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Page 12 • The,Dally Sentinel

Thursday, October 28, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily S'e ntinetcom
@ Meigs High School ·
pie'.
Wacky Ta(ky day was Wcdncsday Not as many people parttc1pat·
ed on this day Probably because of
embarrassment' Some students wore
dtffercnt colored &gt;ocks . hair standing
stra1ght up or 111 p1gtatls. shorts on top
of sweat pants. Joke men do when
they go to work out (very tacky),
!1right blue eye shadow w1th dark red
ilpsuck. and str1pcs wuh pla1ds. It
was really humorous to see what
some students came up with.
Camo day was Thursday and students wore camoullage pants. shirts,
hats, socks, boots, and some even
went to greater lengths by pamting
the11 laces.
Friday was Maroon and Gold day.
We have thi s day every Friday, but it
was even more important to wear it
on this day to show how much
school p~ide we have for the players
on the football team and for the
schooL
Everyday we counted how many
students in each grade dressed up for

•
•

'

;.

Students attend
Holzer health fair
By JENNIFER NEASE
On October 14, Meigs High
School freshmen, tech prep, and
nursing students went on a field trip
to the Holzer Health Fair in Gallipolis.StudenlS vistted several different
booths dealmg w1th teenage health
issues. The following presenters were
there:
• Safety on the Htghway ~ State
Highway Patrol
• Dental Care - Dr. Smith and Dr.
Jorgensen
• Rescue Breathmg/Chobng
Charlie - H.M.C.
• F.A.C.TS.
• Sports Medicine/InJury Prev&lt;!ftion - Holzer Clinic
• D.A.RE. Consequences of Drug
Use
• Drinking and Dnving Outcomes
• Nutrition/Healthy Eating Habits
- Dietary H.M.C.
• Smoking and Smokeless Tobacco, Result of - Resp. Therapy of
H.M.C.
• Gun Safety - Shenff Department
• GRADS Program, Baby Think It
Over
• Spiritual Guidance - Rev. Jackson
• Health Issues . AIDS, Hepatitis,
and STDs
• Inhalants, Patten! Care Technicians, B.H.C.C.
Amanda Langdon. Tech Prep
freshman, was interested in "Smoking Susie". She says she ~ ill now
think twice hefore dnnktng and driving. As a teenager this will benefit
her and her health because she will
stay drug free.
Tech Prep Freshman, Krista! Johnson also thought "Smoking Susie"
was the most1nteresting ex hibit

Kenji Mori

Exchange student
likes it at Meigs
By SHERRY JACKS
During the school year we always
have at least one foreign exchange
student
.
This school year we have Kenji
Mori who is a sophomore from
Japan. He likes it here but says it is
very different from Japan. He said
there dare so many different things in
nature here compared to Japan . One
of the biggest differences, he finds , is
the food.
At Meigs High School, big adjustments have included not wearing a
school uniform and changing classes every period. He enjoys playing
tennis. Kenji plans to stay until next
May and is living with Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Johnson of Pomeroy.

Meig~

Single Copy. 35 Cents

By JIM FREEMAN

CREATING - Michelle King was one .of
many students who used flowers to create

necklaces tor Maul Wal day·during homecomIng weak activities at Meigs High School.

pregame activities took place. The •· ed by Kyle Smiddie; Brooke
homecommg queen candidates were, Williams esconed by Zach Meadows;
Tiffany Halfhill escorted by Nathan Heather Ferrell escorted by Jeff
Halfhill ; Bethany Boyles escorted by Brown; and Charla Burge escorted by
Ryan Well ; Stephanie Kopec escon- Nick Michael. The 1999 Homecom-

ing Queen was Bethany Boyles. .
I would like to say everyone whcr
participated in the week of activitie;
should be proud of themselves. The
students showed Meigs pride.

WASHINGTON' (AP) - Say
goodbye to daylight-saving time
this weekend.
Clocks shift back one hour at 2
a.m. Sunday, local time, giving an
extra hour of sleep to most people
Saturday night - an extra hour of
work to those who work the
overnight
And the change means it will be
dark an hour earlier Sunday night,
Halloween, calling for extra caution on the part of drivers and those
watching the children on their
rounds.
Most people set their clocks
back before retiring Saturday
evening. Those who don't need to
remember to set them back Sunday
- orthey' II be an hour out of sync
with the rest of the country.
If they still haven't remembered
to do it by Monday morning, they
could be an hour early for work.
Daylight-saving time returns
April 2.

COLUMBUS (AP)- The Public

.

WINNING BANNER - A cont11t to create
banners promoting the Meigs · Local bond

Issue was won by the Family, Career Community Leaders of America at Meigs High.

Upcoming events at Meigs High School
By BILLIE DYE
Nov. I - Second Nine weeks
begins.
Nov. 2- Election day (don't for·
get to vote YES on the Meigs Local
Bond Issue.)

By BRANDY STEVENS
thmg."
On Nov. 2, the voters of Meigs IJ;F;i:]i;~~~'7""7;::"~;"j";~jj:l~i:
Local will be given an opportunity to
vote on a Bond Issue.
The Bond Issue wi ll decide
whether two new elementary school
buildings and a new middle school
will be built
Students expressed their v1ews on
if it would be a benefit to the community if the bond issue would pass
and new schools were but h.
• Lucy Howerton - "Yes, the kids
would be in &lt;1 safer environment"
• Mindy O'Dell - "Yes, I do
believe it would benefit the community. Our teachers, peers, and community members deserve updated
and new school s. Come on, haven't.
we waited long enough."
• Ian Story - "Yes, I believe anything that benefits education is a good'
thmg. We need more money spent on
education and its establishments. WE
are the future and learning should be
apprectated and enjoyed by aiL"
• .Mike Williamson - "New
schools could provide beller educalton for the students of Meigs County which would obviously be a good

333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio
45760
(740) 992-6472

In 1969 - 30 years ago- "Mtdnight Cowboy," starring Dustm Hoffman and Jon Voight, was voted best
picture by Academy Award members.
John Wayne won his first Oscar as
best actor for his performance in
"True Grit." and Maggte Smtih took
best actress honors for "The Prime of
Mi ss Jean Brodie."

Hometown Newspaper

11 a·rrested in ,___Experiencing the arts___,
Turn
clocks raids appear in
back
County Court
S·unday Se~~!~:! ~:~es:~sted

ian Story

Oscar awards

County's

Monday evening in ratds on two suspected
Pomeroy area drug houses were in Meigs County Coun Wednesday and
charged with crimes ranging from possession of crack cocaine to complicity to commit attempted murder.
.
Appearing before Judge Patrick H. O'Brien were: Shirley Mae Shmigal,
45, 1401 Brick School Road, Addison, possession of crack cocaine; Shawni!a A. Johnson , 19, 305 Walnut St., Middleport, complicity to commit trafficking in drugs; Todd May, 19, 39134 Stale Route 124, Pomeroy, trafficking and possession; "DJ" Clayton Nagle, 39, 1101 Brick School Road, Addison, possession of crack cocaine; Shannon P. Chapman, 18, 193 Mulberry
St., Cheshire, complicity to commit auempted murder and trafficking; Travis
W. "T-Money" Friend, 19•. Point Pleasant, possession of crack cocaine; Daniel
W. Craycraft, 23, 193 Mulberry St.; Cheshire, complicity to commit auempted murder and trafficking; Nicky L. Craycraft, 34, 193 Mulberry St., Cheshire,
trafficking in cocaine; Marty D11gan, 41 , 39134 state Route 124, Pomeroy,
possession and operating a drug house .
The defendants, with the exception of Dugan, remain in jail in lieu of bond
ranging from $250,000 to $50,000.
Deangelo Thompson, age unreported , 128 Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, owner of one of the hqmes searched, is being held on a charge of violating his
parole and may face additional charges.
Officials arrested the defendants in a two-county, multi-agency sweep of
suspected drug houses in an effort to shut down activities of the "Irish Dis·
ciples" gang which has been operating in Gallia County and , more recently,
in the Middleport/Pomeroy area.
Meigs County Prosecuting Allorney John R. Lentes said Ceci l Yost, 25,
193 Mulberry St., Cheshire, remains at-large and is bemg sought by authorities including the FBI on charges of complicity to ~omrnit allempted murder and trafficking. Also, a juvenile, Darnell Robinson , 16, Pomeroy, may
face charges of complicity to commit auempted murder and trafficking .
Additional charges may pending on others, according to the prosecuting
auorney's office.
·
O'lllien tentatively ~ppointed attorneys Steve and Pat Story to serve as
the defendants' legal 'cllunsel and set a preliminary hearing for Tuesday.

approves
area code Spending measure
proposal heads for inevitable

Students urge support
for bpnd issue passage

-Page 4

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Volume 50, Number 100

won!

Mike Williamson

Kings In NHL action

•

.'

PUCO

Lucy Howerton

Do you believe in life after death?, Page 2
Meigs County land transfers, Page 6
Losing sleep over snoring-, Page 7

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

Spirit Week to sec who would win the
Sptnl Stick. Of course, the se niors
The parade Thursday night had an
overwhelmin g turn out. The parade
rou te went through Rutland. Midd leport, and Pomeroy. The students that
participated were very spirited and
nutgmng Each grade level at the h1gh
school was competing in the contest
for the best float , and the freshmen
won It looked like they. had spent a
lot or time and elTon an d 11 was a job
well done .
After the parade was over there
was a bonfue. The hand played the
ft ght song. the cllccrlcadcrs cheered,
and the football playe" were chant- .
mg. They inlroduccd the homccommg ca ndidates. then Mr. Chancey
spoke with a few words.
Dunn g school we held a pep rally. The speech and drama students
perfonned three skits. which the y did
an excellent JOb on . Then the band
played a couple of so ngs. and the
cheerleaders dtd a dance rouunc. '
Before the game Friday night. the

October 29, 1999

Weather

Homecoming: a special
time for Meigs seniors
By AMY HYSELL
The week of October II was an
exciting week at MHS with all the
Homecoming festivities. This was a
very special time for seniors and students who attend Mctgs High School.
It started off with Spirit Week.
Student Counc1l chooses five d1fferentlypes of thmgs tu wear for each
day of the week. On Thursday the
annual parade and a bonfire were
held. On Friday students showed their
spirit at the pep rally. At pregame, the
homecoming queen candidates were
announced and the queen was
crowned. The homecoming dance ·
was held after the game..
Monday, Oct, II was team logo
day. Students wore local, college, and
profess ional logos.
Tuesday was MaUl Wai day wnh
students weanng hright flowered
shirts and other things to do with
Hawaii . The senior BOE wond processing class made 'ohi a lehua. Thts
is a flowered necklace that people
wear around thctr necks to greet peo-

Friday

•

Nov. 3 -ASVAB test
ferences 4:00 p.m.to 7:00p.m.
.
Nov. 9 - Sports Nutrition and
Nov. 18 - Parent/Teacher con'·
Physical Activity workshop at Rock- ferences 4:00 p.m.to 7:00p.m.
Nov. 25-29- No School Thankssprings Rehabilitation Center at7 :00
giving Break
p.m.
Nov. 26 - Boys' Basketball Pre:
Nov. II - Parent!feacher convtew at Athens High School

HOME {·
NATIONAL
.
K
.
.-JY.BAN
,;:

