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ByrfheBen~

High: 40s; Low: 20.
Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 50s; Low: 20a

Ann shares best of columns including one with poem

readers have sent on -- my mailhox
was jammed'

Se,·cral of the most-often
requested ess&lt;Jys have appeared in

tht s space within the last year, such
a!'i " Dead at Sc\ c ntcc n." "Matunty,''

"To Remcmcher Me." "Gu lden
Rul es for Llvlll g... ·· Dogs Don' t
Have Soul s. On They, .. ''It was

Gtandlathe r's Btrthday,'' as well as
~:u lumn
n ~wsl~ tt ~: r~.

my

l. tmbastm g Chnstmas
and thl.! one that traJi ll ona\l y appears on New Year 's Day

Today. I pt omtscd to pnnt the
t:olurnn tl lat more l l',H.k rs hm.l saved
th .tn any other. Here 11 1s. ,t\ong with

one nl -the hundreds of letters I
J'CI..'C IVCJ al.:C DIIlpan y m g it .

Dear Ann Landers: I am sendmg you the l Oiumn that gave me the
couragl.! to "plant my own garden .. I

had been married for 20 years, and
was totally miserable. When I read
that essay, it made me realize that
the hfe I had been living was not
what I wanted or needed, and I was
the only one who could change it. It
helped me find the strength to leave
my empty marraige and alll\lC trappmgs that came with it -- a big
house, o Mercedes, fabulous jewelry, glamorous vacatiOns and a lot of
unhappiness
I moved out with my three bcauttful children. and although it was
dtfticuh , I learned that I had the
strength to make 11 on my own. It ts
now 13 years later, and now, I am
married to a wonderful man . We
have a modest life and two wonderful chtldren. who adore thetr three
step-stbltn gs from my f1rst marrmge.
This poem opened my eyes to ·
findin g happiness withm myself. It
was an mspiralion and a challenge . I

mean leaning

1

And company do esn 't niean
security.
And you begin to learn that ki sses arcn ' t contracts
And presents arcn ' t promises,

And you hegtn to accept your
defeats
With you head up and your eyes
open
With the grace of a woman . not
the gncf of a child ,
And you learn to huild all yow
roads on today
Because tomorrow's ground is
too uncertam lor plans .

And futures have a way of falling

Drugs are everywhere. They're
easy to gel, easy to use and even eas·
ier to gel hooked on. If you have
questions about drugs, you need Ann
Landers's booklet, "The Lowdown
on Dope." Send a self - addressed,
lung , business size evenlope and a
check or money order for $3.75 (th1 s
includes postage and handling) to:
Lowdown, c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11562, Chtcago, Ill. 60611 0562.
To find out about Ann Landers
and read her past columns. visit the
Creators Syndicate web page at
www.crcators.com

In an earlier column. I talked
about the Metgs County Dog Warden and the di ffi cult JOb he has.
It occ urred to me that despite my
and others' reassurances about the
commitment of the dog warden and

the \\ell -publicil ed improvement of
·the county dog pound, through
grants and support of individuals
and the county commissioners. some

people may prefer to fmd a home for
a stray on thc1r own .

Some very responsible citizens
want tu en sure that the antmal they
are keeptng wi II go to a home that
they have picked out.
What do you do tf you find a
stray dog or cal and you can keep
that anmwl tcmporanly until you
find JUSt the nght home''
First, check with your neighbors
to see if the ammal ts owned, then
put out nyers and a nottce in the
newspaper (these ads arc free) indtcaltng that you have found the animal , and give onl y a brief descript10n.

Ask for information that only the
owner would know. about markmgs

or the color of a collar. You can even

mislead the person and ask if the
color was green, for example. You
will wanllo have the ad run for more
than one day.
Now that you have detennined
that the owner is not out there, you
can proceed. In the best of all possi ble worlds, you would take the animal directly to the vet and get her or
him the basic vaccinations because you never know. You may
even want to gel this animal
neutered, for it is a lot easier to find
a home for a dog or cal who won't
be "liuermg" or creating liners. Do
your best to make sure the cal is litter-box trained and that the dog is
house trained, bathe your little
charge and then take a black and
while photo for the ad .
In the ad, with the photo, provide
information as to the breed or domi·
nanl breed for a dog and describe the
cal as best you can (long or shorthaired usually does it.), color,
approximate age, and weight.
Include your day and evening telephone numbers.
Take as much infonnalion over
the phone as you can get from each
callers. Questions to ask include:
"What do you want this dog for
- a pel ~r a guard dog'" If the latter, you might want to explain that

Lincoln impersonator coming ,to
Middleport

you intended this dog as a family
pet. . · .
.
"Wtll lhts antmal be an tnstde or
outside dog/cal'" That's a real
tipoff!
"Are there young children al
horneT' Watch out if they are three
years or under. That household probably has all it can handle already,
and children that young can be "3
problem with animals.
If the animal is not neutered, ask
if the person plans to breed the cal or
dog. If yes, you ' ve got your answer!
If you have a puppy, ask: "Will
someone be home during the day ?"
Ask if the person would be willing to sign a contract, saying that he.
or she will care for this animal and
will return the animal to you in the
event that the placement does not
work out well for either party.
You can draw up a short contracl
and include this, and other, tnfonnation. Compliance is the problem
here ; which is why it is important to
gel a pennanenl address and tclephone number.
Think ahead to what you would
be willing to do tf something were to
go wrong. Arc you the sort of person
who would actually go get the ant mal if you. discovered that she was
bemg miStreated'

ancestor who served in
force s of the Civil War is eligible to
he a member. Any woman needing

The regular meeting of Brooks·

Grant Camp No. 7 Sons of Unton
Veterans of the Ci vil War wtll be
held Thursday at the annex of Hope
Bapll sl Church on 570 Grant Street.
Mtddleporl
The dinner ts m honor of the dec laration of Thanksgiving as a natton al holiday by Abraham Lincoln and
the I 36th anm versary of the Geuysburg Address.
The mectmg wtll bcgtn at 6:30
p.m. wtth a Thanksgtving potluck
dinner. The camr wtll furni sh the
meal. ·
The program for the evening will
be presented by Robert lrwm of
Jackson. who portrays Pres. Lincoln.
He will be presenttng a program on
Lincoln 's life.
Work '" form a local chapter of
the Lad1cs of the Grand Anny of the
Republtc wtll be discussed. Any
woman age 12 or older with either a
direct, bl ood-related ancestor or the
brother of direct, blood-related

as ~ istan cc

m locating such an ances-

tor wtll be asststed. The chaner will
remain open until the January meetmg .
The dinner and meeting is open
to the publtc. For infonnation on
membership in the Ladies of the
G A.R. or for the Nov. 16 meeting
may call 992-7874.

.

Honored by Girl ,Scouts
REEDSVILLE
Melissa
Sm1lh, daughter of John and Teresa
Smith, Weston, W. Va. , formerly of
MELISSA SMITH
Reedsvtlle, has been awarded the
gold
award, the highest award given in plete the requirements for the award.
Melissa is the the granddaughter
girl scouting.
of
Elizabeth Smith and Dale and
Several friends and family memThelma
Smith, all of Reedsville.
bers were present for the ceremony
as Melissa became one of six girls in
Lewis County, W. Va. to ever
receive the award. h requires hours Local man's photOJiraphy on dis·
of hard work and dedication to com- . play

'

Community Calendar
MONDAY
ATH ENS- Route 33, Athens
to Darwin Citi zen s Advi sory
Commiue e, regular bi-weekly
meetin g. Monday, 4 to 6 p.m. at
the 0 .U Inn in Athens to review
the dra ft purpose and need d?" ument

RACIN E - Racine Village
Counc il. recessed meeting , Monday. 7 p m municipal building.
LETA RT - Letart Town ship
Trustees. Monday, 6 p.m. at the
office huilding .
TUESDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Informati onal meeting. Meigs County
Wres tling Club, Tuesd)ly. 6:30
p.m., Meigs High School. Open
to children five to 15 . Ray Willford , 74 2-ii03 fot information .
POMEROY

Lupu s/

Fibromyalgia Support Group,
Tuesday, 6:30 to 8 p.m. , cafeteria
at Veterans's Memorial Hospital ,
Pomeroy. Group from Athens to
carpool down . Those with either
disease and their families invi!ed.
For more infonnation, call 740593-2518.
POMEROY
Catholic
Wom en's Club, Sacred Hearl
Church, 7 p.m. Tuesday for Mass
to be followed by a meettng
POMEROY Immunizations offered Tuesday, 9 to II
a. m. and I to 3 p.m. at the Meigs
Multipurpose Center. Children to
he accompanied by parent/legal
guardian. Take child 's immumzation record.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Middl eport
Literary Club. 2 p.m Wednesday.
home of Gay Perrin . Bcrnkc

Carpenter to review "A Different
Kind of Christmas" by Alex
Haley.
THURSDAY
Rev ival ,
PORTLAND
Freedom
Gospel
Mission ,
Bashan and Stiversvtlle Road ,
Portland, Rev. Mark Winnell,
evangelist. Thursday through
Sunday. 7 p.m each evening.
Singers, the Bissclls, Thursday ;
Deanna Stewart, Friday; Jodie
Rice , Saturday; and Delivered
Sunday.
CHESTER - Ewings Chapter. Sons of the American Re volution, · Thursday, old Meigs
County Courthouse in Che ster.
Dinner by reservation only by
Tuesday. (dO p.llJ. made by call ing 992 -7874. Program at 7:30
p.m. with William Plants of Gal lipoli s, speaker. Dues payable .
Guests welcome .

To make. sure that you have the
nght potenltal ?wn~r, you could ask
tf that per~on ts wtlhng for you to
make a home check, before the antmal goes to the new home. Most
responsible people . will recognize
that you h~ve put Ume and money
mto thts antmal and are makmg sure
your "investment" will be happy.
Things to watch out for:
%JPeople who want the animal
as a gift for someone else.
%JPeople who are vague about
thei(intentions. We have l!J worry
about those who sell cats and dogs
for experimental · purposes, for
example.
.
%JPeople who are only Interested in black cats (parttcularly at Halloween when peopl~ have been
known to abuse, mutilated and ktll
cats in rituals, etc.)
Do the best you can, lo make sure
that this stray does not end up at the
pound, which is what you hoped to
avoid, or left lo fate far worse than
that.

By JIM FREEMAN
ton voted against the second rcadmg
The measures face one additional
service.
. Council briefly discussed the fea- at the Nov. I meeting. but was not reading before they can be approved.
Sentinel News Staff
, POMEROY - Pomeroy Village . sibility of placing a small levy on a present at Monday night's meeting.
Council unanimously approved
Council tentatively appointed a board fu.ture ballot to pay for cemetery Council Prcstdcnt John Musser, who the final reading of an ordinance
of trustees to oversee operations at maintenance. Currently the village was not present at the Nov. I meet- . granting a seasonal wage compensa·relics on donations and grave lot fees ing, voted Monday night in favor of tion to village employees.
Beech Grove Cemetery.
During open discussion, council
Council members and Mayor from family members for cemetery the second reading.
Council also reconsidered the sec- members discussed the recent paving
Frank Vaughan , responding. to citi- · 'upkeep. However,. Clerk Kathy
zens' complaints of unkempt grass Hysell pointed out that very little ond readin~ of a similar ordinance job and needed repairs to catch
granting salaried employees a 5 per- bastns. Hysell said the village wtll
and brush, has discussed on several -money is actually collected.
After rejecting earlier this month cent pay increase. The second read- .have to pay about $129,000 for the
occasions reestablishing the board to
. the second reading of an ordinance ing was given and approved, with ·paving work.
take care of the cemetery.
It was pointed out that the county
Vaughan presented the names of · granting a 5 percent raise to hourly Dillon again voting "no" and Wright
village
employees.
counctl
approved
abstaining.
_
·
highway
department is to put blackDon Mayer, Scott ·Walton and Bill
l~c
(eading
Monday
ni~hl
with
Coun.
.
Councilman
Larry
Wehrung,
who
·top
on
Pleasant
Ridge Road, perhaps
Young as prospective trustees. Coun·
c_
t
lman
Scott
D1llon
votmg
agams(
the
.
:
voted
against
granting
the
second
next
week.
cil approved the appointment and will
. . . . r&lt;Jading on Nov I, asked the motion
It was also noted that dcbris.froin
leave it up to the new qustees to . 1\lCasurc. . .
. Cc~unctlman . George Wn~hl ·. ~-reconsidered . He then voted in the old Sugar Run School nceds=to.be
establish - using existing ordi:
.
.hauled away due to rats. . .
nances - their tenns and length of ~bstalJlcd . Counctlwoman Gcn Wal- ·. tavor of the reading.

"For Children Only"
(16 years of age or younger)
Will he published
Thursday, Decemhe~ 23th
•
m

The Daily Sentinel

Nov. I regular meeltng and Nov. I0
special meeting;
' Clerk Kathy Hysell presented the
financial report for October as follows: general fund , $93,362.20; safety, $5,048.59; street, $5,696.98; state
was instructed 10 ohtain a more highway, $5,540.62; fire, $78 ,223.86;
~etailed estimate and rcpon hack to
cemetery,
$5,286.74;
water;
cnuncil with h1s lindings.
$71 ,715.54; sewer, $35,134.57; guar·
Mayor-elect John Blacllnar anty meter, $20,576.68; utility;
requested council approve the pur- $14,489.14; ovcnimc grant, $157.57;
chase of municipal government hand- perpetual care/cemetery. $7, 147.16;
books for council members and oth- cemetery endowment, $38,446.59;
er officers. Council approved the pur- police pension, $8 ,586.80; building
chase.
fund ,
$9,956.80;
recreation ,
In other business, council:
l.$1 ,232.90;
pcrmtss1vc
tax ,
• Renewed its membership in the · $17,625.77 ; law enforcement,
:Ohio Municipal Lea~ue for $555 ;
$3,458.91 ; COPS FAST grant, no
• Approved the minutes ·of the ·
(Continu~d on Page 3)
Fire Chief Chris Shank discussed
proposed renovations to the lire station, including new lighting. carpelmg. cetltngs aQd nthcr tmprovcmcnts
The work should cost bet ween
$10.000 and $11.400. Shank said. He

Committee ,hea.rs
·local: l_
ss.tie Two. :
project proposal$

-ONLY-

By BRIAN J. REED
This is the third consecutive year ·
Sentinel News Staff ·
that Syracuse has requested-funding
POMEROY - Members of for the project.
: ·
·Meigs County's Issue Two Local
County highway ·
PJanning Committee ranked Meigs
The County Highway Depanment
County's five proposed projects for has requested $371,339 in grant
Round 14 of the program,on Monday funding for the paving of three counaftcrnoon.
ty roads and the replacement of a
. Representatives of four ofthe five bridge.
·
applicants attended the meeting and
David Spencer of the department
made presentations to the commiuee, made a presenta,tion to the commitwho subsequently assigned leverage tee yesterday, explaining that the
points to each proposal and scnuhem paving of County Road 5 (BI;Idbury),
on to the district level.
CR 28 (Bradbury), and CR 36 (Short
The' meeting was held in the · Sumner), would be combinj:dwith the
o!J\~1\ Q( the couqty c.ommissioners rcplacement'pf Jl:.\ll.ia&amp;eon CR 20 in
following the board'$ rcgOinr meet.-. Be~foril Townshil'f' t~ :lll.ak~ . up· a
ing.
·
$501,810 project.
Proposals· from the Village of · Swnccr specifically nottd that CR
Syracuse, Village of Pomtr:oy, Coun-, 36 will serve an increased .traffic flow
ty Highway Department, the Village lllitlt thq pending closure of t~«:
of Mtddlcport and Tuppers "Rainbow Bridge'' at Chester. CR j6 .
Plains/Chester Water ·Dlstfict were 'will be the only nearby route rortra~­
rankcd in that order by ~secret bal- elcrs wishing to enter Chester from ·
lot vote of the commillee. ·
State Route 7.
·
That commiuce is made up of
A high lranic courit wa•·aJso cit- ·
Janet Howard. rcprcscnitng ' the cd on Locust Grove, which serves as '
Meigs County Commissioners: Ed a popular route from State·Route 71o
Durst. representing th~ county's 24X. h1r travelers as far away as
tnwnship trustees ; JoAnn Ea~s. rep- Racine. who usc the ro'u1c as·a short- · .
resenting the cou~ty's mayors: Man- cut ttl Route 7. Buses carrying stu-."

Per Picture
Prepaid
Pleaae enclose
· self-addressed, stamped
envelope to return
your photo

Parents' or
Grandparents Name

$5.00 Per Additional
Child In Picture

Entry Form

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Syracuse
·
Mony Wood. a mcmher of the ·
Syracuse Village Council. discussed
the village's prnposcd .paving project
The village has requested $49,854 in
Issue Two funding to assist, wjt~ a
$67.370 project to pa~c College
Road, and Founh and S1xth ,streets,
with 3 inches of asphalt.

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Sentinel

Lotteries

The Daily Sentinel

•
OHIO

111 'Court St.
·Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

w.YA.

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Pk:k 3: 4-3-3; Pick 4: 4-S-7-1
Buckeye 5: 2-8-IS-27-34

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~y

3; 3-0-2; ~y 4: ~3
o 1999 Ohio Volky Publithlna Co.
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Committee. Also plcfured
·
·
·
funded for'proj~ts in· tY
department
not · noted thartiU:distric1's highest-ranked'_. did not say why (or if) the department
years of the program, bill .. endorsed a proposal made
this 'project was a comhmcd project . and Engtnccr Boh Eason opposed
• said ,thlll
made "no apologie~." ·.,year, that would allow townships and beiwccn county, townships. and vii- · such a prnposal , which was made hy
. because ,the county's projects ~· nf'-.: vill.a gc' to apply WITH.the county in lagcs in Musktngum County.
·, the cnmmi&gt;Sioncrs earlier this year,
.tited all county residents, rather than · ·a·joint application. Apphcations sub- .·
Spencer replied by noting that vii- ·. hut was not acted upon .
residents. in only one vtllage. .
· iltittcd in that manner receive addi- . !ages and townships have the righ1lo
!The commi&gt;Sinners have mdiealWmgctt also asked why the cilun, · · tiona! leverage points, and Wingett make application on their own, but
(Continued on Page 3)

.,.,

. Shoemaker wants
more school money

Good Afternoon

0

C!:l

'·
•·

.
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.
By BRIAN J. REED
• Portland.'
financial insignificance to local gov-: ~the ll)ining and preserve the site.
sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Pioneer and em merit and the employm~nt· situa- . · In other business, Ashley noted
POMEROY :_ The Mcig&lt; Coun- Historical Society, along with groups tion in mining the land.
·that Dec. 14 is the 200th anniversary
ty ,Commissioners were asked to like the SA:R, have become active in · · According to Ashley, Civil War . .,f l}Jc death of Gcn George Washseck a Congressional investigation of a campaign to halt the mining of : historical sites arc among the _most ·. '.ington, and said that members of the
COLUMBUS (AP)- Sen. Mtkc Shoemaker says there arc two things
the Huntington District of the J).S.. · gravel atthe .silc oflhc Battle of Buff- popular tourist attractions in the .,· Sons_of the American Revolution will
that can make the state 's school huilding asststancc program bencr: more
Army Corps of Engineers during the , · ington lslan\1, Ohio's only Civil War ·.nation, and the groups involv~d in :·conduct a bell-ringing service in
money and less red tape.
bilard's regular meeting on Monday. · battlefield and one of only thtec bat-· preserving the site plan to develop a· · Washington's memory.
Echoing the concerns of nearly three dozen school superintendents who
Keith Ashley, representing the . tic sites in the North.
visitors center, museum and inter- · · Ashley a~k~d that the commistestified before the Ohio School Fac11ittcs Commission in Scptcmhcr, the
StJns of Union Veterans, requested
. Ashley said that statements made prctalion facility at the site, and .arc · sioncrs ring· the bell of the County
Bourneville Democrat told reporters Monday that he pl ans to introduce
the investigation into the way in by. the ·coinpliny during the penn it · even considering the devclopmcni of. Courthouse on the anniversary.
' legislation th~l would holh increase overSight of the commission and
which the district has handled permit . hcarin~~nx:es~arc false, and that the a historic river town in the Old Port- · Janet Howard presented a lencr : change lls priortlics.
from State Sen . Mike Shoemaker, D- · .
Among the changes sought by Shoemaker, a mcmher of the commisapplications filed by Shelly Matcri- . nnl~ . mtcrcst&lt; conSidered by the · land area .
als for its grovel mining·opi:rations at · Cofl!S du(ing that process arc tho.c nf . A~hlcy .' said that the Historical . 9ournc~illc, and petitions frol)l rcsision himself:
~hclly Materials.
.
.' Society is now pursuing grant funds dents in th~ Swtck Road and Lasht!r ·
; Requiring an audit of the commission to dctenninc whether it is oper: · ~c Kistrirical Scx:icty and , the · for landp~rc,hases, but, in the mean- R-qa? commun1ty, requesttng wate{ ·. ating efficiently.
.
B~!fifi.\!IOn· l~l~d BaulefieltJ Preser- _' ttmc. mmmg ha~ he gun, and the
scrytcc for over 30 households in.thc ·· ·. · •,Eiimttiating a requtrcmentthat school districts hire construction manv~lt~ Foundation ha~e foug~tto halt groups have no financtal resources to
area.
agers to oversee thctr buildtng projects. Making construction managers
tfic t~suancc ·. ,f mt~t~g- penmts to cxerc~sc thctr . nght 1~ cmmcnt
The area would likely be served
optional could save districts millions. he said.
,Shelly·by the Ohto Dtvtslon of Mtncs doll!!ltn_at tht_s ttme . .
i by the Leadtng Creek Conservancy
• Expanding a program that rctmburscs districb later if they raise their
;~nd Rcdama.uon: gotng so Ia~ as the
Ashley satd that he left the corps t District, and the commissioners
own money for building projects before they arc eltgibl ~ for stale aid.
ltlc an appeal m the Court ol Com- has con~tstcntly demonstrated sym- agreed to encourage and fund, if pos• Setting aside $100 million annually for the state's etght, large urban
I Section • 10 Pages
mnn Pleas.
. .
pathy with Shelly Matcnals, and had I siblc, an extension of water lines to
d1stncts. Each would he cligihle for up to $12.5 mtllion , with a 50 perThe groups have mamtatncd that turned a deaf car to the arguments ol I serve the community.
cent local match required .
10
Calendar
gravel
by
the
mtmng
company
wtll
·prescrvauomsls.
The
board
agreed
to
request
a
, Tacking an extra $250 million a year to the $300 million Gov. Bob
6-8
Classifieds
destro~ the historicai intcgnty of the
. "The Corps ofEnginee~s is in bed . "user fcc" in the amount of $610 per
Taft has already promised to seck from lawmakers to give wealthier dts9
Comics
hauleflcld. a potnl reiterated by Ash- with t~ts company. Were l~stng , employee for departments not in the
tricts access to huilding aid sooner than they would otherwi se have it.
2
Editorials
Icy ,rcsterday. .
everythmg, and ~~ey'rc takmg .~t aU general fund , which arc members of
Taft has proj&gt;oscd a $10.2 hi Ilion plan to funnel construction aid to every
. . Yo.u cannot mtcrp~l a battlefield out ofthe ~ounty, Ashley satd. Thts ' the county's self-funded health ins'urschool district in the slate withm 12 years. But hccausc the program is
3
1f tts ·lay ts changed. Ashley satd, battlefield 1s the most tmponant thmg : ancc group. Those offices, which
based on property wealth. some districts would have to wait years for help
'
4&amp;5
• Sports
noting' that remains of soldiers could in this county."
,
·include the Tuberculosis office, the
from the slate.
3
Weather
be_ disturbed and unnoticed by the
Ashley_said that he had been in Soil and Water Conservation District
Randy Fischer, the commission's' c.ccutivc director, said funding lev-

....

JonBenet's
parents
give interview to station

presented as one of scvilr~llcuers in
supportllf the county's application.
Wingett. who serve&amp; as grant
adm.ini•trator for Syracuse, asRed
several questions rclatin~ to the co,u~ty's application. When Wingett ask.ed
how ma,ny years the countts highway depanment had received funding,. Spencer noted that the depart-

Commissioners
asked. to seek inves-.i-gation
.

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mittee members, and Myron OuJtield, Sandy lanlterelli and Becky
Hayes of Floyd Browne Aasociates, who represented the Village

are
~~=u~.~~~Q~mhc&amp; ~s~m~m~~~~d~~ee~l~d~w~~~g~M~oo~d~a~r~·~~a~~~~~~~~~~~~~o~.t~M;I;d;~~e~~;n;·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~;

-

z~
=
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PRESENTS PROPOSAL~~:~~~:!::~:~~:
ty Highway Depaitment 1!flia'

ning Roush, representing the high- dents lrom Eastern Local Seheoll)is- ·
way department : and Robert Wingett tnct also usc the road. and a letter

..=
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Cl)

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f

Single Copy- 35 cent s

Pomeroy· tentatively estab.l ishes cemetery board

Our special page( s)

Vl

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)- The
parents of JonBenet Ramsey resent
the Colorado governor and others
who say the couple acted suspiciously after their 6-year-old daughter was
killed in 1996.
In an interview with WSMV-TV
to be aired over several nights slarttng Monday, John Ramsey said he
was offended by the criticism.
"When you've lost a child, nolh·
ing else matters . ... You're rendered
as low as you can possibly be without
dying," h~ said. "Our focus was laying JonBenel to rest properly and
that 's all that mattered during that
time .
The ·Ramscys, who haven' t spoken publtcly in more than a y'l!ar.
gave the interview with the local televiSion station to promote their "new
book , tentatively titled "The Death of
Innocence." It is due out in March.
"I don't know who will want to ·
read it, but if they do, it's going to be
there as best we can portray what
we' ve been through in two and a half
years," said Patsy Ramsey. ""'

-Page5;

Hometown Newspaper .

