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12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, November 2, 1998

Tuesday
Weather

Vote today! Polls open until 7:30 p.m.
Honduran death toll mounts, Page 6
Side effects of Viagra, Page 10

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 40s; Low: 30s

. I

I
.

-

Baked Porketta
intended to provide a nutritional
meal at a reasonable cost Dollars
generated will be used to support
the existing lunch and home
delivered meal program.

Mixed Vegetables
Bread
Prunes

.THURSDAY

.

5

Chili Con Carne
Grilled Cheese Sandwich
Pertecticln Salad
Crackers · '

Oven Fried Chicken
I
Mashed Potatoes an11 Gravy
Green Beans
Roll
Carrot Cake

'

Texas Sheet Cake

'
12

10
Scalloped Chicken
Broccoli with Cheese
Cola Slaw
'•
Roll
Tropical Mixed Fruit

.

•
Pineapple Upside Down Cake

.

.
17

Beef and Noodles
Green Beans
Mashed Potatoes
Roll
Earthquake Cake

•

SpagheUi with' Meat Sauce ,

...

and Cauliflower
Bread
Orange Juice

Fruit Cocktail

Cracl&lt;ln
P81fectlon Salad
Grapes
Brownie

Liver &amp; Onions
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
Buttered Com
Bread
Fruit Cocktail

Macaroni and C'-"e
Creamed Tomatoes
Gnlen Beans .
Bread
Peach Slices
Codl&lt;ie

llakect Steak
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy

BBQ Chicken Fillet
_Scalloped Potatoes
Cooked Cabbage
Breed
Peach~ Creamy Pudding

Sweet and Sour Pork
Mashed Potatoes
Brussel Sprouts
Br8ad
Applesauce

Beaf~tes

Baked Fish
Lyonnaise Potatoes
Buttered Com
Bread
Peach Slices

Hamburger on Bun
Broccoli &amp; Potatoes-HOM
Broccoli Soup- Sije
Tomato Juice-Site
Applesauce

Beef Stew

'

Glazed Carmta
Bleed
Pinliapple Tidbits

New England Boiled Dinner
(Ham, pollt081,
carrots. cabbage)

Biscuit
Banana Slices in
Red Gelatin
Roast TUII&lt;ey
Potatoes and Gravy

Ma~

Cauliftower
GrBWOBeans
Bread

Dressing

Lima ee..s &amp; Com

. Aplicot&amp;

Cranberry Relish
Pumpkin Pie

t

Spaghetti .With

Meat Sauce
· Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread
Tropical Mixed Fruij

.

'

,.

, Cote Slllw
Orange J.uice,
Biscuit
Rocky Road Pudding

:.-·,~

THANKSGIVING

'

CENTER CLOSED

CENTER CLOSED

26

•

THANKSGIVING •

BuHered Peas.
Roll

There will not be an evening
meal served this day.
•

November Activities
,.

'

•
Heather Sabrie, Outreach specialist with the Ohio Consumers'
Counsel, Is shown at right conferring with Frank Vaughan and
Jane Walton following the presentation about Columbia Gas
Customer CHOICE program. Ms. Sabrie gave a very
lnfornnatl_ve prog.r am about the gus choice program, electric
deregulatiOn, and ·telephone cra"'.l"ing for the s.enior citizens in
attendance.
.
·
• ·

'

Dr. William Smith, Orthopedic Surgeon at Holzer Medi~al
Center, Is shown displaying a model of a knee joint ·HI a recent
_program on Hip and Knee Replacement. .
·

Your Senior Center
Is Here For You!

The Meigs County Senior will be held Tuesday, November 17
'.
Citizens Center is open Monday from 7:00 p.m.~8 :30 p.m. and
through Friday from 8:00 to 4:30 Wednesday, Nov ember 18 from
TRIPS
p.lJl . Regularly scheduled activities 1:00 p.m.-2:30 p.m. at the Center.
A trip to Parkersburg for mall
are quilting, sewing, cards, games, Cost for the program is $5.00. shopping and the living Christmas
and pool. Weekly activities are line . Please call the Extension Office at Tree program · at th e North
dance team practice wit'h Paulette 992-6696 or the Center at 992-2161 Parkersburg Baptist Chur~h has
Harrison, instru~ tor, every Monday to make .a reservation .
been scheduled for Friday,
The Retired and Senior Volunteer
from 1:00 p.m.-2:00 p.m. and the
Thursday, November 19- the December 4. Cost will be $20.00 Program (RSVP) recently held the
knitting circle every Wednesday annual thanksgiving dinner will be for trav el by motorcoac h and Annual Volunteer Recognition
from 10 :00 a.m .• noon .
The served at noon. Rev. Bob and Joan admi ss ion for the Christmas along with celebrating the twentyExercise Room is open daily from Robinson will present a program at program.
Dinner , will be at fifth anniversary of the program."
8:00 a.m.-4:30· p-.m. for people to 11 :00 a.m. Seniors celebrating Country Buffe.t at your own cost. The following volunteers received
use the exercise equipment.
birthdays in November will be Call Alice, 992-2161, for
awards for years of service:
The "Over 50 Exercise Class" is honored before the dinnec.· .,,
inforfnation and reservations.
held on Monday and Wednesday at
Two shopping trips are scheduled
Friday, November ·. 20- the
Ten Year Award-Eilen Bowers
3:30p.m. thr6ugh December '16 th . Arthritis Support Group will meet by Center van at ·a cost of $5.00.
Bernice Carpenter, Polly Curtis',
This class will consist of stretching from 10:00 a.m.- II :30 a.m. with Tuesday, November I 0, the trip
Alta Ferrell, Wanda Fetty, Gertrude
and bending exercises for Sarah McGrew, RN, coord inato r.
will be to Athens for shopping at Tracy' Edna Triplett and Evelyn
strengthening and mild aerobics for
the old mall and University Mall, Wofford .
cardiovascular exercise, cost is $.50
with lunch at Ponderosa.
for each sess ion attended.
The trip on Tuesday, December
Fifteen Year Award-Jackie
A beginner line dancing cl.ass
15, will be to Gallipolis for
.
Hild
ebrand, Mary Loudner and Eva
will be held on Monda.ys from
shopping at Hill's Plaza and Wai'' ·
10'30 a.m. to 11 :30 a.m. for six
Mart with lunch at Golden Corral. Robscn.
Twenty-Five. Year Award fleclplents pictured from left to
weeks. Paulette Harrison will be
The Meigs Multipurpose Senior Call Wanda or Karen, 992-2161, to
right: Lula Hampton, 'Charles Blakeslee and Loretta
the instructor and the cost will be . Ce nt er will feature a "Tree of reserve a seat .on the van for the
.Beegle. Not pictured Ia Marjorie Brewer, who was unable
TWenty Year Award-Anna Fitch.
$1.00. This class is good exercise Li¥hts" to ho~ or fri ends, relatives, shopping trips.
to.attend.
'
and Is open to beginners and former netghbors or church members.
""'"' . .
-- ~ ··-- ·
members who want to partici'pate · Donations .of $5.00 will place an
·for the eXercise.
.
ornament on the tree in memory,or
A represe ntative from the 'Athens to honor a recipient. The purchaser
Social Security Office will be at the will be given the ornament as a
t
Every Wed.nesrlay Storewide Savings
212 EAST MAIN ST..
Center on Wednesday, November.· kee~sake following the holid ay
11th &amp; 25 th from 10:00 a. m.-1 1:00 seaso n. All proceeds from the
POMEROY, OH.
·992-3785
GOLDEN BUCKEYE CAROS
a.m.
"Tree of Lights" will be used to
.,
Friday, November
6-t he assist the Home Delivered Mea l
'
thirteenth ann ual Arts and Crafts Program. You may mail your
· Show will be held from 10:00 a.m.- donations to the
Meigs
5:00 p.m. with area craftpe rsons Multipurpose Senior Ce nter, 112
having a wide var iety of handmade East Memorial Drive, P.O. Box
itefl)s avai lable for sa le for gifts and .722, Pomeroy, O~jo 45769:
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS
holiday, decorating. Food wi ll be
avai lable to the public from 12:30
p.m.-4:30p. m.
Thursday, November 5-0 r.
David Faro, Podiatrist, will conduct
a foot screening from 10:00 a.m.1
"Serving Southern Ohio for ove r 20 years"
noon. Call Diana Coates at g92.
2161 to make an appointment.
Uft Chai rs
Mastectomy Supplies
Thesday, November'
I 0-the
Wheelchairs
Cervi"al Pillows
At hen s shopping trip wi ll leave the
Hospital
Beds
Tractor Equipment
Cen ter at 9:30 a.ln.
Shower Stools
Wednesday, November U -the
Tens Units &amp;
Grab Bars
Stroke Survivors Support Gro up,
Supplies
• ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIRS
wi th Lia Tip ton, OT, Hol7c r
Commode Chairs
Back Supports
•
BATH SAFETY EQUIPMENT
l&lt;chabilitation, coo rdin ator, wi ll
Walking Aids
Knee,
Ankle
Braces
• RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT
Atcct from I :00 p.m.-2:30 p.rn.
Diapers&amp;' Chux
• HOSPITAL BEDS·
Nursing Supplies
. Thursday, Novem'ber 12-Dr.
• LIFT CHAIRS
HOME OXYGEN
'
Ostomy
Supplies
Support Hosiery
· James Schm oll will cond uct a
•
'STAIR
GLIDES
24 Hr. Emergency Service
· Diabetic Supplies
vision scree ning from •10:01) a. m.First Aid Supplies
• OSTOMY
Feeding Pu mps
Respiratory Therapist On Stall
noon . Call Diana Coates at 992• DIAPERS &amp; CHUXS
Dressing&gt;
2161 to make an appointment.
•
Wednesday, November 18- the
monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will
bc .hcld from 9:30 a.m.- 11 :00 a.m.
Blood sug ar screening will be
1480 Jackson Pike
availabl e for $1 .00.
Tnll Fro·•·
Gallipolis, OH
· The an nu al Hoi iday Happening
'' ,
I-BOO-I I :l-2:!11(,
program conducted by Becky Baer,
Meigs , County Extension' Agen~,

RSVP recognition program is held

"Tree of
Lights"

-==========~==========================~~:1~:;;:~~~~;;~=:~~----~~--~~~~~~--~··~-.,-

SENIOR CITIZENS DAY

15o/o off

@Jaul

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
Everything
for the
Patient
at
Home

;.

~e~·~e::
\Q'J~:wea a~

w
,i ir

Hometown Newspaper

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Single Copy- 35 Cents

CAA submits se~ond welfare-to-wprk pr9Posal

Scalloped Chicken
Broocxlli with c Hrta-d Beets
Bread
Tropical Mixed Fruij

19

John Lentes, Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney, will be at
the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center on November 19, and
December 17, rrom 9:.30 a.m. to 2:00p.m. to' assist seniors with
legal issues, ·answer questions, prepare wills, etc.
If you would like an appointment tq talk with him, call Darla
Hawley at992-216l.

.

Meigs County's

lemon lush

Roast Beef
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy

Rocky Read Pudding

a,_

.Gf-'ee..s

' CNii Con Came
a-Slice

Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread

24

'

Broocoti/Carots

1

3

Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
Glazed Carrots
'
Roll

Beef Tips in Gravy on Rice

Maohed Potatoes

Volume 49, Number 1'l8

TUESDAY

'

Oven Fried Chick.an

Peach Crisp

- .
.

NOVEMBERM

Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
Lima Beans and Com
Bread
Applasauc:e

Sweat Potatoes

Dallas hands
Eagles 34-0
loss at home
Page4

.

MEIGS SENIOR CENTEf:=t

vening Meals
The Senior Nutrition Program
'evening meal will be served on
Tuesday and Thursday with serving
from '4:45 to 5:30 p .m.
A
suggested donation for th e evening
meal is $4.00. The evening meal is

Tomorrow: Partly sunny
High: 40s; Low: 30s

:

Sports

November 3, 1998

· It is the secon~ proposal made by the agency. and was requested by the comBy BRIAN J . REED
,,.
missiun~rs after the board dett!'rmined that the admin i :&lt;~trati on costs assoc iSentinel News Staff
'•
' ·
A second proposal from Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency for a . ated with the lirst plan were e~cessive.
A plan was s ubmit~ed last week by the University of Rio Grande.
welfare-to-work program was presented to the Meigs County Commission·
second plan would serve 55 clients." and would involve ski lls a.ssessCAA's
1
. ers during their regular meeting on Monday.
menls and jpb training. and place the clients iri public-s.:ctor jobs in an attempt
The plan calls for the e~pe nditure of nearly $222.000 in state and federto tmin them for pri vate-sector employment, according to Tom Reed of CAA.
al funds earmarked for training welfare recipients and placing them in paying jobs.
·
who presented the plan.

Accordi ng to Reed, the second plan differs largely from the first in tMt
the connection between training and assessment is stronger, and COA D)Velfare· to-Work and JTPA traini ng dollars are also available for use .
-The admini stration costs have been reduced from $33.000 to $15.000.
Re~d said that the agency ~.:itt!d $33,CK &gt;O in administration in ils first proposal
beco.~u:\e it is the maximum amount al lowable under the prognun for the costs
of operation. The $ 18.000 difference has been placed in the fund for panic- ·
··
(Cont_inued on Page 3)

Voinovich
.
•
faces new
elections
allegation

p'omeroy Council
considers roof
replacement job

"
By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Press Writer ,
COLUMBUS'- The Ohio Elections cOmmission . plans to investigate allegations that Gov. George
Voinovich tried to hide the source of
money paid in 1994 'to a company
controlled by hi s brother to cover the
salary of a political ally.
The complaint was tiled Wedresday but did not come to public altention until Monday. whe'n a lawyer for
the state Democratic Party discovered
it. Party officials called a news con'
fercnce in an e lection-eve attempt to
gain some politic:tl mileage.
Voinovich. a Republican, is the
favorite to win the U.S. Senate seat
being vacated by U.S. Sen. John
Glen'"!. in loday's election.' Secretary
of State Bob Taft, alsc a Republican
and normally an ally ofVoinovich. is
running for governor. but handles
FINAL SWING . Ohio Gov. George
Michael, at the Courtyard restaurant In
election complaints a• a duty· of his
Volnovlch, right canter, reached out to sh.ake
Brack1vllle during ..the final hours of his.c~~:.
current oft1ce.
·
- handa with Lydia Dob~. left, 8tld-hw~1tle'ti.S. eentte orf"MOftiS&amp;y. ('Al')
Voinovich aga_in today said He
would CO&lt;&gt;perate fully with the elec- last six campaigns." Boyle said today
• Gallagher then worked out a deal Judge Sandra Beckwith in Cincinnati.
In an affidavit attached ll&gt; the elections commission. "I support it," he in Cleveland. "Perhaps today 's accu- with Fabiano to pay him $5.0001 a
said as he voted in Cleveland. " W.e sations show one of the ways that all month. with half the salary paid by tions complaint~ Panichi said he was
need to enforce the' election laws."
occurred,"
The V Group. an archite"ure and at a get-together with Voinov ich and
It is against stale elections laws to
The potential peilulties for mis- construction managerl1ent ~.:ompUny
his brother in which the payment IO
misrepresent information on cam- representation include forfeiting the owned by Voinovich's brother. Paul. Gallagher was discussed. Asked
paign finance repurts filed with the governor 's ollice
though
Fabiano and The V Group paid ·. about the appeamnce of a campaign
secretary of state. Candidates are also Voinovich likely will have already Gallagher about $60,000 before they expen.se paid to the V Group. Panichi
prohibited from accepting campaign left the office before the matter is decided they had helped him out noted: " Politically it doesn' t look
·contributions from corpurations. ·
resolved. The commission has sched- enough. Fabiano told the IRS. Paul good."
Taft said he filed the complaint as '· uled a preliminary hearing for Dec. Voinovkh suggested his brother\
Instead. they brought in a camsoon as he received it from Fr.mklin 10.
t·ampaign .curnmittee reimburse the paign fund-rai ser. Nick Mama is. to
County Prosec utor Ron O' Brien, also
At the center of th~ complaint is two companies - a rnove Iuter act as a go-between. Fabiano told the
a Republican. But Voinovich oppo· .Ray Gallagher. a former pipefitters approved by the gov~rnor. accor~ing IRS:
nent Mary Boyle was skeptical that union official from Cleveland.
to Vince Panichi, Voiriovich's earnOn., Dec. 5. 1994, the campaign
the matter was hanqled without delay.
Voinovich appointed Gallagher to paign treasurer.
wrote Mamais two checks totaling
· ''It's a perfect example of a one- an $80,000 job on the Ohio lndustriThe circumstances of the fedeml $60.000 fnr "voter program develparty system. The delay must have, at Commission in early 1994. But the investigation surrounding the case are opment services." Mama is then
been so they could figure out a way , offer fell through after it was revealed unclear, however. Both Jon Allison. wrote a check to Fabiano and one to
Bob Taft and George Voinnvich can that Gallagher had a previous felony a spokesman for the secretary of a company he controlled. Fubiano's
cover lhis until il won ' t muller in an conviction, according to a transcript stute!s oftice, and Phil Richter, exec· company then wrote a check to The
election:· she said.
of an Internal Reve nue Service inter- utive director of the elections com· V Group.
" Forty million dollars was raised view with Michae l Fabiano. a lobby- · mission. said the matter is subject to
Mamais took a $3,000 cut for himby Voinovich committees over the istahd fri end of Gallagher's.
a gag &lt;lrder issued by u.s. Di strict self, the complaint

Congressional seat campaig·n 's .
s. pending m·ay surpass $1 mil_lion
.

By PAMELA BROGAN
Gannett News Service
. WASHINGTON - Democmtic
incumbent Ted Strickland and his
Republican chullenger. Lt . Gov. Nancy Hollister. each are. expected to
spend more than $ 1 million in a tight
race for Ohio's 6th Congress ional
District seat.
·
··our campaign funds are in a conshmt state of flux.." said Jess Goode.
Strickland's campaign press secretary. " It will be a milli on-doll ar race
by the time we ari: throu gh."

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

I Section • 10 r ages
Calendar
Cl•ssificd.,
Comics
Editorials
·I.A)l'al
Sports
Weather

.

IU

7-H
9
2

J
4&amp;5
3

Lotteries

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE

l'ir k .1, 7-'1 -4: Pick 4: 5_-f&gt;-5-5

146-2206

W.VA.
llait y .l: o-74: llaity 4: t-ti-K·'

Um.:kcyc 5: :\-4· 1f\- ~ 1-2')

As of Sept. 30, Strickland had
raised $700;703 during the 1997-98
campaign cycle as compared 10
$710.152 for Hollister. an analysis by
ihe Center for R ~spon s ive Politics
showed. The cenler is a nonpartisan
gro up that tracks the role money
plays in politics.
Between Sept. 30 antl Oct. 14.
Strickl:utd raised . an :tdditional
$73. 107 compared to $31.256 for
Holli ster.
Both catllpaigns report that us the
race ti gh ten s,and heads toward ·next

"
Tuesday's voting. cash is being spent
on TV and radio ads us soon as it
comes through the d&lt;!or.
Betwee n Oct. 1 throug h Oct. 14.
}1ollister'scampaign spent$196.994.
.including $ 169 .~90 it paid to Colum~
bus-hased Midwest Communicalions
for medi:I purchases. Only $36.320
remained in her camp:tign. Federal
Election Commission recllrds
showed.
"We're ·spending our money on
media and grass· mots efforts.·· Hoi (Continued on Page 3)

.,

Two phases set for sewer project
from restaurant to corporation line
' FREEMAN
By JIM
Sentinel News Staff
Roof and sewer projects dominated discussion at Monday night's meeting of PomeroY Village Council.
·
Council met first with contractor Greg Bailey of Home Creek Enterprise&lt; Pomeroy, concerning the proposed roofing project for the old Pomeroy
Junior High School. which is now owned by the village.
·
Council earlier' approved the application of a foam roof. but did not follow up on it s deci~ i o n . Bailey us ked council to'considel' other types of ~f~ . .
Council agreed to let th e project out for bids, and will have a structur~l
engineer examine the building to determine which so rt of (oaf will offer the
best pro.tection. Village Administrator John Anderson . wa.." authorized l&lt;1
employ an engineer at a cost not to exceed $1.500,
.
Anderson advi~ed th:.Jt ·a planned sewer project from the area around
Craw's Restaumnt to the Middleport corporation line will be done in two ptm.es. and receive Community Development Block Grant funding.
The project will cost about $1.4 million, total , Anderson said.
At Anderson's request, ~ouncil also approved spending $9,800 to repair
a slip on Spr ing Aven ue . Jeffers EJ(cavating of Pomeroy will remove loosematerial and rebuild the area.•Anderson said.
In oth er business. council approved the ~econd reading. by title only, of
an ordinance which would allow Police Chief Jeff Miller.to n;side outside
of the village.· ·
·
. .
·
Council also di scussed ovt:rtime in the police department. which is currently averuging aboul 20 m~1nhours ·per~wee k in overlime over 1997 figures.
according to Coun cil Prt&gt;:sident John Musser. He said the overtime wj Ucost
the village about $K.IIIIII Jhis year.
Musser said he is opposed to a lay-off to reduce the hou rs, but said the
village needs lo find a way to cut hours.
"Nobody likes to have th~ir pay cu\.'' said Musser.
Councilman Larry Wehrung said ' the police de partm~nt needs to mak~
more eftit•it:nt use of ils time.
·
Clerk Kathy Hysell said she would check on the cost of an additional vii·
Iage eleanup day. which was req ue~ ted by the Pomeroy Merchants' Association. 1
•
Wehfllng asked questions concerning open burning in the village atierdark.
, He was udvi sed that it is legal to bum leaves and other debris during this
· time of year. but that the burning must take place after 6 p.m. and before ti ·
a.rn.
"
..
Council is al so seek ing a list of standard operating procedures for flo:oJ
emergencies. Ander&lt;on said the water department has an SOP, bu!. council
still needs an SOP from the st ree t depanment.
·
, .
Council 'members re4uested that Street Superintendent Jack Krautter attend
the ne~t council meeting along with Anderson.
Also present ,Ver~ Mayor Frank Vau£han and council members Geri Wal ~
ton , Scott Di llon, Dave Ballard and George W6ght.
·

Strickland's complaint
heads for panel review
11

COLU.MBUS(APJ·- TheOhioEiectionsCommissionhaskeptalivea
complaint by Rep. Ted Strickland. D-Ohio, against Republican orgllnizations
backing his opponent.
A three-me1pbel panel •nn Monday' forwarded Strickland's complaint to
be reviewed by th e full com mi ss ion. at a date to be determined.
the cmnplaint took iS&gt;ue wi th the way Strickland's positions on education and c~1 pi1 al pu nishment were portrayed in a ~.:u mm er~.: ial and in a cam·
paign mailing.
The panel's acti on ducsn ·1 meom thai the Republican Parly organizations
behind those :tds were found guilty. on ly thatthe Detnocrat 's'complaints will
get furt ~er scfll liny.
· ·
·
After til!! p:tne l's decision, the campaign of Strickl:tnd's GOP oppone~t
in the 6th Congressional District. Ll. Gov. Nancy Hdollistehr, said it would flle'.
a complaint a~:,cusing the incumbent ol p1acmg a s Wit mi sleading infor· ,
mat ion aboul her road·builtiing proposal .
. The district covers 14 counties across southern Ohio . .

Abundance of cheap energy worries environment;Jiists

' size of th~ econom y-.., me:tsured in
gross domestic product- doubled.
WASHINGTON ~ A genenllion
Nowhere was rhange greatt:r than
after the tir•.;t oil shock changed the in the auto industry.
·
world. America is awash in cheap
General Motors Corp.'s plant· in
energy. a fact beginning to wo~ry Lake Orion, Mich .. for example.
some experts on energy. national uses gas from rotting garba'ge in a ·
sec urity unU the cnvironmen l.
neHrby dump as a sourct! of power.
Twenty -five ye;.\rs ngo. Arab
Highway fud e tli~.: icm:y is nearl y ·.
nation s jolted th e U.S. economy with 50 percent better than a ge neration
an oil embargo to prolest pro-Israe li · ago.
.
polic'it&gt;:s.
The international scene has
A second shock in 1979 seemed to dmnged us well .
~:on firm America""s energy vulnera· ·
Tht: Ji :;co~¥t!ry of new. ·uil ti elds
bility.
and Middle East instability has IonsThe nati on responded by llramal- encd the grip Arab nations once had
ical ly reducing I he amount of petro- on the worlll's petroleum supply. And
leum needed to power industrial. oil-importing nati ons 'have h&lt;.~nlk·d
houst!holt.l anU lransportul ion equip- togt: th er tn counteruc t the Organi7.a·.
menl . Energy consumption by every- . lion of Petroleum Export ing Couil lhing from gjant manufacturing opa- trit.'!s - OPEC - in the futu re.
at ion~ and utilities tn home furn!1t.:cs
As u rcsult. lOng lines at go1s .
and wa"'hing machines all rtllliGi.lly pumps have 'given way to in stances
·changed. Con'I!4Ut.::nt ly. U.S. oil con - of sales on premium gasoline. · I
~ump t ion has rcmajm:d llott whil e tht:!
Whc: re once oil supplicU nc.arly
By DAVID' MASTIO
Detroit News

one-fifth of U.S. electricity needs. it
now gene rate s less power than
renewabh: alterna11veS such us wrnd.
solar and ri ver dams comb ined.
.. Worries ab{)Ut another embargo
are hi ghl y e:-;aggerated,'" o.;aid John ·
Lichtblau. a researc~er at the Petroleum IndustrY Rl;!search Foundation
in New York.·.. Tht! ~ it uat ion is sn diffcrent. it's unlikely you'd have the
same disruptions aga in." '
Such bold se ntimt:nts are :1 fa r cry
from the stark energy outl ook Amer.
icans thought they ful'ed in the years
that fo llowed the initial oil shock
when pfesidents went on TV to urgl!
:K!ople to lower thermostms, anU th e
nalional Chri stma s Tn:e in Washington rcm~lint..'&lt;i dark . asH rcminUt:r.
Still. there are ~ i !! n s th at tmuhle
nlan'y env imn mL· ntan,ls and natinua! security ~ xpert s who w~1rn tarefrl!t:
attitudes :.~bout chea p L.: nergy co uld
spdl problems for rhe indu ~miali ud
\A:orlt.l in th e near fulllre .

With gas clo'e to $ 1 a galh~n .r:tther th:tn the once-proJected pnce
ol $2.50:.1ga ll ~m - moton~ls sp~ nd
more ~imo;; beh1nd t ~.e wheel. nn"img
~o ll ut t ~ n ~o~ cery1:-. . Ovt:r·f..·on:-. umptl on. of ml rs a grave .. t hr~a t tn t~ur
e nvrmr.Hnen~ .as .w d l: sa rJ Damcl
Lashot. ~l scr~ nu~t t.m th~ Na t ur:.~ l
Resoun:~s Defense .c tnrnc l1:
. Amenca's appctde for h1g trucks
1~1steall ~l~ small. ~:ani 1.'\ ~.' conc~rn.
SporHttllllYvch tcle- ~a les JUmped 15
percc:nl last year alone.
Meantime. petroleum imports are ·
expected to rise to 70 perce nt ol' the
oi l we con."'ume in :!5 years.

.

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Former CIA di rec tor J anies

Wool sey~ alls upu.cks

10

A~encan01l

r.mports.. u ~~ccl! ptabl.e , We re ask~ng
~m a ~.:.n~~s rt we don I do some t~m g
,tbout It
But t:rics of aiJrm ah()ut America\
dep&lt;nden.:e on, e&lt;haustible foreign
oil have hee1.1 made before.
It now i s - ~4 years since the Interior Department said oil wells would .
run dry. and th&lt; United States strll
produces 10 million b'1rrels a day.

