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                  <text>Pqe 10 • The Dally Seatlnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Loggi~g on the Internet proves to.be .bad experience .for husband~
Jy ANN LANDERS
Internet -· both pro and con. Keep
Dear Aan Landers: You recently
Ann
reading:
commented on the World Wide Web
landers
From Haddam, Conn.: I read your
IJid the Internet. 1 qree these highresponse to Sen. Patrick Leahy
tech advancements are a wonderful
,..,, ..., _.,
wherein you stated, "The Internet is
"toy" for the lonely and the holed.
;!:',~""::'""'c• tailor-made for con men, the lonely
lbey also can be home wreckers.
and lhe bored:'' The same perils exist
~y wife of 18 years left me for a to know she
on the Internet as in all other areas of
guy she met on~ line. We had a good our joint bank account.
our lives. If you wouldn't buy a gold
marriage (I thought), a paid-for
You said a marriage that can be watch from a stranger in a bowling
bouse, a cabin in the mountains and busted up by the Internet must have alley, don't buy one on the Internet.
two great kids. There was no hint ol had so.me serious flaws. Well, if ours
Denton. Texas: Tell your Internet
b'Ouble until she began to stay up had' flaws, I never knew it. Please addicts to use common sense. When
until 3 in ..__
· my 1etter as a wammg
· to 01 hers you are posting to a chat room, it's
u"' momt'ng ••hatti'ng on- pnnt
line with a man in New Hampshire. .. who think logging on the Internet is the same as writing your name on a
Last week when 1 -..
---e ho·me a mce,
· harm 1ess hobby. -- California bathroom wall. You have no idea who
·
from w.ork,I found a note saying she Heartbreak
is going to read it or how they might
went to meet "lolmny" and 1shouldDear Calif. : Sorry you had ~uch a use the information.
n't worry. She promised to call me bad experience. A great many jJeople
Madison, Wis. : You seem to think
, "soon," and oh, yes __ she wanted lne have heen writing to me abounhe there are no positive aspects to· the
.
.

Internet. Well, how about these: Are
you moving and interested in real
estate in your ne10 city? The Internet
can help you. Maybe you'd like to
know about a good hotel in Selcuk,
Turkey. The info's on the Web. Do
you enjoy lames Fallows on National Public Radio and want to read his
books? Check ~ut the website. Do
you like to stay in touch with the family? Three of my sisten; and two
brothers communicate via e-mail
almost daily. It has brought us all
closer.
San Bernardino, Calif.: Wary of
the Internet. Ann? I'll bet if you had
been around in the 1880s, you'd have
been suspicious of the telephone
because it could be used for "nefarious purposes." Anything new needs

time ·to be ICCepied, Lighten up.
Hello, dear readers: This is Ann
weighing in. I'm oo my trusted old
ffiM typewriter and saying thanks to
all who wrote. I promise to keep an
open -mind. Maybe something will
drop in.
Dear Readers: Tomorrow is Eleclion Day. If you don't bolher to vote,
you have no right to complain about
who gets elected. The essay that follows was, sent in by a reader in Mis-souri, and I have printed it in the past.
I hope it will inspire
• you. How
Important Is One Vote?
In 164S, one vote o•ave Oliver
Cromwell contnil of England.
In 1649, one vote caused Charles
I of England to be executed.
,
In 1776, one vote gave Americ~
.

NEW YORK (AP)- Phone rates

are sure to cheapen. ~ $20.8 billion
maniage ofMCI and British Telecom
will c.-eate a marketing free-for-all,
goading global rivals to slash prices
to get customers,
But wait, rates may get more
expensive. A combined MCI-British
· Telecom CO!lld squeeze out foes from
local and long-distance markets it
·controls, smothering the competition.
' Both scenarios were peddled as
.' the likely resUlt of the biggest foreign

takeover ever of a u.s. company. billion and 43 million business and U.S. competition.
Shareholder approval also is needWhich ultimately is deemed more residential customers in 72 countries.
ed.
·
They
will
call
the
merged
business
accurate could not only affect conConcen,
named
after
a
joint
venture
.
sumers' monthly bills, but determine
Investors today get their first
whether government regulators begun three years ago when British chance to respond to the takeover
approve what may tum out to be a Telecom bOught a stake in MCI.
agreement. On Friday, MCI stock
test case· for more such trans-nationWhile both say they expect gov- soared 20 percent on confirmation
ernment approval within a year, the · from the companies that they were in
al deals .•
· In jliint announcements Sunday, proposal is sure to get extraordinary talks, while British Telecom's U.S.
British teleoommunications.PLC and . scrutiny because of questions over shares fell 4 perc~nt. ·
.MCI Cdittmutiications Corp. agreed foreign innuence in the U.S. telecomThe i~sue of whether telecommu-·
to create a "communications power- munications industry and whether nications marriages are good for
house, .. with:avnual revenue of $42 Britain 's market is equally open to ,' constJmers has flared with increasing

frequency since the Justice Department in 1982 broke up AT&amp;T, separating long-distance from local phone
companies and granting all long-distance carriers equal access to cus·
tomers.
Whafwas new on Sunday, however, was thai the biggest protests
came from the old mother of monop-

·Eiway.leads.
way to victory
for Broncos

•

the English language instead of German.
In 184S, OIIC! VOle brought Te~.
into the Union.
· '
In 1868, one vote saved Pre$ident
Andrew Johnson f19m impeachment
In 187S, one vote changed France
from a monarchy to a republic.
In 1876, one vote gave Rutherford
B. Hayes the presidency of the Uniied States.
;
In 1923, one vote gave Adolf
Hitler leadership of the Nazi 'Party.-.
In 1941, one vote saved Selecti.e
Service -- just weeks before Peail
Harbor was attacked.

.

JEFF

THORNTON .

Announc-e birth
.of second .chi d
."

'

Kcv.jn and Ann VanMaire of
Pomeroy announce the birth of their
second chiW, a · daughter Mika91a
Lyn, born Sept. 19. She weighed seven pounds. 13 ounces and was 20
inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. VanMatre have a
son, Ryan Todd.
· Maternal grandparents are Don
and Carol Diddle, atid paternal grandparents are George and Barbara Van
Maire.
Maternal great-grandparent is
Pauline Cunningham. Paternal greatgrandparents are June Van Matre,
Mary Jlliben and Robert Byers.

'

MIKAYLA VAN MATRE

Shannon Jenkins to serve
as cheerleader instructor
,Sha11non· Jenkins, Miss Junior
Teen Columbus and a Meigs varsity
cheerleader, will be instructor for a
cheerleading clinic 'to be held Nov. Iii
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Municipal Auditorium.
Jenkins will be using the funds
raised from the clinic to help finance
her trip to national competition al
Disney World. in February.
The clinic will be held at the
Pomeroy Municipal Building auditorium. The cost is $10 and the clinic
is open to all founh, fifth and sixth
lfade girls. Those attending are to ..
take a sack lunch.
Training will be on cheer, chants
and dance routines.
To ~·register girls are to call
742-2327,leave their name, the grade
they are ill, and the school they
attend.

I'm asking you the voters of
Meigs County to give me a chance
to be your County Commissioner.
This would be the only job I.would
have. J . will be a full time
commissioner and work hard fo~r
all the residents of Meigs County. I
will work in all townships &amp; villages
having public meetings to find the
needs of the people. I will travel at
my own expense to bring jobs
back to Meigs County. As Mayor of
Racine I have been very
successful- I will do the same for
all of Meigs County!
Paid for by candidate, Filth St, Racine, Oh

olies herselfo ·
:
AT&amp;T chairman Robert J'.. Allep '
warned in · a statement that the
unprecedented proposal could "neg..
atively impact competition ani!
reduce customer choice;' and as such
should be closely scrutinized by go~
emment regulators. ·
·

J.'

'·

11

SHANNON JENKINS

Canan
Sheriff

PROFESSIONAL • EXPERIENCED • EDUCATED

•

•

Pald

Street,

Ohio

Brian J.

-.
·
..

From AP, Stlltf Reporte
By MIKE FEINSILBER
, A steady voter turnout was reportAasoclated Pniaa Writer
ed at precinct polling places throughIt's finally Election Day, and
out Meigs County this morning. SevAmerica is choosing between Bill
eral precincts reported an early, heavy
Clinton's conduct in the White House
voter turnout including Bedford
and Bob Dole's promise of a more
. Precinct, which surpassed the I 00
disciplined stewardship to carry the •
,voter mark around 9 a.m., according
. nation into the next century.
to Board cif Elections officials.
Whatever their presidential·
. , Meigs County Board of Elections
prospects, Rep ubi ican leaders
Director Rita Smith attributes the
seemed cocky about retaining GOP
,anticipated heavy turnout to the councontrol of Congress for only the first
ty office races, state legislature, and
time since Calvin C901idge' occupied
U.S. Sixth District congre~sional
the White House six decades ago.
races.
They . argued, in unspoken
• "We are expecting a good turnout
acknowledgement that Dole's
t¢ay. I submitted a predicted counprospects were poor. that the country
ty turnout of I O,SOO voters to the Secshould not give Clinton "a blank
'
ll!tazy of State's office, but I now
check." ·
HEAVY TURNOUT EXPECTED- Melga County elections offie~pect the turnout to easily surpass
· "I thin~ probably we have a
cials are expecting • heavy voter turnout today In electlona that
t!lat," said Smith.
•
greater chance of actually increasing
will decide prealdentlal, congressional, state and local races •
ON THE TRAIL- PI'Hident Clinton apoke to a large crowd at
.~ Early estimates indicate that as
Hel'e, George Holter, left, and BUI Nease make thalr declslona at the number of seats we will have,"
Clevelal'!d State Unlveralty Monday. Clinton &amp;l'!d VIce ""aident
many as . II ,000 of the _county's · the Minersville Precinct In the basement of the Foreat Run llnltsaid Newi Gingrich, the Republican
AI Gore, along with their wlvaa, met In Cleveland aa part of the
·lS,OOO registered votcrs·will cast bailast full dly of campaigning before today's election. (API
ed Methodlat Church.
House speaker whose scorcbed-earth
J9ts before the polls officially close at
speeches made hjm the symbolic
7:30p.m.
'
.. with a chancr.of rain in the northern would hurt families and draw busi-· issue in contest'S across the n~tion.
wa&amp; facing "pending criminal Labor Day.
· • The final number of voters could half of the state. The rain was expect- ness away from restaurants and othGOP National Chairman Haley charges."
"A twitch or two in turnout could
·eJISiiY top the record figure of I 0,597 ed to travel west t0 east during the er companies near the casinos.
Barbour called increased Republican
Clinton's administration is under deny Clinton a majority," said ABC's
voters ,who cast their ballots in the day, leaving the eastern part of the
Supporters say casinos will gen- ·strength in the Senate "likely." Close investigation by the Whitewater pros- director of polling, Jeffrey D. Alder1-992 general election. During that state by the end of the day.
erate $186 million a year for schools, races abounded; the South was the ecutor and has been under fire for man. "But for Dole .to finish above
(992 election, 73.49 percent of Meigs . The temperature was expected to create jobs and keep ·gambling mon- key.
accepting questionable foreign dona- thc 'low 40s would be a feat; he. nevCounty's registered voters cast bal- reach the low 50s in the north and the ey from leaving Ohio for casinos in
Clinton seemed ever more confi- tions. No federal charges have been er exceeded '!J._pcrcent all fall."
.
IC?!)i&lt;)!ll', ~~ gene~al eleetion voter U~Jper SOs in the ~outh.
. neighboring states.
'::' this ~1Cc11on ~_.:- ~shOrtOnr&amp;SU'cS; ~
· ·
" dent ol'-becorning tl)e fir;t fC"!'Iected. levie&lt;l ~gains!'the -presidCl\1. • ·
Wt:IIQ!II,m cOunty htstory. ••
Secretary of State 'Bob Taft said
Democrat since franklin Roosevelt's
As they traditionally do. the folks shon on new faces, short on drama... A presidential visit and a last-ditch last week that a record 6.8 million
Jan James, state director for Yes · 1936 landslide, and the polls gave in a two New Hampshire hamlets had not c·aptivated the country. Not
,drive for the.hearts of vo)ers over a · Ohioans have registered to vote, but On Issue I, said workers spent Mon- him reason. His goal reached beyond gathered at midnight to give the much in evidence was the distrust of
nverboat gambbng proposal htgh- lust 69 percent of them are likely to day making telephone calls, knocking victory - he wanted to win with country the first returns: Dixville government that produced Gingrich
lighted the final full day of cam-- do so·
on doors, handing out literature and more than .so percent of the vote, a Notch gave Dole 18 votes to eight for and the Republican Congress in
paigning in Ohio prior to Election
0~ Monday, Gov. George putting up signs.
target denied him in 1992 and made Clinton and one for Perot. At Hart's 1994.
Day.
.
Voinovich flew around the state urgAlso on Monday, President Clin- difficult again by the insurgent can- Location, 50 miles away, it was Dole .
The congressional races tightened
Gray skies· were expected to greet ing voters to. defeat Issue I, a pro- ton jetted into Cleveland, where he didacy of billionaire Ross Perot.
13, Clinton 12 and Perot four.
in the final weeks.
voters today_ as they go to the polls. posed constitutional amendment to · was joined by his wife, Hillary Rod- · Clinton won 43 percent in 1992 to
Across the nation, turnout is
Republicans hold a 53-47 majorThe Nattonal Weather S~~vtce . legalize riverboat casino gambling. ham Clinton, and Vice President AI then President Bush's 37 percent and expected to be low. h could fall close •ty in the Senate, so Democrats must
predtcted mostly cloudy condtttons,
Voinovich said casino gambling Gore and Gore's wife, Tipper,
to 50, I percent of citizens over age gain three scats for control, &gt;is.&lt;uming
Perot's 19 percent.
Clinton, Dole and Perot went 18, the rate recorded in 1988, the Clinton is re-elected and Vice President AI Gore is available to break a
back to their roots - Arkansas, lowest 'in modem ·times.
.
Pour
years
ago,
spurred
by
Perot,
tic.
Kansas and Texas -to await Amer- .
'
turnout reached 5S percent.
· With 34 Senate scats at stake,
ica's verdict.
.
Through the' campaign, no great much of the suspense revolved
In final appeals, Clinton .told boisterous crowds on his way to Little debate developed between Clinton around 14 scats vacated by retireRock , "Your vote is going to decide and Dole and the Republican chal- ments, including Maine, Oregon and
era!
Em'ergency
Management
Asso·
County
prosecuting
attorney's
office
By JIM FREEMAN
whether we return Congress to a lenger had trouble argu.ing he knew four Southern states.
ciation.
o.n
Second
Street
between
Mechanic
New Jersey was the scene or'one
Sentinel Newa Staff
majority of people who have pre- how to cut taxes 15 percent across the
He also commented that village · and Mul.berry Avenue,
Water and sewer matters were
of the nastiest Senate races, with two
pared to shut the government down." board and, still balance the budget.
Baxter said cars parked there
once again the topic at Monday workers have corrected a drainage
Dole, his voice cracking, raced
The 73-year-old Dole •.crippled by congressmen figh)ing for the place
night's regular meeting of Pomeroy problem in the yard of Union Avenue make it difficult for motorists to pull across four time zones as he headed wounds in World War II, sought to given up by Democrat Bill Bradley.
resident Gene Houdashelt..
from Mechanic onto Second Avenue. toward Russell, !Can. His main mes- make character the issue against the In South . Carolina, 93-year-old
Village Council.
On water matters, Councilman
. The ·curb there is painted yellow sage - he could be trusted while 50-year-old Clinton, who avoided Republican Sen. Strom Thurmond
Council tnet with Village Administrator John Anderson, who updated Larry Wehrung asked how much signifying a no-parking ' zone, yet Clinton could not. "My voice may military service in Vietnam. "Where was expecting re-election, and the
members on work done recently in new water meters would cost to .many people continue to park there, change, but I still keep my word," he is the outrage?" demanded Dole, but chance to become the oldest senator
the village.
. '
·
replace bro,ken water · l)leters, and he said.
.
said. He was sprinting for a pic- he never found Jt.
ever.
wanted
to
know
many
new
meters
Mayor
Frank
Vaughan
said he turesque windup at Independence,
Anderson said village workers
For his part, Clinton campaigned
' In the race for House' control
would ask Police Chief Gerald Mo., home of Harry Truman, biggest on an incumbent's traditional don't- Democrlts, aided by the Iabo~ move:
have cleaned two catch basins on were needed in the village.
Anderson said new meters would Rought to talk to Prosecutor John R upset winner in recent presidential . let-them-take-it-away stance. "Will ment, targeted Republican freshmen,
Mulberry Avenue at the request of
Mulberry Avenue resident Malinda cost ahout $3S each and estimated the Lentcs to resolve the problem.
history.
.
you seize the day to keep your coun- and dozens of ra,ces looked clo.se. It
number of broken meters in the viiDuring open discussion, Council
Strong.
Perot slapped Clinton's ethics in a try moving in the right direction?" he would take a net shift of 18 seats to
President John Musser commended Texas speech and a final binge of asked.
"They're shining like a rifle bar- lage at between 75 and 80.
·
the Democrats for them to regain
Wehrung said he has received Councilman George Wright for the television speeches, run clcction.cve
rel," Anderson said.
The polls, as they had from the control and Gingrich contende4 his
However, he maintained that complaints from village . residents work hi: a'nd others are doing in on the major networks. "We arc start, showed Clinton strong. Typical party could actually pad its 235-197
drainage problems in the aiea were because some people with broken installing new ,lights along the prom- headed toward a second Watergate was ABC's final poll putting Clinton majority. There is one independent in
not the result of plugged sewers, but meters .are charged the minimum enade in the Pomeroy parking lot.
and a constitutional crisis," Perot at 51 percent, Dole 39, Perot 7 the 435-mernber House and two
that water from storms could not get water rate regardless of how much
Musser explained that a photo- said, inaccurately claiming Clinton about ·where they had been since vac;ancics.
water they use.
electric timer will be installed to.coninto the sewers.
·. He suggested the village consider
"1 would like to see some new trol the lights.
a· waterway prot~ction ordinance water meters purchased," he said,
Councilwoman Ocri Walton asked
111akitig it illegal to put cut brush or adding that they would pay for them- about the installation of a new cauother obstructions i tito streams and selves,
.
tion light for Pomeroy Elementary
waterways.
Anderson said he recently pur- School and Wehrung asked why
"such an ordinance would protect chased 40 new meters at a cost of work has not been done to correct a
.
'
'
the openings to drainage ways during ahout $800.
drainage problem on Brown Alley.
Houdashelt said the toial price,of er to create jobs and increase our tax
storms," he said. "When they're
In addition, council met with
Wright urged Anderson to proceed
the
industrial park project is around base, said Houdashelt.
blocked with trash, . that's when we Mechanic Street resident Homer Bax- on getting a newly drilled water well
$940,000
, She credited those who assisted
have problems." · '
ter ubouf an overgrown lot ncar his into servlce.
If
the
grant
is
awarded,
officials
with
the Meigs County strategic
Anderson said he proposed mak- home.
In other business, council: ·
plan.
hope
to
receive
$500,000
from
the
ing more storm drains available. but
Baxter also showed pictures of
•Approvedthepurchaseofa 1991
grant, which will be combined with
"This (grant) application was very
added that the village did not get cars, including police cars, parked on Ford Crown ·Victoria from Carl By JIM FREEMAN
$200,000
through
the
Appalachian
extensive,"
she said. "We couldn't
Sentinel News Staff
fllnding for that Pt?iect from the Fed, the sidewalk across from the Meigs
(Continued .on Page 3)
The Meigs County Board of Corn- Regional Commission applied for by have done it without (the strategic
missioners Monday afternoon gave, Boyer Simcox of the Buckeye Hills- plan}."
Meanwhile, Houdashelt said she is
thumbs up to a grant application for Hocking Valley Regional Development
District.
awaiting
,word oti a $SO,OOO Microimprovements to the Tuppers Plains
The Meigs County CIC, which Enterprise/Small Business DevelopIndustrial Park.
Commissioners met with county will serve as the grant applicant, has ment grant through the Ohio DepartEconomic Development Directqr fronted $240,000 toward the indus- ment of Development's office of
Housing and, Community · Partner.
Five members were elect~ to tile Sheets witb 2S. Sheets and incumbent tiona year ago and will finish out the· Julia Houdashelt, Meigs Community trial project.
ships.
The grant will be used to pay engiImprovement Corporation President
Meigs County Agricultural Society Carolyn Ritchie each received 25 term which expires in 1997.
The program is designed to assist
The newly-elected board mem- Paul Reed and Meigs Chamber of neers to design the park, layout the
:Soan! of Directors for three-year . votes, with Sheets winning in a coin
bers join Dan Smith, Eddie Holter, Commerc~ President Horace !Carr, utilities and include a road from Slate small b~sinesses which typically
term1 at Monday night's election toss.
held at the secretary's o(lice on the
The terms of · candidates Rick Addalou Lewis, Howard Ervin, who is also chairman of the CIC's Route 7, across the park to SR 681. employ the owner and no more than
This is the result of 2-1/2 years of five other employees.
Rock Sprinp Fairarouno!l.
Koblentz and Virgil Windon expire Roger Spencer, lim Deaths, David land acquisition and development
Preseqt were Commission Presijoint cOQperation between the coun- Re-elected to tho board were Ken this year and neither w_as re-elected Watson, Leonard Koenig, and Tom committee.
.. .
· Houdashelt presented the grant ty commissioners, the CIC and cham- dent Fred Hoffman, Vice President
lluckley with 42 votes and Jini Wat· to the board.
Drake to make up the IS-member
board.
application
to the board.
1011 wid! 31 votes.
Brent R011e was the only candidate
ber of c~mercc and the private sec- Janet Howard and Clerk Gloria
The Urban and Rural Initiative tor, includinJ Fannen Bank and Kloes. Absent was Commissioner
Officers will be ~lected at the Dec.
Biected to the other three open ~ file for the unexpiRid one-year
Hall we~e Jennings Beegle with 42 term. He was appointed to that posi- 2 meeting 19 be held at the secretary's Grant is designed to help fund new Joe$ business leaders coming togeth· Robert Hartenhach.
office.
VCIIIII, Bob Calaway with 39, and Jim
sites for ind!JStrial development.

