<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7939" 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://66.213.69.5/items/show/7939?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T01:03:39+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18352">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/c51f586191bb1c8021eeeaf8f17ef8f3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b1faa15fa45c64e59282e6c02eaeb402</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="25766">
                  <text>•
hge12 • The Dally Se~tlnel

· Pomeroy • Middleport, OhiO

Thursday. Januery 14, 1899

~====~====~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~--~--~-.

Follow through ·On healthy eating
.
'

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -NBC. has gotten on the \lad side of
Jesse Ventura.
The new governor of Minnesota is upset that the network is
producing a made-for-television movie about him without his
permission.
"I am extremely disappointed that the NBC network has
. ~ decided to produce an unauthorized movio; about my life. It
: ~ _ appears they have put ratings above accuracy and honesty," the
•
former pro wrestler said Wednesday.
&gt; .
An NBC spokeswoman did not return a phone .call seeking
comment
.
NBC had approached Ventura about the movie idea after his
surprise election as governor, NBC affiliate KARE-TV reported.
But Ventura said he wanted any movie to wait until after a book
' . about him is released this summer.
NBC decided to go ahead anyway, scheduling the broadcast
for May 23.

..
.

...

.
.

' .
.' .

....

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Melissa Gilbert's four-year battle
-....--...., against the National Enquirer is over.
The former "Little House on the
Prairie" actress and the tabloid have
reached an agreement that means she
will drop her libel suit over a story in
which her ex-husband, Bo Brinkman,
called her a "deadbeat rnother...
Terms were not disclosed. ·
"It's like a no-fault divorce," said the
Enquirer's editor in chief, Steve Co~.
"We're no longer making accusations
Gilbert
against each other."
Miss Gilbert filed the suit in 1995, but it was dismissed a year
later by a judge , who said the Enquirer had quoted Brinkman
accurately and could not be sued for neutral reporting on a subject of public interest.
Miss Gilbert appealed and the 2nd District Court of Appeal
reversed the· decision, saying the level of public interest didn't
mean that the·ac(!ess could not seek damages.
RALEIGH; N.C. (AP) - Six years after its debut, an opera
wriuen by Carly Simon is back in the
spotlight.
The Opera Company of Nonh Carolina has chosen "Romulus Hunt," about
how a young boy and his imaginary
friend come to grips with divorced parents, to open its season tonight.
It will mark the first time a professional company has performed the opera
since its initial runs in New York and
· Washington in 1993.
Simon
· Originally, the Opera Company had
hoped to have Simon be a part of the
casting and rehearsal process. But because of scheduling conflicts, she only had time to be part of several fund-raising func,
lions.
·
Simon was expected to be on hand for tonight's performance.
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Teen-age rocker Jonny Lang is
rolling along with the Rolling Stones.
Lang will replace Green Day as the Stones' opening act in
Minneapolis on Feb. 15, one of Lang's managers said Wednesday.
The concert comes two days before Lang opens for the
Rolling Stones in his hometown of Fargo, N.D. Lang, who has
opened for the Stones previously, also is scheduled to open for
the Stones for two weeks in April.
·
"He loves it. He' loves the guys," said Lang's co-manager,
James Klein. "They're like old buddies, already."
Lang, 17, is to perform Saturday at Target Center as the headliner for the "People's Celebration" for Gov. Jesse Ventura.

.·

LONDON (AP) - Prince A¥jrew is making his first visit to
Vietnam.
.
·
The second son of Queen Elizabeth II will visit Hanoi and Ho
Chi Minh Ciiy from Feb. 28 to March 4 to learn about Vietnam's
developing commercial links with .Britain, Buckingham palace
said Wednesday.
It will be Andrew's last royal tour before he takes up a new
job in the Royal Navy, in whic_h he will be responsible for international relations with the rank of commander.

.
.
Stamps In The News: Berries to
~ighlight 1999 definitive schedule

By MARY DEIRDRE DONOVAN

For AP Special FealJ!res ·
After holiday feasting, good resolutions abouf sensible eating jil\e
with the need to stay healthy
tl\rough t~ 'wintry weather.
,
Eating well means making sure
your diet includes all the right nutrien~ . Folic acid may be one of the
less familiar: In January 1998 it
· joined the list of fortifiers added to
breads, cereals, pastas and rice.
But according to Mayo Clinic
Women's HealthSource (November
1997), half of all Americans don't
meet the Recommended Daily
Allowance for folic acid (180 micrograms for women, 200 micrograms
for men).
Folic acid is vital for cell growth
and the synthesis of DNA. For
women who may be considering
having a baby, folic acid is of particular importance. Maintaining adequate levels before ·becoming pregnant has been shown to greatly
reduce the incidence of neural tube
defects such as spina bifida.
' One of the simplest ways to get
folic acid is to drink an 8-ounce
glass of orange juice at breakfast.
But, since that will take you only
about half of the way, you should
also eat more foods naturally high in
.folic acid at lunch and dinner, too.
Fortified breads, cereals and pastas are good sources. Other foods to
include in your meals · are beans,
nuts,JCeds and dark leafy greens.
T1l' following recipe for Spinach
Salad with Tangerine anil Pomegranate features folic acid-rich citrus
and spinach. The salad is one of sev. eral to be featured in "The New Pro-

resolution~
.

Combine the juices. vincsar.
fessional Chef's Garde Manger,''
112 teaspoon balsamic vinegar
coming from The Culinary Institute
112 teaspoon prepared Cieole . mustard and garlic. Whisk in the oil1
·
gradually. Adjust the seasonina with
of ('\merica (Wiley, October 1999). . mustard
salt and pepper. Makes 3/4 cup. 1
Spinach Salad with 1lmprine ·
112 teasp&lt;!Oii minced garlic
Nutritional analysis pfl' •
and ·Pomegnmate
t/3 cup vegetable oil
OIIDCe,
2 tablespoon portion: 12d
Tangerine Pineapple Vinaigrette
2 tablespoons olive oil
cal., less than I g pro., 13 g (at, 2l
(recipe follows)
1/4 teaspoon salt (or to taste)
10 ounces spinach leaves, sterns
1/4 teaspoon ground black pep- carbo., 0 mg chol., 135 mg sodium.:
· ·
per (or to taste)&gt;
removed
&gt;
112 small red onion, sliced into
0.\
paper-thin rings
i tangerines,,segments only
I pomegranate, seeds only
Prepare the vinaigrette; whisk
vigorously and check seasoning just
before serving.
'
Thoroughly rinse and dry tile
spinach. Refrigerate until ready to
, serve. Toss the spinach with the
vinaigrette, top with onion rings,
tangerine segments and pomegr;m- ..
ate seeds. Serve at once. Makes 4 to
5 servings.
Chef's
Notes:'
Grapefruit,
oranges, ugli fruit, mandarin
oranges or .blood oranges, individually or in combination, may be used
4 cyl, 5 speed, A/C .
as substitute fruits. Slice onion rings
and place in a container of ice water
for up to 24 hours to crisp them. This
will also mellow the harsh bite of the
· raw onions that some. people find
offensive.
'
Nutritional analysis (includ~ .a
1-ounce, 2-tablespoon portion of
dressing): 170 cal.; 2 g pro.,' 12 g
fat, 13 g carbo., 0 rilg chol., 180 mg
sodium.
Tangerine Pineapple Vinal·
grette _
3 tablespoons tangerine juice
2 tablespoons · unsweetened
pjneapple juice
I teaspoon lemon juice

TOY.OTA S/C 414 _

kitchen ~craps into the bucket, each
time you do so covering them with a
sprinkling of the sawdust-soil mixture. The mixture will absorb odors
·and excess moisture. If you have a
lot of scraps at once, dump in a little
at a time, ·covering each layer with
the. sawdust-soil mixture. Chop uJ?
large pieces and let water drain from
anything that is very wet before you
toss it in the bucket.
Do not put meat. litterbox waste,
or anything else that you would not
put into your .outdoor compost pile
into the indoor compost bucket. ·
When your bucket is full, set it
aside and start, filling . the other
empty bucket. By the time the second bucket is full , the contents of the
first one will be well on their way to
becoming compost. Dump the con- .
tents of that first bucket outside on
your compost pile, and start filling
that .bucket again while the second
one sits.
Keep the bucket you are filling
and the. sawdust~soil mixture right in
the kitchen. There, warmth hastens
decomposition an-d the whole setup
is as convenient as a sink's garbage
disposal or a garbage pail.

97 FORD EXPLORER XLT 4 DR

:roritorrow: w.rmer

By SYD KRONIS.H
For AP Special Features
Most stamp collectors have
Seen the list of the 1999 U.S.
.Postal Service commemorative
stamps. Now the Postal Service
·has released the new designs for
definitive stamps on its 1999
agenda.
Definitive stamps are used on
most mail. They feature.
deceased American presidents,
flags, fruit and flowers while the
c9mmemoratives honor important people in tbe news, events
~Jfsignificant anniversaries.
One of the most colorful
offerings on the 1999 definitive
~gram is a set of four stamps
depicting fruit berries. Each 33ctnl'self-adhesive stamp shows a
different berry - blueberry,
strawberry, raspberry and blackberry:
. · A 33-cent flag envelope will
illustrate a stylized red, blue and
gold design. Another flag offering will be a 33-cent stamp portraying the American flag and a green classroom chalkboard displaying the first th!:_et$&amp;lers of the alphabet.
'. A cora.! pink .rose stamp will featurQII&gt;eautiful blooming rose on a 33ecnt self-adhesive format.
.
.
· President Abraham Lincoln, who has often appeared on U.S. offerings,
will again be shown on a special33-cent envelope. Justin S. Morrill, founder
efland grant colleges, will be honored on a special 55-cent definitive stamp.

33USA

'

Meigs County's

Organizing stamps better
. New collectors can better organize their stamps by acquiring glassine
oqvelopes. They are made of special see-through paper tltat protects stamps
from grease and air. You can use these small envelopes to keep your stamps
until you put them in albums.
Another helpful device is a magnifying glass which helps you exami ne ·
your stamps while en larged to see if there are damages and check the prop~r design and color. The condition of a stamp is important in determining its
value.
.
The glassine envelopes and magnifying glass may be obtained at your
l~~~:al dealer.
-

Any

Any
, Ex~.
Exp.
Frem erlaln•l t10 or tiS C-41 proe111 roli1.
Sit One Of Our Clerh For .Detail&amp; Of.The Fuji
Tru Celor Film Clult Cnd
Have 6 Relit Develop And Oat·T.fle
Sevetth Roll Developed FREE

Try Us Out For All
Your Photofinishin Needs.
Chertee Rlllle, R. Ph.
RoNild Henning, R.. Ph.
Mon. tllru Frt. 1:00 o.m. to 11:00 p.m., 511. I om-8 pm
IIUnday 1o:oo a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
KenMih McCullough, It Ph.

Another Princess Diana memorial
Naura, an island in the western Pacific which is a membtr of the British
Ct~mmonwealth , has joined many others in recognizing the ·first anniversary
of Princess Diana's death by depicting her on new stamps.

_____

'

....___·-~- ~--·

------·-----

PRESCRIPTION
E. ·Meln

PH. 11112-21155
Service Pomeroy, Oh.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Voh 1""' 4!J. N111u ll or 178

.

'

.By IAARV MAAGASAK

AaiiOCiated Preu Wrltllr
: WASHINGTON (AP) ·- The prosecution's .talc of
"perjury and obstruction is unfolding before a jury of 100
hushed senators in President Clinton's impeachment
trial, but Democrats who would have to provide the margin for conviction say they are unmoved so far by the
presentation.
·
Rising from their curved, custom-built tables in a
chamber steeped with history, House "managers" took
turns in their opening statements Thursday to argue for
removing the 42nd president from office. · .
The second of three days set aside for the House;s
presentation was continuing today with a·summation ~f
(evidence and arguments that the president's conduct violated criminal law.
· ·
A key decision facing senators is whether to call wit·
'nesses during the trial.
•;
. "If you boil the cilse down, somebody.'s telling we
'truth under oath and somebody's lying under oath," Rep.
,James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., one of the House prosecutors, said on NBC's "Today." "And the only way the
senators will ~ able to determine which is which is 1)\y
seeing the principals, looking at their facial expressi~hs,
looking at the tone of their-voice and making a detenbi-

nation."
On Thursday, Clinton carried
on at the White House, preparing
for Tuesday's State of the Union
address.
Today he was scheduled to
address a reinventing government
forum at the State Department
before flying to New York City to
unveil a new economic initiative.
· designed to encourage investment
in underserved lnner-city and
rural communities.
The opening day of arguments
. in the first presidential impeachment trial this century ,was carried
out with decorum inside the Senate chamber, where senators sat in silence for nearly six hours with just two
quick recesses. Once senators stepped outside into the
hallways, the opening volleys .of a political free-for-all
got under way.
White House spokesmen derided the case by the allRepublican prosecution team. Democratic senators said
they had heard nothing new. Repllblicans praised the
prosecutors' presenta.tions.

Senate Majority Leader Trent
Loll, R-Miss., chided Democrats
in a written statement for commenting on the substance of the
case- contending most Republicans followed his admonition to
hold their political fire.
"What we heard today was
nothing new," said freshman Sen.
Charles Schumer, D.N.Y., who
served ori the House .Judiciary
Committee as that panel built the
impeachment case with sharp
partisan divisions.
"I think some in the House ·,
hope·if we keep saying it enough,
maybe (pro-Clinton) public opinion will ·change.l do.n't
think s,o ," Schumer told ·reporters.
· Sen. Frank Murkowski, R-Alaska, countered that the
prosecution brought the jurors "achronology we've not
had .... The presentations were very meaningful and very
strong," .
·
A team of White House lawyers sat at their own
curved table opposite the prosecution team, waiting to
present their case next week but unable under Senate

=

Log!

4&amp;5

Wrather

3

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 7-1-2; Pick 4: 9-2-9·0
Buckeye 5: 1-19-23-31-32

w.yA.

.,

Dally 3: 7-2-0; Dally 4: 1-3-9-2
o 19'l90hlo\'ot~yPublmhlnaCo.

womenone being Long- rented
the apartment.
"They're· all great ki(ls," the
landlord said!
He said t;ong and Pryor each
signed leaseslin September.
He said they wanted to live near
each other.
Asmus said all the units in the
building were rented by a netWork
o{ friends and. family. Lo!lg's
cousin and a frien4 from high
school are also tenants.
He described Pryor as quiet and
respectful. Long, he said, "always
had a smile on· her face ... always
.cooperative, very friendly."
Asmus said Long was saving her
money to return to school. . ·

By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Dlplomauc Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States today
proposed removing a U.N. ceiling on Iraqi oil sales provided the proceeds are used to purchase food and other
humanitarian supplies for the Iraqi people.
Calling on Iraq tO take advantage of the exemption to
a 9-year-old U.S. Security Council trade embargo, State
Department spokesman James P. Rubin said the process
for approving contracts for food an\1 medicine would be
· made virtually automatic.
The U.S. proposals are designed part)y to counter a
campaign by Baghdad of accusing the United States of
starving the Iraqi people through its support of economic sanctions.
.
Iraq is permitted to sell $5.2 billion worth of oil every .
six months provided the proceeds are used to purchase
food, medications and other humanitarian supplies.
That ceiling would be lifted if the U.S. proposal were
accepted by the Security Council. it would not assur~ a
better life for Iraqi children, pregnant women, nursmg
mothers and the elderly. According to U.S. officials, Iraq
has kept huge supplies oi food and medicine in store·
houses, refusing to distribute them to the needy.
" Unfortunately and sadly for the people of Iraq, the
government of Iraq has chosim not to order important
. foodstuffs anil medicines for ita people," Rubin said;
"Furthermore, the government of Iraq has rejected
donations of humanitarian goods from other countries.
"The United States would support eliminating the
ceiling on funds from oil exports so that those funds can
be used solely for humanitarian food and medicine,"
Rubin said.
"We would al59 support reasonable measures to

•

.
.
rules to raise any objections.
At the White•House, presidential spokesman James
Kennedy attacked th.e Republican case as "both unsubstantial and circumstantial. We look forward to presenting·our defense based on the facts, the law and the Constitution." .
·
·
Clinton is charged with perjury and obstruction of
justice in two articles of impeachment approved Dec. 19
by the House along partisan lines. It takes a two-thirds ·
vote in the Senate to remove the · president from office,
meaning a dozen Democrats would have to join the 55
Republicans to convict him.
Rep. Asa Hutchinson, R-Ark., presenting the case for
obstruction, methodically wove tosether a series of presidential actions in late 1997 and into 1998 that, he said,
were designed to keep Clinton's extramarital affai.r with
Monica Lewinsky from the Paula Jones lawyelli at all
costs.
·
Beginning on Dec. 5, 1997, when Ms. Lewinsky was
added to the potential list of witnesses in Mrs. Jones'
.gxual harassment lawsuit against the president,· "the
wheels of obstruction started rolling and they did not
stop until the president successfully blocked the truth
from coming out on a civil rights case," Hutchinson
argued .

Meigs County's "First Baby of
1999" contest winn·er ,declared

Two shot to death in
campus-area apartment

::!~~~=·====i==l

LS Trim, loaded

Single Copy - 35 Cents

lProsecution ·case
unfolds, but Democrats unmoved
.

Good Afternoon

98 CHEVY BLAZER 4 DR 414

-Page4

' Newspaper
Hometown

cteam

2nd Set Free
.
EVERYDAY!

loss of SBinl

•

ffllm

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Photo Center

uc takes first

. ~:H~Ig~h:~·~~·i~UM~~:~~--~~==~~----------------~----~~~=----=~--~--------~~

COLUMBUS (AP) - Homicide detectives said they had no suspects
,in the fatal shooting of two young people in an apartment near the Ohio
·
State University campus.
Loretta Long, 21, and her boyfriend, Patrick Pryor, 20, were (ound in
.Long's apartment Thursday night.
·
Long was pronounced dead at the scene just after 8 p.m. Pryor, who
lived in another apartment in the same building, died at the Ohio State
University Medical Center about an hour later.
NeitHer victim wullli Ohio State student, police said.
.
"lt. does not look like• i.t was ·a · ri1Urder-sui.;l~ " .said. Sit, James
Longe~ ofth~ homicide unit.
"· •• .: -.~ 1..• · " ·,,~ · ·
.....,, ~e Qi~ ~ rlliOP"nP.·-~;rf;!!- slior'IIY)fter lile:-ooii"'pM''IIad.
1
shopptng and ~ilin&amp; out. " . ; ..
•
returnea
Long, a former 0SU atlu:lcnt; WIS ftom Can'Ollton, in eastern Ohip,
sh\lji, police said,
.
,lind was working at a campus-area ic~
·Pryor,. whose family lives in the ColumouJ lsuburb of .Grandview
Heights; had attended Columbus State Community .College and was
working at an appliance store, police said.
. ·
·
Longerbone said a roommate of
Lons was horrte during the shootings and called 911. His name wasn't released•· and police said he
\Vasn't injured.
Today's ~t;?nlttmm WayneAsmus, the building Jand2 Sections • 12 Pages
lord, said the man and three

(For information and supplies
related to indoor composting with
worms, contact F1owerfield Enterprises, (616) 3~7·0108.)

ports

•

Tyson-Botha weigh-in, Page 5
Reasons to drink, P~ge a
More.for .crime.:-fighting, Page 6

·Today: Snow
:High: 30s; Low:20a

'
I

Janlltlry 15, 111118

Weather

•

The Gardener's Guide: Keep
composting right through winter
By LEE REICH
For AP Special Features
A compost pile in winter oan too
easily look like a garbage pile. No
·matter how neat it is, not much happens in cold weather. So mounds of
old salad, cooked broccoli, and
moldy bread just sh. There won't be
odors in winter, but it's not a pretty
sight and may attract dogs, raccoons, or other animals.
You can actually compost kitchen
scraps in winter, though, by doing it
indoors. One way is with worms.
You need red worms, which are the
kind of worms that .live in manure
heaps and compost piles, and are
sometimes sold as fishing bait. Put
!he worms in a l;&gt;in having a loosefitting lid, along with some shredded
newspaper and a smidgen of soil.
Then feed the worms kitchen waste
as fast as theY can eat it.
You also can cmnpost indoors
without worms. You need three
buckets with Joosefitting lids - 5
gallon buckets should .suffice: Then
make a mixture of equal parts ·dry
sawdust and dry soil, wiih a little
limestone added. You could substitute peat moss for the sawdust. Fill
one of the buckets with tliis mixture.
To begin composting, punin inch
of dry straw, leaves or shredded
newspaper in the bottom of one of
the empty buckets. Then dump your

Friday

.,

•

Break in winter's :
·grip expected
over weekend

I

�Friday, January 15, 1999

Pomeroy • Mlddldport, Ohio

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel Scandal unlikely to ·be year 200~ i~Sf-!e
By Morton Kondracke

'

'Esta6Gslid in 1948

.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
7~·2158 • Fax: 082-2157

•'

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
. Publisher

'.

...

DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gener~J M•n•g•r

!)'pod--,._-

nw Sentinel waiGomea,.,.. ro fir• Milt« from , . . . , . an • btoad , . , . or top-

or -1 """ 1111 _ , .,.,.. ol 1»/ng Pflbll-.
ott moy 1» - • · Eocll o/louldlnctudo • o/fiMhn,
- - · . , dlrylm. , _ . """""'· Specify • nro lflh.,.'o • ,.,_to • - . ortkJio or t.ftw. Moll to; t..tloro to tho Ml/10&lt;, !'Ito Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
Pomwoy, Ohio U7fil; or, FAX to 7~16f.
liM. llhotl _ , . pt10 -

: Senate negotiating.the
'black pit' without m.ap
The principal players m the unfolding Senate 1mpeachment trial drama
are feeling their way through a process that has few landmarks or road signs.
Precedenls are being set at every awkward turn.
And every time one question is answered, more seem to be raised.
For mstance, if senators are considered as jurors and commanded to
silence on the Senate floor "on pain ofimpnsonment," should they be holding news conferences on the side or making the rounds of TV inlerv1ew
shows?
And what about reading newspapers and following broadcasl news?
Jurors in major trials are usually sequeslered and kept away from news
,reporls that might influen)!!lthem.
And should they deliber~te privately, as juries do normally, or publicly,
· . as the Senate does when it cons1ders legislation, treaties and nominations?
And what about that "pain of imprisonment" thing? Would a senator
really be locked up for speaking out during the trial?
"Th1s is a strange process, one that we are not familiar with, in terms of
making a case," says House Judiciary Committee Chairman Henry Hyde, RIll ., President Qinton's chief prosecutor in the first presiJ'ential impeachment trial in 131 years
Even Chief Justice William H Rehnquist, who decided to wear a distinc' tive gold-stripe robe of his own design to preside, seems a bit uncertain
Taking the gavel Friday after the two parties reached accord on rules for
the trial, Rehnquist moved quickly to order a vote on the resolution embodying those rules, presented by Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss.
Too quickly, it seemed
No sooner had Rehnquist ordered up "the yeas and nays," than Sen.
Robert Byrd, D-W Va. - a master of process and st1ckler for procedure ·was on his feet.
"Could the clerk read the resolution for the edification of the Senate at
this time?" Byrd asked, gently guiding RehnqUJst. The chief justice told the
clerk to read.
Byrd himself has warned that the Senate is " teetering on the brink" of
'"the black pit of partisan self-indulgence,'' one he suggests has already
·swallowed the House. Proceed cautiously, Byrd warns.
As to senators·as-jurors, Sen. Tom Harkin, D·lowa, says .. nonsense"! "I
have gone to great pains over the last weeks to try to inform and advise people that we are not a jury sitting in a cnmmal case or civil case in a court of
law"

Harkin and Sen. Paul Wellstone, D-Minn , want to requ1re that all deliberations be public. "In short, a debate that affects every single person in th1s
.country may be cloaked m secrecy,'' Harkin sa1d,
If the Senate were really a jury, "we wouldn't be here talking with you,''
Wellstone said at a news conference. " Th1s is a judicial process but it's also
a political process."
The Senate is known more for its convolution of rules, ones that allow
individual senators to put anonymous death-grip " holds" on presidential
.nominees and small minorities to hamstring all activity.
• " We have very good and clever lawyers. I'm sure they could have come
· ·up with 15 or 20 constitutional arguments that could have tied this process
.up for weeks and months," said Clinton spokesman Joe Lockhart. "But we
think that th1s should move forward expeditiously."
- From the chiet justice down, everyone is taking the process very seriously.
"This building is a hallowed place, a temple to the rule of law, "l..ott said
in a GOP radio address. "Believe me, to sit in judgment here is to feel a
responsibility far heavier than any other political concern."
Then there's the issue of witnesses - a subject the Senate won't decide
.for another few weeks.
In the real world, Clinton would "be lookmg at some 55 years in federal
'Prison for what he's charged with, with perjury and obstruction," cla1med
:Rep James Rogan, R-Calif. "If he really IS innocent, he should come down
:to the Senate, he should test1fy, he should present h1s case, and he should
·bnng his friends and h1s budd1es and his employees down to do the very
same thmg."
Which bnngs up another question for which there is no precedent
If Clinton is acquitted by the Senate, but later tried as a citizen by Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr, convicted and sent to federal prison would his Secret Service detail have to go to jail with him?
"The Constitution gives the Senate this solemn duty However, it does
not give us a clear roadmap on how to proceed," summed up Sen. James Jeffords, R-Vt.

T-oday ln. History

•
The Republican v1sion of the
2000 election's killer ad shows
Vice President AfhGore in the
Rose Garden on ~. 19, !998,
saying, " I'm proud to present to
you my friend, America's great
President, Bill Qinton." And a
voice comments: "If YOU don't
feel proud, vote Republican."
Democrats haven 't dreamed up an alternative
spot yet, but their political calculation is that farright Clinton-haters are seizing control of the
GOP, that the public Is. mad about it and that
Democrats will profit handsomely from the
excess.
Which is right? Poll resulls support each side.
Texas Gov. George W. Bush, all of wh05e national positions are still unknown, leads Gore in test
votes by up to 20 points, yet volelli prefer the performance of congressional Democrats over
Republicans by even bigger mar-

gi~My

guess, though, assuming
that Clinton's Senate trial doesn't
run completely amok and if no
serious new ethical charges arise
against Clinton and Gore, is that
2000 won 'I primarily be about
morals.
The worst case for Republicans
would be that the Senate actually
removes am ton If it does so after
Jan. 20, Gore conceivably could be
president for 10 years.
Most hkely, Clinton w1ll survive and the next election w1ll
hinge on econom1cs, education,
health and Social Security.
If the polls show anything conSistently, it's that the public wants
to get the Clinton sex-and-perjury
scandal over with.
By fall 2000, what politicians
did on impeachment in 1998 and
early 1999 is likely to be forgotten
-- much as what they did on the
Persian Gulf War in 1990and 1991
had little effect 10 1992, even for
President George Bush
Democrats counter that they
lost control of Congress in Novem·
ber 1994 because of a tax vote in
early 1993, but the failure of Clinton's health care plan in 1994 was a bigger factor
in the loss.
Still, scandal surely will play a tole in the two
parties • primar1es. Republicans will rile the faithful by characterizing "Clinton-Gore" as the
"most corrupt admm1stration 10 history."
· In fact, the process has already started, with
GOP Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) taking a direct cue
from Gore's Dec. 19 use of "proud" in connection with Ointon. ·
On Jan 1, at The Weekend -- formerly known
as Dark Ages, the conservative alternatiVe to the

Re~olve

e-m FDRr WORtM9!Ml·WI.UIW'
• I

I'IY George R. Plaganz
If you didn't make a New Year's resolution
before the old year expired, there is still time
Frances Hayward, an octogenarian in my congregation in Boston, coined the adage, "If you
can 't begin m the begmning, begin m the middle "
She would have said that January, 'Or even February, 1s a perfectly good t1me to make a New Year's
resolutton if you let Dec. 31 shp by without getting
it done.
If you can't come up w1th something to resolve
for 1999, a good resolution would be to study the
Lord's Prayer, that old standby of prayers, as a
year-round project
"Oh, I know the Lord's Prayer backward and
forward," you are probably saymg. "I can rattle 11
off without thinking."
·
Which, of course, is the trouble. I have the
feeling that most people, when they mumble the
Lord's Prayer in unison in church, are not paying
much, 1f any, attention
This does not necessarily make the recitation
of the Lord's Prayer a wholly futtle endeavor. For
most of us, the prayer has hallowed associations
that are evoked whenever we say 11.
In th1s respect it is like the cross. The cross
speaks no words whatsoever, but, held "b~fore
our closmg eyes,'' it can "shine through the
gloom and point us to the skies,'' in the words of
the evening hymn.

•

•

•
'

•

'

A :,,
" ''

'

' '

•I Columbue !2ft4e' I

«A

~

•

John T. Holliday
........

_
WVA

\ ~

C&gt; 1999 AccuWealher, Inc.

0 ~··· ~-~

S..nny PI Ooudy

Ooudy

Sh-.

