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I )

OCTOBER
IS ·~
• .:.ai.H
• ..fii.H
'UT.N
UT.H
AmiCAfld . .
CHEVY
TRUCK
MONTH
•• 1-1
•• 1-1
AT C &amp; -0 .M OTORS!')
CHECK OUT THE SAVINGS
998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
EXTENDED CAB·414

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Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
923
Pick 4:
7810
Buckeye 5:
4-11-20-24-30

Spqrts on Page 4

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By JIM FREEMAN
S8ntlnel News Starr

AS

1998 CHEVY

..

S-1.0

• BOOK MARKERS. Southern Local kindergartners and Racine
Rrst.1nden presented book markers to Racine Branch Librarian
Norma Hawthorne. Here, Timmy Yates, Brooke Chadwell, Rashell
Boso and Sean Copplck, from left, make the presentation.

Restyled Front Grille, lnstru.ment Panel, ·
Bumpers, and Increased Horse Power! I

Ohio GOP wants
Bl~ckwell to stay out
of governor's race

AS
LOW

AS

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CINCINNATI (AP)- The head strongest candidates will end up
of the Ohio Republican Party wants fighting each other.
·
state Treasurer Kenneth Bl~kwell to
''I never want to so;~ our two pit
stay out of the governor's ¥ace and is bull elephan\s in a fight against each
willing to pay to see that it happens. other. That dissipates our resources,"
Party Chairman Bob Dennen told he said.
The Cincinnati Enquirer for a story
"From where they sit, the opporpublished today that the GOP will tunity for an open seal for governor
"commit the maximum" amount of- only ~omes around every so oftencampaign cash to Blackwell. if he and so it's not that surprising when
runs instead for secretary of state.
you have two· of your slats compel" I;II commit the maximum right ing for the same scat," he said.
·
Taft began his gubernatorial race
now;'' Bennett said Tuesday. "I've
told Ken that privately - whatever last week with an 11 -city tour. .
it takes."
His campaign manager, Bnan
Blackwell said he isn 'I interested. Hicks, confinned that. talks about
Instead. he is preparing a bus tour Blackwell as a running mate have
of Ohio to announce he will chal· occurred.
lcngc Secretary of S'tatc Bob Taft for
Neither Hicks nor Bcnn~l! could
next year's GOP nomination for gov- be reached for comment thos momcrnor.
ing. They did not immediately return
"I'm calling it my 'Freedom phone calls left at GOP and Tan
Tour,"' Blackwell said. "Freedom 'headquarters.
from government regulation. FreeThe GOP feud comes as Benncu
dom from the education bureaucracy. .is attempting to complete the GOP
Freedom.' '
slate for next year's statewide clccBenncu said he fears two of the tions.

*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

1998 CHEVY 5·1 0

EXTENDED CAB
Air Conditioning, Alum. Wheeis, LS Package,
AM/FM Radio~ W/L Tires, and Morell

AS
LOW

AS
•

Air, AM/FM Radio, Tachometer,
Locking Differential

AS

Low ·
AS
*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

IOIUIIIS

MOTO
ST. ALBANS

TOYOTA ........
•1• .
&amp; LEIUS
. am~'c::.C~
1
727-2921

•. ..

Southern Local ntle I reading program schools are celebrating American Education Week spotlighting the
importance of education to the wellbeing of children and society.
aook markers will be made and
donated to the new Racine Branch of
the Meigs County Public Library and
to D&amp;M Pizza. The book markers
will go out 'with each pizza ordered.
Bacr's Market, Waid Cross' Sons
Groce&gt;y and Powell's SuperValue ·
donated grocery bags which will be
decorated by the children and sent
back to the stores to be used.
· Placemats will be de~-orated and
used and Paula's Restaurant in ·
Racine. D&amp;M Pizza and Karen's
Greenhouse near Ponland.
In addition, posters will be mlldc
and posted throughout the communities and students will be writing
papers on what they like most about
school.
·
The Racine Library was the focus
of National Education Week activities
Tuesd;~y· with student council members from Southern Junior High
School in Racine presenting boOks
about Princess Diana and Mother
Theresa to the library.
Students at the junior high school
wrote essays to detennine what they
were thankful for during the Thanksgiving Holiday, and the 'library was
one of the top
choices. The
school uses the library on. an almost
daily basis.
•
Kindergarten teacher Suzanne

three

PRESENTING BOOKS • Southern Junior Sayre, Sec:retary Lindsey Smith, Treasurer Macy
High School StudentCoundl members present- Rees and Olita Heighton, library diredor or extened books on Mother Theresa and Princess Diana sion services. Stadonts at the junior bi.:h, kindet·
to the Racine Library Thesday. Shown.here are, garlen and first grade use the library •• located
from left: student council President Joe Cornell, adjacent the school ··on an almosl·dail~ basis.
Vice-president Tommy Theiss, Reporter Lori
Wolfe said h~r li,ludents go to the
library on Tuesday and Friday.
' Student council members said
they chose the books about Princess
Diana and Mother Theresa because of
tpcir significance in history and

because students .at the school arc
reading and writing essays about
famous women in history.
Southern kindergartners and
Racine lirst-gradcrs presented book

markers to Nonna Hawthorne and
joined in a l&gt;ricf ceremony with
Racine Mayor Scott Hill who proclaimed National Education Week in
the village.

'Great American Smoke Out' set for Thursday .

Meigs Countians are being urged of a pack of dgarcues today is $2 or
to join in the "Great American Smoke more. For the person who smokes a
Out" on Th.ursday by pulling oullhei~ pack a day, the daily cost is $2; wcckly $14; monthly. $61; yearly. $732 ;
cigarcues.
.
five years, $3.660; and over I O,ycars,
Norma .,..orrcs, R. N. o f th c Mcogs
County Health Department. through ···· S7.320.
the Ohio Unive_r~ity College of
For the two pack a day smoker, the
Osteopathte Medtcme, has secured cost for a year goes up to $1.464; for
staltstocs on who smokes, the cost ~f five years, $7,320; and for 10 years,
smoking, and the health and envo- s14 .64o.
ronmcntal problems ot causes.
As for the health problems which
To stress t)lc damage of smoking, smoking creates. statistics show that
Torres said that tobacco use kills smokers arc 10 times more likely to
more than 400,000 Americans each die of lung cancer, that it doubles the
year -- more than Aids, car accidents. chances of heart disease, that it is the
alcohol, homicides. illegal drugs . main cause of chronic bronchitis. a
WASHINGTON (AP) - Con- turned n~gativc. Bonds were lillie suicides and fires combined.
serious lung infection and cmphysc~
sumer inflation remained at a modest changed.
11\U.
that about one out of every three
In a separate report tuesday, the
' . 0.2 percent in October for a fourth
According to the information teens that smekc daily will die prestraight month - a pace that could Commerce Department said business
released
by the OU College of Osteo- maturely, thai second hand smoke
lead to the smallest yearly increase In inventories rose 0.7 percent in Scppathic
Medicine.
kids arc more like- hanns· non smokers nnd increases
11 years.
tcmbcr.
.
ly
to
smoke
if
they
live in a house- their chance of developing lung
The Labor Department said ThesAnalysts said the growth. partieI
day its Consumer Price Index ularly a 1.2 percent buildup at the hold where a parent or older btothcr infections. heart di sca.•e and cancer.
increased at a 1.~ percent annual rate retail level and the 1.1 percent whole- or sister smokes. nearly 90 pen;cnt of
In addition to personal health
during the firstlO months of 1997. If sale increa.'&gt;C. could result in reduced smokers started as teenagers. 20 percent
of
high
school
senior
girls
arc
damage,
smoking creates an envi.the pace continues for the rest of the goods orders and a slow ins economy
ri:gular
smokers,
16
percent
of
high
ronmenlal
hazard . lt takes more than
year, it would be the smallest annual that could further curb inflation.
increase since a 1. 1 percent advance
Still. business sales jumped 1.3 school senior boys arc smokers . lhrec hours to remove 95 percc~t of
in 1986.
percent and resulted in an inventory- almost 66 percent of high school the smoke [rom one cogarcue from
Consumer prices rose 3.3 percent to-sales ratio of 1.36 months supply seniors have tried smoking. an csti- · the room once smoking has .ended;
.,
at the September sales pace. That wa' mated 4.5 milliOJ1 kids smoke, the exposure to second hand smoke os
last year.
.. . .
1 35
h
Despite the posmve. pncc data. the smallest since a . -mont sup- · average teenage smoker begins at age t,csponsiblc [or an estimated 350,000
14 and becomes a daily smoker cases of hronchitis and 152.000 cas4
Wall Street lost ground after three ply in February.
before
18, and among smokers, 12to cs of poeumonia yearly in children
·days of strong gains. The Dow Jones
The Labor Departmcnt.reported
17.
70perccnt
regret slarting and66 under the age of (i•e , and exposure
industrial average closed down 47.40 last week that its Producer Price
percent
want
to
quit.
is responsible for 1.2 molhon car
at 7650.82 after an early 22-point. Index. inched up just 0.1 percent in ·
As for the cost. the average price infections each year.
gain. Broader stock ind~xes also
Continued ?" pa1e 3
"

~

Private prison sent back for more work
COLUMBUS (AP) - Escape
from a privately. operated ·p~ison
n:mained technically legal on Ohoo as
lawmakers held off a vote on a bill
placing new regulations on for-profit facilities.
Sen. Louis Blessing, R-Cincinnati,
said Tuesday that he planned to hold
one more commiuee hearing on the
bill in January to try to clear up confusion over sections of the bill - in
.• particular, whether it even applies to
· the one private prison operabng on
Ollio.
"I think they need to he regula!·
ed" Blessing added. "But 'some of
' would cause it to shut dO\"n ."
these
Supporters of the legislation say
officials with Nashville-based Cor·
rections Corp. of America, which

"There was just a lot of confuruns the Northeast Ohio Correction- police had the authority to arrest
sion,"
Ms. Hart said. " I understand
al Center in Youngstown. succeeded escapees since fleeing from a priva~e
prison currently is not a crime on they may start the whole process
in gutting the bill.
over."
Ohio.
"Tiley rewrote 90 percent of the
Ms. Hart added that limiting the
But
Corrections
Corp.
officials
bill over the weekend," said Senate
types
of inmates eligible for the
sponsor Robert · Hagan, D- said the bill would have unfairly lim·
prison would ' hurt the company's
ited its ability to operate.
·
Youngstown.
Hagan said ihe bill was "dissectIn particular, the company object- ability to make a profit - and create
ed and polluted" _by amendments that ed to auempts to limit the types of jobs for the economically depressed
area.
distorted backers' original intentions inmaies that could be housed there.
It was the promise of 350 new
to deal with problems at the private"The company does not ... have a
ly operated prison. ·
problem with oversight," said Susan prison jobs that won over the city,
As envisioned by Hagan and fel- Hart, spokcswomi!Jl for the country's . which has strugsled with the loss of .
more thiu&gt; 64,000 steel jobs since the
low Youngstown Democrat Rep. Ron largest for·profit prison operator.
Gerbcrry, the legislation - which
There also was uncertainty over late 1970s. Youngstown gave the foralready has passed in the House:; -, whether parts of the bill could be profit company land, offered multiwould set standards for pnvate prtson applied retroactively to the year tax discounts a~d agreed to prooperators that want to house out-of- Youngstown prison, which opened in tect the $40 million prison against
state inmates. It also would have May and now houses I, 700 io'imates losses and court damages.
cleared up uncenainty over whether frotn Washington and Nevada.

JOIN the Great American Smoke Out Thursday.
Tohacc~ use kills more than 400,000 Americans each year

•
•
•

•

After official count

No changes reported in
'97 election results
The outcome of the Nov. 4 general election remains unchanged fol lowing Tuesday's official count of ballotS conducted by the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
Elections official s were closely watching a township trustees race
in Bedford Township, where only .one vote separated the second
declared winner and a declared loser in that race.
The final rcsulls in that race, where two trustee.• were elected, were:
Robert F. Hawk, 229; David M. Brickles, 155, Virgil C. King, 151,
and Jack R.'Wells. 134.
·
That race was the only race which could have been changed in the
official count. No recount will be required in the race because of the
four-vote difTercncc between Bricklcs and King . A final difference of
two or less votes between the two candidates would have resulted in
an automatic recount by the board, Deputy Director Jane Frymyer said ,
on Friday.
Yesterday's official count added 89 provisional ballots, cast either
at the polls or at the board of elections office durina the absentee voting period. Those ballots allow voters who have moved, either within the county or from another Ohio county, to vote in the election.
The results of the three county-wide lery issues were as lfollows :
Meigs County Health Department, I mill i'cnewal, 4,471 for, 3,184
against; Meigs County Carlctop School. 1r8 mill new ~ontinuing levy,
3,403 for, 4,233 against; Meigs County Home, additional half-mill ,
3.577 [or, 3,961 against.

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Inflation remains tame

*PRICE INCWDES REBATE. TO DEAl ER

998 CHEVY BLAZER
4 EEL DRIVE

AND

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Southe-rn students observe;..:..
Nati·
o
nal
Education
Week
·
.

LOW

AU PRICES INCLUDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCWDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
UCENSE FEES.

2 Secllona, 11 P.-.~
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A Gannett Co. New :..-: .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 19, 1997

AS

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IIIII. 41, NO. 112
Ctte7, Ohio 'hllley Pltbltlhlng ConlpMy

Partly cloudy tonight,
Iowa In upper 201 • •
Thureday, partly cloudy.
Hlgha In the upper 50s.

;.'f.

Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chrome Bumpers, Chrome
Appearance Package and Morel

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Atlanta Hawks,
Lakers remain
perfect ·In NBA

IPEI

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Co!fJnJentary
· '£stufisMtf ml!J48

rCourt

11(,
Street, Pomtroy, Ohio
14-lt2-21M • FIX 112·2157

.!}.

'
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publllher

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
GeMrlllllflllger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Not lowbrow fluff,
this book is OK
By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
Asaociated Prus Writer
WASHINGTON - It is OK to sit in the bathtub and think highbrow
thoughts about potato chips and hot dogs. Nifty, in fact , because these are
words that are as American as apple pie .
A pair of word historians hiiVe collected their choices of "words that have
shaped America," choosing one for almost every year since English was first
spoken on this side of the Atlantic.
·
·
When it came to making a choice for a given year. they tried to select the
word ''that made a difference." said Allan A. Metcalf of MacMurray College in Jacksonville, ill. They looked for words that reflected "how we look
at ourselves as Americans, what our concerns are and what our ideas are,"
he said.
Me1calf and lexicographer David K. Barnhan arc co-authors of "America in So Many Words."
Most word compilations are organized alphabetically. This one is by year,
with the first entry from 1555, a half-century before the first pennanent English settlement in America.
·
The significant word was canoe, a tenn that might have appeared earlier
still because Christopher Columbus described boats used by natives in the
West Indies that they called canoa. Metcalf and Barnhan date it from the
first English usage, a 1555 book that described the canoa as "very Ionge and

· narowe."
Pickin~ the significant word for a particular year was not always easy,
Barnhart said. For example, OK first came into use during the presidential
campaign of 1840 when President Martin Van Buren , also known as Old
Kinderhook, was running against William Henry Harrison.
Van Buren was a native of Kinderbook, N.Y., and bis supponers referred
to him as O.K. Although he lost the election, his nickname became one of
history's great lex!cological winners, an Americanism known throughout the
world.
· Some of OK's competitors for 1839's American word of tbe year are
fluff, dishrag and vegetarian.
In their search for social significance. the authors settled on sweatshop as
their choice for 1892, the year the tenn was used in a magazine anicle,
"Among the Poor in Chicago. "
Other words Barnhan dates 10 that year are southpaw, basketball, twofer,
roadster and the expression "to cv"!' up."
Not surprisingly, Mark Twain has ihree-cntrics. He was the firs! to refer
to·what the English called a ba1hing tub as a bathtub. He used. il in "innocents Abroad" in 1869, and the authors say that by the next year the word
"had been installed in our language.'·
·
,
The use of boom to mean expansion also was attributed to Twain, who
:&gt; wrote his pt1blisher in 1871 that "my popularily is booming now."
. \ · Twain must share credit for early usc of nifty with Bret Hane. Both used
.:: it as a fonn of Nevada frontier slang .
~
Frontier itself is a word with a long European history but a unique Amcr.; . ican usage. In Europe. a frontier is the fonificd border between two coun:: .tries. 'In America, wrote Metcalf and Barnhart. the frontier was "the place
: where civilization dwindled away and wilderness _began." ·
:~ . Highbrow and lowbro~ arc Americanisms that came into use early in the
~ 20th century.
·
t "From the start both tenns were applied with tongue in cheek," the
:• · aulhors wrote. " They referred to the discredited phrenological notioh that a
: person of superior intellect and culture would have a high forehead, while
:~ an ignorant boor would have a low one."
·
:·
Hot dog is a play on an old jOke that dog meat was used in sausages. The
:: first use of hot dog .is traced to the Yale Record in 1895. .
~
The other gteat American food, the potato chip. was invented by an
: American Indian chef at a lodge in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. First called
• . ~aratoga chips, the snacks were referred to as' potato chips in a cook book
~ published in 1878.
·
·
·
·
What could be more American than apple pie? Well. a lot of things. Apple
•
: pie has one of the weakest claims to being genuinely American. The book
quotes the English poet Raben Greene as wrjtina in ·I 590 that "Thy breath
is like the steame of appie-pyes."
.
11 is the lop crust that distinguishe~ the American version from its European cousin, more often referred to as an apple ta(t. .
.
.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Don.ld M• .Jtelhbera bas wrlttea unc~led
words durin&amp; 31 yean u a reporter In lite WuhlnlfOII !Moreau. qt The
Auodllted Press.

/
Barry's· Wl4'f
'World

A.~ 450 ~t4'{ MEt-l
WeA1t~ Pf«&gt;Lf.TAAIA~~

~PE ~K SLUf P«e:5S
St\lt(rs~

I

' 'r

PEOPLE Af(£
LESS INCLINEt&gt;
1'0 CAt..L YOU
"A SU\1'."..

Wldneldly, Nov~ 11, 1117

••
•

The Daily' Sentinel

VVedntldly,NovtWnbe111,11t7

Page2

--~--

uRG nutWing meeting set

AceuWeathe.- fom:ut

-L oophole has benefited Iraqi military

•
IToledo I 46" I

United
NaliQfls,
nor the

over' U.N. inspection teams that and ballistic missiles with ranges of
include Ameritans have highlighted ISO kilometers or less.
Saddam '1 intention to secure the
Iraq has tried to take advantage of
IAEA,
weapons of mass destruction he had this loophole to prevent the deslrUChas - been
before the.Guif War.
tion of equipment used for the proable to do
But lost in ali the coverage about . duction of the Baar 2000 (Condor
anything
this showdown is what U.N. offi- II), a 1,000-kilometer-range ballistic
about
cials .. in more than a dozen inter- missile believed to be far more accuthis.
views wilh our associate Dale Van rate than Iraq's upgraded Scuds. (Its
, •· SueAlta .• call "the big loophole: " the solid-fuel engines also make it easi·
ceeded in
fact that none of .the U.N. Security .. er to COIICeai and quicker to deploy.)
reinvigoMol* 6 Andenon
Council resolutions on 1~ calls for
Starting in 1985, the U.S. governrating its
the dismantling or monitoring ot ment led a major campaign to prevent the sale of critical manufacturing equipment to the Condor II prodestroys all chemical, biological, in Jordan, France and Gennany to resolutions, U.N. teams ·'have gram, pans of which were being
nuclear and ballistic missile purchase critical items and spare inspected some of the conventional conducted jointly with Argentina
materiel.
parts for its weapons industries. Iraq weapons 'Jllants, but only within a and Egypt. Before the I:J.N. inspecYet in the last six years, the Iraqis continues to ship oil to Jordan, and very limited framework.
. lions began in Iraq, it was widely
-- with the same tenacity, deceptiQII to Iran, using funds from oil sales to
As one senior analyst with the claimed that halting tlie Condor II
and drive used to amass their.fonni- feed that procuremehl network.
U.N., ' Special
Commission program was the largest single sucdabie war machine in the first place
-- Manufactured T-72 tanks. ' (UNSctJIIIl)' on Iraq put it to us; cess of the Missile Technology Con-- have now rebuilt much of their artillery munitions and even shon- "We can't be bothered with count- . troi Regime.
military complex, according to our range ballistic missiles, and is oper- ing how many 155 mm shells the
UNSCOM inspectors soon disintelligence sources. Despite the ating more than 40 major weapons Iraqis can.make, as long as they, do covered four separate bomb-damongoing U.N. inspections, and the plants. At the same time, Iraq has not violate the tenns .of (resolution) aged facilities in different pans of
oil embargo, Iraq has:
repatred and returned' to service 687.. .. We have too much to do -as it Iraq that fiad been engaged in the
-- Managed to reconstruct more most of the 2.500 main. battle tanks is."
;
production of the Badr 2000 only
. than 80 percent of the military man- and 250 fixed-wing aircraft that surIn other words, Iraq is fully days before Dcscn Stonn began.
ufacturing capability it possessed vi ved De sen Stonn. ·
·
allowed by the terms of the cease- One of the facilities. south of Fallub_et_o;:;re:;;;;D;::e;&gt;se:;rt=S-t.:..onn_._N_ei_th_e_r_t_he___Th_e_re_c_e_n_t_sh_o...,w,..d_o_w_n_w_ith_:Ir:..:.aq:::_:..:.fi:.::•re~to:.:.co::n:.:ti:.::n:ue:_:;making convention," jah, was also manufacturing liquidr afSTeill""
al weapons and fueled al-Hussein and ai-Abhas mis~
..
ammunition at siles, Iraq's improved-range Scuds.
*Wi • f'll,a
whatever rate it
All four missile plants appeared
desires -- even in to have been built by Gennan and
the same plants Italian !inns, although the bulk of
that arc suspect- the solid fuel technology is said to
ed of being part have originated iri the United Stat~s
of Iraq's nuclear and to have reached Iraq via France
program.
and Italy.
·
In theory,
Iraqi authorities promised (o
Iraq can even modi(y the plant to meet U.N.
save equipment demands, and were particularly
slated for dispos- intent on holding on to a series bf
al by UNSCOM solid-fuel mixers· thar were housed
by declaring that at a plant south of Baghdad.
it will only be
While UNSCOM rejected Iraq's
used for the man- reasoning in this panicular case and
ufacture of cqn- began destroying Condor II manuvcntional
facturing equipment several years
weaponry.
ago, it Jef1 the vast majority of Iraq's
Allowable activi- "dual-use" equipment untouched.
ty includes the
Jack Anderson and Ju 1\tolier
.are writen United. Feature SynciJ.
manufacture
of cate, Inc.
artillery
rockets
·

IManalleld 148• I•
•I Columbusls2• I

~~f;;'s~a~~a~nd X;::::"an~~~arg:~ ~~!~st~~e J:~~~r~~:~'co~~'::[~; lr(;~~~:~n~~~~:::~~ ~~:~t

W.VA.

:Today's weather forecast
:Ohio forecast
Tonight... Partly cloudy. A chance
of flurries early extreme northeast.
LOws in the upper 20s and lower 30s.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy in the
. morning becoming mostly cloudy in

·Victor L•Berger Brown
Victor L'Berger Brown, 85, longtime Minersville businessman, com·
munity leader, and Minersville historian, died Monday eveping, November
.17th, 1997, at his residence. He was 1he son of the late George and Elsie
Roush Brown.
He_graduated from Dutchtown Elementary sChool in 1926; from Pomeroy
.High School in · I930, and attended Bliss Business College in Columbus,
Ohio.
His years of business experience began as clerk in the Meigs County Treasurer's Office, the Atlantic Pacific Teas Company, Williams Variety Store,
and assistant manager of Brown's Grocery, Pomeroy, Ohio.
, In I93S he married lhe fonner Kathryn E. Maag, daughter of the late
Theodore and Laura Funk Maag.
In I948 he started his career in Minersville, doing business in the same
.location for 40 years, operating a combination grocery and service station,
a marine business and a mobile home park.
He was a converted Christian and active in the Minersville Methodist
·church serving as Sunday School Superintendent and various other offices
· for ID!IftY years. He was approved as Lay Speaker in the Ponsmouth Dis. lrict of the Methodist Church in 1952 and was cited as an outstanding Layman in this field. He served as Pastor of the Portland, Great Bend, Morse
'Chapel, and Stivcrsville Churches for about three years and fulfilled speak, ·ing engagements in some 25 or more Meiss C~unty Churches. His biography is retarded and listed in the 1966 edition of Who's Who in the Methodist
Church, and was included in the Dictionary of the International Biography,
· 'which was recorded and housed permanently in the world famed Museum
at Danmouth. Davon, England.
·
He was a member of the First Baptisl Church of Racine, Ohio and was
a Sunday School teacher of the men's class and served on various boards
·of the church.
He was a fanner school board member of the Southern Local School District. 1952-1960; a member of the Meigs County Senior Citizens, a chaner
member of the Meigs-County Litter Control, trustee and lifelong member
of the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society and member of Ewing's
Chapter of Sons of the American Revolution.
He is survived by his son. Danny (Dec) Brown of Minersville, Ohio; his
daughters. Vicki (Jack) Cummins of Racine. Ohio. Sharon (Ed) Wolfe of
Jackson , Ohio. and Marilyn (Allen) Williams of Pomeroy, Ohio; a sister,
Gretta Thomas, Middleport, Ohio; two brothers, Raymond Brown of Colum. ' bus, Ohio and Floyd Brown ofMiddlepon. Ohio; 10 grandchildren. 14 great. grandchiiliren, and several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his parents; his first wife, Kathryn E. Maag;
brother, Clyde Brown; half-brother, Elmer Brown: half-sister, Carrie Brown
Hilewick; son, Jackie Victor Brown; grandson, Kory Patrick Cummins ;
granddaughter, Janelle Wolfe. and second wife. Alice Morris Robeson
· Brown.
Services will he held Friday. November 21, at 1 p.m. at the First Baptist Church in Racine, Ohio, with Pastor Larry Haley officiating. Burial will
·be at the Letart Falls Cemetery. Calling hours will be Wednesday evening,
7. to 9 and Thursday evening, 4 to 9 at Ewing's Funeral Home in Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·
We, the children of our earthly father, thank our Savior the Lord Jesus
· Christ for having the honor and privilege of life, having been instilled within each of us the ingredie'lts of an abundan! life of value, character, morals
and ethics. Thanks again, Dad!
.
.. .
~· -

What it means to be 'progressive
and syringes to intravenous drug
ab1sers to slow the spread of AIDS .
But there arc two problems with
needle exchange. First of all, lhc
government would place iL~elf in the '
rr-&gt;ition of aiding ~nd abetting crimo
inai activity, namely illegal drug
usc. And .whenever the government
tacitly condones crime, · it undermines respect for the law.
Second. the government would
pla.:e itself-in the position of choosing the lesser of public health
threats. It would rescue people from
one potential killer -- AIDS -- only
to deliver them to another -- drugs .
The progressives may view this
us enlightened public policy, 1\ut
most Americans do not.
They find it more sensible to
stem the spread of AIDS through
intravenous drug usc not by giving '
junkies needles so they can continue
to shoot up with cocaine or heroin,
but by providing them ·drug treat- .
menl so they can overcome their
deadly habit.
. Doctors killiflg off tenninally ·ill
patients. Medicinal usc of mariJ·uana, hcro.in, cocaine and other illcg'al
drugs.
Govcrnmcnt"sanctioned distribu- ,
tion of hypodermics to drug addicts.
If this is what it means to be progrcssive,l'm glad I don't qualify.
Joseph Perkins Is a columnist
for the San Di~o Union-Tribune.

