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Pomeroy • Mid~leport, Ohro

Search for clues 'in jet crash focuses
By GLEN JOHNSON
· A'*oc!Med Pre'* Writer
.

WASH~NGTON - With the flight data recorder from EgyptAir Right
990 s~wmg.thmgs were normal until the autopilot mysteriously disconnected, tnvesttgators looking mto the Oct. 31 crash say it is all the more important that they recover the plane's cockpit voice recorder.
The search fonhat second " black box" continued early today amid rubble ptled 6 feet htgh, some 250 feet deep in the Atlantic Ocean off Rhode
Island. The recorder may not only reveal what the pilots were saying to each
other, but what .other notscs or alarms were audible in the cockpit.
In Boemg anplanes, for example, an· alal'm sounds if the autopilot disconnect button isn't .pressed twice in a row -a way to prevent the pilots
from mtssmg an acctdental disengagement.
" We await information off the cockpit voice recorder, when it is recovered, that can help us put this information in context," Jim Hall, chairman
of the National Transponation Safety Board, said Wednesday as he revealed
the first bits of information from the plane 's flight data r:ecorder.
Hall satd the New York-to-Cairo flight had been cruising normally at
33,000 feet when the autopilot disconnected. That is unusual, because the
plane was just beginning its hours long cruise across the Atlantic Ocean. Hall
refused to say if the autopilot disconnected manually or automatically.
About etght seconds later, the flight "begins what appears to be a controlled descent" from 33,000 feet to about 19,000 feet, Hall said.
The recorder stopped shortly afterward, and the final five to I 0 second;

Gore calls
for U.S. to
reassert
leadership
DES MOINES , Iowa (AP) Warning about isolationist trends
sweeping through Congress, Vice
President AI Gore is using a Veterans' Day speech to argue that the
United States must reassen its role
as an international leader.
Gore also was calling for
increased defense spending while
using the iss.ue to sharpen differences with Bill Bradley. his rival
for the Democratic presidential
nomination. But he said "the
change we need requires more ·
than just strong defense."
" It also requires American
engagement with the world, and it
requires American leadership,"
Gore said in remarks prepared for
delivery today.
.
In the speech. Gore laments
Senate rejection of a nuclear test
ban treaty that he said was "sacrifi ced on the altar of partisan politics" and pointed to what he argued
were troubling trends in Congress.
" More and more each year,
engagement abroad means a political struggle here at home," he
said. " When even free and fair
trade agreements that deepen the
ties among nations become political footballs, we threaten our very
stability and security. "
Gore credited the administration
with helping to build a new consensus behind increased military
spending, but said agreement was
lacking on the need for effective
diplomacy.
"We have rebuilt a consens.us in
our country for a strong national
defense policy, but we also need a
national consensus on the other
great pillar of American foreign
policy - waging peace through
serious and sustained diplomacy,"
Gore said.
He also argues for combining
diplomacy and military policy in
one package.
"Diplomacy together with military might is how we fight the
spread of nuclear weapons in the
world," Gore said. " It is how we
are breaking up deadly drug canels
and crime syndicates around the
world."
The address is the latest effort
by Gore to paint Bradley as too liberal to win the White House, as
well as cast himself as a leader on
the world stage.
Bradley, a former senator,
recently told a disarmament group
that he saw no need to boost military spending, although his
spokesman did not rule out pay or
benefit increases.
"Military spending should be
adjusted as needed. to protect
America's most vital and imponant
interests. I believe current levels
would suffice if the Department of
Defense was led and managed
effectively," Bradley replied

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By MIKE GLOVER
Associated Press Writer
DES MOINES, Iowa - Steve
Forbes gets attention for his money
and his stubborn focus on a sharply
conservative message, but Michael
Mahaffey paused only briefly when
asked for his assessment of the publisher's campaign.
"I sense there's some momentum
in that camp," said Mahaffey, a former state GOP chairman. "There's
something to be said for having an
organization in Iowa."

With
virtually
unlimited
resources, Forbes is a threat in Iowa's
leadoff tests to Texas Gov. George W.
Bush, the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination. With
Arizona S,en. John McCain - who
isn 't competing in Iowa- narrow.ing the gap in New Hampshire, Bush
faces clear challenges in the two early states.
In Iowa, Forbes has based his
campaign on a laser-like focus on
organizational politics. Attendance at

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VA lleacflts
Lcpl Sa does·
lldlaiiSatlca
Co di11Satlca
.....,. . Settle:&amp;

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By LISA J. ADAMS
Aasociated Press Writer
MEXICO CITY - The Mexican
DC-9 jetliner that plunged to earth
shortly after takeoff, killing 18 people, had numerous maintenance problems that at times threatened the safety of its passengers and crew, former
flight attendants for the operating airline alleged.
The airline, Taesa, vigorously
denied the accusations Wednesday,
saying that all of the airplane 's maintenance needs were addressed.
Flight 725 originated Tuesday
from the western border city of
Tijuana with 91 passengers aboard. It
took off again after stopping in
Guadalajara and Uruapan, an avocado-growing city·of 250,000 people. lt
had only 13 passengers and five crew
members aboard as it headed to
Mexico City, 180 miles to the east.
Investigators had located the voice
and data flight recorders Wednesday
but had not determined the cause of
the crash. Taesa was quoted by the
government news agency Notimex as

saying the plane was in perfect
mechanical condition, and that its
engines had recently been overhauled.
The Union of Me xican Airline
Attendants claimed the airplane that
crashed had at least 20 "irregularities " at one time or another, the most
serious involving fuel leaks that
caused losses of up to 2,200 pounds
of fuel in flight , inspections and lubrications left undone because of a lack
of spare parts, and an excessive pressure leak in one door.
The majority of Taesa's 34 airplanes have deficiencies, union leader
Alejandra Barra[eS said during a
news conference in which the union
distributed a list of problems in Taesa's airplanes.
But Taesa press director Gregorio
Onega called the complaints "a mixture of two things: problems that never existed and some that, well, that's
what flight logs are for, to point out
errors that should be corrected.
Everything was taken care of at the
appropriate time."

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badly dented orange housing t!tat contained the recorder,~ well as _the beiQ
tape recorder itself. The unit had been pulled QUI &lt;;tf the Qeean a day earliei
Hall said the recorder showed that lhe plane·did not hit supersonic speea
in its initial descent.
·
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He did not comment on how the airplane behaved afte~ a brief climb showl
by radar data, or in its final plunge to the ocean, which' tilso·was c;acked oil
radar.
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..Hall also said the safety board was forming a committee to review th~
ntght recorder data, a routine action.
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He identified the participants as the NTSB;'th'e'Federal :&amp;.viation Admi"
istration; Egyptian authorities; the Boeing Co., which made aircraft;·and Prad
&amp; Whitney, which made' the two engines that powered it.
"
Hall did not mention the FBI, which likely would be involved if,analystl
suspected that the recorder documented any criminal activity. 'The agency
continues to monitor the investigation.
' .
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The search for the cockpit voice I'C(:order was being conducted by tw9
remote-controlled underwater robots. Deep Drone and Magnum.
~
Heavy seas were forecast for today, followed by the possibility of good
weather on Friday and Saturday.
·
·;
The civilian salvage ship Carolyn Chouest, which was managing the Mag~
num, planned to remain on scene as long as conditions permitted. It was being
accompanied by Coast Guard and Navy ships.
i ,
"Weather conditions continue to drive the pace of the operation," Hall
said.

along with veteran consultant John
Maxwell . while veteran Bob Haus
runs the campaign on a daily basis.
"[ think he's real and where he's
real his support is deep," said Lowell Junkins, a Democratic consultant
watching from across the partisan
aisle. "Unlike last time when he was
sort of a superficial candidate, this
time he's real."
Most polling in the state has
shown Bush with a lead, and Forbes
in second place with the margin
between them varying from poll to
poll. Polling in a caucus state is tricky
because it's difficult to measure the
level of commitment of activists or to
assess the efficiency of campaign
organizations.
With his resources and commitment to the state, however, it is clear
that Forbes is poised to do some damage.
Adding to that, he's about ready to
launch a new round of television
commercials in the state to highligh1
his differences with Bush.

Ortega added that Taesa had filed
a defamation lawsuit against Barrales
when the complaints were first aired.
The union made its concerns public
months ago and in the wake of Tuesday 's crash, Barrales said, adding " it
seems our obligation now to repeat
them."

The Wednesday news conference
by the Union of Mexican Airline
Attendants, known as ASSA. had

been scheduled days before the crash
to announce a complaint filed by the
AFL-CIO . The complaint, filed
Wednesday. accuses the airline of
·violating the North American Free
Trade Agreement by firing flight
attendants for union activities.
ASSA representatives said nearly
I00 flight attendants were fired from
Taesa after voting in March to leave
the pro-government Confederation of

F?rbes caused a stir in the I~ ·
elecuon cycle when he bashed even, ·
tual GOP nominee Bob Dole relent' '
lessly in an assault that weakenea ·
Dole for the general el~tion.
; '.
Forbes has said i)e'll'il$~ a diffeJl. ·.
ent style of commercial this time, bqt
made it clear he won't be shy abou,t
drawing distinctions.
:'
While Forbes is elevating h~ '
standing among social conservativ~.
the field is not being ceded. Consel'vative activist Gary Bauer, is fighti~l: .
hard for the sarn·e vote, but has fq •
less campaign money and gets les~ ,
attention.
Gillespie said there's ~t least one
piece of good news for Bush..·
"There's no one person who has so
far been able to put it together everywhere," he said.
Others say it's too early to tell. ,
"Is there a gene, the meltdown
gene, that Geof~e the senior passed'
along to his son?" asked Junkins,,·
who hasn't endorsed a candidate.:
"That has yet to be tested."

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Wit_h These Great Savings!!

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OBERLIN (AP) - Police were looking for a man who stabbed an Oberlin College student in her dormitory room during an apparent robbery attempt.
The 20-year-old victim was stabbed in the head, neck and back during
the attack about 7:30p.m. Monday, said police Chief Robert Jones. She was
treated and released from Allen Memorial Hospital and was expected to recover fully from her injuries, according to police and college officials.
Police have a possible suspect but no arrests have been made, Jones said
Wednesday.
The victim, whose name was not released, did not know the attacker, who
police believe was not a student.
Jones said experts were trying to determine if a kitchen knife found at the
scene was the weapon and if.any items were taken from the room at Noah
Hall.
Police did not know how the man got into the donn, which requires a security card to open the door. Jones said the suspect may have slipped in as another student walked in or was let in by someone.
Jones said the attacker did not force his way into the room but would not
elaborate on how he got in.
The attack was the third in three years against a student in a building at
Oberlin, about 30 miles west of Cleveland.
College President Nancy Dye urged students in a letter to be cautious and
never let strangers into dormitories.

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59·9

48" X 48" X 72"

Lane®

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Spruce
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Neo-Nazism rises again, ·Page 2
Sonics defeat Cavaliers, Page 4
Caregiver does right thing, Page 7

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 601; L~w: 401
tomorrow: P. cloudy
High: 801; Low: 401

Meigs County's
Volume

so. Number 110

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Sid
POMEROY - A dismal turnout
at Meigs County's Veterans Day
observance ironically highlighted the
Jllessage of guest speaker Judge Dan
Favreau: America's veterans are often
n~glected and unappreciated by their
own country.
- Only a handful of people and
elected officials clustered in front of
the Meigs County courthouse for the
final Veterans Day observance of the
century. They were outnumbered by
the veterans who assemble there
eyery year at the eleventh hour of the
eleventh day, of the eleventh month.
For most people, Thursday was
· appartndy just another.day of work,
school or shopping. Of the 20-some
people attending, only one youngster
INas present, 6-year-old Katie Maynard, who was there with her godmother, Rosalie Story of Pomeroy, a
retired teacher. Katie, clutching a
small teddy bear, held a U.S. flag dur. ing the ceremony.
Favreau, a Marine Corps veteran
of the Vietnam War and judge of the
Morgan County Court of Common
Pleas. recalled a chance meeting
with the widow of a fellow Marine.
He said the woman was working
at a small service station "to make
ends meet" even though her deceased
hu~band had been a retired sergeant
major with over 26 years in the
Corps. He said 1\te woman explained
___ !tow~ C!lUPI~~~_p,@i!J !be Marines
extra money over the years, 51100 a
month, to enhl!nce his pension and
survivor benefits to 80 percent How-

FLAG RAISING - Students ilt the Mid-Val· The Legion recently donated the new flag pole
ley Christian School in Middleport enJoyed the and a new flag to the school. Legion members
first flag railing In the playground area of their visited several area schools on Thursday, to
school yesterday, conducted by members of presant patriotic programs In honor of Veterthe "-ley Bennett Poet 128, Amerlca~. LegiCJ!I· ana Day.
YOUNG PATRIOT- 6-year-old Katie Mlynard, lhoWn here wll;h
her grandmother, Rosalie Story, participated in the annual Meigs
County Veterans Day obsarvance Thursday. ·

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ever, that amount was reduced due to ,
a "change in policy."
"I wonder why the government
asks people to fight for this country
and then treats their families poorly,"
Faweau said.
He funher commented on the
stale of the milillry today:
: "lf.you 'look at the milill(y loday,
you will sec that it is vecysundermanned, very understaffed.
"We are .taking troops trained to
fight set-piece batdcs and committing

them to be the police force
the
world."
He ended by asking the few
assembled to "remember veterans,
remember the families of the veterans, and remember the sergeant
major's wife when you talk to your

congressman...

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"As much as we hope aild pray
that we Will neVer l)l!ve,wars, remember what the Bil&gt;le says about wars
and rumors of war."

Program starts restoration .
project for .war memorial
By BRIAN J. REED
. Sentinel News Staff
· - MIDDLEPORT - Feeney-Bens
• nett Post 128, American Legion,
·- hosted a patriotic and entenaining
ceremony honoring the nation's veterans on Thursday afternoon.
The event was held in the Stewans
Bennett Memorial Park in Middles
port, and featured speeches, musical
entertainment by the Meigs Maraud' ·ers Marching Band, and an appeal for
support of the resto~:&amp;tion of the
park's All-Wars Memorial. .
Approximately 100 people from
throughout the county gathered
around the distinctive gazebo monu·
ment, which is to be restored through
; a project undertaken by the Legion
Jl9SI.

. · Middleport
Mayor
Sandy
; lannarelli welcomed those attending,
, and read a poem from the Ann Lan, ders column. puhlished in Thursday's
edition of The Daily Sentinel. which
· bonorcd the veterans of the nation's
foreign wars.
! "Not all of us here today served,
i but everyone knows someone who
; did serve, and, sadly, many of us
: koew someone who was lost defend~ in!i our country." Iannorelli said.
:"'We should stand tall anywhere we
:go, proud that we are Americans."

Good Afternoon

oday's Sentinel
2 Sections- 16 Pages

123 St. Rt. 7
.
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In his remarks, Legion member
Ron Eastman said that movies, popular books and television all glorify
war. and said that the biQ9dshed, pain
and suffering of veterans who served
and died are often glamoriled.
"There's no glory in war ... none
whatsoever," Eastman said. "Anyone
who says there is glory in war has
never fought in a war.".
The service was led by Post Commander Jerry Hawley.
Myrori Duffield, who chairs the
committee in charge of the monumen! restoration project, gave background on the memorial, noting that
it was dedicated by the legendary Sgt.
Alvin C. York in 1927. 'The memor·
ial was originally placed in Pythian
Park in lower Middleport, but was
moved in the late 1930s to its current
location otl Mill Street.
Duffield introduced George Wolfe
of Pomeroy, who helped rebuild the
monument when it was moved.
Wolfe worked through the YPA program, a New Deal relief project, to
help in the construction'.
Duffield said that the Legion com-

0 t999 Cillo Wloy Mlillll'l Co.

. mittee has set the date of May 30,
2000, the 73rd anniversary of the
original dedication, to rededicate the
restored memorial.
The project will include repair or
replacement of the clay tile roof,
refurbishment of concrete steps and
sidewalks, and fresh 'paint and new
landscaping.
The restoration project has been
estimated to cost $12,000, and a
SI.OOOcontributionfrom Lindy Douglas and the Ohio Educational Support Group was presented yesterday
by the organization's local representative, Ellis K. Myers. At the same
time, tlie Legion, through the Ohio
Educational Support Group, contributed $1,000 to the marching band.
At a Legion dinner following the
ceremony, Legionnaires contributed
over $500 in private contributions to
the restoration project Donors of$25
or more will be memorialized on a
special plaque, according to Duffield,
and veterans groups, private citizens
and municipalities will be asked for
contributions.

CEREMONY SPEAKER- Middleport Mayor
Sandy lannerelll waa one of the speakers at
Thur8day'a Veterans Day ceremony In Middles
port. The event was 1pon1~ by the Feeney-

BennetfPoat 128 of the American Legion, and
helped kick off a restoration project to benefit
the All·Wara Memorial, pictured here.

--------~--~----------~=

Group seeks establishment of
veterans center in Dayton
DAYTON (AP)- A proposal to preserve four Civil War-era buildings
on the grounds of the Dayton Veterans A(f~ Medical Center and establish
a site to·honor American veterans has been' announced.
"Essentially, our mission would be to preserve the best of our veterans'
past," said John Meagher, project director of the American Veterans Heritage
Center.
Speaking at a news conference on the -grounds Thursday, ~ said
the group w;tnts to create a museum and research library at or near the buildings. He said such a center would honor veterans and serve as a magnet for
cultural events and veterans reunions.
·
It also could sponsor programs on conflict resolution and violence prevention to "see how we can better teach jlcace;" he said.
Meagher said he did not know how much the project would cost, but hopes
it can be funded by private donations. He said his group just received tax-

status.

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Meagher was joined by U.S. Reps. Tony H'a!l, D-Ohio, and David Hobson, R·Ohio, federal Judge Walter Rice, representatives of veterans groups,
and community leaders.
Congress has approved SISO,OOO for roof repairs, climate control and otlt·
er repairs to preserve the buihlings until more money can be found to reston;

them.

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buildings are part of a Veterans Affairs hospital complell that, until
1930, was national headquarters for the II National HOIIICI for Disabled Vols
unteet Soldien, which served Civil W• veterans. The complex has been ruled
eligible fof listing on the National Re,Uter of Historic Places.
One buildjn&amp; is a Protestant chapel. Built in I868, it is considered to be
the oldest chilrcll consttucted by the federal aovernment It was closed last
year.beCIIise it was deteriorating ·
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Nov. 12, 1999

Weather

Sofas ·
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Saturday, November 13, 1999
Fort Randolph - Krodel Park
Point Pleasant, WV
Beginning at 9 a.m.

I

Mexican Workers, or CTM, to joi~
the independent ASSA, which repre·
sents flight attendants at Mexico's
Aeromexico and Mexicana airlines.
In addit.ion to calling the CTM
corrupt, the attendants claimed it
faitcd to address their safety concerns
and other alleged violations of workers' rights, such as understaffing, low
pay and excessive hours.

11

Police sear.ch for stabbing suspect

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Flight attendants allege safety proble111s before crash

For Disadvantaged &amp;H~iess Veterans Of The US Armed Forces
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Forbes' organization gaining ground in ·Iowa
events has grown and he's steadily weeklong affairs in small towns and
winning backing from key social con- . hamlets. where strategists say he
servati ves.
looks to build on quiet work that's
"He's got a real organization," gone before.
said former Iowa Republican Chair"The Forbes campaign spent the
man Richard Schwarm. who is back- summer lining up people in every
ing Bush. " [think they are into meet- county," said· Steve Grubbs, a
ings and telephone trees and quiet respected strategist and consultant for
discussions. They' re fighting.an orga- the campaign. "Now we're using that
nizational battle."
group of people to ·reach out and
Mahaffey, who is not aligned with bring in other people. I think it
any campaign. said Forbes' focus on shows there's really a quiet, but sigbuilding a campaign organizatjon nificant, grounds well, out there ."
has impressed him.
Campaign organizations are key to
"My se nse is ·there is some a caucus state like Iowa. Rather thanstrengtlt that he has gained," said voting in a traditional primary,
Mahaffey. "[ think he has decided activists must show up at a neighthat Iowa is the place where he wants borhood meeting prepared to argue
to do well. "
with friends and neighbors about pol"I don't know the magnitude of it. itics. That requires a much higher Ievbut that's my read- Forbes in Iowa e[ of commitment, and demands that
and McCain in New Hampshire," candidates put together grassroots
said GOP consultant Ed Gillespie, organizations to deliver backers.
also not aligned.
Forbes has spared no expense in
To accomplish that, Forbes has doing that, hiring some of the most
talented organizers in the state.
returned to the political basics .
Campaign trips to the state are Grubbs has drawn a strategic plan

Ptlday

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Appalachian Stand Down '99

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on voice reco·rde·r:

of information on its tape are still being extracted by safety board technicians. Without that information. details from the cockpit tape or more analysis .of radar data showing that the plane later climbed briefly before plungirlg to the ocean, investigators are having difficulty explaining the crash.
Hall dashed speculation that the plane's initial plunge was caused by a
problem with a thrust reverser - the cause of a 1991 crash of another Boeing 76 7 in Thailand.
Thrust reversers are used to slow an airplane upon touchdown with the
runway. One of EgyptAir's reversers was out of service at the time of the
crash.
"There is no evidence of thrust reverser deployment in the data we have."
Hall said .
Flight990 took off early Halloween morning from New York 's Kennedy
Internati onal Airport, risi ng to 33,000 feet before plung ing into the sea south
· of Nantucket Island. Mass.. ahoul 40 minutes after takeoff. All 2 17 people
aboard were killed.
Investigators have not ruled out any possible cau se, including mechanical failure , human error, sabotage and terrorism .
The flight data recorder was designed to capture over 150 type s of information from 55 aircraft systems during a rolling 25-hour period .
Among them were such things as the plane's altitude, speed, spin and roll ,
when electrical power was out off. and how the autopilot functioned.
On Wednesday. the safety board gave the public its first glimpse of the

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Thurlday, November 11,1188

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BAND PERFORMS- The Melg• Marauders
Marching Band, under the direction of Toney
Dingess, performed "The Star-Spangled Ban·

ner;, and saveral enetertlllning numbers during
the Veterans Day ceremony in Middleport; ·

October retail sales hold steady
WASHINGTON (AP) - Retail amount of output for each hour of down and consumers arc using their
sales held steady in October as Amer- work, rose at a 4.2 percent annual rate credit cards less freely.
And, while consumer spending,
icans pulled in their spending on cars from July through September.
At the same time, unit labor costs, which a~counts for two-thirds of all
and furniture but shelled out more for
hardware, building supplies and considered a key measure of wage economtc actiVIty, rose at a splid
pressure, rose just 0.6 percent, the annual rate of 4.3 percent in the July·
clothing.
,
Total retail sales last month were slowest quarterly increase thi's year. September quarter, it was down
Meanwhile, retail sales have 5.1 percent growth in the second
unchanacd at a seasonally adjusted
$2S2.S billion, . the . Commerce climbed or held steady most months 1quaner.
Depanment said today. That was in of this year and last month were 8.5 · 1 Federal Reserve policy-makers
line with most analysts' expectations . percent higher than October 1998. :will decide next week whether to
In September, sales fell by 0.1 per- The resilient U.S. economy, · unem- 1raise interest rates for a third time this
cent; the govenunent previously had ployment at a 29-year low of 4.I per- year. Economists, which have 'been
cent and tame inflation have hel~d 1split Qver what they belieVe the Fed
esti1111ted a 0.1 percent gain .
In a sepmte report today, the to give the nation's retailers a strong ! will do on 1\Jesday, said both~
· particularly the good news 011111r0111
Labor Dcpa11meat said the gowth in year.
But there have been some signs . · third-quarter productivil)' arowtii,
Alperican wclflten' · productivity
jumped in the third qul!ltcr while . that the economy may be slowing. . which helps keep inftatiou tow lig•
Fed ·
srowth in labor I10SII moderated• Consumer confidence has fallen in . niftcandy reduces the cidda
· ·
Productivity, defined as the the last four months, home sales are :.increasing rates.

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Com1nentary
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Sentinel,

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Editorial viewpoint
from around Ohio

•
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•

•
•
•

••

Pege2 .
Friday, November 12, 1189

The Daily Sentinel Neo-Nazism's rise in Ce·ntral Europe

..
..

By The Auoclated Preas
Excerpts of recent editorials of %tatewide and national interest from Ohio
newspapers:
'
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Nov. 4:
For 52 years, Mayor John Manin Coyne ran suburan Brooklyn as if it were
his household - personally signing all of the checks, drawing up the bud·
get, barely tolerating an often timorous City Council that seldom tried to stand
in his way.
But the Coyne era came to an end Tuesday night when he lost to 48-yearold Kenneth Patton.
Coyne was believed to be the nation's longest-serving mayor. He acquired
a nalional reputation in 1966, when Brooklyn became one of the first U.S.
mumcipali.ties to require the use of seat belts, and again recently when, at
Coyne's behest, the city outlawed hand-held cell phone use by drivers.
Now Coyne can be Brooklyn's most dapper retiree, volunteering at the
10,000-piece lending "library" of toys he helped create and collecting a hefty
pension while receiving the $5-a-season lawn tending and snow clearing services he secured for seniors in his community. And Patton will find he has
a large, well-polished pair of shoes to fill.
Dayton Daily News, Nov. 8:
American presidents are always being told that the way to get rid of foreign leaders we Americans don't like is to support their domestic opponents.
The Clinton administration has found an intriguing way of taking this
advice with regard to Slobodan Milosevic, head of what's left ofYugoslavta.
The administration, having previously said it will do nothing to help the
Yugoslavian economy so long as President Milosevic is around, now says it
will lighten up on sanctions if President Milosevic runs real elections.
Condiuoning Amencan cooperatton on real electtons strengthens the hands
of President Miloscvic 's opponents. They become the forces for economic'
progress as well as democracy.
Tribune Chronicle, Warren, Nov. 3:
AU.S. House of Representatives subcommittee took quick action last week
in approving U.S. Rep. James A. Traficant's bill to ban gas and otl well drilling
around Mosquito Creek Reservoir.
While environmental studies have shown the chance of anything going
wrong is small, a leak that contaminates the lake would be extremely cxpen·
sive to contain and correct.
We do not think the federal government should be taking chances with
local water supplies ..
The Columbus Dispatch, Nov. S:
Walter Payton's football legacy is unequaled. If he could have juked or
bowled over liver disease, as he did.£Qmany opponents, he would have. But
at age 45. the former Chicago Bear died of5evere complications that developed while he was on a waittng list for a liver transplant.
·
Thousands of. other people also are awaiting transplants for all kinds of
organs to battle many kinds of killer diseases. Those who pay tribute to Payton for his football exploits and his examples of integrity and simple human·
ity could not honor him more than by becoming organ donors and urging
others to join the donor game plan.
Akron Beacon Joornal, Nov. 1:
Alan Schriber is' something of a fatalist. The chairman of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio realizes that dialing a 10.. or 11 -digit telephone
number, whether we're calling across the street or across the nation, "is some·
thing that we're all, everywhere, gmng to be dealing wtth before long."
Some of us sooner than others. 1bose of us in the 330 area code, for
instance.
The North American Numbering Plan Administration warns all available
area codes will be used up by 2006.
Yet now there are more than 1.5 billion unused phone numbers the feds
constder "assigned." That's because ofa system dating from 1947 that assigns
phone lines in blocks of I 0,000.
_
Moreoever, a rule against assignmg area codes 10 specific technologies
should be modified.
The capacity of the 330 area code isn't the only thing reaching its limit.
So is the patience of consumers when less annoying alternatives are avail·
able.

....Today in history

By The A11oclated Pnt1s
Today is Friday, Nov. 12, the 316th day of 1999. There are 49 days left
in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
In 1920, baseball got its first "czar" as Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis was elected commtsstoner of the American and National Leagues.
In 1921, representatives of nine nations gathered for the Washington Conference for Limitation of Annaments.
In 1927, Josef Stalin became the undisputed ruler of the Soviet Union as
Leon Trotsky was expelled from the Communist Pany.
In 1929, Grace Kelly, future movie star and Princess of Monaco, was born
in Philadelphta.
In 1948, former premier Hideki Tojo and several other Japanese leaders
in World War n were sentenced to death by a war crimes tribunal.
.lo. J9S4, Ellis Island closed after processing more than 29 million immigrants siitee it opened in New York Harbor in 1892.
In 1980,the U.S. space probe Voyager I came within 77,000milesofSatum.
In 1982, Yuri V. Andropov was elected to succeed the late Leonid I. Brezhnev as general secretary of the Soyiet Communist Pany's Central Commtttee.
In 1990. Japanese Emperor Akihito fonnally assumed the Chrysanthemum
Throne.
,.
In 1993, H.R. Haldeman, former Nixon White House chief of staff, died
in S.Ota Bllbara. Calif., at age 67.
On this date:
Ten years ago: Abortion rights advocates rallied in cities across the country, including Washington, D.C.
•
Five yean ago: President Clinton arrived in the Philippines to open a campaign for free trade in Asia and to commemorate World War II Alhed vic·
torics in the Pacific. Wi lma Rudolph, Olympic gold medalist in track and
field, died in Nashville. Tenn., at age 54.
One year ago: Chicago Mayor Richard·M. Daley filed a $433 million lawsuit against the firearms industry, declaring that it had created a public nuisance by flooding the streets wilh weapons deliberately 1118{keted to criminals.
.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Kim Hunter is 77. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Ruby Nash Cunil (Ruby and the Romantics) is 60. Actor-playwright Wal. ~ IIGC Shawn il ~- Singer Brian Hyland is 56.

.

By JACK ANDERSON
and DOUGLAS COHN
PRAGUE, Czech Republic- AJ
celebrations continue over the fall of
the Berlin Wall, another wall has
gone up in an o~nous throwback,
not to Communism. but to Nazism.
Here in the land of poet-president
Vaclav Havel, the human rights advocate who helped lead Eastern Europe
to freedom I 0 years ago, a wall has
been built in the town of Usti nad
Labern to create a Roma (gypsies)
ghetto.
"This isn 't about racism. It's
about decent people who have to live
among these sub-humans who live
like animals," said Jaroslav Kopecky,
53. "Neanderthals," added Jana
Kaplanova, 65. another neighbor.
"lbey aren't Homo sapiens."
Such language, thought to have
been relegated to~ trash bin of Hit·
lerian history, is commonplace here.
With 16 active ultra-right organizations, the Czech Republic is consid·
ered the center of nco-Nazi activity
in Central Europe. Czech skinheads
have murdered 38 Roma since 1989,
according to the Roma Rights Center - three times the number of skin·
head murders in Romania, Bulgaria
and Slovenia combined. To this add
1,600 reported acts of racial violence
since 1990- one every other day, on
average.
What is most disturbing is how
tolerant Czechs are of the e~tremists.
Of 130 convictions of skinheads, only
13 have been given unconditional
sentences. Judges tend to reject racial
motives for crimes in favor of the
charge of general "hooliganism,"
which carries a lesser sentence. One
judge rejected a murder charge tn a
case where skinheads threw a
Romar.y woman into a river and prevented her from swimming to shore
until she drowned, saying it was actu·
ally the river that killed her.
"Discrimination in Eastern

Europe ia still alive and repments a
problem for enlargement," said
Guenrcr Verbeugcn, European com·
missioner for European Union
enlaqement Verheugen said I0 years
may not be enough time for Eastern
European countries to catch up with
the progress of the rest of the world,
from which they had so long been
isolated.
ThC Czech Republic is one of six
cguntries on the fast track for admission to the EU. But a progress repon
on Oct. 13 sharply criticized the
country's progress in human rights,
symbolized by what Council of
Europe Secretary General Walter
Schwimmer called the Czechs' "wall
of shame."
"That wall is a wall between us

and Europe." added an embamssed
C:zech Prime Minister Milos Zeman.
Havel hu not given up. He is still
the Czech president, and ·still stubbornly punues Western ties and an
agenda centered around human rights
- including speaking out on behalf
of the Roma - even though this
course has often put him in the doghouse with the Czech public. Fonner
Prime Minister Vaclav Klaus himself
said Czechs are tired of Havel's
"constailt talk about ethics and empty phrases about a 'good' society."
A poll at the beginning of this year
found not only that the majority of
Czechs disapproved of Havel, but
that 55 percent thought he should
resign . And that poll was taken
before the conflict in Kosovo, which

"The New
Isolatlorust,s"

.

•

_.

M!DDLBPOIU- William C. "Jackie"Linle, 78, Middlepon, died Thurs·
·day, Nov. II, 1999 in Pleasant· Valley-Hospital.
He was born on Jan. 31; 1921 in Gallia County, son of the late lldward
. and Nellie Frazier Little. He was retired from the R.C. Bottling Co. in Mid·
. · .dleport.
He is survived by three sons and dlillghters-in-law, Michael and Teresa
Little, and Steve and Rita Little, all of Middleport, and Rick and Sharon Lit·
tie of Phoenix, Ariz.; six grandchildren and six great-grandchildren; two sisters, Betty Abbott of CasaGrande, Ariz., and Jean Ward of Bullhead City,
Ariz.; and two brothers, Danny Little of Crystal Lake, Ill., and Raymond Lit·
tle of Cheshire.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Freda L. Little; and by a sister, Letha Clark, and two brothers, Dowl Little and Robert Little.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Silver Run Baptist Church, Hobson, with Pastor Bill Little officiating. Burial will be in Gravel Hill Ceme·
tery, Cheshire. Friends may call from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Saturday at Fisher
· - Funeral Home-Middleport.
r

Thelma Sparks

Warm conditions slated
for region over weekend

Campaigns put candidates in
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Presidential
campaigns are not quiz shows, but
they do put some contestants in jeoparoy. A blundered answer, a misstatement, a flash of temper can make
any episode' politically costly.
It has happened to front-runners
before, and most recently to George
W. Bush.
Bush's problem is not the ambush
questioning by a Boston television
reporter, who destgned a pop quiz for
the Republican pre~idential front·run·
ner to flunk - as he did. lt is the risk
of being typecast as a candidate
unprepared for the White House.
When Bush let himself be drawn
into a game of who 's·t~·foreign­
leader, and named only one of four,
his performance fit that impression.
After all, he was the one who had said
Kosovites instead of Kosovars, Grecians for Greeks, Timorians instead
of Timoresc.
He also had confused Slovakia
with Slovenia.
No matter that almost anyone
else, including his questioner, could
have mixed them up, too. Or that
those slips didn't involve policy.
One point that did, and which
drew Democratic criticism, was Bush

nearly two-thirds of Czechs opposed.
Havel's backing of NATO and public statements supponing the Kosovar
Albanians prompted dozens of angry
letters to Czech newspapen, some of
which cornjlared his betrayal of Slavic "brothers" in Serbia to turning his
back on his own people in order to
defend the Roma.
Ethnic bigotry is a cancer of the
soul. It erupted in Bosnia and Koso..
vo; it could do so here and elsewhere
in Eastern Europe as well.
To order a signed edition of Jack
Anderson's autobiography, "Peace,
War &amp; Politics," call (703) 821-3434.
(Jack Ander10n and Douglaa
Cohn are columnllta lor United
Future Syndlc:81e.)
·

Wilnam ·_c~ 'Jackie' Little

•
GALLIPOLIS - Thelma Sparks. 74,9611 State Route 7 South, Gallipolis,
: ~ died Thursday, Nov. II , 1999 in Holzer Medical Center.
· Born Aug. 18, 1925 in McKee, Ky., daughter of the late Tom and Della
Glenn Schock, she was a homemaker, and she and her husband owned and
' operated Sparky's Sunoco station at the comer of Second Avenue and Grape
Street in Gallipolis.
: ;;. ·. She was a member ofthe Chapel Hill Church of Christ.
.
• ·~ :. Surviving are her husband, Gerald L. Sparks, whom sh~ mamed June 29,
• 1946 in Columbus· two sons, Thomas Sparks ofHoppersvtlle, Md., and Jym
; Sparks of Columb'us; two sisters, Amanda Morris of Hamilton, and Marie
Hall of San Antonio, Texas; and a brother, Lloyd Schock of Pearland, Te~as.
She was also preceded in dealh by a son, Jerry Sparks, on Oct. 10, 1996;
a sister, Geraldine Schock; and two brothers, Jerry Shock and S~ley Schock.
Memorial services wtll be 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 21, 1.999 tn th~ Chapel
Church of Christ, with Harold Dilly officiating. There wtll be no vtsttallon.
Arrangements are by the Cremeens Funeral ~hapel.

saying .the general who took control.
in Pakistan in a coup Oct. 12 appar·
ently was bringing stability there, and
calling it good news for the troubled
region.
Vice President AI Gore satd it was
troubling that Bush characterized a
military coup as good news. Bush's
campaign said he opposes the over·
throw of elected governments.
The Cltnton administratton wants
democracy restored in PakiStan, but
has not broken ties with the military
regime and has not argued that the
toppled government should be
returned to power. So' the policy dif·
ference is not as wide as the word
gap.
In the Nov. 3 interview, Bush
called the Pakistani general "this
guy." His name, Pervaiz Musharraf,
was one of those Bush did not know.
He also could not name Asian
Maskhadov of Chechnya and Atal
Bihari Vajpayee of India. He got Lee
Teng-hui ofTaiwan. "Lee," he said.
This week, 11le New Yorker magazine published Bush's undergraduate grades from Yale University,
where he earned a degree in 1968. No
surprises there; Bush always said
he'd had "gentleman's Cs." He did;
most of his grades were in the 70s.
But the marks someone earned in

~Jeopardy'

college more !han 30 years ago are melting snow•ran down his cheeks,
irrelevant to what that person ts and he later told author Theodore H.
doing, or can do, now.
White he was tired and mad. "It
Then again, when the person is changed pcople's.minds about me ....
running for president, there 's that They were looking for a strong,
image l&lt;~etor. A Candidate can't afford steady man, and here I was weak."
to be seen u not Up to the job. And
Dan Quayle was labeled a light'
once affixed, such a label is hard to weight for a falteringstanafterbefng
pry loose.
nominated for vice president in 1988,
As in the case of George Romney, and it got worse, with such incidents
governor of Michigan, and a prime as his misspelling of "potato."
early prospect for the 1968 RepubltHe couldn't get past the image. He
can presidential nomination who nev- ran for president this year•. but
er got over his own explanation of dropped out for lack of campaign
why he'd once backed the Vietnam funds.
war policy he came to criticize: "I
Bush said he thinks a lot of.peo·
had just had the greatest brainwash- pie respected the way he handlejlthe
ing that anybody can get when you go quiz. which was to acknowledge
over to Vietnam." ·
what he didn't know. He said he.had·
After a brief, fumbling campaign, . n't "memorized every lea~er 's
Romney withdrew.
name," but knows how he wants to
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie was the lead.
towering Democratic front-runner in
He also recalled a minor accident
1972, until he shattered the steady, in Austin, in which he jumped o,ut of
sage, trust-inspiring image he'd the way of truck trailer that overgained four years earlier as a vice turned behind him while he was jog·
presidential nominee. In a flawed ging.
campaign, the episode that became
"The guy never hit me with the
the symbol of his downfall came in garbage truck, either," he said.
New Hampshire, when he went to the
(Walter R. Meara, vice president
conservative Union Leader newspa· and eolumnlat for The Aaaoelated
per in Manchester to denounce stories Pma, has reported on Washington
about him and his wife.
and national politics for more than
3
0 years.)
His voice choked, either tears or

..•· Jiy The AIIOCiated Pres1
.
' ; A warm weekend is expected in Ohio, forecasters satd today,
; ~~' · A high pressure system will begin to move southeast of the region this
· ··&gt;· weekend, bringing warmer temperatures for Saturday. Highs are expected
• to be the mid to upper 60s under a sunny sky.
It will be panly to mostly cloudy Saturday night with temperatures in the
40s.
It will be slightly cooler Sunday with highs of 55 to 65. There is a chance
of showers in the northern pan of the state.
·
The record high for today at the Columbus weather station was 74 in 1879.
The record low was 16 set in 1911.
Sunset tontght will be at 5:18. Sunrise Saturday will be at 7:14.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ...Panly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s. Light and variable wind.
Saturday...Partly cloudy. Highs in 'the mid and upper 60s.
•-.
Saturday night. .. Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 40s.
Extended forecast:
Sunday ...Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 60s.
Monday... Panly cloudy. Lows in the upper 30s and ~gh~ in the ~d 50s.
Tuesday ...Partly cloudy. Lows in lhe mtd 30s and btgbs m the mtd 50s.

-~·· Andrew Young takes helm of
National Council of Churches
By THOMAS J . SHEERAN
Associated Presa Writer
CLEVELAND- Fonner Atlanta
Mayor Andrew Young, new president
of the National Council ofChurc~s.
says the financially hard-pressed religious coalition must rely on faith in
the new millennium.
Young, 67, was installed as president of the NCC in a colorful two·
. hour cathedral ceremony Thursday
evening and later was the keynote
speaker at an installation banquet.
"We don't know what the future
holds," Young told the dinner audi·
cnce, "But we know who holds the
future."
Young, introduced by an old col·
··· league from the civil rights move•"
. _ . .- .
"

The Daily Sentinel
(USPSliJ-960)

Tell kids about evolution, creationism
By GEORGE R. PLAGENZ
- both from a scientific standpoint
By changing just one word, we and as a way of stating a truth which
could perhaps find a solution to the science can only dimly and awkevolution-vs.-creationism controver- wardly hint at.
sy in tbe public schools.
If man is just a monkey who has
We need only substitute "tell" for learned to shave, this may not rule out
"teach."
the possibility that he is at the same
The debate centers on whether time a special creation of God who
schools should be required to teach evolved according to divine plan. But
creationis111 along wilh evolution. that possibility is not something that
The word "teach" has, in many would occur naturally to us after seeminds, the connotation of indoctri· ing this ancestor of ours at the zoo.
nation - of implanting information
If man is a special creation of God,
and ideas which are to be learned and the artist - which the author of Denabsorbed.
esis most assuredly was -may do a
We teach our children the 3 R's much better job !han lhe scientist of
and good manners with the end in gelling us to see this.
mind ·that such instruction will sink
We may need the artist's concepin and be applied. We teach brother· lion quite as much as the scientist's.
hood and tolerance so that those who
To "tell" - not "teach" - this
_are taught will be led to follow these to schoolchildren is not to indoctribeliefs.
-natt them with any particular philosSo it is natural that parents who ophy. It is to get them 10 understand
believe in evolution do not want their how it is tliat we bave two opposing
children to be "taught" creationism. philosophies of the origin of mankind
But teaching and telling are two and lhe world- which, in fact, may
different things. Couldn't we tell our be complementary rather than conchildren about both evolution and flicting.
creationism without scaring anyone ' Science's insistence that all truth
into feeling that we are.trying to take :conform 10 the letter of scientific
over their minds one way or the oth- :truth is impoverishing us.
er?
Our attempts at 'precision and
As a parent, I want my children to . exactitude in these matters are open
know about the theory of evolution. to question. Symbols, such as angels
I also want them to know- as pan •or the biblical story of creation, seek
and parcel of bemg educated persons to express truths which cannot ade- that there are a lot of pc:ople who quately be apprehended in any other
don't believe in evolution but ratlrer way.
that the wor~ and mankind were ereFor some of us, these symbols
ated as the Btble says.
must be believed literally in order for
. I want the~ to know how such .a · them to have any reality. But thi• is
vtcw of~ umverse aot started, and ~. isn't it, than to hal(e notlling
what legtltmac:y, If any, it may have . whK:h stands for truth?

