<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8236" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/8236?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-06T03:14:13+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18654">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/9bbe3ea61ab4fb96d9d62779676670ba.pdf</src>
      <authentication>14bede6bb9924310ea22193a7bc48bd9</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="26662">
                  <text>By The Bend

r

The Daily Sentinel
Page 10
TUBiday, September 14, 1999

:Reader recalls painful"- and dangerous - experience of children visiting jailed parent
Ann Londers.
~tt7,

Dear Ana Landers: This os in

response to "Locked Down tn Mass-

not happy about it. but \\ere unsure
of how to say no. so: we let her go.

aChusetts." whose wife did not want
IQ bring their young ~on to VtSJt hiS
-'!IIddy in prison. I suppon the wtfe
.I 00 percent.

Two weeks lat&lt;r. we found a card
That "mce fnend of Daddy's" turned
out to be a ~onvicted felon who now

When tny wife and I were mar-

had our daughter\ name . phone

ned, her ex-husband was serving a
three year prison sentence. He was a
drug addict who dtd everything from
writmg bad checks to panicipaun g
in anned robbery - all to finance his
!tabit. '
My stepdaughter visned her
grandparents every other weekend
Once, they persuaded us to let her
vtsit her father in prison . We were

number and address.
When my wtfe "as offered a JOb

In

her nxnn from another mmatc .

m another state.

\\' C

JUmped at the

opportunny. That summe-r: howC:\ Cf.
1

my stepdaughter wa!-. agam \ is1tmg

her grandparents

W1thout our knov. le.dge.

the~

::~.llnwed
\ ' \SUS

her to h;ne unSUfk."r\ '"l"LI
with her father. who " 'a.s then

out of pnson She spent several

•
"ecks mo,ing from house to house and a daughter. "Elsie." Wilen my siad stone. only the stone is a zirbecause drug dealers were chasing mother In law died five years ago, COII - not a dillllOIId. I then called
him for money he owed. We ha'·e she stated in ber will !hal her dia- Ell~!: and told her 10 IWint the ring
not let her go back since.
mond engagement ring would go to pnillto. She refused. I bave called
Her father is now back in jail Trent when he became engap:d, and ber every day since, but she 53ys the
(drugs agam). and wtll not be eligi- that Elste would gel her beaulifltl ring now Mlongs to her.
ble for parol&lt; for 41 years.
· cocktail ring.
Meanwhile. Trent's fiancee had
My stepdaughter was devastated.
The following Christmas, Elsie
the ring appraised, and was
but my wife anJ I breathed a sigh of told me tn confidence that she truly informed that it is a falce. When she
relief. h was selfish and irresponsi- wanted the engagement ring instead confronted me, I confessed.
ble tQ mstst that h1s child vis1t h1m m of the cocktail ring.
Feeling guilty, I purchased a genShe gave me a sob story about uine cara1 diamond ring and gave it
pn son.
.
A man \\ho truly lo,es his chil- Trent being Grandma's favorite and . to Trenrs fiancee, along wilh a fancy
dren would not place them in such a how she was always le£1 out. I fell
bouquet of flowers. I have called
humtiiatmg position.-- NO TEARS for it, and let her Ullk me into giving repcatedly to tell her how sorry I am.
FOR THE JAILBIRD IN D.C.
her the engagement · ring, with tbe but she avoids me and has made 11
DEAR NO TEARS: Your leuer understanding that if Trent became clear she no longer trusts me.
\:o n,·e) ed the message far benCr engaged. she would give the ring
My husband says I am to blame
than an~ t h~n g: I might say. Thank back to him.
for this mess , and it ts killing me.
Six months ago, Trent mel a love- How can I malce it up to her? \00 .
· Dear Ann landers: I have been ly girl and proposed to ber. When SORRY IN ROCK HILL, GA.
marrred tu a wonderful man for 15 my ·
husband told me to get
DEAR SORRY: You dtd set;&gt;ous
\ClrS He hao;; l\\ 0 ch ildre n from a
Grandma's nng back, I panicked, damage 10 your credibiluy, dear, and
Pre' wu~ lll.liT~.lgc - a son. "Trent. " and bought a ring that has a similar it's going to be a long tinne before

,1\ ~...

.. ' •

"

+,t &gt;~

Almost all scwmg pattern mstru.ctmns

require the ac;ldition of mterfacing to a garment.

The interfacmg adds stabili ty, strength. ,
shape and crio;;pness to collars. cuffs, waist-

Teams and 1ndJVJdual walk ers

_will begtn collecting donations
from co-workers. friends , famtly
and businesses to help fight hean
disease, the number one cause of
death m Metgs County
Thts year's walk will
honor Bob Hoeflich, a ,long-ttme
member of the Meigs County

RECRUITMENT LEADERS - 'Diana Coates, Linda King, Scott Dillon, Joan Wolfe, Allee Wolfa
and Maxine Rose are some of the recruitment leade's for the American Heart Assoclatlon'l
Heart Walk, to be held September 28.

American Heart Assoc!3tJOn and a

survivor o( heart disease.

member, co-worker or personal
fnend With heart d1 sease to ho nor

or remember.
A team plaque wi ll be presented
to the team coll ectmg the most
~onations and tndividual prizes
Wlll

be awarded to indiVidual
to amounts col-

walkers accordmg

lected. Those pnzes wtll include tshtrts , travel bags, cooler chatrs,
vests. rain jackets, and luggage. ·

recruitment leaders, including
Scott Dtllon, Denver or Nora Rice,
Joan Wolfe, Maxine Rose, Diana
Coates, John Redovian, Peggy
Hawley, Darla · Hams, Carolyn
Ohlinger, ·Cindy Johnston, Linda
Kmg, or Linda Warner.

Those wishing to participate as

an mdiVIdual walker, team of
walkers or stmply to donate to the
cause are asked to contact Ahce

Wolfe at 949-2286, or any of the

Curtis family of Meigs County
holds reunion at Star Mill Park

TUESDAY
The Meigs
SYRACUSE
County Chamber of Co)ltmerce will
hold a free seminar "Competing
wuh Wai-Man" Tuesday, 6-9 p.m. at
Carleton School in Syracuse. Speakers wtll be Perry Varnadoe, Meigs ·
County Economic Development
Director; Debra McBride , Small

reunion were the descendants pf Sonona (Curtis) Osborn .

Those of descendants attendtng were Marj one Curt iS Brewer of
Reedsv ille. Charles and Elizabeth Curtis of Spnngboro. Albert and Manlyn
Pooler, MtamtSburg; Sylvta Curt1s of Reedsvtlle. Jenny Curtts Reynolds of
· \'arkersburg. WV: Chns and Paige Curtts of.Ttpp Cny : Don and Max me Batley of Jo)lnstow n:· Bill and Mary (Palmer) Powell of East· Lt verpoo l, Dora
(Swank) Crispm of Westervi lle; Ann Kerns of Wcsten·tllc; Kenneth and
,!Jetty (Ro"'') Duke of Alexandria. Sally Cunntngham of Newark , Wilham

Busrness Development Center; and

Swank of Hebron, Russell Cunnmgham of Newark: J.unes·Cu nmn gham of

Newark; Gail and Elame Roberts of John stown: Brian Bradford of Wooster:
Paul and Bobbi Bradford of Athens. Douglas. Carolyn and Matt Bt&gt;sell of
Tuppers Platns; Brcat, Alec, and Auslm . Ttm, and Lea Bi ssell. Ruby
{Swank) Sarbaugh of Newark; Jim and Btl lie Richey , Clarence Bradford of
:Racine; Harold and Phyllis DeWolfe ol Newark; Sandra (Curtos) MacDonl
:aid of Reedsville; Peggy Mullen of Reedsvi lle; Tom an&lt;\ Sheila (Newe ll )
•Thetss of Racme; Onofno and Lmda Mona go of Akron ; Syvta MacDonald
.of Reedsville: Don and Yvonne (Swank) Griffnil o( Newark: Vivtan
XPalmer) McCarre ll of Hpokstown, Pa, Rtchard "Bud" Palmer of East Ltv-.
erpool: Howard Johnson of Granville; Ruth Ana Mae (Johnson) Muska of
Columbus; Paul and Shelia Curris of Pomeroy , BrJcc, Annette, and Jake
Kurtz of Johnstown; Donald and Carole (DeWolf) Wallet ot Heath: Roger
and Elaine DeWolfe of Talbott, Tenn.; lnzy (Curtt S) Newell of Chester, June
Ashley of Racmc; Keith , Emma, Rachel , Whttney. and Emtly Ashley of
Rocksprings.
Several cousms of the Hoyt Cunts famtly attended. They were Gayle and
Edna Price of Ponland ; Roland and Doris Eastman of Coolvtlle: Cleo Smith
of Chester, Ron Eastman of Coolvtlle , linda Eastma n of Columbus , Theresa and Tracy Shaffer of Pomeroy. .
,
Friends of the famtly that attended were Brent Dennts of Rushvtlle and
,Paul Djtty of Mtddlepon.
.
Charles Curtis , president of the reunion , conducted the mee ting Pictures

of Hoyt and Mary Curtis and their family were displayed . Gayle Pr1ce
brought a large photograph of Hoyt Curtis' father, Jostah Curtts Jostah was
born in 1803 and &lt;:arne with his , parents to Meigs County m , 1811 The
December death of Ed llh (Mrs. Percy) Curtis,. of Akron was announced.
' . Keith Ashley, hostonan of the famtly, reported that he ts preparmg a pnnted history of the entire Curlls family of Meigs County. Thts wtll beg m wtth
Da,vid and Sally Cunts who brought thetr family to Met gs County tn 1811
Contacts will be made with all the famtly during the ne xt year to update
infonnation and obtatn coptes of family ph'llographs.
' Ashley ts trymg to find a picture of the Cunts schoo l house that was located somewhere near the Oh10 Department of Highways butldtng near
Chester. Also, it was announced that progress is bem g made on the ancestry

of Sally (Williams) Curtis, mother of Hoyt Curtis . The Williams family ce ntered around Long Bottom and Hocktngport
Charles .Curti s was re-elected president of the reunton Th e reunton wtll
be hosted by the Filura (C urios) Palmer descendants next year on the third
Sunday of August m the East Ltverpool ar&lt;*. ·

Rio Grande announces fall production auditions
For re ser vati ons, an yo ne Interes ted tn audition m g may call
Co nni e McNerlm , 245 -7364 or

to ll

fre ~ .

1-800-284-720 I . Ext

7364.

Ong~na l ly wrrlle n and promg Arts Center theater, Greg
Miller, Ph .D. an nounced.
duced tn 1998, "Ltttlc Tot em·"
The "Lt ttlc Totem :" cast IS 'wa s wnt tcn hy Greg Mill er and
large and includes charac ters of Kevin Lyl es, also a tin e arts proall ag,es from eight years old to fe ss ion at the Umvers it y of Rto
scmor citizens Performa nces are Grande Th1s year\ producti o n
planned for Nov. I 0 and II with 'wt ll be directed hy · Mtll cr and
an evenmg performance on~v Cratg Sm tth
·12at8p.m.
·

bands. buttons and buttonholes. It ts usually
hidden between the fabnc and the facing for
inner support. There are several dtfferent types of interfacing&lt; avatlable.
Here are their characteristics to help you choose the one best sutted for your
materia,!.
Woven interfacings come in a variety of weights and finishes . They are
used for woven fabrics, as well as stabilizing stretch knns. Thoy can be cut
on the bias to allow, the gannent to drape. Fashion fabrics can be used to
mterface sheers.
· Nonwoven ·interfacings offer 'ravel-free versaulity. They are flextble and
soft. The stable nonwoven interfacings have no grainlme. so they don ' t
stretch. 'I'hCy can be used in waistbands, collars and for craft projects. The
nonwovens that are stretchable won 't stretch lengthwtse, but wtll crosswtse.
They are used in knits and stretch-woven fabrics such as stretchable denim.
Bias nonwovens allow stretch m all dtrections, with the most stretch
being across the fabric. They are great for collars and cuffs that roll back and .
wrap around tbc neck or wrist, such as m ~ shawl collar
Knit interfacings usually come in fusible form . They are suited for woven
or knit fabrics and are capable of stretchmg in all dtrecttons, especially
crosswise. They can secure machme knined. handwoven or loosely woven
materials. They are generally used for reinforcing jacket elbows and pant
knees.
Weft insenion interfacing is made from a lrlcot knit with a crosswise yarn
that is wo;ven among kmt stitches, although 11 acts hke It rs woven It offers
the most stretch wben placed on the btas. h IS deSi gned for raw silk. suttlng

Community
Calendar .

The 92nd annual reumon olthe Hoyt and Mary Cathe rme (Foster) Curti s
was held on Sunday. August 15. at Star Mill Park in Racine The hosts of the

AuditiOns fur the fa ll produ ction of "Little Totem" at the Untverstty of Ri o Grande wtll be held
at 6:30 p .m on Sept. 27 111 the
John M. Berry Fine and Per.form -

www creators.com .

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

wnh team captains signed up 10
participate in the Amerjcan Heart
' Walk, scheduled fpr Tuesday, September 28. beginning at Kroger m
Pomeroy.
Corporate sponsors, to date .
include Parmers ,Bank and Savings
Co., Holzer Metgs Chme. Home
National Bank, Kroger, Rose's
Excavattng , The Peoples Banking
and Trust Co;, Ty Bnnager and
Sons, Ctty National Bank, and
BPOE Elks Lodge 107.

walk ro· list rhe name of a fam ily

the Creators Syndicate web page at

,t'

The Meigs County Amencan

pm to wear to recognize that person as survivor.
Also, every walker will receive
a 'back patch to wear dunng the

and read her past columns, visit

Time Out For Tips

Heart Assoc rat10n met recently.

or stroke walktng at th e event w1ll
receive a free red cap or survrvor

~ers

'

Heart Association plans Heart Walk

Each survivor of heart disease

you patch this one up - if ever.
If yoo continue to be contrite and
straight with Trent and his fiancee ,
they may eventually. believe you are
truly SOil')' and forgive you. I hope.
for the sake of family unny, it happens soon.
DrUgs are everywhere. lbey' re
easy to gel. easy to use and even easier to get hooked on.
If· you have questions about
drugs. you need Ann landers' booklet, "lbe Lowdown on DOpe .. Send
a self addressed. long. bustness stze
envelope and a check or money
order for S3 75 (thi s mcludes
postage and handling ) to: Lowdown.
c/o Ann Landers. P.O Box 11562.
Clitcago. Ill. 60('&gt;11-0562. (In Canada. send S-!.55.)
To find our more about Ann Lan-

a panel of bustness owners affected
by Wai-Mart . RSYP at 992-5005.

and sportswear fabrics.
Warp insertion interfacing has a lengthwrse yarn that 1s woven through~
out knit stitches . llts stable in both lengthwise and crosswise directions, but
stretches on the bias. It permits steady, but flextble shaping for dresses. jack- ·
ets and coats. It works well w11h microfibers
How do you know whi~h type of interfacmg you need? Check the pattern
envelope and mterfacrng chart. The bolt of fabnc w1ll g1vc manufacturer 's
1
recommendations to help you make a w1sc c hoiCe
•

According to Marge Wolford, OSU Extension Agent in Pickaway County, color, fabne qualities and how compattble the fabnc s are dunng launde ring should also be c.onsidered.

Council participating in mission food drive

Members were reminded of a
Sunshtne gifts for September
food drive in progress this month are to be g1ven to Tressie Henfor Grundy Mountain MissiOn dricks and Larry Baker. Commu'POMEROY
Catholic
when the Bradford Church of mon for October wtll be handled
Women's Club meeting Tuesday fol Christ Lydia Council mel recently by Madeline Painter and for
lowing mass at 7 p.m.
at the church .
No~ember, Brenda Bolin Becky
POMEROY _ Bedford TownA ladies retreat at the Ohio Amberger and Madeline Painter
Valley CJ!risuan Assembly ' was wtll be hostesses for the October
MICHAEL DAWN PROFFJn
shtp Trustees, regular meeting, announced for Sept. , 24 and 25, meeting . Toilet tissue and paper
BIRTH ANNOUNCED Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the townhall .
and . tt was noted that the fall products were deSignated as the
Mr. and Mrs. Ray R. Proffitt, Jr.
cleaning of the ·chufch has been
are announcing the birth of a
CHESTER - Chester Township set for Oct. 23 at 9 a.m . The Faith "pack the pantry" products for
November, while furniture poltsh
daughter, Michael Dawn, on July Trustees, regular monthly meeting,
Promise
revival
will
be
held
on
is
the month 's church supply
15 in Baltimore, Md. The infant Tuesday, 7 p.m., Chester Town Hall.
Nov.
5-7
at
7
p.m
with
George
request.
weighed six pounds, 14 ounces
,Pickens as the speaker.
and was 20 inches long.
.
POMEROY - Metgs County
Other events noted was the
Paula Pickens had the closmg
Paternal grandparents are Mr. Genealogical Society will meet
and Mrs. Ray R. Proffitt, Sr. of Tuesday, 5 p m at the Metgs Coun- annual church hayride to be held prayer. Hostes s Sherry Shamblin
Racine, and maternal grandpl!r· ty Museum, Butternut Avenue. Open on Oct. 9 at 5:45 p.m. with the provided refreshments for -Charents, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin meetmg for members and non-mem- locations to be announced later, lotte Hanning. Dtane Bing, Madeand a layeue shower to be held at l me Painter, Br e nda Bolin, Suz1e
Forester of Racine.
b.ers. Fo~ more tnfonnation, call
th~ church on Oct. 2 for Emily Will. Becky Amberger, Charlotte
Patty Cook at992-2447.
and Randy Bing.
VanMeter, Kathy , Mega n and
_ Open house
Plans for a Christmas dinner to Madtson Brook Dyer, Paula Pi ckCourt weighs whether at MIDDLEPORT
Mid- Valley Christian School, · be held _on Dec .. 6 ~~ the Golden ens, Sherry Smith, Ca rolyn
father's spanking is Tuesday, 6:30-8,30 p.m. All wei- Corral tn Galltpolts were dts- Nicholson 1 and Nancy Morn s.
cussed and tl was noted that a
come.
punishment or abu'se
bridal shower had been 'held for
Bing, bride-elect of Bill
Diane
MEIGS CO. KARATE
BOS'I'ON (AP) - Massachu- WEDNESDAY
Maxwell.
setts' h1ghest court IS wetghmg
CLUB
RACINE - Meigs County Fire
Carolyn
Nicholson,
president
,
whether a father's spanking of his l"ighters ' Association
meeting
Will Start Its Fall Quarter
young son i~ proper disciplme or Wednesday, 7:30 p.m . at the Racine gave prayer following prayer
for Beginners,
requests.
abuse.
Fire Station .
Starting Monday, Sept. 13
Officers' reports were given
The issue came before the
at 6:00PM
and Suzie Will gave devottons on
Supreme Judictal Court on appeal · THURSDAY
at Carleton School
RACINE _ Southern Local the topic of "Marriage." Scripiure
by attorneys for Donald Cobble, a
rm111ster from Woburn , who ha s Board of Education specml sess10n was taken from I John 3 and Phtl .
in Syracuse. ·
admllted usrng the e nd of a leathe r Thursday, 6 p.m. at ·southern High 1 and there were readtng s on
Class will be held
· hell to spank hi s full y clothed son, School to consider bids on the high "Thtngs Not to Say to Your
Mon. &amp; Wed.
Judah , (}nee or twice a mo nth.
school boiler proJect and construe- Spo~se", and "What is a GrandFor More Info . .
Earli er, a lower co urt' s1ded wnh lion project.
mother."
Call 992-6839
Mate Dcpartmenl o f Soc1 a l Services
ufftcia ls who !'tied abuse charges
POMEROY
Alcoholics
against Cobble 111 March 1997 after Anonymous open mcetmg Thursday
If the 992 J:xchange is a Free Part 9f Your
tl~e boy told a teacher about ht&lt; at 7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart
fathe r,s spankmg s.
Catholic Church.
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Under ques tt omng from the
Holzer Clinic in Gallip91is
seven-Judge panel Monday. State FRIDAY
A ss1stant Attorney General Juhan a
POMEROY -Meigs County
Toll Freel
__;..;;,_;,_....,
Rtce satd the agency !lied a report Arthritis Support Group, Friday, 10
on Cobble after determining hts a.m. to II :30 am. in the confere!lte
••
methods rmscd a '"substantm l n sk o f room of the Meigs County Senor
phystcal injury" to Judah, now 12.
C1t1zcns Center.
Cobble's attorney, Chester Dar""
·f . '
ling, said there is no ev tdence hi s

DIAL

992-7834

Wednesday

'

High: 70s; L,Ow: 50s

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 50s

Meigs County's

,,

.

t

·-- ~ .

_______

..:...

·-··.

~

-'---· ., ....

Sports
Chicago beats Cincinnati
4-2, snapping Reds' 7
gMI8 winning sb salt

· -Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 69

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Floyd bears down on Florida, heads for·North Carolina
HURR FLOYD.

" We hope and pray for the best," said North Carolina Gqv. Jim Hunt.
"But this looks real mean."
'
'
Associated Press Writer
'Nearly 2 million people were told to evacuate the Southeast seaboard as
COCOA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Monslrou:s Hurricane Floyd moved closFloyd's path remained uncertaiJt. Florida undertook what officials called its
er toward the Southeast, sending wind-whipped rains through Florida's
largest-ever peacetime evacuati on, with tens of thousands of motorists mak deserted streets and leaving coastal residents from Georgia to Virginia bracing an epic, halting journey north. Georgia and South-Carolina residents also
ing for a more severe thrashing.
.
·
streamed inland.
Early today. near hurricane force winds arrived at Cape Canaveral while
Danny Mills, a 34-year-old Kennedy Space Center worker, became stuck
lhe rest of Florida's eastern coast was met with tropical force winds and ,
m traffic, managing only 15 miles in 2 1/2 hours. He became so fru strated
gusts up to 73 mph, said Jack Beven, a forecaster at the National Hurricane
he simply turned around and returned lo_the Cape, where 102 other workers
Center in Miami.
·
had volunteered to stay behind.
Heavy rain fell from West Palm Beach to Cape Canaveral.
"You made a mile every five to 10 minutes," he said. " There were peoFloyd's eye was expected to continue to swirl over the Atlantic Ocean
ple going on the sides of the road . People were get~ng angry."
before making landfall on Thursday at Wilmington, N.C.
Walt Disney World closed early for the first time in its 28-year history,
"What we've been spared in Florida may just be transplanted to the Carand other resorts also were shuttered. The Navy sent ships to ride out.the
olina coast," said Jeremy Pennington. also a Hurricane Center forecaster.
storm at sea rarher than risk damage in port, and military aircraft were Oown
At5 a.m. EDT, the stonn 's center was localed about110 miles east-southinland to bases from Maine to Texas.
east of Cape Canaveral. Floyd was moving northwest near 14 m~h. and a
President Ointon issued pre-emptive disaster declarations for Florida and
tum to the nonh and increase in speed was expected later today.
.Georgia to enable recovery efforts Ia begin as quickly as possible He al so
A hurricane warning remained in effect from Fort Pierce, Fla.• at the midplanned to cut short his trip to New Zeal and.
way point of Florida's eastern coast, to the' North Carolina-Virginia border.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency set up a staging area in
WAmNG FOR FLOYD- Brian Grzach, 11, and his slater Karli, Atlanta, stockpiling food, ice, water, cots, sleeping bags, blankets, generaAhurricane watch continued from there to Chincoteague, Va.
Forecasters expected rainfall totals of 5 to 10 inches in areas along 11-months-old, watch the wavea caused by the coming of Hurri- tors, ponable toilets, flashlights and plastic sheeting so that they could be
cane Floyd pound the coastline in Lantana, Fla., Tuesday. Floyd I~ delivered to hard -hit areas tn a hurry,
Floyd's path.
,expectad
to come ashore on the eaat coeat today.
"A lot of that is falling over water, but there is some rainfall over north
Meanwhile, hundrecl s of airline flights in and out of Florida and Georgia
Florida and the Carolinas," Beven said.
gusts, the kind you'd see in a slrong thunderstorm."
were canceled, and Amtrak suspended train service mto and out of Miami,
Hours before daybreak, the streets of Daytona Beach were an abandoned,
Aflcr making landfall, forecaslers expect Floyd - a Category 4 storm scrambling the plans of vacationers and business travelers around the counrain-washed grid. In Bunnell, 25 miles north, Flager County officials report- with 140-mph winds - to follow the lnlerstate 95 corridor north to Wilm- try.
ed tides at 3 to 4 feel above norm al, and up to 1,400 customers were with- ington throughout the day.
,
·
'
In Garden City, west of Savannah. Ga., Michael Tarvin and his girlfriend,
out power.
·
With iiS hurricane force winds eKiending I 25 miles from the center and Robin Hill, took a break at a shopping center after silting in bumper-to"We' ve had a lot of squall lines coming through the last several hours," tropical storm force winds up to 290 miles outward, Floyd looked lo spare bumper, three-lanes-wide traffic.
said Jon Fillinger. a county emergency management chief. "We've gol few North Carolina cities from its fury. ·
" I'm going west, a5 far west as I can get," said Tarvin .

By MIKE SCHNEIDER

Junior Achievement topic of chamber luncheon
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
Teach kids how America works by· helping them learn about business.
That was the message delivered Tuesday
to the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce.
Guest speaker for th&lt;:_ event was Suzie
Ch1lds, senior vice president of Junior

Achievemenl of Central Oh10, who discussed
Ju~ior Achievement with the approximately
35 people who altended the monthly luncheon at Carleton School in Syracuse.
Junior Achievement's purpose is to educate and inspire young people to value free
enterprise, business, and economics ' to
improve the quality of their lives, she
explained.
Junior Achievement began in 1919 by
teaching kids how America works by having
them run a business. The program started
working with schools in the \970s and eventually moved into an elementary school pro. gram beginning in kindergarten.
"We want to help teach children rhe value
of a dollar," Childs said. Other lessons:
"profit is not a dirry word" and "work is what
brings in the money."
Childs was drumming support for implementing Junior Achtevement's fifth-grade
program. She said she received grant funding

to expand Junior Achievement in AppalachiHe pointed out that continuing design and
an Ohio, working locally last year with fifth · engineering work on the projecr has been
grade classes at Pomeroy Elementary School funded by the Transportation Review Adviand expanding this year.
sory Council.
The goal is to have fifth graders every"I want to give people the perception we
where experience the program which are winning this fight," Story said.
includes lessons in organization, human
Story also pointed out thai the Meigs
resources, production, advertising and annu- County Chamber of Commerce is a strong
al meetings, she said .
supporter of the highway project and repreThe program needs volunt~ers from the sents the interests of Meigs C9untians in the
busin~~s community to help fifth grade
controversy surrounding the highway which
teachers with the program which offers is op)l06ed by an Athens-based group.
hands-on education.
Tourism director Karin Johnson said
"Kids are going to have dreams. We are Meigs County has received a grant to examgoing to give !hem the tools to make those ine Pomeroy's tourism potential. Pomeroy
dreams dome true," she said.
was selected for the grant due to the recent
Chamber President Steve Story reported downtown revitalization project in the vil on the newly formed Athens-Darwin Citizens lage.
Advisory Committee which· was began by
In addition, sternwheeler cruises are
the Ohio Department of Transportation to being sel up for Oct: 25 :28, she said .
offer input on the proposed new portion of
The Big Bend Sternwheel Festival
U.S. 33 from Athens to Darwin.
Parade, sponsored by the chamber, will be
Story invited commissioners Mick Daven- held Oct. 9 at 1:30 p.m. in Pomeroy. People
port and Jeff Thornton, who attended Tues- wanting to enter the parade can get more
day's meeting, to attend the next Citizens information by calling the chamber office at
Advisory Committee slated for Monday, 4 992-5005.
Sue Maison gave an update on ,upcoming
p.m. at the Ohio University Inn in Athens.
1
" I would like to see a lot of people show chamber activilies including Casino Night on
up at thsse meetings," said Story, who is a Oct. 8 and a Business Afler Hours at Farmers
Bank on Oct. 5, 6-7:30 p.m.
member of the committee.

case involving
Rutland man
A preliminary hearing was held
Tuesday morning in the case of The
Stale of Ohio v. Kevin Clark Clark
is charged with attempted murder
in the stabbtng of Mtchael ThompJr., Rutland. .
The incident occured at !he
I~~r;:~;i~Gas Station in Bidwell at
I,
alely 1 am, Satu
31, \999 .
Th&lt;&gt;mrtson told the packed court
room that he had stopp«d at the gas
\station to 'kill time' before going to
· in Rodney . Thompson
Ino,tie&lt;:d a car driving by several
before stopping directl y
'""'';""him in the parking lor of the
Accord1ng to his testim ony,

JUNIOR ACHIEVEME_NT Suzie
Childl, senior vice pres1dent of Junior
Achievement of Central , Ohio, dis·
cuaaad the program Tuesday at the
monthly M~igs County Chamber of
Commerce Luncheon at Carleton
School In Syracuse.

Hocking College students evacuated ftom the Bahamas

-A rnan who was shot and paralyzed by police was
sentenced to more than four years in prison for corruption of a minor and
intimidation of a public official in 'performance of his duties.
Timothy J. Thomas, 48, who was accused of engijging in sexual conduct with a 14-year-old boy, pleaded guilty to the charges in July. r
Police shot Thomas, of Trotwood, in March after stopping hi s van to
question him in connection with hi s con!act with the boy
. ·
A police videotape showed Thomas holding a handgun as he was shot.
His attorneys said the gun was inoperable and not loaded.
Montgomery County Common Pleas Judge John Petzold sentenced
Thomas on Tuesday to three years on ·the corruption charge and months on
the inlimidation charge. Thomas had faced a maximum sentence of 6 1/2
years.
Assistant county Prosecutor Jeff PaiZer said the charge of intimidation
was intended to show that attempts at police-assisted suicide will be fully
prosecuted becavse of the danger to officers.
Thomas was shot at least nine times and was paralyzed below the waist.

Canton man disappears after test drive
CANTON (AP) - Authorities said they had no new information on, the
whereabouts of a man who never retumed after accompanying a couple as
they test drove a car he was selling.
'
Ryan James Stoffer, 21, of Canton,
has not been hear&lt;j from since Sunday
afternoon, when he accompanied a
;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;.._ _ _ _,man and a woman on a test drive of

Good Afternoon

no,aaiV s Sentinel
2 Seclions • 12 Pages

j~:~~====~~= '

f

\990 dark' blue Ford Probe.

Sloffer, who lives wilh his parenls
works as a machinis~ was selling
his grandmother's.house.
He car
and from
his mother
drove lo the house
5:30 p.m Sunday to meet
lijOme·one who called ro arrange lhe
Stark County Sheriff Tim Swanson
on Tuesday rhat Stoffer got in the
with the couple and drove
I "11ev,er to be seen or heard from again
that's why it's so suspicious. "

Lotteries
3: 5-2-6; Pick 4: 1-3-0-3
1Bucke;,e5: 2-3-13-22-35
3:0-7-7, Dally 4:8-7-6-7
C 1999 Ohto Vallt'}' l'uMt shmg Co .

I.

'f

Meigs volleyballers down Southern, Page .4
Ann on giving up .children, Page 8
Auto talks continue, ·Page 6

Today:Sunn"

Holzer Clinic ... Keeping the Promise!

c lie nt Inflicted abuse .

~15,111011

Weather

•

About 90 minutes prior to Stoffer's

ldisaf&gt;pcarancc, another man in Canwas robbed of $1,030 while giva test drive.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A group of 34 students
from Hocking College in Nelsonville who were taking
part in a field studies program in the Bahamas fled lO
South Florida as Hurricane Floyd bore down on lhe
islands.
The students, all studying ceo-tourism at the technical
college, spent Tuesday night at a high school in Naples
but hoped to find a hotel today where they could ride out
the storm.
"This is a really good lesson because you couldn't
plan for this kind of thing," Walter Ben Bohl told The
Columbus Dispatch by telephone from Naples on Tues-

group that handles it this well. They 're upbeat. They're
very positive," instructor Jan Scher of Intern · nal Field
Studies told the newspaper.
"I didn't expecl this to happen,"
freshman from Bowling Green.
"We're all in this together. The instructors and everybody have been cool, ·and they're taking good care of
us."
Drake, 19, said he's planning a career in rouri sm.
"I'm learning to be prepared for any situation that Mother Nature throws at me," he said.
Each of rhe students has had a chance to contact fam-

~

il~

Bohl is director of the International Field Studies in
Andros, the largest of the Bahamian islands, is about
the Columbus suburb of Bexley.
· 60 miles west of the capit'll, Nassau .
International Field Studies ru~s the field sration on the
The organization was hosting the Hocking students at
a field station on the Bahamian island of Andros for the ea_sl coast pf the island for a number of study-abroad p[O·
\0-week fall quarter.
grams for colleges and high sc hools, including several
"Now they all have the idea of what can happen in a central Ohio schools.
Hocking is the only school using the station this fall.
location like this, which is remote, and whal needs to be
done, " Bohl said. "That's what we were talking about:
Although Hocking has sent students there for a week
safely first. And that includes evacuatiqn."
or two at a time in years past, this is the firs! time the .colTheir Hocking College professor, Tim Murphy, and lege has offered a full , quarter-long program there in ceofive others from International Field Studies remained on tourism, which meshes travel with environmental studAndros Tuesday night. Bohl said !hey had sough) sanctu- ies.
ary in a concrele house.
"Once the storm passes. and if the damage permits,
The studetiiS are taking the storm as an adventure.
lhe entire crew plans to go back to Andros," said Russ
"Th'ey
a fascinating group. I've never seen a Tippett, dean of Hocking's school of natural resources.

are

help, and opened th e door
assisr him, Clark entered the car
stabbed Thompson in the neck.

and then exited the ve hicle.