G and I funds are doing fine

By Dian Vulovlch
"I
that it's under price pressure but lias
In spite of recent market tensions, just try
. "We hqd a co"ection (recently) of cross Mina catalyst -- something that he
growth and income funds have pro• to find sectors/' Keefe says. "But what '1 find, nesota
expects will drive valuations up ;in
vided their shareholders some pretty the best
Mining
the futtlre.
being
a
value
investor,
is
that
by
knowing
sn~ppy returns.
.
compaand
"We had a correction (recently)
Today, 629 different funds make nies out all the different sectors is thOI IMre are Manuof cross sectors," Keefe says. "But
corrections in sectors all the time." ·
up the Growth and Income Fund cat- there
facturwhat I find, being a value investo~ is
egory as Lipper tracks it. The year- with the
ing
that by knowing all the different~·
to-date average performance for that best
(3M) is tors is that there are corrections •in
group was up 20.17 percent, as of manage.
another
sectors all the time."
•
- Ocl. 30. Look closer at the top I0 menl teains so I can really fall in of the fund's top holdings, as are
The fund's three top holdings *rc
performers, and you'll see a number love with the company," says Dayton .Hudson, Swiss Life and Calenergy, l geo-thermal utility
of 30-plus percent returns. Not too Rollins, who has been managing the Royal Caribbean.
company that, among other things,
shabl;&gt;y for funds lots of folks con- fund since its Inception in 1996.
"! like the cruise industry helps developing countries meet
sider conservative.
Rollins likes to invest in compa- because the demographics are good their growing energy needs; Cojn.
Two of that category's top- 10 . nies that generate pleiHy of cash; and the playing field limited. Three puter Associates, a software com~a­
prefonning funds are the John Han- that possess a strong market posi- big players ctllltroi nearly_75 percent ny that helps create a bf,idge
cock Growth and Income Fund , up tion; that have franchise value and of its market -- Royal Caribbean, companies moving from main frame
30.56 percent through Oct. 30, and the ability to control pricing; and Carnival and· Princess cruise lines," computers to PC systems; and Prothe Janus Growih &amp; Income Fund, that have management teams that says Rollins, whose fund has 128 gressive Corp., the auto insurer. :
up 30.48 percent.
care about their shareholders as well stocks in its portfolio and a turnover
The John Hancock Growth ahd
Blaine Rollins is the portfolio as revenue growth.
rate of I. 81 percent.
Income Fund has been around sitte
manager of Janus' Equi1y Income
Some of his picks include
Timothy E. Keefe is tbe portfolio 1949, currently keeps about 80
Fund. Like other portfolio managers Dionex, a company that makes manager of the John . Hancock s_locks in its ponfolio and has a panat Janus, he is a bottom-up stock machines that help detect chemical Growth and Income Fund.
folio turnover rate under 50 perceltt.
picker. That means instead of find - compositions. Some big buyers of While he's a value manager and botDian Vujovlch is the author 'llf
ing an industry that's hot and buying its machines are the Japanese -- they tom·up· stock picker, J(eefe also "Straight Talk About MuiU.I
lots of stocks of the individual com- aren't keen on having high levels of , makes sure the fund 's portfolio is · Funds" and "Stniighl Talk AboUt
panies within it. as top-down man- nuoride in their water. So, machines well-diversified among the various luvesting for Your Retlremeat;"
agers do, he looks at individual com- like those Dione~ manufactures pro- industries.
both· of 'l'hich are published by
panics firs! and leaves the industry vide a great service to them by helpHe looks for value buys ,. com- McGraw HUt Send questloas to
sector weightings to develop on their ing water treatment plants keep tabs panies the market has overlooked. her in care of this newspaper, or
own:
on nuoride levels.
What he likes to see in a company is via e-mail at MisMutualaol.com:

--~

-----

.....

----------------- -··- - -- -

the afternoon. Chance of rain north
and west central in the afternoon.
Highs in the mid 40s north to around
50 south.
Extended foreeast. .
Friday... A chance.of rain.

Victor L'Bcraer Brown, 85, Minersville, died Monday.- Nov. 17, 1997,
at his residence.
A longtime businessman, he was the son of the late George and Elsie
Roush Brown and araduated from Dutchtown Elementary School, Pomeroy
Hi1h School, and attended Bliss Business College in Columbus. For 40 years
he operated a combination grocery and service station, a marine business
and a mobile home park in Minersville.
He was active in the Minersville Methodist Church serving as Sunday
School Superintendent and was approved as Lay Speaker in the Ponsmoulh
District of the Methodist Church in 1952. He served-as Pastor of the Portland, Great Bend, Morse Chapel, and Stiversville Churches. He was a member of the First Baptist Church of Racine where he was a Sunday School
teacher of the men's class and served on various boards of the church.
He was a former member of the Southern Local Board of Education; a
member of the Meigs County Senior Citizens, a charter member of the Meigs
County Litter Control, trustee and lifelong member of the Meigs County
Pioneer nnd Historical Society and member of Ewing's Chapter of Sons of
the American Revolution.
He is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Danny and Dee Brown of
Minersville; three daughters and sons-in-law, Vicki and Jack Cummins of
Racine, Sharon and Ed Wolfe of Jackson, and Marilyn and Allen Williams
of Pomeroy; a sister, Gretta Thomas of Middlepon; two brothers, Raymond
Brown of Columbus and Floyd Brown of Middlepon; 10 grandchildren, 14
great-grandchildren, and sev.eral nieces and nephews .
· He was preceded in death by his first wife, Kathryn E. Maag, to whom
he was married in 1935; a brother, Clyde Brown; half-~rot~er, Elmer Brown;
half-sister, Carrie Brown Hilewick; a son, Jackie Victor Brown; a grandson, Kory Patrick Cummins; a granddaughter, Janelle Wolfe, and his second wife, Alice Morris Robeson Brown.
Services will be held Friday. I p.m. at the First Baptist Church in Racine
with Pastor Larry Haley officiating. Burial will be al the Letart Falls Ccme ·
tery.
Friends may call Wednesday, 7-9 p.m. and Thursday, 4-9 p.m. at Ewing
Funeraf Home. Pomeroy.

Agnes Dixon

Boll advisory Issued
All Leading Creek Conservancy District customers on Union
Avenue and Union Terrace are under a boil advisory until funher
notice. Water service was interrupted Monday afternoon to repair a
leak.

·BREC slates outage Thursday
·

Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative Inc . will have a scheduled power outage at the Meigs substation at I p.m. Thursday. The outage wi!i last
approximately I-112 hours.
Mas affected include Meigs, Athens and Vinton counties, and a portion of Jackson County, line numbers 23, 24 and 25 .

Patrol Issues citation after accident
A Cheshire man was cited for failure to control by l&gt;he Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol following a one-vehicle accident Tuesday on County Road 345 (Story's Run).
Troopers said Thunnan Smith, 41, 4501 State Route 554, was eastbound, 1.6 miles west of SR 7, at II :20 a.m . when his pi'ckup truck went
off the right side off.the right.
As the vehicle came hack nntn the mad, Smith lost control, went off
the left side of the road, came hack on, traveled across the road and went
off the right side into a small creek .
The pickup wa.• moderately damaged.

•Holiday Happenings•
Parade set for Sunday

A Christmas parade with the
theme "Holiday Happenings '97" will
Agnes Dixon, 79, Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Nov. I8, 1997 at O'Blebe beld Sunday, 2 p.m. in Middlepon.
ness Memorial Hospital in Athens. Arrangements are being handled by
• The parade will fonn along Ash
Fisher Funeral Home and will be announced later.
Street between Imperial Electric and
Park Street and proceed along Beech
Street, General Haninger Parkway,
South Second Avenue to Dairy Queen
to where it will disband on Front
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Pomeroy. ·Albert Smith, VMH , Street.
gency Medical Service recorded eight Pomeroy squad assisled;
7:10 p.m. , Overbrook Nursing
calls for assistance Tuesday. Unils
Center, Middleport, Clara Davis,
responding included:
VMH, Middlepon squad assisted;
CENTRAL DISPATCH
The second round of. the Meigs
.
9:48 p.m., stale Route 143, Lee
5:33 a.m., state Route 7, April
County
Community
Housing
Nichols, Veterans Memorial Hospital; Bing, VMH, Rutland squad assisted.
Improvement program is underway,
9:28 a.m., Third Street, Syracuse, POMEROY
10:10 p.m ., OBNC, Middiepon, and applications are being processed.
Sadie Thuener, VMH, Syracuse
according to Jean Trussell, the adminMildred Arnold. HMC.
squad assisted;
istrator of the grant program.
I 0:52 a.m., Bailey Run Road, SYRACUSE
8:05p.m., Church Street. Kathleen
Trus~ll met with the Meigs CounMiddleport, John W. Thompson,
ty Commissioners on Monday to disFryar, treated at the scene.
Holzer Medical Center;
cuss the program's status.
12:08 p.m., Wetzgall Street,
The latest CHIP round includes
funds for housing rehabilitation and
for assistance with down payments
for home purchase for low and modTime omitted
Dance planned
erate
income families.
Thursday's meeting at !he Meigs
A round and square dance with
Trussell
said Monday that 76
Senior Citizens Center for prospec- clogging, will be held Friday night,
applications
were requested for the
tive students in the nursing program 8 to I I p.m. at the DAV Chapter
at the Meigs branch of the Universi- Home, 2805 I, State Route 7, housing rehabilitation program, and
ty of Rio Grande will begin at 7 p.m. Cheshire. Out of the Blue will be the 62 .for the down payment assistance
The time was omitted in the Monday band; John Russell the caller. Dances program.
Trussell's office has completed 55
· issue of The Daily Sentinel .
will be held first and third Friday of
interviews
for the rehab program, and
each month.
I0 applicants have either withdrawn
Speaker al Stlversville
Sinpplrallon planned
or failed to show up for the interview
Billy· Bond of Tulsa. Ok. will be
A singspiration will be held Satpreaching at the Stiversvillc Com- urday at 6 p.m. at lhe Eden U. B. process. 27 households have l&gt;een
verified a' income eligible.
munity Church, Thursday, 7:30p.m. Church above Reedsville.
Additionally, eight prc-in.•pcctions
have been completed, and the speci·
from page I
fication• have been prepared 10 deterOctober. Since the PPI measures and a veiy gOod job of bringing ser- mipe if the homes arc eligible for
rchabi litution work. Trussell anticiinffation before reaching the con- vice prices down."
pates
that the first of these homes will
sumer level. it suggested little price
While the PPI measures prices for
pressure in the pipeline.
goods only, nearly 60 percent of the be ready for bids in late December.
·"The inspections." Trussell said,
"The price of goods is preuy close CPI rcffects the costs of services such
' "have revealed a problem that is
to zero, pretty close to price stabili- as transportation and health care.
ty," observed economist Stuan G.
While many economists see no prevalent in this rural area, of poor
Hoffman of PNC Bank Corp. in Pitts- end 10 the low inflation rate, others septic systems and the lack of adeburgh. "We' ve done a very good job believe the phenomena is temporary. quate and safe water supplies."
1lle CHIP program must address
of getting to price stability for goods,
these problems in order to meet the
rcquirc111ents of the program.
To date, the office has completed
A Pomeroy man was cited fol- unable to stop and struck Duncan's 37 interviews for potential down
lowing an accident on East Main vehicle from behind. Moderate dam- payment panicipants. 18 have been
age ·was reponed to Duncan's 1989 determined eligible, and I I families
Street on Tuesday afternoon.
Troy Duncan, ·33, of Point Pleas- Chevrolet and Smith's 1994 Geo.
have completed the home buyer class
Nobody was injured. Smilh was that is required for participation.
ant, W.Va. was traveling west on
Main Street when he slowed for a car cited for assured clear distance, That course is conducted hy Becky
turning right onto Spring Avenue. according to the Pomeroy Police
Donald Smith of Pomeroy was Depanmcnt.

Meigs· EMS logs 8 calls

L---~..;...~--.:=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----_j

By Joeeph Perkins
assisted sui- for such law is that patients amicted
Webster's New World Dictionary •
cide
lack with ;\IDS, cancer, glaucoma and
. -- the Third College Edition, that is . .
compassion
certain other medical conditions
- defines " progressive" a$ "favorfor terminal- ought to·tic allowed to get high to
ing, working for or characterized by'
ly ill patients esea(ll: their suffering.
progress or improvement, as through
-- panicularCalifornia voters unwittingly·
political or social reform." That's
ly those ' who · approved a ballot measure las! year
kind of the way I viewed myself.
are so men- that allows "patients" to get a doc·
But I've recently learned that I do
tally
or tor's ptcscription for marijuana.
not qualify as a progressive. That's
physically
Like the' Oregon vote on physicianbecause I fall on the wrong side of
diminished
assisted suicide, progressives hailed
several litmus-test issues that deterthat they feci it as a harbinger of-things to come.
mine, I'm tot'd, juSt wlfo's progresPerklna
their lives arc
But the progressives went too far
sive and who's hopelessly stuck in
no
longer too fast when they placed a measure
the bad old ways.
,
wonh living, orthose suffering such on Washington state's hallol 1~is .
One such issue is physician· agonizing pain that they long for. month that would have allowed
assisted -suicide. The progressives death.
"medicinal" usc of not only maricelebrated last week when Oregon
· But there are way's of accommo- juana, but also cocaine, heroin, LSD
voters reaffirmed the " right" of dating tenninally ill patients without or any other mind-altering drug that .
Beaver State patients to ask a doctor encouraging doctors to actively has- a patient might need.
to help them to kill themselves.
ten their deaths. ·•
The measure failed overwhelm"This vote marks a turning point
Indeed, in most states, patients . ingly as' even the Evergreen State's
nationwide for this movement," said already have the legal right to refuse _quirky ' liberal voters were unready
Barbara Coombs Lee, leader of a respirators , feeding tubes or other to make this progressive leap. ·
pro-suicide -- I'm sorry, "death- life-sustaining treatment.
Of c,oursc, the advocates of medwith-dignity" --organization in the
That's precisely how the author i_cinal usc of marijuana and other
Pacific Northwest.
James Michener recently brought on illegal drugs arc hardly motivated by
But does a vote by •one state, his death.
empathy with ampulees or AIDS or
boasting a scant 1.2 percent of the
· As 10 patients enduring cxc~uciat- cancer 'patients.
country's population, really signal ' ing pain, the solution is not to have
The , real aim of these progrcs·r l&lt;'vcs but 'or
Snuff
Out
doclors
thc'
lhat a majority of Americans arc
''
sives is de facto legalization of
ike Californ,·a to· change
.
sanguine about physician-assisted ·States ' l
'
drugs in th1s country.
suicide? Would they welcome more their stringent laws that prevent
The~~ is a similar unspoken motidoctors, like Michigan's Jack these .patients from acquiring suffi- vation ,behind apother pet progresKevorkian, the unconvicted serial cient dosages of pain-killing mcd- sive is~uc .. needle exchange prokiller, who specializes .in sending · ication to ease their agony.
am '
Which bn' ngs me to another pro· gr Ads.
atients
to
tHeir
deaths'
t
f
h programs
P
.
gressive issue .. "medical" use of
~jlea es o sue
The progressives suggest that otherwise illegal drugs. The pretext argue . lhat the government should
t~ose of us who oppose doctordistribu1tc clean hypodermic needles

The University of Rio Grinde is holding the first of ueries of public meetina• Thunday evenina toward eslablishina programs for a
Meigs County Branch Campus .
University otfiCills will meet 7-9 p.m. at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center with residents interested in the bachelor of science in
nunina proaram. The aeneral public is welcome to attend.

Victor L•Berger Brown

MICH.

.

The Daily Sentinel

J

tUSP5 lll-000)

j
f

Published CYCIY afternooa, Monday throuab
FrMIIyf Ill p,ure St ., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio V.lley Publllhina Comptny!Oanneu Co.•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 991-2156. Seoond
clw JIOIIIJC piid 11 Pomeroy, Ollio.
M~btr: Tht

Asscx:iltCd Pn111, altd lite Ollio

Newspa.-r Auociation.

POSTMABT'ER: Send add res• corm:1km1 10
De Daily Senlinel, Ill Court S1., Pomeroy,
Ohio CS169.

SUBSCRintON RATES

Jy Carrier or Motor Ratr

One \Yeclt .................................................. S2.110
One Monlh ............................. t .. ................ U .7tl
OM Ytar _............................................. SIOC.IIO

ror

'

--Local·briefs--

OHIO Wc;1tlwr
Tlnmday, Nov.lO

•

By Jack Anclenon
and Jlln Moller
Six years ago, for 40 days and 40
nights, Iraq was pummelled by the
largest air·and-hombing assault in
the history of the world.
When it was over, the country
w&amp;S in ruins, a monumental rubble
that was the direct result of the madness of its leader, Saddam Hussein.
Since the 1991 Gulf War, Iraq has
been crushed funber by a series of
United Nations resolutions that have

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

,

Stocks
Am Ele Power .....................47'~.

Akzo ...- ... ~ ............................. &amp;&amp;~

AmrTech ..............................75'-

ATAT ................... ,.................52~

Bank One ...................... ,...... 53\.

Bob EvMa ............................ 19'Borg·Wemer .........................
Champion .............................17'1.

48'·

Charm Shpe ........................... 4'1•
C!I::Idlng ..........................41'1o
F
I Mogul ......................45'0•nnett.................................54'!.e
GoodyNr ..............................61 \

Kmart ...................................12"'kroger ...................~........,.....34'-

Sublcribera rt0t delitinJ to pay the carrier may
remir in tdv•nce direct to The D•lly Senlin~~t
c:. 1 tluft, Jill or 12 monlh batil. Crfllh will be
JiYen carrier tach week.

Limited ..................................24\
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 20~
ova ......................................:..35
One Valley ...............................38
Peoplea ....................................42

No Jubscriplion by mall permiued in nell
hbllllwr mervet the rl...tlo adjwat Mite&amp; dllr·
iftJ tiN •lblcriptto.. period. Sublcrlptton rate
chanpt may be impfcmeftted by dlan&amp;ill the
dural tor. of lht i.b.:ri,tiot~ .

MAILSUISCRtmoNS
llllldt Mttp CH•IJ

l l -.......................... .........................Sl7.ltl
. 26 Wttks .................................................$.53.K2
.52 \Veeltt ...............................................SJ0.5 •.56
lbltl 0..... Mtlp CH•tJ

l l -........................................ ...........129.25
26 w.....................................................ll6.611
l2 w................................................... $1119.72

Second round of housing
improvement program underway

Meigs announcements

Baer of the Meigs County/OSU
Extension Service.
Six families have received
approval and 11re now seeking preloan approval prior to seeking a
home and entering into a purcha.'e
agreement. Upon pre-loan approval
from the financial institution of their
choice, these households will look for
the home of their choice and, i( after
the CI:IIP inspection the home is
deemed eligible, closing will take
place. Some rehab work can be completed after the new homeowner
moves in.
' The CHIP office has received
applications from seven general contractors and five subcontractors to
panicipate in the work under the program. Other contractors are encouraged to apply.
The office is also requesting fee
proposals from area attorneys for the
preparation of documents.

Inflation remains.;:utinued

Pomeroy man cited after accident

----Hospital news---Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Roben
Mahr, Pomeroy; Albert Smith.
Pomeroy.
Tuesday discharges - Neil Bonecutter, Sarah McCarty, Ronald Davidson, Helen Norris, Benha Johnson.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Nov. 18 - Norma

Devoe, Patrick Riley, Celia Guthrie.
Stephen Donohue, Lori Rose, Hazel
Carnes, Denny Wallis, June Radcliff,
Edison Mayes, Carl Rhodes, Carol
Pack, Harold Thacker, Belva Miller.
Birtb - Mr. and Mrs. James
Campbell, daughter, Vinton.
(Published with permission)

A8hlend 011 ...........................48'1o

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily ............ .................... .................... 35 CIMI

wllert home canitr tcrvke 11 available.

Santa Claus will he al Peoples
Bank after the parade. All children
wili be given a treal and have their
picture taken with Santa at no charge.
compliments of the bank.
A holiday open house for Middlcpon businesses will be held Sunday. I -5 p.m. with businesses being
open on all Sunday. 1-5 through Dec.
21.

Lend• End............................... 38

Prem Flnl ...............................26'4

Aockwell ..............................45"1.

RDISM11 ...............................52'-

S..ra....................................48"t.
Shoney'a .................................4~
Star Bank .............................48V.
Wendy'• ...............................2cr1.
Wonhlngton..........................18'h

-·-·-

]resh Cut lirrangements
· • Silk • Pilgrim Glass • Crafts
• Personalized Crocks
• Beaumont Pottery
• Leaning Tree Cards
• Love Lite Candles

BURGUNDY &amp; BRASS
Florals &amp; Gifts
PHriiThlrd

Racine
149-ROSE (7873)

POSSIBLE
Do you hiM 1111 ulctJr or signs snd

symptoms of~ disease?

Rnulllgltenlm•llllbiiJ.
ttl to sm6 flf Plfll/lt wlllr duot: 1 ,, ulctlts

n

hiM lhtJse blctwta. 1s fi(JW cursbl8. .
Thursday, December 4, 3:00pm-7:00pm
Call ror details/appointment (614) 99:Z-oo60
Holzer Meigs Clinic
88 Esst Me1110rial Drive

Stock repona are the 10:30
a.m. quot.. provided by Advell
of Gallipolis.

Tlllflorl

•

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

�.....

.•
•

/Sports

The Daily Sentin.!!

!HaWkS, Lakers beat Wizards &amp; Jazz to remain undefeated
.

: By CHRIS SHERIDAN
1 AP S.sutNII Writer
, The lalesl reason why the Atlanta
: Hawks and Los Angeles Lakers are
: still undefeated is this: Both learns
; know how 10 finish with a flurry.
: The Hawks improved their n:cord
1 10 11 -0 Tuesday night by holding
• Washington scorless in overtime as
• they beat the Wizards 98-89.
The Lakers, meanwhile, had a
; much mo.re dramatic finish 10
: improve to 9-0 as Kobe Bryant
; blocked a three-point auempt by
; Bryon Russell and went in for a
· buzzer-beating windmill dunk lo cap
'· Los Angeles' 97-92 victory al Utah.
: "In case any of you missed it, Mr.
· Bryant made lhat last shot," said Lak·
l ers coach Del Harris, who jumped up
; and down several times and pumped
• his fist at the Utah crowd after the
: game. "He cenainly had beuer corn: posure than I did. "
I Both the Lakers and Hawks are off
: to the best stans in franch1sc history.
: With a couple more victories apiec.:e,
; they'll be taking aim al the NBA
• record of 15 straight victories to stan
; the season by the 1948 Washington
; Capitols and the 1993 Houston Rock1e1s.
.I
.
.
Atlanta would need vJctoncs over

; New York. Detroit, Toronto and
: Charloue to tie the record. Los Ange: les would have to beat Minnesota, the
• Clippers. Miami. Bos!On, Philadcl; phia and Toronto to go 15-0.
; The Lakers' win snapped a three' game winning streak for the Jan
• Utah had beaten the Lakers eight

I

straight times in Salt Lake City,
inclllding three wins in last season's
Western Conference semifinals.
With four seconds left and 1be
Lakers up 95-92, Russell took an
inbounds pass and squared up from
25 feet. But lhe ball was swatted to
midcourt by Bryani, who then
scooped it up and dunked with si•tenths of a second to play.
"I wanted to come out and make
a statement," Bryant said,. " I didn't
want to dribble that last ball off my
foot. "
"This was great for him, for his
confidence," said Shaquille O'Neal,
who finished with 17 points and nine
rebounds.
Bryant and Nick Van Exelled tbe
Lakers with 19 points. Karl Malone
had 26 points, nine rebounds and six
assists for Utah. Jeff Hornacek added
18 points, but the two Utah stars were
a combined 3-of-10 in the fourth
quarter.
"!think we gave one away," Utah
coach Jerry Sloan said. "They got
every loose basketball. "
They also got every fourth-quarter free throw. The Lakers shot 14
free throws in the fourth quarter,
compared lo none for the Jazz.
"I won't comment" on the officiating, Sloan said.
The game was the first between
the two teams since O'Neal earned a
one-game suspension for slapping
Jazz center Greg Ostertag after a
pregame shootaround Oct. 31 in Los
Angeles.
O'Neal was booed lustily by a

Rocket~ ,5, Kalcb U
sellout Delta Center crowd every
kee.
time he touched the ball, but be and
At Houston, Hakeem Olajuwon
Afterward, Detroit coach Doug
Osterlag never clashed during tbe found his shooting touch with 24 Collins described his club as
game.
points and Mall Maloney finished uawful."
In other NBA games, Houston one shy of his career-high with 23.
Celtla 12%, Rapton 109
defeated New York 95-84, MinnesoOlajuwon, who ~ntered the game
AI Toronto, Dee Brown wenl4-of·
ta downed Phoenix I 08-90, Milwau- averaging only 14.1 points. put Hous- 4 on three-pointers in the first half as
kee beat Detroit 87-79, Boston beat ton ahead for good on two free Boston built a 23-poinl lead and
Toronto 122·1 09, Orlando' lopped the throws with 4:31 10 play.
cruised 10 its fourth straight win.
Los Angeles Clippers 112-94, Van"This was a big game' for us,"
John Wallace scored a career-high
couver defeated Denver 100-87 and guard Mario Elie said. "A lot of peo- 30 points with 12 rebounds for the
ple were counting us out, but there's Raplors, who looked sluggish and
Sacramento topped Dallas 102-95.
a Icit of pride in this locker room. We uninterested in the wake of an
Hawks !18, Wizards 89
At Atlanta. Christian Laeuner and showed a lot of spirit and heart, espe- announcement by general manager
Mookie Blaylock scored 24 points cially in the fourth quarter."
lstah Thomas that he might boll the
Houston snapped its four-game club for a broadcasting job at NBC.
apiece and rookie Ed Gray scored
seven points in overtime when the losing streak and ended New York's
Magk 112, Clippers 94
Hawks were outscoring Washington three-game victory streak.
At Orlando, Mark Price, snapping
9-0.
John Starks IJX\ the Knicks with 29 out of a major shooting slump, hitiO
"I'm a rookie, but I try not 10 points, and Charlie Ward. had 14.
of 13 shots and scored 23 points as
Tlmberwolva 108, Suns 90
lhe Magic defeated Los Angeles.
think like one," said Gray, who had
Stephon
Marbury
scored
II
of
his
Rony Seikaly added 21 points and
his best game so far with 14 points
23
points
in
the
final
5:13
as
Minafter being pressed into second-half
duty with leading scorer Steve Smith nesota used a late 15-0 surge to win
sidelined at· halftime by an aching at Phoenix.
Kevin Garnett led the Timberback. ''I'm ~gressive. (Cqach Lenny
wolves
· with 26 points, an'd Tom
Wilke'ls) told me to drive to the hoop.
_Gugliotta added 20 points, 10
That's my game."
"II was two games," added Gray, rebounds and eight assists. But il was
the Hawks' first-round draft pi'ck Marbury who ended the Suns' final
from California. "They won the first comeback bid by spearheading the
three periods, but we won the fourth run that helped tum a light game into
an 18-poinl victory.
and the OT."
Buc~ 87, Pistons 79
The Hawks have won two overAt Milwaukee, the Bucks led just
lime games and have only one double-digit margin of victory - II 31-29 at the half, and the combined
points- in th~irseason-opening win · 60 points was only two more than the
streak. Atlanta has won 10 straight NBA record of 58 scored by Syracuse
overtime games dating to the 1994· and Fort Wayne on Jan. 25, 1955.
95 season.
Ray Allen and Terrell Brandon
scored 21 points apiece for Milwa~-

II rebounds lind Gerald Wilkins

came off the bench to score 17. Brent
Barry led the Clippers with 21 points.
Los Angeles has lost six straight
games.
Grizzlies 100, Nugeb 87
Blue Edwards scored 27 points
and Shareef Abdur-Rahim added 18
as Vancouver won its first road game.
It was the fifth victory of the season
for the Grizzlies, who didn't win that
many last year until Dec. 17.
Denver lost for a franchise-record
ninth time to start the season.
Kinp 102, Mavericks '5
AI Sacramento, A.C. Green tied
the NBA record by playing in his
906th consecutive game, but his
team lost its seventh straight.
Corliss Williamson had 20 points
10 leaq Sacramento. Green had 20
points and 13 rebounds for Dallas.

I'

Ranford said.he's going to try and
find the positive points from this
game and start climbing back.
"It 's just one of those games, •· he
said. "It 's lhc type of game you've
just got to build on."
1 •
Claude Lemieux made building
anything difficult. His three-goal,
two-assi st performance was a career
best.
Both Peter Forsberg and Valeri
Kamensky had a goal and three
assists for Colorado. Neither Forsberg nor Lemieux had scored a goal
in more than a month.
Colorado kept pressuring Ranford
and the Washington defense. The
Avalanche outshot the Capitals 37-33
and manufactured numerous scoring
chances. They also ended an 0-for-28
power play by scoring twice with a
man advantage.

