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Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday

Tuesday, October 12,1999

TIME OUT FOR TIPS
BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family and Consumer Sciences/Community Development

October 13, 1999

Weather

Community Calendar

Today: Rainy ·
High: 70s; Low: '\Os

The Community Calendar is publish'ed as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar is not
designed tq promote sales or fund raisers of any type. Items are printed only
as space pennits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of.
days.

Tomorrow: P. Sunny
High: 60s; Low: 40s

Braves beat Mets in NLCS opener, Page 4
Grandmother upset.with pre-teen, Page 8
Family Medicine, Page 12

POMEROY- Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern Star, Tuesday,
7:30p.m. Initiatory work to be performed. Members to wear chapter dresses.

Planet Hollywood announces closing of nine locations
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Planet
Hollywood has closed nine of its 32
U.S. mov ie-themed restaurants
ahead of a pl anned Chapter II bankruptcy filin g.
J he Orlando- based company
plans to file bankruptcy petitions
today in Delaware. and will soon
suhmit its reorganization plan, ihe
companx said in a news rele ase
Monday evening.
"Today is the first step in our
plan to position Planet Hollywood
for a return to long-term profitability and healthy growth," said Robert

POMEROY - Meigs County Health Department immunization clinic
Tuesday, 9 to II am. and I to 3 p.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose Center. Every
child must be accompanied by a parent/legal guardian . The immuni zation
record&gt;ij~ to be presented. For more information call 992-6626.
TO BEGIN SERVICES •
Revival services will begin
Wednesday and continue through Sunday at the Pomeroy Church
of the Nazarene.
Ishmael and Eileen Horsley will be special workers for the revival
which will be conducted 'nightly at 7 p.m. and on Sunday at 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m. The Rev. Floyd Grimm, Jr., pastor, invites the public
to attend.

Tri-state artists to exhibit at Jackson Festival
Artists from tile tri -state of Ohi o, Kentucky, and West Virginia will be
heading to Jackson to exhibit their work at the 18th Annual Foothills Art
Festi val at Canter's Cave 4-H Camp thi s wee kend . The festival gets underway Friday and continues through Sunday.
Organized by Southern .Hills Arts Council in Jackson, with the sponsorship of local Ohio business...c.Sands Hill Coal Company, OSCO Industries,
Oak Hill Banks, National City Bank, and the Ohio Arts Council - this annual event features the work of more than 150 artists from the tri-state region.
In addition to the visual ans, live music will be performed and hands-on ans
activities will be available.
One special feature of the Festival is found in a special area set aside on
the mezzanine called "Experiencing Foothills" and is manned by teachers
and volunteers on Saturday from II a.m. to 2 p.m. and·again on Sunday from
noon to 2 p.m. This free .hands-on workshop will give everyone the opportunity to make a pin, prim, or watercolor card to take home.
Classical music lovers will enjoy the enchanting melodies played by classic guitarist Sean Ferguson Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m. The Brighton Trio consisting of Valorie Adams, flute; Kari Gunderson, violin; and Susan Walsh,
cello performs Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m.
The· Festival is open Friday and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 7 'p.m.; and
Sunday, from noon to 5 p.m. Canter's Cave is located five miles nonh of
Jackson off Rt. 35. Food concession, by the Canter's Cave staff, is available.
For more information, call the Council at 740-286-6355. admission and
parking are free.

WED~BsDAY

RACINE - Racine Board of Public Affairs meeting Wednesday, 10:30
a.m. at the municipal building.
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Athletic Boosters: 7 p.m. Wednesday. high
school. Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053. Thursday. Dinner at 6:30 p.m., meeting, 7:30p.m.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Alcoholics Anonymous, open meeting, 7 p.m. Thursday;
Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Thursday, home of Clarice Krautter. Vera Crow and Charlotte Elberfeld, hostesse·s.
ALFRED - Orange Township trustees, Special session, discuss fEMA
projects, Thursday, 7:30p.m., home of Osie Follrod.
POMEROY - Veterans Administration Medical Center of Chillicothe
health care enrollment Thursday, I0-noon and 1-2 p.m. at the Veterans Service
Office, 117 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. Proof of military service required. Call
992-2820 for an appointment.
REEDSVllLE - Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine
Childhood Immunization Program will provide free immunizations for all area
children, from birth through 18 years, Thursday, Il-l p.m. at Reed's Store in
Reedsville and at McDonald's in Pomeroy from 2: 30 to 4 p.m.

the latest in sports news from the'

Dat·ly Senti•nel

99 .DAYS SAME As CASH*.
FLOOR. 99 DAYS ~SAME As CASH.
FLOOR. 99 DAYS ·SAME As CASH.

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Your John Deere dealer is passing along 99 days Same-As-Cash* on a full line of lawn i.llld garden equip~ent
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By JIM FREEMAN
Sentlnei .Newa Staff
"We're the Rodney Dangerfield of state agencies. We
don 't get any respect"
That was Nancy Pedigo, public relations director for the
Ohio Depanment of Transportation's District 10 in Marietta, described the agency to the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce. Pedigo, of Racine, w115 a guest speaker at the
chamber's monthly luncheon held Tuesday at Carleton
School in Syracuse.
.
.~gq, 'Yho started working with ODCiT in 1992, said
shc.lm9WS the agency is- frequently tlte bNnt o~ jokes·. ·- · ··:·
"Wl\en you see workers slandtng or sitting, there's usually a !CjiSOrl why," she said. Generally !he workers are waiting for the next truckload of malerial .or doing paperwork
alongside the road. The workers are entiUed to two 15minute breaks each day.
"Everything we do can be seen by someone," she said,
adding that the workers "do an honest days work" and are
very experienced.
One of the agency's m05t important, and often thankless,
tasks .is the clearing of state roads during winter. "Imagine
· being in the ·eab of a dump truck during a blinding snowstorm. Imagine yourself in that situation," she said.
· Drivers are assigned routes to clear roads based on their
priority. U.S. 33, state Route 7, and state Route 124 to the
Ritchie Bridge are the top priority roads in Meigs County,
when those roads are cleared the workers move on to other
state roads. Trucks will also plow the way for emergency
personnel to get through to homes during winter stonns, she

Wakefield Garage
US# 50 West, P.O. Box# 639

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668 Pinecrest Drive
740-446-2412

$113 PER MONTH*

Today's Sen~nel

D E E

LoeB!

12
?8d0
11
2
3

\Soorfs.
Wetlher ·

3

Calendar.
C!assllleds

740.593-3815

P-.kenllur"wv
brry's Cycle &amp; Tractor Sales
2706 Pike Street
,.,,
304-428-7102

Comics
Editorials

4-7

Lo tteries
miW

Pl~k 3:'5-8-6; Pi~J&lt; 4: 6-0-5-9

,Bucken 5: 12-16-23-29-31
•Offar enda October 31. 1999. S!.b}ect to approved credit on J~hn Deere Credit Revolving Plan, for noiHIOmmerclal use. A 1()'1(, ctown payment required. If the biiMCe Is oot paid In full by tht lnd of~ AI Cllh promotlonll period. lntefe.st will be IIMI HO fr tt1e rl&amp;l
11
purchase 81~9.8% APR untoso you reside In CA(19.2'11.APR); AI., Fl. KS: lA, ME. MA. MN. NE. NC, NO, PA, VT, &amp;w.t (18ll APR); TX(14% APR , but rate may vary); ARf9.5% APR, but rote moy ¥11J)wllh 1 $0.1(1 Pl'r11!111111 mtntmum.·Taul, frt~, fltlup oncJ.dettvery:'arcea ~~
monthly payment. Larger monthly payment me; be required In California. Other special rates end terms may be available, InclUding Installment fin arcing ana flnancln&amp; forcorrmercl• ute. AYIIllbllll: pa1ictpatll'ldllltrl. Prtotatnd rnoct111 ~--~ b'f dlalet".

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GOODYEAR FAMILY- Roscoe and Sandee Mills were named the Goodyear Family of the..¥•r
In recognition of their diversified farming operation on 1600 acres In Meigs County. Larry Vance,
chief, Division of Soli and Water Conservation District, right, made the presentation assisted by
Joe Bolin, supervisor, left.

said.
bow Bridge" on state Route 248 in
"Our ODOr workers from the
Chester; a Nov. 9 evening meeting
top to the bottom are highly trained
on the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge Proprofessionals," she said.
ject; and a Dee. 8 public hearing on
Jerry Wray, former OOOT directhe Ravenswood Connector. In
tor, was credited with changing the
addition, the Meigs OOOT garage
color of ODOT's trucks from yelwill hold a winter rehearsal on Oct.
low to white. "Good guys drive
18 starting at noon.
white trucks," Pedigo said. Plus;
Also speaking were Bill Buckwhite paint costs less than bright
ley, superintendent of Meigs Local
yellow and is easier to repaint.
~hools, and Steve Beha, director
"q'lie · Meigs· County's ··
of .. Carleton Schooi!Meigs·-lndusGarage, which ,is moving to a new
tries, who spoke on their agencies'
facility next year, plays an important
,
respective building issues.
role in the community. ODOT
· Buckley said Meigs Local is
recently donated its old computers
seeking approval of a 3.95-mill
to area schools, she pointed out.
bond/levy for construction of two
Pedigo
also
encourages
new elementary schools, a new
motorists to exercise caution while
middle school, and renovations to
driving through construction zones.
the high school.
Since 1911, 150 ODOT employees
Approximately 80 percent of
have been killed while working in
the $33 million issue will be paid
construction areas.
for by the Ohio School Facilities
She concluded by stalin~ " We
ODOT SPEAKER - Nancy Pedigo Commission, he said. In addition,
may not be perfect, but if you need from ODOT District -tO spoke about the district h115 resolved to roll back
us we'll be there."
the agency's mission during the Tues- its current permanent improvePedigo then infonned chamber day luncheon meeting of ~he Meigs ments levy by 3.95 mills, resulting
members of three upcoming meet- County Chamber of Commerce.
in no net inc~ease in property taxes,
ings of interest to area residents: an Oct. 21, 7 p.m. meeting he said. at the Chester Firehouse to discuss the repair of the "Rain"We feel this is an o'pportunity we cannot pass by,"

~·

D•lly 3: 8-9-7; Dally 4: 2-7-9-9

.

0 I'Hli'Ohkl V1lky P'llbli11hlna ( :u.

included in the site package is the
. installation of some utilities and
gravel access roads and staging
areas for further construction.
The acceptance of the Anco Mining Company bid was recommended
by the district's construction management company, The Quandel
Group, and by Marr. Knapp and
Crawfis Associates, the district's
architectural firm.
The board also discussed the
boiler replacement project at the
high school. It was noted that the old
boilers have been removed with the
new boilers expected to arrive later
this month.
In financial matters, the board
approved a resolution declaring the
Southern Local School District in a
state of fiscal emergency. The resolution will aUow the district borrow
money from the state at no interest.
The board also agreed to allow
members of the Southern High
School FFA to attend the National
FFA Convention in Louisville, Ky.,
during the-week of Oct. 25.
· Present were Superintendent
James Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie
Hill, board President Bob Collins
and board members Marty Morarity,
Doug Little, David Kucsma and ~ton
-Cammarata.

The Meigs County Fair Bureau will hold its
annual meeting on October 19. The dinner meeting will begin at 7:09 p.m. at the Meigs County
Senior Center in Pomeroy.
According · to Farm Bureau President Rex
Shenefield, John C. "Jack" Fisher, executive vice
president for the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation, a
200,000-plus member organization, will be the
special guest speaker, and Sheila Arnold, the wellknown local gospel singer and songwriter, will
provide entenainment.
Fisher holds a bachelor's degree and master's
degree in Agriculture from The Ohio State University, and a-master's degree in counseling from
Ball State University in Muncie, Ind.
He has extensive experience in both government and agri-business, serving as a deputy director of the Ohio Department of Agriculture, and as
an assistant to the director. Since being named
executive vice president of the Ohio Farm Bureau
in 1996, Fisher has also been named to serve on
the Board of Public Expenditure Council, the
Board of the Ohio State University Alumni Association, and as a member of the Vice President's
Advisory Council for The Ohio State University

College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental
Sciences.
Arnold, a two-time winner of the "Female
Vocalist of the Year" ,title in the Country Gospel
Music association, is currently working on her
fourth recording at TBN's Trinity City in Hendersonville, Tenn., at H.I.S. Studios. From that project, two of her songs have been released to I ,000
radio stations. In August, she was also nominated
for "Female PerSonality" in · the Country Gospel
Music Guild Association.
At Tuesday's meeting, election of trustees and
delegates will be held along with voting on resolutions for the state platform. Stale' trustees will
also give reports.
All members, family and friends of the Farm
Bureau are invited to attend. Tickets are $5 for
adults and $3.50 for children. Tickets may be purchased from any board member or from the Farm
Bureau office, located at 382 East Second Street,
Pomeroy.
Reservations may be made by calling the Farm
Bureau at 992-2403.

Homecoming activities set

This week 's homecoming activities at Meigs High School will
get underway Thursday night with a parade beginning at Rutland and ending with a bonfire and pep rally at the football
field.
Toney Dingess is in charge of the parade and entries are to
made with him at 992-7141 . Lineup will be at the Rutland Fire
Department at 6 p.m. with the parade to leave there at 6:30 and
go
.to Depot Street where it will disband, and then reassembly
Firefighter finds Infant son
at
6:45
at the Family Doll~r in Middleport and proceed to
dead at accident scene
Fruth's Pharmacy. From there the _participants will go to the
ALEXANDRIA (AP)- A vol- Farmer 's Bank in Pomeroy, reassemble and move to the footunteer firefighter who was on the
ball field.
first emergency vehiCle to reacH the
Friday homecoming activities will begin with a parade Qf the
scene of a fatal traffic accident dis, queen candidates at 7 p.m. Crowning ceremonies will follow.
covered the victim was his infant The can.d.idates are Bethany Boyles, daughter of Vickie McKinson.
ney and Chris McKin~ey of Middleport; Charla Burge, daughVic Buzard found his son, . ter of C~arlie and Penny Burge of Middleport; Heather Ferrell,
Qllton, 1, dead in achild safety seat daughter ofT. J. and Vicki Ferrell of Rutland ; Tiffany Halfhill,
in. the rear passenger seat of a l:ar.. daughter of Lawrence and Sandra Halfhill of Rutland;
driven by his fiancee, Cindy C. Lee, ' Stephanie Kopec, daughter of Tony and Dawn Kopec of Midalong Ohio 37 in Licking County on dleport; and Brooke Williams, daughter of Barbara Williams of
Sunday.
·
.
· Middleport and Richard Williams of Pomeroy.
Ms. Lee, of Alexandria, was
CANDIDATES- Candidates for 18911 Meigs hometaken to Grant Mellical Center in coming que•n are from the left, front, Heather Ferrell,
Columbus, were she remains in seri- Charla Burge, Stephanie Kopec and Bethany Boyles,
and back, Brooke Wlll,ams and Tiffany Halfhill.
·
ous condition.

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Buckley said, noting that the district has one year in which
to pass the issue.
The Meigs County Boand of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities is seeking approval of a countywide 1.5-mill continuing levy for the purpooes of maintenance, capital construction, and operation of Carleton
School and Meigs Industri es.
The capital construction project would include two phases of construction added to the existing facility in Syracuse.
The first phase would add 4,200 square feet to the Adult Services Program while the second phase would add 4,200
square feet to the school program including two classroom
learning centers, a facility cafeteria and kitchen renovations.
Before touring the Carleton SchooVMeigs Industries
facility, the chamber members endorsed passage of both
issues on the Nov. 2 ballot.
In other business, Karin Johnson updated members on
the upcoming cruises on the Valley Gem ·slated for later this
month, including an Oc.t. 27 masquerade dance cruise. She
and David Kucsma, teacher at Meigs High School, also
announced plans for the new Meigs County Visitor's Guide.
Economic Development director Perry Varnadoe
encouraged members to attend the Monday, 3:30p.m. meet·
ing of the Athens-Meigs Citizens Advisory Committee at.
the Meigs County Senior Citizens· Center. The CAC is
tasked with studying the proposed U.S. 33 from Athens to
Darwin.
, The next Business After Hours will be held Nov. 2, 67:30 p.m. at Ohio Valley Bulk Foods in. Pomeroy, it was :
noted.

Fa·rm Bureau annual meeting set

• I

· Bidwell, OH

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Chamber speaker: ODOT the 'Rodney Dangerfield of state agencies'

Good Afternoon

www.deere.com

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
lure for emergency 115sistance to liveSentinel. NIY(S Staff
stock producers. He reminded those
Conservation and reclamation proattending that they have only until the
grams and new funding sources to
end of the month to make application
carry them out were discussed by
for assistance.
Samuel Speck, director of the Ohio
The speaker was introduced by .Joe
Department of Natural Resources,
Bolin who noted that Speck was in
when he spoke last night at the Meigs
Ohio's General Assembly for 13 years
Soil and Water Conservation District's
as a state representative and was the
annual meeting.
primary author of Ohio's Strip Mine
Progress being made with weUand
Reclamation Act.
restoration, non-point :source pollution,
Marco Jeffers w115 master of cerereclamation, watershed management
monies for the banquet held in the
and ·water quality were' noted by the
Meigs High School cafeteria. Guests
speaker who credited partnerships with
were introduced by John Rice and canother agencies, as the most efficient
didates for the board of supervisors
way to protect resources.
were presented by Constance White.
"Managing resources takes pulling
Chris Hamm and Tom Theiss were
. together-to make it work," said Speck,
- Samuel Speck, elected to the Board of Supervisors by
who commended local leadership with director of the Ohio Department a ballot vote during the meeting.
making real contributions to advancing of Natural Resources, was . In special recognitions, Roscoe and
the protection of natural resources.
speaker at the annual meeting of San dee Mills were named the
The director talked about the $5 the Meigs Soli and Water Con- Goodyear Family Of the Year and premillion set aside by the Legislature to eervatlon DlatrlctTueaday night sented a metal placard by Larry Vance,
go to counties with substantial flooding problems.
c;hief of the Division of Soil and Water Conservation Dis" Meigs County will be one of the eligible places for tricts.
that money and could get a significant amount to address
The couple, who owns and operates a diversified farmflooding problems," said Speck.
ing operation on 1600 acres in Meigs County, have turned
He talked about the drought and said that farmers will
benefit from the $4 million sel115ide by the Ohio L.egislaContinued In "Meigs Meeting• on page 3

2 Secllons • 12 Pages .

N

.Hometown Newspaper

State ·ODNR director speaks at Meigs meeting

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• 48-inch deck
• Automatic transmission

99-5675-H/B

Athens, OH

so, Number BB

Construction on the Southern
Elementary School should get
underway soon following the Southern Local Board of ~u cation 's
acceptance of a construction bid for
site work on the project.
The board, meeting in special
session Monday, accepted the lowest
bid of $244,125 which was submit·
ted by Anco Mining Company Inc.
of Belmont. The board also
approved construction of a construction roadway loop for an additional
$14,243.75.
Also submitting bids on the project last month were Roses' Excavating of Racine, $265,750 plus
.$16,000 for gravel road construction, and T. L. Smith of West Virginia, $298,629 plus $19,000 for
gravel road construction.
The initial site work includes the
removal of topsoil and the installation of more than 10,000 cubic yards
of fill dirt to raise the entire site
~pproximately four feet. Also

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$38 PER MONTH*

T H

Meigs County's
Volume

RACINE- CHOICE Home Education meeting Tuesday, 1-3 p.m. at Star
Mill Park. In case of rain, the meeting will be held at the Pomeroy Library. For
more infonnation, call Tammy Jones at 992-6743.

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MIDDLEPORT - Low impact aerobics, Ash Street Baptist Church, Middleport, Tuesday, 6 p.m. Public welcome.

98 JO~N DEERE TRACTORS ON THE
97 JOHN DEERE TRACTORS ON THE
96 _ JoH_~ P.~- ~~~- TRAcro~t~ QN TH_E·FLQ()R.

N

-PageS

ATHENS - Athens Parkinson's Disease suppon group, 2 p.m. Tuesday,
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, basement conference room.

Earl, chairman and chief executive
officer.
POMEROY - Meigs County Republican Pany annual bean dinner Thurs· The restaurants closed Monday
day, 6 p.m. at tl)e Meigs Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy. All welcome.
were in Chicago, Costa Mesa, Calif.;
FRIDAY
Fon Lauderdale, Fla.; Gurnee, Ill.;
Houston ; Indianapolis; Maui,
MIDDLEPORT - Ash Street Baptist Church Women's Conference, FriHawaii; Miami and Phoenix.
day and Satut"d3y, 7 p.m. Speakers, Debbie Cundiff on Friday, and Betty JohnThere may still be a couple of
son on Saturday. Door prizes will be awarded; refreshments will be served foladditional closings or franchise conlowing Saturda}l.;service.
versions. the company said. The ~"Get
·SATIJRDAY
company 's restructuring plan also
POMEROY - Meigs County Retired Teachers, Trinity Church, Saturday
calls for upgrading several of its
movie-themed restaurants and
at noon. Senior citizens represe~tative to speak on Wellness in the Millennimenus, Earl said.
'--....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,::_ _ _ _ _ _ _..;__ _ _ _ __...!~ · . urn.

99 JOHN

Hall of Famer Wilt
Chamberlain dead at
age63

•

TIJESDAY

Each year as children go back to school, it
seems that the problem of head lice arises. If
your child gets head lice, it is nmhing to be ashamed of, but it should
be treated immediately. Head lice can infect anyone, no matter how
clean the hair.
How do you know if your child has head lice? You may receive a
note from school or you may notice your child scratching his head a lot.
On a closer look you may see tiny whitish-gray insects that are wingless. fl at and about 1/8-inch long and wide. They may be hard to spot
because they travel so fast, but they do not jump or fly.
The eggs, known as nits, are much easier to see, even though they
are about the si7.e of a pinhead. They are oval-shaped with a sil very or
yell owish-brown color. The head lice tend to be in the hair. behind the
ears. at the crown of the head and the nape of the neck.
What can you do to treat head lice' There are several over-the
counter and prcscn ption medications available. Effective treatment can
be accomplished overni ght if you make sure you follow the instructions
precise ly. Don't usc more than di rected. because a severe rash may
develop. The nits may partial ly be removed by using a fine -tooth comb
supplied in some treatment kits. However, the only sure way of complete removal is by pulling throu gh each hair strand from the scalp to
the ti p be tween your fingers. Contact your doctor, pharmacist or the
Meigs County Health De partment at 740-992-6626 for further information. Family members and close friends should also be treated to
preve nt further spread of the lice.
The child 's clothing, bcd linens. hats and caps that have been worn
within the 48 hours be fore treatment will need to be washed in very hot
water or dried on hi gh heat in the dryer for at leas t 20 minutes. Dry
clean garments that should not be washed. Toys. such as stuffed animals that can't be washed. should be sealed in plastic bags for 14 days
to allow tim e for the lice to die. Carpets, upholstery and mattresses
should be thoroughl y vacuumed. Combs and brushes need to be
washed in hot. soapy water or boiled for ten minutes. (Some plastic
items may be damaged if care is not' taken.) Don't waste money on
insecticides for they do not work to rid the house of the head lice.
What can be done to prevent head lice? Talk to your child about
the danger of sharing combs, brushes, hats and headphones. Don't
allow your child to share hi s locker, coat hook or bed with class mates.
If your child follows these simple preventive measures, her chances of
becomin g infected with head lice shouldbe greatly reduced.

Sports

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Wednesday; October 13, 1999

Commenta

Wedneadty, October

The Daily Sentinel Buchanan's world

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'£sta6{islid in

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111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-1182-2158 • Fax: 0112-21lH

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
CHARLES W. GOVEY
Publlaher
DIANE HILL

CHARLII;NE HOEFLICH
Genertll ,......,

Controller

Big producers, borrowers, consumers
~JOHN CUNNIFF
. AP Bullnea Anllylt
NEW YORK (AP)- Of course a billion dollars isn't what it used
tO be, but when you owe 6,170 of th·osc.billions, as Amerkan housec holders do, it catches your eye.
. That's more debt than is owed by Uncle Sam; whose spending and
borrowing habits are often lambasted by critics. It's more money than
is borrowed by the entire non-financial business community.
. A shocking figure, to be sure, but then you must consider another
f1gure: There are more than 100 million households in the United
States which, divided into the total, means something around $61,700
per household.
.
These are round figures, as are most sums with zeros numerous as
pearls in a necklace. So many zeros in this case, that millions of people simply cannot identify with a sum so large.
And yet, those zeros can mean everything.
Pay attention to them, say economists, including most prominently
t_hosc at the· federal Reserve, because credit is costly and eventually
comes due. It's better to save, they say.
: You might not guess that from the behavior of some families, mainly those that coniinue to spend beyond their incomes. Millions of families do it, even though personal income continues to rise.
Personal income "- wages, ·interest and government benefits ros~ 0.5 percent in August, but spending rose 0.9 percent, driving the
savmgs rate back down to minus 1.5 percent, same as in May.
These are extraordinarily good times for many families, and a bit of
.. borrowing makes them feel even better. Confidence is high, for both
present and future, and the future seems a long way off.
.
Eventu_ally, however, America's households must consider paying
down their debts, and that's why some economists worry even if the
borrowers don ' t.
~ : "The cau~ionary lesson is that high debt levels cannot readily be
reversed dunng a downturn," says analyst Jane D' Arista of the Finan&lt;ial Markets Center, which analyses the flow of finances.
: Indeed, she writes in the private thir.k tank 's " FOMC Alert" report,
high debts " tend to prolong slumps as borrowers struggle to meet debt
payments with stagnant or declining incomes."
: Viewing the broad picture, signs exist that households might agree,
since the debt expansion rate dipped a bit in the second quarter of the
year, mainly due to a decline in consumer credit.
.: B~t there's more to the picture than consumer credi\. including
ored1t cards and car loans. Mortgages play a big part, and mortgage
debt has been persistently strong.
: Some of this 'mortgage debt is a result of home purchases, but not
~II. Some also is a consequence of owners borrowing funds from ·the
r.ising value of their homes. Borrowing to spend.
: Along with a reduction in the amount of corporate stocks held
directly by households rather than through intermediaries the cash
. ~· obtained via home mortgagees has helped fund consumptio~.
By no means has all this spending been frivolous, as sometimes it's
• . made out to be. Households have obtained fine homes, cars and educations, and the consumption has kept businesses humming and innovating and hiring.
But it's• hard to ianore what D' Arista suggests- that's it's easier
I!' get your financial house in order during good times than bad.
Zeroes can indicate nothing, or everything.

Llttf!CI to tho ErJitor

Making no bones about your role ·
TO TilE EDITOR:

' While traveling over the stale as Commander of District 9, Disabled American
" · ~~some of the c:hapters I visited have this problem Md I am sure other organi2llli0ns have the same problem.
·
·
The membersl)ip is mille up of four bones.
Thene are '~bones", who spend all their tinic: wishing somebody would do
the WOik.
· ~·
Thene are the "jawbones" who do all the talking and do very little of anything
else.
Next oomc the ''knucklebones", who knock everything that everybody else tries
to do.
Finally there are the ''backbones", who get under the load and do the work.
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What kind of member are you?

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DmverO. Curtis

Berry's World

WASHINGTON- Republican ·presidential candidate Patrick J. Buchanan continues to press his unique view of World
War II, most recently in the Oct. II, 1999,
edition of The Washington Post, and lest
his latest slant be viewed as plausible, an
answer is in order. This is especially
impor~nt as a refutation of the isolationist
view he is selling, because he is as wrong ·
today as the "America firsters" were in
1940. Specifically, the following
Buchanan statement must be refuted: "After .the
Battle of Britain in 1940, Germany posed no
strategic threat to the United States."
As evidence, Buchanan mirrors British Prime
Minister Neville Chamberlain, who proclaimed
that Hitler's territorial ambitions were sated with
the devouring of Czechoslovakia. Buchanan cites
Hitler:
"Everything I undertake is directed against
Russia. If the West is too stupid and too blind to
comprehend that, I will be forced to come to an
understanding with the Russians, to smash the
West and then after its defeat, to tum against the
Soviet Union ."
Clearly, to anchor an argument on a megalomaniac's words is not the stuff of good debating.
So Buchanan moved to deeds, claiming that
the absence of a substantial German surface fleet
prevented Hitler from considering an invasion of
the United States. But no mention is made of
· German missile, jet propulsion and nuclear programs. In fact, their nuclear program was interrupted by both covert and strategic bombing
activities - activities which would not have
taken place in the absence of American belligerency.
The German missile program, however, proceeded, and culminated with the development of
the V-2 rocket, which in the postwar period would
-under German scientist supervision in the U.S.
and the U.S.S.R. - lead to the development of
the intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). Further, German technology developed the first jet
airplanes. This invention was significant because
Bu.:hanan argues that British victory in the 1940
air Battle of Brita'indestroyed all of Hitler's hopes
for a cross-channel invasion. German jets would
have brought a different outcome in a Second
Baule of Britain. · But once again, American

c1n

for you,
built will cost you."