.

~~~

'

Racine 949-221'()
Syracuse 992-6333

Vaughan's .
Supermarket ·

Good Afternoon

Today's

·-

•(:

UIO CUUtlff UOIP '

Sentinel

2 Sections -.16 Pages

408 General
Hartinger Parkway
992-3471

Calendar
Classifteds
CoRdes

Downing Chdds Mullen
Ofiio ~iver
lftusserlnsurance
111 E. 2nd,,Pomeroy
'Bear Company
992-3381

992-4055

Utilities Commission of Ohio
approved a plan Thursday to overlay
a new area code within the existing
330 code because technological
expansion is draining available phone
numbers.
Beginning next October, northeast
Ohio residents within the 330 area
'code will keep their number but must
dial 10 digits for local calls, said
PUCO spokeswoman Beth Gianforcaro .
When all existing numbers have
been used, new customers in the
region get the new area code but also
must dial I0 digits for local calls.
Phones in the same neighborhood, or
even the same house, can have different codes, Gianforcaro said
The PUCO cited fax ·machines,
cell phones, pagers, ATMs and computer modems for the increased
demand on phone lines. Area codes
~ are being used up much more rapidly than expected, and only I0,000
numerical combinations exist for
each prefix, Gianforcaro said.
"As Ohio's telecommunications
needs and technology increase, we
are all likely to be dialing I 0 digits,"
PUCO Chairman Alan Schriber said.
"This is a small price to pay for the
features and conveniences we'll soon
have at our di,sposal.
The PUCO is also keeping a close
' eye on the Toledo (419), Cleveland
(440) and Cincmnati (5 13) areas, said
Scott Paller, direFlor of telecommunications for the PUCO.

7

12-14

v

Editorial~
L.ocal '

2
3

Soorts
Weather

4&amp;5

3

Lotteries
WWl

Crow's Family Restaurant

Pick 3: ·4-3-2; Pltk 4: 5.{)-9-4
BuckeyeS: 2·14·16-19·37

Featuring Kentucky Fried Chkkin
228 Mala St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

lY.YA.

nan,. 3: 2-0-6; Dally 4: H-0-6

Drive-Thru.Wladow

C 1999 ~hio Valley Publi•hina Co.

veto·· by presl•dent

By LAURIE KELLMAN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON
House
Republicans moved another step
toward an inevitable budget shawdown with President Clinton, passing
and sending to the Senate the last and largest - spending bill of th'e
year in the face of a cenain veto.
"We've put our mark on it, he'll
put his mark on it in the form of a
veto, and that's when negotiations
really start," House Appropriations
Commiuee Chairman Bill Young, RFia., said Thursda~ after the- House
passed a huge bill to fund the District
of Columbia and the health and labor
departments.
The spending measure, approved
on a .near pany-line 218-211 vote,
also.carried a 0.97 percent across-theboard cut in federal agencies ' budgets, which Clinton has said he
would not accept Senate passage was
expected early next week. •
It was the last of the 13 spending
btlls needed to fund the government
in fiscal 2000, which began Oct I .
Congress already has passed and
Clinton has signed two short-term
measures that have kept the government running nearly a month into the
new year.
But neither the Republican-led
Congress nor the president was ready
to let the budget fight produce a federal shutdown.
So Congress on Thursday also
sent Clinton a measure letting .federal agencies function through Nov. 5
as the two sides work through their
differences.
The House vote on the extension
was 424-2, Senate passage was by
voice vote, and Clinton's signature
"was expected quickly.
· Picking his own baules, Clinton
acknowledged what has been a political fact in Washington for many
weeks: That his proposals to extend
the solvency of Medicare and Social
Security, and create a new Medicare
prescription drug benefit, would have
to wait until next year.
"I think th'ey're making a big mistake," Clinton said of GOP opposition to handling those matters in Congress' few remaining weeks of 1999.
. He added , "We can come back to all
that early neltl· year."
House Republicans, meanwhile,
celebrated a near partr line passage
ofthe .final spending bill. - ,
'

•.
I·

'

,I

"Today's vote IS a victory for the
American taKpayer and America's
seniors," said House Speaker Dennis
Hasler!, R-IlL, as dozens of GOP lawmakers gathered oil the Capitol's East
Lawn amid banners and a four-piece
jazz band playing, "Pennies From
Heaven ."
·
"Mr. President, please make the
responsible decision for American
taxpayers and American seniors and
sign ·this important bill into law,"
Hastert added.
There was virtually no chance of
that. Clinton stood ready to veto the
nneasure because of the da01age he
said would be caused by the acrossthe-board cuts in all agency budgets,
which Republicans included to avoid
using Social Security money.
Clinton also objected when the
GOP did not provide the money he
sought to help communities hire
thousands of elementary school
teachers.
The final spending bill contained
$314 billion for education, labor and
health programs for the new fiscal
year and $429 million for the District
of Columbia budget. It included
more than Clinton wanted for the Job
Corps and AIDS treatment, but less
than he wants for substance abuse·
and programs for the elderly.

The maaka created this
month by fifth graders at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
are of no ordinary dealgn.
They are individual expreaalona of art, painted In vivid
colors and decorated with
aequlns, glitter, feather• and
ribbons.
The project Ia one of nine art
programs baing offered to the
students under a Martha Holdan-Jenninga grant of $4,000
secured through the efforts of
David Ramey, Linda Stanley
an~ peb_ble '-owery,. teachara,
The ·money Is given to be used
in exposing students to the
'arts.
A succeaaful program this
year will raault In renewal of
the grant for another year.
Drama was the emphasis
last month whh students
attending the Renaissance
Festival. This month they went
to the Bob Evans Featlval, and
next month will attend the Nutcracker Ballet. Christmas card
designing In December, puppet
making In January, painting In
February, kite making In March,
photography In April, and
music In May with a trip to hear
the Columbus Symphony will

round out the year's experience in the arts.
• In the top photo, Ashley
Zielinski, Andrew Fletcher and
Kayla Grover enhance their

Greene County plant to add 200 jobs
JAMESTOWN (AP)- Alabamabased American Buildings Company
has proposed building a plant that
could create up to 200 jobs in this
southwest q~io community in the
next three yeilrs.
Village officials said Thursday 's
announcement was especially good
news because 180 jobs are being lost
by the consolidation of production at
JPE Finishing with another plant in
Beavercreek.
American Buildings closed a plant
here nine years ago, pulling 150 people out of work. The new plant, on

the same site as the old one, will add
about $35 million worth of production capacity, said .Joel Voelker!,
president of the company's Construction Products Group.
"There arc a lot of memories
there," Mayor Donald Kolesar said of
the old plant, which had been in operation 20 years.
The first phase of ~he plant would
include 149,300 square feet of manufacturing space for fabricating structural framing. It would be the lOth
U.S. plant for the company, whtch
expects to invest $6.3 million m
building, site work and equipment

during the fir st phase, said Ron
Buchholz, vice president of operalions.

The plant could create ohout 411
full -lime jobs by the end of 2000 ami
80 by the end of 200 I . Howc,er. oiTiCials smd the project is contmge nt
upon state and local tax and trainin g
incentiYcs.

Kolesar said the village council
has approved a 75 percent tax abatement for 10 years on personal prop·
erty, and Greene County Administrator Steve Stapleton said the county
commission could vote on it next

week.

It also was stuffed with,scores of
home-district projects, such as
$250,000 for a Philadelphia ballet
school to serve poor children in
southern New Jersey and $2.5 million
to train construction workers in Fairbanks, Alaska.
But in truth, the measure was all
about a GOP effort to gain leverage
in upcoming budget bargaining by
letting them assen they had finished
Congress' spending business without
dipping into Social Security's surpluses. Those talks will encompass
differences over the departments of
Justice, Health and Human Services,
and other Cabinet level departments,
plus dozens of agencies and foreign
aid .
.
Underlining !he political significance of Social SecUrity, both sides
produced similar documents from the
nonpartisan Congressional Budg'et
Office to buttress their cases.
Democrats distributed ·a table showing GOP spending bills would dip
into Social Security for $17 billion.

ENJOYS FESTIVmES- Little K'Tayons Garnes, pictured here with her mother, Lori Gsrnea, Pomtroy, Wits one of the little Trick-orTreaters who enjoyed Middleport's Sleepy Hollow event on Thursday evening. Hundreds .of
children and adults attended tht event followIng Trick or Trut laat night for hayrldal, 1 bonfire and refruhmente. Mamliars of the F~-

Bennett Poat 128 of the American. Legion and
their auxiliary were·h•rd at work Tuelday night
In the m1rlna 1n111 In Middleport, taking young
and old alike on • hayride, com'plate with scary
etops along the way. Hot doga, doughnuts, cot~
faa, COCOI lind elder ·ware lerved; and COItUIMI were Judged.
..
,• ·
•

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L---------------------------.....,-"-...,""""""',_...,....,;____. .,__.__. . __. . . _. . . ,________. . . ., __
'o

painted masks with glitter and
sequins, while above, Britnee
Sauters adorns her mask with
feathers. (By Charlene Hoeflich)

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. . . . . . .... .._. .
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Friday) October 29, 1999

Co1nmentary
The Daily Sentinel
'£.sta6fislid in 1948
111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740.1lll2·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

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

DIANE HILL

Gen...•l M•n•ger

Controller

n. s~ntinel w.lc'omw ,.,.,..to th• editot from rNdtra on. ~rtMd r~ng• or fopwon» or t•••J htv• the bftt chtnc. of bemg publlahed.

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Woua trflcle or letter Altll to: btl.,. fo the Hltot, The Sentinel, f11 Court St,
Pomwoy, Ohio &lt;CST~; or, FAX to 740-9!12-2151.

Today in history
By The Aasociated Press
Today IS Fnday, Oct. 29, the 302nd day of 1999. There are 63 days left
m the year.
·
Today 's Htghhght m Htstory
On Oct. 29, 1929, Black Tuesday descended upon the New York Stock
Exchange. Pnces collapsed amtd pamc selhng and thousands of mvestors
were Wiped out as America's Great DepressiOn began
On thts date
In 1682, the founder of Pennsylvama, Wtlham Penn, landed at what ts
now Chester, Pa.
In 1901, Prestdent McK.mley's assassm, Leon Czolgmz, was electrocuted.

.

In 1911, Amencan newspaperman Joseph Puhtzerdted m Charleston, S C
In 1923, the Repubhc ofTurkey was proclatmed.
In 1940, Secretary of War Henry L. St1mson drew the first number- 158
- in Amenca 's fitst peacettme mtlttary draft.
In 1947, former first lady Frances Cleveland Preston dted tn Balumore
at age 83
In 1956, dunng the Suez Canal cns•s, Israel launched an mvas1on of
Egypt's Sma1 Penmsula
In 1956, "The Huntley-Bnnkley Report" premiered as NBC's mghtly television newscast, replactng "The Camel News Caravan "
In 1966, the National Orgamzat10n for Women was founded
In 1979, on the 50th anmversary of the great stock market crash, antinuclear protesters tned but fat led to shut down the New York Stock Exchange
Ten years ago: At least 20,000 East Berhners observed a mmutc of s1lence
for those ktlled while attemptmg to !lee over the Berhn Wall , the f1rst such
public mournmg smce Commumst Party authont•es bUilt the wall m 1961
F1ve years ago. Franctsco Manm Duran of Colorado Spnngs, Colo, fued
more than two dozen shots from a semiautomattc nile at the Wh1te House
while standmg on Pennsylvama Avenue, Duran "as later convicted of trymg to assassmate President Clinton and was sentenced to 40 years m pmon
One year ago Sen John Glenn, at age 77, roared back mto space aboard
the shuttle D1scovery, retracmg the tratl he'd blazed for Amenca's astronauts
36 years earher The government cleared the powerful drug tamox1!en as a
way for healthy women at very h1gh nsk of breast cancer to cut the1r odds
of gettmg a tumor South Afnca 's Truth and Reconcll~auon Comnuss1on condemned both apanhe1d and viOlence commmed by the Afncan Nauonal Con·
gress SIXty three people were k1lled when fire broke out dunng a d1sco par·
ty tn Goteborg. Sweden

Arline L. Davis

Dissatisfied with trustees

Sign represents political blackmail
Dear Ed1tor:
That s1gn, "Stop the Ra1d on Soctal Secunty," bemg !lashed across our
TV screens, is uns1gned pohtlcal crap
The mference ts that some SiniSter force m th1s country 1s about to yank
the rug out from under so me poor. strugglmg segment ol our soc1ety That
amounts to pohttcal blackmail
The truth JS, there IS plenty to go around m th1 s country, 1f we stop acting like a bunch of sand-lot pohttcal brats.
We are free We got that way by thmgs hke Valley Forge and Omaha
Beach.
Our nation has recently been exposed to the some of the worst kind of
political lechery 10 my hfe t1me.
That IS what the Reform Pany IS all about There IS change m the wm.;!.
Who knows what may develop?
Gayle Price
Portland

Wells Run Road neglected
Dear Editor·
Lebanon Township offices and trustees have not done the JOb that they
are paid to do. All you people need to do IS go on the back roads, hke Wells
Run Road, and then tell me that they are do10g their JOb. Because they were
supposed to fix the dttches and the stgns and the hole on Oct 9, and today
is Oct. 22 and 11 IS still not done. As I see 11 they are not workmg for the
good of the people m the township as a whole
Now we k.now that they wtll be closmg Route 124 past Wells Run Road
sometime in November and 11 will be closed for three months and people
will be usmg Wells Run Road as a detour. And we the people know that Wells
Run Road is not safe nght now for the cars or trucks because of the shps
that have not b!:en fixed smce the flood from 1998 and the dttches that needed to be done smce 1996 So, yes, as a taxpayer I would hke to see someone in there that will work for the whole townshtp.
Lee Anna Musick
Portland

•1M!*:£ 6H~ INYOURE~ff'

Two killed in collaps~
of roof at Ohio arsenal
"IS that we ha'e nothmg to do woth
the deciSIOn, but crlltcs don't trust a
crack-addicted woman to make a
dec1s1on about whether or not to be
stenh1.ed But she 1s 10 a positi on to
be a mother? It IS nd1culous."
Or IS 1t? The tdea of pay10g peo
pie for muttlatwn may or may not be
1llegal, depcndmg upon the 10terpre·
tat1ons of vanous federal, state and
local laws, butn certamly should g1ve
us pause Alter all, to the extent that
the stenltzatJon 1s IrreverSible , 11
amounts to a h fe sentence lor a drug
user Th1s Is all the more tntercsung
when considered m the context of
Harns' ow n admitted drug usc

However a senous problem does

eXIst 0! the 86 women who pariJCI·
paled m the CRAC K program, 37 are
Caucaswn. 34 arc Alncan-Amencan
and 15 arc HISpamc The grcatmaJm·
1ty of these women are !rom Cah!ornw Those 86 clients had a combmed
622 pregnanc•es among them Of
those pregnancies, 232 were aboned,
390 were brought full-tenn and of
those births, 64 d1ed and 240 are m
foster care
Between 1992 and 1996, 12,338
crack bab1es were born m Los Angeles alone. And of the bab1es that are
taken from the1r mothers to be ra1sed

dtstnbuted a short letter to restdents statmg my reasons lor wantmg to be
mayor. I firmly stand behind any statement I made m that letter
Yet at the council meeung I was subjected to embarrassment and put down
by a member ot counctl for statmg in my letter that I would ltke to restore
pnde m our town. She found that statement offensive and smd that other res·
1dents compla10ed to her about 11. I find 11 strange that not one person called
me to complam However, I have received many calls that were comph·
mentary.
As you well know, the purpose of a counctl meetmg 1s to conduct village
busmess It 1s not the proper place to dtscuss tndlvtdual poltucal tssues that
should be dec1ded at the ballot box by you the voters. Yet the mayor did not
object tn any way to thts Improper conduct by the council member
Agam as you know, my oppunent10 th1s electiOn IS the present mayor. I
feel that the attack on me by the council member dunng the mect10g was an
underhanded and subtle way to openly campatgn tor the seated mayor. I
beheve it was out ot hne and totally uncalled for
Over the past 15 months, I have only miSsed attend10g one counctl meet·
10g, whtch ts more than I can say for the present members I attend these
meet10gs to keep aware of and present matters 10 reSidents' best mterests.
It was not my mtenlto offend anyone ui my letter If anyone feels that I
have done so , I apulug1ze and welcome any phone calls objecung to the contents olthe letter
I can only thmk of the words of one of our tore! at hers - "I disagree with
what you say, but \\Ill defend to the·death your nghtto say n." Perhaps our
town leaders forgot ahout freedom of speech
Jean Craig
Middleport

Board urges support for bond issue
Dear Editor
The voters of the Metgs Local School DtstrJct have an opportunity on Nov
2 to build for the future of the students m th1s dtslnct. The State of Ohio has
agreed to contnbute to the d1stnct over 80 percent of the cost to bu1ld two
new elementary schools, a new middle school and to renovate Metgs H1gh
School The 3.95 m1ll bond 1ssue is a true barga10 1f you consider what 11
would cost the dJstnctto try thts 1ssue on our own Without state asststance
Several years ago, the voters in th1s distrtct approved a 5 mtll permanent
•mprovementlevy That levy IS currently bemg collected at4 2598 m1lls based
on the current valuatiOn of the dtstnct The Metgs Local Board of Educallllll passed a resolutwn to the effect that tf the bond tssue passes, the permanent Improvement levy will be reduced by the amount of the bond 1ssue.
.That would allow the dtstnct to cont10ue to collect a small pon1on oft he permanent Improvement levy whtle reducmg the levy by the 3 95 mills of the
bond ISsue. In additiOn, U2 of a mtll of the bond ISsue stays m the d1stnct
and accumulates over the next 23 years to be used tor repairs and upkeep ol
the new bu1ldmgs
The locatiOn tor the new schools was g1ven a great deal of thought. One
of the pnme consideratiOns was keepmg the schools out of the llood plam.
The areas on State Routes 124 and 143 afe out of the llood plam Wh1le portwns of those roads do llood on a regular bas1s. the d1stnct already has plans
m place to transpon students around those areas The dtstnctJS usually effected by thiS sort of llood10g on a very short-t1me baSIS and 11 tloodmg 1s severe,
we Simply do not have school The new mtddle school locauon ts cena10ly
out of the tlood plam and allows for centralized busmg of students lor over
half of our student populatiOn The safety of our students IS always of pnme
consideration

We sincerely hope that you Will g1ve the young people of the dJStnct (current and !uturc) your consideratiOn on Nov 2. 0ur SISter d1stncts 10 Meigs
County have passed bond 1ssues budd new bu1ldmgs We feel our ktds deserve
the same consJderatton
Meigs Local Board of Education
John Hood, president
Scott Walton, vice president
Roger Abbott
Norman R. Humphreys
Wayne Davia
Superintendent Bill Bucklay
Treasurer ~indy Rhonemua

There is still freedom of speech
Dear Editor:
After having attended the Middleport Counctl meetmg of Oct 25, I feel
thts letter IS necessary.
As the nominated candtdate for mayor of Middleport, I had wntten and

by foster parents, only 25 percent are
reumted wtth their b1rth parents,
meanmg that 75 percent of crack·
addtcted mothers never recover sufficiently to care lor their children.
Hams pushed for legtslauon in
1995 to make 11 a felony cnme for
women to bear a crack-addicted
baby A Cali forma state senator drew
up the law With her, providmg a proVIsion for forcmg the crack-addicted
mothers to parttctpate m a long-term
birth-control program The measure

was struck down.
Clearly, the problem needs to ~
addressed, but paymg people for
sterilization cannot be the answer. As ·
one women's advocate said, "The .
essence of thts campa1gn ts profound •
hatred against poor people. It presupposes that addicted poor women
have no redeemable quahties and
their children have no contribution to
rna~."
•
(Jack Anderson and Douglas
Cohn are columnists for United .
Faature Syndicate.)

Do you believe in ·
life after death?
By GEORGE R. PLAGENZ
Your phone nngs, and when you
answer 11, you can't beheve your ears.
"Mary'" you say with astomshment. " I was thmking of you thts
very mmute."

Mary 1s an old school chum you
haven' t seen or heard from m years.
Is it just a comc1dence that you had
each other on your mmds at precisely the same moment?
"No," wntes Char Margolis in her
new book, "Questions From Earth,
Answers From Heaven" (StMartin's
Press) The two old school friends
were "shanng a psychtc experience."
"We're all psychtc," says Margolis. Many anecdotes she relates m her
book are much more sensatiOnal
than the one aliout the two fnends
frJ?m gtrlhood days Margolts sa1d
that she herself talks to the dead and
beheves we all can
Tl)omas Ed1son told some of h1s
close fnends JUSt before he d1ed that
he was workmg on an 1dea for a
machme that would p1ck up vo1ces
from the dead
Nobody know s how far the mvcn·
tor of the electnc hght bulb and the
phonograph gut w1th hts revolutton·
ary 1dea, but II he had been success·
ful , he would have made beltevers
out of even the must hardened
doubters
We would have been tmpressed
not only by Ed1son's standmg as a
scJentlSl but also by the fact that he
was an agnostiC who d1dn 't believe m
personal 1mmortahty. He would feel
vmdicated, thenifore, 1f he got hts
machme workmg and no vo1ces from
the dead came across Then he could
say, "See, JUSt as I satd " Here was
somebody we could trust not to
make up a story about talking to the
dead.
A friend of Edt son's, Allan Benson, always beheved that 11 was the
mventor 's admiralton for the famed

phystctst Sir Wtlllam Crookes that
sparked h1s mterest tn the afterlife.
Crookes' familianty with phys1cs
had not destroyed h1s faith in spiritualism and m the ab1lity of the sptrtts of the dead to communicate with
the livmg.
Edt son no doubt read the astound·
mg story Crookes told about the spirit of a dead woman that vistted his
home.
Summoned by a medtum who '
would he on a couch tn the rootlladjommg the hbrary where Str
Wilham and hts fnends would gather, she appeared m what seemed to be
tlesh and bones, "clad as any woman
might be for an afternoon call "
But she d1d not walk tn. She was
there mstantaneously -- nobody knew
how. Some even felt her pulse It was
beatmg 70 limes per mmute
These meetmgs occurred all wm,
ter that year m the early 1900s Str
W1lham took 43 pictures of the sptrIl woman, accordmg to Benson.
When Ed1son read accounts of
these gomgs-on, what could he thmk?
He could not doubt Crookes' veract ty or h1s mtelhgence It was also
unhkely that anybody could dupe the
man of sc1ence.
Benson felt that Edtson was "m '
the pos1t10n of one who cannot dts- ,
beheve a statement made by a man of
undoubted prmc1ple and yet cannot
beheve. "
Is thts when Edtson began to wonder whether 11 might be poss1ble w
make a machme that would enable
departed sptnts to commumcate wtth
the hvmg Without the a1d of medt- .
urns?
To a sctenttst hke Ed1son. wary of
t~e spooky world of seances, this •
would end all doubtmg -- or confirm
what he had beheved all along about ,
the •mposstblltty of life after death. :
Sorry to say, thts IS how the story
ends.
'

Other voides, other opinions

.........

_..... ... ,

· ~

' - ;;. ' , , ..t.: ! •,'" • "'- ''· ·~

~;:

Dayton Daily News, Oct. 19
Thmk of them as Mother Teresa with an atlltude. They are physicians and :
others of_the mternauo~al Doctors Without Borders who bnng desperately '
needed atd to the globe s troubled lands - after earthquakes m Turkey and '
typhoons m Bangladesh, during wars m SaraJevo and Rwanda, wherever '
human bemgs are sacnficial pawns to nature or government.
•
But unhke most other carefully neutral ~lief agencies, Doctors With(lu\ •
Borders never hesitate to cry foul When physicians see perceived injustices, :
the1r tongues can be sharper than their scalpels.
·
The small group thus has changed the face of international democracy. It .
has proven that what nations do to each other, and do to their own people, '
no longer 1s the exclusive preserve of professtonal dtplomats. It concerns us
~I
,
Doctors Wtthout Borders was awanded the Nobel Peace Prize. Just con,
s1der it the Nobel Prize Colllmittee's way of speaking out about speak.ing out.

I
'

C: L ~·~·"' ..t.•H'l&lt; l ~ t , O '- • •"•'&gt;'&gt; f~ ' ' ' ' " ' ' ' " '

• - ••

:A • ._, , ),

L--

'
RAVENNA (AP)- Two demoli tiOn workers d1ed when a roof col lapsed on them at a former m1litary
ammumt10ns bu1ldmg
'Joe Mayle , 40, of Canton, and Btl I
Duffy, 30, of Mounds \I lie, W Va ,
d1ed m the acc1dent at the Ravenna
Army Ammumt10n Plant about 4 15
p.m. Thursday, satd Tom Decker, an
mvesttgator for the Portage County
coroner's office
Both men were trapped beneath
concrete and steel, he smd
Jay Hooker, 43 , o! Moundsville,
W. Va , suffered head cuts and was m
stable condll1on at Robmson Memonat Hospttal, spokeswoman J1ll
Lew1s sa1d.
The collapse occurred wh1le
workers of Environmental Construction Inc of Tallmadge were demoiJshmg 12 bUJldmgs on the sprawling
arsenal located about20 m1les east of
Akron
Firefighters scrambled across the
collapsed roof and cut holes to check
for anyone trapped, whtle others

fonned a bucket bngadc to 1emovc
debns
----vertical stee l beams wc1c sup·
pmtmg the 1ool when tl lell The
Sides of the bwldtng already had been
taken down, sa td Ma1 k Patterson,

Dinners planned
The RLDS Church located on the
Portland-Rncme Road w1ll have an
election' · day dmner at the church
Servmg w1ll begin at II a.m. and take
out orders w1ll be ava1lable. There
W)ll be soup, sandwtches, desserts
and soft drinks. Breakfast rolls and
coffee Will be available begmmng at
7:30a.m.
. · Evangelme Chapter 172, OESD
will hold a chicken and noodle dmner, Tuesday at the Masomc Temple
in Middleport Servmg will be from
II a.m . to 6 p.m. Orders may be
placed by calhng 992-5330, and can
be delivered m Pomeroy and Mid·
dleport.
Cancer Society to meet
The Me1gs unit of the Amencan
Cancer Society w1ll have tls annual
meetin~ at 7 p.m. Thursday, at the
Pomeroy Library. Busmess w1ll
mclude the electton of off1cers

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213·%0)
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
Publ1shed every afternoon, Monday through

Q:h1o Valley Pubhshmg Company Second class
postage pa1d at Pomeroy Ohto
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Newspaper Assoc1at10n
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month lor the thud lime tillS )eat II
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
conditi ons rcq u11 c 11. or hold1ng off
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON
Federa l on turthe 1 J,ttc hikes
These ,malysts sa id th,tt what the
Reserve Chauman Alan Greensp,m
appears to be keeptng his op11ons cc ntoal hank end s up d01ng will
open about what the Fed's next move de pend very much on the cconomK
d,tJ,t 1eleascd before the Nov 16
on Interest rates should be
In a speech to chtef exec uti ves of mectmg
" fhe Fed IS read) to move II It has
the some of the country's largest corporatiOn s, Greenspan expressed wor- to, .md I believe the odds toll tow,trd
ncs about what could happen to mna- another rate hike, but 11 IS a close
llUn 1f a Jcccnt 'upswmg In produc· call , ' smd Davtd Jones, chtcl econ·
ltvlly should suddenly falt er and otmst at Aubrey G Lanstun &amp; Co m
t1ght labor markets begm to push New York
Tite Fed got some good news
wage demands higher
But at the same ltme, Greenspan before Greenspan spoke Thursday 10
noted that fmancml markets have government reports showmg that
already pushed long-term mterest even tho'i'tgh the economy grew at a
niles htgher In moves that also wtll s1nhng 4 8 percent rate m the third
slow cconomK growlh to a more sus- quarter, the fastest pace this year,
tamable pace
wage pressures remained subdued
Because of these 111creases m with the Employment Cost Index
l ong~term rates, "the p10ccss ol co n ~
showmg wages and benefits up only
tammcnt (ol unsustamable grn\Ai th) 'l I perce nt over the past 12 months
ma ) already he Sigmlic.Jntl y
The government also released
.1dvanccd. ' Green~ pun ~a id
Thursday a maJor revlston of the
Many' pnvatc cco nomi ~; t s sa id gross domestic product, the natton 's
Gicenspan 111 h1s 1 cm.u ks ThursLh.ty total output of goods and semccs,
n1 g ht to the Busmess Council in Bo{.;a showmg th at grow1h this decade has
Raton. Fla. seemed to he gomg out been sigmficantly h1gher than previ of hi s \\ay to leave open .ti l the Fed s ously rep01 ted, With mll.HIUn a bit
option~ - ol Cith cr r.us1n g 1atcs nex t lower

ByTHOMASJ.SHEERAN
Associated Press Writer
arsenal
SUFFIELD - Vcnt1ng fuel and
He would not speculate about
JOitmg
ne1ghbors w1th Its engmes '
whether the beams gave way under
roar,
Goodyear
's oldest bhmp
the wetght of the concrete or 1f some·
crashed In woods a few m1les from 1ts
thmg else tnggered the roof's Iall
Ravenna F~re Chief !1m D.1Paolo atrdoek, shghtly mJurmg the two peosmd two men on a scissor hit were ple on board
gotng up to attach a cable when the
But the cause of the 10of collapse
has not been detern1med, D1Pao.lo
satd

Arline L. Davis
Arlme L. Dav1s , 80, Middleport, d1ed Thursday, Oct 28, 1999 m Holzer
Med1eal Center
,
She was born Apnl 7, 1919 m Middleport, daughter ol the late Pearley
and Nelhe Murray Nelson She was a homemaker and had been emplo)ed
as a secretary m Columbus durmg World War II She was a member ol the
Bradhurv Church of Chnst Evangehne Chapter 172 Order of the Eastern
Star and While Shnne
She 1s survived by her husband , Max Dav1s, to whom she was mamed
Nov 8, 1945, at the Middleport Methodist Church by the Rev Rothrock
Also su1 viVlng arc a son and daughter· In-law, Jerry and Len me Dav1s of
Galhpohs, a daughter and son-m-law, Joyce and Pat Cochran of Galhpohs,
a brother and SISter-m-law, Orton and V~rgmJa Nelson of Dexter, two grand·
daughters, a ststcr-m-law, Margaret Kennedy o! Rutland, a brother-m-law,
Marvm Dav1s of Akron, and several meccs and nephews
She was also preceded m death by a bJOther Hobart Nelson, who d1ed m
1945 m World War II
Serv•ces w1 ll be 2 p m Sunday m the F1sher Funeral Home, M1ddleport,
w1th the Rev James Keesee off1cmtmg Bunal Will follow m the M1les Cemeter), Rutland Fnends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 6-&amp; p m
Saturday.

Church meeting set
The Emmaus, Chesh~re Umted
Methodist Church, will meet at 7 30
p m Monday

Stocks
AEP- 34·1/2
Akzo - 42·314
AmTech/SBC- 53·11/16
Ashland Oil - 32·3/4
AT&amp;T- 46-7/8
Bank One- 38·13/16
Bob Evans -13-9/16
BorgWarner- 39·1/4
Champion- 4·7/8
Charming Shops - 5
City Holding - 16·1/2
Federal Mogul - 25
Flrstar- 29-1/16
Gannett -76·11/16
K mart- 10·1/4
Kroger - 20-314
Lands End -77-5/16
Ltd.-40
Oak Hill Financial - 17
OVB-33
One Valley- 35·9116
Peoples- 26·7/8
Premier - 9-314
Rockwell- 46·13/16
AD Shell- 60·1116
Sears- 27·15/16
Shoney's -1-5/8
Wendy's - 24
.
Worthington -16·1/4

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to the

'- ICW

that g1owth

111

p10dw.: t1v

lty cannot continue to mcrease mdefmitely At some pomlll must, at least,
plateau," Greenspan satd.
On prcvaous occastons th1s year m

Il y, the output pe1 hour of work has
begun lo ,\lcc leJdtc SJgmfic,mtly altcJ
l &lt;~gg1ng lor Jv.o dc c,tdcs
Grccnsp,m s,ud the new ly reviSed

d1scussmg the potenttal tor ttght
labor marlets to tngger mllauon,
Greenspan has smd the Fed was ready
to move promptly at the f1rst stgn of

ltgurcs on output lntl!cdtc that p1o-

a~.:celerattng pncc pressures

ductJvlly ltds hccn growt ng by dn
•IICiagc ol 2 25 pc rccni.mnuall y over

The Fed al ready has raised the
federal fund s rate . the mterest that

the past li ve yca1s alter a\cr.tglllgjU)l

bilnks charge each other on overn1ght

I 75 pel ce nt me1 the previOus 20

loans , twice thiS ycM, ltrSI on June 30
and then ,tgill n on Aug 25, pushmg
the fund s rate to 5 25 perc ent
But Greenspan noted that longterm ra tes set by nMrkct lorL:es have
,tlso been IIStng and this IS already

years
The h1 ghci US ptoductl\Jty
goowt h h.t s .II lowed t~e Fed to let the
Clonomy g1ow .lt Ias ter rate!'\ Without
wo n ymg ahouJ lltllauon sparked by
nsmM wngc Ucm ands
II ~&lt;orkcrs ,tre more

workm g 10 slow cconortuc growth

p10ducttve,
' G(IJng forward the Federal
then employers can afford to pay Reserve must monnm not onl y thi s
them more for the mcreased output rcspo n,e, but also the cvo lvmg capacWithout bc1ng force d 10 raiSe pnces 11} of our econom) to meel h•gher
on their products
levels ot demand, Greenspan said
But Greenspan warned that the
' Mawtammg balance between
Fed must be particularly alert to any these for ces will be esse ntial to preSigns thatth1 s upswing m productiV- serving the stab le pn cc env mmment
Ity IS faltcnng, smce that could lead that ha s provided a firm !oundation
qutckly to tntlattonary wage mcreas- lor this pcnod ot extraordmary mnocs. g1ven that unemployment has fall - vatJon and p10gtess 111 the US econcn to a 29-year low of 4 2 percent "f$ my," he smd
"The rate of grov.th o! productiV-

Terry Ford, who lives nearby,
sa1d he ran to help, hut a member of
the crew waved hun off, wmned
about the leakmg fuel.
" It dtdn 't sound hke a bhmp, 11
sounded hke a helicopter, 11 was so
loud " he smd
The State H1ghv.ay Patrol and a
team from the Goodyear T1re &amp;
Rubber Co were exammmg the Site
today Federal tnve sltgato rs were
expected later A cause of the crash
rem ained uncertain
The $5 mtlh on blimp, which IS
ahout 12 years old, passed an mspectton the day befo re the crash ,
Goodye,u saod
No one has ever been senously
InJUred llymg 111 one of Goodyear's
commerci al bhmps But the crew at
the company 's nearby ansh1p head·
quarters, aboul 10 nules southeast of
Akron was shaken by the crash
" It 's pretty tough to see,' said
Mtckey Wottman, a spokesman for
Goodyear's airship operatiOns ' I've
been around them fo1 30 years and I
cned tonight "
The aCCident happened about 6 20
p m as the crew was makmg a rou'-

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446•4524

OlDROV!l J'i 1'/EST
1lfi4JJ\Ci&lt;: SO N PIK E

7

tmc ni ght sign !light , tn which the
shtp runs a ltght show and advertiSements on each s1de of the bhmp.
The mrshtp was traveling about25
mph to 40 mph when a problem was
diScovered, sa1d Scott Baughman,
manager of Nonh Amencan atrship
operattons
Pilot Gerald Htssem released 150
gallons to 200 gallons ol kerosene
fuel to make the hlunp hghter A
bhmp can hold about430 gallons, but
the Sp1nt of Akron had only 200 gallons on board 11mrsday, he sa1d

....

IIIU8E If IIAIIfiBIIIl" 7'.4&amp;, 111:111

(Hontl!l Fn Jmoo. l.6a loeb,GeotiJey Rush
111111111111. ..... t1&amp;, 4:a8, 7'.41, 1nl

SOCTH SEN8f JP&gt;•~
t41i, 8:16
lb) 1ltQ Wlilliallt .lttillmll Tm Colfltl, 1M l'«il'rr
llllllttttlllt. .... 111 :GG, 1:18, t4&amp;, 1:11

FIGHT ClUB

8'.45, 8:85

1111

(Drama) BrafJ Pm,Edwaltl NOiloo, H!iefJa eoMam Caner
llllllttttillt. .... 111 :GG, t.IG, t4&amp;, 1:11
SII'BISTAR iP&gt;'~
7:111, 11:111

EMS units record 9 calls
Umts of the Me1gs County Emergency Med1cal Serv1ce recorded mne
calls for assistance Thursday Unns
respondmg mcluded · ,
CENTRAL DISPitTCH
3 35 am State Route 143,
Pomeroy Allee Chapman. Holzer
Med1cal Center,
4:49 am , Spnng Avenue,
Pomeroy, WIIIJam Lehew, HMC,
Pomeroy and Rutland squads asSisted,
6 II am , Flatwoods Road,
Pomeroy, Della ChJalastn, HMC,
Pomeroy squad assiSted ,
10.01 am , SR 684, Steven Donahue, Veterans Memonal Hosp•tal,
Rutland squad assisted
POMEROY
3 59 p m., Bearwallow R•dge,
Shade. Bertha Zamopano, O'Bleness
Memonal Hospital,
9 20 p m., Gold Ridge Road,
Pomeroy, Patnca Lehew, VMH, Cen-

Vote For A Full Time Trustee

BERNARD D. GILI(EY
Salisbury Township Trustee
Non-Partisan

Expereinced, Qualified, ALie
Vetet·an of World War 11-DAV Chaplet· #53
The American Legion, Post 128-VFW Post 9926
l'uul Fnr Ry 1 !J, C11nolul nlo
ll1•tnunl U G1lk• y. 39UA"h St , MuMiqutJI , Ohu

•

Rates Outside MeigS County
13 Weeks , ,,
............... $29 25

26 Weeks .......................... $56 68
52 Weeks . . ................ .$10972

No one on the gro und was hurt
Hundreds of people drove to the
crash site Thursday mght to sec the
205-toot Sp1nt of Akron The blimp's
blue and gold tat I fins , 1llumtnated by
lloodhghts, stuck up from the trees,
and the cJ umpl ed gas envelope could
be seen

Death Notices

roar came down on Ihem

Art1llery and mortar shell s were
made at the 21,419-acre complex
dunng World War II and the Korean
and V1etnam wars
The s1te has former ammumtion
assembly plants, storage bUJldmgs
and laftdftlls

Greenspan cited the GDP tevt ·
stons In Ius remarks Thursda) nt ghl,
say mg they provtded lunhcr support

Two hurt wh~n Goodyear's oldest blimp crashes

e nv1ronmcnt&lt;tl coord mator at the

Meigs announcements

Fnday, Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Oh1o by the

Today 's Birthdays Country smger Lee Clayton IS 57 Rock muSician Den-:
ny Lame 1s 55 Smger Melba Moore IS 54. MusiCian Peter Green IS 53. Actor
Rt~hard Drey!uss 1s 52 Actress Kate Jackson is 51. Idaho Governor Dirk
K.cmpthorne ts 48 Smger Randy Jackson ts 38. Rock mus1cian Peter Timroms (Cowboy Junktcs) ts 34. Actress Joely Fisher ts 32. Rapper Paris is 32.,
Mus1c13n Toby Smllh (Jamtroqum) IS 29. Actress W1'nona Ryder IS 28.
•
Thought for Today "Who, I ask you, can take, dare take, on h•mself the
nghts, the dut1es, the responstbihtlcs of another human soul?" -Elizabeth ,
Cady Stanton, Amencan fernmist (1815-1902).

I
'

•

Arline L~ Davts, 80, of Middleport, d1ed Thursday evemng, October 28,
1999 to Holzer Med1cal Center m Galhpohs
She was born Apnl 7, 1919 tn Mtddleport, daughter of the late Pearley
and Nelhe Murray Nelson She was a homemaker, and had been employed
as a secretary m Columbus dunng World War II She '&gt;'as a member of the
Bradbury Church of Chnst, Evangeline Chapter 172 Order of the Eastern
Star, and the White Shnne
She IS surv1ved by her husband, Max DaviS, to whom she was mamed
November 8, 1945, at the ~llddlepon Methodtst Church by the Rev Rothrock
Also survmng are a son and daughter-m-law, Jerry and Lenme Davis of
Galhpohs; a daughter and son-m-law, Joyce and Pat Cochran of GallJpohs,
a brother and sJSter·m·law, On on and Vtrgm•a Nelson ot Dexter, two grand·
daughters, Sarah and Megan Cochran of GallJpohs, a sJSter-m-law, Margaret
Kennedy of Rutland, a brother-m-law, Marvm Davis of Akron. a mcce, Patn·
eta Archer, and three nephews, Perry Kennedy, and Rtchard and Wa)ne Nelson
In addition to her parents, she was preceded m death by a brother Hohart
Nelson, who d1ed m 1945 m World War II
Serv1ces wtll be held Sunday, October 31, 1999 at 2 p m at the F1sher
Funeral Home m Mtddleport, with the Rev James Keesee oiiJcJatmg BurIal w1ll follow m the Miles Cemetery, Rutland Fnends ma) call Saturday.
October 30, 1999 from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m at the funeral home

"" 'TII'f '1\IHE OF

----Letters to the editor·--.-----Dear Ed1tor:
I beheve that the Chester Township Trustees have and contmue to fatlto
complete the duttes of thetr office
I asked them to determme the need for, and see to the estabhshment of a
diVIsion fence between propeny owners The fence 1s necessary to present
further crimmal damage to my property. I attended two meetmgs with the
trustees and corresponded at least two ttmes wtth them . They mspected the
property and II was my understanding they had determmed a diVISIOn fence
was 10 order I was then summoned to a meetmg at wh1ch lime I was adv1sed
thattf I did not wnhdraw my request, a divtston fence would be constructed by their contractor usmg matenal wh1ch m my opmwn IS totally m vtolallon of the law as stated 10 the Oh10 Rev1sed Code
I corresponded w1th the trustees on Sept 7, 1999, agam requestmg acuon.
I spoke With one trustee by telephone and I was told that they had done nothmg, saymg the Prosecutmg Attorney had the ball
It ts my opm1on the trustees are "passmg the buck" to get out of completing the dut1es of the1r office. The least they could have done was respond
to my letter by thts ume.
James M. Sprouse Jr.
Long Bottom

Fed chairman ~again suggests
interest rate increase possible

Group with controversial plan gets atten~ion

__,,,...._.

The Daily Sentinel • PagE! 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page2
Friday, October 29, 1999-

By JACK ANDERSON
and DOUGLAS COHN
WASHINGTON -A controverSial program to decrease the number
of children born addtcted to crack ts
sparkmg both cheers and cnes of
genocide Called CRACK (Chtldren
ReqUJrmg a Canng Kommuntty), the
Califorma-based group pays crackaddicted women and men $200 to be
stenhzed or go on a long -term birthcontrol method
At thiS dat~. 86 women have
accepted the money and the birth
control, 59 ha\e opted for the surgery
While hundreds ol men have
responded to the billboards located In
California and key Cities hke Mmneapohs and New York, none have .S
yet ac tually been stenlized
The nonprofit group has been
around for two years and has rece1ved
handsome !undmg from people hke
Dr Laura Schlessmger (who has
donated both $10,000 and plenty of
au t1me to the group) and bigger
donattons from busmesses and tndJ v•dual s hke Aldous Huxley, the
author ot "A Brave New World "
"We get checks tor $10, we. get
checks from very \\ealthy people,
too We have received sustamed
attentton for the last J\\O years I rom
people from all walks o! ltle We
don't have a problem wnh money, "
Barbara Hams. the organizatton 's
founder, told us Harns has no 1dea
what the annual opetatmg expenses
are or what kmd of mtake the group
has seen this year
Harns, the adoptive mother of
four crack bab1es tells us she doesn't take a p&lt;~y chc c k lor her nauonwJde labor, which IS to "put a chapter 111 every maJor Cll) m the country
and a billboard m evct y town "
She acknowledges that her program IS controversial. mcludmg the
recent flrestorm m Oakland, Cahf,
when a CRACK billboard was pulled
down by an angry crowd The crowd
accused Harns' group ot rac1sm and
attemptmg to neuter the poor
Federal stenhzation statutes have
been on the books smce 1979 that
reqUire mformed consent and explanatton of contracepuve alternatives,
but there appear to be no other legal
roadblocks to CRACK's program.
"It is notltke we drag women off
the street and force them to be stertltzed," Hams told us The women
are sent hterature to read, they make
the1r chmce, and CRACK ptcks up
the med1cal costs and cuts a check for
$200 "Whatts irOntc, " Harris says,

...

'

To the voters of:

---SUTTON TOWNSHIP--• The Board of Trustees ask for yotir support of
a 1-Mi'll Replacement Levy for Fire Protection
in Sutton Twp.
• This i~ NOT a new tax.
•This will repalce a 1-Milllevy which expires
on December 31st. '
• The firefighters risk their lives for all of us.
Please support them.
YOTE:
.
1

·- IX IFOR THE FIRE PROTECTION1 LEVYJ
Pd. lor by Sutton Township Trustees

trdl Dispatch squad asststed
RUTLAND
9 12 a m , Crouser Road , Elste
Mac Crouser, VMH, Central Dispatch squad asststed
SCIPIOVFD
2 49 p m , SR 681, bru sh lire. no
mJUnes reported
TUPPERS PLAINS
H 49 p m Sumner Road, Albert
Pa1ker. Pleasa nt Valley Hospnal

~I

f811111j(anedy) KMt Claslt, Mandy Pmm, v-a 1111ans
llllllttttllll. • la114:1i • 7:16

DOUBlE JBIJAIIDY

1111

7:15,8:45

(ActionlllJril~t) T011111j lee J:Jnes, l.slikly Judd

111111111111. ..... til, 4:H, 7:16, tAl

STORY If US

7:al, 8:40

1111

(Comedy) Bno:e W1!os, Mkl1elle Plemer, Tim Ma~esoo
llllllttttlllt. I Ia II tal, 4:40, 7:18. tAO

THREE TO , . .

tp&gt;U)

7:11, 145

(ComEdy)Mattrew Peny,Neve CampOOII D)1an Mclle1100tt

tnorrvr)t.ouDtamond Phtlltps, Dona Meyer
IlL I Ia II t45, 4:45, 11:00, 10:00

IWIIOM IBRTS

1111

ti5

(Romanc6'11tnUer) flaiiloo FOld, Kristin Scdt 1'liaMs

...... ~~~.. lalll:fi ll:lli

Dear Meigs Local Friends &amp; Family,
On Tuesday,Novt;,mber 2, you have the
opportunity to vote YES for the Meigs
Local Schools Bond Issue. By passing this
bond issue, you will provide new
educational facilities for the Meigs Local
Schools. These new facilities will ensure a
strong learning environment and the latest
technological resources to prepare all of
our children for the future.