Peter Bondra led Washington with
two goals and an assist. Chris Simon
. added a goal and an assist. Bondra's
power-play goal with 5:04 left in regulalion lied the ga111e a16 .
Players from both teams talked
about how much they enjoyed the
shootout.
"We just kept going," Bon~ra
said. "We kepi fighting and gelling
through to pul the puck in the net."
Both coaches said they liked how
their teams fought in the game.
Washington's Ron Wilson enjoyed
his team rallying four times to tie, and
Colorado's Marc Crawford liked how
the Avalanche kept working on tbe
last game of a tiring road trip.
"We hauled hard and maintained
our composure throughout the
game," he said. "It was a tough road
trip. All the teams we played are

Scoreboard
Basketball

Boston ..
Ouuv..a .
Piusburp:h
Carohn11
Burrolu ...

NBA standings ·EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dhhion

:r....
Miami ............ ...... ..... . .. .

.It L f&lt;L

.6
kncy .. ... . ................ . ~
New York .....
.6
Orlnndo ......... ................. ... 6

'.1
4
4

.. .:'1

600
600

5

.~

N~w

Bosum ...

Washin~10n

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

PM!ldt phia.

...... ..2

...1
. 62..~

••

oOOO

.2~

Cttdral 01..-iliun
Atlanm ...
.. II
0
Charlotte .........
.5
Otlcuao .............
4
Milw~ukec .....
... 6 4
Cleveland ..
... 4 l
lftdiann .....
..............4 5
Dl!uoil ...
..........4 1

-·- '

lil

-•,
·•,,
I ·~

t~
.l '~

too

625

4'•:

600

4':

600
4-14

-~·~

.....
.164

.100

9

6

•1
IJ':

l!C L f&lt;L
.....ft
J

lill

5

I':

'• "''"''lOO

............... ..........6
.. .......... ~

Min~!IOUI
Ut~th ...............

...s

Varu:UU¥1.'f ...............

Hl.)ujCon ....
OaiiM .

4~~

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

'

Denv~r .

.....

5

.J

1

.0

'

JOO

000

htllk DlvWott.
l.A. Lukt:n .. .... ......... ...
0 100
Punlnnd .
1 2 .17M
Phuenil ......
2 750
~11151: ..................
. 1 .1 .700
Socr~nto ..
J 1 \00
.. I
.100
LA Cllr.=
Gollkn mt~ ...
... 0 K .000

•
•

•

2
.'\':

•

2
l ',

' '·

,;;·~..
14\

Tuesday's scores

St .

»: I.$ I2

.... I,
..... 1.1
..... 12
.. 10
1
.6

l_(IU ii

Dclrllll ..
Dallas
l'hn~:nix
Chteu~;u

.

~7

,IJ
62
61

2
12 2
10 J
!(

1iA
47
~l
~~
~(1

22 6.\

K
9
- ~ II

.....

Edmun1t1n ,.
S:•n Jo~ ........
Vun.:uuvcr ...

'J
'

114 I

.... ~ 1.1

..... .J

Calp:&gt;~")l

14

27

~6

,.

61

12

"'
•• ,11

.

21 5•
15
ll .11
IJ ~)
II :&lt;.)

6.1

7\

OENVI:R BRONCOS· Actlvnt~LI WR IJ:IYid
Gamble rrnm the practice MJUad. Mdca,cd WR
Willie Andcuun.
GRrti~N /lAY PACKEM.S: A~.:liY!llcd I.H
Gt:mJ!c K••nncL· f'r11m the r.:st:r•e- 1 ,hy~h:allr- un ­
l1Me·tu-pt'rfurnl li.~l. WuiwJ WR-KR Kocl l'n.'-

('IJIOmdu 0. W:L~hinltllltl 6 {lie)

N.Y. RatlJ,ers .l Florida I
S;m Jv~ 4, Anaht:l!tl 2

Tonight"s aam·rs

~t~un .

Bosmn a.r Piu~bur~h . 1 p.m•
Mnnln=al a1 C:U'olln.1, 7:?.0 Jl n1 .
N.Y. Ranl(cu 011Tampa Uay. 7::\0 p.n1.
PhdaddJKuu at Turunlu, 7::\0 p.m.
N.Y hl:lfldcnat Oelrun, 7..10p.m
EdtTitlllton m Dallas, 14:.10 p.m.
Chk:IJQ 111 1\n.uhcun. Ill ,\ ()p.m.

MIAMI UULPHINS: R~·le;ucd I ~R l&gt;cwnyll\."
i&gt;tlfSIItl.

SAN FltAN('ISCO 4',1ERS: W:U..,"'\1 DH CW'Itl:~o
Thorncun. W11iYL"Il RranUun Nuhlc and l ' U ~t:.riu
DraJic~ fmn11hc l'llll.:lice squiLl
TI~ NNESSEE Ulli~RS ; kciL':lliCd Kit ML·I
Gr:ty t~t~d RB RunnM: H:wmun.

Thurlidoy'• ~~""'""

8-ball

Kenny Roam lmde. ·

SEAnLE MARINERS: AJr~J l&gt; l trrm~·wilh
28 Joey Con on D ot~e· )'t'lll' contr.11.:1.
TA.MPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: AJ.!ftd Intern"
•itt! RHP Robtrto Hernundtz un u rour·ycm cullrraet . Atqulrtd 18 Fn:d McOrfiT from the Athwna
Brave• for a playt:r rn be nomtd. Nnme!.l frunk
Howard bcn&lt;:h coKh, Oarr)' Riddoch thlrl.lb"sc
COGI.:fl., Bill Hlllther flf•t bule '-"'~:b. Rick Will i um~
plrctNna eo.:h lllfld Steve Hc:ndtnon hhtin' cmw:h

Ill ~roit. 7:30 P:m.

lndlllflll at Mtlwau.kct, 8:)0 p.m.
Ooklen State at Dona.. 8:30p.m.
Toromo '" Houaon. 8:,.'\0 p.m.

Chh!IIJO nr Phoerab., • p.m.
Urah 111 Sacrlf'Mnto, 10:30 p.m.

Hockey

NHL standings
EASTERN CONPEIIENCE
AtlonlkDI-

t flo.

GI Ia

New Jertcy ..........
1:S S 0 30 62
Philadelphia ..................... 0 6 J 29 68

.15

WuhlnJion .................... 12 7 J

21 66

;\6

N.Y. RartJett ................... 7 1 7 21 54
N.Y l•ltnden,..................1 8 4 20 ~

.:'J

Floridl .............................. 6 10 •

60

R .........

16 4J

6 lo

~I

~

12

Christmas Kick-Off
Edition
Is Coming On Wednesday

November 26th
Don't Be Left Out
Call 992-2155
Dave Harris Ext. 104 or
Don Riffle Ext. 105

For More Details

MILWAUKEE RREWI:.MS: Attrc...'d 1u term~
will\ RHP Doufi JuTII.'I un :1 unc·)"!ar cn11tn~1
NEW YORK YANKEE.'\; A~;~itcU Jll Scnu
Brothu from the 0:1kl:lnd Alhl!:til'lli 111 \'IIOIJlicCe d11.•

Thunday'o p,_

TO THE HOOP-'- The Atlllnlll Hewka Ed Gray (22) goes to the
hoop paet and above Waahlngton forward Tracy Murray (lower right)
during overtime of Tuesday nlght'e NBA game In Atlanlll, whare the
Hswka won 98-89 to allly undefullld efler 11 gamea. (AP)

Notlonoll.eol"f
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS: Ac~uuc:J CF
~on White from the Aori~ M•lins for LHP JeIUI Manintz Acquired OF Har•ey Pulhurn from
the ColoradO Roc kit:• for LHP Chuck McElroy
CiNCINNATI REOS : Acquired 18 Dm1tn
Youna from the Tampa Bay Devil R~ys to com.
ptete the Mtb Kelly 1r11dc. Acquired RHP Scott
Winchester from the Aru:ona Oinrnondl&gt;acks rn
complerc the Felix RodriJ...Cl ITQdr
COLORADO ROCKIES Agree!.l to Ierma
wilt! C Jeff Reed on a 1wo-year contract nnd INF

Jerr H1101 on a minor-iea&amp;uc cont111cr.

FLORIDA MARUNS Traded RHP Robb Nen
10 lht San FrllncisCo Oiun11 for RHP Mike Villni'IC.I,
RHP JQe Fonlcnot nOll RHP Mick Papler. Tntdt:d

,.

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NOVEMBER 24TH 12 NOON

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Reds .
regain
pair taken
in draft

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally SenUnel• Page 5

Devil Rays get McGriff from Braves; Red Sox acquire Pedro M~rflnez

Baseb~ll trade fever moves maJor stars

By RONALD BLUM
PHOENIX (AP)- General managers' heads were spinning. No one
could keep track of what was going
on.
In a frenzy perhaps unprecedented in baseball history, 31 players
switched teams Tuesday night in 13
simultaneous trades following the
expansion draft.
·
Pedro Martinez went to Boston,
Fred McGriff to Tampa Bay, Robb.
Nen to San FranciSco, and Travis
Fryman and Devon White to Arizona.
"It was a great moment for base·
ball," said Joe Garagiola Jr., general
manager of the expansion Arizona
Diamondbacks. "We can once again
kind of claim center stage in our offseason. 'This is the kind of activity
we used to have at the old winter
meetings that the fans love,"
In all, 36 players were affected by
deals or signi~gs. After seven tedious
hours in which expansion teams
shunned stars for no-names, teams
rushed the podium to announce their
deals, sort of like a bargain-basement

agents re-signed. Tony Clark, tus- $5 millioo . in each of the next
Detroit's 25-year-old first baseman, two years - was a drawback 10 the
came away with a$12 million, four- expansion teams, who did not draft
year conlract.
him.
"One of my feelings was 10 be
"We have great respect for Fred
somewhere where I would be part of McGriff as a player and as a man,"
something new," Hernandez said.
Braves GM John Schuerholz said.
Martinez and McGriff, who is "One of the reasons we sought out
leaving a perennial contender, might Tampa Bay was i~ deference to him
not be so happy with their new sur- and his family."
roundings. Montreal became only the
While the new learns built up, the
secon(l team to trade a Cy Young World Series champion Florida MarAward winner when it sent Martinez lins continued 10 strip down. The
10 the Red Sox for lop pitching Marlins, who last week traded Moiprospect Carl Pavano and a player to ses Alou and his $25 million contract
be named.
to Houston, sent Nen (35 saves last
"This is the kind of trade wben · year) to San Francisco and While lo
you go to bed al night as a general Arizona for prospects.
manager you dream about making,"
Florida also tried to ship Kevin
Boston general manager Dan Brown 10 St. Louis, but that trade
Duqueue said.
carne apart when lhe Cardinals
Martinez, 26, went 17-8 with a refused 10 send a second prospect.
major-league best 1.90 ERA and 305 The Marlins talked about . trading
strikeouts last season and made Gary Sheffield lo the Mets, but
$3,6! 5,000. .Martinez, eligible for balked at New York's demand that
free agency after next season, does- tbey pay about half of his $61 miln 'I intend to sign a multiyear deal lion, six-year contract.
with Boston. Duquelle refused to
"We're going back and we're
closeout
address that.
going to n:group in Florida," Marlins
"II was a thrill to be involved in
"The good news is we got a good general manager Dave Dombrowski
the situation tonight," Devil Rays pitcher," Duquellc said. "We'll go said. "There are still some moves 10
general manager Chuck LaMar said. back to Boston and talk about ex lend- be made."
"We had some scenario with every ing our relationship."
Montreal was another team downlearn during the week, or almost
McGriff. born in Tampa and still sizing. In addition to gelling rid of
every team. And then it's jusI a mat- a resident, is corning off his worst Martinez, the Expos traded second
ter of trying to.activate those trades." season in a decade, hilling .277 with baseman Mike Lansing to lhe ColCloser Roberto Hernandez got a 27 homers and 97 RBis while haUling orado Rockies for right-banders Jake
$22.5 million, four-year contract with injuries was deal! by Atlanta for a Westbrook and John Nicholson and
the othere•pansion team, the Tampa player lo llc named. His contract sta- outfielder Mark Hamlin. Lansing
Bay Devil Rays, and three other free

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Dmitri
Young became a Tampa Bay Devil Ray on Tuesday - for an
evening, anyway.
Pitcher Scott Winchester was
one of the original Arizona Diamondbacks - for a couple of
hours, anyhow.
The Cincinnati Reds lost Young
and Winchester in the expansion
draft Tuesday night, but got them
back as soon as the draft ended. No
one from lhe Reds was taken in lhe
third round.
Young was the player lo be
named in the trade that sent oul·
fielder Mike Kelly to the Devil
Rays one week ago. Winchester
was the player to be named in the
trade that sent pitcher Felix
· Rodriguez to the Diarnondbocks
th~ same day.
It was part of general manager
Jim Bowden's strategy for givipg
the Reds a little more control over
who they lost in the draft.
Confusing'? Well, even Young
wasn 'I sure after the Reds
explained the moves to him.
"I didn't understand it," Young
said, in a telephone interview from
his home in Arizona, where he was
watching the draft.
Bowden made deals with Arizona and Tampa Bay last week,
before teams had to submit their
15-man protected lists for the draft.
The expansiqn teams would gel
Kelly and Rodriguez as the first
part of the deals; they would draft
By BOB GREENE
Young and Winchester and
NEW YORK (AP)- For want of
returned them as soon as lbe draft
a
toenail,
Brenda Schultz-McCarthy
ended to complete the trades.
That meant the R&amp;ds had some. could have pulled off an upset of
say in who they were going to lose Martina Hingis at the season-ending
10 1he expansion teams. It also Chase Championships.
"I really had her," said Schultzmeantlhat, in effect, they were able
McCarthy,
the woman with . the
to protect more players through the
biggest
serve
on the WTA Tour. "I
first two rounds.
kind
of
was
worrying about her
Each team was allowed to proheahh
instead of my tennis .."
tect 15 in the first round, 18 in the
Instead,
·it was 'Schultzsecond and 21 in the third. Since
McCarthy's
health
-the nail on her
the Reds had already accounted for
big
toe,
actually
that did in the
the first .two rounds, they didn't
Dutch
woman
as
the
lop-seeded
have 10 worry about. losing somel
Hingis
escaped
her
first-round
match
one until the final round - when
7-6 (7-3), 5-2, retired.
their protected list had 21 names.
It was much, much closer than the
"We kepi trying lo make .jeals
score indica1es.
10 try to prevent the expansion
In other matches Tuesday, secondclubs from laking a player from us
seeded Jana Novolna defeated Conin the third around, and unfortu· chita Martinez 6-4, 6-4 and No.6 Iva
natelr we weren '1 able to do that," · Majoli edged Ankc Huber 7-6 (7·5),
Bowden said. ''So we are expect7-6 {7-2).
ed to lose u player in the third - _In the night's final match, secondround. 'I guess that's the only playseeded 'Jan a Novotna defeated Coner we have 10 sweat out right now."
chita Martinez 6-4, 6-4.
As illumed out, il was no sweat.
The iirst.round will be completed
Only seven National League teams
tonight when No. 3 Lindsay Davenlost players in the third round, and
port faces Mary Joe Fernandez and
the Reds weren't one of them.
No. 5 Monica Seles, the only fanner
Bowden has been trying lo champion in the elite 16-player field,
make irades for a center fielder or plays Arantxa Sanchez Vicario.
young pitchers. but said he wasn 'I
Sunday's tide match is the only
close to completing any deals.
time during the year that women play
The Reds' draft maneuvering a best-of-5 sets format. The singles
occupied Young's evening. He
winner pockets $500,000, while the
came 10 the Reds only a week earfirst-round losers collect $30,000. ·
lier from St. Louis in the trade for
In the quarterfinals, Hingis will
reliever Jeff Brantley.
play No. 7 Mary Pierce, Majoli will
He knew he would wind up with
lake on Nathalie Tauzint and Novol·
the Reds when the day was over,
na will face the Seles-Sanchez Vic·
bul liked the idea of being drafted
ario winner.
by an expansion team- even if he
Booming her serve and forehand,
would never gel 10 put on a unoSchultz-McCarthy matched the
form.
world 's top player nearly point for
"I thought it was cool," Young
point on the Madison Square Garden
said. "Too bad when they make
carpel. And she took turns smacking
trades they don 'I give you a hat."
her backhand'for winners,
"I had the feeling Martina was not
a hundred percent in shape," Schultz·
McCarthy said. "She kind of sur(Continued from Page 4)
prised me. I was a bit too careful
Jersey 2, Clagary I; the New York because I knew she wasn't as fast as
Rangers 3, Florida I; and San Jose 4, she normally is."
Anaheim 2.
The 6-foot-2·Dutch star slammed
Devils 2, Flames 1
I 0 aces - the fastest at 118 mph New Jersey won its seventh and had five double-faulls. She hit31
straight game and the lith straight for wiimers to 15 for Hingis, but had 44
. goalie Martin Brodeur by bcaung unforced errors to just seven for the
hapless Calgary.
world's No. I player.
Brodeur had an easy game, makIt was Schultz-McCarthy who
ing just II saves as the Devils outshot drew first blood, breaking Hingis in
the Flames 41-12. The Devils' streak the third game of the match. Bul
matches the club record they posted Hingis broke right back, .and the two
to 'slart the 1993-94 season.
bauled through the tiebreak.
New Jersey got goals from Denis
"I was just hoping that she can't
Pederson and Doug Gilmour during serve that well in the tiebreak," said
a second period in which it outshol Hingis, who has lost only four rnau;h·
Calgary 18-2.
es all year.
Andrew Cassels scored for Cal·
Schultz-McCarthy couldn't, givgary. which stretched its winless ing Hingis the lead. But the tall and
streak 10 nine (0-6-3) games. The talented Dutch star refused to wilt.
Flames are the only winless road
team (0-7-4) in the NHL. Stretching --Sports briefs,-back to last season, the Flames have
not won in their last 15 road contests
Hockey
(0-9-6).
CANONSBURG, Pa. (~P) Ranaers 3, Panthers 1
Jaromir ·Jagr, the Pittsburgh Pen·
Pal LaFontaine had a goal and an guin$' marquee player now that
assist, and Mike Richter made 30 Mario Lemieux is retired, said he
saves as 'New York beat Florida lo expects 10 sign a new contract start a four-game road trip.
probably for seven years and about
LaFontaine's goal early in the $SO million - within a week.
third period- New York's first shot
over a stretch of 12:3S- broke a IBoxing
I tie. Alexei Kovalev made a fine
UPPER MARLBORO, Md. (AP)
pass to LaFontaine. who in full stride - Bernard Hopkins successfully
chipped the puck past Mark Fitz- defended 1his IBF middleweight title,
patrick for his team-leading lith outpointing Andrew Council. Hopgoal.
kins improved to 33-2-1 .

made $2.7 million last season and is
likely to make $3.5 million or more
in arbitration.
"Obviously both of my trades
were dictated by the economics of the
limes," Expos general manager Jim
Beauie said. "We do not intend to
win next year. We intend 10 build to
have a championship club when we
move into our stadium in 2001 ."
· Also:
- The Diamondbacks acquired
their third baseman in J-'ry!Tian, sending newly drafted Joe Randa to
Detroit in a four-player deal.
·
- San Diego got pitcher Brian
Boehringer and shortstop Andy
SbeeiS from the Devil Rays for catcher John Flaherty.
- Tampa Bay drafted first base·
man Dmitri Young from Cincinnati,
then sent him back to the Reds. Arizona picked pilche,r Scou Winchester
from the Reds. then sent him back to
Cincinnati.
-The Chicago Cubs got pitcher
Kurt Miller from Florida for a player to be named.
- The New York Yankees, as
expected, received third baseman
Scou Brosius from Oaklapd as the
player to be named in a recent deal
for pitcher Kenny Rogers.
In free agent re-signings, Seaule
kept second baseman Joey Cora
($1.65 million), Milwaukee kepi
reliever Doug Jones ($3 million) and
Colorado re-signed catcher Jeff Reed
($2.6 million for two years).

Indians
retain
Williams; .
Arizona
acquires
Anderson

By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) ...., The
Cleveland Indians said good-bye to
left-handed pitcher Brian Anderson
and were shut out on the trade front
at the e•pansion draft Tuesday
night.
Cleveland balked al Montreal's
request for Jaret Wright in a deal
for Pedro Martinez, and the Expos
traded the NL Cy Young Award
winner 10 Boston . The Indians
decided not trade third baseman
Millt Williams to one of the expan·
sion teams when the draft was over.
"Is there a deal thai will be an
impact-type deal for the Indians?"
Indians general manager John Hart
asked. "Right now, thai is nollhe
case. lflhere is not an impact deal,
we don't trade him."
Hurt said after the draft that the
Indians weren 't making any trades
in Arizona.
Anderson, a 25-year-old lefthander who flourished in the World
Series, was picked second by the
Arizona Diamondbacks.
· Rumors persisted in the days
before the draft that Arizona would
send Anderson back to Cleveland
with third baseman Tim Naehring
for Williams, who will become a
free agent after the 1998 season.
But Arizona did not pick Nachring,
coming
off an injury plagued sea"I could hardly walk," she said
But neither player really wanted to
son
with
the Red Sox, killing a deal
about retiring following Ihe seventh come close lo lhe net until they shook
that Hart didn '1 sound willing do
game. "I couldn't pul pressure on my hands after lhc boule ended.
.
foot because my nail just completeHuber also warned aboullhe Ime make anyway.
"Obviously there have been a
ly went otl ot my toe."
calls and the umpire's overrules. ·
lot
of
rumors and a lol of talk about
Martinez won Wimbledon three They all seemed to go against her.
years ago and was ranked as high as
Mnjoli, whose biggest victory him," Hart said. "But at this point,
No.2 in the world. She has been in came· in June when she shocked our plan is to bring back our Silver
a freefall since.
Hing_is in the French Opcn'final, qui· Slugger and Gold Glover for another season."
The Spaniard began her match by elly pounded out the vtctory.
In !he second round, Tampa Bay
winning the firstth!ce games, then it
Huber had a chance. to pun even
selected
Indians right-hander Albic
was "el foldo" as Novotna ripped off when she broke MaJoh at 15 m the
Lopez.
The
26-year-old was 3- J
the next live games. The eventual mnlh game and ~ervcd for the second
with
a
6.93
ERA
in 1997 and has a
winner also had a four-game streak in sci. But MaJoh broke nght back.
95-rnph
fastball.
But Cleveland
the second· set as she won handily.
again at 15. and the two battled into
had
all
but
given
up
on him as a
The Majoli-Huber match was a lhetr second hebr~aker of the match.
banle of forehands, backhands and
After Huber won the first two starting pitcher.
"We've spent as much time as
grunts- all from the baseline. There points, she thought she lost a couple
humanly
possible trying lo develwere nashes of shotmaking ·inter- of quesuonable hne calls. She even
op
Albie,"
Hart said.
spersed with all-out power, a few off- stopped grunting on the last two
l&amp;e INDIANS on P e 6)
speed shots in the midst of fastballs. points.

lbcn, on the ncxl-lo-last point in
Game 2 of the second set, SchullzMcCarthy raced to the net, only to
lose the point. As she went to change
direction ·at the net, she appeared to
stub her toe.
Hingis won the next point to pull
even 1-1. Then, instead of serving,
Si:hullz-McCarthy went to umpire
Missy Malool and requested an injury
timeout. She had ripped off a portion
of the big 'toenail on her right fool.
"I went to volley and I had to
reach," Schultz-McCarthy said. "My
toe just totally went up. My nail went
off my toe completely."
After having the injury anended
to, Schultz-McCarthy returned to the
court and held her service at 15 to
take a 2·1 lead. She would not win
another game.

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Wednesday, November 19,1997

I

The Dally Sentinel's

~ .~

]() 40
15 ·' "

, • 22
' 5

. 10 5 1

l.u~ Alll!Cks .
Allalk'Hll

~ !if
.l2 72
5 4 .lO 7J
, 4 2K 7CJ

Padl'ir Dh·lsion

Culur.u.l!1

,.

B011on at New Jmry, 7:JOp.m
WU~~hingtun ~~ Pftillldelphill., 7·30 p m
L.A. Clippen ac M1:.mi. 7:l0pm
PonlnAd ut Ctuarlone, 7 : ~ p.m.
Orlando ar Clt!veland. 8 p.m.
Golden Stale! 1t1 San Anmnio. 8 : ~ p.m.

r....,. Boy ....... ...... . ...... l " 2

49

TransCJctions

Tonipt'sp....,.

11'. L

~~

fl2
,9
."ill
47

•L.u•

Sill"t':m'ICqlu 102, Dllllilli 9~

X..

1~

22
22
19
'"

Central Oiwision

fum

2

HUlton 122, Toronto 109
Orlancklll2. L.A. Clippers 9.a
Athmt" 98, Wt~JhntgtooiW (QT)
Hou•ton 9~ . N~ York K'*
Milwnu~ rl7, Dttroit 79
Votncouvcr 100. Denver 117
L.A. Udu:n 9i. Utllh ')2
Minncil\'lta 108, Phoenia 90

Por1~1nd

4~

Tuesday's scores

Mldwna Dl\'lsitln
Snn Ant nnio ..

)O ?I

WESTERN CONFERENCE

WESTERN CONFERENCE
ll:am

-·-

TilrtiUIU .

•'

TOO.mto.....

Norlhu.~l Dl"lsion
............. 14 5 2
......... II 7 .l
"" ..... 9 9 ~
................ 9 9 4
..... 14 10 J
.. ... -~ 10 "

Momrcul ..

good, and they all are real Iough at
home."

The Avalanche head home after a
tough five-game Eastern swing where
they also played Detroit, New Jersey,
the New York Rangers and Philadelphia and finished 2-2-1.
Washington used a four-goal second period 10 take a 5-4 lead heading
into the final period. Bondra's goal
with 12 seconds left in the second
period broke a 4-4 tie.
Colorado rallied, however, on
goals from Kamcnsky and Forsberg.
to take a 5-4 lead with 6:47 left. Sondra then lied illo force the overtime.
"We had a chance to win the
game, and they had a chance 10 win
the game," Bondra said. "We go1 the
point, though."
Elsewhere in the NHL, it was New
(&amp;e NHL on Paae 5)

~

...

Hingis beats injured Schultz-McCarthy .

I

LANDOVER, Md. (AP) ' A.hhough players on both sides kepi
(~!king about how much !hey enjoyed
a6-6tie, Washington goalie Bill Ran1
• fQrd was nol among them.
"My job is to stop the puck, and
11 didn't do that enough times," said
the oft-'injured Ranford, who
nonetheless conceded that a tie was
I an improvement. "The last three
games I've played . .I've lost, so it's a
staning point."
1 • In addition to his injuries, the suc' cess of goalie Olaf Kolzig hi'S slowed
Ranford's comeback. Kolzig is 11-32 with a 2.03 goals-against average
this season.
Ranford, now 1-4-1, finished with
31 saves and made a number of difficult stops against 1/Je Colorado
Avalanche, but is still searching for
some answers.

•

First-round action in Chase Championships continue

!Capitals, Avalanche skate to 6-6 deadlock
I

•

'

: -----------.~----------------------------------------------------~--------------~w~~~~"=•:•d~a~y~·~No~v~em::be~r~19~,~199~7'

__ ·-

•

.,

everything... even sale prices!

WRAP IT UP EARLY SALE
Friday &amp; Saturday only! November 21 and 22

"Tit~ •tore )1011 •~~­

i• now elo8e to Ito..~"

�J
Pege 6 • The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wadn•day, November 19, 1997

By The Bend

booper holds.weekly news conference

OSU
seeks to ·erase memory of 1-7-1 mark .vs.. Michigan
'
~

.

