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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday

Thursday, October 7, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· October 8, 1999

Meigs places four on AII-TVC-team, Page 5
Prenuptual agreements, Page .7
Sermonette, ·Page 8

Today: Sunny
High: 70a; Low: 40s

Community
Calendar

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 70a; Low: soa

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Revtval
beginning Thursday, 1 p.m. nightly,
through Oct. 14 at God's Temple of
Praise, located on McGuire Road
near the ju~ction of state routes 7
and 124, near Middleport. Services
will be held at 6 p.m. Sunday. Pastor
Jerry Wayne Balcom invites all.

Meigs County's

SATURDAY
CHESHIRE - Ladies for the
Lord , interchurch picnic, Cheshire
Park, Saturday, 2 p.m. Door prizes,
music by Sid and Carol Hayman,
Deanna Stewart and the Earthen
Ycss~l•. Take covered dish and
dessert. '\.II churches in voted.

Humecomong to mark the I50th
anniversary of the Heath Unoted
Methodist Church. 1849-1999, will
he observed Sunday at the church
located at the corner of Main aord
Suuth Thord Ave. on Middlepon.
The worshi p service at 10:30 a.m.
hy Pastor · Yernagay Sullovan woll
, aory out the theme of "Celebration
o f Conung Home." There woll be
,rectal lnusic at the morning service

.tfte• th e noon luncheon.

The alocrnoon program will feature mu soc by "Under Conslructoon"
,, h"rherslmp quartet composed of
John Anderson. Jr. Gerald Kelly,
!)ave Power&gt;, and John Anderson ,
.md "S"Jcm Echoes" a seven meml·,·o gospel group from Athens. It
" dl also feature da 11me of remembrance and son gong of old familiar
hy mn s along with specoal ow.osic by
Hal Knccn and Joan Robonson.

POMEt'OY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, Saturday, at I
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. Grave
markings woll follow the meeting.

'

POMEROY - Modem Woodmen of America, Camp 7230, family
dinner, 5:30 p.m. Saturday at the
Burlingham Modern Woodmen
Hall. Members to take covered dish;
camp to furnish sandwiches, cider
and donuts.

By KATHRYN CROW
Special Correspondent
Robert Wingett, grants administrator, informed
Syracuse Village Council Thursday night that he,
along with Larry Lavender, council president,
attended a meeting at the courthouse with the county commissioners in regards to Issue II funds.
Wingett explained that the commissioners stated
villages were not being included in the applications.
He noted that he contacted Buckeye Hills/Hocking
VaHey Regional Development District, grant administrators, and was told that it is legal to include villages.
He informed commissioners of his findings, but
no action was taken by the commissioners.
Wingett in turn made application on behalf of
Syracuse Village for a $49,854 grant for paving with
the village share.being $17,561. Wingett also asked
for permission Jo advertise for bids to sell a 1977
fire truck.
Council approved the request.
The money will be applied toward the purchase of

the new fire truck which \viii cost approximately
$161,000.
The village obligation is $50,000 plus they have a
$35,000 grant and have also sent letters to Syracuse
residents to commit $100 a year for 10 years toward
the purchase of the truck.
Wingett said the response to the letters has been
very good.
Eber Pickens Jr., council member, reported that
mobile radios for village trucks and village hall are
needed and a cellular telephone for the cruiser.
No action was taken and Police Chief Tim
Gillilan is to check on prices.
Pickens also suggested an exterminator be called
to kill water bugs in the fire department.
That request was approved.
DoQna ' Peterson, council member, asked about
trick or treat night and that. was set for Thursday,
Oct. 28, 6-7 p.m. with the fire siren to begin and end
the activities.
Mony Wood, council member, reported the culvert had been repaired at College and Fourth streets

DISPLAYS - Displays on the early history of the Heath United
Methodist Church will be a feature of homecoming to be held Sunday.

LONG BOITOM - Hymn sing,
Faith Full Gospel Church, Long
Bottom, Saturday, 7 p.m. Singing
will be Jim Blair and the
Gospelaires.

The Meigs County Historical
Society will hold an open house at
the Meigs County Museum, 144
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
There will be a special exhibit of
Ohio River Boat pictures. Riverboat
and Ohio River books, along with
boat accessories and rell!!ld, itoma,
will be a feature of the special ,display. Light refreshments will be
served throughout the day.
The extended hours will give visitors to the Big Bend Sternwheel
Festival an opportunity to visit the
county museum and learn more
about Meigs County, said Margaret
Parker, president, in announcing the
exhibit.

THE CARLETQN CHURCH
Sunday the Carleton Church risonville area and at the end of two
Jocatcu on Kingsbury Road, days had received enough cash or
Pomeroy. wil l ce lebrate 50 years of pledges from the Presbytenan mem~e r v u.; e at tts annual homecoming
bers o.f the community. A new date
Sunday School will begon at 9:30 was set and at the dedication sera. m loll owed by church servoces led vices John Baxil Carleton, Wolliam
hy Pastor Clyde Henderson. Lunch Smith, and Dana Dais were elected
w1 11 be served 1n the social room at as trustees.
noon and homecoming services will
Dais recalled being asked to be
hegon at I :30 p.m.
responsible for getting a bell. He
Special songcrs for the afternoon ordered the bell, still in use today,
servocc woll oncl ude Boll Henry and from the Blymer Bell Company of
the Tronoty lroo. Ahhy and Gwynn Conconnato. The bell was shipped to
Pill ops on the poano, Mary Etta Pomeroy by boat and the cost was
Burnside, Margaret Henderson, and less than $100. He and George
Kenny King Fonner pastors will be Thoma took a team of horses to the
boat wharf to pick up the bell. The
rccognozcd.
river
had just flooded and the land·
The Carleton church has a history
whi ch goes back to 1872 when ing was very slippery anJ difficult
Wolliam Carleton erected on hos for the horse's footing .
Services were regular for a few
farm ncar the graveyard a church for
Epi sco pal &lt;e rvo ccs. The church years but attendance was poor and
ceased In ex ist shortly alter the di sconunued. The church was not
·" Jc,1jh ol C.ul cton, was 1.11cr sold used for a few years until folks from
f'rec Mcthouosls ahout 1890, and the Bunker Hill Church, seven in
then was acquored hy the Cumber- number. moved to the present day
lanl' Presbyterians on 1894. The Carleton Church in May, 1949, with
huildin g was struck by li ghtning and Pastor Clyde Honton.
On July 3, 1951. Rev. Snedden, a
burned about 1906
The prese nt day churc h was bui lt Baptist mini ster from Al(lany, met
in 1909 at an unknown cost so nce all with the people to organi ze a conlumber and labor we re locall y gregation These people dec oded to
J onatcJ There was a shortage of call it "The Carle ton lnterdenomina·
$601) &lt;llld the dcdocoti on of the new tiona! Church". Those original seven
church had to he cance led. A Rev. were : Mr. and Mrs. William King,
Brown . scrvcJ '" pastor for the ded- Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King. Mr. and
Jc. .luun -.dviccs after Dana Dais Mrs Dean Blackwood, Jr., and Mrs.
soli citcJ ohc necessary fund s. Dais Florence Michael.
In the 1930's, possobly 1940;s, a
went on horse back to the Har-

RIVERBOAT DISPLAY- The

County

Society

. will have open houH Slturday, 1N p.m. at the Meigs County
MuHum In Pomeroy eo that vleltora may enjoy a epfj:lal exhibIt of Ohio River boat plcturn .and other Items. Light rafrelhmente will be eerved. Hara;muHum volunteer Joyc~ Davie dieplaya an engine room clock from the steam veeeel 9harlee R.
Hook.

Regional Briefs

November 1967; Jay Stiles, April
1968 to 1970 and 1973 to 1974:
Gary King, March 1975 to 1979;
Jimmy Evans, October 1981: Davod
Curfman, )une 1983 to September
1987: Clyde Henderson, September
1987 to December 1993: Jeff Smith,
October 1994 to 1997; and Clyde
Henderson, who has pastored the
church since May 1998.
Sunday school superintendent is
Roger Young; song leader is Kenny
King; and pianist is Sadie Carl, who
has served faithfully since 1951.
Louise Harrison, active since 1951,
stoll teaches the beginner Cradle
Roll class. The board members are
Vorgil Carl, Richard Houdashelt,
Roger Young, and Wayne Beat.

Buggy-truck collision kills Amish couple

1 MILLERSBURG (AP)- A furniture delivery truck slammed into a
buggy, killing an Amish husband and wife.
·
Abi: L. Troyer, 63, of Dundee, was pronounced dead at Joel Pomeraine
. Hpspital in Millersburg and his wife, Mary Troyer, 60, was flow,n by helicopter to Akron Oty Hospital 811,(1 died there.
The 21-year-old truck driver was not hurt.
The Holmes County sheriff's offj~e did not release additional information about Thursday's accident on state Route 39 east of Walnut Creek,
· which is about 70 miles south of Oeveland. No charges have been filed.

No fire, but puppy caught In .mattress spring
. MIDDLETOWN(AP)-Awoman who told a 911 dispatcher·that her
house was on fire really wanted someone to rescue her hours-old puppy
that was stuck in an exposed mattress spring, officials said.
(
"I didn't think I hl!ll any other choice," Wanda Stapleton said Thursday.
"I thought I was doing the right thing. All life is the same to me. You have
to do something if an animal or a human is suffering."
Wanda Stapleton, 2!1, is charged with a first-degree misdemeanor of
reporting false alann. She said she was willing to pay a fine.
Mrs. StapletOn made two calls to 911 on Sept. 28, asking for help to
save her Doberman Pinscher, which she later named Sprinser. When the
dispatcher determined the situation was not dangerous to human life, he
declined her requests.
So when she called 911 again, she said her house was on fire.
Fire Chief John Sauter said his crews warned her that she could have
been cited for the false call, but decided to rescue the pup anyway.
"We don't know when we're responding to an alarm whet~er it's an
emergency or a false alarm, but we
tre~t all of thein like it's an emer·
gency," Sauter said.
She has been advised to call the
police·department's humane officer
for help next time.

CHESTER
COURTHOUSE
Ohio's Oldest Courthouse

Good Afternoon

Today; s Sentinel
:z ~liS • 1l Paaa

Calendar

8
9&amp;10
11

Clrplftcdl

:z

Editorials

3

Enjoy a tour of Ohio's oldest Courtho~e and a 1•
presentation of Historical Reenactments by the ChesterShade Historical Association. ·
·

3

Wqtber

Lo tt eries
ww
.
Pick 3: 8-o4-l· Pick 4: 8-6-S-6

Where: The Chester Courthouse
When: Saturday, October 9th at 9:30AM
Who: You! The event is open to the public.
Why: Come have some fun, and learn about y(,lur '
heritage.

.

.

&amp;.(keye 5: 6-7-27-35-36

w.YA.

Dally 3: 6-2·6; DaUy 4: 0-3-2-7
0 t999 Oliio Volley Publliibi,Co.

Call 992-2239 or 992-2622 for details.
Donations appreciated.
''

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and that a culvert needs repaired at Rustic Hills. He Baer's Market need to be trimmed.
also suggested council vote to remove the speed
Lavender noted that council should consi der
bumps on Marina Drive.
ordering a pump for the pool. Connoll y advised
Council voted to remove the speed bumps with Lavender to check on prices.
council members Kathryn Crow and Larry Lavender
Also meeting with council was Eber Pickens Sr.,
voting to keep the speed bumps.
fire chief, who reported he has obtained an electrical'
Biii Roush, council member, reported that Faye generator for the fire station in the event of an elecWiggins wants to rent the pool and ballfield for the trical outage.
Hit'n' Misses next spring.
Roush also reported a generator was needed f!&gt;r
Council OK'd the request, pending availability of the water well .
.
the pool.
·
In other business, council named Home National
He also asked about removing the boat docks for Bank as depository.
the season. Mayor George Connolly said they would
The police chief reported issuing 27 citations and
be removed in about a week or two.
investigated two complaints.
Roush also reported paving could be done on
Clerk Janice Zwilling gave the clerk's report for
Bridgeman Street in front of the Municipal Building September showing the following balances: general
for a total of $5,000, and also patching on Bridge- fund, $32,691.81; street construction, $23,805.47;
man Street where the slip occurred and on West Col· highway, $3,048 .69; fire, $14,303.85; water,
lege Road .
$12,717.36; pool, $2,110.10; guaranty meter,
Council approved the work.
$3,704.37; cemetery, ~201.80 ; law enforcement,
It was reported that the bucket on the tractor $688.75; EMS building fund, $1,839 .72; total,
.
needs to be reinforced and that trees across from $95,111.92.

BY BRIAN J. REED
ipate in the program.
SePtlnel News Staff
However, he said, as those
The Villase of Middleport took
owners began to see progress aod
the first steps toward starting a
improvements to other buildings,
downtown revitalization program
many joined the effort. He also
on :rhursday, meeting with a rep·
noted that, due to the grant fund·
resentative of the Ohio Arts Coun·
ing, many of the owners were
cil's Ohio's Hill Country program.
able to appreciate the value of
Street landscaping, facade
improvements which could be
improvements, and an emphasis
made to their properties for rela·
on developing higher-rentloftlivlively little investment.
ing spaces in the downtown disMore ''!lportant to the success
trict could help Middleport create
of the proJect, Mulle~ s?od, was
a "vital and attractive" area, simi·
the purchase of buoldongs by
Jar to the Front Street project in
investors, who were able to foreMarietta, which Michael Mullen,
see a significant inc.rease in prop·
who met with village officials and
erty values. Many onvestors pllr·
others at Middleport Village Hall
chased buildings in the district for
yesterday helped to implement.
relat.ively little. cost fro~ owne~s
Mayor Sandy Iannareili, Counnot onte.rested on. •o:nprovonj: the or
cil member Beth Stivers, Myron
propertoes, partocopated on the
Duffield 'of the Middle~•
program, and are now reaping
munity Association, County Com·
high re.nts and .operating success·
missioner Mick Davenport, Meigs Heritage
operated through the
Arts
ful busonesses on the area.
County Economic Development tours the
buelneu district of Mlddlepqrt Thureda!( aftw- . "It !a~es .~ collective ~ommuDirector Perry Varnadoe, Mike noon with Roger Wllllama, Myron Dllffleld, Befh Stivers, Mavor noty vosoon, Mullen saod, and
Kloes of Farmers Bank, and Roger Sandy lannaralll, Economic Development Director Perry Yarnadoe, ~arnadoe, a Marietta resident
Wiiiiams, who has served as a and County Commluloner Mlck Davenport. Mullen met with the htmself•. agreed.
grant writer for the village were group to dlacuH Middleport's potential for ravltallzatlon.
."~hole the old owners. of these
included in the meeting, which
capitalize on, Muiien said.
_
buoldongs are. often unwolhng to
included a sl'ide presentation which showed
The elimination of less desirable "low-rent" cooperate, new owners woll usually come on
"before and after" views of the Front Street pro· businesses and their replacement with attractive with new enthu~iasm."
.
•..
ject, o~.; weii as an extended discussion of Mid· establishments offering quality merchandise
Mullen admotted that Moddleport faces ~·
dleport's potential for revitalization, and a brief could help compete with Mason, W.Va.'s com- mor~ doffocull struggle than dod Manetta, on thai:
walkiDg tour of the business district.
ing Wai-Mart and other competitors, and would Manetta ha~ access .to more levera~~ . gra.~t
According to Muiien, the federal government help bring traffic into the community and funds, but saod that Moddleport has the host~ro­
has made available some $24 million in funding increase property values, Mullen said.
cal ontegnty" needed to make such a proJe.ct
for communities included in the Scenic Byways
The City of Marietta accessed a half-million successful.
.
• .
highway designation. Mullen said that he was dollars in ICE-T monies through the Ohio . He also n~ted !hal ~und~ are avaolabl~ specof~
unsure if the village of Middleport was includ- Department of Transportation to begin the revi - ~call.y to assosl woth hostoroeal preservatoon pro:
ed, but said if it was not, village officia~ should talization project on Front Street, as well as Jects. .
..
.
other grant funds. Local business owners also
Duffoeld, who v1sots regularly woth downinsist that it be included in the designation.
Middleport's business district and the Front joined in the effort as did Bank One and other town merchants, said that "pride has already
Street district in Marietta share similar prob· lending institutions' in the city.
b~gun to .catch Qn" in Middleport's business ~is·
terns and similar strengths, according to Mullen.
Mullen said that the Front Street area was troct, s~yong th~t several busonesses ha~e paont·
The historic architectural integrity, the types of dismal prior to the beginning of the revitaliza· ed the or exte~oors an~ m~de other omprove- .
businesses now in place, and the presence of the tion project, and that many of the building own- ments, and saod tha~ pnde '".the appearance of
Ohio River are all assets that the community can.,. ers in the area were, at first, reluctant to partie· the downtown area os contagtous.

Gem·

Carleton Church to celebrate 50 Years at homecoming se·rvice
door was put in the back of the
church. In 1968 new Sunday School
class rooms were added to the back
of the church. In 1989 a full basement with modern . facohties and
kitchen were included.
Pastors serving the church since
1949 were Clyde Hinton, 1949;
Blame Farley, Juiy 1951 to July ·
1954: Ray Biddle, November 1954 •
to July 195i:•John Newkirk, August
1957 to June 1958: Maroon
Williams, July · 1958 to July 1962: ,
Henry Stanley, September 1962 to
April 1964; Cecol Cox, June 1964 to
October 1964; Deleno Humphrey,
January, 1965 to March, 1965:
Clyde H!nton, March 1965 to

Single Copy · 35 Cents

Middleport leaders discuss revitalization project

Boat display to be
featured at museum

.1nd those auending woll have time to
voew a variety of displays on the
beg onnong of the church and happenings through the years before and

Hometown Newspaper

Syracuse·Council pursuing Issue II funding for street paving

TUPPERS PLAINS - Town
meetong at the grade school, 6 p.m.
' Thursday, re, idents urged to attend.

Heath United Methodist Church to
observe 150th anniversary Sunday

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-Page4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50. Number 85

MIDDLEPORT - Eva~geline
'Chapter 172, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
the Middleport Masonic Temple.

HOMECOM ING SET AT RVHS - Homecommg actovotoes at Rover Valley Hogh School woll h.c held at halftome
RVHS-Marocua game Candodates for homecoming queen are, front , from left. Kristen Gillian, Alison
le ro y. Dct.ra Wnkcman. M ~ Kon scy Saunders and Bridget Johnson: back, Casee Justice, Kathy Brabham, Eron
Shill ll,.hlll.
Yumoko Yokokawa and Jessoca Groffoth. The homecoming dance woll be Saturday.from 8-11 p.m. with
'
ohc theme uf "One Moment on Tome ...

Cleveland crushes
Boston 11-1 , takes
2-o lead In the ALDS

•

RACINE - Racone Grange,
Thursday, 7 p.m at the hall.

" I f'l id .ov ·s

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FBI captures fugitive
20 years after escape
DAYTON (AP)- A man who
escaped from a California prison
more than 20 years ago was captured at a home in Sidney.
Alfonso Borjas Gaitan was
taken into custody Thursday after
the FBI was alerted by .taw
enforcement officials in San
Diego, said spokesman Stephen
Morris.
Gaitan, usirig the name Noe
Borjas, had !leen in Arizona and
other parts of the country before
moving to Sidney several months
ago.
Morris would not give details
about what led to Gaitan's capture
. or w.hy he fled to Ohio. .

Democrats' HMO victory heads toward sticky negotiations
By LAORA MECKLER
Associated Prell Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Proclaiming a big
victory on patients' rights, House Democrats
celebrated passage of a sweeping bill meant to
rein in HMOs while acknowledging that it
could be diffic~lt to get the Senate to go along.
The bipartisan measure was approved Thurs·
day by a wide margin, 275-151, giving House
Democrats virtually everything they wanted,
including a patient's right to sue, but setting up
potentially contentiQus negotiations with the
Senate, which passed a considerably more modest version earlier this year.
All sides agreed that the politically charj:ed
battle to give patients more leverage agaonsl
HMOs was far from over.
"Obviously, nont of this is worth anything if
we don't get a law," said Rep. Charlie Norwood, the Georgia Republican who bucked his
party's leadership and joined with Democrats to
push the bill through the House after concluding
Republicans would support only limited
reforms.
The House bill would allow lawsuits against
health insurance companies in state and federal
courts, with no limit on potential awards. But no
new suits would be allowed in the version the
Senate passed in July.
The House 'bill covers every American with
private health insurance, while much of the Senate bill would affect only a fraction of them.
"We still have a toi of work to do before this
bill becQIIIes the law of the land" President
Clinton said.
'
The House bill would guarantee access to
· reasonable emergency ,room care, give p~ti~nts
'the right to see pediatricians and obstetroc1ans
without permission from primary care doctors,
and would require HMOs to pay for routine care
associated with clinical trials. It would require
HMOs to disclose a host of information and
allows' patlenis to take their complaints to outside arbitrators.

Throughout two days of House debate this
week, Democrats argued that patients needed
protections from health maintenance organizalions and manag~d ~are. plans. These plans con·
trol costs by ehmonaltng unneeded care, but
many Americans fear they will be denied care
they need, and HMO reform has proven politi·
. cally popular.
.
Republican~ argued that giving patoents n~w
powers- p~rttcularly the power to file lawsuots
- would drove up the cost of health care and
prompt e~ployers to drop c~verage.
Soxty-eoght Repubhcans JOoned 206 Democrats and one independ~nt in favor of the House
bill, whil~ 149 Repubhcans and two Democrats
voted agaonstot.
In the Senate, Republicans stayed together,
led by Sen. Bill Fri~t, R-Te_nn ., a ~earl surgeon
who used his experoence w!th patoents to.argue
that Republicans were lookong out for thetr best
interes~.
.
But. on the House, Republocan doct~rs took
the opposite tack. Norwood, along wllh Rep.
Greg Ganske, R·lowa, a plastic surgeon, left
their party and co-sponsored a bill with Democr~ts. Rep . Tom C~burn, R-Okla., an obstetroctan, decltned to Joon. th~m, ~ut . he pushed &lt;:JOP
leaders to support a hmoted roght to sue, a ftrst.
All eyes are now on_ House a~d Senate leaders to see when the~ mtght appotnt m~mbers of
a conference co!'lm.ottee to work out dofferences
between the theor bolls.
Sen. Don Nickles, the No. 2 Senate Republican, vowed to "work aggressively" to defeat
the more sweeping House provisions. And many
speculated that GOP congressional leaders
would ta~e their t.ime appointin~ members ~fa
conferen~ commot~ee to reconcile the two bolls..
Asked tf there would be a conference committee. this year, House Speaker Dennis
Hastert's ·spokesman, John Feeherey, said: "I
wouldn ' t want to rule it. I wouldn't want to rule
it ~ut."
A delay might, i~ fact, help Democrats, as

next November's elections approach and pres·
sure to pass an HMO bill increases.
.
In any case, D~mocrats ~ouldn 't conceal
theor gle~ after handon~ Re~ubhcans and Hastert
the year s sharpest legosl~tove defeat.
Hastert repeatedly saod he was content to
simply let t~e Hous.e " work !ts will.'' B~t he is
well -v~rsed on the d1cey pohtocs surroundong the
H~.o ossue.
.
. . We ca~not afford t.o be he~d r~spo~s oble for
kolhng pallent .protectoon. legos.latoon, Haslett
told ~ank-and-f1le Republ~cans on a closed ·d~or
meetong Thursday, accordong.a.n account prov.'d·
ed by a G~P source on condotoon of an~ny.moty.
Repubhcans! ~ho hold a narrow maJonty on
the House, were m a tough spot from the start.
Many of the more conservative Republicans
believed no new federal law was n~ed~d to reg~
ulate health mao11tenance organozatoons ~nQ
other manage~ care plans. Others were pushong
for a strong b1ll.
. .
.
. It took Hastert unltlth1s week to endorse an~
btll, and the GOP strategy was fuzzy unltl
debat~ opened.
Ultom~tely, under P.res~ure from the GOll
leadershtp, many Re~u~bcans suppor.ted an
~lternate, that allowed hmtted new lawsutts. Bu'
ot wasn I enough, and the GOP versoon of
patien~ rights ~as defeated, 238-193, with 29
Re~.ubhcans vottng n?.
.
They pr~bably wosh they ~oul~ have gotten
a lot more onvolved sooner, saod Rep. Ray,
LaHood, an Illinois Republican who supporte~
the more modest bill.
Business and insurance groups lobbied heav;
ily. The National Association of Manufacturers;
for .instance, promised to. get com.panies to tell
theor ~mployees that any oncrease on health care
· prcmoums should be blamed on members o(
Congress who supported this bill.
•
It didn' t work. Rep. M,ark Foley, R·Fia., said
he would be thrilled if employers advertised hi4
vote. "If they keep up that threat," he said, "I'll
pay for the printing."
•

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Friday, October. 8, 1999

~~Commentary

De· ~~ t:b·.,

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Friday,
October 1, 1'"
'·

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\ The Daily Sentinel Reinventing government No. 2: sunset l~ws

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Market quakes and aftershocks
By .JOHN CUNNIFF
'
. AP Bualnlll Analyst
; · NEW YORK (AP) - I t isn't so much that the stock market is built
• Jltop an earthquake fault line. No, it's just that certain players are
: standing on a quivering foundation .
' · On Tuesday this week the Dow Jones industrial average was enjoying a pleasant day, reflected by a Dow Jones average that was up
more than 100 points, and rising.
:·: There w~re reasons for the optimism. The dollar was strengthening
·. egainst the Japanese yen, and investors were anticipating strong
:_- lhird-quarter earnings from the ubiquitous technology stocks.
'. : And then it happened: Shortly after 2 p.m., the Federal Reserve
said that while it wasn't raising interest rates _immediately, it was
Jeaning in that direction and might do so at some future date.
-; Within a few minutes the Dow had given up all its gain, heading
: toward a decline of more than 232 points in little more than an hour,
: accelerating to the South like it meant to winter there.
· : And then it made an abrupt V-turn, almost as if to ask, "what am I
: doing?" Heading north again, it speeded up in the last half-hour of
: irading and ended the day less than a point below where it had ended
• the previous session. Such brief, violent shocks have vibrated the
: market all year long, scaring the wits out of the timid, making money
: lor shrewd short-sellers, and telegraphing a message to those who
. will listen.
: • The message is an old one: Buy companies, not stocks. Or, staled
:· another way, put your faith and money in shares of well-chosen com. panics and, lest you be driven mad, ignore the convulsions.
As offered by some institutional portfolio managers, the amazing
explanation for this particular convulsion was 'th~t Alan Greenspan,
the Fed chairman, had surprised them by suggesting interest rates
misht rise .
: . Amazing, because Greenspan had never hidden his bias toward
: raising rates at the merest indication of inflation . Not only had he
: already done so, he had all but proclaimed he'd do it again.
Whatever, those who play the market rather than invest .in good
: companies, and that includes many of the big mutual fund managers,
: reacted to the news rather than to long-term corporate prospects.
Market players, as contrasted with investors, are part of a herd, and
~ news good or bad s(!reads quickly through the herd. And if the news
~is seen u bad to a few they can pani.~: the rest.
-: You may recall they did this back in October 1987, when the mar. tel plunged 20 percent in a day, but soon recovered and began its
~spectacular climb. A case of short: term fear vs. long·term confidence.
'- Those who stayed the course made lots of dividends and capital
. j:ains; the,)n-out traders paid lots of commissions and taxes. And,
because of this, they fell far short of obtaining maximum gains.
In short, the marketplace is a,Jong-running play rather than a series
1&gt;f one-nisht stan!ls, or a marathon rather than a dash, a view endorsed
~ by Brad Perry, former chairman of David L. Babson &amp; Co., investment counselors.
' In "The Babson Staff Letter," he writes that a focus on companies
.'".not only enables investors to make much better-reasoned decisio~s;
"it also helps them keep calm during market extremes."
.. ·· He continues: "Being able "to worry less can make investing fun
i'ather than a headache. And staying off the emotional ro-ller coaster of
~the stock market prevents rash, stupid decisions."
Perry is having fun. He's just written and published " Winning the
. rnvestment Marathon."
•' ' Stop worrying and don't b.e impatient, he says.