A~n

flr.rrleo

-

.... "

"'

Snow

~

Ice

Partly cloudy skies, highs
in the 50s forecast Saturday

gesting elimination of either corporate taxes or
taxes on dividends.
Gore aides have the same strategic notion: that
voters in 2000 will Jlot focus on scandal, but
"What are you going to do for me?"
It's true that the post-Watergate 1976 election
was all about ethics, hurting Richard Nixon's
party. But then, there are many ways in which the
Monica L.ewiQSky sandal ain't Watergate.
(Morton Kondreeke I• •xecuttve edllor of
Roll C•ll, the newepaper of C.pHol Hill.)
Copyrtghi1HI NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Still, if we can find a deeper meaning in the
words of the Lord's Prayer, this can make the
prayer much more powerful.
The meditations that follow are not my own.
They were wntten, as I recall, by the Rev. Walter
Bowie, rector of Grace Episcopal Church in New
York, and the Rev. Theodore Ferris, rector of
Trmity Church (Episcopal) in Boston.
OUR FATHER WHO ART IN HEAVEN
Help me to believe this day that there is a Presence to lift me up which is stronger than all the
thmgs which hold me down.
HALLOWED BE THY NAME
May I become more aware of the beauty of thy
holin~ and the holiness of all things that come
from thee, by thinking only on such things as are
true, honest, pure, lovely and of good report.
THY KINGDOM COME
Help me to be quick to see, and ready to
encourage, whatever brings the better meamng of
God mto that which otherwise might be the common round of the uninspired day.
THY WILL BE DONE ON EARTH AS IT IS
IN HEAVEN
Help me to realize that there is a higher will
than mme and that my life will never be what I
want it to be, or what it Clln be, until I bring
myself to say, "Not my will but t~ine be done."
GIVE US THIS DAY OUR DAILY BREAD
Open the way for me td earn an honest living

mous ruling that a sitting president can face a civil
suit while in office.
The petition comes in response to a suit by
Dolly Kyle Browning, an alleged former paramour of the president who is suing him for
defamation in connection with a "semi-autobiographical" novel she wrote about !he affa1r In
their original opinion, the justices noted that a
civil suit is highly unlikely to occupy a substantial
f10rtion of a president's time.
•
-- The independent counsel statute, routinely
criticized by Republicans when it was used against
Ronald Reagan, has now earned the wrath of
Democrats. It is almost certain to be disbanded
when 11 comes up for reauthorization the next time.
-- Members of Congress have also done their
part to keep financial crimes from seeing the light
of day. Most prominent is their refusal to give the
Federal Election Commission the staff it needs to
investigate all but the most flagrant abuses of the
campaign-finance system. But when the vicechairman of the FEC asked Congress for $2.8
million in new funding last year, he was turneddown. As a result, we're stuck with a toothless
enforcement system where violators aren't caught
until long after their campaigns have concluded.
-- Finally, there is the administration's misguided plan to cut in half the staff of the 57 offices
of inspeclor general, ih-house cops charged with
mvestigating federal departroents and agencies.
Vice President Gore included the plan as a costcutting measure in his "reinventing-government"
initiative, complaining of an "adversarial" cui-

•

without anxiety but help me never to seek to have
and to own more than is needful, so th•t I may
never use my gifts as a means of power over oth~
ers. Make me want only that benefit for myself
which will also be their gain.
.
FORGIVE US OUR TRESPASSES AS WE
FORGIVE THOSE WHO TRESPASS AGAINST

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Serv1ce recorded 11
calls for assistance Thursday. Units
responding included·
c;ENTRAL DISPATCH
3.13 a.m., Gold R1dge Road,
Pomeroy, Ruby Casteel, treated at
t~e scene;
6:16 a.m., County Road 1, DexICr, John T. Holliday, dead on
.-,arrival, Columbia and Salem town ship volunteer fire department, Ruthind squad assisted;
9:02 a.m., Ann Street, Pomeroy,
motor-vehicle acc1dent, Charles
fitzpatrick and Steven Tatterson,
Veterans Memorial Hospital ;

us

Make us sympathetic and patient with the
shortcomings of others, especially of those w~
love, and keep us sternly watchful only of our
own sins. Help us to remember the many 'bleS$·
ings of this life which we can never pay for. May
we receive them with thanks and, mindful of the
debt they represent, may we pray humbly, "Forgive us our debts."
AND LEAD US NOT INTO TEMPTATION
BUT DELIVER US FROM EVIL
Let me not go carelessly this day within the
reach of any evil which may capture and conquer
me but if in the path of duty I must go where
temptation is, then give me thy strength so that I
might meet it without fear.
FOR THINE IS THE KINGDOM AND THE
POWER AND THE GLORY FOREVER AND
EVER. AMEN.
And so in my heart may I carry the knowledge
that thy greatness is above me and around me and
that thy grace through Jesus Christ my Master i$
sufficient for all my needs. Amen.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-!1&lt;10)
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

Publl.';hed every afternoon, Monda y throucJt
Fnda y 111 Cour1 St, Pomeroy, Oht o, by the
OhiO Valley Pubh shmg Company Second class
postage patd at Pomeroy Ohto
Member The Assoctated Pre.ss and the Ohto
Newspaper Assoctatton
Po111maner: Send address oorrecttons to The
Datly Semme l, 111 Court St Pomeroy Ohto
45769

SUBSCRIPTION RATF.~
By Cnrier or Motor Roote
One Week
• • .. .. ..... .$2 00
One Month ... ... .. ' .. • :: ..... 58 70
One Year.
•............. $104 00
SINGLE COPY PRICE

lure that often develops
between inspectors and
inspectees. He wants to foster a more uconstructive"

environment where the two
sides "work together."
What Gore ignores is that
the 57 IGs saved the taxpayers an estimated $15 bilhon
in 1997, while costmg the government around $1
billion. Not even Wall Street can beat those
returns.
We bring all this up because the U.S. Senate is
about to set another ugly precedent in this direction.
Right now there aren 't enough votes to convict
Bill Qinton of perjury, even though the entire
world knows that he lied in his grand jury deposition about Monica Lewinsky.
Democrats tell us it's all about sex. Republicans tell us it's only about lies. Millions wonder
how a president can stay in office for doing something that would get a general court-martialed or
a CEO dismissed.
More worrisome to us is the aftermath of this
impe~~~:hment. After Clinton geta acquitted, and --· .,,.....
we're left with a precedent that says lying under iif;~J
oath is not an impeachable offense. After a bipar·
tisan Congress dismantles the independent coun·
sel statute, to ensure that no more Kenneth Starn
come along. When the next Cabinet secretary,
president or senator breaks the law and we all
wake up to find that there are no more cops on the
beat.

•

'
By The Associated Preas
A warm front approachmg the state from the southwest will bring the
chance of light freezing rain to the area along and north of Interstate 70
tonight into Saturday morning.
Tem~ratures will fall into the low 20s early tomght, then slowly rise Jo
near 30 across central and northern Ohio and mid-30s in southern Ohio.
Any freezmg ram wdl end or change to rain Saturday afternoon as tem1' p.era'Juroes rise into the 40s across most of the state, except -for some 50s
south-central and Southeast Oh10.
Th1s afternoon, some sunshine was to appear, bringmg temperatures
mto the 20s, with some 30s across southern Oh1o.
Overnight snowfall of 2 inches to 3 inches was common across southeast Ohio, while 1 inches to 2 inches fell over the northeast part of the state.
Extreme northeast Ohio saw up to 8 mches.
Lows were in the single dig1ts or teens.
Record h1gh for today was 64 set m 1932, record low was mmus 12 in
1893
Sunnse Saturday will be at 7;51 a.m., sunset at 5.32 p.m.
Weather fol'llCast:
Tonight... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s. Southwest wind 5 to 10
mph.
Saturday... Milder with a mix of clouds and sun. Highs in the mid 50s!
Saturday mght ...ParJIY cloudy. Lows in the m1d 30s.
Extended fol'llCast:
Sunday . Partly cloudy with a chance of showers. H1ghs in the 50s.
Monday . Partly cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows in the m1d 30s
lind h1ghs from the upper 40s to the lower 50s.
Tuesday.:.Partly cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows m the m1d 30s
and highs from the mid 40s to the mid 50s.

EMS logs 11 calls

Congress chips away at. self-restraints

•

AccuWeathe..

1\'1

mer Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J., and Sen. Paul
Wellstone, D-Minn., both squeaky-clean on both
morals and campaign finance, will say when
quizzed by the press on Clinton-Gore ethics.
Gore aides are dismissive about facing the
prospect of McCain-style ads during the general
election.
"With Clinton's approval ratings in \be 70s,''
said one top adviser, "if they want to put on ads
like that, come on."
It's worth noting, though, that Gore and his
aides are not part of the mner Ointon scandal-

-

Storm yields power outages

l'h11ip F. Burgess, 72, Lakeland, Fla., forme fly of New Haven. W Va.,
died Wednesday; Jan. 13, 1999 at h1s res1dence.
Born Oct. 28, 1926 in Brooklyn, N.Y., son of the late Philip F. Burgess,
and Marie Burgess of Middleport, he was a construction electrician.
A U.S. Navy veteran of World War II, he was a member of IBEW Local
382, the Clifton Masonic Lodge 23, Sm1th-Capehart Post 140 of the American Legion in New Haven, Stewart-Johnson Post 9926 of the VFW in
Mason, W.Va., and Point Pleasant Moose Lodge 731.
Surviving in addition to his mother are h1s wife, Olive Grimm Burgess;
two sons and daughters-in-law, Philip f. III and Susan C. Burgess of Syracuse, and William Edward Burgess of The Plains; and a grandchild.
Services will be 1:30 p.m. Sunday m lhe Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, with the Rev. Donald Fritz officiatmg Burial will be in the Graham
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-8 p m Saturday
Masonic graveside' services will be conducted by the Chfton Masomc
Lodge 23.

Saturday, Jan. 16

Oatly ..
35 Cents
Subscrtbtn not desmng to pay the earner may
remtt m •dvana: dtrect to The Datly Sent mel on
a three , su: or 12 month bas., Credtt wtll be
gtven camc r each week
No s~.ab!cup tt on by matl pcm11Ued m areas
where home earner servttc 1.1 available
Publisher reserves the rtght to adJust rates dur·
mg tbe subscrtplton pertod Subscnptmn rate
• changes may he tmplementcd hy changms the
• dural too of the :wb.scnphon

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
Inside Meigs County
13 We~:b
.
$21 10
26 Weeks, ... • .• .. •• .... .SH 82
52 Weeks ............. S105 56
Ratn Outside Me11s County
11 Weeks
.
.$29 ~
26 Weeks... ... ... •• .. • • .S.S6 6S
-'2 Weeks .... .......... .$10912

Reader Services
Correction Pqllcy
Our main concem in all stories Is to be

•cc::unlr. If you know or al_'}rrror In I
story, all the newsroom 1t (740) 992·
l15S. We wlU check your lnronnatlon
and make a cornctlonlrwarranted.

John T. Holliday, 88, S"Iem School Lot Road, Langsville, d1ed Thursday,
Jan. 14, 1999, at his residence.
He was born July 10, 1910, in Dexter, son of the late Wallace Benjamm
and Hettie Bosworth Holliday. He was a ret11ed Meigs County H1ghway
employee and member of the Old Dexter Christian Church. He was also a
member of Star Grange 778, the Oh1o Farm Bureau Federation, a former
director of the Buckeye Rural ElectriC Cooperative and attended Temple
United Methodist Church.
·
He is survived by a daughter and son-m-law, Norma Ga1l and Kenneth
Wilcox of Middleport; two sons and daughters-m-law, Raymond and Manlyn Holliday of San Diego, Calif., and Robert and Avanel Holliday of
Langsville; eight grandchildren, L.eslea Hayes, John C. Holliday, Suzanne
Arnold, Dav1d Wilcox, Darla Wilhamson, Judy Nelson, Gary and Floyd
Holliday, and numerous great-grandchildren; a brother, Eugene Holliday of
Charleston, W.Va.
Serv1ces will be held Sunday, Jan. 17, 1999, at 1 p.m. at the Blgony-Jo~­
dan Funeral Home m Albany w1th the Rev. Edward Jones off1c1at1ng. Burial
will be m Standish Cemetery.
Fnends may call Saturday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Edith F. Sayre
Ed1th F. Sayre, 91, Carlisle, Mass., formerly of New Haven, W.Va., d1ed
Tuesday, Jan. 12,1999 at the home of her daughter, Ruth S. Uebelhoer,
Born Oct. 7, 1907 m Pomt Pleasant, W.Va., daughter of the late W1lham
Edward and Emma l..oUJse Moses Church, she was the former owner and
operator of Sayre's Acres Dnve Inn at New Haven .
She was a member of the New Haven Umted Methodist Church.
She was also preceded m death by her husband, George E. Sayre, in 1975.
Survivlog are two daughters and sons-m-law, Ruth S. and Herbert K.
Uebelhoer of Carlisle, and Dorothy J. and the Rev. Bernard H. Lieving Jr. of
Valrico, Fla.; six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; a stepdaughter,
Barbara Wilbert of Toms River, N.J.; two stepsons, George E. Sayre Jr. of
Whiting, N.J , and Harold R. Sayre of Fort Davis, Texas; eight stepgrandchildren and 10 step-great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
Services w1ll be 10·30 a.m. Saturday in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, W.Va., with the Rev. Bernard H. L1eving Jr. officiating. Bunal w1ll
be m the New Lone Oak Cemetery. Fnends may call at the funeral home
from 6-8 p.m. Fnday.
In lieu of flowers, the fam1ly requests that contributions be made to the
Kitchen Improvement Fund of the New Haven United Methotlist Church.

-----;,.,.Qbit·u aries .
~

:'.1.

'

John

1~

Holliday

Clrculotlon. . ..
Cllutlled Ad•

..

. . '...Exl. ll04
........ .Exl. IIOJ
. . Ex I. tliiO

Ano~uncements:
Trustees Association meeting canceled
Tonight's annual meeting of the Meigs County Township Trustees AssoCiation has been canceled. Meehng w1ll be rescheduled.

Trustees organize
Chester Township Trustees recently elected officers for 1999: Blair Windon, president, and Alan Holter, vice pres1dent. Elmer Newell is the third
member of the board
The board's monthly meeting w1ll be held on the second Tuesday of
each month at 7 p.m. at the town hall

Meeting set
Chester Township Trustees will hold a special meeting on Friday at 2:30
p.m. at the town hall.

Financial aid workshop
A financial aid workshop will be held Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the Me1gs High
School cafeteria. Students who are planmng to attend college this fall and
theu parents are mv1ted to attend. M1ke Whitnable, a financial aid counselor at Washington State Umversity will be the speaker.
OhKan club to meet
·
The OhKan Coin Club Will meet Jan. 25 adt 7:K30 p.m. at the Riverbend Arts Council bUJidmg in Middleport. A membership drive in
under5way. Adult membersh1p is $10 a year. For those under 16, the dues
are $5 a year. Visitors are welcome, Refreshments wil) be served.

LCCD meeting canceled
Leading Creek Conservancy D1stnct has canceled the meetmg this
evening at the Dexter Church to obtain easements. Weather permitting, a
representative will bt at the church saturday, 11 a.'rn. to 1 p.m. to obtain
' easements for the DeXter Rural Waterline Extension.

Orange Township Trustees
The Orange Township Trustees rescheduled organJZational meeting will
be held Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. followed by the appropriations meeting at the

home of Clerk Os1e Foil rod

Letart Trustees

Meigs girls' basketball

Patrol files charge in trooper accident

Stow council votes to appeal city seal decision

Stocks

Ho.s pital news

'

-·-·Stock reports are the 10:30

expire , and the ongtnal owner shall tmmedlately

remove such certH1cate from the 1ra11er

a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

OPERATOR OF A
HOUSE TRAILER
COURT-

•~

Other Services
Advtrtl•lng. ... ..

Buckeye Rurai Electnc Cooperative of Rio Grande and American Electnc
Power both reported electric outages as a result of winter storms and emergency conditions throughout their service temtones
In addition, area schools were closed for a second consecutive day and
motorists were advised to stay off roadways unless absolutely necessary.
Approximately 2-3 mches of freezmg ram and snow fell on Meigs County ovemight, making for treacherous driving cond1t1ons.
Meigs County Sheriff JaiTJes M Soulsby 1ssued a level three snow emergency last night wh1ch was downgraded to' a level two emergency earlier th1s
morning.
A level three emergency means all roadways are closed to non-emergency
personnel. No one should dnve unless absolutely necessary. Conta~; your
~mploy er to see 1f you must report to work. Those traveling on the roadways
may be subject to arrest.
A level two emergency states only those who feel it is necessary to drive
should while a level one emergency s1mply asked dnvers to drive cautiously.
The snow emergency rating system was Implemented statewide in 1991.
As of 8:30 th1s mommg, approximately 4,000 BREC customers did not
have electnc service lhroughout BREC's nine-county area More than 13,000
customers stdl have electric se1V1ce .
BREC reported the outages were caused directly by the wmter storm of
1ce followed by snow, wh1ch resulted in numerous broken poles, downed
electnc hiles, fallen treeS, and a var~ety of other problems created by the large
we1ght of ice and snow on trees and electnc equipment.
BREC serves port1ons of Lawrence, Gallia, Jackson, Scioto, Pike, Ross,
Meigs, Vinton and Athens counties.
AEP Athens Distnct manager Greg Pauley reponed 175 Meigs households were Without flectnc seJVice as 6 a.m.
Most outages, 130, were reported in the Pagev1lle area wh1le others were
reported m the Hemlock Grove and Horse Cave areas.
Pauley sa1d workers hope to have service remstated by 6 p.m

John T. Holliday, 88, Salem School Lot Road, Langsville, d1ed Thursday, Jan .
Letart Township Trustees will meel Monday, 6 p.m. to cons1der 1999
10:33 a.m , Wright Street, 14, 1999, at his res1dence.
appropriations.
He was born July 10, 1910, in Dexter, son of the late Wallace BenJamm
Pomeroy, Marv1n Jacks, VMH;
11 ·56 a.m , Kmgsbury Road, Nev and Hettie Bosworth Holliday. He was a retired Meigs County Highway
employee and member of the Old Dexter Christian Church. He was also a
The Meigs/Belpre g1rls' basketball make-up game w1ll be held Saturday
Wh1te, VMH;
at Me1gs H1gh School. Reserve game begms at I p.m.
3:12 p.m , state Route 681, Tup- member of Star Grange 778, the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation, a former
pers Plains, Jean Hawk, treated at director of the Buckeye Rural Electnc Cooperative and attended Temple
Umted Method1st Church.
the scene,
He 1s survived by a daughter and son-m-law, Norma Gail and Kenneth
6:19pm., TH1rd Avenue, MiddleWilcox
of Middleport, two sons and daughters-in-law, Raymond and Mari·
DELAWARE (AP) - A man Dec. 3 when he was struck by a car that
port, Robert Dempsey, treated at the
lyn
Holliday
of
San
Diego,
Calif.,
and
Robert
and
Avanel
Holliday
of
accused
of driving into a State High- Coombs was drivmg, the patrol said.
scene, Middleport squad ass1sted
Langsville;
e1ghl
grandchildren,
Leslea
Hayes,
John
C.
Holliday,
Suzanne
Collins spent three weeks m a coma
way
Patrol
trooper and puHmg him
COLUMBIA TWP :VFD
Arnold,
David
Wilcox,
Darla
Williamson,
Judy
Nelson,
Gary
and
Floyd
Holmto a coma for three weeks has been and IS recovenng at· a Columbus reha5:31 p.m., power line f1re on
liday,
and
numerous
great-grandchildren;
a
brother,
Eugene
Holliday
of
charged
w1th a m1sdemeanor, the bilitatiOn center patrol spokesman 11
Jones Road, no inJunes reported.
Charleston,
W.Va
John Bom said.
patrol
sa1d
Fnday.
OLIVE TWP VFD
Services
will
be
held
Sunday,
Jan
17,
1999,
at
1
p.m.
at
the
Bigony-JorR1chard
Coombs,
45,
of
Delaware,
7:02 p.m.,' state Route 248 and
dan Funeral Home m Albany w1th the Rev. Edward Jones officiating. Bunal IS charged with faiimg to maintam
Success Road, Jree on roadway.
w1ll be m Stand1sh Cemetery
assured clear d1stance ahead, the patrol
REEDSVILLE
Friends
may
call
Saturday,
2-4
and
7-9
p.m
at
the
funeral
home
said Friday. The charge is a misde6:24 p m., Rice Run Road, Ray meanor pumshable by up to a $!00
mond
Barber,
Camden-Clark
fine.
Memonal Hospital
A heanng has been scheduled for
RUTLAND
SlDW (AP) - Stow C1ty Cquncil had sued the cuy, say mg the seal VIo- Jan 21 m the Delaware Cou nty
11.08 p.m., Bowles Road, T1na has voted lo file an appeal Joday of a lates the constitutional separatiOn of
Mumcipal Court.
W1lhams, VMH
ruling that the City's seal is unconstitu- church and state
·
Trooper Jeff Coll1ns was takmg
tional because 1t shows a cross and
The c1ty had until today to file the measurements from an acc1denl scene
Bible.
appeal w1th the 6th U.S Circuit Court along US. 36 m Delaware County
lilly AI
Counc1l voted 5-2 Thursday mght to of Appeals m Cmcmnatl.
appeal
U
S
D1stnct
Court
Judge
Dan
2:80, 4:66,
Am Ele Power ......................... 47
The city wdl be able to contmuc
Akzo ........................................37
Polster 's rulmg that the use of a cross m using the seal whde the appeal1s pend·
7:26, 8:611
AmrTech ...............................62'"
the c1ty's seal was unconslltulional.
mg, said Stow Law Dnector Tom
lilly AI
Ashland 011 ........................ ..48'!.
Holzer Medical Center
TheAmencan
CIVIl
L1berties
Union
Watkins.
AT&amp;T ..................................... 82~"
Z:BO, 4:611,
Discharges Jan. 14 - Dcrnck
Resident Judy Nelson sa1d she was
Bank One .............................. 53},
7:fti, ll:fi1i
Coffey, Mrs, Mark Neece and
Courthouse Closed disappomted by the dec1sion
Bob Evans ............................ 2S'I•
Borg-Warner .......................so'Y.
"What the seal says IS irrelevant 'daughter, Dora M1ller, Ed1th
Monday
Broughton ............................... 17
How people treat each other is more Manuel
The Me1gs County Courthouse
Champion ..............................9"1•
Births - Mr. and Mrs John
lmport&lt;\llt," she sa1d
Charm Shps ..........................3"1.
will be closed on Monday, January
But res1dent Don M11ier sa1d coun· Johnson, daughter, Gallipolis, Mr.
City Holding ...... ................ .... 27:0
18, m observance of Martin Luther
and Mrs. Thomas McDonald, son.
Federal Mogui .....................S9"1•
Kmg Day. The Commiss1oners will cil "d1d the nght thmg to uphold the V1ntnn
' .
z:ao, 1:16,
vote of the people."
,
Gannett ................................. 64'!.
meetmg
on
hold
their
regular
8:00
Goodyear .............................so•t.
Tuesday, Jan ,uary 19, at 3:00p.m
Kmart ... ................................. 14'4
TAX BOOKS ARE OPEN FOR THE 1999 TRAILER
Dllrlt
Kroger ................,................. 56'~.
Z:lll,
6:40,
Lands End,............ , ...........u .. 27Y.
TAXES. DEADLINE WILL BE FEBRUARY 10, 1999.
8:00
Umltlld ......................., .......... 29't.
AFTER THIS DATE A t»ENALTY WILL APPLY.
Oak Hill Fini .......................... 19Y
.
OVB ....................................... 41 7,
Tax Levy On House Trailers
One Valley ............................. 32Y.
Peoples ................................. 23:0
All owners of house lratlers havtng a status tn
Prem Flnl .. ............................. ts~.
RESPONSIBIUTY
lhe
Slate of Ohio and subJect lo the ta• as
Rockweii ..................... ...... 40,,
OF HOUSE TRAILER
THE FACULTY (R)
provided
above MUST reg1ster such tra1ier woth
RDfShell ................................45%
720U20 DAILY
OWNERMAnNEE9 SAT/SUN 1 20 a 3 20
the Counly audotor on or pnor lo lhe date the
Sears ....................................43'/•
tax os due and payable
Shoney'a .............................. 1"1.
First Star ...............................S6'!.
D11r At
Wendy's ..............................22'1.
Upon
the
transfer
of
ownership
of
a
house
8:10.
TRANSFERWorthington .........................13'1..
tratler the certtftcate.,.. as to such tratler shall

ne moln numbu I• 992·ll55. Depart·
Gtntrot Monoger.............. ExL 1101
New~
EX1.1102
or Exl 1106

f

ObHulriM ... ptila lnnouncen ...lla errMpd by -•tun.... homM., Obltuor!M
..publlllhed DI'IJCIUMf!d! acao ••• dttethoNCIMirtno IliON lntorn.tlon than
II ~ In lhe ICCOriiJ'Ili'IYIIID OMal - ·
"
.•

News Departments
mrnl extensions

)

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Local briefs:

Philip F. Burgess

E'l'tl.

---

.

Death Notices

*

•

to study the Lord's Prayer

By The AMOCiated Preea
Today IS Friday, Jan 15,the 15th day of 1999 There are 350 days left in
By J•ck Anderton
the year
and
Jan Moller
Today's H1ghllght m H1story.
When
former House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
On Jan. 15, 1929, CIVIl nghts leader Martm Luther King Jr. was born in
R-Ga., was reprimanded by h1s colleagues in
Atlanta.
early
1997 for eth1cs lapses, the aftermath was
On this date.
sad,
1f
predictable:
. In 1559, England's Queen Ehzabeth I was crowned in Westminster
·
Within
days, Gmgnch and h1s lieutenants had
.Abbey.
formed
a
comm1ttee
to exam me ways of "reform· In 1777, the people of New Connecticut declared their independence.
ing"
the
House
ethics
process. Several menibers
,(The tiny republic later became the state of Vermont.)
spent
monthsgomg
over
the ex1sting rules and
In 1844, the University of Notre Dame rece1ved its charter from the state
searching for ways to make the process more fair.
:of Indiana.
• In 1870, the Democratic party was represented as a donkey for the first What they settled on can only be called a dereliction of duty.
·time in a cartoon by Thomas Nast in "Harper's Weekly."
Under the new rules, average citizens can no
: In 1919, pianist and statesman Ignace Jan Paderewski became the first
longer
file an ethics complaint against a member
:premier of the newly created Republic of Poland
. In 1943, work was completed on the Pentagon, now the headquarters of of Congress. Instead, complaints now have to
come from other members. In an instant, the
·the U.S. Department of Defense.
· In 1967, the first Super Bowl was played as the Green Bay Packers of the House had drastically raised the bar for all future
:National Football League defeated the Kansas City Chiefs of the Amencan ethics probes, creating a climate much more conducive to corruption The intent was to hmit
·Football League, 3li-IO.
: In 1973, President Nixon announced the suspension of all U.S. offensive "frivolous" charges. In reality, House members
know that the institution functions much like a
;action in North Vietnam, citing progress 10 peace negotiations
• In 197CP,oSara Jane Moore was sentenced to life in prison for her attempt high school; those who rat out their colleagues
tend to get shunned.
'
·On the life of President Ford in San Francisco.
Unfortunately,
the
House
is
far
from
alone.
In
• In 1992, the Yugoslav federation, founded in 1918, effectively collapsed
:as the European Community recognized the republics of Croatia and Slove- a capital where iJOliticians love to posture as
"tough on crime," members of both parties are
·nia.
quietly,
but sleadily, eroding the rules and safe; Ten years ago: NATO, the Warsaw Pact and 12 other European countries
' guards designed to keep them honest. Examples
;adopted a human rights and security agreement in Vienna, Austria.
• Five years ago: President Clinton paid solemn tribute to victims of Stal- are everywhere:
-- While the president apologizes for the Mon~nist purges and Gennan occupation during a six-hour stop m the former
foica
Lewinsky imbroglio, his attorneys are asking
:SOviet republic of Belarus before continuing on to Geneva. Smger-songthe Supreme Court to reverse itself on the unaniwriter Harry N1lsson died in Agoura H1lls, Calif, at age 52.

•

Ointonite Renaissance Weekend-- McCain punc- strategy team, and Gor~ ~s keepmg busy wtth poltuated a recital of Qinton scandals with the icy events and strategiZing for 2000 rath~r than
phrase, "Are you proud?"
lobbying his old Senate colleagues on Omton'a
As in, "Are you proud when monks and nuna behalf..
.
abandon their vows of poverty and pay tens of
'White House &amp;Ides close to ~re sa~ th~t ~e
thousands of dollars to have spiritual communion hard-core GOP base 's hatred of Clmton IS .driv1~11
with the Vice President?
moderate Members of Con8fCS!', and prestdential
" Are you proud when the Lincoln Bedroom in candidates, too, ~ far to the nght that they ':"ill
the White House is rented by the night, and tlie lose the next el~ctlon . .
.
president of the United States serves as the bellGOP strategists ~mit that !h•s could happen~
boy?"
such narrow 1994 v1ctoJS up m 2000. as Repu~IF
And, ·~Are you proud of an administratiort that can Sens. ~pencer Abraham (M1ch.), M1~e
spends all of its time worrying about controlling DeWine (Oh1o), Rod Grams (Mmn.) and R!~li
legal authorities but cannot abide a controlling Santoru'!' (Pa.), but th,ey say the overall election
ethical authority? Are you proud? Of coullie not." should hmge on other Issues such as taxes and d)e
On the Democratic side of the fence, 1t's size of government. , •
unlikely that Gore's primary foes will exploit
. McCain •. it's worth notmg, devoted about onescandal because it's taken as gospel among the eighth of h1s Jan. ~ speech t~ s;,andal. He spent
party faithful that Clinton is bemg hounded by the rest.dem~nstr~tlng that he IS .~ P!oud Reagan
hyper-partisan GOP extremists.
Repubhcan, calhng for ~ new, . faner and flatIt will be fascinating, in fact, to see what for- ter" tax system that taxes mcome JUSI once-- sug-

.

Every operator of a house tratler court or park
of avery owner of property used for such

purpose when there 1s no operator shall keep a
reg ister of all house tra1lers wh1ch make use of
the court, perk, or property

MIGHTY JOE VOUNQ tPOJ
7001820DAILY

IIAT1Nff.l UTIIIJN 1:00 a :UO

"MIDNIGHT MOVIE SPECW.oW&lt;ME &amp; OOtro!INO S
PEFISOHAI..PAN F'lllAI'OR $500
tiCKETS ON SALE AT BOX OffiCE &amp; DOMINO'S

HOWARD E. FRANK,
.MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER

no

�•

Sports

The Qaily Sentin~! ;,

)

UNC-Charlotte beats No. 3 Bearcats 62-60

Top 25
college basketball
By The Associated Prass
Diego Guevara made four threepointers for North Carolina
Charlotte in the final I0 minutes.
Then Melvin Levett made what
looked to be Cincinnati's biggest
three of the game, but it didn't count.
North
Carolina
Charlotte
knocked· No. 3 Cincinnati from the
ranks of the unbeaten Thursday
night with a 62-60 victory that had

HNB to sponsor
Eagles' game.
against Hannan

"We fought to get back even though
we played terrible, and then that
happens to us."
Lead referee Tom O'Neil said the
whistle was inadvertent.
"As soon as the ball was
rebounded the whistle was blown,"
O'Neil said. "Therefore ·we had to
take the ball out of bounds and reset
the clock."
Cincinnati coach Bob Huggins
said he never heard the whistle.
"I'm not allowed to comment,"
he said. "But you can probab1y
guess."
The 49ers then fouled Kenyon
Martin, a 52 percent free-throw
shooter, with 3.2 seeonds left. He
missed the front end of the one-andone and Cincinnati got the rebound,

but was unable to get off a shot.
. ''This is a quality, quality win for
a team," first-year North Carolina
Charloue coach Bobby Lutz said.
"I've been saying all along' that
Cincinnati is one of precious few
teams in the coun_try capable of win,
ning the national championship, and
for us to beat them is a real accomplishment.''
Guevara, listed as doubtful for the
game with a severely. sprained l~ft
ankle, missed his first eight fieldgoal atlempts before making four of
his Ian six. His three-pointer from
the top of the key put the 49ers
ahead to stay, 61 -58, with 2:25 left.
"I'm just glad they blew the
(See TOP 15 on Page 5)

Southern sevl!nth-grade girls' basketball
team starts off season . with. four victories

· On Saturday, the Home National
Bank in Racine, with branch services
i~ Syracuse, will host a night in its
honor at Eastern Htgh School, where
the Eastern Eagles will host the
Hannan W.Va. Wildcats tf weather
permits.
All fans will be admitted to the
game free of charge and five lucky
fans will be chosen to participate in
~ - money scramble worth a possible
$300. The reserve game begins at
6:30 and the varsity contest follows
around 8 p.m.
. Racine Home National Bank
sponsors similar events at Southern
and Meigs and continues to offer
competitive banking services to
n)embers of the entire Meigs County
Community.
; Games postponed: All area girls
g~mes were postponed Thursday
night, . includi ng the SouthernE:astern girls basketball contest tn
R;acine.

