<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8273" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/8273?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T07:25:07+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18691">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/b02f69be67ab99b8549af0987c3eabae.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ac9590837887d3e312ea015da45c0682</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="26773">
                  <text>'

. . . -~·-

..

...

w

'

. . . . _ .....

~ - ••

~

.-

•

1

•

...

•

..

.....

"

....

•

,.r,;

'

I' "

I

'

•

•,

•

t '

.' •

,. ·,

,

•

t'"'
'&gt;

•

\

tuesday, October ·a,a,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally sentinel

'I

-

Wednesday
Weather

.

, .• ,,
Study: Exercise may Teen girls adorn·thems~lves wittJ,,. ta",,.,..,...,,_
'

·reduce risk of breast
cancer by 20 percent

0 of A observes Friendship Night
District 13, Daughters of America, observed friendship night at the
Chester lodge hall recently with a potluck dinner. The blessing was
given by Esther Harden.
Bette Biggs, district councilor, presided at the meeting where Jo
Ann Ritchie, deputy of District 13, Helen Wolf on th~ state legislative
committee, Jean Welsh, on state credential committee, and Esther
Smith, past state councilor, were received in official form.
Presented gifts were Wolf,, Welsh, Charlotte Grant, district flag
bearer; Sm1th, Erma Cleland, Chester, deputy state councilor; Esther
Harden, deputy state councilor of Guiding Star Council, and Mary C.
Moose, deputy state councilor, Logan CounciL
Reported ill were Betty Wolfe , Logan Council ; Jean Hall , Guiding
Star; and Sylvia Downes, Logan.
The Christmas dinner and meeting was announced for Dec . 4 at
noon at the Old Dutch Restaurant, Logan. There will be a $3 gift
exchange. Helen Wolf was pianist for the meting. Practice for the fall
on April will be held March 26, I p.m at the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy. Another practice was set for March 4 at I p.m at the Chester
Lodge Hall .
Flag bearers escorted Jo Ann Richie, district deputy to the altar
where Esther Smith on behalf of the district, presented her with yellow mums and commended her on her work for the district. .
Attending were Janice Zwilling, Margaret Cotterill, Esther Harden
Betty Biggs, Guiding Star Council ; Mary C. Moose, Faye Trowbridge:
Logan Counc1l; Opal Hollon, Ehzabeth Hayes, Julie Curtis, Mary K.
Holter, Jean Welsh, Erma Cleland, Helen Wolf, Doris Grueser JoAnn
Ritchie, Charlotte Grant, Scott Smith, and Esther Smith.
'

By KALPANA SRINIVASAN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ideal·
ly, Jonathan Davis would love to
have his cellular telephone, handheld computing device . and other
electronic trinkets on his person at
all times.
But fashion reality won't allow
that.
"I have far too many gadgets
and not enough pocket real
estate," said Davis, technical
director at The Adrenaline Group,
a software development and Web
strategy firm in Washington. "It's
just a little too cluttered."
Some retailers, especially those
catering to younger customers, are
responding to the high-tech
quandary by adding accessories
and altering the design of their
clothing.
"At Silver Tab, our whole new
mantra has become equipment for
modern living," said Mary Bruno,
design director for the youth-oriented jeans line, a sub-brand of
Levi's. That means clothing should
be able to hold things that would
normally fit into the briefcase or
backpack, she said.
· Silver Tab has tinkered With its
pockets, both in size and placement. Putting the front pockets at
the top of the leg rather than along
the side seam makes is easier for
people to reach their phones,
Bruno said. Pockets were becoming more long and narrow to store
cell phones, but as the phones
become shorter and fatter the
shape of the pockets are evolving
as well.
The Silver Tab line - geared
toward 15- to 24-year olds keeps on top of the latest technology trends by comparing notes with
the company's information services department, responsible for
their computer systems.
It's not the first time clothing
makers have taken their cue from
technology trends, said Joe Culley,
brand manager at Dockers, known
for its khaki pants. The rise in people carrying sn.uff boxes and pocket watches had a similar effect, he
said.

I
--..;...~ow'"'--·-----.-.;:-._
·

By MIKE BRANOM
Associated Press Writer
SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) - A
company says it has developed a
new electric process that can kill
almost I 00 percent of bacteria lingering in meat, vegetables, fruits
and other foods .
Titan Corp. officials unveiled
their new SureBeam electric pasteurization process Monday at a
test facility in Sioux City. The
process has already has won
approval from the Food and Drug
Administration, and officials
expect acceptance from the U.S.
Department of Agriculture by
year's end.
"What this does is eliminate
99.99999 percent of harmful bacteria, of food pathogens," Gene
W. Ray, president of the San
Diego-based company.
The SureBeam process works
by charging an electronic beam
that disrupts the DNA structure of
the mic'roorganisms it hits, rendering them sterile. Irradiation, an
alternative pasteurization process
now being used , exposes food to
gamma rays from radioactive
material. such as Cobalt 60.

_. . . ·- - -·. ---·-·· ·-·- _. .

I
...,.

ROWLAND HEIGHTS, Calif.
A steady stream of friends
and family brought food and support
to Los Lobos singer-guitarist Cesar
Rosas as he awaited word on the
search for his wife, who has been
missing for two days.
Sandra Ann· Rosas, 47, was last
seen by her daughters Saturday night.
Her half-brother was arrested Monday for investigation of kidnapping
after police found her abandoned van.
Her husband said all was well
when he called his wife from New
Orleans, where the band was on tour
the night she disappeared.
"We spoke and everything was
cool at home," Rosas said.
Mrs. Rosa's burgundy-colored van
was found empty Monday about 15
miles from her home in Rowland
HeightS, an unincorporated community in eastern Los Angeles County.
Sheriff's detectives combed
through the vehicle before arrest.ing
39-year-old Gabriel Gomez. He was
identified as a parolee but his record
was not released.
'
Mrs. Jl,osas was last seen at home
by her three daughters about 8:30
p.m. Saturday, When they returned
about II p.m., they found the front
door open, her van gone and broken
glass from the vehicle in the driveway, said Deputy Boris Nikolof. ~

Yankees bounce
back to beat Atlanta
fi

· -Page 5

a1
Meigs County's
Volume

so, Number 98

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

~-~

Election '99:

• ·

Meigs Local to deciae
MELISSA COLON IS shown
with her tallo iewelry. The Sa6
Francisco tHn Ia among mll;llons who like the look • partly
because of the shock value end
the low price.
:
decorated their bodies with stick\'
on tattoos and the painted-on henn4
tattoos popularized by Madonna. 1
"The market is very excited
over body art, especially ethni~
body art," Ms. Ngo said.
;
,
·I

,•I
..,'

Hometown Newspaper

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
On Tuesday, voters in the Meigs
Local School District will decide a
23-year, 3.95-mill school construction bondllevy issue.
That amount w6uld raise local
funds of $5,726,000 to be combined
with Ohio School Facilities Commission funds of $26,856,76~ for a
$32,582,763 building project which
includes two elementary schools, a
middle school and renovations to
Meigs High School.
Supporters of the building issue
maintain th1s 1s the closest thmg to
free schools ever offered in the district.

bond issue

Single Copy- 35 Cents

I

Person of the Year

That is because the Meigs Local
Board of Education has agreed, in
writing and by official resolu1ion on
Aug. 10, to roll back an existing permanent Improvements levy by 3.95
mills to keep property taxes from
increasing above their current level.
Plans call to build two new elementary schools, one in 1he R}ltland/Middleport area to replace Middleport, Bradbury. Rutland and Salem
Center elementary sc hool s, and
another in the Wolf Pen area to
replace Pomeroy, Salisbury and Harrisonville eleme01ary schools. A new
middle school will be built ncar
Meigs High School which wi ll i1sdf
be subject to extensive renovations.

+

PRESENTEb
Peoples Ch~ice Presents Switzerland
9 Escorted Days - Departing May 3, 200o
No European country is graced with more spectacular scenery than Switzerland.
And now Peoples Choice offer11 you the chance to experience it all ... massive peaks
soaring ~bove glacial lakes, green meadows knee-deep in alpine flowm, cozy villages
tucked m the hean qf valleys, and gracious pristine cities! You'll see the best of
Switzerland, induding the t"on of Interlaken and the majestic Rhine Falls ...you'll,
even dip into neighboring Lj~chtenstein, Austria and Germany!
Unlike other European holidays, you will not find yourself constantly packing and
unpackmg as you travel from hotel to hotel. You will stay the entire time in the lovely
ctty of Lucerne, nestled in the Swiss Alps and within an easy day's drive of major sites
and other countries. Yqur ljidging will be the Grand Hotel Europe, a historic four star
hotel with all the charm aJid elegance you would ex[)ect from a European hotel.
This trip package includes SwissAir flights, deluxe motorcoach transportation, 7
nights accommodations in Lucerne, 17 meals (breakfast and dinner daily), all tours
and sight-seeing. basgage handling and local guide. All for only $2,095 per member!

Sound like fun? Jolr'! us for a Swiss 1i'avel Preview!

(J\1') -

'

r

.

'

Thursday, October28, 11199
8:30p.m.
City National Bank
2212 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant

1'tunday, October 28, 1999
2:00p.m.
City National Bank
3801 Mac:Corlde Avenue, SE

CharlestOn
,

't

By BRIAN J. REED
the construclion of a speculauve
Sentinel News Staff,
building on the si te, and emphasized
Arriving by helicopter from a that Meigs County has a "willing
tour of other Southern Ohio counties, · work force," despite its double-digit
Ohio's director of development visit- -unemploymenl figures (I 0 percent at
ed one of Meigs County's two pro- last report).
posed industrial sites on Tuesday
As an example , Varnadoe noted
with a group of local community that I,000 applicants had IUrned up lo
leaders.
seek jobs at the new Wal-Mart store
m Mason , W.Va., and cited that other
new businesses in recenl years had
C. Lee Johnson was greeted by the
experienced
similar application figMeigs County Commissioners,
ures.
Development Director Perry VarnaMichael Swisher, director of the
doe. and members of the Meigs
Meigs.Cqunty
Department of Human
County Community Improvement
Services,
which
has taken an active
Corporation and chamber of comrole
in
economic
development as it
merce at the former Ohio Valley
relates
to
job
creation
and the state's
Manufacturing property in Tuppers
new
and
limiting
welfare
reform
Plains
laws,
agreed
that
Meigs
County
resThe 50-acre site, which has been
idents,
in
general,
arc
hard-working
subdivided into I0 lots, is situated on
State Route 681 , and 1s owned by the and industrious.
·"In the past, our main industries
CIC. a non-profit organization dedihave
been agriculture and coal mincated 1o economic development.
ing,"
Swisher
told Johnson. "Neither
. The sile has all utilities in place
along the h1ghway. but access roads
and other on-site mfrastructure have
yet to be bUJh. Varnadoe stre ssed that
state asSIStance would be needed in

industry has a history of a bad work
ethic."
Johnson said that commumties
such as Meigs County are "the future
of economic development," citing
two reasons: quality of life, and the
ready-made sites for locating small
industry and other business.
Johnson said that applicants for
industrial positions are seeking safe
and friendly communities. and that
business owners are beginning to
look at sites such as the CIC site
because they allow facilities to be
constructed "from the bottom up,
rather than the top down."
''I'm trying to get to know the people in this state, and find out what
their needs are," Johnson said. "What
I'm heanng in the field is not necessarily the same as l'm hearing in
Columbus."
Varnadoe also noted that the West
Virginia Depanment of Development is very aggressive in working to

attract industry, and said that Slate
asSistance IS all that much more
important.
"We're very anxious to do what we
can," Johnson said, telling those who
met with him 1hat he would investigate ways in which 1he state can
assist the CIC and the county in
developing the site, and specifically
in constructing a speculative building. The proposed 50,000 square-foot
building, estimated to cost $1 million,
would provide a starting point for
selling the site to industries.
According to Varnadoe, half of
Meigs County's residents leave the
county every day to go to jobs oulside of the county.
"In talking to people m Me1gs
County, I have found that people
want their own children lo have the
opportunity to live and work in
Meigs County, and to do well," Varnadoe said. "What we're doing now
is for the next generation."

grant to aid
r,grounds improvements

Good Afternoon
Today's Sentinel

l

2 Sections • 12 Pages
Calendar
Classitieds
Comics
Editorials
lAical
Soorts
Weather

....
I

7
8-10
11

2
3

•

4-6
3

Lotteries
2BW

Pick 3: 0-8-3; Pick 4: 5-3-4-9
Buckeye 5: 4-12-25-29-36

l!.YA.

Doily 3: 9-0-1; Dally 4: 6-9-0-2
0 1999 Oh1o V~ ll ty Publishing Co.

•

-~- - -- · -·· - -"
.. _..___ ,,
-· - ...-_·,._ __- ---.2..-_
;_·' ·.•'!. ~- :__:_~- - - · _~::.....~.--:.-:......_.;,
.. ·-:,,. ''
.-.· .• ...,:~-~l..r;~
,' . •'•
,. . ....... _....:.~-~-.: .. ~- .. _ ::-._
- -- ~
- _..... . ... ~~-;...;;.
•

. .,

VISITS COUNTY- Ohio's Director of DeveJ.
opment C. Lee Johnson, right, visited the
Industrial slteln Tuppers Plains with members
of the Community Improvement Corporation
end Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. At Jell

ere Mike Swlaber, director of the Meigs Coun·
ty Department of Human Services, and Sue
Malson of the Melge County Chamber of Com·
merce.

,.l
'

•

sta1tA-~ponsored

'

For more lnformetlart, pJeaM call your local Peoples Ch&lt;lice

'.,;

·-· ... __ _

-Heading for isolationism?, Page 2·
·Roush honored in column, Page 6
N9t the person of her dreams, Page 7

•

"When you look pt it, we're vice' president marketing for WestThe company's StarTac wire~
really at another one of those junc- port Corp., which makes bags and less phone comes with accessorie1
tures in time," Culley said.
agenda notebooks under such like an im1tat10n pearl necklace so
Jimmy Newcomer, a professor · names as Mundi, Perry Ellis and the device can be worked around.
of fashion design at the Fashion Kenneth Cole.
the neck. Motorola also has beell
Institute of Technology in New
. Gap stores offer a version of the working on packaging a cellular
York, said it's not surprising that modern-day backpack, featuring a phone in the form of a wristwatc~
retailers are making changes to single strap that goes across the - making the technology mor~
suit the needs of their customers.
front of the body with a cell phone like a personal accessory.
'
Vibrant colors and sleeket
"If your manufacturer sees that pocket in the center.
customers are making do with a
".Technology has been a huge shapes are. becoming more perval
makeshift pocket or strap, they are influence we see in our fall and sive. Qualcomm 's thin phones;
going to invent new designs," holiday line," said Amy Manitis, which bave a built-in battery and
Newcomer said.
Gap's director of public relations. are less ·than seven-tenths of tui
He expects the trend to reach The chain has updated already- inch thick, can slip into a pocket
the mass market - where the spacious cargo pants with special but still be comfortable to use. ·•
prevalence of cargo pants and cell phone pockets and added
The portability of personal
other multi-pocketed items help clothes with lots of Velcro details. technology is influencing fashion
cater to those who can't live withIt cuts both ways. Personal style in other ways. New devices enablci
out their techno-gadgets. Acces· also is influencing the design of people to conduct business jus1
sories such as sleek-looking belly cellular phones, pagers and other about anywhere and free therq
packs and shoulder satchels have devices.'
from the confines of the office. '
sprung up in part so people don't
"People believe that these · "Clothing needs to keep up
have to stick bulky computing and products, which are going to be with that," said analyst Phil
telephone devices in their clothes, with them for long periods of time, Kowalczyk, a partner in charge o(
Newcomer said.
have to be an extension of their strategic services with Kurt
personal selves," said Dan Salmon Associates in Atlanta~
Indeed, the belt bag category items that loop through the belt or Williams, director of design and More comfortable fabrics, lilt~
are worn around the waist - have innovation for Motorola's personal wool garments with some stretCh
been "red hot, " said John Florin, communications sector.
in them, are the result, he said. ,

Company unveils
electronic process Wife of Los Lobos
that kills bacteria member missing;
in meat, fruit
half-brother arrested

DAUGHTER CHRISTENED • •
Ivy VIctoria Welsh, daughter of
~ end Holly Welsh of Lov•
llrid, Wll chrlltenld on Sept. 12
It .the Rutland Church ol the
Nuerene, by - the Rev. Sem
Baye. '
Born oil June 12 et Bethesda
Hoapltlllln .Cinclnnetl, aile 11 the
grenclcllughter of Mr. end Mrs.
Allen Wlllleme ol Pomeroy,
Thomas Welsh of Coloredo, and
Carol Kreiner of Cincinnati.

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 70; Low: 30s ·

Fashion heeding the call of high tech junkies

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
POMEROY
Winding Trail Farmland Preservation committee, 4
Garden Club, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at p.m. Wednesday, Extension Office.
the home of Kay Frederick.
POMEROY - Immunization
POMEROY - Wildwood GarClinic, Tuesday, 9 to 11 a.m. and I to den Club, Wednesday, I p.m. at the
3 p.m. at the Meigs County Health .home of Betty Milhoan.
Department. Children must be
accompanied by parent/guardian. mURSDAY
Immunization records must be prePOMEROY - Meigs Soil and
sented.
Water Conservation District Board
of Supervisors, Thursday, 8 p.m. at
REEDSVILLE - Meigs County conservation office.
Holiness Association's October
rally, Tuesday 7 p.m., Reedsville
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Church of the Nazarene. Bill Justice, Beta, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. Lutheran
speaker. Everyone invited.
Church. Hobo dress contest. Hostesses, Donna Dyer and Shirley BeeWEDNESDAY
gle.

IVY VICTORIA WALSH

.

By JESSIE SEYFER
Assocllted Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The
latest fashion trend for girls doesn 't
mvolve body piercing, hertna or
Britney Spears. But it still has
shock potential.
Tattoo jewelry ...,..- stretchy bands
of woven plastic that from a distance look remarkably like tattoos
- is all the rage among preteens
and teens, adorning necks, fingers,
ankles and bellies of girls who
want to appear just a bit wicked.
"At first my parents were
freaked," said 15-year-old Melissa
Colpn, who takes any opportunity
to make her school uniform look
more trendy.
The lacy jewelry stretches to fit
over a person's head , foot or hand.
It also fits a teen-ager's budget: A
necklace sells for about $3.
TATTO JEWELRY IS the latest rage among tHna. The lacy
"They' re so hoi it's unbeliev- jewelry atretchea to fit over a pe~na'a head, foot or hand.
able," said David Wolfe, a fashion
forecaster at the Donegar Group in elry has been a top-seller since it enjoys the double takes she ·gets
New York. "I think people like appeared on shelves last spring.
from adults who thought she had
them because they give the impresSutton said Claire's buyers done permanent damage to herself.
sion you're cool enough to have a picked them up in Austria and Ger"At first I thought, 'Oh my God,
tattoo, but you don't have to be many last year. Karen Ngo, of the people are tattooing their necks! '"
brave enough to endure the pain of teen Web site Alloy, said a compa- said Eneida Merlos, whose 11 a one."
ny in the Netherlands claims to year-old daughter Tiffany wears
·cynthia Sutton, director of mar- have designed them first. Some one of the necklaces. "But as long
keting for Claire's Stores, which teens trace them to the Philippines as ' it wasn't permanent, it was
operates more than 2,000 teen bou- and Japan.
OK."
tiques nationwide; said tattoo jewLaurie Louie, 16, said she
Previously, .young people have

By MARmA IRVINE
Assocllted Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Women who exercise at least an hour a day
may reduce the1r nsk of breast cancer by 20 percent, according to one
of the largest stud1es ever done on the topic.
. The findings, published in Monday's Archives of Internal Medi~me, add to the growmg ev1dence that exercise can help prevent
breast cancer. A smaller 1997 study in Norway found that women
who exercised at least four hours a week were about a third less likely to get breast cancer.
."All the evidence suggests that there's nothing to lose by women
bemg physically active," said Beverly Rockhill, lead author of the
latest study and a researcher at Brigham and Women's Hospital in
Boston.
Researchers believe exercise may affect breast cancer because it
lowers the level of estrogen circulatmg in a woman's body. Estrogen
has been found to stimulate breast cell growth, increasing the
chances of cancer, Rockhill said.
The latest study was based on the analysis of questionnaires from
121.701 women nat1onw1de who participated in the Nurses' Health
Study, a long-term health survey of women ages 30 to 55. Rockhill
and her colleagues looked at data from 1980 to 1994. They found
3,13?-cases of breast cancer among the 85.364 women who answered
questions about physical activity.
Of those, 20 percent fewer women who exercised an average of
o~ce a day or more got breast cancer, compared with those who exerCised less than an hour a Wt!Ck The exercise mcluded brisk walking
and JOggmg but not things like housework or gardening.
The researchers adjusted their data for factors such as weight and
hormone use but not for diet and smoking. since neither factor
appeared to be that that different among act1ve and inactive women
Rockhill said.
'
Louise.Brinton, chief of the environmental epidemiology branch
at the NatiOnal Cancer Institute, said the findings are more likely to
be accurate than some other studies because the women were asked
about their exercise habits when they were actually exercising.
Other studies have asked participants to remember how active
they were in the past.

Today: Sunny
High: 60s; Low: 30s

.October 27, 1999

The Rock Springs Fairgrounds
will see some major capital improvements through the Ohio County Fairground Capital Improvement Grant.
According to State Rep. Johg
Carey, R-Wellston, the Me1gs County Agricultural Society, or fair board,
will receive $26,500 toward the con.
struction of a small animal barn, a
horse barn and an open pavilion .
A matching amount for the construction will come from fair board
funds, according to Debbie Watson,
secretary, making the entire project
cost $53,000.
Yesterday advertising for bids on
the construction began. Bids will be
opened on Nov. 23 at 4 p.m. and Watson said the board is hopeful of getting the construction underway by the
first of December. According to the
rules Of the grant, the buildings must

be fini•hed before the 2000 fair
opens.
The horse barn to be built over 1he
hill will be 38x 120 feet, while the
small animal bam to be located on Ihe
hi II near the sheep barn will be 40x 70
feet.
The slate made available $5 m'ilhon IR funding for fairgrounds
improvements across the Slalc, and
1he 94th Dis1ric1 will share $199,225
from the fund.
Gallia County's junior fair board
will receive $84,475 for the purchase
of real estate . Jackson and Lawrence
Counties also received funding .
Also included in the grant award
package is a $12,000 for the Albany
Independent Fair, according to a
spokesman for State Rep. Larry
H6useholder, R-Gienford .

�..

"

'

Wednesday, October 27, 1_999 •

(:!ommentarr.
By JACK ANDERSON
and DOUGLAS COHN

'Esta5lisfutf in 1948 •

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-m-2156 • Fax: 1192-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
CHARLES W. GOVEY
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

DIANE HILL
Controller

.,. s~ntinel w.lcom.. ,.,.,. to lh• Hlltor from,..,.,. on. brc»d rang• of top,.,. Short lett•~ (300 worth OT t.••J hav. tiM bNf t:hanca of tMing publl1hH.
TyfH'd ,.,.,, .,...
and all may be 1dlt«&lt; Each ahould Include 1 algnatu,.,
adtlrtN, and lllytlme phtJne number. SI)Kffy 1 data if tlt.n 'a 1 ref~ to • p,..
vlou1 lrllcl• or ,.,., Mall to· btt.,. lo 1111 «&lt;ltor, Th' , ~nbnel , fff Court St.,
Pomerroy, Ohio 457U; or, FAX to 140-IP2-2151.

,_,.rr.d

'Renegade' Buchanan
plots his new course
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
MANCHESTER, N H - Renegade Pat Buchanan 1s planmng a national campmgn ta1lored to his style now that he has abandoned h1s faltenng
Republican b1d lor preSJdent to run 1n the Reform Party
Alter two msurgenl GOP campa1gns that peaked and qu1ckly faded , he
says he chose " not to play our ass1gned walk-on role" m 2000
Instead, he sa1d, he mtends to be a nattonal campatgner from now on, "m
th1s fight to the end for the causes we beheve m "
In talkmg about hts party sw1tch and campa1gn plan, Buchanan satd he
believes that as a Reform nommee he could push past 15 percent m the nauonal polls next fall and force hiS way mto campatgn debates agamst the Republican and Democratic nommees
Buchanan says he couldn't compete fmanc1ally wnh Texas Gov George
W Bush, the front-runmng Republican, who has raJSed at least $60 mtlhon
lor hJS campmgn, so there was no poml m trymg Better to switch to the
Reform Ime, on whtch nommatlons are, effectively. determmed by popular
vote -by matl, telephone and Internet He told his backers he w11l need $4
m1lhon to $6 m1lhon to wm the nommatwn , whtch requ~res an effort to qualIfy for the ballots of 29 states. The Reform Party already 1s on the ballot m
the remmmng stales because of Ross Perot's showmgs m the last two presJdentJal elections
Buchanan told supporters he IS about out of money "We are really stanmg our new campmgn from scratch," he wrote potential donors
St11l, the Reform campatgn won't cost nearly as much as the s1x-way GOP
race Bush dommates The odds are better Nobody else JS runnmg, although
real estate and casmo executJve Donald Trump SW itched h1s voter registration from Repubhcan to Reform on Monday, too, saymg he' ll dec1de later
whether to seek the nbrnmatton
There could be other cand1dates Perot h1msel f hasn 't ruled 11 out.
And as a Reform candidate, Buchanan can tailor hJS tactics to fit h1s
strengths He ligures he won't have to spend hJS t}me on the small-scale campa•gmng rcqUJred m the presidential pnmanes, but can concentrate on televJ sJon, hJS calling when he tsn 't runnmg
Buchanan declared hJS switch Monday from the Republicans to more than
300 "Go, Pat. Go" fans m Falls Church, Va , saymg the two major part1es
are lookahkes, that the1r nommees w11l be twms, and that a ch01ce between
them would be "a sham election "
He had lagged m the shrinkmg Republican field, and there was nothmg
to md1cate he could break out th1s t1me In 1992, he got 37 percent of the
vote m the New Hampsh~re prestdentlal pnmary agamst Pres1dent George
Bush In I996, he narrowly defeated Bob Dole Both men eventually were
nommated, then defeated by Prestdent Clmton
So Buchanan made New Hampshlfe the first stop m his Reform carnpatgn,
telling about 200 mv1ted supporters that the maJor parttes don 't offer the voters a real ch01ce because they are so much ahke.
"We don 't need another Xerox copy as the Republicans and Democrats
have become m Washmgton, DC ," Buchanan sat d.
With that, he repeated pledges to end unfair trade, fore1gn atd, overseas
m1lltary entanglements, to cut taxes, rem m federal JUdges, end rac~al quotas and seek tu ban abortion. The hst of popuhst and conservative prom1ses
goes on - he also talked of protectmg the Panama Canal agamst Chmese
mnuence alter the Umted States ytelds control at the end of the year.
"If we don· t have a president ... who looks out for Amenca first, who
w11l 1 " Buchanan asked. "Who w11I?"
Buchanan was campatgnmg Tuesday m Mtchtgan where h1s denuncJatJon
of trade deals he calls unfair to Amencan workers could help h1m recnutt bluecollar Democrats
On that and other targets, the new Reformer sounds hke the old Republican But not always
"Amenca needs a government of national umty and reconc1hat10n that
draws from the best of both parttes," he sa~d as he swttched "I promtse you
I Will create thai kmd of government."
But tirst. there's a campmgn war to be waged
"So let me say lo the money boys and the Beltway ehtes who thmk that
at long last they have pulled up the drawbndge and locked us out forever,
you don 't know th1s peasant army," Buclianan sa1d "We have not yet begun
to hght "

(Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated
Press, has reported on Washington and national politics for more than
30 years.)

Letter to the editor

WASHINGTON - In the realm
. ol fore1gn pohcy, Amenca JS the new,
often mept, k1d on the block, regu·
larly lurchmg backward toward tsolauonism. Is pres1dent1al candidate
Patnck Buchanan at last takmg that
wmg ,,f the Reputlhcan Party over to
the Relorm Party''
In the 19th century, Amencan foreign pohcy was vtrlually hm1tcd to
Western Hem1sphere co~cerns mirroring our two-ocean tsolation
from Europe, Asta and Afnca And
except for the Monroe Doctnne's
hands-off warnmg - pnmanly to
Spam - South Amenca also went
largely 1gnored Indeed , the century
that followed George Washmglon's
century also followed h1s adv1ce to
av01d fore1gn entanglements
Not un11I the 20th century d1d
Amenca become a world power and
bcgm to shape a world v1ew and a
po!Jcy to match It Steam, steel,
mternal combusuon and n1ght had
manda1cd 11 So JIJS hule wonder that
so lillie expenence has rendered such
a generally mept effort We had
spent the pnor century wmtmg for the
wolves to come to the door
We had played no role ellher way
111 ·Pru ss1a's 19th-century nse as a
contmental power, 1ts role m the um IJcaiiOn of Germany. 11s m•htansm.
Jts threat to globa l stabJIJty The Seven Weeks War and the Franco-Prusslan War were to Amencans, Simply
further examples of European squabbles they and the1r ancestors had left
behmd
As a result, Amenca played no ·
role m the events leadmg up to World
War I and the Russwn RevolutiOn,
1wo events that would dlfectly mnucncc US behavwr for the balance of
the 20th century Yet that wh1ch we
had attempted netther to hmder nor
stop drew us mto us clutches Great
Brilam 1mposed a surface-fleet blockade on Germany and 1ts alhes m

Today in history

I

·\

German democracy was subverted, German rearmament begun and
German mthtansm rekmdled, all
wh1le Amencans scrambled to
reassert thetr tsolatJon•sm of the pnor century The next 11me however,
Japanese planes, not German submarmes, altered the national mood
If we had not been mvolved m
thwartmg German mtlnansm, at least
we were aware of 11. Japanese mJh tansm mterested us even less - until
Pearl Harbor. So unprepared was the
Umted States for war, that defeat was
a real poss1b1lity, an unconscionable
poss1bihty constdermg the relat1ve
strengths of the nat1ons mvolved But
the war was fought and eventually
won, after whtch the smgle most
Important Amencan fore1gn -pohcy
decJstOn of the century occurred. The

Marshall Plan.
Involvement, however, takes
many forms: diplomauc, mihtary or,
as m the case of the Marshall Plan,
economic. That plan, and a sim1lar
plan for Japan, a1ded VICtor.; and vanqutshed ahke, bnngmg a period of
prosperity and peace the world had
never known. So oplmg out IS no
longer an option; 11 really never was,
as John Donne explamed more than
300 years ago.
I am mvolved m mankinde
(sic),
And therefore never send to
know for whom !Ire bell tolls;
It tolls for thee .. "
(Jack Anderson and Douglas
Cohn are columnists for Umted Feature Syndicate.)