Funds to assist
.local endeavors
in devei(Jping site

Agricultural Society members elect
.f ive members to three-year terms

'

Promises Made., Promises Kept•• ~

the Committee to Re-elecl John Lent•. 117 Weet

Presidential
candidates ·
return home
to await end

Commissioners OK application .
for industrial park improvement

Prosecuting Attorney

JOHN LENTES

·

Pomeroy
Council again·studies
.
water, sewer service concerns

Paid for by ·rhe Canan forSherifl Committee, s&amp;rah Gibbs, Treasurer,
34046 Ball Run Rd., Pomeroy, Oh 45769

.

A Gannett Co.~

.

Dear Citizens, ·
I am applying to you for .the office of
Meigs County Sheriff. Over the past .few
days, I have submitted to you my
resume' which includes my-educational
bacj(ground, employment experl~nce,
and letters of recommendation attesting
to my compettmcy arut.mv character. 1
have provided you with this Information
because these are the most · important
facts needed to determine who Is most
qualified to serve as your Sheriff.
The decision of whom to "hire" for this
responsible position should not be made
lightly··· your safety and that of your
f~mily is at stake. My law enforcement
career is unblemished and my
qualifications speak for themselves. ·
Our county's reputation· for drug
cultivation and trafficking has not
over the.·past 8 years. If you
want to send a different message -·- one
of toughness and intoleranc.e -it's time
for some changes.
I ask for your vote tomorrow, November
..
5th.
Respectfully,
Mike Canan

.Sinatra to remain in hospital a few more days
LOS ANGELES (AP)- DoctorS had heen ex}iected to be a stay
~Rating Frank Sinatra for a pinched througlt the weekend. The spokesman
-have decided to keep him in the did not say when Sinatra will be
hospital a few more days.
'
released.
"He's doing quite well, talking
Both Wise and the entertainer's
Mel walking and so forth," said publicist, Susan Reynolds, disputed a
Cedars Sinai . Medical Center KCBS television report that Sinatra
ljiOblman Ron Wise on Sunday. was also being treated for pneumonia
"But he's uncomfortable because of and possible heart trouble.
"He's being tested and treated for
the nave.''
, The ll().year-old singer was admit- a pinched nerve," Reynolds said,
,lf9.d t.o the hospital Friday for what

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 -

Pomeroy-MiddlePort; Ohio, Tuesday, November 5, 1996

Precincts in ·
Meigs report
:voter tJJrnout
heavy today

As you prepare to go to the polls tomorrow,
please consider ·the accomplishments of
Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes: tough, ·
fair and successful criminal prosecutions;
Meigs County's first Victim~' Assistance
and D.A.R.E. Programs;. crime- prevention
education programming for Meigs -County
chlldrtm; and priority service .for townsh.l p
and county officials. John Lentes promised
results, and he kept his promise. .
·

~'t"'~'"f'
.,' ,.

.

::America turns to the polls to decide IEiection '96

J

VOTE

Cloudy tonight, Iowa In
tha 40a. Wedneaday,
cloudy. High• near 70.

•

Yof, 47, NO. 130
01 .... Olllo v.U., Publlelllng Compttny

Mik#1:f .

LEWES, Del. (AP) - Hundreds from Morton, Ill., which used their
Expo manager Mike Duve said but he'll have to get used to it.
of unlucky pumpkins got smashed to Aludium Q36 Pumpkin Modulator to the event was designed to increase
Lombardi, who died in 1970, was .
" smithereens last weekend, and the · blasted a pumpkin more than a half- awarene&lt;is of potential emergencies. honored Sunday at Lam beau Field.
' . crowd loved it.
mile out of an 80-foot cannon.
"If your house doesn 't have light, with the unveiling of a postage stamp
It was the annual Punkin '
water or heat, it's an apocalypse. with his likeness.
Chunkin' Championships, a postCOLUMBUS (AP)- If you're When you're in the center o( things,
The stamp, to be issued by the
· Halloween tradition where pumpkins expecting tlie apoca)ypse, this fair's it's the end of the world for you," Postal Service next year, depicts a
are hurled into the sky with home- for you.
·
·
jubilant Lombardi being ·carried on
said Duve.
mad~ contraptions.
, The Great Ohio Preparedness and
the shoulders of his players.
"This is one of . the weirdest Self-Reliance Expo 'featured 100
, "Vince Lombardi knew flow to be
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) things I've ever seen," Peter Devine vendors se,lling hooks, potions and . Green Bay Packers coach Vince number one . and lle shared that
·of St. lames, N,Y,. said Sunday.
readi.f!g materi.al to help survive any- Lombardi never liked getting licked, .knowledge with those around him:"
. What began II years ago as a •. thjng from parasite infestation to mil. challenge among a ·handful of locals itary takeovers.
has evolved into a serious contest that
"We're getting ready to .expose
-draws engineering students and the Centers for Disease Control for
· gourd-gougers from around thecoun- 'what they really are," said Larry Har. try.
.
ris, wearing a bulletproof vest and
' "Some peaple play golf; some hawking a 111-page document he
' peopl~ shoot pumpkins," said Harry wrote on prot~ction against germ
"Capt. Speed" Lackhove, the 1995 warfare.
· champion.
A booth for readers offered such
Catapults, slingshots and human titles as "Everything You Really
power were acceptable. Some Need to Know About Choosing a .45
brought engine-powered contrap• Automatic for Self-Defense," and
COMMISSIONER
tions. The winning hurler was ate~ "The Gestapo and SS Manual,"

·Pick 3:
7-3-5
Pick 4:
5-3-6-0

•

Elect
.

:Pumpkin contest turn~ into ·national ·event

2·10..1,1-12-20

•

~·

Lottery

BuckeyeS:

~Sports on Page 4

Send quesllona to Ann LanderS,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 w. Celitury Blvd., Suite 100, Loll ,\ngelef,
Calif. 90045 .
•

A1CI, British Telecom form new_ communications powerhouse

~hio

•

,.......... - - - -...,.-.------''-------4'--~-

-- -

- -- ----~----&gt;0-

�.

!T:u•:•:dl::y:,No::v~•~m~bw~5~,~1~8;88~::::::::::::::~--~~----~~~P~o:m:M:!o!y:•:M;Idd::lepo~:rt~,~O~h:b~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Th~e~D;a;ily::Se:n~t~ln~e=I•:P;a;ge~3

Commentary

:-.

..... 2

•'

Tuesday, November 5,1198

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-892-2156 • Fu: 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
•

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publleher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Genen~l Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controlle~

French, has seduced sul.len Europeans everywhere into the epic
whimsy and happiness mandated by
"' 1 o·
na t tSney.
.
Now it looks like Europe's going
to get a new one. Mythos Park may
soon be built, at a cost of S150 mtl·
the bottom like. a pebble across a lion American, on the outskirts of
pond before final ly sinking in the . Athens, Greece. Aceordl.ngtotheSan
· Ex ·
.. ·sitors will be
shallows, bruised, , battered and FranCISCO
armner, vt
screaming . This activity either able to clamber inside a Trojan horse,
appeals to you or it doesn't You don't to be scJed by animauonic, multineed billboards of Kevin Costner headed hydras, and 10 watch. fire-,
h.
lod
d the throne of
with gills to get kids to jump in the worM
exp e aroun
Ze
There
will
be
water
rides tak·
water. That's been my experience.
ingu~ids
past
the
ships
of
Jason
and
But, hey, uy to tell that to marketing.
Still, like the Internet, opinion the Argonauts, and chutes whisking
polls, and dmosaurs, theme parks viSitors alongside the city of Atlantis,
have become a permanent fixture on with Poseidon and his trident 'fising
· our blighted landscape. Even from the deep." At least the water
EuroDisney, after a brief period in slide's presided over by Poseidon. not
which it was sneered at by the Pluto. Imagine sending children bar·
er with a slide attached is still the
major water park indicator.
You zip down the thing at about
80 mph, then skip across the pool at

/an Shoa/es

Letters to the editor
Readers praise band program

l '

Dear Editor,
compete in the state finals, and if
We are writing in regards to the there was any band that deserved to
letter .that was written by Mr. R.D. go to the state finals, it was most def•Thomas, stating that the he was initely the Meigs Band.
·The only thing we could say we
upset with the Meigs High School
agreed
with Mr. Thomas on, was his
Band.
First of all, Mr. Thomas, before praise of the Meigs Football Team,
you Y!fite a slur letter, you should first but in my opmton he was totally out
of line to put the band down the way
.get your facts slraight:
Fact I •• Band members do wear he did. In closing we would just like ·
their uniforms to football games, and to say that we are proud to have a
they are ·not afraid to ,get ·then uni- daughter/granddaughter in the Metgs ,
•forms diny.
Band, and we think Mr. Dingess
Fact 2 -- The band was there for deserves a pat on the back for his
the football team at Vmton, but it dedication to the hand, not a slur
wasn 't its•fault the game was held up because he chose to go ahead and go
so long they couldn't stay and play for to competition mstead of staying to
play for a football game. :
half lime.
Raymond, Penny Reynolds,
Fact 3 ·· I wasn't JUSt any competition that the Meigs Band was going
Mrs. Freda Jacks,
· to, they were going to Columbus to
Langsville

CNN, IF YOU WAVE

FOUR VIDEO GAMES

AND ITAKE AWAY

TWO, WOW MANY 00
'1W HAVE L&amp;FT ?••

Wi«&gt;'S GOT -TW&amp;
ANSWER? ANYOODYl

ANYIDTf??
•

.. Coach supports band
Dear Editor,
1 would like to take this opponunity ·to thank the many Marauder
football fans for their lremendous
suppon throughout the season.
As a coaching staff and team, we
feel that we have the best fan support
of anyone we pi~.
I would also like to respond to an
earlier lelter conc~rqina .P~ )land. _
Dunng our Vinton County football
game, our band had to leave the game
in order to attend its state competi·
tion. Our band directors, Tony
Dingess and Dave Deem, and the
band members work very hard just·a~ut year-round.
It was agreed by both s&lt;'• Is that

the game would be played on Saturday, and that there may be a delay
before the game started. I would just
like to say that myself, the rest of the
coaching staff, and players, realize
the imponance of that state com pelt·
lion not only to our hand, but also to
all of us at Meigs High School.
As a football team, we cdmplete·
ly support Mr. DingesJ and our hand.
I would like iOthank the band for all
their suppon . We feel that we are very
lucky to have the quality of band that
we do at Meigs.

"

•

•

Do you realize that if the presi- "We're not going to let the media Grover Cleveland.
dential campaign of 1996 had ended steal this election. We are gomg to
It nourished in the 20th century. "I'
a couple of weeks before it actually · win tliis election. The country have never heard or seen such outradid, the press in this counuy would belongs to the people."
geous, vicious, distorted reponing in
be
in
a
stupefymg
funk
at
this
very
27 years of pubhc life," thundered
Mike Chancey,
Ri~hard Nixon.
bead rootball coach, moment?
Nay, I go further: We would be
What Dole said, of course, is comMeigs High School
wallowing in a professional crisis.
plete nonsense of a type that gets pea-'
Week after week went by, and
Of course, much of what he said pie inflamed but seldom results m
nobody accused us of screwing things was not lrue, and I'll return to the votes. The bulk of the press is not
up. Oh, there were some boos and matter of veracity in a moment. But "liberal." It may indeed be Democ. Dear Edt tor,
We were m our uniforms despite hisses here and there, bot they were who the heck cares? The point is, in ratic, but even so, it is moderate ..
My name is Wesley Thoene. I am the weather conditions. Our um- muted things, almost insignificant.. this Internet, on-line, talk-show, occupying the approximate spot on
a fresnman at Meigs High School. I forms are expensive. We need new a few ideologues and some think cable-TV world, somebody finally the speclrum where conservativ~s
am wming to address Mr. Tho10as's ones. New umforms cost between tanks that are paid to say had things. noticed us. Tl1f point is, the lradition used to be before Newt &amp; Co. moved
leuer to the editor about !he Meigs $20,000 and $25,000. Money we
Then Bob Dole got desperate. He of scapegoating the press for politi- the marker a few hundred yards to tbC
don't have. But I will most gracious· had bashed Hollywood. He had tried cal failures may not be thriving, but right.
Htgh School Band, printed Friday.
I resent his accusation that he ly accept you contributioo for new tax cuts. He had gotten nasty. Noth- 11 is surviving.
Was the press trying to "steal " the
·
tmplied we were.an "obstacle" for the ones for our band.
ing worked. So then he got down to
I mean, this custom goes all the election for Bill Clinton? Heavens,
On the subject of school spirit. We the final refuge of a floundering pol . way back to the 18th century. Presi- no. Many of them can't stand Clinfootball team because of our absence
at the Meigs-Vinton football gaine. bnng pride to our school every time
ln Pensacola, Fla.. he blasted the dent Washington "was much ton. Oh, I know about that famo~s
Mr. Thomas, are you aware that game we bring home a trophy. By the way, media, specifically the New York mHamed" and, wrote Secretary of study eariier this year wh&lt;ch diswas scheduled for I p.m. and was we won 21 this year alone (I count· Times, for ignoring th~ sins of the State Thomas Jefferson, "got into one closed that 89 percent of the Washdelayed for the arrival of one Vinton ed them just for you). I have great Chnton crowd. Dole s~td: "Now we of those passions when he cannot ington press voted for Clinton. My
County football player? If the game pride and school spirit every time I know the hberal medta ts (Sic) not comm;tnd himself, ran on much on guess is, that's a misinterpretation of
had staned on time, we were to per· march with this band.
gomg I? report all these thmgs. They the personal abuse which had been data. A full third of those pro-Clinton
In closing, Mr. Thomas, I would want h1m re-elected. They hke 11 the bestowed on him."
form . Do you think Vinton County is
votes were actually anti-Bush votes:
on the way to Columbus? Do you like to say I feel we get respect from way it IS. But _this counlry .~oes not
It continued into the 19th century.
Has the·prcss been ignoring Clinthmk our band has the: exira money other areas for our band program. belong to the hberal medta. And so "I don't think there ever was a time ton's trespasses'/
for bus lransportation to Columbus They actually feel we are wonhy to forth and so on.
when newspaper lying was so gonerHardly. The New York Times, to
compete. Last spring I competed m
via Vinton ?
Then, in Houston, he did it again al a~d so mean as at present," fumed use Dole's favorne wh1pping boy,
You questioned our ha~d director's the District Science Fair held in
'
Athens.
In
the
awards.
ceremony,
we
Jildgmenl. Our band direc~nd his
staff go above and bey
hat is were told our teacher did a great JOb
expected of them to make
band "considering the difficulties he faces
progrimi one of the most sue ssful tn teaching in southeastern Ohto."
I'm waiting for the media frenzy ·school' s pohcy agamst bringing t~ on the part of some school offiprograms in this area. I challenge you Any pride I h3d suddenly disap- o~er young Charlotte Kirk. Her sto- weapons to school Then the teacher Clals. It ha.&lt; not stirred a natto~al conto find another program in the Meigs peared. Do you know what it is like ry has all the elements of the school- called the police.
troversy. No one IS questlomng the
Local School District so successful to work so hard and be put down like regulations-gone-wild morality tales
A deputy shcnff arrested the siKth· value of anlt·weapons pohc1es m
that IS so poorly funded by the Board that? By the way I sttll haven't that are popular these days, so I'm
schools. No one ts suggesting that the
of Education. If you wanted to see us received my governor's award. sure the helicopters will be circling
anti -violence crowd haS gotten out of
perform so badly, we did numerous Beheve me, band has restored my her house any day now.
hand.
band competitions, performed at faith you can be from Meigs County
In case you missed Charlotte's sto- . grader as she left 'school with her
Similarly; when two Dayton,
every football game except Vinton, and still achieve.
ry, which I spotted on page 24 of the father that day. The officer would not · Ohio, teen -agers were suspended
Wesley Thoene, Los Angeles Times, it goes like this: even let Charlotte's father nde i~ the from school for tralficking. Midol, the
and march in almost every parade
Pomeroy
seemingly possible.
Laic last month, the 11 -year-old squad car with her wh1le he took her over-the-&lt;ounter pam rehever com·
from Columbia, S.C., was packing down to the station. An Associated manly used to relieve menstrual
her lunch for school and included a • Press report says that she looked out cramps, we failed to see an outcry
steak knife. wuh whtch she planned the back wmdow of the car the entire from those who think anti-drug polito eat some leftover chicken. When way, trymg to keep her father in sight. cies are bogus.
she gOt 10 school, a frien&lt;ltold,her she
The story has been reported
After all, that would be silly. We
thought that using the knife might be nationally, but it has not become a don' t want our children going to
By The Aeaoclated Prn1
against the rules. Not wanting to media sensation. Charlotte is not schools where drugs and weapons are
Today is Tuesday. Nov. 5, the 310th day of 1996. There are 56 days left cause trouble, Charlotte asked her
doing~ tal~·show circuit; she won :~ !oleratcd, an.d we want school_admin'" the year.
teacher if she could use her knife to be host1ng 'Saturday N1ght L1ve. JSirators to be tough on any k1ds who
Today 's H1ghlight in History: .
cut her chicken. The teacher said no Her arrest has largely been lreated for would bnng them to schooL If, from
Fifty years ago, on Nov. ~ . 1946, Republicans ca~tured control of _both · and lectured her about violating the what it is: an isolated act of stupidi- time to time, the rules are applied
the Senate and the U.S. House of Representattves m mtdterm elections.
mcorr~ctly or ovcrzcalously, t~at
Democrat John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts won a House seat.
!
doesn t mvahdate the bas1c notion
On this date:
In 1956, Britain and France sta11ed landing forces in Egypt during fight· that our schools should be free of
In 1605, the "Gunpowder Plot" failed as Guy Fawkes was seized before ing between Egyptian and Israeli forces around the Suez Canal. (A cease. weapons and drugs..
.
he could blow up the English Parliament.
.
fire was declared two days later.)
,
But when the 1ssu.e ts .seKual
In 1872, suffragist Susan B. Anthony was fined SIOO for attempung to
In 1968, Richard M. Nixon won the presidency, defeating Vice President harassment :· well that s a dtffere~t
vote for President Ulysses S. Grant. (She never patd the fine.)
Hubert H. Humphrey and third-party candidate George C. Wallace.
story. One httle boy ts forced to .stt
Jn 1895, George B. Selden of Rochester, N.Y., received the first U.S.
Jn 1990, Rabbi Meir Kahane, a Brooklyn•bom Israeli extremis~ was shot out an 1ce-cream pany, and the enttre
patent fOF an automobile.
to death after a speech at a New York bote!., (Egyptian native El Sayyed nation is in an uproar. The story of
In 1912 Woodrow Wilson was elected ~sident, defeating Progressive Nosair was acquitted of state clwges, but was later convicted in federal coun Johnathan Prevette, the 6-year-old
Republi~ Theodore Roosevelt and incumbent Republican William of Kahane's killing.)
·
who was punished for kissi.ng a
Howard Taft.
In 199'4, former President Ronald Rcasan disclosed he had Alzheimer's classmate, wl! not the \ale of a
In 1940, President Franklin Roosevelt won an unprecedented third term disc aS..
teacher who overreacted. It,was not
'i ~ offi ce as he defeated Repoblican challenger Wendell L. Willkie.
Ten years ago: The White House reaffirmed a U.S. ban on weapons Nics an anecdote about school MminisIn 1944, British official Lord Moyne was assassinated in Cairo. Egypt, to Iran as it sought to curb speculation that an anns deal with Tehran might llators misapplyins a basically sound
by the Zionist Stern gang.
have been connected to the release of American h~~~= David Jacobsen.
principle. No, this was a story of fern·
t
~ -

Joseph Spear

Band a source of school pride

""

I, '
'

Today in history

•

Albany area man injured In crash

:Brief spell of warm w,ather
.:predicted for Wednesday

,.

