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Ji'IC.. 10 • The Dally·Sentinel

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday

29, 1999:

Monday,

November 30, 1999

Dr. Hugh Davis celebrates 90th birthday
The 90th binhday of Dr. Hugh H. ·
.
Davis of Pomeroy was celebrated
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recently with a party in his room at
the Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Skilled Nursing Facility ..
About a dozen members or the
staff and board of the Meigs County
District Libraries gathered there for
/
a time of honoring Dr. Davis. Presented to him were pictures of the
bronze plaque which has been
placed at the front entrance to the
Pomeroy library. The plaque read:
"In Honor of Professor Hugh H.
Davis, PhD. Emeritus ProfessorClassics. in Appreciation of the
Donation of his Ancestral Home at
222 West Main Street, Pomeroy to
the Meigs County District Public
Library. Feb. 23. 1999."
Pat Holter. past president of the
board, led the group in sangang
''Happy Birthday." Serving the cake
to guests were Kristi Eblin, Iibrary
director. Olita Heighton and Norma
OBSERVES 90TH - Dr. Hugh H. Davis, center, was honored on
Hawthorn, assistant directors. Frank his 90th birthday by staff and board members of the Meigs County
Trautman, cousin of Prof. Davis. District Libraries. Among those joining him for a C!!lebratiqn were
assisted with the arrangements.
his cousin, Frank Trautman, left, and C. E. Blakeslee, longtime
Library Board member.

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Don't worry: Social Security is Y2K okay

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BY ED PETERSON
Social Security Office manger
In Athens
·
As 1999 draws to a close. the
(SSA) repons that all of its computer benefit payment systems have
been updated for the year 2000. This
is a direct result of making Y2K
compliance a top priority at the
Social Security Administration.
As one of the first federal agencies to recognize the problern, Social
Security began preparing its systems
years ago. In fact. we have been pro' cessing monthly benefit payments
with Year 2000-compatible computer systems for the past year. Congress gave SSA an "A" for its efforts
in a rec.ent evaluation.
Social Security has been working
with other federal agencies involved
in the benefit payment process to
resolve any Y2K problems. The
Federal Reserve Board and the Treasury Depanment have tested the
direct deposit program successfully
and included Social Security transactions in their bank testing. The
United States Postal Service also
assures Social Security beneficiaries
that their benefit payments will
arrive on time through the mail.

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Obesity listing deleted from
S.S. listing of impairments
The Social Security Administra. lion recently published rules in the
Federal Register deleting the obesity
(being grossly ovNweight) from the
list of disabling conditions for
Social Security or Supplemental
Security Income programs.
The final rules require disability
decision makers to consider !he
·effects of obesity on other body syslems. The rule s add guidance to
other relevant listings (for example,
·respiratory and cardiovascular body
systems.)
Claimants for disability whose
impairments would have been evaluated under the· old obesity listing ·
will now have their claims consid-

cr~d

under the

con ~ idera11on

uth~r

TUESDAY
PORTLAND - Lebanon Town, ship Board of Trustees regular meet. ing Tuesday. 7 p.m. at the home of
Clerk Dorothy Roseberry.
RUTLAND - Revival through
Thursday, 7 p.m. nightly at the Rutland Church of God with Pastor
Craig Heath from Sidney guest
·speaker. Special singing nightly.
RACINE - Southern Local
School District Financial Planning
and Supervision Commission organizational/regular meeting Tuesday,

l011_.g~ r

and

Sel:urity program was created in

Social Security stat es that th is
L:hangc in the listing of impairmen ts
will have no impact on :myone cur·

t'IJ 5. a 65-ycar-old had an a-n., gc
life expectancy of 12.2 more years:
today it 's 17.2 year&lt; and ri sing. This
means people need to start planning

rently rece iving Social Security or
SSI disability benefits.

for a longer life in retirement.

Wedneaday: Sunny
ttlgh: 40a Low: 20a

· Meigs County's

Pomeroy man injured
in hunting incident
POMEROY- Wildlife officials are investigating a "hunting
Capt. Steve Brose of the Allen Township Fire Department said
incident" which resulted in the injury of a Pomeroy man early Barker was discovered about 10:15 a.m. about 3 miles west of
Tuesday.
,
North Lewisburg. He was flown to Memorial Hospital of Union
Wildlife Officer Keith Wood said that Billy Smith, ofState County in Marysville, where he was pronounced dead.
Route 681, Pomeroy, suffered a gunshot wound to the arm shonAt least three hunters were injured seriously enough to require
ly after sunrise today in Bedford Township.
hospital treatment on the first day of the season in incidents not
Smith was transponed to Veterans . Memorial Hospital, and related ~to guns . .
was to be transferred to 0' Bleness Memorial Hospital at
Another hunter fell out of a tree in Licking County, a man
presstime .
broke a leg sliding down a gully in Perry County and man cut
Wood $ilid that Smith's injuries were "not life himself while dressing a deer, also in Perry County.
threatening,"and said that wildlife officials were investigating
Natural Resources Department officials are hoping this season
t~e incident to determine .if criminal charges would be filed.
will be safer for hunters than last year, when there were three gun
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said that he understood that Smith fatalities.
was shot by his brother.
·
Two new safety rules affect hunters this year. Hunters now arc
There was one death reported on the opening day of the deer limited to shotguns that hold no more than three slugs, one in the
gun season in Ohio but it wasn't gun-related.
chamber and two in the magazine. Before, there was no limit.
Clifford Barker, 77, of North Lewisburg, was killed on Mon·
And hunters now are required to wear a vest, coat, jacket or
day when he fell from a tree in Logan County where he was coverall of solid hunter orange or camouflage hunter orange.
perched to shoot deer.

.Rural AIDS cases on the rise

Wednesday is World AIDS Day

Social Security if more than a
retirement program
About 7.5 million people get
monthly survivors benefits, and
more than 6 million workers and
family members get disability benetits . For the average wage earner
with a family. Social Security survivors benefits are equivalent to a
$354,000 life insurance policy or .a
$233,000 disability insurance policy.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
POMEROY- The 12th annual World AIDS Day will
be observed. on Wednesday. AIDS is the, second-leading
cause of death among adults . aged 25 to 44. More than
410,000 Americans have died of AIDS to date.
According to Anieric.an Association for World Health
estimates, 200,000 people in the U.S. are HIV-positive
and do not realize it.
·
The Meigs County Health Department officially reports
A!9.S,.1ea.&amp;bs. ~~ .CoWll)',..,$ln"- ~~~.._epidemic:
began t]lthe early 198~s. and a· tlfllct case whtch has b·een
unofficially reported.
·
How~.ver, AIDS case.s in rural communities with
·populations smaller than 50,000- are on the rise.
Fro'm 1991 to 1995, reported AIDS cases in rural' areas
nearly doubled. While the disease has historically been
considered a disease primarily affecting· gay men, the
largest increase in contraction has been among heterosexuals - nearly doubling in recent years, according to the
Rural Center for the Study and Promotion of HIV/STD
.Prevention.
A recent study, which examined HIV tests for 16 and 17
year-old boys and girls in a rural South Carolina job training program, revealed that those who tested positive for
HIV were more likely to be female than male, and that the
rate of HIV i~fection in rural applicants is nearly 50 percent of the urban cases repotted.
Those figures can be misl~ading, according to health
officials, because most AIDS cases are diagnosed and
reported in urban areas, although AIDS patients often
return to their rural hometowns to die.
The theme for this year's observance is "AIDS- End
:=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~t~h~e_;:s~il~e!n~ce~,_;Li1sten,. Learn, Live!" The purpose of this

Social Security provides a foundation for retirement security
Today, only a little more than half
of all workers have employer-sponsored pensions, and people are not
saving as much as they know they
should. While Social Security
replaces a.bout 40 perce nt of the
average worker's preretirement
earnings, most financial advisors say

that you will need 70 perce nt of preretirement earn ings to live comfortably. Even if you can count on a
pension. you'll stil l need to save. If
you won 't have a private pension,

you' ll need to save more and start
sooner.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Middleport Lncrary Club meeting Wednesday. 2 p,m.
at the Pomeroy Librarv. Martha
Hoover will review The Search For
The Nancy Reagan by Frances Spall
Leighton.
.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township Board of Trustees meeting
Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. at the
Pageville Town Hall.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Flu shots free to
veterans with a current photo lD
card Thursday, 10-noon and 1-2
p.m. at the Veterans Service office,
I I7 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.

Single Copy. 35 Cents

First death reported during deer gun season

Workers can ret ire as early as age .-,_--,...-~,...-.,..-,.---.,..-.,..--.,...,..-~,...'"'!"~'!'!"!"!"!~!"'!''i"!""!i'!l!"'!'"!i!'!~l'!!!'""'!~-"!"!'...,..,.

10 a.m. at Southern High School.

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 121

62 and gel reduced Social Security
benefits. Or they can wait until full
retirement and rCCCIVC i'ull benefits.
The full retirement' age is now 65. ' ·
. but it will increase gradually starting
with those born in 1938 until it
reaches 67 for people born in 1960
or later.

Why retirement p·lanning is more
important

-Page4

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DID YOU KNOW?
Early retirement

:·Jacob Brewer turns two years old
The second birthday of Jacob
Brewer, . son of Charlie and
Stephanie Brewer, was observed
recently with a party at his home
in Pomeroy.
A Rugrats theme was carried
· out and cake, ice cream, chips
and pop were served.
Attending besides hi s ·parents
were hi s grandparents, Ronald
. and Lady Davis and Charlie and
Diana Brewer.
Others there were Joey, Misty,
Zach and Trey ~oatcs, Prissy and
Mikey Tabler, Ronnea, Danny,
Sierra and Emily Hudson . Justin
and Travis Brewer, Aaron Brown,
Dustin Kebler, Matt Bisse ll. and
T. J. Brooks.
Sending gifts were his great grandmother, Pearl Scon, Belinda
Taylor, and Amanda Hays.

arc living

l)ealthl er hves. When the Social

obesity.

.Community Calendar'--MONDAY
·POMEROY ~. Ve.terans Service
Commission, 7:30 p.m. Monday at
117 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.

American~

listings with

gi\'L'Il for the elfccts of

Sorority enjo.ys Thanksgiving l ,versity, was explained by Miriam during a recent meeting of the Past
dinner out
'tPerkins, speaker at a recont meeting Councilors Club of Chester Council
Members of Alpha Omicron ''of the Meigs County Church of 323, Daughters of America, held at
Chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma, : Christ Women's Fellowship held at . the hall.
gathered at the Ole Dutch Restau- ·')he Middlepon Church. ·
A Christmas supper will be held
rant in Logan recently for a ThanksPerkins talked about being at Trinity Church on Dec. 8 fol·
giving dinner and meeting.
unable to find a mentor during her lowed by a meeting and a $3 gift
Sandra Nofruff, first vice presi- college years. She wanted to fill that exchange. Deputies and past coundent, conducted the meeting during gap and became involved with the cilors of District 13 will have their
which those with November birth- OU campus ministry. The students Christmas dinner at noon on the
day were recognized. The group gather for Bible study and related same day at the Ole Dutch Restau:
sang "America, the Beautiful", activities which lead to Christian rant in Logan, also with a $3 gift
"God of Our Fathers" and "Come, growth. Currently the group has exchange.
Yc Thankful People." Officer's between 40 and 50 students meeting
Opal Hollon and Ella Osborne
rcpo11s were given, it was noted by weekly. Future plans include a trip were hostesses for the meeting con·
Susan Will that Rebecca Zurcher to Hondorus to help build a house. ducted by Esther Smith. She read
won the afghan give-away· sponNew officers elected during the from Psalm I0-7, and the group
sorcd to raise money for the World meeting are Kathryn Johnson, pres- gave the Lord's Prayer and lhc
Fellowship. Sandra Walker, schol- ident; Pat Thoma, vice president ; pledge to the American flag in uniarship committee chairman, con- Paula Pickens, secretary; Charldene son. For roll call members told what
dueled a silent auction, assisted by Alkire, treasurer; Ida Murphy, news they liked about fall.
Cindy Johnston .
reponer; and Eleanor Hoover and
Dolores Wolfe and Ruth Smith
Linda Russ gave grace hefore Virginia Wyatt, card committee. gave the sec retary and treasurer's
the tu1key dinner served at tables Installation will take place at the reports . Readings included "A Note
decorated in a Thanksgiving motif. Detember meetihg.
to Winter Underwear" by Esther
Favors were candies and pens.
Members had prayer for a 17- · Sm1th; "l Made a Left Thrn" by
Mcmhcrs took part in a "gelling year-old boy who has cancer. They Ruth Smith; "A ·Thanksgiving
h&gt; know you" segment in which
notep that the Pomeroy Church of Prayer" by Ern1a Cleland; "Give
they told of unique jobs they held Christ pastor ind his wife have a What you Have" by Goldie Frederbefore becoming teachers.
new baby. A thank you card will be ick; ''Cultivating Friends" by MarAucndmg from Meigs County sent to Hal Kneen for his program garet Amberger.
were Walker, Johnston, Saundra at the last meeting.
Door prizes were won by lnzy
Tillis. and Nellie Parker.
The meeti·ng opened with Newell , Margaret 'Amberger, MarNext meeting will be at the singirig of "Love Lifted Me", cia Keller and Opal Eichinger.
Senior Center in McArthur on Dec. prayer was by Chareldine Alkire. Refreshments were served by the
II. t I a.m .
and devotions by Eleanor Hoover of hostesses and games were conductthe Dexter Church on "A Word ed by Mary Jo Barringer. Others
Church women hear about cam- Now and Then."
attending were Eli zabeth Hayes,
pus ministry
Jean Welsh, Mary K. Holter, ThelReach Out on Campus, a pro- DorA plan holiday activities
.rna White , Guests were Sandy
gram which operates at Ohio UniHoliday activities were planned White and Richard .White.

Family money blues, Page 10
Trade carnival or riot?, Page 2
.Rou'sh tabbed top back, Page 4

0 MllL~NNftJM O
Have your BUSIN,Es~ or ORGANJ
. '
.
historical time capsul k~ZADQN induded iQ this
Milestone events in aoed eepsake review of the last cenh•""·
. .
around Mason Co """'
•..,. ,.
Counties m Ohio along with N •
.,;, "' '• GaiDa &amp;: Meigs
this once in a life~e sup I ational happenings wiD highUght
P ement.
This SpeciaJ Edition wiD be
,
Register, The GaiUpolis Dailyplaced in the Point Pleasant
Sen~el the last week of Dece'!:e':7~ and the-Pomeroy Daily
For space reservati00 .d
· ' 999.
·
~ , .hdp cbigain ·
·
·
please contact your 0~ .r . . ~ .s your :~ettisement,
'arb . . . ,. : \ pe advertislllg depa:ri&amp;ent: .

,~::·i'
, } . , : : , { · ' ·•• \

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CUSTOMERS
For the past several days
the telephone system at The
Daily Sentinel has been out
of operation. We apologize
for lhe inconvenience.
The system is now
repaired and we invite you
to call us with news items
and. for your advertisiqg
needs.

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B:!:rn.t ~feasant 1\.egister (304) 675·1333

illings Ext. 1113 or Pam Cal~ U~'arbe ~a((' ('
·
e LA&amp;. 1112
L
lpo IS tlaatlp arrtbune (740) 446·2342
arry Boyer Ext. 110 or Matt Rodg

•

Good Afternoon

~....

~ Today's

The Pom
.
ers a.&amp;l. 117 .
. ~roy Dally Sentinel (740) ·992-2156

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Dave Ranis Ext. 1104

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Sentinel

I Section • 10 Pages

-cak:odu
- - - - -10 QwiDC!!s

6:8

Colnlg

9
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Spodf

4-5

Wcllbcr

3

EditOrials

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Lotteries

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Plck3: 4+7 Pick 4: 7·3-4-9
' a.cb)'t 5: 9·11;1s-t7-26
- WeSt VIrginiaDally 3: 4~ DaUy 4: 8-4·2-9
0 IW90bk•Villoy PublllldngCu.
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·Memory tree benefits
Heart A·s$ociation .
POMEROY - Area residents
will ·.have the opportunity to
honor a loved one during the holiday season through a Memory
Tree at Peoples Banking and
Trust Company in Pomeroy. Proceeds from ornament sales will
benefit the Meigs County Division of the American Heart As.so·
ciation.
Bank employees decorated a
tree in the branch office's lobby
and will offer personalized ornaments for display at a cost of $5
each. The ornaments will be
placed ' on the tree and will
remain there through the holiday
season.
While the tree is located at the
Pom~roy office, ornaments may
be purchased at the other bank

locations in Rutland and Middleport as well as the bank's drive·
through location in Pomeroy.
"While most peopl~ think of
purchasing an ornament for a
loved one ·who is deceased, we
also want' to celebrate life,"
explained Joan Wolfe of Peoples
Bank, who serves as the division's treasurer. "Ornaments can ·
be purchased to honor a husband,
wife, or other loved one~ A family can even purchase an ornament with the family name on it.
We want this to be a display of
people showing their lov,e for
each other during this ~cason of
giving."
Those with questions about
the program can contact Wolfe at
the bank, at 992-2133.

theme is to promote communication with those who are
affected, directly and indirectly, by HIV and AIDS. World
AIDS Day aims to increase awareness of the magnitude of
the HIV/AIDS epidemic globally and in the U.S. despite
new hope in treatment options. Ending the silence about
HIV/AIDS will stimulate the development of new programs for young people to minimize their vulnerability to
HIV and to reduce the stigma and discrimination surrounding the epidemic.
.
.
As of this year, 33.4 million men, women and children
worldwide were estimated to be living with HIV and
AIDS. If current trends continue, nearly 40 million adults
will be infected _by next year.
All communities are affected by the continuing spread
of AIDS. In Ohio, I 0,255 individuals currently are reported to be infected with HIV or suffering with AIDS,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Those persons most at risk for contracting the
disease arc homosexual men, injection drug users and
those who have sexual contact with injection drug users.
The CDC reports that the spread of the disease among
young people across the country is the result of a combination of unsafe sexual and drug use practices, inadequate
prevention services and a misconception among young
people that they are not at risk.
World AIDS Day will link communities across the
United States tomorrow in a unified observance when the
White House dims its lights tomorrow evening. The visual demonstration will signify the commitment to fight the
AIDS global epidemic and will give tribute to those living
with the disease and those who ·died from it, according to
the health department.
.
Observance of World A lOS Day in the U.S. is ·coordinated by the American Association for World Health, the
Joint United Nations Programme
on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), the
Pan American Organization, and
the U.S. Department . of Health
and Human Services.
..
Local AIDS education and
respite care for local AIDS
patients and their families are
provided through the Athens
AIDS Task l'orce.

Memory Tree

·Power outage leaves 1,700
residents without electricity
About 1, 700 customers of
·Columbus Southern Power were
without electricity for ·more
than four hours Tuesday morning.
Greg
Pauley,
company
spokesman, said that the outage
occurred at · 3;3£1 a.m. Power
was restored at 7:S4 a.m.
The outage affected an area
from State Route 124 toward
Rutland,
Middleport
and
Pomeroy, south to C~eshire.
The caus.e was a burning wire

which led to other deterioration
at the substation located at the
intersection of State · Route 7
and State Route 124.
Because of the lack of elec·
trical power in the schools in
Middleport, Pomeroy and Brad·
bury, . there was a two-hour
delay in starting .classes not
only in those schools but district-wide. That was necessary,
accordir1g t·o a spokesperson in
the Meigs Local School . District, because of bus scheduling.

Sponsored by...
EmployHa of Peopl11 Bank In Pomeroy, ar~ pictured with the
.Memory Tree, deco~ttd . wlth pereonallzed omamenta. that will
.bellttlt the Melga County DMIIon or the American Hellt Alloc:l·
atlon! Joaf) Wolfe, dlvlalon. treasurer and bank amployH, Ia
joined by other bank employHa aaalatlng with the pro(ect: Garl
Walton, Dianna Lawton, Dee Jtn.ra, Tammie Maah, Janet BOlin
and Mlrily!'l Wolle. ·
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SMITH'S GJWC .
IRUCK CENIER, INC.
135 PINE ST.,/RTE.180.
GALLIPOLIS, OH