Thompson made his w ~y to a
nearby hom e, where residents
called for an ambulance.
Judge Wt l~am Medley cited that
the C'v.1dence agamsl Clark was s uf-

ficient, and bound th e case to the
session of the Grand Jury.

for
missing Mason Countian

Is

NEW HAVEN, WNa. - A search

continuing into the disappearance
of a New Haven man who was report·

CINCINNATI (AP) - Ohio's superintendent of
public instruction has hired consultants to come up
with alternatives to the slate 's school-funding system,
althoul!h the state continues to defend the current sys-

expected to decide whether the General Assembly sueceeded in fixing the school -fundmg system .
Some legislative leaders fear lhat rhe latest panel of
experts will undermine the state 's defense of. the cur-

ed missing Tuesday, according to Sgt.
Gordon Oark of the Po11I1 Plea~anl
Detachment-West Virginia State
Police.
The family of Jerry Levi Reitmi re,
36, reponed his disappearance to

tern in court.

ren1 system.

911 , Who in tum co ntacted the state

Less than two years ago, state lawmakers overhauled the funding system under orders from the Ohio
Supreme Court. But state Superintendent Susan Tave
Zelman h:is said tl already may be hme to change the
way money is raised and distributed to sc~ools .
"A lot of people are telling me that was a missed
opportunity, " Zelman told The Ci ncinnat i Enquirer for
a story published today. " I want to take care of this. 1·
don't want school funding to become Ohio's Vietnam."
The State Board of Education has approved the hir-

"While the issue is pending before the court, I think
this is a waste of money," said Senare Minority Leader
Ben Espy, D-Columbus.
Contracts acquired by the Enquirer say the consultants are being paid $316,500 to outline potenrial
sources of funding for schools, determine the base cost
of a child's education and consider other factors such
as special education, transportation, gtfted programs
and adjustments for low-inco me students.
".Is the curient system outdated ? I don '1 know," said
Ze lman , who took office in March. " We don 't even

ing of five researchers from OevelaQd State Universi-

)mow how the current system is working ."

poltee.
Oark said articles of clothing and
Reitmire's waller were located along
the riverbank in Hart ford
· A diver from the Poin t Pleasant
Police Departmenr: and dragging
operations from the Poinl Pleasant,
Mason and Pomeroy fire departm ents
searched the river where the clothing
was found . The Mason County Office
of Emergency Services also assisted
in the search. Nothing was found.
Oark said.
According to Clar k. tHe state
police are currently investigating al l
possibilities including hts being in the
river or having left town. Ret tmire has
not been seen since Monday.

State looking at alternatives to school-funding plan
.

ty, lnd tana University and Pennsylvania State UniverJudge Lint on D Lewis Jr. of Perry County Common
"It appears we have different sus- . s tty to recommend other options. One of the experts is Pleas Court, who heard (he suit challeng ing the consti based on descnpti ons but it cercontacting legislators, teachers, administrators and , tutionality of Oh10 's schoo l fundmg system, ruled in
ltaiirilv is quite a comciden~e." city '- community leaders for advice.
February that the state fail ed to meet the Supreme
~ili ~:~sDetectilie Sgt . Dennis
The group is to present its plan early next year, Court's order to fix it. The state ha,s appealed his rulsaid.
around the same time lhe Oh io Supreme Court is mg.

l 1

l

•

1;;~~~g·~e~ believed tha t Clark

I•

I
I

�•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Commentary

. P~~geA2

Death No ices

Wedneadey, Septemb« 15, 1SKIO

.The Daily Sentinel Pollster scopes Beatty's chances

Thursday, Sept. 18

saw professionals of both parties erect barriers to
such long-shot challenges. He watched insurgents
such as Gary Hart, Joe B1den and Jerry Brown fall
one after anotiJer to better-finanCed cand1dates
who were rhore amenable to the insider's game,
Today, an older. w er Patnck Caddell, having
gotten involved '" the mov•e busi ness himself,
worries that hi• friend Warren Beatty, whom he
met '" that ea. !y. ever-hopeful '72 McGovern
campaign, may suHer a sim1lar fate should he
choose to enter today's big casino pohtics· getting
beaten by the house.

.......
~r~-----

'£sttJ6fisftd illl!J48

By Chrtl Mallhew•

ence, moreover. how qu1ckly such front-running
candidacies can be toppled. At the tender age of
21, barely out of Harvard, he spotted anti-Viet·
nam War crusader George McGovern's chance to
knock off Edmund Muskie, dlen a daunting
favorite to wrap up the Democratic nomination
early.
"There were a great number of people who
were not happy with the Muskie choice, blue-coitar people," Caddell recalls. "I knew McGovern
could speak to the hberal ehle, but also to the factory workers." He remembers what a "shocker"
it was for the country to wake up after the New
Hampsh1re pnmary that year and realize how well
McGovern had done.
Four years•later Caddell saw a Georgia farmerturned-politician prepared to plow the same fertile ground. the voter's growing sense of distance
'from the political establishment.
"When I first sat down with Jimmy Carter,
he' djust spent two years campaigning in people's
homes. He was the only one who understood the
alienation from Watergate.
"People don' t understand what that gave him,
those IWo years of staymg and livin~ople's
homes. He had a feel for the country. '
Staning in the early 1980s, the pollster who
pioneered the numbers for McGovern and Carter

Patrick Caddell was the brilliant young pollster
who gu1ded George McGovern to the Democratic
111 ~urt St., Pomeroy, Ohio
nomination tn 1972 and J1mmy Carter all the way
740-1182-2158 • Fax: 1182·2157
to
the White House in 1976.
•
A quaner century later he senses the same
undercurrent
of voter "alienatmn" driving the
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
presidential prospects of his longtime friend.
famed actor-producer Warren Beatty.
CHARLES W. GO~
"The people arc being told that the two panics
Publisher
have decided," he said of the IWo probable 2000
candidates, George W. Bush and AI Gore, " and
DIANEHIU
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HJ have very ffiJX:edremotions n
they're saying this isn't enough of a choice.
G-IMM-s~V
• Controller
Though he fears the P.,rsonal nsks to his
There's an argument that a vacuum exists."
friend, Caddell wonders who else can h II the void
Caddell, 49, blames party ins1ders for that
m year 2000 politics: a Democrat untainted by
"vacuum," for collapsing the selection process
n.St!ntln~l•:tkaa ... , . , . . 11M fllllttX fNm ,...,_an • llrNd~oftcp..
b. $hoff ,.,.,. (3110 ....W tN ,...) h-. fM ,_, dulm:. of Wing put f' I 'l«&lt;.
either
the big-money rolillcs or the Clinton scaninto a dense pack of March primaries .. including
~
dals themselves
the blockbuster states of California, Florida, New
lddrtll, and dlyf.m. photw~ $p«&lt;ty
I
to I , .
"The Republicans were disastrous '" present·
riiNia .rlt:M, ,.,.,._.,II to: LAtt... ro IN aditOI', n.. ~ntinel, rt1 Coutt St,
York and Texas -- that only a few well-funded
~~ Ohio 46118; ot; FAX to T.fD.eti241S1.
mg 11," he says of the still-smoldering i_mpeachcandidates can afford to contest.
ment fight. "But if you're saymg w1th great
"This front-loading of the system, a premedienthusiasm
that it's all right to lie 1f you vote nght
laled act by the establishmen~ is going to backon
aborllon,
that character has nothing to do w1lh
fire," he warned in an intervie'!". " It's a little prethe
White
House,
the Democrallc party is going to
cooked for people. It tells the American people
reap the whirlwind."
'
they're irrelevant to the process" ,
(Chris Matthewl, chief of the San Francisco
What sets the early 2000 race apart from those
Exllmlner's WIShlngton Bureau, Is host of
of previous years, Caddell argues, is the speed
"HirdiHIII" on CNBC cable channels.)
with which Americans have learned how puny a
role they may get to play in picking ,-----------------.,.....-------------:----:====:1
the next president He says people
are dismayed at the prospect of a
By JOHN CUNNIFF
two-candidate
contest .. RepubliAP Busln... Analyst
NEW YORK (AP)- It may not rate up there with bowling or golf as a can George W. Bush vs. Democrat
participant activity, but one of the most popular adult endeavors today is ere· AI Gore-- they had no hand in creating,
ating a busmess of one's own.
·
"We don't have to accept this,"
As many as 8 4 percent of American adults, 16 million in all, arc at any
hears voters saying this
Otddell
given time attempting to start such businesses, according to a study by IWO
September. "We don't have to buy
recognizffd institutions.
And, since 11 takes money to lay the foundations for a business, an addi· this."
Whether or not Beatty, who
tional 4 million or so, including family members, say they 've provided per·
master-crafted such epics as "Bonsonal funds for stanups in the past three years.
Among other lhmgs, the study by Babson College and the Kauffman nie and Qyde," 41 Re~" .. Heaven
Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership offers reassurance to aunts and uncles Can Wa1t," plus his more recent
electoral send-up "Bulworth,"
who thought they were the only ones bemg hit up for funds
Starting a business is one of the definmg charactenstics of Amencans, mounts a full-fledged campaign
and it m1ghl become even more so, considering the leadership of fellows like for the Democratic nomination
next summer, the man who helped
Bill Gates, Michael Dell and as few other multibillion-dollar successes.
Moreover, the acbv1ty could mtensify. The study finds that among major steer both McGovern and Carter to
world economies, the United States and Canada have the highest proportion victory sees a similar opening this
of adults aged 25-44 years, the age range of people most likely to start ~i­ autumn,
Caddell argues that a. the vice
nesses.
The implications of a high degree of entrepreneurship are huge; the president's all-out defense of Presstudy's findings suggest a posit1ve relationship betwee~ the level of entre- ident Clinton last year lays him
open to challenge, and b.. Bill
preneunal ac11v1ty and Gross Domeshc Product growth.
· Small businesses, defined as those with fewer than 500 workers, employ Bradley's 18 years as an uncom53 percent of the pnvate work force, account for 47 percent of sales and plaining Capitol Hill insider makes
the former New Jersey lawmaker
make up 51 percent of pnvate sector GOP.
an
unlikely claimant to the out·
In 1996, small businesses produced an estimated 64 percent, or 1.6 mil·
sider's
role in 2000.
· lion, of the 2.5 million new jobs created, according to the study, which said
Caddell knows from experi·
such busmesses account for 55 percent of all innovations.
' In spite of this, the report questions whether the United States maximizes
'
what most countries would consider a national asset, and it criticizes federal, state and local assistance programs as poorly publicized and marketed.
"Most nascent entrepreneurs do not know they even exis~" it comments
roused the operator - - . . . . . , - - - - - - - - - - was occupied by ham Lmcoln, when he died of an assasabout public assistance programs, and argues that a mechanism is needed to By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
in the White House
Washington yesterday IWo of his doctors. sin's bullet on Apnl 15, 1865 And he
coordmate and market them.
· Assoclated Preaa Writ..WASHJNGfON (AI')- The res1- telegraph office and
One, his coat and was present at Buffalo, N.Y, on Sept 6.
In spite of the efforts of public programs and the investments of venture
capitalists, it contends that seed money is relatively hard to obtain in the dence floor of the White House was filed a bulletin ---------~-- shoes off, lay 1901, when Pres1dent William McKinheavy With sleep and "quiet as death." informing the news agency's New York asleep on a bed. The other dozed in a ley was fatally wounded Nearly a ceoUnited States.
tury later, on Nov 22, 1963, President
In the end, informal financial support from friends, family and work asso- Through open windows the listener headquarters that the president's condi- chair
could
hear
the
splash
of
a
fountain,
a
tion
was
unchanged.
"The
door
of
the
sickroom
was
John
F. Kennedy was shot an~ killed in
ciates contributes the lion's share of mitial funds, an estimated $56 billion
per year, it states.
distant barking dog.
In tbday's world of rigid security, a slightly open but not a soun~ but heavy Dallas, Texas.
In an office on the second floor a world haunted by the memories of the breathing carne out .._ II was evident,
Modem medical hinds1ght places as
While such private contributmns or mvestments- it sometimes is diffi·
cult to distinguish beiWeen them in a startup situation- are in the spirit of restless pen noted the time, 3 a.m., and assassinations of four American presi- however, that no change had takoo much blame on t)ungling by the presifree enterprise and mitiative, the authors suggests a little less regulatory scratched out a letter: ''Not a step is dents, Trusdell's solitary Crek through place and I sent a bulletin to that dent's doctors as it does on GUJteau.
heard in the mansion. The president the sleeping executive mansion would effect''
Garfield was returned to the Whde
restraint from the government m1ght help the effon
be unthinkable.
. On Saturday morning, July 2, James House where his 'doctors miSJudged the
"Compliance with U.S. regulations and tax laws is labor intens1ve and slee15-"
The date was Aug. 16, 1881 , The
It was enough out of the ordinary, A. Garfield, the 20th president of the course of the bullet anq probed his
costly," 11 says. "Moreover, regulations generally rely on punitive remedtes
sleeping presiden~ James A Garfield, even forTrusdell, that he recorded the UmtedStates,haddriventotherrulroad wound w1th unwashed fingers and
to achieve compliance rather than incentives."
wounded by an assassin as he walked details on stationary engraved "Execu· station, accompanied by members of unsterilized probes.
through the capital's railroad station tive Mansion- Washington."
his Cabinet and their wives. He
Three weeks after Trusdell wrote his
one morning in July, had little more
The only people in the Wh1te House planned to attend a college class pre.&lt;Jawn letter, the president's desper·
than a month to live.
at that hour, Trusdell noted, were two reunion, then vacation in the mountains ate doctors moved him to a seaside cot·
SV The AaaOcletfld Preas
But on this warm August night hope watchmen at the main door, a sleeping of \lormonl
tage at Elberon, NJ , m hopes that the
: Today is Wednesday, Sept. 15, the 258th day of 1999. There are 107 days remained.
government messenger, the presiden~
As the president's pany walked ocean air would improve his condition.
le;ft in the year.
The letter writer was Franklin Hath- his wife, two children, three doctors, a across tile station they were approached He died there on Sept 19, 1881, of
· Today's Highlight in History:
away Trusdell, a reporter for the telegraph operator and himself. Most by Charles Guiteau, a 'lllentally dis- infection and internal bleeding.
: On Sept. 15, 1949, "The Lone Ranger" premiered on ABC television National Associated Press, one of a were asleep.
twbed apphcant for a diplomatic post.
Garfield, a major general of volunwjth Oayton Moore as the masked hero and Jay Silverheels as Tonto.
numbef
of
competing
news
agencies
The
mood
at
the
White
House,
he
From
a
distance
of
6ve
feet
Guiteau
teers
in the Civil War who became an
1
· On this date:
,
wh1ch lilen used the AP name. He told wrote, had been one of "deep anXJety." raised his arm and fired two shots from influenbal House Republican leader,
: In 1776, Bntish forces 'occupied New York City dunng the American the story of his White House vig~lto his
" All has been quiet, eager and anx- a .44 caliber revolver.
had been president for s1x months.
Rtvolution.
w1fe, Genie.
ious but still hopeful."
One bullet grazed the president's
A jury reJected GUJteau's plea of
i In 1789, the U.S, Department of Foreign Affairs was renamed the DepartTrusdell' had just checked that
"At two o'clook I crept on bp toe right arm. The other struck him in the insamty He was hanged on June 30,
~nt of State.
·
Garfield still lived. He had walked, through the door," he wrote He silent- back,
1882.
'
In 1821, independence was unquestioned and unchallenged, ly passed through the roorn used by the
"My God, what is this?" Garfield
Garfield's death was not the out·
procla•med for Costa Rica, through the private quarters of the dark- president's secretary, and "all in the called out.
come for which Franklin Trusdell had
Guatemala,
Honduras, ened mansion. At the president's open dark," walked down IWo step; into the
Among the wihlesses was Raben· hoped.
Nicaragua and El Salvador.
bedroom door he heard Garfield's Cabinet room, through the library Lmcoln, Garfield's secretary of war.
"Will he better in the morning?" he
~'In
In 1857, Wilham Howard Taft heavy breathing.
behind the south portico, and into the The younger Uncoln had been at the wrote his wife. "Oh. I pray so much
- who served as president of
He then quietly retraced h1s steps, room next to the president's chamber. It bedside of his fa1ther, President Abra- that he will."
'the Umted States and as chief
justice - was born in Cincinnati.
In 1917, Russia was proclaimed a republic by Alexan- By William A. Rusher
the 20th century.
must we bend our knee to every p~sing conder Kerertsky, the head of a
. But r.ow that the Republican gressman, senator, governor, Cabinet officer and
For nearly 50 years 11 has been an erticle of
- Friedrich Nietzsche, provisional government.
faith of the conservative movement that governParty, under conservative leader- president, on the theory that he or she is by de fin·
:German philosopher (1844-1900). In 1935, the Nuremberg Laws ment, far from being the solution for what ails us,
ship, has acquired control of Con· ilion committed to serving the public weal, wh1le
.
deprived German Jews of their is part of tfie yroblem .. mdecd, that it is often the
gress, and not infrequently of the you and I are grubbing along trymg to amass
ci!izenship and made the swastika the official symbol of Naz1 Germany
e.ntire problem.
White House, certain Republicans enough money"to satisfy our ani mal aepetites?
In 1940, during the Battle of Bnlam m World War II, the llcle turned as
1 am not one of those far-out libertarians who
with valid conservative creden·
I have known a lot of politicians, and even
the Luftwaffe sustained heavy losses inflicted by the Royal Air Force.
believe that government is vinually the only probtials have begun looking more admired a few (includmg Sen. McCmn, wrong
In 1950, during the Korean conflict, United Nations forces landed at ' lem, and that happiness would break out in our
fondly on government as, poten- though lthmk he is on almost every maJOr public
Inchon 10 the south and began thelf drive toward Seoul.
society like dandehons 1f only we would elimi- tially, an instrument of posliJve soc1al good. Bill issue)
' In 1959, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev arrived in the United States nate government almost entirely There are cerla1n Krista! and h1s colleagues at the sprightly Weekly
But most of them simply di~covered in high
for a 13-day v1sit.
things . that only government, at one level or Standard are in the forefront of this tendency, and school that they had a knack for gelling elected
In 1963, four children were k1lled when a bomb went off dunng Sunday another, can do, or at least do best: most notably, they are not alone. George W. Bush, no less, has class president, and have been conning their way
services at a black Baptist church in Birmingham, Ala.
provide for the common defense, mamtain civ1l attacked "the idea that if government would only through life ever since. Many of them .. as Bill
Ten years ago: Pulitzer Prize-winning author Robert Penn Warren, the order, enforce the obligation of contracts, require get out of our way, all our problems would be Ointon reportedly once adm1tted, apropos him·
fir,;t poet laureate of the United States, d1ed in Stratton, Vt., at age 84.
cars to dnve on the right side of the road (or the solved" as a "destructive mindset." That is no self, to one of those Arkansas state troopers -·
· · F1ve years ago: In a terse ultimatum from the Oval Office, President Clin· left -- it doesn' t matter ,which, but one or the doubt true, but it does not lead mexorably to Gov. have schmoozed the public so long and so excluton told Haiti's military leaders in a pnme-time address: "Your time 1s up. other), etc And, since it must acquire the money Bush's conclusmn, which is that "government sively that they coulqn't, today, make an honest
~...&lt;:ave now or we will force you from power."
necessary to do these things, it must also have the must be carefully limited, but strdng and active." hving at anythmg else.
:One year ago: Nine states and the District of Columbia held primaries, In power to tax the citizenry for that purpose.
One may sllll agree with H.L. Mencken that " not
Well, as noted above, government IS necessary
Now York, Rep. Charles Schumer, a liberal, won the Democratic nod to
But the slow, insidious growth of the liberal strychnine and digitalis, but poppy and man- at a certain low level, and somebody has to run it,
challenge Republican Sen. Alfonse 0' Amatp. (Schumer won.) In Washmg· notion that government js the sovereign remedy dragora, are the best med1cines (or presidents."
so we can't dispense w1th politiCians altogether.
too state, Republican Rep. Linda Smith won the right to challenge Sen. Patty for all our social ills is the primary cancer on the
And Sen. John McCain has gone Gov. Bush As the saying goes, it's a dirty JOb, but some·
Murray, a Democrat. (Murray was re-elected). Mark McGwire of the St American body politic, and it has come very close one better, insisting that government does not body's got to do it -- and they get handsomely
Louis Cardinals hit his 63rd home run of the season.
to destroying the United States as a functi oning deserve the "widespread cynic1sm" with which rewarded for doing it. Bu{ "the highest calling"?
Today's Birthdays. Bluesman Snooky Pryor is 78. Comedian Norm Cros- society. In practice, as Stephen Moore of the Cato conservatives treat it. On the contrary, he asserts, Not in my book, not by a long shot. About the
by is 72. Actor Henry Darrow is 66. Baseball Hall-of-Farner Gaylord Perry Institute recently observed, it boils down to "pro- public service is "thCI highest call mg."
warmest sentiment I can muster toward the vast
is 61. Football Hall-of-Farner Merlin Olsen is 59. Opera singer Jessye Nor- vidmg concentrated benefits to narrow mterest
Is that true~ Higher than the practice of medi - majority of Amencan politJc.ans 1s a sort of affcc·
man is 54. Rock musician Lee Dorman (Iron Butterfly) is 54. Actor Tommy groups, and spreadmg the cost to the rest of us." cine? Higher than devoting one's life to the ser- tionate contempt
Lee Jones is 53. Movie director Oliver Stone is 53. Rocl&lt; musician Mitch The political rewards of that tactic, which Harry vice of God? I wi ll grant that one special arm of Copyrlght1IKHI NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Dorge (Crash Test Dummies) is 39. Football quarterback Dan MariQO is 38. Hopkins famously and accurately described as government ~· the mihtary, whose members are
William A. Rusher Ia a Dlstlngulshfld Fellow
Actor Danny Nucci is 3L Rap OJ Kay Gee(Naughty By Nature) is 30. Actor "tax and tax, spend and spend, elect and elect/' comm1tted to laying down thelf lives for this of the Claremont Institute lor the Study of
Josh Charles IS 28. Britain's Prince Henry of Wales is 15
· kept the Democratic Pany in clover for most of coun try tf need be ·- is a high calling indeed. But Ststeamanahlp and Political Philosophy.

..

J)l&gt;od_.,.,.,..,.,odllltd•U....,.,._
- ,-,.,..IMOf
• .......
I.,.,,..,..,

T.he U.S. is a nation
of entrepreneurs

'Not a step is heard ... The President sleeps'

Today in History

!bought for.Today;

every real man a

child is hidden that
WantS tO play."

How high a calling is government service?

I

EE~~!'~rsuc~I~2.~~~~~~T~sday,

AccuWaalharB foriiCIISI for da

Sept. 14, 1999, in
11
Steubenvllle,fb
She was born Sept. 19, 1896, 1n Meigs County, daughter of the late
Eugene and Hannah Story Campbell. She was director of Sunset Oub 10
Steubenville, taught swimming at the YMCA and was one of the first hfe
guards at the Steubenville City Swimming Pools. She was also act1ve m
beginning programs for the aging in Jefferson County. She was a member of
the LaBelle View Church of Chnsl and Daughters of the Amencan Revolu·

.

I llonotlekl 14fliW I •

·~

tion.

0
·I eotumbuo !40·112· I

• (.!
k
1

ctnctnnou
I

' ·-;,"'Y"
-...f

"'

V~~./ -

-t'-&lt;t
V

'

!*l·rw
\
- -\ .
~&lt;'&lt;: / l
. .
.
1

.-,j
I

! J

~

W VA.

(

Portomoutto

c::

ll:l111118kcuWOelher, Inc

j.w·m· I &lt;.)

Partly cloudy and breezy
weather slated Thursday
By The Aasoc!eted Preas
Ohm will enJOY fair weather through the weekend, thanks to a htgh
pressure system over the upper Midwest, the National Weather Service
smd today.
That means daytime temperatures generally in the 70s and overnight
lows in the 40s and 50s,
'The record-high temperature for th1s date at the Columbus weather sta·
lion was 97 degrees in 1939 while the record low was 40'" 1923. Sunset
tonight will be at 7:41p.m, and sunrise Thursday at 7:13a.m
Weather rorecast:
Tonight ... Panly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s. Northeast wind 10 to 15
mph.
Thursday...Partly cloudy and breezy. Highs in the lower and mid 70s.
Thursday mghL.Mostly clear, Lows in the lower 50s.
Extended rorecast:
Friday... Mostly clear. Highs 10 the m1d 70s.
Saturday .. Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 40s and highs in the mid 70s.
Sunday... Mostly clear. Lows in the mid and upper 40s and h•ghs in the
mid and
70s,

passes
uphill fight in Senate
By JIM ABRAMS
Associated Preas Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
House took a step toward curbing
politicians' insatiable appetite for
ca mpa1gn contributions, but 11 was
far from clear whether the Senate
would go along.
For the second consecutive year,
Republican rank-and-file members
defied their House leadersh1p and
joined Democrats in a 252·177 vote
to ban "soft money," the unlimited
and largely unregulated contribu·
lions that corporations, unions and
wealthy donors make to the pohllcal
parties.
In all, 197 Democrats, 54 Repub·
licans and one independent voted for
the bill, while 164 Republicans and
13 Democrats were opposed.
"We've gone from a government
by the people, for the people, to a
government of lobbyiSts and special
interests," said House Democratic

leader Dick Gephardt of Missoun,
rejecting claims by opponents that
the b1ll would violate F•rst Amendment rights to free speech.
Like other supponers, Gephardt
argued that passing the b11l •was
essential to regiiining the trust of an
electorate turned off by big-money
politu:s.
But gettmg the Senate to agree 1s
likely to be diffic.ult Last year, after
the House bill passed 252-179, Senate backers garnered a majonty but
fell well shon of the 60 votes needed to break a filibuster.
Rep. Chnstopher Shays, RConn., who authored the House biU
with Rep. Manin Meehan, 0-Mass,,
sa1d the sJtuallon has changed, w1th
more lawmakers shocked by the
way the panies and candidates are
awash in money. But he also
acknowledged that "we're still
going up the hill and we could fall
right back down."

·. Meigs EMS logs 4 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded

four calls for ass1stance Tuesday.
Units responding included:

CENTRAL DISPATCH

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213·!160)
Community Newsp•ptr HoldJnp. Inc-.
Pubh5bed every •ftcmoon, Monday through
Fnday, Ill Court St , Pomeroy, Oh10, by the
Oh1o Valley Pubhshmg Company Second class
postage paid a1 Pomeroy, Ohm
Member. The As.soc1a1ed Press and the Oh•o
Newspaper Aaaociallon.
Poltmater: Send 1ddress corrections to The
Dally Sentinel, Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Oh1a

45769.

SUBSCRIPTioN RATES
By Ctrricr or Motor Route
One Week .• . ..... .............. .S2 00
One Month ....... • ••.... ......

10:06 a.m., Mam Street,
Pomeroy, Nonga Robens, Veterans
Memorial Hosp•tal;
4:55p.m., Third Avenue, Middleport, Eldon Walburn, treated _at the
scene.

POMEROY
1:48 p,m., VFD w1th boat, ass1st
Mason VFD with river search.

SYRACUSE
11:25 p.m., Dusky Street, Phyllis
Hendrix, Holzer Medical Center.

S8 70

One Year... ....... ............. ..•.••• SI04 00
SINGLE COPY PRJtE
Datly•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,••••••• ,,3S Cents
Subscriber! not des1rmg to pay the carrier may
rematan advua: darect to The Daaly Sentmel on
a three, SIX or 12 month ba:m Crcdtl will be
g1ven earner e1ch week
No subKriptaon by m•ll penn•Hed m areas
where home camer KrvlCC l.!i ava1lable
Publisher reserves tDc ngt1110 adjust rates dur
mg the sub:lcnptaon pc:nod SubKnp11on rate
changes may be tmplemented by changmg the
dur~l:ton ofthe subscr1plaon

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
hukle Mdp C ounty
13 Wr:eb................... ,
.$27 30

26 Wecb . . .... .. . . .S53 82
52 Wr:eb , .............. ,. ,$105 56
Hales Outside Meigs County
13Wecb ............................ S2925
26 Wteb......................... SS6 68
52 Weeks...... .......... .. .$109 72

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our m•ln coactm In •II stories Is lo M
•ccurate. If you know of an error In a
story. alii tbe newsroom at (740) 991·
2US. We will cha::k your lnfonnatlon
and make a corrtetion lfwarranled.
1

News Departments

The main numMr Is 992·2155. Dtpart·
mcnl extensions art:

Gtnenl Manager.:........... . .. .. .. .ExL 1101
Ntw$. ... , .

.

.

~.

. .E'Il. 1102
or Ext. 1106

Other Services
Advertising. . . ............ Ext. 1104
Clrculalion ............................... .Ext. 1103
t.:Jaulfied Ad1. ... ,.. , .. .....
....Ext. 1100

Stocks
Am Ele Power .. ._ .. ._._._ ...... ._ .....36
Akzo .. ._ ...... ._ ........ , ___ .... ,......... 44 ~
Amerltech ............................. 64 ~

Ashland 011 ...._ ......,.... ._ .... ._ .. 37,•.
ATIT ..................................... 44l,

Bank One ........................... .-37'•
Bob Evans .._.-.... ._: .. , ...... ._._,_,21'·
Borg-Warner ._-;:'......... ._ ..... .-.45').
Champlon ..... ._ .... ._ .......... ._ .._ ... sl.
Charm Shps ._....... ._ ..._ .. ._ ... ._._.6).
City Holding .............._._._ .....19'j.
Federal Mogul ... .-... .-. .-......... 29l.
Flrstar __ ....... ._ .......... ._ .. ._ ......... 24),
Gannett .................. ._ .... ._ .......71 l.
Kmart ......,............. ._._ .. ._ ... ._ .._ ... 13
Kroger ........... ,....._ ..... ._ ......... 24l.
Lands End .-........ ,_, ........ ,._._._.62'!.
Limited ......... ._._ ...... ,.·--.........39"1.
Oak' Hill Flnl ......................... 17"1•
OVB ._ ............ ._ .._ ............... , .... 32 ~
One Valley ... ,_, ........ ._ ... :.........35l,
Peoples ..... ._ ... ._._._ ..... .._ ......... 27),
Prem Flnl .... , .. ._ ....,.. ,............._ ..11
Rockwell ........ ._._ ............. 54'l.
RD/Shel1 ........ ,............ ._._ ...... 62~

Sears ....................................33 1Y•

Shoney's ,............. ....... .......,... 2).
Wendy's ......_ ........................ 26~
Worthington .......... .._ ............. 15),

-·-·Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided
by Advest of Gallipolis.

She is survived by three daughters and sons-m-law, Hannah and Kenneth
Gilcrest ofToronto, Dotothy and Robert Wells of Steubenvllle and Dons and
Michael Bmch of Parad1se Valley, Anz.; II grandch1ldren; 13 great-grandchildren and three great-great-grandchildren
She was preceded in death by her husband, Ma. Scott Gorsuch m 1967
and by four brothers and one sister,
'
Services will be held Friday, I PJII· at McClave, Chand l~r-M•IIs Funeral
Home in Steubenville with Tom Arehart officiating Burial w1ll follow m
Union Cemetery.
Friends may call Thursdliy, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral hom e.