"$t1CX:I.&lt;atecl
. cool day is on tap (or Ohio on Thursday as a frontal system
P"'"'~. out . ..storm clouds from tod~y. ·
. ·
Hrgh temperatures will be only in the upper 50s to mid-60s, the National
Weather Sl.'.!')l•.ce.&amp;ald..
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Lows,toQig)o t will . ~e in the 4Qs.
The rec?~d -h!gh tcmpc;rature f,or this date at r~e Columbus weather station
was 85 d~gree;; m_l969. while the record low was 28 in 1988. Sunset tonight
Will be al 6:$6A&gt;.m. and' sunrise Thursday at 7:41 a.m.
, Today, .. Be~ming mostly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms
from noon on. Breez.r- Highs in the lower 70s. South wind 10 to 20 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
B Tonigh~::Mostly 'Cloudy. A chance_of s,howers or thunderstorms early.
reezy. Lfiws •n the upper 40s. Northwest wmd 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain
30 percent.
. Thursda'y.::Partly cloudy early.,.'I~en mostly sunny. Highs in the lower (iDs.
Extended forecast ...
~ursdl!y night ... Ciear. Lows in the lower 4()s.
Fnday... Partly clrudy and warmer. Highs1itl the lower and mid 70s.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy. A'chance of showers during the night. Lows in
)he m1d and upper 40s and highs in the mid 70s.
: Su_nda&amp;&lt;;Jl~~ly.Cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows in the upper 40s
and h•gh~:fiQm~ibrJipp«r_60s to the lower 70s.
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, ,;h'l i.1&gt;0' ····"·~
i!;'5o;;.f .(.• ,

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Helen Werry

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Helen Werry, 80, Gallipolis, died Tue~day, October 12, 1999, at her residence.
.
Bo~n April _6, 1919, in Gallia County, the daughter of the late Everett and
Cynth•~ P~rkms Cardwell, she was a member of the Vinton Methodist
Church and Vinton Chapter Order of Eastern Star #375.
She.is survi_ved_by her husband, Ha~ld Werry; one son, Anthony (Jane)
Werry of Galhpohs; a daughter, Cyr.th1a (Michael) Swisher of Syracuse;
four .srandchrldren; five great-grandchildren; one brother, Bennie Cardwell
of Vmton: f1ve sisters, Marie Cardwell of Vinton, Paulene (Homer) Hysell
~f P~meroy, Thelma (Fred) fisher of Vinton, Linda (Guy) Guinther of Galhpolos, and Teana (Richard) Williams of Columbus.
Funeral Services will be held at 11 a.m., Friday at the McCoy Moore
fun~ral Home 10 Vonton with Rev. Connie Faires officiating. Burial will fol low m the Vmton Memorial Park.'Visitation will be held at the funeral home
'T~ursday from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7 p.ni. to 9 p.m. Eastern Star Services
will be conducted at 8:45 p.m. Thursday.

Po!cer Ran planned

.

_The Coolville Li9ns Oub will hold their second annual Poker Run on Saturday. Sign up will be held from l1 a.m. to 1 p.m., ,:;.ith the first bike out at
noon. The last bike in will arrive at 5 p.m. PlaqueS will be awarded, food and
beverages will be available, and an auction and other fundraisers will be held.
All bikes and vehicles are welcome.
·

Ducky Derby winners announced
Charles Riffle, Marilyn Spencer and Tom Theiss were winners of three
sav ings bonds given away a5 a part of the Pomeroy Merchants Associati on's
D~cky Derby, held Saturday during the Big Bend Sternwheel Festival. 62
pnzes were awarded in the derby, including gift cenificates, sternwheel festival souvenirs and food prizes.
· .

Hunter education c;lass slated
An Ohio Hunter Education class will be held starting Oct. 25 at the
Pomeroy Gun Club near Pomeroy. Class dates for the 10-hour course are Oct.
25, 26 and 27, 6-9 p.m. nightly, and Oct. 30,9 a.m. to noon. Students must
attend all four sessions. The class is free and all materials will be provided the
first mght of the class. No preregistration is necessary, but class size may be
hm1ted to the first ,60 students registering the first night of the class.

Smorgasbord dinner planned

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A smorgasbord dinner will be held Saturday with serv ing to begin at 5 p.m.
at the Long Bottom Commwnity Building.

Watch meeting slated

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.The Middleport Neighborhood Watch will meet at 7 p.m. Oct. 19 at
Mrddlepon Church of Chrost:

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Support group to meet

Meeting ...
Co•nllnu•tr:lt\:ii'Q:'j)'l gi' 1
tional agriculture department who
to alternatlv~' ways · . .. tha opcr- participated in a county-wide soil
a\ion pay with:'Sl:l&amp;:tt·~e : i:utlirig of . judging contesl. This year's "oontest
t!mber, reseedl~lt Wll.i l~'... offer,ing was held in Athens County at fernLAND JUDGING AWARDS - Winners In the soli Judging con·
hunting package~ . l!,&gt; g~ps ~~d ~on- dale Park.
test for vocational agriculture students sponsored by 1he
struchon of three c:abms ;on ·their
The high scoring individuals in MSWCD pictured with Charles Yost, left, supervisor, and Aaron
properties.
.;,:·:· . . ·,~.· ····.
the agriculture judging contest con- · Sayre, Southern FFA advisor, were from the left, front, Alan
Named outstliiidtng·.':Cooperatoo test .\Yere T. J. Moore and Ainy Wil- Moore, Amy Wilson, and T. J. Moore, and back, Joe Adkins, Lori
was boc Burke ' ~Jid.-\ldJh:JJis, S'&lt;&gt;n.~ _son, _~outhern FFA, who tieQ for first Sayre, Crystal Cotterill and Richard Murphy.
·
operates a 60(YaJ;tp.f.artp ·w.i!lUL"berd ';;;P.I~c~· with Alan Moore, Richard
of 100 beef cattle:--··- ~· '"·'·-•·'" ' '
~:Muq)iiy and Joe Adkins, who tied for
. : Plaques we;;; p;;es-e-;;r~;r,;;.·:Meigs second; and .Cr.ystal Cotterill, who
GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio Val- Catering, entertainment by a barber
County Fairfioi;!~ki;'le,h8)'s h~ win- took third, all' of South~'fn High ley Visitors Center, the Meigs · shop quar:tet and the Grande Chorale
County Tourism Board and the from URG. Tickets for the cruise are
riers, David Kilt8~~71i11!t~~n't c\rlnore School.
.
~
alfalfa; and Herbie I;l]!~::all.'iit~.
The high;Si;Qring students in the M:ason County Tourism Office $20 per person and $35 per couple.
and 40 I?Crcent or l ess,· !eg~o;es.j'li~: ·" l!~lf'i~dgilf!l"' contcst wC're T. · J. announce a new regional tourism Tickets· may be purchased at the
show 1s co-sponsored · by the Moore, nrst; 'Lori Sayre, second, and partnership, The three offices will Ohio Valley Visitors Center in Galcollaborate to capitalize on the lipolis or at the Mason County
!li!SWCS.
Alan Moore third.
: District land judging awards were
Affiliate members were recog- river town image of Gallipolis, Tourism Office in Point Pleasant.
The multi-city morning cruises
given out during the, 'meeting to ' ~tu- ,nized and presented certificates. Pomeroy and Point Pleasant by
bringing
a
sternwheel
boat
to
the
will
run from Pomeroy and Point
dents from Meigs and Southern voca- Numerous door prfzes were awarded. ·
area.
Pleasant Oct. 26, from Gallipolis to
The Valley Gem Sternwheeler Point Pleasant Oct. 27 and from
of Marietta will be in the a.tea Oct. Gallipolis to Pomeroy Oct. 28.
These cruise prices depend on· the
Units ofthe Meigs County Emer2:15 p.m., Christy Road, struc' 25-28 .
A
variety
of
cruise
options
will
length of the ·excursion.
gency Medical Service recorded six tu(e fire at Jim Sheets residence, no
All multi-city cruises · require
be
offered
including
multi-city
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units injuries reported, Tuppers Plains
morning
crui~es, hourly cruises each
passengers
to provide th eir own
re~ponding ·included: . ..
. VFD assisted.
afternoon
and
evening
cruises.
return
transportation
eKcept for the
RUTLAND
Gallia
and
Mason
counties
will
Pomeroy
to
Gallipolis
round-trip
CE~f~Cms'~ATCH
2:31 a.m ., Salein Street, Joy
hold
combined
evening
civic
cruise
slated
for
Oct.
\!8.
Passengers
may
2:09 p.mw ·East · Main Street, · Anderson, HMC;
Tuesday,
Oct.
26
from
6
p.m.
to
10
bring
a
sack
lunch
for
the
day
cruisPo.meroy, K.,l(y. Allen, Holzer Med,·
5:46 a.m., Lemaster Road, Paul
es.
ical Center;,_. " ..
McCarty, O'Bieness Memorial Hos- p.m.
"The Enchanted Fall Cruise" will
Afternoon hourly rides will be
11:16 p.m., Arbaugh Addition, pital, Central Dispatch squad assistinclude
food
provided
by
K&amp;L
offered
in Gallipolis and Point
Tuppers Pklins; Rose Peterman, St. · ed;
Pleasant
Oct. 26 and in Pomeroy
Joseph's }lospital, Tuppers Plains
8:25 p.m., Hi,!l Str~:et, Marcia
Oct.
27.
Student
and group rates are
sqwad assisted.
Dennison, Veterans Memorial Hasavailable.
CHESTER VFD
pital.
,
;
Hourly rides wil) cost $6 for
adults,
$5 for senior citizens and $4
t~rairltet!ns
for children under 12 years old.
For more information, contact
the
local tourism offices in Gal. LORAII)(,(AJ') -;:,\Jsing.a terror, that ~tudents were never in danger at
lipolis,
Point Pleasant and
·~ gu1de (o~p~ o~ th~ .lrt~rn~t,, two thr. h1gh sc~ool. The youths built the
Pomeroy,
or
call toll free, 1-800youths built a makeshift gun and an devices. on t.heir own 1\me, away
765,6482.
exploding light bulb, .p()lice said.
from the school.
.
·
"They w.~~e r ·~ obsess,ed w.ith .
Curry said he first learned of the
blowing thi~gs ,up, but they liked to wi:apons from an anonymous tip
see things go,:'Boom!' "said Lorain about a week ago.
police detecti.v.e Ste~~en. Curry.
.. "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Police ijrr~~\CQ ..the. ~5-year-old
'= lPRII IGVld lfY (ill liM ,_,
boys Tues~~ ~~ Admir~l l,(i,ng High
446-4524
' :· '.'.. '
School. No one was hurt or threatened.
, The boys were taken )o the,
Lorain County Detention Home and
now face juvenile charges of possessing dangero~s-WtaiJOns.
Police and ,school.officials .said

Parkinsons Support Group will meet at 2 p.m. in the library of Grace United Methodist Church, Gallipolis.

Right to Life sets meeting
Right to Life meeting will be held at 7:30p.m. Monday at the Pomeroy

:·.".r.

Sternwheeler cruises set for Oct. 25-28

.

By William A. Rusher

Rough seas for Capt. Ventura

his gang, who ki.lled the sheriff:
In t 942, during World War II , President Roo·
sevelt delivered one of his so-ca lled "fireside
chats" in which he recommended drafting 18- and
19-yea r-old men .
In 1942, Attorney General Francis Biddle
announced ihat Italian nationals in the Uni.ted
Slates would no longer be considered enemy
aliens .
In 1960, Soviet premier Nik.ila Khrushchev
disrupled a U.N. General Assembly session by
. pounding his desk with a shoe during a dispute .
In 1964, the Soviet Union launched a Voskhod
space capsule with a three-man crew: it was the
first mission with more than one crew member.

__________________ _

By Chris Matthews

logs 6 ,calls

.

charged with
posse$s,n.g·h.omemade weapons

Two

Mammography

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Holzer Clinic

o

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Community N.e~spapcr Holdlnp, Inc.
oo~ (tJSP&amp;ll~

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Published every afternoon, Monday lhrough

Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley 1Publlsl\ing Compih'f.1SecOnd claks
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OHIO VALLEY
ECK CASHING &amp; LOAN
Corner 'of Courl and Main 81.
Pomeroy 740-992-0461

Special -rates &amp; Extended ·Hours
will be available at all Holzer
Clinic Mammography ·
·Locations: Gallipolis, Jackson,:
Meigs and Proctorville

b~ .. . ~I,MtiCI, CP,~If.

26 Weeltl,. .. &gt;j ,,,\~.:,:.I, ;,,,,"'""SS6.68
52 V/eekl ......................... .$tll9. 7~
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Reader Serv1ces
Correction Polley
On m•lne£Oncem ln eall 1torlt1 II to be

~·" or .•• •.rro~ ID.IJ
c.otl ,~~ ... ~~"""" ,11.(740) 9,9:1,3155. We wilt &lt;heck your laformodoa

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Clralltlon~.~ •. ~t ••••~ •••• :..~i ••1•• .'.,.•;,,,,.Ext.·1103

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In recognition of National
Breast Cancer Awareness Month,
Holzer Clinic is offering special
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Routine .Screening - $55
Diagnostic Unilateral- $85
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_., , ", " ' , .• ~A.

In 1968, the Summer Games of the 19th·
Olympiad officially opened in Mexico City.
In 1973, President Nixon nominated House
minority leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan to
succeed Spiro T. Agnew as vice president.
·
In 1997, singer John Denver was killed in the
crash of a light 'aircraft in Monterey Bay, Calif.;
he was 53.
Ten years ago: The House approved a statuto.'
ry federal ban on desecration of the American·
flag. (The Senate defeated the measure a week
later.)
·
five y·ears ago: Panama granted political uy·
lum to ousted Haitian military leader Raoul
Ced1as.

OUTSTANDING
- The outstanding cooperator
award went to Doc Burke family; left to right, Wanda Burke, Doc
Burke, and son, Dan who operate a 600 acre beef cattle farm In
Meigs County. The presentation was made by Marco Jeffers·
supervisor, MSWCD.
.
·
'

CC7000n-006

CL750048-006

Call

74B-992-BB6B
Dr Your Physicians Office

• Ctosotfted Ada ...........:..................ExL 1100

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......:._

Meig~ , ENIS

The Daily Sentinel

CAMBRIDGE, MASS. - Jesse Ventura picAlso his authenticity. Place Ventura's stark armed cult members who stood barricaded at
honesty, just to take an obvious example, along- Waco.
tures himself as a ship's captain in rough seas.
The job description refers to his Reaganesque side that of the nation's top office-holder, a presHe believes the second FBI assault on the
manr.er of governing the state of Minnesota. "I . ident who hosts "prayer breakfasts" but also has Texas compound was driven by government
realize I'm like the captain of a ship, a Navy ship. been known to caress his bible, again for the "revenge" for the killing of four ATF agents durThe captain doesn't actually run the engines ... cameras, on the same Easter he's penciled in time ing that first tragic rush of the Texas compound.
(or) steer the ship," he said during a rousing pub- on his calendar for a certain White House intern.
Ventura's anti-establishment language is both
lic interview at Harvard last week. "I try to put in
"freedom of speech is not there to protect rough-hewn and unfamiliar.
.
the most qualified people ... that know more than popular speech," he told the 800 awe-struck stuThe carpools and bar stools of America arc
dents surrounding him Wednesday night, "but packed with middle-aged, undereducated guys ·
I about that particular department. "
· who think like him, who hate n9t just the IRS but
-The "rough seas" refers to a recent interview also unpopular speech."
" I want to live in a country that supports all every alphabet agency of the federal government.
Ventura did with Playboy: The main cause of the
turbulence was his comment that "organized reli- the amendments to the Constitution. · I think They see "the government" as an alien force
gion is a sham and a crutch for weak-minded they're very important."
comprised of bureaucrats and betrayers.
He's especially vigilant about the Second . Now the; younger, well:educated folk are buypeople who need strength i.n numbers."
Despite a bit of zig-zagging - "there's not Amendment, believing that the Constitution pro- mg the anll-governJ11ent hne. Ventura, for all his
necessarily a bad connotation on being weak- tects the right to bear arms not for hunting ani- warts, impresses them.
Why wouldn 'I ,he?
minded," he told the wide-eyed audience of 1-lar- mals but for protection against the government in
vard students - Ventura has stuck to that same Washington.
The old Navy seal charting his ~urse through
." It was written to protect we, the citizenry, what he calls the "rough seas" of his post-Playrough course he set in the Playboy interview.
Asked what goes through his head and heart from an oppressive government, that if govern- boy existence, the perfect answer to the slick
ment ever became oppressive we would have the ~litician with blow-dried hair pandering to us
when he walks past a church, he offered this:
"I have nothing at all against religion, peo- .right to bear arms and the right to battle our gov- . With well-grool)led, poll-tested banality.
ple's beliefs and the freedom that we're allowed ernment if it ever got IQ that point."
Jesse Ventura's got something, and the
Ventura openly admits his sympathy for any rougher the seas the better he's going to look- ·
to practice them . What goes through iny heart is
that it's a sanctuary, that if people desire or need American out th~re who believes there ·is a clear · most of all to those young Americans who are
and present danger of such oppression from even now, so blithe to cheer him .
'
it, is there for them. I don't generaUy need it."
It's this readiness to shove the establishment, Washington, whether it be the fellow who owns
Chris Matthews, chief of th• San Fmncisco
including organized religion in this co~ntry, that an assault rifle, nien who don fatigues to march Examinu's Wa~hington Bureau, is host of
each weekend with a militia group or those "Han/ball" on CNBC cable tlutnnel1.
provides Ventura his star quality.

By W Anoclltld Prell

tonowing··
Pre"s
,.

'

t""Well, everybody else is doing it, so why New Hampshire are inordinately proud of hav- Nation" and "This Week " on the same Sunday.
shouldn'tl?
ing the first primaries and thereby wield more But first, of course, I will have to make the offiThis. is to announce tha) I will shortly be influence than a state that size is ordinarily enti- cial declaration of my candidacy in the traditionappoontmg an exploratory committee of my 10 tied to. What is less widely noticed is how often al way: on" Larry King Live. " .This may be a lit-.
closest friends to advise me on whether I should they niake some thoroughly cockeyed and unex- tie difficult to arrange, since Larry once identi'fied me in a long-forgotten autobiography as the
run for the presidency,of the United States.
peeled choice.
.
The .committee will, of course, duly recomIn 1964, for example, when Barry Goldwater only guest he'd ever had on his show whom he
mend that I run, and I will consent. There will and Nelson Rockefeller were slugging it out for actively disliked. I will have to count on his nose
then be several important decisions to make.
the Republican nomination, the voters in the for news to overcome his scruples.
I am under no illusion, though, that the WashFirst, what party's nomination shall I seek? New Hampshire Republican primary (who can
Pat Buchanan IS undoubtedly nght thai t~e two be anybody - cross-voting is allowed) dropped ington press corps will actually enjoy giving me
major parties have everything rigged against him the handkerchief in front of Henry Cabot Lodge, all that publicity.
(and me).
who was then serving as our ambassador in farThere are already signs that major commentaH?": about the Reform Party? From all I can off' Saigon: Lodg,e had never won a primary tors like AI Hunt are sagging under the strain of
tell, 11 IS such a can of worms that an outsider before, and never won one again, but he certain- discussing the presidential prospects of outsiders
like myself has as good a chance of getting its ly proved that an outsider has a chance in New like Warren Beatty, and you can see why. Some
nomination as anybody else.
Hampshire. Building on my success there, I can of these pundits have been around Washington
for 2$ or 30 years, becoming pompous public
Any party that can claim Pat Buchanan, Jesse then march on to victory.
Ventura, Donald Trump, Lowell Weicker and
How about issues? As it happens, being an figures in their own right and making fortunes in
Lenora Fulani has a tent big enough to include only child and a lifelong bachelor, I don't have a the process.
They are accustomed to passing their invalu·
me.
.
blood relative on earth whom I would recognize
able judgments on presidential candidates and
!'~wever, just in case I fail to get its nomina- if he or she walked into the room.
tiono', l will make alternate plans for a write-in
So my big issue, naturally, will be: family lesser political figures every four years or so,
candidacy.
values! My argument will be that nobody knows and must feel dreadfully demeaned to have to ·
Who shall be my vice presidential candidate? the importance of a family better than the person pay even modest attention to intruders from out. side the Golden Circle. But they will do it any·
The conventional wisdom these days is that it who doesn 't have one.
has to be_ a woman, ~o the question practically
Anyway, as the old saying goes, the Lord way, and I will get my fair share of their forced
attention.
answe~ Itself: Phylhs Schlafly. We agree on gives a man his relatives, but thank God he can
My fellow Americans, the time for equivocaeverythong, and she no~ only could step into my choose his friends . (I am a godfather in 12 diftion is past. The time for action is here . The
shoes 1f necessary but uust between you and me) ferent families.)
f1ll them better than I can.
Alii have to do now, therefore, is wait for the future lies before us.
What about my campaign strategy? I don't media to beat their inevitable path to my door, I
knowwhether'there will be a Reform Party pri - would enjoy duplicating what is now known
William A. Rusher is a DistinJuishld Fellow
mary IR New lhmpshire, but if so I will make it inside the Beltway as the Ginsburg Trifecta: of the Clanmolll /nstilutt for tht Study of
my f1rst and most Important battle. The voters of appearing on "Meet the Press," "Face the StattsnuJnship and PolltiClll Philosophy.

Today is Tuesday , Oct. 12, the 285th day of
1999, There arc 80 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
.
On Oct. 12 ,' 1492, Christopher Columbus
arrived with · his expedition in the present-day
Bahamas.
On this date:
In 1870, Gen . Robert E. Lee died in Lexington,
Va., at age 63.
In 1933, bank robber John Dillinger escaped
fled a jail 'in Allen County, Ohio, with the help of

!Death NotiCes[

By Jack Anderson and·Douglas Cohn

My hat is in the ring

Today In History
'·

ta,

bombing inhibited jet development and compelling. In Buchanan's world, Hitler
production, causing their introduction to have defeated· Stalin and communism, and left
come. too late in the war to reverse ·france, Great Britain, the United States and their
Hitler's fortunes. finally, it is reasonable allies alone, and the West would have thereafter
to assume that the American nuclear pro- lived in peace with Nazi Germany, ignoring the
gram - the Manhattan Project - would ~olocaust as an internal German matter.
We submit a different scenario. Without Westnot have had the same urgency or funding
in peacetime that it garnered in wartime. ern aid and alliance, the Soviet Union would
As a result, it is probable that America indeed have fallen to Hitler. German scientists,
would have lost the nuclear race. In uninterrupted by allied bombing and sabotage,
Realpolik terms, we assume Buchanan' is would have proceeded at an accelerated pace in
assuming that a strictly enforced U.S. neutrality the development of rockets, jets and nuclear
toward Germany and noninvolvement in Asia weapons. In fact, Hitler alone would have held
would have forestalled the Japanese allack on these weapons, and he would have used them
Pearl Harbor and the ensuing German declaration before U.S. technology could have caught up.
of war against America. Even after Pearl Harbor, Buchanan's world - through inaction if not
isolationist sentiment was sufficient to restrict the intent - would be a Nazi world.
Douglas Cohn is a West Point graduate and
U.S. declaration of war to Japan . Germany was
military
historian. He was retired for wounds
only added as a response to its declaration.
rt!ceived
in
Vietnam.
The upshot of these arguments is direct and

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

___:.

____________

-

_____ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,..._ _ _
• _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....;.....:..:..:..!.

�.. . . .
"

'

Sports

The

I
I
''

Maddux. Mike Remlinger and
John Rocker comhincd on a SIX-hitter
as the Braves heal New York for the
I Oth 11111e m 13 mcc ungs this year.
Atlanta. which sent the Mets into a
late 1a1ispm that almost cost them the
wild-card spot, has defeated them in
14 of the last IS malchups at Turner
F1eld.
" Better pitchmg," Mels third
baseman Robin Ventura. explaining
the disparity.
P1ana came back alter m1ssmg
the fi nal two games of the first-round
wi n ove r Arizona because of a
swollen left thumb. He drove m the
Mets ' only run against Maddux with
a grou ndoul, and fi nished 0-for-4.
P~azza did nol h11 the ball out of
the mtield. The Braves also stole
three bases against the All-Star catcher - he made a poor throw on one
attempt and didn '1even make a throw
on another.
"II doesn't gel any caSter lor us,"
Piana said. "They know it 's not
gomg to be an easy scnes."
A crowd of 44, 172 - 6,000 short
of capaclly. perhaps held down by an
ali -day ram that caused a tour-mmul e
delay at the s1ar1 - saw Atlanta win
the opcntng game of the NLCS at

"frank li n," a cartoon show about a

h nrn~

ILH IIe. with hiS kids.
: " Hes Greg Maddux. He docsn ·t
have ail those trophies because he's
lue ky:· Mets manager Bohb y
V~le ntine said. "He dtd a· great job."

Braves lost Game I at home and
eventually los! the scncs.
Every year smcc I991 , the team
that wnn Game I went on to win (he
NLCS. Atlanta has been in every one

The

prcvtous

two years. the

of those best-of-seven series.
" It's beuer to win the first game,"
Braves manager Bobby !=ox said.
"You like to win the first one."
Game 2 was to be this afternoon,
with Kevm M1llwood, who p1tched a
one-hiller against Houston in the
opening round, starting for the
Braves against Kenny Rogers.
Maddux, a four-lime Cy Young
winner and a ninNime Gold Glover,
gave an ali-around performance in
improving to 10-9 htet1me m !he
postseason He beat the team that got
eight straight hits ofT him Sept. 29 at
Shea Stadium . put down a perfect
sacrifice bunt and made several mce
fieldmg plays.
Walt Weiss, making his first start
smce !he last day of the regular season, had three hils apd stole a base for
the Braves.
Weiss doubled and scored on
Gerald Williams' single for a 2- I lead
m the fifth off losing pitcher Masato
Yosh1i . Eddie Perez homered in the
sixth and Weiss hit an RBI smgle m
the eighth .
Cox had been playin g Jose
Hernandez at shortstop ever smce the
Braves got him in a late-season deal
with the Chicago Cubs. Hhnandez
was 5-for-7 llfctune against

Yosh11 ,

but Cox dec1ded to stan Weiss.
"That's not the No. I thing we
look at alii he time," Cox smd. "Walt
IS really a slick-fielding shortstop.
Maddux tends to get a lot of ground

Baseball
American League
C hampionship Series

VO le S IR )l:tri' nlhcses)

:ream
\-Grove C'1ty (26) 7-0 .

Tonight

.

Boston (Merckcr 2-0) at

Vorl\ (Hrrnandez

N~w

17-9). 817pm

Thursday
Boston (R Mart•nez 2- 1J at New York (Cone I 2·
9)8 17pm

Saturday
New York (Clemens 14-101 at Boston {r
Manmez B -4) 4·22 p m

Sunday, Oct. 17

New York (Pc:ttJlle J4.1J ) ut Boston (S~berhagen
IQ-6J . 7 50 p.m

·Monday, Oct. 18

2-Cm S1 Xav1er (';) 6-0
·' ·Mamllon Washmgton 11) 7-0 ...... .. ............... .
4-Cm Elder (2) 7-0
5-Centenoille t2) 7-d
6-Cie S1 lgnru1us 6-1 ...
7- Brunswtd 7-0
ts- W(lrthmgton Kllbournc 7..()
9- You Brordman 6-1
10-Canton McKinley S-2 ..................... ......... ...... ..
Othen recriving 12 or mo~ poinls. 11 -Solon
"5 12-Shaker fi ts 19 13-Mayfield 17 14 (Ue}LOGAN N Canton Hoo\'er 16 16-Huber Hts
Wayne I ~

New York at BosiOn, 8 17 p m , tf necesMry

Division II

Wednesday. Oct. 20
Boston at New York, 4 20pm .or 8 12 p m. 1f
necc:nary

Thursday, Oct. 21

2-Dover (IJ)7·0

J-Piqual ll 7-0

Boston at New York. 8 17 p m , If necessary

4-Cuy Falls Wal~h Jesu1t (3) 6- 1
5-Trenton Edgewood (2) 7-0
6· Mary~v l l le ( 1 ) 7-0
7-Untontown Lake 6-1 ...

National League
Championship Series

8-Mad•son (2) 7-0.

Thesday's score
.\t l-'"'11 4, New York 2. Allama kads senes 1-0

Future games
Today
New York (Rogers .5- 1) at Atb.ma(Mtllwood IS7), 4·09 p m
Friday
Adanta (G \avme !4- 11) at New York (Letter 1112l:8 12 pm
Saturda)'
Atla.nla (5moll1 11 -8) at New York (Reed II -5 1,
7.42 p m
Sunday. Oct. 17
Atlanta m New York. 4 09 p m . 1f necessary

TUl'Sday, Oct. 19
Nt'W

York at Atlant:a, ~ 12 p m . 11 necemtry
W~nnday. Oct. 20
t\ tl ant;~, S 12 p m 1f

New York at

necessary

Hockey

Dh lsion

ll: L I.&amp;l til. !if !ill.

'

Ntw JctSl'}

I
I
I
{}
I

2

2

I
I
0

P•Usburgh
NY Is l and er~
Phtladelpht a

0
0
0

7

0

a

I

'

14 10
12 10
14
K 10
5 II

"

Northtllst Oivisiun

0
1 l
I4
0)

I u 9 15 9
0 0 6 15 10
0 0 l 8 11
20
8 ll
20
ll

4

Olfnwa
To.-omo
Mlilntreal
Boston
Bll'ffalo

•

0 1
Southr a~ t

Divbion

I0
12 8
2 I I0
7
I I0
ll 12
I 2 0 0
6 8
7 16
0' I 0
WESTERN CONFERENCE
1 0

Flqnda
Carolina .
Woshmgton
Tampa Ba y
Atlama .