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 112

(Alden Waitt enjoys hearing
from her readers who have questions and comments about pet
care and humane issues. Readers
may address their comments to
her, dq The Daily Sentinel.)

Patrick
son of Freda
Edwards of Middleport and the late
Charles Edwards, is on display at the
Rennolds Art Gallery at St. Catherine's School in Richmond, Va.
Edwards was selected as one of
I 0 arltsls whose work is being featured in the Gallery's visual arts
c&lt;hibitions this year. His photos in
the exhibition· which opened today
will remain on display through Dec.
16 They are called "Photography
Retrospective."
A gradua(e of Middleport High
School, Edwards trained to become
a physical therapist before turning to
commercial photography. He died in
1992 at the height of his career.
One his two sons, Grant, completed a class in photography at St.
Catherine's earlier this year and
placed second in the National Arts
Program Teen An Show at the Galleries of the Carillon in Byrd Park,
Richmond. His picture was titled
"Brothers", an exposure of himself
and his 14-yea~-old brother, Ross.

.l

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e
Meigs County's

Finding a good home for a stray takes planning
By Alden WaiH, President
Meigs County Humane Sociely

New England Pabiots

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hope you will print it again for others who are back there, where I once
was. -- CONTENTED NOW IN
KANSAS CITY, KAN .

Dear Readers : I cannot possibley repnnt all the poems, essays and
"favorite columns" that my gracutos

Where does Bush stand?, Page 2
Southern honors fall athletes, Page 4
·Best of columns~Part 2, Page 6

Today: Sunny

PICTURE YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE ...

down in midnight.
After a while, you learn
That even the sunshine burns if .
you getloo inuch.
So you plant your won garden
and decorate your own soul,
Instead of waiting for someone to
After A While
bring you flowers
And you learn that you really can
By · Veronica A Shoffstall
After a while , you learn the sub- endure ...
That you really are strong.
tle difference
And you really have worth.
Between holding a hand and
And you learn and learn .. .
chaining a soul,
With every goodbye you learn.
And you learn that love doesn't

Nov.1(i~ 1-999

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Tuesd·ay

Monday, November 15, 1919 '

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page10 • The Dally Sentinel

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I

mmtng proc~ss.
Ashley,satd th~ eanh has al~eady
been moved an~ pt~ed on a poruon of
1~ 486.4Lacre sue m Lebanon Townshtp.
Ashley asked the commissioners
to consider the many bcnefjts of preserving ~ battlefield, including .the
preservation of farmland, tl)e tounsm
potcntial of the battlefield, and the

contact wtth U.~. Rep. Ted Stnck- · and the Department of 1-fuman Scrland, D-Lucasvtlle, and Rep. John vices, have been asked for the fcc in
Ka~t_ch, R-Columbus: abo~t the pos- order to remedy a continuing deficit
s_tb1ltty of a Congresstonaltnvcsu~a- in the fund.
Uon, and satd that Kastch, m parttcHoward said that the departments
ular, had expressed an interest in the can expect a similar fee next year, and
issu~.
:any subsequent year that the selfHe said that he would be willing ·funded program is in place.
to meet with legislators and Gov. Bob
· The board also;
Taft, !f needed, in an attempt to halt
(Continued oo Page 3}

~1

cis were up to Taft and the Legislature.
· Some of the other problems, though, Ftscher attributed to unf~reseen
circumstances on mdividual projects and the speed at which the commission was set up.
The 2-ycar-old commission has gone from a four-person .operation 10
a staff of 24, he said.
"There arc some growing pains," Fischer conl:edcd. "We had to !cam
on the job. ·
·
"We would welcome any constructive criticism."
'

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Comm6ntarr_

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TUIIdi~NO~ber18,1818

I,..

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1Uesday,Novembtf18: 1999

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-112·21111• Fax: 112-2157

Community Newspaper Holdlnga, Inc.
CHARLES W. GOVEY
Publlahtr
CHAALEN£ HOEFLICH
Gener8l MIIIIQW

DIAtlE IIILL
Controller

boll--.
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Ill COI"f St,

Washington Yesterday:

Disaster's aftermath
pleasant for president ·
By LAWRENCE L KNUTSON
Aaeoclatecl Preaa Writer
WASHINGTON- On a late wmter afternoon m 1844.a gtant cannon
named "Pea.oemaker" exploded on the deck of the Navy steam fngate Pnnce
ton and ktlled the secretary of state and the Navy's ctvthan chtef
The dtsaster JOlted the young rcpubhc But not all of the consequences
were tragtc
On board the newly launched Prmceton were Prestdent John Tyler and
400 guests representing the capual s socKJI and pol meal elue They mclud
ed Cabmet members senators, representatives, sentor Navy officers soctal
leaders, foretgn envoys, thctr wtves and the nation s most celebrated woman,
former first lady Dolley Madtson
Tyler, at 54 was a recent wtdowcr and one of hts guests was a much
younger woman who had both caught hts eye and turned hts head She was
24-year-old Juha Gardmcr accompanted on the Prmceton by her father
wealthy New Yorker Davtd Gardmcr
She had recently reJected the prestdcnt's proposal of marnage He had
hopes she would reconstdcr
The weather on Feb 28, 1844 was pleasant ' almost a summer sky
someone called 11 as the Pnnccton left tis berth at Alcxandna Va and
steamed down the Potomac toward Mount Vernon
Throughout the mornmg Navy officers kept thctr guests cntcrtatncd by
test-ltnng the new Peacemaker a I~ ton monster satd to be the world s largest
nav.11 gun It ltrcd 225-pnund tron cannonhalls whtch sktpped and bound
ed downnver
In the alternoon the shtp turned hack toward the capital At 'p m 11 was
oil Fun Washmgton on the Maryland shore when the request came to load
.md hrc the Peacemaker JUst one more time
By thts tlmc most passengers mcludtng the prestdcnt and Julia Gardtner
were chatting l&gt;clow deck
At least one htgh-rankmg passenger walked away moments l&gt;clore the can
non was hrcd

Though I am secretary nl war I am alratd ol these htg guns Wtlham
W1lkms was he.trd to say
Wtlkms had more to fear than he knew
When Pc.tccmakcr was It red the hreach burst A large fragment nl jagged
metal hun led hack wards tnto the knot ol spectators ktlhng ctght
The casualty Its! tndudcd Secretary ol State Abel P Upshur Na' y Sec
retary Thomas W Gtlmer two other government olfi&lt;tals and Julta Gardtnet s
lather
When the shtp reached Alexandfia. Prestdcnt Tyler scooped up the dts
traught Mtss Gardmer tn hts arms and earned her across a gangplank to anoth
cr vessel
More than 40 years later she descnhcd the scene to JOUrnahst Nelly Bly
1 famted and dtd not revtve unul someone was carrymg me off the boat,
and I struggled so that I almost knocked us both off the gangplank" mto the
tcy water
Funerals for four of the dead, mcludmg Upshur and Gtlmer, were conducted m 1hc East Room of the Whttc House
In the aftermath of the Peacemaker cxploston the Navy hastened to
tmprovc lis system for assunng the qualuy of us ordnance
And the May-December romance between the New York hetrcss and the
prestdcnt of the Unned States took wmg They became secretly engaged In
June after eludmg reporters they exchanged vows m a pnvatc ceremony m
Manhauan
Wtth her new husbands presidency approachmg tiS end Julta Gardmer
Tyler launched an ctght-month whtrl a.s first lady that !ell many people gas(}mg
'Ltfc at the Whtte House had suddenly never seemed mcmcr htstonan Wilham Scale reports tn The Prestdent s House hts htstory of the
nauon's prestdcnttal famthcs "The new Mrs Tyler hkcd to stng and dance
she hkcd luncheons monlmg crutscs on the nvcr and fancy dress balls that
laslcd until late hours "
One ball consumed I 000 candles and 96 boules of champagne At anoth
cr, Mrs Tyler mtroduced the polka whtch ovcrntght altered the funerary
rcputatton of the East Room ' and qutckly became a national rage , Seale

By MORTON KONDRACKE
The funous fight between Dcmocrattc prestdenttal candtdates AI Gore
and Btl! Bradley over health care rats
es the question Where ts GOP frontrunner George W Bush?
The answer ts that Bush advtsers
are workmg on proposals to help the
umnsured pauents nghts Medtcare
and medtcal research but we aren t
hkely to sec them unttl next year
One advtser satd Bush's schedule
was too clogged - wnh hts maJor
foretgn pohcy speech next week and
hts economtc/tax plan commg tn
December - to permtt an early fo r
ay mto health pohcy
There are nsks both to wattmg and
to gomg early Polls show that health
tssues have leapt to the top of the
nauonal agenda By wallmg Bush
looks to be out of the actton More
over some Bush pohttcal advtsers
thmk the Texas governor s record on
health care ts so weak that he has to
un\Ctl some prpposals soon to show
he cares about the ISsue
About one quarter of all Texans
Jack health InSUrance one of the
htghes t rates m the nation and Bush
has done hule about 11 He even
rcststcd cxpandmg the Chtldrcn s
Health Insurance Program unttl
Democrats lotccd h1m to do so
Aga1nst tho se ,lrguments lm
speakmg out soon one health advts
cr says Bush ought to wa11 because
hts plans for the unmsurcd and
Mcdtcare cet1amly Will be comrarcd
unfavorably to Gores and Bradley s
whtch promtsc to cover more people
and provtdc nchcr bcncftts
One alternate strategy ts for Bush
to unvctl part ofhts program thts year
- callmg lor doubhng the mcdtcal
research budget over hvc years
whtch he s sa td to Javor - and leave
the rest for next year
Netther Bradley nor Gore has
come out for doubhng research so
Bush could beat them at least on that
score What 's more Bush would be
endorsmg a goal the Republican
Congress has already begun achtcv
mg
Gore and Bradley arc at war over
plans for the unmsurcd and Mcdtcare
that wtll cost somewhere between
$30 btlhon and $100 btlhon a year,
dcpendmg on who's esttmatmg
Bush's plans arc hkcly to cost less
although Bush atdes clatm they wtll
be beuer destgncd and contam far
more market based reform than the
Democrats arc proposmg

POMEROY - The followmg
land transfers were recorded recently m the office of Metgs County
Recorder Judy King
Deed, Sharon K Riffle to Mark E
and Teresa A Davts, Pomeroy
parcels,
Deed, Douglas E and Lon R
Warden to Mtchael D and Mtchelle
L Evans, Sulton parcel,
Deed, Kathryn Evans and Norman
J Evans to Earl Phelps, Lebanon,
Deed, Patrtcta Phllhp Chauvm
and Paul Chauvm to Patncta J and
Robert M Holmes, Sctpto,
Deed, Mtchael C and Carne A
Kennedy to Raymond L and Megan
Andrews, Pomeroy parcel
Easement, Harold and Lynn S
Brown to Elmwood Terrace LTD,
Rae me,
Deed, Gary and Aosste Dtll to
John and Kathy R1ley, Chester,
Deed Larry E Klem to James A
Jt and Juhe L Wtll Pomeroy
parcels,
Deed, Ehzabeth J Hood to DenZil L and Barbara J Welsh Bedford
Shcnfrs deed Brady Huffman Jr
Rohtn L Nance to Home NatiOnal
Bank Letart,
Deed Ronda E Speelman to

By JOSEPH PERKINS
Way back m 1983 I was a summer tntern at The Wall Street Journal
One ot my asstgnmcnts was to tntervtew a Scarsdale N Y bus mess man
who had opened a home computer
store
He was a former IBM executive
who had taken early rettrcment He
was convmced that every household
tn Amenca would eventually own a
computer A car m every garage a
chtcken m every pot, a computer m
every home office
Well, he sold a few home computers But not nearly as many as he
expected Because tn 1983, two year~
alter IBM Introduced Its first personal
computer most Amcncans could not
sec enough obvtous uses tor a PC to
JUStify such a purchase (not even the
well-educated afllucnt rcstdents ot
Scarsdale)
But a wondrous development llKlk
place dunng the fall of 19R~ that
would eventually hrmg personal
computing home to the mas!\cs Fnr

'N11w they cannot say I am a prcstdcnt Wtthout a party, Tyler qutpped
At Juha Tyler's request the Manne Band began to play Hat! to the Chtcf"
whenever the prestdent entered the room at a pubhc event a custom that sttll
endures
She 11111k to heart advtee from her mother Be a pohttctan and look deeply
mto the aftatrs of state
The lirst lady adopted her hushand s crusade to make the Repuhhc ol Texas

th.u ts when a small X yc.11 old
soltw.llc company outol Bellevue
Wtsh Introduced two new products
- Mtcrosot I Wm d and Mtcrosolt

.1 ~tate

'm the

jToday in history
: By The Alloclatecl Preaa
• Today ts Tuesday, Nov 16 the 320th day of 1999 There are 45 days left
: ~n the year
Today 's Htghhght m Htstory
On Nov 16 1959, the Rodgers and Hammerstctn mustcal • The Sound
of Mustc' opened on Broadway
On thts date
In 1776, Brtttsh troops captured Fort Washtnglon dunng the Amencan
Revolutton
In 1864 Umon Gcn Wilham T Sherman and hts troops began then
'March to the Sea" dunng the Ctvtl War
In 188S, Canadtan rebel Louts Rtel was executed for htgh treason
In 1907, Oklahoma became the 46th state of the unton
In 1933, lhe Untied States and the Sovtet Unton established dtplomattc
rclauons
In 1961, House Speaker Samuel T Rayburn dted m Bonham, Texas, he
had served as speaker stnce 1940 except for two terms
In 1966, Dr Samuel H Sheppard was acqumed m ht~ second tnal of
ch111Je5 he murdeR&lt;! hts pregnant wtfe, Manlyn, tn 19S4
In 1973, Sky lab ID CIKIYtng a c.ew of three astronauts, was launched from
;tape Canaveral, Fla.. on 1111ll+day mtsston
• In 1973, President Ntxon stgned the Alaska Ptpehne·measufe mto law
In 1982, a contract agm:mcnt was announced m the 57th day of a stnke
by Nattonal Football Leap players

ees but none to mdiVIduals who buy
thetr own msurance Bush has not
dectded, though, that tax credtts for
mdtvtduals are the way to go
A means tested tax break ltke
Bradley's say Bush rudes, would dts
courage workers from earnmg more
money So Bush ts constdenng a new
tdea to provtde block grants to states
that encourage msurance compames
to offer lower cost pohctes to the
umnsured
Both Gore and Bradley hkely
wtll cnttctze Bush - as Bradley cnttctzes Gore - for bemg too 'mere
mental " Bush atdcs say that both
Gore s and Bradley's plans are too
government-dommated and mcffi
CICnt
Bush atdes say he wtll offer health
reform m morsel s btg enough for
the Amen can pub he to chew ' rather
than overhauls such as those proposed by Prc,dent Chnton m 1994
whtch the public ICJCctcd
On Mcdtcare Bush lavors the
approach taken by the co chamncn ot
the Btparttsan Medtcarc CommiSSIOn
-Sen John Breaux D La and Rep
Btll Thomas R Cahf - to help
scntors buy pnv,nc health msurancc
and pnmdc .1 prcscnpuon drug hen-

~lfR.

etu tor those wuh low mcomcs
Bradley and Gore both want to provtde drug benefus tor all scntoh,
though Bradley s method ts more
generous
Mcanllmc on pattcnts nghts
Bradley and Gore both favor the
House passed Norwood-Dmgell btll
that allows patients to sue thctr health
pl an when servtccs arc dented
Bush stgned a btlltn Texas that ts
hkc the Rcpubltcan alternative spor
sored by Reps Tom Coburn, R Okla ,
and John Shadegg R-Anz, that
allows sutls only after admmtstrattve
rcvtew and hmtts damage awards
Bush s approach to health care
seems tn kcepmg with hts overall
theme of compassiOnate conservausm It deals with all the tssues
Democrats arc ratsmg - from the
unmsured through pat tents nghts but less cxpcnstvely and through pnvatc-markct mcchan1sms
The Bush approach probably wtll
work tn a general clectton campatgn,
but he can t wan joo long bct ore
starttng to sell II
(Morton Kondracke Is execullve
editor of Roll Call, the newspaper
of Capitol Htll )

(Continued from Page 1)
ed that they mtcnd to allow townshtps
and vtllagcs to JOIR together for a
htghcr rankmg project next year)
Wtngcn also notctl that the rest
dents from throughout the county
also benefit Iron\ pavmg proJects m
vtllages and townshtps and objected
to the county s conducting a traltic
countt~ Syracuse over the weekend
Wtthout authonzattOn from vtll.tgc
olftctals
Is 11 wm at any cost lor your
department' Wmgeu asked Spencer
Also dunng Spencers prcscnta
lion Durst satd that he objected to
peltltons whtch were placed tn van
ous communtltcs m suppot1 of the
county proJect whtch Durst satd
retnforccd tnsmuallons that he dtd not
support county htghway bsuc Two
applications
Spencer satd that Durst has m the
past, demonstrated that he does not
support county proJects, an allega
uon that Durst dented yesterday
Whtlc makmg hts presentatton,
Spencer warned the commtsstoners
that rankmg other local proJects
above the htghway department's,
whtch ts the county's htghest ranked
proJect at thts potnt, could Jeopardtze
all of the proJects' chances for fund
mg
Middleport
Becky Hayes of the engmeenng
firm Aoyd Browne Assoctatcs presented Mtddlcpon's proposed apphcatton to the commlllee Mtddlepon's
project, ranked #54 m the dtstnct,
requests $400,000 for a total prOJCCI
of $724,168 The funds would be
used to asstst wnh the upgradmg of
the vtllagc's dry weather sewerage
ovcrnows and sewerage hfl stattons
Hayes noted that the v1llage has
recctved a number of mandates from
the EPA and that other fundmg IS
hemg sought Ill contmue these
Improvements and to tmprovc the VIllage's drmkmg water wells also
Bccau~c the proposal has ranked
so low diStnct-wtdc (mamly due to

HOW MUCH

IS AN OUNCE

'fl/9
stahler@fuse net

" 115 aNI.lNNIIII ,_.

Wmt.lows
MH.:wsolt Wmd Wd'i hghl ycar!'i

.1he.1d ol every other sumlar product
TlMrk~,;t

Anti Wmc.low11

w~t!'i ~1

qu.tnlum tmprov~.: mcnt upon the
MS/DOS 11pcr 111ng system lwhtdt
Mtuosolt llltgmally dc,cloped lo1
IBM PCs) hcc.lUsc II gave users the

OF PREVENTIOW?!

lhthty to wm k Wtlh sc\CIal pwgr.1ms

the s.unc tunc .md eastly swttch
he tween them wuhout h.wmg to quu
tnd rcstall tndl\ tdual apphcattons
Mtctosoh s cuntnbutton to the
exponcnttal gro\\th IR personal com
putmg over the past 16 years cannot
he undcrcstunatcd For 11 ts because
the company that Btlt Gates cofounded wtth Paul Allen m 1975 created software that made personal
computers more uscr-fnendly to the
non-gcck populatton that the percentage ul Amcncan households
hoastmg computers mcreascd from a
mere 8 m 1984 to 43 m 1998
So what ts the reward that Gates
and company recetved trom thetr
government for leadmg the masses of
Amcncans mto the mformatton age,
where surfmg the Internet correspondmg vta e mat! and shoppmg
onhne arc as easy as usmg the
mtcrowave or the VCR?
The mother ol all antttrust sutls
Indeed, U S Dtstnct Court Judge
Thomas Penhcld Jackson recently
tssued ' hndmgs of fact ' that
declared Mtcrosoft a predatory
monopolist, and stated that the soft
ware ltrm engages m busmcss prac-

.11

IICCS InJUriOUS to competing comp,l
ntes and harm lui to consumers
The Justtcc Department '" wcll.ts
19 state auorncys general who Jnmcd
the federal government as pl.untllts
agamst Mtcrosoh behcvc th,u G.llcs
and company ought to he scvctcly
punt shed
We arc now 10

ll

pns1110n to get

thctr compamcs enjoyed tor varymg
pcnods of ltmc, the same kmd ol
market dommatton that Gates and
Mtcrnsoft enJOY tdd.ty And hardly
anyone save tor mayhc Judge Jack
son would dare say that Amcncan
consumers were somehow harmed hy
the mnovattons th,u Ford and EdiSon
and Bell hrnught to the marketplace
And so 11 ts wnh Gates and
Mtuosolt Whtle the Ju stice Depart
mcnt s trusthusters and the state
.morneys genctal m.unt.lln that the

a rathcrilran~.tllc remedy -atd New
York Auorncy Gener.tl Elhot Spitzer
almost sahvatlng .11 the th11ught ol
hrcakmg up Mu.: ro,oh Jntn sm,tlkt
compantes ( B.1hy Btlls '"they rc nalton s lOOiriUmcrs h,lVC somehow
already betng rei erred to ,m .tlluswn been h.mncd h) Mtcrosolt- a key
to the court ordered hrc.tkup 11l ~.:omhuon m hndmg a cmnp my m
AT&amp;T IR 19R4) or lorctn~ M~erosoh vthl.ttlon ot federal .tntllrustl,,wsto somehow shun: Wmd~1ws (wh~eh t:nn'iumcrs thcm,chcs hcg to d11lcr
ts mstallcd tn more th.m ~~ pc~ecnt
Indeed tn ,, new Gallup Poll 1.1~
of the worlds computers I wtth lis en 111 the w~1kc ol Judge J.u.:kition ''
soh ware nv,tls
t&lt;ccnt lmdmgs ol l.tct two thuds nt
But why should G.ttcs ,md AmciU.:,tnlri CX[li CS)iCd .l l.lvor.th(c
Mtcrnsoft be punt shed lor tb.:tr tnn&lt;&gt; vtcw ol Mtcrosolt 1\mong cumpu\
vat ton lor thctr 'iU~.:q;s'i 1
~.: r UM:rs more tlhtn tlucc qu~trtcPs
It ts not unltke pumshmg Henry VICV.cd the sohw trc l:omp.tny l.worFord and Ford Motor Company for thly
So Judge J.tckson the Justt~e
bnngmg the automobtlc to the massDcp
llllliCnt and the st.lle .lltornc)'s
es Or Thoma.' Edtson and Edtson
genet
11 ought to stop ptctendmg that
Elcctnc Ltght Ci&gt;mpany lor replacmg
they
.nc
somehow .tcltng on hch.tll •II
otl lamps and natural gas lanterns m
the 1\mcnc.m public I he pnmary
the natiOn's homes, offtcc. and lac
tones Or Alexander Graham Bell hcnela.: MIIc'i ol the govcrnrncnl s
and Bell Telephone Company tor kg.tl Jlh td .tg,unst M1croso1t .trc tls
enabhng Amencans to talk Wtth each c nv1ous ~.: ornputcr mUusll y nvals
(Joseph Perktns Is a columnlsl
other over wtrcs
Each one of these vts10nancs and tor The San Otego Union-Tribune)

you dtdn't need to scratch the Ahcrcrombtc and Fuch veneer too deeply
to find whole nctghborhoods of twiSted stckos
In "Amcncan Beauty. 'a normalsecmmg couple and thctr teen age
daughter hvc separate, tsolated lives
tn a perfect house where the kuchcn
counlertops shtnc like mtrrors and the
mother's prunmg shears match her
gardenmg clogs The parents arc
self-mvolvcd shallow and mtscrable On hts way to work the husband curls up m the back scat of the
family 's Mercedes SUV- hts controlhng, soctal chmbmg wtfo and
contemptuous daughter hog the front
seats- and says to htmself, ' I know
I dtdn' l always feel lhts sedated"
Next door lives a btgoted former
Manne colonel wnh 11. blank-e:ted
wtfe who ~ms to have had a lobpt
omy They locked thctr teen age sqn,
Rtcky tn a mcntalmstnutton for two
years for smoktng martjuana, though
he clearly ts the most grounded, sen-

Published every afternoon Monday through
Fnday Ill Coon St Pomeroy Ohto by the
Oh10 Valley Pubh~htng Company Second class
postage patd at Pomeroy Ohto
Member. The Auoc~~oted Press and the Otuo
Newsp~ptr A»octiiiOA

P01tmastcr: Send addrus corredtons to The
O:uly Senttnel, Ill Cour1 St, Pomeroy Oh1o
4'769

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C•rricr or Motor Route
One Week
.S:! 00
One Month

l

S8 70

OneYeu
..
SID400
StNCLE COPV PRICE
Datly
,
..
3S Cents
Subscnbers not desenaa to pay Ihe. camer may
remtl m advance dtrect to The Dilly Semmel on
a thlft s1x or 12 month bu11 Cred1t w11l be
gtven earner each week
No subsCnpttort by mat! permmed tn arcu
where home earner aervtc:t ts available
Publisher rtKr\'es 1M ngltt to adJUSI rates dur