Science. of course, must be true to
itself. It must deal only with scientific
evidence . But it must not, on that
account, rule out all other expressions
of truth - those which cannot meet
science's own criteria.
Unless we tell our schoolchildren
that truth has this dual nature, as edu·

•

cators, we will be failing them. We
must acquaint them, therefore, with
both the evolutionist and creationist
views.
(George R. Plagenz Ia 1 colum·
nlst for Newspaper Enterprise
Aasoelltlon.)

C!Mimunity New1p1pcr Holdlnp. Inc.

".

By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Bu1lnn1 Analylt
,
NEW YORK - The decision appears to have been made, and it is that
a society ingenious enough to create the computer is capable of avoiding disaster because of a few ominous zeroes.
You can tell that the decision has been made by the way people act. Con·
sumers are spending, investors investing, and corporations completing plans
for even bigger sales and revenue in 2000.
In shon, as Y2K approaches, the vague but intense co~cems of earlier this
year, such as the fear of economic collapse, seem to have dissolved into mere
concern about disruptions and irritations.
As most now understand, If only superficially,'Y2K involves the ability
of computers to realize we are passing from 1999 to the year 2000, riot to
1900.
.
'
Maybe no decision was involved at all, just a growing sense of ret15Sur·
ance that the SSO billion spent by ~sinesses and the $8.34 billion by gov.
emmenJ was enough to fix the tiny but massive defect.
·
Tlue, airline reservations for New Year's week are said to be down, some
families are hoarding f!JOCI and·water, and baoks are ready for cash wilhdrawals, but fears of cascading disruptions are fading.
Still, opportunists will exploit the days before year's end wi!h terror..t~~Jes
and rumors, and amulets, tokens, souvenirs, insurance policies and finalles·
taments, Entrepreneurship will be a1iv~ and well. _
•·
Most likely there'll be some disruptions, even serious, but more localized
rather
regional, and very unlikely on a national scale. That is, spe~ng
domestJcally.
.
·
Overseas, it may be 1 different matter, and since we now have .a· ~I
economy (oil from the Mideas!. for example), certain foreign, bn!akdowns
could spread beyond national boundaries.
·

'!W'

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•
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!!lent, said he would resist the temptatlon to-reminisce and instead want·
ed to look ahead.
.
"I look forward to moving wtth
you, as the spirit moves us into the
21st century," said Young, a fonner
congressman and U.S. ambassador to
the United Nations.
"Yes, we're weak. We're fratl.
We're doubtful. We're a faithful peopte and God hasn't failed us yet," he
said.
Young, a United Church of Christ
minister, will serve a two-year.
unpaid tenn as head of the ecument·
cal group made up of 35 Protestant
and Orthodox denominations with
about 50 million members.
Young's inauguration htghltghted
an NCC conference ending tod~y and
held in Cleveland to mark the council's founding here 50 years ago.
There have been some difficult
moments at the four-day meettng,
most related to the ongoing financtal
problems at the NCC.
·
The council is facing a $3.2 mil, lion operating debt for 1999, and its
executive board on Wednesday
approved cutting 34 jobs from the
New York City-based NCC staff

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•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohro

;Bosnian
leader
laments
economy
DAYTON (AP) - Rebuilding a
weak economy and resettling
refugees are major problems facing
Bosnia four years after the signing of
the Dayton Peace Accords that ended the war there, a high-ranking
Bosnian official said today.
"The country is poor," Svetozar
Mihajlovic, co-chair of Bosnia's
Council of Ministers that serves
under the country's three-man presidency, said at the beginning of two
days of talks to IJlark the fourth
anniversary of the accords.
"There is very weak functioning
of the economy." he said. "There ts
no way we can attract foreign capital to our country right now."
Mihajlovic also said 4 million
people displaced by the war remain
out of their homes.
After the opening remarks, U.S.
and Bosnian leaders met pnvately to
discuss Bosnia's problems.
"There has been signtficant
progress." U.S. Ambassador Robert
Frowick, secretary of slate for Day·
ton Implementation, said Thursday
night. "It's just that the issues are so
complex .. . that it takes awhile. I
think it's very important that we stay
the course."
Frowick said one focus of the talks
will be how to make Bosnia self-sustaining once NATO-led peacekeeping
forces are wtthdrawn from the country.
tfl.
In 1995, U.S. mediators brought
Muslim. Serb and Croauan neeotiators to Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base in Dayton to push for an end to
a three-year war in the former
Yugoslavia.
Three weeks of negotiations
among the warring .factions ended
with an agreement on Nov. 21, 1995,
that stopped the fighting but produced a country that is divided
between a Muslim-Croat federation
and a Bosnian Serb republic, and in
fact virtually panitioned among the
three ethnic groups.
U.S. Ambassador James Pardew,
secretary of state for Kosovo and
Dayton Implementation, said the
Bosnian economy still needs to be
restructured, more refugees need to
be allowed to return to their homes,
and war criminals need to be apprehended.
"We're not going to make promis·
es before a meeting that you're going
to have some son of breakthrough
here," said Pardew. -

Report issued
Rt.ITLAND - Rosemary Snow·
den-Eskew, clerk/treasurer for the
Village of Rutland, announced Tuesday that the village has a cash balance
of $69,634.11.
Her report to council included the
following line-item balances: general fund, $20.746.66; police, $974.58;
law enforcement, $487 .33; street,
$3,764.47; highway, $1 ,218.89; water
depanment, $5,637.65; sewer depanment, $8,178.25; sewer debt,
$18,405.36; utility, $5,816.40;
FEMA, $4,404.52; replacement,
$7,977.30.

Meigs EMS runs
POMEROY - Units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service
recorded three calls for assistance
Thursday. Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:45 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabili·
tation Center, Pomeroy, Veri Howson,
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
I: 17 p.m., Nye Avenue, Richard
Collins, Holzer Medical Center, Ceo·
tral Dispatch squad assisted.
RACINE
3:31 p.m., Oak Grove Road ,
Emma Adams, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Announcements
Dance to be held
A round and square dance will be
held Saturday, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. at
the Gallipolis Am· Vets off Route 35.
True Country will provide the music.
The dance is open to the public.
Club to meet
"The Catholic Women's-Club will
meet till Sacred Heart Church at 7
p.m. Tuesday .for Mass to be followed
by a meeting.

BAND CONTRIBUTION -Through the Ohio
Educational Support Group, the Feeney Bennett Post 128, American Legion, eonlrlbuted
$1 ,000 to the Meigs Narehlng Band on Thura-

day. Pletured are Legion Post Commander Jerry Hawley, Band Director Toney Dingess, and
Ellis K. Myere of the Educational Support
Group.

CONTRIBUTION MADE -The Ohio Educa- The Feeney-Bennett Posl of the Ameriean
tional Support Group and Lindy Douglas, rep- Legion Is overaeelng the project. Representing
resented here by Ellis K. MyeB, cenler, pre- the Legion post are Post Commander Jerry
sented 1 $1 ,000 contribution towards the ren· Hawley and Myron Duffield, restoration chair·
ovation of the AII·Wal'l Memorial in Middleport. man.

Pentagon hears survivors' stories
By SANG-HUN CHOE
Associated Preas Writer
WASHINGTON -South Korean
survivors of an alleged mass killing
of civilian refugees by U.S. troops
fii)JIIIY are getting a chance to tell
their harrowing stones to Army
investigators.
Keum Cho-ja, 61 , says she'll talk
about how the bullet injuries ruined
her marriage. Chung Koo-hak, 57,
will explain how his nose was torn
apart by an American bullet. Yang
Hae-sook, 61, wants to talk about her
left eye blown out in a bombmg and
how women and children died in a
pool of blood.
"I came here to tell the truth about
No Gun Ri," Yang said. "I want to
tell how American soldters came to
our village and took so many children
and women and killed almost all of
them."
They arc among the few dozens
South Koreans who survtved the
1950 episode ai No Gun Ri, a South
Korean hamlet where witnesses say
U.S. troops killed hundreds of civil·
ian refugees in the early days of the
Korean War. ·.
Four SoutlPKorcans planned to
meet Patrick T. Henry, an assistant
secretary of the Army, and other Pentagon officials today in their fir.;t trip
to the United States
Pentagon officials will mamly lis·
ten to testimonies of the survivors,
said Victor W.C. Hsu, a director at the
U.S. National Council of Churches,
wh1ch arranged the meeting. The
Koreans also expected to get an
update on the progress of an Army
investigation ordered by President
Clinton.
"The real tragedy about No Gun

. Ri was that we could not speak about
tt for 50 years," said Chung, who had
half of his nose blown away by a bul·
let. He also lost his mother and baby
sister at No Gun Ri.
South Korea's past military governments, cherishing close ties with
Washington, had forced the survivors
into silence. The later, democratically elected governments in Seoul
knew about but never investigated the
case. Washington had dismissed the
claim since 1994, citing lack of evi·
dence.
The Associated Press reported in
September that a dozen 7th Cavalry
veterans, corroborating the accounts
of Korean villagers, satd the regiment's 2nd Battalion killed \!large
number of civilians at No Gun Ri in
July 1950. Survivors say 400 were
killed by American soldiers . .
After the repcrt, both Washington
and Seoul started an investigation.
Earlier thts week, Anny Chief of
Staff Gen, Eric Shinseki said there
was never an attempt to ignore evidence that American soldiers killed
large numbers of civilian refugees
during the early stages of the Korean War. Instead, he said,-"'When the
Anny checked, there was no credible
evidence that they could pursue."

The initial AP rcpon on Sept. 29
shed new light on the episode. he
said, with interviews of U.S. Anny
veterans and by uncovering declassified military records.
The Anny, in 1ts pnor mvcstiga·
tton of the allcgattons. did not tntcrvicw American soldiers, but instead
searched historical records.
The Korean survtvors feared their
campaign for an official recognition
by Washington mtght be seen as an
att~mpt to discredit the sacrifices by
American soldiers who fought alongside the South Korean troops during
the war.
In a symbolic gesture, they paid
homage to the Korean War Veterans
Memorial on Thursday.
At dusk settled over the monument, they silently walked past 19
sculptures depicting bedraggled U.S.
infantry men slogging through the
rugged Korean countryside. Then
,they bowed their heads in front of the
inscription honoring the servicemen
who died to "defend a country they
never knew and a people they never
met."

The Koreans Oew to Washington
from Cleveland, where they prayed
together with three U.S. veterans in
a church Tuesday.

\PRII:t. \&lt;lilt Clll 1 11"\

,..,
446 ·4524
- ' ., •j
FRI11!12 • THURS 11!1eistl
lOX OfFJa WIU OHM AT
..JO PM FOil MIIIIIG SHOWS
2:30PM FOil SAT, SUM IWIIIIIS
'

'

'

THE

Immunization clinic set
The Meigs County Health Depanment will offer an immunization
clinic Tuesday, 9 to II a.oi. and I to
3 p.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose
Center. No evening clinic will be conducted that day. Every child must be
accompanied by a parent/legal
guardian and bring the child' immu·
nization record.

,.

I
--.:--------

•
- - - ~·

, ,.,

. . ....... .

~ · ·· ·

.~

-

... ...... ---.... -

�•

The Daily Sentinel

,Sports

.

.

I

.

Friday, November 12, 1999

Pl!lg84

Friday, November 12, 1999 ·

· CLEVELAND (AP) - Maybe
lie's lfYing too hard to impress, or
l)laybe the Sonics know Shawn
Kemp so well they know how to stop
him.
Whatc~cr the reason, Kemp plays
poorly against his former team.
Kemp had a horrible shooting
night, going just 8-for-23 and throwi.ng up an ugly brick in the final two
minutes Thursday night as the Sanies
beat the Cleveland Ca~aliers 109103.
Kemp finished with 22 points and
14 rebounds. Nice looking in the
boxscore, but very deceiving. The
power forward, traded from Seattle
to Cleveland in 1997, is now 15-for45 in three games against Seattle.
"They' re going to rush me and
send two men at me and sit in my
lap," said Kemp. "They're not going.

to let a guy who used to play with
them come out and do what he wants
agilinst them. They're going to force
me to shoot tough sho!S. It unfortunately happened against them. When
you play your old team,
course
you want to do well."
Gary Payton, playing with a stimulator taped to his waistband in the
second half to help ease back
spasms, had 27 points and nine
assists to lead Seattle.
"My back was acting up," Payton
said. "I was hurting, but whatever."
Payton was late coming out on the
floor for the third quarter while the
device was put in' place. Once the
All-Star guard returned, it wasn't
long before he and his teammates
were feeling much better.
"He was really hurting," teammate Ruben Patterson said, "but he
did a heck of a job helping us get this

o'

Scoreboard
Monday's game

Basketball

New York Jcu M New EnsJIUid, 9 p.m.

Hockey

NBA standings '
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dhis&amp;on

ea.
' "I .800

!ill

2 .667
2 .600

.m

I

)

I

....I ' 4 .200
Philadclphill .. .......
........ 1 4 .200
;w-ashinJIOn .. .................... I
4 .200

.1

Iwll
Miami .............................»:
4
N&lt;wYori&lt;
...~
bo~1on ......................... -- ~
()&lt;Iondo ...........

....... 4

New Jersey ........

EASTERN CONFERENCE

.1
)

Central Oi¥lsion
)'oronto .......................... ___ 4 I
Chntlo«e .. .
......... 3 2
CLEVELAND
......... J
2
tiNliana..
.. .......... J
2
Milwaukee
....... J
2
Atlanta ....
.. .......... 1 4
'Detroit ..
..... I 1
......0 4
Oic;aso ...

»: "I
I

........ J

2

................. 2
.. 2

2
2

Dol lat ...... .

... 2

4

Howton ..... .

..0

l

VaMotvn ... .

1'l '·,l

S..Hie .

............. l

I

. ......................l
. .... ..... 4

I
I
I
I
4
4

Phoeni1.......
Ponland ....
Sacramrnto .
LA Clippen
Golden Siate.

.. ... ............. 4
. ... ..... 1
. .. ....... I

...............0

N.Y. Ranzers ....... ....6
N.'l. lslandcn .......... .4
PinsburJII ........ ...... ..\

1

5
q
7
1

1
2

I
I

21
19

~~

~9

~
0
2 0

15 .l 8
10 26

.l

10 -13

I

~I

.&amp; .\
H

46
36
48

2J SJ
18 -13

35
.\7
41

16 4.5

46

I0 32

43

Florida .
. ..8 6 2 2 20 46
Cwolina.....
6 i , J 0 15 37
Wutlinalon ............ s 8 2 I 13 39
Tompo Boy ............. l 6 I I 12 ~9
Alllllla ................... .3 R 2 I 9 29
-·-

40
44
49

4~ f:t
. . . . . . . J ~ ~ Bf ~ ~ ~
St. Louis... .............. 9 6 0 0 18 46 36
..,,
2
)';
4

8
8

I I 14 37
4 . ~ !I 36

Nerdlwut Dl•d~ti: "
Vucot"or .............. ! l .I I 20 lO

Colorado...
........ 1
Edmoaton .............. .4
C~pry ....................l

7
8
9

2
4
2

hdltcDh·SH Jo.................... l t 7 2 I
Los Ao..los .......... 10 4 4 0
- · ....................9 4 J 0
Aaabeim ................... 8 7 2 I
Dollu ..................:....8 8 I 0
Overtime kMia eo~~at • a lou
lie.

Thursday's 114:I!Miiw 116. Ot-IIOdoiOI
Miluni 128. O.Hul~
Sanlt 109. a.EVEJ..AND IOJ
TorODIO 123. Detroit 106
MI........ ~l. New Yoolt 90

Toni&amp;IJt's &amp;ames

New York a1 BcSion, 7f.m
Miami 11 WashinJtOD. p.m.
Chie'lo 11 Pllilodol,.._ 1 p.m.
New Jersey 01 0...-\ouc. 7:30p.m.
Photnix u Milwaukee, 8 p.m.
Utah a1 Sacramento, 8 p.m.
Por1land ac DtDver, 9 p.m.
Gol~n Stale at Vancouver. I() p.m
Houscon at L.A. Lakm. 10:.10 p.m.

17 44
I.S 37
12 40

I
J
0

2.l 61
24 l9
21 l2

19 45

4S
47

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALE

lO
~

JERRY BIBBEE

41

38

17 38 41
lnd 1 rqulllioo

,..

Saturday's games
Saa Jose 11 Philadelphia, I p.m.
Detroit 11 Toronto. 1 p.m.

Atlnnrn nt Portland. 10 p.m.
Hou51on 1\f Golden State. 10:30 p.m.

Atlllfltll o.l Mo~l. 1 p.m.
.\nahcim 1U OltDWII. 7 p.m
St. Louis at N.Y. lsl1nders. 1 p.m.
New Jersey at Washittton . 7 p.m.
BOlton at N.Y. Ran&amp;crs. 7::\0 p.m.
Nil!bville 11 Pinsbur1h. 7JO p.m.
T:~mPQ Bay at ~aroli~. 7:30p.m
BuffaJo ot Aondll. 7:.\0 p.m.
Coloradn a1 CaiJlliY. 10 r .m.

Sunday 'a pmes
Phil3delphla as Tcronto. 3 p.m.
Miami :tt New York. 7 p.m.
L.A. Clippen ot Vancou~. 9 p.m.
Denver at S~:~Cn~mento. C) p.m.
At lanca at L.A. L.akcn. 9 : ~ p.m.

Football

XLT, 4x4, 5.4L V-8, Auto Front &amp; Rear AC. 3rd Row Seating,

,Edmonton a1 Chicago. 8 p.m.
Los Antela 11 Phoeni-.. 8 p.m.

:NFL leaders

2000 FORD F250

1999 EXPEDITION

Sunday's games

Super Duty Supercab, V-8, !5 ap., Air Cond ..
Trailer Tow, Reading Utility Body, More

Transactions

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
QUirterblckl

; ElaUt

AU. !dim. rdi.II!Inl.

-Bled50C. N.E. ... .
.. .... 211'
•Kitrm. Sen. .......
.191
~ Mannlng . lnd ..... .. ........ ... 216
' O'Donnell. T&lt;n..
.. 112
. Orba&lt;. K.C. .. .. . .. .... 219

164 Bl.&amp; 13 ol
II ~ 1.&amp;18 12 4
IMI 2282 IS 9

IQ.I 1209 8 4
BO 1~97 10

7

Baseball
Amtrican Lta&amp;ut
8ALT1MORE ORIOLES: Aan:cd to te-rms with
OF Derrick May an a ore-yea- c:onuact.
SEATTLE MARINERS: Declined 10 exercise
lheir 2000 opticm on OF Jay Buhner.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS : Announced 1ht
mirement of 38 Wade Bos&amp;s :and named him special
GUis&amp;aftl tO the aeneral manap.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS , T"ded RHP Pat
Hent~ aftd utP Po~tt1l Spolj:vic to lhe St. Loui1 .
COI'&amp;nah for LHP Lance Painter. C Albeno Cutillo 1
and RHP Ma~:t DeWitt. Eurcis.rd lhrir 2000 option :
011 C Dooita Fletcbet-.
.

-Leo...

HOUSTON ASTROS: Exercised their 2000
option on lB Cf1l:igio.
LOS ANQ
OOOOERS: Agt«d 10 1mns
wid!INF Dave HaDJea on a one-year contract

.

1999 FORD MUSTANG

1998 FORD F150

c...,

V-9, 5 Sp., Alr Ccnd., AM/FM
CD,
Tl~. CruiH, PW, F'L, P Hat, LOadOCI

''

Bllllketball
Nallonai .......... A-kto

NBA: Suspcn4c:l1 Los Aoaeles Lakm C
Shaquill&lt; O'N&lt;II ltld HouJion Rock&lt;tJ F Clwleo
Barkley without pay for one ~for their acti0111 in

o Nov.

10 some. Fitted O'Neal $10,000 ltld Bodley

Sl.OOO.

DALLAS MAVERICKS: Pla«4 f t.on Smith
on the injured lilt Activaud f Bruno Sundov from
th&lt; injur&lt;d
PIIILAIJEUIIIIA 76£RS, Wli...t F R&lt;&gt;Giek

-·

die lajured lilt

11J'AH JAZZ: Activ:lltd F Blkari Hendria ftom
lhe injured lill and waived him.
w.....,. N-...1....... A.-.dadMI
LOS ANGELES SPARKS' Annoott&lt;ed the
•etittiiKM ol G Pemy Toler ID4I aame4 Tokr aefter·

"-·

N-1 Horktr Lcop
NHL: FiliCd Decrolt Red Winas coach SC(Jn
Bowman $1 ,000 for his role Ia 111 alaercaion wich a
-I&gt;Criodl of ...... 011 Nov. 1.
CALGARY fUMES, Cloimed D Bobby Dollu
off wai.m from 1he Oi11wa Senaton. Auiped G
frJd BnobWiit&lt; 10 StiN John of 1he AHh. IW:olled
0 /&lt;!I!:Sdooori&lt;a Gipae from Slin1 1oM.
OTfAWA SENATORS' Traded C Bru&lt;e
(i¥'fincr 10 th&lt; Tllllt'l Boy UlfMnioa f« LW Colin
fcirboo. !i«•lletl D f.licll Goldtwn aDd D Kml ·
t¥'-" from Oroncl Rl(&gt;ids of lhe IHL
.

La...-

-Lac-'-"&lt;
PHILADELPHIA WINGS: Tiltltd A Gre1
(Of&lt;Qtwra to PimlttttJII ,,. G Owia Soode&lt;100
SYRACUSE SMASHo Norned

P~

_., ud Mart Vitordfi ooao&lt;llk coo&lt;h.

Donaft.,.

CGilqe
NEWBERRY: Announced the resia:narion of
Kendell Reyn, women's socm coach.
·
Pl..YMOU11f STATE: Named Na1e Ostis men's

lacrosse coldl.

1999 FORD RANGER

SUpercab 4X4, V·O, Auto, Alr Ccnd., AM/FM CIIN.,
Loaded, Several In Stock

1997 FORD F250

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7.3 LOifJJUI,Auto,AirCOnd.,AM/FM Case.,
lllt, Cruise, All Power, Two In Stock

Hot key

.

N.Y. Rangers beat
Capitals 5-4 in OT

PICTURE YOUR CHILI)
AMONG THE ...

od goals to lead host Philadelphia.
Mark Recchi added an empty-net
goal with ·45 seconds left, while
Valeri Zelepukin, John LeClair and
Daymond Langkow added two
assists for the Flyers, who are 9-2- 1
after going 0-5-1 to start the season.
LeClair has 10 points in his last
five games.
Bruins 4, Maple LeafJ 3
P.J. Axelsson scored with I :02
remaining in overtime, and Dave
Andreychuk scored two third-period
goals to rally Boston.
Axelsson took a pass from Darren
Van lmpe and backhanded a shot
over the left shoulder of Toronto
goalie Curtis Joseph for the winner.
Trailing 3-1 • in the third,
Andreychuk scored twice to tie it for
Boston and move into a tie with
Jaroniir Jagr of Pittsburgh for the ··
league lead with 13 goals.
;
Ray Bourque added three assists ·.
for the Bruins, who have won five
straight at home.
Canadiens 2, Might Ducks I
Martin Rucinsky scored for the
fourth straight game and Sergei
Zholtok got his first goal ofthe season as host Montreal stopped a ninegame winless skid.
Jeff Hackeu stopped 24 shots as
the Canadiens won for the first time
since beating Buffalo on Oct. 16.
Montreal was 0-8-1 in t~at span.
Matt Cullen had the lone goal for
the Mighty Ducks.
Predators 2, Senaton I
Greg Johnson and Robert
Valicevic each scored to give
Nashville the victory.
Valice~ic broke a 1-1 tie late in
-ONLYthe second period as the Predators
rallied to win their second game in as
many nights and halt Ottawa's threegame winning streak.
Wade· Redden scored for the
Senators, who lost for just the second
time in 10 home games.
Kings 5, Avalanche 2
Per Picture
At Los Angeles, Ziggy Palffy and
Marko Tuomainen stunned Patrick
Prepaid
Roy with goals 52 seconds apart on
.
Please enclose
consecutive shots in the first period.
. self-addressed, stamped
Palffy also assisted on the firsl
envelope to return
goal of the season by Len Barrie, and
your photo
Vladimir Tsyplakov scored his first
two goals of the season, helping the
$5.00 Per Additional
Kings improve their record to I0-4Child In Pieture
4. It is their best start since 1992-93,
when they went to the Stanley Cup
finals.

NHL action
By The Aaaoclated Preaa

One night after collapsing in the
third period, the New York Rangers
mounted a comeback of their own.
Petr Nedved tied the game with
19 seconds left in regulation. and
lim Taylor scored I :04 into overtime
to give the Rangers a 5-4 victory
over the . Washington Capitals on
JIMY WILLIAMS
Thursday night.
card in 199g, finished only four " "This could be the turning point
games back this year, improving as far as our season." said Nedved,
from 92-70 to 94-68.
who scored twice. "When they
The Red Sox even pressed New scored the fourth goal, we stayed
York in September, sweeping a three- positive on the bench even though it
game series at Yankee Stadium and was really hard."
closing within three games during
Especially after blowing a 3-1
the final two weeks.
lead at home to Ouawa on
After the votes were cast by the Wednesday night .
Baseball Writers' Association of
New York's offense had done litAmerica, the Red Sox overcame a 2- tie recently, scoring only 13 goals as
0 deficit to heat the Indians in the the Rangers went 1-6-2 in their last
best-of-live first-round series, then nine games. But Nedved scored on
lost to the Yankees in the AL the Rangers' first shot of the game
Championship Series.
and Taylor scored on the last
"We have to be proud of our seaTaylor put a pass from M.ike
son," second baseman · Jose Knuble past Washingt'?n goalie Ohif
Offerman said the day after the final Kolzig for the winning goal.
game. "Not too many people expect"You just hope for the best."
ed us to go this far."
Taylor said. " It's coming across, and
Oakland (97-75) was one of only you hope you have the righl angle on
three teams among lhe bottom 15 your stick to put it back towards the
spenders 10 finish with a winning net. "
record, joining Cincinnati (96-67)
At Washington. Nedved and
and San Francisco (86-76). Reds Michael York both scored 1wo goals
manager Jack McKeon won the NL apiece for the Rangers, who also got
Manager of the Year award 30 saves from goalie Mike Richter.
Wednesday.
Adam Oates had a go~ I and an
Exceeding expectations seems to assist for Washington, sc &gt;ring his
be the key.
first goal since the Capi Jls' 66th
"I don't know what my expecta- game of last ~son . Calle 1hansson
lions are," Williams said last spring. also got a goal and an l• sist. The
"It's like the word 'potential.' Those assist was his 300th for th• Capitals.
two words don't mean a whole lot to Scott. Stevens is the o ly other
me. We can't please everybody. Washington defenseman to reach
Certainly, we have to pleaSe our- that total .
selves first."
. Despite the win, the Ranger_s
came up empty on all f&lt; 1r power
plays. They have gone SC!':eless on
·all 35 extra-man chance• in road
games and scored on only &gt;Ur of 76
power plays this season.
In other NHL game' it was
.
Nashville
2, Ottawa I; ' Jston 4,
: COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - not recommended because the heatToronto
3
in
overtime; Ph adelphia
: Evidence of a parasite that can cause ing is uneven.
4,
Carolina
1;
Montreal 2, \naheim
"We need to let people know this
: human birth defects and illness has
I;
and
Los
Angeles
5, Cok tdo 2.
: been found in deer in centfal Ohio, is of some concern," Needham said.
Flyen
4,
Hurricao•
I
:· 'a'ccording to a new report in the Ohio "I don't see hunters out there doing
Eric
Lindros,
Eric
Desj:
dins
and
anything now to protect them.· Journal of Science.
Sandy
McCarthy
scored
se•
llld·peri;c Signs of Toxoplasma gondii, selves.''
Exposure to the bug ;:an cause
: .which causes an infection in humans
;1:called toxoplasmosis, was fo11nd in cl,lronic fatigue, fever and sickness,
' 44 percent of 147 deer carcasses test- according to Leona Ayers, an infec: ed in Delaware, Fairfield, Franklin, lious-disease specialist at the Ohio
. Geauga, Hocking, Perry and Portage State University College of Medicine
·: counties during the 1996 and 1997 and· Public Health. She said the
hunting seasons, according to the infection can kill or seriously deform
a-fetus.
~ journal.
More 'than 60 million people in
. ·;· . Antibodies indicating the parasite
·:·have been found in deer in the United States probably carry the
Peter Senior of Australia and
:::'Pennsylvania, New York and other parasite, but few have symptoms By CHRISTOPHER.BODE ~
TA
SHEE,
Taiwan
(AP
Sweden's
Johan Skold were another
Tiger
because
the
immune
system
usually
:· states, but this is th.e first documentaWoods
struggled
with
his
,
rt
game
stroke
back
at 139. Senior had a 72,
prevents
illness,
said
the
U.S
.
.: tion of it in Ohio, said Ohio State
today,
bogeying
three
hole
1
sErnie
while
Skold
shot a 73 in the second
for
Disease
Control
and
Centers
:: University entomologisl Glen
Els and Michael Campbell ared the round.
:. Needham, senior investigator on the Prevention.
Woods, the world's No. I golfer,
The extent of the infection in lead midway through th fohnnie
.repon.
Walker
Classic.
·
showed
even less inspiration with the
.. , Hunters should wear rubber Ohio varied by C-&gt;Unty. One of 17
.d
a
67,
The
South
African
El&gt;
putter
than
in his uninspired first
:. ,gloves when handling deer carcasses deer tested in Franklin· County carndshot
round
on
Thursday,
failing to make
while
Campbell
of
New
2.
· •and thoroughly cook meal, the Ohio .ried the antibody over that lwo-ycar
any
putt
longer
than
six
feet.
a
71
to
finish
tied
at
7-un
Jar
137
:Division of Wildlife said. Other rec- period. The infection rate in
"It
was
a
difficult
day," said
after
the
second
round
ot
·
'a
Shee
. :ommended precautions are to freeze Delaware. Fairfield and Hocking
Golf
and
Country
Club
,
·
m1hem
Woods,
adding
he
felt
tired
and had '
;or lhoroughly cook venison to kill counties ranged from 39 percent to
been
thrown
off
by
the
vatying ·
Taiwan.
•the parasite. Microwave cooking is 55 percent.
Woods finished with a ven par weather, which included lighl rain
'
72 and was three strokes · 1ind the and sunshine.
Others were also struggling.
leaders.
(Cominucd from Page 4)
"I held it together but · lS strug· including Fiji's · Vijay Singh, '
ager when the deal was made.
beat New. York 93-90, Toronto gling with the putter and ' I well to England's Nick Faldo and American
. "It was no big issue for me." said defeated Detroit 123-106 and Indiana fight back to even for the y," said Jim Furyk. Singh and Faldo both had .
Woods, coming otT a rc1 rd-tying 72s and were at 143 and 144 respec: Mashburn, a former first-round draft downed Orlando 116-101.
four consecutive tournan nl wins tively; Furyk was tied with Woods at
• pick of 1he Mavericks. "It's not
Timberwolves !13, Knicks 90
and
eight victories in hi last II 140 after a 73.
· about being with Don, it was about
At Minneapolis, Kevin Gamet!
O'Hem, however, said he expectappearances.
· not being with Jimmy Jackson and scored a career-high 35 points as the
The
tournament
seen
I
to
be
ed
the top players would begin to
Jason Kidd. I'm thankful to Don for Timberwolves ~eat New York in
dominate
after today's cut.
shaping
up
to
be
a
replay
I
the
start
putting me in a situation where the their North American opener.
of
last
year's
Classic
in
1ailand,
"After
a couple of days, they're
Heat have a chance to be in the play· Minnesota, which started the seawhere
Woods
fell
eig
l
.strokes
still
adjusting
to the conditions of the
. offs and win a championship."
son wilh two games atJapan, looked
course,"
the
28-year-old
Australian
behind
Els
before
surgi:.
back
to
Miami enjoyed its highest-scoring lethargic at the start and trailed 70-56
win
in
a
playoff.
said.
game since get 129 points against late in the third quarter.
Ta Shee 's grass has a different ·
"Tiger is the best gP
in the
• Detroit on April23, 1995, in the regGarnett scored IS points in .the
pretty grain than turf found on courses in
ular-season finale. The host Heat final period to put the limberwolves world by far. He had
1
id.
"If more temperate climates, causing
mediocre
day
(today),
"
l
have won three in a row.
ahead. He blocked Marcus Camby's
balls lo roll faster or slower than
tt
couDallas has lost three straight and shot with five seconds left, and I can score under 70 for tl
might
be expected, O'Hern said.
•Come
has not ·beaten Miami since Dec. 10, Latrell Sprewell's three-pointer was pie of days, then they'll h
Campbell,
who has frequently
out
and
catch
me."
1991. at Reunion Arena.
off target just before the buzzer.
racked
up
low
scores only to finish
Nick
O'Hem
of
Aus·
•hot
a
The Mavericks got a season-high
Rookie Wally Szczerbiak scored
lander
poorly,
said
he
wasn't
intimidaled by
7
I
and
Sweden's
Mar
• 23 points from 7-footer Dirk 23 . points for Minnesota. Allan
any
of
the
other
players.
had
a
70
to
tied
for
thin.
under.
Nowitzki.
Houston had 29 points and Sprewell
None of the DallRS defenders, 20 for the Knicks.
including the 21-year-old Nowitzki,
Minnesota center Dean Garrett·sat
VETERANS :f\
could handle Mashburn's spinning out after his surgically repaired left
moves.
knee swelled·on the flight back from
Diabetic Screening
:
"He's a great player who I Tokyo.
~ enjoyed watching when . I was
Raplon 123, PisloJU 106
Wedne y, November 17, 1999
i young," Nowitzki said. "He showed Doug Christie scored 24 points
8· AM - ll:OOAM
: it tonight."
and Vince Carter had 22 points and
~ .. Miami led 45-36 when Mashburn II rebounds as Toronto beat Detroit,
: ~ored the team's next II points. . the Raptors' fourth straight victory.
~ creening Test,
- ~at extended into a 21 -6 burst that
Kevin Willis added 18 points and
) l1i!!oatcd the Heat's lead to 66-44 with 13 rebounds for Toronto. Grant Hill Nutritional and Medication Educational Information
~~:a 1 left in the first half.
had 25 points and Jerry Stackhouse
Call (740) 992r3632 to Pre-Register
::~~ ' Mashburn ~hot 13-for-19 f~m the had 21 for the Pistons, but both shot
;:~~¢1d in ,31 101nutcs. It w~ h1s. h1gh- just 6-for-22.
.•~.t-sconng game for M~amt H1s
The Pistons, who lost to the
· :~eer high of 50 came with the Knicks at the Palace last Friday, are
.- Mavericks in 1994.
· 0-2 at home this season and have not
: ;.'· lim Hardaway had 16 ·points in led in either game.
" 27 minutes and Alonzo Mourning
Pacen 116, Magk 101
~ idded 18 in an abbreviared stint for
At Indianapolis, Reggie Miller
~ the HC~tt. PJ. Brown had 15 points had 21 points and reserve AI "
:: and II rebounds, and reserve guard Harrington scored 17 of his career;. Anthony Carter had 10 assists.
high 19 in the fourth quarter as
•:
"They mad.e every shot and took Indiana beat Orlando.
;: advantage of every mistake," Nelson
Rik Smits put the Pacers ahead to
: said. "I didn 'tlike our game plan. I'll stay at 62-60 with a hook shot.
; take the blame for that."
· Darrell Armstrong led the Magic
·
In other NBA games, Minnesota with 22 points.
·
· 'P~.
candidate.
Gilkey 390 Ash St. Middleport,

:: NEW YORK (AP) - Jimy
}Villiams won the American League
Manager of the Year award Thursday
'i{ter leading the Boston Red Sox into
.the playoffs despite the loss of Mo
:V.aughn.
' · : : Williams received 20 first.place
~otes and five seconds for liS points
from the Baseball Writers'
A,ssociation of America.
: · Oakland's Art Howe was second
for keeping the Athletics in con·tention until September despite a
$25.2 million payroll, 24th among
the 30 major league teams. He got
five firsts, 19 seconds and three
thirds for 85 points.
. · Joe Torre of the World Series
champion New York Yankees, last
year's winner, was ,third with 21
points.
. . Johnny Oates of the Texas
:Rangers finished fourth with one first
•place vote and 18 points. Mike
:J:Iargrove, fired by the Cleveland
'Indians after losing to Boston in the
J..llayoffs. finished fifth with lwo firsts
and 13 points. He will manage
jlaltimore next season.
- : Boston had been expected to
'S!ruggle after Vaughn left as a free
}gent and signed with the Anaheim
~ngels.
,
"You take the club that you have,
\he players that you have and you go
out and perform the best you can,"
.\yilliams said the day before spring
;!laining last February. "We're not
1[ying to replace Mo. He was a
:¥mendous player here, but he's not
·]:iere now, so we have to move on.
Does it do any good to get down on
~ 17 I don't believe so."
Boston, 22 games behind the
.Yankees when it won the AL wild-

·o hio DOW warns hunters
of dangerous deer parasites

Els,·Car, tpbell share

Our special page( s)

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u".

SEA'I'IU SUI'EitSONICS' A&lt;tivlled F Llzaro
Bonetl from che injlmllilt. rt.::e 0 Ftt:d ViDIOR on

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

lead at .. 'o hnnie Walker
Classic' ; halfway mark. ....b

NoPa

Toni&amp;ht's ga~

Atlanua a1 New Jersey, i :JO p.m.
Buffalo at Tampa Bay. 7:30p.m.
Piltsburah 11 Detroll. 7::\0p.m.
Edmomon at St. Lcui1. 8 p.m.
N.Y. Is laDders at ChiCIJO, 8:30p.m
Vancouver at Phoenil. 9 p.m.

Boston at Chicna;o. 8:30p.m.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·· ~

49
44
41
58

Thursday's scores

Washinaton at Indiana. 7 p.m. "'
Scnttle at Detroit. 7:.\0 p.m.
MilwDIIkec at CLEVELAND. 7::\0 p.m.
OriOOdo oat Dallas, 8 p.m.
Phoenix ill MinncJota. 8 p.m.
Olarlotlc at San Antonio, 1\:30 p.m.

,

JlY RONALD BLUM

Nullvill&lt; 2. Ottowo I
N.Y. Ran,een 5, WUhintlon4-0T
Boolon 4, Ton&gt;ato l·OT
PhiiMtlphi1 4, Carolina I
MCIIItla} 2. Anaheim I
""! Anpla s, Colorado 2

Saturday'sganies

'

'

manager
pf
the
_
year
'-

Miami in February 1997, Mashburn
scored 34 points Thursday night as
NBA action
the Heat beat ttie Mavericks for the
15th straight time, 128-105.
HOW DOES IT FEEL?- That 1111y have been the question Suttle
Nelson, now the Mavericks' SuperSonics' Ruben Patterson wanted to ask 11 he looks beck at
By The Associated Preea
Jamal Mashburn got to thank Don coach, was the team's general man- the Cleveland Cavaliers' Brevln Knight after dunking In front of him
during Thursday night's NBA game In Cleveland, . where the
Nelson in person.
SuperSonics
won 109-10~- (AP)
(See
NBA
on
Pace
S)
Traded by Nelson from ·Dallas to __

46
47

c...nlllivillioo

NashviUc .................6
Chieaao ............... .)

...

'Mash' helps Mi~mi
defeat Dallas again

WESTERN CONFERENCE

2

PadlkDI¥1sion

LA. Laken .

~wJerley ............ 8

L I BI I'IJ. !i.E GA

~II

win."
Trailing by 10 points, the Cavs
Vin Baker added 24 points and 13 pulled within 96-93 with 3:40 left
rebounds for the Sonics, who when Danny Ferry grabbed a looliC
outscored the Cavs 29-13 in the third ball and dropped a 12-foot baseline
quarter and then hung on.
jumper.
Payton scored 12 points in the
Barry's three-pointer from the
third and hit a key jumper in the final right side put the Sanies back up by
three minutes for Seattle, which had six before Bob Sura's three on
its 14-point lead in the second half Cleveland's next trip closed it to 99trimmed to three with 2:58 left.
96 with 2:58 remaining.
Horace Grant had 10 rebounds
Payton made the biggest basket of
and Patterson, a Cleveland native, the game with 2:37 left by knocking
added 10 points.
down a 17-footet near the foul line.
Andrew DeClercq had a careerAfter rookie Andre Miller's free
high 19 points and nine rebounds for throw made it 101-97, Grant hit a
Cleveland, which had its three-game jumper with one second left on the
winning streak stopped.
24-second clock and Barry made a
The Cavs had won 27 straight foul shot when Kemp committed a
when scoring over I00 points, but technical foul.
couldn't catch the Sonics down the
With Paytontill being treated in
stretch because of ~orne costly the locker room at half, Sharnmond
turnovers and poor shot selection.
Williams started in his place in the
" It was just one of 1hose nights. third quarter. Once Payton checked
The jump shot wasn 't falling," said in, he scored six straight points ·in a
Kemp. whose jumper from lhe top of 9-0 run as Seattle took control.
the key with 1:37 left' and lhe Cavs
"He's a tough guy," Seattle coach
down by only four nearly cracked the Paul Westphal said. "It was hurting
backboard. "That shol has been all him. I'm jusl amazed at what Gary
net this year, tonighl it was all air." can get done when he's in so much
The Cavs were playing for the pain."
first time in four days, and weren't
Notes: Cavs forward Cedric
sharp al either end of the Roor.
Henderson was 0-for-5 from the
"We jusl came oul too soft, no Roor and is now 2·for-22 this season.
energy and lackadaisical," coach .. . Sanies guard Vernon Maxwell
Randy Wittman said.
spent ponions of the game 1alking
Brent Barry had four three-point- · trash with several members of the
ers and added 17 points for Seattle, Cleveland Browns silting courtside.
which has won nine straight over ... Cleveland hadn't lost when scorCieveland, including the last five at ing 100 points since April II, 1997, a
Gund Arena.
I03- 10 I OT loss at Boston.