-·-

Central Division

nim
Dclrou .

W L I.&amp;l til. !if !ill.

2 I I 0 5 11 6
2 2 0 0 4 II • 8
1
I 2 I 0
10
0 2 2 0
2 II 18

•

~ cago

..

Vaacouver
Edmon con
Co4orado

•

'

St.,LoUIS
Naahtille

Northwest Diviskln
·' 0 0 0

6 II
I 2I I 4 7
I 2 2 0 4 12
.0 1 I 0 I 8

Ca!sary .

Pacific Divisien
4 I 0 0
J I I 0

An!h&lt;om

..

6
9
14
16

8 14
7 14

II
10

J l 0 0 6 20 14
.2 I 2 0
6 15
8
... 2200 4 8 9

Tuesday 's scores
: Flofida l , Montreal I
, Wtuhington 5, Phila~clph m 4

Tonight's games

' ;st Louis at Dctro11 . 7 p rn

at Toromo. 7 30 p m

. Amil~Jrn PI New Jersey. 7·JO
.san J o~e nr Dallas, 8·Ml p m

pm

' Boston at Colorado, 9 p.m
1
•carohna at Edmonton. 9 p.m
:caiJary at Vancou\'er. 10 p m. ·

.

197
.. .179
... 152
140

.Ill

Division Ill

:ream
I·LimaBillh (l7)7·0

til.

299
2- Bellbrook (5) 7-0
254
248
] -Poland Semmnry (S) 7-0 .
4-Copley (2) 7-0
200
5-Col Watterson (2) 6-1 .
17 1
16 1
6·Steubenvlllc:(2)6· 1
7- Bclle\'Ue (2J 6-0 .
I J9
Orrville (I J 6-1
1]9
9-JACKSON 7-0
104
10-Millcrsburg W. Holmes 7-0
.15
. Oihen ~n·ivlng IZ or mo.-.: puints: II ·Akrun
H&lt;lban 16 12· rHORNV II .LE SHERIDA N 2-l I ' ·
Pwy 20 14-Ct n Pun:cll Man.m 19 [';. Wi ll ard 17
16-Col DeSa les 11

Thursday's games

·Adnmit at N'.Y Islanders, 7 30 pm
' Pittsburgh at N Y Rangm. 7.JO p m
~ Mont rea l at Ph i la~ l phia , 7 30 p m
.San Jose at Nashv1lle. 8 p m
,Otrnw;a at Pflocnl.ot. 10..10 p n1

Ohio H.S. sports
O~io H .S. football poll
:COLUMB US Ohio I &lt;\11)

-

~- I

1-lnw ,, u.tte panel

til.

266

2-WUEELERSDURG (8\ 7-0
:!5 1
'-Ch ~gnnFa ll s (8) 7-0
!49
4-Germantown Valley Y1e" 12 16-1
202
~-C 1n Wyonung !217-0
\90·
6-Sandusky Perk111s (2) 7-0
1SO
7- Dcll.un.:( 2)6- l
IJI
1!-Cantpbell Memonal (217-0
124
9-HellvJIIe Clem Fork 6-1
85
0 .1k H.1rbor 7-0
85
Others reeelvl na 1l or mou points: II Ut1co
44 12-Akro n Man.:he)tcr (I J 29 ll- IRONTON 28
' "·Manms Ferry 27 1 5- M ~ n o n Elgm 19 16-Gtrard
11

Division V

:ream
!-Bed ford Chanel ( 18) 7-0

.1'11.

l22
275

2- Cle VASJ (7) 7 0
)- N L1ma S Range 7-0 .
220
4-St Henry 5- 1
148
5-LtbcrtyCtr ( 1)6-1
144
6-MasstllonTuslaw(I)7-0 .
. 140
7- MIIford Ctr Fwrbanks (I) 7.0
I
I 17
8· Woodsfi eld Monroe Central (2) 7-0
Ill
9-Srru thVJ IIe (I) 7-0
58
10-Johnstown Northndge (I) 7.0
43
Others neeivlng 11 or more poinh: 11 Balumore Liberty Umon J7 12·Ainanda-Ciean.Tet:k
( I) l &lt;l IJ·G1bsonburg (I ) JO 14-W Alexandna
Twm ValleyS 26 15-Wayncs\'tlle (]) 24 16 (tte)·
CHILLICOTHE HUNTINGTON. L1sboD Anderson
. (1) 19 18-CHESAPEA KEI8 190(t•cJ-Barnesnlle,
Malvern 17 20-Memmora Evergreen 16 21-Apple
Creek Waynedale 12

Division VI
Tram

, Over t1~ lmses wtll count OOth :u a loss and a
regulation be

~ Florida

241

9-Ub:mon 6-1
79
10 MentOf Lake Cath 5-2..
. ............. 42
Othen ftc:thl"l U or mon: points: 11 -Col
Independence 31 12-Kmgs Mills Kings 30 13-Cin
McNicholas 28 . 14-Grafton Midvtew (1) 23 15·
Whnehouse Anthony Wayne 16 16-Macedoma
Nordonta 1.1

:ream
1- You Mooney !91

EASTERN CONFERENCE

:ream
NY Rangl'IS

.1'11.

.10.1
.100

Division·IV

NHL standings
Athmli~

:ream
1-Col Brookhaven (24) 7-0

1-Delphos S1 John "s (B) 7-0 .
2-liffin Calvcn (I) 7..()
....
3-Spnngfie ld Cath. Cent 7-0 .
4--Toronto 6- 1
S - Mogad~ 6- 1
6-C.n. Country Day 7-0 .. .
7-Bellaln:SI John 6- l .
8-Beallsvllle ( I) 6-1

9-HEMLOCK MILLER 6-1

.1'11.

.. 3S5
.... 274
. .. 236
... 180
.... 175
. 143
. .... 119
' .. 97

4l

10-Pandora-Gr lboa 6- I
.
.. . 42
Others reeelvin1 11 or mort poklb: 11 lndepcndencc (1) .18 12-AntwCI'p JO I)-Oregon
Stntch 28 14-Cuyahoga Hts 2S IS (tJe)-Norwalk
St Paul, Wmdham 18 17- Kutland 14 IS-Newark
Ca1h I\

Ohio H.S. football
computer ratings
Colu mbus . Uhto fAP)
Here are the fourth
weekly football computer ratmg~ from the Ohro H1 gh
School Ath leuc Assoc iauon Ratmgs arc by div1s10n
and reg10n wllh rfcord omd average bi ·k\'cl point~
per game (lOp e1ghl i'eams IR eal h regwn advance to
regmnal qu:u-terfinal s)·

Division I
Rcg10n I J -Solon (7-0) 11 2.l~ 7 2-Shaker
Het ghts fl -01 !8 678~ .1-Mnyfield (7-0) 16921 -J 4Cle St lgnn11us (6-11 I6,26J7 5-SrroogH•tlle 15-2r
12 7 1-12 6- Middh::hu r~ H1 s M1dpnrk (5-!J 12 0214
7-Lukcwood (5·21 II 6 1-12 11-Cic Glem 1lle (~·ll
10 l'ifr7 lJ- EIK hd {-I -ll 10 ~O'i7 10-Eastlake North
/fl- I t 100000
R ~s • o n 1 I G • m~· C•t) 17-0) 10 ~71&lt;~ 1
Wnrrhing.tu n K1lh1•u1nr.: t 7·0l .10 !07 1. 1-Uppt"r

1-Gmlrd~(6- 1)

Arhngton (6-11 16.6000 4-Westervllle Soyth (S-2)
Rcg10n 1.1
1J 4714 2-Chagnn
14 2928 5-Tol Whumer (6-1) 14 27 15 &amp;-Fmdluy Falh (7-0) B 4142 \-Newlon Falls (6-1) 12 5642
(6- 1) U 796 1 7-Lima Semor (4·3) 110285 8· 4-Akrun Munches!er 16· 1) 125 142 5-Sandusky
Thomas Wonhmglon (6-1) 12.5285 9-Dublm Perkins {1-0) IU8214 6-Acwater Waterloo (6- 1)
Coffm an (4-l) II 9785 10-Westemlle North (4 - ~) 9 7000 7-Akron St Vtncent-SI Mary (5-2) 8 9244
11 407 1.
8-Wtckhtfe (S-2) 8 5!187 9-Leavlltsburg LaBrae (4Reg1on 3 1-Manillon Wa5h1ngton (7-0) J J 8 0887 10-Welhngton (6· 1l 7 5 142.
19 907 1 2- Brunsw tck (7-0) 17 8785 ~-Yo u
Regton 14 1-Man on Elgm (7.0) 1:'12928 2Boardman (6-1) 17.17 14 4-Ptckcnngton (6- 1) Tornogany Otsego (6- 1) 12 657 1..1-Bellvt lle Ocar
Fork (6- 1) 12 4857 4 ~Wau seo n (6- 1) II 6637 516 1714 .5-Canton McKi nley (5-2) 16 1142 6-N
Canton Hoover (6-1) 15.6357 , 7-LOGAN (6 I ) Cold Y.ater (52) II 2285 6-0ak Harbor (7-0)
13.057 1 8-Sundusky (5-2) 12 10 14 9-Warren 9 5928 7-Sparla H1ghland Morrow (5·2) 9 3500· 8·
Hard1n g (4·3) 9 6068 10-Mount Vernott (5·2) K e nt on (4J J907 8~ . 9 - Pl a tn CII y J onatha nAi der(494000
.~) 8 72 14 10-Swruuon (4-3) 7 8570.
Rtg1on 4 1-C.n Elder (7-0) 20 3092 2- Huber
Reg10n 15 1-CampDe ll Mernonal (7-0) 14 1667
Hts Wayne (7-0) 17607 1 .1-C. n St Xav1er (6·0) 2-Struthers (~·2) I.U214 J-Navarn: Fa~rless (5·2 )
160180 4-Faufield (5-l) IS 91S7 5-Cemervtlle (7· I I 7.157 .f. You Moo ney (6- 1) 10 7547 S-Bella1re
0) 14 9000 6- Lt bercy Tw p. Lakota East (5-2) (6- 1) 10 3872 6-Zoarv1lle Tu sc Val ley (S-2)
1J 8642 7-Mason (5-2) 11 7428 8-Cm Sycamore 10 0571 7 (t• e) LANCASTER FAIRFIELD UNION
(5·2) 12 5357 9-C.n Oak H1lls (5-2) 1I 6928 10- (S-2). U11ca (6- 1) 9 8642 ?-Coshoccon (5-2) 9 7500.
Cm Wmton Woods (S-21 I I 2934
10-NEW LEX INGTON (5·2) 9.6642.
Regaon 16: 1-Cm Wyorrung (7-0) Ill 08S7 2Division II
WHEEL ERSBURG (7.0) 15 6487 l-C1n MIKie1ra
Regton S: 1-Madtson (7-0) 17 2428 2-Cuya (6· 1) IJ 1500 4-Cm. Indian Ho11(6·1) ll 0071. l ·
Palls Walsll JeSUII (6·1) 16 32M2. 3-Ravenna (6-1) IRONTON (5·1 ) II 6396 6-Ham Badin (5·2)
14 9714 4-0 imsced Falls (7.0) 14 0642 5-Mentor II 4025 7-PORTSMOUTH (4-J ) 9 2%5 8-Ctn
Lake Cathohc (S-2} 10 557 1. 6-Ntles McKinley (5-2) Fmneylown (5-2) 8.l500 9-WAVERLY (4-J)
9 1642 7-Gtcen (4-)}9 0285 8-Richficld Revere (4- 7 7214 IO.IRONTON ROCK HILL (5·2)7 5358
J) 8.9928. 9-Panna Hts Holy Name (6-1) 8.7785.

H)-Akron Buchtel (l-2) 8.lJ I4

.

Reg1on 15· 1-Piqua (7-0) 18 6851 2-Wadswontt
{7-0) 181 500 ) -Av on Lake (6-1) 14.8214 .4·
Whnehou~c Anthony Wayne (7·0) 144808 5·
Sylvama South v1ew (6-1) 13.4000 6-G~afton

~ase ~~nch

I}9 2214 9-0amesvlllc {7-0) 9 2142 10-BEVERLY
FT FRYE (:'i-2) 9.157 1
Reg1on W !-Mi lford Ccmer Fmrbank! 0..0)
l l 742ts 2-Wcst Alex andnaTwm Valley South (7·0)
II /647 l-Rockford Parkway (5-2) 10 992K 4Vma1llcs (5 -2) 10 68~7 5 - W~Jy n ts\· il le (6-0)
10 5590 6-St. Henry (5 -I) 9 7200 7-Cm Detr Park
(4·1)90642 8-Bacav m (7-0)89JJ8 9-NewAlbany
{7-0) H0642 lO-West Jefferson (4-1) 6 7857 .

3

bench &lt;;o:lcti, Bobby KnMp first
and Citci
Gaston baumg coach Announcca 1th~ retirement oi 4
Bob Engle, semor Jldmgr to basebulloperatmn51 ,JI
Announced that l ommy t:ra1g. trauu:r. wtll not ;
tl'lurn next ~ason
,
'
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National League
: ·1
' CINCINNATI REDS PromOied. Dill Scherrer tq 1
East Coast cross-checker nnd Ros~ Sapp to WeSt ~'
Coasl Gross-checker
J
·
MILWAUKEE BREWERS Announced C J
Division VI
ChariJC Greene nnd INF Eddi e Zosky hbve refused (
· Regmn 21 !-Mogadore (6- 1) 12 4428 2;- nunor league ass1gnntt:nts and elc~o:teU lo ba:omc free ~ w•ndhant (6 • I) 102071 .11
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(70)
agenrs
• n epen ence
•
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Basketball
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9 7642 4 Norwalk St Prml (6-1) 9 7142 5-Toronto
(6-1) 7 5637 6-Cie Cuya He1ghu (6· 1) 7 2857 7Naliooal Basketball Association
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Monroev11le (5-2) S 9571 IO-N lackmn Jachon- Sm1th executi ve director of communny re latiOn~-- )I
M11ton (4-3) ~ 9428
Warriors Founda!ion
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(7-0) 9 6714 4-Pandom-Gilboa (6- 1) 9 2714 5-,
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NR.. Named'Chrb RussO Senior \ide president )
7 1500 7-Frcmont St Joseph (4 •.1) 59714
8· of new media for "'
·
~fJ.. EnterpiJSCJ.''
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LakeSide DanbUry (5·2) l.l500 9-Arlongoon (l-2)
ATI.ANTA FALCONS Waivea DTBen Huff ·· •
5 5428 'I"
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(1 4) 5·0142·
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v- . ecovery ·:
CHICAGO BEARS· Agreed to terms w1th ·'
11.. • . ,
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}
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7 4642. 4-Newark Cathohc (4-3) 7 .1642. 5-Howard .., Himson
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INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: Signed DB Erie ~

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92285 S-Covinston (6-1) 8.9417. 6-New Bremen
(4-3) 7 8407. ?-Mechanicsburg (S'· 2) 7.6071 . g.
Ansoma (S·2) 7 Uf12 9-lipp Ctty Bethel (S·2}
6 1178 IO-N Uw1sburg Tnad (4-3) .5.5714

Baseball
American LeaAue

CLEVELAND INDIAN S Named John
Mmtbell1 director of scouung.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Named Lee Elaa

• ., '

•

PHii.ADLEPHIA EAGLES. Agreed to terms ·-~
with WR Alex Van Dyke on a two-year concract :

PORTSMOUTH NOTREDAME (4-2) 418910.
Waoved WR BriM Fonneruo
Region 24: !-Delphos Sc John's (J-u) IJ.83S7.
,
2-Ctn Counory Day (7-0) ll.l92S. 3-llola Hardin
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CALGARY R.AMES · Assi gned fl Rico Fata to

S~t~ntJobn of the t\HL. •ndpTom lr:rdlflanto HIFK · ~
~clsinld ofthcfi~niJ~ I..A:agl4c • ,• . • ,

DALLAS STARS Signed C )oe Nteuwendyk IO
a three-year contrncl extenston. through the 2002-0l
season Activated C Mike Modtlno nnd D DanyJ"'jJ
Sydor from the InJured rc~rve 1/~t Plnccd D Shnwn ~~
Chctmbers and C Bnnn Skrudland ·
·
NASHVILLE PREDAlORS Asstgned 0
R1chard Lmmer and F Phil Crowe to Milwaukee of
rhe IHL
NEW YORK ISLANDERS· Sent 0 Enc Brewer 1
10 Lowell of the AHL Rcculled D Eric Cairns from
Provtdence ot the AHL

.,

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New sandwiches·from
the chicken
expert
•
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Savor juicy perfe&lt;;tion with
our slow roasted Tender
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MORGAN (5·2)85714 9-VINCENTWARREN (4.
JJ 8 1785 10-Cancon Cent Cnth. (3·4) 7 8638
Regton 12 I-JACKSON (7-'0) lll07 1 2·

Bellbrook (7-0) 14 407 1 J-London (7-0) 12.4500. 4Cm Purecll Man an (5·2) I I 3642 5-Dayron
ChallUnade·Juhenne (S-2) 11.28S7. 6-AS HVILLE
TEAYS VALLEY (6· 1) 10 4428 7-Gree nfie ld
McClain (5-2) 97928 S-Eaton (6- 1) 96,57 9-,SI
Pans Graham (6- 1) 9 2928. 10-New R1 chmond (6-1)

92142

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Globetrotters in 1958, was one of
only two men to win the MVP and
rookie of the year awards in the same
season ( 1959-60). He was also MVP
in 1966 through 1968. He led the
NBA in scormg seven straight sea.
sons, 1960-66, and led the league in
rebounding I I of his 14 seasons.
"We truly lost one of the icons of
professional basketball and , more
importantly for myself, someone
who I've known for· almost 40
years," said a teary -eyed West, now
the Lakers vice president.
Said Johnson. "Will was my idol,
and definitely changed the game of
basketball As a kid, I loved watching
him play for Philadelphia."
Chamberlain was such a force thai
the NBA changed some of its rules,
including widemng the lane to try 10
keep him - and hi s wei rd finger-roll
shot w1th his back to the basket farther away from the goal.
His most famous record is the 100
points he scored m &lt;he Philadelphia
Warriors' 169-147 defeat of &lt;he New
York Knkks on Man;h 2. 1962. in
Hershey, Pa.
" I spent 12 years m his arl)lpits,
and I always earned that lgtl-poinl
game on my shuuidcrs ,' ( Darrail
Imhoff, the former Knicks center,
said Tuesday
"After I got my third foul. I said
to one of the oiTicml s, Willy Smith,
'Why don 't you JUSt give him 100
points and we ' ll ail go home·•· Well.
we did. "
West said, "TI1at's one record that
Will never he hroken, I can assure
you."
Chamberlain al so holds the sm-

gie-game record for rebounds, 55,
against Boston in 1960.
He averaged 30.1 points in his
career, including a record 50.4 in the
1961-62 season with Philadelphia.
He also was one of the most versatile
big men ever, with an NBA·high 702
assists in 1967·68.
"I guess one year they told him he
couldn't make as much money as he
wanted because he couldn 't pass the
bali, so he went out and led· the
league in assists," said Denver
Nuggets coach Dan Issei, a former
NBApiayer.
Chamberlain led his team into the
NBA playoffs 13 limes, but won JUSt
two championships. The first came in
I 966-67 with the Philadelphia 76ers,
the second in 197 I. 72 with the
Lakers. who won a record 33 straight
games.
His teams lost in the finals four
other times and were beaten in the
conference final six times.
Russell and the Cehics almost
always seemed to be the stoppers for
Chamberlain-led teams, beating them
twice in the championship series and
five times in the conference finals .
Three umes, a series was dec ided by
a seventh game thai Boston won by
either one or two points.
Those who don 't follow basketball may remember Chamberlain
most for his sexual boasts.
Before his death from AIDS in
1993, Arthur Ashe crit1c1zed promiscuous athletes like Chamberlain, saying the behavior reinforced racist
stereotypes
Ashe also didn ' t believe
Chamberlain's claim, concluding, "I
felt more pity than sorrow for Wilt as
his macho accounting backfired on
him in the form of a wave of public

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CROW'S 'FAMILY RESTURANT
I

Pom~roy

Wilton Nonnan Chamberlain was
born Aug. 21, 1936. in Philadelphia
and didn't play basketball until he
was in seventh grade. He grew four
inches in three months when he was
I 5 and was 6- I I when he entered
Philadelphia's Overbrook High
SchooL
After leading Overbrook to three
public school -championships and
two ail-city titles, Chamberlain
became one of the most recruited
players ever as more than 200 coiie~es expressed interest.
He chose the University of Kansas
and Hall of Fame coach Phog Alien.
In his fitsl game against the Kansas
varsity- freshmen weren't allowed
to compete against other teams then
- he scored 50 points before a
packed Allen Fieldhouse crowd of
more than 15,000.
The next year, Chamberlain
scored
52
points
against
Northwestern in his first game, a
total he never surpassed in college,
partly because of zone defenses
designed
to keep him from gelling
COMING TOGETHER to !Met media repreeanta- R), relatlvee of NBA legend Wilt Chamberlain, foltivea are Wilbert Chamberlain, Oliver Chamberlein, lowing the B11ketbail Hail of Farner's death of a the bali.
As a sophomore, h~ led the 1957
Vaughn Taylor, Barbara Lewis and Elzie Lewis (l• . heart attack at age. 63. (AP)

Bay Village board bars father from school's ·athletic events

Division Ill
Reg•on 9. 1-A kron Hoban (6-1) IS 8785 20rrvJile (6- 1) IS 2S7 1 ;\-Copley (7-0) 14 l 8.'i7 4Perry (6- 1) 14 . 1 ~00 5-Hubbard (6-1) 12 4!W4 6Cic Orang~ 15- 1) 9 0266 7-Twm~burg Ch.1mberh n
(~ - .f) 8 9121 11- Medma Bude)'e (~-l) 8 8~ ~ 8 9Mantua Crestwood (~ · l) 8 828-1 10-Chcstcrland W
Geauga (5·2! 7 :'107 1.
Reg1on 10 1-Col Wauenon (6-1) IS 2M51 21tma Rath (7-0) I~ 82 14 1-Col IJcSales (:'li- 21
12 87 8~ 4-Sunbury ll1 g Walnut (6- 1) 12 77 1.t ~ ­
Odletonlmne (~·2) II 4 ~00 6-W11lard (6- 1)
II ]500 7-Shelb y \5· 2) II 21 42 8-BeiiC\ UC 16-0J
10 7170 9-0nawa-Glandor! (!'i-21 9 37 14 IONapolenn (4-l ) 84000
_
Reg1on II 1-Poland Senun:.-y {7-0) 16 8000 2
Mtllmburg W Holmes (7·0) 16 11 42 :\-LouiSVIlle
(6· 1J 14 2428 4-Sceuben.,l lle (6-1) 12 0857 5THORNVILLE SHERIDAN (6·11 11 87 14 6·
lJ sbon Beaver (4-'\ ) 96332 7- Rayland BuckeYe
Local (4 -~ ) 9 1500 8-McCONNELSVILLE

PICKENS

•I o '• •

.. ... ......
....~

\

The Dally Sentinel • Page S

Jayhawks to the NCAA tournament
final s, where 'Kansas lost to unbeaten
North Carolina in triple overtime.
Frustrated by the smothering zone
defenses, Chamberlain left Kansas
after his JUnior year and went barnstorming with the Globetrouers.
Chamberlain, exlremeJy agile for
his size, ran cross-country in h1gh
school and was an outstanding high
jumper and shot-puller al Kansas.
He remained active after his NBA
career and was considered an outstanding volleyball player. He also
ran in the Honolulu marathon in
recent years.
In January 1998, Chamberiam
made his firs! official visit to Kansas
since his college career ended 40
years earlier. His jersey was ra1sed to
the rafters of Allen Fieldhouse.
"I've learned in life that you, have
to take the biller with the sweet, and
how sweet th1s is," Chamber! am smd
at the ceremony, obviously touched.

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West knew that side of him
" He was a smart guy, he was .
well -read. He was an authority un· ·
everything. He had this bluster about ·
him, .. West said. "And on the mstdc,
he was a soft guy ...
Chamberlain 1s survived by sisters
Barbara Le wis. Margaret Lane.
Selina
Gross
and
Yvonne
Chamberlain, and brothers Wilbert •
and Oliver Chamberlain

criticism."

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,
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Bedford Chanel (7-0) IS 628S 3-Lisbon Davtd MATAMORAS FRONTIER {4-.1) 5 g428 10•

Andenon (7.0) IJ 0142. 4-N. LimaS. Range (7·0)
11.3071 ~-Cie . VA-St Josefh (7·0) 10.3364. 6Wanen Kennedy (4-J) 7.7S7 7-New Middletown
8-New Carhsle Tecumseh (S-2) II 7g57 9-0regon Spnngfield (6-1) 7.6857. &amp;-Orwell Grand Valley (5Clay (5-2) II 5750. 10-Amhcrst St«:le (5-2) 9 9285
2) 7 3000 9-Brookfield (4-3) 7.1642 10-Sullrvan
Regmn 7 !-Dover (7·0} 19 3500 2-Umontown Black River (4-3 ) 7 OSOO.
Regmn 18: !-Gibsonburg (7-0) 12.42!4 2La~ {6-1) 17.3071. 3-Col. Independence (7-0)
15 3571 4-Col Brooltha\·en (7-0) 14 3500 S-Eas1 Smithville (7-0) II 6428 3-Ltbeny Cenlfr (5- 1)
Li verpool (5-2) II /142 6-Canton limken (4-J) 11.5686 4-Columbus Grove (6- 1) 11 4428 ;.
9 4714. 7·Col Beechcroft (5-2) 8 &amp;785 8-Col Delphos Jeffenon (6-1) 10 J928 6-Bluffton (6-1)
Eastmoor Acad (4-3) 7.7970 9- Uwts Center 9 2~57 7-Cresthnc (6·1) 9 OS71 8-Metamora
Olencangy (4-3) 7 '28!'1. 10-Col St Charles (4-\) Evergreen (5-2) 8 8465 . 9-Sycnmore Mohawk (6. 1)
R6142 10-Bioomdnle Elmwood (5-2) 8 2071
70000
RegiOn 19 !-Woodsfi eld Monroe Central (7-0)
Reg.1on !! I-K1ngs M1lls Kings (6- 1) 16 4690 2JJ 1910 2-CHESAPEAKE (7·01 12 4462 . l-Balt.
Trcnton Edgewood (7-0) 14.5777
1-Cin
McNtcholas (6· 1) 12 9714 4-Ubanon (6- 1) L1beny Union (7..()) II 47 14 4-Amnnda-Cienrcreck
12 52 14 5- Day Carroll (5 ·2) 10.8tH2 6- Hru-nson (6· 1) II 4424 5-John slow n Northndge (7·0)
(5-2) 104214 7-Vandalia Butler 15-2) 10 \000 !I- II H 57 6-LUCASV ILLE VALLEY (7-0) 10 8'84
CHILLICOTHE (4-.'\) 10.1500. 9-0:lyton Colonel 7-0AK HILL (6- 1110 7644 8-CROOKSVILLE (6·
Whtte-(5-2) 8 7 142. IO· Springboro (5·2) 8 4428
Mtd,iew (7-0) 122428. 7-MIIf)lsville (7-0) 12Oll7

~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By KEN PETERS
Red Auerbach, coach of those
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Wilt great Boston teams, admired
.
Chamberlain's extraordinary basket· Chamberlain.
bail talent put him in tho· elite compa"Wilt Chamberlain had a great
ny of athletes like Babe Ruth, Jim deal to do with the success of the
Thorpe and Michael Jordan, whose NBA," Auerbach said. " His domi.
fame transcended sport.
nance , power, demeanor and the
" Obviously, he was both literally rivalry with Bill Russell says it ail."
and figuratively a larger-than-life
After Chamberlain retired in
sports figure of the 20th century," 1973, he made news of a different
Atlanta Hawks president Stan Ka~ten . sort, stirring controversy - and a
satd after Chamberiam, the mighty 7- litany of jokes - by claiming in his
foot-I "Wilt the Stilt" who once 1991 biography that he had had sex
scored 100 pomts m d· game and with&lt;20.000 women, averaging 1.2 a
prompted the NBA to change its day from the lime he was 15.
rules, died Tuesday at 63. .
His boast sparked wide reaction
Pres1dent Chn&lt;on, speakmg at a. and became a sort of standard for
White House event, also called extreme sexual activity.
Chamberlain one of the century's
Magic Johnson, who revealed
greatest and said, "I hope you Will shortly after the book was published
have him and his family in your that he had contracted the virus that
thoughts and prayers."
causes AIDS . Johnson commented,
· Chamberlain was found dead m "I' m no W11t Chamberlam, but as I
his bed at his Bel-Air home at about traveled around NBA cit1es, I was
12:30 p.m. PDT, police said.
' never at a loss for female companThere were sig~s he might have ionship."
hajl a heart attack; authonties said.
Chamberlam starred in the NBA
Chamberlain was hospitalized with from 1959 through 1973. when he
an irregular heartbeat in 1992, and played for the Phiiadelphta (later the
his agent, Sy Goldberg, said the Hail San Francisco) Warriors. 76crs and
of Farner was on medication.
Lakers.
When he retired. he had more
He scored 31 AI 9 points during
points and more rebounds than any his career, a record until Kareem
NBA player, and he was remembered Abdui-Jabbar broke 11 in 1984
for epic battles against nemesis Bill Chamberlain, who never fouled out
Russell and the Boston Ceitics.
in I ,205 regular-season and playoff
Chamberlain, four tnches taller games, holds the record for career
than Russell, often seemed to be reboundmg with 23.924.
viewed as the villain in his classic
"Wilt was one of the greatest
matchups agai nst the Celtics' center. ever, and we will never sec another
Fonner Lakers' teammate Jerry nne like h1m," Abdui-Jabbar sa1d
West said he once told Chamberlain,
Chamberlain, who began his pro·
"Nobody roots for Goliath ."
fessionai career with the Harlem

DOUBLE PLAY TIME comes for New York Mets the sixth inning of the National League
shortstop Rey Ordonez (right) as he throws to first. Championship Series opener Tuesdaf night In
after retiring the Atlanta Braves' Ryan Klesko in Atlanta, where the Brave~ won ~-2. (AP
balls."
say a word" about the Braves.
hanging hi s jersey in the dugout.
Rocker got four nuts for a save. As
The Mets miSsed a chance in the
Notes: Braves f~r st baseman •
is his custom. he ran in to relieve and , third when Yosh11 missed a bunt lr)&lt; Andres Gularraga. sidelined ali sea- •
with a runner on second , threw fast-' on a suictde-squeeze play.
son by cancer. threw out the f~rst ball.
bails of Y7 mph . 94 and 97 to slnke
As the Mets took the held.
Benedict last coached lhlfd hase on ·
out John Oierud .
Valentine spoke with bench coach a regular basis· in 1996 under ·
New York scored an unearned run Bruce Benedict, fillin g in as the third- Valentine at Triple. A Norfolk ... The '
m 1he ninth on Todd Prall's two-out base coach while Cookie Rojas began Mcts' streak of 110 slrmght mmngs
smgle. A &lt;Jay earlier. Rocker was one his fi ve-game suspension for shov in g without an error ended· on left fielder· ·
of the mos! vocal Atlanta players, umpire Charlie Willi ams last week- Rickey Hende&lt;son's miscue m the
wondenng aloud how Valentine "can end. New York remembered Rojas by fifth .
•

Scoreboard
of sports wntcrs and br!l.'l.dcasters rntes Oh10 h1gh
sch&lt;lol football teams m the fi ft h of c1ght weekly
1999 Assocmted Press poll. by OHSAA dtv1s10ns.
wtth won-lost record and total pomts (tlrst·place

&gt;,_..