(740) 446·2532

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.Commentary

Is
it
a
trade
carnival
or
'68-style
riot?
r.The Daily Sentinel

By MORTON KONDRACKE
A starker chotec posed by pollster
In Seattle last week protesters John Zogby th1s month produced an
'fstabl~&gt;lie&lt;l'" 19~/I
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warmed up for the World Trade even starker result Only 26 percent
I·
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
Orgamzallon s meettng by rappelhng of voters favor unllmned free
740-992·2156 • Fax· 992-2157
off butldmgs and learnmg how to trade whtle 68 percent prefer that
hang themselves from lampposts
barners protect U S producers
Without dy10g
Thos summer when the Pew
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
The pohce sent out flyers adv1smg Research Center asked about normal
busmesses to board thetr wmdows trade status for Chma 54 percent of
.
CHARLES W. GOVEY
prepare evacuation plans and remove U S adults opposed n When asked
anythmg from thm prem1ses that of trade With the West would lead to
Publisher
•
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a more democratiC Chma the pubhc
could be used to cause damage
Tens of thousands of labor envt by 47 percent to 39 percent sa1d that
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
DIANE HILL
ronmental and other groups are !llan- 11 wouldn t
Genet'll Manager
Controller
The purest pro free trade posmon
mng to march th1s week- and pos
s1bly cause disturbances -to protest so far enunciated m the presidential
1111- wolc:omlllottera to tholdltor from-. on • broad rongo of top.
lea Short letloro (300 wordo or lou) hove tho boll chonco at bllng publlohld
the alleged damage done to people campmgn came last week from Texas
~
lettoro oro ~otorrld ond oil moy bl ldltld Eoch ahould Include •
Gov George W Bush who sa1d that
and
the planet by world trade
1 1111ure oddreu 1nd day1tmo phone number Spoclry 1 d1t1 11 thoro 1 •
the case for trade IS not JUSt mone
nee to 1 prevlouo ortlclo or 1 - Moll Ia Lottoro to tho ldRor Tho
If
the
WTO
mm1stenal
conclave
I·
-.not 111 Court St Pomoroy Ohio 4ll7ft or FAX to 7-2157
tary but moral Economtc freedom
makes
progress
m
!ls
meetmg
rooms
l·
and there s JUSt a carntval m the creates expectatmns of democracy
.
.
There arc no guarantees but
streets the Amencan pubhc likely
Will treat II all as a ho hum gathcnng there arc good examples from Ch1le
to Ta1wan Trade freely w!lh Chtna
ol the world s wonks
As matters now stand Congress IS and ume IS on our stde Bush men
hkely to approve permanent normal lmncd no ltnks between trade rela
trade status for Chtna next year and twns and human nghts weapons pro
both maJor party preSidential cand1 hferatton or threats to Ta1wan dates woll advocate free trade w1th problems he tnd1catcd would be dealt
only the Relorm Party upholdmg the wnh m other venues
~&gt;olauontst protecllontst frmgc
The agreement the Clinton admm
But the WTO mcctmg has the 1strat10n reached With Chma on WTO
potentwl ol rcpeatmg the notous membership Similarly contams no
Chocago 1968 Democratoc Natwnal
Convention at least tn the streets
That could set off real soul searchmg
By JOHN CUNNIFF
tn the Uno ted States over the ISsue of
AP Bualneu Analyat
Jlolnl
trade
NEW YORK- Real estate owners ltlllnagers mvestors and developers
Despite
a strong economy the
Check out those dot com compames before handmg them the keys They may
puhltc
IS deeply ambovalent Just as
not be your passpon 10 the New World
Allen Cymrot offc:rs the advtce based on hts background as stock bro- the 68 convention d1d no good lor
the Democrauc party that year a
ker multtbllllon-dollar real estate mvestor author and most recently strate
WTO not could hun the cause of free
~IC advtser to nattonal real estate compames
trade and help the hkcs of Reform s
No questiOn about 11 dot com fascmates as the stock market demon
Pat
Buchanan
Strates every day II suggest young gemuses at the cusp of a market revolu
Over
the past seven years the
uon with the potenual to make m1ll1ons of dQIIars
Chnton
admtmstrauon
has been stal
But, says Cymrot such compames can go broke W1th low •mt1al sales
wan
m
contamong
and
amehoratmg
:lnd b1g promotiOnal costs and challenges by competmg concepts, they can
ant1
trade
sentiment
m
the
Democra
be the worst as well as best tenants
t1c
party
but
11
s
done
a
poor
JOb of
From h1s base m Cahforn1a s Sthcon Valley Cymrot has observed own
ers and developers spendmg b1g money to lure dot corns and then accept educatmg the public on the w1sdom
of an open tradlng system
1)1g stock optmns m hcu of rent
Whne House pollster Mark Penn
' The behcf ts that dot corns arc the wave of the futurc and the expecta
reported
earlier th1s month that 46
non ts that they can only grow and occupy more space and thatthe11 stock
percent
of
registered voters believe
opt1ons Will be worth a lortune he says
the
Umted
States
should take a lead
Already he says the dot corns and the11 need for space have created a
ersh1p
roll
m
expandmg
global trade
second phase tn the re.1l estate bull market
because
11
benefits
the
U
S econoBut he cxplams the 'alue ol commcr&lt;tal structures- olficc retatl and
my
mdustnal- depends on the qualtty ol leases and the oncome they generate
But 47 percent sa1d that the Untt
'Without good leases he says such hUIIdtngs arc nothmg but hnck and
ed
States should slow the trend
mort u and he conSiders some olthe leases he has vtewcd as not very good
toward
globahzauon because tl hurts
The Achilles heel lor husmesscs thai depend on the Internet to selltheu
Amertcan
workers and dnvcs JObs
services and products he says ts the heltef that they will be able to contam
overseas
i.l'IUSincss costs at a very low level
He mamtams th ll 11 ISn t so largely because the competouon to v1cw a
company s Weh page ts so mtensc that even relattvcly small compames may
•nave to develop huge adverusmg budgets
II no one vtstls the Web page then no products arc sold and no revenue
1ts 2encratcd
says Cymrot fomoer ch1el exec ut1ve olthe Robert McNc1l Co
on~ of the nat1on s b1ggcst property.J)wners
athletes as well as good sportsman
By JOSEPH PERKINS
If you look at newspaper Web pages dol com compames have sent more
I encourage all the people of the shop)
markeung money down a rat hole with lcwcr results than any otber busmcss Umted States to share the sptnl of
For gnod measure the parents also
group m recent htstory he declar"'
fellowship and prayer and to rem- challenged the diStnct s pohcy of
He contends that the headlines of full or half page newspaper ads or bnef force the lies of family and commu- allowmg bencd"t1ons dunng h1gh
tv spots show how dtfficult 11 1s to promote a Web Mte - to qu1ckly and mty to express heartfelt thanks to scliool graduation ccrcmomcs
A three JUdge panel olthe 5th U S
God for the many blemngs He has
clearly 1dent1fy 1ts umqucness
Circuli Court ol Appeals based m
bestowed upon us
The cost of such marketmg he says os parttcularly dangerous for dol com
So urged President Cl10ton m hts New Orleans reached a spin dec1s1on
compamcs espec1ally when they have yet to earn a profit It means the source
annual
Thanksgtv1ng proclarnauon on the case thts past February By a
' of theor funds must come from venture cap1tal firms mmal pubhc offcnngs
last
week
The unabashedly rellg1ous 2 I maJOnty, the panel ruled that stu
of stock or loans
tone
of
the
president s message was dent-led graduatton prayers were
These arc not repeunvc sources of financmg such as earnmgs that can
no
doubt
offens1ve to secular w1thm constitutional bounds as long
be drawn on at w1ll he observes The marketmg must be effect1ve - or
humamst
types
throughout the fatr as school offic1als mstructed students
else the fund10g for tt w1ll run dry Good marketmg ts hfe or death to a
land
that those prayers must be nonsec
~ot com company '
They beheve that any utterance tanan and nonproselyttzmg
And so the warnmg to rtsk fnendly landlords Not all your tenants wtll
But as to student-led prayers at
• s\ICCCed It means you must check thetr balance sheet thcu management, and about God by public offic1als (like the
prcs1dent) or any homage patd to the football games the panel held that
the loyalty and strength of the1r mvestors
And do 1t before stgnmg lease commtlments that m1ghtt•e up your prop- Alm1ghty by pnvate md1v1duals m they are out of bounds constltuuon
pubhc places somehow undermmes ally under any and all Circumstances
erty for fi vc or I 0 years
the separauon of church and state
Gnd1ron clashes are hardly tbe
- that phantom consutut1onal pnn sober type of annual event that can be
c•plc
appropnately solemmzed w1th
The Supreme Court ought to set prayer the two JUdge maJonty
tic once and for all the half centu- declared
By The Auoclated Pr•••
ry long legal war between the God
Perhaps because the 5th C~rcun
Today 1s Tuesday Nov 30 the 334th day of 1999 There are 31 days left feanng and the godless And the JUS
panel ruled that student led gradua
tn the year
llccs can bcgm wllh the school t10n prayers are constttuuonally
Today s H1ghllght m HIStory
prayer case out of Texas that they acceptable under court spcctfied con
On No~ 30, 1782 the Un1ted States and Bntam s1gned prehmmary peace placed nn the h1gh court s docket car d1t1ons the Supreme Court declined
• tcles m Pans, endmg the Revolutionary War
her thiS month
to address the tssue Instead, the JUs
On th1sdate
The case dates back to 1995 when llces agreed to dec1dc the matter of
In 1804. Supreme Court Justtce Samuel Chase went on tnal accused ol the parents nl four students enrolled whether student led orgamzed prayer
•liOllllcal btas He was acquttted by the Senate
on the Santa Fe Texas pubhc schools ts allowed before school sponsored
In 1835 Samuel Langhorne Oemcns better known as author Mark Twam
challenged the d1stnct s pohcy ol sportmg events
'i"~as born 1n flonda. Mo
allowmg students to rcctlc prayers
But one more narrow school
in 1874, BrtUsh statesman S1r W10ston Churchill was born at Blenhetm hclorc football games (as u way ol prayer dcc1s10n w11l hardly resolve
promotmg the salcty ol the student the consutuuonal diSpute to the sat
Palace
.; In J900,1nsh author Oscar Wilde d1ed tn Pans
' In 1936 London s famed Crystal Palace built for the lnternattonal Exht
tiiuon of 185 I was destroyed tn a fire
In 1939 tbe Russo-Fmn1sh War began as Sov1ettroops mvaded Fmland
' In 1949 Chtnese Communtsts captured Chungking
between men and women other than
• In 1962 U Thant of Burma was elected Secretary General of the Umted By JOAN RYAN
I
envy
the
young
women
m
my
the
obv1ous phys1cal ones The cui
l'lat100s, succeedmg the late Dag Hammarskjold
office
111ey
are
so
comfonable
bemg
tural
and socmlog•cal tdcal was
• In 1966 the former Bnt1sh colony of Barbados became mdependent
_women They show 1!1' to work m sameness wh1ch could be ach1eved
In 199~ Prcstdent Clinton stgned tnto law tbe Brady gun control btll
~ Ten years ago Prestdent Bush left Washmgton for hts first summu With sk.tns and blouses that-don t htde the stmply by changmg laws enlighten
SOvtet President Mtkha1l S Gorbachev that took place aboard sh1ps off the fact they have legs and breasts Lace mg schools and redtrecung parents
IS not out of the question As one late
We rarely stopped to ask the next
Mcdttcrrancan •~land of Malta Alfred Herrhausen, chatrman of West Ger
lll'any 5 largest hank was k11led 10 a bombmg cla1med by the Red Army Fac- 20s up-and commg ed1tor satd to me, log•cal quest tons What docs same
I hke g1rly things '
ness mean exactly I How would tl
111111
When I entered the busmess 1 look' Were the two sexes trymg to
; ftvc years ago Two passengers d1cd and nearly I 000 others and crew
mber.t ned the cru1se sh1p Ach11le Lauro after 11 caught fire offtbe coast drank scotch and wore trousers and become some son of thtrd gender that
nat shoes and took to heart the was nenher male nor female' The
~Somalia the shop !lank two days later Th.e Ach1lle Lauro had gamed nolo
adv1ce
not to wnte a woman's'
answer of course was no We were
~ety 10 1985 when 11 was hiJacked by Palesttman extremists
sports
column
because
no
one
would
gmng to ach1eve sameness - and
' One year ago Quebec s separattst prem1er Luc1cn Bouchard was returned
accept
me
Without
thmking
too
hard
thus
somehow equality- by every
~~power but w1th only 43 percent of the vote settmg back the Part1 Que
on
11
I
strove
to
be
a
ltUie
man,
whtch
one
bemg
men
~ 011 • goal of scekmg mdependcnce from Canada Deutsche Banki.A'/J
made
perfect
sense
at
tile
ttme
Men
Now
the
cloak of gender pollttcs
~~nc;ed 11 was acqumng Bankers Trust Corp for more than S I0 bllli'bii.
served
as
the
sole
model
of
human
•s
ltfung
and
underneath arc gads
Today's B•nhdays Mov1c d~rector Gordon Parks ts 87 Actor Efrem Z1m
ompetenc:e m the workplace
more pmk than we ve seen m a whtle
" hllst Jr ts 81 Actress Vtrgtnta Mayo ts 79 Former Rep Sh1rley Chtsholm
Th1s tt stnkes me now, was hke a
Three maJor pubhshers released
lJ).N y ts 75 Actor RIChanl Crcnna 1s 72 Actor Robert Gutllaume 1s 72
'fPI personality and producer Dick Clark IS 70 Rad1o talk show host G Gor cat stnvmg to be a dog It smacked books earlier th1s year that examme
'liOn Liddy ts tn Country stngerTeddy W1lburn 1s 68 Country smger record of self-loathmg, even tf we dtdn t what tt means to be female from the
~ executive J1mmy Bowen 1s 62 S10ger Luther Ingram IS 5.5 Smger Rob thmk of tl that way It suggested that neurons.m our brains to tl)e cycles
~rill (,_ Grassroots) IS 55 Playwnght Dav1d Mamet ts 52 Actress Mar
femaleness was somethtng to over· 'that regulate our bodtes Time magilret-Wflttton 1s 49 Actor Mandy Pattnkm ts 47 Mustctan Shuggte Otts ts come For decades we held to the azme put the toptc on tts cover thts
not1on that there were no d1fferences 1 spnng Medtcal semmars on gender46 StnJer June Pomter IS 45 Country smger Jean me Kendall1s 45

•;z:

Business Mirror:

Yes, landlords,
your dot.com
·leases can fail

~

I

hnkage wh1ch led AFL CIO pres•
dent John Sweeney to denounce the
admtmstrallon for
prostratmg
Itself ' before a rogue nauon that
decorates tlself w1th human nghts
abuses as 1f they were medals ofhon
or
The AFL CIO cla1ms that II
accepts the 1dea of U S part1ctpat1on
m a global tradmg system with
appropnate safeguanls for workers
here and abroad but Sweeney s
speech to the National Press Club last
week showed how deep labor's dts
trust of free trade ts
Over the last 25 years he
cla1med the global economy has
produced slower growth and greater
mequahty m both less developed and
mdustnal nat1ons because corpora
lions have been dtctaung the terms of
trade
It may be true that the gap
between nch and poor has grown but
over the past 50 years the Clinton
admtmstratwn asserts per cap1ta
world mcomc has tnplcd cconom1c
productiOn has grown s1x ltmes
average hie expectancy has gamed 20
years and mlant mortality has
dropped by two thirds
Stausucs hkc that need to be
transmitted In the pubhc agmn and

agam along w1th evidence that U S
workers are benefiung from expand
mg markets overseas
In Seattle the admmostrat1on 1s
advocatmg creatiOn of a WTO work
mg group on labor the bannmg of
child labor around the world and
reportmg on the envnonmental con
sequences of trade agreements along w1th market opemng measures
m agnculture and serv1ces
It s a worthy example of th1rd
way Chntomsm - somethmg
between pure fa1th m free markets
and the sancttons mmded policy
advocated by labl&gt;r untons
The third way formula wtll face
dtfficulUeS Wtthtn the WfO meetmgs
especially from developmg nanons
that oppose hm1ts on thetr ablltty to
take advantage of the1r cheap labor
and weak envuonmental controls
Free trade also faces a threat from
ag1tatton outstde the meetmgs
mcludmg one mass march bemg
mounted by the labor movement In
the strange bedfellows category one
of labor s.allles 10 Seattle w1ll be Pat
Buchanan perhaps the buttoned
down Abbte Hoffman of 1999
(Morton Kondrecke Ia executive
editor of Roll Call, the newspaper
of Capitol Hill )

CHINA'S REVOLUTION...

~~lfR

~(llkl~ Ml919
stalllerOfuse net

I

j

·Today in history

:;:z

l

•f'-

~

J

V.

COOLVILLE-Herman R Carson Sr 92 Coolv1lle d1ed Monday Nov
29 1999 at the Camden Clark Memonal Hospital Parkersburg W Va
Arrangements are bemg handled by the Ftsher Funeral Home

Florence I. Circle
RACINE- Aorencc I C1rcle 95 Racme d1ed Monday Nov 22 1999
1n the Veterans Memonal Extended Care Unit Pomeroy
Born Sept 3 1904 m Racme daughter of the late Sulhvan and Clara
Moore C1rcle she was a rettred schoolteacher havmg taught m Columbiana
eounty for three years 22 years m Washmgton County and 22 years m Me1gs
County at Letart Elementary and Racme Elementary
She was a member of the Carmel Sutton Untied Methodtst Church and
served as a Sunday School teacher and supenntendent She was also the
church orgamst for several years
She was a member of the Metgs Retired Teachers Assoc1ahon the Oh10
Rettred Teachers Assoc1a11on and the National Teachers Assoc1al10n
Surv1vmg are a brother Douglas Ctrcle of Racme and two meces and a
nephew
She was also preceded m death by two ststers Mabel Circle and Stella
Cucle and three brothers Garrett Circle John C~rcle and Grant Cucle
Serv1ces wtll be I p m Thursday m the Carmel Sutton Umted MethodiSt
Church With the Rev Dewayne Stutler offic1atmg Bunal will be m the
Carmel Cemetery Fnends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Home Racmc
from 6 9 p m Wednesday
Memortdl contnbuuons can be made to the Carmel Sutton Umted
MethodiSt Church m care of the Rev Dewaync Stutler 48411 State Route
124 Racme Oh1o 45771

Nancy Rawlings Ewing
CLEARWATER Fla -Nancy RawhngsEwmg 82 ofCiearwater Fla
d1ed Saturday Nov 20 1999 m Clearwater
A former rcs1den1 of Pomeroy she was the daughter of the late Ray and
Clara Rawhngs of Umon Avenue of Pomeroy Whtle rcstdmg m Pomeroy
she was a member of a local garden club
She IS surv1ved by two daughters and a son Deanna Ewmg Nichols of
Sugar Hill Ga Natalie Ewmg Thomson of Clearwater Fla and Mtchael
Ewmg of Alpheretta Ga seven grandchildren and f1ve great grandchildren
and a stster tQ IalV Hamel Karr Ewmg of Columbus
She was preceded m death m 1977 by her husband Howard Karr Ewmg
known as Howard the Trader who owned a store m Mtddleport on the T
m the late 1940s Mr and 'Mrs Ewmg moved to Flonda m 1950
Memonal serv1ces wtll be held for the 1mmedtate famtly at the annual
reumon held each March Her body was left to~he Anatomy Department at
the Untverstly of Flonda
The fam1ly requests that remembrances take the form of domg somethmg
spec1al for someone who would least expect 11

GALLIPOLIS ~

1sfact1on of the Amencan people The
nauon s h1ghcst court needs to reach
all the way back to 1962 and overturn
the ruhng that first declared sch(K&gt;I
prayer uncnnsutullonal
It came m a New Ynrk case
Engels v V1talc m wh1ch the hhcr
al activiSt Warren court turned the
F1rs1 Amendment s so-called estah
ltshmcnt clause nn us head
The clause reads that Congress
shall make nn law rcspect10g the
cstabltshment ol rchgton nnr pm
h1h1tmg the lrcc cxerc1sc thercol
What that says IS that the gnvernmenl
m.ty nnt establish one rcllgton lor all
ol the penplc It dncs not say that
pubhc msli!Ullnns - tncludtng
schools- Will have ahsolutcly noth
mg to do wllh rehg1on
Those who ms1st that school
prayer 1s unconstttutlonal who mam
tam tllat the consutullon somehow
reqUireS a scparatiOif' of church and
state have obvtously m1srcad the
document they arc obv1ously tgnorant of the founders vtews on gov
ernment and rcllg1on
Indeed 210 Thanksgmngs ago
Prestdcnt George Washmgton 1ssued
a proclamauon that declared 11 the
duty of all nat1ons to acknowledge
the providence of Almighty God, to
obey H1s w11l to be grateful for H1s
bencf1ts and humbly to tmplore H1s
protection and favor
The Father of our Country also

noted that both Houses of Congress
have requested me to 'recommend
to the people of the Untied States a
day of pubhc thanksgiVIng and
prayer to he observed by acknowl
cdgmg wnh grateful beans the many
and s1gnal favors of Ahn1ghty Oud
The Umted States 1s a nat1on that
was founded by God feanng people
who never 1mag•l'\ed that the government they created would nne day
hamsh rcllgoon lmm sch(Kols and &lt;Kh
er public mstotuuons
Indeed when the early Congress
neglected one day to begm 11s pro
cccdmgs wnh pmycr BcnJ.tmm
Frankltn admomshcd
Have we
now lnrgotten that powerful Fncnd'
Or dn we 1magmc we no longer need
H1s assistance 1
Ever smcc that day more than two
ccntunes agu Congress has begun us
d.uly husmcss wnh pr.lycr
Wh1ch ra1ses a quc~tmn that the
ovcrwhclmmg IOaJ&lt;mly ol Amencan'
who support sch&lt;Kol prayer have hccn
askmg for the past four decades
II prayer ts cunslllut10nally at:ccpt
ahle 10 the puhltc chambers ol the
Caplin! how can the Supreme Court
cnnstttutwnally delcnd a ban on
prayer and other forms of rchg1ous
expness1on tn schools and other pub
he venues?
(Jollph Perltlnl II I COI\Imnlel
for The Sen Diego Union-Tribune )

Men and women: apples and oranges

t
t

Herman R. Carson Sr.

BEVERIDGE
l ByAP DIRK
Bualne.. Writer

ElizaMth
Pierson Hill
•

We pray in Congress, but not in school

I

Trade conference continues despite protests·f

Page2
Tuesday, November 30, 1!'!

spectfic btology that attracted only a
handful of doctors four years ago
now fill to capacity Researchers are
feehng free to explore the sc1ence
behmd Venus and Mars Without bemg
accused of setting women back
What my book does I thmk 1s
say, 'Let s look at ourselves and not
feel defenstvc, " says Dianne Hale
author of Just Ltke a Woman How
Gender Sc1encc Is Redefinmg What
Makes Us Female (Bantam), pubhshed last month Hale and the
authors of two s1mllar books have
been desclibed as 'femaletsts 'rather
than femmtsts There 1s no pohutal
agenda m the books though they
probably would have been braftded as
SCXISI JUSt I 0 or 15 years ago
"The soc1al landscape has
changed, so that now they can put
these books out there wtthout bemg
lambasted ' says comedtan Rob
Becker A decade ago when Becker
first began perfortmng Defendtng
the Caveman ' h1s one man show
I

about hunter men and gatherer
women some crtttcs called 11 mscn
SIItvc stereotypical and out of touch
But audiences loved u They recog
mT.cd what Becker was saymg All
the well mtenttoncd politically cor
rcct theoncs m the world can t, and
shouldn I try to, change cvnlutmnary
b1ology Tho show bc~;a.mc the
longest runnmg one man shOw m the
history ol Broadway and 1s sull sell·
mg out tn theaters across the country
' What bothers me about people
saymg men should be hke women or
women should be like men or that
everyone needs to be the same
Becker says, "ts that what they're
really saymg IS that we're not OK lht

way we lUll '

We're finally movmg to the potnl
when we can stop makmg cotnpar•
tsons altogether and undersUind that
we are what we arc Then when
someone asks who IS better, l)lcn or
women we'll answer as Samuel
1ohnson did Whtch man 1 Whtch
woman?
\

El1zabeth P1erson Htll 87 Galhpohs d1ed Monday Nov
29 1999 m Holzer Med1cal Center
Born Sept 27 1912 m Pomt Pleasant W Va daughter of the late Wtlllarn
H P1erson and Stella Rodgers Ptcrson Lepon she was a reured cook and a
homemaker
She was a member of the Elizabeth Chapel Church and attended the L1ght
house Assembly of God m Galhpolls
She was also preceded m death by a daughter Ella Aorence H1ll a son
Wilham Dtckie Blam H1ll two stslers Kathermc Sheets and Ruth Wells
and a grandson Harold V Lookado Ill
Sumvmg arc seven daughters JoAnn McDonald Vugm1a Suckler and
Wtlma H1ll all of Galhpohs Nancy Htll of Pollacksv111e N C Sh1rley Byus
and Sally Wears both of P01nt Pleasant and Mary Lookado of Vmton two
sons Ernest Sonny Htll Jr and John D H1ll both of Potnl Pleasant and
32 grandchildren 72 great gr mdch1ldren and 13 great great grandchtldren
' Servtces wtll be 10 a m Thursday m the Crow Hussell Funeral Home
:Poml Pleasant wllh the Rev Alfred Holley and the Rev Bill Banks off~eo
atmg Bunal w11l be m the Ktrkland Memonal Gardens Fnends may call at
the funeral home from 6 9 p m Wednesilay

Meigs County court news
Dissolutions ftled
POMEROY- Act1ons for d1sso
lut1on of marnagc have been filed m
Me1gs County Common Pleas Court
by Vtckl L Wheeler and Randy A
Wheeler both of Racme and Tma L
Glass Chcsh~re and Roben J Glass
M1ddleport
A d1vorce act ton has been filed by
Sh1rley D Heater Long Bottom
agamst James C Heater Coolville
Marnage hcenses
POMEROY- Mamagc licenses
have been tssucd m Mc1gs County

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113 960)
Cocnmunlt)' Newspaper Hold1nas Inc
Published e~ery afternoon Monday throtJgh
Fnday 111 Court St Pomeroy OhiO by the
Oh10 VAlley Pubhshmg CompAny Second class
postage pa1d at Pomeroy Oh o
Member The Associated Press aiKI the Oluo
Newspaper A.\soeiat on
Postmaster. Send addrns correct ons to The
Dally Sentlltl Ill Coort St Pomeroy Oh10

Probate Court to Donald Burt
Kennedy 26 Langsv11le and Mary
Elizabeth Stem 25 Middleport Hen
ry Trav1s Thomas 20 and Cynthia
Ann While 23 both of Long Bottom
James Alexander Burton 19
Decatur Ala and Jcnmfer Pauline
Erwtn 20 Vmton Robert Len Pat
terson II 23 P01nt Pleasant W Va
and Adna Charlene Frecker 24
Ractnc Robert Ohlen Ward 29
Franklin and Amy Ehzabeth Rcdov
tan 22 Pomeroy and Chnstophcr
Allen Rc11m1re 19 and Hctdt N1cole
Bumpus 17 both ol Syracuse
Foreclosure sought
POMEROY- An actton for lote
closure has been 11\cd tn Mco!s
County Common Pleas Court hy
North Amerocan Mortgage Co
Alhtnn N Y ag unst Marun J Chap
m m Mtddlcport and others
The sun alk~cs dclault on a mot1
'1oc
and seeks judg
c loan al!rccmcnt
,_
men! m the amount of $44 6 ~~ 12
~

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OIU' 11llli rooC.ra li ~II dories b lo be
oc:corete II , •• . _ el •• emr 11 1

call the - - II (740) 992
2155 We will ch&lt;k '011r toro ...lllon
ond
1 c:omcdooo 1r womoted

1101'},

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no ...1...mber Is 99%-2155

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•eat exleaskms arr
Genenl 1\ion~~~t•• ........................ .ExL 1101
Ntwl• ....................................... 1 ExL 1102
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or ExL 1106

SEATIU:; - Protesters may be
raiSing a ruckus outs1de global trade
talks that formally open today but
officials from nations nch and poor
say they re qutetly gettmg thetr work
done anyway
It 1s cnt1cal to launch a new
round of global trade negotiations
U S Trade Representative Charlene
Barshefsky told reporters as offic1als
from 135 nauons gathered for a
meetmg of the World Trade Orgam
zauon We thmk the lime 1s nght
W1th Pres1dent Clmton scheduled
to arrove m the wee hours Wednesday
and the world s news med1a focused
on Seattle protesters also f1gured the
ltme was perfect to broadcast thctr
objectiOns to the WTO Labor umons
and environmentalists- tradtllonal
DemocratiC Party consutuenctes v1cw the Geneva based trade body as
a threat to worker nghts and envt
ronmental protection
Organtzers say some 50 000
actovtsls w1ll descend on Sealllc
Among the more mamstream demon
strators the AFL CIO has htred 200
buses to bnng m thousands of umon
members who were gathenng m a
lootball stadoum today before march
mg to the ctvtc center" here the trade
mtmstcrs wctc mcctmg
Chnton who has staked much on
the It adc talks wa, to addt ess the
WTO delegates Wednesday on an
cllort to prod warnng'delcgatoons to

put as1de their dtfferences and'agree m other venues
on a common agenda for new trade
Trade offtctals were holdtng
negotiatiOns
countless pnvate meetmgs m hotel
H1s last mtnutc effort to get other suues and elsewhere around town
world leaders to allcnd as a way of through Fnday as they sought con
bndgmg negouatmg differences was sensus on a lormula for startmg a new
rebuffed but the admtmstratiOn sa•d round of trade hbcraltzauon talks
other leaders stayed away because of · expected to take about three years to
schedulmg confltcts not fears of fat! complete
ure
B1g areas of eontenuon among
The more rad1cal acttvl sls sa1d trade momsters tncludcd Western sug
they would he down tn roads and • gesttons that any new tr tde deal
cham themselves to rathngs tn what should tnclude labor standards
they b11led as a Festival of Rests
Wealthy natwns and then labor
lance literally to try and shut down un10ns charactcnzc cheap wages
the WTO by cloggmg up streets so and shoddy worktng conduoons tn
delegates couldn t reach the meettng developing countnes as an unlatr
hall
trade pract1cc Many Astan and Latm
Pohce Wllh not gear have been Amencan nat10ns have been upset by
guardmg the entrances to the con
the suggestion saymg they cannot
ventwn center where the trade mtn
afford qUickly to confonn to the stan
1sters are meetmg - and a spec1al dards of rtcher nat!€ns
sessiOn Monday for vanous mterest
The European ~1on trade com
groups was delayed for several hours m•ss1oner Pascal Lamy has called
by an apparent breach of securuy that labor the most dtfficull1s sue at these
occurred JUSt after the Secret Serv~ce talks
had combed through the butldmg
Barshefsky votced parttal agree
foremg another careful search for ment
bombs None were found
I do thtnk the tssue of core labor
Despite all the uproar delegates to standards 1s perhaps the most con
the WTO ms1sted the protesters trovers1al one but 11 1s not the only
would accomplish lmle more than one to be resolved she sa1d late
making lots of notsc Busoncss w1ll go Monday Agncultural•ssucs rcmatn
on desp1te any d1sruptoons they satd cnttcal
Sadly I thmk II s a bll funic
The Untied States wants to end
sa1d Le•gh W Purnell an Austral! an substdtcs of European agncultural
busmess lobbytst It achocvcs the exports w~1ch 11 says g1ves European
publlctty factor but dearly govern
farmers an unfair advantage over
mcnts Will be makmg their dcm10ns farmers elsewhere not JUSt m the