Southt~•Dhisioo

MWwHlDM....

........ l
...2

»:.9

Philadelphia

Toronlo ................. 10 6 2 I
Boscon ...
...1 6 4 0
Buffalo ..
.........7 7 2 0
Montreal.. .. .. ..........4 I 2 I I

WFSfERN CONFERENCE
lila

Atlantic Olwisk»n

1'wll

Northust Dhision
Ottawa ., ............. 11 5 I ' I 24

-·-

San Amcnio.
MinrteSO(a ......
Utili. ..
Denver ..... .

NHL standings

AL names
;williams
,

Sonics chain Kemp, beat Cavs 109-103
ISY TOM WITHERS

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Dec. 17. ot 3p.m.
Mail or bring the entry form:

The Daily Sentinel
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.• Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

'.

!: Coaches .u. Cancer

·stanford, Iowa ,beat Du:ke,.
B~ JIM O'CONNELL

NEW YORK (AP) - The one game everybody
wanted from the Coaches vs. Cancer Classic top-ranked Connecticut against No. 10 Duke in a
rematch of last season's national championship
game - will be played.
Just make sure to get to Madison Square
Garden early enough tonight to see the consolation game.
.
In Thursday night's opener. No. 13 Stanford
used impressive runs late in regulation and in
overtime to beat Duke 80.79.
In the second game, Iowa, with a new coach
and almost a whole new team, withstood a big
comeback and stunned.Connecticut 70.68.
Connecticut and Duke will meet in the third·
place game, the one that won 't be televised nationally, while Iowa and Stanford meet in the championship game.
"What better way to start off a season than to
beat the No. I team," Iowa point guard Dean
Oliver said.
The Hawkeyes' last game had been a NCAA
tournament regional semifi nal loss to Connecticut.
It had already been dec ided coach Tom Davis was
leav ing, and his successor, Steve Alford, had quite
a start Thursday night.
"I have only been with this team fo r one game
and we' vc already got one special win under our
belts together," Alford said.
Iowa opened the game by takin g a 16-4 lead,
and it was .liP 36-21 at halftime as Connecticut
shot 26 percent and had twice as many turnovers
( 14) as field goals. The Huskies stonned back-and
took the lead once. but Iowa found a way te·hang
on.

·

·PomerOY e MiddlepOrt, Ohio

nnecticut

Alben Mouring:s three-p(,iriter with 7:o6 1\1
·stanford, like Duke a te8m loaded with freshplay gave Connect)cut a 55-53 lead, but sopho- men, made iis big nins without its only returning
more Kyle Galloway, who missed last season with starer, Mark Madsen, who pulled a hamstring with
a back injury, hit a three with 6:33 left, and .Iowa just under a minute ten in regulation and didn't
didn'i trail again.
. return.
"That was a real gut-check when they took the
The Cardinal outscored the Blue Devils 8-2 in
lead," Galloway said. "The coaches told us to the final 39 seconds of regulation to tie it 68-68,
keep playing defense and we would come back to then used a I 0-0 run to give themselves enough to
win it. "
hold off a Duke rally in overtime.
Jacob Jaacks had 20 points for Iowa, while
"We made some big plays to get itto overtime,
Oli ver had 14 and Galloway had II.
and a lot of guys stepped up," Stanford coach
. Khalid El-Amin, focus of a newspaper story Mike Montgomery said. "Madsen has a pulled
earlier in the day ~sible NCAA violation hamstring and !'m 90 percent sure, barring some
involving a botfowed car, had 26 points for the kind of miracle, he won't play (tonight)."
Huskies, all but two in the second half.
Chris Carrawell made two free throws 33 sec- •
"I don' t think the team was aware of anything, onds into the extra session to give Duke its final
and we didn't make them aware," said lead. Michael McDonald, who scored eight points,
Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun, who refused to then started the 10.0 run with two three-pointers.
comment on the story. "It certainly wasn't a factor
David Moseley's layup and Jason Collins' dunk
in the game."
gave Stanford a 78-70 lead with 2:03 left.
El-Amin denied the report to the newspaper Carrawell then scored seven points in Duke's 9-2
Wednesday and did the same after the glllljC.
run to close the game, but it wasn't enough.
"There was no wrongdoing on my part," he
"There were a lot of good things, like the
said. "''ve spoken to the people who need to be comeback in overtime," Duke coach Mike
spoken to, and the situation should be handled." Krzyzewski' said. "Our defense was beller than I
It was the 22nd consecutive season-opening thought it would be allli it kept us in the bailvtctory for Iowa and the second time in four years game."
the defending national champion lost its opener.
Moseley led Stanford with 20 points, and
Kentucky lost to Clemson to open the 1996-97 Madsen had 15.
season.
"We knew we had to make some big plays
"I am not taking anything away from Iowa, but down the stretch, and we did to get to overtime,"
PLAYING HIM CLOSE- Iowa's Jacob Jaaclis (right) Is defensed
if they s~t down .it wouldn 't have made a differ· Moseley said. "We showed some depth, and now at arm's length by Connecticut's Edmund Saunders during
ence," Calhoun said. "The better team won we'll need it."
· Thursdlly night's Coaches vs. Cancer Classic semifinal game,
tonight and if we play like this tomorrow night we
Carrawell, one of two starters back from last which the Hawkeyes won 70-68. (AP)
could be in for a real hurting. I don't expect us season, finished with a career-high 28 points,
to."
while Shane Battier, the other returnee, had 19.

UNLV slates title unification bout for Saturdav night

Holyfield, Lewis promise more exciting fight
By TIM DAHLBERG
the dull sameness of all 12 rounds as
. LAS VEGAS (AP) -'- When they do for the controversy that
Lennox Lewis and Evander erupted when Holyfield salvaged a
Holyfield first met eight months ago, draw despite being seemingly domithe boxing world anticipated a clas- nated by the bigger and more agile
sic matchup that would finally pro- Lewis.
duce an undi sputed heavyweight
And while Lewis appeared to
champion. ·
have his way, he didn 't win many
That didn't happen, of course, fans by refusing to press the fight
when questionable judging allowed more.
•
Holyfield to walk out of the ring at
"In the first fight, maybe I was a
Madison Square Garden with a draw bit cautious," Lewis said. "In the
and his two portions of the heavy- second fight, I won't be as cautious."
weight title.
Both fighters will earn $15 mil·
The undisputed title will be up for lion this time around, a decrease of
grabs once again Saturday night SS million for Holyfield and an
when the two meet in a rematch. This increase of the same amount for
time, though, boxing 's credibility Lewis from the first fight.
will also be at stake.
Unlike the fight in New- York,
"Boxing definitely needs some· though, the three sanctioning bodies
thing." Holyfield said. "This will be had no say in picking the officials to
a performance that may make every- work the ·rematch. Holyfield has the
·body forget everything that's hap· WBA and IBF belts, while Lewis
pened in the last year."
holds the WBC title.
The hype that led up to the first
Nevnda boxing authorities picked
fight March 15 is missing as both the judges and the referee, with three
champions prepare to unify the three veteran judges with a combined 220
parts of the title for the first time title fights between them picked for
since Riddick Bowe tossed away the ringside duty.
. : .WBC portion of the belt after beating
"I'm confident that the fighter
:· ·Holyfield in November 1992.
who wins the fight in the ring will get
,
!nstead, it has been replaced by a the proper decision, " said Marc
• · subdued sense of urgency to help sah . Ratner, executive director of the
: vage a sport hurt by the controversy Nevada Athletic Commission.
: over the first fight as well as the
Holyfield, who gives away 25
· antics of Mike Tyson and a disap- pounds and distinct height and reach
-: pointing welterweight fight with advantages to Lewis, who weighed
· : Oscar De La Hoy a and Feli x in at 242 pounds Thursday, has
' Trinidad.
always fought well in rematches and
· Though the 18,000-scat UNLV says he has changed things in his
: campus arena has long· been sold out, fight plan to try and press the attack
· the pay-per-view sales for the against the English champion.
: rematch are expected to fall far
"I guarantee victory," Holyfield
·: below the 1.2 million buys that land- said at the weigh-in.
: · cd the first fight in the top 10 of all
It was a similar guarantee that got
: : pay.per-vicw fights.
Holyfield in trouble the first time.
, : That may be because boxing fans when he was left without a game
, . remember the first fight as much for plan after the third round came and

went and he had failed in his predic- against overmatched opponents.
tion of a third round knockout.
Some think Lewis is still haunted
"I hope he comes in trying to mix by his only loss - when Oliver
it up because he's only going to get McCall knocked him out with one
damaged," Lewis said. "I'm going punch in the second round five years
to do everything in my power to ago - and is fearful of getting
knock him out."
caught again.
Holyfield (36-3· 1. 25 knockouts)
"I'm a boxer-puncher. I'm not
has rescued his career before, win· like Mike Tyson," Lewis said. "But
ning back portions of the beavy. I'll be right in his face. He won't
weight title back twice after first los- have to go looking for me."
ing to Bowe. He knocked out the
The fi ght, expected to begin about
seemingly invincible Mike Tyson, 12 p.m . EST, tops a card that
then was beating him in a rematch in includes a WBA ·cruiserweight title
the infamous ear biting fight.
fight between champion Fabrice
But Holyfield has been in some Tiozzo of France and Ken Murphy of
wars in the ring and, despite; his Chicago. Sharmba Mitchell of
expertly sculpted body, is old for a Takoma Park, Md., will defend his
fighter at the age of 37.
WBA s•Jper lightweight title against
"The first fight with me he could· Elio Ortiz of Venezuela and WBA
n't figure out what was happening," lightwe ight champion Stefano Zoff
Lewis said. "He won't figure it out of Italy . will defend. against Gilbert
again."
Serrano of Venezuela.
For Holyfield to win - and odds- •
makers make him a 9-5 underdoghe must figure out a way to get inside
the dominating jab of Lewis and
score effectively before Lewis ties
him up. In the first fight he failed
miserably at both, with CompuBox
punch-count statistics crediting .
Lewis with landing 348 punches, 187
of them jabs, to Holyfield's 130, 52
of them jabs.
"I was disappointed in my performance. I kind of felt old for real,"
Holyfield said. "I Y;asn't able to do
what I wanted to do. I always

:~~g~~t:~r~B~t ~ c~~~t!~tno~!rc~:~

OVER

my actions with my mind."
Lewis (34+ I. 27 knockouts) has
always possessed better tools for a
heavyweight than Holyfield, who
began his career fighting at 175
pounds. But he has been criticized
for not exploiting them more, and for
fighting far too cautiously even

2100 MODEl SilVERADO PICKUPS TD CHDDBI fiDMI

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= y~·--------------------------------~--------------------------------------------------------------------------~------------~~::~~::::::~~;::::

~:,Grandmother~s caregiver doing right thing on stopping birthday checks for greedy family

:
.•

Dear Ann Landen: Your advice
, to "Just My Opinion Out East" was
:~·all wet.
, ;;;,
"Out East" said her sister,
Clarice, was taking care of her
grandmother's affairs. Consequen'!!
ly, there would be no more birthday
·cards or checks for the children from
Grandma.
You said, "I think it's a shame
your sister is taking advantage of
~ Grandma's old age, and ignoring
,. what were surely Grandma's wish·
::_es." You went on to suggest that
;' "Out East" send pre-addressed,
stamped birthday cards that Clarice

~· .Scouts

could just drop in the mail at the
appropriate time.
You missed the point. ''Out East"
wasn't interested in a birthday card
from Grandma. She wanted the
check. I can only imagine how
happy she will be to get an empty
card. Clarice already has her hands
full taking care of Grandma, and
should not have to wony about selfish relatives. God bless her.•• BEEN
THERE IN NEW YORK
DEAR NEW YORK: You and
humlreds of others were upset that I
was · not more sympathetic to
Clarice's situation. You are right.

:: :ey RUSTY MILLER
We' re just genuinely excited to be in
The future has finally airived.
; : AP Sport• Writer
.
a game of this magnitude."
"We beat this program
. Wooster wants to be Wittenberg
Wittenberg has taken note of how (Wittenberg) two years ago and beat
: · and Winenberg wants to be the old seriously Wooster is taking the game. Allegheny at their place this year,"
::'Wittenberg.
"I'm not a Website guy, but I've Barnes said. "You know, we're not
. That's why both teams have a lot been told a couple of times that going to them all, but we certainly
:::riding on the outcome of their North they've billed this as the biggest feel like this Saturday is one we can
•. 'Coast Conference showdown game in school history because they get."
: : :saturday.
have an opportunity to get into the
Kenyon is at Denison and Ohio
;.; The Scots (8-1, 4-1 NCAC) must playoffs," Fincham said. "I don't Wesleyan at Earlham elsewhere in
:·::win to get a share of the league title blame them. I guess that's the exact the NCAC.
·~· from the Tigers (9-0, 5-0). An NCAA same approach I would take,on it."
Other games arouf\11 tlie state on
:· :Division III playoff berth likely
Naturally, Wittenberg is accus- . the Jut big Saturday of the season
.;.: ;awaits the winner.
tomed to playing big games in include Illinois at Ohio State in the
·: · Wittenberg is trying to take a step November. But Fincham stresses that Big Ten, Kent at Akron, Ball State at
;. :back to the future .
all those titles won three and four Bowling Green, Miami -of Ohio at
:.:·: "We're trying to get . back to decades ago don't mean much to 18- Ohio and Northern Illinois at Toledo
· &gt;where we were in the '60s and '70s, year-old kids who were playing high in the Mid-American Conference,
:&lt; as hard as that may be to do. I don't school ball a year ago.
and Cincinnati at East Carolina in
~.;know if we'll ever be that good
"You've got to understand that Conference USA.
·: •again." Tigers coach Joe Fincham kids go through your program in four
Findlay travels to Ashland in the
::said. "It's a big game for us. too."
years," Fincltam said. "We've got a Great Lakes Intercollegiate, while
;.•.; · Wittenberg is judged by its glori- number of guys on our club that are Muskingum is at Heidelberg, John
:: •olis past, which includes more victo- young guys.who haven't really eKpe· Carroll at Hiram, Onerbein at
&lt; ries than any other Division III rienced this before. It's just as big a Marietta. Baldwin-Wallace at Mount
.:~school (600), national champi· game for us."
- union and Capital at-{)hio Northern
: •onships in 1962, '64, '69, '73 and
Wooster stumbled right out of the in the Ohio Conference. Malone is at
·: ·:'75, a total of 20 league titles and 16 blocks, losing its conference opener Tri-State, St. Francis at Walsh and
· .; undefeated regular seasons.
to Ohio Wesleyan, 14-11. But the Urbana at Geneva in the Mid-States
·: • It's a ·standard that's difficult to Scots have regrouped, winning six in Association, while Bluffion visits
&lt; keep up with.
a row and edging NCAC bully Wilmington in the Heartland.
&gt; "There's some really good things Allegheny 13-10 in overtime on the Non-conference action includes
::about ·being here at Wittenberg: the road.
'
Youngstown State at Villanova,
-~istory, the tradition, all of those
Barnes attributes the early loss to Alfred at Oberlin and Olivet
:l:mings," Fincham said •• "But ~ a looking to far into the future and not Nazarene at Tiffin.
; ocoach, that history and tradttton . dealing with the game at hand.
-:works both ways. It's not real fun to .---"---'-"'= = ==--- -- - - - - -- - ----.
· :'walk down the halls around here
With Greg Pruitt running for 297 yards, Oklahoma set an NCAA
: :.nter you've stunk it up."
record of 711 yards rushing in an 78-25 pounding of Kansas State in
• : 111e showdown amounts to one of 1971 .
. ·
•
: )he biggest games - if not the
: -biggest - ever at Wooster.
.
Because of the lack of television exposure and season ticket $Upport,
• : "We 're almost a little naive about the IO·tearn World Football League was forced to disband in 1975.
: ' t all," Wooster coach Jim Barnes
: 'laid. "I don't think we're feeling any
In a 49:21 Philadelphia victory over the Washington Redskins in
• :pressure. I think we're just feeling 1954, Adrian Burk of the Eagles passed for seven touchdowns.
i
: ;aenuine excitement. We're not giddy.

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demanding, and often thalikless job,
and Clarice deserves all .the help she
can get. Here are a few more letters
on the subject:
From Canton; Ohio: Are you
still writi11g your column, or did you
tum it over to a bunch of greedy
teenagers? I could not believe your
answer to the woman who expects
her sister to send birthday cards
from Gralllima.
That woman should tell her chit·
dren that Grandma is no longer
capable of sending them birthday
cards. To receive such cards with her
signature on them would be deceptive and patronizing.
Lyndhurst, N.J.: I'll bet Clarice
is ·an unmarried woman stuck with
her 94-year-old senile grandmother.
I wonder how long it has been since
"Out East" visited Grandma. And
when did she last help Clarice out so

for Grandma? "Out East" says the
birthday cards will help her children
remember Grandma. Maybe "Out
East" should bring Grandma to stay
with her for a nice long visit. Then
they'd remember her just fine.
Billings, MonL: You dropped the
ball, Ann. That sister is not missing
the cards. She missing the checks
that came with them. I wonder how
often she wrote Grandma a thankyou note for those checks. Probably
never. She should be grateful Clarice
is taking carerof Qrandma and managing her affairs. I doubt "Out East"
would want to assume that responsi·
· bility. I hope Clarice inherits what·
ever money Grandma has left. She
deserves it.
Bryant, Ark.: If "Out East"
knew how much time, energy. love
and sacrifice it took to take care of.
·Grandma, she would realize why

discuss projects and upcoming events

Community projects were dis·
cussed and upcoming scouting
events planned at the recent Big·
Bend Girl Scout Service Unit
meeting held at Mei gs High
School.
A food drive will continue
thro~gh Saturday with troops collecting non -perishable food items
from their various neighborhoods.
To conclude the food drive , an
afternoon of games and other activ·
1ties is scheduled at God's NET
from 2-3:30 p.m. Anyone having
9uestions about this event can contact Glenna Smith at 696-1153.
: On Dec. II troops will be doing
a Secret Santa at which time they
will tum in the gifts they have purchased and go caroling to various
nursing homes in the county and
then have a social a~tivity. Tami
Putman at 278-6422 is in charge of
. the activities.
·: · Training .for troop cookie chair., men will be held Tuesday, Nov. 30.
· ! ill 7 p.m. or Saturday, Dec. 4 at 10
, ·a.m. Questions concerning the mat·
ter are to be directed to Brenda
Neutzling, Service Unit Adminis·
·trator.
.. Local Girl Scout troop activities
as follows:
Pomeroy.. Senior Troop 118.0.

elected the following officers:
Andrea Neutzling, president;
Melissa Brown, secretary-treasurer; Jennifer Larson, historian. Sev·
eral projects for the upcoming
months were discussed and
approved. Information on the nut
sale was given and permission
forms · collected. Girls took orders
from Oct. 8 through Oct. 17.
The troop participated in the
Chili Cook-Off at the Sternwheel
Festival and placed third in the
commercial division. The troop
was sponsored by Hubbard's
Greenhouses. The chili was pre.·
pared ·over a charcoal fire ..
Girls began troop work on the
Do You Get the Message? bndge
and planning leadership activities.
The troop currently meets at the
leader's home on Thursdays from
6-8 p.m.
Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271
began meeting at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ on Tuesdays from
6-8 p.m. Girls are working on the
Girl Scout Ways Try-It as they
learn about Girl Scouting and the
Play Try-it. Girls are preparing for
their Investiture/Rededication ceremony.
.
Middleport Ju11ior Jro.op. 1276
. reviewed safety for thec nut~ale that

was held in Ocwhor. The troop
chose to use town meeting for con- ·
ducting business. Three girls and
two adults attended the Fall Fun
Fest held at Camp Rotan in Athens.
The girls made plans .to attend
the Bonfire oil Oct. 29 and how
they would collect individual funds
for the Juliette Low World Friendship Fund. The girls worked on a
bead craft and also held a Halloween Party. The troop is planning
its bridging ceremony.
Eastern Brownie Troop 1316
has been busy learning about Girl
Scouts as they read about Girl ·
Scouting in the handbook and discussed the motto, slogan, quiet sign
and learned about Try-Its. During
the monih, girls have made sit·
upons as part of . the Girl Scout
Ways Try-It. They made spider
crafts, danced and attended the Girl
Scout Bonfire.
Salem Center Brownie Troop
1308 holds its meetings every
Tuesday 111 4 p.m. at. the ·grade
school. Girls are learning about
Girl Scouts as they prepare · for
investiture. The troop participated
in the Sternwheel Festival parade
on Oct, 9· and participated in the
Fall Hike at Lake Hope on Oct. 16.
'll!e troop learned about kaper

charts .and how they work. The
troop also participated in the Girl
Scout March and Bonfire.
Salem Center Junior Tr9op 1254
meets at the grade school every
Tuesday at 4 p.m. The troop partieipated in the Sternwheel Festival
parade, Lake Hope Fall Hike and
the Girl Scout March/Bonfire .
Middleport Brownie Troop I015
played a scavenger bunt game and
made a paper project using the Girl
Scout Promise. They reviewed
safety to use during the nut sale
and attended the Fall Fun Fest in
Athens. Girls worked on the Girl
Scout Ways Try-It and made
posters for the Girl Scout bonfire.
Posters were hung at Middleport
Elementary and Rutland Elemen·
tary.
The girls are . working on a
design for a troop T·shirt. Plans are
also underway for the troop
investiture/rededication and bridging ceremony. They will also be
attending the Brownie Art Day in
Huntington, W.Va., to earn the colors, shapes and numbers Try-It. ,
The troop meets on Monday at
the Middleport Church of Christ.
Anyone wanting more information
should contact the leader Jerena
Ebersbach .

next birthday, so she will be inclyd·
ed in the celebration. This will gtve
Oarice a break, and give "Out East"
an idea of what it is like to be a care
giver. There may not be many holidays left to share together. I woald
give anything to have my graRd·
mother back for just one more family celebration.
When planning a wedding, who
pays for what? Who stands where?
"The Ann Landers Guide for
Brides" has all the answers. Send a
self-addressed, long, business-sized
envelope and a check or money
order for $4.25 (this inclu4es
postage and handling) to: Brides. c/o
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11 562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611 -0562. To find
out more about Aim Landers and
read her past columns, visit the Cre·
ators Syndicate web page · at
www.creators.com.

She should invite Grandma to live
with her for a while, and see how
much time she has left to send out
birthday cards, or anything else.
"Out East" should be counting her
blessings instead of whining to Ann
Landers.
Mineola, Texas: A 94-year-old
graodmother should not be eKpected
to observe anyone's birthday. The
cards and checks she has given them
over the years are evidence of her
generosity, and should be enough.
We told our aging parents, "No more
gifts, please," when it became
apparent that it was a burden for
them both financially and physical·
ly.
Collqe Point, N.Y.: You were
not hard enough on "Out East."
Instead of having Clarice send out
cards in Grandma's name. the whole
family should visit Grandma on her

FRIDAY
POMEROY - State Rcpresenta·
tiye John Carey, R-Wellston, 94th
District; open door session, Friday, 2
to 3 p.m. at the Meigs County Courthouse.
·

Meigs Chapter. Daughters of lhe
American Revolution. Friday. I p.m
Grace Episcopal Parish house with
Kathryn Colborn, national historian,
speaker. Members to take gifts 'for
disabled veterans.
·

POMEROY
Youth conven- MONDAY
tion, Calvary pilgrim Chapel, S. R.
ATHENS - Route 33, Athens to
143, Friday, 7:30p.m. and Saturday, Darwin Citizens Advisory Commit·
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Special speakers.
tee, regular bi-weekly meeting,
Monday, 4to 6 p.m. at the O.U. Inn
MIDDLEPORT Pomeroy in Athens to review the draft pur·
Chapter 80, Royal Arch Masons, pose and need document.
inspection, 7:30p.m Friday, Middleport Masonic Temple.
POMEROY - Issue Two Local
Review Committee, Monday, 3:30
ALFRED - Orange Township p.m. in chambers of Meigs Cbuj,ty
Trustees, Monday, 6:30 p.m., home Commissionets.
of Osie Follrod, clerk, special
FEMA meeting.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council, recessed meeting, Monday,
POMEROY - Thanksgiving 7 p.m municipal building.
appreciation dinner, teens, volunteen, sponsors and their families, at
LETART - Letart Township
God's NET, Main Street. Pomeroy, 7 Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at the
p.m. with doors· to open at 6 p.m. office building.
Funding for dinner provided by Sisters of Saint Joseph Charitable Fund. WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Middleport LiterSYRACUSE - Curbside recy· ary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, home
cling in Syracuse, Friday instead of of Gay Perrin. Bernice Carpenter to
Thursday due to Veterans Day.
review "A Different Kind of Christmas~Alex Haley.
POMEROY - Return Jonathan

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: :Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

TWINS Tl,IRN THREE . The blrlttdays of Kody Wolfe, five,

Friday, November 12,1-

Friday, Novamber 12, 1 •

:ay'WILL LESTE~
'Aasocleted Preu Writer
· WASHINGTON- The political climate enterias the 2000 election sea·
soil is more fav0111ble for Democrats. but a poll suggests that advan~&amp;~e may
·be of more benefit in the races for Congress th~ for the White House.
"The Democratic Party is in very good sllape," said Andrew Kohut, diree"
:tor of the Pew Research Center for the People &amp; the Press. "But its chances
:to win the White House are once apin bedeviled by social conservatives,
·the so-called Reagan Democrats, who have played a role in every Democ·
ratic presidential defeat since 1968."
Many conservative Democrats and independents join Republicans from
every wing of their party in ·supporting the GOP front-ruMer, Texas Gov.
;George W. Bush.
· As Bush draws support across a broad spectrum of voter groups, a com·
·prebensive political poll by the Pew Research Center suggested Thursday
that the .governor's Democrati~ rivals face early obstacles.
,
Bill Bradley, a former New Jersey senator, has mi&gt;re work to do introducing himself to voters; Vice President AI Gore must reintroduce himself
: after the trauma of President Clinton's impeachment.
"Gore is really tied to Clinton," said George Appleby, a Des Moines, Iowa.
lawyer and Democrat. "Even the people who have stood by (Clinton) can't
wait for this to be over. They don't want to be embarrassed."
.,

Utb .Grade - Stacey Ervin,
Courtney Haines, Autumn Hill,
Samantha Hysell, Christopher Ran·
dolph, Bobby Scarberry, Autumn
Thomas and Brandon Wolfe; all A's.
Jamie Baker, Elin Bolin, Sarah
Brauer, Heidi Bumpus, Bill Coe,
Adam Cumings, Heather Dailey,
Joshua Davis, Kim Ihle, Jeremy
Lawson, Laraine Lawson, Amber
Maynard, Julie Nakao, Kyle Norris,
Donald Proffitt, Josh Pullins, Dena
Sayre, ~on Smith, Jody Wolfe, and
Lena Yoacham.
Soutbem Junior Hilb
7th Grade - Ashton Brown and
Craig Randolph; all A's. Cammy
Callicoat, Jonas Hart, Randall
Mahon, Mary Ranki11 and Autumn
Reed.
8th Grade - Bethany Amberger
and Cody Davis; all A's. Jordan
Bass, Stephanie Bradford, Sarah
Hawley, Henry Rider, and Katie
Sayre.
Syracuse Elementary
2nd Grade , - Kyle Cunningham, Ellie Dudding, Victoria Freeman, James Hart, Daniel Imboden,
Taylor Lemley, Jesse Ritchie, Brean-

na Taylor and Catherine Woods; all .
A's. Cody Counts and Ashley Freeman.
3nl Grade - Zachary Ash, Alex
Hawley, Emlila Hunter and Chelsea
Papc; all Ks. Merri Collins, Megan
Gray, JeMifer ·HuMell, Samantha
Patterson, Weston Roberts and
Jaime Warner.
4111 Gnde - Morgan Brown,
Lindsay Buzzard and Sarah EIDaba·
ja; all A's. Bonnie Lou Allen, Teddy
Brown, Heather Cundiff, Stephanie
Cundiff and 'Ii'cnton Roseberry.
StJl Grade - Mallory Hill and
Jacob Hunter; all A's. Nick Buck,
Chris Cogar, Chance Collins, Olivia
Dudding, 'Tyler Harkness, Amber
Hill, Nathan McClure, Adam
Phillips. Allie Rees, Adelle Riqe,
and AshleeTeaford.
6th Grade - John Bentz; all A's.
Ryan Amberger, Bobby Eblin, Den·
nis Lavender, Myca Michael, Caitlin
Nease and Chelsea Smith.

die and Britney Young.
5th Grade .- Natausha Amon.
Cameron Brinager, Miranda McK·
elvey and Bethany Vance.
6th Gnde - Nicole Jones; all
A's. Dustin Brinager, Courtney Cal·
llcoat, Amber · Holsinger and Erin
Wise.
Letart Elementary

.
1st Grade - Katie Barr aod
Bobbi Harris; all A's. Allen Brickles,
Alex Day, Shawna Farley, Mickale
Hill, Dakota Imboden, Dalton Imboden, Justin McNabb, Katey Patterson, Charley Pyles, Matthew Shane,
Paige Shuler, Katelynn Smith, Jay! in
Snider and Braxton Thorla.
2nd Gracie - Cody Neal, John
Powell, Cyle Rees, Stephanie Shamblin, and Lynzee Tucker; all A's.
Brooke Chadwell, Bradley Coppick,
Kim Faulkner, Alexis Hill , Gabby
Johnson, Alisha Lawson, Cody Lee,
Dustin Salser, Jordon Taylor, Ashley
Walker and Kelly Winebrenner.
3rd . Gracie - Jimmy Grimm ,
Portland Elementary
4th Grade - Megan Day and Christopher Holter. Bryan Harris
Cody Patterson; all A's. Erin Chap· and Rachel Pickens; all A's. Marvin
man, Shelena Doss, Ashley Krider, Eddy, Tosha Jones, Stefani John·
Dereck Lee, Drew Long, Whitney ston, Brittany Meldau. Paul Powell,
Riffle, Jessica Smiih, Ashley Wed- Anthony Shamblin and Caleb Utt.

DAR sponsors history essay contest

itary leader, or agriculturalist,
according to the rules.
For students in grade five, the
essay is to .be 300 to 600 words,
while those in the sixth, seven and
eighth grades, il'i 'to be between
600 and 1,000 words. Essays can
be handwritten in ink, types or pre·
pared on a computer.
The essay must have a bibliography listing all references utilized.
Internet resources, if used, should
be cited in similar format to that
used for printed resources with
electronic addresses of sites as sup-

"An Obituary for George Washington, 1732-1799" is the topic for
the American History essay contest
sponsored by Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution.
· The essay open to all students in
grades five, six, seven and eight, is
to take the form of an obituary written for a local newspaper at the
time of George Washington's death,
and should focus on only one or
two facets of his life.
The focus could be placed on
such roles as that of statesman, mil-

plementary information. ·
and bronze medals may be presentThe judging will be based on ed by the sponsoring chapter.
historical accuracy, adherence to
One essay in each grade will
the topic, organization of material, then be selected as the state winner
interest, spelling, grammar, punctu- for forwarded to division competi·
ation, and neatness.
tion, then on to national competi·
Pictures, maps, drawings, tion.
graphics and other such additions
The winning essays will be pub·
will not be considered in the judg· lished in an issue of the DAR maging.
azine.
According to Pat Holter, the
All entries are to first be submitchapter contact person, one essay in ted to !he local chapter, Mrs. Holter,
each grade will be selected as the 34425 Dairy Lane, Pomeroy, Ohio,
chapter winner and forwarded to 45769.
the state competition. Certificates

Syracuse UMW Church group elect officers, plans holiday events
ture from Psalms 91 by Crouch.
The program by Mrs. Crouch
included readings by Hope Moore,
Mrs. Lisle, Mrs. Stout, and Mrs.
Wilson. The world thank offering
program, "The Church of Strangers"
included scriptures from Matthew

New officers were elected at a
recent meeting . of the ·Syracuse
Asbury United Methodist Women
held at the church.
Elected were Hope Moore, presi·
dent; Mary Lisle, vice president and
secretary of programs; Jean Stout,
secretary; Ann Sauvage, treasurer;
Ruth Crouch, mission coordinator;
· Elma'Louks, education and interpre·
tation; Jean Stout, membership and
outreach; Marie Houdashelt and
Freda Wilson. nomination committee; Houdashelt, news reporter.
PRESENTS CHECK - Flrstar
' represented
VIce Preal- The Christmas dinner was set for
dent Thomas Stephens, left, recently preaented the Gallla/Melgs Dec. 1. It was reponed that 16 sick ·
Community Action Agency with a cheCk for $10,000, for the calls had been made. A free will
agency's houaing program. The fund' will be used to purchase offering was taken follpwing the rit·
ranges and refrigerators for each of the 10 homes the agency plans ualistic opened which included a
to build in Meigs and Gallia Counties. The homes will provide hous- reading ..1Always Carry My Cross
ing for low to moderate-income famlllea. Also pictured are Trlsh
.
McCollough, executive director and Julia Houdaahalt, houalng . _w_it_h_M_e_"_b_y_M_rs_._L_i_sl-e;_a_n_d_s_cn_p_·
director, both of the CAA.

and Luke. In the program it was
noted that welcoming strangers is a
ineasure of discipleship, tluit women
organized for missions week to be
Christ's sheltering hands, healing
presence and create open doprs and
places of refuge. Today more than

ever it is a mission challenge to rec- ·
ognize the strangers among us and I
welcome them into our midst, this ;
being a test of discipleship, it was ;
pointed out. Prayer was given by
Mrs. Crouch who served cinnamon
rolls to the group.

Barbara Streisand
items in auction

from its 1996 level of 2.3 percent to 2.2 percent in 1997, according to the
latest data released.
NEW YORK (AP) - Garage
Ed Peterson. Social Security manager in Athens, said that figures are prosales
a~ifferent when you're a
jected to remain fairly level at roughly 2.2 percent of the United States popdiva.
ulation through 2022, according to a report released by the Social Security
Barllra Streisand is clearing out
Admini stration.
·
one
of her California homes and
The 1998 Supplemental Security Income (SSI) Report noted that in Janselling about $5 million worth of
uary 1998, 6.2 million people received an average monthly SSI payment. of
$335. The report also indicated that growth in SSI program outlays dunng furniture. cars, Tiffany lamps and
movie memorabilia, Christie's auc·
the next 25 years is projected to remain relatively modest.
The SSI program is a nationwide federal assistance program administered tion house said Thursday.
The good$ will even include a
by SSA that guarantees a minimum level of income for needy aged, bhnd or
customized motor home - comdisabled individuals.
plete with Ms. Streisand's initials on
Congress requires the Commissioner of Social Security to annually report
the
door- used as a mobile office.
to the President and the Congress on the status of the SSI program. The
"It's one that she took to the
report provides projections of program participation and costs through the
Academy Awards," said Nancy
next 25 years.
McClelland, who is overseeing the
sale for the auction house. "I'm sure
Lady Bird Johnson in fair condition after fainting that she took it on lilllllocations and
· AUSTIN, Texas (AP) __; Former home in Austin to Seton Medical used it as a home away from home."
Streisand decided to sell the posfirst lady Lady Bird Johnson was in Center.
.
fair condition at a hospital today
She was accompamed by her sessions, including part af her col·
lection of American arts and crafts·
after fainting at her home.
daughter Luci Baines Johnson. .
Liz Carpenter, her former White
A spokeswoman for the hospttal, style furniture and ceramics, after
House spokeswoman, said Mrs. Stephanie Elsea, said Mrs: Johnson selling the Los Angeles home where
Johnson, 86, "has periodic fainting was awake and alert but wtll be kept she lived for 18 years. She now lives
mainly in Malibu.
spells" and was transported from her overnight for observation.

1999 Pontile Montana
4 Door Extended

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on the morality issue.
·
Rick Vogel, a S().year-old financial analyst from Greenville, S.C., and a
Republican, said the overall Democratic advantage these days "has to do with
what happened to President Clinton. Right or wrong, I think Republicans took
that issue farther than the American people wanted to go."
Bush has a big edge among all wings of the Republican Party, the poll
indicated, and also has a tot of appeal with independents and conservative
Democrats.
·
When asked whether they would vote for a Republican or Democrat in
their own congressional district, Democrats had a slight edge, 49 percent to
42 percent.
The questions on the presidential race and the congressional race were
asked oft, 134 registered voters Oct. 7- 11 and have an error margin of plus
or minus 3 percentage points. Tbe series of questions on 'politicat values were
asked of 3,973 adults between July 14 and September 9 and have an error
margin of plus or minus 2 percentage points.
Kohut cautioned that today's political landscape isn't necessarily predictive offuture elections.
"In October of the current survey, 70 percent said they thought next year
George w. Bush would defeat AI Gore if he's the candidate," Kohut said.
"In October of r991, 76 percent thought (then-President) George Bush would
beat whoever the Democratic candidate was."
The winner in the 1992 presidential election, of course, was Bill Clinton.

Bush cites Mexico in foreign policy resume
By MICH.EL HOLMES
Mexico to Texas and ·to the U.S. at
Aaaoclated PI'HI Write;
large. This is a break from the past
. AUSTIN, Texas - Gov. George and from many other politicians in
W. Bush points to Texas' relations the U.S.," said Jorge Gonzalez, an
with Mexico as evidence that he has associate professor of economics at
the international experience needed Trinity University in San Antonio.
to become president.
Bush campaign spokesman Scott
Dogged about his foreign policy McClellan said Bush has met with
know-how throughout the Republi· Mexican President Emcsto Zedillo at
can presidential campaign, the two· least five times and has sought to
term governor defended himself this develop personal relationships with
officials there and in other Latin
wee k.
"There's a foreign policy campo- American nations.
nent tO being governor of Texas, and
He also has met with the presithat's dealing with Mexico, South dents or other top officials of Argenti·
America anil Central America," he na. Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica and
said in New Hampshire.
Colombia, McClellan said.
Governor since 1995, Bush has · But it is Mexico where Bush has
made numerous trips to Mexico, been most involved.
befriended its leaders and those of
Texas and Mexico haye a long and
other Latin American countries, sup- close history that Bush has recog·
ported the North American Free nized. Tbe two share a 1,248-mile
Trade Agreement and split sharply · border, Texas is the largest exporting
with soine fellow Republicans on U.S. state to Mexico and the culturillegal immigration.
. at and family ties span generations.
And both Bush, the front-runner
While U.S. foreign policy is the
for the GOP presidential nomination, domain of the federal government,
and his state have reaped politic~.! and Bush has played an active role for a
economic rewards from the ties to state official.
Mexico, experts say.
Peter Ward, a professor at the Uni·
''He truly knows the relevance of versity of Texas' Lyndotr B. Johnson

I;Jy LEIGH STROPE
Alaoclated Prest Writer
COLUMBIA, S.C. - Black
·-leaders are reacting coolly to Gov.
·~im Hodges' offer to back a Mar·
:tin Luther King Jr. holiday in the
.state if a planned boycott over the
.Confederate flag is scrubbed.
"The governor is either very ill· informed or insulting in his intent,"
:said the Rev. Joe Darby, pastor of
;the state's largest African
: Methodist Episcopalian congrega·
' tion.
: Such a swap would be "wholly
•unacceptable, and I consider it an
insult," he said.
• Hodges'
proposal
came
:wednesday during remarks at an
:Equal Opportunity Day banquet.
:He said creating the King holiday
·would be a step toward fostering
:mutual respect needed for discus·
:sions to remove the flag (rom atop
·the Statehouse.
· "The more strident the rhetoric,
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP)- Vice President AI Gore said a relative offered
:the more shrill the headlines, the him the chance to join the National Guard and avoid the Vietnam draft but
:tess likely we can make progress he turned it down.
-towards · a final resolution," the
·' "I could have done that," he said in an interview in today's editions of
'Democratic governor said.
USA Today. "I thought about that, and because a lot of those decisions were
. The state has no permanent 111ade with political influence; I ~&gt;U!d have done1hat, but it did not feekighl"·
King holid. y.,bqt e,ll9Ws employees .
Gore's father, tbc late Sen. Albert Gore Sr., strongly OpPOsed the war.
to pick any day of their choice as
The vice president said that he struggled with what to do about the draft
an optional holiday. A bill calling once he graduated from Harv~ University in 1969, a cousin offered to help
for a King holiday passed the him join the guard as a way oV(.
.
Democrat-controlled Senate last
Gore declined to identify til« relative who made the otfer·or the guard unit
year but failed in the Republican- iAvolved, except to say that it w~ in a state neighboring his native Tennessee.
controlled House, where the Con·
Gore joined the Army in 19~ and was a news reporter during Vietnam.
federate flag has the most strident
Gore, who is seeking the llemocratic presidential nomination, said be was
support.
not being critical of his leading Republican and Democratic rivals by dis·
The National Association for cussing his sitUation.
the Advancement of Colored PeoTexas Gov. George W.. Bush. the GOP presidential front-runner, flew Air
ple is calling for a boycott of the National Guard training missigP.s over Texas. Former Sen. Bill Bradley
Slate to begin Jan. I and last until
attained the rank of lieutenant in the Air Fon:e reserves. Neither went to Vietthe flag is removed. At least 80 nam.
.
groups have already canceled plans
"My personal situation was my personal situation, and I do not sit in judg·
to hold meetings in South Caroli· ment of anybody else. I respect the pressures, the confusion, the uncertainna.
ty, the strong feelings, the whole times that eyerybody was going through
then," the vice president said. ·~
Gore said it was "long past t~lime when itmakes any sense to go back
Audience members groaned and
and
pick over individual decisiO!IJ made during that time by guys 19, 20,
muttered as HOdges made his sug21,
22
years old faced with a situation that the leaders of our country had
gestion.
completely
screwed up."
David Swinton, president of
the predominantly blaclr. Benedict
College and chairman of the
Columbia Urban League, called
the proposal "an attempt to vii·
lainize the NAACP."
State Rep. Todd Rutherford, a
Democrat, said asking the organi·
zation to suspend its boycott so the
Pome~oy
state "can lose gracefully (is) ... ,
ridiculous."