This bond issue does not mean new taxes. It will enable you to
dictate that more than 32 million dollars will be used for the
children in the Meigs Local School District.
Sincerely, Michael, Jennifer &amp; Cody Bartrum

Vote YE,S
Meigs Local Schools Bond Issue
Paid lor by the Mergs Local Better Buotdmg Committee- Ralph Werry, Treasurer 320 East Ma1n Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769

.

,

�. . -.-

·•'

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

·

Page4
Friday, October 29, 1999

·

Sharks edge Predators 3-2;
Kings defeat Penguins 5-3 .
NHL action
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
With Steve Shields making the
saves, the San Jose Sharks put a stop
.to their three-game losing streak.
Shields made 22 saves as the
streaky Sharks got back to winning
with a 3-2 victory over the Nashville
Predators on Thursday night.
"This was kind of a must-win for
us. We didn't want to lose another
one," said Niklas Sundstrom, who
scored twice.
The Sharks have been a rollercoaster team this season. They
opened with a three-game winning
streak before losing two straight.
Then they won four straigh t, then
lost three in a r.ow before Thursday
night.
The Sharks remained among the
leaders in the Pacific Division, the
NHL's toughest so far. Los Angeles
kept pace with a 5-3 victory over
Piusburgh, and Phoenix defeated
Vancouver 4-1.
Shields, who had limited experience in three seasons with the
Buffalo Sabres before being traded to
the Sharks in June 1998, started this
season as the backup to Mike

Vernon. But he has taken over the
No. I role by building a 7-3 record
with a 2.01 goals-against average.
"I thought I saw most of the
shots. I don't remember giving up
any bad rebounds," Shields satd.
"We haven't been playing well.
Tonight was a little better. But we
still need improvement in our work
ethic. To beat anyone, we have to
work hard. "
Owen Nolan scored his ninth goal
for the Sharks, one behind the
league-leading 10 scored by
Montreal's Brian Savage.
Patrie Kjellberg and Sergei
Krivokrasov scored
for
the
Predators, who had a three-game
winning streak snapped. Goalie
Mike Dunham took his first loss of
l he season after winning his first four
games.
Elsewhere, it was Boston 7.
Tampa Bay 3; Calgary 4, Ottawa 3 in
overtime; and Philadelphia 5,
Colorado 4 in overtime.
Kings 5, Penguins 3
Luc Robitaille and Glen Murray
snapped a tic with goals I I seconds
apart in the third period as Los
Angeles beat Pittsburgh.
The Penguins led 2-0 before the
Kings scored four consecutive goals
in front of new Penguins owner
Mario Lemieux, who watched from a

Tonight's games

luxury box at Staples Center.
Two nights ago. the Kings rallied
for a 5-2 victory over Washington
with five cdnsccutivc goals. They
closed their first homestand in the
new arena with three straight victones.

Coyotes 4, Canucks 1
Jerem y Roenick had two goals
and two assists. including his BOOth
career point , Phoeni x won at
Vancouver.
Goa lie Mikhail Shtalenkov 's
shutout bid was foiled when Bill
Muckalt scored with .06 seconds
rcmammg .

matched a franch1sc record ' for most

NFL leaders

Saturday's games

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Quartefbacks

rJaw:

&amp;I.!Jzm. lJb, II!.W.
KHna. Sea...
. ... 14!! 87 1107 7 2
Bledme. N.E ................ 249 tlO 2038 9 4
Manning.lnd .
... 209 123 1679 IJ 8
O'Donnel l, Ten.
. ... 172 104 1209 8 4
Gannon, Oi!lk..
. .... 242 148 1745 8 5
Rushrn
&amp;1. lliL MJ,Lli.II!
Martin, NYJ
.. 146 615 4.2 28 2
James, Ind..
.149 520 3.5 40 4
DILLON, CIN ............ 118 SOB 4.3 38 t
Rhel!, Bal ..................... Ill 468 4.2 -~~ 2
J. Stewart Jac...
.. ... 126 464 3.7 441 5

rJaw:

Rtctlnn

rJaw:

rili.IIIL M&amp;.LG II!

Brown, Oak. ..

13.1 45t
709 15.8 56t
577 14.4 65
477 11 .9 39
716 18 4 67

............. 46 602

Harrison. Ind .. ................... 45
K. Johnson. NYJ ................ 40
SCOTt, CIN .................... 40
Glenn. N.E .................. 39

-·-

3
8

A.ll.l:mo. lliL Illlal.

Wamer,St.L ................. 162 11 8 1~31 18
B. Johnson, Was ............ 197 124 1657 12
Manbews, Chi ...... ............ 177 Ill 1043 8

ttoben. N.O...

........ 86

Beuerlein. Car

48

3
2

3
l84 5 2

21I 121 1560 10

7

Rwhtn
&amp;1. lliL MJ,LGII!

rJaw:

Oavts, Wu ................... .124 553
E. Smith,DaL
..........llO 515

Staley, Phi ... .. ....... ........ . 129 l05
Faulk, St.L ................... ... 88 502
En is, Chi .............. .. .. ... 156 497

Rrctinn

rJaw:

Jjg. lJb,

4.5 24

9

3.4 37 6
3.9 26

I

5.1 58

2
I·

3.218

MJ,Lli. II!

.... ..4J 538 ll.l 52 l

Mathis. AtL

Carter. Min ..
..38
Toomer. NYG ................ .37
Muhrunmad. Car. ........34
Bmce. StL ... .
.. ..32

457
470
593
538

12.0 36
12.7 38
17.4 60t
16.8 60

3
I.
2
8

Sunday's games

&amp;

1-Bt\inswidc. (5) . ............. .... ................. ..... 159
2-Cin. Elder (3) . ......... ...... ................ ... ........ 158
3.Cin. LaSal le (2).
.. ..... ....................... .. 156
4-Cin. St. Xavier ( 1) ...
.148
5- Picken ngton (I) .
.....................146

6-Ashland .. .
... ........ .. ...... 101
7-Hud§on . .
.......... 83
8-Tol. StJohn'$ ........................... "'v· . . . . . 72
9-N Canton Hoo,·er ...
71
IO.Clayton Nonhmont ................................ 67
Othm1 with 1Z or more points: 11 -Mass. Perry
54. 12-Ce nterville 40. IJ-Memor J9 . 14-Fairfield 28 .
IS-lakewood 25 16-0ublm Coffman 18. 17-Tol
Cent. Cmh 17 18-Fmdlay 16. 19 (tie)-Cie. St
Ignatius. Cin . Moeller 15.

&amp;

Q

m. ........ . ....... ... ......................

Division III girls
1-Minstcr (1 2) .

Atlantic Dltlslon

I. I KI bl. liE !iA

CHICAGO BULLS. Stgned G Dt'dnc
Willnughhy Warved F-C Do ug Swe n ~o n
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS: Wal' 'ed G Earl
Boykim. F Jamcl Thoma! and C Matt Fish
HOUSTON ROCKETS . Sigm:d C Kdvm Cato
to ~ muluyeLl.r co ntract exten sion.
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS: Waived G Charles
South ancl G Scou Brook ~
LOS ANGELES LAKER:S : Released C Benoit
Bcnjmrun and F Stephen Howard .

PJTISBURGH STEELER S: Signed TE Mnll
Cushm g.

Hockey.
Nutional Hockt&gt;y J.ea~~:ue
CALGARY FLAM ES : Rc ~at lc d D Rub,- n
Regchl fwm Sm nt Juhn of the A~I L
NEW JERSEY DEVIlS Signed C Brendan

*-Fort Loramie
5-N LimaS . Range
121
6-Elmore Woodrnore .
.... .. .. 11 ~
7-At~d o ve r Pymatunmg Va ll ey ..
11 .1
8-0ahimore Libert y Umon .
. 12
9·McDona1d .
. . . . 62
10-Bascom Hopewell-Loudon .
5)
Others with 11 or more points: II lti eJI.oiJisvllil' Aquut:\s . Berton Berk shue 46 n -Huron
.!2. J4.LANC FISHER CATH . .l6 15-Barne svtlle
26. 16-W Libcny Salem 22 . 17-S hadysJdc 20. ISCovington 19 19-Ft . R~:ciJvt:ry I8 20-CVCA 13.

Transactions
American Ltague
TEXAS RANGERS : Wai ved
Gu nder son and INF Jon Shnve

LHP

Eric

I

I

12 23
I2 32
9 21

I

I

I

0

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SALISBURY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

-·-

Pd. For Ted A. Warner
Salisbury Township Trustee 35801 Wolfe Pen Rd ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

your loss to Wisconsin, your loss to Miami,
your loss to Penn State. They won't remember that stuff."
The Buckeyes beat Mmnesota 20-17 on
Dan Stultz's 40-yard field goal with 1:15 left.
After 22-point underdog lo"'a come games
against Michigan State, ll!!nois and
Michigan.
"They're going to remember how you
finish," Salem said.
A memorable finish could put the
Buckeyes in a bowl game for the lith year in
a row. A week ago, they were hoping to reach
the mandatory seven wins just to qualify for
a bowl game. Now they find themselves just
a game out of second place in the loss column in the Big Ten.
But the B~ckeye s can't just flex their
muscles, as they have in two of the last three
seasons while finishing No. 2 in the country.
"We're not the overpowering team we ' ve

been in past years," Cooper said. "I don ' t
think we're good enough to win if we don ' t
play good."
Ohio State is still sorting out problems.
One is the erratic play of its offense. It man aged just two first downs in the first half at
Minnesota, but then rebounded to pick up 13
second-half first downs to avoid a possible
third loss in four games.
"I don't feel too sympathetic for any
problems they may be having," Ferentz said.
"They're a pretty good football team and I
think the season will bear that out.'.'
Tai lback Michael Wtley was all but invisible in the first seven games - that is , unless
he was giving up critical fumbles as he did
against Wisconsm - but ~arne back with
118 yards and two touchdowns last week.
Ohio State has won the last five meetings,
outscoring the Haw keyes 200-98.

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• V-6 Power

• Automatic
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~

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... '

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......

·~·,.···....

Oldamcblle

Weal VIrginia's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.

assists and Phil Housley added a goal
and two assi~ts for the Flames. Andre
Roy, Magnus Arvedson and Radek
Bonk 'cored for the Senators, who
lost at horne for the first time in six
games.
Flyers S, Avalanche 4-0T
Valeri Zelepukin scored wi th 8.2
seconds left in overtime as
Philadelphia bounced back after
blowing a four-goal lead to beat visitin g Co lorado.
Zelepukin skated in on goali e
Male Denis .and tlicked a backhanded shot between his pads, atoni ng for
what had been one of the Flyers '
worst collapses in recent memory.
Trailing 4-0 in the third, the
Avalanche stunned the Flyers with
four goals on eight shots in 8:09.
Alex Tanguay and Milan Hejduk
each scored twice.
Despite the near-debacle, the
Flyers won for the fifth time in six
games and tied New Jersey for first
place in the Atlantic Division.
Colorado lost for the third time in
four games.

Available Around The Clock
For Road Repairs
Snow &amp; Ice Remova~
Member Of Flood Mitigation
Committee
For Elevation Of Homes
I Appre~iate Your Vote

..

{

e d ."

That's maybe the attit ude you
have to have when your team has lost
13 games in a row and is 0-7 overall
and 0-6 in the Mid-American
Conference.
It 's not li ke the Bulls can afford to
be overconfident, just licking thei r
chops to ge t a shot at a team like the
Gulden Flashes.
"I don't look it as any more of an
opport unity or less of an opportuni ty," Cirbus said. "I look at it as
another Saturday and another opportunity to have this program see success in terms of the win- loss column .
We've seen a lot of success in terms
of our productivity and improvement
but we haven't quite seen the success
where the world views it."
Cirbus wants his team to play as if
it is mee\ing 13th-ranked Marshall
- on ly without some of the ugly
side effects of last week's 59-3

thrashing at the hands of the
Thundering Herd.
That has been the norm instead of
the exception . Preceding that were
losses to Western Michigan (45-17),
Central Michigan (38-19). Northern
Illinois (45-21) and Ohio (45-6). The
Bulls' best games carne in their first
two outin gs: a 23-0 loS&lt; to
Connecticut and a 17- 10 setback
against Akron.
In thetr ftrst year in the MAC and
first year back in Division I after 28
years away. the Bulls are chasing
their first win against a Division I
oppo nent since a 16-0 victory over
Holy Cross on Oct. 31, 1970.
Kent will never be mistaken for
Florida State anywhere except in the
minds of the Buffalo players and
coaches.
Kent is 1-4 in the MAC and has
lost four in a row. Just last week, the
Golden Flashes outgained Northern
Illinois 331-324 yet somehow found
a way to lose 50-7.
"We 've got to regroup thi s
week," coach Dean Pees said . "We
know that Buffalo's hungry to get a
win. They're going to be coming
here feeling like they've got a chance
to win a ballgame."

Kent is playing .at somew hat
friendlv Dix Stadi um , where it is
averaging 26.3 points per game as
opposed to only 8.6 on the road.
Regardless of which side wins .
the overwhelmtng emotion will likely be relief.
"We know that the Kent game
will be a tremendous challenge. a
very .difficult game to win, " Cirbus
said. "We look at it with a great deal
of excitement because we 're itching
to win, too."
In other MAC games Saturday,
Central Michigan (2-5 . 1-3 West) is
at Bowling Green (2-6, 1-5 East),
Ohio (3-5, 3-2 East) at Ball State (07. 0-4 West), Western Michigan (6-2,
5-0 West) at Akron (6-2, 4-1. East),
and Northern Illinois (4-4, 4-1 West)
at Marshall (7-0, 4-0 East). Non-conference action includes Cinci nnati
(2-5) at Miami (5-2, 4-1 East),
Louisiana Tech (5-2) at Toledo (3-4,
2-3 West), and Eastern Michigan (34, 3-2 West) at Central Florida (2-5).
MAC FAX: Jason Gavadza needs
just 48 yards to become the leading
tight end receiver at Kent. He would
surpass current Toledo head coach
Gary Pinkel, who had I ,082 receiving yards .... In the last six meetings

between Bowling Green and Central,
the cumulative score is BG 129,
CMU 136 .... Cincinnati and Miami
meet for the I 04th time . RedHawk s
coach Terry Hoeppner said: "] figured out the other day that in my 13
years here. the point differential is
we have scored three more points

than they have. Every game comes
down to the wire. " ... Quick quiz:
Who's the coach at Lou isiana Tech?
Fonner Boston Co llege head coach
Jack Bicknell .... Ball State has also
lost 13 in a row, just like Buffalo, but
has won its last eight meetings with
Ohio .... Western's Tim Lester needs
Xust 171 more passing yards to
become the MAC's all-time leader.
... Akron has already clinched its first
winni ng sea.son si nce 1992.
Marshall has won 28 games in a row
at home and II in a row overall both the longest streaks in the nation,
wh ile Northern Illinois has won four
in a row for the first time in nine seasons.
Atlanta scored three touchdowns in a 48-second span of the
third quarter during a 51-23 rout
of the Carolina Panthers in 1998.

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALE

JERRY BIBBEE

1999 FORD WINDSTAR LX
4 OoorWgn., 3.8 "L,Auto, All Power
Loaded $'1 ,500 Rebate or 0.9% APR Available

A Full Time Trustee

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo
• Nicely Equipped!

• Automatic
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• Nicely Equipped!

Thursday was tough enough. The
fog lifted and unveiled a first round
in .the Tour Champion ship that was
unforgettable.
Woods hit through a rock the size
of a baseball and left the course at the
end of his round holding his left wrist
in pain. Bob Estes hit the shortest
drive in PGA Tour history. And
before the firs t shot was struck, a
lone bagpiper emerged from a ghostly fog playing "Going Home," in a
brief service for Stewart on the first
tee.
The banner trailing a plane read,
"We will remember you Payne.''
Love saw it and th~n took 10 minutes
over a four-foot putt.
"The whole day I was thinking
about all kinds of things - events of
the week, all kinds of other crazy
thoughts," Love said. "When you ' re
not concentrating, it's hard to stay
focused. ·I definitely wasn't. "
It was hard on Woods in other
ways.
One stroke out of the lead with
four holes to play, his drive on No. 15
came to rest next to a tree and directly in front of a rock.
Instead of taking a drop, Woods
took a wedge and blasted through the
rock, causing the ball to squirt sideways and advance about 30 yards. He
managed to hit the green and twoputt for bogey, but winced ,on every
shot ·after that.

have no expectations," Cirbus said.
"We've been playing teams that are
0-2, 0-3 or 0-4 in the conference and
they've been tremendously cha llenging football games. Just because of
some record that Kent may have
ri ght now doesn't brush us any differently than if they were undefeat -

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Elect Bernard D. Gilkey
For
Salisbury Township Trustee

.~ 3

San Jose .1, Nashv ille 2
Los Angeles 5. Pittsburgh J
Phoenix 4. VMc9uver I

·

Ohio State (5-3, 2-2 Big Ten) is favored
by three touchdowns Saturday against Iowa
( 1-6, 0-4).
Iowa is fighting off a host of offensive
problems. Opposing teams have piled up a 2to-1 edge in first downs (200-103), a 230-90
advantage in rushing yards per game and a
13-1 upper hand in touchdown passes ~'
The Hawkeyes hope they've solved some
of those worries, hased on the performance
of junior quarterbat&gt;k Scott Mullen. He
stepped in last week against Indiana and

passed for 426 yards in the 38-31 loss.
''I'm QOI going to lie. I'd love to throw the
ball a lot," said Mullen, who had his 1998
season ended when he broke his collarbone
against Ohio State. "But that's not our focus.
We want to nave an equal balance."
Running at Ohio State has caused the
Buckeyes problems. An opposing back has
rushed for at least 100 yards in Ohio State's
last five games.
" I imagine Ladell Betts is licking his
chops too," Cooper said of Iowa's leading
ground-gai ner, averaging 78 yards a game.
Ohio State needs a strong finish to get into
a bowl game and erase the memories of some
earlier pratfalls.
"We've got to. finish strong in October
and then play out through November," quarterbacks coach Tim Salem said he told his
players last week. "You start winning the
test of these games and they'll forget about

(Continued from Page 4)

: Dave Andreychuk scored a franChise record-tying four goals, two of
them in Boston's four-goal first period, as the Bruins chased Darren
· Puppa and beat Tampa Bay.
. It was Andreychuk's third career
· four-goal game, and his lith time
' scoring at least three. He also has a
· five-goal game- against Boston on
Feb. 6, 1986, when be was playing
for the Buffalo Sabres.
The Bruins, who have been in the
NHL since 1924, have never had a
player score five goals in a game .
Rob Tal las stopped 22 shots as the
. Bruins won at home for the first time
· this season after a loss and two ties.
Flames 4, Senators 3-0T
Jeff Shantz's second goal of the
·game, at 3:07 of overtime, lifted
·Calgary to victory over Ottawa.
· Shantz, who also tied the game 2'2 in the second period, poked a loose
puck past goalie Ron Tugnutt from a
· scramble in front of the net, giving
: the Flames just their second win in
: the last seven games.
Valeri Bure had a goal and three

19
30
28

C~ntraJ

now."

Buffalo coach Craig Cirbus is
approaching Kent as if he were playing Florida State or Penn State even
· though the Golden Flashes have won
only one of their eight. games.
"I make no presumptions and

HOUSTON (AP) - A woman
wore knickers. The plane pulled a
: ~anner. Black ribbons were every.: where .. The memory of Payne
· ·Stewart was so pervasive in the first
· ·round of the Tour Championship that
Davis .Love III quit tryin g to avoid it.
When he tapped in for a bogey at
the end of a sad, strange and sometimes shocking first round Thursday,
Love found himself at 7-under 100
through 27 holes and in the lead by
one stroke over Tiger Woods.
And he cou ldn 't have cared less.
"The focus fs not on us, not on the
tournament and not on the scores,"
Love said. "It's on the lo s~ of a lot of
fathers and husbands."
Three days after Stewart and five
others wer.e killed in a freak plane
crash, the top 29 players on the PGA
Tour tried to get back to work on at
Champions Go lf Club.
And that's just what it was.
"It just didn't excite me," Love
said. "The fun doesn'tlast very long.
It was more like work."
,. That Plight not be tl!e hard part. '
llie 'ri10st 'gin-wrenching day of
the $5 million Tour Championship
could come today when no golf is
played. Instead, most of the field
planned to be . in Orlando, Fla., for
Stewart's memorial service.
"It' s going to be tough to come
l)ack on Saturday," Torn Lehman
said.

f+/HL games ...

168
1S1
148

~1beny - D e mo n ..

• Son of Herman and Amber Warner of Pomeroy.
• Member of the American Legion Post 39 of Pomeroy
2 I 7 lS 29 ·
I 0 !I 18 26
• Member of the Zion Church of Christ, St. Rt. 143
Northeast Di\'bion
Toronto. ..
.. ......... 8 3 I 0 17 36 22
• Graduated from Pomeroy High School in 1957
Ottawa......
........ 6 3 2 0 14 30 21
Boston ...... ....... 3 5 4 0 tO.l7 29
' • Married Suzanne Vaughan, daughter of Richard
Buffalo ..
. .. 2 6 2 0
6 26 33
M on~real. ................ 3 8 0 0
6 20 28
(Grandpa) and Lucille Vaughan, in 1957
S.Utheut Division
Florida ...
........ 6 3 I 1
2
• 'three Children · Patty &amp; Randy Young
Carolina.
......... ..4 2 3 0 ~~ i!{\s
Atlanta ............ ........ 2 5 2 I
7
32
scott warner
6 20 29
1Washington . .. . ....2 4 2 0
Tampa Bay ........... 2 6 I 1 6 25 JJ
Kimbe-rly and Albert Dettwiller
WESTERN CONFERENCE
• United States Army 1953 - 1955
Division
Detroit.. .. .......... .7 I I 0 15 32
16
St.l.ouis ............. . 6 4 0 0 tl J l 20
• 35 Years at the Meigs County Highway Department.
Nuhvillc ......... ......4 4 I 0 9 23 26
Chicago ...... .... ....... 1 4 4 0 6 21 29
15 Years as an equipment operator and 20 years as
Northwnt Division
Superintendent. Helped to man·age a million dollar
Vancouver ...
.. .....6 4 2 I 15 38 36
Colorado ........... '· 5 5 3 0 13 30
Edmonton ............. ..&gt; l 2 2 10 24 26
budget at the Meigs Counly Highway Department.
Calgary. . . . . ........3 7 2 0
!J 27 43
Extensive knowledge of road construction and
Pacinc Division
San Jose .................8 5 0 0 16 42 33
maintenance of equipment, including purchasing,
LA&gt;• Angeles.. .......... 7 3 2 o 16 41 32
Phocni" ..... .. ...... 6 2. .1 0 IS .n 23
o.nu .
......6 4 1 o tJ 22 24
paving and planning construction of bridges and
Anahcim ...
.~h._ S
I I 12 31 27
Overtime losses count as a loss.nnd a regulation
roadways.
''
tic .
• Retires from the Meigs County Highway Department
Thursday's Sl:ores
Calgary 4. Ottawa 3-0T
Boston 7, hmpo Boy 3
in 1994
Ph1 lmk lphi il S. Colorado 4-0T
Philadelphia . .... ....... 5 6
1
Pittsburgh ...
.. 2 4
N Y.lsJanden ......... 2 5

W~ s lun gt o n

TEDA. WARNER

EASTERN CONFERENCE

N.Y. RIUlgcn ....... 4

football
National Football Ll'agul'
CLEVELAND R"ROWNS· Clnuncd DB Enrl
Llllk off wm vers from N c ~&gt;o Orkan s
INDIAN1\POLIS COLTS S i ~ I H'd RB Lt!c land
Mc Elroy. lks 1 ~ nt!d RB s,·ou Greene Placed RB
Danek Holmes on injured re sen-e.

College
AKRON · Named Tmt 8ere nyi head b[lseball
C(1ach. cllec uvc Jul v 1. ZOOO. and current coach Dave
Fross w1ll bccomt'" ~·u - hcn d Cllrt.t h.
BRIDGEPORT: Namd Bob Bu swell men's basketball co a~ h
ELI ZAB ETH CITY STATE. Aunounced the res·
1gnat1 on of George Moody. football coach.
MONMOUTH . N.J .: Announced the res1gnatinn
n f Mike Scab . director nf athlcuc mmmunications,
effec ti \'C Nov 13.
OREGON Signed Erwe Kent. men 's basketba\1
c oach , to a fuw ·yt·;u cu ulra.:t.
RUTGERS: Announced the rettremem of Tom
H[lyes, men's lacrosse coach. effeciive at the end of
tht' 2000 sea~on
SOUTHERN Mf:.T HODIST Announced junior
G Chnd Elsey is lca\"mg the basketball team.

. . 180

VOTE FOR

NHL standings

Basketball
National Basketball Anocialion
BOSTON CELTICS : Named Ann Halt'" y 1•ir:c
p1 esidt:tlt of COl porale 1dations. Waived G Enc

Mornson and F Patuk El1 as. Placed C Jason Amoll
and D Orad fl o mbardir on iniured reserve.
UTIAWA SL:N MOKS . Cl:umell C Vi&lt;!Cheslav
Butsayc\ offwai \ers from Tampa Ba y and ass1gned
him to Grand Rap1ds of the IHL
ST. LOUIS BLUES. Assigned F Lubos Bartecko
tu Wurcl!stcr of th ~ AHL
TAMPA !MY LIGHTNING · Recalled C Roben
Pt•trovlc ky from Grand Karnds ol the IHL

&amp;

Iwn

Baseball
&amp;

ORLANDO MAGIC S• gn!!d John Gabrid . gl·n ('ral manager. to a four-year cmllr&lt;JCi l' Xtcusion
PH IL AIJ ELPHIA 70I:KS Wai\'Cd V lJo u~
Ov erton and r Korleunc Young
SEAll"LE SUPERSONICS R c lc :t~l·d C STC\"C
Schi!tllcr
VANCO UVER GRIZZLII:S: W;uvctl G Stq1hcn
Jacksort, F Antv.ain Smilh and C R1ch Km g
W/\ SHINGTUN WII.AKIJS: Wmcd G James
Cn \lms. F Derek Grimme. and f Randell Jackso n
Women ·s Nn1 1o11al Bnskeibnll Association
CHARLOTil: STING · Named ·1 R Ounn
coach

&amp;

!-Mogadore Field ( 9) .
... 177
2-C\e. Hts . Beaumont (3) ........ . ................. 153
3-Be llevuc .
.. ............... 138
4-Pemberville Eastwood ........................ IJ2
5-0imsted Falls. ..
. ....................... 11 7
6-Napoleon ..
. . ...... 114
7-AIIia nce Marlington ..
.................. 80
8-Cuya. Falls Walsh JesUit ... .................... 75
9-Euton ....
. .... 72
I0-Carrolllon ... ..... .. . ... .. ... . .. ..... ... .. . ....... .54
Othtrs with 12 or mnre points: \\-Kings Mills
K.ings SJ 12 flie)-Spring Greenan. Kenering Alter
-l8 14-Richfield Revere J7. IS-Dover 22. I6-M1 lan
Ed1son 21 11 (tie)-Mmen ·a, Ravenna SE 16 19
(tie)·Salcm. Bay Vt llage Day. Van Wert-Willard 15

2-Findlay

!-Eaton (8) .......... ······· · ~···
... 178
2-Girnrd
168
.~·Pataskala Watk.ins Memorinl (3 )... . ...... ... 157
4- You. Mooney ...
...................... IJ J
.5-Springfield Norlhwestern.
. 126
6-KenenngAiter ...
109
7-Nnpoleon
.79
8-Mogadore Field
.6~
9-Bellefontai ne . . ....................... .. .... ....%
10-Bay Village Bay .......... ...................... ...... 56
Othtrs l\lth ll or mort points: 11 -Brytln 50.
12-Poland Seminary 39. IJ-Minerva 38. 14-Bexley
J"l . 15-Pember.·ll lc Eastwood 3 1 16-Cuva Falls
Wahh Jesuit 24. 17-Van Wen 22. 18-Ciyde 18. 19
( tie)- Che~ter l nnd W. Ge11uga. Canton Cent. Cath 17

National L~agu~
CHJCAGO CUBS Dcdmccl to C)(CfCtsc the1r
npllorJs o n C ll emto Santmgo and INF Jeff IU au ~e r
CINCINNATI REDS . Signed Jack McKeon .
mnnagcr. to a one-year contract e:&lt;tension
LOS i\NGELES DODGERS: Nnmed Bob Daly
~ h airm nn , chief exec utive officer and managmg part ner atld annoum:ed he purchased a mmority stake 1n
tht'" team . subject to approv.1l by Maj or Lcnguc
Baseball ·
PHILADELPHIA PH ILLI ES · Cla11nr d RHP
H11ico Nomo off wai vl!rs from M1lwaukec .

Division II girls
Iwn

·' ·Attica Seneca East

!·McDonald (6) ..... ........ .. ........................... 17.'
2· Findlay Libeny-Bcnton (6) ..
.. .. .. . 172

Hockey

3

Division 1 boys

Iwn

Seanle at Green Bay. 9 p.m.

»:

' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The seventh and
finaJ "weekly state cross country poll as compiled by
the Ohio Association of Cro.n Country Coaci\C§
(first-place votes in parentheses) :

Division Ill boys

Monday's game

.......!!

Ohio H.S. sports

Iwn

Buffalo at Baltimore. I p m.
Carolina at Atlanta. I p m.
Chicago at Washmgton, 1 p.m.
CLEVELAND at New Orleans. 1 p.m.
Jacluonville at CINCINNATI. I p m
New York Giants at Philadelph.a. I p.m.
St. Louis 111 Tennessee. I p.m.
San Du:go at Kansas City. I p.m.
New England at Arizona. 4:05p.m.
Miami at Oakland, 4:0S p.m.
Dallas at Indianapolis. 4:1S p.m.
Minnesota nt Denver, 4: IS p.m.
Tampta Bay at Detroit, 8:20p.m.
OPEN : Piusbt~rgh , New York Jet1, San Francisco

New Jersey ...

Ottawa at Atlanta, 7 p.m
Nashville at Edmonton, 8 p.m.
Phoenix at Anaheim, S p.m.
Wahington at San Jo5e, 10:30 p.m.

l'raJa

fll.

1-Cin. Colerain (1 2). .
..... \80
2-Massillon h ckson
15R
J-Dubh n. Coffm:m .. .
........ ... ........ 157
4-Hilliard Oav1dso n.. .
.... .. 145
5-Kent Ruu sevch
........ IJ2
6-S trongs vtlle .
. ........ II I
7-Ciayton Northmom .. .
.. ... 103
8-Lew1s Center Olentangy
67
9-Beavercreek .............. ................. .......... .... 58
J(). To! . Notre Dame .................................. 57
Othrrs wl~h 12 or mo[l poinlS: 11-Findlay 56
12-Cin. Sycamore 44 IJ-Ashland 36 14-0ayton
Carroll 30 15-Cin. Anderson 28 . 16-Medina 27 . 17·
N Royalton 20 18-Cin Ursuline 4 cad. 19. 19-Cin
Mother of Mercy 17. 20-MARIETTA 15.

Division II boys

NFL's Week 8 slate

Iam

Division I girls

Iwn

Cross country poll

Quartubaclu

. ... .. 61

Othrr!'i with 12 or mnre points: 11-Zoa.t\"tlle
Tusc Vnll ey 58 12-Gates M1lls Gtlmour Acad . ~I
.J3·Covington -15 . 14-Cana l WJn ches ta 30. 15Caldwell 25. 1 6-Aui ~ a Scnca East 19 \?·Franklin
Monroe 18. 18-Cortland Maplewood 16. 19 {tie1·
Barne-sv tll e. Van Wen Lmcolm'tew 15

Sunday's games

2
I
2

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
rJaw:

Phoenill at Colomdo. 3 p.m.
Buffalo at Boston, 7 p.m.
Calgary at Toronto, 7 p.m
N.Y. Rangers at Montreal. 7 p m.
Florida at Ottawa. 7 p.m.
Carolina at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m
New Jersey at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Lm Angeles at Chicago. 8 p m
Dcl:rott at St loUIS, 8 p m
Tampa Bay at Dallas, 8 p.m.
Nashville at Vancouver. 10 p m
Pittstlurgh at San Jose. I0:30 p m.

.. 7J
71

enemy territory when the final gun sounded.
But it's the stretches of ineffective play
which continue to bedevil first-year Iowa
coach Kirk Ferentz.
'
" You want them to play well all 60 minutes," Fcrentz said. "That's our goal. We 're
struggling right now. If we were playing well
all 60 minutes, we wouldn 't be 1-6 right

Love doesn't enjoy
one-stroke lead at start
of Tour C~ampionship

FENDS OFF ATTACK
Pittsburgh
goalie
Jean
Sebastian Aubin and defenseman Alexey Morozov {95) lend
off a shot on their goal by the
L.A. Kings' Glen Murray during
Thursday night's NHL contest in
Los ·Angeles, where the Kings
won 5-3. (AP)

.... 11 7
... . 92

Ohio State needs consistent offense, run-stopping defense

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Spons Writer

(See NHL on Page 5)

.. 141!
.... 125

Buckeyes favored to beat Iowa by three touchdowns Saturday

1\iHL action

wins in the month of October, a mark
the club has reached four other times.
most recently gomg 6-4-2 in 1995.
Bruins 7, Lightning 3

... 15-1

The Daily Sentinei•·Page 5

Despite one-win season so far, Kent gets ·nod to whip Buffalo

Tcppo Numminen had two goals
and an assist , and Kellh Tkachuk set
up a pair as the Coyotes (6-2-3)

3-Bu non B\"!rkslnre
4-Fort Lorarn1e .
5-Fostorm St. 'Wendehn ..
6-Sandusky St. M~r }'
7-East Camon ...
8-Columbus Grove ..
9-Cun,oy Crem·icw ...
I 0-New London . ..

Floridn at Buffalo. 7 p m
Chicago at Detroil. 7 p m.
New Jersey tll Carolin11, 7:30pm.
Washington at Anaheim. 10 ..~0 p m

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

. By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio State
coach Joh~ Cooper tried hard to say only
:posttive ~hmgs about the Iowa Hawkeyes,
.ijut there s only so much that can be said
:about a team that's lost six of seven games.
'
"Iowa is a really an improving foothall
team, " Cooper said. "Their record is not that
~ood, as you know, but their quarterback was
stopped near the goal line on the last play last
.week or they would 1\avc beaten Indiana."
Cooper has relied on his usual
euphemisms for a bad team - scrappy,
.feisty - to describe the Hawkcycs.
" This is certainly not the most talented
jearn. we' ll play," Cooper said. "B ut they're
·.playmg hard and they're not hanging their
: heads."
:: ' Say that much for ·ihe Hawkeyes. They
· have lost their last two games by a touchdown or less and· each time was deep in

Scoreboard
Football

Friday, October 29, 1999

Fri. 9 am ·10 pm • Sal 9 am- Midnight
Sunday 1 pm • 9 pm

·P aid For By Camlidate Bernard D. Gilkey

TOll FREE 1-800-822-0417 • 372-2844 • www.tompeden .com

390. Ash Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760

,,

•

1997 FORD F350 ·

1998 FORD F150
Supercab, XLT, V8, Auto, Air Cond .,
AM/FM Cass .. Tilt, Cru ise. More

JERRY BIBBEE
'

'

Phone
740 -:- 992-2196
www.jerrybibbee.com

461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

�" ......

~

.,

...

~·

,~......

·'h •

•: *' ,.,.-

,. ,.,:r-,_........,,.,.,,.....,,.,.._,..,_...,....,.=---------------------'!""'------------------.. . .

"""''"""' .•

~~:-:.----,-. ~.. =~~
-

•

Friday, October 29, 1_
999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

P•g• 6 .; The Dally Sentinel

Clinton proposes rules to keep e-medical records closed
,

•
r
BY: DAVID HO
The new federal rules would go beyond the weaker protecttons of some and to request corrections of any errors.
. .
. .
AIIOCiated Press Writer
Slates. but would not ovcrnde those wtth more restricti ve laws.
Under the new rules, law enforcement orgamzauons would be prohtbllWASHINGTON - Picking up where Co ngress f;ulcd. President Clinton
The rul es would apply onlv to electronic informati on, including compul- ed from obtaining medical records without legal authorization like a war·
is proposing regulations to keep electromc medical records from the prying er records that have been copied to paper.
rant or court order. This retreats from the administration's previous posttion
eyes of employe rs, marketmg firm s and others who oltcn sec patients' most
On ly congres&lt;ional actum can prole&lt;:! the large amount of medical in for- of allowing law enforcement unfettered ac~ss to health records.
.
mat ion that has exrstcd only on paper. smd Sen Chnstophcr Dodd. D-Conn .,
The plan would require health care providers to send patients a nottce :
sensitive mfonnallon wrthout their consent
"I wtll lise the full authority of thi s office to create the first cumprehen- who wrote a hi partisan pn vacy hill hclorc th e August de:~dline.
descri bing how they use electroniC medical information and advtse paltents .
sive national standards for rhe protection olmedrn rl records." Clinton said
" I c:~n only hope that lhc adm mrstratton's actron will li ght a fire under in advance of any changes.
::
in a prepared statement .
Con~ress. so that we can deal wi th thi s ut tic:~ll y imputtant ISsue in a senHealth maintenance organ izations would also have to establish mternal . :
"The new rules I'm proposmg would appl y to all c kctron~&lt;: med~&lt;:al ous.-htpartr&lt;a~ and comprehensive way.'' he sa id"' a prepared statement.
procedures to protect patt en! records, mcludmg limiting access to informa- .
Under the proposal. doctors. hospitals or healrh plans wou ld not release lion and training employees to keep patient inform atiOn pnvate dunng thetr : .
records and to all health plans. It represents an unprcccJcnlcd step toward
putting Americans back rn control of thetr own medrc:~l records, .. the pres- a pal tent' s inl ormatum for purposes unrelated to treat meIll anJ ~aymc nt wnh - routine operations.
.
.
::
tdent satd m advance of a form al announcement scheduled for today.
out wnttcn consent. Pn vatc ml ormauon can now he released to linancral "" ''Regardmg teen-agers who seek medtcal care on therr own, the plan fol- . :
The proposed regulations. admimstratl on offi ctals said . would restrict the tutt ons. dt,rcct marketing linn s and others without a patlcnl 's knowledge or lows the lead of extsting state laws. When a state allows a nun or to obtat.n ·
use and release of private health 1nfom1 a1ion transmuted or m:untained by conse nt.
health care without notifying a parent or getting their consent, the mmor s
computers Congress debated the issue for years. but failed 10 meet a selfWhen rc4u1rcd to teleasc mcdicaltnfonn atlon. hea lth nrgarlllations would rights would be protected under the proposed pL1n . If a state reqmres a parimposed Aug. 21 deadline for legtslallng new prmccuons.
have to l11n11thc diSclosure to the rmnimum necessary for each case mstcad entto be involved, then the privacy rights would apply to the parent, not the
Existing law s protectin g medtcal pnvacy vary w1dcly from state to state. llf a patient 's enure record. For example . when paying for medical servtccs, minor.
Currently, there arc no federal guarantees that pnvate mform auon won't he no treatmcntmlmmallllll would be se nt to banks or crcd tt card comp antc s.
During co ngressional debate, Democrats led by Massachusetts Sen.
passed to employers. sold to phannace uttcal CO!npamcs or talked about 10
The propo" ll wou ld create new civil and criminal pe nalttcs for improp- Edward Kennedy pushed to all ow teens to kee p their records private, even
insurance company offices .
erly dtsclosin g pat tent mfonnatton . Intentionally releasmg information would from their parents and even when it involves abortion.
After Congress failed to meet the Aug. 21 deadline it set three years earThe admtmstratwn wrll puhl rsh rhc prnpusal next week for rcv1ew. It has he puni shable by a fmc of up to $50,000 and one year in jar I. Someone tryuntil February 2000 to ISsue a frnal proposal. wllh the rules to take effect 111 me to sell information could fac e a $250,000 fin e and 10 years in pri son.
lier, the 1996 law reqUired the Department of Health and Human Servtces
2002 .
·
Patients also would be given the right to see and copy their medtcal records to wnte regul ations on medical privacy.

With Bush absent, GOP hopefuls debating about him
deserved 11.
By WALTER R. MEARS
The Ari w na senator. publisher
AP Special Correspondent
HANOVER, N.H. - Next ltme. Steve Forbes. conserv ..lti" e acti v1st
Gov. George W Bush's nvals lor the Gary Boer. commen talor Alan Keys
Republican presidential nommauon and Sen. Orn n Hatch of Utah went
wtll be debatmg against hmr Instead ahead wtthout Bush, meet ing for the
' econd time in a wee k in a 60·mmute
of about him .
'Tm sure Gov. Bush wtll he very question-and-answer format
They sparred at limes. but it was
active 1n thts campaign. particularl y
no
slug fest as they stated their postsince we ' re moving up so rapid ly in
lions
on taxes. aboruon and assorted
the poll s," sard Sen John McCam.
other
1ssucs. withou t much arguwho trail s Bush but ts gaining.
n1cnt
It
was not direc t debate. They
McCain said he· d have preferred
got
LjU
Cs
tinns
m !Urn . 90 seco nds to
to ha~e Bush parti cipate mthe forum
answer.
no
re
butta
l time.
at Dartmouth College on Thursday
In
tbe
New
Hampshire
polls.
·night because New Hampshi re voters

McCun trai ls Bush by 12 to 16
pomts. Tbc others arc far behind, rcglstcrmg 1n smglc d1 git ~. McCam s~ud
he docs not cltscount them. tecalltng
that he was down trcrc, too. not long
ago

But he says he rs gatnmg tract ion.
and he sought to add to it Thursday
nt ght by slicking to hi s message of
reform . a pmnt he made on almost
every question put to him . He said
paltents' medical ri ght s. sc hool
voucher fundmg, money to meet the
needs of milnary families, and hi s
standard , political fi nan ces, arc all m

need ofrcfonn that can't happen until
the power of spec ial interest money
is curbed.
Forbes took the hardest shot of the
ntght at Bush for his absence.
" Perhaps in the future, at a forum
like thts, 1f we calitt a fund-raiser he
might show up," said the magazine
heir, who is financing his own campatgn.
B.ush already has said he wiII
come to the Republicans' debate in
Manchester, N.H., on Dec. 2. And the
absentee got a solo interview on
WMUR-TV, a loca l station, two

hours before the hourlong debate it
co-sponsored wi th CNN
He said he regretted missing it, but
preferred to be at a ceremony honoring hr s wife, Laura, at Southern
Methodtst University in Dalla!!&lt; ''I'm
surry I'm not there , I look forward to
the debates , I've got a lot to say,"
Bush said .
'
"I know I've got a lot of work to
do, I take nothing for granted," he
said
Only a front-runner would get that
TV treatment. But it also showed that
Bush is wary of the abse ntee argument against him . His campaign

Land transfers posted by Meigs County recorder
The following land transters were
recorded rece ntl y m the offi ce of
Meigs County Recorder Judy King ;
Deed, Benton Phillips to Rhonda
G. McGrath , Rhonda G · Phrllips.
Lebanon;
Deed, Darrell and Carol Fay Jenkins to Kim D. Mrtchell . Sali sbury;
Rtght of way. David and Ktmberly Vanlnwagen to Tuppers PlamsChester Water District . Sutton;
Right of way, Iva n L , Ivan and
Evelyn Wood to TPCWD, Chester;
Right of way, Wilma A. Manslield
to TPCWD. Chester;
Right of way, Leona Hysell. Linda Bates to TPCWD. Chester;
Rtght of way. John Jr. and Rosetta L Redovtan to TPCWD. Chester;
Rtght of way, Terry and Regrna
Life to TPCWD. Olive;
Rtght of way, Fred Ayres to
TPCWD. Orange;
Right of way. Larry E. and Nancy Cummins to TPCWD. Letart ;
Ri ght of way, David R. · Mtlls,
David Mill s, Sandra Mill s to
TPCWD , Columbta;
Deed. Howard E. Frank to Damel
Paul Demko, Columbia;
Deed, Richard A. and Ethel R.
Lambert to Keith A. and Cece lia L
Cook. Oli ve.
Deed. Charles J. and Betty Jane to
Kerth A and Cece lia L Cook. Olive;
Sheri lfs deed , James W. and Carolyn A. Goodnch to F11st Indi ana
Bank, Anttquny;
Right uf way. Robert E. Vance to
Buckeye Rural Electnc Cooperati ve,
Rutland ;

Right of way. Emery G. and Lel ia
J. Haggy to BREC. Rutland , .
Rr ght of way, Wesley and Jodi L.
Young to BREC, Scipio;
Deed. Helen Marfe Engltsh Ran·
som and Kenneth M. Ransom to
Donald Ward, Eve lyn Hobbs, Ruth
Priddy, Kay Shultz and Tammy Fry,
Meigs;
Deed, Charles F. Barnett , Louella
Barnett, Luella Barnett to Evelyn and
Jimmte L. Hobbs, Salem;
Deed, Sandra Sue and Darrell D.
Eash to Eve lyn and Jtmmie L Hobbs,
Salem; ·
Deed, Exa Mae Christian to Paul
D. Anthony Sr. and Mildf"':d V. Cas·
tie, Scipio;
.
Deed, Charles F Chancey to Scott
A., John T and Christi A. Lisle, Sut·
ton;
Deed. Richard and Lois Rosenbaum to Terrence D. Sr. and Christine
S. Conlin, Rutland ;
Right of way, Charles and June
Baker to Ohio Power Company, Sutton ,

Deed, Charl es F. Chancey, Paula
J. Chancey and Donald C. Shaffer to
Ralph W. Anderson , Sutton;
Deed, Cheryl M. Brownin g to Billy J. Browning, Middleport ;
Deed, Edna M. Curry to Marvin
Edwards Jr.. Pomeroy;
Deed, Robert G. and Paula L
Creeger to Robert G. and Paul a L.
Crecgcr, Oli ve;
Deed , Roger W. and Barbara F
Hyse ll to Chnstopher S. and Kn sly
Dawn Greenlee , Sutton;
Deed, Carolyn Jonel Reeves to

Tnna Hannan , SaliSbury;
Deed. Donald R. and Ernestine K.
Shult1. to Peggy S. Manuel . Sutton;
Deed, Rosann a Manley to Southcast In vestments Inc .. Mtddleport
Deed. Everett L Peterson to
Kevin L and Laurie C. H. Barber,
Oltve ;
Sheriffs deed , Wrlltam E. Kaulf.
William E. Kaulf Sr.. Jenme M.
Kauff, Jennie Kauff to Jenntfer M.
Kauff. Bedford ;
Deed, Kelly P. Sauber to Kelly P.
Sauber and Cindy J. Poole. Bedford ;
Deed, Mary K. Persons, Mary K.
Young to Victor Young Ill, Pomeroy;
Deed, San tmyer and Spangler,
Donald L Santmy.er and John N.
Spangler to Brian Williamson, Rutland;
Deed, George S. and Lavinia
Carper to George Carper, Bedford;
Deed, GeorgeS . Carper to Lavinia
Carper, Bedford;
Deed, Ruth Wolfe and Duane B.
Wolfe, Sutton ;
Deed, Rebecca and Glenn Edward
Martz to Lavern and Mary Jordan,
Columbia;
Deed, Richard P. and Nancy
Howard to Craig Hanning, Bedford;
Deed, Kathleen M., Bernard L
and Dwayne E. White to Angela Bak·
er, Rutland ;
Deed, Jeffrey C. and Deborah M.
Hanis to Jeffrey C. and Deborah HarriS , Lebancm;
Deed, William J. and Beverly A.
Edwards to Robert G. Edwatds,
Olive;
. Deed, L Dean and Robin Harri s

Cases concluded in County Court
The following cases were con·
:eluded recentl y in the Meigs County
:Court of Judge Patrick H. O'Bnen
Fined were; Wayne Dent, Mid: dleport, speed, $50 plus costs; Josie
. E. Jarrell , Racine, speed, $30 plus
:costs; Jennifer Mayle, Long Bottom,
: seat belt, $15 plus costs; Kimberlee
: Mayle, Long Bottom, seat belt, $25
: plus costs. Chad R. Wtse, Mtddleport,
seat belt, $25 plus costs , following tu
closely, $20 plus costs; Ttmothy D.
Faulk, Pomeroy, speed. $30 plus
costs; Amy M. Ri zer, Syrac use, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; speed , $55 plus
costs; Joseph B. Di llon, Racine, failure to maintain assured clear distance, $20 plus costs, Jonathan Todd
Mitchell , Coolville, speed, $30 plus
costs; Edward G Lawrence , Deland,
Fla. , failure to yteld from stop sign,
$20 plus costs; seat belt , $25 plus
costs;

Walter G. Snopeck. Hemlock
Creek, Pa., seat belt , $25 plus costs;
Robin Strait, Grove City, speed, $30
plus costs; Jame s J. Krager Ill,
Albany, speed, $30 plus costs; Jeffrey
D. Root, Cleve land, seat belt. $25
plus costs; Jimmy J. Lemaster.
Garfield Heights, seat belt, $15 plus
costs; Nancy L. Manley, Middleport,
seat belt, $ 15 plus costs. David W.
Roac h, Gallipolis, speed, $30 plus
:costs; Crystal D. De•ter, Pomeroy,
speed, $30 plus costs; Gladys J
Gross, Langsville. failure to maintam
·assured clear distance, $20 plus costs;
. William Zeig ler. Pomeroy. domestic
v.iolence, costs, one year probation,
· 30 days jail suspended 10 one day ;
:Denni s Marcmko, Middleport , rec k, less operation. $500 suspe nded. costs.
one year probat ion. three days rcsi; dentialtreatment program ;
. Robert P. Schnetder. Mtddleport.
·driving under suspension, six months
' Jail suspended to 10 days, $200 plus

costs, one year probation, 90-day
vehicle immobilization ; fictitious
tags, costs only ; falsification , 60
days jail suspended to 10 days concurrent, costs, one year probation;
Amber N. Ohlinger, Racine, speed,
$22 plus costs; Andrew Robinson,
Pomeroy, driving under suspension,
$200 plus costs, 60 days jail suspended to I0 days. one year probation ; R1ckie L. Hollon, Long Bottom,
overload, $275 plus costs; James Rizer, .!'omeroy, speed. $28 plus costs;
Charles McGrath, Rutland, falstftcation, $100 suspended to $50 plus
costs, 10 days jail suspended, one
year probation; Benton Ford. Gallipolis, no operator's license, $200