"'By RUSTY MILLER

"The truth doesn't bother me,"

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- John
Cooper has brought ~uccess, .pros)let'lty and pride to Oh10 Stat&amp; m h1s
10 years as head coach.
·· Then there's the matter of his
•· record against Michigan.
•
At Cooper's weekly news confer.• ence Tuesday, a reporter began a
·•question, "You've done everything
'·here except ... "
· Without blinking, Cooper finished
·the sentence: " ... beat Michigan ."
·~·
"I'm 1-7-1 against Michigan, in
··case you guys don't know- in case
it hasn't been in your paper yetthts
week," Cooper said, his anger rising.
- · Heading into the fourth-ranked
: .Buckeyes' showdown Saturday at
• :llp-ranked Michigan, the questions
: arc rising again. How could a coach
: who has won so much lose so much
) , to the team he needs to beat?

Cooper said. " I don't like it, but the
only way we're goinR to do something about it is go win the game ....
Don't endure it, enjoy it Enjoy it. It's
a great opportunity to coach at Ohio
State to coach in the Ohio StateMich,igan game. If you don't like
what's happened. do something about
it - go win the game. That's going
to be my approach this week-:'
The irony is Cooper was htred as
a Michigan-slayer. He led Arizona
State to a 22-15 victory over the
Wolverines in the 1986 Rose Bowl .
Cooper has been in charge of the
Buckeyes for I0 years. His team won
the Rose Bowl and finished second in
the country last year. He's gone 8630-4 at Ohio State, including 50-9-1
the last live seasons. 1\vice the Buck·
eyes have won Big Ten co-champi·
.

J

onships. And he's sent dozens of
players to the NFL. si• last year alone
including two of the top three draft
picks.
Since taking over for the fired Earle Bruce in 1988, Cooper has
restocked the program with talent and
turned it into a cash cow for the uni.vcrsity.llle Buckeyes have appeared
in a bowl game every year hut his
first, arid have picked up hundreds of
thousands or dollars for playing in
preseason bowl games three of the
last four years.
In the wake of the Buckeyes' dramatic, last-minute 20-17 victory over
second-ranked Arizona State in the
Rose Bowl. merchandise bearing
Ohio State's logo . and colors ha.•
moved into the top live in the country in sales.
Ohio State has built a new base-

ball stadium, is in the midst of construction on a new basketball and
hockey arena and is planning a SI SO
million renovation of Ohio Stadium .
King Football is payina the bills.
Cooper works tirelessly for charity and has always been accessible
and gracious with reporters. His
team has been involved in relatively
few off-the-field problems. The
NCAA has never looked into the program.
· Cooper said he doesn't feel jinxed
or cursed and denies that his team has
a mental block against its rival.
"I think there's been a play made
here, a play made there that's determined the outcome or the game, •• he
said.
Three of the la.•t four years, Cooper has taken an unbeaten team into
the Michigan game. All three times

they lost.
A year aJO, favored by 17 point!
and playiqg before a partisan crowd
at Ohio Stadium, the Buckeyes
squandered several opportunities 1in
the first half but still led 9-0.
Then came the second half.
"llley run a simple slant route
that you could hit in the dark," Cooper said. Tai Streets caught the short
toss from Brian Griese, but Ohio
State cornerback Shawn Springs
slipped on some loose turf. Streets'
69-yard cat~h and run turned the tide
as Michigan grabbed a shocking 139 upset.
. "Sometim~s I think, gosh. what's
it going to'take to win the game'!''
Cooper said.
Ohioans&lt; arc a tough ·crowd. On
radio talk shows and in newspapers,
they vent the same frustrations that

Ann
Landers

I1191, LOI An,elu n"*

Sy'ldi&lt;:•~ 11Mi

l
:

!
1
1
•
:
·•

~

!
~
•

"We talk a little trash to players,"
Michigan safety Marcus Ray, from
Columbus, Ohio, said, "but it's all
done in fun. On Saturday. the most
physical team is going to win, not
who says the most."
Evc.n Michigan coach Lloyd Carr
joined in : "I agree with David
Boston. I think Ohio State should be
two- or three-touchdown favorites."
Ohio State coach John Cooper. I"
riding on the out&lt;.:omc of the gam ... at 7-1 against Michigan and known for
M~ehigan Stadium, hut until that
hcing testy during this week, said
momcnl arrives, a wotr of words is Tuesday that words aren't going to
just line.
get anyone "more fired up than they
in Saturday's showdown between the
No. I Wolverines ( 10-0) and No. 4
Buckeyes (10-1).
"Well," Woodson said, smiling,
"1f our offense and defense dick, we
shnuld win hy two touchdowns."
Perfect.
Such words arc what rivalries Iike
Ohio State-Michigan arc all ahout. ·
There may llc a perfect season, Big
Ten title and national championship

By RICHARD
ROSENBLATT
AP Sports Writer
Even though he grew up in Humble, Texas, Ohio State's David
Boston is anything but.
So it was no surprise when the
'wide receiver kicked oO'Ohio StutcMichigan week with these words: "If
'our offense and defense are clicking.
we should win by two or three
'touchdowns."
Enter Michigan cornerhack
·Charles Woedson, who will line up
:more than few times against Bos1on

already arc."
"And I don't have anything more
to say about that," he added.
Boston and Woodson could spend
lots of lime talking to· each other, as
the winner of that matchup wi II
probably be playing for the winning
team.
Boston, a 6-foot-3, 205-pound
sophomore, has 67 catches for 862 .
yards and 13 touchdowns - an
average of one touchdown every 5.15
catches.
Woodson, meanwhile, is the

nation's premier cornerback and a
Hcisman Trophy contender. The 6-1.
197-poun~'r from Fremont, Ohio,
leads the Big Ten with six interceptions. He also has two touchdown
receptions and a 33,yard scoring run.
"I think I've faced corners better
than him," Boston said. "Guys in
practice. Antoine Winfield is._, good
as him and certainly as fast as him.
I've got to watch film on him. He
ain 'I no Shawn Springs.
"I know he's made a lot of plays
ever since he's been at Michigan.

• By JIM O'CONNELL

l AP Basketball Writer
~
Dean Smith headed for the golf
• &lt;ourse. Rick Pitino left for the NBA
: ·and $70 million. Danny Fortson and
: Ron Mercer decided not to be upper;~ dassmen. And Tracy McGrady leapt
~ ~traight from high school to the pros.
" : College basketball lost many
~ familiar faces in the offseason, yet
• .some star coaches and players are
: back for a shot at being the last team
: to cut down the net.
: · Aiizona has its top eight players
: returning 10 defend its championship.
~ ·Kansas is among the favorites to win
'l :it all because RaefLaFrentz and Paul
.:. ;Pierce didn't give in to the lure of the
INBA. Duke coach Mike Krzyzews• \ki managed to come up with one of
. : ibest recruiting classes in years. And
; :the five-second rule is back.
~ i So a season that ends in San An to~ ,nio on the lasl Monday night in
~ ;March starts this week with a lot to
: :get used to.
• , It will be hard to watch Nonh Car: :olina and not be di stracted by the
: 'absence of bean Smith, with his fur~ 'rowed brow and dominating nose thai
~ 1made it hard 10 tell whether he was
.,
6
~ smiling or frowning. For the past 3
: seasons he was the focal pcint of one
• of college basketball's special pro: 4ra'ms and his departure was as
: expected- on his tenns.
~ • Smith, who won . two national
~ championships and retired as the
~
sport's winningest coach, was
~ replaced by longtime assistant Bill
• Guthridge, hut the Tar Heels proba: bly will be as tough as ever as they
~ compete in the country's strongest
~ !c"gue, the Atlantic Coast Confer-

i

••
••
•

8~mgals

••

He's a big-time player. I'm going to
sec him and he's going to see me. I'm
ready for him and he's ready for me,
I'm sure., So we'll sce.
Woodson agrees.
"We will go at it all day and may
the best man '!lin," he said. "He is
one of the best receivers out there and
some of their other guys arc tough as
well. I was surprised he made those
comments so early, but it really
docsn 't matter because I am going to
go out and play my game rcgardlcS&lt;." ·
11

camp notes

•~
•

••'•
•..""

•

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' By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - One of the
•
'
;
:
~

:
:

~

.,

~
~

,.

•~
t
.,

~
~

•

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:

Cincin·nati Bengals' draft-day gambles has blown up in their faces . The
other has panned out better than
e•pccted.
While safety Tremain Mack has
jeopardized his career with more
alcohol-related problems, running
back Corey Dillon has stayed out of
trouble and won a starting job.
.
The Bengals made it dear when
the~ddra fted Dilloffnththatfi hde had to
avot pr emso
e 1e1 .
"And he's given us no indication
that's not happening," coach Bruce
Coslet said. "His troubles were in the
distant past, when he was very
young. He'sapplied himself well. He
comes every morning bright-eyed
and ready to go. He's upbeat. H~
t;ants to do well."
I So far, he's done very well.
Given an opportunity because of
K;.Jana Cjlrler's tom rotator cuff,
Dillon has taken over at tailback. He
, made his second start last Sunday and
: picked up 78 yards on I 9 carries : a 4.1-yard average - in a 20-3 loss
• in Pittsburgh.
: Carter carried only twice for 8
j yards, an indication of what's ahead .
\ Coslet plans to let Dillon have the
bulk of the carries the rest of the seaaon .
Carter will have surgery on his left

t:
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'&gt;

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••'
•

pass within live seconds if a defendColorado joined them in the NBA of something for a long time how do er is within six feet. That rule returns
draft lottery.
you know how you should feel and after a three-year absence.
The 18-year-old McGrady went how is it passed along'! Th.at's what ·
Some early season games also will
straight from Mount Zion Christian I' m worried about."
· experiment with a 40-second ·shot
Academy in Durham, N.C., to the
Krzyzcjj.~ki's freshman class has clock rather than the 35 now used and
Toronto Raptors, the latest young four mem"'l's and no nickname.
four quancrs instead of halves.
player to choose to learn the game at
"Thesc\ids wanted to come indc- .
"By putting that five-second
the highest level, not in college.
pendently tO&gt; be part of our program. count back in. you're going to sec the
Many feel college basketball is too They didn'tcomc to be part of this speed of the game increase," Oklastrong to be brought down by play- class," hc ·•iaid of William Avery, homa coach Kelvin Sampson said. "I
ers who leave early or jump to the Shane Battier, Elton Brand and Chris think you're going to sec a livelier
NBA fr.om high school.
Burgess. "!J'hose kids didn 't want a basketball game with more .scoring
"It's hurt our sport, but overall it's name. They knew they were coming because you're going to have more
still exciting," Krzyzewski said. into something that was bigger than opponunitics to Score on defense ."
' "The older player, the really out- them, Duke is bigger than one class.
Amid all the coaching changes,
standing player, can'.t teach. the There's no •secret handshake or tat- the new rules and playen; coming and
younger player to become that great too."
going, fans should note one dale that
player, that superstar. and that hurts
As for the biggest rule changes. 1 ~gins the mos1 Amportant part.ot; the
(Continued from Page 5)
the pros.
coaches themselves can now call a season: Sunday. March 8, the day
, Cleveland lost promising infield
.
"The
players
arc
still
talented
and
timeout and players with the ball they can fill . in their toumumcnl
··'llro.~t Herbert .Perry to Tampa
stars.
but
ihc'y
don't
have·that
vision
'.
must advance toward the basket or ·bracket.
liay in the third round. Perry, 29,
plays first base, third base and
some Ojllfield and is highly regarded for his defense. But he missed
most of the last season seasons with
serious knee injuries.
Williams, who turns 32 on Nov.
28 and will make $7.3 million this
season. batted .263 with 32 homers
and I05 RBis in his first season in
Cleveland, winning his fourth Gold
Gloye award. Playing in Arizona is
attractive to Williams because his
children live there.
Hart arid Williams' agent, JeiT
Moorad, failed to agree on a contract extension after the World
Series and decided to break off
talks until after the draft.
"I think Matt made it very clear
Ill! loves it in Cleveland," Hart said.
"But at this point he is reluctant to
sign an extension: That in itself
doesn't make him a traded player."
Anderson, a lilelong · Indians
fan from nearby Geneva, was
quickly becoming one of the team's
most popular players. He knew all
the Cleveland heartbreak storie.• by
bean, reciting them f~cquently for ·
reporters at the World Series.
In a conference call during the
draft, the first thing Anderson
asked was, "Is the second round
over yet'! Did we l011e anybody
shoulder wh~n the season ends.
else'!"
DOOR PRIZES lfiCLUDE BEANIE BABY, FLORAL
After II games, Dillon leads the
He is apparently still a fan .
ARRANGEMENTS AND GIFT CERTIFICATES!
Bengals in yards (494) and average
"As far as coming back home
SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENT EACH DAY.
per carry· (5). He has four rushing and playing in Cleveland, this is a
touchdowns. only one behind Carter big disappointmen,t," Anderson
, REFRES"'MENTS WILL Bl;_ SERVED AND COME GET YOUR
for the team lead .
! aid. "I guess I have to look ahead
PIC'RJ~TAKEN WITH SANTA'CLAUS AT NO CHARGE SUNDAY!
And he's made an impression on and try to make the best of the sitthe coaching staff, which likes his uatlon. I'm e~cited ·about Arizona
Stop In For
style. Dillon runs over tacklerS and is and their building process."
hard to bring down.
.
But the Indians apparently were
Your 10%
"I hate to compare people, but 11's growing impatient as they waited
Discount
kind of like when I watc.h (Jerome) for Anderson to develop into a front
Bettis run," Coslct said. "Pretty _ o[ the rotation starter. Hart referred
Coupon Before
soon he gets a 15- or 20-yarder. And to him as a "No. 5 staner" after the
pretty soon on third-and-one he first round was over.
Saturday
creases 'em for 40. He has thai capaAnderson was 4-2 with a 4.69
bility, but he's no Jerome · Bettis ERA for Cleveland last season, but
William H. fr•ncis, in November of 1957, operted
yet."
.
had a 1.80 ERA in the postseason.
Francis Florill for business. The shop originally was
Better yet, he's been no Tremain He recently signed a $700,000,
located in Middlepon, Oh. and was moved to Pomeroy
Mack.
one-year contract with a $1 .6 milabout two yeatS later. This Npvember marks the 40th
Mack, the Bengals' fourth-round lion option for 1999.
Anniversary of this opening. Francis Florist is currently
draft pick, got a starting job, got hurt
Hart said the Indians' front
owned and operated by son, Bill and his wife Jo Ann.
and then got arrested .for drunk dri- office decided. to keep the position
Their daughter, Susan, is currently employed there and
ving. He pleaded · no contest last players from the AL championship
is the third
month and is on the reserve list.
team together rather than protect
Both Dillon and Mack were in Anderson. Although teams arc not
trouble repeatedly earlier in their allowed to disclose their list of 15
lives, prompting them to slide in the protected players for the first
draft. Many of Mack's problems round, it is believed that Cleveland
were related to drinkin~. Dillon made a late change to protect cenre~edly was charged With seven ter fielder Marquis Grissom and
. offenses in J~venile Court between leave Anderson exposed.
1987-92, but has stayed out of lrouAlso, Hart felt his position playble since then.
ers could bring more value if a
Dillon entered the NFL draft after trade for a No. I starter presented
his junior year out of Washinllton. itself.

001

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widely flouted, and the J111Ciing that challenJinJ the establishment
work schedules continue. lbo rca- could affect the evaluation he
son, of course, is financial. It is receives from whoever runs tbe promuch cheaper to staff an emergency gram, so he keeps quiet.
room with four physicians working
. The greatest pressure is felt by
100 hours a week than with 10 •interns. who arc the most junior
physicians working 40 hours a physicians and yet do the bulk of the
week.
physical work. It's scary when peoYour "Anonymous Resident" pie suddenly tum to you in a crisis
probably knows this. Cliances .are, and ask, "What should we do now,
he will not make a ·fatal error, but he doctor?" Suddenly, you find your. is rightto be concerned. He may fear self facing a life-or-death decision.

To make such a decision with littl~
or no sleep and minimal supervision
from a senior staff member can be
terrifying.
I sympathize with "Anonymous
Resident."flvery physician has been
through it. Unquestionably, brutal
hours and sleep deprivation teach
self-reliance and build self-confidence, but tbere are inherent dangers
that need to be addressed by the
medical establishment. The sooner

••

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the better.
.
Dear Alia I • den: When I read
in your column about the couple on
a Minnesota cross-country ski trip
who had sex while on skis, it
brought to mind the oouple I saw
having sex on a uam going down
Aspen Mountain. His bare behind
was right up in ·the window!
I had flown from Kentucky to
visit my daughter and son-in-law
wbo had raved ~bout the beauty of

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Aspen. Colo. It was truly exquisite,
even
with the
unexpected
"scenery." Too bad I didn't have a
camera. --C.G. in Birmingham, Ala.
Dear C.G.: Maybe it's the altitude. Regardless-- shame on them'
Send questions to Ann Landers. ereators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.
. 90045

l.et The Deli
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WYATT NICHOLAS JARRELL

Invites You to"~•· Come and Celebrate
Our 40th Anniversary
&amp;aturday. Nov. 22 af1d 6unday. Nov. 23

Lb.

71

RC Cola
Diet Rite

fran ·· s florist

12 pack 12 oz. Cll'l

TURNS TWO - Wylltt Nlcholll
Jarrell, eon of Mark end Aimee
Jarrell, obeerved his HCond
birthday on Oct. 22 It two per- ·
ties.
A 101 Dalmatlona theme waa
carried out with cake, lea cret1m
111c1 pop being Nrved to the
youngatar and eever.l friends. A
B•rney theme was ueed at
another party• .

, At the Pomeroy Municipal Building
Auditorium. The festivities begin at 10 a.m.
- 7 p.m. on Saturday and Noon - 5 on
Sunday. Stop by for Christmas Bargains,
Entertainment and Giveaways .

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FOODLAND ·

more tolcranlie for bad years no matter what you (lid the year before. And
then everything gets sensationalized
on radio shows. ·It's becoming a
tougher and tougher business."
It's hard to keep the star players
around for four years, too.
Three members of last season's
all-America team were eligible to
return and only LaFrcntz did. And
Cincinnati's Fortson and Kentucky's
Mercer weren't the only top-flight
players to leave early: Tony Battie of

OP

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EASTMAN'S

the fans and administration have no •Te~as Tech and Chauncey Billups of of the game·.... If you're never a part

Mack's alcohol woes
continue as Dillon
wins starting postion

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ence .
Pitino left Kentucky after consccutive appearances in the NCAA
championship game -the first a victory that gave the school its sixth title;
the second an overtime loss to Arizona that ended up being his last college game. The man who turned the
Wildcats back into a national powerhouse left for a chance to do the same
with the Boston Celtics. He'll be followed by his fonner assistant, Tubby
Smith.
North Carolina and Kentucky are
just.two of the 64 schools that start
the season with a new coach. With
306 schools competing i~Divisio~,I,
that's 21 percent, the second-highest
mark ever to the 23 percent that
changed coaches entering the 198687 season.
"Basketball coaches are ttie" last 'of
the old cowboys. They live on the
- edgeandtheposseisjustaroundthe
comer," Kansas coach Roy Williams
said. "It's the nature of"the game. It
doesn't mean we have to like it or say .
it'sOK, because it's not. Some of the
situations arc mind-boggling. It
makes for a lot different environment
from 20 years ago."
What made the moves. entering
this season so stunning was that they
came so late. In addition to Smith's
retirement. moves at major schools
with longtime coaches and possible
NCAA violations- such as Miehigan. Arizona State and New Mexico
State - all came as practice was
about to start or had already begun.
·
"Pretty soop, five years is going
to be conside'rcd a long time,"
Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson
said of his profession. "It's because

5

Dear Arur Landen: I am a resident in medical training, three years
out of medical scbool. Many of us
must work through every third night.
This
are on dutywefor
hoursmeans
straight.weSometimes,
get36a .------------------~~
nap but not always ..
The physicians in charge also
worked 36-hour shifts when they
were training, but that was 25 years
ago.' Hospitals were different then.
Patients stayed for a week after an
appendectomy. Now, they're in and
out in two days. Mothers with newborn infants used to be in the hospital for seven or eight days. Now they
are expected to check out after 24
hours unless there are complications. We see many more patients in
a shorter ·period of time and often
feel guilty about it. After 24 hours
witho11t sleep, our problem-solving
abilities decline.
·
Patients have no idea how sleepdeprived we are and how this affects
10 lbs &amp; up,
our ability to perfonn. Please tell
Wllh Pop-Up
th•m. -An Anonymous Resident
Dear Resident: You've hit on a
sensitive subject, one I've been
hearing a lot a~ut lately. I shared
your letter with a New York physician, and this is what he said:
Dear Aan: The problems cited
by your correspondent are fairly
standard in me!licaltraining. Interns
and residents are often expected to
make life-or-death 'decisions while
in a state of near exhaustion. The
. results can be disastrous.
1
Several y~ars ago, a young .
Umllwoman named Libby Zion died parwlth
tially because of mistakes made by a
$10.00
chronically sleep-deprived resident.
addlllaolll
After her death, her father, Sidney
Zion, now a New York Daily News
columnist, pushed for legislation to
restrict the number of on-call hours
worked by doctors. As a result of his
efforts, several states now bave laws
limiting shifts worked by interns and
33-39
can
residents.
Assorted Varieties,
Unfortunately, those laws are

~ College men's hoops sees coaching transition as practices start
j I

CrtMnn

Syndica~c .

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· sleep~deprived resident worries about job perforrriarice

Cooper does. To them, that Rose
Bowl victory was something, but
why did the Buckeyes have to fall
again to Michigan'/
Ohio State lost eight starters on
defense and much of its offensive line
from last year's Il -l team. Yet the
Buckeyes are ranked fourth in the
nation heading into Saturday's game
at top-ranked Michigan.
"I'm not one of these guys that
goes home every night with a
headache," Cooper said. ''I'm one of
these guys who likes to feel lik&lt;
we've had a good year. We've won
I0 football games and I don ' tthink
many thought we'd win 10 games.
We 've put ourselves in a position to
at least play for the championship for
the third year in a row. We've won a
lot of football games. I'm proud of
this team."

!I Boston-Woodson ~atchup puts pressure on pt;ncipals1 teams
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Famities meet
for reunion
TheHart-Cuckler-Colburn family
reunion was held recently at the
Modern Woodmen' hall in Burlingham.
Attending were Eileen Douglas,
Lotus.Goldsberry, William C. CockIer. Rosemary and Bernard Cooley,
Juanita and Reid H,ar~, Ardith Hart.
William, Jackie, Heather and Cody
Hari, all of Athens; Wiley Colburn,
Albany; Jack Hart, Catherine Grosnover, Matt Grosnover. Durward
Cumings. Dale tll)d Ann Colburn,
Thomas and Celia Hart and Gladys
Cumings, all of Pomeroy.
Andre Lirado. Hilda Lirado. Gal·upolis; Fred Col bum, Tall Cuckler, ·
William and ,Ethel Hart of Shade;
Wilbur Colburn. Lancaster, Dan
Stotts, Lowell; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Colburn, north Fon Mycr, Fla.·
Family members reminisced.
took pictures and enjoyed entertainment by Junior and Rita White. Ne~t
reunion will be held in September,
1998.
.

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3 Lb. Can, Regular Or Iutter
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Heiners Enriched
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12

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Umll one free- thio coupon.
Good onty 11 Foodllnd
Urn~ one wllh

addltlonal purchase

Bob Evans Dinner Rolls o~
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oz.
15.a - 19.25

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18-lUGZ.pllg.Jr 111\WOii.

:.Betty Crocker
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�Page a • TM o.tty suttnel

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Wedntlday, November 19, 1997

:Rae Reynolds addresses Year 2000 Computer Crisis at DAR
Rae Reynolds, National Defense
chlinnan, addn •eel the computer
problem that faces the nation IJld the

world in the yew 2000 at the m:ent
meetinc of Return Jonathan Meigs
Chlpler, Dauahtcrs of the American
"Revolution.
She said that the estimated cost of
fixing the federal government's
"year 2000" computer bug has
jumped by more than I billion dol. Iars over the summer to nearly $3.8
'billion.
The problem is , Reynolds said,
1hat many large computer systems
operate on a tw&lt;Hiigit year dating
system, with I and 9 assumed to be
the first two digits .of the year.
"'!bose computers, if not ,repro~ grarnrned. will think the year 2000
'or 00 is in actuality 1900. a glitch
that could bring many machines to a
halt and lead others to spew out
wildly erroneous data," she said.
Reynolds pointed out that the
problem is particularly prevalent in
the government because most agencies have older computers. that use
this two-digit system.
This may seem a minor problem
to many people, but she warned that
on the government level this could
affect Social Security checks, government pensions, military service,
and paychecks.
Also. she added. this will effect
every day activities such as banking,
ordering merchandise using credit
cards and everything that is related
to computerized handling .
• What failures are occurring now
or wi II occur he fore the year 2000she continued. research in banks and
companies arc quite advanced in this
l&gt;ase but still there are quite a few
failures that have occurred already
and some are continuing 10 occur
and must be corrected lbrough the
source code and system.
Reynolds said she believes the
most frightening and compounding
problem in this time of global economy is the fact that outside of the
United States the problem regarding
the computer 2000 bug is much
more substantial.
Many banks, she said, are set up
with a lot less informed internal
technological resources and are just
getting started. .
Several countries in South Amer; iCa, Eastern Europe, Thailand and all
of Southeast Asia have not staned to
' correct the problem or are just
·beginning an awareness.
Funhennore, Mrs. Reynolds said,

the United Slates Government IJld
its unclereslimllion of the cost of
compwerizina fcir the year 2000 has
generated controvmy 11110111 memben of the Conpess. particularly
Republican members of thi! subcommittee tracking the repair of the
wort. "! regret to say !hal another
billion dollar increase in the administration's cost estimate comes as no
surprise, subcommittee Chairman
Stephen Hom (R-CaliO has been
quoted as saying. Chairman Hom
suggested that the latest figures
might still be unreliably low because
lhc agencies have been very slow off
the blocks to fix the glitch.
Another alarming fact. Mrs.
Reynolds pointed out. is that as of
O.:tobcr 1997. nnly H percent nf the
government's "mission aitical"
computer systems which include
those that handle defense. air tmllic
control and income lax funclions
had heen fixed and that only 35 percent of computers nccdin~ system
rcpajrs had undergone a thorough

regions of the United Swes which
consist of em or ~ areas,
such IS a rwure reserve, pnlleeted
areas or buffer ,.ones in which minimal human ICtivity takes piiCe, IJld
transition zones or zones of cooperIlion in which most people live.
Elfons m underway by various
congressmen to pass an amendment
to prevent various orsanizarions or
foundations from using their funds
to support Bio~ Reserves and
also to terminate all US Bi9sphere
Reserves by December of 2000
unless Congress passes a specifoc
bill for each existing biosphere
reserve site.
AnotiJcr. UN program; designating World Heritage Sites on US soil
is conducted under the terms of the
1972 Treaty.
Citizens across the US are
expressing fear that the designations
will he yscd to throw people ofT the
land or cunail economic and industrial activity in those areas.
Mrs. Reyholds reviewed the latest' uproar which occurred at a public hearing in New York when Rep.
Don Young's House Resources
Committee held a field hearing that
featured. representatives of labor and
civic groups.
Young introduced
bill, The
American Land Sovereignty Protection Act, designed to prevent federal
agencies and the United Nations
from pulling UN labels on. United
States Territory without the approval
of Congress.
·
The United States, Reynolds
reminded, is not a third world country that needs the United Nations
help to preserve our country's
resources. "The United States does
not need the United Nations to
SPEAKER - RH Reynokle, local DAR ctwptar netioMI defense chlii'INin, addreued the entlclpatdecide when and where our land · ed YNr 2000 computer crlele .t • tweent mHtlng of Return Jonethan Melg• Chapter;
areas are transferred to World Heritage Sites and Biosphere Reserves,"
he said.
Regent Pauline Atkins opened
...
.the business meeting with the DAR
ritual, the Pledge of Allegiance to
the nag, a nag tip, and the singing of
the National Anthem.
Gifts for veterans ·Will be collected at the December meeting to be
given to the Veterans Hospital.
''
The next meeting will be held on
Dec .. 13 at the Meigs County Public
Library. Mrs. Rae Gwiazdowsky
will present d program' on "Dons
Past and Present." Members are
invited to brin.g a favorite doll ..

systems analysis.
In the area of greatest increase.
Reynolds sajd. is the IRS. They had
earlier relied on a standard industry
formula to project its cost estimating
that it would cost $2.70 to fix each
of the 90 million lines of computer
code that comprise the agency's systems. But. over the last few months.
IRS has discovered that fixing the
code wouldn 't he enough.
Repaired systems. Reynolds
noted. would require entirely new
software that in turn would need
new computer hardware on which to
operate because they have very old
systems that will not run &lt;bn new
software.
In summation of the "Year 2000
Computer Problem" Reynolds said
that it would appear that the repon
card on the year 2000 progress
reflect the facts that insufficient
management progress has in most
instances made it impossible to
come to grips with the full scope and
cost of this program.
·
Another area of National Defense
that Reynolds discussed in her prtsentation was the. UN Man and the
Biosphere Program or MAB.
In 1972, Mrs. Reynolds said,
when the United States entered into
Unesco, the program was enacted.
In 1984 under President Ronald
Reagan the United States withdrew
from Unesco but the Biosphere Program remained in place.
Biosphere Reserves, she said, are ·-4-

a

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Community Calenda-r......_...,. ._...._ ..._.
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The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
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.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Feeney Bcn.neu Post 128. American Legion, 6
.p.m. Thanksgiving dinner at the hall.
All members and guests. invited.
POMEROY '- Guest singer
Chris Adkins, Newpon News. Va., at
·the Hillside Baptist Church, State
Jtoute 143, Pomeroy, Wednesday. 7
p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District board
meeting, Wednesday, 8 p.m. at
offic~. Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
THE PLAINS - Free Small
.B11siness Tax Workshop, sponsored
by Internal Revenue Service. 9 a.m.
let 4 p.m. Wednesday. Register by
calling 1-800-829-1040. For new or
prospective small business owners
·and self-employed persons.
'

MIDDLEPORT - Middlepon
'Literary Club. 2 p.m. Wednesday.
Racine library. Olita Heigh,ton, hostess; Bernice Carpenter to review

'·Dark Wind" by Tony Hillcrman.
MIDDLEPORT - Middlepon
Wesleyan Bibles Holiness Church,
Missionary service. Wednesday,
7:30 p.m with Ann Jones from All
Tribe Mission. Public invited.
SYRACUSE - Third Wednesday Homemakers Club meeting
Wednesday. 10 a.m. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building. Roll call will be
a cookie exchange with recipe.
Potluck at noon.
REEDSVILLE
Regular
monthly meeting of the Eastern Athletic Boosters Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
in the high school cafeteria. All
coaches and parents of athletes arc
urged to attend.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middlcpon
Child Conservation League. Rocksprings United Methodist Church,
Thursday. 7 p.m. The program will
be about hospice.
·
POMEROY - AA meeting will
he held at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Chu~ch.
Mulberry
Avenue,
Pomeroy, 7 p.m.
sriVERSVILieE - Billy Bond
of Tulsa. Ok. will he preaching at the
Stivcrsville Community Church,
Thursday, 7:30p.m.