By RED GREEN

IA&gt;KS Lll&lt;e THeY'Ve.
FiNiSHeD MaT;~
Ttte Nt"LeaR TeST
sa...a TReZIY.

'
Irene Tom , 84, of Meadow Lane, Athens, d1ed at her home, Monday, Oct
25, 1999.
'
Born at Laurel Cliff m Me1gs County on May 4, 19 I 5, she was the daugh. ter of the late Joseph and Dess1e Wmneford Church Grueser She was a graduate of Rutland Htgh School
She and her late husband, Wade, owned and operated several busmesscs
tli Athens, mcludmg a grocery on West Washmgton Street, the Spot Pizza,
Carry-Out on Richland Avenue, the Wh1te Crest Restaurant, Campus Cleaners, Sundry Store on Mulberry Street, the Nut and Candy Shop, and P1pe
Dreams
She was a member of the Flfst Methodist Church
She IS survived by a brother and stster-m-law, Richard and Jess1e Grueser
of Rutland; a brother-m-law and wtfe, J1m and Genevteve Tom of Athens;
and several me~es and nephews
·
Besides her husband, who d1ed m 1989, she was preceded in death by a
SISler, Josephme Grueser; and brothers, Alan, L~roy, Ntcholas N. and G1lberl
Grueser
Serv1ces wtll be I p.m. Fnday m the Jagers &amp; Sons Funeral Home, Athens.
The Rev. Tom Hanover Will off1c1ate and bun a( w11l be m the l\thens Mem, ory Gardens Fnends may call Thursday, 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

: By The Associated Press

..

..
•

Then the dl\orce came through. You
You hear a lot these days about promiSed that you would marry her
stand1ng up for your nghts and So you started hvmg together You
speak1ng out on your own behalf, but prom1sed that you would marry her
none of th1s applies to a successful Now, you don't need to be a whtle hat
mafnage Any tdwt knows when to to see a pattern developmg here You
speak up and shoot h1s mouth off, but pronliSed that you would marry her,
a truly w1se man knows when to put and to date you haven 't, and I thmk
a hd on 11. There are certain ltmes m her anger toward you right now JS
every mamage where It 's better 1f what they call "JUStified."
I' m not gomg to try to sell you on
you don't say anythmg For example,
when you're wrong, keep qu1et. the vtrtues of gettmg mamed. I'm not
When you break something or lose gomg to talk you into domg somesomethmg er forget something or eat thmg you obviously screwed up once
somethmg, be very, very qutet. Hon- before I'm gomg to help you stall for
esty ts a great policy, but so Js msur- more ltme. Even 1f you propose
ance The trick 1s not to use e1ther ton•ght, whtch I hope you wtll, we all
unt1l you have to. L1fe has a way of know there are lots of speed bumps
gettmg you mto trouble - you don 't on the way to the altar.
need to help 11 along So when you
L1ke the nng. Should cost two
screw up, shut up. But there's an even months' salary. You won't know how
more tmportanl t1me to stay SJlent, much that ts till you get a job. Then,
and that's when you know you're of course, there's the p1ckmg of the
nght. When your way was the nght date There are lots of thmgs you
way Your 1dea was the nght 1dea
have to work around -- for example,
Your plan was 1he nght plan No one all sports playoffs. P1cking the chma
that you're marned to wants to hear pattern takes months, even tf you're
that Nothmg good ever follows the bemg helpful. Btg versus little wedphrase, "I told you so " So when dmg? Guest hst? Stze of the cake?
you're wrong or when you 're nght. Flowers? Music? Wh1ch church?
try keepmg your trap shut And 1f 11 You'll be pulhng pens1on by the ume
works, well, I
they wheel you down the atsle. If you
The big stall
st1ll need time, ng the wheels to fall
When )OU met her, you were sep- off. They' II have fallen off pretty
arated frum your fJrsl w1fe You li"uch everythmg else by then
promised that you would marry her
The lying in water

Irene Tom

.Y"armer temps to filter
·H'lto region by Thursday

Knowing when not to say anything
You're at an age where you've
accomplished way more than your
h1gh school yearbook sa1d you
would, but you sull don't gel any
respect from your own lt1ds There
are lots of opm1ons on how to recllfy thts snuauon, but most of them
take t1me, and nobody knows how
much of that we all have left. So
mstead, I recommend lymg to them
It's probably what your father d1d It's
not that hard . The ktds beheve everythmg they find on the Internet, don't
they" Just don ' t he about the present
by say mg thmgs hke, "You do that
agam, and your eyes will stay that
"ay." And don't he about the future
with thmgs hke, "I prom1se that tf
you go to college your skin wtll clear
up and you' II look hke Brittany "
Lymg about the past, on the other
hand, 1s not only fau game, 1t's essential Let 11 shp that you once killed a
very bad man dunng the stx months
you spent With a motorcycle gang and
you'll get a lot more respect around
the breakfast table And 1f the ktds
should get the 1mpresston that you
were a road1e for the Rolhng Stones
or that you had to turn down NASA
for a space mission, they're gomg to
hsten a little more carefully the next
lime you're gassing off about bemg
home by curfew. Just remember to
keep your dates stratgbt, and don't go
too far - you don't want to have to

explam how such an Important man
as yourself could have possibly ended up where you are
Taxes on education,
and vice versa
A fellow tried to get me to s1gn a
pelltJon the other day that sa1d that
since older folks don't use high
school educat1on, we shouldn't have
to pay the lax money that prov1des for
11 Well, who hkes paymg taxes? So
I was just about to put down my John
Hancock, when I slopped ltmagmed
what n would be hke 1f the k1ds
weren't gettmg educated. Do I want,
m the autumn of my years, to have to
rely for most of my needs on a generatiOn that can't even spell "cat," let
alone run a CAT scan? Call me crazy,
but I thmk everybody benefits from
a socJety that can read and wrue The
guy at my door trymg to cut back on
educatiOn couldn't even get people to
read h1s petition 1f the prevwus generalwn had already Signed Jt
Quote of the Day "Somellmes
a man's gona do what a woman
would never even conSJder " - Red
Green

(Red Green Is the star of "The
Red Green Show," a television
series seen In the U.S. on PBS and
In Canada on the CBC Network,
and the author of "The Red Green
Book" and "Red Green Talks Cars:
A Love Story.")

Southerly wmds w11l bnng warmer temperatures to Oh10 on Thursday,
· forecasters sa1d.
; • : :H1ghs wtll range from the upper 60s to low 70s. Mor~. of the same 1s
: expected on Fnday, the Nauonal Weather,Serv1ce satd
No ramts m s1ght before Sunday.
It was ch11ly under clear sktes across Oh10 early th1s mornmg, wuh some
below-freezmg temperatures
The record-htgh temperature for th1s date at the Columbus weather statwn was 8 I degrees m I963 wh1le the record low was 20 m 1962. Sunset
tOnight Will be at 6·36 p m. and sunnse Thursday at 7·56 am
Weather forecast:
Tomght .. Clear. Lows m the mtd and upper 30s. Ltght and van able wmd.
Thursday .. Sunshme wtth a milder afternoon H1ghs from the upper 60s
to the lower 70s.
Thursday night.. Clear. Lows from the upper 30s to the lower 40s
Extended forecast:
Fnday Mostly clear H1ghs m the lower 70s
Saturday .. Partly cloudy A chance of showers dunng the mght. Lows m
the lower and m1d 40s and h1ghs from the upper 60s to the lower 70s
Sunday .Partly cloudy with a 'chance of showers Lows m the lower 40s
. and h1ghs m the lower and m1d 60s.

::Taft, coalition differ on
method to fund schools

By WILLIAM A. RUSHER

profitable mdustry w11l be targeted paved the way The gun manufactur- And, m any case, they believed next A good many people thmk Jt ers w11l be easy to cast as cold-blood- nghtly so- that a person cou ld qu1te
'
w1ll be the alcoholiC beverage mdus· ed VJllams
reas,onably bet that he would beat the
And that ts a tremendously Impor- odds and could, bes1des, qun tf he
try, wh1ch has tons of money and
whose products k1ll many thousands tant pomt. Before a legitimate btr.;l- really wanted to
of people and cause endless m1sery to ness can safely be squeezed for b•lYet the state ofCahforma today ts
afntctcd fam1hes every year The hons of dollars, the pubhc must be runnmg a hugely expensive campmgn
alcoholiC beverage producers can taught to regard those who manage 11 of rad1o and TV ads m wh1ch an unchardly cla1m they dtdn't know the as downnght evtl Moreover, as the (uous female vo1ce tells us that the
damage alcohol does, or dtdn 'I real- Salem w1tch tnals demonstrated, the tobacco manufacturers deliberately
IZe that, for certam people at least, public dearly loves to be gtven some let hundreds of thousands of people
alcohol 1s, qUite literally, fatally government-approved v11lam to hate. die . "'You know what they say," she
The JOb that has been done on the murmurs. "'There are plenty of f1sh
addJcl1ve Yet they keep on selling the
pnnctpal executtves of the tobacco m the sea'"- somethmg Califorma
stuff, and rakmg m btlhons.
But somehow I doubt the pohtJ- mdustry ts poslttvely appalling We has no proof any tobacco producer
ctans Will want to tangle with the have been taught to believe that ever sa1d, anywhere.
Currently, we are add1ng to the
alcoholiC beverage producers. About - these men deliberately sold a fatal
product
to
the
Amencan
people,
statute
books all so rt s of '"hate
25 percent of adult Amencans smoke.
knowing
that
11
was
fatal
and
simply
cnmes"
- crimes that are supposBut that leaves 75 percent who don't,
not
carmg.
If
that
were
true,
they
edly
worse
because they were moiJand those are odds a poht1c1an can
would
all
be
vulnerable
to
prosecuvated
by
hatred
aga1nst specific
feel comfortable With I have been
unable to fmd the equtvalenl figure tion for first-degree murder as having groups Yet our pohtJcwns are bttsy
for the proport1on of Americans who dtsplayed "depraved mdtfference" to pthng tWigs around the stakes at
drmk, but it IS unquestionably far the loss of human hves But they whtch the alcohohc beverage proh1gher than 25 percent Moreover, were, of course, perfectly ordmary ducers and gun manufacturers .are
alcoholic beverages are widely asso- people, many of them S\"Okers them- scheduled to burn, so the pubhc will
ciated m the pubhc mmd with such selves who, hke everyone else, were cheer the Iootmg of those mdustnes.
(William A. Rusher Is a Distincheerful occas1ons as toasting a new- aware of the charges agamst tobacco
lywed couple, etc. No, the politiCians but were entitled to hope that the long guished Fellow of the Claremont
w11l contmue to watch alcoholics dte argument over the correlation cast Institute •or the Study of Stateawtthout hftmg a finger agamst the legitimate doubt on the causatton manahlp and Political Phllosopfllf.)
mdustry that kills them.
F1ve years ago: In the first tnp to Syria by an Amencan president 10 20
Rather, my own guess ts that the
years,
President Clinton met W!th Synan Prest dent Hafez Assad before headpohtiCJans' greedy glare will next fasmg to Jerusalem lo meet With Israeh offic1als
ten on the gun manufacturers (and
One year ago. Hurncane Mitch cut through the western Canbbean, pummdeed, the first lawsuits agamst
mehng
coastal Honduras and Behze, the storm caused several tHousand deaths
them have already been f1led). Here,
m
Central
Amenca m the days that followed Serb forces drew back from
the hystena wh1pped up for more and
former Kosovo battlefronts, holdmg off the 1mmed1ate threat of NATO
more gun-control laws has already mrstnkes

By ALAN FRAM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Repubhcan
leaders are bowmg to pressure and
mcludmg congresswnat salar1es m
thclf proposed across-the-board budget cuts. But they are still huntmg the
votes they need to push the plan
through Congress
GOP leaders dcc1ded Tuesday to
mclude lawmakers' pay m the reductions after rank-and-file Republicans, Pres1dent Chnton and rad1o
talk-show hosts ch1ded them for not
domg so They now want agenc1es'
budgets cut I percent, savmgs they
say can come from parmg federal
waste
"Repubhcan members of Congress believe that the government can
find a penny on the dollar m waste,
fraud and abuse" to av01d spendmg
Soc1al Secunty surpluses, sa1d House
Speaker Denms Hastert, R-Ill "They
also believe that they can set an
e&lt;ample by shavmg back thelf own
pay by the same percentage "
Lawmakers decided last summer

(Continued from Page 1)
he quoted one person as saying.
Buckley also satd he has heard few
negative comments.
Poole, who dnves past the new
.Eastern Elementary School tw1ce a
.day, sa1d the fact that Eastern and
Southern restdents have taken advantage of state school fundmg to con-

· The Daily Sentinel
(USPS l 13·960)
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
Publ1shed every afternoon, Monday through
Fnday, Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Ohm, by the
Oh10 Valley Pubhsh1ng Company Second class
postage p;ud at Pomeroy, Ohm
Member: Tile Assoc1ated Pres.s and the Oh1o
New$f&gt;aper AMoc1at10n
Pos1mu1er: Send addre!S e«re~hoos to The
Da1ly Sentinel, Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Oh1o
4l769
SUBSCRIPTION RATE$
By Carrie~ or Motor Route
One Week .......
.S2 00
One Month .......................... 70
One Year • . • . • ...
Sl04 00
SINGLE COPY PRICE
• Datly .................................. 3~ Cents
Sub.scrlbers not desmng to pay the earner may
rem111n advance dnect to The Datly Sentmel on
a three stx or 12 month bastS Credtt w1ll be
1 .... ..... ......... .

1

struct new elementary schools may
provtde some mcenuve to Metgs resIdents, although he states, "We have
to hve on our own merits."
"It would be n1ce 1f all three
school d1stncls (m the county) had
new school bUJldmgs," he commented "Now 1t's our turn "
He sa1d bUJldmg 1ssue supporters
wtll gather at Pomeroy Elementary
School Tuesday mght for ce lebration
or consolation, depending on the outcome, as cleclton results are posted
Voters m the following precmcls
Will vote on the 1ssue Bedford, part
of West Chester, Rutland V1llage,
East Rutland, West Rutland, Middleport Second, M1ddl~or1 Thud, Middleport Fourth, ~omeroy Fmt,
Pomeroy Second, Pomeroy ThJTd,
Bradbury, Laurel Chff, Rock Spnngs
and SctpJO.

sa

gtven curter each week

No aubscnplton by ma1l pcrm1tted m areas
where home earner scr.1ce 15 avatlable
PubliSher reserVes the nght 1o adjust rates durmg the subscnpt10n penod SubscnpiiOn rate
changes may be 1mplementcd by changmg the
duration of !he subscnp110n

MAIL SUBSCRII'f'ION
Inside Meigs CO\Inly
13 Weeks .................: ..S27 30
26Weeb ...... , ..... ..... $5382
l2 Weeb ...
.....
SIOll6
Rain Oulslde Meigs County
13 \\leeks ........................ $29 25
26 Weeks .. ...... . ....... $~6 68
WeekJ ....................$109 72

'2

By ALICE ANN LOVE
Associated Prell Writer
WASHINGTON - Kentucky
Gov. Paul Patton demanded more
federal money and elbow grease
Tuesday to clean up an Energy
Department uramum plant that has
en&lt;langered workers and continues to
threaten the envuonment.
"It's lime for the federal governme.nt to do right by the city of Paducah, a c1ty that's been loyal to thts
plant for 47 years," Patton said at a
Senate heanng.
On the other s1de of Capttol Hill,
House member.; from Ohio and Ken-

l)ur main conc:en In all stories Is to bt
accurate. If you know of an error In a

story, coli the newsroo01 ol (7-MJ) 99Z·
l!SS. We will check your lnronnallon
and make a correction If warranted.

.

News Departments

The matn numbtr Is 99Z-Zt55. Depart·
ment extensions are:

General Manager. ............ ... Ext. 1101
New1 ..................... , .. ..EX!. 1102
or Ext. 1106

Other Services
AdvertiSJng, ... .......................f.xl. 1104
Clrculalton .. ........................Exl.l103
tlasstned Ad• ........ .............. .Exl. 1100

to boost their pay next January by 3 4
percent to $14 I .300, a $4,600 ra1se
Wtth the I percent reductiOn , their
salary would nse to $139,900
It ts unclear, however, whether
legiSlators' salanes wtll ever be
affected Pres1dent Clinton has
prom1sed to reJect the GOP's acrossthe-board spendmg reduction, argumg 11 would be too damagmg to
defense, educatton and other programs.
"The presJdent w1ll veto the
across-the-board cut they've proposed," White House chtef of staff
John Podesta told reporters
Applymg the reductiOn to lawmaker.;' pay would save less than $I
m11lion, a tiny fract1on of the btlhons
of dollars m dtspute between Clmlon
. and Congress m thetr budget fight.
But w11h Republicans arguing that
federal agenctes could afford to tnm
waste from the1r budgets, then mtttal
exclusiOn of lawmakers ' pay had
caused them a publtc relatwns
headache.
One worry was that unless Iegts-

lucky mtroduced legtslation des1gned
to make a guaranteed pot of money
avatlable for cleaning up the Paducah plant and 1ts s1ster plant 10 Piketon, Ohm.
Reps Ted Stnckland, D-Oh10,
and Edward Wh1tfield, R-Ky., would
force the federal government to spend
at the two plants all of the money
paid by nuclear utility compames mto
a spec1al cleanup fund.
Stnckland sa1d about $2 b1lhon
has been paid mto the fund. But the
money helped offset the federal
deficit because there was no legal
requirement that the money be spent

Meigs announcements

BorgWarner- 37-11/16
Champion - 4·318
Charming Shope - 4·7/8
City Holding.- 17
Federal Mogul- 22·15116
Firatar - 26·3116
Gannett -'72-1/16
K mart - 9·318
Kroger - 20.314
Lands End- 74-1/16
Ltd. - 37-5/8
Oak Hill Financial-16·1/2
OVB-33·5/8
One Valley- 34-1/8
Peoples- 26·112
Premier- 10.1/2
Rockwell - 48-5/8
RD Shell- 59-1/8
Sears- 27-7116
Shoney'a -1-1/2
Wendy's- 22·13116
Worthington -15-314
Dally stock reports are the
10:30 a.m. quotas provided by
Adveat of Gallipolis.

Give Life!
- Blood Drive Pleasant Valley Wei/ness Center
Thursday, October 28, 7999
Noon to 6 p.m.

• FREET-ShirtsToAII Donors
+ Door Prizes

hns wtll provtde thnlls Costume
JUdgiOg wtll take place at 8 p m.
C1der, coffee, donuts, hot dogs donated by local merchants, the village of
Middleport, and Feeney-Bennett Post
128 and Aux1hary, w1ll be served
Trustees to meet
The Board of Trustees of Columbia Township will meet Monday at
7:30 p.m. at the fire stat1on 10 Carpenter
The Lebonan Townshtp trustees
w1ll meet 10 regular sess1on, 7 p m
Saturday at the township butldmg

lators' salanes were mcluded , labor
un1ons m1ght run advertiSements contrastmg that w11h the GOP 's reluctance so far thts year to ra1se the mmlmum wage, sa1d John Feehery, a
spokesman for Hasten
Republicans had been pushmg a
I 4 percent reduction m fede ral agenCies· spendmg, a cut that would not
affect automatic benef1ts suc h as
Socml Secunty, Med1care and MedICaid. On Tuesday, they were plan·
mng to drop thai to a I percent cut 1n
hopes of ptcklng up support from
lawmakers unhappy over reduct1ons
lo defense and other programs
GOP leaders sa1d they had not
ongmally mcluded lawmakers' pay m
the across- the-board cut beca use
money for the1r salanes IS not con·
trolled by the spe ndmg b11ls that
finance agency budgets
Republican leaders were havmg
other problems m the struggle to pu&lt;h
theJT plan through Congress
House TransportatiOn Commmee
Cha~rman Bud Shuster, R-Pa , was
demandmg that the across-the-board

Highway meeting
The Me1gs County Route 33 Corndor Improvement Commlltee Will
meet Thursday, I p m at the Semor
Cuizens Center m Pomeroy. All welcome

..

cut not apply to h•ghway programs,
and other lawmakers were sa1d to be
seekmg exemptions for other programs
"We're workmg 11, JUSt l1ke anythmg else." sa1d House MaJority
Wh1p Tom DeLay, R-Texas, the
House GOP's lop vote counter
Republicans plan to attach the cuts
to a $314 btlhon measure financmg
labor, health and educatiOn programs,
the b1ggest and last of the 13 annual
spendmg bills for the new fiscal year.
wh1ch began Oct I Also affixed to
the bill wtll be the D1stnct of Columbia's budget after Clm1on vetoed an
earlier versiOn
Though the b1ll exceeds Chntun's
overall demands foreducauon spendmg. the prestdent plans to veto 11
because of the across-the-board culs
and because n prov1des lml e of th e
$1 4 b1lhon he wants for hmng new
teachers
So far, e1ght of the 13 spendmg
bills for fiscal 2000 have become law
Chnton has vetoed three and has yel
to act on two others

~leanup

\PRING VAllEY CINEMA
446·4524

1,'!\ I JM II ',nlll~l

Ul[J 11\JlJ!l

(&gt;!

,....
I

'

MON10~5-THURS10~8~

lOX OFFia Will OPIN AT
6:30 PM lOR EVENING SHOWS

THE SIXTH SENSE (PG13)
7:10DAILY

SUPERSTAR (PG13)
7:10DAILY

DOUBLE JEOPARDY (R)

,.,~

!lilmllliiDI 1¥11, !!al!y .llalmd, Trn Clllltte,
fiiiiT CUll Ill
t45, 11:35
(IIrlml) llmd Pit, Edwald No!bl ~~ ~Caller

IWIIIIM IIARTI t11

8:60, t40

jl!onn!lldrj Harm FCIII, Kristi! Scltt 1'll.mls

7:10DAILY

THE STORY OF US (R)

FOR CUSTOMER APPRECIATION,
PRESENT ncKET STUB AND
RECEIVE A FREE POPCORN,

(MON-THURS ONLY)

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

We would like to recognize our Dietary and
Housekeeping/Laundry Staff for their years of dedication and
commitment to our residents, facility and community.
PIETABY
Cindy White
Patricia Harris
Paula Rife
Carol Will
Jan Eblin
Diana Stover
Wendy Hubbard

4 Years
6 Years
12 Years
17 Years
14 Years
7Years
3 years

Deanna Searles
1 Year
Teresa Gillilian
1 Year
Lisa Russell
10 Months
Tammy Baumgarner 6Years
2 Months
Cindy Hutton
Amy Krautter
1 Months
Gina Weaver- Dietary Supervisor 6 Years

tu.;uJ~I;~i;~~~~YlL.a!J~PBY
20 Years
18 Years
12 Years
12 Years
12 Years
11 Years
7 Years
2 Years

•

Maxtne Thomas
1 Year
Tammy Boggs
1 Year
1 Year
Sheryl Carson
1 Year
Kelli Jeffers
2 Years
Clarence Hayman.
Leisha Berry
1 Year
Barbara Culbertson 12 Years
1 Month
Rochelle Wiseman
Mike Gtlmore- Housekeeping/Laundry
Supervisor 8 Months

Sponsored By:
Pleasant Volley H6spnal
Auxiliary

&amp;
AmericanRed Cross

._..,_,.._

He saJ d ullht•es thts year are con- through groundwater toward the Oh10
tnbutmg about $175 m•lhon mto 1he R1ver at a rate of one foot a day
decontammauon fund " Those
Congress has provtded a $16 mil momes should be used for the1r han mcrease for the cleanup 1n us
mtended, assessed purpose," he sa1d. budget for fJScal 2000
The Senate heanng and House
DOE offtctals, who had asked for
actJvJty came as federal regulators $6 m1lhon more, agreed wJth Patton
prepared to VJSJt both gaseous dJffu- that that won't be enough to fulfill
swn plants to report on recent safety federal government prom1ses that II
mspectwns The Nuclear Regulatory would accelerate the cleanup and
CommiSSion was to explam Jts fmd- 1ncrease health momtonng of workmgs m Paducah on Wednesday and m ers
P1keton on Thursday
"( understand and share everyThe Paducah plant has been the one's concern that we have not
subject of close scruuny followmg a moved ahead fast enough," sa1d Carlawsull by three employees who olyn Huntoon, DOE assistant secrealleged that workers there unwittmg- tary for environmental management
ly were exposed to plutomum and "The reahty JS we have lacked the
other h1ghly tox1c substances from money we have needed "
1953 to 1976. The lawsUJt 1s sealed.
A recent D9E invesugat1on looklOg back to 1990 lound that worker
safety and envuonmental problems
have perststed dunng a federal efforts
to clean up the plant.
The report, released last week.
satd that plant workers haven't been
adequately mformed of some nsks
and that radiOactive contammatwn
from the site continues to spread

SARto meet
Ewmgs Chapter, Sons of the
Amencan Revolution, w1ll meet
Thursday, 6.30 p.m at Our House 10
Galhpohs. The dmner w1ll be served
by candlelight w1th staff dressed m
coloma! costume Guest of honor and
speaker Will be John R W1lhams,
president of the Ohw Soc1ety, SAR
ReservatiOns are to be made by calllOg Barbara Kemper, 740-441-1121.
9 a.m. to 5 p.m .

Marilyn Miller
Hazel Sprague
Carol Dtddle
Doris Roberts
Pam Roach
Peggy Caton
Bonnte Rtfe
Deborah Michael

Reader Services
Correction Polley

,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Patton demands more money for plant

Stocks

, .Meigs Local to decide

_,_

GOP inc.ludes congressional
salaries in spending ·cutback

Halloween
Trick or treat w1ll be held in MidCOLUMBUS (AP) - Gov Bob has comphed w1th Jts 1997 order to dleport, Portland, Tuppers Plams,
Taft and a coahuon representing come up with a new system that pro- Reedsville, Pomeroy, Racme, Chester
most of Ohw's school d1s1nc1s con- vides an adequate education whtle and Rutland Thursday, 6 to 7 p.m. In
tmue to d1sagree over the best way lo also redU'Cmg the burden on local most of the commumties, the siren
property taxpayers
pay for pubhc educallon
w1ll sound t" start and end the obserThe coalition, wh1ch represents vance.
"The only way to resolve the
DeRolph littgat1on ts to base Ohw's most of Oh10 's 611 pubhc school dlsIn Mtddleport the Sleepy Hollow
school fundtng on the needs ofOh1o's lncts and successfully challenged celebralton will begin at 7 p rn. There
children," Paul Folmer, a spokesman the way the stale pays for education, will be free hayrides through Sleep
for the Ohto Coahtion for Equtty and argues that,Taft and other state ofli- Hollow where Witches, ghosts, gobAdequacy of School Fundmg, satd at ctals are too rocused on the costs of
educa!Jon
a new conference Thesday.
The group released a 70-page
Folmer was referring to the I99 I
lawsuit flied on behalf of Nathan document that 11 says out!mes the
DeRolph, a former student at Sheri- components uf an essential educatiOn
AEP- 33·112
dan Htgh School 1n the Northern for every student
Akzo- 42-1/2
The pl an starts w1th b1g-t•cket
Local School Dtstnct m Perry CounAmTechiSBC- 46·13/16
Items, such as ali-day, every day
ty
ATl.T-44-3116
The Ohto Supreme Court has kmdergartcn , smaller class s1zes and
Bank One- 34-1/16
scheduled a hearing for Nov. 16 up to 10 days of teacher trammg
Bob Evans -13-1/16
before determmmg whether the state every year

Hatred's use as a political weapon

By now 11 JS pretty well understood among thoughtful people that
the savage attacks of the state and
federal governments on the tobacco
Dear Editor
mdustry have nothmg to do wllh the
To all those who support the Metgs Marauders Football program
pubhc 's health and everythmg to do
I would hke to take th1s opportumty to say "thank you" to those who attend- With money: hundre~s of btlhons of
ed the Newark Cathol1c versus Me1gs Marauders football game on Saturday, dollars, wh1ch pohllctans have dtsSept I B The dnvc was long and curvy, but the beauty at the end of the road covered they can gouge out of the
and the people of Me1gs made the tnp worthwh•le.
tobacco compames (who of course
It was a pleasure to be m your commumly Thanks to everyone for offer- pass the cost along to theJT cusmg dlfecuuns to lost persons. Thanks also to the Wendy's restaurant for bemg tomers) m heu of more taxes After
so effiCient at the end or the mght when many of us who were headed home all, the federal government kept on
stopped by to grab a bile before we left.
subSJi:tlllng tobacco farmers for
decades
after the Surgeon General
The fans we encountered were fnendly and pleasant and even after the
game people were still showmg us the~r hospnahty wllh "easy out" dlfec- began warmng that Cigarettes can
tJOns I also p1cked up The Da~ly Senttne[ as I left the area and was extreme- cause cancer and other fataltllnessly pleased to read the art1cle by Dave Hams m the Fnday, Sept I 7 paper es; so Washmgton 's h1gh-mmded act
about the upcommg game. A wonderfully wntten arttcle emphasized the pos- JS a httle belated
Bear m mmd that Phthp Moms
Itive efforts of both teams and steered clear of bashmg or putting down anynets
JUSI 28 cents on every pack of
one. This art1cle was a pleasure to read Thank you for makmg a long dnve
Marlboros
11 sells, but the governworthwhile We hope to see you next year m Newark and we hope that we
ment takes several times that amount
can be as gractous to you as you were to us
Cynde Travis If the government were really senous
Newark Catholic parent about savmg the hves of Amenca's
Newark smokers, II would Simply ban the sale
of cigarettes. But no- that cash cow
has to be kept ahve and producmg at
all costs And mc1dentally, smce poor
people tend to smoke more than nch
ones, the cost of cJgarettes falls most'
By The Aasoclated Prall
heav1ly on them In effect, the govToday JS Wednesday, Oct 27, the 300th day of 1999. There are 65 days ernment has hu on a bnlhantly
left in the year.
regressive tax, wh1ch 11 Imposes m
Today 's H1ghhght m Htstory·
the sacred name of public health.
On Oct 27, 1787, the first of the Federalist Papers, a senes of essays callSmce the greed of our poht1c1ans
mg for ratificatiOn of the US Constttut•on, was published 111 a New York Js hterally bottomless, observers have
newspaper
been waJtmg to see wh1ch other

Appreciates Meigs' hospitality

World War I, and Germany retaliated w11h a submarine blockade, wh1ch
led to the doctnne ot unrestncted submanne warfare m whtch all sh1ppmg
to or from the Bnt1sh Isles, belligerent or not, was attacked
It was the Amencan need to contmue mlernational commerce that ran
head-on mto the German pohcy and
mev1tably brought Amenca mto the
war But when the war ended, the
country, once agmn turnmg tsolatwmst, reJected Woodrow Wils9n 's
14 Pomts peace plan and the League
of Nations envisioned by them. The
New World had reluctantly gone to
the a1d of the Old World, but only
temporanly, settmg the stage for
World War II, because once agam
Amenca was not an acttve player m
European events

r'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page2
Wedneaday, October 27, 1999

The Daily Sentinel Lurching backward into isolationism

.