1ng the subscnpttoo penod Subscrtptaoo rate
chanses may De trnplcmented by changtng the
subscr~ton

MAILSUISCRtmON
looldeMolpCCMOnO,
11 W..b
.Sl7 JO
26 Wceb
J~3 82
Sl W..b
_
J lllH6
Rata O.llldc Melp C...17
13 Weeks ..
J29 2.~
26 Yheb
.$56.68
Sl Weeu ·.Slll9 12

c1cnl

Reader Services
C01'1'8Ctlon Polley
O•r ••• cvou111 • ollllorln Is to be

-uroto. If fOI kaow of U Ornr .. I
story, CIR .-e 1tw11110m II (740) 99Z·
2155. Wt wiU tkck fOOr loftntadotl

.... ••ke ......- II

WIR'IIItd

Newe Department•
Tbt ••I• •••ber ._ 1192-~155. Dopart•ent n:ttadaiJ an:
Gonerol MIH~&lt;t. ,, .. ,,,,,,, bL 1101

11m•• _

_ _ _ _ ExL 1102
or ExL 1106

au. 8erviCea
.4dnrtlolooc.,.• , ---- , ·--· __ .ExL 1104
Clrat~~~~oa .. .. , _. __ .. ·--_ .ExL 1103
1

•

PAwTuCKET, R I - V Evelyn Dobbtns, 96, Pawtucket, R I, dted Sat
urday, Nov 13 1999 at the Elmhurst Extended Care Facthty m Provtden&lt;ll:
She was born m Conrad Run m Roane County, W Va , daughter of~
late John B ana Jeanene Morgan Longsworth A restdent of Pawtucket st~
19SO she was a teacher m West Vtrgmta and Oh10 and a member of the Pawtucket Congregational Church She W!IS also a member of the Memonal H~pnal of Rhode Island Auxthary
:
She ts surv tved by her husband Charles A Dobbms a daughter, Mildred
D Conlon of West Hanford Conn a son, Robert C Dobbms of Pawtucket a stster Esther West of Racme two brothers Ernest Longsworth bf
Charlestown, WVa and Thome Longsworth ofWtchtta Kan and stx grarUIchtldren and 10 great grandchtldren
Servtces were held today, Tuesday Nov 16 1999 at 9 am at the 0 W
Bellows &amp; Son Mortuary m Pawtucket, and at I0 a m at the Pawtucket Coitgregattonal Church Bunal was m the Swan Pomt Cemetery
'
•
•

Farie V. Kennedy

•
•

MIDDLEPORT- Fane V Kennedy Mtddlcpon dted Saturday Nov 1~.
1999 m the Overbrook Center m Mtddleport
•
A former teacher m Metgs and Mason countu or over 50 years she was
born m Ravenswood, W Va , daughter of the late .vtmnte Mtlhoan Erlewt~c
She was a member of the Mtddlepon Prcsbytcnan Church and Past Matron
of Evangehne Chapter 172 Order of the Eastern Star and Whtte Shnne •
She IS SUI):Illed by a ntcce, Karen Rou sh of Mtddleport wnh whom s~e
rcstded and by several other meces and nephew s and then chtldren
She was preceded m death by her husband Leo Kennedy Sr four s~
ters Thelma Mane Lucy and Dolly and by one brother Aldo
•
Graveside scrvtccs wtll be held Wednesday at 2 p m tn the Gravel Hill
Cemetery wnh the Rev Davtd Huffman offictatmg No callmg hours will
be observed and arrangements arc by the FISher Funeral Home Mtddlcport

the readmess to proceed factor) the
vtllage hopes that enough pomts wtll
be asstgned locally so that the diStnct
board can refer the appltcatton to the
Theft of handgun reported to deputies
Issue Two Small Government Com
mtss10n where 11 mtght be more hkc
RUTLAND - Danny Walker Lasher Road Rutland rcportcd·Q~
. ~y
ly to recctve fundmg
evcnmg that a handgun was stolen from hts home accordmg to I
.,'
Pomeroy
County Shenffs Offtce
The Vtllagc of Pomcro) has
requested $222 397 for a total proJect
POMEROY - A 21 year old Rutland man was charged wllh escape after
ol $297 397 requested tor the con
walkmg away from custody Saturday, accordmg to a Metgs County Sher
tmuauon or a three-phase water mam
replacement program
tfrs Ofhcc report
Larry Napper was bc mg held for transport to the Vtnton County Shcnffs
Counctlman John Musser and Vtllagc Admmtstrator John Anderson
Offtcc when he walked away from the Pomeroy Pollee Department He lat
cxplatned that thts thtrd phase would
cr turned htmself back m
replace water hnes from the area of
the Oh10 Valley Bulk Food Store on
RACINE- Joseph Tucker age unreported of 49831 State Route 124
East Matn Street to Bullet nut
Rae me was arrested and Jatled Sunday by the Mctgs County Shenlrs Office
Avenue
on a charge of domesttc vtolcncc
The project would see the replaceIn an unrelated maucr Anthony C Roush 22 Syracuse, was arrested and
ment of a 100 year-old network of
Vtrgmta V: Blaz~wKz Mctg'i pan:cls
ptled
Monday mormng on a charge ot escape
water hnes wtth larger hnes
Thts last phase wtll provtde all
new water hnes at the heart of the
The Galha-Met gs Post of the Oh10 State Htghway Patrol has cllcd Thomas
systems water dtstnbullon system
where 11 ts needed the most ' Ander- Time changed
Chapel Church 92~ S Thtrd St A Roberts 17, Racmc, for opcratmg a motor vchtclc under the mllucncc of
son satd
The regular mcctmg of the Metgs Mtddlcpon Sen mg wt ll he It om 2to alcohol and no scathe It followmg a one vchtde acctdcnt that occurred at
approxtmately 10 25 p m Saturday on SR 124m Sulton Townshtp
Musser noted that the project was County Commtss10ners wtll be held 'p m
Accordmg to the report Roberts was westbound when he went ol[ofthe
cntlcal not only to Pomeroy, but at I0 a m , mstead of I p m , on
left
stdc of the roadway over an embankment stnkmg a tree The vchtclc
also to Mtddlepon, whtch has used November 22
No Sunday servtce
came
to rest on ns side
water from Pomeroy swells m recent
There wtll be no Sunday cvemng
Also
cued hy the patrol was Jcrrod R Mtlls I R 2R94 SR 124 Syracuse
months
scrvtcc at the Ash Street Baptist
Correction
followmg
a one car acctdcm that occurred at apprmtmatcly 7 ~~ p m Sat
The Tuppers Plams/Chester Water
Apphcattons for food baskets at Church Mtddlcport due to the com
Dtstnct apphed for $304,200 .for a the Metgs Umted Methodtst Cooper- mumty Thanksgtvmg servtcc at the urday m Sutton Townshtp
Accordtng to the report Mtlls was northbound on Pme Grove Road when
water system tmprovemcnt project m attvc Pansh wtll be taken on Dec I Mtddlepon Church ot Chnst
he
went olf of the nght stdc of the roadway stnkmg a ~Itch and overturn
Letart, but no proposal was made on and 2 at the pansh offices on Condor
tng
behalf of the dtstnct, because, Street The dates were mcorrectly
Mtlls and hiS passenger Sheena L Gt lmore 18 Chester were transport
Roward.satd, other fundmg ts bemg reported to The Datly Sentmel and Legion dmner set
cd
to St Josephs Hospttal hy the Metgs County EMS Mtlls was cttcd for
Racme
Post
602
Amencan
sought for the proJect
were pubhshed mcorrectly on Monfatlurc
to control and no sc,tthelt
Legton wtll have a Thanksgtvmg dmMyron Duffteld, representing day
ner at the hall Thursday 7 p m for
Mtddleport, as the county s largest
Legton and Auxthary members and
muntctpahty, wtll represent Metgs Right to Lire
County on the Dtstncl 18 cxecuttvc
Mctgs County Rtght to Ltfe wtll thctr spouses and spectal guests of
board tomorrow cvenmg at the head
meet on Nov 22 at 7 30 p m at the VFW Post 905~ and spouses Meat
quarters of Buckeye Htlls!Hockmg Mctgs County Pubhc Ltbrary tn and potatocs wtll h fumtshcd Lcgton
Valley Regtonal Development Dts- Pomeroy
and auxthary members arc to take a
lnct tn Manetta
covered dtsh
BIRMINGHAM Ala - Ralph 1996 m Lexmgton Ky and moved
That~1ar wtll asstgn dtscre
to Btrmmgham m Apnl 1998
Martm has restgncd hts post as pres
Craft show
ltonary mts o the proJect rank the
Ralph Martm hUt It a strong toun
tdcm and chtef execuuve olhcer of
Southern Band Boosters wtll hold Soronty to meet
proJects a send them on to the a craft show Saturday 10-5 p m at
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Communtty Newspaper Holdmgs dauon lor thts wmpany and puttlllo
state
the htgh school Tahlcs arc avatlable Stgma Pht Soronty wtll meet Thurs Inc m order to pursue other mtercsts place an excellent team ol newspaper
protess10nals to run 11 Reed satd
lor $10 Irom Paul,, Imboden at 992- day at 6 30 p 111 at the Lutheran
CNHI s board ot dtrectors accept
Church Reva Vaughan and Velma cd Martm s rcstgnatlon and named
We wtsh htm every success m hts
42K6
Rue wtll be hostesses
Mtchacl Reed the company s chtef luturc endeavors
ftnanctal olltcer to the post or pres
Trtbule to Elvts
(Continued from Page 1l
A tnhutc to Elvts stanng Dwtght Support group
tdcnt and chtcf exccuttve ofhcer
Reed satd he expects no other
Parkmson s Support Group wtll effecttvc tmmcdtatcly
• Met wnh Shcnll James Soulshy Icenhower wtll he held Saturday 7
changes 1n the company s slru~.:turc or
p m at Mctgs Htgh School Admts- meet at 2 p m Fnday at the hbrary of
CNHI was lounded m December m,magcmcnt
In eXCt;UIIVC SCSSIUn tO diSI.:USS per
smn of $4 wtll hencltt fnys lor lots Grace Unned Mcthodtst church 600
sonncl wnh no ,tclton taken
We believe our company" well
Second Ave Speaker wtll he
• Approved the payment of htlls tn
situated lor contmucd SU\.:t:css , Reed
Jonathan Kollmann one ol the mm
Dmner offered
the amount ol $~~2 W6 32
POMEROY - Unlls iifthe Mctgs s,ud We witll:onllnuc to scrv~,; our
tsters nl the church For more mlor
free
Th.mksg1vmg
dtnncr
wtll
A
• Changed the It me of next weeks
County Emergency Medtcal Servtcc readers our tnvcstor!'i ami our
be held on S.tturday at tl1c Fatth maltOn c.tll 446 OXOX
mceung to I0 a m mstcad of I p m
recorded three calls tor asststancc employees hy puhltsh1ng qu ,1llty
Present m addttton to Howard
Monday Un tt s respondmg mcludcd n~,;W'ip~lpcrs thlll L.Ut: ~ahout then
t:OJnmumtr~,;s Reed si.uJ
were Commtss10ncrs Jeffrey Thorn
CENTRAL DISPATCH
ton and Mtck Davenport, and Clerk
4 04 a m Maples Apartments
Glona Klocs
The Ptck l Numhcrs day game Pomeroy, Sybtl Barr Veterans
CNHiowns IIH&lt;rc than 21K) ne ws
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
p.tpc" tn 22 st.llcs tncludtng the nlc
were no uckcts sold nammg all five wmncrs payout was $13 I 179 on Memonal Hospttal,
12 52 p m , Manual Road, Letart D.uly Senttncl Galltpnlts D.11ly Ill
numbers drawn m Monday mght s sales ot $354 191
In the Ptck 4 Number&gt; ntght Falls, Eva Lawson VMH
hunc ,mtl Pomt Pic ~'"•tnt Rt:gtskr
Buckeye 5 drawmg the Ohto Louery
pmc players wtll share $146 300
REEDSVILLE
satd
AEP - 33·11/16
There were 85 Buckeye 5 ttckcts and the sales for the game came to
I 26 p m State Route 7 and Sue
Akzo - 40-318
cess Road, motor vchtclc acctdcnt
wtth four ot the numbers, and each ts $127 386 50
The Ptck 4 day game wmners
James ScoH VMH, Tuppers Plams
worth $250 The 2,941 ltckels show
AmTech/SBC - 50-7/8
pmcs
total
was
$35
700
and
the
lot
Volunteer Ftrc Department asststed
Ashland 011 - 35
mg three of the numbers arc each
tery
sold
$117,692
worth
of
ltckcts
worth $10, and 'the 31,653 ttckets
AT&amp;T- 47-1/16
showmg two of the numbers are each lot that drawmg
Bank One - 38-3/4
In Buckeye 5, sales totaled
worth $1
Bob Evans -14·1/8
$291
193 and wmncrs can share
The Super Lono Jackpot ts $4 mtlBorgWarner- 41-13116
$X2,ll3
hon
Champion - 4-314
The Oh1o Lottery wtll pay out
Charming Shops- 5-1/2
$189,422
to wmners m Monday
City Holding- 15
ntgnt's
Ptck
3 Numbers datly game
USA WEEKEND
Federal Mogul - 23
whtch had sales of $920 926
Flrstar- 28·112
Gannett - 73·518
K mart - 9-9116
Kroger - 23·718
Lands End - 52

Local News in Brief:

Rutland man charged with escape "" oj "

Racine man placed in county jail

Patrol issues citations in accidents

, p..rlltd Ad&amp;..

- - -- -- • •• ..ExL 1100

Meigs EMS runs

1

No winner in Buckeye 5

Stocks

magazine

Ltd. - 38·314
Oak Hill Flnanclal-17·1132
OVB-33
One Valley - 35-1/4
Paoples-23
Premier - 10-314
Rockwell- 46·118
AD Shell - 83--5/8
Seara- 30-11/16
Shoney's- 1·7/16
Wendy's- 24-5/16
, Worthington -15-13116
I' Dally atock reporta are the
10:30 a.m. quotes provided by
, Advest of Galllpolla.

News Hotline
NewsHotUne
NewsHotUne
News Hotline

'

992-2156
'

Pomeroy
(Continued from Page 1) balance, FEMA UI, no balance, total,
$421,687 32
Also present was council member
Dave Ballard

I

I

'

•'

Deed, Ronald E Ntcholson to Joe
and Janet Bohn Rutland,
Deed, Lth B and John Sulhvan to
Sophta B Stephenson, Rutland/Set
pto,
Deed Wilham C and Mary E
Cundtff to Dann L Boster Syracuse
Deed, Larry L and Shtrlcy S
Roush to Larry L and Shtrley S
Roush, Chester,
Deed, Sara Snouffer to Martha J
Cratg, Gary L Rothwell Cynthta J
Rothwell , Mtddleport
Deed. Bobby Lee and Nancy E
Young to Stephen S and Lmda M
Lukastk Sctpto
Deed Margueme M and Ashley
J Btshop to Paul E Jr and V Lomsc
Laudermtlt Mtddleport
Deed Harold D and Lynn S
Brown to Mmdy K Htll Armmta
Sutton
Deed Ruth E Arnold to M Jtll
Demarcht T Beth Basttant M Gay
Hcndncks Sctpto
Deed Paul Hawk to Frances and
Paula Jane Wood Chester and
Orange
Judgeme nt entry Jane Annette
Moon to Stanford Moon Mtddlepon
Deed T Beth Basttan 1 M Gay
Hcndncks Gar) F Hcndrtcks M Jtll
Demarchi AI Dcm trcht Loren
Wtlton Dcnnts Stanley Hall Deho
rah Hall Sophta B Stephenson and

V. Evelyn Dobbins

Ralph Martin resigns
presidency of CNHI

!USPS ltJ-960)
c....... to, Ncwopoper Holdlnp.lnc.

sllt vc person m the movte You gc(
the message In the warped world ol
suhurhta people not caught up m tho
gel ahead put up a good frnnt ra(
r.llc arc seen a' psychologtcall y dell
In the end Rtcky tnd the gtrl.
nc~ tll, ~r 00\;tde. to ru?' away to i.(
place wlicre tllCII scnSIIIVlly and
gr«IOMEdncss \\(On 1lie seer\ .ts ahcorant It docsn t matter that.:hc II h.tvc
to support them hy drug dcahng
We re supposed to Ieel that they' vc
tnumphcd hecitusc they rc cscapmg
the suburhs and gomg to - where
else' - New York
I ltkc to tmagmc a se'qucl that
shows the twn teen a~ers m Man hut
tan the moment they rcaltze lhl\1
beauty and mtscry travel through
ptckct fences and tron grates wtth
equal effictency
(Joan Ryan II•a cotumnlll for
the san l"t'lncleco Chronicle. Send
commel)ts to her In car,a oW thl6
newspaper or send her a-mall at
Joanryanlfgale.com.)

Deed, Bobby Joe Jr and Sehnda
Adams to Edna M Nance, Chester,
De ed Emmogene Hamtlton
Emmogcne Holstem, Charles D
Hamtlton to Homer Mtlls Jr Sut
ton/Syracuse
Deed, Martha Lou Beegle to
Wtlham K and Bruce Beegle Sut
ton
Deed, Ttmothy E Smith to Carter
P and Carolyn S French Mtddle
port
Deed, Muchell Owen Stanley
Mtchael Wayne Stanley Jerry Cltn
ton Stanley Lmda Stanley Randy
Alan Stanley, Sue Stanley Robyn
Rcnac Martm and James J Marttn to
Henry Stanley Pomeroy
Deed Manon K Fugate Revoca
blc to James Barber Jr Ohve

Meigs announcements

The Daily Sentinel

durataon af the

por hrought on hy horedom and the
soulless pursuit ol matcnal goods
But I put up a ~nod tront whtch ts
whm movte suhurhanucs do My
house ts dc.m my lawn mowed my
tlowcr potstn hloom I seem to enjoy
the company ol my son and husband,
hut coldness hypomsy and perhaps
c1cn dcpravny lurk behmd my perky
puhhc smtlc
In Hollywood s suburbta IQs
rarely exceed the nctghhorhood speed
hmu The mor,tl code ts shaped by
two lactors convcmcnce and sell
mtercst The only thtng m the sur
burbamtcs hvcs worse than thetr
dead-end JObs arc then ~cad end
mamagcs
I say thts havtngjust seen' Amertcan Beauty ' a compelhng and at
ltmes bnlltant film dtmtntshed by
enough recycled suburban put downs
to ftll a Hefty bag Maybe I'm a Itt' tie protecltve of the 'burbs these days,
after Columbme and Conyers, et al ,
seemed to remforce the notton that

Rhonda J Wherry to TPCWD, Ohve,
Deed, Marsha and Charles Frecker, Timothy and Bethany Lawson,
Ehzabeth Lawson and Scott Anderson to Marhn R and Debbte Lynn
Evans, Chester,
Deed, Walter E Green to Clarence
E and Jess1e M Mtght, Mtddleport,
Deed, Bruner Land Company to
Sebert Belcher Jr , Salem
Rtght of way, Roscoe and Sandra
J Mtlls to TPCWD Suuon
Easement Barbara L Hess to Ed
Ftschcr Mctgs
Easement Ed Ftschcr to Barbara
L Ours Hess Metgs
Easement Barbara t He » to
Edward Ftsahcr Mct~s
Deed Homer P ' and Sat ah J
Parker to Homer P and Sarah J Park
cr Lebanon
Deed, Jon B Ulbnch LISa R
Evcrcu LISa R Ulbnch to Dchorah
S Blaze r Salisbury
Deed Faron L and Rachel D
Speelman to James A Sr and Mtldred Sue Moore Ohvc
Rtght of way Davtd E and Bren
da L Ktscr to TPCWD Sutton,
Deed Leonta F Moore to Bruce
Lee and Area Lynn Moore, Ohve,
Deed, Harold H and Helen E
Blackston to Carl R and Paula J
Hall , Sahsbury,
Deed, Ltllon Loan Servtcmg LP,
Bankers Trust Company to Mark A
Gtlhlan, Pomeroy,
Deed, Darlene Curry, Darlene A
Curry to Mark A Gtlhlan, Pomeroy
Deed Clarence Hook to Harold E
Hook, Bedford,
Deed, Clarence A and Sally J
Lambert to Peoples Bancorp Inc
Pomeroy
Deed, Jack Jr and Charloue L
Satterfield to Robert J and Emma E
McClure, Chester,
Deed, Ivan L and Evelyn Wood to
Juha P Houdashelt Chester,
Deed Assoctatcs Fmanctal Scr
vtce to McClure and Sons Inc
Pomeroy
Deed Rtchard A and Ethel R
Lambert to Rtchard A and Ethel R
Lambert Orange
Deed City Nauonal Bank to Dou
glas and Sadtc Chapman Pomeroy

Commissioners asked

Movie's suburbia offers depressing sight
By JOAN RYAN
Growmg up off Route 17m New
Jersey I always dreamed ot ltvtng tn
Manhauan Mme was a chtldhood ol
above ground pools aiia statton wag
ons and front lawns wuh Vtrgtn
Mary statues amtd the rhododcn
drons New York had edge and
sophtsttcatton It had museums wuh
artwork I wanted to apprectate and
stde111,3lks thrummmg wtth purpose
ful people m styhsh shoes If I hved
m New York, I would know lhmgs
That ts the promtse of btg Clites
You'll read the smartest books, see
the htppesl movtes, eat the newest
cutsme You'll understand the complextttes of The Real World because
tt's pressed agamst your face hke
cxhaust fumes every day
Perhaps all that ts true 1 woqldn't
know I never dtd hve m New York
Except for two years m Sao Franctsco, I ve been a suburbantte all my
hfe To Hollywood screenwnters
thts means I ltve m a stulufymg stu-

Faron Speelman, Ohve parcel,
Deed Kate Jarrell to Terry and
Cmdy Jarrell, Salem,
Deed Raymond D and Ruth Ann
Pnddy to Darrell G and Carol Fay
Jenktns, Sahsbury.
Rtght of way, Joseph R and Rtta
J Ftclds to Tuppers Plams Chester
Water Dtstnct, Sahsbury,
Rtght of way John Blake to
TPCWD, Bedford,
Rtght of way, Randall J and L01s
lean Wtlson to TPCWD, Orange,
Rtght of way, Lmda and Donald
Fttch to TPCWD, Orange,
Rtght of way, Lloyd E and Anna
M Blackwood to TPCWD Orange,
R1ght of way. R Larry Durst to
TPCWD Letart,
Rtght of way, Jeffrey and Lana
Noble to TPCWD , Bedford,
Rtght of way, Jason and Shen L
Huffman to TPCWD, Salisbury,
Rtghl of way Ronnte and Manlyn
Spencer to TPCWD, Chester,
Rtght of way, Dale and Beuy J
Wtlhs to TPCWD, Suuon,
Rtght of way, Robert and Ltlhe
Han to TPCWD, Sutton,
Rtght of way, Ohto Department of
Transponatton to TPCWD, Chester,
Rtght of way, Edwm L Sr and

Committee hears local

Bill Gates: the modern-day Edison

wntcs

• Wtth her j!&lt;K&gt;d looks and lltrtattous manner she used the Whttc House as
·'the ccnlCJ'fliCcc ot a lohbymg campatgn creducd hy her hushand wuh wm
: ntng majortltcs tn the House and Senate to the cause ol Texas statehood
• - (Lawrence L Knut1011 hill reported on Congresa, the White Hou.e
-•nd washington's history tor more thlln 30 yu111.)

For the nauon s 44 mtlhon unmsured ctttzens, Bradley has proposed
gtvmg tax credtts to allow lowmcome people to buy mto the Federal
Employees !lealth Benefit Program
He says thts wtll guarantee m ~urance
to 95 percent of the population at a
cost of $55 btllton a year
Gore asserts Bradley s plan wtll
cost too much - $100 htlhon he
says - and mstead Gore wants to
guarantee coverage to the natton s II
mtlhon unmsured chtldren at a cost
estimated at $30 btlhon a year
Bush atdes say then man s focus
ts hkely to be on 17 mtllton employed
pe"ons who lad health msurance
although how much help he wtll gtvc
them - and how - ts still under
de hate
At one ol two half day health pol
tc y sesSions he s held accordmg to
one advtser Bush satd that a person
who gets up m the mornmg and goes
to work ought to have the same
access to health tnsurance whethet
they work at the ~.:o10er l!as station or
Dow Chcm tcal Why' should you
have a tax code that helps one and
hurts the other'
Extstmg tax laws gtve adeductton
to compantes that cover thctr employ

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Recorder posts Meigs land transfers

; ~ge2

The Daily Sentinel Where is Bush on health care fight?
'f.stJJh/Witd In ''fl

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.J,.

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The Oaily Sentin~!

·sports

Pomeroy, Mlddleport,·Ohlo

iii Dia·mondbacks'

.. . '
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'Big Unit' wins NL

The Dljllly Sentlnei • Page 5 ~

PICTURE YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE ...