MOSCOW (AP)- Surgeons successfully carried out a vital hean
operation today on President Boris
Yeltsin to clear clogged aneries and
everything went according to plan , ,
. A government spokesman said the
. bypal;s operation ended around 2 p.m.
(6 a.m. EST), seven hours after the
surgery began. He gave no funher _
details on Yeltsin 's condition.
Yeltsin was confident and joked
with doctors before the surgery,
which was earned out by a team of
12 top Russian doctors, including
four surgeons.
"I'm not going to stay in the hos·
pital bed for too long. I believe that
I soon will be ~.orkin~ as ~fore at full strength, Yeltsm ·satd before
the operaiion at the Moscow Cardiological Center.
Shortly before going under the
knife: Yeltsin tr.ansfe~. power ternporanly to Pnme M!ntster Vtktor
Chernomyrdtn, mcludmg control of
Russia's vast nuclear arsenal. The
premier visited the hospital while
Yeltsin was in surgery, but made no
public comment.
The surgical .team was. led ~y Dr.
Renal Akchunn. who tramed m the
United States with American. hean
surgery pioneer Dr. Mtchael
De'Bakey. DeBakey and a team of
American and German surge?ns
watched the operatton on a momtor
in case advice_ was ne~ded.
Doctors sa1d Yeltsm would need
three or four bypasses to relieve his
clogged aneries. But they expect
Yeltsin io make a full recovery and

~

When the former vice chairman or'
Dole's campatgn finance committee'
paid a million-dollar fine for illegal,
contributions, the Washington Post'
ran it at the bottom of page 16.
:
Even Bob Dole knows his "hber- :
al media" tactic was bull . Just a few'
days before he launched his attack, he ·.
said he had gotten a " fair shake"'
from the press. ·
·'
But, agam, that 's all beside the ,
pomt. We appreciate the attention,
and I'm sure I speak for most jour- '
nalists when I say:
'
Thank you, Bob Dole.
Joseph Spear Is a syndieated '
writer for Newspaper Enterpri~e'
Association.
&lt;·
I.

inist McCarthyiSm, of political corrc ctness run wild. Thts was, as USA •i
Today thundered, "The Kiss That ,
~hook the Nation."
.
. :
Johnathan became an instant •
celebnty, .making the usual· rounds, :
from the "Today" show to CNN. j
Newspapers across the country put , 1
the adorable httle boy with ihc Coke- ~
bottle glasses on thek front page. And
the pundits were thnlled.
"This is an cKcellent example of
the total excesses of this kind of arch
femini st ideology gone amuck," l
Camille' Paglia said in the USA ~
Today story.
Columnist Linda Chavez didn't
stop there. "If the feds and their fern- .
inist allies have thetr way, every lit·
tic boy and girl in the nation will be :
taught that flirting is a crime "
•
Yes, that's the real femini~t agcn· ' l
da. All that talk about day care and I
pay equity and repr.oductive rights is ' 1
just a cover. Really, what feminists ,
want to do is outlaw flirtation. And
the anti,drug folks arc committed to ,
eradicating the Midol Menace. And · 1
the anti-crime crusade is really about •
kitchen utensils.
''
So good Jeople unite. You've
nothing to lose but your forks
Send comments to the audtor in ,
care ofthis newspaper or send here- '
mail at saraeumaol.com.
S11ra Eckel Ia a syndlcafetl •
writer for Newspaper Entei'JII'fle (
Anocladon.
'

I

I
1

i

~

By The A11oclated Pres•
' Temperatures could approach 70
degrees in Ohio on Wednesday, but
the warm weather won't last long.
' Forecasts said it could be snowing by
· ' the end of the week.
' Sunny skies will warm things up
on Wednesday following overnight
'lows in the 40s, the National Weath,er Service said.
It will start to get cooler on Thursday with highs of 55-65. Then snow
showers are in the forecast for Friday,
'when temperatures will hover in the
40s.
The record-high temperature for
'this date at the Columbus weather
'station was 76 degrees in 1977 while
·the record low was I4 in 1991. Sun·
'set tonight will be at 5:24 p.m. and
sunrise Wednesday at 7:07 a.m.

An Albany area man was injured in a motorcycle acc1dent Monday on
State Route 681, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State H1ghway Pauol reponed
.
.
·John R. Gabriel, 64, 1125 Baker Road, was transponed from the scene
by the ·Meigs EMS to O'Bieness Memonal Hospttal, Athens. He was lat·
er 1reated and released. a hospital spokesperson sa1d.
.
Troopers said Gabriel was westbound in Orange Townshtp at 3:20 ~.m.
when his motorcycle went off the right SJde of the road, went mto a d1tch
and overturned.
.
The motorcycle was slightly damaged, 1r00pers srud. ,

Weather forecast:
Tonight...Mostly cloudy. Lows in
the 40s.
Wednesday .. .Mostly
cloudy.
Highs from the lower 60s nonh to
near 70 far south.
. Wednesday night...Showers likely
DETROIT (AP) General hours after GM and the UAW
west half. Cloudy with a chance of
Motors
Corp.
says
it
is
quickly
get- reached a tentative agreement in
showers east. Lows 45 to 50.
ting
its
plants
back
on
uack
after
a Detroit on Saturday on a national
Extended forecast:
local
strike
that
crippled
production
conuact covering the automaker's
Thursday...Showers
ending
of
high-profit
pickups
and
sport
util215,000 UAW workers.
west... Turning panly cloudy. ShowTopofficers~the 123 UAW-GM
ers likely east. Highs from the upper ity vehicles.
"It
looks
like
everything
's
going
locals
naoonw e will meet Wednes50s nonh to mtd 60 south.
to
be
back
to
normal
in
the
next
couday
in
Chicago t hear details of the
Friday... A chance of snow showple
of
days,"
GM
spokesman
Tom
contract
from union President
ers ... Mainly nonh. Colder with lows
1 Klipstine said Monday
Stephen Yokich. GM workers will
from near 30 nonhwest to 40 south·
vote on the conlract next week.
Four
!ruck
plants
idled
because
of
east. Highs 40 to 50.
After signing the new Chrysler
United
Auto
Workers
strike
at
an
a
Saturday... Lingering snow showCorp.
contract on Monday, Yokich
·Jndtanapolis
metal-stamping
plant
ers nonheast...Otherwise partly
will
be
operntmg
normally
by
Thursacknowledged
some GM workers
cloudy. Lows 25 to 35. Highs from 40
day,
the
automaker
said.
The
strike
may
not
be
completely
pleased with
to 50 .
was settled Saturday.
the pact. "You can't satisfy everyBut its Janesville, Wis., truck body," he said.
assembly plant remamed shuttered as
He scoffed at reports that the deal
negotiators continued talk s with allows GM to cut as many as 30,000
UAW workers who have been on or more jobs over the next three
strike smce Oct. 29.
years,. but he declined to reveal
return to work after six weeks to eight
GM spokesman Tom Beaman said details of the conlract before Wednesweeks ~f re~t Several members of the two sides met through the week- day's meeting.
~e prestdent s famtly were at the hos· end and Monday, but he dechned to
A key issue in the talks was the
say if any progress was made.
P!tal.
.
..
union's demand that GM guarantee to
· Nearly all of the plants hurt by last maintain at lea1t 95 percent of it$
!iJe prestden.t . appeared e~er­
gettc and felt opUrnts~c a?,d wa~ )Ok· month's Canadian Auto Workers union jobs in the next three years.
ing before the operatton, preStden- strike were at full operation by Mon- Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler have
tial spokesman Sergei Yastrzhemhsky day. That strike shut down OM's such provisions in their contracts,
Canadian operntions and forced the wtth some exceptions for econom1c
said.
· Mbeting the chief Kremlin 'physi- layoffs of more than 2~.000 workers downturns and productivity gains.
GM , the least effiCient of the Big
cian, Dr. Sergei Mir0 nov, before the at dozens ofU S and MeKicoplants.
Though the lndtanapolis and Three automakcrs, sought broader
surgery, Yeltsin smiled and jokingly
asked, "Are you carrying a knife Janesville mikes were over local exceptions so it could cut thousa.nds
issues, UAW offictals said they were of jobs and become more competialready?" the spokesman said.
coordinated
by union headquaners to tive. At issue were which plants and
The 65-year-old president also
put
pressure
on the aulomaker to set· jobs were to be ·excluded from GM's
thanked the ord(nary people who had
work force total, on which the 95 persent letters and telegrams wishing tic the national dispute.
The
Indianapolis
strike
was
se(tied
cent
calculation was to be based.
him a' quick recovery.
"Dear Russians, you are all aware
that 1 have to undergo a serious oper·
ation. I would like to thank all of you
The following bonds were forfeited in the Syracuse Mayor Court of Maywho sent letters and telegrams. Compassion and kind words are some· or George Connolly.
Forfeitmg bonds were: Steven Dodson, Dothan, W.Va., $53 speed; James
times more important than any medKrautter,
Decatur, Ala., $57 speed; Barrie Taylor, Walden, W.Va., $58 speed;
icine," he said in a statement.
LeeAnna
Beegle, Racme; $5,5 speed; Demse Morris, The Plains, $50 speed;
"I am sure everything will go nor·
Rohen
Sanders,
Poml Pleasant. W.Va., $57 speed; CurtiS Oatley, Albany, $54
mally," he added.
• ,
IfYeltsin were to die or was mea· speed; Robert Massie. B1dwell, $51 speed; William Bedilton_, Little Hockpacitated, Chernomyrdin would take ing, $57 speed; Sheryl Ervin, Racine, $57 speed; Rebecca Bmg, Syracuse,
over, but would be required to call $20, old fine.
elections within three months.
Transferring his ·powers tern·
porarily to Chemomyrdin. Yeltsin
assured the Russian nation that the Arts and crafts
Special board meeting
government was in firm hands and
The ann~al Eastern Band Boosters
The . SoUJ.hern Local Board of
there was no need for concern.
ans and crafts fair will be held Sat- Education will meet in special ses"The counlry will not be left with- urday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Variety of sion Wednesday, 7 p.m . at Southern
out a leader," he S81d in the statement. crafts, food, entenainment by award· High School in Racine to d1scuss perWhile ordinary Russians wished winning Eastern marching and eon- sonnel matters.
Yeltsin a full recovery, many are cen band.
unhappy with his administration and
Bean dinner planned
the political turmoil that has plagued Fruit for sale
Evangeline Chapter 172, OES,
the counlry. '
The VICA (Vocational Industrial bean dinner, Friday. II a.m. to 6 p.m.
"Who needs such a president?" Clubs of America) at Meigs High Beans, cornbread. slaw and cake, $3,
said Valentina Zharova, a pensioner School is selling fruit and orders may downstairs Masonic Temple, cat-in or
who was selling goods from a card- be placed with any vocational student call 992-5330 'or 742-2049 to place
board box on a Moscow sidewalk. or by calling Meigs High School992- orders for delivery 10 the Mtddleport2158 and asking for the vocational Pomeroy area.
department.

GM plants getting back
on line following strike

.Russian leader's surgery
·successful, doctors say

.

mcnt: ..

One person was cited in a minor two-car accident t.~onday aftem~n
on the Powell's Supermarket parking lot, according to Pomeroy Pollee
Chief Gerald Rought.
.
The accident occurred at 12:19 p.m. when Anna M. Barnes, 63,
Pomeroy, was backing her 1983 Chevy from a parking space. Barnes failed
to see a 1990 Chevy, driven by Virginia E. Ramsey, 28, Rutland, and suuck
the vehicle while backing.
'· Damage to Ramsey's vehicle was light, while no damage was record·
ed to the Barnes vehicle. ,
Barnes was cited for improper backing.

W.VA.

broke the Whitewater story and ha~
run numerous other&amp; that reflect neg-'
atively on Clinton. This is not to say,however, that the press hasn't ignored'
some meaty scandals
When Dole staned raising the
" character" questwn, the New York'
Daily News ran a story about . a
lengthy affatr he had been involved'
in during his first marriage. You
might not have heard about it. It did-~
n't get the Gcnn1fcr Flowers treat-'

Why the kiss 'shook the nation'
Sara Eckel

Two-car accident yields citation

Association.

''

A Pomeroy woman was ueated at Veterans Memorial Hospital after
Pomeroy fuefigbtm and CIIICfFDCY medical service personnel responded to a suspected gas leak Monday night.
Firefighters were called to a Laurel Street residence in Pomeroy around
8 p.m., according 10 Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny Zirkle.
AColumbia Gas worker was on hand and dtd not detect a gas leak,· boW·
ever, a carbon monoxide leak was found in the house's furnace, resultins
in the gas being shut off.
Mary Lang was uansported by the Pomeroy squad of the _r.teigs Coun·
ty Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memonal Hospttal where she
was lreated and released.

---~

Thanks for blasting us, Bob
II

Suspected gas leak Investigated

1--- · MICH.

~cling dow~ the Rivef Styx into.the
mfemal regtons. That d be an E-bcket ride , all rig~t. but stnctly one-way,
un,less your kid happens to be named
0 rpheus or .Eurydice.
Kids
. "wtll be able to wander the
Labynnth, where the Mmotaur feeds
on the flesh of mwdens, and watch
the 12 labors of Hercules, from
k'll'
t mg monsters 1o steaI'tng a go lden
. dl " W: II
be Greek arents
g1r e.
e • ~ay .
P
.
":ould allow thetr children to get thetr
k1cks watching a monster devou~ng
guls m a maze, but that sen of thing
·
ed "R" ·
k
would still be rat
tn our nee
of the wooM And will the 12labors
of Hercules tnclude h~s cleant~g out
the Augean Stables . Watc~t~g a
beefy demt-god shove1tons o orse
manure? Really.; does that have entertamment val~e. ·
,
Many clasSICS professors. educators and mvestors .agree that a thell\e
park is an excellent way to acquaint
young people with our rich mythical
heritage. But a theme park doesn't
tell half the story.
How do you handle Medusa?
Sendmg your young one~ off for a
glimpse pf this snake-headed Gorgon .
might be a good way to tum them
into hfe·stzcd lawn ornaments, but
that's not responsible parenting, in
my opinion .
.
The petting zoo probably doesn 't
include the hunter that goddess Diana
turned mlo a stag to be eaten by his
own hounds. The animatronic dioramas probably won't display
•- Prometheus gettmg his liver pecked
out by an eagle. The funhouse probably won 't show Jason's wife,
Medea, lolling off their children. or
Hercules' dying agony. tearing his
own flesh from his bones. But there
m1ght be a way to make that materi·
al cute If Disney can give "The Lit·
tie Mermaid" a happy ending, or turn
Pocahontas into Indian Barbie, hey,
anything is possible. The old gods are
alive again! Magic is afoot! Major
credit cards accepted! ·
·
(To recci~e a complimentary Jan
Shoales newsletter, call 1-800-989DUCK or write Duck's Breath, 408
Broad St .. Nevada City, CA 95959.)
Ian Shoales is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
c

WediHiday, Nov. 6
AccuW~ forecul for daytime conditions and high temperatures

The Daily Sentinel Park on a class.ical theme
Back when I wall. kid, we didn 't
have theme paries, poor us. All we
had were "am~ment ... plllks. They
had roller coasters, of course, bot they
weren't inspired by major motion
pictures. They had faded pictures of
dragons on their sides, not dinosaurs.
The Ttlt-a-Whirl was actual, not virtual. lf there was a Midway, we were
parted from our bucks 'by contemptuous tattooed carnies, not smiling
young lmagineers on a mission of
family fun. The Ferris Wheel was a
simple circle that spun at a leisurely
pace, not the faster-than-the-speedof-data wheels-within-wheels we see
at theme parks today.
Our amusement vias unfocusell,
' pitifully lacking ·in thematic unity.
Even today, if yay go to a .water
park, water remains the only coherent theme. By and large, a giant tow-

Local News in Brief:

OHIO Wcatlwr

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS Zl:l-9601

Published e'Yery llftemoon, Monday

'

dlrbuJh

Friday, Ill Court St , Pomero~ Ohio, by the
Ohip Valley Publiahing eon.onytoanntu Co••

PUmcroy. Ohio ,.5769, Ph. 992-21.56. Secuud
clllU posfiiC pwd Ill Pomeroy, Ohio.

·Syracuse Mayor's Court

Stocks

Am Ele Power ................ :......42\7

POSTMASTER: Send addrcu ~ction5 to
The O;ily Sentinel, Ill Coon St.• Pomeroy,

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MAILIUIICIIU"nONS

26-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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SlJ.

l Z -..............................-............ 11~:16
-Oololllt Molp ~
13 ............... ................................. $29.25
26 .............. "' """"""" '""'"" ...... '"" .. 1!6.61
1109.72

l&lt;'l-.. ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

High court says no
to student-led prayer
By RICHARD CARELLI
Associated Prest Writer
, WASHINGTON- The Supreme
Court Monday refused to revive a
Mississippi law that )NOUid have
allowed student-led group prayers tn
. public schools - at assemblies and
spons event~ and even in classrooms.
The justices, without comment,
left intact rulings that declared the
1994 state law a violation of the constitutionally required separation of
church and state.
Today's coun action was not a rul·
ing 'on the merits of the Mississtppi
law and set no national precedent
Confusion still reigns over just what
the Constitution allows.
·
In other action, the court:
• Rejected an appe'UI \by millionaire equestrian George' Lindemann
Jr.. who is serving a 33-month federal prison term for insurance fraud
stemming from the 1990 electrocution of one of his horses.
'
• Made it easier for federal courts
to uphold criminal convictions by rul-

ing that some state court tna1 error's

were harmless. In an un signed opinwn , the justices reinstated a California man's murder convi ction and told
a federal appeals coun to reconSider
whether the use of a flawed jury
mstructwn during his trial should be
considered a harmless error
In the debate over school prayer.
the National School Boards Association last year told the justices in
another dispute that the natwn 's public schools "arc currently the site of
religious warfare" and that "school
boards are caught in the middle and
· do not know which way to turn."
The mvahdated MissiSsippi law.
would have allowed "invocations,
benedictions or nonsectarian, non ·
proselyti~ing student-initiated voluntary prayer" at "school-related stu·
dent events."
Since a 1962 Supreme Coun ruling, organized school prayers have
been barred from public schools. That
landmark case mvolved prayer sessions sponsored' and led by public
school officials, not students.

Emogene Mercer Edwards
Emogene Mercer Edwards, 75, Gallipolis, died Tuesday, Nov 5, 1996 at
her residence.
.
Born Dec. 23, 1920 in Huntington, W.Va., daughter of the late Chester
Clifford and Sadie May Johnson Thornton, she retired from Holzer Medical
Center.
She was a member of the Patriot Methodist Church and the Patriot Sun·
shine Club.
She was also preceded in death by her first husband, Froud Mercer; and
by a sister, Elizabeth Trout.
.
Surviving are her husban?, Carl FremontEdwards: two daughters, Janet
(Roger) McClelland of Gall1pohs, and Mane (Vcrn~n) Hall of Columbus;
four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; a SISter, Joann•Vaughn of
Pomeroy; and a brother; Bernard Thornton of Washington .
.Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday in the Waugh: Halley-Wood Funeral
Home, wtth the Rev: Alfred Holley and Jane Ann Mtller offictallng. Bunal
will be in the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Wednesday.
·
.
.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the Patnot Method1st .
Church 518 LeGrande Blvd., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, or the Galha County ,
Scm or Resource Center, 1167 State Route 160, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

Council again studies

$210 at the request of street depart- ·
(Continued from Page t)
ment
supervisor, Jack Krauucr.
Hysell for $4,500 for the police
Present
were Vaughan, Clerk ,
department, and a nc)Y truck for the
water department at cost not to Kathy Hysell, Musser, Walton, CounCilman Bill Young, Wchrung and
exceed $6,000;
• Approved the mayor's repon Wright, and Anderson. Absent was ·
Councthnan Scott Dillon .
· showmg $4,513;
• Approved second reading of an
ordinance granting Christmas bonus·
cs to v1llagc employees;
• Heard a rcpon on the inaugural
Fall Fishing Classic, which raised
about $750 for the 1997 Meigs County Umted Fund campaign ;
• Renewed the village's liability
insurance with the Downing-ChildsMullen- Musser Agency of Pomeroy,
with Council President John Musser,
who is a partner in the agency,
abstaining;
• Renewed annual membership in
the Oh10 Munic1pal League for $500
and approved Vaughan's membership
in the Mayors' Pan.nersh1p for
lation Center, Ellen Sluchell, VMH, Progress for $50;
10:21 a.m, Mulberry Avenue,
• Approved the purchase of tools
Gerald Sellers, VMH;
for the street department for about
4:35 p.m.. Overbrook Nursing
Center. Mildred Stancan, VMH;
8:07 p.m., volunteer fire department to Laurel Street, suspected gas
leak at Mary Lang residence, Mary .
Lang, VMH ;
. II :54 p.m., Shcnfl's otficc, Robcn
Kennedy, VMH.
RACINE
· 6:47a.m., State Route 338, Clara
Adams, Holzer Medical Center;
4:03p.m., Barringer Rid~e, Orma
Criss. Pleasant Valley Hospttal.
'
REEDSVILLE
4:10 p.m., Keller S,treet, Sierra
Tucker, Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital:
TUPPERS PLAINS
$5
3:20 p.m., yolunteer fire depart·
Both
ment and squad to SR 681, motorcycle accident, John Gabriel, O'Bieness
ALL: AGES WELCOME
Memorial H&lt;lspital.

Meigs announcements

Member: The A.s!IOCIOted Prtu, ond the Otlio
·NewJpaper Msociation.

Ohio .45769

TRASH FROM SWEEP- The American Electric Power's River Transportation Division employees volunteered to staff the
co
ny's harbor towboat, the MN Safety Leader, and a crane
bar:to collected larga llama from the river bank during the
recent Kanawha Rlvar Sweep. Employees gathered four cars,
mDf11 than 30 tires and numerous household items - mcire than
five tons of trash. The treah-fllled crane barge Ia pictured at the
company's Lakin, W.Va., headquarters before the items were taken away for proper dlapo..l.

Akzo ......................................63 4
ATaT .....................................34 4
Blink OM ................................43
Bob Evan• ............................12\
~·,..... .........................39,.

Chlmploft •••••••••••••.•••......•••22 3!
Chltfl!llllll Shopa ....................4 •
~~dlng ..........................21 '4
I Mogul ............ ~ ............24
Gllnnttt .......\ .........................7!1i\
Goodyear ......................... __. ..48'1.
K-rnMt ..................- .................
Landi End............................. 2J.L•
Umlled ...- ..............." ...........1. •
Ohio Valley Bank ....................36

se

OM V•lleY .............................32'1.

PI aplel ................................. 27''
PNm Flnl...............................12'4
Roc~•ll ............................... ss:t.

AD-SMII ..............................160\
Sh_,-..................................
7'!.
lltll.r llllnk ..............................89'4
Wencly'e ................................20'.4

-·-·-

Worttllflgton ..........................21'4

Stock report• are th• 10:30
a.m. quotle provldld by Adwell
of GIIIHpolle.

•,

EMS units log 10 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service _!ecorded I0
calls fof assistance Monday. URJls
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
10:34 p.m., Cole Street, Tony
Harris, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
8:41 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabili-

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - none.
Monday discharge.s - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Nov. 4 - Kathryn
Delay, Mrs. Richard White and
daughter, Patricia Wiseman, Eugene
Johnson, William Butcher, Roben
Dorst. Mrs. Melvin Simpson and
daughter.
BirCh - Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Dickens, daughter, Rutland:
. (Publllbed wltb permission) .