Heart attack kills NBA legend Chamberlain at 63

Braves d.e feat N.Y. Mets 4-2
in opening game of N·LCS
'
After ali the
st)iping between the Atlanta Braves
and New York Mets, ·Greg Maddux
g(IVe both ieams something to agree
O{l - !hal p1tchmg wms m the postseason.
Maddux pu\ an end to the offensive madness that ru led recent playoff games. and the Braves kept on
beating New York with a 4-2 vtclory
Tuesday night 111 the opener of the
NL Champ1onsh1p Scnes
" What happened last year, the last
10 years. who cares?" Maddux smd.
"What matlers 1s now I"
Of course. pllching has always
been the t1cke1 m October. And after
Boston a·nd Cleve land combined for
50 runs 111 two AL playoff games 1h1 s
week, Maddux restored order from
11\e mound.
- "We need three more games.
We're on the nghl track so far...
Maddux satd .
· Maddux worked seven innings,
aOowmg onl y one run agamsl a Mets
ltneup that once agatn had Mike
Piazza. A day earl1et. Maddux admitted he dod not know what was bcmg
smd m the cluhs' trash t ~ lkm g - he
said he was too busy watching

...

~

Wednesday, October 13, 1999

•

a;• ATI.ANTA
BEN WALKER
(AP) -

~

.'

'I •
I

BAY VILLAGE, Ohio (AP) - A
man who allegedly punched one of
his son's high school soccer opponents has been banned from the
school's athletic events for the rest of
the school year.
Bay Village school board members voted 3-0 Monday in favor of
the ban against George Telidis, 40, of
R!)Cky River.
He is accused of running onto the
field and punching an Eastlake North
player during a Sept. . 27 game in
Eastlake. Telidis said later that he
became upset wa!ching the piay~r
pushing around his son, who plays
for Bay High School.
· Bay Village school superintendent
Dennis Woods said a school adminis·
trator who is usually assigned to each
home game will call police ifTeiidis
shows up at an event and will have
hiin escorted off school grounds. The
district would then press trespassing
charges.
Telidis pleaded innocent to an
assault charge last week in
Willoughby Municipal Court. If
found guilty, he faces a maximum
sentence of six months in jail and a
$1 ,000 fine.
.
Woods said the ban would remain
in place even if Telidis is acquiued
before the school year ends. The district will ask other schools to enforce
the ban at away games.

Telidis could not be reached to comment Tuesday. A telephone mcs· sage was left for him.

Make regular mammograms
a ·way of "life"
In recogni~ion ofNational Breast Cancer Awareness Month,
· O'Bleness Memorial Hospital and Radiology Associates of
Athens are offering FREE mammograms to 25 women
who qualify during the month October.
To qualify for one of the free mammograms you must:
*Be 40 years of age or older )
*Have not h~d a mammogram for at least three (3) years
*Have no health insurance, including Medicaid or Medicare

Kevin Johnson
retires after 11 years
PHOENIX (AP)
Kevin
Johnson, one of the NBA's most prolific point guards, retired after an I I ·
year career. Johnson, who sat outlast
season revealed hi s decision in a
news r~lease from the Phoenix Suns,
the team he led for 101, seasons
before leaying as a free agent in
1998.
·Johnson was traded to the Suns
from Cleveland midway through his
rookie season. Hi s career assist aver·
age of 9.2 trails only John Stockton,
M!lgic Johnson , Os~ar Robertson
and isiah Thomas. H1s 6,687. ass1sts
rank lOth on the NBA career list.

Detroit's AI Kaline doubled down 'the right-field
line for his 3,000th hit, but
Baltimore beat the visiting
Tigers 5-4 on Sept. 24, 1974.
"

To receive a certificate for one of these 25 free mammograms,
call the Community Relations Department at

740-592-9300
between 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Monday - Friday
Cenificates will be honored through March of.2000.
You must obtain a referral !fom your physician before
having a ma~gram at O'Bleness.
/
·

To receive a removable sticker displaying ) )
breast self-examination instructions that can be placed
in the shower and on a mirror
contact the Community Relations Department.

PULLING DOWN REBOUNDS was but one of the capabilities Wilt
Chamberlain (right), shown in action against Boston's John
Havlicek, demonstrated in a 20-year·plus career that took him from
Philadelphia's Overbrook High School, Kansas University, the
Philadelphia Warriors, the Philadelphia 76ers and the Los Angeles
Lakers. (AP)

Participants
Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc.
Dr. David Faro, Podiatrist
Dr. Kelly Roush, Chiropractor
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Anwar Eye Center
Health Recovery Services
Meigs County Health Department
Meigs County Board of MR/DD
Kroger Pharmacy
Serenity House, Inc.
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
Behavioral Health Unit (VMH)
GJM Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction
&amp; Mental Health
Meigs County TB Clinic
Continuity of Care
Appalachian Community Visiting Nurses
·
Holzer Hospice
·
Rocksprings Rehab
Breath o.f Life Tech
OU COM Arthritis Program
OU Community Service Program
Dr. Margie Lawson ·
·
In Hearing
Holzer Home Care of VMH
American Red Cross
Holzer Wellness
to our fine sponsors of
the 1999 Health
Information Fair
Farmers Bank &amp; Saving
Company
Racine Home National Bank
Peoples Bank
McCullough &amp; Riffle Drug
Brogan-Warner Insurance
The Daily Sentinel
Middleport Trophies &amp; Tees
Don Tate Motors, Inc.
Delivery Concepts
SunMeadow/GA Food
Service
Superior Office Service
King Hardware
Thanks alao to the area
bualneaeas who donated
door prlzeal

Screenings Offered
at no cllargel!l
Cholesterol
Blood Sugar
Blood Pressure
GlaucomatCataract
Spinal Screenings
The HNtth Fatr II !undid by the
Ohio Department of
through

Buckeye
"::::~~::~~~~~:~
Development
Agatncy on Aging and the Meigs
County Council on Aging, Inc.
You won't want to miss the
Tal Chi Demonstration by
Ramona Compton
(Located In the Fitness
Center at the Senior Center)
Also, new this year will be a
display by The Herbal Sage
Tea Company
Sign-Up to win a Lift Chair
Donated By
Continuity Of Care

�"" ~ -

.-

'

,,

II

Wednesday, October 13, 1999
Wednesday, Oc;:tober 13, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport,.Ohio

.• P~ge 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Weekly prep column praises two Meigs football pl~yers

.I

By RUSTY MILLER

l
I

I
I

AI&gt;.Sports Writer
Save the money on officials, stadium rental and travel. Why not just
give Delphos St. John's the Division
VI s tat~ champio nship trophy now'?
Last week the Blue Javs, ranked
No. I in what is supposediy the divisiol'l for Ohio's smallest schools, met
Division V top dog St. Henry.
Final score: St. John 's 48, St.
. -Henry 7.
Zach Weber rushed for 227 yards
on 27 carries. S~.:uring un runs of six.,
four, 73 and 29 yards as St. John's
stretched its winning streak to 36 in a
row, including hack-to-hack smallschool titles.
Weber wasn"t the only hero .
Rocky Klaus had six tack les and a
sack. while Randy Grothaus had two
interce ptions and Jeff Fischer
returned a punt 76 yards for a score.
But everyth ing wasn't perfect for
the Blue Jays. After all. they did
all ow their first points of the season.
Speaki ng of undefeated teams.
Ohio prep foot ball guru Dick
Steve ns uf Marion reports that there
arc still 61 unbeaten teams left in the

of the past 15 seasons. Three teams
will fall from that number this week
as unbeatens Cincinnati St. Xavier
and Elder, Mayfield and Solon and
Barnesvilk and Woodsfield Monroe
Central square off.
He scores! Brandon McDowell of
Cleveland Villa Angela-St. Joseph
scored a school-record si.&lt; touchdowns 1n a 54-7 wm ove r
Tuscarawas Central Catholic; a week
after scoring five touchdowns in a
game. Martins Ferry's Tony Collette
scored four times in a victory over
Faii]Jort Harhor; hack up 4W1rtcrback
Dane Bringman (atnc in to pass for

27 1 yards and three touchdowns and
also ran for a 59-yard score in
Fostoria's 56-40 loss to Napoleon;
and Jason Morton of Co lumbus
Ind epe ndence scored five times and
ran for 204 yards in a 39-0 win over
Columbus South .
·
· Big yards: Jon Blcchingcr rushed
for 313 yards and six touchdowns in
Elmore Woodmorc·s 46-27 win over
Pemberville Eastwood two weeks
ago; Jarrod Barher picked up 265

JONATHAN HAGGERTY

Plymouth: Upper Arlington 's Jon
Focht rushed for 259 yards on 34 carries and two scores in a 33-15 win
over Lewis Center Olen tangy; Brock
Steuball of R1chmond Hcigllts
rushed for 236 yards on 24 carries in
a 39-0 victory over Beachwood;
Lexington's Mike Zieholfcr ran for
228 -yards and scored three times, but
yards 011 14 e&lt;.1nies - s..: oring on Mansfield Madison still won 28-22
runs of 75. 77 and 71 yards - in in nvcrtnnc:
state - more at thi s point than in any Ashland Crestview 's 4 1-0 win ~1vc r
Anthony Fmle tarried the freight

JUSTIN ROUSH

for Mentor, rushing for 224 yards
and two touchdowns in a 24-10 win
over Cleveland Hei ghts ; Brandon
Kern rushed for 223 yards on 12 carries, scoring on runs of nine, two, 38
and eight yards , as AmandaCicarcrcek beat Fairfield Union 540: Andy Adams gained 207 yards and
scored once in 27 tries in Lisbon
Anderson 's
15-7
wm
over
Hanoverton United Local; Jason
DeGmodt ran for 206 yards on 12

carries and scored twice in Geneva's
41-8 win over Ashtabula Harbor; and
.Hemlock Miller's Cliff Cox rushed
for 193 yards on 26 carries and
scored twice, pushing his school
record for yardage to I ,242 and tying
the mark of 14 touchdowns in a seaso1:.
High marks: After being an independent for II years. Orrville caplured the Ohio Heartland Conference
title with a 5-0 record in its first year
as a mem5'er; Tiffin Columbian
scored touchdowns on the grou_nd,
through the air, by a blocked punt. a
punt return and an interception -all
in the first quarter- of a 53-0 win
over Bucyru~ with one more victory,
Johnstown Northridge - 7-0 this
year after going 2-8 each·of the past
two years - will equal its winningest season ever; Baltimore
Liberty Union (7-0) is off to its best
start since going 10-0 and last making the playoffs in 1987; a11d
Division I No. I Grove City drove 67
yards for the · winning touchdown
with 2:35 left to .squeeze past 2-5
Groveport Madison, 34-27. ·
New Albany: Long the doormat
of central Ohio, New Albany is 7-0

and on track for its best seaspn smce
going 8-2 in 1978. The Eagles have
only two winning seasons (b9lh 6-4)
in the last 21 years, lh~ most rec ent
in 1988. Going into this year, New ·
Albany was 48-150 over the past 20
seasons.
Late show: For the third time in
tour seasons. the East LiverpoolRichmond Edison winner was determined on the game's final play. The
' Potters' Gino Wi\liamsintercepted a
pass in the end zone to end
Richmond Edison's possession in
overt ime. Then Mall Schoolcraft
scored on a "one-yard run for a 27-21
victory.
One-man gang: Justin Roush had
a hand in all of Pomeroy Meigs'
points in a 32-14 victory over
Nelsonville-York. He scored four
touchdowns including a 70-yard punt
return and a 51-yard- run and completcd a 66-yard halfback pass to
Jonathan Haggerty for the other and ·
kicked two extra points. He carried
33 times for 21'7 yards and punted .
one time for 49 yards. Not to be outdone, Hagger1y had three interceptions in addition to his touchdown
catch. ·

Red Sox-Yankees rivalry gets new stage in ALCS tonight
By RONALD BLUM

NEW YORK (AP) - While Red
Sox fan s look at hi story and get
"·ared. the New York Yankees look
at thi s Boston team and worry.

play toni ght. fractured rih and all.
The AL Champi onship Series
hegins at Yankee Stadium with
Orlando "EI Duque" Hcrnander.
pitching for the World Se ri es champions agai nst Kent Mercker.
Yes , Kent Mercker.
"I guess I was getting to start by
defj!Ult,.. said f\1ercker. chased by
Cleveland after 1· •1nnmgs 111 Game 4
Sunday night.

They worry about all those runs
the Red Sox scored against
Cleve land.
They wnrry about facing Pedro
Martinez.
They worry their traditional rival
Red Sox. fans assume the worst,
might linally trip them up.
"They ought to be playing the Jets especially against the Yankees. They
or somebody. the way they're scor- remember how Thurman Munson
ing." said Paul 0' Neill, who plans to and · Reggie Jackson ,kept Carlton

As is usual , the Yankees seemed Tampa Bay, and the Yankees worned
Fisk and the ~ rea l Boston teams of Atlanta ."
Man
y
New
York
players
didn
't
more
concerned about themselves whether he would be able' to play.
the late 1970s ~t ut of the playoffs.
O'Neill, who sat out Saturday 's
think
Bostitn
would
make
the
play
than
their
opponent, convinced that d.
" In the '70s. there was. some
first-round
clincher. at Texas, took
oils,
and
few
thought
the
Red
Sox
they
play
to
their
potential
,
they
can
'
t
hatred among the players: Munson
didn'{ like Fisk. Fisk didn 't like would ovcrtome Cleveland, espe- be beat. After all, they've won 10 about two dozens s~ings during batting practice Tuesday a11d more in a
Munson. the Yankees didn "t li ke Bill cially aft er · losing the first· two straight postseasqn games.
While the Yankees swept Texas in cage underneath the stands at Yankee
Lee." sa id Yankees coach Don games.
"They take advant age of whatev- the first round, holding the Rangers Stadium, then pronounced himself
Zimmer, who managed those Boston
.
.
er weakness they may happen to spy to a grand total of one run for the sec- ready.
teams .
"
Unless
I
wake
up tomorrow and
on
any
particular
day,"
New
York
and
straight
year,
the
Red
Sox
lost
"That's not tl1ere anym ore ,"
have
a
big
setback,
then.
everything is
manager
Joe
Torre
said
..
"I
was
one
the
first
two
games
again
st
Zimmer said Tuesd~y. " I hate to usc
go
at
this
point."
said
·.&lt;;&gt;'
Neill, who
of
them
that
thought
Toronto
was
Cleveland,
then
won
three
straight.
9the word, but there is some hatred
hit .298 with six RBls against Boston
3, 23-7 and 12-8.
betwee n the two cluhs. The way I'm going to pass them ."
Boston was 8-4 against New York
Boston outscored Cleveland 47- this year. " If we were ·an hour from
reading the papers now. there may be
some between the Mets and this year, one of on!y three teams to 32. But here's the bad news for the the game right now: I am pretty sure
win the season series.
Red Sox: Excluding the I0 shutout that Joe would have me in the line"They have a good lineup," New innings by Pedro Martinez, Boston up. "
Notes: David Cone, who didn' t
York shortstop Derek Jeter said. had a 7.83team ERA.
"They have a team that scraps for
Hernandez, 3-0 with a 0.4 I in ,Pitch in t~e first .10\'nd ~c.~use of
runs ."
three career postseason starts; was 2- New. York s sweep. win· start Game 2
Despite the Yankees' compli- I with a 2.70 ERA against Boston Thursday against Ramon Martinez.
ments , Boston said New York is a during the regular season after going Roger ·Clemens starts. (}arne 3
Saturday against Pedro Martinez at
. dear favorite to go win its third AL 1-0 versus the Red Sox last year.
Fen way Park, and Andy Pelliite starts
pennant
in
four
seasons.
"It
makes
no
difference
if
you
entered Monday 's game and sh ut
Game
4 Sund~y against Brei
"
It
is
a
source
of
motivation
to
try
beat
a
team
up
in
the
regular
season
·
down Cleveland's .hitting.
Saberhigen
.... Boston cut RHP Tim
to
prove
everybody
wrong.
It
is
obvior
they
beat
you
up,"
Jeter
said.
"It's
" If you don't have the pitching, it
Wakefield
and RHP John · Wasdin
ous
we
are
an
underdog,"
Mercker
a
whole
different
intensity
level."
doesn't matter how many balls you
froni
its
active
roster and' added RHP
said.
"
We
were
an
underdog
against
Speaking
of
intensity,
O'Neill
is
put over the fence," he said.
Cleveland,
but
as
long
as
25
guys
and
baseball's
most
prominent
example.
Bryce
Florie
and
RHP Pat Rapp ....
Piricsi said he was so confident
New
York's
two
candidates to
five
coaches
in
that
clubhouse
don't
When
it's
the
postseason
,
no
that the Indian s would beat the Red
replace
0'
Neill
both
struggled
believe
that,
there
is
no
situati9n
Gatorade
jug
or
water
cooler
is
safe
.Sox that he made plans two weeks
againstthe.Red
.Sox..
Shane
Spencer
ago to watch the second round of you are dow11..fiW r.uns.~!!t!Y. llY~j:)'; '"wheJ1 ~e strikes out. ·~··
was
2-for-18
and
Ricky
Ledee
1-forone
thinks
we
are
supposed
to
be
On
Monday,
he
leame&lt;)
that
he
has
playoffs in Jacobs ~ield. He arrived
down
five
runs,
so
what
'do
we
got
to
...
a
.fractured
rib
frbm
'an
OCt.
2
colli8.
in Cleveland on Ttiesday, uncertai n
sian with a fence in foul territory at
what he would do for a week in the lose?"
'
'• ,. !, \ , ,
', .. "·':. " " , .. , r 1 .... .. . \
' '
city.
Illes said he was already looking
forward to next year because the
team will have a new owner. Indians
owner Richard Jacobs announced in
the spring that he was selling the
team .
"Jacobs was more conccrn~d
about making money - he's a busi nessman - than building a winner,"
Illes said.
Piricsi. wearing a World Series
Il"'!ians hat. predicted Cleveland
sports fans will have a tough time the
next couple of weeks, especially

Indians fans look to new owner
to end ~tring of playoff losses
By AMY BETH GRAVES ..

CLEVELAND
(AP)
Frustrating. embarrassing, devastating.
Cleveland Indians fans weren't at
a loss for words Tuesday when
describing their reaction to watching
their beloved team let yet another
shot at a World ~cries slip away.
··1 can't believe it. They blew a
two-game lead. Can't Cleveland ever
get th~t big win? ll's like it 's the
perennial question," said Joe
Shoults. 33. of Cleveland.
Shoults, who attended Monday
night 's deciding game of the AL
division series. said he didn't give up
hope that the Indians would come
fr(lm behind and win. After all, they
had done it all season.
But the Boston Red Sox prevented the Indians from getting another
chance at the World Series title that
has cfuded them since 1948 with a
12 -8 victory Monday night.
Indians fans said the humiliating
postseason - losing three in a row.
' including a 23-7 loss in Game 4 erased all the hard work that the team
did to gel there.
Who cares that the Indians
became only the seventh team to
score I ,000 or more runs in a season'' So what if Manny Ramirez
drove in 165 runs in the regular season? All that ·matters is that. once

again, the Indians fell short of their
goal.
" It makes me wonder what
they've been saying about the heart
of the team. Where is it?" asked
Mark Illes, 38, of Medina, as he
looked at a newspaper headline
about Monday's game.
Dreams of a World Series title
may die hard, but Indians fans said
they can't be bitter. One fan taped up
a sign that said "We love you anyway" at the players' private parkllig
lot at Jacobs Field.
" It breaks your spirit, but I've
been a Cleveland fan forever. We've
been through this before ," said
Daniel Fortney. 26, a bartender who
works at Pete &amp; Dewey's, a bar next
to Jacobs Field.
Fans repeated what they ' ve been
say ing for years on what improvements the Indians need to make to be
World Series champions.
"Pitchin g, pitching, pitchi11g,
pitching. How many times do we
need to say it'" asked Shoults,
decked out in an Indians jacket.
"Maybe losing the playoffs was a
good thing . Maybe they' ll finall y get
a decent pitcher."
The Red Sox· Pedro Martinez
proved that a solid pitcher can make
all the difference, said Denny Piriesi,
54, of Detroit. The Indians had eight
runs under their belt when Martinez

si nce the · new Browns are winless
th1 s seaso n.
1
" It 's going to he a low time for

the next week for Cleveland with the
Indians out of it and the Browns out
of town," he said . "There's no sports
team on lop in Cleveland for the fan s
to support."

Harding sets professional skating
debut for Monday in Huntington
"y LANDON HALL

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)- When
Tonya Harding makes her professional debut next week at a small
arena in West Virginia, she ' II skate to
the sounds of 'lZ Top while wearing
a turquoise and purple dress .
Harding is detennined to have a
little fun in her first competition
si nce the 1994 Olympics in
l..,illehammer. and she doesn't particularly care whether it leads to any
more offers.
"I' m very excited that I got this
second chance," she said Tuesday.
"If · something comes from this,
great, but if it doesn 't. that's OK too.
I take life day by day. I just want to
go out there and have fun and skate
wdl . Win or lose, it doesn' t matter."
Harding, who turns 29 next
month, will perform in · the Pro
Skating
Championships
in
Huntington, W.Va .. next Monday and
TUesday.
Her adviser, Michael Rose nberg,
said ' the event's promoter told him
about one-third of the 5,780-seal
Huntington Civic Arena ·s ·ticket s
have been sold. but that he expected
sellout by Monday.
"lt's not my concern how many
tis;kets they sell in West Virginia,
which is not skating territory,··
~osenberg said. " It"s how many millibn people see it on ESPN."
The network will air the competition on tape delay Oct. 25. Nov. I
and Nov. ~ .

a

Harding , unphcatcd 10 a 1994
attack on rival skater Nancy
J&lt;errigan, is banned for life from
· c·ampeti ng in an amate ur eve nt. But

the U.S. Figure Skating Association Harding looks fit and much more
has no jurisdiction over professional trim than she was in Lillehammer,
events.
where she finished eighth after a broHarding announced her comeback ken shoelace and the enormous presplans in February, but Rosenberg sure made her weep .
wasn't able to put together a deal.
Kerrigan won the silver medal ,
The big-ticket professional revues, just weeks after a shadowy thug
and many skaters. had been leery of whacked her on the knee during the
U.S. Championships in Detroit.
appearing on the same ice as her.
Harding is unfazed, saying she Harding later pleaded guilty to hindering prosecution , resulting in
only skates for her fans now.
"I'm sure there's people who do $160,000 in fine s and 500 hours of
not want me back in the skating community service . Her ex-husband
world," she said. " But that's their and two other men served time in jail
problem. Skating is my life. It's all I for planning the attack.
Other than praf.liccs at ·a local
know."
Harding will skate the technical mall, Harding last skated in public in
and artistic programs. Others entered February 1997 , during a two-minute
in the competition include Surya exhibition between periods at a
Bonaly, Elizabeth Manley, Tonia minor league hockey game in Reno,
Nev.
Kwiatkowski and Pasha Grischuk.
Appearing on local talk shows,

AEROBICS~:t~~~~

· at Eastern Elementary School
Classes on Mondays &amp; Thursdays ·

3:30-4:30
Come Enjoy The Fun!
For More Information, Call 992-6893

Fit Together Aerobics
Jeannie Owen
CERTIFIED INSTRUCTOR

·Report finds wide disparities among transplant ·hospital~ .
By LAURA· MECKLER
Alsoclated Preu Writer
,
WASHINGTON (AP)- Offering a wealth of new
data for transplant patients, a govetilment report documents striking differences among hospitals in the likeli~ood patients will die while awaiting a new heart or
liver.
· It's the first study to examine survival rates of all
patients who enter transplant waiting lists, offering a
head-to-head comparison of 106 liver and 128 heart
transplant centers.
"If you're a patient, your chances of survival depend
enormously on where you get your transplant," said
Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., who requested the data
from the Department of Health and Human Services.·
At the University of Kansas Medical Center, 89 percent of people awaiting liver transplants got them within a year. But in Baltimore, just 21 percent of patients at
the University of Maryland and 23 percent at Johns
Hopkins Hospital got them in a year.
There were some disparities even among transplant
centers in the same cities, though these differences were
generally less ·pronounced than regional variances. In
Boston, for instalfce, about 18 percent of liver patients
at Massachusetts General Hrn,pital and 17 percent of
patients at the New England Medical Center died while
waiting. But it was 33 percent at Beth Israel Deaconess

'

Medical Center, also in Boston, the report found .
Officials cautioned that patients must consider many
factors when choosing a transplant center.
" It should prompt questions rather than conclusions," said CJmpbell Garden, a spokesman for the
Department of Health and Human Services.
Still, Gardett said, the report may be useful to 111any .
people.
"This answers the questions a transplant patient
would have: Will I gel a transplant? Will I be alive a
year from now?" he said.
Several factors explain the national variation,
experts say. They ipclude policies for distributing
scarce organs, a community's willingness to donate and
the effectiveness of the local organ bank in collecting
organs. They also include a transplant surgeon's medical skills- both in keeping patients alive while awaiting organs and in operating on and treating those who
get transplants.
The report was being released today, just as legislalion remaking the nation's transplant policies was
expected to pass the House Commerce Committee. That
bill, strongly opposed by the Clinton administration,
would severely curtail the administration's power over
the transplant network. It also would allow the network
to keep data like that in the new study secret from
everyone but transplant patients.