36759 ROCKSPRINGS RD.

POMEROY
992-6606

I.

�.

.

...

•

-Sports

The Dally Sentinel

•

Wednesday, October 27,.1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page4
Wednesday, ()cto"'r 27, 1999

Yankees beat Braves 6-5, lead World S~rle• 3-D

Curtis' 1Oth-inning HR caps comeback .:~.

•

By BEN WALKER

.

Greentield McClain (S-4) II 7444.

Baseball

5-Marysvtlle (4) 9-0 . .. ............................... 195
6-Lebanon 8- 1 ............................................... IJ2
7-Col. Brookhaven8-l ............................... 121
8-Col. lnrkpendc:m:e 9·0 ................................ 11 0
9- Kings Mills Kings 8- 1 ............................... 54
IIJ-Madison 8- 1.................................................. 5 1
Olhen ncrhinc12 or more polnlo;: 11 -Mentor
Lt!ke Cath . 45. 1 2- Wad ~ worth 28. 1.~ - G ra flon
Midview ( I) 25. 14-R:rvenna 14.
·

Division IV

World Series slate
Thesday's score
,
N.Y. Yankees 6. Atl:uua 5 (IO I: New York lcadi
series 3-0

Fature games
Tooighl
Atlanta (Smolu 11 -8) at N.Y. Yankees (Cleme ns
14-10), 8:20p.m.

Thursdav
Atlanta ill N.Y. Yankees. ~. 20 p.m , tf necessary
Salurday
N.Y. Yankees at Atlanta. R05 11m . if necc~sary
Sunday, Oct. 3 1
N Y. Yankees at Atl:mlil.. 8:05 p.m EST. tf nco.&gt;
essary

Football
.OHSAA football

.c omputer ratings
COL UMBUS. O hw (1\P) - Here arc the si :&gt;.th
Weekly fo01ball complltcr raun~s frw n tht.• Ohm High
School Athk:tic A:m.x iatmn Rat mgs are by div1Ston
and region with record and &lt;1rcrage ht -lerc l po int s

pcr _garre (lop etKhl teams tn c.u: h regton ad\·ancc tn
regtonal quancrfmalsl

Division I
Reg ton 1.• 1-Sol&lt;• n (IJ- 0 ) .14(17~1

~-S haler

Hetghts t8-l) 15 01 :!.:; .\-Ckve St lgnattu s (7- ~)
~3 ..~ 578 . 4-Maylid ll t!! -1) 19...13fl8 5- Lakewuod jft.
3) 18.994-1 6 - S t m n g~\"i ll~ (7. _1_) IS'JOOO 7- Mem or
l~- 4) 17 9277 1\.Cle\c Glcrwdll' (7-2) 17 -H 71. ')Euclid (6-.l ) 16.7668 10-Mr\ldkburg HIS i\lidprtrk
(6-.1) 1.\ 5.1.'.1
Rcgiuu 2

1-(jw\'1: Cu y (9-0J 29 9-'4-l

!-

Wunhing!O n Kil bournt• 1'1·01 2 ~ \PKS .l-l·mdlay C~1J 25 ..\.SR~ . 4-Uppc.·r Arlmgton 0!-]) B 6166 5Ltma Se-mor (6- .l) 20 7500. 6-Tnl WIHtmcr 1 7-~)
19 7020. 7-Tol S1 Fr an c • ~ r6-JI 1 ~ .7 500 SWest~\· rll e North (6-.\) I M .1-U-t 9-Dublin Coffrmm
tS-4) 17 7 JJJ 10-llwma~ Worthing ton (7 -2 1
A5.9-l"".
.
• Regron _,. 1-i\lass illon Wa~ htn g t un tiJ-lH
~0 . 7868 !·C Ulton Mc Km lc) 17-21 26.06_1_0 .1.
Pickerington (8· 1) 25 471 7. ""' · Brunswi ck (9-0\
2_. .7."\ H 5--N . Ca ruon Hol.lver (S-1) 2-1 ]555 6- You
Boardman 0-2 1 ! I 8-HO. 7- LOGAN H~ - 1 1 19.9944 .
8- Massillon Perry (6-J) 15.2722 . 9- Wrm ~· n Hardin£
(5-4) I-I 1521. 10-Sandu sky (.'i·""' ) 14 0246. •
'
Regron 4. I·Cin. St Xilvler (8-0J .10.0.145 2Cul . Elder (7 - I J 27 5000 .l -Ce nterv1lle (9-0l
l .l .69.W. 4-Fmrfit!ld ( 7-2) !l.tl 166 5- Hubcr Hts.
Wayne (8- 1) 22 7722. 6-Ci n. Oak Hills 17-2 1
22 . 1~00. 7- Mason t7-2 1 20 6500 8-Liberty Tv.·p
Lakota East (6-J) I H.99+t. 9-Cin Moeller (.'i --l l
18.2732. 10-Crn . Sycamore (6-3) 16 9000

Division II

.