'

A year after the 1973 Anjb em bar·
go; prominent e nvi ronment~ li s t Paul

··u.S. ~~~ulcrs ~U\vc forg.ott.~n tl~e Eh rlich argued the spiking price or oil
le"''\Ons ot !he tHI cmharg.o. ,;.ud was evidence of ·· a dark age to
Howard Gdler. exet.'Uit\'e director of come." The i'j~ti onal Academ)' of
the Ct)uncil for an Energy-Eflkien t S~o·iences predicted Ame rica woukl
~conomy in Washln).!..t('" · .. Today. nm out or nilund nutural gas by 1999.
nnpons represl!nl 4X percent of oil
What has helped aven that cri sis
~.:onsum pt i on, l'ornpar~ d ro jusl 34
is &lt;.1 healthy dose of energy Conser:
percent in 1973 - wc"re nltlrc vul·· vmion by businesses and average
folks.
··
ncrahk than evt&gt;r."

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Tuesday, November 3, 1998

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

DIANE HILL
Controller

11» S.ntutel weleom•• lener~ to rhe «&lt;ltor from ruders on • bt011d rang. or topb
Short len.r. (300 won:J• or leu) h•v• the O.•f ~hMJce of being pubtiJhtld ryp.a ,.,.
,.,.. ,,. p,.terr.d Mid 1111 may be edlr.d.. EliCh .OOuld lncludt • .Jgnatu,., eddtwu,
and dll,um. phone number. S,.ctty 11 *t. If lh~,.·· • ,..rw.nc. to 11 pr8v#tJtn •rtkl•
or ,.,., Mllilto bn.rt to the Editor. TIN Sentl,.l, 1rt Court St, Po,.roy. ' Ohio
45769; or, FAX to 614-992-2157
I
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Lobbyists, lawmakers
prepare for lame-duck
session across
Ohio
.,

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Assoctated Press Writer
COLUM BUS-Its thao s 111nc ol year agaon
Sh.tdowy ligures roamong the So&lt;ttehouse h.oll s P1.onks pulled on unsus·
peeling l .tw m ~tk c rs
Nope, not Halloween
it s tunc for the l.une dm:k scssmn ol the Leg1slaturc when lobby1sts
look for shoncut s and lawmakers who may be on thetr way out of off1ce may
tiot he: paymg clo se enough attentiOn
People Will be prow long around "saod House Speaker JoAnn D&lt;ovodson,
who w1ll bnng the House hack to Columbus on \ 1hursday
' Yvu vc got a lot of people who make thcor II; ong letting thmgs 1hrough
the Lcgoslature '
Davodson, R-Rc) noldsburg saod she relies on her slaff to keep an eye
\&gt;pe n lor secmmgly onnocuous amendmeniS that o111ght be more substanuve
th.on tbey appear
Stoll, some spec oal mter•st "oil tl) to get some thong enacted durong the
last monute rush Rep W1lham Batchelder R-Medma, predocted Usually,
ot sa company trade group or other orgamzatoon that has a very spectfic
pwblem that 1t etther doesn't want to walt to have ftxed or figures the pub
lie nught not be 100 receptive to
1hc typocal way of dealong w!lh the problem IS to have a member of a leg
tslatovc commmcc add an amendment to a b1ll that JS assured of passmg
The committee may or may not undersland all the ramtficauons of lhe
.m1endment " Batchelder added
'
Talk of refioancong some state bonds has already ra1sed Batchelder's eye

1934, Franklm
D Roosevell 's
first lertn, has
an mt:umbent
party gaoned
seats m an off
Scandal weary voters, seemg few year
ossues of nauonal omponance, are
Steve
plannmg to slay home m drove:s
Grossman,
' Bu1 whole tomorrow's elecuons chaonnan of the
won't change control of the House Democratic
or Senate, they'll have a lot 10 say Nauonal Com- Moller &amp;
about how each pany prepares for a m11tee, mrunat
Anderson
, much more 1mportant contest elec
ed pany regu1
uons on the presodenual year of lars last week when he predocted thai
2000
'
Dcmncrats may lose as many as 20
A ",u.:tory" for Democrats
seats 1n Tuesday's co.rfgressJOnal
meanong a net loss of fewer than 10 elections
scats m the House and tl1rec 1n the
When asked to defend Jumsel(.
' Senate spells leader.hop paralysos Grossman sa1d he spoke h1s mmd to
lor congrcssoonal Republicans that maonlmn hos crcdtboloty as head of
could ~.:arry mer mto the next electhe pany
tion A \ICLOr) for the GOP -But 11 Gross man was \.\Orncd
meanmg 15 or more new scats m the .JIJoul crcd obolny. he may have been
House and a filibuster proof Scn,uc- better olf kecpong Ius mouth shu1 as
- could seal Presodcnl Cion ton s l.ltc Rep Charl es Rangel D-N Y,
as the rust IIH1dcrn Ll3y P'l!'IUcnt (0 advtsed For the dtny ltttle &gt;ecrct of
he unpcachcd
TucsdaJ s e l e~..:twn 1s th1s Less th,m
Only m Washmgton couid .1 net three months al te r DcnHX:I&lt;ltJL canlos:s -- and there w1ll he a net loss -- didates appeared destmed to lie s1 t
spe ll VH.:lOry lor Democrats That s ton g ducks m November, they rc
hecause ohc party on the Whote now p01scd to mm1m1ZC thc1r losses
House has lost an avcf .1gc of 22 10 levels undreamed or Jll"t weeks
seats m m1dterm clct:tJons datmg ago
back 10 World War II Noll soncc
Most neutral analysts belocve the

Democrats wolllose about I 0 House
seats. and three or four m tbe Senate
11 says here that both sodes are
wrong and that Democrats wolllose
a net of two to five m the House, and
two m the Senate That's a bog-time
won for Democrats, who would be m
shouting dostance of reclaommg at
leas! !he House m 2000
Thos sccnarto honges on two
recenl bu1 unexpected' develop·
ments GOP weakness m Calofornoa,
whtch they ve bastcally conceded to
Dcmocratoc candodales, and Dcmocrals holdmg thetr own 1n the South - where the GOP os pounngSIOmol·
lion mto antt Chnton adve rt1smg as
a way of boostmg turnout
h means that Sen Ernest
Holhngs. D-S C must hold off
Repubhcan challenge r Bob In glo s
Sen Barbara Boxer, D Cahf must
mam1am her lead over challenger
Map Fang. and Sen Hmry Rco4, DNcv must wm hiS slugfcsl woth
Repubhcan John Ensogn It also
means Demot:ratJL candidates ha\ c
to break eve n m 1he cru coal Ohoo
Rover Valley, where nearly a dozen
sc~1 t s arc still m play Recent tra&lt;.:k ~
ong polls show thmgs breakuig 1he
Demoaals way, hut thm gs ca n
change on a hurry thos close to ElectiOn Day
Also ornmous lor the Rcpubh

11Jt;~!;llt COMMUNI~II/\ 1 \'IE

11"11

1'0tATOI0~,8UT~l&lt;Y ~
litO"Tn:N I'OT,trrO~$.

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brows

"That s JUSt a goft to the on vestment ban kong ondus1ry ' saod Batchelder,
who os glllng to be a 1.1mc duck himself The second-rankmg Republican
gll\e up ho s House seat 10 run lor JUdge back home
Overall, though , Batche!Mer doesn't expec1 as many shenanogaos thos year
.ts mother lame-duck seSsiOns he 's served mover h1s 30-year career m lhe
Lc~t~slmurc

For one thong, you can lorgct about any attempt at a post-electoon pay
r.nsc for lawmakers he satd George Vomo\lch has refused to sogn them
The fact that Vomovo ch os also on hiS way out 'of office also reduces ~o me
of tl1c hkehhood of somethong sltppmg through the Legtslaoure without
bcong fully debated, Batchelder ,nod Sometimes a mtd-tertn governor puts
the heat on lawmakers to gel somcthong onto law, he explamed
No1 every ptecc of lame-duck lcgtSiatJOn comes and goes quo etly
the people who put sl.!le Issue I on the ballot blamed specoal mterest
prc$su1c on key sen.tt orS dunng p lame duck sess10n m 1994 ror the Lcglsl.llure s dcc1s1on to allow mourm ng dove huntmg m the first place And
r.: nvtronme ntal groups .1re still b1t1cr over lawmakc1s ' dec1s1on .tt the end ol
the 1996 sess1un to allow ~,; ompan1es 10 est:.!pc pumshmcnt and public sc1uti
n) ol they voluntaroly clc.m up thcor polluuon
In both t.:.1scs ~u.lvo\.:atcs on cad1 Side ol the 1ssuc h\lcd Ihc Statehouse to
lobl)y for 1he or cause
rhe most hkely c.ondodatc lor stc.lllh lc gos latoon tillS ycao lhc $1 6 btl lion
l:.!phal bill - the states bJCmu.d vo~sh )1st lor sr.: hool hUJidmgs spoils stad1
ums( ans centers and o1hc:1 puhl1c hu1ldmg proJects
Th.1t s ,1 t1cmcndous vch H.:lr.: Jm 1111st:hu~l Batchclde1 said

t'LL HAVE Tl-'~
G~IL\..EO CHE:ESE
SA~PW~ A"'D A.
GlASS OF WA"f~~-

AccuWealh~ forecast for daytome condotoomr. low/lugh temperatures

-.

cans are races that once looked '
wonnable and are now slippong
away Sen Patty Murray, I)-Wash,
looks ready to dtspose of the gutsy
Londa Sm1th, and Sen Russell Feongold, D-Wts, IS holdong off Republican Mark Neumann despote masSIVe nauonal advertosong on Neumann's behalf
That's st1ll a far cry from las1
spnng, when Dcmocrals were openly (and realtsttcally) talktng about
takmg back the House by gammg I I
or more scats Bul tt's also a long
way (rom GOP pred1ct1ons a few
' when ms1ders were pn
weeks ago,
vately pred1ctong results SJmolar 10
1994, when Qongro ch s troops
achoeved a 54-seat lurnover and C.1pturcd the House
More mleresung 1han Tuesday's
rc sulls woll be the resulung effec1 on
mternal GOP poltttcs
and the
cffec1 on 1he 2000 elccuon Rankand fole Republicans are already
funous woth 1heor leade(shop for cavmg m to Clinton s demands on ohe
budget fhey can't understand why
Gtngr!ch and company sogned off on'
a 4,000 page mon stros ity of a budget boll wnhou1 consultong the
troops, at a ttme when the pres1dent
was staggcro ng on . the Lewonsky
ropes
Further cumpiJcatmg matters
Thts woll be the thord term tor the
Rcpubhcan revoluuon.trles of 1994,
a class thai came to office m pan
because of 11s unammous support for
term hmtls Come January, they ' ll
have to choose between abandomng
those vows or gomg back to provate
hfe
An elecuon setback woll turn up
the heat on Gongnch and Anney,
already unpopular among many tn
the fac110nalozed GOP caucus Gongnch has already saod lhts wtlt be hts
last term as speaker
Already there IS talk of another
coup At least seven Republicans
have thetr eye on !he speakershop _
and are quoetly llnmg up &gt;otes
among thetr colleagues Battle lines
are bemg drawn, and the electoon
tsn' t over yet Thai's bad new s for a
party that needs to recapture lhe
Wh1te House tn two years ·
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for Unii~d Feature.
Syndicate, Inc.

"

thai
It
was
hokcy and lnte
but we t1lso
cn ed our eyes
out when Ashe
ly Judd dtcd
And
th nught t~bout ,t
ne ws clop I'd
reccnll y seen on
Rohclt Altman
Eckel
The dorccloo of '
SUl:h
Wttlely
&lt;Jcc lalln cd lolm, ·IS The Player
and · N.1sh\o1lle was IUJ ccd to rc
wook fhc Gongcthtead Man last
)Car when tes t .audJCnccs g.tve the
tdm .t lukew~um 1csponsc
Altm.m lollowcd the orders of
Pnlyg1am producers .md IC ed ited
the fohn Jhoc c dli lc ocn t tom es but
the s~..:o rc s neve1 went up So Poly
1 he G1ngcrh1c.1d
gr(1m took
Man" away from Altman and gave
1t to ~1nother three tor
When that vcrsoon got even
lnwe1 scores, Polygram offered
Altmlln the mo\lc agatn wtth
mstruct10n s for rcv1 s1on s
But tillS time Altman put hts
foot down He would do fhc movo e
lm w.ty or he wouldn 1 do 11 at all
The res ult was a film thai got great

revocws but dtd poorly al the box
ofloce
Altman believes that the folm's
commercial laliure was due to the
fact that Polygram cxccutoves,
angry that Altman had publocly
L:flta.:JZcd the fut:us-group process,
dodn 't promote 1he movte properly
'I thtnk th e f1lm was buned ' Altman told CNN
Once I &gt;~as actuall) on MY
lm.: us gro up 1ts lure \.\as hard to
resost For th e most part I stayed
t) uc to my vow
only ra1smg my
h.md ~o say that a scene was
exce ll ent ' or very good, ' and
llCVCI VOICing any CritiCI Sms
Th1s was easy lo do Sln t:c 1t
was actually a prelly good fohn
But then so meon e went on about
how they lmcd the mother character, who I thought was ve ry weazk
When someone else Sdld she
thought the mother was " too earlOon-y" the moderator "asked of
aoyonc else agreed And that's
when I dod It I betrayed the dorec tor I raosed my hand
That s the problem w1th focus
grou)&gt;S The) are des1gned to make
you v1ew a film as a work 10
progress and they natter you onto
thmkm g you can actually omprove

By Joseph Spear
For months now, you· ve been
heanng about what a gra nd loar B•ll
Clonlon JS and I've been telhng you
they all do 1t
Indeed Washongton, DC , os a
vortual vtper's nest of Ioars The pols
• do ot the lawyers •do 11, the dlplu
mats do n, the bureaucrats do 11 the
· ·' spokesperso ns do 11
'
Lyong os a way ol lofc '" ohc
nation's capual Lyong makes the
qc;_~
0 '.19fl by NtA, Inc
town go round
,
Concerned about the global economic
In fact , you JUSl wuncsscd the
Imal c vent m the annual B 1g Lu;
crisis, Wall Streeters are not spending
Fes tival and you ullc1cd h.ud y .1
the way they once did.
wh1mpcr ul protest
Congress passed the last ptccc ol
the hudgct and the p1esJdcnt s1gncd
11 ~md they 10ld us Amt:m.:.l 1s !mo.:
ltseally speakong
They tolt.l us they h.1d kt:pt IlL w
CXpt: tHJitUi eS With Ill thl: )lll11h p rC\ I
Dy The Assocoaled Press
uwdy .tgJccd tO hy the Cong1ess .111LI
[oday os Tuc,d.t) Nm 1 lh&lt; 107th d.t) ul IYYX lheoe .trc 58 d.l)' lei!
t h ~..: Wh1h.: Hou-.e
111 tti~.: yc~~r 1 h1s Is Elcd1on D 1y
That 1s .1 he The p1csa.lcnt .md
lmltiY s Hrghllght m Htstory
th.,; l.nvm.1kL:: rs at..:tu.llly unl!lo.:nll.:d tu
On Novc.:mhcr ' 1900 the 111 . ,1 LIUhJiluthde . , hnw 1n the Unu~d St.llc~ :b2 1 hll hon wm th of ext! &lt;1 sp\.:nLhng
up~.:nc.:J .1t New Ymk s Mad1;.,on Squ.ue G.uJt:n undc1 the .1u~p1.:es 11! the
hut man.tgcd w sq ueeze 1f 111 .111~
Autmnobtk Cluh of Amc11c.J
t..:.unoutl.tgc 11 hy .t ~ I C ~.:Jn g to tin
()n thts date
~.:qu.tl .unount of
Clllt: I ~~.;IH:v
In I H68 Rcpubl~&lt;an Uly"e' S Gldlll \\On th..: prlsJdc.nJJ .II ck~..:t1on mer spend111g th.tl 1s cxdnpto.:d hom the
0l'll'lo~.:tat Hor.uw Sl!ymour
lmm II L:~.:lhngs
In IX96 , Rcpuhllt:an Wllll311l MlKmlc.:y di.:l t.:.ah:d Dt.:mnu;lt WJIII.Jlll Jcn
Rchr.:f !01 l.umels pc h.c~ccpmg
111ngs Bry,m tor the pn:s1dcm:v
o.:Xpcnsc!'l 111 Busn1&lt;1 thL Yc.u 2000

'

computer problem -- all were
class1 f1Cd
as
emergency
p1 ohlcms
They wid us
th at
revenues
w1ll
exceed
expcnduureS1 Jn
the new l1scal
year and 1ha1 we
woll enJOY a $70
Spear
h1llmn
surplus
fha1 IS a loc
We wo ll actually .octrue .1 $29
h1lhon dellut
Th1s IS hcc,JUse the gove1nmcnt
,\ s II h.\S t01 the fldSt 10 ) C.lrs COil·
t1nues to ~..:o unt Sn~,;wl Sc~..:U I I t ) ~md
OlhCI tiUS( lund 111UIHL:S .Is lt.:g:ul,u
llll:Oill U

1 h~: hUJC,IUli,\IS Sllll ply t.akc II
hum the tru:-.1 !unds r~placc 1t wu h
t.:llx:lltiiiiL IOUs ,mJ us~.: the mnney
.1~ gcnu.il l ...:'' ..:nu~s In the new hud
glt the riC&lt;l'&gt;UIY will l kc $91) bJl IJon !rom the trust lunds
Subtt.tct the $70 holl11m 'uoplu , .ond \CHit' - ,, $29 holloon
tldJ(.:I[
Wh,u s worse 1s th.H' they do n 1
count the mon..:y hol lllWcd ll lllll the
t1U st luntls &lt;~gd m st till puhl l\.: tkbt
Jt s 11~..:,\tctl .ts ,\ simple 11.ansle1 ol
fun ds h~.:t\v c~.: n gmc1n m~.:nt .1gen-

ctes And smce they dodn't really
borrow anythmg, then It follow s, by
theor reasonong that the Interest
they pay the trust funds doesn' t
count as a real ex.pend1ture, eltber
T&lt;ilk about your faory dust'
And that bnngs me to the bo ggcst
lt c of all, whoch IS 1he omplo callon
that our nauon os fonally llvmg a solve nt ex 1stence
--4
No, no, no We are, m ract , woefully. froghtfully on debt More than
$5
tn I loon
on
debt
$5 156 liS 2(}9 669 62 (.os of October 28 .tl 7 05 p m ) od be exact
And worse we have no plans to cor
ICCI th1s sad anO st:ary and JJshonor,,hlc si tuat iOn
A "'111·111 1.\~..:tlon ol lc g Jsl.ttors
w.uus to spe nd ~mtiUJMicd su1pluses
to JM} down the debt thus savnw
hlll 1on-. ol doll.us a )C.H m 1ntc1csl
p.1ymcnts .md dc.umg the books lor
ou1 t: hllllrc n ,\Jlll gtanddu ld1e n
It won t he too Jon~ lo1 cxam plr..: hclorc the Bo01nc~ ~cnt:l,ltJon
hc g111s to deplete the Soc~al Se~..: un
ty lund and th e gmcmmcnl w1ll
need tn lm11ow more to meet the
dcm,md
Mn~l

Demnt.:l.lts, how..:vc1. w.mt
to spend tht.: surpl uses hu soc lcll
prngJ.lllls Most Rcpuhii\.:,\Jls want
tu "rend some ol It lb1 nullt.uy pu1
po~o .UlJ 11..: tu1nthc 11.:st1n the lorm

-~----.&lt;.. ------v '
.-L:.:.~··--- ~ William A. Byers
Wolham A Byer.; 76. Warren tunnerly of Meog' Cuunl), doed Sunday
Nov I. 1998 on the Vencor Hospo!al on Fon Lauderdale. Fla
LT~;I~j~ '3r~'~
Arr.mgements w1ll .:.mnounl.:td by the Cremeen"' Funeml Home Ra..: me
I YCMjno•town [30,:142' ]
Florence Henegar
L~11!'!1]32'L4): . •
;
PA

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• ~!lotu_mbua

ol For a tleeung moment, you get
to be on show boz - 1 tel long dtrec
tors and producers, "You dtd some
n1ce work here , but here 's how you
could make ot better
In ohe end, the dtrector of thos
ftlm neede&lt;\ no protectoon
H1s low budget dark comedy
was very entertammg and had no
obscure references, no long rambling scenes and no na"y characters gettong away woth murder In
fact, 11 was almost too crowdplcasong
Though 11 dod have some dolfocult sceoes and bottng doalogue
cverythong "as neatly resolved a1
the end -- With the modes! and shy
und erdo gs hapP,tly on love and
theor brash and conn&gt;vo~ oppre~ ­
so rs doomed to a lofe ol loneliness
and de spatr
~ I lelt the theater lhmkong that '
there was no need for the producers to water th1s mov1e down to
make ot palatable 10 a mass audience
The dtrector had done that homself
Sara Eckel is a writer for
Newspaper Enterprise Association.
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Hobert K. Vineyard

p_2'£44' j

Hoben Kenh Vmeyard, 58, Belpre doed Sunday, Nov I 1998 at hos res
1dence
He was born March 10. 1940 m Long Bouom, 'on of Mae o,borne Vone
yard ot Reedsvolle, and the' late Hoben Voneyard He was a reured carpen·
ter for Parkersburg Tile Company for 34 yea"
He was a member of the Parkersburg Carpenters Local 899, Amenean
Legoon Pn,t IS. the Ohoo Bog Bucks C lub and th e Sl Paul United Methodo't
Church ot Tuppers Plaons
Survovmg m addotoon to hos mother are hos wote Carol Collons Voneyard
thre~ daughters and son,·on·law T(na Mane and Ken Bremar and Meli"a
Dawn and Tom Hunyady. all ol Vorgmoa Beach Va . and Boll10 Jean and Keoth Loweol Westervolle, three grandcholdren two brothers Charb Voneyard
of Arkansas. and Ern"'t Voneyard ol Reedsv olle. two sosters. Mary Frances
Vmeyard ol Reedsvolle, and Janel Golland of Locust, and several noeces and
nephews
Servoces will be II am Thursday on the St Paul Unoted Melhodtsl Church.
Tuppers Plaons. wnh !he Rev Sharon Hausman ollocoatong Bunal w1ll be'"
Tuppers Plaons Cemetery. woth m1l11ary mes by Amencan Legoon Post 15
Froends may call at !he Whne Funeral Home Coolvolle from 2-9 p m
Wednesday
Memonal contrtbuuons may be made 10 Home Nursmg Servtce and Hospo ce, 900 Thord St. Manetta Oh1o 45750

•...., I
._,

WWc

'1 _Pof!o~_J:Je'/48' '
) -·

Early taste of winter will
be evident across Ohio
By The Associated Preas
Deuer bundle up. The Natoonal Weather Servoce says ot's gomg to be cholly
across Ohoo lhe next few days
Dayttme temperatures won't climb out of !he 40s and mghtume low s wtll
be on the 20s at least through Saturday, forecasters saod.
Through the penod, there"s a chance of ram or snow showers near Lake
Ene m the northeast
The record-h1gh temperature for thos date at the Columbus wealher sta
lion was 80 degrees on 1987 whtle the record low was 20 m 1991 Sunset
tonoght will be at 5·27 p m and sunnse Wednesday at 7 04 am
Weather forecast:
'
Ton1ghl Mostly cloudy and colder Lows on the mod 30s Nonh wond 5
to 10 mph
Wednesday Panly sunny Hoghs 45 to 50
Wednesday mght Panly cloudy and chtlly Lows around 30
Extended forecast:
Thursday Partly cloudy Htghs only 45 to 50
Fnday and Saturday. Dry and contonued cholly Momong lows 25 to 30
Hoghs m the mod and upper 40s

Hobert Keith Vineyard
Hoben Keoth Voneyard, 58, ol Belpre, doed Sunday, November I, 1998
at h1s resodence
He was born March 10, 1940 on Long Bo~tom,.&lt;on of Mae Osl&gt;orne Vmeyand of Reedsville. and the late Hoben Vineyau:l':'
• '
He was a re11red carpenter tm lhe Parkersburg :r11e Comp,my for 14 yettrs
He was a member ot the Parkersburg Carpentdrs Local 899. Amen can Legoon
Post 15.the Ohto B1g Bucks Club and the S1 Paul Untted Method!'! Church
nl Tuppers Plums
He JS also survtved by hos wote, Carol Collms Vmeyard. three daughters
,tnd sons-In-law. T111a Mane and Ken Brem~tr, and Melissa o.,\.\on anti Tom
Hunyady. all of Vorgmoa Beach Vtrgonoa. and Bolhe Jean .ond Keoth Lowe of
We,tervolle, three grandcholdren, Knston and Aaron Bremar ol Vorgmoa Beach,
.tnd Keoth Ausun Lowe of Westervolle. two brothers. Chari&lt;&gt; Vmeyard of
Arkansas, and Ernest Vmeyard ot Reedsvolle , two Mster' Mary Fr.onces Vmeyard ot Reedsvolle, and Janet Golland ol Locust and several noeces and
nephews
,
Servoces Will be Thursday. November 5, 1998 at II a m m the S1 Paul
Umted Methodtsl Church, Tuppers Pfatns, wtlh the Rev. Sharon Hausman
oflictatmg Bunal Will follow on !he Tuppers Plams Cemetery. wolh molotary
ntes by Amerocan Legton Post 15
Fnends may call Wednesday, November 4, 1998 from 2 9 p on a( the
Whote Funeral Home Coolvolle
Memoroal contnbutoons may be m~de to Home Nursong Servoce and Hospice 900 Tho nd S1 , Manetta Ohoo 45750

Defense secret51ry travels
to consult with U.S. allies
WASHINGTON (A P) - Preso
dent Clinton 'ent Defen'e Secretary
Wolloam Cohen 10 Europe and the
Persoan Gull 10 con,ul( wnh U S
.1lhes on n:spondmg to lr.1q's l.uesl
deliance on U N arm s on,pecuons
Admm1slr~tt1on ntf1t:1.1ls were
ughtllpped on 1hc spec.: die s of
Cohen s m1ss1on ex~.;ept lo sa¥ he
departc:d Monday ntght They would
nnt ,ay exactly what he would dts·
cuss or whtch countnes he would vos1l
The Gull alltes, oncludon g Saudo
Arabta. have been reluctant to sup pon U S, 1m1htary actoon agaonst Ira})
The Saudis recently have refu sed to
sanction U S aor strokes agaonst Iraq
Irom Saudo suo I
Cohen rushed back to Washongton
0\er the weekend .ohruptly abonong
a .tn p to As1a m order to auend national secunty meetings at tbC White
House
After ~ s~!JdJP~ an ,l)OJ-" , lrl'!h
Cohen Secretary ol State MaJckone
Albnghl and other nat1onal sicunty
ollie
tal&gt; Monday Clonton\aod Iraq\
1
announu~d deus1on to stop t.:ooper
atmg wnh UN arm s tn speLtors w11l

Ohioah convicted of murder
The 'Daily Sentine.~.
(liSPS 113 960)

Connaunlly New.,.perHukll•p.int
Published '"r.ry afternoon Monday th1'0ugh
Fnday, Ill (.01.1rl St Pomeroy, Ohio by t~
OhiO Valley Pubh~ht~g Company Second ctau
poslagc pa11.l at PIJincpoy, Oh10
Member: The A.or.WCI:tt ..d Pl't§ and 1he Ohio
Ncw~papcr As&amp;x:l.utiun
Fuslmuter: Send adan:JS cqrrcchuns 10 The
,r;;~ Scnlmel, 111
Sl , Pomeroy, Oh•o

Cour

By Curler or Motor Roule

One Week

o .. Monlh
One Year

•
_.

1

..

.S2 00
S&amp; 10

SI04 00

Dally SINGLE C.JPY prJCE 35 Ccnls
·,uhscrtbcrs not c.lcs1nng 10 jliY lh., camer may

remit madvarttc dtrec\lo'J1lopa.ly Se1t.mel on

a 1hrce st~~; or 12 n"Onth h~. Credil wll ~
gwen canter etc~ v.et".t
No 5ubscupbor by mail perm1Utd Ln areas
where home catrJe, !i.Cr."W icie It lllltlable
Publisher res~rvcs lht nghl ui adJUSt r.a.!es d,n
1ng tilt subsalpuon penod Sub5crtpllon .ale
change!\ may be tmpkmenlcd by chama,ma lhe
duml11m of Ihe ~ubS~;nplron
MAILSUBSCRLP110N

Inside Mclp C~Mr•t)'
13 Weeks
26 Wer.ks

, .$27 30
.S53 82
52 Week:;
.$1 05 S6
R1tts Outsklc{~hlp ..:'ooml)'
13 Weeks
:.- $'29 25
26 Weeks
$5.S 68
S2 Weckll
$109 72

4

Reader Services
:

.