Meigs High Cheerleaders
Will Sponsor A

CHEERLEADING
CLINIC

THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY
4:30·6:00 AT MEIGS
HIGH SCHOOL CAFETERIA ,
Coat PeF PerPon
(Covers
D-.ya)

�Tueeday, November 5, 1898

..

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Unanimous choice
•

P8ge4

---.

'·-

Tuelday, November~. 1898
.

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•
WINNING SCORE • Denver Broncos wide receiver rod Smith
Ia congr.tulat8d by teemmate Byron Chamberlain alter a 49-yard

touchdown pan from QB John Elway for the winning acora
against the O.ldand Raldlra leta In the final quarter Monday
night. Denver won, 22·21. (AP)

...

::~ ·M ajor League clubs
,_

argue over labor deal

NEW YORK (AP)- The 1998
expansion teams might be voting on
baseball's proposed labor deal, which
appears to be headed to defeat going
into Wednesday's meeting.
Jerry Colangelo, managing generd· : a! partner of the Arizona Diamond!'J.
backs, said be expected to vote on the
,,, five-year agreement when owners
gather at Rosemont, Ill. ,
·
" I have very strong opinions
"l! about this whole situation," Colan-~
gelo said Monday. "I would as soon
have an opponunity to voice them.
"The most imponant thing in my
opinion is: WluU's in tbe best stakes
t of the game?-· not individual teams
it or in agendas. In a spon that needs to
1.-: get its act together, Hrst and foremost
bring some stability back to tbe
!· let's
game. Let's get on in rekindling the
1: interest baseball once· had." '
l7
Other officials said owners would
decide
at the meeting wbether to give
t:
to the Diamondbacks and Tamir votes
pa Bay Devil Rays. .
"It has to be discussed; it has to
f.. be voted on," NL vice president Katy
l,
said.
• Feeney
Allowing votes to the expansionb teams adds more potential oppot.; nents to stop the deal. A three-quar-P. ters majority is needed to ratify the
tt proposed agreemen~ which was completed O&lt;:t. 24. That means ·eight
f1 teams
can stop a deal, no matter if28
11. or 30 are voting.
.
i!
~Chicago White Sox and Cubs,
Florida, Kansas City and Montreal
are
known io oppose the agreement,
H
H
' fl
ll
. '!

~1

,,

·•

"

which would bring labor peace to
baseball after a fight that's lasted
nearly four years. Boston, Cleveland,
Houston and Seattle also were seen
as possible no votes.
In rejecting tbe deal, owners might
tell 'negotiaior Randy Levine to go
back to tbe union and extract addi·
tional concessions, a lawyer familiar .
with the .situation said. Levine, howeve~, was,contemplating resigning no
matter how the vote went, the lawyer
said.
Several officials said a rejection of
the deal might cause next week's
summi.t meeting on umpires to be
canceled. Levine has told people he
will resign almost immediately if
owners tum down the deal, and
union ~Donald Fehr has told peapie he probably wouldn't attend if the
labor agreement is rejected.
Ownen agreed to .the summit
l)teeting while in U.S. District Coun
in Philadelphia in an effon to stop the
threatened postseason strike by
umpires. The umpires were angry that
Baltimore's Robeno Alomar was
given only a five-day suspension for
Spitting at umpire John Hirschbeck,
a penalty to be served nc~t season.
"There is an. agreement with the
United States District Coun that this
meeting will go forward." umpires
.union he.ad Richie Phillips said. "I
intend to be there with a representative group ·of umpires."
Fehr, reached at his hotel in Lendon, did not comment on any aspects
of the labor situation.

* Los Angeles Angels name
n

Terry Collins new manager
ANAHEIM,. Calif. (AP) - The

tJ stadium will be hardly recognizable,

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choice for the AL award and the ftnt
Akron Springfield, tbe Division II
COLUMBUS (AP)- Troy got a scoring with 509 points. Also, Troy
since· California outfielder nm
boasted
.two
1,000-yard
rushers
in
poll
cl;lampion, had never before
little help from Canton McKinley to
Salmon in 1993. .
sophomore
Ryan
Brewer
(I
,308
been
ranked
in the top 10 at the end
New York Knicks game. He unani·
notch its first Associated Press poll
Besides being a successful rookyards, 25 touchdowns) and junior of the season, much less won the Iitle ..
mously won the AL Rookie of the ie, there was another status that
title ever Monday.
Year award.
In tbe 50th year of the media poll, Matt Dallman ( 1.090 yards, 19 TDs). But the Spanans received 25 firstseemed to bring the 6-foot-3 Jeter
Troy, which received 14 of a pos- place votes and 341 points to easily
Even Derek ·Jeter, who rarely even more celebrity : Being single.
Troy jumped from second a week ago
sible
37 first-place votes and 330 outdistance runner-up Washington
to
first
in
Division
I,
thanks
to
Canshows any emotion on the field, was
Jeter, who often· talked to fans
.
points,
beat out Grove City by 29 Court House Miaini Trace. Columbus
ton
McKinley's
21-0
victory
over
· • ' forced to admit that he's had it pret- while in the on-deck circle, turned
points for tbe poll crown. Brunswick, Watterson, Fostoria and Chardon
•.:• ty good lately.
top-ranked Massillon Washington.
into tbe darling of many of the YanWhile Troy and Division D cham- the only otber unbeaten team in the made up the rest of the top five.
"I'm not one to comment on a kees' female rooters. In fact, after
pion Akron Springfield won their first big-school division, was third folMentor Lake Catholic had the
' · season until it's over," the New York John F. Ken-nedy Jr. got married,
poll crown~. the rest of the No. I lowed by Canton McKinley, which · most points (359) and most first· "' Yankees shonstop said Monday after some said Jeter was the most.eligible
moved up four slots with the victory place votes (30) in the poll, both
teams have been there before.
• • the rookie honor was announced. bachelor in New York.
Since
1990,
Mentor
Lake
Catholic
over
its rival. After Massillon came till)es edging · St. Henry by one.
"But I guess it's safe to say it's been
"Oh, I don't know who said
Youngstown Chaney was a solid
. • . a great year.''
that," he said. "That may be because and he was behind me every time I has won three Division DI titles. Cincinnati Elder.
Cleveland St. Ignatius, winner of second, followed by defending poll
· • · · From opening day, when he hit a ' I am one of the few single ·players." had a problem or didn't play well," Gennantown Valley View two Division IV crowns, Venailles has won six or the last eight poll titles and the champion Hillsboro, Springfield
- . • home run and made an over-tbeNot if 8-year-old Christina Slderos he said.
Jeter became the Yankee's' sixth . two media votes and defending poll last frve playoff crowns, finished sev- Shawnee ·and Jackson.
'' • shoulder catch, to his key RBI single has ber way. The New Jersey young-·
In Division IV, Germantown Val" off Greg Maddux in the clinching ster became a Yankees', good-luck different opening-day shonstop in six champ St. Henry has won four AP enth. Eight· time . poll champion
Icy View had the narrowest victory of
· • Game 6 win over Atlanta, it was a chann because each time she sang the years, following Tony Fernandez, trophies symbolic of being No. I in Cincinnati Moeller was lOth.
St. 'lghatius and 'Moeller both any of the No. I teams, totaling 340
national anthem, they w.on . After per- Mike Gallego, Spike Owen, Randy the state.
special season for the 22-year-old.
Troy had not even been ranked in qualifr"!! for the playoffs and both are points to beat Youngstown Mooney
Jeter hit .314 with 10 home runs, . forming at Game 6 of the Series, she Velarde and Alvaro Espinoza.
' '
the
final pOll since 1971. But tbe Tro- · seeking a record eighth postseason by 22 points. Newark Licking Vallev
said
she
wanted
to
fix
up
her
favorite
He
played
1~1
games
this
season,
· ' ' 78 RBis and 104 runs scored, and setjans
soared to the top spot behind an )itle. Newark Catholic, which missed was third, Bellaire fourth and Castalia
, · tied a position that had long been in player, Jeter, with her homeroom the most by a Yankees shonstop since
offense
that set a school record for the playoffs. also has won seven.
Margaretta fifth. ·
:
teacher.
Bucky Dent in 1977. He also became
, " flux -for tbe Yankees.
.,
. Voting was completed at the end the lint No. I pick of the Yankees to
On a team with likely Cy Young
· · ·" winner Andy Pettitte, star relievers of the regular season . That was make an impact with the team since
· ' John Wetteland and Mariano Rivera before Jeter hit that stanling home Thunnan Munson, chosen in the
and AL championship series MVP run caught by a 12-year-old boy in 1968 draft.
Jeter's 78 RBis were the most by
Fournier will work out of the office.
Bernie Williams, Jeter stood out for the AL playoffs and before his RBI
TOLEDO (AP) - The · Mid- ni conlacts.
single and steal highlighted the win a Yankees shonstop since Frank American Conference. committed to
' ·· manager Joe Torre.
"This satellite. office is pan of
He also said that tbe MAC will
Crosetti had 78 in 1936. He became expanding its membership_staning "most likely" host a· nu;nber of Phase I in a series of programs
· .. , . "I don't think we had one guy, against Maddux.
"'· player-wise, who was more valuable · In all, Jeter hit .361 and scored 12 the first full -time shortstop for the next fall, announced Monday that it annual events in the city. The finals designed to crcate ' morc awareness
runs in New York's 15 postseason Yankees to bat over .300 since Gil, . will open a satellite office jn Cleve: of last year's conference basketball and exposure for the MAC in major
than him," Torre said.
McDougald hit .311 In 1956.
'. '
Jeter was tbe eighth Yankees play- games. ·
tournament was held not far.from the .metropolitan areas," lppoliti said.
land by the end oflhe. week. · ·
"Winning a world championship
Jeter made 22 errors and stole 14
Staning with the 1997 football
.,.' er to win the AL award- including
· MAC Commissioner Jerry 1ppoli- MAC headquaners in Toledo: ·
is
the
best,
even
more
than
winning
bases.
He
also
struck
out
102
times
'
season,
Marshall and Northern Illi·' shonstops Tony Kubek and Tom
Two of the MAC's I 0 members
ti said the office was opened to crethis
award,"
Jeter
said.
'
while
batting
in
several
spots,
includnois
rejoin
the MAC. SUNY at BufTresh -lind first since Dave Righetate greater media awareness of the -Akron and Kent -are within an
falo is expected to join the league the
Jeter. the sixth player picked in the ing leadoff and ninth.
,.i ti in I 981. He received all 28 firstconference, identify corporate sup- hour's drive of Cieveland.
Jeter, whose salary was $120,000 pan in the area. and to cultivate alumAssociate Commissioner Rob following fall.
place votes and 140 points in ballot- 1992 draft, briefly appeared for the
ing by the Baseball Writers Associa- Yankees in 1995 and earned the stan- this year, had a $10,000 bonus clause
ing job this spring.
in his contract for winning tbe award.
tion of America.
Jeter
credited
Torre
with
giving
He'lllikely get about $220,000 as his
Chicago White Sox pitcber James
share for winning the World Series.Baldwin, who went 11-6,101 19 sec- him boosts of confidence.
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio State day's 45-0 victory over Minnesota.
football again is excellent at this
"!had rough periods all season. In
The NLRookie oftbe Year will be
... , and-place votes and 64 points.
sophomore tailback Joe Montgomery
The native of Robbins, Ill., tore point. He will, however. face an
, .. Detroit first baseman Tony Clark, spring 'training, 'I thought they were announced Wednesday. Los Angeles . was released Monday after undergo- the anterior cruciate and lateral cru- extensive rehabilitation process over
who hit 27 home runs.• was third with going to send me out when the sea- outftelder Todd Hollandsworth and ing surgery to replace two tom liga· ciate ligaments. Surgery was per· the next six to eight months."
Pittsburgh catcher Jason Kendall are
. . .• · six second-plaee ~otes and 30 points. . son started, ... he said.
ments 'in his right knee.
·.
fanned Sunday at the Ohio State UniMontgomery's 6.8-yard per carry
"He ,111ld me I was the shonstop . considered the leading candidates:
Jeter was the fifth unanimous
Montgomery, the second-ranked versity Medical Center. ·
average was the best oil the team. He
~ his team win the World Series. He sat
~ · next t&lt;i supennodel Tyra Banks at a

'

II

I

NEW YORK (AP) - He helped

Bronco.s ' Elway does it again

•

helm Stadium, redesigning the uni·
forms and,changing the team's name
from "California" to "Anaheim''
. Angels.
"I'm .excited about being here."
he said. "We have a chance to •ontend ·and that's what makes this
opportunity special."
Outspoken and quick to confront
his players when he feels they· re not
hustling, Collins is expected to bring
some new fire to a team that lacked
inspiration last season. ,
"I think the club has at times
·
lacked intensity," Tavares said. "I
know I've walked out of games
thinking we didn't execute very
well."
Collins, who favors aggressive
base-running. among other , things,
hopes to make the Angels more com·
pctitive and also I]lOrc entertaining,
which just happens to be Disney's
business.
···1 want fans to leave here saying.
'Hey. those guys played hard .'"
Collins said.
Collins' intensity led It&gt; run-in,;
with several Houston players during
his three years there, but the new
Angels manager said he doesn't
expect to be pals with every player.
"Players have to respect you. I
don't necessarily think the players
have to like you," he said. " It would
be nice to have all the players like'
you, but it's impossible to ask
because the players have different
personalities that. may contlict with
mine.
"The only thing I ask is a maxi·
mum effon every day. The players
who want to win will be the playen
who· are out t he re."

the unifonns will look flashier and
even the name won't be the same.
There will also be a new manager
running the show wben the Anabeim
Angels take the field in 1997. ·
The.Walt Disney Co.. which took
over the AL team. last May, put anoth·
er piece in the puzzle Monday by
naming Terry Collins as manager.
Bnmming with enthusiasm and
iqcas, Collins will be asked to tum
;iround a team that has a mostly futi lc
37-year history and slumped to 70-9 I
last sea5on.
Collins, 47, signed a multiyear
deal with the Angels after edging out
about a dqzen otber candidates.
including former World Series-win·
ning manager Sparky Anderson .
Tony Tavares, president of Disney
. Spans Enterprises, obviously took
the long view when he and other
Angels officials settled on Collin&lt;,
who was fired by the Houston Astros
a month ago despite second-place fin·
!shes in the NL Central in each of his
three seasons there.
"Sparky was definitely a finalist."
Tavares said, adding that he has the
highest regard for Anderson and
believed he could have had a positive
impact on the Angels immediately.
"But we were looking at the
longer tenn. My belief is that in any
organization, stability is impqnant.
You want to keep the same people,"
Tavares explained.
Collins is 15 years younger than
Anderson, who is now a TV analyst
for Angels games.
Tavares said the Angels executives
whO interViewed Collins were very
impressed.
"I asked them to rate tbem lthe
Collins, a former minor league
candidates) on a 1-2-3 basis, and by inftelder, acknowledged that he is
what margin they rated them,"
Tavares explained. "By a wide mar- intense.
"I love to compete, and tben
sin, Terry was the clear winner."
there's this intensity thing," he said
Collins, meanwhile, is happy to during a question-and-answer session
hook up with the Angels and the Dis· when "in~nsity" kept cropping up.
ney Co., .which is remodeling Ana·

•

OAKLAND. Calif. (AP)- Harvey Williams couldn't shake his
sense of dread when the Oakland
Raiders scored a go-ahead touchdown with little more than five minutes remaining.
"There's too much time. I thought
right when we scored, we've given
him too much time/' tbe Raiders run·
ning back said.
Williams was right. The "him" he
was referring to, of course, was John
Elway. ·
The veteran Denver quanerback
led the 33rd game-winning, founh·
quanerdrive of his career to rally the
Broncos past Oak)and 22·21 Monday
night.
·
"He's a great quarterback and be's
·having the career-year of his life. My
hat's off to him. But we still
should've won this game," Williams
said after the Raiders lost a home
game on Monday night for the lint
time.·
They were 8-0 in Oakland and 40 in Los An!eles before falling victim to Elway's heroics. The King of
the Founh Quaner connected on a
. 49-yard touchdown pass' to Rod
Smith with 4:14left.
Elway, who had just 108 yards
passing heading into the game's final
five minutes, finished 16-of-33 for
182 yards and two touchdowns. He
also ran for a career-high 70 yards,
breaking the personal record of 62 he

set last week.
"I'm always relieved," El~ay .
said of his comebacks: "Surprised?
No. if there's clicks on the clock left,
we have a chance."
· The Raiders, trailing 16-7, had a
fourth-quarter . rally of their own,
scoring twice in little more than two
minutes to go up 21-16.
Using tbe no-huddle, Jeff
· Hostetler drove the Raiden down the
field, finishing a 64-yard march with
a IS-yard touchdown pass to Denick
Fenner.
Oakland's defense forted a punt,
and Hostetler completed two passes
·to nm Brown, the last good for a 42·
yard TO. Brown was wide open after
Denyer defensive back Ray l;:rockett
slipped and fell on the play.
The Raiders'lead was shan-lived,
however.
Staning at their own 27, the Bran·
cos moved to tbe Oakland 49 on a
pair of completions to Anthony
Miller and Smith.
Elway threw two incompletions
before going for broke on third
dowti. Smith seemed to be running a
shan slant, bui suddenly broke deep
and burst past the Raiders' zone coverage, aided by Elway's pump fake.
"It was a great call by the coach·
es, a great throw by John," Smith
said,
Safety Lorenzo Lynch, whose
first-quarter interception ofEiway set

up Hostetler's 5·yard TO on a scramble, said be stumbled after Elway's
pump-fake and couldn't recover in
time to catch up with Smith.
"I thought I could make tbe play,"
Lynch said. "I feel like I let everybody down, my teammates, fans and
coaches. If I could have found a hole
to crawl in and hide, I would've. I'm
not going to get much sleep tonight."
Elway, who had a 10-yard scoring
pass to Shannon Shame in the first
quaner, also has led tbe Broncos on
seven founh-quaner game-tying dri·
ves during his career. Denver went on
to win six of those games, and one
ended in a tie.
Jason Elam had field goals of 36.
43 and- 28 yards for the Broncos (81), whose defense shut down the
Raiders (4-5) until tbe final quaner.
Elway grabbed his left hamstring
after being sacked by Pat Swilling a
series befon; his game-winning TO
pass, and Denver&lt;:oach Mike Shanahan said ·he wasn't even sure if
Elway would be able to continue
playing.
.
Shanahan,. now 3-0 against the
team that fired him in 1989. said he's
gotten used 'to Elway's comel;nu:ks.
"There's a look in his eye with
five minutes to go," he said.
Raiders defensive end Pat Swilling, who sacked Elway twice in the
game, put it simply: "Eiway does it
best down the stretch.''

Hostetler was 22-of-34 for 2SO
yards, but the Raiders' offense was
hurt by 86 yards in penalties.
The first Monday night 1ame in
Oakland in 15 years attracted the
Raiders' first sellout of tbe season.
With the Oakland Coliseum expand·
ed to 62,500 during an offseason
$129.4 million renovation, it was the
laraest crowd ever in Oakland.
"It's a little more special because
it's a tciugh place to play," Elway
said. "Wben you get in these situations, you don't hear the ·noise, you
just figure out a w'ay to get it done.
We worked on a silent count (on the
final series)."
After the Raiders took a 7-0 lead
on Hostetler's scoring run, the Bron·
cos responded with an 11-play drive
kept alive by an 18-yard scramble by
Elway on third down. Six plays lat.
er, Elway scrambled to avoid two
would-be sackers and threw a I0yard touchdown pass to Sharpe.
Cole Ford appeared to kick a 25yard fie'd goal on Oakland's next
possession, but an illegal procedure
. call nullified the kick, and Ford then
missed from 30 yards .
That blown scoring chance
seemed to deflate the Raiders, who
didn't gci another first down in the
half. Elam, meanwhile, kicked field
goals of 36 and 43 yards - the latter just 31 seconds before hillftimeto give Denver a 13-7 lcBd.

!

.

MAC branching out to Cleveland

Montgomery released after surgery

White: .MU won't live with the 3-pointer this winter
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (Ap)Marshall's basketball team Jived with
the 3-point shot in the past two seasons, and also died with it.
·
New Thundering Herd coach Greg
White isn't planning on building his
offense outside .the arc.
"To win a championship, we can't
rely on the 3-point line," White said,
refening to the Southern Conference
tournament. "In a three-day tournament, it will let you down. You have
to guard people. Can we guard in a
half-coun set? That's a glaring weakness to out team."

Marshall finished 17-11 overall
last season and 8-6 in Southern Con·
ference play. The Herd lost 92-77 to
Davidson in the semifinals of the
league tournament.
The Herd has back seven letter-

men from last year's squad, including second-team all-Conference selection Keith Veney, who hit Ill cif 244
3-pointers.
·
·
. Veney said . de.fense has been
stressed by White since tbe first day
of practice.
·
· "If you can't play defense ever)r
night, you can't give yourself a
chance to win," he said.
. Marshall lost point guard Jason
Williams. who averaged 6 assists and
13.4 points per game. Williams, a
second-team all-conference selection
as a freshman, followed coach Billy
Donovan to Florida.
So joining Veney in the backcourt
likely will be Sidney Coles, a trans;
fer who showed. f\11Shes of talent at
Memphis State.
·"He might average 5 points a

game and still be our most outstand- Atlantic Coast Conference, percnni·
ally the toughest basketball league in
ing player::· White said.
·
However, White said the 6-foot-5 1 America. .
"Marshall has won 77 percent of
177-pound Veney has much to pro.ve;,
its
games
(at the Henderson Center),"
his success at Memphis State was
White
said.
"I think we'll be pretty
augmented by the fact he played with
Anferneo Hardaway. currently one of good at home. On the road will be
another qucs~ion."
the top guards in the NBA.
"All he had to do was pass it to
Anfemee Hardaway, take a step to the · White isn't putting much creright, and Hardaway would get a bas· dence in preseason polls that picked
ket," White said. "Well, we don't Marshall to win the Nonh Division of
have Anfcmce Hardway."
· t)'te Southern Conference.
Maishall will be tested early, with
"We're glad to take it. and we'll
a game Dec. 17 against in-state rival
West Virginia ·at Charleston. The take it and run with it. Very few times
Herd's toughest game of the year, did I finish where we were picked,
·however, may be Dec. 28 at Clemson though~ " said White. fonncrly 'head
of the 1\tlaniic Coast Confcrcllj:c. · coach at the Unive111ity of Charleston
Some experts arc picking the Tigers and an ex-player and assistant coach
to challenge for the title of the at Marshall.