Rl·gwn 1.1: 1-Akwn Manchester (8- 1) 11 6722 .
2- GirmJ Ul· l) 21 .n~2 .\-Sandusky Perkms {9-0J
ltl.g555 . 4-Ch:tgrt n F~tl s (~ - 1 ) I ~ 42Fn 5-\Vtdliffc:
0·!) IS S27S 6-Nt.'l\ttm 1":111, 17-1) IS I.HU! 1.
AI"-'Olll'r W: lll"r] , , ,~ 1:00: - l r 1-liJl/-l-1 S-Ak run . Sr
Vrn~·t.'nt - S r Mar) If&gt;· .I) I ~ ,IO .n 9- Wc:llntgton (1\- 1)
10.6.1.1.1 10-Lca,·msbur): Lrll rac (4-:'\ ) 10 2976.
Region 14: 1-Manon J: Jgrn ('1-0) ZU7166 2·
Division Ill
Uell vrlle Clear Fork (7-!) I M9000. l -WHuscon (8- 1) fum
&amp;
18.6858 4-Coldwatcr(7-2 ) 17 2 5~ 1 5- Kemon (6- ~)
!-Po land Semi nary ( 17) 9-0 ....... .. .................. .103
16 288tl. 6-Tontogany Otsego (7-2 ) 15 5944. 7- 0ak
2- Bellbrook (8) 9-0 ............................ .... ... 257
Harb&lt;1r (8- t )I IJ.6000 H·Col Ready (8· 1) 12 66 11
J-Coplc:y (J) 9-0 .................. .. ............ . .. :24 .~
Y-Spartn Hrg 1land Monow t7·2) 12.-1 722. IO· PI &lt;~i n
4-Col. Wanerson (] J Il- l .......................... ...... 209
Cny Jonathan Alder (.'i -4 ) 1 1.-l .~.'i~ .
5--Steubenville( 2)8· 1 .................. .... ....... 190
Region 1.5 · I·Campbcll Mernom.l (IJ-U) 20.511 2
1-Na\'arre Farrless (7-2) 17.8000 .1-Doylestown
..
...............
Chippew a (~ - 1) 16 5666 4- You Mooney (R- 1) 8-Bdlevue 7- 1
60
16.-l267 5-SJruthe n (6-J ) 15 9-888 . 6-NEW
9-Willnrd 8-1 .
.. .... .50
LE.XINGTON (6-.l) l.'i 144-1 7- Bellaire (7-2) 10-0nvtlle 7-2...
. ............................... J5
1-1 7S~R ~- Utk-a (8· 1) 1-1-1221 9 -Cu ~huctu n (7-2)
Othrrs r~ctlvlna 12 or more points: 11 1-l o.q3 ID·M;rnim r-crry (~- I) I.U82M
Ashvtlle Teays Valley 28 12-London 25. (.l ( uc )Region 16: 1-WH EE LEt&lt; SBURG (9-0) 22.21\.l
Eaton. JACKSON 21. IS- Hubbard 17. 16-Akmn
1-Crn Wyunung (8- 1) 21 5666. ~ - H il miho n Badin Hoban 14. 17-THORNVILLE SHERIDAN l.l I!!
(7-2 ) 20.4897 4-Cin. Indian Ht 11 (8- 1) 197944 S- (tie)-0\esterland W. G~.:auga . Louisville 12.
C!II Madcrra lS- I l 19 6277 6-PORTSMOUTH (6-3)
l!t-1 125
7-IRONTON (6-2 1 15.9545. 8· Division IV
G~ rm antown Valley View 18· 1I 12. .1888. 9&amp;
\\'AVERLY ib-.l) 1 1.681!~ . 10-Ci n FiniiC)'IOW n (6-:1 ) fum
l-WHEELERSRURG ( I6) 9-0 ...................... 284
10 9.l .lJ
2- You. M'ooney (9) 7- 1.....
. .... 269
J -Sandusky Perk.ins ( 4) 9-0 ..... ·.. ................. 22 1
Division V
4-Germantown Valley View (2) 8-1 ............... 200
Regt&lt;ln 17: !-Bedford Chand !9·0) 20 8944 2."i-Campbell Memorial (2J I). Q ................ ... . 198
MaHrll nn Tus)aw (8 - I J 1911712 J-Cic ve. Vi ll a 6· Utica 8·1 ..
107
..,u~du - S t Jt,seph (9-0) Hd'JO I 4-LJsbon Oavrd
7-Chagri n Falls8- 1 .................................... 95
Andcr so1l i!~ - 1 I 15.5222 5- N Lmw S Rangt' 17-l) M-CJ n Wyoming 8- 1 .
. .. !19
1 .~11000 6- Nl"W Middlctnwn Spru1g fi cld ~!1- 1)
9-Akron Manche ster(]) 8-1
... 58
1.1 7ggg 7- Brnl)kt't t•ld (5 .-ll In I/ Ill 11-0rwell 1-Q..Oak Harbor 8- 1.. .
. .. 53
Grand Vn lll')' l fl - 0 10-1177 9-Sulll lan ll l;d Ri1'er
Olhus rccd\'ing lZ or more points; I I ·
16 -.1) 10 .1 -U4 10-Cohrmhr ;ura Cn·srvtl'W (6-.1) Martins Ferry .19 ll- Bellvr lle Clear Fnrk .H. IJ.
10 1760
IRONTON 29 14-Bc llnire 28. 1 ~ - Hanull on Uadin
Rq:ro n l ti 1-G rll.•IHtburg (LJ-0) 11UI606 1·
27. lb (Ut')· Doylestown Chippewa. Marion Elgm 21
Lrbc.·n y Cenll' r t7· 11 16 41 60 J-Cuhnnbus GrO\'C (II- lti-Girard 10. IIJ-Coldwa1er 17 20-Wauscon 12.
II 159777 4-Ddphos Jc lk ison (8 -11 I .J 7J~I{ .'i Situt1ml lc tK · ll 1-1 .11 06 6-Biufft on (g. JI UXR'J
Division V
7- Bur.\TU S W y nft~rtl 17-21 I I 25 00 M-S herwood
rt&gt;.
Fmnl'W 0-J I 1\U.tMlt 9-llJ\,\I Illd:rle Elmwood (7. Irnn
!-Bedford Chane! (20) 9-0 .
.\ 19
11 I ~ 0 166 10-Syl.'anlllrt.' Mohawk 17 - ~) l l ..'ii:!Sil.
. VASJ (7)9-0 .... ............ .. .. .... 163
R•:. c.••'ll t•J: I·Amarlda-Ck .m:rrd 18-l 11R 55 12. J-2-Cleve
Milfurd Ctr. Filirbnnks (I I 9-0
1:0 1
2-C HE SA. I' EA KE iiJ-0) 17-140 7 .l -Johnstown
-1-l.ihen y Ctr ( 1)7-1..
.179
N&lt;J11hndgc 11·01 !'7 .1 277 4-Wontls hcld Monr&lt;k'
5-John sluw n Norlhritlge {lJ 9-0 .................. 175
CcnJral ( ~ -1 l 17 1.160 .li-Bal tmmrl' l.ibt.·n y Union (8.86
1) 16 46 11 6-l UCASV II.LE VA I.I .EY 19-0 J 6-Woochlicld Monro..: C('nJml 8- l ..
7-Smi Jhville 8- 1..
.. 78
lb.J-Ib() 7- Mal l'l'rn IR- 1I I i 5S.88 . !!-OAK HILL 0~-r\manda -C i earc.·reek ( I ) 8- 1..
. ..... 69
11 I-I IS66 IJ- B:HIIl'SI'il k• 111· !1 14.0721: 10'1 -Grbsonbu rg ( I) 9-0 ......................................6 1
BEVER I.Y FORT FRYE (7-2) l.l.9 111.
10-St. Henry 6-2..
59
!lcgl\)n 20: J- \Vayrresvillt! Ul-0 ! 13.6700. 2Others rrcrhing 12 or mon points: 11 Millmtl Center Farrbank.s tiJ·OJ Ht-1000. J- Vcrsarlles
0-2 1' 17 ~4--14 4-B:navin (IJ-0) 1662-ll .'i-West Massillon Tuslaw 42. 12-N. Luna S. Range .\5. ]J.
Li sbon Anderson _n 14-Barne5\'illt.' 26. 15 (tie)Alcxandna Tw 1 n ~ Valky Soud1 I'J-0 ) 15.6411 6-SJ
Henry (6-1 ) IJ YSW. 7- R n~kfur d Parkway (6-3 ) CHESA PEAKE. Wuynesville 25 . 17 (lic )-Ballimore
Libe n y Union. Columbu s Grove. Malvern. W
11&lt;.10R-I ~ - S tdne}' lchnran (6-l) 11 7277. 9-Ncw
Alb:tll) H~- 1 I 10 . 68~~ - 10-Cin. Dct.'r Park (:'i--1) Akxi!ndnm TwJn Vullcy S 19 21 (tie) -Bat:w ia.
CHILLICOTHE HUN.I1NGTON 18 21 - Ve r~ni l lcs
IO..'i555.
15 24-New Middletown Springfi eld 14. 25-Apple
Creek Waynedale 12.

~~~!~!~rl.~: ~~~~~s -~ -1 ~ 9-~

Division VI

Region 2 1: !-Mogadore {8- 1} 19 3666. 2Norwalk S1. Paul VI-I) 15.6888 ] -Independence (9·
0) ll76 11 . +Kirtland (7-2) 12.6460. 5-Mot..-oeville
(7-2) 11 .9055 . 6-Turonlo (8· 1) 11.77.\8. 7- Ci e ~·e.
Cuya . Hn . (8- 1) 11 .5000. 8- Windham (6-J) 10.611 I.
9-Lowell vllle (6-J ) 9.5500. 10-McDonald (5-41
9.l000.
Region 21: 1-liffin Culvert (9-0) 20.8111. 2·
Pandora-Gilboa (8-1) 14.3 166. ]- Antwerp (8· 1)
115722 . 4-Mnria Stei n Marion Local (6-3) 13.5600
5-0rc:gon SlrilL"h {8· 1) - 1 2 .4 ~88. 6-Arlinglon (7·2)
8.2.133. 7- McComb 11·2) 8.1777. 8- W. Unny Hrlltop
0-1) 7.9342 . 9· Fremom St. Joseph (5-4) 7.6500. 10Edon 16-JJ 6.ll lJ .
Region 2J · 1-Renll svi lle (8- 1) 14.0333. 2Newark Cath (6-3 ) I 2.2000. .l -HEM LOCK
MILLER (8-1) 11 I 277 4-Bd lillre St John (8- 1)
120217. 5-WILLOW WOOD SYM MES VAU..EY
(7·2) JO 7877. 6-Morral Ktdgcdale (5 -4) 9.26 11. 7Howilrd E. Knox (6-]) 8 5500 8-Dan vtlle (5-4)

Region .5: !-Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit (7- 1)
24.8070. 2-Madison (8- 1) 24JSS5. J -Ra\·enna (8- 1)
22 .1888. 4- Mentor Lake Cath (7-2) 19.7772 . 5·
Olmsted falls (8-1) 19.1666. 6·Richfield Revere (6-) ) 14 ..56 11 . 7-Chardon (4· 5) 1402.54. 8- Niles
McKi nley (6-.1) 13.5888. 9-Akron Buchtel (7-2 )
13.3833. 10-Panna Hts. Holy Name (7- 2) 12 3500.
Region 6: 1-Pic:p.ra (9-0} 25.4777 . 2-Wadsworth
(9-0) 23 .4444: )-Sylvania Southview (8- 1) 21.4222.
4-Marysville (9·0) 20.5833. 5-Avon Lake (7-2}
18.5.55.5. 6-Whiteh ouse A nt~ ony Wayne (8- 1)
18.2320. 7-Amllerst Stl!'ele (7·2 ) 17.6666. 8-Graft on
M1dview (9·0) 17.0111. 9-Perrysbura (7- 2) 15.2322.
10-New Carlisle Tecumseh (7-2) 14.7888
Region 7: !-Dover (9-0) 24 .2444 . 2-Col.
Brookhaven (8-1) 21..5388. 3-Col. Independence (90) 21.4943 . 4-Uniomown Lake (6-J ) 19 7777 . 5-Col
Bcechcrort (7-2) 16.8222. 6-East LJ verpool (6·3)
16.4055 . 7-Col. East {7-2) 12. 14 11. 8-Col. Fmnkhn 8.25 11. 9-NEW MATAMORAS FRONTIER (S-4)
Heights (7 -2) I I 7222 9-Col. St. Charles (5-4) 7 96Q J 10-Zanesvi lle Rosecrans (5-4)6.8055.
11.5388. IQ.lewJs Center Qlenlangy (5-4) 10 5444.
Region 24. !-Delphos St. John 's {9·0) 18.J682
Region 8: 1-Kings Mills Kings (8-1) 23.0042 2- 2-Cin. Country Day (9-0) 14.9180. J-Covington (8·
Trenton Edgewood (9..0) 19.3677. 3-I...ebanon (8-1) 1)' 14 8481 . 4-Dola Hanlin Northern (8-1) 14.0666.
19.0596. 4-CHILLICOTHE (6-3) IS.3611. 5· 5-S prin&amp;field Ca1h. Cen1. (8· 1) 13.0000. ~A nson ia
Springboro (7·2) l ~i.Z.555 . 6· Day. Carroll (6-3) {6· .~) 10 7320. ?-Cedarvi lle (6-3 ) 9.4336. 8I j _Jjj,5, 7-Cin. Mc Nicholas (6-3) 13..1555. 8- Mechanicsburg (6-3) 8.9611. 9-New Bremen (4-.5)
Vandalia Butler (6--3) 13.2722. 9-Harrison (5-4) 8.44.17. 10-Minster (4-5) '7 .4292 .
12.4666. 10-Cin. Turpin (5-I) 11 .9277.

Division Ill

Division VI
fum

I'll.

!-Delphos St John 's 02) 9-0 ........ ............. 338
2-liflin Ca lveri (I) 9-0 ............ .. ............... .... 28 1
J -Mogadore 8-1.. ... ... .. .. ..
.. ................ 203
4-Cin. Country Day 9-0.
.................... 193
5-Turomo 8- 1................................................. 159
6- Bellaire St. John 8· 1.
.. 127

?- Independence (I) 9-0.
. ........ 11 6
8- BeallsvilleR- 1 ..
.. .......... ................. 99
9-Springfie ld C:ath . Cent . 8- 1
............... 84
10-HEMLOCK MILLER 8· 1............................. 65 '
Others rn~hlnc 11 or more points: 11·
Pandora-Gilboa 42. 12-Norwalk St. Paul .~9 . 13·
Oregon Stritch 29. 14-Cuyahoga Hts. 26. IS· Kirtland
ll.

:~

NHL standings

Tonight's games

Thursday's games

Atlanllc Division

n

fum

New Jersey ........... .4
Philadelphta .. .. .... .. ..4
NY. Rangers ......... .4
Pi ttsburgh .............. 2
N.Y Islanders ....... .2

1.

:r BI &amp;

7

0

3
6

I
I
I
2
I

2

4

I ·10
I 10

0

0

lif !iA

21
27
9 21
6 24
5 1.5

Northeast DiYislon
Toronto ................... 7 ~ I 0 15
Onawa .
.. ... 6 2 I 0 l.l
.2 5 4 0
8
Uoston .
Mcntreal...
J 7 0 0 6
Buffalo
.... I 6 2 0
4

Southt:ast Division
Horida ..
..5 J I I 12 24
Carolina ..
' ..... .4 2
0 II 2 ~
Atlanta .. . . ......... .2 ; 2 I
7 18
Washingto n .. . . ... 2 4 2 0
6 10
Tampa Bay . .. .... 2 4 I
6 19

·'

"
WESTERN CONFERENCE

-·-

Ctnlral llhislon
.. .. ....... 6 I
I 0

n l!rroi J
S• Lc ui!i ..
.. .6
Nash\' illl' .
4
Chrcagu .. ..... .....0

18
26
2R
22
20

.\2 22
24 "17
20 26
20. 17
22 27

u

20
2J

28
29
21

27
12 JO
9 11
4 20

2.1
19

Northwest Oivldon
V:ml·ou,·cr .... __ .... 6 J 2 I l.S J7
Co lorad11
5 .1 2 0 11 2J
Edmonton ................ J 5. 2 2 10 24
C:tlgary .... :...... ........ 2 7 2 o· 6 2J

_,]
2J
26
40

·'

J
;

0
I

;

0
0
0

P11clOc Dh'is1on
SanJost ............... 7 5 0 0 14
Los Angeles. .. ........ 6 3 Z 0 14
Dallas .
.6 -1 I 0 IJ
PhOL'ni x ........ ....... 5 2 ·' 0 lJ
Anaheim .
.. .... A .'i l I 10
0\'l!rtimc losses !.:UUnt as a loss and a
lie.

Basketball

. National Ba~ ktlhlll Auotlation
DALLAS MAVERICKS: Waived F Charles
Shackleford .
NEW YORK KNICKS : Wnivcd C-F lvano
Newbill and F Amonio Smith.
VANCOUVER GRIZZLIES : Signed C Robert
Werdann.

Football
National Fuolbr&amp;ll Leasue
NFL: Announced the resignation of Ned
Au strian, president and chief operating officer.
CINCINNATI BENGALS: Wai ve G Ken
Blackman.

Chester Church of the
Nazerene
Featuring Evangelist Guy Wright
.of Charleston W. V.

CAN'T TOUCH THIS! - Atlanta right fielder Brian Jordan can't
get to the baseball hit over the fence by the New York Yankees'
Chuck Knoblauch in the eighth Inning of Game 3 of the World Sarles
Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium, where the Yankees overcame a
four-run deficit to win 6-5 In 10 Innings. (AP)
Hospital. Talk to your 'doctor about
a referral to O'Bieness.
Even if you show no signs of
breast cancer, The American Cancer
Society recommends a screening
mammogram every one or two
years after age 40 and every year
after age 50.
Now 'i's the time to take charge
of your health. Do something wonderful for yourself and your family: ·
Schedule a mammogram at the
mammography facility at O'Bieness
Hospital.*

NEW YORK (AP) - NBC
reporter Jim Gray apologized to
~aseball fans Tuesday night for .his
contentious interview with Pete Rose
before Game 2 of the World Series.
NBC was deluged by complaints
from fans Sunday night ~fter Gray's
interview with Rose al Turner Field
in Atlanta. It centered on Rose's lifetime ban from the sport for gambling, and came minutes after he
returned to a major league field for
the first time in I0 years as a member
of baseball's All-Century team.
During NBC's pregame show
Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium,
Gray spoke of the incident .
"After viewing the videotape, I
can understand the reaction of many
baseball fans." Gray said. "I thought
that it was important to ask Pete
Rose if thi s was the right moment for
him to make an apology.
"If in doing so, ihc inlerview
went on too long and took out some
of the joy of the occasion , then I
want to say 10 baseball fan s every where that I'm very sorry about
The Yankees seemed not to be in
a forgiving mood, however. Chad
Curtis, who hit the game·winning
home run in the IOth, refused to
answer Gray's questions after the
game.
"Because of what happen.ed with
Pete, we decided not to say anything," Curtis told Gray on li ve televis ion, ailding a greetmg for his
grandmother before walking away. .
Gray shouted after Curtis, "Don't
you want to talk about your home
run?" but Curtis did not turn around.
In its postgame report on CNBC,
reporter Craig Sager, who had been
covering the Braves' dugout, went
overto the Yankees' side of the field
to ask the questions.
Fans seem willing to forgive
Rose, speaking out in polls in favor
of his reinstatement to baseball. He
received the longest ovation of any
baseball hero introduced Sunday at
Atlanta's Turner Field.
Rose told Gray he was "surpri sed
you 're bombarding me like this on

House

Time
• Monday, October 25, 1999
7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
• 1\Jesday, October 26, 1999
7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
• Wednesday, October 27, 1999
7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Mason Bowling
Lanes results

"It was a changeup." Rendingel'
said. "It looked like it got too mucb
of the plate."
.
Scratched from the lineup in the
opener when Glavine became ill,
Curtis took advantage of this opportunity. A backup left fielder. he did
not play at all in the 1998 sweep of
the Padres.
"I never stepped on the field ,"
Curtis said. "I wasn't pou1ing, we
won the World Series. By the same
token , I felt like I was more congratulating my teammates than celebrating with them."
Kept o~ the Series roster instead
of Shane Spencer. Curtis delivered.
") think somewhere betwee n S!:C,
ond and third , I felt like there wa!'
electricity running through my legs,'''
he said.
The Series win was the lith in a
row for Torre, breaking the record set
by Joe McCarthy of the Yankees. .
Torre, however, was nul certain

Curtis' heroics wou ld get him aspol
tonight.
"I'm going to wait on !hal and see
what happens," Torre sa id. "h 's normally Ricky Ledce agai nsl ri ghl·han·
ders."

New York won in its 200th World
Series game - the Yankees are 120.
7Y- I overall , with lhe St. Loui s
Cardinals' lotal of 96 games ranking
second .

such a festive occasion. "
In an interview Monday, Gray
said his questions shouldn't have
surprised Rose si nce other reporters
asked the same things at a news conference shortly before.
Dick Ebersol. chairman of NBC
Sports, backed Gray by calling· him
"the best TV sports reporter of his
generation." However, Ebersol said
he thought the interview "probably
went too long ."
Switchboards at NBC affiliates
across the country were bombarded
by phone calls from people angry at
Gray - two hours non stop at
WLWT in Cincinnati , where Rose
collected most of his record 4,256
hits for the hometown Reds.
Yankees manager Joe Torre said
the interview was uncalled -for. "For
some reason, we' ve lost sight of the
word 'respect.' We deal too much in
·shock val ue."

Cold Weather Is
Right Around
The Corner

we have what

European
Commission .
.On with drug policy officials of the 15
LONDON (APJ - The United Thursday, he will meet in Portugal Eur?pean Union countries.
States has gained an important ally
in ,its push for an independent internatioAal agency to lead the fight
against
performance-enhancing
drugs.
Britain has agreed to back the
U.S. proposal for a drug agency that
is not controlled by. the International
Olympic
Committee.
Barry
McCaffrey, head of the White House
drug policy office, is touring Europe
Candidate For .
to build support for the plan.
McCaffrey opposes the IOC's
plans for such·an agency, contending
.
it would lack independence and
accountability. But the IOC said
Tuesday it plans to set up its agency
next month and have it operating by
the end of the year.
In a joint statement after a twoNovember 2, 1999
day meeting in London with British
Paid
For
By The Candidate THANK YOU
antidrugs
coordinator
Keith
Victor
Yo~ng
ill 856 E. Main St. Pomeroy, Ohio
Hellawell,
Britain
endorsed
McCaffrey 's five principles:
-an independent arid accountable antidrug agency.
-t~sting on a year-round , nonotice basis.
-no statute of limitations for
drug offenses.
- preservation of samples so they
can be tested years later when new
· detection techniques are developed.
-advanced research.
McCa ffrey will prese nt his plan in
Belgium on Wednesday to the

Victor Young, III

you need to
tune up your
Toy A &amp; KeroSun Heaters

Pomeroy
Village COUNCIL
.

Wixs&amp;
Accessories

··ELECT--

Vote me in and
let me work for you!.

PICKENS

HARDWARE
103 South 2nd, Mason, WV
PHONE: 773-5583

PRESENTED BY

Vote For A Full Time Trustee

Peoples Choice Presents Switzerland
9 Escorted Days - Departing May 3, 2000

BERNARD D. GILI(EY

No European country is graced with more spectacular s.cenery than Switzerland.
And now Peoples Choice offers you the chance to experience it all... massive peaks
soaring above glacial lakes, green meadows knee-deep in alpine flowers, cozy villages
llJcked in the heart of valleys, and gracious pristine cities! You'll see the best of
Switzerland, including the resort of Interlaken and the majestic Rhine Fa lls ... you'll
even dip into neighboring Liechtenstein, Austria and. Germany 1

Salisbury Township Trustee
Non-Partisan
Expereinced, Qualified, Able
Veteran of W01·ld War 11- DAV Chapter #53
The American Legion, Post 128-VFW Post 9926
l'•icl Fc1r

J

n,. Th ~ Canclicl•rh'

Unlike other European holidays, you will not fjnd yourself constant ly packing and
unpacking as you travel from hotel to hotel. You will stay the entire tirne in the lovely
city of Lucerne, nestled in the Swiss Alps and within an easy day's drive of major sites
and other countries. Your lodging will be the Grand Hotel Europe, a historic four star
hotel with all the charm and elegance you wou lil expect from a European hotel.

Bnn~m l 1). Cilkr1y, 390ANI• S t. , Mirldh~ l l ort , Ohiu

Bank
.

This trip package includes SwissAir flights. deluxe motorcoach transportation, 7
nights accommodations in Lucerne. 17 meals (breakfast and dinner daily) , all tours
and sight·seeing. baggage handling and local guide. All for only $2,095 per member'

. .,

on 1t!

Sound like fun? Join us for a Swiss Travel Preview!
Thursday, October 28, 1999
6:30p.m.
City National Bank
2212 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant

Thursday, October 28, 1999
2:00p.m.
City Naflonal Bank
3601 MacCorkle Avenue, SE
Charleston

If you've got a computer,

access to the internet and a.
standard web 11rowser, you've got
'
1\ tljll ( ... ( ) Jl illlt ( &gt;ll iH l !Jr Ill . With Peoples
OnLine Connection, you can do a whole lot of banking
from wherever you are. To sign up, enroll at
\ \ \ \ \ \ I l l ()1)1{ ... ll, ll llLIIj) { IIlli . Even if you aren't an
existing Peoples Bank customer, visit the website for
a Peoples OnLine Connection test drive! ~t's simple.
It's secure. For more information,talk to a Peoples Bank
personal banker or call 1-800-3 74-6123 .
c

• Thurroay,_October 28, 1999
5 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Place &amp;
Admission
• Located in the former Rite-Aid building
across from People's Bank (Main Street)

• All canned food donations
will go to the local food pantry

NBC's Gray apologizes to fans
for tone of interview with Rose

this."

"Screamers"

and 1932 - the I Ith win in that
. streak was the game in which Babe
Ruth supposedly called his shot at
Wrigley Field against Charlie Root.
Glavine, scratched from his Game
I start because t&gt;f the tlu , fortified
himself with a plate of ravioli and
pitched like a two.time Cy Young
Award winner. And Atlanta looked
every bit like the team that led the
majors with 103 .wins.
Bret Boone hit three doubles in
the first four innings against Andy
Pettitte and finished with four hits.
Every Braves batter had a hit by the
fifth, and by then it was 5-1 and the
sellout crowd of 56,794 was booing.
Boone could been seen huddling
in the dugout with batting coach Don
Baylor, checking out what appeared
to be hitting charts. During Monday's
workout, Baylor held an ex tended
session of batting practice and
stressed patience at the plate and
emphasized hitting to the opposite
field .
It all worked in the early going for
a team that hit .121 in the first two
games. After that , the Yankees quick·
ly hit !heir first four home runs of the
Series.
"We're not a home-run hilling
team, but sometimes these things
happen. " Torre said. ·
Curtis hit the I tth game·ending
homer in the Series history, and the
first for the Yankees since Mickey
Mantle in 1964. It al so was the
Yankees' second such shot in' this
postseason - Bernie Williams did it
to Boston in Game t ' of the AL
Championship Series.

By STEPHEN WILSON

the public.

Breast cancer has killed millions
of American women. Probably
someone you know. Regular mammography at our fully accredited
mammography facility is one of
the best things you can do to protect your health.
·
A mammogram. though,
depends greatly on the professionals who perfonn it and those who
interpret it. That's why we offer
you only certified technologists and
board certified radiologists on our
mammography stiff at O'Bieness

since Joe Carter's Game 6 shot won it
all for Toronto in 1993.
"I have a tendency when I get up
there in that situation, I try to hit a
home run," Curtis said. "So I went
up there and tried to hit it up the middle, and I hit a home run."
Curtis inade his first ever start in
the Series and ended up as the hero
with the first walkoff homer he could
remembei: hitting. Until Tuesday, he
had homered just once since May 23
and had not hit one at Yankee
Stadium since Sept. 23, 1998.
"Always somebody you don ' t
expect," Cox said. " You never know
where it's going to come from."
Roger Clemens, who joined the
Yankees this spring in hopes of win·
ning his first World Series ring, gets a
chance to close it out in .Game 4
tonight against John Smoltz.
No team in baseball history has
overcome an 0-3 deficit in postseason
play. The Yankees are trying to win
their third World Series in four years,
a streak that began when they beat
Atlanta in 1996.
"We swept four before. but nol in
the World Series," Cox said.
Mariano Rivera, Mr. Automatic in
October, pitched two innings for the
victory. Ha has not allowed a run in
his last 4 I ,3 innings, artl has a post·
season streak of 24 :3 scoreless
innings.
While the Braves lost !heir seventh straight Series game, the
Yankees moved within one victory of
tying the longest Series winning
streak. The record was set by their
Murderers' Row teams of 1927, 1928

U.S., Britain discuss possiblility of forming
new anti-drug agency outside IOC control

Pastor Herbert Grate invites

1

• Admission is $2/person or
$1/person &amp; (I) can offood

Knoblauch 's two-run homer in the
eighth off right fielder Brian Jordan ·s
glove made il 5-all and finish ed
Glavine.
·
. In the lOth , Curtis hit a 1- 1 pitch
from Mike Remlinger into the
Braves' left.field bullpen for the first
game-ending homer in the Series

7 p.m. Nightly 6 p.m. Sun~ay

Reg1un 9: !·Orrville (7·2) 21.3833. 2-Copley (9COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How il state panel
()) 21.3222. 3-Ak.ron Hoban (7-2) 21.0098. 4Hubbanl (8· 11 19.0702. 5- P=y (6-1) IS 4611. 6- of spon.s wrilers Md broadcasters rates OhJo high
Cheuerla':'d W. Geauga {1-2) 14.5302. 7-Mantua school foo tbilllteams m 1he sevemh of eigh1 weekly •
1999 Associated Press poll -by OHSAA divisron.'i,
C~sJwood (6- J} LU86J. 8- Bay Village Bay (6-3;
11 .8888. 9-Twiniburg Chamberlin (4-5) 11 .2870. 10- with won-lost rel'ord and total poinJs (first-place
votes in parcnthe~s) :
!:leve. Orange (5-3) 11.0010.
Region 10: 1-Col. Wanenon t8- l) 27 .4694. 2·
Division I
Col. DeSales (6- .\) 20.3722. 3- Lima Bath (8-l)
19.5000 4-Willard (8-1) 17J986. 5-Bellevue {7- 1) fum
flo.
)6.8245. 6-Napoleon (6-3 ) 160750 ?.Shelby (6--])
1-Gmve City 124) 9-0
.. ..U5
1~ . 0048 . 8-Bellefonttline (7-2) 14.7777. 9-Sunbury
2·Cin St. Xavier (7) !1-0...
.. ....... .289
J- MMs illon Washi ngton ( I) 9-0 .................. B O
Big Walnut (6·.' ) ll30S5. I 0-0ttnwil-G1andorf (6-3)
12.2888.
~Cen tcn, ill c (2J 9-0...
.. ... .. .:. .... 205
Region 11 : !· Poland Scminilry (9·0) 2 .~ . 8981 . l - 5- Druns wick 9-0 ..
....... .. .. .. 188
6-WOrthingmn KiiDourne 9·0 ...
........ 16 1
Millersbur! W Holmes 19-0) 22 9666 -' ·
Steubenvil e (8- l J 20.5857 -1-Loui ;vi lte 0-2)
7-Solon 9--0 .......................................... 12-1
8.4666. I-THORNV ILLE SHERIDAN (7. 2) 8- Ci n. Elder 8- 1........ . .
. .... 108
7.1666. 6·Lisbnn Rt:aver (6-.\ ) 1~ . 6 1 92 79-Cleve. S1. lgnut ius 7-2
66
McCONNELSV ILLE MORGAN !1-2) 15.0122. 8· 10 -C:mton M c Kinl~y 7-1
.............. 58
Canton Cent: Calh. f.~- 4 ) 14.740.\ 9- BeloiJ West
Others rrc:tiv ing 12 11r mort' points; II Branch (6· 3) 14. 1444 10-Rayl;rml Buckeye Loci!\ LOGAN 26. 12- Findlay IH t l. N. C;tmon Hoover
(5-4) 13.49--H.
14 14-Shaker Hts. U
Region l 1: !·London (9-0 J 10.9055 . 2·
8ellbrook (9·0) 19.&lt;888. .1-JACKSON (7·21
Division II
18.7277. 4-Day. Chan1ina£k -Julienne 0-2) 18.0872 fum
fu.
~-Cin . Purcdl Marian (6- :1 ) 16.6000. 6-ASHVILLE
1-Dover (2 1I 9-0 ...
.. ............ J07
TEAYS VALLEY (8· 11 15872l. ?-GALLI POLIS 2- Piqua {2) 9-0... ..... .. .. .. ..
......... 27J
GALLI A ACAO. t7-:U 15.5447. S-Eaton (8- 1)
.\-Cuy. Falls ~'a1 s h Jesuu (.iJ 8· 1 ................. 214
1.1.9444. 9- New Rich moud 17·2 ) 12.6277 . 10- 4-TrentOn Edgewood 0) 9-0
.. 205

!'Ill~~ .. ~~~-~~~,~~~~~~' Haunted

lose. "

Wed. Oct.,27 ·
through ·
Sun. Ocr., 31

18

22 24
28 22
29 26
regulalion

CLEVELAND INDIANS: Signed RHP Janue

Brewington, LHP Cameron Caimcross and LHP Roy
Padilla to minor league contracts.
National Lap
MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Released RHP
Hideo Nomo.

Revival

IJ

.W _, I
]6 29

Transactions
Baseball

Tampa Bay at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
A1lama 1 1 Toronto, 7:30p.m.
Chicago at Montreal, 7:30 p.m.
St. Louis at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
N.Y. hlanders at Aorida. 7:30pm.
Colorado at Dl!iroit, 7:30 p ~
Piusburgh at Anaheim, 10: ~0 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

NEW YORK (AP) - The fans
were gone, the lights were off and the
trash sweepers were out in force at
Yankee Stadium afier Game 3.
Their brooms might have a whole
new meaning tonight.
As in: Yanks in four, goodbye
Braves.
A 3·0.edge sure didn' t look likely
for most of Tuesday night. Atlanta
had everything going its way until
New York once again found a way to
win, rallying for a 6-5 victory on
Chad Curtis' lOth-inning home run .
"I'm still amazed, and yet I'm not
amazed ," Yankees manager J&lt;?e Torre
said. " We go out there and play nine
innings. And good things happen."
Or even ex.tra innings.
New York trailed 5-1 against Tom
Glavine - the home fan s were boo·
ing - . before Curtis homered twice
and Chuck Knoblauch and Tino
Martinez also connected. The
Yankees won their lith straight
World Series game, putting them. one
victory away from 'I s.econd consecutive sweep.
"It would have bee n nice to have
won," Atlanta manager Bobby Cox
said. " It would have gotten us going
real good. This was a big one to

Amerlatn Leaaue

Tampa Ba~ at Boston, 7 p m.
Cal!atY at Ottawa, 7 p.m
Colorado at Philadelphia. 7:30p.m.
Phoenix at VanCQuver, 10.30 p.m.
Piusburgh at Los Angeles. IO:JO p.m.
Nashvi lle at San Jose, 10 · ~0 p.m.

Hockey

Do Something
Wonderful
For Yourself And
Your Family.
Schedule A
Mammogram.

Ohio H.S. football poll

l\Jesclay's scores
Atlanta 2. Cillgary I
Vancoli\'er 5, Phi ladelphia 2
Edmonton J, Phoenix I
Los Angeles 5. W&lt;~s hingto n 2

The Dally Sentinel • Pag' 5

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital
SS Hospilal Drive, Athens, OH 4S70t
6t4-S9Jc ~SSI

www.oblencss.org

*Fully accredited by the American College of Radiology arid
the Food and Drua Administration.

(

A hospttal we cim all
be proud of.

1._------~-..----------------+·---------~----_j

Early Wednesday Mixed
League (as of OcL 20)
Jwn
Secord .
Dairy Queen Brazier .............. .42-22
Meigs Co. GolfCourse ........... 41 -23
The Dark Side .... ........ ............ .38-26
Tony's Carryout .. :.......... ......... 35-29
F.O.E. 2 I71 .... ......................... 28-36
Meigs lndustries ............. ...........8-56
Team high series: Meigs Co.
Golf Course ( t 836)
Team high game: The Dark Side
(678)
.
Men
High series: Bill Slack (547):
Sam Smith (541)
High game: Loren Coleman
(208): Slack (201) ·
·
Women
High series: Pat Carson (479 );
Margaret Eynon (430)
·High game: Kaye Spencer ( I87);
Carson ( 182)
·

For more Information, please call your local Peoples Choice cOordiNIIor.
Point Pleasant ...................... .................. Mary Fowler ................................ ,..........,pc)4j):~f:11028
. Charleston ........ :.. :... :...... ...... ............... Debbie Harrison ............................ ::......,;;.
Ripley ....... ......,.................................... Beverly COt:hrlrl
Berno~Q00 ........;.~.""':.~ ............0

"""

Now You've Really Gpt Connections!

r a v e
I

An Exclusive Servic.e of City Nationllllllnk of, West Virginia •
.

I

,,

,.

I

II

II

~

I

"

,.

,,

I

{;

"

'

"

\'';iii

1:

I

-~

II

'

�' I

..

By The Bend

Wednesday, October 27, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

'

Columnist lauds Marauders' Roush, Miller, Feder·al Hocking.
.

.

Scholastic
sidelight
By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
Tens of thousands of games had
been played through the deca~es, yet
Tyler Martin did something that had
never been done in Ohio high school
football.
The Mechanicsburg running back
carried 20 times for 293 yards and
scored a state record ol pomts - all
in the lirst half - of a 65-0 victory
over Ridgemont last weekend.
Martin's points came on runs of·
two, nine, 10, 14. 26, 33, 36 and 75
yards. a 40cyard punt return and
seven extra- point~.

The 61 points hroke the previous
state record of 59, set by ChaunccyDover's Hubert Bobo in I!J5 2. Seven
players had held the previous mark
of eight touchdown runs in a game.
Martin's eight rushing touchdowns
tied Bobo's mark.
By the way. Martin dtdn't play
and. nobody scored in the

la~t

two

quarters .

He's not the only one burning out
the lights on scoreboards: Pomeroy
Meigs' Justin Roush scored all but
two of his team's points in a 41-40
ovenime loss to McArthur Vinton
County. rushing for 233 yards on 29
carries and scoring six touchdowns:
and in a span of seven minutes, Bart
Fisher scored or set up all of Tiffm
Calvert 's points - on a 61-yard punt
retum, an 11 -yard touchdow n rcception, a 70-yard touchdown .catch. a
4Q..yard interception return and three
extra-point kicks - in a 27-0 win
over Sycamore Mohawk.
Well grounded: Oregon Clay's
Derek Besgrove rushed for a school
and league record 359 yards and
scored touchdowns on runs of 30. 12,
23, 79. 54 and 44 yards in a 49-13
win over Fostoria; Clifton Cox
gained a school-record 345 yards on
just 17 carries - scoring on runs of
64 and 61 yards - in Hemlock
Miller's 65-1"1 victory over
Reedsville Eastern; in his first game
as the starting tailback at Bunon
Berkshire. Caleb Miller picked up
308 yards on 24 carries in a 34-15
win . over Newbury; Columbus

Nonhland's Garrett Randall rushed
for 305 yards and scored four times
on 30 carries in a 34-13 win over
Columbus West; Crestline's Josh
Friley rushed for i58 yards on 33
carries and scored twice, but the
Junkyard ' Dogs still Iosito Bucyrus
Wynford 28-27;
Extra effort: Millersburg West
Holmes'
Rod
Taylor has carried .
99 times for a 9.7yard average to
lead the Knights
within a victory
of their first
unbeaten season
smce
1982;
•
.. .
Shawn Cole set
"'
',
A m a n d a · &lt;;&lt;L /
Clearcreek's season
rushing
record with 1.439
yards
through
~inc games as the
Aces picked up
their fifth shutout,
34-0 over Logan
Elm; Granville's
Jon Chupka mtcrJUSTIN
Senior RB -

cepted four pasges and reilhned one
50 yards for a touchdown in a 19-8
win over Williamsport; Matt Heinz
has only 17 catches this year- but
10 have gone for touchdowns- for
top-ranked Grove City; Jon Clark
completed 3(J..of-59 passes for 437
yards and three touchdowns and
Northmont still lost to Troy, 69-27,
·
which got 305
rushing yards on
17 carries by
D
a
v
e
Levorcheck; and
Findlay's Ben
Roethlisberger
threw
three
touchdown passes in a 38-28 win
over
Toledo
Whitmer, giving
him a staterecord 39 for the
season.
Note to opponents: kick the
ball away from
Yellow Springs'
B r i a n
ROUSH
C r d ssw h it e.
Meigs H.S.

Crossl'(hite returned four punts for score of 41-7. Yet the Chipps upend210 yards - including touchdown ed the previously unbeaten Smithies
jaunts of 50 and 80 yards ~ in a 39• 10-7 on J.T. Joyner 's 34-yard field
6 win over Dayton Jefferson. On the goal into the'wind as time expiredyear, he has returned 17 punts for his first field goal attempt ever.
660 yards, a 38.2-yard average, and Elsewhere, Willard's Charlie Frye
five touchdowns.
threw three touchdown passes · TEAM WORK: With a ninth win; including a four-yarder to Chad Carr
Hemlock Miller will set a school on fourth down in the second overrecord; Stewart Federal Hocking's 7- time- of a 28-21 win over previ2 mark is its best since going 6-2-2 in ously unbeaten Bellevue; and Lima
1970; Doylestown Chippewa needs a Shawnee was just 2-6. ·yet stunned
win over Hillsdale to reach nine wins top-ranked Lima Bath 28-27 on
for the first time since I956. while Brian Arnold's 52-yard touchdown
Hillsdale has already won a school- pass from John Long and Long's
record seven games this season; two-point conversion pass to
Fairfield just won the Greater Miami · Maurice Shelby with 48 seconds left.
Conference title fOJ the second time
Finally, Dylap Wessell played one
- when the Indians won it in 1986, of his best games in Jefferson Area's
they went on to win a state cham pi- 38-27 upset of Geneva. Four days
onship: Marysville is 9-0 for the first earlier, his father, Lynn, died at the
time since 1953; the shonest of the · age of 43 of kidney cancer.
eight scoring plays covered 26 yards
Wessell rushed for 90 yards and
inDolaHardin Nonhern's41-13 win two touchdowns on 24 cmies and
over Leipsic; and Columbus Grove also cleared the way for tailback
(8- 1) has six shutouts and has Dustin Park, who ran for 167 yards.
outscored its victims 251 -22.
. ";fhis was the biggest game 'kY
UPSETTING: Smithville had life," Wessell said.
·
won the last six meetings with .
Maybe not so coincidentally, the
Doylestown Chippewa by an average victory came on parents night.
'

Minnesota president wants to show NCAA he means business
By GREGG AAMOT
MINNEAPOLIS

(AP)

University of Minnesota prcs itknt

Mark Yuduf said school 0t'ficiab has
tu show the NCAA they arc serious
about cleaning up a men's baskethall
program rocked by &lt;Kadc mic cheatIng .