Cy Young honors

AII·TVC ACADEMIC HONOREES- From left to Baker, Chad Hubbard, Jonathan Evans, Tyler
right are Southern student-athletes Brenna Little, Matt Ash, Chris Ramtolph, Kyle Norris, Josh
Sisson, Macyn Eivin, Aaron Ohlinger, Joe Cornell, Davis and Brandon Wolfe.
·
Kim lhle and Emily Stivers. Standing are Jamie

SHS holds banquet for athletes
Athletes on the vari ous Southern
High School Fall Sports teams were
honored Sunday afternoon with a tine
meal and awards ceremony in
Charles W Hayman gymnasiUm.
SHS principal Gordon Fisher gave
the welcoming address wnh the invocation presented by the Rev. Brian
Harkness. The meal was a potluck
affair provided by the Southern
Athletic Boosters.
Athletic director Jay Recs made
introductions and spoke on behalf of
the booster club and athletic department.
·
Cheerleading advisor Lee Codner
presented awards to members or this
year's cheerleading squ~d. Autumn
Thomas was presented the lone
senior cheerleading award.

Cross country coach Ryan Lemley
honored his cross country team. the
first ever such team at Southern High
Sc hool. Russell Reiber was the lone
senior boy participant. while Laraine
Lawson and Stacy Lyons earned
senior honors in the girls division.
Chad Hubbard was named to first
team AII-Tri-Vallcy Conference.
Varsity volleyball head coach
Tammy Chapman and co-coach
Laren Rime then honored members
of the team which claimed a 8-10
record overall.
Senior award winners were Stacy
Lyons, Laraine Lawson, Kim Ihle
and Heather Dailey.
Special volleyball award winners
were Kati Cummins, Best Passer;
Laraine Lawson, Best Setter; Fallon

SENIORS HONORED
Southern
High :
School
presented ·
senior awards to football players Willie
Collins,
Jason- ·
Imboden,
Josh
Distelhorst (standing in.
upper photo), Jamie
Baker, Adam Cumings
and Josh Davis (seated
in upper photo). Similar
awards were presented
went to cross country
runners Stacy Lyons,
Russell Reiber and
Laraine Lawson (L·R in
middle photo) and to
volleyball players Stacy .
Lyons, Laraine Lawson,
Kim lhle and Heather
Dailey (L·R in lower ·
photo).

Roush. Most Improved; Stacy Lyons,
Most Blocks; K1m lhlc, II 0 percent
Award: and Heather Dailey. Coach's
Award.
lhlc was first team all-league and
all -dislrict. while Kati Cummins was
first team all-league. lhle and Lyons
were Tri-Valley Conference All Stars.
Golf coach R'oger Hubbard then
awarded members of the golf team.
Senior honors went to BiU Coe, Kyle
Norris. Chris Randolph . Brandon
Wolfe and Kyle Norri s. AIHeague
honors went to Kyle Norris, first
team: and Chris Randolph, second
team .
Varsity football head coach Dave
Barr then presented awards to mem -

SACKED - New York Jets linebacker Roman Phifer wraps up
New England quarterback Drew Bledsoe (wearing dark jersey) for
the second-quarter sack during Monday night's AFC East game in
Foxboro, Mass., where the Jets won 24-17. (AP)

Jets notch 24-17
win over Patriots

By BOB BAUM
fastballs in the ninth.
PHOENIX (AP) - Great pitch"The one thing that was the least
ing doesn't always bring victories. in his control was the wins and lossNo one knows that bcner than Randy es," Diamondbacks manager Buck
Johnson, who could have sued the Showalter said. "Scoring runs and
Arizona Diamondbacks for non-sup- catching the baseball, that's the thing
port this year.
he couldn't control. Th~nk goodness
So Johnson was grateful that people realized that."
baseball writers looked beyond hi s
Arizona scored just II runs in his
17-9 record with the Arizona nine losses, and he left four games
Diamondbacks to present him with with leads the bullpen railed lO hold.
the NL Cy Young award.
During one four-game stretch,
"There was a lot more to the sea- Johnson allowed a total of six runs
son I had than wins and losses," yet Arizona was shut out four times.
Johnson said. "Quite honestly, I feel including a 1-0 loss to St. Louis in
still this was the best year I had in my which the Cardinals' Jose Jimenez
career."
threw a no-hitter.
At 36, Johnson joined Gaylord
Johnson never complained pubPerry as the only pitchers to win the licly.
award in both leagues, although
"There were a few players who
Boston 's Pedro Martinez was expect- came up during the course of the
ed to join that elite group when the year and said I handled myself pretty
AL award was
well," Johnson
announced today.
sa id. ''That meant
"That's pretty
more than any
good company,''
win I could have
Johnson said.
had ...
Johnson won
T
h
c
the AL award
Diamondbacks
with the Seattle
signed Johnson to
Mariners in 1995.
a four-year. $52.4
In both of hi s
milli on conlract.
Cy Youn g seaThe Big Unit
sons. he led his
oave them th eir
team to its first
n1oney's worth.
postsea so n
not onl y in pitchappearance.
in g talen t but with
Johnson
an intensity that
received 20 firstwas contag1ous.
place votes, II
As
catcher
seconds and one
Damian Mill er
third for 134
once put
it.
RANDY JOHNSON
points in ballot"Around here.
ing by the Baseball Writers every fifth day the world stops ...
Association of America. Mike
" It almost so unds ridicul ous to
Hampton , who went 22-4 for say that you could be surprised by a
Houston and led the league in wins. Randy Johnson .' ' ge neral manager
was second with II first-place votes, Joe Garagiola Jr. said. " But those of
17 seconds and four thirds for II 0 you who watched him take the bal l
points.
every five days, as good as we all
Atlanta's Kevin Millwood was thought he was. you couldn't he prethird with one first, four seconds and pared for thi s level of consistent
18 thirds for 36 points.
excellence."
The voters were swayed by
Johnson heard the criti cs who
Johnson's awesome individual statis- questioned his motivation when he
tics.
signed with a second-year team.
As the ·Diamondbacks won the
"They're all silent now," he said.
NL West title in their second season,
Sitting at a table set up where the
the 6-foot-10 ieft-hander- had a pitcher's mound would be at Bank
league-leading 2.48 ERA. His 12 One Ballpark, . Johnson talked
complete games, 364 strikeouts and Monday about the honor that has
271 213 innings pitched were the eluded him, a World Series champi- ·
most in the majors .
onship. He has lost six consecutive
Johnson fell19 short of the strike- playoff decisions, a major league
out record set by Nolan Ryan in , record.
1973
But he believes that he will get
He'd never pitched so many another chance.
" We have some unfinished
innings in a season. yet down the
work."
Johnson said .
stretch, he was throwing 100 mph

By HOWARD ULMAN
come down to two minutes. so we
FOXBORO. Mass. (AP) - In a knew it. It dido 't surprise us." New
season of tough breaks and a tough · York cornerback Marcus Coleman
schedule in the NFL's toughes t divi- said.
sion, the New York Jets' playoff
What is surprising is that Parcells
chances arc slim.
might have round a quarterback to
Then again, what were the odds replace Vinny Testaverde, who was
that Ray Lucas, spumed hy the New lost for the season with a ruptured
England Patriots, would quarterback left Achill es ' tendon in the opening
the Jets ·lo their best performance of 30-28 lo" to the Patriots.
the season''
Parcells tried Tom Tupa and Rick
And how likely was it that New Mirer before switching to Lucas as
England's Drew Bledsoe, who had . his starter Monday night. And Lucas
thrown just four interceptions all sea- enjoyed beating Patriots coach Pete
son long. would toss three Monday Carroll, who used him only on spenight and fall short at one of his spe- cialteams before lelling the Jets sign
cialties, the fourth-quarter come- him after the 1996 season.
back?
"That's icing on the cake," Lucas
"Like I told the players. even said. "They let me go. They didn 'l
though we arc 3-6, it is too soon to think I could play in this league. I
quit," Jets coach Bill Parcells said don 't have to say anything about how
after the 24-17 win over the Patriots. I feel . My actions speak louder than
: "Maybe," said New York running words."
b~c k Curtis Martin, who rushed for
The Patriots also let Martin sign
149 yards, " we can get some - as a free agent with the Jets after the
momentum ·from this and turn our 1997 season, and he's in the midst of
s¢ason around. "
one of his best stretches in his live
Even though they ' vc won their NFL seasons. He rushed 3 I times
last two games, that might be loo and went over 100 yards for the
Tl!uch for the Jets to hope tor since folMth straight game.
six of ·their remaining seven games
"I did OK," he said. ·'I feel I
arc against first-place teams. ·
should have done better. I s-nw a lot
The Patriots (6-:1) had a chance to of runs that I should have hcen able
hers of his 1999 squad.
tic forthc AFC East lead with Miami to break it on. ··
Spec.al football awards went to
and indianapolis. hut had their worst
That 's what he did when he went
Tyler
Johnson . Most Improved :
game &lt;if the season coming off a bye otT nght tackle tor his longest run of
Jamie
Baker. Most Valuahk
week.
the season. giving the Jets a 14-31ead
: "We didn 't come up here to ruin with I :09 left in the haiL And after . Lineman·: Adam Cuminus. Most
their season. we came up to heal Coleman intercepted Bledsoe's pass. Valuable Defensi ve Plilyer: Josh
them. and we accomplished our mis- B"xter scored 49 seconds after D'wis. Most Valuable Offensive
Player: Jimmy All ey. scout- team
si(m." Jets · I'C~ civcr Kcyshawn Martin.
J&lt;&gt;hnson said. "They can ruin tlleir
"This is prohahly one of l ilc best Player of the Year: Brandon Pierce.
season no their own. "
moments ever. hesidcs the Super best incoming player; and Brice Hill.
· " It could he very d'imaging if we Bowl (in 1996 with New England) ... special teams Player of the Year.
Senior Awards went to Willie
get down about it and pout. .. New sa1d Lucas. who played quarterback
Collins.
Jason Imboden. Josh
England fullback Tony Caner sa1d.
at Rurgers.
Distcihorst.
Jamie Baker. Adam
The Patriots wasted excellent
· They didn't get discouraged after
·
Cumings,
Tommy
Smith. Ryan Hill
the Jets took n 24-3 lead early in the oppmtunitics &lt;&gt;n two or their lnst
and
Josh
Davis
fi&gt;Urth quarter on Lucas' scoring three possessions of the first half.
AII-Tri Valley Conference football •
[lllsscs of one yard to Johnson ~nd II Faulk returned a kick•1lf 95 yards.
yards to Fred Baxter. Martm s 36- hut Ten·y Allen was thrown for a one- players were Jonathan Evans. Josh
yard touchdown run and John Hall's . yard loss on fourth down at the one. . Distclhorst. Adam Cumings and Josh
26-yard field goal.
"You always like to go for it in Davis.
AII-Tri-Valley Conference ilcadcThe Patriots dosed to 24-17 on those situations." Patriots left tackle
mic
award winners were Brenna
Bledsoe's lourth-quartcr touchdown Bruce Artmtrong said. "When you
Sisson
(4.0). Macyn Ervin. Aaron
passes of 13 yards to Kevin Fnulk make it . everybody feels like a hero.
Ohlinger,
Joe Cornell (4.0), Kim lhle,
and 31 yards to Troy Brown with nnd when you don't , you feel like a
Emily
Stivers.
Jamie Baker. Chad
6:58 left in the game. But on thCIT gont. ..
Hubbard.
Jonathan
Evans. · Tyler
remaining three posse ssions. they
Then the Patriots settled for Adam
Little
(4.0).
Matt
Ash, Chris
had no first downs as Bledsoe went Vinatieri's 22-yard field goal after
havin"e a first down at the Jets' five.
I- for-9.
"There was never a time when I
And when they had a chance to tic
thought we were going to lose the the game in · the fourth quarter•. ·
game.': said Bledsoe. who brought Bledsoe railed as the Jets defense
.
New England back from a 28-7 rose up.
.
di:ricit to a 31 -28 win over
Their hopes also climbed a notch
hidianapolis in the second game of with the victory.
.
tbc season. ::It was just a question of
"Its been don~ before that teams
when."
go on long winning streaks," Jets
The Jets' defense proved him receiver Wayne · Chrebct said : "We
can put one or those together. "
wrong .
"Coach even said -it's going 10

·'

Our special page( s)
"For Children Only"
(16 years of age or younger)
Will be published
Thursday, December 23th

.

m

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-ONLY-

Per Picture
Prepaid
Please enclose
self-addressed, stamped
envelope to return

NAME)

your photo

Parents' or
Grandparents Name

$5.00 Per Additional
Child In Picture

Entry Form

I

.A wards banquet...

SPECIAL FOOTBALL HON·
OREES Various football
awards went to Tyler Johnson,
Most Improved; Jamie Baker,
Most Valuable Lineman: Adam
Cumings,
Most
Valuable
Defensive .Player; Josh Davis,
Most \laluable Offensive Player;
and Josh Distlehorst (L-R).

University of Chicago's killin.g
of Michigan's early-century st~k recalled
CHICAGO (AP) - The University of Chicago defeated Michigan 2-0
on Dec. 2. 1905. to end the Wolverines' 56-game unhcatcn college foothall streak .
On a punt pl ay, Maurice Cat line of Chicago tackled Denny Clark of
Michigan in the end zone .for a safety, the only points in the game.
During its five-year streak. Michigan had gone 55-0-1.

New f1cm DISH Neflntfr

Padf'ic Dl\lilion

Basketball

Ponl:md ...
LA Lakers ..

NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
"IIMtk DIYiSion

t: . . . . .

W L l'l:l.

.........6

..... ..4
..... ..4

Bolton ...... .
-York..

1

g~n

~

~71

"

.500

..

Philadelphia .. .

...
..... J
I

~

~29

6

. I~ J

WashinJtOn..... .. .

.... I

6

.14J

OrlandO ..

New Ieney .. .