School of Public Affairs, recently
completed a study of intergovernmental relations between Texas and
Mexico. , , .
"One of the thmgs that struck me
is that when George Bush goes down
and talks to President Zedillo, they
treat him very much as a head of
state, not just ,the head of a state,"
Ward said.
He said Bush has "piggy-backed"
on a relationship that has emerged
over the past decade. "It's fair to say
that 15 years ago, Texas still looked
very much to tbe north. S.ince the late
1980s, Texas has looked very much
to the south," he said.
Chandler Stolp, director of the
U.S.-Mexican Policy Studies program at the LBJ School, said Bush
made ties to Mexico a priority from
the start of his administration. He noted that Bush tapped Antonio Garza,
county judge of Texas' southernmost
county, for a key appointment - secretary of state.
Garza, now chairman of the Texas
Railroad Commission, recalled that
even before taking office, Bush
attended Zedirto's inaugural and met

with the new Mexican president. At ·required state officials to report sus7 a.m. the morning after his own pected illegal Immigrants to the
inauguration, Bush had a breakfast authorities.
·meeting with five Mexican state
In sharp contrast, Bush advocated
governors and other Mexican · offi- public education for illegal immi·
:cials.
grant children . While .supporting
Garza said it's unusual - but beefed-up border enforcement, he
effective- for a U.S. state to have, said there was a difference between
in essence, a foreign policy.
enforcing a national bor.Jcr and help"We appreciate that in Texas, and ing people already here.
"In 1994-1995, when the Rcpub·
I think increasingly you see other
border states trying to be more pro- lican Party was ba&lt;hing immig~ant s.
active in their relationships with bashing Mexico left and right. Gov·
ernor Bush came out and said, 'We·re
Mexico," he said.
A key issue where Bush won not going to do that in Texas.' He
· Mexican support was the bitter con· stood for Mexico in a moment when
troversy over illegal immigrants Mexico was in deep trouble, " Gonsparked by California's Proposition zalez said. "That gave Texas a
tremendous amount of goodwill in
187.
"I think what makes Bush shine Mexico."
so well in Mexico relations is the
And for Bush, there's been an
contrast with (then-Gov.) Pete Wilson upside at home.
in California," Stolp said.
Mexico is Texas' largest export
Wilson supported Proposition 187, market, purchasing $36.3 billion in
passed by voters in 1994 but over- . goods last year. Bush also has been
turned by the courts. The measure rewarded with Hispanic votes.
,would have made illegal immigrants
Although the exact percentages
ineligible for public social services, are disputed, Bush has laid claim to
non-emergency health care and pub· more of the Hispanic vote than any
lie education. It also _would .have other Texas Republican

Gore declined ·offer to skip draft

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J.T. McLawhorn Jr., president
of 4he urban league, said "King's
legacy to the South deserves a holiday."
, "I don't think we ought to have
any srtings attached to the Martin
·Luther King holiday deal,"
McLawhorn said. "It's tong overdue. It should not even be associ·
ated with any compromise at all."

'.

~

1999 Chevy
Lumina Sedan

1999 Pontile GI'IJICI Am
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Owners of Rental Housing in
Village of
Yearly
Inspection Fees. ~are due. You may
Register at the\
, Pomeroy Water
Office. Fees are due no later ·than
Novembet r. I5, 1999.

Pomeroy Village lfousing Authority
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· The political landscape in 1999 differs dramaticatly from five years ago
when Pew last looked in great detail at the mood and preferences of votingage Americans.
_....
"Moderates reisn, they reign right, left and center," said Kohut. "These
are not the angry people we saw five years ago." ·
Several recent polls have shown American optimism at a high level
because of the roaring economy of recent years.
·
.
In a series of political values questions, people were asked their feelings .
about government. the poor, immigrants, and minorities. The shifts toward
moderation across the board since 1994 "are pretty small changes," Kohut
said. "But it's the direction of the changes that are significant."
. For example, almost two-thirds in 1995 agreed with the statement "governmcnt is always wasteful and inefficient." Five years later, half agreed.
In 1994, disaffected voters turned over control of Congress to Newt Gingrich and the Republicans. But the Republican poll standings have faded and
Kohut suggested the national Republican Party currently has "a real image
Prob.lem."
Democrats have the edge this year in the percentage of people who say
they belong to that party, 34 percent, compared to 27 percent for Republi,
cans and 39 percent independent. In 1994, 30 percent said they were Demo·
crat, 32 percent Republican and 38 percent independent.
Democrats have a clear edge on top policy issues like Medicare, education, the economy and health care, while Republicans have a big advantage

as

SSI rolls expected to remain steady to sell off personal
The number of Supplemental Security Income (SSI) recipients declined

Medkll ~ ulcel
c. d... ~·-

·Proposal ·to
··end flag
·flap earns
:negative
.response '.

•

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

Southern Hip School

~~=nor.:l~·:::ta:v;: :~= ~~no~~~:• .with a party at the Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter

•:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.Political clim&amp;le may aid Democrats' congressional runs

andf..~:------------------------------------------

A citnoaaur theme was carried out. The children enjoyed breaking
a pinnate at the party. Guests were the boys' grandparents, Anna
and Wilson Wolfe and Joe and Alberta Loftis, John Priddy, Wendy
Zane, Brett, Zac, and Joey Beegle, Staphannle and Danlelle King,
Joyce, Danlelle and Samantha Cline, Amanda and Bryan Schwarze!,
Cant~ace Heer and Tammy, Tyler and Paige Cline. Ruth Ann Boyer
sent a gift.
·

'------·

Southern Local _posts first nine weeks honor roll
9tb Grade - Ike Apperson,
Crystal Cottrill, Mariam EIDabaja,
Jeri Hill, Tara Pickens, Brandon
Pierce, Brandon Smith and Tommy
Theiss; all A's. Adam Ball, Sharlene
Chapell, Rachel Chapman, Chris
Coppick, Custis Crouch, Leasiann
Deem, Brittney Fortune, Jordan Hill,
Amy Lee, Andrea Long, Charles
Moore, Curtis Neigler, Zach Pickett,
and Josh Smith.
lOth Grade - Joe Cornell. Tyler
Little, Rachel Marshall and Lori
Sayre; all A's. Matt Ash, Carolyn
Bentz, Sherri Cummins, Amber
Duffy, Amanda Huddleston, Russell
Krider, Joey Manuel, Kim
McDaniel, Travanne Moore, Lindsay Smith, Amy M. Wilson and tan
Wise.
11th Grade - Sarah Ball,
Macyn Ervin, Jonathan Evans,
Denise Keyes, Shauna Manuel, and
Kayla Pullins; all A's. Angel Bird,
Jeff Circle. Clay Enslen, Jeremy
Fisher, Brandon Hill, Chad Hubbard, Josh Larsen, Felicia Legan,
Jessica Nance, Matthew Neigler,
Brenna Sisson, Maggie Smith,
Emily Stivers. Kevin Tapscott and
Chris Yeauger.

KODY DEAN WOLFE and TRISTEN ANDREW WOLFE

...
_ _ _...__.,r;::-···.

Monday- Saturday 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm • 8 pm

The Daily Sentinel

•

HOLZER CliNIC.. :.. ,

". Celebrating so Yea-rs a~~~erv/cel

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

992.-2155

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Page10 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy e Middleport,

NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL

Public Notice

CJ8.04I8 001, Montgomery,
Robert Kehh &amp;/or Unda K,
100A Lot 248 1 OOA out of
700A E ol VIllage Lola W
End 1 OOA, Total t778.08
08.Q0522 000, Powell Llrry
M River Lind In Front of
The lands, lots and parts of lots returned delinquent by the County
Lot 34 NW of Stollar! &amp; BE
of Lot 14 Total $7 311
Treasurer of Me1gs County w1th the taxes assessments Interest
08 00018 ooo Johnlton
and penalties charges thereupon agreeable to law are contained
Ch1rl11 E Jr &amp;tor Dlborah
and descnbed 1n the follow1ng hst
C Lot 14 50 x 181 Joining
Wlntera Ell Coli 33A Total
(Name DHoriptlon, Actw, Parcel 18 10.888A Out of 07 00111 001
Bellert
$740
Tot.. Toea Au.amentll 132 044A 10 868A Total Robert &amp;/Or Trll Slct 30 08 00019 000 Johneton
and P-lUM)
T2N R11W NE Cor of BW 1/4 ChariH E J~ &amp;/or Dlborah
$0347
Bedford lWp
CJ5.00550 008 Coe Robert C 1o .00174A out ot zuSA ex C, Lot 14 1/2 ol50 x100 BW
MtlgeLSD
end SW of river lOA Total
&amp;/or Uu L, Slot 23 TO R15 1A80017A, Total$17402
01.oooel 000, Bu-n Mark 1110A Out of 18 2g5 A 07.01078 000 Sw1n H1rry $248
Owen Sect 13-11 All of S 1110A, Total $734 73
&amp; Ethel C/0 111rv1n G
08 00020 000 Johnaton
1/2 of NW 1/4 of Ad Ex 05 oosg8 000
Cuto Sw1n Sact SE P1rt 7 33A Ch1rl11 E J~ &amp;/or Dlborlh
1137A Ex HI37A 14 77A Charlll E &amp;tor R.-c1 A Total$710
C, Lot 14 134) 2/3 0150 X180'
Totlll 1355 70
Sect 28 Frae 35 1A Out of 07-00484 000 Tlylor R1ndy S of Mill Ell Coli 20A Total
01-oooe7 001 Bu-n Mark SE Cor of 30A 1A Total Dill C/0 Randy D &amp; Kllhy $343t7
Owen Sect 18 T3N A13W $1183 74
Tlyl, Lot 12 Naw Port11nd W 08 00011 001
Wltaon
110A out of 3111A S 112 of 05 00124 002 Fletcher 112 Total SO 03
llon1ld W &amp;/or Tere11 A,
NW 1/4 t lOA, Total $25.81
Jam11 R &amp;lor Tracy L, SlOt 07o00485 000 Taylo~ R1ndy Sect 1 (180) TZN R12 W
01 00083 000 Caruthere 33 TON A15W 5 003A Out of Dill C/0 Rlndy D &amp; Klthy 2 8004A out of 3 OOA
Richard Cartar Jr &amp;/or 77 887A 5 003A
Total T1yl, Lot 10 Naw Port11nd W 2 8004A Total $1 031.20
Wlmlley Barbara J W P1rt $127 30
112 Total $1015 81
08 00815 000
Wolr.
of SW 112 Sect 13 25 2A OS.00320 001 H1rvey Geron 07.00714 000 Taylo~ Randy Cherl11 a Lol• Beet 3 7
Total $108 03
&amp; Rebecca Jean Slct 28 Tl Dill C/0 1'11ndy D &amp;Klthy (215) W P1rt of lOA Ex. Coal
01-oo2tii.OOO Gilkey Kermn R15 148A Out of 33 50A Tlyl Lot 27 NIW Portland 13A, Total$48.48
E &amp;/or Mirilla J Frac 35 T 948A, Total $12 01
Total$t5.18
08 00818 000
Wolfe
3N, A 13W, 2 83A out of 57 Total $2611
07.00715 000 Taylor R1ndy Ch1llea a Lola sect 36
lOA 213A, Total $80 80
Millar Dill C/0 R1ndy D &amp; Kathy (tCJ0.215) wEnd Ex 12A a
05 00500 000
01 00208 001
Guthrie Thoma• 0 815-38 N Side of Tayl Lot 29 New Portland 11A W of Ad Ex Coal
Pamela K W Part of SE 1/4 NE 1/4 Ex Lola NW Sldl 01 Total $1313
18 50A, Total $244 52
2 317A out of 48 75 A 41A 49A, Total 5182.23
07.0071&amp; 000 T1ylor Randy 08 00482 000 Woodyard
2.387A, Total $211 58
05o00571 002 Perry Michael Dlle C/0 Rllndy D &amp; K1thy J1m11 H Sact 35 (220) E
01-110027 000 Jecke Dannl1 &amp;tor Parry N1ncy Sac 38 TO Tayl Lot 31 New Portllnd End Ex 1.24A Hlghwly Ex
&amp;tor Wanda Lot Sect 17 R15 5 58A Ex 1 78A 3 78A Total$31 08
14 01A Ex 1 30A 10 70AEX
Part S of Ad W of Church Total 132 57
07 00842 000
Thel11
3 184, Total $481 Ill
Lot .50 A Total $323 80
OllveTwp
05 00152 000 Sh11tln1 Thom•• II Sect (100.207) S
of 49 50A 37 50A Total
01 00887 000 L1nguell DanielE 7 Total $1310
ElltlrnLSD
Jam11 Lot Sect s Pt of 05 00153 000 Sh11tlna $4465
09-o03117 000 Bluell Roger
Thel11
&amp;lor Shlnl, Slot 24 NE P1rt
1 lOA NW Cor of SW 1/4 Daniel E 6 20 W Side of N 07 00843 000
Thom11 M Sact 12 27 (1 OQ. 2A, Total $13 78
50A, Total $13.21
112 Total $10 54
Of.oo&amp;IIO 000 Llwaon Mark 05 00154 000 Sh11tln~ 208) All Ell 501 /2A 48 lOA OO.Q0368 000 Bluell Roger
F &amp;/or Amada Lot Slot 18 Dlnlel E 5 Total $13 10
Tolll$4158
&amp;/or Shtrri Sact 24 BE of
on N Une of Slct 18 74 75 05 00155 000 Sh11tln1 07 00844 000
Thelll
NE 11/4 Ex. Nollnd 8A Total
A Ell18 OIIIA 1 8585A Total Daniel E 6 30 x1 00 E Side Thorn•• M Sect 21 (1 00. $8245
$7778
205) E 55A of Ad 45A Total 00 00473 000 BllniCit
Total $15.85
01.Q0881 000 Llwaon Mark 05 00031 0'02 Spencer $4507
J1ck M &amp; Ch1rl1ne C Elll
Thel11 Slot 3 18 Unkl x 22ADS N
F &amp;tor Amanda Lot Sect
Curt, Fracuon 7 T9N R15W 07 00847 000
17 on S Una ol Slot 75 6 3A 5 OOA Out of 79 83A 5 OOA ThOmll M Sact (100.208} N ol Lot 117 10A, Total $3.61
Ell 21 808A 53 721A Total Total $523 03
of Rd E old Town Cr11k 09 00474 000 Bllntctt
$870.82
JICk M &amp; Cherlene C Etal
05 00102 ooo William• 17A Tolll$17.22
01.Q0882 000 Llweon Mark D1vld D CIO David 07 00848 000
Thllll Sect 3 Lot 104 T4 R11 DIV M
F &amp;tor Amanda Lot Sect Wllllama Sect 8 SE P1rt of Thoma• M Slot (100.197) N Reed Elt 0 75A Total
13-17 W Prt of 77A on S NE 1/4 21 88A Total $808 38 Prt ol Lot f197 15 72A, Total $4882
Una of Sac lOA Total $4 80 05 00409 Q02 WHII1m1, $1587
09 00475 000 Bl1nacet
01-110883 000 Llweon Mark David D Sect 6 Tl R15 07 00849 000
Thtlll Jack M &amp; Charlene E Etal
F &amp;tor Amandl Lot Slot 17 $08A Out of 12 705A Thomu M Sac! (100.187) ol Sect 3 T4 R11 on s une 01
Mill Lot W Prt of S 1/2 of $08A Total $2 18
88.02A All Ex 1 80A Hwy Sw1rb 19 75A 75A Total
SW 1/4 BOA, Total4.20
TRFD FR H1rrll 71 20A $383
LEBANONTWP
Total $1 ,245.30
09 00478 000 Bl1necet
01 00873 001
Pullin•
EASTERN LSD
Bu11n M1rl1 Sect 34 T3 06 00135 002
Gh11n 07 008111 000, Thelll Jack M &amp; Charlene E Etal
R13 2 004A Out ol "23 lOA" M1nuel &amp;/or B1rb1ra Sect Thomaa M Sect 22 E Sldt Mid of Lot DIY M RIICI Elt
Tota15383
33 T3N A11W E Part ol NE 79 teA Ell48 781A, 32.381A 22 50A, Tolll $114 83
08o00159 000 Clark Herold
01-110770 000 Shaw L:f.'n 0 114 2 OOA Out of 101 OOA Total$121189
&amp;/or Mary Elizabeth
Lot 2 OOA, Tot1l $1 400.28
07 00153 000
Thtlll E Lot 18 Arblugh a 3AD
Bact 17 W Pt of 77 72A E
Thorn11 M Slot 11 22 All Ell $ubcllv 100 x200 Total
LEBANONTWP
17A W 53A Total $53.28
Pt Of NW 114 E of Rd teA,
$48.33
SOUTHERN LSD '
Thel11 08 00305 000 Cowdery
Total$.38
07 00747 000
Adklnl 07 00855 000
01.00771 000 Shaw Lynn D Roger D11e &amp;lor Temar1 Thom11 M Slot 20-21 22 E Clement Lla &amp;lor Joyca
&amp;/or Mary Elizabeth S. Lot Lynn Slot 25 NW 114 of NW PAFRT 38 45A Ell 24 712A $act 11 SE of N 112 50 781A
13 738A Total $82.0
Sect 17 NW PI Ex 1A 1/4 40A, Total $1111 08
Ex 47 711 A 3 OOA Total
School Lot 58 31A Total 07 00018 000 Aumlllat 07 00916 0011
Thel11 $258.27
$81402
09 00428 001
DIVII
Ulllan S Slot 23 W End Ell
01.00138 000 Still Carl &amp;/or 1Aon N Une Ex 1Aof N Prt Thom11 M Slot 21 27 (100. Herbert Lll Slot 9 T4 R11
210) E End 31A Total 180A Lot 1188 443A Out of
Pauline Lot Slct 13-17 s or 47.32A,Total $244 00
Jon11 173A 1A Total ONI0104 000 Congo Ruby, 1178.84
1135A443A Total$21.2t
$23440
01 00431 001
Davl1,
Sect 24 1 24A 01 8.50A SW 07 00181 000, Thel11
llt.00137.000 SUII Call &amp;lor Prt of 10 711A In W Prt of Thomea M, ST t 1..zo.21 a:t Herbert Lll 180A Lot 1tU
(100.197) All Ex 1 80A to Sect 9 R11 T41177A Out ol
Pauline Lot Sect t3-t7 N 40A 1 25A Total $414
End
1 75A
In 07 00185 000
Dalley Hwy Ex 71 20A 8A Totlll 40 OOA 11 77A, Total $276 015
W P1rt 75A. Total SO 95
09 00434 000
Davl1
BenJamin A Sect 18 2 88A $4283
01 00020 000
Turner Out of NW Comet' of 32 lOA 07.oo250 000 W1rd Troy E Harbert L11 Sect 9 P1rt of
818 T2 R11 Wf/2 Nt/2 of 40A SW 114 1 08A Total
'Kimberly D &amp;/or Mlchlll W/12 2 88A,Total$188.44
Ill¥ Slot 6 E 1/2 ol NE 1/4 ONI0184 000 Dilley Bryan liSA Lol175 EX1 8A EX1 5A $810
-of SW 1/4-21A Total218.28
09 00410 000
Drlgga
R. &amp;lor Mella• D sact 18 8.30A Total $78 80
01 00510 001
Wellman N112 SU.Lot t711 A 11 t 2 07-111000000 Wllaon R1yA L l - L &amp; Eyvonne On
.wtllllm M &amp;/or Glori• J, 1 lA of 10 20A 1 lA,Total &amp;/or Naomi E Sect 14-15 E Une N of Rlclne Rd 38A,
tOOA Lot 188 75A, Total Total $175 52
"Sacl30 T3 R13 W 1/2 ol NW $120 85
1/4 10 00 A Out of 75 OOA 07.01047.000 Gray Cha- 1483:11
0tlo00447 000 Epling Und1
10 OOA, Total$13411
E C/0 Jo1nn1 G Canlllld 07o00071 000 Wolla, D1vld Kly Sect (100.1181) Bet
01 00510 002 Wellman
Sect 24 (llllneral Only) a-, Sect 24 SE P1rt of Ad &amp; River 80A Total 1
83A Nt/2 of NW114 2 75A
William M &amp;/or Glorll J Sac 28 88A, Total $28.50
45083
30 T3 R13 W 1/2 of NW 1/4 07.01048.000 Gray Ch11tar Total$5493
01-00448 000 Epling Llndl
15 218 A Out of 75 OOA E C/0 Joanna G Canfield 07-1101177 000 WOHI Dlvld Kly Sact 12 NE Prt out of
Sect 24 SE Cor of 22 08A 1A, Total S 13 76
15.218A Total287 04
Sect 24 SE 114 of NE 1/4 Gene
N112 of NW114 8 88A Total 08o00448
01.00130 011 Whltl Jamea 13 33A, Total$13.26
000 Epling Undl
Dlvld &amp;lor Angela Marie Fr 07.00784 001 Gray VIncent $8542
Kly
Sact
34-9-10 (180-116t)
,23 T3N R13W Lot 110 D 100A Lot 200 E111 End 07.(10878 000 WOHI David .30A ol 75 A E Prt ol17 25A
.COnrad Subdlvlelon Total 7 0095A Out of 27 25A Gene Sit 11 24 NW Part ol E 30A, Total $17 88
NE1/4 of Rd 1 50 Total 08o00576 002 Epling Undl
14673
7 0095A Total $100 78
01 00178 000 Wllltama 07.01342 000 Gray VIncent $14.26
Kay Slot 27 T4 A11 1 738A
LETARTTWP
Olvtd SlOt 28 W 1/2 of SW D 70A Lott88 1738A out of
Out of 2 27A 1 738A Totlll
SOUTHERN LSD
1/4 83 OOA Total $83.14
$115 48
70A Lot 198 1736A Total 08 00704
000
Davll
.01 00177 ooo Wllll1ma $184
08o00838 001 Epling Und1
Dlvld SlOt 25 N of Rd 42A, 07-00738 001 Huddl11ton Marton &amp;/or Candll Lot t7 Kay Sect 11 T4 R11 NW
"rotal $31.48
Garry &amp;/or Angela Sect 10 (100.248) 72 X 128 Mid of Corner :lOA out of 72 OOA
Ot 00110 000 Wllll1ma SW P1rt of S. 114 5 01A out W END .20A, Total S35 15
30 OOA, Total $107 18
JoHph 09-0083t 000 Epling Undl
,David Bact 13 NW E1 54A of 15 478A 5 01 A Total 08o00457 002
W &amp;/or Pattareon, Angell1 Kay Slot 12 E Part W 54A
128A Tolll$t27 .20
$183 78
01-00817 003 Wood Earl 07-G0738 000 King Parnell K 100A Lot 247 T1N R12W 11 02A, Total sao 88
Luther Sect 33 T3 A13 10A Slct 19 S Part ol 83A In SW 48A out of 81A 48A Total 08-01412 OOt Epling Lind•
of 21 295A 10 OOA Total Prt of BE 114 10 488A Ex $78.42
Kly
Lot
u won
08o00458 002 Gray, JoHph Subdlvl1lon 1OOA Lot 1211
) 127.20
8 I88A 1 50A, Total $21 71
Chfttar '!Wp.
07-00738 002 King Pamala W &amp;/or Pltt.-n Angllla K, 1 OOA Total$103 28
ElllarnLSD
J Slot 19 T3 R118 I88A out 100A Lot 248 T1 N R12W 08-01492 002 Epling Unda
.03 00271 000 Clifford
Lot
•4
won
of 10 488 A I 188A Total 08A out oil OOA 05A, Total Kay,
$84
Cathy Slct 18 (140) Out of $132 78
Subdlvlalon 100A Lot 128
'70A Tract W of Cem 2A 07 00704 000 Ottm1n Oa.ocn74.000 Hay11 P1ul lilA a Lot 121 034A
'l"otal $5011 34
Llfltll K &amp; Terry L, Sect 25 W a Kltrln• M Slot 32 on 1 OOA, Totlll $317.25
N Une of NW 114 Ex. Coli 01 ooaeo ooo Jack•on
1)3 00088 000 Clifford
NW Prt ol NE1/4 S ol Rd Ell 18.50A,
Total $77.24
.Cathy D Block 1 R1 248 Part 1 A E Prt 1A, Total$11 4t
Randal M &amp;lor Shlrlay J
104A 34 Sllld SURV 110A 07 00703 000 Ottm1n 08o00275 000 Hay11 Paul Slct 24 NE Corner Ell SOA
Total$878 12
Lel1tt1 K &amp;/or Terry L Sr w a Kltrlna M Slct 11-32 W Side Ell t 50 A 12 50A,
.-o:J.00121.001 Olffnn Tonya Sect 25 Mid of NW1/4 of N ol W 1/2 Ex Coal USA, Total $481 01
M S1ct &amp; T3 R12 N 1/2 01 NE114 b lA EX 1A 8 50A, Total$2342
011 001177 000 McKenzie
08-00278 000 Hay11 PIUI Jlrotr11 N Bact 9 N Part of
Sw 114 88A Out of 21 17A Total 1354 14
88A, Tolllllill.ll
07 00534 000 Picken• wa Kltrllll M Slot 32 on 40A 2 88A Totlll $885 30
:.03 00111 000
Kibble C1lvln D &amp;tor Carol A Slot E Lint of W t/2 Ex Coli 00 Ot053 000 Putman
ThOmll J &amp;/or Suz1nne 33 (180-1187) N Pt of 38 30A 11.25A, Total $803 70
Don1ld &amp;tor Marlane Sect
Sect 10 (282) E 1/2 ol W 1/2 E Pt Ell Coal 11 30A, Total 08-00277 000 Hayti PIUI 18 T4 A11 1 87A Out of
wa Kltrln• M Slot 32 NW eMA t.87A, Total sao 12
1!x 14A N 21 211A Total $42.21
-74
07 00535 000 Picken• Ex Dailey N Ell Col113.50 A OII.Ot052 000 Putm1n II
03-00114.001 NIIIOR Frank Calvin D &amp;lor Carol A, SlOt Ell2 7515A 10 7415A Total Wlleon Junior Slot 24 Mid
R &amp;lot Annl ll Slot t T4 33 (180-1185) out of NE Cor $21803
on N Une ol NE1/4 8A Totll
08 00430 000 Hollinger, $8381
A12 1 028A out of 2 35A of Sect lOA Total $2 04
1.G21A. Totall1•.87
07 00531 000 Picken• Llrry &amp;/or E D1rt1n1 Sect 011-00881 000 Pyla• Joan
Q3oG08111 000 Pooler Terry Calvin D &amp;/or Carol A, Bact 1 7 .30A of 550A WEnd Lot ~ 5 Arllaughl 2ND
"A &amp;tor Dlborllh K, Slot 18 33 (180-~1·) Mid on N Una Along Bull c - ROid 30A Subdlvlllon 100 x140 Total
T 3N II 12W NW Cor SW E 112 Ell Coal 7A TOIII Total 135.34
•t38.2t
08-0047~ 001, HollinS:~ 08-01112 000
1/4 t1,o2Aout 28 OIA 1.02A $26.23
Rhodee
&amp;/or E Dartena 1
:Yotlll $800 14
AHred Slot 28 W Part o1
07 00537 ooo, Picken• Larry
a 272 3.188A In Lot SW11424tiOA, Total$11153
ChRtarTwp
Cllvln D 1/or Carol A, Bact Lol271
27t a 1 0415A tn-t.ot 272 01 01170 .eo Rhode a
Mtlg1LSD
27 (180-11., Mid onE Une 4.2075A,
$118 18
owooao oo7, King nnlolhy Ell Coal 7.28A, TotalS 27 05 08-00214Total
Allred Royalty lntereat
Jenkin• Carte E Smith' Ptlroleum
~ 1/or Paula A, Sect 12 (840) 07 00531 000
Plckena, Steve 1/or001
Elizabeth 100A lno Total 114.07
.T2N A 13 Min on W~ 1/2 Calvin D &amp;/or C1rol A, Slot
1.01A out of117112A 1 OtA, 33 (180-1181) B Pt ol NE 18 Lot 287 wEnd 2.32A out ol 01 01384 ooo
Scyoc
tota~saae.a
Th01111e A &amp;/or Am1nd1 D
3/4 Ex Coli 12A, Total 10A 2 32A Total $85.32
~BAOO Jullloe, Dan Slct t1 E End l!x 252A
Columllla Twp
$4485
&amp;lor Branda L, Slct 38 N ol IIII8A, Totall587 38
Alllelmdar LSD
07 00538 000 Picken• 100A
Lot 1214 SA oi28A 5A, 08 00220 012 Beckman
.011 00005 000
Allman Calvin D &amp;lor C1rol A, Slot
Jaokle P a llnar• Su• 33 (180-11881 BE c - Ex. Total$18110
John H Btlng Part o1 30A
08·00887 000, Ju1ttce, Lot t21 T3N A11W I lOA
1ect 20 Out of NE COl: NW Coal13 70A, Totai$8U4
o1 Ad. 1!x. .23A t 77A Total 07 00540 ooo Plcktnt, D1nny K &amp;tor Brendl L Out of 5 4888A 1.50A, Totlll
Sect 38 (214) T 1 N R 11 W
SO' Ill
Calvin D &amp;/or C1rol A Bact
0500312 010 Bruner Lind 33 E End Ex. Coli 33A, Total UJIA Total$12.33
08o00014;Q02, Young DIVId
08 00713 000, Juetlce, E &amp;lor DIPhne G 100A Lot
"Company Inc , C/0 Mark $322.02
Danny K &amp;tor Brend1 L, t28 T3N A11W 10 137A out
Johnaon Sect 7 T8 R111
Sect 38 (214} w 112 Ell 2A of t4 101A 10 t37A, Totlll
Perce! 10 11.174A out of 07 00541 000 Picken•
132 044A 11 87A Total Carol IIIII, 8eot. 20 T 3N A NW EX Coli Ex. 22A 11 02A, $14011
11 011 W Una olt/2 ol Rd 2A Totll$228.a
OrangeTwp
tt00.31
oii.27A
2A Total $11011 04
08-00888 000, Markewlcz,
OS00382 013 Bruner Land
EallemLSD
comp1ny Inc C/0 Gery 07 00770 001, Sell ere, Dtvld Anthony &amp;/or t 0·00854 000, John eon,
Chartea Sect 7 T8 111 II OriiiOIY A, 8tcl23 110A Lot M•gaN T A-nna 100A Brandl S &amp;/or G1ry Lot
1t7f T2 A1t I OOA out of Lot 222 t 1 A t2 lA ol Sect 34 N Pt ol NE 1/4 1!x.
Plrc'l 13 5.811A, Out ol 44.84A,
$80.33
13.24A 1A, TOIII$43.13
131 044A 5 818A
Total 07.Q0773Total
000 ..,..,. Larry 08 003t7 000, Meldeu 14.42A Nl Ex 1 083A Ex
1.282A 53 2411A
Total
ator Agn11, 8Ht 23 (teo. MlcNII &amp;/or lletl): hot 11• $1,1131.87
OS.Q0382
- &amp;Mid
Company0111
Inc·
, C/O
G1ry 1171) E End of W112 Ell Coal 2 (t80) 4A of 27A E of Ad 10 00435 000, Limbert,
4A TOIIII$77.84
Cherlee Sect 7 Tt Rtl a.teA, Total $414.88
Ylollt, C/0 ThlrHI a-,
r

MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR

DELINQUENT LAND TAX NOTICE

o,.,

....

.....

._____________________

Ohio

Friday, November

Public Notice

Public Notice

Slot 12 A 12 T4 814A, Total
1111.28
10 00710 ooo Pereona,
Merta E &amp;/or Parnell G Lot
8 (5) S ol MIUICk &amp; E of Ad
180 x320 Ex lilA 85A
Total $379 13
10o00711 000
Paraona,
Merle E &amp;/or P1mel1 G Lot
8 20 x 185 Ex 20 Totlll
$1704
10 00182 000 Rlcherde
P•mtll J Lot Slot _a 10
Mid on N Line 3A Total
$131.52
to 00183 000 Richerd•
P1m111 J Lot Sect I ·10
Joining P1rker 3A Lot 58A
Total$8.26
10 00703 000 RIChVIIII
Sportamen • Clulllnc , The,
C/0 Ralph C1puano Lot
Sect 17 UND 1/2 80A SE
Part of 118A 1 OA Total
$279.110
10.00573 000 Roblnecn A
Rex &amp; Wllml Lot Blot 24
SW Part of 75 87A 11 Forkt
of Rd 41A Total $208 72
1o-oo3711 000 RUIIIII John
R &amp;/or B,.ndl S Lot Bact 5
2A of 10 48A Prt of 48.31A
2A, Total $588.45
1 o 00824 000 Bherpe
William B &amp;/or Sharon Lot
S14 15 E End N1/2 11 483
Out ol34 21A 1t 483A, Total
118540
IIUTLNDTWP
MEIGS LSD
11-G0117 000 Bltzlng Cery
Sact a t8 A 14 on W Una F
SE114 NE Ell Coal of 8 SOA
1 ot&amp;A Total sao 44
11 00149 000, Blazer,
Debor1h S &amp;/or Shamblin
Gary L Lot Sect 6 9A
Total$128 48
11·00150 000
Blazer
Deborah S &amp;/or Shamblin
Gary L, Sect 8 31 A out of
58 A 31A, Total 5171 t3
11 00151 000
Blazer
Debareh S &amp;/or Sh1mblln
Gary L, Lot Sect -8 out ol
32 15A Ntlr 8 Side Nl1/4
tOA Total $37 17
11-00795.000, Bobb John W
&amp; Wilma K Lot Sect -38 Mid
on N Una of S 112 33 87A
Total S124 97
11 00210 000 Bretton
Mereu• P &amp;/or Bretton
Combe Chalcle Sect 18
Mid &amp;SE Part of N1/2
78 85A To.. l S1 842 111
11-00211 000
Bretton
Mereu• P &amp;/or Bratton
Combe Chelcle Sact 18 In
W Part of SE114 54 47A
Total $217 80
t1 00212 000 Bratton
Mercu1 P &amp;/or Bretton
Combl Chelcle Sect t 8
N112 of 40A E Side of SEI/4
20A, Total $50 83
11.Q0208 001 Buckely Tom
E, Sect 35 T8 R14 4 828A
out ol 80 OOA 4 529A Totll
$4200
11-G011 il 000 Bullington
PhiHip L Sect 38 NW P1rt of
NWt/4 Eli1!2A NW &amp; 3A NE
28 50A, Totll $803.58
11 00188 000 Counoll
Jo1nna L Sect 27 28 NW
Sld1 of 28A Cor Ell 14 Vein
Coli 3 0023A Total $188.18
11o00650 000 Hartley Floyd
A &amp;lor H11ther A C/0
Heather R1thllurn Lot Slot
14-12 B Part ot sw 1/4
1 OOA Total$140.82
11 00402 001 Hubbard
Carol Sect 18 Tl Rt4
1 0315AOut 01 t 21 75A
1 0315A Totll $313 01
11 01082 001 Hugglne
Henry E Beet 35 Te A14
200A Out ol 8 74A 2 OOA
Total$28 80
11o00675.000 Jackl Allin R
&amp;tor Henrietta Sect 15 N
P1rt of 88 85A Mid on N
Line 70 778A Ex 88 581 A
2 187A Total $20.45
11o00678 000 JICkl Allin R
&amp;lor Henrietta IIICI 11-16 on
W Une W ol Rd 14428A Ex
11 44A2 885A. TOIII $485 75
11 00877 000 McGuire
John &amp;/or Kathy D A 14 T.4
Slct 20 N Can Pt of Free
211 1 881A, Total.t15.88
11 00940 002, JlltcKinney,
Dlnnl1 E Fraction 1 TIN A
14W 1 OOA Out of 15 335A
1 OOA Totall148.88
11 00879 001, McKnight,
Ken1111h Sr &amp;tor J1net, Slct
8 TeN R14W 1 017A Out of
2191A 1 017A, Total $8718
11-G0703.000 Mtlltlt' Rtlpll
&amp; Hankll John C/0 John E
Hinkle Lot Slct .Zt BW Cor
of 20 04A N11r Mid on w
Unt 33A, Total $2 84
11.00704000 Metalar Ralph
&amp; Henkll John C/0 John E
Hankla Lot Slct -20 21 In
SW Cor 24 50A Total
$1 128 24
11 00221 000, Neutzllng
Charl11 &amp;/or Clrolyn 8tcl
12 Mid of Ef/2 N ol Cr Out
of 88 11A 1 10A, Total
$178 08
11 00783 000,
Ohio
Comp1ny The en Ohio
Corp Lot Sect 14 111 W
End Ex 4A NW EX 1A
40 28A 1 440 • Lind Total
$5882
11 00714 ooo
Ohio
Comp1ny The And Ohio
Corp Lot Slct ·15-20-21 I
Prt Ell 7 42A J N 45A Total
$12088
11 00188 ooo
Pereon
Elllne SlOt 2 t lOA ol NW
Cor of 3 85A AlSO 12 WD
RTOFWAY 1 SOA,
Total
$84t.37
11 00273 004
Pelroe
Jeremy &amp;lor Pierce MarUn
P1rt o1 Fraotton 38 'taN
R14W 2 724A out oi31111&amp;A
2 724A, Total 110.21
1U0841000, Prloe, Mlchlal
Weyna, Lot lecl -27 W 8ldt
ol I8A NW Cor lA, T0181

Chrlatollher L &amp;/or Vtllarle
A Lot Sect ·10 llld on B
Une W of lid Ell 40A 40A,
Totlll $7 37
t1 00124 000
Rouah,
H1rold C &amp; Sue Ann, Blct
20 8 End Ex Cam EX 78 81A
t 07A, Totll$74178
Bhene
11·01230 ooo
Pllrlola A, Beet 33 BE Cor
of N Braley 1 2A lA, Total
$1308
11 01231 000
Shane,
Pltllcl1 A Slct 33 SE Prt ol
lA Sl!1/4 .28A, Total$114.
11 00878 000 Shoemaker
NIDI A Etal Lot Slot 27..28
S Plrt of Fl'IO 34 &amp; N Pt of
Fl'IO 24 1 70A, Total $8 79
11·01028 000, Snowdln
William M Lot S1ct 21 NE
Cor ol 4 75A NE FRAC 31
2 94A, Total $87 8t
11 01032 000, Snowden
William N Lot Bact ..21 on S
Une W of 10 75A lA, Total
$841
11 01033 000, Bnowd1n
William N, Lot Slot 21 SW
Corner Frac 38 2 33A Total
$2187
11 01034 000 Snowden
Wllll1m N, Lot Sacl 21 E
Co~ Out of 130.32A Mid on
Rd 2A Total$18.77
11 010311 000 Snowden
Wllll1m N Lot Sact ·21 81!
Cor Frac 30 10 73A Total
$8208
RUTLAND VILLAGE
MEIGS LSD
12 00125 ooo, Gilmore
Michael K &amp;/or Dlborah J
Sec 8 (840) SE Cor of
15 34A 12A of 18A 12A
Total $318.24
12 001 28 000 Gilmore,
Mlchlel K &amp;/or Dlllorah J
Sec 8 (840) Be Cor of
15.34A 08A, Tol!ll $4.84
12 00380 001 Gilmore
Mlch11l K &amp;/or Deborah J
Bact 8 T6 A14 .483A out of
14.287A Eli2134A 2888A,
Total $10.31
12-G0188 000 Hyull Dlvld
W &amp;/or Penny K, On W Une
S ol NE Church Lot E112 EX
t4A 18A Total $t0.79
12-00188 001 Hyull D1vtd
W &amp;lor Penny K On W Une
S ol NE Church Lot W112 of
Lot 14A out of 30A 14A
Total $822 72
12-oo307 000 Searle, P1ul
R 8101 I (840) N Pt 75A E
of AD, To Cr 40A Total
$83897
12.Q0308 000 Se1rl1 P1ul
a ~ • ta.tft\ ~ nf 1111 T"
Cr Hotel Lot Ell 40A N Pt
38A Total $4402
12o00037 000 T11h Dlnlh
Sact 14 8 (840) N Llnl
NW1/4 E of Rd 50A Total
$2582
t2.Q0038 000 Tllh Dlnlh
BlOt 0 (282) E ol Ad On B
Una 47A, Total $231.00
12 00013 ooo, Thomu,
Anna Belle Blct a (840} w
Part of SEf/4 8 9IA Total
3881
12 00347 000
TIHII
K1thl11n Sect 8 (840) oJ
14.GliA Parcel It t ItA
TOIII sao71
12 00348 000,
TUlia,
Kllhllln Beet 8 N ol RA
Parcel 12 1 teA Total
$4355
SALEMTWP
MEIGS LSD
13 00037 000, Berrett
Gerlld F Sr Elll C/0
Minnie Thompaon, Sec 10
SE of NWI/4 ol 58 78A Ex
14 Vein Coli 1 17A, Total
$0880
13 00038 ooo, Berrett
Gerald F Br Et1l, C/0
Minnie Thompeon, Slct 19
N11r Mid on N Un1 of Seo
1A 1 OOA, Totlll $85 03
13 00288 000 Berrett
Gerald F Sr Etlll C/0 Minnie
Thompeon, Sect 14 •5 (3)
Long1treth Add Total
$2673
13-00084 00 Btevlna l!dlth
G C/0 Arlin Blevlna Jr
Sect 8 T 8 A 15 E Prt In
NWf/4 Ex 1111A 87 001A
Total $547 62
13-00879 00, 8lavln1, Edith
G C/0 Arlin Bllvlna J~ 81 8
T8 R 111 Mid Pt of 8812A
sot Rd 325 Front 1 118A.
Total $1080
13-00181 005, C1nterllury,
Glry R &amp;/Or Dorll Sect 25
SW 1/4 of SW 1/4 5 OOA out
of 27 1111 A 5 OOA Totlll
$207 01
13-00181 008 C1nttrbury
G1ry R &amp;/or Dorll, Slct 25
BW 1/4 of BW 1/4 2 08A out
of 22181 A 2 OIA Total
$137 74
13-00705 000 Hlllleld Paul
~ &amp;/or Harmon Dlllllfl Lol
28 Longetreth Add Total