The Southern Lady Tornado seventh-grade team is off to a great start
this season as they have posted a 4-0
record with wins over Meigs',
Federal Hocking, Kyger Creek
twice.
'
Southern defeated Meigs 29-27 in
an exciting overtime contest that saw
Southern get hot early with a 15-4
advantage at the end of the first quarter. Emily Htll had stx, and Deana
Pullins had eight wtth great transition passes from Katie Sayre. Meigs
turned it up a notch and held the
Tornadoes scoreless in the second
quarter. Jaynee Davis had the hot
hand for Meigs, scoring 8 of her 14
poi nts in the round . .
Southern led by three going into
the last few seconds of the game.
Davi~issed a second free throw
and Chrissy Mtller rebounded and

scored on the follow-up jumper to tie 17-point ruh. Every Sout!tem player
the game at 23-23.
scored.
In overtime, Deana Pullins stole
Sarah Hawley had four, · Jessica
the ball and put Southern up by two. Hill two, Amber Mills two, Emily
Amber Mills fouled out-after having Hill . eight, . Katie Sayre 13, and
a big steal and a good night on the . Pullins 14.
boards. Southern then went up six in
Southern won the first ·Kyger
the overtime and held off Meigs for Creek game 42-32. Jessica Hill had
the 29-27 win.
two, Mills five, Pullins eight, Emily
Southern scorers were Deana Hill 12, and Sayre 15.
Pullins with 12, Emily Hill with II,
Erica Taylor had 13 and Cassie
Katie Sayre 5, and Amber Mills one. Hudson seven for Kyger Creek.
Meigs scorers were Davis 14,
In the second contest, the Tornado
Miller 5, Bobby Napper four, Xantha defense gave UP. only two points in
Smith three ana .Nikki Butcher one. the second half to claim a 44,10 win.
Southern defeated
Federal Sayre had her best Jr. High career
Hocking 43-23, after fighting game with 22 points, Pullins !tad 12,
through a tough game over the first Jessica and Emily Hill four each, and
I'
'
three quarters, 26-2 I. Coach Pete Mills two.
HANG TIME - ClfiCinnatl's Kenyon Martin hangs from the rim
Sayre changed to a zone defense and
Taylor had three for Kyger and after dunking In f~ont of North Carollna·Charlotte's Tremaine :
Gardiner during Thur~day night's game In Charlotte, N.C., where the
held the Lancers to wo points tbe rest Gerri McFann three.
host 49ers knocked off the third-ranked Beari:11tB 62-60. (AP)
of the way, while Southern went on a

Scoreboard
Cleveland St. 74, Wis.-Mitwaukee 69
Creighton 68. Bradley :5..5
lnd -Pur -lndpls- 91, Chicago St 5S
M1ssoun-Konsas Ctty a1 Youngstown St . ppd
N Iowa 84, Drake 73
Oral Robens 77, Oakland 1 M1ch 1S
SE Mhs.oun 78, Mt~rray St 59
SW Mt sso'un St 80, llllno1 s St 65
Tenn · Manm 79, E IllinOiS 64
W lllinots 64, S. Utah S I
Wicb1ta S1 66, lnd1ana S1. 55
Wis -Grct:n Bay 79, Detroit 53
Wngbt St. 60, 111.-Ch.tcago .55

Basketball
[lj'CAA Division I
roen's scores
East
Faufield 71, Camsius 70
- George Wa~ hmgloll ~ 1, Dayron 69
· Hartford 60. Towson .57-0T
Penn 61, La Salle .58

sa. 84, St

~

n

Peter'•
', Tcm(lle 61, S..looepl\'t 47
• 'Vennoat64, De1awn: 63

Southwest

""""""~~- ........ppl 5&lt;158
Colrndo St. 119, Teua a.riatian 76
NE Louisiana 67 , Stephen F 1\\miD 63

South

:56, T~xas-Ar ling1 on 51
R1cc: 73. UNLV 43
Southern Meth 97, Wyommg 66
Te~as -E! Paso 65, San Jose S1 47
. Tulsa 78. Air Force 54

•
,
•
·
•
'
:
•
•

Auslm Peay 68, Tennessee Tech .58
Cen1 Florida 74, Jacks onviUe !58
Georgia Sr 87, C.1mpbel1 64
Marshall 82, Bulfalo 62
Mc•Pph•s 83. Tulane 68
Mercer 8 I, Troy S1. 65
M1ddle Tennes!ee 70, Tenneuee St 60
N. Clltolma ~t. 82, Virgtma 12
N C O!arloue 62, Cmcmnan 60
~ SW Texas 77. SE lounHtoa 66
• Sam Houston Sl 76, McNeese St 70
~ Samford 82, Jacksonvtl!e St 57
~ South Alabarria 76, Aa lntern:monal 69
: Steuon 7J. FlondaAdanttc 57
• Te~as- Sa n AntoniO 78. Nicholl s St 68

:
..
•
..
•
•
•
:
•
•

Arkansas St 70. New Orl eans 51
NE l ou1st::ma 81. Stephen F Austm 77
North Tex:u 81 Pauflc 7'1
SW Loui Si ana 7J. Texa~- Pa n Amem:.m 60
TeKas-Arhngton 71'! Nort hwestern St 66

•
•
•
"

Air Force M. Tu iS&lt;\57
Anzona 74, Arizona St 7l
Botse St 7J, UC lm ne 61
Bngh[lm Young 8J. San D1ego St 76
3 0 11
6

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allantic: Di"ision

.

~o~~~~~n!:~~ 8l s~~:a~~~~hSt ~2

Fresno St 70 Texas-EI Paso 56
Idaho 77. Cal St -Fuller1on 62
New MeK1co St. 60, Long Beach St. 46
Oreg on 87, Washington S!. 83. JOT
Strmford 72, SoUihern Cal 55
UC Santa Barhara 66, Nevada 64
UClA 72. Cahfo mta 6 1
UNLV 78, Rice 12
Utah St 97, Cal Poly-SLO 73
Washmgton 70, Oregon St 50
Weber S!. 77, Idaho St 56
Wyorru ng 96, Texas Chri s11an 93

NCAA Division I
w.omen's scores

~

54
49
45
41
19

51
51
48
44
'7

Southrast Di\ision
Carolma
19 16 7
Flondn .
14 15 I I
Washmgton .
. . . 1:5 21 J
Tampa Bay
. . 9 29 3

45 109 101
\9'T02 108
13 92 100
21 86 146

ll6 120
127 93
Ill 82
104 89
' 96 ·111

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cmtnl Division

'

i ~
··

31 104 131

S9 117

St
40
36
:\6

5S:

~

, Monmouth . N J. 73. WagrKr 47
#' Mount St. Mary's, Md 76, St Franc1s, Pa. 62
;. Nonheastem 62, Drexel 51
• Qumnipioc &lt;11 Robert Mom!. pPd
• Rutgen 7.l. West Virgtma 54
~ St. Francis, NY. 68. Cent Connecucut St 54
: St Joseph 's 63, Massachu seus 58
• Temple 51 , Rhode Island 46
• Villanova 54. St John 's 41

South
; Alabama 78. MI SSISSippi ' I
, Auburn 76, Flonda 71
• Belmont 77, Alabama A&amp;.M 50
• Duke 86. ClemsOfl 77
• Aonda St 80. Wake Forest 57
• Georgia St. '70. Samford 65-0T
: Jacksonville St 68. Campbell 60
• L.SU 67, Kentucky 59
• Louisiana Tech 94, Arkansas St 48
• Louisvtlle 62, Saim loUis 56
• McNeese: St 64. Sam Housto1,1 Sr, 49
' Mercer .58, Flonda Atlantic 5J
• Mtddle Tennessee 85 , Tennessee Sl :50
: N Carolina S1 7.\. Maryland 45
, Nicholls St 70. Tuas·San Antomo 56
, SE l..otustana 82. SW Teus 74
• South Alabama 68. SW lmnsmna 65
• Southern Mi n 68 DePalll 65
• Tennessee 102. Geo!Jia 69
• Tennessee Tech 77, Austin Peay 60
: Tulane 86, Marquette: 7~
• Vanderbilt 8 I Soulh C:.rol10a ~4
, Virg1ma 82. GcoriJiil Tech 61

Midwest
: CillCinnati 6J. N.C Charloue 57

1

Named

Pat

'•

Nalional Hoc:kty League
BOSTON BRUINS. Recalled C Andre Savage
and 0 Brandon Smith from Prov1dens:e of the: AHL
COLORADO AVALANCHE: Loaned D Wade:
Belak,.lo Henlley of tile AHL.
,·
LOS ANGELES KINGS· A.r.tiflltd D Doug

.

College

ATLANTIC 10 CONFERENCE: Suspended St.
Joseph s freshman C Damian Re1d one game for
unsponsmnn hke co nd ~te t during a Jan 6 11ame
again11t Dayton ,
GEORGIA STATE: Announced G·F Shernard
Long has transferred from Georgetown.
'
,
' . . ,.

'

DON TATE MC)TORS, Inc~
IIOMEROY, OHIO (740) 992·6614 • (800) 837·1094
Mon.· Fri. 9 am • 9 p.m.; Sat~ 9 am • 4 pm; Sun. 1 pm • 5 pm

Transactions
Baseball
Amnk•n League
KANSAS CITY ROYALS . Agrttd 10 eerms with
RHP Scou Servtc:e on a one-year contract
..
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS NameC! Eddie
Dilne spo:wl assistant to the general manager
Natlon~l Leaaue
·
ARI ZONA DIAMONDBACKS: Agreed to
1crms JN!lh C Kelly Stmneu on a one-year contracl
CINCINNATI REDS · Agreed 10 t~ with I B
Hal Morr1s on a one-year controct.
.
HOUSTON ASTROS: Traded C Brad Ausmus
nnd LHP C J Nukowski to the Oetrmt ligers for
RHP Dean Crow, RHP MBrk Peruils. RHP Brian
Powell . C Paul Unko and INF Clltlos Villalobos
P'H ILADELPHI A PHILLIES. Named Sal
Ar1i nga d1iector of Limn Amencan operations

Dragon .Internet
Full Unlimited Access

as low as $12.50 per Mo.
$150 for 12 months

Web TV or Computers all at local call!
UN UMITED Personal Access, Personal E- Mail Account
&amp; 10 meg of Personal Web Space' Regular rate os S 16 95 per mo.

Guaranteed No Busy Signals!
1-8~8-657 -0977
"'Pomeroy

'Gallipolis

'Lebanon

•oay ton

' Wilmingto11
'Sardinia

' Hillsboro
'Springfield
'Circleville

1999 Chevy Tahoe
4 Dr, all power, auto, VB,
trailering, locking deff, cass &amp;
CD, Lt, Leather, MSRP $36,649
4~4.

00

1999 Cadillac
Sevill,
Northstar VB , auto. air, all power,
I
loaded, MSAP $44,623

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

'Greenfield

liid Tf.
M...., · EAGLES·
P1·11LADEL1-HIA

Hockey

Sunday's games

East
: Boston U 62, Hofstra 58
• Delaware 76, Vermonl 67
~ Hartford 70. Towson 40
• Md.· Bahimore County 71, Fairleigh Dtckmson

77
105 79
101 9S
99 108
91 .t 9'7

Football
.Nallotlll Football League
DENVER BRONCOS: St1Jned QB Chuck
Cements and LE\ Anie Ulmer to future contracts.
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Named Dave Wannsredt
aui!tallt head coach and Tom Melvin Offensive: qual·
ity coatrol ust1lint.
OAKLANb JIAIDERS: Slped QB Andrew...

Phoenix :u Cblcago, 8 p m
Dc:1roit at Edmomon. 8 p m

123 82
118 107
110 99
114 114
99 118

Northust Dl"lslon
Toronto . .
2415 1
Ott uwa . .. . . . .. 23 )] 5
Buffalo .
.. .ll 12 6
Boston
,.. 19 14 6
Montreal
15 20 7

-·-

14 26 3

Pacific: Division
Dallas ......................... 26 7 7
Pboenit .................. ,... 13 10 S
Anlhcim .·......................... l6 11 8
losAnp)el ........f .......1... 16l1 4
SanJoee ....................... ..1liR10

L I flL !l£ li.:l.
10
5
7
7
.l

42 103 107

17 19 6 40 119 11 2
14 23 5 33 107 126

Bodger From,InJUred reserve.
.
NASHV ILlE PREDATORS: Recalled D
Kimn\0 limonen from Mi lwaukee Of the IHL
NEW JERSEY DEVI LS Reca lled G Mtchael
Buzak from Albany of the AHL
,
NEW YORK RA.NGERS: Recalled 0 Jan
Menzig from Hanford of the AHL
ST. LOUIS BLU ES A5signed F Lubos Bnrtec ko .
to Worcester of the AHL

Saturday's games

NHL standings

l'tuladclph1a
22 9
New Jersey . .. .... 22 11
Pm sburgh .. . .. .. . . 19 11
NY Rangers ·
1717
N Y lslal'lders . . . . . .I J 27

19 19 4

· BasketbaU
Nallanal Basktlball Association
ORLANDO MAGIC: Named Eri~ Muuc:lman
and Tree Rolltns assistant coaches

Shurmur tight ends conch and Tom Mel'''" offensive
qll ality control assmant
SEATn. E SE AHAWKS Nan-.ed M1ke Shennan '
offensive coordinator. Frm. Shurmur defens1vc: coordmntor, Tom Lovnt offensive hne coach, Larry
Brooks defensive line conch, Nolan Cromwell wtde
receivers cQUl:h, Jim Lind hn~bac kers coach, Ken
AaJole defenSIVe: backs coach. Pete Rodn guez speCial team s coach. and Kent Johnslon strength and
co ndtti omng coach
.
\.

St louis n1 Co lorado, 3 p m.
Tampa Bay nt Boston, 7 p m.
N.Y. Rangers at Montreal, 7 p m
Toro nlo :Jt Philadelphia, 7 p m
Wa5hington at Carohna, 1 p m
Buffalo at Ottawn, 7 30 p m
NY. Islanders a1 Florida, 7 JOp m.
De troit at Vnnccmver, 10 p m
Pittsburgh at Los Angeles, 10:30 p m
Ca l,gnry nt Snn Jose. 10 : ~0 p.m

Hockey

Far West

:
•
•
•
•
:
•
•
•
•
•
•
:

Northwest Division

Colorado ......... : ......
Edmornon .................
Vancouver............
Ca lgary ........,. . . ..

Montreal at Washmgton. 7 p.m
Bos ton a' Buffalo, 7.30 p m ·
Tampa Bay a1 New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Ch1cago nl NY Rangers, 7 30 p.m
Ph oe m:~~ at Nastwd le. 8 p m.
Dallas a1 Anaheim, 9:308.m.
P1tt~burgh a1 San_Jose, I ]0 p m '""

Allmnce 41 , Umontow n Lake 30
Ouawa Hills 74, Maumee Vall 35
Pons mouth E 59, New Boston 38

Icam

41 107 98
32 9.5 131
28 90 136

Tonight's games

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Southwest

9
4
6

SAN DIEGO PADRES: Agreed 10 ternis with
RHP Woody Wllliiuns on a thm:!-year conlract

Thursday's scores

Far West

Midwest

2 46 127 112

Carohna .1, Flor1da 2
Ottawa 3, New Jersey 2
Dc:trmt 2, Nashvil le l-OT
Edmomon l Vancetuver I
Los Angeles 3. Calgary 0

Brigham You ng 75, Hawa11 54
CS Nonhndge 74. Montan a St 66
E Washmgton 69. Sacramento St 57
N An zona 66, Montana 50
New Meu co 71 Fresno St 62
Ponland St 63. Idaho St 57
Stanford 69, Sou1hern Cal 49
UC lA R7, Cahfomm6 2
Utah 74. San D1cgo S1 60

Bow hng Green 66, Akron 57
Butler 78, Cleve land St 62
Ch1 cago Sr 50. lnd - Pu r- ln dp l,~ 47
DePaul 87. Alll - Binrun~ham 80
Oelroit at Wright St , ppd
Mi ssouri-Ka n s n~ Cny at You ngstown St ppd
Murray St 71 SE Mi ssoun 70
Ora l Roberts 94. Oakland Mt ~·h 1'!9
Term -Mamn R~ . E. lllmoJs 75-0T
W lllm ms 76, S U t:~h 68
Wts - ~h lwa ukL-e 52 Ill -Cht l'!lgo 50

:
•
..
•
•

Detroit ..
.. 22 18
St louis
.. 16 14
Nash'¥11le .................... 1423
Chtcago ..................... II 2'

North~~ t ern

; Appalachran St. 62. Olalta~ooga 61-0T

~

lY L I nL !l£ li.:l.

Itam •

•Nelsonville
' M iddlelown

•w,shington CH
•west Union
"Jamestown

NBA training camp• to start Tuesday · .
By CHRIS SHERIDAN

Cincinnati falls out of undefeated ranks
quite an eventful last 17 seconds.
The 49ers (10-6, 2-2 Conference
USA) were leading 62-60 when
Leven missed a shot and Guevera
was fouled grabbing the rebound
with 17 seconds left. He went to the
foul line for -a one-and-one and
ITjissed the free throw. Cincinnati
(15-1. 4-1) got the rebound.
That's where things i ot messy.
As the Bearcats headed downcourt, Levett buried a three-pointer.
But an official had mistakenly blown
his whistle, so the ball was given to
Cincinnati out of bounds and the
clock was restored to 17 seconds.
"That one really hurt. That killed
us, " Levett said of the whi stle,
which he said he heard as he was
getting ready to release his shot.

1· 015°0
..,....!:=======
DODGE
4-cyt, auto, air, till, cruise, White Was 0,995 ........................................... $9,200
OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 LSS Loaded, One Owner, Was $10,900 .......................................... $7,800
CHEVY 1/2 TON SWB 4•4, V8 350, auto, air, !til, cruise, only 41,000 mtles, one owner, like new, Was 116,995.... . $15,450
FORD WINDSTARV6, auto., AM/FM cass, ti~. cruise, front &amp; rear air, Was $12,900 ..............$11 ,750
CHEVROLET LUMINA V6, auto., air, tilt, cruise, AM-FM cass, Was $11,999 ............................ $9,900
FORD ESCORT SW 4 cyl, air, 5 spd, AM/FM cass, 33,000 mi, WAS $7900 ........................... $6,600
GMC SOMOMA SportsMie, V6, 5 spd, llir, AM·FM '""· bH, cruise, 1·"'""· or&gt;ly 16,000 m, Black sluttp Must,.. Was 112,900 .........$1 0,850
CADILLAC SEVILLE VI, "''· PS, PB, llir, Pw! seats,PW, Pl 1n. crutse. lea1her. AMJFM cass. WAS 122.995 Stock 14430-A •..•• $20,800
PONTIAC GRAND AM, 4 Dr, 4 cyl, auto, air, till, cruise, Was $10,995 ...................................... $9,600
CHEVROLET CAPRICE VB, auto, air, cass, tilt, crUise, Was $8,900 .........................................$6,400
BUICK REGAL V6, lllrto, air, P sealS. PW, AM/FM CO ~ayer. ••. cruoe, 1-owror, on&lt;y 5,500 ml Uke""" WAS 111,900., ............ $17
OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 V&amp;, outo, olr, PS, PB, Ps11t, PW, AM-FM coos, tHt, cruiH, 52,000 ml, W11 sa,too .... ........ $7450

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Collective bargaining puts Pippen, Krause in money trap

1999

''

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,

• CHICAGO (AP)- After years of
hating each other; Scottie Pippen and
Jerry Krause now suddenly need
each other. PiPpen can't get top doll~r without ' Krause's help, and
Krause can't get anything back 'in a
trade without Pippen's help.
· At least the Chicago Bulls are giving us one last soap opera before the
bfeakup hits full throttle.
: NBA teams learned Thursday that
the expected starting date for the
opening of training camps - as well
a$ the go-ahead for trades and free
agent signings - will be next
Thesday instead of Monday.
• Under new, collective bargaining
rules, the Bulls can offer Pippen
more than any other team, with a
limit of $14 million. Since Pippen
doesn't have the leverage to command th~t amount, the Bulls are trying to sign him for $10 million to $11
million and immediately trade him to
another team.
But Pippen, a free agent, could
choose to sign with Houston, taking
the Rockets' $9.5 million in salary
cap space and leaving the Bulls with
nothing in return. .

· If Houston gave him a four·year
deal, Pippen would make $44.2-million. If the Bulls gave him a fouryear deal starting at $10 million, he
would make SS 8.2 million. ~
Therein lies the price, at least $14
million, that Pippen must pay to
mess up the plans of Krause, the
Bulls general manager with whom he
has feuded.
"That would be my impression
right now. I don't think you'll see
Sco.ttie back in a Bulls uniform
again," said Bill Wennington, another· on~ of the Bulls' free agents.
Pippen's best other option would
be to sign with Denver if the Nuggets
would give him their entir.e $13 million in salary cap space, but Pippen
wants to win another championship.
Two of the strongest Pippen signand-trade rumors involved the Los
Angeles Lakers and Orlando Magic,
with the Seattle SuperSonics a longshot, the Associated Press learned
·Thursday.
As for a Latrell Sprewell trade,
the top contenders appear to, be the
Miami Heat and New York Knicks.
According to numerous league
sources ~ho spoke on condition of

anonymity, these were some of the
scenarios regarding some of the most
sought after players:
- Antonio McDyess was trying
to decide between signing with the
Rockets, the Bulls, the Denver
Nuggets and his old team, the
Phoenix Suns.
·
Although the Suns could offer
McJ;&gt;yess the largest contract for
seven years, McDyess could' receive
an opt-out clause making him a free
agent again after five years. And'
since the difference between what
Phoenix could offer for five years
versus what the other teams could
offer would be only $2 million to $3
million, the Suns do not have a huge
advantage.
·
The Bulls scheduled a meeting
with McDyess for Monday iri
Chicago. The Rockets are believed to
prefer McDyess over Pippen, and the
possibility of McDyess rejoining the
Nuggets was realistic because of his
friendship with Denver point guard
Nick Van Exel.
·
- Tom Gugliotta was said to be
leaning to re-signing with the
Timberwolves for seven years, since
Minnesota can pay him more than

any other 'team. The Lakers were
believed to have inquired about making a sign-and-trade deal involving
Gugliotta, Eddie Jones and Elden
Campbell, but the league's complicated base-year compensation rules
would prevent such a deal. Houston,
Denver and Detroit also are interested in Gugliotta.
- The long-rumored Sprewell
trade scenarios involving the Indiana
Pacers appeared to be dead, and there
were confli cting reports over
whether tlie San Antonio Spurs had
renewed their interest. There was a
rumor of Sprewell, Clarence
Weatherspoon and Bimbo Coles
bei ng sent to Miami for Jamal
Mashburn, Brent Barry and Voshon
Lenard or Dan Majerle, but again the
base-year compen sation rules
appeared to be a'-major hindrance.
That could leave the Knicks as the
best contender · for Sprewell ,
although New York was believed to
be offering a package of Chris Mills
and Chris Childs, while the Warriors
were asking for John Starks and-or.
Charlie Ward. The fine print of the
sign-and-trade rules, however, would
prevent Ward from being packaged

with another player.
All around the league, general
·managers and agents continued to be
confused by the complexities of the
new collective bargaining agreement
relating to trades.
Lawyers from the league and
union have been working the past
severat days to put the agreement in
writmg, and the lockout Will remain
in effect unttlthe deal is finalized.
In the meantime, every team was
trying to gauge every other team's
probable moves, and everyone was
ex pecting a frenzy of activity to
com mence immediately after the
lockout is lifted.
Among the other possibilities:
- Bulls free agent center Luc
Longley was said to be headed to
Phoeni x.
- Bulls free agent guard Steve
Kerr was said to be going to Detroit,
along with Clippers free agent forward Loy Vaught. The Pistons
soured on Suns free agent forward
Clifford Robinson when he asked for
a four-year deal starung at $5 mtllion.
'
- The Atlanta Hawks were trying
to decide between signing Lakers

free-agent forward Rick Fox anct.
Kings free-ageht forward Bill;
Owens .
- The Bulls were mulling mak··.
ing runs at free agents Jaysott·
Williams (Nets), Jerry Stackhou~·:
(Pistons) an!! Brent Barry (Fteat). But :
Williams reportedly agreed to a sixi:•
year, $85.8 contract with the Nets. ·.
-The Orlando Magtc were again
exploring the possibtltty of trading ·
Penny Hardaway. '
·:
- Magic free agent guard Derek·
Harper received interest from the •
Knicks, Lakers, Rockets, Bucks and ,
Bulls.
- Clippers free agent center ·
Isaac Austin was said to be choosing ,
between Orlando and Charlotte.
.
- The Knicks were lqoking into ·
acquiring Weatherspoon.
.
- Several conte nders were trying
to get Derrick Coleman to sign fo(
the $1.75 mil lion exce ption, but
Coleman was trying to land a ll)OI'Il • ·
lucrative deal.
- Portland free agent guard
Damon Stoudamire was trying to us~ ,
the posstbility of signing with tho ,
Rockets as leverage to get the ;rrai(.•
Blazers to increase their offer.

,. '

S~nators

edge Devils; Red
Wings beat Predators in OT
best, but we showed some good heart
lO come back."
NHL roundup
Andreas Johansson poked a loose
puck past goalie Martin Brodeur at
By The Associated Prase
12:47 of the third period for his fifth
Break up the Senators.
game-winning goal of the season .
Ottawa, whtch has had only one
Alexei Yashm and Wade Redden
winning season since rejoining the also scored for the Senators.
NHL in l992, is suddenly playmg . Randy McKay and Scott
like a title contender.
Niedermayer scored for the visiting
Wtth a 3-2 win over New Jersey Devils, .who were playing the
on Thursday night, the Senators Senators for the third time in 13
e~tende~ their winnmg streak to five days.' Ottawa won the first two
and the1r unbeaten streak to 10 -. games 6-0 and 4-2, and they play
both modern records for a franch1se once more this month.
that was reborn after a 58-year .• "I thought we did a good job
absence from the league.
tonight," Devils coach Robbie
"We're confident," said Ottawa's Ftorek said. "It's the best game
Daniel Alfredsson. "We're working we've played of the three."
hard for our chances and things are
In other NHL games, it was
falling into place for us." .
Carolina 3, Florida '2; Detroit 2,
The Senators, 8-0-2 in their last Nashville I in overtime; Edmonton
I 0 games, moved into a first-place 3, Vancouver I; and Los Angeles 3,
tie with Toronto in the Northeast Calgary 0.
Division. Both teams have 51 points,
Hurricanes 3, Panthers 2
but Ottawa has played one fewer
At Greensboro, Glen Wesley
game.
.
scored with 41 seconds left as
Ottawa also is 10 games over .500 Carolina snap)ll;d Florida's flve(23-13-5) for the first time since its game unbeaten streak.
return to the NHL. ·
All the Hurricanes' goals were set
"It f~ls good," said defenseman up by Ron Francis, who had his first
Jason York, who had an assist to assist 1M a month and first multipoint
stretch his points streak to seven game since Nov. 29 .
games. "I don 't think we were at our
Red Wings 2, Predators l-OT

At Detroit, Vyacheslav Kozlov 's
goal 2:54 into overtime lifted the
Red Wmgs over Nashville.
Kozlov took a pinpomt pass from
Steve Yzerman near the right post
and snapped a shot past goalie Tomas
Vokoun for his ninth goal of the season.

Oilers 3, Canucks 1
Boris Mironov scored the goahead goal in the S.Cond period as
Edmonton won at Vancouver.
The Oilers snapped a three-game
winless streak and improved to 4-0
against the Canucks this season.
Mark Messier set up Vancouver's
only goal for his I,040th career
assist, tyiAg him with Marcel I;&gt;ionne
for fifth on the NHL's career list.
Kings 3, Flames 0
Jamie Storr won his sixth consecutive start and Donald Audette set up
CRUNCH TIME comes for the Carolina In Greensboro, N.C., where the Hurricanes won 3·
two goals by Luc Robitaille as Los ·Hurricanes' Kent Mandervllle (right) and Florida's 2 on the strength of Glen Wesley's laat-mlnutd
Angeles won for the seventh time in Oleg Kvasha during Thursday night's NHL contest g·oal. (APl
nine games.
.
Storr, sidelined for 16 of the
Kings' first 20 games because of a
groin injury, earned his fifth ·career
shutout with 22 saves., The loss was
the Flames' fourth straight at the
Forum, where they were 5-0-3 in .
their previous eight visits.