Umted States but also m the Thiflf
World where go~ernments canllQ
afford to match Europe s gencrou
farm subs1d1es
But the Amencans are balkmg a
Japan s demands to reform US u
of ant1 dumpmg laws wh1ch ar
tntended to stop countnes from
exporting manufactured goods al
below cost
r
Respondtng to quest tons aboutth
nume10us protests the US hosts sa
they are open to heanng all v1ew
pomts They may be less sure abou
some olthc tactocs wh1ch have led l
a few arrests for mtnor InCidents ~
I thonk that the comments th~
arc bemg made on the street and~~
all smts of sctttngs arc good to \&gt;4
heard Commerce Secretary Wtlllant
Daley saod tn an mtervtew They rolI
people s legttomate concerns
r
But WTO Dtrector General Mtkd
Moore sa1d that whtlc there may IJ4
as many as 50 000 people outs1d~
gnpm~ about the Geneva based bod.J.
that sets ~lobaltradc rules there arc
30 natwns w1th a combmed pop~
uon of I 5 b1lhon people fightmg'lo
,.,.
get tn
o'
The WTO talks arc bemg held
without Chma as a member tven
though Bc•Jmg recently stuck trade
deals w1th U S and Canad1an of(,.
c1als tn hopes of gettmg m The El(s
Lamy satd he w1ll meet soon wtth ~
Chmese counterparts to d1scuss •}
necessary trade arrangement betwef!t
BeiJing and Brussels
~

Retirement age starts slow climb to 67
WASHINGTON (AP) - A long
scheduled mcrease m the Soc1al
Secunty ret~remcnt age from 65 to
67 Will stan havmg 1ts firsltmpact on
Amcncans next year although many
don 1 know 11 yet
Don Blandm president of the
Amencan Savmgs Education Coun
Cll sa1d people attendtng retnement

semmars he conducts across the
country are shocked when he tells
them they won t be ehgtble for full
Soc1al Securny benefits at age 65
I go through that and hear a lot
of gasps 10 the room sa1d Blandm
As a result many people may be
underest1matmg how much they need
to save on then own tf they want to

Lows in the teens will be
felt in the region tonight
By The Associated Press
It was a cold mommg across Oh10 w1th temperatures at daybreak as low
as 21 degrees 10 Toledo
And northerly wmds commg across Lake Ene produced another 2 10ch
es of snow along the shorchnc tn northeast Ohto
Even colder temperatures are prcdocted for tonoght under cleanng sktes
The Nat1onal Weather Serv1ce sa1d lows w1ll be mostly m the teens
Some moderation 1s predtcted for later m the week as a h1gh pressure sys
tern dnfts to the east of the state and produces some southerly wmds
An approachmg low pressure system could bnng some prcctpotatiOn on
Fnday and Saturday
The record h1gh temperature for th1s date at the Columbus weather sta
two was 71 degreeSin 1934 wh1lc the record low was 4 below zero tn 1958
Sunsettomght w1ll be at 5 07 p m and sunnse Wednesday at 7 34 am
Weather forecast
Ton1ght Cleanng early Lows IS to 20 L1ght north wmd
Wednesday Mostly sunny H1ghs on the lower 40s
Wednesday mght Clear Lows m the upper 20s
EKtended forecast
Thursday Clear Htghs m the lower 50s
Fnday Mostly cloudy wuh a chance of ram Lows on the m1d 30s and
htghs m the upper 50s
Saturday Mostly 'loudy wtth a chance of ram Lows ncar 40 and h1ghs
m the uppc1 50s

Patrol issues citations in
Saturday injury accident
POMEROY- The Gal Ita Mc1gs Post of the State H1ghway Patrol cued
Jonathan W Vance 23 36995 Vance Road Pomeroy on charges of dnvong
under the mnuence drt vmg under suspensiOn dnvmg left of center and no
scat belt followmg a two veh1cle acc1dent JUSt after m1dn•ght Saturday on
State Route 7 near the tntcrsecuon wnh SR 143
Accordmg to the report Vance was southbound on 7 when he allegedly
drove left of center colhdmg wuh a tractor tratler dnven by Harold E Alit
son 56 Boston Mass
Vance pulled from 143 and drove mto the northbound lane of SR 7 accord
mg to the report
Alhson was treated at the scene at the crash while Vance and Cheryl
Hysell 42 37228 SR 143 Pomeroy a passenger were transported to Vet
crans Memonal Hosp1tal by the Me1gs EMS

EMS units log 11 calls

Stocks

POMEROY - Umts of Me1gs
Emergency SerVIces answered II
calls on Monday Umts respondong

AEP- 31-1/8
AkZo-43
AmTech/SBC - 52-1/8
Ashland 011- 33·1/16
AT&amp;T- 57·9/16
Bank One- 35-7/8
Bob Evans -14-1/8
BorgWarnar- 40-3116
Champion-S
Charming Shops - 6·1/4
City Holding - 16·9/16
Federal Mogul- 22·13116
Flrstar- 24-15116
Gannett- 71-318
K mart - 9-3116
Kroger- 21-3/6
Landa End - BD-5116
Ltd.- 41-13116
Oak Hill Flnanclal-17-1/8
ova -33-1/4
One Valley - 33-518
Peoples - 21-314
Premler-10
Rockwell- 50-7116
RD Shell- 59·1/4
Sears - 32-7/8
Shoney'a - 1-318
Wendy'• - 22-318
Worthington -15-1/8
Dally stock reports are the
10:30 a.m. quote1 provided by
Adveat of Gallipolis.

CENTRAL DISPATCH
4 02 am Stale Route 338 Fran
cts Mtllcr treated at scene
8 29 a m Shady Cove Lester
Bowers Veterans Mcmonal Hospttal
3 12 p m Bashan Road Ada
Moms Veterans Memonal
5 07 p m Laurel Chff Road
Chnstopher Lee treated at scene
5 03 p m
Umon Avenue

were

Pomeroy Bob Barton refused treat
mcnt
7 24 p m Yellowbush Road Mar
tm W1lloams Veterans Memonal
8 57 p m SR 143 Bob Will tams
Holzer Medical Center
POMEROY
9 08 p m Hudson Street M1d
dlcport Tab1tha Ohler Pleasant Val
Icy Hosp1tal
RACINE
I I0 p m SR 124 motor vchtclc
acc1dent Chandra Russell and Shcr
ry Branham refused treatment

Fire truck fund drive continues
SYRACUSE - Those who have
not yet turned m then completed
pledge form fot the new Syracuse fire
truck but stdl wosh to do so are
urged to submtl 11 by Dec 5 Ftre
Chtef Eber 0 Ptckens satd today
We mtend to close out th1s very
successful fund dnve early next week
and request households/busmesses
who have not yet turned m thctr com
pleted forms to do so by then Ptck
ens swd
Pl(:kens also commented that the
Syracuse Volunteer F1re Department
IS very apprectat1ve of all those who
are supportmg the program by agreemg to donate $100 annually to the
new truck project for a max1mum of
10 years
Pledge comnulments totaling over

rettre m their early 60s he sa1d
A poll of Amencans over age 25
taken thts year by the Employee Ben
efn Research lnsututc found that
almost s1x m 10 thonk they will he ell
g1ble for Soctal Secunty bcnclits
before they actually wtll be
Ready or not the normal Socml
Sccunty eltg1btlny age w1ll hcgm
crccpmg up next year unttl 11 even
tually reaches 67 lor those horn on
1960 or later Also taktng eaoly
retirement

ll

1gc 02 will hcc..:nmc less

ol a good deal
The ciJan ~c' woll tntllally tllecl
people horn tn 191H who turn 62 on
2000 tnd become eh 0 ohle lor Soctal
Sccunty "' l.: atly rctlrcmcnl oplmn
Those people c tn still choose Ill

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collectteduccd Socoal Sccunty hon;
citls next year II they d1d howev,cr
then e trl) rctuemenl henchl would
he shgllll) less than m the past - 2ll
5/6 percent bs th m tl would he II
they w ut unto! to rcltrc unt1lthc usu
tl retucmcnt age rather than the fO
pc1ccn1 rcducuon that h ts been st~n
d.trd he lore now
TIM! means the typ~eal per~n
rcunn~ at age 62 m 2(X)() woll rcccl\:i:
$721 a month rather than the old tOr
mula s $728
•
Forthosc born m 1938 who dec,id'c
to retire only when they rc ellgtbfc
for regular Soctal Securny bcncfi\~
the wall Will be two months longer
than before unttl two months after
their 65th b1rthday

Meigs announcements
the •clreshmenttahlc Puhltc onv1tetl
Rev1val set
Calvary Polgrtm Chapel on State PERI meetmg
Route 143 Pomeroy will hold
The Mc1gs County PERI m~cliJ'Il
Rcv1val scrv1ces ~cgmnmg fuc sday Wl\1 be held at I p m Thursday Ill the
and conl!numg through Sunday Scmor Ctttzens Center There wll~be
bcgmntpg at 7 p m ntghtly Rev and a luncheon and rescrvatwns arc IQ m
Mrs W1lham T1llts ol Penns Creek before Yam that day lvnr Jones list
Pa w1ll be the cvangcltsts and v1cc prestdcnt of the Oh10 PERI wJJI
smgers Rev Charles McKcnzoe pas be the speaker
0
tor mvllcs the publtc
Center program
Meetmg rescheduled
Jumor and Rua While will be
The Me1gs County Commtsston playmg and Singmg at the Scm or C1t
crs w1ll meet on Wednesday at I0 1zcns C~ntcr Thursday at 5 JO p m
am tn place of theu regular meet Chnstmas mustc will be mdudcd,_
mg on Monday
Meetmg changed
PresentatiOn planned
Syracuse V11lage Council 1\'111
The M1d Valley Chnstmn School meet on Dec 9 Instead of the us~al
w1ll host the Columbus Juno or The mccung umc on Dec 2
ater pcrformmg Mr Scrooge at the
RCJOICtng L1fc Church Thursday at Rebred teachers
7 p m Tockcts arc $5 at 1hc door
Hal Knccn w11l present the prt-.
gram at the Saturday noon mectmg bl
Town meetmg
the Mctgs County Rcurcd Teachers at
A town meetong Will he held on Tnnoty Church Members arc to t~e
De~ 4 at noon at the Portl3nd Elc
records nl the1r volunteer hours
mcntary School to d~&gt;cuss the lor
matum ol a volunlccr lm.: dt.:partmcnt Dmner to be served
and the recent appeal&lt; I the Bulltn
The Tuppers Plums F1rc Depe
gton !&lt;land pemlll lrnm I RAC
mcnl woll sene a baked steak du"cr
Saturday 11 l-p m at the statmn The
Census meetm~
c&gt;st1S$S
A puhltc mcelln~ re ardtnc lhe
••
2(KK) census wtll he held at the Meogs VFW to meet
County Sen or C c nkl t n Wt.: Linc stl ty
The VFW Post Y05'1 Ladles Aux
.11 7 p m The puhl tc "cncoutoccd to tltary Wil l meet Thursday at 7 3() p m
,mcnO tht,; mcctm~
Dance to be held
A round and squa1e dance woll he
held at the Scn1or Clltzcn, Center
Fnday Hto II p m Mustc wo\1 he hy
Wtlhc and the Crabgrass Boys wtth
Art Conant caller AdmiSsiOn $3 per
person $5 a couple Take snacks lor
SPRII.G V:.tiiY CIIIII.IA
_,
446·45 24
. '. '.,' '
FAI 11126- THURS 12/2199
101 OfiKI WIU OPlllll
6:3G I'M fOI ~SHOWS

12 30 I'M 101 SAT &amp; SUit MADIIIS

$70 000 have been submitted to date
Ptckens announced
Households or busmesses who
have m1splaced then pledge form or
fa1led to rece1ve one, are mv1ted to
contact h1m at 992 7181

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES S~M
'\

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~Sports

The Daily Sentinel··i;

I

,I

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JUsTIN ROUSH
yards in 271 carries. Once atain
Sanders was in second place with
2,224 in 203 carries.
Other local players that were listed among the state leaders included
Clifton Cox· of Miller, who was
eighth in rushing with I ,981 yards in
232 carries. In receiving, Phil Faires
of Trimble tinished in third place
with 77 receptions for 911 yards.
Last "eek by lhe vote of the fans
on the Internet, Roush was named
Player of the Year in the area by
WOUB -TV's "Grid iron Review
"show.
Roush defeated Adam Claar of
Vinton Cou nly. Joey Conrad of
Logan , T.J. Mus tard of Jackson.
Scott Da vis of Parkersburg and
C)ifton Cox of Miller for the honors

Marshall Faulk of San Diego State set the NCAA record for touchdow ns by a freshman wi th his 20th in a 42-32 wi n over Colorado State in
1'191.
Houston kicker Roman Anderson in 199 I became the first NCAA play er to top 400 poinls, with a 32-yard field goa l ia a 23- 14 victory over
Texas.

Tetas Southern 96. Wiley 84

Basketball

Cal Poly·S LO 102. Cal Baptist 87
California 68. Hofsfla 61
E. Washington 66, Idaho 53
Gonzaga 7\ Washington Sr. 6J
Idaho St. 73. l.ewis·CI;u-k St. b1
Ponland St. 69. Pacific 65
S Urah 85. Montana 75
Utah 74, StOll)' Brook 45

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atl1ntlc Divi!ion

L f&lt;l.

}!:
. . II

Miami ..
Nc:w York ..

3

.786

7
7
7

5J J
.500
500

~ ·:

8 .467
.. ... ~ 10 286
. ... . 2 12 14J

4\

8
.. . .. 7
7

Bouon ..
O.Oaodo ...

Philadelphia .. .
Washington .. .
New Jersey .

..... 7

Central Division
Toronto .
. ..... 9
5
Ch:arlooe ........ ........
M· 6

Milwaukee ..

.8

Indiana..
Detrcil ...

CLEVELAND

7
7

6
. . :'i
I

Arlanl.a ... .....

-·-

O.icngo . .

7
9

.9 3
.500

I
J',
2

.J57
077

WESTERN CONFERENCE

l
4

7'~

-

Midwest Division

n: -J.

Ium

San Anton• o •
Utah ...... .
Minni!SOl : r. .
Denver ..
Dallas .....
Houston .

-~

6

MOO
57 1

6

5

5~ 5

6

6

5 10

500
. 13_,

II
II

2&amp;7
11.!

-l

V:mcnuvcr

1

r.. cmc Oh·isitm
'I

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.. l.l
. II
10

_,

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JO J
71-l6
71.4

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Pon lan(l
s~au lo.:

L /1. . L:~k.: rs
Plu"-.'nu .
I. A Chrfll.'r ~
&lt;iniJcn Sratc

f&lt;l.

12
.K

Mundav·s

~

~

1J

lOS

~

II

1 :\ ~

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N~w Y1•r~ Hn . O;,ll:·l~ ~~
M1:mu t.IH.

S :1 .: r:.tn ~&lt;: nt &lt;&gt;

Toni~hl's ~ames

Huuq"n 71 . [\;~ v.. Mcxll"ll .~ I

San:nlll: lll t1 .11 OrL.nJ•'· 7 .~ 0 p 111
NI!W Yur ~ :r t Phtb tkl[•lu a. ,'( [UH
[)cn,l!r :11 Mrnnl' ~tll :t . !t p m

&lt;)Unh tlllla '1 .1. Tulsa 70

L\"nn ~ -

South

rn.

Midwest
Dayton 68. Kcntll(k)' 66
E. lllinois94. Illinois College 41
"' E. Micbia.1n 91 . Hillsdale M
kaalllos St . 86. TtllU·San Antonio 75
Keat 8$. Wis.-Parlcside 56
N. llllnois9 1. Concordia. Ill. 52 .
Otdo St 74. Vermont ~ I
W. MirhiJnO 78. Xoongstown St 71

Southwest
hrkson St. 85. Arkans.llll St I«)..QT
North Texlll 91. T"11tLJ A&amp;M 18
SMU 86. Ark.·Pin&lt; Bluff6l .
S&amp;ephen F.Ausrin 9-'. Texas Coli. 62

'

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Transactions
American Leaauc
NEW YORK YANKEES: Agreed to terms with
UiP Mike Stanton on a three-year contract.
TORONTO BLUEJA'tS: Named Scou Shannon
trarner and George Poulis nsaistmt trainer.
National Lt•&amp;ut
CHICAGO CU BS: -Named Osc;u- Acosta pitchmg coach and Sandy Alonw bullpen coach.
COLORADO ROCKIES: Sold the contract of
LHP Robeno Ramitc:t tn the Hanshin li Rer&amp; of

0
0
0
0
0

.636
. ~4.5

:no

2S5
455 162
.455 194
250 183

287
182
220
222
276

Sunda~.

Grc~·o R:~ y

.•.

Basketball
National Haskttball Auocialion
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS: Ac1i vared F
Jason Caffey from the InJUred l1s1 Pla~.: cd C lim
Young on the injure(! list
HOUSTON ROCKETS: Placed C Hakcem
Olajuwon onrhc rnjured liM
National Football Ltague
JACKSONV ILLE JAGUARS. Waived DL
James Roberson. Sign!d DL Chri s Whrte rrom the
pntctice squad. Signed DE Troy Bailey to 1~ practice squad .
MIAMI DOLPHlNS: Placed FB Kantroy Barber
on injull:d reserve Sigoed RB Brian EdwiU"ds.
ST LOUIS RAMS: Stgned OT Man Wtllig to a
one-year contract.
"
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Reinsrnred QB
Rvan Leaf to the active fOSter. Wai ved LB Tracy

Hockey
National Hockty Ltacur
ATLANTA THRASHERS: Reassigned G Rick
Tabaraw to Orlando of the IHL RcaSSiJncd D
Mikko Kuparinen from OriWJdo of the IHL to HIFK
Hel sink..i o( Fml3lld.
CHICAGO BLACKHAWK$. Retailed G Steve
Paumort and f Jean-Pierre Oumonl (rom Cleveland
of the IHL
EDMONTON OILERS : Recalled D Brett Hauer
from Manitoba o( the lHL.
NASHVILLE PREDATORS: Recalled D Ka-lis
Skrast ins from Milu.aukee of the lHL.
NEW YORK RANGERS: Reca lled 0 Dale
· Purinton !rom Hrutford of the AHL. Assisnt.&gt;d C P.J .
Stock and D Terry Virtue 10 Hur1ford.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS, T"dcd LW Todd
Wanincr to the Tampa Bay Lr(thtning for a thirdround draft pick in the 2000cntry dra.fl. Recalld LW
Adam Mair and U Dimi1ri Yakushrn from St John's
of the AHL.
VANCOUVER CANUCKS : Reca.lll!d C Ar1em
Chu bnrov from Syrncuse of the AHL and F Loury
Shapley (rom Manilob:. of rhe IHL. Drsignaaed...
Shapley for ussJgnmem .

r1ze

Mond•y. Inc. 6
Tampa Bay. 9 p.m.

»:

and we will show The Whole Community
(Oh yes, If you don't have the photo come by
the office and we will take it) ONLY
$10.00
For this
ad

I. I 8I lb. Iii 1iA

Philadelphia........... I;\ 8
NewJer~y .......... 11
8
Ptlfsburgh ....... ...... .1 II
N.Y. Rangm ...... 7 n
N.Y. Islanders ........ 6 II

4 I ]I 74 57
32l75fl52
))20676l
3
3

I
0

Northt.lll Division
Toronto ..
14 9 J 2
Ottawa ..... ........ 13 9 2 I
Bos1on ......... .. ....... ll 8 6 0
Buffalo .................. 11 I I 2 0
Monrreal.. ............ 9 14 I I

S.utheast Division
Aorida ... .... ...... 13 8 2 2
Carolina ................ 10 8 6 0
_ Wp~ington .........9 10 4 I
Tampa Bay ............,. ~ 13 - r 2
Aduta ................... 5 IS

2

-·-

I

18 S4
ll 43

60

69

H 7S
29 (f}
28 6~
Z4 66
10 '10

55
51
58
6S
62

.\0 6~
26 57
23 59
20 64

54
59
67
75

13 .51

84

Ctnlral Diwllion
St Lou;s ........ ll 7 2 0 Jl 7l
Derroit
... 14 7 3 I 32 78
Nashville
.. :.7 14 I 2 17 53
Otirago ................ 5 14 4 2 16 56

53
S4
68
75

Northwest Division

10 8
... 10 II

6
3

Edmon&lt;oo .............. 6 II

6

.. .. 8 IJ · 2

I
1
J
0

27 67
24 66

69 . '

21 l1

6)

18 5.1

78

12

·

~~tnc:'ro n

Phocnil ............
Los Anr.ele§ . .... . 14 7 .a I
SanJose
.... 14 11 3 2
Anahcim ....... ........ l2 II 2 I
Dallos .................. 10 II 3 I
Ovenime losses count as a lou

79 s1
H 82 64
H Ill 70
27 6b 60
24 52 56
and a regulation

Monday's Kon

P.S. At the end of the season the
Sentinel will give our First Annual
Award to the.one that published the
largest Deer.
Ill Court St.

Pomeroy, OH 45769

Chicago at Ona.wo. 7 p m.
Piusbur1h at Buffalo. 7JO p.m.
Oolla1 at N.Y. blanckrs. 7:30p.m.

' '

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The .Daily Sentinel

Toronto l Washlna1on I

TO!llllht's pnies

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my career. ''

Our special page( s)
"For Children Only''

',

(16 years of age or younger)
TVC DIVISION CHAMPION - The Eastern Lady
Eagles junior varsity volleyball team had another
great year in claiming the Tri-\lalley Conference
Hocking Division championship with a 20-1 overall
record. In front are (L·R) Janet Ridenour, Kayla
Gibbs and Amber Baker. Standing Is Hiliary Peal

(25). In the . middle row are Tiffany Spencer,

Amanda Yeager, Brandy Bentz, Elaine Putman,
Janet Calaway, Shauna Elliott, , Ashley Hager.
Behind them are Jessica Bartels, Tiffany Hensley,
Stacie Watson, Tammy Bissell and Holly
Broderick,

Saban didn 'I say if he wHuld
coach the Spartans in the Florida
Citrus Bowl Jan. I.
"That's something I think needs
to be determined hy the administration, " he said, adding, 'T vc made it
very clear to the players that this is
their howl game."
· Sophomore linebacker Josh
Thornhill said he didn't think Saban
would remain with the Spartans
lhrough the bowl game.
"I got the feeling that he wasn 't
going to be around for it," Thornhill
said after meetin~ with lhe coach
today. "It's disappointing. I would
have rather had a coach stick around
for all four years."
Saban told the players that he was
leaving 10day to go to Louisiana for a
couple days. He said he was to be al
a news conference at LSU later
today.
The Times -Pica\'une of New
Orleans reported today that Saban
had accepted a five-year, $6.25 million contract with LSU that 'Will
make him the third-highest paid . ·
coach in co llege football. Saban
SENIORS HONORED - Seniors in all sports David Rankin and Mendy \&gt;uo:55.
would not confirm the terms of the
that were honored at the Eastern fall sports ban- photo)
deal.
"I don't make dec isions just for quat were Leah Sanders, Eric Smith, Alison Rose,
money," he said.
Incentives, including bowl bids $203,530 and makes $493,000 from Mich ., to pick up Saban to bring him
Saban accepted the job by tele- and high graduation rates, could olher sources, including his TV to campus Monday night, WAFB
phone late Monday from his home in boost Saban's contract from $1.25 show, for a total of $697,330, The telev ision in Baton Rouge reported.
East Lansing, The 'limes-Picayune million a year to $1.5 million, The Detwit News reported Sunday.
WILX-TV in Lansing reported
quoted an unidcmified source as say- 'Jimes·Picayune said. At Michigan
The contracl with LSU was that Saban 's · wife, Terry, was in
ing.
State , he had a base salary of expeclcd to be signed today, when Baton Rouge, La., Monday to sec
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , LSU will introduce Saban as its next what she thought of the location . .
coach. The Times -Picavwre reported. LSU provided a private plane to
He Will replace Gerry DiNardo, return her lo Lansing.
LSU 's sports informalion office
who was fired after LSU's second
said it could not conlirrn the reports.
consecutive losing season.
LSU officials have said they
Michigan State tailback Lloyd
Poll Comp Schedule
Clemons said he thought Saban had a wanted a new coacl1 in place by Dec.
L Tht.
M ll:E
10 to replace DiNardo, who was
difficult time making his decision .
0 2.24
6 0.~4
I. Florida St. .......... .. .. I
I 1.00 1.00
'' !think money was the reason he tired two weeks ago after going 2-8
0 6.16
2. Virginia Tech .......... :2
2 2.00 2.00 54 2. 16
dc&lt;:idcd he was goong 10 leave." this season, and 4-7 in 199H - the
I 770
3'. Nchraska ............... J
3 HJO 2.X6 21 o\ x4
Clemons said after today's meetin g. year LSU was cxpc&lt;:tc&lt;.l to contend
2 13.48
4: Florida .. .................. 5
5 5.00 6.00 12 0.4H
"It's not going to affect me as much for an SEC champi onsh ip after three
2 14.13
14 0.56
5. Tennessee ............... 6
6 6.00 5.57
as the underclassman. I feel had that winning seasons under DiNardo.
I 15.59
6 Kansas St... ... ...... ... H
7 7.50 4.57 63 2.52
they wmmittcd loa program and the
0.04
2
16.54
7.00
I
·l Alahama ................ 7 K 7.50
~..:oa~.:h is \!O in1! tO he gone ...
2 16.67
74 2.96
H. Wi sconsin .......... .... A
4 4.00 7.71
John Lew.i"ndowski. the Spartans'
2 19.69
J 0. 12
9. Michigan ....... ......... Y
'I 9 ()(} H.57
sports information director. said LSU
2 20.26
10. Michigan St. ....... 10 10 IO.tKl 7X6 10 0.40
officials coni acted Michigan Slate on
3 28.96
ll. Tcxas ...... ........ ..... l2 12 12.lKl 1:1 .00 24 0.96
Monday to say they wanted t&lt;i sreak
0 29.63
1'1. MARSHALL.. ..... II
II 11.00 14.7 1 'IX 3.92
with Sahan aboul the job.
3 30.00
9 0.36
13. Penn S1. ........... ... 14 17 15.50 11.14
Saban led No. 10 Michigan State
3 34.79
52 2.08
14. Minncsotn ........... 13
13 13.00 16.71
tn a Y-2 •·ct::ord this season, a second3 35.55
IS.TcxasA&amp;M ........ IX
14 1600 1'\.43 2R 1.12
place finish in tl1e Big Ten and the
Citrus Bowl hertll. the Spartans' first
1Wn
R.ll Ill KM NIT l!R JSS:H SI
Jan. I howl game si nce appearing in
I
I
I
I
I:.Florida St ....................... ( I)
I
I
lhc Gator Bowl in 1989.
2
2 (3)
2
2: Virginia Tech ..... . .... ..... 2
2
2
2
A win in the Citrus Bowl would
3
3
2
3
3, Nebraska ........... .............. .3
3
3 (4)
give the Spartans a I0-2 record, their
7
5
5
4
4: Florida .........., .... ............. 6 ( 10)
7
K
best mark since fini shing· 9-0-1 in
5
4
H
6
5, Tennessee ...................... (K)
6
5
5
1966 .
4
6
4
5
6: Kansas St. ..................... .4
5
4 (6}
LSU sent an airplane to Lansing,
NICK SABAN
6
7
7 II
7. Alabama ........................ 7
8 (II)
3
9
6
II ( 13)
8, Wisconsin ....................... .. 9
4
6
9
7
10
9: Michigan ... .................. (l0)
9
9
7
9
"
9
8
8
8
10. Michigan St... ............. 5
7 ( 10) 10
14
14 12
II. Texas ........ ................... 14
II ( 15) 13 13
12
20
16
II
12. MARSHALL.. .......... (33) 25
8 II
10
10
II
12
13. PcnnSt. ................. ..... ll
12 12 (22)
14
16
15
21
14. Minnesota ..................... l5
19 P (21)
16 14
15.TcxasA&amp;M .. ........... I3
15 16 (17) 17 . 17

Will he published
Friday, December 24th

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\ Packers ...