..
. .'

."
'

Everything falling into place for Michigan Wolverines

was,

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Hlike l Ia."

-LIGHTING SYSTEM
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e4 TIRE AND AIR PRESSURE CONDITION
eSSUSPENSION AND STEERING
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·: :I'
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dunk with 15.8 seconds left.
The Jazz broke their record of 74
points, set in 1974- when the team
was based in New Orleans -· in a
game at New York.
Karl Malone led Utah with 16
points, but was held without a field
goal in tbe fourth quarter.
· Barkley, who had 33 rebounds
Saturday' in Phoenix, had 20
rebounds and nine pajnts in his second game of the season.
Hakeem 'Oiajuwon, w~o scored 23

I

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Dates of Active duty

1! ~ ~~k~::~~~·r::~~~~::ia•~nU:

•: • Rockets a 73-72 lead.
: •: On ' Utah's ensuing possession,
; ; ; Greg Foster was tied up underneath
•!• by Olajuwon. On the jump ball, Fos::; ter tipped to Houswn's Mario Elie,
: ; ' who was fouled.
! ' : Elie made two free throws with
! · 3.3 seconds left. After two timeouts,
: LUtah JOI the hall to Jeff HomiiCelr. in
&lt;the left comer, but his 3-pointlltempt
I bounced off the rim. •
.
I' 1 Slio finished with 16 polnll and .
Drexler. 10 for the Rockets, 3-0 this

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1111 Court St.
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The Dally Sentl'nel

lowest point total in franchise histo- .
.y, beating the Jazz 75-72 Monday ·
Il' . night
on Charles Barkley's
•

A Special Salute To :

! I cJo .
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i ,., Houston Rockets held Utah to its

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Jazz held to
1·· lowest po1nt
(~ total ever
!:i
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shaving, but said investigations were totigher."
necessary to clear the program's rep-.
"My concern is for the
utation.
· '
playcn who are innocent of anything.
"Giadchuk stated on the I hope that's everybody."
record these four are not under susHenning said he had made
pension and thatthey are expected to no changes to his roster for the Notre '
,play on Saturday and participate in Dame game. Asked if it was safe to ·
practice this week, •• Keefe said. assume players alreBdy would be sus· ,.
"None of these four were involved in pended if there were any evidence of
any kind of spans betting with gambling, Henning said, "That's
Boston College."
correct."
Keefe noted that !he players
Gladchuk mei Monday with
could not have been shaving points or the four players, who took pan in a
fixing games unless they bet on their heated meeting Saturday with Hen·
own games. But it would still be ning and the team's student captains.
against NCAA bylaw 10.3, which The four stormed out of Saturday's
prohibits stuclent athletes from most meeting past reporters who watched
1
gambling activities or associations. through the·windowed door.
Keefe's comments came
"What my clients wanted to
even as the team retreated.,to a rare do 'was to clear the air that they did
closed practice in preparation for Sat- not at any time do anything t&lt;i throw
urday's game against Notre Dainc- · a game at.BC," said Keefe's partner.
·BC's biggest of the year. Las Vegas John McBride. "I'm Sure that their
oddsmakcrs have taken the game off leaving. the meeting tended to aggra·
the board .
vate some of the feelings that _exist"Everybody is planning and cd.
practicing to play in that game,"
"We're confident when
coach Dan Henning said in a hastily · everything is said and done that
called and hastily ended news con- they'llbeexoneratedofanythingthat
ference. "It is a difficult task to get smacks of illicit betting on the BC
ire;a;;;dity.fo;;;r.;N,;;o;;;tr;,;;e;,;D~a;,;,m;,:;c:;,.,:Th=is,::m:;:a::;k~es:,i:t~.t..;.foo;;,:tb;;;;a;,;,ll;,;t;,ea;;m;;;.
..._ _ _ _ _ _. .

:j

One of the virtues of post·
graduate courses Is that
keep lhe boss's kids out·of
business for another year.

was coming off a career-best 160yard rushing day against Iowa O&lt;:t.
26.
_
·

deny ·s oston College
***********************************
*
.
.
.
*
players bet on own games

•,.

. Grate .
of
Rutlnd

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FREE Six Point Safety Inspection

DOiflft

. By
DaVe

Our friend!! had a tough day
work. The computer broke
down, and everyone had
learn to think all over again.

Willi nre .....lo.

&amp;til.

pleted 14 of 23 passes, including a
school record-tying four touchdown
strikes. Three of tbe latter carne in tbe
final2:09 of the second quarter. when
'the Wolverines turned a 10-7 deficit
into a 28-10 halftime leBd.
It was a pcrfQnnancc that proved
Dreisbach, Il-l as a s11&gt;r1cr the past
two seasons, is a big-game quancrback.

Buckeyes' second-leading rusher
"Joe's ' surgery went very. very
with 460 yards on 68 carries, was w~ll," .?hio State trainer Bill Da.vis
injured in tbe firsi quaner of Satur- satd. Hts prognosts for playmg

L~wyers

NEWTON, Mass. (AP) - Four
Boston College football players who
,,· , have denied that they gambled on
, .. .. their own games could still be pun•... : ished if they bet on others.
.
····,
·According to a repon in
, a ....,.ioday's Baston Plobe, three of the ·
.: ,._ four players at the center of a pointshaving controversy admitted that
they bet on games not involving
Boston College. NCAA l'l!les forbia
players to "participate in any gam·
bling activity that involves intercol'· ' legiate athletics."
_,
Bill Keefe, a lawyer for the
, : four players, denied that his clients
took part in any activity tied to point1 1
'
shaving' or game-fixing. But his com·
ments did not quite put them in the
~~ ·:,; clear.
'"They had no involvement
in spans betting with regards to BC ·
' football ," Keefe told The Associated
Press in a telephone interview. "As
. - . far any other type of sports card bet·
: ' ling on other college or professional
games, or any other sports betting. I
•
•
have no comment with regard to
•
;
·that."
The Globe sources, whom it
: ; did not identify, said the players felt
: • they were unfairly singled out for
: : something as many as 30 other play·
~ ·; •· ers also had done.
,
. Athletic director Chet Glad: '"-:
, h chuk has stressed that there was no
~ evidence of any game-fixing or point-

'

Minnesota with an impressive and ball team in the middle of the seaANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Just a month.ago, it seemed Michi· emotional 45-29 win over Michigan son," coach Lloyd Carr said. "We
· had a lot of guys in casts who missed
gan 's football season was disinte- State.
Should the Wolverines win their a lot of practice.
grating.
"We were alsQ tired due to acadThe Wolverines followed a 17-16 remaining three games - trips to
loss at Nonhwestern with a lacklus- Purduc and No. 2 Ohio State sand· ernie demands with midtenn exams.
ter win over Indiana. And it seemed wiched around a home date against I think more than anything else, that
a factor. But in the last two
hopes of a Big Ten title and a Rose .J4th·ranked Penn State - they .
would win at least a share of the Big · games, we have made great strides."
Bowl trip were disintegrating.
Ten championship.
That's particularly tru~ on offense.
All that's changed, however.
Under that scenario, the only way Michigan had great balance against
Now the ninth-ranked Wolverines
are playing their best football of the they wouldn't get the Rose Bowl trip Michigan State, running for 206
season. And they've virtually is to finish in a two-way tic with yards and throwing for another 203.
Quancrback Scott Dreisbach comregained control of their own fate as Nonhwestem. That's unlikely, since .
far as winning at least a share of the it would take two losses by Ohio
'
Big Ten title and a Rose Bowl benh State.
What
a
difference
a month makes.
arc concerned.
"We
were
a
very
banged-up
footThey followed a 44-10 win at

Akron Springfield cops
Division II football crown

•

Denver 22 Osklsnd21

'' I

Troy captures first AP Poll title

Jeter named AL
Rookie of the Year

...

The Dally sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

•

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

.

-

· The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

WEDNESDAY

TUESDAY

MONDAY

·

7

6

Pork Steak
Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy
Mixed Vegetables
Bread
Prunes

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER
NOVEMBER MENUS
ll

Ce!ebratlac birthdays at the September party were: Front- Floyd
Weber, Keno; ·Garnet Ervine, Racine; Lula Hamptoa and Dora
Wlalng, Pomeroy. Back: Mary Stobart, Letart Falls; Daisy
Blakeslee, Pomeroy; Nellie Parker, Alrred; Mary Cleek and
graaddaughter Olivia, Raclae; Paul Peanon, Middleport.

. Meigs Senior Center
·November·activities
The Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc., is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 to 4:30.
· Regularly scheduled activities are
quilting, sewing, cards, games and

pool.
Weekly actil(ities are Line
Dancing classes, with instructor
Paulette Harrison, on Mondays
from 1:00 to 2.:00 at a cost of $1.00,
Chorus Practice on Tuesday at
12:45, Knitting Cir~le on
Wednesday from 10 to 12, and
Physical Fitness,' chair setting
exercises, on Tuesdays and
Thursdays ill 11:15.
The "Over SS Exercise Class" is
held on Moqdays and Wednesdays
at 3:30 p.m., at a cost of 50 cents.
This class consists of bending and
stretching for muscle toning and
strengthening and walking and low
impact aerobics for cardiovascular
conditioning.
,
·
Transportation by Center vans is
available on Mondays and
Wednesdays to the Arthritis Water
Aerobic classes at Royal Oak Park,
leaving the Center at 9:00a.m. For'
further information, call the Center
at 992-2161.
A r~presentative from the Athens
Social Security Office will beat t~e
Center on Wednesdays, November
13 and 27 from 10 to 11 a.m. .
Tu~sday, November 5 and 12 tbc craft class will be held from 10
to 12. The project will be a lace angel with ceramic head and hands.
The angel can be used for a
centerpiece, decoration or treetop.
Cost for the class is S9.00, with all
supplies for the angel fumished.
Thursday, November 7 - the

evening dinner will be served from
4:30 to 5:45. Cost for the Baked
Steak dinner is $4.00 per person.
The Sounds of Country.will play at
6:00 , with a free will offering
taken for the musician~.
Tuesday, November 12 -.Beverly
Rolls, a Mary Kay Consultant,
Ravenswood, will be at the Center
for a makeover and beautification
session .from 9:30 to noon. All ·
participants will be instructed on
how to do a proper facial and
correct makeup application.
Friday, November I 5 - trip to the
Parkersburg Mall, leaving the
Center at 9:00 for shopping. Call
the Center, 992-2161, for further
information.
Friday, November 15 - The
·Arthritis Support Group meets from
10:30 to noon.
Tuesday, November 19 - a
Caregiver's Appreciation Dinner
will be held with serving at 5:00.
·All persons and caregivers who
receive services from the Center
programs are invited to attend.
Center Staff who assist clients while
remaining in their own homes will
·be honored. The public is·invited
to attend.

Liver &amp; On ions
Masbed Potatoes
and Gravy
Buttered Corn
Bread

18
BBQ Chicken Fi
Scalloped Pot
Cooked Cabbage.
Bread
Blushing Pears
25
Chicken Patty
Broccoli - HDII
Potatoes - HDII
Br6ccoli Soup-Si
V-8 Juice-Site

12
Macaroni &amp; Cheese
Creamed Tomatoes
Green Beans·

Peaches
Cookie ·

Johnny Marz~tt1
Tossed Salad
Bread
Frozen Mixed Fruit

.·.•

Baked Steak
' Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy
Buttered Carrots
Bread

Scalloped Chicken
Sweet Potato&lt;1s
Broccoli/Cheese
Bread
Tropical Fruit

21
Turkey/Dres$1ng
Sausage Links
Mashed Potatoes
Scrambled Eggs .
and Gravy
Hash Brown Potatoes
. Lima Beans &amp; Corn
Orange Juice
Cranberry ·Relish
Bis CUit
Pie
Roll Hot
20

19 .

Hamburger on Bun
Skin On Potato
Wedges
Baked Beans
Pineapple
Hawaiian Ham ·Loaf
Sweet Potatoes
Mixed Vegetables
Bread
Pineapple /Bananas/
Oranges

Baked Fish
Oven Roast Potatoes
Buttered Corn
Bread
Peach Slices

II

•'•
•

THANI\SGIVING

••
••

•
II

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

Tuppel'l' P .. lns, Ohio 45783
614-98&amp;-3813 or 614-667-6484

'1.' U.L approved Conduk
8" Graveless leach pipe
Gas pipe 1" thru 'Z'- fittings· Regulators- Risers

•Garage•
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESnMATEES
985 4473

Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Aex fittings &amp; W&amp;terllltlngs
Full line of Cistern, Septic &amp; Water storage lanka

Owner:
Ronnhi Jor18J,,..

Highest "R Value" .
Blocks 99.5%
otUV Rays

: Plc:l!:.up cllac:M'ded

..,....._ batW!el,
~

IMIIJmNia&amp;

'

motor bloclca.

by
WI~DOW ·

SYSTEMS.

f!O'IJCE TO BIDDERS

• DEPARTMENT OF

:TRANSPORTAnON
: Cotoombn, Ohio
• Oflloe of C"abaatl

~~:'CO':'TR'='
~lllllgDN10118108

v ..

&lt; liiii().GD(S)
Btatecl pto-la will be

1
'

accepted tram ell pre~=l•ed blddere 11 the
of Conlreotll, Room
118 *"- Ohio Depe..-nt

r'

oI 1

Maxine Little, one of the newest..RSVP volunleen, helps some of the men who were part of the Prostat~
Screening. This was a joint effort of Riverside Hospital, Veteran's Memorial Hospital, the Meigs
Cqunty Health Department and the Retired and Senior Yolunteer Program.

·~T

T I'MipOi....,,

Public Nol'§e
PUBUC NOTICE
llelge County Flood
V.~ence loerd will hold 1
variance hNrlng N"--L..... ,,_
:;;1:"'!~Ytlt Commleetonere
2:00 p.m., In thtl
Meetlnl' Ia open to

I

public.

. Col........., Ohio, until 10:00
lhlge County Floa""llln
\ a.m, Thuracley, November
MlfiiOer
21, 818 lor lmprovementa
Edward Worry
In: .
30; (!11_5; 2TC
P*' 1: Melge County,
Ohl4 for lnlprovlng eectlon
·Public Notice
IIEG-143-11.29-P•rt 1, 8tata
Route 143 In Scipio
PUBLIC NOTICE
Townehlp, by conetructlng:
The llelge Soli - Wot•t
&amp;ridge NO.IIEG-143-1131, 1 Coneervetlon Dtelrlct aro
lh~e epen conllnuoue
bld1 on their
rei orced concrel• 1l1b
lpruder. II
w ceppecl pltalll-nta
1 5
cepe city,
tar.
(opMo
20',
25',
hydraulic
end
PTO
drtven,
n
1
20'
....,_nta~ roecMiy Wot/dry lime 1pro1dor, 5
32' Jlf guardrail oVIr llud ,... old.
Fori Crlllk.
Contect tho llolge Soli
..,.. 2: For Improving 1nd W1lor Con ..rv11ton
oedllon1 IIE0-143·(11.78) Dlllrlct Otlln II 112 el471o·
(13if7)-Part 2, a- Ro\ote mille errengomenh to took
1~1n Cotumbte 1ncl Sclr,lo lllhtt opreador.
'Towpnlhlp, by oonetruct ng leeted bld1 wilt b•
two'11ox ,...__
1cc•ptod until cto1.1 of
Ohio Deperlmlnt of buatnou on llond1y,
TrU'Ieporletton hereby NoWtmber 25 1nd will b•
not1fl•d ell ,pre-quellflld
11 7:30 p.m. on
bldillrllhll cltaldvan'-!1
Nov•mbor 27.
biM(tneeu--.m••• wllfbe
to: llolgo
otfcinled lull tipportunlly to
33101 Hllend Roed,
IU...,tl bldl In raeponN to
OH 45711 1nd
thla.lnvltJtdon end will not melt&lt; on
outakll of tho
be
llflllnll of enVIIope "Lim• . Spr•ld•r
the roundl of race, color, lid". . ·
or . nation II origin In Tho bo1rd ro1•rv11 th•
co~el'llllon for en award. right to reject eny ond ell ·
.,mum wege retea lor blda.
thloi' proleol hiYI bun (11) 5, 11; 2TC
pre.otennlned II required \ - - - - - - - - - i
by leW 1nd are HI forth In
lhollld propaaat. "Tho dola
ut lor completion ot lhl1
work
be u Ntfortllln
lhtt blclcllng propo11L"
Pllnl ond SpecHICIIIone
1re on Itt• 11 the
of
De'portment
Tranepcntltlon.
·
'
·JERRYWRAY
DIRECTOR OF

Til•

=RIIId

t~·

t

We had quite a· crowd for the 1ngel (lasses held recently at the Meigs Senlqr Center. Allee Wolfe, . '"';
RSVP Director, was the instrudor. Everyone had a good lime while learning a new craft.
, ·~!

...

ornament as a keepsake following 1"'T
the Holiday Season . All Proceeds
from the "Tree .of Lights" will be
used to assist the Home Delivered· \"~ !
Meal Program. You may
donations to the
Multipurpose Senior Center,
Box 722, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

DAY

Every Wednesday Storewide Savings

15o/o off

1-900-526-5050
Ext. 6218
$2.99/min, 18+
Serv U.

1!xL 1M1

742·3212

.

~~0....,..~

tE Construc:tio~

I

ask for Rick

E.-,&amp;WtH"-s

949-:)057
mo. pd.

WOMEN TO TALK
WITH YOU liVEIU

Body work, Car, truCk
&amp; trJH:k paln11ng, .

Unforgettabte
Conversational I

minor rnechlniCIII
l'lptllr.
TunHipa, 011 Change,
w.x, Burnng
Long st., Rutland, 011.
742-2935, Alk for Kip

Calllhla exclualve
2ot hr. hotnnell
Cel11-900-476 8585
Ext. 3313
~.88permln.

Muet be18 yra.
s.rv-u- 611 645 843-4

MEIGS
REFRIGERAnON
HEATING&amp;·

DATELINE
The Girls of
your dreams

COOUHG

1-900-99()-9330
Ext. 1553

ofUrtiiCel

(No Sunday Calls)

SLUG MATCH
JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE
. FORKED RUN
992·7119
SPORTSMAN
J'A I,L CI,EA N·UP
CLUB SUNDAY, Aeration Repair or Replace•ent
NOV. 10,
10% Dl~cout for Sept. &amp; Oct.
12 NOON
••••••• and WMkend D x-c:•arge

s•ITH'S
COISTIIC1101

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

--

In Memory

In Memory Of
ESTHER A.
LOWERY
McKINNEY

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding .Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dre~~~~ing • Ornamental
Steps • Stair&amp;, Railings, Patio FumHura, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots ol other stulli!

May 12, 1958-

Nov. 5,1993

"No Job Too Large or Too SmaH

1'

We will work wtthin your budget.
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
108 Pomeroy Stntet
M81on, WV

Appaladian

Oi••~=es
Dulllul
...
Flrapl1ce 6 Furmtee

CINnlng
Rllncepe, .......,, 6 Full
LlneofACCH1ortea.
24 Hour An1Mr1ng
Service
lllflly lnopectlono

Senior Chlan Dllcounl
. Fully lneured
614-717-4491
800-9011-3040

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

985-4422
Chester, Ohio
1012

.,_,

GUYSI

WAIIT TO TAlK TO
BEAUTIFUL LADIES,

TfN

r-------COLLINS
•AddltJone
-New Conltructlon

o0-10 Y.... Experience ·
ol.ow-a
ofrH EtU11111ta1
•All Wartl: Guaranteed ·

614-992-9910
".tSK .tBOUT OUR
ROOF SI'KCI.U
· uat-.IML

· REMBRANDT PAINTING
AIID DKORATING
Over 15 Yean Exp.
'Interior and Exterior
· Palntlna
Palnlin1 Roors
Wallpaper Hanging
Pressure Cleaning
Roofing
Minor Remodellnc
Raldenllal aad
Commen:lal
FREE ESTIMATES

•UYE•?n

CALL IOWIII
1·90CH76-1515
EIT. 4971
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 8434

'~ 1

2 Klnent. 1514 ·448·4887 Ev8ningl.

Black

a white rabbit to 'a good

home, 614·8J92·2219 or 81 ..-Q9278illl•

Chow Uale Cinnamon Colored ,
Very Friendly, To Goad Home
Only 814 ·247 -2032 Evenings,
~ends.

Free ducks and tamale pot-bellied

pig,814-142·1410,

long Haired White female Cat
Free To GOOd Home, To A Famil~
Wilh No Other Cats, 614 -446·

2342 Ext. 1 Then 20, Usa Pet8f·

aon.

Singer ltwing machine in cabinet. nead1 wome work. Call 30&lt;1875-536! .

Wnirlpool washer ror pons . 30'4458-1657.

60

Lost and Found

nesday, CR 35 vlc lnil)', anawera
to ·euttt~a·, reward, pleaae call

614·843-5258.

LOST: Nov 2, llny, IBn-orange

m•l• dog, 11 Fooclland; Rt 2 byPillS. 304·875· 8351 or 304-6755872 uk tor Cheoyt.

last : young Jack Ruue_ll remer,
Happy Hollow Rd. vic inity, black
hlarton rjght slde, 814-742-1410.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp;.VIcinity

ALL Yard .Sales Mull Be Paid li-1
Adv•nce. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
ttt. dRy bef9re -the ad ,ls to rurt.
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition- 10:00 a.m. Satut&lt;1ay. .
November 4th, 51h, Blh, lit·5, 48
Hubbard AvenUe, Kanauga,

· Clolhlng, Kerqsene
Christmas Decorations.