plus costs, five days jail and $100
suspended tf valrd OL presented
within 90 days, one year probation;
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Eli zabeth
Moodtspaugh, Pomeroy, failure to
control, $30 plus costs; Kenneth D.
Mohler, Mtddleport , squirrel huntmg
from a motor-vehic le, $30 plus costs;
J as~n ' Richands, Hoc kingport, no OL,

$200 plus costs, 30 days jail suspended to seven days, one year probation; tictitious tags, $25 plus costs;
Justin L. Milliron, Vincent, spotli ghting, $75 plus costs, three days
jail suspended, one year probation ;'
deer hunting during closed season.
$200 plus costs, three days jail suspended , one year probation, one year
suspension of huntin g license with
hunter education course to be c om~
pleted to obtam hunting license at end
of suspension; deer huntmg from a
motor-veh icle, $50 plus costs, three
days jail suspended , one year probation ; hunung wrthout permr ssron,
costs only ;
Daniel Shane, Ractne , dnving
under the influence, $850 plus costs,
30 days jail suspended to I0 days,
one year OL suspension, one year
probation, 90-day vehicle immobilization; driving under financial
responsi bility action suspension ,
costs, one year probation, 30 days jail
suspended to I0 days concurrent

--ELECT--

Victor Young, III

to Jack Jr. and Charlotte L. Satterfiel d, Salem;
Deed. Pomt Mason Auto Glass
Inc to Jeffrey and Lana Nohl c, Bedlord;
Deed, Joey and Mary E. Daniel to
David M. Demos ky, Co lumbia ,
Deed, Jose ph T. Bonus to Bil l and
Lena Webb, Salem;
Deed. Harold L and Betty A. Nut·
tel to Harold L. and Betty A Nutter,
Olive;
Deed. Outdo J. iro ami to Cindy
Lambert and Bi ly . Burcham,
Pomeroy ;
Deed, Palrlcta M. Shere to Ray
Wellman , Salem;

A

Dee d, Kenneth R. and Mary J.
Workman to Denise M. and John A.
Harden ,
Deed, Steven H. and Wanda Eblin
to Melvin H. and Cinda D. Milliron,
Sal isbury tracts;
Deed, Alberta Siders, Alberta J.
Siders to Joh n A. and Bertha M.
Hawley, Sutton;
·
Deed, Charles J. and Betty Jane,
Richard A. Lambert to Shannon H.
and Lori A. Miller. Olive;
Deed, A. W. Tipka Oil &amp; Gas Inc.
to Arloma Corporation , Lebanon ;
Shcrifrs deed, Naomi P. Findlay,
John Doe to Homeside Lending Inc .,
Rutland.

issued statements explaming ht s
absence. He had planned to stay out
of debates until January.
Bauer did take a slap at Forbes on ·
aMther poin l, saying that his proposed flat tax would favor corporations over famrli es. "Gary. you ' re
wrong, " Forbes countered.
McCain urged Republican openness to differe nces on the abortron
issue, repealing that he is firmly:
opposed to the practice. None of the: ,
more conservati ve candidates challenged him on it.
·
" We can have respectfu l dis-:
agreements on specific issues, and w&lt;:"
can work together on this one," hC:
said of the party's most divisive'
social policy dispute.
Vice President AI Gore and former.
New Jersey Sen. Bill Bradley, thC:
Democratic candidates, met in thei(,
ftr st question-and-answer debate
Wednesday night. When the mode r~
ator at the GOP forum asked who iri
that crowd had watched the Democ-:
rats, McCain 's hand was one of .
those that went up.
·
McCain said the Democratic con-:
test might have a bearing on ht s;
because about one-third of New .
Hampshire voters are independents
and can vote in either party primary
on Feb. I. So independents could be
pivotal. "Sen. Bradley is appealing to .
a lot of independents," he said before :
the clebate. "I am, too.''

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he is at it again. He says, 'Til move
to the couch," but he never does . He
says, I'll have the surgery," but he
never gets around to making the
appointment'.
He says he snores because he is
tired . Well , I'm tired, too. What's
more, I believe that his conditi on ts
life-threatening to me, also,
because I have to fa ce each day
without enough sleep.
It burns me up when he acts like
his snoring 1s a big joke: He laughs
and thinks it's funny, but he is the
only one who is laughing. Surgery
won't happen, snore strips don 't

every 'effort to do so. And be tolerant of your mother, too.
I'd say you have highdass wor- .
ries -- two women who are interested in your welfare. In quieter ·
moments, please remember they •
will not be aro und forever, and they ;
both deserve your respect.
Is alcohol ruining your life or the
life of a loved one? "Alcoholism; .
How to Recognize It, How to Deal .
With It, How to Conquer it'1 can
turn things around. Send a self" •
addressed, business-size envelope ,
and a check or money orde r for :
$3.75 (this includes postage and
handling) to; Alcohol, c/o Ann Landers, PO Box IJ562, Chicago, Ill .
60611-0562 . (In Canada, send ,
$4.55.)
To find out more about Ann
Landers and read her past co lumns,
visit the Creators Syndicate web
page at www.creators.com

say anything, because I knew she
was trying to be helpful.
When I told my boyfriend how
upset I was, he said, She did the
same thing for my brother when he
moved into hi s place." Ann, hi s
brother 1s single, and moved into a
bachelor pad.
I don't want to hurt Janet's feelings. but I'd like to rip down that
ugly shower curtain, throw out
those silly pictures, and decorate
my own place. P.S. ; I have plenty of
"help" from my own mother. Please
advise. -RATHER BE SPARTAN
IN CALf.
DEAR SPARTAN: Cool it, Buttercup. You can ltve with the ugly
shower curtain and those silly pictures for a couple of months, then ,
replace them with somethmg more
to your liking. It will help your
relation ship wllh your boyfriend if
you get along with Janet. Make

,Lydia Council extends mission food drive
At one time or another, everyone
Is criticized for somet~lng. But the
most Important thing Is how we
react wnen someone disagrees with
us. By understanding that everyone
has different Ideas. we ean sometimes
gain Insight and achieve personal growth
as a result of constructive criticism. •
One good way to respond to criticism Is to
ask ourselves hOw Jesus might respond to a
similar situation. In the Bible, .when Jesus was
confronted by someone, He would sometimes explain His views and at
other times He would uot respond at all. One thing we shOuld all keep In
mind Is that It Is virtually Impossible to ptease eVI!ryone all of the time.
Sometimes when we are criticized, a gentle response may be appropriate,
trut knowing when not to respond requires good judgment and Insight.

Slllpid people always rhink rhey are right.
Wise people Iuten Iii advice.
Good News Bible ProverbS 1Z:15

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-prolit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calen·
dar is not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed only as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.

Candidate For

November 2, 1999

Dear Ann Landers: You hear a
lot about the poor snorers; how they
are picked on, made fun of, and
some even say their condition can
be lifethreate,ning .
Well, there is a flip side to this
condition that goes untold. I'm talking about the snorer's spouse, who
has to sleep in the same bed with
him.
, My hu sband's snonng could
wake the dead. I cannot remember
the last time I was able to sleep all
night without movmg to the couch.
He always says , "Just wake me up .
Well , I do , and withm 30 seconds

boyfriend and I recently moved into
an apartment. We saved money for
a long time to buy good furniture .
However, like other couples who
are just starting out, there are some
things we haven't been able to buy
yet.
My boyfnend's mother, "Janet,"
is a ni ce person, and we have
always gotten along well , but now,
there's a problem.
Two weeks ago, she dropped by,
walked through our apartment,
then , left Without say ing a wond .
Hours later, she returned with several boxes of gifts. She put up a
shower curtain, placed plants in the
livmg room , and hung several picturcs.
Although her gifts were things
we needed, I'm not thrilled about
her decoratin g our home and pickin g Out the col ors for my bathroom
and krt chen. I was upset, but dtdn't

The Grundy Mountain Mtssion
food dnve was extended through
November when the Brad fmd
Church of Christ Lydia Council met
recently at the home of {lecky ,
Amberger with Made line Painter as
co- hostess.
Carolyn Ni cholson opened the
meeting with prayer, offi cers '
reports were given and Charlotte
VanMeter reporte~ on cards sent
Dec. 6 at 6;30 p.m was set for the
annual Christmas dinner at the

Golden Corral in Gall ipol is.
A thank you note was read from
Diane Maxwe ll for a weddin g
.s how er. Selected as pack the pantry
nems for November were shampoo,
soap and deodorant , while in
December it will be dried beans,
pasta and noodles . Church supplies
to be co ll ect in November are
household cleaners, while in
December, plastic forks, knives and
spoons are on the list. .
Devotions from I Thes. were

gtven by Amberger and Madeline will be the speaker and a fellowship
Painter. Articles included "Story on dinner wtll he held on Sunday.
Encouragement,
"Basket
of
It was announced that the comEncouragement" and "Passage of munity Thanksgiving dinner will be
held on Nov. 21 at the Middleport
Thoughtfu ln~." It was reported
that the youth of the church will be Church of Chrisi
Refreshm ent s were served by
taking pop can recycling on as a
the hostesses to those named and
project.
A senior high retreat was Paula Pickens, Charlotte Haning,
announced for Nov. 12- 14 at the Kathy, Megan and Madi son Dyer,
Ohio Valley Christian Assembly. A Jackie Reed, Charlotte VanMeter,
faith promise revival weekend will and Diane Maxwell. Pickens will
be held Nov. 5-7. George Pickens host the Nove mber meeting.

Rock Springs United Methodist Women elects new officers
New offi cers were ~l ected when
It was voted during the meeting
the Rock Springs United Methodist to buy socks and underwear for
North Carolina flood victims. These
Women met recently at the church.
Elected following a report by the items will be taken by the Rev. Keith
nominating committee of Virginia Rader when he goes to assist a
Wears, Ann Werry and Frances Goe- church in that area. Hunger in the
glein were Rita Radfond, president; United States was discussed and the
Dorothy Jeffers, vice president; group signed a paper calling for
Leah Ord, treasurer; Pandora steps to be taken to end hunger in
Collins, secretary; and Iris Collins, this country.
news reporter. They will be installed '
It was noted that the unit received
in January.
a five star rating and the certificate

was displayed. Plans were discussed
or the Election Day dinner on Nov.
2.

'

'

The meeting opened with scnpture from Phil. 4 followed by the
Lord's Prayer in unison. The purpose was read followed by singing
of "I Know Who Holds Tomorrow"
and "Leaning on the Everlasting
Arms." Collins gave the secretary's
report and reported that I 7 cards
were sent to sick and shutins and

prayer was gtven to by Leilheit. Ord
gave the treasurers report .
The program and devotions were
given by Radfond and Hazel B all on
the topic, "God Calls Us to be in
Missions" with responsive readings
by members. "In Chnstianity there
are three K's," A contest regarding
the books of the Bible followed.
Jeffers had the closing prayer and
refreshments were served by Radford and Ball. •

Chester Council Daughter of, America inspection takes place

~

Vote me in and
let me work for you!

.

By The Bend

(.""~

·~)

RACINE - Racine Chapter
OES, Monday, 7;30 p.m. at the hall.
SYRACUSE - . Regular meeting, Sutton Townshi'p Trustees ,
Monday, 7;30 p.m. Syracuse Village
Hall .

FRIDAY
TUESDAY
Weekend
MIDDLEPORT POMEROY - Meigs County
revival, First Baptist Church of Mid- Chamber of Commerce, Business
dleport, Friday through Sunday, 7 After Hours, Tuesday, 6 to 7 p.m. at
p.m.' nightly. Different singers, dif- the Ohio Valley Bulk Foods ,
·
ferent speakers each evening . Fri- Pomeroy.
day, Earthen Vessels, Rev. Mark
Morrow, speaker; Saturday, P~o ­
ALFRED - Orange Township
claim, Marvin Sallee, speaker; Sun- · Trustees, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
day, Boelk Family Singers, Morrow home of the clerk, Osie Follrod.
speaking; Sunday evening , Boelks
to sing, Charles Swigger to speak.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Pomeroy-Racine
POMEROY - Friday 's Fun, Lodge 164, Free and Accepted
Food and Fellowship project at Masons, Wednesday. Election of
God 's Neighborhood Escape for officers, work in the fellowcraft
Teens. Nutritional foods for snack- degree.
ing while there, non-violent games,
computer programs , pool tables
MIDDLEPORT - Middl eport
available. Center opens at 6 p.m. and Literary Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m at
closed at 10:30 'p.m on Friday and the Pomeroy Public Library. Olita
Heighton will review "All Over But
Saturday.
the Shouting" by Rick Bragg.
SATURDAY
PORTLAND - Lebonan Town- THURSDAY
CHESHIRE - Gallia-Meigs
ship trustees, regular session, 7 p.m.
Community
Action Agency, monthSaturday at the township building.
ly board meeting, 4:30 p.m. ThursRACINE - Racine grange pig in day, at the Guiding Hand School in
··
a poke auction and community din- Cheshire. :
ner, Saturday, 6:30 p.m. at the h:ill.
Take a covered dish. Community
invited to attend.

Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.

TOLL FREE 1-800-822·0417

..

e

Fri. 9 am -10 pm • Sat. 9 am- Midnight

372-2844

Sun~y 1 pm • e.pm

e

www.tompeden.com

••

RE·ELECT

Trustee 8 Yrs Exoerjence

"Your full time trustee"
Paid for by Chrl11topher T. Wolle 485ZO Blind Hollow Rd. R;adne, OH, 4.5771

JENNIFER AND JEREMY ROUSH
TWINS BORN • Jennifer and Jeremy Roush announce the birth of
their twins, Augusta Jane Hill Roush and Riley Lester Hill Rouah,
Sept. 9.
.
Augusta weighed four pounds, 14 ounces and Riley weighed six
J)ounda, two ounces.
Maternal grandparents are Jan and Marvin Hill. The maternal
great-grandparents are Jean Alkire and the late Charles Alkire and
the late Jane and Dale Hill.
Paternal grandparents are Terl and Gary Roush. Paternal great·
grandparents are Ann and Charles Findley and Carrie Roush and
the late Lester Roush.

AS A "WRITE-IN'' .,.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR ~UPPoAr

WRITE-IN BALLOT
To vote for a person NOT
on the ballot, write In
BOTH the title of the office
and the,candidate's name
on the lines below.
FFICE

Ma or

CANDIDATE NAME

Sand lannarelll

YOUR CURRENT MAYOR, SANQY'IANNARELCI

Please re-elect incumbent Larry Thomas as
Salisbury Township Trustee on November 2nd.
I, Larry Thomas, h_ave been a Salisbury Trustee for
the past six years and have the experience. In those
years I have worked with the other trustees to get
three of our roads black topped and paved. I have
helped, also, in the grants from F.E.M.A. to raise
houses out of the flood stages in the Laurel Cliff,
Rock Springs, Willow Creek, on State Route 124,
due to the big floods of 1996 and 1997.
I have a CDL license ad am able to drive and
operate machinery and am able to work in all
conditions.
I care and listen to your problems about your
roads, and will do my best to help in any way.
I arri a member of Pomeroy Lodge 164, Scottish
Rite, Shrine, The Ohio Township Trustee Assoc.,
and the American Legion 128 SAL.
Please get out and vote! YOUR VOTE REALLY.
DOES COUNT!!
Thank you for your time,

,. . _ _{~, 1i ';"/
0/c '/~''11'1, )'j
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, ....

Larry Thomas

Co.-J'fltll Citizen• Of The Vlllege of Middleport

Suun IIIIer, rrueurer ·
408 s. lth Ave.
Ml

I

Gary
BarOpal
Mrs.

.E2r Letart Twp.

&amp;

MIDDLEPORT - The Friends
of the Library will meet Mo~day at
7 p.m. at the Middleport .Library.

Osborne, Esther Smith,
Holter, Everett Grant . Mary
ringer, Mary Holter,
Eichinger, Jean Welsh, and
Biggs.
·

"Wolfie"

MAYOR
OF
MIDDLEPO'RT

POMEROY - Rev ival, Mt Hermon 'Umted Brethren in Christ
Church, Monday :through Nov. 7,
7;30 mghtly. Rev. Charles Swigger
of Pomeroy, evangeli st, spec ial
singing. Church located on Wickham Road, just off Te•as Road in
Texas Community Robert Sanders,
pastor.

Thelma White, Ruth Smith, Elizabeth Hayes, Deloris Wolfe, Julie
Curtis, Laura Nice, Doris Grueser,
Erma Cleland, Betty Young, Marcia Keller, Helen Wolf, Ella

(\:hristopher Te Wolfe

IN THE UPCOMING ELECTION
MY NAME WILL NOT APPEAR
.
ON THE BALLOT
HOWEVER;
I AM A CANDIDATE FOR

MONDAY
CARPENTER
Board of
Trustees, Columbia Township, Monday, 7:3!1 p.m. at fire station.

' RACINE Racine ·Village
Council, Monday, 7 p.m., municipal
building.

singing ~f the National Anthem ,
and recttatwn of The Lord's
Prayer.
.
Reported til were Opal Hollon ,
Helen Chne, and Goldie Fredertck. Balloting on candidates was
held and letters were read from
Helen and Chet Taylor and Alan
Levan . Refreshments were served
to Charlotte Grant, Opal Hollon,

SPECIAL NOTICE

SUNDAY
· CARPENTER - Dllf!'en Smith,
· Welch, W. Va. to sing at Carpenter
Baptist Church, 10:30 a.m. servi1=0
Sunday.

BWCIC"

West VIrginia's t1

Inspection was . conducted by
Betty Btggs of Gutdtng Star 124,
D,au!\hters of Am.enca, at a .recent
meetmg of Chester Counctl 323
·held at the hall.
.
Bt ggs gave the Council a report
of "very good ." Laura Nice condueled the meeting which opened
in ritualistic form with pledges to
the Christian and America flags,

The Write-In Ballot
Ia Located Inside Front Cover

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Salisbuty Township Trustee Paid for by tile candidate,-Larry Thomas.~
33080 Bailey Run Rd., Pomeroy, OH 457e9

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Page 8 • The Dally Se-ntinel

Friday, October 29, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, dhlo

Friday, October 29, 1999

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Racine United Methodist Women learns about services.of Serenity House

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Hilda Stotts of Serer.ity House, Metgs, and Jackson Counties, she
Gallipolis, was speaker for the pro- surd.
gram when Racine Umted Methodrst
Lee Lee, prestdent, read the
Women met recently at the church.
poem, "Ahnost Autumn" to open the
Introduced by Ruth Frank. the bustness meeting. The UMW purspeaker e~plaincd the services of pose and the Lord's Prayer were
Serenity House noting that women given in unison and reports were
and children who have been physi- gtven by Karen Walker, secretary,
cally or sexually abused may be and Clara Mae Sargent , treasurer. A
given shelter for up to 30 days. The card was read from the Bill Cross
House serves victims tn Gallia, fanuly, and the hat and mitten fund

that lime The the mi.! of the- class

over the years has been "Bu tldmg H orne~ un E&lt;.~ rth .wd In
Heaven."
The meal was prepared and
served by the Bthle Seekers
Class of the church. AI Hartson
had the hlcsstng. and Frank lhlc
gave the Y.clcome . Apprcctat ton
gtfts were gl\·cn by Kathryn
Evans to !hie. teacher, and AI
Hartson and Btl! Frazter. mtntstcrs.
Committees for the banquet
"(e re Thelma Boyer, Rosanna
Manley. and Hazel Wilson , reservauons; Gene and Dorothy
McDaniel!;, Elsie Kmg. Bonme
Smith, and Dorothy Baker,
tables; and Glenn and Kathryn
Evans. Flora Dell Grueser, and
Dorothy Road, program.
Officers retained for the comtng year were Dorothy McDaniel
and Frank Ihle, co-presidents;
Elsie King, vtce presrdent ;
Dorothy Roach, secretary ; Thelma Boyer, assistant secretary ;

By The Associated Press
Tailgate parttes arc as cheery a
part ol foothall as the potnt after
touchdown .
They can be beer-swillmg barbecue feasts with fan s tn complete
regalia and patnted faces. Or they
can be refmcd alhurs leatunng prepared mcab served on the best
ch ina , \\ .ith linen napktns rmd w1ne
goble ts
Here ' s a suggest ton lrom the
Cult nary Institute of Amenca: a simple make-ahead menu f01 a coolweather ptl' I11L' to serve from your
tail ga te
Rec tpcs arc adapted from th e
in s titute'~ new cookbook "Garde
Manger: The Art and Craft of the
Cold Kitchen" (Wtlcy. $54.95).
Pan Bagnat, literall y me anmg
"bathed bread ... consists ol mannated luna salad. stuffed in side haru
rolrs and wrapped up ttghtly. The
bread soaks up the savory juices of
the salad and !he robust llavor calls
for an tcy col d beer and salty potato
chips.
For dessert try Hermit Bars,
hearty spiced cookies. Serve them
wt th mugs of steaming Mulled Ctder
you've kept piping hot m a thermos.
Pan Bagnat
6 tablespoons red wme vmegar
I bunch bast! , chopped, about
1/4 cup
3/4 bunch ltahan parsley, rough-

Kathryn Evans. treasurer
Theme of the progmm presented by Debbie Gerlach was
"Down Memory Lane." Glenn
Evans and AI Hartson sang "He
touched Me ". rcadmgs on growmg old wetc given by Btl! Bailey. and there was a skit "The
Pncc ts Rtghi " by Mtke Gerlach.
Dc hbtc Gct lac h and Cathy
Erwm .
A d1Spl.ty ol old ptcturcs was
cnJnycd by those attendmg and
the closmg prayer was hy lhle
/dtcnd1ng were Gene and
Dorothy McDaniel. Wrllard and
Netttc Boyer. Thelma Boyer, Bill
and Delores Batley, Ruth Barnhart , Mane Cwd. Tem Hoekman. Raymond and Farie Cole.
Btl! and Mtssy FraZier, AI and
Donna Hartson, Lena Martin ,
Edna Evans, Ella Mae Daugherty. Bonmc· Smtih, Elsre Kmg
Dorothy Baker, Richard and
Doris Bailey, Mack and Bea
Stewart, Haze l Wilson, Flora
Dell Grueser, Mtldred Long,
Dorothy Roach, Glenn and
Kathryn Evans. Frank and Kathy
!hie, Pete and Patty Kloes, Mary
Hysell , Lester Bowers, Loretta
Tiemeyer, Clarice Erwin, Rosanna Manley, Steve and Behnda
Lane. and M1ke and Debbie Gerlach.

Literary club members hear
review of McDermott book

Vegetarian Cooking: Potato and Vegetable Gratin
layer, then season lightly with salt
and pepper. Brush or pat potato
slices lightly with I teaspoon of the
olive ot l. Spread half of the onions
evenly over potatoes.
Layer half of parsnip slices on
top of onion layer, overlapping them
slightly. Brush parsnips with I teaspoon of oil. Season lightly with salt
and pepper.
Repeat layers, seasoning each as
before, and finishing with potato
slices If any vegetable slices are left
over, alternate rows of vegetables
and potatoes on top layer. Brush top
layer wuh I teaspoon of the oil, then
season. Cover tightly and place '"
the oven to bake for 45 minutes.
Remove cover; brush top with
remaining teaspoon olive oil and
sprinkle wrth herbs. Bake, uncovered, for another 15 to 20 minutes;
or until top Js nrcely browned.
Remove from oven and allow to sit
10 to 15 mmute.s before serving.
Makes 8 serv ings as srde dtsh, or
4 to 6 larger servi ngs, as desired.

Barbers
announce birth

Jeremy and Debbie Barber,
Coolville, announce the birth of
their second child, a daughter, Katlyn Marie, born Sept. 14 at St .
Jose ph 's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
Va. She weighed 10 pounds, four
ounces.
Lloyd and Ruth Brooks of
Coolville are maternal grandparents,
and Leonard and Shirley Barber of
Reedsvrlle are paternal grandparents. Great-grandparents are Mildred Brooks, Pauhne Barber. and
Charles and lola Wilson, all of
Reedsville.

A contribution was made to the
Meigs Local Better Buildings
Commtttee by the Meigs Local
OAPSE umon in support of the
bond ISs ue to be on Tuesday's
ballot. Officers of the group are
Steve Morri s, president; Carrie
Moms , secretary ; and Lois
Wyant. treasurer.

.

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firmly press the sandwiches closed.
Wrap each sandwich tightly with
deli paper or wax paper. Let rest at
room temperature at least I hour
before serving.
Makes I0 sandwiches.
Nutrition information per
sandwich bar: 486 cal., 21 g pre
29 g fat , 36 g carbo., 709 mg sodi um, 53 mg chol.

Apostolic

Each bracelet, which ·is · strung
on an elastic band, is typically
made up of one type of stone and the beads don 't change colors
hke mood rings.
Powerbeads' popularity comes
as an increasing number of Americans look to Eastern spirituality for
direction. Many people also are
takmg to yoga and using feng shui,
the ancient Chinese art of object
placement that says if you put
things in certain places, it will help
your well-being and give you energy
"Americans today are taking a
mental account of what is important in life. They are more mystical
and inspirational," said trendwatcher Irma Zandl, who runs the
market research firm Zandl Group.
" Powerbeads fit right into that. ...
They are about being positive and
fee ling good."
Metro was inspired to develop
powerbeads after seeing the
Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama
wear a few beaded bracelets.
She began her line with wooden
beads last fall, and then moved into
semiprecious stones in January. By
August, they were flying off store
shelves at many big department
stores and pricey boutiques.
" People were laughing when
they first saw them. They didn't get
it," said the 30-year-old Princeton
University graduate who sells her

Chun:h or Josus Christ
Aposlollc Faith
New L1ma RoaJ
Pastor: Marty Hutton
Sunday, 10 a m Hnd 730 p.m
Wednesday, 7 30 p.m.

Liberty Assembly or God
P 0. Box 467, Ow.ld1ng Lane
Mason, W Va
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Services· 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Baptist
Mannatha BapiiSI Chun:h
Burlmgham · 742-7606
Paslor: John Swanson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Mormng Service 11:00 a.m.
E"vening Service -6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7.30 p m.
Hope Bapl!Sl Chun:h (Southern)
Pastor: Jim D11ty
570 Grant St , Middleport
Sum1ay school - 9·30 a.m
Worsh1p · II a,m, and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ice - 7 p.m
Free Wilt Bopllsl Church
Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor: Lcs Hayman
Sunday Service- 7·00 p m
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.
Rulland Ftnl Baptist Church
Sunday School- 9.30 a. m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

lfi=L

Patd lor by the candidate Richard Bailey, 463 Hooker St .. Middleport, Ohio 45760

~nd 'h• Shoe

Old Bethel Free Wtll BapUSI Chun:h
2860! SJ. Rt 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 30 p.m.
Thursday Se~ices • 7:30
Hillside Bapllsl Church
51. Rl . !43 just off Rl. 7
Pastor · Rev hmes R Acree, Sr.
Sunday School · 10 a m,
Worship - 11 a.m ., 6 p.m
Wcdncsd11y•Se rvtces -7 p.m.
· Victory Baptist lndependant
l25 N. 2nd St. Middleport ·
Pastor· James E. Keesee
Worsh1p - lOa.m,, 7 p.m.
Wednesday Ser.,.iccs -7 p.m.

Fallh Bapllsl Chun:h
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.Jll.
Worshtp- I J a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Setvices • 7 p.m.

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Ope

ouse

PU.IIc Is lnvbd TIIDind
1200 Sand IBid t Point PIIISIII, IV
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Thurs-., IDVIIblr 11, 1999
2D.DLID1PA

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Do• Prizes •lelrlsh•• •11181111

Rehabilitation Center
1200 Sand Hill Road • Point Pleasant, WV 25550

(304) 675-5250

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Pomeroy
Paslor· Connie Ftares
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worsh1p - 10.30 am.
Btble Study Tuesday- 10 a.m.

Faith Chapel
923 S Third St., Middleport
Pastor Ernie Wengerd
Sunday sc:rv1ce, lOam.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m

Rock S~rlna•
Pastor: Kc:t!h Rader
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship - 10 d.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Chriulan Fellowship Cent~r
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wors h1p - 11 .15 a.m., 7 p m.
Wednesday ServLce · 7 p m

Snowville
Sunday School , 10 a.m.
Worshtp • 9 a.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Dewaync: Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 am. .
Wednesday .Serv1ces- 10 a.m.

The Belltms' Fellowship Mlnlslry
New Lime Rd ., Rutland
Pastor. Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Servtces: Wednesday, 7:30pm. •
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Carmel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor· Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worsh1p - 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed 7 00 p.m .

HarrboD.l'ille Commuaicy Churth
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday-9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Bradford Chureh ofChriSI
Corner or St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Mmister: Do~g Shambhn
Youlh Mmtster: Btll Ambet&amp;er
Sunday School • 9·30 a.m
Worship - 8:00a.m, 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00 p.m.
Hickory Hills Church of Cbrlll
Evanae list Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 a m.
Worship- 10 am., 6·30,J!·.fll·
Wednesday Services • 7-p.m.
Lan11svllle Christian Cllurch
Sunday School -9:30a.m
Worship - 10.30 a.m., 7.30 p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
Hemlock Gro"e Chun:h
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school - 10:30 am
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7 p m.

Rteds•ll!e Cbun:h or C~rlll
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School; 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 •. m.
Btble ~tudy, Wednesday, 6:30p.m
Dexter Chureb of Cluil1
raslor· Justtn campbell
Sunday school 9:30a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sundly worship- 10:30 a.m.

Keorpnlzed Chun:h or Jtslll CbriSI
or Liller Day Salnll
Porthmd-Racane Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School· 9·30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wedne5day Services-7:30p.m.
The Chun:h of Jesus
Christ of laller-Day Salnll
St. Rt 160, 446-6247 or 446· 7486
Sunday Sclxiot 10:20-11 a.m.
Rehef Sociery/Pricsthood 11:05-12·00 noon
Sacrament Servace 9-10:1S am.
Homemakmg meetrng, 1st Thurs.- 7 p m

Lutheran
St. John Lulher.. Church
Pine Grove
Rev . Donald C. Fritz
Worshtp - 9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 am.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va
Pastor: David Russell
Stmday School • 10:00 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Frilz
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Worship · lla.m.

United Methodist

Christian Union

Graham Unlled Melhodlsl
Worsh1p- 9:30a.m (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7·30 p m (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7.30 p.m.

Hartford Cbun:h of Cbrlst In
Chrlsllan Union
Hanford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Mt. Olite Unl1ed Melhodlsl
Off 124 behind Wi1kesvt!le
Pastor. Rev Ralph Spires
Sunday School -9:30a.m
Worship- 10·30 am., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

Church of God
ML Moriah Chun:h of God
Mile Hill Rd , Racine
Pastor: Brice Utt
Sunday School , 9 45 a.m.
Evening , 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Episcopal
G111ce Eplorop.ol Cbun:h
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James BemacJti, Rev. Katharin Foster

Sacred Heart Catbolle Chun:h ·
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor· Rev Waller E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:45-5:15p.m.; Mass-5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:4.5-9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass , 9:30 a.m .
Dailey Mass-8:30a.m.

Pearl Ch•pel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - I0 a.m

Laurel Cltlf F... Method Ill Chun:h
Pastor: Cllarlcs Swigge1 •
Su nday School - 9 30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Rev. DeboraH Rankin, Ocr¢~;
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday School t 1:00 a.m. ~'
www. frognel.nct/-deancry

'.

Mtlp Cooperallve Parl•h
Northeast Ouster
Alfred
Pal:ilor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School , 9:30a.m.
Worship· II a.m., 6.30 p.m.
Chnter

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship - 9.30 a m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Long Bot1o111
Sunday School - 9-:HJ a.m
Worship - I(I·JO am.
Reedsville
Worshtp- 9·30 a.m.
Sunday School- !0:30a .m.
UMYF Sunday 6'30 p.m.
First Sunday of Monlh- 7:30p.m. service

Tuppen Plain• Sl, Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services -•7:30 p. m
Ctntnl Cluster
Asbary (Syncuoe)
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9.45 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m
Pasaor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Worsh 1p 10 '\0 am 7 '\Up m
Wedne sday Sen I Cc - 7 JO p m

Stivenvllle Word or Faith
Pa!itor Dav1 d DaLley
Sundi:l) School 9 30 il.m.
Evemng- 7 p.m.
Rejoicing Life Church
500 N 2nd Ave , Middleport
Pastor Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10.30 am
Wednesday Scrv1ces - 7 p.m.

CliRon Tabernacle Church
Cliflon, W.Va.
Sunday School - tO am.
Worsh•p - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce - 7 p m.
New Life Victory Center
3773 George s Creek Road, Gall ipol1s, OH
Pi:lstor. B11l Stull.:n
Su nday Scrv1ces- 10 a. m &amp; 7 p m
Wednesday . 7 p m &amp; Youth 7 p m.

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Full Gospel Church or the Living Savior
Rt 338, Anllqull y
l a~tor. Jesse Moms
Asst Pastors J1m Morns
Scrv1ccs S&lt;iturday 7 30 p m
1

God'• Temple ol Pnlse
31665 McOutre Rd . Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Sc:rvH;c:s: Thurs. Nites 7.00 pm
New dlurch No Sunday scrvtce eslabl.tshed

Pentecostal
Pei.tecostal Assembly
Sl. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: Wtlham Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p m.

Middleggrt Community Church
575JScar1 St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday Schoo\10 a.m
Evening- 7 30 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30pm.

Morning Star
Pastor Dewaynl! Stut iCr
Sunday School - ll a.m.
Worsh1p - 10 a.m .

Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev Cla rk Baker
Sunday School - IU a m
Evcmng - 6 p m.
Wednesday Services- 7.00 p m.

Faith Valley Tabemade Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor, Rev Emmell Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p m.

East Letart
Pastor· Bnan Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a m.
Wedne~ay - 7 p.m

Presbyterian

Syracuse Mluloa

S)ncuse First United Presbyterian
Pastor. Rev. Krisana Robmson
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Worship- l1 a m

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School, 10 a.m.
Evening. 6 p.m.
WednesdaY. Service. 7 p m.

Racine
Paslor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- !0 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Coolville Uolled Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coot.llle Chun:h
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunda)' School· 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a rn.
Tuesday Services 7 p.m
Bethel Chur&lt;h •
Townshtp Rd, 468C
Sunday School - 9 a. m.
Worshtp - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servtces- 10 a.m.

Han-isonville Presbyterian Church
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 9.45 a.m.

Kozel Com11onlty Churth

OffRI. 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School - 9 am
Worship- 10 a.m.

Dyesvllle Communily Churtb
Sund1y School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Seventh -Day Adventist
Seventh·Day Adventist

Morse Chapel Church
Sunday school- 10 am.
Worship - It a m.
Wednesday ServLce - 7 p.m.

HodUn&amp;port Church
Grand S1ree1
Sunday School - 10 a m
Worsh1p - 11 :~.m.
Wednesday Scrvtces- 8 p.m.

Mulberry Hls Rd , Pomeroy

Pastor: Roy Lawmsky
S;nurday Services·
Sabbath School · 2 p m.
Worship- 3 p.m.

Fallh Gospel Chun:h
LongBOI!om
Sunday School- 9 30 a.m.
Worshtp- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m

Torch Church
Co.Rd.63
Sunday School - 9 30 a.m.
Worsh1p, 10·30 a m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon U•ited Brethren
in Christ Church
Texas Community ofT CR 82
Pa~ tor : Robert Sander~
s~nday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 am , 7.30 p m.
Wednesday Scrvtces - 7·30 p m

Mt. Olive Community Church
Pastor· Lawrence Bush
Sunday School- 9·30 a.m.
Evcnmg- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Chun:~ of tho Nazan!ne
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m
Wednesday Services· 7 p m.

Eden United Brethren in Christ
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsvill e
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School - 11 a rn

United Faith Chun:h
Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor Rev Robert E Smtih, Sr
Sunday School -9:30a. m.
Worship· 10.30 a.m., 7 p.m
Wednesday Serv1ce- 7 p.m.
Ri. 7 on

Full Gospel Ughlhouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Paslor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - JO a.m
Evening 7.30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday · 7:30p.m

Reedsville Fellowship
Church of the Nazartne
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School • 9.30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p m.
Syneuse Church of the Nazarene
Pastor, Robert J. Coen
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 6 p m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p m.
Wednesday Kids for Christ- 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Chun:h oftht Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Lloyd D. Onmm,Jr.
Sunday School -9:30a.m
Wo~h•r - 10·30 a.m and 6 p m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p m.
&lt;.:hester Church of the Nazarene
Pastor· Rev Herbert Grate
Sunday School -9:30a. m.
Worshtp · 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servtces · 7 p.m.
Rutland Church orthe Nazare•c
Paslor: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

South Bethd New Testament
Stiver Ridie •
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Sun. Wor5hip- 10 10 H.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servtce- 7 p.m.
Carleton Interdenominational Churth

Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Clyde Henderson
Sunday School- 9·30 am
Worship Serv1cc 10.30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services
Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd 31
Pastor. Rev. Roger W1llford
Su nday School - 9·30 am
Worship- 7 p m
White'5 {:hapel Wesleyaa

Coolvtllc Ro&lt;1d
P.LshH Rc\ PhLlllp R1 dc nour

Sund11y Sc hool · 9.30.1 m
Worship- 10 .'\0 it m
WcdncsUay Scrv tcc I p m

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship . !0.30 u.m., 6:30p.m
Wednesday Servtccs · 7 p.m .

Ente'l"",.

1

Su nd,l} Sehoul . lJ JU &lt;~ m

Hobso1 Christiaa Fellowship Church
Sunday setVL~.:e, 10 00 a.m , 7.00 p.m
Youth Fe llowsh tp Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wedn esday SUVICC, 7.00 p m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship- 9 a.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

Calvary Bible Chun:h
Pumcroy P1kc, Co Rd
l 01 ~t or Rev Bla~kwuuJ

Agape Lire Center
"Full -Gospe l Church "
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Avc. Mason
773-l017
Semce lime Sunday 10·30 am
Wednesday 7 pm

Faith Full Gospel Chun:h
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School ·9:30a m.
Worshtp- 9 30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
· Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday- fellowship service 7 p.m

Trlnlly Cbun:b
Second &amp;. Lynn, Pomeroy
Sunday school and worship 10.25

Catholtc

Mlnenvllle
Pastor: Bob Rob1nson
Sunday School • 9 am.
Worship - 10 a m

Salem Center
Pastor· Ron Fierct
Sunday School - 9:15a.m
Worshrp- 10:15 a m.

Congregational

Rolland Free Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor. Rev . Paul Ta)I IOr
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evcmng - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ccs - 7 p.m.

Harvesl Outreach Minlnnes
47439 Rerbel Rd., Chester
Pastors. Rev Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday SeCVIces-· 10 am. &amp; 6 p m
Wednesday Serv1ces- 7 p m

Healh (Middleport)
Vernagaye Sullivan
Sunday School - ~ : 30 a.m.
Wqrshrp - 10 .30 am

Pa ~tor ·

Hy.eu Run Holtnea Churth
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wor.~hip- 10.45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7:30p.m.

Tuppers Plain Church or Chrt•I
Instrumental
Worship Servke • 9 a m.
Commumon- lO a.m.
Sunday Sohool- 10:15 a m
Youth- 5:30pm Sunday
B1ble Study Wednesday 7 pm

Cbun:h of God of Prophecy
O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Paslot: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvaces: 7 p.m.

Antlqully_ Bapllst
Sunday School -9:30a. m.
Worship · 10·45 a. m
Sunday Evening-6:00 p.m.

l'ailh Fellowship Crusade for Chrisl
PaSior Rev Franldm 0Lckcns
Serv1ce Frid ay, 7 p.m

Rolland
Sunday School - 9·30 11 m.
' Worship - I 0:30a.m.
Thunday Serv1ces - 7 p.m.

I

MI. Moriah Bapllot
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor. Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
~unday School -9:30a.m.
Worsh1p - 10:45 a.m.

Rote of Sharon Hotlne" C~urdt
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Paslor: Re v. Dewey Kmg
Sunday school- 9·30 a m
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Wesleyan Bible Hollneas Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship-9:30p.m , 7·30 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Syraeuoe Ftnt Chun:h ot~
Apple and Second Sts. ,
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship, •lO a.m.
Evening Services-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

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

Calvary Plftrlm Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunda~ School9:30 a.m.
Worsh1p- 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Se~ice . 7:30 p.m.

F11irview Bible Church
Ut&lt;~r t, W Va Rt I
Pastor: Bnan Ma)
Sunday School - 9:30a.m
Worship-7:00pm
Wednesday Bible Study- 7:00pm.

Zion Church ol Chrlsl
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rl.l4'3)
Pastor. Roger Walson
Sunday School , 9 30 a.m.
Worship · 10·30 a.m 7·00 p m.
Wednesday SetviC\:s- 7 p.m.

Kudand Chun:h of God
Pastor- Ron Heath .~
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 ' p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 e·l"!"·

F:orest Run Baptkt

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
•
••
•

"
.

Belblthem Bapllll Church

Great ije:Rd, Route•124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Gene Morris
Sum.Jay School· 9.30 u.m.
Sunday WorshtP.- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p m.
Wednesday Btble Study - 6·00 p m

Place

264 South Second Ave.•M1ddleport, OH
740·992·5141
Bruce A. Ftsher - D1rector

'Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

590

992·5432
INSURANCE

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tnaurance

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~ · ~

Evenmg- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

219 N. Second Ave. Middleport, Ohio

.Salisbury Township Clerk
Your Support Will Be Appreciated

Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:4.5 a.m.

Danville HoUam Chureb
31057 State Route: 325, Ung.svlle
Pas10r: Gary Jackson
Sunday school • 9 30 a. m.
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service -7 p.m.

Foral Ruo
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a. m.
Worsh1p- 9 a.m.

Portlaad First Chuf(h of the Nazarene
Pastor. Mark Matson
Sunday School -10·30 a.m
Morning Worship - I J ·15 a. m
Sum.lay Service - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m

Pine Grove Bible Hollneu Church
112mileoffRt 325
Pastor. Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School • 9:30am.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Hull and Chun:h of Christ
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10.30a.m, 7 p.m.

Mt. Union Baptls.t

Commqnlty Church
Pastor: Rev, Amos Ttlhs
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Wonhip-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Sen'ice-7 p.m.

Flatwoods
Pastor: Ketth Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Bearwallow Ridge Church or Christ
Pastor Terry Stewart
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 am , 6 30 p:m.
Wednesday Services- 6 30 p.m.

Flrsl Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor E. ULmar O'Bryant
Sunday School- 9.30 a.m.
Worship - 1045 n. m., 7:00p.m
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Uule
Sunday School - toa.m.
Worship - lla.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6.30 p.m.

November 1st, 8 pm to 9 pm

Keno Ch•rch of Christ
Worship -9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10.30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
lsr and 3rd Sunday

Bradbury Chureh of Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School- 9:30 a.ni
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Racine Flnt Baplbl
Pastor· Rtck Rule
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worshtp • 10 40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servtces - 7:00p. m.

Check Our Advertisement In
The Sunday Times Sentinel For