(Continued from Pa~c 4)
bot.h left the game with broken tory to surpass the 18,000-yard mark. '
Rice had his two longest recepbones .
lions
of the season. The first was an
McQuarters. also a kick returner
for San Francisco, broke his shoulder acrobat ic over-lhe-shouldcr catch
blade . Montgomery broke his right !hal went for 32 yards in the first half
and led to Richey 's field goal.
arm.
" I felt we were moving the ball at
The lone bright spot for San
Francisco was Jerry Rice's four times, but nothing happened,' ' Rice
receptions for 63 yards, boosting his said. "We need to try to turn this
car~er total to 18,025 yards receiv- around. It's going nowhere fast.' '
ing, He's the first player in NFL his.

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.m. .m.

Explanation key
Poll Average -The average of The Associated Press media poll and
USA Today-ESPN coaches poll. Others receiving votes are calculated in
order received.
Computer Avemge - The average of Richard Billingsley, Dunkel
.Index, Kenneth Massey, New York Times, David Rothman, Jeff Sagarin ,
M~nhcws/Scripps-Howard and the Hester &amp; Andcrson!Seanle Times,
runkings. The computer component will be determined by averaging the
seven highest computer rankings. The lowest computer ranking will be
disregardod . The computer ranking disregarded is in parentheses.
· Schedule Rank - Rank of schedule slrength compared to other
Di:vision I-A teams divided by 25. This component is calculated by dcter~ining the eumulalive won/loss records of the team's opponent (66.6 percent) and the cumulative won/loss records of tbe team's opponent 's opponents (33.3 percent).
Losses- One point for each loss during the season .

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people in your life.

Mull •• pai• for in ••vance,
lnclu•e Name, Size of Deer Etc.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

.

Simien.

•

Alltnlle Division

"'

Japan 's Cervral Lt.ague.
FLORIDA MARLIN S: Appointed David
Ginsberg vice chairman of the bo;u-d of directors.
HOUSTON ASTROS: Agreed to tem1s with C
Tony Eusebio on a two· year contract .

Just brinq or Mail us aphoto of you and

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Cal&amp;ory....

HIGH-STEPPING Into the end zone past several San Francisco
49ers is Green Bay tight end Tyrone Davis (81) in the third quarter .
of Monday night's NFC game in San Francisco, where the Packers .
win 20-3. (AP)
quarterback, it 's sort of cvcryhody, .. strike-shortened 1982 season .
49crs coac h Steve Mariucci said.
A crowd used to seeing the 49crs
" We ' re searching for ways every win turned on the home team
week to win. Somehow we' re just Monday night. showering !hem with .
not able to execute on game day. "
boos even as the players were pelted ·
It 's the longest skid for San hy rain late in the game.
Francisco since losing eight in a row
There was eve n more had news
in 1980, and ensures the 49crs will for the 4Yers - cornerbacks R.W.
finish wilh their first non-winning McQuarters and Monty Montgomery
campaign since going 3-6 in the

YOU BET!!

NHL standings

Vtmeouver ....
Colorado

EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP)Michigan State coach Nick Saban
has actepted the coaching job at
LSU, he confirmed today after meeting with the Spartans.
" I think some of your personal
feelings for people, places and players don 't necessarily coincide with
whal could be an outstanding professional opportunily," said Saban, who
coac hed for one season at Toledo and
spent four seasons as the defensive
coordinator for the Cleveland
Browns.
':It was a tough decision , hul the
opportunity at LSU was one l had to
consider rel ative to my family and

nam

Hockey

.

... '. '~

'

.KlR ·'66 147
.455 261 249

Dtc. 5

~

...' ..

BCS standings

Nl'Y. Orleans at Atlanta. I p.m.
New Ynrk 1N5 at New York Giants. I p.n1.
St Louis at Carolina. 1 p.m.
San Frandsc11 at CINCINNATI . I p m
Tcnncucc :11 Baltimore , 1 p.m.
Washington :u Detroit. 1 p.m
Jlh1lar.itlphiu at Arizona. -':05 p m
. CLEVELAND !it San Diego. 4:1~ p.m
Kansas Ci ty or Den\"Cr. ~ : 15 r m
Sc~tt lc at Q,lkland. ~ : 15 p.m.
Dallas 111 Ncw·Eng land . IUO p m.
OPEN· B11ffalo

lWa

I

.,

~1¥;~~-:.~~ -

m Ch1cago. I p.m
lo dtanapu l i~ ar Miami. I p.m.

Minoesot&lt;~ nt

.,

2'9 214
212 226
174 141
212 212
207 242

.2H 166 :lOI
. IK2 155 269
I K~ IR2 269

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

PICTURE YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE ...

'·~

Football

Baseball

Thursdav
Pil t.\bur~ll ar b .:kson,·ille: ~ : !0 p.n1.

Mid&lt;1le1own Christian 45. Cedarville 44
Mineral Ridge JJ. Southington 20
Old Wash. Buckeye Tr.:UI 57. Meadowbrook 48
Painesville Rivmide 70. Ashtabula 49
Pettisville 54. Delta SO ·
Ravenna 61 Ravenna Southeast 46
Rayland Buckeye Local )4, Mlftins Ferry 33
RoSiford 49. Bryan 4$
SebrinJ McKi nley 62. Waterloo 4~
Sh•dysHie 81 . Soraluvilk Shenando.tl )I
To\ Rogers 54. Sprinsfield 46
Tol. Woodward 59, Sylvania North view S2
Toromo 57. Bridgcponl7
Vi ncent Warren ·62, Belpte 36
W. Portsmouth 49. Easrem Pike 27
W:.mn JFK 61 , Newton Falls 26
Waterford Sl. Fromier 31
Wbetlerliull .10, Piketon 40
Windhan~.Sl. Jackson-Milton 45
Xenia 69, Day. Belmont 14

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

211

Week 13 slate

Akron Elms ,6, Streetsboro J7
Avon 4.1. Elyria Carholic 18
Belmont UlllkWI 62. Stcul:nville BiB Red 60
Boyd Count')' Ky. 17. South Point28
Burton Berkshirt 59. Ashtabula H:ubor .\0
Carty S8. Vanlut 48
Cbyton Northmonr67. West Ca.rrollron 29
Col..DeSalts ~9. Teays Valley 35
Day. C11tb. ((lltral 60. Bethel 37
Day. Jefferson JS. Day. Stivers 24
Emmanual Baprisl Sll. lkttsvJIIe ] I
Evangel Christian 46, Wny1ick .t.cademy ~2
Foairpo1t $6, Gilmour 39
fllyeueville 69. Clenoont NE eM)
Gallipoli1 78. Ches~ke .\~
Greenfield Mc-Clam 78. Peebles 50
Hannibal River 80, Bwnc:svillt 27
Hubbard 44, Austintown-Fitch .\8
Ironton Rock Hill 71. Franklin F.umace Green 57
JacUon 6l Wellston 26
Kent Roosc:vclt 60, Mopdore: Fteld 48
Kinsman Badltr $0. Contend Maplewood 29
Latham W~ 58. Ponsmoulh Noire 40
Logan 60 • SOlilhcothe SO
Magno1it ll'ldy Valley 56. StrasblltJ F.-..kli•

NFL standings ·

Dallas al Montreal, 7:JO p.m.
N.Y. Rangas at New Jene)', 7:.'0 p.m.
San Jose at Detroit 7JO !).m.
Colorado at Edmonton. 9 p.m.
Tampa Bay ;u Anaheim, 10:30 p.m.

Monday's score

llrown 70

Football

125
202
167

Gree n Bay ~0. San Fnmcisco .l

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

46

4
.5
6
6
9

Western Division
St. loUis
....... ... 9 2 0
Cnrolina .. . .............. 5 6 0
San Franmco .
.' 8 0
Allanra ...
....... ... 1 9 0
Ncw Orlcrm s................ 2 9 0

Far West

East

Wednesday's games

I. I lb. l.E rA

Cmtql Division
Detroit ........ ........... ........7 4 0 .636
M1nnesotn ....... ... .............1 4 0 .6)6
Tampa Bay . ... ... ............. .1 4 0 .636
Green Bay ..
..... ...6 5 0 .545
Chrcag.o ...................... ...5 7 0 .417

Tl'X:IS Tc=r h M Soulht-rn c :.16J-OT

NCAA Division I
men's scores

Appalachian St. I04. Pfeiffer 90
Belmonl 96. M&amp;lliJ3A 61
Aorida IJ I. New Hampshirt 72
Gcort:ia Southern 87, J:.cluonville St. 8J
Ubcny 79. Jame s M!Miison 70
Memphis
Al1b1ma A!tM 66
Nicholls St. 82. Loyola. NO ~6
SE Louisiana 61 . Florida A&amp;M SO
Temple 69, Aorida St. 58
Tenn.-Manin 82. Oui1dan Brothers 66
Tennc11ee I02. South Florida 90
UNC.Grrenaboro 77. Elon 66
Vandertih 70, ETSU -'.5
Vi1Jinia Tech 8J. N.C.·Ashc,·ihe 61

~

·Washington...
....... 7
Dallas . .... ........ .. .. ...........6
Anzona ............................ 5
N.Y. Giams
....... 5
Muladelphia
.. .. ..... J

Okl:thnmn St M. Oral Rnhl..'fls 51
lli ~c 7J. S:~ n Houston Sr fit ~

O...•rroit ar S:rn i\m,•nu ' K .~ 0 p m
(.. ,\ l.a"-cr~ at Sc:111 k . In p m.
l'hr~nu ar LA ChpJX'f'. 111..'0 p.m

"'

J ohn

239
256
240
22 1
18J

Calgary at Carolina. 7:30p.m.
Photnix at Nashville, 8 p.m.
Colorodo at Vancouver. 10:30 p.m.

fMiern Division

Southwest

W:1slunglllll :11 N~11 h·r\cy 7 J' l p 111
D:•IIHs :u CI.EVEI.i\ND. 1 .10 p m

American U. 74. Loyola. Md . 66
Army 70. W. Maryland 49
Bmton Colleat 104. Hartford b2
Connecticut 89. Copp1n St .U
fordham 80, Fllirficld 08
baf:lyelte 6l. Cornell l~
Marsllall 65. Musachusetu 55
Navy 82. Co:ut Gunrd Jti
Quinnipiac 49. Columbia ~8
Rider 66. DelawiJre 49
Set:on Holt 79. St. Pe~er · s b5
Symr:use 13. Colgate 49
Tulsa 79. St JMeph "s 7J
Villanova 62. Fairleigh Oick.inson 52

1so
201
226
226
252

1\..:n.;JII: Un..: . Kan . ~7 . Komsa ~ w~..- ~ k\,\ 0 4~
Fon H :~v s .-.96. Tatlllf -U1
•
ltlhll c irml liO. kenyon 4(1
S llhnoh 61. Ill · C I1 1 ..:J~ ! I .U.
S lnJJ:IO.l ~O . lb~hmtll'il y t-.1

Atl:tnt.r ar "h•nmtn 7 p m.

Wednesday 's games

Westrrn Division
Seaule ... . ... . . .. ............ H J 0 727
Kan ~as Ci ry .
..6 .5 0 545
Oakland . . . .... . ............ 5 6 0 455
Denver ...
... .... ....... ...4 7 0 364
San Diego ....................... .4 7 0 .364

Midwest

l"X

Urah ll..:"i . Cnkk:n Still' W
lm.liana •Jl. f)rrnl:md 1H
HtlUSI Clll I \:&lt;. V:illl"llUI l'r 110-()l

CLEVELAND at Washington. 7 p.m.
Philadelphia a1 Miami. ?·.\0 p.m.
Houston at Phocni rL 8 p.m.
Detroit al Denvtr, 9 p.m.
Charlotte at Portland. 10 p.m.
lradlaaalll Vancouver. lOp.m.
Oolden State at L.A. Lakers. 10 : ~0 p.m.

.H 7

l'wn

Campbell M. Liberty .59
Clark A1l:mta 69. Clayron Sr 66
Clemson 65. South Cnrolma 46
Jackson St. 6.5. Toug~h)() 62
Lane 61. Mrles H
Lrncoln Melll(lrial 74. Millisan &amp;9
McNt-cse St. ~5 . N:ny 47
Mtss1ssippi College 6!i. Williatll Ca~~· 5H
Moum Olive%. Columbi a Union ·' ·'
Nnnh Gcur~ i &lt;l 100. Brewton Parkl'r .l 6
SE Lot11sran;160. W. C:trolina ~7
Tallll':l KJ . r:loriJ:t Mc:n)Ofial 57
Tr~·, r ..:c :1 N.ll:tr..:nc 75. Rrck:i a 'i()

~·,

change. When I drop back now, I'm
not afraid to throw the ball anywhere. Before, I would try to aim it,
and it didn't go where it was supposed to go."
The Packers, seeking a playoff
spot for the seventh straight season,
broke a four-game Monday night losing streak, and coach Ray Rhodes
got his first victory on a Monday
night after seven losses.
But the Packers know the 49ers
they faced Monday night bear little
resemblance to the Steve Young-led
squads who challenged the Packers
the past few years for NFC supremacy.
"It's obvious it's not the team thai
it has been, but I'm nol here to knock
tbem, " Favre said. "S teve Young is
the heart and soul of this team .
They'll be back. When you've been
on top so long, you've got to be
knocked down some time . This is
one of those years."
Wade Richey's 35-yard field goal
early in the second period was the
only score for the 49ers, who have
been outscored 94-22 in their las!
four game s. Stenstrom, a thirdstringer who became the starter
because of Young 's concussion and
Jeff Garcia's ineffectiveness. was 19of-35 for 195 yards.
Stenstrom has yet to throw for a
sc ore in hi s three starts. San
Francisco has failed to score in dou ble figu res in the past four games, a
franchise record.
"We haven't had production at
the quarterback position thai we
would like. or that we arc used to
having. But it ce rtainly is nol just the

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

South

7

Centr•l Division
Jacksonville ................... 10 I 0 .909 287
Tennes~ .......... .......... 9 2 0 .8!8 239
Piusburgh
.. ..... 5 6 0 .45!5 202
Baltimore ..
. ......4 7 0 .364 196
CINCINNATI ................. 2 10 0 .167 188
CLEVElAND ........... 2 10 0 167 137

-·-

A!vernia 67, York. Pa. 56
Ashland 60. Oarion 53
Bates 70, New England 60
Delaware 86. l...a(aycue SO
Fairmont St. 67. SaJem-Teityo j5
Gwynedd Mercy 70. West Cbester 57
Humer 65 , Montclair Sc. 59-0T
Lc:hmao 76. Mount St. Vincc:ll( 58
NYU 95 , Staten Lsland ~I
New Rochelle 70. John Jl)' 46
Rmemonr 65. Neumann S6
S Mai~ 57, Bowdoin W
ShrppcnsbUIJ n. Kutztown ~9
St Perer"s Ill Md.-Enstem Shore 70
Yes hiva 73. Bard 66

I

6 .500
9
12

NCAA Division I
women's scores
East

.643
57 1

b .S7 1

.... 8
. .. 7

4
4

By ROB GLOSTER
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The
Green Bay Packers revived their season while extending the San
Francisco 49ers' losing spiral.
Brett Favre threw touchdown
passes of 13 yards to Corey Bradford
and 10 yards to Tyrone Davis as
Green Bay defeated the 49ers 20.3
Monday night and pulled within a
game of Detroit, Tampa Bay and
Minnesota in the NFC Central.
Ryan Longwell added two short
field goals for the Packers (6-5), who
have rebounded with two consecutive wins after dropping three
straight.
For the 49ers, it was their seventh
straight loss. They have one offensive touchdown in the las t five
games, and have clinched their flrsl
non-winning season since 1982.
Things have gollen so bad for San
Francisco that it has come to thi s:
Sieve Stenstrom went back to pass in
the second quarter and dropped the
ball without being hit.
" Our offense is terrible , there's no
other way to say it." 49e'rs light end
Greg Clark said as San Francisco (38) was held without an offensive
touchd own for the fifth game this
sca..,on.
Favre, who made his !20th
straight start to extend hi s NFL
record for consecutive starts by a
quarterback, went 25-of-36 for 246
yards. He has had two straight solid
games after struggling with a thumb
inJury for much of the season.
"There is no secret we've been
struggling offensively this year,"
Favre said. " I feel healthy for a

Buffalo ........................ 8 4 0 .M7 228 171
New England ..
. ....... 6 ~ 0 ~45 2.12 218
N.Y. lees ....
...... ..4 7 0 .364 173 187

Far West

NBA standings
Ium

LSU hires
- \";!
.,. Michigan
State's
•
Saban
.. -,
·-· as new
football
.
-· coach

Packers cruise
past Niners 20-3

Meigs'
Roush
as SE
District's
best back
I
.I

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.
Page4 ~
Tuesday, November 30, 1999 -"'

AP tabs

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
POMEROY -The list of honors
by Meigs se nior tailback Justin
Roush continues to grow. Last week,
Justin was voted as the Back-of-the
Year in the Southeast District by the
Associated Press.
In unofficia l statistics released
last week by the Ohio High School
Athletic Assoc ~ation , it was
announced that Roush led the all
divisions in lhc slate in ru shing and
scoring.
In scoring. Rou sh scored 22~·
points on 34 touchdowns, II one
point exira poims and four two poinl
conversions. He easily outdi stanced
Marcus Sanders of Ravenna and
Jonalhan Sm1th of Cinci nnati
Coumry Day. Both scored 194 points
on the year.
In ru shing, Roush ~aincd 2.313
.

Tueaday, November 30, 1999

The Daily Sentinel
11 fCourt St.
.Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

I

•

··

�I

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Mi·norities press networks for
more diversity in television

.·

I

I

By DAVID GERMAIN
ti ves of the four big networks to
Associated Press Writer
the forum . but only CBS TeleviLOS A NGELES (AP) - Ann e- sion Pres ident Leslie Moonves
Marie Johnson, who has a rec ur- showed up . A BC , NBC and Fox
ring ro le on the tel ev i sion show all sent broadcast content and
"JAG." says she has had repeated
standard s exec utives.
ca,li ng diffi culties because of her
Moonves touted CBS's success
li ght ski n tone.
at improving its depiction of
" I ' m very tired of bein g ' too minorities . including producer
nlack for a white project and too· Steve n Bochco's upcoming series ,
. whot&lt; for a bl ac k project, " John"City of An ge ls," about an inner: son said Monday at a TV divers ity city hospital. The cast and crew
; forum organized by the NAACP.
are mostly minorities.
Minori ti es have co mpl ain ed
"This show i s an important
: anout a pe rce ived l ack of progress effort in bringing down barriers in
ami cvc..:n indifference to improv - Hollywood. " Moonve s said .
ing the dep iction an d empl oy ment
H owever, ac tor Blair Undero f blac·ks. Asoa n- Amcri cans. Hi s- wood. a star of "C ity of An gel s"
panics. Ame ro ca n Indi ans and who was a r eg ul~r o n "L. A .
other &lt;thnic groups on TV.
Law ... told the panel the ossue
The Nat oonal As soc iatio n for goes far deeper than min oriti es'
the AdV&gt; nc emc nt of Col ored Peo- on-sc reen ro les. Putting more
ple &gt;:l id 11 wil l dec ide by 1hc end min oriti es in decis ion-makin g
o f Dc(l.' lllhcr whe the r to fnllnw j obs is cri ti ca l to i mprov ing the
thr ough on threats o f boycott s and situati on. he sa id .
dcmun .'\trat1l•n.'\ if the largest net ..
" When we arc not see n in front
works Jo n ' t qui ck ly · put ' more of the camera, it 's just the tip of
~minorit1c s 111 fron t of and behind
the icc nerg," U nderw ood sa id .
th~ ~.:amcra!-- .
" It 's almost like ' The Wi zard of
.. They then run l he real ri sk of Oz. · When yo u pull back tile cur,
&lt;l -. u.'\ tainrU . fl H.: u s~...: J and cominu - tain. you sec it's a much big ger
\lliS consu ml: r ac tion in the form of
prohlcm ."
rcpcti ii\L' boycot t-&gt; . pi cketing and
M oonves sa id C BS is trying to
l ar!.!~ - sca k

demo ns tra ti o ns

fro~\\

:I

improve il s percentage of min ori-

o f their net wo rk he adquarters . lloc ofl'i'ccs of netw o r~ -o wncd
allii~&lt;Jie' and in fr o nt of the
offi ce' n f their maj or and largest
~Hh

.I

1n

Public Notice
VIIUI. .1,000.00 down on
.day Of All.
Jamu M. S.ulaby, Sllerllf
llelge County, Ohio
Dennie Reimer Co., L.P.A.
By: Dannie Rllllllr (Fieg.
10031108) Adlm L. Groll
(Fieg • .oo65392~
Attorney• lor tht Plaintiff
P.O. Box 868, 880e RIVtnna
Flcl. Twlnlburg, OH 44017
(330) 425-4201
3T 11(16~ (231(30)

ti es in the top ranks.
While 21.5 percent of the network's employees are minorities,
only.t4.8 percen t of its executives
are minorities. "an area where we
clearl y need to improve and where
Public Notice
we will improve," Moonves said.
Esteban Torres, · a retired conThe Melgl County
gressman , said if network minori- Council on Aging, Inc.
ty hi rin g doesn't improve, find- (MCCoA), 1 501 (c~ (3~ nonings from th e heari ng would be profit oregnlzetlon. Ia
turned over to the U .S. Justice 111klng 111l1d bide
Department
and
the
Equal lnentlclplllon ot performing
en A·133 Syateme Audit,
Employment Opportunity Co m- financial end compliance, of
mission for investigation.
the MCCoA'I progr1m1 lor
Actors at Monday's panel dis- the calendltr yeor 18811.
cussion sai d the prob lem even Bide ehould Include
praperetlon of l'orm 9110
goes beyond employment numbers Return lor Non. TIXIIbla
to racial stereo types that ha ve per- OrgeniZIIIone 1nd Form
aa.T Exempt 0rgiii1ZIIIone
sisted in Hollywood for years.
Ca lvin Jun g. a Chinese-A meri - Buetn111 Income Tu
Return lor one year ending
ca n actor whose TV cred it s December 31, 1M.
include "C heers " and the movoe
S11l1d :~l~ii~J~~~~~o~~~~:
"T he Day After," sa i d A sian .muet
be
end
actors usua ll y are asked to do received no
then 4:30
p.m.on0ecember31, IM.
accents at casting talk
The llnel eudlt document
" I ' m third- ge nerati on C hincs emuat be completed by June
A mcncan. My acce nt , if any thin g. 30, 2000.
The MCCoA
would be a New York accent. .. he ruervea the rlgh! to rtllct
said. " If the character' s name is any and all prop.oeela
Lee and yo u lo ok at me . I kind of received In rupon11 to !hie
Invitation.
think yo u got the mcssugc wi th out
Should you have eny
the accent. ..
quutlona or dtalra further
Information, plea11 contact
Scott Dillon, Flecat Director,
at (740~ 9112-2161.
(11~24, 30 (12~ 2
Public Notice

crtisc rs... said Kwcisi M fum e.

the group 's president.
Bov co tt s and other

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Legal Copy No.01·11-99
In accordance with
·1 .PrOVIIIOnt Of Chapter 5511
: of lhl Ohio F11Vl11d Code,

ac ti o n

wou ld co me during tclc v i ~io n '.s
cri ti cal ratin gs sweeps period in
February. whic h is u&gt;cd to set
hrnadcast
adv ert i sing
rate s.
I
Ml•umc
sa1.d .

Tuesday, November 30, 1999' ·

T he NAACP invited top exccu-

To all o/ ••• Fa'";/;., .
Joar ••igl.~., &amp; f,;,.J,

i
I

Dr. z;,.ll., Ho,.,/.,alt!.
Ca,. &amp; Nuru1, A/fy F'7J
(lk.laJylkal JiJ Poar/1
~air) £,.ing Funorol
Hom•, R·~ K,;,~ RaJ,.