Botha sai·d he's getting almost
$2M to fight Tyson Saturda·y
By ED SCHUYLER JR.
AP Sports Writer
- Four bo•ers were considered for
w'hat ts supposed to 'be the supportIllS role in Mike Tyson's latest comeback Saturday night.
: And the winner was Francois
Botha, who said he's getting $1.98
million to fight Tyson in a I0-round
pay-per-view match in the MOM
Grand Garden in Las Veg as.
· A lot of people also say he going
to get a beating.
·
Those in volved with Tyson's
career don't want to see htm beaten.
A third· straight loss on the heels of
his di squalification for biting
Evander Holyfield 's ears would cook
boxing's Golden Goose.
On the other hand, they don 't
want a repeat of the one-round Peter
McNeeley fiasco in Tyson's first
fight after he was released from
pnson in 1995.
"Shelly (Finkel, Tyson's boxing
adviser) gave me a list, and from that
we mutually agreed on Botha," said
Jay Larkin, in charge of boxing for
Showtime .
The other names on the list were
Vaughn Bean, an excellent boxer
who gave Holyfield a good fight;
Axel Schulz, a tall German who
moves well ; and Brian Nielsen, a
towering Dane with all the movement of a statue.
"We didn't want another Peter
McNeeley for Mike's first fight

Top 25 hoops ...
whistle on that play at the end, " he
said. "When he went down and hit
that three-pointer, I was like, 'Oh,
no, this can't be happening."'
Marlon Thomas 'had 13 points
and Galen Young added 12 for the
49ers, who ended the hest start by
Cipcinnati smce the 1962-63
Bearcats won their first 19 games .
· The loss left Connecticut and
Auburn as the lone ramaining undefeated teams in Division I.
Steve Logan led Cincinnati,
which trailed most of the game, with
20 points, while Martin finished
with 16 and Levett 13.
"We have absolutely no enthusiasm," Huggi ns satd. "It's like we:re
just going to show up and wm.
We've got to stop doing that."
In other games involving .ranked
teams Thurs(jay, it · was No . .4
Stanford 72, Southern California 55 ;

back," Finkel said "Botha is credi- night. If he looks·awesome, plans are
for stepptng up the level of competible. "
Botha, an 8-1 underdog, has a 39- tion."
A thtrd fight with Holyfield, who
1 record, with 24 knockouts. He outpointed Schulz for the vacant IBF won the WBA titl e by stopping
heavyweight title in 1995, but he Tyson in the II th round Nov. 9,
tested positive for a steroid and was 1996, would be a huge money light,
especially if Holyfield becomes
stripped of the title .
The So uth African 's loss came undisputed champion by beating
when he was stopped in the 12th Lennox Lewis on March 13 in
round by Michael Moorer in a bid for Madi son Square Garden m New
York. Holyfteld also holds the IBF
the IBF title in 1996.
Botha, who li ves in Newport title, whi le Lewis ts WBC champion.
A thtrd Holyfteld-Tyson ·bou!
Beach, Calif., and has. been in the
United States nine years, fought wou ld be btg even tf Holyfield loses
twice in 1997, scorinjl a 10-round to Lewis, but m that case Holyfield
technical knockout and winning a mtght not want another Tyson match.
Tyson-Holyfield III would be on
12-round decision. Both his fights
SET,
Showtime's pay-per-view arm.
last year ended in the first round,
Lewis
is tied to HBO, which probameanmg he's fought less than two
bly·
would
keep him from defending
full rounds m 19 months.
That mactivtty had to make Botha the undisputed championship against
an attractive opponent for Tyson, Tyson. The Holyfield-Lewis fight
who also wiH be fightin g for the first will be a pay-per-view presentation
of TVKO, owned by Time Warner.
time in about 19 months.
The bout also will be Tyson's first also the operator of HBO.
"They'll be selling Italian ices in
on a new four-fight deal with the
MOM Grand, and he would like to hell ~efore we let Mike Tyson fi ght
have four fights this year, capped. by Lennox Lewis anywhere but on
Showtime," Larkin said.
a third fight with Holyfield.
5howtime still has a multiplefight deal with Tyson. Larkin would
Jim 'Lee Howell, head coach ·of
not say how many fights, only that
the Giants in 1954, had two assis"it is a substantial number."
Larkin wants Tyson to fight again tants who became famous , Vince
on April 24 and his opponent Lombardi and Tom Landr~
"depends on how he looks Saturday

(Continued from Page 4)
No. 7 Arizona 74, Arizona State 73;
No. 10 UCLA 72, California 61'; and
Wyoming 96, No. 20 Tcxao
Christian 93.
No. 4 Stanford 72, USC SS
Mark Ma\lsen had 17 points and
sophomore Jarron Collins added
career-highs of 13 points and 12
rebounds as the Cardinal (14-2, 4-0
Pac-10) won their IOth straight. The
visitors used a I 7-6 run to start the
second half to take a 51-30 lead with
14:53 remaining. Elias Ayuso led the
1Tojans (10-4, 2-3) with 15 points.
No. 7 Arizona 74, Arizona St: 73
A.J. Bramlett matched his careerhigh with 24 points, including the
game-winning shot with I0 seconds
to play, and grabbed II rebounds as
the vistting Wildcats ( 12-1 , 4-1 Pac10) beat their in-state rivals for the
seventh straight time. Freshman
Michael Wright had 18 points and
•

'12 rebounds for Arizona. Eddie
House had 22 points for the Sun
Devils (10-7; 2-3), but he missed an
off-balance three-pointer at the
buzzer.
No. ·lO UCLA 72, Callfomls 61
Baron Davis, playing most of the
second half with three fouls, scored
19 points to1ead the Bruins (12-3. 41 Pac-10) to their lOth win in II
games. Geno Carlisle had 14 points
for the Bears (10-4, 1-3), who had
four of their last six games at Pauley
Pavilion.
Wyoming 96 ·
No. lO Texas Christian 93
Bradley Mann and Ugo Udezue
each scored 18 points as the
Cowboys (10-4, 1-2 Western
Athletic Conference) registered its
fifth straight home win over a
ranked opponent in the last three
seasons.

128 850*

... .

I

New

Brand
1999
. ·
Pontiac Trans Am Ram Air

• 350 V-8 Power, 320 hp
Wllh Ram Air Induction
• AMIFM CD W/ 500 watt
Monsoon Sound

122950*
I

• Vortec V-8 Power
• Air ConditiQning
• AMIFM cassette
"LS.pkg. and aluminum wheels extra

• Leather Interior
• T·Tops .
• Totally Loaded
• &amp;Speed Or Automatic

All New 1999 Chevy
Extended Cab 4x4 Pickup
• Cruise Control
• Styled Wheels
• Nicely Equipped I

122 450*
I

Brand New 1999 Chevy
ZR2 Ext. Cab 4x4 Pickup

• Vortec 4300 High Output V-6
• Automatic
• AMIFM CD System

t1
•1

8,850*
I

• 3800 V-6 Power
• Power Windows
• Power Door Locke

Brand New 1999
Buick LeSabre Cus&gt;tom
• AMIFM Cassette
• Cruise Control
• Loa!ledl

• Remote Keyless Entry
• Aluminum Wheels
• Totally Loaded!

�.'"~""""..

...

..

.

·-· .

~

.......

-----·--------.-

·----'·-·. ·--·-

.,

... , ~·

..
'

Fnday,Januery15,1899

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dlilly Sentinel

Fnday,January15,1998

·Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7·

-Witnesses·may enliven Clintoo's Senate trial
By WALTER R. MEARS
:AP Special Corr..pondent

.
· WASHINGTON- In ordinary Senate dmes, it could have been called
:a filibuster. But this was extraordinary, 100 senators sitting in unaccustomed
:silence as House impeachmenl prosecutors opened the re~titive case for the
·conviction and ouster of President Clinton.
That would take 67 votes, an outcome neither side could count as the tri·
at resumed Thursday. So the Republicans arguing the House case for conviction said in tum that the next chapter should feature witnesses, Monica
Lewinsky and other figures in and around the sex and cover-up scandal that
brought the first presidential impeachment in 131 years, the second ever.
The Whiie House does not want witnesses; CUnton 's defenders are satisfied to have him judged on the evidence produced by Independent Coun- ·
sel Kenneth S(arr. They argue that it does not prove perjury or obstruction
of justice, and that if it did, the charges against Clinton did not warrant House
impeachment and are not grounds for Senate conviction. '
The House managers said the trial was not supposed to repeal the process
that led to the Republican-driven impeachment vote, and that testimony from
the people involved - including Clinton, one suggested - is essential at
the trial. .

(

No questions, no challenges; no debate:l;ven the. written questions senIt may be essential to their chances of changing the prospect that.atleast
34 senators would vote against impeachment, enough to acquit him to serve ators are entitled to ask are reserved for .tater. "
Usually, an uninterrupted speech or a series ·of them clears the Sena~
out his.tenn. Only with M~. Lewinsky on the .stand to be questioned can the
chamber.
Some senators drifted out and back during the six hours of House
Senate " fairly and honestly determine her credibility," said Rep. Asa Hutchinarguments,
but the 100 .seats were full or nearly so most of the opening day:
son, R-Ark.
Short
on
drama, the lead prosecutors were long on oratory about the dire
Without witnesses, the prosecutors' case remains essentially the o~e made
in the House Judiciary Comminee, and again aS the House voted to tmpeach impact of acquittal. Rep. Henry Hyde, tne Judiciary Committee chairman, ·
said oaths of office and of truth would "never be the same," their signifiClinton.
Their opening arguments showed the hurdle involved in making the paper cance crumbling.
·
:.
.
.
case so compelling as to persuade two-thirds of the Sen.ate, i~cludjng at least
"If we fail in our duty," Rep. lames Sensenbrenner of W1sconsm swd,
12 Democrats ' IO convict Clinton. All estimates at thiS pmnt nre that .tlley
"I fear ihe difficult and dedicated work done by ihousands of honorable men
.
need to change minds to do so. Th at will take more than lawyerly repetition and women elected to serve not just here but in our state capitals, city halls, ··
of the case.
.
.
courtrooms and school board rooms will be swept away in a sea of cynicism."
Five Republican congressmen did so on Thursday, beginnin~ \"ith _an
The president's lawyers listened from the defense table, only observers
overview, then ,reviewing the charges and the evtdence ptece by p1ece. Ftve until next Tuesday. Then their tum comes.
more are taking over today.
.
Observing, and listening, was wearing.
·
.
They are lecturers with visual &lt;,lisplays, quotes from the law and pnor tesRepublic~n Se.r . Ted Stevens of Alaska praised the Hou~e prosecutors,
timony, brief videotapes - one of Clinton swearing the' ?ath of off1ce at ~Is . but said he was ulidng cold medication that rriade him drowsy. "It's tougher
first inauguration, another of his vehement, finger-waggmg televiSed dental than hell to stay awake," he said.
a year ago of the affair he finally had to admit.

Apostolic
CllliJ'daorJ-~"­

VIIIZuldl 1111&lt;1 Ward ltd.
PaaiOr: Jame~ Miller
Sundar School -10:30 .a.m.
EvtiiiiJ- 7:30p.m.

Assembly of God
Libert)' -biJ or God

insurance

By RON STATON .

" · na!W# Hawaiians will cast votes
"-£unday to select the people who will
Associated Prell Writer
HONOLULU - Imprisoned tn shape it.
"Sovereignty is a trail Hawaiians
her . palace bedroom, Queen
have
been traveling actively for 25
Lili 'uokalani was given an ultimatum
in 1895: abdicate the throne or her years and even longer since the overfollowers would face a firing squad. throw of the monarchy," said Kaipo
"For myself, I would have chosen Kincaid, executive director of Ha
death rather than to have signed it," Hawaii, sponsor of the election.
the eighth ·Hawaiian monarch later - "This is a journey we are taking wrote. But she felt she had no choice. alf of us."
About I 00,000 native Hawaiians
Her signature ·forever relinquished
are
eligible to elect delegates to a sovthe 1110narchy begun in 1810 by
ereignty convention planned for this
Kamehameba I. .
· ·
Now, more tban a century later, summer. The convention, organizers
some native Hawaiians want the hope, ·will set· specific goals for the
crown reStored, others want their own sovereignty movement.
The process began three years ago
nation and still others would like to
when
the Hawaiian Sovereignty Elecsee something akin to an Indian
tions
Council mailed ballots to
reservation for ancestors of the orig81 ,507 registered native Hawaiians.
inal islanders.
No one seriously worries about Less than half voted, but. 73 percent
insurrection, but the sovereignty of those who returned ballots favored
movement in Hawaii is real, and electing delegates to a convention.

now lower
via Fannie
Mae unit
By MARCY GORDON
AP Business Writer
WASHINGTON - .First came
smaller down payments, enabling
more people to buy a home. But
there was a catch: The borrowers
had to pay more in home mortgage
insurance.
Now mortgage giant Fannie
Mae is offering both lower down
payments and lower insurance
costs, by providing new options
that will make mortgage insurance
cheaper for homebuyers who cannot afford big down payments.
The new insurance options will
save home buyers who.make small
down payments $1,100 to $2,250
over the first I 0 years of a 30-year,
fixed-rate mortgage, according to
Fannie Mae, a co ngressionally
.chartered, publicly traded ·company that buys mortgages from original lenders such as banks.
Fannie Mae retains SOJTie mon·
gages in iiS portfolio and packages
others int o sec urities for resale to
investors.
Franklin Raines, Fannie Mae's
new chairman and chief executive
officer, was announcing the mortgage iilsur·ance plan•·ttiday at the
N ationa\ Association of Home
Builders ' annual meeting in Dallas.

A total of 156 Hawaiians are
competing for 85 seats at the convention. Results of Sunday 's vole are
to be announced Jan. 27.
Not all native Hawaiians support
the push for sovereignty. Some question the legitimacy of a process
begun by less than half of qualified
voters.
Kina 'u .Boyd Kamali 'i, a former
trustee of the Office of Hawaiian
Affairs, an agency . charged with
looking out for the interests of native
Hawaiians, said the election should
meet minimum requirements, including having ballots cast by a majority
·• of registered native Hawaiian voters.
Ha Hawaii ("ha" means "breath"
in Hawaiian) succeeded the stateappointed Sovereignty Elections
Council - and Karnali 'i said any
process start~ by state'appointees is
tainted.
"The Ha Hawaii process is not the,

breath of life, but possibly the kiss of
death to native Hawaiian self-government;" Kamali 'i sajd in a January
·newsletter from ihe Office of Hawaiian Affairs.
She also likened the election to the
creation of the Republic of Hawaii
after Lili 'uokalani 's overthrow.
"Then, as now, a.small group of
unelected individuals decided the
process and drafted a constitution ready or not; wanted Or not." ·
But Ha Hawaii president Pua 'ala
McElhaney said the group's authority. comes from its membership and
supporting organizations.
"Can detractors have such total
lack of trust in the ju~gment of the
Hawaiian people to 11.\ink that all of
these groups, all of these people, as
diverse as they are, are under state
control and not know it?" McElhaney
·
asked.
Sentiment in favor¢" sovereignty
has existed ever since Americans,

the preliminary survey data, Clinton
ventured across the Potomac to this
Washington suburb to dramatize the
grass-roots support for COPS, the
community police project· he began
with the 1994 'crime law and a call for
I 00,000 new police on the beat.
"Criminals have the best technol ogy. Police should, too," Clinton sai~
" For too long, we· have seen criminals go free beGause the me,thods to
gather evidence is not up to date....
Police carry a heavy burden, but we
know they can '.t carry it alone."
Clinton's new budget will ask
Congress for $1.3 billion in fiscal
2000 - and a total of $6.4 billion
over the next five years -to extend
the COPS program·, said Jose Cerda,
a crime specialist on the White House
Domestic Policy Council. New hires
under the program are expected to
meet that goal by midyear. As of
October, the. Justice Department
reported the total had reached 88,500

Associated Pres• Writer
ALEXANDRIA. Va. - President Clinton, celebrating new data
that show a record low number of
serious violent crimes; proposed a
five-year, $6 billion package Thursday to raise the ante on his nearly ful·
filled pledge to 'put 100,000 new officers on the beat nationwide.
"It'll be ·the best investment we
can make in a safe future for our children, and I hope we can pass it with
your help,'' Clinton said during a ceremony at a police station here. · ·
In •the Justice Department's
Bureau of Justice Statistics midyear
report, ihe total number of violent
crimes for 1998 - both incidents
reported to police and those unreported - · is expected to 'fall below 3
million for the first time since 1973,
when the bureau started its annual
interviews with crime victims.
In conjunction with the release of

' 'We can cut costs to co nsumers, qualify more homebuy¢rs,
·and give them more ~orne for their
mortgage-payment dollar by reducing their mortgage insurance
costs," Raines said in a statement.
"Eventually, we hope all low·
down-paymentborrowers will benefit from new approaches to mortgage. insurance."
The new options will be avail.able nationwide in early March
from some 700 mortgage lenders
natior&gt;wide that use Fannie Mae's
"desktop underwriter" computer
software. About 150,000 borrowers, most of them first-time homebuyers, are expected to take advantage of the options over the next
year or so.
Last April, Fannie Mae
launched nationwide a new type of
mortgage with a small down payment- as low as 3 percent - and
fle xibility regarding the source of
that money.
The new mortgage, previously
available only in limited areas of
the country, was designed to help
people with good credit histories
but little savings ~o have been
unable to buy a hpme. But homebuyers making the smaller down
payments had to pay more in mort·
gage insurance to protect lende(s
against losses from defaults.
"We gave millions of Americans the chance to buy a home by
lowering down payments, but
requiring more mortgage insurance,' ' Raines said. "Now we can
offer homebuyers the best of both
worlds - lower down payments
and l ower mor1gage insuraQce
costs."
fi:onsumers seeking more information can call Fannie Mae's consumer resource center at 1-800-7· ·
FANNIE benveen 9 a.m. and 5
p.m. EST.

not declare victory and decide we
and was climbing.
The balanced-budget agreement don't have to keep the effort up, "
·
reached by Clinton and congression- ·Biden said.
According to an advance copy of
al Republicans in 1996 planned to
phase out COPS, allotting $300 mi.l- the Bureau of Justice Statistics
lion for fiscal 2000 and then shutting midyear report, the 2.8ll:miJiion serious violent crimes in the 1998 preit down the following year.
Clinton's proposed package would liminary report compare~' Jo· 3.04 milearmark $600 million for fiscal2000, lion that the .bureau r~pbrted in its
whiCh starts Oct. I, for the hiring of final data for 1997. The inumber has
30,000 to SO.OOG addilional officers, been steadi\y droppjng.,since a high
"with a~ effort to ·target new police of 4.19 million in 1993.
The survey defines serious violent
officers to crime hot spots," 'Cerda
crimes
as rape, robbery, aggravated
said Wednesd~y,
"We are hopeful· that Congress assault and homicide: If simple
. will see the \visdom of continuing.a assault is factored in, the 1997 total
very successful program that has, and rises to 8.61 millimi. '·,
Property crime rates ,for 1998 are
will continue to have, strong law
expected
to be less than ~alf what the
enforcement and local-level support,' ' he said.
1973 rate of 520 per l,OOO houseSen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., an holds, according to the preliminary
architect of the .original crime legis- report. ·
lation, said the extra resources are
. In addition to the money designecessary if the nation 's police are to nated for hiring new police, Clinton's
keep violent crime rates down. "Let's proposed $1 J-billion package for fis-

· Germans and Britons sacked Queen:
Lili ' uokalani's government and
formed the Republic of Hawaii in:
1893. Sugar planters then convinced'
the United States to annex Hawaii in
1898, despite opposition from native
islanders.
,
The islands became a U.S. territory in 1900. Though Hawaiians
were U.S. citizens, they could not
vote and were represented by a congressional delegate who also could
not vote. Hawaii became the 50th
state in 1959.
Ha Hawaii still needs to raise·
about $3 million to hold the convention. Assuming fund-raising targets
are met, delegates will likely hold
community briefings and then make
recommendations for ratification by
voters, Kincaid said.
"Over time, the (sovereignty) discussion will weave a fabric," sht
said, "As there is more dialogue, the
predominant concepts will prevail."

•

Then, last month he testified Ms.
Associated Press Writer
Fahey was accidentally shot to death
WILMINGlDN, Del. - Jurors by another mistress in a suicidal, jealbegan deliberating Thursday whether ous rage. He said he dumped the
to believe the word of Thomas body in the ocean to protect the othCapano or the circumstantial evi- er. woman.
,
dence of prosecutors who say the
Jurors began deliberations Thursprominent lawyer killed his mistress day at a Wilmington area hotel where
and dumped her body.
they were sequestered: The judge has
No one has found ·a murder told them to set their own hours,
weapon or the body of Anne Marie adding that if they reach a verdict
Fahey, the governor's scheduling during evening hours they must wait
secretary and Capano's mistress of until the following day to deliver it.
three years before she vanished June If convicted of first-degree murder,
27, 1996.
Capano could be sentenced to death.
Prosecutors ridiculed Capano's
Capano denied knowing anything .
story
in closing statements Wednesabout her fate until his murder trial.

day, and questioned why it took him
2-1/2 years to explain the shooting.
"That story is ludicrous. It defies
common sense , ' ~ silid 'prosecutor
Cohn Connolly. "The defendant
thought he would get away with murder."
·
Capano's defense stood by the
lawyer's story, blaming Deborah
Macintyre, who had an affair wiih
Capano for more than a decade.
"If Tom Capano planned to kill
Anne Marie Fahey, what kind of
moron would kill her in his own
house?" said Joseph Oteri, Capano's
attorney.
Ms. Macintyre denied being at

Capano's home the night Ms. Fahey,
30, di~appeared . Sh~ testified she
bought Capano a gun at his request a
month earlier.
Capano, a former state prosecutor
from a wealthy family, long insisted
he didn't know what.became of Ms. ~
Fal1ev after they dined together at a
Phitlad:elphia restaunint - the last

Fin! Baptlll Cllurdl
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School - 9:1.5 a.m.
Worship· 10:15 a.m., 7'00 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Rodne Flnt Baptlat
Putor: Rick Rule ·
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
WoBhip - 10:40 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00p.m.

, man said. "Everybody is .so quick to
judge this young man. That's what
we have courts for."
Former neighbors at an apartment
Merlino rented with friends in 1997
have described him as a hunter who
·blasted birds in the yard with a shotgun, gutted a deer on his living room

lild&lt;ory Hllo Cburd! of Cbrilt
Evlrlaf;li&amp;l Mike Moore
SunCII:y School - 9 a.m.
Worship ·10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedn,sday Services · 1 p~m.
Uberty Cbrlstlon Cburdo
Dexter
Pastor: Woody can
Sundi)' Evenins • 6:30p.m.
Thursday Servi~ • 6:30p.m.

cal 2000 would provide funds ' for
competitive grant programs, includ"
ing:
• $350 million for local police
agencies to tap into new communication, crime-solving, and crimeanalysis technologies.
• $150 million for communities to ·
hire prosecutors and "neighborhood
DA's" for locally tailored, preventive
and crime-solving progra111s.
• $50 million for communities to
acquire the technology for community-based prosecution programs.
• $125 million for innovative
community programs, such as bringing schools and churches together'in
the fight against crime. ·
"This initiative is one of the few
billion-dollar-plus increases" that
Clinton is proposing in this year's .
budget, Cerda ~aid . "The data from
... (the Bureau of Justice Statistics),
we think, is a good indicator that it is
working."

, Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schooi·9:4S a.m.
B\lening • 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Lupvllt Cbrlotlu Cbun:b
SuiKII)' Scbool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp -10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneiday Service 7:30p.m.

Bethlebe01 Bopliol Churdo
On:at Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Gene Morris
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday WorshiP.· 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday B1ble Study - 6:00p.m.

He.,lock Grove Church
PUtor: Gehe Zopp
Sunday school • 10:30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Old Bethel F.;_ Will Bapllll Cburch
28601 SL Rt. 7, Middlepon
Sunday S.:hool· 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; • 7:30 p.m.
Thursday Services· 7:30
Hllltlde Baptlll Church
St. Rt. 14~ just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School · IO o.m.
Wonihlp • 1Ja.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7 p.m.
VIctory Baptlat lndependaat

525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship · IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Services • 7 p.m.
Fallb Bopltll Cbun:h
·Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School· 10 a.m:
' WorshiP ':.':'Jl a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Fonol Run Baptill
Pas1or : Arius Hurt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
· Worship • 11 a.m.
ML Morlab Bopllll
fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pas\or: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

time she was seen.
He said at trial he crammed her
body into a cooler and, with his
brother's help, dumped it at sea the ·
day after the shooting.
.
Oteri urged the jury to set astde .
any resentment for Capano's conduct,
including his many affairs.

Aoodquily Boplllt
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Sund~y Evening · 6:00p.m.
Rudand Free Will Bapdll
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evenina -7 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

-~

Catholic
Sa&lt;ndH-Co!MkO.urdl
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
. Sat. Con. 4:45-5:l~p.m.; Mus· 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass • 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass - 8:30 a:m.

••

Church of Chri s t

carpet and bragged about his marksmanship.
The bodies of the free-roaming
mustangs were found outside Reno
late last month. Authorities sa:id several animals suffered for a long time
before they died or were destroyed.

Pomti'O)' Chureh of Christ
212 W. Main St.
Minister: Danny Bias
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7 p.m.
Po10eroJ WtollkleCburdl orCbrlll
33226 Children'• Home Rd.
Sunday School • 1~ a.m.

Bdha•y

Pastor: Dewayne Stuller
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 ·a.m.

Our Slwlour Lutheran' Churth
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
'.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
SL Poul Lutheran Chun:h
.
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
·
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Wor~hip • 11 a.m.

Chn sti an Unt on

., .• r\.. GnJwDUalied.M......... . · ,,
Worship· 9:30 u;n. (hi&amp;. 2ad Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd k 41h Sun)
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

,

Banford, W.Va.
PutOI"Jim Huahea
. Sunday Scbool- II a.m.
Worship· 9:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednctday Scrvit"Ca· 7:30p.m.
•

Mt Olive United Methodist .
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Church of God
MLMorl.abCbiii'CbofGocl

Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Putor: Brice Uu
Supday S.:hool- 9:45a.m.
Evenina . c5 p.m.
Wednesd•y Services • 7 p.m.

MtiJ• Coopcntlwe f1ri1h
Nortt.eaat Clutter

ldfrtd
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
.Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 6':30 p.m.

Rudud Cburdo or God
Putor: Ron Healh
Sunday Worship- 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesdly Services·-? P·~· .

Cllnter
Pastor: Sharon ,Hausman
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

Syncuoe Flnt Cburdl or God
Apple and Second SIR.
Pastor: 'Rev. David Ruuell
Sunday Sc:hooland Worship~ 10 1.m.
Evening, Services~ 6:30p.m.
Wadnesd~y Services·· 6:30p.m.

Joppa
Pa.s1or: Bob Randolph
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

Chardl otGod or Proptoecy
OJ. White ltd. of(SI. Rl. t60
Paston·P.J. Chapman
Sunday School-10 a.m.
W~hlp . It a.m.
Wedne~~1 Services - 7 p.m.

Li&gt;nl Bottom
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. '

Cong1 egattona I
•

Second ~ynn, Pomeroy

Putor: Rc~ Rol1nd Wildman

Sunday ochoqi ond wotlhip 10:25

Epi scopal
G.- Eolieopol Cbo,.
326 E. Mtln St., Pomeroy
Rev. Jamca Bernacki, Rev. Katharin Foster
. Rev. Deborah Rankin, Clersy
Holy Euc1'11ris1 and
Sunday S.:I)OOtll:OO a.m.
www.frD111:1t.ncl/-deanery

Holine s s
c-..11!' Cburclt

- Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Street, Rudand
· Sunday Sc:hool-9:3Qa.m.
Sunday. Worlllip-1Mll a.m.
Sunday&amp;. Wedneadly Service-7 p.m.

llao•Uie Hoi.._ Cburdl
310S7 SUie Route 32.5, Lanpvlle
Pastor: Or. J.D. Young.
.

ReedSville
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday of Month- 7:30 p.m. service .

Tappen Plains SL Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

Central Clu.Ur
AabUI')" (SyracUS&lt;)
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday Sehool· 9:45a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:30p.m.
Enterprise
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday·School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m. .

· ,,

,

Grand Street
Sunday School · 10 a:m.
Worship · lla.m.
Wednesday Services · S p.m.
Torth Chun:b
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School • 9:30 ~.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Mlddlepon Chorch ortbt Nuareae
Pastor: Gresory A. Cundiff
Sunday School-9:30a.m.'
Worship ~ 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
• ·RtednWe Fellowship
Church of the Nazartne ·

Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday SerVices • 7 p.m.

Harrloon•llle Prtobyterlu Qardo
Worship ·.9 a.m.
Sunday Scl\ool • 9:45 a.m.

Hazel CommuaiiJ Cburdl
OlfRI.I24
Pa•tor: Edsel H~rt , , ,
•'.,,
Sunday ~hoot ·· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

M lddlepol1 l'&lt;ttbJitrioa
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
Pastor, Robert J. Coen
WBOS Radio-1 0:30 a.m. daily 9 a.m. Sunday

WJOS-TV 27- 3:30 p.m. Sunday
4-4:30 Saturday
Sunday School· 9;30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 P·l11:·
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Wedracsday Kids for Christ-7 p.m.
Pomeroy Churdl of the Nuarene
Pas1or: Rev. Lloyd D. Grlmm.Jr',
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 1Q:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • ~ p.m.
Ghelltr Cllurtb or the NUU'I!RC

Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday SchOol-9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Portland First Churdl oftbe Na:atnne
Pastor: Mark Matson

Dyesvllle Commualty Cbarth
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Ad ventist
Seventh·I&gt;•J Adveallat
Mulberry His. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawi11sky
Sa1Urday Services:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Worship . 3 p.m.

Morae Chapel Church
Sunday school- 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service • 1 p.m.
Filth Goopel Chureh
Long Bottom
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

United Brethren
ML Herinon Unlltd Brethren
in ChriJI Cburc:h
Te,;as Community off CR 82
Pastor: Roben Sanders
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

ML Olifc Commully, Ch•rth
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
• Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

Eden United Brtthrtn In Christ

Uolled Faith Cburcb
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy.By-Pass
· Pastor: Rev. Robert E.. Smilh, Sr.
Sunday Scbool- .9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'ice- 7 p.m.
Full Goopel U1hthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School . 10 a. m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday- 7:30p.m.

•
•

•

SyroCUIO Flnt United l'ftsbJierlalo
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School··10 a.m.
Worship ·11 a.m.

Hockhlaport Church

Sunday School~ 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

.

1

•
•

Presbyterian

Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Rutland Chun:h of the Naurene
• PastOr: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

Ftot..ooda
Paslor: Kt:lth Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

•

SyraCUJt Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracu5e
Rev. Mite Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Bellltl O.un:b
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School· !J a.m.

..

•
.•
Peoltcvotol AaaembiJ
•
St Rt. 124, Racine
•
Pastor: William Hoback
•
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
•
Eveaing · ?·p.m.
••
Wednesday Services- 7 p.n!..
•
•
Middleport Penit&lt;GOtat
•
Third Ave.
.•
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
•
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
•
•
Evening • 6 p.m. '
Wednesday Servi~s ·7:00p.m. •

Filth Valley Tobtmacle Church
Bailey Run Road
. Pastor: Rev. Emmett Raw$0n
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Coot.llle United Metloodi.ll PariJh
Pastor: Helen Klipe
Cool•llle Choreb
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services · 1 p.m.

'

Penteco s tal

Middlepo11 CommuaiiJ Church
575 Pearl St., Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evenina ·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Radne
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School. 10 a.m.
WOrship • 11 a.m.

,I •• Wpr,~}ljp·~~a.m,.l
, ,;r:
Wednesday Sr::rvfces- 1u a.m.

'

...

Full Gospel Churdo or the U•in1 SaYlor :
Rt.338, Antiqui1y
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

Eadd,., Houao ofPnyor
(at Burlinlham . ch~h off Route 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship -10 a.m.
Wednetday oervice ·6:30p.m.