And he hopes a one-year. se lfimposed ban on postseason play will
Impress the athletic govern ing body
when it completes it s own invrsrig.ation months from now and hands out
its own sanctions.
"We must demonstrate good faith
and take meaningful action to repair
the damage that has been Jone by
others." Yudof said Tuesday in
announcing his decision to ban postseason play. " It's the right thing to
do."

The university also is placing the
program on probation for an unspecified length of time. That will mean
h1gher le vels of reporting to the
NCAA , such as periodic se lf-studies
and compliance checks, Yudof said.
An investigation into the men's
basketball program began in March
after former tutor Jan Gange lhoff
claimed she did more than 400
pieces ~f course work for at least 20
basketball players from 1993 to
1998.
Yudof said earlier that the investigation revealed "numerous, maybe
even massive " instances of academic
fraud. It has since widened to include
accusations of improper payments
and travel irregularities, and alleged
sexual and other misconduct in the
men's athletics dcpanment.

The president said the university
and the NCAA could impose more
sanctions after the final" university
report is completed. probably by
Nov. I0. The repprt is expected to he
made public about 10 days later.
NCAA
spokeswoman
Jane
Jankowski said the organization
would not comment specilical ly on
the sanctions. But she said it "
appropriate and common for schools
to come up with their own punishments.
"Universities do frequently hand
down their own penalties, and our
(infractions) committee considers
that and can adopt those sanctions, as
well as add other penalties," she
said.
The NCAA is supposed to have an
infraction hearing next spring and

could issue sanctions then or wait
until the fall.
Yudof said he realized some basketball team members may feel the
sanctions are unfair since no current
players were involved in the cheating. But he added, "The NCAA has
·to worry about deterrents. I have to
worry about deterrents in . the
future."
The postseason ban includes The
National Invitation Tournament and
the NCAA tournament, but not the
Big Ten tournament.
Gangclhoff, the woman who
sparked the investigation, left her job
at a casino in Danbury, Wis., to listen
to the university's news conference
on her car radio.
"I think it's just the beginning,"
Gangelhoff said. "President Yudof

must have enollgh information to
realize these two things (sanctions)
were going to happen regardless of
whether or not he has the complete
report in hand."
Yudof did not say whether job~
might be lost because of the lindings
in the investigation. "I don't want to
presage what might come out in the
report," he said.
Coach Clem Haskins resigned
under pressure. in June and accepted
a $1.5 million buyout of his contract.
He has said he had no knowledge of
any academic cheating in the basketball program.
· Dan Monson of Gonzaga
University was hired to replace
Haskins.
One reason to come out with
sanctions now was to improve team

'
morale, Yudof said . Monson agreed.
"For the staff and our team. it's
the beginni.ng of the end," Monson
said.
Monson said he would . be open
with prospec tive players about the
sanctions, which both he and .Yudof
acknowledged would hurt recruiting.
However. if they end after one year.
they may not have as great an
impact, Monson said.
·
The NCAA holds a 64-team tournament at the end of every regular
season to determine a national champion. The NIT is held for 32 teams
that don't qualify for the NCAA tournament.

Minnesota has won the NIT twice
and qualified fur the NCAA Final
Four in 1997.

Niners lean toward putting Young on injured reserve list soon
By DENNIS GEORGATOS
The agent for the San Francisco ing again thts year. The team and
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) - 49ers quanerback said Tuesday he Young's · doctors seem to feel the
Steve Young's season appears to be doesn't foresee Young, still bothered same way.
finished.
by post-concussion symptoms, playThe two-time NFL MVP is

expected to be placed on injured
reserve within the next week or so, a
course favored by general manager
Bill Walsh, according to a club
source, and echoed 'by agent Leigh

Ste~~?:~etermined
Fed era
I
Off •Ic I· aIs say Stewart 's·
•
k
d
.
h
d
t
d
·Lear)et 1ac e 11 IQ t a 8 recor er - ~~~t~~~oi~j~~r~ere;:v~~Th~~iili:

he. not risk anythtng more this yellf/' Stetnberg s81d
Tuesday. "He's probably going to

By JOHN MacDONALD
MINA, S.D. (AP) - The questions arc mounting as investigators
try to determine what happened to
golfer Payne Stewart's Learjct as it
flew over America's heartland.
There is no flight data recorder to
provide clues. The cockpit voice
recorder is a 30-minute loop of tape
that hasn 't been found. And medical
experts fear the remains of the six
victims may not reveal whether they
died after the aircraft suddenly lost
pressurc.
No one was apparently consc ious
at the controls fur four hours
Monday. when the jet !lew 1.400
miles acmss the country on autopi lot
before running out of fuel and slamming nose-first into the ground near
Mina .
Most of the plane·s debris is
embedded in mud and soil w1thin a
10-foot-deep. 30-foot-wide crater. ·
said Bob Francis, vice chairman of
the National Transportation Safety
Board.
"It looks like the aircraft was pretty much vertical when it hit the
ground," he said Tuesday. "The
ground is soft, and it went in fairly
deep. It's ·going to be a challenge,
with the wreckage and sorting out
what's there."
Investigators planned to return
today to search inside the crater for
pieces of the plane . Tissue samples
from the remains were being tested.
Authorities are focusing on a theory that the plane may have suffered
sudden cabin depressurization, which
could have caused the crew and pas-

·
sengers to black out or die. But proving that will be difficult.
"The issues obviously are what
was damaged, what might have been
an issue prior to impact," Francis
sa1d. "That will be a real challenge."
In the plane's last radio transmission above Gainesville, Fla., the pilot
was mstructed to climb to 39,000
feet. Planes that fly above 12,000 feet
are pressurized because the air does
not contain enough oxygen for people
to breathe comfonably.
Even a videotape made by fighter
pilots who chased after the plane may
yield few clues because its windows
were frosted over in the minus-70
degree atmosphere. "The. quality is
probably not going to be good
enough to help us:· Francis said.
Four years ago, federal regulators
ordered that valves that regulate pressure on Lcarjcts be replaced to "prevent rapid decompression of the airplane."
The
Federal
Aviation
Administration also limited planes to
an altitude of 41,000 feet until the
valves were replaced because of the·
possibility they could fail. The FAA
gave owners 18 months to comply.
James Watkins, president of
Sunjet Aviation Inc., which operated
the jet, told The Washington Post in
today's editions that the aircraft's
maintenance log books showed that
the new valves had bee n installed and
that the plane was in compliance with
FAA directives.
Francis said investigators also still
hope to recover the plane's cockpit
voice recorder, although he admitted

field and that's where those players
it may be of little help even if it did go."
survive the crash.
Young, 38, was expected to
'The recorder consisted of a 30- address his condition and status with
minute loop that usually records over the team today. It's hi's first such
itself. And Stewart and the others on meeting with reporters in two weeks
the plane might already have been since word surfaced that his primary
dead by the last half-hour of the neurologist, Dr. Gary Steinberg, who
flight. The plane did not carry a flight is unrelated to the agent, had made a
data recorder.
long-term recoll\lllendation about
Francis also said NTSB invcstiga- whether Young should play again.
tors in Florida were examining the
While Dr. Steinberg's opinion
maintenance records of the Learjct. .hasn 't been disclosed, Young has
Watkins said the plane h'ad .been conceded the report was "discouraginspected before it took uff and four ing" and his agent has said that the
other times in the past week.
"
initial medical opinion has been reafThe 23-year-old. eight-passenger firmed in consultations with other
plane had logged more than 10,000
hours of flight time but had no history of serious mechanical problems,
according to the FAA.
Also killed in the crash were
Stewart's agents, Robert Fraley and
Van Ardan , and the two pilots,
Michael Kling, 43, and Stephanie
Bellegarrigue, 27. Bruce Borland, 40,
one of Jack Nicklaus' golf course ·
designers, was also believed to have
been on the plane.

specialists.
Young continues to speak with
some of his contemporaries who
were forced out of the game by
repeated concussions, including AI
Toon and Merrill Hoge.
He's also gathering more medical
advice and may see another specialist this week, but coabh Steve
Mariucci and Walsh have. both said
that they· would give greatest weight
to Dr. Steinberg's conclusions, and
they are in no hurry to see Young
back on the lield.
The concern with Young is he
could be at risk for permanent brain
damage from another concussion.
Mariucci said Monday that the
·team, which has a bye this week,
hopes to resolve Young's status in the
next week or two and said injured
reserve was a possibility. It would
allow Young an extended period
away from football while not totally
shutting the door on his eventual
return.
Though Young has not received
medical clearance to play and has no

real hope of getting it any time soon,
he remains optimistic that his concussion symptoms will eventually
clear, leaving at least a possibility he
could return next season.
Leigh Steinberg said there would
be no decision or announcement on
the possibility of Young·s retirement
until after the season, but added that
Young also will abide by the final
medical consensus.
"Nothing is going to happen in
the way of retirement this season,"
Leigh Steinberg said. "He will come
to the right decision, but this will
take a little time."
Young continues to feel a strong
sense of responsibility to the team,
especially now that it's struggling
without him , and wouldn't think of
leaving in the middle of the season.
By going on injured reserve .
though, he could stick around and get
treatment while remaining with the ,
team as a locker room and sideline
presence along with helping advise
his replacement, Jeff Garcia.

Grambling beat Prairie View
Eddie Robinson's 324th career
victory, a college football
record.
In 1895, at the Newport,
R.I., Golf Club, Horace
Rawlins defeated Willie Dunn
with a 36-hole total of 173 in
the first U.S. Open.

riOlZER Cli~IIC

for MAYOR

Dear Friends and Residence of Middleport,
As a "Write In" Candidate for Mayor of Middlep6rt, I am asking for your vote so we, together, can
continue working in the best interest and for'the improvement of our village.
I have served on the Village Council for the past three years. During that time I have served as
president of council, acting Mayor, and full time Mayor of the Village.
As one of your local officials I have had the opportunity to serve you in many ways.
~ Voted for the Board of Public Affairs to promote better water and sewage.

• Submitted a CDBG Grant for funds to pave streets.
• Published the first Water Confidence Report for Middleport.
• Instrumental in developing set of "Rules For Council"
• Appointed an Economic Development Committee to study growth for the Village.
• Activated an existing Middleport Tree Authority Board.
• Established a Neighborhood Watch Program for the safety of village residents.
• Developed a "Records Commission" to review village records.
• Rewrote
established ordinances for improvement of village appearance.
• Appointed a Street Commissioner Position to comply with the Ohio Revised Code.
• Workin~ on Issue II Grant for fu(lds to pave streets
• Worked towards obtaining the Nature Works Grant for park improvements.
• Supported the major purchases of your new Leaf Machine and Sewer Jet Machine.
• Paved road to cemetery.
• Council and village employees are working hard for the improvement of the Village of Middleport.

a

and

If you will please write in the name of the office "Mayor: and my name "Sandy lannarelli" in lhe
space inside your ballet, I will continue working for you in every way I can. We are all proud of our
community and we all want to make it the best place in southern Ohio to live and rfiise.bur children.
With your support we can accomplish all the necessary things to make that happen.
Thank you for your vote and your support.
SANDY IANNARJ::Lll

HOLZER CliNIC......
Celebrating

so Years of servil::e!

"WRITE IN"
"MAYOR" Sandy Ia:rinarelli
Paid lor by: Concerned citizens lor Village of Middleport. Susan Baer- Treasurer

•

\

Dear Ann Landers: Recently,
my college sweetheart and I got
together again after not seeing one
another for 45 years. "Ed" does not
understand why I am reluctant to
marry him. I believe we have some
issues that need to be resolved lirst.
Ed has had a triple bypass hean
operation. He also has emphysema
from long-term smoking. When we
go out to cat. he will have two drinks
before dinner, wine with dinner, and
'occasionally, an after dinner drink. •
He then becomes overly friendly and
talks (o everyone in the place.
On several occasions; he has
arrived home half potted and argumentative. I have never associated
with people who hang out in hars ,
and told him so. He. says. I am a snob
and calls me "Mother Superior."
Ed has barely enough income to
pay his living expenses, and spends
several hundred dollars a month on
his addictions. He tells me · that
everyone he knows drinks moderately (like him) and that I am the one
with the problem.
When I remind him how harmful
cigarettes are, he becomes defensive
and says he will Cl\t back "after we
get_ married." Should I marry him?
Wl1at do you think, Ann?-- MOTHER SUPERIOR IN OREGON
DEAR OREGON: Your relationship with Ed, as you describe it,
does not sound as if it has the ingredients of a happy marriage. First and
foremost, I believe he has a booze
problem that would be a continuing
source of trouble. And then, there
are the cigarettes.
Although you didn't go irito
detail, I get the impression that Ed
has money problems as well. You
need this man in your life like a
moose needs a hat rack.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm writing
in response to that inquiry from
"G.C. of Sagamore Hills, Ohio who
wondered why photos in obituaries
are iiWariably 20 to 50 years old. i
can give him a simple answer.
When my mother died recently at
age 86, my siblings and I gave the
local paper a photo taken when she
was in her late 30s, although we had
more recent ones. We knew she
would want to be remembered at her
best -- when she was young. vital
and attractive.
We selected a photo for the newspaper that represented our mother -the mother who raised us, not the old
woman she was when she died. I
believe ·this is the way it is with all
adult children. -- NANCY IN LUBBOCK. TEXAS
DEAR NANCY: My Sagamore
correspondent makes a valid point
when he opts for more reality, but I

Community
Calendar

Page7
Wednesday, October 27, 1999

'\

can understand why you and yoor
siblings felt as you did about using a
more youthful picture of your mothcr. You also believed it would have

honored your mother's wishes to
publish a photo of her in her prime. I
believe that the family's preference
should prevail.
Dear Ann: When I married
"Dwayne," he had two grown
daughters from his first marriage,
and I had a grown son. We are very
happy together, and I want to keep it
that way.
I brought more money into this
marriage than Dwayne did. Since

much of my money was inherited
from my parents, I feel it is perfectly OK if I give special gifts to my
son and daughter in law. However, I
do not want to create problems by
making my stepdaughters jealous.
Both of Dwayne's daughters are
lovely people, but I did not raise
them, and do not feel the same closeness toward them as I do my son.
Am I asking for trouble by showing
favoritism? Please help.-- AUSTIN,

TEXAS
DEAR AUSTIN: Your stepdaughters are part of your family
now, and I assume you remember
them on their binhdays, anniversaries and holidays. If so, you should
not feel guilty about giving additional gifts to your son and his family.
Do you have questions about sex.
but no one to talk to?' Ann Landers'
booklet, "Sex and the teenager," is
frank and to the point. Send a self

addressed, long, business size envelope and a check or money order for
$3.75 (this includes postage and
handling)· to: Teens, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill .
60611-0562. (I n Canada, send
$4.55.)
(
To find out more about Ann Landers and read her past columns, visit
the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.crealors.com.

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

P 0 WEl L'S

~

STORE H~URS
Monday thru
Sunday
8 AM·IO PM

2/$5

298 SECOND ST.
Accepts Credit Cards

12 PK 12 OZ CANS

WE
THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRI.CES GOOD THRU OCTOBER 30, 1999

WHITE
HOUSE
APPLE JUICE

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

c
FRESH FA~I~Y PACK CHICK:N .

~9 C

4

LB.

Drulhsl1cks or Th1ghs ••
~ FRESH

$

BONELESS PORK

1
79
Cubed Pork ............~::.. $1
.
99
Pork Sausage •••
··
S·lrlo·ln Ch ops· ..•...••..
LB.

4'

·

FRESH

USDA CHOICE FRESH BEEF BONELESS$

Chuck Roast •••••• :~.

BALLARD'S (lSST VIR)

139

C

.

•

!:·:~~

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

·

Lb.

Cubed Steak.........

Ch ck S.tea

lb

$

219

·
$ 89

"$

$2'!
DOUBLE ROLL

FRESH CALIFO

.Brocco1•1••••••••••••••••••••••••
bunch

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. Lutheran
Church. Hobo dress contest. Hostesses, Donna Byer and Shirley Beegle.

f

WESSON
OIL

KLEENEX
COTTONELLE
BATH TISSUE

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District Board
of Supervisors, Thursd~y. 8 p.m. at
conservation office.

SUNDAY
CARPENTER - Darren Smith,
Welch, W. Va. to sing .at Carpenter
Baptist Church, 10:30 a.m. service
Sunday.

2/$5

(REG, CANOLA, BEST BLEND)

POMEROY - Wildwood Garden Club, Wednesday, I p.m. at the
home of Betty Milhoan.

POMEROY - Friday's Fun.
Food and fellowship project at
God's Neighborhood Escape for
Teens. Nutritional foods for snacking while there, non-violent games,
computer programs , pool tables
availab le. Center opens at 6 p.m. and
closed at 10:30 _p.m on Friday and
Saturday.

7 UP, DIET 7
UP, DR.
PEPPER, DIET
DR. PEPPER

SJ59
English Roast •••L:~

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs 'County
Farmland Preservation committee, 4
p.m. Wednesday, Extension Office.

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Weekend
revival, First Baptist Church of Middleport, Friday through Sunday, 7
p.m. nightly. Different singers, different speakers each evening. -Friday, Earthen Ve ssels, Rev. Mark
Morrow, speaker; Saturday, Proclaim , Marvin Sallee, speaker; Sunday, Boelk Family Singers, Morrow
speaking; Sunday evening, Boelks
tQ&gt;sing, Charles Swigger to speak.

640Z

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

Sandy lannarelli
''WRITE IN" Candidate

A&amp;M 27-7 in 1985 for coach

,:

.

~

The Daily Sentinel

FRESH LARGE

79 , 99c
.

~

.

2/$ '
Eggs .......................~........
PILLSBURY (ASST VIR)
2/$3
BISCUitS ••••••••••••••••••••••••
·

•

•

4pk9.5oz

99c
Waffles ............~~~:::......
89C
I

.'h 10.5·~\1 oz. $189 MORTON FROZEN (lSST VIR) oz.
Nabisco C eese n1ps
.Dinners.......................
•

14.5-15.5

BLUE RIDGE
BLEACH

79

4

'

VIR)

(ASS~($1
'~).
oz

190Z.

dozen

AUNT JEMI~ FROZEN

LV'S
VETETABLES

DAWN
ORIGINAL
DISH LIQUID

I

OR FRUIT
COCKTAIL

.

JIF PEANUT

BUTTER

,. .! 159
ASST VARIETIES

,'

6.75 ·10

Win A

SO DRI
PAPER TOWELS

4/$1
LIMIT 4 PLEASE
ADD PURCH 3/$1

..

SINGLE ROLL

BANKROLL

This Week
Powell's Super
Value

-

$200
Free

'

.

�-------·--. ~------------~-------------------------:--~,..
••

!

.I
Wednesday, Qctob8r 27, 1999 ·

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, October 27,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. I

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1

2 Counky Watcl'ldogS, No
Chains. Or Fences , 740·•46·
1756.

.Rx for wife's sciatica: better car seat, manipulative treatment

3/4 Beagle Pups . 6 Weaks Did,
Free To Good Home. 740·441 ·
1440.

'

f a m ily

~edicirze
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Question: My wife has devel oped sciatica. and has done all of the
"standard" medical treatments-pain
medication (ibuprofen and Relafen).
therape utic .massage and ph ysical
therapy. While the medication helps
temporarily. nothing has given her
long-lasting relief. She drives about
25 minutes to work on a congested
highway and fet&gt;ls that the constant
"brake tapping" with her left foot
contributes to the pain. She bought
some padded cushions fo r the car
that seem tn help a hit.
I'm wondering if there's any
osteopathic treatment thai her M.D.
might not know about. or if there are
other treatments she should trv "
Answer: The sc iati~.: nerv; is the
largest nerve in the hody-it is a bundle of nerve fibers thai is about as

on1o
Unlvtrtlty
Coll-a~ of
OetiiOp8ithi C"

Medicine

big in diameter as your thumb. It is
formed from smaller nerves that
leave the spinal cord in the low back
region and join together near the
spme to forin the sciatic nerve. Tl\is
nerve then passes across the inside
of the pelvi s. co urses across the buttock. passes near the hip . and then
leads down the leg.
Irritati on or injury to any part of
the sc iatic nerve can produce pain
that is correctly labe led "sciatica...
Sciatica is usually low-back pain
that also involves the bullock and
leg. Its intensity may range from
mildly annoying to completel y disabling. In addition to pain in this
region. there may be loss of sensation or loss of muscle use in the leg.
Almost40 perce nt of us will have
sciatica some time during our lives.

These epi sodes may have many would probably benefit from it. stantly adjust the posture as the er borrowing a vehi.cle with a taller
causes. The sciatic nerve can be Additional physical therapy, particu- vehicle subtly bounces and sways. and more Sl!pportive seat-and trying
injured while giving birth to a child. larly therapeutic exercise, is also of Extra cushioning to help maintain a .a course of manipulative treatment.
proper posture minimizes, but doesor it can be damaged when the pelvis great benefit.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
or hip is broken. Most episodes of
Driving always creates strain in n't eliminate, this type of back
column.
To submit questions,
sciatica, howeve r. occur for less eas- the low back. This occurs because of strain. This problem is worse in
to
John
C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
write
ily identifiable causes. A common the need to work the accelerator and vehicles that have seats close to the
culprit is a ruptured or bulging inter- '· braks (and clutch for some of us) floor just as silting on the floor in the University College of Osteopathic
Grosvenor
Hall,
vertebral di sk in the low back.
with the feel while being positioned · living room is less comfortable than Medicine,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
X-rays . CT scans and MRI st ud- to see the road and to use the arms to sitting up on a chair.
I'd suggest that your wife considies are often done to find the source steer. The back muscles must conof sciatica. Sometimes these studies
clearly identify the underlying problem, and this knowledge then
enables your lloctor to specify
appropriate treatment. As examples,
surgery may be necessary for a
severe ruptured di sk or for a broken
hip. Most of the time, however,
· The Meigs Metropolitan Housing Authority is announcing that
these studies only 'show minor agerelated changes that aren' t the real applications for the HUD Rental Assistance Program will he
cause of the sc iatica.
Most individuals with sc iatica available beginning Friday, November 5, 1999 through Friday,
will have resolution of their symp· ·
toms within one month without spe· November 19, 1999.
cia! treatment. There are a large
If you are a low-income household in need of rental assistance ,
number of other sufferers, however.
more persistent. This group of indi viduals warrants treatment for their
sc iatica. Manipulative treatment
done by an osteopathic physician or
a chiropractor has been shown to
red uce the healing time. Your wife
hasn' t had this type of therapy and

Poster contest winners announced

Posters appealing for support for
the Meigs Local School bond issue
to be voted on in next Tuesday's
election were judged and prizes
awarded to the winners.
Elementary students from each
building selected a classroom winner and an overall winner for the
school.
Bradbury ·Elementary winners
were Robert Foreman, Tyler Little,
Alex Sisson. and Katie Rodehaver:
the overall winner.
Harrisonville winners were Ashley King. Timmy Parsons, Hailey
Williams. Travis Hicks. Doug Herd:
man, Constance Wyant, Hailey
Williams, and Gabrielle Lester,
overall winner.
Middleport Elementary winners
were Taylor Dowell, Britta Flowers,
Cynthia Kauff, Brittany Frazier.
Lian Hoffman, Adrian Bolin, Patricia Clark, Brillany Frazier and Josh
Tiemeyer, overall winner..
Pomeroy Elementary winners
were Jesse McConha, Olivia Cleek,
Nathaniel Gilkey. Hannah Cleek.
Shelby Ohlinger, Whitney Johnson,
Tanisha Thomas. and Cornelius
Engli sh, overall winner.
Rutland Elementary winners
were Josh Miller. Daniel Jenkins,
Micki Barnes. Morgan Lentes, Jason
Morris. Bethany Gibbs. Andrea
Bartrum. Bryan Gayheart, Jesse
Hanson, with Jacob Nitz, overall
winner.

Salem Center Elementary winners Kassandra Mullins, . Samantha
Goble . Jordan Duncan. April Oiler.
Anthony Davis. with Corinna

St. At. 7

.•

a• Gravelless Leach

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

...

..

LEVY POSTER WINNERS - The Meigs Local Better Buildings
Committee sponsored 8 poste.r contest 8S a promotion for the
Meigs Local School bond issue to be voted on Tuesday.
The building winners pictured here with Don Poole, committee
chairman, left, and Pa.ul Reed, president of Farmers Bank which
donated two $50 savings bonds, were Hailey Williams and Jacob
Nltz, .front, winners of the bonds, and Cornelius English, Corinna
Cross, Amber Will, Britany Frazier, Katie Rodehaver, and Hadley
Everett, left to right.

Cross,overall winner.
Salisbury Elementary wmners
were Courtney Baker, Marissa
McAngus, Joey Blackson, Ruche!
Davis, Ben Coppick, Hadl~y
Everett. overall winner.
Meigs Middle School winners
were Briuani Dailey and Amber

Will , overdll winner.
Meigs High School clubs participated in a banner contest, winners.
first through third, were FCCLA
(Family Careers Community Leaders of America), Senior Word Processing and Homeroom 101.

sand~iche~
Try all three

· · New sandwiches from
the chicken expert •
Savor juicy perfection with
our slow roasted Tender
Roasf8 Sandwich. Enjoy the
legendary taste of our Original
Recipe® Sa~dwich. Or sample
our Honey BBQ Chicken
Sandwich with chunks of
chicken simmered in tangy
Honey BBQ sauce. They're all
freshly made, topped with
their own signature sauce and
serves on special split-top
Pepperidge Farm buns.

''

' Notice of Election on
Tax Levy In Exceea of
the Ten Mill Umltatlon
Revllld Code, Sectlone
3501.11(G), 5705.19,
5705.25
NOTICE It hereby
given that In pureuance
of a Reeolutlon of the
VIllage Council of the
VIllage of Rutland,
Rutland, Ohio, p1111d
on the 13th day of July,
.t 999 there will be
aubmiHed to I VOII of
the people ot aald
aubdlvltlon 11 a Genarel
ELECTION to be held In
.the VIllage of Rutland,
Ohio, at the regular
placet of voting therein,
on the 2nd day of
November, 1999, the
qu11tlon of levying a tax,
In exceea of the tan mill
limitation, tor the benefit
of Rutland Village tor the
purpoea of Current
expenaet.
Said tax being:• A
renewal of a tax or 2
milia at a rate not
exceeding 2.0 milia lor
each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounta to twenty
($0.20) canta lor each
one hundred dollara of
valuation, lor live (5)
years.
The Polla lor aald
·Election will open at8:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open unll 7:30 o'clock
P.M. of uld day.
By order or the Board
of Electlona, of Malga
County, Ohio.
John N. lhlo, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated: Sept 13, 1888
(10) 6, 13, 20,27 4TC

CORNER ON ROAD
LEADING FROM LETART
TO APPLE GROVE;
THENCE FOLLOWING
SAID
ROAD
NORTHWEST 88 FEET;
TME.NCE
IN
A
NORTHERLY DIRECTON
198 FEET TO SAID EAST
LETART ROAD; THENCE
EAST FOLLOWING SAID
EAST LETART ROAD, 88
FEET TO THE PLACE OF
BEGINNING,
CONTAINING 1/3 ACRE,
MORE OR LESS.
PERMANENT PARCEL
NO. 08-000065 Located
II 48430 St. rt. 338,
Racine, OH 45771. Said
prperty hn bttn
appralttd at $10000.00
and cannot eell lor Ina
than two·thlrda of
appral11ment.
Thla
appralul Ia balld upon
·a VIIUal lnapactlon Of
that part ollhe premlto which accaaa waa
rtldlly avtlliblt. The
appralae,ra Illumed no
reaponalblllty lor, and
give no weight to,
unknown legal maHera,
Including, but not Bmlted
to concealed or latent
delecta, and/or the
prl11nca of harmful or
toxic
chemlcale,
pollutanta, or gaaea.
Terma of Sale: Ten
Percent (1 0%) day or
aalt, baltnca within 30
daya.
Jamea M. Soulaby,
Shtnll or 11e111a
County, Ohio
Stephen D. Mll11·,
AHomey, 1 8 Weat
Monument Avenue,
Dayton, Ohio 45402
3T 10(20) 10(27) 10(3)
188-1120 (10)20,27,(11)3,

Public Notice
SHERIFF,'&amp; SALE
United Statee of
America ve. Brian Lie
Hunt, ttal. Mtlga County
Common Pl..a Catt No.
99-CV..017. In purauence
of an order lllued from
Common• Pl.., Court,
within and lor the
County or Malga, State or
Ohio, on hte 31at day or
Doc.18119 and to me
directed,. I will oller lor
ute at Plubllc Auction In
the Mtlga County
Courthouaa, Second. St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 111 10:30
A.M. of aald da~, lhl
lollowlng Real Eehlte, towit: SITUATED IN THE
TOWN OF MEIGS,
TOWNSHIP
0F
LETARTE, STATE OF
OHIO,
TO.Wil!
SITUATED INLETARTE
TOWNSHIP, IN SECTION
18, TOWN 1, RANGE 12.
BEGINNING AT THE
NORTHWEST CORNER
OF A TRACT OF LAND
OWNED BY JULIA E.
BELL, ANP ON THE
SOUTH BIDE OF THE
ROAD LEADING 'TO
EAST LETART; THENCE
FOLLO'IIING JULIA E
BELL'S SOUTHWES-r:
Announcements

TRUCKlOAD
1/2 PRICE SALE AU
NAME BRAND ITEMS

CROW'S FAMILY RESTURANT
228 West Main

992-5432

Pomeroy

NOVEMBER 1-5
lO:OO AM· 8:00 PM .
Location: The Fonner
Blue Tartan Building
803 Soulh Third ave.
Middleport

' 3TC

.

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE
Unlted Statea of
Am arlee · va. John E.
Foreman, Sr., et al.
Melga County ·common
Pleat Can N. 99 CV 038.
In puraullnce or an
order lnued · from
Common PI••• Court,
within and lor the
county ot Melga, s - or
Ohio, on hte 31at dallor
Dec, 1899, and to 1111
directed, I wiU· offer lor
nit at Publec Auction In
the Mtlga County
Courthoun, Second St.,
Pomeroy, qhlo at 11:00
110

laborcQ needed for
work at auto pans
manu(ucturer. $8JOpcr hour
plus $.50 anendancc bonus. 12
hour s)]jfts; temp-to-hire; must
ilavc own tr;lnsponation and
.be willing to relocare.
. Temporary housing aval~able.

We will be accepting

applications for tllcse positions
at the ,

MEIGS COUNTY
UBRARV
2t 6 Wttl Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
on Thuraday, October 28
NOON-4:00 PM
Pltllt bring 2 forma of
ID.

Public Notice

NOW OPEN:

Rutland, Ohio
I
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seat~. motorcycle seats,
boat covers, oarpets, etc.
Mon • Fri 8:30 • 5:00

MEIGS COUNTY TRANSFER FACILITY

(j~re{{

Located at 34878 Rocksprings Rd. , Pomeroy
'a ccepting residential and commercial
refuse and demolition.
$32.00 par ton, refuse, $25.00 per ton,
Denio. $20.00 minimum
Operated by Southern Ohio Disposal
We support all local haulers!
For more Information on
Meigs County Transfer Facility or
Southern Ohio Disposal Hauling,
.visit our office at 34878 Rocksprings Rd.
or

Vinyl Replacement Windows
R-IO Insulated Glass
50 Year free glass replacement

Call992·9330 or 1·800·809·7721

Excqlsjye Dealer

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

Quality Window
Systems
Visit our showroom
Rl. 33 6 miles North of Pomeroy

740-992-4119

Public Notice

A.M. or aald day, the
Dlatrlcta reaorvee the right
following Real Eatata, toto waive any Informality and
wit:
SITUATED IN
roject any and all bide.
CHESTER TOWNSHIP,
BY HAROLD H.
MEIGS COUNTY, STATE
ILACKSTON
OF OHIO: AND BEING IN
PRESIDENT OF THE
SECTION 12, TOWN 2
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
NORTH, RANGE 13
165-1880 (10) 22,27,31.
WEST OF THE OHIO
COMPANY'S PURCHASE
Public Notice
AND BEING DESCRIBED
AS FOLLOWS:
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
BEGINNING AT A POINT
Reference: 5715.17 Ohio
IN THE CENTERUNE OF
Revised Coda
COUNTY ROAD 28,
The Malga County Board
(FLATWOODS ROAD),
of Revlalon haa completed
SAID POINT BEING
Ita work or equalization. The
SOUTH 42" 40' 00" EAST
tax return• lor tax year 111911
71.78 FEET FROM THE
have bttn revlatd and the
NORTHEAST CORNER
valuation• completed- and
OF NORA EASON'S
are open lor public
21.05 ACRE PARCEL AS
lnepectlon In the office: of
DESCRIBED IN THE
the Malga County Auditor,
MEIGS I;OUNTY DEED
Second Floor, Courthouaa,
RECORQ;I: VOLUME
Second Street, Pomeroy,
2111, PAGE 543; THENCE
Ohlo45769.
·
SOUTH 42" 40' 00" EAST
Complaints agalnat the
100.00 FEET ALONG
valuations, 11 utabllahed THE CENTERLINE OF
lor tax year 1999, nluat be
SAID COUNTY ROAD 28
TO A POINT; THENCE · made In accordance w)th
Section 5715.19 olthe Ohio
SOUTH 48" 38' 29"
Revlaed Code. Th .. ,
WEST 345.24 FEET TO
complalnta must be flied on
AN lAO ROD, PASSING
Alit IRON ROD AT 50 · forme which will be
turnlahad by the County
FEET FOR REFERENCE;
Auditor and mull bt flied In
THENCE NORTH 18" 55'
the County Auditor's Ofllca
27" WEST 179.78 FEET
on or before the 31at day of
TO AN IRON ROD;
March, 2000. All complalnta
THENCE NORTH 85" 29'
tiled with the County
44" EAST 180.45 FEET
Auditor will be heard by the
TO THE POINT OF
board or Revlalon In thi
BEGINNING, PASSING
manner provided by Section
AN IRON ROD AT 138
5715.19 or the Ohio Revlaed
FEET FOR REFERENCE,
Code.
CONTAINING
1.00
Nancy Parlcer Campbell
ACRES, MORE OR
Melga County Auditor
LESS, EXCEPTING ALL
(10) 28, 27, 28, 29, 31, (11) .1,
LEGAL EASEMENTS
2,3,4,5,10tc
AND RIGHTS OF WAY.
'
PERMANENT PARCEL
NO: 03o00541o004
Public Notice
LOCittd at 38391
'
Flatwooda
Road,
' Notice of Election on
Pomeroy, Oh 45788.
:Tax Levy In Exce11 or
Bald· property haa .bean
the Ten Mill Limitation
appralaad at $45000.00
Ravlaed Code, Sectlona
and cannot aell lor 1111
.· 3501.11 (G), 5705.1 II,
than two-thlrda or
5705.25
appralllmtnt.
thla
. NOTICE Ia ha;eby .
appratul Ia baud upon
il,lvan that In purauance ·
1 vlaual lnapecllon of
4f 1 Reaolutlon or the
that Plrl ortha premlna
Board ol County
. IO Which ICCIII Wit
Commllllonera of the
readily available. The
~ounty or Melga, Melga, ·
appralttra aaaume no
Pfhlo, Pllled on the 9th
uy of Auguat, 1111111
reaponalblllty lor, and