I
I

carJ,, pra!fttr'l,
ph••• ,.II, &amp; ,;,;,,, I

/or /ooJ,

ca~ 't f;nJ acorJ, to

f,,/;"9' {rom

•xpr.,, my
Jo•p ,.;tl.in my

koarl.

r~•• ,, E••'7J•••·

From Tkor &amp; P..rJ

Public

Public Notice

Public Notice

~

D 1 p.1 r t m 1 n t
oI
Treneport.tlon will hold 1
pubtl c
hearing
on
Wedllllday, December 8,
1M, beginning 7:00 P.M • .t
the Floyal Olkl F111ort n11r
PomlfOy, Ohio, lor the
purpo11 of hurlng
etetellllllll on the propoeed
highway lmprovem1nt
known locally 81 lhl
flavenewood Connector
Road (MEG-124·21.18~ and
the
a 11 o cIa II d
1bandonment •nd/or r•
dlllgnatlon of liarloue
exletlng hlghwey rout..
wHhMelgeCounty,Ohlo.
PROPOSED,
THE
IMPROVEMENT
AND
ESTABLISHMENT OF A
UMITEDACCESSHIGHWAY
SITUATED IN CHESTER,
SUlTON AND LEBANON
TOWNSHIPS, WHICH IS TO
BE DESIGNATED U.S.
ROUTE 33 ALONG WITH AN
EXISTING SECTION OF
STATE FIOUTE 7 IN
CHESTER AND SAUSBURY
TOWNSHIPS, AND AN
EXISTING SECTION OF
STATE FIOUTE 824 IN
LEBANON
TOWNSHIP,
BEING ENT1FIELY WITH THE
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
S1 I d
prop o 1 e d
lmproveman~ will conelat
an alignment along the
prelerrtd
alternative
corridor. The preferred
11ternaUve boglna a e_lrtlljlh't
line distance ol
kllometera (22.74
from the.Gallla County line
along S.R. 7, which Ia tha
terminus of the tour-lana
divided aagment of S.R. 7
near Five Pointe In Melga
County, Ohio. The Preferred
alternative corridor extende
eoutneaaterly to the S.FI.
824 approach
the William s.
Bridge.over the Ohio
near Flavenawood,
VIrginia.
Said eatabllehment of
limited acca11
ol
II to Include
1ccaaa and
along
lnllrllctlng croaaroada In
eccordance with tnt Ohio
D 1 part men t
o1
Tronaportatlon'a Limited
ACCIH Polley.
PROPOSED, THE REDESIGNATION OF EXISTING
U.S. FIOUTE 33 IN THE

The Dally Sentinel• Ppge 7

.J

VILLAGE OF POMEROY, propolld relocltlon: ·•r
AND SAlSBURY TOWNSHIP, needed lor any other 11!11•
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO, TO hlghwey.
STATI FIOUTE 124 AND
PROPOSI!D, THE
STATE FIOUTE 833.
DESIGNAnON OF EXIBTI
Slid ll•dlllgnetlon II to STATE FIOUTE 338 IN
Include the removal of u.s. SUlT()N, LETART A~
Route 33 between the LEBANON TOWNSHIP .
flockaprlnga Interchange MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO ,
1nd the lntere~lon ol the STATE ROUTE 124• . · '
Pilmeroy-MIIon Bridge
Said rl-dealgnlllfon ra I~
epproach roadway• and Include tha removal of S.FI,
Wilt VIrginia State Route 338 and the eatabllehment
62. Hence, the highway ol S.R. 124 betw11n th4j
batwlln the Flockaprlnga lntereectlon• with S.FI. 124
Interchange and the In the VIllage of Racine ancl
lnter11ctlon at Kerr Run S.FI. 124 In Lebanon:
ehell be eolely Identified 11 ToPwRnOa~pO.SED THE FIE;;
S.FI. 125, and the highway
through the VIllage of DESIGNATION OF EXISTING
Pomeroy, betw81 n S.R·. 124 STATE FlO UTE 824 1!,1;
and the Pomeroy-M8Ion LEBANON
TOWNSHIP,
Bridge approach roadway MEIGS COUNTY, OH!O TO
lntareectlng with Weal THE
P II E VI 0 US LY
VIrginia State Route 82 1 ESTABLISHED U.S. FIOU~
ehall be aatabtlahed 11 S.FI. 33.
833.
Said re-dealgnatlon Ia to
PROPOSED,
THE Include the removal of S.A.
ABANDONMENT OF A 824 and be eolely ldanllll!
PORTION OF EXISTING ae U.S. Route 33 to '""
STATE ROUTE 124 IN Ohlo-Weat VIrginia 11.1,,
SUTTON AND LEBANON llna.
· 1
TOWNSHIPS, AND STATE
Mapa,
drewlngt•,
ROUTE 338 IN LEBANON environmental date, oth.r
TOWNSHIP, ALL WITHIN pertinent lnlormatlo~
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO. developed
by
the
SAME TO FIEVEFIT TO THE Tranaportatlon Department,
HIGHWAY SYSTEM OF and any written commenlll
MEIGS COUNTY AT SUCH received at a IIIUII cil
TIME
THAT
THE coordlnetlon wilil aieit
CORRESPONDING
reaourcea, rtcreatlo~
RELOCATED PORTION OF planning agencl11, Ieder~~! .
U.S. ROUTE 33 IS OPENED agenclea, local publl•
TO TRAFFIC AND AFTER offlclale and aganclee, •!Ill
THE FINAL ABANDONMENT public adVlaory groupe WID
ENTRY TO THE OFFICIAL be made avalltble to :Ua
ROAD INVENTORY.
public lor viewing at ·tilt
Said abendonmente are Ohio
rtmant : ~
to lnoluda the portion ol I Tr1tnaportatl~on'a DlaUI!II
S.R. 124 between the Olllca, 338 Mueklngum
lnteraectlone wltn S.FI. 338 Drive, Marlalhl, Ohio 45750.
In the VIllage of Racine and
Anyone wlehlng to aubrilll
S.R. 338 In Lebanon at a written or exhlliiJ
Townehlp, end tne portion concerning thle project~
ol S.R. 338 In the Great do 10 by preaentlng ltartft
B.end trll, betw11n the two hearing or melllng It to 1M
lnteroectlona with S.R. 124 Ohio Department · of
In Lebenon Townahlp. Said Treneportatlon, Dletrleil
abandonment• to Include Deputy Director, George ~
all that portion of lhe Colll111. Thla final dete : f~
existing
route
not aubmllllon ol llllement
necuury
lor
the will be January 7, 2000.
:·
con at r u c t 1o n
Gordon Proctor, Dlr~or
maintenance of
(11~ 23,30 2TC

:.1.
nQQ

1

I

~LLLR
, &amp;un.set Rome Con.struetfon
r' '
, New Construction &amp; Remodeling - Kitchen Cabinets
'
Vinyl Siding. Roofs - Decks- Garages

1'ree Estimates
:'7~0- 742-3411

..

-

CREDit PROILEIII???
No Credit • Slow .Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • DIV,Orded

WORRYING!!!
No Emblrraeement ...
You're Treated. with Reapec:tl

Call Now lor lnltlnt Approval! I**

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUaiON
New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
Free Est/mat11

Joseph Jacks
740·992·2068

MoJit,

lu·otlr.,.., •i•l•~"••

So"• • Bra"J 61 }ol'"
Unel... A .. ,,., Wif• Ci,J!J

mo pd

742-2076
Porcelain Dolls. New Toys
692 Art Lewis Street
Middleport, Ohio

l
1'

Hemlock Grove Rd.
Pomeroy,OH
Ph. 740-9112-7285
(Sat., Sun.

"You Kill 'em
we chill 'em•

Open Now

East State .Street
1~1rtc::n~, Ohio 45701

(740) 592-5025 Athens

-

E
lNG

Must have d'6Cking aa:ou11

Toll Free: 888-853-4704

Joe N. Sayre !i

740·742·2138

3/11/99_TFN

34878

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

cLASSIFIEDS!.
110

Mon-Fri 9am-5pm Eastern
(Fee~
.
. .

Help Wanted

Full-time position rcs~nsible for the JDaiUI:eateDI
coordination of all Utilization Senica with l'bysicians, I
·: Admin:imation and other departments. KtgUtaed
Record Administrator or Wdor's DcgRe in

COOK, et If, Devancllnla
Court ol Common Ptala,
Melge County, Ohio, In
purauance ol en Drdlr of
Sele to me dlreotacl from
Hid Court In thl lbOVI
lnlltlld lclfon, I will 8XfiOII
to 1111 11 publiC 1uctlon on
the front lllpl Of the llelge
County Court Huuee on

~;K~~E~F1Wss~:G ~=
ar

s.t..,
H"PililliuliH .

NOFITH 14' 34' .14" WEST
214.02 FEET TO THE POINT
OF
BEGINNING, ·
CONTAINING 1.03 ACRES,
IIORE OR LESI.
Current Ownere Neme: '
Dlborllh K. Cooke - .
Property AIITIII: 43275
Frank Floed, Pomeroy, OH

4ml

:

Permenant PIICII No. 03· I
00828.000
I
Term• Of S111:
Cllh, !
Cennut biiOfd lor 1111 t1t1n '
2/3rdl of lhl IPIIriiiiiCIJ II

Soamped Envelope\ GICO. DEPT

5, Box 1438 , ANTIOCH . TN .

per ton,refuse

$25

per ton, Demo

$20
$8

$6 per

o-1

H.UU,.

"--~.:,
..,._,

u.,.-~

. Lifo1 - llnirntntl
join our fomi/y ofprofouioruds to bt the
··~'l¥101~rct,for
hetdih service nm/s,
'Pluu ndmtit rmmu'1to:

tO,,.;,

"C.ndles

326 Main Slreet
Polm Plea&amp;ant, wv 255150
(Across from the Poll 0\fictl)

·-

~

.. .

-

CALL:
1-740·992-9330 OR 1·800-809·7721

1

A.J
MINI-STORAGE

Uc. II OO.SO

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

'

i' BISSELL BUILDERS,

I

INC.
~

'

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding, New Garages
1

Busy denial office Is seeking In·
terestad applicanls lo• Iho posl·
~;:.;.;.:;...::;:..;,;~:-:---- ltion ol dental asslsian1 . PoSI high
70
Yard Sale
school educalkm prelerrod. Sand
resume to: P.O. Bo.: 704 .

171, Ollio 45769.

FREE ESTIMATES

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

992-3505

Any Scotch or White Pine- $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends
Rt. 33 to Darwin, East on At 681, 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd., 1 1/2 miles to tree farm. Follow signs.
Daily 1 am til Dark
Nov. 26 thru Dec. 24
11122199/1 mo ~-

45n1

Jerkey Sliced
Sausage Made

Phone

949·2·7 34

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Houra
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

SuperStore

;

.

JOUNI'S
·, CARPENIER SERVICE
i

http://WWW.excelir.com

•lloom tddltlanl • lltmodellng
•NtwGallgH
, •EIIct~CII &amp;Plumbing ,

/excelsmostwanted
take a look,,, then

tell all VOUB friends

. •Roofing &amp; Gutltrl
•Vinyl Siding &amp; Plllnllng
•PIIIo &amp; Porctt Declta

Thanks Joe,,

Ftw Ellimllll

I&amp;D Auto Upholstery• Pl•s, Inc.

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
. truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeier seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon·Frl 8:30 -5:00
RuUand,

Pomeloy, Ohio
227n. Loral

l
~

Over flO yra experience

CONCRETE
CONNEOION
YOUR

Quality Driveways,

(740) 742-8888 1-888-52l-o918

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

HOWAlD
EICA¥411111
CO. ,, 740-742-8015
,..,
n
I
'
I'
877-353-7222 (loH fraa)
I

PLEASANT VAIJ.EY HOSPITAL
. do PERSONNEL
ZS20 VAIJ.EY DRIVE
PT.PLFASANT, WV2SS50
(,)R FAX TO (304) 675-697S
'\.

'
'
I

I

'~

Tmcl&lt; Tape, Glassware, Cloltoos.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
After season Indoor yard sale,
coats, Unena &amp; glassware, few
Longaberger baskets &amp; pottery
items, S' Xmas tree with many
decorations, new items added
each day. Everything must go so
house__can be rented . Wed . 1211.

11(}/11 (}Pcll
For Banquet•, Family
Gathering;, Business
Meeting• and Parries

9·3pm, rhu ... 1212, 9-3pm, Friday
12/3, 9-3pm , Sunday 12/5, 12·
4pm. 362 Lincoln Street. Middleport, 740·992-6154.

Call
740/992-3124/3200

1

.. ...

1

'
,
·

10110 St. Rl. 7 South

, ,

CooM//t, OH 45723

DOCTORS NEED BILLERS. FT/
PT Medical BIIHng. No Expe•tence
Necessary. Work At Home. Make

Your IBM Compallble PC Earn
SSS Call 1-800·697- 7670 .

www.medicrew.com

Driver wanted , over the road
eJ&lt;P.necc, 304-675-5873.

ORIVERS · Cannon Exp•eSS 99%
Driver No Touch Freight. Slart At

.32e Mi. /5 Yr. + Exp.; .3te Mt./3
Yr.; .30&lt; Mi. I t Yr. ; .29e Mi. /6
Mos.; .28&lt; MI . 12 -6 Mos .; Slud·
enls Or I Mo.. Exp. $350. Wk. Pay
Raise Every 50,000 MMes. Bonuses, Rider Program . Paid Vacations. Ins. Avail . www.cannonex·
press.com. Call For Details 1·

SDO-Il45-9390.

Drivers: 2 Week Paid COL Train·
lng. No EKP. Needed. No Money

No C,~dil? No Problem\ Eam Up
To S32.'60Q /tst Yr. W /Fulllltne·
fils. P.A.M&gt;Tr.ansporl Coli Toll
Free 1-877-230-6002 www.olrdrivers.com

Advance. OOedllnt: 1:\IOpm the

EMERGING COMPANY NEEDS
Medical Insurance Billing A&amp;alatance Immediately. It You Have A

Stainless steel 1at:te. cas h regIster, Hobart meat slicer. electric
·dehydrator, electric bait massager, vibrating beck board, electric

hedge clippers. molal snelvlng,

Equipment Parts

Dealers.

Needs People To Process Medtcal Claims From Home. Training
Provided. Must Own Computer. f.
000-:123-1! 49 Ext. 400 ·

day before the 1d Ia to run,
Sundey &amp; Mondly edition·
1:octpm Frldoj.

Basement sale, Friday. Dec. 3rd,
9-4pm. Rulland Church ol God.

. All Makes Tractor &amp;

Case-IH Parts

Dental Billing Software Company

All Yard Salea Muat Be P1ld In

DEPOYIIG
.. PARft
Factol'y Authorized

runs goo~. no rust, great gas
miles. $1500 080. 740-99H205,
304-882-2379.
AJJ. Yard S.lea Muet
lit Plld In Advence. ·
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
the cloy bolorethe Ill
Ia to run. SulKily
edldon ·2:00p.m.

Thursday 2nd and Friday 3rd., 9
Tit -? Mitchell Reels, Tools, Furni·
ture. Washer, Dryer. Carpet, 8·

(Formerly Blue Tertan~
I

==----

~ 10:00 a.m. 5aturdly.

A Meeting Place

CLA 486 % Gallipolis Daily Trib-

tallgaie. 350 4 speed. runs/ looks uno, 825 Third Ave .. Gallipolis,
good, $2600 OBO; 1983 Ford I ·Oll=.4=58-:-3-'-1
Ranger, 4 cylinder 4 speed, 4x4, DENTAL BILLER SIS .s 45 /Hr

F~day. Mondoy oclltlon

Garden Room

Pomar·

Denial AssiSlanl Needed Pan
Time. Full Time. Send Resume 1o

1973 Chevy 18' box truck wllllt

(NO Sunday Calls)

•
\

snrtey Spears. 304-675-1429.

Poplar Ridge Road. 740·3677118, 740-367-7047.

740•992• 7643

11n1M1n

Se~·J ing,

Found: Large Female Dog . Typing ... Greal Payl CALL 1-600·
Brown, Black and While with 795-0360 E•l. 1201 (24 Hrs).
long ears. Looks like Hunting
Oog.(:l04)S7S-SB90.
.AVON! All Aroasl ~o
Buy or Sell.
I'
&amp; Hereford Back 01 Cheshire On

•Replacement Winl!ows·
•Room Addo'to'ons

Send Resume to:
Galli&gt;Oiis Oally Tribune,
AE: AOYerliSing Salas Aap
825 Third AYI!nUO
Gallipoll~ OH 45631

ASSEMBLY AT HOME\\ Crafts.

COMMIRCIAliM RESIDIHTIAI

Racln•, Ohio

player

Toys, Jewelry, Wood .

LoSI: 3 Cows And 1 Bull, Llrrousin

•Roofing

29870 Beahan Road

·Skinned
Cut &amp; Wrapped

'Must have good Communication
skills
• Musl haW! good driving record
&amp; Provda own Tmnsportallon
"Must have ability to be a TEAM

60 Loat and Found

• . !~!~!!~~ ~

My

Mate Himalayan, 3yrs old, neu·

825 Tnlrd Avenue. Gallipolis. NO
PHONE CALLS PLEASE.

CHRISTMAS TREES

Joseph Oulveys
web-site

For WaR Established Local Co.
SERVING TRI.COUNTY AREA

Wooden Pallets To Giveaway, 1st
Come 1st Serve, Can Be Picked
Up AI : Gallipolis Dally Tribune,

o

Maple Wood Lake
Deer Processing

8 Weaks old Mala Millen To
Giveaway To Good Homes. 740&gt;146-2800.

2 all Whit&amp; Kittens! 740-446-

~

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

ADVERTISING
'SALES REPRESENTAnVE

3732.

-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;i;;;;;~;;;;;~
8
·-

Union Ave., Pomeroy, OH

1·801-263-&lt;1034.

oemd &amp; declawad. To goOd nome
only. (304)675-7693, aftll( SPM.

AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progrelllve top line.

Now Renting

Giveaway

740·4&lt;16-3479.

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

hour

lOG WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble Crafts, Wood ttem1.
To $480 t Wk. Materials Provided. Free lnformallon Pkg. 24 Hr.

Indoor Kittens To Good Home,

Free EStimates

per hour and labor positions, up
to

"Books
"Plaster Craft
·Seasonal Crafts

740·985·4180

minimum

$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN·
MENT REFUNDS. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY [24 Hr.
Recorded Mossago) 1·600·8546469 Ext. 5046.

·eeads

Set. 9:00 to 12:00

...

6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

Now accepting resumes for COL drivers,
up to

'Unfinished Wood Crolla

Before

(passed fairgrounds)

$32

·oream Catchers
"Floral AITBngements

INTERIOR

Rocksprings Rd.

. 11/26199 I IOO.:JIC

management apcntnct

Frldey, 3111 e-mber, 1M AND SOUTH 5' 45' 11"
it 11 :30 A.M. of llld
. EAST 191 .4 FEET AND
the lollowtng deacrfbld
SOUTH 7' 29" WEST 84
Illite:
SITUATED IN FEET AND SOUTH 4' 08'
CHESTER
TOWNSIIP, WEST 121 FEET AND
MEIGS COUNTY, STATE OF SOUTH 7" 45' EAST 50
OHIO AND BE.ING IN FEET AND SOui'H -82· 15'
SECTION 5, TOWN 2 WEST 125 FEET TO AN
NOFITH,RANGE13,WEST IliON STAKE; THENCE .
OF THE OHIO COIIPANY"S SOUTH 81" 58' 48" WEST '
PURCHASE AND BEING
111
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
i
BEGINING AT A POINT IRON STAKE AT 125.8 FEE'r,
SOUTH 25 RODS (412.5 THENCE NORTH
42' 31.•
FEET) AND NOFITH 18' 110'
233.85 FEET TO AN
42" WEST 1048.07 FI!ET
STAKE, THENCE

Brochures! Satislactlon Guaranteed! Postage &amp; Supplies Provided! Rush Sell-Addressed

•$20 ·$40 /HOUR Easy Medical
. Billing . Full Training . Compuler
Required. Call 1·888·869-7905
Ext.700.

Now ()pen!
Gift end Clift Supptlet
10:0Dam to 6:00pm
Tuesday · Salurday

Tuppers Plains, OH

,Take tbe pain out
Of paiDtfng, and let
me do it for you.

MEIGS COUNTY TRANSFER FACiliTY
OPERATED BY SOUTHERN OHIO DISPOSAL
Located at

Poppy'l Place

Linda's Painting

740·992~5212

DIRECTOR l!flUZATION SERVICll

Public Notice

6129/mo.

40

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

•

Shtrlll'l IIIII
IIIII Elllll
C11e Number 99 CV 042
AUFIQRA LOAN SERVICE,
INC. Planlntlll ·VI- PHIWP
COOKE llkl PHIWP G.

.

7

L IIIII

33795 Hiland Rd.

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

Public Notice

"

Help Wanted

12,000 WEEKLY\ Malting 400

Quality clothing and household
Items. St .00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Salurday
9:D0-5:30. •

B' GraveNess Leadt
100' · 1000' Rolls 1' &amp; 3/4' 200#Waler Una
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulators Water Storage Tonks
Mon.· Fri. 9:00 to
. ~ .. .... A I

Now Renting

Rstes

Phone

110

740-592-1842

Phone (740) 593-6671

Culverts: 4" • 48" In stock

High &amp; Dry
9..
......... ' Self-Storage

MEDICAL BILLER
Up to $15-$45/hr
Process medical claims from home.
Training provided.
MUST own computer.
1·800-434-5518 ext. 632

Supplies AI No COS I To You. For

740-985-3813

NOW OPEN:

1113111 pel. 1

" 'Hcalthcare Administration. Two years hialthcare

Public Notice

St. Rt.

William Safranek, Attorney

ehristmas greeting

Public Notice

.,

Bankruptcy contact: .

Matches

. .

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

. More tnlormallon 1-888 -6 77-

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

For information regarding

Every Sunday
1:00 p.m.

/

Dtabatlc PaUenta : Medicare Or
Private Insurance , You May Be
Entllted To Receive Your Diabetic

9 West Stimson. Athens

can rtlirtt a deb111 ollinandal ohlifallons llltd llllangt alal! dlstikllori ol
llllfll among tlldll011. AptllOA going lhrough barWupJty may llltin tll1ttlrt
property, knawn tn ' exempt' property, lor his or her )lltlGrttll1111. !his may
lndudt a car, a house, dolltes, and m.hald pds. You sheuld dlrld any
ques1ions repding benkrvptcy lo an allornly belort )IIOIIIding.

ANNUAL

TO PLACE . \)~~~.·&lt;i.~\\f&gt;e\
~
YOUR ,~e, ~"".~
GREETING,
CALL
DAVE
AT
992·21SS

Announcements

New To 'rbu Thrift 51\oppe

"A Better

Breech Grove
.Road
Gun Shoot
Slug and Shot

$$$NEED A LOAN??
Conaolld:ate Debts! Same Day
Approval.
Cut.paymentato 50%111
NO Affl.I9ATION FEESII
1-800-868-9006 Ext. 854
www.help-pey-bills.com

30

6561.

S80.og

The -Daily Sentinel

ADVERTISING DEADLINE:
. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 5 PM

Singles tonlgnt. Call toll free t.
800·768·2623, extension 8178.

1

Post467

-- -------------·--

gles In Your Area. Call For More
fnlormatlon. t -BOO· ROMANCE,

.

I

• Garages
• Complete
· Remodeling ·

American Legion

EDITION
THURSDAY,DECEMBER23RD

740·992·2665

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
. Larry Schey

·New Homes

Rutland, Ohio

I

START DATING TONIGHT!
Have Fun Meellng Ellglblt Sin-

Why walt? Slart meeHng. Ohio

!lOBERT BISSELL
·fONSTRUCTION l

31645SR325
Langsville, OH

We mi.u you so

you very mucl..

Personals

W.V. NWI/028120

,.-....;·;-,;.:··:;.;;-_;;..;,
.. ";;;:;·~;;:;;-·-~..., r"'!-

Deer Shop

For Sale: Beanie Babies, Angels,

740-742·2706
740-446·1141

BL\NKRUP'RY

Ptzrry "Fr-ank"
Hof/man]...

We /o11e anJ mis11

005

Free Estimates

Ext. 9736.

£!top &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

Oiler's

Dec. 1, 2, &amp;3

normal Size Room.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

·37011 -1 438. Start Immediately.

. In Memory

11-30-99.

Guard $45 • Any

985-4473

111111

mucl. on your .
birti.Jay

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

Clean &amp; Scotch ·

992-5479

www.sunsethome.com

Construction

CARPET SERVICE

Cellular
·Jeff Warner Ins.

Bryan Reeves

nm Deem's

BURKE'S

,'·1

i

wooden desk, loots, s/s clothes
rack, door &amp; window casing, ottoman, pillOws, new Irregular jeans,
men's work jackal&amp;, aprons, tabla
clothes, tH shirts, new Christmas
decorations, outdoor concrete,
video movies, free coffee &amp; donuts, 9-1 pm dally this weak only,
basement, 132 Bunernut, Pomer·

PC You Can Earn $25,000 To
$50,000 Annually, Call 1·800291·4683 Dept 1 109.
Growing, EKpa~d l ng, Briley &amp;
Thompson seeks Mason County
Youth Services Case~Worker.
Must have BSW or BA In HUman
Services Field &amp; 1 Yr. Experi-

ence. Call Melissa, (304)7221704. EOE, MiFIHN.
Jeclulon Gent11t Holpltet

. Ripley, WV
Has lhe fol1owlng
Fuii·Timo Poslllons Available:
Alld\olovlc Tochnologtat

~Tochnalogllt

Jfl.

Must Haw
Currtnl Lictlnae/Certlllcallon

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodtopaugh Auclloneerlngcomplete aucllon aorvlce. Buy
and 1111 utatas. Ohio License
t7693, wv t338, 74Q.989-2e23.
Wedemeyer's Auction Service,
Galli&gt;OIIs. Ohio 740·379-2720 . .

PrtViouS ratevant "-"'nc..

AeplyTo:
Jactoson Genmt Hospital
POBox 720
· Ripley, wv 2152 71
.~
, EXT.
OR 3t•
13041372 31'EOE
. 313
'

I:-:::::::-:=::-:--:---

•

�~

-

..

.... .

'- '

..

"' -·
.I

1989

. Pomeroy;

•

Ohio

NEA Cro••word Puzzle
ACROSS

PHU.LIP
ALDER
FINA NCIAL
Llcenood
Weekly Point
Genes1s Elde rCa re~ State Route

Business
Opportunity

62N PI Pl easant , WV 25550

(304)675 3005
Now acctDtlng resumes only fOr
maintenance po sition Please
contoct lhonagor at Elm- Tor·
race Aplltments, 740ofl4&amp;.20t 2.