Today In History
By T1le Alloclated Pl'lll ,
Today is Friday, Oct. 8, the 281st day of 1999. There are 84 days left in
. fhe year.
' • Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 8, 1871, the Great Chicago Fire erupted while another deadly
blaze broke out in Peshtigo, Wis.
: On this date:
• In 1869, Franklin Pierce, 14th president of the United States, died in Conconi, N.H.
•
In 1890, American aviation hero Eddie Rickenbacker was born in Columbus, Ohio.
_ In 1918, Sergeant Alvin C. York almost single-handedly killed 25 German
soldiers and captured 132 in the Argonne Forest in France.
In 1934, Bruno Hauptmann was indicted for murder in the dealh of the
infant son of Charles A. Lindbergh.
:· In 1944, "The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet" made its debu"t on CBS
Radio.
. In 194~. President Truman announced that the secret of the atomic bomb
JNould be shared only with Britain and Canada.
In 1956, Don Larsen pitched the first perfect game in a World Series as
tbe New York Yankees beat the Brooklyn Dodgers, 2-0.
: In 1982, all labor organizations in Poland, including Solidarity, were
banned.
· • In 1985, fhe hijackers of the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro killed Amerlc:ln pUienger Leon Klinghoffer.
In 1993, fhe government issued a report absolving the FBI of wrongdoing
: in ita final assault in Texas on the Branch Davidian compound.
: • Ten years ago: The Oakland A's won the American uague pennant for the
· second year in a row by defeating the Toronto Blue Jays.
: ~ Five years ago: President Clinton, responding to the massing of Iraqi
. CfiX!PI near the Kuwaiti border, warned Saddam Husein not to misjudge
: "American will or American pow_er" as he ordered additional U.S. forces to
: J1te region.
· - One year ago: The House triggered an open-ended impeachment inquiry
· apinlt President Clinton in a momentous 258-176 vote; 31 Democrats
joined fhe Republican majority in opening the way for nationally televised
Impeachment hearings. Portuguese novelist Jose Saramago won the Nobel
Literature Prize.
. , Today's Birth4ays: Entertainment reporter Rona Barrett is 63. Actor Paul
· Bopn is 60. Rhythm-and-blues singer Fred Cash (The Impressions) is 59.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson is 58. Comedian Chevy Chase is 56. Author R.L.
Stine ("Goosebumps") is 56. Country singer Susan Raye)s 55. TV person. ility Sarah Purcell is 51. Actress Sigourney Weaver is 50. Rhythm-and-blues
: singer Robert "Kool" Bell (Kool &amp; the Gang) is 49. Producer-director
edward Zwick is 47. Country singer-musician Ricky ue Phelps is 46. Actor
'Michael Dudikoff is 45. Actress Stephanie Zimbalist is 43. Rock musician
MilCh Marine (Tripp_ilig Daisy) is 38. Rock singer Steve Perry (Cherry Poppin' J)lddies) is 36. Rock musician C.J . Ramone (The Ramones) is 34.
~inpr-producer Teddy Riley is 33. Actor-screenwriter Matt Damon is 29.

By Jack Anderson
, ·
and Douglas Cohn
·
WASHINGTON .. Thomas Jefferson
was thought to be wrong when he said,
" The earth belongs in usufruct (the right
of enjoying something belonging to ·
another ~ long as it is not damaged or
destroyed) to the living. If it be enforced
longer, it is an act of force and not of
right." But was he wrong?
"Every constitution ... and every law,
naturally expires at the end of 19 years," he
wrote about the new Constitution, and, today,
virtually everyone disagrees with him. Or do
they'
·
If we discuss congressional laws rather than
the Constitution, Jefferson 's views will be seen
in a different light. He is essentially calling for
sunset provisions -- termination dates for laws.
A recent example was the Independent
Counsel Law.
Enacted in the wake of Watergate, the law
that was intended to remove executive-level
investigations ·from the hands of an executivelevel appointment -- the U.S. attorney general - came with a sunset provision.
II was a provision Democrats and '"Republicans alike were pleased to see after the law
proved unpopular during the Clinton impeachment ordeal.
They did not renew it.
They let it sunset.
But how many outdated, arcane, silly laws
remain on the books? We all have heard the stories about laws regulating consensual intimate
behavior, laws requiring trick-or-treat permits,
laws governing the proper uses of buggy whips
and so forth. We are a nation awash in laws.
There is a solution.
Follow Jefferson's advice by passing a constitutional amendment, a sunset aJT.endment:
"Every law and regulation shall expire no
later than 19 years after enactment."
Such an amendment would be applicable to
federal, state and local governments. And if

Congre.ss or a state legislature believes a
given law should be permanent -- that
is, the law of the.land -- then the amendment. process would need to be
employed.
An example would have been the civil
rights legislation passed during the
Johnson administration. At the time it
was passed, the simple majority would
have fallen far short of the super majority necessary for passage of a constitutiona) amendment, but a few years later the
inherent justice of the laws were so apparent
that passage of an amendment would have been
easily accomplished.
But most laws do not rise to a level necessitating permanence.

They are ordinary laws, la~s wh".h one seneration does not have the nsht to 1mpose on
succeeding aenerations. Yet such laws seem to
multiply daily.
.
The alternative to a sunset amendment IS a
burgeoning of laws throughout the land to such ,,
an eKtent that by 2050 so many aspects of
human behavior will have been regulated that
no one would know what is legal and what is
not.
And a nation made great by the rule of law ,
will be overwhelmed by the sheer weight of •
unknowable, irrelevant, arcane laws, which we
had no right to "force" upon succeedins generations.
The earth may belong to us, the living, but
only in usufruct.

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Steve Forbes said it amounted to declar· the national economy to the eKclusion of all
ing war on the conservative movement.
else, speaking a sterile language of rates and
Bush also is putting space between his numbers .... "
"Too . often, my party has confused the
campaign and the Republican-led Congress.
He's more popular than they are. And need for limited government with a disdain
Republican leaders are struggling to produce for government itself," he said.
an already-tardy budget that will force cuts
Bush said that is not an option for conser·
in programs popular with voters, to balance vatives, whose goal should be limited gov·
the books without borrowing from Social ernment, "focused, effective and ene.rgetic
:.. doing a few-things and doing them well.'-'
Security funds.
"We're getting stuff done here, real stuff,
.Bush agrees with the goal, but he doesn't
have to sign on to the detai Is.
compassionate conservat'ive stuff," said
He is campaigning for president, not Rep. Torn DeLay, the fellow Texan behind
drafting budgets.
the budget maneuver Bush helped derail.
DeLay had proposed, and other House
Congressional job approval ratings are
sagging in public opinion polls, and the bud- GOP leaders had agreed to a plan in which
$8.7 billion would have been taken out of the
get crunch is still to come.
President Clinton gained in earlier current budget by shifting from lump sum to
rounds, in 1995 when Republicans got the monthly payments to recipients of the earned
blame for government shutdowns, and in income tax credit, which pays an average of
1998, in a compromise that included spend- $1,890 a year to low-income families.
ing he wanted.
Senate leaders saw the image problem and
So there are perils for a ,presidential can- said it wouldn't pass there, but the House
didate tied tightly to Congress. Bob Dole hierarchy was going ahead - until Busll
suffered them when he was both the 1996 weighed in.
nominee-in-waiting, and the Senate majority
"I don't think they ought t~ balance their
leader.
budget on the _backs of the poor," he said at
His answer was to quit the Senate, his a campaign news conference.
career for 35 years.
.
DeLay denied his plan would have done
Bush 's answer is to pick his spots and that. "It's obvious Mr. Bush needs a little
make his points, on programs and phiioso- education on how Congress works," said the
phy.
Houston Republican, who has endorsed Bush
He can't run against Congress, especially for the nomination.
one in which 147 House Republicans and 20
"I don't think he knew what he was talk"senators have endorsed him.
ing about."
.
So his comments in a New York speech on
But his opposition undercut the proposal.
Tuesday' about his party's negative outlook Republican leaders are talking now of
did not directly blame Congress.
across-the-board spending cuts instead.
But that's where the GOP record is being
written.
Walter R. M1ars, vice president and
Too often, Bush said, the Republican col11mnist for The As:Wciat1d Press, ll11s
Party has painted an image of hopeless cul- report1d on Wasllington and national politural and social decline, and "has focused on tics for more tllan 30 y1ars.

that when the body dies, the soul .passes into·
another body. A new book on reincarnation,
"Old Souls: The Scientific Evidence for Past
Lives," is based on 250 interviews with people
in India and Lebanon"who claim to offer evi·
dence that they have lived before.
·
The author is Tom Shroder, an editor at The
Washington Post.
One of Barbra Streisand's early movies;
"On a Clear Day You Can See Forever," has a
reincarnation theme.
She and Yves Montand are forced to part,
but take consolation in the knowledge that they
will be reunited in a new existence in 2038.

By The Associated Press
A cold front moving towards Ohio l.l(ill bring with it clouds and the possibility of rain beginning tonight through the weekend, forecasters said.
Low temperatures tonight will range from the upper 30s in the eastern
part of the state to the upper 40s in the west.
,
Shower and thunderstorms are possible Saturday with high tempera, lures in the mid 60s to mid 70s.
·
'
The record high temperature for this dale at the Columbus weather sta: lion was 91 in 1939. The record low was 29 in 1889.
Sunset tonight will be at 7:03. Sunrise Saturday will be at 7:35.
Weather forecast:
Tonight .. .Increasing clouds with a chance of showers late. Lows in the
mid and upper 50s. South wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Saturday... Cloudy with a chance of showers, and possibly a thunder·LSiurn". Highs 70 to 75. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday night. .. Cioudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the low and mid 70s.
Exteilded forecast:
Sunday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the low and mid 70s.
,
Monday ... Partly cloudy. Lows near 50 and highs in the upper 60s.
Tuesday...Ciear. Lows in the lower 40s and highs in the upper 60s.

Yankees fan claims Indians
security guard assaulted him
Jakimtschuk then filed a comCLEVELAND (AP) A
Cleveland ·Indians security guard plaint against Sha-Y who was
assaulted a man for rooting too charged in June with misdemeanor
ibudly for the New York Yankees assault after an investigation by the
during a playoff game at Jacobs city's Office of Professional Stan'Field last year, according to a law- dards.
Shaw, 43, of Cleveland Heights,
suit.
Jeffrey A. 'Jakimtschuk, 29, of faces trial Oct. 19 in Cleveland
€1eveland, alleges in a lawsuit that Municipal Court.
Jakimtschuk's case goes to trial
be was ordered out of his seat,
llandcuffed and beaten up by Nov. S.
Jakimtschuk said Shaw hit liim
Cleveland police Detective James
Shaw who was working as a secu- several times in the head. Someone
rity guard qt the Oct. 9, 1998 game. at Jacobs Field used a cellular teleThe lawsuit, filed Wednesday in phone to call police and· complain
U.S. District Cpurt in Cleveland, about Shaw's treatment of
aames Shaw, the Indians, Gateway Jakimtschuk that night, said
Economic Development Corp. and Jakimtschuk 's attorney, Mark Herunnamed ushers as defendants.
ron.
· Jakimtschuk was charged with
Shaw has been assigned to
disorderly conduct and resisting administrative duties that do not
arrest after Shaw alleged that the require him to carry a weapon
Yankees fan tried to pick fights since the charge against him was
with other fans, refused to be hand- filed, said Law Director Cornell
Carter.
cuffed and tried to spit on Shaw.

The Daily Sentinel
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Community Newa,.per Holdlnp, ln'-

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Thought for Today:

1hope we never
live to see the day
when a thing is as .
bad as some of our

Role! Oublde Melp Couot7

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newsNinaiS
it. " ,_,_, make
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- Will Rogers, Arnerlcari
humorist (1879-1935).

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Absentee voting begins

Reader Servtces
Correction Polley
Oar 01ato ..,....,. t. all llorlto to lo be
oa:al'llt. If yoo kpow or ao error 11 a
otory, call Ill• ..,.,,_ 11 (740) !IU-

ll55. We wiU th«k your

lorom~llo•

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News Departments
ne ..... IIOiber Is 99l-ll5$. ll&lt;pllrtlltllt n.ttuioas are:
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Ray Stanley Bostic, 77, Gallipolis (Eureka Community), died Tuesday,
Oct. 5, 1999 in Grove City.
Born July 30, 1922 in Gallia County, son of the late Vinton and Nellie
Collins .Bostic, he retired in 1985 as a machinist from the Columbus Bolt
Works.
·
He was both a U.S. Army and Navy veteran of World War II, and was a
member of the VVFW Post 4464, Gallipolis, and American Legion
Lafayette Post 27. He was a Master Mason, arid a member of the Gallia
Lodge 469, Free and Accepted Masons of Ohio.
Surviving are two sons, Robert Raymond (Shelly) Bostic of Galloway,
and Raymond William Bostic of Columbus; a granddaughter; two brothers,
John Bostic of Gallipolis, and Emory Bostic of Newark; his former wife,
Barbara Galloway Bostic of Columbus; and several nieces and nephews.
He was also preceded in death by two sisters, Effie Mays and Audrey
Malone; and a brother, Arnold Bostic.
Services will be I p.m. Saturday in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, with
the Rev. James Patterson officiating. Burial will be in the Walnut Ridge
Cemetery. near Lecta. Friends may call at the chapel from 6-8 p.m. Friday.
Masonic services will be conducted in the chapel by Gallia Lodge 469 of
the F &amp; AM at 8 p.m. Friday.
Military graveside services will be conducted by VFW Post 4464 and
American Legion Lafayette Post 27.

.

Citizens seeking to cast absentee ballots in the Nov. 2 general electio~
can do so ·now at the Meigs County Board of Election on Mulbe"l'
Avenue in Pomeroy during regular business hours or can request au
absentee ballot via mail by calling the office at 992-2697. The last day t(l
vote absentee at the board office is Nov. I. No ballots will be mailed after
noon on Oct. 30. People who will be out of the county on Nov. 2, 62 yean.
old or older, hospitalized, or in the military can vote via absentee ballot.:

Boelk Family to perform Sunday

.

MI. Union Baptist Church will host the Boelk Family singing Sunday,
6:30p.m. The church is located 2 1/2 miles south of Carpenter. Pastor Joe
N. Sayre welcomes all.
'

Carleton Church homecoming

;

Carleton Church will celebrate its 50th anniversary and homecomin'
Sunday with services beginning at 9:30 a.m. followed by lunch and ser,
vices at 1:30 p.m.

Meigs County Republican.Bean
The Meigs County Republican Party will hold its annual bean dinner
Thursday, 6 p.m. at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy. All we&amp;
come.

Antiques club to meet
The Big Bend Farm Antiques Club will met Monday night at 7:30 p.ni
at the Meigs County Fairgrounds.

Immunizations offered
9bltuariH are plld onnou.-..-ta arniiiQed by k\Cal fuiWII homM, Obltullrleo
•11 publlahect aa requ- to accommodlte- ciHtnng moNinformotlon than
lo provided In lhtloccomponylng De!llh Nollcoio.

The Meigs County Health Department will offer an immunization clinic Tuesday, 9 to 11 a.m. and I to 3 p.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose Cen'·
ter. Every child must be accompanied by ·a parent/legal guardian. The
immunization record is to be presented. For more information call 9926~.
.

Lillian (Krautter) Walker

Chance of showers may
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By George R. Plagenz
ized reincarnation for a mass audience in the
The anti-Semitic hatemonger may be in for West.
the surprise of his life (make that "the surprise
He told his readers:
of his lives") one of these days. The same for
"You have lived many times before, in difthe person who spouts hate for
blacks or ferent ages and different civilizations. Many
espouses "ethnic cleansing" to get rid of the times you have been a man and many times
hated minorities in his country.
you have been a woman.
r
We have had an example of such hatred in
You have probably been very rich and very
the ethnic cleansing recently carried ou't in poor. Some of those who are at the bottom of
Kosovo.
the social ladder today have walked the earth
The hate that appears to be the motivation as kings and presidents and generals and high
behind a growing number of crimes in the priests.
world seems to have caught God's attention.
"And some who now sit in the s~ats of the
There are now billboards popping up on mighty have toiled as simple peasants, pulled
highways that say, "Remember what I told you at the oar of a galley or worn the chains of a
slave.
about loving your neighbor. I meant that."
The message is signed "God."
"In the future ages· you will return to this
It probably has never occurred to those who planet and be born again as a baby in some
hate blacks or Jews or any other class of peo- family arid grow up (and probably marry) and
ple that they may return in their next life as one live out another life."
of the group they detest -- that is, if reincarnaWhy all this dying and being born again?
tion is true, as more and more people in the
Once we master a problem on the eanh
West are coming to believe.
plane, said Fox, we never have to come back to
"It is probable," said Emmet FoK, a leading meet it again.
metaphysical writer whose books have sold in
But if we don't master it, we will face it
the millions, "that the majority ofmankipd has again in our next existence. And again and
always believed in reincarnation."
again. Until we finally conquer' it.
Up to now, however, this majority has not
The simple laboring man of today, said Fox,
included many Christians.
may have been a prince in days gone by, but
Re~ncarnation -- the idea that we have lived
because he failed to learn certain lessons -before and will be born again into this world humility, for e.umple -- he came back into the
after we have died -- has ~een largely an East- world as a member of the rank-and-file where
ern belief.
he would be more likely to learn these lessons.
New Thought -- a New England cult that
Similarly, said FoK, the white man who fails
combined Christian beliefs with Eastern mysti- to accept the black man as brother may be born
cism -- gave many Americans their introduc- neKt time as a black man so that he can learn
tion to reincarnation in the middle of the 19th sympathy, affection and love for a class of peo:
century.
pie he despised in a former life.
· But it was the writings of Fox that popularReincarnation usually embraces ~lief

..

11111'/70'

•

Reincarnation: another reason not to hate

•

•

I Toledo

KY.

Using Congress, Bush makes early move to center
An AP News Analysis
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
·WASHINGTON (AP) - After George W.
Bush condemned a House Republican proposal to squeeze budget savings out of a program for the working poor. the irked sponsor
said the governor needed an education on the
way Congress works .
But Bush knew well enough to have it
work to his political advantage on that point.
Now he is chiding the GOP more broadly for
casting a negative image.
"I was making the case that the conservative philosophy is the compassionate philosophy," the GbP presidential front-runner
said Wednesday in New York.
He also was moving toward the political
center, where the vital swing vote will be in
the 2000 general election.
It's early for that; in the Republican primaries that come first, conservative votes
are crucial.
·
Richard M. Nixon once said a Republican
candidate has to move far enough right to get
nominated, then far enough to the center to
get elected .
But Bush's towering lead- in the polls,
in campaign money, and in par~y allies opens the option of playing to the center
sooner.
None of which alters Bush's self description: compassionate conservative. What he's
doing is defining the terms his way. "Conservatism has become the creed of ho'pe," he
said. "The creed of aggressive, persistent
reform . The creed of -social progress."
Predictably, rival candidates seeking conservative support in the primaries said Bush
doesn't deserve it.
"Some of us seem to be embracing the
idea that the way to win is to pe everything
to everybody," said Gary Bauer.

MICit

..·

..

"

Ray Stanley Bostic

''

,.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

P11g1A2

Meigs EMS .Iogs 2 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded two
calls for assistance Thursday. Units
responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:42 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy, Myrtle
Stanley, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
RACINE
10:46 p.m ., Sellers Ridge Road,
Donald Raines, treated at the scene.

Lillian (Krautter) Walker, 78, of Springfield, formerly of Meigs County,
died in Mercy Hospital in Springfield on Sept. 20, 1999.
Born on Aprill2, 1921, she was1he daughter of the late Frank and Freda
Smith Krautter. She was a member of the Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post
128, American Legion, Middleport.
She is survived by her husband of 55 years, James Leo Walker; three
daughters and sons-in-law, Bonnie Dailey of Pomeroy; Carol and James
Allen, and Judith and Robert Lanter all of Springfield; a son and daughterin-law, Terry and Georgia Walker, also of Springfield; two special grandchildren, Carla Kimmel of Springfield, and Angel Reeves of Pomeroy, and
two other grandchildren, Teresa and Holley .of Springfield; 11 great-grandchildren including a special great-granddaughter, Amanda Kimmel, and
Rachel, Jodi, Randi, Jill and Randall Reeves of Pomeroy; several nieces and
nephews, and an aunt, Olive Smith of Reedsville. ·
Besides her parents, Mrs. Walker was preceded in death by three sisters,
Marie Thomas and Evelyn White of Pomeroy and Freda Laws&lt;ln of Columbus; and two brothers, Harry "Bros" and Frank "Jack" Kraulter, and a sonin-law, James "Junior" Dailey of Pomeroy.
Entombment was in Rose Hill Mausoleum in Springfield, Sept. 22, 1999.
The Littleton and Rue Funeral Home in Springfield handled the funeral
arrangements.

Ohioans at center of
bjg health care debate
By KATHERINE RIZZO
It was clear from the start that
Anocla1ed Press Writer
Boehner's version didn't have enough
WASHINGTON (AP) - The gen- support to pass. But the lawmaker
tleman from Ohio spoke, and then a from West Chester, Ohio, said he was
different gentleman from Ohio spoke pleased to have won two Democratic
DUCKS AVAILABLE -It's not .to late 10 adopt a duck for tha
in what turned out lobe the Ohio hour defections.
Pomeroy
Merchants Anoclatlon's Rubber Ducky Derby, to be
in the House of Representatives.
Reps. Ken Lucas of Kentucky and
held
tommorow
aftamoon during the Big Bend Sternwheel F"·
Afterwards, the House approved Virgil Goode of Vi1J!inia broke from a
tlval.
Julie
Howard,
derby chairman, and George Wright, who
on Thursday a bill that granted new solid Democratic line to vote for the
was
laat
year's
top
ducky
salesman, are pictured with some of
rights to patients, including a broad proposal.
1he
ducks
which
will
be
set
off In 1he river for an exciting riCf.
ability to sue their health insurance
"We put together a plan that
Those
who
adopt
tha
fastest
ducks will be awarded a large numcompanies for denying care. The vote ensures better quality for managed
ber
of
prizes
donated
by
merchants.
set the stage for negotiations with the care patients without reducing access,
Senate on a compromise.
eKposing employers to lawsuits .or
Ohio's delegation voted 9-8 punishing the uninsured," Boehner Man accused of plot to kill co-worker so
against the bill, with most Republi- said after his proposal failed. "In the his girlfriend could assume her identity
caos opposfng it and Democrats in end, 145 members took a stand in
LEBANON, Pa. (AP)- Authori- er, Massillon police Detective Bobby
favor. Republican Rob Portman and support of that cause."
ties are accusing a 25-year-old Grizzard said. He said the two met pn
Democrat Marcy Kaptur did not vote.
Boehner's proposal had been con- ubanon man of plotting to kill a co- the Internet in thespringof1998, with
Leading up the vote, the House sidered the mildest of the options worker so his 14-year-old girlfriend the girl using a computer in the Masconsidered and rejected a more limit- before Congress, and it was the one could take over her identity.
sillon public library and Roth chatting
ed alternative written by Rep. John with the greatest support of business
According to court records, from a computer in L.ebanon.
Boehner, R-Ohio.
and insurance lobbies.
uonard Roth met the girl from MasRoth traveled to Massillon in OctoRep. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio,
Brown argued that the plan would sillon, Ohio, in an Internet chat room ber 1998 to meet the girl and returned
organized the speeches against not have held insurance companies last year. The relationship was in December when he brought her to a
Boehner's proposal, which ultimately accountable when they make deci- detailed in a federal search warrant hotel to have sex, Grizzard said.
was defeated, 284-145.
sions that harm people.
issued to search Roth's mother's According to the federal warrant, he
The way the House works, lawA competing proposal was better home. The warrant was issued last made six more trips to Ohio to have
makers don't call each other by name. because it restores the doctor-patient month, but details of the case surfaced sex with her.
So every time Boehner or Brown relationship, he said.
Thursday.
spoke, they were recognized as "the
"People have been telling their
Roth has been charged in Massilgentleman from Ohio."
members of Congress for years that lon with corruption of a minor and .
Boehner's version of managed they want these basic HMO reforms," contributing to the delinquency of a
care reform would have created a Brown said. "The message is that minor, The Patriot-News of Harrispanel of doctors to hear appeals from doctors, not insurance company burg reported today. He is being held
people who believed their insurance bureaucrats, make medical deci- in jail there in lieu of $50,000 bail.
plans improperly refused to pay for sions."
The girl has not been charged.
needed care.
Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland of
The girl would sign her messages
He argued unsuccessfully that Portsmouth, Ohio, also opposed "satanz mistress 666," according to
those committees would be a better Boehner's bill. "We can either sup- the federal search warrant. Roth's
way to oversee HMOs than making port patients or we can support insur- screen name was "Lucifer."
them susceptible to lawsuits, as other ance com~anies; it's as simple as
The girl had been saving up money
bills would do.
that," he said.
for the pair's plan to run away togeth-

.

Stocks

;&gt; JUliA ROIEIIS UKltARD GIRl

Am Ela Power .......................34'h
Akzo ......................................43},
Amarltach ............................67"1•
Aahland on .........................32"1•
AT&amp;T .....................................4711
Bank One .:............................35},
Bob Evans ............................ 19'.1
Borg-Wamer ...........................42
Cnarm Shps ............................5'.1
City Holding ......................... 20~.
Federal Mogul ......................... 29
Flrstar .................................. 25-,.
Gannett ................................. 71 "·
Kmart ................................. ,.. 10~.
Kroger ..................................... 23
Lande End ............................ 69,.
Llmltad ................................. 43'·
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 17
OVB .......................................33'h
One Valley ........................... 34"1.
Peoplea ..................................
Prem Flnl ............................... 11 '!.
Rockwell ........................... s4Y.
AD/Shell ............................... 57}•
Sear~ .................................... 31~.
Shoney's ............................... 1'}.
Wendy's ................................ 25'.1
Worthington ....,.................... 16'1•

2n

-·-·-

Stock reports are tllf 10:30
a.m. quotes provided
by Advaat of Gallipolis.