$here will bit aubmiHed
give no weight to,
IIi a vote ollht people or
unknown legal mattara,
~aid aubdlvlalon et a
Including, but not llmltld to,
~eneral ELECTION to ba
concetled or latent delecta,
lltld In tht County ol
and/or the pr111nce of
Melga, Ohio, et the
harmful or toxic ahamlc:~~la,
regular plac.. or voting
pollulllnltl, or gena: Terma
lhtreln, on the 2nd day
or Sale: Ten Percent(10%)
pi November, 1998, the
day' of 1111, balance within
queallon of levying a tax, .
30daya
In lkCIII Ollht len mill
Jam••· II. Sbulaby, Sheriff
limitation, lor lha benellt
or MtiP County; Ohio
of Melga County. tor the
818p1Mn D. 1111.., AHomty
purpo11
or Maintenance;
11 Will Monument Avenue
Clpltel conatrucllon, and
Deyton, Ohio 411402
bperatlon of Cllleton
3T 10(20)(27) 11 (3)
School and Melga
lnduatrlea workahop lor .
pa.raona with mental
Public Notice
rtllrda.tlon
and
developmental
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
.dlllblllllll.
BID FOR TRUCK
Said tlx being:• An
"LEGAL AD"
additional tax ol1.5 milia
10/20/19911
II I 1111 not excaedlng
The Tuppert Plalna1.5 milia lor each one ·
Ch..ter ·Water Dlatrlct Ia
dollar of valuation,
Inviting blda lor a 1999 or
which amount' to llltttn
2000 mid alze or email
($0.15) centa lor aach
truck. All apeclllcellona tor
one hundred "dollara of
the truelt bid .can be picked
valuat'lon, . tor a
Up at the Tuppere Plain•
continuing · period of
Ch ..ter water Dlllrlct'a
time.
main OIIICII. The Mtln office
The Poll a lor aald ·
Ia Iocated on SR 7, 3 mll11
Election will open at8::10
aouth or Tuppera Plaine,.
o'clock A.M. and remain
The malting addreaa Ia
open unll 7:30 o'clock
38581 Bar 30- Road,
P.M.ol ..ldday.
.
AtediVIIIt, OH 45772. We
By order or the Board .
will 1110 mall or lax a copy
ol Electlona,• of Melga
or thtlptclftcttlon ahatt.
County, Ohio.
John N. lhle, Chairman
The phone I Ia 1·740-1185Rita D. lmllh, Director
3316. Bide will be opened
Dated: Sept 13, 1111111
Thurlday, November 4th,
(10,8, 13, 20,27 4TC
1999, 11 2:00 p.m. ·at the
Dlatrlct'a main office. The
. I

No Embarraaament. ..
You're Treated with Respectl

• 1\tne-ups • New filters • New plugs
• Sharpen blade or chain $20
Mon &amp; Wed 10·5 Fri. 8·4
Toes &amp; Thur 1·5 Sat 10·2

A &amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

New. Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
Free Estimates

800-291-5600

Steve Riffle
Public Notice

WORRYING!!!

4 Beautiful Kittens, 740·256·6056.
4 gray kinen&amp;, 11 wkt. ole!, 2 mala,
21erna1e. 740·992·36ll1.
Beagle puppies, 6 months old, tri·
color, 740-949-2915.
Cute PLJpp les, Mother : Beagle,
Fatl'ler: Unknown, Appro~t . 8
Weeks Old, 740.446·8059.
Part Boston Terrier Part Beagle,
Male. 5 Weeks Old, 740-388·
8624.

60

Lost and Found

Found! Chocolate Labrador. Fe·
male. Jackso n Pike I Holzer area.
(740)·2511-6969

you may pick up an application at the Housing Authority office
located at ll7 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy (directly behind the
Holzer Cli~c). Applications will he given out between the hours of
9:00a.m. a~ p.m. Monday through Friday. Applications will
he given on a first serve basis.
For any questions or concerns please contact the Meigs Housing
Authority at 992-2733.
Jean Trussell
Executive Director
Mei s Housin Authorit

Public Notice

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
·
Repo • Dlvorded

Specializing ·in saws &amp; trimmers

100' -1000' Rolls 1' &amp;3/4' 200# Woler Une
Full line of Glrs Pipe &amp; Ragulolors Woler Storage Tanks
'1 i 1 101''
o •

SlrHe, OH

740·696·0027 •uslness 740·992-7046 Home ·.

Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock

11 111 1

2270 Rt. 33

Tuppers Plains, OH

740-985-3813

PRIBLIMI???

DOUBLE D'S REPAIR SHOP

Stop In And See

•

I

·G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

PUBLIC NOTICE:
APPLICATIONS ]fOR RENTAL ASSISTANCE

whose symptoms are more severe or

Giveaway

40

,,. Sales Representative

~

.

.

750 East State Street
Athe~s, Ohio 45701

Joseph Jacks
740·992-2068

Larry Schey

Phone

(740) 593-6671

ROUSH
LANDSCAPING
Now's the time for:
• :rrilnmiag • Leaf
removal • Planting
• Mulching
• Landscape Rock
• Retaining wall
construction
Jeremy L. Roush
740·949·1701

Sunset Rome Construction

"A Better
New Construction &amp; Remodeling- Kitchen Cabinets
Vinyl Siding- Roofs- Decks- Garages

SERVICE

Call 985·3831

INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
. · Siding • New Garages
•Replacement Winqows
•Room Additions
•Roofing

STOIL\(;E
ST. H.T. 7

.You• CONCRETE

CONNECTION
Quality Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios
Complete Garages:

masonarytwood

•

&lt;

EXCAVATING CO.

,,,.....,..a.

nr

BeJd'nr

Bu1Ulo1er &amp; Backhoe
Se"'ice•
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy11erm &amp;
Vtilitie•

(740)992-3138

7am THRU 4pm
MONDAY·FRIDAY./"
7amTONOON
. SATURDAY

tter-!1-j!

·

.

~

•

.'

TRUCKING
Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138
3/11/99 TFN

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

: ,

~'

Christmas Open tlou&lt;!le

Regular Hours: Tue· Frl11).6
Saturday 104
At 124 Minersville, OH · 740-992.-4559

cars &amp; clean up fn~s
Allen Casto
304·372·1898
after Spm

We deliver

SAYRE

New scents, layowoys &amp;credil cards accepted

Will hatd off cild IUik

Delivery
Service

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

22 yn. Local

24 Hr. Taxi Rlti

28870 Beahan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-1149-2217
Slzea5'x 10'
.
'
to 10' x 30'
Hour•
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

.,.

Now Renting
. A•J

MINI-STORAGE
Union Av~ .• Pomeroy, Oh

Rt. 7 Pizza Express

10x12 unite
10x2p unite
Available,
Call 992-8396 or
992·2272

1B: 3 Item $12.99
or Two 16" 2 items $19.99 ·
We Deliver
.992·9200

I,

Gallipolis
&amp;VIcinity
A1J. Yord Solto Mull
Be Pakl tn Aclvonce.
DEADUNE: 2:00p.m.
lht dly bolo.. "" eel
II 1o run. Sunday
ldltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldoy. Mondoy ldlllon
-10:00 o.m. Solurdoy.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

y•••

Ball Logging and
Firewood Bob Ball
35215 Ball Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Leave a Messa e

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 Sl. Rl. 7 South .
Coolvllf•, OH 45723 ·

74N8'1-G383

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M .
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Covarall
$500.00 Starburat
. Progressive top line.
Lie. II D0-50 liM"'"

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

Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneeringcomplete auction service. Buy
and sell estates. Ohio Licen se
J7693. wv 1338, 740·989·2623.
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer. complete
auctiOn
service . licensed
ll66,01'11o &amp; Wast Virginia , 304·
773·5785 Or 304-773·5447.
Wedemeyer's Auction Service.
Gallpolls, Ohio 740·379·2720.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins. Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry. Gold
Rings, Pre -1930 U.S. Currency,
· S'terllng, Etc. Acqulsltlons Jew,lry
- M.T.S. Coin snop, 151 Second
AveniJ9. Gallipolis, 740-446·2842.

CB Ant . ·. CB Towet. Will Pay
Well. Call Chu&lt;:k: (304)882·2220.
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks , Low Miles, 1995 Models
Or Newer, Smith Buick Pontiac.
1900 Eastern. Avenue, Gallipolis.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Diabetic Patients : Medicare Or
Private Insurance, You May Be
Entitled. To Rocelve Your Olab8tle
Supplies ·At No Cost To You . For
More tnlormallon 1·888-677·
6!161 .

New To 'lllu Thrill Sltoppo
9 West Sllm11011. Alhtns
· 740·M2-1S.2
.
Quality clothing ana household
Items . $1 .00 bag sale avery
Thursday. Monday lhru Saturday
9;()0-5:30.

Giveaway
2 Black and Whlla Barn Ktnons.
(740)-256-1385
2 black Chow mix pupplas. 9 wks
okl. 740-742·2237.

Company Paid Uniform s. Stock
Purchase. Call 800 -555-CWTS .

cwt.jobsO con·way.com . ConWay
Truckload Service s. CWt IS An
EOE

CLERICAL $12 -$16 /HR . Full
Benefits. No EKperience Neces5ary Call Mon ·Fri. 8 A.M. ·8 P.M.
1·800-637·5Zl1 Ext. 1300. Fee.
Computer Users Needed . Work
Own Hrs. S25K ·$80.Kl Yr. I ·BOO·
536-0486 X 7777 , www.1cwp.com

DATA ENTRY · National Billing
Seeks A Full /Pa n Time Medical
Biller. Salary At $46K Per Year .
PC Required . No E~tperien ce
Needed . Will Train . Call 1·888·
251·7475 .

DENTAL BILLER Up 10 $15 ·$45
/Hr Dental Billing Software Com·
pany Needs Peopl e To Process
Medical Cla ims Fr om Home.
Tra ining Provided . Mus t Own
Computer. 1· 800·223· 11 49 E)(t .
480
DOCTORS NEEO BILLERS. PTI
FT Medical Billing , No Experi·
ence. Make Your IBM Compatible
PC Earn $$$. www.med1crew.com
600-697-7670.
DRIVER-COL POSITIONS
We are in need ol CLASS " A ~
DRIVERS. who would also be responsible lor working as Sales
Assoc. on our Tour Shows. Will
tJavel Extensively across the U.S.
Excellent Pay &amp; Benefits . Call
Lisa Ness al (800)·247·7034 Exl.,
241 .

DRIVERS · IMMEDIATE OPEN INGS· REGIONAL IOTR Star!' AI
29 CPM /All Mi. • Unloading Pay •
Pe rso nali zed Dispat ch • Home
Often . Holiday Nacatlon Pay •
401 K IMB&lt;llcai /Pras . /Dental .'Is·
signed 99 ' T2000's • Rider Pr o·
gram • 98% No -Touch Freight
Call Butcn At Summit Transports·
lion 000·876-0880 EOE

Earn $250 week . Running Taw:i
plus Delivery Runs. 4 Taxi Drivers nee ded, 2 Taxicab Dispatch·
ors Need0dl(740)-441·0247

EMERGING COMPANY NEE OS
Medical Insurance Billing Assls·
tance Immediately. If You 'Have A
PC You Can Earn $25 .000 To
$50,000 Annually. Call 1-800·
291-4683 Dept. • t09.
FULL-TIME POSITION
AVAILABLE
Competitive Salary And
Exceptional Fringe
Benefit .Package
REHABtLtTATION AIDE - Re quirements: High School Diploma
Or Equivalent: Experience In
Health Care Field; Prior Aide Ex·
perience A Plus.
Only Oualilie d Appl icants Need
Apply To Holzer Clinic; Human
Relations Depart ment; 90 Jack·
son Pike.; Gallipolis, Ohio, 4563t·
1562; Fax To 740·446· 5532; Or
Call740·446·5189 Equal Opportunity Empbyer.

Grill cook, apply in person. Crew's
Steak HoUse.

11 0

Help Wanted

$2,000 WEEKLY! Mail ing 400
Bro churesl Satl'slactlon Guar·
anteed! Postage &amp; Supplies Pro~
vided! Aush Sell-Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT
5, Box 1438, ANTIOCH , TN .
37011-1438. Sla" Immediately.
$20 ·140 /H OUR Easy Medical
Billing Full Training. Computer Ae·
quirad. Call1 -888·869·7905 Ext.
700.
$800 WEE~LY Be Your Own
Bossi Processing Government
Refunds . No Experience Neces·
sary. 1·81J0.854·6469 Ext S046.

Healthcare

SPEECH LANGUAGE
PATHOLOGIST
(Ripley, WV)
PAN Or Part · Time Positions
Available. Current Licensure And
1 Year Minimum Experien ce Re·
quir8d. Prior Long ·Term Care Of
SNF Exp. Preferred. For.More In·
formation. Please Contact Robbin
Coleman At 800·789-2880. Or
Fax Your Resume To : 804 -747 ·
6804. EOE.

ServlceMester

Reheblttlltion

$800 WEEKLY POTENTIAL
Complete Simple Government
Forms At Home. No Experience
Necessary. CALL TOLL FREE •
1·800·966·3599 Ext. 2801 . $34.00
Refundable Fee.

Local Cleaning Co. See~lng Full
Time tor Carpet cleaning , Gener·
al Cleaning, Construction Work .
Send Resume to SCCS.' P.O. BOX
541 • Kerr. Ohio 451143

Act ivities Assistant , Part· Time
Hours, Apply In Pe rso n By No·
vembar 1st. AI: Scenic Hills. 311
Buckrkige Road-. Bidwell.

Local tax office needS part time
tax preparers lor up coming taK
season. we will train. send resume
to: Daily Sentinel. PO Box 729-89.
Pomeroy, Oh 45769.

ADVERTIStNO
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
For Well Established Local Co.
SERVING TAl-COUNTY AREA
'Must have good Communication
SkillS

• Must have good drlvlngy-ecord
&amp; Provide own Transportation
*Must have ability I&lt;? be a TEAM
player

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crafts.
Toys, Jewelry, .wood , Sewing,
Typing ... Great Payl CALL 1-800·
795·0380 Ext. 1~1(24 Hrs).

30 Announcements

PLUS 401 k Aller 90 Days (With
Matching). Company Paid Vaca tion And Paid Holtdays . 95% No
Touch Freight. Satellite Communi cation . Credit Union, Direct Deposit Assigned Conventlonals,

Drivers: 2 Week Paid COL Train·
lng. No Exp. Needed. No Money,
No Credit? No Prob1eml Earn Up
To $32,000 /1 sl Yr. W /Full Bene·
fits . P.A.M. Transp ort Call Toll
Free V877·230·6002 www .otr·
drivers.com

Auction
and Flea Market

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Peraonitla

Company Paid Retirement Plan

80

Sand Resume to:
Gallipolis Daly Trt&gt;une,
RE; lldwrti~ng Sa~o Rep
825 Third Avorue
Gallipolis. OH 451131

Why walt? Start meeting Ohio
Singles tonight. CBIIIOII !rea 1·
8&lt;l0-766·2623. extension 6176.

CLASS A COL DRIVERS. Dedi· '
eated, Regional &amp; OTR. Solos
$.30 /Mi. Teams $.34 /mi. /Spill :
100% Co"1'8nY Pakl Health Ben·
eflta: Medical, Dental, Vlslo·n .

Drivers wanted· now hiring, Domi·
no's Pizza, Inc., Pomeroy location,
740-992·2124. Stop In lor appli·
cation, 8t1 West Main. Pomeroy,
Ohio.

992·0437 .

005

Help Wanted

All Yard Soteo Muot Be Potd tn
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm tho
day before the ad Is to run ,
Sundey &amp; Monday edttlon1:QOpm Frtdaj.

7!2WN

DEPOYSAG
·. PARtS

740·992·0038

992·6215

• NewHomea
•Garages
• complete
· Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
985-4473

Firewood Division

HOURS;

Yard Sale

ROBERT BISSElL
CONSTRUCTION

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

740.384-6212
lUMPAIID STOIIII COAl
II.U.P. VOUCIIIS
ACCIPTID
DIUVEIY l¥lllllll

70

10!25/99 1 mo. pa

h11p Tr11k 11
Plak-1p lo •••
Recently purchased:
Graham 's Wood Products

Sr. 124 Wellslon, Ohio

Lost Cat: Seal Point Siamese . I
White. Female . 2 Years. Still
Nursing, Mill Cruk Road. 740·
44&amp;-2317.

740·992-5232

Take ti{e pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.

740·985·4180

lost At Family Dollar. Old Route
35. "Amity " Burgundy Walla! . Re·
ward If Foundl Need Oesperatelyl
Please Call740·245·919&lt;l.

Pomeroy, Ohio

FIREWOOD

A Ferrell Gas Representitive

FIH Elt/mattl

33795 HUa11d Rd.

Linda's Pah1tlng

Call for details

:au·:~from the Glassifiedsf
&lt;

HOWDD

740-949-2734

•New Garages
·Eiecl~cal &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing &amp; Guttera
•VInyl Sldi1g &amp; Painting
•Pallo &amp; Porch Dtclta

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

WltK•s HfiULIHG .BRAMHI COAL
COMPANY
and

(740) 9fZ·J470

•Roam addHiane &amp; Remodeling

Now Renting

4/2' TFN

ALMOST anything

Pomeroy, Ohlo

;$/l.op'at home... ·

949·2168

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

· 140-742-8015
877-353-7222 (toll free)

. 740-742·3119

FREE ESTIMATES

Maple Wood Lakes
45860 St. Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio 45771

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Melga, Gallla &amp;
Surrounding areas

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Found : White Kitten , about 2mo.
old. New Haven Grade School
Area. (304)882·2925.

•·7 40·992-6142

fJlJ

25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

For New Local
Referral Service

·'· ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

992-1717

. FREE ESTIMATES
. .. (No Sunday Calls)

Howard L. Writesel

101 SEBIIIG YOUR
r-•auPOBfABLE PBOPUE lEEDS

. ·COMMIICill . . RISIDIIITIAL

740·992·7643

Found: Older Male Pomeranian,
740-256· 1316.

Free Estimates

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

I L\ IU'\\ El.l.

I II:\ I 0 S-UI
I 11:\20 $611

.

EXCAVfiTinG

10/13 1mo.

BISSELL BUILDERS,

Bryan Reeves

www.sunsethome.com

* Custom G.rindifl.g
* Fall Fertilizer
*Pet Foods

t

'-~-_)

Free Estimates
740·742·3411

Found· red male Pit Bull, blue col·
lar, friendly, Dexter area, 740·742·
1080.

110

ATTENTION ORtVERSI Dodlcal·
ed , Regional, Longhaul, Company
Drivers, Owner Opera tor&amp; And
Truclc Purchase~ Program. We
Have II All. Poslllons Available
Today. Great Equipment. Great
Pay And Ben&amp;llla . Home Often.
Charter Express, 417·662·5586
Or 800·819-4999.'

Allenllon State Tested Nursing
Atllstants : Are You looking For
Stable Hours In A Caring Envl·
ronment? Holzer Senior Care
Cent~r ts Now Aecspllng Appll·
cations For All ShillS . We Will
Pay For Your E•perlence. II You.
Are Interested In Being A Part Of
Our Excelleiit Team, Pleaae Ap·
ply At 380 Colonial Drive. Bidwell.
OHEOE·.
AVON I All Araall To' Buj or Sell.
Shirley Spoera. 304-671!-1429.
AVori Products: Start your own InHom• Bustne11 . work Flexible
Hours. Enjoy Untlmllld Earnings.
(304)347·8838.

LOSE WEIGHT OUARANTEEDI
ALL NATURAL!
DR. RECOMMENDED!
CALL: 1·888-248-2779
OR VISIT: www.melt-away.net

LPN Position 3 To 11. Fitl·ln Part ·
Time. And LPN .weekend Treat·
ment Nurse. With Shill Differential.
&amp; Experience Pay. Apply At :
Scenic Hills Nursing Center, 311
Buckridge Road, Bidwell.
MED ICAL BILLING Learn From
Tl'le Experts! Everything You
Need. Home Study $t ,999 3 Day
Training $6.495. Financing· Avail able . BETTER BU SINESS BU·
REAU MEMBER. PACIFIC MEO·
ICAL www.pacificmedical.com
MEDICAL BILLING. Earn E.:cel·
lent Income . Full Tra ining. Com·
puter Required . Ca ll Toll -Free
800·540·6333 E~ . 2301 .

MEDICAL BILLING . Earn E•cel·
lent SSSI Processing Claims From
Home. Full Trai ning Provided.
Computer Required. Call Medl·
works Toii-Fres 800·540·8333
Ext. 2312.
. TEMPORARY LABQRERS 6
CASHIERS

Naed 4 people to unload trucks
ond 2 Cashltrs at Chuck Hom!·
efa1luckload Sale. See Homier
Soles Manager at NATIONAL
GUARD ARMORY. ROUTE 62
NORTH, POINT PLEASANT.
8A.M., 10128/911 . Paya $9.00/Hr.

No Phone Call&amp;.
Now Forming Nursing Assistant
Classes Holzor Senior Care Can- •
ter Ia Forming A. Claas To Begin
On November 8th. If You Are In·
terested In Caring For The Elder·
ly PleaS&amp; Apply A1 .380 COIMIII
Drive. Bidwell. OH Or Call For 0.

11111. EOE.

,,,

I

.:

�- -- ,~----------:------~--------------------~-I

, P • 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, October 27, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio'

"'
"''
'.

\

:Wednesday, October 27, 1999

OOP

NEA Croaaword Puzzle
PHU..LlP
ALDER

OWN A COMPUTER, PUT IT
TO WORK $850 $3 500 MO
PT /FI FREE Oela1ls Log Onlo
http /lwww hbn com Access Code
529Q
OWN A COMPUTER?
PUT IT TO WORKI
125 -$15/HR PTIFT
CALl. 1-8N·2411-mo
OR VISIT go-~hy nel
Postal Jobs $48 32 3 00 Vr Now
Hiring No Experience Pa1d
Train ing ·Great Benehts Can 7
Days 800-429 36M Exl J 365

(304)736 910~

446 8172 740 256 8251

New 3BR 2 Bath 14 W1de $500

440

FRITO LAY /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE $1 000+
WEEKLY POTENTIAL
ALL
CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO·
CAL SITES SMALL INVEST
MENT/ EXCELLENT PROFITS 1
BOO 731 7233 EXT 4303
MEDICAL BILLER Up lo S15

MEDICAL BILLING Unhmtted In

667
come Potential No

Exper~ence

Necess ary Free InformatiOn &amp;
CD AOM Investment $4 995
$8 995 Financmg Ava•lable Is
land Automated Med1cal Serv1c
es Inc 800 322 1139 Ext 050
Void InKY IN CT

sacnllce 98 S W

All realeotale advattlllng In
!his newspaper Is su1&gt;1ec:t 10
!11e Fednl Fair Housing l&gt;l'ol1968 which makel lllogol
to adYenise ·any peeiWtMr:w,
im11all0!1 or dlsalmlnatlon
based on race -.. religion.
sex tamtllal status Of national
origin or any Intention to
rrlakt any such prafwrenao,
llmllallon or chcrimlnatlon •

This newspaper wiU rot
koowingly accepl
advertisements forrulosllte
wNch Is In violation of 1111

law Our readefl ""' hereby
ln!Oimtd tl181 all dwellings
adveniSed •n lhls newspepot

are available on an equal
oppor1unlty basis

SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRV AND EASY LISTEN·
INGI Call 1 800 469 8164 For

START YOUR OWN VENDING

310 Homes for Sale

Busme ss Fo r As ltttle As $52/
Mo Up To 15 Ma chme Routes
Ava laO!e Easy F1nancmg 1 600

A ZERO% DOWN LOAN I

Appointment To Come To Nash

220 2985 24 Hrs

ville Tennessee And AuditiOn
For Mator Record Producers And

Concert Promoters

Internet

wwwwcmac

220 Money to Loan

Subslllute Rural ~all Camers To
Work Saturdays And Add111onat

Days As Needed Salary S10 54
Per Hr Plus Mileage Must Have

Clean Drlv1ng Record Possess A
Valid State Dnvers L1cense And
Pass A Physical Please Apply In
Wrltmg No Later Than 11 5 99
To PO Box 9998 Gallipolis OH

45631 9996
Take Back Your Life! Be Your
Own Bossi Earn An Extra $500

$1 500 PT Or $2 000 $5 000 FT
Per Monlh Call 1 600 604 1269

Or Visit www l!veabeUerl!lt! rom

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL 1 800 813
3585 EXT 14211 6 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS Ids Inc Fee
WORK FROM HOME $800
$4 500 /Month For Free BooKlet
Call 1 888· 775 6322 www cash
911 com/home

140

Business
Training

Gllllpollt Carter College
(Careers Close To Home)

CeliTodayl 740 446 4367
1 800-214 0452
Reg 190 05 1274B

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GREE QUICKLY Bachelors

SS$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Rema1nmg Payments
On Pr opert y So ld ' Mor tgages!
Annu1t1est Senl eme n•s ' lmme
d1ate Quotes'" Nobody Beats
Our Prices • Nati onal Contra ct
Buyers BOO 49Q 0731 Ext 101
www natlonalcontractbuyers com

$FREE

CASH

NOWI

From

Wealthy Families Unloadmg M1l
hons Of Dollar&amp; To Help Mmtm1ze
The•r Taxes Wnte lmmed•alety

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

APPROVAL"

Bank CarLl No Credit Check No
Up Front Cash Secunty Deposit
Requ•red •Mus t Be 18+ And
Have Val1d Checkmg Account •
Pre Approval By Phone 1 800

689-1556
FREE MONEY! Its True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 000 For Debt Consohdalton
Personal Needs Med1cal B1lls
Educatton &amp; Bus•ness Call Toll

Free 1 BOO 724 6047 (24 Hrs)
FREE MONEY I 11 s True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500
Debt Consot dal ton
$50 000
Personal Needs Busmess 1

800 511 2840
BANKRUPTCY $79+ Stops Gar
n1shmentsl D1vorce $99+ Slop
Foreclosure $350 Bustness Op
portuntt es + Tratntngt FreshStart
1 888 419 94 17 www freshstartu
sa com

No Down Payment Required With
Government Sponsored Loan
Good Cred1t And Steady Income
Reqwred Call For More lnlorma
!ton Ana For Other Financing Opltons Independence Mortgage
SeNIC8S 1 80()..845 0036
ARIZONA RARE BUY' Pnstme 40
Acre Ranches In Northwest Art·
zona From Only $495/Acre' Lush
VegetatiOI'! Mountam V1ewsl No
Oual•lytng Low Down Ask About
6 Mo Inspection Program! 1 800·

711 2340
By owner $47 900 must se ll
qu1ckly make offer Three bed
rooms two baths btg one car ga
rage Racme Central air heat
pump all appliances mcludlng
washer &amp; dryer stay call 740

949 3147
COUNTRV HOME

2 BR , 112 Baths Vtnyl &amp; Brick Bl
Level W•th Unl!ntshed Basement
On 7 Acres 01 Meadow Sur
rounded By Trees Barns &amp; Other
Outbulldmgs More Land Avail
able Localed Near Thurman Off
SA 279 On Centerpo int Road
$87 200 Anthony Land Co LTO
1 BOO 213 8365 www country
tymecom

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Oownt Gov t And Bank Repo s
Being Sold Now' F1nanclng Avail
able Call Now • 1 800 730 7772

Ext 8040
FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down' Gov 1 And Bank Repo s
Betng Sold Now' F1nanclng Avatl
able Call Now t 1 800 730 7772

CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monthly Payments 20 50% Save
Thousands 01 Dollars In Interest
Non Prahl TCC 800..758 3844

HOMES FROM $199 30 lllo 1
3 BR Repos /Foreclosures Fee

CREDIT CARD UP TO $3 000

Details 1 8Q0-719-3001 X1185

Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSIT'/1 800-964 8316

Unsecured VISA IMC Sad Credit
Or No Credit 1 800 256 8818 El(t

HOMES FROM $2 000 Low Or

Carpentry Fram•ng F~nlshmg
Remodeling Add1t1ons Decks

and Porches

(740~366-6931

4% Down For L1stlngsf Payment

NOWill 800 772 7470 EX! 8040

• Stop CollectiOn Calls!!!
• Low Paymentstl1
Free Consumer Counsettng Catl

Two story vinyl Sldtng 2 3 bed
rooms bath large k1tchenldlnlng
new gas furnace 8735 South

Now HIOO 788-6777

-------+....::::)1

Second Mlddleporl S34 000 call
800 388 6194

~32:-::0:::::.:=M~o~bi::-ie-::H-o_m_e_s• 14• Smglas and Double Wtde
Trade and Repose Prtce NegoU
able bot all homes will be sold by
12131199 Come early for Best Se-

lecllon 1 (88B) 736-

$11 000 740 992·5688
14x70 W1th El(pando Good Con

dillOn $6 500 740-446 8172 741}256 6251
1974 Shultz 12x60 new carpet
front kitche n must be moved,
$3 700 call betwee:n 9am - 1pm

740 949 2771
1980 Coahman Tra1ter 35 2 Ex
pando Roof Atr Electr~c Heat
Gas Stove Wa ter $4 000 Or

Trade 740 245 9472
1980 Shull 14x65 2 Bedrooms
Factory Wood Burning Fireplace
Appliances Awning Underpin·
ntng and 2 Air Conditioners

Ready to Movel $6,500 00 (740)
441 9527
1984 14x70 wtth Large Factory
Expando Total Electric Central
Air
Rea l Good Condition!

$6 000 00 (740)367 0832
1999 Doublewtde Aepo Never
L•ved In New Home Warranty 0

Down If Quallhed 740 446·3093,
OakwoOd Gallipolis on~ll
1988 Redman Danv ille 14x70
Also Has El(pando Very Nice
New Heat Pump $14 000 740

366 8335

Mounts Tree Service "The Tree
Professionals" Bucket Truck
Servtce TOJ:l Tnm Removal
Stump Grtnd.ng Free Est1mates
Fully Insured Works Camp Bid

A PHONE CARD ROUTE
Cents IM!n Rail Nat 1 Co $500
!Wk CASH Free Info 1

24 Hrs
ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
$1 000 A Day No Soiling Nol

MLM

For Free•Information Pack-

ago Call 1 800·786-8849 24 Hrs
XT27
AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 -20 Locations $4K $10K
14 000 +/Mo Income • ALL
CASH! 100% Finance Avalloble
1·800-380-2615 . 24 "'•
EARN $1,000 A OAV.. I DO Not
MLM No Selling Work From·
Home PIT Frea lnlo Pkg 1 800
831·2385, 24 Hrs Exl 63

well OH Cell And Save 1 800
838 9568 740·386 9648 Owner
Rick Mount

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITV ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W1nl

1 88&amp;-582 3345

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
$0 DOWN! HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED I
GOV T
FORE·
CLOSURES! CALL NOW FOR
REGISTRATION I 1 800 434·
2434 EXT 3205 (NO FEE)

I 112 story 7 rooms 1 t/2 baths

furnished new roof n1ce lot 4Z7
Sycamore Street Mtddleport

3 br 2 ba CA

everything upgraded cathedra l
ceiling some furniture stays 2

decks w/ ullllly bulildlt1c
extras excellent cond 30•1·6Jr5.
o4451 alter

s pm

2 Mu lt!Sectton Repo 1 On lot
Other IS Not Financing Available

304 738 7295
All Lot Models tor Sale Year In
Close Out At Try State 1f t Vo
fume Deater No Payments for 90
dayst Come Early lor Best Selec

lions 1 (888) 736 3332
BraOO New 4 Bedrooms 2 Baths
10% Down! $199 00 Month No
Payments lor 90 days! 5 to

Down $349 per mo Free Oehv
ery &amp; Setl.l) 1 800-691 6777
Used Homes lor Sale Final Mark
Down 69 Fleetwood 12x60

I br apt furnished edra nice &amp;
clean no pets 304 67~ 1386

Spec1al 28x60 3 or 4BR $1000

$1 500

74 New Moon 12x65

$3 500

81

Windsor

14x70

$7 500

85 Holly Park 14'70

$9 995

87 Carrolton

t 4x70
4

5

~~:i Fre~~tf~~~:~~~~s x~~~~~

poliS Oh 1740)446 9340

2 Bedroom Apartment Deposit
Required

Lookmg To Buy A New Home?
Don t Have Land? We Ooll!llll'lll
Hurry Only I 0 LOIS Left! 304 736

7295

330 Farms for Sale
26 Acres MIL With 6 Stall Horse
Barn County Water 3 Bedroorn

House 740 3E8-8504

340

t or 2 Bedroom Apartment Pt
Pleasant Utilities patd Refer
ences /Deposit &amp; Lease Re
qulred No Pets (513)271 9091

Business and
Buildings

3 000 Sq Ft Commercial Bu1ld
lng tn Henderson lor rent lease
or sale Call Sonny Reynolds

(304)675 4123
Bar Busmess Gallipolis Area
With 2 30 Liquor license 740

No Pets (304)675·

2548
2bdrm apts total electric ap
pllances lurnlshed laundry room
tac•llues close to school In town
Applications ava•lab!e at Village
Green Apts 149 or can 140 992

3711 EOH
28~

Apt In Mason Stove/Refrlg·
erator/Ut! lltle s lurmshed A C
Laundry Room cen ~ng Fans
Garbage Disposal Very Ntce No

Pots (3041773 5352/(304)882
2B27
4 Rooms Downstairs Very Clean
No Pets1 deposit and Reterence
Requlfed Gallipolis Area (740)

2 44 Acres Homesite, Green

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE~ 52 WeSIWOOd Drlva

Townsh1p Gatlla County Scen•c
Quiet Close To Gallipolis Some
Restnctions 740 245 5776

from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740-446 2568
Equal Housing Opportunity

Appro)( 16 acres Green School
D1st Leave Message (740) 446

Beech Street Middleport two
bedroom turn1shed apartment
utilities paid deposit and refer
ences required 740 992 0165

GALLIA COUNTV
23 ACRES
2 "'les 0~ SR 7 &amp; SR 218 South
01 Gallipolis Slnglewides Allowed
Rough Mostly Wooded Road AI
ready Cut In $27 000

20 WOODED ACRES
Great For Hunting Near Patnot
011 SR 141 &amp; SR 233 $23 000 On
New Road Bu1lt That Conttnues
Into Wayne Nattonal Forest

MEIGS COUNTY
Near Danville &amp; Rulland 011 SR
325 5 &amp; 1o Acras $9 500+ Call
For Free Maps On The&amp;e And
Other Properties In Southern

01110

www countl)'lYnle com
Lot 11 Meadow Hill SubdiVISIOn

We Buy Land 30 500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1·800·213·8365
Anthony Land Co

2 Bedrooms $325/Mo + Uttllttes
and Depostt No Pets! 740·446

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

741}-446-0390

Firewood for sale $25

load 740 949-0605

One bedroom lurms~ed apart

menl call740 992·9191

North Ttilrd A.venue Middleport
One bedroom lurn•shed or unlur
mshed apartment deposit and

Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740·
446.0008
One Bedroom Apt tn Upper Part
ol Town Very nice and Prlvare

No Pels (3041675-13E6

1-888

Ohio Call74o-446-6737 collecl

In Windshields Free VIdeo 1

2 000 Sq Fl 1 118 Acre Route 7
I 6x32 lnground Pool 2 Storage

2 3 Even 4 Bedroom Homes
Payments As Low As $149 De
livery And Set Up Included Only
At Oakwood Homes, Barbours

BulldlligS $70 000 74().245 9472

ville 304 736 3409

1922
For Sale ~allred longenberger
Wood Craft Shelf &amp; PegBoard
Holds Plates New Condillon

Paid $90 will sell for $60
(304)675 2892
Grubbs Plano tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

Golden Retriever Puppies, AKC
Registered 1st Shots &amp; Wormed

9 Weaks Old S200 ·$250 740
446-2899, 740-446 6651

570

Musical
Instruments

2E8-6218

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

4x4 long W/Buckal $5 500 00
0 I! 0 Phona (740)·388·90E2 or
(740)-446-7278

620 Wanted to Buy

ture 1740) 446 1004 (740) 446
4039 a.ny lime Out BulavNie Pike

630

Gallipolis $390 Mo $390 Deposit
reQuired Apply at Topes Furnl
ture 151 Second Ave No Phone

1519

Calb

460 SpBCB for Rent

3 bedroom Racine

$400 per

monlh plus $200 depoSII no pels
references required 740 949
2621

Large private mobile home lot at
Santa's Forest on RT 87 w/water sewer S90 00 a mon relar

ences 304-675-4138

3 Bedrooms 1 Bath, 152 Fourlh

MERCHANDISE

Avenue Gallipolis $375/Mo De·
pos11 Required W/0 Hook-Up 1-

888 84().0521
3/4 bedroom House In the Glen
wood Area $450 month + de·

"""' (7401983-9107
Buy Homes From $199 30/Mo
1 3 Bedroom Repos 4'Yo Down
0 K Cred1t For Listings And Pay
menl Detail&amp; Call 800 319 3323

Exl 1709

Historic Home Upper Second
Avenue Gallipolis Hard Wood
Floors Throughout $425/Mo
Deposit And Rental Agreement
Pilot Program Renters Needed

304 736-7295

510

Household
Goods

Premium Firewood Oak &amp; Ash

$50 Load Full Size Pick Up De
'""red 74().992-4568
Retired longaberger Baskets

Sale 1991 To Prasenl 740·446
1280

7795
For Sate Aecondttloned washers dryers and refrigerator&amp;
Thompsons Appliance 3407

Jackson Avenua (304)675·7366
APPLIANCES

Washers dryers refr~gerator&amp;
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76

VIne Soreel Call 740 446·7398,
1·888 818.0128

AI Invoice! 1

STEEL BUILDINGS New ltlust
Sell 40.60x14 Was $17.500Now
$10 971
50x100x16
Was
$27 650 Now $19 990 80x135x16
Was $79,850 Now $42 990
100x175x20 Was $129 .850 Now
$78.850 f-80().408·5126

and depoSil 304-824-2480

!ectlon Priced To Sell!
And Brow!tt • Corner Of Floute 7
&amp; AddiSon Pille 740-367.0280

520

$30 00 74tl-446-4548

Two bedroom house In Pomeroy
would ltke to sell on land contract
or will rent for $350 month plus
depoSit &amp; .utilizes no pets 7 40·

Sporting
Goods

698 7244

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

King Cobra Gravity Back Irons,

Never been Hll $400 Call (740)·
446-375l!
'

New Carpet Gas

Furnace Very Nicol In Gallipolis
(740)·446-1409

Antiques

1124 Eall Meln SIIOOt on SR 124
E Pomeroy, 740·992·2526 Ruli

Moor•
11811

~r http lilts-your bual·

comrnvoilnel

$400 oo Monlh Plus Depos111
(740) 245-9687

540 Ml-llanaoua
Merchandiu

Rio Grande Area Across From

1997

Doublewlde 3 Bedrooms 2 baths

Campus, 2 Badrooms $30011.10
Wator, Sepllc Sewage Trash
Paid Deposll Raqulred 1 888
840 0521
'

~anmoro

relrlg 25 cu 11

reg /crushed lea water n191
$750 -4 poster queen s•ze water

bed rose podli nlca $250 304·
675-7915

Motorcycles

style wlth clear flip up shield

Two 15' Klclcar Frae Air Subwoor
era Couattc 360 Power logic

Amp 150 Wallo. Couellc 160
Amp 30 Wans Per Channel Cou·
site XM·3 Croaaover Mounting
Board And All Wires Intact, En

lire Pactcago. $350. Call 304·1,73

5592 Belore 5 oo or 304·882·
2102 Aller 5 00
WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLQ
GV Will Finance Wllh ·o· Down I
PaS! Credll Problems No P.-m
Call Toll Free 1-800-803-7537
WANT A COMPUTER17?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO

OY We Finance, •o• Downl Past
Credit PrObler,,s DKfl Even 11

Turned Down Bslorell RotslaJ;Ish
Voll Crldit111 80().659-0359

1992 Yamaha Tlmberwoll 250 '
Excellent ConditiOn\ $2 000 740·

3 Infrequently
4 Boxer
Muhammad5 5ellme plant

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

3E7 0219 740-387 7272

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
28 Pontoon Boat, large Pontoons 90 HP Motor, Full Canvas,
Fish Finder Tandem Axle Trailer

6 Brilliance
7 Ualng both
hand8
8 Author
Umbello-

peraon

North

East

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

l.
4t
s•

12 "Angel" Aeeee
19 Womon'a

patriotic

newcomer

24 Pasture
26 H1rrow'a rival
28 Ache
30 Sincerity
34 "Swan Like,"
for one
35 Actre11 Dahl

Q

36 Longing
3B VIolent
39 ""Thla
second!"
(2 wda)

40Nulllnc.
42 Having debll
44 Guide

49 compe11 pt
50 CEO, e.g
52 Fnonc:h 53 Newsman
Rather

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C&amp;lebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotahons by famous people past and present
Each liner in the cipher stands lor another Today s c/!HJ W ~qusls H

'p A

s

CSZZUR

I R DYN

pI

LU

TDKOZPTSRUV

T SA' R

'::~:t~~'

VSATU

RUZZ

INADANKI.'

low to

I

was

WOlD
lUll
POllAN-------

S©tt4UlV\-l££tfS"
•r
l~lt•~

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled words
form four

CLAY I

the

be
11mple words \2~~l-l('f~

DILNAI

HL S A C

. H N K____,1_=:
A T :..,'_
..---1
5
6

1.

My husband complams ev
ery year about h1s w1nter
chores I believe that Without

I0-

, . - - - - - - - - - - . w1nter spnng wouldn't be so--

SPOOEP

.

1-lE't', CHUCK,
A5K '(OUR
D06 WHAT HAPPENED WITH
Tf.IE MESSAGE HE DELIVERED FOR

RD

PKODIIPCZU

XUDYXU
CSZSATWPAU
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Mark Twa1n was a great Amencan ongmal So
Allen Funl • - Charles Osgood

I

PEANUTS

aoc.

22 Cert1ln

1---r-1....:.,..17,=....ri:...;I...;.....,I,....B-4
_

•

•

.

•

.

fj

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

0

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS~
FOR ANSWER
.