ROCK SPRINGS Rock
Springs Beuer Health Club meeting,
Thursday, I p.m. at the Rocksprings
Church. Dorothy !effers, hostess.
ROCK SPRINGS - 'Town and
Country Expo meeting Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
REEDSVILLE
Riverview
Garden Club meeting Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at the Reedsville Church
of Christ for a Christmas workshop.
Members arc to bring finger foods.
.POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters (o peel apples for apple
butter project Thursday, 6 p.m.

CHQI~TMA~

.

GQEETING EDITION

With Wll't'lltiM ol holly 11nd ~lsiltl•t...-. NtfwklnJ.IN ln•••.r by
· tiH! Ore aiiMII AeeltN lll1111ketMI with IQinw. t:hriHtiiiiiN

•n•

••..,.•••••" ••••th
Ill• •• eht'f'r liN we •herllllh the
blf'IUIID. we~• 111hll...... tbl11 put Y•llr. t'ol' WI It IIH"IIhN
Nnylnlll "thanlut" t'o yo••· •••• 111any lrhon~,.. old nn•l ••to!w.
'"h.....,. kiiiMII 11appart w•"ll alwnyH tll't'n~~tll.... lhtln•
bllrtl•e• with you l~ oar jll't'nti.'At pl..-.......r

SATURDAY
RUTLAND - Power in the
Blood Ministry to present live
drama, "Emmanuel", Rutland Civic
Center, 6 p.m. nightly, Saturday and
Sunday.
SUNDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern High
School Athletic Awurds Bahquct,
Sunday, 2 p.m. EHS gymnasium.

•

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lMednesday,November19,1997

.

A candlelight installation or offi- meeting in Gajlipoli• were Oct. 25 - - The Lord's Prnylll";1;1uh creed and
cers highlighted the recent meeting were Dorothy Woodard, Atkins, and collect were given to open the mcetof the Rutland Garden Club held at Chelcie Bratton who wos inslalled ing. For roll call members told about
Jhe horne of Joy Combs.
as county contact chairman.
bulbs thy purchased for fall planting.
Installed by Ann Webster were
The program included "Fall is the
The program included instNction
Pauline Atkins, president; Dorothy n pre~sing leaves add ways to U5C Time to Think Spring"; a GourdWoodard, vice president; Joy them, along 'with growing gourds gcous Crop", and "Fall, the Other
Combs, secretary; and Marjorie aod the designs they arc suitable for. Plantins Season."
· Rice, treasurer.
·
· Plans were made for participatins
The traveling prize furnished by
· A candle in a color symbolic of .in the Christmas nower show to be Stella Atkins was won by· Clotine
the office was lighted by each of held 11 Carleton School this week- Blackwood. The November travelthOse installed as Webster read the end.
ing prize will be furnished by
responsibilities.
The club will furnish entry ·tags Pauline Atkins.
The program book for the new and ribbons. Red, yellow and blue
Tips on how 10 control moles
year was discussed and it was noted ribbon• will be needed and the were given. These included the use
lliat !he printing is in progress. The theme will be Jinale Bell Seuon. of thorny blackberry canes stuffed
cover will be pink wilb a red rose.
Various classes for the show wen: into the holes, squining creosote on
The Christmas dinner will be discussed.
the Nns every six to eight feet, 11nd
. planned II Crow's Family RestauIt was reported thai Hal Kneen puning moth balls in the Nn.
rant, 6 p.m. on Dec. IS. A repon was pve the program on setting !he yard
The ·hostess gift was won by Ann
J1ven by Pauline Atkins on the ready for winter. He said now is the Webster. The November meeting
reJional board meetinJ held at time to plant trees, shrubs and bulbs, will be on Nov. 24 at the home of
Cliesler. Aucndin&amp; lhe reaional remembering to water them well.
Mllljorie Rice. I p.m.
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TilE DAILY SENTINEL

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tips to help .you avoid Thanksgiving
heartburn after that holiday
meal.
. .
.

Ohio University
Collese of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor

Question: Every time I eat a big
meal, I suffer with heanbum afterwards. How can I prevent heanbum
this Thanksgiving?
Answer: According to folklore ,
the first Thanksgiving was held in
1623. I wouldn 't .he surprised if that
wasn't also the date of the first case
of Thanksgiving heanburn . Today,
both the Thanksgiving ttadition and
the heanburn tradition live on.
The words heartburn, indigeslion, and sour stomach all describe
the same condition- a heavy, buming feeling underthe breastbone. It's
brought on by irritation to the esophagus. This is the tube that connects
the mouth with the stomach.
Where this tube enters the stomach, there is a band' like muscle that
encircles it. When all is working
properly, this muscle only relaxes its
grip on the esophagus to let food
.Pass into the stomach, and !hen it
prom~lly squeezes shut again after'
the food has passed. A failure of this
mechanism allows stomach acid to
back up into the esophagus, which is
made of tissue different from the
stomach. The strong stomach acid is
desirable in the stomach, but it causes considerable irritation to the
esophagus. It is this irritation that

actually causes heanbum pain.
Question: I usually drink milk,
eat a mil'it or take an antacid, like
Maalox, to relieve my heartburn. Is
that the best treatment?
Answer: Contrary to popular
belief, drinking milk or eating a mint
only gives brief relief from heanburn, and actually, these things can
makeheanburn worse.
Milk temporarily soothes the
esophagus as it passes through, but
once in the stomach it can cause the
production of more acid and, thereby, make heartburn worse.
Peppermint will relax the muscle
that closes ihe esophagus, and the
relaxed niuscle may allow more
stomach acid to back ~p past it, thus
worsening the heanbum. The use of
a liquid antacid is the be$t of your
choices. It soothes the esOJlhagus as
it passes through it, and then it
reduces the amount of acid in· the
stomach. However, 'I think there are
. still heller.chtiices.
'.
The best way to treat simple·
cases of heanburn is to put gravity to
work for you.
Stand up to reduce the pressure in
the abdomen that is forcing the
stomach acid to "back up" into the
esophagus. Drinking a glass of cold

water can help lo wash acid back
into the stomach.
Better still, avoid heartb)lm in the
first place. Don't eat large meals lbat
over-fill your stomach. You will still
be able to enjoy a Thanksgiving
feast, but make sure to take a break
between appetizers, the main course
.and des sen. This will let your stomach empty a little and reduce the
~ressure working ~gainslthe mu$Cie
closing off the esophagus.
When eating the main course,
you can·sample all those traditional
favorites, but do so in reasonable
quantities. Also, watch ' your intake
of cenain foods that can raise .the
stomach's acid level or relax the
muscles closing off the esophagus.
These foods include chocolate, peppermint, onions, peppers, mustard,
orange juice · and tomato juice as
well as caffeinated beverages and
alcoholic drinks. Also, decaffeinated .
coffee and aspirin can cause stomach problems.
Although it's not usually a serious problem, you should be concemea if you get heartburn frequ~t­
ly. The constant backtlow of acid
into the esophagus can lead to ulcers
or other damage.
I hope you can avoid heanburn
this Than~sgiving, and - on behalf
of all of us at the Ohio u 'niversity .
College of Osteopathic Medicine I'd like to take this opjlonunitY to
pass along our best wishes for a
. happy holiday season!
"Femlly Medicine• 11 1
WHkly column. To 1ubmlt
queetlone, write to John C.
WoHe, D.O., Ohio Unlvet'llty
College of Osteopathic Medl·
cine, Groevenor H•ll, Athena
OH 45701.

For decorating, .the first Noel competes with
Halloween while cash
registers ring up sales·
•

By JEFF DONN
ASsociated Press Wrlter
SPRINGFIELD. Mass. (AP) The signs of autumn are unmistak~ble these days in downtown·
Springfield: a nip in the air, leaves
s'lciuering through crosswalks,
. school children hustling home in
sweaters, and Santa's reindeer.
That's right: reindeer peering
down from the facade of a high-rise
hotel. And that's not all.
Evergreen garlands spir~l up
lamp posts and l'ghts . etch out
Christmas irees in a park heside a
shopping center . - all before an
ounce of Thanksgiving turkey is
sampled.
,.In this "City of Bright Nights,"
Mayor Micfiael Albano bears cash
registers ringing. "This is not only
capturing the spirit of the season, but
it's also capturing economic development," he said .
Springfield is not alone. Once
only seen after Thanksgiving, seasonal trappings appear sooner than
ever, some before Hijlloween. It is a
concerted effort to get shoppers to
buy.
.
"You certainly don't want to
offend anybody, but we're talking
20 percent of sales," said Scott
Krugman, a spokesman for the
National Retail Federation, a trade
group.
Retailers have discovered that
they can reach out beyond the
Christmas market to Hanukkah and
to Kwanzaa, the increasingly popular celebration by black Americans,
he said.

The holidays bring in 15-25 percent of a year's sales, Krugman said.
Kassandra Valentin likes the
early deCorations. "It 'reminds you
to get your shopping done," she said
last week, window shopping for

••
The Dally Santlnel • Page 9 :
;.

•

•

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jewelry in a· downtown mall.
·
But it can go too far, said another
shopper, Janice Wilson. "Somelimes now you have a chance to get
the holiday spirit - and lose it if it
starts too early." she said.

290Z.

Mary Combs to address Sons of
American Revolution on Nov. 20
Mary M. Combs of .the Nabby.Lee
Ames Chapter; Daught¢n" or"the
American Revolution, will be speaker at the Thursday nigbt meeting of
Ewings' Chapter, Sons of th~ American Revolution, at the Meigs Museum, 6:30. p.m.
·
Her topic will be "The Women of
the Revolution. She has' been a
member of the Nabby Lee Ames
Chapter for over 50 years and serves
as the Americanism chairman.
DAR members will be suests at
the meeting with delegaiions to
attend from Nabby Lee Ames Chap·
ter, Athens; Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Pomeroy; Mariettll Chapter, Marietta; Col. Charles Le)Yis
Chapter, Point Pleasant, and French

Colony Chaptq, Gallipoli~· ,_
Entenaihment .l!litl be presented
by the Gentlemen Four, a quB!let
presenting favorites from Broadway
musicals
Making up that group will be
Hugh Graham, .Gallipolis; Deriver
Rice, Middlepon; and John· Anderson and Gerald Powell, Pomeroy.
Jim Lochary, president, reminds
members t6at dues of $37 are
payable at this time. The increase,
he said, is due to an increase by the
.National Society SAR.
There will be no meeting in
December. Speaker at the Jan. 22
meeting will be John Briley, director
of Campus Martius Museum.
.
.

Reedsvil·le .UMW meet at
Gladys Tnomas' home
Gladys Thomas hosted a recent
meeting of the Reedsville United
Methodist women. '
The meeting opened with prayer
by Mrs. Grace Weber. Mrs. Thomas
read Psalm I 0, "Autumn:s Glory"
and the purpose of the UMW, and it
was reponed that 69 shutin visiis
had been made. Cards were signed
for friends .
Weber will pay the bill for
pecans. A Christmas party was
planned for the county home. A
game was play,ed with prizes award-

PRINCELLA

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ed and a circle of prayer closed the
meeting.
. Refreshments carrying out a
Thanksgiving theme were served lo
the above named and to Frances
Reed, Nina Boston, Diane Jones,
Delores Frank, Pearl Osborne, Ann
Lacomb, Nancy Buckley, Rosemary
Vance, Debbie Weber, and Lillian
Pickens .
Boston received the door prize.
Debbie Weber will host the January
meeting.

· Wish aU your customers and
. friends·a very Merry Christmas
in our Christmas Greetings Edition
on l)ecernber 24th

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Officers installed at Rutland ·Garden Club

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Wednesday, December 24th

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Boswonh
Council 46 R&amp;SM will hold its
inspection in . the Select Masters
Degree Friday, 7:30p.m. at the Middlcpon Masonic Temple. Refreshments with the ladies will follow.

·-

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Are you interested in having your handmade
items(s) included in ~ catalog of products
made in ~eigs County?

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�VVtdnllday,NoY~rnbtr19,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 1i

Iran aiding .fuel
smuggling ·by Iraq,

PICTURE YOUR CHiLD -~
AMONG THE •••

U.S.-Ied force claims·
By ROBERT H. REID
A11oclatlld PI'MS Writer
UNITED NATIONS - Iraqi
smuggling of diesel fuel has
increased 500 percent this year
because Iran is letting Iraqi mer·
· chant ships sneak through its waters,
a U.S.·Ied interception force say,s.
The multinational naval force has
been patrolling the Persian Gulf
since 1990 to try to make sure ships
do not violate international sanctions imposed after Iraq's invasion
of Kuwait that ban virtually all trade
with Iraq ..
The force is not authorized to
intercept vessels in territorial waters.
Members of the multinational
force. including U.S. Rear Admiral
Michael Bordy, briefed the U.N."s
Sanctions Committee on Iraq behind
closed doors Tuesday.
Committee sources, speaking on
condition of anonymity, said representatives of the multinational force
told members that interceptions of
. smugglers ' in international . waters
had fallen off sharply this year.

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LUXOR, Egypt (AP) - Surrounded by strengthened police
patrols, Egyptian merchants and
· workers wondered · today whether
increased security after the massacre
of 58 foreigners would save the
tourist industry that supports them.
The massacre by Islamic militants - the deadliest attack in their
five-year rebellion to oust the secu, Jar government- is a clear threat to
the tourism essential to Egypt's
economy. And Luxor, with its hun. dreds of temples and tombs, is one
. · of the most popular ·slops for .sight·
. seers.
President Hosni Mubarak, who
deployed more police immediately
after Monday's slaughter, was
replacing top security officials in
this southern city, police sources
said today. speaking on condition of
anonymity.
In Cairo, the sources said, top
ministers were being demoted or
: shifted to other jobs, a move that fol. lows Mubarak's replacement Tuesday · of the interior minister, who
supervises the nation's police force.
"Didn't anyone know security
was loose before?" asked Luxor
· shopkeeper Raafat Mohammed.
"The idea of security up till now
has been to set up a few guard posts
on the West Bank and put two tired

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Our special page(e)
"For Children Only"

policemen by the site," he said Tuesday in a fax to a Western news
today. refetTing to the Temple of agency, saying it had been seeking
Hatshepsut. on the west bank of the the release of Sheik Omar Abdel
Nile, where the massacre took place. Rahman.
.. This isn't securily," he com·
Rahman is jailed in the United
plained. "It's stupidity. And it could States for his role for the 1993
cost all our livelihoods."
bombing of the World Trade Center
and
a failed plot to blow up the U.N.
Mubarak himself visited the tern·
pie on Tuesday and pronounced building and other New York landmarks .
security there to be "a joke."
Since 1992, AI-Gamaa and other
Mamdouh Hussein. a salesman at
radical
groups have been waging an
a spice shop, said he hoped the security improvements weren't just tern· insurgency to overthrow Egypt's
porary and that tourists would be secular government and impose
strict Islamic rule.
reassured that the city was safe~
"Everything in Luxor depends on . The faxed message sought to
tourism," he said. "Without it there shift blame for the high casualties which totaled 62 including two
is no money for anyone."
Egyptian policemen and two civil·
Cafe worker Abdul-~ahman Taha ians - to the police force. It said the
agreed: "If tourists don 't feel confi- gunmen's "brave" attempt to meredent that we can protect them, they ly kidnap foreigners went awry
won't come ...
because police opened fire too
guickly,
forcing militants to return
The attack's immediate impact
fire.
It
accused
police of showing
was evident Tuesday night, when
only a few .foreigners were out in negligence toward the safety of
Luxor. Normally, sightseers crowd tourists .
the streets. After touring the Valley
"The government forces · dealt
of the Kings and Karnak Temple. lightly with the lives of the tourists
they stroll the town in the ·cool and the citizens, leading to the
~venin~. stopping for drinks and
falling of this . great number of
souvenirs.
dead ," it said.
The outlawed al -Gamaa alWitnesses said the six gunmen
lslamiya, or Islamic Group, claimed opened fire as soon as they entered
responsibility for the auack late · the temple grounds, spraying wildly

·t

(16 yean of age or younger)
Will be published

Ji

Tuesday, December 23rd

.Islamic militants claim responsibility for .
Egyptian temple massacre of 58 people

~\JE

•

The decrease is due tD a dramatic
increase in the use of Iranian territorial waters rather than a reduction in
smuggling, the sources said.
The force estimates that Iraq had
managed to export $10 million
worth of diesel fuel last year.
Illegal sales are expected to reach
$75 million this year and about $120
million for 1998, the force's report
added.
ENTER OIL REFINERY • A Jlroup of Thrldsh lorry driven eater
The United States and other
grounds
of tile Beljl oU refinery near Bqhdag Thesday. (AP)
members of the multinational force ·
As they sail south toward the Per- vessels had managed to sail all the
have repeatedly claiJIIOII that highlevel Iranian and Iraqi officials were sian Gulf, the ships pass an Iranian way to India without ~ntering interprofiting from the smusgling. Iran Revolutionary Guard post, where national waters. Other ships unload
dismisses the charges as anti-Iranian the Iranians charge them $50 to $55 · their cargos in the southern end of
propaganda.
'
per metric ton of fuel for papers the Persian Gulf for delivery to ports
showing
the oil is of Iranian origin in the United Arab Emirates or else·
The reason behind such cooperaand
for
permits
to sail through Iran- where.
'tion between former adversaries is
ian
waters.
The source said the ships
money, the international officials
The Revolutionary Guards some- engaged in smuggling were regissay.
The fuel allegedly •is taken on times provide Iranian flags and reg- tered in many different countries,
board at an Iraqi port i~ the Shall al· istration papers for the vessels, the including Belize. The largest num·
Arab. a river formed by the conHu- sources said. They also instruct ship her were registered in the United
ence of the Tigris and Euphrates pilots on how to steer through Arab Emirates. he said, without giving precise figures .
rivers, Y{hich Hows between Iraq coastal waters to avoid detection.
One
coriJ.mjuee
source
said
some
and Iran into the Gulf.

in

The Daily

Sentin~l

-ONLY-

with auiomatic weapons. One Swiss
survivor said the "very young" gunmen calmly shot victims who had
dived to the ground or run for cover
behind temple pillars .
Police gunned down one attacker
at the site and the five others after
they hijacked a bus. Authorities.
counted only six gunmen, but the aiGamaa statement said nine others
escaped.

(CHILD'S NAME)
Parents" or
Grandpa(ents Name

Per PicturePrepaid
Please enclose self-addressed,
stamped envelope to return your
photo.

Last year, ai-Gamaa took respon·
sibility for killing 16 Greek tourists .
at a hotel near the pyramids on the
edge of Cairo. The group also
claimed an assassination attempt on
Mubarak while he was visiting
Ethiopia in June 1995; he was
unharmed.
•
In Monday's auack. the slain foreigners were 31. Swiss, eight Japanese. five Germans, four Britons, a ,. ·
' Bulgarian, a Colombian and a ,
French citizen. Seven of the dead
were still unidentified, police said.
Twenty-four people were wounded.

Official
Entry
Form

Tourists have warily returned to
marvel at the sandstone terraces of
the temple, now bloodstained and
bullet-scam:d. Hundreds of foreign
travelers have fled the country. and
tour agents worldwide canceled
thousands of bookings.

:Taiwan's most-wanted man surrenders
COIN. PEAS 01 w:!N BEANS

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vegetables

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.

: 'TAIPEI. Taiwan (AP)- A slaying
: suspect hunted by police for the past
: six months released his last hostage
: today and sutTendered, ending a 24. hour .standoff at the home of a South
: African diplomat.
.
. Chen Chin·hsing freed Anne
: Alexander. wife of South African
· defense attache E.G.M. Alexander.
:and was whisked away in a police
·motorcade to an unidentified loca: tion.
Local television said Chen would
:be taken first to a safe house, then
: Hown by heIicopter to a second
·'location.
;. Mrs. Alexander walked into an
.-ambulance. apparently unhurt, and
iwas driven to a hospital to visit her
&gt;husband and a daughter, who were
;:.Oieased hours earlier after being
·:injured in a brief gunballle between
&gt;chen and police.
.
·, Chen was wanted in the kidnap_ping and killing of a television star's
'een-age daughter and the slaying of
·a plastic surgeon and two nurses.
· The teen's killing trisgercd an
·outpouring of public anger over ris:ing violent crime and the govern-

IUD.A. OIOICE EF

TUrkey

Boneless Bottom

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right leg and the daughter was hit in
the wrist and hip.
Two more hostages - Alcxan,dcr's foster child, a Taiwanese
infaill, and his 12-year-old daughter,
Christine - were released this after. noon after officials promised they
would reinvestigate the role of
Chen's wife and brother-in-law in
the crimes he is accused of.
After the initial shootout,. police
sought a negotiated solution, bring. ing Chen's wife to the , house this
morning to help mediate.
They later allowed ·opposition
lawmaker Frank Hsieh to enter. He
spent nearly two hours talking with
Chen before walking out with Christine.
While in the Alexander home,
Chen spent several hours on the telephone with T11iwanese television sta·
lions, calmly admilling to a string of
grisly crimes.
He acknowledged taking part in
the April kidnapping of Pai Hsiaoyen, the 17-year-old daughter of
popular television entertainer Pai
Ping-ping. He denied actually
killing the girl.

Chen also admitted to breaking
into homes around Taipei and raping
several women, as well as helping
kill the doctor and two nurses. .
He insisted that his family members played no role in the violence,
and said he would release the
hostages only if promised that they
would be released. He said he would
then kill himself.

=

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Taiwan's Foreign Ministry
spokesman said Taiwan apologized
to South Africa, one of only 30
countries lhat recognize Taiwan .
South Africa plans to switch ties to
China by the end of this year. China "
claims sovereignty over Taiwan.

Ill

~

HYDERABAD, India (AP) - A bomb exploded outside a film studio in
ihe southern Indian city of Hyderabad today, killing 20 people and injuring
,20 others, the police chief said. A movie producer whose rivals were
:believed behind the attack was seriously injured.
.
. Bloodied bodies were strewn on the street outside the D. Rama Naidu
film studio on the outskirts of Hydcrabad. 800 miles south of New Delhi. A
crowd of actors, journalists and fans had gathered for a ceremony to kick off
the filming of a new movie, .
.
, . .
.
,
· Police Chief Ram Prat~p Smgh sa1d seven of the IOJured wcre·m se11ous
condition. ,t,mong those hurt was popular Indian actor Mohan Babu, who
had a role in the movie.
Many of the injured lost limbs, said Singh, who.added that the death toll
was likely to rise.
.
.
.
Police believe the target of the bombong was Paritala Rav1, a former
•politician who was producing the movie. Ravi, a form.er leftist guerrilla
fighter whose political rivals were thought to be responsible for the auack,
was seriously hurt.
The bomb, which Singh said was probably remote-controlled, was hidden
at the studio entrance and exploded just as people were leaving the ceremo~
.
The blast left a crater six feet wide and two feel deep. A car leavmg the
studio took the full impact of the blast, which witnesses said lifted the vehi-

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Pai Ping-ping tearfully accused
Chen of lying and called on him to
release the hostages and give him:
self up "'if you still have a soul."

;

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Another suspect in the case, Kao
Tien-min, killed himself after being
trapped by police in an apanment in
northern Taipei on Monday.

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A third suspect, Lin Chun-sheng.
apparently commiued suicide after a
shootout with police in a residential
area of Taipei in August.

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clc several feet into the air. Five other cars were damaged.

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DeadDne: Friday, Dec. .19 at 3 p&amp;
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Mall or bring the entry form:

The Daily Sentinel
.

&gt; ·

I 800 853 3033 ,
•

-u
sc::.

;Blast kills 20 st.film studio in southern India

'

... _

ment's seeming' inability to control
it.
Chen "s surrender ended a hostage
drama that began about S·p.m. Thesday when he followed Alexander
from a nearby convenience store
into his home, one of several villas
in a walled compound in nonhero
Taipei.
Chen took the family ·of five
hostage, later explaining that he targeted foreigners to draw attention to
his demand for the release of his
wife, Chang Su-chen, and brotherin-law, Chang Chih-hui. They were
convicted of being his accomplices
and sentenced to 12 years and life in
prison .
Hundreds of police in body armor
lined the roads around the house,
riHes at the ready.
Police tried to break into the
home "Tuesday night to rescue the
hostages, and Alexa~der and his 22year-old daughter, Melanie, were
injured in the crossfire. Chen
allowed police to bring the two to a
hospital, where officials said they
were in stable condition.
Alexander was wounded in the

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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f4\tliMAA*t11'*5IAA :rt 1\fliti 51*51.;a

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�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 13

Carey's downfall a blow to labor reform
WASHINGTON (AP) - To
many, Ron Carey symbolized
teform at the Teamsten.
After decades of institutionalized
corruption, his victory in the union's
first rank-and-file election in 1991
was seen as evidence that organized
crime's grip had been pried loose
from the 1.4-million-mcmber union.
He brough! a tepu..tion as an
honest uade unionist built during
mote lhan two decades as a local
president in New York, and by clim·
inaling perks and slashing salaries at
headqowters he cheered embattled
union reformers.
Now the reformer's teign is com·
ing to an ignominious end. While
some question whether the progress
he made will be erased by his failings, others say refonn has taken
root at the nation's largest privatesector union.
A court-appointed mo.nitor, Kenneth Conboy, barred Carey from a
rerun eleclion against challenger
James P. Hoffa. finding that Carey
had engaged in an illegal fund-raising scheme thar siphoned $735,000
from the union treasury.
The government has devoted millions of dollars and some 40 years of
PROBES INCIDENT • Ohio Slate Petrol trooper B. J. Wllllama . litigation to cleaning up the union,
pulls cross from ground at Wilberforceto lake to the crime lab Tues- including some $20 million on the
1996 eleclion that was annulled.
day (AP)
While , scandal has returned to
Teamsters headquarters, longtime
students of labor and activists argue

Cross-burning reported,
.patrol is investigating

/'

WILBERFORCE, (AP)
Someone planted and apparenlly
~tried to bum a cross next to the
]llational Afro-American Museum
:and Cultural Center, authorities said.
Museum spokesman Michael ·sampson said staffers saw the cross
.when they arrived at work Tuesday
•morning.
; Sampson said racial slurs, KKK
~and a swaslika were written on the
qoss, which was made of lumber
.and stood about five feet tall. He
-said the cross was slightly charred
on the back and there was a smell of
kerosene in the air.
"11 was shocking. Our staffers are
•very uneasy," said Sampson.