CotreCtlon Polley

Our mum ~cent In all stories Is 'o be
accunte If JOU know or an error In a
stor--1, call the newsroom at (740) 992·
215S We will check your lnformalion
a,_d make a cort'fttlon If warnntfd.

News Departmentr.
fhe main number Is 992-2155

Depsr.~

menl extensions are:
1

General Manager.o........................ ,Ext 1101
New!i
!Ext lH·l
or£xt !106

Other Services
Ad•rrtlslng..
:::::::::::::: :::::: : Exl,
IIC4
Clrculatmn ··~
Ext 1163
Cla,.IOed Ad•
.Exl 1100

PARKERSBURG, WVa (AP)An Ohoo m.m ha' been convocted ol
murder lor drovmg over and kollmg a
man 10 a West V1rgm1a mght dub
pMkmg lot
Dern~.:k Greathm.tto.
:!0, ol
Columbus, was conVICted Mond~\Y b~
a Wood County JUry atter two days ot
Jelabt=rallons
Greathouse drove over' Charl~s
- G~tskl ns, ~5. ,md Myn n Wadenker
last November m the parko ng lot ol
the Common Grounds bar Ill Park ersburg Gaskons doed, but Wadenker
surv1veJ

""'""'""'""'':;:'"""""'""'":'""'""""'""''il
lr

Stocks

Am Ele Power ................... 49 5/8
Akzo ... .. ..... . .. .. .. .39 7/8
AmrTech .. .. .. ..... ...52 3/4
Ashland Oil ................... 49 7/8
AT&amp;T ................... 61 5116
Bank One .. ,..... . .. .50 13116
Bob Evans . .. .. . .. ...... .. .. 20
Borg-Warner . .. . .. .. 48 7/16
Broughton ......... , .... 18 1/16
Champoon ..................... 10 1/8
Charm Shps .,... .
.3 5/8
City Holding.... ........
36 1/4
Federal Mogul
., ........ 58
Gannell .. .. .. ..
63 3/4
Goodyear.... ... ..
.. 56 1/4
Kmart. ...... .. ..
.. 145/6
Kroger.. .. .. ....... .. .. 56 13116
Lands End ..................... 16 7/8
Ltd "' " " .. ' ' "
.. 26 1/2
Oak Hill Flnl . . ...... 191/2
OVB ...... .......... ........
........ 44
One Valley .. .. .
...32 7/8
Peoples .. .. ...
25 1314
Prem . .. ..........
. 18
Rockwell • . . ..
. 43 1/8
RD/Shell .. .. .. ..
. . 48 7/8
Sears . •............... 46 11/16
Shoney's . . . ..
... 1 7/8
Star Bank........
.. ....74 314
Wendy's . • ............ 21 5/16
.. .... 13 3/8
Wosrthonglon .

-·-·-

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

I

Florence Henegar, 85. Pomeroy. doed Tuesday. NQv. 3, 1998 on the Rock
sprongs Rehabohtauon Cen1er Pomeroy
Armngements Will be announced by the Pomeroy Chapel of the Fl'her
Funeral Home

).•

~(~

suBSCRII"TlON RATES

of tax cuts
It sounds worthy unul you e.amme the log1c The people whu lead
us wan1 to contmue borrowmg from
Socoal Secunty to fund new programs or to finance oax cuos
Puttong ot candtdly They want to
contonue buymg votes woth your
Socoal Secunty money
For 200 years, except m umes of
war or economic emergency, th1s
nallon ran budget surpluses
It was voewed as good sense and
the moral !hong 10 do In 1969 we
hcgan to run def1c11s to lmance rou
line government spe ndmg and
accrued n $5 6 tnlloon debt
Thos os not some amorphous ftgure owed to somebody' Tins os
real money owed to l1oldcos ol U S
lrcas ury notes bills ,md hond s - a
filth ol them oncodcntally lrom lor
c1gn nattons
The Jcll crsons and tht.: J.Kksons
.1nd !he Coolldgcs and ohc Trumans
.md the E1scnhowc rs 1ook 1t upon
thcmsehc, to keep_, ltd on ohc debt
Tht.: ~:Uircnt c1op 111 Washtnl!ton
docsn t gtvc a t..lamn
...
I s.1y th~.:y .uc .1 lhsm,H.:c to the
Ametu.:an legacy
..
Joseph Spear os a syndicated
wnter for Newspaper Enterprise
Associat1on.

~

I

4

There are some good films and bad films

By Sara .Eckel
I've always thought that movoe
locus groups arc one of the great
enem1es of Amencan cullure
ngh1 up there wllh Jes se Helms
and Tom Arnold The fact that
directors often hav e to ,!Iter the1r
folm s b ~ca use Dan 10 Dubuque
dodn t get ot or Betty 111 Boca Ra10n
found 11 ollens1vc IS the very Jcaso n so many ol Holly" ood 's oiler
on gs arc tep1d and bl&lt;ontl
So )OU can omagon c my deltght
when I was acoually .1\ kcd 10 participate on a locus gooup
Before the c1ed11s 10lled I made
,, so lemn vow I would be 1he
director 's fnend No matt c1 how
dcpressmg the cndmg no mallei
how obscure the 1efe1Cnt:cs no
matt er d the mo v1e w.rs JU SI pl.un
bad, I would defer to hos vtsoo n I
would not .make suggestmn s on
huw ot should be changed
After all there are lots of greal
folms I don ' t care for -- 'C111zen
Kane ," "Tax1 Dn ver ' ' Chma
town" - thank God nu one asked
me 10 1mker wnh these classiCs
And there are plenty of really bud
lilms that I qune enJoyed Rec ently, I saw "Somon Borch " woth
1 some fneno s, and we all agreed

----..

The lies keep coming from Washington

Today in history

Death Notices

.Wednesday, Nov. 4

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
The congressoonal modtenn electoons are only hours away but many
expens are already wroung off the
whole spec1acle as a ho-hum affaor

'Esta6{1Sfittf 111 1948

Berry's
World

Ohlo weather

Tueaday, November 3, 11198

The real contest is still two years away

'

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

Page2

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

•

I

-Local News in Brief:~:
Commissioners open own website
The Me1g" Cuunty Commi",IOn~r' have opened the1r own "'c!b page on
the mternet The page will featun: s1te' ror ull three ul the county ~.;umm•~·
'lOners. an update on pend on~ lego,lat1on and an oppununHy for ohe public
to provu.Je mput to lhe bo.mJ acf.:ordmg tu Comm1 ... ,1oner Jettrey Thornton
The webslt..: 1~ lo..:ated al http //www e'urekanel com /-me1gsco"

•

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One-car accident injures motorist

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A one-car act.:Jdent on State Rnutc 692 on Monday "'en I a Rutl;md man to
an area hospual lor oreatment ol onjuroe&gt;. 1he Galha·M•og&gt; Posl ol the S!ale
Hoghway Paorol reported
~
1
John L Young. 22 73 Nelson Road wa" transponeJ from the ~~.e nt! of
the 7 45 am accodent by the Meog' EMS tu Holzer Medocal Center accund- :
mg tl;.J the patrol He was later treated and relea.,.ed for a lral:tured rad1us, a •
hn'&gt;pltal spokl!sperson sa1d
:
Troo~rs s;.hd Young was northbound m Sc1p10 Town~h1p when he la1led : Y
to nav1gate a curve and went &lt;)II the nght stde of the road The car he drove •
came bat.:k on the mad and then slu.J ott the left ~1de, where 1t "trud a tree
~
Young told troopers he swerved 10 avood colhston wuh a deer on 1he road.
at:cordmg to the report The car was ~verely damaged, and Young was Cited tor la1lure 10 control
In another Monday accodent o~ve, ugaoed by the patrol John C Chaney
II. 23. 4557 ~ Vonegar St. Racone, wa' uted for 1mproper backong
Troopers saod Chaney was stopped-eastbound on County Road 20 (Rockspnngs) at 12 05 J&gt;m when he rolled ""'!bound and colloded w1th a anodr
er eastbound vehocle dnven by Renee Mernll, 45 36050 Rocksprongs Road, ,
Pomeroy who wa' also slopped
'
•
Moderale damage wa' reported to .Mernll scar, whole sloght damage was · •
h&gt;ted tn the p1ckup truck dnven by Chaney

CAA submits proposal

•... ••
(Continued from Page 1)
1pant wages as a part ot the agency s se:cond proposal
. . .•
The plan submoned by the Unoversoty ot Roo Grande would serve an esto.:,:
mated IOO'cloen ts and would provode vocauonal tramong lhrough the uno ~
vers1ty s Me1gs Center
.~
The commossooners must adopt a plan by the end ol the year on order 1(1, ,
be a 'panne rshop county woth lhe Ohoo Dei)arlment of Human Servo&lt;-es The.
welf,Jr&lt;-10-WOrk plan IS a part of the stateS well are reform program, desogned
to 'bre.tk the cycle' of dependency on public asmtance ,
Hottman '\U.Id that h~ prelt:rred JOb tr~unmg upportu111t1es m the pnvate
,ector rather than publoc sector JObs (such a' mowong ccmetenes and pe r,
lornung J-lnoton,tl work on 'c hnob) a11d Reed '"'d that the CAA propo,al
could on dude pro vate socoor JOb,, a' well
,
ln other hu~1ness tht! t:onums . . Joners s1gned a resolUtiOn declanng November as V10lence Agamst Women/Women Empowerll'\ent Month
Pro se~..: utlllg Attorney John Lentes m!i!l Wtth 1he hoard to d1scuss vanouloi
programs mdudmg self de tense and se ll -reahzat1on programs that Will~
(.;Onducted 1hrough the county's VICtims asststan~.:e program dunng the month
ot No\ ~:mber
lntormatwn ~lbout the programs 1s available I rom tht: proliet:uton offlt.:e
,and r~g1strat1on must be madt! no later th.m Nov 12
The txJ.Jrd aulhon«d a loan on the .unuunt ol $135 (~)()for the county hogh- ~
way department to meet current expen,es assocoated wuh FEMA llood
rep.urs The loan v.oll be p.ud oil when FEMA lunds are rccetved
The ho.ml .tpproved 1he loan through Eormers B.onk &amp; Savongs Co 1
Pomeroy. at a rate of 4 percent Other onterest rates were obt.u ned from Home
Natoonul Bank. at 4 95 percenl Peopb Bankong and Trus1 Co, 5 21 per
cent. and Coty Nauonal Bank , 6 percent
The commossoone" also approved transfers ollunds for the jlrosecutor's
office and the board of elections
Pre,ent. on addotoon to Lentes and Reed, were Davod Spencer of t~ e hogh
way department, Cummossooners Halfman. Jell Thomton and Janet Howard,
and Clerk Gloroa Kloes
1

,

backlire He satd 'no opt &gt;On' are otf
the table' for a po"oble re spo n'e
"S.oddam Hu,eon s late't retu,al
to cooperate wnh the ontern.ouon,ol
weapons Jnspet:lnrs 1~ t:omplet ely
unaccepoable, Clinton sa od Once
Llgam though. It Will ba~..: ~lire Far
trom1 d1v1dmg the 1nternano"nal com
munhy and ach~t!vtn g conces~tons.
h1s obstruc.:IJOmsm \.\as 11nmed1.ttely
,ond unanoonou sly co ndemned by the
Uno ted Nal!ons Secunt) Coun&lt;OI It
h.ts only st::rvetl to deept!n the IIller~
n.l1JOnal community s resolve •
Clmtnn s rem.lrks were me.mt to
underltne th~lt Amen~..:an 1ml1lary
slnkes remam an option although
Pentagon ollicmls smtl no movement
ot extr.t troops !hops or weapons was
under way In addotoon to about 110
U S Aor Force aorcraft stauoned on
the Gull regoon, the U S Navy has 13
shops m the area oncludong a battle
group led by the aorcralt earner USS
The Repubhc~n Nauonal Con1(Contonued from Page 1)
pwoghj D Etsenhow&amp;r 1~ th~ .;\.raboloster' press se,retar} R.ochael mouee os spendmg hundred&gt; of tho1u-·
an Sea
Abo, sox Aor Force B-52 bomber\ \ Swt"eny s,uJ ·The r._\ce 1s down to s.tnds of doll.1rs .unng TV ad'\ mthe1
armed woth aor-launched cruose mos- crunch tnne and 11 s g~ttmg very dosmct m support ol Hollister
soles woth 2,000 pound warheads are close
Clotf-~anger elections .tre the
on stauon m England
norm 1n the fith D•~tnl:l Dun ng Ihe
past three dect10ns the wmner won
by le" than 7 I(K) votes and each •
•
f
..
tune
the voters lossed out the meum
ur11ts at the Me1gs County Emer- Central D1 spa rch squad a~~ Isled
be
no
gency Medo ca l Servoce recorded
stx
'
RACINE
A, of Oct 14 Strockland\ cam
calls tor ass1st~mce Mond.ty Umts
10 18 am, Fotth and Pearl streets
By
paogn reported $292.475 on hos trearespondmg mt·luded
Mane Boyd VMH, Central D"
' ury but the money already ha' been
CENTRAL DISPATCH 1
patch squad a"os1ed
spent
on add1110nal advert1smg to
12 34 a m
Condor Street
RUTLAND ' counter
a natoon.ol GOP televoS!on
Pomeroy, Troy Todd Veterans
7 54 .t m • ;olunteer tore dep.tn~,;ampa1gn 111 -.upport ol Hollister
Memoroul Hmpotal, Pomeroy 'quad menl and 'quad to State (l.oute 692,
of
Goode saod
USSISted
motor veh1cle .~~..:ctdent.,John Young.
1
' We're JUst gelling k1lletl by the
Bottle
7 19 p on Pe.orl St&gt;eel Racone. HMC. Sctpoo Townshop V,FD assostRepublocan
,olt-money
ad
camSherne Reedy Holzer Medocal Cen- ed
pa1gn · Goode sa1d
ter, Ra..:m e squ.u.l ~JssJsted
SYRACUSE
A pess1m1st burns h1s bndges
POMEROY
8 I0 a on , Oak Grove Road
before he gets to them
8 41 am Rockspnngs Rehl.lblh
Rac1ne, one-car motor vehtcle accitatoon Center Fredenca Fans VMH. dent, Mo chael Ball, VMH, Racone
squad and V FD assosted
Peacock a chicken 1n bloom

Congressional campaign

4

Tl)e Ligl) f
Toacl)

EMS units record 6 calls

Dave
Grate
Gas

Meigs announcements .

Town meeling
Red Brush Church ol Chmt on
A Tuppers Plams to\.\o n meetmg Bashan Road, S.uurday, 7 p m and
woll be held Thuosday. 7 p on ,\1 1he Sunday, I0 a m .md 6 p m The publire house All are urged to attend
lic os mvlted to attend Speaker woll
be Denver Htll, Foster W Va
Sleak dinner planned
The Rac1ne Amenc~m Leg1on Post
602 woll hold a steak thnncr Sund.ty,
I I ,, m $5
Veiernns Memorial
Mond.1y admossoons - Troy
Rarme American Legion
Todd, Pomeroy , Frederoca R Fans
Raune Amerocan Legoon Post602 Pomeroy
woll meet Thu"d.1y 6 30 p on woth
MomJ ..ay d1~t.:h.1rg~s - none
me,,l and drawmg 10 tollow
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Nov. 2 - Mrs Tom
Serv1ces set
( • othy C.ompbell .ond daughter, Paul
Spec tal servoce' woll be held at the Fosher. J,ocob Harvey Lon Rose.
Wolloe G.omboll
(Published with pennission)

Hospital news

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners and
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

Our slatostocs show that mature
dr1vers "and home owners have
fewer and less cosily losses
than olher age groups So ot s
only fair lo charge you less for
your msurance Insure your
home and car with us ~nd save
even more woth our specoal
doscounts
I

OGAN
BROVBJ

~

~RNER'?.

8:10,7:45
'"' 4:4017:15
NDII AT TIIIIIXUY lPG ,,
7:35

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

992·6687

***************
BIG C~ll f nrMovt&lt;&gt;Time«

Lote Home Car Busoness

[O

nsurance Serv1ces

[AI

•

l'fO\fleS

Af•ln~O!VIIers lri SIINllll'e

1-74 0-753-3400
M"ttMe'

£ \'ER~04l''

TM

',

•

***
***
If mank1nd really profits from

1ts m1stakes, we have some
glor1ous future comong up

***

One advantage of a bad
memory you can keep
enJoyong the same JOkes
wt!hout getttng bored

***

The real labor ques1ton IS 1!
f1ve o'clock yet?

NASCAR HARD TO
FIND PIECES
•Eamhart •Gordon •Elliott
•Wallace •Labonte •Wa~rip
•John Force &amp;Others
1/24 &amp; 1/64 Pteces
•New Batman &amp; Joker Cars
•Small Soldoer Cars
•John Force Gold Car
•Nascar Barbie ·
•Jeff Gordon
Start1ng Une· Up
Full Poseabte Ftgures
•WCW &amp; NWO Ooecast
1/24 &amp; 1/64
•Two McGuire Tops Rookie
Cards (near mint to m1nt)
•McGutre &amp; Groffy Combo
XL Headliners
•Cal R1pken Jr XL Headliner
•Only 1 McGuire Starttng
Une-up 1998
Call 742·25 11 or

1·800-837-11217
Ask for Davod
May be seen at
Rutland Bottle Gas
d

Rutland Bottle Gas
Rt. 124, Rutland, Oh.

•

742·2211

•

•,

�Tuesday, November 3, 1998

The Daily Sent~~l

·sports

Tuesday, November 3, 1998

looL.e&lt;.l

t)(J\'-

it'-

dominant a... t.&gt;\er.

N~" the1 need to 110r~ on the re&lt;t.

ri!;!hl 110\\ ... Co"boy ... coa'h Chan
Ga1ley ..,;:ud. ' Tm not II) In!! h• ~

"They ju!-lt \ hot too much to one ... ide

\\e ·re doing and

c.TI\."~~

)f \h~

don"tthinl...

pc)\ittnn.

and I bounced back to the opening:" . we \\OUid be wrong:"
And !\ander~ had a 69-yard punt
\\' irh the :u~.o Jo..,.., tn SeoJitl~ in the
retllm f'or tt touchLiown. the flflh nf home opener. Ihe Ea_glc" l"le{'llme thl." ·
hi s career and seCond thi~ ~a,on­ . fl"t NFL team to lme 1\\ o home
both under the" light~ on MonJ a~
'hulOut' b) more than .lU po111t"' in
night. In th~ two game" agnin\1 the
the &gt;arne _.ason. II wa&lt; the first time

Tro1 ..\i•man to Mithael .l n in was

had \~·1 th a IO·)ard touchdo"'" pass.
Emmin Smith did a litile pirouette
ar1d •.:ut ba":k imo the end Lnne. ali
•ml) il pr~ciou.., few \\ho've worn
..,houlder padli L'a'n.
Pnme Time. wa" Prime Time.
Wh:tt el..,e Y.ould Deion Sander' be~
The Co\\__bO)'!- took H ..,tep loward
rca ... ..,l.!rtin~ th em~h'es a!-1 an NFC
po~\er Monday night. routing the

Ea~le .... they
~c.ore of 05-7.

the) · ,e bt-en

&lt;on si nce 1957. and the fir-1 time it''

in. a 'f."a-

''*

'phia.
:
The · 34-point . debacle

hapk&lt;&gt; E:tg les 34-0. While tt' s hard on Sept. 21. ''I'll hal'e to 3\k my
if the 'Boys from Dalla' are all mother ahoutthnt." ·
th.c "a) back. Aikman appeaf' to t.e:
Fort he Eagles. thi&lt; Monday Night
And that\ a preny good stan .
Massacre was e\'en wor&lt;c than they

Ill tell

Philadelphia·~

was

prim~ + tim e

· wor:-.1

defeat &gt;i nce. a 4~,3 los&lt; to the Rams
on Nm . 3. 1975'."ThJt w;" the infa~

,had feared . They are I -7 for the fipa

time "incc 1975. with no end in ' i ~h l
for their terrible season .
··we were inept in ju~o;t ~1hnut
C\'ery phase of the game~" Eagles
coach Ray Rhode" ..,aid. "ll Wil'\ very
emharrassing."

mous "' Dog Bone Gnme" in which

rim. . pa'O'\Cd large bones around Vet-

er~lm S t ~H.Ii ~i m lu 'ig nify that the

Eag le11 were playing like dogs.
"You coul d sit here and w;tllnw in
\t:l f pity... 'iaid Eagles running back

~ilman

wa' 14-for -26 for 171 yard&lt;
Dallas has a one-game i&lt;ad m·er
and two touc hdowns. He 'hook off a Arizona in the weak NFC Ea&lt;t anu
cru, hing hit hy Hollis Thoma' on the rebounded from a 13-12 lo« at

Ch:trlie Gamer. who'e fumbl e on the

fir,t play of the game ;md lei every - Chicago two weeks ago. They are 4·

reception. "Thill\ what we:"re going

one know thai the Cowboy'&lt;15-3) are 0 again&lt;t dil'ision opponent'. with
a different team when he'.., healthy. games lhc: nex.~ two ""'eek-: again"'l
"It wao; good to be back." snid New York and AriLona.

to try to pre\'ent here.·· -'
.
Eagle' quarterbac l Rod ney Peete

Aikmim. injured in the second gnme
They ,s till ha\'c prqblem~. com·
of the season against Qen~~er. ''It was · milling 10 pt"nalties for 1.10 Y.ard..; a~

hi s Jinger. and former 'tarter Bobby
Hoying was ·blii zed ·and brutali-zed'·
into a horrible 13-for-39. 124-yard

Eng les' nine late in -the lin.t quaner

led to Irvin's 10-yard touchdown

week'\ from the '\ideline. ( ,wa.., iryi1ig
be sman and didn't wan.t to take

pe~alties in a wretched. flng · fillc:d
game. But on the whole. it wi1'i ''

any .unnece"ary hits."

good sign for the folks from Valley·

'

~

knocked "out with a deep cut on

\\' liS

tough to watch the last couple of the 1&lt;\t ms combined 'for 240 yard' in
to

•

hapf1Cned twice at ho.me ..,;nee 19'4~ .
In the 38 )Car&lt; and 78 game&lt; the-e
team'&gt; h~ve played. it was the Cow· .
boy..,· frrsl ~ hutout againsl Philadcl·

"I think I \\as born nn Monday
night .'' "aid Sanders. \\h&lt;• ret umed ._.
punt and an interception for to uch·
downo., in the gi.lme againo.,tthe Giant.;

" The only ~r~on I'm more com forlahle with i~ · my wife , and she
do~..,n·t throw th~ ' baiL" :-.aid lr\'in.
who ..,cored his first touchdown of the
"'t:a . . on to get the blowout rolling .
In his fir~t '\tart , jnce mis..,ing fi\·e
@ames with a broken collarbone,

~hut outtwi~e

New Yorl Giani.., ;md

v.·on by a combi ned

performance with two

inlercepti~ns.

the e~tire Philadelphia deli:n&lt;e on a weren't thinking ahout the playoffs

at Veterans Stadium in a foul mood
t'ven hy Philly 'Oiand:ml ....
•· we .can' t throw in the towel"...
Peete saiJ.

..

~
{'

,1998 Bowl Championship Series ran kings
r:-:::- Polls :-:-:l 1 computer ran kings I
1.00 2

"., 1

2.50 3
3.50 4

-· 3.75 (5)

· 1. Ohio State

Tennessee.

3
3

4

4

2 '

5

5

Florida St.

8

6

TexasA&amp;M

7

B

8

7

9

9

3. UCLA

Kans1.s Slate

5. Florida

" 6.
7.
I

B( Wisconsin

'

Penn State

Arizona

10
11 . Arkansas
11
'112. Nl!braska 14 '
'
:13. Notre Dame 13
1I 14. Texas
20
'115. Virginia
12
t5
!16. Tul~
Syracuse
t5

2 .

4

1.75

24

0.96

0

. 3.71

2.82

' 1

0.28

0

5.70

3.00

3

0.12

0

6.62

o

8.05

3.00 1
5.00 5

3

3 (4)

2.33

' 68

2.n

6

6

5.67

8

0.32

· &amp;.00 II
7.50 10.5 (11)

2

6 (8)

4.117

0.60

7

7

8.17.

15
21

9

10.117

12
10

tt.67

98
31

3.92

10.50

46-

•ttJ4•1- .......-1-:z3.84

10

9.00 13
10.50 g
10.50 14

13
10
13.5 (14)
14.25 (t6)

5

11.08

3.32

0

24.90

15

14.50 7

12

11

10.00

13

13.00 15.75 (22) 8
21.50 9 ;.
.9

63
12
51

0.48
2.04

2.
1

26.98
28.29

T.SO 10 , _..

II

23
16

12.00 20
15.50 21

26.25.(94)

17

16.00, 18

17

12

:17.

2.25 (3)

21

&gt;•

0.84
0

1.24

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS. Ohio (API- O~io

0.68

2

34.68

80

3.20

1

36.20

20.~2

96

3.84

0

39.78

26.25 (29) 20.42

37

1.40

2.

39.90

S"tate now knnws what BCS means in

the alphahet 'oup of NCAA Di\'ision
1-A college t'oothall - another way
of say mg they ' re No. I.

1\\'t) cre&amp; ul ar-'ie :l..;{)lj gnmc'i, lllllle r
su..,p~lb i On'i

announced hy couch

~.J •

..........~

........_

East' battle In Philadelphia, where the Cowboys wc:it)
34-0. (AP)

.

.,

,

Fiesta Bo~vl.
. "My finan ce classes ~tre easier
th:1n thi s BCS thing."" Rudzinski
said.

bemg No. I in that. too."
A w~Fk ngo, UCLAwa.., first wilh
3.04 point &gt;in the combined rankings
based on hoth major poll s. three com-·

by the Cardinal. winless in the Pa&gt;-

index :md each team's won-los~"
record. Ohio State was seconcl with'
4J I points, follmv~d by Tennessee
(6.50). Kansas State (8.79) and Florida State ( 13 .39).
With the Bruins ~inking two spots
in the coaches' poll and one in the AP

While UCLA was h:~rely getting

first coupl e. or weeks or the , I 0. Ohio State wa.., walloping lndian:1
season. I don'!think a lot of us eve n 3R-7 .
unJcr:-.tood what thn'Oe thr~e letters .
Cooper might not ha1·e heen wor'"Th~

stood for," linebacker Jerry Rudlinsk i

s~id.

When the Buckeyes were, ran~e&lt;l

Total
Two Jeams
with the
lowest total
play in the
BCS lille
game.

ried. but hi s players wiled'" if they
were. ·
"We were clelinitely di,appointed

p111er ran~ings. a schedule-o;;trength

No. 2 in last week's initia l Bowl

we wen: No.2." .sotid qum1erhnck Joe

ran kings. Ohio State wa ~ first with

Champion ship Series standing... hmv ·~
' ever. they l curnc~l that BCS mi gh t
huve. mort.! effect on th~ir se:1so n than

Germaine. wholflpped 300 yard' in
pas-i ng for a sdmol-rtcord fourth

3.:71 points this week followed by .
Tennessee (5.70). UCLA (6.fi2) : .

time in ;,t row in th~ victory over the

Kansas State (8.05 ) ~md f'lorida

AP. ESPN .. USA Today or C\'en
UCLA might .

Hoosiers. " We definil&lt;'ly think of
ourselves as the No. I team in the

( 11 .99).
The Buckeyes are first in the New

In Monda y\ second BCS rank-:
ings. Ohio Stale mm ·cd u'p a notch matchi'ng it-; placement in The A'"O·.