Heater,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid !n ,
Advance. Deadline : 1:OOp.m the
day before the ad is to run. Sur\- ,
day &amp; llonday odlllon· 1:OOpm

Frowy.
Clo~

.

in carporl sate. Novembtt

8· 9. First mobile home behind

Ueiaa fairgrounds. Christm••
lterilo and mora.

80

·

.

Public Sale
and Auction

R1ck Pearson Auclion Company
full ~lme au~lione&amp;J , compte1G
auc11on
serv1ce . licensed
166,0tlio &amp; West Vifg 1nia, 304·

773-57850r 304-77:).5-WJ.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolule Top Dollar : All U.S. Sil-

ver And Gold Coins, ProotseiS,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold

Rlng_s, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,

Sterllr'IQ, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 S.Cond
Averue, GaiNpolis, 614·448·2a.t2.

Clean Late Mod81 Cars Or
Ttucks, 1990 Models Or Newer
Smhh Buick Pontiac:, HlOO Easr~

em Avenue, Ga!Hpolia.

·

·

J' &amp; O'a Auto Parta. Buying ial·
;;r~cles. Selling parts. 30•-

GRAND OPENING
HIDDEN
TREASURES
749 s. Third Ave.,
Middleport
Ctramiea, Woodcrsfta,
Holllll!lllde Done &amp; .
Buketl.
AIIO Chlcl~'l

A
young
h..rt
etoppec1 beating, and
-• came, 1he- clay
God
called you

•

home.

ELLIOTT'S
Everyday Low Prices
Waallera ..........................$297
Dryer1 ............................. $267
Dtehwaahers ................... $297

Range&amp;................... :........ $2117
Refllgerators ................... $477

ELLIOTI APPLIANCES
2

675-'165o.

COISTIUCTIOI

(10) 21 (11)1 2TC
'

Open

2 Kittan1, 4 months old, very
pretty, yellow, 10 good heme
only, good with children . 304·

oRnldll)llll Remodeling

'

Giveaway

loll: male Bassett hound, Wed-

Must be 18 yn\.
Serv-u
(819) 645-8434

•New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Palnllng
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753

d:WJOnWIJ:

"nd

oflalt Iyemors
Instillation &amp; Service
oln•urad
Phone 614 992-2735

Cusmm Building &amp; A..-~ ill

Hert·

Check ltallon. CBAWfABQ'R

Found: OciOber 26th, Small Mixed
Bread Dog, Vicinity : Spnng Valley
Shopping Center, 1!14·245-5130
Identify. ,
·

Doli Smllh
tHiatPumps

$2.99 per min. ,

We proce11 deer, make tllckorr
amokod hom' !rail boloiina, pop.
peroni, Jerky, 1ummer tauaage.
Coottw kapt, dean, sanitary. Hunt·
lng eupplles, licente &amp; game

40

MIKE liNG

711Min

.

30 Announcements

31801 Amberger Ad.
011 Forest Run

-&lt;ycltFC

,

AN NOUN CEMENTS

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR

I

614-992·7643

For ell the en1wer1
talk live to one of
our metaphy1lcal
advlsorslll
Clll1-900 582-4000
Ext. 2308
$3.111 per min.
Mual'l&gt;e 18 yre;
s.rv-u- (619) 645-8434

•

Residential
Commercial
New Home
Remodeling
Custom Design
"We treat your home llka
our horne"
Call 614-949-2600

FORKED RUN · BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
SPORTSMAN
..ClUB GUN
SHOOT
FRIDAY,
NOV. 8, 6 P.M.

Horiza? ~

~HECI THE.~ms FOR ALL YOURNEEDSY

Co.
We specialize In:

30 Announcements

. New Homes • Vl.nyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
· Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENnAL
FREE ESTIMATES

What's on Y01r

(619) 645-8434.

TRANSPORTATION

testing wllb Henrietta B~iley, Pomeroy, at a recent vision ~llnlc.

OR. CITIZE

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

....,n

WE HONOR

{§)

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

Cllll for Pemonetnltlon &amp; Free Estimate
. 614-892-4119
. 1--8110-291-560.9
110 Court St.
P.omeroy, Ohio ·

• STATE OF OHIO

•

.

· Industrial • Automotive
.New Radiator• • Re..Cores
A/C Conden1ers/Ho1e Asaemblys

QUALITY

•

An evening dinner will be held
. Saturday; December 7, 'beginning at
4:30 p.m . to light the outside
Christmas tree to honor participants
and deceased members of the
Senior Citizens Center.

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Offered E;xluslvely

Ida Diehl are llot!t retired leaehen and involved
with the Retired and Seaior Volunteer.Program. They recently

COUIIIYI
1 (100) 37W3II(

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

Top, Trim, .
Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

THE lATER II REPLACEMENT WINDOW
TECHIOLotY
"'HEAT MIRROR• pat. .ed syst•. ··

I

IOOIPOITIIS

JONES'
TREE
SERVICE
20 Year• Ezperience •

T/1211111

I

..., ..

•

•New Horilea ·

NEW

I

'DATE LINE
Are You Sick And Tired
01 Being Single 7 Daya
AWeelc? R011111nce Ia
Just A Heartbeat AW/11'11

Attorney At Law
(614) 592-5025
Athens, Ohio

Plastic Culvert - Dual wall and ReOular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D. pert. - solid pipe
4" &amp;8" Flex'plpe
. 4" &amp;6" Sch 35 pipe
'!." &amp;'I•" C.P.V.C. pipe
11/o" thru.4" Sch 40plpe
.
'/.' &amp; 1" 200 p.s.l. water pipe (tOO' rolls thru 1,000' rolls)

IOIEIT IISSELL
CONSiiUcnON

Racine
American
Legion
Poet 602
I
:. Doors Open
.4:30p.m.
Blngo6:30
Sunday

;

CENTER
CLOSED

The Meigs Multipurpose Senior
, Center will feature a "Tree of
Lights" to honor friends, relatives,
neighbors or church members.
Donations of $5.00 will place an
ornament on the tree in memory of
or to honor a recipient. The
purchaser will be given the

Sale
Merchlndllle
Not Included

Umestone, . I
! Gravel, Sand,
Top
Soli, Fill Dirt
I
'

I

•
CENTER
CLOSED

--__.:-Tree of Lights----;:~

Save 15% off everything in our store.

1-800-273-3385

BINGO

·' ~.

'Jf'ednesdays
Senior Citi~ens Day
Storewide

I
I

. 614-992-3470

Evening dinner
is scheduled,

RSVP ReeDtly sponsonid a TB and Tetanus Clinic. Don Younc. a
RSVP volllnteer, fills out bls paperwork to get "stuekH. He's
pttl•l •• yearly TB tea.t from the Meigs County TB Clinle.

National Tire Recycling Center

i

••
••

Beef and Noodles
Cauliflower
Harvard Beets
Bread
Apricots

I

I

:
•I

management, gift ideas, and tips for
holiday entertainment wHI be
distributed. Cost for the program is
$5.00; with food sampling
included. Please call the Center,
992-21'61, to make a reservation by
November 18.
Thursday, November 21 - the
annual Thanksgiving dinner with'
turkey and all the trimmings will be
ser.ved at noon; Call. the Center,
Wednesday, November 20 - the 992-2161, for a meal reServation by
monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will Tuesday, November 19. A program
be held from 9:30 to 11 :30.
will be presented at 11:00 by Joann
Wednesday,' Novembe.r 20 - a,.. Rev. Bob Robinson.
Becky Baer, Meigs County Family
Tuesday, November 26 - the
and Consumer Science Agent, will
monthly birthday party will be held
conduct the annual HOLIDAY with seniors celebrating birthdays
HAPPENING from · 1:00 to 3:00. in November honored. The Christ
A cooking demonstration and ,a . Academy Handbell Choir will play
craft project will be featured: A all 1:15.
,The last scheduled trip for 19'16
booklet containing recipes, time
is Thursday, December 5 lo
Wheeling, WV. The trip includes
mansion tour, Winter Fantasy Laser
Light Show,. shopping ~~ St.
Clairesville Mall, the Oglebay
garden and gift shop, and a guided
tour of the Oglebay Festival of
Lights. The cost is $35.00, with
meals at your o~n expense.
Persons with reservations need to
make a $10 .00 deposit by
November 11 to hold their place, as
there are several persons on
standby status. Call the Center,
992-2161, for further information.

RSVP
Allnutil Health Information
on October 10.
Davenport,
owaer o( Big Bend Health &amp; Fitness, was one of twenty-five
participants. His exercise equipment was a big bit.

.

I

22

tt

WICKS
' HAULING
'

l•

.

manulactured in 41eetlanglhs with IDs of 13, 14
or 15• and an average oo of 22.
(Larger sizes alsO available.)
Never polluting, EPA approved, impervious to
attacks from salt or other minerals, la$tS forever!
$5.00 per linearfoot, F.O.B. Pomeroy, Ohio
Contact:

(Unle Stonel,ow Retet)

29

28

27

26

CULVERT DRAINS .

• ..,.,s,ll

Beef Stew
Cole Slaw
Biscuit
Banana Slices in
Red Gelatin

William Safranek

Cover your mosquito infested drains

Usellllns:
$5.00 &amp; Up

·.

made lrom the sidewalls ol scrap tires,

.,.,rwrment

l_ &amp;hcU...

Beef Tips in Gravy
on Rice
Broccoli/Carrots/
Cauliflower
Bread
Peach Cri.s p
15

14

13

'

8

"""' ~r.ed-ll'ldMtnlctlble

,_D ,0U, llltd you Clift help tfte

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

f

FRIDAY:

THURSDAY

BANKJUJPT&lt;!Y can relieve a debtor of fii!IIIICUII-1
obilgations IUid 11T811ge 1 fair distribution of ISletS.
Debtors in banbuptcy may keep "exempt" property
for their personal use. This may include a car, a house,
cloth':~, and houleho)d goods.
Poe Information Regarding Banbuptcy contact:

11170At..1
afr Rt. 13 at Rt. U1
D• win, Ohio

1 to5

8t. ~7'Chrl~~8051

You to11ow.c1 the filth
God chou for you
You could nol ttsy
I!IOihtr dey
To ..ugh, to love, to
work, or plly,
.
Your life - full, you
loved so much.
Good fltttldt, good
' U-. lfld I loved'l

-toucll. on -"'·

Pllyroom

••• •• •••

!:

::~:~::
on
, _ equlpnoont.

'ON
FIN'IHCING
...THIIPOT
1111111o 10 OUAU'IED

Mondtly 10 sm-6 pm
Tull.•lllur. 2 pm-7 pnl
Fridly 2 pm-8 pm

LINDA'S
PAINTING
..IIIIOI·IDIIIOI

...........r••·"'''
FREE ESTIMA11:S .

plllatl........... ..
fer
VIIY IWOIIAIU

un

••••••~as

Top dollar- ahtiques furniture
Qllla, c:hina, clocks, Ootd, silver:
~nl, Wllthtl, 1&amp;18181., olcl IIOnt
t•r~. old blue &amp; white dilhea, old
wood boxes, milk bonlea, Meig1
County Advertisement
Martin, 814-992·7441 .

Warued To Buy Ustd Mobile
~omea . Call : 614·41116-0175 Or
304-875-596~

Wlnled To Buy : We Buy Auto'•
AtrJ Condition, t3 14·388-9082 Or

, 01~PIIRT.

61&gt;MIJ.4110

IUYI!RI

FOOL
PROOF
LOVEll!

IIISULATIOII

'laur 111M
•••m•dlltooW.
But wt wilt fill It, with
lliiMm!IMied
Joya,

1~

notlfllf.

'laur _ , 11M IIIII

EXT. 4500

' ui""" ......- .

$Uipermin.

. . . , rnll8lll by
. t.nlly .... frtlncll.

llllltb111yre. .
lllrt-U-{111) 141 14ll4

'

'

Er.1PLO VM ENT
SERVICES

'VJ11 1 mo. pd.

'INIGII tNVINTORI' FOR
-OIATE INITAU.ATIONI.

O•Dy
'

110

Help Wanted

S$0ancersSS need e~:1ra Xmu
eaah, Southfork Showbar, Pl.
Plaosan1 WV, 30&lt;-675-5955,
~rmnasuc~ 1n11ructor, full or Plfl
nme, at Willpower Tumbling.. 304675-6182.

HOME COIIPUTER USERS
NEEDED. 145,000 Income po·
t•nllal. 1-100-t;1G·4343 Eat. 8~

-Col ""'r ....~~~.

·

HOllE TYPIST, PC uotro naad·
td. ••s.ooo Income jlotin11at.
Cll1 1-51~ Ell. 11-0311.
;

I

l

�P8ge 8 • The O.lly Sentinel .

•

..day, November 5, 1996

t~u

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • P-ae 9

OOP

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

·=~=~~

p}UTJ,TP

ALDER

~CR088

41UKIIIII. .......
42fllr .....
44AI .....

1-fu

6Chlallln-

PositiOns. ~rnanent Ml t1m11

111 lima bul'lfW, E-Z ftnonclng 2 14x70 2 Bedrooms, $250!Mo.,
or 3 boclroom, around UOO/mo, 1250 O.posil, Green Elemen1ary
"" dlllvoty and •••·up. 1-100· Schools, 814-3e7-0632.
251-!IO'IQ.

Clttkltortlfl. Full Benelill.
• tdm. a~iation and ul11y

coli: (701l9D8-2350E11.3070.
llm-tpm.

AVON I All 11,1"1 1 Shirley
Repreunlativet
_ Earn money lOr Civil!·

Able

bill at hOmllat work.

m11

e

1-IQO..

882-11358 or 30•·N2·2845, Ind.

At!&gt;-

~Iaska

Jab1l

NlltOI-I&lt;Ivtrllllrl(lrl
tNa
Pill ..... . , . . ..,
. . Fadlrtll Fair Hauling M
of I 11118 "'*"&gt; RlltgOI
I t &gt; - 'any p.wfooaw,
ln~tatla1 ordllcilliielbl
buld on fi!CO. 0010&lt;,' Nllglon.

new

Earn Up To

S30,000 In TlvH llonlha Fllllling

F-.

Salmon. Co ..IIUction, Clmorlal,

Di
Mort&gt;l 7 Doy1 otli7-8752022Eiti.0521A42.
Computer

Uter~

NHded. Work
own houn . $20k to $SOk/~r 1·

IOO-:Io4&amp;-7111811508

oulomlial8tolul or notional
001gln, or ony lnlatllonto

.,.

make onyorIIUCI1
"'"'"""""'··
lmtlation
dlla1mlnalon.
•·

INp jobs! Earn 13001$1100

Ytlr round pollttona. Hlr·
room

This t4w paper wll not

ki_ilh....,.

-lorllll- · l n - o f . . law.

DILIVERY DRIVERS Fltr
Schaduln All Lav•ll Of Erpetl·
ance N - . Earn.$8 -SIO /Hr.
Calli Prtlf Daily. Apply AI Gtlli·
po11, Llafo c-.~

offtce. tralnlng lor: persons select·

Uuar

I

MUST SEU la81 14170 wilh fi,._
place. Need to sell fast. Call RE·
GINA 111-814·385-2434.

ICfYtt1IHclln lhll ne lpt~C~e'
aie aval&amp;able on an equal

wllline to work hiU'd and llkl' to
help others, we may r.,.,. a job
tor ~ou. LDcal rHtdent. Excellent
income posalbililiel and home
have pl~tlng person·

allty and be willing 10 m•et the
public:. No eaperiem:e necet·

MUST SELL 1881 1417D with
firaploco. Nll&lt;l 10 1111 lasl. Call

-·

RIQina •• 114-38S-201.

REAL ESTATE

1985..., ,_., 14X7G. Colt Mike at
8' 4-3BS-0821 . ·

31 oIHomes for Sell .

New 14XIO. Only m~~ke 2 pay·
menta 1 move-In, no payment atter 4 yeara. tree Ml·up &amp; dehery.
31)4..1SS-5185.

•s Wooded Acrea,

-........ -•lion c-.

tion.
2 Bedroom, ,._.

4.82 Acr11,

Vinyl

""·000, 1148 Room, garage, largeiOL 304·
8~3030., :1)4.0754431.

two,....

nu't11. Tile candldoll mull hava
In • long'

A·Frame 3 ·4 Bedrooms, 2 Full

14Wt.

Onlv $208. 1e PI!' month wilh era10r

St025 Down. Call t-~00·837·
3238.
::N;:ow;::_ho_m_o_o_l""ta_rt_ln_g_o_l_$_17-0-pet-l
'month with only, $710 Down . .Call
FlJSS at 1-614-385-0698. ·
New hornea atarling 11 1170 per
month with only S770 down. Call

Rua at 1·800-837-3238.

Chrilly'a F-, LIWif

recently rfi'IQYaled, CIA. nMCir·
por~ dqorl, ,_liding, oultulld-

mull be Ucertsld to
prar:lico ,.,.,;ng In Ohio and ,...

11101121,000 080, 814-992-451•.

..~ corM'IJI'icltiDn lklll,

son. No ••perlence neceatary.

Call 304·875·5880.

A.M. or alter •pm.

Call early

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 Acre, Water, Sewer, Footers,
Garaoe. Off Possum Trot Road,

111,000, 81'1-3111H11118.

'

tal. Warer, Gas, 614·4~0116.

(31M)I76-0«&lt;. ANEOf.

oullldl. asking S5400 negolilltle,

I

180 wanted To Do

121110 2 Badraom, , Bath, eroe~lenl Condition, $3,500, 304-738-

PDmeroy. 12500 nogo1ioble, 814·
742-13&lt;3.

Three loll on Sprn"!Q Avenue,

RENTALS

51--

Wr Home All Houra

72QS.

410 Houses for Rent
2 Becfroom Furnished HouH No

'

_,..1 Portol&gt;lo Sawmill, don't 1$7" Fischer 12x60, i '*iroom,
hilul JOUI loQI 10 N mill lUll call vorv good condition. $5.000. :JIM.
e~ .
304-IJ't1117.
1175 2badroom, mobile home,

nished S45QfMo.: Deposit &amp; Ref·
Rlquired, 011 Rou•

150, 814 ··445·.4111 Evenlnga,

814-245-0080.

Central Air, No Pets, References
Deposit, 6·14·4.46·215e, 814·•4!-

0003.

1983 Schullz 1•41170 With 7'121'
E1pan~on. 3 Bedrooms,
2 S.ttls, New Carpet, CA, Hea,t
Pump And LOti 01 Extrlll

Factory

Will car• tor tht etdarly in lheir

- · 414-241-:!1161 .
$15.1100. 014·245-5986.
Will Do Homo, Office Fai Or Holl1984 14170 S*ylint, 2
l/llf c~. 304-875-0328.

In Rutland: a c bedroom houu,
recenlly renovaad, CIA, new "''
pot, !biro, - siding, oulbuild·
lng, $400 plus depo~~ Pill &amp;
cHcten are.wtlcom., 8VIIIable
-olbli I.
lo -f01':12al2lumllhod '

BedA&gt;OIN,

""'iloblo. 64-·611111.

.·, 980 Sunshine AC , Large· cov-

:::J~~ts~~~-1

room, access '10 appli.ances.

ered pOrch, Storage. building, 2
bathrooms. 2 bedrooms. convenl·
enl location, $17,500, 614 ·388·

kiEt»n. bath, laundr~&amp; al ulill·
lilt, Wllllly or monthly ra~es,

model'n I rotch fret, cal 614~2·4514 eam-1 1pm.

:

14110 Sll.ytint, 1WO btdrOOm.
rwa Nth, total electric, Ste.OOO.

New upstairS eflicienc)' with pri·

vale enlrance, completely lurniahed, quiel surroundings, three
miles lrom the Ravenswood
Ritctve Bridge in Ohio. II )IOU are
looking! it's a mu11 tee. It's S390
month, utlides are lncllded. A
depoan is required . For
infotmatlon or an appoint·
men1, call 114· 8"3·5343 and

1/811t Allor8 P.M. 114-258-13118.

Refrigerators, Sroves, Washerl
And Dryers, All Rec:ondlrioned
A~ Gaurantetdl $100 And Up,

510 lona Traclor Good Tires,

I-800-4Q9-34Qil.

\WI Dlllvtr. 814IMIO 8111,

Wetline, PS, law Hours, ·Goad

Punch 20Q car · amp, Sound·
atream SPL 12·inch IPIIkera in
a bqx, •~aoea, 1750 IDgelher.

Kenmore Washer Was S150 Cut
To $125; Kenmore Ory8r Was
$95: Cut To $75: Whirlpool Dryer
While $aS: White G.E.. Wisher &amp;
Dryer Set $205 Each, t Year
Warrant)', G.E. Electric Range 311

Ramlngton modii100AS 243 collber bolt aclion rifle·, new, $390;
Rlmlngton BIDWIIIng lypa AS 12
gauge IU(Omatlc dter ·gun with
light, very good, S275: Bornen

Hydraulic 011 S12.50·SQII poll.
Sldtrl Equlpmenl. He'ndtnon,

Waruect' tO bu)'· 87 or newer Ca·
price Cta11lc, mu11 be 4 door, V·

To $85; Skaggs Applionctl, 78
Vine Street Gallipolit, 014_.....
7398, 1·800-4119-3499.

~.

WV. 304-875-7&gt;121.

Polly's New af?d Used Furniture

no

Commando cronbow, exeellent.
I11P; Wl'lam·o crollbow, new,

175;1814·7•2·1123.

Semi Eiac:tric; Hospil81 Bed, 814·

Creeps, Gates, Coral Panels,
Headgatel, Grooming Chutta,
Post Augers, Aowl, TIMers, WOOd
Chippers, Bush Hogs. Bladel,

3157·77'34.