The report, which examined only livers and hearts,
looked at patient chances in three distinct ways, adjusting for the severity of each transplant center's particular patients:
-Chance of gelling a transplant, which relates primarily to policy questions but also involves doctors '
medical judgment about which organs to accept.
On this score, patients at liver centers m the bottom
10 percent got transplants just 24.9 percent of the
lime. Among the top 10 percent, it was 71 .2 percent
For heart transplant programs, 35.8 percent got transplants at the bottom compared with 71.8 percent at the
top.
-Chance of dying while waiting for a transplant,
which involves the speed in which organs are procured
and the ability to stay alive during the wait.
In the lowest-scoring liver programs, 22.3 percent
of patients died versus 7.7 percent at the top programs.
For heart transplant centers, 23.1 percent of patients at
the bottom centers died, compared with 9.4 percent at
the top programs.
-Chance of surviving a year after coming on the
list, whether the patient gets a transplant or not. This
involves a surgeon and a center's skill at transplantalion and postoperative care, along with the ability to
keep patients alive while waiting.
At the lowest liver programs, 65.3 percent of

• '

By TOM RAUM
denly sprung it for a quick' vote.
·Aaaoclated Preas Writer
But Loll later told reporters, "We don't have an agreement."
WASHINGTON (AP) - While bipartisan support is building in the
Four conserv@livcs - Sens. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.; Jon Kyl, R-Ariz.;
Senate to delay a nuclear test ban vote, finding-a graceful exit from near- James Inhofe, R-Okla.; and Bob Smith, lnd-N.H. - have continued to
certain defeat of the pact remains elusive.
demand that the final vote go forward because they want to see the treaty
A small group of conservatives continues to threaten to block any effort defeated.
at meeting President Clinton's request that the vote on the Comprehensive
It is difficult to put off the vote because most ways of doing it would
Test Ban Treaty be postponed.
require unanimous consent.
Unless a deal can be reached,. a showdown vote on the pact will Of.CUr
Republican officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity said Lou
late today. Clinton and other supporters concede they are far short of the 67 was having a hard time persuading those four conservatives to go along
needed for ratification if alllOO senators vote.
with any delay. ·
Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., offered a pledge to
The question was whether Loll would try to maneuver around them and
Republicans on Thesday that he would not seek to reschedule a vote on the risk a rift with the party's right wing, as he did in 1997 when he broke ranks
treaty before a n.ew president and new COngress is sworn in in 2001 "bar- with other conservatives in supporting a chemical weapons ban treaty.
ring extraordinary circumstances."
.
·
Clinton himself had already met one of the GOP demands -thai he ask
That appeared to appease most Republicans, who are fearful that for a delay in the vote on the treaty; in writing. But White House spokesman
Democrats will use GOP opposition to the treaty as a 2000 campaign issue. Joe LOckhart said Thesday the president was unwilling to go along with a
Daschle spokeswoman Ranit Schmelzer said that Majority Leader Trent second GOP demand that he also promise in writing not to press for the
1A&gt;tt, himself, "absolutely agreed" to go along with such an approach.
pact's ratification during an election season.
Under the proposal, Lou, R-Miss., and Daschle would jointly propose
The trick now, said Loll spokesman John Czwartacki, "is finding an airthat the Senate send the treaty back to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, where it had languished for two years until Republican leaders sud-

Thesday Oct. 26 • 10:00anr:,t2:00pni
''
Pomeroy to Point Pleasant(must have own return transportation)
This is a half-price cruise!
Adults: ~ $6.00 • Seniors:

~$5.00 • Kids 12

•"

By JOSEPH SCHUMAN
A11oclated Prell Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- The Department of Health and Human Services
and many state governments have failed to enforce a 19921aw aimed at ending the sale of cigarettes and other tobacco products to minors, an independent analysis of their performance says.
While all states and U.S. territories have laws prohibiting the sale of
tobacco to minors, most have neglected to properly investigate whether the
laws are followed or prosecute when the laws are broke'!, •CCQrding to the
study released today by the Substance Abuse Policy Research Program and
published in The Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, a peerreview journal of the American Medicai Association.
"Very few states have implemented effective enforcement programs, and
national surveys confirm that there has been no mell$urable reduction in the
availability of tobacco to youths/' said the study's author, Dr. Joiieph
Difranza, a professor of family and community medicine at the University
of Massachusetts Medical School.
With the 1992 Synar Amendment, named for its sponsor, the late Rep.
Mike Synar, D-Okla., Congress required states to pass laws banning tobacco sales to anyone under age 18 with aggressive enforcement measures that
may include random, unannounced inspections using decoy buyers at grocery stores and other retailers.
States must outline how they have carried out the Synar Amendment in
their annual applications for block grants from the Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration. And the Department of Health and
Human Services must in tum withhold some funding from states who have
not complied.
But the study, wl!ich examined the aj:Jplications flied in 1997, found that
18 states or territories and the District of Columbia had failed to meet the
Synar requiremen~ yet were not punished by the department. They were:
Alaska, Arkansas, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Kentucky,
' Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Tennessee, Virginia, Wyoming,
Guam, the Marshall Islands, Miqonesia, Northern Marianas, Palau and
Puerto Rico.
fifteen states and territories did not provide evidence that inspections of ·
cigarette vendors were tied to prosecutions, and 18 states showed no evidence that merchants had been successfully prosecuted for selling tobacco
to minors, the study said.
Most of the 41 states that prosecuted such cases did not enforce the laws
in a way that "would even remotely be expected to reduce the availability
of tobacco to minors," it s11id.

.,
'

.
The day
you've dreamed of
is finally here.
You've worked hard preparing for this day. You
decorated the nursery. You picked out names

~n4er:~~$4,;PO

Thursday" Oct. 28 • lO:OOam-l:OOpm
Pomeroy to Gallipolis (must have own return transportation)
Adults: $12.00 • Seniors: $10.00 • Kids 12 and under:' $8.00 '_: ·
Or Round Trip Cruise • 10:00am-4:00pm
Pomeroy to Gallipolis to Pomeroy
Adults: $14.00 • Seniors: $12.00• Kids 12 and under: $'10.00

to see that all your needs are met, and that
all your fears are washed away. While
we're proud of our commitment to pro·
viding the latest in birthing technology,
it's our warm and caring attitude toward our

"Witb Proples
Online Connection, you can do a whole lot of banking

. ·'

from wherever you are. To sign up, enroU at

• " .~~··

&amp;:Jd~

~@
.);j

It's secure. For.more information, tllk to a PeOples Bank
personal banker or c~ 1-800-37~123 .

.

~

....
~

'

at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital

Now You've Really Got Conhections!

Call 992-2239 for ticket information!

~5

HospitBt Drive • Athens, OH 45701 • 740.~93-ll~t
www.obleness.org

Celebrating
New
Arrivals
Eyery
Day.
-

Spon.'iors:

IJUPP

Center ai O'Bieness Memorial HospitaL

a Peoples Online Connection test drive! It's simple.

! lo ••

'

You may bring a sack lunch during day cruises. Additional cruises from Point
Pleasant and Gallipolis will also be sold.

l.ANDSCAPING

made the right choice-the O'Bleness Birth '

existing Peoples Bank customer, visit the website "for
'

"·.,,.

as soon as you walk through the door. You've

. Even if you aren't an
''''

j

patients that really sets us apart. You'll know

standard web browser, you've got

___ .... -.. ,
pr~es ,

feel comfortable and;ate. We take the time

access to the internet and a

Ask about speciai student group rates.

Halloween Dance cruise • 6:30pm·l0:00pm
$15.00 per person. Food, DJ entertainment and costume

anticipation into satisfaction, making sure you

.If you've got a computer,

Wednesday Oct. 27 • 1:00pm-2:00pm, 2:00pm-3:00pm, 3:0opm•4:00pm
Hourly cruise rides down Ohi~ River and back.
Adults: $6.00 • Seniors: $5.00 • Kids 12 and under: $4.00

•
..
..

'~
j .-'
'

it really going to be like, you ask? We turn

on 1t.

"·

and

tal, the anticipation continues to build. What is

• I

.

tight seal for its not coming up in this Congress."
Meanwhile, two senior senators- Democrat Dani~l Patrick Moynihan
of New York, who supports the treaty, and John Warner of Virginia, who
opposes- were leading a bipartisan effort to build support for a delay.
"We ... believe in see)dng a delay. We believe many colleagues are of a
like view, irrespective of how they would vote at this point," they said in a
joint letter to Lott.
In Senate debate M&lt;;! nday, supporters of the treaty raised Tuesday's military coup in Pakistan as even more reason for the pact 's eventual ratificalion.
"There's a struggle today within Pakistan ... about what they should do
with their nuclear capacity," said Sen. Joseph Biden, senior Democrat on
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
By rejecting the treaty "we lose any leverage we have" over either Pakistan or its nuclear-anned neighbor, India, Biden said.
However, no one on either side of the issue - including Biden - gave
. the treaty any chance of ratification if a vote occurs today.
Outright rejection would be a humiliating defeat for Clinton, who in
1996 became the first leader to sign the pact. Some 154 countries have
signed it, but only 25 of the 44 nuclear-capable states have ratified it.

Study disparages enforcement
of many tobacco youth laws

Bank

'I

patients survived a year, compared with 85.9 percerr.t :
at the top. At the lowest heart programs, 67 percent of:
patients survived a year, versus 84 percent at the lop.: ·
Beypnd the variation at the top and the bottom;
mixed results were recorded in the middle as well;
noted the report's author, Dr. Henry Krakauer. Nor: ·.
mally, statisticians expect a few low performers and 4
few high performers, with most clustered in the center.
But this report found that on several measures, hospi:
tals were all over the board.
;·
"The range of probab ilities is in all cases substan;
lial, but the breadth of the distribution of the transplant
rates, especially in the case of the liver ... is striking,''
the report concluded.
The report includes data through early this year tha!
cover all patients who came onto the transplant wait·
ing list between April 1994 through the end of 1997. U
was reviewed by experts in the field, including official~
from the United Network for Organ Sharing, which col- .
lects the wealth of raw data from transplant centers. :
"You need to use this with a combi~ation of a whole
host of information," cautioned network spokesman
Bob Speilbruner.
The network also produces data on patient survivaL
but only among those patients who receive transplant!t,
This is the first report to factor in a patient's chances of
getting an organ in the first place.

Agreement to delay nuclear test ~an vote remains elusive

for ypur baby. Now, as you drive' to the hospi-

Monday Oct. 25 • 8:00pm-10:00pm
Meigs High School "Maroon and Gold" cruise.
$10.00 per person: Open to the family and friends of M.H.S. students. Sold
exclusively through M.H.S. Call Kelly Bamett at 992-2158.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

( m'* )[,-11!-~-m.~r--""'1::.:.-=~=--')( ~. )'-·-·~·_. ~.._·~_.o:.,_··;.l'-_':.a_···:_ :._·.,~-·

;.I

J

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••

'

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'.

/

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sent~!:~·

By The Bend

I

I ,

Froo Car &amp; Truc k. To le ~II o r
None. (304)67H«&lt;.
Full Blooded Blut Hooter. No pa·

Culverts: ll" - 48".'in stock

Please tell your readers that most spots a hearing aid is natural.
What people should·do is speak
people, when they see an individual
wearing a hearing aid, immediately more distinctly and, if possible,
raise their voices to the point of look directly at the person being
spoken to. Individuals with defecyelling.
'tive
hearing often become adept_at
This can be very embarrassing,
reading
lips.
especially when others are nearby. It
Is
alcohol
ruining your life or the
has happened to me in restaurants,
life
of
a
loved
one? "Alcoholism:
department stores, supermarkets,
,
How
to
Recognize
It, How to Deal
gas stations, and so on.
Many times, I have told the With It, How to Conquer It" can
speaker, "You don't need to yell. turn things around.
Send a self addressed, long, busiMy hearing aid allows me to hear
you just tine ." It makes no differ- ness size envelope and a check or
ence . .They continue to shout any- money order for $3.75 (this includes
postage and handling} to:
way.
Alcohol, do Ann Landers, P.O.
In many instances. it makes me
think that I am not the only one with Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611worry.
a hearing problem. I hope you print 0562. (In Canada, send $4.55.) To
Dear Ann Landers: I am now in thi s. Ann. The public needs to be find out more about Ann Landers
my 60s, and have been wearing a educated. -- L.G. IN SARASOTA, and read her past columns, visit the
hearing aid since I was 2 years old. FLA.
Creators Syndicate web page at
I was made deaf by measles, before
DEAR SARASOTA: The incli - www.creators .com .
we had the vacci ne.
nation to speak louder when one

. 110

8" Gravelless Leach
100' , 1000' Rolls 1" &amp; 3/4' 200# Water Line
Full lin~ o.l Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators Waler Stora,ge Tonks

Genlnll ELECllON to Ill

hlld In the Counly of
Melgl, Olllo, 11 the
...,.., , . _ of voting
~ &lt;tt~~n~n,

011 1111 2nd dey
. or Novemller, 1. ., the
qUIIIIon of tevylng I tu,
. In
of 1111 twn mill
llmltltlon, for the lllnlllt
of ..... Caunty for 1111
f1111P0M, of llelnllo .. IM,
Cllllllll --..ctlon, filii

•x-

OPfrlllon of Cerleton
Sohoot end 1111111
~ WWIIIIIop

for

peraone. with mentel
reterdellon
end

==IIIII

Slid 11X llllng:• An
of 1.1 milia
m. .._..lng
1.1 1111111 lor IICh one

e~dlllalllllalc
II I
not

dOIIIf Of VIIUIIIon,

which -*Ill'"""'

(S0.11) •nte for nch
IIIII

hundred dolllfl of

VIIUitlon, for I
continuing Ptrlod of

llml. '

The POIII for llld
EMctlon wll openll1:30
o'aloek A-11. end rlllllln
open Will 7:30 o'clock

·P.If; of Ilk! dey.
By order of lllllkllnl

of .lectlonl, of Mtlge

Public Sale and Auction

f~

' NoiOI of Ellalon on
Till L8Vy In.._ of

1111 Ten IINII~.Jm~WIIool
RkflldCode,IIDIIGI•

11101.11(0), tmlll.tt,

8705.211
NOTICE II herelly
.....,. lhlt In pui'IUIIIM
of 1 llwotutlon of the
Vllllgl Council of the
Vllllll of llullend,
llllllend, .Ohio, PfiHd
on 1111 13111 dey of July,
there will be
lllllntltlld 1o I of
lhl PfOPII of llld

1...

td .. Allan Ill I Glntrlt
!LICTION to lie hlld In

·VII....

the
of llutlend,
Ohio, II 1111 regullr

,.._ of VOIIng lhlnln,

on -the 2nd dey of
,_,.,..., 1111, the
qu•lllon of 1wytng 111111,
In of lllllln mill
for lllllllnlllt

O!.llulllnd VIMfll for the
~f

110

Help Wanted

110 Help Wanted

110

Help Wanted

110

110

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc
Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats. headliners,
truck tarps. cor,vertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats,
boafcovers, carpets, etc.
Mon • Fri 8:_30 . ~ ,5:00
0\(er 40 yrs experlet:'ce

.. _. ... :o 742·$888 .

R,lO ,ln~.ulateq.GJ~.S
SO Year free

CONSTRUCTION

!Jgwtpgrfl'm=U
Hal!""
Bulldozer &amp; Backhoe

B.e ginning Sept. 26th

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

House &amp; 'trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Syate,.. &amp;

SMITH'S

8:30am· 8 pm
Sun 1 pm·6pm

WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS

(740) 992·2753
or 992·1101

Pomeroy

Co. Rd 19

..

and

.

aiass r~pt~~emen!

Qu~lity

Help Wanted

EXCAVATIHG

Hauling*Umestone*Gravel
SaAcl*Topsoii*Fill Dirt*Mulch
• Bulldozer Services

\Vindpw

-~~_x:st!l}!l~ . -.

Current

''C
IIX llllng:• A
-loflllxol2
1111111 11 1 r111 nol

·~1111

2-0 mllll for
11ch one doller of
VIIUIIIon,
which
liiiOUnll tO tWIRly
(•11.20) 'ftnll for Noh
hllrllfntll dofllrl of
W~n, for fiYI (I)

,..,._

::flM POIII for Hid

••1111011 . . Gpllllll:30
cf.Oiocll A-11. IIIII l'lllllln
· OJIIf!. untl 7:30 o'clock
lUI. of Ilk! dey.
• By ...., of 1111 llolnl
ot lflotlonl, of ......

c--. Ohio.

.lolln II, IIIII, Clillrnllili
111111 D. lmllh, 01r.ctor
.,...: ...... 13,1 ...
(11) •• 13, 20,27 4TC

ESTATE
AUCTION

• INVOICE ASSOCIATES
• CASH ASSOCIATES
• UPC ASSOCIATES
• CLAIMS ASSOCIATES
• PERSONNEL MANAGER

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1999
10:00 A. ••
Loc:ated at 802- 4th St In New Haven W. V. will
be Hlllng the eatate ot Mary.Roush.
FURNITURE
2-3 PC B. R. Suites, 2 pc. LA suite, Quasar color
console TV, 2 end tables, lift chair, L.a-Z-Boy recliner, ·
"'!'Pie tabla &amp; 6 chairs, Samsung microwave oven,
Kllvtnator 14 C. F. Frost Free lrigerator, Gibson 15 CF.
chest freezer, Hot Point washer &amp; dryer, metal
wardrobe &amp; more. ·
GLASSWARE
Allortment of glassware, Phaltzcraft, Pink &amp; Green
deprelllkln glus, old pig, hull art L27-12 vasa, croCk
oak kitchen clock, lanterns, brass lamp, touch lamp,
eagle ftoor lamp • others, bedspreads, linens, rugs,
Afghani, pot &amp; pans, fans, Tupperware, iron skillets,
fireplace lnaert, fishing poles, 8hoe lea, pocket knHes
&amp;more.
GUNS
Orneg1 22 pistol, Excel, 12 gauge shot gun, British
303 rifle, H&amp;R 12 gauge shot gun, Rem. mode!I0-12
gauge pump gun, All"". model 48 Mohawll auto 12

* Fall Fertilizer
* &amp;t Fgods

cau 98s~is3J'

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
Free Est/mares

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. 186
MaonW. Ya
Rea. 173-a785 or Auction Center n3-5447
Executor: W11ter J . Routh
T111111: Clah or chick w/ID.
Not l'elpO!IIIblllor ICC!dlntl or loH of property.

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE .

CQNNECTION
0/.Jality.Driveways,
· Sidewalks, Patios
Complete Garages:
masonarytwood
2~ yrs experience ·
Free l;stimates

Sunset Hollie Construction
New Construction &amp; Remodeling - Kitchen Cabinets
Vinyl Siding- Roofs : Decks ·Garages
Bryan Reeves

Free E'stlmates

740-742-8015
877-353-7222 (toll free)
1

House On Hill Behind Jackson
Pike. Foodland, October 1 4tn ,

Ffff E111m11t1

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy,

HILL'S

740·992·7643

Ohio

(No Sunday Calls)

22 yr.. l..o&lt;al

' a big ntst tgg whtn
you sal't wirh rht classl(ieds

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

SELF STORAGE
29670 Balhan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Slzea5'x 10'
to 10'x 30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

..

DEPOYSAO
PARft .

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

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. RL 7 South
Coolvfll•, OH 45723

740U7..-a

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138

53S-0486 X 7777, www.1cwp.con'l

DENTAL BILLER Up l&lt;i· St5 -$45 ' ., ,
IHr De ntal Billing Soflware Company Needs People To Process , ·' I
Medical Claims From Home.
,
Training Provided . Mu st Own' ··.. - ~
Computer. 1-800-223- 1149 Ex t ... , ·
460.
Driver- Class .B COL w/11az .; ex- .• ·, ....
pedlte freight, 72' D.B. sleeper. no
OUI's or felonies . call 740-992 · ' ·' "
5407 .
' .' l ~

DRIVERS · IMMEDIATE OPEN·"', ...
INGS • REGIONAL IOTA Star t At • ,,
29 CPM /All MI. · Unloading Pay · .
Personalized Dispatch • Home
1
Often - Holiday !Vacation Pay - • • '
401 K !Medical !Pres. /Dental As·
signed 99' T2000's - Aid er. Pro gram • 98% No -Touch Freight
Call ButCh At Summit Transporta-tion 800-676-0680 EOE
Drivers: 2 week Paid COL Trai nIng . No Exp. Needed . No Money,
No Credit? No Problem! Earn Up_.
\
To $32.000 /1st Vr. W /Full Bene-· .... • 1 ~
fi ts. P.A .M. Transport Call To ll_ ~ .;
Free 1·877·230-6002 www.otr- .I •
drNers.com

MEIGS COUNTY FARM BUREAU
ANNUAL MEETING ·
Tues.,Oct 19 ,7:09 PM
at Meigs S.enlor .t;;itizen C~nter,
· . Adults ~. 50 Child $3.50
· Special Guest Speaker,
John C. Fisher,
Executive Vice Pres. Ohio Farm
Bureau Fed ,
Entertainment - Sheila Arnold,
.. ,...w-...... Door Prizes

HOLIDAY PAY
• STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
• 10% DISCOUNT ON PURCHASES ·
• PROFIT SHARING
(REQUIRES 20 HOURS
PER WEEK AVERAGE)
I

WE AJ.SO OFFER THE FOLLOWING ADDITIONAL
. BENEFITS FOR ALL FULL·TIME ASSOCIATES

SALE- MUFFIN
Friends of the Library
October 14 12 noon to 7 pm
October 15 9 am till 4 pm
Pomeroy Liqrary

··'
.•.

• PAID VACATIONS
• SICK LEAVE
• DENTAL INSURANCE
•

'

APPLICATIONS WILL BE TAKEN BY WAL-MART MANAGEMENT
AT THE MASON nRE DEPARTMENT
MONDAY, OCT. 18· WEDNESDAY, OCT. 20.. FRIDAY, OCT. 22 8:30AM • 4:30 P.M.
TUESDAY, OCT. 19 &amp; THURSDAY, OCT. 21 8:30AM. 7:30P.M.
SATURDAY, OCT. 23 8:30 AM- "'-1.1:00 A.M.
.

,.

• Naw Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ·
ESTIMATES
985-4473
7122/TFN

..

0

I

MODERN
SANITATION SERVICE

740.;992-3954

PROBLEMS???
No Credit • Slow Crldlt • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvordld

WORRYING!!!
No Embarraasment...
You're
Respect!

988-265-1935.
. Envelope stuffing positions avail able. to apply can toll free. 1·888· -

4/2TFN

Le~ve

a Message

for Ne,. Lo&lt;al
ReferNJI SenJi&lt;e

Meigs, Gallla &amp;
SurrOunding areas
740.742·3119

Llndll!'l Painting

do

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
mes.sag!l. After 6 pm

740·985·4180
Free Estimate•

-

=__:...----.. .;

I

AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,,
Pomeroy, OKPaylng $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starbunit
Progressive top line.
Uc. I CJ0.50 11M/Hn.

~E~~·-------------Auctlon
and Flea Market

80

Bitt Mood!spaugh Auctioneeringcomplete auction service . Buy
and sell estates. Ohio License

24 Hr. Taxi Ml
Delivery
Service
We deliver

ALMOST anything
Call for details
740·992·0038

Rutland, Ohio
Ameri,an Legion
Post 467
8ee(h Grove Road
Gun Shoot
Slug ond Shot
Mat,hes
Every Sunday
1:00 P.M.
ANNOUNCJOMENTS
Personals

STAAT DATING TONIGHT!
Ha'Ve Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·
gles In Your Area . Catl For More
Information. 1-800-ROMANCE .
EK1. 9735.

wv 13311, 74Q-969-2623.

t7693,

Billy Goble AUCtioneer, 740·.992·

7502. .

.

. .

.

Rlc:k Pearson Aucllon Company,
fu ll time auctioneer, complete
aucllon
service.
.L icensed

066,0hlo &amp; WeSI VIrginia , 304773-5765 Or 304·773-5447.
We 're Back . Auction. Hartford
Communlly Center, Saturday,/

October 16,' 1999. 0 6:30PM .
Lots of Christmas &amp; HalloweenDrive a little &amp; save a lot. Ed
Frazier 1930.
Wedemeyer's Auct iOn Service,
Gallipolis, Ohio 740·379-2720.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins , Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold

Alrygs, PI0· 1930 U.S. Currency,
Ster11ng, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry

• M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second
Awnue, Gaii()Ois, 740-446-2642.
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks , Low ·Milts, 1995 Models
Or Newer, Smith Buick Pontiac,
1900 EastBm Avenue, Gallipolis.

Wanted To Buy: 1987 Jeep
wrangler Fiberglass Top, 740·
250-6574.

EMP LOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Help Wanted

$2,~00 WEEKLY! Matting 400

Brochures! Satisfaction Guaranteed! Postage &amp; Supplies Pro·
vlde d! Rush Seti·Addr&amp;ssed

Slamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT
5, BoK 1436. ANTIOCH , TN .
37011-1438. Starl lmmadiately.
$20 -$40 /HOUR Easy Medical
Billing Full Training. Computer Aft·
quired. Call 1·888-869-7905 E~et.
700.

Full-Time Management Positlon· ~i.;:
With Local Retail Jewelry Store:' ~
Retail And Computer Backgroun4 ..·
Necessary. Benefits Available, At:
Apply: Acquisitions Fine Jewetr)ll··'..,
151 Seoond Avenue. Gal~p:&gt;lls .
• .:'4
Keebler Company ·Is Now

Ac(;~

ceptlng -'PPIICatlons For The Po- -..

~sltion Ot Weekend ~rchepltleer ' 1•

lri The· Gatllpofls Area . Ptea·se •()
Call 304-743-9717 And Laavr
Message. EOE.
• ,,;

•c
,. ·,:

Live - in nanny/house worke' ~
needed, loving. mature. honest . .: .
caring, non- smoker. Experience· ..,

and references reQuired. send re! ,..,
sume in care of The Pl. Pleasant ·• -·
Register 200 Maln St. Pl. Plea s- . ~
an1WV 25550

--------~:· ""

l . 1\

Local Cleaning Company Seakint,. -.
Full Time Help. Carpet Cleaning~ .... ~
Light Construction And Remodl\t ,,
Work . Send Resume To : SCCS' ~
P.O. BoK 541 . Korr. OH 45643.
•

-:L-:0-:SE::-:W-:E::-:IG::-:H-:T-:G-:UA:-:R:-:A-:NT::E=ED::"I
" ;~
ALL ~ATURALI
• .:
DR. AECOMMENDEO!
1
CALL; 1·98&amp;-2411-2779
• ' ·'
_;;,O:.:_RV_;;,ISI:.:_T:.:_:ww_;_w_.me...:.n_-a...:.w_.:oy_
.n_et~ ,. ,
LPN Wanted For Growing Home , .~ t.
Heallh Care Provider, Appl lca : ., v
tlons Being Taken . Call 740-441,- J "..
1877 For More Information
: .t l!t

.,t,

•:

MEDICAL BILLING . Earn EKce~'
lent Income. Full Training. Conf'-.., 1;
puter ReQuired . Call Tolt-F r ea"' · ~
600-540·6333 EK1. 2301 .
.• JC

"-.

MEDICAL BILLING . Earn Excel-,
lent S S $ I Proces sing Clal nf~
From. Home. Full Training Provid'- ·~·
ed . Computer Required . CaW'•· '
Madiworks Toll-Free 1-800-540• 't~~
6333 Ext. 2312.
· . , ~ ~.
N89d 7 Ladles
446-3358 ,

TOSell Avon ,.. 74tt'~-~.'
' ,J . I

Need depen,dable p~rson to work
weekends caring for the elderly." ......
call 740 -992·5039 Monday ·
through Friday between Bam-4prponty.
;,
OWN A COMPUTER. PUT IT Te- :•
WORK. $850 .-$3.500 MO. PT./FI~
FREE Delalls: Log Onlo: hllp //
www.hbn.com Access Code 5298 , •~

•:&lt;·

OWN II/COMPUTER?
PUT IT TO WORK!
., •'-'
125 -$75/HA. PT/FT
,. : ~~~,
CALL 1-88&amp;-248-2770
·. · ' ·. •
OR VISIT: www.getwnlthy.net ·••.• t1

,.:..

Postal Jobs $&lt;48,323 .00 Yr. Now... ,.,
Hiring -No E~eper i en ce - Pa i~. : .
Training -Great Benefits, Call ?' ·~ ,
Days 800-429·3660 Ex!. J·365
.. • r

"''

Bob Ball

1-740..992-6142

1

. • .•

Envelope Stuffing PoSitions Available To Apply Cal l Toll Free, I :

::-'-~-~~--=-~-Retail Furniture Sales. E~eperie nce:..• :-,

35215 Ball Run Rd.

Pomeroy, Ohio

!

:

Earn $250 week , Running Ta xi
plus Delivery Run s. 4 lui Orlv• ·
ers needed, 2 TaKiceb Dispatch-: __

Ball l..ogglng
and Firewood

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

..

. •Please advise us If assistance • the ..plcatiollerltilg process it ... d•d to aus•111dlt• a •salllity.•

'

Limestone
Gravel
Top Soli

. Du111p Tr~e~ or
IR our y•rd
Recently purchased:
Graham's Wood Products
Firewood Division
Pie~-ap

ltUYII'I"'''II ......

CORRECTION
,. . . o~oellls ·.
:Home·Safety &amp;
· ·Security tabloiq The sale dates are
·good-:thru ·
October 24, 1999

. ,'

STONE
HAULED

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

·

265-1935 .
Sunday l Monday edlllon1:OOpm Frldoy.
, Gallla County ov Task Fore"
Seeks Part· Time Facil itator For
Big garage sale· last this year,
Its Batterers Inter ve ntion Pro ~ ...
Rl.7 bypass TR. 207 between Pegram. Applicants Must Be Ll:
mida &amp; Dave's Small Engines.
censed In Social Work In Ohio
Fr~ay 15th, Saturday 16th.
With Some Group Counseling E~e ·
parlance . Mail Resume By t01 19d'l .,
Pt. Pleasant
99 To Tom Mc Guire, SEOLS, 49 -a.
&amp;VIcinity
Richland Aven ue. Athens . OH ·;~
45701 . An Equal Opportunity Em" •
Friday &amp; Salurday. 6AM - 8PM . player.
•. .."
206 Smith St., Henderson. Doors,
Trunk . Excerclse Bike, Clothes ,
IMMEQIATE OPENI_
NG

3111/99 TFN

FIREWOOD

.' ;.:

ersNeedeOI (740)-441 ·0247

All Yard 81111 Must Be Paid In
Advance . Dtad11ne: 1:DOpm tha
day before the ad 11 to run,

949·2168 .