"'

·u.s. bans

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
No case of bovine spongifonn
Stales has banned imponed encephalopathy, the proper name of
:Cattle, sheep, their meat and many the neurological disorder fatal in
related products from Belgium af1er . cattle, has ever been reponed in 'the
-a case of mad cow disease was United Slates. Since 1989, 1he govreponed there last month.
emment has banned imports of live
"This emergency measure was animals and many producls derived
taken to protect animal and public - from them from countries where the
'health." Joan M. Arnoldi, deputy disease is known to exist. ·
Eating meat from cattle tainted
..administrator for veterinary services
'\vith the Agriculture Department's by the diseased is believed to cause
.animal inspection agency, said Tucs- the brain-wasting Creutzfcldt-Jakob
~ay.
disease in humans.
~United

is laughable."
The 'leainstcrs scandallw been a
problein for labor since allegations
&amp;~ainsl Carey's campaign surfaced
shonly after his re-election.
Labor's influence has been on the
rise: since John Sweeney took con:
trol of the 13 million-member AFLCIO in 1995. With new energy,
unions have been posting some
impressive 011anizing and publi¢
relations gains. But Co~boy 's deci•
sion implicated the AFI..-CIO anci
union officials who, like Carey:
played key roles in putting Sweeney
in power.
.
· ·'
Gerald McEntee, president of~
American Federation of Stale,
County and Municipal Employees,
admitted to Conboy that he soliciled
$20,000 for Carey from a printing
company called Kelly Press.
Rich Trumka, Sweeney's No. 2 at
the federation, is accused of funnel ing $150,000 from the Teamsters
through the AA..-CIO 10 a liberal
consumer group used' as a conduit in
the scheme, bul invoked his Fiflh
Amendment right against selfincrimination and declined to speak
wilh Conboy.
Sweeney issued a statement saying it was an "article offaith that the
AFL-CIO does not interfere in internal union elections" and repeating.
" We have not found evidence of any
illegal conduct by the AA..-CIO."

weapons~

That some of these weapons may
be intended for possible conflict
with neighboring Iran should not
slow the international effort to
resume U.N. Special' Commission
inspections in Iraq, says Anthony
Cordesman, a Mideast analyst with
the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based
think tank.
"Only effective UNSCOM operations can de,ler Iraq from rapidly
rebuilding its wartime capabilities,"
Cordesman wrole in a recent study,
adding that a newly re-anned Sad·
dam would spark "a new anns race

kin~d present major new prob-

lem for U.S. forces in the region."
Thro h illegal imports and clandestine research programs, Iraq has
improved its chemical and biological weapons technology and has the
know-how -: though nolthe critical
fissile material - to assemble a
workable nuclear weapon, U.N.
inspectors found.
Equally important, Iraq also may
retain some ability 10 deliver these
weapons. lnspCc:tors working for the
United Nations say lhey have
accounted for all but two of Iraq's
Scud missiles. U.S. intelligence officials are nol so sure; they say 'Iraq
may be able 10 attack distant targets
through a small, bidden c~he of
medium- and long-range missiles.
All . these elements of Iraq's
weapons programs are underscored
in separate reports and briefings by
U.S. intelligence officials, outside
experts on the Mideast, the U.N.
Special Commission that conducted
the on-site inspeCtions in Iraq- and

the British Foreign Office.
The British repon, disclosed to
news media Tuesday, coofinns U.S.
intelligence assertions that Iraq may
have hidden "a handful" of largely
complete missiles along with chemical and biological weapons.
"In a crisis these could be available for use within a matter of
weeks, or perhaps even days," lhe
report said. "Provided it still has key
components - and 1hat is unclear
- Iraq could within a few months
build, wilh little risk of detection,
missiles capable of hitting Israel and
key targets in Saudi Arabia."
Those targets could include
major U.S.' military installations,
such as air bases that serve the allied
missions over southern and northern
Iraqi that have been going on since
the end of the Persian Gulf War in
1991.
·A particular area of concern is
Iraq's efforts at developing VX, a
highly lethal nerve agent known to
linger in the atmosphere and pose a

nerve gas sarin would have dissipated.
"The Commission recently
obtained further sufficient evidence
that Iraq had indeed suc~ed in
acquiring VX production hpabilities," UNSCOM reponed. "Given
that prior to 1995 Iraq completely
denied lhe production of VX and
anempted to eliminate all traces of
such activities in order. to conceal
them from the Commission, this
area clearly requires further verification efforts."
Based on U.N. and U.S. reports,
the key ingredients of Iraq's ,
weapons-of-mass-destruclion capa·
bility may include:
-At least two Scud missiles that
remain unaccounted for after U.N.
inspections, analysis of Gulf War
records and Iraqi claims of what it
has destroyed on its own.
-Equipment to manufacture
missile airframes and warheads.

FOR THE PERSON WHO HAS EVERYTHING
1 YEAR GIFT .SUBSCRIPTION TO
THE DAILY SENTINEL

52 WEEKS

FOR ONlY
sa8.40

. TRUCKING

PARTS

DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
GravelLimestone-

Buy, Sell &amp; Trade

Sand- Dirt

Richard's Lawn 6 ~arden
Gravely Dealer
1-8CJ0.827-41551
Spencer, W.Va.
,.

614-992-3220
11/31117 1 mo pel

YOUNG'S
'• CARPEIITER SERVIa
.

~ ··

Happy Holidays
I

·l~ar I

I

i

Exterior

PalnUng
AIIO Concrete Wortc
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

•I
I

'

'

Pomeroy, Ohio

-

'• • •

•

From

CHEVAUER'S
CARPO CUANING

$19.95 per roo•
Min. 2 Rooms

I

W.Z-11215
~ ••

..

614-992-oo77
Offer good
Nov. 20-Dec. 20
11111m1 ma. pd.

11

BACK HOE"
SERVICE

THE DAILY SENTINEL
"YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER"

992-6305

Open Now &amp;.Wil Be
Open Dtrlag The low
&amp;Regular
Dew StaSOII
742·2076
10/211171 mo. pd•.

PL Ull SIND A QII'T SUBSCRIPTION OF THE DAILY SENTINEL FOR 1 YeAR fOR ONLY
.
IUIIICRPTIOH QIFT ,OR:

~~------------------------------------------­

In Memory of
~Y Husband,

BILL PETTIT,
On Our 26th
Wadding
Anniversary
Nov. 19, 1971.
Wife, Nancy

AmmED----~----------------------------------­

conoocuiiVI
In Tho rantll
Dolly Stnllnel,WHkl
1 nowapaper
ol gonerll clrcullllon In thlo
county ond require all Forkod
Pork,
credit ore of thlo eatott Mola• County, Ohio.
locolld In Ohio, d11lrtng to . Olllclal bid prop011l1 will
1111rt their clalma egolnll bo racelvld In the office o1
• IN THE ESTATE OF
lht rtol 101111 of oold tho Dlvlolon of Parka end
. Rag~~~~~: Nonc E1 docldlntlacolld In Ohio, to Recreation until 2:00 p.m.,
TO CREDITORS
fill their clalmo In IIIII court December 10, 1H7. lllda
PUBUCAnON within 3 1110nth1 from the will be publicly oponod
Syblo Kunklo, 551 llluo filing of tho outhentlcetod thorooftor by tho Chief or
. Jey Drive, vendolle, Ohio copy ol lettoro, or tholr hlo authorized agent. Tho
c111me will be forever right Ia t11ervld to reliCt
45377 , tiled an
· llcotod copy ol
borred 11 Ilona agalnal Ohio any and oil bldl.
oppolntmont luuod to
reel ootate.
Tho lotH will be for •
by the Steto of Florldl,
Robort E. auck, Judge term of epproxlmltlly four
· Probate Dlvlalon, Circuit (11) 5, 12, 1t 31c
(4) yaero from leuo
·c
c
::.:.:..::.:=..:.:.;:::.____ 1 oxocutlon
to Docombor 31,
., ourt of Paeco ounty,
Public Notice
2001 , Seld leoet may be
renewed 11 tho option of tho
, Florldt, end moved the
; Court lor publication of
Dlr~or
tor a perlod not to
NOncE TO BIDDERS
""' lour
. noIIco t o eredltoro oI ••ld
llllcald
(4) ynra.
, 111111 to lilt their clelme In
Tho Ohio Doportmont of
Tho Dhllalon of Pe,.. end
·IIIII court H tppeerlng thll Naturel Raeourcta, through
·
·
Rocrtellon will provide ano
t I b lldln
·tho reel ooteto of aeld the Dlvlalon of Ptrkl end b I
:docldanl Ia loceled In thlo Reerelllon, purauentto·tnd
oe ren •
u
g, 1
In tccordenco with the ltoragt 1r11, -lor ren.. l
•county, Ill• ORDERED thtl
S
boola, tnlgnod lend, 1,.11
;tho copy ol lottero bo provlelone of ecllon ol the PI~ for the epeclflc
-recordld In lhlo court, end 1501.10 of the Ohio RIYIIId
••
Codo propooeo 10 lotoo lor purpo11 ot operating Vlnd'thai notlco of tho filing
Ina mechlnee, operating
:thorool bo publlohed lor 3 the operotlon ·of tht boot equipment II enumerated
In tho bid opeclllcetlono,
end all water nacooury tor
the operation of tho fecHity.
Tho Conc1111onelre will
lurnlah ell olhlr equipment,
merchendloe, motorlala,
auppllle, Ullllll11, end labor
noc1111ry to operate tho
concooelon to opprovol
lttndarde during the
11eoon of oparetlon and
dolly houro 11 dollnld In
the 11110 epeclflcetlono. It
oholl bo the Intent of the
loooo thot tho minimum
uuon of operation bo , _
Mey 151o Stptlmbor 15. '
Roquoota lor bid propoul
forma ahould bo modo to
the Ohio Department ol
Neturel R110urcea, Dlvlalon
Large 16" Deluxe $12.99
ol
end Rocroellon,
Large 16" Three Item $9.99
ConcHolona Socllon, 11152
Belcher Drlvt, C·3,
992-9200
Columbuo, Ohio 43224.
Telephone: (814) 2115 8540.

Jenny

.

IUSIMSS CUSTOMEit5: CMI your Mlts ritpl'tHnt111Y't fOf' an appointment .

C~-~~~~~~~~~~~--~----~--~-ZIP

••• IIIII of .. rvlct 1114 co•tr1ct re,.vlrt41 . CrHII ,.llrh:tlont .,,,,, U:D •lnvtlt 11•0 ,uliJII W'tlbMI) !lUlU H IIUIII owtr - · ' ' ' '
INIIIII. . lllfllo~tt-MstiiiCI Chl ...t . , , ,, AlftiMeltHiellllln ltllf•IMOII'III'"-,.IIIIIIItl, Off., .. CIMfltllll lllllltallr locltlolll .,
'
k11111 rulrktl1111 ''''1· Offer .. ,,,,, Dte1111111r J1 , 1117,

,

Custom Homes

7:00 a.m. thN 4:00

Roofing, Sklng,

PolaBima,

p~~~..,..l

Dicke,
C.,H Us
F01 A FrtHI

814-742·30110
814-742-3324
814-742-3071

Monday thru Friday

You,

&amp; Timmy

HEIRLOOM CONNEOION

Remodeling

81

Heirloom Quality CU&amp;tom Furniture
• l:eJDplete Kltehens
* Kltehen Cablne• Relaelng
* Andque Rep-.lue,lone
Handcrafted Using Meigs Co. Hardwood

1998 Martin Street

614-992-4106
Free Estimates
Still Takln Orders for Chrlltmea

. Joa Wllaon

Pomtroy, Ohio 45769

(814 992-4277

BANKIUPftY [
ChapJer 7

Chapter 13 ' 1

For Information Regarding

-.

Bankruptcy contact:

ANNOUNCtr.1E.N1 S

005

Garages • Replacement Windows
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

William Safranek,
Attorney At Law.
614-592·5025
Athens, Ohio

4

2/12/IIMn
___

LET A PSYCHIC ANSWER

I YOUR QUESTIONS! 1-900·329·
1189, EAt. 5-407, 13.99 Pvr Min.
Must Be 18 Vrs, Serv-U el9-64511434.
FRUSTRATEDIII Need Somoo""

Wreaths- Swags &amp;
Grave Blankets

••

$10 &amp;Up
BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT
Rt. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742-3051

..

To Talk To'? Call Now For
Someone Who'll Understand!!! 1•
9DO· 772·3888,
e403. $3.98
Per Min. Mutt Be 18 Yrs. Serv-U

e...

619-BC$-8434.

SPORTS
RESULTS
SPREADSIII 1·900·285·9413,
Ext. 3207, $2.98 Per Min. Mull Be
18 Yra. Serv.U 819-1145-84~ .
ROMANCE- STATE Of
THE ART
Feel A little -wkward. Shy, Or
Maybe Uncomfortable Is Asking

OPEN NOV. 23- t 1 to 8:00
.

1•

Someone For A Date? Then Gat

Wilh The Program!

..

'
. ' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....., lrv An Er:clling Oitteren£ Ap•, _ _......._...,_....._..._
proach To Finding Tnat Special
SOmeone ! The Power It All
Vours ... At Your Olscrelion , AI
•,
Your Convenience, At You r Fingertips!
Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
CALLNOWI
•Re-cores • New· Radiators ·
1·900·289·1077 Ext. 1388, $2.99
Per MinUte. Must Be 18 Yn,
Se&lt;v·U 8\9-645-8434
Oxy - Accetl Regulator Repair
~·

·RADIATOR REPAIR

RACINE,OH.

614-949-3060
·. John Williams,
Owner
Llcanied
Electrician

992·5583

•

SAYRE
Hauling, ExcaVItlng
&amp; Trenching .
Umeatone &amp; Gravel
Septic Syllltma
Tl'llller &amp; Houu Sitae
RHIOnlble Ratee
Joe N. Sayre

.

........

Complete Machine Shop Service Fabricllllon
Steel Sales, Weldint Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday. 8:00a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday • 8:00 a.m • • 12 noon

Swings, a-has, ~ables
....
II
,
Misc. Items

a·•g .Bencl.fa bfiCa
• tlon,

~:,1:S:~:S7

1'- , . _ IIIII leelt
.,.,... t111t11 ,.._,.
, _ "~ , . _ ,

~=======~
I
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
StoP 6 Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985 4473

~~-;:--=:::;;;;:7:/22/tfn::::
Pick up dl~e~rded
appiiiiiCII, blllltrlel,
many metal• &amp;
motor blockl.

614-992-4025 ....

1yr old half Australian Sl'lepl\lrd,
very oood with kids. 304 · 576·

2477.

' 4 PuPPIII if not gone by Thank•·
: gi'ling we Will have U&gt; gir.~t !hem 10
lhe Aminal Shellon . ~614) 4481208 .

' old 1-Bmwn. 1-Biadl/ Brawn. lind
; 4 all Bladt (61AIA4! ·1335

' . 7 Puppies : Cule 4 Males, &amp; 3 F•
. males, Mother Regit~erad a,.QIIt,

. i 5Wee~s01d, 61A~
o;,.,_, 304·675-5892.

Free kinens, t so~d gray &amp; 2 solid white. 81t..&amp;e3-5350.
Full-Blooded Lab Pupploo, Gold·
en, Chocolate &amp; Black, 614·245·

.9188.
Several Young Roosters, 'Different

~!feed&amp;,

Sevenol Garboll" Bags 01

AlurniR.Im Cans, 814-25&amp;-1399.

Loll and Found

60

Found· blacl&lt; &amp; wlllte Boogie type

Machine.&amp; Welding Shop

~~:~~:!~~~;i5tl~.,hfor~

.
p
250 Condor Street
omeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on·Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-773-5861

Found: r:nat. Waturl coon hound,

1'-...,.o;_.._;;..;;;;;;;.;;.;;,;.;;..;;.~.;.;,;;..._ _.;o;.;...~

Lost· molt
blackHollow
&amp; browrl,
I ("Bud"),
BarBeagl'
30 &amp; Owl
Rd

Higley Rd.. lliddlopart vicinity, coli
su -742· 2475, atH42·2889 o•
• 14· 742·1408.

814·1185-4481. .

and Beat Pump•~==

.lNfMfiB.
'

W. Ylnl-lluol
Be Plild In Adnnce.
DfAQUNE: 2:00 p.rrt
11\o day boloro lho ld

- Easy Bank Financing -

I Fulrruo~:aa

Is to run. Sunday

*2S00 a month

odHion - 2:00p.m.
FrldoJ. IIandor odHion
• 10:00 a.m. Satunt.y.

IW•••• Pumpslnstall~'3800 a month

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

FIW &amp;llmstll

BIIINIII COOLIIII
Serving Southaaotam OH &amp; VoN
114-4411-11418
1~7
Safford School Rd.,
OH

·

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

~
lA\

All Yard S.IH Must h Peld tn
Adnnce. Oudllne: 1:OOpm the

day belire the ad le to run,

Sundar a MondiJ tdltl•n·
1:00pm Foldor.

80

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

Auction
and Flea Malltet

ATTENTION VENDORS: Indoor
Spoco $5.00 Ouldoor 13.00 Open
Everyday. Store houra a-5, Crawlard's Fie• Markt1, Hendtrson,

WV. 30H75-5A04 .

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Umeatone • Gravel
Dirt • Send

Chriatmas AutiiOn-Novembtr 21,
12 Hour1. 12 Noon- 12 Midnight.
UL Alto Auction Rt 2·33 ·crosa·
foada" Bill Mo ore, Ll tllt Roy.
Uvtrtl Olt1 tr s. Brtnda Fraz ier
t1 S1 S. Ed F011Z11r 1830.

1185-4422
Cheater, Ohio

Giveaway

lame Furnac• , .....
70

ROBERT IISSILL
CONSTRUCTION

HMith&amp;arviOM

OH .

.. •·,• .

Handcrafted Wood
Projects

Public Notice

POMEROY,

614-992·5479

My PLACE.

NIII'VII tho ~ghlto rljiCt

40

· 8 Puppln milled Shepperd, 8 M..

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

Call 1·900·285-9413
18 • $2.99 Mfn.
Ext 3278.

1 Year Old Male German
Shepherd Miz, 614-~-3993.

360' Communications

614-742-2138
c. "

t/4/1111

CELLULAR PHONES

·TRUCKING

_,.lng

Movies, Horoscopes, Financial

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

Fl'ft E1tlmste1

PUBLIC NDnaiCih.iEinl~oat
NoiiOIII horlby
on Sllurdly, N - - 22,
1187, It 10:00 a.m., 1 public
1111 will bo hold at 211 W..t
Second Slrlll, Pomeroy,
Ohio, Tho Fermer'• lllnlc
and Sevlnge Company
lot, to Hll lor Ollh
,...
tho following collllerel:
111114 PONnAC GRAND All
1G2NE11133RMIIOIII88
The· f'trmer'a lank and
Sevlnne
Compenv,
•
•
Pomeroy, Ohio, rHervll
the rlghl to bid atlhla 1111,
end to withdrew the lllow
colllterel prior to ulo.
Further, Tho fll'llllrl lank
tnd Savlnge Company

Sport• + Enl.taln...nl

State Certified Welder
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

24 hr. emergency

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOncE
Notlctla hortby given thlt
on Slturdey, Novembor 22,
1H7, 11 8:30a.m.. a public
1111 w1a bl hold 11 1100 Eaat
Main llrul, Pomeroy, Ohio,
J.D. Auto Stl11 lot, to 1111
lor cuh 1111 following collaterel:
DONALD C. ANDERSON 11112 FAEIGHTUNER
Director TRUCK
(11) 12, 18, H; (12) 3, 4tc
1FUPYDYB1CH20827S
The l'ermor'a Bonk end
Sevlnge
Company,
Public Notice
Pomeroy, Ohio, re11rvn
PUBUCNOncE
tho right to bid II IIIII 1111,
The tlflhlun mombor end to withdrew tho. ellow
0 IIIII•Jtckoon·Metea. colletlrtl prlo~- to 1111.
Board ol Alcohol, Drug Further, Tho Fetmlrl lank
Addiction end Mentel end
Savlnge Compeny
HHHh 'S.rvlcu II tppolnt- I'll 1rvt1 thl right to rwfect
ld by tho Director Of tho eny or til blclltubmlltld.
Ohio llepertmont ol M-1
Further, tho allow oolll·
HMHh (4 lppol-), tho
erel will blaoklln 1111 conDlreotor of 1111 OhiO
dillon II 11 In, with no
Dlptrtment of Aloohol end IXPrlll or Implied Wll•
Drug Addiction Slrvlcll (4
given.
appotnt111), ond tho rlniiN
~or further Information.
County Commlaelonere In' .contect Deolrll 11 H2·
Galllt, JIOkiOn end MilOt 2131.
Countlae (10 eppolnten). (11) 11, 20, 21
Currently, thoro It one
VICincy to bo flllad by
ODADAS lor 1 drug end
tlcohol proleulonel.
Individual• lnteraatld In
bllng conllderld lor IIIII
IJIPOintmlnt can do eo by
ntlng an appllcttlon
from:
lei A. Adklna,
Ex
DI..Gallle-JackiOn-MIIge
Botrcl of Alcohol, Drug
Addlollon end ~I

e...

CHRISTMAS TREES

~

414 Boooi'ICI AYI~
P.O. Box 514
Golllpolle, OH 45831
Phono: 1114 4411 3022
The Boord llrlvH to ""''""
llln 1 bolanced l'lpriHII,.
lion o1 community marnbora and niCOIIIII mlnorlo
ty or lemole eppllcanla.
(11) 1t, :ZO, 21; 3TC

any or an bide aubmlllld.
Furthor, tho allow cotlat·
erel will bo tcld In 1111 condHion It It In, with no
expro11 or Implied war·
rentlu given.
For further lnformttlon,
contact Dnlroo ot H2·
2136.
(11) 111, :ZO, 21

' IIEET YOUR COMPANION I
81~1145-843-1 .

...

RUTLAND
AMERICAN LEGION
. WICKS
SLUGMATOI
HAULING.
SAT., NOV. 22
Umestone,
STARTS 7:00P.M.
Gravel, Sand,
BEACH GROVE RD.
GUN SHOOT SUN., Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470
NOV. 23, I P.M. .
.

t; $2.99 ~in . Setv-U8113-t-CS-804.

D00-285-9119,
7055, s2 .8t·
Per Min. Must Be 18 Yra. StrY·U

(No Sunday Calls)

(UmtStontLow Riles)

'

1 Bored Ohio .Houaewives I ' a 1·
aoo-2&amp;5-11077, Ext .cses 11 +

614-992·7643

UWIIM1_,..

'

DATELINE

1100-285-8111 EXT. 17*1
Only $2.11111'1tr MitMite
· Mutt Be 18 - • Old.
Se&lt;v.U 818-6&lt;05-843-1.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Room Additions • Roofing

Personals

ANXIOUS?
10 tEET IOIIEONE?
nAiD Of THAT OLO BAR
SCENE?THENCALLTHE

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

1.;

r;~~~~~~~~I--..!:P~u~b::ll::.c.!N::ot=ICI::..,_

IN THE COURT
COMMON
PLEASOF
OF
MEIGS COUNT'I: OHIO
PRO
E DM,SION
BAT
IN THE MAl b~:~:~. 3o107

Christy, Donnie,

1051 IH1 S - Sa.t_ Adlons. OH (1141SM-nlS
- o d ponklpotlt19- eon-n1ca11ono Dtalon

llldcllopott. Ohio - Naw HomH, Add~,

614-384-6212

Hou,.: ·

Ohio

WVHa3477,

In Memory

We Love

,.40 (Ji'aYN~~t.lnclutled).

'110 Court St

33111 """"' Hollow .....

LUMP AID STOKER COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAIUILE

Landscaping
Septic Tanks
Water Lines

S.R. 325,
Langevllle OH

You're The
Best!

AC'TIVATION AND A
ALL FO~ ONLY

••FACI'ORY
DJRE(;T
. PRil:ES"
Quality Window Systems

WELLSTON, ')HIO

No Job 7b smaU

OILER'S
DEER SHOP

(Carol Southern)

~0 f~~~ MINUUQ OV~~ ON~

.25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

•

......w••••ts

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 mliM e . .t of Route 32.

'

•Room Addition.
•NewG•r••
•Electrical I Plumbing
•Roofing
.

I

&amp; REPAIRS

(Free Dlacount parts list)
Same Day Repair Service

HAPPY 51st
BIRTHDAY
"MOM"

-

'

•

IIIGS'

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

1

p,,.,

' r;lllfoCf

ITATE

IRAVILY liilCIIII

1

312 GIFTS
•

S&amp;L

Saddam believed capable of quickly mobilizing deadly weapons
WASHINGTON (AP)- Despite that is certain to lead Iran to reply in now the lalest entry, a new report by hazard long afler the more.common

The State Highway Patrol was intense intematio~al scrutiny, Saddam Hussein has kept Iraq on a
investigating.
course
to developing a fonnidable
Lt. John Born, patrol spokesman,
arsenal
of chemical, biological and
said the cross appeared to have been
nuclear
weapons, U.S. and internadoused with an accelerant and lighted, but il either did not catch fire or tional weapons experts say.
The full array of killer chemical
was put out.
.
and
biological weapons - anthrax,
He said investigators were checking the cross for fibers and finger- VX nerve gas, aflatoxin, botulinum
prints and have interviewed museum toxin, sarin and mustard gas, among
officials to try to get more infonna- others - could be produced and
"weaponized" in secret, all within a
lion.
"We don't have· any suspects matter of weeks or months, accorddeveloped yet," he said. "We're ing to U.S. and international inlelligence reports.
hoping someone will call."
There are no massive weapons
The .museum, chartered by Congress, opened in 1988 and employs stockpiles - Iraq doesn't need
them, the experts say. It already has
15 workers.
the key ingredient: the expertise
needed to manufacture these

all Belgian
_c attle, sheep products

that the tefonn eft'ons haven't been was a difference belween the
for noupt The union chalked up charges &amp;~linst Carey and the vioone of ltbor't bigeat victories in 1 lence and rKI::eteering of the union 's
decede with tbe UPS llrilce, and it •past
played a key role in labor's pua·
But othen, lil::e Tom Leedham, a
1'0011 fight to blocl:: the fast-tnck union official considered 8 conauthority to nc1otille trede cleols tender 10 replace Cmy on the ticket
th11 Presideat Olaton Wlllled.
challenging Hoffa, saw no distincThe Teamsten .-e more cnPied lion.
in n:cruilmenl and involvine mcm" If any of this were true, 1 think
hers in union affairs than ever whet's wrong is wrong," said l..eedbefore, lebor activists say, llld the ham, who said thm although he was
mafia 1w no influence over held- "distressed" by the facts laid out in
quuters.
Conboy's report he was willing 10
"The genie of • mote tesponsivc take Carey's word that he had done
union wodring ·assiduously for its nothing wrong.
members will never be .put back in
Nevertheless, Leedham said, "we
the bottle," said Michael Holland, a have to usc the same standards for
labor lawyer who served as election everybody in the union if we are
officer for the Teamsten' 1991 con- really serious about democracy and
lest.
... cleaning up the union."
Holland credited Carey wllh
Meanwhile, Carey's promise 10
helping to tum the union around, but appeal the decision was slowing
the ovcniding point of reform, he efforts ·IO settle 011 a new candida1e
said, was that the members continue to oppose Hoffa. And the eleclion
to have a direct say in its operations. overseer, Benn~ Mansfield, said
"Whether the person that they Tuesday she wanted to delay the
choost symbolizes them as much as rerun while she scrutinized Hoffa's
Ron Caiey seemed 10 symbolize finances .
them is really not so much the point
"Let's hope that they do the·same
as it is the members having the kind of investigation, from congresopportunily to express their will on a sional committees to the FBI ... that
continuing basis," Holland said. has been done on Carey," said Ken
"And that will cndute."
Paff. leader of Teamslers for a
Michael Belzer, a labor studies Democratic Union.
professor at the University of Michi"There's
nothmg
there,"
gan, agreed that "the union is cer- declared Hoffa campaign manager
tainly cleaner" and added that lherc Tom Pazzi. "What they 've alleged

20 Yrs. E&gt;ep. • Ins. Owner:, Ron1:1le Jonu

Ritk Pearson Auc.rlon Company,
lu ll tlma t 1Jtllon11 r, complttt
auction
serv ice.
Llctnatd
oee.OIIIo l WoOl Ylrglnlo, 304·

77M715 Or 304-773-5447.