WOULD 'IOU UKETO
EAIVIIIeo -41,000
lifORE CHIIISniASIII
(GUARANTEED SAI.AIIY)
Men And Wornon Needocffo
Co Tetepllone Opomor Wur1t For

Like to Buy a House on Land·
Contract In the Country In tile
Potnl Plouant Area . (3G4)6757971

IISTAY HOMEn UP TO $800
WEEKLY PROCESS ING GOVERNMENT REFUNDS FROM
'HOME NO EXPERIENCE NEC·
ESSARVI 1-800·854-e469 EXT
5048 (24 HAS)

this newspaper IS sulljeelto
tho Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes 1 Illegal
to advel'tlse "any preference,
limitation or UiSCiimtnatlon
based on race, color, raliglon,
sex familial status or natlqnal

$100 Per Hour Homeworker&amp;
Naededl Largo Advertising Firm
Pays $4 For Every Voice -Ma ll
Retrieved Make $400 ·S5o0 Eve·
ryday In 'tllur Spare Time llmltod
Space 1·888·387·8303 (24 Hra).

make any such prelerence,
llmltatlon or d1scnmlnatoo •

LOCAL RADIO STATION
~

INOTICE I

·ow
And~
Shlftlwlllable

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommend s thai you do busi·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to sand money through the
ma11 until you have Investigated
tha ollenng

• Fua aPwt-n.. O!&gt;oolnga

I

• No ElcpeoleriOOWE TRAIN
• H.S. &amp; Cc1tege
Stu&lt;lonta wetcome

I

foof1(Jiy In Person At.
t7PineStrwt
Gllllpolla, OH
WedneSday Daoe-r 1St
3:00 P.M. TIU 1:00 P.M. ONLY
~ For. Ms Hammond
-hiring .... drlverl

lnformod that all dwel"ngs
advertised 1n thb newspaper
are ava1lable on an equal
opportunity basiS

310

AT&amp;T · MCI · SPRINT What"&amp;
The Big Secret? Work 5 Hrs fWk
Make $52K -$ 125 KI Yr Eesyll
FREE lnlo' 1-800·997-9888 (24
Hrs) Ext 1155

~7!1-5858

bath , Mtddleport, Oh , $34,000
Will consider land contract, call
800-388·8, 94

320

380-261 5 • !2·1 Hrs )

OliN A COMPUTER?
PUT ITTO WORKII
S25-S751HR PTIFT
1-888·220o201 3
Part time taMonallltOusekHplng
position available lor 1 tocar professional off1ce building. Some
light maintenance duties also lncluderJ Interested parsons may
submit resumes to PO. Box 4S8,
RIIC'I18, OH 45nt
Part lime AN's, LPN'S &amp; STNA's,
all shifts. No ptlone calls please
Send resume to Overt:Jro6k Cen11&lt;, 333 Page Street. Middleport.
OhtO 45760 or stop In and fill out
an appfocaiMJn EOE
Postal Jobs $48,323.00 Yr. Now
Hiring -No Experience -Palel
Training ·Great Benefits, Call 7
Oaya 1100-429-36110 Ext. J-365
POSTAL JOBS To $18 .35 /HR .
INC BENEFITS, NO EXPERI·
ENCE . FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1·800-813· 3585 ,
EXT 14210. 8 AM. -9 PM , 7
DAYS !Co Inc. Fee
POSTAL JOBS Up To $17 21 /Hr
Guaranteed Hire. For Apphcarlon
And Eum lnklrmatlon Call 8 A M
- 9 P.M. M·F 1-888·888·5627 Ext
24-1007.
Rnponalbte person to wol1r ,weekonda call Bam-4pm Monday thru
Friday, 74().992-4410 or 74o-992·
5039.

Small Gallipolis area DUslness is
now taking resumes ror both fun
and part time positions Appllc
ants musr bt punctual and de·
peMablo, goOd wllh paoplo (job
lnvofves some selling) and child·
ren. know baSIC otfice Skills, have
some basic computer knowledge
and be able to learn new skills.
Salary IS negot~ Wllh bonuae&amp;
and possible commissions Send
res ume to The Dally Sentinel ,
PO Box 729·91, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
Someone to Watch Elderly man
lrom Sunday Evening lO Friday
Morning Call Allor 5:GO pm
(7 40)-4-48-2956
The V1t1age of Middleport is accepllng applications for a Bulld11g
lnspactor This Is a 10 to 25 hour
a - k position poylng S6 oo
hour. Applications can be
up at Ylllagt Hall,
Street, Middleport,
e.ooam &amp; 4.00pm

Truck Driver WKh Haz·MI1 Class
A Endorsomtnt Dotlvor &amp; Pick·
Up Within 150 Mit. Radius. ReIurn Homo Evtryday. Apply At
llurlltOII. 7~119

~78

FREE BOOK! Reveals Secrets To
Flnanc1al Freedoml LIVe A Life Of
Pleasure DEBT FREEl Free
Cqpy
www secre ts com/s pecta118370

14x60 2 Bedroom. 1 bath, w/Car-

port Plus out Bulldm1ng on Rental
Lotl l7401·446 -6617 Leave Me&amp;·
sage.
14x70 mob1le home, two bedroom,
1 112 bath some remOdeling, new

FRITO LAY /PEPSI /C OKE
VENDIN G ROUTE $1,000+
WEEKlY POTENTIAL ALL
CASI1 BUSINESS PR IME LO·
CAL SITES SMALL INVEST·
MENT/ EXCELLENT PROFilS 1·
8D0-731 -7233 EXT 4803

carpel. $10 500 OBO 740-992·
5600
1974 t2x85 all alecwc. washer,

dryer refrigerator, oven . curtains.
couch and chair, two w1ndow air
cond1Uoners. rn Portland read~ to

MEDICAL BILlER $1~ ·$45 /Hr
Madtcal Btlllng SOftware Company
Needs People To Process Meeli·
cal Clatms From Home Training
Providad. Must Own Computer 1·
801).434-5518 Ext667

1985 Oakwood 14 x70 2 Bed·
roomo, 2 Baths. New Plumbing, 1
Owner, 740.2~1 1

MEDICAL BILLING Unltmlled In·
come Potential No Ellperience
Necessary Frea lnformallon &amp;

1993 Clayton 1611 x BOll , Haat
Pump, Dryer, Stove. Refrrgerator,
$20.000 OBO lovely Condttlonl

CD -ROM ln'o'e&amp;tment

move. $3500. 740·843-5310 days
·

or 740-843-5t47 evemngs

$4,99~

(740)·2~·6362

$8,995 Fmanclng Available Is·
land Automated Medical ServiCes, Inc 800·322-1139, Ext 050.
Vo1d In KY, IN, CT.

1999 MODEL'S ClOSE OUT
SALE SAVE BIG S$1
2,3,4 Bedroom Homes, 1-800 948·5678
New Bank Repo On lot. 1-800383-6862

Need A Loan ? Try Debt Consoli·
daltOn $~.000 • $200,000 Bad
Credtl 0 K Foe 1·800-770·0092,
Etc1 215

AWESOME: NEW Z OR 3 BR .
ONLY MAKE 2 PAYMENTS TO
MOVE IN AND NO PAYMENTS
AFTER SYEARS. (304)755-7191 .

Personal a Business operauon,
Bankrupt,Bad crM1I, lorn to us
we can help cell toll tree 1-877-

BANK REPO

1998 Clayton-3 Bedroom, 2
Baths, 1-8()0.948·5678.

SUCC.ESSFlJl SPORTS PUBLI ·
CATION Turn -Key Operation,
Nets $30K Part· Time, !OO'Ko Fl·
nanetng Available: 54.990 1-877·
442-4263.

Double Wtde Set-Up In ThO
Country No Payments For 90
Days Only 0 Oakwood ·Gallipolis, 749-446-3093.
OoubleWide, 3BR/2 BA, only
$287 per mo. w/low down paymant Frao Air. Hl00·69H7n

1

An~ a~~~~~~~~~r~:~~~~:::

First Time Buyers Easy Finane ·
lng 2 and 3 Bedroom, around
$200 par month Call 1·800.948·
5678

OK C~~
I
247·5125 Elrt. 1134 Void OH, KS.

$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Famtllll Unloading MU·
lions Of ~tara, To Help Minimize
Their Taxes Write Immediately
Windfalls, 847·A SECOND AVE ,
SUITE 1350, NEW YORK , NEW
\'OAK 10017
FREE MONEYI Ir s True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500 •
$50,000 · For Debt Consolidation,
Personal Needs, Medical Bills .'
Education &amp; Bustntsl Call Toll·
Frao 1·800-724-5047 (24 Hra)

140

BualneH
Tr1lnlng

Gtl1lpolla

...

---

c.- Collop

(car-a Clole 1b Homo)
CoiiTodiVI740-448-4367,
1-800-214.()452,
Aogt90-05-127~B.

150

ln1tructlon

Lota

&amp; Acreage

2 44 Acres, Homestta , Grean

Townshtp Gallia County, Flat,
Scenic, Close To Gallipolis, Soma
Restrictions, 740-245- 5776
20ACRES
Oil SR 7 South Of Gallipolis
Roughly Wooded, Aoad Cut In
No Aest ricttons. Land Contract
AYallable Anthony Land Co Ltd
1-800-2 13-8365 www,cgyotry -

OOWlllll
BT017ACAES
In Meigs County, 011 SA 124
St.500 + land Contract Avail·
able S950 Down. FREE Maps 1·
11()().213-~.

Carpentry Ftam Fra. . To Finish, split driveway, ntlda work, as 11.
Remodtllng, Ad~ltlont, Decka, $17,500,
380ol7 Toxaa Rd .. 740Pordlol,".,.388-1!fl31.
ileS-3444 011·-1-1105.

BRUNEll LAND
7~1-1412

Child cart provider will CliO lot 2.000 Sq. Ft 1 111 Aero. Routt 7,
Gtlllt Co.: All Ntwl Marabol Rd.
Children In my home, call 740. 18x32 lnground Pool, 2 Storage
33 Acres $35,000 Or 17 Acrn
992-011114.
$22,000 Great Hunting + Home
Suild&lt;lgO, $70,000, 740-245-9472
Sltot. Friendly Aidga Rd , Hun!Att
Goorgaa Portable Sawmill, don't Ch&amp;thlrt VINaga, New Roof, New
15 Acres f11,700 Caah, Water.
haUl )VUIIogl to tho miN jullt call WINew lots ooon to opan In Kyger
. Siding, Gu FurnaC8, 3
3()U75-11157
CaH oer1y to ~1._1
Bedrooms. 1 112 Balho, 740o367·
~. 1 Story- 130.00: 2 0335
Co : Rutland, Whites Hill
Story· SfO 00 Basrc Cleaning, HOME FORECLOSURES No
$12,000 Or 11
Have Referonceal (7401· 388·
Oownl No Creelu Checkl
1 ~~~·;~ :,. ·;(~u , Counly Water.
91185
rak&lt;eover
Low Payments! I t
I
325, 5 Acrta
1-600·355·0024
$16,000, Water Or Briar Ridge
I Will Cltan Houoll, Any Area,
Rd., l'llvate 1 Ac:raa $13,000.
AoiM•r.oH. 7..0.258 8282

11

Many Nice lolt To C - From
For Home SliM And Huntl!'ll. &lt;;ol
Now For fiiEI MaPI And Fl·
nanclng Info. 10% OFF Cash
81/y~

-·

''

I

'

Houses lor Rent

2 Bodrooma, Water &amp; Trash Paid,
No Pita. DeposH &amp; Rolottnco Required, Bulevllle Pike, 7~0 - 3881100.
2 Dr. Muse lor rent you pay utll
d8t) &amp; rol roquirod 3()(-575-2535

2 or 3 bedroom house In Pomer·
r:Ji, no pats, 740-992·5858
28R $2751$125 Secunty Oepos1t
&amp;Utilities HUD approved Garage Apt Mason,WV 2BR, $350/
$150 dop &amp; utlllttes (304)6751911
3 Bedroom, LA, Lg Kitchen, Carport Available Nov 1st Pnvate
and convenlen11 47112 Spruce St
Gallipolis $390 Mo , 1390 Deposit
requWed . Apply et Topes Furniture. 151 Second Ave No Phone
CaHs

4BA/1 ·112Bath, Home For Rent
Appl!ances Furnished large
Chain -Link Fanca immediate
O cc upanc~ $525 Rent + DeposIt (304)675-7873
549 Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis. 2

Bodroorns, Clc!an, No AppHances,
$350IMO 74().446-1050.
Btl)' Foroclosod Homos
1 From$1991Mo.
4% Oown For Listings /Payment
Details Call 800-3 19-3323, Ext
1709

Small 4 Room House Stove and
Refrigerator Furnished . (740)·
446-0974

Statt Route 586 Countryaldo
Apartments. 2 Badrooma, C/A, W/
0 Hook·Up, Water Stwago Gar·
bage Paid $365/Mo , DapoaK Re·
qutrod, 513-574·2539
Twin Towers
plications tor
tzecJ apt tor
capped EOH

now accepting ap1 BR . HUO subald·
elderly and handl·
(304)675-5679

Upstairs Furnished, 3 Room a,
Balh, Clean, No Petal Aelerencaa
&amp; Oeposll Required. 740·448·
1519

460

Space for Rent

Retail Space for Rent, corn1r of
Vine and Third. Off Sooot Ptr1tl!'ll
(740)-448-88Sfl

MERCHANDI SE

510

Houaehold

Goode

•

Appt1anc:es
Aeco.ndltloned
Washers, Dryers. Ranges, Relrigrators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag. 74G-448·
7795.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers , dryers, refugerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appllanc11, 76
Vine Streat, Call 740·448·7398,
1·888-818.0128

Three bndroom, 1wo baths, Harr&gt;
sonvllle area . Available Decem·
bar. $400 plus utilities. depo&amp;~. no
smoking, no pats, 740o742·3033.

High l ift Chair $125 (304)6754034

Two bectroom house m Pomeroy,
would like to sell on land contract
or will rent $350 per month plus
deposit and utilities, no pets, 740698·7244

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Between Athens and Pomeroy, 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob lit homos,
S-"$300
·~
. 7'"992
~
.2167

Complete DISH Network ootolmo
system, brand new, $149 Installed
lree. 740·992·1182 or 304· 773·
5305 after 8pm.

550

COMPUTER BLOWOUTIII COM·
PAQ MICRON Galeway Dllk·
tops , eCommerce, Websltes,
Merchant ·Accounts Almoat
Everyone Approvodll Zero
Downllll Low Monthly Paymants.
FREE Special Ollar 1-888·671·

1

580

Pets for

Site

6935

AKC Gol~•n Rtlrt.vor PuP,ploo,
ShOll, Wor-.&lt;1, Both Ptrenta On
Promlao. Slro 11 CeriiiiCid, $250
Each, 740o25f.1886.

EMERGENCY HOME RESCUE,
INC . Avo1d Foreclosure, Stay In
Your Home Gov't &amp; Privata Pro·
grams Services Guaranteed 1·
800-203-0525 Time Is Crn•cal

Baby Cockatlell (3()()07!1-5857.

FISh , Blrda. Pond Suppllea
Sun 1·4PM , Mon .-Sat. 11AM6PM . Fish Tank/Pet Shop, 2413
Jackson Avenue/POint Pleasanl
(304)675-2063

Entertainment Center &amp; Sony
Stereo System, 19E. 6 Langen·
berger L1m1ted Ed1t1on Hamper,
Gas FtreplaC8 (3041895-3129

Four Month Old Mate AKC Registered Boxor. $200 00 (7 40)·4•1·
1602

a truck

Firewood for Sale. split &amp; dellv·
erod full·olzo truckload, $40 00
Call IYtninga or leave message.
(304)882-3893.

Rogllterod Slborltn t:juoky Male,
8 Montha Old, Grey Wtth Bluo
Eyes, 7•0.441·0852 Evenings
Se tlnauz~tr

puppif'.l'-,

mlnllti•Jtt,·,

ArtwOOd. Any Kin~ . Will Dallvor,
$40 A load, 740-256-1003, 7-40.
256-9282

AKC , 'ih'll!• WfJrffllt'J ~ 'jr'hi'YIIJtf
r. h.•mr,,r,n I,I,,,,,Jiu,,, 14'1 '•'· I

For sale· Prlmaslar Syotem, also
wantod RCA Direct TV older
moctel system Must have access
card, poy cash Call 740·949·
3315 and leave message

West Highland WMo Torrt.r. Fe·
mala, 5 Montns Old, AKA Regie·
tl&lt;ad, Price Negotiable, 74G-441·
1824

Grubb'a Plano· tunmg &amp; repairs
Problems? Need 1\Jnad? Call lhe
ptano Dr 740-446-4525

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

·~· ..... ''''""f•th•Jfhlo'-11•'' ' '"" '

Gunsll Guns!' Sale on' all guns In
stock, ShOtguns. rlf les &amp;
handguns Ron's Gun Shop, just
outside of Audanel on Lasher Rd.,
Sale lastthru Daoember, call 740·
742·9412
,
Htrloy Dovldaon Btrblit· Bar·
blo &amp; Ken Is hero, first coma first
served, pius Starling Lineup (all
sports), plus 12' pooolble figuroo, jual a few 12' Star Ware
Dann Maul (non talking), Rulland
Bottle Gas, 1·800·837·8217 or
740-742-2511 .

JANITROL 101CW
ELECTRIC FURNACE
$250 Each New: 2 Only. 100,000

530

Pump, llnoset, (A) Coli Thermostat, $1,50G, Free Estimates ·11
ll&gt;u Don'f Cell Us We lk&gt;lh Loss·
1·800-291·0098, Or 740·4•8·

610

- -·

Antiques

Buy or soli Riverine Antlquu,
1124 East Moln Street on SR 124
E Pomeroy, 740·992-2528. Ruu
Moore. owner hllplllts·your-buslnass com'rlveilna/
Miecellaneous

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, ~r=::-:-::-:::-:::::::::::--:--:--:-~
Pay Ullllllos. &amp; Deposit, 1 • nor
SSBAD CREDIT? Get Cosh
Loans To 55 ,000 Debt ConaollArea. No Pats, 740o388·9
dation To $200,000. Credit Car~s.
Mortgages. Reltnanclng And
Auto Loans Available. Mtrldlan
Credit Corp. 1·800·471-51 19 Ext.

2 Bedroom Trallev 1 Gallipolis
Fe (304
rry
)e75-3216
2 Bedroom Tralltr Beautiful River
View In Kanauga, No Pots, 740·
441.0181 . .

_11_80~=~~=---..WATERLESS COOKWARE••.

2 eo~rooms , 14x70 $250/Mo..
Plus
74().367..()832

Homo Demonstration Kind High·
esl Ouallly • American Made.
NOT Korean . Normally, $1 ,500,
Sollng,$695 1-t00-421·7267.

Dapoo•.

2 Badrooms, No Pets, Depoaltl
(740)·245· 5582, Alter 5 OOpm
(740~24!1-5890

•Attention Prlmestar Customer••
Want A Better Deal? Free Equip.
men I, Free Installation, Froo 8
Months Programming, 74G·388·
0113

Nice Clean 3 Bedroom Mob1le
Home In MercerVIlle Area, 740·
2~574 .

Two bedroom trailer In Tuppers
Plains, new stove &amp; carpet, $250
plus deposit and uitllllos, 740 ·
667-3487.

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 bec:lroom apanments, fur·

2 Bedroom Apartment Actjacent
~o University of Rio Granda
Campuo, 1740)·245-5858.
2bdrm tpll ., to1tl oltctrlc, tP·
pllancoa furnllhld, laundry room
facllltlts. clo11 to ochool In lown.
Appllcallona IVIIIObtl a1: Village
Graan Apts. t49' or can 1._·9923711.EOH
3 Aparlmonls For Rent In Rio
Grande, Walking Distance To
College, All Utllltt.s Paid, Great
Pri:el740o24!1-5100.
Apartment for rent m Pomeroy, no
peta, 740.992·5858

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 10. U58. Walk 10 Shop
&amp; movlea Call 740·446-2568
Equal Housing Opportun11y
Brand New Apt, Rodney ~raa. 2
Sodrooms. 1 Bath, Anached Gs·
raga. Deposit/References Ra qulradl (740)-448-280!
Chrllty's Family L l~lng, aparl·
mtn~s. home &amp; 1ra11~r rentala,
740·1192·4514, apan..onto avail·
- · 11/tnlshod &amp; unfllmtlhad.
For lease: Ont Btdroom, AC
Apt .. Second Floor, Corner Of
Sooond And Pine $240/Mo., PIUI
Uttlitlos s.eurl1y And Kay Depos·
II. Roferontea Aoqulllld. No PelS.
1~ .
..
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Rlvoralda Apartmanla In Mlddto·
pori. From $2.9-$373 can 740·
992-5084. Equal Houolng Oppor·

,,_

1997 Compaq Prasarlo computer
with keyboard, mousa, liard drive
and speakers Taking bids, mtnl·
:."mn;,::d~.1 ~· Mucsaii~Ba11 nbtfy '~loa·l

899

Anance, 740o992·211 f.

2 -12' Kicker lmpulaos In A
Sealed
2 ; wau
10' Kenwoods
In
Jenson Box
4X100
Amp, 1300,
OrTrada, 740.992-7tn.
3 STEEL BUILDINGS 40x80 Woo
$I0,900 Soli $i,800. 50XIOO Wll
$26 ,800- Sell SIS,80G 70x100
Was $42,200 Soli $28.900. Doug
801).379·3754.
:il4 Srznd Rollaway Bed. $10000
Call: After s·OOp m (740) -3677123

--~----------c-~
1989 lincoln Continental. Baau--~
. ·
llful Ltather lntartor. Ntedl en· ' ·
glnt wclrk, hao now body. SIOQ. •
(304)87!1-5479
• '•

;1

,

Lovaaeat Wtth Chair To Match;
Footstool, New Oval Shaped Col·
fee Table. Exercise Slke. Like
New. 74().24!1-9587
MOBILE HOME OWNERS

Moving 1 Year Old Matching
Heavy Duty Automatic Woshor 6
.Dryar FrliiJdlfrt. $475; Color T.V.
1 Year Old RCA, Floor Model
With Remote S150, Sears Ml·
crowave 8 Months Old, $55, 740.
1256-6989
.
Nttctt Dltcoat· Tony Ste•art,
Dale Dale Jr.. Jelf,Gordon &amp;
others by Action Aayoll &amp; Win
'
' Cliltmplons,
•
•
nlng Circle
&amp; Racing
Rutllnd,Bottlo Gas, 1-100·837·

-1991 Oldt ·ouuau Cion!, ~ Door, ·· ,
V-8, es,ooomllos. S3900 . oeo. '• 1
Nice Clean car (304)87~.
1992 Rod Dodge Daytona , 4 ey. ; \
IInder, Automatic. A/C, Sunroof, . ..
$1,800,080 74()o25f.tf552.

l.~~~~~~40o~Uaad
~~·~Furniture.
~~~~~
Nice

Baby Bed, Stroller, Car Seat,

Swing, High Chair, and Play Pan.
ltllle Tyke Toy Chest (304)6 75·
2801
BALANCED LIVING MALL •
Why Flghl The Crowds? Ordtr
Holiday Gifts On ·llntl
www BL,..II.OOI1&gt;MitVGroo111fo htm
Thank 'lbu

Tappan HI E111t lency 90'Ko Gu
Furnocea.:OII F,urnacoa, 12 stet
Heal ~~~!1'~·&amp; Air Condltlonlno
Systema·l'iel fJvflr PariS &amp; L./.
bor Warranty S.nnona Heollng &amp;
Cooling, 1·80Q.812-5987.
So
"
C
artlnestyte ardlo Fit low lmpact Exercise Machine, L1ka New,
uood Only 5 Times, 304 •882 •
31 52 ·
Season Firewood $140 Oump
Truck load, Heap Accaptad, Call
After 6 P.M 74(). 379 _2758 _

Solo Flex for sale, $300, call 740-

992•5053

Free

Beaullful SIPhlre &amp; Olamona
Ring. Apprelsad fOr $700, ooklng
1300. Slzt 4 Could bo alzod·
up.(304)075-547t.
' COMPUTERS • SO Down. Low
Monthly Paymanll. Y2K Compll·
ant Almoal Everyqna Approvtd.
Call FIROCOM ~dvanced Tech·
inologloa 1·800·817·3478 Ext.
' 330.
COMPUTERSilaaaa, RENT -TO
'·OWN I $88. EASY .QUALIFY·
IINGII NEW 800 1800 Mliz. Cofllo•
[plttt 8yalin1IINTEfliiE1' IIEADI'
Software &amp; TtdtniCal Htflt,
300·2640. Aflotdablt TtCI\nolo·

eoo.·

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHN"OLO·
GY Wo Finance, •o• Downl Put
Credit Problema OKII Evon If
TllrnCid Down Babrlll Rooatabl~h
'lbcM" Crtdtll 1-8flO.Me.0369

710

AUt"l for Sale
,.
f$00 CARS FROM f5001fl Buy
Pollee Impounds &amp; Aepos. Foa.
IOALL NOW For llsttngel 1·800·
319-3323JC2156
$NO OONNI HOMES NO CREO.
IT NE~DEOI GOY'T FORE·

8509.
'93 Ford Probe, silver w1th black
Interior, aharp car, $5500, 740·
992·m 7•
'97 Camero, automatic, loaded,
~2.000 mllu, dark fortst green,
740 &amp;e8 0904.
·

•1

Jeckson, Ohio, 1-80Q.53M528

Pass

·;:1

1993 Ptymoulh Du1111. 6 cyllndal ~
OHC, standard, excellent condf· •
lion, lookS groat, boautllul lntorlor, .
nlco wheels, $3500, 740·9~9·'
\

f 998 Hyundol Accont, 2 Doors, ~
Speed, 36,000 Mlln, Gr..n, AIR· •

1
1eH FOIID EXPLOREilf100 /.:2
080. Solzad And Soiling Locally.
Fee

-f

....

f

1118 FORD MUSTANG $1110-l
OBO. SEIZED AND 'BELLINO .
LOCALL~. FEI: HQ0,40f.7111
EXT. 8138 • .1
t ,
1
B7 Bronco·
-~ew:·Palnt.
Clutch, tires, w~ools, CD Player
$3.500.00 (740)·448· 0208 olttr

'

·I

I

_5ocp~m~·------------- l
93 Probe $3,500; 91 Neon $3,800
4x4 Hunting Joop $500 00; 88
Fllonza Good Work car $600.00,
(740)·388'· 9062 or (740)·U8· ~
7278
•

"'ee

• ••

THE BORN LOSER -~·

(,(If ~ 1-tw

00&amp;, 1\~iTIE. ~

fli.'S"' ~

.,

~

~

~ E.X~~IVE. WI\TU\ DOC., Ell 1
WI\~"I"

e:1,P0\'51V€

00 'i'OU c.Nl-1\11#. 7

w~rc.t\ 006!

THEY Si&gt;.'( THD&amp;E
DON'T LEARN
THE PAST

COtiDEMNED

~PEAT

IT

PEANUTS

.'

'l
1
j

,..N_O_W_I_F_O_R6-0-T~

Wl-li\T I WAS
WRITIN6. .

1982 Mustang Black On Black
351W. 4 Speed, Now Wheels &amp;
Tires, Richmond 4 11 's 74Q·992"-"
7653$1,800 Firm.
1983 BUICk Rogal SBOO.OO OBO
(740)-446·7730

~••

1988 Nlsaltn 200 SX 5 Speed,
PW Wlndowa , Power Sunroof
AM/FM Tepa With Booster'
looks Good, Runs Groat! $1
740-441-1083

,ooO

Van (Ovelhoulocl)

Baet Offtr, 1990 CMavan
.Baat Offer, 740-441o0583,

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

''

AITRO·ORAPH

4

•

Wednesday, Dec. 1.' 1999

U:

In lhe yell' ahead, you could enlcr
lit to a relationship with a pe11011 wbo
thinlcs on a 8f8!1der scale dtan you do.
His or her input will elevate your po&amp;ilhililies for al,aining greater aaons.
; SAOI'f!'ARlUS. (Nov. 23: Dec·
~)Even if you bchcve lhc pnde of
an egoistical friend needs 10 be
SOOihed today, do nolatlcmpt .10 use
Rattcry 10 pamper the penon. Sin·
cirely will produce better mullS.
Trying 10 palch up •. broken
.

•

•

Appliance Parts And ~rvlco: All
Name Branda Over 2~ Years Experience All Work Gua 1anttod
Frapch City Maytag, 740·4 48:

RHidenlltl or commercial wlrlni
repairs. Maoltr
cenoteS el,ctrlclan. Rldono•r
~~:lrlcal . WV000308, 3o4•675: :

25 type of cau

3 Frenzltd 1tatt
28 Choreog111pher 4Fiee

Tharp
5 a..btrral
8 Vehicle on
32 Shipping box
33 Cllurel1 lingers
I'W'IIIII'I
34A-o0'Nul 1 Fur-blaring
animal
35 Biblical king
311 Armldlllo
8 Apiece ·
37 Lecklng loot
8 Oppotltt of
peril
poat
31AIItogather
10 Klndolllot
(2 wcla.)
11 Soft drink

22 "The-

12 Formerly,

lonMrly
1g Lawyer F. Bel lay

Cometh"

23Urgq
2~

21 lnlllnnt
chllrecltr

For • lhort
time

25Minutellol

278yHya
21 Dllyt ot-

.

30~1
IIIVIalon

.'r

31 Umbl

~Chi-

...,.._

3I=IIMI

.

- 40~
41 Lady of long
42 Stodtoflllrbt

!!!rt-+-+-+-1 .

-ntl (tlbbr.)
43 Churdl

..,.

.•.

45Forey
46"-Wondtrllll

Life"
. 47 Anlllrecl.
anlrMI
48 "Cialllcal"'
11811
SO Mallei

;~ ~

'

mlaua

'

~~~.