Rev. Noel Adolph Herrman
Rev. Noel Adolph Herrman, 90, Middleport, dJed Monday, Sept. 13,
1999, at his res1dence.
He was J,x&gt;rn Sept. I, 1909, in Gallia County, son of the late Ethyl Mary
Herrman and Charles Farley. He was a mmister for 62 years and pastored
several area churches, He was a miner, farmer and electrician and a member
of IBEW Local 317 of Huntington, W.Va.
He IS survived by his wife of 62 years, Dora Edith Mitchell Herrman of
Middleport, three sons and a daughter-m-law, Roland Herrman of Coolville,
Dale Herrman of Pomeroy and Wade and Judy Herrman of Granville; four
daug~ters and two sons-in-law, Nma and Ralph Butcher of Middlepon,
Marg1e Stone of Galhpohs, Sharon and Charles. Kitchen of Middleport and
Anua Vanchoff of Coral Spnngs, Fla,: one stepbrother and SJSter-m-law, Ray
and Tony Farley of Columbus; 27 grandchildren; 41 great-grandchtldren; 19
great-great-grandchildren; several meces and nephews.
He was preceded 10 death by hts first wtfe, Mildred Mulford Herrman; a
son, Carroll Herrman; five grandchildren, 1 great-grandchtld; a stepsister; a
son·m-law and three daughters-in-law
· ·
Services w111 be held Thursday, 11 a,m. at the Ash Street Freew.ill Baptist
Church in Middlepon with the Revs. Les Hayman and Ralph Butcher offic1ating, Bunal w111 follow 10 Beech Grove Cemetery. Pomeroy.
Fnends may call today, 2-6 p.m, at the church. Arrangements are by FISher Funeral Home-Middleport.

Consumer pr Ices up 0.3 percent In August
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer prices rose 0.3 percent in
August as gasoline and other energy
products shot up for a second straight
month . But elsewhere inflation
remained a no-show With clothing
prices down for a founh straight
month and a~rhne fares retreatmg
after a big jump in July,
The Labor Depanment said today
the August mcrease m its Consumer
Price Index matched the 0.3 percent
July advance.
In both !IIOnths, energy was the b•g
force pushmg prices upward. For
August, two-thirds of the total price
increase was attributed to a 2,7 percent surge 1n energy costs, Food costs
rose a much more modest 0.2 percent.
Outside of the volatile energy and
food categones, prices were up JUSt
0.1 percent'" August.
This performance of the :•core"
rate of inflation was even better than
economists' expectations and will
prov1de ammunition for those arguing
there is no nec;d for the Federal

Reserve to boost mterest rates for a
third time.
F10anoal markets ralhed on the
pnce figures w1th nsmg demand in
inflation-sensitive bond market sendmg y1elds on 30-year Treasury bonds
down to 6.08 percent this morning
from 6.12 percent late'Tuesday.
The Commerce Department sa1d
thatinventoriesheldbybusinesseson
shelves and backlots rose by 0.3 percent in July wh1le business sales rose
at an even faster 0.4 percent clip.
That left the ratio of inventones to
sales at a record low of 1.34 months,
meanmg it would take that length of
time to exhaust supphes at tire current
sales pace,
So far this year, oonsumer pnces
have been nsmg at an annual rate of
2.6 percent, compated to a gain of JUSt
1.6 percent for all of 1998. "
All of the mcrease reflects higher
energy costs, which have rebounded
th1s year after a steep plunge'" 1998
that reflected slumping global
demand in the wake of steep recessions in many nations hit by a global
curre~cycrisis.
•

Boy pumshed for. wearmg a .Pittsburgh
Steelers football Jersey to OhiO school .

NORWALK (AP) - An 11-yearold Ohio boy who wore a Pittsburgh
Steelers football jersey to school on
Cleveland Browns' spint day was ·
made to sit in a corner.
'
Eric . Nutter, a f1fth-grader at
Western Reserve Middle '&amp;chool,
and h•s mother, Debbie, have long
been fans of Pittsburgh 's professional team. He knew he wouldn't fit in
when he didn't wear the brown and
orange of the rival Browns last
week.
He wore black and gold, a Steelers' quarterback Korljell Stewart Jersey, on the day the school was marking the Browns' return to the NFL in
Sunday's game agamst the Steelers
Eric said his teacher had him turn
his desk around and push 11 mto the
corner.
"I had to turn around the whole
time to sec what was gmng on," Enc
told The (!..{&gt;rain) Morning Journal.
"I d•dn't like it."
After a few hours, Eric changed
into a Cleveland lnd1ans basel&gt;all Tsh.n for gym class. He kept tfie sh1n
on for the rest of the day, and he was
allowed to take h1s desk out of the
corner
Eric's stepfather, Roben Counts.
sa•d hJS stepson came home from

school crying. Western Reserve
schools Supenntendent Dennis Bahmer explained to the family that the
teacher was reprimanded but will
not receive any additional discipline.
" We expressed our concerns to
the fall)ily and apolog•zed, and the
teacher d1d the same," Bah mer sa1d.
" It 's one of those Jhmgs that staned
out in fun, but for some reason was
not taken that way." .

The Rock Spnngs Umted Methodist Church will make apple butter on
Oct. 2 at the home of B1ll and Louise Radford , Orders will be taken by
Mrs. Radford at 992-5218 or Pandora Collins at 992-2587. Pri ~e w•ll be
$4.50 per quan Jars can be provided, although customers are encouraged
to take a jar wuh them at the lime of p1ckup.

Art class offered
A begmners an class taught by Carol Tannehill will be offe red at t~e
R1verbend Arts Counc1l on Thursdays, Oct ?through Oct. 28 at 6:30p.m.
Cost wJJI be $20. The class is for those ages 16 and up. and no previous
an experience 1s necessary. Supplies mclude a sketch pad and a #2 pencil.
To reg•ster call Tanneh1ll at 992-5336

Middleport Neighborhood Watch
Middleport Ne1ghborhood Watch will meet Tuesday, 7 p m. at the Middleport Church of Chnst

Athens-Darwin Advisory Committee
The Athens to Darwm C111zens Adv1sory Commlltee w11l meet Monday, 4 p m at Ohio University Inn 1n' Athens to hold a working sesston to
consider a chaner for the commlltee created to advise ODOT and TRAC
on the Athens to Darwin U.S. 33 proJeCt, cons1der the chmce of an environmental engmeenng firm and d1scUss other 1tems as necessary. The
1s mv1ted to attend

'

.

'

Report: Plutonium contanimation at·.
southern Ohio plant more extensive
COLUMBUS, Oh1o (AP) Workers at a utamum ennchment
plant handled a type of plutoniumlaced uranium more dangerous than
the government has acknowledged
m an operation Ihat was halt ed
because of concerns about radiation
exposure, The Columbus D1spatch
reported today.
At the Portsmout h Gaseous D1f·
fusion Plant in Piketon, spen t
nuclear-reactor fuel was ccnvened
to cnnched uramum for reuse. That
operation, known as oxide &lt;onvcrswn, was halted around 1977
because of concerns about exposure,
according to U.S. Depanment of
Energy documents the newspaper
obtamed.
"The oxide conversion facJhty
was not able to mamtam adequate
containment of the radmactive matenals," accordmg to a September
1985 report of the Jomt Task Force
on Uranium Recycle Matenals Processmg.
The report said the process was
shut down to make changes, but the
mod•f•cahons were never funded.
The government ' in August said
about ,100,000 tons of plutomumlaced uranium was handled by P1keton 's sister plant 1n Paducah, Ky.
Some of that uranmm, containmg
small amounts of plutonium, later
was sent f(Jr enrichment to Piketon
m southern Oh10.
Energy offic1als had msisted that
Paducah workers handled all the JRI·
hal convemon and most of the 101hal ennchment of that material
before it was sent to Piketon, the
Dispatch sa1d. That would have
meant P1keton workers dealt With
matenal w1th a much lower plutomurn level, they said.
However, 11 now is clear that
P1keton rece1ved some undiluted

matenal d~rectly from nuclear power
plants, an Energy Depa rtment
spokesman told the newspaper Tues:
da:y after bemg shown his agency'•,
documents
·
"A prclimmary review of records
ind1cates the Portsmouth plant was.
mvblved m hmlled productiOn tests .
mvolvmg small quantilles of reactor ,
return " fuel from federal nucle~r.,
reactors, spokesman Jeff Sherwood ·
said.
He said offic.als do n'ot know the .
exact quantities but beheve they are
small.
Mary Byrd Dav1s, who heads the .
Kentucky-based Uramum Ennchment Project. a nuclear watchdog
group that uncovered some of the ,
documents provJded to the newspaper, said there is a big difference
between handling SJl!lnl reactor fuel
and the far more d1luted product thar .
has been convened and JDIIJally
ennched,
" What it means is that place wa$ ·
contaminated much more than If the .
matenal had JUSt come from Paduc ah," she said.
The 1985 report says that beg•n '·
mng in 1953, the federal Idaho.
Chemical Processing Plant "recov:. •
ered uran1um from spent nuclear •
fuels, largely from governmentowned reactors." P1keton's conver-'
sion plant turned that matenal mto a •
gaseous form of uramum that could
again be enriched for use in bombs
or as nuclear-plant fuel.
·•"
A 1993 Energy Department
repon says pan of an old agency- bu1lding at P1kcton "is scaled and ftO
longer used because of contamJnalion" w1th plutomum and relate&lt;!,
materials.
·
" Th1s area was an oxJde·conver·
s1on area and IS h•ghly radJologJcal
ly contammated," the repon says - ,

TOLEDO (AP)- A 1-year-old
female gonlla that su,ffered from a
bactenal mfecu on, seizures and
brain damage was put to sleep
Wednesday at the Toledo Zoo.
Zoo offiCials decided to euthanize the gonlla, S1ndiswa, after a

yearlong effort to bnng her back 10
health, Said Bill Dennler. the zoo's'
executive dlfector.
'
Unable to s1t up. crawl or f«d ·
herself, the gonlla was a safetv nsk
to those providing care. off1C1a ls:.
sa1d.

Toledo Zoo puts gor"llla to sl
.

eep :

News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

992-2156
Protect your assets and still receive the qual it)
care you expect and desenoe. Consider the facts:
• The avrr.1~r cost m Ohio for a smgle day m a nursmg home ,, S 1 \II
• Sun:~ ~'"""~'. MedJcarr and Medicrud are not dt'SJgned to p.11
for long tenn care

• Most fannhes are \\llhng hut are not eqmppl'&lt;l or qualified 'to
pro&gt;1de ion~ tenn care to loved ones m the1r homt"

Learn bow Long Term Care lnsurunce can help jffl,·fur

qunlfly cure In your own bo111&lt;' or'" n nursing fxime.

MON 9/13 • THUR 9/16

Learn bow Long Term Care lnsurunce Clln help presen•e
and protect your assets and financial resourres,

lOX Offta WIU OPIN AT
6:30 PM FOR !VINING SHOWS
THE S!XTH SENSE (PG13)
7100NE SHOW
ITCH PROJECT (R)
720oNE SHOW
THE 13TH WARRIOR (A)
7:10 ONE SHOW
CHILL FACTOR (R)
715 &amp; 9 15 FRI, SAT &amp; SUN
RUNAWAY BRIDE (PG)
7 00 &amp; 9 20FRI, SAT &amp; SUN

STIGMATA (R)
7•15 &amp; 9 IS FRl, SA'r &amp; SUN

HE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIII (A)
1 00 &amp; 9 20 FRI, SAT &amp; SUN
FOR CUSTOMER APPRECIATioN,
PRESENT TICKET STUB AND
RECEIVE A FREE PoPCORN,
(MON-THURS ONLY)

Learn bow Long 1.,.;, Care lnsurunce can help lVIII
and your famiiJ• maintain estabUsbed lifes~l'lt•,, . ·
Att~nd

our free workshop!
Call now, seating is limited!

(740) 992-2133 or (740) 376-7580
"I
[Cnly) &amp;!!XIan F1aso,111011 ~ Siah .1essa Pm

111NM 81111 '" too, 4:15, 7:30, 10:00

[Cnly)... 1\nrts liiMI Gel!.i'Q' fuooil .l&gt;an

""'*

I

Clll FACTOR ., 2:451 5:00, 7:30, 9:55

BUll WITCH PRO.ICT ~~ 7:151 9:30
[ll«tor) '~lire iJooiJii.E lilct.ll W..,.. .&lt;wUILmri
Matinees Shown Everyday
ALL
ALL TIMES $4.00

•

.

Aft•~.,,..,.,.,...

lnsutei'ICI! products are pnMded by VllflO:IJ5 tns"urance compames anct are onerecl t~rough Nor1hwest
Tamtory l le lnwranee ,t,gency Inc ! NTLI~) The purchase al NUT.!Int:ll !tom NTLIA IS no! r&amp;Qulted tO
otltam creel~ or SI!I\'ICtU from Peoples Bani.:. or its aft~tates lniuta{lel produ4:11 ar• not blnk dtpo•lla
and . . not FDIC lnav~ nor are t!My guW~nteed by Peop1n Ban~ . and may lou vaM

/
'

Northwest JIJ.nitwy
Life Insurance
AgenC,Kinc.
.....

6 p.m, • Thursday, September 30. 1999
Pomeroy Library

[llvilr) Silt1 Lit Cilia Goolil9~ . Oivd Pa)TrEr P!1!1 f~

•'

•

Apple butter making time

�•

Sports

The Daily Sent~~~

•

Wednesday, September 15, 1999

Meigs volleyball
clubs beat Southern

Cubs record 4-3
· victory over Reds

The Me1gs Marauders rolled to a
15-2. 15-10 voctory over Southern
Tuesday night in Southern's Charles
W. Hayman Gymnasium in Racme .
Meigs blislered Southern in the
first game, getting a huge boost m1d-· .
way through the game with li_ve
points from Tangy Lauderm1h.
Tiffany Halfhill slarted strong and
finished strong by scoring the last
three poiniS for a live -point game,
igniling the T-N-T offensive express.
. Southern led 6-4 in lhe second
game behind three Kim lhle serves,
bul Tawny Jones came on to serve
six straight for Meigs , toppling
Snuthern 10 a 10-6 deficit
Afler several exlended volleys
Southern cut lhe lead 10 10-8 and 1310, but Jones' serve came up for lhe
•ccond time and s he pUI Ihe
Tornadoes away 15-10.
Southern wh• led by lhle's three,
Kati Cummin s· two. Heather
Dailey's two. Fallon Roush 's one
and Stacey Wilson 's two.
For Meigs. Jones was JI -ll serving with nine poiniS overall . Halfhill

By JOE KAY
Mets. ·who also lost Tuesday. by 2',
CINCINNATI (AP}
Sammy games for the wild card.
"Nobody cares how you get tu
Sosa came up empty, jusl like the
team that got him out.
the playnffs. " Harnisch said. " You'd
Tlte Cincinnati Reds prevented lik.c to be the division winner. If not,
Sosa from hilling bomer No. 60,_but we' II 1ak~ the wild card. I don' I
Henry Rodriguez hit hi s first in ncar- know if they give you a banner you
ly a month and the Chicago Cubs •an fly for Ihal , hut we just want to .
withstood a ninth-inning rally for a be one of -the four (playofl) leams."
4-3 victory Tuesday night.
Chicago. which has two fewer
The Reds were trying tu keep wins than Sosa has home runs. ended
pace with Houston in 1he NL Cenlral its si.'-gamc losi n_g streak wilh ?nly
and wanted tu make sure Sosa didn'( its mnth VIC tory m 43 games smec
hun lhem. They pitched him tough Aug . I.
;.,.::. Sosa went 0-for-4 and didn't get ·
Kyle Farnsworlh (4-9) gave up
~he ball out ofthc "infield.
on ly three hits in six innings. includ~ "Everybody knows my sii ua- ing ~arry Larkin's solo homer, to g~l
.tion." said' Sosa. who 's gone 19 at- hts tlrst vactory m lhrcc stuns. th1s
·hats 'without a homer a~d failed to hit month .
;Jne oVer the weekend m Houston.
Rick Aguikra got out of a two-on ,
~~ 'I've b~en fac ing teams in the ~n · &lt;,?_De-out threat in the eighth when
. )l~nt race and they've been takmg EddJ.c Taubcnsee_. struck our and
;~:are of me.
· .
.
rook1c Kerry Robm son was thruwn
: " When they ' re in a pennant race. out trying tu steal thinj on lhe pi1ch.
;you've gottu unders tand they ' re nol
Al"ter Nieves" tnple made it4 - l in
-going to give me too much 10 hll ."
the top of ~he mnth, .Terry Adams
: Sosa went 0-for-3 against Pele . wired lhe hrst two Reds a nd then
· Harn isch ( 1'4-9). then •ompkled his made il an adven ture . Chns Stynes
: nigh I by govunding nut in the ninth , Si ngled. Hammonds hi I hi s lirst
·. against Dennys •Reves . who ~ave up pinc h homer and th_e nextlwo hailers
'
· Mark McGwire 's- 6lll h homer last ' reached .
·-.,·a
Dtlll.lrl· Youn':! then hu a ~ink ir.~·
• J e· r.
e
;· . 'fhe Reds . wound up losi ng any - liner · 10 Nieves. The s hortstop
•'way. Jose Nieves tripled hom e two knocked it down. recovered and
:Tuns to make il 4-1 in the top of the threw Out Youmz.. cndirh! -the come; ninth, and a two-out rally in the bot- back a'nd giving Adams his I J th snvc
~tom of the ,if1n ing came up short.
in LO chances.
: Cincinnati had its seven -game
··Younl! hit that last hall welL "
; winning streak snapped and tdl four Cuhs ma 1 ~1 gcr Jim Rrggleman said.
:·games behind Housl.un. jls higge st " It"s the type of ball that's hcen
•deficit since June 23. The Astros beat going for base hils agai nst us all
:Philadelphia 12-2 Tue sday for their year- It was hil (ight at Nieves. He
kept his composure and threw him
: 12th slraight win .
,
"lf lhey lose (any game). I" on sur- out. ..
: prised," said Jeffrey Halnmond s.
A crowd of 23.353 thai came to
; who hit a pinch lwo-run homer 111 1he sec Sosa swi ng away for No. 60
;'ninlh . "You gu into every game Instead walched · the Reds get !heir
·e.'pecting them to win ."
1,OOOth Joss lo lhc Cub•
~- The Reds are closer to a wild-card
Sosa, who last year became the
•6cnh than a division title with 17 founh player to hit 60 homers in a
:games left. They trai l the New York season. is trying to become the first

NICE JOB , BARRY! - As Chicago catcher Jeff Reed stands in the
distance, the Cincinnati Reds ' Barry Larkin (right) Is congratulated
by teammate Sean Casey (21) alter. Larkin's solo homer in the lirst
inning of Tuesday night's National League game ,In Cincinnati,
where the Cubs won 4-3. (APl
• •
C
H . h . h .
f
to do it twtce . H~ said he' s not going
hicago. armsc IS avmg one o
to bat swmg·in g for the· horn..:r C\'Cf)'- his line~ I .seasons, but ·is 0-2 in four
one expet.:ls .
~tart s against the Cubs.
~.
" People might 'say I'm ·anxious_.
Larkm, w~n went a carecr-rcl:~lrd
but I' m not." he said . '' lt's ,hccuusc 72 ga1ncs wrthout a homer bclurc
they've been pitchin g me great ...
btcak mg. the streak last. Friday, hit
He COl loud ovations and dozens another m the bonum ot the fii'SI to
of nashbulbs went off throughout the put the Reds ahead 1-0.
half-filled s tadium every time Sosa
The Cubs tied it with lhcir first hi I
.amc to hal. He stru•k out sw inging in the thi rd. Nieves walked with one
in the first. shattered his hat on a out. Farnsworth had a sacrifice bunl
·
groundout in Ihe fo urth a nd lined out and Lance John&gt;un singled 10 1e ll.
10 third baseman Aaron Boone in the
Farnsworth got a double-play
sixth bd"ore ground ing oul in the grounder from Taubensee to underninth .
·
cui a lwo•on. none-out threat in the
The Jorsl three at-bats were fourth . and got Boone to ground oul
agaonst Harmsc}o. who gave up with rOnners on second and third m
homer No 59 live days earlier 1n . the sixth. ,

Wellston spikers
defeat Eastern
Wellston dcfea1ed Eastern 15- 10.
The EHS varsity is 4- 1.
7- 15. and
15-9 in a Tri-Valley . . The Eastern reserves won 15- 1.
Confere nce voll eyball malch a1 13-15. 15-9. EHS was led by Tammy
Bissell's II poinls and _two aces and
Easlern Tuesday nigh!.
Juli Bailey had eighl points , o~e Amber Baker's 10 pomts and two
ace. was 9' II spi king and had one aces. Elame . Pulman led m sp1kmg
kill woth four blocks, Becky Davis wilh great back row play by T1ffany
had eight poiniS and was 4-5 spiking, Hensley ·and Janel Ridenour. TI1c
Ali son Rose had five points. Leah reserve record is 6-0.
Sanders five poiniS. .Danielle
The v~rsi ty . will play . at·-Rivcr
Spencer four points and was 4-6 Valley . Ill a In-match wuh Rtvcr
sp iking, Sarah Clifford two points Valley and Fairland. The freshman
and 2-4 spikin g, Krislen Chevalier and reserve match al EaSiern os postone poont and 2-4 spiking with 4 " poried and will be rescheduled al a
dmks . and Whitney Karr had three later date.
1blocks and 2-4 spiking with one'k ill.

;Red Sox cruise to 12-3 win over lnd·ians
•

• CLEVELAND (AP} Troy Williams sa1d. " He go1 the big hil
:O ' Leary is doing his beSI to put the 10night, j ust like he 's gonen a lot of
·Boston Red Sox on center stage and big hilS all season.
:maybe ~~ven 'gam
little attention
O' Leary 's 27th homer gave him
:himself.
·
99 RBls.
"One more would be good, it
O'Leary drove in four runs , Jose
:Offerman went 4-for-4 and Derek would give me one of my goals,"
:Lowe pilehed 3), hilless innings O'Leary said of reaching 100 RBls
.q'uesday night as lhe surging Red Sox "for the firs llime.
.
:routed ·lhe Cleve land Indians 12-3.
· The Indi ans, meanwhile, may set a
:-· Boston won for 1he eighth time in goal of getting another hil agai nst
, II 'tames on a 12-game road tnp and Lowe (6-3). Cleveland -has gone 1:remained 3'/, games behind lhe New for-30 (.033 ) against the rig ht-hand er
· Y~&lt;k Yankees in lhe AL East. The 1hi s season.
;Roll Sox increased !heir wild-card
"II is kind of crazy," Lowe sa1d of
,ead to three games over Oakland.
his success against lhe best-hitting
• "This is the biggesl trip o f the team in baseball. " I can't explain rt. "
:year, " O' Leary said after goi ng 3-for·
Trot Nixon :s two-run homer1 his
'5 with a'thrce-run homer a nd an RBl th ird in four games. helped Basion
:~ingle. "Th is is how the game should lake a 3-0 lead in lhe lhird off Dwi ghl
~~e played and yes, it is nice."
Gondcn (3-4), who allowed six runs
.: O ' Leary is hilling .400 ( 18-for-45) and six hits in 4', inrimgs.
:Wrth three homers and 13 RBi s
" h wasn't a good ouling," Indians
: against Cfcvelund , helping Boston to manager M1ke Hargrove said. " His
•a 7-4 ret:ord agamst 1ts possible play - vcluc1t y was there. but he was ihcon: orf opponent 1l1c teams have facei:l S ISI enI .
:each other 1wkc in the last four pos l '' If then! was a silver lining from
*'Scasons.
this loni ght. il is th at we got a ..:hanl'c
,
''Troy is a very special player who f 10 look at people and make some
"'docs nnl gc t the rccogniuon he decisions. And 'lh al'srcall y stre tch ing
: deserves," Bos ton managc_r Jim y for a si lver lining."

a

·•

Wihon Veras led off the third with
a single for Boston's first hit . Nixon
·then lined, a 2-2 pilch inlo lhe rightfield seats for his 13th hamer.
Darren Lewis added a sacrifice ny
in the third a nd Veras ' RBI double
made'!f4-0 in ·thefourth .
Boston starter Ramon Martinez. in
hi s second star! , si nce shoulder
· surgery in June 1998, he ld down lh,e
besl hitting club in baseball for 4·1,
innings. The older brother of Red Sox
ace Pedro Martinez a ll ow~d three
runs. and three hits, slri king out five
and walking fo ur.
" I felt good, like I never even had
surgery," R~mo n Martinez said.
Jim Thome's 29th homer, a tworun , 434-foot shot to cenler in the
fourlh made it 4-2
·
O'Leary 's homer. off lhc second
pitch thrown by reliever Mark
Lan,gs10n, made it7-2 in th e fifth .
•O'Leary si ngled for hi s fourth
RBI to ma ke it 9-3 in the seventh.
Notes: Ofl"crrna' n walked in hi s
first at-bat and reached base all five
tim es .... Martinez started ·in place of
Pat , Rapp. who returned hol)le
Monday to be with his wife. who is
expec ting a baby. Rapp is expec ted to

Scoreboard
Baseball

.

NL standings

~

~ L s tandings

l~-

n
. ~(J

York ..
.

:. S.\

~Bn5to n

:ro~nto

t.l

.'\Y

*Detroit

60
c;9

.

tn

f&lt;L

~97

571.
527

476
4 28

.
,1':

10
17':
24':

c,ntn1l Oivisiun·

,.:Ox-CLEVELAND .
~Chit.:ngo ... .. .. . .

'" Minnesota ...
:Knmas City

58
62

77 . 69

riT&lt;~mp.l ll~y

_

L

.69 . 76·

~ Rallnnure ...

.~
!

Iwn

Ea\tern j)h·ision

~
~New

Ewstcrn

5~

618

6-1 81 .441
.... ~7

25':

IH
85

.4 17

410

29
.10

88

.J9J

32' :

Wesll'rn l&gt;ivision
.. "· .... !17 59 596
:Oakland .
RO 65 sn
~ratt le ....... ..
71 7.1 .49.t
!}() !15
?AnaMim . . .-.
4 14
1~-clioch;ed dil'ision !t!l,e
~eus .. .......

'

.
1\Jesday's _scores

t:

!

Seaule 5. Tampa l)ay I
... BosJon 12 , CI.J;:VELANO J
.. -.New York 10. Toronto 6
• ..Saltintore IJ , Uukland 6
~ 1'ktrolt 7, Chi cago 0
~
Tellas 5, Minnesota 4
;. DH ~n.thctm tl. K~nsas C1t~ 6, Anah~:im 6.
;:konsas.Cny 5

:
i
;

Tonight's games

Oakland (Hudson 10-1) :u Bolltlmore (~ill'Y 0-0),

... 7 ~ os p.m

... Sennle ICI1K1de 4-4) at Tr1m p:1 Uay ( Alvarr1 q. 7 J.
.. 7:05p.m
'
• Bo ~ton (I' M &lt;~ri ii.Ct '2 1·4) at CLEVELAND
! CColon 16 5), 7 0511 m
\ .
~
rkw York 1 P ~ U1th.' J1. \ \ at !Uruntu (Hcntg~·n
t t0-10), 7:.l5 p.m
.
.[)l:trrnt (Muchh:r 9 . [~ ) :11 Chicago (Baldwin 9-,
,121. 8:05pm
1 Te:oo:as (Loaiza 7-4) at Mmnesola (Radke 12 · 1.~ 1.
~ 8 · 05 p m .
• Anaheim (finley 9· 11) 111 Kan sas Cit y {Stet n 1· 1).
: 8.05 p.m

!
•
..

Thursday"s games

An1\hcim {0rli1 I · 21 at Kn111as Cit y (S11ppnn Q.I.J)
'::2:05p.m
'= Oakland (Oii,•nres 1-I· Ht) at Rahunnrc (J
~nh nson 6-7) . .\ .q5 p m.
.
~
Seattle (Garcw 14·l:!J .11 lo~mr;1 lluy IN11pc !:1 ·1H
~7·0 5 pIll
t
New Yurt. {lr :1hu ft).6J :11 CI.I:VELAND fH u1t•;1
.. ,4·7! 1·m 11 m
•

•
•

.•

Ou, i~ iun

\\"

91

L , f&lt;L

!it!

610

1

... "

Atlanta ...
New York
Phtladelphi:a .
Monlleal
Aorid:.

55

R9

61

77

" ""

Houston .
CINCINNATI ...
Pittsburgh .
St louis
Milwaukee .. .".
Ch.icago ..

l'enlr.d Division
91 55

86 59
70

68
.64
57

..,

77

so
X7

.\()6

59l

&lt;86
&lt;69

.....
, 9fi

n ',
29 ':

'-'
4
19'

22
25' ·

n'

National Uaskethall AsSO&lt;iatiun
C HICAGO D U LI ~'i S i gn~d G fred lkuhcrg
NEW JERSEY NETS: Agreed 10 terms wuh C
f-11~:had C'ilgt' on a ofle·)Car ~:on lrad
VANCOUVER GR IZZLIES . Signed F Ohin nn
Ekez1e.