Silvertone S.njo. new ttrlngs WI
£Y8:. 1100.
TrucM !Opper, snort bed, S50. »&gt;·

Boom Poles, Subsoilert, Rock
Rake, Truckbedt, Trailers, Toro
Wheal Harte lawn &amp; Garden
Tractora, Husqvarna Chain Saws,

Sol!d Oak Dining Tlible • Ct.lrs,

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

Waltfbtd Manrtst, Full Bedroom
Sulle Manressea, Bed, Chest,
V8n ity. Bench, $250, 1814·4.48·

4782
Used

Furniture, 130 Bultvtllt PMI,

Bunk Bedt ·fMattret&amp;el, $150.00.
Couch! High Back Chairal Oneman 1150.00. Tables, Gifts, Mi crowave Cart, Beds . 18U ·448 ·
4782.

.Sporllflll
Goods

520
'
I .

Timely Maner In Which We Do
Our Repair Work On Any Brand
Of Equipment &amp; See II 'rbu Aren't
Fully Sltilfiedl
We Appreelltt Your 8UIIn1111

With Hoodl14-4o48-49"4.

l14....,t171
Jlvlcltn'l Fllin Equipment
3137!ngallaRd.
Oallipolil, OH 41831

Sllburban 'oal &amp; wood burning
stove w/thermoslat &amp; blower.

$150.304-713-SMe.
Ventleu gat heatert, kerosene
1'1el1ttl I WOOd IIOVH In tiOCk.

Siderl Equipment304-875-7421.

quick releate swivels,
occpe with llip-up
Clps, 3 boxes ammo, padded

cammo catt,

11 new, 1450,

...·1192-71187 leave....._.

call

Remington Uodel 700-AOl S)'n·

ethic bolt action, center far riHe.
24• barrel, 7mm Rem. Mag 4·
shot.
IIlii in box, 'never

tomatic, air, llereo, high mltet,

vwy nice. teeOO. 814-082..111)

Conversion, Sh,rp, loactid,
7t,OOO Milea, $18,000 61•·317·

0157.

1G8• ChO¥y 250D •••. blaCk,
350, Sapd, 1800 GYr/,
2•.ooomi., IH.ooo. 304-81&amp;1742.
•
Handicapped 1879 Cttevy Van'ln
flir Cmdition, 814-387-1734. ;

Motorcycles
.

'

!
0~0
. ~

1095 Ho- 300, 4-wd, '"' 0111n

20 hoUI'I, IXC Cond .' $4,400. 304•
578-2871 .•

IIBfterL 11,000. 3CM·I82-20M.

~·40

'111 Cftowy Sullurblrt •••· 3!0 .,..

1981 Po larix 250 $1.,800

COrT'!'Und Bow &amp; Sights 180, 614· Wolfe tanning bed, new bulb• &amp;

=lh

' ..

V·l,

81.,2!18-1198.

014'-7311 .

Cl-.
mint condition. Padded cammo

PEANUTS

•ag Clilo)i S·1D Blaz•r. 4.3
good COIIII!Ion, 81o1-8112-3902. ,

740

WATER WELLS DIIILLED
FAST AEASONABLl.SERVICE

a.da
TAN AT HOME
buy DIRECT and SAVEl
WotffTannlng

Mod. 7QO Romlngton. 31)8

_,

WHdea1ert

Uprighl, Ron Ev1n1 Er,terprltes.,

- THE BORN LOSER

.
~

FREE color caoalog.
Ca!ITOOAY 1·800-642-1305.

Cf: mJ flf..Y

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, sewer

..,

I'fo\ :iOF.R'(, - •YOJ./IV-..Y VO_itt:;(,IS'F~tmN-I'&lt;',DQOf~TI'f.tlRt:&gt;
MR.'ll®tN-'RL... CffiC.IN.L'(""

CornmerciaiJHomt unif1 from
$1119.
Low month!~ paymen1s

550

30Phoneffc
IIJIIIbol

_ -1--1--1--t

31 Prtn all pflnl
,3 3 :"40A35 - aplft
.

I i85 BIIZOI 414 N•odl a llhil
•
E Ac
tc.
omplttt - - .2;000. 814-245-11818. 1
Line Of Liveomclo Clipper Bladll.
Grooming &amp; Show Supplleo WI ·1990 Dodg• Ram Van 8-2SI).
Also Have A Variel)' Of ' Uae,d 72,000 Mllea, S•.ooo, 080 Can
Equlfl"''lnl lnclu~ng 5 Round Bat· .Be Seen At Gtllipolla Daily Tribuna, 825 Third AVIIIue, Gallipolia
ars, Grtndat' Ulxer, TraCIDt'l Etc.
See Us For A Complete line af Ohio.
Parts &amp; Service.
Compare the Outllty, Price &amp; 1903 Ford E-1So Van, Starcralt

Palf ,1,800, IItke Offer: 112 Car11 Pear Shape Diamond . Paid
ant.
·
$1,100 Asking $800: 3 Rolli 6 .FI
Llnglh Fonoo Approx. 150
New Speaker Box S35; 3 Window ' Chain
Ft.' $150 D14-24&amp;.5~DII Leave
Air Conditioners ·1 35 Each Sew· M
ing Machine In Wooden Stand 1
euage.
2101 Jefferson Ave .•. Pt Pleas·

.

8, loadld, firouCihl!ft .ons. 814·
7&gt;12:3802.
'

OngUenl

24 Scott
21iActorAIM211 Mylllllflotl81y
28 Taatypa

Opening lead: • 2

304-875-31182.

NEW EOUIPMENT: Zator, Long·
vans &amp; 4-WDs
I Krotl Trtclort. Waders, Back·
hOH, Yermeer I Ltly Hay Equlpmtnt. A Compltte .Lin8 Or Bale '87 Nill&amp;n, 4WO, rebuilt tnQine I
Wrapping, Htndllng I Feeding pa~rla, silver, wirh IDpper, ISOOO,
Acctll, Feed Bunks. Calf 114-9112-5248.

1875-3862.

laYIM'II)' I1CM' b Ctvl111rn11.

614-258-1274.

-

20g,-:.:_
22

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South ·
8Gulh
Weal Norn Eul
4•
Pus Pass
Dbl.
Pus
4•
·s •
s•
Pus
· Pass 6 •
Dbl.
Pus
Pass . Redbl. AU pass

Mull Sail: 1812 BMW 3201, Rt·
buill Motor, Now Point, AMIFU

ranges. Skaaos .Appllances, 7e
Vine Street, Call614·440·7391,

Frigidaire Harvest Gold Froat
Free Refrlgeraror Was 1125 Cut

.iJC..

'&lt;l()TE.

Fireworks
at the table
By Phillip Alder .

110~

How do you view lireworks? In
Auslralia, th~y are illegal . In the
. Netherlands, all wildlife is driven crazy
with fear on New Year's Eve as evecyone sets fireworks off at midnight. And
in Britain, many peDple set them off
tonight to commemorate the failure of
Guy Fawkes and his gang to blow up
the Houses of Parliament
At the bridge table, fireworks usually come from an auction with lots of
doubles and a large penalty. This deal,
although il features two doubles and a
redouble, is remarkable for North's
actions. It was in Alan Truscott's book
, "Doubles and Redoubles" !Random
House,l987) ..
.South began with a four-heart preempt at adverse wlnerability, showing a long and strong suit, but little
defense . Most of us, sitting NDrth,
would nod knowingly. Don't partners
always do that sort of thing? But not
, Larry Edwards, wbo died in 1985.
; When East made a takeout double and
·West bid lour spades, Edwards real' ized his partner had to be very short
in spades. So he raised 18 five hearts!
. : And when East contested with five
spades, Edwards apparently "sacrificed" in six hearts!
'
Finally, when · East doubled,
· Edwards redoubled, pemaps with the
thought of persuading East to retreat
C 1H60, NEA. Inc
to six spades . However, everyone
passed.
Of course, you or I sitting West
.
~
would have led a diamond, but ·this
WT Tl6£ &lt;~ ~ PW.'i~Ol-1 FOiit West, not being psychic, placed a
epade on the table. The (jeclarer,
O.STI~ Ya.R \0~
·
Michael Radin, ruffed and played the
tU:. •NONE OF
, heart ting. A moment later he drew
0C I&gt;WJE'I
.·trumps and claimed.

Slclflaa

..~:·l

lobMIIIIon)
51,_._
Ecl1011
52 Calara

16 Ex.,.,..
lnlla.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty Cipher cryptogram~.,. cq811fd trom quo&amp;alions by lllmOUI PIQPI, put
eaen ~ett.r
cipiWfstandllor .nether. Todly'• W.: r ~ B

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LIZDS1J.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "It's nice to be here in Iowa."~ Gerald FOfd, in Ohio.
·eosaon Is a slate of mind:- Thomas Appleton .

r~~:t;~r S©~JtllA-l&amp;~~s·
lllllted lly CLAY I . POUAN
O four
Rearranv• ltttera of lht
scrambled word• below ro

.I. ij
~

0

R0

2

1

........

four worda.

form

AT

I I -I

C Y EA 0

I

PI

I

. "l know of only one thing
more disturbing than a neighbors noisy car," my husband
·~------..., sighed, ·and thai's a neighbors
R EY RM

CIA. ,....,.

1:::

1--,.,.,_,.-..-...--.l. ~
1. 1_ 1_
_:::

CJ:ND!P"TE....

pipet, wind..

411

45 Bnafty aound
47 li...Oifrfflll

-,.

Wltl~·lt.l

ows, lintels. t1c. Cl.udt ytlnttrs.
Rio Grand~. OH Call 81'4·245Bui;:o,!~l'R]~;n;Tnj~~~ :,51:!2!:.'-_ _ _ _ _ __
560 Pills for Sele
3 Baby Hedge Hogo 614·381·
11889 Calloller 4 pm

partlclpanta

43 Sill duck

~;~·~;~~ ~~~h!h~~~~ ~~
~.s_,;..I_;;N,...T;_,W,;_;E;,..;.H;_,I'.-trO
I I I I · ·
you develop from slop No. 3 balow.

~-

BIG NATE:

. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Aparrment, Gallipolis . laUndr~
Room, Air, No Pets, S3e5tMo .,

Nice twq bedroom apartmenl m

..

Ponwror. no pets. 814-992:5858.

Hara~s • Balmy· Prone • Blight· TELLS
'You must remember," the park ranger told the campers· ·Nature doesn't try to persuade you it TELLS'you:'

NOVEMBERS I

!TUESDAY

Plealanl. 1114-992·5858.

Ot1e bedroom furnished aoarr- . t

mont in Mldd,_~ caii61•1·.U6·
:!Ott. 614·G82·2t78 or 614-992-

One bedroom upstairt lilpBIIment,
1275 plus utilities and f:ieposit,
Small One Bedorom, Ellc:eflent
Condition, Washer, Drytf, Stove,
ReFrigerator
Included.
No
Smokart, No Pall, $300 Deposit,
$350/Mo., Centenary Area, 814·

+18-2205. .
Twin Rivlft Tower,

now accePting

applications lor 1br. HUD subilcf.IZed apt. lor elderly and handicapped. EOH 304-675-MJG.
Two bedroom 1par1ment In Mid·
dleport,. 1155/mo. plus 1100 de·

For Aent Four Bedroom Older
Haute, Gallipolis, 1300 Deposlr,
1350 Per Month, Referenc:H Rt·
~uired, 814· 448· 7538 Evenings;
11A.·&amp;4fi· 187S Oa)'t, Available

Very nlco ground opetlmont
In quiet surrounding! locared
lhrtt mltea from lhe Rlvenuood

...~.

NM-1Gil7 14 Wide· 3 bedroom, 1 House For Rent: 3 Bedroom
Houll, In Gillllpollo, loiOD Dlpol·
it, 3 Rerauinces, No Pett, 01•·
•.e-ol37, '--o MM-.
'
New 3bedroom, 1 112~thl, in