RCS and we Wt"rc disappointt"d alit·

Yorh. TimL'"' l'nmputrr ratinJ,!o;; and

tie bit."

both maJOr polls and are third in the
"At first. not h~ing u.;;ed to it. , ..,e
Seotttle Times and Sagatin c.omputer •
ciated Press me&lt;l ia p&lt;ill ami USA didn't t"ke it seriously." corne rback -- . ranking~ . Their schedu'ie is consid- •
Today-ESPN mache' poll.
. Ahmed Plummer said of the BCS . ered easier than all but Kansas State's

_ _ _......__ _ _ _ _ _ Sports b t i e f s i - - - - - - - - - - -

1\.'r Jal1 laal t\1aglpil'c- wil l ..,i l nul ths:~
Wiltkat ..,· fi r~! four gam~-;. including

"

Ohio State moves up to top
spot in latest BCS standings

22.91

-~

Anthon) . ~ uurd Ryan Hrig:m and cen-

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

JUST IN TIME_- Dallas'quarterback Troy Aikman

22.09

17

Unskul ball
LOUISVILLE:' ·ky. I APl --

Tuhhy Smith.' ·
The s u li pensio11~ had he~n expec
t·
1

I

........

..)

17.51

Polls
. ~omputer ranklngll
Quartile rank .
Rankings of each team are Rankings of each team
Cumulative won-loss
added, then divided by two. are added, lhen divided
records of a team's
bY.Ihree. To prevent unusual opponents (worth 66.67%)
dtfferences in individual
and cumulative woA&lt;joss
formulas, a maximum
records ol the leam's
~Hesler &amp; Anderson/Seattle nmes
adJUSted deviation of no
opponenl's opponents
(33.33%) are ranked
greater Jhan 50% of the
average of lhe two lowesl · then divided by 25 ,
computer rarkings is ulilized.

Basket hull
LEXINGTON. ~ Y- IA Pl - Three
K,entudy playe'r&lt; .L foqv;lf(l Myron

•

(8) throws the pa·s s just before Philadelphia's Hoilis Thomas hits him during Monday night's NFC

12.27

13
12.25
13.5 (16) 10.50
19
20.00
14

1

11 .99
1

lf!j'
~-

AP USA Today/
·
.
'
·
(media
ESPN
Poll
Jell
N.Y. Seattle Computer Schedule Quartile .
poll) (coaches poll) avg. Sagarin Tlmoa. Times•
evg.
rank
rank Losses Total

l!ank Team

4.

')

"Ttl rathl'r hL' 1 than :!, J or 4."
Ohio Stq,tr: .;:·o:1c h Jnlm{'nnper s:1id.
''I'm no! go in:; tt l wtlfl)' almul it. La'OI
\\Ce k \\"l' were ~o.:! and I didn"l wor·

ry ;~hnll1 it.",

Luui-.,,ille h ; l~,h.~th;dl coach Dt:llll ) ·
UCLA'' -~~ -2 4 dn'e call over
three wou ld he puni,hed• fnr ' mis- C'rum left the ho"pitnt I\\ o d:~y .., aft~ r Stan foal ho~)-;tcd the BLKlcyes a "'Pot
deed~ off the l:Ollrt. Sm1th w~tited
he co ll~lll"'e d al an &amp;~irp ort . C'rum intht• ranh.ing "'Y"tcm that will deter·
until -the day he fore the Wildc:n &gt;' grudging ly rode :·1 wheelchair tlr the 111inr: thc ,two tr: am s pl:!ying fnr the
~:xhibition · Opener lo announl·e the
Jewi sh Hospital lobby. hut walked n:.ttinn:d ch&lt;t1Upi nnship Jan. 4 at the
detail '\.
'out of lh~! hospital.

ed sinre June , when Smith s:tid :d l

Forsberg g01 his first Jloal of the
sea""' aftertaLing31sholson net i~
nine games without scoring. heating
Anurs hbe with 8:54 left. He also
a'si,ted on Color.ulo's fir&lt;t goal and
on the eventual game-winner _by
game.
Rene Corbet with 4:04 left.
Carolina had G""" six straight
"It was not an average guy.havirig
a great night. it was a great player games without allowing a first-peritaking an ad•'antage of some oppor- od goal before Lemieux .cored the
iunities. ··Carolina coach Paul Mau- 302nd or his career.
Ktvin Dineen scortd hi&lt; first ~oal
rice said of For&lt;berg.·
of
lhe o;eao;on three minute&lt; laterto tie
" h"s always good when it"s an
the
score.
important j!OOI. too," said For;berg,'
Nelson
Emeoon scored his second
Who has scored at least 25 goals in
goal
with
2:32-Jefl to pull Carolina
each oflhe last three sea""'&lt;- "'Goals
are scarce nowadays, and you've got within one. but 1~ Hurricanes couldto·get a good shot ofT if you're going n't get the tying goal after pulling
lrbe in t~ final minute.
'lo beat the goalie." .,. 1
.
Elsewhere _in the NHL, il wa&lt; the
lrbe. lhe NHL player of lhe month
New
York Islanders 6, Aorida 2: and .
.'
for Octot&gt;er with a 0.76 goals-against
E&lt;lmonton 5. Vancouver 3.
, I
a\'erage. allo)"ed Colorado's first
shot of the game 10 slip under his
hlancl«s 6, Panthen 2
pads.
Roben Reichel had two go&amp;ls and
"Colorado played against us like a
PUSHED from behind Ia what Carollna'a Martin the first period of Monday night's NHL ~ In
desperate team. Unfortunately I had two assists to lift New York' over
Gellnaa (23) finds happening to him aa Colorado'• GrMMboro, N.C., where the visiting AvalancM _ ,
to be the lin;~ one to let (Forsberg) get Aorida.
Bryan S"'fllinski added two goals, Jon Klemm (24) battlea him for the loose puc:k In 3-2. (AP)
out o( his slump," lrbe said.
Jrbe allowed one goal or le« ins x and both Trevor Linden and Claude
straight starts before giving up three Lapoinle had a goal an'd assist as the
Islander. moved into a fir&lt;t-place tie
···we're a team. we're a family and against Colorado.
we all feel pressure.·· Hartley said:
"Colorado played like a veteran with idle Philadelphia in the Atlanlic
.
. ".'This business is all 'about pressure. cl~b. ·· Carolina • captain_ Keith Division.
Tommy Salo'stopped 18 shots for
the Islanders.·
.
At 6-5, New York cracked the
double lhe total of San Diego's Greg 112 points. with C()lorado"s Vinny
.500"barrier for the first time since . By RONALD BLUM
Castilla second at 57.
Vaughn. fourth with 35.
AP
Sports
Writer
Nov. 19, 1997, when it wa&lt; 9-8-4.
Edgar Maninez of the Mariners
.
Oqly
one
player
from
the
World
On
the
1998
Associaled
Press
The win put the Islanders o•er the
won
the closest race. finishing with
Series
champion
New
York
Yankees
.500 mark at home for Jhe first time Major League AII-StarTeam. Sammy
since Oct. 4. 1997, when they beat Sosa was beaten by no one, not even made the t(am. David Wells. who 60 votes at designated hiher. 15 more
pitched a perfect game against Min- than Toronto's Jose Canseco.
Toronto 3-0 victory in their home Mark McGwire.
Ivan Rodriguez of the Rangero.
Chicago
Cubs"
outfielder
nesota in May and went 18-4 with a
The
. The Southern golf team under lhe tutelage or coach Jay Rees placed third opener.
··easily
won at catcher with 139 votes.
received
187
votes
in
totals
released
3.49
ERA,
led
left-handed
staners
Aorida got goals from Rob Niem the Tn-Valley Conference Hocking Division and sixth in the 13-leam secMike
Piazza
of the New York Mels
Monday.
live
more
than)lis
St.
Louis
with
92
votes,
27
ahe.ad
of
Atlanta's
dennayer and Bill Lindsay.
tional tournament in Octot&gt;er.
.,
Tom Glavine. who finished ,.cond. was second with 31.
rival. who led al first base.
•
Division champion Waterford advanc'ed to the district and state tournament,
Toronto's Roger Clemens was the
Houston'sCraig Biggio dominatMcGwire.
who
set
a
record
with
Oilen S, Canuck.&lt; J
where it placed fourth in Jhe Division IV.
top
right-handed staner with 122 112
70
homer&lt;
four
more
than
Sosa
ed
at
second
base.
beating
BaltiAt ' Edmonton, Josef Beranek
Rees.. said. "I think the most positive ·thing I saw this season was a conmore·
s''R!ot&gt;erto
A
IQ,;,ar
,
1
4
7-12.
voles
after going 20-6 with a 2.65
had
the
most
dominaling
win
in
the
!inuedirhprovement among our players. They maintained a good auitude and scored twice and assisted on Bill . nationwide voting by sports writers
Alex
Rodriguez
was
an
ERA
and
271 strikeouK San Diego's
Seanle"s
were very consistent in keeping competitive, We played to our potential. but Guerin's ,league-leading ninth goal of and broadcasters. His · closest com- easy winner at shonstop. beating Ke\'in Brown was second with 42 112
the season as the Oilers moved into
improved each lime out."
·
petitor at ftrst was Boston's Mo Boston's NomarGnrciaparra 102-55. votes. followed by Atlanta's Greg'
"This was a good group of kids to work with. We had some great indi- ftrst place in the Northwesl Division. Vaughn. who got six votes. Atlanta's Derek Jeter of the Yankees was third . Maddux with 10.
,
Guerin, Beranek and Pat Palloon
vidual perfonnances throughoutlhe year. We had four players amon,g lhe top
Andres Gularraga was third. gening with 17, one ahead of Cleveland's ~ San Diego's Tre\'Or Hoffman. who
15 in lhe league. They were very competitive wilh one another and a ~a team." eac~ scored a power-play goal in the the only Jwo other \'ote~.
had a major league-leading 53 sa•·es.
Omar Vizquel.
Trimble's Trent Pan on headed the league honorees with a 36.6 yearly aver- opening two periods. Mals Lindgren
was the top reliever with 169 votes.
'In
the
outfield,
Sosa
finished
25
Chipger
Jones
won
at
Atlanta's
age. Waterford placed live players on Jhe all-division leam. Casey Lang, Pat also scored for Edmonton (6-4-0), ahead of Seanle's Ken Griffey Jr. third base in the clo"st contest Boston's Tom Gordon was second
Burche.tte and Aaron Clark, who were first-team honorees and Josh Arnold while Brandon Convery, Mark Juan Gonzalez of the Texas Rangers among position players. Jones had 81 with 12.
Messier and defenseman Adrian
and Adam Conralh, who were second team.
got the third-spot with 78. more than
Joining Pallon. Burche11e. Lang and Clark on first team were Trimble's Kei- Aucoin scored 'for Vancouver.
th Locke and Miller's Steve Lucas.
' Second team honoreeS\wece Chris Randolph (43.1) and Troy Hoback
(43}7) of Southern: who joined Eastern's Man King (42.5). Cof rath and
Arnold of Walerford and Matt Woods of Trimble.
_,
: Kyle Norris (43.66) and Benji Manuel (43.7) just missed all-league honorees placing 131h and 14th respectively. The league's top 12 earn all-league
honors.
Overall. Southern finished 40-29 with a 31-19 league mark.
In league standings. teams get five points for winning a match, four for
second. three for third. two for fourth, one for fifth and none for sixth. Waterford won the league with 49 points.
Please _check one
In seclional play. Southern was sixth overall. Troy Hoback (43.92) led the
way for the Tornadoes. followed by Chris Randolph (44:13), Kyle Norris
(44.0.7). Benji Manuel (44.4), Mitchell Walker (46.5). Joe Cornell (46.5) and
' Bill Coe (47.0). ·
'
: Southern had three seniors - Hoback. Manuel and Wnlker. Joe G:ornell
My buddies alid I want to get together to: ·
My idea of a good tiule would be:
made the_varsily as a freshma~ ..
Rees added. "I hate to see our seniors go. They did a great job, but we have
0 A. Discuss Greco-Roman architecture;
same greal yo~ng talent coming up. I am looking forward to ne&gt;t season."
0 A. Taking out the trash;
'

" Bul after ;1 week of thinJ.!in~ :H10\I\
it. we came In understqnd that this is

·anmng' the top 'five tenms.

the one that matters."
Some pl"yers saiu th e)' fdt Ohio

(4-4) Sat~~rday. then travels to Iowa ·
0 -6) before rival Michigan (6-2).

Sta te"' ~""

..,JJgh1ed in the ini tial BCS

Ohio St;.lle hosts Michi gan Stale ·

The BCS stand1ngs wtll be updat·

st:mdino&lt;.

ed each week through Dec. 6, at ·

" "He;·e we &lt;tre No. I i1i hnth pulls
anJ 'iOille cprnputcr sees us a'\ some·
lhin~ elsc t · offt"ll'live guard Rob

whic.h time the top t1Wo teums will be ·
awnrded places in the Fiesta Bowl
. und the o!her top bowls. begin divvy·;

Murphy sa id . "We ' II happily '"'cer,t
··

ing up the rest of the highest ranked ·

A~IF.RICAN CONFF.RF.NCE
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Transactions

•

Thrun

49
37
31
16
II ~
6

Waterford
Trimble
SOUTHERN
EASTERN
Miller
Federal Hocking

t .. l :mdo." r~

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'1o.1\TLANTA lliU\V F.S Nafued Don Bny lor hit ...
ting ~n: t rh an d Glenn Huhh arU firs1 - h01s~ wn~h .
r. luH•d Ned Yml lrum hullpc n t;U&lt;II.:It Ju lhml-basc
l'&lt;l ilt' h. Bu hh y D c· w~ h om tlj ird · b iiSC coath to

Hocking· Divisi.o n all-stars
Au.

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'Pomeroy
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'WilminaiWl
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•Gallipolis
•Dayton ,
'Hillsboro .
'Springfitld
'Cilci~vlllc

' Nelsonville
'Middletown
• Washin&amp;ton
'Wc'st Union
'

36.6
37.739.4
39.8
40.0
40.9

Casey Lang, Waterford
,.Keith Locke, Tnmble
Pat Burchene, Waterford
Aaron Clark. Waterford
Steve Lucas. Miller

\

&amp;iJ!.Ij

First team

hullpen wm:h. anti 1':11 Cnrm llls frum lirst-h asc

.\Vl•dnl.'sday\: ~o:&lt;mH's

0

Hocking Division standings

t~am~.

ltl;llh '" Ill' 11th ~ ll.ll.: h
Clllt"II.GO ('UIIS· 1\ ~n···d tp twm wllh RHP

Base hall,

1\tlanlir lli vi., iml

ItJun

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Cnlur;ttln

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F.ASTF.RN CONFERENCE

Nc\1. kl\l'Y •

ll. L I !'h. tl-' £a

·'

NHL standings

l'htl :nldl'hl .l

I l:d l:"

C:1l~ary

Hockey

NY

CONf'ERENCE

V;ulc'l111\l'r

1.01 1'-111

Munday. Nov , 9
Grcl·n!l ay a1 l'lll ~h ur gh , K.:w I' rn

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St l.n11is 111 f'hkHt:n. I ·01 ·p 111
C:tn1lirm 011 San Fr:mcis~u. 4 : 0 ~ p.m.
Washingh"l ;H Arilona. 4 : 0 .~ p'p1
Buffalo m Nl!w Yurlo: Jets. 4: I~ p 111
· Kan ~: 1 s City ;it Scm llc. 4. 1:'\ p.'111
Sm1 Diego :u l)c twcr. 4: 15 11 m.
Tcnncs~t.:e ill T:u11p:1 Hay, K.20 p m

110

Euslt'rn llh i'&gt;iun

NY

Sunday, Nov. II
E11j!lolnd. I :{II pIll

C INCINNATI &lt;~I J;K:hPn v ilk .

NFL standi.ngs
:w.m

N~w

t

•

r.=n::~~~~~i mbl~

Atlam:t on

Sosa gets most votes of ~P's
.major league baseball a/1-s~ars

A Golfer's Persbnality Q.u iz

1

Football

Primeau said. ··we've been able to
outwO&lt;t mos1 ol~r team. this year
for the loose puc b. but they would&gt;
n"tlet us do it.""
It didn"t lake Color..OO long to
solve the honest goalie in the league.
Claude Lrmieux blasting. one
bel"'ttn lrbe's leg.s I: 19 into the

Southern, Eastern see
three claim Hocking
Division ,g olf honors

The ugly loss left the sellmlt crowd

.' Smith ran for I 0 I yards and a Ranch.
,touchdown, cuning back and fonling
" I would be disaprointed if we

a daily basis ...

By DAVID DROSCHAK
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)
Playing with a lead down lhe stretch
was a nice ch31)ge of pace for the
Colorado Avalanche.
Struggling 10 keep pa~e after an 04 slart. Colorado won its fir&lt;t mall
g~ of the season NHL Monday'
mght. beating the Carolina Hurricanes · 3-2 behind Peter Forsberg's
three-point game.
"lbe boys have been under lots of
pressure lately. Playing with a deficit
all the time, it"s not an easy ihing."
rookie coach Bob Hartley said. " We
can feel that were building momen:
tum. and all we need is a couple o~
good gmnes together to really get
back on track.''
Colorado is 3-2-1 in its last six
games. splining its first two or a ~i• game, II -day road lrip -the club:s
longest in eight years.
.
When a'ked if he was inclu&lt;led in
lhose feeling pressure. Hartley. who
look 0\'erfor Marc Crawford in June,
nodded yes. Crawford won the Stanley Cup in 1996 and three straight
Pacific Division titles prior to Hartt
ley t&gt;eing named head coach.

.l hHUI \\h~l~

pt:l..,I'\C.:I"'-&gt;11

You have 10 learn to deal with it on

NHL roundup

15-yard touchdown run that"'"'' in l&lt;tge Emmitt.
··lbey O\'erpla) ed it... Smith ' aid.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

-Avalanche tame Hurricanes
·a-2; Islanders, Oilers also win

Cowboys ground Eagles 34-.0
By 'KEN BERGER
PIIILADELPHIA(AP)- With a
fe " ~raceful pi a)&lt;. the Dalla&lt; Cow.-

PomelrY'f • Middleport. Ohio

B,

0 B. Attend an interpretive dance

Working at the office on weekends;

weekend;

0 C. Admiring a 250-yard drive on the
0

Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail.

C. Take on the 414-yard, par four

"Assassin" at Oxmoor Valley.

.,

i'

I would feel better about myself if 1:
'
~ ..

This weekend I plan to:

.

0

A c;lean out lhe garage;

0

B,

0 A. Lost 20 pounds;
I

0 B. Learned a foreign lan&amp;?age;

Wash the dog;

0 C. Head·fo{ Alabama to play one of the

0 C. Shot my handicap on any one of the
eighteen Ro~rt Trent Jones Golf
Trail courses.

seven sites on the Robert Trent Jones
Golf Trail.

I

•

•

Second learn
41.1
42.5
43.0
43. 1
43.37
43.4

Josh Arnold, Waterford
· M'ATT KING. EASTERN
Adam Conrath. Waterford
CHRIS RANDOLPH. SOUTHERN
TROY HOBACK. SOUTHERN ·
Man Woods. Trimble
·

Eastern junior high spikers
lose
two
of
three
matches
:
I
·: The Eastern junior high volleyball
~~'am has been enjoying a good sea~n. however. in·pre-IOurnament play
ki&lt;l two of lhree malches to tough
Ojtio Division squads during eighth
grade aclion.
Meigs defeated Eastern in three
sets. 2-15, 1'5-11. 15- 11. Ashley
Boyles led Eastern with a n I 8-18
serving night and 1'3 points. Nikkie
Phillips was 16-16 with II points.
and an ace; Krystal Baker was 6-6
with ftve points. Jennifer Chadwcll99 with ftve points. Tara Fisher 6-6
with three points. Lisa Smilh 2-2. ami
Jess 'Dillon 2-3.
·
In spiking, Phillips was 8-9 with
four kills. Dillon 2-2 with one kil l.
Smith and Fisht!r one spike eac h.

Again st Vinton County, Eastern
came back 15-9 after l o~ing the first

game 15- 13. Vinton County came
back to win 15-7.
Chadwell was 12-12 with 10
points and an ace. Smith 7-7 wilh si•
points and lwo aces, Baker 8-8 with

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six p9ints. Tant Fisher 6-6·wilh five

points. Phillips 6-6 with three points,
Jess Dillon 6-7 with three points. and
Ashley Boyles 6-7 with three points.
In spiking. Phillips was 3-4 wilh
two points. and Dillon 1-2.
Eastern defeated Federal Hocking
15-4 and 15-9 . Boyles was 15-15
with 15 points and an ace ; Dillon 78 with six points and two ace s,

Phillips 6-6 and four points; Fisher 45. three ppints; ChadwelL Smith. and
Baker one each.
Phillips had one set for a kill and
was 7-7 with a kill spiking. Dillon
wa., 1- 1 with a kill.

HAMPTON
COVE

lhmiSIJIU.

L__ _ _ _ __

SIL.V~R
LAKES
AnnUl~

GRAND
NATIONAL

CAMBRI.a.N

t-tJGHLfAND

MAGN OLIA

RIDGE

OAKS

GROVE

' A•lnmriVpf/1...

G-vtlle

Dotlxm

,tloi&gt;lle

OXhiOO"

VALLEY

ill,lrrpmr

......:....___.:...,--------------1' . i'

- - :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

�•

•

•

Page ~ • The Daijy Sentinel

Tuesday, November

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

3, 1998
•

.Low voter·turnout haunts nation's last election of century
.•

jty TERENCE HUNT
M White Houle Coo ••pondent
! WAS_HINGTON- Wim me~
jdentoal ompeach""'"t drama hangonj!
'ill the balance. Americans were
dloo-.ing a new Congress today in
midterm rae.- pl'4'ued by the

: prospect of another kJw v01enumou1.

From Maine to Ala.,ka and
Hawaii. 36 go-em&lt;.--hoP' wer&lt; at
. sta!o;e along with ).1 Senate seats and
; aii-H5 "'at' in the Hou.se. Voter&lt; al~
• wer&lt;el&lt;eting lhou.ands of stat&lt; leg: ;,Ialor&gt;.
. . .
; · The Bu&gt;h boys - Republicart•
• Jeb in Florida and George in Texasseemed like!y to become the first
brOiherS to serve a.&lt; governors simultJneously. But in California. Ll. Gov.
: Gray Davis, a Democrat. appeared
' ·ready to brea~ 1he Republicans' 16: year control of the govelliOfShip.
.
h was 1he last national election of
· the century. the scene-seller for lhe
presidential race in 2000. With the
economy strong and lhe electorale
· mostly happy. it was expected to be
: a good year for incumbent&lt;. PoiiSien
: and pundits predicted modeSt Repub: lican gains in Congress.

11Jrrr were hunll~s of 'lat~wode
ltJIIot me&lt;bUr~' lleahng wnh d"e~
;,._,...,. ~h a&lt;. late-term ahnrtinn.
aflinn:lltve "'-'t&lt;on. g;~y n1&lt;1rrtag~.
as'i"ed &gt;Uicide. legal nl&lt;lriju•o~&lt;~ f,.•i&lt;-~ people and higher cigareue In·

es.

President Clinlnn \, nanlt! thO nnt
appear on any balh&gt;t. and nl&lt;O&gt;l candidales fo.:u&gt;ed on lu.:al i-.ue, in the
ilhsrnce of a burning national queslion. But Clin(on"s allair wilh Mon. ~.:a Lewins~y ~nd the threat of
ompeachment cast a shadow over the
elections. neVerthele".
1llc ICl(llh Congre« taking olfoce
in January will decide Clinton's fate .
unles.• there is a speooy resolution in
me final weeks of 1his year. In any
event. today"s rcsuiL&lt; will be read._,
a signal from voter&lt; on what they
want done · about the president.
.. Impeachment hearings are to begin
later this month in the House Judiciary ~ommittee.
Republicans conlrol both the
House and lhe Senate-and are expect··
ed to strcnglhen their grip. bul not by
huge margins.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich on

Mtond.iy pr-'tli.:l-'&lt;1 GOP g•in&gt; of"'
to JU ..._.al' on the Hoo-e and two 10
,ix ""ats )n the S.:n:ote.
" It all depend• on who shows
up," Gingrich. R-Ga .• !old a Republie an rJIIy in Ra&lt;well. Ga. " If our
team '"""' up. the team !hal i&gt; for
.,.-uning taxe!&lt;.. a Mronger defense and
winning the war on drup. we ,hould
win the topside of every one of lhose
numbe"...
•
'If the GOP picks up a lot of seats.
. say 15 or more _in the House and five
in the S.:nale. Republicans could be
emboldened to move ahead with
aggressive hearings about nO! only
the Lewin,ky affair but ai&gt;O Whitewater. fund raising and missile technology transfer&lt;..
But if Republican gain~ are mode'l. the GOP may bac~ off and agree
to a plea bargain on Clinton's pun·
ishment..
The current breakdown in the
House is 228 Republicans. 206
Democrats and one indepenuent who
usually votes Democratic. In the
Senale.-lhere are 55 Republicans and
45 Democmts. '
,
Since World War II. the average

ordinary el&lt;etiun."' he o,aid. In a mer their challenge". At the mo~:
modlenn elet:llons ha.' bt!en 27 on the ,.,ric- of intrrview&lt; and appearJnce,, 40 tu 50 Hou"' "'al' were truly COlli
Hou.&lt;e. foor in_the ~nate..
1he pre,idem appe'Jied to reliably peliti•e.
.
.·
_
In non-prestdentoal electoon yean;. Demucr.dic black and Hispanic vot- .
'fhe &lt;tak"' on the govemo':' con
fewer people bolher to vote: the 'JI" e" to go to the pnlk
te'l' "'ere e,pecoally hogh thos year
ical mi.W,rm turnout is about 36 per·
A I&lt;~ of r.k."b were clll'e at the fin. becau-e th&lt;: wonners woll have • bog
cenlto 38 percenl. and expert&lt; expect i'h hne.
say in redrawing congres&lt;Jonal dosit to slay in thai range today. Lo~Senate come-.t~ were clo\e in uicl~ afler the ~ cen .. us. That. 10
IUrnout elec~ions generally favnr New York. California. North Caroli- turn. innuences whoch party ~on trois
Republicans. who &gt;eem mure ener- na. South Carolina. Wiscon&gt;in. Ken- Congre".
.
giLed even when nio't I"'!'Pie •lay at tucky and Nevada.
Republican&gt; are go•emors on 32
home.
·
A net gain of five seals would give
&lt;tales. including eight of the 10 mo'&lt;l
Senate . Majorily _Leader Trenl Republican&lt; a 00-vote majority to populous. and_ were expected to
R-MI's .• campaogned on North break lilibu,ter&lt;. but a pickup thai expand lheor gnp.
.
Carolina for S.:n. Lauch Fairclolh. lal'~e appear' unlikely. With 55 .&lt;eaL•.
Seven governo"hip' held by
whu ;, on the GOP'&gt; mo.H:ndaol- Republicans already have thc!ir Democrats could change hand.: C~~gered li;l. "In order to pick up our largeSt majority &gt;ince 1929 and 1930, orado. Florida. Georgia. Hawaii,
numbers in the Senate. you ha•e In when they had 56.
Maryland. Nebraska and Nevada.
prolect the numbers you have," he
In the House. 56 Republican• and
The Republican-held governorsaid.
'
39 DemocrJts coa&lt;led throti~h their ships considered most competitive
Clinton campaigned for Democ- campaigns with no major-party oppo- were Alabama. California. Massarat• at lhe White House. "This is nO! nents. Scores of other Hou.e incum- chuseus. Minnesota. New Mexoco,
•ri ordinary time and lhus il is nolan bents had large financial advantages
Rhode Island and Soulh Carolina.