•Football

Meigs varsity golfers take second
in OD match; Dettwiller earns medal

'
slart Friday.... Cleveland's Manny
Ramirez, whose 144 RBls lead the
majors, missed his lhird game in a
row with a bruised right knee

Meigs junior Nick DeUwiller Vinton' County ... ......................... .-... 9
fired an even par 36 for medalist Nel sonville-York ............................ !
honors, but it wasn't enough as
Wellston continued to hold onto firSI
~-----,
~~~~·,~~- the TVC's Ohio Division I .
I

r - --...;, --

Yellow Jackets
get 24-20 win
over Bullets

The host Wellston lellm had a 160
Ia win the malch played Monday at
Fairgreens. Meigs finished in second
place with a 165, followed closely by
Belpre with a 166. Belpre added a.
172 , Vinton County a 178 and
Nelsonville-York a 213.
Besides
Dettwiller,
Carson
Midk iff added a 40, Zach Meadows a 44, Tommy Roush and Thad
Bumgardner each with a 46 and
Andy Davis a 47.

PICKENS
HARDW'ARE
1'\

I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I"
I
1·

·

. The Middleporl Yellow Jackels
1
I
are off lo a good sian in the Central
I
I
Otiio Foulball League afler they
1
1
defeated 1he Tuscarawas Bullels 141
1
20 Sunday a1 1he Meigs Junior High
1
1
School.
I
1
The Yellow Jackets scori ng came
I
1
on a 12- y~rd run by Loga_n native
C hn s Yates, an eighl-yard run by
I
I
River Valley High graduate Jimmy Ohio Division
I
I
Gilmore , Poinl Plcasanl's Rick
standings
.
I
I
Franklin 's 35-yard pass/run and ·
I
I
Gallia Acad e my grad uate Larry
Team
~
I
I
Howell's 38-yard interception return .
Wellston .................. ..................... 32 . I
I
"h was a great accomp lishrnent
Meigs ........................ ................. 24
fo r us ," team founder Ruben
I
I
................ 23
Belpre ............_......
Rodriguez said . "We ha ve practiced
1
1
Alexander ............... ....................... 16
without a coach for a while. hut wi lh
the editio n of former Belpre Panther
coac h Gary She lton. we have been
Golfer Greg Norman lost playoffs I
I
able lo concentrate more o n playing . in lhe 1984 U.S. Open, lhe 1987 1PICKENS HARDWARE I
than trying 10 pl ay and coach."
Masters, the 1989 Bri tish Openand I
103 South 2nd,
I
The Jack ets will play un Sunday. the 1993 PGA Champi onship.
Mason WV
I
I,
Sept. 26 when tpey l(avelto Dover lo .
:
play the Tri -Counly Warriors. They
By winning lhe 1993 Hungarian · : , Phone: n3·5583
Will return homt: on dct. 2 to host the Grand Prix. Damon Hill and the late
I
Tn~Cuu nt y Warriors.
. Graham Hill became the-first falher- I
I
.
.
I
For ticke t mfo rrnati on cal l 740- son Fonn
. ula One winning duo.
367-7 195.

Your Full Line Dutch

:

.

Baskelball

Nalional hotball League
NR.; Suspended Dallas Cowboys 0~ Leon Lett
Western Division
· for §even g;unes for v 1ol~ting the NFL's substance '
Ariwoo .. .. .........
'.88 51 .601
abuse policy. .
·
.
San Francn Go.
1'J 65
8':
5&lt;9
CINCINNATI BENGALS . Acquired CB Chfton
10',
San Diego ..... .......
.6!1 78 466
Crosby oft wa1vers from the St Louis Rams
Los A ngelc:s .... .....
•67 78 .-162
21
CLE VELAND BROWNS : Wn1ved Dl Bill
22 ';
Colorado .
66 80 45 2
Duff. SigiiCd RB George Iones.
' GRF.EN RAY I'ACKERS Si gned P toUi e
Tuesday"s scores
AgUiar Waived P Chris Hanson
. Ch]c&lt;~go 4. CINCINNATI J
NEW YORK H:.TS: S1gned l'U l'orey .$aW)er
Hou ston..\2. Ph1ladelph1a 2
and RB Robert Farmer. Waived CB Jernuun~ Jones
Milw aukee 4, St L,ouis 1
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES. S1gned OG Da,ld
Colorado 7. New York l
· Dial· Infante (O a one:-yeer contract S1gncd TE Justin
Arizona 2. Piusburgh I,
Swift to · ~~ (wo- year cantrnct. Promoted OT Oliver
San frni'IC1$CO J, Rond~ 0
Ross lrqm the pmct1ce IQster.
Montreal 3. Los Angeles 0
'
SAN DIEGO CHA RG.fRS : Si~ned QR Mosc~
lul:mta .11. S~ n Diego 4
Mureuu lu the pract~~:e ru~lt'r
SAN FRANCI~CO 4'Jen · Wn1\'Cd T Pete
Toda}·'s games
Swanson from the pmcticc ~qu:td
New York (lieuhtser 13·10) at Culondo
WASHINGTON RELJSKINS S1gned CB D:1V1,j
(Bohanon 12· 11), ~ :05 p m.
Terre ll and LB RtJn W:u ner 10 the pr nt tlce squ ad
Chu:;1go (l1cl~t:1 !1·9) ,11 CINCINNATI(Ncagk Released TE Ke~ 1n Pc!nl;. and UE lkm ck. H1un froll'l
6- ~) . 7:05pm.
1
the, prdct1ce squad.
Ph il adelphin (Pc:rs1m B-5) 111 Hou ston (Eiartun 8-

SIGnJard Dealer

:

L-------;..~----.J

'NOTICE OF THE PUBLIC HEARING
Meigs Coun t y inte nds to apply to the Ohio Department of Deve lopm ent for funding under
the Community D eve lopment Block Grant (CDBG) New Horizon Program, a fed erallyfunded program administered by the State . . Meigs (:minty is
CDBG New Horizon funding in the estimated amount of

eligibl~

$15,000,

for Fiscal Year

99

providing the county

~

4), H OS p.m
Milwaukee (Pu lsipher -Hll at

Hockey
St

t oms

(Hottenfit:ld 11· 7). 8.10 P 01
P1usburgh rRen1on I0 Ill at l\ri 70ntl fR
Johnso n 15-9 ). 9J5 JI Ill
Rondo (Spr1nger 5- 14) at.Snn Fram:Jsco \Ortll
16·9). 10:05 P m
'
,
MOntreal (PO\Iol" ll 2·6 ) :u l os Angell'S IDrclfort
J]. I)), 10 35 P m
'
.
{ Atlunta (Smalt z 9-7) r-~1 San Dlegn (Cit:nl&lt;.!n1 tl·
I ~ ! 10 .\5 P nl

Thursday's games

Aorida (Nunet. 6 It) a1 San Fram:1sco ( Ruclcr l-1·
X). 4·1Y.\ p m
Ch1cago (Lieber R-9J :11 CINCINNATI (Guzman
6·2 ). 7.05 p n1

Transactions
1\ merinn l.ugut

•• •

469
.-l2 1

7-1

Baseball

•••

62 .~

TAMPA BAY DEV IL RAY S S l ~.:ned Lom y
Rothsch!ld. m:~ na ge r. t o a co ntract cxtct1~1 c n thmu~h
the 200 1 season.
National Lrague
NEW YORK . METS: Acqwed LHJI Glendon
Ru~ c h fro m 1hc Kans~s C1ty R oy~ l ~ lm RHI~ Dan
Murray Ac4uircd RH P Juslin Dunn111 ~ from the
Sc,1Uie Mm1 n~rs to complete ;1 Junc 18,tr.llk' ..

was 8-8 wilh five points and live
kills. ~rooke Williams was 8-8 with.
two kills. Lauderrnoll was _9-11 W,ll~
three kills and 1wo ass1sts . Am)
Hysell was 3-3 and had lhree_ k1U_s.
and Shannon Price was 7-7 wnh SIX
assists.
.
,
.
Coach R1ck Ashs Marauders are
now undefeated at 5-0 ov~ra!l and m
the _Tn-Valley Conference s Ohw
DIVISIOn.
.
Meogs was 46-48 servmg overall
with 30 101al pooniS.
S~JUthern stals showed lhle 5-5
servmg, Da1ley 2-3, Cummons . 2-:&gt;,
Laraine Lawson 2-2, Fallon Roush
3-4; and Stacey Wilson 2-2. Lawson
was 15- 15 setting, and ·Roush 13-14.
Cummins had three blocks .
Meigs won the reserve mat&gt;h 152, 15-10 lo rem am undefeated al 5-0.
K. Pennington had II for Metgs.
while M. Drenner had seven and K.
Davis had six .
.
Brandy Lane had four lm
SoUihcrn. Slephame W11Son had lwo,
Stacy Molls lhrec, Emoly Stover&gt; twu.
and Amy Lee _one.

Naliomd Hvd1.cy Ll'agur
,\fLAN rA THRASHl'RS· As\igncd RW Klrb)'
Law, RW Sean Rnchlln , LW Dryan Ada111s, C Regg1e
Bo:rg. c Je ft Mar11n, 0 Lawrcncl" Ny~:hol:u .1nd G
Scou fankhouser to Otlando of the lmernnti onal
Ho.:key Lengue Re·ass1gned lJ M1ke Mult;chkil to
Tri-Ctty of the Western Hoc~) League. Amgned 0
MIIQS Hol an 10 Vi1kOV1Cc 111 the Czech Rtpublit
...,
CARO LINA HURR ICANES: Re·n~s igned D
N1kos. 'l\cho~ . RW Cmi~ Adams. D Ste,·e Brmcrofl.
D Enc Dandmaull. D Len Esau LW Gil~rl Omnnc,
C Fred Kmp~chc.""er, (' Greg Koehler ~ nd C TOOd
Smmn to Cu'ICmn~ll of the IH L
lOS· ANGELES KINGS ; Ass1gned RW Ke vm
Uaker. L1 Trc•·or G1 ll 1~ . [) R~ehan.t Sttley and Ke,·in
' B111ibruck to Lowell of the 1\HL Reassigned LW K1p
Arenn;m 10 Sudbury pf the OHL
'
- PHOENI X COYOTFS A~~tg n cil F kohNt
J=ral;~.l F Rub .Mun :1y D Tn.·,n1 Cull .uH.J. I) IJunl
Tiley In Springflchl ol f th;• AHL
ST LOU IS BtUES. S1gned IJ.\'cl cr Smrl•k
V1\NCOUVER CANUC-KS Ro: -~tg ncd LW
Pch:r .S~.:hncf~r

meets applicable requirements.

'

'

Th-: first"of two public h ea ringe; will be held Septembe r

20, 1999 at 1:00 P.M .

at the reg·

ular meeting of the Meigs County Commissioners, M eigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Ohio to provide citizens with the pertinent informati.on about the C DBG program including an explanation of eligible activities and program requirements. The goal

of the CDBG

New Horizon program is to provide funds to units of local government t"o affirmatively
further fair housing in addition to activities unde rtaken with their Formula Allocation
Program funds. The activities must be designed to primarily benefit low and
income person s or limited clientele.
Citizens are

encourag~d

mo~erate-

·

to attend this meeting on September

20, 1999

to make sugges-

tions arid to provide public input on variou s activities which may be undertaken
program.

If a

in this

participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, bruilled or taped materi-

al, assistive listening device, other) due to a disablilty, please contact Gloria Kloes, C lerk,
prior to September

20, 1?99

at

740-992-2895

in order to ensure that your n~eds will be

accommodated. The Meigs County Courthouse is handicapped accessible.
Wrillen co mments .;,ill

be

accepted

~ntil 1:00 P.M., September 20; 1999 and may be

mailed to the Meigs Court Commissioners, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio

45769 .'

Wednesday, September 15, 1999

Meig1 County Commissioners

. ·.

National League
roundup
By DENNIS WASZAK Jr.
Associated Press Writer
The Houston Astros won lheir
12th Straight game and finally
mcreased their lead over the
Cincinnati Reds in the NL Central.
Shane Reynolds homered and
al!owcd six hi's in seven in~ings, and
Ricky Gutierrez went "4-for-4 as lhe
Amos roti1ed the Phifadelphia
Phillies 12-2 Tuesday night
Cincinnati l-)ad its seven ·!arne
winning ·streak snapped in a 4-.i loss
to Chicago and fell four games
behind Houston , the Reds' biggest
deficit si nce June 23.
" It's about time the Reds losl a
game," Gutierrez said. " We feel very
~ood aboul where we are wilh a fourgame lead with 15 to go, but[ don'l
think they're going to go away. I
think (lhc race) is going 10 go right
dnwJt to the end."
Another race that might go down ,
to \he wire is in th_e NL EaSI; where
1hc Allanta Braves increased their
load IO two games over lhe New York
Mcts with an 11 -4 vic tory over the
Pad res. Tlie MciS loS! 7-2 to
Colorado.
In Houston , Rey nolds (16- 11 )
~1ll owed two runs-, struck otit lhree
and wa lked one as the Astros set a
club record for consecut ive victories.
He is 2-0 Wilh a 1.25 ERA in three
Septem ber slariS.
· Paul Byrd (14-9) was tagged for
seve n ru ns and eight hits in threeplus innings. The losing streak is the
· Philli cs' longest since they lost II
straight from June 24-July 7; 1997.
ln C in c'innati. Sammy Sosa came
.

up empiy in his bid for homer No.
60, bUI Henry Rodriguez hit his fir&gt;l
m nearly a month as the Cubs bea1
the Reds.
·
Kyle Farnsworth (~-9} gave up
only three hils in six innings. including Barry Larkin's solo homer, to get
his firsl viciOry in thr~e stans this
month. Pete Harni s··h ( 14-9) took the
loss.
..
The Reds Irail . •e MelS by 2';
games for the wild card.
"Nobody cares how you gel to the .
playoffs," l:-larni sch said. "You'd
like lobe the division winner. It" nol.
we'll take the wild card . I don '1
know if they give you a banner you

can ny for that . hut we JUSt want 10 and even contnbutcd on offense."
he one of the four (playoff) teams ."
In Colorado. Vmny Ca.ulla hit his
In San D1ego. Kevin Millwood 2001h career home run and Neifi
(17-7) s1ruck oul 12 in ;even innings Perez tripled tw1ce and drme on a run
and hil his firsl career homer as the for lhe Rnckoes .
Braves snapped a lhree-game losing
Janoey Wroght (3- 2) gave up one
~Lreak .
'
run and five hits in seven innings to
Millwood matched h1 ~ v1ctory win his second consecutive Slart .
total from laS! yeat, h1s lirst full
Oc1J1;oo Dutcl r7-2). who hadn 'l
major league ~..:a.:-.on. He impro\cd to h1~1 in 12 ~tart!! ~inn~ hi ~ major
5-0 in his last seven s1ans afler hold- league debu1 June 26 againSI Atlanta.
ing the Padres to one run on five hits. gave up s1x n,ms and seven hits in
"We needed a big ~lart from him 'thn;e innings.
to kind of get us out nf this liule funk
In other NL games. it 'was
we've been in the la&lt;tthree games," Milwaukee 4. St. Louis 1: Ams&gt;na 2,
Braves third baseman Chipper Jones P·i usburgh I; San Franc1scu 3,
said. " He cenainly shut them down · Florida 0. and M ontreal 3. Los

..

AngelesO.
B"'wers 4, Cardinals I
Sccoll Karl ( I0-11 ) potched &gt;even
strong innings and Marquis Grissom
and Jeff Cirillo had key hils in a
.three-run seventh for Milwaukee at
St. Louis.
Grissom 's two -out ~ingle off
Manny Aybar (4-5) snapped a 1- I ue.
Cirollo, baning - ~ 17 again&gt;! the
Cardinals this season and .3~8 for his
career. added a two-run double .
The Brewers have won thrt!c
slraight and are 40-37 on "the road.
but just 24-43 a1 home . The
Cardinals . without injured Mark
McGwire. have los1 six of seven and

are a ~ason-worst nine games belowo ·
.500.
Diamondbacks l, Pinta I . ,.
In Phoenix, Hanley Frias singlc:td:'
and scored the winning run OIT
Piusburgh first baseman Kevin
•
Young's fielding error.
Erubiel Durazo had a &gt;olo homer
and a &gt;ingle in three at-bat&gt; for the···
Di .,
., 1 \ \~ho v.on for the
ninth 11me m 10 games - the last
five in a row - and reduced their···
'magic number.IO 10
Marc Wilkins (2-3) gave up Friaf
hit and one unearned in the nimh'.
Greg Swindell (3-0) gal two oulS in
the eighth.
.,

PEPSI,
MT. DEW :
PRODUCTS.
4

STORE HOURS
Mondar thru
Sundar
8 AM-10 PM
298 SECOND ST.

89

Accepts Credit Cards

2 UTERS

WE
THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SEPTEMBER 18, 1999

WE ACCEPT WIC ·coUPONS

PEPSI, MI. DEW, Dt

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

.PEPSI,-PEPSI ONE,
DR PEPPER, 7 UP

.

.

2/$

Ohio H.S.
football poll ,
BONELESS PORK SIRLOIN

COLUMBUS, 'Oh ip (AP} -· How
a stale panel of spans wriltrs and
broadcasters mles" Ohio high school
footba ll teams in the first of eight
weekly 1999 Associated Press poll,
by OHSAA divisions, wilh won-lost
record and total points (first-place
voles in parentheses):
Dhision I

FULLY COOKED•GRILLED CH~~KE"SJ69

Breast Fillets ......-...

na.
... 2 16

Iwn

J.Canton McK i nl~:y ( 16) 3-0 .
St Xavit!r ~ -0 .......
3- GroveCll)' (J ) 3-0 .. .......
2~Ci u

...... . .....

.119 .

S· Youngs . Bcardman 3·0 ................................ 100
6-Cm. Elder (2) 3-0 ... ......................................93
7-Centervilte (3) 3.0 ...., ..., ...... .••..
. ,..116
~ - C 1 n . Moelln (I ) 2- 1................................. ,..... 83
I.J. WcstcrvalleSouth (I )3-0 ...............................6 1

10-Cle St lgnatms 2-1 .....1...
., .......... 56
Others receiving 1l or more points: 11-

llrunswic k ~8.. 12-Worthi ngton KilbOurne 41. 13-N.
Can ton Hoover 41. 14-Solon JQ . 15-lakewood St.
Edward 3 1. 16-Mayfield 25. 17-Huber Hts. Wayne
19. lti..Cm Colerain 18. 19-Tol. Sl. John's 16. 20..
Snndt1sky 15. 21-Wamn Hardi ng 13

'

Otvlslon II
\-Mentor lake Cath . ( 12) ].0 .... ...... . ........ 176
2-Col.' D rookha ~·en (2) 3-0.
.. ... ,.......148
URI~'II'U ow n Lake (4) ,1·0......
... 148
4-Dnwr {I) ~-0 . ...
.. . 98
5-Tiffin Columbian ( I) J-0 .
..... 91·
rl· l,1{1ua (I) J.Q ......... ......... .. ............... .-90
7· Tr~n t nn Edgewood (I) ~-0
. ... 71

·' ·0..... :.............................68
9-Cuy. Fa IIi Walsh JesUit 1· 1...
65
~ - Cm . McNichol~s

:\ hil s K1n)! S 12) 50. 12-Maneua J8 \ .\·Lebanon (1)

· .n

14 -Cira ll nn Midview

IS -Macedonm

17

:'\Jordol'llll ;~ 16-Madison ] 4 17 -Cul lnd~pendencc:

11

I M - l'dm~

18 J9, Perrysburg

2~

20-Ch ill icothe

22 ! 1 ltiC 1 - R~n~nna - Whi1ehouse 1\0ihony
P}

!l - Wam~n

Wa~ ne

Howland D

Dh·lslon Ill
I-C 11I W:memmr7JJ .O..
2·Stc•u \"lt:nnlk 1 ~ 1 .\.Q
\-Lmm Bmh (! J3·0 ..................
-l-Belllm)(lk (6} .l-0
5- Polilnd Scmmary ( I J 3-0 ..
fl·C:IlJ'IIe) 1I ) 1-0

.

.

.

FRESH GROUND

.

.

12 01

,

.

JAMESTOWN .BREAKFAST LB.
Bacon~~ ••••••••••• ~ •••

1''
99 c

79~\U;~tl

(chunk. crushed. sliced)

DEL MONTE ·
SQUEEZE
KETCHUP

Division IV
l·Gl•nnnntown Vn!kv Vii!w (~ ) 2·1
.. . 109
2-Youngs Mooney {412· 1.
. .'............... 106
1-Bdh•tlle ClcJr Fork t:l)J-0 .
.. .. IOJ
4-Whcdcrsburg ( 1)3·0 ......
. 87
~.Chagrtn Falls (4)3-0..
.. ........................ 86
Hnmihon Baditd-0 ... .......
.. .. 86
?-Cold wate r 12 ) 2-1 ... ....... ..
· .. 83
11-Cm. Wyonung (J) ]..0. ..
.. ... 72
CJ-Uticn i IJJ·069
10-Cul. R"•d&gt; J-0 .....
..: ...66
Sandusk)' l' erkm~ 1-0 ....... .......................... ·66
Others rtctll'lng U ur more points: 12·
Belhme {2) 63. B ·C!n. Mariemont 51. 14-0ak
1brt&gt;or -l8. IS-Wauseon ( I ) 4-J. 16 (ue) -Girard Stnllhers 30. IS-Ironton 28. 19-Ca mpbell Memorial.
Ill 27 . 20-Navarn: fa1rless 16. 21-Warren
Char1p1on 22. 2!-Aiban.y Ale , andcr 19. 23 ~ Mnnin s
hTT)' 16. 14-C m Mad~trn 12.

~ -B c drord Ch~nel (2) 3·0 .....

16

.'1 - Mah• cm l~ .

lOib

Potatoes~ •••••••••••••
BORDEN AMERICAN

1-MII15tcr 1.0

(2) J.Q
I I J J -0
fl·Tmo nto(IJ1.0
7· Kir1lanr! ( I) ~.0
~ - Dum die ~ -0 .
1J·Spn1f.)1. fl cld Cath C~nt
':0.
10-Mc Donuldti J 2- I
.
..
.
Othrr~ rccchln~ IZ or mon points : I I (lie)·
llo:al\ s; 11tc-C:"'c) \~ 11-Ncw M:uamorJs Frontier
14 14 ·C II1 Co untry Oa) ) I 15-Deliance Arers\lllc
~9 16 (nci- Ne\\ Uremcn. l'andom-GIIboa 2!! . 18·
\nt~crp 11 \9 (tiel-Bellaire St. Juhn· M~Comt- 18.
~ 1-l'll}allllgfl Hb .. 17 12-Morral Rnlgeqn le 14 .

12 oz.

$)99

·
.
2/$

3

Cheese Singles.....
24~1.

Bread ••••••••••••••••••• SJ19
•

VIENNA
So1.

Sausage •••••••••••••••

5/$2

II

Di visio n VI
1-DdphosSt Jo hn ' ~(l(iJJ.Q
!-Ney,ruk Cath. t-I JJ-0..
-I· M oga.l or~

.

UNITED VALLEY BELL

.. .............. 54

SMUCKER'S ·

EMPRESS
PINEAPPLE :

7-C m. Pun;cll f\\:ui:m 2- 1.
. ...... 75
X-Orr.·dl e {.!) l·J ..,.
..74
1 ~- Bclkvuc (11 ~ - 0
... " ....... ...... .....
..7 1
IO·Sunbury Big Walnut 1I ) J.Q .....................15.1
Oth~:n: rtcti~Jng 112 or mort points: J I·
Jat" ksnn fi! 12-Pcrry 60 . U -St . Paris Graham H.
\4-Hummg Valle~ Umv Sd1ool (I) ]0. 15-Akron
Hoban ~9 16-\VJIIard.l-1. 17-Col DeSale~ 19. 18·
D,1ytnn Dunbar 1~

9-;arookvilleJ-0 ......................................... 46
IO-N L1ma S. Range (I ) J.Q. .... .... . . .. 44
Others receiving 11 or mon! points: 11-0ak
Htll 41 12-Milford Ctr. Fairbanks ( l ) J4 IJ (he)·
Chesupeake· Mnsslllon Tuslaw JJ
15-W
A I C~tand na Tw1n Valley S. ~2 16·~nmesville JO.
17-Diuffton 29. 18-Bamvin 28. 19 (tie)-tibeny Ctr.
(I r- Versa11les 26. 11-Middletown Fen w1 ck l5 22
u1e)· Dal11more L1hert)' Union (I )-Woodsfield
Monroe 24. 24-Roc kford Pnrkway 2~ . 25Co lumbus Grove (1 ) 21 . 26- W Jeffer.snn 20. 21( hilhcothe Huntmgton. 19. 28 -Lisbon And~.rson {\ l
II\. 29 (!JCJ·C'moksvi lh:· Johu stown Northndg~ (I)

13.25 oz..

320Z.

.106
.. .. 86 .

Di"Vb:lon \1
! .St . Henry(9)2·0 .. ·...... ..... ...
.. 182
~. H:. mle r Ptltnc k Henry(~ ) .~·0.. ...
... 120
J•Apple Cree"k Wayncdale J-0 ......
..... 98
qe , VASJ (4) J-0 .... ....
.. ... 98
~ ~Orwell Grand Valley _
,..0.... .
......... 65
6-Mctamora E\'ergreen 3-0 ..... ..... .....
.. .. 59
7·0~Jp hus Jefftrson 3-0 ..... ,... ....
. .. 56

A!!STFLAV

c

••••••••••

.. llZ
.114

2/$
OR JAM

Round ••••••••••••••• ·
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF $
Sirloin Steak........•....
WHOLE SMITHFIELD EASY ~ARVE ~=NILES$

LAY'S
POTATO
CHIPS

GRAPE JELL

$)19

LB.

. 18 1
165

.... ...... .. ..... 1 ~...

1

LB. .

LB.

lll-Marvsl'ille ( I) .1 ..0 .. . ...... .......... .... j7
Others re,·eh·Jng 11 or more PQ inls: 11 -Kmgs

ot

$ 09
Chuck.,. ............... _

FRESH GROUND

·

9c
ogs.........~·········~···
99 c

SHUP_ERID~R'S

.. ... 128
.. ............ ... 120

4-Massillon Wa~ hm gt on3-0 ......

6 PK 24 oz. NRs

$ )59

'
~
.
Ch ops.......................... ·

MACARONI &amp;
CHEESE DINNER

2/$1

TREET
(REG OR 50% LESS FAT)

_- 79c
12

7.25

oz.

.

Orange Juice • ~ 1:'...

------- ----·-

-

12

$) '29

·

•.
28

oz. .

ARMOUR
POTTED MEAT

419
FROZE(~sstvar)
9
9
9
D1nners ........................

BA.NQUET

C

9-11 oz

2/$

BROUGHTON PREMIUM

' flav)
ICe Cr.ea m
••••••••••••
(asst

STOKELY
VEGETABLES

~:,~, 1
14 25. 15.25 oz

•
'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Astros rout Phils 12-2,\win 12th straight game &amp; hi-ke lead;,

~- TilfinCalll•n

Janet Howard, President

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

--------··

...

1/2 gal.

5

.

·,

30Z

Win A

STOKELY
TOMATO ~UICE

79

C

~soz.

BANKROLL
This Week
Powell's Super
Value

$200
Cash!

'

�•
•

•

P-.ge 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Contract extension
given to automakers
By JUSTIN HYDE
Associated Press Writer
• AUBURN Hll..LS. Mich. -Talks between the United Auto Workc"
and DaimlerChrysler AG stretched into the wee hours today as the umon
·granted an opcn ~ ended exten!iiOn to automakcrs' contracls that cover
.407.000 workers.
'
While there was no word on progress from the union or DaimlerChrysler, the continumg talks were a sig'n that a deal could be imminent.
Talks between the union and ·General M}ltors Corp. ended late Tuesday
evening . while negotialfons at Ford Motor Co. were much less intense .
DaimlcrCh&lt;)·sler spokesman David Barnas saiJ early today that the

union had granted the company an indefinite extensiLm of it s three-year

contract. and talks for a contract cu\•ering 7S ,()(X) worl"Crs would l'Ontin~·
ue into the morning . Similar extensions wac gi\'cn ~ o GM and Ford on

Tuesday.

"We ' re still hopeful we '-'-111 be able

get a eontract \\'ithouL stgnifi·
cant work stoppage." DaimlcrChryslcr co·chainnan Bob Eaton sa1d at a
·news conference Wednesday at the Frankfurt International Motor Show.
\Vhile marathon talks are a traditional sign of progress.. there also were
s·igns of strain between the union and DaimlcrChrysler. National n~go·
tiators. including UAW President Stephen P. Yokich. \\ere mocting at
DaimlerChryslcr heaJquaners whc:n "urkers at five plants 111 M1ssouri and
Indiana staged a brief walkout Tuesday night .
Worker&gt; at two DaimkrChryskr plants in Fenton. Mo .. outside of St.
· Louis. walked off the joh at 9:45 p.m. EDT and started p1c keting . The
.·plants. which make. the highly prntltahk Dodge Ram truLks and DaimlcrChryskr's minivans. ('.mplyy ahout 7.100.
About 15 minutes later. workc.rs at two transmtssion plants and a casting plan! in Kok omo. lnJ .. walked oil the job. DaimlcrChryskr nfTicials
. smd . Those plants employ a wtal of 8AOO workers.
Th.: pic k(' I signs in Fent\m went d own ahout an hour after they we111
up . On~.? lm:al in Kukomo ..,aid members should report lO work as scheduled toda~ : a JelL' phone m~.? Ss agc at ;t FenlOn ll"-=Uitold work~rs to do the

I

I

I

to

same.
_ Barna~ s;.~id th(' union has not told Dail~llcrC:hry~lcr the reason lor lht:
walkout .... OffiL·ial~ at ]llcals m Mi~ S{ IUri -an'd Indiana could not he reached
for C(ln1111Cnt .
Wages. joh security. health care cost~. overtime dl'mands and the assigrtrnent of v. ork.111 nulsidl' ~uppliers were t;&gt;xpectcd to hi.' among the 10p issues
in this y~ar's ta l ~s. as Ihey were during the last round' in 1996.
Un·ion leaders· have said that workerS were entitled to a share nf record
automakcr profitS: the three companies combined em ned more than $5 ..5
billion in the second quarter of 1999.

Casino hotel workers walk off· job
By JOHN CURRAN
Associated Pren Writer

Coolvill.e, underage consumption_.

Arnold . Rutland. overload. $335 plus
cosis: David R. Eakins. Pomeroy. seat
belt . $25 plus costs; Donald A. Har·
tung. Pomeroy. seat belt. $25 plus
costs: Neil D. Snyder, Alverton. Pa ..
seat belt. $25 plus cos ts;
John T, Baxter. Pomeroy, failure to
cono-ol, $20 p.lus ~osts; Kenneth R.
Richmond, Trumbull. rear view mir·
ror. $20 plus cost" uns~fe vehicle.
$20 plus com: Holly R. Milhoan.
Long Bottom. speed. $30 plus msts:
Darrell K. Rowley. Ritchie . W.Va ..
seat belt , $25 plus costs; Meli ssa J .
Goble, Pomeroy. scat beli, $25 plus
cos t ~: Bruce . C. Grecnlec., Orldndo.
Fla .. spood, $25 plus costs ; Marcella
F. Weber. Pomeroy. left of center, $20
plus costs; Rachel E. ·Pro!'fitt. Point
Pleasant. speed. $.10 plus cos ts:
Joh'nathan. J Nagle. Mecrue. \V.Va ..
&gt;peed, $:10 plus costs; Nathan T.
_Boron. Newport. seat hch. $25 plus
costs: Susan P. Wolfe. Junction City.
s pe~d. S30 plus cos t~: Tum1el Ccdrec.
Sto,ncham . Quchcc , speed. $30 plus

$50 plus costs. three days jail sus·
pended; Keith Barrett, Langsville:
driving under · the influence. · $850
plus costs, 30 days jail· suspe nded to
10 days, one year ope rator's license
suspension. one year probation: dri ving uridcr financial responsibility
action suspension. S200 plus costs.
30" days jail suspended to ·1 0 days
concurrent,. one ye ar· ·probation ;
squealing tires, costs; Bruce M .
FIJcnd. Le tart. W.Va., DUI, $850 plus
costs, 30 days Jail suspended to 10
day s, one year 0~ sus pension . one
year probation, 90-day vehicle immobjlizati on ;
Charles Ohlinger Jr., Pomeroy.
DUI . $~50 plus costs, 10 days jail
suspended to three d ays, 90-day OL
suspension. o ne year probation, three
days jail a nd $550 suspended upon
completi on of residential treatment costs: Galo~k1 Hosh1.ns, Willmette.
ptog ram within 90 days : scat belt. Ill . speed . $30 plus costs: Darlene L.
25 plus costs: left of center. costs: Moodispaugh. Pomeroy. 'cat hell.
p ·cssion of drug paraphernalia. · $ 15 plus costs ; Larry 0 . Sellers.
$~0 us costs: possession. $50 plus Pomeroy, scat belt. $25 plus costs:
Cf!Sts: Mark A. Rciunire. Pomeroy.
Sara L. .Partlow. Rutland. scat belt.
assautt. co~ts. two years ·pr0bation. S25 plus costs: CarolS. Dailey, Port·
r&lt;!straining nrdc r issued. six months land , failure to stop and yield at stop
jq;il s uspe nded to I 0 day s; Joh nnie T. sign, $20 plus costs: Megan C. Druln ·
Owen s. Che shire. seat l&gt;elt. $ 15 plus me r. Rutland , seat belt , $25 plus
cOsts; Alkia R. Mulford, Rac ine , .-..cat costs; Clifford Murray 'Jr., Pomeroy.
b~lt. $15 plus costs: Dereck S. Scott. seat belt . $25 plus costs; Alma
G:hesa[lcakc. speed. $~0 plus costs: Katherin e, Bolivar, speed, $30 plus
eXpired registration. $20 plus costs: costs ; Rick A. Hoffman, Parkersburg,
[)Svight Bogart .' Sardinia. failu re to W.Va .. seat belt, $25 plus costs: Car·
c&lt;mtro l. $20 plus cos ts; Martha D. oli ne A. Ostand, S1ssonville. speed, .
·Raven. Ci nci nnati , spee d. $50 plus $30 plus costs: Roge Paul. Glenshaw,
at i"'ts;
Pa., speed , $30 plus costs: David,A.
· Patrick C. Hale &gt; Athens, speed. Stewart, Albany. seat belt. $25 plus
$30 plus costs: Ronald D . Vogel song, costs; speed, $55 plus costs; Kim·
HOckingport. scat belt , $ 15 plus berly Renee Carl, Clifton. seat belt,
cqsrs; Gaile L. Drummond, Bidwell , $25 plu s costs; James R. Johnson Jr.,
o~load. $430 plus costs;· Stephanie Middleport, overload, $175 plus
D: Sneed' , Point
Pleasant. scat belt, costs: Raymond J . Ward. Middleport,
.
$35 plus costs: James E. Harman Jr.. speed. $30 plus costs; Hawld A. Par·
S~racusc, Scat belt, $ 15 plus costs; son, Lon g Rotto m, seat belt. $25 plus
Shelly L. HardiSon, Palm City. Fla ., costs ; expired reg istration. $20 plus
speed. $30 plus cos ts: Amanda Marie \COSts; Christina J. Holl oway,
L;nch: Walkcrwnod , w.v,l .. seat belt. Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 p.lus costs;
$t'i plu s costs: speed, $55 plus costs; Donna J. Turner. Portland. scat hclt,
T'&lt;"Y H~yse, Pomeroy ..seat belt, $15 $15 plus costs ; Noel K. Metz, Belpre,
plus cos ts; Mark R. Moore , Athens, seat belt, $15 plus costs ;
seat belt , $25 plus costs: Randall L.
Kenneth A. Mctz. Belpre. scat

.

belt. $25 plu s costs: Kimberly Bash.
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs:
Steven Wayne Shull. Pomeroy, speed.
$30 plus costs: Dwnc M. Adams.
Vinton. scat hell, $25 plus c·osts:
Kevin D. Hunt. Vinton, scat hell . $ 15
plus coio.ts ; Vit:tor E. Vinuc .
We nt Lv ille, open con;aincr. $30 plus
costs : Dwight Bogart San.lim a. open
container. $30 plus costs: William J.
Campbell Jr.. Detroit. ope n contain·
cr. S30 plu s costs: Terry Hulton .
Bctc h Grove. ope n t:ontaincr. $30
plus cust~; Charles Wagner. Racine.

NOTICE OF THE PUBLIC HEARING
.Meigs County intends to apply to the Ohio Department of Development for funding under
the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Microenterprise a federally -funded
pt·ogram administered by the State. Meigs County is eligible for Fiscal Year 99 CDBG
Mi.croenterprise funding in the estimated amouilt of 150;000, providing the county meets
applicable requirements.

open .:.:ontai ncr.. $~0 plu ~ costs: Shcr.
ry Ri ckard .' Parkersburg. open con·

1ainer. $30 plus costs: Lisa M. VoE!cl ·
sung, 'Long Bqf10111, ~c,at bclt 1 $:2:1
plus cos ts; left of center. $20 plus

The first of two public hearings will be held September 20; 1999 at i:15 P.M. at the r~g­
ular meeting of the Meigs County Commissioners, Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Ohio to provide citizens with the pertinent infomtation about the CDBG program including an explanation o.f eligible activities and program requirements. The goal of the CDBG
Microenterprise program . is to provide low to moderate income person~ -with aec~ss to
capital for business development and self employment. 'The activities must be designed to
primarily benefit low and moderate-income persons or limited clientele.
·

costs:
· Allen Maynard , Rac ine. stop sig n.
S20 plus ~osts: Benjamin H. Mar·
shall. Middleport , scat belt . $25 pius
costs: Larry Church. Coolville. speed,
$30 plus costs: James P. Broderi ck.
Middleport, scat belt. $25 plus costs;
David K . Vujaklija. Reed sv ille,
speed, $30 plus costs; William E . .
Johnson, Marietta, speed, $30 plus
costs; scat belt, $25 plus costs; Diane
M. Adams, Vinton , scat belt, $25 plus
costs·; Kevin D . Hunt , Vinton. scat
belt , $15 plus costs; Alma Katherine .
Bolivar, speed, $30 pills costs;
Benjamin H . Ewing II. Pome roy,
speed. $30 plus costs; John P. Riley.
New Have n, speed, $30 plus· costs;
Robert J . Horton, San Jose. Ca ..
speed , $30 plus costs: James E. Ran·
dolph, Racine. failure to maintain
assured clear distance , $20 plus cos ts;
Jason L. Smith, Bidwell. window tint ,
$20 plus costs; Maureen K. Young .
The Plains, speed, $30 plus costs:
Richard S. Sweeney, Murray, Utah .
no highway use'tax.sticker, $30 plus
costs; Michell Wilson , Shade, failure
to control, $20 plus costs; Kenneth
M. Swann, Pomeroy, scat belt , $25
plus costs; Randolph W Yoa k,
Grantsville, overload, .$694 plu s
costs; Daniel Tho mas Graf. Loga n,
seat hell, $25 plu s costs; speed. $55
plus cos ts; Dale T. Bra nt , Dunhar.
W.Va .. speed, $50 plus costs: Mi chael
D. John son, Mason, speed. $30 plu&gt;
costs : John R. Alkire , Coolville . .
speed, $30 plus costs.

Page7 :

Wednesday, September 15, 1~

was writtt=n by a lhird· gradci and

'

appeared in the newsletter of t tie
Saint Andrews Soc1ety of WaSh·
ington, D .C. It first appeared in my
column in 1979. Here u IS agam .
Th~nk you for asking .
What is a Grandmother?
A grandmother is a .lady who ha&gt;
no little . children of her own . She
hkcs other people's. A grandfatl&gt;er:JS
a man grandmother.
. Grandmothers don't have to do
anything exc~pt be there . They are
o ld, so they shooldn't play hard or
run . It IS enough 1f they drive us to
the ·market and have a lot of dimes
ready
. Whe n they take us for walk 1.
TI1e~ ~ l ow down past things like
preuy leaves and caterpillars. They
never say "' hurry up."
Usually grandmothers arc fat , but
nol too fat . to tic your shOes. They
wear glasses and funny undcrwc:)r.
They ~.:an lake their teeth our.

Society Scrapbook

Grandmotl&gt;er; don 't have to be
smart. tl&gt;ey o nly have 10 answer
quest1ons hke. "Why isn 't God mar·
ned.'" and "Ho" come dogs chase
cats'' " When the y read to us . they
don 't sk.1p lmc ~ or mmd 1f we a-.k for
the same s10ry over agam
Everybody ; hould try .to have a
grandmo ther. especially 1f you don 't
have a TV. becau&gt;C 1hey are 1he only
grown-ups who haH· umc .
Dear Ann: A!) :.1 sc mor ctltlen. I
keep losmg dear fncnd ~ Man y

the spouse lca\ e:o. 1hc
deceas:ed pcr~ o n · ~ voice on the1r
an:;.werm!! mach1ne Whc.·n I hear the
times·.

familiar \OicC of th~ dt=pancd 'a~.
"One of us will call ) uu hack J '
soon as '-" C can:· I ~Nan unco mfurt.
able and sad feeling .
My best friend ha&gt; ke pt h"
decea~cd wife 's \ Oice on h1 . , an~\\t=l·

ing machine for fnore than
years. I find 1his

I\\

o

extreme!~ dc pico:..~·

ing. How do you feel ahout this:
Fr. ATKINSONi
WIS .
DEAR1 T0\1 : Two )Cars " too
long to a\ ol d rcahty. Your be&gt;{
fnend IS in need uf gnef co un~chng .
and the sooner the beuer. Send h 1m
thi s column.
An alcohol problem ? How can
you help you"elf or someo ne you
lo ' e' Alcoholi sm : Ho" to Recog·
nize lt. Ho" to Deal Wuh It. Ho w to
ConquCr It" ulll g1\~ )OU the
an~wers. Se nd a self addressed,
lOng. b.usine~ s ..,1,e emcll)pe and a
ched:. or rnone ~ order for SJ .75 (this
Ann ~ ·• TOM IN

mdude ... po,tage and hanJhng) to:

Alcohol. do Ann LJnders. P.O. Box
11562. CIHcago. Il l h0611 -0:\62 . (in
Canada. ~end $455 .) Tn find out
~norc ab0ut Ann Lander ~ and read
her pa.. . t -..:ulumrh .. \ i ~it the CrcJtors
SyndiCate \' i..~r. p;tge al W\\" ere·
JIOT S.I:i.l ffi .

.

Heallh Club gi&gt;·cs school sup· the program hy Lenora Lci1llcll and a nd feel s like cotton .
prayer hy Ann Lambert.
" When the Roll is Called Up
plies Co-op
the contest' hv Nanc)' Gruc~cr.
Schoo l supplies for Mci gs C oun-• LciThcil .~n·cd ·re freshment~ to Yonder". wrilttll by a RUtlahd man.
Farewell party honors departing
'
ly Coopc rati\ C Pari sh distrihull o n Phylli s Skinner. Fran ces Goeglcin. \\as sung to open the 'meeting . TI1e pastor
Florence
Ann
.
Richard,
and ' Tim
were brought to a recent mec.ting of Dorothy Jeffers. Barb Fry. Lenora prayer song was "More About Jesus :
the Rock Sprin gs Better Health Quh . L~ifhcit. Suzi e Mao;; h. Nancy Morris. .and the orcning prayer wa~ £ivcn by Spencer hosted a farewe ll wiener
· Jean lll Omas . There were spec ial roast for Paslor Sharon. Haus man at
held at the Rock Springs Church .
and a guest . Tammy Mash.
songs by · Knecn.. ··Ask the Lord ': their home in Tuppers Plains on
It was noted that France s Goe·
along with a medley of "T o God Be Sept. II.
gl~i n will bring supp li e&gt; for the Co-- Program presented
Hal Knccn gave a ptog ram on theGlory". ·'Because He Lives" and
Marilyn Ro binson won the huS·
o p to the October meeting.
band-calling contest. Da';,e Bar·
Barbara Fry presided at the met· recycling at tfJ.c recent meeting of " How Great thou Art .""
ing which opened with the Lord's the Me1gs County . Churches o f
. Lynn Runyon of Bradbury ringer had the closest guess to the
Prayer and the pledge to the flag. Christ Women's Fellowship held at Church had devotions using " When candy count in a jar. Janice Weber
God Waits." There were 23 attend- and Eva Johnson won the d oo r
Lenora Leifheit had de vuLions titled the Bradford Church of Christ.
"God is Listening" and "Faith."'
"Toge1her We Can Do It" was the ing . Cards were sent to Marilyn pnzes.
Others attending were Sarah
Office rs· reporls were presented and topic used by Kneen . Meigs County Wilcox . Lo is McElhinny. and Bob
Caldwell, Doris and Lloyd Dillinger,
· repons Were given on th e sick and , ExtensiOn agent, who described the Hoenich .
The next meeting will be a Russell Archer. Charlotte and War·
environment as being iry trouble. He
shutins.
Phyllis Skmner presented the co mm e nt ed on st ream soluli on,' potluck at 6 p.m. Sept. 30 at Dave ren Van Meier, Melvin and Gertrude
program in .the absence of Nancy overnowing landfill s. toxic waste, Diles Parle Bradford will have devo- Tracy, Marlene Dovovan, Will
Grucser. It incl ud ed "H omemade and illegal dumps. He suggested that tions and 'members were reminded Poole, Thelma Henderson, Victor
Furi" by Dorothy Jeffers: '"Should cvel)'onc recycle. train their c hihJ,rcn to take paper productdor .the camp. Bahr, Nina Robin&gt;on, John Taylor,
It wa s announced that Zion's Bettie Bow. Brendan. ~nd Conan
you Get a n Ultrasound with a Mam- to recycle at home. and teac hers· to
Homecoming will be held Sunday. · Lind, Kirk Allen, Mary Jo Barringe r. ·
·mogram''; "Dmg'A icrt: by Frances te,ac h recycling in the schools.
Sept. 19 with Jennifer Gruver H.ic ks Gary and Brenda Johnson, Joe and
Goeglcin; " Housekeeping Habits:
He also noted that there is a com·
by Barb iua Fry: "Tumm y Ache pany that comes in around April to to have the program in the after· Pat Mayhew. Pete and Osie Follrod ,
noon . Women 's Retreat at the Ohio .Joe. Laurie. Matt, Ashley and Janae
Relief: by Lenora Leifheit:·· and pit:k up ha7.ardous wastes. We can
Valley Christian Campgrounds will Boyle s, Nellie Parker, Dan . Shelia.
··summer Remembrance: by Tammy reduce, reuse. 'recycle. and buy recybe held Se pt . 24 and 25.
Kin. Tiffany and Danielle Spencer,
cled products . He displayed a t·shirt
Mash .
The meeting closed ivith a song. all local : Eleanor Boyles, Belpre:
The October mee ting will b ho:o.t· made , from recycled plastic boules
ed by Barbara Fry a.t her hoc wit~ and recycles cotton ca lled Foitron. '"Burden~ ctre Lifted .at Calvary" and Doug, Su san and Michael Trout.

a,k~d the member!\ 10
think o f h.lc~~ thdt \\·C could do tO
-.uppon the dlUn.: h.
Birthday to be observed
Mar) Cleek. corresponding M!'CCora \Val lacc. fnrmer ow ner l&gt;f rdar). reported tJ1at "thinking of
Wallace Jewelry in Middlcpurl. \\111 vuu.. l' ard.., had ·hl'cn :-ent tO Naom1
ce lebrate her 90th blrlhda)· o n Sept. · "'e,·illc. Esther West. Bob Hoefl ich.
22. Cards may he sent to her "t I027 and Pauline Wo lfe arid that ~y mpa·
Lakeview Drive : Be\crlv. Ohin thy cards were mmled. to Martha
45715 .
, Lou and Tomm) Beegle. Ann Boso
\\as tn charge of the prngram and