Public Notice

$2481

13 00458 000 Eggtrl
Buddy Wayne J~ &amp;/or Ruth
Jeen Nette C/0 Ruth
Eggara Slot f5.·t8 NE Cor
48.44A Out ol 80 A 48 oUA
Total $801.82
13 00280 000 G1rn11
Witter n~ Slot 31 8A Out ol
85 88A Se Cor of NE 8A
Total$18830
13 00405 000 Goodman
Billy J &amp; Antonia M, Slot
25 T.8 R 15 NW Cor of NE
1/4 3 081A of 40A 3 08tA,
Total $114.88
13-00401 000 Goodman
Billy J &amp; Antonl1 M, Slct
25, TIN, A 15W, 2.55A OUt
of 30 870A 2 55A Total

133.88

13·00888 ooo
Harold
Lle,nn, Bt 13 NE Prt of
8E11.4 Ell 8.30A EX 14 Vein
CojJ IID.IIIIA, Total ll400 07
13 00889 ooo
Harold,
LIIAnn, 8Ht 7 NW 1/4 of
SW 1/4 Ex 14 Vein Coal 40A,
Total $22114
Helton,
13·00771 ooo
$178.88
11.01131 000 Rameburg Richard D &amp;/or P1mala K,
Rlahanl A &amp;lor c.ot J 8eOt 8tcl 2:2 E S. Part !xcept M
24 8 P.-1 of Wt/2 5 03A, V11n Coei8.50A, Total $8.32
Totall82.08
13·00772 000
Halton,
11-CI1141 004 Rlcherda, Richard D 1/or Palllllt K
R-Id A &amp;lot Kathryn 'l BIOI 22 End IXCipl M
l'reotlon 4 Tl R14 1044A Vein Coal Only 118A, Totlll
Out of 41 347A Ex 7t8A $818.01
MIA, Totaltl3 08
13-00004 000 Handrtcke,
11.ootl88 000 Richmond
wuwuttam• ~~ ~
ChrlltOPher L &amp;tor Vlllrll Liee~Na..
"'
10ft .,_., ....
A. 1.111 tact -1o 81! Prt or w $.40
1/2 W Of Ad OOA Total 13·00008 000 Hendrlokl,
1. .71
&amp;.arry, a Wlllllrnt nna, hot
11 oCIIIII88 000 lllohmond, 1 111t w.- a CR .eo. Total

•

11

$8.32
13-oooo8.000 Hendrlclll,
Llrry a wtllllml Tlnl Sect
II TAl N End 35A Total
$118.17
13-00200 000 K~ya~r Tony
A, Slct 31 N112 of BE t/4 of
SW1/410.80A, Total $38.01
13-00201 000. K1yur, Tony
A, 8ect 38 Nl/2 of NW1/4
Ell lA Ell 4.518 A Ell 14 Vein
Coal 70.484A, Tolll $0511.84
13·004111 000 MiltOn
Audrey Feye Elll C/0
Robert
B
Rigney,
s.ct s NW Pt ot Swf/4 aw
PI of NWI/4 Ex 78A
73 30A, Total $442 88
13·00462 000 Mnton
Audrey F1y1 Etal, C/0
Robert B Rigney Sect 5
Out of 74 OIA 75A Total
$874
13 00558 000 Peyton
Richerd A Elll C/0 J1ne
B1re Beet 5 on w Line or
NE1/4 Ex 14 Vein Coli
4 84A, Total $28 02
13·00~57 000
Peyton
Richerd A Et1l CIO J1n1
Bert Slct 11 BW P1rt NE114
I 08A SW Ex #4Veln Coli
40 faA, Total $282 72
13 00155 000
Peyton
Rlchlrd A Etal C/0 J1n1
Bar1 Slct 11 E Of NE11/4 Ell
34A NE Ex #4 Vtln Coal
t 05A, Total $837 55
13 ooug 000
Shuler
BIUIIh, Slot 27 8 Central
Prt ol 8101 N Bldl ol1124
Ell Mlnarala 1A, Total$88.50
13 00831 000, Shuler
Blullh, BT 15-27 BW Cor Ex
Bch Lot 4 17A Out ol34 62A
30 45A, Totlll$1128.00
13·00840 000
Shuler
Blul1h, Slot 33 SW Corner
.88A,Totll $8 54
13-00895 000 Stillier, Jell
&amp;/or Son11, Lot 24
Longllrath Add S1/2 Total
$1t 48
13-00808 000 Stiffler, Jell
&amp;lor Sonl•
Lot 25
Longatrath Add Total
$222.88
13 00107 000 Watrobe
Mlchalle Sact 17 lOA Out
of Mid E Side ol 40A( 40
IC) Ex 14 Vein Coli 10A
Total$7407
13·001108 000 Wltrobe
Michelle Sect 18 1 38A 01
E Sldl oi15A Ell 14 Vein
Coai1.38A, Total $1703
13·00211 doo Wtlltama
Elbert L &amp;lor Sllaron L, Sect
28 Mid on S Une of Nt/2 Ell
14 V1ln Coal 7 OOA Total
11.01782
SAUSBURY TWP
MEIGS LSD
14 00054 001 B~rnett
Bettie llact 32 T2 R13 NW
Corner of40 18A II008A out
of 40 15A IIOBA Totll
$3584
14-G2485 000 Carmen, Ivan
Royalty tnterllt Trlld
Energy Corp 01 WVA Inc
Totlll $3 21
t4-00281 000, Derll, Robert
Rey, Slot 34 (tCINJ8) W 112
lx 18 80A 31 83A TOIII
1131.02
14-00282 000, Darlt, Robert
RIY Sect 34-35 (1 oo-3211)
NW Pert EX Co1l
32.32A,Total $11 18
t4-00283 000 Dar.t Robert
Aa)l Slot 34 (10Q.328) t1.41A
Total $22.22
14-00211 000 D1y Martin
Edwlrd, (282) Lot 10 Fr 31
T2N 1113W 5 3021A Total
$78.23
14 00817 001, Dill Todd
Slot 3 T2N R13W t OOAOut
of 10 4&amp;A t OOA, Total
$33140
14.Q0784.000, Dillard, D1vld
B 8tcl27 S 112 75A, Total
$12.28
14·00 1811 000 Doerler
Henry &amp;/or Andraa, Sect 8
(840) SE of School Lot In
Bend of Ad 1 40A, Total
$71.44
1~1032 000, Dowell Roger
T&amp;ior Et1cl J Slot 38 Lot
10Q.31t N End oleA Tract 2
ATotal$48.81
Fowler
14·00423 000
Jllfrey A &amp;/or Ruby J Sect
34-36 (1 00.330) N End Ex
14A NW 29 7&amp;A Total
$178 02
14 00424 000
Fowler
Jeffrey A &amp;tor Ruby ~. Slct
34-35 (100 321) Trl on W
l.tne W of N 1/2 4 30A EX
1.oOA 3 30A, Total $581 80
14-01427 000 Fry Timothy
D &amp;/or T1mmy J, Sec 38
11A ol 21 877A 11A Total
.183.21
14-01428 001 Fry Timothy
D &amp;/or Timmy J Slot 100
Lot 311 1.88A Out ol20 78A
1 88A, Totlll$12 84
14-01181 000
Glaze
Timothy A Etal, 810 18 N11r
Mid Of Nf/2 13A ol 40A All
Lying B i. E 01 33 3 37A
Total $412.04
14·01103 ooo H1ntng
Eugene &amp;/or Lydl1 V, Sect
34 (840) I! l!nd 01 N 12 01
NE 1/4 IUOA Ex t.o20A
18.88A, Total$873.03
14-00888000 HWII, John
Bact FA 38 111(282) lOA
TOIII$1 81
t4-00870 000 Hankla, John
E BlOt 28, T 2, A 13, Nl
Cor 1A UT Of 3 t7A 1A
Total$1071
t4-00811 003, ltyHII, Todd
Fraction 24 T2 A13 328A
Out of 27 03A 328A Total
$4081
t4·01873 000 J.,...
Chlrlal D1vld &amp;lor Branda
K, Sact g (282) E ol Ad On S
Line NW Cor of 14 11A
.24A,Total $483 08
14-00808 000 Klull HIBI
J11n Sect 30 (tOO) 110
::'~ Surv 4 321A, Total
14-001~000,Kauii,PauiE

&amp;/or Fr1nc11 M Out of
8 78.fo Trlln S P1rt tA, Total
$73.13
t4-oo822 000, King, D1nny
&amp;tor Cynlhta, BlOt 28 (840)
SW Cor 01 IS 12A Neer
Mid W 1/2 t 04A Total
S183.02
14-00823 000, King, D1nny
&amp;/or Cynthia, Sect 21 (840)
180'x170 I of Allan Gflkey
1.04A l!x tteA 2t4A,Total
$4.10
1~1301 000, Lludlrmllt,

12, 1999

Public Notice
Edwerd &amp;/or Judy, Sec 8
(840) N Side oft t4A In Bub
2.33A,Total $78 08
14· 00053 001
Loula
Reyrr1911d H &amp;/or Mlldl'lil J
Slct 30 T2 R13 18 047 Out
of 30 OOA tt 047A Tptal
$102.20
14-00407 000 McPheraon
Evtrtrett &amp;/or Bonnie L
Slct 28 NE Pert of NE 1/4 of
BW 1/4 1A, Total $843 28
14 00708 000 Milliron,
Dl1n1 &amp;tor William Sect 8
FR2t 2R 13SWCor Ex
10.34A 9 04A,Total$134 119
14 01275 000 Minard
Howard E Slot 31 (840) Mid
of SW 114 on 8 Lint Ex
1 024A 13 58A Ex 1 8879A
Total $412 50
14 01278 ooo
Minerd
Howlrd E Sect 38 (10Q.315)
WEnd of N1/2 Ex 2 224A Ex
3.28A 5 52A Total$103.20
14.01024 000 Mitch Gary
&amp;/or 81ndl 81ct 34 Out of
20A E End of Nt/2 01 NE1/4
10A, Total S2 74
14-01025 000 Mitch Gary
&amp;tor S1ndl Sect 35 1A Out
of 20A SE of SW 1/4 Ex
Ctm 1A, Total$1111.20
14.01028 000 Mitch Gary
&amp;lor S1ndre A piece
82'11150 Out ol SE Cor Of
2 lOA 25A, Total $8 85
14 00807 000 Obryant
Emory L &amp;lor Joyce L, Beet
18 (840) NE Cor 115.28A W
End W 1/2 01 N Pt
2 73A,Total 178 83
14 oogor 001 Obryant
l!rnory L &amp;lor Joyce L, Sect
18 (840) NE Cor 115.28A W
End Wt/2 of N Pt 1 87A
Total $474 88
14-00015 000 R1lrd1n Carl
&amp;tor Beatrice Slot 27 (282)
Mid of Sf/2 of Rd Out of
17 40A 1 88A Total $0818
14-00018 000 Ralrden Carl
&amp;/or B11lriC1 F33 T2 R 13
SW Pt 28 SOA llld ol S1/2 Ell
I2A 1 OOA Total $28 66
1401214000
Reuter
W1llace J1n Bact 30 Und
2/3 &amp; 1/3 ol140 A SW 1/2 Ex
20A NW Ex .25A Ell 54 80A
58 89 Total $403.24
Ort4-01152 002 Smith,
Gregory &amp;/or VIcki Sect 31
T2 R13 3 337A Out of
17 55A 3 337A Total $378 22
14 01064 ooo Smith
Kimberly Sue Slct 27 S 112
1A, Total$18 11
14 01428 000 Stitt Nore
C/0 Corbitt AIUIII Sit (327)
NE Prt of 22 87A NW of St
R17 55A, Total $11 11
14-0011111 000 Stumbo John
D &amp;lor Cheryl Slot 8 (282)
30A Out of 9 34A SW Cor
Ell 10.34A .30A Total $4 88
1+001182 000 Stumbo John
D &amp;lor Cheryl Sect 9 (282)
Out of NE Cor of 8 01A
57A,Totlll$1t4.24
14 01532 000 Sturgeon
H1rry L St 30 (840) Unci 2/3
&amp; 1/3 ol 140A SW 1/2 EX
20A NW &amp; 4DA EX 25A
1 782A, Total $80.SO
14 00074 000
Stone,
Th0ma1 A: lleet I In NW
Co~ of W1/2 of N1/2 1A
Total $834 11
1~1504 000 'llwnbull, Opel
Vlrglnll Lot 315 Stet 38
.223A Out of 22 1OA
.223A Total $2.20
1~1508 000 Turnbull, Opel
Vlrglnll Sect 38 (3111) SE
Cor of 12A NW of E1/2 Ex
2A Eli1A480A,Total $511:at
1~1508 000 Turnbull Opal
VIrginia, Sect 13 38 (100
315) N Una Mid 1!112 Ex
Coai1A Total$10 71
1~1507 000 Turnbull Opel
Vlrglnll Set 38 (10Q.3111) N
Line Mid Et/2 Ex Co•l
1 84A,Total $20 88
1~t545 000 W11r1 Myra
M1rl1 Elll C/0 Joan W11r1
Slot 27 (2821 Mid of S 1/3 of
Ad Ex Coal Ex 1 50A
15 45A,Total$145 88
1~1548000 Wtarl, Myra
ll1rl1 Elll C/0 Jo1n W11,.
St 27 (282) T2 R 13 F3 W
End 40 88A S Pt 10 OIA
Total $3785
1~1547000 Weare, uy,.
M1rla Elll C/0 Jo1n W11r1
Slct 27 (282) Mid S P11t of
21AB ol St/2 Ex lOA 1 32A
Total $480
1~1548.000 W11ra, Myra
Mlrle Elll C/0 Joan We1r1
ST 27 (282) Mid of S 1/3 ol
Rd EX Coli Ex 68A
12 414,Total $43.28
1~1238000 Will Paul~ Br
&amp;/or Dottle L Sect 3 (840)
Mid On W line Ex Coli 2A
Total $787 00
14· 01531 ooo
w~
M1rahall W, Beet 27 (~82)
1 lOA Out of 11 85A
1 50A,Total $t77 80
14 018511 000
YIIUIII~
F,.nCII Sect 11 33 (1Q03112) BE P1rt of 1 1OA SW
Part 52A Totall173 08
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE.
MEIGS LSD
15·00051 000 AndRaymond L Et11 Lot (201
R11r Sect Lot 28 Facing
Colt St 3g E End Tollil
$443 51
15 00500 000 AndRaymond L Etal Lot 4 Toial
$837.82
1a-oo233 000 81UIIrriU~n
Dllnl &amp;tor Them Jame• T
C/0 Jam11 l 'l'hem Lot 47
30 s Side Ex lx35 Total
$72.03'
15-00234 000, BaultrmiJI
Dltn• &amp;tor Them J1m11 T
C/0 J1m11 T Thtm Lot 48
Total $038.34
15•001144 000 Burt, Htla
Taily1 B 1.111 (123) Palmet a
2ND Add 123-! P1rt of Str'lp
41150 Total $3 13
15.Qj083 000 C1101 Ao"""
P &amp;/or Anne' Lowery, Lot 17
Behen 1BT Add TD91I
$402.SO
15.Q0408000 Cutor Allen
T Lot Ill Bthllll 2ND ~
All, Total $343 73
,
15-00451 ooo Ellerall~c;!l •
Jerenna M &amp;/or nmolhf_Ff
Lot Prt Lot 110 3011120 'Pit
Lot 111 3011120 lo1wortJt
Add, Total$$2017
15•02021 000 lnYIII!t~
Tlleoom Public Utlll_'l'
PWionll Totlll•1tM
•
111-00120 000 King Lucliili

Friday, November

12, 1999

Pomeroy e Middleport,

Delinquent Real Estate Taxes
(Continued from Page 10)

Lot 40 1/2 Blhln I 2ND
Add Total $84.50
15-00089 000 Llwlt, Peggy
Lot (47) Bhelllald 47 OS112
Total $2457
1S.OOOOO 000 Llwll Peggy
Lot (33) Sheffield 33-S 1/2
Totll $308 89
15-00870 000 Medley Billie
&amp; Harriet Wln11 Sect 29
18A 51/2 ol S1/2 of 75A on
River 18A Totll $3 58
15 00998 000
Milton
Ellzlbelh Etal C/0 Richard
Ward Lot 12 Horton &amp;
BoiWOrth Add Total $84 78
15 00503 000 Nuggud
Shlrln, Lot 18 Co1IPort
Total $5214
15-00822 000 Pridemore
Joey Sr &amp;/or Zelma J Lot
(84) Beh1n 1 2ND Add 14
Total $137
1S.00187.000 Qualll Danlu
D Lot (19) Sheffield 119 24
S Side ol W1/2 Total
$45548
15 00188 000
Qullll
Denlat D Lot (20) Sheffield
20 18 N Side Of W1/2 Total
$4939
15 01828 000 R81VII
Carolyn J &amp;/or Hannan
Trlna Lot 121 P Jona1 3RD
Add Und 112 of 25 Total
$341 65
15 01829 000
Raevu
Carolyn J &amp;/or Hannan
Trllll Lot 121 P Jon11 3RD
128 N1/2 Total $338 89
15-01351 000 Seldenable
John Etal CIO Raymond L
Andrew• L.ot 28 Ex 30 E
End &amp; 50 W End Total
$25792
15 01352 000 Stldtnlble
John Etll CIO Raymond
Andrew• Pt of Lot II 30 In
Rear of Cole St 33 x 6
Total $3.20
1S.01278 000 Smith Ernt1t
L &amp;lor Shirley A C/0 Shirley
A Smhh Lot 105 Boaworth
Add Total $218 93
15 00386 000
Smith
K1thleen M
Lot 80
Botworth Add Ex 20 Prt
Lot Total $784.33
15-00492 000 Tyr11 Linn~
Lot 329 Lower Porn Total
$3843
15-QOIIM 000 Tyr11 Lanny
Lot 328 Lower Porn Total
13587
POMEROY VILLAGE
MEIGS LSD
1&amp;.o1138 000
Al11hlre
William Lot 1 45 X100 N
Part Felger Lot Total
135483
18o00012 000 Alkire Roger
S &amp; Charldlna A Lot 487 E
P1rt cl Lot Total $261 70
16 00787 ooo Anderaon
John H &amp;lor Gretchen 0
Lot 489 50 xSO NW Cor
Total 158988
18-00788 000 Barbar Diane
Lynn Lot 175 1/2 H Add
50 x80 C1ntar N Sldt Total
$18818
16-00008 000 Betzlng John
Cary Lot 448 Total $883.23
18o00087 000 lletzlng, John
, Clry Lot 4311 Ell Til Lot 111
Total $4885
18-00311 000 lletzlng John
Clry Lol17 E Er)d oi31.3A
N of Rd 8143A, Total $37 43
11 00442 000 Eberallach
C1th1rlne Lot 124 Dabney
Add Total $ 38 39
16-00443 000 EblriiiiCh
Catherine Lot 124 1/2
Dabney Add Total $13 00
16-00444 000 Ellarabach
Catharine Lot 125 D1bney
Add Total $38 3t
te-o1588 000, Formyduvll
nmothy L, Lot 18 Sub 5
Cherry St eo s Total
$41822
15-01589 000 ForrnyduYII
nmothy L Lot t 8 Sub 4
Cherry St 28 x80 Total
$17 54
1S.02428 000 Formyduval
'nmothy L. Lot 18 Sub II
Condor St 8 dO Total
"764
111 013711 000 Foulkrod
Stephen &amp; Baker VIcki Lot
51 Maylore Run Total
$3837
18 01377 000 Foulkrod
Stephen &amp; Baker VIcki Lot
62 Naylora Run Total
$30047
Ul 00867 000 Imboden
Earlln1 Etal C/0 Betty
Imboden Lot 258 Sub 00
Total $143 28
f8 02814 000 lnYIIIon
Telecom P.ubllc Utility
Peraonal Total$19 80
18 00917 ooo Johneon
Jeule &amp; Bertha C/0 Sol &amp;
L,ealer John10n Lot 35 V B
Horton 1 Add Total $7 82
18 00918 000 John1on,
Jeule &amp; Bertha C/0 Sol &amp;
J.e•ltr John1on Loll 26-27
211 Total $83 34
16 00919 ooo Johneon
Jeeale &amp; Berth• C/0 eol &amp;
Llaler John10n Lot 38 V B
Horton 1 Add Totlll $11.24
18 00920 000 John1on
J1111e a Bartha cto Sol a
.Lealer John10n Lot 34 V B
Horton 1 Add Total $7 82
16 00921 000 John1on
J•alle &amp; Bertha cto Sol a
Liller Johneon Lot 28 a 30
90 xt 00 Total $11.84
18 00541 000
Jon11
nmothy D Etlll C/O Robert
$ T1ylor Lot 258 Back of
Lot 2115-288 Total $30 18
18 00542 000
Jonaa
nmothy D Etal C/0 Robert
S T1ylor Lot 258 BICk 01
Lot 283 a wor t/2 01285
Total$8011
18 00543 000
Jonu
timothy D Elll, C/0 Robert
S Teylo~ Lot 288 EX All S
Of Lldge, Total $8.28
, 14-011454.000, Klein, Llrry E.
Lot 258 IUb 93 Total $311.08
U.OOS01 000, Klein, Larry E
r.Tor Kellay Lot 258 Sub 11
1J2 t1 3,14 8A, Total $188.31
1HOII02 000 Klein, Llrry E
0
&amp;/or Kelley, Lot 258 BW Cor
•
.lOA, Total $4.o8
111-01111 000, Moon Annie
Lee NKA H1rrl1 Lla C/0
;Annie Lll H1rrl1, Lot 257
Sub.18 1/2, Totll $81103
18-00211 000, Neutzllng,
,Michlal A &amp;lor Brandl Kll,
tot 7 Hoffner Add Total

flf.28

18.00212 000 Ntutzllng,
MlchUI A &amp;lor Branda Kle
Lot 481 Til 88' Front Sub 3,
Total$2247
16.00213 000 Neutzllng
Mlch111 A &amp;lor Brend1 Kle,
Lot 481
Bull 2 Total
117075
Rental•
18 00742 000
Unlimited C/0 R1ymond
Andraw1 Lot 4211 WEHE
Add Sub 16 Total $58 83
18 00743 000, Rent1l1
Unlimited, C/0 R1ymond
Andrawa Lot 425 Sub 17
Total $544 08
18 01972 000
Rental•
Unlimited C/0 R1ymond
Andraw1 Lot 180-1225 Sub
118 W Side of 78 x1 00 Trl
Bet St &amp; 35A, Total $ 7 80
f8 01073 ooo Rant111
Unlimited C/0 R1ymond
Andrew• Lot 208 1/2
40 x40 W of 208&amp;180-12211
35A Bet CUll &amp; Lot Total
$37835
18 00375 000 Rental•
Unlimited A P1rtn1rehlp,
C/0 Reymond Andrelllll Lot
115 Dlbnty Add Tot1l $
1940
18 00378 000
Rent1l1
Unlimited A P1rtntr1hlp,
C/0 Raymond Andrawa Lot
220 Dabney Add Total
$2895
16 00377 000
Rentala
Unlimited A P1rtntr1hlp
CIO Raymond AncrLot 221 Dabney Add Total
$533.27
18 00378 ooo Rent111
Unlimited A P1rtntrthlp
C/0 R1ymond Andrawe Lot
222 Dabney Add Total

so.eo

111 00450 ooo Rtntlle
Unlimited A Plrtnerehlp
C/0 Raymnd Andrew• Lot
311 20 E Side Total $855.SO
18 01489 000 AUIIIII,
D1nny &amp;lor Lllh J1ne Lot
282 17 R 13 R 2 Sec 20 Lot
282117 815A Totll$1117 00
16-00081 000 Seldenabel
John Etal C/0 A1ymond L.
Andrew• Lot 32 Bet 31 &amp;
33 35 Frt Salt St 13 2
51 Mlln St Ellc SW Pt Total
1312.66
18 01088 000, Selden1bel,
John Et1l, C/0 A1ymond
Andrewt Lot 2 50 on W
Side Spring St Total
me.78
18.02805 000 Selden1bel
John Etal C/0 Raymond
Andrawe Part of Lot 2 W
Side Spring Avenue
4 71 X80' Total $5 58
15-0189t 000 Snow Dl1ne
Lot 189 Point Bet Butternut
&amp;Hilltop Sl Total $182.85
18 01838 000, Stewart
Carolyn A C/0 Cerolyn
Jtflera Lot 28 Lincoln
Helghta Add Total $34810
18 01884 ooo
Werry
Thoma• Lot 18 &amp; 10 Total
$22.0t
18 01830 000 Will Carl
Edwin &amp; Meriel Jean Lot
237 Strip 88 Wide BICk Of
Lot 253, Total $40.01
18 01931 000 Will, Cerl
Edwin a Merl1l Jean Lot
253 Total $590.08
18 00351 000
Wlleon
Sam1ntha &amp;/or Thom11 E
~~.1 Lot 18 (283) 1A SW Cor
1:}1 87 83A
053A
807A, Totall3f2 80
15-01151 00
Young
Katherine M Lot 213 214
Til Cor Alley &amp; St Total
$5551
15-01152 000
Young
Kltherlne M Lot 294 P1rl of
294 From Alley Back 34 8
With 37 on All1y Total
$166AO
18 01710 000
Young
Katherine M Lot 281 Ell
Back ol Lot, Total $185 02
18 01882 000
Young,
Kathlrlne M Lot 282 7' E
Side Total $15.24
18 01983 000
Young
Kllhlrlne M Lot 202 24 W
Sldt Total $850 78
HI 01884 000
Young
Kllhlrlne M Lot 213 15 Mid
Bet Alley &amp; Front St A Total
$1457
Young,
16 011185 000
Kltherlne M Lot 293 30 W
Side E 40 B1ck to Cliff
Total$28.81
SCIPIOTWP
MEIGS LSD
17 00454 000, AllllouM
Marvin &amp;lor Bonnll, Lot
Slot 18 (840) W ol Rd 1A Ell
337A 883A, TOIII $4t 71
17 00454 001 Ahhouu
M1rvln E &amp;/or Bonnie H,
Slot 16 (840) W ol Rd 337A
Out of 1 OOA 337A Total
$8588
17 ooaea 002 Bogge11
Dorothy &amp;/or Freddl1 Slot
33 T7N A14W 4221A Out D1
140 OOA 4221A, Totlll$8.07
17 00758 ooo Bogge11,
Dorothy &amp;/or Fraddll Slct
33 S&amp;W P1rt of NW 1/4 &amp; S
of WP of NE 1/4 1A Out
142A 1A Total $35$32
17 00425 000, Boring
Robert E NW 01 19 Totlll
$5.&amp;7
17 00426 000
Boring
Robart E Lot 8 Tot1l S
2184
17 00427 000
Boring
Robert E, Lot 8 Total

sw u

M57.84

t 7 00428 000
Boring
Robert E, Lot 7 Total $3318
17.00011 ooo coohren
Ch1rl11 W PI, Lot (10)
1.031A N Prt of 4 70etA
1.031A Ell DBA OSIA Totll
$1,18935
17 00352 ooo Cochran
Ch1rl11 W IV Lot 10
2.4380A Out of 4 708011 lx
I 137A 1 29ggA
Total
I1M711

17 00178 000 Cottarlfl
$Ieven D &amp;/Or Barlltrl C
Lot (10) Total $81312
17 00178 000, Cotterill
Steven D &amp;lor B1rbara C
Lot ('1), Total ....
17•00110 ooo, Cotterill
Steven D &amp;/or 81rll1ra C
Lot llct ·18 (840) Nl! ol NW
1/4 Ex 18 A E lA Totlll
1127.30
17·00013 ooo Gilmore
Donne, C/0 Edwtrd L
Bmlae, Lot (3), Total $44 82
t 7·0ll872 000 Henlnt:
Jeffrey E &amp;/or IIIIIICCI

Bact 7 W of NW 1/4 1 78A
Total227.4t
17 00382 000, Howtrd
Craig &amp;/or Dlllrl Jean Slot
28 1:7N R 14W SW Corner
t808A Out of 81A
18 08A Total$1,070 14
t 7 00472 000 Kennedy
Perry E Lot 8101 14-15 NE
P1rt of 37 50A 5 50A Total
$1015.28
17 00473 000 KeJ nady
Perry E Lot Sect 14 15
(282} NE Part 50A Total
$371 88
17 00474 000 Kennedy
Wlllllm E Etal DBA Red Hill
Ferme Sect 1110 (282) W
End Ex 20A W 20 SOA Ell
708A 10 702A,Total $149 22
17 00482 000 Kennedy
Wlllllm E Etll DBA Red Hill
F1rm1 Slot 10 (282) W End
25 OOA Ell 88A 24 34A,Tol!ll
$274.30
17 00810 000
Phelpl
Stlnley &amp;/or Sue Beet 36
2A Out of 25A 2A Total
$11181
17.00718 004 Phllllll• Brian
K &amp;lor Stacy Elaine Sact 4
T7 R14 3 052A Out Of
20 OOA Total$88 48
17 00854 000
ReiYII
Eugene W 1/or Juanl11 M
Lot Slot -9-10 N- Mid On
S Une 3.27A, Total$88 10
17 00855 000
A1evea
Eugene W &amp;lor Juanita M
Lot Sect 10 Mid on S Une
1OA Total $82 52
17 00819 000 Wandling
Ptggy Lot SICI -4 NE Part
01 NW 114 15 737A Total
$73071
17 00139 000 Williams
David D C/0 David
Wlllllml Lot Sect 36 NW
Prt NW 1/4 30 ISA Ex
21 3078A 9 3424A Total
$7314
t 7 00140 000 Wllllllm1
Dlvld D C/0 David
Wllll1m1 Lot Bact 38 S Prt
of 32 47A W Prt of Sec
18 t5A,Total $5041
SUTTONTWP
SOUTHERN LSD
18-00177 001 Ablll Jlmll
I( AKA J1me1 Keith Sact 8
T2 R12 Wf/2 of 180A Lot
2 OOA Out of 80 84A
2 OOA Total $84 47
18 01201 000
Amott
Robert E &amp;/or Debra K
Slot 24 S Part of 30A NE Pt
oi107A N3A Total '"70
18 00188 000 C1rnahan
J1m11 A, Total $025.08
18-00218 000 Cl1rk, W11ley
&amp; Geneve SICI 10 SE
Corner 4.81 A, Total $24 02
18 00533 000 Council
AIICII C Lot 100.310 Back
of Lot• 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
3tA Total $8 57
18 00534 000 Council
Alicia C LoU Total $11 82
18 00535 ooo Council
Allcl1 C Lot 8 10 Joining
n Total $5 71
18 00538 000 Council
Allcl• C Lot 8 27 Joining
LotH Total $8 57
18 00537 000 Council
Allcl1 C, Lot 8, Total $20 01
18 00538 000 Council
Alicia C, Lot 5 Totlll $53 07
18 001138 ooo Council
Allcll C Lot 48 112 x45 SE
Comer, Total $5.20
t8 00540 ooo Council
Alicia C Lot 7 Total $20 01
18 00541 ooo Council
Allcll C l:ct 10 N 1/2 Total
S079
18o00334 000 Durlt, John C
Sect 30 NW Corner Ex
Coal SA, Total $25 70
18-00337 000 Dural John
C Sect 30 N End Ex Coal
11A Total $55 10
18-00338 000 Dural John
C Sact 30 S ol N 40A Coal
28A Totll $348 88
18-00330 000 Duret John
C sact 100 W End Ex. 8A &amp;
Ex. Coai34A,TOll I $174.24
1S.01143 008 Ginther John
J &amp;/or Juanita II Slot 13 T3
A12 5.0202A Out of 9 88A
5 0202A,Total $143.24
89 Total $18 77
18 00518 001
Halnaa
Nalh1n Jr T2 R13100A Lot
201 1 85A Out of 5 58A
1 95A Total $27 74
18-00283 000 JarNII Dallaa
D &amp;tor Kimberly Sect 17
SECor 01 Bal/4 Ex Coal
114A, Total $493 44
18-00813 000 Klein Llrry E
&amp;/or Killey Lot 89 Sub A,
Total$7 35
18-005t4 000 Klein Llrry E
&amp;lor Kelley Lot 111 Sub e
Total$5 71
tt1-o01115 000 Klein Larry E
&amp;/or Killey Lot 89 SubC
Total$5 71
18 00858 000
Medley
Gragory 58 x158 1/2 N of
Chapm1n
21A
Totlll
$28442
18 000282 000
Miller
Robert L, Sact 11 NE of NE
1/4 Except 26 1055 AC
3 8M5A Total $324 83
18 001211 ooo
Roueh
Robert G &amp;Jor Klmberlr K
Sect 12 22 S Una E o Rd
.38A. Total$88144
18 00220 000 St1nley
loiiiJy Sect 18 E End of
448A E I OOA Ex 8 811A
t t!IIA,Total too 17
18·01218 ooo Stollart
Donna Sect 8 S Pt S of Ad
Ex Coli 2 873A Out-of
26.87A 2.873A, Total $85.88
18·01234 000 Thllll
Thoma• M Slct 4 S. of W
28A 04A4A Totll$8.115
18 01237 000
Thtlll
Thcma1 M, Slot 4 N l!nd Ell
40a E Ex 4A 55A Total

Public

Notice

Total $1 ,383.82
Wolfe
t 8 012011 000
KlmberiJ Kly Lot (2111) 110
&amp; U11Twp Ex Coal 011 Gaa
&amp; lllntrele 4 35A Total
$7288
16-01373 001 Volt Charlet
E &amp;lor ILA Slct 17 S Part of
NW 1/4 E of Rd Ell Co11 Ex
91 85A 1.20A, Total $1.22
111-01374 000 Yoet Cherl11
E &amp;/or ILA, St 22 BE Pt ol
18 53A S or NW 32 85A
8 28A ol12 23A 8 28A Total
$33.47
15-01375 000 Yoat Charles
E &amp;/or ILKa Sect 12 22 NW
Part Of 18.53A S of NE 2/4
5 05A,Total $23 27
16-01547 000 Yoll Charl11
E &amp;lor ILA Sect 17 T2 R12
Part of NW1/4 E of RD Coal
Only 85 31A Total $14 19
111-01240 001 Yo1t Charl11
E &amp;/or ILA J Sect 17 N Part
of SW 114 Ex Coal 7 5961 A
Out ol48 40A 7 5881A, Total
$3288
111-01243 000 Yoat Charles
E &amp;tor ILA J Sect 17 Out of
42 OOA E of Rd 1OA Total
$4288
18o00800 000 Yo1t Charles
Edw1rd Sect 22 Mid on s
Unt of Lot Ell 1A To St Ry
3 BOA, TOIII $22 87
16-110802 000 Voat Charlet
Edw1rd Sect 20 S of R
Woll 73A Total 13 65
18.Q0893 000 Yo1t Chorlea
Edwerd Sect 16 W Line
118W 1 9585A Total $3 28
18o00814 000 Voat Charlea
Edward Sect 16 W Une 118
Near Mid 1 12A Total $6 53
18o00805 000 Volt Cherlea
Edwerd Sect 18 16 Near
SW Co~ Ex 08A to St RV
65A Total $ 82
111-01380 000 Yoat Charles
Edwlrd Sect 22 NW Corner
Ex lA NW Ex Coal 9 75A
Total$8143
18-01372 000 Volt Charlea
Edwlrd St 16 36 t2A Out of
E End oi48A 11 of SE 1/4 Ell
Coal38 12A Total $54 88
111-01373 000 Yo1t Charles
Edw1rd, Sect 17 S Part of
NW 1/4 E 01 Ad Ex Coel
81 88A,Total $1 893 47
18o00034 000 Young Herry
J &amp;tor Carolyn S Lot 78
Total$4530
1S.01028 000 Young Harry
J &amp;/o( Carolyn S Lot 85 Ex
Coal Total $11 82
15-01027 000 Young Harry
J &amp;lor Carolyn S Lot 88 Ex
Coal Total $11 82
18-01028 000 Young Harry
J &amp;lor Carolyn S Lot 87 Ex
Coal Total $111 09
18-01021 000 Young Harry
J &amp;lor Carolyn S Lot 100
Ell Coal Total $2 84
RACINE VILLAGE
SOUTHERN LSD
10.Q0218 000 Boso Pemola
L, Lot a Total $55 86
10o00217 000 Bo1o Pamela
L Lot 11 W Add Total
$57914
19 00431 001
Davia
Gregory R &amp;/or Barbara K
Sact IS T2 R12 3 3583A Ex
8033A2873A, Total$80001
19 00158 ooo
Gheen
Manuel 61 Total $26 57
11 00180 000
Gheen
Manuel 82 Total $325 27
19 00181 000
Gheen
Mlnutl E &amp;lor Barbara 0 87
1187 Total $50 55
19 00229 000
Jerrell ~
Eetella &amp;/or Dalla• C/0
Dallu Jarrell Lot 28
251/21150 SE Corner Total
$178
19 00230 000
Jarrell
Eltell1 &amp;/or Dallal C/0
Dallll J1rrell Lot 28 Ell SE
Comer Totll $13M
19 00231 000
J1rrell
Estella &amp;/or D11i11 C/O
Dallet Jerrell Lot 18 Fr of
Lot N of -Bub 17 Total
$8495
19 00232 000
Jarl ell
Eatella &amp;/or Dellll C/0
Dallaa Jarrell Lot 18 60
Front Sub G Total $8.08
19 00088 000 Scerberry
Anna E 51 Ex Trl W End
Total $407 01
10o004t1 000 Walker Ricky
Allen 16 118 Total $89 08
19-00235 000 Volt Charles
Edward Sect 18 (840) E of
Rd In W End 16 12A Total
$393
1O.Q0238 000 Yoet, Charlea
Edwerd Sect 18 (840) w
End olll8 W 25A,Total $7 83
SYRACUSE VILLAGE
SOUTHERN LSD
20 00585 000, Berker
James &amp; Debora Lot 211 Ell
W 50 t8A,Total $4111 08
20 00568 ooo
Berker
Jam11 a Debora In s Pt Ex
Pt of Loll Sold From C H
WMS Trustee Ex 32A
5 71A Total $28 72
2CJ.00180 003 Dural John
C P1rt Ot100A Lot 290 T2N
R12W 2 2779A Out of
4 9521A 2 2779A Total

0~

The Deily Sentinel • Page 11

College president resigns
amid swirl of family rumors
By DEE ANN DURBIN
Associated Pre88 Writer
HILLSDALE M1ch - With 1ts
conservative curnculum and clean
cui students tmy H•ilsdale College IS
a place more accuslomed 10 Socrales
!han scandal where talk of morals
and values •s the nann
The campus IS reeling at the sud
den ret11emen1 of longume PreSidenl
George Roche III am1d rumors that
he had a relatiOnship w1th h1s daugh
ter m law who later comm1tted sui
c1de
Little reason was g1ven for
Roche s rettrement Wedne sday
wh1ch came nme days after a forced
leave of absence and admmJStrators
aren t lalking beyond terse state
ments Pollee have decimed 10 com
ment on Roche s personal hfe saymg
only that they have talked w11h h1m
and found no ev1de nce of foul play m
the Oc1 17 death of L1ssa Roche 41
The rumors have been d1scussed
mtensely on campus of the I 200 slu
den1 school and have been reported
m Detroit area newspapers and on
TV and rad1o
Lauren Gunn Boyar an 18 year
old freshman sa1d she docsn t know
whal to thmk of the rumors
I don t behe•e anythmg I hear
she sa.d Th1 s campus IS so small
that rumors can get way out of con

trol and 11 s not nghl and respec1ful
to have anythmg to do w1th allega
uons
An all campus meetmg loday
auended by students and faculty shed
httle new hght on the SJIUal•on Don
aid Mossey chrunnan of the college s
board of trustees srud the last fe w
weeks have been very difficult as the
board deculed the school s future
I m sure you ve been mundated
w1th much rumor a great deal of
mnuendo and some fact he told the
gathenng Each of you w1ll have to
reach your own conclusiOns
So the quest10ns contmue
The college IS never gomg to diS
cuss the situatiOn wtth George Roche
agrun Ron Trowbndge v1cc pres•
dent for external commumcauons
saJd earher We are done From here
on out we re starung over
Provost Robert Blackstock IS the
actmg pres1dent Trustees on Wednes
day appomted a search comm1ttee
that mcludes fanner U S Educallon
Secretary Wilham Benneu and
Wtiham F Buckley- conservallves
who champ10n traditiOnal morality
Roche 64 had headed the school
smce 1971 He endeared h1mself 10
conservatives when he declared m
1985 that Hillsdale would not accept
federal fmanc13l a1d because 11 would
come wnh 100 many government

stnngs such as affinnauve acuon
Under hiS pres1dency the school s
endowmenl rose from $4 m1lllon to
$172 mJihon
We have proved that mtegnty
values and courage can st1ll tnumph
m a corrupt world Roche sa1d m a
leuer released Wednesday by trustees
H1llsdale College 1s a monument to
those behefs
Roche would no1elaborate on h~&lt;
deciSion to re11re from the $1 88 000
a year pos1 The leave was granted
Nov I shortly af1er h1 s son spoke to
lhc board about an undi sclosed top
IC
The combmed pressures of h1 s
personal health and pn vatc family I fe
make th1s step necessary • the board
sa1d m a state ment
The elder Roche d1vorced h1s
w1fe of 44 years m Apnl and remar
n ed th1s fail
Questions aMI rumors have
SWilled around Hillsdale a lown of
some 7 400 about 90 m1les southwest
of Detroll smce Roche sclaughter m
law shot herself m the head at the
campus arboretum last month
Mrs Roche was managmg editor
of the H•llsdale College Press for 14
years and her hu~band George Roche
IV IS a h1story professor at the
school

Rockets explode in Pakistani capital
By AMIR ZIA
As11octated Press Writer
ISLAMABAD Pakistan - In
what appeared to be a coordmated
attack seven rockets exploded with
m two mmutes near the U S
Embassy the U N bulldmg an
Amencan cultural center and down
town go•ernment bu1ldmgs loday
official s and Witnesses sa1d
At least s1x people were wounded
bu1 no Amencans were hurt a U S
offic1al sa1d
These are rockets fired from cars
by umdenllfied people who have
managed to flee sa1d a semor ctty
offic1al Deputy CommiSSIOner
Mohammed All Khan
There was no cl31m of respons1
b1l1ty for the blasts
Gen Perva1z Musharraf Pak
1stan s m1 htary ruler had no 1mme
d•ate comment on lhe 1dent11y of the
attackers m an mterv1ew With The
Assoc1ated Press He sa1d 1he attack
IS under mvesugauon

This IS QUite scnous Mushar
raf sa1d
The explos•ons all occurred m the
center of the capnal Three blasts
occurred near PakiSiam government
bu1ldmgs less than a half m1le from
Parliament and 1ts adJacent PreSident
House
Before today there had been little
unrest m PakiStan smcc Musharraf
ousted Pr me Mm1ster Nawaz Shanf
m a coup last month
The blasts came as the Umted
Nat1ons and Umted States are m a
showdown with Afghamstan Pak
1stan s ne1ghbor over suspected ter
ronst Osama bm Laden
Afghamstan s ruhng Tahban m1h
ua and 1ts s upporters elsewhere mcludmg some Mushm groups m
Pakistan - have warned lhe Umted
Nat1ons not to 1mpose sancttons on
Afghamstan as the world body has
prom1sed to do unless b1d Laden IS
turned over for lnal
Af1er the exploSions hundreds of

people gathered outs1de the Amencan
Center to watch a car burnmg !here
A blackened rocket launcher could be
seen ms1de 11 and Witnesses report
ed seemg rockets fired from cars JUSt
before the explosiOns occurred
Two of the explosiOns were near
the Amencan Center and the U S
Embassy center spokesman Mark
Wentworth sa1d All the Amencans
are safe
Behmd the US Embassy a U N
car was burnmg
I saw !he car JUmp live to 10
yards after the blasl bul luck•ly no
one was close to ll Witness AnJum
Ahmed smd
A student who Jdent1f1cd himself
only as Hussam sa1d he was ms1de
the hbrary at the Amcr can Center
when he heard the e xplosiOn and
JOmed dozens of olhers 1n a rush out
s1de to sec what had happened
Pollee and paramilitary troops
patrolled lhc streets and searched
vehicles

@4jf:JI~---~~

312 GIFTS

FOR THE PERSON WHO HAS EVERnHING
1YEAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO THE

The Daily Sentinel

$4883

20 00180 000
Duret
MarJorie A Lot 290 100A Ell
271 To St Ry 7 1A To
Grindley 2 6742A
Ex
2 4828A Total 1208.03
20o00352 001 Lude Shirley
100A Lot 289 T1 A13 312A
Out of OSA 312A Total
5t,288 15
20o00725 001, Mill• Homar
Jr &amp;/or Dl1n1 100A Lot 218
T2 R12 1A Out of 3A 1 001
Total $283 38
20-00355 000 Mo1a, J1me1
Eric &amp;Angela K, 217 W P1rt
of 4 12A In E Un1 1 03A
Total$78175
20-o0583 001 PIPI AUen L
&amp;/or Carol A Lot 2
18•01238 000 Thein lulllnytron E1t1t1 311A
Thomal M 8t 4 All Ell 20A E Out o t It A 381 A Total
End t28 871A Ex 1 4741A $38.04
2CJ.00587 000, Papa, Allen L
12111181A,Total $708.15
18 00420 000,
Turley &amp;/or Carol A, Part of Lot 218
3 Buffington
l!dwMI M, SeCt 12 oo4 W Prt .878A Lot
of71A e.aA (Naw 8uiWY) Eltlllt Ell .201A 584A, total
S1 047;84
Total$132.88
18·01ue oo3
rr~ 2CJ.00443 000, Sheppard
Edward M tiOA Lot 1204 Robert T &amp;lot Anita K. 218
TIN At2W 1 OOA Out ol .28IA Total '1 077 34
121117A 1.00A, TOIIII14.211 20 00738 000 Zwilling
18 00173 d01, Whll1tch Woodrow T &amp;/or Shelton
Cryltll 8101 5, T2 1'112 NE Ruuell, SE Cor 13
Corner of Beet 5 883A Bullington Ell OBA Total
Totlll $7 77
t83.02
11 00175 001 Whltletch, 20.00731 000, Zwilling
Cryltil Slct 5 T2, A12, 8E Woodrow T &amp;/or Shelton
Corner of Sect 8 8 75A, lluuell, 288 S P1rt of 1 78A

The Dailv Sentinel

" YOUR HOMETO~N NEWSPAPER"

....