RUNAWAY BRIDE,.

.. '
j'J,
'

Aii'W•:n NtOHT ALL SEATS
STARTS AT 7:30

1:.
FRI1018; SUN 10/10/89
lOX Ollla WIU OPIN AT
6:30 PM fOIIVINtNG SHOWS
2:30 PM FOI SAT &amp; SUN MATINIIS

I

- Blood Drive Pleasant Valley Wei/ness Center
Thursday, Odober 28, 1999
Noon to 6 p.m.

I

+ FREET-ShirtsToAII Donors

+ Door Prizes

Sponsored By:
Pleasant Valley HospHal .
Auxiliary
&amp;

American Red Cross
ALL AGES, ALL TIMII 14.0d

�--

- ..

.....

''·

.....

'•

,·

i

,Sports:
.

'

~

. t,

~ · ~Fr~ld•••Y~·-Oc_t_o_be~r8~,_1_99_s____________________________________· ~P:om::er~o~y-·~M:ld:d:l~ep~o:rt:,~O:h:lo~---------------------T~h;e~D:a:12Jy~S:e~n:tln~~:I~·~P=•ge!:~5

;Michigan, MSU to battle Saturday;'Army, Syracuse get wins

• '

-:Indians lead 2-0 in AL playoff series

~:: Cleveland gets.11-1
~· ~win over Red Sox

\

' •By TOM WITHERS
CLEVELAND (AP) The
; .Cleveland Indians don 't need any
, help sconng ruhs, thank you very
: ' much. They scored I ,009 during the
: regular sellSon·, the highest total in 49
.,

But if a team wants to givc the
'· Indians more than 27 outs and put
them on base without making them
. ·swing their bats, that team could find
:·itself in big trouble.
'
And that's where the Boston Red
' Sox are .
. " If the pitcher is not having a
." good day and makes mi stake s,
:chances are he's going to pay for it ,"
, Indians third baseman Travis Fryman
said.
,
The Red So x paid dearl y for their
. , generosity as Cleveland 's offense
unleashed a twu· inning allack that
sent the Indians to an 11 · 1 rout and a
2·0 lead over Boston in the AL play·
, offs.

~ -.Cleveland moved within a win of
{:sweeping Boston and advancing to

;. _the ALCS for the third straight year.
·•
The Indians, the first team since
· : 1950 to score more than ·1.000 run s
&gt; during the regular season. looked the
: part in Game 2.
Baines' homer capped a six·run
third inning against an uncharacteri s·
•• tically wild Bret Saberhagen. and
. , Thome 's second career postseason
:. · slam iced a fi ve.run fourth off John
·: Wasdin as Cleveland 's high·octane
:••offense
shifted into demolition
.
.: : .mode.

··we need a £!ood st art from

Ramon ." Williams s aid . "We ha ve to
wi n Saturday. We know that.
We're not done yei. It's not over
.
yet. ..
Pedro Martinez. who removed
him self after four innings in Game I.
said the muscle strain in .his back
improved, but there IS persistent
pain. He plans to throw again
Saturday.

.

Scoreboard
O'Donnell . Ten ... ......... .. .. 11 2

Baseball

Thursday's sron
New York -' · Texas I: New York leads series 2-0
Saturday
New Y&lt;lrk (Clemens 14-10) at Texa5 (Loaiza 9. 5). 7:40p.m. (NBC)

.
•.••

Sunday, Oct. 10
New Y&lt;lrk at Teu s, 4:09 p.m. (ESPN) or 7:50
p.m. (FOX), if necessary

•~~

·

1\tonday, Oct. II
Ttll.as at New York, S:l7 p.m. (FOX ). ifneces-

~

:-

"'Y

~
~

Thursday's score

.,
.,

Cleveland II, Bos10n I; Cle \•eland leads series

2·0

'

Future games

'

Saturdaty

Cleveland (Burba 15-8 ) at Bos10n (R.Maninez
2- 11. 4:17 p.m. (FOX)

'·-

Sunday, Oct. 10
Oeveland a1 Bouon, I :09 p.m. (ESPN) or 7:50

'••
~

II

il" necessary
Monday, On. 11
Boston 111 Cle,·eland. 4:09p.m. (ESPNJ or 8: 17
p.m. (FOX). if necesmry

P:m. (FOX),

••

NLplayotTs
..

'

Today
t\tlanm IGJa,·in.: I-I-II ) at Houston (Hampton
22--h -1 :09 pm. (ESPNJ
Saturday
Atlanta (Snmhz 11 -Rl :u HCluston (Rey nold s 16l - h 1:09 p.m. tESPNl
Sunda\·, Q,l, 10
Houston at t\tla(Ua .. -1 :09 p.m. fES PNJ or 7 : ~0
p.m. IFOXJ. if necessary

,.~
•:~.
,,

Arizona vs. New York

~

Toni~hl

~1

Ari zona (Daal 16-Y J :11 New York /Reed 11-5 1.
8:10p.m. INBCJ

"'
""
~

Saturda~

Arizona (Andmon 8-21 m New York (Leiter 1 .~ l l. 1:09 p.m.. fESPN 21
Sunday. Od. 10
New York. at Ari zona . 1::110 p.m.. 1f necessary
&lt;fOX)

.,
lk.

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All..rJh. A!J. LG II!
4.9 .15 I
4.0 44t )
l9 19 2

Wa«m. Sea..................... 89 289

J.2 18 0
J .7 40 2

R~cdvers

~

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Glenn. N.E. .
. ......n 5:W
Harrison, Ind..
.. .. 28 422
J. Smilh. lac ..................... 28 401
Brown. Oak ....... .. .. ....... 11'1 .~ 14

A!J.I&amp;II!
17 .0 54t I
15.1 46 6
14.3 57 l
12. 1 22 2

Scoll , CtN ................... ... 26 .107 11 .8 J9 0

Football

•.••

Quarterh..clu
f1anr
AU Qtm
Warner. St.l
......90 62
H. Johmon. Was ... ........ 12:2 17
Cunningham, Min___ . __ _138 R9
Bcuerlcin, Car........ ......... 128 12
Batch. ~ .................. 76 41
Rushen

flw1

Da ~· i ~. Was..

:: NFL leaders
'•••
....,
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
IDJ.oL
.,. flw1
• Sleds()('.

All..rJh.

.. ............. 92 400

Diakabuluka. Ca r............. J4
E. Smith . Dal ............... 7-1
Levens. G.B... .......... .. .. :.. 65
Garner. SF.
5n·

Yds.mJnt.
894 9
1191 9
1088 7
961 6
648 7

2
0
5
3

5

A!~. I&amp; II!
4.3 24 9

366 10.8 671 5
295 4.0 n 4
280 4J 32 I
277 4.9 53 I

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18.1 601 1
13 9 -~ 8 0

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-1-11 21.0 w "

NFL's Week 5 slate
Sunday's games
Al l am :~ :11

New Orleans. I p 111.
Chicago al Mmnesota. I p.m.
CINC INN,\TI ;n CLEVELAN D. I p.m
Oitllas at Pltiladdphia. I p.m.
New England ;n Kan sas Cily. I p.m.
Ptnsburgh al Bulfalo. 1 p m
San Dit"go at De troit. I p 111 .
San Fra n c 1 ~co at St. Louis. I p.m
New York Gi oml~ al Ariwnil. -I:O.'i p.m
Balli more m Tennessee . 4:15 p.m
Dcn,·er at Oakland, 4:15 p.m.
lt-·1bmi at lndi;mnpol1s. -1:1 5 p.m
Tampa Bay at Green Bay. 8:20p.m
OPEN: Carolina. Seaul e. Washingroo

Monday's game
Jacksonvi lle at New York Jers, 9 p.m.

Transactions

Quar1erbacks

'i

.

N.E
KitM. Sea

::

AtlCom Yds,
.......... 145 96 1261

R9

51

680

6

I

4

I

agalnstthevisltlng Boston Red Sox, who lost11·1.(AP)
.
He co uld he ready should there be but 3-0 against Boston .
a Game 5.
" I have no idea why I have sue·
But the way the Indians are play· cess against .that team ; and I'm not
in g. there may not 9c a Game 4.
going to even try to analyze it or
Cleveland coasted after clinching thmk about it ." he said .
its fifth strai ght AL Central this sea·
Thome fee ls the saine way ahout
son, sell ing its sight s on the poslsea· hi s postseason home run production.
son. And in the first two games, the
The AII· Star first base111an , who
Indian s have put it all together.
hit &lt;i grand slam last year in the AL
Nagy followed Bartolo Colon 's championship series, has 14 career
strong Game I pc.rformance with one postseason homers and four in hi s
of his own , allowing one run and fi ve last four play off game s. His two,. run
hi ts in beating the Red Sox for the homer in Game I made it 2· 2 in the
second straight time in the playoffs. sixth, and the Indians rallied to win
Nagy is now 3-4 in the postseason. in the bottom of the mnth .
Of Thome's 36 postseason hits.
14 have left the fi eld .
" It 's harJ to explain," he said.
" I' ve had some good pit ches to hit,
and they went out. "
Garret Andtrso~ and OF Jim Edmond5.
· Saberhagen , on the disabled li st
BALTIMORE ORIOI,.ES: Fired Ray Miller.
three times this year, walked II in
mru1agcr and Frank Wren, general manager.
National League
119 innings this season. But he
CINCINNATI REDS: Promo1ed Jeff Barton to
walked three in the third inning,
major league seoul and national cross checkei.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: Re leaseit RHP when the Indians set a division series
Steve Conno lly. RHP Robbie Crablret and RHP
record by scoring 'six times.
Sle,·e Sodersuom.
·
"I guess he's.' human." Williams
Basketball
said. " He's not perfect."
National tlaskelball Association
CLEVELAND CAVALIER S: Named Don
Donoher seoul
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS : Signed G Rodrick
Rhodes .
TORONTO RAPTORS: Signed Glen Grunwald.

(See INDIANS on Page 5)

p ett 1•tte heIps New
·
Vork' beat liexas· 3-1·.
.

. . .

Jl

By BEN WALKER

owner George Steinbrenner not 'to

NEW YORK (AP) - The Texas
Rangers needed just one key hit to
put themsel ves in pos ition to tic their
AL playoff series.
But they were not going to get ·it
on thi s niglu. either. Not against the
New York Yankee s. Not against
Andv Pellille.
Pettine, pitching every bit up to
manager,. Joe Torre's expeclalions,
stopped Texas at every tight spot
Thursday night in a 3- 1 victory that
gave the Yankees a 2·0 edge .
"I've seen Andy do it before.
When you need to count on him, lle
doesn't di sappoint," Torre said. " He
makes big plays .' he makes big pitch·

send the shaky Pellille to
Philadelphia at the July 31 tradin g
deadline . Pcllille was sharp down the
stretch and rewarded hi s manager's
confidence' with another top effort in
October.
" It seems like every year I struggle and they tall&lt; about trading me ,
and then somchndy stands up for me.
like Joe ," Pettine said. "I had a
tough year, a lot of pcop!e doubting
me. "
~ ' ·
Against Texas. he looked every
bit as focused as the pitcher who won
the clinching Game 4 of last year's
World Series and the crucial Game 5
of the 1996 Series against Atlanta.
After .the game. Steinbrenner personally complimented Pettitte for a
"courageous performance."
Juan Gonzalez homered in the
fourth , ending the Rangers' postsea.son scoreless streak at 25 innings.
But that was all they managed in ·7'i,

es . ''

The Yankees won their ninth
straight postseason game and sent
Texas to its eighth playoff loss in a
row. New York can complete a threegame sweep Saturday night at Texas
when Roger Clemens starts against
Esteban Loaiza.
It was Torre who helped convince

(See YANKEES on Page 5)

general manag~r. 10 a,fotlr-yt nr contract exttmion.
through the 200J -04 se:~so n.

National Football Leaaue
NFL: Fined Atlanta Falcons CB Ray Bud mnan
$7,500 for losin g his temper and slamming
Baltimore receiver Palrick Johnson to the turf in an
Ocl. J game.
NFL ENTC:kPRISES: Named Douglas Quinn
~c ni or vkc pn:sidem and managing director of NFL

lntemali onal .
CINCINNATI BENGALS: Activa1ed S Tremain
M:~c k _ Waived OL Tony Coats.
WASHINGTON REDSKJNS: Added Bill
Arnsprugcr to the dcfcmi ve coaching staff. Named
Stephen Baldacci president of Washington Rtdsluns
Entertainment. Inc.

Hockey

~A!J,LGII!

Muhammad. Car.. ,
. 24
Toomer. NYG...
24
Conway. Chi ...
.. .. ... 24
Carlc:r. Min...
....... .. ~2
W( stbmnk. Was
21

Yankees lead AL playoff series 2":'0

HITS GRAND SLAM- The Cleveland Indians' Jim Thome rounds
first base and heads lor home shortly after hitting a grand slam in
the fourth inning of Game 2 of their American League playoff series

Football

Rtctivtrs

llu«

Atlanta vs. Houston

~

911

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Cleveland vs. Bqston

••

5 2
5 2
7 5

869
990

Rhett , Bal ...................... 71 350
J. Stewarl. J;tc. .................... 71 310
Martin, NYJ .............. , .79 305
James. Ind ........... .- ...... 75 276

Future games

.,

68
82
68

Ru!hers

flw1

New York vs. Texas

•.,•.'.•

()

Gannon. Oak.. ..... . ...... .. 13.1
Manning. Ind. ................... 117

AL playoffs

~

•

said .

· :·run shot and Charles Nagy pit ched

~

Baseball
Ameriun League
ANAHElM ANGELS : EJtcrcised options on OF

National Huckey ltatue
NASH VILLE PREDATORS : Re-ass igned G
Mike Dunham and D Jan Vopat l[) Milwaukee of tho:
IH L.
NEW JERS EY DEVILS : Acqu ired C Steve
Kelly from the Tampa Bay for a Se \·enth- rour~d pick
in tlw 2000 en try draft . Assigned Kelly to Albany of
the AHL. Ass1 gned F Oryar1 Duce. F Wcs Mason. F
Chri5 l110mp$On and G km· franl·ois Dan1phousse
ti"om Albany to Aug usta of the ECH L. Annount'td U
Vlasti mil Krot•pa has left Albany.
WASHINGTO N CA PITALS: Sig. r~t.-d D J(&gt;e
Reekic to a thrl!e-ycar conu:.a~· • . American Hock~y league
SYMACUSE CRUNCH: Acquired D Ze nith
Komj_rniski on k&gt;:tn from the Vancouver Canl1eks

Soccer

ftER 1400 ,CARS, TRUCII ANS VANS CHOOSE FROM!

All New 2000
Buick LeSabre Custoni

Br.at~d

New 2000 Pontiac
Flreblrd With T·Tops

College
ALB RIGHT: Named Dan Handerh an m c r~ 's br~.s­
ketball int ern iiS5i51arn
BETHEL. TENN .: Named Cal Lulher. interim
nltn·s basketball coach and athletic direc tor.
CAZENOVIA : Named Fran S:ualil\ Jr. men 's
basketball conch.
·
FLORID A STATE: Su spended WR Pt rer

Warrick and WR Laveranues Coles from the football

team for rh~ Oct 9 game against Miami for being
charged with grand theft.
GREEN SBORO COLLEGE ; Pmmoted Jean
Lojko 10 assistant director of alhlelics and senirn
wo men 's admini strat or.

•.

'
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"I was locked in."
The left-hander gave up one run
and seven hits, walking none and
striking out five. Last year, he also
beat Helling 3-1 in Game 2.
Pellitte received a standing ovation from the crowd of 57.485 - a
stark contrast to the rude treatment
the fans gave him earlier this yearwhen he left in the eighth, and he
responded with an enthusiastic wave
of the cap.
"He understands the magnitude
of these games," catcher Joe Girardi
said.
·
Reliever Jeff Nelson struck out
Ivan Rodriguez and Gonzalez, and
Mariano Rivera pitclied'the ninth for
a save.
Brosius, MVP of the 1998 World
Series, had a tying double in the fifth
for his first hit of this postseason,
New York took a 2-1 lead in the
seventh after Tino Martinez walked
and took third on Chili Davis' single.
Ledee, a World Series hero last year
but sent to the minors early this season, hit a fly-ball double to right-center that fell between Kelly and
Gonzalez.
Leyritz drew his bases-loaded
walk in the eighth from Mike
Venafro.
After being blanked 8-0 in Game
I, the Rangers gave Gonzalez exuberant high-fives after his homer.
Gonzalez hit five home runs in the
1996 playoffs against the Yankees,
including two off Pettine.
Notes: Yankees bench coach Don
Zimmer, cut in the ear and left jaw by
Chuck Knoblauch's foul ball in
Game I, wore a gag gift in the first
inning when Knoblauch batted -:- a
military helmet with a Yankees logo.
Zimmer had a bandage over his
wounds .... Clemens is 1-2 with a
3.88 ERA in nine career starts in the
postseason. Loaiza will be making
his first playoff appearance. .. .
Pettine is S-4 in the postseason ... .
Fonner Yankee~ star Don Mattingly
threw out the ceremonial first pitch.

Florida State receiver Peter
Warrick, a top contender for the
Heisman Trophy, won't play when
the Seminoles try to extend their 44game home unbeat&lt;n streak.
The Seminples (5·0) have not lost
at home since Miami's 17: 16 victory
m 1991. That was the th1rd lime tn
five years that the Hurri canes ruined
Florida State's bid for a national
champion ship.
"Miami has beaten us when
everything was riding on it,"
Bowden said. "They won the national championship when we could
have won it."
Florida State has dominated the
series in recent years, winning four
straight over the Hurricanes. But
Bowden thinks Miami coach Butch
Davis has returned the Hurricanes to
their old form .
"They're back, " Bowden said .
"To me, Miami is a 4-0 club. They
are so close 10 being undefeated ."
Miami (2-2) opened the season
with victories over Ohio State and
Florida A&amp;M before losing to No. 2
Penn State and No. 16 East. Carolina,
both by scores of 27·23.
In other Top 25 games, it's No. 19

Miami at No . 1 Florida State; No. 2
Penn State at Iowa; Iowa State at No.
4 Nebraska; No. 5 Virginia Tech at
Rutgers; No. 10 Georgia at No. 6
Tennessee· North Carolina at No. 7
Georgia T~ch ; No. 8 Florida at LSU;
Kansas at No. 9 Kansas State ; Baylor
at No . 13 Texa s A&amp;M ; No . 14
Mississippi State at Auburn ;
Southern Mississippi at No. 16 East
Carolina; No. 17 Purdue at No. 21
Ohio State; No. 20 Wi sconsin at No.
25 Minnesota· No 22 Southern
California at Arizon~; Oklahoma at
No. 23 Texas; and California at No.
24 BYU .
On Thursday night , No . 18
Syracuse beat Pittsburgh 24· 17 , and
Army defeated' Louisville 59-52 in
double overtime .
No. 18 Syracuse 24, Pittsburgh 17
Troy Nunes threw three touchdown passes in the first half,.includ·
ing a desperation heave on a botched
field-goal attempt , as Syracuse (5-I ,
2·0 Big East) won at Pittsburgh (3-2.
1-1).
'Nunes didn 't start, but came in
and threw his scoring passes in less
than a quarter to give Syracuse a 21 ·
0 halftime lead. The Orangemen

increased their lead to 24-0 on Nate
Trout's 28·yard field goal before
Pittsburgh (3·2, 1-1) rallied behind
backup quarterback David Priestley
for two touchdowns and a field goal
in the ftnal 15 112 minutes.
Syracuse beat Pitt for the ninth
straight time under coach Paul
Pasqualoni .
Army 59, Louisville S2-20T
ljuarlcilJJck Joe Gerena st ored
on a seven-yard ' 'tun in the second
overtime and Michael Wallace
rushed fo~ a school-record 269 yards
and four touchdowns as Anny beat
Louisville in the first OT game for
either'school.
Louisvill e (J .J, 0· 1 Conference
USA) overcame a 45-17 halftime
deficit at West Point, but came up
short against Army (2-3, 1-2) in the
second extra period.
After Gerena scored in the second
OT, Louisville started from the Army
25 and gained a first down at the 12.
But the drive stalled and , on a fourthand-se ven from the eight, Chris
Redman 's pass was dropped by
Lavell Boyd near the back of the end
zone.

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The Ohia Division All-TVC golf
team has been announced with conference champion Well ston leading
the selections.
Jon McDonald was selected the
Most Valuable golfer with an average 36.44. He was joined on the first
team by teammate Jamie McWhorter
(37.30). Other on the first team were
Matt Preston of Belpre (37.60), Chris
Johnson of Alexander (39.00), Shane
Dunn of Wellston (39.90) and Pat
Klein of Belpre (40.00).
The second team consisted of
Sean McManus of Vinton County
(40.10), Jason Warren of Alexander
(40.56), Nick Dettwiller of Meigs
(40.70), Tommy Roush of Meigs
(40.70), Zach Meadows of Meigs
ALL·TVC REPRESENTATIVES - The Meigs
.(41.20) and Carson Midkiff of Meigs Marauders placed four players on the second team to right are Tommy Roush (also a Division II district qualifier), Zach Meadows, Nick Dettwiller and
(41.60).
of the Ohio Division's AII-TVC golf team. From left Carson Midkiff.

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'} Here are the results of the races
~eld on Oct. 2 at Kanawha Valley
pragway near Southside, W.Va.
t• Racers are listed in order of finifsh, and by hometown aqd vehicle, ·
~hen reported.
.
·
[1.r Junior
Dngster Division:
11lrandey Burd. Crown City; Mike
itlhandler, St. Albans, W.Va.
Motllfted Division: Travis
Patton, CharlestotP. W.Va., 1973

Duster; Darrell Wheeler, Reedsvtlle,
1987 Shadow
Pro Division: John Cornwell ,
Flatwoods. Ky., 1995 Sp1tzer; Greg
C~andler, St. Albans, W.Va., dragster ·
Pure Street Division: Josh
Stafford, Bridgeport, W.Va., 1989
Mustang; Travis Patton, Charleston,
W.Va., 1973 Duster

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALE

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BI~BEE

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1999 FORD F350 414
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1999 FORD F250
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Phone
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; Saberhagen, a World.Series MVP · throw pulled Mike Stanley off the
;l:n 1985, is 0-3 in three first-round bag at first to put the Indians in busi:!narts.
·
.
ness. Kenny Lofton worked
~: · "I just didn't make some pitches Saberhagen for a walk, and Vizquel
~hen J had to," Saberhagen said. followed with a triple .
~ ·walking three guys in an inning,
"I was thinking, 'We've got a
'that's not me. Maybe I didn 't mix my cripple on first, a cripple at bat.' That
~itches as much as I should have."
was a sure double play," Fryman
:r Vizquel hit a two-run triple and said. "But Sandy hustled, and that
:Roberto Alomar had an RBI double turned out to· .be a big play in the
·before Baines hit his fifth career inning."
tostseason homer.
· Notes: Boston set a division
:• · But Saberhagen, who didn't walk record with nine walks .... Only
~batter in 13 starts and im more than Reggie Jackson (i'8), Mickey Mantle
}lne in20of22, wasn't completely to (18) and Ruth (IS) have more po$t·
:J!tame. After Travis Fryman walked season homers than Thome . ... The
Jo open the inning, Santly Alomar hit Indians have won six straight Game
• slow grounder to shortstop that 2s.... The II runs equaled a division
:fooked like a sure double play - series record and tied the most in
~th Frymal! and Alomar wear knee Cle:veland postseason history. .. .
~races. .
.
Nomar Garciaparra, an Indians killer
.. However, Fryman slid hard into all year, went 0-for-3.
~econd, and Jose Offennan's relay

~VD submits results of latest races

"'··'~

,,

Meigs puts
four on All-TVC
golf team

Indians ... ·(Continued from Page 4)

~.

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innings against Pettitte.
"I really put a lot of weight on the
games that count the most," Torre
said. "He has not backed off."
And this is the task Texas faces:
In 56 best-of-five pos1season series,
only four times has a team oven:ome
an 0-2 deficit.
"We know in our heart we can
play with these guys," Rangers manager Johnny Oates said. "But until
we start doing it, there's always
going to be doubts."
Oat~s switched his lineup, moving Royce Clayton into the leadoff
wet for only the third time this year,
but it didn't help. The Rangers have
just two runs jn their last 51 postsea$On innings, all against the Yankees.
Ricky Ledee's tiebreaking double
'in the seventh off loser Rick Helling
and a bases-loaded walk to pinch-hit·
ter Jim Leyritz in the eighth put the
Yankees one win away from their
'Second consecutive 3-0 sweep of
.Texas in the opening round of the
,playoffs.
:· "They got ·lhe big hit when they
:needed it. and Andy made the big
·pitch when he needed to," Helling
:said. "If we win, we have them right
;where we want them, going home
•tied 1·1 and the home-field advan:tage. Now we have to win three in a

Michigan and Michigan State
have met every year smce 1910
except 1943 and 1944, when the
game was suspended because of
WOCid War II. The Wolvennes have a
16·9·2 record at East Lansing and
have beaten the Spartans the past
three years.
"We have to beat Michigan this
year," Michigan Stale receiver Gari
Scott said. ···we haven't done it since
I got here, so we need this. one bad.
We can't let them come into our
house and beat us again .'.'
This is just the 12th time the
intrastate rivals have met when both
were ranked in theAPpoll. The higher ranked team has won nine of the
II games, going 9-1· 1. The only
upset came in 1950 wheli Michigan
Staie won 14-7 in the first game of
the season.
M1ch1gan nose tackle Rob Renes
hopes there is no upset this time.
"l plan on living here the rest of
my hfe, " Renes said. "That's not
somethtng I want to tell my children
or grandchildren."
At Tallahassee, Fla:, the MiamiFlonda State game will be m1 ssmg
one of its featured attractions.

•'

..:. NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC- REGARDING TITLE OFFICE
...,,
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(Continued from Page 4)

(row.''

National Professional Soccer League
..
HARRIS BURG HEAT: Traded D Dewan Bader
to De 1roit for future considr:ralions .

The Meigs County Title Office Staff will be attending computer
training classes as required by the State of Ohio during the following
dates:
Sept 7th thru the 1Oth
Sept. 13th thru the 17th
Sept 20t t ru the 24th
Oct 4 thru the 8th
Oct lltQ thru he 15th
The office WILL BE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, but we will be
running short staffed, especially the first two weeks of October.
We are asking for everyone's cooperation Jlnd patience during t.hese
times. We will try our best to avoid long lines and to issue titles in a
timely fashion. Thank you for your anticipaed cooperation and
patience .•
Thank You:
Larry E. Spencer

:·.Yankees •••

' · Texas had its best chance in the
:fifth inning. Texas already led 1-0
;when Roberto Kelly led off with a
•single and took third on Lee Stevens'
:double.
.
f Pettine fell behind in the count 3!0 on Mark McLemore, then came
lback to strike him out. Clayton, after
ltaking a minute because he had trou;ble shaking the weighted doughnut
:off his bat, groun~ed out to third
•baseman Scott Brostus.
' Rusty dreer ran the count full
·before striking out on a breakirlg ball·
tin the dirt, prompting Pettille to
tpump his fist and shout.
:• ''I'm usually nO! very emotional,
·!but it was a big game," Pettitte said.