Eututart
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship ~ 9 a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

,

Ne~ Ute VIctory Ceatcr
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
·sunday Services · 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

HarrlsoovUie Comm1111ity Cburth
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday ~ 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday. 7 p.m.

Mornlna Slar
Pas1or: Dewayne Slutler
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Worship. 10 a.m.

Untied Methodi st

H"""'~~v":...~la

Clifton Taberaade Chun:..
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m .
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Tbc Believers' Fellowship Mlnlatry
· New Ume Rd., Rutland
Putor: Rev. Maraaret J. Robinson
Servia:s: Wednesday, 7:30·p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Cannel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewarne S1utler
Sunday Schoo -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

SL John Lalhenp Chun:b
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship· 9:00a.m. ·
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.

lbedo¥81e Cbun:b ofO.rltt
Pator: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wotlhlp Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

TrlnliJ Cbun:ll

SDOttn'We

Luth eran

Cburdo or Jnus Cbrlo~ ·
Apc~~lollc Folth
114 mUe past Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sundll.y-7:00 p.m,
Wednesday-7:00 p.m.
Fnday-1:00 p.m.

Fai.. Full Gospel Churdo
Long Botlom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 9:30 Lm. ~d 7 p.m.
.
Wedneaday • 7 p.m.
Friday • fellowship service 7 p.m.

Sunday Scbool. 10 a.m.
Wors~ip • 9 a.m.

The Cburdl or Jenu
Cbrlot of Lllltr•DIIf Sainll
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446· 7486
Sunday S.:hool10:20-ll a.m.
Relief Soc:iety/PriesthoOd 11:05-12:00 noon
· S.cramentService9·10:1Sa.m.
Homemaking meetin&amp;, 1st Thun. • 7 p.m.

R~olei"' Ufe Cburdl
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 am
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

- · Chrlttlan Fdto..lblp Churdl
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
.Wednesday Krvicc, 7:00p.m.

S.lem Center
Pastor: Ron Fieroe
Sunday School· 9:1!5 a.m.
Worship · lO:JS a.m.

R.........,. CWrcb or J..,. Chrlat
ot Latter Day Saints
Portland-Racine Rd. •
P111tor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

Sllven•Uie Word of Faith
Pas1or: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.

Cbriltiaa Felowahlp Ceattr
Salem Sc., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
· Sunday School · lD a.m.
Worship · 11:1!5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ 7 p.m.

Rutlaad
Sunday SchOol - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

BraMord Cburdt ofChrlll
ComefofSt. Rt.124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Sbamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberaer
Sunc!_a.r School-9:30a.m. ·
Worship- B:lJ!.l a.m .• 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

U!e Center

.'

South Deibel New Testament

Silver Ridge
PaSior: Raben Barber

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a·.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

Carttton Intcrdtnomln.alional Church
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Clyde Henderson
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a. m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services
Freedom Gospel Mlulon
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
PaSior: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School- 9:.30 a.m.
Worxhip· 7 p.m.

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Rideoour
Sunday School · 9:30 ll,m.
Worsh iP · 10:30 a.m.·
Wednesday Service- 7 p. m.

2 ui miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124
a;:'as1or: Rev . Robert Ma.rkley
Sunday School· 11 a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
. Wednesday Youth Service-7:30p.m.

Let cliurcfi

6e a part

of
your ilfe
1'i:: ..... ~

.

J
I

RACINE PLANING MILL

· Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse .
. 992-3987

Motor Co., Representatives.

824 Changes Called "Tax R!!lief."
·(And you didn ) think the government had a sense of humor.)

Davla.Qulckel Agency Inc.
Real tax relief comes when you sit down with us. · Last year we

K&amp;C JEWELERS

~iJ~tr Jlfuneral ~ ~nt.

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

264 SoWI1 Second lwa. -Middtaporl, OH 45760
740-992-5t4t
Bruce R. Fiahef • Din&gt;ctof

. 992-3785

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC
Briggs &amp;

· got more than $10 billion back for our customers. Working

Stratton

Master Service Technician
KEROSENE HEATER REPAIR

together, we'll help you get everything you have coming.

Bill

618 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
9-6M-F
HSat
992-6674
Duc:o,.,r, V"ua/Ma~ler Charge
Arneric:on
·,

Support your
local
churches

..

Place an ad in this space
•

'

Rudud Cburdo orCbriJt
Sunday School -"9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:)9 a.m .• 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

RockS~p

•

Col•ary Bible Cbun:b
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pasror: Rev. Blackwood
. Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

Follb Chapel
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pastor Er~ie Wengerd
Sunday service, tO a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worshl~ · 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowsh1p, Sunday. 6 p.m.

"

Faith Fetlowoblp Cnooade for Chrlol
Putor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

· 'Full-Gospel Church"
.Pastors John&amp;. Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
"3-5017 .
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 1 pm

. r.......,

Pastor: David DeWill
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10t30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:00 p.m.

Rullond Community &lt;;hurdo
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Suraday School· 9:30-a.m.
Sunday Evening· 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Ap~

Pastor: Connie Fiares
Sunday School· 9:1~ a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuc54;fay .~ 10 a.m.

La11ft! curr Frtt Metloodtat Cbureh

Bndbul')" Olun:b of Chrlll
Pas1or: Tom Runyon
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.

Other Church es
47439 Reibel Rd., Chesler
Putors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m.&amp;. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Peort Cllopel
School- 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

H71tl Run Hollaeu Chun:h
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4!5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service-7:30 p.m.

Folrvlew Blblt Cburdl
Utart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: John Hart
Sunday Sc,:hool ·9:30a.m. ·
Wonhip • 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.

Hln'tll Outrucb Mhllotri&lt;l

Sun~)'

. Wtoleyoo Bible HoiiDtll Churdl
7.5 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor. Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship ~ 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
, Wednesday Servicze - 7:30p.m.

Worship Service · 9 a.m.
Communion • 10 a.m.
Sunday S1hool o 10:15 Lm.
'Youlh· ~:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 1 pm

\,

Mln.,...lllt
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Su.nday School • 9 a.m.
Wor5hip • 10 a.m.

Pille Grove Bible Hollneta Church
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley ·
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

,J;

Slher Rua Bapllat
Pastor: Bill Lillie
S,un~ay SChool ·lOa.m.
Worship · lla.m., 6:30p.m.
ML U•loa BllptjJt

Hoi.._ Clturdl
Leadins Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey KJrag
Sunday school· 9:30 a.m.
Sunday w~rship .7 p.m.
Wcdnctday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Tappen
Chard! or fYbrtil
· lllltrumental
Pls1or: Teny Stewan

)Yorship · 10:30 p:m.
Sunday School- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Heoth (Mkldlepon)
Paslor: Vemaaaye Sullivan
Sunday School • 9:30 1.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

~or Stoaro•

Putor: Roser Watson
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wo11hip ·10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednetday Services - 7 p.m . .

Rllllond Flnt Boptlll Cburdl
Sunday S.:hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.

Fortst Kun
Putor: Oiad Emrick
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship ~ 9 a.m.
Thursday Services-6:30pm.

CoiY.., Pllarlat Cltapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp -It a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnetday Service· 7:30p.m.

Zloo Qurdl or C1irlst
Pomeroy, Harrl1011vllle Rd. (Rt.143)

. Flnt s.,t..m Boptlll
41872 Pomeroy Plke
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services . ?':00 p.m.

Suspect in mass horse shooting free on bail
VIRGINIA CITY, Nev. (AP) One of three suspects in the slaughter of 34 wild horses was freed on
bail after declaring his innocent while
another underwent a mental exam
' fought his extradition to Nevada.
and
Anihony Merlino, 20, posted a
$60,000 bond Thursday and was
released from jail. He was to be
arraigned today on charges of grand
theft, grand larceny and maiming,
poisoning or killing another person's
animal.
"Mr. Merlino maintains his innocence," defense lawyer Scott Free-

............. Rldp Cbor&lt;b orCtlrlll
Past01:Terry Stewart
Sundoy School -9:30 o.m.
Wo11blp · 10:30 a.m.• 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 6:30p.m.

Pomti'OJ Firat Boptlll
EutMain ·St.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Jury deli.berates fate of suspect in mistress' death
By TODD SPANGLER

Bapt ist

Free WIU Boptlot Churcb
Ash Stteet, Middtepon
Pastor: Lea Hayma.n
Sunday Service • ?:00 p.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wedacsday Service~ 7:00p.m.

Clinton proposes $6 billion anti-crime package
By SANDRA SOBIERAJ

Worship • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School .. 10:30 a.m.
Putor-Jelrrer Wail""
btand 3rd Sunday

Dittr.

Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
.sunday wot1hlp- t0:30 a.m. &amp;: 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer &amp;eryice -7 p.m.

Kno Cli..... ofClullt

P.O. Box 467, Duddina'l.ane
Muon, W.Vo.
Putor: Neil Tennant
Sunday ServiCN-10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Hope Boodll Clturclt (Solothtnl)
Pas10t: Jim
~70 Orant St., Mldd epon .,
Sunday school • 9:30a.m. .
Worship · 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Sovereignty movement gains ground in Hawaii

Mortgage

Wonlllp - 101i.m., 6 p.m.
W - r Serv.,... 7 p.m.
'
MuM port 01111'0 oiQrtll
5thaodMaia
Pastor: AI.HlrtiOn
Youtll Mlnloter: Bill Fruier
Sunday Sc:h09l - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednetday Services - 7 p.m.

•

.--.

949-2804

SAVE TIME
·
WITHA
CLASSIFIED AD!
.

' .

590 Eaat Main S11118t • l'omllrn&gt;f, OH 45769
740-992·5444
James R. ktee, Jr. • Director

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES

985-3308

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

EWING FUNERAL HOME
Dignity and Service Always

EstabliShed 1913

992·2121
Pomeroy

'

.

lv, '

~')&gt;

Crow's Family Restaurant

.

,, ,

·"·

Time to clean house?

Clean out your basement
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy or attic with the help of the
St. Rt. 248, Chester, Oh.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

106 Mulberry Ave. '

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

,.
I . - ''•"'"•"' ,~
.

Searching for a
local church?
Check the Sentinel
every Friday! '

'Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken'

992·5432

CLASSIRED SECTION/

Buy, Sell or Trade

!franCis FLORIST

in the

Sentinel

Meis• County $ Oldesa Ffon.c
BlaltMIIIP,__

CLASSIFIEDS!
SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075
172 North Second Ave.
Middle rt, Oh

Advertise your

business each week
In ·this space
and support local
churches

�•

•
'

ByTh·e Bend
•f '

rhe Daily

•• - ••

Sentine~;
·
Friday, January

Ann
Landers
1997 Los AnFiel nmes
5yndtcate and Cr~•tnn
Syn.Jiealc.

,
Ann Landers: Will you
please reprint the poem on . alcollolism that I have enclosed? As you
can see, my copy has yellowed with
age and is difficult to read. It
deserves a re-run... J.P. in Glendo'~ Calif.
: Dear J .F.: With pleasure. It
aP,peared in my colum n several
yoars ago and is one of my favorites.
Unfortunate ly, I have been unabl e to
id!:ntify the aut hor. Posi tive ly Nega-

15, 1991 ;:

We drank to get more confi dence they go to sleep.
extremely unpleasant Our neigh- . blessing. Try it
and became afraia.
·
We have nothing against young borhood used to be a paradise until
Dear Ann Landen: Our son and •
We drank 10 make conversation . children, Ann. Most of the kids in this family moved in. We all try to his wife adopted a. beautiful little ·
flow more easily, and the words this area produce a normal amount be considerate of one another, all girl when· she was 7 days old: The • ·
came out slurred and incoherent
of noise, and it doesn' t bother us. We except for this neighbor. We have child will soon be 4 years of age; ·
We drank 10 diminish our prob- especially dread "pool time," which lived here for over 20 years and and they have not told her that she it · .
lems and saw them multiply.
can last from one hour (bearable) to don ' t want to move. What can we adopted. We believe this is not right
We drank to feel heavenly and si x hours (intolerable). Ann, these do? -- Frazzled in Florida
· but hesitate to interfere. Any sugges- · •
ended up feeling like hell.
kids don't play. They yell and
Dear Frazzled: Make friends lions? -- Concel'"e~ Mom and Dad ·: ·
Dear Ann Landers: I am writing screech. During these screamfests, with the kids. Serve · them treats
Dear Mom and Dad: I don '! · ,
on behalf of four families in our it's impossible 10 read, watch TV, occasionally, and ASK them to mind interfering on your behalf. Tell
neighborhood. One of our neighbors relax or convers'e. A nap is out of the PLEASE not scream when they are your son the child should be told thai .
has three unruly, screaming, question. When they bri ng friends playing because it gives you a she is special because she was "choscreeching, constantly yelling chil- over, it's so bad we have to leave our headache. It won't eliminate the sen." (And the sooner the better.)
dren between the ages of 3 and 8. homes and go elsewhere.
screaming, but it could cut down on
---Send qu..tlons to Ann LanWe can tell from ·the noise when
We have approached this neigh- the noise.
ders, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W,
they· wake up in the morning, when bor and expl ained that the screaming
Stereo headphones might be the Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los ·
they leave for school, when they is too much, but the man was not answer. Listening Ia calming music Angeles, Calif. 90045·
come home and , thankfully, when receptive to our plight and became at times such as these could be a

~n~~~ft~~~fiit~~

~

JD CONSRUCTIDN .it

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
,;r...
00~ Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding ll~
~
Commercial &amp; Residential
~
27 yrs. exp.
Licens ed &amp; Ins ured
Phone 740-992·3987
,;r...
Free Estimates
~
111.'!1
Owner: J ohn Dean
ill'~

111:.