011 E End 1 &amp; A Ell 28A
37A, Total $452 28
20 00787 000 Zwilling
Woodrow T &amp;/or Shtllon
AutHII Pt of Lot 288 011 E
l!nd 11 a 2 Ex 21 A 45A,
Total $107 58
And notlca 11 hereby
glven thll the Whole oi1Uoh
nvaral tracll Iota or pertl
of Iota will be cartlfled lor

loracloaure by the County
taw or
lorelellld to the State
unteu
the
tax11,
IIIIIIIMnll lnd pen1111M
ara pllld
Nlncy Pllbr Clrnlllll
Auditor ol Melga County,
Ohio
Novemljlr 12 18 1 •
Auditor purauant to

NOTICE OF AVAILABIUTY
Sactton at04(b) thle form II
FOR PUBUC INSPECTION avllllbll lOr publlo
The Em11t 1nd M1x1ne ln1pectlon 11 the h - o1
Wlngalt Memortll Educlllon Robert Wingett, Trullle IIIII
Trult hat flied Ita 1nnu11 Director 1387 College
return of a prlvlll Road Byrecu.., Ohio,
IOundltlon form 1110-PP:, during the 110 tllyl ~
with the lntemll AIVIIIIII beginning November 11,
Servlol for 111011 year , 0118- 1 tl In IOOOrdence With (11) t2 1 tc
lntern11 Revenue code
I

~_.------w-~~~~~~~~~~~--~- - -~.~M~·~
· · ·--~--------------------------------------~----------------------~~~~

�. ..
Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

.California·sprawl
By JEFF WILSON
.Aaaoclatecl Preh Writer
SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. - The rolling hills of lhe central coast
used to be the stuff of California
dreams. Now, outlet malls and hous.ing tracts grace some of America's
. most beautiful coast and valleys.
Sunny California is beginning to
feel more like an.urban nightmare for
some residents clinging to rural memories of just a generation ago.
" We're going to tum into Los
Angeles. It's a common phrase now,"
Sierra Club activist Ada Babine said
of the rapid growth in Santa Barbara
and San Luis Obispo counties, norlh
of Los Angeles. "It's really spooky.
We're getting very nervous."
The cause is simple: With urbanization nearly complete from Mexico border to just nonh of sprawling

inche~

L.A., developers consider the central
coast inviting turf.
Il's long been one of lhe Golden
State's most piciU!esque regiops,
where waves crash against rocky outcroppings, vineyards produce quality grapes for a growing wine industry and cattle graze in hills shaded by
oaks. Its strawberries, grapes and
vegetables are served across the
country.
But bulldozers have carved up
· great stretches of the landscape. In
the place of verdant fields are T~rget ,
Office Max, Me Donalds, Carl s Jr.
and housing for thousands of transplanted southerners- as m Southern
Californians.
Commute.rs now see Los Angelesstyle traffic Jams and housmg along
Htghway 101 htdes the scemc oceanfront vtews.

$16.95

$79.95

Plus
Tax

AC Inspection
any repairs extra

Most GM cars
any repairs extra

$21.81

Plus
Tax

As your GM Parts
supplier, we're your
source for GM
Goodwrench® new and
remanufactured engines
and new transmissions.

GM carslight duty trucks
any repairs extra

$24.95

vs

STEVE L. LINDSEY

DE.J'ENQANT

In

·Plus
Tax

Front End
Alignments
Plus
Tax

**All Prices Are Subject to Sales Tax**
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT, 992-6614 • HOURS 8:00AM TO 5:00 PM MON-FRI

6moll Port Coclr.or Spaniol

II
'

St. At. 7

In Memory or

LEONAEBUN
November 1936 •
November 1996
Though out of sight, .
you'D rorever be In my
heart and mind.
Daughter
Nancy Manley

Tuppers

(10) 15, 22,28
(11) 5, 12, 18 6TC

DON ,.A,.E MO,.ORS, INC.

I

'1111

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1999

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

..

FIREWOOD

IIINIIP.I•£1•.....,1

Plek·IP lft HI fll~
Recently purchased:
Graham's Wood Products

"''""'~
Bulldooer
&amp; Backhoe
Seroices
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Syolenu &amp;
'

..

-.

• Meigs Marauders

• Southern 'tOrnadoes
• Eastern Eagles

BINGO
AMERICAN LEGION ·
POST467
RUTLAND, OHIO
GUAUNTIII 60 A
GUll, OVIIIO
PIOPLI 10 ·AGUll,
OVII 99 PIOPLI
tt.OOAGUU
STAIIUIST
$2000.00 AND
·coVIUU
MON &amp; WID DOORS
OPINAT4:30
GUIESSTAIT
AT 6:30

Leave a Messal!e

.

yore{{
Vinyl Rcplacemcnl Windows
R-10 Insulated Gloss
SO Year free glass replacement

Sat. Nov. 13, 1999
8:00-11:00 p.m.

30 Announcements
MINERAL WELLS, WV
(Parkersburg)

740-992-4119

Stop In And See
Steve· Riffle
u
. , Sales Representative
i't
. Larry Schey
, .•

Nov. 13· 14
...... ~........ flltllpo

..

n..-. S4.(MI

\J'JDER I 2 rREE. WI 1\0U.:r

I

$1 00 Off wMisAD

SO's SOCK HOP

l

BUT•IELL •ftlADE
I-Tt I:XrT I til ·ro 10" :.t I IJ:Fr

1n: ' .. 1£fi 1'111 .1.0\\' TO llT. .f IJ-:1,..
0 :'\ IU. .f 1U 1\XI'O C:lll .

Glllll, UIYD, lllll.ft~

Consignment Auction
AMVETS Kanauga
6 pm Nov. 18th
Collectible Dolls, Nascar
collectibles, Longerberger
baskets, lots more
Fitinls "Ike" Isaac
Auctioneer Info

Call 985-383%
10/13 1mo.

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
•Replacement Winqows
•Room Addttlons
•Roofing
COUIIOAlllll IESIDIIIIJAl
FREE ESTIMATES
(No Sunday Calls)

No Embarrasament ...
You're Treated with Respect!

YOUNG'S
, CARPENTER SERVICE

·,.

74().992-2665 .

•Room lddlllonl &amp; AlmodeiiJti
•Ntw Glfltll•

•Eioetrlell&amp; Plumblno
•Roaltng &amp;Outllrl
•VInyl Siding &amp; Pllntlng
I'Grch Dtckl
r •
Frle Elllma!M

.; ·V.C. YOUNG Ill
l .- 992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
l
22 yn. Loeal

: ·J &amp; Llltsulatlon
.. I Siding
.

evr.,ISitlll
e ..... &amp; s..IHs"""

11 lnslalatiOII
• Huge equ1pm1nt &amp;pa11s iwtntoly ' I
. • frlli &amp;linllllls • EmY Bank Rnandng
• Fadtry Trrirled Tedtnklans

Mizway Tavern
Friday Karaoke with Jetl North
Sat. Band- Bad Habit

• • ltplm•tlf Wlltltw•

ec:-.tt

BENNm'S M~BILE HOME HEATING &amp; COOLING
·s~ing Southeastern Ohio &amp; WV"
For,Over Two Decades
,,
1·800·872·5967
or 740·446·9416
'

9:00·1:00

.

'.

'

. Bryan Reeves

Rutland, Ohio
American Legion
Post467
Breech Grove
-Road
Gun Shoot
Slug and Shot
Matches
Every Sunday
1:00 p.m.

Now .R enting

High &amp; Dry
Sell-Storage
33795 HUand Rd.
Ponwroy, Ohio

740-992-SU2
1~tmo. pd.

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

740-992-4559

Free Estimates

'

' . · - ftl'1twte . . . .

............ "

eWt&amp; ... lllcb

; Pia (7401 tt2•2772

.
•' .

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

Now Renting

1be Country Candle Shop

.Construction

W.V. MwV028120

Unda's Painting

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

Tim Deem's

740·742·2706
740-446-1141

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5''X 10'
to 10' x30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Sun.set Rome Construction

Regular Hours: Tue- Fri1D-6
Saturday1H
Rt 124 Minersville, OH

Clean &amp; Scotch
Guard $45 ·Any
normal Size Room.

HILL'S
SELF STORAOE

Free Estimates

Wooden Angels, Snowmen
New stenl5, layaways &amp;credit cords O((epted

• Siding • Decks
. • Windows • Porches
• Roofing • General
House Repair

3111199 TFN

740·915·4180

Racine Gvn Oub

Fumaoes installed as low as $28.00 a month
·
· (with approv~ cr.::1 .

1-740-992-8154

740-949-17()1

ID SEIIIII YDD
PORfULI PIOPIIIIIIDS

I pm
Nov. 7th thru Nov. 28 .

Mobile Home r ·wmace!!!
&amp; Heat Pumps

Continued Indoor Sile
Ceramic Christmas trees. Good
eelectlon of omamente .'
Fri. 11/12 1()-3 pm Sat. 11/1310-3 pm
391 Uncoln Street Middleport

• Trimming • Leaf
removal • Planting
• Mulching
• Landscape Rock
• Retaining wall
construction
Jeremy L Roush

740·742·2138

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave

11/:WI pd. 1 mo.

740·992·764~

"ltkl'

Call740-446-8519

•'

*Pet Foods

WORRYING!!!

CARPEl SERVICE

Now's the time for:

www.sunsethome.com

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

BURKE'S

7122/fFN

LANDSCAPING

740·742-3411

* Fall Fertilizer

SLUG MATCH. :

YOUR

CONCRETE

Union Ave.• Pomeroy, Oh

10x12 units
10x20 units
Available,
Call 992-6396 or
992·2272

DEPOYSIG
PARtS
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Ca8e-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 st. Rt. 7 South

. ...

, ..,

Ceo/ville, OH 46723

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Akzo on the la ce . Aew1rd 304 -

4§8.1910.

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

740.742-8015
BlJ-353-7222 Uoll ftae}

Lost 8 Month Old Female Dog,

70

Yard

Sale

Galllpoll•

&amp; VIcinity

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M..

No Hunting A1 .6113 Long Branch
Road, Bidwell. Vlolotore Will Be

Necessary.
Full-Time Seeretarlal Work. Word
·Processing, Peachtree Financial

Ii

I

Uc. I CJ0.50 11/ltltfn ; ....,_ _ _ _.;;,;;,;;,;;;,;;;;;;;

PC Required. No Experience

Needed . Will Train . Call 1-888·
251·7475.
DENTAL BILLER Up lo $15 -$45

Computer. 1·800-223·1149 Ext.

House Behind Foodland On

Jacl&lt;son Pike. FriOay &amp; Saluoday.
Large 2 Family Garage Sa~. Fair·
llelO Centenary Road, 011 588,
Porterbrook Subdivision, Friday,

Saturday, Sunday, ~ .

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yo rei Seleo Mull Be Pold In
AdYonce. Doodttne; 1:OOpm tho
dly boloro the ed lo to run,
Sunday a Mooday odlllon1;OOpm Frldoy.

pany Nooos People To Process

Medical Claims From Home.
Training Provided . Mutt Own

&lt;MIO.

100 bed nursing center with 28
pari focusing on ven-

bed dlstlncl

from Rt. 2 Lots ot interesting
llam~

80

Auction
and Flea Market
Bill Moocllspaugn Auctioneering-

complete auction service. Buy

and sell estates. Otlio license
17693, W/1338. 740-989-2623

Wedemeyer 's Auction Service,

Gal14l011a. Ohio 740-379·2720.

90

Wanted to Buy
Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S .. SII·
vor And GoiO Coins. Proolsets.
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold

Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Aequlailions Jowelfy

- M.T.S. Coin Snop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gaftipolis. 74().446.2842.
Clean Late Model Cars Or

Trucks. Low Milos, 1995 Moclols

Public library, 20Jhrs . weak .
evenings and weekends. Apply •at
lhe Pomeroy Library before NO·

vembor 13.

47 People To Lose Up
To 20 Pounos Or More By CMst.

mas. Sate. Natural. Guaranteed.
Call 1·800·561·7406 , Or Vlsil
f'IWW.a1herbalsolutlons.com

Oay &amp; nigh! shift, 9am· 7pm. 7pm·
Bam. taking care of elderly. 18 or
Older. 740.992·5023.

OFRCE MANAGER

.1

Local village has opening for a
detail oriented Individual to man·
age daily office funclions . Su e·

ceulul candidate will possess
ba&amp;lc compuler and ollice &amp;kil~
and have experience as a super·
viSOr as well as be self motNatinQ.
Grant writing and bookk.eepi""
experience a plus. Position is 30
hourt per week a1 $8.00 per hoUf
10 start bUt will increase as gralt1
funding increast!ls. Th is position
allows tor a great deal ol flexiblhty
end opportunity lor a good in:
come. Send resume, 3 l&amp;ltltr$ oJ
re..rence, and income history by
November 19, 1999 to : The Vii·
lage of R"lland , P.O. Bo&gt; 420, R1&gt;
tland, Ohio 45715. Attention: Per,

sonnel Committee-Office Manag'.
er. No f&gt;hone calls please. Th•

ketlng/Admluions . Candidate
shouiO be soli a1ar1er and highly

Vlllatge of . Rutland is and Equat

~tyEfuployer

Competitive compenSation pack·
age with lnctntW. tfonus program
available tor the right candldale .

http:/lwww.hbn .com Access Codt
5298

'
with physical plant and strong OWN A COMPUTER, PUT tf
TO WORK. $850 -$3.500 MO:
managernont loam In plaoo.
PT./Ft. FREE Details: Log Onto:

mollvalad. Southern ONo location

OWN ACOMPIJTER?
PUT IT TO WORKII

Relocalton 011islance aval-.

$25-$75MR. PTIFT
I -8811-22(). 20 13

Sard rasumo. salary oxpeetalion.
and references to:

www.intemet·s\JCCe$S.net

i

.•'
t

:
1

Part·Time; Full· Time Medicare J
Medicaid Billing Clerk Posili of\
A'lailable For Home Heal!~
Agency. EKperience Necessar.£

&amp; VIcinity
Garage Sale. Nov. 13 8:30·4:00 .
1430 Jorrya Run Rd .5 miles out

110 Hetp Wsnted •
IN HOME Data Proco11of1
Needed! Up To $50 An Hour.
Muo1 Own ~· Mon - Sat 8
A.M. -8 P.M.1.aoo-688-3188.
Leiding StHing Person NHdl\1.
Must Call 740-441·0247 And
Come In &amp;·Apply In Person Wllh
AP!MlillJ!Tlont. 482 Bulo¥111e Plk~ .
Ap- 15, Gallipolis.
Library Cler11 al 1he MeigS County

tilator and respiratory care needs
an experienced Director Of Uar·

Pt. Pleasant

DIRECTOR OF MAINTENANCE

SonG Resume To: CLA 484. cfo
Gallipolis Daily Tribune , 825 Third
Awnue. GaHipo~s. OH 456:11 .

~

KnowleOga In All Phases 01 Postal Jobs $48,323 .00 Yr. NoW
Facility Molnlenonce. A/C Eaperl· Hiring ·No Experience ·Palit
ence 'A Pluo' Excellent Banelit&amp;, Training -Great Benefits. Call 7
Call Holzer Senior Care Center. Oays 80().429-3660 Ext J-365
'
74().446.5001 .
POSTAL JOBS To $18.35 /Hft
DOCTORS NEED BILLERS, FT/ INC . BENEFITS, NO EXPER~
PT MOdiCa! BlUing. No Eaperlence ENCE. FOR APP. ANQ EXAM
Necessary. Wortc At Home. Make INFO. CALL 1·800-813-358S,i
Your IBM Compatible PC Earn EXT 14210. 8 A.M. ·9 P.M.. 1
$$$. Call
1·800·697· 7670. DAYS Ids. inc. Fee.
www.medieftw.com
POSTAL JOBS Up To $17.21 /IV.
Drivers to tra"sport cars to and
from auction. ealt 740·992· 2806

Guarantew.t Hire. For Appllcaltol'l

And E""m Information Call 8 A.IA,
· 9 P.M. M·F 1-888·898·5827 E&gt;L
24-1007.

between lllam-8pm.
Drivers: 2 Week PalOCOL TrainIng. No Exp. NoeOad. No Money, Rapidly

-----.....,.

No Credit? No. Problem! Earn Up

To $32.000 /1sl Yr. W/Full Benetits. P.A.M. Transport Call Toll

growing business needs
manager, cashier, bookkeeper~
Send resume cJo The Dally SenH·
nel, P.O. Box 729·7.5, Pomeroy,

Free 1-877-230-8002 www.ou- Onio 45769.

c!llvers.com

Responsible parson to work wee-

Or Newer, Smith Buick Ponllac,

'Easy Work! E•cettont Payt ~·­ kends, call 8am-4pm Monday th!'_\,1
.semble Products At Home. Call FrtOay, 740·992-4410 or 740·992.
~~
Wanted to buy· coal burning Toll Free 1·800·467·5586 E&gt;l. 5039.
stove with cast iron rire pot. call
12170.
419-893.0581al1ornoons.
EMERGING COMPANY NEEDS
WonleO To Buy: Pinball Ma· Medical lnsuronco Billing Asslt·
chines And Baseball Machines. lance tmrnadlatoly. II You Have A
80().421-69011.
PC You Can Earn $25.000 To
S50,000 ·Annually. Call 1·800.291-4683 Dept.' 109.
EMPLOYMENT
Four Winds Nursing Facility Is
SERVICE S
SOCIAL WORKER II
Seeking Quallllad Applicants For
The Director Of Nursing Poalllon.
1900 Ea818m Avonua. GlltipoUs.

After Nearly 20 Years As A

110 Help Wanted
$2,000 WEEKLYI MaiOing 400

O.O.N.. OUr Director Of Nursing Is
Rellrlng As The D.O.N. KYou De·

sire A Challenging Career In A

Well -Established, Stable Envl·
anleodl Postage &amp; SUl)l)ll85 PrO' ronment, Tnls Job May Be For
viO&amp;dl Rush Soli·AJdrassod You. The Individual ChOsen For
Stampad Envelopel GICO, DEPT This PosiUon Shall So An RN And
5, Boa 1438. ANTIOCH, TN. licensed In Ohio Who Has Su·
37011·1438. Smn lmmaOiaJoly.
pervisory E11:perience (Long Term
Care Experience Preferred .)
$20 ·$40 /HOUR Easy MeOical Competitive Benetll P~n:kaga
Billing Full Training . eo...,t.,. Re- A'lallable . If Interested Please
qulrad. Call 1-888·869·7905 E&gt;l. Sand Resume To Faclllly Or Ap700.
ply In Person. M·F. 8:30 A.M. To
Hlll
P.M. E.O.E.
$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN·
FoorWirds
MENT REFUNDS . NO EXPERINursing Facility
ENCE NECESSARY (24 Hr.
Attn: Ad"!lnlslnllor
Rocoroao Massage) 1·800-854·
215 Selh A"""""
11469 Ed.5048.
Jacl&lt;sorl, Ohio 45640
740-288-7551
$800 WEEKLY POTENTIAl
Brochures! Sallslaction Guar·

Complete Simple Government
Forms At Home. No Experience

• MU81h8Ve good driving &amp; Provide own 'Tii._mtion

·Musr nave alllily 11&gt; be a TEAM
l&gt;fiJYOr
Sind Reaume 10:
Gallipolis Dilly TrtbJne,
RE: Advtr11slng Sitos Rep
82S Third A,....

Ganipolis. OH 45631

Giveaway ·
Advertising
Rlllio Salesperson
1 Year Old Doga, Must Find
Good Ho..a By End Of Monlh. I For a taat growing radio station,
Malo Lab, 1 Dolmatlon, 2 Gol~on V 93 11 looking lor a
Shtphord /Huo•v Mix. Femolas aatnporeon to cover Gallipolis.
Hevo ·aooo Spoyod. · 740-245· Pt Pleaaant and Pomeroy ares.

5882 Aok Fore~.

•Mual have good communlcaUon

304-57&amp;-3030.

cations.

Send-10:

-nV93
POBoxe&amp;7

Ravortawood, wv 2$184
Ann:Jill~

AISEIIILY AT HOMEII CraHs.
Toy1, Joorotry, Wood, Sewing,
Klttont TO Gtveowoy To Good 'l'tPing. .. GrNI PIJyt CALL 1-800.
~ 740 ue·zeoo.
79&amp;()380 Ell. 1201 (24 ttl).
Kllteno: 10 WHU Old, 2 Calloo AnENTION MOMS NEEDED.
Femolo; 2 Mall ~now Ttbblll, 1111'1 CO. Stoles PT 1FT 1~­
Wormed And Liner Trotno~. ero. CALL: 801·325-HOME.
Phorro: 740-44&amp;0865• .
www.ltlllrt.com AcciAI P22111.
740 311 8121:

Seeks A Full /Part Time Medical
Biller. Salary At $46K Per Year.

to to run.llundoy
odltloo - 2:00 p.m.
Fricloy.llondoy ld!Hon
-10:00 o.m. Solunloy.

40

Cult Fuzzy Pupploo. Wunod,

.

E~~:perlence

!Hr Dental Billing Sohware Com·

Prooocu11111

2 &amp;lad&lt; &amp; Wlllta Kittens. I Mote
&amp; 1 Fomell, unor Tralntd, 740.
44H071.

seo.oo
saoo.oo Coval

CHURCH OFFiCE MANAGER

AIJ, ~nl -111101
Be Poklln Aclvoneo.
DEADLINE: 2;00 p.m.
tile lily _ , . . . ...

skills." 'Must have ability 10 be 1
3 mole &amp;4 · lemotoo pupplll toam pltJ~r: ·Mull bl 11H motlmother Ia part rod bonono~ ml• votod." If you hove thaoa qualifi-

. MalnSt,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying
per game

ele aide . van driver. Submit resume by November 17! Carleton
SchooVMeigs Industries. PO Boa
307. Syracuse, QniO 45779. EEO
Neadad.

ship From Nice Femalo For Talks. Necessary. CALL TO.LL FREE ·
Walks &amp; Friendship. Sand Ro· 1·800·986·3599 &amp;t. 2601 . $34.00
plies To : 553 Second ..Avenue.
Retundablefoe.
Apartment t.ro:l. GatlipoHa
••aOV'T POSTAL JOBS'• ·Up
START DATING TONIGHT! To $17.24 Hour, Hiring For 99,
Hava Fun Meeting Eligible Sin· Free Call For AppllcaHon /Examl·
gles In Your Area. CaU For More nation Information Federal Hire tnlormalion. 1-800·RDMANCE, Full Btnelll$. 1-800.598-4504 Ea·
Ed. 9735.
tension 1523 (8 A.M. ·6 P.M.
C
.S.T.).
Why walt? Start meollng Ohio
singles tonight. Call toll lroo I· »DRIVER PLACEMENT«&lt;&lt;
80().769-2623. axtenslon 6176.
'EXPERIENCEO OR NOT. Wo Con
Put You Behind The Wheel!! Ca ll
30 Announcements
Free 1-888·239·4411 &amp; 1-888·
473-3584.
Evan RoSSI
Mapn
ADVERTISING
Now Booking Holiday Por11es
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
Parlloa. Churchos. Schools
Call: (304)675·1847/(304)674·
For Wall ESiablithed Local Co.
4868.
SERVING TRI·COUNTY AREA
Now To You Thrift ~
'Must havt good CO""""'tcation
9wast Sllrnson, Alhans
ski Is
740-592·1842

.:
I~

Personals

Gentleman Seeking Compa"nlon·

Thurlday. Monday Jhru Saturday
9:t»5:30.

Quality Driveways,

Pr.ogreulve top !Int.

A.J
MINI-STORAGE

Quality clothing and household
Items . $1.00 bag sale ever~

CON NEalON

$500.00 Sllrburst

Lost Womans Kamllton watch

golo w/ gold ••panslon band.

·Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

~

Free Estimates

·cREDrr PROBLEMS???.

Allen Casto
304·372·1898
after S

·-·

*Custom Grinding

·George Grate

laacher. teacnlng assistant. vthl·

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel

message. After 6 pm

Old Dominion Shows
Info: (540) 238-1343 .

Call: 740·742·2271

crew leaders, secretary/clerical.

HOI liSe 7am THRU 4pm . Long Haired, Tan With White On
Face &amp; Chest. Last Seen On Lin· • Accounting, Worlting Wltl1 Public.
MONDAY·FRIDAY
Benefits. Sand Resume To Grace
COin Pb, 740-256-9364.
7amTONOON
Unlt•ed Methodist Church, 800
Lost: Ring; al Gallla County Flea Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
Markel or Caplian o·s. Reward. 45631 Or Fax To 740-44CHJ701 .
I304J675-54U.
DATA ENTRY • National Billing

....

. 750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
· Athens, Ohio 45701
" 6/29/mo.
"A Better

For All Your Propane Needs

WIUaul off oW junk
cars &amp; chan 1p farms

...

I

,.-...,.~

9:00AM· 5 PM
Closed Sunday

snacks provided,
contests, prizes, dress
tl'ie fifties
Eagle Club - Members
and guest.

, New Homea
• Garages
• Complete
. Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
985-4473

800-291-5600 .

GUM SHOW
SAT 0 ·5, SUN

CiiNSTRUCTION

Visit our showroom
Rt. 33 6 miles North of Pomeroy

Open -Daily

Racine American
Legion Post 602
Chicken &amp; Noodle Dinner
Sunday 11 am $5.00
Dine-in or carry-out
Public Welcome

.Por ~pre· Information

~------·--··-~- ~~~~--~
ROBERT BISSEll
ROUSH

Quality Window
Systems

Muting all your Propane nudi
Residential • Commerical • ·
Agriculture

Bowl First Game Free
Mason Lanes •
Mason, W. VA.
Fri .• Sat.- Sun.
Nov. 12-13-14
All Bowlers register at
·desk for door prize·
Beautiful Bowling Ball
Open 6 til midnight

The Daily Sentinel

Ball Logging and
l'lrewood Bob Ball
35215 Ball Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

1·740·992-6142

St. Rt. 93 North
Oakhill, Ohio
740-682-9955

Put on by Eagles Auxiliary

~ - OIIJ. II92~2155
Pavt at Ext. 104

accepting residential and commercial
refuse and demolition.
$32.00 per ton, refuse, $25.00 per ton,
Demo. $20.00 minimum '
·
Operated by Southern Ohio Disposal
We support all local haulers!
For more information on
t.\elgs County Transfer Facility or
Southern Ohio Disposal Hauling,
visit our office at 34878 Rocksprings Rd.
or
CaH 992·9330 or 1·800·809·7721
•

BuuWn Q.cqkr

Announcements

740·384-6212
Ul. AID stOIII COAl
H.U.P. VOUC:IIIS
lCCEmD
DIUYEIY lYltallll

-·.-JIIg

quollled..,.
. l'll**b'tno~.
lull pooltlono:
Bua Clr!N, COOk, Hoa1111 -

(RN or LPN). llllbilllaLost and Found ~ _ Coonllnatof
tlon · and workshop specialist
IAdutt Sorvlcoo), janitor, janitortot

611

Sr. 124 Wellston, Ohio

SAYRE
MEIGS COUNTY TRANSFER FACIUTY
Located at 34878 Rocksprings Rd. , Pomeroy
TRUCKING

SERVICE

@ .v

Advertising DtadHn~ Friday, November 19th, 1999

NOW OPEN:

Firewood Di.vision

(740)992·3131

IRUJII COAL
.· COMPANY

Ftmlle

Dog, Great For Indoors Or Out.
740-2e5281.

L---------------------------------J , ~-----.~~~~ru~-~~=. ~AY=r~.--~

...,,......

HOWARD
EXCAVAIING CO.

Cox Bottle,Gas

Businesses rJe Sure dC
·rJe t'1 Part
Of tthis Year's ·
Special flaketball
Pre11lew Edition!

• lime-ups • New ftlters e New plugs
• Sharpen blade or chain $20
Mon &amp; Wed 10-5 Fri. 8-4
Tues st Thor 1-S Sat 10-2

.

CLASSIFIEDS!

(740) 992-8614. 1-800-837-1094

•

Specializing
in- saws
&amp; trimmers
'
.

100' · 1000' Rolk 1' &amp;3/4' 200#Woter Une
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Reguloton Woter Storage Tonks

308 E. MAIN ST. POMEROY, OHIO 45769

[IJ

7411-696·0027 business 74G-992·7046 H0111

Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock
8' Gr~Nelleu Leach

.. .... .. A

SIIMt, OH

2270 Rt. 33

Plains. OH

740-985·3813

UtililiB•

SAVE TIME AND MONEY·
SHOP THE

DOUBLE D'S REPAIR SHOP

_G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

I .

I

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Steve L. Llndeey,
whoee tnt known
llddreaa II 2750 Sawbury •
Blvd., Columbua, Ohio,
but wholl pre11nt
whtr .. bouta
and
rnldenee ere unknown,
will like notice thet on
the 13th dey at Oct.
t 819, Chrtlllna L. Haning
tiled Complaint agalnet
him In Cell No. 99-DR·
160 In the Cammon
Ple11 Court at Melga
County Ohio, !Mmandlng
that eha be divorced
tram him on the ground•
at tncomPIJtlblllty, and
tar other end lur1htr
equlllble relief.
Steve L. Llndaey Ia
notified that you muat
enawer the Complaint
within 28 daya alter the
tell publication, which
· will bl mad a an the 19th
dey at Nov. 1889, or
ludglment by !Miault will
be rendered eplnat you.
Ulrry Spencer, Clerk ol
Courta, Melga county,
OH
Marlene Harrlaon,
Deputy

-·--- -·

110 Help We"*'
All AreNI To euy 'or SoH.
Milo Lob Pup AKC Roglsteroo AVON!
s~•leJ Slleara. l04-e7ts-14211.
Rott Woller, 10 Montl1o, Cham·
pion~, 74().4.1HI116.
CMietDn Schoolon&lt;l Mliglln-

-TRIVIA

Public Notice

The DeUy Sentinel • Page 13
Giveaway

say I' m from Southern California showing up on the central coast..
· these antigrowlh measures are the
people say, 'Oh boy; I bet you're glad
The Paso Robles City Council ones who are already there . .They .
to be up here.'
recently voted to ban new applica- don't want high density.
"There's/ pity for .people in Los . tions for multifamily housing projects
"But each little community IJ'ying:
Angeles," he added.
and vowed to devote efforts to open to set a growth boundary is ridicu-:
Even some developers are nervous
space and density concerns .. A pro- lous."
.
about the boom.
Bliss doesn't see it as ridiculous,
posal requiring farmers to get permits
"Given the type of urban growth before cutting down oaks was recent- In fact, it took him little ti'me to ge(
north and south of here, there is cause
ly approved by the Santa Barbara accustomed to the small town spiri(
for alarm over runaway growth," said
in Los Osos - and resent the migra•
Board of Supervisors.
developer Rob Rossi, a 30-year-old
But lhe simple demographics of tion from his former home.
resident of San Luis Obispo. "But . the nation's most populous state
"I don 't want to bring more peothere needs to be balance.''
ple
up here," Bliss said. " It's very.
make such efforts difficult, if not
They may draw a page from impossible. Projections show Cali- reassuring to be here and know peoSouthern California.
fornia' s population will swell to ple don' t want to run willy-nilly t.o
Growth-limiting measures have
about 59 million by 2040 from about development. We can maybe stop thiS
been popping up all over the southbefore it ever starts."
34 million today.
em half of the state. The city counTed Gibson, chief economist of
cils of Indio, Lancaster, Palmdale and
the California Department of
Santa Monica are among those
Finance, estimates up to 225,000 new
imposing building moratoriums.
housing units are needed statewide
All four plans are under review by
each year to keep up.
Alan Aida was born Alphonso
!he state. An illegal moratorium can
"The central coast is going io be
D'Abruzzo. He almost turned
disqualify a community from state or
right in lhe thick of this. The coastal
down hi s role in M•A•S•H,
fe~eral housing subsidies.
areas are getting pretty crowded,"
thinking it too lighthearted for a
New anti-growth efforts are also
Gibson said. "The voters approving
war series.

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
01110
CASE NO. IO-DR·180
CHRISTINA L. HANING
PLAINTIFF

Scan Emission
Systems

Plus
Tax

4 Wheel
Alignment

$54.95

The numbers speak to lhe growth:
Santa Barbara County's population
grew by 20,000 in eight years to
389,.502 as of July 1998, the late$t
census figures available. San Luis
Obispo County jumped by more lhan
17,000 residents to 234,366.
The growing pains are worse· in
the San Francisco. Bay area and in
Orange and San Diego counties . But
the pace of the development is worrying re~idents .
Jeff Bliss packed up and moved
his wife and two kids from Thousand
Oaks, in suburban Los Angeles, to
Los Osos six months ago. He has
heard some express fear about the
flight from Los Angeles.
"They say, 'How can we keep
people from moving up here? Can we
get everyone out who wasn't here
before 1989 1 '" Bliss said. "When I

2 gal. reg. coolant
Flush, seal &amp; tabs and labor

Up to 5 quarts GM oil
and AC filters most GM
cars &amp; Light duty trucks

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November 12, 1999

into picturesque coastline

Coolant Flush

Oil, Lube, Filte

&lt; .•

Four Winds Nursing Facility, A
Progressive 100 Bed Facility Located In Jackson, Ohio, Is Cur·

rantly..t.ceaptlng Applications For

The Followlr'Q

Postllon~

UNIT MANAGER. This RN Will
Directly Oversee Tho Care 01 50
RosiOonts, Supsrvlso Charge

Nurses And Nursing Assistants
And Act As A Part 01 The Man·
agement Team . Long Term Care

Experience 11 Preterrect, But Not

Necessary.

ACTIVIT'/ DIRECTOR. This lndl·

vidual Will Posses&amp; Currem Ac·

tivlly Director Canlticatton Or 9t
Wiling To Gain Cerl!licallon.
LPN CHARGE NURSE. Full
Time And Part Tline Postllons

SlateTntod

Nursing Asslstanls And

Nul"'lng A11lstanta
Pleasant Valley Private Duly ts
recrulllng Stale te sted nursirf_g
assistants for facility staffing and
home care cases in Meigs. Gal·
lie, and Mason counties. Exclfit·

Nurse Aide Training Cl111.

lent pay and fleJible schedulinb.
SIK months &amp;JCPirience reQuirea.

Available. Directly Cares For
Resident And Supervises Nure-

lrgAsslstants.

Those lntorea1ed In Taking
Individual Provides Cora To
Eldorly Aasldents In The facllty.

Call: (3041675·7400 or 1-800-741·

0076, tor more intormauon or to
complete an applica11on conta=t

Applicallons Will Bo AcceptoO In Pleasant Valley Privmta Ou~ .
Person M-F, 8:30 A.M. To 4:00 101 t Viand Slrool. Pl. Pleasani,
P.M. Or You Moy Phone Tho W/25550. AAIEOE.
Facility At 740·288·7551 For
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 .60 IHI!.
More lntormallon.
INC . BENEFI'I'S. GAME WA!V
DENS, SECURITY, MAIN&gt;
E.O.E.
TENANCE . PARK RANGERS. Nl)
Full· Time X-Ray Teen Monday EXP NEEDED. FOR APP. ANp
Tnru Frldoy. Apply tn Person To EXAM INFO, CALL 1·800·8q'MeOical Plou, 938 Slate Roulo 3585, EXT. 14211 . 8 A.M. ·9 P.M;
180, GaNipolll.
7DAYS fds. too. Fee.
•·
Help Wanted To Strip To~acco. 140
Business
·'
(740)256-6573.
•
Training 1
;:
LFEAOI!NTS

Oalllp:IIIC.,.., College :

II You Art A Lloenlld Lifo Agent
Who Would Like To Work In An

(CirnrsCtooaToHoma) ,
Colt TOdayl740-44&amp;4387, o'
1-1100·214-0452,
f90-o5.127o48.

..._.,.p_

Environment Whoft
I

Mlrkltlng

~

ko

PeiO By 'obur e..,..,.,
• CompoiM,. Seltlr)' kwJ llonellt .

- . . , . 01111111
Send Conlldlnlel Rolumo To:
Humin~ Dept. LIA

P.O.lbt738

Mlrlllli.OH45750
Equot Clpporluntlv ~

150

•'
"'

�·,
I I

,.
Friday,

Novem~r

:~·~F~r~~y~1 ;N;~~em::~:r~1~2~,1~9=~~~·&lt;i~----~~~----~--------~P~om:·:·~o~y=e=M=Id=di=~~-=··:O:h~====~~====~==~~- =·~-~~=al=ly~~~t~IM~I•:P=~==1=5=r=
=
'

12, 1999

::AUEY
OOP.
:r·

,,

;

•

'

:~
· !!~~-~~

NEA Crossword Puzzle

IRIDOII:

•••

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

~

4DIIdrt'-'G "-llle

,...