Sonshine Circle meets
discussed items using the five scns·
The Sonshine Circle of the Dar· cs . She abo told a story abou t the
cas United Me thod is t C hurch met o;;ong "Jesus Luve~ Mc''and read
last week at the c hurch with Lois scripture from John 3: 16. and read a
Sterrett. president. conducting the poem titled " Jesus Loves Me:·
rnce lin g ~
·
Refreshment s were se rved by ThelOfficers' reports were given by ma Walton and Edna Knopp to the
Kathryn Hart. secre tary, anq· Letha ahove named individuals and Mabel
Pruffiu, assistan t treasurer. It was Brace, Manic .Teaford . Naomi
noted that the group made $54.75 on Neville . Mildred Hari. Emeline
the si lcru auction that \\'·as held at the Sayre , Sheila The11s, Lmda Russe ll.
last meeting . A $ 10 .donation was Joan n ·Lee. S~aron Birc h. Janet
acknowledged. The circle decided to Theiss. Martha Lou Beeg.le. Lillian
have a yard and bake · sale at the · Hayman, Ruth' Simpson,and Sally
church o n·Oct. 2. Anyone wanting 19 Gloeckner. Next meeting will be on
donate item s may co ntact StCrrcll at Oct: 14, with Mary Cleek to have
949-0032 or Han at 949-2656. All · the ·program a nd Mallie Teaford and
proceeds will go to benefit the Mabel Brace to serve refreshment s.
churc h. · Sterrett read Psalm 46: I 0 Women of the coni.munitv are tn\ il·
·
and a poem wlcd " Where God ed to attend.

Ryan and J . J. Bailcv. Cold Spring.
Ky.

Am ' t". She

'

It

\
•

Citizens are encouraged to attend .this meeting on September 20, 1999. to make suggestions and to provide public input on various activities which may'be ur{dertaken in this
J.H·ugram. If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailled or taped material , assistive listening device, other) due to a disablilty, please contact Gloria Kloes, Clerk,
prior to September 20, 1999 ',lt 740-992-2895 in order to ensure that your needs will be
accommodated. The Meigs Covnty Courthouse is handicapped accessible.
Written ·comments will be accepted until 1:00 P.M., ' S'eptembe1· 20, 1999 and may be
mailed to the Meigs Court Commissioners,, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
'

Janet Howard, President
Meig~ County Comniissionet·s

I

~ecorder posts Meigs land transfers .
;The following land transfers were.
Dc"cd. Jack 0 . Devore to Jack 0. Chester;
rerorded recently in the oiTice of Devore. Steven Neville. Pa ula A.
Sherifl's Deed , George Brickl cs,
Meigs County. Res:order Judy King:
C lark . Chester parcels: .
George W. Brickles to Benefic ia-l
Deed. LuthcrE Jr. and Veneva M. Mortgage Company. . Pomeroy
: Deed, Lilli a n D. Cun nin gham, L
A; Cunningham, Lawrence Cun · Gilliam to Donald L. and Sh irley A. parcels:
·
ningha m to Hagerty an d Mitchell
Mas!1. Sut ton parcel s;
·
Deell, Janet M. and William H.
LTD , Columbia parcels;,
Deed . Dale Tayl or 1&lt;1 Sheila M. Bruton Jr. to Lavern and Mary Jor·
: Deed. Ronald L. Carpenter. Linda Partlow, Salisbury:
dan, Columbia;
E,:Carpenter, Ronald Carpent er, Lin ·
Deed. Edith Welch to Annie E'.
Deed, Anthony Land CQmpany
d;rCarpc ntcr. Mary Lou Naft~ger to Martin. Scipio:
LTD to Robert E. and Carol J. Burns,
Ronald and Linda Carpenter. Mid·
Deed, Charles F and Paula J
Salem:
dl¢port ;
Chancey. Donald C. Shaffer to
Deed, Daisy M. Saunders to Myr·
·, Deed , Wanda L. Ebli n to Gregory Steven A. and Carol A. Rifllc. Sutton: tie Ed na Maynard, Middleport:
Steve Eblin , Salisbury parcel s;
Deed. Merlin Harold Tracy Jr ..
Deed, Beneficial Mortgage Com·
: Decd. Thurmond a nd . Betty A . Melva Tracy, Stella Louise Stone and pany to Sand Fork Development
B~iley PoyntertoParhelaJanc Jcnk·
Darrell Stone to Robert B .. and Company, Pomeroy parcels;
in!. Rutland;
'Genevieve E. ~urdette , Salisbury:
Deed, Melanic B. Kittle, Melanic
Deed, DorOthy L. Hoffman 1o B. and John L. Rl~enour to Michael
: Deed, Roger L. and r ubara J .
BiSsell . to John L. and Melanie B. Sandra Kay Salser, Sun(ln :
f'. and Amy L. Young, Sution parcel:
R~enou.r, Chester lot;
Deed. Walter Floyd and AnnaL.
Deed , Teresa A. Carson to Hcnnan
•Deed. Marvin Edward Bickers to Roush to John R. and Cheryl L. A. Carson. Sutton parcels;
Right of way. Victor L. and Vlck·
Seott Allen Ours. Sutton:
Thomas, Sunon ;
:. Deed , Robert C. and Virginia
Deed, Bank of America 10 Gayle ic S. Roush to Columbus Southern
Power. Salisbury:
Diane Homan to Lavern and Mary L. Estes, Olive minerals:
Right o f way. Rick D. and Chery l
Jordan , Columbia parcel ;
·
Deed, William E. and Diane Bar·
L·. Law~on to CSP. Orange:
; Deed , Conso lidated Rail Corp to tel s to Larry R. Durst. Letart ;
Deed. James and Teresa Me: Don ·
P~n sy lvania Lines LLC . Meigs
Deed , Geraldine C. Reed to
aid
to Harley McDonald. Sal ~shury.
.. Michael W. and Connic.J.. Marcum.
parcels :

..

I have sean:hed my soul and do
not agree . with her. Perhaps most
·women would feel otherwise. but I
wanl to know what you think .--.·
HUNTED DOW]Il IN TEXAS
1997, Los Angeles Tt~es Syndicate and
DEAR TEXAS: With all due
Creators Synal ca~e.
respect to your therapist. I disagree
Dear Ann Landers: I am the afr~d that if.I refused, the invcstiga· with her assessment. She has no
'birth mother of an adult daughter tor would contact my parents . whq right to tell you how you feel . You
who was born when I was a tccnag· are both in poor health. I didn't want sound like a woman who has her
er.
them to be upset by this· tum of head on stmight , .and I applaud your
frank self-appraisal. Go aheii\1 and
For many reasons, a closed adop· events. so I met her.. ·
lion was the only viable solution for
She lumed oul to be a very nice. li ,.e your life. I wish you all the best.
Dear Ann L.a~ders: A long time
me. I believed I was gi\'ing my child person. but I have no maternal feel ·
ago.
you printed an 'essay about
the best life she could have, and did ings ror her o r her two young chil·
not feel conflicted o r ambil'alcnt dren . I helicve her adoptive family is grandmothers that I thought was
about .my decision . I went o n with her real family and that my con nec- delightful. Would vou con sider
prinling it again on Grandparent.;;
my life. and ha\'C lived "happi ly ever ti on is biological o nly.
after."
I have told 'cr) fei\ people about Dav fo r those who missed it the first
Rcccntlv. 1 \\as contacted hv an thiS. but I did. tell m y female thera · tirr{e&gt; · A FAITHFUL.READER IN .
in\estigatn.r ""ho ~aid m: Jaughtcr pist wh'o in~ISt' lhat I am in denial HOUSTON
DEA~
GR~NDMA:
With .
wantcd 10 nh.:et m~ . I felt no dc:~m: ahout my maternal feeli ngs and am
pleasure
.
The
es'
s
ay
you
requested
. 'to pu.rsu~ tlk. relationship . hut wa~
ang ry 1hat I \l.' a~ ·· round ." .

-Ann Landers

statistician Larry Sink.
showed less dramatic rate increases.
.. We've seen race relations as a For hainple .California increased its
Hispanic population by 3 1 percent
black-white issue. " said Roderick
Harrison of tlie Joint Center for and its Asian populatum by 34 per·
Political and Economic Studies. a ce nL ·
The e•plosion in Hispanic popu·
Washington think tank . " Clearly, the
lati on lets Latin os sense their growsize of the Hispanic population and
ing political potency .
the Asian populalion turns it into a
Th(' hi£h number of Hispani cs in multiculttiral issue. "
" This is a very crit ical (presidenlarge Electoral College states such.as
The Asian and Pacific Islander tial) race for us , and we will he the
Texas .. California , Florida and New population grew in the 1990s from 3 defining group," Aida Alv~rez. c hi ef
York gives · the group substantial percent of the overall population to of the Small Business Administration.
politi cal c lout. but-the growth of His· almost 4 percent at 10.5 million.
said Tue ;day at a rally for Vice 'Pres·
pani l's showed' up in less expected.
• In Nevada the Asian-Pacific ideill AI Gores presidential camareas.
Islander population increased by 106 paign. "'The 21st century will be a ·
"Four states had their Hispanic percem to ·81,000.
Latin o century, no doubt about it."
po pulations double - Arkan sas,
• In Georgia, it increased by 95
George W. Bush, governor of
Gl'.orgb. Nevada and North Caroll~ . percent Ia 150,000.
· Tex.as and tht ffont·runner in the face
na ... saiJ Census sta11stic1an Larry
• In North Carolina, it increased for the Republican presidential nomSink.
by 87 percenl to 100,000.
ination, also is targeting the Hi span·
• Arkansas· Hispanic population
Dinah Choi, project director for ic vote. A recent poll said he and Gore
mcreaseJ by 150 percent to 49,000. the Asian Pacific Policy and Planning
are splilling lhe Hispanic vote tn
• Georgia's increased by 102 per· Council. said the rapid growth in
Texas, but Bush trails in California.
cent to 220.000.
nul!lbers of Asians emphasizes a
Republican consultanl David Hi II
. • Nev"da 's increased by 124 per- need for an accurate Census count in
of Houston warned a decade ago that
CCiit tO 78,000.
2000.
the GOP needed to gain a bigger
• ·North Caroli n~ ·s increased by
The country's population of share of the Hispanic vote or lose
I I 0 percent to 161,000.
American Indians , Eskimos and
gains made when they carved away
T he Hispanic population, already Aleuts grew 14 percent to 2.4 million
some whites who traditionally voted .
one of the nation's largest minorilies, during the period.
Democratic before the Reagan era.
wi II overtake the non-Hispanic black
States that already had significant
These Democmts came to .be known
population by the end of 2004, said populaiions of specific minorities ·as " Reagan Democrats."

WASHINGTON - The H ispamc
and Asia~ populations of the United
States surged during the 1990s, the
number of Hi spanics growing by
more than 35 percent and Asians
more than 40 percent. the Ce nsus
Bureau says.
A report released Tuesday fur·
nishes fresh evidence of inc:rea!"ing
ethnic diversity and its unpredi ctable
impact on the nation 's political and
social landscape.
The . trcnd is leading to .a time
when "everybody 's a minority. ·· said
Vanderbilt University histori an Hugh
Davis Graham .
·
Blacks, whose nUmbers grew
almost 13 percent between 1990 and
1998. remain the nation's largos!

.

Birth .mother has no maternal feelings for daughter- and no excuses

minority at 12.7 percent. or 34.4 mil ·
lion of the nation 's population of
·about 270 million in 1998 .
Hispanics made up 9 percent of
the population in 1990, and that grew
hy 1998 to just over II percent of the
total. 30.3 million, the annual update
o f the 1990 Census said.

Cases resolved in' County Court
The following casos were settled
recently in the Meigs County Court
of Jud ge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Shannon Nitl.

strike that also could incon,•en1ence
Waders were stnking against the
contestants and fans of the MJ&gt;s Atlantic Cily Hilton. Tropic ana Casi·
n..•prt·~cntaiJ\e~ had agreed on a con·
Amenca Pageant. scheduled for Sat· no Reson, Bally's Park Place. CaelfJCL
urday.
sars Atl~ntic City Hotel Casino, the
Oflictals at thi: affected casinos
Union officials said members are Sands ~otel Casino. Resorts Atlantic
'o'' cd tO remain open during the satisfied with the terms of the resorts' City, T
Plaza. Trump Marina
\\:tllnut , though they said they would
latest contract afTer, but tlley demand and Trump aj-ro.;.nal. &gt;
h.t\C w dose so me of their restau additionally thai bosses stop hiring
Carrying signs. rowdy union
rJ.nl' .
subcontractors who do not pay union members set up picket lines at casiBart,·ndcrs, banquet waiters, cock,
wages.
no entrances and rallied on lhc
tat I Jo.Cner, . m3td~. mailre d 's. cools
Union president Bob McDevitt Boardwalk shouting '" No contmct, no
and other ranlvand-file workers said the casinos failed to live up to the peace· and " Hey. hey. ho. ho. sub:
h:g.m to Ji&lt;appear as the deadline promises made when casino gam- contracting musl go.1..
p.l .; ,~J .
bling was pitched to New Jersey vot- , Po lice said the pickets were nrdcrC.ts~ta..; a nd dealers are not
ers in the 1970s.
ly.
unaoni1cd and ~re nor ranicipa~ing in
Subeootracting '"will erode the
Union nego tiators came to lorm s
thr: '' ork ,sto ppagl- . The caslnos · community and il w.ill make it diffi· wi1h rcprcscntali,es ofHarrah·!lo Casi ~..·m pl o~ between 40.000 and 50.000
cult in the Atlantic City area for no Hotel. Showboat Hotel Casino and
pl'oplr: .
workers to feed !heir families in the · the Clandgc Casino Hotel about 90
The collapse . of co ntract talks
way that was promised by the casino minutes hefore tho midnight deadline.
Tue~day ~~I the sta:ge for a ~isruplive
indusi{Y," McDevitt said.

Census report reveals extent of ethnic diversity .
By WILL LESTER
AssoF.iated P_ress Writer

The Daily Sentine)

•

boa1 , " they yelled .. because repm;cntatJ\c; for Sho,.boat Hotel Casino

ATLANTIC CIIT. N.J . - Rau·
cous piCketers from the ranl" of
14 ,000 stnking hotel workers gre&lt;t·
cd early morning visitors to Atlantic
City casino~ loday.
Members of Local 54 of the Hotel
and Restaurant Employees lnterna·
tiona! walked off the joh at nine ca&gt;i·
no hotels today after their five -year
contract expired at midnight.
, Unll)ll members reached agrccmcnls at three other casi nos hcforc
the deadline .
Among the targets of the stnke ""
the Trump Taj Mahal. At the entrance
this morning . about 100 union mcm·
th=rs jeered people attempting to t.lrive into park4ng areas.
"Go to Sho"boat! Go to Sh&lt;lW·

By The Bend

Wednesday, September 15, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

'

•

Pumpkin Apple Spice, Cinnamon,

Coffee Scents

.CJI!ristm!'S Series, Gallia c_ounty
~''~' . Co~t;fbolise, Gallia County District

~ats Meow Houses

fndudlflg:

·,

Li1it"ary,&amp;·Old Gallipolis Post 0./fice

Gallipolis Garden Center
2~EAIHIN AVE, GALUPILII, OHIO

, . (740) 448·1711 .
IIPfN 7DAYS AMil
'

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

u...__
"""'

- ...

""'-"'
Oiil ; '!k

Sharing hats,·combs and
brushes spread head
lice among children
Question: My son caught head lice while he was at camp this summer. We got him cleared up, but I'm concerned about him gelling them
again now thai he has returned 10 school. There has been a chronic
problem with lice there. What can· I do to prevent hi"' from getting
them agam?'
· Answer: Lice are a type of wingless insecl that live on humans and
most other animals. Fortunately. there are on ly three varieties of lice
that infect humans. and the se -doni infest our livestoc k or pets:
Pediculus humanus corporis (body lice). Pedi culu s humanus capi tis
(head lice). and Phthirus pubis (puboc hce) . As you·vc ·noticed. these
lice are named for the areas of the body where lhey are usually found.
Therefore. your So n has had Ped iculus hum'anus capitis . .
All of these lice · survive ~y usin g humans as their food source.
They bite the s kin. ~o n su me hlood. and lay their t!ggs On t he un luck}
individuaL Their enlirc li fe cycle require s humanS.

The scalp on an individual · wilh hcUd lice has sores where the
insects have biuen. While these sores are soniewhat itchy. the '"ic.·tim

may not complain much aboullhcm. The most obvious sig n of head.
lice is the presence of eggs. These eggs. cal led nils. are s mall graywhite .colored. oval-shaped structures. Each nit j·s cemented to the
~h aft of a hair strand at scalp leveL As the hair grows. it carries the nit
further f,om the surface of the scalp.
Head· lice can hve for up tu two days off a huma'n host. It is possible to acquire yo ur ow n personal head louse by close personal co ntact
with someone who has them or by using a pillow.: hal or co mb of the
infested person . The transferred louse then "est abli shes ,a new home ~:m
your head. Children are often Infested in this way. The. nil can be
spread in the same way as the aduill ouse. but it is even sturdier than
the parent. A nil can remain capable of producing infestation for up 30
d~ys.

Several medicines arc effective at k illin~ adull head lice as well· as
nits . These are usually in the form of sha;Dpoos or lotions and may
contain I percent penne thrin , brand name Ni~: l pe~ce nt
pyrethrins. brand name Rid; 1/2 percent malathion . brand name
Ovide; or I percent lindane. All these medicines work quite well. Each
one should be applied ·accordin.e: to their specific instructions. These
drugs kill adult lice and nits, but none remove nils from the hair.
Repealed combing with a very fine-toothed comb is necessary to
accomplish this ··nil-pic kmg·· task!
•·
To prevent reinfestalion, all of the clothing, bedding, furniture , carpels and other items thai have come in contact with the infested person's head in the last 30 days -the period the nit can survive "off of
a human host .:.._ should be treated. Clothing can he laundered, but an
insecticide spray is usuall y necessary to tre3t the furniture and carpets.
Lice arc a common complication of living in communal groups.
Keeping your child inside a plastic bubble will isolate him from another episode o,f lice. However, I think there is a bener and si mpler soJu.:
tion . Encourage your son to wear onl y hi ~ hat and let no one else wear
his. He should also use only his ow n comb or brush. This. plus the pre- .
ventative measurers practiced in schools. is 4sually sufficient to pre-

Now that area school·s arc in
session again, teachers and students can share delaols of their
summer vacations. For more· than
30 area teachers. that summe r
e&lt;perience included a tour through ·
an underground coal mine at
American
Electric
Power·s
(NYSE: AEP) Southern Ohio Coal
Company.
Southern Ohio Coal Company
(SOCCo) hosted ·32 teachers for
three days during July to hetp -them
le'arn about the coal and electric
utility industries. Participants gave
the e&lt;perie nce excellent marks.
"I was very · impressed with the
entire workshop and learned a
great deal. .. A great experienCe for
me! .'. stated one teacher o n a
workshop evaluation form.
The program. ··spotlight on
Coal. .. featured sessions on coal
geology.
transportation . coal
underground' mining, surface rhin·
ing and land' reclamati on, en·, ·iron·
menta.! cornpliance , sa fet y and
~lectricity

generatiOn. Souther n

Ohio Coal Company employees
delivered the presentations.
'"We try to give them an under·

&lt;ta ndin g of · the · many different
fat.:ets of coa l mining and rcclama·
tion, .. says Chl ori s Gaul. senior
ad ministrative sec retary , who

"Family M~dicine" is a weekly colpmn. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,_Ohio University College of Osteo·
pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio 45701.

coordinated the "orkshop. ··Many
times the best learning e.perience
takes place through pullong on
mining equipment and goong down
. into the mine ...
That's e.actly what participants
did . They toured the Mei gs No. 3 1
underground mine, sojourned IC)
the Meigs Division coal preparation plant, and paid visits to Gavin
generating statipn and AEP "s "River
Transporration Division .
··we believe that it 's important
to share information about our
indu stry."' says Lance Sogan.;
Southern Ohio1Coal Company vice
president and general manager.
··we supporf education and we
enJOY he.lping teachers learn e\'er.y·
thmg they can about our ope ra-tions.
·
Work shop participants also
received malerial s ·· lhat · will help
them incorporate lessons on coal.
power ge nCrati un and tht; env1ron ·
ment into their curric ula . In addition , Lhev earned at.:adcmic· credit
through Ohio Unive rsity.
AEP. ·a global energy .company,
is one of the United States' largest
investor-owned utiliti es. providing
energy to three milli on custo mers
in Indi ana. Kent~cky. Michigan.
Ohi o. Tennessee. Virginia ancl
West Virginia. AEP has holdings in

Community
Calendar
· .

Legislative issues .addressed
by Meigs' Pomona Grange
Several legislative iss ues were man. arinounced that this year 's
d.iScusserl at the recent mee ting of Meigs County Grange princess is
the Meigs County Pomona Grange Whitney Ashley of Racine Grange.
hosted by the Racine Grange.
The co~nly princess is Mi chael
Current problems in the educa- McCumber of "star Grange. Both
tional system was among the topics will be Competing in the state final S
discussed during the meeting con- at the Ohio State Grange convention
ducted by Ziba Midkiff. master.
in October. Whitney is currently the
lt wa s reported that Racine first runner-up 10 the · Ohio Siate
Grange had passed two resolutions Grange princess. •
· and referred for consideration by the
Donations were made to the state
state Grange. One deali with the and national deaf ac:tivities funds to
complicated rules regarding the Ia&lt; promote deaf education and assis·
deductibility of all-terrain vehicles tance to the deaf. Also, a donation
on· farm s. The. membership unani·- .was made to the Ohio State Grange
mou sly adopted a re solution to for slate building repair.
allow all farm uses of such vehicles
Opal Dyer was asked to chair the
as ta&lt; deductible usage. The other Grange e.hibil at the Expo later this
resolution dealt with the Ohio . month at the Meigs County Fair·
Courts Futures Commission's plan grounds. She asked for ~ssistance in
. l 10 eliminate the offi ces of county manning the county youth refresh·, clerk of courts and county sheriff as ment booth.
The county officers' conference
1 well as county couns in favor of
'I multi-county dtslrict courts. The will be held at 2 p.m., Sunday, OCt.
membership unanimously opposed 31, at Hemlock Grange hall. Hemthis idea based on the bias against lock Grange will also host the ne&lt;l
rural areas, ineffective r~~ ionalism , Pomona Grange meeting on Friday,
aovllack of local control.
Nov. 5.
Rosalie Story, lecturer, was
The Star Grange hayride and
absent due to illness, and Keith Ash- wiener roast wi.JI be held on Sept. 18
ley acted in her absence.
at Star Grange hall. ·
Op"al Dyer, county youth chair-

I
I

I
J

BREANNA DAWN COLBURN

I

r
. I

80

TURNS ONE • Breanna Dawn
Colburn celebrated her , first
birthday on Aug. 18 with a party
at the.Middleport Park.
A "Winnie the Pooh" theme
was carried out tor the party
with hamburgers, hotdogs, and
cake being served. Those
attending were Braanna's . parents, Rick and Tracy Colburn
Collins, Robert Strohl, Ricky
and Ren-. Colburn, Tina Mayle,
gralidmother, Wendl Co111ns,
Gerrl and Fred Hanel, Joyce
Hall, Brandon and . Robert
Grover, Diane, Kendi, Kayle and
. Tyler Ba~tttel, K. J . Potts, Shelly
Wolfe, Frances Jeffers, Becky,
Bruce and Keane Ward.
Sending gifts were greatgrandmothers, May Mayle and
Dorothy Collins, and grandparents, Jerry and Connie Colburn.
Tyler and Colena Shoemaker,
Terri, Rose, and Evan Yeauger,
Lisa, Jay, Marla, Jennifer and
Jerry Colburn.

On ·Dec 22. ~ Y97. AEI'
anfwunc ed a dd'initiH· merger
al!rcc rnent for n tax -free. ~tm.· k ­
f~r-stock tran sat.: tiun \\ ith Ce nt ral
and So uth We st Corp .. a ·ruhli c
util ity holdin g (ompanj based in
Dallas.

touch. of~s tfur JufinBs1
touch. ofproftssional t:ompetenaJ

Lab Co-Or.1linator
•'Bo ll ni£· .t;il·11i119

•}oyer :Hollon

Catholic Church.

SALEM CENTER
Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior Grange
87.5. annual hayride .and wiener
roast, Saturday, 6:30 p.m. at the
Grange Hall. · Member to take
'wien'ers, snacks and drinks. Buns
will be provided.
POMEROY
Weekend
re vival, Faith Valley Tabernacle
Church. Bailey
Run
Road,
Pome.roy. Saturday and Sunday. 7
p.m. Rev. David Wedlund of
Columbus, evangelist.

•

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Zion Church of
Christ, Sate Route 143, homecom- '
ing Sunday. Bill Dummitt, guest .
speaker at 10:30 am. worship ser- 1
vice, carry-in luncheon at 12:30 '
. p.m. Jennifer Grover Hicks to present a 2 p.m. program · with special '
singing. Sunday school, 9:30a.m.

1

RACINE - Raci~~ Am erican
Legion' Post 602, ham and turkey
benefit dinner for Bill and Nellie
Cross Sunday. Serving to start at II

Public Notice
PUBliC NOTICE
l'he Vltla.ge or
Pomeroy did not monitor
for the pruence . ol
synthetic organic
chemicals (SOCa) In tho
public drinking water
syatem during the April·
June199911me period ao
r.oqulred by the Ohio
. Envlranm•ntal
.
Protection Agency.
· Upon being noUfled or
. thle vlolaUon by the Oh!o
Environmental Potoctlon
Ageny, the water auppty

RACINE
Rcunoon , Gideon
arid Arunesia Roush desce ndant s,
Sta' Mill Park. Racine: I p.m. Sunday. Take old photos and a basket
lunch .
MONDAY .
PORTLAND - Portland Elementary Schoo l PTO meeting Mon day. 7 P·~·

LL.A Tutor Training Workshop
Mason County Library

Card of .Thanka

Sept. 17 5-9 PM
Sept. 18 9AM-5 PM

To Philip Werry,
Harold Norton, &amp; Tim
Baum for sawing &amp;
hammering
&amp;
plumbing ...
To Karen Werry for
.cooking &amp; cooking &amp;
cooking ...
And to the 206
boosters &amp; athletes
who volunteered th.eir
time to work ...
THANKS! from the
Eastern
Athletic
Booster officers for
yqur help at the
Meigs County Fair.

Call 675-6076 to register

Still Available at The .
Daily Sentinel Office.
-Rutland 200th
Anniversary Tab
-Meigs County 175th
Anniversary Tab.
·Middleport 200th
Anniversary Tab

.

$1.50 Each '

1!,111199 1 mo. pel.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

BAR-J

•Room ~no &amp; RtmodoUng

Portable
Welding Services
Gas .. A&amp;C-Mig
Aluminum
A11yt~-A11ywlaere
Hourly Rates

992-9178

DEPOYSAG
PARts ·

Sr. 124 Wellston, Ohio
740-384-6212
LUMP IIID STOIII COIL
u.a.;. VOUCIIIRS
ICCEPnD
DEliYEIY IVIIlllll
HOUIISI 7am THRU 4pm
MONDAY·FRIDAY

All Makes Tractor &amp;

7am .TO)'IOON

. 740-IIT-Gall

Equipment. Parts·
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

..

Linda's Painting
Take the pain out
. of painting, and let

me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm le;~ve
message. After 6 pm

740·985·4180 .
Free Estimates

•

Pub.llc Notice
was required to have the

dlnklng water analyzed
for atrazlne, alat:::hlor,

almazlne, melolachlor,
and matrlbuzln. . The

water supplier will take
slops to ensure that
adequate m·onltorlng and
reporting will be
performed In the future.
Contact person: Johh
Anderson ·
P~on· o number: (740)
992·3121 • .
(9) 13, 14, 15 3TC

A &amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

UNIQUE
OLDIES
115 Salem St.
· Rutland, Ohio

. OPEN
10·5:00 Tues. Wed.

&amp;Thurs.
&amp;

Pomeroy

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Fain

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
·• New Homes •
Aamodellng • Siding
• Roots
25 yrs experience

(740) 992·2753
or 992·1101

HfiOLinG InC.

can relieve a debtor ollinancialobligolians and arrange a fair l.rribution al·
Aperson going rhraoigh bonkrupl&lt;y may relain &lt;Ortain
property, known os "exempt" property, for hil or her pe~onal use. This may .
indude otor, a house, t~lhes, and household goork. You ihould d~od any
ques1ion1 regarding bonkrupl&lt;y lo a.noltorney before prateedlng.
For information regarding

os!t~ among credilacs.

Bankruptcy contact:

We Deliver
Lime,stone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agricultural Lime, ·

M11lch, Top Soil
· (Low Rates)

William Safranek, Attorney .

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION
Don Smith
37814 Peo1h Fork Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
992-2735
Sc'nlln\J He&lt;l ! Pulllp
c~~fllrdl Air, VVInfJow
Un1ts. llV Hoof top

Help Wanted

Comp\Jter Uura Needed Work

Own Hra. $25K -SSOKJ Vr. 1·100·

536-0486 xnn. www 1cwp.com

.-•••...

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CU.SSOFOEIDSi
ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

Meet B~autil u l , Excit1ng women
Worldw ide! 26,000 Ha ppy Client
Mamages Since 1974. Free Color
Magazine!
www .cherry·blossoms . com/?adid = 158 800·32~ ·
3267 Ext. 158. Cherry Blossoms,
P O. Box 190 11 58 . Kapaau . Ha ·
waii 96755 ,

llndP.IIIll:al•!ll
HevDM

n..lldo•er &amp; Backhoe
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
GradinQ
Septic System.• &amp;
Utilities

1740) 992·3838
30 ·Announcements

Rutland, Ohio
American Legion
Post 467

Beech Grove Road
Gun Shoot
Slug and Shot
Matches
· Sunday,
Sept. 19 1999
1:00 P.M.

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply
St. At. 7

Tuppers Plains, OH

740-985-3813
Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock

8" Grovelless Leach, · ·
100'. 1000' Rolk 1' &amp; 3/4': 200#Woter Line
Full line of Gos Pipe &amp;Regulators Water Storage Tanks
NJon.- Fri. 9:00 to 4:30
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

1,.

•Sale• experience ·
•Salary Pl,.. Bu'J,ItiJ

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomero~, Olti.o

40

6124/99 I

mo. pd

MYERS PAVIJIIG
H~nderson ,

WV

We Do•••
• Parking Lots
• Basketball Courts
• Driveways
• Grading Work
• Hauling Stone
(304)675-2457 Ollkt

(304)674·331 I Ctll Ph.
fREE ESTIMATES

.,.,

Cont. ,WV003506

tt~~~~ 24 Hr~ Taxi

a.l(rl Delivery Servijce
We deliver ALMOST anything
I

Call .for .details
740-992-0038
.

Services

Site Preparation
Septic Systems
RODNEY KELLER ·
Owner/Operator ·

1-740·985·3949

(No Sunday Calls)

Ca ll 592-2497
Ask for Hea th Clemons

· To Good Home: 3 pupPies/ !
mate. 3 fem ales . Pii!Bull. German Sheppard Mix. (3v4) 675·
4057.

60

Lost and Found

Found: Black ·lab ·Mix,' Around 6 ·'
Red Collar,
740·379·2696.

a Months Old·, Male,

Los t 9/11 or 9/ 12 : male wire ·
haired Jack Russell terrier, Rock·
springs Rehab Center vicinity, re·
ward. 740·992·3256.

01amonas . Ant ~ue Je~elry , Gold
Rmgs . Pre -1930 US. Currency.
Sterling. Etc. AcQuisitions Jewelry
• M T.S Cotn ShOp , 151 Second
Avenue. GallipoliS, 740-446·2842.
Clean l...ate Model Cars Or
Trucks . Low M1les. 1995 Mod els
Or Newer. Sm1th Burck Pont1 ac.
' 1900 Eastern Avenue . GalhpoliS
Wanted· RCA Direct TV , older
models with access card . W1ll pay
cash . Call 740·9"9·33t5 , leave

message.

Wanting Free Dirt . 740· 379-

2989

WORRYING.
! !!
No Embarrassment. ..
You're Treated with Respect!
Call Now for Instant Approvalll*'

J &amp; L Insulation
&amp;

~-

Siding

· • V1nyl Sidipg
• Roofing &amp; Seamless Gu"er
• Replacement Windows .
• Con&lt;rete
• RoomAdditions • Garages
• Decks &amp;·aoat Docks

Ja111as basaa II
PH: 1740) 99.2·2772

I

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11 o

Help Wanted

$2 ,000 WEI:KLY I Mailing 400
Brochures ! Satis fact ion Guar ·
anteed! Postage &amp; Supplies Pro·
vi ded! Rush Se lf-Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO. OEPT
5 , Box 1438 , ANTIOC H, TN .
·
37011-1438 . Start Immediately.
$800 WEEKlY POTENTIAL
Complete Simple Go\lernment
Forms At Home. No E11pe nence
Necessary. CALL TOLL FREE 1·.800.966·3599 E~l . 2601 $34 .00
Refundable Fse.
'"""DRIVE THE BIG RIGGS !!!" ..
' Reg ·O .T A · :Truck Driving
Trainmg N o Exper. Necessary!!
21 &amp; Over 1·687 ·213-1303 (Toll
Free) .

70

c;LERK
We
Have A Full·Time Opening In Our
Accounting Department For An
Individual That Has A Slrong
Computer Skills A nd An Ac·
counting Backgrounel Or Oegree
In Accounting Or Related Fi!! ld .
E xpe r ience In Microsoft Ofrice
Would Be Very Helpfu l. Success·
tul Candidate Must Have Good
Communica tion Skills And Enjoy
WorkillQ With People In A Team
Almospt1ere. Benef its Include
Health. ·oental. Vision. &amp; life · lrt·
surance ; 401k , And Vacation.
We Are A Long Establ iShed Gallipolis Area Busl~ess . For Inte rview Consideration. Please Send
Your Re'Sume With A' Cover Let·
ter Sta ling Why You Are The
Pe rson For This Positi on To : Box
DH -24 c/o Ga lllpoll ,s Da lly Trib· ,
une. 825 Th ird Avenue. Ga llipolis, .
OH 45631.
Application s Now Accepted For:
Small But Ema Special One Bed·
room , Very Clean. Stove. Fng ..
Washer, Dryer. Total Electric lAC.
Non-Smoke rs Only. No Pels ,
$300 Deposit, S3501Mo., 740·446·
2205. 740·44 6·95 8 5, Ask For
Virginia.
ASSEMeLY AT HOMEII C"fls .
Toys , Jewelry, Wood, Sew ing,
Typing .. . Great" Pay ! CALL 1·800·
795·0380 Ext. •201 (24 ttrs).
Attn: LPN s. RN s, EMTs And Par·
amedics! BeCoine An AN Or BSN
Graduate And Increase Your In come Wltt1out Going Back To
Schooll To Sctiedule YolJr Inter·
view In Huntington . Call Angela
Co pela n~ By Oct 7 . 1· 800··737-

2222

.

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell.
Shirley Spears. 304-675-1429.
Avon Products. Start your own In·
Home Busirtess . Wo r,k Flexible
Hou rs . EntOY Unllm1ted Earnings.

(30&lt;)347-6838

Yard Sale ·

Babyslner need ed lor two children
in Middleport area. 740·992·0149 .

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

C LERIC AL $12 ·$16 / HR . Full
Bene fiiS . No E•perlence Neces·
sary Call 8 A.M. ·6 P.M . 1·800·
637 -5231 ElCt . 1300 . Fee

3 Family .Garage Sale : Clay TOwn- .
hOuse On Lovers Lane. Thursday
Clerical Pos 1tiOO
9To 5.
·
Cand1dates must have M1crosoft
Word &amp; Lotus Knowledge . Data
A.I..L Yard Sales Must
Entry and bas1c olfu;:e duties ."
Be Paid In Advance.
Th iS Is a !ull ·llme position with
pEAOLINE: 2:00p.m.
benef its ava 1lable Sta rting pay
the day before the ad
1S $6 an hour. P lease send re'·
Is to run. Surtdey
suf[le ' or apply in person between
edition· 2:00p.m.
10 .00· 4 :00 at General Ret use
Friday. Monday ediUon
Service , 97 Hubbard Avenue,
-10:00 a.m. Saturday.
Gallipolis. Oh10. ,45631 . No
phone ealls please 1
Friday, Saturoay, 9f17th, 18th , 8-?
836 Skid m ore Road. Fen ci ng
Posts. Small Gate. Boo~s. Tw in
Box SPrings. Clothing, Misc .
·
Huge Sa le ; 17th, &amp; 18th , 578
ShOeSHing R id'gt;~, Dishes, Furni·
lUre, Small Appllartces. Clocks .
1
. Comtorters. Laritps &amp; Much More!

All Yard Sal's Mutt Be Paid In
Advance . DeadHrte : 1 :OUpm the
day before lf'te ad 11 to run ,
Suriday · &amp;. Monday ·edltlo, 1:OOpm Friday.

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

1

To good home. 5 male k1ttens : 4
black . 1 bla ck/g ray. (304 )675·
7122, leave Message.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

CREDIT·

CALL NR• nRD
(740) 448 1800 01
1-80H71-I178

N in e mont h o.ld Shepher d mix,
grayf biack, loves kids, one btue
eye , one green. 740-992-4228 .

New Roofs • Repairs •
Coaiing • Gutters •
Siding· Drywall •
Painting • Plumbing
Free Estimates

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer

740·992·7643 ·.

Kiltens to good home. serio us
ca lls only, 740·992·993'7 .

Lost: Mediu m S1ze Male Brown &amp;
·Wh it e Dog , 112 Face Wtlile , 112
Brown, 740-446-7224.

EXCAVATING

FREE ESTIMATES

Free Kittens To Gooo Home. Ca t ~
Aher 5 P.M. 740·441-0391.

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

KCB

COMMERCIAL an~ RISIDINTIAL

Giveaway

l ost : 3 Angu s Cross Hailers In
Area 01 St. At . 141 &amp; 775. Call
John Jacksqn 740-446-7339. Or
740·446·4889.

Joseph Jacks
. 740-992:.2068

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
•Replacement Windows
•Room Additions
•Roofing

• Nt?cd Appeam11ce

Absolute Top Dollar; AI! U.S. S1 l·

ver And Gold Cotns , P roofsets ,

ACCOUNTING

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
740.-992-S2J2

Wanted to Buy

&gt;&gt;DRIVER PLACEMENT&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;
EXPERIENCED OR NOT. We Can
Put You BehiM Tt1e Wheel!! Call
Free 1-888 -2 92 ·2002 &amp; 1·888·
47 3·3584

Petra Fashions . Designer Unge r·
le Pr iced Under $40.00 Sizes 54)(. Some Gowns SX . Bo ok A
S how Or A Ghost Party And I'll
Te ll You H ow You Can Earn
$140 .00 In Merc handise For
$7.00 . Call 740-245·9582.

ADVANCED DFWNAGE SYSTEMS INC.

INC.

• WiUi~~g to Work Long lluun &amp; Tnkt&gt; Direc tiolt

90

Sta rt Dating Tonigh1! Ha ve tUn
playing the Ohio Dating Game, 1·
SOO·ROMANCE. e)(tens ion 9681 .

ow Renting

Garage Sale - Sept. 16·18, 9am·
~pm , 51. Rt. t'24 (Elm St across
!rom Hill 's Cltgo) Racine. Oh, girl's
school clothes (6-16 ), old glass
milk bottles. house hotel items. 100
ma ny Items to mention.
Large · first this year . Thutsday,
Sept. 16. Fr1day. Sept . 11 7. One ·
mile tmm SA 124 on SA 325 . Bedding . curtains . Home lntenor. toys~
cloth1ng. misc. Ram cancels .
Several tamtly yard sale , Rock·
springS Ad . Sept 17-18 MOSI
s1ze clothmg . lots mtsc .. Bea nie

babies.
Two la mi ly yard sa le , 19 Artn9
Street. Pomeroy Sept 16 , 17 &amp;
18 Rain cancels

BRAHC~ MANAGEMENT

'•

•

.t.me nca.n General Ftnanct. A
Leader In The Fmanctal SerVlCes
Industry, W1th Over $11 BilliOn In •
Asseh; AM Mor~~t Than 1, 300 .... ,. .
Branches Nat10nwu:Je , Has An !m· .. : ..
mediate NeeCl For A Bra nch
Management Tramee In Our

Jadlson OffiCe

3 People Needed For Satellite In·
stallai!On, Experience Not Needeo. $7 .00 H r Pl us E11cellent CommisSion, 740· 446·7 451 , Or 614'271·1688.

740-992-3470

BISSELL BUILDERS,

•llo11e11l
•liard Working

Wedemeyer 's Auct•on Serv•ce .
Gallcpol!s. oruo 740·379·2720

START
DATING
TONIGHT !
Have Fun Meeting Elig ible Sin ·
gles In Your Area. Call For More
Infor mation . 1 ·BOO·ROMAN CE.
Ext. 97l5

·30 Announcements

Flnanco
TRAINEE

Rtck Pearson .AuctJon Company
ruu tune auct•oneer complete
auctton
servtce
Licensed
t61S .OhtO &amp; West Vugm•a . 304·
n:J.57850r :JO&lt;·n:J-54-47

Urli ! S

(740) 592-5025 Athens

11111 1

,Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT &amp;:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive lop line.
Lie. II 00-50 11no111n

•St&gt;lf Motivated
•Sale• Orienltul "

Love
Mom, Dad &amp;

949~21. 68

By Appointment

New Store Hours
·F or Deer Season
Mon-Sat

Athens County #1 Volume Used Car
Dealer Is looking tor Sales Person:

"MARIAH CAW

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473

4/2 TFN

BANKRUPRY

111 •• ••• ~

SOUTHEAST IMPORT CENTER

Birthday

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30 '
Hours
7:00AM • 8.:00 PM

•Hew Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

'

110