~~~plele

lhe chuckle quoled

bv

t.lltng tn rhe mtssmg words
you develop from step No 3 below

SCRAM-lnS ANSWERS

(740) 446-6566
HORSE SALE Belle Pla1ne West
ern E~~;c~ange, Belle Plaine lA

Two Day Calalog &amp; Uncalalogad
Sale October 30 &amp; 31 Horses
1 00 P. M Saturday Noon Sunday

Expecting 500 Head Call For
Calalogs /Conslgnmen!S 319·
444 2320 Fax 319-444-2656

TRANSPORTATION

Hel1um -Hasty- Pnnt- Eldest- PUSHED

For Sale or Trade 35 HP Johnsdn
Boa! MOlor $350 oo or lrede lor
15·10·20 HP molor (304)·875·
5131

760

"I

Don t gel !tung hy h1gh I"''"' I
Shop lh&lt; clol~r(iod '"''"'"

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessorin

th1nk some of us are hke wheelbarrows," the old
man s1ghed while watchmg teens laze about. 'we are
tlnly useful when PUSHED"

IWEDNESDAY

15" Aluminum Rim Fit• 1997
Ford Taurus and newer (304)875-

OCTOBER27I

1109
Budget Priced Transmissions

and Engines All Types Acce11

good. gas saver $1295 OBO

CaiiM&amp;J Aulo
74().366-9693 or 740·740 1011

To Over 10,000 Transmissions

eve Jolnls 74o-245-5677
High Oulpul 316 Molor w/Auto
Trans

Can Hear Run

$300

wv

&amp; R Aulo Ripley,
(304)372·
3933 or 1 Sllll-273-9329

SERVICES

95 two door Grand Am, $4699

"93 Oodgal~lrepld $3999

810

Rutland Car Sales

74().742 3311 or 74!&gt;-742 1400
97 Camara automatic loaded
41 000 miles dark forest green,
transferable warranty 740-e69

0904

CARS $100 $500 &amp;

U~

POLICE

IMPOUND Honda's Toyota s,
Chevy&amp;, Jeeps And Sport Utili·

tits Fee Required Cal Nowl 60().
n2 7470 EXT 7832
1982 Mustang Black On Black

Home
Improvements

ASTRO-ORAPH

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local references furnished Es

laJ;Ished 1875 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446·0870. 1-Boo 297-0 576 Roo·
ers WalOrproollng
Appliance Perla And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Yeara Experience All Work Guaranteed

351W 4 Speed New Wheels &amp;
Tires Richmond 4 11 s 740·992·
7853 $1 600 Firm

French Clly Maylag 740 •446 :
7785
•

19~3 Po~llac

tenence Painting~ vinyl aiding,
carpentry, doors, windows, bathl,

J 2000 21doora

Runs Good Dependable Ne~
Tires Clean lns1de &amp; Out!

$1 000 00 080 Day(740)·448·
2560 Eve (740)·256-1288
188~ Chevy Corveuo. $8.500
74().245 5659
1968 Monte Carlo Luxury Spot!
40 OOOMlloa Loaded Nlca COlan
Car $2 500 080 (304)675
4452

1989 Pontiac Grand Pnx,

Red SunRool Air MagWheela
Loaded S2 500 (304)675-4452
1989 Corsica 4 dr lots ol new

parts 11200 OBO or will lrado for
!ruck of equal value 304·937·

3348

C&amp;C

General

Home

Main·

mobiOI llofre repair and more For 1
free osllmato caN Chel 740.~ 2•
6323
•
li~Jingston s Basement Water
Proofing. afl baaomon1 rop11ra
done, lroe o•tlmaloa lllotlme
guarantee 12yra on job experi