.;

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) ::_ Heisman
Trophy hopeful Peter Warrick was indefinitely suspended following his arrest
Thursday . on charges he and a Florida
State teammate were allowed to underpay
for clmhes at a department store by about
$391.
, Warrick and Laveranues Coles, both
• Seminoles receivers, were charged with
grand theft along with a Dillard's clerk.
19-year-old Rach'@l Myrtil. She was accused of letting the two players
buy $412.38 worth of clothing for $21.40 on Sept. 29.
An off-duty officer saw what happened through a surveillance camera,
police said.
Florida Stale coach Bobby Bowden sa'id in a written statement that he
was "terribly disappointed," and noted Warrick is on schedule to graduate.
"He came back for his senior season instead of going pro and he has
been such a hard worker and good leader," Bowden said. "It makes this
all the more disappointing."
Florida State athletics director Dave Hart said Coles was kicked off
the team because he already was on probation because of past problems, ·
legal and academic.
Warrick will be allowed to pra~tice with the team but cannot play at
least until his case is resolved under school policy. He will miss topranked Florida State's game against Miami on Saturday and possibly the
rest of the season.

CELEBRATION TIME comes lor the New. York Yankees' Tino
Martinez (left) and Derek J'e ter alter Martinez scored on Ricky
Ledee's seventh-inning double in Game 2 of the Ameri~an League
playoff series against Texas Thursday night in New York, where the
Yankees won 3-1. (AP)

" Maybe I' II get a It old of George
Herman (Babe Ruth )... Williams

" : seve" solid innin gs Thursday as

,..

By BILL KACZOR

seance.

The Red Sox. who. lost Pedro
Martinez to a back injury in Game I
and maybe for the series, will turn to
another Martinez. Pedro's brother.
Ramon. Lo save their season in Game
3 Saturday at Fe nway Park. Dave
Burba. a postseason hero for the
Ind ians pitchin g out of the bullpen
last year. starts for Cleveland.

a~ut. split between Michigan and
Mtch1gan State fans, so I get an ear-·
ful ~th .ways when I'm home."
.Mtch1~an lea?s the series 60-265, mcludmg 6-3 m the 1990s.
"I've always believed that we can
have two top programs in this state,"
M~ch1gan State coach Ntck Saban
sa1d: "They do it in Florida with
Flonda and Flori~, State . I !lon't
thmk tt would h either program
for both of us to be powers. It would
JUSt mean one great game every season."

Police arrest FSU's Warric;k;
Seminoles'" suspend star WR

.,

Boston manager limy Williams
kidded that it mi ght be time for Cles·
perate measures. Maybe even a

Jim Thome hit an historic grand
:0 slam, Harold Baines added a three·

•.

·r..

·s eri es.

;:

:·:·

:f ly Tht Aaaocllted Pr11e
.. .
b Before e1t~er team ca~ tlit~k
~.a ~u~ a natton~l . champtonshtp,
r MtC.htgan a~d Mtc~tgan State must
: .decide ":'ho s No. I tn the state.
.~ .. That ISsue ~til be settled Saturday
·• ·tn East. Lansmg. when the No. 3
.• ~oJvennes meet the No. II Spartans
tn a B1g Ten sh.owdown. Both learns
. , are.~-0 overall and2~0 tn the league.
. Bac.k home, tht~!s alleverybody
ts talkmg about_. . satd . Shawn
Thompson, the Mtchtgan t1ght end
from Saginaw. "In my town, it's

And the Indians did all their dam·
age without much help from Manny
Ramirez. who drove in 165 runs this
season , but none· so far in this series.
" We ' re in a groove now," shqrtslop Ori'iar Vi7.quel said. "We got
everybody swin gin g the bats, and
we're feeding off one another. "
The Red Sox need help - quickly. Boston. whi ch beat the Cleveland
eight times during the regular season .
has now lost five straight in the play·
offs to tile Indians the past two years.
Moreover. Boston dropped to lIS since Bi ll Buckner' s infamous
error in Game 6 of the 1986 World

~ . years .

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.P .• 6 • The Dally
Sentinel
.

Friday, October 8, 199~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ByTh~Bend

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"'..,.

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Church of Christ

H()liness

C~urdl of Jesus Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and W1rd Rd.

· Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 W. Main St.
Mi n i s t e~: Danny B ia~
Su nduy s~· hoo l · 9:30a. m.
Wurship· IO:JU a.m ., 7 p.m
Wt:Ut!CSUay S..:rvkcs · 7 p.m.

Community Church
Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Worship--10:00 a.m.
Sunday Servict-7 p.m.

Pomeroy Wesulde Church of Christ
:\3::!26 Ch ildren's Home Rd .
Sunllay School - II a.m.
Worshi p · IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se rvices - 7 p.m.

J 1057 Stale Route 325, Langsvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school · 9:30 a. m.
Sunday worship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service . 7 p m.

Middleport Church of Christ
51h and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youlh Mimslcr. Bill Frazie r
Su11day Sl'hoo l - l) :)O a. m.
Worsh1p- 8: 15, 10:30 a. m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m

Colnry Pllarim Chapel

Pastor: James Miller
Sunday School - 10:30 a. m. ·

Evenina- 7:30p.m.

Cbul'&lt;h of Jesus Christ
Apostolic Faith

New Lim a Road
Pastor: Marty Hutton
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 7:30p. m.

Wednesday. 7:30p.m .

Assembly of God
Llbeny Assembly or God
1

1 .0. Box 467. Dudtilng Lull'
Mason, W.Va.
Pastor· Neil T ennant

Sundily Services- IU:OO a. m. and 7 p. m

Baptist
Maranatha Baptist Church
Burlingham - 742-7606

Pastor: John Swanson
Su nday Schoo l - 10:00 a. m

Morn ing Se rvice II :00 a. m.
Evening Service- 6:00p. m
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

570 Grant Sl. , M1tldlcpon

Worsh1 p - II a.m. :md 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m

Frtt Will Baptist Chun:h
Ash Strcc1, Middleport
Pastor: Lcs Ha yman
Sunday Service . 7:00p.m.
Sunday School • I0 a m.
Wednesday Serviee-7:00 p.m.

Tuppt:rs Pl1ln Church of Christ
Instrumental
Pastor: Terry Slewart
Worship Service · 9 a. m.
Communion· 10 a.m .
Sunday School · 10:15 a. m.
Youth -5: 30pm Sunday ·
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Rutland First Baptist Chun:h
Sund11y School · 9:30a. m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.

Pomeroy First Baptist

First Southern Boplist

Rutl11nd Chun::h of Christ
Sunday School · 9: 30 a. m.
Worsh ip · 10:]0 :..m., 7 p.m.

41 872 Pomc•oy Pike
Pas10r: E. Lama r O' Br yam
11 Sunday School - 9:30 a. m.
Worship · 10:45 J. m . 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ces ·7:00p.m.

••

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f

Hndrord Church of Christ
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbur y Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9: 30a.m.
Worship · 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

flnt Baptist Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow
&amp;hand Palmer St., Midd leport
Sunday School · 9:1 5 a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a. m., 7:00'J).m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Hickory Hill&lt; ChYI'&lt;h of Christ
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 6: 30p.m.
Wednesday Services . 1 p.m.

Radae First Baptist
Pastor: Rick Ru le
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:40 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Hemlock Grove Church
Pastor: Ge ne Zopp
Sunday school - !0:30a.m.
Worship - 9:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Mt. Uaion Baplist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9: 45 11.m.
Evening· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptist Chun:h
Bend , Ruut c 124, Racin e, OH
Pastor : Ge ne Morris
Sumlay Sc hool · 9:30a. m.
Sunday Worship- 10:30 n.m. &amp; 7 p. m.
Wednesday Bible St udy - 6:00 p.m.
Grc&lt;~ t

Old lltthet.rm Will Baptist Churth
28601 St. Rt. 7. Middleport
Sunday Schoo l . 10 a.m.
Everling - 7:30 p.m.
Thursday Serv ices · 7: 30
r
I

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The a.urch of Jesus

Dexter Church or Christ
Pastor: Just in Campbell
Sunday school 9:30 a.m.
Norman Will , superintendent
Sunday worship· 10:30 a.m.

Christian Union

Worsh1p- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday·worship · 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Seryices . 1 p.m.

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Worship - 11 a. m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a. m.
Worship - 1 0: 4~ a.m.
Sunday Evening · 6:00p.m.

Rulland Froe Will Baptist

Che!ltr
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

Joppa

Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship· 9:30a.m. ·
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

Loag Bottoni
Sunday School · 9:30 a. m.
Worship - Jll:30 a.m.

ReedSYIIie

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Sat. Con. 4:45·5:15p.m.; Mass· l:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass· 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass · 8:30a.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL

Mill Work

Centnl Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastur: Chud Emrick
Sunda y School -9:45 a.m.
Worship · I I a.m.
Wednesday Services . 7: 30p.m.

'•

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Episcopal Church
326 E. Main S1., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. K.atharin Foster
Rev. Deborah Rankin, Clergy
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday School 11:00 a.m.
www.frognet .nel/ ...t:Jeanery

Pomeroy
992-3785

Syracuse

INSUIWI.L

740-992-5141
FiSher . Oii8Cior

Bruce R.

590 Eul Main Slreet • Pomeroy, OH 45789
740-992·5444

James R. Al:roe, Jr. . Director

r:::~

... .....

Rtetlnllle fellowship

Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School , 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m. , 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servjccs · 7 p.m.

Buy, Sell or Trade
in the

INSURANCE

IOCSI

FUNERAL HOME

"'Weorcept rPrenmlrrTonsfers"

Churches

,'
lI :,

•
I

PIace an ad in t!lis space

112·1200

Dignity and Service Always

Established

1913

992·2121

Lundy Brown Regan Brown
Director
174
Street 106 Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy

I"

have received aboul the silly things
DEAR TROY: Thanks for
husbands do.
another one of those storie s ihat is
One day, I opened our free zer funny in the relelling, but was noth·
door and found a robin lying on its ing to laugh at when il aclually hap·
back, feet straight up in ihc air stone pened. (I roared.)
cold dead, of course. When I
Whal can you gi ve the person
screamed , my husband came ru~ho has everytiljng' 1 Ann Lanaers'
ning into the kitchen .
IJooklet, "Gems," is ideal for a ni ghl·
He explained thai ihe robin had stand or coffee table . "Gems" is .a
somehow gotten into our chimney; collection of Ann Landers' m o~r
and when he opened the fireplace requested poems and essays. Send a
doors to free the bird, ihe robin flew self addressed, long , business size
out and crashed into a window, envelope and a check or money
dying on impact My husband didn'l order for $5.25 (thi s includes
want lo throw the bird out for fear postage and hanqling ) lo .. Gems. c/o
the cal would gel il , so he froze the Ann Landers, P.O. Box 1 156~.
poor thing .
Chicago, Ill . 60611 -0562. (In Cana·
Needless tu say, I tossed oul da, send $6.25.) Tu find out niorc
everything in the free zer and disin- aboul Ann Landers and read her pa$1
fccted ihe interior, bul I am still columns. vi sit ihe Creators Syndi·
more ihan a lillie queasy every time cate wen page a1 www.crcalors.cum .
I open ihal door. · TROY. MICH .
.

"'•
Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Try all three

'1.

•..

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the chicken expert Savor juicy perfection with
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legendary taste of our Original
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chicken simmered in tangy
Honey BBQ sauce. They're all
freshly made, topped with
their own signature sauce and
serves on special split-top
Pepperidge Farm buns.

Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
.._
Sunday School ·10 a.m .
·~
Eveni ng. 6 p.m.
~
Wednesday Services. 7:00p.m. ::

Presbyterian

.,

Synu;:use Firsl Unlled Pmbyterl•n

"

Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship. l1 a.m.

Han1son•lll• Pmbyttrian Churcb

.·..
'

Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.

.•

Middleport Pmbyltrian

..

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-Day Advenllsl ·
Mu lberry Hts. Rd .. PomerO)'
P,astor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Scrvtces:

Sabbath School · 2p.m.
Worship . 3 p.m.

'

. ••"'

....

United Brethren
MI. Hermon Unlltd Bnthnn
In Chriol Church

..

2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville

Rt. 7 on Pomeroy 8~-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

Sundtty School· 9:30a.m.
Wor&lt;hip. 10:30 a.m., 6p.m.

on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
;!
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
.PC
Sunday Wor&gt;hip . 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m. "'
Wednesday Scrvicu. 7:30p.m.
.~
Wednesday Youlh Service· 7:30p.m.

Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednosday Strvicc • 7p.m.

••
"...

...

Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert 81rbcr

3...
...."'••

Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Sun. Worship·IO:l0a.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev.lloyd D. Grimm)r.·
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wor.~hip · 10:30 a.m. and 6p.m.
Wednesday Servtceli · 7 p.m.

Carielon Jaterdcnomlnldonal Church
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Clyde Henderson

-·

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
. No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services

Fmdom Gotpel Mluloo

Chester Chun:h or the Nazarene

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pas10r: Rev: Roaer Willford
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship· 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday SchooL · 9:30a.m.
Worship· I I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servlcts · 7 p.m.
Rutland Church or tb Naareae

Pastor: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

·

White's Chaptl Wesleyan
Coolville Road .
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsltip • 10:30 11.m.
WcdneWay Service . 7 p.m.

Clean out your basement 'Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken"
or attic with the help of the 228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

CLASSIFIED SECTION/

992·5432

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

Buy, Sell or Tra~e
in the

.IOCBI ChUrCh?
Check the S~ntinel
·
every Friday/

.-172 North Second Ave.

I

Recognition of volunteers highlighled the 26th anniversary observance of the Retired Senior Volunteer Program held recently at the
Senior Citizens Center.·
.. "
Recognized were Dorothy Davis
and Louise Eschelman, 20 years of
service; Marabel Frecker, Nellie
Michael, Nadine Hudson, Rosy
Niday, and Joan Sorden, 15 years;
and Helen Bodimer, Mary Davidson, Peggy Harris, Rulh Moore,
Mary Nease, Betty Spencer, Leona
Cleland, Dorothy Davis, Bunny
Kuhl, William Middleswarth, Velma
Rue .and Opal Tyree.
Following a luncheon with Rev.
Middleswarth giving the invocation,
there was entertainmenl by !he Ceofer staff. A guardian angel tl)eme
was used for the observance with
angel decorations on each table .
Door prizes were awarded.
Introduced were RSVP Advisory
Council members, Ann Rupe, chairman ; Linda Kind, vice chainnan,

$2·"79

r-------------------~------~
1 FREE Regular I
ITe~der Roast®

1 ChiCken
..
1Sandwich
15-VEAR VOLUNTI;''"RS - Recognized and presented certlfl·
cates were these 15 year RSVP volunteers, from the left, Rose
I ..,1 d R "
Niday, Nellie Michael, Marabel Frecker and Joan Sorden.
.h'~nk ers oadst. h
I C IC en an w1c
Tom Dooley, Kristi Eblin, Connie McLain, Carolyn Grueser, Bruce
.Karschnik, Betty Spencer,, Charles May, and Julie Wandling.
II :.~~~~:~:
~;:~~.lu'·t'""'ci''"''"•
KFC
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.
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Free movie to kick off MGM scouting popcorn sale I N vs I er
MGM Dislrict Boy Scouts of as !he prizes which the boys can goes out to Wendell Hull , manager
e 11 tuurants.
ol

America will be hosting the annual
District Popcorn Promotional Movie
to kick off the annual popcorn sale.
This movie is free to ·all registered Boy ScoUis, Cub Scouts and
their families. The movie, Jumanji,
will be shown at the Spring Valley
Cinema 7, 1284 Jackson Pike in
Gallipolis at 9:30 a.m., Saturday,
October9.
There will be infonnation about
lhe upcoming popcorn sales, as well

win. All Boy Scouts and Cub Scouts
should try to wear their unifonn to
this event if possible.
According to W. John Matthews,
MGM District Executive Director,
the day could not be made possible
without the help of community
minded people, "A special thank you

Lord is good; mercy iS
everlnsting; and his truth
enduret to all generations. ·
rpsalm 101 :r

1'rancis FLORIST
Meiti•

Coun•r~ Olde.. FIDriot

i

business each week
lri this space
and support local

..

'•••

"'•

lo&lt;

MILFORD,III. (AP) -A mayor
accused of ,beating a 6-month-old
beagle puppy to death with a shovel
says he will resign due to public
furor over the killing.
In an interview with the Chicago
Tribune, Mayor James Cook sail) he ·
planned lo resign today because of a
flood of hate mail.
Cook is accused of clubbing the
puppy, named Snoopy, with a shovel oulsi!le a grain elevator on Aug,
22. 'the mayor has said he struck the
dog with the shovel td shoo it away
from workers who were building a
. grain bin. He said that when he saw
how ba\lly he hall inadver!ently ·
injured the puppy, he felt the ki~dest
thing would be to put il out of its
misery. -·
The dog's owners said the puppy
was a gift for (heir 6-year-old son
and had been 'missing for several
days when its remains were found .
Cook has pleaded innocent to
charges of animal cruelty. If convicted, he could'bi: sentenced io 30 days ";
in jail.

of Spring Vafley Cinema for helping
make this eventpossible. His contin·
ued support of youlh and communi·
ty activities should be recognized.
We're hoping that all scouts and par·
ent remember to thank him wi th
continued attendance."

o r c1•rm

11 wit

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11pe c111

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a ccepttlll
· ·

Limil 2
·" , 10/26/99
0

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1I

~
·

f(

1

Size Soft Drink

I
.

.

1

With the Purchase of a Honey BBQ
Sandwich at Regular Price

I .".
IN
R

mit four pe r CI.IU[JOU at 1•articipating KFC
N
1 ·
·

t:s lourHIII !I. u reprCN llf:lltlnH .IU~ceple.:l.
I' 1 · 1 h
· 1 f'
ol vu U Wll I ol e i' IIJltWIU o Te r ll. Limit 2
Jler CUIIJJO II . 'l'•x eJIIrn . Expin:s 10/26/99

~
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I
I

·--------------------------·
CROW'S FAMILY RESTURANT.
11r.r COUII(In .

Illinois mayor to
resign in furor over
puppy's death

Time to clean house? Crow's Family Restaurant

FIR'E &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992·7075

PRESENTED PLAQUES- Presented plaques In recognition of 10 years of volunteering In the local
senior citizens program were, left to right, front, Mary Davidson, Opal Tyree, Helen Bodlmef, and Leona
Cleland; and back, Ruth Moore, Bunny Kuhl, Peggy Harris, Mary Nease, Dorothy Davia, Betty Spencer, ·
and Velma Rue. William Mlddleswarth also received a plique.

•'
•'

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m .

112
~=r Sentinel
w;r:~~r~~~~~s·
.Sentinel
flll!:!92~~·
2~~~~~;"s ~
.: ·~--C~LA~iSfSjiJ.FilvEjDvSv-!
· -G~E12M·5~1~~~P~om~eeroR.y~~iiE~ee~2;-2~9s~s;h~~P~om:e~r~oylr_ClfNLA~S;SiiF~IE_D~S_!-t_~·-lli~~~~~~~~rt-~b~~-~,~.~~~~~
t~s'um~o~ulc~knelt::r\U~~~wr,
.Support your
NEW HAVEN EWING FUNERAL HOME se.rchlng for a
·r

-z ·

8

no surprises later.
I hope he will never know ihe gul
Even if Ben decides lo leave his wrenching anguish of burying a
entire estate !o Sandra, he should be child. Death is forever. Helmets save
willing to set up a trust allowing you lives. Keep telling them, Ann . ·
10 live in the house until your death. DIANNE ARRINGTON HUGHES .
Ben's daughler is going to get top DOUGLAS, MYRTLE BEACH,
consideration, so expect it. A second S.C.
wife who has produced no children
DEAR FRIEND IN MYRTLE
does not carry a lot of weight at the BEACH: I hope that father sees
bargaining table. (PS. Don 't quit your letter. II would open his eyes
·
your day job.)
.and close his moulh. Because you
Dear Ann Landers: In the ·last wrote, some lives may be saved.
year, helmet sales have increased • Skate boarding should be permit·
dramatically in Myrtle Beach, S.C .. ted only in areas where there is no
since my 16 year old son, Malt, died traffic.
from a massive trauma lo the brain.
It is impossible to control a skaleHe was skale boarding. His skate· board on a downward slope. and
board slipped from under him , he hit skate boarder who heads inlo a busy
his head on the sidewalk, and never sireet is risking his life. Thanks for
regained consciousness. He was on an important leller.
life support for two days in the
Dear Ann Landers: Here 's
another story to add to !hose you
neuro-trauma unit.
Matt had been skate boarding for
four years and loved it. He was well
liked and always smiling, a very
happy kid . That farber who 10ld his
sons that helmets are for sissies is
crazy.

""volunteers honored at Senior Citizens Center

...

Soulll Btllltl Ntw Tnlamtat

SyracUit Ch•rch ot the NaiJrene
Pastor, Robcn J. Coen

· 7 p.m.

~

Full Gospel Church or the Living Savlor '!;
Rt.338, Antiqu ity
·i,
Pastor: Jesse Morris
~
Asst. Pastors: lim Morris
'"
:•
Services: Saturda y 7:30 p. m.
....,

33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday · 7:30 p.m.

c•urm of the Nazartae

~rvio::s

.;:
•:
t._,
"'

. Full Gotpel UpthoUJC

Worship -10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

264 Sooth second Ave.•Middleport, OH 45760

992-3978

Inc.

Wednesday Servias · 7 p.m.

Wednesday

".:'

Eden United Brethrtn In Christ

Unlttd Fallb C~un:li

Middleport Church of tile Naurtat
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m .. 6:30 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Enterprise
Pastor: Ke ith Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

K&amp;C JEWELERS Jl[i11~er Jlfuneral ~omt ~~'-

212 E. Main Street

Cabinet Making

Nazarene

Tuppen Pial at SL Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship • 10 a.m.
Services · 7:30p.m.

..

ML Olin Community Chorcb
. Evening • 7 p.m.
Wedncday Service • 7,p.m.

Congregational

T~sd a y

~

..'

Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.

Pomeroy Charth of tht Naurene

Sunday School · 9a.m.

.....•

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
WOBhip • 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
Pastor: Lawrence Bush

First Sunday of Mo!llh • 7:30p.m. service

UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

..-·•

Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School ·9:30 a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Longbottom

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Christ· 7 p.m.

Episcopal

!lacrotl Htar1 Catholic Church

Fallll Gotpel Chur&lt;b

Worship· 9:30a.m.
SunrJuy School • 10:30 a.m.

Gr~~ce

161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz

Dyea•lle Commuaity Church
Sunday School ' ~ : 30 t ift. • -·' · ..
Wo"hjp· 10:30 a.m., 7p.m.
.
Mon. Chapel Church
S14nday ~hoot- lQ..•.mu..,..44-,. ... ..,.,
Worahtp - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Strvice · 7p.m.

O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt . 160
Pastor. P.J. Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Servicts . 7 p.m.

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Sunday school and worship 10:25

Catholic

Torch Church
Co. Rd.63
Sunday School · 9:30 i.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Northeast Cluster
Airred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship· II a.m., 6:30p.m.

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
~unday School . 10 a.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.in.

Pastor: Edsel Hart

Bttbtl Church
Township Rd ., 468C
Sunday School · 9 o.m.

Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · IO:JO a.m., 7 p.m.
Thufsday Services· 7 p.m.

Page 7:

Friday, October 8, 199~

Syrocuae Mlolloa

Meigs Cooperatln Parish

Trinity Church

Salem St. _
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunda y School · IOa. m.
Evcn ln~ · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices · 7 p.m.

Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m .. 7:30p.m.

MI. Olin United Methodist

~

•

Fallb Vallty Tobemodt Church

Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7 p.m.

Grand Street
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Services · 8 p.m.

Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

•

New Ufe Victory Center
3773 Georges Creek Ruad, Gall ipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Service s· 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m. &amp; YOLIIh 7 p.m.

Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Hazel Community Church
OffRt. 124

Hocklnapdrt Church

Dear Ann Landers: I am 47 because Ben is pressing for a wed·
years old, and I!IY fiance is 50. We ding date, and I sec red flags waving
both have been married once before. at every turn_
I have no children, but "Ben" has a
.Ben knows I have a wealthy
daughter from his previous mar- uncle who is 98 years old and ihat I
riage.
will probably inheril some of his
Ben has told me that when he estate, but there are several nieces
dies ; his en1ire, esta!e goes to "San- and nephews in .my family, and the
dra." She is happily married, has a estate may not be as large as Ben
good job, and is financially secure. lhinks.
Ben said any assets we a,quire after
I love this man, but ihose red
our marriage would be left to me.
nags keep blowing in my face. I
I'm not happy about this, to put if need an objective opini on. How
mildlY: I see potential problems about it? SECOND IN RICH·
ahead, particularly since Sandra MONO, VA . .
DEAR RICHMOND: See a
seems lobe his top priority.
I have few assets of my own, and lawyer and have a prcnuplial agree·
have struggled frnancially since my ment drawn up as soon as possible.
Be clear about what you want should
divorce.
I hope you will rush your advice. Ben die before you. so there will be

..

Cllnon T11beru1cle Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 1 p.m.

Middleport Community Church
575 Pearl St., Middlepon ·

Pastor: Helen Kline

Grahom Unlltd Meihodlsl
Worship· 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd S"n).
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)

..

Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Coolfllle Church

•

Rejolcln&amp; ure Church
500 N. 2nd (\vc., Middleport
Pilstor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- I 0:30am
Wednesday Ser\'iccs- 7t&gt;,. m.

Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 7p.m.

Cool•llle United Mtthodlll Part1h

Worship· 10 a.m.
"'Wcdncsday·Servioc5 • 10 a.m.

Ch•rch of God of Prophecy

Anllqully BaptiJt

Harrboavllle C~mmually Church
Pastor: Theron Durham

United Methodist

Synacuse Ant Church of God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Ru§se ll
Sunday School'and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

MI. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pruner: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sund~y School 7 9:30a.m.
'Worship · 10 : 4~ a.m.

Cannei:Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.rri .
Bibl~ Study Wed . 7:00p.m.

Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Rlclae
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

St. Paul Lulberon Church

Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Utt
Sunday School · 9:4:5 a.m.
Evening . 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi ces. 7 p.m.

Rull•nd Church of God

The Btlltvtn' Ftllowohlp Mlaltlry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, w :va .
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

MI. Moriah Church or God

Railroad St., Ma§Ofl

Belhany
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 10 a.m .

Eastl.etort

Lutheran

,,,

Friday · fellowsbtp service 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dewuync Stutler
Sunday School · II a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

Sl. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove
Rev . Donald C. Fritz
Worship - 9:00a.m.
Sunday School . 10:00 a.m.

Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School . 9:45 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m .
Worship· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneiday • 7 p.m.

Mornina Star

Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05· 12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10: 1~ a.m.
Homemaking meeting, lsi Thurs. • 7 p.m.