~~~y 2nd

740-949-2217

WICKS

Coolville, OH 45723

SATURDAY

Service•

•

Racine, Ohio
45771

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Free

1000 St. Rl. 7 Sourh

Co. Rd 19

a.m.

ALFRED Alfred United
M~thodist Church homecoming
Sunday, re gular serv ices in. the
morning, dinner at 12 :30 p.m .;
aftern oon serv ices at 2 p.m. with
Sonshine.

20 Yrs . Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronn ie Jones

WILSON'S ARMY SURPLUS
'

--.----------~~----:------==~;~:;;~==r-=::;;:::;:;::;:;:;::==

CHECK THE .WANT ADS

G,\l,o\"9

. Beginning Sept. 26th

.RACINE- Second annual Fink
family reunion , Saturday,. 2 p.m. at
Star Mill Park in Racine. Take cov·
ered dish and table service.

• sw~~'9

8:30am· 8 pm
Sun 1 pm • 6 pm

'Darmy Carr brtemal Medicine Cltnic
JtPC Medical L-aboratory
•
James :Xeslar Cardiopulmonary Cerrler
• 9owi"i Oncology Clinic

•

877-353-7022 ltoll free)

7/27199 2 mo. pd.

.

"The rich autumn may touch you with golden leaves,
. What can I do? That I am so poor;
Aheart that's aflower, a soul that's ariver.
And asingle minded devotion; that~ all,
All that I have. to offer you with aperpetual love. "

..

.,.,,11'

740-742-8015

(740) 742-8888 .

&lt;For appointments please caiCC740) 992-9320
or (7~0) 592-2678

29670 Bashan Road

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

TREE SERVICE

Free Estimates

Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

·
rromercry Clinic Jlours: Wednesday _&amp; Saturday
· · · 7:30am- 12:30 pm
at sos Jtiulberry Jleiqfits, ·rromeroy

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers, Saturday, n.oon.
Trinity Church, Pomeroy. Program
by barbershop quartet.

3111/99 TFN

25 yrs experience

· 1llbany, Ohi"

· 265 West Union Street,

Citizens Center.

740·742·2138

JONES' .

Quality Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios

1·800·311·3391
Free Estimate8
Contractors Welcome

Cliniwl I{~ sociatr

'Clinical !Associate

992-1717

CONCRETE
CONNEOION

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

0/Jru Co-Ordwator
Clinical Stction .1ftad

lOX 10$40
10X20$60

YOUI

Rutland, Ohio
•rTaula Currnin_qfiam

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

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

Howard L. Writesel

BRAMHI COAL
COMPANY

· . • 13oar~ Certified in Internal :Medicine _
•r-Jellow Yfmerican College of rpfiysicians
• JVCI Train~d :Medical Oncologist

•..Lisa Compson

SIDRAGE

SAYRE
TRUCKING

.

• .Xun:rr '"Btlfes

Alcoholics

'

22 r. .. Local

!Juardinn Yfngels

Anohymous open meeting lltursday at 7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart

ST. liT. 7

POcMroy, Olilo

'1-fJitn' e.t1ensive po~t granuate training. in some of tfie best Jr(edicall_nstitrrtion s inSmrt
. &lt;Britain and U.S. ill all sub specianties of Internal .Jtfedicin~: incluiling Jfyperter!siorr, .
"Dwbetes, Cancer, InfectiOns , 'Drsease of the Jfeart, Lungs, :Xrdneys, Cf.ndocnrre Sfands , .
·
13/ood. Joints, 1./derly and Intensiue Care.
. Z.

THURSDAY
RACINE - s ·outhern Local
Board of Education special session
Thursday. 6 p.m. at ·Southern High
School to consider bids on the high
school boiler project and construe·
tion project.

Larry Schey

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

lnttmal."\1tdicmd.1ftdical Oncology

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Meigs County Fire
Fighters Association meeting
Wednesday. 7:30p.m. at the Racine
Fire Station.

HARfWEIL

•NewGoregeo
•Eieclrlcol &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing I Gutton
•V1nyl Siding l Pointing
·Pallo I Porch Dtctc1
FIH fslfllllllfl

Halesl{""pf.fef""I MD, FACP
·

Stop In And See .
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative

WILLIS'
·sEAMLESS
·GunERS
Sitli~tg &amp; Sf#IH
th e United Stales. the United King dom , China and Australia. Wh oll y
ow ned subsid iari es provide J&gt;owcr
cnginccring. energy co nsulting and
energy management scrv H:cs
around lhc world. The company is
based in Colu mbus.

Consignment aucuon- Mtll
Straet. M~ddlepon . Thursaayl
Ohto ltcen&amp;e t7693 7•0-989·
2623

11 o

u

750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
Athe ns; Ohio 45701 ·
"·
I
"A B~tter Wa , Eve

. LEARNING ABOUT COAL- Chuck Wood (right), training supervisor at Southern Ohio Coal Company, instructs teachers on _underground coal mine safety during the recent "Spotlight on Coal"

Aucllon
and Flea Market

B•U Moodtspaugh Auchoneet~ng
Complele Auctioneering Servtc·

( -

4

4

POMEROY - Meigs County
Arthritis Support Group. Friday. 10
a.m. 10 11:30 am . in the ·conference
room of the Meigs County Senor

•

15,1999

. !{C1T tM Cl1n Witli toucli,

.

. The Community Calendar os
pub1ished as a .free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meetings and special events. The
calendar I S not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed only as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to be
printed a specific number of day s.

POMEROY

vent. repealed episodes.

.c

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

CSOCCo hosts 32.teachers at workshop

..::J\/Cedicine

(

•
Wednesday, September

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

fimily
Jolm C.' Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Wednesday, September 15,1999

•

DATA• ENTRY · National 'B illin g
· Seeks A Full / Par t Time Medical
' Bill er. Salary At $46K • Per Year.
PC Req u~re d . No Experience.
Needed . Will Train : Call 1· 886·.
25 1-7475 .
'
Domino's Pi,zza o! Point Pleas·
ant. Now H iring Safe Drivers.
Fluible hours·Advancemer~t op·
portun1t1es App ly In person
{:3041675-5858.
Drivers: 2 Week Pa id COL Tra inmg . No E~~:p . Needed . No Money,
Nor Credit? No Problem! Earn Up
To $32 ,000 I t st Yr. w /Full Bene·
his. P A M . Transport Call Toll
Free 1-877 · 230 -.6002 www."otr drlvers .com
EARN $50K A Year. Comp·UMed Seeks Fu ll /Part· T ime Medical Processors. PC Required . No
Experience Ne cessary. Will
Trairl. Cal11 ·800.4'58-41l5.
Evenmg Waitress &amp; Midnight
Cook . Call: 1:3041937·2456
Expenenced rpol1ng and siding
person Wanted . call 740·378·
6349
•
Expe11enced Sennce Tech 81Cy· 1
cle 8 Lawnmower Assemb ly
Greal Pay 8. Benel11s.
.

APPLY TODAY,
STAR TOMORROW

Cell1..aoo-852·2453

lndtvu:tuats Will Par1ic1pate In An
lntenstve On ·The ·Job Trammg
Program Des 1gned to Prepare
You For Branch Manager Ae·
sponstblllttes ·The 1
M onth
Modular Tralnmg Prograrn In·
Suucts You In All Aspects Of
Managing Credit Extens 10n , Ac·
count AdJustment , Busmess De·
velopment AM Personnel Stafl ·

I

a

I

.I

ing . .
App licants For Th1s Entty Level
Opportunity ShOuld .Have Four
Vears Post Htgh Sct1oo l Ectuca ·
t ion . Training Or Work E~~:peri·
en ce (Sales Expe ri en ce Pre ·
terredl; Strong Written Anct Ver·
bat Communlcatton Sk1fls ; A.nd A
Valid Driver 's License Must Be
Open To Re location And Have
The Des ire To Assume Manage ·
rial R~sponsibillty

'.

American Genera l Fina nce Offers
A Competitive Benefits Pa ckage .
Including Medic al, De ntal And A
401(k) Plan . For Immediate Con·
stctera l!on, Please. Send Your Re sume To : Amer ican General
"Finance. P.O. Box 702 . Jacksor~ .
OH 45640-0702. Please Visit Our
Web S1te At: www.aghnance .com .
Equal Opportunity Employer
Flexible Schedule up to 13,400 1
month proceulng medlc•l
c:la l ms . No experience necu ury. PC required . (800)9•5 -

7981 .
Housekeeping And Ca re For Ambulatory Gentleman . 40 Hours Or
Liv e·ln, R IG Grande A re a , 740 ·
245·5203 .
Immediate Open ings For AN 's,
FUll-Time Or Part.· Ttme . Me d1·
Home Health, 740--441·1779 .
L1ttle Caesar's Is Look 1ng For
Motivated Ind ividua ls f:or The
Following Positions : All Levels Of
Management. Delivery Drivers &amp;
lr1 Store Pers onn el Please Apply
At The GallipoliS Little Caesar's.
86 1 Second Ave nue. GallipOliS.
Local Co.mpany now acceoti ng
app licatiOns for Full· Ti me Data
Entry Clerk &amp; Full· Time Payroll
Clerk . Reply cto : Po1n t Pleasant
Re g1ster. M L. 01. 200 Matn
Street . Point Pleas ant, WV
25550.
MED'ICAL BILL ING. Earn Excel·
lent Income . FlJII Tra ining . Com·
puler Required . CaH Toll· Free
800·540·6333 E!Ct. 2301 .
Oll ice seeking .Med1cal Data·enlry .
reps for Enuy·leve l Position. FT I
PT Excellent Pay PC Ae~ Call· t·
8()0-298·8506
MOT~ERS

&amp; OTHERS WORK

FROM MOME I Ma il-Order . Part
Time &amp; Full Time . $650 · $3 ,600/
Mont h: Full rra i nirtg Provtded'
For FREE Booklet Call 1·888·234·
9897 www.cash-9t1 .conv'home
Nee d Babys itter In My Home To
WalCh A 3 Year Old. Need. Reier·
ences. 740-441-0867.
NOW ~IRING
1170.00 PER WEEK / PT
LOCAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS
' Day And Evemng
Sh1hs Ava1lable
• No E~~:pene nce Needed·
~
We Tra•n
Students Welcome

-.

Apply In Person At

a

•

..