005

-

~'

. . ...
E~eperl - ~~:
"'·I'

..,.---

Computer Users Needed . Work ' 1:;j
Own Hrs. $25K -$60K/ Yr. 1·800· . '••·'

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

tt~~~~

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
·•Replacement Winoows
•Room Adoltlons
I
•Roofing
COMMERCIAL IIi RISIDIIIllAL '
FREE ESTIMATES

992-0437

. .

Toy1, Thursday, Saturday, 10:005:00

740· 742-3411

•E!Kirical &amp; Plumbing .
·Rtiollng &amp; Gutltra
•Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
•Patio &amp; Porch DK1t1

• MEAT WRAPPER •
• ASST. PRODUCE MANAGER
• PRODUCE ASSOCIATE

ALL ASSOCIATES RECEIVE THE FOLLOWING
EXCELLENT BENEFITS

'

Oebb•e Orlve Chapel's Activity
Building (1.7 Miles Out Route
141) Some Items St .OO Bag, Lots

FREE ESTIMATES

Thursdays

•Room lddHiona &amp; Remodeling

Slug Matches
Beginning Sunday,
Oct. 17, 1999
1:00p.m.
Shooting every
Sunday until after
deer season.
Slugs only

gauge.

TOOLS&amp;MISC
Tool craft table saw, sm. Sears planar, lg. vise, bolls.
nutts &amp; etc., old model T jack &amp; wrenches, push plow,
misc. tools, Craftsman 11 H.P. riding lawn mower,
Dynamark 11 H.P. riding lawn mower &amp; more.

• 10:00 a.m. Saturday.
Big Garage Sale 117 Hilda Dr.
Wed .- Thurs .. 9:00Am -5:00Pm.
Kids Clothe s. Ohes t. Toys. Toy
Box. Tools. Much MoreL

(740)992·3131

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

CONCRETE

•Ntw Gai'11ges

FOOD AREA
ASSOCIATES

• GROUP HEALTH PLAN
• GROUP LIFE INSURANCE
• SHORT TERM0 DISABILITY INSURANCE
• LONG TERM DISABILITY INSURANC~

Is to run. Sundly
edition • 2:00p.m.
Frldoy. Monday ICIIIIon

Pomeroy Eagles
C!ub Bingo On

·YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

· Forked Run
Sportsman Club

CILA~SUFOIEDSI

• EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS
• ADVANCEMEN~ OPPORTUNITIES
•GOOD WAGES
• FLEXIBLE SCHEDULING
WHEN POSSIBLE
•401K PLAN

Be Paid In Advanee.
QEAQL(NE: 2:00p.m.
the dly beiol8 the ICI

Utilitiea

Announcement

• AUTOMOTIVE
•COSMETICS
• GARDEN CENTER
• STATIONERY
•FOODS
• HARDWARE/PAINTS
• HOUSEWARES
• ELECTRONICS
•PHARMACY
• LOSS PREVENTION
• FITTING ROOM ASSOCIATE

• GROCERY RECEIVING
• ASST. MEAT MANAGER
• MEAT CUTTER

9· 6. 14tll . 15th, Old Porter ·Texa·
co, Now: Tommy 's Truck &amp; Tlrtf .
At . 180 -554 , Toys. Microwave ,
Gourds. Pumpkins. Plus Size &amp;
Kids Clothing, &amp; Home Interior.

Services

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

Joseph Jacks
740-992·2068

f740) 992·3470

*Custom Grinding

• STOCKERS (DAY OR NIGHT)

OFFICE

Yard Sale

·HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

____

11

BOOKKEEPER WANTED ·Min . • .• •
01 2 Years On The Job
:. ·
ence. Con~puter Fnendly, Knowtedge 0! OUi ckbooks So1tware . : · •
Payroll /Job CO tiling l AP /AR • .. ;- : ~
Ability To Handle Multiple Tasks I ·" , ,
Construction Knowledge A Plus I ' 1.,
NO PHON~ CALLS ACCEp.TED
:&gt;
/SEND RESUME TO: CHRIS - . , ~
TIAN'S CONST. 1403 EASTERN - ·-··
AVE., GALUPOUS, OH 45631.
"

Galllpolla
&amp;VIcinity

Regular Hours: Tue- Frl 10·6
Saturday 10-4
Rt 124 Minersville, OH 740-992-4559

New Store Hours
For Deer Season
Mon-Sat

~

Vinyr?eP,ace'riletit Windows

SALES ASSOCIATES &amp;
DEPARTMENT MGRS

RECEIVING

Lost: 1 Yellow Female Labrador
An swers To"Taylor· 1 Black Male
Labrador An swers To Sebastian ,
740-441-0013.

New scents, layaways &amp;uedil cards accepted ·

Ill . WICK'S HAOLIHG

10/l3.· 1mo.

• JANITOR (DAY OR NIGHT)
• CART PUSHERS

1426

___;:;,:__

Lost - In Rodney Area On Co.ra.
Mill Ad. A Tannish- Red 3 Month
Old Pomeranian Puppy, Very
Playful And Fruendly. H Seen Or
Have 'Please • Co ntact Me At

70

•

Ba rten der Wanted , 740·441 ·

LoSI- 3 pygl\'ri goals. 1 mate. 2 Ismate s, Rutland area . il found
pteese call 740·742-2486.

Howard L. Writeset

&amp;·ore[{

24

MAINTENANCE

t304)347-8838.

15th, 161h.

WE ARE LOOKING FOR APPLICANTS
SEEKING FUILTIME OR PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT!

•MENSWEAR
•BOYS WEAR
•GIRLS WEAR
• LADIES WEAR
. • INFANTS WEAR
•FABRICS
•DOMESTICS
•SHOES
•JEWELRY
•TOYS
• SPORTING GOODS

Lost and Found

AU. Yard Sll11 Must

YO·~·

•CASHIER
• CUSTOMER SERVICE
•LAY-A-WAY
• CUSTOMER SERVICE MGRS.
• PEOPLE GREETER

Avon Products: Star1 your own InHome Business. Work FleKible
Hours; Enjoy Unlimited Earnings. :.

Fo und : Beagle Pup, Male . Ap·
pro K. 6 ·6 Mos. Old. 740-441 ·
011 6.

November 5th 10-7 pm 6th 10-5 pm
Gift to 1st 25 customers (1 per family)
Door Prizes, wooden Angels, Snowmen

• it\1'1' .
~ S\\11'1'9
Gt\1\4\1\9
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Rt. 33 6 miles Nqrtlt of .Pomeroy .
740-992-411'9. ·; ;~()Qf~~l-5600

FRONT END
SERVICE

60

Christmas Open House

TREE SERVICE

Visd our showroom

AU

Sr. 124 Wellston, Ohio
740-384-6212
lUMP AND STOKER COAl
N.E.A.I'. YOU(HIIS
A(UPTID
DllMRY AYAilllll
HOURS: 7om THRU 4pm
MONDAY-FRIDAY
7amTONOON
SATURDAY

JONES'

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas I. To Buy or Sell. · ·
Shlr1ay Spearo, 304-67!;..1 429

Mato Chocota1e Lab. Full-Blood·
ed , No Papers. 2/1-2 yrs old.
(304 )695-3399 or675-1320.

The Country Candle Shop

\ U Ua·: UOOIC
\1 ("1'10'\

Held At: Athena Co. Fairgrounds, Athena,
Ohio (Jr. Fair Bldg)
Take Rt. 33 (West of 682) to Union Ad., go north
to fairgrounds.
Due to Fedll'll Cuel5 : HCV1605
Wayne Dalton• ve Shoff Door Co, Inc. ·
Jack Goodbar Auctioneer has been commissioned
to sell over 10,000 able, C.H.I., Clopay, HAAS,
Shoff and Wayne Dalton• garage door sections In
several states, to raise funds for attorney fees and
other business expenses. 1/2 H.P. Genie and
Llftmaster garage door openers. ~ 100 garage
doors will be offered In this auction, one sided steel
and Insulated doors, several Insulated doors
wtsunburst glasa tops, track, springs, trim, 300'
hanging metal and door hardware. 8x7, 9x7, 16 x 7,
10 x 8, 10x10; 12 x 12, 14', 16', 18' wide
commercial and other size doors available. For
more Info. Call1-614-837-4710.
Don't miss this sale!
. Bring a truck or trailer
Open for Preview 2 Hrs. before auction
All sales final &amp; sold "As Is"
Terms: Cash or check with S.S. number 10. 10%
buyers premium will be charged. Tax will be
charged unless you have vendors number. All doors
must be removed 2 hrs. after completion of auction.
OWNER: SHOFF DOOR CO.
JACK GOODBAR· AUCTIONEER
Any Individual or business that would like to help
Shoff Door Co., in Wayne Dalton's- lawsuit against
·
Shoff Door Co. can call1-814-837-8847.

• Public Nollce

purp011

Phone (740) 593-6671

Sunday, October 17, 1:00 P.M.

County. Ohio.
.1o11n N. IIIII, Ct.lnnln
Rill D. llnllft, DliCior
Dllld: llpt. 13, 1 (111) 1,13, 20,27 uc

llol~lfitlon,

High &amp;Dry
Self-Stora

E,rcuhivt Qeqfec

• Notloe of Election on
Ta L8VY In~ of
the Ten 1111 Umtt.tlon
•• ' RI¥IMd ,Code, 8ectlona
. 31101.11(0). tmlll.1i,

Ofllo, peiMCI 011 the IIIII

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45 70 I

.
.·
::
:
.
:·
· ··

Pleasant Valley Hospital's Private Duty Division is
currenll¥ recruiting state tested Home Health Aids for
immediate assignments in Meigs County. Excellent pay
and flexible schedules. ·Requires 6 months of facility
work experience. For more infonnation contact Debbie
Mitchell at (304) 675-7400 or apply in person at 1011
VIand Street, Point Pleasant, WV.
Join our family of professionals to be the resource for
communi! health service ·needs. ANECE

dey of . Auguet, 1'"
· there will lie eubmlltld
to I Wll of 1111 people of
Hid IUIIcliYIIIOn II I

Now

740-245-9250

Pleasant Valley Hospital

8705.211
NOTICE 11 herelly
.liMn lhlt In p u of • 11-IUtlon of the
Bo1rd of · County
Commtu10111re of the
County of lhlgl, Mllp,

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

• ·

··

e

Public Notice

Tuppers Plains, OH

740·985·3813 '

Eleven year old's provacative dress and adult behavior has grandma worried

Dear Ann Landers: I am disturbed about the questionable
behavior of my step granddaughter.
"Caitlin" is II years old and dresses
like an adult, often provocatively.
I realize many preteen girls dress
inappropriately these days, but
Caitlin naunts her body like no II
year old I have ever seen.
Recently, her step father opened
a catalog of men's wear and showed
her pictures of well built, well
endowed males in very brief underwear, which left little to the imagination.
He shoved the catalog photos iri
front of the child and laughingly

In And See
~teve Riffle
"' Sales Representative
Larry Schey
. Stop

G&amp;W P,lastics ·a nd Supply
St. Rt. "7 .· ~· · · · · ·

This happened to me as well . A
financial aid adviser told me that the
quickest way to solve this problem
was to "pay" the bill, so I sent a
check for $0. This is the only way
the computer knows to stop sending
statement letters.
Calling the customer service centers is useless , because the centers
don't always communicate with the
billing departments.
Since I sent that check. I have·
not been bothered, but get this, Ann ,
the billing department actually tried
to cash it. -- MINNEAPOLIS
DEAR MPLS.: Is the "billing
department" another computer, or a
live person·• If it's the latter. I'd

ASSEMBLY AT HOllEtt Clalts,
Toys , Jewelry, Wood , Sewing,
1YPI11Q... Groot Payl CALL l c80Q795.Q380 E&gt;&lt;t t201 (24-Hrs). ·

pers. 1 yr. old. (304)675-S621 .

· Wedneadiy, Octobe; 13, 1999

his pants, and bathe hill'.
Am I crazy to think&lt;there is a
dangerous trend developin'g? - EUGENE, OREGON
DEAR EUGENE: This child
needs counseling now. Do everything you can to see that she gets it.
Her highly charged sexuality is dissaid, "What do you think of this?"
tressing, and her step father's attiShe gave him a bored look. Appar- tude is do)¥nright scary.
'
ently, it was nothing new to her. The
Meanwhile, Caitlin should not be
girl's reaction, and her step father's left alone with her younger brother.
behavior, disturbed me tremendous- Share this letter with your husband.
ly.
and ask for his support.
Caitlin displays her growing sexDear Ann Landers: I just reah
uality in many ways, including the lener from "C.M. in Milpitas,
unnatural attention to her younger Calif.," who sa1d the Department of
brother, who is almost 3 years old. Education lost her file and kept
My husband sees her as "caring" for hilling her for her student loan.
her brother.
· After the mess was finally
I see other things. I' vc heard her straightened out, she was harassed
tell, the boy. "Kiss me on the by biUs demanding she pay a bal mouth." She then turns his head ance of $0. That's right -- zero dol around and gives him a lung kiss . lars.
She fondles him. wants to change

110 Help Wanted

Giveaway

40

Entitled To Receive Your DtaDellc
Supplies At No Cost To 'tou . For ·
More Informatio n 1·888-677 - ,
856 1
=-----~---:-:---:~-:- 1
Land owned or leased by Harris
. Farms w11 1 no 1onger oe open to

(AREA TITLE RESEARCHER)
Must have dependable lransportaUon and good handwriting. Will
!rain. No cost or obligation . (Call
1·800-701 ·2273) "Openings and
Training In M~s County".

:...Pub_l_lc_hu_
nl,-ln::..g'--::--~--J »DRIVER PLACEMENT««
Now To You Thrin Shoppe
9 West Stimson. Athens
74Q-592·1642
Quality cloth ing and household
Items. S1.00 Dog solo every
Thursday. Monday ihro. Salurday
9:oo-$:30.

E~PERIENCED OR NOT. We Can
Put You Behind The Wheel!! Call

Free 1-688·292-2002 &amp; 1-888- ·
473-3~. .
·
ADVERTISING
SALES REPRESENTATIVE

For Won Eslatlltslled Local Co.

·- - - . , . - - - - 1
40

SEAVI~G TRI.COUNTY AREA

Giveaway

1 Long Haired Calico Cat &amp; Kittens , 740·446·1062 Call Aller 5
P.M.
5 PUiltl)OS- Sharpe! &amp; eteck LaD
. MIK. 74Q-245-5747.

In Furniture, Carpel Or Drapery,"'· '•
Sates Preferred, Apply At Tope ;~ ·
Furniture Co .. 151 Second Ave- •• •
nue, Gallipolis, No Phone Calls. •• ·v.

"r.

Diabetic Patients : Medicare Or
Private Insurance, You May Be

•Must have good Co!T'muntcatlo'n
skills
• Must have good artving teoord
&amp;Provide own Transportation
'Must haw ability to be o TEAM
l)layor .

Beagle Pup, lllolo, Approx. 6 ·8
Monlhl Old, 741l-4.41.0118.

Send Resume to:
Gaiii&gt;OIIs Dally 'mbune,
AE : Advtrt~lng Sale&amp; Rep
825 Tllifd Avenue'
Gall!&gt;olls, OH 45631

Black Male Dog , 2 Yeoro Old,
Part Peklngese &amp; Mixed. Good
Watch Dogl740-388-0583 .

.r

- - - - - - - -- ,,r,

SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN.•::,
COUNTRY end EASY LI5TEI\·•'-'r
!HOI Call 1·800 -469- 6 164 FCII ;..·
A.ppointment To Come To .Na ~tl·. ~,..ij;
VIlle , Tennessee And Aud iiiO ri.Q t'"
For Ma1c)r Record Pro·ducers . I~ ' "'
tarnetwww.wcln .ac
· ... ._,
---------------~
·. :~~e

State Tested CHHA's Needta\.
For E~epandlng Home Health Pro-•. 1'! .,,
vider. Starting Wage $7 .25 Hr.•'iP"t
Call 740-441 -1 877 For More trj;

;v-

. _,.,.

~
_::...:.=--------~
Warehouse Manager Neadtd,l'l'.
Must have· typing skills and so.,.... ~"

!ormation.

computo1 knowledge. some hea•, 'l&lt;l
.lifting required In this posltlofJ. an"'
Salary dependant on experience. ,, .. v
Call for Interview. Sparkle Supplv,: .. .
7 .. 1\_.ol.lot-4109
.. tN",

Vf1i

~~=-:-:-::':":':--:-::-----"~·r

WORK FROM HOlliE . $800 •';"~·"'
$4,500 /Month. Call 1- 686 - 234.-:~ ·J
9897. www.cash-~11 .conV!Iome : .~~"

Work Part-Time IFuii -Time, OIL~' ~
monatratlng Beauty .Productitt! • ·
With An lnltrnatlonal Cosmttib"i ,,.
Company, Call ~ohley, 740·44,. ,.,;,
1982.
I "f. ... .

...': ..

.

'J w•f•

·-1

-•

~,

,:• (;,tj

"
·,.

;

•

- ------

- ·-

�... . . . -.
'

Page10 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 13, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'
The Dally Sentmel • Page 11

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

FREE MONEY Its True Never
Repay Gua anteed $500
$50 000 Fo Debt Co1 sohda on
Pe sona Needs Med ca l B lis
Educat on &amp; Bu s ne ss c~ To
F ee 1 800 724 6047 (24 Hrs

Gotllpollo Career College
(Caree s Close To Home)

Call Todayl 740 446 4367
800 214 0452
Roy •so OS 1274B
180

Wanted To Do

A&amp;J s Cleanmg Serv1ce es den
t1al and bu~ ness Call bela e

7 oopm 740 992 9913 or 740
992 2578

CASH Or lOAN Fa m Ca p tal
W u Purchase Or Loan Aga nst
Your Government Farm Pay
mens (CRP/ PFC) Call Farm

Cap tat 1 B66 FARM ACT (327
6226)
CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced

Corpotand Upholstery
C~enlng

Our safe tow moisture soli ex
traction method deep cleans car
pet and upholstery No odor no
fuss and m.n mum d y~ng 1 me
( t 2 hrs ) Call C early Clean lor

tree est mala [304)67S 4040
Georges Portable Sawm II don t
haul your logs to the m II JUSt cal

304 67S 19S7

Areal Earn $500 $5 000 Wk'
CASH FREE nlo 1 800 997

9666 24 H s
A Money Mach ne Be Your Own
Boss Get Your L fe Back Home
Based Bu s ness Manufa ctu er
D rect Buy 30 Candy Machmes

$9 995 Free V Oeo VEND STAR
1 BOO 998 VEND
A truly revolutiOnary and expo
srve opportumty that w n allow you
to earn a 5 6 figure annual n
come Send SASE for lree mfor
malton to P 0 Box 976 Mason

wv 25260
ABSOLUTELY NO$$$ DOWN
HERSHEY NABISCO COKE
VENDING ROUTES SECURED &amp;
GUARANTEED LOCATIONS
FIN AVAIL CALL 1 677 933
9466
ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
$1 000 A Cay No Sell ng Not
MLM Fo Free Info mat on Pack

$3 000 And Up No FPe 1 877
663 9269 Ext 22

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
D.pp cat on W Serv ce Reduce
Payn ants To 65 % CASH IN

GET OUT OF DEBTI REDUCE In

GET YOUR CASH NOW 0 dest
Buye s 01 S ructu ed Sett ements
Annu lies And Government Farm
Payments Also Pu cnas ng Lot
teres And P vale Mo !gages
Ca ll Settlement Cap !al I BOO
959 ooos www settlementcap1
Ia com
Need A loan? Try Debt Consol•
dat on $5 000 S200 000 Bad

Creo t 0 K Fee 1 600 770 0092
Ext 21S
RECEIVING PAYMENTS? In
ves o Pays CASH NOW Fo
You Seller Fmanced Mortgage
Real Estate Contract Insurance
Annu ty Htghest Pr ces Free
Quotes Why Wa t? Call R1ch 1

600.685-6450
230

Professional
Services

Mount s Tree Servtce The Tree
P oless ana s Bucket Truck
Service Top Tr m Removal
Stump Gnml ng Free Est mates
Fully nsu ed Works Camp Bid
wei OH Call Ana Save 1 BOO
838 9568 740 388 9648 Owne
RICk Mount

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
1 688 582 3345

ng NOT Aeptac ng Long Cracks
In Windshields Free Vtdeo 1
800 826 8523 US /Canada
www glassmechamK com

EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Send Us A One Page Form We
Do The Rest No D ect Sell ng
Free Info Package 1 600 831
2~5 24 Hrs Ext 63

fREE SECRETS OF MAKING
MONEY Eas ly Make $5 000+
Per Week www secrets2suc
cess com'spectal7080

MEDICAL BILLER Up to $IS
$45 /Hr Medtca l B II ng Software
Companv Needs People To P o
cess Med cal Cia ms From Home
Tralnmg Provided Must Own

Compulers
667

304 576-2890
14x70 W th Expando Good Con

1979 Governor 3 Sea ooms
Clean Sel Up On A Rented Lot
74().245 5783 740 446 9833
1980 14Ft X 70Ft Remodeled In
s de Good Shape Must See To
App ec ate $10 900
740 446

oo

4880

1990 Danv Ue 14x70 2 Bedrooms
2 Baths Exce ent Cond 1on 740
446 1778
1991 141tx7211 2 Beorooms 2
Bains Sh ngle Roof V nyl S d ng
E~rcellent Cond lion $16 000 00

[740)446 6113
1999 Doub ew tde Repo Neve
Ltved In New Home Warranty 0
Down II Quallf ed 7 40 446 3093
Oakwood Gall pol s Only
4BA 2BA $499 Down $259 mo

304)755-5S66
98 14x70 Clayton 3 br 2 ba CA
everything upgraded ca thedral
ce 1ng some furniture stays 2
decks w/ ult l ty buildmg many
e11tras exce llent cond 304 675
4451 alter 5 pm

Doublewldes Free Decor &amp; Furm
ture

HURRY HURRY HURRY!
OAKWOOD HOMES
BARBOURSVILLE WV
BOO 363 6662

START YOUR OWN VENDING

Work W th Pub I c y Traaeo O&amp; 8
Aateo Company To Generate S x
Ftgures 90 Days No MLM 1

800-743-B529
Money to L.oan

"THE CREDIT DOCTOR

We

Aepa1r Web Site At www cred

tmd com 600 733 0223

MOVING OUT OF AREA Must
Sett At Sacralce 199B SW Lke
Now 304 733-9102
New 3BR 2 Bath 14 Wtde $500
Down $2 0 per mo Free A r 1

B00-691 6777
New 4BR 16 wtde $500 Down
$245 per mo Free Air 1 800

310 Homes for Sale

$499 down

on Singles &amp; $999 down on

$0 DOWN HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED
GOV T
fORE
CLOSURES' CALL NOW FOR
REGISTRATION! 1 800 434
2434 EXT 3205 (NO FEE)
3 Bedrooms 1 112 Barns Br ck
age Approx 1 Acre 740 446

ARIZONA RARE BUY! Pnshne 40
Acre Ranches In Northwest Ar
zona From Only $495/Acre' Lush
vegetatiOn Moun a n v ewst No
Ouahly ng Low Down Ask About
6 Mo InspectiOn Program! 1 800

711 2340
Buy Homes From $10 000
1 3 Bedroom Local Government
$; Bank Foreclosures Finane ng
Poss1ble For L slings Call 800

319-3323 Ext 1709
COUNTRY HOME
2 BR 1 112 Baths V~yl &amp; Br~k B1
Level Wtth Unf n1shed Basement
On 7 Acres Of Meadow Sur
rounded By Trees Barns &amp; Other
Outbulldmgs More Land Avail
able Located Near Thurman Olf
SA 279 On Cente pomt Road

$87 200 Anthony Land Co LTD

Cash For Rematn ng Payments
On Property Sold Mortgages
Annuities Setllements lmme

1 800 213 8365 www country

$FREE CASH NOW$

From

Wealthy Famll es Unloadtng M•l
Ions Of Dollars To Help M n•m ze
Their Taxes Write lmmedtately

Wlndlalls 847 A SECOND AVE
SUITE 1350 NEW YORK NEW
YORK 10017
GUARANTEED

APPROVAL

Bank Card No Cred t Check No
Up Front Cash Security Oepos t
Required
fvtust Be 1ST And
Have Valid Checking Account
Pre Approval By Phone 1 800

859-1556

Mobile Homes
for Rent

$260 $300 740 992 2167

675 1400
Schult New Generauon Sect1onal

28 x52 Featuring Schull Country
K tchen 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Sale Pr ced French City Homes
Point Pleasant wv 304 675

1400
Schult New Generation Sectiona l
28 x64 LA Famtly Room Ftre
place 4 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Thermopane Wtndows &amp; Much
Morel Pr ced To Move! French
C ty Homes Pont Pleasant WV

HOME FORECLOSURES

NO

MONEY DOWN' NO CREDIT

Furmshed two bedroom a/c no
pets Rver Park Pomeroy $300
per month S 150 depos t 740

949 2093

992"""'

1 8drm Unfurn sned Wtlh Slave
&amp; Relr g $21 5 00 Pe Month n
c udtng Wate $100 00 Oepos t
No Pets 74D-446 3617

' 8ectroom unrurmshed Apart
ment Range Refr ge ator D spo
sa GaraQe Prov dea Wate
Sewage Gartlaga Patd Oepos t l!
Re e ence&amp; Aequ reo 36 F rst
Avenue Rear Gat ho ol s 740
446 2561

.,-------

, Bed oom 2 Btocl&lt;s From \Jn
lfe s ty A c S23!i Mo Plus 0&amp;post Ava tab e Octooe 12th
740 388 9946

-----

304-675 1400
Speclot 28x60 3 or 4BR $1000
Down $349 per mo Free Dehv

ery &amp; Setup 1 800-691-6777

House and lol lor sale 4 bed
ooms two baths located n car
penter $1000 down WAC easy
terms conlact Oav1d 1 800 333

6910

2 Ira ler lots lor renl $ 75 00 each
across from New Ha..,.en grade
SChOO 304 882 2219
Aver Park Pomeroy (former ly
B owns) $100 per month 740

Pom&amp;roy Rl 124 600 sq II cus
tamer parkmg ale carpet ce1llng
fan modern $350/month $150

510

Household
Goods

10 Col o TV Emerson $100
Nlntendo 64 2 con troller 5

games $150 (304)675 8195
Appl ances
Recondlt•oned
Washers Dryers Ranges Rein
graters 90 Day Guarantee!

3 000 Sq Ft Commerc a Bu td
ng 1n Henderson ror rent ease
or sale Call Sonfly Reynolas

1:¥&gt;41675 4123
Bar Bus~ness

Gal po 15 Area

Wtth 2 30 Liquor L. c11nse 740

1

2 4-4 Acres Homes te Greer;
Townsh p Gallla Coun1y Scemc

Ou1et Close To Gallipolis Some
Restncttans 740 245 5776

3 35 Acres Corner ol Foglesong
and Hang ng Rock Road m Ma

son
$25 ooo OBO
(304)882 3460/or882 2833

Call

62

Club Ca lves At Bred Rased The
G an~ Champ on S1ee In 1999
Mi:lson County Fa
740 245

9315

Down! Past Cred1l Problems OKI
Even If 1urned Down Before 1 Re
estat&gt;llsn Your Credltl 1 800

659-Q359
WARMUP
92% Gas Furnaces Heat Pumps
0 Jet Systems Free Est mates If
YOU Don CCal US We Boln LOSB

Cover C op Wheat Seea $5 00
Fo 100 bs 740 245 5047

Wnea1 w o s or vetcn seeQ n t
Exce en cover crop or wnea
hay $5 50 pAr 100tb Also gratn
dryer &amp; 2 ro"" p1cker sheller 2
ow moumed corn o eke on 1600
D ese 0 1ver Tractor 1304)372

Autos for Sale

852 3264
CARS $100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUND Honda s Toyota 8
Chevys Jeeps And Sport Ut h

1970 El Camino SS Clone 350
Rebuilt Motor 350 Turbo Trans
m1ss on Came F om Flonda New
1983

J2000 ~ ont

ac 2 Ooo s

740 256 1288
1983 Olds 2 Doors Cutlass Su
preme Brougham Back One

Owner Blac! Full Power AJT s o
Uter V 8 Motor Excellent Cond

tiOn $2 200 740-446

~277

J

1985 Buock flegal 3 8 L 6 With
Cru se AtC Good Condtllon
$1 600 F~rm 740 388 877B 740
24S 9084

3/4 200 PSI

367 0331 740 992 6976

$21 95 Per tOO

1 200 PSI

$37 00 Per 100 AI Brass Com
press1on F tt ngs In Stock

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

Jackson Oh o 1 800 537 9528

WHITES METAL DETECTORS
~on

Allison 588 Watso n Roaa
B dwA I Oh o 740 446 4336

1986 Chrysler Lebaron Runs
good looks good Extra mce n

terlor $1 300 080 (304)S76
2317
1988 Chevy Spnnt New rings &amp;
beanngs head rebu It new
brakes &amp; front t res (304)895

3940
1968 Monte Ca~o L S 305 v 6
Loaded 40K N1ce $2 500 OBO
304 675-4452
1991 Dodge Shadow 4 Cy l nder
5 Speed Good Condit on Asking
$2 000 Senous Calls Only 740

441-0616

V 8 $1 700 OBD 740 446 2247
339 0336

AKC Pomerantans Female 1
year o ld $150 00 Male 1 year

1993 Grand Am 2 Doors $4 395
1992 Olds Ach eva 2 Doors Low

Pets for Sale

$100 00 Very sweet (740)256
6162
AKC Fleg Yellow Lab House
tra ned exce lent w/ch1 d en

$100 (304)675 6195
AKC Regtstered Cockar Soan e l
pupp es ltrst shots and wormed
buff and buff &amp; whtte spots $200

740 992 7371
Black &amp; Chocolate Lab Pupp1es
$200 00 W th Papers 1St Shots
And Wormed 740 388 8922 Or

Apartment tor rent In Pomeroy no

530

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1992 Pont ac Grand AM 4
Doors Cruise A r Stereo tCass

ete PL I OOK New Body Style
74G 245 9416
1993 Dodge Shadow loaded 3 0

Milos U 995 1991 Cava l er 2
Doors $2 195 1969 Pontiac 6000

LE 4 Doors S2 195 Cook Motors
74Q-446.Q103
1993 Plymouth Ouster 6 cyiJnder
OHC standard excel ant cond1
t on looks great beaut ful nterlor
n ce wheels $3500 740 949
2045 evemngs
1994 Plymouth Acclatm 66 000
M les Auto A r CrUise Tilt Atu

mnum Wheels $3300 080 740
256 6169

Registered German Shepherd
puppes for sale $100 for males
$150forfemales 304 773-5810
Wanted Mate Stud Welsh Gorgl
Please Cal l 740 446 5252 Ext

3022 (Work) Or Alter 5 OOPm
740 441 155
570

Musical
Instruments

Moonglow By t&lt; mball Electnc Or
gan Good Cond lion Pnce Nego
table Ca 1740 446-9477

111gs 740 245 9047
Walnuts Bought At Troyers
Woodcraft Open Monday And

Thursday And Sat~roay Starting
9125 Tllll0/30199 9 Miles Wesl
Of Gall polls On 141

Chain Link Dog Pen For Sale
740 245 55-13

Grcic1ous h~Jing 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
A•..,.erslde Apartments In Middle

COMPUTERS $0 Down Low
Monlhly PBymenls Y2K compll

port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal HOUSing Oppor

Call FIROCOM Advanced Tech
nolog1es 1 800 817 3478 Ext

tlJnHIBS

330

ant Almost Everyone Approved

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

TO OU((
/

Power Wtndow &amp; Doors 350" A~

GUf~T Of tf0/'10~/ A "'AN AT
T~t TOP OF 1'41~ Flf&amp;.l) .... T~f
APE~. TtfE PINI'IA(.Lf,

Tt4f AG.Itllf, Ttff

1996 F 350 Ford 4WO pow~
stroke al till cruse PW P
white w th gray Inter or loaae

'

'

••

1981 Harley Dav dson low Rd~
Lowered Two Inches Lots tf
Chrome Excellent Cond tto~

tHE BORN LOSER
T\Jm\1{(, 1D !'Ncr&lt;-'(
CLOUt&gt;'( ~y Tl\€.