Monday's Moonlight Sale!

Middleport C~ur&lt;h or Chriol
5th and Mail)
faslor: AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School, 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:!5, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Setvices - 7 p.Lti.

Pomeroy Fint Baptist
East Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10·30 a m

Flrsl Bap1lst Chun:h
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer Sl., Middleport
Sunday School- 9·15 a.m.
Worship· 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

beads possess some power - and
look good, too.
Madonna and Richard Gere
have been spotted wearing the
powerbeads. And as the prices have
dropped, they have found their way
on to the wrists of the masses, from
schoolgirls to corporate executives.
Last week, Vivian DiMare
bought a powerbead bracelet that
Signifies energy and she's already
feeling a difference - she is more
alert and isn 't as exhausted from
her job as an office manager for a
large New York public relations
f11m .
"I know it's probably mind over
matter, but I have to admtt that
since I put this bracelet on, I have
been staying up late and feel
great," the 47-year-old mother
said.

Pomeroy Ch11rch of ChriJt
2t2 W. Main 51.
Minister: Danny Bias
.
Sunday School-9:30a.m ."
Worsh tp- 10:30 a.m. , 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m ·

Pomeroy WtSlllde Chun:h ofChrill
33226 Ch ildren's Home Rd.
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Worship · IOa.m., 6 p.m
Wednesday Semces- 7 p.m

Assembly of God

Mulled Cider
2 1/4 quans apple cider
I cinnamon stick
4 whole cloves.
4 allspice berries
Zest of I orange
I0 thin orange slices
Optional Garnish:
I 0 cinnamon sticks
20 allspice berries
Combine all the ingredients
except the orange slices 10 a
saucepan. Simmer until the flavor of
the spices and orange zest are
Infused into the cider, about 20 minutes. Strain the cider and serve in
heated mugs or glasses (cider may
be poured into warm thermos to take
t.
ish each portion with an
rce and a cinnamon stick
ce berries, 1f deSited .
a
n 6-ounce servings.
Nutrition information per serv·
ing: 110 cal., 0 g pro. , 0 g fat, 27 g
carbo., 5 mg sodium, 0 mg chol.

$20 to $40 bracelets under the Stella Pace brand.
"But the goal is not to have people just believe in it, but we want
them to try it and see what works
with you."
Her beads are so popular that
knockoffs are flooding the market,
many selling for as little as $1.
Some retailers, including RossSimon, wtll soon offer pricier
powerbeads with diamond and gold
accents.
"Everyone is buying these
powerbeads, all ages, all sexes,
across the country" said Jennifer
DeWinter, associate general merchandise manager at Saks Fifth
Avenue. "Rarely do you get a trend
that appeals to so many people. It's
incredible."
Regardless of what shoppers
pay, many seem convinced that the

Holiness

Church of Jesu1 Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Paswr: James Mtller
Sunday Scllooi-10·30a.m
Evening - 7:30p.m.

in the raisins gently.
Spread the cookie batter evenly
in the prepared pan and bake for 20
to 25 mmutes or until the center
springs back when pressed with a
fingertip. Allow the cookies to cool
in the -pan before cutting mto bars.
Makes 36 bars.
Nutrition information per bar:
110 cal., I g pro., 4 g fat , 15 g
carbo., I00 mg sodium , 30 mg chol.

Hermit Bars
2 1/2 cups flour
I teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup butter, at room temperature
I cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup unsulphured molasses
2 eggs
1/4 cup milk
3/4 cup raisins
Preheat oven to 350 F. Butter and
lightly flour a 9-inch by 11-inch
bakmg pan.
Sift together the flour, baking
soda, allspice, cinnamon and salt.
Set aside. Cream together the butter
sugar and molasses until light an
fluffy. Scrape the bowl to mcorporate all ingredients fully. Add the
eggs, one at a time, blending thoroughly into the batter. Add the milk
and blend well. Stir in the sifted dry
ingredients until just combined. Stir

Bailey

II

.. . .... . ; , ...;

ly chopped, about 1/2 cup
4 anchovies
I Jalapeno, roasted, peeled. seeded and chopped fine
I cup extra-virgm olive oil
I0 oblong, crusty hard rolls
I pound otl-packed tuna, drained
and fl aked (about 4 cans)
5 plum tomatoes, chopped and
seeded
I 1/2 cups mannated roasted peppers. chopped (about I small Jar)
3/4 cup pitted black olives,
rou~hly chopped
l cucumber, peeled·, seeded and
chopped
I small red on ton, mmced
2 hard-bot led eggs, chopped
3 tablespoons capers
4 teaspoons minced garlic
Salt and pepper to taste
Puree !he vmegar, bast!, parsley,
anchovies and jalapeno in a blender.
With blender running, slowly pour
m oiI to make the dressing.
Cut rolls in half lengthwise, and
scoop out insides, leavrng a shell
1/2-inch thick. Crumble the
removed bread and combine it with
the tuna, tomatoes, peppers, olives,
cucumber, onion, eggs, capers and
garlic. Add enough dressing to
moisten and bind the filling. Season
to taste wtth salt and pepper.
Brush the insides of the rolls with
the remaining dressing. Divide the
ftlhng equally between the rolls and

Contributes to levy funds

RE-ELECT
Richard

report, "Caring for Our Environment", taken from the UMW
Response magazine.
Refreshments wore served by
Sargent and get well cards were
signed.
Others attending were Cindy
Winebrenner, Margie West, Opal
Diddle, Martha Dudding, Chris Hill,
Tara Norman, Chris Hill , and Judy
Pape.

Inn, Gallipolis. A card and monetary
donation will be .sent to the Athens
District secretary, Pat Fu~ey, who is
retiring after 29 years.
Election of officers will be held at
the November meting .
A card will be sent to a missionary selected from the prayer calendar. Alice Wolfe 1ead letters from
two missionaries from Nrgeria and
Nicaragua. She also gave the mission

Powerbeads attract the masses for healing and happiness

By RACHEL BECK
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Imagine if
you could find happiness, wealth
and willpower JUSt by weanng a
bracelet.
Sound far-fetched? Not for the
million
s of Americans who arc
Leah Ord presented a revtew of the book "Charming Brlly" by Allee
buymg
mto the latest New Age
McDermott at a recent meeting of the M1ddlepon Literary Club held at the
craze
powerbead bracelets,
'Racine Library.
which
promise
to do everything
Ord noted that the author uses Billy, a charming Insh-Amencan drunk, to
from
boost
intelligence
to offer
eumme alcoholism and its' effect on friends and family. A National Book
from
PMS.
relief
Award wmner in 1998. this book weaves a tale about three generations of a
From the gtant department
close-knH family and their fnends who have admired and tended Billy
to local street vendors. merstores
throughout his hfe .
chants
can 'I keep enough of these
The revrewer said that Btlly's alcoholism is aunbuted to the early death
brightly
colored bracelets m stock .
of his first love. "that lmh lass", and because 11 appears he has a solid reaAnd
everyone
is buymg !hem: the
son to be morose, he is excused for his drinking. and eve n admired for his
young
and
old,
men and women .
steadfastness to work, his loyalty, and his reticence in speaking ol hi s sor"
I
look
down
at my wnst and I
row. In reality, all those close to him have become co-dependents, never
I
need
to
be strong . It's a
remember
helptng hrm face the reahty of hts true problem, alcoholism.
msp
irati
on,"
sa td Sarah
great
Jeanne Bowen presided at the meeting whtch opened with the club colLessen.
a
30-year-o
ld
New Yorker
lectin umson The Memonal Tnbute Commlllee reponed that posstblc book
who
wears
a·
rock
quartz
powerselections are bemg considered to be placed in a local library in memory of
bead
bracelet
rcpre
semtng
deceased members , Maxme Philson and Juanita Bachtel.
A guest. Elnora Wells, sister of Bern tee Carpenter, was welcomed by the strength .
Modeled after Buddh tst prayer
prestdenl on behalf of the group .. There was a dtscuss1on of new books
beads.
powerbeads were originally
recently pubhshed that members might be tnlercsted m reading. The group
marketed
last year by Zoe Metro, a
was reminded that Tom Brokaw's books. "The Greatest GeneratiOn" should
New
York
designer, and soon
be read tn preparatiOn for general discuss ton on it in the spring.
copted
by
numerous
others.
Members responded to roll call by telltng of fictronal and non-ft ctwnal
The
beads
are
semipreciOuS
characters they had read who had "feet of clay" as did Billy in the reviewed
stones
that
are
thou
ght
to have ce rbook.
tain
powers
depending
on color. If
Eileen Buck served as hostess for the meeltng. Next meetmg wtll be held
you
wear
a
rose
quartz
bead, love
on Nov 3 at !he Pomeroy Lrbrary with Olita Heighton giving the reVIew.
may
come
your
way,
while
In her revtew. Ord sa1d that by drawmg VlVld word ptctures of largerturquorse
may
bring
healing
and
than life, as we ll as ordinary characters, the author presented a fascinating
mother
of
pearl
may
attract
money.
photo-album of community life ftrml y malted by the characters' affection
for one another. The revtewer read several quotes from the book to illustrate
the author's adept use of vtsual tmages tn presenting the colorful characters.

By The Associated Press
Potato and Vegetable Gratin, a
nutritious casserole of sliced potatoes and other root vegetables with a
nicely browned top layer, would be a
tasty component of a vegetarian
meal.
The recipe is the creation of
Mrchel Ntschan , executive chef of
Heartbeat restaurant m New York
City. He is a btg fan of vegetable
combinations, he said, at a recent
demonstration of potato dishes in
the city. "Potatoes and parsnips love
each other," he satd , "and the
rutabaga is one of the most versatile
vegetables there are."
Potato and Vegetable Gratin
6 teaspoons extra virgtn olive oil
I large rutabaga (about I pound),
peeled and thmly shced
Salt and pepper to taste
5 large Idaho potatoes
I cup Vidaha ontons, very thinly
sliced
I pound large parsnips, peeled
and thinly sliced
I tablespoon fresh herbs (such as
parsley or thyme), chopped
Preheat oven to . 350 F. Using
clean hands, rub 2 teaspoons of ohve
oil onto bottom of an 8 112- by. 12inch casserole dtsh Layer enough
rutabaga slices to cover bott om of
dish, overlapping slices by no more
than 1/2 inch. Season slices lightly
with salt and pepper
Thinly shce one ol potatoes
lengthwise and layer slices. over
rutabaga, overlappmg slightly. Slice
more potatoes as needed to 'finish

announced for Dec. 4. Everyone in
the church is to be responsible for
four or five crafts to be sold at the
bazaar. Craft tables may be rented by
tndtvrdual s for $10 each, it was
decided and anyone interested may
call Lee, 949-2454, or Clara Mac
Sargent, 949-2604.
Several' options were given for the
Chnstmas party and it was voted by
secret ball ot to hold it at the Holiday

Try this make-ahead tailgate party menu for football/overs

Homebuilders observe
60th anniversary mark
The Homebuilders Class of
the Mtddlcport Church of Chnst
observed tls 60th anntv er&gt;ary
recently tn the Famil y Ltfe Center wnh 45 att enc.hng
The class was orgamzed m
October 1939, by Mr&gt; . Dun
McMtllan. wtfe of the nnntster at

was collected.
Plans were fmalized for an election day dinner. The charge coniCrcnce was announced for Oct. 31 at
the church and several UMW members wtll serve refreshments .
It was decided to again partictpate
m the Angel Tree project. The names
of 75 chtldren will be gtven out at a
later date.
The Christm as bazaar was

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current Church
listings.
Ye are the light of the.
worltl. A city that is det
on an hill cannot be hid.
Matt 5:14

740·992·5#4

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PHARMACYl! us not love in word,
We Fiil Doctor~·
~ither in to~nge, but
Prescriptions
&amp;n deed and ln truth.
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Pomeroy
John 3:1

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SERVICES
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992·5130 Pomeroy

FUNERAL H!)ME
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Established 1913

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882·8200

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992-2121
106 Mulberry·Ave.

Pomeroy

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Director

Regan Brown

·· 174

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740·992-2644
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L.1

u. Send Your Tlto~~&amp;hu ' With

, ev~ry. Fftiday!

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Meigt County~ Olde•t Florist

Searching f9r a
local ·church?
Check ttiEJ Sentinel

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Street

East Milin Stroe1• Pomeroy, OH 45769

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.,
~· ..;

'

�. ,..,
.I
'
, I

'

'

Pap 10 • Th~ Dally Sentinel

Friday, October 29, 199ft

PomerC!Y • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, October 29, 1~9

the Daily Sentinel • Page 11 :

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

3

European Union pledges help_for Kosovo durin·g winter
By MERITA DHIMGJOKA

~·

Associated Press Writer
PRISTINA, Yugoslavia- European Union officials today promised
Western help to rebuild shattered
Kosovo to help get its people through
the rough winter.
They also urged the province's
ethnic Albanian leaders to stop their
, political infighting and work together to build a society based on ethnic
tolerance .
Javier Solana, the EU's foreign
policy and security chief, and Chris
·Patten, the EU's external affairs commissioner, got a firsthand taste of the

•

reconstruction problems facing Koso- Slobodan Milosevic accepted a Westvo: As they walked into a press con- ern-dictated peace plan to halt n
ference, the electric power failed ..The days of NATO bomhmg.
province has long suffered from
The EU has earmarked a half hi 1insufficient power supplies.
lion dollars. for Kosovo next year,
NATO officials cranked up a gen- mostly for long-term reconstruct ion.
erator which powered only one small said Patten. Britain's last governor of
light and the sound system. The press Hong Kong. He said the EU had
co nference proceeded in ncar dar~­ , already provided $500 milli on. mostness, with reporters shouting "b,tck ly for humanitarian aid.
here" as the two peered through the
The advent of winter has added
shadows looking for the questioners. new urgency to reconstruction efforts.
The two officials said the EU is Accordi.ng to the EU, more than
ready to help Kosovo recover from 3001000 people here face the prospect
the 18-month Yug[}slav crackdown of a winter without adequate shelter
that ended in June when President because so many homes were

destroyed during the crackdown.
ognized. Rugova's chief rival for the authorities to grant investigators
An EU task force plans to rush mantle of Kosovo leadership is access to Serb victims and witnessbuilding materials to Kosovo in Hashim Thaci. political leader of the es.
Tile major difficulty facing war
hopes of restoring at least 3,500 of . officially disbanded Kosovo Libcracrimes
inv estigators "is our in ~b ili ­
the most heavily damaged homes in tion Anny and head of a KLA-backed
ty to gam access to Serb witness and
the next few months.
provisional _administration:Solana, who served as NATO sec"Somet imes we get the impres- victims, many of whom are now in
retary-gencral during the bombing sion that there's too much infighting Serbia," said Carla del Ponte, the tricampaign, said the EU is anxious for among the leaders of the Kosovo bunal 's new chief prosecutor.
She called it "a seve re impedithe province's ethnic Albanian lead- community and we fi gure there
ership to set aside personal differ- should be a more coordmated effort ment to our ability to inve stigate casto g~t the comm on goa ls achieved," es where Serbs have been victims,
ences and work tog'b ther.
Solana . and Patten spoke after Solana said.
not on ly in Kosovo, but in Croatia
meeting with moderate ethnic AlbanAuthont1cs say thousand s of cth- and Bosnia as well ," she said .
ian politician Ibrahim Rugova, .twice- ni c Albanians W£fe killed by Serb
The tribunal currently has about
elected president of a Kosovo gov- fon.:cs dunng Miloscvic\ crackdown 400 forensic experts from 15 nations /
· never rcc- against set"laratists in Kosovo. After working in the southern Yugoslav
ernment that Yugos Iavm
NATO hom bing forced the Serb province. So far, only Yugoslav Prestrnopstuwithdraw thi sspring.cthnic ident Slobodan Milosevic and four of
Albanians be gan attack mg Serbs as his allies have been mdicted. Del
rc\·engc.
Ponte warned Thursday that addiinterest in its UPN network. "No parAlso in Pnstina today. the new tional charges could be filed against
ty is linin g up to assume responsibil - chief prosecutor of the mtcrnat ional M1losevic, mcluding genocide
tt y for a network that is still losing
war crimes tribunal urged Yugoslav charges.
hundreds of.millions of dollars each
year. The only other option therefore
might he to shut down UPN alto- 1Y our Vote and Influence Appreciated •••
gctt1er. ... Closi ng it would not serve
****************************************~
tl1c puhlic interest. "
XRE-ELECT
.
ll1c company that hccame Viacom
was spun off froin CBS in the 1970s
11
because of government rules, since
repealed. that prevented networks
Candidate For
from owning their own program-

•
.cBS-V1acom
merger worr·leS comml•ttee· Chl.ef
.

.

By, DAVID HO

Cole Andrew Hanning
Parents
Scott and Dayleen Hanning

Baylee
Taylor ~rl\.l•rlrtP
Parents -Bill and Tracy Hupp

Kali Morgan mmtngha1m
·o
·

Parents - Leanne &amp; Shawn Cunningham
Grnndparents - Ron and Judy Oilrk
· Robert Cunningham

Joey Roush

Parker Matthew Haggy

Dylan Haynes

Parents
Joe and Jenni Roush

Parents
John and Heather Haggy

Parents
Tiffany Hoffman &amp; Matt Haynes

·::. ·.. .

Alanis Meadows

Dylan Darst

Caleb Elijah Stanley-Robinson

Grandparents
Chris and Gina Streetman

Parents - Keith and Sue Darst
GTJndparenls - Jeff and Kathy Darst

Parents
Brandy Stanley &amp; Paul Robinson

Tyler Ryan
Parents
David and Kimberly Vanlnwager

Andy

.

Holly &amp; Braciley McGrath

Parents
Leslie and Ralph Fisher

Parents
Tony and Becky McGrath

Madison Grace Maynard

Marlee Hope Maynard

Tyler Allen Peyton

Alexis Makenna Burke

Parents
Brand and Junie Maynard

Parents
Brad and Junie Maynard

· Grandparents - Sandy Peyton
Charlene and Louie Frederick

Grandparents
Grandpa and Grandma Burke

Tyler Peyton

Makayla Dawn

Breanna.&amp;Hannah Baily

Augusta ~ Riley Roush

Dylan &amp; Clayton Boso

Parents
Richard and Jessica Peyton

Parents
Jessica Peyton

Parents
Clinton and Carissa Baily

Parents
Jennifer and Jeremy Roush

Parents
Charlie and Mandy Boso

Grandparents
Darlene Moodispaugh and
Lar Sellers

&amp;

Breanna Colburn
Parents

Collins

Parents
Jeremy and Michelle Roush

Associated Press Writer
. WASHINGTON- The chainnan
of the Senate antitrust subcommittee
says he is conce rned that the proposed $35.89 billion merger of CBS
aryd Viacom will limit comp~tition
and diversity in the media industry.
: " The idea of another media congl:omerate, with holdings in so many
related· market segments, seems,
somehow, a little bit ominous," said
Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio.
in testimony prepared for a hearing today before De Wine's Judiciary
antitrust subcommittee, CBS President Met' Kannazin and Viacom
Chainnan Sumner Redstone said the
combined company will result in new
programming, new jobs and lower
costs " for the benefit of Americans
and ,all consumers around the world,"
: "In light of the two different but
s~ccessful business strategies forged
by the two companies ... the merger
of Viacom and CBS will be a union
. between two natural partners," the
prepared statement read.
Viacom and CBS announced Sept.
7 they wanted to merge their extensive interests in TV, movies, radio
and outdoor advertising.

By adding CBS tu its stable of Mudios and cable TV networks. which
include Paramount. MTV and Nickelodeon. the new Viacom would
become a media powerhouse to rival
Time Warner Inc. and the Walt Disney Co.
DcWinc sa id Redstone's own
comments haven't been reass unng .
When the merg er was announced
last month, Redstone . said , "Our
union will be king - not just in content, but in 1ts distribution. marketin g,
and packaging. We will be global
leaders in every fiftet of the media
and entertainment industry ...
Federal Communications Com- ·
mission regulations prevent one
broadcaster from operating television
stations that reach more than 35 percent of the , nation's homes. CBS
comes close to this lim1t now, and
company officials have said the deal
would give the new Viacom about41
percent of the national' audience.
The rules also prohibit companies
from owning two or more networks
in certain combinations, a regulation
that would hit the new Viacom, with
its half-interest in the UPN television
network.
The companies may have to shed

MORE
PUMPKIN
'P ATCH
KIDS

some of their stations to comply with
the regulations.
the two compan ~ leaders said
while they will "come into compliance as quickly as possible with
whatever rules are in place at the time
of their closing, the~o companies
firmly believe that t 35 percent
national TV owners · limit and the
dual-network rules no longer serve
the puhlic interest of viewers and
those rule s should be relaxed .. ,
The two men also ex pressed concern if Viacom is rcquircJ to d ivest

Delbert Deb" Smith
Sutton Township Trustee

ming.

S.C. execution now hinges
on confession by witness

****************************************~

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - . en him and two other hitchhikers a
Richard C. Johnson was scheduled to ride.
The South Carolina Supreme
die today for killing a state trooper,
but his execution has been put on Co urt on Thursday stayed the execuHold following a co ntroversial con- tion in response to statements from
Connie Hess, a fellow traveler of
fession from a Nebraska woman .
Johnson's whose testimony was used
Johnson, 36, faced lethal injection
to convict him.
for the September 1985 shooting
R~canting last week in a swOrn
death of Bruce K. Smalls during a
traffic stop. Johnson, of Morehead affidavit, Hess s~id it was she, not
City, N.C., also was convicted of Johnson , who killed the trooper. She
abo said the third hitchhiker killed
killing a Virginia man who had givthe Virginia man. Johnson w:-ts given
a life se ntence fur the driver's slaymg.
He ss. who was 17 at the time, said
she confessed now to case her conscience. She said she li ed originally
because " the so licitor told me I
would fry " if she committed the
en me.
The justices sa id they needed
more time to examine the case and
promised to rule no later tl1an Nov.
,, 10.
John Blume. Johnson 's lawyer,
called ihc delay "a good 's ign," but
added: "I would hesitate to i·ead too
much into it ..
Hess' confession is complicated
hy
her history of mental illne ss, state
Jordyn Elizabeth Johnson Attorney
General Charlie Condon
Parents
said. Hess lives in a Norfolk, Ncb.,
Doug and Vida Johnson
supervised facility for the mectally
ill , and all evidence in the case
shows Johnson to be the trouper 's
killer, he said.
" We want every last' question
that the court mav have in this case
answered satisfa~torilv before the
execution is carried out." he said.

Krysta Streetman

Sydney Marie Cleland

Morgan Wyatt Davis

Grandparents
Chris and Gina Streetman

Parents
Hank and Angie Cleland

Parents
Mark and Mary Davis

Paid for By The Clndldate Thank You
D. Sm ith 46305 Bowman Rn Rd Racine, OH 949-:Z135

Your Vote and Influence Appreciated ...

GARY R. DILL .
Candidat:e For

Chester To-wnship

TRUSTEE
PAID FOR BY THE CANDIDATE

THANK YOU

Gary R. Dill48190 Riebel Rd., Lung Bottom, OH

Dick &amp;Ruby Vaughan Invite
You To Stop In Before
braziel &amp;Mter The Game For Their
Friday Night Specials.
MIDDLEPORT DAIRY QUEEN BRAZIER
·

®

992-3322

Try all three

John Warren Wilcox
Parents
Dave and Sherry Wilcox

KaviiP.P

Hupp

Grandparents
Darrell and Jan Norris

Alec Boothe

Gabriel Riffle

Grandparents
Richard and Gail Hovatter

Parents
Amber and Monte Riffle

=···..··&gt;." ·

Makayla Dawn

Dana Lynn Roberts

Grandparents
Louie and Charlene Frederick

Parents- Ja;h Pltalin and Megan Robens
Grnndparents - Doug and Karen Phalm

t

Nicole Moodispaugh &amp;
Katelynn Chevalier
Grandparents

Grandparent
Pearl Glaze

Tyler i Sh~emaker
Parents
Tony and Co lena Shoemaker .

Andy
Parents - Ralph and Leslie Fisher
Grandparents - Bos and Libby Fisher
:
Linda

Ethan Nottingham
Parents
Jeff and Valerie Nollingham

&amp;

Samh Ashley Martin
Parents
Frand and
Martin

...··..

Morgan Renee Michael

Jacob Brewer

Erin Renay Glaze

Parents
Macie Pierce and Shawn Michael

Parents
Charlie and Stephanie Brewer Jr.

Grandparents
Ernie and Brenda Haggy

Megan
Grandparents
John and Crystal Hood

Ashlyn Pickett
Grandparents
John and Cryslal Hood

New sandwiches from
the chic.ken expert •
Savor juicy perfection with
our slow roasted Tender
Roas~ Sandwich. Enjoy the
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our Honey BBQ Chicken
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Honey BBQ sauce. They're all
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serves on special split-top
Pepperidge Farm buns.

CROW'S FAMILY RESTURANT

Parents -Tracy Picken and Brian Pagel
Grandparents·Lewis and Judy Picken
I

228 West Main
·''

'

992-5432

Pom~roy

�Page12 •

The Dally Sentinel

Smith decide'S to drop his
long-shot White House bid
By DAVID ESPO
A11oclated Preaa Writer
WASHINGTON Sen Bob
Smtih satd Thursday that he was
dropptng hts long-shot, mdependent
btd for the Whtte House CongresSIOnal offictals sa1d he had made
overtures about returnmg to the
Repubhcan Party
" I know thts announcement Will
come as a disappmnlmenl to many
people," Smnh sa1d m a wntten stale
ment today " II ts certamly a dtsappomtmenl to me . but I am satiSfied
knowmg my campa1gn has brought
many conservatiVe 1ssues to the forefront of the pres1dent~al debate "
Smith sa1d a l ack of mone} made
It •mposs1ble 10 conunue h1s' campaign and that he wan1s to return hiS
attentiOn to Congress and pursue h1s
conservauve agenda there
Congressional offic ials. who
spoke Wednesday on condlllon of
anonym•ty. sa1d Sm1th has made

numerous overtures about returnmg
to the Republican Part&gt; alter barely
)()() days as an Independent They
smd Smith s ges tures mclude attendance at a party fund -r31Sm g dmne1
and conversatiOns wnh semor Repub
l1cans
These overture s began well before
Sen John Chafee 's unexpected death
Sunda y. these offlc~al s say The

process appears to be accclcraun g
because the Rhode Island Rcpubli
can ·, death created a vacanc} at the
head of the Senate Envtronment and
Public Works Commlllee - a chalf
mansh1p Sm ith IS eager 10 have
Earl1 er ' " the week Sm ith told a
reporter 11 was " not appropnalc to
diSCUSS po)ltlca) ISSUeS Ulllli after
Chafee's funeral th1s weekend How
ever, he d1d not deny cons1denng a
return to the GOP, say 1ng, "I'm JUSt
not gomg to say anythmg nght now ·•
Sen James lnhofe of Oklahoma 1s
currently m hne to ascend to the
cha~rmansh1p, holdmg the grea1est
semonty among the panel's GOP
members But several sources, speakto g on condition of anonym1ty, smd
Smnh wants to retmn h1s sen1onty
nghts 1f he returns to the GOP
wh1ch would allow h1m to take the
cha•rmansh1p
While Republicans have publicly
mamtamed that the ISsue won' t be
addressed until after Chafee s funeral. sources sa1d Smith and lnhofe parllclpated m a diScusSion of the cha1 r
mansh1p 1ssue at a closed-door mcc tmg of se,eral conservatl\e Republi-

can senators
Sm1th, who had been seckmg th e
GOP preSidential nommallon , qUit
rhe party 1n July '"th a blast at the
party

' We \\O il the IC\UillliOn on ISS UCS
STI!."f A&amp;OW r-1 T~ ~A CYol
ffGH P!OCE.I lHOI' 1ItO ClAl!l WI

power .md the GOP t.lkC&lt;l\ er of the
Hou se .md Scn.llc Ill 1994

Buy, Sell ,or Trade

But the dc:m c to st.ty Ill power
Ld uscd us to st&lt;utll stcnlllg to th~ poll
stcrs and the u msult.mts .rg.un who
were tdlm~ru s lor S( ! llH: mc x.piH.: ablc
rea so n that \\ c nn:d to w.tlk dway
II om rssucs
I w.mt mv p.u ty to st,llld for

in the

OWil

rarty

pllli01111

011

ISS UCS

Wool142.373 IHI along lhe
conltrllnt of aold Counly
Roed 51o 1 polnl;
Thonct Soulh 9• 29' 09"
Weal 153.7921tet along lhe
cenlorllno of uld County
Rood 5 to the point of
beginning containing 1.812

ADDITION
TO
MARTINSBURG; THENCE
EAST NINETY NINE (99)
FEET, THENCE SOUTH
SEVENTY FIVE (75) FEET;
THENCE WEST NINETY
NINE (99) FEET; THENCE
NORTH SEVENTY FIVE
FEET (75) TO THE PLACE
OF
BEGINNING,
CONTAINING ALL OF LOT
NO. TWENTY FIVE (25)AND
THE SOUTH HALF OF LOT
NO. TWENTY FOUR (24) IN
LONGSTRETH ADDITION
TO MARTINSBURG.
Known as 35285 Hilltop
Road, Dexler, OH 45741 .
Aldllor'o Parcel Nos. 1300895 .. 13-00696.
Appralaod ol $12,500 00
Torma ol sale. To be sold
for nollaaa than two-thirds
of the appraised value.
$2,000.00 caahlara check
only al the lima of sale ..
Balance caahlsra check
within 30 days from sale
dill.
JAMES M. SOULSBY,
Sheriff. John Bocclardl,
Allorney, (614)839-3860
165-11203T10(22) (29) 11(5)

amounla to llltaan
($0.15, canto lor each
one hundred dollars of
valuation, lor live (5)
yaara.
The Polio lor said
Election will be open at
6 30 o'clock A M and
remain open unlll 7:30
o clock P.M. of said day.
By order of the Boord Of
Elecllons, of Melga
Counly, Ohio.
Dated: September, 1999
John N. lhla, Chairman
Rita D. Smtih, Director
(10) 15, 20, 22, 29 4TC

Public Notice

or

1111,

excepting
all
legal
aaaamtnlo ond rlghl of way.
Tho bearing In lhe above
Description are auumed
and aro lor angle
meuuromenl only.
Tho
abovo d11crlpllon Ia baaiCI
on a aurvoy In Fob. 1997 by
Robort R. Eoaon, Ohio P.S.
No.1033.
Subject to ell 1111manla
reotrlctlono and condlllon
of rac:ord, llony.
Parcel No: 14-00419.002
TERMS OF SALE: $5000.00
11 limo of 1111 bllanco dua
within 30 dlya of
conflrmallon.
Jamea M. Soulaby, Sheriff
Roblrt E. LH, Allomoy
2483 South Main Street
Akron, Ohio 44319
(330)844-6161
3T 10(22) (29) 11 (5)
Public Notice
MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF'S
DEPARTMENT 104 E.
SECOND STREET,
POMEROY, OH 45769
EQUIPMENT
CORPORATION OF
AMERICA, PLAINTIFFS VS
PAUL CLAY, ET AL.,
DEFENDANTS
In purauane of on ardor of
aale to me dlroclod from
aald court In the above
entitled action, I will expoH
to Silo At Public Auction on
lronl atepo of lho
Courlhouoe on Frldoy,
Decambor 3, 1999, 1110:00
A.M. Of llld day, lhl
following deacrlbed real

.......

SHERIFF'S SALE
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 134
CASE N0:99-CV-o26
S. 5th Sl., Mlddloport, OH
MOREQUITV INC.
45760
PLAINTIFF VS. HOMER
PROPERTY
APPRAISED
GRIMM,ETAL
FOR: $2500000
DEFENDANTS, MEIGS
TERMS OF SALE. Cannot
COUNTY COMMON PLEAS
ba eold lor 1111 than 2/3rda
COURT
of lhe approlaod value.
By virtue of an Order of $5,000.00 caah or caahlar
Salt lo me dlrecled by tho check at the tlmo of 1111,
court· of Common Pleu of balance due within 30 daye
Mllga Counly, Ohio, I will of conllrmollon.
ollor for 11le al Public JAMES M. SOULSBY
Auction, 11 tho Courthoute SHERIFF OF MEIGS
In Pomeroy, Ohio on Friday COUNTY ATTORNEY FOR
lho 26th day of Decembor, PLAINTIFF· GEORGE W
1999 11 11 00 o'clock A.l!f. ANKNEY, JR, 360 S. FIFTH
on uld doy tho following ST., COLUMBUS, DH 43215
d11crlbod real oaloto, to PHONE:(614)621-1700
wllh: Property addrtll, 185-1120 3T 10(22) (29) 11(5)
38564 Bradbury Rood,
Mlddltporl, OhiO 45760.
Public Notice
Proporty elluotod In
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
Sollabury Townahlp, Melga
ESTATE
Counly, Slate of Ohio·
Being Stcllon 31, Town 2 • 35285 Hllllop Rood
North, Rona• 13 Weat ollho Daxler, OH 45741
Common Ple11 Courl,
Ohio Company'l Purchuo
and being doacrlbod •• Melga Counly, Ohio, Cue
lollowa: Beginning al 1 No. 99-CV-o29
··Tho
CIT
point In lhl cenlerllne of
County Rood 5 11 lho Group/Ccnoumer Flnonco,
Norlhwoat Cornor of Inc., Plolntlll va. Jell
Danny'• parcol 11 dtacrlbiCI Slllflor, at al. Dalondonll
In purauanco of on Ordor
In lho Mtlga Counly Ofllclll
Recorda: Volume 21, Poge of Solo from aald Court to
149, aold polnl alao bllng mo dlrocted, I will ollor lor
Woal obout 2870 1111 and Ull II public IUcllon, II lhe
North about 11180 IHI from Irani 111p1 of lhe Molga
tht Soulhtlll cornor of County Court Hou11,
Sacond Street, Pomero)-,
uld SICIIon 31;
OH
45769 on (dayf, lhe 3rd
Thlnco South ea• 04'48"
Day
01 Dacemblr A.D. 1999,
Eut 210.00 11e1 along the
Al11
:30 o'clock A.M., tha
North line of the uld Danny
parcol 1o a polnl, paoalng following doacrlbed reol
on Iron pin found 11 30 1111 llltle, Sllualod In the
and an Iron pin found 11210 Counly of Molga, In the
IHI 11 tho Northooat cornor Sllto of Ohio ond Vllloge of
of aald Denny parcol lor Daxlor, Solom Townohlp;
Tho following doocrlbed
reference;
• " proparty lo-WII:
Thtnca North 9° 01 19
SITUATED IN SECTION
Eut 2118.812 1111 to an Iron
NO.
FIVE (5), TOWN EIGHT
pin found 11 lhl Sou1hllll
comer of Underwood parcol (8)AND RANGE FIFTEEN
(15) OF THE OHIO
11 daac:rlbiCI In lho Malgo COMPANY'S PURCHASE,
County Official Rocorda
IOUNDI!D
AND
Volume 22, P... 587;
Thine• North
04'48" DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING
TWO
Well 210 !182 1M! olong the
AND
South line of the sold HUNDRED
Undorwood porcol to a TWENTYFIVE (225) FEET
OF
THE
point In tho conlorllno of SOUTH
aald county Road 5, NORTHWEST CORNER OF
palling on Iron pin found 11 LOT NO. TWENTY (20, AS
DESCRIBED IN THE PLAT
280.5821111 lor referenco;
LONGSTRETH
Thone• South 4° 18' 54" OF

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
RovlaiCI Code, Secllons
3501.11(G), 5705. 19,
5705.25
NOTICE Ia hereby
glvon that In purouanco
of a Ruolutlon of lha
Board of Truslaes of the
Townahlp of Oliva,
RHdavllle, Ohio, pasaad
on thl 5th day of August,
1999 tharo will be
oubmltled lo a vote of
the people of said
aubdlvlalon al a General
Eloctlon lo be held In the
Township of Olive, Ohio.
at the regular places of
vollng lheraln, on lhe
2nd day of November,
t 999, lha qua all on of
levying a tax, In excess
of the ten mill llmltallon
lor the benefit of Oliva
Townahlp
lor the
purpoae
of
Fire
Prolecllon. Said tax
bllng:' A renewal of lax
of 1.5 milia al a rate not
exceeding 1.5 mills lor
each one dollar of
valuollon,
which

on lha property of
Southern Ohio Coal
Company;
with
undergroun'd workings
In
V1nton County,
Wilkesville Township,
Sections 1, 2, 2E, 3, 4, 8,
9, 10, 15 and 16,
Fractllons 24, 30 and 36;
Township 8N, Range
16W and 1BW, Meigs
Counly,
SaI am
Township, Sections 13,

You left us beauuful
memones, Your love IS

sull our gUide, and
though we cannot see
you , you are always by

19, 25, 26, 30, 31, 32, 33
and 36; Fractions 7, 13,

our stde

19 and 25, Township BN,
Range 15W. The permit
contains 379.43 acres
and Ia located on tho
Mulga and Wilkesville 7
1/2 Minute, U S G S.

We mtss vou verv, very
much

The lollowmg co uple was ISSUed
a marn.1gc hu1nse tn the Metgs
County Prob.llc Co UI t ul JuJgc
Rohcrt Buck Jos hua Eugene Casto,
2 1, Pomeroy and Clmst1 e Ann Mills,
19 Rer ds\lll e

Helen, Howard Ketth ,
T1m

and Kartma
110

Resources,

Division of Mines and
Reclamation The permll
areas are located In
VInton
County,
Wilkesville Township,
Sectlone 3, 15, 21 and
22, Township BN, Range
16W and 17W, Fractions
24, 30 and 36, Township
8N, Range 16W; Meigs
County,
Salem
Township, Sections 25,
26, 30 and 32, Township
7N and 8N, Range 15W,

10/29/98

Marriage licenses

SHERIFF'S SALE
REAL ESTATE CASE
NUMBER 99CV01 8
THE BANK OF NEW YORK,
AS TRUSTEE UNDER THE
POOUNG AND SERVICING
AGREEMENT DATED AS 0
FEBRUARY 28,. 1997, I
SERIES 1997-A-1 c/o The
Money Store. PLAINTIFF
VS. MIKE WILLS, el 11,
DEFENDANTS.
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS , MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
In pureuance of on Order
ol Sale 10 me dlriCIICifrom
aold Court In lhe above
onUIIICI ICIIon, I Will lxpGH
lo ule 11 public oucllon 11
lhe Courthouae on Dec. 3,
1999 al 10:30 o.m. of uld
day, the following deac:rlbiCI
reoleatate·
SITUATED IN THE STATE
OF OHIO, CITY
OF
MIDDLEPORT
AND
COUNTY OF MEIGS AND
BOUNDED
AND
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
BEING LOT NO. 18 OF
PLAT OF RIVERVIEW
ACRES, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO, FILED IN THE MEIGS
COUNTY PLAT RECORDS,
IN VOLUME 4, PAGE 311.
Prior
lnatrumont
relerenc11 : Volumo 47
Pagl319
Properly oddrtll:
203
PARK
STREET,
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
AppralaiCI al $ 25000.00
Term ohale: Caoh
JAMES M. SOULSBY
SHERIFF, MEIGS COUNTY
Alan J Unman, Lerner,
Sampson, &amp; Rothluoo, 120
E Fourth Strool, 8th Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202,
(513)241-3100, OH Sup Cl
110022216
165-1120 3T 10(22) (29) 11(5)

Quadrangle
Mapa,
approximately 2.5 mllas
weal of Wllkeavllla, Ohio.
Tha appltcanl has
obtained a road permit
to mine wllh 1oo feat of
tho rlghl-ol-way of Salam
TownshiP Road 333,
ellacttvo November 8,
19 81 ;
W llkesvlllo
Township Road 4,
effective December 12 ,
1973, and Slate Roule
124, affective February
26, 1974, which will
remain In effect until
coal
mining
and
reclalmlnallon
operations
are
completed under tho
coal mining permit
Issued pursuant to this
permit The renewal
application will allow
Southern Ohio Coal
Company to conllnue the
mining oporalions on D-

year ago today

Smuh s,nd then that he would seck
1he pre sident I.II nonunat1on of a th1rd
party But shortl y thereafter, hiS w1fc
became il l HIS prcs lde nt~al c,lmpa~g n
has been mvlslhle for months
In the d.1ys lcadmg up to Sn11th' s
announcement ,, stn ng of GOP leaders cruH.::JlCd hun

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
Southern Ohio Coel
Company, P.O Box 490,
Athena, Ohio 45701 haa
submitted a renewal
application lor coal mine
parmtt D-0463 to lhe
Ohto Departmanl of

who passed away one

d1vFse as .lboli!On forc1 gn pol1 cy
and gun Lontro l

Public Notice

Public Notice

I awrence Douglas

dS

Public Notice

more

In Memory of

Rcpuhl~e a n s loullndy 1gnorcd il1c tr

Public Notice

acres,

CLASSIFIEDS!

he s,nd contcnd•n g th.u

so mething

Public 'Notice

Natural

We won tht: rc\olutron on pnn~.:tplc '
he sar d 1n a Scn.Hc spccd1 th ,tt
re traced Ron.lid Rc .tg ~m 's rr se to

Plcllollnl V1llty Hospltll curnntly h" the rollowlnr
oppor1Unltlts •••ll•blo:
LONG TERM CARE UCENSED PRACTICAL NURSES
LONG TERM CARE CERTIFIED NURSING ASSISTANTS
Twelve hour shlfla. Excellent benefits.
Full-time tnd Ptrt·tlme positions available.

Public Notice
)oln our fomlly of profonlonoll to bt lilt
rtJOUn:t lor communlry ht1lth 10nrko nftds.
Ple11e Nbmk resumo to:
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
c/o PIISONNIL
2520 VALUY DRIVE
pr, PL!ASANT, WV 25550

vs

STEVE L LINDSEY
DEFENDANT
LEGAL NOTICE
Steve L. Lindsey,
whose laat known
addreas Ia 2750 Sewbury
Blvd., Columbus, Ohio,
bul whose praaent
whereabouts
and
realdence are unknown,
will take notice lhal on
the 131h day ol Oct.
1999, Chrlallna L. Haning
Iliad Complain! agalnal
him In Case No. 99-DR160 In lhe Common
Pleaa Court of Meigs
Counly Ohio, demanding
lhal she ba divorced
from him on thl grounds
ol lncompatlblllly, and
lor other and lurlher
equllabla relief.
Sieve L. Llndaey Ia
notified lhat you must
answer the Complaint
within 28 days after lhe
leal publication, which
will be mode on lhe 191h
day of Nov. 1999, or
judgomenl by default will
be rendered against you
Larry Spencer, Clerk of
Courls, Meigs Counly,
OH
Marlena
Harrison,
Depu!y
(10) 15, 22,29
(11) 5, 12,19 6TC

Ol fAX TO (J04) 675·6975.

1/2 PRICE SALE ALL NEW
NAME BRAND ITEMS
NOVEMBER 1-5
10 00 AM- 8·00 PM

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

NOW OPEN:

Rutland, Ohio

MEIGS COUNTY TRANSFER FACILITY

Pomeroy, Uluo

10!25199 t mo pd

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

Now Renting

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740·949·2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

MINI-STORAGE

10x20 units

992·2272

Cemetery does not
rece1ve any Revenue
from tax levy

You II bund o b1g nt!l tgg' whtn
you '"'" with rht clos11(itd1

The cemetery IS
supported by contnbut1on
only
Wells Cemetery Trustees

Real
Jr ....... . 992-2259

ROBERT BISSIU
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
985-4473

740-992-4119

Wayne's Place
Halloween Party
Saturday Night

Kathleen M. Cleland ........ 992-6191
......... ........... .... 992-2259

Costume contest at
10 p.m. Saturday
D.J. Friday and
Saturday

DEPOYSAG
PARTS
All

Makt&gt;o T1 actu1

Equipment

• VInyl Siding

&amp;

Pari s

Siding

• Roofing &amp; Soamlo11 Gutlor

Halloween Weekend
Bash
featuring

"Bad Habit"
-Friday and Saturday
Night Costume Contest
Saturday at midnight
Mtzway Tavern
Frl , Oct 29th Karaoke w1th Jeff North
Halloween Party
Saturday, Oct 30th
Pnze for top 3 best costumes
OJ Uncle Harley

ee•

CONTACT OUR OFFICE FOR ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION, OFFICE- 992-2259
I

Free Estimates

Joseph Jacks

740·992-2068
1m

Phone (740) 593-6671

"A Better Wa , Ever Da "

•12 TFN

d

SenicetJ

Garage sale 4 miles out 143, 10
29 &amp; 30, 9am-4pm HardwiCk
wood &amp; gas stove mlsc
Rob&amp;rt Barretfs St At 124 1st &amp;
2nd dllferent merchandise 741)-

(7401992·3831

992-7217

1917 N Main Street Pt PI G1
gantlc Yard Sale, Cleamng
Basement Old lurntture d1shes
books odds&amp;e nds Frtday Satur
day SAM·5PM Everythmg Must

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

Go

80

New Homes • Vmyl
S1d1ng • New Garages
·Replacement Wtndows
•Room Add1ttons
•Roof1ng

...t RISIDIIITIAI

740·992·7643

message After 6 pm

740·985·4180
Free Estimates

CONCRETE

CON NEalON
Quality Driveways,

CARPENTER SERVICE
•!loom addlllona &amp; Remodeling
•New Garages
•Eieclrlcal &amp; Plumbing
•Rooting &amp;Gutters
•VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
•Pilla &amp; Porch Decks
Fret Ell/mitts

Maple Wood Lakes
45860 St. Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio 45771
740-949-2734
A Ferrell Gas Representitive

The Country Candle Shop

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Christmas Open House

992·6215

FIREWOOD

Pomeroy Eagles

New S[enls, layaways &amp;credit cards ac,epled

Dump Truok tr
Plok-up In our yor•
Recently purchased
Graham 's Wood Products

Club Bingo On

• Conuals

Ot•.tlcrs.

• Room Addillons • Garages

35215 Ball Run Rd

1000 St Rt 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

• Detks &amp; Boal Dotks
James Ke11111l

Pomeroy, Oh10

1-740-992-6142

74H87-G3&amp;3

PH: (7401 992·2772

Leave a Messa e

Ball Logging and
F~rewood Bob Ball

110

Pomoray, Ohio

Regular Hours: Tue· Frl1 o-6
Saturday 10-4
At 124 M1nersv1lle, OH 740-992-4559

Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. II 00-50 11nomn

Personals

Why watt? Start meeting Ohio
s1ngles tomght Call toll free 1
600·766·2623, extension 6176

30

Announcements

CO Case w/CD s mistakenly sold
at our Yard Sale Please Return

(3041675·7196
D1abet c Pat1enls Med1care Or
Private Insurance You May Be
Enttlled To Recewe Your Otabeltc
Supplies At No Cost To You For
More InformatiOn 1·66B·677·

6561

Oual1ty clothing and household
1tems $1 00 bag sa le every
Thursday Monday thru Saturday

900530
Giveaway

2 K1ttens free to Good Home Call

aHor 3 OOPM (740) 441 1107

• ,~

••-

I,

c

ers Is Apprmc 6 Weeks Old 740

446-3281
3 month old Beagle/Hound mhced
pup, Dlack &amp; tan, shots 740-992
3602

4 Beautiful Ktttens 740.256-6056
4 gr8y k1t1ens 11 wks old 2 male

2 lema~ 740-992 3681

Father

Free

e~~~ JONES'
~~ ~POUS,

• ToP
• p.elllo"a\

20 Yrs

l.

Lost and Found

e months old

trl

Found· red malt P1t Bull, blue col·

S\ll"'"

Gt\~6\~9

Exp • Ins Owner: Ronnie Jones

Necessary CALL TOLL FREE ·
1 81)().966-3599 Exl l601 $34 00
ADVERTISING'
S4LES REPRESENTATIVE
For Wei Es18~lshld Local Co
SERVING TAl COUNTY AREA
'Must have good Comm.miCatiOn
skills
• Must hive good dnv1ng record
&amp; Prov1de own Tran5portalion
"Must have abHtty to be a TEAM
player

Send Resume to

Gallipolis Daoly T11txme
RE Advertising Sales Rep
825 Th1rd Avenue

GallipoliS OH 45631
ATIENTION OAIVERSI Dod1ca1
ed Reg1onal , Longhaul Company
Dri'&lt;'ers Owner Operators And
Truck Purchase Program We
Have It All Pos1tlons Avallabfe
Today Great EQuipment Great
Pay And Benefits Home Often
Charter Express, 417 862 5588

Or 800-819-4999

Attent ion State Tested Nurstng
ASSIStants Are You Look1ng For
Stable Hours In A Car ing Envt·
ronment ? Holzer Semor Care
Ce nter Is Now Accepting Appll·
cations For All Shifts We Will
Pay For Your EJtpenence If You
Are Interested In Being A Pari Of
Our E~~:cellent Team PJuse Ap·
ply At 380 Colonial Drive, Bidwell

OHEOE

CARDIAC SONOilRAPHEA

tar, lrlan&lt;l~. Dexter area, 740-742·
1080
•

POTE'NTIAL