1 Tel type
7 llldli10 ._.

~···"

)

48 AGir-. LuplnO
47 eon.truciiOn

14 Propltellc 111 Blood nulcl

51 eor.ge.floww
53 GIOIII

13,.,.,

CLEAN HOUSE

WITH THE
CLASSDFUEIDSI
·180 Wanted To Do
: ~arpantry, Framing: Finishing ,
"' Remodeling, Additions , Decks,
• and Porches.(740)·388-8831

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul yaur logs to the mill jusl call

304-675- t 957
Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction .
New Construction &amp; Remodel/

Drywall, Siding, Roofs, Addl·
tlons , Painting , etc (304)6744623 or (304)674-0155.
Mother 01 2 Will Babysit Your
Child In My Non-smoking Chris·
tian HOme. Monday Thru Fnday, 8
A.M -6 P.M. Meals &amp; Snacks
Provided, Reasonab le Rates .
References Available , 3 Miles
Past Locks &amp; Dam Towards
Crown City. 740-256-9244.
Mother Of Two W1U Care For
Your Child In My Home Crafl6.
~ctlvities And Hot Meals Provided House Is Far Of! The Road

Trained In Child CPR Must Be
· Potty Trained (Or Cl ose To II) .

740-446·999ti.
W1ll do painting mslde and out.
w.lt work lor $4fhr. dOing odd jobs,
74Q-992·9314.

FINANCIAL

210

FREE MONEY! It's True Nevor
Repay. Guaranteed. $500 ·
$50,000. • For Debt Consolidation,
Personal Needs. Medical Btlls,
Educa1ion &amp; Business Call Toi iFree1-B00-724-6047 (24 Hrsj.

CONSOLIDATE DEBT. Reduced
Monthly Payments 20 ·50%. Seve
Thousand&amp; 01 Oollm In lnlerost
Non-Profit. TCC 800-758-3844.
FREE MONEY! ll's True. Never
Rapay. Guaranteed. $500 $50,000. • Debl Consolidation,

Personal Needs. Business 1·
B00-511-2640.

230

Professional
Services

Stop Creditors Calls. B A M. ·8

P.M. Mon · Sat. 1-600-688-3t88.
Mount's Tree Service "The Tree

Professionals ' Bucket Truck
Service. Top, Trim, Removal,
Stump, Grinding. Free Esllmates.
Fully Insured, Works Comp. Bid·
well, OH Call And save, 1-800·
838·9566. 740-388-8648. Owner
Rick Mount.

SIGNS · PORTABLE CHANGE·
ABLE LETTER SIGNS $275·389.
FREE OELIVERY/LETTERS.
PLASTIC LETTERS$55 (SEC·
OND BOX FREE) . AAA SIGNS
800-533-3453
TUR~ftt)

!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do busi·
l"'eS6 w1th people you know. 81"1d
NOT to send money through tl'le
mail until you have Investigated
lt1tl oflering.
A PHONE CARD ROUTE. 2.9
Cents /Min. Ratt. PUblic Co. $500
-$5.000 /Wk. CASH Free Info. 1·
800-997-9888, 24 H11
ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
$1 ,000 A Day No Selling Not
MLM. For Frae tnlormalton PaCk,
ago Call t-800-788-8849, 24 Hrs.
XT27.
AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 ·20 Locations. SJK ·S8K.
$4 .000 +/Mo .. Income • ALL
CASH! 100o/. Finance Ava ilable.
1·600-380-2615 - 24 Hra.
DO YOU EARN 1800 In A Oay?
Your Own Local Candy Route.
cludes 30 Machines And Free
Candy. All For $9,995 Call t-SD0996-VEND.

In·

DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee UrWe&amp;6 We Winl
1-888·582·3345

SSt ,OOO 's WEEKLYIIII Mailing
Brochures. FREE Postage Al"'d
Supplies Stan lmmedoatelyl Rush
Sell-Addressed. Stampe~ Envelope To: HSE; Oepan 20; PO Box
573; Amotenlam, NY 120t0.

~--~In

11111- _

• .....,. ..

tte , _ . Fair ttouo;ng !¥:A

'"'*"'-any- ....
to-......
••ll,
""-tor--

oil IIIII

----.--

-

pc..

on race. aD,I'IIIglon.
origin, or...,. . _ . ,

fftlkiMy lid\ ,.......

-or--·

n. no

111• w11 not

.;:..,:;;;:;...,.

REAL ESTATE

Now Bank Ropo On Lot, 1-800-

383-6882.
AWESOIIE: NEW 2 OA 3 BR.
ONLY IIAKE 2 PAYIIENTS TO
IIOVE IN AND NO PAYIIENTS
AFTER 5 YEAR$.(304)755-7181 .
BANKREPO
1998 Clayton·3 Bedroom, 2
Baltls, 1-1100·941·5678
Brand New 16 Wide 3 Badrooms,
2 Baths, Just $244/Mo., Only 0
Oakwood -Gallipolis, 740-446·
3093

First Time Buyers Easy Finane·
lng 2 and 3 Bedroom, around
S200 per mont11. Call: 1·800-9485678.

Two &amp;tory houee, 2·3 ba&lt;lroom, 1
bath, utility, new gaa furnace,
$34,000, call(800) 388-8t94.

2608.
Extremely Nice 3 Bedrooms, 2
Bath Ranch Style Home With A
Detached 2 Car Garage, Storage
Building, Nk:e Size Van!. Clou To
Galllpolil, Pr1ca To Salo, catt 740441-1818 Or 740-44t - 176~, II No
A.-r L.w Mossage.

E1Ct. 8040.
HOliES FROM 11tUO lllo. 1 •
3 BR Repos /Foreclosures. Fee,
4'% Down. For Listings/ Payment
Detail&amp; t-800-7111-SOOt xtt85.
House and lot lor sale, -4 bed·
rooms, two battls, located near
Carpenter. new construction,
$600 down, easy tlrma. No pay·
menls tor 90 days ahtr cloatng.
No points or closing coots. Con-

tact Oavld at 1-800-333-&amp;fltO.

1188-t!56.

The Homo National flank. Raotna,
Ohio, 1111 lor aale a model
t 700 sq. h. double wlde horne w/
targe tot in Syracuse, OhiO. Throe
bedrooms. two baths, room add~
lion . front and back porch, all
electric. Well maintained . Ca:ll
George Lawrence lor an eppoint·
men!, 740-1149-2210.

CREDIT REPAIR! AS SEEN ON
TVI Eraaa Bad Crecllt Legally.

320 Mobile Homea
for Sale

Houae&amp; apt. low rent , hud ap proved, some utll. Included dep.
required 304-675-2053.
Thrn bedroom house. 1 1/2
baths. living room. OA, kllchon, 11M
basement, rec room , WID hook
"'· s10ve &amp; relrlgarator, furnished,
no Inside ptll, leaee and deposit,
1641 Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy,

740-667-3966.
Two bedroom house In Pomeroy,
would lice to oell on land conttact
or wlll rent $350 per month plus
depotll and utlllllos, no pata, 740-

61111-7244.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Between Athena and Pomeroy, 2
a 3 bedroom mobile homes,
$260-$300, 740-992-2187
2 Bedroom Furnished Mobile
Home Located 01"1 Hannan Trace
Road, 1 Mlle Off 218, 740·256-

6202.

lofi,....

2 be&lt;lroom trailer lor ronl,
ville area, references a must,
$250 monthly with deposit, 740·
992-6777 altar 5pm.

2 Badroom Trailer In Small Thlller
Park References &amp; Deposit Re qu~ed.

HOUSE I M ACRES
2 Bedrooms, t 112 Balhs, Vinyl &amp;
Brick 6\·Level With Untlnlstltd
Basement. 45+ Acres Tillable
Wllh Ponds, Lots 01 Road Frontage. Barns &amp; Other Outbulldingo.
Off SR 35, Near Thurman, 740·

286«1111 .

340 Business and
Building•
3,000 Sq. Ft. Commercial Building In Henderson for rent, leaH,
or sale. Call Sonny Reynolds,
(304)675-4123.

350 Lota &amp; Acreage
2.44 Acres, Homesite, Green
Township, Gallla County, Flal.
Scenic, Cloee To Gatupolla, Soma
Rostrlctionl, 740-245-5778.
20ACRES
Off SR 7 South Of Gailtpolll.
Roughly Wooded, Road Cut ln.
No Restrictions Land Contract
Available. Anthony Land Co. Ltd.
1-800·213·8385. www cguntrylyml,am

360

Real Estate
Wanted
We Poy !:.Alii

For LANDI

Even lilts Ltlltd
20 ·500 Acres
Coli Avon

1001213-GM

Anthony Land~- LTD.

wn COl""""""' com
RENTALS

410 Housn for Rent
2 Badroom Houla, Stove, Rofrigerator Furnished. 1-828- 112
Chestnut, Gallipolis. Aaftrtnctt
Required. $275/Mo., Depoolt
$150, 740-446-80e1 .
3 Badroom, LR, (0. Kllchtn, Carport. Available Nov. t 11. Private
end oonvonlenll 471/2 Spruce St.
GaiNpollo $380.Mo., $380 Depolit
requ~ecl . "PPIY 11 Topea Furnl·
ture, 15t Socond lwt. No Phon&amp;

12 Ft. x80 Fl. $1,000 ln Good

S'- Bu1 For FlOOr, -

Racine- three bedroom. 1375
month, $200 dopooll, no pall, Nf.
erencoo required, aome utllllteo
-.74Df4f-2821.

-n

8 P.M. &amp;

1974 ·12x85 all tltctrlc, waaher,
dryer, rwlrlgefalor, oven, curtainl,
couch and chair. two window air
condltiontrl, In Portland, roldy lo
move, $3500, 740.843-5310 days
or 740-843-51471M1111ngo

9.:8 bar w/ brass II. raii&amp;Huntar
brass remote control caiMng lan
cell altar 5 prn 304-675-7822.
Appllenceo:
Reconditioned
Washera. Dryers. Rangea, Relrl·
gralors. 90 Day Guarantael
French City Maytag, 740-448-

7795.
For sate: Reconditioned wash·
ers. dryers and relrlgeratora .
Thompsons Apptlal'lce. 3407
JaCklon Avenue, {304)675-7388.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryera. refrigerator~.
renges. Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vlno Slreal, Call 740-446-7398,
1-888-818-0128.
R&amp;D's Ueed Furnltura Great Sa·
lecllon. Priced To Sell! •come
And Browse. • Corner 01 Route 1
&amp; Addson Pl&lt;e, 740-387-0260.
Speed queen washer 1 dryer set
1·1 cycle axe. cond come see &amp;
maka oflor 304-875·4624 . bet-n6am-8pm.
Washer $95; Dryer $95, Electric
Range $95; Rolrlgerator 1150 ;
Like New Refrigerator $350, One
Year Warranty; Washar $205;
Dryer S205; One Year Warranty,
Skaggs Appliances, 76 Vlna
Street, GaiiiPOIIt. Phone: 740-44&amp;7398, Or 1-888-818-0t28

Sporting
Goods

520

740-446-t104.

2 bedroom, furnlahecl, In Middle·
pon, Oh. 740-378-6353.

270 Savage with 3K9w.32 scope
$250.00call304-674·2260.

3 Badroom All Eltctrlc, S350Mo.,
+ Deposit, References, No Pers,

Natd A Loan? 1ly Dtbl ConiiOII·
dalton. U,OOO - 1200,000. Bed
o.K. Fw. t-eoo-no-ootz.

RaplaOad, CoN
8 P.M. 740-388-8743.

1182·2888.

New 14 Wide . low down payment. $175 per mo. Ffee Air, Free
Skirt, 1-800-691-67n.

Pilot Program, Renters Nndtd,
304-738-7295.

FlOOr

3 plooa lire placa tool eet $25,00,
IOYt 111t brown/tan $25.00 304·

Land Home. Direct Loans, Fast
Close Your Land Or Ours, 740·
446-3570.

Pomeroy- 4 bedroom, HUD, SIR,
WJO hookup, rtfertnces, IIC.,
Nayloft Run, 740·!192·8818,

PAUl Llcloc7110N.

House for rant In Mlnersvlllt,
$400 por n•111th plus ulllltlos, 740992·2043 or 74Q-949-2025.

Houaehold
Goods

2BR Troller lor rent In Ashton. No
dapoalt. (304)576-2388 or
(304)582-9303.

5 ba&lt;lroorno, 2 batill, owr 2,000
aq.n.. tor Ina than $400mo.
FREE OtUvery &amp; eet. 1-800-11485878.

NIED AN EARLY PAYDAY? No
Olllce Viall Ntcauary. Up To
1500 lnotantly. Call Toll Fro I·
177•1ARLTPAY. Ut ADVANCE

FarmHouae For Rent. {304)882·
3375 C e l l - 8 • 7PM.

510

Buy or sell Riverine AnUquea,
1124 East MaK&gt; Streat on SR 124
E. Pomeroy, 740-992·2526. Russ
Moore, owner. http ://lts-your- bus~
nest.oomlrivorlne/

FREE DEBT CONSOLIOATION
Applleallon W /Sarvl.,.. Reduce
P~mantl To 85% IICASH INCENTIVE OFFERII Call 1-800·
328-8510 Ell Zl.

En 2t~.

B u y - From $t99.301Mo.
t -3 lleclroom Ropes, 411. Down
O.K. Cradh, For llotlngs And Poyment Ollalls Call 800-319·3323,
Ext. t709.

530

Calli.

••1.001(lH•

MERCHANDI SE

~SS58.

2 Bedrooms. No Pets, Located
On Jaclcaon Pike, 740.245-5582;
Altar 5 P.M. 740-245-5890.

330 Farms for Sele

z2o

c-

3 To 4 Bedrooms. 1 Balh, Palrlol
Area. $450/Mo., Pluo Deposit,

HELP SAVE IIY CREDIT! 2BR,
2BA 1411 DOWN, ASSUME
PAYMENTS, WILL PAT TO RE·
LOCA'fl' HOllE. (301)'1&amp;5-515111.

8882.

-moaaago.

lhrH bedroom all ttactriC rtnctt
homo with attached geragt,
lenctd back yard, large lot, at
MHdow Lancl Eotatao, Pt. Ptouant, $800 month pluo roftrencet
and dopolit, 304-824-2ol80.

b.n

1S PrlmlrY cell

3 Bedroom&amp;. 2. Baths, Garage. ' Mobile Home Lot, located at
Baaamenl, Poto, Children Wtl· edge of City limits, Close to
come, Landlora Can Be Contact· Schools. {304)675-2359.
ed AI71Tual Rood, Gallipolis.

740-367~11 .

All Elaetr1c, Washer &amp; Dryer. M1·
crowave. CIA, 2 Bedrooms, Dishwasher, $300/Mo .. $300 Oepoall,

740-446-0743.
Country eenlng. two bedroom. ell
electric. heat pump, TP water, caU
74Q-992-720t .
Nlco MobMo Home AH Electric, 4
Miles N. 01 HOlzer On Route 180,
$325/Mo.. + Depolit, Relorencas,
740-446-lt 89.
Trailer lor Sale or Rent. (304)675-

8t72.
Two btdroom mobile home In
Middleport. $275 plus deposll,
call740-992-3t94.

440

Apartments
for Rent

Merchandise
1500 gallon. 2 manhole, plastic
cistern, cal740-992·90118.
2 -12• Kicker lmput11s In A
So aled Sox 2 • t 0' Kenwood a In
Jensen 4x100 Watt Amp, $300,
Or Trade. 740-992-71n.

2t'x20' TWO CAR GARAGE Full
125 Yr. ManufaCturers WarrantH
Complete Wllh 10' Overhaad I
Door $2,993.00 Can Oellvar 1·
800-70t-7912.
3 ALL-STEEL BUILDINGS 40138
was $10,990 Sell 13.990. 40x58
Was $t6,800 SOli 55,900. 50x120
Was $136,880 Stll $12,880 .
Ooug B00-388-5314.
4 Bruce Sprlngatoen Tlcktts, November 17th, Terrace level At
Face Value, 740-~70.
7 Pair Brown Shutters $5 Pr. 740·
448·2233.

1 and 2 bedroom apa~ments, fur·
nilhed and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pets, 740·
992·22t8.
1 Badroom Modern Ground FlOOr
No Pals, S21S/Mo.. Wafer lncluded,SIOOOopoalt, 740-44&amp;--3617.
2 br. unfurn . 1275.00 •$100.
dep.4th St. Maton 304-675-t911 .
2bdrm. apts., total electric, appliances furnished. laundry room
facilities, cloae to school In town.
Appllcatlono available at: Vlllage
Green Aptl. 149 or call 740·992·
3711 . EOH.
4 Rooma, Downstairs, Very Closn
, No Petal dopooK and Relorence
Required. Gallipolis Area (740)·
388-1100

Apartment lor rant In Pomeroy. no
poll, 740-992-5858.
BEAUTIF\JL APARTMENTS AT
8\JDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
~om $279 10 1358 Walk to shop
&amp; movteo. Call 740-446-2566.
Equil Housing Opportunity.
Chrlaty's Family Llvtng, apartmenta, tlome &amp; trailer rentals.
7..0·992·451•. apartments avaitllblo, " ' - &amp; uni&lt;Knlohed.
Furnllhed apartment; 1 bedroom,
upataira, ulllltlet paiU. No Pats!
Second Ave .. Gallipolis. (7401448-8523
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apertmtnta at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartmtnllln Middleport. From $218-$373 Call 740112·5014. Equal Housing Oppor-

1111i11to.
Ont bedroom lurntsned apartment, call740-992-llt9t.
Nonh Third Avenue, Mlddlepon.
Ono bedroom furntlhed or unfurnished apartment, dtpollt aM
rello101CIO. 740-11112.0165.
Now taking Application•- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouae
Apar1mtnts, Includes Water
= I r u h , 1315/Mo.. 7400akwood Aparlment, 1 Bedroom
Apertmen~

Antique•

540 Mlacellaneous

3 Bedroom Mobile Home. In
Country, $300/Mo., Plua $300 Ot·
poatt, 740·441·0583, 740·256·
6718, 740-251H1408.

Factory Direct Sale, Oakwood
Homes, Barboursville, 800·383-

HOME FORECLOSURES No
Monay Down! No Credit Chackl
Takeover Very .Low Payments!
CALL NOWII 1·800·355·0024

Froolnfo•..-2580.

New Haat Pump, $14,000, 740·
388-8335.

Wll Sacrolk:e $2,800 Equity 1999
Oakwood Legal Probtam1 For
S&amp;le, 740-446-3583.

Personal &amp; Bua•ness operation,
S.nllrupt,Baa credll , turn to us
... can help call toll free 1-877583-88411.

'GUARANTEED APPROVAL '
Bank cara, No Credit Check, No
Up-Fronl Cash Security Deposit
Ritqutred. •Must Be 18+ And
Hive Valid Checking Account' .
Pro-Approval By Phone . t ·BOO·

1988 Redman Danville 14x70
Also Has E•pando. Very Nice,

Shopping For A Home, But Worried About Holliday Expenaes?
Only The HOme snow. Bsrlloursvlllt, Will Pay Your Firat 3 Paymtrltl. 1-888-736-3332.

Beautiful 4 bedroom, two bath,
fenced yard , established small
engine shop or run your own
business from large commercial
buildlng. PI,. good rontol iloma al
on one block In Racine, Ohio.
With or withOut extras, 740-949·

citd!

t 999 MODEL'S CLOSE OUT
SALE. SAVE BIG $1$
2,3 ,4 Beclroom Homes, t-800·
948·5678.

Repoa, Stngla &amp; Doui&gt;IOWldt. 1·
888·11211·9896.

MEDICAL BILLER Up to $t5 ·
S-45 IHr Med1cal Billing Software
Company Needs People To Process Medtcat Cta1ma From 110me.
Tra11"11ng Pro\lldad Must Own
Computer 1-800-434·5518 Ext.

•'FALL SPECIAL" VISA $2,500
LinK. Bad Cllldlt. No c . GUARANTEED APPROVAL Or
Rtctlve S100 Cash! No Slcurily
Deposit. Fee $39. 1-888-8762101 (24 tn.)

1993 Sunshine 16x80 3 Bod·
rooms, 2 Full Baths, Deck. Total
Eie&lt;:trlc, Heat Pump, AvaU..blo On
Land Owners Contract, Call 740446-7661 For 0ttall8.

RENT BUSTER: NEW 3BR, 1511
DOWN I S211110NTH. ONLY AT
OAKWOOD HOliES, NITRO, WV.
(304)711&amp;-liiiS.

ARIZONA RARE BUYI Prtalnt 40
Acre Ranches In Northwest Arizona From Only $49S/Acrel Lush
Vegetation, Mountain VIews! No
Oualilylng, Low Oown, Ask About
6 Mo. Inspection Progromf t ·800·
7t1-2340.

$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Woallhy Famllles Unloading MilHonl Of Dollar&amp;, To Help M1nnruze
Their ra 11 11. Write Immediately:
Windfalls, 847-A SECOND AVE ..
SUITE 1350, NEW YORK, NEW
'I9AK 10017

Excellent Condlllon S16.000.00
(740) 446-8113

-011 .,. ,.

FRITO LAY /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE . $1 ,000+
WEEKLY POTENTIAL. ALL
CASH BUSINESS. PRIME LO·
CAl SITES . SMALL INVEST·
MENTI EXCELLENT PROFITS. t •
800-731-7233 EXT. 4503.

Money to Loan

1991 14ftx721t 2 Bodrooms, 2

9e1116, Shingle Rool, Vinyl SIOing,

-ftllalorrwol-•tlil Now t6 W1de, 4BR/28A , low.
wllk:hloln_ol..
down payment, only $245 per
low. Our-·. . ,..,
mo. Free Air, Free Skirt. 1-800·
lrtlannodhlllldwllln!lll
89t-em.
- - t n t l l i l no 1~
=--=---------~Only One Lefl, 28x80, 48R. 2BA,
n
only $39,988. Free Delivery/Free
-"'*Ysot-Up. t-80o-89t-em.

FOR SALE BY OWNER
Due To Poor Health. Owner Must
Sell Rainbow Bag Company. This
Small Manufacturing Bualnass
Will Require An ln~estment 01
140,000 And A Building ApproxImately 30w.30. Can Be Operated
On Weekends, Evenings. Or
Made Full· Time. Only Qualified
Serious Buyers Need Inquire,
Please 74Q--2359.

"!EDlCAL BILliNG Unllmrlad Income Potential. No Experience
~cessary. Free Information &amp;
CD -ROM. Investment $4 ,995 •
$8.995. Financing Available. Is·
lind Automated Mad1cat ServiC·
eo. Inc. 80G-322-t139. Ext 050
VOid In KY, IN, CT.

1988 14x80 Spruce Ridge. 311e0rooms . 2 Baths , CA. On Rented
Lot, Gas ~urnace , 740-379-2627.

Doubi&amp;Wtde, 3BR/2BA, only
S287 per mo. w/low down payment. Froo ~r. 1-B00-69t-67n . .

EARN $90,000 YEARLY Ropair·
lng NOT Replacing, Long Craekl
In Windshields. Free Video 1·
800 -826-8523 US /Canada .
www.glassrnechanlx.com

6e7.

304·67~19

Concept 2000 Oakwood 4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, New Model
$39,995 Oakwood -Gallipolis,
740-448·3093

EARN $1,000 A DAY... I 00. Not
MLM. No Selling. Work From·
Home PIT. Froe lnlo Pkg: t-800·
831-2385, 24 Hrs. Ext 83.

FREE BOOK! Reveals Se&lt;:rets To
F1nanclal Freedom! Live A Life Of
Pleasure. DEBT FREEl Fr81
Copy www secrets com/speclal18370

1981 Ventura slnglewlde 14a:70

t995 Redman t4x80 Moblle
HOme, 3 Baclrocm&amp;. t t/2 Baths. 5
Aero Lol. 740-388-8445.

DICORCE $195 30 ·60 Cays,
Children, Prop&amp;rty, Missing
Spousa O.K. Bankruptcy $225.

Business
Opportunity

320 Mobile Hom11
tor Sale

s- • Aa~lgaretor,
a

Ctoao Tb Gtlllpolll Holzer, No
Polo. Call 740·448-3028, Evonlngo0.740 1181_189Dolya.

On 114111 180, 7 Mleo From
Holzefo, 2 Bedrooma, 1 112
Batltl, 137Mio.. Rolllencto, C;ll
7~1.0117.

Ono Bedroom Apartment in Pt.
Piaaaont. Ellra nice and clean.
No fllll,l'ltonl (304)f7$-1388.

Amazing Metabolism Break·
through Loaa Weight Whllt Enjoying The Foods You Love DurIng This Holiday Seaton. Fret
Sampiel. 740-441-1982.
ATTENTION HOllE WOOD·
WORKERS. Build ·lt -Voursell.
Buckboard Bench Kll, teOt
Coaster Wagon Kl1, lrlah Mall
Hand Car Kit, Buckboard Sleigh
Kit. FREE Catalog I ·800·8474947.
Blue Metal Twin Bed Whitt Twln
Beclroom SUite, Peggy Huber '740-

448-4052.
Kitchen Cabinet Wtth Flower Ben
$75; Running Boarda Flbarglall
For 1998 F-150 Ford Pick-Up
$50, 740-258-6989
Complete DISH Network ntellito
aysltm, brond now, 1149 lnttallod
free, 740·992· 1182 or 304·773·
5305 altar epm,
COMPUTER BLOWOUTIII COM·
PAO MICRON IBM Desktops
Merchant Accounts eCommerce
Almost Everyone Approved, Low
Monthly Paymento NO MONEY
OOWNfll FREE Color Printer 1·
888-671-4300
COMPUTERS • $0 Down. Low
Monthly Poymanlo. Y2K Compll·
ant Almost Everyol'le Approved .
Call FIROCOM Advanced Technologies 1·800·0t7· 3470 Ext.

330.

JANITORIAL 10KW
ELECTRIC FURNACE
$250 Each New; Only. 100,000
BTU 92% Gas
$895 ;
Ona 2 112 Ton
Heat
Pump, Llneaet, (A)
stat, S1,500; Free Eatlmate&amp;.
Ybu DonY
We Boffl Los•.
t ·800·29t ·0098: Or 740·446·
8308.

DIRECT TV

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

eon us

JET
AERATION MOTOFIS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebulll In StOclc
CaH Ron Evans, 1-B00-537-9528.
Memorial Garoens, 1 crept or lot,
opening &amp; cloaln9 Included,
$2500 1save $500), 740-742·
2574.

610 Farm Equipment
3 Point Woods back hoe, 1·8'
bucket, 1·18' bucket, dig 6 t/2
lett OBO. 740-742·2522.

~2· snow blade ror craftman garden tractor $125 . call 304-675·
3753.

Olver super 55 tractor end toader
gaa. wide front end three pa1n1
hitch runs slick $2500. 304-6753824.

IIOBILE HOllE OWNERS
liuga Inventory, low Prices on
Vinyl Skirting Ktts, Doors, Windows, Anchors, Water Heaters,
Furnaces, Plumbing and Electrical Parts. Bennetts Mobile Home
S'I'Piy. (740)-448·9418

630

MOMS : Ara You Sick And Tired
01 Being Slck And Tired? We
Can Holp. Call Today For Your
Free Cassette. 1-800·986·0674.
(24 Hr Rto&gt;nled Melljlge)

Special Fall Feeder Calf Sale
Saturday, November 13, 1999, '1
P.M. Canle May Ba BrOUIJhl In AI·
tar 4 P.M. On Friday. All Consignments Welcome, Hauling Avail·
able, Athans Livestock Sales,
740-582·2322, 740-698-3531 '

Moving Sate: Lane Sola Paid
Over S1.000 Sill For $300 Rattan
Glus Top Dinette Set $75; t 4
Foot Jump King Trampoline With
Covtr $100; 10xt2 Deck $200;
Solid Cemenl Steps $125, 740·
245-9&amp;45o

Livestock

Pigs, $25 and up. (740)256-8573

Want to buy• Hailer calf from a
dairy cow &amp; beef bull, 740-843·
5253.

TRANSPORTATION

Naw Snow Blower; 5 HSP 22··
Wide Swath Used 5 Minutes,
740-388-!1080.

710 Autos for Sale

OUice furn1tura cop1er 1100.,
dtska, fllo cablntt&amp;, shllvlng,
chairs 304-875-5571.

$500 CARS FROII$500111 Buy
Pollee Impounds &amp; Repos . Fee.
CALL NOW For Llsllngsl t-600319-3323 x2t56 .

Premium Firewood, Oak &amp; Ash
$50 Load, Full Size Plck·Up, De·
livered, 740-~.

'85 VW GTt, black , 5 speed,
moonrocf, good work car, $1500,
740-6611-3091.

Queen Size SOfa Bad, Magic Chef
Side By Side Refrigerator &amp;
Freez«, 740-148-9476.

'93 Ford Probe, silver wllh btack
Interior. aharp car, SSSOd, 740·
992·7727.

Sam SomerviUe's Army Surplu6,
Hunting, camouflage, New Satellite Systems, $t25 Free Installation. By Sandyville Post Office.
(304)273-5655.

CARS $100, $500 &amp; I,!P. POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's Toyota's,
Chevys, Jeops, And Sport Utilitits. Fee Roqulrecl. Call Nowl BOOm-7470; EXT. 7632.
•

Sears Lifestyle Csrlflo Fit LOW Im-

t963 Pontiac Catalina, 4 Doors.
Body In Good Con~lllon, $300
080, 740·256-9172, 740-256 -

pact ExerciH Machine, Like New,
Used Only 5 Times, 304 -882·
3t52.

1831.

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Claim Dented? We SpecialiZe In
Appaets And Hea~nga . FREE
CONSULTATION. eneflt loam
ServiCII, Inc. Toll· ree. 1·888·

t 982 Mustang Bleck On Black
35tW, 4 Speed, New Wheels &amp;
Tlras, Richmond 4:11's 740·992·
7853 $1 ,6011 Flnm.

638-4052.
And

t 984 Buick Century, automatic. 4
door, good condition, S1300, call
740-992-6531 or 740-985-4150.

TWo t5" Kicker Freo lr Subwoof-

1966 B.M.W.. 325 .8cyl. 5spd .,
$1500. (304)675-61193.

Tanning Beds S .000
11,300, 740-446-782t.

IUS Cousllc 360 P wer Logic

Amp 150 wans, couauc t BO
Amp 30 Waus Par Channel, Cou'
site XM-3 Crossover, t-4ount1ng
Board And All Wires Intact, Enlire Pacl&lt;age, $350, Call 304·7735592 Boforo 5:00 Or 304·8822102 After 5:00.
Ty Btanlos: Maple 585; Tank
$45 , Goldie $25; Flip 125 And
Many Morel 740-446-4850 After
4·30PM
Used Outside Wood Burning Fur·

naco, $500. oeo. (304)882·3235

WANT A COMPUTER117 BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Fil'lance, •o• Oownl Put
Credit Problems OK!! Even II
TUrnecl Oown Beforoll Reestablish
'1\lurCredltlll·fi00-8511-0359.
Waterline Special: 314 200 PSI
$21.95 Por t 00, t ' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100, All Brass Com·
pross10n fittings 1n Stocic
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jaeklon, Ohio, t -800-537-9528
WHITE-&amp; METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allison. 588 Watson Road,
Blclwai;Ohlo, 7-10-148-4336.

550

Building
Supplies

Block, bnck, sewer pipes. wind·
ows, lintels, elc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·
5121.

560

Pets for Sale

5 Rat Terrier puppies, real cute,
$125, 7~1233 .
Adult CFA regiStered Himalayan
cats. three females. two malaa.
$50 aach, 740-742-1019.

t 988 Nlsslan 200 SX Turllo. New
Eaglo GT Tires, Runs Strong,
LOOkl Good, $t ,000 740·441·

t083.
t 986 Plymouth Horizon Runs
Good, 114.000 Milts, $700 080

740-446-7002.
1989 Chevrolet Celebrity, 77,000
Miles, $2,500, Call 74D-245·5942.
Or 740-245-9183.
t 989 Dodge Shadow, Needs
Head Plalnod, $500, 740·367-

04t5.
t990 Grand Am 96,000 Miles,
$1,500 Call 740-245·5942, Or
740-245-9183.
t 892 Beretta 5 Speed, $2,895;
t990 Baratta G.r. S2.465: 1991 sto $2,895; 1989 !'ontiac 8DOOLE
4 Oooro, $1,995 , Cook Motors,
740-148-Dt 03.
1992 Cadillac Savllte, Excellent
Condition lnllde &amp; Out, 4.9 Liter
V-8 Engine, 108,000 Miles,
$7,500, 740-245,-5357.
1993 Plymouth Duster, 6 cylinder
DHC, standard, excelllnt condl·
lion, looks groat, beautiful Interior,
nice whaelo, $3500, 740 -9492045 evenings.
1994 Dodge Shadow ES 4 Cylinder, 5 Speed, AIC, $2,850 OBO;
t 996 Chevy Cavalier 68,000
Miles, Auto, AIC, Cossette, Rod
Wllh Rear Spoiler, $5.500 OBO,
740-258-6169.

"""'"" 2 door, SE,
1994 Gron Prix, ......
PW, PO, t~l. crul11, $7500, call
740-992-7435.
1996 Cougar. loaded. (304)576·

2903.

'

AKC Boxer Pups· 5 Male/4 Fe·
male. Tails Docked, Dew Clawa,
tat Sholl. $200. 13041882·3872.

1998 Ford Contour GL, 5 SPiecf,
48Jl00 rnffea, excellent cond~lon,
$740-985-3580 or 740-985-4418.

AKC Lab Puppies, $150 Each; 3
~ Female, 1 Choootata 1'&lt;1msle, Shota, Wormecl, 740-388·
9398, 740-388-11922.

1896 Grano Am GT Excellent
CondHIOn, 45,000 Milot, 740-388-

l!laclc,

AKC Registered Chocolate Lab
Puppies, Shots And Wormed,

740-446-1420.

Satellite sy&amp;ttmt, 2 monttl free
movie channel, btlt prices In
town, 888-285-2t23.

Ibanez soundgear, EleCirlc Ball
Gullar. Excellent Condition, Hard
Shell Case Included. $850 Firm.
{304)675-4118.

AKC regtatered Dachshund pUp&amp; tst lhota, 2
m, 11, 740-742-2694.

PieS. vet { -

8039.

1996 Mltsublsht Ecllp11 Spydor
conventble, 40,000 mtltt, lOaded,
dlac changer, turbo. automatic,
green with black top, eJCcellel'lt
condition, very sharp, $19,000
080, call740-742-2780,
1996 Poriuec Grand Am SE. 4
door, oharp, very nk:e car. $6995;
1998 Buick Century, 4 door, V-8,
good car, $4995.

1887 FOI'd Ranger E~~:tended Cab
4 Wha&amp;l Drive, V-6, EKCellent
Condltkln, 74Q-448-6E59.

. ___......_.....

BARNEY

IN THEM
PILLS YOU GAVE

WHAT'S

THEY SORTA TASTED
LIKE ASPIRIN II

ME, DOC?

YOU PEEKED

IN

MY MEDICINE
8A8

199t s -10 Blazer, 2 door, 4x4,
new 4.3 motor with warranty, rebuHt transmiaslon, new paint. auto,
air, lilt, asking $7500 060, 740·
742-2574.

jJ

1992 Dodge Grand Caravan New
Transmission, New Bells, 126,000
Miles, Excellent Condition, 740·
446·2522 Daytime, 740·379-2789
Evenings.
1994 Mazda Navajo LX {Ford Explorer), 4 wheel drive, v-e. auto,
navy blue with tan Interior, sun·
roof, aluminum wheels, asking
$6300 OBO, 740·992-1508 days,
740-949-2644 sve.

Motorcycles

1 Year Old 6x4 John Deere Galor, Wl!h Dump Bed, Hunter
Green. $6,950, 740-387- 7755.
Pr~e .

1985 Yamaha Big Wheat 200 Excellent CondiUon, Rebuilt Engine.
Lots 01 New Parts, It ,OQO 060
740-148-3944 .

THE BORN LOSER ·-

1999 Honda 300 EX. 5 months
old, new tires, lllfY good condi·
tion, paid SASOO. sell for payoff al
$3350, call 740·992·2459 days or
304·882·3407 evenings .

"WL ~ TU\ (.01:1 (.~'{

~

l~a.u-..:iED '\'~E:.Iit. ~Cf'{\'t:
~T

For sale- 1994 4x4. Kodiak four
whaolar, t800, 740-992-1\174.

~T

1&lt;'00~\

BIG NATE
• · 'IOIIR 1).1. t&gt;
·• l !&gt;N'T GOING
10 &amp;UY IT'

SUilE

HE

WI~L.!

I'Ll. JUST

'r'Olll. TRY·

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

tN6 TO
EXPL.-.IN
131AME 'lOUR IT 10 HIM,
ENltRE llE· PUII.E Ai'll&gt;
PORT CAAP
!&gt;11'\PI.E!
ON l'IR$ ·

12 Fl. V-Bottom, Aluminum, 5 HP
Gas Motor, Trolling Motor, Trailer
Good Condition, $1,000, 740-446·
2110.

c;oDn.ev.

14' Boat And Trailer Trolling Mo·
tor And 9.9 HP Motor St ,200,
740-448·2805.

t 979 Starcraft 23' cuddy cabtn
boat. inboard V-8. naw cover,
completely restored In 99, no
trailer. no outdrlve, flr&amp;t $2500
OBO, 740-992·1508 days or 740·
949-2644 1M1111ngs.

• J 3 2

North

1.
3.
5 ...

Pus
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2•
4•
5t

s.
&amp;•

1•

6•

AND MAV8S DO ALL

NO OIR15TMAS
SPIRIT, Hlll-1?

'

~:.
• . .t)

.

•

p YJ "•

··~P;~
,.. ., -- .

• ••

Rllldanltal or commercial wiring,
new service br repairs. Malar L~
canud eltctrlclan. Ridenour
Electrical, WV000306, 304-8751766.

,Refrigeration

•

K-12

,

28 Penon of .
aetlon
29 Moon

property •

Pass

Pus

30

Pass
Pass

r~"":r..ic

31 ro::unll:

Pass

37

Slurred o•r

(ayllablla) In
pronunciation

38 Acted

.

41 Sample (food)

42 Fling

·

43 Court

order
44 Tap

••

45 Demonalrate
47 Skinny :-

48 Nola-

48 Tlleftla
5D Aemalndlii'
52 Midi of •
(lull.)
54 h'alor~
course ,,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campps
C818bnly Crpher cryptograms are created trom quotatrons by lsmous people, past and
· present. Each letter 1n the cipher stands for another

Today's clue: R equals C

'K ME

DWAGSD
GKG

W S I

BCMU

ZWI

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"This will be a better world,·
granny told me, "when the
power of love replaces the • - .·of .. --·.· .

I

CASELO
._-,~7.;;-r,-r;;...;,.I"'"' :"r_, .... complete

.... chuckle

'

-,.
0

quoted

_
V by filling In tha mlaino -d•
1 1
.L...JL.....L.-1-.L-...&amp;.;...J you deoelop from tltp No. 3 below.

• WWlUMemD I'

I' I'

I 1- I I

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I' I' I' I' I' I

loF I

I I I I I

ICUM-LITS ANIWEI5

Kn~tty - Whsck - Error· Adroil - DON'T WORK

,.

"

.

colleague. "I have thousands of results that DON T
WORK'"

IFRIDAY

ROBOTMAN

..
•

I •

BASEIIENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee.
Local relerencaa furnished . Ea18bllshed 1975. eon 24 Hro. (740)
446·0870, 1·800·287-0576. Rogers Waterproofing,
•

1

bard

24111nglaae ,
25 Of griCiel '

"I have gotten resuRs," the scientist revealed to h,ts

'

R&amp;H Contracting : New Homes,
Ro~m Addlllons, 'Rooting Proftsslonala,• Alao Tree Service.
For Eottmete, can (304)675-4699/
(304)175-5242.

ca,.lelaly ·

23 Old Engtlsr,

East
Pus

•...

M'f SIIOI'PIN6, AND
WRAP ALL Tf.!E .
PRE5ENT5 FOR ME ,

'

22 Spencla

28 Claim on •

-By Phillip Alder
In a letler to his wife Abigail, JOhn
· Adams wrote, "There is something
very unnatural and odious in a government a thousand leagues off."
Some bridge players feel like that,
except that the government is only
four or five feet away, across the·
table.
The winning play in this deal
would be considered unnatural by
those who are not used to adjusting
their thought processes to the situation at hand.
South's three-diamond rebid was
a priori a game-try, looking for diamond help 10 reach four spades.
Nonh was, of course, happy to jump
to game. But now .ca_me. some cu~­
tlidding (or control-btddmg, as 11 1s
becoming known). When South bid
five sp'ades, he made it plain that he
was staring al two heart losers. With
that ace •. Nonh moved toward six,
cue-bidding in case seven was on.
That was an excellent sequence,
but Soulh's play didn't match the bidding. After winning with dummy's
hean ace, he drew two rounds of
trump with honors from hand. He
continued with a diamond to dummy's ace, a diamond to his king, and
a diamond ruffed low in the dummy.
East happily overruffed and returned
a hean 10 his panner's queen: one
down.
Prime Minister Nonh wasn't hap- ..
py. .. Ruff the third diamond with my
spade king," he suggested.
.. But my diamonds still aren 'I
es1ablished, and East overruffs nexl
lime," protested South.
.
.. No. After playing a club 10 your
ace and-leading a diamond, discard
dummy's hean loser. Then, you can
ruff your hean .safely, when there is
no risk of an ovcrruff."

Home
Improvements

Llvingslon's Basement Water
Proofing, all basement repairs,.
done, lrtl est1m1tea, lifellma
guarantee 12yrs on job experience.(304)895-3887.

ChOir voice
12 8hlrp

Kid-

21 Beglna

-Can unnatural
.become natural?

•

1997 Damon Hornet 27' camping
trailer. si&amp;BJlS eight. microwave,
range, rafrigeratorNreezer , ale,
am/lm cassette, awnmg, scissor
jacks, $7800 OBO, call 740-9921506 days or 740-949-2644
evenings.

.