ill

f;t ·

1111~· ~

~~~~~~ ~ ~~bil2~Til!!T ~

.

Mr. and Mrs. Dale Barr

Couple notes anniversary
·REEDSVILLE - Dale and
Pauline Barr of Reedsville celebrated: their 50th wedding anni versary
. wilh their children and granilchildren at Christmas time.
:At the observance were their
dailghler and son-in -law, Ronald and

Brenda Tay lor and granddaughter,
Lon Tay lor, of Fostori a; and their
son Gary, and granddaughter, Sarah
Barr, of Parkersburg. W.Va
Mr and Mrs. Barr were married
in Reedsv ille on Jan . 15, 1949, by
the Rev. Parker E. West

....;.._- Community CalendarFRIDAY
. ·DEXTER Lead1ng Cree k
Conservancy District, resc heduled
rri~etin gs to obtain right of way
easements for Dex ter rural water
li ne exte nsion. Represe ntati ve at
D&lt;(xter Churc h Fnday, 5 to 7 p. m.;
Saturday, II a.m. to I p.m. to confer
with residents.

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTE R •Star
Grange 778, fun ni ght and potlu ck
supper, Saturday, 6:30 p.m. at the
grange hall.

POMEROY
Alcoholics
Anonymous study group mcc tmg, 7
· p.m. Saturday, Sacred Heart
:POMEROY - Friday 's Fun , Catholtc Church, Mul berry Ave n_ue.
Food and· Fe ll ows hip projec t at
God's Neighborhood Escape for
PORTLAND - Le banon Town· Tc~ n s . Nutriti onal foods free. non- ship appropriations meeting, 7 a.m.
violent video games, computer pro- Saturday at the tow nship building.
grams, cards, use of pool tables, 6 lo
10;30 p.m. every Friday and Satur- SUNDAY
day. Center located on Main Street,
EAST MEIGS - Hymn sing,
l'omeroy. Adult supervi si'on provid- South Bethel Church, Stiver Ridge
ed:
Road, 7 p.m. Sunday. "Delivered"
wi II be featured group.
.'
POMEROY
Women's AA
" It's a happy place," Caroline Green says.
meeting, 7 p. m. 1608 Nye Ave.,
SY RACUSE- AA open discusPo(neroy.
sion meetin g, 7 p.m. Sunday, Carleton Sc hool, Syracuse.
PO MEROY - Meigs County
was quiicklly
Tow nship Association, annual meet- TUESDAY
Navy
Robe rt W. to the Arabi an Gulf to support the
ing, Friday at the Senwr C11ize ns
REEDSV ILLE - Eastern Ele- Thomas, son of Ne lson E. and USS Enterpri se Battle Group and
Center. Dinner at 6:30 p m. with mentary PTO will meet at 7 p. m. Claud ia J. Thomas, New Ha ven, USS Be lleau Wood ARG , which
meeting 10 fo llow.
Tuesday in the cafetorium.
W. Va., recent ly completed a six- rece ntly participated jn Operation
mon th deployment to the Mediter- Dese rt Fox, durin g wh ich US
:f!ARRISONVILLE Me1gs
Financial aid ra nea n Sea an d Arabian Gu lf forces attacked military targets in
POMEROY County Pom·ona Grange #46 mee t- workshop Tuesday, 7 p. m. at Meigs aboard the aircraft carri er USS !rag.
' ing; 7:30p.m. al the Scipi o Town- High School cafi:tena. Students who "Dwight D. Eise nhower, home portPrior to department '!he home
ship Fire Station.
are plannin g to attend college th is "ed in Norfo lk, Va.
base of Camp Pendleton, Calif. in
fall and their parents are tnvited lo
While depl oyed, Thomas' ship December, Martin participated iii a
tHESTER - Chester Township attend. Mike Whilnable, a fi nancial partic ipated in num erous large- Paci fic Joint Task Force Exerc ise
Trustees will hold a special meeting aid coun selor at Washington State sca le mili tary exercises, including wi th more than 15,000 Sailors,
on•Fnday at 2:30p.m. at the town University wi ll be the speaker.
Matador L1vex and Dynamic Mix Marines.' Airmen and Coastguardsha~ .
'98. During these exercises, me n m the Eastern Pacific Ocean
Thomas and crew members to lest theA RG's ability to respond
B~rtha Sayre Missionary Society meets in Racine worked w1th mi litary forces from to situations they may \' ncounter
II NATO countries to improve the du rin g their deployment.
An afternoon of cuttmg quill hlocks to be sent to the Philippines was · interoperabi lity, flex iBi li ty and
A 1995 graduate of ·Meigs High
enjoyed by the Bertha M. Sayre M1sswnary Society of Ractne when 11 me t mobiltty of mull inational forces.
Sc hoo l, he JO ined the Mari ne
rec~ nt l y at the home of MarJorie Grimm.
In additio n, Thomas and crew · · Corps in June, 1995 .
'fhe blocks will be sent to the Philippines by Hayman who is the while me mbers had the opportun ity 10
croi.s chairman for the group.
·
·
·
visit France, Greece, Italy, Spatn
Matthew Marcinko
i\.uendi ng were Lillian Hayman , Barbara Ghee n, Geraldine Cleland. Mi ld Turkey, where c rew membe rs
Ar my Pvt. ' Matthew W.
dreJI Har~tNaomi Stobart, and the hostess . ·
,
p tic ipated in comm uni ty re la- Ma rc111 ko has graduated fro m
. ~heen wa~ in charge of the meeti ng during which time names of' new tions projec ts in the hos t countries.
basic infa nt ry trai ning at Fort Be np~er partners were drawn for the new year and those of last year were
ning
in Columb us, Ga.
rev~aled .
Charles D. Martin
g the course of instruc Durin
·f\ report g1ven on support paid for a teenager in Murrow Indian Chi lMari ne Cpl. Charl es D. Martin tion, the -soldier rece1ved train ing
drett 's Home in Muskogue, Ok la. A thank you note was read from the Meigs r ce ntly arrived on station in the
in dn ll and ceremonies, weapons,
yotith program, "God's Net."
·
A bian Gu lf V(ith the 13th Marine map reading , tactics , military cour. Pel well cards were sent to members whooare ill and hospitalized. A love Ex di tionary Unit , embarked
g1ft was taken for a resrdent whose husband is hospi talized for treatment of aboa the ships of the USS Boxer tesy, mi litary justice, physica l fitness, first aid and Army history
injuries received in an automobile accident
Arilph ious Ready Group.
and traditions:

.

•

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Hustler magazine publisher J.,arry
Flynt was hospitalized with pneumoni a after winning a Gondi tional delay in hi s obscenity trial because of planned surgery.
·Flynt was in intensive care at Cedars-Sinai Hospttal, said one
of his ,lawyers, Alan lsaacman.
"Mr. Flynt is doing fin e. Hi s prognosis is excellent," a Los
Angeles-based spokeswoman told The Associated Press late.
Thursday on conditi on of anonymtty.
Flynt, 55, and his brother, Jimmy, 49, were indicted April 7
on charges of pandering obscenity, di sseminating material harmful to a juvenile, conspiracy and engaging in a pattern of corrupt
activity.
The charge s stem from the alleged sale of a sexually explicit
video loa 14-year-old boy at the Hustler Magazine &amp; Gifts store
that Jimmy Flynt manages. If convicted, each brother could get
24 years in prison and $65,000 in fine s~
LOS ANGELES (AP) - John Travolta fans may have forgotten he 's a. singer, a talent thai will
have him back · in the spotlight in
" Standing Room Only. "
Travolta, who stars as a lawyer in "A
Civil. Action," will take center stage
portraymg Jimmy Roselli, whose
career took a hit after he got blacklisted by the mob around 1970, ·
. II will be Travolta's fi rst singing part
since "Grease" in 1978.
"People might forget that John has a
Travolta
wonderful voice, did all his singing in
.
"Grease,' and ,recently sang with Carly
Simon on her album," said 'Travolla manager Jonathan Krane.
"He' ll be the 'Raging Bull' of lounge singers, but with the
humor John brings to the role."
Filming.is to begin March 15.
NEW YORK.(AP) - A stalker who promised in a ·letter to
Howard Stem that he would "absolutely, without a doubt" kill
the shock-jock has been sentenced to 2 -112 years in prison.
The sentence was nearly twice as much as federal guidelines
called for in a case that began when Michael Lance Carvin sent
four letters to Stem last spring from Las Vegas.
Carvin, 44, threatened Stem and his family, referring in one
letter to the rad io personality as
" Dead Man Walking," according to
prosecutors.
"I wi ll absolutely, without a
doubt, kill you and this is 100 percent guaranteed ," said in one'letter
to Stern, whose radio show is broadcast nationally.
Carvin was arrested in 1975
for pulling a toy gun on then-presi-·
denti al candidate Ronald Reagan.
St
. The next year, he was convicted of
ern
threatenin g then-President Ford and
Vice President Nelson Rockefell er.
'
Carvin served six years of a 10-year federal sentence and was
paroled in 1982,
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Bill Anderson knows country
music memories will come fl ooding back when he plays a
''Grand Ole Opry" reufJ.ion show from the old Ryman Auditorium.
Some glory will be revi sited on the Opry 's original home this
weekend, with three shows lo be broadcast from the Ryman over
Friday and Saturday nights.
. Younger Opry stars including Vince Gill and Trisha Year'
wood will play the Ryman for their first time, along with Ryman
veterans like Anderson, Porter Wagoner and Little Jimmy Dickens.

Howell's Bookkeeping
&amp; Tax Service . ·
Bookkeepin!J and PayroU
Individual,·Partnerthlp and CarparatU.n
Ta:t: Retunu
Federal and aU • tales
Hours: Mon. thm Fri. 9 to 4:30 ·
...
Sat.9tol2
Eve nings and Sal. afte rnoon by appt. only.

Jeanie Howill, EA
Phone 74o-992-7036

YOUR' MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FO~ A TOTAL OF '
$7.00 PEA DAY.

33334 Hysell Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
St. Rt. 7 .

Tuppera Plains, Ohio 45783
7 40-985-3813
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
.
9:00-4:30 Weekdays ·
'
9:00-12:00 Saturday
4/21/t8 tfn

Public Notice

London's newest tourist
attraction - the dog pound
-By MITCH STACY
Associated Press Writer
LONDON (AP) - Along with
the · obli gatory visits to Big Ben,
the Tower of London and Madame
Tussaud 's, London touri sts are
increasingly pencil ing in a slop at
another, rather unlikely allracli on
- the local dog pound. ·
The auracti on is The Dogs'
Home Bauersea, a 127-year-old
animal shelter whose profile has
grown u\ recent years along with
its well -documented success at
"re-homing" stray and unwanted
dogs and cats.
The shelter, which counts
Quee n Eli zabeth II among its
many patrons imd vi sitors, now is
being featured in a daily British
Broadcasting Corp. documentary
series.
The half- hour program, which
focu'ses on the fortunes of various
animals brought to the shelter, has
proven so popular since its debut
last month lhallhe BBC has insert,
ed the show into its prime-time
lineup one night a week.
Actors Kevin Spacey and Jeremy Irons have adopted pets from
the home, and singer George
Michael brought in his pal Geri
Halliwell, the former Spice Girl, to
choose a new pet She took home a
black Shih Tsu:
"We don't really try to solicit
Sonja Ooelhulzen augglas with
money. We don 't reall ¥ try to solicit nine month old Tasha at the
auention," insists Duncan Green, Dogs' Home Battersea.
the grandfatherly ex-military man
,
who has run the home for the past six years. " We just,try to do what we ' re
.
good at - and that's finding homes for stray dogs. "
The unsolicited but not unwelcome s potlight not only earn s the facility
more than enough in d o ~ati on s to cover its operation s, it also has secured it
a li sting on London touri st maps.
Last year alone, some 70,000 people from all corners of the globe visit·
ed the unassuming complex in South London, located under the stacks of the
old Batlersea Power Plant.
Most of the vi sitors paid th~ admi ssio n price of 85 cents just to wander
amid the four fl oors of kennel s ·and pet the dogs - which on any given day
number about 600 - or visi t with the 100 or so cats in residence.
" You get into a black cab anywhere in London and say ' Dogs' Home Battersea' and they will bnng you stra1ght here," ~ ay s Green, whose two
Spnn ger spaniels, one of them adopted from the home, accompany him tq
work each day.
Unlike many "shelters, The Dogs' Home Banersea never euthani zes an
adoptable animal. Only sick and vi cious animals are put down , and then only
aft er efforts to heal animals or modify their behavior.
For some animals, that can mean a long stay. Viva, for tnstance, a plain
but not unpleasant-looking blac k-and -white mull, has li ved at the home for
three years. Along with other long-stay dogs, she is among the firs llo be prese nted to customers see king a new pet.
.
With plenty \9 eat and a warm place to sleep, life for the animals could
be worse.
"
· "They just sit here and wait for the ri ght person to come alon g for them,"
says Caroline Green, the home's events coordtnator, no relation to Duncan.
And the right person usually does.
The shelter found homes for 5,000 animals last year, Duncan Green says,
and ex tensive pre-adopti on interviews with prospective owners kept the
return rate to less than 6 percent
Van drivers from tHe home pick up Strays from police departments around
Londo n every morning, which also means the shelter tends to be the scene
of tearful reunions of lost pels and their owners.

LEGAL NOTICE
Tho Area Agency on Aging
of Buckoyo Hlllo~ Hocklng
Valley
Regional '
Oavelopmant
Dlotrlcl,
Route 1, Box 2990 Marl-.
Ohio 45750 Ia roqualllng
propooala for Dlaeaae
Prevention and Hoollh
Promotion In Atheno,
Hocking, Malgl, Monroe,
Morgon, Noble Perry, and
Waahlngton
countlet.
· Funding Ia available for
Medical
Allntment;
Mental l!aollh A11111man1,
Hoalth EduCiltlon and
Medication Scr..nlng, for
period ol 111!99 to 12/31/99.
Bidders may requ..t a propOll! pocket !rom Jollie
Lane, Pl1nner at tho above
addreaa or call 740-374-,
9436.

GRAND OPENING
KARNS CASTR.OL
QUICKL'UBE
992-9909
WE HAVE GIFT CERTIFICATES
SPECIALS ON

TIRES
BRAKES
~

~- .•- 43370 SR 124
~ ' RACINE, OH 45771

SHOCKS

Public Notice

(MINERSVILLE)
12/17.198 1 mo. pd

Public Notice

Completed propoe~le mull
be received at tho Buckeye
Hilla olllce by 5:00 P.M. on
2/3/99. Techii!Cill ueletance
available,
(t) 15 ~TC

Snow
Removal
591-1897

Cell phone
992-3141

Home
Call Anytime
RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC • .'.
· New Homes • Vinyl Siding New • ••
'
Garages • Replacement Windows '
'

Room Additions • Ro.ofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

'

614-992-7643

..

•
'
••
.,• •
-'
•

.

....
..

·

(No Sunday Calls)

2/1 -' '

SUNSftHOME
CONSTRUCTION
New construction &amp; Remodeling ..
Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roora • Dacks • Garages
Insured
Free Estimates .

•'

740·742·3411

CREDI'P
No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo •·Divorced

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Respect!

Slug &amp; Shot
Marches
:A certificate of accompli shment
w'!' presented by Ohio Agri c~l ture
Director Fred L. Dailey to the
Aibany Independent Agriculture
Sctciety for the completion of an outLimestone Hauling
standing 1998 fair. ' .
Houst &amp; Trailer Sites
:Accepted the certificate on behalf
Public Notice
Land Clearing &amp; 1
of' the society was Lawrence Bean ,
Grading
Sealed bide wtll be
president Qf the Albany Fair,
Custom Homes
Septic System &amp;
recelvod until 3:00 p:m.
:The presentation was made durJanuary
28,
t998
at the
Utilities
ing the director's luncheon during
, mayore office, 237 Race
Estimates
the 75th annual Ohio Fair Managers
StrHt, Middleport, Ohio for
the
"
f
ollowing
equipment.
J,\ssociation luncheon held . in
(614)
Oho 1750 GPM pumping
Columbus last week.
fire engine, Speclllcatlona
"The people who made our fairs
for thla equipment are
so successful are the volunteers,"
available upon requeet at
ROBERT BISSELL .
tho Mayors office or !rom
sai d Dailey. "They spend long ho urs
the Fire Chlel of the
CONSTRUCTION
"Build Your DreCJm"
'making sure that both patrons and
Middleport
Fire
Department.
•New Homes
· exhibitors have successful fair expeIn any contract entered
'
1998 Martin Street
n.ences.
Into between the Village of
•Garages
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Middleport and the
: Fairboard delegates from Ohio's
•Complete
IUCCIIIfui
blddar.Jt
ohall
be
91county lmd .lndependent fairs and·
Remodeling
the roaponatblllty of the
the Ohio State Fair participated in
contrector to meet all
r=~~~~~~~~~~~-------, ,
Stop
&amp; Compare
the Ohio Fair Managers Convention
requirements of NFPA
FREE
'
RECOGNIZED '- Ohio Agriculture Director Fred L. Dalley, left, booklet 1901. All required
in :c olumbus, the largest convention
can relieve.a
·'
presented a certificate of accomplishment to Lawrence Bean, pres- teet raaults shall be made
of: its kind in the country.
ESTIMATEES ·
debtor 11f financial obligations and arrange a fair
available to the Chief of the
Ident of the Albany Fair.
985-4473
Middleport Fire Department
distribution of a"ets . Debtors in bankruptcy may
, 7122/lln
at or balore delivery of the
k eep "exempt" property for his or h er per sonal
completed apparatua.
Each bid ahall be
u
se. This may in clude a car, a hou se, clothes, a nd
Pomeroy Eagles
accompanied by a detailed
household goods,
Club Bingo On
deocrlpllon ol the lira
Thursdays
apparatue and equipment
For Information Regar~ing Bankruptcy contact :
which Ia propoeed to be
AT
6:30P.M.
lurnl1hed Including a COI&gt;V
William Salranek, Attorney At Law
By BEN DOBBIN
Main St.,
of all warranllea that will
Associated Press Writer
apply to the apparatus
Pomeroy, OH
(7 40) 592-5025
Athens,
L-;,__...,;,_
___
__,;,..Ohio
_
___. ..
:ROCHESTER, N.Y. (A P) - A
Including engine ·and drive
Paying sso.oo
line, pump and related
small bell recovered by an Americ an
per game
·
;
components,
booster tank,
so ldier from a bombed-out church tn
$300.00
Coverall
etc.
A
detailed
blueprint
Italy in 1944 is being sent home to
ahall aloo be provided with
$500.00 Starburst
mark th e 55th anni versary of the vil 111 bide.
Progressive
top line.
lage's li t&gt;e ration during World War
Each bid shall ba
Lie.
II
00·50
accompanied by 1 10% bid
II.
11 19 n
bond
and
100%
" II meant so much to me to have
performance bond . Each
it in my possess ion," said Herbert
bid ihall contain a signed
Roth, 84, , who grabbed the bell as a
statement ol tho bidder that
the VIllage ol Middleport,
war memento during an Alli ed
Ohio Fire Oo'partment lire
offe nSive in and around Anzio, a
apparatus apeclllcallons
Mediterranean v1llage 4Q mil es
DUMP TRUCK
have bean atudled and
so uth of Rome.
reviewed. It Ia undoratood
SERVICE .
20 Yrs . Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
that In aome aspacta theae
" But to know that il's going back
Agrlr;ultural Lime,
apeclllcallons are detailed
to where God had it in the first pl ace
In their design and also that
Limestone • Gravel
is wo nderful ," the fo rmer Army
exceptions may be taken by
(Lime StoneDirt • Sand
sergeant said Wednesday. , " I honestsome bidders. Exceptions
..
will
be
allowed
II
1hey
are
ly feel ! saved it. "
985-4422
Low Rates)
determined by tho
Pick up discarded
The bronze hell, which was used
Chester, Ohio
Middleport Fire Department
appliances,
baHerlas,
for ca llin g peopl e into Mass al
1
0/25/96(t1n
to be equal to or superior to
many
matal1
&amp;
Sai nts Pia and Antoni o Church, is
that apacllled, and provided
motor
blocks
are
listed
on
a
1eparate
they
just 9 inc hes tall and 5 inches in
HISTORIC BELL - Herbert Roth is shown in a photograph taken page ontltled "Exceptions
740-992-4025 8 a~ pm '
diameter. On its side is the pro lrud- last year, with the historic Anzio Bell.
. ,.
to Spaclllcatlonl". The
ing figure of a lion's head, a papal
Limestone,
exception llat shall refer to
sy mbol marking the church's found- for its return .
Computer Graphics
·spot 'where his artifact would be the page number and
GUN SHOOT
Gravel, Sand,
paragraph
ol
thne
ing around 1850.
The community center initiall y properl y appreciated. He's delighted
Deslg'1s
Racine Gun Club ·'
After keeping 11 on a shelf at suggested sending a repl ica to the the center is now giving it back to 1ts spaclllcatlons.
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
All Landscaping &amp;
The VIllage of Middleport,
·'
home for a half-century, Roth donat· museum. But its board of di rec tors "righti·ul owners. "
Ohio raaerves tho right to
· Lawn Services
614-992-3470
· Nease Hollow Rd.
ed it tn 1997 to the Ital ian American fin all y agreed thiS w~ek to return to
" I did not know how much lime I re(act any or all bids
I
·Commercial
Com mum ty Cen ter in Gates, a bell in May, when Anzio commemo- would have on this Earth and I want- received and to waive any
·Residential
Every Sunday
In the bidding.
Roches ter suburb.
ed to have a permanent home for Informality
rates its li beratiOn by U.S. troops.
(1) 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 ,
Owner, Mickle Hollon
'
Last summer, the An zio Beac h
Nearly 5'0,000 soldi ers were 1t," said Roth, who suffers from 22, 24, 25, 28, 27' 28, 29,
12:30'pm
Ches ter, Ohio
Muse uJn fo und out the be ll had sur- killed at Anzio 1n one of the most heart problems and is too ill to 1899
740-985-4422
vived from members of the commu- fe rocious encounters of the war.
Limit 680 sleeve '
attend the ceremonies in May.
New Roofs,
·~nity center who went lo Anzio hopRoth. had donated the be ll to 1he
"With my health the way it is, I
Repairs, Gutters,
back
ing to find old photographs of the newly opened community ce nter couldn 't buy what I have gotten out 30 · Announcements
30 Announcements
Coatings,
Siding,
churctt. The muse um po litely asked because he 'd been anxious lo fi nd a of this," he said.
Drywall, Painting ,
'.
YOUNG'S
Plumbing
·Rio Grande to celebrate Martin Luther King's birthday on Jan. 19
every Saturday
Free Estimates
CARPENTER SERVICE
Scott , a '96 graduate of Rio
The University of Rio Grande and ' veteran educator organized the Wi ndJoseph
Jacks
•Room Additions
night
Rio Grande Communtly College -sor Go lden Jumpers in 1994 as an Grande, will perform With the gospel
&amp; Siding
•Remodeling
MON.
&amp;WED.
740·992·2068
invites area -resiclents to its fourth outlet for young peop le in 1he L1nden musical group "Ordi nary People."
6:30p.m.
'
· •Garages &amp; Decks ·
annual Martin Luther King Day cele- area of Co lumbus to express them- "Ordinary People" has perfo rmed
6:30P.M.
American
Legion
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
selves
wi
thoullhe
in
nucncc
of
drugs.
wide
ly
across
the
tri-state
region
for
·
bration on Tuesday, January 19. .The
'
RUTLAND
Middlep ort
•Interior &amp; Exterior ·
progra m begms at 7 p.m. in the John alcohol. and other vices. Since that the past stx years. The group consists
Hill'S
W. Berry Fine and Perfonmng Arts 11me, the Windsor Golden Jumpers of 16 members representing six
Paintin g
Post 128
POST 467
have disti ngu ished themse lves as churches in Ohio and West Virg inia.
SELF STORAGE
Cen ter on the R1o Grande campus
•Roofin g &amp; Gutters
Starbui-st $2,250
To cap off the evening 's fesliviThis ·year's program feaJurcs R1o ci ty, slate and, world Double Dutch
STAR BURST
29670 Baahan Road
•Concrete Work
' '
champions.
ties,
a
c_
andl
elight
serv1ce
w11l
be
held
Grande· alumn1 Sandy Hunter and
Door Prize $200
Racine, Ohio 45n1
Workin g under the theme of · llnmcd1ately follow1ng the program.
Chrisltan Scott, a naltonal champion
(Free Estimates)
•'
740-.949-2217
145
peoplf;
,o
r
Double Dutch jump rope learn and "Rope Not Dope .. .Because I Have The service ts .bemg sponsored by the
01 MOll
V.C. Yo ung Ill
Sizes 5' x 10'
the mus1cal group "Ordmary Peo- Better Things 10 Do Wi th My Body," Rio Grande Office of Mulu-Et hntc
more
will
play
PEl GIMI
(Owner-21 yrs)
the Windsor Golden Jumpers pro- Affairs, the Rio Grande Volunteer
ple."
f
to 10' x.'~o·
"
$1 000 cover all.
Hunter, a '74 graduate of Rio Grande, mote teamwork. academic exce l- Chaplaincy Program and Youth
f740)
992·6215
Hours
served in the Ga lhpoli s C1l¥ Schools lence, good decision-making and Board , and the Rio Grande Mu lt iAverage $90 per
1:00AM - BPM
"Fully Insured"
from .1974 to 1990 and now teaches connnumty and civic awareness and EthniC Student Cultural Un1 on.
11•199 1 mo. l)d.
reg~tlar
game.
(Reduced
Winter Rates)
in the Columbus Pub lic Schools. The inv.olvement.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

M&amp;J

.

BAIKRUPTCY

Anzio bell found by Gl in Italy· in · 1.944 is
going home in time for liberati9n anniversary

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

FREE

WICKS

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS -

bas ic combat
and bal:tlefi elld
operations and tactics, and experiRobert Sinnett
enced using various weapons and
Marine Cpl. Robert E. Sinnett,
weapons defenses available to the son of Sandra Kirkendall of
infantry crewmen.
Albany, recently arrived on station
Marci nko is the son of Peggy J. in the Arabian Gulf with the 13th
Robinson of Long Bottom and Je ff · Marine
Expeditionary
Unit,
W. Marci nko, Tuppers Plains.
embarked aboard the ships of the
USS Boxer Amphibious Ready
Larry Hess
Group .
Navy Airman Larry I. Hess, so n
The 13th MEU was quickly sent
of Larry and Carol Hess of New to the Arabian Gul f to support the
Haven, W.Va., ·recently completed USS Enterprise Battle Group and
a six-month deploy ment to the USS Bell eau Wood ARG, which
Medi terranean Sea and Arabian rece ntl y parti cipated in Operat ion
Gu lf aboard the atrcraft carrier Dese rt Fox, duri ng wh ic h US
USS Dwight D. Eisen hower, home forces attacked military targets in
ported in Norfolk, Va.
Ira g.
Whil e dep loyed, Hess' shi p parPrior to department the home
tiCipa ted in numerous large-scale base of Cam p Pendleton, Cali f. in
military exercises, including Mala· Decem ber, St nneu partic ipated in
dor Livex and Dy namic Mix '98. a Pac if1c Joi nt Task Force Exerc-ise
During these exerc ises, Hess and with more than 15,000 ·Sail ors,
crew members worked with mili- Marines, Airmen and Coastguards·
tary forces from II NATO coun- men in the Eastern Paetfic Ocean
tries to im(lrove the interoperabi li- to tes t the ARG's al,&gt;il ity to respond
ly, flexibi lity and mobility of to situations they may encounter
mult inational forces.
during theif deployme nt.
~n additiOn, Hess and crew
A 1995 graduate of Federal
members had the opportun1 ty to Hocki ng Hig h Sc hool, he joi ned
visi t Prance, Greece, Italy, Spain the Manne Corps in Octo.ber,
and Turkey, where crew members 1995.
participated in comm unity · re ia-

'

.

.

HAULING

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Constructioi

bore

.737

BINGO

BINGO

.

.

$700.00
$50.00

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

I

•.
&lt;

Page 9

Pagel .:

!he reasons people _drink can turn in/to ·so111ething very different ·
live
We drank for joy and became
miserable.
We drank for sociability and
became argumentative.
We drank for sophistication and
became obnoxious·.
We drank for friendship and
became enemies.
We drank to help us sleep and
awakened ex hausted.
We drank to gai n strength, and it
made us weaker.
We drank for exhilaration and
ended up depressed.
We drank for " medical reasons"
and acquired health problems.
We drank to help us calm down
and ended up wi th the shakes.

The Dally Sentinel•

l

.

�•
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10•The Dally Sentinel

•

\

Friday, January 15, 1999

Friday, January 15, 1889.

•

'
The Dally Sentinel• Page 11:~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1

ALLEYOOP

BRIDOJ:

Attention Mothers &amp; Others!
Work from hOme Earn an extra
$500 $1500 part time or $2000
$4000 lull ti me per month Call

aaa.!l62-6228

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

ASK QUESTIONS,
GETANSWEAS
CALL AMERICA'S 11 PSY·
CHICS I 90CH40-6500 Ext

3596

www lheh01pagos2 com/ns/psy·
ci11CI250291 him $399/Min 18+
Serv·U 619-645.a434
Start Da ti ng TontgtHI Ha'lle tun
playing the OhiO Dating Game 1
8QO.ROMANCE eJCtenslon 9015

30

Announcements

DIABETIC PATIENTS You May
Be Entitled To Receive Your Dla·
betic Supplies At No Cos t To
You For More Information 1 888·
6n~561

New To You TMft Shoppe
9 West Stimson Athens
741}592 1842
Quality cl othing and household
11ams $1 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru Saturday
9 1)0.5 30

40

Giveaway

1 Mate Puppy Part Collie 8
Months Old To Good Home 740·
441.0192
1 Q Lab MIX Puppies 740 256 ·
1489
Cat, named Goldie has had all
shots In perfect health call
(304)675 6343 afler 6pm
liver spotted male Dalmatian,
copper nose green eyes, nice
pet 740·94g.2644
Male Brittany spaniel approJC 6
month old no papers 740·742·
1507 afler 5pm
Rattweller mix puppies 2 black
males 2 brown tamales 740 992·
5747

60

Lost and, Found

Found Female German Shepherd
on M1 Olive Road Ashton Call
{304)576 4036
Found Puppy, About 6 8 Weeks
Old, Part German Sh epherd
Black &amp; Tan Prehy Faced Male
Needs Good Home l 740 366
8314
Lost Black spayed female Ger
man Shepherd $i00
(304)675 2277

70

Gallipolis
AI.L Yard Balel Mull
Ba Paid In Advance
PfAPLINE 2 00 p m.
the dly before the ad
11 to run. Sunday
edition • 2 00 p m
Friday Monday edlllon
• 10 00 a m Saturday

..

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodlspaugh Auctione ering
Services Little Hacking Ohio
Appraisals
Farm
Estate
HousetiOid Commsrclat Oh1o Ll
cense
740 989 2623
Rick Pearson Aucti on Co mpany
full lime auctioneer complete
auction
service
Licensed
166 OhiO &amp; Wes t V1rglnia 304
n3·5785 Or 304 77:).5447
Wedemeyer s Auct1on Service
Gallipolis Ohio 740 379-2120

90

Antiques to p prices paid River
tne An tiques Pomeroy Ohio
Russ Moore owner 740 99 2
2526
Antiques &amp; clean used furn iture
will buy one piece or complete
ho usehold Osby Martin 740
992 6575
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Tru cks 1990 Models Or Newer
Smith Sulek Pontiac 1900 East
ern Avenue Gallipolis
Wanted To Buy Toppe r For A
1985 S 10 John Furst Jr 740
446-3409

EMPLOYMENT
SERV IC ES

I

0353

Full-Time Hair Stylist Needed
Stgnlng Bonus Other Benefits
Aveda Produ ct~ Raphae l s Hair
Remedies 40 North Court Street
Athens Ohio Phone 740·592·
4779
CRNA
Full lime position Compelltl'llt
salary and benefit package
Monday • Friday surgery sched
ule For more lntormation, call
304·312·2731 Exl 313 or submll
resume to HR P 0 Box 720
Ripley, WV 25271 EOE
Grantswrlter Working As A Con
tract Employee This Person Will
Assist With Locating And Secur
lng Grant Funding For Education
al Programs lndi\liduals Knowl
edgeable 01 Extension Or Unl·
'llerslty Outreach Programming
And /Of With Successful Grants·
wntlng E~~:pe rlence Preterred
Flexible Work Schedule, Work
From Home Or Our Otflce Send
Letter And Resume To osu Ex
tension South District P 0 Box
958 Jackson OH 45640
Housekeeper (Live In) For Olsa
bled Practicing Columbus Attor
ney Cooking Cleaning Laundry
Some Care Some Driving 6t4
267 5354

11 pays of lost welghtl 42 people
needed to lose weight now! All
na1Ural guaranteed doctor rec
ommended Call toM free 868·717
8478

Help Wanted

Babysitter For 21/2 Year Old Full
Time &amp; 8 'fears Old Before And
After School In My Home 740
31177389
Babysluer Noaded For Occasion
al Weekend Evenings Perfec t
For Maluro High School Sludant
Can Provkle Transportation 740
441 9511
luelne.. for 1111 established
Pomeroy re staurant lor sate
Great potential Please call 740
992 1044 to make an appoint
ment Ser1ous inqulr1es only
Comp uter Users Needed Work
OWn Hrs S20K $75K /Yr 1 600
348 71 86 Ex1 1173 www amp·
Inc com

\

Furniture repair refinis h and res·

toratlon, also custom orders Ohio
Valley Rellnlshlng, Shop, Larry
Phillips 74().992-6576
He.ve 2 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Handicapped 740-441·1536
ProfessiOnal Tree Service Sl\)mp
Removal Free Estimates! In·
surance Bidwell, OhiO 740 388
9648 740·38H010
Seam stre ss can do wind ow
treatments bedroom accent, etc
Will do clothing alterations 35
yearo experience, 74().992 3220
Will Sit With Elderly Person s
_Dayllghl Hours Call 740·367·
0280

FINANCIAL

21 0

Opportunity
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have ln'llestlgated
the oflerlng
Amazing

S Income $ producer

yours free wrlrs SA Melbourne
727 Utica Ave Suite t77 Brooklyn NY 11203

230

Professional
Services

Daniels Plano Service · tuning
and repair, expert ser'lllce since
1965 740-742·2951 Lane Den·
leis Rullend
Llvlngaton'l Basement WaterProofing, all basement repairs
done free estimates lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on JOb experl·
once 30Was.3887.
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
1 688·582·334S

All real estate ad\tertlslng In
1hls new!lpaper IS slAljed 10
lhe Federal Fair HouJing ACI
of 1968 whiCh makes MIllegal
lo advertise "any preterence,
limitation or discrimination
baaed on race color religion
sex tamlllalstatus or national
origin, or any lnltnllon \o