52 IEilglr Al..n

·-1)1

~~*""....l.......l...,j,...l ~ 53- Jl11111

'{~

'

~r-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty C~rcryptogramt lrt created from Quotations by !amoua peop1t past and pr8MtiC
Ead'lletter in tht Cll)htf alnll tor anoi\ef t«Uy's c1w ,., sq11.1L4: U

'VTGXGMN

X F D K,
ELLO

Y$

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VFLM

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XF GMN

SMOP

G K_,

YSM•K

••

WFSHOY

CL

L 0 W L.'

WSILXFGMN

G

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YSGMN
NOSTGD

WKLGMLI
PREVIOUS SOLUTION. "WI~ (Chamberlatnkwas one ol the grea1esl ever, and
we will never see anolhar one like htm " areem Abdui-Jabbar

'

w:::' S&lt;C\\.c«llA-C!i-~s· ....

.

.,

' '

WOII

Nllocl ltr GAY L I'OI&amp;Ait ....,;;...._ _ __

o•aarra,..

:-~

letters ol the
,_ ICI'Cimbltd words ....
low 1o ,,.... lovr simple warda.

I II I I I l
ri ,~ E,, . ..
l
TOBOMT

2

1

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1

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r-c::""':':'u-::'E-:Jr-:I;--,1::,·
•
5

I I I 1
·L.....L......l-....L.--'--1 ~

,JI.l

,

~ ·;

,.

·~

~''

Alter paying his bills my son
sighed, "YIIhy is there so much
month left after the end of - -

· ~I

1~. ,. _.-,:~:j_,"': 'v=f==1 :1 ~-~..-::_~
0

..· .

=A=I

altp

'"

No. 3 below.

I 'o

,I

Don"fgtt Slunf by htgh pricrt r
Shop claJII(Iod SK!Ion.

rh•

Valise- WAVY HEAD
"I always thooghl I had wavy hair until I shaved my
head." my husband laughea. "Now I know I just had

WAVYHEAD"

.

a

~~

'

,.'

~'~
14•,
i ..!
'V

.f';&lt;~

J:l-;

~· &lt;

..

..

-·-or

2 NU1ce1

II

·-

&amp;

Eloctrlca11nc1
Refrlgeretton

1 Greek peak

21 Where Lagos

• i•_i ,
'

Accessories

.840

DOWN

SCI 4 MU'rl ANSWaS

ITUESDAY

14' Boat And Trailer Trolling NQ·
tor And 9.9 HP Motor $1 ,200,
74().446-2805
' '•

Llvlngalon's Bastmtnt Watef
Proofing, all baaoment ropalrl
dono, lree esllmates, lllallma
guarantee. 12yra on job experience 1*188e·3887
.

57 Himalayan
cedar

' ~··:
·~;·:?',..

.

for Sale ,

t,
i 985' Chrysler ' Flflh Avenue. ~·(J' ,,,
S800, 01111 740·992·9827 or 7i O·
· C&amp;C • Qonllol Horitl. Main:
992-8190
tononct· Painllng, vinyl oldlnd.
1885 Pontiac Trans AM Tune carpantty, doort, WindOWs , batha
Pori lnlootlon V-8, Now Paint, mobile 11oma ttpalr and moro..Foi
Runs Excellentl $2,000 . Firm. ~~stlmote call Chat, 740o992·
(740) 446 Qo120 •

11
17 Query
11 -de France
20 Map abbr.

58 Claulfy

Deacon • Weaty • Wheat-

750 8 oats a Motors

BASEMENT
, , -~ WAJiillfROOFJNG
, ,
uncondiUona1 lifetime guarantH
Local referancaa furnished. Es·
tab1l8hCid 1976. Call 24 Hra. (740)
448·0870, 1-600·287·0578. Rog·
I&lt;S WIIOIPIOOIIng

55 Not at all

you .......

•

:::::::'-::---:-~--~.

CARS $100, $500 &amp; U~ POLICE
IMPOUND Honda's Toyota's,
Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Uttll·
ltes Call Nowl 800· 772-7470,
Ext 7832

=

14 ~,_
11 AIIHrbent

I:!J

1

Auto Parts

;::~~!.

- -"
7 Be rMINnl to 45 DIMncumber
13 "PulP Fiction" 41 Un-*1
aur, - L.
51 Secletlve
Jlckaon
54 1.111 doWn

East
Paso
Pass

I

!Excellent Condtlon,
$1,700, 740. I
i367o0219,
74().367,7272
,
.,
i
.!998 Honda-300t 4x4. Mint Con· '
dillon. $3,1QO Call after 8PM. 1
1
(304)875-4840,
1
,
i98 Honda Foreman ~14, I
LJ1Ioncla O.B.O. like Newl 19"
"
300 $3,3DO, Wor-·
~ll&lt;t.Rll&lt;.&lt;••" · Home. 740· 245• •

760

lftOUnUine

court
28 Snare

By Phillip Alder
Mtkc Lawrence has put out his
fourth dtsk, !his one being called
"Defense " Requtnng Wmdows 3.1
or higher, it IS difficult because
defense is difftcult. Yet it must
tmprove your game if you analyze
deal s. And you have Lawrence
your elbow, asking the key questtons '
that need to be answerM.
Take 1his deal as an eumple. Cover lhe Wesl and South hands. Against
three no-trump, West leads the heart
jack, wh1ch you correctly overtake
wnh lhe queen. After winning. the
tnck, what do you do next?
Unless partner ts a kamikaze pilot
in lrammg, South cannot have the
ace- king of hearts. So you should
return your remaming heart: ace, two,
five . Declarer leads a spade to dummy's queen You have four possible
defenses. What arc they, and which is
rtghl?
You could duck, or you could win
wnh lhc spade ace and (a) return lhe
spade jack, or (h) swttch 10 the dia·
mond mnc. or (c) swttch lo the club
two
The last looks Ihe most dangerous,
hut tits lhc only wmncr. How do you
kn ow thi s"' W ell . a! trick two, partner
could have played any of hts remain·
mg hearts He carefully selected his
lowest. the two. as a suit- preference
stgnal for club s. (If he held the dia·
mond ace or kmg, he would have
dropped the heart king under declarer 's ace.)
Yes, Soulh should overcall three
no-trump; he needs only one instant
winner in the dummy. And lrue, he
could have cashed out for one down,
but was correct to hope for a misde·
l fense.
The dtsk costs $39 95 postpaid
from the author at 131 Alvarado
. . Road, B_~r~e!ey, C~ 94705.

rng SS,OOO,J.cG-119:l·9015

Fee. 1-800·~09-7S11 .E•t 986f

44

w-rt

Uncovering
defenses'
mysteries

1993 Ford Probe. alt. 5 spoed, Ill,
11\,000 actual mlt.a, extra shaiJ).
1
$3795, 74().992-5824.

'97 Gao Mllro, ~ cyllrtdtt; 4'ildbr:
automatlo, oxcotltnt ~lion, low
=~· asking $7335, 7~0·742·

3/~

200 PSI
1" ·aoG PSI
Brill Corn·
Block
ENTEAPRISE8

3 NT

North
Pass
Pass

41 Mouth 11111

Opening lead: • J

1992 Yamaha Tlmborwolf, 250,

Thomas Tree Farm, Ball &amp; Burlap
$30 ~II PI
N
B
· "" e na, orway. luo &amp; 1983 Olds 2 Doors, Cutlooa Su·
Whitt Spruce, 4-112 IO 811 Cut preme Brougham. Black, One
tree $18 Rt 2, North, Flatrock. Qwnor, Full Powtr, A/T 5 G Liter
~rois lrom Good Shepherd V·8 Motor, e~cellont Condition,
"nurch (304~75-4041._ '
.•• ' $1 ,7t5, 740;!40-3277.

15' Ki&lt;bi
Air, StlbWOOI·
ara Couallc 380 Power Logic
Amp 150 Watts, Couollc 180
Amp 30 Wattl Ptr Channel, Coif.
altc XM·3 Cronover, Mounting
Botrd And All Wlreo Intact, Entiro Packaga, $350, Calt 304·n3S592 Befort 5:00 Dr 304·812·
2102 AI* 5:00.

West
3•

ac, cauene, 8tK good condltion. ,1
74().985-350!!.
,I

l

D10•~kKicztco Cs~00r.lo0ue!,~"'oeono, ~~~~~~F~~ 8~~~:e~~:::~eA:r
· 740o99'2-4!568
RII1DINTIAL HOME CWNERS

South

l

u::..
:-:-":-:----::-~-:--:---J

-

BAilN£Y

~------~~-----~
1993 ClloYy Cavalier, 2 door, red, ·,

I

Farm Equipment

740o5112'2322, 7. . . .3531.

742 2 51 1

Are You A Metal Building Erector
/Contractor? We Havt Factory I
Otrect Building• With NO Dol~·
Ship Fee Or Vot•ma COf1Ml)l1/hanl.
ALL SIZES /All LOAOS. El·
DORADO BUILDING SYSTEMS
1·800-279-4300.
,'
. ~
Artificial Chrlstmaon-eo, rh "r,
looks nice, aaoy to put up, szo.
Two JC Ponnay Ctrllng Fans, 52"
wllh hlht ktl , antique brass lin·
ISh,
10 oa Wolko good .
(304)675-4439

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

!

·

a

or ~·
rs .....,
.
74().256·1215
Premium Firewood, Oak 6 Aah
$50 Load, Full Size PICk·Up, Do·

tAKQ!0852

... 9 5

°

Huge Inventory, Discount Prlc11.
Dn Vinyl Skirting, Doors, Windows, Anchors, Water Heaters,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Porta. Fur·
nacos &amp; Heat Pumps IJannetta
Mobile Homo Supply, 740·446·
9418.

Old Houat Foundation Stones,
Average Size, 12 • 10 15• Square
b 32· 10 53' L
C 1(
Y
ong, al · 7401·
245-5672
Plonear Home Storao Racelva&lt; 8

•As

I'

'·•, !

7

and Appliances,
Furniture (740)·
448-1004, (740)·448·4039 any

Soulll
• 73

'
------.,.----..,:.._____ '':

20A5 Mnlngt.

• Q 4
• 9 3
... Q 7 2

• 7 4
"'A 3

•

19111 Eaglt Talon TSI, all wheel
dr. 5 sp. turoo,l/c, p.w, pI, tinted
wind . looks good,$3500 ltrm
304-937·2281 1eevo mouage.

East
• A J tO 9 6 4

•K.I10 '1762

Try OUt. A .Ntw 200 SIRlES HONDA'S FROM 5200. Pollet
JOHN DEEAE IKID S,TEER At Impounds: All Makes And MOd,..1
Carmlchaars Farm &amp; Lawn, GaUl· "ols. CALL NOWII 1:800·77lt-T
polls, Ohio. 7.6"1. Flxod Rail Fl· 747G, EXT. 6336
'
nanclng Available. 1010 U TO
115 HP &amp;ERIES TRACTORS Fl· 720 Trucks for Slle
nanclng AI Low As U'Ko USED
TRACTOR Financing As low As 1884 Ford F· 150 Auto 3016 9'Ko Carmlchaars Form &amp; Lawn, $1,000. OSQ 304-575-51193.
.
1
1-800·594·1 111
1988 S·10 2 8 V-6, Sap, Goa:
Mechanical Shape! Bit 8of:' 1
WINTER SPECIALS: John 136,000 miles $2200 . 00(740):~ i
Deere Lawn Tractors JUNE 1 367-7055
SAME AS CASH; Also $300
And $550 011 our Already Low 1998 Ford Rang11 Truck Stol\-• )
Prices On Tho 300 And 400 Sor· dard Trans., low Mlloagt, Exc:el&lt;' 1
les Lawn Tractors ; Check Out lent Condition. $7,500, 740-. .:•
Our Wtnt 11 Service Tune up 8180 (Days), 740·~48·00~
SpecialS on Lawn Tractors. Ga· iE-ngs).
'.
~ ·1
tors And compact Tractors. Car- 85 Ford Ranger Pick·UP "2 Whoet" l1
mlchaors Form &amp; Lawn, Gallipolis. 01 4 Cly 5 s A
Good
..
Ohio l · 600· ~94· 1,, o r 740·
•
·
p, uns
· Now
446-2412
Tires, No Rust!_, Good Body':J
Claanl $1,100 ODO (740)·44&amp;·
'"'" W ted
8
·
2560
""''
-v . an tO uy
,f
730 ,· Vena .,
a -~W
, Ds
,'
Buying Quality Dtor Hides, also
.
0811
1
Tanning
Hldaa, Heir on
't7 Ford f•UO XLT, very sharp. )
Hair Off! (740)·258-6172 '
axctllant condition 4x4, 119,700, 1
630 , Livestock
740.99'2-5097.
;
~--------- '
1•89 Dodge Caravan, V·5, ma· 1
2 Hampshlrt Boar Hogs and Pigs. roon . good lhape. Taking bidll rl
7
( 40~379-2805
•
must sell by Nbvombar 30, 1999; 1
3 yr. old Quarter horse, 14 , 1 "Call8anetlclal Finance, 740o992,:!
h d1 b k1 ul 0 II I"
II .2111.
c
0 r ua, Ira
an • ro q
•
rides, loads. bathos, started,over
\
1
j""f)s, 5 200, 7~3-5205
1992 lsuzu ROdeo v-e. 5 Spaocl, 1
4 registered miniature horsea tor 8••••
-.. /Gray Interior, f8,000, 1101. 1'
sala, 740o742•2050
,
wean 6·9 P.M. Weekdays, 7411' 1
441-1489.
Special Fall Feeder Calf Sale·
Motorcy
'
t
Saturday, December 11 , 1999, 1 740
""
P.M Cattle Moy 8a Brought In AI·
ler 4 P.M On lirldoy. All Consign- 1988bKawasakl22, rllluilt motorl
monts Welcome, Hauling Avail- now rakes , runa good, BikinG
oblo, A,thont llvtoJOCk Sales, IS1800, 740o742-8612 altar 4pm.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
caRoPB
&amp; ~11 1 '!.,~
11 Rlred,eNew
on vans, 1 ·~~ -~a

82 1 7 01 7

We•t
• 8 5

1991 Cavtllor SU95, 1989 CUI:
1a11 Supreme S2.595; 19811 Ill- •l
rolla $2,395 ; 1889 Ponllac : 1
8000LE $1,885 . Cook Motora.' 1
740-448.()103.
•

u,t;i'ip.

International Dozer TD9B Power
Shill Good Undor ~arrlago 80'1.
Cargo Winch, 10" Blade, Roll
cage; Brush Guards, $12,500,
740o:vg:93e1

6308.

Amazing Metabolism Break·
through Lost Weight Whllo Enjoying The Foods You Love our·
lng ThiS Holiday Season . Free
Samples 740-441-1 982.

Moatrn 1BR All U111111tl Paid
Elicopl Elaolrlc. Gallipolis Flltry
Area. S25g month • Oepo111.
(304)6'1!1-1371/875-3230
·iglos.

f.,

~

11·31HMI

-;,

AKC en·gnsh Springer Spanltl
Pupt, Rudy To Go 12/181911;
$150 Each·, D8t)otl1 Rtqulrtd II
Hel~ Till Chrlotmul 740· 2S8·

DIIIECTlV
Sa toll itt syslema, .2 month frat
mov1e channel, best prices In
lllwn, 888-28!1-2123

Firewood lor sale. $25
load, 7~0.949-0605

Building
Suppllos

Block, brick. aowtr pipes, wind·
owa, lintels, ttc. Cltuda Wfnttra,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245·
5121 .

4300

R&amp;D's Uaed Furnlluro Great So·
!action, Priced To Solll 'Como
And Browse.• Corner 01 Route 7

~..:......;......,..;....._______ L .Jr."""''Merchandlae

440

Cedar Ch est $85, lull olzo,
Blonde. canbe redone, good con·
d111on

Top Soli lor Sale call (740) -245·
5535

fu~~~:~~-~~a;we Buy Furnl· ~~~ ~2~2G~.'~~~~~n s~:~j g~~~~!s.~:;~

Two bedroom house In Portland
wood heat, $300 per month plus
electric, 740.843-5548

420

Pomeroy, 2·3 badroom,,stoveMfrlg., nur park. ytnl, patio, rtf. ,
security dlt)osll, t.... meuaga,
74().992-8886.

'For Sale Reconditioned wash·
ers. dryers and ralllgeralors
Thompsons Appliance . 3407
Jad&lt;son Avenue, (3()()67!1-7388

P1lot Program, Renters Needed,
3()(-736-7295

1 Bedroom Near Arbots Nurs1ng
Hom&amp;, Econom1cal Utilities, Ou1et
Location, $279/Mo , + Uhlllles, No
Pal$, 740-448·2957

350

Homeelor Slle

410

Shopp1ng For A Home, But Worried About~olliday Expenses?
Onl~ The Home Show BarboursYille, W1ll Pa~ Your F~r s t 3 Paymenll, 1·888·736-3332

6882

11 room t1ou11 wilh bllement,

&gt;I

RENTALS

nlshed and unfurnished seeunty
deposi t required , no pets, 740992·2218

Factory Direct Sale, Oakwood
Homes, Barbouravllle, 800·383·

Professional
Services

No• Taking Appllcahons- 35
Wesl 2 Bedroom Townhouse
APfirtments, tnc:tudts Water
Sewage. nuh. $315/Mo, 740·
us 0008

Repos, Stogie &amp; Oouo1eW1de 1•
B88-928·11fl96

Single Wide Clearance $9 99
Fued Rate Save Thousand&amp;,
Hurry -Won't lastl Only 0 Oak·
WOOd -GaN~I . 740-446·3093.

HEAL ESTATE

310

180 ~anted To Do

www countrytyme mm

3BR Mobile Home lor rani in
Camp Conley $250 per month ..deposit (304)675-3230.

RENT BUSTER: NEW 3BR, $5H
DOWN 6 $219 MONTH. ONLY AT
OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO, WV.
(304)755-6885.

nJRNEO DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582·3345

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DEGREE QUICKLY, Bachelors,
Masten. Doctorate . By Corre·
spondlnco 8uod Upon Pr101 EduoaiiOII And Short Study Course.
For FREE Information Booklet
Phone CA"'BRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY Hl00.9&amp;4-83\8.

800121W385
Anthony land Company LTO.

New 14 Wide, low down pay ment, $175 permo Free Atr, Free

Only One left, 28x80, 4BR, 2BA,
only $39,999 Free Delivery/Free
Set·Up t-80Q.69t-en7

FREE MONEVI It's True Never
Repay Guarantood S5GO $50,000 · Debt Consolidation,
Personal Needs. Buslnoss 1·
801).511 -2640

North Third Avenue, Middleport
One bedroom lumlshld or untur·
nlshed apartment, depos1t and
lllilnnceS. 74().992-0165.

20 ·SXI Aa8s
Ctl Ryon

3 Badroom . $350/Mo. + Dapostt,
No Pttsl740·367-o611.

Now 16 Wide , 4BR /2 BA, low
down payment, only $245 per
mo Frea Air, F1eo Sktrt 1-800·
691-em.

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY? No
Office Vlsll Noceuary Up To
$500 lnotantly. Toll Free 1·877·
EARLY..,.Y. llctcc70036.

230

Schools

" For lAIIDf

HELP SAVE MY CREDITI 2BR,
ZBA $499 DOWN, ASSUME
PAYMENTS, WILL PAY TO RE·
LOCATE HOME. (3()()75S.5561.

Skin. HlOQ.691-6777

CREDIT CAAO UP TO $3,000
Unsecured VISA IMC. Bad C"rodlt
Or No Crodll. t-t00-258·8818 Ext
Wanttd, part·tlmo Rosplta Pro- 4000
vider lor optclal natdo child .
CREDIT PROBLEMS
STOP
304-382·3339. after 5PM
HEREtl WE CAN HELPII LOANS
WILDLIFE JOSS To $21 .80 /HR AVAILABLE $3,000 AND UP
INC . BENEFITS. GAME WAR· CALL TOLL FREE 1·688·748·
DENS, SECURITY.
MAIN· 881 0 Exl 663
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS. NO
EXP NEEDED. FOR APP. AND CREDIT REPAIRI AS SEEN ON
EXAM INFO. CALL 1-80Q·8 13· T'l ' Erase Bad Credil Legally
3585, EXT. f.l21f 8 AM ·9 PM Freelnkl 888-659-2580
7 DAYS ldt,lnc. Fee
FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
App licatiOn W /Service Reduce
WORK ,_HOllE
Payments To 65% IICASH INGrowinG Company Htlf&gt;'
CENTIVE OFFER II Call 1·8G0&amp;m $800-$4500 PTIFT month
328-8li10 EICI. 29
WIU TRAIN
Cllt.an-2S7-047~

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

•••LOOK!" ..
5 bedrooms 2 baths, over 2.000
sq It , for less than $400mo
FREE Delivery &amp; set 1· 800 -948·

EARN $1,000 A DAY.. t DO. Nol
MUA No Selling Wor k Fro m·
Home PIT. Free Into Pkg 1-888
837·0700, 24 Hrs

www.lntemet·succeu.net

Homes lor Sale

Two stor y 2-3 bedrooms . one

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 ·20 Locat10ns $3K ·$8K Excellent Income - ALL CASH!
100% Fma, r- o .Availab le t -800·

Domino's P~za ln Pt P-nt
ltelabto hours owly In peroon,

.I

advertisements tor real estate
which Is In v10lat10n of the
law Our readeD are hereby

AAE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
$1 ,000 A Day No Selling Not
MLM For Free Information Pack·
age Call 1·800-786-8849. 24 Hrs
XT 27

Monday Now-r 29th
TueSday NCMIIIlber 30th
I

This newspaper w•ll no1
kiiOWI~ accept

yarn. no pats, 740-992-5633.

EY111 nIts ltaltd

ortgln, or any lntenhOn to

N1ce one bedroom apartment In
Middleport private driveway and

Wt Pay !;A5II

All real estate ad'Yertlsing In

One bedroom furnished apart ment, call 740-992·9191.