11

8 Jazz player

19 Joan ol- ·

Opening lead: • K

, von gs.
r~:!:!::.~~"'~----

8323.

together
7 Stfmler

~

Pass

t995 Coleman Pop-Up Camper,
Excellent Condition, $2,200, 740·

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tanence- Pamung, ~lnyl siding,
carpentry, doors. windows, baths,.
mobile horne repair and more. For
Ires estimate call Chet, 740.992·

9 "Till Gill ol
the-"
10 Sacred Image

8 Grind (IMih)

Plcauo
38 Uae a pancll
part

Motor Homes

n95.

mortr..

• A Q J 10 9

Ca~pers &amp;

Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Ove, 25 Years Exparlance All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag, 740· 446 -

32r~
38 Emulal8d

Weal

Budget Pnced Transmissions
and El"'glnes. All Types, Access
To Over 10,0.00 Transmissions,
eve Joints. 740-245-5877.

810

1 Fumbllr'a cry
2 Heraldic
burtng
3 Falalfllr
33 FOIHIY
34 YellOw pigment 4 Greek peak
5 -de plume
35 It goea lnfo a

Soutb

South

PEANUTS

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Upllalre Furnlollld, 3 RoomJ,
111111, Cltan, No Poll! AofooiOICIOI&lt;.
Oepoell Required, .740·440·
1518.

..

¥109643
e 10 2

Dealer: North

It

SERVICES

DOWN

Vulnerable: East-We!ll_

Real Nice t979 Ford Pi ck-Up
Needs Motor. $600 . (304)674 0t40.

1997 Inns Bruck 24 Ft. Camper
Excellent Condition. Slaeps 6,
40-448-6290.
7

Hemingway

•A

1996 Chevy, 2 Wheel Drive, Full
SIZe Extended Cab, Pay 011, Great
CondiiiOn. 740-446·1397.

840 Electrical end

a

• 8 7 2

• J 8
tKJ865

t 994 Chevy Truck 4x4 , 39,000
actual miles. dual exhaust, 305
engine automatic. (30-4)882·2870
$14,000.

790

r:c'..'::'
WOitllll

• 5
• ·K Q 7 5
• Q9 7 4

258-6430.

760

20--lhe

23 Small !Ia~
27 BuppotUd

East

"' K 10 7 6

118 ..... Impure
57 Boiled
118 Borgnlne or

mongy

21

West

1999 Ford F-150 Long Bed 300
Six Cylinder, 5 Speed, Claen.
Runs Excellent, $3,800 OBO 740·

Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer For
Sale By Public Auction A 1999
Honda
TRX300FWX
ATV
10t4988 At tO:OO A.M. On t l/201
99 At The OVB Annox, t 43 Th11d
Avonue, Galltpolla, OH. Sotdfo
H~ghest Bidder 'As Is -wnere Is'
Without Expressed Or lmpllo
Warranty &amp; May Be Seen y
Calling The Coltaction Dept. At
740·441 · 1038 . OVB Reservas
The R1gnt To Accept ll!ejact Any
&amp; All Bids, I Withdraw Items
From Sale Prior To Ssle Terms
01 Sale CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK.

1l·t2-99

t A 3
otoQ9854

t990 Dodge D- 150, 318, Automatic, 1987 Dodge O· t50, Pick·
Up, 6 Cylinder. Automatic; 1982
Dodge D-250, 316 Automatic
740-148·98t8.

Twin Towtro now accepting appliclllona lor 1 BR. HUD aubtldlzed apt. lor tlderly and hand!·

CIPII&amp;d-EOH. (304117H1171.

Nortb
• K 6 4 3
¥A 2

t 985 Nlssan Klngcab 4 WD
$2.200 080 740-446-t420

1982 Honda Goldwing 11 DO
$2,500, 74Q-446-7821.

~

18 Clpucltln

445-0280.

740

55~

17 Antlloxlna

·1984 Foro F-150 6 Cylinder. Four
Speed, Very Good Mechanically
$1,200 , 802 Firat Avenue, 740·

'

'

ASTRO·ORAPR
Saturday, Nov. 13. 1999
Some 1ype of se~rct ambition
you' vc been nurturins for awhile liP
an cxccllcat chance of being fulfilled
in the year ahead. However, il
behooves you 10 keep II secret undl
this happens.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Tooting your own hom today might
only produce sour noies instead of~
impressive tune. Your deeds will
speak for themselves If Y~ live
enousJt lime for Clhen to n011ce. Oel
·. - a jump on life by unclentandi~g flto
you tn the
influences that'll
. year lltead. Send lhc required refund
• form and for your Altro-Onplt pre. dictions by mlllin1 $2 10 AIII'O-. · Onph, c/o litis newapopcr, P.O. Box
' 1738, Murray Hill Station, New

·"

covem

- York, NY 10156. Be oure to lllte
your Zodl11: sip,

SAGmARJUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) YOII' lmpultlve I1IIIW may apln
~· ~ you 10 opend footlohly on
1• dtinp thiiiiCtl'l CIMII1iiJ 10 your

practical needa. Slri ve 10 m.,tniStin
lip! flnaneilln:iJns today.

. ~) .

u:iin.l9l ,,·

CI\PiUcORN (Dec.
your attitude ia not wlllinslo go all,
lhc wo)' loday. you'~e apt to pedorm
far below&gt;"* Clflll&gt;ilkiea and pollll·
1ial. Set yOII' siJIIU on vlclury and
-don't do thlnp in half ~rc.
AQUARIUS (Jill. 20-Feb. 19) In
mauen11hal ha\&lt;e a direclelfccl upon
your career, you could sadly lei erro• neou• huncltot or percepdons override your l01ic Ill this lime. Don'llcl
daydrcomaacl out ol htnd.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Should your jllllner In ajoinlve111tm!.
be inept, she or Ito miahl fumble the
ball for you where an hnpcrtant
opportunity Is concerned. Keep M
·eye en what's JOin&amp; on.
1,RIES (March 21-April 191
Befote ntalt1n1 any major or impci'llnl decision, be sure 10 wcish all

sides of tho i•ue cnfully.

If you

don't like lhc time to anllyre the

allcmatiYOio 111 en'Of In judpnent Is
'l ikely.
.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
lnsiefld of bukbla on wltlt y0111iope .
lolnorrow wiU briftl, plaa and work

today fqr dill whiCh i8reality yGU'Ie
llblc 10 brina 11110 ~~e~n,. 11111'• what •
will aive ycu illnll!dlllllllilf~elion.
I'

..
-··GEMINI (May 2t-Ju,;. lOl Don't
-' assume lhat a mauer thallw lhus far
· been running smoolhly will alway•
:continue to do 10. If it is lcflto fend
rfor itself today,- aome serious p-ob-

lems 't:Oulcl arise.

·CANCER (June 21-July 22) Peop!C will hold you ICCOUnllble f'!'
'promises you mab 10 them II lhto

, tline. Be Clleful nCI lo ~ any
bosly commitntents today JUit 10 Jel
somebody off your beck.
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22) No maner
'what .your good lnlenlioundghl_be
todoy, you colild spend musave
IIDOUftiS of lime l1ltd enaJY'Otl projects if you're not ortlftized and
-!Mihcidical In your methods and
plaanins.
.
VIROO (AUJ. 23-Sepl. 22) In
order 10 nCI liave any repli conccmina an lnclinltlion 10 spend way
' beyond your mew today. ~cu'd be :
wiae 1o cunail your slttJ!lPina atod ,
. wlkh
every ciutlay.
:

your

LIBRA (Sept, 23-0ct. 2))
Allhootaft you may consider projectl
' you leave haJf.flnilhed today~ a fail
acccmpll, t~ 'wlio In! depertdi~l
• upo11 you. won't be u p~• m
. !hair aseament of 1he facts.

..

NOVEMBER12f

�-------------,..------------------

......

-·---·---,- - - -------- --~----- ---~~~.,.-------

Page16 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.,·,· ~ ...... ~ ..... + ..........

N

''

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t

·...... ...., ..

':T ~ ~···,.·~:·

.

.

t'"··:'" ? ' .. ...........

.

••

·~·· -

..

November 12, 1818
_.... .Frkllly,
..

I,

I

Blue Devils
continue to roD·
with victory over

Ariel Theatre seroes
Apo sto lic

Cl1urch of Chnst

Cllurth or J ..lll C~ritl Apoolelk
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
PiUtor: James Miller
Sundoy School· 10:30 a.m.

Pomeroy Church of Cllritt

· Eve ning· 7:30p.m.

Church of Jesus O.risl
Apo&lt;lolk Fallh
·New Lima Road
PlSior: Many Hutlon
Sunday, 10 a. m.1nd 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

Sul)day School · 9 30 a.m.
Wor!ihip- 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Baptist

Keno Church of Cbrill

Mannalha Boplbl Church
Burlingham -·742-7b06
Paslor: John Swanson

Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Paswr-Jcffrcy Wal lace
!st and Jrd Sunday

Sunda y School - \ 0:00a .m.

Morning Service 11 :00 a.m.
Eovcning Service· 6:00p.m.
Wedne-sday Service · 7:30 p.m.
Hope Bapthl Church (Soulhtrn)

Pusto r: Jim Di!l)
~70 Gram St. , Middleport
Sunt.iay school · lJ:JO a.m.
Worship - ll a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednc!'iday Service · 1 p.m.
Free Will Baplisl Church

Ash S!rccl, Middleport
Pastor: Les Hayman
Sunday Service · 7:00p.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Scl'\'ict-7:00 p.m.

Rullood Flnt BapiiJI Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wors hip · 10:45 a. m.
Pomeroy first Baptist

East Ma in St
Sunday School - 'J:30 a.m.
Worsh ip . 10:30 a.m.
Flnt Southern Baptist
4JH72 Pomeroy Pike
P~:~.st or :

E. Lam:u O'Bryant

Sunday SChool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:45 ~. m ., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnc54.Jay Scrvi~;es - 7:00p.m.

Flnl Baptist Church
P:~ slo r : Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School· 9:15a.m
Worship · 10:15 a.m.. 7:00 p.m.
Wed nesday Service- 7:00p.m.
Rocioe Flnl liapllll
Paslor: Ri ck Rule
Sunday School • 9:30 a. m.
Worship - \0:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.
Silver Run Bapllst
Pas1or: Bill Lillie
Sunday School - IOa. m.
Worship · I I a.m., 6:30p.m.
WclJncStlay Services· 6:30p.m.

Mt. Union S.ptltit
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Su ndny Schooi-9:4S i!·.m,
. .Evenina • 6:30 p.m.. ,

Wedne~doy Services. 6: ~0p.m.
Belhl~htm

Baplin Churth
Great Bend. Routl' 124. Racmc. OH
Pastor · Gene Morns
Su m.l:~)' School - 9:3tl a.m.
Sunday WorshiP. - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wcdnc!lif.lay B1blc Study · 6:00p.m.

Old Belhtl F,.. Will Boplist O.urth
2860 I S1. R1. 7, Mi&lt;ldlepon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evcnin1 · 7:30p.m.
Thurscta,y Services "- 7:30
Hillside Boplill O.ordl
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 1
Pastor: Re ~J . James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wor~hip - II a.m.. 6 p.m.
WclJncsday Service~ -7 p.m.
Victory Bapti•llndependant
525 N. 2ml St. MithJieporl
Pastor: J t~ mcs E. Keesee
Wor~hip · IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne!'day Services · 7 p.m.

Fahh Baplhl Church
Rililroad St., Mason
Sunda)' School · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdnc~ay Services· 7 p.m.
Fomt Ran Bapllsl
.Pas10r : Arius Hurt
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.
MI. Morioh Baplill
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middlcpon
Pastor: Rev. Gilbcn Craig. Jr.
Sunday Sc~ool· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Allllqully Bopllsl
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wot"hip • 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening · 6:00p.m.
Rulland Fm WillillpiiSI
S&gt;~l c m S1.
Pa:~lor : Rev. Paul Tnylor
SunlJay School· 10 01 .m.
Even in~ - 7 p.m.
Wcdnc!U.Jay Service~· 1 p.m.

Catholic
·.

Socnd Hearl Cllholk Churdr

": )61 Mulberry Ave. , Pomeroy, 992-S898

·...
Plstor: Rev . Woller E. Heinz
·'Sal. Con. 4:4l·S: 1~ . m.; Mass· S:lO p.m.
.;
Sun. Con. · :4l·9:15 a.m.•
Sun. MMss ·9:30a.m.
Dailey Mas.'i - 8:30 .a.m.

Duollle Holl- Church
31037 State Route 323,Lanpvlle
Postor: Gary Jaci&lt;Jon
Sunday sciMJol · 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship . t0:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wedntldly prayer service · 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Wtslllde Church orChrlsl .
33226 Children's Horne Rd.
Sunday School · t la.m.
Worship -! Oa.m.,bp.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

P.O. Uux 4CJ7. Dudd10g Lane.:
Masun, W.Va .
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Services· 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Libcr1y Asnmbl~ uf Cod

c_.,a.....,.

Mloemllt
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School · 9a.m.
Wcrship · 10 a.m.

ROM or Shlroo Hollaoa Church
l:.eading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Re._ . Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Connie Fi~res
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Worship ·t0:30 a.m. ·
Bible Study Tuea&lt;lay · 10 a.m.

Pai.Chupll
923 S. Third St., Middleport

Roc:kS~p

Cllrildolo Felltwolllp C.ler
Salem St., Rudand
PDIOJ: Raben E. Mruer
Suoday School • tO a.m.
Worship . U :IS a.m.• 1 p.m.
Weclnesdoy Service · 7 p.m.

Plae Gro•elllble Hollnoss Church
1/2 mile off R1. 325
Pastor: Rev . O'Dell Manley
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Won hip · 10:30 a.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'ict · 7:30p.m.

Zion Churc• or Chrisr
Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pa"or: Roger Watson
Sunday School - 9:30 a..m.
Worship· 10:30 o.m., ?:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Wesleyoa Bible Hollaea Church
7l Pearl St., Middlepon.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship · 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Rullaad
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wo"hip. 10:30 a.m.
Thursd11y Services - 7 p.m.

Hyoell R.. Holl- Ch111th
Sunday SciMJol • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thu..clay Servi&lt;&gt;: • 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School · 9: 15 a.m.

Br1141bUI') c•urch of Christ
Pastor: Tum Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship .. \0:30a.m.
Rutland Church or Christ
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Bradford Church or Christ
Corner of S1. Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minisler: Doug Shamblin ·
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.
Hi&lt;i&lt;orJ Hllb Church of Chrhl
Evanscltst Mike Moore
Sunday Sdrool· 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wedne5day Services · 7 p.m.
Laop•llle Chrisllao Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
HemiO&lt;k Grove Chorch ·
Pas10r: Gene Zopp
Sunday school • 10:30 a. m.
Worship - 9:)0 u.m., 7 p.m.

·Reedl•lllc Churcll ol Chrid ·
•·· ·-PlrilipSirono··· ,...
Su . a~ School: 9:30a.m.
WoriltipServicc: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study. Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
Deller Churth of Chritl
Pas1or: Justin Campbell
Sunday school9:30 a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.

Chn st1an Un10n
Harllord O.oaa or Chritt in
O.rllllu Uolon
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School· 11 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip · 9:30a.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1:30 p.m.

Church of God
ML Mcrrlab Churth of Gad
Mile Hill Rd., Radn.,;
Pastor: Brice Un
Sunday SchoOl- 4,1 :45 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Rullaod Oun:b or Gnd
Pastor: Ron Healh
Sunday Worship · tO a.m., 6 p.m.
WtdrK:"sday Services- 7 p.m.
SyrKIIIt Flnr Cllum of Gad
·
Apple: and Second Sts.
Pa~tor : Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services-6:30p.m.
. Wednudoy Service~ . 6:30p.m.
Churth of Gad of Prophe&lt;y
O.J. WhiteR~ . off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School . 10 a. m.
WoDhip · ll~:~ . m .

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Congregational
Trinlly Church
Second &amp; Lynn, Pumcruy
Sunday school and worship 10:25

Episcopal
Grace Epis&lt;opol C~urth
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev, Kathurin Fosler
Rev. Deborah Rant in, Clergy
Holy Eucharhl itnd
Sunday Schoolll :(M) ll.m.
www.f rognet ncl/- dcunery

Laurel Cliff Fftt Methodlll Churth
·
Pastor: Charles Swigger
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
wo..hip . 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Samts
Reorpolzed Cllurdl of J.,.. O.rill
of Laller Doy Solnll
Ponland·Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School ·9:30a .m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
The Churth or Jesus
Chrill or Latter-Day SaloiS
St. Rt. tiiO, 446-6247 or446-7486
Sunday School10:21l·lla.m.
Relief Socie1y/Pries1hood 11:05-12:00 noon
Sacramcn1 Service: 9-IO:lSa.m.
Homemaking mcc1ing, ht Thurs. · 7 p.m.

Lutheran
51. Joha Lrrlbenrr Churdr

a.......

H - Cllrittl.. l ' - p
Sunday servia:, tO:OO a.m .• 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship S~nday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday ,erv1ce, 1:00 p.m.

SolemCearer

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

Fallb full Golpel Cbuaa
Lena Bottom
Putor: Steve Reed
Sunday Sd&gt;ool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesdar, • 7 p.m.
Friday · .fellowsh p 10rvice 1 p.m.

llolhlay
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 10 a.m.

Tllelllllnon'FdoWIIIIIIMiallll')
New Lime Rd., Rurland
Pastor: Rev. Marpret J. RabiUCMI
Servicca: Wedncaday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Worship· 10:15 a.m.

~

CII'IIMI·Sulloa
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewaynt Stuller
Sundoy School · 9:30a.m.
Wor!hip - 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Comer Sycamore &amp;: Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritt
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

Un1ted Methodist
Gnrham Unllod Melhadlsl
Worship· 9:30a.m. (hi &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (lrd &amp; 4th Sun) '
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
MI. Olivo Uniled Melhodlll
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev .. Ralph Spires
Sunday SciMJol · 9:30a.m.
Worship- J0:30 1 1 .m., 7 p.m.
Thu~y Services. 7 p.m.

Melp Coopenlhe Parioh
NorlllflsiCiusler
All\'ed
Pas10r: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· II a.m.. 6:30p.m.

HO&lt;IIin&amp;porl Churth
Gr:md Street
Sunday School . Ill ,,m.
Worship· II a.m.
WedncWay Services- 8 p.m.

Lon1 Bouoin
School · ~ : JIJ u.m.
· Wurship · JO:Jo a.m.
RmlnHie
Worship • 9:30 u.m.
Sund&lt;!y School • 10:30 a.m.
. UMYF Sun~'Y 6:30p.m.
first Sunduy of Monlh - 7:30p.m. scrvlet
Toppen Plalas Sl. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wunihip · 10 a.m.
Tuesday Scrvitc5 - 7:30p.m.
Cenll'lll Cl•tter

Anui')(Sy.....,..)
Pt~1itor : Dub Robinson
Su n~:ry S&lt;lrool· 9:45 a.ln.
Worship· II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Kriuna RobiDSOn
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worlhip · 11 a.m.

alca
1ncl Ml'l. Helenlu
for the CJNtlon of "Eh11111n'a
1tter the fowth · gr~de tHcher, The
cornet 11 1 ICIIIIICe 1xperlmant during the
Wh1Mit progl'lm Frld1y morning. C.lyert Ia In-

HorriMa•Aio Prabyleriu a.uaa
Worship · 9a.m.
Sunday ~hool , 9:~5 a.m .
·. h"''i'"• ,·,:,.

=

·~· ·:. }!\;.~·

:;"~

•l' '"'
~~.t'lV
Wonhlp·10a.m.
~y

I.JI'Ii

By JIM FREEMAN

11

:....-&lt;:Die Davis called Ohio'• ~e~:os~
· ~1 ~~·~~·~~~I
Columb~~&amp; to locate "the astronauiS" for Green E
Wheel~ program Friday morning. ·
Unable to find them, she asked the excited students if they want·
to be astronauiS·in·training for the day. The auditorium erupted
the a&lt;;ceptance of over 150 young volunteers.
This was the opening dialogue between Davis, an energetic COS!
I(Cen~cr Of Science and Industry) employee, and the stuclent1, of
Elementary during their second day of Fascination Destina·
tion - a program brought to students by COSI On Wheels. This
marks the third year the Sl:hool's PTO has sponsored the event.
Throughout the morning, students performed supervised handsscience experiments with liquid nitrogen, dry ice and other vari·
sulxltanCCll. .They created rockc!S, learned about conductivity
and e'l'en "built" a comet.
· COSI On Wheels consists of a le!!IR of 14 traveling employees
that visit an aver-ac of four schools per week throughout !he entire
ISl:tlool year. COS! also travels in the summer to present programs to
organizalions.
.
Recently, COSI moved from 280 W. Broad SL to 333 W. Broad
The new location, which opened Nov. 6 and is dubbed FascinaDestination, covers a 17-acre lot directly across from the down·
skyline and fills three stories of space. '
The reinvented COSI will featutc new and redesigned cxhibi·
lions, programs anil theaters in a 320,(J(J()..square-foot facility. Seven
learning worlds with a range of themes from Oceans to Space will
as the major educational ports. Other attractions al . COS!
include an ou~oor Science . Park, retail store, Dome Theater and
Extr.eme Screen Theater.
. (XJSI was established in 1964 as a part of the Franklin County
~~:~~:!c~ Society: Since then, it has attracted more than 14 mill!on
h
AJ one of the first frce-stan_ding science and technology
centers in the world, COSI has established a reputation asa leader in
innovative, interactive science learning.
For further information, contact COSI at (614) 228-COSI.

Un1t ed Br ethr en

Torch Cburth ·
1
~· Rd. 63
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:3(1 1.m.

ML H..- Uolled .....,..
laCbiiiiC~uaa

Texas Community off CR 82

ML Ollft C001muiiJ Clnon:ll

Pa§tw: Robert Sanden
Sundoy School· 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.• 7:30p.m.
·Wednesday Services· ~30 p.m.

Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday SciMJol • 9:30 a.11.
Evcnl•a· 7 p.m. ·
Wcdneday Service • 7 p.m.

Edeo Uollocl Bnl•,..l• Chriot

UoHed l'allll Chrdl
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pau
Pastor: Rev. Raben E. Smith. Sr.
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

2 1/2 mila north of Rccdlr•illc
on State Roule 124

PL.ror: Rev. Robert Markley
SundaySciMlol·ll am

Foil Goopd IJPIIIoM
33045 Hiland Rood, Pomeroy
Poslor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School· 10 Lm,
EYCnina7:30 p.m.
Tlladay &amp; Thunday • 7:30p.m.
Soulls Badtel New T - 1
Silver Rkllll'
PISior: Robert Bart&gt;or
Sundar School· 9 Lm.
Sun. Worshrp ·IO:IOa.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servia! · 7 p.m.

SyrocuseChun:ll ofllrt NIDRM
Pasror. RobenJ. Coen
Sundoy School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· IG-.JO'Lm., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Chrill· 7 p.m.

'

Corteloo lo-ollloul Chorcll

Kinasbury lloo&lt;t
" - : Clyde Hendenorr
. Sllllday Sd&gt;ool · 9:30a.m.
Worship Sc:rvic.: 10:30a.m.
No Sundiry or Wc~ncsday NiKhl Service&gt;

PomenyCIIun:ll of lire N.....,.
Paslor: R~;:v . Uoyd D. Ori11mJr . .
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship -!0:30a.m. und ~p. m .
Wcdntllday Scrviccll ~ 7 p.m.

......... ~Millloll

Cbeiler Chun:b or the Nuo""'
P.ilslor: Rev. Hcrben Orale
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · J t y,m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Bald Knob, 011 Co. R~. 31
Pa!itor: Rev. Roser Willford
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip· 1 p.m.
Wbll•'• Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville RUltd
l"'.rsaur: R~" · Phillip Ri!Jcnuur
Sunday SciMJol • ~ : JU '·"'·
Won~hip. 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servia: · 7 p.m.

RuriHdC..rdlolllrt N Pastor: Rev. Samuel W. llaaye

"Featuring KentuC/ry Fried Chicken"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992·5432

.

us not love in word,
. P~RMACY~·
·· .
·
in tounge, but
We Fill Doctors'
in deed and in truth.
Prescriptions
1
Po
· '"
John 3:1
. ~"!J,

SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

~i1~er ~unnal ~ t"llm:.1
284 SOtal Second Ave.........,,..;, 011
740-1192-5141
Bruce R. , _ ·lliledor

. 590 East Main S1raol• Pomeroy, OH 45789
740-892·5444 '

M~

Co.,.,y\ 0/de~t Flt&gt;..Ut

-~~~~-p I IJr.
LH

740-992·2644
740·992-6298

u. S.od r.... .,_,... ru s,_.., c.,..

your
local

churches
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,_

dier's explained. ·
The soldiers also gave a brief spiel
· about other ways to navigate and
alternative ways to find north includ·
ing using the North Star.

Freemin also demonstraled an
Army-issue hand-held global posi·
tioning system that can delcnnine a
soldiers location and allitude any·
where on earth 1o within 10 melcrs.

Lutheran Social .Services paid for hay dflivery to Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - The delivery
of a.donation of hay to Galli a Coun·
ly farmers this week was arranged
through Lutheran Social Services
and not by federal government
relief agencies, as reported in
Wednesday's Gallipolis Daily Tri·

bune.
.
The Rev. John Jackson of New
Life Lutheran Church said Lu!htran
Social Servi.ces paid lo have the hay
trucked in Wednesday, where it was
distributed to producers whose own
liay reserves were impacted by this

year's drought.
Mary Woodward from Lutheran
Social Services, whom Jackson said
had inquired about helping Gallia
County lhrough the drought's
effeciS, was put in contact with
relief queries from Guyan Town-

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
. · POMEROY - "It's been an
extraordinary year - probably our
best," commented Toney Dingess,
director, about the Meigs Marauder
Band which captured the 1999
Grand Champion title at the Tri·
State Marching Band Festival held
last weekend at Marshall University,
Meigs competed for the title
against 22 other award-winning
banda in the James F. Edwards Sta·
!fium, home of the Thundering Herd.
, · The 87 Marauders wbo pCCIICnted
~!Swing music show featuring "Rock
This Town", "Boogie ~umper", and
''Minnie the Moocber", lOOk not
Only !he top awird at the Tr!·State
competition, but also won numerous
other trophy . awards for their
impressive performance.
.
• Competina in Ous AAA, the
. band too~ finl place in its elliS edg·
ing out nine other bands, and
received a superior rating for its
overall bind performat\ce. It also
JCCCived the trophy for· having the
highest .marching acore of llle day.
: · Superior rB~ings were also award·
'ed to the guard, the perc~ion, the
'.

The commissioners have also
made tenlalive plans to join with
Gallia, Jackson and Vinton Counties in an effort to plan WIA ser·
vices, although those counties will
likely serve individually as their
own fiscal agenls, and will imple·
ment their own counties' services.
Davenporl said that Galli a,
Jackson and Vinton Counties will
make excellent partners in plan·
ning services, because of the work·
ing relalionship !hat the counlies
enjoy in other areas.
This joint planning and broker· .
age of lfaining dollars could allow
the four counties 1o obtain a betler
uni1 rate for some services, and.
although the four-counly group
could administer the funds as a
group, Davenport said that he and
Commissioners Jeffrey Thornton
and Janet floward favor a plan that
preserves as much local control as
possible.
"We have an excellent opportu·
nity to operate these programs
locally," Davenport said, ~and
while we haven't made a decision
yet as to how we will administer
the programs, we want to make !he
right decision for Meigs Counly what will produce· the best system
and keep the funds as llically-con·
trolled as possible."

LEARNING LAND NAVIGATIONaclence ltudenta got a practical exilorch11 lnvoMng the Hrth't
mqnetlc lllld Wldneaday by uelng a C:C!fllpaaa on • amall land
rllvlgltlon c:ourae. Here, Army N1tlon11 Guard Stiff Sgt. Robert
F,_,man of the 3864th Malntan1nce Company, Point PIHant,
W.V1., glvee 1011111 lnatructlon to Sel'lh Klo.., ahown holding the
c:ompaH 11 left.
''
.
·

nme•Sentlnel Staff

SWISHER&amp;

I~SURANCE

. PQ~E~OX ..., !i;r ioldiers, the
ellth~l ~9 field is a valuable
llly.:ll keept ~ frotn getting losL
Four soldiers from the Army
National Guard's 3664th Mainlc·
nancc. Co., in Poinl Ple&amp;W!I, W.Va.,
visited Meigs High School in
Pomeroy last Wednesday to show
freshman science students how to put
the earth's magnetic field to good use.
Staff Sgt. Robert Freeman, Sgt
First OISS Travis Gray, Spec. Joshua
Searls and Pvt. Kima Durst, working
in conjunction with sci~ teacher
Janice Haynes, set up a simple corn·
pass course ncar the high school.
The studeniS used lensatic cornp&amp;sses to dctennine the direction to
several preestablished points and
counted their pace to find the proper
dislance.
Haynes said her class has been
studying magnets, electromagnets and
magnetic fields, including the earth's
magnetic field. She asked Staff Sgt
Freeman, who lives in Pomeroy, if he
would assist with the project Free·

man's daughtct, Robin, is a student in
Haynes' class.
1-fay!ICS"said the class has learned
how animals, patticularly migratory
birds, use the earth's magnetic field to
•navigate over great dislancea. Most
everyone has heard of people who
have "a nalural sense of direction."
These people, and some migratory
animals, have a some magnetic male·
rial in their brains, she explained.
After a short class, the students
were broken off into groups of four·or
five, handed a compass and a list of
directions and dislances, and sent off
to find their points.
"We were trying to give them a
basic land navigation course," said
Freeman. "We wanted to show them
what we know about' a lensatic com·
pass and how to shoot an azimuth
(one of the 3«l degrees indicaled on
the compass)."
Wednesday's class was only a brief
introduction to land navigation, gen·
erally soldiers use a variety of aides to
dctcnnine their location including the
compass. a mililary·issue map and
protractor and other means, lhe sol·

.Meigs Band captures grand champion title at Trl ·• State Marching Band Festival

·.
Crow'a Family Restaurant

Meigs County will receive workforce development funds to
$805,000 for the first year of WIA the table for planning with local
funding.
workforce policy boards.
The new WIA program will be
Mike Swisher, director of the
used in conjunction with the part· Meigs County Departmenl of
nership between the commission· Human Services, said Friday that
ers and the Department of Human use of the WIA funds will also like·
.services in implementing Ohio ly tie in with the stalewide merger
Works First, the state's welfare of the Ohio Bureau of Employmenl
reform law.
Services and the Department of
Allowing local WIA funds to Human Services, to form the
flow primarily to county commis- Department of Jobs and Family
sioners was developed by tbe state Services. That merger is scheduled
as an alternative to a mandate from to be finalized in July, 2000.
the federal level, · according to a
"If you 're going to give the
news release issued last by Gov. commissioners the . responsibility
Bob Taft.
for welfare reform, you must also
Meigs County. Commissioner give them the other pieces of the
Mick Davenport said Friday that . pie to help provide employment
the commissioners adopted the services and !raining," Swisher
Ohio Option because it makes the said, referring . to the increase in
county eligible for other funds local control of welfare-to-work
from the state.
funds from the state.
Had the county chosen to follow
The Meigs County Commis·
the Federal mandate, other funds sioners hope that !his merger will
would also be made available, but allow for an unemployment office
WIA funds would be allocated -or at least employment services
using a formula, and local control - .operating from Meigs Counly.
of funds would have been limited. No such office has been located in
Davenport said that the Ohio Meigs County since the closure of
Option also allows for other incen· the OBES office in Pomeroy sever·
. lives from the stale. Those incen· . al years ago, although the OBES
tives are offered for several rea· does offer. services through the
sons,,. i~l!lding work in multi- Community · Action Agency's
coiln"iyt!aieas · and bringing other offices in Pomeroy.

Soldiers help MI:IS students with science lesson
· ·11•• Stntlnel Staff

Sunday Scliooi· 9:30a.m.
Wonhj • 10:45 o.m .. 7:30p.m.
ednesday 7:30p.m. •

Sunday School • 9:30 ua.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m. ·
Wcdnctday Services • 7 p.m.

Enl•rprile
11:astur: Kcilh Ruder
Sundoay School · 10 a.m .
Won.hip ·.9 u.m.

s,nraue Flnl Ulllled l'rerllyrenu

..... Gtlllll a.Lena bortom

R...... Pie Fello....lp
Chun:hollheNPaslor: Tcrcu Waldeck
Sunday School• 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:43 Lm., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:• • 7 p.m.

Sun~uy

Pre sbyteri an

M- Chupel Clluaa
Sunday schOol · 10 a.m.
Worship • ll Lm.
Wednea&lt;lay Servia: • 1 p.m.

. r ·" ..

Joppa

MlddloiiOri Ptn,_
Third Ave.
Paslor: Rev. Clark Biker
Sunday SchoOl · 10 a.m.
Evenina - 6 p.m.
Wedneldly Services- 7:00 p,,m.

Sullday Sd!ool • 9:30 a.m.
Wanhip • 10:30 o.m. 7 p.m.

llolbtl Churth
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 10 a.m.

Mlddleporl Church of lire N Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Serviocs - 7 p.m.

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

Pnle&lt;OIIal Alltmbly
St. Rt. 124, lbcine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday SciMJol · tO a.m.
Evenlna · 1 p.11.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Dy,..llt C..-MJ Clnort. '',

Nazaren e

Cltesttr
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday Sctrool · I 0 a.m.
Thursday Services . 7 p.m.

Penteco sta l

.Yt-·1
. ,•.t:"".l..i~·•i.lt..-···~

1\resday Semoes ·1 p.m.

POMEROY- Meigs County is
one of 82 in the state to choose a
state plan for implementing a fed·
era! workforce develoment pro·
gram.
. The Workforce Investment Act
of 1998 will beconie effective next
July, replacing the federal Job
Training Partnership Acl (JTPA),
which is implemented locally by
the Gallia/Meigs Community
Action Agency.
The new Ohio Workforce
Slrategic Option empowers county
commissioners to make decisions
relating 'io how job training dollars
are spentand job training programs
· arc ope.ratediin ~ch county. It has
been designed to· consolidate job
service programs now offered
through several ·agencies, includ·
ing the Ohio Department of Devel·
opment, JTPA and CAA, and !he
OBES. all of which offer job train·
ing programs.
Under the Ohio Workforce
Strategic Plan, which .Meigs Coun·
ty has adopted, a single administrJ·
live entity - possibly the Depart·
menl of Human Services - will
administer the programs, increu·
·'iilg efflcien~ ..urd. eliminating the
duplication of job scrvic:cs.

God'a Temple or Pnlle
3t66S McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio'
Pastor: Wayne Baloolm
Services: Thurs. Nltcs 7:00 pm
New church No Sunday service established.

otfR!.-124

.........,,..._., .

By BRIAN J. REED

nmH Santlnel St.ff

full Gospel Churth oflhe U•ln1 Soilor
Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor. Je~ Morris ·
Assl. Pastor.~ : Jim Morris
Service~: Saturday 7:30p.m.

.... c-.11111 Clrordt

Vol. 34, No. 38

Meigs County adopts Ohio Option
for new job training programs

New Ufe VkiOI') Cearer
3773 Georaes Creek Rood. Gallipolis. OH
Poslor: Bill Stalcn
Sunduy Services - 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday. 7 p.m. &amp; YDUih 7 p.m.

...... CoMIIIIIIIy Clloaa

, ,,Suridly lliriirolr40;,•..

,

Worship- 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

s,...... M_

Cooh'llk Uallcd Melhadlil Parloh
Pas1or: Helen Kline
Cooi•Hie Churth
Ma1n &amp;,Fifth St.

Gallipolis· Middleport • Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant • November 14, 1999

COSI On Wheels inspires
would be scientists at
Green Elementary School

Oll'loa Tabema&lt;lo Churc•
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday SciMJol · 10 a.m.

1411 Bridaeman Sl., Syii&lt;Uoe
. a. •. Mike 'lboa)poon,~
Sunday School· 10 Lm.
Evenin&amp;. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Pas10r: Brian Hartness
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship . 11 a.m.

OUr Sa¥1our Lulhoru Churth
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pa5tor: Da~Jid Russell
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.
···~N SL·w.;~r·~;.;rii~;;:.~-.~r·.

Rtlokloa Ufe Churtb
SOON. 2nd Avo., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday Sd&gt;ool · 9:30 o.m.
Worship· 10:30 am
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

l'allll ValloJ Tobtrude Clrordt
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmtlt Rawson
Sunday Evcnin&amp; 7 p.m.
'!l'ursday S...ice • 7 p.m..

RadDe

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

EvcninM, • 7 p.m.

Middletort CooiomURII7 Chorth
51~ Pearl Sr., Middleport
Posror: Sam Ander1011
Sunday SchoollO a.m.
Evc:ninK ·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Eolll:.elorl
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sundoy School · 10 o.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship · 9:00a.m.
Su11day School - 10:00 a.m.

Sd•moPie Word orFallh
Pustor: David Daile~
Sunday School9:30 a.m.

Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday • 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.11.
Wednesday • 1 p.m.

Momln&amp;Star
Pastor: Dewaync Stutler
. Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship · \0 a.m.

tmes

Wedncsdl.ly Service . 7:30p.m.

PUIOI Ernie Weoaerd
Sunday tcrvkle,lO a.m.
W - y lfrvla!. 1 p.m.

Pastor: Ke11h Rader
Sunday School · 9: IS a.m.
Worshif • 10 a.m.
Youth FcUowsh1p, Sunday. 6 p.m.

•

Cainry llllllt Churth
Pom~roy Pike, Co. Rd.
P~:JIOr ; Rev. Blackwood
. Sun~t~y Sctluul · "1:30 a.m.
Worship IO:JO a.m .. 7:30p.m.

Appeur.c......
'Fuii·G-1 Chun:b'
Puton John .t P1ny Wide
1103 Second Ave. Muon
'
773-50t7
1·, Service time: Sund1y 10:30 a.m.
·.
Wednea&lt;lay 7 pm

PtaiiC..pel
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

New-to :ieblmOJid- 1

Pastor: Rev. Frtnklin Didlcns
Servia:: friday, 7 p.m.

47439 Reibel Rd.. Clteller
l'lllan: Re•.lltary ond llan&gt;ld Cook
Sunday s.m...: 10 a.m . .t 6 p.m.
Wednelday Servla!a • 7 p.m.

Sunday Scl\ool- 9:30a.m.
Worship . IO:JO a.m.

-'----Feature C·1

Of IIIIIVICIII

SeeA3

Feldt ffllowOip ~lot Chriol

Cliur clic~,

'Jianaa ~ Millloulet

Heath (Middleporl)
Pus10r: Vemagayc Sullivan

Btarwallow Rldae Chun:h or Christ
Paslor:Terry Stew art
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
wo ..hip . 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 6:30p.m.

Tuppen Plain C~urch of ChriJI
Instrumental
Wor!ihip Service · 9 a.m.
Communion -10 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:15 a.m.
Youth· S:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Oth er

with variety of programming

,.,...... lllllt Cllurdl
l:.elart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: Briin MaY
Sunday 5aool · 9:30 a.m.
Wanhip ·7:00p.m.
W - y Bible Study· 7:00p.m.

- -Suodaj'Sdlool·t0:30 a.11.
Momina Wollltip ·ll:t5 a.m.
.
Suotday S...la! • 6 p.M.
W - y Servlcoo • 7 p.m.

FonoiR..
Paslor: Bob RobinJOn
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Cal•ary PIJarim Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Olarles McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Worship • II a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

'

...._.,llllnl a,.cloofiMN•·
l'u!or: Mut MillOn

Pastor: Keith Roder
Sunday School . to a.m.
. Worship • 11 Lm.

Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main SUtet, Ru1land
·sunday Wonhip-10:00 a:m.
Sunday Servlco-7 p.m.

212 W. Main S1.
Mini sler: 01ulny Bias

Middleport Churclr or Chrill
Slh and Main
Pasaor: AI Harlson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:1S, 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
WtdncS(Jay Services· 7 p.m.

Assembly of God

Pia-

Hol1ness

Spom plant not••

50 fH,..

ship trustees, who declared an
emergency in Guyan this summer.
Jackson said Woodward has
located··farmers in the Plains states
willing to supply .olher producers
with hay, but transportation has
proven to be a problem.
As a result, Lutheran Social Ser·
vices has paid $1,700 per tractor·
trailer load to bring hay into Gallia
County, Jackson explained. The
agency is willing to continue local·
ing hay supplies, he added.
Jackson suggested that !hose in
the lransport business wanting to
help local fanners through the crisis
should contact Woodward.
"Anyone· in the trucking busi·
ness '!"ho is running empty from
!hose areas &lt;;an coordinate with
Social Services," he said.
Those interested can reach
Woodward at 740-838-5627, and by
cellular telephone at 740-581 ;4763.

Good Morning

1'orio-. Dlr,geM, front right, .nd Mlletlntl, Dtve Deem lncl Ben
:ori1~ Chllmplon It the the Tri.Sr.te Merchlng Bind Feltlval.

field coinmuder, and the :Wind Oct. 30 where Meip received a Sept. 2S, at River View on oa. 16,
and at Green Local' on Oct. 23
iuperioi rating.
instrumcntalisl)s.
·;
The fall. COJ!IJlCiition for the before going into the OMEA contest
The Huntin&amp;ton pprformuc:c fol·
lowed an outstanding sJtowinJ at the Maraude(Band began on Sept 18 at and the finale performance al the
Ohio Music Education Associllion Logan Elm, ud after that they sue· Td·State Festival.
Dingess has been band director at
State Fin~s held i• M.usill '9n ceasfully .f!l(xllpeled al Zanesville on
,.

. . ..

Wright,

Meigs High School for !he past 12
years. He is assisted by Dave Deem,
Ben Wright, Missy VanMeter, Chad
Dodson, and Ryan Baker.

Calewdars

C!&amp;7

C!uallleds

DJ.?

Comiq
Eclltorills

Iwn

AJog the RtvCr

Cl-8

A4

Obituaries

Bl-6

Sports

c 199\1 Ohio Vdky Prrbllllrirra Co.

,,

. •.

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