Calvary Qlble Church
Pomeroy titke, Co. RiJ.
Pastor: Rev. Blackw uuc.l
Sunday Sehou l - 9 :.l0 a.nl .
Worshi p 10:10 a.m.. 7:.10 p.m.
Wcd ncsdu y Se rvice - 7:30p.m.
Word or Fallh
Pastor: D:1 vid Dnilcy
Su nday Schuol ~ : 30 a.m.
Even ing . 7 p.m.

.

Couple may avoid fl:nancial problems with a·prenupital agreement

..

Sti~envllle

·

.

1

Faith Full Go~pcl Church

Snowville
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

Chriot of Latter· Day Saini•
St. Rt.l60, 446-6247 or 446·7486
Sunday Schooll0:20·11 a.m.

Church of God

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

f
I.

Reedsville Church of Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a. m.
Bible Study, Wednesday , 6:30p.m.

Hobson Christian Fellowship Church
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship S~nday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday servtce, 7:00p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
SuRday Sehoul • 9:15 a.m.
Worship · 10:15 a.m.

Re-orpoited Cbunh of Jnus Christ
or Lauer Day S.iols
Portland-Racine Rd .
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
,
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Salem Sl., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 :15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnesda~ Service · 7 p.m.

'~

~

Pastor: Rev . Franklin Dickens
Sen. icc: Friday, 7 p.m.

773·5017

Pastor Ernie Wengerd
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

~

folth ftllowsblp Cnuodt lor Christ

Alapo Uft Ctnttr

Rutland
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wm ~hip - 10:3011.111.
Thursduy Serv1ces • 1 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Fairview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va. RL I
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.

"Full-Gospel Church"
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship· 10 a. m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday · 6 p.m.

Pastor: Charles Swigger
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

Worship· 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

fallh ll.lpliit Churth

Christian Ftllowsblp COIUtr

Laurel Cliff free Methodist Church ·

Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Victory Baplltllndepcndanl
525 N. 2nl.l St Wl!ddleport
Pa5tor: James E. Keesee
Worship . IOa.m.. 7 p.m.
Wcdnesd11y Services · 7 p.m.

Ruck Sprinp

325

Thursday Service. 7:30p.m.

Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School - ll a.m.

St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, S1.
Sund&lt;~ y Schoo l · 10 a. m.
' Worship - II a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se n1ices. 7 p.m.

folth Chopcl
923 S. Third St .. Middlepon

Hysell Run Hollnes• Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship ·.10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Hartronl Church of Christ In
Chriotlan Ualon

Hllkldt Bapli&lt;l Church

Pomeroy
1
Pastor: Connie Fiares
Sunday School • 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a. m.
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 a.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holl.ness Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Wmship · 9:30p.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wedn e s~ay Service . 7:30p.m.

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - IO:JOa. m., 7: 30p.m.
Wcdncslby Se rvice 7: 30p. m.

Silver Run Baptlsl
Pastor: Bill Linl e
Sunday School- lOa. m.
Worship - l la.m., 6:30p. m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Service time: St.mday 10:30 a.m.'
Wednesday 7 pm

In mile off Rt.

LangsYIIJe (hristian Church

Harvest Oulreach Ministries
47439 Reibel Rd ., Chester
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harolcf.Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service!~ • 7 p.m.

Peon Chapel

Pastor: Rev . O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · \0: 30 u. m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Hndbur) Church or Chrbt
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a. m.

East Mai n St.
Sunday School · 9:30 a. m.
Worship · 10:30 a. m.

Heoth (Middleport)
P&lt;tstor: Vcrnagil yc Sullivan
Sundu y Schoo l · IJ:JO a. m.
Worship · 10:.'\0 a. m.

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worsh ip· IOa.m.

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Churdl

Scr\'iccs- 6::'\0 p. m.

Other Churches

Rose or Sharon Holiness Church

Bea rwallow Ridge Church of Christ

Zion Church or Christ
Pomeroy, Harri sorwi ll e Rd . (Rt.143)
Ptastur: Roger Watson
SLJnday SchoOl · 9: 30 a.m.
Worship · !OJO a. m.. 7:00 p.m.
We dn ~sda y Sc r\l ices- 7 p.m.

Su nday 'ictiuol - lJ:)tl a.m.

ForatRuo
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

·Minersville
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m

Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pas10r: Rev . Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday pra ye r meeting- 7 p.m.

Wcd nc~da)'

Pastor: Mark Matson
Surtday School -10:30 a.m.
Mornins Worship·· II : 15 a.m.
, Sunday Service•· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 1 p.m.

Harrisonvi lle Road
Pastor: Rev . Victor Roush
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7: 30 p. m.
Wednesday Servia • 7:30p.m.

Keno Church of Chrisl
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Su n da~· Schuol · I 0:30a.m.
Paslur -Jcffrt'j W ;di J!..:&lt;:
I ~~ ;md .1rd Sunda )"

Sundav SthooJ'-9 :JU a. m.
W orship : 10:30 &lt;~. m . , 6:30p. m.

Portlaad tlnt Cburth ortlte Naunnt

Pnston Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

Danllle Hollaess C~urch

Pastor:Tc rry Stcwan

Hopt Baptist Church (Southtrnl
Pt~ stvr : Jim Dilly

• "•

tlotwooda

Apostolic

-

The Daily. Sentinel

ax cxtru. , XlllrCII

228 West Main

STOP

992-5432

Pomeroy

lfttiJ
GALLIPOLIS
Friday, October 15th

COMPLETE
SEMINAR
Only 39.1111

7:00 PM - 9:30 PM

HOLIDAY INN
577 State Route 7

(Near jet OH Rt 7 &amp; US

~5)

•
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Friday, October 8, 1999

,Patrt 8 e The Dally Sentinel
.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

Friday, October 8, 1999

Food lab has ~­
blast tenderizing·:
meat for melt - iD ;
- mouth taste

•
'•

..

You Can't Buy
Integrity
lntegrit); is learned aotd earned b) heing
righ•eous, a,.d a person ·~ firnm e.s ~ uf c•lwrm l e r
is more valuable tha11 wealrll . E1'e f)Oir e fed.&lt;·
»&gt;O,.e

enjo)'S ,Jealin~

cotnjortahle, and

u·itlr

an

hmaest and uprisht person who knows thut tlu•
end does not always justify tile 111eans. Lri~rg.
cJaegeing, or defrauding Should uet·er he

5tpl, .\,

rationalized to 'a;hieve

'

otJe 's

lJt~fortttnately, t

I-i.u 1;1&lt;th j&lt;.'an ''~tc nn

goals.

often in our sotiet' we lwa r of tlw~e who
hm'e been ta~n " Vil ntage of by orgmri::Irtions frrul £'cop/e ~ril lr
no pnnctples. lt does not ;t,atter if u·e cr re talkiuR ~ out 11 jeu
dollan or many hundreds of dollars , lo a persr"' oj i"leg ril\',
hunesty is important and they will alwars try In deal faorl) ill
et~ery dttu~tion . 'We can all recall .someone wlwm u·e mlmire tmd
look t4f to because of t.beir i~ttegri ty a~1d chamder, mul U'l' are
always blessed because of our associatioll ll'itlr tlw"' "111 e Bil1le
tells us that we are being tested by Gotllo ~ee if we are good.
because God e njors good people.

RSV
Prtwerbs 10:9

j

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•

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. CHESHIRE - Ladies for the
Lord. interchurch picn1c, Cheshire
~ark . 2 p.m. Door prizes, mus1c by
Sid and Carol Hayman. Deanna
Stewart and the Earthen Vessels.
T;ikc covered dish and dessen. All
ctmrches invited.
:POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution at I p.m. at
tfi~ Pomeroy Library. Grave markings will follow the meeting.

'

BIRTH ANNOUNCED • Scott
McKinley and Mary Sheets of
Pomeroy announce the birth of
a daughter, Hannah Jean McKin·
ley, Sept. 3, at the Holzer Med·
ical Center. The infant ~eighed
five pounds, 15 ounces.
Grandparents are Betty and
Earl McKinley, Middleport; Patri·
cia and Sam Thompson,
Pomeroy, and Henry Doerfer of
Racine. Bessie Mattox is a
great-grandmother.

·

~~ Oernmunity

Llo;, J5

HANNAH JEAN MCKINLEY

He who wniJts in iNtegrity walks secu,.ely, '"" l1e wlw pen ,erls

his ways will he fomul 0111.

(')\1'} )

Calendar-----'--

Clark. piano. and Bnan Brannon.
bass guitar, will be at the Middleport
Church of Christ. Mam Street. Middlcport , 7 p.m

POMEROY - Meigs Local
Bond Issue Camp&lt;ugn Committee, 7
p.m., Mc1gs High School Cafeteria.
Information and d1sc uss10n of cam·

CARPENTER - Mt. Union
Baptist Church will host the Bocl k
Family singing Sunday. 6:30 p.m.
The church is located 2 1/2 miles
south of Carpenter. Pastor Joe N.
Sayre welcomes al!.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Chapter 53, Disabled American Veterans,
6:30 p.m. covered dish dinner; 7
p.m. meetmg.
POINT PLEASANT - Revival
services, Monday through Oct. I6.
Gospel Lighthouse Church. off
Route 2. 7 p.m. each evemng. Special singing, John Elswick, evangelist.

POMEROY - Modem Woodmen of America. Camp 7230, family
dinner, 5:30p.m. at the Burlingham
Modem Woodmen Hall. Members
to: take covered dish; camp to furnish sandwiches, cider and donuts.
~ LONG BOTIOM - Hymn sing,
Faith Full Gospel Church, Long
Bottom, 7 p.m. Singing will be Jim
REEDSVILLE - Revival serBlair and the Gospelaires.
vices, Nazarene Church, Reedsville,
Monday througill Oct. 17. 7 p.m
SUNDAY
. MIDDLEPORT - Sounds of each evening. Doug Carpenter of
Praise Quarter featuring Steve Charlotle N.C .. evangelist.

pm gn s1ra1eg1es Don Poole, chairman.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Special
meeting , Eastern Local Board of
Education. 5 p.m., purpose being to
cons1der act1on on bu1lding project.
RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education, special session,
7:30p.m., Southern High School, to
lake action ·on site work package for
elementary school.
RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Edu cati on spec1al meelmg
7:30 p m at the Southern H1gh
School 10 take action on sHe work
package.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of elections meeting, 9 a.m.
The office will be closed Monday in
observance oi'Columbus Day.

.!

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- 211, 2MI MDDEllllVERIDD PICUPI II CHDDIE FRIMI

SHARON WRIGHT
TURNS ONE • Abigail Faith
TURNS FIVE • The fifth birth·
Causey celebrated her first day of Sharon Wright was celebirthday on Sept. 18 with a cook· brated at her home with a cook·
out at the home of her parents' out after wh lch a LiHie Bear cake
river lot in Reedsville. A Winnie· and ice cream were served.
the-Pooh theme was carried out.
Games were played and gills
She is the daughter of John were presented to Sharon by her
and Tammi Causey, Reedsville, family and friends.
and the granddaughter of John
Attending besides her moth·
and Sylvia Causey, Stanley and er, Tammy Wright, were Terry
Juanita Wells and Charles Lee Hutton, Jason and Kassldy
Cozart.
Wright, Jean Wright, Bennie,
Others aHending wera Penny Sandy, Jessica and Wesley
and Chuck Voss, Theresa, Wright, Charlie and Minnie
Wayne Alisa and Aaron Shamp, Young, Van, Marlene and Sustin
Robert Lawrence, Danny, Sandy, Johnson, Mindy, Nicki and
Zach and Nathan Kidder, Wilma Travis Butcher, Beth and
Tillis, Gary, Amanda, Chalsey Rochelle Gloeckner, Missy and
and Johnny Curtis, Paul Curtis, Zach Kesner, Austin Adkins,
Lauri Hason, Lawrence, Jennie Kevin Hutton, Jessie Hutton,
and Angela Hayman, Melvin, Chuck
Rathburn,
Tammy
Jenny, Jason, and Jeremy Reed, Starcher, Becky, Holly and
Charlie Mays, Kathy Wells, Hank Bradley McGraff, Lori and Natal·
Mays, Sam Cozart, Kas Seck- ie Michaels.
man, Terry Hayman and a friend,
Sending gifts but unable to
Kevin, and Kristi, Jeremy and J. · attend were Brian, Amy, Devon,
T. Nelson.
and Brianna Buffington, Mike
Sending gifts were Toddy and and Lynn Wright.
Tim Wilkfnson, llah and Bill
Roush, Wall alltl Sharon Tuttle,
Cindy Butcher, Kaye Hender· BP
Amoco warns
son, Rick and Rose Causey,
using cell
John and Dee Adams, Jennifer against
M~rris and Eric and Becky Kidphones near pumps
der.
By MIKE WENDLING
Associated Press Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - Drivers
Elvis' Army home for filling
up at BP Amoco stations will
sale on eBay auction
be seeing a new symbol at the
KILLEEN, Texas (AP) - li's a pumps: a cellular phone with·a slash
house fit for a King.
through it.
The home EI vis Presley had
The message: No cell phone use.
while he was a soldier al Fort Hood
"This is not a ban -this is a pre·
is for sale again on the Internet auc- cautionary warning," company
tion site eBay. The auction closes spokeswoman Linda McCray said
Saturday.
Thursday.
One prospective buyer already
There is a risk that electronic
has matched the mmimum bid of impulses could start a fire, and while
$200,000, said the home's owner, that risk may be slight, lhe company
M.J . Craig.
doesn 'I want"to take chances, she
Ms. Craig said two previous auc- said.
tions closed with high bids of
Cellular phone manufacturers
$126,100 and $75,000 - not have included warnings in owner's
enough to pari with the one-story, manuals for years indicating that
three-bedroom brick home she 's under certain conditions, cellular
lived in since 1987.
phones could help generate sparks.
Presley was stationed at Fort
Chris Kelley, a spokesman for the
Hood when he was 23 He lived m National Petroleum Institute, there
the home for 25 weeks. said Debo- have been unverified reports of fires
rah Garrell. Ms. Craig's daughter.
sparked by cellular phone use out no
Ms. Garrell said Presley's parents evidence that any occurred . in the
also lived there for a lime.
United States.

· Public Notice

Brlnd New 1999 Chevy Full
SID Allied Roof Conv. Van

Brand New 2000 Chevy

Brand New 2000 Chevy

SiiYerado Extendad Cab 4x4

Silverado Extended Cab·4x4

123,750* 123,350* 121,850*
~

!

•

•
'

• VOrtec V-8 Power

• Auto, Vortec V-8 Power,
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo

• Color TV And VCP
• A• Alrltlelt

Brlnd New 2GOO Chevy
Sllvnlo Exlllded Clb 2WD

• Vortec V-8 Power
• Air Conditioning
• Nicety Equipped

Brand New 2000 Chevy~&gt;

Brand New 2000 Chevy
S.Serles LS Pickup

Silverado Shortbed 4x4

~1,450* ~7,150* ~1,550*
• Vortec V-8 P~r

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo
•. Styled Wheels

• Air :Conditioning
• Nicely Equipped

• Air Conditioning
• LS Package
• Aluminum Wheels

·To-. T~~g~. lllle F•hlii..Robale Included In sale price d new vehicle Hstod where applicable.
Pltcw Good Oc1olllr 8111 ltlnl ()Qo[)er 10ih. Not ~lor lyJIOgriQIJicat emJIS.

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby
given thot on Seturday,
October 9, 1999, at 10:00
o.m., a public ule will be
held at 211 Well Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio,
The Fermer'• Bank and
Sovlnge
Company
parking lot, to ..u lor
cooh the following
collateral:

~

1987
, PLYMOUTH
HORIZON
1P3BM18C2HD71D34
1991
PONTIAC
LEMANS
KL1TN5462MB304884
1998 KAWASAKI 300

ATV

JKALF8B1XWB558855
The Farmera Benk ond
Sovlngo Compeny,
Pomeroy, Ohio, rHerve•
the right to bid et thlo
aale, and to withdraw the
above collateral prior to
aale. Further,
The
Farmen Benk · and
Savlnga
Compeny
ra8trvea the right to
refect any or all bide
.
submitted.
Further, the above
collateral will be •old In
the condition It Ia In,
with no expre.. or
Implied wa,...ntleo given.
For
further
lnlormetlon, contact
Shannon et 992·5909.
(10) 6, 7, 8 3TC

Public No11ct

IN THE COMIIION PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE.
DIVISION MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MAn'ER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
COURT MEIGS! COUNTY,
OHIO
Accounts
and
voucher•
of
the
following
named

ftducl•rv h.. been flied
In the Probete Court,
Melg1 County, Ohio lor
eppi'OV1II end .Uiement.
ESTATE NO. 24105 •
The 14th Account or
Jennifer L. Sheete,
Guerdlen of the PII'IIOn
end eatete of Oliver E.
Belley.
Unle11 excepUoM ere
flied thereto, .. ld
eccount will be ..t lor
he•rlng before ••ld

Announcement

BINGO
AMERICAN LEGION
POST467
RUTlAND, OHIO
GUAUITEED 60 A
GAME, OVER 10
PEOPlE 10 AGAME,
OVER 99 PEOPLE
99.00 AGIME
STARIURST
$1550.00 AID
COVIWL 110111 I
WID. DOO~ OPEl
AT 4:30 GIMES
START AT 6130

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Monday- Saturday 9 am - 9 pm

Wilt VIrginia's 11 Chevr. Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
Alii Cllllant VII Dllllr.

TOLL FR EE 1 800 ·822 -0417
•

e

372-2844

·sunday 1 pm - 8

pm

'
e www.lompeden .cbm

·Chicken BBQ
Racine Fire Dept.
October 1Oth

·,),.,~,· '.

~·

A.

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Mon.- Fri. 9:00 to 4:30
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

,..

High ·&amp;Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232
9/27199 1mo

• 'Tf\11'
•• S\UI1'9

Gtl~'o'"g

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronn ie Jones

BAR-J

..24tt"'"'!
~
Hr. Taxi

a~~l

We deliver

Aluminum

ALMOST anything
Call for details
74o-992-Q038

Anytime-Anywhere
Hourly Rates

Beginning Sept~ 26th

LUMP AIID STOKER COAL
H.I.A.P. VOUCHERS
ACCEPTED
DEUYIRHVAIUILI
HOUII5c 7am THRU 4pm
MONDAY·FRIDAY
7amTONOON
SATURDAY

WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS

992-9178

Co. Rd 19

Pomeroy ......

.

A &amp; D Auto Up olstery • Plus, Inc
Rutland, Ohio

(740) 992-2753
or 992·1101

Sr. 124 Wellston, Ohio
740-384-6212

8:30am ·8 pm
Sun 1 pm- 6 pm

Gas~A&amp;C~Mig

• New Homes •
Remodeling • Siding
·Roofs
25 yrs experience

BRAMHI COAL
COMPANY

New Store Hours
For Deer Season
Mon-S at

Portable
Welding Services

Delivery
Service

WICK'S HfiOLIHG

·

and

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops, .
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc.

EXCfiVfiTIHG
...
Hauling*Limestone*Gravel
Sand*Topsoii*Fill Dirt*Mulch
. Bulldozer Services

Mon - Frl 8:30 - 5:00

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005
Personals
START DATING TONIGHT!
Have Fun Meeting Eligible Singles In Your Area . Ca ll For More

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERYICE

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
. Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburlll
Progreulve top line.
Uc. liD0-50 1Mt~

YOUR

CONNECTION

•Room add"lons &amp; Remodeling
•New Garages

Quality Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios
Complete Garages:
masonary/Wood
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

•EIK!rlcal &amp;Plumbing
•Roofing &amp;Gutltrl
•VInyl Siding &amp; PalntllliJ
•PIIIo &amp; Porch Dtckt
FfH &amp;1111111,.

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

740·742-8015
877-353-7222 (toll free)

Pomen&gt;y, Ohio

22 yr~. Local

UNIQUE
OLDIES

Howard L. Writesel
I

CONCRETE

30 ·Announcements
Bu1lding Fund for Oak Grove UM
Ctiurch Fe ll owship Hall, Dona•
lions Can Be Sent To Oak Grove
Church, RA 2, Box 6, Letart , WV

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

115 Salem St.
Rutland, Ohio

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

OPEN .

10-S:OO·Tues. Wed.

J Thurs.

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
4/2TFN

HILl'S

SElF STORAGE
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio.
45771
740·94g·2217

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
· Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

• BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC~ .

'

Any peraon lnterHted
mey
file
written
exception to .. ld
account or to metter• '
pertelnlng to · the
execution of the trult,
not leu then live d•y•
prior to the dille ut tor
huri11Q .•
Robert llllcll, JUdge
Common Pie•• Court,

Bulldo•er &amp;: Backhoe
-

Take the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.

Service•
House &amp; Trailer Sitee
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

I lre!heprl'""'!U

"'"""'

Seplic Syatenu &amp;:
lflilitUJI

1740) 992·3131

COMMERCIAL aool RISiDINllAL

FREE ESTIMATES

&amp;

740·992·7643

By Appointment

(No Sunday Calls)

R. .L. MASH
CARPENTRY
New Homes
Garages
Replacement
Doors &amp; Windows
Wood &amp; Vinyl Siding
Custom Work
Kitchens &amp; Baths
Insured
24 Yrs. Experience

740·985·4180
Free Estimates

992-0437

(10) I 1TC

FJREWOO.,
D1111p T11ek er
Piek·•P IR 011 rar4

Recently purchased:
Graham's Wood Products
Firewood Division

Ball Lugging
and Firewood
Bob Ball
35215 Ball Run Rd

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-7.:10.992-6142
Leave a Message

In Memory of our
B~wved "Huoband"
and "Father"

Diabetic Patients : Medicare Or
Pnva1e Insurance. You May Be
Ent1tled To Receive Your Diabetic
Supplies At No Cost To You . For
More Information 1·668·6 77·

6561 .

Land owned or leased by Harris
Farms will no longer be open to
public hunting.

New To You Thnft Snoppe
9 West Stimson, Athens
74().592·1642
Qua lity cloth ing· and household
items. S1.00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

9:D0-5:30.

40

Giveaway

ROY ARTHUR EWS

SAYRE

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

TRUCKING

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete .
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compere
FREE
ESTIMATES

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel

lfeasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre
740·742·2138

g85-4473

3/11/99TFN

7/22/TFN

Black used elec. stove, cracked
on top,1.side &amp; oven works 304·

675-3968.

Black &amp; Brown Terner,

Home. 740.388-9357.

DIPOYSAG
PAR7S
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts .
Factory Authori~ed
Case-IH Parts
D ealers.
19011 St. Rl. 7 South
CooMII•, OH 45723

740187-1388

STONE

HAULED
Limestone
Gravel
Top Soli

MODERN
SANITAnON SERVICE

740-992-3954

740-446-4662 ..

Friday &amp; Saturday, October 8th &amp;
9th at Stewart's Gun Shop in Au·
ttand . Two family, something for
everyone. 740.742·2421 .
Lost Female Walker Coon Hound
With An Orange Collar, Lost On
Georges Creek Road , Reward!

Call 740-446-0223 Leave Message

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

152 Gavin Street, Rodney Village
II, Beani es, Furnltt.1re, Gas Cook
Stove. Baby Furniture, Clothing ,

Etc. Starts Thursday 71h. Thru

Saturday 9th.

3 Family Yard Sate· Saturday October 9th, Toys, Bikes, E~eerc1se
EQuipment , Gas Grill, Clothing,
Tools, 1402 Jackson Pike , Beside
Vanco Floor Covering.
903 Jackson Pike, Fnday 10/8,
Saturday 10/9 8-5, Longaberij_er,
Home Interior. Toys , Clothing ,
Many MiS;C.
ALL Yonl Salol Mutt
Be Plld In Advance.

WORRYIID!!!

SaiUrday 9-7 .

Boys, &amp; GillS CIOlhlng, &amp; Much

day, 9-'
Moving Sale: Home Interior, Tupp8fWBra, Clothes. Dlshware Some

Farm EQUII)menl, 8:30-7 Blh, 91h.

845 Sowards Ridge Road, Crown
Clry.

Joseph' Jacks

.

Large Sale Route 160 Across
Fr(lm Medical Plaza , Girls 10
Speed, Trampoline , Burcham
Resident, Many Items! Friday,

Morel Thursday, Friday, Satur-

Free Estlm•,.•
You'l brild obif nt!l ~ when
, ~ 11M with rht clossl(ltds

Friday. Monday tdltlan
• 10:00 a.m. Satunloy.

Large Yard Sale : Oa .. Hill 279
West, Over The lake On Top Of
Hill, Furniture. Painting , Toys,

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing

!Jitndtl)',

Janet &amp; 'Dan

No Embarraument...
You'riJ'Treated with Reapectl

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

:Happy 9otfi 'Birtfiday
alice Struble
Open :House to family
&amp; frierds

DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
1111 cloy before 1111 tel
11 to run. Sundly
edition· 2:00 p.m.

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Olvorded

740-742-3119

.

Good

Found: Mistreated Mate Golden
Retriever Puppy, Needs A Home,

CREDit PROBLEMS???
'

Surrounding areal

Jot, 'Die~. Sue,

T.9

neutered. 740-992·3360.
60 Lost and Found

llllflii I AI IIIID
For New Local
Referral Sen&gt;ice
Melge, Gallla &amp;

Thursday, &amp; Friday, large variety
Ona generator, sweepers , play

740·992~2068

Advance . Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad Ia to run,
Sunday a Monday edition·

I:OOpm Frlday.

Four lam1ty ya rd sale , Saturday,
October 9th , 9am -3pm Dav1d
Spencer's, Main Street. Ra cine.
Adult and girt's clOthes. girl's bike ,
toys , hou sehold 1tems and m1sc.
Rain cancels.
Friday &amp; Saturday. October 8-9. 1
1/2 miles 249, Chester. Clotl1es,
household, Beames Frank A1ffle.
October 9 &amp; 11 . Bam- 4pm Btng
res1dence, 48642 SR 124 , one
mile ease ol SHS Clothes tor
e"Ve ryone . inlantl toddler , Pooh
Item s, Ullle Tykes toys , crafts,

91C

October 9th, 9am-4pm. Turn first
road lett past rad1o station from
Middleport hilt, hfth house Lots ol
Items
Sa!Urelay, October 9, John Light·
loot's. llrst to road left past Mitlie's, watch lor s1gns

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
3 Family Oct 7·8·9 9 am ·5 Leon
Main St.clolhes . Knick knacks
&amp; cnore.

FRI., SAT 8 miles oul RT. 2
North horse drawn dump hay
rake , &amp;several ant1ques

Huge Garage Sale. Rl. 2. Jcl. 87.
Mill Creek Road. Thurs ., Fri., Sat.
9 Piece Antique Dining Room
Su1t. Old pictures linens. Dishes , Pols ; Pans, Lamps , Quills ,
Home Interior

9AM·2PM, Saturday, 9AM·12PM .
90727thSirHI.
Sat Oct. 9th IHpm 2219 Jackson ·
Ave mens clothing , canceled U

rain
Yard Sate: 116 South Park Dnve,

complete auction service. Buy
and sell estates . Ohio license

17693. wv 1338. 740.989-2623.