17 Pme St reet
.Gallipolis, OH
Tuesday. Septemner 141h
wectnesaay ?eptemoe r 151n
Thursday. Seplember 16tt\
3 00 P.M. Ttll 6,00 PM 011ly
Ask For: Ms Hal"'""rnona
Now Taking A.ppl tCa11 qn s For
Drive rs For Gall1o olis &amp; Pomeroy
Only, Dom1no s P1zza .
Ofl ice ASS IStant ICast11e r Jol". '"lson Superma rket . 85 1/me S1rce1.
Ga lltpolls. Resumes And APp ll·
cat1ons Be ing Acc epted Between
8 A.M. ·2 P.M. For A Ae sponstble
Person 21 Years Or Older. 'fo
Work Some Evenmgs And Weekends . No Phone Calls Please .
Previous Applicants Need Not
Apply.
OTR flatbed tractor trail er drivers needed · 1 year exper 1ence .
good pay, home most weekends
plus , ca ll 740-949·2203 or 740·
441 · t334
Part time recept iOnist/ billing clerk .
tor local physicia n's oflfce E•peri·
ence with compu ter. coding and
medica l billing preferred Send re·
sume to P.O. BolC 458. Rac111e, OH
45 r-7t .
Part· Time Help Needed For Local .
Retail Store . Send Resumes To
P.O . Box 141 , Gallip Olis , O H
456 31.
Pan-Time Workers NeeOea Ap·
ply In Per son · 22 0 Fo llfth Ave- ·
nue. At A&amp;A Auto Deta11
POSTAL JOBS To $18 3 5 HR
INC . BENEFITS , ~0 EXPi:A '·
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INF p . CALL 1· 600 -813 356 5.
EXT 14210 8 A.M ·9 PM . 7
DAYS Ids. inc. Fee.
Scen1c HHis Nursing Center Now
Taking Applicatior s F_or DP pe naable .&amp; Car1ng LPN s &amp; AN 'S Part·
Time . Apply In Person M ond&lt;~y
' Thru Frtday 8 · 4 30 PM 3 1 1
Buckridge Road. Btdwell. Ohto.
Sherwtn Wil l1ams Co Now Ac· ·
ceptlng ApphcatJons For P T Po·
sit 1ons At The New Ga lli pol•s
Store (Lo c ated Next To Bob
Evans ) Appl i ca110ns Ma y Be
Prcked Up At The Store . M·F B ·
Noon
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY. Call Now Toll Free 1800·339·4204 Or t·S00-469 ·8164
For App omthient T'o Come To
' NaSh\l tlle . Tennessee And Aud iliort For Major Record Produters.
Interne t: www.won.ac
STNA tra1n 1ng cl ass bemg
scheduled tor 100 tied skllled
lacility See /:111 g cand idates wt1o
are cartng . compass iona(e and
wart! to. be a member ol a great
te am . Inte rested canctldates
·should apply 10. Rockspn ngs Re ·
tuib Center. 36759 RockspringS'" ~•
Rd . Pomeroy, Ohio cl5769 Equal
Opportunity Employer

. '

�Wednesday, September 15, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, OhiO

Wedneeday, September 15,1999

The Oa1ly Sentinel e Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEY OOP

Secretary wanted expenence
needed In general bookkeeping
Ohio &amp; WV payroll taxes send
reaum&amp; to PO Box 278 Rutland
Oh 45775

HOME EMPLOYMENT OIREC
TORY Hundreds Of Leg tlmate
Compan es W th Oeser pt on
Che ck I Monev Order $3 0 00
Mac s Bus ness D re ctory P 0
Bo• 1464 Launnt&gt;urg NC 26352

WANTED
63 people to lose 30 bs In 30
days &amp; earn $$$$$ wh le surf ng
the net 1 888 229-5427 www ...
talily nel/loelgood

At real estate advertiSIIlQ 1n
s newspt~per s subjeCt to
the Federal Fa Housmg Act
of 1968 whiCh makes it llega
to adven se any preference
1m tatlon or dlscnm natiOn
based on race color reUgton
sex lamil a status or national
or g1n or any 1ntentton to
make any ~uch preference
I m tal iOn or 4 scnmlnatlon

m

abOut compute s? Want to
make money al home? Get your
own onhne computer stare!
bus ness byinter net

Wanted a woman to sur; with 2
elderly ad es tor free room &amp;
t&gt;oalll 740 992 7445

MEDICAL BILLER Up IO S15
$45 Hr Med cat B II ng SoftY"ara
Company Needs Peop e To P o
cess Med ca C a ms From Home
Tram ng Prov ded Must Own
Computers 800 434 5518 EKt
667

Wanted drywa I ca penter to
complete drywall &amp; repa1rs m ex
change lor three months of tree
rent Do equere deposu contact
Mrs Mll1on at 740 992 9053

www evllalll'j nel/1eelgood
Warehouse And Oel very Person
Apply In Person No Phone Calls
Please Ltlestyle Furn ture 856
Thllll Ave GalllpoMs

START YOUR OWN VENDING
Business For As ltt e As $500
ALL CASH BUSINESS!! 1 800
220-2985 24 Hrs

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL 1 800 813
3585 EXT 14211 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS IdS II'&lt;: Fee

220 Money lo Loan
$$$ NEED CA SH

Business
Training

GoltlpOIII Coreer Colleg!t
(Careers Close To Hom8)
CaN Today 740 446 4367
1 800 214-Q452
Reg 190 OS 1274B

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A ~EGAL tOLLEGE DE
GREE QUICKLY Bache ors
Masters Doctorate By Co e
spondence Based Upon Pr or Ed
ucat on And Short Study Cou se
For FREE Information Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSIT¥ HIOQ-964 B316

Carpet And Vmyl lntallat On Ae
pair And Restreten 20 Years Ex
pertenee Free Est mates Ca I Bill
Pric8 740-379 2164
E &amp; S lawn Servtce Des.gn tm
plementat1on
ar:~d
Serv ce
Available for Spr ng Clean up
ferttilzmg and plant ng F ee est
mates Satisfaction guaranteed
Grog MHhoan 3041675 4626

SO DOWN HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED!
GOV T
FORE
CLOSURES CALL NOW FOR
1 BOO 434
REGISTRATIOI'j
2434 EXT 3205

$FREE CAS H NOW$ F om
Wealthy Fam es Unload ng Ml
lions 01 Dol as To Hep M nm ze
the Taxes Wr te lmmed ately
W ndtalls 847 A SECOND AVE
SUITE 1350 NEW YORK NEW
YORK 10017

3 Sed oom House W 3 Acres
Land Few FrUit Trees 2 Bed
rooms Bath Upsta rs 1 Bedroom
Front Room 0 n ng Room Utlty
Room K tche('l Bath Oownsta rs
S ts On Storys Run Boad Off Ao
ute 7 Information (740) 367
7576 After Noon
$47 500 00
OBO

Guaranteed ssoo
for Debt Consol datiOn
I ~;J~~o.
Persona Needs Med' cal 8 lis

Certll ed link

Child Care Prov1der In New Ha
van Area now has even ng
openmgs l nk or Self Pay ac
cepled (3041882 3319
Jlms 0 ywall &amp; Construct o n
New Consuucllon &amp; Remodel
Drywall Siding Roots Addl
ttons Patntlng etc (304) 674
4623 Of (3d4)674 0155

Educat on &amp; Bus ness Ca I Toll
Free 1 800-724 6047 124 Hrsl

CASH Or LOAN Fa m Cap Ia
W1l Pur.ehase Or loan Aga nst
Your Government Farm Pay
men s (CAP I'FC) Call Farm
Capttal 1 868 F"AAM ACT (327

6226)
CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monthly Payments 20 50% Save
Thousands Of Do tars In Interest
Non Prot t TCC BOO 758 3844

Mother of 4 w 1 babys 1 n her
home reasonable rates lor mo e
~nlo call Angela 740-985 9806

CREDIT COUNSILING
Debl
Consolidation Need Help Pay ng
Voyr B Is? Make One Smgle
Lower Monthly Paljment Free
Quote No ObiiQal on Call 1 800
844 8293 0 E Ma I ufsOUniOnl
nanctalserv ces com

Need ch1 d care? I have two
openmgs n my home Oh o &amp; WV
certlt ed Cal 740 992 3509 ask
for Melissa

CREDIT PROBLEMS Slop Here
We Can Help LoahS Ava abe
$3 000 And Up No Foe 1 877
663-9269 Ext 221

Opening Fo 2 E derly Or Hand
capped Pe sons In Co untry
Home Pnvate Rooms Call Bet
ween 9 AM 6 PM 740 368
0118

W1ll Do Brust Hoggmg Please
Ca I 740 245-5560
Will Paint Hgu•ea (lnterlor/Exle
rior) Barna t Tin 8ooft Experl
enced References + Free Est1
males (3041895 3961

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

$$ HCME INSPECTION $$ B I on
&amp; Growth ndustry Pwtected Ter
r tones Low Overhead Cash
Business Trammg Prov1ded low
lrM!Stmenl 1 800 586-4046
INOTICet
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus
ness w1th peQple you know and
HOT to send money through the
ma I unh you have nvest gated
1he otfenng
2 9 Cenlo /Min PHONE CARD
Ale EASY $$ MONEY FEW
Hours Earn $500 $5 000 /W k
CASHI FREE S les 1 800 997
9888 24 Hrs
ARE U LAZY? I Am And E&amp;rn
$1 000 A Day No Sell ng Not
MLM Compute And Softwa e
0 stributorsh p For F ee lnlorma
I on Package Call 1 aoo 7a6
8849 24 H s XT 27
AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 20 Local ons $4K $10K
$4 000 +fMo
Income
All
CASH! 100% Ftnance Ava! able
1 BOO 380-2615 24 Hrs
DENTAL SILLER Up 10 $20 $40
IH Dental B lllng Soflwa e Com
pany Needs Peop e To Process
Medical Claims Training P O\'id
ed Must Own Computer 1 eoo
223-1149 E•l 460
EARN $500 $1 200 WK IN
YOUR BATHROBE &amp; SLIPPERS
Great Income Opportunity W/
Computers Low Investment 1
eoo-«9-2969 Code 03

CREOIT PROBLEMS
STOP
HERE I WE CAN HELPII LOANS
AVAILABLE $3 000 AND UP
CALL TOLL FREE 1 877 663
9269 E&gt;i 231
GET YOUR CASH NOWI Oldesl
Buyers 01 S ructured Settlements
Ann• 1es And Go\'tHnment Farm
Payments A so Purchasing Lot
teres And Pr vate Mortgages
Call Sett ement Capital I 800
959 0006 www settletnentcap
tal com
Need a Loan ? Home "ulo &amp;
Debt Canso Ida! on Good or Bad
Credit Cu toll free 877 658
0551
Need A laar,? Try Debt Consol
dal on $5 000 $200 000 Bad
Cred I 0 K Fee 1 BOO 770 0092
E•l 215

RECEIVING PAYMENTS? n
vestor Pays CAS~ NOW Fo
Your Seller F nanced Mo tgaoe
Real Estate Contract Insurance
AnnUity Hi ghest Pr ces Free
Quotes Why w~ t? Call A ch 1
600 88B 6450

230

Professional
Services

Mounts Tee Ser11ice The Tree
Profess onats
Bucket Truck
Ser\'tCe Top Trtm Removal
Stump Gnnd ng Free Estimates
Ful y lnsu ed Works Comp Bid
well OH Cal And Save 1 800
838 9568 740 388 9648 Owne
RICk Mount

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1551?
No Fee Uness We W n
1 88i 582 3345

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
HOME FORECLOSURES NO
MONEY OOWNI NO CREDIT
NEEDED TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS 1 800 916
9191 EXT H5023
House and garage on 160 x50
Ol call740 992 2610

House and lot for sale by owner
Ray P ddy next to Bradbury
school 740 992 3362

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Aopa r
tng NOT Aeplactng lang Cracks
In Wlndsl'llelds Free VIdeo 1
800 826 B523 US /Canada
www glassmechamK cam

House and l ot tor sa e 4 bed
rooms two baths located tn Car
penler $1000 down WAC easy
terms contact Da11 d 1 BOO 333
6910

EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Send Us A One Page Fa m We
Do The Rest No 0 r.ect Sellmg
Computer &amp; E Commerce Distr b
utorshtps Free Into Pkg 1 800
831 2385 24 Hrs EXI 63

House located n Miners~! e our
bedroom LA FA utltty room
bath basement w th bath a1r wa
ter softener oewer root beaut ful
vew of the nve 74D-992 9012 for
appomtment

N ce G ound Floor 2BR W 0
Hook up Ae erence Depos t No
Pols (304)675 5162

No Pets 1 l'arge Bedroom 875
Sq Fl $375/Mo $250 Oopos I
7404419884 Ca1Belo&lt;e2PM
35

Real Estate
Wanted

,,3

We Buy Land 30 500 Acres
we Pay Cash 1 800 213 8365
AnthOny Land Co

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent
1 Bed oom Hou se In Mason
740 256 1469
1 Bed oom House No Pets! 28
L nco n Ave $325 00 month
(7401 446-9342

67 Acre Level lot 3 Bedrooms
2 1 2 Baths Uti ty &amp; Pantry
A a sed K1tchen &amp; D1nmg Room
K1tchen Has Wh te New Cab nets
Etectr c Sto\'e Fr g Washer &amp;
0 yer lnclud e&lt;J 1t •28 Front
Porch Overlooktng The Valley
11x14 Back Porch 1376 Patnot
Road Prtced In Low $70s New
Wh 1e Ce hng Fens lights
Plumb ng &amp; Carpet Throughout
Hardwood Floors Under Ca pet}
F replace &amp; Lots Of Storage! C,all
740 379 9000 Or 740 379 9887
No Land Cant acts

$$$ OVERDUE B LLS $$$ Con
so idate Debts Same Day Appro
va NO APPLICAT ON FEESII 1
800 563 9ootl Ext 936 www help
pay bi Is com

Apartment to ent n Pomeroy no
pels 740 992 5858

WANTED MOBILE
HOME PARKS
80• Sites (Occup ed) Nat onat
Company Pays Cash Closes
Fas11 Toll Free 888 653 ~244

Fence lnc/uc18d

FREE MONEY Its True Never

Georges Portable Sawm I aon t
haul your logs to the m II just cal
304-675-1957

Jenny Greene

If You Hearts In Tn&amp; Count y
We ve Got The Farm House Fo
You W thout The Farm Lots Of
Country Char.m Wh te Ptcket

GUARANTEED AP.PROVAL
Bank Card No Cred Check No
Up Front Cash Secur ty Depos I
Aequ red
Must Be 18+ And
Have Va d Check ng Account
Pre Approva By Phone 1 800
689 1556

180 Wanted To Do

360

31 0 Homes for Sale

W n Our Beaut t~ Income Pro
ducmg BU ld ng n Mane Fo
Free Contes Au es / Bu td ng
P ospectus V s t www un co n
contest com Or Send SASt:. Un
corn Essay Contest P 0 Box
1403 Bethe Mane 04217 $200
Entry FEW Aequ ed

WORK FROM HOMEt
Earn $500 $1500 PIT o $2000
$4000 FIT per month Cal 1
(8BBI957 3206 or v sl www at
wayslhebest com

23ACRES
2 Milos 011 SA 7 &amp; SA 21 B Soult1
01 Gal!1pol s S nglewldes Attowed
Rough MOS\ y Wooded Road A
ready Cut In Land Contract
Ava lable Only S27 000 1 800
213.S365

Th s newspaper w1ll not
knowtng y accept
adven1sements for real estate
which s 1n v10lahon of the
aw OLX rea~rs are l'lerE1.bY
nformed that all dwe tirYJS
actvenlsed n th s newspaper
are available on an equa
opport,umty basis

MEDICAL BILLING Unl m ted In
come Potent at No Expenence
Necessary F ee informatiOn &amp;
CD ROM nvestment $4 995
$8 995 F nanc ng Ava lab e Is
and Automated Medlc:al Serve
es Inc 800 322 1 39 Ed 050
IJOid InKY IN CT

WANTED
63 People To lose 30 bs In 30
Days &amp; Earn SSSS$ Whtle Sur1mg
The
Nel
1 811 228 8427

140

2 .u Acres Homes te Gret~n
Townsh p GaIa County Scenic
Ou et C ose To GaH pols Some
Restrictions 740 245--5776

2 b at 2123l ncoln Ave rei re
qu ed no pets $350 a mon +
dep 304 675 2749
3 Bedrooms $250/Mo S 50 De
posit 27 Arm St eet Pomeroy 3
Bedroom $250/Mo S150 Depos
t 112 Condor Street Pame oy
740 388-11591 304 633 8937
3 Bedroom Hou se n Henderson
$800 pe mo Oepos t/Aele ences
Requued (3041675-1972

House For Rent 4 Bedroom Ga
rage PI Pleasanl (3041675
6633 AHor 5PM

V nyl 61&lt;111 ng K IS $299 95 5 Gal
ton Alum num F1bered Roof Paint
$25 21 5 Gal Wh1te Rool Patnt
$57 69 Anchors $5 Doors &amp;
Wmdows Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters Plumbing &amp; E ectrlca
Parts lntenherm M ller &amp; Cola
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pump s Bennetts Mobile Home
Supply 740 446 9416 Gall polls
Ohk&gt;

va

ey V1ew Apartments R10
G ande Oh Now Accept ng ap
p cal ons lor lmmedla1e occu
pancy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts A r
Condll onmg K tchen app lances
Fenced in Playg ound laundry
On Stght Management Wate r
Sewage and Trash Pad Fu I time
Studen s mus1 meet Ohio Hous
ng F nance Agency OuBhf1ca
o ns Sen or Clttzens We come
EHO For more lnlormatlon call
{740 ) 245 9170 Monday thru
Thu sday 9 00 12 00 noon

Pomeroy three bedroom house
two bedroom apa tment relerenc
es secu ty P,art y lu n shed 740
992 68a6 alter 5pm

Mob1le Home Space Green
Schoo 0 st ct 4 M es From
Holzer Hospital Some Restrlc
tons Apply 740.~053

FORECLOSED HOMES Low 0 0
Down Gov t And Bank Repo s
Be1no Sold NOW! F nanctng
A\'al able Ca 1 Now! 1 800 730
7772 EKI B040

3 Bed10om Tra le For Rent in A o
G ande References No Pets n
s de 740 379 2720 No Cello
Until After7 PM

Three bedroom 1 &amp; 1/2 story cedar and stone home stone ch m
ney arge w ndows two baths
basement covered dec~ large
garage 1 1 2 acres Prtvate
near Pomeroy 740.992 6176

a

HOMES FROM $10 0001 1
5 Bedroom local Repos &amp; Fore
c osu es Fee F nanc ng Poss
be For Listings 1 800 719 3001
x1 185

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1 1999 Fleetwood 14x72 28A
2BA A Sk rt ng on Ren a Lot

2 1995 Sky! ne 14x70 3BR
28A V nyl S dtng
Sh ng es
Roo! 6 wal s
3 1996 Redmond 16J.70 3BR
2BA 6 walls N ce I Fmane ng
Ava table (304)675 6055
14x65 Electr e two bedroom two
baths new a1r cond1ttoner under
p nn ng curta ns $8500 leave
message 740 949 2453

t6x80 1996 Clayton Loudon
A C JBR 2Ba Take Over Pay
ments Uke New (304)675 8165

Pump Excel enl Cond t1on 740
446 1778

t99 1 14ftx7211 2 Bed ooms 2
Ba1hS snmg e Roof Vmyl S d ng
Excellent Cond 1 on $16 000 00
(7401446 8113
1993 Clayton 16x80 Very N1ce
Super Olean 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths w th B g Round Bathtub
Heat Pump Electr c $2 000
740 2i6 6382

1993 Flemm ng 14x70 2BR 1
ba h Central A r Co11ered Po ch
10•16 B•B Deck $12 500
(3041773 5064
Wanl A Home Don t Have land?
We Do Hur y Only 10 l ots left
800 383 6862

•109763

Large Chest Type Deep Freeze
work ng Fine $100 00 740 446
0208

N ce used Appliances lurn )ure

Pop Cooter Double Door Sl de
Chesl Type $300 (3041675
738B

Sand Fork Court Gelllpotlo Fer
ry New Mobt e Home lot&amp; sin
g e wide double w de ncludlng
80 II models Tak ng apphca
Ions CaM (304)675 6908
B dwe I Po er Elementary Schoo
$95/Mo Pus Ut1 t es 740 446
8665

490

For Lease

Pomeroy SA 124 600 square ft
customer parking carpet air con
d tloned ce lng !an modern $350
pe month $350 depos t 740
949 2093

'""'

DirecTV Summer PromotiOn CSB
now 1 88B 265 2123
READY TO LOSE THOSE UN
WANTED POUNDS? Long Onlo
www provenplan coiT\Ilosa

Used BathTub Good condtt on
W II accept reasonable otle
Cal (304)675 2811

1984 Cutlass Supreme A.uns
Good V 8 Needs Work $675
060 74Q-245-982B

You Don't Call us We Botti Lose/

1984 Linco n Town Car Stg Sar
Fully Loaded Excellent
Condlllon No Rusl ~arage kepi
~o $4 600 Firm (3041773

A two BR Mob le Home wtth new
front porch $300 Also 2 tratlor
Io ta near school $75 each per
month tn New Haven (304)882
2219

Mob le home lor rent In Pomeroy
area no pets 74D-992 5858

Furn shed two bedroom a1r con
dit oned no pets $150 depos t
$325/mo also spaces tor rent
$90/mo $90 depos 1 R 11er Park
Pomeroy (lo merly Browns) 740
949 2093
Two tra ers lor rent 12x65 two
bedroom $225/ mo 10K55 th ee
bedroom $2001 mo SA 7 south of
Midd eport 74D-992 2524

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bed oom apartmef1ts lur
n shed and unlurn1shed security
deposit equ red no pets 740
992 2218

1 Bedroom A C W/0 Hook Up
Near Arbo s Nurs ng Home No
Pet&amp; Quiet Locat1ons $279/Mo
+ Ut Illes 740 446 2957

510

Household
Goods

App ances
Recond tioned
Dryers Ranges Ael
grate rs 90 Day Guarantee
French C ty Maytag 740 446
7795

Washe s

Fo Sate Recond t1oned wash
ers d yers ana relrlgerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jackson Avenue !304)675-:7388

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers fefrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appl ances 7G
V ne Street Ca I 740 446 7396
16868180128

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga Slop
And See Us 740-446 4782
QUICK CASH
A&amp; D s Used
Furniture Buy ng Partta Or
WhOle Eslale 74Q-367-D260
2 Dryers lor sale 3112 to 4 yrs
old (3041675 6693

530

Ant1ques

Buy or se I A1ve r ne Antiques
1124 E Main Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm Sunday100to
6 oo p m 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1 Bedroom All Ull t es Included
$385/Mo 740-441 0120

2bd m ap s to at etec r c ap
p 1ances furmshed laundry room
tac 1ttes ctose to sehoo tn town
Appt cat ons ava lab e at V !age
G een Apts U9 o ca l 740 992
371 I EOH
2BR apt fOr rent $275 a montht
depos 1 Stove/Aefrlgerato Fu
n shed
New Haven A ea
(304 )77J..5577 Leave Message
2BA Apl n Mason Stove/Retr g
eratorfUIIhtles furnished A C
laundry Room Cel ng Fans
Garbage D sposat Very N tee No
Pels (3041773 5352 (304IBB2
2827

A Room Apt Newly Decorated
$250 00 Month Plus Deposit And
1 Years lease No Pets Ap
pt ances Fu n shed Cil I 740 446
163

For Lease One Bedroom AC
Apt Corner Of Secant:~ And P ne
Brand New Ooub!ew de 3 Bed $250/Mo Plus Ut lilieS Security
rooms 2 Baths only $340 month And Key Oeposl References Re
Free Oelevery and Set Up Um ted qu red No Pets 740 448 4425
01 e wont Last! Only at Oak
wood Gall po~s Oti (740) 446 Grac ous lvlng 1 and 2 bedroom
3093
apartments at V llage Manor and
R1ver s de Aparlments n Middle
New 3BR 2 Balh 14 W•de ssoo
From $249 $373 Call 740
Dawn $210 permo Free Atr 1 1992·5&lt;)64. Equal Hous ng Oppor
800 691 6777

les

Washer &amp; 0 yer 41 Sony TV
Futon B,d Tables Microwave
Cuno Cabtnet some Ant ques
Hundreds Of M sc Items 740
256 6753

1984 Volkswagen Jetta 4 Speed
Has AfC Needs Brakes &amp; Fuel
Pump
$400 OBO 740 446
0671

Water ne Spec1al 314 200 PSI
Sa1 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pression An ngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 80Q-537 9526

1985 Che\'y Looks and runs
great Lot of new parts $900
(304)675-6693
1987 Chrysler LeBaron Automat
lc AIC PW POL Runs Excel enl
Gooq Cond•llon $2 oOO 740 446
8981

Wh te Kenmore washer $90
While Kenmore Dryer $85 While
G E Washor $90 Almond Ken
more Dryer $90 30
Call Aller 5 30 PM

1988 Mercury Topaz A I Wheel
Drive Great In The Snow
$1 000 00 740.245 9206

9066

550

Building
Supplies

1989 Dodge Caravan 181 ooo
miles
runs
good
good
cond $900 a good buy&amp; 19B6
Dodge V sta wagon 4 wheel dr
good cond needs carburetor
work $500
304 675 4889

Block bnck sewer pipes wind
ows lntels etc Claude Winters
R10 Grande OH Call 740 245
5121
Steel Bu khngs New Must Selll
40x60x14 Was $17 500 Now
$10 971
50,;100x18
Was
$27 850 Now $19 990 B0•135•16
Was S79 850 Now $42 990
100x175K20 Was $129 650 Now
$78 850 1 800-406 5126

560

1989 Plymouth Hor zon 5 Speed
89 Obo 0 tg na Mtles Good Con
d lion $1 400 0 B 0 740 446
3869 Pease Leave Message &amp;
Will Return Call

1990 Chevy Cavalier 4 Doors 4
Cylinder Automatic 2nd Owner
Well Ma ntamed $1700 740
379-9885

Pets for Sale

AKC Bassett Hound Pupp es
Red &amp; Wh te Tn Colo 1st Shots
&amp; Wo med $200 740 256 1686

t990 Plymouth Aclalm AutomatiC
A/C T II Cruise PW
$1 200 741)-446 7029

P..KC b aek labrador Retriever
female DOS 7f16/99 shots
wormed dewclaws remOIIEid laml
ly &amp; hunli/lg dog $250 740 992
2472

1998 Fa rmont Commander Ser
es 14X70 3BR n ce can leave
on lot Fu I s ze Couch Flora
Des gn Mau..,e&amp; Eggshell Has
not been used $400 Ant que
Wardrobe 13041675 4153

29 Gallon Ftsh Acquar urn All
Accesso ies No Stand No
Leaks $50 (304)773-5051

29 PEOPLE NEEDED
TO LOSE WEIGHT
Dr recommended 100% natural
Gua anteed t1 program In Eu
ope Alia a1 1 (8B81 449 3759 or
\'tstt www memb'ers tr pod com/
NSFo d
Ash ey Wood stove excellent
cond tton 32 storm door stan
dard boys bike no gears 740
742 2931
BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 lbs 30 DAY MONEY
BACK GUARANTEE! Natural Or
Recomrhended 740 44t 1982
Free Sampes
Co lect bles Picture Frames
Meat Grinde s Butter Mold
Washboards 0 I lamps Iron s
Cigare tte Lighters Furn ture
Much More 7 40 446-(1639

Collectors Item G6rman 35 MM
Plate Came a Wo ld War I
Loyd E Esque Phone 304 773
5479 Mason wv
COMPUTERS
aceessones soflwa e supp es
Del vered to you doo at supe
sto a prtees
computers by1n1er net
COMPUTERS $0 Down Low
Monthly Payments Y2K Compll
ao A most Eve yone Appro\'ed
Call FIROCOM Advanced Tech
rtotog10s 1 BOQ-617 3476
Couch &amp; Chair In Good Condlllon
For Sala 740.446-7589

AKC Lab Pupp es ChampiOn
Blood In&amp; Proven Hunt ng Stock
Black Chocolate Colors Males &amp;
Females 740 643-2288
AKC Reglsle ed Puppies Po
meranlans $300 Poodle $250
Also Shih Tzu $250 (304167~
3361

1995 Buick leSabfe Bought New
1996 One Owner Like New

We are baby Pussycats
Come
&amp; Get Us 1 Our names are
Hershey Borden Sterl ng and
MaJO and we need good homes!
Our Daddy got sick and died and
Mom says there are people out
the e who w I love us We are 8
weeks o d and ve ry sweet and
cuddly Ca I our Mom Rebecca
al (3041675 4803

1\,iiuslcal
Instruments

Klmba I canso e plano 11ery ntce
condition $500 740.949 2861

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Red Aaspberr es Now Available
Taylors Berry Patch Cali In Eve
lngs 74d 245 9047

•
J
I

1995 Fo d Mustang Black W th

G ~ lnte lor Spoiler "- ound Ef
tects Headtlgl'lt Covers very
Sharpt Musl Soli 740 245 9239
1995 Monte Carlo one owner
looks and runs 1ke new Carroll
Johnson 740 992 5949

1998 Muslang GT 5 speed toad
ed 5000 miles Ike new ga(age
kepi $17 500 740 992 2998

Conn trombone with case S125
phone 740992 7447

580

39 ooo Milos $12 500 740 446
0004

1998 Ctwwy Cava ier Automatic
AM/FM Cauette Power Moon
Roof Green 8 500 M les Ask ng
$8 500 OBO 740 256 1011

FACTORY WHEE~S
Alloy
Steel Rally worlds Most Cam
p eta l~ventory Of OEM Whee s
Ship
Nationwide
1 aoo
9WHEELS Slock Wheels (And
Hub Caps I On y Buy SeU 1 600
994-3357 www ackerwhee com

18
19

20

Pass

5•

Flaher

East

24
25
27
32

Pass
All pass

35 Winter
vehicle
39 Window

coverings
43 I.Airge artery

45 Food plan

Al~er

or

K

K

47 Ac1resa
Meclellne-

48 Subside
49 Actress

He d"

x x opposrte

J

x oppos1 te

J

Joanne-

50 Receive
52 Casual top

x x

53 Annapolla
grad
54 Collector a

x

As w1th yesterday s deal th1s one
b1ddmg

goal

to get

South mto 1he contract H1ron w1shed
lo d1scuss How should the auetwn
proceed 0
Agamst five dramonds West leads
che spade queen

after ruffing East

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce ebnty C pher cryptograms are created from quota11011s by famous people past and
present Each etter n the c phe stands for another

Today s clue 0 equals Y

SWitches to a low heart What should
South do now 0
Openmg w1th a weak two Q&lt;d usu
ally shows only a SIX card su1t Yet

THE BORN LOSER

1983 Yamaha 200E Shaft Drive 3
Wheeler Runs Great $700 00 &amp;
oi0-245-9:206

r OF COO~':&gt;f) JU~I Wfl.i~--1 00 ~

~~'(~

'&lt;CIU

~·

er than

5f\OC':&gt; P.,'?.E- ON. \fi.E-

sonal or partnership slyle 1 Whatev
er West does three no trump shou ld
be lhc fmal conlrac t made wo1h at
North passes

Sou1h balances With

1wo n o uump

md North rai ses)

pomted pa r even t Easl sho uld cash
I he heart ace 11 tnck t\\ o

II should be

clear thatlhrcc no 1rump 1s nak1ng
pre bably W&lt;lh an m ellr ck so h o ld

BIG NATE

1n~ declarer 10 hrs co ntracl

NOT nilS YEAR THOUGH'
WEARIN&lt;O THIS ::&gt;TUPI D
TIE HAS ME IN S.UCH
A fOUL MOOD I
COULON T SMILE

canno1 be bad and Will
lhosc

YOU LOOK
NIC.E TODA.Y

East \\ es t

pa

plus

If West wms thiS lllc k

West olf lhe lead
wms

LXOVHHU

UXCUINDX

DH

G K H T D

I hate 1he dawn The grass always looks as lhough
- Chf1on Webb (The Dark Corner)

PREVIOUS SOLUTION
11 s been left ou1 all n gh1

'::~~:~' S©~clllA-~t.~se
loy CLAY I POllAN _.;;.._ _ _.,--WOlD
lAM I

l~l&gt;o~

0 four
Rearrange letters of
ocromblod words

the

be

low ro form four simple words

I

WURDAP

\

Whe 1 I he k1ng

declarer draws 1rumps

and

I
•

~,'

AL T S A

j5 j6
•

•

1
•

..

A

I

NATRYT

f----r:,7;_;;.1..:,..;,r~l...:..,r,..-l

_ __..J.
L-.J.L........I..L....J_L.-...J.-.J.