I

•

�.

Wedneedey, November 19, 1197

,,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 1.1

,U.I.EYOOP

=t
••
PHILLIP.
ALDER

.=-.011111

ACROII

.=.a...,

eo.•w:lll 1
balm
I Dln:nlng
t

..........
-

42 ...... In lllilrld
Gfllle
• Fwllt blrdl.
•1 Tlll Rating-

12lrnpel

S Btdroon1 t4501rno. + )HO de·
POll I + \1 tllitlll, b81etnent, ea·

f:!~~:~:~~ti~ U.S. Currency,

11198 Schull, 3 btdrooma, 2 rogo, polio &amp;largo yord.

.S..•IIt,. EIC. Acquisilions: Jewelry

bath&amp;, centrallir, vln~l aiding,
ahlngltcl roor, 2 deckar barn
building. aGU75-1275.
.

Coin Shop, 1St Second OHIO vAllEY PUBLISHING CO.
,....,.... Gallipolis, 81 • ...a.21Ul.
recommends thai you db busi·

;Kntiques, top. prices paid, Riv~r­ ness with people you know, and
•na Antiques. Pomeroy, OhiO, NOT to send money througtl the
'Run UCiore owner. 614-992· mail until you have investigated
lilt ollo&lt;ing.

~-

.Antlquel· no item too large or 100 FAMOUS MILLIONAIRE·MAK·
!linall. Also estates, appraisals, ER Reveals Exciting New ways
rifinishing, cus1om orders, 614· To Earn 50-100K A Year Fasrt 24

Hr. Msg. -573-3085.

992-8578.
Clean Lara Uodel Cera Or
irucka. 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith BUick Pontiac. 1900 Eastem Avenue, Galtipofis.

CASH
GIWITSI
College. Scholarshipo.

J &amp; D' s Auto Parts. Buying sal -

Business. Medical Bills.

FREE

Discounl Mobile Home Parts &amp;
Acceuorle$, . Vinyl Skirting

Nwer Repay.

vage whicles. Selling parts. 304·

CAll ToR free

773·5033.

1-800-218-9000 Ext G· 2814.

Non - Wor~ing Washer, Dryers,

Air Conditioners, Color T. l/. 's,

Suppllea, Water Healer~ Furnoc·
-304-875-3000. lom-Spm.
os, liberglasa Stopa, Call 814·
Mobile Homes
Moblltltomelolllor rtnt sntdy
448·9418 Bennett'a Supply. 1391
for Rent
Cove 11 now oceopllng appllca·
~~ord Sc:hool Ad, Gallipolis, I~_,.,_,.,...,.._____ tiona. One month frH for quali·
l•x70, 2 bedroom. no polo, 614· !ltd appllcanll. No oullide pata.
Display Doublewldta $1199 Down 1 7:.;4::.2·::.27:.;1.::•·:..._______ Horllord. 304-88.2·311&lt;11.
Includes Oelivet'y, Set-Up, &amp; Tall· I'
u 1111 h
1
11 1J1 •·
~
14ll70, 3 bedroom, no pets, 814- ...o t ome Ill ava a I -•es. 304-'1.....-3409.
742-27,...
ween Athens and Pomeroy, c1il
DOUill.E WIOE DISPLAY SAL£
~11-385-13117.
$999 DOWN
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homoe~~~~~;s;;;.;;'iF;;R,;,:
SAVE s1ooo
U80·$300, ltWtr, wa1or and
Spact For Rant,
Fr.. Oeli""Y &amp; Setup
1111111 Included. 814-11112-2157.

Way

1238.
Wanted To Buy: Holiday SJ~rbie's
1988, 1990, 1993. 1994, 614·

230

245-5887.
Wanted To Buy : Tlriiber And

Professional
Services

HARTS MASONARY · Block,
brick &amp; atone work, 30 yearS e.r-

land With Standing Timber, 614682-7318.

penence, reasonable rates. 304895-3591 ahor 6:00pm, no job to
smau or 10 BIG. WV-021206

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

OAKWOOD HOliES. NITRO
304·755-588S.

livin~sron 's basement wa1er·
proofing, all basement repairs

------···

Oo.ublewida On land $250 Deposit ~Ired, 30C-73B-7295.

done, tree eaumales, liltlime
guarantee. 1pyrs on job experi·
ence. 304-675-2145.

11 o Help wanted

AVON I Al l Areas-' I Shirley
Spears, 304-675-, A29.

Doublewldes Mual Go! G.99%
FiQd Rato On Seleeltd Models,
304·736·3409.
FIRSTniiEBUYERS
E·Z FINANCING
2 01 3 Beclra:oms around $2'00 per
month. 1-1100·251-5070.

Computer Users Needed. Work
own hours. S20k to $50iclyr 1•

800-3&lt;3-71BBx150a
DAVID WIUTE SERVICES
Fui-Time HVAC Installation
•EPA Cortihcation
•2 Years Experience

• All real estate actvenising in
this newspaper Is subfed to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes II illegal
to advertise ·any preference,
limitation or discrimination
base&lt;f on race. color, religion,
Sek familial s1atus or n&amp;tional
. origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference.
limitation or discrimination.·

114-446-4840
800-27~21181

Dependable And Flexible CNA'a
Needed For In Home Care.' Call
Adrianne Or Angi At 1-800-481 -

11334.
Drivers

....... ..
~

GOOD FREIGHT
Home Most Weekends!
Up To-~ Per Mile I
Good Benefilsl
Corwenlionalsl
COL·A &amp; 1 Yr. om Exp.
Call Ken 800-395-1045
wlekends l€venings
800-1193-6792

Free air, tree skirt, 1411170 3 bedroom, $1,055/down, S~96tmo.

can 1-~..&amp;91-8777.

Free air, tree ,skill, 161180 3 or 4
bedroom S1.3501down, S299m'IO.

accept
aclvertlsements for reaJ estate
which is in viOlatiofl of the
taw. Our readers are hereby
inlonned tha1 all dwelllngs
knowing~

advertised in this newspaper
are available' on an equal

&lt;1992.

Oak

Hill~

Appllancea:

Orytra, Rangta, Rafrl·
gratora, 90 Day GuarantMI
Frtneh City May lag, 61 4-448·
77G5.

1---------..;._

Calil-800·691-6777.
ONLY $499 DOWN
ON SEL£CTIVE SINGLE WIDES
Fr.. Delivery &amp; Setup
OAI&lt;WOOD HOMES. NITRO
304· 75~5685.

Ohio Based Trucking

Company Is See~no EIIPirlenced

OTR Semi-Tractor /Trailer Otiv·
. ers. EllceHtnt Pay &amp; Insurance
Package. cau &amp;1 ..682-eG13. ·
3 -4 Bedrooms, Optional Family
Room, CA, 2 Baths, ln·Qround
OR liCU Experierl&lt;td RN'o
Pool, $73,000, 814·446·4173,
Wanll!d For Newly Oewloping
Nursing Ragiatry. Self Schecluling
4 Bedroom, lull size bas&amp;ment,
And Co"'4JJititve Compensalion. .
Please Respond To:
. P.Q Box 828·
Morle!la, OH •5750.

Single· Parent Program. ~ Rent
When You Can Own. Special Fi·
nancing Avaifabl&amp;, 3:&gt;4·738-7295.

-I

'line Street,
1.fl00.480 3119

Two bedroom, Mulberry Avenue,
Pomero.-. g11 heat. $150 per

kly area. 301-675-8885.

.

Englander Pollet Stove, $500,
61.. 256«151.

Apartments
. for Rent

1 and 2 bedtaom apattinllnlll, fur·
nlthtd and unfurnllllld, oecurlly

Re~igera!Or,

deposit required, no peta, 814·

T.V.; VCR $50 Each, 614·250·

802-2218.

.

. _1238_._ _ _ _ _ _ __

1 Btdroom All Utllltlet InclUded

.....r

Wa-. Dryer, Color

IIYERSIDE 'MtOLESALE
114·25H8811

Bunk Bad a Comp. $225: Sola I
Chllr $249: 4 Country Plno T-.
1br Boneh 1 3 Chain $235: 7 Pc.

apta, 10me utlllliea Included, Cedar BR S789; Oak Curio C.b.
c:entrallocatlan wlth·ln walking It 50: Pottery, Mexican Blankets,
distance or Poet Oftlce &amp; Foodland, reaaonable rent &amp; low d•

lnclanl, Ere.

posit 301-875-2053.
2 bedr&lt;&gt;om apartmont " Pomeroy,

Roum 7 South, Crown Chy
Open 11-S. Sol &amp; Sun

ulilitles paid, no Pell, 114·8i92·

Uled ·Furniture Store, 130 Bull·
I

~-

3711. EOH.

For sate- model 2S Winchester
pump lllloiQUI\ 814-742-G!Ol.
Grubb'l Plano- tuning &amp; rppaira.

Hob1r1 Meat Saw, Sllcero~ Pany
t.tacl'line, •Cutting Tables, Toledo

Mill Gr._, 614·448-8030.

'

Kenmore Washer &amp; Dryer S100
Pew, Fuel Oil Stove Pluo 2~5 Gill·
lon Fuel link, $150 For Pair, 814-

448-6172,61 .. 256-8251.

HUNTlHE

Qulltl tor sale, hand pieced and
hand quilled, 30..S63-55911.

R &amp; S Furniture ~.
llaoon, WV It

Buy, Soil, Trade t
Ulld &amp; Anllqu11 ~ ·
Furnitu,.,

...

304-773-5341.
Rainbow IW&amp;Bper with all attach·
menta lncludlni carpet ahampooer, very good condition, S250,

540 Miscellaneous
Etllciency On Easlern AYenue,
Washer &amp; Dryer, Utilities Paid,
$400, 81 .. 4411-251!i.

Merchandise
1 Electric Furnace $305; 1 Gas

Fur,... 100,000 Bru $1110, 814·
El1rl Nice, 2 bedraam, All alec:· 4411-8306, 1-100-21ll-0098.
trlc, Furniahed kitchen, WID 112 Caret Diamond EngaGement
Hook-Up. Close to Spring Valley, Ring, Paid S1 ,400 Will Sell For
No Pelll $375.00 llrrllth. Dlpolil $700, 81•·3118-81~.
, Reference required. (814) 448·
8157 after 4:pm.

Furni&amp;hed EHiciency. All Ulllitiet

2 Grave Sl111 $300, Memorial
Gardens. 811-lol8·26201

Peid, Shiro Bath, $185/Mo.. 019 20 + 4 Ca•• Trencher Call .814Second Avenue, Phone: 814-C48· 1114-7842 Aller 4 P.M.
»&gt;S.
2300 dilc:h witch trencher. Call
814-711-42 ohor 4prn

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,

81 • ...a.0390.

55 Gallon fi&amp;h Tank, Excellent
Condition, 1250, Call Evenings,
8 IH46·1 0011.

Nice dean 2bedroom, wid hook-· a X PHEN · FEN &amp; Redu• Cilonll
up. Reference•. Depo1it. No Try . Our tOO% Safe Natural

poll. 304-87~5182.

Weightlosa Herbal Tablet, Oia·

Nice One Bedroom Unfurnished

441·1982.

Aparlr:n-tt Ra9 &amp; Regrlgerator

Prolridtd. We1er l Gorl&gt;lgo Peld,
Dopoeil Requkod, Call 814-448·
4345 Aftore P.M.
Ca'&amp;h Paid For Land. In Gallia
Coun~ • Blackburn Realty 814·
446-oool.

One Bedroom Near Hol~r 128
~onlh Heat Budgel, Ground
Floor, Kitchen Appllancea Furnlohtd. •:zeg Plus Ullllaoo (81•1
441-21157

RFNTA LS

Small One Bedroom In Coun11y

2 BtdlliCiml, 2 Bath Hou11 Wllh
of "'" wii bebrollln my
home. arn or pm shlh, 01"-378·

Dlshwa&amp;her Built-In Appliancel,

Uallty Room, Flroploco. Sllualld
On 20 AerM In Crown City, Now
Avalloble, HUD Approvtd, e,..
441·951 1. Or'814-4*3523.

1400.

11188, 14X10 Ciaylln S. WOD&lt;I, 3
-oionol TrH 541Mto, Slump Ndrooma, 2 Batna. WIHeat
Removal, Free Eatlmateal ln- Pump f15,000. (6141-Je '
.,,.,.,, BidWIH. Ohio. 614·388·
1g~3 Oakwood 14Jl70, e11c .
.... l14-:le7·lU10.
cond.~ neat pump, lhil1gled' roor,
Will Noll junk or 111111 · 1351 Sholl Crtdll Union. :104·576·
pldlutllood. aGU75-5035.

--

2 or 3 B•droom noute In Nn
HIYin. go111go, bo11!!11n~ •3351
mo. + depo11t &amp; utJIIUea. 614·
158-4401.
2 ....1111ry hou,. loi ron1 In Ru·
lllnd, .....,Kim

304-m-.

'

1~~~~~~~~::.:::

tributor• Needed Now, Call 114·

Aluminum Storm Windowl DifferSlzn For Older Home; Sparta

tnt

Card Collection. VCR Vidios,

Mull Soill814·-211.

like new, 1500 OBO. 304-875·
5365.
'

1981 GMC SLE PU, 350 Loaded,
16,500; 19GO Ford Lariat XLT
Loadod, $5.200: 1901 Cl!ov., S.lD
0450.
Blazer .&lt; Door. $6,200: 1992 Ford
SQuare bale• $1 .50 to t2.25 1 Ra~er PU: '$3.000: 1990 ChiW.,
nile N. Rt 2. 304-875-3980.
lumma Van $2,9QO; 1991 $~10
PU $2,200: 19119 S-10 PU $1,500:
WIH haul tobacco. 304-1175-2087.
B&amp;D Aula Sales, Hwy. 160 N.
81+44B-6111l5.

710 Autos for Sale

1982 Toyota Corolla, no rust,
runs excellent, 45 mpg, S750,

ral And LP Gas Furnacu. Lile·
time Warranry On Heat Ex:chang·
er. ·u You Don't Can Us We Both
Loae1• Free Eltimaleal Add·On

1985 Uercury Grand Marquis,
Automatic, 302, V-8, Remanufac·
lured Engine Has Lets Than

Twent~

Sevenlh Year ·In The

·t.t.tlng &amp; Cooling Buaine~a· t 81Co4-4S-630e, 1-800-291 \0098.
TANK~,000

Gallon

.TH' FRONT
PORCH!!

tal ""

118 Flm-rale

&amp;.::·'

17 . . . . . . . . . .

11 Dlallilgtfnlm 17
..,.. • ollalr
.. - - 10M
20 Ola
118 G: hh1

=

type..... IOIIaona'-

22Puader
. 24

ltalp

258ala

Dog, lor ilhorl
a11 Ceirllga

II
any

'

DOWN

alrondJIII

.

a~::l::m
.

10~ ~

'