Kittens a Cats To Good Home

color 740 ~9-2915

'

WEEKLY

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell
Shirley Spoors 3£4 675-1429

C~ow

Beagle pupp1es

OHIO 48831• CHESHIRE,

$BOO

Complete S1mple Government
Forms At Home No Expeuence

Mix Pupplos 3
Monl~s Old, Days 740-245 9356

60

TREE SERVICE

·' J

8

740 256·6702

Furnaces Installed as low as $28 00 a month
(wtth approved credit)
' Huge equtpmenl &amp; parts mvenlary ' lmmatliole lnstollolton
' Free Esltmoles • Easy Bonk finan1ing
' faclory Trained Te!hni1ians
"Servtng Southeastern Oh1o &amp; WV''
For Over Two Decades
1-800-872-5967 or 740-446-9416
Galli ohs Oh
wv 010212

Appro~e

Five Cockerspantei·MilC Pupp1es
Bwks old + Mother/Full-Blooded
Cockerspan1el Call (304)675
2488, after 5PM

No Embarrassment ..
You're Treated with Reapectl

BENNffi'S MOBILE HOME HEATING &amp;COOLING

Unknown

Weoks Olo 740 446 8059

WORRYING!!!

$500 WEEKLY Be Your Own
Bossi Processi ng Government
Refunds No Expenence Neces·
sary 1 8Do-B54 6469 Exl 5046

3 Female Full Blooded Eskimo

Spllz One Is 6 Months Old Oth-

Free To Good Home 740· 441 ·
1440

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

$20 ·$40 /HOUR Easy Meolcal
B1lhng Full Tratntng Computer Re
qulred Call 1 888 869 7905 Ext

Refundable Fee

New To You Thnft Shoppe
~West St mson, Athens

40

37011 1438 Start Immediately

700

314 Beagle Pups 6 Weeks Olo

CREDI,. PROBLEMS???

, ,.

Help Wanted

Stampeo Envelope• GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN

Cute Pupp1es . Mother Beagle

1

-

Brochures! Satisfaction Guaranteed! Postage &amp; Suppltes Pro
v1ded l Rush Self·Addressed

74Q-592·1842

;!2 yn. Local

Ca se Ill Pa1·1 s

1900 Eastorn Awf&lt;le Gallipolis
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Found Older Male Pomeranian
740 256-1316

Found Tan, Grey &amp; Black Mar·
blelzed Male Cal Wllh Blue Col
tar, 740-245 5104

'

An eKcenent opportunity lor a full
or part ttme cardiac sonographer
In a freestanding outpatient dtag·
nostlc canter Basic adu lt echo
required with stress echo and
vascu lar e~tperlence preferred
E11cellent aa lary (negotiab le),

fringe banellts Including 40tK
Lila, Olssblllly and Hoalth Insurance Monday thru Friday no
call so It you are looking for 1t
chall&amp;nglng position that will offer
professional growth and an op·
portunlty to meat your prolesston·
al objectives call Jane at 740·

887 5025

740-441-1803
Need help taking care of elderly,,
at lest 3 nights a week 7pm;,gam,
call for tnlerv1ew 74Q-992-5023

POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 /HA
INC BENEFITS NO EXPERI
ENCE FOR APP ANO EMM
INFO CALL 1 B00·813 3585
EXT 14210 8 A M 9 PM 7
DAYS fds me Fee
Aesponstble perso n to work wee
kend caring for the elderly call

740 992·5039 740·992 4410
SINGEASI GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY AND EASY LISTENING! Call 1 BOO 469 8164 For
Appmntment To Come To Nash
\n ile Tenne ss ee And Audt t1on
For MaJor Record Producers And
Concert Promoter s In ternet
WWWWCIO ac
Substitute Rural Ma11 Carriers To
Work Saturdays And Ad dii!Onal
Days As Needed Salary $1 0 54
Per Hr Plus Mlleage Must Have
Clean Onvmg Record Possess A
Valid State Dnver5 license And
Pass A Phystcal Please Apply In
Wr1tmg No Later Than 11 -5 99
To PO B o~e 9998 Ga llipolis OH

45631·999B

251 7475

WILDLIFE JOBS To $2 1 60 /HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
OENS
SECURITY MAIN·
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEOEO FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CA LL 1 BOO a1 3
3585 EXT •421 1 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS Ids InC Fee

DENTAL BILLER Up lo $15 ·$45

WORK FROM HOME $BOO

DATA ENTRY • National Billing
Seeks A Full /Part Time Medical
B•ller Salary At $46K Per Year
PC ReQuired No Experience
Needed Will Tram Call 1 8B8

/Hr Dental Billing Software Company Needs People To Process
Medical Claims From Home
Tratntng Provided Must Own
Computer 1 BOO 223 1149 Ext

$4 500 /Month For Fre e Book let
Call 1·6B6 775·6322 www cash
9f 1 com/home

140

Business
Training

Gallipolis Caroer

Col~ge

(Careers Cl ose To Home)

FT Medical Billin g No Experl·
ence Make Your IBM ebmpatlble
PC Earn $$$ www medlcrew com

Call TO&lt;Iay1740 446 4367
I 800 214·0452
Reg 190 05 1274B

800 697-7670
DRIVERS IMMEDIATE OPEN
INGS · REGIONAL IOTA Slarl AI
29 CPM /All Ml · Unloaolng Pay ·

150

Personalized Dispatch Home
Often • Hol1day /Vacation Pay •

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GAEE QUICKLY Bachelors

Signed 99 n!OOO s • Alder Pro·
gram 98% No Touch Freight
Call Butch At Summit Transporta-

Masters Doctorate By Ct rre
spondence Based Upon Pnor Ed
ucatlon And Short Study Course
For FREE InformatiOn Bo oK let

401 K /Meolcal /Pres /Denial As-

Onvers 2 Week Paid COL Train·
1ng No Exp Needed No Money,

No Creoll? No Probleml Earn Up
To $32 000 /1st Yr W /Full Benefits P A M Transpo rt Ca ll Toll
Free 1·877·230-6002 www otr·
dnvers com
Earn $250 week, Running Taxi
plu s Del1very Runs 4 Taxi Orlv·
ers needed 2 TaJticab Dispatch·

ors Noedeol (7401-441 0247
EMERGING COMPANY NEEDS
Mad1cal Insurance Billing Assls·
lance Immediately If You Have A

Expenenced Timber Cutter, Call

Wanted to Buy

$2,000 WEEKLY! MOiling 400

005

Computer Users Needed Work
Own Hrs $25K SBOK/ Yr 1 800·
536·0486 x 7777 www tcwp com

90

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks Low M1les 1995 Models
Or Newer, Smtih Bud. Pon11ac

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Classes Starlin g Nov 5 For
Nursmg Assistant Want Friendly
Dependable &amp; Canng People To
Care For Our Aes1dence Appl1·
catiOns At Front Desk EOE A.r·
bars Of Gallipolis 170 Pinecrest
Dnve lnformat1on Call Judy Hart
LPN /Instructor 740·742·2370 .

Gallipolis, Ohio 740-379-2720

Awnue GallipoliS, 740-446 2842

7 40.992.()()38

(740) 992-3470

ellts Med1cal Dental Vls1on
Company Pa1d Retirement Pl an
PLUS 401k After 90 Day&amp; (W1th
Match1ng) Company Paid Vaca
tton And Pa td Holtdays 95% No
Touch Fretght Satellite Communt
cation Credit Umon Otrect De
po st! As si gned Convenllonal s
Compa ny Pa1d Untlorm s Stock
Purchase Call BOO 555 -CWTS
cwt JObS@con way com ConWay
Tru ckload Servtces CWT IS An

PC You Can Earn $25 000 To
550 000 Annually Call 1-800·
291·4B83Depl 1109

Call for details

November 5th 1 0-7 pm
6th 10-5 pm
Gtft to 1st 25 customers (1 per family)
Door Pnzes, wooden Angels, Snowmen

Dlvtston

74Q-989-2623

Absolute Top Dollar All U S S11
ver And Gold Coins Prootsets
Diamonds Antique Jewelry Gold
Rings, Pre 1930 u S Currency
Sterlmg Etc Acqursit1ons Jewelry
M T S Coin Shop 151 Second

t'er-~~~

Haullng*Ltmestone*Gravel
Sand*Topsoti*Ftll Dtrt*Mulch
Bulldozer Servtces

$ 30 /MI Teams $ 34 /ml /Spill
100% Company Paid Health Sen-

Wedemeyer s Auction Serv1 ce

ALMOST anythtng

ROW SDVINI YOUR
992-1717 ......PPOR,ABLE PROPANE NEEDS
YOUNG'S

wv 133B

Wedel1ver

STt )H .\(; E
ST. RT. 7
I 0:\ I() $~0
J():\20 $60

.... II',

17693

24 Hr. Taxi atrl
Delivery
Service

IIAHTWEIJ,

''

Bill Mood1spau~h Aucttoneermg
complete auction serv1ce Buy
and sell estates Ohio License

Bryan Reeves

10/131mo

BISSELL BUILDERS,

F~rcwood

Before 6 pm leave

Call 985·3831

AGSEIMCE"

• Raplaomenl Windows

Mobile Home Furnaces
""""-&amp; Heat Pumps

Auction
and Flea Market

•

ca ted Regional &amp; OTR Solos

ucn 800-876 0680 EOE

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Linda's Painting

Help Wanted

Need An Experienced Mechanic,

DOCTORS NEED BILLERS PT/

Sunday 6 Monday oolllon1 OOpm Fridoy

Septic Sy•tenu &amp;
Utilitie•

www sunselhome com

CLASS A COL DRIVERS DeOI·

110

460

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm the
dey before tht ad Ia to run,

House &amp; Tra1ler Sttes
Land Cleanng &amp;
Grad1ng

*Pet Foods

SHADE RIVER

I

Free Estimates
740· 742·3411

01 EW1rylhlng1

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

'''""*"•tr•csd
Het•Dg

Sunset Home Construetion
New ConstructiOn &amp; Remodeling- Kitchen Cabmels
Vmyl S1dmg- Roofs - Decks- Garages

LIH~

October 30th Green Terrace In
Centenary Chmtmas Decor
Home Interior, 0f11C8 Desk LOVI S
W1nter Clothes Baby Clothes
MISC

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

.,
'

CIOihes EIC

949-2168

6/29/mo

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE ~
* Custom Grinding
* Fall Fertilizer

Fac toty Au thonz t'd

Good Times

FREE ESTIMATES

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

Typmg Great Payl CALL I 800·
795·0380 El!l 1201 (24 Hrt)

I BOO 637 5231 Exl 1300 Fee

30199 8 5 Baby Items /Clothes
Chttdrens
Mens, Women&amp;

New Roofs • Repa1rs
• Coatmg • Gulters
' • S1dmg • Drywall
• Pamtmg • Plumbmg

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Cralls
Toys, Jewelry, Wood, Sewing.

edition

Wlh Brkk Rod Roof Saruroay 101

INTERIOR

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Mond~

• 10 00 1m Saturday

Downspouts

r

740-742-8015
877-353-7222 (loll free)

&amp;

Frldey

Bulldozer &amp; Backhoe

' Slop In And See
Steve Riffle
' Sales Representative
Larry Schey

740·742·2138
J &amp; LInsulation

ldiUon • 2 00 p m

Gutters

Painting

ROUSH
LANDSCAPING

Help Wented

Benef1ts No EKpenence Neces
sary Call Man -Frl 8 A M 8 P: M

II to run Sunday

Operated by Southern Ohio Disposal

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

o

CLERICAL $12 $16 /HR Full

lha day before tho ad

Gutter Cleaning

Call 992·9330 or 1·800·809· 7721

'

Sidewalks, Pat1os
Complete Garages.
masonary/wood
25 yrs expenence
Free Est1mates

3/11/99 TFN

Be Paid In Advance
DEADLINE 2 00 p m

Demo. $20.00 minimum

or

800-291-5600

Hauling
limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

7/22/TFN

AU Yard Sale• Muat

Garage Yard Sale t 348 McCor·
mlck Road Only House On Road

visit our offlce at 34878 Rocksprings Rd.

V1s11 our showroom
R1 33 6 m1les North of Pomeroy

YOUR

TRUCKING

Wntesel

I

(No Sunday Calls)

SAYRE

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Southern Ohio Disposal Hauling,

To the voters tn Sc1p1o
Township, The Wells

L.

11

EOE

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

For more Information on

Quality Window
Systems

FREE ESTIMATES

Call 992·6396 or

Howard

$32.00 per ton, refuse, $25.00 per ton,

Erculs«Ve Deater

COMMiRO~I

Available,

Yard Sale

MONDAY·FRIDAY
7amTONOON

refuse and demolition.

Vtnyl Replacement Wandows
R-IO Insulated Glass
SO Year free glass re place ment

INC.

10x12 units

70

HOURS: 7am THRU

' We support all local haulers!

(jore{{

A·J

Umon Ave , Pomeroy. Oh

Wook (3041BB2 3323

Meigs County Transfer Facility or

Casto
304·372·1898
after 5 pm
For Neav Locttl
Referral SerVIce
Meigs, Gallla &amp;
Surrounding areas
740·742·3119

Lost New Haven Area Gray Female Cal Named Sassy Shon
Haired Lost durmg Homecommg

LUMP IND STOKII COIL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS
ICCEPIED
DELIVERY IVIILABLI

accepting residential and commercial

(740) 742-8888

Allen

BABYIIftiRIIIIDID

13041675 7196

Sr 124 Wellston, Ohio
740-384-6212

Located at 34878 Rocksprings Rd. , Pomeroy

Over 40 yrs experience

&amp; dean up farms

33795 lltlund Rd.

992-2260

30th Boys Gtrls Brand Name
Clothing Ladders Toys M1sc

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

Will haul off old lunk
tars

Lost on Arnold Road Golden Retriever ll'llle, looks full blooded,
bul IS mixed. 740·992 5677 740·
Los t 1 pair Prescription Sun
glas:sn m PI Plea sant Area

• Tune-ups • New filters _• New plugs
• Sharpen blade or chain $20
!\'Jon &amp; Wed 10-5 Fri. 8-4
Tues &amp; Thur 1·5 Sat 10-2

Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00

OhiO 45769.
Complaints against the
valuations, as established
lor lax year 1999, must be
made In accordance wllh
Section 571519 of the Ohio
Revised Code
These
complatnls must be flied on
lorms which will bo
lurnlahed by the Counly
Auditor and must ba Iliad In'
tho County Auditor a Ofllce
on or before the 31st day of
March, 2000. All complalnla
Iliad with the County
Auditor will be heard by the
board ol Revision In the
manner provided by Section
5715 19 of the Ohio Revised
Code.
Nancy Parker Campbell
Meigs Counly Audllor
(10) 26, 27, 28, 29, 31 , (11) 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, 10 tc

'

Nuralng Mill Creek Road, 740-

Shde, OH

Specializing in saws &amp; trimmers

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

lr:mmm Services
Now Renting

33

Culverts 4" - 48" tn stock

Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

Lost Cat Seal Point Siamese I
White, Female, 2 Years Still

5 112 Miles Out Route 141 10/

Second Street, Pomeroy,

AMERICAN LEGION
POST 467
RUfLAND, OHIO
GUARANfEED 60 A
GAME, OVER 80
PEOPLE 80 A GAME,
OVER 99 PEOPLE
99.00 A GAME
STARBURST
$1850.00 AND
COVERALL
MON &amp; WED DOORS
OPEN AT 4:30
GAMES START
Af 6:30

2270 Rt.

Loti and Found

446-2317

740·696-0027 business 740·992-7046 Home

ADV/WC 0 D~NAt1E SYSTEMS INC

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Reference: 571517 Ohio
Revised Coda
The Meigs county Board
of Revision has compl•tad
Its work of equalization. The
tax returns lor lax year 1999
have boon revtsod and tho
valuations completed and
are open lor public
Inspection In the office of
the Meigs County Auditor,
Second Floor, Courthouse,

BINGO

a~ ad CuU _9. ~2-2156

To pl,a[e

740-985•3813

9:00 to 4:30

60

DOUBLE D'S REPAIR SHOP

Tuppers Pla1ns, OH

Mon .• Fri.

Public Notice

Local ion: The Former
lllue Turton Butlding
803 Sout h Third ave.
Middleport

7

8" Gtavelless Leath
100' · 1000' Rolls 1" &amp;3/4" 200# Wolef Line
Full line of Gos P1pe &amp; Regulators Woter Slorag8 Tanks

Ohio 45631 lor public
viewing
WriHen
comments or reque1t1
lor
an
Informal
conference may be aanl
to the Division ol Mineo
and Reclamallon, 1855
Fountain Square Court,
Building H·3, Columb~a.
Ohio 43224 wllhln thirty
days of the laal date of
publication of lhlo
notice.
(1 0 15, 22, 29
(11, 5 5TC

TRUCKLOAD

740-992-52!2

SMORGASBORD
Bashan F11ehouse Co Rd 28
Sunday, October 31, 1999
11 00 am to 1 30 pm Turkey, Ham
Adults $5 00 Ch11dren $2 50
Sponsored by Bashan Ladles
Aux111ary

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply
St At.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Bus-iness Services

Public Notice
0463 lor up to live yoara
paal the expiration dole
Of April 7, 2000.
The application Ia on
lila at the olllcaa of lhe
Meigs County Racordlr,
Meigs
County
Courthouse, Second
Slreel, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, VInton County
Recorder, VInton Counly
Courl House, Main
street, McArthur, umo
45551, and the Gall Ia
county Recorder, Gellla
County Court House,
Locust Slreat, Galllpolla,

Announcements

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley Hospital

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
CASE NO 99-DR-160
CHRISTINA L HANING
PLAINTIFF

Friday, October 29, 1999

Friday, October 29, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Larry Slrlcktan&lt;l. 740-6112-7823
FULL-TIME POSITION
AVAILABLE
Competitive Sa~ry And
Exceptional Fringe
Beneht Package

REHABILITATION AlOE - Ae·
qu1rements Htgh School Diploma
Or EqUivalent, Experience In
Health Care Field, Prior A1de EJt
penance A Plus
Only Qualified Applicants Need
Apply To Holzer Cllnlc Human
Relattons Department 90 Jackson P1ke, Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 1·

Schools.
Instruction

Phono CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1-800·964 B316
180

Wanted To Do

Carpentry Frammg Ftn1 shmg
Remodeling, Add11ton s Decks

and Porches (740) 388 8931

Carpet end Upholstery

Cleaning

Our safe low mo1sture smt extraction method deep cleans car
pet and uphol stery No odor no
luss and mm1mum drymg t 1me
(1 2 hrs) Call Clearly Clean lor
free estimate (304)675 4040
Friendly dependa t&gt;te DayCare tn
Mason Area Call (304)773 5524
Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your logs to the m111 JUSt call

304-675· I 95?

J1ms Drywall &amp; Con stru c!IO n
New Con5tru ct1on &amp; Rem odel/
Drywall Su1mg Roofs Addt
tlons Pamtmg etc (304 )674

4623 or (304)674 0155
Aehable Lady Wtlh References
available lor Fall and Reg ular
Housecleamng Call D1ana (740)

245·5104

Someone To Ca rp ool To Ch1ll ·
cothe Monday ·Fnday Day Shill
Call Rhonda 740·775·2652 From

9-5
FINANCIAL

1562 Fax To 740 446 5532 Or
Caii740-446·51B9 Equol Opportunity Employer
GnU cook, apply In person Crows
Steak House

SPEECH LANGUAGE
PATHOLOGIST
(Ripley, WV)
:20 Hrs /Week Guaranteed Cur·
rent L1censure And 1 Year M101
mum Expenence ReQUired Prtor
Long Term Care 01 SNF Exp
Preferred For More Information
Please Contact Robbin Coleman
At 800-789 2880 Or Fax Your
Resume To 904-747 6804 EOE

5ervlceMasttr

Rehabllltodon

Loca l Cleanmg Co Seeking Full
Time tor Carpet cleaning General Cleanmg Construction Work
Send Resume to SCCS P:O BQ)(
54t Kerr Oh o 45643
Loca l taJt olflce needs part ttme
ta x preparers lor up co m1ng tax
season we wtll tram send resume
to Datly Sentinel PO Box 729 69
Pomeroy Oh 45769

LOSE WEIGHT tlUARANTEEDI
ALL NATURA"'
DR RECOMMENDED!
CALL 1-888-248-217;
OR VISIT www melt-away net
LP Needed Middleton Estates

Part T1mo Call (740)·446·4814

MEDICAL BILLING Learn From
The Experts! Everything You

Need Home Sludy $1 999 3 Oay
Tralmng $6 495 F nanctng Avatl

able BETTER BUSINESS BU·
REAU MEMBER PACIFIC MED
ICAL www pac1ficmed1cal com
MEDICAL BILLING Earn Excel·
lent Income Full Tratn lng Computer Requ1red Call Toll-Free

800 540 6333 Ex1 2301

MEDICAL BILLING Earn Excel·
lent $$$1 Process1ng Claims From
Home Full Tralmng Prov1 ded
Computer Reqwred Cal l Med1·
works Toll Free BOO 540· 6333

Exl 2312

Need 7 ladles To Sell Avon 740·

446·3358

Now Forming Nursing Assistant
Classes Holzer Senior care Cen·
ter Is Forming A Class To Begm
On November 8th If You Are In·
terested In Caring For The Elder-

210

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do busl
ness w1th people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall un111 yO l have 1nvesttgated
the offering
A Money Machme Be Your Own
Boss Get Your ltle Back Home
Ba sed Bu s1ness Manufactu rer
D1rect Buy 30 Candy Machtnes
$9 995 Free V1deo VEND STAR

1 BOO 998-VEND

A PHONE CARD ROUTE 2 Q
Cents 1M1n Rate Nail Co $500
$5 000 /Wk CASH Free lnlo 1

800·997·9888 24 Hrs
ARE U LAZY? I Am AMd Earn
$1 000 A Day No Selhng Not
MLM For Free tnlormauon Pack
age Call 1-800 786 8849 24 Hrs

XT27

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 · 20 Locations $4K $10K
$4 000 +IMo Income
Al l
CASH I 1OO'Y. Fmance Availa ble

1 8Do-380·2615 · 24 Hrs
DOWNTOWN BUSINESS
BLDG .. QB PEACE
For Lease Three Rooms Cenlral
A1r &amp; Heat Clea n &amp; N1ce To
Vtew 740 446 9539

EARN 51,000 A OAY I 00 NCI
MLM No Sel ling Work From
Home PIT Free Info Pkg 1 800
831 2385 24 Hrs Ed 63

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Aepalrmg NOT Replacmg Long Cracks
In W~ndsh1elds Free Video 1

Boo 826 8523 us /Canaoa
www glassmechaniJt com
FREE BOOK! Reveals Secrets To
F1nanctal Freedom! Uve A Ll!e Of
Plea sure OEBT FREEt Free
Copy
www sec rets co mlspe

clall8370

FAITO LAY /f'EPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE $1,000+
WEEKtV POTENTIAL ALL
CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO·
CAL SITES SMALL INVESTMENT/ EXCELLENT PROFITS 1·
80().7317233 EXT 4303
MEDICAL BILLER Up lo $15-

ly Please Apply AI 380 Colontel
DrMI, Bidwell OH Or Call For De·
lolls EOE

$45 fHr Medtcal B1lllng Software
Company Needs People To Process Medica l Cla1ms From Home
Tral mng Provided Must Own

OWN A COMPUTER, PUT IT
TO WORK. $B50 ·$3, 500 MO
PT /FI FREE DeiSIIs Log Onlo

Compu1er I·B00-•34 55 18 Exl

http llwww hbn com Acceaa Code
5298

OWN A COMPUTER?
PUT IT70WORKI
$25 -175/HR. PT/FT

667

MEDICAL BILLING Unllmltld In·
comtt Potentia l No Experience
Necessary Free Information &amp;

CD·ROM lnveSimanl $4,895 - '
$8,995 Financing Available !atend Automated Medical Servlc~

CALL , ......zemo
OR VISIT www 111-hy.not

es loc B00-322·1 I 39, E•t 050
Void In KY, IN CT

Po Sial Jobs $48,323 00 Yr Now
Hiring -No E•pertonca ·Paid
Training ·Graat Benefits, Call 7
Cays 800 429-3860 El!l J·365

START YOUR OWN VENDING
Business For As llltle Aa $52/
Mo Up To 15 Macntna Routeo
Available Eaay Financing 1-800220-2915 24 Hrs ·

�L

)

r•

Friday, October 29, 1999

Friday, October 29, 1999 •

-

ALLEYOOP

The Dally Senti!lei' •

ort, Ohio

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

8RII)OII:
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
510
SS$ NEED CASH ?? WE Pa~
Caah For Rema i ning Payments

On Propert y Sold! Mortgages '
Al)nulttesl Settlements' lmme
dlate Ouot esllt ' Nobody Beat s
Our Pu ces ' Nat to nal Co ntra ct

Buyers 800 490 07 31 Ell! 101
www nauonalcontractbuyers co m

SFREE CASH

NOW$ From

Wealthy Famtl es Unloadmg Mtt

lions 01 Dollars To Help Mtntmtze
Thetr Taxes Write tmmedtately

Wlnalalls 847 A SECOND AVE
SUIT E t350 NEW YORK NEW
YORK 10017
'GUARANTEED

APPROVAL

Bank Card No Credtt Check No
Up Front Cash Sec unty Oepostt
Required 'Must Be 18-t- And
Have Valtd Che c ktng Acco unt '

Pre-Appr oval By Phone 1 800

6 Ro om House full basement 2
garag e s outbutldtng s &amp; double
lot Fru tl Trees/Bi ac kBernes On
Sandyhetg hts
Lew ts l ane
$1 25 000 (304)675 6676

Only One l eU 26x80 48A 2BA
only $39 999 Free Deliver y/Free
Se t Up 1 800 69 1 6777

2 Bedr oo m Mo btle Ho me You
Pay Ut1htte s &amp; Depostl In Porter
Area No Pets 740 388 9162

AZER0'4 DOWN LOAN I

Loo ktn g To Bu y A New Ho me?
Don t Have Land? We Dott tttt tt ttt
Hurry Only 10 l ots leftl 304 736

2 Be d roo ms New Carpe t Gas

No Down Payment ReqUired Wtth
Gov ernment Sp onsored Loa n
Gooa Credtl And Steady Inco me
ReqUired Ca ll For More lntorma
han And For Other Ftnancmg Op
!I o ns Ind ependence Mortgage
Services 1 600 645 0036

ARIZONA RARE BUY' Pnsllne 40
Acre Ran che s In Northw est An
zona From Only $495/Acret Lush
Vegetatton Moun tam Vte wst No
Ouatttymg Low Down Ask Aoout
6 Mo Inspection Program' t BOO
7tt 2340

689-1556
FREE MONEY I It s True Never

Repay

Guarant eed

$500

$50 000 For Debt ConsoltdatiOn
Personal Needs Med tcat Bil ls
Edu catton &amp; Busme ss Call Toll
Free 1 8Q0..724 6047 (24 Hrs)
FREE MONEY' It s TrlJe Never
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 ooo
Debt Co n s ot~e1 a t JO n
Personal Nee d s Bus ne ss 1

800 511 2640
BANKRUPTCY $79 t- Stops Ga1
ntshment s ' Divorce $99t- Stop
Foreclosure $350 Bustness Oo
portumt es + Trammgl Fre shS1a1t
t 888 4t9 941 7 www lres hstar tu

sa com
CON SO LIDATE DEBT Reduc ed
Monthly Payments 20 50% Save
Thousands 01 Dollars In Interest
Non Proftt TCC 800-759 3844

CREDIT CARD UP TO 13 000
UnsecUied VISA /MC Bad Credtl
Or No Credtt 1 600 256 6818 Ext

4000
CREDIT PROBELMS?
• Avoid Bankruptcy'!'
• Stop Collection Calls" '
·Low Payments!tl
Free Consumer Counseling Can

Now 1 BOO 788./3777
CREDIT PROBLEM S Slop Here
We Can Help Loam:; Ava tl able

$3 ooo Ana Up No Fee 1 877
663-9269 Ex1 221
CREDIT REPAIR I AS SEEN ON

Be auttl ul 4 bed room tw o bath
ren ceo yard establl sned sma ll
engrne shop or run yo ur own
bus tness from la rge co mmerctal
butkltng Plus good rental home al
o n one bloc k tn Ra cme Ont o
W ttn or Without ext ras 740 949
2 ~06

2 BR t 1/2 Baths Vtnyl &amp; Bnck Bi
Level With Unllmsned Ba sement
On 7 Acre s 01 Meadow Sur
rounded By Trees Barns &amp; Other
O utbUt ldm gs More Land Avatl
able l ocated Near Tnurman 011
S A 279 On Cen terp otnt Road

$87 200 Anlhony l and Co LTD
1 800 2 13 836 5 www co unt ry
tyme com
FORECLOSED H0 \•1ES Low Or 0
Down 1 Gov 1 And Ba nk Repo s
Bemg Sold Nowt Ftnanctng Avatl
able Call Nowt t 800 730 777 2
Ext 8040

FORECLOSED HOM ES Low Or 0
D own Gov t And Ba nk Rep o s
Bemg Sold Nowt Ftna ncmg Avatl
able Call Nowl 1 800 730 7772
E•t 8040

HOME FORECLOSURES NO
MONEY DOWNI NO CREDIT
NEEDEDI TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1 800 916
9191 ~XI H5023
HOMES FROM $199 30 /Mo 1
3 BR Repos /Foreclosures Fee
4.,.o Down For Llstmgsl Payment
Detatls 1 800 71 9 3001 x1185

HOMES FROM 12 000 Low Or

FREE DEBT CONSOL IDATION

No $$$$ Down Credit Trouble
O K Fmancmg A~a t lable CALL

Apphcahon W /Servtce Reduce
Payments To 65 % II CASH IN

NOWIII 800 772 7470 Ex1 8040

CENTIVE OFFER II Cal l 1 BOO
3288510Ex1 29

Ntce hou se tn Maso n for sale

Buyers 01 Structured Sentements
Annutltes And Government Farm
Payments Al so Purcha smg Lot
tenes And Pn vate Mortgages
Call Settlement Capu al 1 800
959 0006 www settleme ntcapt
tal com
Need A l oan ? Try Debt Consoli
datton $5 ooo $200 ooo Bad

Credit 0 K Fee 1 BOO770 0092
Ext 215

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
Olltce Vtstt Nec ess ary Up To
$500 Instantly Call Toll Free 1

877 EARLYPAY 1S1 ADVANCE
FREE1ltc• cc70036
AECEI~IN G

PAYMENTS? In

304 773 5828

320

'14 " Single s and DouoJe Wtde
Trade and Repose Pnce Negott
able but all homes wtll be sold by
t 2/31199 Come early lor Best Se

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtnt

1 888 582 3345

5678

$11 000 740 992 5686

to ldYeftiH '"any prelerenrd
limitation Of tiscrlmlnaliOn

baled on race, COlOr religion
HJI famlllalstacus or nat onat

origin or any tntenhOn to
make any such preference
limitation or discnmlnatlon ~

1980 Coahman Tratler 35 2 Ex
pand a Root Atr Ele ctrtc Heat
Gas St ove Water $4 000 O r
Trade 740 245 9472
1993 14x70 L1berty 3 Bedrooms
2 Full Baths Total Etectnc Heat
Pump On Rented Lot Very Good
Condttton Pay Off Or Best Ofler
Call Between 4 9 PM 740 245

9029

1999 Doubtewlde Aepo Never
Ltved In New Home Warranty 0
Down II Ouattlted 740 446 3093
Oakwood Gallipolis Onlyll

1999 MODELS CLOSE OUT
SALE SAVE BIG SSS

knoWingly accept
adWr'tilementl fot real estate
wt1ichla In violation ollhe
laW OUr ,_,. are heretJy
thot an dwellings

-In
"*""*'

11111 -per

.,. - o n an equal

~-

REAL ESTATE

310

Homes lor Sale

$0 DOWNI HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED I
GDV T FORE
CLOSURES! CALL NOW FOR
REGISTRATION! 1 800 434
2434 EXT 3205 (NO FEE)
1 1/2 story 7 rooms 1 112 baths
furnished new roof ntce lot 477
Sycamore Street M•ddlepo r t
()!;o Caii74Q.446-6737 collecl

2 000 Sq Fl 1 1/8 Acre Roule 7

2 3 4 Bedroom Homes 1 800

98 14x70 Clayton 3 br 2 ba CA
everythmg upgraded cathedral
cethng some lurntture stays 2
decks w/ utl l tty bulldtng many
extras excellent cond 304 675
445t after 5 pm

s1o ooo. 740-245 9472

3 Bedrooms 2 Bath s Kitchen
Dining room TV Ll vmg and
laundry Rooms Minutes !rom

1own Clly Schools AI 7 (740)
+48-9293 740-446 8055
38 Acres 2 Bedroom House

Good Hunllng Lana 740 682
7312

2 44 Acres Homestte Green
'~'o wn s htp Gallta County Scentc
0 Utel Cl ose To GaUtpoli s Some
Restncttons 740 245 5776
78 Acres 3 112 Mtles Ofl S A 325
On Deer Creek Road Contact Ja
son Ad~tn s 740 682 7312
Approx 16 acres Green School
D1st Leave Mes sage (740 ) 446

3545
GALLIA COUNTY
23 ACRES
2 mtles OH SR 7 &amp; SR 218 South
0 1 Galltpohs Stnglewtdes AI owed
Rougn Mostly wooded Road At
ready Cut In S27 000

20WOODEDACRES
Great Fo r Hunttng Near Patrtol
011 SA 141 &amp;SA 233 $23 000 On
New Road Butlt That Conhnues
Into Wayne Nat1onat Forest

MEIGS COUNTY
Near Oanvt11e &amp; Rutland Oft SA
325 5 &amp; 10 Acres $9 SOOt- Call
For Free Maps On These And
Olhfl r Propertte s In Southern
OhtO
An thony Land Co Lid
1-800 21 3 8365
www countrytyme com

360

Real Estate
Wanted

$325 00 Month Oepostt' No Pets•

2 br unfurmshed house m New
Haven lor rent 304 675-3469
229 Burkhart Lane Galltpohs 2
Bedrooms WID Hook Up $3401
Mo Depostt Requtred 1 888

3 Bedroom House For Rent 25
Evans Hetghts Galltpohs $400/
Mo 0Apost1 &amp; Referen ces Re
qu lred Cays 74 0 256 6456
Eventngs 740 256 1530
3 Bedroom LA Lg Kllcnen Car
port Avatt able Nov 1st Pnvate
and convententt 47112 Spruce St
Gallipolis $390 Mo $390 Depostt
requtred Apply at Topes Furnl
ture 151 Second Ave No Phone

Calls
3 bedroo m, Ractne $400 par
month plus $200 depoSit no pets
re fere nces requtred 740 949

2621

Brand New 4 Bedrooms 2 Baths
10% Downt $199 00 Month No
Paymenrs lor 90 dayst 5 to
chOOse from 1(800) 251 5070
DoubleWtde
3BR f2BA
only
$287 per mo wi Low down pay
ment Free Atr 1 800-691 6777
Ft rst Ttme Buyers Ea sv Ftnanc
tng 2 and 3 Bedroom around
$200 per month Call 1 800 948

5676
HUO Homes Approval By Phone
Singles Or Double s 740 446

3583
Moving Out Of Area Must sell at
s a c r~f t ce 98 S W
ltke New

(304)736 9102
New t 4 Wide tow do wn pay
ment $175 per mo Free Atr Free
Sktrt 1 800 691 6777
New 16 Wtde 4BR /2 BA lOW
dow n payme nt o nly $24 5 'J'er
mo Free Air Free Sktrt 1 800

691 6777
NEW
2 3 Even o4 Bedroo m Ho me s
Payments As Lo w As $149 De
ll~ery And Set Up Included Only
At Oakwood Home s Barb our s
VIlle J04 736 3409

440

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
ntshed and unfurntshed secunty
depos tt required no pet s 740

992 2218
1 Bedr oom Near Holzer s Eco
nom lcal Gas Heat Kitchen Ap
phances Furnished $279/Mo +
Uttltltes 740 446 2957
t br apt furmshed extra mce &amp;
clean no pets 304 675 13B6
1 or 2 Bedroom Apar tment PI
Plea sant Ulll ltte s pad Refer
ence s /Depos tt &amp; Lease Ae

QUired

Pels (51 3)271 9091

N~

2 Bedroom Apartment AdJacent
To Rto Grande Campus 740 245

5858
2 Bedroom Apattment Deposn

No PelS (304)675

Aequ~red

2548
2bdrm apts tota l etectrt c ap
pltance s furntshed laundry room
facthttes close to school In town
App llcattons a~atlable at Vttlage
Green Apts 149 or calt 740 992

3711 EOH

Required $350 1Mo No Pet s
740 446-4043 After 6 P:M
4 Rooms Downstatrs Very Clean

No Pets' deposit and Reference
Requtred Galltpoil s Are a (740)
388 1100

3 Bedrooms 1 Bath 152 Fourth
Avenue Gall pohs $375/Mo De
posft Requtred WID H oo~ Up 1
3 4 bedroom 3 lull baths all ap
phances has new 30 year roof
newer wtnng one car garage un
der the house 2 car garage plus
small storage butldtng on tot
across street Butternut Ave Po
meroy Oh asktng $60 000 must
sell ca ll 740 992 5009 or 740

992 3501
3/4 bedroo m House tn the Glen
wood Area $450 month + de

poSII (740)983 9107

Buy Homes From $199 30iMo
I 3 Bedroom Aepos 4% Down
0 K Credit For LISttngs And Pay

Htstonc Home Upper Second
Avenue Galltpo!ts Hard Wood
Fl oors Throughout $425/Mo
Depostl And Rental Agreement
Reqwed No Pets 74G-446 4474
Large 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Ex
ecuttve Home Near Got! Course

$685/Mo
2957

No PelS 740 446-

Ptlot Program Renters Needed

304 736 7295
Tnree bedroom all electnc ranch
home wttn attached garage
!enced back ya rd large lot at
Meadow land Estates Pt Pleas
ant $600 month plus references
and depostt 304 82o4 2480
Two bedroom house m Pomeroy
would hke to sell on land contract
or wtll ren t lor $350 month plus
depostt &amp; ut h2es no pets 740

698 7244

420

Apartment for rent m Pomeroy no
pelS 140 992 5858

ESTATES 52 Westwood Dnve
!rom $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; mo vi es Call 7 40 446 2568
Equal Houstng Opportunity
Christy s Fam tly Lt~mg apart
ments home &amp; trat ler rentals
740 992 4514 apa rtments ava1l
able furmsned &amp; unfurnished

OOWNTOWN APARTMENT
FOB BENT

First Floor Central Heat &amp; Atr
Ideal For A Senior Persons 740

446 9539
Fo r Rent Apartment Downtown
upstatrs 2 Bedroom Ntee' (740)

446 0139
Gractous hvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vtllage Manor and
Atverstde Apartments m Mtddle
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housmg Oppor
tunltles

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedro o m mobtle homes

$260 $300 740 992 2167

Antiques

Buy or sell Rtvenne Antiques
1124 East Matn Street on SR 124
E Pomeroy 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner http IItts your bust
ness com/riverine/

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1991 Grove AMZ50 Diesel 50 Fl
Bo om ltft Very Good CondlltOn
Phone Huntington 304 525 5359
1997 kenm ore relug 25 c u ft
reg /crushed Ice wa ter nice
$750 4 poster queen stze water
bed ro se pads ntce $250 304

460

21 X20 TWO CAR GARAGE Full

800 701 7912
3 All STEEL BUILDINGS 24K36
Was $7 500 Sell $3 990 30160
Was $10 900 Sell $6 950 50175
Was $19 600 Sell $8 900 Doug
800 388 5314
9 Windows Wtth Storm $40 Each
Or $350 All Small Tra 1ler Cart
ltke New $80 Cra!l sman Pres
sure Wa sher Used On ce $90
200 SQ Yards Of Carpet &amp; Pad
$400 740 367 7401
Baby Bed Dressrng Tabla High

Cflatr Car Seat ana Stroller.
(304)675-2801
Bassett c rib sold maple wtth
mattre ss $100 excellent cond 3
drawer &amp;5 drawer cherry Bassett
cllest of drawers $300 for both

304 675 3440
Applt ances
Aec ondtlloned
Washers Dryers Ranges Refri
grato rs 90 Day Guarantee!
Fren ch C tty Maytag 740 446
Iron Tub WHh Claw Feet
$200 Kttcnen Cabmet Wtth Flow
er Ben $75 Running Boards F1
bergla ss For 1998 F 150 Ford

PICk Up $50 740 256 6989
Complete DISH Network satellite
system brand new S t 49 tnstalled
lree 740 992 1182 or 304 773
5305 after 6pm

COMPUTER BLOWOUTIII COM
PAC MICRON IBM Desklop s
laptops

Alve r Park Pomeroy $ 100 per

monlh 74().949 2093

490

For Lease

Pomeroy At 124 600 sq It ale
carpet ceiling lan l'nodern $3501

monlh $150 deposll 740
2093

~49

MERCHANDISE

510

Ho~Jsehold

Goods

178 850 1 800 406 5126
Tailgate ,fits 1998 and newer
Ford F Senes Ptck ups Came ofl
of a t 999 F 350 Super Duty Ex
cellent Condition $150 00 Stl(
Pane l Door 24"x79 134 $15 00
Motorcycle Helmet Black full lace
style wllh clear lltp up shteld

ant Almost Everyone Approved
Call FIROCOM Advanced Tech
nolo gtes 1 800 6t7 3476 Ext

NET Software Tecnntcal Help
n olog~e s

COMPUTERS I Lease RENT TO
OWNI $79 EASY QUALIFYINGII

·o·

GY Wtll Ftnance Wtth
Down!
Past Credtt Problems No Problem
Call Toll Free 1 800-603 7537

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO

·o·

GY We Finance
Down! Past
Cr@d tl Problems OKII Even If
Turned Down Before!! Reestablish
Your Creditll 1 800-659 0359

WARMUP
92% Gas Furnaces Heat Pumps
Duct Systems Free Esttmates ff
You Don t Call Us We Botfl Lose!

74().446 6308 1 800 291 0098
Watertme Special

3/ 4 200 PSI

$21 95 Per 100 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
presston Fttltngs In Stock

For Sale Retired Longenberger
Wood Craft She lf &amp; PegBoard
Holds Plates New Condhton
Pa1d $90 will sell lor $60

(304)675·2892
Germania Beanie Baby Bear 1st
EdJtiOn With Spelltng Errors On

p~s

740 441- 1982

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Huge tnvento r y Low Prices on
Vtnyl SklrU ng KttS' Doors Wind
ows Anchors Water Heaters
Furnaces Plumbing and Electrl
cal Parts Bennetts Mobile Home

Supply (740) 446 9416
N tce used furntture and Ap
pltances Johnson s Used Furnl

88 DOdge Ram 5 speed runs

good gas sal'l!r $1295 OBO

CaiiM&amp;J Aulo
740 388 9693 or 74D-742-101t
93 Dodge lntreptd $3999
Rutland Car Sales
740 742 331 t or 740 742 1400
97 Camara au tomatic loaded
41 000 mites dark forest green
transferable warranty 740 669

IMP OUND Honda s Toyota s
Chevys Jeeps And Sport Utll t
ties Fee Requtred Call Now! 800

• K 7 4

Trucks for Sale

1948 Ford 2 Door Sedan $800

BARNEY

1988 S 10 truck 84 000 mtleS
exc cond auto ltlt atr 304 675 ~

MEDICINE TIME--

1989 Ford XLT wtth topper Must

See 304 895 3378

1984 Ford F 250 4 WO Truck

run~
good needs body work 304 675l
7223

1983 Pontiac J 2000 2idoors,
Runs Good Dependable New
Ttres Clean Inside &amp; Oull

S1 000 00 OBO Day(740) 446
2560 Eve ( 7~0) 256 1288

1988 Ford Aerostar XLT

IF

93 Ford F 150 XLT 4x4 302 5

Loaded 91 ooo Miles $2 450
OBO 74D-256-6169

contro l a1r condtlloned 8 bed.
104 000 miles can 740 992 4172
or740696 1116

1990 Goo Slorm GSI Slandard

740

Transmission AC 28 MPG Call
1990 Red Geo Storm Extra n ce
Glass

Great

Gas

Mileage

$2 500 304 773 5192

2 Male Beagles Hard Hunting 1
Is Lemon WMe 4 Year s Old 1
ls Trl Colored 3 Years Old $200
Each 740 441 1440

Nose Trl COklr 740 441 1440

256-6162
AKC Regtslered Cocker Spaniel
pupptes hrst shots and wormed
buff and buff &amp; whtte spots $200

74().992 7371
AKC Regtstered Dachshund pup
ptes vet checked tthots &amp;
wormed two males two females

$200 740 742 2694
AKC Registered Golden Retrlev
ers $150 each 5 Females Ca li
(740) 245 5098 Leave Message!
AKC Regtstered Toy Yorkshire
Terrter Blue &amp; Tan Nine Weeks
First Shots Mate $o400 740 388

a

AKC Shettle
Weeks Mate
$150 Registered Toy Ratt Terrier
$125 House Tramed 740 256
Blact&lt; tamale German Shepherd
Pupptes Fust shots &amp; wormed

$100 each Phone 1304)675·
7771
Golden Retriever Pupptes Girls

$250

B~s

570

1200 740 367 7708

Responstble party wanted to
make low monthly payments on
p~no

1992 Plymouth Acclatm Pnce

Reduced (304)675 4014
1993 Plymouth Ouster 6 cylinder
OHC standard e11.cellent condt
!ton looks great beautllul Interior

n1ce wheels $3500 740 949
2045 8\/0nk\gs
1994 Cadillac DeVtlle Oes1gned
Edlllon fully loaded exce ll ent

condlllon 88k pearlized pa101
740 992 7508 aftar 5 OOpm
1995 Buick Lesabre Custom 4

Doors Till Cruise Pwr, Locks Pwr
Windows Loaded $8 500 00
740 882 7512

I

Excellen1 Condlllon $2 000 740 '
367 0219 74().367 7272
1
I

1998 Honda 300 4x4 Red With '
Snow Plow &amp; Winch Many Other 1
Extrast740 446-8142
~ f

95 Honda 300 EX $2200 740 '

See locally Call 1 BO!J.288

199B Pontiac Trans Am 350 v 8
LS 1 Engme
automal/c transmiSSIOn Factory
chrome wheels T Tops Fully
loaded 500 Watt Monsoon Ster
eo system wtth 10 speakers 12
disc CD changer m trunk Cas·
sette player In dash Dark blue
metallic pamt Dark Gray leather
tnlerlor Will take payoff or rea

with

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
Farm Equipment

350 John Deere Dozer good condillOn $9 500 Dan Hershberger,

Jr 2265 Palnol Rd Palrlol, Oh
45658
Wanted to Buy

Wanted to Rent/Buy a Housel
Trailer In Hannan Trace School
District Excellent Reterenc111

(740) 446 4997

630

2.
3NT

25 Cotton

package

East

25 Holly
27 Area

Pass
All pass

By Phillip Alder
What dtd George Bernard Shaw
feel "stamps a man at once as an educated gentleman"?
South cruises mto three no-trump
West leads his fourth·htghest heart,
the SIX How should declarer plan the
rlav? Do vou agree wnh North's use
of Stayman lo try to fmd a 44 spade
fit?
Taking the second question first,
there are some experts who recommend never usmg Stayman with 4-33-3 d!Sirtbullon sun. if your count is
only JUSI enough for game - about
nme pomts -there IS a case for huntmg out the su11 fit If the opener has a
weak doubleton, four of a maJor
m1ght make when three no-trump
fa1ls Here, though, w1th 12 pomts, I
would JUSt JUmp to three no-trump
South played low from the dummy
at lnck one, East wmnmg w1th hiS
queen and retummg hts second heart
Then, when declarer Jook the diamond finesse, he lost five tncks four
hearts and one d1amond.
If the hearts are breaking 4-3, u
doesn 'I matter what South does But
what1f the su111s 5-2? Then East rates
to have queen- or king-dqubleton
And tf that is !he position, declarer
sutvtves by wmnmg the first Irick
With dummy's heart ace Then he
takes the diamond finesse. It 105es,
bul lhe heart sutl IS blocked
True, 1f West has king-queen-fifth
of hearts and the dtamond king, South
needs to play low from the dummy at
lnck one, but that IS against the odds
For one thmg, West might have led
the king, not low
Shaw was of the opinion thai
knowmg Greek marked a man - or
woman, I trust - as educated

29 South Afrlcon

Dutch

30 Seed coating
31 Gemini
launcher
abbr.)
37 t'a for the

!couree

38 Aviator
Earhart
40 Putoln a

eecret epot

41 WalChli
42 Pull
43 Tllerelont
115 Not wild
115 lllmlc
47 Sauy
49 Fiber knot

50 Compau pt.
52 Curvy leiiW

53 Neglll-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LuiB Campos
Gellbrily Ciphtr cryptcarams 11'1 cNittd from quotations by famous peq:lle past and presef1t
E.ch litter In lht cipher 11andllor another Toctay s Clue T equals P

'K

PEANUTS
RI6~T. C~UCK,
W~ERE'S TIIAT MES~iA6EI

lZGIIO

ux

OZGMG

I y J

D06 OF YOUR5?

ME55A6E5
EVER60T
DELIVERED.•

OZGMG

YDG

T E K F G

DY

X~YJEHD'L

L y

WY

VG

SJUEEGD
IIYVGML
PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'Hollywood where an amtcable d1vorca means that
each gels fifty percent of the publicity " - Lauren Bacall

·::~:t:~' S@~~~-ltr.~s·
U11o4
CLAY I 'OWIN

WOlD
IAMI

~r

Q Rearrange

lo1ters of 1ho
four scromblod
be·
low to form four simple words

I

-d•

UNREAl

I
I1-rl-r:l,-,-1oor---11
NA8 EG

~

.

r-1

~M~O~N-E-W--.,1 ":;~'
1•

I

I

I :_

lt,.wtll be mteresltng to hear
the teenagers oftoday tell thetr
r--=--:-:--:--,....-,,....,.,-..., children what they had to do
0 y L L 1 14
lwlthoutwhentheywere----•

•

•

~

~

_

•

~

•

Comptele lhe chuckle quoted
by fill•no •n the m•wno words
you d&amp;welop ftom step No 3 below

PIINT NUMalRED lETTERS IN
lHfSE SOUAUS

PARDON,MADEM015ELI..E ..I !lAVE BEEN
ORDERED TO FORT Zli'IDERNEUF ...
AUREVOIIUIAVE A NICE DA'&lt; ..

NONEOFM'&lt;

U X

LYOD

Z U F R

e
I1--TI-.,1-.,Ir--ri-TI-r"-1
8

1

ALL

8

UNSCRAMIII.E AIOVf lETlERS
TO GEl ANSWER

I' r I' 1· 1~ I
II I III

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Valtse - Wreck • Graft - Punty - PR/ VA TE

Buaget Pri ced Transmissions '
and Engines All Types Access
To Ove r 10 000 Transmiss ions

Don 1gel stung by h•gh priCes 1
Shop I~ clas11(ied SKtiOO

eve JolnlS 740 245 5677
H tgh Output 318 Motor wiAuto

Trans Can Hear Run $300
(304)675-4452

I FRIDAY

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Our new boss was very tactfu~ A coll!llgue remarked
that you had to adm1re h1m because he lells you your
faults tn PRIVATE

OCTOBER29I

Fee I 800 409 7511 Ext 9865

Fee

2000 Dodge
(304)675 1709

Neon

Payoll

FACTORY WHEELS Alloy S1eel

Slock Wheals lAnd Hub Caps)
Only Buy Sell 1 800 994 3357

SERVICES

'I

www ackerwheel com

HONDA S FROM $200 Pollee
Impounds All Makes And Mod

Olds Cas t2940S6 A 1993 Hon
Oa XR 250 t901122 &amp; A 199G
Pontiac Lemans 1327377 At

10 00 AM On 1116/99 AI The

810

Home
Improvements

I
..I

BASEM~NT

WATERPROOFING
Uncondtltonal lifetime guarantee
l ocal reference&amp; furnished Es

Saiunlay, Oct 30, 1999
Use lhe year ahead lo uiCrease
your tnvenlory of knowledge by
Sludy1ng enjoyable subJects that
could 1mprovc your marketability.
These mtereSis have a profitable des-,
tiny.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22)
What appeaB lo be ovctwhelmtng in
your tmagtnattOn today w1lltum out
to be paper dragons You 'II overoomc
these tonate uncerta1n1tes by mcet1ng
cl)allcnp head-on. Trying lo patch
up a broken romance? The AJiroOnph Ma!dm~'ker can help you
undeftlllnd what to do to make lhe
rclatiollllllp work. Mall $2.75 to
Matchmaker, r:/o thil new~r, P0
Box 1758, Mu1r1y Hill Station, New

labhshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs I740)
446 0870 1 BOO 287 0576 Rog·
ers Waterproofing

OVB Annex 143 Third Ave , Gat

620

North

1999 FORD EXPLORER $100 I
OBO Se12ed And Selling locally

Oh1o Valley Bank Will Offer For
Sale By Public Auction A t ~88

610

note

rea It
24 Poured

_

740 446 2030

790

West
Pass
Pass

Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

28 Pontoon Boat lar ge Pon 1
loons 90 HP Motor Full Canvas
Ftsh Fmder Tandem Axle Tratler

sooable offer (740)·446 4548

Responstble Party Wanted To
Make low Monthly Payments On
Ptano See Locally Cat! 1 BOO·
Organ

01 Sale CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK

760

PaymeniS 740 367-0219 740
367 7272

BIG NATE

The OVB Annex 143 Thtrd Ave -~
nue Gallipolis OH Sold To High 1
est Btdder "As Is Where Is"
Wttnout Expre ssed Or Implied
Warranty &amp; May Be Seen By,.,
Ca lling The Collect ton Dept A\. 1
740 441 · 10381 OVB Aeserves 1
The Rtght To Accept /Reject Any
&amp; All Btds &amp; Withdraw Items •
From Sale Prior To Sale Terms

1997 Ford EKpedltlon 37 000
Miles Mint Condttlon Take Over

FOR SALE CONSOLE PIANO

Gentus

Honda TRX300EX ATV 1207984 1
AI 10 00 AM On 10/30/99 A1

For Sale or Trade 35 HP Johnson 1
Boat Motor $350 00 or trade for i
15 to 20 HP motor ( 304) 675 ~
5131
1

Ols CALL NOWII 1·800 772
7470 Exl 6336

LO'fYrey

I

40 OOOMIIes Loaded (304)895
3129

1997 Chrysley Sebring Stiver

""

1992 Yamaha Tlmberwoll 250 t

750

11 Adam'a
grandson
12 Dlepatched
19 Bul"lght
cheef
21 Actreu Ole
22 Pullaaway
23 It could be

90nthe(runnlng from
the law)
10 Talk
Imperfectly

Ratty Worlds Most Complete In
ventory Of OEM Wheels Shtp
Nationwide 1 800-9WHEELS

Musical
lnstrumenls

FOR SALE CONSOLE PIANO

6218

IO-Z9

1987 Kawasaki KX80 New Jug ,
New Pt&amp;ton Great Condtton Runs 1
Great 740 367 0308
:

Ohio Valley Bank WIU Offer Fo~
Sate By Public Auction A 1997'

1992 Eagle Talon 93 000 M1 les
2 0 Engine 5 Speed Looks And
Runs Good 74D-256 1964

~§~

iw/&gt;..VEs

~ N..l ~Gl-\T, IJE.R.'( FU~t-1'{ I

247 7100

800 701 7912

!

"

Motorcycles

1992 Camara 25th Anmversary

Pets lor Sale

AVI&gt;ITfP.

!1

THE BORN LOSER

RS 91 000 miles very good con

dillon $4800 304 773 5305 afler
6pm

GfT

1

21 K20 TWO CAR GARAGE Full

560

viOV~

sp ps pO pw door locks crul"'
1990 Chrysler LeBaron 4 Doors,

ylf-

AGCOVNTING j m
FO~ TA6Tf,
i ~~
1)tt6 PLAGt
~~~