1

I

I

nimance? The Aslro-Oraph Malc:h-

llllller can help you undersland whal
10 do to make the relationship worlt.
lllllil $2.75 10 Mtdchmlker, c/o lhis
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray
Hill Station, N.w York, NY 10156.
- CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·1an. 19)
That whicli ~ JO be simprc and
euy 10 do could be inl"eltcd with
complicallont tqday. Thus, if you

wOrt •lo•a the 11lnoa of leut real•·
tanc:e, ~ ead tu1l!l won't be 100
dcilllblli. ~"'' .,. '
AQUARIUS (111!· 20-Feb. 19) By
1ildlq ,tile lily todiy, h could 1ive.

l.:i·

your listeners cause 10 doubt any of
your future stalemenls. Benet 1o lell
it like il is and you' ll gatn thetr
res peel.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201
Being the usually good manager of
your n:sourc~s misht be absent in lhc
way you conduct your matenal
affatrs today. You 'll have 10 pay .for
il tomorrow.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) Be
salisfied loday wilh ~our share of the
returns rrom a situation you didn't
conkOI. 1r you acl up, il miafll give
pause for othen 1o wonder if you're
worth whal you·n: gtl1in1 now.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don' t put ofT lhat whiCh you can do
early in lhe day today. Elch task
mighl become mo~e diiTlcult to do as
lime ticks on and they 1\lUdly clamor
to
laken care of.
·
· GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Socill
IIi~ will 1101 only brin1 rac:nhncllt

be

frD111 'the offended puty, but 1hey
could cause .oblerven to question
whallclnd of penon you really are 11
lhis time

,..

.......,............

•
-

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Flamboyarfce will prove lo be coun·
t~rproduclive loday, while eccenluating your modest virtues w111 anracl
admiren. The choice ia yours, make
a good one.
LEO (July 23-AuJ. 22) Dame
' Fortune could be rather fickle today,
so it's besl n01 lo take things for
granted, even in situations where you
111e usually lucky. Be alert 11 all times.
• VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22)
Should you lind you,.lf in two
81T811gtmenllloday that offer oppor·
lunity, doo'l attempt to handle both.
Select the best one and focus on it
only.
LffiRA(Scpt. 23·0ct. 23) It's best
lo be frank end forthright should
solnconc come 1o you for advtce
• loday. You can lind a way to lclllhc ·
lrulh wilhoul being unkind or crude.
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
. Don't expectaucceu loday If you gel
, ,indifferent or careleu and leave mot·
ters up to chance. Your only c:htnc:e
• 10 alliin your objectives is 10 follow
lhrouah on all thai you do.

•'

�I .

'·•

~

,.
i

,

yThe Bend
~

•,.f

The D_
aily Sentiqe{
P.tp
.

...

Tuesday, Novembir 30j 1991t:
'

. ·

l

·Anti-rjob grandpa • Ann Landers Page 7
Bush foreign policy needs work - Page 2
Prep .Basketball Preview- Insert

tl

'

'

!

Reader should back off nagging hubby about giving his daught~r ea:·sti .

!\

December 1, 1 ~99

10.

j

I

.~
II

Wednesday

··

· ,..· ••·· . , . ·

• ··••·

.. . •• .. . ... r· ..

band that he isn 't helping Linda by
cavmg m every month when her
bills are due ?
He won' t listen to me . He tell s
me I know nothin'g about children
because I don 't have any. We've
been together for 12 years.
We get along beautifully. I love
Dear Ann Landers: You recent- month crying about one financial
him,
and want to stay with him forly printed a letter from parents emergency or another.
ever. This is the only major co nni ct
whom you termed "enablers"
My husband sends her $200 or
because their young adult children $300 after every tearful call. and that we have, but I am a nervous
still expect money from them. Ann , swears each time that it is the last wreck every time the phone rings.
Do you havo any a'ctvicc for me'.' -my husband 's situation is exactly the check he will mail.
REBECCA IN MISSISSIPPI
same with his daughter. (She is his
My husband saw the column
DEAR REBECCA: Yes. 1 do
only child. I have no children .)
where you said. "Tell such children
Lay
off. You have spoken yo ur
"Linda" quit high school in her the bank is closed." He vowed that
piece,
and it has n' t made a pan icle
se ni or year, and has moved from one hi s "bank" was going to close. I was
of
differen
ce.
medtocre salesclerk job to another. thrilled . Then , tw o days ago, we
The problem tsn't finan cial. it \
Her father stopped paying child sup- received another well-rehearsed call
emotional. And it isn' t your pn1hport a year ago, but he still gives her from Linda. with the same old song
Iem. it 's his.
money to. live on.
and dance. Again, he sent a check.
So, swallow it. dear. and don 't let
She ca ll s him re gularly every
Ann , how can I convince my hus· thi s issue ruin yo ur rc lati nn:-;hip.

tiut I didn't have the luxury.
true. Those mothe~ are better off.
When a second income means working, and so ate their children. :
education for your children, not
P.S. All universities offer som(
vacation homes and fancy cars, the · form of financial aid for studen~
s11uat10n takes on a totally different who cannot afford tuition. At state.,
meaning.
supported schools, it should pay a;
What mother would not love to good portion of the C!JSl. Jnvestigatej
spend precious time with her little You will. be p)easllntly surprised. J
ones instead of fighting office poli An alcohol problem9 How caO:
tics?
you help yourself or someone you, .
We are each faced with different love? "Alcoholism: How to Recog"
situations, and must make the best of nize It, How to Deal,With It, How tO:
what we have . Just because a moth· Conquer It" will give you the:
er works does not mean that she isn't answers. Send a self-addressed,'
loving and canng. ·- 'fNP IN long, business-size envelope and ~
GREENSBORO, N.C.
check or money order for $3.75 (thist
DEAR GREENSBORO: You ,includes postage and handling) to::
have written a letter for Which every Alcohol, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box•
working mother will bless you. Not 11562, Chicago, 111.60,611 -0562. :
all mothers are alike. however.
To find out more about Ann Lan·:
Some would rather dig ditches than ders 'and read her ~asi columns, visit:
stay home and take care of thetr chtl· · the Creators Syndicate web page a1·
dren. Hard to believe? Trust me, it' s www.creators.com.
'

That grabby daughter would then
have her daddy all to herself, and
wouldn't that bq mcc?
Dear Ann Landers: I have just
read your column advtsmg exhaustcd mothers to .quit working outside
the home so they .can spend m~re
time wtth thetr famthes. I agree wtth
that , but many mothers work so that
thetr chtldrcn can gel an educatton.
My husband and I have two chi Idren in college because I work. I am
not talkin g about Ivy League
sc hools. I am speaking of state -sup·
ported universities. We have suf·
lercd through company layoffs and
shutdown s.
Unfortunately, in
today's world, it takes two incomes
to make ends meet.
Please don 't .make us working
mothers feel guilty. Ann: We have it
tough enough. My ltrst chotec
wo uld have bee n to slay at home ,

----~~~~~~~~----------~--------~-;:,

Parent meeting held
POMEROY - An ex planation
of di ffcrcnt Title I program and
how they work in the Meigs Local
Schoo ls was given by Wendy
Halar. ass istant superintendent at
the recent annual parent meeting
held at Salisbury Elementary.
Halar talked about the various
programs pullout in-class
model. and replacement classes
- to those attending. She also
reviewed test scores for each area
of the proficiency tests (grades
4,6, and 9) • writing, math, readi·ng, science and citizenship for
each school over the past two
, year~ . Th e Competency Based
Test (CRF) scores in each build ing (grades l ,i,3,5,7) were also
reviewed for the past two years .
Teachers from each of the
buildings in Meigs Local partici·
paling were Shannon Kern , Bradbury; Paula Chancey, Harrisonville; Liz Story and Teresa
Carr, Middleport; Janet Hoffman,
Becky Triplett, and Bryan Zirkle,
Pomeroy; Barb Mathews Crow,
Salisbury : Shirley VanMeter,
Salem Center; Ron Drexler and
Pam Vogt, Meigs Middle; Lester
Manuel and Kathy Sargent, Meigs
High; and Linda McManus , Rutland.
Students parti cipated 111 program s from the di fferent sc hools
in th e district include Colt Kerr,
Brya n Manley. Dustin Nash ,
Bryan Payne, ' Kelsey Burton,
Cassie Smith , St ev ie Bunce,
Dustin Lee. Ashley Barber, and
Jeremtah Myers . . Middle row•

Lawson ; Lindsey Houser,
Meltssa Grueser. Nathan Cook.
Patrick Carey, Caleb Davis, Adam
Lavender, and ·Jos h Morri s.
Local students included in
Who's Who
POMEROY - A total of 55
students from thi s area are included in the 33rd Annual Edition of
Who 's Who Among American
High School Students, 1998-99.
Who 's Who , published by Edu cational Communications , Inc. ,
Lake Fores t. Ill. , is the largest
recognition program and publication in the nation honoring high
achi ev in~ hieh school students.
Students are nominated by high
school principals and guidance
counselors,
national
youth
groups, churches and educational
organizations based upon student s' academic achievement and
involvement in extracurricular
activities . Traditionally, 99 % of
Wh o 's Wh o student s have a
grade point average of ' B' or better and 97% are college bound.
The 33rd Annual Edition of
Who's Who Among American
High School Students, 1998-99 ,
published in 18 regional volumes ,
feature s over 750,000 students or
just 5% of the nation 's 14,000,000
high school student s. They repre·
se nt approximately 20,000 of the
24,000 public , private and
parochial high schools in the
country. ,
Wh o's Who students also compete for $200,000 in scholarship

award s. The
is di stribui cd to
up to 15 .000 high sc hool s. col leges. univ ersi ti es and puhli c
librari es throughout the country.
Loca l
student s
sele cted
include •
Albany area: Steven Beha.
Kel ly Caudill , Cheryl D&lt;tvi s.
Ellen K. Lambert , Jyncllc Stack.
Bryanan Branham, Grandy Crook.
Sonya M. Krumme, and Cassandra Meek.
Chester: Jessica Po01 e and
Eric R. Smith .
Long Bottom: Cinda K. Clifford, Jessi ca C. Marcum . John
Heath D. Profl'itt, Cassie D.
Roi se, Chasatie S. Holl on, Aman·
da L. Northrup , and Christy A.
Riley.
Middleport: Charla Burge.
Rebecca John so n, Way lon J.
McKinney, Chris Snouffer, Sarah
E. Househol der, Heidi Matson,
and Chad Mourning.
Pomeroy: Holly N. Broderi ck,
Stacy J. Gilmore , Joshua M.
Broderick, Beatri ce Morgan,
Christy Phalin, Jenni fe r Starcher.
Julie Spaun, and Wesley Thoene .
Shauna
Elliott ,
Racine:
Tiffany L. Holl on, Amhcr Maynard , Joey Taylor, Kimberly God win , Kara King , Brooke Nichols ,
and Robert Taylor.
Reedsville: Amher Baker.
Matthew Caldwel l, Stephani e
Evan s, Barbara J. Smith. Meli ssa
Barringer. Amber Chur ch. Jos h
Kehl , and Amanda Upton .
Rutland: Pamel a Cadc. Shan·
non Enright , Brandon Co llin s. and
Tiffany Richmond .

TIME OUT FOR TIPS
BY
BECKY
BAER
Meigs
County
Exten·
sion
Agent
Family
and
Con·
sumer Sciences/Community
Development
Although going' to the mall, shopping and browsing in stores have
become a popular pastime, you must
have strong willpower to keep from
overspending. While buying gifts
this holiday season, keep in mind
several things that can help curb
unnecessary spending.
First, only look at the type of
products that you went into the store
to buy. Research has proven that the
more time you spend in a store, the
more money you spend. Go in, compare prices and features, buy, then
, get out.
Only use a small shopping bas· ket, if you need it. Shoppers tend to
fill whatever basket or cart they are
using.
Don ' I make small talk with others, especially store clerks and staff.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Agriculture Society, special meet·
ing , Tuesday, 7•30 p.m. grange hall
on fairgrounds. Building projects
and other matters to be discussed.
PORTLAND - Lebanon Township Board of Trustees regular meet·
in g Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the home of
Clerk Dorothy Roseberry.
RUTLAND - Revival through
Thursday, 7 p.m, nightly at the Rut·
larid Church of God with Pastor
· Craig Heath from Sidney guest ·
speaker. Special singing nightly.
· WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Middleport Literary Club meeting Wednesday;,2 p.m.
· at the Pomeroy Library. Martha
· Hoover will review The Search For

I

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The more time you spend with them,
the more compelled you will feel to
purchase something.
Beware of the selling strategy of
placing commonly-purchased items
at the back of the store . You have to
walk by thousands of other articles
to get to them . The temptation may
be too great to re sist unneeded
things.
Whenever you shop, especially at
Christmas, have a list and stick to it.
Decide ahead of time how much
money you plan · to spend for each
article. Don 't go over that amount. If
you just look around to see what is
available, you tend to buy · more
things on impulse. Beware of sales
people who try to talk you into buyJANSEN NICOLE WOLFE
ing extravagant product features that
POMEROY - Jansen Nicole
you won't use.
Wolfe celebrated her second
Realize that an advertised special birthday with a party held at her
may not be a bargain. If an item is home in Racine on Nov. 21.
being sold at "2 for $10," but the
Talatubbles was the theme of
normal price is $5 each, you are not •the party. Attending were her
getting a special deal.
parents Jimmy and Theresa
If you are unsure about buying a Wolfe; her grandparents Ernie
particular item, sleep on it. It will and Judy Bing and Marjorie
probably be there tomorrow, if you Hoffner; and her great grandpar·
enta, Mattie and Ooley Beegle
decide you do want to purchase it.
and
Guy Bing.
The holiday season is a fun-filled
Other•
attending were Brid·
time of year. By watching your nickget
and
Jesse
Ritchie; Bradley
els· and dimes, you can help prevent
Brown;
Mar:!!!ene
Beagle; Junie,
overspending from ruining the fesMlldlaori,
ana
Marlee
Maynard;
tive occasion.
Ryan Beegle; · Patrace and
Russen Beegle; and Brittney
Young.
Sending gifts were Vic and
Mazie Hannahs, Peggy Stout,
Leighton.
Bob and Jane Beegle, Kenner
and Jonathon Taylor, and Linda
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Town- Hudson.
ship . Board of .Tru stees meeting
Wednesday, 6•30 p.m. at the AMD's newest processor
Page vi lie Town Hall.
the fastest ... for now
SUNNYVALE. Calif. (AP) ~
POMEROY - Publk meeting The fastest co mputer chip for perregarding 2000 census, 7 p.m., Tues- sonal computers has reached the
day, Meigs County Senior Center. market just in time for the holi ·
Public encouraged to anend .
days .
Computer chip maker AMD
TQURSDAY
re lel(sed a ne w processor Monda y
POMEROY - Flu shots free to that crunche s information at a
veterans with a current photo ID speed of 750 megahertz. surpassin g
card Thursday, I0-noon and 1-2 Intel Corp.'s 730 megahert z chip
p.m. at the Veterans Service office, introduced last month.
117 Memorial Dri ve, Pomeroy.
·Computer chips, ·also kn own as
minoproccssors, arc what make
Racine Grange. · computers run . The faster the chip ,
RACINE
Thursday. 7 p.m Thursd&lt;ty at the the quicker and more powerful the
hall .
c·omputer.

·'

Tuppers Plains : Kim Godwin ·
:md Sarah Sexton .
)'Ieasure Riders visit · Farm
Museum
POMEROY - The Meigs 4-H
Pleas ure Riders rec ently held
th eir year-end picnic at the West
Virgini a Farm Mu se um .
A potluck lunch was served
ilftcr whic h members enjoyed a
tout of the farm. The highlight of
the tour was visiting ~he mounted
statue of the world 's largest horse
and the hi story that went with it.
Group pictures were taken and R.
J. Leach was announced as the
Outstanding Pleasure Rider for
the year.
The nex t activity will be the
annual Chri stm.as party in Decem·
bcr held at the Peckhams' home.
Attendin g were Vicky PeckFOUR GENERATIONS - Gathering repently for a family plct:ur•
ham , Mathew Pec kham, Advisor
were
the,four generations of the Vanlnwagen family. They are
Pam Milhoan , Matthew Mi lhoan,
vanlnwagen
of Racine, seated, holding hla eon, Tylar Ryan whoM
Brittany Phil son, Sandy Phi lson,
grandfather
is
Jerry Vanlnwagen of Flatwoods Road, Pome:oy, left.'
Stephanie Story-Schwab, Zach
and great-grandfather Ia Ernest Vanlnwagan of Middleport.
. ·,
Sc hwab . Peggy Schwab, and
Ange l ia Wil so n. Advisor Rachael
Downie was unable to attend.

Monica mum on her .Senate favorite

Harts announce birth
RUTLAND - Amber Kay and
Jaso n Thomas . Hart of 33765
Nicholson Hill Road , Rutland ,
announce the birth of a daughter,
Aubre y Ann , on Nov. II at O' Bieness Mem orial Hospital.

otl

NEW YORK (AP) - Monica Lewinsky, New Yorker, is keeping mum
who she would vote for in the Senate race next year.
·
·l
"I think that, uh, voting preferences should be kept private," Ms. I..C:wi~:
sky said in an interview with ABC's Barbara Walters to be broadcast tonight:
. Ms. Lew_msky, whose affair with President Clinton led to his impeach,
ment, wtll hkcly be forced to choose between her former paramour's wife:
Htllary Rod ham Clinton, and New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani if she
votes for a U.S. Senate candidate next year.

The Holidays.
Are Coming •••
Be Ready For All Your Holiday Entertair.J,ing
With
Great Savings!!

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Thuraday: Sunny
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Meigs County's
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PERRY VARNADOE

Holiday home tour set for this weekend

.

Pomeroy area homes .decked out nicely for the holiday season
century, while the other two were constructed recently.
The 157-year-old home of the Reed family, a two-story
frame structure, is home to the sixth generation of Reeds .
II was built by Drius Reed in 1852 and besides being
home to the family, has been a wedding chapel and
boarding house. A country theme is being carried out in
the decorations this year. Collectio'ns on display will be
of Santits, snowmen , and angels .
The three-story frame country home of the Fishers was
built about 1860 and during the Civil War was a campsite
for Morgan 's Raiders. All 12 rooms of the house are dec·
orated with each room carrying out a different holiday
theme.
Italianate Victorian is the style of the Amberger house
in Syracuse.
The two-story brick which features a cupola was built
before the Civil War. The decorating carries out the Vic·
torian theme enhancing the architecture and antique fur·
nishings of the home.
The stalely two-story structure, home of the Rhonemus
family, is located in Minersville and overlooks the Ohio
River. II was built in 1875. The antique furnishings are
enhanced by the extensive holiday decorating which
includes an angel tree in the formal dining room and a
snowman collection .
After more than a·century of being occupied by gen·
erations of the Lochary family, the spacious house at the
end of High Street is home to the Cleeks and their two
daughters. The house was built in 1896 after the original
house burned. Greenery from the pine and holly trees
which surround the house and handmade items from the
Cleek children and friends will be featured in the decorations, along with a collection of Santas, and a Christmas tree accented with ornaments from around the world
HOUDAY HOME TOUR- The stat1ly brick home or the Amberger• In Syracuae (left photo) Ia on• or eight family homea on the holiday hou11 tour. It Ia
along
with homemade creations .
. decorated for Chrlatmaaln kHplng with the flavor of Ita VIctorian style. Pink llghtaand pretty angela decorate the C.hrletma• trH (right photo) In the rorThe
turn of the century home of Susan Clark on Lin: mal living room at the horne of the Rhonemu1 family. Cindy has uited theme decoretlonl on the treee In HCh room or the ho~ae. The Minersville rea'rdence
coln Hill featuring antique family furniture and decorat: I• on the holiday houae tour thla weekend.
· ·
ed in a Victorian motif is enhanced for the holiday seaProceeds from the event chaired by Sarah Fisher will be used for beau· son by extensive exterior lighting. Featured on the front porch is an
tification in downtown Pomeroy, specifically flowers for the numerous antique sleigh. Toys, bears and dolls, along with a collection of antique
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
planting areas which have been developed.
porcelain hand and head vases, are on display for the holidays at the
. Sentinel Newt Stiff
Homes on the tour are located around the county. The three in Pomeroy Clark home.
POMEROY -If your Christmas spirit seems slow in coming, perhaps
·the holiday home tour this weekend will be just the ticket for generating are those of Susan Oark, 124 Lincoln Road; Paige and Corbet Cleek, 114
A mixture of antique and contemporary decorations will be featured
High Street; and Tom and Cathy Reed at 141 Mulberry Avenue.
at the Aanastad home, a two-story brick which was built in 1997. Among
enthusiasm for the season.
In Minersville the spacious home of Mark and Cindy Rhonemus will the displays is a New England snow
Eight private homes and a rental log cabin, all decked out for the holbe
open for viewing, while in Syracuse the home of Paul and Dorothy village.
idays, are on a home tour scheduled for Saturday and Sunday.
Amberger,
and the vacation log cabin of Judy Williams on Marina Drive
Sponsored by Peoples Bank and the Pomeroy Merchants Association
The otlter two homes on the tour
are
on
the
tour.
·the tour will be held both nights from 5 to 9 p.m.
are log cabins - one built by the
Other homes are those of John and Sarah Fisher on Crew Road, Erik Warners last year, and a vacation
Tickets at $5 each are available at McCullough and Riffle Drug Store,
and
Jane Ann Aanestad on ~ocksprings Road, and Jeff and Linda Warner rental on the river owned by Judy
Clark's Jewelry Store, and Peoples Bank. Beginning Saturday noon, they
on
Wickham
Road.
·
will be available only at Clark's which will be open on 'both evenings to
Williams.
Six
of
the
eight
homes
to
be
toured
were
built before the turn of the
~erve refreshments to !hose on the lour.
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Pkk 3: 9-4-4 Pick 4: 3·0. 7-S
Buckeye 5: 22·24-31-33·35
-West Vlrglnl•Dilly 3: 2·5-1 Dally 4: 7-9-6-S
0 1999 Olllo,Vatky PubllohioaCo.

Final public hearing set on ~onnector project
By BRIAN J . REED
Sentinel Ntwa Stiff
POME~OY - Area residents will have one
more opportunity to speak their minds about the
proposed connector road at State Route 7 at
Five Points (near Pomeroy) to the Ravenswood
Bridge at Great Bend.
The hearing will be held on Dec. 8.
The Ohio Department of Transportatl'on will
conduct the hearing at Royal Oak Resort. The
public hearing will provide area residents a
chance to review and comment on the preferred
alignment for the proposed new road. Also to be.
discussed are proposed changes in state high·
way rou1e numbers, which will result from
building the connector. The public hearing is the
final step in preparing the Environmental
Impact Statement. (EIS) for the project, as
required by the National Environmental Protcc·
tion Act.
According to the project's engineer, Tony
Durm, public comments culled at next week's

meeting will be included in the final EIS, which
will be submitted to the federal government as a
part of the federal f~nding process. .
Bids for the first of three construction phases

arc likely to be awarded in F2bruary, 2002, if
the current construction schedule remains in
place. That phase will involve construction of
the Super·Two highway from the William S.
Ritchie Bridge to an area ncar Portland Road.
A second pht1$C will involve construction
from Five Points to the intersection of Morning
Star and Court Street Roads, and the third phase
will connec11he first and second sections.

The total project involves 16 miles of new
highway.
According to Durm, next week's public hear·
ing is actually the only "official" public hearing
involved in the project, although a number of
public meetings have been held since the initial
planning of the project 16 years ago.
Durm said that next week's meeting will fol·
low a similar format and will serve the same
basic· purpose, although the comments made
will be recorded and sent on to the federal level.
All concerned citizens, from up and
down the U.S. Route 33 corridor in Ohio and
from Jackson County in West Virginia, , are ·
encouraged to attend the meeting.
Those who arc unable to attend the hearing
may submit their comments ·on the project by
writing to George Collins, deputy director, Ohio
Department of Transportation, 338 Muskingum
Dr., Marietta, Ohio 457SO.
The public comment period ends on Jan. 7,

2000.

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POMEROY - Meigs County
Economic Development Director
Perry Varnadoe has been elected
vice president of professional
development for the Ohio Development Association.
In this office, Varnadoe will be
responsible for the oversight and
expansion of ODA programs to
offer develompent professionals in
Ohio the highest caliber of career
development opportunities.
ODA currently sponsors many
highly-regarded programs, including the Ohio economic develop·
men I course, "Nine Weeks to:a Bet·
ter Community," and regional
workshops throughout the state.
The Ohio Development Association is comprised of over 400
members from the development
community in the state. ODA is
regarded as the leading resource for
economic development information
and education for Ohio's develop·
ment professionals.

Lott'erles

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POMEROY - Hunters killed 34,771 deer on 55 counties and at sunset Sunday in 33 counties.
opening day of the statewide deer gun season The Division of Wildlife expects hunters will kill
Monday, according to the Ohio Department of 75,000 to 85,000 deer during the one-week gun
season.
Natural Resources Division of Wildlife.
The preliminary figure obtained from deer · "We are quite pleased to have enjoyed a very
check stations represents a 4 percent increase, or safe opening day without a firearms-related hunt·
1,197 more deer, compared to last year's opening ing accident reported," said Michael J. Budzik,
chief of the Division of Wildlife.
·
day total of 33,574.
"The opening day figures are consistent with
Counties reporting the highest numbers of deer
brought to Ohio check stations on Monday includ· our predictions for another good deer hunting seacd Muskingum, 1,720; Athens, 1,414; Washing· son this week," he added.
An accident involving a Pomeroy man, Billy
ton, 1,376; Guernsey, 1,305; Coshocton, I, 182;
Tuscarawas, 1,171; Gallia, 1,149; Meigs, 1,102; Smith of State Route 681, on Tuesday is being
investigated by wildlife officials. Smith reportedLicking, 1,088; and Hpcking, 1,069.
Jackson County reported 939 kills on the first ly suffered a gunshot wound to the arm in Bedford
Township shortly after su'nrise.
day, while Vinton had 631 and Lawrence, 516.
The wildlife agency said no deer hunters were
In Gallia County, Monday's totals were up by
20 over 1998's opening day total of 1,129, while injured by fiiearms Monday. An estimated
450,000 people are expected to participate in this
Meigs was down by 36 from 1,138 last year.
ODNR reported that hunters had excellent week's deer gun season.
New rules adopted this year require hunters to
hunting conditions and seasonably cold temperatures on Monday, including some light snowfall in visibly wear a jacket, coat, vest or coveralls that
are either solid hunter orange or camouflage
parts of northeast Ohio.
Weather forecasts call for generally milder hunter orange in color. Hunters m.ay not use shotconditions with a chance for .rain by the weekend. guns capable of holding more than three slugs.
The deer gun season ends at sunset on Saturday in

2 SectionS'" 24 Pages

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Meigs economic development
director tabbed VP for ODA

Delivery Available ·

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Gallia, Meigs among counties
with top first day deer kills

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