By ANNE GEARAN
•.
Associated Press Writer ~
. WAStfiNGTON - Microsoft
:.Corp. CEO Bill Gates wa.' the reluc1anl tour guide for h trip through his
::company's history a.&lt; government
, •-prosecutors pressed their case that
Microsoft applied illegal rnuscle to ·
crush competitors.
The
boyish-looking
Gates
Jlllpeared only on video screens in the
federal courtroom where the land'1'•rk antitrusl ca.se against his gianl
software company entered ils third
week Monday.
: . His sworn testimony. laken Ia."
summer, was marked by long pauses
_and testy answers. Oflen. he rocked
back and forth in .his chair before
answering questions, sometimes

The ca.se is built large lyon· inter·
nal c'.'mP'Y"Y documents gathered by
.the govemmenl. In the deposition.
Boies showed 10 Gales some
Microsoft executives' eleclronic mail
musings and summaries of informal
convers-ations,· and asked Gales to

e.plain them.
In particular," the governmenl
focused on lhe role Gates played in
securing a surprise August 1997
alliance with archrival Apple Com·
puler, and on a disputed meeting two
years earlier between Microsoft and
Netscape Communi_~ati on s Corp.
· Boies asked Gates whether he
ever lalked to Apple oflicials about
the " the need to undermine" ·Sun
Microsystems, the makers of Java, a
programming language that can be
used to design software pn;&gt;grams
across a .variely of types of computer&lt;, not just those with Microsoft
Windows installed.
Gates said he couldn 't remember.
Boies .tried to refresh hi s memory
with a three-line e-mail he se nt on
Aug. 8. 1997, to one of his senior
executives that asks': "Do we have a
clear plan on what we. want Apple lo

. replying wilh just one or two words.
· Often, he told Justice Departfllenl
lawyers he couldn't remember thee·
·mail and other documents they
showed him. The government auor-neys. in turn. accused him of not
answering their questions directly.
· .' Although Gales won'l appear in
· person. government auorneys hope
portions of his 20-hour tape~ depo;
sition will help show that Microsoft
planned and carried out a variety of •do to undermine Sun?"'
Gates said he didn 't remember
~allegedly anti-competitive rmaneu ~ ;,
sending the .nnte.
ver~.
Boies also asked Gates about a
- '"The issue in this case is whal did
_Microsoft do and what was June '2 1, 1995. meelingduoing which
Microsoft's intent;"the government"s Netscape claims Microsoft illegally
· lead allorney, David Boies. said out- . and unsuccessfully offered to di xide
" side the counroom Monday. "What the market for the browser software
the CEO says is obviously rele- that allows people to view informa·. "vant."
tion on the lntern~t . Mi croso ti denie s
· Mkrosoft, however, accuses the it ever made such an offer.
. government of scapegoating .Gates
and usi ng his testimony to sensaGatos, who didn't attend lhe meeh
tionalize the trial. The company says ing , said he couldn't reme mber ever
its actiOns - while aggressive ~ discussing it with any Microsoft
·
never ~lra}'ed over the line into the ex:ecutives who did.
Gales also wa~ asked about
types of. practices forbidden under

'

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BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;COOLING

Phone:----------- I

"Wioere Quality Doea11 '1 Co31 More"

I

.I

In Honor Of

• I

,,

Public

~otlce

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
: Relerenca: 5713.01C Ohio
Revised Code
! . The Me/go County Board

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio .45769

of Revlalon has completed

· 'Love, Your Family

Its work of equalization.
Phone (740) 992-2155

.; The tax returns for tax year

1998 have been revised and
the vatuattona cqmpleted
and are open for public
· lnapecllon In the olllce of
the f.'elga County Auditor,
Seco~d Floor, Courthouae,
Second Street, .Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO;

!n Memory

Public Notice
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
MID-STATE Tf!UST, VI,
PLAINTIFF, VS. PATRICIA A.
OXYER, ET AL,
DEFENDANT.
CASE NO. 98·CV.027
NOTICE OF SALE
Notice of Sate. is hareby
given In thla acl/on.

r---------.1

Public Notice
than two-thirds of lhal
amounl ($21 ,333.00). Said
properly Ia described as

follows:

Situate In the Townshl p of
Sclolo, County of Meigs and
Slate of Ohio: Sltuale tn
In Loving Memory
Section 31, T. 7N, R. 14W of
of my Father
lhe Ohio Company 's
WILLIAM B.
Purchaoe: BEGINNING at an
Iron pin, S. eg• 41 ' 39" East,
CAPEHART
' Sheriff's Sale has bean set 1038.70 last from tho
lor lhe 11th ~ay of assumed N. W. corner of
on His Birthday
December, t 998 at 1o:oo Section ·;31; thence along
Nov. 3, 1917A.M . at the Co.urlhouse. the South boundary of lhe
Property
has
been · Andrew Williams property
May 6, 1998
appraised lor $32,000.00
. 316, Pg. 335), S. 811"
God saw you were ~nd cannot be sold for less
• 39" East, 412.12 loot to
getting tired
And ·a cure was not to
Happy Ad
card of Thanks
be,
So He put His arms
around you
We wish lo thank
And whispered "Come
everyo ne JD/oo sent
with Me." · ·
flowers , cards, food
With tearful ayes 1
watched you suffer
and money; mad for
And saw you fade
your prayers and
away,
phone calls. EveryAlthough I loved you
rloin g 'was grear./y
dearly
appreciated.
I could not make you
Also special tltauks
stay.
lo
Rev. &amp; Mrs. Clyde
A
golden
heart
Sfie than{;j she's
stopped bllatlng
·
Henderson, 1Diw were
Sporty!
Hard working hands to
rlt ere wloen
ove
rest,

God broke my heart to
prove to me
He only takes the
Best
·
Your Lo"''"" DatJQhlter,

'But sfie's rea(fy
":Forty"!
ri"''"h fier:
:Happy 'BirtMay
3

1

rt eedetl 1/oem. Tloanks
lo Ewing Fuueral
Romr for 1/wir rourl eous service.

Tlae F

WORRYING!!!

for tax year 1998, must be

Public Notice
lhe center of carpenter Hill
Road· (C.R. 10) passing an
Iron pin at 391.12 loot;
thence along the c·anter of

Carpenter . Hill· Road (C.R.
10), the following two calla:
S. 24" 53' Eaat, 98.43 feat, S.
20" 54 ' 05" East, 11 .74 loot;
thence atonjllhe now parcel
line, N. 89 4 I ' 39" Weal,
458.28 feet to an Iron pin
pautng an Iron pin set by
lhls survey at 21.00 leal;
lhenca alonp tho new parcel

made In accordance with
Section 5715.19 olthe Ohio
·Revised Codo. These
complaints musl be filed on
forms which wtlt be
.furnished by the County
Auditor and must be flied In
the County Auditor's Office
on or before the 31st day of
March, I 998. All complalnls
ltlod with ths County
Auditor will be heard by lho
Board of Revision In tha

"Huge

AI..COA

ANY SIZE UP TO 93 UHI1ED INCHEIIH
EXISTIIiG WOOD OOUBll HUNG OPENING
'OPTIONS AVAILABLE

QUALITY
WIN.DOW SYSTEMS
110 COURT ST.
1·800-291-5600
l ·

New Roofs,
Repairs, GuHers,
Coatings, Siding,
Drywall, Painting,
Plumbing

At the OLD AMERICAN LEGION BUILDING
Middleport, Ohio
Food to be served by the
LUNqH LINE
In Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phone 740-992·6670
or 740-992-5827

.·. .

'

Free Estimates
Joseph Jacks
7 40-992-2068

10Jtll mo. pd .

..

...._,

R. L. HOLLON

Remodeling

Custom.. Homes

POMEROY, OHIO
,.
W. Vf!.. #023477
MINIMUM PURCHASE MAY BE REQUIRED
,.

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

Auction Starting
Saturday, November 7 at 6:00 p.m.

M&amp;J

.TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
I .
. Agnpultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
. . Chester, Ohio ·

Dream"
Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277
7

.

10,125/96/tJn

PERRY'S
CONSTRUOION
Dozer, End loader,
Backhoe,
Sight Preparation,
Utility Lines,
Build Roads
Licensed for Septic
l (740) 367-0280

provided by Section

5715.19 of the Ohio Rovtaod'
Codo. ,
Nan.c y Parker Campbell,

Meigs County Auditor

(11) 2,3,4,5,6,8,9,1 0,11,12

IOTC

SOUTHERN
OHIO DISPOSAL
•Residential·
$11.00/month
•Commercial .,.
•Senior Citizens
Discount
•Dumpsters
•Monthly .Payments
can for best prices:
. 1·800-809-7721
10113/1 mo.

.

..

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
Slug &amp; Shqt

Matches

. ~OBERT BISSELL .

ON·UNE
SECRETS!

CONSTRUCTION

Get tons of free stuff
from On-Line
Services!
Plus 30 more amazing
secrets
1-900-976· 3339
ext. 9765
. 2.99/mln. Musl be18 .
Saov·U 619-645-11434

•New Homes
·Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
.
ESTIMATEES
985-4473
7/221lln

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre
614-742-2138

100.00 feet lo the polnl of
BEGINNING and containing
1.000 acre.
FOR LAST SOURCE OF '' .
TITLE SEE D.B. 42, Pg. 63 of
the Melga County, Ohio .

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

No. 17-&lt;)0696.004
David H. McCown, altornoy
Plalntlll
James M. Soulsby, Sheriff
(11) 3,10,17 3TC

'
Public Notice

Meigs Co. Bikers taking
. ~ applications for
Toys for Tots fo~ Chri~tmas
Meigs Co. Health Dept.
Nov. 2, 3, 4 &amp;
Nov. 9, 10, 11 .

PUBLIC NOTICE

will be held at11 :3Da.m. on
Monday, November 9, 1998.
Purpose ol the. meeting Is

lo eelecl a 1/llh member 10
this committee.
(11) 3 lTC

·

No phone calls .
Apply in person.
· Pick-up day Dec. (5th, 10 am6
at Rutland Legion

Guard Again. I High Prim
Uso Tho Classl(iod Swton

\

,,

.

r:lew Homes &amp; Remodeling

(n&gt;ll,j.., Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding

~
~

Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yrs. exp.
Lice nsed &amp; Insured
Phone 740-992·3987
Free Estimates
Owner: John Dean

-...
lt\~ 1

~

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding •Soffit
•Fascia
•Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
•Replacement
Windows
·Stationary Docks
•Blown Insulation
•Garages •Decks
24x24 Pole Building
starting at $5995
740-992-2772

7411-446-9416
1391 Safford !
School Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

LANDSCAPE.
DESIGNS
Computer Graphics
Deslg"s
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
·Commercial ·
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio
7 40-985-4422...,....

~ARPET ·

PLUS
Professional ·
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES
740-698-9114
or
8{11 /911 tfn

GUN SHOOT
Racine Gun Club
Nease Hollow Rd•
Every Sunday
12:30 pm
Limit 680 sleeve
.737 back bore
(Llme StoneLow Rates)

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top

Soil, Fill Dirt

.Residential &amp;
Commercial

uNo fob too bit or
too small"
Free Estimates
(740) 367-0412
(740) 992·4232
Winter is aro .. nd
tl.e corner

Come into
IMPERIAL TIRE
. and have your car
winterized. Have your
anti-freeze checked, Oil
changed-, New tires .
Snow Tires. Brakes
checked. &amp; Exhaust
Check out .our
discounted tires.
uirqe variety of sizes

ASK QUESTIONS,
GET ANSWERS

g~~ts "'~~~6c7~~~e:Jo

ELECTRIC OR
SATELLITE
SERVICE
Call

992-6320
Local Sate llite
Provider
Best Electric Pomeroy

P:J.:

3596, www.1hehotpages2 .comlnsl
psychic1250291.htm $3.99 ' ""!n.
18+ ,5erv·U 619·645-8434.

Princess Video Has X-Rated
Movies For Sale, $15 Each Or 2
For $25, New -Releases. 740.44.1 · ,
5167.
Start elating tonigh t! Have ftm
playing the Ohio Oatln~ Game .. ,1·
800 -AOMANCE . e~tenswn 9015.
SWPM, Mid 40's 6'1 230. likes
Outdoor A,ctivlties . I SO SPF 25 •
45. Send Response To: CLA o&amp;97,
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 8?5
Third Avenue, Gallipo li s, QH
45631 '

30 Announcernents ..
I, Melissa Barrett, wi11 not be re·
sponslble for any debls occurred
1
by Timothy Barrett.

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stim son, Athens
740.592·1842
Quality ctott1ing and household
Items . $1.00 ba g sale every
Thursday. Monday thr u Saturo"ay
9:tl0'5:3().

Giveaway

2 Year Old Male MiJCed Collie

Dog. 740·446-1062

'·'

Adorable puppies, part German
male &amp; female,' 8
weeks, 304·675·6494 after 7:00
~hep herd ,

PM.
La r g~ Female Calico Ca t, Na,u lered &amp; Oeclawed . Lovely Dis~ -

sitlon, 740·245·5543.

·

Siberian Husky, to good home ,
740-992-0040.
ol

60

7 40-698-7231

••

Personals·

40

Cousin's Home
Improvement and
Painting &amp; Coating

•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(F.REE ESTIM~TES~
V.C . YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Records of Deeds . Parcel

Bennett Supply

614-992-3470

line, N. 00 18' 21" East,

1). meeltng of the S.C.l.P.
Local Review Committee

ANNOUNCEMENTS

_.,

Supplies

10/1tt mo.

Public Notice
manner

/

ln~entory"

I•Rbaf Coatings
I *Vilnvl Skirting
I *VVat&lt;!r Heaters

&amp; Wood
Steps
,
Discount Prices

10!15/1 mo

All VINYL'DOUBLE HUNG
INSULATED GLASS
TILf.IN FOR EASY CLEANING

.

• Hot Water Heater ·
• Freezers
•,
• Dishwashers

005

$)95.00 INSTALLED'

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

Limestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites " .
Land Clearing &amp;
I Grading .
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
,--"Build Your
Estimates ·
(614) 992-3838
1998 Martin Street
12/18/tln
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Compl.afnla agalnsl lhe
oaluattona, as eatabllshed

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANJ AD

.

.,

'·

PARTS

REPLACEMENT WINDOW
SPECIAL
riJ

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

740-446-9416! 1-800-872-5967

L------~------------J
The Daily Sentinel

Corporal
Bob Johnson
1991-1992
Mari.nes
Desert Storm

740•742•3411

I

MOBILE HOME

Free Estimates

Insured

CREDIT

Air Conditioners As Low As '28 a month
Heat Pumps AI Low AI 138 ·a month

I'

Your Name :

William Safranek, Attorney At I aw
(740) 592-5025
Athens, Ohio

.

Call Ken Young
(740) 985-3551

Roofs • Decks • Garages

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

"Eaay Ot•er tlae Plaou~ Bank Fir.~tuitcir.lg''l

Trubutes must be prepaid.
~ Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11

10/ 1 4198 1 mo.

• Dryer

' Minor Re.pairs • Cabinets • Siding

. ,.

'!'!!~!:/!!!.

AD DEADLINE: Thursday, Nov. 5, I 99B

Call 740·843·5426

• Washers
• Ranges
• RefrlQerators

New Construction &amp; Remodeling

Residential &amp; Mobile Home
Air Cofiditioners &amp; Heat Pumps

Conflict/War
Love, (name relationship to veteran)

.,

financial obligations and arrange .a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruplcy may
keep "exempt" propeny for his or her personal
use. This may include a car, a .hou se, clothes, and
household gopds.

Over 20 years experiencq.
Free Estimates

"'Need repair on any make?"

SUNSE,. HOME ·
CONS,.RUC,.ION.

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a.4ebtor of

44087 Wlpple Road (Five rolnts Area)
· ..
Pomeroy, Ohio
Nick and Eleanor Leonard

.·

Branch of Service

Ad With Photo- $12.00
' size)
(shown actual

(748).2-8344

Call for appointment
(740) 992-2036
OHIO VALLEY PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Dates of Active Duty

Love, Yotu· Family

.... ,_.

Tbne to gel your furnac:e
ser~ic:ed for ......-infer

C!O The Dally Sentinel

In Honor Of (name and rank)

1969-1971
7

VETERAN SALUTE

1
I
I
I
I
I

4,121/tl ""

&amp; Used Tires

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

THE APPLIANCE MAN:

• Sales • Service
• Installation
Great Deals On New F1.1rnaces
Starting As Low As $900.00, lnsta,l led
Call Don today at 1-740-742-2842
ASES and EPA Certified

Computer Balancing &amp; Mounting
44087 Wlpple Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

mo.

G&amp;W PLA~TICS AND SUPPLY

Forces.
·
,..-------------------,
Your Choice Of Two Style_s.~. 1 i. Please Fill Out And Return Witfl
Ad On I y $7.00
1
Your Payment To:
·
In Honor Of

1·800-809-7721
12121•1

On November II, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the
thousands of men and women who have proudly served their
country during times of crises and peace.
This Vet(lran i Day, The Daily Sentinel•will publish a very
special tribute honoring 'area veterans. You crmjoin in our salute
.
'
by including the veteran in your life, living or ~ceased, who have
seroed or is currently serving in any branch of the U.S. Armed

(shown actual size)

New

..

LOHG•s
COHSTROCTIOn

(Cut Out lor Future Diocoont)

"Done right the fltSt time"
"Priced right aU the time~•

; for 3 or more families $25.00 per mo.
••

MIGHTY MAC
AERATION SYSTEM
New llghl weight,
fiberglass 's tate and
county approved with
two-year warranty.
740-742-2566 .
D. Howard 10i'lt.'1 -.

DON'$ HEATING &amp; COOLING

Our Customers Are Special

Small Dumpsters

,.

'.

FREE ESTIMATES

. • Fall Special·
3 Rooms &amp; Hall
$59.95
(Maximum 500 sq . ft.)

Room Additions • Roofing

SOUTHERN OHIO DISPOSAL

By Calling

should threaten . Apple by saying
Microsoft would stop making the
popular Office business software for
Macintosh computers. The product
was crilicallo Apple's bollom line.
"The threat to cancel Mac Office
97 is certainly the strongest bargaining point we have. a.s doing so will do
a greal deal of harm 10 Apple Immediately. I also believe that Apple is
laking this threat preuy seriously."
one Microsoft executive wrole to
Gates in a June 27. 1997, e-mail.
Boies asked Gates whether he
remembered being told about the idea
of using the Office program as a b~r­
gaining tool. Gates avoided answering directly.
" Well, I know thai Apple would
prefer lhal we have a more updated
version of Mac Oflice, that that
would be a positive thing for them."
he said.
Boies also asked Gates repeated·ly whether browser distribution was
a key par1 of Microsoft 's August 1997
deal with Apple. He referred Qates to
one e-mail he wrote to executive~.
explaiiling what Microsoft would
get in the' deal: "Apple endorses
Internet Ex plurer technology."
'·No such deal was ever struck,"
Gates replied. He later acknowlcd!\ed the pannership had "soonelhing to do with, they will at least
ship it along with olher browsers."
Boies also asked Gates whether
Microsoft e•er press ured Apple to
abandon its QuickTime multimedia
software, which competed directly
with Microsoft's own Netshow program. Gates denied the claim.

992-7834
I"(!/ Holzer Clinic ... Kee i the Promise!

CLEANING

With Poly Cart $11.00 per mo.

ex:ecutives sUggesting,that Microsoft

liminary ligures showed 1.330 dead
and I,903 missing·.
As many as 1,500 ' people may
have died in mudslides when the
crater lake of the Casitas Vokano collapsed, sending a wall of mud and
debris miles wide onto seve ral villages below.
The greatest devastation was
By late Monday, soldi ers had
reported in HonUura11. where an estipulled 808 bodies from the mud. CivThe U.S. Coast Guard said Mon mated S.IKXl people dieJ and 6!XI,IXXl . il de fe nse officials planned to begin
- · 10 perceno ol the population burning bodies today to cut down on day it had searched a Colorado-sized
sectinn of the Caribhea n fqr 3 1· peowere forced to flee their homes~ after the risk of disease.
last week\ ~:. torm . Countle'&gt;s more
Another small rm•dslide on the ple missing since Oct. 27 aboard a
were luck ing fre"h w:.tlr.: r. fom.l and northern slope of the volcano 2K2-fool schooner, the FaniOme. ·
medkinc.
destroyed 34 homes Mond ay. but operated by Windjammer Barefoot
Faced w1 th a nut1nnal tJata~·.truph e. then: were no apparent casualties, Tours of Miami.
A plane crash in western
Pre s1 dent C:.~r l o" Flore s Fucusse
Nicaragua's defense minislcr. Pedro
Guatemala blamed on the remnants
· appealed for internutional hcl p Mon - Joaq uin Ch~morro. said.
day.
'
Miguel Angel Oniz waited three qf Mitch killed II people, 10 ot;them
"We ha'.'e bt:fore us a panorama of Jays with his famil y on a barren hill- · Amt:ricans bringing emergencY aid , '
- death. Ueso lation anU ruin. " he ·sai d top under pourin g rain aftfr barely and injured another seven U.S. citi·
in a nationally broaU~..:ast speech.
escaping the torrent of mud. trees and ze ns Sunday,' doc tors said.
"There are corpses everywhere. roch that camt! crashing down on hi s
victims of landslides or of I he (ilood) village of El Ojochal.
Bad weather and lack of radar
waters," he t:onti nued. ''The most
may
have caused I he crash of thj: C·
They were among the few lucky
conservative calcu lati ons of the Lie ad t!nough to get out in lime. Help nt!v- 47 cargo plane operated by the Livare in the thousands. not in the hun- er came. and the soggy. quicksand- ing Water Teaching Mission. a!rporl
clreds ...
li ke mud trapped them for days. They officials in Guatemala sa id. The
Responding to widespread looting finall y walked out Monday. pro- plane went down near the town .of
and vantlali sm, Flort:s Fal:l.lsse sus- pelled by desperate hunger and thirst. San Andreas 'Xecul. 60 mil"' wesl of
pended constitu tional liberties for two
"There w;,a s no food, no w;,1tcr unU Guatemala City. as it was pelted by
weeks, i.illuwing author.ities to seiz.e a lot of disea•e. a lot of death:'' the .ram.
propeny. detain suspects and conduct
· unlirnitl!d sean.:hes. A cu rfew was
imposed between 9 p.m. and 5 a.m .
If the 992 Exchange is a Free Part of Your
Many parts of Honduras remained
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
cut of( almost a week after Milch barr.eled into the Bay Island of Gua~nja
Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis
with I HO in ph winds. The storm
pounded the isthmus. dropping up to
Toll Free!
25 inches of rain in one six-hour periDIAL
" od, before dissipaling Mon.day over
soulhern Mexico.
~
.I
Vinually all of Honduras suffere
• ll ooding. from the lowland marshes
on the Atlantic Coast to the moun·
· l;rins. hill s and plaleausof the interi-

992-7696

CARPET &amp; UPHOLSTERY

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows

In Historic' Downtown Pomeroy

HOWARD'S
Til-COUNTY
SANITATION

ALL PRO

Residential _Pick-up $10.00 per mo.

alleged threats his company made to
P.rsuade Apple to distribute
Microsoft's Internet browser.
Boies cited several internal emails sent between Gates aoid ~his

33-year-old Ortiz said. "We needed
to get out of there."
They headed to Chichigalpa. six
miles away, where Uoctnrs att ended
to survivors in an elementary school.
Among the casualties in other
Central American countries, El Salvador listed 174 dead. 96 missing and
27,000 homeless. Gualemalareporled 100 storm-related deaths. Mexico
reponed one.

BISSELL BUILDERS,·INC.

Antiques • Lang Calendars • Candles
·Toland Flags • Camille Beckman Lotion
Birdhouses • Clocks • Frames
• Soap • Baby Gifts
• Hartwell Hares

.

Honduras suspends civH liberties
·in wake of devastation from Mitch ·
TEGUCIGALPA, Hondums (AP)
.:..... As llood waters receded and communications improved toUay. the
. "panorama of ~ealh .. left by Hurricane Mitch swe lled to biblical proportions: An e'timated 7.000 dead in
Centml 1\nierica. with whole vi llages
wiped off the map and hundreds of
' aet.:ornp~sing bodies red~i ng in slowly hardening rivers of mud.

HARTWEll HOUSE

u"'·

:Videqtaped testimony finds Gates
·defending deal with PC marketer
antitrust laws.

=======

&lt;a
lo" fur the _pie,idcnt"s party in

Honor Our Heroes

The Dal_ly Sentinel • Page; 7

Pomeroy • MiddlePQrt, Ohio

Losl and Found

Lost· anyone with lnlormatto\"'lon
missing rings In my hOmeton
Plymale Ad.· diamond souta:lre ,
H4 ca ra t, marquis shape; rjng
With two hearts; black onyx r~ g :
Avo n ri ng with blue sto ne . Ae wa rd If returned, ca ll 304-675·
~903.

l ost: Gold Alng In Gallipolis Are.a,
Gold With Red Set, $50 Rewardl
740·869·9g32 Call Collect
..
los t: la rge Black /Silver And
Br own M~le German Shepherd .
Black Spot On Tongue, Losl In
S. A. 325 &amp; Cente rpoint AreB ,
Child's Pel, H Seen Please C811
740·245·5997.
\

.

Lost : miniature Schnauzer, 'tO/

29/98, vicin ity or north Point
mentary, 304·675·1 725 .

El'e·

Lost: Small Chihuahua Type Dog,
Brown / Black Wit h Whi le Mq,rk ·
ing s, Child 's Pet, Lost: McCdrmlck Road. 740·441·1983.

Lost : White long hair cal. B ~r­
delte Addn . area. Reward, {304)

675·6612.
New ltoor mals, lor. a car ,C.\11
and identity 304·675·4331 .

· 70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

t;'-p!~~~:=.~~=~

'

QEAQLINE: 2:00p.m.
the day before the ad
II to run . Sunday
edition . 2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday edlllon
~ 10:00 a.m. Saturday. , .

Garage Sale : In Pa triot. Novelf'l·
ber 4th, 5t h, 6th . 7th, 9·5 , Lots 01
Girls /Boys Clothes, Nice Ladles
Guess And Levi Jea'ns, Rotollller
And Loi s Morel Eve rything
Cheap!
' '

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

.·

All Yard Sates Mu tt Be Plld In
Advance . Deadline: 1:OOpm t~e
day ,b efore the ad It to rYn,
Sunday • Monday edltiQnt

1:OOt&gt;m Frldoy.
Inside rummage sale, 1112·11·n,
10.4, lots ol winter clothes, 381QO
1
St.Rt124wesl.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity

-

"

Sidewalk sale cont1nues- MQn·
day, Tuesday &amp; Wedneselay. 1'-40·
vember 2 thr u 4 . Wherelll H.,n.
derson , WV across !rom the post
ollice a t The Junque Shoppe &amp;
C ..'J. leathers, t0am·4pm .

s

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday,Novemnber3,1998

Tuesday, November 3,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally SenUnel• Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..