B1ity Gobi! AuctiOneer, 740·992 -

7502
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull tulle auctioneer: complete
auction
se rvice . licensed
t66 ,0hio &amp; West Virgm1a . 304·

77J.57B5 Or 304·773-5447

Wedemeyer's AucUon Service,
Gallipolis, OhiO7 40-379-2720.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All US Sll·
ver And Gold Coins, Proolsets,
01amonds, AntiQue Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre- 1930 US Currency.
Stertlflg , Etc. AcqUisitions Jewell}

- M.T.S. Coin Shop, m Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446·2842.

Clean Late Model Cars 01
Trucks . low Miles, 1995 Models
Or Newer, Smith Buick Pcntlac,
1900 Eastern Avenue , Gallipolis
Wanted To Buy: 1987 Ranger Fi·

16 white American geese , 740·

Male Poodle to giveaway, gray,

Linda's Painting

All Yard Sates Mull Be Ptld In

berglass Top, 740.256-6574.

949-2317.
EMPLOYMENT
New Homes • Vinyl
2 Long Haired KiHens, 1 Black &amp;
SERVICES
White; 1 All White, Both Beaullful,
Siding • New Garages
740-446-3388 After 5 PM
•Replacemllhl Windows
Help Wanted
8 Month Old German Shepherd, 110
•Room Additions
To Gooo Home Only. 740-367- $2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
•Roofing
' 7043
Brochures! Satisfaction Guar·

•

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

9AM·2PM. Wed./ThursJFrl.
lnlormatlon. 1-600-ROMANCE ,
80
Auction
Eld 9735
and
Flea Market
Start Dat1ng· Tonight! Have, fun
p1ay1ng lhe Ohio Dallng Game. 1- B•ll Moodispaugh Auctioneenng·

25253.

Rutland, Olio
American Legion
·Post 467
Beech Grove Road
G•n Shoot
Slug and Shot
Matches
Every Sunday
1:00 P.M.

s.w. From Gallipolis, On
141 , Mise Items. ·Friday October
Bth, Saturday October 9th.

9 Miles

MoYing Sate: Lots ol nice items
·priced to sell. Thurtdaylfrldey

800-ROMANCE, extension 9681

(740) 991-3470

Court on the 8th day of
Novwmber, 1111111' •t
wlllch time Nlcl IICCOUnt
will be conlllderecl •nd -,
continued lrom dey to
day unu1 nnely dlepoNCI

October zotli 2
Senior Cifiunj 'Bldg.
1Vt lovt you, motlier.
~Cit all liaV( been blesud.

prJ

CONSTRUCTION

TREE SERVICE

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp;Vicinity

No:w Rentinc

,

"A Better Wa , Ever

JONES~

Pl'llbeW Dlvlelon
Melge County, 9hlo

One year ho• poued
aince God rook you hoiiU!
· October 9rh, 1998
You're mined and
loved by all. You're
in our thoughts and
Olf.r /Jearts always.
Sometime•
your
pr.,.e.~ce U 10 real it~
like only yeaterday.
Other day• it i Wee an
eternity. What we
wouldn't give for juat
one glimpae from
omiling face.
memory live• on in
of Ul. You
never be forgotten.
Your family

Phone (740) 593-6671

. ,.

70

SMITH'S

Public,Notice

of.

Cull9, ~~-. 2156

!"""

· Full line of Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators Waler Storage Tonks

w

"on appOVl!d CI1Kiil. On Hlectod models.

·;,1

a·

I IIIII

ad

Stop' In And See
Steve Riffle
... Sales Representative
1;:;
Larry Schey ·

,~

Now, the company is on the verge ;~
of signing a deal with a major meat. ~
processor that will bring this technology to market
"This method will essentially·
make lower grade meals more v~lu·
able than they were before," Hydro- :
dyne president Stanford Klapper..
said. "The consumer will be able to : ·
pay a lower price for meat, but still
gel higher grade quality."
For instance, Klapper said, a lowquality steak that may cost $1.99 per ·
pound in a supermarket today may ·
cost $2.49 after it's been through the ·
Hydrodyne process. But thai cut of :
meat will be as tasty and tender as a :
$5.99 per pound strip steak.
The Hydrodyne method - tested
in a Buena Vista lab - works by :
lowering a metal basket filled with :
about 400 pounds of vacuum- ·
packed meat into a sealed, water- :
filled ·vat anchored in concrete. :
Then, an eKplosive charge the size ·
of an orange is detonated from_
above, sending supersonic shock·. :
waves rebounding back and forth :
through the meat. The shockwaves
tear certain fibers that bind muscle
tissue, thus tenderizing the meat
,without changing its appearance or
flavor.
The Hydrodyne process requires
no government approval because it
does not penetrate the meat packaging or introduce any foreign substances into the meat, Klapper said.
The new method will shave days,
perhaps months off the lime it takes
to tenderize meat.
.
Hydrodyne's staff occasionally :
tests meai after it's blasted. A bottle ·
of steak sauce sits in the fridge as an :
aid to the testers.
"It's good. I ·definitely can tell
the difference," said staff member .
Ron Smith:
Surplus meat is donated to the ·
Natural Bridge Zoo for tiger food. ,
The Hydrodyne process was :
invented by John Long, 79, a retired :
nuclear weapons designer who holds ·
several patents besides the one for. :
Hydrodyne . .
Kellogg Brown &amp; Root, a sub- :
sidiary of Dallas-based Halliburton ·
Co., has exclusive rights to design, :
build, operatt and maintain Hydro- :
dyne equipment in meat processing ·
plants worldwide.
:

Public Notice

~------~~~~~

;.

meat.

Tuppers Plains, OH

Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock
Groveiless leo1h
100'- 1000' Rolk 1• &amp; 3/4" 200#Waler Une
.llut,.

an

'1

740·985-3813

BUEN-1 VISTA, Va. (AP) Coming soon to your supennarket
meat counter: a dynamite new way
to tenderize cube steaks, pol roasts
and bnsket.
.
Hydrodyne Irie., a Puerto Rico-· :
based research company, has discov .. :
ered a way to immerse packaged,. :
leathery cuts of m~at into water,_,
send a shock wave through·it by det·; .;
onating a small explosive charge and· :·
- voila! - melt-in-yo'J·mouth; ;'

To pl,ule

'0,

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply
St. At. 7

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Bus-iness Services

. '

'

,.

i:,.

•.

pen, tables. 14Uarlel Drlve, 9 ·?
ac~s

from fairgroorr:ts

anteedl Postage &amp; Supplies Provided! Rush Self·Addressed

Slamped EIM!Iopel GICO. DEPT
5. Box 1438, ANTIOCH , TN.
37011·1438. Sian lrnnedUlle~..
$800 WEEKL~ B~ YOU~ OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN·
MENT REFUNDS. NO EXPER~
ENCE NECESSARY 1-800-854·

S&lt;la9Exl.~

seoo WEEKLY POTENTIAL

Complete Simple Government
Forms At Home. No E~~:penence

Necessary. CALL TOLL FREE ·
1·800-968-3599 Exl. 2601 . $34.00

Flelundable Fee,

"DANCERS'
Top Dollar · (7401992·6387.
AOVEATISING
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
For Well Established Local Co.

SERVING TRI.COUNTY AREA
"Must have~ CommunicaUon
skills
• Must haw good driVing record
&amp; Provide own Transportation
'MUSI ha118 ablliiY IO be aTEAM
player •
Send Resume to:

Gallipolis

DIIJ~

Tribune.

AE : Advertising Sales R131? .;825 Third Avenue

Galllpolos, OH '45631
ASSEMBLY AT -HOMEil Cralls,
Toys , Jewelry, Wood , Sewing ,
TyiiJ.ng .. Greal Payl CALL I-BOO·
795·0380 Eld. 1201 (24 Hrs)
ATTENTION:
HOve A Computer'?
Put It To Work!

$25 -$75/Hr. PT/FT
1·888-890·3481
www.pc-income.com
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell.

110

Help Wanted

11 o Help Wantec:l

Time Employment In In·
CLASS ACOL DRIVERS. Dedi- Part·
surance Agencv 3 days a weak.
cated , Reglon41 l &amp; OTR . Solos
11

$.30 /MI. Teams $ 34 /mi /Spill.
100% Company Paid Heal!h Bene fils : Medical , Dental , Vision .
Company Paid Reti rement Plan

Computer &amp; People Skills rtquired . Insurance Experience

Preferred . Send Re&amp;umes In c/o:
Point Pleasant ~agister, M.l .. 03 . ...

Main Street , Pt. Pl. , WV
PLUS 401k Aller 90 Days (WI1h 200
25550.
PHLEBOTOMIST- lmmedlale

Matching ). Company Paid vacation Anll Paid Holidays. 95% No
Touch Freight Satelhle Communi·
cation . Credit Union . Direct Depo sit Assigned Con11enUonal s,
Company Pa1d Uniforms , Stock
Purcha se Ca ll 800 -555 -C WTS
cwt JObs@con-waycom ConWay
Tru ckload Ser vices. CWT IS An

EOE

CNA Clas ses Are Being Set Up,
For October 11th . lmmedtale
Openings. E.nerget1c, EnthusiaStic, And Dedicated People Wanted , To Care For Ou r Resld8nt s
Apply Arbors 01 Gallipoli s, 170
Pmecre&amp;t Drive, Gallipoli s, Ohto
Or Conla ct Judy Hart. LPN flnstructor 740-742-2370, EOE

opening for experienced phlebOt:

omlst. full or part time. Respon~..
bllitle&amp;oo would Include collectlnQ'
spec:mens from nursing noi'Aif:
patients m South East Ohio. Seft4
res1.1me to · Athe ns Medical l~~·
400 E State. Athens . Oh 45701 . ,. •

Poslal J~bs $48,323.00 Yr Noif
H1nng ·No Expenence - Pakf
Training -Great Benefits. Cal~ ·t
D0ys 800-429·3660 Ext J-365 ',

POSTAL JOBS To $18 .35 /H)ilr
INC. BENEFITS, NO EXPER!J
ENCE. FOR APP. AND EM"'
INFO CALL 1 · 800 - 813 · 358,~,,
EXT »4210 8 AM -9 PM, J
DAYS fds. inc. Fee.

Computer Users Needed . Work
Own Hr&amp;. $25K -$60KI Yr 1-800·
536·0466 X 7777 , www.t cwp.com

DENTAL BILLER Up lo $15 -$45
IHr Dental Billing Software Company Needs People To Proce ss
Med1ca 1 Ct a1ms From Home
Trai ning Provi ded . Mt.1st Own
Computer. 1· 800·223· 1149 Ext .

460.

DRIVERS - IMMEDIATE OPENINGS · REGIONAL /OTR S1arl AI
29 CPM /All MI. · UnlOading Pay Personalized Dispatch - Home
Often • Holiday /Vacation Pay •
401 K /Medical /Pres. /Dental As·
signed 99' T2000's - Rider Pro·
gram • 98% No -Touch Fre1ght
Call Butch At Summit Transport&amp;·

lion 800-876·0680 EOE

Drivers: 2 Week Paid COL Train·
lng No E~~:p Needed No Money.
No Credit? No Probteml Earn Up

•

Retail Furniture Sales EMperieno4
in Furn1tt.1re , Carpet Or Drape~

Sales Prelerred. Apply AI Tope,t

Ft.~rmttJre Co., 151 Second Ave 1
nue, GallipoliS, No Phone Calls. • ;

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Centei
is now accepting applications f\V
part t1me dietary a1de positloll"!
Mu st be able to work all shiltf
and weekends. Apply in peraon·tQ
1111 out application or send resun'll
to Rockspri ngs Rehabllitati'QIII
Center, 36759 Rocksprings Rd;j

Pomeroy. Oh 45769. EOE
•,
SECRETARY lor busy non-prof4

agency. A mmimum of high ~
diploma and two year axperienq~~.
Must possess good communlc11
lion skills (wrilten and oraft
phone skil ls. and experlence'tn
Microsoft Word and EMCtl.
Knowledge of database a piUI ..
Send resume by October 18,

1999 10. FACTS, 45 Olive Srree~
Ohio 45631 EOUNFIH

To $32,000 11s1 Yr. w /Full Bene-

Gal~polis .

Envelope Slulting Positions Available To Apply Call Toll Free, 1·

Sh ort Order Grill Cook Need4df:
Pan-Time 20 Hours, Must Be 21,
Pick -Up Applications At Elkl
Lodge 11 t 07 , 408 Seeond A'I&amp; '
nue, Gallipolis , Ocotber 111n •:
14th, 1 P.M. ·5 P.M. N~ Phon~
Calls Please.
-

Ills . P.A.M Transport Call Toll
Free t -877 · 230· 6002 www otr·
dnverscom

868·265·1935

Fast growing business looking lor
cool&lt;. cashiers , and part ume
cashiers. Send resume c/o· The
Daily Sentinel, P.O. Box 729·75 ,

Pomeloy. OH 45769.

Full Time Secretarial Position tor
local law firm . Legal experience
hetplul. but not requiJed. Compul·
er skills required . Send resume'
cto · Point Pleasant Register,
M.L.02 , 200 Main Street, Point

Pleasant WV. 25550.

Galli a County OV Task · Force
Seeks Part-Time Facilitator Fo r
Its Batterers InterventiOn P.ro·
gram. Applicants Must Be Li·
censed In Social Work In Ohio
With Some Gro1.1p counse11ng Expenance. Mall Resume By 10/1 9/
99 To Tom McGuire, SEOLS, 490
Richland Avenue . Athens. OH
45701 . An Equal Opportunity Em-

SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEA~ .
COUNTRY, And EASY LISTENJ
INGI Call 1-800·489·81e4 F.l&gt;'• .
Appointment To Come To Nash·
v1lle, Tennessee And Audition
For Major Record Producers. In·
ternet: www.wcln ac
Wanted : Splicers For Telephone .
Construction CO. Must Be Eligible,
To Work For G T E Home Even!
ings. 4.30·11 .00 P.M. 740·44'6• 1

3184; Olllce Days: 8:0Q-4:00 740·

288-.4165; Mobile~ A.M . 6:30 -5:30
740·441·7877.

Wanted: Wa1t ress at laCanllna;
. Apply at ~estaurant , 4· 12 Dally. ' •

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 .60 /HR, .
INC. BENEFITS. GAME WARDENS. SECURITY. MAIN- '
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS. NO
ployer.
EXP NEEDED. FOR APP. AND.
EXAM INFO. CACL 1·800·810·•
HAVE DOCTORS. NEED BILL- 3585,
14211 . BA.M. ·9 P. ~:
ERS. FIT: PIT Medical Billing. No · 7DAYSEXT.
lOs. Inc. Fee.
, ,

EKperlence Necessary Earn Up
To $40k+ Workmg AI Home
Must Have IBM Compatible PC

Call 1-800·697-7670. www.medl·
crew.net

Houaelceeper· lor disabled practicing attorney In Columbus, l1ve
in, some Clre duUes, room, board,
salary, 614-267· 5354.
IMMEDIATE OpENING

Full-Time Management Position
With Local Retail Jewelry Store.
Retail And Computer Background
Necessary. Benefits Avai1able ,
Apply : Acquisitions F1ne Jewelry,

151 5econd Awnue. GallipoliS.

Job Sptelal!tl
The Buckeye Jobs For Oh'lo's
Graduates Program Has An lm·
mediate Opening For A Full· Time
Job Specialist This Position Fieports To The Program Manager
And Is Locally Responsible To
The Principal At Gallia Academy
Activities Include Classroom In·
struc110n. Academ ic Coaching ,
Job Dev~lopment And Placement, Job Coaching And Coordination With local Bus1nesses.
The R1ght Candidate May Have
An Associates Or Bachelors De·
gree With A Good Work History
And An Aptllude .For Worki ng
W1th Youth EKtens lve work Ell·
perience May Be Accepted In
lieu 01 A Degree And Teaching I
COaching Ability IS Essential. The
Full- Time Sataned Posltion Assumes A Work Year Of Appro•lmately 1800 Hours With Reduced Summer Act1v1t1es Base
Salary ls $15,500 Plus Retirement
Plan And Medical. Dental. &amp; life
Insurance Benelils ...Qualifled Ap·
pllcants Should Send Resume
W1th A Cover LeHer By Oct 11th

Work Part-Time JFull-Time, Dth.
monstraling Beauty Producti ·
With An International Cosmetic
Company, Call Ashley, 740-441- '

1982
140

Business
•
·:
Training
•,
Gllllpollo career College • :

(Careers Close To Home) • .
Call Todayl 740-446-4387, :
~

1·8()()-214-0452.
•.
Re9 190.Q5-127.B. •·
150
Schools
•••·
Instruction
EARN ALEGAL COLLEGE IJI.
GREE QUICKLY, Bachelori!.
Masters Doctorate. By Corr•·spondence Based Upon Prlpr ~
ucat1on And Short Study Cour~
For FREE Information Book

Phone CAMBRIDGE STA
UNIVERSITY 1·B00-964-8316. •'
180 Wanted To Do ~

A&amp;J's Cleamng Service. resld;O
tiat and business . Call bafOM

7 OOpm, 740-992-9913 01 7.W,·
992-2578

•.

Georges P,ortable Sawmill, dotl
haul your logs Ia the mill just cjl
304·675-1957.
·~
Handyman see.,ing work, avatf';
able now, 740-949-1035.
" ..
Honest , Dependable, Wee6
House Cleaning. Aeasonat¥e
Rates . Free Estimates. (304)67~2892.
·~
J1ms Drywall &amp; Constructla~
New Construct1on &amp; Remodljt'
Drywall, Siding, Roofs , Adelf'·
t1ons . Painting , ·etc. (:;04)674;

To: Buckeye JOG. Depl GA. P.O · 4623 or (304)674·0155.
~
Box 735. Hillsboro. Ohio 45133,
K1ms Cleaning &amp; Interior Pairf
Or FAX To:937-393-9409

Local Cleaning Company Seeking
Full Time Help. Carpet Cleaning ,
. Light Con struction And Remodel
Work . Send Resume To . SCCS

P.O. Box 541 . Kerr. OH 45643

Local Truck Driver Needed To
Haul Milk . Musl Have Class A
With Tanker COL E•perlence

Needed, 740-245·9557
·
LOSE WEIGHT QUARANTEEDI
• ALL NATURAU
OR. RECOMMENDEOI
CALL: 1....248-2n&amp; .
OR VISIT: www.mtlf.awoy.ne1

MEDICAL BILLING . Earn Excel·
lent Income . Full Training . Com·
puler Requ ired Call Tol l- Free

ing . Commercial. ResidentiU'.
Reasonable Rates . Free eut;

mates call304-674-4823.

•.

Reliable Lady, Will Do Housft
cleaning Or Help You With YOUf
Fall Housecleaning, Call DianiJ

740-245-5104
W111 Do Painllng

&amp;

••
Odd Jottf

$4.00 AHoor, 740..367..0140

Will prov1de caregivmg for eldaP
ty Mate or Female, Monday th~

Friday, 9-5. (304)675-2617.

..(
elderlv In nr;

Wtll take care ol
home, e•perienced , 740 -99a..
7526.
.~

•

FINANCIAL

8D0-540-6333 Exr. 2301 .
MEDICAL BILLING Earn Exeef. 210

len! $ $ S ! Processing Claims
From Home. Full Training . Com·
ter Required . Call Mediworks
To I' Free 1-B00-540-6333 Ex I.

•

Business
Opportunity
$20 ·$40 /HOUR Easy Medici!

Billing . Full Training Comput.r
2312.
Required. Call 1 · 888 - 869·7~
E~~;t. 700.
II
Bartender Wanted , 740-441 · · MOTHERS &amp; OTHERS WORK
FROM HOME! Maii·Order. Pari
1428
INOTICEI
,•
Time &amp; Full Time. $850 -53.600/
BOOKKEEPER WANTED ·Min. Month . Full Training Provided! OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING Cfij;
01 2 Years On The Job EKperl· For FREE Boolliel Gall 1-888-234· recommends that you do bu~
ness with people you know, ar{tl
ence , Compu1er Friendly, Knowl · 9897 www.cash-911 C(OIT\Ihome
NOT 10 send money lhrough IIW
edge Of Quickb'aoks Software.
Payroll /Job Cooling /AP /AR - Need 7 Ladles To Sell Awn, 740- mall until you have investtg1tlllf
lhe olferlng.
-~
Abllll\' To HanOia MuiUple Tasks 1 «6-3358.
Construction Knowledge A Plus I
PHONE CARD R NO PHONE CALLS ACCEPTED Need dependable person to worX 2.9 . Ctnto
$750 - $3.000 /Wk. CAS
/SEND RESUME TO: CHRIS· weekends caring for the elderly, ulo
FREE Locations. Free Card
TlAN'S CONST. 1403 EASTERN call 740-992·5039 Monday Vldeo.
1-888-200-7551,2•Hrs. ·!
through fflday between eam-4pm
AVE., GALUPOUS, DH 4H31.
only.
A truly ;evolutionary •nd expl~
DRIVERS - Cannon Exprt$$ 99'!1.
OWN ACOMPUTER. PUT IT TO slve opportuniJy mat Will a - ~
Driver No Touch Freight. Sliut At
to earn a 5l6 l lgure an('UII 1 '
.32t MI. /5 Yr. + Exp.; .31t Ml./3 WORK. $850 -$3.500 MO. PT./Fl. come . Send SASE for free Info
Yr.; .30C MI. 11 Yr.; .29&lt; Mi. /6 FREE Details: Log Onlo: hltp:l/ mauon to P.O. Box 978. M••on'
Mos.; .28&lt; MI. /2 -6 Mos.; Slud· www.hbn.com Access Code 5298
WV25260.
~
enl8 Or 1 Mo Exp. $350. Wk. Pay
OWN
A
COMPUTER?
Raise Ewry 50.000 Miles. Bonus·
ARE U LAZY? I Am And Ear~
PUT IT TO WORK I
es. Rider Program . Paid vaca$1 ,000 ADoy. No Selling. NCO'
$25 -$751HR. PTIFT
tions. Ins. Avail . www.cannone•MLM. For Free 11\tormallon Pl.,...
CALL t ....:Mf.2770
press.com . Call For Details 1·
'9'1 CoH 1·8oo-78HI49, 24 H~

Shirley Spears. 304-!i7S.t429

eD0-845·9390.

OR.VtsiT: www.gDu:Mtthy.net

XT27

.

.,.,t
•'
.'

••

c
I
i

•

••

/

'•

••

&lt;

11

I

•.

,

,:

••
·,

4

�Friday, October 8, 1999

.Pag4t 10 • The Dally Sentinel

P,rlday, October 8, 1999

the Dally Sentinel • Page 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

u

54o-Miscellaneous
Merchandise

•

$35 IIAonth Residential Long Dis

lance Plan I Oe /MINUTE $75 I
Mon1h UNLIMITED CALL 24 17
Agents Wanted Hu ge MLM In
~me Potential Toll Free 1 877
~1 0713 (Lv Msg I E Ma•l
otlnaworld 0 aol com

Mounts Tree Serv1ce The Tree
Protess1o nals" Bu cke t Tru e~
Servtce Top Trtm Re mova l
Slump Gnndmg Free Estimates
Fully Insured Work s Camp 81d
well OH Call And Sa,ve I BOO

838 9568 740 388 9648 'Owner
A ck Mount

AT HOME DATA ENTRY SOUT
SfANDING INCOMES$' Process

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1 888 582 3345

~ /Dental Cta ms Computer
F.lequlrld Will Tram 1 800 :289

4159 Ext 54
AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 20 Location s $4K $10K
$4 000 -t/ Mo
Income
ALL
CASHI tOO% Fmance Ava1lable
1 80().38()..2615 24 Hrs

A I real estate adverts ng n
thiS newspaper IS subject to
the Federal Fa r Hous ng Act
or 1968 wn1ch makes 1t1llegal
to advert se any preference
1mnauon or d1scnm nat1on
based on ace color rehg on
sex tam 1al status or naiiOna
or g n or any ntent on to
make any such preference
I ml!at on CM" d scnm1nal on

/Ca nada

www glassmechanlx com
EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Send Us A One Page Form We
Do The Rest No D11ec1 Se111ng
Free Info Package t 800 831
2385 24 Hrs Ext 63

FULLER BR SH CO Is Lookong
For Peop te ho Would Ltke To
Start Thetr Ow Busmess Work
NO INVEST
1ng From Hom
MENT Needed L1 t~d T me Only
Call 800 882 7270 Ematl full er
ettOaol com

Th s newspaper w It not
know ngly accept
advertisements for real estate
wh ch s m v otat on of the
law Our eaoers are hereby
nformed tha1 atl dwethngs
advertiSed n th s newspaper
are ava table on an equal
opportunity bas1s

MEDICAL BILLER Up to $15
$45 I Hr Med1 cal B II ng Software
Comp1ny Needs People To Pro
cess Medical Cia ms From Home
Training Prov ded Must Own

Computers 1 800 434 55 18 EKI
687
MEDICAL BILLING Unhm1ted In
coma Polential No Exper ence
Necessary Free Informal on &amp;
co ROM Investment $4 995
$8 995 Financing Available Is
land Automated Med1cat Servrc

es Inc 800 322 1139 EXI 050
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22().2985 24 +irs

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NETI!I Have Your Own Turn Kay
Online Bus1ness Through HAND

TECHNOLO GY

Low Slart Up

Cost Gives You A Camp ete
Package With Mentorlng And
Trainmg To Help You Succeed
Call Ivan Turner 877 324 8135

TCt28586

220 Money to Losn
US NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Rema imng Payments
On Property Sold! Mortgages!
Annullie&amp;l Settlements! lmme
dlatt auotesrn "Nobody Beats
Our Pric es • Nattonal Contract
Buyers 800 490 0 73 1 Ext 101
www nauonalcontraclbuyers com

SS$ OVERDUE BIUS"' S$S Con so1~a1a OeDISI same Day Appro
val NO APPLICATION FEESII t
800-863 9006 Ext 936 www help
pay-bils com

t

•

•

i

SFAEE

CASH

REAL ESTATE

$0 DOWN HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED!
GOV T
FORE
CLOSURES! CALL NOW FOR
REGI STRATION I 1 80 0 434
2434 EI&lt;T 3205 (NO FEE)
1 95 Acres Seven Rooms Plus
Ba th Two Garages Barn 10 5
M1les To Gall polls

Wtndlalls 847 A SECOND AVE
SUITE 1350 NEW YORK NEW
'IORK 10017
'GUARANTEED

APPROVAL'

Bank Card No Credit Check No
Up Front Cash Security oeposn
Requ1red •Must Be 18+ And
Have Valid Checkmg Account•
Pre Approval By Phone 1 800

689-1556
FREE MONEY I Its True ~ever
Guaranteed $500
$50 000 Oebt Consolidation Per
sonal Needs Busmess 1 800

740 388

8942

BANKRUPTCY $79+ Stops Gar
ftishmentsl Divorce $99+ Stop
Foreclosure $350 Business Op
jllllrtunltles + Tratningl FreshStart
1-tea &lt;419 ~17 www lreshstartu
IlL COin