•
.=::..

~~~- ·

111818'

;":k

21
clollt
23 ltnciiOW .

25---

?

U·Haul Co. Hei Used Trucks For
sa1e. cau 1·600-262-8575.

40,000 Miles, $1,200: 1090

Dodge Caravan,

Automatic, 2.5l,

4 Cyl., Clean, Reliable. $3,200.
ll14...a.7215. .

YOV'ftt T'#IO
NO,.,TtfS Wft41NI&gt;
IN YOVIC

PAY-

M~NTS." ,.:&amp;....:..:~

• • 'N •·LJI-i,;JI•
~

.,

• IT ~~!-\Ere '&lt;001\k\U,~W
l£N'.I~

.,

electrl~

ranQe,

Building
Supplies
etc. Clautte Wlnt&amp;fl,

560

Pels for Sale

2 Yeaf Old Full-Blood" Female

l

949·3412.

i

t993 Ford EJCpJorer, Loadecl, 6144411·41199.
Ford E •plorer Eddie Bauer

Loaded, PW, PS. leather Seall,
4x4, Stere.o Syatem, .Excellent
1985 Nissan 300: 1978 Chevy· Condition; '15"14-448-6754 Aftet' 4
, 480 Holmes bed, dual P.M.
call 614-949-2355 or

1987 llonla Corio Super Span, T·
Tapa, 305, Corveue Reiley's

199fl 300 EX HOnda, Call Afler

$2,400. 080 81 ..36Nl138.

4:30P.M. 61._2.5-5158.

1••• C 1' • ..1 79 ooo lltl
· - avaler ""o. ·
es;
12.295:
1Gil0 Grand Am 5 Speed,
NADA $3,775 Our Price: S1,9G5,
Cook MoTors, 614-448-0103.
1990 Old&amp; Cutlass Supreme,
Loodtd, Standard, L•lher Seall,
CD, eDK, Excetlint Condition
15,600, 114-......,...222
111110 Pontile Grand Am $2,500:
111110 Pontiac Grand Prl•, 12.500:
111113 Ford Taurua, $3,1100; 19G2
Ponlloe Grand Prix S4.90o: 1U3
Ford Festlva $1,700; 8&amp;0 Auto
Solet, Hwy. 100 N., 81 ..4 - &amp;

ao.s.
448

"KC German Shepl'lerd Puppy,
12wkl old, female, 11t shots &amp;
wormed. 304-875-8639.

AKC Reg. Sharpei ·chocolate leAKC Regl1tentd Bas1el Puppies,
CFA Reglslered, Seal Point
Siamese Kittens; New Boys 12
Speed Hulfy Bicycl&amp;, 614-367-

7705.
AKC Registered Oalmat1an pups,
champlon line, Dred for tempera·
menl, adults alae available,
Chri1tmas bjables coming, reasonable prices, 814-74~·~2.
AKC R•~:t~rc:_ Pekingeae,
1150,814-

Board, Chlf'lll Cabinet, 814-U&amp;-

Bolton Territr tor ialt. e14·992·

1383.

·

Arlo. Wllhor /Oryor, s-. Frlg.. Baby bod,. 11101111, hiOh chair, car Cocktail, Males and Female&amp;,
'
Vtry CIMn, Wt Pay W.ltr /Gar· . aeat, 1wlng &amp; rocker. 304·675- (6141388-11714
,
bag•· Tenn1n1 P1y1 Electric:, 4548.
Four Jack Ru11ell terrier puppies,
$3 0 Dtpotll, f350/Mo .. 614·
Beanie Babiel. hard to get ·.port 1250 each ; live Miniature Collie
448·2205, 814·448·9515, No card
in..,ta, rare camica, hard 10 Shll~et. S125 each; will hold until
Smolwi,Nofind acllan flvurfl. Priced below Ctlristmu with deposit, 614-742·
Tara Townhouse Apartmtnll, currenl marMt value. Ju•t In ~me 205tl.
Very Spacloua: 2 bodrooma, 2 lor Chrillmu. Col lor lallll prlc.t
Floo" CA. 1 liZ 8aih, Fuly Cor· quoiM ond dlllllt, 61H411-30GI Nine week old Bo•er Pups, flr&amp;t
ptltd, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Peal, lnve mtiiBgt before 5:00pm, or ahotl, dew claws remond, tails
·doc:kod, f12~ 614-742·2525.
Pallo, Start 1350II.to. No Pet1, c o l - 5:11H:OOprn.
leaH Plua Security Depolit A• 80011. By Redwlng, Chippewa.
qulrod, 61 4-4•6-3181, 814·448· Rocky, Ton~ lama, Guaranteed Poodle puppiea- tin~ tor: a11o
mlniiiUrt Schnauzer, champion
0101.
L-1 Prk:ll AI Shoe Call, Gol· bloodline, male, AKC; 114·187·
ipcitiL
:MO-t.
Tlllln RIVera T - now·-~~~~~
tppllcallono lor 11ir: HUD aubakf; Btown Krohlar love nat, qry lt'lolf H~brlda, ChOWI. Huaklll,
:::~r· for elderly and handi- good condition. f75. 304·773- lllltnuiH, &amp; Peodltl. Mull Still
5123.
EOH 31H-e7U67V.
814 :Jill 0421.

-

-

350~n.

37

lltl

'•

41 Halfolbl .\
43--World•'
Tu
• .~

... around
~

~!

!•

48 Obltlcl1a
418-k

In two
50 Actor
Wyla
•
11 F....,._ ·

u;r,'; .
fill~

(comb. form}

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Carnpot

.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The most useful thing about a princlple' tS that rt can
• always be seeriflced lo expediency."- W. Somerset Mau~am. ·
•

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WOlD
,::~:~;~, s~tt~\A-L&amp;r.~s·
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Rearr!'nge letTers of, the
scrambled words below to form four limpl. words.
.
'

IT I I I 1
ECILUS

1

Mlll.ll

,.
NUMBERED . ,.
8 . PRINT
LETTERS IN SQUAR~S

·~~~~E~MBlEFOR

Honda 19M TRX 250R 2 Suoke,
Good Condition, $2,500 No Leu,
:61:;4::·44:;::.11-4~11:.:3.:__ _ _ __

ou~

IWEDNESDAY

SERVICES

Pockaoe. 42 MPG, AC, CO, 5
Speed, Excellenr Condition,
34,000 Miles, $4,500. 090 614·
370-21115.
1993 Pontiac Grand Am Auto, 2
Doort, AIC, Power locks, Til~ CD
Player, New Tires, Amer. Racing
Wheels. 65,000 Mile&amp;, 1 Owner,

Home ·
Improvements
BASEIENT.
WATERPRDOFINO

Unconditional lifetime guarantee.
Local references furnished. E&amp;·
tabtished 1075. Call (814) 446·
0870 Or t -800-287-0576. Rogers
Wa1erprooling.

-Price, 814•44e·964S.

18i95 Monte Carlo loaded, 32,000
leather interior, gold
package, Allo~ wheels, Unted
windows, slill ' under warranty.

miles,

113,500 080. 304-67~2342.

1995 Red Plymouth Neon Sport, CIC Ge:neral Home Main·
Wheel Drive, tenence - Painting, vinyl siding,
AUIFM Stereo Cauene. AC, Ell· · carpentry, doors, windows, bath&amp;,
collent Condllion, 40,000 Miln, mobile.home repair and moAI. For
free esUma1e call Chet, 614·ei2·
7 5055

~:l~~-~~~ "

•

Evenings: 8323.

1D95 Saturn SC2. Automatic:, Air,
Crui&amp;&amp;, AMIFM ca,seue. Trunk
AeltiM. 112,000 Call Mer 5 P.M.
(Serious Inquiries Only!) lUI ·
44-4015.

DENNY"S PLUMBING
ttstalalion 'I AIJ)IIr 17 'Yel.ra
Ellperlence "Toiltti• Faucets"
Wt" Pun.,a"Hot &amp; Cokl WattrUnea. Coli304-578-211111

-·FREE ESTIMATES-

1998 blaclil CheYrolet Monte Carlo, POL, PW, air, tilt, cruise, 3.1 H· Roqer'&amp; Plumbing Servlc1, E.r·
rre V·8. eketllent cOndillon. pertenced, Free E1tlmatta, C1rr

S13,900 "rm, 814-V92-7562 llltr
8pm.
A Need A Car? No Credll, Bad
Credit Bankrup.ley, We Can Help
ReE1tabllah Cl'edit, Must Make
$150 Weekl1 Take Home, Down

Poymonll Ao Low At UG, To
Ouollly For Thlt Bank Financing,
81 ...41-otl07.

-

ASTRO·OIIAPR
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E.rperience All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag, 814·C46 ·
77115. '

Automatic, Fron1

All8r 5, 814-148-8568.

840 Electrical and

Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wiring,
repairs, Malter U.'
cenaed electrician. Rldenaur
EltclriCII, WV000308. 301·875•
nM 18f'VICI or

1788.

_

4
•

_

_

•

•
1• 1,

I II II I I II

Weasel· Hitch· Puffy· Bawail· USE IT

Accessories

810

_

I've conCluded that advice is comRfjcated because
you don't know if it is Rood or bad until vou .llSF IT

1988 Ranger 373V 18' 12 ·2411
Trolling Mann, 150 XP Evinrude

$31195. 814·992-8824.

r r 1 r.r 1,

SCIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

750 8 081S &amp; M0 I Ors
for Sale

Parts

1993 Camara (new stylv), V-8
aulD, red, kladed, e11tres, 38,COQ
miles. Exc. Condl $t0,000. 30CAKC Rag Dalmatian cmos. old, . &amp;75-3&gt;87.
hat had sllota, very gentle. $50. ::.:..::..:.:::.:..:._ _ _ _ _ __
304·773-5418.
1993 Hyundai Sharp, Tilt, GT

male. 614-992-81G2.

atE.

_.:.:..:·::.:::.:...,.------350cc Yainaha Terrapro 4
Whae1er, P.T.O. With 41. Finish
Mowedlec:k. 814·44H183.

BUDGET . PRICE TRANSMIS·
1992 Chrysler LeBaron Convert- StoNI,
Used /Rebuilt, Ail Types,
able V-6, Auto, Air, Good Condi· Acceu OYer 10,000 Transmlallon, $5,250. Neg.: 1993 Z24 Convertable V-8, NADA LOan, Auto, sions.l Ctuleh&amp;s 614-245-5677
$8.37~ Allklng $8.500, Neg.. 111113 New (Ill tanka, 1 ton truck
Dodge Sprlit Automatic, Air, Good wheel&amp; I radiators. 0 &amp; R.Auto,
Condition, $3,550 NOlJ., . 81 1·258· Ripley. WV. 304-372-3933 or 1·
1738, 614-258-1252.
800-273-9329.
.

P.M. (e14)44t-1602

33""'"'

me•••P.34-•

814·

A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.
Featuring Hydro . Bath . Don
Sheetl. 373 Georges Creek Rd.

AKC Boxer Pupplea. 6 Weeks

llbode
31 Mt'NIIinlty ·

1gD8 Hondo 300 EX, Many EX·

uasl Excellent ConditiOn

, 892 Chevy Lumina, 3.1 Multipart 0&lt;/-rd. $8.600, 814·1192-27JU.
V-el englrie, air, til~ cruise, anv'lm
alereo canelte, automatic, 4 760 Auto
&amp;
door, ntW lirH, extra clean In and

Old $250, Call Between c 1nd g

published bridge magazines in Eng·
land. The youngest, Bridge Plus, is
the one I think most of y6u would
enjoy ·• except that you mustn't mind
the Acol bidding. It is a monthly
aimed squarely at the majority of avid
players. There is very little for the
expen.
As an example, here's a deal from
the Improver Page. How would you
play in three no-trump after West has
· · led the spade jack?
There is a natural impulse to take
an iriunediate club finesse. Fine if it ·
loses, but what do you do if it wins?
Before leat\ing, l09k ·• count your
top tricks. Here, you have seven:
three spades, two hearts, one diamond and one club. So, you need two
more tricks. Obviously, if the club
I
finesse is worlting, you can get the
tricks there. But what if the finesSt; is
F\.1(1"
losing and East knows enough to
duck sm()Othly the first time? Then
you'll need the ninth trick from diamonds.
After winning trick one, duck a
diamond .
Let's suppose East takes the trick
and switches to the hean queen. Win
and nqw take the ci,Ub finesse. After
it wins, as irmust, continue wilh the
ace and another diamond, Are they 3·
3? If so, claim. If not, take a second
~..----...----~ club finesse.
_Why not take the club finesSt;
THAT"S
before ducking a diamond? Because
NOT
a good West will win with the dia·
A IIAI&gt;
mond I0 and return a club, forcing
IDEA .
you to commit yourself before you
know lhe diamond position.
·
A one~year subscripti_on sent air·
mail "for free" costs $70. To order hv
credit caid, call or fax 0 11-44-1822·
:833080 during, work hours in Eng·
land.
·

pi

•r

Blue Auatralian ShephBfd 2 Full
Blooded Labrador Retrievera, 1
Black Female, &amp; 1 Chocolate
Male, 814-..M6-3413.

814-448·0231 .

~

"""'"'""....... I"TI'L

1991 Cl'levrolel Lumina APV,
must sell, needs acme .minor r•
pairs, a real steal, 12500, 814·

1ggc

27=.coech

Easl
AU pus

By PhiUIJtAider
There are three i,ndependently

r• TtfiS IS T~t
~I.~GT'ICIG. (OMPANY~"""'

THE BORN LOSER

Weal North
Pus 3 NT

25~

From the
founding fathers

FR4NJC &amp; F.4RNEST

8i4·742-3513.

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

WARM UP: High Elficloncy NaiU·

H•l Pumpe Orlly Sligllly Higher.
Call Ut Today. 1997 Ia The

HOW DID YOU IVIR
GIT THAT Wl.aLI
WORM TO SET
STILL

LOOK AT TH' PURTY

1991 S·10, runt great, body
rough $1fiMlO, new ~rea a bt'ake&amp;,

1189 Torino GT Fastback, 351 1992 Ford F·150 5spd, long bod,
W1 auto, hood scoop, original GT 61,000 miles. se,soo. 304·875·
wheels, 82,000 miles, look• &amp; 5424 olio&lt; 5pm
runa good, $1850, 614-247-1292.
1993 liiniled Ford Ellplorer, Ok.
19th Chevy Monte Carlo rebuilt Cranberry. loaded. 73,000 MI.
engine. $650 080. Coli 30-4·67~ Good Condillon. (6141•48·7310
7219aller 5:000..~.
111116 Ford DokD!a Sieroo Syotom,
1f81 Ford Mustang, new tii'es, Bed Cover.· A·1 Condition, 6
new brakes. B7,000actual milea, Speed. 614·446-6754 Alter 4
P.M.
$500. 30~-87~7e12.

1984 Ford Escor\ 4 Speed, $600.
814~.
.

Antique VIctorian Dre11er Duncan PhJ'fe 8 Pc. Dining Room
Group, Teble 8 Chairs, Side

3049, 614....e-1190.

MNetll•'a

ts
11 J F K :

Opening lead: • J

Alph'l I Orchard Gran Milled,
Phone: 814-448·1104, 414·•••·

1989 Dodge Dynaaty LE 3.0 new
water pump &amp; radlltor. $2,500 lQU GMC Solan Cu110m, $4,950
814-446-4222
080. 304-773-5054.

'

.

1500 lb. hay baloa, 120 a bale,
814-742·30tM or 814-742-3081.

Searl Pro-Form cross walker
plua personal traloer treadmill,

Rio Grande, OH Call 81-4-245·
5121.

3711-23119.

14,.70 Buddy, Nice Condl·
On Rented lot, 614·441 ·
61 ..448-2005.

Hay ·, Grain

814-742·3513.

OWl, lintels,

55 Gallon Aquarium With Wood·

2 Bedroom hou~. depolit I ret·
eroncot. 30«7H072.

640

81._8G2-75e2 olllr epm.

550

en Stand, Complete $250, 814-

410 Houses tor Rent

BARNEY

OF. TATER
S&amp;TTIN' ON

TRAN SPORTATI ON

Monumenr Sale: Quitting B\111·
ne111 John's Monuments ·113 Off
Umil Stock Ia Sold, 130 BulavUie
Pike, Gompoli, Oh~.

llealh
2 NT

PITCHER I GOT

367·71181.

Block, brick, sewer plJils. wind·

11112·7727.

Angus CtOII, call John or Harley
Alee, 814-1167·3389.

Seized Carl From 1175. Por~ch·
C.adillac;a, Chevr•. BMW'1,
Also Jeeps, 4 WO'I,
Area. Toll Free 1-800-211Ext A·2814 Far Current

Havt Dud, C:rept Wilt! Plate At
Hope U•uaoleum, In M(tmorial
Gardena, $-4,000, Or Nig:, 614·

GALLIACOUNTY

lkllldlnQ LDI FoiSIIt, SyiiiCUit,

Bred cows, hereford and hereford

Problema? Neod Tuned? Call the
plena Dr. e1 4....a-.525

011 Stove Wllh Blower: 2 Gas
Stoves, Fuel Oil Furn,~:e, .6143117-7533.

Wood /Stone Home + 18 Acrea

14=11'111

Vulnerable: Both

Woodburner With Blo!Ner, Fuel

8CI010 COUNTY

•-.._
DNol-

' Dealer: South

$150: Kitchen Aide porlabla dish·
washer, gold. $50; call 614·992·
5t 87 or e 14-9112-7233.

$225.000

18=iitlio-r&amp;lll

30
32

A 88 2
• Q 4

White Gib1on

Newer Houae W JPool + bO Acres Barna, Meadows, Pond,

• a2

·Soulh

Waterline Spacial: 314 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 100: 1· :!llo PSI
$37.00 Per, 100: All Bra01 Compmllon Filling&amp; In Slock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jac:klon, Ohio. 1-800-537~

NEW ~I FARM$

Eul

• Q J 10 8
• QJ 9
• K78 5

• I 2

Frida), 108m-4pm. 6 14·902·3725.

330 Farms for Sale

Ohio, Nict Area, S1B,800. B14·

• 9 8 4
t K 10 4

The Pomero~ Tnrilt Sh~Jp· now
buyinQ Levi jean• only, men'1.
women's and d'ildren'a, also little
girl&amp; dresses. toys, dolls and tod·
Cller car seats. Tuesday through

livery. 1-800-251·50JU,

Rood. t16,000. -~111.

• J 10. 7 5

L.t.HICI..I&lt;

Jac:koon. Ohio. 1-800-537·9528.

Weatwood Home Show-Used &amp;
RepO Sale! As little As $5001
Down Sl 50 Per llonlh. FrH De-

2.07 acrea 5mi out on Sandhill

Wed

o

Upright, Ron Evan's~nttrprlsel,

ery, 1·800-251·5070.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

rn 111£
R:lSfTIQ.J tt £l,f;R

• AK7

STORAGE

2bdrm. apts•• total electric, ap·
pllances furnished, laundry room
lacllitiH, c:lau to school in town.
Applicationa anllabla at: VIllage
Green Ap11. t40 or call 8~C-Q02-

Westwood Home Show Used &amp;
Repo Sale As Uule A's $500.00
Down And $150/Mo., Free Deliv-

Barn, Pend. lleodawl, fl 44,1100
Extra land Available, 1·800·213·
8365.

• 53 2
• 75 3
• A J 10 9 3

EEK&amp;:MEEK
""" SA~.-S

11-lt-fl

aAKQ3

now

Trailer for sate wtth lot an Condor
Street In ,Pomeroy, 2 bedroom, to·
tal electric, trailef needs some repair, asking 14,000, 814-9922034.

unfurnished, fenced back yard, 2
car detached garage, Camp Con-

1-800-5374528.

Polllfo
Ulld FumHuro
We
havtlllmy Surplualll
2101 Jolforton Ave.
Open 9:30 • 5:00 - 304-675-SOFA (7&amp;32)

81..9112·2034.

lbr Duplex, l·:!br &amp;Pl.

Oakwooct 28x56 3 be&lt;troom, 2
bath, 'starting at $199 per mo.

USED APPLIANCES

ca• 814·448· 7318,

and setup. Only $187.08 per
month with $1015 down. Call1-

691·6777.

GOOD

Waihera, dryen, refrigerators,
In ranges.
Skaggs Applianctl, 76

$31 5/llo.. Deposit Requlrtd, 414
Eaat COllege StrHt, Rio Grandt,
1 888 8&lt;1H1521.

$39,995. Free delivery. 1-800·

REAL ESTATE

t~nr

New 1998 14Jt70 three bedroom,
i"'ludes e monthe FREE lot rent.
Includes skirting, delu•e steps

New 281180 3 or 4 bedroom.

11

Two bedroom ttaller for
Raclno, 81•·9112·5039.

Reconditioned

Woallef~.

PI" 61&lt;1-11112·5856.

large seleCtion of used homes. 2

800-837-3238.

Evan&amp; EnterpriHa, Jack~n. OH

AERATION MOTORS ·
Repaired, Now I RabuWI In SIO&lt;~
cau Ron Evano. l·BOC-537·9528.

Three bedroom mobile horne. no

440

Crown Cky, 81 .. ·256-1744.

Concr11e &amp; Plastic Septic Tank&amp;,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallo~• Ron

JET

920 Fourth Avenue, 2 Bedroom
Trailer, Water Paid $300/llo.,
61 ..441o0573.

-

Mobile Home. 2 Garages, On lot,
Possible Land Contract, localion:

Earn &amp;lllrB money lor Christmas, IJ•IIl'olipl.po;,rt;,u.nlljlyllllb;,a"ll·s•.• - \
Nursing Assill&amp;nt Or Homemaker
To Provide In Horne Services For
Ttle Elderly fOisabled In La·
wrence &amp; Galli&amp; Co. Areas. 16.00
An Hour, Please CaR 1-888-453-

MER CHANDISE

2 Bedroom lraller 1275/depoah,
S275Jmo. References required,
no pe1L 304-875-4878.

cau 1·000-891-5777.

or 3 bedrooms. Starting it S2W5.
Quick deliver~. Call 61.4·385·
9621.

This newspaper will not

..........

1011 .won, call 61._949-9009.

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, 814·
44B·9589.

FirSt Time Buyers E·Z Financing Trailer For Rant, References No
2 Or 3 ~edrooms, Around $2001 ._Pe_"_·_6_1.._44_1--154-4._ _ __
Mo.. 1·B00·251·50lU.
r

-Oualifications•Prolessiooal Demenor

Tal l'roo BOC-522·2730 X4420.

· North
• e4

exao

$299.95, Anchors $5.00, Awn·

NEED A LOAN? Apply The Eaoy
-Br Phone. Friendly Loan.
814·388-11635.

VCR'i. Also Junk Cars, 614·256·

Month. Truckl, 4X4'1, EIC. Being
liquidated In Vbur Arta Now. All
Makes &amp; Modelt AvaHabtt. Call

CARS FOR tlOOI Trucka, botll,
4·Wheelers, mokk llamas. furnl·
lure, el~tronlca, computtl'l etc.
bf FBI, IRS, DEA. Available your
1G97 Shenniu 25 HP 4 1'/0, Llill area now. Call 1-8Q0-513·C343
Ult 5 Fl. King Kutter Flnloh Mow· Ext. S-9368
tr. $5,500, 81 ....1-1 ..8.
1980 ·1990 Clrt For $100111
SoiZod And Sold '
Chain Saw1: 3.8 Jonureda t8•
Locally Tt;allonlh.
S175: 029 Stihl Farm Bon 18"
Truc:ka, IX4'1, Ell:.
t:zeo: 380 Homelile Pro 18"' $135:
Hl01Hi22-2730, X 31101.
031AV S11hl18" 1145, 81'4·388·
8870.
Crllldlt Problems? We Can Help.
Eaay Bank Fl"onelno For Utod
Vehlclel, No Turn Down•. Call
1/'ICkle, 61 .. 448-2897.

tor 1
•'•P·
1
- t d ·~llclillon. K &amp; K llobllo
,.... w - -

ings, Ooora, Windows, Plumbing

220 Money to Loan

Stoves, Ri:tlrigerators, Freezers,

304-87~

«eel.

3 Bedroom Doublowldo, 112 IIIIo -110 Aporbnlnll 1br 1 :!br, no
'
Ouialde Bldwoll, U50111o., $350 ptiL -75-~72.
1997 1•x10 Spruce Ridge Sky· D&lt;lpoal\ • U1illloo, 61,..388-9354, 450 · Furnished
line, IWD bedroom, IWD balh. large No Colli Ahor 8 P.M.
ROOIMI
kllehen wllll laland, heo1 pump.
dlshnlllltr, IIOVI, Ill .oltc:VIc:, 011 3 bedroom. $100/mo. Otpotll.
Klnga llottl Lowut Ratto In
rented lolln counlry Httlng. call 301-67s..tl71 IIIVI
Town, Ntwly Rornodottd, HBO,
814·9•9·1400 or 304·773·5005
Clntmax:, Showtlmt &amp; Ollnty.
olltrepm.
Wookly Rain, Or llonlhly RIIH,
Conatructlon Worketa Wetcome
Cuatom Built Doublewldes over
81""4~1·Gell8, 611-141·5187.
250 Available Optlona, You Pick
The Floor Plan, Vou Cof)lrol The
Sleeping rooma with cooking.
Price. Thousands Leu Than
AIH 1raller apace on river. All
01~ Custom Buih Homes. Fachook-upa. Call afttr 2:00 p.m.,
rory Direct, No Micldlef!!an, 304304·773-5651, Mlaonwv.
738·3409.

INOTICEI

"- M.

IUY CAM FOR t100III
Stlzod And Sold LOeolly Thia

Thu~y,No~20,

1997
. In the year ahead, you could be
fonunale in promoting ventures in
which you 'II play a significanl role .
Your possibilities for rewards and
recognition arc stronJ.
SCORPIO (Oct. . 24-Nov. 22)
There is nothing ·so serious that it
can't be worked out today, even if lt
appears inswmounb!ble. Pursue pos·
itive purposes with victory in mind.
Scorpio, treat yourself to a birthday
gift. Send for your Astro-Oraph predictions for the year ahead by mail- .
ing $2 and SASE to Astro-OI'Iph, r:lo ·
this newspaper. P.O. Bo• 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY
10156. Be sure to stale your zodiac·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If a conflict of ideas arises today,
lake time to discuss things wilh
everyone involved. A mutually grat·
ifying balance can be achieved.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Move cautiously in joint endeavors
today, because money management
, could create problems within the
group. Everyone should be held
e9ually accountable.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Do
not feel you have · to stic~ to your
original blueprint today if you find
bener ways to achieve your objectives. Adjust your course when necessary.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You
may need 10 rely upon others to assist
you today with an important usignOijSRt. You shi&gt;Uid be able 1o choose
from a pilol of qualified assistants.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Things should work out well for you
today if you bank upon your own
abilities. Nothing is guaranteed If you
rely on the talents of a newcomer.
TAURUS (Apri120.May 20) Ear·
ly in the day you might try toO hard

'

I'LQ~.I'LE~Si ...

.)lflrr ~ liTtlE Cl'R.

to win peer approval. Lak r when you
start to relax, you'll recei·'e acknowledgment and endorsem1 nt
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You
might want to ignore lhe suggestions
of_a fii.end today if yo~ feel you're
better equipped to evahi life a panic·
ular development than he or she.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Financial trends look promising
today if you diligently follow up your
leads. You could begin 10 generate
earnings ftom previously unproduc·
tive channels.
LEO (Jullii3·Aua. 22) Your ini·
tial plans miiilPbc rejected today, but
don't let this upset you. The back-up
you have soins for you will be bet·
ter than the original.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) Be
patient and persistent loday if you
make a few mistakes It the onset of
an imponant involvement. Problems
can be rectified rather easily.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Large
groups will be more gratifying today
than spending tiine with a smaller cir·
cle. Being able to mix with lots of
people has ils advantages.

NOVEMBER19I

'·

�'

'

..
.1. .

OCTOBER
I
• ..fii.H
.
-.fii.H
'UT.H
IIT.H
IIIII C..
CHEVY TRU.C K ONTH DIU••.1-1. .
AT C &amp; ·0 MOTOR I•
.CHECK OUT THE SAVINGS
1998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
EXTENDED"CAB 414
.

.

Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chrome Bumpers, Chrome
.Appearance Package and Morel

Ohio Lottery
Cavs drop
NBA battle

Pick 3:
808
Pick 4:

2935
Super Lotto:
1·2·12-20-39-40

to Magi'

Kicker:

Sports on Page.s

886711

. .,_,., 48. NO. 153
C111117, Ohio Yllley Publllhlng Compeny

LOW

AS

1998 CHEVY
·5·10

WASHINGTON -America's monthly trade deficit soared 17 percent
to an eight-month high as impons of toys and telephone equipment helped
push the trade gap with China and other Asian nations 10 new records.
Today's Commerce Department report on the $11.1 billion deficit in
September, the worst since January, com~s amid fin~ncialtunnoil in Asia
and as President Clinton prepares for a summtl thts weekend wtlh the
region's leaders in Vancouver.
The U.S. appetite for imports from all countries rose 1.2 percent to a
new rceord of$89.1 billion in September. Exports slid 0.7 percent 10 $78
billion.
The deficit with the so-called Newly Industrialized Countries- Hong
Kong, South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan - more !han doubled to a
record $2 billion, pushed by a surge of computer imports.

,...__Humpback·whale. - Hussein chan.ges his mind
Clinton still wary
of Iraqi leader

AS
LOW

AS
*PRICE'INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

1'998 CHEVY S~ 10
EXTE DED CAB
Air Conditioning, Alum. Wheels, LS Package,
AM/FM Radio, W/L Tires, and Morell

,,

AS
*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

998 CHEVY BlAZE
4 WHEEL DRIVE
Air, AM/F~ Radio, Tachometer,
Locking Differential

LOW

AS

......

*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

"4.9% fiiiiiiCIII

. . . . IOVIIIIIIC
CIIDIT

AND

MOTORS TOYOTA
ST. ALBANS

I

•

Rachel Feast of SeaWorld of Ohio, along
with Michelle Bellomo used an Inflatable humpback whale to show students at Syracuse Ele-

mentary School the different parts of a whale
during Wednesday's Whales on Wheels program.

Syracuse pupils treated to
Whales on _
Wheels program
Students al Syr1cuse Elemen·
lary School were treated Wednesday to "Whales on Wheels". an
outreach program by SeaWorld of
Ohio.
Sponsored by the Syracuse
PTO; the program focused on
whales -- ranging from the small·
est, Commerson dolphins. to the
largest, the blue whale.

According to Sea Wprld education instructor Michelle Bellomo.
the program ofiCrs an intmdu&lt;.:tion
to whales and how they Iced. and
the environment in which they Jive.
Par1icipating: in the program
were students grades one through
six who were shown a slide presentation. did an eKcrcisc designed
to show the size of a whale. viewed

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton today promised lo keep
the pressure on Saddam Hussein to
assure he lives up lo an agreement
Jelling U.S. and other U.N. inspectors
resume their search for illicit
weapons material.
"The United Stales must remain.
and will remain, resolute in our
detcnniriation to prevent him from
threatening· his neighbors." Clinton
said.
At a prayer breakfast with religious leaders, Clinton said Russia.
Fl!ll~.Jind Britain all agreed that Iraq
.':Jllllsl ..comply unconditionally ~ith
' ihc will of the i!IICI'(Iqtional ccimmunili ' on weapons inspections.
"He said he would do that In the
coming days we will wait and sec if
he docs," Clinton said.
Underscoring the president's
theme. six huge B-52H bombers
roared away from Barksdale Air
Force Ba...: in Louisiana curly today
as the United States added reinforce:
mcnl~ to the Persian Gulf region.
All five members of !he U.N.
Security Council arc in accord that
the multinational inspection teams
will return to Iraq unconditionally.
White HOuse spokeswomen Anne
Luzzallo said curlier.
Clinton wa.&lt; noli lied of Suddam's
decision atiO p.m . Wednesday night
hy Sandy Berger. his national security asssistant.
"Generally speaking." Luuauo
said ... we view lhis ns an encouraging development nul one thai ultimately must be tested hy what Saddam Hussein docs. We have 10 sec
how it unfolds."
The U.N. Special Commission.
which oversees the search in Iraq for
illicit hiological, chemical and other

PROCESSED FOR DEPLOYMENT • Air Force Airman David
Rendon of Dallas receives an Atropine Injector, a nerve gas antidote, as he and other Travis AFB personnel are processed for
deployment to the Middle Eeat Wednesday. Approximately 200
Air Force personnel from Trevl,s are heeding to the Middle Eeat
to support operetlonl In the region. (AP) ·

weap&lt;&gt;ns material, is to meet Friday tn ha\Jc the inspectors return uncon: ·
ditionally." she said.
on procedures for monitoring Iraq.
Alllright 's spokesman. James P. •
lis rccommcmlutions arc subject to
Rullin,
said the secretary views the
unanimous approval hy the Security
lr;1qi announcement as a "step in the
Council.
Secretary of Stale Madeleine right dirct:tion ."
"But prcMJf of whe1hcr our ohjcc•
Alhrighl said in Geneva, Switzerland.
ti
ves
have been mel is whether the
where she mel, with Russian Foreign
tcanis
go hack to Iraq anti arc allnwcd
Minister Yevgcny Primnkqv, !hal !he
hl
pcrfttnn
their work unc.:&lt;•·nditionalagreement involved no U.S. or U.N.
t.:onccssions. The lr~i .. ; "arc prepared ly." he said.

inllaUtlllc life-sit.e killer mid hump·
huck whales and watched a videotape showing the birth of a killer
whale , Afterwards. instrucwr
RarhCI Feast showed genuine ami
model whale purls includin~ Ieeth.
halccn. a vcrtchrac and a rih.BaiL'Cn is an cla.'itic. horny muterial hanging from the upper jaw of
baleen whales used to strain plunkion from the water.

-Pt. Pleasant man killed inpwreck

AS

ALL PRICES INCWDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT IIIICWDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
UCENSE FEES.

the United States come from China. U.S. purcha.•cs of telephone equipment from China jumped by $105 million . America's higgcS! e&lt;portlo
China, commercial aircraft. fell hy $169 million .
The deficit with Japan rose 6.9 percent to S5.1 billion. U.S. purchases of clewical machinery and photo equipment rose whtlc sales of aircraft and cars !o Japan slumped.
China's deficit with !he United States is catching up tn Japan 's, which
is the largest of any counuy. h's running at an .annual rate of $4~.7 oillion this year while Japan 's is huilding ala $54 hill ion rate .
The deficit with America's two partners in the North American Free
Trude Agreement also incrca.&lt;ed. The gap with the higgcsl U.S. trade partncr, Canada, edged up 0.3 percent to $1.3 billion white the imbalance with
Mexico jumped 32.4 percent. also to $1.3 billion.
,
Just he fore Congress recessed for the year this month. Clinton withdrew in the face of concerted opposition a hid for traqc ncguliming authority to expand NAFfA to other Latin American nations.

Economists say the flood of imports from Asia will only increase.
Sh~ dev~luations of currepc!es, from South K~rea's won w.lndonesia's
nnggtl, wtll make the rcgton s goods cheaper m the Unued Stales and
make it difficuh for those countries to purchase American goods.
The deficit for the first nine months of 1997 is running at an annual
rate of $115.3 billion. even worse than the eight-year high of $111 bil·
lion in 1996.
·
'
Some analysts arc predicting the gap will soar to $200 billion next year
and will he the main force slowing U.S. growth trom its current robust
rate.
Less than a month al'!er Chinese President Jiang Zcmin paid a slate
visit to Washington, the deparlmenl said the gap with China jumped 13.4
percent to a record $5.5 billion.
h was driven by a $200 million increase in U.S. purchases of toys as ·
American stores stocked up for the holidays. Half'of all the toys sold in

Restyled .Front Grille, Instrument Panel,
Bumpers, and lncreased.Horse Powerll

LOW

2 Sectiono, 12 Pogea, 35 con1a
AGannett Co. No~

America's trade deficit jumps 17o/o

,I

AS

Partly cloudy tonight,
Iowa In 40a. Friday, rain
likely, hlgha In the upper

401 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 20, 1997

By DAVE SKIDMORE
A. .ocleted Pre11 Writer

AS

,

&amp; LEXUS

A 45·ycar·old Point Pleasant man Hospital after he in~ transported there
was killed in a slngle-vehicle accident lly the Middleport. Ohio EMS.
According 10 the Mason County
Wednesday al 7:05 p.m. on S.R. 62
Sheriffs
Department Leonard travin Clifton.
,
Lester Leonard. 45. was pro- eled off !he southbound lane of S.R.
' nounccd dead a! Veterans Memorial 62 in his 1984.Chcvrolc! S-10. struck

a guardrail. then a parked truck . The
parked truck. a 1979 Ford FIOO
owned hy Michael Conlin. of
Pomcwy. Ohio. was kn_~c!cd into a
parked 1989 Dodge owned by Dan J.
Bonccullcr of Gallipolis Ferry.

Bob Evans earnings up 20 percent
COLUMBUS - Bob Evans
Fanns Inc. has announced final
· results for the second quarter and first
· half of fiscajl998. Earnings per share
· were up more than 20 percent for
both periods. reflecting stronger
same-store sales in the company's
restaurants and improved profitability in its food products segment
-. For the 13 weeks ended Oct 24,
: ncl sales were $224.7 million, up 9
percent from $206.2 million a year
ago. Net income advanced 21 percent
to $11.7 million. or 28 cenls per
-,share, from $9.7 million, or 23 cents
per share, in the corresponding period last year.

For !he firs! half of the fiscal year.
net sales increased . 7 percent to
$446.7 million. white net income rose
19 percent 10 $22. 1 million, or 53
cents per share.
The restaurant segment achieved
ils fourth consecutive quarterly
increase in same-store sales, which
were up 4.8 percent from a year ago.
Total restaurant sales rose nearly 10
percent, and the segment's operating
income gained 12 percent de spite
higher labor and related costs.
"Same-store sales have benefited
from our c'?nlinued focus on execut- 1
ing at the restaurant level- serving
high quality food quickly and salis-

•

fying.Our customers at every level,"
said Daniel E, Evans, chainnan of the
board and chief executive officer.
"We arc particularly pleased with
the consumer response to our fall
menu, introduced midway through
the second quarter, which included
several new items that have proven
popular," he added.
In the food product segment, a
decline in raw material costs contributed 10 a significant profit gain
rela1ivc to subpar results a year ago.
The segment's net sales for the sec.
~nd quarter rose 7 percent from the
corresponding period last year, due to
Continued on page 3

PROCLAMATION SIGNING - Racine Mayor
Scott HIU, shown here aurrounded by Southern
Locll kindergartners 1nd first-graders at the
Racine Branch of the Meigs County Public

.

Voters approve
NEWAAK (AP) - Seven votes
pul · a referendum allowing Bob
Evans to open a restaurant in
Granville over the top on Election
day. .
The 718-711 vOle marked the
first time in the history of the Rio
Grande-based chain that one of its
restaurants became an election issue.
The results of Nov. 4 election
were certified Wednesday by the.
Licking County Board of Elections.
Opponents of the planned $1.8million restaurant wanted voters to
decide if the restaurant should be

B~b

Library, Tuesday signed 1 procl1m1tlon
announcing National Education Week In the vil-

lage.

Evans restaurant

1 built in violation of village zoning
codes.
Plans for 1hc restaurant included
parking in from of the building.
parking 100 clos~ to !he building and
a sign larger than codes allow.
The Village Council approved the
plan but opponent Mary Fcllabaum
said voters should be given !he
chance to decide if !he plan should
Stand.
She said Wednesday that voters
may have misunderstood the issue
and believed !hey were being asked

whether the company should he
allowed to huild in the village.
Meanwhile, the final official vote
count also showed a proposed 5-ycar,
I percent school income lax for
Newark failed by 4 votes.
Since Election Day results showed
the tax failing by only 36 votes. supporter.; felt there was a good chance
of the tax squeaking through after :
walk-in ballots were counted.
•

•

The school board will present the ::
proposal to voter.; again, Supcrinten- ·
dent Rick Evans said .
:-

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