NEA Cro..word Puzzle
PHJIJ.TP
ALDER

Auction
and Flea Market

Jl()

Si1ck Pearson Auction Company
.full t1me auct oneer complete

auct•on

serv ce

licensed

166 Oh o I West V rg ma 304
?=73-~785 Or 304 773-5447

:Wedemeyer s Auction Ser"VtCe
.Galclolt5 Ol'lio 740-379-2720

:90

Wanted to Buy

.Absolute Top Dollar All U S Sll
ve r &lt;And Gold Cams Proo!sets
Otamonds Anhque Jewelry Gold
8 ngs Pre 1930 US Currency
Sterlmg Etc Acqu isitions Jewelry
M T S Com ShOp 151 SecoM
Avenue GallipoliS 740-446-2642
Antiques &amp; Collectables Buy ng
1 P1eca Or Estates 740 446

2707

Antiques top pnces pajd R1ver

tre Antiques Pomeroy Ohio
Russ Moore owner

2526

740 992

A.nttques &amp; ctean used furniture
will tluy one ptece or comple te
Muuhold Osby Mart n 740

992.SS76
~lean late Model Cars Or
Trucks 1990 Models Or Newer
Sm th Bu cit Pont ac 1900 East

ern Avenue GallipoliS

J &amp; 0 Auto Parts

Buymg

wrecked or salvaged vehiCles

30+773-5033
Left lront fender bumper rad atOI'
lor 1992 Chevy S 10 4 cyl 740
247~292

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas I St) rley
~ars :DI-675-1429
Rocksprmgs Rehab Center s
seekmg a part lime Ill! m cook
dishwasher etc Please apply n
person Rocktspr ngs Rehabihata
tiOn Center 36759 Rocksprings
Rd. Pom,roy Oh10 4576g No
phone calla P*-•
·

Someone To lrve In &amp; Take Care
Of Elderly Couple For Room &amp;
Board Plus Salary 740.446-4051

740-44&amp;-3117

Telemertceter~

Work In our new Pt Pleasant of
t ce setting appo1n1ments Great
oft ce atmosphere great pay
tong term employment available
For 1mmed1a1e employment call
304 675 6539 I lam 5pm
Wanted persons 55 and over to
help teach read1ng at Pomeroy
Elementary w1th the STARS Pro
gram F !teen hours per week
Cho ce of $.2 50 per hour st pend
or tu liOn uMIIS for your grandchild
or a cl"'lld ot your cho ice Pa d
m1leage and free lunch For an
apphcauon or more mformat on
can 01ana Coates 740-992 2161

Wor1&lt; AI Home
Growing Company Needs Help
Now $250 $500 A Week Part
Time Full T me Easy &amp; Fun We
Will Tra in No Exper ence Need
ed Serious lnquries Only 1 800
204 7048

140

Business
Training

Galllpol s Career College Sprmg
V.lllley Plaza 740 446 4367 1
800 214 0452 Accredited Mem

ACICS AlllJ •oo-os-1274B
150
Schools
Instruction
be

11 0

Help Wan,ted

Computer Users Needed Work
Own Hrs $20K $75K /Yr 1 800
3497186Ext 1173 wwwamp
Inc com
Eam Extra SS$$S

HOLIDAY HELP NEEDED
Wllh Taking Gift Orders &amp; Host
ing Demonstrat ons
• Candlas
Bath &amp; Body
• Fragrances Aromatherapy
• Skll'l Care ChHdren s G fts
Call Tracy 740-441 1982
Exper enced Auto Body Repair
man A~ply AI Larry s Body
Shop 2046 Addison P Ice Ga!11

pols
Female live In compamon wanted
for elderty woman Country setting
room and board modest salary
Food preparation and light
housekeepmg req ui red Must
have ver flab le references 740
992 6584 leave message
K tchen help 11'1 pizza shop 32 40
hours per week two years expe
ence required Send resume to
Box 121 Syracuse OhiO 45779
Needed somf!!One lo stay with e1
derly gentleman room and board
small salary prefer male 304

89s-3942

Now Accepting Appllcat ons At
Oomlno s Pizza Gall polis &amp; Po
mer~ Locations Please Apply In

Person
Oak Hill Tr uck ng Company Is
Seeking Expenenced Semi Trac
tor Trailer Drivers EKcellent Pay
&amp; Insurance Package Over The
Road &amp; Local Orlvmg Exper1
anced Drivers Only Call 740

w nn

Overbrook Center has part lime
LPN posit ions available for all
shifts If Interested please contact
Angle Halley at 740 992 6412

EOE

Part Time LPN S 16 to 32 Hours
Per Week Call M ddleton Es
tates 740..446 4614
Part I me handyman .needed
send resume to Dally Senlmel
PO Bo~~: 729 74 Pomeroy Oh
45769
Position Ava table
Gall a Me1gs Community Action
Agency Is Accept ng Appl ca
ns For The Follow ng Positon
"'I 118 AsSIStant {J TPA
At Cheshire Duties
ng Eft c•ent F ow Of
Documen ts In Com
Wit h Approved Pro
" es Organ z ng And Main
1a n ng P ogram Records Prepa
ng Reports And Other Statstlcal
lnlormat on Perform ng Needed
Payroll Funct ons A nd lncodlng
.And Rev ew ng Compute Entries

'

Post on Requires H•gh School D1
ploma Or GED Knowledge Of
Computer Systems And Know!
edge Of JTPA MIS Funcuons
Pas lion W I Requ re Trave In
The Galha Me gs Area And Out
Of Area Tra11e l To Allend Meet
ngs And Tra n ng
App cat ons May Be Obta ned AI
The Follow ng GMCAA 0 11 qes Or
At The Oh o Bureau 01 Erhploy
ment Serv ces On Buckeye H•fl s
Road In Rio G ande Appl cat ons
Must Be Rece ived By Tuesday
NO\I'ember 17 1998
8010 North State Route 7
Chesh re Oh o 45620 0272
859 Th rd Avenue
Gallpolis OhfO 45631
33105 H land Road
Pomeroy OhiO 45769

Magic Years Day Care Pre
Schoo spaces available excel
lent sk1lls for your childs devel
opment Call us lor more mforma

lion 304-675 51!47 MF 7 30-5 30

180 Wanted To Do
Dependable l:.ady W1U Do House
c ean ng Cal Edna Lanier 304
675 8738
e:1ectr c maintenance ~erv ce
Wlr ng breaker boxes light f x
lure heat ng systems and Aa

modeling 304-674 0126

Furnllure repair ref n sh and res
toratlon also custom orders Oh1o
Valley Aehnlsh ng Shop Larry
Ph lllps 740-992-6576
Georges Portable Sawm 11 don t
haul your logs to the m II JUSt cal!
304 675-1957
Higgs Construction Roof ng S1d
ng Pa ntlng Remodeling Also
Tree Cunlng &amp; Landscapmg
Combined Experience 1s Years
Fully Insured Free Est mates

304-674 0058 740 446-3409

W II babysit In Apple Grove a ea
my home or yours 304 576 4008
Will Work For $4 00 I Hour W II
Haul Trash Jun~ Etc 740 367
0140

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

recommends that you do bus1
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall unt 1 you have n11est gated
the offering
ESTABLISHED RETAIL REPS!
Exc tlng Service Designed To
Complement Present Product
lines hce lent Commissions!
Fa• Resume To 888 753 6334
Or Call740 753-6605

230

Professional
Services

Llvlngaton 1 Baaement Water
Proofing all basement re pairs
done free estimates I fetlme
guarantee 12yrs on ob e~~:pen
ence 304-895-3887
Llvlngaton 1 Beaement Water
Proofing all basement repa rs
done tree estimates hfet me
guarantee 12yrs on job exper
ence 304-895 3887
~

310 Homes for Sale
114

IMMEDIATE OISPOSALI1

Reposessed / Must Sell 2 Brand
New R30 Prems1a1tated Prefab
Homes H ghest Ouahly Easy
ConstructiOn N~ver Erected One
Is 4 Bedrooms 1 800 874 6032
Sacnllcel
A l11tfe Country 111 Town Pr ce
reduced 1\Jrge restored V ctor an
home &amp;- ~tuated on 12 acres V1l
tage of Middleport Secluded and
pnvate close to schools and
churches Prtvare br clc c~rcular
dnve brick patiO modern lc1tchen
family room wn1replace 3 4 bed
rooms two baths large lormaf LRI
DR large Ioyer four orlgm.al
stained glass w ndows 30
m nutes from Athens 15 20
m nutes from Gallipolis For ap
potntment call740 992 56!H;
3 bedroom country kitchen llv
mglfam ly 2 baths detacheg ga
rage on 1 112 acres country set
tmg Chester area $46 000 740

985 3511

6yr 2 3 bedrooms loft tongue/
groo11e pellet sto11e HPIC A ap
pi ances garage spa acre Buta
v ne P•lce 740-367-()286
House &amp; Lot For Sate .2 Bed
rooms 1 Bath $600 Down w A C
Easy Terms located Near Bid
well Contact David 1 800 448
6909
House On State Route 7 South
less Than 10 Mmutes From
Downtown Gallipolis Private 2 112
Acre Lot w th Breathtaking RIVer
\1 ew Approx 2 000 Sq Ft 3 Bed
rooms 2 112 Baths Family Room
2 F•reptaces Hardwood Floors 2
Car Garage lots 01 E~~:trasl 740
446 g:76.2 Of 740 448-4514
Modern 3 bedroom house .2
baths country kitchen large 2 car
garage on 1/2 acre lot Tuppers
Pla1ns Oh sewer already hooked
up $75 000 740 985 3511 or
740 667 3304
Pr ce reduced again will cons der
selling on land contract 3 bed
room spilt level new 3 car ga
rage new heat pump and a1r new
carpet throughout \tery nice
home 740 742 4000
RED BRICK RANCH Style
House Excellent Cond1tlon Par
!Iaiiy Fm1shed Basement 2 Car
Garage Serious Inquiries Onlyll

740 446-3385

R ght In Cadmus Great Location!
112 Acre MIL 3 Bed oom House 2
Baths Living Room 0 nlng Room
N1ce Porch 112 Basement With
Good Dry Concrete Floor Nice
B g ShOp Plus A Good Garage
Top Notch Garden Barn Has 1
Horse Stall Plus A Little Pasture
County Water And Well Good
Furnace In Basemen t For Heat
Pnced Just Rlghll Roman 0
Hershberger 15586 Stale Route
141 PatiO! OH 45658

AN position ava abe for an e~~:
perlenced case manager at
Rockspr -ngs Rehab I tai!On Cen
ter Exper ence n MDS assess
ments rehab I tat on nurs ng and
ttle coord nat on ol an lnterd sc
pllnary team preferred Positron
has flexible scheduling ana e~~:cel
lent benefit package Must have
pnor nursmg exper ence and be
familiar w th gerlatnc rehab htat10n
Please send resume to Attention
Carol Greemng R N C DON
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Cen
rer 36759 Rockspnngs Ad P.o
meroy Oh10 45769

1.----~----1..

Wanted Substtute Hyglen sl tor
marerr'l ty leave December 16th
through the second week of Fe
bruary Exce ent work ng cond
tlons n a modern office w th g eat
pay Please ca I 304 773 5620 or
send resume to P 0 Bo~~: 360
Mason WV 25260

2 yr Old nr clc ranch 3 becl ooms
2 baths den wood floors 3000
Meadow bmok 304 675 7643

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
2 bedroom 1 1!2 bath fireplace
gas lurnace .270 S(l II of lv ng
space
In Chester
asking
$4 7 000 7 40 985 3582
2 Bedrooms 1 Bath Fam ly Room
C ty Schools On 1/2 Acre Ne gh
bo hood Road 740 256 6102

3 bedroom handiCapped acces
Sible water &amp; sewer provided to
tal electric IJath &amp; half Hud
voucher •ccepted Racme area
Southern School 01slnct 740

New 16x80 $500 Down $245 per
mo Free air slurl 1 800 691

67n

949-4002

New 199'8 14x70 three bedroom
mctudes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes sWut~ng detulfe steps
and setup Only $187 08 per
month Wllh $1075 down Call 1
BOQ.837 3238

McCorm1ck Road 3 Bedrooms &amp;
2 Badrooms $275/Mo Ptus De
posH 740 446 6844

NEW BANK REPOS
ONLY 3 LEFT
Still In Warranty

OWNER FINANCING
AVAILABLE
304-75s.5885
House Tra11er on Broad Run Ad
3br 1 112 baths 2 added on
rooms Porch garage lot 2 A/
C s household terns $15 000

304 e82 3426

We F nance land &amp;: Home W1th
As L ttle As $500 Oown 1 606

928-3426

4 Bedrooms 2 Baths $229/Mo
, 800-383-6862

340

Business and
Buildings

CommercJal Off ce or Rata I 87
M II St M ddleport 1 450 Sq Ft
$400 mo Corner Buildmg 740
992 6250 Acquisitions (next
door)

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 38 Acres Level W/12Ft X 60Ft
Mobile Home 24X24 Garage
9Ft)(10Ft Storage Bulldmg

$36 000 00 740-388 8884

49 3/4 Acres On Ward Road In
Gallla And Me gs County Ap
prox 5 Acres Clean Rest In
Woods $30000 740 388-9105
Appro~~:

mately 3 5 Acres Perry
Twp For Sale 740 446 4609 or
740 446 1104 After 5 OOPM
Seen c Valley at Apple Grove
WV BUild ng lots s ngie w1des
accepted
public water 20
m nutes from new Buffalo Bridge
on Jerry s Run Ad C::lyde Bowen
Jr 304 576 2336
Several 5 acre parce" remote
beaut ful land Me1gs County Sc1
PIO Twp SA 692 Uusl off SA 143)
~ner financing ($1800 per acre)
Call for good map 740 593-8545

360

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy land 30 500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1 800 2fJ 8365
AnlhOny Land CO

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent
2 Bdrm House In Gall1polls De
post Requ red NO Pets 740 379

Three bedroom ranch kitchen w/
appliances bath LA hlrnllure
cur tams 18x.20 back deck out
buildings c ly wafer blacktop
road Waterloo Ad $39 900 1

2 bedroom all etectr c home n
Letart Falls w th carport awn &amp;
garden Hod accepted with com
plated appllcat on &amp; references
WID 740 992 2311 alter 6pm
outs de pets only

Three bedroom one bath home In
New Haven good neighborhood
close to school and public pool
large yard new v nyl siding per
feet starter hOme $38 500 304
882 3319

2 Bedrooms 1 1/2 Bath W th Full
Basement In Patriot Call Alter 6
PM 740 446 4569

600 466 8555

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
$500 Down on any 14:1170 m
stock lm11ed number free del v
e.ry Calli aoo 691 6777
$999 Down on any 96 model
Doublewlde an stock Free Oellv
ery Call 1 800 691 6777
Abandoned Home Take Over
Payment s Or Make Offer 1 800

383 6662

2x65 2 br
742 2803

total electno 740

1959 2 be&lt;JIJom must be moved
2000 OBO 304 675 7773 ask lor
M ke and leave message
1963 W ndsor 1Ox 56 .2 bedroom
good cond tlon mi.Jst move

$2500 OBO 304 675 871!2

1969 Communlly mobile i1ome
121156 asking $2300 740 843
5310 days or 740 843 5147 alter

1971 H llcrest 12x60 two bed
roo ms washer d yer stove &amp; re
lr lg~Hator
air underp nnmg
$4500 740 99.2 5039

Th S newspaper w II not
~now ngly accept
advert sements lor real es ate
wh ch s n v olat on of the
law Ou readers a e hereby
nlormed that a.ll dwell ngs
aaven sed n 1h 5 newspaper
a e ava able on an eq ual
opportun ty basis

8•30 fully equ pped ready to
move $1200 740 7•2-8282

New brlclc Ranch 3 bedroona
.2 bath Den
.2 car garage plus
storage area All Ecec trlc l 1 2
leOJel acres $127 500 304 675
8959

6pm

AI real estate adverhs ng n
th is newspaper s sub1ect to
the Federal Fa1r Hous ng Act
of 1966 whtch makes t 111ega1
to advertise any preference
Imi tation or dlscrlm nat1on
based on race color rei g on
se~~: lam II a status Or n~t onal
o gin or any rltenllon to
make any such preference
m tat on or d scr m nat on

320 Mobile Home•
lor Sale

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1987 C layton 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths Central Air Gas Heal
Great Condition 1'40 388 8475 )
Price educed 1990 Sp uce
R dge 141170 mobile home very
good cond tlon 2 bedrooms 1 &amp;
1/2 baths washer &amp; dryer stove
retrlge ato central a 8x8 out
s de bu ldlng mmedtale posses
slon 740 992 6582
1996 14 Ft ~~:72 Fl Sunshine 2
Bedrooms 2 Baths Island Kitch
en Oak Cablne1s 740 .245 9834
ABANDONED HOME
3BR Assume loan
Low Month y Payments
Financing Available
304 755 5566
Double Wide New $999 Down
$237 per mo Free delivery &amp; se l
up 1 aoo 691 6777
Large selection of used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Starting at $2995
OUICk dellve y Call 740 385

9621

Oakwood Homes Barboursville
wv Model Close Out 304 736

3409

Mob le Home &amp; 3/4 Acre Lot For
Sale 1980 K ngsley 4~~:7 0 3 Bed
rooms .2 Baths Located S A 218
Days 740 446 3278 Evenmgs
740 446 3099
New 14•70 $500 Down $199 per
mo Free- aH skill 1 BOO 691
6777
NEW 14x80 3BR
GLAMOUR BATH
$199 Month Only At

3 Bd ms t 1! 2 Baths Full F n
shed Basement Double Garage
Brick 1 Mile Fr om HMC 740
446 14.23

OAKWOOD HOMES
NITRO WV
304 755 5885

I

2400

3 Bdrms Fam ly oom 1 3 Acres
2 OOOSqFt 3 Miles .South On 7
16X32 lnground Pool 2 Storage
bu ld ~s 740 245 9472
3 bed oom house with garag_e lor
rant m Rutland $285/mo plus de
post 740 742 2367

1 5 BEDROOM HOMES FROM
$4 000 loca Gov 1 &amp; Bank
Repo s Ca 1 800 522 2730 X
1709
Efficient clean two bedroom
depos t references no pets 3Q4
675 5162
House lor Rent wltt1 opt on to
buy 4 bedroom 1112 baths I car
garage fenced In yard! Centra l
a r/heal Washer/Dryer Hook up
lg Deck Slove Aefr g Dlshwa
ter furnished $525 Plus Deposit
(304) 675 7673
House Fflr Rent Pair ot Area
74(}.446 t4569 Aller 5 PM
N ce 2 o 3 bedroom hOuse n Po
meroy no pets 740 992 5B56
Two bedroom lull basement re
fr ge ator and stove furnished
S300 month pus deposit and er
erences no pets one bed oom
apa tment al new no pets 304

675 6676

N1ce Tra1ler Secluded Lot Near
Bidwell Porter 1 Badroom $4001
Mo Includes All Uttl t es 740
441...0720
Tra fer For Rent Beautiful River
V ew 198 R1ver Street Kanagua
Oeposn References No Pet s
7.t(H41..0181 Fostei'Trallef Park..
Two bedroom mob1te home ut1l1
ties partially paid call 304 675
6512 aher 7pm
Two bedroom partially furnished
near Leon main road S20Q de
pos11 $200 month call 740 446
1930 attar 6 00 pm
Unfurnished Mobde Home On
Cora M II Road Off Of 325 No
PelS References Depo11t Re
qulred 740-245-5622

440

Apartmenta
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
mshed and unfurnished security
deposit requ red no pets 740

992 2218

1 Bedroom Economical Gas
Heat W!O Hook Up Near C1nema
$279/Mo Plus Utilities Deposit &amp;
Lease Requlr9'.1 740-446-2957
2bdrm aptf total electnc ap
pllances furnished laundry room
fac 1t1es close to school m town
.Appl cations available at V1llage
Green Apls N49 or call 740 992

3711 EOH

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Central
Heat /A1r On First Avenue
.Available November 15th Reier
ences Depos t 7 40 446 1079

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; mo11les Call 740 446 2568
Equal Hous1ng Opporlun rt
FurnlsheC 4 Rooms &amp; Bath Com
pletely Redecorated Clean New
Carpet No Pets Or Smok1ng Ref
erence &amp; Depos1t Requ red Also
Furn shed .2 Rooms &amp; Bath Up
stars 740 446 1519

y

Furnished Upsta rs. Apartment
Close To Downtown Gallipolis
Also 3 Room Cottage Refrences
And Depos t 740 446-1158
Grac ous lrvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V flage Mar..or and
R verslde Apartments in MI-ddle
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 50$4 Equal Houtfng Oppor
tunllles

New Apartment 1 Bedroom In
R o Grande All UtI ties Pa1d
Plus Cable Walking Distance To
Campus $375 00/Mo 740 245

5100

Nice Clean .2 bedroom referenc
Washer /Dyer Hook Up! 304 675

5

62

Now Tak ng Applications 35
Wast 2 Bedr oo m Townhouse
Aparlments
Includes Wate r
Sewage T ash $295/Mo 740

441 1618 740 446 0957 740
446 6515

One bed oom apanment In Mid
die port all ulihtles pa1d $t 00 de
posit $270 month call 740 992

7806 Sam 5pm

2 Bedroom Mob le Home Hannan
T ace Road Oft 210 $225/Mo +
$100 Depost 740 256 6202
2 Bedroom Mob le Home $.200/
Mo Depos1t 8 M les Out Stale
Route 218 Gallipolis 740 446
817.2 74(}.256 6251
2 bedroom tra•ler n Rae ne good
neighborhood carport &amp; porch
$300 per month $300 deposit
references required 740 949
2217
.2 bedroom trailer 111 Ra e ne 3
bedroom tra ler In Middleport no
pets 740 992 5858
2 bedroom In country Tuppers
Pans wa er hl p 740 992 7.20 1
eave message
2 Bed ooms $3751Mo Plus Uti I
ties &amp; Depos I No Pets 740 446

4313 740 446 0879

3 bed oom I a le $300 a monlh
$150 depos 1 no pets call740
742 2714

Don 1 Call Us We Botn lose I

ready 1o go 740-992 3265

7 - 1 600-291.()098

AKC adorable Cocker Spaniel

Huntert Special P1ie Inn Bed
and Breakfast Leon WV $38/
person or $4512' people 304 937

-

2447

1 Crypt &amp; Plate $350 740 367
7864
1994 Terram1te low Hours Hunt
ington 304 736 9131 Or AUer

52s-5359

Beaut1luf AKC Registered Mal
tese Puppes 74Q-4.16.0857
Now Open Sundays 1 • Man Sat
11 6
F Sh Tank &amp; Pel Shop
2•13 Jackson Ava Potnl Pleas
ant. :J04..675-2063

Cily Pel Groomong by Appolnt,..,nt "Uitrl w.. h B81hlng
French

29 People Wanted

Sy1tem " 650 Second A\le Galli
poll$ 740-446 1528

To Gel Pa~ $$$ F«

The Pounds Or Inches
You Wil Lose In The Next
30 Days All Naturai!Gawanteed
Call Tracy At740-441 1982
large Rocking Horse Baby bed
HIQh cha~r Sw1ng Stroller Car

Seal 304-675-4548

Beame Bab1es Selhng Below
Secondary Market Price 304
675-3090
Ctwrch pews lor sale 12 twelve
foot 4 ten toot $200 each 740
949.2217
Come Get Your Cut To length
Slab F rewood AI The Sawmill
Jusl Out&amp;Hie Of Patriot On PatriOt
Road $15 A P•ck Up Load Buy
OJ1e Get Ttle Next One Free
Thru Oct
Dratn culvert tor sate 4 x20' nev
er be&amp;n used a2 gauge call 74(}.

992

740-992-6-11~

s berlan h1.1skr puppies AKC
reg•stered 1s shots wormed

304-67s-4860

$200

Stud ser ... ce AKC champ1on
blood hne M1n Schnauzer (S &amp; PI
guarantee call 7.40 992 6700
leawt me&amp;&amp;age 11 not home

570

Musical
Instrument•

Plano Kimball /Wh1tney Good
Condition W th Bench 11 000

740-441 1418

580

Frullll. &amp;
Vegetables

Turnips &amp; salad tomatoes u can
p1ck Vtrgtl s Berry Palch east ot
Syracuse ori Fit 124 7.40 992

2378

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOC K

Electr c Scooters Whee lchairs
New And Used Sta rway Eleva
to rs Wheelcha r And Scooter
L11ls Bowman s Homecare 740
446 7283

9PM

E~~:tra Nlca Used Furniture Ap
pllances Dinettes Freezers
Be~s
Refngerators Stoves
Washers Dryers Etc 740 446
4039 740-446 1004

FIREWOOD

160 A Barko loader/CTR Saw
buck Excellent Condit on 7.40

662 7318
24 USED TRACTORS
STOCK

IN

F.nandng As Low As 6 9"fo With
John Deere Credit Approval On
Used Tractors Carmichael s
Farm &amp; ~awn Gallipolis Ohio
740 446 ~412 Or 1 800 594 1111
Also See The "New• 4000 Series
Compact Utility Tractors Several
In Stock

se

Cut Spbt De Neredl Jared 74(}.
446 6566 Chad 740 446 1211
For Sale Fill Dirt Will Delver
304 675-6734
Grubbs Plano tun ng &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Or 740 446 4525

Hay for sal&amp;- one mile north on

At 2 square bales SI 00 $2 00
Saturday only p1cll; up

JET

AERATION MOTORS

Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 8Q0.537 9528

Ford 2000 3 cyl d esel
100
co\lered utility trailer 5 xe $150
pole barn 25x50 no tresses
5850 4 section 12"x16 metal
pipe Mossberg 12 gauge full
choke plus deer IJarrel $250
74Qo992 3564
Massey Ferguson 40 4 Speed
Wtth High &amp; Low Transmission
Live Power Good Condition 740.
.256-6574

12 000 740 742 2675

N ce K ng Size Waterbed W th
Headboa d Mirror Complete
bresser With Mirror Nlghtstand

740 379-2720 AFTER 6 PM

Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Res dential And Commercial
Lawn Equipment Compact Utility
Tractors From 20 To 39 HP All
Sizes Of 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Tractors Hay Equipment John
Deere Skid Steer loaders Check
With Us About Financing On
lawn Tractors And low Rate Fl
nancing On New And Used
Equlbm9nt Carm ichaels Farm &amp;
Law n Gall polls OH 740 446

MERCHANDISE

510

use hold
Goods

App li ance
Recondit io ned
Washers Dryers Ranges Ref I
grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French C ty Maytag 740 446
7795

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs App lances 76
Vine Slreet Call 740 446 739B
, 888 818 0128
Used Fu nlture Store Below HoI
day Inn In Kanauga Twin Beds
Compete $115 Ful Beds Com
ptete $135 Hutch $75 Dressers
Couches 7-40 446 476.2

520

Sporting
Goods
FREE STUFF FOR SPORTS

FANS I 888 588 3743 Toll Free

530

Antiques

Buy o se ll F.hverlne Ant ques,
1124 E Man Stree t on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 0 00
am to600pm Sunday100to
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ
Moo e owner

One owner 1969 Chevrolet Be
lair 3'Zl motor 740-992 7538

Two Malahlng Tapestry A.rm
Chairs In Fall Colors Never
Used very E egant 740 446
3377 More Information
Used computers $100 $400 a
system based on your needs
plus used parts call 740 992
6700 leave message If not home
Used Patio Covers And Alum I
num Window Awnings Of Various
Sizes 740 446 2642
Wanted advertls ng co lecllbles
Coke Pepsi etc Including old lin
signs 740 992 5053

TRANSPORTATION
-'

720 Trucka for Sale

BARNEY

1971 Dodge Pick Up 6 Cyhndel.
Standard Runs Good Ready To

87 Cutlass Seton 455 AT AC
PW sunroof veue rally&amp; very
nice $3500 304 875-2909

740 446 9320 Aller 5 OOPM
1980 1890 HONDA CARS $100
$500 Pollee Impounds All
Makes Ava table ca 1 1 800 522
2730 E~~:t 4420

Jackson Ohio 1 800 537 9528

1982 Cutlass Supreme .2 D .260
va Good Condition $1 500 oo
F rm 740 992 4568

Wor ld Book Now on Sale Save
$280 00 limited nUmber or sale
sets I Low Monthly terms (304)
675 3775 Also 1996 CD Rom on
Sale I Margaret Pierce

550

Building
Supplies

Block brick
wmd
ows lintels ate 1
A o Grande OH Call 740 24 5
5121

560

Pets lor Sale

4 Pekingese AKC registered
3 yrs old .2 I 4 months old
after 5pm 740-843 5175

~a~l

A Groom Shop Pet Groom1n;
Featuring Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad
7•0-446-0231
AKC golden retriever puppies
I st shots and wormed $200

304 675 1689 days 304 576
2998 after 7 pm

AKC
Registered
German
Shepherd Male and Fema le
Ava table BlackiS l11er Black/
Tan Bread for good Tempera
ment (304) 675 4412 Days
(304) 895 3322 eve &amp;Weekends
dachshund

1982 Ford Fairmont
a Miles Runs Good
New Parts- No Rust
7404411677

90 000 Actu
New Brakes
$500 OBO

t 985 Dodga Aries Clean Air
low M1les 34 Ml Per Gallon
34 000 Actual Miles Books $700
More $1 100 OBO 740 446

1127

p...

Paso

1988 Bonn1Wllle LE maroon 4dr
new tires &amp; brakes good cond
$3 200 304 675 5792 aller5pm
1988 Che11y Beretta r;n v 6
auto ale ps pb stereo high
m les looks/run good $1575

740 247 4292

1988 Subaru Justy $650 Neg
1990 Geo Metro S t 650 080

740 446 3407

1990 Cavalier 2 Doors 70 ooo
Acutal Miles Auto A/C $.2 195
1988 Bere11a V6 5 Speed Great
Condlhon $2 195 Cook Motors
740 446-0103
1996 Plymouth Breeze 49 800
m les white wlgrey Interior auto
cr uise a r a mllm casse tte 4
door asking $8300 740 949
2311 days or 740 949 2644
evan ngs

-.yor.

........

13Naula! ......