198B Soli Tau Custom Harley D&gt;f

m tes

ke ne~

$12 700 740 698-5054

'

ZEN I~ ....

TtfAN~

YOU FO((

Tt4AT SYNOI'IYM

TOAST.

I

s11 ooo 74o-446 0947

.,

...

Wf\t&gt;-..1 (X~IL'&lt; l~ \fiE.

Dlff(~e£\WEEH

Ml~

'&lt;

P~H.. 5Ufii~Y ~p

'&gt;---4-="- PI\F.ILY CL0Ut7'(7

1988 Yamaha Warrior New TlrefA

S"

Runs Gooo Looks GOOd s 1 sol(
1996 Kawasak 750 55 Jet
low Hours With Tratler $2 80
74()-441 1567

1989 Har ey Davtason Sorts

$12 500 OBD 74Q-992 2209

'-

1999 400 EX Excellent Shap~
$4 400 OBD 740 446 1627
,

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

~

![::::======::::::----,

1989 20 Sk ipper Crall PontQoh

~
~

60 HP Marmer Low Hrs Btmtft

Top $3 800 74G 256 1906

'

WUMP!

1994 Ba ss TracKe
TaoPol~
1411 w/Fistt F naer 8HP MereU~¥
&amp; T othng Motor w Tra ler used
11ery ne $3 500 !304)675 1731 ~

•

i

THAT CIVIC!&lt;. I
HEARD MUST HAVE
SEEW THE ICE

~I?EAKIN6 I

1995 17 Hydra Spor 90 11~.
Johnson til tr m troll ng motor ~
tra ter readY to go 57 600
1997 1$ Bass Tracke Pro Team
60 llp mar ne w th troll ng motdt
&amp; 1ra ler $6 700
~
1998 tB 800 Seres Ntro 120 np.
Mercury Dua Console Dutil "'
cattery charger tra ler $8 900
1998 24 Sweetwater pontoon §o
hp Johnson tandem axle Wtfl.

-~

brakes $13 700 74Q-992 6520
760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1

l

•

nus

~ow DOES
''T~E NIL.E RIVER IS
L.IKE TME MISSISSIPPI

'' IF VOU'vE SEEN
ONE RIVER
SEEN

Pass

Pass
Pass

North

East

5•

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

z.
a•

8.

790

'

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

tree

3 Company
founded by
Giovanni

35 QriH p.1rt1
31 Evil
39 Some curve•

Agnelll
4
5
6
7

40 Flxld (ehon)
42 Songbird

vouve

T~I:M A~L

8
9
10
11

Exiot
Edges
Wrnnle-the
Mr Naslase

12
19
21
22

26
28
29

By Phillip Alder
lei s dtve stratght mlo the deal
today In stx spades you wm trtck
one wJth the club ace and cash two
top trumps seemg West dtscard a
club (black on black rn case the
opponent rsn I watchrng) How
would you conunue?
When North showed game values
wrth hts second round JUmp South
drove mto stx spades whrle dabbhng
at a grand slam
At tnck four declarer cashed the
heart ace then he played a heart to
dummy s queen However East
ruffed and returned h1s last trump
Suddenly declarer had an unavmd
able heart loser to go wrth the tnck
already conceded one down
If Othello !he Moor had been the
declarer whal rntght he have sard?
Perhaps I pray you m your lei
lers when you shall these unlucky
deeds relate speak of me as I am
nolhmg extenuate nor set down
aughl m malrce
Well we won t be mahctous bul
Othello wasn 1 unlucky
he mts
played
After the bad trump break the
only rtsk ts an unfrrendly heart sphl
Jus! m case East has a smglelon heart
declarers f1rst play should be low to
dummy s queen Then a heart from
the dummy leaves Easl wtlh no
defense II he ruffs South s hand ts
high so Easl dJscards South relums
Ia dummy wtth a dtamond lhen calls
tor the las! heart Agatn Easl ts pow
erl ess Assumtng he dtscards declar
er wms !he lnck and ruffs a heart m
!he dummy estabhshrng hrs lasl heart
tn the process The defense rs reslncl
ed lo East s trump tnck
Try to avotd havmg vttal wmners

Social misf11
Psyche parts
Cructalllmes
Removed
(soap)
Wound cover
Dame - Hess
Wile of
Garalnl
Yemeni ctly
Trims
(branches)
Reporter

Lane

30 Vtlla d31 Hardy lass
37 Clauilled
38 Cunmng
41 Uncanny
42 Chicago
area

43 Curve
44 Singer
Coolidge
45 New Zealand
parrots

47 Buddies
461nler(among
olhera)
49- billy
50 Serves the
purpose
52 Compass pi
54 Greek island

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by L.uls Campos
Celebrity Clphlrcryptogfwns n crealed lrom quota1ons by famous people past and present
Each Jener In the cipher slands fOf another rooays clue F equas G

MLJM

JPP

F N P X

AC

FPAMIIQH

J p p

RNM

JHG

VJRXQH

XNGC

RNM

MLJM
T H H

PNCM

IINPEAQR
PREVIOUS SOLUTION •Pee Wee Reese was the grealesl Dodger who ever
ltvad He tS the ltnest person llhtnk I ve ever mel " - Duke Sntder

'::!:t:~' S© ~JU tv\-~
tZNS" VAMI
----..:.......: ldllod lly CUlT
POlLAN - - - - - WGID

I

Rearrange
0 four

letters of the

wordt be
low ro form four simple words
ICrombted

I

,

HIPRRE

I

NUGEL

I

(-.,.,.,....,....,3-r--1...--I'~
~S~l-A-:--=-T-::8~,_~

l
r
•

.

,I

I

•

I~

•

I I _
_

•

ME J B U l

School was very dtfftcult lot
my son A counselor told h1m
lhal to pay for success you

Ie

must tax your

1---r-ri-.,,..,5,-T,-.,,r--i
_
_ _ _ _ _

Complete the chuckle quoted
by f1/Jmg tn the m ss r g words

.____._ _.__ _.__.._--''---' you develop from Sfep No 3 below
NIJM8£RFD LETTERS IN
THESE
UARES

I

THE

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE llffERS
TO GfT ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Wholly
Don I get stung by hrg~ prlc~s'
Shop thr clossr(ir:d SKitOrl

o1

0

Rusty Crown Embryo TOMORROW

My husband wa1ts until the last m1nute to do any
th1ng He says that the best t1mesav1ng devtce 1s TO

MORROW

&lt;/&gt;

ROBOTMAN

•
'

\
1978 Star Crafl Fold Out Campe~
Sleeps 8 Stove Aelngeralor AI,.
Condit on~ng $2000 (304)882'
3693
:

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

or good runmng truck 740 992

92 Ponderosa cattle tratler 114)

lor oale $1500 llrm 740 992
6035

Home
Improvements

ers Waterproofing

9190
Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E~t
per ence All Work Guaranteed

french City Maytag 740 448
7795

720 Trucks for Sale
1979 GMC 314 Ton S13 000 Ne•
Parts Price $1 100 Cal 740 258

1102 ••• Fo Jr
1967 Dodge D 150 Ptcl&lt; Up 6
Cylmder Automatic Good Condl
lion 1982 Dodge D 250 318 Au

IOmatlc Good Condit on 740 446
9816 7411446 0566

'

610 Farm Equipment

'

C&amp;C General Home Matn
tenence Pa n!lng vmyl sid ng
carpentry doors wndows baths
mob1le home repa r and mon, For
free estimate call Chet 740 9~2

6323

1':-:--:-:-~---c::----Ltvmgston s Basement Water
Proollng all basemen! rep a I 8
done free esllmatgs lifetime
guarantee 12Yrs on JOb expert

once (304)895 36B'7
840

1989 Jeep Grand Cherokee wa
goner 116 000 M tes $3 20G 00
Call After 4 30Pm 740 446 9357
1989 Jeep Grand Cherokee Wa

goneer 116 ooo m les $3200
Callefter 4:30 74{) 446 9357

Electrical and
Refrigeration

ASTRO·ORAPH

21) Keep your expectancy level htgh
tn all of your undertakrngs and

Thursday October 14 1999
More than the usual amount of
lnps may be rn the offing for you rn
lhe year ahead Although they mrghl
IJe of shorl duralton !hey wtll have a
purpose and you won I come home
unfulfilled
LIRRA (Sepl 23 Oct 23) Good
news mrghl be commg your way
today !hal could rnnucnce you per
sonally It may come rn !be form of
rnformaltoo you can use an lnvnauon
or an opponunoly to beller yourself
Know where lo look for romance and
you II find tl The Aslro Graph
Matchmaker tnslanlly reveals whtch
slyns arc romanltcally perfect for
you Matl $2 7~ to Matchmaker c/o
lhts newspaper ~0 Box 1758 Mur
ray Htll Slatton New York NY

hopeful condtltons you re.senstng are
nghl on the money
CAPRICORN !Dec 22 Jan 19)
Dealtngs you have wtth authoruy fig
ures !oday wtll work oullo your hen

closely observed and scruunrzed by
your peers today you II wtn the"
admrratton and respect as !hey wu

10156

ne!ls what a n1cc person you arc

Involvements

SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22) Your
posstbrlmes for personal gatn arc
more encouragrng today than usual
II could be a profitable day for you
concemtnl all lhmgs of a malcnal

nature
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23 Dec

cl1t

today

because those

so don 1 hesitate to @O strmghtto

!he IOJ' honcho e&lt;pectally when tn

need or a favor

no! be hesllanllo put yourself out for
someone loday Any efforts you
expend on behalf of someone allhts
ttme wtll be rewarded m lhe near

future m greater measure
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) What
wtll bnng you !he grealesl happmess

loday ts when you re Involved m
partnershtp arrangements or tn sttu
at1ons where you are part of a team
Subdue any rndcpendent mchnaltons
CANCER (June 21 July 22)Take

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
U!tlll.e your nnagmatton to the fullest

control of matters

today tn order to fisurc out wnys to
ctrcumvcnt or erase problems Test

le!Ung thmgs fend for themselves
because somethmg you ve been hop-

oul any bold new Ideas or C( ncepts
you get and you II find on~ that

works
PISCES (feb 20 Marc~ 20)
Bet.:ause your behaviOr may he more

ARIES (March 21 Aprtl 19)
Through good communtcaunn
diSharmon,Y can be vanqUished wtlh
mosl any ISsue IQday Open up diS
cuss10ns wtlh those you need to clear
the atr You II be glad you drd
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) Do

tng

to

(Pan 2oi2J

today mstead of

finalize can now be moved

tn

thnt dtrectton but tt won 1happen by
tlself
LEO (July 21 Aug 22) You don 1
have to be ruled by outstde factors
today Instead lake steps lo reorga
ntze Jhtngs so that you re tn charge of
your own desuny Independence rs
!he key
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sepl 22) Some
rhmg beneficml lhal could have a
dtrcct affect upon your linancml
postlton 1s strrnng a1 hts tunc It could

make bolh you and your fanuly feel
more secure You may learn of tl
today

\

•

Least bit
Opp ofl!INW
Skater Sonja Eskimo boll
(var)

fj PRINT

1St

4x4 Ford $120 (304)67S 1731

33 UtaiO p.lrt
34 Zodiac elfin

• K

''THE NILE RIVER IS ALSO L.IKI:
TilE MISSOURI TME RI-IINI:
AMAZON TilE COLORADO
THE VOLGA TilE EUPHRATES
AND Till: DANUBE I

'

Truck T res 4 ea Mounted on
Ford A ms w/4 Hub caps off

How clumayl

23
24
25

New Replacement Gas Tanks D
&amp; A Auto Rip ey wv (304m~;

0 1 llQ!l 273-9329

1

2 Tamarllkalll

46 Dell bread
47 Took care of
the billa

ruffed

Budget Pnced Transm 1ss•on1
and Eng nes A I Types Acces~
To O~Jer 10 000 Transm•sstons,
eve Joints 740 245 5677
,

3~33

DOWN

As usual, not
so unlucky

Aid

1999 FO~D EXPLORER $100 1
BASEMENT
oso SeiZed And Sell ng Locally
WATERPROOFING
Fee t 600 409 7S11 Ext 9696
Uncondlt anal lifetime guarantee..
Fee
Local references lurnlshed Es
87 Mustang sunroof blue &amp; tabllshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)
wh te runs good $1500 or trade 446 0870 1 60Q 287 0576 Aog

Red Raspbe rles Now Avatlable
Taylors Berry Patch Call In Eve

Mart $400 00 Ut lilies Paid! i740)
446-2515

1994 GMC 112 T6n 4X4

1997 Mercury Cougar 30th Anm
versarv Svecta Ed1t on v 8 Tor
eador Reo $15 500 740 446
1062 After5 PM

a bushel (304)675 5790

Elf c1ency Apartment bes de Wa

etV

SERVICES

Golden Dehctous Apples $12 00

446-0139

3~0

West
Pass
Pass

Openmg lead

,

gme new overdnve trans safq,
cage good t res uses no o~
uns/dr ves
e~ecellen

I!OIIgll lrH

PUPPIES Shots Wormed Ready

FrUits &amp;
Vegetables

Downtown Very nice upsta rs 2
Bedroom all Electuc Complete
Kllchen W 0 Non Smok ngl No
Pets I Reference &amp; Oepostl (7 40)

4NT
5NT
6•

z+

$6900 (304)675 1731

g~~aallne)

14 1111n1mcn bird 58 Cryelelllne
15 Typewriter
g~~m
rCIIIar
57 -in
11 Peraonaletory
(Introduced In
17 - - pl'ecedent
alageol
11 Roman three
58 Somel!onel
20 OUtdoor
Trilling worko

To Go' 740 379-9061

45 KW Kanter Generator 6 Cylin
der Dtese l 63 Hours On Unit

$5 SilO 740 256 1506

2"

Capt Chairs Ret

v oson 15 000

AKC German ShepherO Puppies
740 245 9213

Buy or sell R "'er ne Ant ques
1124 East Ma n Street on SA 124
E Pomeroy 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner http Ills your Dus
ness com/nvenne/

vB

lngs

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Antiques

I •

Bench Seat Converts to full s
bed dual gas tanks l ke neYI.

CARS $100 $500 S. UP POLICE
IMPOUNDS Honda s Toyola s
Chevys Jeeps And Sport Utll
ties Fee ReqUI eO Call Now! 800
772 7470 EXT 7832

74Q-446 3261

Sporting
Goods

South

199 1 Ford Mark Ill Convers totl

van

z

Antwar to Prevloua Puzzle

Ell!

53 Theiler dlalrlct
55 - rating (of

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

oot

AWD $5

1 Ukll a goon
7 Rowboat part
13 lneltet:llva

• 8

OBO 1991 Plymouth Voyagel1
$3 000 OBO 740 992 2209

$19 500 67 000 miles call74
992 6223 or 740 949 204S evef1i

Jackson Avenue (304)675 7368

'520

991 Astra van

• 10 9 5

•AKQ52
•AK732
• 7 4

THAR•S MY

,

ties Fee ReqUireo Call Now! 600
772 7470 EXT 7832

Eskimo Sp tz $50 Each Mother &amp;
Father On Pram ses No Papers

367 0280

&amp; 4-WDs

tomatlc 75 000 Miles 740 388l
8304
•

5 Pupp es 2 Males 3 Females

7~0

Vans

67 Z24 while $750 call 304

For Sa le Recond I oned wash
ers dryers and relngerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407

&amp; Addison P1ke

730

1 6~ OOOmltes $3500 OBO
trade (304)773 5054

If No Answer 74Q-441 1085

Mollohan Carpets Ouahty Carpel
At Affordable Pr ces 202 C ark

~

• Q 10 9 3

South

BARN};Y

-"

$500 CARS FROM $500111 Buy
Pollee Impounds &amp; Repos Fee
CALL NOW For Llstmgsl I BOO
319 3323 x2156

560

Washe s dryers elr gerators
rang es Skaggs Appl ances 76
vme Street Call 740 446 7398

• J 86

Chevy Tuck 112 Ton 4)14 Goolt
50~

" 10

•KQJ74

1997 350 XL 7 3 Diesel Automa~
c Cab &amp; Chass s 38 000 mite'!
A 1 Cond hon (740) 2S6 6056

For Upcoming Wmter $3
740 J67-Q331 74Q-992-6976

East
• J 10 9 8

• 8
•J986

Speets Good Cond Uon 72 OOG

M les Ask ng $12 000 oo 7401
446 1397
•

S023 after 6PM

Waterl ne Spec al

Lovmg Gill AKC TOY YORKIE

F rst Avenue Galhpol s 1 Bed
room Apartment 740 446 1066
or Weekends 74D-441-()952

&amp; Gram

1965 Monte Car lo $400 740

rows Included $200 !304)575
8195

Beech Street Middleport two
bedroom furnished apartment
u111 lies pa1d deposit and eler
ences requtred 740 992 0165

Hay

740 446 6308 1 800 291 0098

Pets (304)773 53521(304)B82
2627

&amp; moves Call 740 446 2568
Equal Housrng Opportumty

640

New Pam! Clean Inside &amp;. Out AI
New Paris &amp; T11es $1 300 OBO

740 366 9396

from $279 to $358 Walk to shop

Two year old pamt geld ng green
broke $1000 o w II trade for we ll
tra ned horse 740.843 5295

GY Will Fmance W th 0 Down I
Past Cred t Problems No Problem

Mountameer Bow Lefthand Ke I
er S ght Overdraw/au ver &amp; Ar

ESTATES 52 westwood Drive

Two eg stared quarter horses or

Pant 7402561071

And A Nlghlsland All $300
Drop Leaf Table W th 4 Cha rs
$200 Po table Washer &amp; Dryer
W th Rack $600 Leave Message

West

f'ltrt of the Far

51

21 CloHI wood
23 Daub
27 Frying p.1n
32 Singer U!uper

• A 63

150xLT Lariat 302 luell111oCI
auto new american rae ng rln1)!
new t1res towmg packaglt ress.tU
t1 tch new heavy du ty drlyt
shafl pow~r w ndows Pow~
brake&amp; air cotid 304 882 11042 ....,
sa e col 740-696 3290

to 13"

t A K5Z

"

77 000 actual m•les Ford

WANT A COMPUTER??'? BUl:
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO

Double Sed Wlth Mattress &amp; Bo¥
Springs Dresser With Mi rror

Chusty s Fam ly L v1ng apart
ments home &amp; trailer rentals
740 992 4514 apartments ava
able lutmshed &amp; unfurn shed

Buildings

9594~

French C ty Maylag 740 446
7795

Brookside Apartments Now Ac
ceplmg Applications For One
Bedroom W th WID Hook Up
Apartment 74D-446 9611

Business and

uldate'l 800 211

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? We Finance 0

R&amp;D s Used Furniture Great Se
lect10n Pr ced To Se 11 Come
And Browse Corner Of Route 7

2BA Apt n Mason Stove/Refng
e ator/Ut lilies furnished A C
Laundry Room Ceiling Fans
Garbage Disposal Very Nice No

60x200 Free Dehveryll Must L1q

Call Toll Free 1 600603-7537

2bdrm apts total elec tnc ap
phances furnished laundry room
facthtles close to schoof In town
Applications avatlable at
llage

Schult New Generation 16 x72 3
Bedrooms 2 Baths V nyt Siding
Sh ngie Roof 2 x6 Walls Garden
Tub Sky lghts Total E ectpc
Free A/C Sale Pnced French
C ty Homes Po nl Pleasant WV

STEEL BUILDINGS 7 ONLY! 2
30x60 40x80 45x90 2 S1x 120

Chapel RQad 740-446 7444 740
368 0173

Green Apis 149 or call 740 992
3711 EOH

Serv1ces Inc Toll Free 1 888

460 Space for Rent

Utilities 740.446-2957

v

Appeals AnO Hearmgs fREE
CONSULTATION Bonel t Team

ISI9

1 688 818-Q128

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

LOW PAYMENTS' 1 800 916 367-o2t9 74{) 3677272
.:.9'..:.91_E_x,_H_502_3_ _ _ _ _ 350 L.ots &amp; Acreage

3 BA Repo~ /Foreclosu es Fee
401o Down For Ltsttngs/ Payment
Details 1 BOO 719 3001 x1185

1 Bedroom 2 Blocks From Un
1Jers1ty R o $235/Mo Plus De
postt A~Jallable October 12th

Cam Oen•ed? We Special ze In

836 4052

e

·-

Livestock

740 742 1903

710

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY

&amp; Depos t Required 740 446

• 7 4 3
" Q54

t 993 GMC Cargo van

November 1st Please call 740
992 2292
Upstairs Furntshed 3 Rooms
Bath Clean No Petsl References

Norl

1996 Chevy 2 WD Full :::; .c:·,
Cab43V6 5Spaed 72K I
Grea Cond ton As&lt;lng $12 oog

TRANSPORTATION

HEAP voucher accepted 740
985 3419

MERCHANDISE

reQu ed no oe1s 740

New Swmp S..t $70 740 379
2642

completely turn shed washe 1
dyer all uhlll es pad Ava table

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 b8droom apartments fur
"'sneo and nfu n shed secur ty

HTG &amp; CLG 740 446 9416 Dr 1
600 672 5967 Galt po 16 OH

c::a.:.p_pe_d.:.E_O_H_.:.(30_41_67_5_66_79___ "1&lt;::easoned f~rewood $45 pfck up
Two bedroom apartment lor renl
~ $90 cord spilt &amp; del ve ed

depos t 740 949 2093

304 675 1400

NEEDED! TAKE OVER VERY

HOMES FROM S199 30 /Mo 1

For $38 Ask About Free Sam
pies 740 441-1982

lw n Towers now accepting ap
pi calfons lor 1 BR HUO subsld
tzed apt for e lde rly and handt

(304)675 69B4

pets 740 992 5856

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down• Gov t And Bank Aepo s
Being Sod Now! Ftnanctng Ava I
able Cal Now 1 800 730 7772
Ext 8040

Lose Up To 30 lbs In 30 Days

Tara f ownhouse Apartments
very Spac1ous 2 Bedroom&amp; 2
F oors CA 1 112 Bath Fully Ca
petec Aault Poo &amp; Bally Pool
Pat o Start $350 Mo No Pets.
lea:stl P us Secu ty Oeposft Re
QIJ ea A.fter 5 740 446 010
13etore 5 740 448-3481

949 2093

Schult Ftesta t4x70 3 Bedroom~
1 Bath V1nyl Siding Shmgte Rool
2 x6 Walls Tolal Electric Free AI
C Priced To Move French City
Homes Po nt Pleasant WV 304

340

www natlonalcontractbuyers com

pay-bHIS coot

Three bedroom all electnc ranch
home wfth attached garage
fenced back yard larg e lot at
Meadow Land Estates Pt Pleas
ant $600 month plus ~eferences
and depos t 304 824-2480

1 Bedroom Near Holzer's Eco
nomtcal Gas Heat Kitchen Ap
phances Furn shed $279/Mo +

tyme com

Buyers 800 490 0731 Ext 101

val NO APPLICATION FEESII t

74Q-949 2621

74Q-3B8 9994

Our Prices • National Contract

800-863-9006 E•t 936 www help

Ractne three bedroom $400
month plus ut ht es $200 depos t
no pels reletences equ .red

Doubles 1 800 948 5678

dlale Ouoles II Nobod)i: Beats

solldate Debtsl Same Day Appro

alter 3PM

691 6777

A I Homes On Sale

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay

$$$ OVERDUE BILLSIII $$$ Con

4BR Home on Haven Heights
New Haven lul/unl n shed base
men! Wood Burner $350 mo +
utlluestdeposlt !304)273 3492

(304)755 7191

1393 Or740446-6612

TC•28586

2BR 1BA &amp; lull stze basemen
Lots ot land &amp; garden space
1400 sq It ol l vmg space
(304)576 9991 For renvsate

oepos

L ke New

Pleasant
Even ngs

740 446-4474

New DoubleWtde Repo never
ltved n Sltll under warranty

ALL CASH BUSINESS
220 2965 24 Hrs

NET Have You Own Turn Key
On me Bus ness Througn HAND
TECHNOL OGY Low Starr Up
Cos G v~u. Yo u A Complete
PacKage With Mttntor ng And
Trammg To Help You Suc ceed
Call Ivan Turne 877 324 8135

2 Bedrooms Upper Second Ave
nue Ga lhpol s $42!/Mo Depos t
And lease Ag eement Requ red

For Sa l e or Rent 2BR Mob le
Home $250 per month Sewe I
Wate
furn shed
No Pets

sacol ce 98 S W

Busmess Fo As L tt e As $1000

WE ARE ENGERGIZING E
COMMERCE ON THE INTER

4313

(304)755 5665

(304)736 9102

REAL ESTATE

2 Charota1s bulls breed ng age

Cred t Easy Over The Phone
Bank F nanc ng Huge lnvento y
01 lntertherm M ller &amp; Co leman
Furnaces Heat Pumps And
Parts V nyl Skill ng Ktts $299 95
Doors &amp; W ndows Water Heat
ers Anchors P umblng &amp; Electr
ca Paris Bennetts Mobile Home

2 Bedrooms S32S/Mo ... Ut ht es
and Depos t No Petsl 740 446

DoubleW de D splay Sale All
un ts must go Save thousands
Oakwood Homes N tro WV

Moving Out 01 Area Mus! sell al

tv

Grubbs P ano tuning &amp; epatrs
P ob ems? Need Tuned? Calllhe
p ana D 740 446 4525

$28 oo A Movth w th App oved

410 Houses for Rent

Between Athens and Pome oy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob le homas

1409

This newspaper w II not
knowlflgly accept
advert•sements or real eslate
"Whtch s n v oat on of the
law Our readers are hereby
nfo med that all dwellmgs
advert sed in thiS newspaper
are ava lable on an equal
opportun bas s

New Haven one bedroom furn
s heef apartment utllttes paid de
oos t ana references reou red
740 992.0165

12SOO

1996 Chevy 2 Wheel dnve fu
Size E&lt;tended Cab 4 3 V 6

630

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

740.446 7321 AitBI' 6 OOPm

May Se l On Land Conuact Very
Nice 2 Bdrm Atr With Or W th
out Furmture May Be Left On
Ren ed lot In Gall pohs 740 446

Ranch Laundry Room 2 Car Ga

t BOO

500 Acres

1991 Ford Aanger
cyl nder looks good runs
lent chrome wheels

740 446 379

I 8B8 671 4300

RENTALS

440

Carriage $13 500 740 379 9381

Repat ed New &amp; Rebu 11 In Stock
Call Ron E~Jans 1 800 537 9528

Anlhony land Co

420

International TO 9B Dozer Power
Sh ft And W nch Good Under

JET
AERATION MOTORS

12ft x 65ft 2 BOrms $260 00
Month Plus $300 00 Depos t

lot/low rent (304)675 4153

th s newspaper s subject to
the Federal Far Housmg Act
of 1968 which makes 11 1llega
to advert se any preference
lim tat on or d scr mmat on
based on race co or rei g on
selt fam I a status or natlona
ongm or any ntenl on to
make any such p efe ence
tm tat on or dtscr m nat•on