CenlniDMsion
li\diua...................
.....~ :!

~~~~~~ :

! l
..

Charlocte...................

...&amp;

M.Uwaukte .....
... 4
Delroil ··········· ....
....... 2
ChiCBJO .............................. I
Aslanta
.......1

_._,

:ii..
Slln Altonio

.857
.71rl
.750
.7SO

PhoeniJ. ...
Golden Stau~ . .
l.A.Ciippt-rs .....

4

500
167
.167

: ~~

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1' :

2
2' ·
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~

...,.. . ··- ....... -- ...., . • '

WLI&amp;rE fA

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1 2 o .m
1s1
.1 2 0 178 192 166
1 ,1 0 .100 2()1 149

...... 6 ) 0 667 208 174
·-···· . .J 6 0 JJJ ISO 167

S.aule ...........................1
Kansas City
.... !1
Oaldaod
................ l
SanO~go ....................... .4
Denver
............... J

-·-

.. .

,

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I ~9 I SO
.200 99 m
.100 1.10 292

0 .111 10~
0 5S6 200
O .ll6 185
O .-W4136
0 .300 19~

I'~

1.\6
162
194
205

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eastern DlvisiDn

Itam

Dallas ...
N.Y. Giants

WLiba.rE fA

............ l
............. !!
Washin~ton. .
........... 5
Arizona ........................ ~

4
4
4
6

0 .556 126 169
0 .556 151 ld.5
0 ]j() "287 251·
0 J~J 11 5 187

New York Jc1s 24. New Englond 17

Week II slate
S11nd•1• Nov. 11
Allan1a at Tamp&lt;~ .Bay. I p.m.
8uffolo ot New York Jets. I p.m.
Carolina Ill CLEVELAND. I p m
()e{roit at Grfen Bay. I p.m.
Indianapolis at Philadelphia. I p.m.
New England 11 Mitlfl\i. I p.m.
Pimburgh 111 Tennessee. I p.m.
Seanle at Kansas Ci ty. I p m.
Baltmrore at CINCINNAti . 4:0S p.m.
Ouca(!O at San Diego. 4: IS p.m.
D::.llas at Ariz.onn. 4:1S p.m
New York Giants at Wo.shing10n. 4:15 p.m.
'SI. Louis at Sa~ Froancisco. 4:15p.m.
Ne'w Orleans at Jacksonville. 8.20 fl.m
OPEN: Minnes01a
Monday, Not, 12
Oakland at Denver. 9 p.m.

,\~lish player. ~
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First-team All-TVC
Cross country

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Pomeroy

.. -

99:1-6687

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

1 0 ..100 149 212

'

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II

•

mulative grade point average or high-

cr.

10. or 20-war level tenn life

DIOITAI.SAIIWII

12M
204

2~8

Randolph (4.0). Kyle Norri s. Josh
Davis and Brandon Wolfe (4 .0).
In order to quahly rnr all-academic honors. the ath lete must have
earned a varsity letter during the currem season and must have a .l.5 accu-

proteet.the nnnoli£,
....... . .· rtarit
'
people myour . e. ·

.I

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... . . .

2.
4
4
5
7

Wcstfm Division
StloUIS .................7 2 0 .778- JOO
Carolina ............ ......... -~ 6 0 J J .~ 1%
San Francisco
.......... J 6 0 J JJ IS6
Atlanla .. . ......... ... .. ... 2 7 0 :222 117
New Orleans ........ ............2 7 0 .222 147

Monday's score
.889 216 79
.778 190 171
.556 172 12-1

WtUtm Division

Philodclphia ...................1

, .. .

Oucaso ......................... 4 6 0 .400 167 201

Haste.m Diwlsion

Cenlral Di•ision
Jacluonvtlle .................... 8 I 0
Tennessee
.............7 2 0
Piusl&gt;ura.h .
. - ~ .a 0
Bahimore . ... .............. J 6 0
CLEVELAND...
. .. l H 0
CINCINNATI ....
.. I 9 0

. CLEVELAND lit Boston. 7 p.m.
Mianti at Phil adelphia: ?'p.m.
Portl :~nd :11 Orlnndo. 7JOp.rn
New Jersey at Detroit, 7:30p.m.
Dallas at ChariCMtc. 7 : ~ p . m~
LA Oippen at Minnesota. Rp m.
Ntw York at Utah. 8 p.m.
Chico(IO at P~nh . Q p.m.
Golden State at Seattle. 10 p.m.

\.

..... ~... ~ y

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
l'wl

Wednesday's games
Gil

Green Bay ................ .4 :ti 0 .444 166 192

•lndianapoln ..
Miami ..
Buffalo ..
New England
NY. Jets ...

Ctlicaao :lt Golden Slate, 10: ~ p.m.
Vancouver :u Sacramento. IOJO p.m

4

Central Division
Dctrol1
... .. ... 6 3 0 667 201 171
Minnesota .
.... 6 .a 0 600 B7 199
Tampa Bay ................. ...:ti 4 0 J56 139 12M

NFL standings

NeW York at Dcm\lcr, 9 p.m.

·'
.'':

~ :;:·;_ l lm

...... ...... _ ..;"'-• -

.S

Tonight~• 1ames
.Pfliladelphia at WashiQIIOn. 7 p.m.
Deuuil at Toromo. 7 p.m.
Charlotte at Alianta. 1::40 p.m
Ponl:u~d ru Miami . 7JO p.m.
l A Clippers at Milwaukee. 8 p.m.
Indiana nl San Anlonio. 8:JO p.m.
Houston I'll Dallal, 8:JO p.m.

I
I

·571
·286
.167
. I..J

2 .750

~

Utall9 1. San A,ntonio 8~

.714

WLI'l:l.

. ..... ... 4
I
... ... ... I

Monday's scores

. ~00

I\IWwHI Dhlsion
......6

I
2
2
I

Seat! I~ I00. New Jersey 92
lndi.anJ 96, Hous1on 87
L.A. L.akers 91. Phoenix 82

WESTERN CONFERENCE
'

... 6
.7
Seaulc ... , ............... ... .. .... 6
S3cramemo ....................... ·'

Gil

.\ - . ~7 1

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5
5
6

GET
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PRICE OF

(Continued from Page 4)

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By The Bend

The Daily SentineJ
PagiJ
.., -;

mut hcr-in -law.

She was getung on "' years, and
wondered why she was sti ll on th is I
· told her 11 was hccause God had so

fe w examples of class that he had so
few exampl es of class that he needed all the ones that were still needed
all the ones that were still around.
My copy is tanered from constant use. and I hope you will print it
again --COLLINGSWOOD, N.J.
Class
Class never runs scared. It is
surefooted and confident and it can

and keep the common touch."
Everyone is comfortable with the
person who has class because he is
comfortable with himself.
And now, dear readers, here's
one more favorite.
Dear Ann Landers: The
enclosed column has been glued in
my scrapbook since the mid - 1970s.
I was strengthened by looking at it
again, and came to realize that my
latest relationship was not he true
love either of us were seeking.
I miss him, but I know I made
the right decision. Thanks for our
wi sdom. E.M. ALBUQUERQUE.
N.M.
Love or Infatuation?
Infatuation is instead desire . II is
one set of glands calling to another.
Love is friendship thai has caught
fire. II takes root and 2mws - nne
day at a time .
Infatuation is marked by a feeling
of insecurity. You arc excited and
eager but not genuinely happy.
There arc nagging doubts. unan ·
swcred question. lillie hits and

DOUBLE D'S REPAIR SHOP.·
2270Rt. 33

JOlES'
(740) 367-0266 • ..,,uct\9
"' -~\t\9
1-800-950-3359 • Gf\'"'

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

~\:'

J

·==~

:}

EN

SENIORS JOIN CELEBRATION- Gertrude Tracy was the winner of the "Color My World Drug Free"
t-shirt in a recent observance of Red Ribbon Week held at the Senior Citizens Center. Julie Wandling
of Health Recovery Services, Inc., center, and Meigs High School Teen Institute members presented a
program at the Center. The origination of Red Ribbon Week was read by Jake Birchfield, right; prevent ion services that are conducted In the Meigs County Schools was explained by Amanda Miller, left,
and Michelle Kennedy was dressed as HOOLA Hippo and made an appearance to dance with the
seniors to the drug free Boot Scootln' Boogie. The t-shlrt won by Tracy was the door prize.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1999

• Meigs Marauders
• Southern Tornadoes
• Eastern Eagles

9

1---------.&amp;...---------'----------L--------

CREDit PROBLEMS???
No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
· Repo • Dlv,orded

WDRRYIIG!!!
No Embarraaament...
You're Treated with Reepecll

BURKE'S

SltMe,OH

Mobile Home t'u1rna.ce~
&amp; Heat Pumps

Located at 34878 Rocksprings Rd. , Pomeroy

accepting residential and commercial
refuse and demoiHion.
$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
Meigs County Transfer Facility or
Southern Ol'llo Disposal Hauling,
visit our office at.34878 Rockaprlngs Rd.
or

. .. .·-·.-.. . .

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTlON '·
, Complete
1.

· Remodeling
Furnaces installed as low as $28.00 a month
(with approved credit) .
• Huge equipmenl &amp; pol15 invantory • lmmedialelnsillation
• Free EslimatiiS • Easy Bank R111ndng

Rutland, Ohio

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
· ·boat covers; carpets, etc.
Mon-Frl 8:30 -5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

Do you have Met:iicare
or private·insurance? .
Under a new law, you _·
may qualify for FREE
DIABETIC SUPPLIES
even if you are on an ...
oral medication or diet
control. Call for detail~:,ll

\$1.

1

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

985-4473

.

7122/fFN

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF THE
ADOPTION OF
CHRISTOPHER
OOUGL.AS WARDEN
CASE NO. 31078
NOTICEIIY
PUBUCATION
To: Betlndl H.,.,., lkll
Belinda W•4en, whoH
1..1 known addrell Ia
Box 3111, Cripple CrHic,
CO 110813 PI'Hinl 11.addrela
e4dre••
unknown.

Public Notice
You hereby notlllad
thai you have been
named •• a party In the
action antltled In the
Mlltlr of the Adoption Of
Chrlatopher Dougl11
WJII'dln, Thll IICllon hn
blln ullgnld Cal No.
31078, end II pending In
the Probetl Court of
Melgl County, Ohio.
Whereby, 1 Petition hea
' bean flied by Lori
Rlchllle Wlrdln to ICiopt
Chrletophar Douglaa
Werden.

Public Notice
You ere rliCJulred to
1nawer lhl Petition
within twanty·light(28)
d1y1 alter the 1..1·
publication of thle
Notice, which will be
publlehed once aech
wuk for
alx(l)
8UOCIIIIVewlllla. The
leal publlellllon will be
mecla on the 23rd dey Of
November, 11189, and the
twenty-elghl(21)cllye for
anawer will comme.on lhlt data. In 1111 Of your hlllure to enawer

Public Notice

Cash.Phone
Advance by

$10,&lt;100 OFF ~
Prime Resale Timeshare
Secure your
2000 Vacation Now....,.,.

cat...,

800.368-3541 lat.
,

745 Eaat Matket St., lillrllorilug, VA
lnd:p&lt;.nrlc.'flfly rfWOI.oQ ~ r.,..,.,cd

Must hB\18 checki1g 8IXlOIIll

Toll Free: 888-853-4704

Mon-Fii llllm-5pm Eastem (Hie)

ICtoJIOifttd Aclverllalnv . 11111 ...,.PII·I
It not retponstble for cor1te•1t.1l
IPteate fool fr11 to contad our tal,a-

1h&gt;tr"""

In Memory Of
UNDALOU
STEWART

Nov.16

The angels are
soft guarding
A quiet and silent
grave;
For in it lies a
precious one
We loved but could
not save.
The things you
always did for us,
I think of everyday.
They keep you near
and dear to us,
Tho11gh God called
you away.
I often sit and think
of you,
And speak of how
y.o udied.
TO think you could
not say goodbye
Before you dosed
your eyBs.
Your weary hours
and days of pain,
Your troubled nights
are past.
And' In my aching
heart I know
You have sweet rest
at last.
Bus some sweet
day we,'ll meet again
Beyond t~is toil .
and strife
We'll clasp each

TRI·Timeshares
Public Notice

..

Medical Claima From Home.

Training Provided. Must Own

KY. 40310
30 Announcements
NewTo Yo• Th1lft Shoppo

Compulor. 1·800·223·1149 Ext.
460
__ ·- - - -- - Oletaoy Cootr

740·592·1842

.

Quali ty clothing and household
Hems. $1 .00 baO sa le every

"'

al lh* phone number llll&lt;tdll

other's hands once

r:~:=y
SATURDAY

• Marketing El(j18nses Aro
Paid By Your Employer
• CornpetiW. Salary And Bonollt

day before the ad 11 to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition·

I OX I U $-tO
I 0:\20 $60

1:00pm Friday.

-

'

Private Duly is recruiting LPN'&amp;
for Home Care cases In M11g1
an(f Galli&amp; Counties In Ohio and
Mason Counly,wv. Hourly at-

•lgnments and Intermittent vislls

ava il able. One year nurSing eK-

es Required, After 5:00, 740-4MI·

,stained glass, Christmas, crafts,

Mature, E11perienced, Cashier

aula, e)l ercise equipment, Olym·

wan!ed- for Convenient Store.

roo accidents. Pally Boandy. 304· MEDICAL BILLING. Earn cxcel-

273-0038.

80

New Homes • Vinyl
. Siding • New Garages
•AepIacemenl Winoows·
•Room Additions
•Roofing
COIUIIIOAL- RISIDIIIIW
FREE ESTIMATES

Auction
and Flea Market

Absolute Top Dollar: All u.s. 511·

vor And Gold Coin s, Proolsets,

p'========~.

Diamonds, Antique Jewotoy, Gold

Rings. Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterllng, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry

' M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740..446-2842.

Clean Late Mo'del Cars Or

Trucks. Low Miles, 1995 !4odols

• Vllyl Siding
• Roolhtg &amp; Seatttltss Getl•
• Replacemtttl Wlrtdows

Or Newer, Smith Buick Pontiac,

• (onattt

Wanted to buy - coa l burning
stove with cast Iron fire pot, call

Thursdays

29670 Baahan Road
Recine, Ohio

"A':J' 6 :30 "M
,., ·
Main St.,

45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' X 10'
to 10' x 30'
HOUr&amp;
AM.
8•.00 PM
',00
7

Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
ll II

Toll-Free 800-540·6333 Ext .
230 1.

••II

(No Sunday Calls)

PHI (740) 992·2772

lent Income. Full Training. Com·
puler Required. Call Medi·Works

MEDICAL BILLING. Earn Excel·
Bill Moodispaugh Aucllonoorlng· lent
S S $ I Processing Claims
.col)'lplete auction service. Buy
and
eslatos. Ohio License From Home. Full Training Provtd·
ed . Computer Required. Call
t7693, wv 1338. 740·969·2623.
Medi-Pros Toll Free. 1-888-313·
Wedemeyer's Auction Service , 6049 Ext. 3125.
Gallloolis, Ohio 740·379-2720.
Nalionat Market Research Firm
Loolllng For lnrllvkluals 16 Yrs Or
90 Wanted to Buy
Older To Participate In Tobacco 1

740•992•7643

J•••• KHIH, II

9842.

pliances &amp; more. Not responsible

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

• R- Atldilions • Garages ·
• Dicks &amp; 1Ht Dodu

In My Home,·cay Shill, 2 Small
Children, (Ages 1 &amp; 4) Raterenc-

pic plales,, CO/ record•. small ar&gt;· 13041895-3603.

'".

J &amp; LInsulation
&amp; Siding

Mature Adult Needed To Babyait

lndoor yard sale· 507 Sand
Street. rear Ravenswood, Novem·

ber 18·19, 8:00·3:00. Antiques,

992-1717
.

Package Are 011811&lt;1

Send-Confidential Resume To:

--::-==&amp;=V::Ic:-in-:'1-:ty~-:':'":-l porlonce required. Per diem pay
and flexible scheduling. For more
All Yard 5alet Mual Be Peld In Information, call: 1-600·746-oQ76
Advonce. Deadline: 1:00pm the or(304)675-7400.MIEOE.

HILL'S
, · Pomeroy Eagles
SELF STORAGE
Club Bingo on

1900 Eastern Avonue. Gallipolis.

Good Working Maytsg Wringer

washer. (3041773-5623.

419·893.0581 afternoons.
Wanlod To ·Buy: Pi nball Ma·
cninas And Baseball Machines.
2

908

800-4 1-6

'

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Alcohol 10 Check Program. The
Individual Will Purchass Tobat:·
co /Alcohol Products To Ensure

HI• /Her ID Is cnecked Prior To

The Sale. Firm Also Looking For
Individuals With Gaod Observa·
lk&gt;nal Skills For Profitable Mystary
Shopping Program. All Individuals
Mu~1 Have Reliable Transport&amp;·
lion And Be Willing To Travel
Limite~ Area . Tremendous Op·
portunity For Right Individuals
Send Resume To: HIR Dept., 5855

Monroe St., 2nrl Fl .. SyMinla, OH
43560 Or Fa• To 4 t9·882·7426.
NEEDED! 47 Peopta To Get Pakl
To lose Up To 20 Pounds Or
More By Christmas. Safe, Natural,

Guaranteed. Call 1·800·581-7406,
Visit
tlonro.com

Or

www.a1 herbalsolu·

OAK HILL COMMUNITY
MEDICAL CENTER
Full-Time RN Posilians AvaUable
AI Oak Hill Community Medical
Center. Varied Shifts . Must Bt
Graduate From Accredited
School 01 Nursing And Have
Valid Ohio AN License. Apply In

110 Help Wanted
$2,000 WEEKLYI Mailing 400 Person Or Send Re•ume To: oak
' Brochures ! Salistaclion Guar· Hill
Community Medical Center,
anteedl Postage &amp; Supplies Pro·

vidor!+ Rush Self·Addrossod Attention: Brenda McKenzie. 350
Chaf..lolte A~Janue , Oak Hill, OH
Stamped Envelope! G!CO. DEPT 45656
..
5. Bo• 1438, ANTIOCH . TN.
i 370t 1·1438.Soart tmme&lt;tlaloty.
EOE
$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
OFFICE MANAGER
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN·
Local village has opening lor a
MENT REFUNDS . NO EXPERt·
oriented individual to man·
,
ENCE NECESSARY (24 Hr. detail
age dally office functions. Sue·
'--------.1! ':=:;c~.:;::OO;;-SO;:':'n:•:'"~" Recorded Messa·oel t-600·854· cesslu
l candidate will possess
o

f

YOUIG'S .
CIIPEml SEIVICE
·Room ldd~lont " Rlmodlllnt
•NiwGifiGII
. •Eiectrlcll 6 Plumbing
•Roofing &amp; Gu1tera
•VInyl Siding " Plln1lng

_I '-----=3/~11:,;;/et;;.TF;;,N;,;.[

•1'1110 a Porch DICit•

"'"Ellfmllll

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

ZZ y,... Local

CONCRETE
CON NEalON
YOUI

Quality Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios

Complete Garages:

Consignment-Auction
AMVETS Kanauga .
6 pm Nov. 18th

masonary/Wood
· 25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

740-742-8015
877·353-7222 (loll free)

Collectible Doii~J, Nascar
collectlbl~, 'Longerberger

baSketS, Ioili more
Flnnls "Ike" Isaac

Wl_,eft.W ...

111'1, .........

Auctioneer Info

•em.

Cali 7~0-446-8519
i.

II

Erwi10nmen1 Whooo

--;

ST. RT. 7

Equipment Parte
Factory Authorized
Caee-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South

TRUCKING •

.740·742·2138

Pomeroy,
Middlep.ort

~TOit\(;E

All Makes Tractor &amp;

SAYRE

Y

It to run. Sunclly
e&lt;tnton • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday ldRion

11\HT\\ ELL

.. PARts

Limestone &amp; Gravel

HCUSt 7am THRU 4pm '

c n

German Hollow, One Mile Above
Bakery, November 16th, 17th.

DIPIYIIG

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

tr. You Are A Licensed Llfe Agent
Who Would Like To Work In An

•Leads Are Provided

4

1 mo. pd.

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VI 1 It

I

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

740-992-S2J2

Reasonab/t Rates ,
Joe N. Sayre i

70

Mon.- Fr1 ..9:00 to 4:30 :
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

I

Union Ave., Pomeroy, Oh

33795 Hiland Rd.
PortUJroy, Ohio

ACC.PTD
DIUVIIY AYAIUIU

Used floor model TV, ca ll 740 696-1290.

Apanmen115, Gallipolis.
LIFE AGENTS

Eq ..l Opporlunlty Employer
LPN'o end RN'I: Plaaunt Valley

A

MINI-STORAGE

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

u.u. vouc••u

5878.

Come In &amp; Apply In Person With
Appointment. 482 Bulavllla Pike,

• 10:00 a.m. Sotunley.

••

Now Renting
A-J

Now .Renting

Hauling

740-992·5275.

Human Resources Dept. LIA
P.O. Box 738
Marietta, OH 45750

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave :
message. Alter 6 pm :;

"

740-384-6212
UIIIP AID STOIII COAl

Free Hl~l-5566 Exl.11577.
Help Wanted ~ Slrlp Tobacco.
(7401256-£573.
Leading Selling Person NMdld.
Must Call 740·440.0247 And

Assemble Products . Call Toll

QEAQLINE: 2:00p.m.
ltle day boloro lilt ad

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

www.sunsethome.com

740·446·5001 .

Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;RegtHion Waler Sloruge Tunks

Linda's Painting

740· 742-3411

ence "A Plus• Excellent Benefits,
Call Holzer Senior Care Center,

ALl. Yen! SIIIIMUII
Be Pold In Aclv1nce.

I I I I I I

Bryan Reeves

Knowledge In All PhUII 01
Faclllt; Maintenance. A/C Ellj]lrl-

Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock
8' Grav8lless Leach
100' -1000' Rolls I' &amp;3/4' 200#Woter Une
Hill~

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

WV 26 t 64. (Located next 10
Cope's Markeoj.
DIRECTOR OF MAINTENANCE

Cats and ktnens, 740·992·9937.

Kitten s, approx . 3 months old ,

740.985-3813

Ravenswood Care Center. 1113

Washington Street, Ravenswood,

EASY WOAKI EXCELLENT PAYI

Problems, 740.446·9799.

Tuppers Plains, OH

St. Rt. 7

Evening shift Dietary posiUon,

previous experience preferred.
Several benefits. Come sea u1f

3285.

M"ale, Due To Owners Health

G&amp;W Plastics and' Supply

Free Estinw.tes !

Sr. 124 Wellston, Ohio

2 female puppies Chow/Spitz/Elk

Tin Can Collection . (304)773·

740·985·4180 '

· BRAMHI COAL
·coMPANY

Giveaway

Hound mix 8 wk s. old. 304·895·

"A

Now's the time lor:
• Trimming • Leaf
removal• Planting
• Mulching
· • Landscape Rock
• Retaining wall
construction
Jeremy L Roush
740-949-1701 ·

1 012~

40

East State Street Phone (740) 59~-6671
1J\tnents, Ohio 45701

- ~~
~
. ~
.. ~~..~-~
- -~
· . ~~~~~

Rutland, Ohio
American Legion
Poat467
Breech Grove ·
-Road
Gun Shoot
Slug and Shot
Matches
Every Sunday
1:00 p.m.

Prosecuted!

Full Blooded Chihuahua Dog,

ROUSH
LANDSCAPING

Free Esllmates

No Hunting At 663 Long Branch
Aoa d, Bidwell. Violators Will

•

7tOIU.-a

7th thru Nov. 21
: Racine Gua Club

~·du·~·

get there! l ets try ?Willi am Dun·

can 118199 0 ·5 BoK 479 Burgin

9 West Stimson, Athens

740-992-2665

Cootvllle, OH 45723

u rto~v-

The Daily Sentinel

/Hr Dental Billing Software Company Needs People To Process

(•

r---=~~-..,

11NII pd. 1 mo.

lpm

Call 992-2155
Dave at Ext. 104
For More Information

gentle, interested In long term relatlonship, we must begin here to

lo"'_'&gt; ......

1-800-500-6995

•-.lrlatimll-..oo~~t

Send lett'' ol opplle.llpn clo:
Point Pleasant Reglattr. ML07.
200 Main Sorett, Pt. Pleat·
:""::::'·W.::,V.:._2::55::50
::·~---DENTAL BILLER Up to $tS -$4!

Stop , In And See
Steve Riffle
..,.... Sales Repre sent ative
,:.hj
•
&gt;~
Larry Schey

MEIGS COUNTY TRANSFER FACILITY

, Garagea

. (740) 742-8888 1-888-52_1..()916

Advertising Deadline- Friday, November 19th, 1999

Free Esti1111Jtes
w.v. •WV028120

NOW OPEN:

, New Homes

Plus, Inc.

,;,;~w~

740~742·2706

740-446-1141

"Serving Southeastern Ohio &amp; WV"
For Over Two Decades
1-800-872-5967 or M0-446-9416

STRUGGUNG WITH BILLS?
INTO ONE LOW
MENTII .
Reduce or Waive Interest
Stop L.ate Fees
Stop Collector Calls Avoid Bankruptcy
CONTINENTAL CREDIT
COUNSEUNG

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

• Sidjng • Decks
• Windows • Porches
• Roofing • General
House Repair

Clean

Nffi'S MOBILE HOME HEATING &amp;COOLING

oConfldenUsl

nm Deem's
Construction

CARPET SERVICE

740·696-002711uslless 740·99H046 Horne
Specializing in saws &amp; trimmers
• Tune-ups • New filters • New plugs
• Sharpen blade or chain $20 ·
Mon &amp; Wed 10-5 Fri. 8·4
Thes &amp; Thor 1-5 Sat 10-2

Call992·9330 or 1·800-809·7721

• Fodory Trained Tedtnldtms

CASHLOANSI
•Bad Credit OK
•Eaay Qualifying
•Fast Service
•Low Payments

,_'

wall? Start matting Ohio
•Ingles tonight Calllolllree t·
800-766·2623, extanSlOn 6176.
Will answer all, SBM 31, 205 ibs. .
5'11 Masculine. Muscular. living

Th ursday. Monday thru Saturday

Businesses rJe Sure di
rJefiiParl:
Of tf:hls 'Jear's
Special rJtuketball
Preview Etlltlonl

'
'

and tlave own trlnt portetlon.

Why

9:()().5 30.

Public Notice

Public Notice
: .;
eetate:
SITUATE~· IN
FEET AND SOUTH 82' IS' 45789
Shtrlfl'1 Sele
RHI Ellm
CHESTER
TOWNSHIP, WEST 125 FEET TO AN Permanent Parcel No. o)O
. •.
CIH Number 18 CV 042
MEIGS COUNTY, STATE OF IRON STAKE; THENCE 00628.000
AURORA LOAN SERVICE, OHIO AND SEING IN SOUTH 88' 58' 46" WEST Terms Of Sale: Cll!l,
INC. Plullntlfl-v• PHIWP SECTION S, TOWN 2 85.2 FEET TO AN IRON C.nnot be aold lor leea than
COOKE lkl PHIWP G.
NORTH, RANGE 13, WEST STAKE, CROSSING AN 2!3rds of the appraleed
COOK, ll II. Dtvendlnll
OF THE OHIO COMPANY'S IRON STAKE AT 125.8 FEE'r, value. $1,000.1)0 down on
Court of Common Pleae, PURCHASE AND BEING THENCE NORTH 87' 42' 31"· dey ofeals.
Melgl County, Ohio, In DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: EAST 233.85 FEET TO AN
Jam• M. Sauleby, Shtrlft '
pureuanoe of an Order of BEGINING AT A POINT . IRON STAKE, THENCE
MIIQI County, Ohio
Salt to me dlrtcled from SOUTH 25 RODS (412.5 NORTH 14' 34' 14" WEST
Dennie Rei""' Co., LP.A.
aald Court In the above FEET) AND NORTH 81' 59' 214.02 FEET TO THE POINT
By: Dtnnl1 Reimer (Reg.
·llitJtled action, I wlltxpoH 42" WEST 1048.07 FEET 0 F
8 E GINNING,
110031109) Adam L GroH ,
to .... II public auction on AND SOUTH 5' 45' 11" CONTAINING 1.03 ACRES,
(Reg. 10055392)
•
Attorneys for the Plalnllft
~:u':;t ~:: 0~::.~·~~ :~~~H 1 ~~·; .F~Ee's/~~ ~~~:n~R ~wS:~,. Name: P.O.
-Box 988, 9808 Ravenna
Friday, 3111 December, 111119 FEET AND SOUTH 4• 08 • Dtboreh K. Cooke
Rd. Twlnllburg, OH 44087
1t 11 :30 A.M. ol Hid dey, WEST 121 FEET AND Property Allru1: 43275
(330) 425-4201
the following deac:rlbed reel SOUTH 7' 45' EAST so Frenk Road, Pomeroy, OH
3T 11(18) (23) (30)

Wanted

glea In '(our Area. Call For More

."•
Public Notice

Help

lnlormation. 1·800· ROMANCE, Cltanlno Lady, 1 doli per Week.
Ext 9735.
Muol tive In Pl. Pldttnt treo

~.

Public Notice

110

· START DATING TONIGHT! AVONI All Ar111l To Buy or 8111.
Have Fun Meeting Elig ible Sin- Shlrllr Spoara, 304.e'TiHo42t.

...

Love means trust. You are ci!lm,
pieces about your beloved that you
would just as soon not examine too secure and unthrealened. He (eels
that trust, and il makes him ev~n
closely. It might spoil the dream.
Love is quiet understanding and more trustworthy.
:~;
Infatuation might lead you to-do
the mature acceptance of imperfection It is real. It gives you strength things you' ll regret later, but Jo~e
and grows beyond you - to bolster never will .
.
Love is an upper. It makes you
your beloved. You are warmed by
his presence, even when he is away. look up. It makes you think up. lt
Miles do not separate you. You want makes you a bcuer person t)lan "y(ju
him nearer. But near or far: you were before.
·
.
What can you give the person
know he is yours and you can wail.
Infatuation says, "We must gel who has everything? Ann Lander.;'
married right away. I can't risk lps- booklet, "Gems, " is ideal for a nighting him ." Love says "Be patient. stand or co ffee table. "Gems " is ~
Don 't panic. Plan our future with collection of Ann Landers' most
confidence."
requested poems. and essays. Send a
Infatuation has an clement of sex- se lf-addre&gt;sed. long. husiness-si1.c
ual exc itement. If you arc honest. envelope and a check or m ope~
you will admit il is dilficulllo he in order for $5.25 (th is inclu(l,~
nne another' company unless you postage and hondling) to :Gems ·:~J{,
arc sure it will end in intimacy. Love Ann Landers .
P.O.Bo x IIS62 :.
is the maturation of friendship. You Chicago. lll.t\06 11 - 0562. (lnCan~·
must he friends hcfmc you can he da. send $o.25.) To finu out more
lovers.
ahout Ann Landers and read her past
Infatuation lack s confidence. columns. visillhc Creators Sy ntl(·
When he's away. you winder if he's l' atc
wc h
r age
i(l
cheating. Sometimes you check .
ww w . ~..:rc att Jrs.1.:1 Jill .

Personals

005

•..

handle whatever comes along.
Class has a se nse of humor. ·It
knows that a good laugh is the best
lubricant for oiling the machinery of
human relations.
Class never makes excuses. It
takes its lumps and learns from past
mistakes.
Class know s good manners arc
noting more than a series of peuy
sacriftces.
Class bespeaks an aristoc racy
unrelated 10 ancestors or money. A
blue blood can be totally without
class while the son of a Welsh miner
may ooze class from every pore.
Class can "walk with kings and
keep its virtue and talk with crowds

Sentinel• Page 1

The

1Uesda~November16,1~

Dear Ann Landers: Thank you
for ask ing your readers to send you
their fav on tc colu mns.
· Among my most precious
rcmcmnronces is the dctiniti on of
· "Class ." I se nt the ori ginal to my late
~

.I

. 304-372·1191
tft•S

-

·=

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

6469 Ext. 5046.

" GOV'T POSTAL JOBS" ·Up
To $17 .24 Hour. Hiring For 99 ,
Free Call For Application /E~~:ami·
nation lntormalion Federal Hire .

basic computer and office skills
and have experience aa a super·
visor as well as bo I104f motlvallng.
Grant writing and bookkeeping
experience a plus. Position Is 30
hours per weak at $8.00 per hour
lo slart bul will increase as grant
funding increases. This position
al~ lor a great deal of flexibility
and opportunlly tor a good in·
come. Send resume, 3 letters ot
reference , and income history by
November t 9, 1999 10: The VII·
1a110 ol Rutland, P.O. Box ol20, Ru-.

Full Benefits. 1·800·598·4504 Ex·
1enslon 1523 18 A.M. ·6 P.M.
C.S.T.).
Bulldozer &amp; Baclthoe
ADVERTISING
Seroice•
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
Houee &amp; Trailer Sites .,:,
Land Clearing &amp;
·.1
Forwen Establshe&lt;t Local co.
. SERVING TAl-COUNTY AREA
Grading
Oland, OhiO 45775. Attention: Per·
Septic Sy1term &amp;
•I
' Must have good Communtcalton
sonnel Committee-Office ManagVtiliti41•
skihs
er. No phone calls please. The
- Must have 0000 dJivlng recorcr
Village ot Rutland Is and Equal
(740) 992·3131
&amp; PIO\Iide own Transportation
_Opponunity Employer.
'Musl have ability to bo allAM
OWN A COMPUTER, PUT IT
player
TO WORK. $850 ·$3,500 MO.
PT./Ft. FREE Details: Log ·onto:
5end Resume to:
http://www.hbn.com Access Code
Ganipotls Daly Tribune,
••• , Trllk .,
5298
AE: Advertising Sales Rep
Plak-•• I• Mr yer~
825 Tl\ird ~1o0nue
OWN ACOMPUTER?
Gallpoiis, ClH 4563 t
Recently purchased:
PUT IT TO WORKII
· Graham's Wood Products
$25-$75/HR. PTIFT
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Cralls,
t -888·220-2013
Toys, Jewelry, Wood . Sowing ,
Firewood Division
www.lnlrorret·ouocota.ntll
TYPing
...
Great
Pay!
CALL
1·800·
Ball Logging and
795-0380 Ext.l201(24 HrsJ .
Parl-Timo; Full· Tlmo Medicare 1
' I'Jre~ood Bob Ball
Allentton: 68 People Needed To Medicaid Billing Clerk PotKion
35215 Ball Run Rd.
Loot Weight By The Holidays. Available For HOme· Health
100% Natural, 100% GaurantH&lt;I, Agency. Experience Nec1111ry,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Send Reaume To: CLA 4U, clo
1-BOO.Bfs-6594.
1·748-992-6142
Galllpollo Oally
825 Third
. DOCTORS NEED BILLERS. FT/
Geillpollt, ClH 4!831 .
Leave a Messa e
PT Medical BIIHng. No Exportonco
Nectssaoy. Work At Homo. Mike POSTAL JOBS To .$11.35 ·/HA.
Your IBM Compatible PC Earn INC. BENEFITS, NO EXPERIANNOUNCEMENTS
, US . Call 1-800·697·7670. ENCE . FOR APP. AND EXAM
:www.ndiCreW.can
INFO. CALL 1-800·813-3585
EXT 14210. 8 A.M. -t,P.M. , -f
Orl1o0ra: 2 Week Paid COL Train· DAYS fda. inc. Foe.
005
Personate
lng. No Exp. NHdld. No Money,
Genttomin Sltklng Companion· No Credit? No Problem! Earn Up POSTAL JOBS Up To $t7 .21 /Hr, .
tltlp F1om Nk:o Femoll for' Talkl, To $32,000 /lot Yr. W/Full Bono- Guorantlld Hire. For Apptioatton '
· Walkl A Frlendtnlp. Sind Re- lito. P.A.M . Tranoport1 Cell Toll An&lt;l Exam lntltmltton Cell e A.M. , ·
plies 'To: !53 Second Avenua,
1·677 -230·6002 -w.otr· · t P.M. M·F 1 881 Ill M27 Ell.
24-1007.
1403, Gallipolis.
"'ndlp~ '

FIREWOOD

A-. T-.

'
I

"'*""""'

.
'

..

'

�Page 8 • TtMi Dally Sentinel

rueaday, November 18,.1999

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel '• Page 9 . -

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.•

NEA Cros1word Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

41Civtlr

ACROSS

47Waundcowr
51 a.t In 1 rotee

1 llllll.t

53 llltlllmote bird
55 Grlllfy
55 Low-c:uiiPOfla
ahoe
17 Dlnad

tllpreiiM
7 IIIUIIIm rullr
13 Mllllltry

oommand

14 Ac1or ....... 11 n~~~c~

540
Po&amp;lal Jobs $46,323.00 Yr. Now
H1rtng -No Expe rien ce -Pa id
Tralnlfig -G reat Benefits, Call 7

Days 800-429·3660 E&gt;rt J·365
Resident Asststant

Earn $ while you learn Several
benefits Coma talk with us! Rav-

en swood Care Center, 11 13

FRITO LAY /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE. $1,000+
WEEKLY POTENTIAL
ALL
CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO·
CAL SITES. SMALL INVEST·
MENT/ EXCELLENT PROFITS 1·
800-731-7233 EXT. 4603

Washington Street. Ravenswood,
WV (Loc ated neKt to Co pe 's
Mar1&lt;at).

MAKE $14 ·$22 AN HOUR An·

Aesponsi!H person to work wee-

1168( x666()

kends, call 8am-4pm Monday ttvu
Fnday, 740.992·4410 or 740.992·
503B

SINGERS! GOSPEL. CLEAN
COUNTRY AND EASY LISTEN·
INGI Calll -800·469·8164 Or 1·
800-339-4204 For Appomlmen t

To Come To Nashville, And Audl·
lion For ~aj a r Record Producers
And Concert Promoters. Internet

wwwwcln ac

Store Manager
New Durable Medtcal Equipment
fac tltty to

open~ oon

tn Ra't'an -

swood , WV. Applt cants must
possess· a friendly personality,
expenence with all aspects of durable mediCal equipment. famlllan·
ty with MediCaid/MediCare B1lhng

process and a compeutlve spnlt
Salary commensurate with expenence, bonus system to earn extra
$ Benefits available Interested
applicants may send a resume to
Store Manager. P 0 Boll 307
~ avensw ood , WV 26164 . A con·
lldentlal ln18fvieW w111be arranged.
Transportation Driver needed lor
100 bed stlllled nursmg facility
Pos111on Is pal1 11me. on call hours
when necess ary Need car ing,
compass ionate IndiVIdual who
desires to be member of a gree.t
heanhcare team. Applications are
betng accepted at· Rockspnngs
Rehab Cenrer, 3&amp;759 Rock·
springs Rd . Pomeroy. Ohi o
45769 EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR·
DENS , SECURITY.
MAIN·
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEE ~ ED FOR APP. AND
EXAM INFO, CALL 1·800·813·
3585, EXT. t 42 1L 8 AM. ·9 ~M
7 DAYS Ids, Inc Fee
WORK FROM HOllE
Gmw1ng Company Noods Helpl
Earn SS00.$2500 PTIFT month
WILL TRAIN
cau Hl77·257-o474
Work From Home, Earn An Extra
$500 To $1 ,500 A Month Part ·
Time Find Us At www ouransw·
ercom OrCall 1·800·585-0760

140

Business
Training

Gllllpolla caroer Collegt
(Careers Close To Home)
can Todayl 740-446-4367,
1·800·21ol-0452.
Regl90-05-12748

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Bachelors,
Mailers, Doctorate, By Correspondanco Based Upon Prior Ed·
ucallon And Short Study Course.
For FREE Information Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1·800-964-8316.

180

Wanted To Do

Georges Portable Sawmill, don t
haul your logs to the mill just call
304-675-1~7

Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction
New Con t lruc11on &amp; Remodel/
Drywall . Sld ln~ . Rooll , Add l·
!IOns, Painting , elc (304)574·
4623or (304)674-0155
Mother 01 2 Will Bobyalt Your
Cntld In My Non-Smokmg Chrla·
tlan Home. Monday Thru Friday. 8
AM. ·6 PM . Moo is &amp; Snacks
Provided , Reasonable Rates,
References Available, 3 Milas
Pa st Loclts &amp; Dam Towards
Crown C1ty. 74Q.256-924A
Will do painting Inside and out,
Will wo111 for $4/hr do1ng Odd jobs,
74().992-9:!14.
Will Do Regular HOusec:leanlng, 1
Story $30, 2 Storya $80, Plus Will
Also Do Olllco Cleanmg . 740·
388- 9078, 740-448·8306, Ltl\18

swerlng Phone From Home For

More Deta11s Call 1·800·765·

MEDI CAL BILLER Up to St5 ·
S45 /Hr Medtcal Btlllng Sortware
Company Needs People To P10·
cess Medical Claims From Horns
Tra lntng Pro-vi ded Must Own
Computer 1·800· 434·5518 Ext
667
MEDICAL BILLING. UnllmiiOd In·
come Potential No E »~ peu e n c e
Necessary Free lnforma!lon &amp;
CD-ROM Investment $4,995 •
$8,99 5 Flnan ctng Available. Is·

land Automated Medical Services Inc 800·322·1139, Exl. 050
Void In KY, IN, CT
Personal &amp; Business operallon,
Bankrupt, Bad credn , turn to us
we can help can toll free 1-817·
583-9846
VENDING: Not Get Rich Oulckl
Th1s Is Very Profitable And Slm·
pte Free Brochure 800·820·
6782

220

Money to Loan

SS Aut o LOans Personal Laans,
Debt Consolrdatmn , Morlgages
And Reflnancmg Cred1l Problems
OK Consumers F1nanc1al 1-800·
247-5125 Ext 1134 VOid OH. KS
$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Famtltes Unloading Mil·
lions Of COllars, To Help Minimize
Their Taxes Wnte lmmedla1ely
WindfallS 847·A SECOND AYE.,
SUITE 1350 , NEW YOAK . NEW
VOAK 10017
"GUARANTEED APPROVAL"
Bank Cant, No Credit CHeok, No
Up-Front Cash Security Oepos 1t
Requi red •uust Be 18+ And
Have Valid Ch ec k1ng Accoun t • ·
Pre-Approval By Phone. 1-800·
689·1 556
Ne 0
FREE MONEYI II ' ~
s .rue
v r
Repay. Guaranteed. $500 •
$50.000 • For Debt Consolidation.
Personal Needs, Medical Bills,
Education &amp; Bus1ness Call Toll·
Free t-800-724-6047 !24 Hrs).
CREDIT PROBLEMS.. STOP
HEREII WE CAN HELPIILOANS
AVAILABLE $3,000 AND UP.
CALL TOLL FREE l ·888·l48 ·

8810E;~t. 663.

CREDIT REPAIR ' AS• SEEN ON
TVI Erase Bad Creutl Legally
Free lnlo: 888-659-2560.
FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
Application W 6/ServiCe. Roduco

pc'rN~~~~ J~F i~t ~~~~~8 ~~:
328-8510 Ext 29

Need A Loan? Try Debt Consoli·
dal,on $5, 000 • $200,000 Bad
Credit OK Foe 1·800-770·0092,
Ext. 21S
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY? No
Oftlce""\'1&amp;11 Necanary. Up To
$500 lnstanuv Call Toll Free 1..
877-EARLYPAY. ht ADVANCE
FREEl Llc:fcc70036.
TURN KEY WEBMAll Your Own
Designed Wobs110 Mall Over
1.000 ouallty Products. Instant
E~eposu re . ,
www.webser·
1111=2::000:.:.::oom=6:.:n:..·:.21:..7..:·9552:.:::...-:--l
::
FREE MONSY' It's True Never
Repay Guaranteed . $500 •
$50 .000 • Dabt Consolidation,
Personal Needs, Business 1·
800-5!1·2640.

230

Professional
Services

COURTHOUSE LIASONS NEED·
ED. No Experience Necessary. 5
(+/· ) Hrs Weekly. People Skills/
Computer Necessary. Up To $50
/H r. 1·800· 688·3188 Or t-800·
99().9835
OI CORCE $t95. 30 ·80 Days,
Children , Property, Missing
Spouse 0 K. Bankruptcy $225 .
Stop Cred itors Calls 8 A M ·8
P.M Mon · Sat HI00-688·3188.

Mo&amp;&amp;egO

FINANCIAL

210

Bualnesa
Opportunity

SS1 ,OOO' s WEEKLYIIII Mailing
Brochures FREE Postage And
SuPPIIao. Start lmmedlatolyl Ruoh
Saii·Addrossed Stamped Envel·
ope To: HSE, Depart. 20, PO Box
573; Amster&lt;lam, NY 12010.
$20 ·$40 /HOUR Easy Mtdlcal
Billing. Full Tralnmg. Computer
Required. Call 1·888·889·7905
Ext 700.
!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do oust·
ness wl1h people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have lnvestrgated
till olllrlng.

A u Canis- Phone cam All.
EASY S$ MONEY'! Ftw Hours!
Earn $500 ·$5.000 IWk CASHII
Free Silos $5M Req . 1·800.305·
2812. Elrt 1155 (24 Hrl)
ARE U LAZY1 I Am And Eern
11 ,000 A Doy. No Soiling . Not
MLM. For Frtl tnlormotton Pack·
lilt Coli 1.8Q0-788-884g, 24 H11.

XT21.

Mount's Tree Service "Ttle
Professionals" Bucket Truck
Service, Top, Tnm, Removal,
Slump. Grinding Free Est1mates
Fully Insured, Won.s Comp Bid·
well, OH Call And Save, t·8DO·
838·9568, 740·3a8·9648, Owner
Rid&lt; Mount.
SIGNS· PORTABLE CHANGE·
ABLE LETTER SIGNS $275-369.
FREE DELIVERY/LETTERS.
PLASTIC LETTERS$55 (SEC·
OND BOX FREE) . AAA SIGNS
800-533-3453
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL HCURITV 1!1111?
No Fet Unlell Wt Wlnl
1-888-562·3345

REAL FSTATE

310

Homee for Sale

ARIZONA RARE BUYI Pristine 40
Acre Ranche&amp; In Northwest Arizona From Only $495/Acrel Lush
Vegetation, Mountain Vlewal No
Ouaily1ng, Low Oown, Ask About
6 Mo. lnopectlon Program! 1·800711-2310.
Cheshire Y111agt, Now Roo!, New
Windows, Siding, Gas Furnace, 3
~Sro&lt;·mo ,, 1 1/2 Bstho, 740·367·

Discount Tobacco Producta
Mall Cigarettes. Clgaro, Snul ,
Chaw &amp; Pipe Tobacco B&amp;W, LOt·
lllard &amp; RJ ReynoldS Coupons
Accepted FREE S&amp;H In Conti·
nental US WI 3+ Carton Orders
C8111·877·945-&lt;1862

AJI real estate advertising In

tniS newspaper IS sub)ect to
the Federal FaJr Housing Act
ol1968 which makes nIllegal
to advertise "any ptefelence,
limitation or dlscrimlnatlon
based on race, cok&gt;r, religion,
sex familial status or national
orig1n, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
nmnatiOO or (fisa1mll'!attOn •
Ttlls newspaper wtll not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate

whk;h Is In viola11on ollhe
law Our readers are hereby
Informed tnat all dwellings
advertised In thls newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunny basis

310

Homes for Sale

Fire Wood! Cut, Split, Oollvorod,
All Seasoned Oak, other Hard·
woods. (740)·446·8588 By the
lluckLoadl

BRUNER LAND
740-441·1412
1

Melgt Co.: Rutland, Whites H111
Ad , Nice 9 Acres $1 2,000 Or 11
Acra s $14,000, County Water. I
Danville, SA 3215 . 5 Acres Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,
$18,000, Water Or Briar Ridge Rd ; :74_0_446-0090
. _ _ _ ._ _ _ _ __
·Private 7 Acres $13,000.
I One bedroom furnished apari·
mant, cai 740·992·9t 91
Gttilt Co.: Friendly Ridge Rd.,
15 Acres $12.800 Cash.
Third Avenue, Middleport.
,
Financed, Water, City
furnished or unfur·
1
, ""'"'"apartment, deposit and
1
refe rences, 740·992.0165
Call NOW For Free Maps + I
Owner Financing Into Take 10% Now Taking App11ca11on s- 35
Off List Price On Cash Suyst
We st 2 Bedroom Town no use
Apartments, Includes water
360 Real Estate
Sewage, Trash, S315/Mo, 740·

I

wanted
Two story house, 2·3 bedroom, 1
bath . utlhty, new gas lurnace.
$34,000, call (800) 388·81 114
The Home National Bank, Racine.

Ohio, has tor sate a newer model
1100 sq n double wtda home w/
large lot In Syracuse, Ohio. Ttvee
bedrooms two baths, room addt·
t1on . Iron! and back. porch , all
electric Well matntamed. Call
George Lawrence for an appoint·
men\ 740.114!1-2210

320

Mobile Homas
for Sale

"""LOOK!"""
5 bedrooms. 2 baths. over 2.000
sq ft. , lor less than S400mo.
FREE Delivery &amp; set. t-600.646·
5678
12 Ft. x80 Ft $1 ,000 In Good
Shape But For Floor, Needs Floor
R-lacad, Call Botwaon 6 P.M. &amp;
9 frM 740-388-8743 _
197-4 t 2x85 all electric, washer.
dryer, refrigerator, oven, curtains,
couch and cha1r, two wlndaw air
conditioners, 1n Pordand, reedy 10
move. $3500, 740•84 3- 5310 days
or 7-40-843-51 -'7 even.ngs
1981 Fairmont 14'x70' 3 Bad·
rooms, 1 1/2 Baths, Asking
$8,000 OBO Call 740·446·9393
o ·- -Masse~

~-

~

1981 ventura s1ngtew1de 14 .:70
304-675-63t9

We Per CASH
F01 LANDI
Evon KIts Usted
20 -500 Acree
C..N Ryan
8001213-8385
Anthony Land Company LTD.
www CQtmtrytyme com

RENTALS

41 0

Houses for Rent

1789 Addison Pike, $500 Plus
Utilities, Free Gas, 3 Bedrooms,
$500 Deposit. References Re·
qulred, No Pets, 740-384-0063.
2 Bedroom House. Stove, Relng.
erator Furnished 1928 1/2
Chestnut, GalliPOliS References
Required . $275/Mo., DapOSII
$150, 740-446-9061.
2 Badrooms. Water &amp; Trash Paid,
No PelS, Deposn &amp; Reference Requ1red, Bulavltle Ptke, 740·3881100.
2 br. house tor rani you pay utll.

dep &amp;relroqwred 304-875-2535

3 Bedroom, LR, Lg. Kltcllen, Car·
port Ava1lable Nov 1st Privata
and convonlenll 47112 Spruce St
Gallf'~' 'J:lOiMo ..,· ~390 D~pos;t
raqu re
PP Y a opes urn .
lure 151
calls
. Sacond Ave NO Phone

lo"";;o-ooo;;;;8~~;;;;;;1,ie.;~
Apartment, 1 Bedroom
Apartment, Stove &amp; Refrigerator,
Close To Gallipolis &amp; Holzer, No
Pats, Call 740·448-3929, Evon·
lnga Or 74Q.446-8289 Day~
aile Bedroom Apartment In Pt.
Plea sant. Extra ntca and clean.
No pets Rhona (304)875·1388
Twin Towers now accepting ap·
pllcatiOns for 1 BR. HUD subsid·
ized apt. tor elderly and h ~ndl·
capped EOH 13041675-6879.
I" ~lostalrs Furnished, 3 Rooms,

Pats! References
740-446·

1519.

460 Space for Rent
Mobile Ho""" Lot, 740.258'-1822
Mobile Home Lot, located at
edge ol City Limits, Cloeo to
SChools (304)875-2359

MER CHANDISE

510

Household
Gooda
Appliances:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers. Ranges, Rolrl·
grators, 90 Day Guaranteal
French City Maytag, 740\446·
n95

Couch exc. cond.$50 .. compurer
desk with return $75. 304·675·
t238
.
1988 14x80 Spruce R1dga, 3 Bad·
rooms, 2 Baths. CA. On Rented
·For Sale : Reconditioned wash·
Lot, Gas Furnace, 740-379-2627
Buy Homes From $199 30JMo
•era , dryers and relrlgeJators.
1 · 3 Bedroom Repo•. 4% Oown [Thompsons Appliance 3407
199t 141tx721t 2 Bedrooms, 2 O.K. CredH, For LlstN1gs And Pay· Jackson Ava""', (304)875·7388.
Bath•. Shingle Roo!, Vinyl Siding, mont Details Call 800·319·3323, ~~~~~R~~~~~~~
Excellent Condition $16,000.00 Elrt. 1709.
APPL1ANCES
(740) 446-81t3
refrigerators,
Houaa&amp; apt low rant hud ap.
1
76
1995 Redman 14x80 Mobile proved, some ulil. Included clap
Home 3 ·~·oorns 1 112 Battis 5 ~ulrad 304-875-2053
~!i:!~~~~~~===
· 740.388-8445
·
·
'"'
Acto Lo\
Largo 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Ex·
1996 14X72 Norris. Two Bed· acuuve Home, Near Golf Course,
rooms, Two Baths, Central1
$685/Mo., No Pat&amp;, 740·446-.,
2957
1
·
~~~/nd
ouulcnes.
Pilot Program, Renters Needed,
304·736-7295.
1999 MODEL'S CLOSE OUT
R&amp;D's Used Furniture Great Se·
SALE. SAVE BIG$$$
Pomeroy· 4 bedroom, HUD, S/R, teclion, Priced To Sell! 'Com9
WID hookup, references, sec ., And Browse.· Corner 01 Route 7
2,3,4 Bedroom Homes, 1
948-5676
Naylor's Run. 740·992·8666, &amp; Addison ~Ike , •wo Buy Furnl·
::;::;:':""""_...~~:;;;;;;;;:;~Ilea
c.:.w
:.:...mesaag
~.::!:•:..·
lure" 741l-367-o280.
1988 Redman Danville 141170 :Also Has Expando, Ver• Nice, . Racine· throe bedroom, $375 520
Sporting
'
monlll. $200 deposit, no pelS, ral·
New Heat Pump, $14 ,000, 740· erences required , some utilitieS
Goods
388·8335
InclUded, 740·64!1-2621 .
Remington 760 Pump 30·06.
New Bank Repo on Lot, 1-600·
Three beclroom all electric ranch Marlin 30-30. (304)875-7163
2
383-688 ·
home with attached ~arage ,
Antiques
AWESOME: NEW 2 OR 3 SR. lenced back yard, largo lot, at 530
ONLY MAKE 2 PAYMENTS TO Meadow Lend Estates, Pl. Pleas·
MOVE IN AND NO PAYMENTS ant, $600 month plus references Buy or sell. Riverine Anllquas,
1124 East Main S1rool on SR 124
AFTER 5 YEARS.(3tM)7fl5.7111
and deposH, 304-824-2460
E. Pomeroy, 740·992·2526. Ru66
BANK AEPO
Two bedroom house In Pcmeroy, Moore, owner. http:tnts-your-busl·
1998 Clayton-3 Bedroom , 2 would like to sell on lend contract na66.oomlrlverinel
Baths, 1·800-948·5678
or will rent $350 per month plus
deposit and utilities, no pets, 740. 540 Miscellaneous
Brand New 16 Wide 3 Bedrooms, 6!16-7244
Merchandise
2 Baths, Just $244/Mo., Only 0
Oakwood - Gallipolis, 740·446· 420 Mobile Homea
""WATERLESS COOKWARE"" .
Home Demonstrqtlon Kind, High3093.
for Rent
est Quality · American Made.
Concept 2000 Oakwood 4 Bod· 1 br trailer lor ront S250 all ulll. NOT Korean Normally, $1.500.
rooms . 2 Baths. New Modal pd 304-895-3603.
5811119, $695 1·800-421-7267
$39,995 Oakwood - Gallipolis,
740-446-3093
Between Athans and Pomeroy. 2 14K Yellow gold 6 prong Tiffany
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes. styl' 53 carat Diamond Solltalra
DoubleWide , 3BRI2BA, only $26().$300, 740-992·2167.
Ring; 24" gold Rope Chain. Neck·
$287 per mo. wllow down paytaco, 7" gold Rope Chin Bracelet;
ment Free Air 1.8Q0.691-tl7n
2 Bedroom Furnished Mobile~ , 50 diamond Tennis Bracelet.
Home located On Hannan Trace ,(740)-446-4234 aner 5J).m.
Firat Time Buyers' Easy Finane· Road, 1 Mile 011 2t8, &lt;
740·256lng 2 and 3 Bedroom. around 6202
18 H P Huskle, 46" Cut Lawn
$200 per month Call 1·800-948·
Mower, $400, 740-446-9848.
5678.
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, You
Pay Utilities, &amp; Deposit, In Porter ' 2 -12" Mlckor Impulses In A
HELP SAVE MV CREDIT! 2BR, Ar... No Pets, 740-388-9162.
Sealed Box 2 ·10" Kenwood&amp; In
. ZSA $41t DOWN, ASSUME
1Jonsen 4x100 Watt Amp, $300,
PAVMENTS. WILL PAV TO RE· 2 Bedroom Trailer In Small Trailer Or Trade, 740-992·7tn.
Park References &amp; Deposit Re·
LOCATl HOME. (304)7SWM8.
q"""· 740-446-1104.
· Amazln~ MetaboliSm Brook·
Land Homa. Direct Loans. Fast
through Lose Weight While En·
Close Your Land Or Ours, 740· 2BR Trailer for rent In Ashton. No joying Tho Foods You Love Our·
deposit. (304)575·2388 or lng This Holiday Season. Free
4411-:3670.
(304)562·9303
Samples. 740-441-1982.
New u Wide , low down payment, St75 per. mo Free Air, Freo 3 Bedroom All ElectriC, S3SO/Mo., Aro You A Matal Building ErO&lt;tor
+ Oaposll. Ralerances. No Pala, /Contractor? We Have Factory f
Slllrt, t.Q00.69t.fim
740-387-0811
Direct Buildings Wllll NO Dealer·
Now 16 Wide, 4BR/2BA, low
payment, only S245 per Country aaning, two bedroom. all ship Fee Or Volume Commitment.
mo. Free Air, Free Skirt. 1·800· olectrtc, htat pump, TP watar, cal ALL SIZES /ALL LOADS. EL·
DORADO BUILDING SYSTEMS
740-992-7201 .
691-Bm.
1·800-279-4300
Only Ont lth, 28x80, 4BR, 2BA, Nice Mobile Home All Electric, 4j
only $38,999. Free Dollvory/Freo Mllel N Of Holzer On Routa teo. Cats Meow collacticn over 100
$325/Mo., + Deooslt. Roflrtncos,, plecoa 304-875-1631 aRor 5 pm.
set-up t-800-691-!lm
7~189.
: Complete DISH Network sattUIIo
RENT BUSTER: NEW"38Ft, NH
syaltm, brand - · St49 Installed
DOWN I 1211 IIONTII. ONLY AT
Apartments
rroo , 740·992·1182 or 304·773OAKWOOD HOMES. NITRO, WV. 440
1
.5305 after 8pm
for Rent
(304)7SWM8.
~Complete House Furniture In·
Repos, Single &amp; l)oubloWide. 1·
[eluding Bedroom Sullaa, Dining
1188·928·9898.
Room Suite, Desk, Couch /Love·
Tlll!H, cnara. Appliances.
Shopping For A Home, But WorAppointment, 740·446·
ried About Holliday Exptnooo?
Onty The Home
BatbourJ· 1 Bedroom Unlurntahtcl Apon·
vlllt, Will Pay Your Firat 3 Poy· mont, 7-74811.
3 To 4 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Patriot
Area $450/Mo , Plus Deposit,
303-•••·""56
~