1996 Ford Explorer XLT 4 dr ~
4x4 V 6 auto both power seats •
leather moon roo! cld player al~
options 32 000 miles excellen(
condttton garage kept $18 900 '
304 773 5305 alter 6pm
:

125 Yr Manufacturers Wa rrantee
comple te WUh 10 overhead 1

RIO Grande OH Call 740 245
51 21

Tltf~

'•

1990 Chevrolet cargo van 305 :
auto 68 000 mt les on engtne•
good work van $2500 304 773 .1
5305 after 6pm
;

1984 Chevy Corvette $8 500

14().245 5659

"fauna"
5 Ur1111
6 TV~hoot
Tom7 AtHII
8 GuldO'I high

The knowledge
usually helps

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

1978 Old smobile Runs Good
New Brakes Good Body Good
tntenor (304 )675 6919

7653 $1600 Firm

1 He loved Lucy
2 verve
3 Tennll cella
4 Beginning of

Opening lead • 6

OPEN WIDE II

3986 aMer 5 pm

Low M1~age 74().446-3438

1962 Mustang Black On Blac~
35tW 4 Speed New Wheels &amp;
Ttres Richmond 4 11 s 740 992

South
I NT
2•

1.,....

DOWN

25 Groteeque
28 Prince of EvH
32 uneaalettcl
33 Royal
headdreea
34 Alloweto
borrow
35 Author Nln
38 Uee force
37 Kneecep
39 Embarraeeed
41 Tile ltdy

Vulnerable Ne1ther
Dealer: South

1986 For~ Truck F150 306 Cyl
Aulo Sell Cheap Call Aller
5PM (304)675 7235

•

poa~lvely

• A Q 10

engme 6000 mtles trailer tow re..
pam ted many new parts ver.Y.
good conditiOn 304 773 5962

74().256-1203

Speed $2 895 1990 Borella GT
$2 495 Cook Molors (740) 446
0103

Repatred New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock

Lose Up To 30 lbs In 30 Days
For $38 Ask About Free Sam

319 332312156

550

Block bnck sewer ptpes wlnd
ows lintels etc Claude Wmters

• 7 5 4

• J 84 3

9 6 5

1977 GMC Suburban 350 Jaspe~

1991 S 10 Durango AIC New
Paint $2 895 1992 Beretta 5

Ber&lt;h $2 500 (304)773-5062

Kenmore Wa sher &amp; Dryer $225
740 446-7556 Leave Message

•

POUND Honda s Toyota s Che
vys Jeeps &amp; SpOft UIII!Ues C~ll

• Q 10 8 3
• Q 9

SSOO CARS FROM $500111 Buy
Pollee Impounds &amp; Repos Fee
CAL L NOW For Llstmg st 1 800

Slalllon $700 740 367 7760

Grubbs Piano tunmg &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call tne

Call Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528

$100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE IM '

•K10764
t K 3 2

East

• J 82
t A Q 10 6

A C 5 Speed New nres Tmted

Sw1ng Tag $200 OBO 740 446
3407

AERATION MOTORS

West
• J 9

720

Zenith 25 " TV $50 Convecttortal
Oven $25 1941 Chevy Truck
Plus Ex tra Transmtsston &amp; Motor
$750 3 Year Old Reg1stered Arao

268 6218

JET

$5900 evening 740 949 1014

17 - and OUII
18 Forest denizen
20 Ore hours
21 Sufllr from the

Anawer to P~l Puall

41 Brought In, ae
Hlary
51 DeiiWIIre
lndlen
54 Conductor
Ormltldy
55 certain
chemlcll
compound
56 Ramptl
57 Expreu

hell

710 Autos lor Sale

Aller 5 ~M 740 446 4241

Building
Supplies

A 6 52

Now I BO!J. 730 7772 EXT 6336

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Oh o 1 BOO 537 9528

DIRECT TV

Truck Load'

97 Ford Asptre o4 ely auto runs
great excellent condtllon asklng 1

772 7470 EXT 7B32

5592 Before 5 00 Or 304 882

10 29 99

• A 53
• J 98
• K 7 2

2855

t981 CJ 7 360 V 8 hard top!
1ew !Ires $3800 or trade lor nice
1
truck 740.949 2958

6162

woods (740)·446 6566 By 1he

•

CARS $100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE

8371

F1re Wood' Cut Spltt Delivered
Ali Seasoned Oak other Hard

1111n

North

92 Butck Century Custom 4 dr
sedan1 very clean well &amp;qUipped ,
63 800 miles one owner $4500
call John Blaettnar 740 992

0904

New 400 /500 MHz Complete
Systems Internet Ready Software
&amp; Techntcal He lp BOO 300 2640
Affordable Technolog es
Sateltll e systems 2 month free
mov•e channe l best pri ces tn
town 888 265 2123

co

wheels $1300 74().992 8833

Two 15' Ktcker Free Air Subwool
ers Cousttc ~60 Power Logtc
Amp 150 Watts Caus tic 160
Amp 30 Watts Per Channel Cou
sttc XM 3 Crossover Mounting
Board And All W1res Intact En
we PaCkage $350 can 304 n3

AKC Shellte known as Mtn lature
Collte Female 3 months Looks
like LtHie Lasstet $15000 (740)

COMPUTERS $0 Down Low
Mon1hl~ Paymenls V2K Compll

Uu a III100ih
lallrlc
11 Biblical etrong

1973 Champion Motor Home
Runs good New Pal nl Must Sell!
$1500 DO OBO or Trade 740 .t
441 0584
f

4300

Syslem (740) 388 9082

1~

90 Ford Tnunderblrd 2 dr air.
Ptoneer
player rectory mao

$30 00 740 441H548

6 Month Old Pure Beagle Pups
Ready To Run $75 Each Copper

Complete PA System 5 000
Watt Generator 10ft Satelltte

Autos lor Sale

South

95 1wo door Grand Am, $4699

eCommerce Almost
~veryone Approved Low Monthly
Payments NO MONEY DOWN !II
FREE Color Prmter t 888 67 1

pano Dr 740 446·4525

Large private mobtle home lot at
Santa s Forest on RT 87 wlwater sewer $90 00 a man reler
ences 304 675 4138

100x175x20 Was $129 650 Now

Door $2 993 00 Can De li ver 1

1922

Space for Rent

$27 850 Now 119 990 80x135116
Was $79 850 Now $42 990

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO

Ftrewood For Sale (740) 256

Upsta irs Furn tshed 3 Rooms
Baln Clear.. No Pets! Aelerences
&amp; Deposit Requtred HO 446
15t 9

Sell 40•60x14 Was $17 500 Now
$10 971
5DxlOOx16
was

2 12 " Kt cker Impul ses In A
Sealed Box 2 1 0" Kenwoods In
Jensen 4x 100 Watt Amp $300
Or Trade 740 992 7177

No PelS (304)675 1386

capped EOH (304)675 6679

STEEL BUILDINGS New MuS!