Free PC Con pule Call Nowtl &amp;
Learn How Internet Me chant
Accounts Custom Websttes
New Bus ness? Poor Credit?
OK A most E"'e y Bus ness Ap
proved Low Monthly Payments

Hawa an Tenyakl Aectpes $3
SA S E
Kama a na
Foods
PMB522 4224 Wa alae Avenue
#5 Honolulu Hl96816

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy land 30

rage $14 000 (304)675 5403

Furnaces Installed As Low As

OCTOBER SPECIAL

V"d InKY IN CT

360

OlhOn $6500 7404468172 740
256 6251

Ll'ied In 7mo 1998/Fa rmont
Commander on lot w1th 2 Decks
20 500 Possibly leave on rented

All real estate adverttslng tn

740 446 2477 9 AM To 5 PM

I BOO 213 B365

We Pay Cash 1 600 213 8365

3563

600 434 5518 Ext

MEDICAL BILLING Unhm ted In
come Potenttal No Exper ence
Necessary Free InformatiOn &amp;
CO ROM lnve slment $4 995
$8 995 Fmanc ng Ava lable Is
land Automated Mad ca Ser"' c
es Inc 800 322 1139 Ext 050

220

tralle

HUD Homes Appro....al By Phone
S ngles Or Doubles 740 446

ReQuired Will Tra n 1 800 289

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Repair

12~t65

Homes Nitro WV (304)755
5885

4159 Ext 54

+IMo Income
ALL
CASH I 100% Fmance Ava lab e
1 80Q-.38Q.-2615 24 Hrs

MEIGS COUNTY

l&lt;x70 tra ler 3 br $3500 OBO
also to g ve away

Two Rooms &amp; Batll/Ntce
Efftetency $225/Mo
Includes A Ut I ties

Oho

Free Money/Cash Rebates that
can be used towa rds your down
payment only at Oakwood

No Fee Unless-We Wm

STANDING INCOMES$ Process
Med ca !Dental Cia ms Computer

ooo

New Road Bu It That Cant nues

Into Wayne Nat anal Fo est

BOO 363 6662

AT HOME DATA ENTRY SOUT

$4

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Want A Home Don 1 Have Land?
We Do Hur y Only 10 lots Left

ago Call 1 600 766 8649 24 Hrs
XT27

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 20 Locat•ons $4K $1 OK

Great Fo Huntmg Near Pat 101

011 SA 141 &amp; SA 233 $23 000 On

Near Danv e 8. Rutland Off SA
325 5 &amp; 1o Acres $9 500+ Call
For Free Maps On Tt1ese And
Othe P operl es ln Sou he n

sage

We Can He p loans Available

te est Aa es ~DUCE Monthly
Paymen s 20 40°o Call 800 700
6812 x 1001 F0 FREE Consulla
1on www debtceb com

2 9 Centa /Min PHONE CARD

One Bedroom Nice Apt W1th
K tchen $360/Mo
Includes AI Uti! es

www countrytyme com

Avoid Bankruptcy1!1
Stop Collect on Calls
low Payments
Free Consumer Counsel ng Ca l
Now 1 800 788 6777

CENTIVE OFFER Call I BOO
32885t0Ext 29

Roule EASY $$ MONEY" Loca

20 WOODED ACRES

A thony Land Co l!O

Wtll take care of elderly female n
my home expe an ced $80 0
month 740 992 7526

recommenas that you do bus
ness w th peop e you Know and
NOT to send money through the
mat! unt I you have nvest gated
the ofenng

Servoces 1 600 645-0036

Rough Most y Wooded Road AI
ready Cutin $27 000

14x60 Ft Spac1ous 2 bedroom 1

Free Info 888 659 2560

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Good C ed 1 And Steaely Income
ReQuired Call For More Info rna
on And For Other F nancmg Op
ons Independence Mo tgage

lnternat•onal Dresser ""D"'E Doz
er 6 Way Blade 70% Under Ca1

LAFAYETTE MALL
Apartmenll For Rent
One Room Furnished W th Bath
$125 Month Includes All Uti! es

bath complete w th carport and
storage bu ld ng Set up on rental
Lot {740) 446 8617 Leave Mes

Ktms Clean ng &amp; n e 10r Pamt
ng Commerc at Res dental
Reasonab e Rates Free est
mates cal 304 674 4623

Business
Opportumty

No Down Payment Requ red With
Governme nt Spon so ed Loan

Ot Gall pot s S ng ew des Alloweo

CREDIT PROBELMS?

CREDIT REAPIR AS SEE NON
TV Erase Bad C edt! Lega ly

210

A ZERO% DOWN LOAN!

GALLIA COUNTY
23 ACRES
2 m11es 011 SR 7 &amp; SR 216 South

320

46230'(304)674 0155

FINANCIAL

Car Garage 2 1/2 Aces 5
M nutes F om Holzers $85 000
740 441 0132

Month y Payments 20 soo Save
Thousands 01 Dollars n nterest
Non Proft TCC BOQ-758-3844

CRED T PROBLEMS Stop He e

J ms Drywall &amp; Construcllan
New Construct an &amp; Remodel
Drywa I S d ng Roots Add1
Ions Pant ng etc (304)674

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Separate 3

ACROSS

�•. •• , . .

· - ··~ ~

.'

..... , • 1 '

'

.. '

'

. ... .......

•'

'

..

,.

..

.

'~

.•

~'

., -·

....

. ..

.

'·'

....

•

· _Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, October 13, 1999 .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday

..

Reader's belly 'ache could be 'abdominal angina'
severity so that the patient progres- arteriosclerosis, although rarely
si vely reduces meal size and/or . there are other causative factors.
The first step in treatment of
avoids eating. As a consequence, the
abdominal
angina involves testing to
person loses weight.
Abdominal angina and angina be sure that the pain is actually
pectoris involve different organs but caused by that disorder.
have the sa'me underlying cause. In
In this regard it is no different
abdominal angina it is the stomach thau be ing sure chest pain is due to
and intestines (rather than the heart) an gin a pectoris. Once the diagnosis
which are temporarily deprived of is established, the cause is almost
mkqu ate amounts of blood to per- alway s a narrowing or ''blockage" in
a section of one or more of the arterhmn their jobs optimally.
This poor circulation is almost ies supplyin g blood to the stomach.
alway s caused by hardeping of the small intestine or colon.
art eries. a conditi on doctors call
Treatment of abdominal angina

fomtly

~edicine

.,

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Question: My doctor said that I
have abdominal angina'&gt; Do you
know anything about this problem·&gt;
Is it a real syndrome. and if so, is it
treatable·&gt;
Answer : Your doc tor didn 't
make up the term "abdominal angi-

Ohio
Unlveralty

n

College of

Olteopetblc
Medicine

increases until it reaches a plateau
and then slowl y decreases over one
t~ o three hours.
As the &lt;.:onditi on worse ns. the
pain increases in frequency and

is, as you might suspect, much like
that for angina pectoris.
Once the narrowed area of ·the
affect&lt;;&lt;! artery or arteries has been
identified, a. surgical plan is made to
correct the condition.
This may be accomplished by
inserting a balloon-tipped instru ment into the narrowed section·.
The balloon is then filled, thereby
stretching the artery so that it is no
long_er blocked - once the balloon
is removed, of course.
In some individuals a more dramatic surgery may be required to

Weather

remove or bypass the bloCked portion of the artery or arteries. And just
like in heart disease, surgery for
abdominal angina is only part of the
treatment.
Attention to problems such as
h1gh cholesterol, high blood pressure and diabetes are necessary to
reduce the chances of recurrence.
"Family Medieine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
Uni•ersity College of Osteopathic
Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall,
Athens, Ohi~&gt;45701.

Today: Partly Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 40s
Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 40s

·

October }.3.~ 999

·Local gridiron previews, Page 4
Ann on pregnancy tips, Page 8
Clinto~ promises export help for farmers, Page 3

•
Meigs County's

n:.l ." It certainly is a rea l condition .

PEPSI &amp;
MT. DEW
PRO.DUCTS

P0 WEL L'S

Most ur us think of heart pain aka
pcdori s" upo n hearing: the
term "ang ina."

STOlE HOURS

I suspect that we physicmns are
responsibl e ror thi s because we
often apply the ve rbal shorthand of

Monday thru
Sunday
8 AM·IO PM

calling acute epi sodes of phcst pain
causeU l:ly heart prohl cms ··angina"
instead &lt;)fu sin g the complete name.
angina pectoris. My American Herit age. Diction ary defin es \angina a.s:

298 SECOND ST.
Accepts Credit Cards

I. · A w nditi on. such as croup or
di phtheria. in .vhich spasmod ic and

WE
THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU OCTOBER 14, 1999

painfu l suffocation or sp·a.' lns occur.
2. Angma pectoris.
Abdominal angina is a l:O ndition

R.C. COLA
PRODUCTS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

that foll ows the fi rst definiti on in
that the sufferer typically has attacks
of abdominal pai n.
1l1is is nut the stomac h ache that
all uf us have suffered from occasionall y. It is a dull. gnawing or
·cramping pain typically felt in the
upper or m1dd le porti ons of the
abdomen.
The pain usually begins I0 to 30
minutes after eating. and g radually

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

il

•

2/$
ii

$ 59

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEf

Community
Calendar

(12 PK. 12 OZ. CANS)

PEPSI &amp;
1 MT.
DEW
$ &amp;9
PRODUCTS
Sirloin Tip Steak••~~:. 1
$ 99
$
99
Cube Steak.••..•........~;.. 1 ·
$ S
9 LAY'S POTATO
Sirloin Tip Steak .L;·•• 1 _ . CHIPS -English Roast•.•..••~~:•.

WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Athletic Boosters, 7 p.m. Wednesday, hi gh
school. Tuppers Plain s VFW Post
9053. Thursday. Dinner at 6:30p.m.. ·
meeting. 7:30 p. m.

UDSA CHOICE BONELESS B-EF

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BE!~

THURSDAY
POM EROY - Veterans Administration Medical Ce nter , Chillicothe. health care enrollm ent ,
Thursday. 10 a. m. to noon and Ito 2
p.m.. Veterans Service Office. 117
Memorial Drive. Pomeroy. Proof of

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

FRESH WHOLE

ll.

military service required.

Chicken Fryers •••••••

POM EROY
Alcoholics
Anonymous. ope n meeting. 7 p.m.
Thursday. Sacred Heart Catholi c
Church. Mulherry Ave .. Pomeroy.

SMITHFIELD E·Z CARVE

LB.

$129

cassT. VAR.)

Boneless Ham (Whole)

CHES TER Shade River
Lodge 453 F&amp;A M, Chester, Thursday. 7 30 p.m.

$169
R1b Chops......................

FR~SH PORK BONELESS

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi Sorori~y. Thu rsday. home of Clarice
Krauttcr. Vera Crow and Charlotte
Elherfeld. hostesses.

ll.

13.25

,,C
•••••••

oz.

FRESH COUNTRY STYLE

l •.

Ribs.

ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees- Special sesston, discuss
FE MA proj ec ts. Thursday, 7:30
p.m.. home of Osie Follrod.

BUnERWORTH'S

SYRUP

'S'·

. ll!..

POM EROY - Veterans Administration Medical Ce nter of Chillicothe health care enrollment Thursday, 10-noon and 1-2 p.m. atthe Veterans Service Office, t 17 Memorial
Dri ve. Pomewy. Proof of military
serv1ce required. Call 992-2820 for
an appointment.
REEDSVILLE - Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medi·cine Childhood Immuni zation Program will provide free immunizations for all area children, from birth
through 18 years, Thursday. 11-1
p.m. at Reed 's Store in Reedsville
and at McDonald's in Pomeroy from
2:30 to 4 p.m.

AUNT JANE'S
HAMBURGER
DILL CHIPS

FRESH ALL

. ...... .8.9 c
$ 99
Orange Juice •••••••••• 1
$ 49
•
1
Margar•••••••••••••••••

99c

• .~.!' .3
·1••·
Ye II ow On1on$
~

IROPICANA SEASON'S BUtz.

. POMEROY - Meigs County
Republican Party annual bean dinner Thursday, 6 p.m. at the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
All welcome.

BLUE BONNET SPREAD

8.5 01.

FOX.DELUXE •

n Mix ••••••••••••

RACINE - Southern High
Sc hool Athletic Boosters. Thursday.
7:30p.m. at Southern Hi gh Sd1ool.

So.. 69
Shells &amp; Chees~ Dinner 11

I

SATU RDAY
POMERO Y - Meigs Count y
Retired Teachers. Trinity Church.
Saturday at noo n. Senior citizens

representati ve to speak on Wellness
in tl1e Millennium .

79c

oz.

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and Bett y Johnson on Saturday.
Door prilcs will be awarded:
refres hments will he served following Saturday service.

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MASONIC DONATION - Roy and Maurita Millar of Pomeroy
donated approximately $100,000 to Middleport Masonic Lodge
363 F&amp;AM. The Millers donated the money which will be used tor
renovating and modernizing the Middleport Tempi!', home of
Meigs County's York Rite Maaona and Bethel Chapter of Job's
Daughters of Middleport and tt~e Middleport Eastern Star Chapter. Shown are, from left: Jim Thomas, lodge education officer
and trustee; Diana L!lwson, People's Bank financial advisor; Mr.
and Mrs. Miller; lodge Master John Lyons Ill and Bernard V.
Fultz, financial and lega_l advisor.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel News Staff
Looking ahead to the holiday season, the
Pomeroy Merchants Association set a schedule of
events and promotions during its meeting
Wednesday in the People Bank conference room.
Carrying out a tradition of many years, the
kickoff for the season's celebration and sales will
be the annual Christmas parade and open house
for businesses on the Sunday following Thanksgiving.
Ways of making the town decorative for the
holidays were discussed and it was proposed that
again this year downtown buildings be outlined
y;ith white lights. To further enhance the historical structures, Annie Chapman, president, suggested that facades be spotlighted.
A change in decorating the trees along Main
Street was proposed. This year the trunks will be
wrapped in liglits, a large lighted wreath will be
used on each one, and the branches will be
!locked.
It was reported that George Nichols of Nicols

Metals, Mason, has completed a 40-foot long
sternwheeler frame which will be wrapped in
lights and used along the riverbank this yeat. It is
the first of several pieces to be made by Nichols
and donated to the village.
The Merchants Association will again this year
sponsor holiday cookie, candy and package wrapping contests. Prizes for the winners will be gift
certificates to be used at participating merchants
in the village. Chapman will chair the contests
and it was suggested that the banks be asked .to
host the events.
The bronze plaque to be placed on the City
National Bank b~ilding historical mural painted
by artist Sarah Alexander last summer was displayed at the meeting by Karin Johnson.
The tourism director also announced riverboat
cruises to take place later this month. The Valley
Gem sternwheeler will be here the week of Oct.
·25 with special cruises being offered each day. On
Monday there will be a Maroon and Gold cruise
from 8 to 10 p.m.; on Tuesday, a half-price cruise;
on Wednesday, hourly cruises daytime rides down

the Ohio River and back with a Halloween dance
cruise that evening; and on ThJlrsday, a Pomeroy
to Gallipolis cruise. l'pr the day cruises, sack
lunches were suggested.
'·' '
It was reported th_at the duck derby staged by
the Association on Sternwheel Festival weekend
was a success. Proceeds are yet to be reported.
The treasurer also noted that there is a balance of
$1,644.41 in the treasury and $1,946 in the
Christmas ornament sale fund.
Supt. Bill Buckley talked on the Meigs Local
School District bond issue for school construction
and renovation and the Association endorsed it.
The bond issue will be on the November ballot.
Buckley said passage of the $32.6 million 3.95
mill bond issue will generate additional monies
over what the state will provide to construct two
new elementary schools - one on State Route
124 before you enter Rutland and the other in the
Wolfpen area on State Route 143 - a new mid· die school to be located near the high school, and
funds to renovate Meigs High School.

Severe Ohio
weather causes
damage, injuries

Regional Briefs
Police put camera in school bathroom
REYNOLDSBURG (AP) - Some Reynoldsburg High School stucents and their parents objected to police hiding a video camera in a boys
restroom in hopes of catching whoever scrawled a llomb threat on a wall.
But the camera was removed.within hours of being put there last week
after school custodians discovered it, police Chief Jeanne Miller said.
"It was no longer a secret," Miller said, in explaining why the camera
was taken down.
She said the camera was not in the stalls and was positioned to videotape only the head and shoulders of people.
But some parents and stud~nts said they thought it was an invasion of
privacy.
"My daughter was extremely upset about it, al!,d I took her side. I'm
glad io hear the camera is gone," said Linda Rico, moihet of a high.school•
student, . . .
.
.
, ,
Miller ·said threats were written on the walls in two boys resttooms
recently.
School officials said the messages didn't use the words " bomb threat"
but could be interpreted to mean that .
·

Bomb threat forces evacuation of hospital
GALION (AP) - A bomb threat forced the evacuation of about 50
patients and the staff from a hospital which remained closed overnight.
Patients at Galion Community Hospital were taken to a church and a doctor's office, police said.
The State Highway Patrol post in Mount Gilead received the first threat
about 9:30a.m. Wednesday, patrol spokesman Mike Perona said. The hospital received a second threat an hour later.
Both threats said a bomb would go off at 12:22 p.m., The Galion Inquirer
reported Wednesday. Authorities continued to search the hospital after the
.deadline passed and there was no explosion.
Police Chief Rick Shifley told the News Journal of Mansfield that the
·Columbus Fire Department bomb squad found .a suspicious package in the
hospital's chapel, but concluded it was not a bomb.
"It was just something that nobody recognized, so that made it suspicious,"
Shitley said.
·
Patients were moved from the hospital by ambulance, school bus and car
in keeping with an emergency plan. ·
The fire and police departments are jointly patrolling the hospital, which
will remain closed until at least this morning, city fire Lt. Jeff Fyock said.
Galion is about 50 miles north of Columbus.

Voices' told Painesville man to kill his parents

$TATE-:- The El!atern Hlgh,SobOI)I Marching _
26 mem·
su,,.rlt3r rating·at the Nalaonvllle'·Y6rk B!Jckeye
.
Band competl·
tloo .
wieKend.
b11nd Is now qualified to compete at alate competl,lon · thla month.
Under the direction of flrat•year director Scott Wolfe, the band will compete at New Philadelphia
on Saturday.
I

Meigs Local Board handles personnel matters
The Meigs Local Board of Education handled mostIy personnel matters during its regular meeting Tuesday
night in Pomeroy.
The board accepted the resignation of Debbie Riffle
and Rosemary Preast as substitute cooks due to other
employment.
After an executive session to discuss personnel mat;
ters, the bQard voted to terminate the contract of Celesta Coates, a cook in the district.
The board approved Charles P. Knopp as a volunteer
assistant basketball coach for the 1999-2000 school
year and hired Cathy .Simpson on a purchased services

contract to assist the high school librarian.
The board also hired Crystal Richmond as a substilute bus driver and Penny Klein as an aide for a handicapped student at Carleton School.
In other business, the board tabled the purchase of
computers for the high school library and canceled a
contract with Panich, Noel, Dawson &amp; AsSociates
, architects for the football stadium renovation project.
Present were Superintendent Bill Buckley, Treasurer
Cindy Rhonemus and board members John Hood, Scott
Walton, Wayne Davis, Randy Humphreys and Roger
Abbott.·

Students claim arigry substitute teacher.threw things
Mernik said he wanted an assurance White wou'ld
LODI (AP) - A substitute filling in for a choir
teacher a\ Cloverleaf Middle School became incensed not return to a Classroom without counseling. He said
by the bad behavior of about 40 seventh-graders and White believed the students were taking advantage of
her because she was a substitute teacher.
lost control, sheriff's deputies said .
White, who lives in Wadsworth and has an unlisted
Carrie White, 26, allegedly hit one girl with a dictionary and another with a calculator. Principal Ron telephone number, could not be reached for comment.
White may have been the target of a paper wad,
Tisher fired her, after stunned and bruised students
told him of her outburst, which injured seven students, Medina County Sheriff's Lt. John Detchori said.
"She thought one of them threw something at her,"
none seriously at the school in northeast Ohio.
·
Students were " horse playing, throwing spitballs Detchon said.
"It apparently set her off. I believe she said, 'So
and wads of paper, scooting their chairs around,"
Sheriff's Deputy Sarno Mernik said Wednesday, after you want to throw things? ' She felt they had it coming
interviewing. them. "She became upset and started and that going to get a counselor would have been
degrading somehow."
throwing things back."

PAINESVILLE (AP)- Mark Lovsin believed that demons told him to
shoot his parents last May.
'
.
"It wasn't Mark who did it, it was the illness," his wounded mother said
at the sentencing.
The 48-year-old man who lived on disability insurance in Willoughby
tlills has suffered from chronic schizophrenia since adolescence. He believed
that voices told him shooting his parents was the only way to keep them from
sending him to ,l.aurelwood Hospital again for treatment. .
His father, Anthony Lovsin, 76, died in the May shooting at their
Willoughby home. His mother; Elizabeth, 72, suffered four gunsha,\· ~ounds.
the Ohio Fanners · Union. "However,
: Although Mark Lovsin in July pleaded innocent by reason of insanity, he By PHIUP BRASHER
until some fundamental long·term
:changed his plea Wednesday after a court-appointed psychiatrist determined AP Fann Writer
reforms
are made in our farm and trade
WASHINGTON
(AP)
President
·
·last month that he was fit to stand trial.
policy,
.
farm
groups will continue to
Clinton
is
expected
to
sign
a
record
$8.7
He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 15 years to life for murder, seven
seek
multi-billion
dollar relief packages
billion
bailout
of
the
farm
economy,
'years for attempted murder, and three years for using a gun while committing
in
the
future.
Farmers
and farm groups
despite
concerns
about
.
the
way
the
a crime, to be served consecutively, for a total of al least 25 years imprisonwant
farmers
to
earn
their
income from
money
will
be
distributed
and
the
lack
of
ment.
the
market."
aid
for
producers
washed
out
by
Hurri"He smells the smoke of hell. He sees the devil," his public defender, Paul
Congressional leaders are considering
·
,LaPlante, told Judge James W. Jackson in Lake County Common Pleas cane Floyd.
additional
assistance for farmers who
The
measure
approved
by
the
Senate
Coun. "Mark has spent years fightlost
crops
and livestock in Floyd's
74-26
on
Wednesday
.
is
the
second
ing the devil."
wake.
Democrats
estimated $-1 billion
multibillion-dollar
pacliage
of
farm
aid
Jackson acknowledged that struggle
in
as
many
years
for
growers
hurt
by
low
Clinton
would
be
needed,
but USDA has not
Bill
as he sentenced Lovsin.
commodity
prices
and
bad
weather.
finished
calculating
the
losses.
·
"Hopefully, by the time you are 73,
Today.'s
"We're
grateful
for
Congress'
response
to
the
What
opposition
there
was
to.
the
package
!here Wall be a cure," Jackson told
financial catastrophe confronting our farm fami- Wednesday came primarily from Eastern senaters
· ' Z Sectl!JDS • Pages
Lovsin.
Assistant Lake County Prosecutor lies," said Jack Fisher, executive vice president of who said it didn't provide enough disaster assis8
Calendar
Carol Mulligan called the crime truly the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation. "But, the dam· tance or-who wanted authority for New England to
tragic and also recognized that men- ages are so deep, and the causes are s0 diverse, that . continue controlling its milk prices.
?&amp;10
C!assiReds
even these emergency aid programs cannot make
Most of the money in the measure, about $6 biltal illness was a factor.
11
Comics
our farmers whole."
lion, is intended to help farmers cope with a second
TWo Covington,
men
. · Editorials.
2
The money is included in a $69 biliion appropri- year of depressed commodity prices, with the bulk
ations bill that will fund operations of USDA, with of the aid going to t~e Midwestern Com Belt. Farm3
charged with murder
I.ocal
COVINGTON, Ky. (~) -1\vo · its myria~ farm and nutrition pro~ms, and the ers in Iowa would share $610 million, the most of
Sports
Food and Drug Administration for the 2000 budget . any S!Ste, followed by Illinois with $535 million,.
men
hav~ been charged wjth murder
j
.weather
year.
according.to,the.Agriculture Depanment.
in
the
slaying
of
.Thadis
"Jay"
I
The
first
checks
to
farmers
would
go
out
within
The measure also provides:
· Payne, 32, of Cincinnati, who was
two
weeks
or
~ of the president signing the bill.
-$1.4
billion for weather-related crop and livefound witb ~is throal slashe~ early
Clinton
hasn't
threatened
a
veto,
although
his
stock
losses,
including $200 million earmarked' for
WllQ
.
Wednesday in a city parking lot.
administration
wanted
Congress
to
come
up
with
a
Eastern livcstiick producers who were hurt by this
Pick 3: 4·7-5; Pick 4: 0·6,3-9
CarlL. Haddix, 31, and James D.
.new method of making payments to growers. Some summer's drought.
Super Lotto: 8-9-11-36-43-47
Fritts, 24, both of Covingti!n, were to of the money could go to growers who didn't plant · -:-$328 mi,IIion to compensate tobacco .producKicker: 6-6-1-2-8.2
be arraisned tOday. They were arrest- a crop.
ers for falling cigarette sales.
lY.YA.
ed about two blocks from the parking
.
''This
package
will
give
many
producers
a
tern·
-:-$125 million in sub,sidies for dairy producers.
bally J: 4-0-S; Dally 4: 1-5-0-0
lot where Payne's body was found, porary economic lift· to enable them to make deciAdditionally, the legislation extends the govem0 1999 Ohio V~allcy Publi~hina Co.
' J)Ol~c;e saill: . ·k~ ·.
sions fpi neKt year,"_said Charlie Na,sh, president.of men!'s price-support progra'll for dairy produclli

From AP, OVP reporta
.
A line of severe thunderstorms that
rolled through the Midwest downed
power li~es and damaged buildings
throughout Ohio.
At least 13 counties reponed
damage from the storm Wednesday
nigh~ including Pickaway where the
stonn destroyed six homes and a
building housing a barber shop and a
carpel store in Circleville, said Kevin
Driesbach, director of Pickaway
County Emergency Management
Agency.
Five people were injured in the
central Ohio city. All .were treated
and released from Berger Hospital.
Buildings at Berger received
heavy damage, but none of them
housed patients. Several homes also
were damaged.
1\vo people were hurt when the
stonn blew out windows inside a
laundry and dry cleaning store, said
Kelly Ross, a nursing supervisor at
Berger.
"A tree came down across the car
ahead of me, and it ripped a roof off
a house," Michelle Schmid~ who
was driving through Circleville during the storm, told The Columbus
Dispatch for a story today. "It was
just a nightmare. I was hysterical."
Heavy rains and wind rocked the
tri-oounty area in the early evening
hours Wednesday. In Meigs County,
a Pomeroy residence sustained
extensive tire, water and smoke damage after it was struck by lightning
Wednesday night.
Pomeroy and Middlepon volunteer fire departments responded to
the Prospect Hill residence of John
and Beth Schneider after li_ghtning
struck a comer of their log cabin residence.
According to a fire department
report, the wind blew the fire across
the roof, destroying the roof and
resulting in extensive water and
smoke damage. No injuries were, •
reported.

Clinton expected to sign record farm bailout

Good Afternoon

Sentinel
•2

'Ky.

Lotteries

-

(I

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Pomeroy Merchants plan holiday activities

Your confusion - or perhaps disbe-

" ~1 n g in a

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 89

li ef wuuld be a murc acc urate
descript ion ~ pro hahl y stems from
the term "angina."

.....,~~~~ the hero as
Yankess defeat
Boston In 4-3 thriller
-Page4

'

.

.

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'

through next year and requires meatpackers to start
reporting the prices they pay for cattle and hogs.
Livestock producers say that will make it easier for
them to bargain with meat processors.
Demoaats seized on the size of the bailout to
argue that the market-oriented Freedom to Farm
law Congress enacted in 1996 isn't working, and
even some Republicans are saying it's time to consider ways to guarantee more help to producers
when commodity prices fall.
The law ended a.Depression-era system of pro·
duction controls and price supports in attempt to get
growers to wean farmers from their dependence on
government progams.
The stockpiles of grain that have kept commodity prices low for two years continue to grow and
are expected to persist well into next year. With
USDA predicting only a modest increase in farm
· exports next year, farm groups are likely to be pushing for another multibillion-dollar aid package-in
2000.
'
"Sooner or later we're going to have to ask the
fundamental question, 'Is this going to be the only
sector of our economy not governed by the free
· market?"' said Pete Sepp, a spokesman for the
National .Taxpayers Union.
·
• As long as Congress regards low prices in agriculture as a aisis, taxpayers will be footing the bill

forever. "
Republicans said the Clinton administration hasn'I done enough to boost fann lfade. . .
"The long-tenn solution (is) 0pening up more ·
opportunities.for our producers to sell their products," said Sen. Chuck Hage~ R-Ncb,, "The basic
underlying principle of Freedom to Fann sbould be .
preserved."
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