'!!'""'"·

- - --:-=

...... 1-881-7'311-3332.

3INIIS·~Ih.)

Mlacellaneoua
Merchandlae

B,.

s-.

AYAtLAILI YINDINQ ROUTE
10 ·20 LOCittonl. I3K ·liM. Ex·
cetlenl IIICOIM • A~l CASH!
1~ Fini-A-bl&lt;l. 1·800·

,. Oil pre-EaDit'lod

Firewood For Sale. (740)· 258·
t922
FLORIDA. MARCO ISLAND
LUXURIOUS
VACATION
RENTALS IN S. W. FLORIDA.
AVAILABLE WEEMLY /MONTH·
LV HOMES /CONDOS AVAIL·
ABLE. CALL FOR SALES •
RENTALS CENTURY 21 1-800·
255-9487 EXT 101.
Fold dawn maple table w/ 3
chairs &amp; matching hutch $3!50.
304-875-1448
FREE SAMPLE. Registered
Nurse Loaos Over 90 lbs . No
Olefin~ . No Exorcise Eat Any·
thing Plus Have Lote Of Enargyl
800·793-9364.
'
GE 25" TV King 0 Heat Wood &amp;
Coal Stove. (304)675-7163
Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs.
Problems? Need Tuned? Call tno
plano Dr. 740-448-4!125
Gunsll Gunsll Sale on all guns In
stock, shotguns, rilles &amp;
handguns. Ron's Gun Shop, just
outside of Rutland on Lasher Rd.,
Sale lastlhru December, call740·742·841)!.
JANITROL IOKW
E~ECTRIC FURNACE
$250 Each Now; 2 Onty. 100.000
BTU 92o/. Gas Furnace $695;
One 2 112 Ton Add On Heat
Pump. Llnesot, (A) Coli Thermoslat, $1 ,500; Free Estimates. "If
lbu OonT Call Us WB BIJ!~ Lose "
1·600·291-0098, or 740·446·

AKC Sheltlt, 9 months, F., alw,
it, ~ colar, -lent pedl·
greo. tattooed. $400; miniature
AKC Schnauzer puppies, vat{
$300 oach, AKO Pomeranian, F.,
Vtt4, 91, ~peclal $100. AKO
Shaltle pupptaa, blue marie, trta,
sable &amp; wlillt, vet,, $21!0 to $350
aacn, 740-698o1085.
Fi sh, Birds, Pond Supplies
Sun.1 ·4PM, Mon.·Sat. IIAM·
8PM. Fish Tank/Pat Shop, 2413
Jackton Avenue/Point Pleasant
(304)875·2063.
Dog Obeldlenca Class Call Shor·
ry AI 740-.U8·1684, For lnlormallon, Tha Right Pew Training Con·

18r.