CASH Or LOAN I Fa rm Capolal
Wlll Purchase Or loan Agamst
Your Government Farm Pay
menta (CRP/PFCJ Cat! Farm

Capital 1 686 FARM ACT (327
8228)

.•
"

CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monthly Payments 20 50% Save

(304)675 6055
160 ACRES /WYOMING Unom
proved La nd $26 995

$195

Down $269 49 MONTHLY Owner
Fmanced 1 800 800 8446 rural
lands com Or 1 307 32D-3337

3 Bed roo m House W/3 Acres
Land Few Fru1t Tree s 2 Bed
rooms Bath Upsta1rs I Bedroom
Front Room D1nmg Room Ut 111y
Room Kitchen Bath Downsta1rs
Sits On Storys Run Road OH Route 7 lnlormalion (740) 367
7576 Alter Noo n
)40 500 00

OBO
3 Bedrooms 1 112 Bath s Brick
Ranch laundry Room 2 Car Ga
rage Approx 1 Acre 740 446
1393 Or 7 40-446-6612
4 Bedroom Home for Sale With 2
Acresll740~388-8596

A ZERO% DOWN LOAN!
No Down Payment ReqUired With
Government Sponsored Loan
Good Credit And Steady Income
ReqUtred Call For More lnforma
tron And For Other Financmg Op
tlo ns Independence Mortgage

Services 1 81)().845-0036
ARIZONA RARE BUYI Pnstine 40
Acre Ranches In Northwest A.r1
zona From Only $495/Acrel Lush
Vegetation Mountain 1/lews! No
Qual fymg low Down Ask About
6 Mo Inspection Program! 1 800

711 2340

CREDIT REPAIR' AS SEEN ON
TV! Erase Bad Cred1t Legally

File lnlo 88H59-2560
EJIEE TERM LIFE QUOTE Lock

In LOW

Rates Now! Excellent Local S~rvlce 1 877 TermOnty

www Te&lt;mOnty com

GET OUT OF DEIIT! REDUCE Interest R1teal REDUCE Monthly

Paymonll 20 40% Cal 800 700
8812 x 1001 For FREE Consulta
t1on wwwdebtdet&gt;t com
GET YOUR CASH NOWI OldeSI
Buy;tta Of Structured Senlements
Annuflitl And Government Farm
Paymenla Also Purchasing Lot
terles And Private Mortgages

Call Stltlemenl Capllal 1 aoo
959

oooe www seltlementcapi

Ill com

I,

dolton •~ 000 $200 000 Bad
CrtiCIH 0 K Foe 1 800 77().0092
Exl 216
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
OffiCI Visit Necessary Up To
$500 Instantly Call Toll Free 1
877•EAALYPAY 1Sl ADVANCE
FREEl Uctcc70006
RECEIVING PAYMENTS ? In

,•
'

•

4BA 2BA $499 Down $259 mo
t304)755 5566
98 14x70 Clayton 3 br 2 ba CA
everythmg up graded cathedral
ce 1l ng some furniture stays 2
de cks w/ utility burld1ng many
extras exce llent cond 304 675
4451 after 5 pm

I

Buy Homes From $10000
1 3 Bedroom local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosure s Fmancmg
Poss1ble For Ltstrngs Call 800

319 3323 Exl 1709

Ext 8040
HOME FORECLOSURES NO
MONEY DOWN• NO CRED IT
NEEDEDt TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1 800 916
9191 Ext H5023
House and lot for sa le 4 bed
rooms two baths located In Car
penter $1000 down WAC easy
terms contact David I 800 333

6910
New Ranch house 1500 sq It
country porch &amp; back de ck :3
br 2 ba formal dtn lng roo m
cathedral ceili ng In living room
d ouble ca r garage 1 19 ac 8
m11es from Shell&amp; Toyota plants

304 576 2722
Tell:as Road Gallipolis City
Schools Five Rooms Arld Parual
Ba se men t Owner Will Finance
Wtlh t Oo/. Down 740-4411108
Three bedroom all electric ranch
hom e with attached garage
fenced back yard large lot at
Meadow Land Estates Pt Pleas
a11t $600 month plus references

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
9t Mans1on mob1 le home 14•60
two bedroom one bath total elec
tnc SlOYe' relrtgerator central a1r
Ready to move St 2 500 740

949 9016
.... LOOKI ...

5 Bedrooms 2 1/2 Baths over

sq It for tess man $400
mo FREE dehvery &amp; set t BOO

2

ooo

948 5678

Quotes Why Watt? Call Rich 1
81)().888-6450

740-742 2852

121155 moblfe home w1!h room

3BR House m New Haven Area
$225 month plus ultht1 es plus

daposlt304)675 1651
New 2 Bedroom House Near GDC
Also 2 Bedroom Tra ler 740 446

0893
Ra c1ne three bedroom $400
month pl us utthtles $200 depOSit
no pets re ferences requi red

74().949-2621

14 x 70 Mobtle Home 2 br
$200 dep $350 rent no pets
nrce In Ga ll potts Ferry call for
an appo ntment 304 675 5421

Free Money/Cash Rebates that
can be used towards yo ur down
payment
onl y at Oakwood
Homes Nitro WI/ (3 04)755

Furnished t .... o bedroom ale no
pels A ver Park Pomeroy $300
pe r mon th $150 deposit 740

949-2093
Mobile Home Nice Clean 2 Bed
rooms State Route 775 (740)
256 6574

'440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroo m apartments fur
mshed and unlurn shed sec ur ty
depos it reqUired no pets 740

HUD Homes App1oval By Phone
Sing les Or Double s 740 446

1 Bedroom Apartment In Gat11po
I s Water Pa1d $265/Mo Deposit
Required No Pets 740 «6 4043

Moving Out Of Area Must sell at
sacrtltce 98 S W Like New

1 Bedroom Unfurnished Apart
ment Range Relngerator 01spo
sat Garage Provid ed Water
Sewage Garbage P&amp;Jd Deposit &amp;
References Required 136 First
Avenue Rear Gallipolis 740

(304)736-91 02

«6-2561

MOVING OUT OF AREA MuSI

1 Bedroo m 2 Blocks From Un1

Sell At Sacral1ce 1998 SW L1ke

verslty Rio S235/Mo Plus De
posi t Available Oc tober 12th

New 304 733 9102

740 388 9994

New 3BR 2 Bath 14 Wide $500
Down $210 per mo Free Air t
80().691-6777

1 Bedroom Near Holzer s Eco
nom1cal Gas Heal Kitchen Ap
pi ances Furnished $279/Mo +

Utihties 740-446 2957

691 6777

2 Bedrooms Close To Watmart
Utlllttes Pa1d Oepos1t References

t304)755-7191
Schutt Festa 14x70 3 Bedrooms

1 Bath Vinyl Stdtng Shingle Rool
2'x6 Walls Total Electric Free AI

C Priced To Move French Ctty
Homes Pomt Peasant WV 304

1400

304 675 1400
Schult New Generation t6 x72 3
Bedrooms 2 Baths V1nyl S d ng
Sh1ngte Aoof 2 xs Walls Garden
Tub Skylights Tota E lectnc
Free AIC Sale Pnce d French
City Homes Potnt Pleasant WV

304 675-1400
Specral 2Bx80 3 or 4BR $1000
Down $349 par mo Free Dellv
ery &amp; Salup 1 8Cl0-691 6777
Used Smgle Wide Around $tOO
Per Month Cal I BOO 948 5678

330 Farms for Sale
26 Acres MIL W th 6 Stall Horse
Barn Coun ty water 3 Bedroom
House 740- ~504

Commerc1ai butlding for sate or
rent on Jackson Ave great busl
ness locato n 304 675-7453

Ntce Ou el 2 br k1t appt ances&amp;
A.JC &amp; carpet Reterences/Oepos

1 304 675 4302

2SA Apt In Mason Stove/Refr~g
eralor/Uiilllies lurnlshed A C
Laundry Room Ce11ing Fans
Garbage 0 sposal Very Nice No

Pets (304)773 53521(304)882
2827
Apartment

tor

l'tlnt 1n pomeroy no

pets 74D-992 5858
Applications Now Accepted For
Small But Extra Spec1at One Bed
room Ver)' Clean Stove Fng
Washer Dryer Total Electric /AC
Non Smokers Only No Pets

$300 Deposol $350/Mo 740 446
2205 140 446 9585 Ask For
VIrginia
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK SON
ESTATES 52 Westwo od Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop

&amp; movies Call 740 446 2568
Equal Hous10g Opportunity
Brookstde Apartments Now Ac
cepling Applications For One
Bedroom W1th WID Hook Up
Apartmenl 74().446 9611

son
$25 ooo OBO
t304)882 34601or882 2833

Modern lBR All utilities pa1d
except electric Gallipolis Ferry
Area $250 mo + depos1t

ready Cut In $27 000
Great For Hunting Nea r Patnot

Olf SR 141 &amp; SA 233 $23 000 On
New Road Bu It That Continues
Into Wayne NatiOnal Forest

MEIGS COUNTY
Near Danville &amp; Rutland Off SR

325 5 &amp; 10 Acres $9

~DO+

Call

For Free Maps On The se And
Other Prop ertie s In Southern
OhiO

Anthony Land Co Ltd
t 81)().213-836~
www countrytyme rom

992 5064 Equal Housing Opper

t304)675 1371 or675-3230
Now Taking Appl ications- 35
west 2 Bedroo m To wnhouse
Apartments
Includes Water
Sewage Trash $3Hi/Mo 740

446.0Q08

20 WOODED ACRES

MERCHANDISE

Free PC Computerll Ca tl Nowt1i &amp;
l ea rn How lnte net Merchant
Accou nts Custom Webs1tes
New Busmess? Poor Credit?
OK/II Almost Every B1.1s1ness Ap
proved low Monthly Payments

Household
Goods

510

onto 110 (304)675-1988

3457 or 304 675-5042
For Sale Reco nditioned wa s h
ers dryers and relngerators
Thompsons Appliance :1407
Jackson Avenue (304)675-7388

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vme Street Call 740 446 7398

1 888 818 0128

5 year ollf Palomino mare genlle

Hawaiian Tortvakl llaclpes $3
S A. S E
Kama alna
Foods

green broke $750 740.992-a357

PMB522 4224 Walalae Avenue
11!5 Honolulu Hl96816

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaore&lt;l New &amp;RoW It In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 81)().537 9528

'

Living room su te couch and
matching cha1r large recliner all
good condtt1on make offer 740

985 4355
Lose Up To :10 lbs In 30 Days
For $38 Ask About Free Sam

pies 740 441-1982
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Furnaces Installed As low As
$28 00 A Month W1th Approved
Cred1t Easy Over The Phone
Bank Fmancing Huge lnyentory
Ollntertherm Miller &amp; Coleman
Furnaces Heat Pylnp s And
Parts V1nyt Sklrtmg Kits $299 95
Doors &amp; W ndows wller Heat
ers AnChors PtumblnQ &amp; Etectn
cal Parts Bennetts Mobile Ho me

ACROSS

(304)862 2436

Chapa) Road 74().446 7444 740
388 0173
New And Used Furniture Store
Be low Hoi day Inn Kanauga

6 00 p m 740 992 2528 Russ
P!Aoore owner

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
(King) Heating Stove lo r sa le
good condlt1on Used approK
tmately 2 Wtnters Lid will ra1se
up to cook on $200 OBO

(304)576-2343
45 KW Kohler Generator 6 Cylin
der D1esel 63 Hours On Untt
$5 500 7 40 256-1506
1 Completed Doll House w/ Lots
of furniture $350 OoiiHouse
ready to assemble w111 be s2·
long 45 " tall 27 " w de $250

(304)882 2436
1987 Dodge Caravan Good
Shape Good Tires King Wood
tlUrner 740.256-1424

21 x20 TWO CAR GARAGE Full
/25 Yr Manufacturers Warrantee
ComPlete W th 10 Overhead I
Doo r $2 993 00 Can Deliver 1
Antique dinmg room set hutch
corner cabinet claw ~gged table
&amp; 6 eM irs 52000 rirm 740 742
Bassett Crib Solid Maple with
Mattress $125 Two Cherry Bas
sett Chesl of Drawers $:100 for

both (304 )675 3440 aner 4PM
Bathtub Showerdoors 1/amty
vanity Top With Faucets Com
mode Commode Cabinet Excel

lenl Shape (304)875-2844
8r~tann1a Os1to Groovy bean~&amp;

bab1es all 3 Holiday teddi8S &amp;
many more beanie babies &amp; bud

die s call alter 6 pm 304 87 5
7223
COMPUTERS SO Down Low
Monthly Paymonls Y2K Compll
ant Almost Everyone Approved

Call FtROCOM Advanced Tech
oologles HlOQ.617 3478
Firewood for sa le $25 a truck

Small 1BR Apt Pt Pleasant
Area $195 monlh Evemngs
(304)675-4975

load

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 1/2 Bath Fully Car

llvere~

740-949~

Firewood lor oele All Har&lt;lwoo!ls
Full Size 314 Ton Truckload De

a Stacked $45 (304)682

2555

poled Adull Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Patio S1ar1 $350/Mo No Pols

like to buy older RCA Dlrecl TV

lease Plus Security Deposit R•

syste m with access ca rd pay

Qulr&amp;d Aller 5 740 448 0101
Belore 5 74Q-446-3481

cash call 740 949 3315 leave

For sale Prlmestar system also

message

1(740) 533 9186 or

t740).fl43.1027

1983 Chevy Blazer New Paint
Tires 4x4 Automat c AJC $2 30QN
1
May Trade Gn Later 4x4 Trud
Ch8\lrolet 740 256-&amp;434
1

oo

Ping Pon Table Paid s20o
Will
Sale $60 00 Pumpk tf'!S and
Gourds will Sa le Whole Sale!
Prem1um Frrewood Oa k

&amp; Ash

$50 Load Full Size Ptck Up De
STEE L BUILDINGS CANCEL
LATIONSt MUST LIOUIDATEtt
25K30 30X48 45K80 55X160

tires new paint asking $41 O.P
OBO call 740 949 2644 ev•o
lngs or 74().99~ 1506 days

Hay &amp; Grain

640

Round bales of hay lor sale 740

698 8211

t99 1 Astra Van A W O S
OSO 1991 Plymouth oyager 1
t993 Chevy S tO Tahoe 4X4 1
Aed 49 300 m11es 5 speed 4.3t
e ngine Extra Ni ce (304)675:

TRANSPORTATION

$500 CARS FROM $500111 Buy
Pol1c e Impounds

&amp; Aepos Fee

POUND Honda s Toyota s Che
vys Jeeps And Sport Utilities
Fee ReqUired Call Now' 800 772

7470 EXT 7832
1993 Chevrolet Lumma 4 dr se
dan 3 1 V 6 auto ale new 11res
non smoker 53 000 miles minor
pa ss enger damage (runs &amp;

drives) asktng $3 150 OBO 74().
992 1506 days 740 949 2644
eves
1964 Ford Falcon 4 Doors 6 Cy
Iinder 3 Speed On Co umn 27 000
Onglnal M1les $2 500 F rm 740

Truck camper $500 ell:erclse
bike S50 18 speed 26" men"
bike $80 10 speed tad1es b ke
24 $40 grav1ty edge ex~clser
S 100 bathroom ca bmet $25
ch1lds vamty $tO cell 740 742

t970 El Ca mmo SS Clone 350
Rebuilt Motor 350 Turbo Trans
mtss1on Came From Florida New
Paint 740256-1071

You Don t Call Us We Both Lose/
74Q-446-6308 1 81)().291 0098
:114 200 PSI

$21 85 Per 100 1' 200 PSI
537 00 Per 100 All B rass Com
pression Fittings In Stock

AON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacl&lt;son OhiO 1 81)().537 9528
Whilfteld (FJreplace Insert) Pellet
Stove Advantage II T Metallic
Black wllh brass trim BTU Ran

www dlamon~llers net WE SELL

DIAMONDS FOR LESS! THE IN
TERNETS BEST PRI¢ESt NO
COMPUTER NEEDED LICENSE
INSURED BONDED C~tl TOLL
FREE 877 726 3753

Building.
Supplies

Block brick sewer p pes wind
ows lintels etc Claude W1nters

1983 Oids 2 Doors Cutlass Su
preme Brougham SlaCk One
Owner Black Full Power AfT 5 0
Liter v 8 Motor Excellent Condl

tion $2 200 740 446 3277
1985 Mercury Cougar Fair Con
dttion 740..446 3479 After 5 PM
19~Monto

Carlo 1 $400 740
367 O!i31 740-992 8976
1986 Olds Ciera 4 Doors Auto
Air New Tires Auns Good $850

Or Best Offer 740 441 1Q83

Eskimo Spnz $75 Each Mother &amp;
Father On Prem1ses No Papers

74().446-3281
AKC Labrador Pups 2 Black 2
Chocolate For Information &amp; Ap

polntment 740 245-95:{7
AKC Pomerania ns Female 1
year old $150 00 Ma le 1 year

$100 00 Verv sweetl(740)256
6162
AKC Aegtstered cockef Spaniel
puppies first shots and wormed

bull and buff &amp; w,..._poiS $200
74().992-7371

P~mouth

Fury 88 140 446

1990 Grand Am White 4 Doors
Auto AJC New aauery Brake s
Fresh Trans Runs Good S1 500

OBO 740-441 1083

38 Holey
fabrlcu?
39 Hypnotoc
utata
40 More foxy
42 Correct
44 Guide
49 Yorkshire
river
!iO RR

TO 0...1 Wli\\,
Ntrn'T t -r

992 1506 day• or 740 949 2644
•

~i

1989 20 Skippe r Craft Pontoon
60 HP Mariner low Hrs 81mm1

f

;

1995 11 Hvdra Sporl 90 hp

WHEN I'SSEr16LI"'(, A

__,

• pot&gt;G.E BALL" TEi&gt;IM,
THE FIRST DRAFT

PICK IS CRUCIAL

t998 t8 BOO Series Ntlro 120 hp
Mercury Dual Console butlt ln
battery charger trailer $8 900
1998 24 Sweetwater pontoon ~
hp Johnson tandem axle w1&amp;h

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are crealed !rom Quotatioos by lamoug people pasl and p esenl
Each leiter m lhe c!pt'lflr stands lo another Todays clus R equs/s U

oc

IT V G D

F

WRLGD

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GX

GOA

XEFMFORGHFOP

F D

VMCJD

F • B T

IT F 0 V

oc

MTHGOT

XFDYT
LCOWTM

TGMOW
VPIFHH
XWTEWTMA
PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'I shul my eyes on order lo see ' - Paul Gauguon
' Art Is the reasoned derangemenl of lhe senses " - Kenneth Rexroth

'=~~;~' S@\\~lA- ~ r..~s·

_ _ _ _..;.._;;

l~lto~

loy CLAY l

POllAN

WOlD

IAMl

Rearrange le11t&gt;rs of 1he
0 four
ocromblod words below 10 form four stmploo

worcb

EGYARS

I
UC E J I
I

nt
Easl must take charge He should
overtake the spade km g w1th hiS ace
cash the club ace then lead the spade
four over to h1 s partner s Jack Even
a Wes t w1th several burned out s1h
con ch1ps should reali ze he can g1ve
East the lethal club rufT at tnck four

&amp; lratlor $6 700

depot
52 Rejjrel
53 Guy

I

I

t

I.D AI. Y I•S ( r_ ~ =~'

How soan w111 you be fm
!Shed dressmg?" the Impatient
.
husband asked h1s w1fe 'Noth·
,..------~-:-:--., mg spec1f1c he added - - - NUTJEK
lthe----"
~-.,;F;-;;,1..;....;1;....;"1-,rr-1 A Comple1t 1ha chuckle quoted

I
5

I

_V

by lill.,g In the moaong words

L.--1--....L--L-.....L--..._~ you develop from step No 3 below

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQUARES
. . UNSCRAMBLE fORI
W ANSWER

Great Good Work Ca.r $1 600

1992 Pontiac Grand AM

SCRAM-LETS ANSWIIS

4

eta PL 1OOK New Body Style
740-245 94\6
1993 Ford Ea:cort LX 4 door

60 000 miles air power p11rrors
stereo tan with tan cloth Interior
minor right front damage runs
and drives $1700 740 992 1506
days or 740.949 2644 awnings

790

nung by hoR~ proc.s 1
Shop rhe clouo(ied seer/on

Don 1§&lt;I

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

pa1ts runs and looks good 740

992 3491

(304)88~ ·

er 31 Fully Loaded (304)895
3902 or (304)675 1437

1994 Cadillac DeVille loaded ax
cel!ent condllion ca ll 740 992

SERVICES

of

wormed 740 256-6162

nss

90 Ford Crown VIctor a 302
auto ale runs seoo 740 992

$150 lor lemales 304 773-5810

7405

Two II K C Reg Female Treeing
Walker Pups Four Months Old

720 Trucks lor Sale

(304)895-3394

1979 GMC 314 Ton $13 000 Now
Parts Pnce $1 100 Call 740 256
1102 Ask For Jr
1980 Chev SB P1ck Up Tru ck
350 V 8 Automatic Transmls
sian PS PB CO Player Runs

Good $1100 140-446-1849
1989 Chevy 4x4 Silverado Long

Bed Pick Up Truck (304) 675•
2159
1991 Ford Ra~gor Slandard 4
cylinder looks pood runs exoet;
lent chrome wheels 101K

t988 Yellowstone Travel Camp

--------'
810
Home
Improvements

------~~~=-~---:~
BASEMENT
o
WATERPROOFING

,o

unconditio nal lifetime guarantee •:
Local refe tencqs furnis hed Ea

tabhshed 197~ Call 24 Hrs t740)
448 0870 1 800 287 0576 Rog

All types of masonry work brick
block stone concrete 20 years
e.:perlence free estimates 304
773-9~50

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
perience All Work Guaranteed

French Cily Maytag 740 448
7795
C&amp;C

General

H6me

Main

t~tn,hce Painting vinyl siding

carP,eptry doors windows baths
mObile home repair and more For
free es~l mate call Chat 740 992

6323

Livingston s Basement Water
Proofing all basement repairs
done free estimates lifetime
guarantee t2Y,rs' on Job experl

ence (304)895-3887

1995 S 10 4x4 V6 43 Looko &amp;

840 Electrical and
fletrlgeratlon

810 Farm 'Equipment

ABS 74().379-2221 After 6 PM

930 Mustang Skid Loader
S8 7! 0 Or Trade II For Termite

1997 350 XL 7 3 Dltsol Automal
ie Cab &amp; Chassis 38 000 mtles
A 1 CondtltOn (740) 256-5056

&lt;

'

ASTRO·GRAPH

ers Wate~rooflng

$2MO 74().949-2045 evanb1gs
Runs like New Tunneau Cover
Class 3 Hllch Paint Graphics

'

8 Stove Refngerator AI (.

Condtllonong $2000
3693

1993 Plymouth Ouster 6 cyt nder
OHC standard excellent cond
lion looks great beautiful Interior
n ce wheels $3500 740 949
2045 evemngs

~ao

OCTOBERS I

1978 Star C a~ Fold Out Camper
Sleeps

1994 Plymoulh Acclaim &amp;8 000

Outrun • /nsh - Notch - NotiOn - INTO the SUN
Art Instructor to class, 'Some pa1n1ers transform the
sun 1nlo a yellow spol while others transform a yellow
spot INTO the SUN '

I FRIDAY

1993 Mercury_, Tracer automatic
ale am/lm cassette some new

1997 Pontiac Bonneville 5!S 000
Miles Loaded TaKe Over Pay
ments $381 740 367

Becl&lt;hoe 740-448 8470

.:iiLVEI&lt;:.W~

sp ade kmg
If havmg the b1d m h1s ROM
North m1ght have made a hmtt ra1se,
JUmpmg to lhree hearts to show 1012 support pomts wtth four plus
trumps South nearly went stratght to
game but JUSt m case hts p artner had
m ade a weak rm se South b1d h1s second sml North had n o hesitation m
JUmpmg In four hearts
Eas t was happy with h1s partner s
opemng salvo of the spade kmg He
s1gnaied enthuSiaStically w 1th lhe
etght West contmued Wllh the spade
tlu ee, but 11 d1dn t matter The con
trac t could no longer be beaten
Declarer ruffed the th1rd spade drew
trumps conceded a tnc k to 1he club
ace and c latmcd
East should have paused at tnck
o ne and asked h1mselt from where
l o ur det ens1ve tncks were cmmng
He could a nltctpate two spades and
the club ace The log1cal fourth tnck
w as a club ruff m the Easl hand But
how docs We st know that' H e does

1992 Ford Tempo Auto IA 11 Runs

Registered Border Collies 1 Fe
male 1 Male Proven Workmg
Lines
S100 Each Shots

FAHM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

K

1oma11c Htgh Miles $1 199 Neg
740 446 0519 Or 74().446 3407

1997 Camaro 40 ooo mtl8s
ed 74().669-0904

Thursday And Saturday Starting
9125 Tll110130!119 9 Mll~s Woa1
Of Galllpol• On U 1

l'"' GOI..u. v-.. u:£.

t97 1 Seastaf 181 Trlhaul w!Trall
er 70 H~ ChrySler Motor Motor
needs llltle work $650 t304)578
4016

1991 Pontac G P 4 Doors Au

$50 740 446 8172 740 256
8251

Walnuts Bought At Troyers
Woodcraft Open Monday And

[ oc:t-l'T ~ \-Jf\i.-1
..-,~TI\t. Bl6 DEN... I~

750 Boat• &amp; Motors
for Sale

760

256-6169

Red Raspberries Now Available

"'I

1999 400 EX Excellent Shape!
$4 400 OBO 740-448 1627

brakes $13 700 74().992-6520

Boston Tamer Pups No Papers
Par t Boston Terr ie r Part Terner

Taylors Berry P~tGh Call In Ew
ngs 740-245-9047

t996 Yamaha Tlrflb erwolf 4
wheeler w1th 1998 tl t trailer new

Runs Good $2 000 OBO 74 0
245 9396

Miles Auto Air Cruise Ttlt Alu
mlnum Wheels $3 600 OBO 740

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

\

1981 Plymouth Laser Automatic
Transmission Power Everything

(304)67, 1275

580

~74~0~«_1~
15~87__________~;

Johnson hit tr m trollmg motor &amp;
tra1ler reaoy to go $7 600
t997 18 Bass Tracker Pro Team
60 hp manner w1th trolling motor

1988
7104

7508 aner 5pm

Regl,stered German Shepherd
puppies for sale $100 1of males

1988 Yamaha Warrior Naw T~res 1•
Runs Good Looks Good $1 500 11
1996 Kawasakt 750 SS Jet Sk ~
Low Hours W1 th Trailer $2 800_,.