make any such preference
limitation "'dlscrlmlnllllon •

This newspaper wll not
knowlnitf accapl
advertisements tor real estate
which II In Yiolallon of lhe
law Our readers all hifeby
lntonned lhll an ctwelllngo
odvertlled In lh~ MWSpopo&lt;
are avalable on an ~
opponoollybufl

310

Experienced And Qualified Per
sons Should Send Resume To
Ohio Valley Bank c/o Patrick H
Tackett 420 Third Avenue Galli·
OH 45631 Equal Opportunl·

3 bedroom doublewlde country
kitchen living/family, 2 baths, de·
!ached garage on 1 1/2 acres
country selling Chester area
$45 000. 740 985 3511

Reception ist Needed for Dental
Office send Resume to CLA 461
%Gal tlpolls Da1 ty Tr bun e p 0
Box 468 Gallipolis Oh 45631

3 Bedrooms Living Room Dining
Room, Kitchen Bath Partial Fin
1shed Family Room Call 740 441
:32
:::5:::3________________
84 Clayton electnc heat c/a built

RESPIRATORY THERAPIST Full
Time Poslllo n Health l rISU''a nr:e
And Retire ment Benef1ts Avalt
able Apply In Pers on Or Send
Resu me To Bowm ans Home
care 70 Pine St Gallipolis Oh
45631 Attn Lewle
Sales- Home Furmshlng Reta11
El&amp;:perlence Preferred Apply Tope
Furniture 151 Second Avenue
Gallipolis No Phone Galls Pleasel

Salal Repr..entatlve
$12 b1lllon co mpany with 100+
years of solid performance seeks
ca reer m the life Insurance Two
year training program assistance
for profe ssional develo pment
Opportunity for promotio n to
sales management contract Lin
da Dunlap For more mformatlon
co ntact linda Du nlap at (740)
44e.0372
The Western and Southern Life
Insurance Company ls a Equal
Opportuntry Employer

TBANSMIISION REBYILQEB
Need Standard Or Automatic Re
builde r Should Have E~tperlence
In Foreign And Domestic Car Or
Truck We Suppl~ All Tools
Great Working Environment And
Banefils Call Columbus 600 848
7680 Ask For Greg
VACANCY Substitute Teac her
For Hearing Impaired Students 01
Elementary Age Total Communi
ca11on Skills Desired Hearing
Cer11hcatlon Not Required Begins
February 1 1998 Through May
28. 1999 CONTACT · Gallla
Jackson Vmton JVSD 740·245·
5334 Exl 201 EEO
Aedlolog~ TeChnician
Want to earn extra money on the
weekends ? Jackson General
Hospital has a per diem poslUon
available For more Information
call 304 372 2731 Exl 313 or
264 Subm1t resume to HR PO
Box 720 Ripley wv 2527 1
EOE

130

Insurance

Crop Insurance Burley ·To·
matoes Corn Ke n Bus In
surance 1 BOO 291 6319

140

Business
Training

GeiHpollo Corwer CaHege
(Careers Ck&gt;ae To Home ) Call
Todayl 740-446-4357 1-1100
214-0452 Reg 190 05 1274B

REAL ESTATE
Homes for Sale

on single garage Dudding Lane

,I Racine 740..949 3037

EXCELLENT CONDJTIONII
Aed Brick Ran ch Style Hause
Partially Finished Basement 2
Car Garage SeriOU$ Inquiries
Dn~ll740 446-3385
By owner 725 Page Street Mid
dleport, house &amp; 3 lots must see
1
Ia
11
o apprec te wiU se hOU$e wlthoul lots lor $89 ooo 740 992·
2704 740 992 5696
House for sale on land contract
740·992 5858

:....:..:::::.:=::...._______

Large family home for sale on ten
lo'llely acres Four bedrooms two
and one half bath&amp;; two fireplaces
formaJ living room and family
ro om fou r ca r garage and two
storage buildings two apartments
which are completely fu rnished,
please call740 992·2292
ONLY $30 000 Fixer Upper Old·
er 2 Story Country Home 2 :l
Bedrooms t Bath With 5 Acres,
Bams Greenhouse Near Gallla &amp;
Jackson Border 740·286.0081
Restored Victorian home situated
on 1.2 acres VIllage Middleport
secluded and prtvate appoin t
menl caii74Q.992 5698

320

1988 14x70 Manorwood 2 Bed·
rooms, 2 Baths, Elec AC, Good
Condlllon $10 500 00 Gall 740

245-5332
Make reasonable offer- 1990
Spruce Ridge 14x70 mobile home
very good condition 2 bedrooms..
1 &amp; 1/2 baths washer &amp; dryer,

stove refrigerator central air, 8118
outside building Immediate pos
S81!1Sion,

740-992-6582

Mobile Hofnes
for Sale

nwown
Only $1 99 down large telectlon
of 2 3-4 bedrooms free delivery&amp;
setup owner financing available
only at Oak wood Mobile home•
N1tro Wv 304 755 5885
Amazing ooty $999 down on
large se teciiOn of double wides,
free deh'llery &amp; se tup owner fl
nandng avallab~ :J04.755-5665
$500 Down on an~ 14x70 In
stock Hmlted number tree dellv
ory Call H IOO 691 6777
'$999 Down on any 98 model
Doublewlde In stock Free Oellv
ery Call1 800-691 6777
14x70 82 Schultz mobile home 2
bedroom 2 baths 740 949 3089
1973 Hillcrest 1wo bedroom mo
bile home 740 992 5039
1979 Falrmon1 14FI X 60Ft Can
Be Seen At K:&amp;K Pt Pleasant
Call740 446 4310

~alar

And Trash

2 And 3 Bedroom Mobile Home
On Bob McCormick Road $200 ,
$215!Mk&gt; 740.4~8 8844

One bedroom, SA 143 furnished
no pets, reference &amp; deposit re
qulred 74Q.99U862

Doublewtde Repo, Catl For VIew
lng, BOO 383 6662

Two bedroom In country, water
and trash Included, references
and deposit required catf 740
!)49,2833

Double Wide New $999 Down
$237 per mo Free delivery &amp; set
up 1 1101).69 J.6777
Good selection ot used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Stanlng at
$3995 Quick delivery Call 740
385-9ti21
Taking Applications, On 3 Bed·
room Repo Pre-Approval In 10
M~nulesl 600 38:H862
New 14x70 $50Q..Oown $199·per
mo Free air skirt H00· 691·

6n7
New , 6x80 $500 Down $245 per
mo Free a11 skirt 1 800 891 ·
&amp;n7

Two bedroom mobile home In
Middleport no pels 740·992
5039

440

Apartments
for Rent

Buildings
Commercial Office or Retail 87
Mill St Mlddleporl 1 450 Sq Fl
$400 mo Cornar Building 740·
992·6250 Acqulslllons (ne~l

door)
Rental
3 room office space
available, all utilities turnlshed
close to Courthouse
Call
(304)675·2659

350

Lots

&amp; Acreage

LAND IN COUNTRY
5 To 10 Acre Residential Tracts
Meadows Pond, Barns Woods
Off SA 141 &amp; SA 233 Naar Gallla
20 Acre Hunting Tracts Touching
Wayne Na11onal Forest Wooded
Pretty Nice Only $22 000 Land
Contract Available With As little
As 5% Down With App roved
Credit Free Maps Anthony land
Co LTD 1·800 21:J.8385

360

Real Estata
Wanted

Wo Buy Land 30 500 Acre s
We Pay Cash 1·800 213 6365
Amoony Land Co

RENTAL S

41 o Houaes for

1 Bedrooms House In Mason
$300/Mo All Utllllleo Paid 740.
256'1469
2 bedrooms full basement Texas
Ad Gallloolls $235 /month $125
Deposit Aett~ re ncea No Pets!
(740)44EJ.41160
2 lledrooms LA KIIChen 1 Balh
In Country Hannan Trace SChOol
Olslrk:t On Oavls Road $275/Mo ,
+ Deposit, References Required
741}256 1649
2 br house on 2219 t/2 Lincoln
Ave Pt Pleasant $275 mon
$275 dep a'lll$11&amp;ble on t -18th,
appliances turn 304·882·2099
after 8pm leave message
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Downtown
Location No Pets References
Required $365/Mo $250 Dopos·
II 74Q.44&amp;4993

1987 Ford Th urndblrd 11 200
Floe:r model color tv $150 floor
model Stereo $125 (740) 445·
6589

Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath
44&amp;.9279
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Menor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle
pori From U49·$373 Call740
992·S064 Equal Housing Oppor
lunlllas

Miscellaneous
Merchsndl!le

"WA:RMYPI"

1994 Pace Shadow enclosed
trailer, deluxe modal 1000 GVW
with wi nch used only on wee·
kenda retailed new for $8 100
sol lor $4,995 caii740.!J49,2045
27' Zenith Stereo TV $229 oo
25' Panasonlc TV $135 00 20'
Zenllh TV $149 00, 13' TV
$55 00, Midsize Microwave
$95 00, Small Microwave $65 00
Sharp Microwave $110 00 , Ya
maha Keyboard $115 oo, Open
Moo Frl 9 OOAM 5 30PM J &amp;
B Technology 372 Stale Route
160
52 Inch Zenllh pro)eellon TV wllh
PI F': surround sound &amp; more,
740 992.SS29
91C7 Wooden Garage Door &amp;
Opener, 74o.44e.4196
AST 100 Megahurts Computer
For Sale Monitor Keyboard &amp;
Mouse Wmdows 95 CD Rom 56
K Modem 3 2 G B Harddrivo In
ternet Capable Call 740 448
1573
AHantiO{'II New Years Resol~tlon
Loose Welgh,t Earn Money! 740··
441·1982 Free Samples
Beanie buddies quakers and
beak plus beanie babies 304
67H223
Brass Daybed (Complete) Large
White Dresser &amp; Mirror All Like
Nowl All For $200 740 251Hl753
Buill&lt; Beds Like New, Red Malal
Frai"A8 With RBgular Mattresses
740-446·9717
Church pews tor sa te 12 twelve
foot 4 ten foot $200 each 740·
949·2217

Jack Ruasell Terrier Pupp1es,
three males, one female
Wormed,
all 1st sh ots!
$25Q.OOee (ll04)67S.3385
Reg_istered Border Colli" Pups
Working Parents, hnported
BlotrdUnes Good Markings First
Sho1SI74().379·911 0
Two-&gt;AKC Registered Shar·Pel
puppies tor sale, one chocolate
male one apricot female 740·
99U378
Two Beagle pups lor sale $75
eight weeks old first shots, 740·
742~30

1736

orTrade

1981 Ford pick up Stepslde she :
cylinder runs great, $900, musr '
sell call 740· 992·7478 leave
message or 740·949·2045

Farm Equipment

0% Financing On New John
Deere Hay Equlpmentll Fmanclng
As Low As 3 9% On Used Hcty
Equipment Now Thru Jan 30
Carmlt:tlaels Farm &amp; lawn, Inc
Midway Between Gallipolis And
R1o Grande On Old 35 (Jackson
Pike) 740 446 2412 Or 1 800
594· 1111

~

1984 Ford F 150 tilgh Mllaga
Good Condllron Many Now Paris,
New Tires Au tom V 8 Excel!
Pa ckage Dual Gas Tanks Bed
Liner 740·446·9253 .After 2 30
PM

One bedroom fUrnished apt In Pt
Pleasant Very clean and nice
No pels 304-675·1386

Heavy winter clothing Sam
Somerville s Army,_Surplus by
Sandyville P 0 Frlaay Sunday
noon 5pm Other days alter 4pm
304 27;1.5655

JET

Pomeroy &amp; Middleport nice two
&amp; three bedrooms, equipped
kltchena reterenoas and deposit
reqolred, 74().985-4373 ollor 5pm

AERATION MOTORS
Ropetrad New &amp; Aebulll In
Cal Ron Evans 1 901).537 9528

Renters Dream Come True! Call
:J04.73e.7295

Ladles Gold Di amond Jewelry
Calallor 5 oop m (3041882 3339

Rio Grande Apartmenl Close To
Collega One Bdrm , All Ullll!les
Paid $290 oo Monlh 740·441·
1005

Upstai rs efficiency with prl\late
entrance completely furnished
quiet surroundings three miles
from the Ravenswood Ritchie
Bridge In Ohio Perfect first apart·
ment for a single pe11on or naY~
couple If you are looking It 1 e
m u~t see It a $390 a month uutl
ties are Included A $300 deposit
Is required for more Information
or an appointment call 740 843
534 3 and leave a message
Why Rent
you can owrn your
own home for as low as $499
down low monthly payments
ow ner financi ng available 304
755 7 191 Oak wood Mobile
Homes

IJ

(

Ohio Val ley Bank Will Offer For
Sale By Publi c Auction A 1976
Mack Tru ck Hl2797 A !974
John Deere Dozer l t52874T A
1997 ASV E Low Boy Trailer
10808~7 A 1985 Prenllce 1so
Kunc::kleboom Loacer tZ21733 &amp;
A 1973 Vagab ond Motorhome
11187 On 216199 Al10 00 AM
At MJV Moving &amp; Towi ng 5331
State Route 7 S , Gallipolis OH
The Above W1ll Be SOld To High
· As Is - WMre Is"
Or Implied
Seen By
I
AI 740
OVB Reserves The
Accept Or Reject Any
All Bids And Wllhdra w
Property From Sale Prior To Sale
Terms Cll Sale CASH OA CER·
TIFIED CHECK
Pla~pe n, flab~ Bed High Cha1r
Car Seat
Stroller
Swmg
(304)67S 4548

S1telllle Sy•tems 18" OlrectTV
dish, total purchase pn ce $99
Ask about tree programming free
lnsl811 kK 1 600 779 8194
1
Stock Car Dir t LM Stock Car
19!il3 Rocket Chassis Trac k"
Champion Jn 1997 same extras
WIO engine and transm ss lon
$3 400 steel black"T&amp;H 436
Chevy w/Brochx heads all $8 500
engh'!e only $6 000 call 740 949
2045,

viiS'~

••

V!e Have From 25 To 30 Use d
1ractors In Stock Fl(\an cing As
Low As 6 5% Fixed Rate On
Ouallfylng Tracto rs Wit h Jo hn
Deere Credit Approva l Car
michie! s Farm &amp; Lawn Midway
Between Gallipolis An d Rio
Grande On Jackson Pi ke 740
446 24120rt800 594111 1

•

630

~

fi.Dtl\ ~'(~ '(00 f\11..\/E Ml
Ui'IW:. Wl-\0 fW:&gt;

~

Tf\f&gt;\.T) TIWE. UNCLE. 5IU..

~

I"&gt; TII."'-T l.l !&lt;£ f\"'-VI 1'16 Ot-IE

r---,--... ow~~ F~aumu

FULL. KO~E 7

ts m m1dseason form , you w1ll go
down w1th th1s layout After wmmng
w1lh the heart kmg, he wtll sw1tch to
a club Then the defense IS ahead m
the race You have nme top tncks (stx
spades, one heart and two clubs), and
can eslabhsh a I Oth m dmmonds, but

640

Hay

&amp;

Grain

Ha~ for sale round $15 square

$2 740 992 2823

twY for sale

740

Square Bates &amp; Round Bates For
Sale 740 24S.5259
Straw And Hay For Sale Square
Bales Altizer Farm Supply 740
245-5193

TRANSPORTATION

710

(one healt, two dtamonds and one
club) first

Autoll for Sale

1981 Ford Truck F150 302 Au
tamat1c Ru ns good $1 000 or
besl offer (304)675 8736
1984 Nisse n 300ZX 5 Speed
Blown Motor Good Shape $525
741}245 5529
1965 FordT-Bird 740 245-5443
1987 Corvette 30 ooo M1tes Mint
C\&gt;nd1tlon 2Tops 740 446 1736 '
1988 Delta 88 Looks Good Runs
GoOdl $1 500 740 388-ool 3
1989 Daytona Auto AJC $1 500
740 379 2726
1990 Dodge Shadow 2 Doors s
Spood A/C 740.379 2726

810

WATEAPIIOOFING
Uncol)d lllonal lifetime guarantee
Local re te rences furnished Es '
lebhshod 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446·0870 1 800 287 0576 Rog.
ers Waterproofing
Appliance Parts And Ser'lllce All
Name Bra nds Over 25 Years Ex
pen enr:e All Work Guara nteed
French City Maytag 740 446 11
7795
C&amp;C General Home Main
tenence Painting vinyl siding
carpentry doors wmdows baths
mobile home repair and more For
free estimate call Chet 740 992
6323
Professional 20yrs experience
with all masonery brick block. &amp;
stone Also room add!Mns ga
rages etc Free esllm~1es 304
773 9550

840

Electrical and

,

Refrigeration
Reqlde;nla7 or eommerctal wiring
new S&amp;Nice or repairs Mister LIcensed electrician Ridenour
Eleclr"el WV000306, 304 675
1786

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotabons by famous people past and present
Each letter 1n the Cipher stands for IIJlother Today's clUB V equals J

' KLI

YWWR

PIZADAMJ

ZWADAMJ.

MYR

K L I

D

DYYWZ

DF

J LAW

WPFGWZ

MIRDWYTWP

J 0 A W •

ZLJJW

PREVIOUS SOLUTION " Art 1s lhe unceastng efforl to compete with the
beauly of flowers - and never succeeding • - Marc Chagall

T::~:~~T ~@\\.dl1A-J&amp;t.~s~~
__,_ _ _...;...._,; 141to4
CLAY IL POllAN

WOlD
GAM I

~y

Reari'Qngl letters of th•
lour ~eramblod words b•
low to form four wards

•

NY KE L E
S I UE S

I" I I'
u Q6 0 I~,
I Is 1 I ,:
AT

n g ht m the end), bul slrangely nowa·
days we seem lo concenlrale on car·

rots

others?

I

D E N N U B

Granny thmks everyone
shou ld have a hobby and
knowtng how to handle money
l's the - - - - - - -

1---..~,;_.;1;.,7,.;.;.TI...:....;1,...::,.1~

PEANUTS
NO, I llAVEN'T ~EARD

-?

CAN'T TALK .

Q

Comp lera lhe chuck le quoted
by f,llmg 1n the m1Ss1ng words
L,--..1.---L
. ...:...J..--...J,L.......J.---1 you develop from step No 3 below

MA'(BE SO, 9UT
I'VE HEARD TflEM
TELL SOME PRETT't'
FUNN'( 5TORIES

ANI( DOU61lNUTS CALLING
'!'OU .. DOUGilNOTS

•)'
SCRAM-lETS

You'll build o btg nest egg when
you save wtrh rh• closst(;.c/s

ANSWERS

Borrow - Realm. Juror . Locate- TOMORROW
A bumper sticker I saw rMIIy htt home It read 'You
can t bUild a reputatton on what you are go1ng to do
TOMORROW '

_I

I FRIDAY

I
.

B L Z

FGWMFWZ

ZWVIAWYMFWP

Adam and Snow Wh1te ale mdlscreet apples (though the latter d1d all

'
1

Improvements

CELEBRITY CIPHER

spnnt. You estabhsh the key dtamond
lnck before the defense can get us
potential club tnck

&amp;

------~----~~~·
BASEMENT

•

(keepmg the kmg m dummy) and
attack d~amonds Now you wm the

ROBOTMAN

Home

gang or
}•
young
47 Tur1s
49 Nervous
twitch
50 Info on a mt. ,
52 Ethiopian tHie
53 Alrcreftoman ,

one With the heart ace, draw trumps

&amp;

SERVICES

sari
46 Ending lor

The guaranteed hne ts to wm tnck

1997 Wilderness ca mper Fifth
Wheel with sli de out excellent
condlllon asking $18 000 OBO
004 773 5484

Hay For Salo l 740 245 5672 Or
740·38H583

Round bales of
949 3069

the defenders w11l collect four tncks

•

ASTRO·GRAPH
Sawrday, Jan. 16, 1999

The new c ycle for the year ahead
will bring beller chances of success
m areas where you ' ve dd1genlly
worl&lt;ed for 10 the pa,•l, bul ruped no
1ang1ble results, Map a fresh coune
for yourself
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) If
you focus on trying to advance your
own penonal u11erests Instead of half·
heanedly auemptinglo please others
today, your time is apt to be more
pnxlucuvely spent Try10g to patch
up a broken romance? The AstroOruph Matchmaker can help you
undersland what lo do to make the
rela11onsh1p work. Mail $2 75 IO
Matchmaker. c/o 1h1s newspaper,
~0 Box 1758, Mumy Hill Stallon,
tfew Yort, NY 10156
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Seek isolauon. Free yourself from
dislraCung, outside 10fluences loday
1f you can By speudmg some ume m
solitude, your oudook can
rerurbished II thiS lime
PISCES (feb 20-Man:h 20) So
your efforts can blend more com·
fortably with your fulure hopes, slart

be

\1

poor lately, giVe a hltle exira "attention

looking ahead today, You ' ll be able to
figwe out ways to effectively metge
lllem w1th your present actiVIties
ARIES (Mardi 21-Apnl 19) Be
sure that whal you say m front of others today leaves the type of 1mpres·
s1on you'd hke 10 convey, because
your words have more weight than
usual and won't be forgotten
TAURUS (Apnl20-May 20) The
muscles 10 your m1nd today tend to
be stronger than lhose in your back
If possible. spend more lime on creative, mental proJects than on those
of a phySical nature
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Gelling to the root of problems lhat have •
bec:n cleverly h1dden should be nllher
easy for you today Your ab1hUes lo
prQbe or detect be espec ially acute
CANCER (June 21 . July 22)
Should your male or a partner make
sound suggestions that could benefil
both of you cono1derably. let wt&lt;er
beads prevail today, Who c""'s who
came up With the tdeas?
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) If your
health habits have been especially

to common sense health matters

,

today You have the dlsctphne to get
back on track
VIRGO (Aug 23· Sepl 22) Avmd
negative thinkers who could put you
in a darlt: frume of mind today Bu~
if you associate with people who are
Y!JIIng at heart. they'll have a bene·
ficml effect on your oullook
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct 23) Gtve
someone you feel protective of as
much lime as she or he needs today
1fth1s ind1v1dualshould come to you
for adv1ce You're the one who could
offer sage counseling,
SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov 22)
Menially. you ' ll be excepltonally
alert, crea11ve and expressiVe today
Th1s m1ght be an exl:ellcnt umc to
caleb up on correspondence or other
communtcattons
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov 23·Dec
21) Do any necessary shopp1ng
today, because you're hkely 10 have
a b1gger appe11te for bargams than
usual Chances are you'll gel more
mtleage o ut of what you spend

•

r•

42 Darien a at
&lt;'
43 GrHk peak ,
45 Angi.,.Saxon • ,

How

l11s temptmg to finesse the heart

f\Olt~~l

"~

sword

queen attnck one However, 1f East

Motor Homes

Registered Arab1an Horse Geld
lng Great Riding Horse 74().446
1736

2

respond w1th thai hand? Take up lhe
hmn rmsel

P"

a

31 Gets older
37 Mall..:enter
abbr.
38 Epic poem
40 Capri and
Man
41 Fencing

ra1se as forcmg , what would you

~r\~~F~

New gas tanks &amp; body parts 0 &amp;
A A~lo Ripley WV 304 372·
3933 or I 800 27H!l29

Livestock

amounts
30 Letters on
crou

ra1se, showmg 10·12 support pomts
and at least four-card spade support
For those of you sull usmg the JUmp

THE BORN LOSER

Accessories

Campers

East
Pass
Pass

3•
Pass

would you play m four spades? West
leads the heart two.
North's three spades IS a limn

I

Budget Price d Transmission,.
and Engmes Al l Types Accest
To 0'11er 10 000 Transm issions ,
740 245 5677

790

Elizabeth 26 Arrow polson •
27 Obligation
•
29 Small
' '

fru1t and vegetables supposedly tempt

1995 GMC Sierra 1500 Serie s
4x4 60 000 Miles Loaded E•cel
tent Condition ! E'llenlngs 740
256 6592

Auto Parts

head.

humans mto md1scretton?
Now 'to th1s bridge deal

1993 Ch evy s 10 Blazer Tahoe
LT E~t cellent condition 4X4
Must See to Ap preciate ! 740~
388 9334

•

Concurred

22 Card
d lltrlbutor
23 Playwright
O'Neill
24 Hummed
25 Red Cro. .

most perfect confidence m your
md1scre11on "
Well, while on that subJect, wh1ch

~~:;::~~~~~::.11986
Ex Cab
00 ,
1991 Chav
4 X4 4,X 4W· $2
8 500
Aulom

553 Cat Rollers For Sale 45 Foot
Parts Trailer For Sale, 1982 GMC
Flalbed Single Axle Olosol
$5 000 2 000 Pound Headache
Ball Extendable Flat Trailer That
Extend s 65 Feet $5 20 0 A40
Ditch W1lch $7 500 6x12 Trench
Box $3 500 Top Can Tran sient
$4 500 Pipe Lazor $4 500 CJS
Jeep New Top Excellent Condi
lion $2,350 740·643-2916 740
643-2644 Alter 6 P.M

Author Wiesel
Auld Lang - Tin 11n

a newspaper Where was that colummst's copy editor?) For example,
Smnh sa1d to someone, "I have the

1984 S 10 new 350 wJth 350 tur·
bo new !Ires exhaust &amp; ratchet
Shiller $2500 firm call 740·992·
7493

1994 Ford F 150
995 Chev S 10 L S
1994 Goo Track
Ali Tru cks Are
Excellent B &amp; D
Sales 74 0 44 6·6 189 or
740 44!Hl865

11
12
19
21

Don't eat
the carrot

.1: t4AI&gt;N'T
TAKtN T~AT MtMO,Y
GOUf(St •• .1: (.AI'I'T
fO,~tT 1998'.

;
•

1984 Dodge Full Size Plc:k·Up 6•
Cylinder 4 Speed Over Drive
Exi ra good COndlllon $1 ,500 00
(304) 875 2074
-.

760

One Bedroom Apt Lafoyoue Mall
$350 oo Per Month Deposll
Aoq d All Ulllltios Paid Cell740·
448 24n

NOv/ .1:

l
j

Wanted Older Co uple To Work
On Farm Salary UUI!tles Rent
Provided Apd ECI 741}445 1052

Grubb's Plano tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned ? cau the
plano Dr 740-446 4525

ALL WEEK
LON• ll

Trucks for Sale

For Sale 2 yr old M l o Aiding
Lawn Mower 12 HP 38" cut
$400 (304)674.0050

Firewood Seasoned Hardwood
$40 00 A P1ckup Load Delivered
74().256 6031

••

720

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

FEELtN•S

•

For Sale

For ~tro , So,son•d Oak Flra·

s

By Phillip Alder
Sydney Smtth, an Enghsh wnter
and clergyman , had a wry sense of
humor (Not "rye," as I once saw m

85 Ford Escort wagon, auto
55,000 miles, front wh dr runs
graal $1,000 00 304.·69S 3691,
30H75-6699

590 ~

wood (004)675 3506

K9 84

North

Operung lead. •

1996 Dodge Neon Autom A/C :
$5,900 00 1995 Camarro 4u· . '
1om , AIC $6,400 00 1992 Ford
Escorl $1,400 00 B &amp; D Auto'
Sales 740 448 61~9 Or 740 446

Young pair of Lo'lleblrds &amp; Cock·
allel&amp; lor sale (304)682 9436

610

ABOUT?

Pass

1995 Dodge Neon
85 ooo Mllea, Aulo 4/C, 740
•
37g.2726, $4.800
: :

6965

t

• Q 10 6

West
Pass

SHE HASN'T BEEN OVER
TO lORRY A
SINGLE THING

I

44a.0009

Firewood For Sale $35 Par Pick
0p Load 740 245-9337

SNlFFL.N'

'

,
~

'
4 Doors

• K 10 7 3

1 FruH of lhl
28 CHiel
gourd family
32 Met oftarlnl'
2 Destroy
33 Auctioneer 1
3 llealdel
word
4 Bon - (witty
34 Tag
35 - noua
uylngl
5 Conctl
36 Bualna••·
woman Lauder 8 Forceful one
7 Loom bar
37 Phil Colllna'
8 Roman dozen
former band
39 Trickled from a 9 Tax org
10 Be fond of
faucet

Vulnerable. North·South
Dealer SOuth

;

93 Ford Escort GT air cruise
am/fm cassette, 5 speed 67 000
miles $4,200, 741}94g.3037

1

THINK I HURT
ELVINEY'.S

''•

1995 Cadlllace Sedan DeVIlle
53,000 Miles Loaded 740 446

Spot On List For Harley Davld
son Dua In 1999 $500 00 740
448 9663

.Eirewood for Sale! Call 740 256
"1922

WHAT ARE YOU

~

K roscene Healer Wtc s &amp; Re
palts Siders Equipment Compa
ny 304 675 7421

Electric Scooters W~eelchalrs
New And Used Stairway Eleva
tors Wheelchair And Scooter
Lifts Bowman's Homecare 740
44!H283

BARNEY

1994 GMC Jimmy, auto, loaded '"
excellent condition , 4 3 new 11res '
4 door $9,500 OBO. 740·742
~
7200 or 740 742 2675

Full Blooded Doberman Puppies
6 Weaks $175, 740 388.seo4

• 6

8 s
J 9s2
A6 S2
J 87

1 - etudent
(future Or l
7 lhonl- lrom
one'a country
13 Final trlbul8
Word
14 Ughtly
54 Store fodder
15 Type of rod
65 Took In, 11
18 Sm1llllnch
ulary
17 Individual
58 PaUit\lowo)
18 E1l1t
57 Gravel r dgt1
20 Wlda shoe size
21 Looked up to
DOWN

•AK2

---

1

1994 Chrysler Concord, Loaded • i'
Rod Melalllc 60 000 Miles • ,
$7 BOO OBO 7450 256 6340 " &gt;
74().256-6467
' '

..ch

East

•
•
t
•

;.!

1993 Plymoulh Acclaim 4 Doors
$1 700 Aulo A/C 740.37g.2728

For sale Simplicity snow thrower
excellent condition $100, 740·
985·3894

Upstairs Apartment Furnished
Ce.ntral Air H1at Cable and Utili
ties paid Depo sit References
$400 00 monlh (304)675·1616

2 Bedroom Unfurnished $2651
Mo SJOO Deposit Includes Wa·
tar &amp; 'Ttuh 740-«6 9569
2 Bedrooms Nice, Air
Gas Furnace In Galllpol ~ls•IUral,fl
446-2003 74(). 4461409

Featuring Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Rd
740-44&amp;.0231

West

• A Q J 10 9 7
" 8 4
• J 3

1992 Oldsmobile 88 Ro~ale
~
Loaded, Good Condition New ,. -::
Tires $5.000, 740·245 9652 AI •• 1
tar7P.M
..;

Now Taking Appllcallons- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments
Includes Water
Sewage Trash, $295/Mo 740·

Newly Remodeled one bedroom
apartment Prime tocallon In
downtown Gallipolis No Petal
$300 oo month plus utilities Ret·
erences &amp; Dep osit Required
Call (7 40) 448·3302 lor appoint·
men I

Farm Houle tor rent, $200 call
after 6pm, 30H9S.S755

2 Bdrms Furntahed On Raccoon
Creek Near Cora No Pets De·
posft Reference $300 00 Month
740 ·37g.2929

A Groom Shop Pet Grooming

Firewood· large loads $45 deliv·
ered 740·965 3540

Modern 1 Badroom Apartment
741}440.0390

Twin Rivers Tower now acc8p tlng
applications tor 1br HUD subsld·
lzed apt for elderly and hand!
capped EOH 304-675·6679

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
conditiOned $260 $300 sewer,
water and trash Included 740·
992 2167

Pets for Sale

9 4 3

South

1992 Honda Accord , LX 2 Ooor
Coupe 5 Speed, A/C Cruloe
....~S4:::,soo=:oeo::::L'7:.,.:4().:..:38::;B...:98::7B:..:::._,.. ,;t•

North 3rd Middleport 2 br unlur
apt dep &amp; ref :J04.692 2566

Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment,
741}440.0390

Cln n 2 bedroom house In Po
mercy $350 per month plus deposit no pets land contract pos·
slble after a year 74D-698-7244

for Rent

560

1992 Chevy LeBaron 4 Doors ;o ~
Aulom, AIC Cru ise. Jilt 74 000 . ,,
Mllea $3200 00 OBO 740 256
,
6169

New .ii010 5010 7010 Sarles
Tractors In Stock 7 75% Fixe d
Ford F 350 su per duty 7 3
Rate John Deere Credit Financing I ~~~~~ll304~~87~5~1~9~93~~.:
Available Naw 4000 Series Com I '
pacls In Slock New John Deere 730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
McCos And Round Bale rs 0%
89 S 10 Blazer 4WD automatic
12 ~o s , 75% -24 Mos 3 5% •
36 M__ps 4 5% ·48 Mos 5 5% ·60 4 3 engme good condition every
thing works PW amlfm casselle
Mas Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn
Midway Between Gallipolis An d $3500 negollabla 740·992·2808
or 740 992 4522
R1o 1Granda On Jackson Pik e
74~ 445 2412 Or I 600 59 4
1994 Chevy Die se l 4 Whee ll
1111
Drive 740 446 4537
Clttarance Sale· All New Tractor
Motorcycles
Parts AI Dejllers Cost Kessel s 740
Tracfor, 1402 Jackson Pike Gal
1992 Honda 300 2 wheel drive
llp'\Jis Ohio 740 446 7767
aulamatlc Shaft drive ctean
Ho ro 9 OOAM To 5 OOPM Salur
$2200 080 304-675 3824
loses AI Noon

312 Wetzgal St Pomeroy 3 Bdrm
tiouse. $360 oo Monlh Deposll
Required 1 668 64Q.052~

Mobile Homae

Buy Qt sett Riverine Antiques
1124 ~ Main Slreer, on AI 124,
Pomeroy Houra M TW 10 00
a m IO 8 00 p m Su['llay 1 00 lo
8 00 p m 740 992 2528 Russ
Mooreo!lfner

t bedroom furnished apartment In
Mkldleport 740.w2 9191

Criol)i'o Pemlly Uvlng,
74Q.992..S14, has lllllrtmenla
available lmmedlaloly. Aud a&lt;&gt;
cepted children welcome
Pomeroy/Middleport area

Block brick sewer pipes wlnd·
ows, lintels etc Claude Winters
~lo Grande, OH Call 740·245·
ol21

Antiques

1 bedroom apartment for rent In
Mlddlooort $270 per monlh $100
deposll all ullllltea paid 741}992t
7808

Tara Townhouse Apa rtments
Ve ry Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floora CA I 1/2 Balh Fully Car·
peted Patio No Pels Lease Plus
Security Deposi t Required 7 40·
448-3481

420

530

Furnace, Heat Pumps, &amp; Air Con
dlttonlng Free Estimates! If You
Don't Call Us We Bolh Losol
740-446-6306, 1 91)().29Hlll96

:.:__c:..;_~---

Supplies

GOOD USED APP~IANCES
Washers, dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIne Slroat Call 740·446·J!l98,
1·889-619·0128

540

One bedroom apartment tor rent
quiet dep &amp; ref required
$300 00 004·875-1550

Rent

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers Ranges Retrl·
grators, 90 Da~ Guarantee!
French Clly Maytag, 740 446·
7795

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnlshad and unturnlshed security
daposlt required, nope~. 740·
992·221 8

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom
t Bedroom Economical Gas
Includes 6 monlhs FREE lot rani
Heal WID Hook Up, Near Cinema
Includes washer &amp; dryer Sklrl•ng, .1 $279/Mo Plus IJ!IIIIIes. Deposll &amp;
deluxe slops and setup
Lease Required, 740-44&amp;.2957
$200 74 per month with $1
down CaB 1 901).837·3238
I Bedroom, On 51h Avenue Galli·
polls $250/Mo , No Pets, Laundry
Oakwood Homes Barboursville
Room, Depoalt Required, Refer
WV Tired Of No? We Say Yesl encas, 741}H6 2800
304 735 3409
2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent
Rent Buster ney;- ,999 14x70 2or To University Of Rio Grande
3 bedrooms only $995 00 down Campus 740.245--sesa
,$195 oo per mon free delivery
and set up call1 8CJ0.948-5678
2 Bedroom Apartment 1 t/2
Baths Graat Location! 15 Court
New bank repos only two left
Street Gallipolis Kitchen With
never lived In call 1 800·948
Stove &amp; Refrigerator $4951Mo
5678
Plus Utilities Deposit, Referenc
eo No PelS 740-448-4926
Factory goof Ill Save thousands,
2bdrm apts , total electric ap·
calli 81)0.948 5678
pllances furnished laundry room
facilities close to school In town
Used single wide around $100
Applications avalla~e at Village
per man 1 80().948-5678
Green Apt&amp; 149 or call740 99~·
LlmJ1ed offer 1999 double wide, 3 3711 EOH
br 2 ba $1799 down , $275 00
per man , delivered and set up 3 room unfurnished apartment
with bath D.eposlt and Reterence
call J.el)().946·5678
required! (004)67S.1090
We Finance Land &amp; Home With
As LIHie As $500 Down 1•606· BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGEt PRICES AT, JACKSON
928·3428
ESTATES, 52 WestWood Drive
Aelocatlng1 Take Over Pay· lrom $279 lo $358 Walk lo shop
&amp; movlea Call 740·446 2568
men1s 304 736 7295
Equal Housing opponunlty
Bualnesa and

Hou;at~old

Goods

70x14 Vlndale With Lot On
Mllcholl Road $20 ooo Lot &amp;
Trailer 74().643-2916 Or Call Af·
IarS ~M 741}64!J.2644

• Q 10 7
•

•

251ra

•AQ6

::.:...:==-----.

Building

MERCHANDI SE

510
Mobile home tor rent on Bashan
Ad $375/mo plua $250 depoalt
call74().94g.2067

340

550

3 bedroom f1lObile home for rent

1996 Sunshine 14x76 3 Bed·
rooms 2 Baths CA $17 500
7&gt;4().388-8567

.,

01 15 99

.

:..

·.~

41 Author
Umbel'to 44 - Canata
45 TYpe of cunto
48 Of the 111811•
51 Magician's

ACROSS

• K 4 3 2

1991 Cadillac Seville 4 door se
dan, loaded wllh accessories ..
great gas mileage ca r phone
304-675-2722

Paid No Pels On Bulavllle Pike
74().38$.1100

1992 Norris 16A X 70FT~ Vinyl
Wllh Shingles 2 Bdrms 2 Baths
All Electric Appliances, Porches
Carport, 740 256·6336

North

age Great Runn1ng C'o ndltlon .. :l
740-446·1735
j -~

Racine 74().992·5039

2 Bedrooms

;

~ :,1~a~/~!:c s!~d8a~.~~v~~~

2 bedroom mobile hom• In

no pelS, 7.W.Q92.5l!S8

Business

Ohio Valley Bank Offers A Gen·
erous Benefits Package Including
401 K Retirement And Career
Advan cement And Mer it Bonus
Opportunities

Wanted to Buy

Abso lute Top Dollar All U S Sll
ver And Gold Coins Proofsets
Diamonds Antique Jewelry Gold
Rings Pre 1930 U S Currency
Sterling Etc AcquiSI11ons Jewelry
M T S Cmn Shop t51 Second
Awnue Gallipolis 741).446 2842

11 0

Experienced Professional Phle
botomlsl M F Early Mornings,
Resume To P0 Box 33 Galllp"'
lis OH 4563t Or Call 740 446·

"People Oriented
·customer Service And
Sales Orl'llen
'Lending Background Required

All Yard Salea Mu11 Be Paid lq
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm the
day before the ad 11 to run.
Sunday 1: ,_onday edition·
1 00pm Ft1day

80

Excellent opportuftl1y to join the
long term health care field Seek·
lng part·tlme LPN's rotating
shifts Intermediate care facility
West Vlrglma license required
Point Pleasant Nursing &amp; Rena
bllltatlon CQnter State Route 62
N Route 1 Box 326 Point
Pleasant WV 25550 (A Genesis
Eldercare center) EOE

Ohio Valley Bank Is Now Accept
lng Applications For Lending Po
sltlons Applicants Should Pas
sass The Following Qualities

&amp; VIcinity

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Easy Work! Excellent Payl As