• Arml&gt;c!N
1Denamin811on

35Fw.-tng

5-

38 Droop

• Sharp lurn

Whllney

18-..-t
20Unltof
22-Down
21 u.. rl1adl

II~
12~

22 Tulcu

z•

3•

4w

24 Hot. . ofll ort
25 strlb r-viiY
71---d
21 Soft chilli ..
21 Atabian

Pasr
Paso

Allpau

31=::::

·-33~
40Teue
Jllflne

I995 Chevy S 10 Vorltc V 6 5.

FJ{ANK &amp; EARNEST

,

1980 Chevy Scollsdale new en •
glne and tires good running ask :

,

1984 Chevy KS Blazer Camtte""
Speical 4x4 AC AT New Tlre11, I
Exhuasl Must Selll S3 500 080
740 446 3580 leave Message

Before 500

1993 Chevy C 20 Short Whe4tl
Base Convers1on Van E~~:cel
Condition New Wheels fond
Tires Maintenance Up To Oatd
1993 Ford Explorer XLT 59 282
miles 4x4 auto air cru se dark
green Alloy wheels 4 door ask

lng $9600 740 946 2311 days qr

$13 200 060 740 949 23il
days or 740..949 2644 awnings

Motorcycles

199.4 YZ125 Racing Dlrlblke E~~: ~
cenent Condition New Tlrea NeW
Overhaul $1 500 740 379 2695

760

... 2001, , ,

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Budget Priced Transmissions
and Engines All Types Acc ess
To over 1o ooo Transmissions

47 Ol!vw•

.. ~r:
.,.... ::

opener a thtrd suH

50 OoiiiMI gollf.
w
52 -MyPirty
53 ...,,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos
~ (4Jher ot::;'i••• are CfNled lrom QUCQUC1n1 by''""""' PNPie
and pr...,.
Eac:h
., ,_ ~ IRani» lor .notMr ToGIIY. e~.- C «&lt;UD 0

W/ii'IT

US.

'

pelf

KHG

' RI

BXL

SHVTYC

H

LTYRPRBG

R J

LHLUV

R J

RJ

G IT V 0

H

N XI

I U H

KU

GHRY

GRV

NTH I G

OHBORYYHJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Baseball rt 18 sa1d 16 only a game True And the
Grand Canyon 18 only a hole tn Arizona • - George F Will

'::~:~;~' S~"\\g\llA-~~~s·
141M4
CLAY I. ,OILAN
~y

....

WOIO

0

R.orronae leHert of ..,.
four .,;rambled word• be
low to form four simple wordt

0

0

740-448-3687

1996 Ford Wlndstar GL van
52 190 miles red metallic w/gray
Interior non smoker front rear aJ
c tilt wheel cruise stereo asklf1'b

740

......
... c__
....,.

43Lab_

wr.Vt

0«.£~01{

$600000 740-4411013

su1t

and responder doses the square, b1d
dmg 1he founh sun What w1ll 1he
Ol'AY,
TOLl&gt; YOU
TO
opener expect h" panner to hold'
Usually the responder will have
ro~f(Oyl Tt~e MONEY,
one of lhree hand lypes As we saw
NOyl YOU TeLl..
yeslerday he could have a balanced
hand and wants lo gel mlo three no
IJS WtiY YOlJ
lrump bul he doesn t have a slopper
TO
•
'" the founh sun Ahernauvely. lhe
responder may WISh to make a fore
L.E-NP
IT
•
mg raiSe of one of partner s suns
• TO
Th~rdly lhe responder may be uncer
1a1n where ro head but thmks lhat
atler heanng a th1rd b1d fmm hiS pan
ner he w1ll know as m thiS deal
I
On Ihe second round North m1gh1
THE BORN LOSER
..,
have
plunged mlo lhree no-lrump but
r
...., r
r
~
there
was no need to rush Instead he
e&gt;ruTU~ 7 eo&lt;:uiU~, 1-JN:£ L&gt;P I
I 1-\P.,iE. TUE.~'( ~~t-10~
Wf\P\ZZI&gt;..\ -r Wfi.O ~ ~EJ..D7Tf\E.
used
fourth su11 forcmg When he
_
_
.._
rr:, 101o71
~01\1'
learned lhat hiS partner had allea.st5
Til£ C.OI&gt;JB067
fOOI&amp;W 5 '" the maJors, Nonh ran;ed to four
heans the known e1ght card til
In the play Soulh used the rehable
.,
gU1dehne tha11t you have a two su11
er and mu~t get Ihe second sun estab
ltshed play on 1t 1rnrned1alely So
declarer won lhe flrsl tnd w1th
dummy &lt;d1amond kmg and pulled a
spade 10 h" kmg When lhal won
Soulh pl.1yed a hearlto dummy s ace
lhen called tnr lhe remam1ng spade
Underslandably Eas1 went m wnh
lhe ace and relurned a d.amond to
Souths ace (It doesn I help him to
due~ ngam ) Declarer cashed !he
heart k1 ng gellmg the bad news
there but 1t d1dn 1 maner He calmly
L:onttnued Wtlh tlow !tipade Howev
er Wesl defended declarer would
lose only one spade and IWO he 1rts

&amp;..OAN
PEPT.

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1980 1990Truclui$100 S500

lng $150Q;PBO 740 643-5295

der a second

BAN~

740-256-6427 740-256-1084

Top $4 900

brlt!nd
42--

By Phillip Alder
Lei s luok funher al founh su11
forcmg Opener b1ds one sun respon

304-675-3753

1 800-290 2262 X 3901

41 F...

More on the
fourth suit

1995 Chev Tahoe LT red witl\
black trlm Dark red leather mtert
or tape and cd player 15 000
miles lactory plastiC CO\tlfl
carpet garage kept $26 000 can

Pollee Impounds
All Makes Available

.,e

23:::::.

Opemng lead • 4

S HI C E R

I

I I

2

1

I I

WORCD

VABER
5 l6 I I

"I ve lived a long t1me" the
grandmother told her Children
and I believe that happ1ness
K H y s 141
11s a rebound from - - - - - ,;_TI.:_.,,.:......:,,8.,.::..,,,.,;,~
Complete the c k uc k le quoted

1.

.

•

.

I!.,.-.,,-,

_

.

.

I

.

1::::•,

.

0

.

.

by f II ng 1n the m•ss1ng words

L..-ILJ_,-..L-.1....-IL...J you develop from slep No 3 beloV(

PEANlJl:S
I LOVE

THE FEEL OF
NEW 800K5 MARCIE
THE PRETT'f COVERS TI4E
PRINT EVEN THE 5MELL

DO 'I'OU EVER READ
OF THEM?

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

' - Stark - Cancel CLOCK
Marmot- Waltz
Have you ever had one of those days when the
only thmg that goes off as planned 1s vour CLOCK?

New gas tanks &amp; body parts o &amp;

A Aulo Ripley WV 304 372
3933 0&lt;1 800 273 9329

790

Campara &amp;
Motor HOmes

I

•

1985 Coachman Slide In Cam!lBf-.
Air Furnace Holding Tank Rlf-frlge rator Water Heater Stove 4
Hydraulic Jack Tape Player~
GOOd Cond lion $3 500 740 258-

6038

1993 Mountaineer 5th Whet~~(
Camper 36 With 16 Slide wash,...
er Dryer Gen E•celle,nt Con~l f
lion 740 441 0519

H~VfLI:S~Y
ST~~S Wffi\ Nil:

Midas Sell Contained Motoft.
Home Generator llke New
Inside! $6 000 740 446-6844

on-

~"ll1 1\ll.1'S 1\4~1 1

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local references furnished Es
labllshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446 0870 1 800 287 0576 Rog
ers Waterproof ng

1987 DodQe Aries 4 Cylinder
A.ulo Ai r 11 3 000 Miles $700

OBD 740 256-1233

7-

~

4

740-379-.245~

MileS

~

1984 Olt:ls Regen cy 98 Leather
Interior Rear Oefrost New Tires
Brakes &amp; Rotors Power Every
th1ng Air Conditioner $1 100
740142.2418 Or304 675 1860

:..:!"!~

3=-.P.Y.•

1993 Chevy 2500 4 WD 86 000

$5 000 740 949 2217

Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pression Fittings In Stock

We buy antiques and partial or
complete est~les baby lt&amp;rf\S and
old Flestaware Jeans Furn ture
&amp; Antiques Tuesc;lay through Frl
day 1 tam 4pm t45 North Sec
ond Mk:ldleport

Pass

740-3711-2853

1990 Ood1J8 Dakota W ttl Topper::
4 WD Can Be Seen On At 588
Welt 3/10 Of Milt Pall McCor
mk:k Road, Gal11p011s

1968 Bronco excellent condlllon

1976 Chevy Nova 4 Door Au
tom AJC Always Been Garaged

• KJ 8 3

WHt Nordl Eui

740 245 5677

710 Autos lor Sale

111811&lt;

32Act-•

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: South

Summers not over! Kawasak)
STS Jet ski still under warranty~
three seater 83 horsepowe!!,
bought new Juty of 97 thre+
matching Kawasaki ski vests aM
trailer all go with It Pr ced to sell
$4200 740 949 2.203 or 740 94g.
2045 will consider trade fo~ 1r
good pontoon boat

Five 600 Pound Steers 740 2.45

IMup
2-ln

• 5

2 Angus Heller&amp; and 1 Angua
Steer 740 388 9708
Baby pigs tor sale 740 949 2908

DOWN

28 Soui(Fr)
71 KnlcU org.
30Pronuncirllon

t A 3

742 2357

$450

57-.,.,..

Ms

• J 10.'

Saalb
•KQ764
WKB7 32

93 Mercury Topaz 4 cyl 5 sp
e•cellen1 condthon $1 600 7-40•

Work

" J

• 10 7 6

SALE Kllchen Cabinets 63"o0FF
1st price If purchased by the end
of October Free In home estl
mates Trl County Distributors
Inc 1 800..35.2 3147

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

A 3 Bed roo m House Apt o
Trailer In town 1 nave good rei
e ences Must be through HUD
can alter 5 PM 304 675 t3~ 1

Mulllanll 2 389 - 0
• tran1mln1on needs pa1n1 tob
1800 or OBO 304-57&amp;-2596
Cobra

750 Boata &amp; Motor•
for Sale

Standard box spring and mat
tress$80 00 Brown couch good
cond $100 00 304-675 2180

Circ le Motel Lowest Rates In
Town Newly Remodeled HBO
Clnemax Showtlme &amp; D1sney
Weekly Rates Or Monthly Rates
ConstfUCIIOn Workers Welcome
740 44 1 5698 740-441 5167

• Qg

2412 1 800 594 1111
630
Livestock

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spac ous 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 112 Bath Fully Car
peted Pat o No Pets lease Plus
Secur ty Deposit Requ~red 740

Furnished
Rooms

• A J t 5

2726

• 10%
" Q 10. 4
54

Jolin - Mill
N loon

23l*a

Eui

1._

56PI1tlor

20 Hrng

WHt

n

C8Mdl

Ar-

1997 Dodge Stratus 4 Ooon
Fl'W Automatic A/C 27 000
Milos $9 300 0~0 740 379

Prlmeater $49 Instal atlon $100
wo r th of free p ogram ng free
Holiday glh pack aoo 263 2640

Gentle 3 Year Old Black Gelding
Broke For Harness &amp; Saddle
$1 000 Yearling Paflmino Filley
Very Gentle $700 740 388 9736
Attar 5 PM

450

740-441.()337

Wanted To Buy

350 Chevy En

1t PMk ,

6 5
t K 1 2
•AQt42

1993 Geo Tracker 411:4 PS PB fi
Speed Air .AM/FM Cassette Soft

5457

Twin Rive rs Tower now acceptlnQ
applications tor 1 br HUD subsld
!zed apt lor elderly and hand
capped EOH 304 675 6679

dilion' $6.500 00

17 Aug , .

wA

1997 ooesg. Neon 11 000 mtlel
4 cylinder aLJtOmaOC Good Con

740 949 2644 evenings

4075

electric e~~:ercise toning ta
bles Lose weight and keep II off
304 675 7961

446-3461

3446

~~-·-

511171" IJU&lt;Ige
54 C1wm

II 8lgn lila lilt
-1-1

N
•• 3

Tobacco baler air press tobacco
&amp;tf'lpper 304 675 3246 I 304 675

glne 740 448 1052
John Deere dozer 6 way blade
new engine $12 500 Tra1leze trl
a~~: e hea11y equipment Ira ler
dove ta I w th ramps $3 500 K1ng
Culler 5 brush hog $250 1972
Mac truc'k 237 Mac motor

CrUIH Control E1cellent CondJ..
1Jon MUS1 SOli $11 500 740-682-

..•

Alww• to PlsAatM Pur:lle

. . c.piU! of

15~-

1995 Dodge Truck 1500 Serle'
Laramie SlT E•tended Cab
Loaded Power Wmdows Doors
Mirrors Seat Split Seat Cargq.
Ud Reese Hitch 60K Extia Clean,

610 Farm Equipment
Entire collection of Bean1e Ba
blest 24 current 19 retued 11
May releases and 15 1997 and
1998 Teenie Beanies Many hard
to finds No bears $500 for all
Call 304 773 5155 between 5 and

1997 CheYy Lumina AMIFM NC

...........

•

••

!MD
I P1k lp 1 - 4 0 Of tiny . . . . .
diMy
4;2 EtDlti L r' I M
10 In good
45 Youlll12S.onlor
14 .....,_
..U:J"'TTII

Speed 30 000 miles AJC AM
FM Ca~&amp;ette $8 600 740 245
5160 or 740-245-9504
"

5E23

Sl~~:

2 bedroom n M ddleport $275
par month plus depos 1 740 992
2 Be d oom Mobile Home $265/
Mo Includes Water &amp; T ash
$100 Depos t No Pets Ins de
Cal 740-446 95439

AKC
registered
Mlmature
OasMund puppMtS I red mate 2
black/tan tamales • wkl Old
$200 550 depottl will hold 1111

One bedroom !urn sh,ed apart
ment 1n MIOdleport 740 992
9t91

lor Rent

3194

Furnace Heat Pu"1)S &amp; Air COn
di1tonmg Free Esllmartesl If You

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment
740 446 0390

420 Mobile Homes

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mob le home s al
cond toned $260 $300 sewer
water and trash nc uded 74G
992 2 67

•WAAMYPil

1

1-

-ldnu- . .

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

6 00 ~M 304

·-~-

ACROSS

•

Appliance Parts And Service A I
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
parlance M Work Guarantefld
French Clly Meytag 740 44.6
7795
C&amp;C Genlral Home Main,
tenence Palnllng vlny siding
car pentry doors windows baths
mobile home repair and more liar
free estimate call Chet 740 99~

6323

ProfessiOnal 20yrs exper ence
with all ma sonery brick block &amp;
stone A so room addlllons ga
r.ages etc Free estimates 30 4

n:r9550

840

Electrical and
Rel~lgeratlon

Residential o commercial wlln~
new service or 1epa1rs Master Ll
censea electrician Ridenour
Eleculca WV000306 304 675
1786

'

,\

'=~~!!!!~~==~==:"-:I) AI

ASTRO·GRAPH
Wednesday Nov 4 1998
In lhe year ahead you are hkely
to see v1clones tn areas where you
have prev1ously expenenced defeat
You are now m an extremely lorlu
n.1te cycle tor the tulflllmenl of your
hopes ana expectuuons So get gmng
early 111 lh1S cycle'
SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22)
Bemg 1oo pushy .1lwuys " coun1er
ptoduc11 ve m the long run and today
w1ll be no &lt;l•tferenl Luck "on your
Side when you use lhe soli sdl where
you have something substunhal to
g~m Scorp11&gt; lreal yoursdl to ,,
b~rlhday g1 f1 Send the re4u1red
relund form .tnd lor your Astro
Gmph pred1e110ns by mudmg $2 and
self addressed stumped envdopc 1o
A&lt;lro Graph c/o thiS newspaper
PO Box 1758 Murray Hill Slat1on
New York NY I() 156 Be sure to
state your zodti.u.: ~1gn

SAGITTARIUS I Nm 2l Dec

ey makers Ieday ThiS 1S where
you re hkely to Iare extremely well
Don t permn actmues lh 11 do olher
WISe 10 occupy your ume
CAPRICORN (Del' 22 Jan 19)
As long as you are aw.~re or 1hc Inn
"'-'
nauons
ul Lady Luck s ab1hl1es s ~e
w1ll perform qUite well lor you today
Let your common sen-.~ gUJde you

w1tll unpredu.: t thle lllltlcrs
AQUARIUS (J,m 20 Fell 191
Don t be atr.ud to clev.ate your st.!hls
htgher th.m usual.tt tht "'i lime Thml!s
h.1ve a way nl workmg out to your
ult1mate 1Uv u1tage ouc..:t:: )OU get
mvolved tod IY
PISCES I Fch 20 M m:h 20) B.ll
ance 1:-. the key In Slll:less tn hit: II
you ve been knee deep 111 work ol
late ..t:t your tools 1su..li! to~ ty tnd
p !rllupate tn some u.:ttv1ty you hnd
lun .and rcJUVt!ll illng
ARIES IM.m;h 1 I Apnl 19)
Stunt:thtng

good wht:n.: yow

al 1nh:rests in:

~.:on(.;ertl~!d

llllkrl

L:nuld

develop lor you today prec1p1ta1ed by

~'

1
soun:e L tdy l u~.:k hi!r
sell wdl have 1 hand 111 11
TAURUS (Apnl 20M •Y 20)

When you locus your e llorts ,mtl

alt..:ntmn on

p~o:rso nal JsSlu;:s

tod lY

those who c 111 open doors w1ll do su

Thmk pos1t1VC and pl1y to w1n
Tlung.s are lnoktng up'
GEMINI 1M,1y 21 June 2()) In
compt!ltll\e mvolvemcnls tnd 1y )Olll
npponems w1ll sense lh 11 you h IV&lt;
tht- uppt: r hand fh1s gP.rcs you 1 &lt;.:o n
Sider 1hle psycholog1c.11 edge rven 11
you Jon 1 re ll1ze 1l

CANCER tJune 21 July 22)
or ventures you ongm tie

Ent~rpnse~

nr man tge tre destmed tor slu.:cess

1oday ThiS " doubly true •n .irc.IS
where your own pc:rson.tllnterests 1re
com:erm::U so get to work'
LEO (July 2] Aug 22) Someone
you lhought w 1s w.1y out ot your
1111~ht ptopo ~c 111 mt~re ~ ttn g
lllVOhl!lllt:IU Wllh )Oll IUd lY rh1s
~..:ould open up 1 w 1y to the bi£ tnnc ~

lt:ague

lor ynu

•

study ot an

•

�By The Bend

Wednesday

The Daily Sentinel·
Page 10
Tuesday, November 3, 1998

Ann 1l
La d ~ ·
n er ' ,
~~..1; ; ":"~.:;:

1

for mamagc. wh1ch pleases me. It
might happen later, but fur now. v.·e
hoth like thmg&gt; the way they arc.
Our sex hfe is OK. but IR the last

Mi ss.
Dear Jackson: I am nut a pharmacologtsland would not be so pre&gt;umptUOIJ'. as to c• aluate any drug I

year. I ha\'C had more fat lures than

d1d learn , however, that the Food

, .....~

&gt;UCcesscs. If you knuv. what I mean and Drug Administrat iO n. Which
A fncnd of mme who 1s 61 told me approved Vmgra.. announred several
D•-..r Ann Landen: I am a, 59- he had slowed down a lot. too. hut wee ks ago that 69 Amcncan; have
)Car-old male. have been tw1 ce since he &gt;tartcd takmg V1ag ra. he " d1ed after takmg the drug
Many people. both men and
dl\ orn:d and am now !o.CCIR~ an as fnsk y as a young colt Ann. I
readmg
somethmg
ahoul
women,
~~ Wl&gt;h to enhance their
remember
anral:ll \ C wo man who as 38. also
men
who
d1
ed
after
takmg
..:
xual
peifonnance
are now taking
several
l"u.: c dJ\ Orccd We get along very
Viagra.
Is'
thiS
1ruc?
herbal
product;
They
arc les;
" ell and my m•grame headaches
I
like
se•
as
well
"'
the
next
fel
·
cxpens1ve
than
presc
ripti
on
drugs
"'ern to have d~;appeared All the
· low, but I am not Willing to d1c for 11 and ha.•e fewer side effect&gt;. and the
m~mhcr' of my lam1ly are crazy
abou l her a nd say they' have never Will you please lool1mto thl&lt; and let result; have apparently been very
1
-ecn rnc '"' happy We have had scv- me know the fact. I am ; urc many •at~&gt;factory. I should mention that
aal tnps together . and get along of your readers would hkc 10 h3\'C V1agra cO:m about SIO a p1ll, and t1't
extremely well She 1s not pushmg them. too. -- Loyal Fan m Jackson. herbal " helpers" co;t about 40

cent&lt; But be aware that herbal products arc not regulated by thr FDA.
and you don 't always know whal
you are geumg Check wnh your
doc tor first
Dear Ann Landen: A few years
back. you had a column saying
women would ltke to see morr
clothing with pockets Would you
plea.-e let the women's clothmg
manufacturers know that we dldn 't
mean pockets O\'er our breasts and
heh1nds.
A woman who measures more
than 36 mches. tn &lt;Jther location
docs not need pockets to drnw allenliOn to those arras. While some of us
use the breaSt pocket out of necess1 ty. I don 't know any woman who

uses the h1p pocket. Most women,
however, would appreciate a side
pocket to hold a set of keys or a ussur for lip blouing or sudden
sneezes

The rashion industry has gone
totally nuts 'with big pockets on
sh1ns and shons. ThOse large, patchstyle pockets may look good on a
skinny model. but they do nothing
for the rest of us. Tell them , please. - Anaoyed in tlw Mi&lt;h•nt Dear
Anaoyed: You told them, and I
thank you on behalf of the women
whose measurements are similar to
the ones you have c1ted. A pox on
pockets that serve no useful purpose.
The same grles for those pesky,
scratchy tags at the back of the neck.

tp;

Tomo~ow: Sunny
High: 40; Low:20

Dear AJm Landen: I am a 28yrar-old career woman in love for
tho: very first time I hope you won 't
thtnk r am fpolish, but my problem
is serious to me. My wonderful guy
has a mustache lhat looks nice, but it
tickles me when we kiss, which, of
course. spo1ls "the moment." This ts
a distraction, and somellmes, I
laugh. Do I have-a right to ask h1m
to shave it off! -- Hamsburg, Pa.
Dear Pa.: Don 't ask him to shave
11 off. He IS probably fond of 11 Ask
him to trim it That would be a fair
compromise
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Crraton Syndkate, 5777 W. Cmtury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,

Meigs Countf.s
Volume 49 , Number 130

'

Calif. 90045

Vlc-

llms of an anthrax scare at abortiOn

clinics 1n four sutes are taking lillie
comfort m aothontles prohounctng
the whole event a hoax.
Tests found no evidence of
anthrax or any other biological agent
in leuers mailed to eight climes, the
FBI announced Monday, the same
day similar leners arrived at'two more
chmcs Also, a fake homb wa.&lt; sent
to one of the chn1cs that re«!Jved a
leller last week.
A Planned Parenthood chmc
sc~edu led to reopen here today
offered counsehOg to workers who
suffered through Friday's scare. and

1

,.,.

......•
- ......,.....
r:.., ....
I

•

employees calleO patients to rea,sure

SlilN WORKS- Sign Works of New Haven, W.Va., previously
owned by Sheldon G~lach, has been purchased by Jim and Pam
Durst of Middleport, shown here working on a new sign. Both
ownership and Iodation have changed. The business has been
moved to 31280 Noble Summit Road, Middleport, just off Bradbury Road toward Rutland. Sign Works will continue to produce
fine quality business and architectural signs, vehicle lettering,
race car ltttterlng, magnetics, banners, window lettering and
decals. The shop will be open Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. and other times by appointment by calling 992-SIGN (7446)
or 1·800.547-2744.

Alfred News notes
Katy and Ray Rodeha,er. Well born. Fla.. viSited recently m the area.
They came

e~peclillly

to

\'lstt

Kate's

haver. Ralph and Nita Rodchaver. all
of Guysville. Thelma and Ted Sabo
of Athens, Sandee and J1m Wnght,
Gay Ann and Bob Burke and Nina
Robmson. all local
Lila Winters of Parkersburg.
W.Va. recently VISited her brother,
Vtctor Bahrand friends, Nma Robin-

new grandson. Raymond Fredenc k
Homiker and h\1 parents, Fred and
Karen Honaker.
They auended church sefv 1ces at
Allred Umted Methochst Church.
.md Kate allended the Alfred Unned son and Thelm.t Hendt!rson.
MethodiSt Women's October meet. Apnl Neeley ol Fairborn viSited
Ing. They v"1ted r~lat1ves and her parents. Marguente and Delb~rt
fn ends. Larry nnd Debb1e Rode- Stearns

Racine UMW meets recently
Mel~&lt;sa Harkness led the World

Thank Offering serv 1ce at the October meeting of the RaCme United
Methodist Women
Her ng m mtssum mean~ sharing
our gd'ts and tal~nts as well as our
exp~ru:~~tces

ol God's "good news"

Wllh others. Scnpture was taken
fmm CorirHhrans .md Mark Readers

were Man lyn Bogard and Martha
Duddrn£ Prayt!r Wi.ts grven by Mrs
H,trkness
Th~

World Thank Otfenng rr.; ttn
opponunlty tor mdrva.luals to
f\!..lipond to God's abundance: and
f!raL:c: wu h spo nt ane Ou~ gilts ot grat-

uude. The World Thank Ollcring
I~Jxes were than col lt:c led Irom mt:mhers .md the tumls will be used for
m1ssrons 1n the Un&amp;tcd States· anti
around lht: v.urld

Lee Lee preSided at the busmess
mcctmg wrth members rept:atmg the

Lord's Prayer .md the Luany on the
Purpose
Karl.!n Wal ~er read the! ~et:re1a ry's
1cpm1 .md corre .. pondencc Wlts re.td
!rom Mary H1ll. RACO. and th&lt;:t,
ll.trkness li.I ITHi y Cl.tra Mac Sargent
g.1 vt: th.: tre.tsurer\ report Monetary
don.1~1ons .tre .-;ent mont hi) to\ an nus
org.tnll.ttwns

fhe h.n .md nu\lcn fund

wa~ 1:..~~ ~

en .tnJ Mdi'iS,\ H.ukncss wil l ht: buyIll ~ the hdl" ,Ul J rmth!'lh wnh the

m~nl.!y (.;n ll~~.:tcJ .mJ then d,~tnbut111g

them tn the

e l ~llll'll!.lry

M~mhcr-. \Ll tcd
~.tvt:nll.u to pre..,cnt

sLhno!..,

to

111\lle

J.u1

Lhc 'C II AMPS '

progr..~m &lt;~I a luturc mectin1:;

Mn. Lt.:t: re.1J a poem ' Ode tn d
Volunteer "

UMW anJ .111 .. hurd\ llh:mhc1..,
wil l .1g.un p.lrliup.ttl" 111 tht! Angd

Troe proJect and the .. Shoe Boi' mmIStry.
Athens Dislncl Fest1v~l of Shanng
cookbooks •"e available tor $7.
The slate of officers was
.1pproved They are Lee Lee. president. M.~rgie West; v1ce president,
Karen Walker, secretary, Clara Mae
Surgem, treasurer and Marilyn Bogard. program resources

Do ;ou boggle ,tt the 1deu o! Larry Kmg. 6~ ne)(t month, a"i ,, nl!w

dad 1 Shawn Sou thwick K1ng. expect·
ing thCir baby next March. has some
good dues "My brother had a baby
last Marc:h. Larry snuggles htm.
loves playing With him. buy1ng hm1
ltH ie T· l.ih trl s inti toys He . , gnlten

mlo the b.1by th1 ng I th 1nk he's at a
UJifcrcnl \la~e 111 lm. Itt c. mon: ..:.tim
and focu:-,ed on family."