3940

AKC Reg1stered fe male Shrh
Tzu P._uppy 7weeks old 1st
sh ots/wormed Vet Checked

I

'

Top$3800 740256-1906

East
Pass
All pass

The debate continues on how well
computers w1ll play bndge m the
future Matt Gmsberg the program
mer f or GIB lhmks h1s baby Will
b e th&lt;rbe&lt;l hndge pl aye r on the plan
et by 2003
There are some human bndge
play ers who tml away hke robots at
the 1able but most of us allow emo
uons to mtercede ThiS deal 1s a good
example How should the play pro
ceed m four hearts? We st leads the

1981 Harley Oavtdson low A i de ~
Lowered Jwo ln Ch8S LO IS Or.
Chrome Excel lent Co ndlltoD 1•

evenings

throat

By Phillip Alder

Motorcycles

9 Gratuity
10 Fill with love
11 Member of a
university
boerd
12 Baby bird?
19 I get Ill
22 Plct,.ud
24 Like sonMOne
withe sore
26 Waa
In debt
28 ooze (out)
30 Moetwary
34 Poutpone
Indefinitely
35 Predetory
birds
36 Author Joh~
- Paseoa

Does the robot play
well, or badly?

$19 500 67 000 miles call74tJ$.
992 6223 or 740 949 2045 even
tngs

1988 Chevy Sprint New rmgs &amp;
bearings head rebwlt new
brakes &amp; front tires (304 )895

Doors Cruise Air Stereo /Cass

5 Pupp es 2 Males 3 Females

Opemng lead •

SUPPER'S ON
TH' TABLE

1979 Starcraft 23 cuddy ca b1~
boat mboard V 8 new cover
very good con~ no trarler np
outdrive first '$3600 OBO 740'

560

Had ShOIS &amp; Rag (304)675 3052

WASH UP ll

mudders $2800 740 992 4163

(740)-446-4782

1 Female We1maraner Puppy

IS THAT
YOU?

aher 5pm

Ato GraMo OH Call 740 245
5121

Pets for Sale

PAW ll

1989 Harley Dav tdson Soflan,t

379-2926

92% Gas Furnaces Heat Pumps
Duct Systems Free Est1mates If

West
Pass
Pass

1996 F :350 Ford 4WD powe(,
stroke a11 till cruise PW PBII
white with gray Interior loadectl

$12 500 080 741)&lt;992 2209

7 Slrong collae
8 Mineral
sprlnga

Vulnerable East West
Dealer South

1993 0 150 Dodge Ram 4x4 •
$6 000 74().388 9888

$11 000 740 446-0947

41 Cavi8r
43 Llutenlng
organu
45 Lower limb
7 Org~~nlc
compoundu
46 Doctrine
47Mekeluce
13 Mlclclay RIP
48 Mlulrell
14 Pleno
15 Thuter elghl 51 Valuuble lur
16 Arl&gt;onatndlen 54 Turnu olltWtll'd
17 Allau (abbr.)
55 Shade of
18 Long-nouecl
dlllerence
flah
56Piuceln
20 Muldeanother chair
21 Abominable
57 Thicker
Snowman
23 The woman
DOWN
24 liMp
1 Written place
25 Promo Ia~
2 Struck with the
27 Cla. .tfv
fool
29 Pointed tool
3 Scold
31 Marmora • g
4 Compass pi
32 'Golly!"
5 Map abbr
33 Above (poet )
6 Groups ol
34 Sowed
!hugo
37 Vol

•AJ1076
t K Q
• K QJ 4

_48~9~3~---------------,

71 0 Autos for Sale

11086532
South
• 10 2

BARNEY

$3 000 080 740 992 2209

Immediate Dellvery ll Huge D1 s
counts! 1 800 462 7930 x 14

304~5~------------

•A

"

740

4039 any 1 me Out

• J 97
• 9. 7 5 2

t989 Chevrolet BlazerS 10 4x4
t 06 000 m1tes sunroof ale new

$100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE IM

(~40) 446
Bul av1~ Pike

• A 8 74
• 9 4

S lC miniature horses lor sale reglsl&amp;r&amp;&lt;l 74Q.742 2050
sale cel740 698 3290

.

a K QJ 3
• 5 2

OBO 740 441 0688

Two registered quarter horses for

10 8 6 3
East

'

1984 CJ7 Wtth Hardlop 32 Inch

A4

West

Mtckeys W1th Ultra Rtms $5 95'o "1

1998 Wlndstar 21 600 Miles R'e
tails $22 075 Asking $18 oo"o.
740 446 6967 Alter 7 PM
•

550

oo

call eve

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

87 Z24 while $750 call 304
882 3264

740 256 6203

Antiques

wrence County For lnlormallon

For Upcoming Wln lor $3 50j)
740 367 0331 740 992 ~976

N1ce Clothe s Dressts SUitS
Coats S1z,e 14 Very Good 740

Wor k Horse Work Pony ~ Antique
Farm Wagon Farm M~chlnery

530

&amp;

• K Q8 3
t
•

0639

304 675 2035

Horton HuntEir Supreme Cross
bow S xarrow OuJVer Sling Sw1
Yels ThiCk Styrofoam Target
Neve r Used In Woods New Cost
Over $300 Sale Pr ce $200 740

Country Fair Grounds Steers

Heifers Born &amp; Raised '" La

10·08·99

• 9 6 5

4x4 Good

87 Z 24 dual hood scope sun
root 28 luel mjectlo n automatic
CD player $2000 OBO call 74().
992 9190

ge7 40 000 Wtth 8 Dag s II WOOd
pellet&gt; (740) 446 2272 $S9li 00

Sporting
Goods

Lawrence

Ton

Need Buyer To Make Otter For
Large Group Of Collectable tAn
t1que s Other Mise 740 446

Wmdow Blinds 6 42 1/:2 in wrde
white 1 29 1/21n wide mauve

520

9 1999 12 oo PM

Chevy Truck 1/2

CALL NOW For LISitngsl 1 800
319 3323 x2156

Waterline Special

Mo lohan Carpets Quality Carpet
At Affordable Prices 202 Clark

Club Calf Sale Saturda)' October

•
North

40 Foodftuh

I Actreaa
Anlle-

1988 chevy StO 4K4 auto 304"'

HTG &amp; CLG 740 446 9416 Or t
600 872 5967 Galltpol s OH

WARMUP

Maple Tab e wit Leal &amp; 4 Chairs
$ t2 5 Maple Drop Leaf w/4
cha1rs $130 Round Oak Antique
Table $165 .&amp; Other old furn

3141

plano Dr 74().446 4~5

livered 740 992 4568

Company Custom built computer
w 1 t7 color mon1tor speak
ers pnnter $1000 OBO 304 614

1997 Che vy Tahoe K 1500 47K
Miles La;~dad $25 900 1998
Dodge W 250 Diesel 5 Speed,
Loaded $32 500 74().245 0379

B llvs sso 00 each t304)67 5
5906

(740) 245-5S 87

Compact Kenmore Washer/Dfyer
Les s than 1 yr old Dryer plugs

2 P1gmy goats for sale 304 882

nes c Plants (304)675 2856

Grubbs Pta no tunmg &amp; repa11s
Problems? Need Tuned ? Call the

turo t740) 446 1004

7795

882 2625

3 Pigmy goats 5 wks old AU

Nice used furniture and Ap
pl1ances Johnson s Used Furm

Applian ces
Reconditioned
washers Dryers Ranges Refn
gr a tor ~
90 Day Guarantee!
Fre nc h Clly Maytag 740 446

$500 Fleward lor arrest!Conv of
person (sl who too k Saddle lrom
my barn at Gallipolis Ferry Cha

1 888 67 1-4300

«6 8329

1019

tunit1es

Wood&amp;&lt;! Road AI

Pomeroy At 124 600 sq It cus
tomer park1ng ale carpet ceiWng

800 701 7912

:3 35 Acres Co rner of Foglesong
and Hang mg Rock Road ln Ma

Most~

For Lease

Buy or sell R1ver lne Antique s
tt24 E Man Street on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T w to
am to600pm Sunday100to

Gracious livmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments in Middle
port From $249-$373 Call 740

Rough

949 2093

Groen Apls 149 or call 740 992
3111 EOH

2 44 Ac re s Home si te Green
Townsh p Gallla County Scemc
Ou1et Close To Gallipolis Some
Restrictions 74Q-245-5776

Of Gallipolis S1ng1ew1des AllOwed

A ver Park Pomeroy (formerly
Browns) $100 per month 740

245 9355

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

GALLIA COUNTY
23'11CRES
2 mles Off SA 7 &amp; SR 218 Sou111

a cro ss from New Have n grade
school 304 882 22 19

2bdrm apts total etectric ap
plrances furnished aundry room
lacllll1es close to sc hool 1n town
Applications ava ilable at Village

First Avenue Gallipolis 1 Bed
room Apartment 740 446 1066
or weekends 74G-44t-o952

Call

2 trarler lots lor ent $ 75 00 each

No PelS 740 245 5893

Ideal For

340 Business and
Buildings

VaHey VIew Apartment s Rio
Grande Oh Now Accepting ap
pi/cations for Immediate occu
pancy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts Air
CondtiiOntog Kitchen appliances
Fenced n Playground laundry
On Sig ht Management Wate r
Sewage and Trasn Paid Full time
Students must meet Ohio Hous
mg F1nance Agency Ouaiihca
t1ons Senror Cl t1zen s Wetcome
EHO For more Informal on call
(740) 245 9170 Monday thru
Thursday 9 00 t 2 DO noon

Stop And See Us 740-446 4782

New 4BA 16 wtde $500 Down
$245 per mo Free Air 1 800
New DoubleW de Aepo never
lived n st1ll under warranty

1519

Washers drye rs re lnge rators

Aller 6 PM

and sal up Call 1 800 948 5678

Upsta1 s Furnis hed 3 Rooms
Bath Clean No Pets! References
&amp; Oepos tl Requ red 740 446

I an modern $350/month S150
deposll 740 949 2093

992 2218

l mtted Offer 1999 Double W1de
:3 Bedroom 2 Bath $1799 Down
$275 00 per month Del vered

992 2292

Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob 1l e homes au
co nd111oned $260 $300 sewe r
water and trash ncluded 740

5885

3583

TVtO bedroom apartment for rent
co mpletely furnished washar/
dryer all utilities pald Available
November t st Please call 740

490

2 Bedrooms ln Small Trailer Park
7404461104

ooubleW1de Di s play Sale All
un1ts must go Save thousa nds
Oakwood Homes Nitro WV

446 0041 After 5 PM

14x70 tra ler three bedrooms lo
tal electnc no pets $300 month
pl~o~s $f50 depoSit 740 742 2714

2 Bedroom Mobi le Home You
Pay UIU t es &amp; Oepos1 1 In Porter
Area 740 388 9162

HURRY HURRY HURRYI
OAKWOOD HOMES
BARBOURSVILLE WV
800 363 6862

N ce Unfurnr shed 3 Bedroom

460 Space for Rent

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Ooublew des Free Decor &amp; Furn
ture

Schutt New Generatron Sectio nal
28 x64 LA Family Room F re
pla ce 4 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Thermopane Wmdows &amp; Much
Morel Prrced To Move! French
City Homes Pomt Pleasant WV

13041675 8959

740 446 1615

992 2167

2606
Brick
Ranch
3Bedrooms
2Baths 2 Car Garage t 2Acre t
Year Old Pt Pleasant $125 000

2 Houses On Lovers Lane Over
looking Atver Each Wllh 2 Sed
roms Small House S350/Mo B1g
House $4501Mo 740 446 1243

800 383 6662

Schult New Generatron Sec11ona1
28 x52 Featunng Schult Country
K1t chen 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Sale Pnced French Ci ty Homes
Pon t Pleasant WV 304 675

vutor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Financed Mortgage
Real Estate Contract Insurance
Annuity Hjghest Prices Free

;

1999 Ooublewt de Repo Neve r
Lived n New Home Warranty 0
Down lf Qua l hed 740 446 :109:1
Oakwood Gall pohs Ontyl

Beautiful 4 bedroo m two bath
fen ced yard established small
engme shop or run your own
busmess !rom large commercial
bwldng Plus good rental home all
on one block m Racme Oh o
Wllh or Without extras 740 949

and daposM 304 824 2460

NHd A Loan? Try Debt Consol

1997 Fll e two od Mob1l e Home
Pa 1ally Furmshed Heat Pump
Electnc 740 367 0565

675-1400

Down! Gov t And Bank Aepo s
Be10g Sold Now! F1nanc1ng Ava I
able Call Now• 1 600 730 7772

CREDIT PROBLEMS
STOP
HEREII WE CAN HELPII LOANS
AVAILABLE $3 000 AND UP
CALL TOLL FREE 1 877 663
92e9Ext 231

t740)446 8113

ter4pm

Nan-Prom Tee 80().758 3844

$3 000 And Up No Fee 1 877
84!3-9269 Ext 221

1991 141t x72ft 2 Bedrooms 2
Baths Shmgle Root Vtnyl Sid ng
EKcellent Cond1 110 n $10 000 00

$550 00 Call t740 ) 441 0972 al

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0

We Can Hetp loa11s Ava table

1990 Danville 14ll:70 2 Bedrooms
2 Baths Excellent Condition 740
446 1778

F nanctng 1s Ava~ablell

1997 Cla'flon 14x70

Thouaanda Of Dollars In Intere st

CREDIT PROBLEMS Slop Here

431 3

1999 F'"'twood 14x72

Repay

511 2640

1982 14 x60 Clayton 2 Bed
rooms 2 Baths Condition Good
Ask ng $4 000 Contact Aller 6

For Sa le t 967 Sc hu ltz Mob tle
Home 12x65 All Plywood Floors 2
bedrooms Total Gasl Good Con
drtton $2000 00 F1rm1 1990
Dodge Shadow Good Work Car

3 Cred 1Less Tl)an Pedect??

RENTALS

2 Bedrooms $325/Mo + Utilities
and Deposi t No Pet sl 740 446

(304)755 5885

1 Just Getting Started In Ue??
2 L mlted Credit HIStory??

NOW$ From

Wealthy Families Unloadrng Mil
llons Of Dollars To Help Mrnlmiza
The~r Taxes Wnte Immediately

1972 Needs Small Repa1rs 740

One bedroom fu rnished apart
ment call 740 992 9191
Apart ment Poin t Pleasant 740

388 9830

Want A Home Don t Have Land?
We Do Hurry Only 10 loi s Lett

310 Homes for Sale

Anthony Land Co

410 Houses for Rent

1987 Kawasaki KX80 New Jug
New Piston Great Condtton Runs
Great 740 367 0308

lng NOT Rep lacmg Long Cracks
II\ Windshields Free VIdeo 1

US

256 6251

500 Acres

We Pay Cash 1 800 213 8365

14x70 Wltn Expando Goad Con
dtiOn $6 500 740 446 8172 740..

PM 740 446-1749

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Repaor
800 826 8523

141160 Ft Spac1ous 2 bedroom 1
bath complete w1th ca rport and
storage bu1ldmg Set up on rental
Loti (740) 446 8617 Leavlt Mes
sage!

We Bu y land 30

••

NEA Crossword Puzzle

&amp;RIDOJ:
PHILLIP
ALDER

Opportunity

•

Residential or commercial wring
new se rvice or repatra Masrer Li
censed electrician Ridenour

Eleclrlca l WV000398 304
1766

67~

Saturday, Ocl 9, )999
Tins could be an extraordinary
year for you for paufy1n1 yoor
mnermost heart's des1re, so take full
advantage of 1ts po1en11ai Do yoor
pan when opponunuy knocks
LIBRA (Sept 23 Ocl 23) J01nt
venlures cspcctally With members or
the oppos1te gender, could be
extremely lucky for you today
Involve younclf 1n team alt'lnge
ments whenever possible Tryma 10
(Nllch up a broken rom1ll1Cc? The
Astro-Orapb Matchmaker can help
you understand what to do to make
the relationship work Mall S2 7' to
Matchmalr.er, c/o 1h11 ncwspepcr,
P0 Box 1758, M'turay Hlll Stat1on
New York NY 10156
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) 'Oits
could be one of your betler days f..nesOIIIItons of all kinds, but cape·
c1ally those that have far reachtng
'ffects All (lllrt1C11nvolvcd w11l be•
efit
SAOI'ITARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) Offer your wis1ana: wllhnaly
today wherever they are needed

Your ability for problem solvmg IS so
good that larger than normal rewtuds
could be 1n lhc offing for you
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Somethmg benefic10l could lranspm:
lhrough lhc g00$1ausp1ces of a frocnd
It II be an oppartunlly you II dcfi
01tely want to lake advanlage of
Ieday
AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Feb 19)
The: pt&gt;sSihohlles tor (IC"'!&gt;nal gnon an:
ralhcr cxlraordmary for you l&lt;iday
There s a chance you m1ght even reap
rewards '" more than 011e area of your
hfe
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20) S11c
can be mstrumental today 1n awak
en1ng your fullest polenllal so thmk
b1g 1n alllhal you do The larger 1he
stakes !he beucr you'll perform
ARIES (March 21 Apnl I~)
Yoo're on a rather l11Cky roll 1oday, so
slay on top of mailers that can contnbule to your mllenal !le&lt;unty
You ve Jilt to malr.e hay whtle the
Sun IS shmtng
TAURUS(Aprll20 May 20)Th1S
could be one of those wonderful days

i

when either romance cnuld hlossom
for you or s1mply betng wuh good
fncnds moghl prove lo be • rcwaro

mg expenence
GEMINI (May 21 June 201 Luck
Will play a maJor role on putung to
rest a mailer thai dodn 1 look hke &gt;t
would ever stop bolhenng you You
could feel hke you have a new lease
on hfc
CANCER (June 21 July 22J
Alhances you form today could lurn
out to be rather lucky for you m way
of contnbutmg to somclhmg of las!
mg value You II all share on what

occun
L.§&gt; (July 23 Aug 22) Success ts
hkel)l"today on whatever you con
centrote your efforts. bul make career
nr linanctal affnus a top pnorlly
Since they can offer new begmmngs
and los1mg rewards
VIRGO I Aug 23 Sepl 22) Pe'l'le
wtll su up and lake noucc today
whenever you say ..- do smn&lt;:lhmg
This 15 btecausc your lcodcnhtp qual
t1tes wtll be very much 1n evodcnce
wnhout even uymg

I,

�.... _ .
..,.,

-~-~··-.r ln1!. r"\..,.,;••'"lo-~·- ~:-•-,
~·

....

··-·~

. .......,.1 .
:~,.

.-.,t

. . ..... .... .

'

Ohio

.. •-1&gt;--•

"' ....... .
.......

''

' .·''

- ·": .

·Christmas Joy on the
back of an iron horse

. High school •
football roundup ·

· MLB divisional
playoff continues

'

.

Local Sports

Inside: poae 8 I

Feature Cl

Imide: Jli&amp;CI • B2·S

HI: 70s Low: 50s

-------- - -"!ol·"
Details on

I

•

I

A2

tmes

•
ven ton

z

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Gallipolis • Middleport· Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant· October

~.

1999

'

Vol. 34, No. 34

Gallia County officials prepare.for local head
GALLIPOLIS - Citing the importance of an accu·
rate count of Galli a County residents in the 2000 census,
officials have begun preparations to ensure that all citi·
zens are included in the local tally.
Committtes are now being formed among townships,
!!Chools, religion, . media, COIIlmunity·based organiza·
tlons, businesses, special housing and nursing centers to
recruit volunteers to assist during the census. The local
count will be taken starting in March 2000.
"To many people, the census is an invasion of privacy, or they won't take the tinie to fill out the forms that
are received from the government in the mail every 10
years because they just don't feel that it is important for
them to be count~" said a spokesman for the local census rommittee; cSlUired by Gallipolis Oly Manager ll. V.
aarke Jr.
The spokeSman added that an accurate count is vital
to th~ amount of revenue local government receives.
The census determines how much money eKh town·
ship, village,rounty or city will get from state and fed-

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Make sure your family can ·escape a fire safely.
Follow these simple directions.
1. Run practice fire drills to familiarize
your family with the safest and
quickest roufes to escape from every
room in the house.
2. If a fire breaks out i~ your home, get
out as quickly as possible. Do NOT try
to fight the fire yourself!
3. Teach your chHdren how to use the
telephone to repo.r t a fire.
4. If you are in •~ room ·filling with
smoke, stay ntar the floor, where
the air quality is better.
·5. NEVER lump from a winclowl Many
people have ~en critically iniured or
~ied1 wlthou~? realizing that help was
,,
nearby.
•

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q

eral sources.
Additionally, the census designates how many stale
and feder~'legislators are elected, based on tbe popula·
lion rount.
Oarke and Gallia County Commissioner Skip Mead·
ows are ,Jeading the local effort in seeking out volun·
leers.
Oarke and Meadows, along with County Auditor
Lany Betz, have expressed concern that the last census
in 1990 failed to rount C\'ery resident of the county and
city. A series of meetings that began in May is aimed at
a complete count of all residents, the spokesman said.
A meeting last week attracted 31 people to the Gallia
County Courthouse to initiate discussion on how to
increase the questionnaire mail-back response rate
through a well-focused, structured neighbor-to-neighbor
program.
City Commissioner Bob Marchi has been appointed
to solicit volunteers fr9m each block in. Gallipolis to
obtain information on the addresses and number of peo·

pie living at the address. These volunteers will be
known as '" block captains" and will have input on enu·
merators hired by the federal government to insure an
accurate count within the city limits.
•
Meadows, with assistance from the township
trustees, will make recommendations on the hiring of
enumerators to work in all of Gallia's 15 townships.
Anyone seeking the job as an enumerator, or census
taker, will be given a written and oral test, and if hired,
will be paid $9·$10 per hour during the official census
period.
· A testing site will be announced later, and then "help
sites" will be announced to assist those who have diffi·
culty in filling out.the official census forms.
Oarke sai\1 that most residents will receive a short
form (less than· 10 questions) while one person in six
will get a long form (about 55 questions) the govern·
ment asks to be answered. Everyone receiving a census
form is 'requested to fill it out completely and return it to
the government immediately.

coun~-

.
''Those people receiving either the long or short

forms may rest assured that none of the volunteerS
working in the help centers, or none of the local work~
ers involved in the census will see what the individual
has written on the form, because they will be immedi·
ately sealed and placed in the mail," Qarke said.
·
Meadows and Betz urged every trustee, clerk, viii.Se
mayor and council to become involved in the count.
Allsubcommiltee$ and anyone interested in the. elm:
sus should attend the next meeting. act for 7 p.m. Mon·
day on the second noor of the rourthou~e. All township
trustees wiiiJ11CFt at the 911 Center on Monday, Oct. Iii
at 7 p.m. for a tour ofthe facility and informatiop on the
census. The last meeting this month is scheduled Tllc:is•
day, Oct. 26 at 7 p.m. in the courthouse, when eve.ty ·
trustee, clerk, and all city and village governments with~
in the county should be represented.
: ·'7'
Cynthia King, census coordinator from Detroit, wi,l·
ronduct an information and education seminar on the
census on Thursday, Nov. 4 at 7 p.m. at the rourthouse. ·

Stern.wheel Feslival ..
concl·u·des ·in Pomeroy
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-This lmportatit Safety Message From:
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Baum
Lumber

Ridenour
Supply

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985·3301
Chester, Ohio

State Route 248, Chester, OH

Ewing
Funeral·Home

Downing Childs
Mullen Musser
Insurance

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985·3308

992·2121
Pomeror, Ohio

(row's
Family
Restaurant

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992·2342

Pomeror

Pon~eroy, Ohio

Valley
Lumber
992·6611
Middleport, Ohio

992·t432

.

Fisher j.:
Funeral Home

The Shoe Place
and Locker 219

Middleport· 992·5141
Pomeror • 992·5444

992·5627
Middleport, Ohio

'

Brogan·War
Insurance
Polileror
992·6682

I

Sugar Run
Mills

I

Pomeror
992·2115

\

Bond issue prom ses new buildings for Meigs Local Sch9ol$:·

Home·Natl,~al · ~Your lank.lor life~
Bank. ~t .
·F·arme.rs Bank
"WROY
GALLIPOLIS
sjucu$1. 992·2136
UCINE
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446·2265

949·2210

992·6533

w.-,

1UPPEISPWNS
915-3161

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By .IM FREEMAN
lions.
mills to help offset the cost of the building project. The risonville elementaries will have a new school on SR
TI111M-S.n.tllltll Slllff
If the issue passes,. it will mean most elementary remaining 1.05 mills will expire in five years.
143 in the Wolf Pen._areL· A new 470-student MeigS
P6MilROY - In a few short years, almost every school-age youngsters in the ~unty will attend new, or
. However, the reduction will take effect only if the Middle School will be consl!'llcted' near \he high schoflli
child In Meigs County may be attending school in a new practically new schools: the llastem Local Schqj~l Dis· ronstruction issue passes and the remainder of the levy and the higllschooi will benefit from an S81Dillion tctf·
. ·
buUdlng. depending on t~e outrome of a ~~~:hoot am- trict completea a new, distriCt·wide elementary school at will be used to purchase textbooks and school buses, ovation.
llli;Uction iaeuc confronting voter's in the Meigs Local the j)eginnina of th~ 1998-99 school year, and julllasl Superintendent Bill Buckley said.
· These areu were choeen for several reasons. BUC;~
-~ooiiSistrict.
·
·
· ·
week' grolliid·w• .broken in Racine for the1new South·
The bottom line then, according to Buckley, is the Icy explained. They are out of'the Hood pllin, are~- '
!' (.\tiiO. diatrict is seeking l!(lproval of i 23-y~. 3.95- em lllementary School. Meigs ~!lly youngsters in · new schools will not raise taxes above their current sible during times of hip
have avlilable utilid~
' I.IIschool construction bond/IC'Iy issue in tlic Nov. 2 Columbia Township are· part of the Athens County- • level.
'
and, while not located in towns, are within easy dri~.
~raJ electl!!~· That amount will !aile local funds of based Alexander School District and do not attend
· Building supporters are ·currcnily meeting Monday distance for approxiniltcly 90 percent of the atuden~jn,
$5,726,000 that will' be combilled with Ohio School JChool in Meigs Co11nty.
~enings at the hiah scbool. The.next meeting will be the-trict.
.
'
While some communities do not want to 10110 lhelf
Facilities ·Commission funds of $26,856,763 for the .
Supporters of the·levy are stressing in their catripaip held Monday at 7 p.m.
$32,582;763 building project,
.
'
that passaae of the bond/levy issue will not increue
Current plans call for construction of two 468-stu· schools, he said U, district and the school board have to
Plana call for repl,acina the existing elementary . property taxes in ·the district.
dent elementary schools. Middleport, Bradbury, Rutland "look out for what ia belt for all the kids in the dilltric:t,•
schools with two ne\v buildings, and the middle school
On Aua. 10, the Meigs Local. Board of Education and S~em Center students will attend a school located
With the sta~ ·1'11!11111 up .about 80 percent of ~ ,
In Mlddlpport with 'a new building idj~nt Meigs Hiah . approved a raolution to ""'uce tbe district's exilltina S· along State Route 124 betw!'CJ1 Middleport and Rutland, money for the new bliildil!ll. it is too good of a
School. ,MHS will also bellefit 'from extensive renova- . mill peimii)C.nli!lijlfOVementsle\ly by 3.95 mills to 1.05 while children attending Poincroy, Salisllllry and Har•
t,, '
.
Continued Oft , . . A2

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