Jack Ruasall Pupplas, Born Oc·
Iober 8, 1999, Call740-388·9936.
Poodle puppies , AKC, shots,
wormed and groomed, male an&lt;l
llmsle, 740-1167·3404
UKC Registered Tiny Toy Rat
Terrier, Male 6 Weeks, Shots,
Wormed. $150,740-258-11162.

570

Mualcel
lnatrumenta

Conn Alto Sa~~:ophone w/case,
bought brand new ·used 1 yeari
E•cellent condition; baas gu1tar.
1740)-448-4234 anor 5p m.
For asle- Hammond organ, model
M1 01 , 740-949-2202.
Ibanez Soundgear, Electric Bass
Guitar, Excellent Condition, Hard
Shell Case Included $850 F11m
(304)875-4116.

FARrv1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610

Farm Equipment

1991 Cadillac Sedan DoYIIIt,
Whlla - Whlto Laathor Interior,
Custom Installed Motorole Mol&gt;lle
Phone Custom Continental Kit,
New Sura Battery ·1998 New
Michelin Radial Tires ·1996 El·
tate Automobile, Florida Title~.
,000 Miles, Never Stan Snow,
teo Or Salt Cinders. S9.800 Firm.
Cantenary, Ohio 740·446· 1634

Leavo Messago.

·

Maytag Washer &amp; Dryer $300
Pair; Small Entertainment Center
$30; Sola Table $35, 740·245·
9147
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Huge inventory, Low Prices on
VInyl Skirting Kits, Doors. Wind·
owa, Anchors, Water Heaters,
Furnaces, Plumbing and Electrical Parts Bennetts Mobile Home
SUppty. i740l-446-94t6

Autoa for Salt

----'91 Pontiac Sunblrd. exceJient
cond1tlon 1ns1de &amp; out, low mile&amp;,
$2850, 740.992-31110.

750

87 Bronco 2• 4x-4 new paint
95 ,000 miles $3,500 OBO. 74
~ord F 150 SAuto 310 $1,000.
304-675-6693
-:--:::-------1988 Flroblrd, V-8 automatic, air,
S161!00B0, 740-742·2357.

1993 Coachman Cataltna, 30
Feot, 18,000 Actual Miles, E""'~
Condn1011. 740-446-n54.

1986 Nlsstan 200 SX Tumo, New
Eagle GT Tires, Runs Strong.
Looks Good, St,OOO 740·44t ·
_10..:6.:.
3·...,-- - - - - -1987 Pon11oc Grand Am, 2 Doors.
Automatic. AIC, Cruise, 135K
Miles, Asking $1 ,000, 740·2459337.

1997 Damon Hornet 27' camJMg
trailer, sleeps eight, mlcrowaYe,
range, refrlgerarorffreezer. ate,
am/lm cassette, awning, sclsaor
locks, $7800 OBO, call 740·992·
1506 days or 740·949·2844

Stool Buildings, New, Must Selll
40x60X14 Was $17,500 Now
$10,871,
50xt00xt6
Was
$27,850 Now $19,990, 80x135x18
was $79,850 Now .$42,980.
100x175x20 Was $129,650 Now
. 1-800-406-5128

1990 Dodge Shadow, 4 Doors,

Good Cond•lon, S1,200, 740.2566946.
1990 Grand Am 96 ,000 Milos.
$1 ,500 Call 740·245 ·5942, Or
741).245-9183

1979 Starcralt 23' cuddy cabin
boat. lnDoarcl V·8, new cover.
completely restored 1n 99, no
trailer, no outdrtve, llrst S2500
OBO, 740·992· 1506 days or 74094!1-2844 MNngs.

760

24 l&gt;opular

22 Needl

25 Crow·a calla :
26 On the briny

cookie

ocralchlng

North

Eaal

Pass

1•

5•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Latvia

37 Took ln. ••
aelary
3B -.Cal
(winter
vehicle)
41 - plan, lor
retirement
42 Burtis

Paso

2

43-

44
45

William James. in a 19061etter to
Polish
composer
Witold
the
' Lutoslawsk.i, wrote, " Most people
live, whether physically, intellectual·
ly or morally, in a very restricted circl e o f their potential being. They
make use of a very small portion of
th~ir possible consctousness, and of
their soul's resources "in general,
much like a man who, out of his
whole bodily organism, should get
into a habit of using and moving only
his little finger. Great emergencies
and cri ses show us how much greater
our V1tal resources are than we had
supposed."
Is that the answer at the bridge
table -· assume each deal is a great
emergency ?
Well, the alarm bells are nnging
for you nght now. You get mto seven no-lrump. W est leads a spade.
After winning perforce tn hand, you
take the club ace, West dropping the
queen . You cross to dummy, then call
for a club. When East plays low, do
you finesse the I 0. go up wtth the
king, or ntp a co in to decide? Would
, t1 make any difference if West had
played the j ac k . not the queen, under
, your ace?
Thi s ty pe o f problem i s unsatisfac tory in a newspaper column,
where you get to see the full deal and,
therefore, !he wmning play. Still, it
doesn ' t affect the nght play. whtch ts
to finesse.
If West has a smgleton club honor, he must play that card. However,
if he staned with the doubleton
queen-jack, he can choose to play one
' card or the other. So. you should
assume that he had no choice. (This
i s called the Principle of Restricted

I

FAILED

5TOR'1'

LISTENING ••

-~.

--

47
48

at

52 lboen

character

54 River Inlet

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos

Celebrity CipMf ~msare cr811td trom quotations Dy lamou• people, pasl end present
·
EICI\.Itttlf-ln the ciphlratardl tor anotner Tothy's clue Tequals U

·o

H J U UK

DOYU

KUUL

LEJU

HZUN

XWN

ZWRU

HE

HZ U

HE

JUKOPBUC

HZOBPK

E HZ U J

H Z U N

MUAWTKU

HZWB

DORU

C E .'

XODDW

AW· HZUJ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "They say the breaks all even up tn the long run . But
how many of us last that long?" - Chuck Knox, Buffalo Bills coach

lAMI
'::~:;~' S©~oUlA-L&amp;£~s·
Nlloil ., ClAY I. POIUN - - - -- -

WOlD

0 Rearrange
'-tters of the
four ICIG!!'bltd -.!1 be-

I

law ro form faur olmplt

-d•

MAPPSA

I· i L( i Tt I..
_,L.....,Y,..N-.N,...0-.--1'~~~=,'
s I
I

~I

r

Youngster lo dad, "Someone else Invented electricily but
•
•
•
_
•
whoe~er Invented the meter
.--.--..,.......,....,.-,_.__, m~de • -, . the • - - - - "

I

CLENAG

I

......,,~,- 11.......,1r--11r--"''rr-l G Complete

L.-..L.-..1.-..I.L--'.L-...I.._.....J

-

tho chuckle quoled
by filling in th• mtssing words
yov dovolop from llep No. 3 below.

' i"'ll' :

' ,YJ ' •

.,t.;:;~~

'• . .. ..

•••
•

-

V

UNSCRAMIII.E
ANSWU

fORI

II

[Hru

IIIII

SCIAMUTS ANSWERS

a

Don "t g•t st111g by h1gh pricts I

Shop !ht clos~(led srct/on.

!TUESDAY

One dummy to another, "If you can spend pelfectly
useless day in a pelfectly useless manner, you have
learned HOW to LIVE "

NOVEMB.ER16I

SERVICES
''
Hom a
lmprovamants ' ·.

..

BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG
UncOiidlllonal tlfetlme guaramee.
Local references furnished Es·
llllllshtcl 1975. Csll 24 Hn1. (740)
445·0670. HIOQ.287-Q516. Rog·
orJWa~

Appliance Parts And Sorvlco: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
ptrience All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag , 740·448·
7795.
C&amp;C General Homa Main·
tenonca· Painting, vinyl aiding,
carpentry. doorJ, windows, baths,
mobile homo repolr and moro. For
troo t&amp;tlmatt cau Clttt, 740·992·
8323
Basement Water

Rtfrlgenltlon
Rolidertllat or oom.-.rctot wiring.
Muter IJ.
ctnltd electrician . llidtnour
Elactrtcat. WY000306. 304·e75'
1788.

IJ

!

50 h'a on tap
a bar

Mlllngs.

810

Archlpelago
Philippine
alanda)
Slrlde
Plllall
Window
ledge
Young male
horae

49 "I cannolllll

Pop-Up Camf!tr.
Condition, $2,200, 740.
, Evontngs

,_ 11rv1ot or repoirl.

'

Job

19 Comp1111 pt.
21 Mlnlatry

Unload - Frown • Heave - Mddew - HOW to LIVE

Electrical and

r

23 Do a banker's

12 HIWellan gooae

28 Holly
29Meedow
mouae
30 Hebrew lyre
31 Native of

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

R&amp;H Contracting: Now Homos.
Room Additions, "Roollng Pro·
looai_Oinal11,' Alao rr.. Sorvlco.
Coli (304)875-oleHI

1A11N II ,000 A DAY... I DO. Not
M&amp;.M. No Stlllpg. Work From·
Ptr. Frt1 Info Pkg: t ·800·
t31·2385, llllh. Ext 63.

PEANLJT:S

Budget Priced Transmissions
and Engines. All Types, Acceaa
To Over 10,000 Transmtssions,
eve JointS. 740-245-5677

790

,....,.

llgurea

8 Colorado
lnelan
amounte
39 Put forth effort 9 Not brief
40 ......
10 Type ol bag
42 .. Hey1"
11 Danllh

Choice.) The odds are slightly below
2· 1 in favor of the finesse.

I-lOW WAS
SCI-IOOL TODA'r'?

Sale. 7-3M3

=-For

,,

Auto Parta &amp;
Acceasorlta

Wll Sl&lt;llb 12.100 Equity 111M
Oakwood Legal Problomo For

DO 'IOU fAAN $100 In A Day?
'lfllw 0111 1.11e11 C8nflY Routfl. In·
, _1 3C1 llo~~lnt o And Frtt
18.995 CaM 1-80().

5TOP P!A'{If;\6
W\IC.I\ Pit.OJEC:'i•l

12ft. Y·Bottom. Aluminum, 5 HP
Gas Motor, Trolling Motor, Trailer
Good Condil1on, $1,000, 740-4462110.

19:75 Corsa1r 24 It travel tra"er
Ac, aleC heat, 2nd owner e1c.
cond. $2,800. 304·895-3080.

1889 Mustang G.T. Convortable.
New Top, $5,500, 741).245·5567,
740-245-9484.

IJU:..Y RJNI'&lt;Y 1I'IO'N

Boats &amp; Motore
for sale

1984 Bu1ck Century, automatic, 4
door, good condnlon, $1300. call
740-992-6531 or 740.985-4150.

1889 Chevrolet Celebrity, 77.000
Miles, $2,500, Call 740.245-5942,
Or 74().245-9183.

~

185 Suzuk1 "3Whtolor Honda
250 B1g Rod, 3Whutor. 1988
Honda 300, 4WD 4Whoetor ~ot
ol !jroslrirrls ttondt 300/4Whtt~
er.l3b4)675-.7163. "'

WANT A COMPUTER??? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance, ·o· Downl Past
Credit Problems OKII Evon II
Turned Down Betorel! RMstabUsh
YourCrediUI 1-1100-659-03!19.

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wlhd·
ows, 11n1e1s. otc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245·
5121.

(OULP t~~tve~ GeT
Ofi.GANI%el&gt; •.

Motorcycles

1963 Pontiac Catalina, 4 Doors,
Body In Good Condition. $300
OBO, 740·256·9172, 740·256·
1831 .
...:.::...-_ _ _ _ _ _ __
1982 Mustang Black On Black
351 W, 4 Speed, New Wheels &amp;
Tires, Richmond 4:11'1 740·992·
7853$1,800 Firm.
·

BANK REPOSSESSIONS IIII
Two Quonset Arch Style Steel
Buildings! Brand New, Still Crated!
0"" Is (401160) Will Sell For Bal·
ance Owodl Call Max 0 1·801182H06t.

~

&amp; 4-WDs

Two 15" Kicker Free Air Subwootera Caustic 380 Power Logic
Amp !50 Watts, Couallc 160
Amp 30 Wans Per Channal, Cou·
snc XM· 3 Crossover. Mounting
Board And All Wires lnlact, Entire Packa~o. $350, Call 304-773·
5592 Before 5·oo Or 304·882·
2102 After 5:00.

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allison, 588 Watson Road,
BI&lt;iwoll, Ohio, 740-446 -4336.
550
Building
Suppllea

•

on.

1999 Honda 300 EX , 5 monlhs
old, new tires, very good conch·
lion, peld $4500, sell lor payoff ol
$3350, call 740.992·2459 dave or
304-882-3407 avonlngs.

e

34FrHhar

The odds are
compelli"ng

IN M'f (/.It, IT yl/.6 ALt,
SINS Of OMISS101'4 • • '

~ 14,000

740

Langu~g~

aullfx
Donkey
7 Geomolrle

. By Phillip Alder

1994 Chavy Truck 4x4, 39.000
actual miles, dual exhaust, 305
engine automatic. (304)882-2670

2· Tanning Bods SI ,000 And
$1,300, 740-446-7821

Waterline Special: 314 200 PSI
$21 .95 Per 100; 1" 200 PSI
$37.00 Per 100; All Braas Com·
presalon Fln~ngsln Sllll;l&lt;
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, Ohio, 1·800-537·952&amp;

HUNG UP!!

1888 Jeep Comanche 4x4, 5
speed, 4Cyl. (740)·446·4234 attar
5J).m.

Vans

5

38 Medlclnll

Opening lead: •

1988 Ford 600 2 1/2 Tons, 16Ft
Steel Flat Bed Good Condtlion,
$8.500, 74().245·9460

'93 Ford Probe, allverwlth black
Interior, sharp cal, $5500, 740·
992·7727.
.:.;,:..:..:.;:.__ _ _ _ _ __
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's Toyota's.
Chovys, Joopa, And Sport Utili·
tits. Fee Required. Cal Nowl aoon2·7470; EXT. 7832.

STEEL BUILDINGSII Will Sacrl·
flee For Immediate Delivery.
THREE ONLY 25x30, 30x40,
50x150. CALL 1-600·211-9593 x·
32

HERE COMES OL" &amp;AllY II
I'LL NEVER GIT MY WASH

1992 Doctge Grand Caravan New
3 year old hall thoroughbred, llall Transmsslon , Now Balla. 126.000
pony, good horse for tra1i riding, Miles, Excellent Condition, 740·
448·2522 DayUjTie, 740.379·2789
$1000, 740-843-5285.
.. evenings.
Plgo, $25 and up. (740)258-8573
1994 Chevy Suburban Sllll8rado,
loaded, 4x4, 60,000 miles. 740·
Hay&amp; Grain
742-2086.
•
Boiled Oats, Call Alter 8 P.M
740-379-~.
1994 Toyota Extendt~ Cob, 4&lt;4.
105,000 mlloa. 10.000 robullt.on
the engine, tiCCellent condition,
TRAN SPORTATION
74().742·2086.
•

710

Weal

' 4NT
7 NT

Llveitock

Premium Firewood, Oak &amp; Ash $500 CARS FROIII800111 Buy
$50 Load, Full Size PIC!I·Up,
Pollet Impounds &amp; Ropos Fee
llvo..:...;rod.;;'c..7_40-'-992=·-&lt;..:.:..:588:.:·:.__ _'-. CALL NOW For Llstlngol HOo·
319-3323112156
'
Sam Somerville's Army ~u,rpiUIS, 1
Hunting, Camoullaga, New
SNO OOWNI HOMES NO CRED·
lite Systems, $t25 Free lnstalla· IT NEEDED' GOV'T FORE·
tlon. By Sandyvlll8 Post Olllce. CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP·
(304)273-5655
PROVALI 1-800·380·4620 EXT
8509
Sears Llleillyle Cardlo Fll Low lm· .:.;; : . : . ; · - - - - - - -pact Exercise Machine, Like Now, '85 VW GTI, black, 5 apeed,
Used Only 5 Times, 304·882· moonrool, gOOd work car, St500,
3152
740-669·3091 .
Slab Wood &amp; Firewood, $10 ·$25
A PICk·Up Load, You Haul: Var1ous Sizes, Used Llh Truck Forks.
$50 ·$100 Sat, 74().37!1-2757

'"..BARNEY

1987 Toyota Truck 22R Very
Nlve, 4 wo. Clean. 1996 Honda
CR125 Recent Rebuilt, $2,400.
"140-367·7754, 740·245-5991 .

'730

Lauper

23 Not
Wldftprettd
27 Of aummer
32 Wipe oul
33 lnllmlle

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

1965 NISSan Klngcab 4 WD
S220DOBO 74().446-1420

87 Chevy 4x4 Y·8 IUIIInjocted 4
sp. 66,000 org. miles tllc. cond.
$7,800. 304·695-3080.

(PII'faclly)
liot working,
llka a ballery
4 Quayle and
Aykroyd

3

• A K 10 8 4

sago.

Otlver super 55 tractor end loader
gas, wide front end three point
hitch runs slick $2500. 304-675·
3824.

unit
Singer

DOWN
1 lt'a In 1 ahakar
2 To - -

35 Spartan alava

• ·A K
•KQJ
+ KJ 4

'86 Ranger, 4 cylinder 5 speid,
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ASTRO·ORAPH

•

• I~ -

Wednesday. Nov. 17, 1999
There 's a chance you could meet
; - a dynamic. new friend in the year
', · ahead who could add a lot of zest to
'". your socinllife and pastime intereSis.
•• You ' ll have much in common to'
share.
,, .
SCORPIO(Oct. 24-Nov 22) Your
· ~" ability to get along m a convivial
_- ;· manner with friend• and usociates
~ today provides the environment for
• compromises and concesoions. Have
- ~ a '"llfeelinl of the mind.o'" where one
~~- is needod. Tl)'ing to patch up a IJro.
, •. ; ken romance? The Astro-Graph
· · • Marchmaker etA help you understand
whlllo do to malte the n!lalionship
· ;. wort. Mail $2.75 to Mlll:hmaltcr, c/o
· • • this newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mllr·
· " ny Hill Slltion, New York. NY
'.&lt;• ~ 10156.
"'!/
SAGitTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) Acc:epl help when offered loday
IIICI your wed will so more amooiJI.
· : · ly. Don"t be too proud to let othcn ·
, . ~: bow that yot1 can use the txtn hands
rr,IO ptajnh done.
• · .•: • CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

You"re always lookin1 for "ays to
advance your personal .;ms and
today might afford you just such an
opportunity through social conlacts.
Don"l separate them from your busi·

ness concerns.
. AQUARIUS , (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
l'lmue in eomcst today an ll'(lbitious
objective you've been contemplating,
beeousc the upeciS JreiiiY favor you,
especially with material ac:quisidons.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
While you might have days where
you sit around wishing and dreaming
for sood lhinp to happen to you,
today you will~~:tively ~ oul ways
•
to malte your hOpes a reality.
ARIES (March 21· April 19) Sit·
ualions that appear to intimidate
your associates won't look that fearful to you. In fact. you thrive on chaJ.
lenges and they"ll awaken your
resolve and detennin~tion loday,
TAURUS" (April 20-May 20) It
may 1a1ce n bit of selling to
others to ..., yuur way of lhlnking ona
110 alonr w1th Y.f1VI desires today, bu
yqa're mnrr than up to the tuk,_DI(Ce
you're determined to do so.

aet

Gfi MI NI (M ay 21 -June 20)Work
; hand in h:md with your assoc tatcs
today on ubJccttves that are tmportant
to you. E•cellent results are likely
when you know how to pull togeth·
er as a unit
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Uti·
lize that wonderful imagination you
possess \oday to find the alternatives
you're seeking to a d1lemma you
haven"! as yet been able to solve. It' s
oot ~re if you'll simply sear.ch.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Important
changes could occur for you loday
through the good auspices of an associate . However, you ~ave got to be
willing to make some transfonnations
on your part.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Don't
pass up any invitations today to
gatherings that have convivial overtones. Something propilious could
develop for you through social expo- '

sures.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Because any task! or usignments
' you take will be handled in on effoc·
• tive, efficient manner today, this can
• be an exlremely productive day for
you. Get an early start.

'

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Page 10 • The Deity Sentinel

1U11d1y, November 11, 1tKII .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~q·ciety ~:.., -c·o~_ ce·rn.ed

jTIME OUT FOR TIPS\

about cemetery care

BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family
and
Consumer
Sciences/Community Development

. Concern about the· care of temereries has been voiced by the Meigs
• County Genealogical Society.· · •...
During a recent meeting of the S'Ociety at the Meigs County Museum, it
•was reponed that Pattil:iil Cook, phisident, is working to set a meeting with
' all Meigs County township trustees and the Meigs County Commissioners
concerning the legal requirements' toward care of cemeteries.
Discussed were things Iike' private landowners living nnl door to cemeteries who are removing mohuments, planting trees, and claiming the cemeteries as private yard.
It was also noted State of Ohip law requires ail public cemeteries to be
1
registered with the stale. VioiiiJion of this results In fines. No township or
vili,ge in Meigs Count¥ js~ompletely registered alth!&gt;ugh r,.etart Townshill
is only out of compliance by one cemetery, it was reported. It was also point•.
ed out thallhe Meigs'County Commission owns a cemetery not registered·
cik
.:
S)mon Township was ret:oa.nized for its fine work in maintaining Snowball Hill Cemetery and maldn~ Carleton Ce"'etery, ~cccssible. It was poi rd-.
, ed out that severe damage .was done by Letan Township 10 Old Fairvic)V

With the holiday season just around the
comer. the aroma of Christmas cookies will
soon be in the air. The smells and tastes of
cookies that may be crispy, chewy, crunchy,
fudgy, cakcy. heany, fancy, fruity, chocolatey, spicy or nuny can make your mouth
water. Nothing tastes quite as good as a warm cookie fresh from the
oven.

Even !hough there are hundreds of different recipes for cookies,
can he d1 vidcd 1010 seven basoc types. The most popular is the
drop cookw . These oncludc chocolate chip and oatmeal raison. Like
the name 1m plies. drop cookocs are dropped from a spoon onto a cool
cook1e sheet The secret to making them ldcn tocal os to peak up the
dough on the cook oc sheet before baking . As they bake. !hey will
spre"d out and have a fa~rly uniform mound shape . When done. they
should have a dchcatcly browned surface.
Bar cook1cs. such as brownocs and lemon squares, are the casiesl
and fastest t'nuk1cs to make Just mix '" a bowl, spread in a pan,
h"ke cool and cut into squares. bars. doamonds or triangles . They
m,&gt;y be covered and stured nght in thcor haking pan. Bar cookies
tend to he roch and moist woth a thin . dclicale crust.
M&lt;•lded mok1cs arc formed by hand onto varoous shapes - ball s.
crc'\cenls. logs. candy canes , etc Examples of molded cookies
in cl ude smckcrdnndlcs. peanut huller (shaped 1010 a hall, then llattcncd from the criss-cross of a fork). thumbprint and Mexican weddong conktcs. This dough woll prohahly have to be chilled in order to
mold plllpcrly 1l1c delicate brown surface. with the crisp.tcndercatmg quality make thos type of cookoc popular all year-round .
Rolled cookies. where the dough os rolled outlhcn cookie cullers
arc used to cut them onto varoous shapes, arc most often thought of
at Chrostmas 11mc. Sugar cook ies. Scotch shortbread and gingerhrend men have become sy nonymous wirh holiday tradmons and
fest ivities. They can either be dccomtcd before or after bakmg to
make them ranc•cr for the yulcudc season. A ract to consider when
ro llong out the dough os that the thinner the dough. the crisper the
cook1c. II IS 1mportant to remember to handle the dough as lillie as
possoblc Eac h rolling adds more llour to the dough. making it
t(lugher and dncr.
F1lled cookie arc a variauon of rolled cookres. Unbaked cut-out
dough is placed un a cook1c sheet. Cooled f1lling, such as cooked
ruosins (I'm raisin filled cookocs). cherry pic filling or pineapple preserves, is placed on the cookie, then topped with another unbaked
cookoc. The edges arc scaled and steam vents are cut into the top. For
fancier cookies, the top cookie may have a design ~ut out of the center. Sandwich cremes arc also an example of filled cookies, if frosting IS spread between two baked and cooled cookies.
Refrogcrator cookies, such as bullerscotch refrigerator and date
pinwheels. require the dough to be shaped onto a long, smooth roll.
After wrappmg on waxed paper, the dough 1s eholled several hours or
overnoght. The dough can be refrigerated three to four days before
baking When ready to bake. the dough is sliced, using a thin, sharp
knife. These cookies lend to be crisp, with a crunchy texture, and a
nch llavor.
Spntz cookies arc an example of pressed cookies. The dough is
forced rhrough design discs at the end of a cookie press or electric
cookie shooter. The dough must be pliable. If the dough or the cookIe sbcetos too warm, the dough won' t hold the shape of the design.
·tf it os loo cold. it will crumhlc or won't come through the press.
These cookies arc known for their rich, buncry llavor.
To save time and energy when doing your holiday baking, you
can start hy moxing up a batch or light-colored cookies. such as
shortbread Whole the dough os chilling, you can usc the same bowl
and utenSil s to make chocolate chip cookies Next you can assemble
peanut huller cookies and. finally. double chocolate bars. If you usc
the system of mixmg light-cofo"'d c~okies first. then the darker
doughs. you won't have to dcao your mixing bowl and beaters
hctwecn hatches. Your utcnsols. howls. cookie sheets and measuring
equ1pment will already he asscmhlcd. An added honus is that the
ov~n will he rnore c~:un om ii.:altn usc hc~ausc it will already be pre·
heated .
Another mcth&lt;ld of sav mg time when haking cookies. is to make
on\.! largl.! hat ~: h nl plain cook ies. then dl\lldc the dough into scrarale
the ~

Cem~tcry.