'Much of th~&gt; h.~&gt; to do '\'llh Larry 's marn.tgc last Septernher ro
Shawn, JK,1 a ch.trrmn g .md stat -

uesque blonde lrom a clmc-kmt

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to D&lt;!ll·
profit groups wishing to announce
meetings and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

TUESDAY
POMEROY -- JEWEL (Jesus
Enhancmg W1se Educa11onal Learnmg) Will meet Nov. 3. 7 p.m. at the
home of Bnan and K1m Hupp Gay
Snyder \Ifill be presenung her CHEO
Sem1nar .. Home Schooling &amp; The
Kitchen .. What? ' .. which provides
pract1cal information ahout home
school mg orgamzauon. For more
mformatlon call the Hupps at 992-'
7779

ALFRED -- The Orange Townshtp Tru&lt;tees w1ll meet on Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. at the home ol the clerk,
OSie Follrod.
POMEROY -- Drew Webster Post
39. American Legion. oyster supper,
7 p.m., followed by regular meetmg

The Chn&gt;tmas Bazaar will be held
MIDDLEPORT -- M1ddleport
on December 5 at the church Craft Mason1c Lodge 363 F&amp;AM regular
t.1bles arc available for $ 10 each, .md meeting and e/ec110n of ufti~.:ers TuesinformatiOn " availahle hy callmg day, 7:30p.m. at the temple. RefreshAlice Wolfe .11949- 22~6. Clara M.1e 1ments.
Sargent at 949-02604. or Lee Lee at
949-2-154
RUTLAND-- Rutland Township
The Chrtstm.IS Partv will be held Trustees meetmg m regultir se-ssion
on December 21 .11 o·:io p m. at the Tuesday. 6 p.IJ1. at the Rutland F1re
church D1nner will he catered and Sl.lllon
Al1ce Wolle will make the arrangements
WEDNESDAY
Mrs. Lee allended the D~&gt;tnct
MIDDLEPORT -- Middlepon LitUMW Annual Day meeting at Logan crary Club meeting Monday, 2 p m
and was presented wtth a certificate on Novel)lber 4 at the home ol
for her unll's havmg fulfilled the five Martha Hooyer. Leah Jean Ord will
r~LJUtrements o! Ftve·Star G1ving.
rev1ew the book .. Angela's Ashes ... hy
' Cards are sent to mlsston lt~ .H.Icrs
Ill

ohcr u1 u ntm~s at each meettng
N.tmt!s are taken from the prayer cal·
endar.
Karen Walker and Melissa Hark11\:!"i~ recently &lt;tttended the Women
ANEW retreat. held ,,I the Oh1o Conv~ ntlon Ce nter 111 Columbus
Rdrcshmcnls were sc.!rvcd hy
M,ugtc West and Lee Let: Get well
~.:.mh were \lgner..l during the: sot.:tal

All tho: chmcs that received tho: letThe Knoxville Center for Reproductive Health, which wa.&lt; sent a let- ter threats last week reopened Monter threat on Friday, rece1ved a hoax day. eKcepl the one here and one in
homb by mail on Monday. David Louisville that is closed on Mondays.
In Lillie Rock, Ark., a man was
Ries, the special agent in charge of
the FBI's Knoxville IJffice,. said sim- convicted Monday of v•olallng the
ilar devie&lt;!s have been received in federal Access to Clinic Entrances
Act for parlong yellow Ryder rrntal
other cities, but didn't say where.
Another Knoxville clinic rece1ved trucks ouL•ide two ahonton clinics.
Prosecutors said J. Fred Hart Jr.
a suspic1ous leller Monday. It hore a
Cincinnati postmark and appeared Iwas aware he would cause fear by h1s
identical to the envelopes contammg placement of the trueks. The homb
the . anthrax threats, but wasn't that demohshed the Oklahoma City
opened, the FBI said. It will be sent federal b01lding in 1995 was left in a
to Washmgton for tests.
yellow Ryder truck
No explosives' were m Han's
A similar letter was opened when
11 amved Monday at the Center for trucks, but their presence prompted
Chotce clime in Toledo. Ohio. The evacuations of hoth clinics and nearclinic was evacuated and two by busmesses.
employees who handled the envelope
Han could get six months in Jail
were treated as 1f they had been and a $10,000 fine on each of two
exposed to anthrax.
counts. No sentencmg date was set

'"

Frank McCourt.
CARPENTER -- ReVIval beginning Wednesday. 6:30p.m. at the Mt.
Umon Bapl1sl Church With Evangelist Rev. Charles Swigger. Featured
singers will be the Whiles, Gabriel
Quartet, Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church Chotr, Mt. Union Choir and
Soloist Marlene Carpenter.
POMEROY -- Chester Garden
Club will meet at the home of Twlia
Buckley on November 4 at 7. 30 p.m.
RACINE -- Regular meeting of
the Pomeroy-Racme Lodge 164
F&amp;AM will be held Wednesday,
7:30p.m. at the lodge hall m Racme.
Election of officers will be held.

Time Out for Tips
By Becky Baer
Melga County
Extenalon Agent,
Family and Consumer
Sclenceal
Community Development
Many of today's adults are part of
the "sandwich generauon" they still
have children at home. but are also
' aging parents. Too
taking care of their
many times these people feel that
they must be able to .. do n all."
Instead of feeling a sense of accomplishment for all that they are domg,
these Pf-Ople may feel guii\Y when
they don't have the energy to manage
their homes, the~r children, their parents and their careers. Because of all
that is going on. members of the
sandwich generation may develop
''caregiver burnout."

POMEROY -- Bradford Church
of Chnsl, located at the corner of
Bradbury Road and Route 124 outSide of Pomeroy. wi II be hosu ng a
concert by Thomas Shelton on Nov.
4, 7 p.m.
PAGEVILLE •• Sc1pio Township
Board of Trustees meeting Wednesday, 6:30p.m. at the Pagevi)le Town
Hall

THURSDAY
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Local
School
Distncl
wtll
have
parent/teacher conferences Thursdyy
and Nov 12. 4-7 p.m. diStnct w1de.
Call ch1ld\ school b01ldmg to schedule an appomtment.

There are several reasons for caregiver burnout. One IS that roles have
changed between adult children and
their aging parents Instead of parents
takmg care of their children, it IS now
the'·children who are taking care of
their parents.
..
Many times caregivers expect too
much out of themselves and the
results of their caregiving. They
expect everything to work out and go
back to the way 11 used to be. That
may not happen. The careg1ver may
then feel he orshe has no control over
the ctrcumstances. The situation may
worsen because of lack ol careg1v1ng
skills, limited finances or lack of famIly support The caregiver may experience a sense ot ever-mcreastng ISO-

tlllh: .
D1dJ I ~ .

Rlllh Fr,mk

Cindy Wmebrenner.

&lt;~nd

T:mt Norman The
nl.'xtnh:etmg will ht! heiJ on Novem-

BE A LEADER...
BE A FRIEND...
BE OF SERVICE!

her 23.

Mormon fam1ly

Sh~

had to

mt~s

Lar-

ry'&lt; two book partl&lt;" thiS week (lor
"Powerful Prayers") hec.tuse her
son, Danny Southwick, 17, haLl a
football game tn ProH&gt;. Ut.•h. where
he lives w1th her ex- husband, Dan
Southw1ck Shawn says sh~ .md Larry discussed religmn ''hcforc we even
got engaged." Shl! .tllenJs church
every week , and o,;ay-.; lhetr -.on '"wJ II
be ratsed m the Mormon la1th. bu!
he ' ll be taught .thou! the l t:W I "ih tra LIIIton, wh1ch we lovt: ~tnd rc..,pect "
Larry ts ktnd of .u1 :..tgno'III C.
She\ workmg wtth her shter on u

deal for a countr}lpop a! hum .•1nd "
'km-can:: line. dnd lov111g !tic Wtlh
L.~rry.

lhl\

IS

perhaps best known

for her sultry rend1t1on ol "Fever."
aruJ she won a Grurnmy lor best l.:Oil temporary tcmale vocal pt!rlorman~:e

'" 1969 fort he h1t " Is That All There
Is''"
A d•abet1c. Miss Le~ 'ha s had a
number of health problems. In 1961 .
she contracted double pneumonia In
1976, she had a near-fatal fall 111 a
New York hotel. and she was sen ·
ow~ly InJUred m a Las Vegas f.tll Ill
19X7
In ear,ly 1985. she had surgery to
open dogged

arlene~

Laler th.tt

year. she underwent double-bypass
heart surgery.

Ms Foster declined to say where
her mother was bemg tre,Hed.

year term He tuld the: RepublicaJ1

rece!Vtng allega11ons that Voinovtch 's

statewtde tss\Je on the ballot, an im-

supporter. that he looked forward to
Wa."'hm gton.

Boyle. in 1 itO emotwnal

~peech

before about 50 subdued supporters,
urged Voinov1ch to remember )lis
lXmocrahc conshtuenh, too
"I [«I more strongly than ever
thatth ~

most imponanl challenge,for

uur Oh1o

repre~ntative

1n Washmg·

ton 1s to be a voJce and a vote for the

worktng farm he~ m our slate." she
sa1d

Althea Acreem. a 26-year-&lt;&gt;ld smgle mother and Democr3t 1 from
Cjevela'nd Heights. spill her vole.
gomg wuh

Fi~her

and Vomovich. a

former Cleveland mayor
··1 voted for George Voinovich on

h1 s reputat1on and for what he as done
for Cleveland and Ohio in general. ..
she satd

Voters turned down the only

1994 campaign spending reports miSrepresented payments funneled to a
company controlled by hts brmher to
cover the salary of a political ally But

tl atlve that would have banned the
hunting of mourning doves. Opponents expected to spend more than $2
million. most of it from the pro-huntthe issue may .. not b~ resolved hcfore ing lobby.
Voinovich leaves office.
Down the ucket. Allorney GenerBarred from servmg a thud con- al B~lly Montgomery defeated
'secutlve four· year term, Vmnovtch Democrat Richard Cord ray. and
will replace Democrat John Glenn. Auduor Jun Petro beat Democrat ·
who dec•ded not to &gt;eek a fifth six- LoUie Stnke

of:~:~~~~ ~=:;~pTu~:r~~~~t f~~:~~~:~~
8

ldenta and area news media following unoHI·
clal election results Tuesday night. Meigs
County Board of Electlons Prealdent John Ihie,

a resident of the Morning .Slar area, is 1!,\lOwn
here har~dlng out updated precinct reports to
supporters of the Carleton School levy. The
official count, which includes 94 provlslon'al, or
walk-In ballots, will be held Nov. 16.

abilll~es must dec1de tf the ISsue will
agatn be placed beforo voters.
He sa1d he fee ls mo.s t Mei~s
County residents support the sehoul's
services. but are alra1d ol paymg
more tuxes ... par1t cularly folluwmn
0
this year's real eshtle n:assessment.
The levy was earl ier defeated as a
continuing tax
A perm,ment. 1.5 mill levy lor tire
protection tn Middleport handily

passed 421 to 314
Levy supporters stuJ ttle lundtn g
will be used to replace an ,1g1ng tire
truck and to purchase cqlllpmcnr lor
members ot the village 's volunt.,;er
tire department.
Metgs County vote-rs JOined voters
· across the state by stw ndly rejcc:tin g

Vl~tc:s. The ts,ue la1lt!U 60 percent to
40 percent in Ohio
A tot~ll 11! 7.674 Mc1gs County
vote rs. nearly 4H perccnl. r\!ported to

Stat~ ls~ue I. a meusun,'! wluch would
have banned the hunt1ng nf mournmg

slig htl y more th.1n on l!-tlllrd of reg·
tstl!red voter~. 14 7X percent reporl·
1ng to the p()ll~

doves

111

the st.1 te by ) . I 11 to 2.140

"

Str~ckland scores huge victory over Holli$ter

stroke

sullered Oct. 27, caused permanent
damage
Miss Lee

Fisher. concedtng the race. ind•cated .that at 47. hiS political career
wa.• not over: "Tonight wa. a setback. I never call1l a defeat."
An exit poll ba.o;ed on intemew~
with voten; a.• they left precmcls
across the state mdicated Taft d1d
well among groups that have traditionally voted Democrauc. such a.•
lahor unions and Roman Catholics.
while relaming groups usually
ahgned wnh GOP. such as those who
think taxes arr too h1gh.
' The poll was conducted by Voter
News Service for The Associated
Press and five national television outlets.
In the Senate race. Voinovich
•gave the GOP both of the stale• Sen'ate seaL• for the first time since 1974,
when Will1am Saxbe and Taft's
father, Roben Taft Jr. repre•ented
Oh10.
The v1ctory came one day al ter the
Ohto Elections Commission reported

Meigs Local issue draws tie vote;
Carleton $Chool levy is defeated

Ohio's U.S. House incumbents all win

Ms Foster said doctors were trydetermme whether

DAVENPORT

.'

Ohio Voters kind
to school issues

I

Ill£ 10

In 1990. Taft began 'a campaign
for governor, but GOP leaders per- '
COLUMBUS - Ohio voters suaded him to step aside for
rewarded Republicans by allowmg Vomovtch. who went on to serve two
them to continue th&lt;ir near-monopoly terms in the Statehouse.
After facmg no opposition in the
_ on statewide Offie&lt;!S and gavr the
state a second GOP senator for the primary, Taft fended off the challenge
from F1sher. whose campaign grew
first time in 24 year11.
close
but failedlo break through in
Tuesday's vote meant a Republican woold continue'" the governor's the race where racb side rxpected to
office, a.s Bob Taft won a ruce he put . spend $10 million '
ot'f eight years ago. and that George
"Let i me a.sure you I will be a ·
Voinov1ch would take h1s career to governor for all the people of Oh10."
!he U.S. Sen;ue. where he will Join Taft told a victory rally at ii' downhis one-lime lieutenant governor. town hotel.
Mike DeWine. ,
The Republicans 'also kept all the
all statewide nOnJUdicial offices and
two Supreme Court seats. The
Democrats won their Supreme Cou(l
race, keeping the GOP edge DR the
court at 5-2.
In two congressional races that
were expected to be close. the incumbents won eaSily And voters defeated a statewide ts.&lt;ue thlll would have
outlawed dove hunting.
Willi 99 percent of the state's
precincts reporting. Taft led Democrat Lee Fisher 50 percent to 45 percent. with two mmor-party pandtdates
sphUing the other 5 percent, accordJOg to unofficial results compiled by
The Assoi:tated Press. In the Senate
race. Vomovich led Democr•t Mary
· Boyle 56 percent to 44 pencent.

Voter turnout even
lower than predicted

Other"' attending were LOis Bell.

Op.d

'

1

1n

LOS ANGELES (A P) - Jazzand
pop Singer Peggy Lee has been hosjlllahzed after suffenng a stroke.
"S he 's conscious and her lamtly
has been with her." Mi ss Lee's
dau ghter. Nicki Lee Foster. satd
Monday

Single Copy - 35 Cents

By JOHN McCARTHY
Aaaoclated Preu Writer

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Taxpayers ol the Meigs Local
School District must wait until Nov.
16 to learn the fate of a 5 mill.' live
year permanent improvements levy
after Tuesday's vole resulted m a lie
-- 1,827 10 1,827 according to unofficial results from the Meigs County
Board of Elections.
The renewal levy Will be decided
by 53 proVISIOnal ballots which will
,be officially counted on Nov 16 ProCOLUMBUS (AP) - Voter of available records
•visional ballots are those cast by regturnout 1n Ohio was 48 I percent , Alli~on expects the vote total to IStered voters in Ohio who have
Tuesday. according to preliminary reach to pred•cted turnout of about moved into Meigs County from
figures released by the secrerary of 3.5 million voters.
·
another county after the voter regisstate's office
Hamson County. m eastern Ohio tratlon.dea&lt;\line. Countywide, 94 proThat percentage could grow as near Steubenville, had the state's VISional ballots rematn to be count·
count1es double-check votes and tal- highest pencentage turnout with 59.73 ed.
ly the votes of people m the military percent of the c(iunty's 10,640 regisThe levy generates about
and livmg overseas, Jon Alli~on, a tered voters gomg to the poll s.
. $550.000 a year and was originally
spokesman for Secretary of State Bob
Athens County. :lhoul 90 miles promoted w1th the slogan of .. Books,
Taft. said today.
southeast of Columbus, had the low- Buses and Buildings". Levy support·
Across Ohio, 3.464,224 people est turnout. w1th 37 8 percent of the ers this time did lillie to promote the
voted . Tuesday That's out of county's 42.317 regtstered voters mensure or gel out thetr vote. ·
7,198.518 registered voters
casting ballots.
II the issue comes out a loser on
The secretary of state's office had
' In l\194. the last midterm electiOn, Nov 16. Me1gs Local Board of Eduptedtctcd the turnout at about 50 per- turnout in Ohio was 57.20 percent, cation Vice Presiden\ Scott Walton
cent, the lowest tor a major statewide accordmg l() the secre tary of state's hazarded to say the hoard would
general election 111 the last 20 years office.
"most ce rtainly .. put the measure
b.ICk before vot~rs be for~ lis explraGallipolis issue fails by 177 votes
liOn on Jilll I. 21XIO The board has
two additional ch.mces lor the levy to
pa~s be tore th ~tt ttme.
The Carleton School 1.8 mill. five
I
year operutum and maintenance levy
w.IS defeated by 1.42X votes, 4.394to
2.966, accord1ng to unolticial election results.
"Our needs have not changed,"
Voters approved 128 ot 210 school
COLUMBUS (A P) - Voters
Carleton
School D•rector Steve Behn
,,pproved 110 perc· en~ot school issues ls'ittes stdtewide Tuestlay. mcludmg
S&gt;ud,
addmg
that the ~oard of MenElect1on D.1y.the &gt;1ate depattment of 65 percent ot operating lev~es.
tal Retald.uion/Developmentnl DIS(Conllnued on Page 3)
educ,,t,on reported toduy.

"

Singer Peggy Lee
hospitalized for stroke

.

received 159 votes. and John R.
Mitchel and Lawrence Anderson. the
Reform Pany candidates. received
202 I'Oies.
Allorney General Belly Montgomery received 4.060 votes in
Me1gs County. wh1le her Democratic opponent. Richard Cordray.
received 2,820 votes
Other state-wide and regional
races were decided as follows in the
county: Audjlor of State: J1m Petro.
Republican incum~nt, 3.903, LouiS
N Strike. 2, 756; Secretary ol State:
J. Kenneth Blackwell. R. 3,748,
Chari eta Tavaros. D. 2.861; lreasurer· Joseph T. Deters. R. 3.760. John
A. Donofno. D. 2.H90; Chief Just1te
of the Supreme Court. Thoma~ J.
Moyer. incumbent. 3,6H I, Gary
Tyack, 1.523; Jusuce olthe Supreme
Coun: Stephen W. Powell, 2.743.
Francis E Sweeney, 2.544. Just1ce of
the Supreme Court, Paul E. Pfeifer.
3.741, Ronald Suster, 1.385; Judge of
the Court of Appeals. David T. Evans,
3,363, L. Alan Goldsberry, 2,665.
sweeping the slate-wide races.
All results are subject to change
In the Ohio Governor's race. Bob dunng the ot'lfcial count of ballots.
Taft and hiS Lieutenant Governor which wtll take place on November
candidate, Maureen O'Connor, 16. In addition to the ballots ca.'t yesreceived 56 percent of the vote m terday, the hoard of elections Will
M~1gs County, witiT 3.945while their count 94 ballots cast by walk-in votDemocratic counterparts, Lee FISher ers who cast ballots at the hoard ol
and Michael B. Coleman, rece1ved elections on Tuesday due to state law.
2.676 votes. Independent candidates and military ballots cast from overZanna Fenler and John A. Eastman seas.

lat10n w1th no hope of Improvement.
If you are a careg1ver, there are
several precautionary steps that you
can take to help prevent careg1ver
burnout. First, know yourself and
understand the reahty of your situa·
lion. Have you had some stressful
11mes that have caused altitude
changes? If so, then realize that the
potential for caregiver burnout may
be present.
· Know how to lake care of· your
parent. Fmd out as much as possible "
about the illness and strategies that
can be used to not only help you manage your parent's Sickness, but also
allow you to personally cope with the
stres~ of caregivmg. One stress management techmque that is extremely
helpful is to make sure that you are
taking care of yourself. Stay healthy,
eat right. get plenty of sleep and exercise. Get away Irom the role of caregiver from time ta time. Ask for help
and take advantage of support groups
made up of individuals who are.
experiencmg s1milar circumstances.
Plan a schedule for your day. Prioritize what is most 1mportant.
Reward yourself for your commitment. Take thmgs one at a lime.
Don't lorget to call upon local
resources such as the Me1gs County
Counc1l on Aging o~ the Extension
Office to provide information on services that can help you care for your
agmg parent. Personal home care, inhome resp1te services, home-delivered meals, suppon groups, etc. are
available to help wuh your caregiving re sponSibtllties.

Hometown Newspaper

Taft, Voinovich triumph

Davenport
defeats
Pickens for
a -seat on
commission
By BRIAN J. REED.
Sentinel News Staff ' '•
Democrat. Mick ,Davenpon wa.&lt;
elected Me1gs County Commissioner in Me1gs County's only contested
, local race on Tuesday. He defrated
Republican Pally Goeglein Pickens
by a 51 percent margin.
'
Davenp&lt;;111 rereived 3,761 votes to
Pickens' 3.5 19. and will join fellow
Democrats Janel Howard and Jeffrey
Thornton on the three-member hoard
of commissioners in January.
In the only other local race. Nan'cy Parker Campbell. who wa.&lt;
unchallenged in her bid for re-election a.• County Aud1tor. recr~ved
5,389 complimentary votes.
Other Me~gs County wmners
included U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, DLucasville. State Rep John Carey, RWellston, and State Senator M1chael
C. Shoemaker. D-Bourneville. Strickland defeated Ohio Lt. Gov. Nancy P.
Holhsler. a Republican. by 53 percent
in the county -- 3.923 votes to 3,468.
Carey deleated f~rst-time candrdate
Bill 01ler by a 63 percent margin 111
'the county. receiving 4.434 votes to
Oller's 2.654 Shoemaker rrceived
3.738 votes to Republican Lee
Thatcher's 3,145, a 54 percent margm.
Higher u·p on the Me1gs County
ballot, Republicans ,fared beller,

Avoiding caregiver burnoUt

Community calendar

~

Larry King has gotten into the baby thing
By JEANNIE WILLIAMS
USA TODAY

them.
"They were put through a very
traumatic expenence and our maiO
priority now is to make certam that

each mdividual involved ha.&lt; the services and resour«!s available to deal
"''th what has happenrd." said Del- •
ben Culp, president of Planned Parenthood of Central and Southern
Indiana.
. The letters were received Fnday
and Saturday at clinics in Indianapolis, New Albany and Scottsburg,
Ind.; Knoxv1lle, Tenn.; W1chlla. Kan.;
and Louisville, Ky. Each 3-by-5-inch
'1-'hite envelope had a Cincinnati
postmark.
The letters said· "You have just
been exposed to anthrax."
An analysis of brown powder
found m some of the letter. found it
wa.s unlikely the letters contained
anthrax, said FBI spokesman B1ll
Carter. Still. it is a crime to threaten
to use a weapon of mass destruction
The FBI sa1d it had no suspects

'

Penguins
defeat
Flyers
Pages 4-6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

·

I

Anthrax hoax still traumatic for victims
INDIANAPOLIS CAPJ -

Issue One soundly defeated~ Page 5
Ann Landers column, Page 7
Election results, Pages 3-6

Today: Clearing
High:
Low:20

Reader concerned about the side effects of Viagra- could it lead to death?

Sports

November 4, 1998

Weather

Pleasant Valley
Hospital
ZSZO Vllley Dltve • Point Pleownl. W/25550 • (3041675-4:140

'
•

backmg Holliste r till ~d the airwaves
By KATHERINE RIZZO
wtth commerc ials.
Associated Press Writer
"It was a battle between people
COLUMBUS - Desp1te exten&gt;IVe nuJgmg by the nullonal political and money ; I hud the people and she
part1es. Ohm voters reJeCted change hdd .the money." he said. " I think I
un&lt;.l y.we their members of Congre!&gt;. . . have developed a level of llllsl with
the people 111 thi s diStnclthat "dlfa twn ~y~ar rl!ncwal.
Republicans 1nves ted heav1ly 1n licult lor these! outsuJe groups to
Lt. Gov.' Nancy HolliSter as thc1r erod~. I wasn't su re about that I'm
~: hal Ienger Lo 6th CongressiOnal Dt~· sure about that now"
Polllu..:.ll Sl:letltJsl John Kessel of
tnct Rep. Ted Stnckland. but southern Ohtoans gave th ~ Dc:mocrat the Ohio State University s.ud St nckland
largest VICtory murgm ol hts l'nreer h.•d the nghl kmd of mess,,gc .md
Complete but unot'licull returns 'record tu hlunt mtcmpts tn chal.u.: &gt;hawed Stncklanu deteat1ng HolliS- tenze him as too l1hcml to represe nt
ter by 57 percent to 4.1 percent the f&gt;th DJSlncl
Strk·kl.tnd wus ahle 111 brag .tbout
Stndland's two prcv1nus vktories
workmg
tn pn: ~ervc tnhs .at ,J boot
and h '' 1994 de kat all were by ,,
I~K·tory
nml
ll nt llllllll pl.1nt. .Ltu.l had
murgm o! ~ I pcn:cnt to 49 percent,
SmckLmd saul he'd hccn nervous the endorsement u! the NatHmal
Rtfle A"i~nuat10n - s1gn1 ftcant
Ltbout his prvspc~h dunng lht: l'Uin·
pntgn's lin .tl week. when groups ~tsse ts m the l.u-g~fy rural dt..,trt&lt;.'t

"Th.tt di stnct, you dnve down

through and it's tnuler p.trks on both
Sides of the roads. It " really a poor
,,rea econp1111cally and it ha s very
h1gh unemplny1i1ent. If he can argue
that he's protecllng Jobs, that w1ll
have

~m

impact. " Kessd snid.

HolliSter, whose ge neral!¥ tolerant
position on abortion nl.lllc many ol
the dtslru.::t's gr.tssrools Republican

orgamzers slow to usslst her, d1d not
do as well in trud1l10nally GOP areas
as the more conservut1ve Frank Cremeans did m past 6th DIStnct campatgns
She even lost

tn,

her home b.,,e,

Washington Cou nt y. pulling just 44
percent ol the vote
Strickl~tntl's con, utuems were m
~tcp

wtth votl!rs el:-.cwhl!rt! m Ohio.

who re-elected. evay rcprt!'sent,ttlve
who sough t :umthertcrm.though not

the poll- Tuesday wllh the M111ersvt ll e prectnct n:pmtmg the lt1ghcst
tu1nout. 5H H9 percr:nt.

•

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

2 Sl•ctinns - 12 l,agt.•s

all were cakewalks

I

had the lowest tu rnout w1th on ly

•

Rep. Steve Ch,•bot. R-Oh1o. had to
tight oll'h~avy mvestmcnt by n.ttionrechmn the I st D1stnct

~1!~11 th ~t l

helonged to Denmcrats unul Chabot
c,un c ;.don g

"A lot of money was spent on
hoth Sides but ultinMtel v. I th1nk. II
came Jown to tht: 1 s~ue~." :-,i.tld
Chabot. who won hy 53 percent to 47
pen.:ent

H-~-111

II
.12

3
~-5

Wc;llhcr

3

Lotteries

In the statt:'s only open House
&gt;e,ll. voters 1n Clevcl.1nd's lith DIS·
tru.:t rl!plur.:etl rcllnng Rep Lnut..,
Stoke" With :.tnotht!r D~mocrat.
Stt!pham~ Tuhbs Jmlc..,
Th.11 prt:st!rwd the del~gdtlon's
part1san bal,m~..t: ol II Repuhlic.u\s
~u .d 'I'( De1nocrats, It ,11'\o w1ll creme
th..: most kmalc ()h'to congf\!ss10n,\l

~

Culcnd.or
Classilic•ds
Contll's
Editnrinls
Locnl

al Democrats who believed Cmcmnall Mayor Roxanne Quails could

OHIO
l'kk .1:

STRICKLAND
l.'Oilttngt!nl

cv~r

when :-.he\ 'worn 111

~;7.

l'kk

~:II ~ XX

Uuckc\l' ~· 12 · 1h - \ ~ - ~ -l - ~7

W,VA.
l?ail) ,1: 117 llail)

to JOin Demncr.u M.•rcy K.1p1ur ,,nd
Republican Dehor.•h P1yce

~: )~I X

•

.,

'

P{HHI!rny

&gt;

•

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