once (:io4)895·3887

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wiring,
new aervlce or repairs Malter L~
censed electrician Ridenour

~~~lrlca1, WV000306, 304·875·

Thursda~Cki 28,1999

In !he year ahead, new contacls

you make euher for busmess or SOCial
purposes could prove of grealer wor1h
to you lhan those you"ve made 1n lhe
past Be sure to cnculale
SCORPIO (Cki 24-Nov 22) By
expandmg your horiZOI!s, you w1ll be
able lo spol new opportum11es lhat
previOusly were blocked from your

VISion Search out new areas of 1nter
ests loday Know where Ia look for
romance and you'll find 11 TheAslroGraph Matchmaker 1nstanlly reveals
which Signs are romanlically perfect
for you Mad '$2 75 lo Matchmaker,
r:/o ibis newspaper, ~0 Bo• 1758,
Munay Hill S~Jtron, New York, NY

10156.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov 23-Dee.
21) If you emph"-&lt;llC your cooperatwe sptril and undcrstale your author•ly today, your dealings w1th olhers
' w1llgo much smoother than e•pcbed
Kmdneu conquers what de111ands

can't
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19)
Thday's aspectS are developing in a

(

29 "How Wll-DOWN
know?"
1 American
31 Drlver1' org.
buffalo
32 R1publlcana
2 Lilla aomo food
(abbrl

11;-nr.:,n

New Piston Gra.at Condtlon Runs
Great 740 367.0308

New Replacement Gas Tanks D

Tallgala·Fils 1998 and nawer
Ford F-Serles Pick-ups i::ame oil
ol a 1999 F 350 Super Duly Ex
cellenl Condlllon $150 00 Six
Panel Door 24' x791:14" $15 00
Motorcycle Halrnel Black lull face

·cocn•

740 949-2958

88 Dodge Ram , 5 apeed, runs

81Xl-211·9593' 31

difference

58 SCilla
57 l'fpe of anap

74().446-2030

Curls and Butterfly Attachm-nts

Must Movel Selling

-1&lt;-\..1 ¥-'

1981 CJ· 7 360 V 8. hard lop.

(304)675-4452

Matching Couch and Chair EM
ce llent Condition and Very Well

R&amp;D s Usad Furnllure Greal Sa·

1973 Champion Motor Home

$500 CARS FROM $500111 Buy
Police Impounds 6 Aepos Fee
CALL NOW For lls!lngsl 1-800
319-3323 x2156

STEEL BUILDINGS • 5 ONLY! 2
25&gt;30 45x90 'SOLO' . 51x100

,-,..._

Runs good New Palnl MuSI Sell!
$1500 00 OBO or Trade 740·
441 0584

Services Inc Toll Free 1-888

~M

N-It&gt; PlC.~£0 lI I

730 Vane &amp; 4·WDa

71 0 Autos for Sale

(740) 446·1207 call Belore 5 00

~1-llJU(..I!-ITO 1'\EK'(f&gt;JZD J,..~'l.ll(l

YENZ TO WJO'(~l.:IJOOc~
N'l't..E. 1 1-Jf\~1 Klt-ID M~'t-'1"'1

1966 S· 10 !ruck 84.000 mites

AppealS And Hearings FREE
CONSULTATION Bonelli Team

Solo Flax Workoul Mach/no Log

55 Shade o1

Club Calves for 4H and FFA

Claim Denied? We Spectallze In

Three bedroom all electric ranch
home w ith attached garage
fenced back yard large lot at
Meadow Land Estates Pt Pleasant $600 month plus references

Modo (304)675·1109

Livestock

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY

836·4052

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers Ranges Refrlgrators 90 Day Guarantee!
~ranch City Meylag 740·446-

GOOD USED

Speed $4 000 OBO 740 256
6573

~. ~~--~'{ .)()(-1~-l

exc cond auto lilt air 304-6753986 alter 5 pm
•

lng Machine (740) 256-1977

Pigs For Sale $25 And Up 1992

I'"

"ml~ l~ lll.€. TlrJ..t Of
l~ \1'\t---T 7

~ves

1986 Ford True~ F150 308 Cyl
Aulo Sell Chaap Call Aller
5PM (304)675-72~

For $38 Ask About Free Sam

Chevy Beretta 73 000 Miles 5

------ '

10-1.7

720 Trucks for Sale

19B7 Kawasaki KX80. Now Jl!ll.

(740) 446-4997

Upstalfs Furnished 3 Rooms
Bath Clean No Pets! References
&amp; Deposit Required, 740·446

-

vys. Jeeps &amp; Spon U!llhles Call

740

Huge 1nventory Low Prices on
VInyl Skirting Kits Doors, W1nd
ows Anchors Water Heaters
Furnaces Plumbing and Electrical Parts Bennatt&amp; Mobile Home

..

POUND Honda s Toyota's Che-

~uclc

Twm Towera now accepting ap
phcations lor 1 BR HUO subsld
1zed apt lor elderly and handl·

3 Bedroom LR lg Kitchen Carport Available Nov 1st Private
and convenient! 47112 Spruce St

els CALL NOWII 1 800 772
7470 Ext 6336

1 Year old New Ideal Disk Maw

MOBILE NOME OWNERS

PON'T YOV UNt&gt;f~STANP,
~ANPY1-· TttAT PA,T
OF MY l.lft IS OVU.

new ttres $3800 or lrade for nice

Supply (740)-446·9416

capped EOH (304)675-6679

HONDA S FROM $200 Pollee
Impounds All Makes And Mod-

Lose Up To 30 lbs In 30 Days
74().441-1982

-7

51 An11aepUc
liquid
54 Seren1
WIMI1ma' aport

9 Cozy room
10 Polntlll

W S Gilbert wrote many amusing
lmes Here ts a verse from "Iolanthe" "For you dream you are crossmg the Channel, and tossmg about m
a steamer from Hatwtch - Which ts
something between a large bathing
machme and a very small secondclass carnage "
Well, as you p1cture a fell)' gomg
from England lo the Netherlands and
back agam, wh1ch declarer-play techmque does tl brmg to mmd? In th1s
deal, how would you play m stx
spades after the club-queen lead? D1d
West have a more effecllve openmg
salvo?
The aucllon 1s amb11ious or
bndge-wnter's license, 1f you prefer'
North's four-d1amond reb1d IS a splinter, showmg game values m spades
w1th at most one d1amond It ts a good
evaluallon of tha1 hand But South's
usc of Blackwood 1s debatable His
singleton and twC!i aces are postllves,
bul havmg only four lrumps ts a negaltve (A smglelon m partner's ftrStbJd smt ts often a nega1ive, bul not
here, as North's suit 1s so weak )
W11h four top stde-suu 1ncks,
declarer musl score eight trump
1ncks ThiS pinnts 1oward a crossruff.
And 1here ts one key lo this technique
Cash all s1de·sml wmnm first So,
declafer should take dummy's two lop
clubs and the red-su1t aces before
rulfmg dummy's four low hearts m
h1s hand and h1s three low diamonds
in dummy Souih's 12 tricks are one
top trump 10 the dummy, the four
sllle-suit wmners and seven ruffs.
If, as a defender, you 1hmk lhe
declarer will be crossruffing, it is best
to lead a trump Here, that kills both
one of the ruffs and the contract

FOR &amp;ALE CONSOLE PIANO
Responsible Party Wanted To
Make low Monthly Payments On
Ptano Sea Locally Call 1·S00-

47 Acquired

40 Pt- for an

Back and forth
across the sea

- THE BORN LOSER

610 Farm Equipment

p~s

4 NT

68

Peyotl

Golden Relrlevar Puppies Gl,ls
$250, Boys $200 740 367 7708

Nice used furniture and Appliances Johnson's Used Furnt·

Evemngs 7.40-256 1530

Noon

Now1800· 73(). 7772 EXT 6336

(3041675 4975

Evans HelghlS GallipoliS $400/
Mo Depos•t &amp; References Re
qulred Days 740 256 6456

2000 Dodge
1304)675-1709

$100 $500 6 UP POLICE IM·

poano Dr 74().446 4525
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebulll In Slock
Call Ron Evans 1·81J0.537·9528

l.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

$100 aech Phone (304)675
7771

3 Bedroom House For Rent 25

2 Bedrooms

NEW

Firewood For Sa le (740) 256

Black female German Shephe rd
Pupptes Firs! shots &amp; wormed

Wanted to RentiBuy a House/
Trailer In Hannan Trace Schoo l
District Excellent References!

Singles Or Doubles 740 446
3583

691 6777

truck

$275 (3041675-5458

Small 1BR Apt Pt Pleasant
Area $195 month Evenings

HUO Homes Approval By Phone

New 4BR t 6 Wtde $500 Down
$245 per mo Free Atr 1 BOO·

a

Males Vet Checked 1st shots
and wormed S!x weeks old

840 0521

Buy or sell Riverine Ant1qu11,

5070

Fire Wood' Cut Split Delivered
All Seasgned Oak other Hard
Tf'IJCk Loadt

$260-$300. 74().992·2167

1(800~251

Alfordable Tecnnolog~s

woods (740) 44B 6566 BY- the

tun111es

530

choose from

&amp; Technical Help 800 300 2640

males 3 Males $300, 740-388·

13 8ly1e of type
14 Cold period
(2 wda )
15 ltlgh-oltchecl
18 CttUin Aalan
17 S!Mie
18 Oid1hom1
town
20 B11aball'a
Hodgaa
21 C1lro'e river
23 Hoelery 1h1de
24 High platelu
25 Plant pert
27 Medii m1gnate
Murdoch

37 Writer Ephron
40 Pell
41 New (pre!.)
43 Tit •Nice
45 Hou• addition
40 Compua pt.

By Phillip Alder

www ackerwheel com

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Alverslde Apartments In Middle

BARNEY

$200 740 742 2694

Pups Had Firs! SholS 4 Fe·

Fllmtone'l pel

llllping
9UIIten

Miles Mint Condlt•on Take Over

AKC RegiSlered Pug Puppies 3

Systems Internet Ready Software

South

AKC Registered Dachshund pup
pies vet checked shots 6
wormed two males two females

Pomeranian

7 Fumlllhed with

Vulnerable Both
D!!aler North

Paymen!S 740·367-0219 740·
367 7272

bull and bull &amp; while spols $200
740 992 7371

Aegtstered

34 Fred

t A 8 6 5

Openmg lead •

AKC Reg istered Cocker Span1et
puppies llrst shots and wormed

(740) 367 7705

COYW

1 Chide

• 6 7 5 2

AKC German Shorlhalf Pups

AKC Registered Dachshunds
Weeks Old Puppies Ready to got

33 Removlble

1997 Ford Expedition 37,000

800 300·2640 Aflordable Tach

or Waekands 740-441-0952

A Q 10 9
• 4

ACROSS

$8 500 oo

NET Software Techn ical Help

COMPUTERS! Lease RENT- TO
OWN! $79 EASY QUALIFYINGll
New 400 /500 MHz CompleJo

a

1995 Buick Lesabre Custom 4
Doors Tilt Cru1se Pwr Lock&amp; Pv«

upSlalls 2 Bedroom NICe! (740)
446 0139
First Avenue Gallipolis t Bed
room Apartment 740 446 1066

South

Edition fully loaded, excellent

condlllon B8k. pearlized palnl,
741l-992·750B o~er 5 OOpm

For Rent Apartment Downtown

not ogles

• Q J 10 6

$200 00 Each (740)·256 1385

s,,

Call FIROCOM Advanced Tech
nologles 1 800-617-3476 Exl
330

tJ9732

(;:JJ'"(

Deslgn~d

Nallonwlde 1· 800·9WHEELS
Slock Wheels (And Hub Caps)
Only Buy Sell 1 BOO 994 3357

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments
Includes Water

Deposll Required

6 Month Old Pure Beagle Pups
Ready To Aun $75 Each Copper
Nose Tn Color 74Q-441 1440

Monthly Payments Y2K Compll
ant Almost Everyone Approved

1994 Cadillac DaVIlla

8642

2 Bedrooms 36 Chillicothe Rd
$325 00 Month Deposit! No Pets'

Bedrooms WID Hook Up $340/

Pets lor Slife

Cast Iron Tub Wtth Claw Feet
$200 Kitchen Cabmet With Flow
er Ben $75 Running Boards Fl

COMPUTERS • $0 Down Low

• 7 6 3
• K Q 10 7 2
t K Q 10
• 9 4

nlca whee ls $3500 740·949

Windows Loaded
740 682·7512

$200 OBO 740 441 0901

Syslem (740)3811-9082

• 4 2
• J 9

2045 evenmgs

Rally Worlds Most Complete Inventory Of OEM Wheels Ship

references 740-992 0185

229 Burkhart Lane Gall1pot•s 2

5121

2 Mate Beagles Hard Hunltng 1
Is Lemon While 4 Years Old 1
Is Trl Colored 3 Years Old $200
Each 74()..441 1440

Complete PA System 5,000
Watt Generator 1Oft Satellite

HAPPY

60·1..l)&lt;J:..Y

East

good $4900 740 687 6688

FACTDRV WHEELS Alloy Steel

4313

2 br unlurntshed house In New
Haven for rent 304 675 3469

Stock bnck sewer pipes wind
ows lintels etc Claude W1n1ers
R1o Grande OH Call 7-40 245

Paymanls NO MONEY DOWN111
FREE Color Pnnler 1 6B8·671
4300

VERY

West

standard excellent condl
ttOn looks great beautiful Interior,

Bassett C[!b sol1d maple wtth
mattress $100 el(ceuent cond 3
drawer &amp;5 drawer cherry Bassetl
chest of drawers $300 lor both

berglass For 1998 F 150 Ford
P1ck Up $50 74().256-6989

(OIJSIDER if-X:,
HIS EO- WCI:-Y
DIDIJ'T t:o"ilb lli£l..L

~oHC

21 x20 TWO CAR GARAGE Full

560

He:SA.

1993 Plymoulh Dusler 6 cylinder

Building
Supplies

Baby Bed Dres•lng Tablo Hrgh
Chat' Car seat and Strolte'
(304}'75-2801

Brand New Large Kitchen Aid
Mtxer Speed Contro l Large S
Steel Mixing Bowl &amp; All The At
tachments Never Been Usedl'

•AK3

1992 Ponttac Sunblrd 2 dr white
63 000 mites, auto 4 cyt , runs

550

KJ 6 5

• 4

$2 500 304-773-5182

Zemlh 25" TV $50 Convecllonal

Slalllon $700 740 3E7-7760

10 27 99

•A6653

Mileage

Oven $25 1941 Chevy Truck
Plus Extra TransmiSSIOn &amp; Motor
$750 3 Year Old Registered Arab

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacl&lt;son, Otllo 1 80().537·9528

f 25 Yr Manufacturers warrantee
Complete With 10 Overhead I
Door $2,993 00 Can Deliver 1
BOO 7017912
'

304 675-3440

Gas

AKC

poSil Required! (740)446 2468'br
(740)44e 2651

410 Houeea for Rant

Ware Games (740) 367-0588

Great

COMPUTERS! $79 · $89 /Mo
EASY QUALIFYING! FAST
NEW 500 MHz Complele INTER

N1ce furnished upstairs apartment
In ctty No Pets! References De

RENTALS

Apple II GS Computer 12" Color
Monitor Hard Drive 2·31f2 Flop
py Drives Pnnter Desk Soft

Glass

1991 5 10 Durango AIC New
Palnl S2 895 1992 Boralla 5
Speed $2 895 1990 Serena &lt;IT
$2 495 Cook Molors 1740)·446
0103

pression Fittings In Sk&gt;Ck

a

1990 Red Geo Storm El(tra nice,

(740) 245 5098 Leave Messegel

Christy s Family Living apart
ments home &amp; trailer rentals
740 992 4514 apartments ava1 l
able furnished &amp; unlurn1shed

New Haven one bedroom fur
nlshed apartment also hal;' wash
er and dryer deposit and refer·
ences reqUtred 740 992 0165

Real Estate
Wanted

200 Sq lards 01 Carpel &amp; Pad
$400 740 367 7401

$21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 1oo. All Brass Com

North

A C , 5 Spaed New Tires Tinted

86 Acura $1 295 00 90 EscO!t
c1 500 oo Bolh run Greall (740~
388 9062 or (740)-446-7278

Sale lor Pay.()~ (304)675-4843

360

9 Wmdows Wtth Storm $40 Each
Or $350 All Small Trailer Cart
Like New $80 Craftsman Pres
sure Washer used Once $90

314 200 PSI

Looks Good. Alpine AMIFM Cas
salle S1 000 Or 080 304·875
1741

AKC Registered Golden Retnev
ers $150 each 5 Females Call

poll From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor

Anthony Land Co Ltd

3 ALL STEEL BUILDINGS 24x36
was S7 500 Sell $3 990 30x60
Was $10 900 Sell $6 950 50x75
Was $19 600 Sell $8 900 Doug
6D0-388 5314

Waterline Spec1al

Laptops eCommerce Almost
Everyone Approved low Monthly

350 Lota &amp; Acreage

92o/o Gas Furnaces Heal Pumps
Duct Systems Free Eshmates If

You Don t Call Us We Both Lose!
740·446 6308 1 800 291 0098

Apartment tor rent m Pomeroy no

pelS 740 992·5858

1989 Subaru Turbo GL, Aunt 6

WARMUP

Door $2 993 DO Can Dallver 1
80().701 7912

COMPUTER BLOWOUTIIl COM·
PAQ MICRON IBM Desklops

367-Q219 740 367 7272

3545

/25 Yr Manuf,acturers Warrantee
Complete With t 0 Overhead I

388 1100

Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Repair
lng NOT ~lacing Long Cractcs
800·826 8523 US /Canada
www glassmechanlx com

992 2218
I Bedroom Near Holzer s, Eco
nomlcal Gas Heat Kitchen Ap
pllances Furnished $279/Mo +
Ut1ht1eS 740 446 2957

RBQU1r80 No Pets 7411-446-4474

98 14x70 Clayton

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
n1shed and unfurn•shed security
deposit reQUired no pets 740

Doubles 1 8D0-848 5678

Mo

14)(70 2 3 bedrooms one and
half bath new carpet and remo
deling must be moved asking

FINANCIAL

All Homes On Sale $499 down
on Singles &amp; $999 down on

(740)-446 24191740)446 0720

for Sale

Will Haul &amp; Clean Up
4538

OCTOBER SPECIAL

No $$$$ Dovtn Credit Trouble
OK Flnancmg Available CALL

CREDIT PROBELMS?
• Avoid Bankruplcylll

Apartments
for Rent

600 691 6777

1·800·213 8365

HOME FORECLOSURES NO
'-40NEY DOWN! NO CREDIT
NEEDED! TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS' 1 800 916
9191 Ext H5023

4000

Like New

Down $210 per mo Free Air 1

Exl 8040

Masters Doctorate By Corre
&amp;pondence Based Upon Prior Ed
ucat•on And Short Study Course
For FREE In formation Booklet

180 Wanted To Do

21 X20 TWO CAR GARAGE Full

Ple as ure DEBT FREEt Free
Copy
www sec ret s co m/spe
ctalt8370

POSTAL JOBS To $18 45 /H1
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 80 /Hr
Benefits Apphcatloo &amp; Exam
Info 7 Days 9 A M 9 PM
CALL 1·800-966-0947 X1003

740-992 5039 74().992-4410

$225!Mo Plus Deposit 8 M1les
Out 218 &amp; Teens Run Road 740-

Moving Out Of ArH MuSI sell al

$45 /Hr MediCal Billing Soltware
Company Needs People To P1o
cess Medtca! Claims From Home
Trammg Prov•ded Must Own
Compute r 1 800 434 5516 E't

~esponsible person to woO&lt; wee-

540 Mlscellan~ua
Merchandln

FREE BOOK1 Aavea!s Secrets To
Fmanctal Freedom• Live A Life 0 1

POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 /HR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPERI
ENCE fOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1 800 813 3585
EXT 14210 8 AM 9 PM 7
DAYS Ids IOC Fee

kend car1ng for the elderly call

420 Mobile Homo
for Rent

11

The Dally Sentinel •

Ohio

Pomeroy•

II

manner that oould awaken new hope
m your heart Condllrons are now takmg a 1um for !he better ooncemmg a
matter thai has been of concern to
you
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Don 'I wasle your lime and efforts
loday on mailers of small oonse·
quence, especially where your career

concerned Luck 1s present m
meamngful areas contammg bag

ts

ObjeCliVCS
PISCES (Feb

20-March

20)

When you exen your authonty mneccso;ary S1luat1ons today, you'll rece1ve
lhe largest approv•l Tius 15 beCause
of the fine manner m wh1ch you w1eld
oommand at th1s lime
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) 1'11.e
rewards you're seeking arcn'llha1 far
off, so d1sm1!1S any discouraging
ihoughls, roll up your sleeves and get
to work on it This can be a most proI
ductiVe day
TAURUS (Apni:ZO.May 20) Trust
in your assessments of areas that you
perce1ve to be fruitful Your judgments are qutle keen and wrll serve
you well today when you start to do
somelhing aboul them

I,

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Profit
for work well done 1s lookms
extremely encouragrng loday Ut1hte
your lalenls, skdls and trarmng lo put
more bread on lhe !able You could
benefit greally al lhts ume
CANCER (Juno 21 July 22) Thai
wh1ch you manage yourself or base

upon your own tdeas could

prove

to

be lhe luck1cs1 S1lua11ons for you
lodny n1c lrl&lt;k IS to keep k1b1tzers
complelely out of lhe p1cture
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Mailers
where you are

looJcmgout for the we l-

Ime and good of olhcrx could y1eld
lhe grealest benefits for you loday
Make lh1s your poorny over other
Interests !hat pop up
VIROO(Aug 23·Sept 22)Agood
arrangement ~ fnend of yours has
estabhshed Wllh a second pally has
room for a th1rd link You may be
1nvo1ed 1n on the charn today and 11
behoov.es you to take advaniBKC of 11
UBRA (Sepi 23-0ct zj) There is
amply financial opportunny ;~round
you 1oday, but you mrghl haye to firs!
ferret 11 out Leave no !IIane unlumed
1n your search for malerial securoly.

\I

•'

�.

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday

Wednesday, October 27, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

the Pacific Nort~west and Great
Lakes," Baker saod Tuesday as the
agency issued its wmter weather
forecast.
"We expec t conSiderable monthto-month variation in temperature,
ramfa ll and stonnrnc&gt;S m the Central,
Northern and Eastern states, which
means days of warmer than nonnal
temperatures followed by bouts ol
brttcr cold ," he added
La Nma IS a periodic coolmg of a
l.ugc area of the tropical Pacrlic
Ocean. It can alternate wu han ocean
wan mn g call ed El Nmo Both can
have uupalls on weather worldwrde.
In So utheastern areas plagued by
drought Ia" summer the outlook IS

for nonnal to below nonnal moist ure
m coming months, said Louis
Ucccllini, dtrcctor of the Nation al
Weather Scrvrcc 's National Center
lor Environmental Prediction That
may be a boon, however, to llooded
areas of North Carolina, pcnnitting
the ground to dry, he said.
"Over the past decade we have
unproved the forecasting of La Nma
and El Nino so that we can now prediet these events and their expecteC:
climatic impacts on dtiTcrent regions
with 70 to 80 percent accuracy a year
before they occur," said John J. Kelly, director of the Weather Service
The servrce is part of the National
Oceanic and Atmosphenc Admin is-

tration.
The annual Weather Service forecast came a day after NASA
researchers in Pasadena, Calif.,
rssued their own simrlar forecast
calling for a wet winter across the
Northwest and a dry one in the Southwest.
· The regional winter forecasts from
the National Weather Service were:
• Alaska: Colder and dner than
nonnal.
- Hawait:•Colder and wetter than
nonnal.
• Pact lie Nonhwesl : Above-normal precipitation and mcreased
stonniness. Ncar-nonnal temperalures. Above nonnal snowfall.

Cases concluded in County Court session
The followmg cases were among
those resolved recently in the Mctgs
County Probate Court of Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Ronald E. Starchci.
Rutland, no motorcycle endorsement.
$150 suspended to $75 upon prout ot
a vahd motorcycle endorsement wnhin 60 days, costs. three days Jai I suspended, operatmg a motorcycle wrthout a helmet. $10 plus costs; speed.
$40 plus costs; Scott M Grande ,
Orvtlle, speed, $40 plus costs: operating a motorcycle wllhout a helmet.
$10 plus costs, Vrolet G. Bailey. Rutland. dnvmg under suspension. $100
~ Ius costs. three days p rl suspended:
dnving 111 marked lanes, costs on ly:
seal belt, $25 plus costs: Raymond J.
Mtchael, Racme , speed. $29 plus
costs, scat belt, $25 plus costs ;
Randy E. Robin, Hartford, W.Va.,
no operator's hccnse, $200 plus costs,
$100 suspended rf vahd OL presented witlun 90 days. three da) s jar I suspended: seat belt. $25 plus costs:
Matthew J. BraMurd. Racme, speed.
$30 plus costs, Charles M. SMrth .
Rutland , failure to dnvc on nght hall
or road. $20 plus costs, Damcl T.

Spencer, Brdwcll, gross overload,
$450 plus costs, Bonnrc J. Smith,
Pomeroy, failure to control, $20 plus
costs. Chris Capehart, Pomeroy, seat
belt. $25 plus costs;
Rrchard W. Jacobs, Athens, seat
hell, $25 plus costs; speed, $55 plus
costs; Angela D. Powell, Pomeroy,
scat belt, $25 plus costs; Danny L.
Walker, Rutland. gross overload,
$650 plus costs, Robert D. Ellis, Mtddleport, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Andrew Paul Wrlliams, Rutland failure to marntam assured clear diSlance, $20 plus costs; Rodney K.
Whrtc, Long Bottom, unsafe vehicle, ,
$20 plus costs; expired rcgrstration,
$50 plus costs: Deana Ash, Syracuse,
speed, $30 plus costs, James B.
Fowler Jr., speed, $30 plus costs;
Brandy L. Cotten II, Pomeroy, far lure
to control, $20 plus costs; Kenneth R.
Smith, Pomeroy, scat belt, $25 plus
costs; Kelly J. Powell, Racrne , speed,
$30 plus costs; Lynn E. Murray, New
London, Wise., reckless operatron,
$20 plus costs; left of center, $70 plus
costs; David A. Gnmm. Middleport,
seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Qurncy L Oldaker, Letart, W.Va.,
Musgrave . Chc sh1rc . scat belt, $25 scat belt, $25 plus costs: Kenneth lorplus cosrs. Jmcph A Collins. dan, Huntmgton, W.Va., seat belt, $15
Newark. speed. $30 jllus costs. Cat hy plus costs: Todd S Varney, Long BotLynn Allen . Pomc~~&gt; y. speed. $30 tom. dnvmg wllh one headlight out.
plus cosls : Jl;ml S1m psn n Jr.. $20 plus costs, Teresa A. Whitlock,
Pomeroy. speed. ~ .1 1J plus cost&lt;: Dara Reedsville, scat belt, $25 plus costs;
L L.l\\'ICil LC. Racinl· . stop srgn. $20 speed. $55 plus costs: Larry F Carplus costs. Sahnna R Congo. Long pcnter. Spe ncer, W.Va, gross overBottom. assure clt.~ar d1slancc, $20 load. $150 plus costs: Todd Tnpp.
plus costs. Phrlhp Fred Batey. N"ew Pomeroy. seat belt , $25 plus costs:
Haven. W Va ., speed, $10 ptu&lt; costs. Steve W Hulse, Lancaster, seat belt.
seal belt. $25 plus costs: Gary A $25 plus costs, Mark A. Haley. Mrd-

dleport. seat belt, $15 plus costs;
Charles A. Tyree, Mrddlcport, seat
belt, $25 plus costs: James A. Pickens. Long Bottom, failure to maintain
assured clear distance, $20 plus costs,
Michael R. Turner, Coolvrlle, seat
belt, $25 plus msts; Wesley T. Karr,
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs,
Andy L Midktff, Shade, farlure to
control , $20 plus costs: Kevm W
VanMatre , Pomeroy, scat belt, $25
plu s costs ; Paul A. Vmcyard,
Reedsville, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Heath A. Ross, South Point, failure to display valid registration, $20
plus costs; Joseph L. Reeves, Athet.ts,
open container, $30 plus costs; Jacob
W. Lands. open container, $30 plus
costs, Kevin M. Graham, Pomeroy,
shooting across a public roadway,
$50 plus costs; no hunting license,
$50 plus costs, Walter D. McFee Jr.,
Rutland, disorderly while rntoxtcated,
$50 plus costs;
Alesa Bonecutter, Middleport,
failure to yield, $20 plus costs; Johnny 0 . Hawley, Racine, driving under
the mfluence, $850 plus costs. 30
days jail suspended to 10 days, one
year OL suspenston, one year probatwn ; seat belt, $25 plus costs; fat lure
to control, costs only; .Anthony
Smith, Cheshire, DUI, $850 plus
costs, six months Jar I suspended to 10
days. one year OL suspension, one
year probation, 90-day vehicle immobilization; drivmg under suspenSion,
$200 plus costs, six months Jail suspendcd to I0 days concurrent, one
year probatron:
·
Amy Slec, Rutland, no OL, $200
plus costs, three days jail and $100

suspended if valid OL presented
wllhin 90 days; driving under suspenSion, $200 plus costs, 30 days jail .
suspended to five days, $100 plus
five days jatl suspended if valid OL
presented within 90 days, one year
probation: Richard Fuller, Btdwell,
possession of drug paraphernalia,
$75 plus costs; possession, $50 plus
costs: unaulhonzcd use of a molorvchrcle, costs, six months jail suspended to 32 days, two years proballon, costs, restitution; Mark D.
Elliott, Pomeroy, DUI, $850 plus
costs, IOdaysjail suspended to three
days Jail. 90-day OL suspension, one
year probation, jatl and $550 susocndcd upon completion of residential treatment program;
Ira Tabler, Stewart, assault, costs,
six months jail suspended to 30 days,
one year probalron; driving under
fin~ncial responsibility action suspension, costs, six months jail suspended to 30 days, one year probation; Freeda L. Chandler. Pomeroy,
reckless operatton, $300 ·suspended,
costs, three days jail suspended; drivmg under suspension, $50 plus
costs, three days jail suspended if
valid OL presented within 90 days;
Theresa Hopkins, Patriot, DUI, $850
plus costs, 10 days jail suspended to
three days, 90-day OL suspension,
one year probatron,jail and $550 suspended upon completion of residential treatment program within 90
days; Brian Cleland, Middleport,
reckless operalron, $100 plus costs;
Arnold L. Granat, Pomeroy, attempted deception to obtain drugs, costs,
stx months Jail suspended, one year
probation.

• Calfr9rnia: Below nonnal ternperature.~Jill.~ar the coast. Above nor-

mal prectpitation in the north, below
nonnal in ihe south.
• Southwest: l\bovc nonnal ternperatures, below normal precipita-

within easy travel distace for approximately 90% of the
students that will attend them. They are also close to
emergency services such as fire departments, police, and
emergency squads. The actual building sites have not
been determined because, until a Bond Issue passes, we
have no authority to proceed beyond initial contacts with
landowners.
A New Middle School for the "Kids in the Middle."
A new Middle School for students in grades stx througn
eight is planned also. This school will house
approximately 470 students. The current Middle School
is housed in several buildings. these buildings are all in
the flood plain and cannot be renovated to get out of this
situation.
The new Middle School is planned to be located on
property next to Meigs High School. It is planned that a
road will be built to connect the new middle school to the
high school for the ease of transporting students by bus
and by parents. This wil also put the schools close
enough to address some of our safety I security problems.
The new Middle School will put all of our students under
one roof and will eliminate the need for thim to travel
putside from bualding to building for class exchanges
and lunch as they do now.
Meigs High School- Renovation for the New
Millenium.
As part of the Bond Issue, Meigs High School will receive
an $8 million renovation. The building is in good
structural shape and is certainly worth keeping for future
generations. The plan is to air condition the vast majority
of the building, bring it up to code for electrical, fire,
security and plmbing needs, provide new windows and
doors, proviede new finishes and paint and to provide a
new roof to the classroom portions of the building.
What is the Plan for the "Old Buildings?"
As part of the "rules" from the Ohio School Facilities
Commission, there are only two options for the buildings
that would be vacated after building the new schools.
The first option is to find a new use for the buildings.
The second option is to demolish the buildings. We have
until the buildings are vacated to demolish the buildings.
There has been a great deal of discussion about the
current buildings and the Board of Education will
continue to discuss options and plans up to the time that
the current buildings are vacated. The Board would like
for as many of the buildings to remain in use in the local

Reaching a deal swiftly, Page 2
This husband is stingy, Page 6
Events detailed at Meigs High, Page 12

Today: Sunny
High: 70s; Lpw: 30s

tion. Below normal snowfall in eastern New Mexico ..
• Northern Plams. Near nonnal
temperatures and above normal precrprtalron Srgmtrcanl arclrc outbreaks likely.

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

a1

The Meigs County Agricultural Society will have its annual election of
members to the Board of Directors Monday.
The election will take place from 5 to 9 p.m. Monday in the office at the
grange hall on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds. Frvc will be elected for full
terms, and one fonn an unexpired term.
Candidates for full tenns are Bob Calaway, Kenny Buckley, Jennings Beegle and Mike Parker, incumbents, and Paula Jane Fttch, Brian Windon and
Tim Bearhs. The candidates for the unexpired lenn of one year are Jim Watson, incumbent, and Don Folmer.
Qualified to vote in the election are those who hold membership in the
Meigs County Agricultural Society.

Meigs County's
Volume

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
• Son of Herman and Amber Warner of Pomeroy.
• Member of the American Legion Post 39 of Pomeroy
• Member of the Zion Church of Christ, St. Rt. 143
• Graduated from Pomeroy High School in 1952
• Married Suzanne Vaughan, daughter of Richard
(Grandpa) and Lucille Vaughan, in 1957
.• Three Children - Patty &amp; Randy Young
Scott Warner
Kimberly and 'Albert Dettwiller
• United States Army 1953 - 1955
• 35 Years at the Meigs County Highway Department.
15 Years as an equipment operator and 20 years as
Superintendent. Helped to manage a million dollar
budget at the Meigs County Highway Department.
Extensive knowledge of road construction and
maintenance of equipment, including purchasing,
paving and planning construction of bridges and
roadways.
• Retires from the Meigs County Highway Department
in 1994

~769

Single Copy· 35 Cents

will nurture, challenge and encourage every individual to reach his/her full
potential."
Vision staiement:
.
"By the year 2010, all members of the district commumty will cooperatively work as a team to assure academic achievement for all students. T~
learning environment wtll provtde advanced technology, a sense of hannony and a respect for others. The district and members of the surroundmg communities will benefit from an educational program that serves as a model of
excellence."
Mission statement:
"The Southern Local School District strives to become a model of excellence through cooperative efforts that provtde a secure learning environment
which focuses on the development of ~ry student's potential to become a
productive member of society."
"V"
The board also agreed to hold a public heanng on Nov. 8 at 7 p.m. at
Southern High School to allow public questions and comments on the Southern Local Contmuous Improvement Plan to be followed by a spectal meeting at 7:30p.m. to approve the plan.
.
In personnel matters, the board approved Amy Kmg, Mary Powell, Jenny Ridenour, Sharon Thomson and Elizabeth Yeager as substitute teachers
and approved (with Board President Bob Collins abstaining) BeverlyColhns
as a tutor for a hearing-impaired student at Portland Elementary for SIX hours
per week. The board also approved Roma Sayre as seventh grade girls' bas-

ketball coach for the 1999-2000 school y_car.
In other business, the board:
• Raised the pay for substitute teachers to $60 per day, the same as Eastern and Meigs school districts.
• Approved Professional Services Industries as recommended by the Quandel Group to provide construction testing services.
• Approved a contract with Dodson Bros. Extenninating Co. Inc. for pest
control services during the 1999-2000 school year at an annual cost of $171
per sch~ol.
.
.
.
.
• Tabled renewing of the borler insurance policy wllh.Dowmng, Chrlds,
Mullen and Musser with a premium of $1,444.78.
• Approved Lane's Boiler Repair update controls on the furnaces at all the
school buildings to solve the Y2K problem at a cost not to exceed $900.
• Approved discharge and pick-up points for students· for the 1999-2000
school year as worked out by the bus drivers and transportation supervisor.
• Discussed the parking of big trucks on the high school lot. The board
dertded that any truck drivers who park at the high school must register at
the high school and park only on the old surfaces. No parking will be allowed
against the building or after the parking lot is completed.
.
.
Present were Superintendent James Lawrence. Treasurer Denme Htll,
boa8President Bob Collins and board members Marty Morarity, Doug Little, Jivid Kucsma and Ron Cammarata.

Election '99:

Wrestling positions
get nod from Meigs
Local school board
The Moigs Local Board of Education, meeting in regular session
Tuesday evening m Pomeroy,
approved hiring a wrestling coach
and creating an additional wrestling
coach position.
The board hired Troy Bauer as
varsity wrestling coach for \he I 9992000 school year and created an
assistant wrestling coach position at
8 percent of the teacher base salary.
In other pc;rsonnel matters; &lt;&gt;the
boand hired Mark Swann, occupatiomil work experience, and Connie
Gilkey, elementary guidance, on
extended service supplemental contracts for the 1999-2000 school year.
The board also paid the following
administrators two days of per diem
pay for auending meetings and workshops during the summer: Rusty
Bookman, Don Hanning, Cindy
Johnston, John Lisle, Mary O'Brien,
David Gaul and Tony Deem.
Hope Donna Buffington, Margaret Corsi·, Rebecca Frechette,
Carmelita Osborne and Gina Thomas
were hired as substitute cooks for the
1999-2000 school year, while Enc
White and Earl Pickens were hired as
substitute custodian and bus driver,
respectively.
Htred as substitute teachers were
Kristen Bond, Penny Burge, Laura L.
Ellis, Catherine I. Grosvenor, Amy
King, Mary Powell, Nancy Scarbrough and Elizabeth J. Yeager.
In other personnel matters, the

Pd. For Ted A. W•rncr
Salisbury Township Trustee 3580t Wotfo Pen Rd
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

PAID FOR BY THE MEIGS LOCAL BETIER·BUILOINS COMMITI'EE-RALPH WERRY, TREASURER 320 EAST MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OH

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Southern Local's Contmuous Improvement Plan was the topic of Monday night's school board meeting held at Southern High School in Racine.
Michaelcne Meyer and the CIP leadership team presented the proposed
plan to the board. The plan ·includes an overall district- wid~ improvement
plan, a technological improvement plan and a plan to Improve proficiency
test scores from kindergarten to fourth grade.
Southern Local was earlier selected to receive special fundmg for the continuous improvement plan and combined with Alexander Local School Dis·
.
trict in hiring Meyer as a consultant for the plan.
The board approved belief, vision and mission statements for the d1stnc1
as pres~nted by the district's CIP leadership team.
Belief statements:
"The Southern Local School District believes:
"It is the responsibility of the district to teach/guide each stud~nt as_they
Jearn to accept both the right and the obligation to make ethtcal, mtelhge~t
and responsible decisions in order to become a productive member of soct•
ety.
..
. h f ., .
"It is the school's responsibility to provide opportumues whtc . act ttate
individual. social, and academic development so that each student wtll acqutre
the necessary skills in becoming a life-long Ieamer. .
...
"The best teaching experience results when there IS shared responstbthty from students, parents. school staff and the community.
.
"It is the responsibility of the district to provide a secure environment thai

TEDA. WARNER

PLEASE VOTE YES ON NOVEMBER 2nd TO IMPROVE THE
OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE STUDENTS IN THE MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT. THEY DESERVE YOUR CONTINUED SUPPORT!

so, Number 99

Hometown Newspaper

Southern considers Continuous Improvement Plan

VOTE FOR

communities due to our inve~tment in both money and
memories. Some of the optiions that have been
discussed include: Bradbury Elementary may have to be
demolished due to limits in expanding its sewage system
and other problems. Harrisonville Elementary is very
limited due to its location, heating with propane (cost to
maintain(and its general overall condition. Two entities
are interested in the building. Middleport Elementary is
in good overall condition but it is located in the flood
plain. It would make an excellent -location for a Village
Community Center and Village Hall. Pomeroy
Elementary is in a very restricted area, has some
structural problems and is very costly to heat, but there is
interest in the building. Rutland Elementary is on a very
small lot and has had many maintenance problems over
the past few years. It would make an excellent location ·
for a new fire department I emergency squad building for
the Village of Rutland. Salem Center Elementary has a
deed restriction thatr forces the district to offer the
property back to the original landowner. That and the
general condition of the building severely limit the uses
of that building and it may well have to be demolished .
Salisbury Elementary is planned to be used as a new
location for the Central Offices of the district. The
current location in Pomeroy is restricted in size and
accessibility. The Meigs Middle School (main building)
offers challenges in terms of the flood plain laws but
would make an excellent location for a multitude of uses
for the community and county.
What is this going to Cost?
The Board of Education adopted a Resoulution that will
reduce the amount of what you currently pay for the
Permanent Improvement Levy by the amount of the
Bond Issue. You will not pay any additional taxes for the
Bond Issue untl your reappraisal exceeds the amount you
currently pay for schools. The Bond Issue is for 23 years
but if property values increase in the district, the Bond
Issue will be paid off at an earlier date. Also, by state
law, one-half qf a mill ." stays at home" to be set aside for
future mainienance of the buildings and for needed
renovations. T\le state is putting up $5 for every $1
raised locally. Our sister school districts in Meigs County
have alredy passed bond issues and. are enjoying the
benefits of new schools or waiting patiently to move into
them. Our students (current and future) deserve the
same considl!ration. Please help us help them .

-Pages

•

Fair ·B oard member election
is scheduled for Monday

BUILDING ·F OR THE FUTURE
Information About The Upcoming Bond Issue To Build New
Schools for Students in the Meigs local School District.
Meigs Local's Bond Issue- The Plan
The Meigs Local School District has been approved by
the Ohio School Facilities Commission (OSFC) to be on
the November 2 ballot for a Bond Issue. The Plan
approved by the OSFC and in tum by the Meigs Local
Board of Education calls for the construction of two new
elementary schools, a new middle school and for major
renovations to Meigs High School. This is a $32.6 million
3.95 mill Bond Issue.
How Did We Get to a Bond Issue?
Last winter the Ohio School Facilities Commission
contacted the school dtstrict and informed us that we
qualified for State Assistance for a building project. A
team of architects came to the district and mspected all of
our buildings and compared them to current state
standards. All of the buildings had problems that led to
the team of architects to recommend to the OSFC that all
buildings, with the exception of the high school, be
replaced with new buildings.
The major problem areas for the elementary and middle
school buildings are in the following areas: inadequate
heating/ air conditioning, inadequate electrical systems,
inadequate communication systems, building in the flood
plain, as well as overall poor condition of the buildings. .
The hi gh school building meets most state standards.
Two New Elementary Schools Why and Where?
The over-all condition and/ or the location of our
elemaentary schools, based on current state standards,
led the architect team to recommend replacement. The
plan calls for Middleport, Bradbury, Rutland and Salem
Center Elementary Schools to be combined into one
school. The estimated enrollment in the new school is
468 students. This school will be built in the area on State
Route 124 before you enter Rutland onJ.he Middleport
side of Rutland.
The second elementary school as planned will include
Pt;&gt;meroy, Harrisonville, and Salisbury Elementary
Schools. It too is estimated to have an enrollment of
approximately 468 students. The school will be built in
the Wolfpen area on State Route 143.
These areas were chosen for several reasons. They are
o,ut of the flood plain areas as determined by federal
flood plain maps of our county. While roads in the area
flood , access to the proposed school sites is available by
paved county roads. The sites also have utilities
available to them. The sites are not in any "town" but are

October 28, 1999

Weather

La Nina effect may bring mild winter to sputhern states
By RANDOLPH· E. SCHMID
AIIOCiated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The weather
phenomenon called La Nina - Spanish for httle girl - may seem like
sugar and spice to Southern stales
where she is promtsmg a mild wmter. But forecasters expect her to be
bratty to the Northwest and Great
Lakes.
La Nina will change the strength
and pattern olthe Pacitic Jet stream
over North Amenca. said D. James
Baker, head of the Nauonal Oceanic
and Atmospheric Admrnr &lt;tration.
The result will "gtve us a wann
and dry winter in the southern hall of
the nation but more snow and ram m

l

MR/DD
levy set
for vote

board hired David Ramey as a tutor
and Theresa Patterson 10 transport a
handicapped student.
The board also voted to increase
the pay of non-teaching substitute
workers from $5.75 to $6 an hour and
the pay of substitute bus drivers from
$35 to $40 a day.
·• The board adopted a resolution to
!rant title·to prp~ in Scipio Township as prepared ,by .J,ohn Lentes,
prosecuti~g attomey. to Virginia V.
Blazewicz, Denni~ S. Hall, Sophia·B.
Stephenson, Loren C. Wilson, M. Jill
De Marche, M. Gay Hendricks, T.
Beth Bastiani and the estate of Manning Webster.
.
In other business, the board:
• Approved an overnight field trip
for the VICA officers to attend leadership training in Columbus on Oct
28-29.
• Met in executive session to consider the hiring and:compensation of
personnel and to'discuss the possible
discip,line and complaints against an
employee.
• Changed its n~xt meeting date
· from Tuesday, Nov, 9 to Thursday,
Nov. II, 7 p.m. at the district's central office in Pomeroy.
Present were Superintendent Bill
Buckley, Treasurer -. Cindy Rhonemus, Board President John Hood,
Vice President Scott Walton and
board members Wayhe Davis, Randy
Humphreys and Roger Abbott.

HALLOWEEN BASH - These witches Stelle Morgen, left, and Carla King - are off to
Mlddleport'a Sleepy Hollow for tonight's Hal·
loween bash, where they'll loin ghosts and goblins for fright sights. They will be at the scary
station created by People• Bank. Hayrides

Cremeans sees need for better.
compensation for area teachers

As the first stages of the massive
financial settlement tobacco companies are making to Ohio and other
states get underway, a fanner congressman is advocating that some of
the money be used to improve teacher
salaries.
Frank Cremeans of Gallipolis
. argued that underpaid educators, who
in a time of low joblessness and more
attractive positions in the private sector, need to be better compensated to
should be spent. But that plan drew maintain 'quality instruction in the
opposition in his own party from schools.
"We ·must face the fact'•that what
Republican senators' who satd that
we
need.in America- in Ohio- is
priorities may change over time. The
not
a workforce of more teachers but
Legislature, howeveJ:, is authorized to
of
better
teachers," said Cremeans,
appropriate money only every two
who
represented
the Sixth Congresyears.
sional
Dislnct
from
19!15 to 1997.
The plan leaves untouched the
In
a
statement
released
last week,
$5.1 billion the state' is projected to
Cremeans
said
the
millions
of dollars
receive over the final 13 years of the
coming
into
Ohio
In
the
coming
years
settlement payments.
from
the
tobacco
settlement
should
All four Democrats on· the panel
be used to double teacher salaries.
voted against the bill.
A former teacher himself, CreSen. C.J. Prentiss, D-Cleveland,
means
said he respects today's educomplained she w~s not consulted by
cators
and
knows how difficult their
majority Senate Republicans on scaljob
is.
ing back the 25-year recommenda· "But I am ashamed to see that
tion.
these'professionals,
who have college
She also argued that the shorter
degrees
and
often
graduate
degrees,
term spending plan would hun
and
who
hold
the
lives
and
minds
of
minorities because there would be
our
children
in
their
hands,
arc
paid
fewer dollars available to fund pubastoundingly low wages," he said.
lic health programs. ,'
"A new teacher starting out at a
Sen. Jay Hottinger,.. R-Newark,
poor
school district in a place like
said no programs would lose money.
southern
Ohio can barely pay the
"Only after a signed ·bill will we
rent,
let
alone
earn a comfortable livhave commitments," HQttinger said.
mg,"
Cremeans
continued. "Private
The 12-year plan will give the
industry
is
always
beckoning stale greater flexibility, he said.
in
these
times of low
especially
''For us to say in 1999 this is how
unemploymentwith
higher wages
we should spend money in 2025, I
and, quite frankly, better qmditions.
think would be premature."
How are we to retain our most talSen. Eric Fingerhut, OcCJcveland, ented teachers when we can't be bothcalled for additional public hearings.\ ered to pay them even a competitive
He said cutting the plan \0 I 2 years wage?"
essentially rejects the task force's rc:c·
While money from the settlement
ommendation and input from a seraes -and not additional taxation - may
of meetings around Ohio.
help schools Cremeans said are
The House is expected to debate underfunded and shpping in quality,
thetobacco settlement issue after the there is a condition tied to·his stance.
Senate finishes its work.

Tobacco settlement plan
heads for vote in Senate
COLUMBUS (AP)- A 12-year
plan to spend about $5 billion in
tobacco settlement money has cleared
a key committee vote.
The Senate Finance Committee
voted 8-4 Wednesday to approve the
plan, which would spend the money
primarily on public health programs
and education programs. The plan
now heads to the full Senate.
· Gov. Bob Taft wan!s to spend the
money over 25 years, as suggested by
a IS-member task force he appointed to study the way the money

i '

,.,

I

-I

',

Good Afternoon
Today's

'

t-~

"

:

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 rages
Calendar
Class!Oeds

6
8-10

Comics

n

Editorials

2

Soorts

4&amp; 5
3

'_..J,j;gt
Local _ _ ___;_____.3~':"'1
-

Wra!her

Lotteries

own
l'lck 3: 6-9-2; Pick 4: 1-9-~-4
Super Lotto: 6-8-9-23-28-41
Klclc!!r: 3-7-9-3-8-8

lY.Y&amp;

Dally 3: 9-2-4; Dally 4:_6:6-3-6
c t999 Otiio Valley Pubhshmg Co.

through the hollow, promising a thrill a minute,
are free as are the refreehment of elder, coffee,
donuts, and hot dogs provided by local merchanta, Mlddleport'VIIIage and Feeney-Bennett
Poat128 and Its auxiliary. Costumes of the revelers will be judged at 8 p.m.

"Our schools today run on a rienced a "frightening breakdown."
Byzantine tenure system which pro"Simultaneously, however, teachtects bad teachers and restricts good ers have been stripped of their abiliones," he said. "It is a system which ties to discipline children, and
must be phased out over time for the stripped of parental support," Cresake of quality.
means said. "In 'increasmg numbers,
"I would suggest that teachers be we are giving our children to our
given the option of keeping their teachers to be parented, not merely
tenure, along with thetr current salary. educated.
or voluntarily giving up their tenure
"Yet we are also taking from
in favor of a doubled salary, paid for · those same teachers the right to use
by our share of the tobacco settle- parental discipline upon children
ment," Cremeans added.
who misbehave," he added. "Our
Cremeans argued against raising children see their teachers now more
taxes to provide more money for than ever as powerless figures, adults
schools, because "making poor peo- devoid of the power to act and lackple poorer is a bad trade-off for ing the support of parents at home.
improved education.
Obviously, these children cannot
"President Clinton believes more respect their teachers, and therefore,
teachers are the answer," he added. they cannot learn."
"But the concept of hiring more
While families must act to reverse
teachers doesn't work well , no mat- the trend m the home, it is also time
ter how nice it sounds on the evening for local school boards to be allowed
news."
,
to set disciplinary standards and
In another statement. Cremeans enforcement methods, he said.
also urged state leaders to put di sciIf a school board wants to allow
pline back into the schools by pro- paddling or harsher tenns of suspenviding school districts wilh the sup- sion when necessary, "then our state
port needed to win respect back for should not stand in the way," Creeducators.
means said.
Citing what he called the "sea
"Only when our teachers comchange" American families have mand respect, and not merely remam
undergone for deeades - broken powerless before the class, will the
marriages, children forced into foster quality of education mcrcase in our
care and parents unwilling or unable schools," he satd. "In loday's pubhc
to raise their families properly schools, only respect for a teacher can
Cremeans said moral values usually afford an atmosphere where learning
taught within the family have expe- can occur."

Economy expands by 4.8°/o
WASHINGTON (AP)- The U.S. economy roared back from a springtime pauSe, expanding at a sizzling annual rate of 4.8 percent from July
through September, the fastest pace this year.
.
\
The third-quarter increase in the gross domestic product followed a sluggish 1.9 percent rate of growth in the April-June quarter as America's soaring trade deficit cut sharply into growth, the Commerce Department report·
ed today.
Wall Street, which has been jangled by fears that t~e economy is growing so strongly that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates for a third
time this .year, seemed more impressed by a second government repon. It
showed that wages and benefits rose less than expected in the third quarter,
causing less concern about inflation.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Voters will once again decide the
fate of a proposed pennanent levy to
benefit the Meigs Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Dis- ·
abilities.
In the past, voters have rejected
the 1.5-mill levy, which has been
placed on the ballot as a pennanent
levy, and, in the last attempt, as a
five-year levy.
Proceeds from the levy would be
used for maintenance, capital construction, and operation at the Carleton School and Meigs Industries,
which serves school-aged children
and adults with mental retardation
and developmental disabilities.
The proposed levy would enable
the MRIDD board to conunue services now offered, and increase the
level of services as enrollment in programs mcreases , allow for the
replacement of two buses during the
next five years, and allow for a capital construction proJect to aecomodate the growing space needs caused
by an increase in enrollment, according to Steve Beha, director of the
county's MRIDD programs.
Beha estimates that the adult program enrollment has increased by 40
percent during the past five years,
while the Early Intervention and
preschool programs have increased
by 300 percent during the same period. Those attendance figures arc
expected to continue to increase.
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 facilities for habilitation
activities and for the program's
school-age transition class. It would
also allow for renovation of existing
space for better utilization of the production area of the prog~am .
The second phase, which would
be completed during 2002 and 2003,
would add another 4,200 square feet
to the school program, with the addition of two classroom learning centers, a facility cafeteria, which would
allow for the full use of the gymnasium, and kitchen renovations.
Total project costs are estimated at
$1.18 million over th,e four-year period. $300,000 of the cost would be
provided by a capital construction
grant through the Ohio Departmen1 of
MRIDD.
According to a news release
issued by the MRIDD board, the cost
to property owners would be $12.60
per year, based on real estate
appraised at $20,000; $25.20 per year
based on an appraised value of
$40,000; and $37.80 based on a value of $60,000.
Assuming a 100 percent collectioo
rate, Meigs County Auditor Nancy
Parker Campbell estimates that the
additional levy would generate
$379,000 per year for the program,
not counting the 1.5 and 1.8-mill
levies now being collected on real
estaie taxes on behalf of the MRIDD
Board. That would place the mi.llage

{Continued on Pqe 3)
\'

.·
•• w · ,

... ht'e·r · · o, ·a· 11 g·

'·

~·

'

-- ·--------,..·" -I

-

·~""-.............- . -............,
· ,;;·';;.
l.·...w........ ...___ ,._

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="431">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9867">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="26775">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="26774">
              <text>October 27, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="612">
      <name>grueser</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5877">
      <name>tom</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