AND WA'( OllER HERE All
ITSELF WHERE NO ONE WILL
SEE IT IS THE UNDER6ROUND
COMIC YOU DREW

SEE., THE TEACHER PUT

VP ALL THE FLOWER PAINTIN65
OUR CLA!iS HAS SEEN DOING

e

PRINT NUMBERED

LETTERS

II

comtc Fecetved a roar of

laughter when she satd to the
college crowd
Spnng IS

I0

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

natures way of saytng
Complete

the ehucklo quoted
n the m1ssmg words
you deVtllop from step No 3 below

by felhng

SCIAM-LET5 ANSWEIS
Bucket Mange Fatal Vortex NOT to TAKE
Don I gel !lung by hgh prK•s r
Shop 1h• closSJ(If'd "''""'

IWEDNESDAY

ROBOTMAN
il~ !til ~ NIBSli ~ SL~~R

Asm: AND BLINK JUST UKF.
~ tT'S NICk ~NiiE 1

---..,..-------'
,
810
Home
Improvements

Res dent a or commercial wlnng
new ser\llce o repa rs Master q
censed electrician Ridenour
E eclr cat WV000306 304 675
1786

NR

another

Qla1ms

SERVICES

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

600

maXIIlliZ&lt;ng h1 s chance ol keepmg

1999 Pa amino Yearling Pop Up
Camper l ke New One Owner
Stove Fr dge Heat And AC
S eeps 6 8 Comtorlably $~ soo
740 388 8304

Basement Water
Praoling all basement repatra
done free esllmates 1 let me
guarantee 12y s oh job experl
ence (3041895 3887

LTGGCKU

spade rufl will del e u the contracl So

New Replacement Gas Tanks 0
&amp; R Aulo A ploy WV (3041372
3933 or 1 800 273-9329

livingston s

A L XK X

AKTAL

utsc ore all

Four 225x75x15 ww t res $85
lour 225x75~e15 Good Year Ran
glor $25 Four 15x8 chrome
spoke wheats $85 740 949
2693

C$C General Home Main
tenence Painting vinyl siding
carpentry doors windows baths
mobile home repatr end more For
free est mate call Chet 740 992
6323

c

South must go up" 11h the heart kmg

Budget P.nced Transm•sslons
and Eng nes All Types Access
To 0\'er 10 000 Transmissions
eve Jolnls 740.245 5877

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
parlance All Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag 740 446
7795

HE

630)

NATE

IF

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional tiel me guarantee
local elerences lurnished Es
lallllshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (7401
446 0870 1 800 2B7 0576 Aog
e s Wa erp ooflng

XIGXKA

s co n ced mg

1998 Sea dOo GSX L mlled rod
and purp e brand new condition
130 horsepower with tral er
$6395 OBO 740 742 3802

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

E H K

Easl ruffs the spade queen lead at
ck on~ then rt:tut ns th~..: heart four

(For 1ournuncn1 plajcrs In a match

,

199717 Nitro bass boat 90hp
Mercury oil Injected 4 blade tur
bo sta ness prop aerated lwe
we Is eMtra butt seat .-.2 PLB
thrust Motor Gu de trolling motor
2 new batteries 2 wide angled
hsh finders one owner garage
kept cover wh te w th teat green
metal flake showroom condlleon
$8 400 740.7.2 3802

BNKBIX

X 0 U

A LX

1sn 1 everyone s

pas smg (I feel thts 1s a matter of per

tr

1978 Hams Pontoon Boat In
Soard OuiSoard (304)882 3273

CA

leas1 one ovcrtnck (Aflcr 1wo spades

Wenled To Sell Spol On Walling
Ust For Ordered Harlay Oa111son
At 8aKtars Pa d $300 Sell Far
$150 740-379-2666

18 112 Fl f995 Bass Hawk W"h
200 HP Mercury Hydraulic Jack
Plat~ Gal11an1zed Trailer 740
379 2635

a queen

cho1ce Some would comprom1se by

'{OU~

IN X R

AKTAL

vulnerable and holdmg nothmg h1gh

Wmi'lli t=EC-T 1

ME.~~
"-~K\~&amp;

TI\I~Momm&amp;

1995 Harley Davidson Springer
Black with too many extras to
list Low miles e•cellent shape
$17 000 (3041882 2737

r

slartmg w1th a three spade b1d when

Car parts

Sips
Baseball atat
Swl1ch
aenlng
34 Perfume

lead • Q

one hold s cuher

Orthodontia! a dell
Using hand
aignals
- llbroafa
Ob . .nre
Shade of

22 L1nger
aimlessly
23 Actress

1ssue of Bndge Magazmc

1993 35 It lnnsbruck Travel
Tra ler with Expando Exce lent
Coodll~n $9 500 740.367 7755

1993 Grand AM 2 Doors V 6
Aulomal~ Loaded $4 395 1992
lumina 4 Ooo s V 6 Automatic
Loaded $3 295 Cook Motors
74()-446-0103

13

H1ron s 1n1crestmg art1cle m lhe June

Ausl'j

790

11

8 Golf club
9 Ma I.Ainclera
10 Oncen-

Th1s IS lhe ihnd deal from Alan

1993 Ford Taurus I Owner 3 8
Iter engme
79 000 m lt~s
$5 ooo (304IB82 3376 Alter
5PM

t 994 Olds Cutlass Cl~ra Wh te
V 6 63 000 mi es Excel ent
Condit on
Garage
Kepi
(3041675 2915

Registered Airedale puppies
make g eat hunters farm dogs
loyal gentle pe s Shots wormed
$ 50 740 992 7888

2•

By Ph1i11p

1981 Honda CX500 Custom Mo
torcyc e U.O.. Tires Battery
Plugs &amp; Brakes MllUQe 21 700
SBOO Includes 2 Ful Face Hel
mels Call 304 773 5723 Ask For

760

7 Pope • piece

More bridge
author's license

Motorcycles

750 Boat• &amp; Motors
for Sale

cardaln •
Roman deck?
• Skillful
36 Worry
37 Org; concerned 5 - - m y
heart
with lntlght
6 Took five
rates

difference

North
Pass

Opemng

ORDER IN TH'
COURT··

1992 Co eman Pap up Camper
S eeps 6 $2 000 or Trade
(304)675 1105

1994 Honda Accord LX All Op
ltOns 84 ooo Mt es Good Cond
tton. $10 ooo Or Take over Pay
meniS 740 379-2283

Oobe man puppies tails docked
llrst st1o1s and wormed p~ enls
on premises $100 each one
black and tan female two red
mates 740 992 5551

3.

WHEN I SAY

1992 Ford Tempo Aula /Air Runs
Great Good Work Car $1 750
740.446 4782

1994 Grand Am GT 64 000 ACiu
at Miles All Powe E1cellent
Cond liOn 740-44S 4604

..CKC Registered Cocker Spaniels
5 Monlhs 2 Males $50 00 Each
1 Femae$10000 7402566182

570

POL

1991 Cadillac Se..,ille Loaded
$5 900 080 13041675-5571

AKC Boxer Puppl9s Talis &amp; Dew
Claws Removed 1st Shots &amp;
Wo med Both Parents On Prem
SBS $225 740 256-1686

BARNEY

1998 'Yamaha Blaster L ke New
$2200 or Trade lor Truck
(304)675 1105

740

3 Numbarof

K 5

features con tor1ed

1983 Jag 4 door XJ6 looks - ·
and dn11es n ce $2500 740 992
5551

WARMUP
92°/o Gas Fu naces Heat Pumps
Ou~t Systems Free Est1mates If

K 6 2

1994 GMC 4x4 Pick Up Truck
350 Eng ne
Automatic Till
Cruise Power Windows And
Door lock A r Conditioner
75 000 MMes $12 500 One Own
er 7&gt;W-388-8304

1969 Chevy Belair 2 Doors 327
Molar 2 Speed Power Glide
Transm ssion Second Owner
87 000 Miles Musl Seltl $3 200
080 740.379 2666

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY We F nance o• Down Past
Cred1t Problems OK!! E\'en f
Turned Down Before'! Reestab tsh
Your Credlllt 1 BOD-659-0359

•

1 Wide ahoa size
2 Roman 410

33Sma1-

1991 Dakota LE 4x4 Tool Box
Running Boards Flare Fenders
Lola Extras! Excellent Condition
S7 500 740-379-2788

CARS $100 $500 &amp; UP PO~ICE
IMPOUNDS Honda s Toyola s
Chevys Jeeps And Sport Utll
lies Call Nowt BOO 772 7470
EXT 7B32

Three Bags Lillie Boy s Clolhlng
sizes 18 mo to 2 11:2 years $10
for all (3041882 2518

30 Pierce
31 Dlaregardo

cussed the vanous possibilities when

POLICE IMPOUNDS FROM
$5001 Repo s All Makos &amp; Mod
els Fee Call Far Ltstings 1 800
719-3001 l!A010

Roll top desk _kenmore d sh
washer secl ana l sofa table &amp;
chairs 304 675-7314

!I'A9843

A 54

West

South

1980 Toyota 4•4 SI 200 OBO
Runs EKcellent Great Truck For
Thts Coming Winter! 740 3888461 740-992 8978

0904

28 Spenlah IItie
2S So theta ~I"

Vulnerable Both
Dealer West

1977 Chevy Blazer 4x• 8 L11g
Ton Rear Ends 456 Gears New
39 5 Swampers Rebuilt Motor
Many New Parts Must Selll
$2 800 080 7ol0-379-2666

97 Camara 37 000 miles au
tomat c dark green traction con
trot amflm cassene 740 669

East

•

•

1973 Ford Truck 4x' AutomBIIC
Comes W th Another Cab 1750
0 B 0 740-367 7576

S!OO CARS FROM $500111 Buy
Pollee Impounds &amp; Repos Fee
CALL NOW For ~!Slings I 800
319-3323 1&lt;2158

DOWN

+AQI096

730 Vena &amp; 4-WD•

710 Autos for Sale

A Q8 2

South

Must See 1980 CheW"y 1 Ton
Facto y Reb It 350 Engine New
TOes $3000060 740-256-1722

TRANSPORTATION

I eezers Bedroom Su1tes 01
nelles Lois Morel (7401 446
1004 (7401-446 4039 any lime

•

Dodge Dakota Sport .-.x:4 Air
Gond
3 9 V 6 Aulomallc
120 000 mites runs good new
llfes and lopper $5 000 OBO
(304)675 7133

Special Fal Feed a' Ca f Sale
Tuesday September 21 1999 7
PM Callie May Be Brough! In AI
ler 4 PM On Monday &amp; UpTo 4
PM On Tuesday All Cans1gn
ments Welaome Haul ng Avail
able Athena Livestock Sales
740.592 2322 74().698-3531

(llbbr)
26 l&gt;oa. .aolve
pronoun

eK.l8 5

1995 Chevy Tahoe 4x4 4 Doors
350 Automatic Loaded Leather
Black &amp; S lver Asking $15 000
060 740.2!16 1011

Lost 3 Angus Cross He Iars In
~rea Of Sl Rl 141 &amp; 775 Call
Jdhn Jackson 740 446 7339 Or
741)-446-4889

740 446 6308 1 800 291 0098

Ooublew des F ee Decor &amp; Furn
lure
HURRY HURRY HURRYI
OAKWOOD HOMES
BARBOURSVILLE WV
600 383 6862
Brand New BO s 3
Ba hs Just $'239 Month
De veyy and Set Up only one
this P eel Hu ry! Oakwood Galt
pols (740) 446 3093

J 4

AERATION MOTORS
Repa red New &amp; Rebu 11 In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 800-537 9528

2 br apt In New Ha\'en lor more
Info ca 1304 895 2937
1990 Darw1t e 14x70 2 Bed ooms
2 Baths 2 Po ches 'And Heal

• 7 4 3

JET

MERCHANDISE
Rental Property A 2 Apartment
Duplex In Gall pots C•ty L m Is &amp;
2 Acres W th Tra er &amp; 2nd Tra f.
er Hook Up Near Ho zer s 740
441 0720

2

Grubbs Plano tun ng, &amp; repa1 s
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Dr 740-446 4525

Tra~er lot For Rent 314 M1le From

Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob1 e homes a1
cond ttoned $260 $300 sewer
water and rash nctuded 740
992 2167

•

PRIMESTAR
Mob te Home Lot at Santa s For
es on Rt 87 WaterfSewer pr
va e
eferences
reqUired
(3041675 4138

Buy Homes From $10 000
1 3 Bed oom lpcal Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures F nanctng
Posstbte For List ngs Cal 800
319 3323 E" 1709

Q 10 7

Good Used Retr gerator Working
$200 Etectnc Range Working
$50 740-367 7115

55 Type of birth

21 Purpo. .ful
57 Montana city
23 Hundredweight 58 Moat oenaoble

• K 8 2

• J 5

QJI09763

8 8glstered mini hor&amp;es will sell
together or separately 3 stamons
and 3 mares 740.742 2050

all

right"
Trimming
Tatka Idly

MIWOftl (abbr I 56 Frul1 ripener

1982 Chevy SC 10 $200 740-9492861

6 year old Arabean mare bred
asking $1000 740-742 2525

46
51

11 TCid TIM'Mr a

Massev Ferguson 50 Gas W1th
loader ~ohn Deere 820 Diesel
574 lnternatlona Attar 6 00 740
446 680B

1 Charolais Bull Calf Welghtng
Approx 350 Pounds Extra NICe
74()-.446-4053

.:; Llltln gocla
46 Astron.tuta

11 s..n.nder
17 F.....,h wtne

2601

For sate 24x42 greenhouse
healer and fans cab net stereo
•ecold player 740-949-2822

Upsta rs Fu n shed 3 Rooms
Bath C ean No Pets! References
&amp; Deposit Required 740 446
1519

..,18/M

14
15M.-~

720 Trucks for Sale

Livestock

•2 S8Wil"ka p.n
.w curvy-

13 AleriMI

1968 Chevy 112 Ton V 8 3
Speed 43 762 Miles All Original
One Owner like New tnslde And
Ou1 Ask ng $6 250 1•0 379

630

•1 t'elr grade

lngest~ne

1996 Adam Horse gooseneck
Tc:allar Stantlo.ad lront dress
rear tack rubber mats padded
walls
(3041675 6132/doy 5
(740)4411015/evorung

F1rewood for sale All Hardwoods
Full S ze 314 Ton Truckload De
hvered &amp; Slacked $45 13041882
2555

Two one bedroom un Is ava1table
mmed ate y newly remodeled
HUO approved no pets 5250 a
month p us secur ty depos 1 ca I
e14 449 9469

7 Food Item
12 Fl1 lor

Clean newer uaed cars good
variety r.. sonablt rate1 7 .. 0
742 3311 Of 74CH42 1«l0

610 Farm Equipment

loll

' leUry .....

-Car-

SUPPLIES

&amp; LIVES10CK

Discount Mobile Home
Ports &amp; Supply
Huge lnvento~

Ta a Townhouse A.pa tments
Very Spac ous 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 1f2 Bath Fully Car
peted Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Patto Sta t $350/Mo No Pets
Lease Plus Secun tv Deposit Re
qwred Alter 5 740 446 0101
Be tore 5 740-4~6 3481

Mode n cab n on large larm A
bany area must have good refer
ences no ns de pets 740 698
7244

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

FARI&gt;1

,.,_..,

::~

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
540 Mlscelleneou•
Merchandise

__

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOI

ASTRO·ORAPH
Wednesday Sep1 13 1999
G1ve full ven1 to your lofty Ideals
and s1andards on Che year abead
because lhey wdl act as magnets lo
attract success to you lberc IS. sub-s1anltal proll\lse bolh career wose and
socially for you
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) Deal
wuh a mauer 1oday that you ve been
avo1dong because of 11s dlfficully II
can easily be concluded now to your
lolal sai1Sfact1on Wieh far less effort
lhan you 1hough1 Virgo tteal your
self 10 a birthday goft Send che
r&lt;:qu1red "'fund fonn and for your
Astro draph P"'docl&lt;ons for Che year
a~ad by muhng $2 and self
addressed stamped envelope 10 AstroGraph c/o Ch1s newspaper ~0 Box
&amp;158 Murray Hill S1a11on New
York NY 10156 Be sure lo slate
your zo,hac s1gn
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) One of
your best assets today wdl be your
abihly lo express your ideas 10 o1h
crs w th great clanty Use th1s m both
y our soctal and comrncrc1al Involve
rnent~

SCORPIO (0c1 24 Nov 22) A
o( Circumstances could engt
neer an unusual financial opportun1
ly for you loday ihal woll have long
lasung benefic1al effecls Walch for
11 1hei\ take advantage of 11
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) Try 10 sprrnkle m small10uches
of ihealncs today when lryong to gel
yom pomts across to assoctates You
have 1he na1ural1alcntlo do so wllh
out appeanng phony Curiam up
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Although 11 moghl appear lo come
about m a most mystenous fashton
1he chances or acqUinng somelh mg
matenal you ve been wanting looks

senes

qu&lt;IC good 1oday
AQUARIUS (Jan

20 Fch

191

Dreams or wtshes can commg true
1oday when backed up by poSitiVe
actton G1ve full \'ent to your tmagt
nation but do so as a "'ahsuc vr~on

ary
PISCES (Feb 20 March 201
Don 1 be coo proud to ask for help

tQ1Jay m matters that are relevant to
your career Persons yau ve Bided
w1ll be more than happy 10 go 10 bai
for you
ARIES (March 21 Apnl I91 The

many ktndnesses of what others hllve
done for you m 1he pasl wlllmsp&lt;re
you Coday lo perform a s1m1larly

compassiOnate gesture for someone
else Your bean will lead you wiSe
ly
TAURUS (Apnl20 May 20) You
may ach&lt;ev~ somelhmg tOday '"
wh1ch you II take grea1 personal

pr1de but tnstead of poundmg your
you II feel humbled by lhe

cheSI

expenence
GEMINI (May 2 1 June 20) The

cooperation and cons derauon you

show today w1ll evoke a stmtlar
response by others Tt 1s collectl\ e
elTon will make somelhmg dofficult
relattvely easy to ach1eve
CANCER (June 2 I July 22)
Allow your onlu11lon to be of serv1ce
to you today where your work or
career IS &lt;nvolved These pcrcepuons
could be quue accurate enabhng you
10 perceive wha1 your peers overlook
L:EO (July 23 Aus 22) Your
mnuence O\ler those who are younger
or less mature w II he qullc strong
1oday They w1ll1nkc lu heart wl al
ever you tell lhem IS for 1he&lt;r wn
good and whal you lclllhem wil l he
g ood

I never

ask for advtce because adv1ce tS like castor

Otl easy to giVe but

NOT to TAKE

•

SEPTEMBER 15 I

�•

:Page 12 • ·The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Wednesday, September 15, 1999

Join In The Area VVide

Thursday
S1pr.mber Ul, Ulllll

Weather

High school football previews, Page 4
National Depression Screening Day, Page 12
Reds beat Cubs, Page 6

Today: P. Cloudy

High: 70s; Low: SO.
Tomorrow: Sunny

High: 70s; Low:

so.

Sports
Cleveland falls to the
Red Sox 6-4 in 13
Innings

-Page 5

•
Meigs County's

The New Gallipolis Kroger at 31 Ohi:o River Plaza
Just 1 mile on Rt. 7 from T"'e Silver Bridge.
U~S.D.A.

Die-t Rite

Select-(12-14-lb. Avg.)

Whole Boneless
Ribe

orRe·eoJ
2-Liter

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volu me 50. Nu mber 70

It's here

Hometown Newspaper

Floy~

charges ashore, flooding Carolina coasts;

By SCOTT MOONEYHAM '
Asaocllted PraM Wrltar
.
WlLMINGfON, N.C. (AP} -· Hurricane Aoyd tore ashore today ncar Cape
Fear :vith winds of 110 IJlph, flooding the~ of North and South carolina as
tens of thousands of people huddled in shelters.
The eye of the huge storm arrived on the U.S. mainland at about 3 a.m., preceded by hours of violent weather, including more than a foot of rain and severaltomadoes. More than 480,(0) utility customers in North carolina, ~th Car'
olina and Virginia were without power.
· " I've never been in nothing like this he fore," said, Norma O.ilders, 62, a
retired Rustburg, Va., nurse who carne to North carolina on vacation and was in
Wilmington's Marriott Courtyard Hotel when it lost (lOwer this morning. "I'm
getting too much fuss from my children. They're at home. They think that's
· where I'm supp&lt;&gt;;ed to be."
.'
5 a. the storm was centered 25 miles noitheast of Wilmington and moving at 2: mph the north-northeast.
a
·ved ~ong the Inte~tal Walerway in Wilmington, porpoises
gently swam seaward past a 34-foot fishing boat that was tossed up onto the
grass across from Wrightsville Beach, island. Surprisingly, there appeared to be
little other damage on the mainland, aside from some road Hooding and buckled piers.
The hurricane was expected to chum along the coasts of Virginia, Maryland,
Delaware and New Jersey before nearing New York's Long Island by early Fri'
day. Storm and disaster preparations were heing made in New Yor.k Oty, M._...achusetts' Cape Cod and along the coast oE Maine.
Hurricane warning.-; were.posted as far north as Plymouth, Mass. In New Jersey, schools were closed for the day statewide.
In Portsmouth, Va., flooding from the storm and power failures com~ined to
shut down the city's water supply system early today, police spokeswoman Sgt
Elizabeth Romero said. The system supplies 110,(0) customers.
North carolina authorities had already issued evacuation orders for the bar. ri~r islands outside Wilmington and for the Outer Banks, the fragile line of
islands battered by Hurricane Dennis last week.
'
.
President Qinton, hurrying back from New ZeaiiU'd to deal with the hurricane, pre-emptively declared a-stale of emergency in South carolina and North
carolina. .
"I think we've done everytliing we know to do," Qinton said.
Authorities had urged more than 2.6 million people along the so~them
Atlantic coast to Clear out of Aoyd's path -the biggest peacetime evacuation
in U.S. history. While the storm delivered only a glandng blow to Aorida and
Georgia on ~nesday, it still forced the cancellation of hundreds of airline
flights in and out of Florida and Georgia. · '
.
Amtrak suspended all train service south of Washington.
One death was attributed to lhe storm in North carolina.- a penron.died
. . ....
. ..
- -.

es of rain. Wilmington_got 13 inches of rain. flooding streets and low-lying:

areas.

=

-.

Single Copy- 35 Cents

•

STANDING FAST- Motel owner Don Gravln obeervea aa the
pounding aurf reac:hea for the HeOnd floor of the Howard Johneon Re10rt Hotel on SL Augultlnit Beach, Fla.,Wedneeday momlng du.rlng the height of Hurricane Floyd'a fury.
when a car hydroplaned on wet roads Wednesday afternoon and crashed. A second pmon was presumed dead after being swept away by floodwalers near
Greenyillc.
·
When F)oyd hit the coast near Cape Fear- about 25 miles south .of Wilmington- the Calegory 2 storm was moving north-northeaSt at 20 mpll. Floyd's
winds were down from a peak of nearly 155 mph when it battered the Bahamas
and wen: expected to weaken as it moved inland.
~y nig!ltfall ~y, ~ of the North Carolina coast had up to 16 inch-

.

.

Meigs Local boar appraves 3.5% raise for·teachers

CaliFornia

Preshbunch
Broccoli

. Chicken

leg ouarters
pound .

Area
line me&lt;;naJ•Personnel matters including a pay raise for teachers dom- Traci Houdashelt and Maria Hampton as aides to handi - Approved a contract with Holzer Clinic to provide
ics from American El~ctric Power inated Tuesday's meeting of the Meigs Local Board of Edu· capped children.
.
occupational therapy f&lt;;&gt;r students at $68 per hour;
traveled to North .Carolina cation.
The board also hired tutors .at SIS an hour for no more
-Purchased a new computer system for the central office
Wednesday to aid their fellow
Arter granting pay raises to non-teaching employees, the than five hours per we~k.
and bus garage ·for S18,650; '
linemen at Carolina Power and boa~ approved a 3.5 percent pay raise for teachers and for
Also, Bob Buck was accepted as quiz team ·advisor and
-Approved parent volunteers for Rutland and Bradbury .
Light in restoring power to areas empl yees with supplemental contracts·· like coaches and Mary Ann Neal and Kelly Barnell were approved as junior elementary schools;
:
.
expected to be hit hard by 150 adv· ors.
·
.
class advisors.
·
· - · Agreed to pay mileage to Laura Ellis for -transporti ng a
mile per hour winds and flooding
In other business, the board:
post·sec0 ndary_enrollment student '
'
The board also approved the iuition rate for students who
rains associated with Hurricane do not Hualify under open enrollment in the amount of
-Approved membership in the Southeastern Ohio Vol-Approved an overnight field trip for ·the Meigs County'
Floyd .
$121.86 (in-state) and $349.28 (out-of-state) per mon.th for untary Educational Cooperative for computer setvices for FFA to Camp Muskingum Sept. 24·26;
The hurricane, one of the most the 1999-2000 school year. Those rates are determined by the the 1999-2000 fiscal year in the amount of $18,423.60;
-Granted permission to the high school librarian to dis'powerful tropical storJl!S to eyer state.
-Entered into a contract with Walnut Township School card surplus books.
threaten the Uniled Slates, is
Present were Superintendent Bill Buckley, Treasurer
The board hired Karen Sue Polcyn, Sharon Thomson and District, Millersport, .to provide services to a health handiexpected to cause dam age alo.n g Dana Williams Sr. as substitute teachers for the 1999-2000 capped child while he resides in Meig.o; Local with foster par- Cindy Rhonemus and board members John Hood, Scott Walthe coastlines .of several eastern school year and hired Sherry Eagle, Joyce Ash, Donna Shato, ents;
ton, Roger Abbott, Randy Humphreys and Wayne Davis.
states including Florida, Georgia,
South Carolina North Carolina
and Virginia. Local restoration
crews from Ashland, -Ky.; Athens, . 1\vo pre-teenage boys spent l'!5t Emergency Medical Service, an resume the search at daybreak.
Chillicothe, Crooksville, Hills- night in the woods near Salem Cen- extensive search of the area was However, before the searc)1 was
boro, Ironton, Portsmouth and ter while dozens of searcherS using conducted by firefighters, emer- resumed, the two youngsters
Wellston, Ohio, and Pint ' Pleas· all-terrain vehicles and a helicopter gency personnel, sheriff.'s deputies returned tO their homes and staled
ant, W. Va. traveled to Ashville, scoured the area looking for tHem.
and the Ohio Highway .Patrol, Souls- they had become disoriented during
N.C.
·
The .Meigs County Sheriff's by said. A helicopter provided by the night, Soulsby said.
"We are sending 32. distribu- Office received a report at 10:10 Washington County Sheriff Robert
He said both were in good condition line ml:chanics and supervi- p.m. of two juveniles that had left Schlicher was used in the search of tion despite the chilly weather.
sors and several '&lt;Chicles, in~lud­ their homes. at 6 p.m. and had not the terrain which Soulsby said is
Soulsby said many local resiing n digger trucks, 10 material returned, said Sheriff James M. very rugged and covered with many dents assisted in the search using
handlers, six bucket trucks, and Soulsby. The boys repOrtedly left to trails.
.. ATV's and expressed appreciation
three pickups to the Ashville sell items for a school project.
,
The search was suspended at 5 for the cooperation of all ~,Vho assistarea," said Ken Hamilton, operaAfter alerting the Meig.o; County this morning with the intent to ed in the search.
tions manager for AEP's southern
Ohio region .which includes Ashland, Ky. and Point, Pleasant; W.
By ROBERT BURNS
by Serbs who knew a rescue attempt exploitation of parading a downed
~.
AP
Military
Writer
was
under way, the award citation , American 'stealth lighter' pilot in
"Our employees will be helpWASHINGTOJ:'l
(AP)Flying
said.
. front of news .cameras." At stake
ing Carolina Power and Light
In a ceremony at Andrews Air were U.S. public support for the war
crews to repair poles and lines 100 feet aboye the ground on a
hazy,
moonless
night
only
25
miles
Force
Base just outside Washington, effort, NATO's resolve to keep
down.ed by the hurricane.
from
dol!o'ntown
Belgraqe,
Capt.
Silver
Stars also were awarded to bombing, and aircrew morale, it said.
Going from AEP's Athens SerJames
L.
Cardoso
and
his
team
of
two
F-16
pilots,, Capt. · Sonny P.
Among other details of the 5 !ifvice Center were Ken Midkiff
Air.
Force
helicopters
dodged
Blinkinsop,
35,
of
Tolland,
Conn.,
hour.
rescue mission not previously
and Kent . Cline, and from the
Point Pleasant Service Center, power lines, 'telephone poles and and Capt. Adam B. .Kavlick. 32, of disclosed: Three Serb Amly brigades
Philip Caldwell', Gary Derenberg- missile launchers as Seib defenders Festus, Mo., for their role in the of infantry, combat engineers and
·
armored forces·were 10 miles from
er, Bill Kuhr\ and Mark Still .
· scanned the skies ·with search NATO campaign.
lights.
The F-117A incident was one of where the downed F-117 A pilot
Their destination: an American the most sensational of the 78-day air landed. Also, the downed pilot's
pilot who had been shot down in his war. Serb TV pictures of the wreck· infrared strobe _light, used .to mark
I'-117A stealth fighter by Serb air age of the stealth fighter gave Bel- his position for rescue, was not
defenses. The Serbs had intercepted grade a momentary propaganda vic- working, so he lit a flare that gave
the downed airman 's radio transmis- tory, but it turned out to he the first of away ,his exact position to the Serbs.
Today's
sions, so they knew his approximate only two downings of NATO air- Fortunately, Cardoso's MH-53M
2 Sections - 12 Pages
position and were closing in with craft; no allied crews were lost dur- helicopter was only a half-mile away
foot soldiers and search dogs. Time ing the air campaign.
at that point.
·
8
Calendar
was running out.
The Pentagon never has identified
One of \he other Silver Star recip- .
Dogs were within 30 feet of the the F·l I 7A pile~ and it had not pre- ients also was involved in the rescue
9&amp;10
Class!neds
airman
when Cardoso directed · an · viously disclosed the name of any- of a downed U.S. pil_ot, though in
11
Comics
MH-60G helicopter to swoop down one involved in the rescue. The offi- much different circumstances .
2
Editorials
and land, pick up the pilot, scoot out cial citation accompanying Car- Capt. Adam Kavlick was fiying
J
Local
of the area. and dash across the bor- doso's Silver Star award offered lead in a group of ·F-16CJs on a
der to safety in eastern Bosnia.
more details ·of the rescue mission mission to destroy Serb SA-3 and
4-6
Soor1s
For
his
role
in
commanding
the
than
previously known - including SA·6 surface-to-air missile batter3
Weather
rescue, Cardoso, 33, of O.erry Hill, the fact that Serb soldiers and their ies near the. city of Nevi Sad on
N.J., was awarded the Silver Star on · search dog.-; were 30 feet from the May 2. when his wingman was
Southern High School's Homecoming Qullttll will be crowned
Lotteries
Wed~esday. The prestigious award is downed pilot before he was plucked struck by -an .SA-3 missile, causing Friday night at Southern'a homecoming footbell game against
OHIO
the· third . highest battlefield honor from the ground.
· 1 engine failure and forcing the pilot Alexander Hl_g h School. QuHn candidates are, clockwl" frllm
Pick 3: 1·6·8; Pick 4: 0-1-2-7
behind t)1e Medal of Honor and the
The successful rescue was a " crit- to eject.
bottom-right: Stacy Lyons, daughter of -lack and Rhonda Lyons,
Super Lotto: 3-5-6-26-32-:15
Air Force Cross.
ical and essential victory" for
Kavlick established the pilot's Racine; Dena Sayre, daughter of Dan and Donna Sayre, Racine;
Kicker: 7-9-8-8-8-3
"He fearlessly led his formation NATO, according to the award cita- pcsition, heard his survival beacon, Autumn Hill, daughter of Lqrl Hill of Apple Grove and Dean Hill
W.VA.
at great personal risk to himself and · tion, because it denied Yugoslav made radio contact with him and of Racine; Lareina Lawson, daughter of Mike and Margie LawDaily 3: 3-9-'1; Dally 4: ,9-5-2-6
his crews by penetrating an extreme- President Slobodan Milosevic "the marshaled the forces necessary for son, Racine; and Lena Yoacham, daughter of Nancy Pedigo of
e I 999 Ohin Vilky rubli5bing Co.
ly formidable air defense " operated pclitical, military and media a rescue .
·
Racine and Mark Yoacham of 1-lurrlcane, W.Va.

Youths

.

DOuble Prints ..• $1.99
4' $Ingle Prints ... $1.99 - 4' Doubie Prints ... $2.99

los~

overnight in woods

Air Force pilots awarded Silver Star for heroism in Kosovo war

.

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

....

TIIliH flU

16

SAT

17 18

Items &amp; Prices Good Through September 18, 1999 in
Pomeroy &amp; GallipOlis.

/

•

(

IAiiiJ

~

Coprright 1999 Kroger Mid-Atlantic.
We reserve the right to limit quantities.

None sold to dealers.

:

Two twisters damaged homes and churches, but 110 injuries were reported ·
At Wrightsville Beach outside Wilmington, Pam Carroll and her husband,:
. Bernard, nailed plywood to the door ·of their King Neptune Restaurant before:
leaving \\\:dnesday afternoon.
_
"This is very nerve-wracking. We' re all stressed, " she said holding her 2year-&lt;&gt;ld son, Patterson, in her arms. Said her husband: " My soo 's not quite 3
years old and this is his third storm."
Hurricane-strength gusts of 80 mph earlier buffeted O.arleston, S.C.. and
more than 200,&lt;XX&gt; people in the area lost power. More than 15 inches of rain
fell on Myrtle Beach by midnigh~ and authorities said they had never seen such
severe flooding.
Earlier, in northern and central Florida. Aoyd snapped power lines, smashed
piers into driftwood and knocked out electridty to 300,&lt;XX&gt; people. About 350
miles off the coast, the Navy and Coast Guard rescued eight people whose tugboat sank in 30-foot seas churned up by the hurricane.
.
Aoyd made a northward tum that spared Aorida and Georgia t,he catastrophic
damage many had {eared. NASA's Kennedy Space Center and its four shuttles
were largely unscathed.
·
Terry Hurley, checking into a Wilmington shelte! with his' wife and two chil· ·
dren, said his family stayed home for Hurricanes Fran and Bertha in 1996, but .
not for Aoyd.
"They talk like this one is going to be pretty mean," he said. "It's got every- .
body shook up."
. Myrtle Beach authorities imposed a 3 p.m. curfew arid turned off the water
supply. The hospital sent its patients inland but kept a doctor and three nurses on .
emergency duty.
.
. ·South Carolina Gov. Jim Hodges banned price gouging on essential items,
threatening fines up to S100 or 30 day~ in jail.
The last lime South Carolina took a direct hit from a major hurricane was
almost exactly 10 years ago, when Hugo struck near O!arleston with 135 mpll
winds'. The storm killed 29 people and caused $5.9 billion in damage, the most:
cosUy hurricane to hit the U.S. mainland until Hurricane Andrew hit Aorida in ·
1992.
At the Wilm ington Marriott, Lynn and 'Gail Wilmer of Lynchburg, Va. , were
sitting with Ms. O.ilders as the storm roared outside. The three friends had
arrived for a vacation on the beach, only to be forced in!O Wilmington onWednesday.
. Wilmer; 54; in tiis stocking feet, was recharging an oxygen concentrator orr
the generator lighting the lobby -the hotel's only power.
"As soon as this is over with, I'm heading back up to Raleigh to spend some
time with some friends," the retired restaurant manager said as he gasped for air.
"I've had enough of the beach."
·

I•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="430">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9866">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="26664">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="26663">
              <text>September 15, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5861">
      <name>gorsuch</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5860">
      <name>herrman</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