Robena Maidens of Syracuse was presented her cenilicatc of member-.
shiP- Ii~ First Families of ~cigs County ba..cd on her anccstors.-.Q.avid anit

THE NEEDHAMS COMING - The Needhams from Murfreesboro,
Tenn. will be singing at the Ash Street Church, Middleport, Saturday
at 7 p.m. A love offering will be taken for the singers. Pastor Les
Hayman invites the public to attend the program.

Names im
NEW YORK (AP) - A fed eral
appeals coun has reinstated the conviction of Autumn Jackson, who was
freed months ago whi le serv ing time
for trying to extort $40 million from
Bill Cosby.
The 2nd U.S . Corcuit Court of
Appeals ruled Monday that rmproper jury instruction was not sufficient
to overturn her conviction. The rul ing. made by the same panel which
freed Ms. Jackson, may lead 10 her
return to prison for another seven
months .
Defense auomey Robert Baum
said his client "was devastated by
the news. "
Ms. Jackson, 25, was sentenced
in 1997 to two years and two month s
in prison after she was convicted of
extonion, conspiracy and crossing
state lines !O com~ll a cnme. She
was freed m June .
Prosecutors said Ms. Jackson
demanded the money from Cosby
on Jan. 16, 1997 -the day Cosby's
27-year-old son, Ennis, was shot 10
I
'
death in an apparent robbery on a
Los Angeles highway. The death of
Cosby 's son was unrelated to the
plot involving Ms. Jackson.
Cosby later disclosed a I970s
affair with Ms. Jackson's mother.
While he has dcnic4 being Ms. Jackson's father. he h~s prov1ded her
with financial support.
MARIETTA. Ga: (AP)- Newt
Gingrich has been ordered to answer
all qucstion!'i posed h¥

hi~

estranged

wife in their divorce light
Cobb County Supcnor Court
Judge Dorothy A. Rohin"&gt;n ruled
Monday that the number of quostwos Marianne Gmurkh wants her
hushand In answl'r ~n t.II\'On.:e pro-

portions where chocolate chiP' · nut'\. cand1cd frutl. choc.:nlate. sprinkle.;. or foo&lt;J n1 lnnng e m he added . Tl1cse ..different .. 'onkics can he

ceedings docs not exceed 50 - the
legal it mit.
Lawyers lor the former Hou'e
Speaker had argued that the phrasong
of Mariunn~ Gingrich':'\ quc~lann:-­
madc the number more like :100.
Gingrich. 56. lilcd for divorce on
July. say ong the couple's IH-ycar
marriage was '' irrcvocahly hrokcn. ··
tcmreraturc .
His lawyers have admiued that he
had a rclatoonship with Callista
Bisek. a 33-year-old congressoonal
aide. hut have refused to catcgoroze
it as an affatr.
Lawyers for Mrs. Gingrich. 48.
had submincd the questions as pan
TUESDAY
of the discovery process. The quesROCK SPRINGS - Inl'ormational meeting, Meigs County Wrestling tions cover evcrylhing from GinClub. Tuesday. 6:30p.m., Meigs High School. Open to children five to I 5. grich's linanccs to any possible
Ray Willford. 742-2103 for information.
extramarital affairs.
dropped. molded 11110 various shapes. rolled in coconut or around a
chocolate krss. hakcd as har cookies or dirrcd in mchcd chocolate
after baking . With one rec ipe. yo u have prepared a wide variety of
cookie . . .
It 1 ~ not too early to swrt haking your Christmas c.:ookics nnw.
Cookic'i 1.:an ca,1ly he frozen m freezer hags. rlastic freezer hox.cs.
frcc1cr paper or loll . When you arc ready to serve them . simply take
out the ones yo_u want. lllcy will thaw m just a few minutes at room

-Community Calendar-

POMEROY - Lupus/Fihromyalgia Support Group, Tuesday. 6:30 to 8
p.m.. cafeteria at Veterans's Memorial Hosp11ai , Pomeroy. Group from
Athens 10 carpool down . Those with either drscase and their families mvitcd to auend . For more on formation. call 740-593-2518.

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - The star
of " Walker, Texas Ranger' ' has
taken his hal off to a real-life lawman whose work made a difference
lhrs year.
POMEROY- Catholic Women 's Club. Sacred Hcan Church, 7 p.m.
Chuck Norris and Texas Attorney
Tuesday for Mass 10 be followed by a meeting.
General John Cornyn presented the
Peace Officer of lhc Year Awatd on
POMEROY- lmmunozations offered Tuesday, 9 to I I a.m. and I to 3 Monday to Texas Rangers Sgt. Drew
·
p.m. al rhc Meigs Multipurpose Center. Children to be accompanied by par· Caner.
cntllcgal guardian. Take chold's immunilat1on record.

-

MINERSVILLE- Wildwood Garden Cluh. Wednesday. I p.m. home of
Sara Roush. Church Street. Syracuse.
THURSDAY
PORTLAND - Revival , Freedom G\lspel Mission. Bashan and
Stivcrsvillc Ro~d . Portland. Rev. Mark Winncll. evangelist, Thursday
through Sunday. 7 p.m cuch evening. Singers. the Bissclls. Thursday; Deanna Stewart. Friday: Jodie Rice. Saturday. .and Dchvcrcd Sunday.
POMEROY- Rock Springs Beller Health Club, Thursday, I p.m. at 1bc
Rocksprings Uno ted Methodist Church. Dorothy Jeffers, hostess.
I

,.

CHESTER- Ewings Chapter. Sons of the American Revolution, Thursday, old Meigs County Counhousc in Chester. Dinner by reservation only by
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. made by calling 992-7874. Program at 7:30 p.m. with
Wrlliam Plants of Gallipolis, speaker. Dues payable. Guests welcome.

i'

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Vandals
struck The Gerald R. Ford Sinhplace with paitrtbails over the weekend, leaving hot pink paint splashed
on the memorial.
Most prominent in pink is a bust
of the former president and first
lady Caretakers of the site had not
filed a repon with police by Monday
evening.
Ford was born in Omaha on July
14, 1913, moving with his family to
Grand Rapids, Mich., a year later.
He became president Aug. 9.
I974, when President Nixon
resigned following the Watergate
scandal.

Study: Keeping pounds off may
require twice as much exercise

By BRUCE SMITH
Associated Press Writer
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) - Losing weight and' keeping it off
may require more exercise than previously thought - maybe as much ,
as an hour each day, according to new research.
A study from Brown University researchers found that 2,500 people'
who lost an average 60 pounds and kept it off for a year exercised
about an hour a day.
·
·
·
·
•
"We know that 3Q minutes every day is a good thing - it.'s beuer
than less than l~al," said Dr. John Jakicic, an assistant professor llf
behavioral medicine at Brown. "But after that what you want is somewhere betwcen- 30 and 60 minutes and wht:rc that is, we're not sure."
Dr. Rena Wing, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral medicine .
at Brown: said qiost 'of the people studied wAlked about I0 miles a
week . then did aerobics, weight lifting or other activities.
The researchers allcndcd the annual meeting of the North American .
NEW YORK (AP) - Dudley
Assocoatoon
for the Study ol' Obesity. The study was based on data
Moore says the Parkinson's-likc illfrom
the
National
Weight Control Registry, a repository or informaness that has a11ackcd his ability to
tion
on
how
people
lost weight hascd at the UniverSity of Pillsburgh.
speak. cat and walk has robbed him
Gcr~ld Mishoe. n 50-year-old paralegal from Charleston who
of something he dearly cherishes:
weighed 287 pounds but has lost almost 50 pounds after a heart aHack
h1s musk .
In an interview with the Daily in August. says he exercises almost 45 minUicsa d'ay.
Mishoe said that even after he was stricken he was not sure ahout
News. Moore. 64. dcsmhcd the
cKcrcising
. His regimen now indudcs strenuous workouts three times 1
&lt;.lcgcncration he has suffered since
a
week
at
the
Roper Hnsrital Cardiac Rchuhilitation Center.
contractmg the hrain disease. pro"
Anybody
who was my weight 'thinks ahoul the need to exercise.
gressive supranuclear palsy. or PSP.
Bull
never
ftiund
the time to do it until I got a wakc-ur call." he sa1d.
The prnhlems begun ahoul fovc
"I
thonk
·s&lt;nriconc
who is just trying to tuke oil weight might he dis-.
years ago. when Moure started srmihy
an
hour
a day ...
couragcd
tancously falling hack wards. ahd the
Another
study
found
that sh&lt;irt houts of cxcrcosc dunng the day
disease was diagnosed in May.
were
as.
effecuve
as
one
long· pcnod in maintaining weight loss for
Moore. known for the "Arthur "
w~mlcn .
'
movies and his longtime comedy
It is important lhat people know they can exercise a lollle hit at a
work with Peter Cook. disclosed his
time.
Jakic'ic said.
·
oil ness in September.
"To send them a message they have to do an hour a day is going Ill,
" It's agoni1ing." the actor and
turn
them niT. " Jakicic said. "We need to readjust that figure and find
pi anist told the newspaper. "I just
ways
to ~ret people In dn u lillie more."
can't play the sounds that I hear in
He
said patients who kept the wci~rht off likely paid close anent inn
my head. it's something I've given
tu
their
diets as well.
up . I thmk n's faor to say I have
"If
you
don't adopt hoth exercise and focus nn the cutin~ hchaviors
cnvosooncd a life Without music . No
you
won't
he successful long term," he said.
music at all. it 's a groat emptiness."
Dr.
l]enrgc
Blac-kburn, the head of the NQ_rth Amcncan Association
Moore's fin~ncialrrobiems have
for
the
Study
of
Obesity, called obesity a "niiMnal epidemic."
forced htm to sell his California
"The
sidewalks
and hike trails and the lime I{) burn calories is
home and stay with friends in New
gone."
said
Blackburn.
a professor of surgery and director of the Divic
Jersey who arc helptng 10 care for
sion
of
Nutrition
at
Harvard
Medical Schooi-BCih israel Deaconess
him . He planned 10 allcnd a charity
Hospital.
eveht in Philadelphia this week to
Fifteen years ago, one in six Americans was overweight. he said.
launch the Dudley Moore Research
Now,
from TV remote controls and garage door openers to meals with
Fund, created to find a cure for PSP.
hundreds
of talorics, Amcritans arc exercising less and eating more , .
" I' m not going to give up," he
"If
you
can burn it, you can cat it," he said, but the problem is
said. " I owe it to other PSP people
many
Americans
arc not burning up the calories they cat.
· to go on. And maybe that's meant to
be my purpose in life right now."

. COLUMBIA, S:&lt;:: (AP) - A
female cadet who quit The Citadel
after a semester has sculcd her sexual harassment lawsuit against the
school. a staff memher and two former cadets for at least $135.000.
... The state-run military academY.
paid $100,000 to settle Jeanie Mcntavios' lawsuit against the school
and a staff member, her lawyer, Dick
Harpootlian. said Monday. A state
official confirmed the settlement.
She also sell led with former cadet
Eric Amhaus for $35,000, Harpootlian said. He refused to comment on any senlemcnt with former
cadet Nicholas Belcher.
"Jeanie Mcntavlos lost a year of
her life, and while this certainly
doesn '!totally compensate her, jt's a ·:
large step in the right direction:·: ·
Harpoodian said.

!-IOlZER Clll'llC

~~ . -;.,;..,~

,.:

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

•'

Stngle Copy - 35 Cents

Justices study r - - - A lesson in
state's reliance
on property tax·
By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS
Aaaoclated Press Wrltar'
,
COLUMBUS -Ohio Supreme Counjustices questioned the state's heavy
reliance on local properly taxes as they heard arguments Tuesd-.y over the
funding of public schools.
·
The issue is back before the Supreme Coun 2-112 years after it ruled Ohio's
school funding system was unconstitutional because it did not provide a "thorough and efficient" education for every child.
• "What have you done with elim'inaling property tax as pan of school fundtng?" Justice Francis E. Sweeney asked Jeffrey Sullon, a Columbus attorney representing the state, during Tuesday's hourlogg televised hearing.
· Suuon responded that the stale has taken over as much as 85 to 90 percent of the budgets of some poor districts, malting reliance on property taxes in those areas negligible.
Suuon told the justices that the slate has plans in place to improve the
system, but needs time.
"We respectfully submit that, whether measured in terms of time, money or the sheer number of laws that the General Assembly enacted during
that period, the General Assembly has not only responded to the coun's mandate but in fact has gone well beyond it in several areas," Sunon ·said.
Nicholas Po liner, a Columbus lawyer representing the Ohio Coalition for
Equity &amp; Adequacy of School Funding, said nothing could be further from
the truth.
Everything the stale has done gives "an illusion of compliance with no
substance," Piuner said.
Justice Evelyn Lundberg Strallon asked Piuner what would satisfy the
coalition. "Give me a number, a percenlage , you'd be happy with ."
Pittner replied that the coalition isn't looking for specific dollar figure s
or percentages of fundmg, but a new system of funding education that gives
Ohio schoolchildren "a sufftcoent system of education."
Justice Andrew Douglas pointed out that Franklin and Cuyahoga counties alone have more taxable property 1han all 29 Appalachtan counties in
southeast Ohio. How could such a discrepancy ever be resolved without a
huge redistribution of wealth ? he asked.
"My question is, is that problem solvable'?" Douglas asked Piuner.
Pittner said it is, because nothing in Ohio's Constitu)ion says it must f~nd
.. , . schools through property taxes.
·
The coalitioti, which filed th e'~ 99 I lawsuit that started"the .~ase, wants
the Supreme Court to find that the state's response remams inadequate. The
coun is not expected to issue a decision until next year.
'
The Legislature responded to eariiercoun rulings by increasing basic perpupil funding. (l.also set aside $1.6 billion for school construction and passed
laws that hold schools and s1udents to higher standards.
But Perry County Common Pleas Judge Linton Lewis ruled in February
that the state had fallen shon of the Supreme Court order to fix the system
of school funding .
The coalition has produced a plan it says would provide an essential education for every student. The plan, which carries no price tag, includes bigticket items such as ail-day, every day kinderganen, smaller class sizes and
up to I 0 days of teacher training every year.
Suuon argued that the slate has spent $1.7 billion on education since the
coalition's lawsuit was filed in 1991, compared with $1.2 billion for the
Department of Human Services and $700 million on prisons.
. .
Gregory Browning, budget director under former Gov. George Vomovoch,
said the arguments presented by both sides acknowledged that lawmakers
and the governor's office had searched hard for solutions to the coun's concerns .
" I think there's a strong message, no mauer where you stand on this issue,
that the governor and the Legislature think this is a big deal," said Browning, who helped assemble the series of bills that became the basis for the
state's respon se.
He also said the coun appeared to be telling the two sides, "'We know
it's our job to figure it out, but help us. "'

No changes recorded
in official vote count
POMEROY - Tuesday's official count of the Nov. 2 election showed no
cMnges in earlier unofficial election results , accordi.ng to the Meigs County Board of Elections.
The official count settled a township trustee race in Columbia Townshrp
with Marco Jeffers receiving 161 votes to Jimmy C. Haning's 159. The unofficial count showed Jeffers leading Haning by 160 to 157.

Experts disagree on lights
being part of m.e teor shower

7

8·10
11
2
3

4-6
3

.mno·

Pick 3: 5-D-2: Pick 4: 3-1-3·2
Buckeye 5: 13-15-31 -34-37

'.w.YA.

:,Dally 3: 2-1:3: Douly 4: 8-5·9·0
() 199'1 Ohio Vol~i Publishinj Co.

In Ohio, as well as much of the
rest of the Midwest, people phoned
authorities Tuesday night with reports
of fireballs and suspected plane
crashes.
.
The celestial light show wasn' t as
spectacular fanher east, where scientists like Rob Suggs of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Ala., said it was the early stage of the Leonod melear shower- expected to be its dazzling best
tonight.
But Ohio State University astronomy professor Gerald Newsom disputed that, saying the fireball most
likely was either a piece of an asteroid or a satellite re-entering the
atmosphere.

mining--~.

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·'" Nint'ti.grade 'itudenla In the Tech Prap pr~~rlm at Meigs ~lgh
School· received a grand tour of the Southern 'Ohio Coal Co.'s
Meigs Mine operation on Tuasday. The tour, which Included an
overview of the mining Industry and several hands-on demon·
strations, was conducted by SOCCO employee.&amp;. Demonstrations
and praeentatlons were
by the mlne's.geo!oglst, elec·
trlclans, engineers and
end emergency medical tech·
nlclans, who wera
course
EMT

I

Mike Richardson is pictured, photo at left, assisting two students
with a first·ald demonstration, while Chemist Todd Adkins, photo at right, is shown with a group of studentS in the coal lab, which
analyzes coal samples from several of AEP's operations in the
region. Tech Prep is a program emphasizing preparation for tech·
nical careers. The curriculum includes a variety of field trips and
other outside activities. (Sentinel photos by Brian J. Reed)

Sunday
parade to
launch
holiday
season
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
MIDDLEPORT - "The Christmas Village" is the theme for Christmas events and promotoons m Middleport this year. The Christmas season will be kicked off on Sunday,
with a Christmas parade and holiday
open house.
The Chrostmas events will g1ve the
community a chance to show off several thousand dollars' worth of new
Christmas decorations, purchased by
the village and now beong mstalled in
the business district. The lighted
snowflakes and Christmas banners
will be placed along North Second
Avenue and a portion of Mill Street.
Middleport's retail merchants have
matched those decorations with
allractive 'window displays and other holiday decorations, dcsogncd to
carry out the "Christmas Village"
theme and to promote local shopping.
· Participating merchants will
observe open house hours from I to
5 p.m. , and Santa Claus will visot
Peoples Banking &amp; Trust Co .. where
a treat a(ld free photo will be provided, counesy of 1he bank.
Merchants have been asked to

NEW DECORATIONS - Mary Wise and and holiday banners which will be installed in
Myron Duffield of tha Middleport Community the business district this week. The village purAssociation, and Mayor Sandy lannerelli dis· chased the new decorations earlier this year.
play samples of the new lighted snowflakes
serve refreshments during the ope n parade can contact Myron Duffield at
house , and free drawings and other 992-4197, although pre-regostration os
promotions arc planned for the event not necessary.
Santa will make hi s appearance in
The Midd leport Communoty Assoc iation will oversee the parade and the parade before proceedin g to the
coordonate the seasonal promotions. bank.
The parade and open house arc
The annual Christmas parade will
begin at 2 p.m .• forming along Ash just the beginning of holiday events
Street, between Beech and Broadway in Middleport. A Christmas candle and proceeding onto Beech, General lighting service will be held on Dec.
Hartinger and Second Avenue 4, in Dave Diles Park The event w1ll
through the shopping district. Those begin at 6:30 p.m ., under the dirccinterested in pre-registering for the toon of the Middleport Ministerial

Assocation. and sponsored by the
Middleport Community Associauon.
The Community Association has
asked that merchants in Middleport
observe evcnmg shoppm g hours
through 8 p.m., until Dec. 23. Those
businesses have also been asked to
participate in a program of Christmas
g1veaways. Parllcipalmg merchants
will provide five gi ft s or gift certificates. and weekly drawings will be
held each Wednesday, from Nov. 24
through Dec. 22. Those drawings will
be held in each pm1icipating store.

Interest rate hike may be year's third and last

WASHINGTON (AP) - After
bumping up interest rates for the third
time this year, the Federal Reserve
signaled that it may remain on the
Newsom told The Columbus Qis- sidelines ·for the next few months,
patch the sight was not a part of the waiting to see whether it has done
Leonid meteor shower. He said the enough to slow the red-hot economy
Leonids are very smail and at the to a more sustainable pace.
Many private economists believe
time, about 7 p.m. Tuesday, the
meteors were on !he other side of the Fed policy-makers will be content to
leave rates unchanged when they
Eanh.
The fireball blazed for 20 seconds meet again in December, citing the
before disapp,earing over the horizon, , y~, 2000 computer changeover as
witnesses 'said.
one of·the reason~.

. Some economists believe tile Fed
"I think this is it for the year," said pushed up borrowing costs for milLynn Re~r. economist with Bank of lions of Americans on variable-rate will stay on hold until February; othAmerica Private Bank. " The Feder- home mongagcs, auto loans, credit ers said March. The answer lies in
what new economi c data tells central·
al Reserve will be on hold for some card dcbl and the like.
The Fed also moved its so-called bankers about the pace of economic
time. allowing tlie economy time 10
respond ·to its previous rate increas- policy directovc, whoch os intended to growth, wh1ch has been bnsk, and the
es ."
signal future interest rates moves, lo prospects for inllation down the road,
The Fed on Tuesday nudged up a neutral from one tilted toward mising econom1s1s said.
key shon-term interest rate by a quar- rates.
" I think they may have to do at
Slack prices rose sharply on the least one more rate hike next year"
ter-poi nt, prompting commercial
banks to boost their prime lending news. The Dow Jones industrial aver- to slow the economy to a cruising
rate, the benchmark for millions of age closed up I 71.58 at 10,932.33, its . speed the Fed is more comfortable
. business and consumer loans, to 8.5 · highest close since Sept. I3, when the with, said David Jones, an economist
percent, up from 8.25 percenl. That index closed at 11.030J3.
with Aubrey G. Lanston &amp; Co.

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Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50 , Number 113

Lotteries

,.·.. · -·

"•.

Meigs County's

Calendar
Classineds
Comics
Editorials '
L001l ·
SpojV
Weather

.;'

Cy Young Award
-Page 5

•

2 Sections - 12 Pages

'{

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Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 60s; Low: 40

Good Afternoon

.. .1 "'".

Differences in diplomacy, Page 2
Meigs athletes earn honors, Page 4
Parents try to do best, Page 7

Today: $unny
High: 50s;· Low: 20s

·Today's Sentinel

HOLZ.:It t;l.~UC•• ~.-~. .. ...
'' .
Ce1eb~atlng sq Year~ of servlc~/
"
.
...
. " ..
. '•

Nov. 17, 1999

Weather

By The Associated Pnsaa
Was it a meteor shower or some·
\hing else?

Female Citadel cadet
awarded $135,000 in
court settlement

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Middlcpon Literary Club. 2 p.m. Wednesday. home of
Gay Perrin. Bernice Carpenter to review "A Different Kind of Chris\ mas" by
Alex Haley.
·
POMEROY - Meigs County Fire Foghtcrs Association. Wednesday,
7::10 p.m.-Pomeroy tire station.

In July, Carter traveled to El
Paso, where one of the FBI's 10
Most Wanted fugitives surrendered
on the International Bridge.
Angel Maturino Rcscndil. also
known by the alias Rafael
Rese ndez-Ramirez, was mdicted in
July on a capotal murder charge in
connection with the death of a Houston-area doctor. He also is suspected
of other killings that occurred nertr
railroads.
Caner look a telephone call from
Maturirio Resendiz's sister that set
in motion the process leading to the
man's surrender.

Sarah (Grow) CURTIS. Any person of direct. lineal descent lrom a persoto
proven to he in Meigs County by I 830 may join for a &lt;&gt;nc-rimc fcc.
,:
D•ffleuilles in the illegal publishing of gcncalog•cal society's copyrighted material on the internet were discussed. The Ohio Genealogical Society
is going to he consulted i'llr legal assistance since other counties arc al!l(&gt;
having 1he same prohlcm.
'.
' Plans were made ior the Society to begin a prujcct on puhlishmg dcmh:
notices of local newspapers to begin with the IR90-l K94 period. The musC.-·
um is c rr y trying 10 locate the machinery necessary li&gt;r .the prujccl. ft;
was note
the project is compli~toy the presence of fllur cxislin~ ·
ncwspa'pcrs ·imultancously in the county during the late IK()(h. All paper•.
will havil't · read item by item as death notices did nut get pnntcd in sp~­
cial parts of.the newspaper as they arc today.
I
,
The Society is seeking any old justice of the peace records lll' Meigs
County to rhotocopy. Records of the justices were their private records anil
so many hav~ been destroyed when the cslalc was closed hy the heirs ql'
these men .
.
New oflicers named for next ye~rs arc Cook, president; Kerth Ashley.'
vice president: Margaret Parker, trea.~urer: June Ashley. trustee: Roberta
Maidens, tru~tce : and Christine Fruth. trustee. The secretary 's position is
vacant aJ this time.
Dues is now payable for the 2000 membership year. Next meeting will he
held on Dec. 14 at 5 p.m. at the Meigs County Museum.

Wednesday

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