2102 After 5 00

/25 Yr Manufacturers Warrantee
Comp lete Wtth 10 Overhead 1
Door $2 993 00 Can Deliver 1

TRANSPORTATION

Services Inc Toll Free 1 888

675 7915

load 740 949 0605

t Bedroom Secluded Btdwell and
Porter Area (740) 441 0720
14•70 3 bedroom total eleclrtc
$300 a month &amp; $150 depos1t no
pel s 740 742 2714

530

One Bedroom Apt tn Upper Part
of Town Very ntce and Pr vale

Tw in Towers now acceptmg ap
pllcahans for 1 SR HUO subsld
l2ed apt for elder ly and hand!

CONSULTATION Bonelli Team

13 AIIIIOit I
clclan
14 Friend of Jerry

'

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY

520

Ktng Cobra Gravtty Back Irons
Never been Htt $400 Call (7 40)
446 3755

mon old 700 BOO pounds Cum
mtngs Angus Farms South s1de

Wv 304 675 6248

25x30 45x90 " SOLO ~ 51x100
Mvst Mo~et Sell1ng At Invoice! 1
800 211 9593 X 31

Ftrewood for sale $25 a truck

(304 )675 4975
-----------1

Rettred Longaoerger Baskets For
Sale 1991 To Present 740 446

STEEL BUILDINGS 5 ONLYI 2

Sporting
Goods

ern Exchange Belle Plaine lA
Two Day Catalog &amp; Uncataloged
Sale October 30 &amp; 31 Horses
1 00 PM Saturday Noon SIXIday
Expe cting 500 Head Ca l l For
Catalogs /Con stgnmeniS 3 19
444 2320 Fax 319 444 2656
Quality Black Angus bulls 7 8

(304)675 2617

BOO 300 2640 Allordable Tech

Small 1BA Apt Pt Pleasant
Area $ 195 month Evenmgs

Premtum Ftrewood Oak &amp; Ash
$50 Loa d Full Stze Ptck Up De
llvereo 740 992-4568

836 4052

N•ce lurntshed upstatrs apartment
m ctty No Pets! References De
posit Required! (740) 446 2468 or

Oakwood Apartment 1 Bedroom
Apartment Stove 8. Aelrtgeretor
Close To Galltpohs &amp; Holzer No
Pets Call 740 446- 3929 Leave
Message

Spe ed 14 000 OB O 740 256
6573

Solid Oa ~ Bed room Dresser 10
Drawers with 3 Ptece Mtrror Ex
ceHent Condtl o n asktng $500

COMPUTERS! $79 $89 /Mo
EASY OUALIFYING I FAST
NEW 500 MHz Complete INTER

446 0008

Ptgs For Sa le $25 And Up 1992
Chev y Beretta 73 000 Mtles 5

Clat m Dented? We Spectalize In
Appeals And Hearmgs FREE

One bedroom furnished apart
ment call740 992 9191

Now Taktng Applicat tons- 35
Wesl 2 Bedroom Town house
Apartments
Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740

HORSE SALE Belle Plaine WeSI

le ctton Pnced To Se ll! ·come
And Browse Corner 01 Route 7
&amp; Addtson Ptke 740 367 0280

330

North Third Avenue Middleport
One bedroom furnlsned or unfur
msned apartment deposit and
references 740 992 0165

71 0

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1280

740 44&amp;-o300

(740) 446 2651

540

t1&amp;D s used Furniture Great Se

BEAUT IFUL APARTMENTS AT 7795
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Cast

Modern I Bedroom Apartment

E•t 1709

Balhs 1 BOO948 5678

Ato Grande Area Across From
Ca mpus 2 Bedrooms $300/Mo
Water Septtc Sewage Trash
Patd Deposit Requtred 1 886
840 0521

2 Bedrooms 36 Cht thcothe Rd

men1 Dela1ls Call BOO 319 3323
2

$275/Mo Ideal For Sentor Per
sons Nice" 740 446 9539

3 Bedroom Apartment In GaUtpo
Its A/C Laundry Room Depostt

Mo 740 446 1615 740 446
1243

1 868 818 01 28

MOBILE HOME IN GALL!fOL!S

RENTALS

No PelS 1304)882 2099(alter
7PM)

1 998 Clayton 3 Bedroom

(740) 245 9667

Pels (304)773 5352/(304)882
2827

304-736 7295

BANK REPO

Doublewlde 3 Bedrooms 2 baths
$4 00 00 Month Plus Deposttl

2BA Apt m Mason Stove/Relrtg
erat or/Uttltll es furntstled A C
laund ry Room Cetltng Fans
Garbage Dtsposal Very Ntce No

3BA 2219 ltncoln Avenue PI
PI $350 month $350 DepOSit

All Lot Models lor Sale Year tn
Close Out At Try State It 1 Vo
lume Dealer No Payments for '90
days! Come Early for Best Setae

304 682 2219

We Buy land 30 500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1 BOO 213 836 5
Antnony Land Co

2 Mutt isectlon Aep o 1 On Lot
Other Is Not Ftnanclng Available

16x32 lnground Pool 2 Storage
Bo~no•

Lots &amp; Acreage

688 840-{)521

liOnS 1 (888) 736-3332
Thla newspaper will not

For Sale Establis hed Medtcal Bill
tng Busmess complete package
several clients 740 992 764t

640 0521

740 949 2771

2 br mob1le home $300 a man
close t o New Haven grade
schoo l tn Herdmans tratler park

949 2093

$325 /Mo $175 Depostl Rater
ences No Pets 740 256--6702

sq ft
lor less than $400mo
FREE Oeltvery &amp; set t 800 948

Wash ers dr yers relrtgerat ors
range s Skagg s Appli ances 76
Vtne S1reet Call 740 446 7398

(304)675 41 23

367-D2 19 740 367 7272

APP~IANCES

(740) 446 1409

1ng m Henderson for ren t lease
or sale Call So nny Re y nol ds
Bar Bus mess Galltpoh s Area
Wtlh 2 30 Liquor l tcen se 740

US~O

GOOD

Furntshed two bed room ale no
pet s R1ver Park Pomeroy $300
pe r month 515 0 depos it 740

5 bedrooms 2 baths over 2 000

New Heal Pump $14 000 740
388 8335

makes,,,.

3 000 Sq Ft Commercial Butld

2 Bedroom s Galttpolls Area

1988 Redman Danvtlle 14x70
Also Has Expando Very Nice

lhe Federal F81r HousnoAct
oiUMIIwhlch

Business and
Buildings

"'LOOKI" '

948 5678

All real estate advertlstng trt
thb; newspaper II SUbject tO

340

For Sa le Reco ndi tiOned was h
ers dr ye rs a nd relngerator s
Th omp so n s Appltance 3407
Jackson Avenue (304 )675 7388

Furnace Very Ntce t In Galhpolts

Barn County Water 3 Bedroom
House 740 388-8504

lecl10n 1 (888) 736

t974 Shultz 12x60 new carpet
Iron! kttchen must be moved
$3 70 0 ca ll between Sam lpm

Mount s Tree Servtce "The Tree
Prolesstonal s" B uc~e t Truck
Servtce Top Tri m Re moval
Stump GnmHng Free Estimates
Fully Insured Wor ks Ca mp Btd
well OH Call And Save 1 BOO
838 9568 740 388 9648 Owne r
Rick Mount

26 Acre s MIL W th 6 Stall Horse

(740) 446-2419 (740) 446 0720

800-888 6450

Professional
Services

Farms lor Sale

2 Bedroom House 3 Mtles Down
Route 7 Overbrook A1ver $3501

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1411.70 2 3 bedrooms one and
hall bath new carpet and ramo
delmg must be moved askmg

230

330

Two story vmyl stdmg 2 3 bed
rooms bath large kttchen/dtnmg
new ga s furnace 8735 Soi.Jth
Second Mtddleport $34 000 call
BOO 388 8194

vestor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Fm anced Mo rtgage
Real Estate Contract Insurance
Annuity Htghest Prtces Free
Quotes Why Watt? Call Rtch 1

WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS
MORTGAGES
DEEDS OF
TRUST NATIONWIDE CALL
BEN OWENS (TOLL FREE l 1
888 399-1965

7295

350

COUNTRY HOME

TV' Er as e Bad Cred tt Lega lly
Free Info 888 659-2560

GET YOUR CASH NOW' OldeSI

---

Household
Goods

1 flo*lponH
7 PNtty women

44R-.
115 'IYP- or dlnCll

hpolls OH Sold To HlgheSI Bid
der "As Is Where Is" Wllhout
Expressed Or Implied Warranty
&amp; May Be Seen By Calling The
Collection Dept At 740·441 - 1038

OVB Reserves The Algh1 To Ac
cap! tAe)eCI Any &amp; All Bias &amp;
Withdraw Items From Sale Prtor
To Sale Terms Of Sale CASH

DR CERTIFIED CHECK
1988 BulcM Par~ Avenue New
+ Plnkln Power Sloer
lng Pump Battery Alternator

PaJnl Rack

Morel $3 995 Neg 740
0519 740-446-3407

~46

1986 Monte Carlo LuK.ury Sport
40 OOOMites Loaded Nice Clean

Car $2 500 080 1304)875-

Livestock

Baby Bull Calves No Sunday
Calls Please 740 388 8524

4452 1989 Pontlao Grand Pr~x
Red SunRoof, Air MagWheets,

loaded $2 500 (304)675·4452
t989 Corsica 4 dr lots ot new

Buck stove In sert 36 " opentng

lure (740) 446 1004 (740) 448

Club Calves for 4H and FFA

paris $1200 OBQ or will lrade for

$400 00 304 675-3119

4039 any tme Out Bulavtlle Pike

(740) 446-6566

truck of equal value 304 937

3348

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

French Clly Maylag 740 446
7795
C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence Palntmg vinyl sldlniJ ,
carpentry doors windows baths
mobHe home repair and more For
lree esttmate call Chet 740 992

6323

Livingston's Basement Water
Proofing all basement repairs
done tree estimates, lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job experl·

once (304)895-3887

York, t1Y 10156

840

SAOmARIUS (Nov, 23-Dcc.
21 ). ShOuld a ba.•ltlna iiiCident arise
today, you miiJht be lempted to meet
pettiness w1th pelhness lJowever,
much to your crcdil, you 'II rile aboVe
ttllld prevatl
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19)
Any I~UIItes 1n a~nngements you

Electrical and
Refrigeration

;;::::;:;::::;::-~_;::;.,::.:;_...:.

'

Residential or commercial wiring-new ser~ica or re~lrs Master ll- :
cansed electrician Ridenour

Eleclrlcal WV000306 30H7S· •
1786
'

'

need lo make wilh others today could
set the 11118" for future problems II
can be easily defused by estabhsh1ng
fatmC!IS lhrough selhng a fatr exam·
pic. '
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Even if a friend IS getting the better
end of a bargain today, put fnendslup
abl&gt;ve your matc&lt;iallatic concerns.
No need to worry, all wtll balance out
in the long run.
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) If
you know tn your heart lhal ypu arc
extend•ng your best effort today.
don't be fretful over whaluaocialcs
may or may 1IOf tllink. Peifom\lliCC.
not appearances· Is what ...lly

COQrita.

I

who

ship.

.o ,.

\t

I

l'(j

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You
mt""t DOt be ,lblc to 110 in one fell
swoop, but something thai has been
disturbing you can be changed for lhc
better today by takmg lhtnp one step
at a time.

or

fmgcr pomtmg

never

resolves anylhtng. so should a vtola·
lion

J

I

ARIES (March ~1-~119) the
WIJ to del'uJe I •wify lttii&amp;Ontlll
£rica to put ' ,.lu
ia front of
friencll, tqday; is to 11011 hil ot her
oommeMa With Indifference, like
~tinS I pop aun ila battle-

doWn

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Crthcism

of

a fncnd rcqu1re dtscusston

loday, say whal needs satd w11h len·
dcrncss and un!kralandtng
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be
on guard today so lhat you're nol
laken advantage of by some
unscrupulous characler who crosses
your palh Unfortunalely, nol every·
one IS as honest as youLEO (July 23-Aug 22) One of
y~r grcalesl assets loday ts ycur
r aluhty to awaken a sptnl of ooopera·
lion in othcn. You have always
known lhat•enthUSIISm IS What propels helpfulness.
VJROO (Au&amp;. 23·Sept 22) When
you are metivated by unselfish
IICIIOIIS today, Slluatlons wdl work
out far beiter lhan you or anyone else
• lltlic!pates. Be 1 g1ver, 001 a taker al
th15luile.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) A pal
who lacks your lalenl for filltng '"
With the ease you do tn unfamtltar
groups and surroundmp may be
envtous of you today Do whal you
can to tnclude h1m or her anlo the
aci1V11y

·.
II

~~

I
-I

•

�/

.Page 18 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•.

Friday, October 29, 1999

Taking advantage of war111
to prepare hollies and cars for
winter's woes

GAHS. MEIGS,

POINT AND WAHAMA
POSI' VICTORIES
S4!e Sports Bl - 88

French Art Colony
to open new stain
glass exhibit
SeeC3

feature C·1

INDIVIDUAL ENDORSEMENTS

Medkol Claim ervice

B111keye Faim Market

Rutlancl Department Store

Rutland rre Deportment
lAdies Auxiliary

Xi Gamtno Epsilon

Salim Center P.T.O
Hllllilaavdle-S!ipio P.T.O.
sso~ Inc.
llarrisonviHe-sqHo P.T.O
DMI, Bethany, and Meredith Gaul
Marma Radabaugh
~yTriplen
Wendy Holor

Tany IIIII Down Kope
Dennis l. Eighinger
Rolpllll. Werry
Jo11111 and Bediy Coner~l
On4y Jolmton
·
Ricky D. Edward
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Willford
lulland Fire i)epartmen
Meigs Middle sd.ool

Rutland B'm!lntary P.T.O

Phillip Sporn AlP ·

Donation-Booth at Stemwheel Fes1ivol
Randall Carpenter
Wiliam and lwila Buckle
Bradbury Elementary P.lO
Mish A. Muir/Bowling Green Equipment Co.,
loc
Roger &amp;Sllzit Ahban
LOAPSI Loml17-Meigs l.otal S!hool District
Howard on4 Moria BiKhlield
Gory Walker, Milk ond Sephonie Ash
Judy on dedik Crooks
Jim Huff
Peoples Ballking and Trust Company
Salisbury P.T.O

William and Twilo Budcley
Dennis llkhingel
Cindy Johnston
lusty loolmoA ·

E.M. P e~ nc.
Meigs L ITaad~e~· Association
hio V y Bonk
~ an Soles
.
Middleport Fire Department
Pomeroy P.T.O.
G&amp;MFuel Company, Inc.
Geiger Brothers
Young's Carpenter Servic e
lornJe~ Bonk
Unle, Sheets &amp;Warner
Poul and Lourie Reed
Chris Tenaglia
Anorney-at·Law
Home Notional Bonk
Tom and Kathy Reed
Cub xout Pock 11249
Jeffe~ lxcovoting
Wyont Exploration
Ienton ond Jeanie Taylor
Corson Crow
Don om Mary Poole
Bailey Lumber
King ACE Hordviare
Kathy Sargent
Janel Wiliomson
lester Manuel
John and Morga Bloke
Timothy Lawson
Mike Gerlach
MorkSwon
Ce~o McCoy
Suzanne Bentz
Tim Simpson
lide's Sport's Shop
Michael and Jennifer Burtrum
John KroWI!Zyn
Noncy Morrissey

lolph Well'(
Sundy Walli•
Gory Woll!er
Judy and Eddie Craols

==.

Denise Wiliams
Christi Lisle
Shannon Kom
lei~ Bannen
Joe lailey

\

lkh Ash
Tim Dunn
V'rdrt Jl Holey

Sheila Hllris

lrenda Erwin
Cathy Edwlrds
Judith t GannaWay
Julio Vaughan
Shirley Von Meter
lito Jones
Metro Snith l'etenon
ftnton 01111 Jeannie mylar
G!ar:e Chen

Porn Durst
Karla Brawn
Dormo M. Welf
lon Drex!.
Donna Vance

luth P101S1111
loy Jahnsan
6r111 MtColl
Pamela A. Yogt
T101 Curfrnln
Christioe lla,Hnor

Susan Mens·
Jeff Woylond

BUSINESS ENDORSEMENTS
Sligar Run Flour Milk
Buckeye Farm Market
Rutland Twe Sales
Rutland Departn~ent Store
Birchfield FmeroiiHome
SSOI, Inc.
Bawling Green Equipment Co. Inc.
PIOI!Im Bonling &amp;Trust Company
Medical Oaims Servke
S.E.M. Parlnefl, Inc.
Sparkle Supply Company
ollio Volley Bonk •
LOCKER 219
Don's
Appalachian Woodworks
Alqui!itions
PIMII's Super Volu
Sweet Greetings Boke Shop
Ohio River &amp;e. Company
W'rcherBII9lfl
The Fabic 5llop
fd Street Backs
flmi~ Dollar
Aardvark Suund &amp; Video
Swisher &amp; Lohle Phormocy
King ACE Hardware
S.E.M. I'ultnerl, lnt
Always &amp; Forever
Wilon's Army Surplus
Downing-Childs-Mullwen &amp;Musser
Jeff Worner Insurance
ReVIIYiew Mot~
Your Neighborhood Lender
Don Tote Mot~
Ashleys Crafts and Stuff
Sian Powell, Anorney-at-Low

Brogan-Warner Insurance Services Inc.
G&amp;L Contacting
Gty National Bonk
Ed's Greenhouse
Sign Works
Meigs Metropolitan Housing Authority
Jeften lx1ovoting
Wyant Explarotion
Horne Notional Bonk
little, Sheets &amp;Worner
Volley Lurmer &amp;Su~ Carp.
Young's Carpenter Servke
Geiger Brothe~
Hurmll Storage
Hortwell House
Leo's Cruise &amp;Travel
MGM 'Drive Right'
O'lleM Lumber Company
Pomeroy And Gallipolis

Carol S. Evans

Sherry Eagle
Don and Mary Poole
Mr. ond Mrs. Roy Wil~ord
Tony and Dawn Kopec
londal1 Carpenter
lager and Susie Abbon
Jenrw Dazd
Max Geary
Dennis Smith

"'!,
\•'

~

if. ~.

\

Matthew Sellers

Sherry~
"'"'"
limes
JoMn £ads

.:~;.··

-:-•._,_,

•t

.'*

Gatrell Constru!lion
Doiry Volley
Lombe!llnsuran11
Mike's Plumbing &amp; Heating
Triplen Engineering
Manley U·Houl Rental
Vaughan Fami~, Ill&lt;.
Dairy Queen Brazier of Middleport
Motor Parts Co.
Pomeroy Auto Parts
Court Street Grill
Haword's Tri-Caunty Sontlotion
(&amp;A Auto
Rbchies Auto Sales
Zide's Sport Shop
AB (uHing Cellar

~otih!nailabaugh

Penny Ramsburg
Missy Howard
Gory Wolk•
OiH Kennedy
John Krowsayn
Dorid Kuarno
Harold Graham
Lynn Bookman
Paulo Roush
Eva Howord
Usa l Averion
Mkhelle frazier
Rita Simmons
. Sundy Napper
Sum Monk
Mono frerker
Jody and Wess Howard
Krkta Johnson
Connan Manuel
Jeremy S. Grimm
Debbie Davis
Betty Ann Wolle
Murcia Hendrich
John 0. Sharp
Sondra K. Butcher
Ron Hill
Jesse Vod
Mary Boles
Cher~ Halley
Julie Randolph
Juhe Hubbard
Yvonne Young
Jo Dunn
Bob and Potty Borton
Howord and Mllie Birchfield
Ricky D. EdWards
Milh A. Mur
Robert J. McClure
Teritio L CD!Iar
JiU Dum
fredrick Smith
Marjorie Walburn
Jesse Howard
Rno Smith

Apri Iarke

Ray_lmnbert
Debbie Gerlach

ltnnelt loust.
S.A. Winans
DonnyC!ow

James D. Story
Sllson Baker
Narvv Hill

Brian Coade
Darrell W. Blwll
Terri Smith - ·

CarolS. Brewer

t.·-·~rd

Debra Amon

.kme l W'M ·
John F. Musst~
Cnon Crow
Murty Boyd

Gloria Compston
Vanessa Wolfe

P1119Y A. Steut •
Slott Pvwell
'Mildrell Ai·Duncon
Steve W'!liems

li1do Gilkey

David Bayd
Gearae Stewart
L Mid!oel Simmons

Michael t Womer

S!aH A. Millie

Carol Crow
Jerry l Bibbee
fred onrl Pauline Hoffmon
Donold Homing
John M. Dovk
Debra o•.n:-on
Douglas"i~e

Tom aQd Jllhy Reed
lernard·hltz

Ouk Tenoglio
Steve Story
Ed Dont

Eugene Triplett
lriol J.IIDward

o.bro tt-d

Jenrilw'l:. Sheets
Paul ond&lt;laurit Reed
John l.entts, Meigs County Prosecuting Anl!lney
Donna Carr
Janet Wiliainson
Lester Manuel
~~
- · Swarin

Brodln.y aementory Xhool Stoff
Dr. Barry Dorsey, President University of Rio Grande
Harrisonville Elementary S!hool Stoff
Rod! Springs United Methodkt Women
Meigs Middle xhool Stoff
Meigs County Chamber ~1 Commerce
Middleport Elementary xhool Stoff
Pomeroy Mmhonts Association
Pomeroy Elementary Xhool Staff
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
Rutland Elementary S!hool Stoff .
Pomeroy Merchants Association
Salim c.nter Elementary S&lt;hool Stoff
Meigs County Community
Sohllury Elementary Sdlool Stoff
Improvement Corporation
Bradbury P.T.D.
Cub xout Putk #249
Horrisonvi11e P.T.O.
· Rutland Friend~ Gordenen Garden Oub
'-rO,yP.T.O.
Forni~ orul Chi~ren fi:s1 Committlti
Rudond P.T.O.
Sahbury P.T.O.
Salim Center P.T.O.
Team 4, Meigs Middle S1hool
Midlleport Fire Department
Rutlanil Firellpolment
lutlond Fire Deportment Ladies Auxiliary
Xi Gammo Epsi~
Xl Gomrno Mu
Pr«eptor Beta Beta
Alpha Epsion Chaper of Alpha
Ddaloppo
Ollio leta Pi
.
Meigs County Dernouatk lxedutive
Cornmitlile
Rutland Township Trustees Joe Bolin,
Charles lornen, and Steve Lambe!l
Rutland Villoae Cou111il
WME l.o!ol4 .
OAPSE l.o!ol17-Meigs L01ol S!hool District
Meigs Local Teochers' Association

Wendy Halar
Dorid, Bethany &amp;Meredith Goul
John Lisle
Bed! Tritllen
Ke:la ~Iimas
Becky Coti•ill
Milk and Stephanie Ash
James Huff

SheiJi R.l.ittle

SW.Rnd

· ORGANIZATION ENDORSEMENTS

Suztrn~dentz

Ron Callmmato

Dovt ll4rris
Kristl Rllflt

Iindo R.Worner

Kathy Sa!gent
B~l Williamson
John and Marge Bloke
MikeGerloch
Celia McCoy
Tim Simpson
Slle Cammoroto
Nancy Smith

Corbet Cleek

Paige CW

Gret!hel1 Andmon

John H.~
Apil Smith

Todd Smith
Lourie Reed
Johll.ltiod
Norman I. Humphreys

Paul Reed
Williams A. Hohnson
S!on Walton
Wayne Davis

unba
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

tmes

Township, village races appear on Meigs ballots
By BRIAN J. REED
Times-sentinel Staff
POMEROY- Voters in Tuesday's general election will choose
township trustees and clerks,
mayors and village council members, and school board members,
and will also determine the fate of
a county-wide levy proposal and
several local levy issues. ·
Each precinct's ballot is different, although every voter will
have the opportunity to decide the
fate of a proposed 1.5-mill contin. uing levy for the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities.
That levy, which would generate an estimated $380,000 per
year for the benefit of the Carleton School and Meigs Industries, would be used for operating
eKpenses, as well as a two-phase
capital improvements program at
!he board's facilities in Syracuse.
Voters in the Meigs Local
School District will decide a 23year, 3.95-mill school levy and
bond issue. If passed, the .funds
generated from the levy will be
used as the local match for a
$32.5 million building program,
which would see the construction

ELECTION PREPARATIONS - Rita Smith, Barbara Smith
and Jane Frymyer of the Melga County Board of Election• are
pictured for the final teating of tabulation·equipment, In prapa·
ration for Tuesday' a general elactlon.

of two new elementary school
buildings, a middle school building, and renovations to the existing Meigs High School at Rock
Springs.

Local funds would be com·
bined with money from the Ohio
continued on page A 2....

911. renewal, board race top
. Gallia election
By KEVIN KELLY
and STEPHANIE SAYRE
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Interest in
Tuesday's off-year election in Galli a County will be focused on the
outcome of a request to renew the
funding mechanism for the county's 911 system and a six-way race
for three seatS on the Gallipolis
City Board of Education.
All 36 precincts in Gallia will
open at 6:30a.m. and close at 7:30
p.m., the Gailia County Board of
Elections noted.
The board announced that the
voting location for two precincts
has changed. Huntington Township and Huntington Precinct will
vote Tuesday at the Fellowship
Chapel, 67 Keystone Road, Vinton.
Previously, Huntington Township Precinct voted at the Huntington Grange Hall on Oay Street in
Vinton, white Huntington Precinct
was housed on election day at the
Vinton Village Hall. Elections
Director Jeff Halley cited insuffi·
cient parking, lack of telephone
service and inadequate handicapped accessibility at both sites as
the reas&lt;&gt;n for the move.
The change in location, Halley

________ ________ _______________________
•

..._

·'

explained, is expected to alleviate
those problems.
Only two ballot items will be
voted on lhroughout the county on
Tuesday. A renewal of a 1/4 of I
percent increase in the county sales
tax to continue operational funding
for the county's 911 emergency
communications system' is sought
for another five years.
Voters first approved the
increase in 1994 for five years to
build, equip and operate 911,
which was launched in December
1997.
Additionally, William S. Med·
ley, judge of the Gallipolis Municipal Court, will be seeking a second siK-year term on .the bench .
Medley,. a Republican, has no
opposition on Tuesday's ballot.
In the Gallipolis City School
District, six candidaies are vying
for three seats on tre board of education. 'Incumbent Dannie Greene
is seeking another four-year term,
while D.avld Walker; who was
appointed to fill an unexpired term,
is running for a full term on the
board.
.
·Also in the runnins are Randall
Breech, Nancy A. Mullins, Roberrt
0. Sch!lloli Jr. -and ..Dougl.as J.
WetherhoiL
1

Five candidates are seeking two
seats on the Gallia County Local
Board of Education. Running are
incymbents Joe A. Burris and John
P. Davis II, and opposing them arc
Marlin Harrington,
Chester
Michael Polcyn and Jon P. Thompson.
.
Gallia County residents seeking
four seats on the Governing Board
of the Gallia·Vinton Educational
Service Center include Joan Cornelius, Roberta Duncan, John Fellure, Terry Halley, Penny Justice
and Stephen Saunders.
In Gallipolis, three nonpartisan
candidates are in contention for
lwo open seats on the Gallipolis
City Commission - John R.
Champer, J, .G,ary_Fenderbosch llfl~.
Richard A. Moore. '
.. .,, ·
Springfield Township voters
will decide a resolution for__ ill!
additional 3 mills for fire protec·
'tion.
In Galli a County's villages,
there are three contested races for
mayor, including . incumbent Ted·
Perroud and James McCormick in
Centerville; Samp E. Johnson and
Jack Rankin, trown City; and
incumbent
continued on ptge A 2

LocaLBaptists assi$f·tn 'hufric8ne !~~:·I ·
By Jl~ FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
POMEROY - Local members
of the Ohio Southeast Disaster
Relief Unit of the Southern Baptist
Convention participated relief
efforts following Hurricane Floyd
which struck along the eastern
coast of the United States in September.
·
· Hershel "Sonny" McClure,
.Pomeroy, a team leader for the
Ohio Southeast Disaster kelief Unit
of the Southern Baptist Convention, had a team located at
Somerville, N.J. for several days
preparing meals for flood victims
affected by the aftermath of Hurricane Floyd.
The group consisted of volunteers who have been trained
through a Southern Baptist program
conducted in Southern Baptist
churches throughout the state, with
training required to be updated
every two years.
Members of the initial response
team are located in Groveport and
those members alerting members
LOCAL REUEF WORKERS - Local membera of the Ohio Southeast Dl81ater Relief Unit of the
from six regional areas as they are Southern Baptiat Convention who traveled to New Jareay to help victima of Hurricane Floyd were, from
needed. McClure, a member of the ·left: Hank Hatton, Good Newa Baptlat Church, Gallipolis; Bob Milia, Hope Baptlat Church, Middleport;
state steer·ing committee, reported Kenneth Imboden, Hope B"ptiat Church; Jack Sim1111, Good News Baptist Church; Sonny McClure,
that eight radio operators and tem- Faith Bllptiat Church, Wellston.
porary child care units are provided Hank Hatten, Gallipolis; Tommy assisted in the aftermath of noods Hurricane Andrew, prepared II ,000
as needed.
Mills, Steubenville; Charles New- at Shadyside, Portsmout, Fargo, meals in one day and performed
The volunteer ministry included berger of Lowell; Don Lynn of Bar· N.D., Hurricane Hugo in South other work as needed.
the following rrien who accompa- nesville; Lee Hili from Malta; Den- Carolina, Hurricane Andrew in
During their four-day stay in
nied the southeast unit: Hershel nis Walburn, Beverly, formerly of Florida, Hurricane Bob in New Somersville the team prepared
McClure, Lee Lefebre and Bob Middleport;
and
Lawrence England and nooding around Cam- approximately 12,000 meals, he
Mills, all of Pomeroy; Kenny Imbo- Buchanan, Steubenville. _
said.
bridge.
den, Middleport; Jack Simms and
Mcaure said the· group, after
McClure said the ministry has

Remember...
change your clocks
back one hour

;

Vol. 34, No. 37

Voters go to polls on Tuesday in Gallia, Meigs counties

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Aaeoclated Preas Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) --:- Ohio
lawmakers are pressing the Clinton
administration · to do more for

I

tntint

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • October 31, 1999

Government ready_to begin probe of Piketon Plant

\.

........,..

Hi: 70s Low: 40s
Details on !*ge A2

DONATIONS
Undo Lear

Suaar Run Floor Milh
loli and htly Barton
Rulb!d Tn Sales

unn'IJ

employees of lhe southern Ohio their experiences with the state's
Portsmouth Ga'seous Diffusion workers compensation system.
Plant.
Strickland said he urged White
Rep. Ted Strickland, a Democrat House budget director Jack Lew to
whose district includes the plant in allow Ohio workers to benefit from
~iketon, Ohio, met Friday with whatever compensation program
Clinton's top budget and disc.ussed the government sets up for those
a compensation pian for .(&gt;hio's exposed to plutonium contamina·
plutonium-exposed workers!;l
tion.
And Sen. Mike DeWi~e. RThe congressman said afterward
Ohio, wrote Energy Secreta~y Bill that he was infuriated by Lew's
Richardson on Friday, compl11ining refusal to make such a promise,
that documents aboui •::~ the and by the explanation that iiabili•
Portsmouth Gaseous Diff~sion ty concerns were behind th·e hesi Piant.were •rchived at a siste~jllant . lance.
in Tennessee rather than in Pif~ton, .
"I am very, very disturbCd about
where the workers could more eas· their inability or unwillingness to
ily view them.
make a· commitment ~bout coverStrickland, DeWine, and Sen. ing ·Our workers," Strickland said.
George Voinovich, R-Ohi&lt;,&gt;, were to
The DOE has announced its
join the worker~ today at a m~\ing inieiltion to compensate workers
called by Dr. David Michaels, exposed to plutonium at the Paducassistant secretary of energy for ah Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Kensafety; ~eaith and environment.
lucky, but deliberately declared it
·Michaels said his goal was to to be a pilot program so that•simi· '
gather informacion about . the iarly exposed wofkers from Pikeemployees' health problems and ton or Oak Riclge, Tenn., could not

claim eligibility.
Sen. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn.,
said Friday that the Senate Com·
mittee on Governmental Affairs
will investigat~ how the DOE handled health and safety issues at
Pikelon and Oak Ridge.
"I believe the committee has
responsibility to look at what mistakes were made and what needs to
be done to rectify them," said
Thompson, .the comm)ttee chair·
man.

DeWine's letter about access to
the official documentalion of what
happened at Piketon came as 'The
Columbus Dispatch published
information it found during a
month-long examination of reports
on file ac Oak Ridge, Piketon and
in Washington. ·
The documents show that crucial workplace-safety information
was withheld from employees by
plant managers, The Dispatch
reported.

JAYNE BURGER

Local teacher presents ,
at national conference .
GALLIPOLIS- Jayne Burger, sixth grade teacher at Washington Elementary School, was one of more than 400 National Board certified teach- .
ers honored by President Clinton on Oct. 22.
•
.
National Board Certified Teachers gathered in Washington, D.C., for
their third annual meeting, "Teaching America about Accomplished Teaching,"Oct. 21-24. _
Clinton addressed these teachers, commending them on their achiel(ement, expressing his continued support for the system of National Board
certification, inspiring them to expand the conversation on accomplished
teaching, and thanking them for their dedication to improved student learning.While in Washongton,
.
. I Bo ard cerll'fioe d teac hers aIso vasate
. . d thear
.
Natoona
individual members of Congress and att~~ded a reception on Capitol Hill
sponsored by Ohio Sens. George Voinovi~ and Mike De Wine.
During their meetings, they focused on ~ubjects ranging from best classroom practices, current research, mentoring new teachers, and the many
leadership roles National Board certified teachers can, and do, assume in
advancing improved teaching and student learning. Additional participants
and speakers included SChOOl administrators, representatives of higher education, researchers and other education leaders.
Mrs. Burger served as a presenter at the conference, conducting a teacher,
session entitled, "Effective Language Arts Practices," to a group of col-•
leagues from across the nation. During her presentation, she difUSsed sue- ~.,
cessful classroom practices and shared several examples of tier studenll'
work. She is one of 1,835 National Qoard certified teachers in tl)e counl?•
having demonstrated that she meets the highest standards set by ·the teacHing professiqn.
_
',
•
National Board certification is granted by the National Board for Profeasional Teaching Standards, a nonprofit and nonpartisan organization crclicd
_in 1987. The organization's mission is to establish high and rigorous
dards' for what ace9mpiished teachers should know and be able to do, to
develop and operate a national voluntary system to assess and certify tllldl'. '
ers who meet those standards, lind to advl\nc~ related education ·rcforml fOr ·
the purpose of improving student learning in American schools.

'•

. .·
..

stan· - , ·
•'

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