semble Products At Home Call
Toll Free 1·800 467·5566 Ex t
12170

-Needed· someone to work In
health care home laking care ot
elderly 7pm to 9am call lor 1nter
view, 740 992 5023 &amp; 740·992
3324

Yard Sile

Pomeroy,

Crlety 1 Family Living, Is seek
lng a malntenace person quallfl
cat1ons are heating , cooli ng
plumbing atecuic &amp; carpentry
drivers lice nce &amp; Insurance re
qulred police check required
drug free work place E 0 E app"
cations can be picked up at 204
North s,.,.nd Ave Middleport In
AtoZ business, between the
hours of 1o--spm 1 18 ttlru t 22

Electric maintenance service
Wiring breaker boxes ligh t fix
ture heating systems and Ae
modeling 304 874-0126

;~

NEA Crossword Puzzle

---------------------------------------------------------~.

PHILLIP
ALDER

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spea10 30+671H429

..,.
....

JANUARY 151

�•

&lt;

••

•

•
•

'
:Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Friday, January 15, 1999

• Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

[Study confirms illness mo.re prevalent in· G.Qif War veterans
:By EMMA ROSS

were about twice as likely to complain of it than the other two groups stud•
ied, the researchers said.
· ·
.
·
"The evidence is unequivoca' that going to the Gulf affects yoyr health,"
said Dr. Simon Wessely, one of the researchers from King's College alihe
University of London.
·
The researchers don't know why ·ailments were more common in Gulf War
vets, but said the study shows there is no single cause, either physical or psychological, and that attempts to look for a "smoking gun" ,will not succeed.
"We have to look at a multitude of causes and their interactions," Wessely said.
The researchers also found that hazards of war- rimgin'g from using pestic ides and seeing dead bodies 10 getting diesel fuel on your skin - were
linked to more symptoms, regardless of whether the men had served' in the
Gulf or somewhere else. .

·Auoc:tatecl Prell Wrltllr
LONDON - Persian Gulf War veterans have a rate of general ill health
:at least twice as high as forces who stayed home or were sent to Bosnia,
:according to a new study of British troops. ·
The Lancet, a British medical journal, published a study this week that
:confirms what previously has been reported in studies of U.S. and Canadi;an veterans- that while no definable disease could be found, going to the
.Persian Gulf in 1991 affected troops' health.
: The study of 8,195 soldiers. sailors and pilots- the first to compare Gulf
:war veterans with troops who served in another hazardous conflict around
:the same time ~ is the largest of symptoms to date.
. · The men, half of whom had retired from the military, filled out ques·
: tionnaires about their current health.
. They all reported a variety of 59 ailments, including chronic fatigue, hair
·loss, rashes, headaches, joint pain, memory loss, heart-problems and nervous
:system disorders.
. There was hardly anydifference between the Bosnia troops and men who
·served at the time of the Gulf War but were not deployed.
· 'Regardless of the ailment, however, vets who served in the .Persian Gulf

The study did find a slight increase in ill health in those who had vaccines against biological threats such as anthrax or plague. Receiving multipie vaccinations against routine infections also W'\5 linked to a modest
increase in !lln~ss •. b!it only in the f&gt;e~si.a~ Gulr group and riot in B?Snia.
In an ednonal '" the Lancet, a sctenust wnh the Nauonal lnslltutes of
'
_ ·,

Aid flights Milk h~rmone rejection
resumed ,
in Angola

By BARRY HATTON .
·Associated Press ·Writer
LUANDA, Angola - The
World Food 'Program resumed aid
flights to some Angolan 'cities, ending. a two-week suspension after
two U.N. planes crashed in areas of
renewed fighting between the.government and rebels, a spokesman
said today.
"We feel we can fly to a number of destinations safely," WFP '
country representative Francesco
Streppoli said. The first flights left
the capital, Luanda, on Wednesday.
He said the United Nations
Humanitarian Assistance Unit was
in "active negotiations" with the
government and rebels to ensure
the safety of aid flights.
"Our distribution plan is known
(by both sides). Our flight plans
too, " Streppoli told reporters.
Two cargo' planes chartered by
the United Nations crashed, possibly after being fired on, shortly .
after they took off from the central
highland city of Huambo on Dec.
26 and Jan. 2. The United Nations
had given the flight plans of the
planes 10 both sides.
Twenty-three people were on
board the aircraft and no survivors
have been found.
The WFP said it has no immediate plans to fly to Huainbo, 300
miles southeast of Luanda, or to
other. central highland cities that
have been a focus of fighting.
Today, government ar.my troops
battled UNITA rebels in Huarnbo's
perimeter, aiming to secure their
grip on the key city where thousands of displaced people have
poured in from rural villages.
The private Radio Eclesia
reported that 17 people were killed
and 16 were wounded when their
truck hit a mine near Gorigoayinga, abo.ut ro miles from Huambo.
Thousands of people have fled
to inland cities to escape intense
fighting between the government
. and UNITA rebels who returned to
war last month, shattering 1he
U.N.-brokered 1994 peace accord.
Streppoli said there were m.ore
than 700,000 newly displaced people in the country.
Planes flew food and WFP staff
from Luanda to six cities in eastern and northeastern Angola .on
Wednesday, he said,
No fightinz was reported in
those cities and the operations
went smoothly.
Food stocks in some war-battered cities have "dwindled to
dangerously low . levels," said
Streppoli.
·
Civil war first broke out in
Angola after its 1975 independence
from PortugaL A 1991 peace deal
collapsed the following year an~ a
new accord was signed three years
later.

\

costs;.

choice 1fhether they want dairy prod- :
ucts from cows that were not inject- :·
ed with the hormone, he said..
:;
Robert Cropp, an assistant pro- ;
fessor of the University of Wisconsin_:
Extension, said the Canadian acuon ·
might prompt legis.lative efforts to '
restrict BGH use.
·
. Last month, the Center for Food··
Safety, ~ural Vermont and other:'
grqups filed .a petition asking that::
JlGH be banned so that the U.S. Food··
and Drug Administration can re-:'
evaluate the resenrch used to•declare:•
it safe. ·The groups said research in:
Canada su~gests U.S. officials over-:
looked or tgnored data about poten- .
tial health risk!l that pointed to the:,
need for additional testing.
·

Kremlin down plays allegations Of aiding Iran .
.

By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

Aasoclated Press Writer
MOSCOW - Russia's intellige~ce agency said Thursday ~I the
Un1ted States was not actmg on
accurate inform~tion when it acc4sed
three Russtan sctenufic mslltubons of
helpmg Iran develop ~eapons_:
The Fed,e_ral Secunty Servtce, -or
FSB, the m~m.successor ofth~ S~vtet KGB, satd 11 checked the mstttutions and found no evidence to supP?rt U.S. claims that they had provtd~d weapons te_chnology to Iran.
. Those organtzal!on~ have ~ommilled no vtolauons ·? f mternattonal
exp~rt co~trol rules mtended to bar
prohferat.1.on of mass-destructiOn
weapons, the FSB satd tn a statement..
.
. The agency s~~ the U.S. assertton
was the result of ~11Sunderstandmg,
?r• probably, ov_erst~~t of the Amertcan secret services.
. FSB . sp~kesma~ Alexand~r
Zdanovtch satd that '" the past, hts
agency had thwarted severallraman
attempts to ac.quue weapons technology from Russta.
. . .
The R~ssian government mmts tl
has sufficient controls to prevent the
prohferatwn of technology ~ceded
for weapons ~fmass destr.ucuon. .
Prtme Min~ter. Yevge~y Prtmakov and other s~n10r R~sstan offictals have harshly crtuctz.ed the
Amertcans for plactng sanctions on

.

the three insfitutions, warning the
move could damage U.S.-Russian
relations.
·
. "Usin~ force and •••!'lin~ san~uons agamst our orgamzauons ts
counterproductiv~ for Russian-Ame.rIcan relatiOns,
Pnmakov said
Wednesday. ·
. .
,Washt~gtoil. fired back, accusmg
the Kremhn of Ignonng the problem.
The Umted States also threatened to
cut back or e.ven eliminate U.S.
satellites taunehed in Russia.
Russia receives tens of millions of
dollars for each of these launches.
At the end of this year, the United States "will take into account very
seriously _progress, if any, that we
have made in getting Russia to stop
its entities from supporting Iran's
missile program," State Department .
spokesman James P. Rubin said
.Wednesday.
The Russian government insisted
Thursday that the nation's space
companies were not involved in any
dubious cooperation with Iran. Foreign Ministry spokesman Vladimir
Rakhmanin said that tying the ailegations to satellite launches was
. "arbitrary."
"The cessation of (space) cooperation would be bad not only for Russian companies - and of course it
would be very bad for Russia companies _ but it would be bad for
America.n companies involved in this

r

cooperation," Rakhmanin added, . lites into orbit aboard American rock·
Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said , ets, !nterfa~ reponed. '
that by using "any' threats or hints at :, · . The U.S. sanctions- announced
any sa_nctions::'the United States was · earlier' this ' w~ek . baiT.ed the : D.
revertmg to outdated mstruments, Mendeleyev Umverstty ofChem1cal
which do nm correspond .to t'!?ay's · Technology, the Scientific Research
level of our btlateral relattons. . ·and Design Institute of Power Tech-.
"These are the _mstruments o.t a nology and 'the Mos~9w Aviation
past ume;, from which we are trymg Institute from purchasit\i U.S.-made
to break, Ivanov was q~oted by. the goods or exporting p~ucts to the
lnterfax news agency as saymg.
United States.
'·
Russia:s Space' Agency deputy
The Un~!ed States hill! introduced
chtef Yurt MIIov warned tha~ IJ.S. sanctions againstl2 Ru~ian organi;
compames ~ouldrunup mucli h1gh: , iations for allegedly sending sensier expenses tf they have 10 PU! sate!. ,
technologies t.o
The U.S.
··
·

.

.

. INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- Three young children died in a house fire Thursday and their mother was burned when she tried to kick open the bedroom
door to rescue them.
The children, ages 3, 4 and 5, died in their second-stpry bedroom frolll a
blaze that may have been started because they were playing with fire, said
Jack Cassady, a fire department spokesman,
The fire was contained to the bedroom and part of a hallway.
Their mother, Margaret Clark, and a neighbor, Edwin Gunnell, 47, were
treated for minor burns and smoke inl)alation from unsuccessful rescue
attempts,·
A-23-month-old toddler and 16-year-old daughter also were home and
escaped the fire. Cassady said II people lived in the house, including eight
children, a mother and father, and another tenant
·,
Firefighters found that none of the home's smoke detectors were wmJ&lt;·ing. "It would have made a real difference in the outcome," Cassady said.

P~meroy

~bligations."

motor vehicle, $83 and costs. ·
Posting bonds were: Debra West,
Pomeroy, speed, $72; Susan Baum,
Pomeroy, open container in a motor
vehicle, $83; Francisco Rengifo,
Loxahatchee, Aa., failure to yield to
a motor vehicle, $83; Petra Kr.alickova, Athens, expired tags, $83; Jeffrey Taylor;Jacksonville, Aa., speed,
$65 ; Joe McComas, Jr., Lesage,
W.Va., speed, $75; Alva Tiemyer,
Middleport, improper backing. $63;
Robin Foley, Syracuse, $65, speed;
Paul Epperson, Pomeroy, failure to
stop, $63; Robert Reeves, Chester,
illegal window tint, $100.

'

-

'

~- .'.'

.:

.'

'

•'

' ••'

'

...• ••.

·-~··,

.
.

'

.

..'.

..

'

'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • January 17, 1999

.

Vol. 33, No. 49
'.

'

·eastern plaf.ls ·public s81e of two ·abandoned schoolS
.

I ·• ,
.~.

'

Sy BR~ J. RE.ED

into the new Eastern Elementary School, which was week.
l1m11 Sentinel Staff .
.
oompleted in the summer of 1998. The new building,
The property in Olester takes .in IWo parcels on either
: , CHESTER- The Bastertl Local School District will which houses grades K-8, is located adjacent to Eastem side ·of State Rol!te 248. A parcer adjacent to the Uniied
sell !Wo o~ its three abandoned elementary ~hool$ lit Hiah School on Stall! R(!ute 7 between Tuppers Plains Methodist Olurch coniists of 1.6 acres, and the parcel
_public auction. . · '
·
·
.,. . · , · ' IIJill Oiester.. 1. •
.
•
•
• ..
•
•
across the road which-inclooes the school building and
· The .Eas~ Local ~ard of Education viJte11 last · • The district will not sell the 'fuppers ·Plains Elcmen: · an acre of property. That bUilding was constructed as a
week to tidverttsc an a,~;~cuon .o f the Chester f!IC!11Cill4ti' tary building, which . now houses a ·center for combined elementary and high school for the Central
·property in. Chester- and Riverview ·Element8ry ,, near Gallia;/Meigs Head SWto "'d ad!ninistrative officcis for . Rural School District in the enrly 1920's.
Reedsville.. .:
t:ti · ·:~ the school district. ' .
·. · ·
'
· · The Riverview property consists of 7. 7 acres off Cur· The schools 'haye been 'vac~~tt since the•.end ' of "'e -:" · Aecording to Distrii:t:Treasurer Lisa Rl~le, the au c- tis Hollow Road, near State Route 124. That bUilding
. 1~-.t;ws school year. In Septemher, s~ildents Jn the iion will likely be .held QR March•6, pend(hg the place· was built in 1958 when the Central Rural and Olive·
distnct s three elementary .schools were .oonsolidated ll)ent of a legal notice in the S11114i&lt;Jy 1illles·$cntil!e'l· ne~t Orange Districts coml!ined to, fonn the Eastern Local
' ..
.
. .
'

Area agency nets
$175,000,grant for
housing a~slstance
RIO GRANDE!- Over 70 organizations, including the Area
~ncy on Aging District 7 Inc., ·
have been · awarded grants totaling
· more than $8.1 million througl\the
Ohio Housing Trust Fund.
The
Arc4
Agency
was
given $175,000 .
to assist low
.,
and moder•te · ·
income . people
in Gallii Coun-'
ty, according to ·
a releale from
Gov. BOb Taft's
office.
The ·..

n..

no.w.-, ._. the thaw:
.

'

Wlrf.er's l'm pact
felt .t hroughout.
southern Ohio

District.. ~twas designe~ ':"d built at the same.time a&amp;.sh~:
. current htgl\ school butldtng.
·
·' •; There has been speculation that the Riverview PI'~
· erty may be . pur(:hased by a gravel mining compill)';
· which has a similar operation nearby on State RoJite.
124.
• 't
Superintendent Deryl Well said last fall that thl! ai.~&gt;
trict had been contacted by the Shelly CompanY. al1illlt
· the possibility ·of the company purch115ing the propc(ty. · ·
Accor~ing to Ritchie, a minimum bid will not, J)e·
specified for either piece of propertl; but the district wi!l:
reserve the rigl\t to reject any bicb offered.
; ·.·'
&lt;

...

Clinton.challenge~
Wall Street to hel~,:
Appal,achian area J.;~
From AP, 11--..senttnet Reportll
· ·. 1 : :,.,
A propos!~~ by President ainton to. stirnJ!I~
nomic. growth in underprivileged · areas · COIIIil ':b\iill
at!ention / to t~e
President Clinton
. phgl\tofAppalachta
8d
. ... .and help spark a pos
,~
• ·
in the "'perregior,r;· a southeast c•nt tlVc
business- credit, •t
.V(0\11an said ·
8 CCMt to
. of the the gov•
problem$- !&gt;f emment
·• lack of of $1 b/1· ,
said //on1 to
who
non·profit corpo,_ , ·
otg11niZ1tlion which t/one
busi-

m

F~m ~. T·S Stslf A.po,.. ·&gt; .

Gl\l,."LIPOLIS- Anyone
·forgot how bad winter can be · •
a rude reminder during .l)il!· past
. k •·,
, !.-\
'
'
wee.
·:·
A winning trend expeCted to
last for''the next few days may
help Eries of severe ·weather
melt
y with the snow, but visible
lndera could sti.ll ,be seen
.Saturday 11JOI'llinB as travele,rs
carefully wound thllir way arourid ·
~:n:~~r~~o~ads aJid electric olll·
throughout south·

p,O:,.

2

f•

:

~~tNi~~d lioril~ fep,alrt~l'ft

1998 Chevy Lumina
• V-8 Power • Power wnlowlll.ocltl

•

. • AMIFM c..tte •P.Wincbi!ll.ocb
• Cnioa'1lt • Ftty Lcadadl

711
Dun frill

ment ~~ . .·
, ~~J·
' Projects we,re approv~· I) · . on
such criteria as proaram imP;IIct.
.OJSanlzatiOn' and •tall experience,
COf.t eff~¢iil')'eJI!~ ' I!Jid feasibility,
and compl~iis: . ODOP received
tlll applications from entities
r~questing $17.2 million in funding.
· The Ohio Housing Trust Fund1
eitablished in 19.91, is a flexible
state funding source that ,provides
affordable housing opportunities,
expandS housin&amp; services and
imp('9ves housing conditions for
low·income Ohioans.
. • The fund also provides funding
for a wide range of housing activi- ·
ties, including housing develop·
ll!ent, emergency home repair, bandl&lt;:apped accessibility modifications,
downpayment assistaqce for fi.n t·
time homebuyers, and services relat·
ed to housing or homelessness.
Taft said he was "pleased" with
the fund's ability to 85l!ist Ohio organizations provide supportive housing services.
.
"Specifically, the organizations
receiving funding will, be able to
develop creative strategies designed
to assist low·incolllc Ohioans in
. their efforts to attain affordable
housing," 18ft said

Good Morning
. Today'a tift
.

UII

23 Sectlollll •

~ nlbwl
h.Jes

C.tendan
Cli••IDeds

C3&amp;:6 •

Com!rs

Insert

Ec!ltori•ls

A4
Cl

Akmg lhC River
Qbltuarles

950

1198 l2llvy lllmr LS 4Dr. 4x4
• Power WJnd.ll..ocb •lMllulle
• AUniun 1'11111111• ruly Lcadadl

AJ

Bt~

0 t999 Oloio \Ioiiey PllbUiill.. Co.

Buckeye Rural 'Electric
customers were

.......-·:this.t;ime
The river was expecltd to CRill
.~ 23 (fld on Saturday, at 7 Jim., at
the Racine Locks and Dam.
· "We are presently at 22.2
on our lower gauge," Larry
lockmaster at the
., ,R:aCiiie Loeb ·and Darn said
Fiiday. "We are raising about
.1 per hour."
.
"Will likely exceed that by
. IWo or three feet,&gt;•· he predicted, noting that figure is still
nowhere near the 38-foot flood
stage at the locks and darn .
The National Weather Service also predicts the river will
crest at ~7._9 1feet at Point
· Pleasilnt, W.Va.
No floods were reported
during 1998. LaSt year the
· river approached flood stage
...,.,~:,..,.l'ilo&lt;:l twice at Pomeroy (46.5 feet)
rising to 45.9 feet on Jan. ·10
and to 45.7 feet on June 30.
BROKEN - Till lllllbotlt Anc!v :t'J!Uradlly. Till jam, mor1 thin 2.5 mlln long,
The last recorded flood in
~==~~=o~utup1 1npiiCI
lor
Ita next wu cllll'ICI Frldly momlng. With till jam Pomeroy was March· 4, 1997,
let jim on till Lit· dllloclgld, till threlit of ftoadlng or more when the river rose to 50.8
tie
River Parlltrellurg, W. Ya., lhlln 110 hOIIIII Wll allo MHCI.
feet, getting irlto Main Street ·
RACINE- As white snow roads and hills and look rain has the potential to force businesses and damaging new
melts into rnuddy water, many · toward the Ohio River; and, the Ohio River from its banks, . lamp posts along the prome-.
area reslden111 tum their eyes · the possibility of flooding.
but not this time according to nadc in the Pomeroy Parking
away frorp snow·coverc.d
Melling snow coupled with the 'National ~eather Service. Lot.
&gt;

!

4'l5South Omrdl Street·~ WV HIIKHIZl-()417· 372-700

M11IhJ - Sldlmlly 9 • • 8 P11 •Slmday t P11 • 7 P11

F . - - _ _ _ , ... """""_, .... Not .. $

_ ... _ ............

.

to; ,

reg}~~kson has maintained that Appalachia has been.~fi

behind while other parts of.the country continue to gr9w; ·
'' People don't hear about us;• said Holley, "!Iii!.
attended the conference. "They don't kno~ alltheexcit•· ·
ing things that are happening here business wise. Wl!eri'
Qinton gets involved people take a look at us." . ::·.;
All told, Clinton's package of proposals would s,Uf
$15 billion in private investment, he said. He talked:of
building a bridge between the office towers and tll:eir
shadows.
t'-Because the economy is so good, now is the time to·
build that bridge," Clinton exhorted.
";:
On the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr., Clintoq.
borrowed a ph~ase from the slain civil rights leader and:
spok~ of American economi' success as "vaults . of
opportunity."
• ~
"Today, those vaults of opportunity arc richer anct
ContlliUid on page A2
•

Ohio lawmake;r urges senators to send a message to child·re~:
WASHINGTON (AP)~He was calm, hewasdi~

VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT: wn.tompeden.com

.-"""lilt

soons

00~7

ecoliohly,
take a· look at some aupport
~f these communi. ttes ~nd start to be ' technology o·~·,.,,/ej,~
creative and help
,
. ·
make a difference," ehopp.ng CIHJ-(11 . ,
· ·
. said Holley, of other busln•• tWv.lo_/1:': , .
Athens.
m•nt In target«/uiN~~ , ( , .
Offering a bil- •nd ruralei'MI~, lnt;lud}(f(j •.
lion-dollar bundle Appai11Chl&amp; ,, · · _.. · . ·: .1':;·:.; ·
. of proposed tax
·
. ',
. ..'._, ~·: ·
credits and loan guarantees, President· Qinton .cl1ali , .
lenged Wall Street on Friday to o~n lis . "vaults~ of :
opportunity" so the nation's prosperity can spill OY~r
into neglected areas.
~ .
· Ointon proposed a 25 percent tax credit, at a cOs:t·iQ
the government of $1 billion~ to corpoiations and inve5.t•
. ment gro\Jp5 that would support small ~chriology cQrp·
panies, shopping centers and other business dcvetppo
ment in targeted urban and rural areas, including ·
Appalachia.
·
. : .
"How many places are there in America where aldd
has to walk for blocks and blocks past abandoned stqre:
fronts just to buy a bOok fclr school or milk for the faro•
ily?" Clinton asked business executives at an econmi\i~
oonference organized by Jesse Jackson,
; , ..
. . Jackson has been pushing for eoono~.855istance.~ · ·
. Appalachia, He came to ~alli_a Count1JP.I\~~••2~
attend the annual Emanctpallon ProeiBinatmn· Obferl!'(:
vance. A week later; he spi&gt;nsored a "u!Uty rally"ln-l'ldi · '
sonville.
tt to
·&lt; '
In September and November he headed rallies: in
southeastern Ohio, bringing' together local busin~;
commercial lenders, ·Wall Street venture capitalists and
investment bankers to try to stimulate growth in 1!ic

em•ll

'Ptocess·

·\Ul~~=~,:,O:.. Clllll frill

'I

.
tmes··'f
'

.

•
'
•'

..·

' I

·,

a.Request for Proposld
(l~FP)
Grantees received
ll!,nding it'( twq Categories, houl!in&amp;

19118 a..y Allro LS AI Whlll

The following actions to end mar,
riage were filed recently in ihe office
of Meigs County-Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer:
.
Divorces asked - Tammy Lou
Freeman, Pomeroy, from Ronald
Freeman, Pomeroy, Jan. 7; Eva R.
Burnem, . Vinton, ·from Lee E. ·
Burnem, Jackson. Jan. 7; James C.
Carter Sr., Racine, from Beatrice K.
Carter, address unknown, Jan. 6;
·Heath R. Hill, Racine. from Diane K.
Hill, Racine, Jan. 6.
Dissolutions granted - Joseph L.
Shepard and Deloris Shepard, Jan.
' ll.
Divorces _granted :_ Jennie T.
Haning from Donald Jay Haning,
Jan ~ 6; Melinda Rea Dunn from Lincoln E. Dunn, Jan. ll.

·--..
.,

30a

Detalll ori
pageA2 . .

coupons

'l'he ·grl!llts were.milde

Mason, W.Va., no child restraint, $20,
wrong way on a one-way street, $83,
fictitious tags, $83; Angela Powell,
obstructed license plate, $20; Travis
Drenner, Pomeroy, expired tags. $83;
Jerry Hardwick, Pomeroy, driving
under FRA suspension, $170, fictitious tags, $83.
·

Actions to end·
marriages filed

Low:

ih~ugl!

1998 llulcll LISabrt Custom

man, POmeroy, open container in a

HI: 408

Hri•f'Nt·

Mayor's Court

Pomeroy, leash law, $20 and costs,
fine suspended; Tesa Schoolcraft,
Bidwell, expired operator's license,
$83 and costs, defective exhaust, $40 ·
and costs ; Mark Farrow, Pomeroy,
public intoxication, $133 and costs;
Timothy Coats, Pomeroy, failure to
control, $83 and costs; Anna Chap-

'

government has not offered evidence :
to support its claims.
:
. .' ,Iran is building a nuclear power •
piant with Russian help, but s~ys it is ~
not seeking to build nuclear bOmbs or 1
other weapons of mass deslntction.
Some Russian politicians said that
the Russian government should take
the American aecusations more setiously.
.
.
. .
Rakhmanm, the Foretgn Mtmstry
spokesman, insisted that "our cooperntion with Iran is benign, the government is ~omplying with all our

House fire leaves three dead

Joshua Dickens, Pornerqy, expired
registration, $83 and costs, no tail
lights, $83 and costs, expired·operator's license, $83 and costs; Patricia·.
Miller, Point Pleasant, W.Va., pos~ · ·Rockford Stewart, Mason, W.Va.,
'sessi&lt;,m of marijuana, $133 and costs, open container in a motor vehicle,
:open container in a motor vehicle, $83; Alicia 'Woods, Pomeroy,
• $83 and costs, public intoxication, improper backing. $63; Freddie
$133 and costs; Carla Smith, New Boggess, Middleport, no child
Haven, W.Va., DUl, $395 and costs, restraints, $120; JljSon Boggess, Midleft of center, $63; Shar&lt;?n Smith, .•dleport, assault, $233; Juanita Lane,
I

may · renew u~s. debate· ~

It has been approved in 29 coun- unacceptable threat to the safety of lameness by about .50 percS~nt.
OTIAWA (A.P) - Canadian
dairy cows."
. ,
. · Mowlingsaidtlf400-pagereport
health officials have rejected the tries.
But Health Canada, in a decision ·
Monsanto, the St. Lo,uis-based was riddled with errors .. He also said
genetically engineered dairy hormone BGH, upholding a ban on its disclosed Thursday, rejected its use. co~pany that 111ade the request, has Monsanl\1 never got a .chance to
An independent committee of scien- invested millions of dollars develop- respond. ,
.~
use in cattle.
tists
decided
the
risks
posed
to
cows
ing
the
hormone,
which
is
a
bio-engi-:·
.
An
official
ofi
the Wisconsin
In the United States, several
is
too
great.
A
separate
committee
neered
version
of
a
honnone
cows·
F
armers
Union
said
the Canadian ·.
groups have asked the federal gov1
found
the
drug
poses
n
.o
direct
risks
produce
naturally.
.
•
,
,.,.
d
,ecisi\)n
was
likely
to
reviv.e debate
ernment to pull the growth.hormone
· A spokesmah S!Ud the company 1s over BGH.
·.
off the. market and re-evaluate the to human health.
"It's a decision that's based on not about to l~t. all .thai go to waste, · "There are a variety of ~ople
research it used to de.clare the com"We're not finished ·with · the Within this country that have n.ever
pound safe in 1993. The two·senators more than nine years Of Cl}mprehen,
sive
review,"
said
Joel
Weiner,
an
actapproval
process," said Ray MowI- been satisfied that th~right decision
from vermont have asked the U.S.
ing
directorof
the
Health
Protection
ing,
a
vice
president of Monsanto was made (on BGH), ncluding some
Health and Human Services DepartBranch.
.
Canada.
"We're.
going to respond to . farmers," said'Bob De,. man, assistant
ment to look into the matter.
·
"When
we
iake
the
findings
of
the
the animal side.''
to the president of thef,OOO-member
The drug, known as bovine
growth hormone and also by the sci- animal safety committee and com- . The animal report said _BGH ~armers union. "Som"i farme~ ~ f~r
entific name of recombinant bovine bine them with our own assessment, mcreases the chance of masuus, a 11 and some farmers ¥'l ~gamst 11.
His group's polic)\,on BGH is to
somatotropin-(rBST), is injected in it's pretty clear we have to reject the bovine udder infection, by 25 perrequest
for
approval
to
use
rBST
in
cent,
increases
infertility
by
18
per.
favor
labeling to giv~ consumers a
cows to increase the amount of milk
Canada.
in
our
view,
it
presents
an
cent
and
incl'!lases
the
chance
of
•
they give.

.Cases ended,in
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan·
recently processed caSes iti Mayor's
Court.
Fined were: John Pullins,
Pomeroy, failure to control, $83 and
coots; James Demaria, Columbus,
$72 and costs, speed; James B. Engle, ,.
· Troy, speed; $66 and costs; John M.
Matson, Raci ne, speed, $67 and
costs; Roxie M. Mayle, Cutler, speed,
$6S and costs; Clarence Owehsby,
Rutland, improper backing, $63 and
costs; Timothy Pridemore, Pomeroy,
failure to control, $83 and costs;
Clifton Sisson, Syracuse, assured
clear distance, $63 and costs; Erin L.
Smith, Middleport, failure to control,
$45 and costs; Vickie ·Baker,
,Pomeroy, underage consumption,
$270 and costs; George Baker, furnishing alcohol to a minor, $520 and

Health called 'ihe study one of the most definitive conducted'to date and said
it added weight to the argument that no unique "Gulf War Syndrome" exists ..
In his edit01;ia1. Stephen E. Straus, ~:hief of the Jabofatory of clinical inves-;
ligation at theJifationalllnstitute bf Allergy and Infectious Diseases, drew par-:
. allels between·the ailments cited by Gulf Wa~ vets and soldiers who fough~:
in,World War .
,
·
''Although the possibility of some still unappreciatell erivirqnmental factor 'cannot be dismissed entirely," 1\e wrote, "the ·Gulf War seems to diffe~·
. from .others on~ in a quantitative·sense and in the intensity of public dis .. ·
course about if.~
·
·
··
·~
· · Byt Dr. Ro~ Haley, an epidemiologist at University of Texas Medicaf
Cent~r who beli!ives a particular·"Gulf War syndrome" exists, criticized the, ·
~search He said the c' f 1 •
ti
·
ur .,
, .. , ·
s ten tS s ques o~s were 1oo vague, so t1 was n01 s -~
,pnsmg they foll.qd the S&amp;Jlle symptoms tn all of the veterans.
~
"J;he)i found ~questions that by_their nature are not unique. They didn't:
ask the rig~t questions," he said.
,:
.
.'
Haiey's research on 8 small· number of patients nas 'previously conclud-:
ed that some Gulf War veterans suffer from distinct~ymptom clusters caused_:
. by chemical poisoning and that some may suffer neurological damage from :
-1 1 n~rve gas or pesticides. ,
·
· ·
'

.$221n
.
mo,ney-savlng

. ilath to tell the tntth to a grand jury, and he pl~yed t.he enforcemen.t officer of this

h~ niade lots ofcye con~t~C~ arid he limiled hi111$C!f to 1•. most lamous exc:erpt of Olnton's v1dco_ deposition, With
than half an hour.
•
illl off-cat11era questioner saying "It

Now, Ohio Rep. Steve Otabot must · · ln~~lde
·
was an utterly false statement Is that
wait for the question-and-answer phase of
correct?" and .lhe president respondPresident ainton 's impeac!tment trial
/!
ina: "It depends upon what the mean·
beforehe knowahow well his w~ids were Prosecutora deride White Houae ing of the word .'is' is."
absorbed by the·senators on the JUry.
•sa whit' der11111 • P•ge Ali
·Olabot, one"of 13 House managers
. Aided ,by video clipe and poster-sized
serving as the prosecution in the case,
cniiiJCtilents. the congressman from Oncinnali on Friday went briskly througl\ escb element of perjury, and told
Jald out the requirements of perjury law and told the Senate the Senate that Ointori 'sstatements qualified as perjury
why the House majority ~lievm Ointon broke that law.
in every case.
·
• ·
• ·. ,
: He showed a video clip of Qlnton swearing out his
"The president or the Untied States, the chtcf law

'ii:fl

IIU)d, lied under oath. He you've got a good ~awyer
raised his nght hand .and he swore to tell the tntth, .lhe or you're~ excepltona!ly
whole lntth and no"'tng but 'the tntth.• and then he lted, sktlled har," he sa1d.
pure and simple," &lt;llabot said. "He chipped away at the "That would be tragic ...
very comerstone of our judicial system."
.
let us instead send a mesHe ended his part of the presentation with an appeal sage to the American peoto~d am~ that tntthfu_lness is im~rtanL ,
P!C. and to _the boys ~nd
If the acbons of the prestdent are ulttmately dtsre- gtrls who wtll be studytng
garded or minimized, we will&amp; sending a sorry mes- American history in the
sage to the American people that the president of the yeilrs to come, that no
United States isabove the law," Clll!botsaid. .
person is above the law
.
:~we will he se~ding a message to our children, to my and that this great nation remains an entity g011cn~edi:W
•' •
chtldren, that telltng the truth doesn't rtally mat~er tf the rule of law."
•

...
••
. •.
''
...
'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="422">
    <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="9849">
                <text>01. January</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="25768">
            <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="25767">
              <text>January 15, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="490">
      <name>burgess</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="223">
      <name>church</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1076">
      <name>holliday</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