country. $00/mo. 304-875·2118•
_&amp;prn_

· · · · - · 1211/mo,
.......
1-·H1·

Rl1clio llrillot In Ctolo. C:O:oploo.OI

ASTR0-0RAPH
Concrete I

Plast~

Stptic

300 Thru 2.000 Gollono
Enttrprlstl, Jackson.

Evans

1-1100-537-8528

304-875-8822

~~~-

·largo
- kltcO.n
· dryor,
diohWUhor and
wtlll
oil
appllancn. Nk:e balh wilh large
shOwer, terge mnt•r bedroom
with a wOrking Urtpllce. Living
aret haa 1011 of room. AI 1410
I* monlh with udlibtl included. A
depotil ol 1400 11 required. For
mo,. iniDrmatlon caN 11•·84353431nd t.vt ")IIIJOI

450

w. Pll_t2.00 tor ~ emalaJM em.

Furnlltlld

Two bedroom home In PDmtfo.,
Rooms
fer ront w1111 Ojllion 1o lluy on CIMIyou llllJI al · Sond • 1111-ed1117 DoubleWIH. 3 llldroom. 2 IriCt, no lnlidt pe11, depallt re·
0
Ckclt Moll!, Now Ownlflhlp.
drtllltd srampecf • nvo1Boo~,! ball, l1,111idaw:~ t2351mo. he quirtd,lt4.-.n.u.
Romoofalld, Eftloloncy
A.W.J. Enllfpr'l-. P. 0· r - · air, wllh a - d ctldll. 1·100·
Tompl• Hill I , MD~~ (Poy· _, 4777,
lito AIIOO.
Two bedroom hoi.IN, IIOVI and ADorna, HBO,
maiiiG _ , n;...,,
refrlgetttor, no lnlidt Pill. 81,.. WMkly, Monlllly Allot. 114-....
2101, 114417-41112.
Qll2..10110.

H...,

420 Mobile Homtl

•

o.,. tt,soo, 111m Kay, ua,

w. •

Nice 2 Bedroom Furnfshed

9am-Spm.

bath. $790/down, $150/mo, with
apprO'ttd credit. Call 1·.800·891·
8111.

HARTS IIASONARY ' Bloolt,
brldl I ·,
-.IMII304•·
,..,lo(lcO,
..
_30,...._
_., I;Oiillm, no 101&gt; •
.... or • IJIG. WV-021201
,

513

Glide

· 11 -~~~~
Roqun
11 Army

•KQJ10543
0108752
•3

--·

on two lidll, phone &amp;14·11J2 ·
2304.

-

w111t.,..,..,.., -1.

.

For rent or ule, Mil apply lhe first pDIII, wattf and trash paid, you
years renr IQIIInst lhe nte price, pay electr·ic and gat, •v•ilabla
- bedroom, PorrlorOI'. 101 lencld November 18. Call 8f.t1 ·9D2·7806

81H92-2987.

IH7 18dll 3 bldraom, 2 bllh,

862·2588.

...... 0.... Car 377 -

10WordloA
under-

814·Q02-7138 .

Chrllly'a F•onily Living

2 Balha, 1 Acre, $28,000. AIIO 7

-

Middiopor~ N 31d Aw. 211edroom,
furnished apl. Deposit &amp; refer·

P.M.

•

571.-'

Nico 3 Bedroom HOUIL Equipped 530-4.
Kilchen, 124 Kinton, Oalllpolls.

heat•r. new wallpaper, great
cond. $4,975. 304-875·5708.

~ID JUST FOR YOU
HGu~!••ning Services. 814·
.. 1~.

GraCious 1Mn8. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments 11 Village Manor and
RiQrside API!rtments In Middle·
port. From 1232·1355 . Call 814992-5084. Equal Houain:g Oppor-

114-2•HG:J NOM 5

... .

•K Q J 8 5

South

1805 Neon Sport Coop Low

141101, E....ilnl Condition. Sacrilict For IG.•OO U11Mr Loon Yal·
ut. 814-367·5()4.4.

lntlde Pets, Co1.1nty Water Fur- One bedroom aparlment in Pt.

new carpel , new 52gal water

.

448-3945.

WOrtnld, Ready 1 V111f5, '1350,

.

~·-

.10 8 7 4

ridge

16T_...
. (2-.)
58 c.......
17 'l1ew
eo Take alirelk
11 About
111 CUpllln and
Sllrgoono
19 II!- bubbly
21 Scorch
23 Slluft - ...,.
DOWN
24 Clog
.
1 Tr&lt;iptc:al nll1
27r~~ 2 o._-a flme
29
32 p . ..,
. 3 Church pan
34 Accommodatto 4 Nllrrow Vllf'-Ja
3ellonrwiroua 5 Gym fell
I To tomo axtton1
37 -Pk:alo
( 2 --l
3eTralnlnek
7 Alllhor ·
3. Holler -II&gt;Ou

Plul Dtpo~~ 614-448-2800.

814-112·713D.

Chaalirt-. 814-3117-7M1.
S.byaitdno

"-'!

Furnished Elliciency
Utill!lei
Paid, Share Bath SuSIMo., 919
Second Avenue, Ga11ipolis814·

10tad. Champion Bloodlina, OFA
c 11 miod Slrt. 111 Sholl 1

M- .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wnhers, dr)'efl, refrigeralors,

446-494 •.

88 Acre1 (+ · ) Sillies ~om Oak ences. 304-112-2588.
Hill, Ohio . S•3.000. 30•·675· New Haven, 1bedroom furnished
•97Q. ·
apt. Deposit &amp; references. 304·

'74, two bedroom, freshly pail'lled

Contlct hriOMel Department 11

n83.

5 Acrtl 011 SR 110, On Kerr :runlofos.
. Road, Cion To Freeway, Hospi·

for Sale

I

Furnished efficiency,• all Utilities
paid. DePosit rt(luired . 30"·875·

Ron Welltr Pups, AKC Regis·

. •Q 6

Will Sacrafica $8,1100 Wj Conlid-

Kay Available, Tope'a Furniture,

T,., wilh add-on rooma, 2 balh,
atc,lhrHiot~;. Located tn Ocala
Forell arn about 40 miles East
of OciJa. SerlouslnquJrtl only.

llo1-8112-51.U.

-mod.

Eaat
•A K 10 8 5
•A 7 Z

s2

. •• a 6

,.;,g

ttT- n•-..a-em.

NEWt Bank Rtpo'a, only 3 left.

Furnished Apt. 1 .Bedroom 807
Second Ave. Gallipolia, $295,
UtilitieaPd.814-384tlaher ·7 pm.

piao, whit•. blacko, g!Jyl, bOut
ayoo. ptally mask,
lt25.

8.,.5.

Dupler ~EI Second AVMJe, Gal·
lipolia, 3 Bedroom•, l.R., D.R.,
1345/Mo., One V.r Lease, Raf-

lll~u~:JIM-755-7191.

slberiln Husky pup.

•Q 1

Cauene, Sunroof, Sport Wheels.
Has Good s,art On Complete
Restoration, Runs Grell, Will
Sacrafice At $1,100 eu-•48·

New Repoa, only 2 tefl, never
!Ned in, "" detlwry and Hl·up.
t-801)..251-5070.

10-5. D1~

Purtbrld

•A 9 Z

wm

1g93 SaiUin Gl2 SUnrool Lllfo.
" Loadld, $12,500; 1 - Mu ..
Air, AulD, Spoiilr IlK Will
I18,50D. 814·••8-0114 Ltjo._

014-379-2!68.

Caae 135, 814·245-5100.

Deposit,

S110,IS14-DD2-5t44.

&amp; LIVE S TOCK

Studio Couch &amp; Chtlr, Girl's 10
Spoed'flika, 55 Gallon, Fish Tank

$~5

+AKJ9t3

Mull Sell : t883 Jaguar 8~,000
IIHI, Piim, (Complate) Now
lnttrior, Nice Car, Alot Invested

UIOCI FurnitUre 130 BuloviUa PI!&lt;&amp;,

arencaa Required,

•J 8 8 4

f AflM SUPPliE S

polit &amp; retereneea. 304·882·
25118.

IIIII Undlt warr11nty, frH dalivery

320 Mobile Homes

For 01.., RN'S and LPN's noed·
td tor Pltallnt Valley Hoipltal.

\

Equal HaUling Opportuni~.

Grubb't Plano- tunfng &amp;
Probllms? NHd Tuned?

NEW AEPO'S ONLY 2 LEFT

cuae, 1814-992.&amp;315.

wv. !ll)+a'IS-5CI4.

ESTATES. 52 'Westwood Drive
~om $2•• 10 $315. Walk ., shop
I movies. Call 814·448·2588.

:KIIile~
·~c~o~ll.;;;8'~"-~2~45-;5m;i.-;;;;;:J

Never Lived 1n.- FrH Delivery
And Sot-u,.. c.a 1·-251-SO'IQ.

c-.

Appty fl Crawford's. Hendlrson

Badrooma, $275/Mo., llonth'a ·
Dapoal~ 814-245-05115.
BEAUTiFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Antique Queens Anne Gllll

Jaduon~ Otio, 1-800-537.g521.

Ohio Valley Bank ho1 • 2;1torv,
OverbfOOk Cenr.r off•rs a com· Sbr hom• lor ul• ' in Maaon I .;;:.;:~------­
po!IM llilry and I bonlfil pock· County. Coli 814·441-cSvo. Sell· Now DIW&lt;IIopment: Rivef1Jond Ea11111, tcenlc 1011, underground
age Ia available. RHum•a with oualnQuirft Only.
11iorv lllatorv lhould 111 1ubrnit· RIVER 'RONT PROPERTY, u - . 2 miln loom Rl~
lOCI It&gt; llavfd Snyder, Adr111nl1tra· WITH HOUSE, 727 FIRST AVI- 304-2J3-P 773 or304-273-3052.
101 Ovorll&lt;ook
333 Pogo NUE, GALLIPOLIS, $81,500, Parcels on Rayburn Rd . Water,
SL: ~'rpar._ Ohio, •s110. EOE
614-446-7112.
paved road, reasontble rlltriC·
tiona. 304-175-5253. (no singlt·
Pt~Dp~• 10 work during CS..r IH· Three bedroom house in Syra·
wide lnqult" please)

'\

/Stove, Outside Storage, 2

Selt: Freeter, Sewing
o:hinol. S.lltl. Chino Clbina~
Bldfoom Suitt. Rototilltr, Couch.
Dilhel, Humldlllor, 18• Holiday
Barbil, Odds I Enda, 814-•.e0137.

Far

Beach St Mirtd~por~ 2 btdtoom,
lurnllli1ed apt, utilltloa paid. Do- Gallipolis. Manre11 Sttl, 'Full

Baths, laundry Room, Large 2 3·6 Acre Tract1 left $500 Down
Car Garage, $48,900 Gallipolis StSOJMo., County Wa111 On Srate
Aiel, 81.f..256-6928.
AMI• 1GO North~ B14-6et-3462.
In Autllhd: a 4 bectroom houte.

3 Room 1 Bedroom Apartment,
With Stove a Reftlgeralor Furnilhed. 814-441-2583.

blocks, and 8 llonth1 FREE Lot Mt Third -..o, c..pat. Rafrlg·

tieing, cloll ro school; priced 10

,

aet-~o~p.

N

Tues·Satg.e, SUn 11-5.
Ftbri~. By The Bolt, 10% Over
Wholetale No Evenings PlttM,

polls. Kildlen With SIDve, Retrlg-- Inch Wao $75 Cui To $1 50; AI·
erator, No Petl, DepGiit, Reler- mond Caloric Electric Rlnoe 30
Inch, S175; Almond Caloric Gas
encn.$38M.to.,81.t-448-4926.
Range 30 Inch Very Nice 1175;

N. . 111111,.•70 3btm, Includes
delivery, setup, skirting, a·tepa,

windows. vinyl

Ill. :JIM-875-5182.
Nice 1 1/2 Story Houae, With·
Building, 32. D .Acre1, locatio~
State Route 7 South 1814-25811878.
Roam
+ Utilty Room On

Overbrook Cen ..r, 1 100 b:td
long """ Cllll llclily, In lhl Olllo
Villlgo otM~rL Ohio
11 accepdno •ppHcalklnl lor a
DONtADON caliber reglster.ct

f

Appl!catklna available· ar: VIllage
Gt:een ~pta. ,., or call 814-892·

1-100-2!!11-1070.

3 Bedroom, efftcienl home, new
roor, vinyl lidino. convient loca-

-01'·

'

flcilldH, cloae to tehool In IDWn.

New1817 14 Wldea, 2 bedroom,

115,225, tree deiiYify and

l)tianc.s, Secluded, 4 IMnutea 10
llo!Nr. 114 u1 4111111

wll Ill olaila nlnlnllcla- In
110 ....... olllovemlitr. Applloa.... btlno aec:oplld 01
311711 ~ lW..
Clau - ~~-- ~ ,.,.,.
. . . . . I l l roquirld wtlll appllcadan. Apply in peraon bill·
...., 10om • 3pm 11-F. s..- .
lhat suc:a~11fuHy complete the
TCE ell" will b1 ailgfblo lor employiMnt. Abaalur.ly no pl:tone

.
I

·

2bdr'm. aptL, IOta! alac:trlc, appllanc• lumiahed, laundry room

Ser-Up 1-100·251·5070.

10 Ulnutea

From Galllpolla. 1130,000, 814·
25f..13B8AfllriP.M.

Nu,.• Aide Training Progfllm-

,

81...,.48-028C.

Need to aetl Immediately. Nice

E.O.E.
INSPECTORS: Maltlf111111o to 2 BeGroam, e milts from Pl.
lnapecl rnidential propertla1 in Pteaunt on Sartdhlll Rd. on
your - . PhoiDI, dlograma. and Ba:!J:d- Aoklng ~5,DOO. :IIW!)trimeter measurements. Must 875;+hiYI 1 ear and a 35MM camera.
Send riiUIM 10: Proptr1)' In· 3 =om Ranch With Full
t Vinyl Sldng. 2720 Sq.
spocliOnl. P.O. Box 370, Dunbar, Ba
h
Atllchad
G11ago. Air Condl·
W.V. An: Jennifer Willon.
tlonlno. Gas Heat. 2 Fireplace•
Needed 5 ladies To 8811 Avon. (With Wood Burner). ln·Grouncl
Pool. Largo Lot: Nlca Loca~on.
COlli 814-446-33511. ''- '
Oullldi GlllpOIIL Routo 5118, ClOy
NEEDE.O: Someone to give ¥iO· School Dlllrict 111111,500. 814-448·
lin lollono. 304·875-63114.
7o1311 (E""'*&gt;gal.
Now Taki~AppJicadans, Domi- S Bedroom. 2 Bath. AC. Jann Nr.
2.8 Actol, Cullom Kitchin, Apno's PizU, " " " - &amp; Gtlipols.

.

1 Bedroom, Extra Nice, Near
Holzera, $268/Uo., Pfus Utlll t1es,
Deposit Required, 81 •-4•6- 2957 ·
2 Bedroom Apartment, Water.
Sewer, Garbage Furnished, Ref:
erences &amp; Deposit, Requ ired,

1 V.Or Old Tri-LIW&lt;II 3 Bod11101111, 1:::.:..;=:==-----,-- 3711. EOH.
2 Balhl, Ba.......,l, Eat-In Klich- NEW IU7 14 WIDE 2 liED·
on, 3 Car Auached Garage, On RDOMS S15,225 Frta Dtliv11 y 3 lltdroorM. 5 Co"'l SlrHI. Gtl&gt;

sarr. For inure information, call
CIIJ Roney at 304-187S-.a019: or
mall resume to: 24t3 Jackson
Awe. Point Pltaaant.WV 25550.

-EOf

a

...

Bur. Sill a Trade, All BreNt.

Pay'mentt Wtlcome , I1-4·!1U·
04211.
.
Purebred Cocktr Spaniel pup.
pial, llils doni. nico blondl mala
tah, houaebroke, loW I children,

30-t· 773-5305 ..... 5pm.

Goods

Balhl, AN Elacoric, s... Routo 7
S. Acnou Fram Dim. 7110 Acr•. Two bedroom 1r1ifer In Mjd(jltport, Beautiful country blue plaid,
814-25M 51D A'* 3 P.M.
eJcellent condition, f51 4·982·6060 Jhape, living room lUIIe, like
HUGE 14r'IQ 3 Drm. with •pando. llrltV~t~~~-~-....:...:..:~ new, sota, love snt &amp; chair.
1500 firm. 304-875-11113.
Will take e~~re ot moving. Call 1· "
440
.
Apartments
814-3115-9821 and Ilk fer liiKE.
Carpet '&amp; Vinyl In S10cl&lt; $8.00 Yd
Mollohan Clrpets, 61....._7....
for
Rimt
Limited Df1atl 1g07 doublowido.
3br, 2both, SI7G8 down, S2781 "1_a_nd.,.,2.,.bod~roo_m_a_pe_r'"
' .,.-n-11-.lu,.,-_1 Couch With Matching Chair
month. Free dtlivtrr &amp; setup. nllhed and unfurnished, ucurlt)' $300, 81........e-4419.
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nitro deposit required , no pels, f514·
.wv. 31)4-755-5885.
992·2218.
Country Furniture. 304-875·8820.
At 2 N, emiles. Pt Plea11n~ wv.

......

- ~-

FDf aall- Saga CO S)'ttem with
appr~xlmlltly 30 gamH, S300,

Household

4 Pc. Living Room Suile Wood
Wilh Cuahiona Uka New 1235.00.
8to4-2Se-t332.
Appliances:
Reconditioned
Walhert. Dr)'trt, Ranges. Refri·
gra1ors. .eo Day Guaran1ee1
French City Mlytao. 014·.,.0·
7185.

Nice 2 Bedrooma, .S2251Uo.,
..-nea Down 21 a, Nice, Rafarenc.
es, Deposit Required, 8U-f14fl .
8172. 81.t-2Se.fl251 '

for Sale Or Rani: 108D MobUe
Homt Gatewl)' 3 Bedrooms, 2

Our-art~

intOnned that ail dl

If you Wllnl 10 m11ke monty, are

ed.

2 Bedroom Mobile Homt, Totti
Electric, No Pels, 181,..388·8326.
For Rent Or Slit: 1187 14 x80 2
Bedrooms. No Pats. Vtr'i Cle~n,
814-258-8089.

112 Actes W11h Moblle.,~H,,c•o;m;•~·
Ercalltrn Condlion, On ~
Road, I IIIII F..., Stall
With Boll Dock, Will Sail All Or
DividllniO Loll, 114-.....58&amp;

Avo.n

n_

51 o

I*' month. 814·742·2714.

3571...,._

Flr.waod : Mlled Hardwood Full
Cord {3 Stack• ta• Average, 4.'
Hi1tll' Long) 814--JG.

MERCHANDISE

141170 tlouse ttailar br rent 5300

3 Bedroom traM.,, earaoe, 1 112
.-tram PL - -- 304-1115-

Spotn, 304-115-1428.

/

PllppySarvico
- ·Pllpjilao,
Konnall, - n g.
SWd
Grooming,

'ATTN : Point Pleasant• Postal

1

__

fnvtgD&lt; ll1lng •

A Sick
14 Co•• ely

13 eo.-·~

.,.

Puall

·-nymph
..._
..
&amp;:·1

te.'-ly0f-

tala •
1a 11111y 111ft

' 110

......

.,.._to PltJta •

for Rent

ttY Ylltl IUYIRI I·Z flo'
MANCINO 2 Of I lladrooma, 14100 T11f101 EltcltiC Wllh AJr 2
Bodroomt W I D 5 Mllao Out
... l'lr ........ FIN DllivwJI I t300
.....2f58.10ol4.
.:;loi::;,.:U,.:::.;.1-.::::.:21:.;1..;;.f0,;;'111.:.-;.__ _

'

a.-.

-........ . -

soor..,.11•1- Golfo , _,

r,

Sialion, New Yor1&lt;, NY. 10151l. Make sure , shine.through today. YoyLchlrisma capto state your zodiac sign:
.
• livates ot~rs and it cannot be faked. .
•
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Your GEMINI (May 21-Juna 201 If everyone on
BERNICE
deelre 10f lt)81erial weallh will be a power- ; : your family can agree 1o a specHic plan,
BEDEOSOL lui motivating force 1oday. You will know . this will be a good time ,to put1he wheels
how 10 get enough money 1o buy wha1 · into mo11on, You should ge1 a good
yDu wanl atlhls 1ime.
bounce .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 111 II villi be .CANCER (Juna 21-Jufr 22) An impormore approprlale 1o 11)ink in 1erms of your ' : tan! decision yDu might have to make
!ong·range goals. Try not 10 worry abo&lt;l1 • today should not be baaed solely on
1ho present
'
... material considerations. Try to make a
AQUARIUS (Jin. IIIH"eb. 191 Someone , wefl·balanead atHument
who lovu you wilt understand your ' LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It looks as •f the ·
needs. and he will taka 11118Surea 10 lry to ' funds you need 10 purchaaa a lui!Ury «em
Wednesday, Nov. 8, 19116
ease
a burden you lhought you'd hava1o · might baeOma aVIiflbfe aoon. You have
n
,
deaf
wl1h
unasailled.
wailed a tong lime fOf !hill.
tnft.encee which are dilficun 10 describe
(
...
b.
20-llarc~
20)
Lia1en
10
·
YIIIGO
(Aug. 23-lept. 22) Your lnlfuPISCEI
~ contrOl mlghl wor1&lt; In your !evor 1o
o4hera
ct~reluffy.
!Oday,
beeau•
an
8110·
'
enca
over
your peer group Ia stronger
i"'Pmv• your 1He In 1hl yaar ahead. 11
cilll
mighl
P(OVfd8
you
wl1h
an
af1em8·
:
and
deeper
lhan you realize. Today,
1!1ough 1'- lllldl wfl be met
11ve
that
could
help
you
10
make
1
more
~
1hoy11
be
i1T4A
u • d Ill' JOUI' example and
llfORPIO (Oct. 14·No~. 21) A cfo..
dlcfolon.
w1111ry
1o_
oamu1111
your -..or.
~ migh1 tel you eome1hlng In canflARID
(Mni111-Aprll11)
SlriVIIIO
par·
'.
LiaR
A·
(Sapt.
U·Oat.
21) FDr be~l
dflCI taaay. You will have 10 daCida II
'torm
1D
lhl
!It&amp;t
of
ycwr
abillly
11
work
;
IUUita
today,
c!flcUu
•
Nl1llttYe
matter
Ytu oen ahara thla Information with
j' with only lha people who ~re dlreolly
ftleno:t. SoCitiJIO. . . yourNfllo • •today. 00 not WOlf'/ abail1
b¥'odiJ gfll. Send fa« your Attro-GNPh ' Poop~~IOk.-fldw'ltel~ will be loi1hc0m· Involved. Do not ditcuN ~ wi1lt outakltrs. .
dol goad job.
~!I "lloill for 1he yaallhNII_by fiiiJflng lng. NJOU
•.

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Slooplfltl - • '!'1111 -king.
Aloo, ltalller .,.•• on rjttt. ~lf
hoof&lt;-upa. Cd Iller 1:00 p.m..
304-m-fHI,-M(
.

$2 and SASE to "suo-Graph, c/o lhis ·TAURUS (April 20-May 2Dl II will be
ne~spaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill : important to let your real personality

,

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�hge 1o• The 0.1~ Sentinel

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POmeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Cell phone..r~ngs its way into public annoyance ~umber one ;
Ann
Landers

--

...

'"'·
.... _.,.. ao.
s,.._

n.e.

8y ANN LANDERS
· Dear Ann LaDders: What do you
think about people who receive calls
on their cellul4r phones in movie
theaters? . .
X..St week. a woman-seated a few
rows in front of me received two
·calls during a very serious and suspenseful film. At first, I thought the
ringing was part of the sound track,

but I realiwl my mislab when I
saw her take a pbone out of her
purse and start talking.
I assume the call was not an
emergency since she dido 't leave the
theater. Reporting the incident to the
manager would have meant further
distraction for me, so I waited until
. the n\ovie was over. I then went to
the woman and told her, "Keep an
eye on the Ann Landers column.
When you see a letter about people
· who receive phone calls at the
movies, you will know I'm referring
to you." ·
,
I realize this isn't one of society's
most pressing problems, but it is one
of those minor discourtesies that arc
becoming . more frequent in malls,

supennarkcts, restaurants and .theaters. Please, Ann, address it Thank
you. - Disconnected in New Jersey
Dear Disconnected: People who
receive cellular phone calls in the
theater are in the same class as people who blast their stereos on buses.
"Inconsiderate" hardly describes it.
They arc also showing off.
So are people who make calls on
their personal cell phones from
planes that are already equipped
with pho~s. Either way, it's disconcerting to be seated next to a person
who is carrying on a long-winded
conversation while you' re trying to
work or read. I speak from experience. Enough said.
Dear Ann Landers: I would like

to respond to "Stymied in Min- cy. I Jove the way my rcllders look
neapolis." whose son was bilten by a · out for one another.
friend's dog. "Stymied" and her
Insurance can be 1 godsend. A
family were visiting at the friend's 'grcat many people say they can't
home at the time.
afford it, but it can be the best
I have worked for a general sur- investment you will ever make and
geon for several years. We have you will certainly appreciate it when
taken care of hundreds of patients something goes wrong. Remember,
and have seen a great many acci- life is what happens to you when
dents. Mtiny people do not know you are busy making other plans.
Dear Ann Landers: This is about
that their homeowner's insurance
will cover an accident of this kind. · that woman whose husband saved
Please tell Stymied to have her over a million pennies and traded
friends check their policy, and I'll them in for a truck. That's over
bet they arc covered. -- Sue in N.C. $10,000! If he saved for 50 years,
Dear Sue: I received hundreds of that would be over 1,666 pennies per
letters saying, as you did, that inonlit. How can anyone spend
Stymied is probably covered by her. enough cash to get back an average
host's homeowner's insurance poli- of 55 pennies every day for 50

Ohio Lottery

•

Bulls outlast
Grizzlies with
23-polnt win

yean? And ainee a roll of pennies
weiJhs around. 1 third of a pound.
thil means he hauled over tine Ioiii
of pennies to the truck dellership.
Here's the really silly stidf, AM.
If those pennies had been ittYei!Cd
annually, he might have had eJIOII&amp;h
to buy 1 house instead of a truck. -;Portland, Ore .
Dear Portland: Thanks for a brilliant analysis. I could never haye
figured it out, but a Mensa-type
assistant in my office did. and she
says you are. right on the money. :

Buckeye 5:

1-8-11·14-36
Pick 3:
7-o-8
Pick 4:

3-1-6-4

Sporta on Page 4

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Send qnestionl to Ann Lande~

Creators Synclkate, 57fl W. Cea·
. tury Blvd., Suite 700, Loll Ancele..

c.nr. 90045

·

Vol. 47, NO. 131
0111116, ()!lio Velt.y Pubillhlng Comp1ny

TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Olive Towti,.. ship Trustees, Thcsday, 6:30 p.m. at
'-!he township building,

PAGEVILLE -- S.cipio Township
Trustees. Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. at
Pageville. ·
·
·

r.:.

CHESTER -- Chester Garden
:: POMEROY -- Medicare forum Club, Wednesday, 7:30 Chester
.• :r'uesday, I p.m.. Senior Citizens United Methodist Church, will make
;t:enter. Laura Greenwalt and Dawn bird feeds. Members to lake tools to
•Pailey of the Ohio Department of work with. Feeders will be taken to
' 1nsurance to conduct.
nursing facilities in the county.

. .

.

;: POMEROY -- CHOICE Home
.Education
meeting, Thesday,
10 a.m., Meigs County Public
. Library. Thanksgiving feast with pilgnmage dress !Uld potluck. Speaker,
•:roni Hudson, former teacher on
'Jndian reservation. Take own table
:service. For more infortnation con;iact Tammy Jones, 992-6743,

·..:

ALFRED -- Orange Township
:Trustees, 7:30 p.m. Thesday, home
clerk Osie Follrod.
.

;?f

MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
.!-odge 363, F&amp;AM. Thesday,
Masonic Teptple, election of officers. Refreshments.

.RUlLAND -- The Rutland
Township Trustees, , Wednesday,
6:15 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
Literary Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m. ,
home of Mrs. David Bowen, Syracuse. Mrs. Bowen to review "St.
Joan of Arc"· by Vita Sackville: West.
THURSDAY
RACINE -- Racine Post 602,
American Legion. ·Thursday at the
hall, business meting with dinner to
follow.

----~.------Military

the;'~

news_;_____

JEFFREY C. BIRCHFIELD
MONTY A. HUNTER
Marine Sgt. Jeffrey C. Birchfield,
Navy Seaman Monty A. Hunter,
SQn of James C. Birchfield of Rut- son of Judith K. Hunter of Rutland
land, recently wai; promoted to his - and ll.oy R. Hunter of Middleport,
present rank while serving with recently completed U.S. Navy basic
. Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron training at Recruit Training Com362, 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing, mand, Great Lakes, Ill.
Marine Corps Base, Kaneohe Bay,
During the eight-week program,
Hawaii.
Hunter completed a variely of trainBirchfield is a 1992 graduate of ing which·included classroom study,
Kyger Creek High School, Cheshire. practical hands-on instruction, and
He joined the Marine Corps in . an emphasis on physical fitness. ·
November, 1992.
Hunter is a 1996 graduate of
, JEREMY P. JOHNSTON
Meigs High School, Pomeroy.
Navy Seaman Jeremy P. John. DAVID A. POLING
Marine Pfc. David A. Poling
stan, son of Lawrence G. and Denise
It- Johnston of Ra¢ine, recently recently completed basic training at
completed U.S. Navy basic training , Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris
at Recruit Training Command, Great Island, S.C.
Lakes, Ill.
Poling successfully complete II
Johnston is a 1996 graduate of weeks of instruction on the Marine
Racine Southern High School, Corps' core values -- honor, courage
llacine.
and commitment, and what the

___;_Society

_u.:.w.
n~'s

By JIM FREEMAN
.
.
For the first time in living memory, Democratic officeholders will hold
the majority on the Meigs County Board of Commissioners, according to
unofficial results from the Meigs County Board of Elections.
Racine Mayor Jeffrey L. Thornton, in his first bid for county office, easily upset incumbent Republican Commissioner Robert C. Hartenbach of
Pomeroy for the commission seat commencing Jan. 2, 1997.
· Thornton won in all but four of Meigs County's 28 precincts, receiving
5,103 votes to Hartenbach's 3,888, according to unofficial results from the
Meigs County Board of Elections. ·
He will join incumbent Democratic Commissioner Janet Howard of Middleport, who beat Republican challdger Judith A. Williams of Syracuse by
a 4,623-to-4,190 margin to keep control of the commission seat commencing Jan. 3, 1997.
.
.
"First of all, I want to give all the praise to God and tell the people of
Meigs County I will be a dedicated commissioner and work hard for all the
county," Thornton said.
·
;,I plan on having public meetings in all townships to meet the people and
start helping them with their problems," he added.
Democrats arc guaranteed control of the board for at least four years since
Howard and Thornton were simultaneously elected to full four-year tertns.
Overall, Democratic candidates won all of four contested ra&lt;es in the coun-

LIVING ROOM SUitES
GLIDER
ROCKERS
Startl••••
$159~

HORNE BIRTH
James and Mary Beth Weeks
Horne of Obetz announce the birth.
of their first . baby, a boy. John
Christopher.
He was born Oct. 16 at Grant
Hospitai in Columbus.
..
Grandparents are Mrs. Alice
Horne of Obetz and John and Barbara Weeks of Pomeroy. Greatgrandmother is Mrs. Frances Scholl
of Pomeroy.

....•.,.

..

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"'•":~

'•

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JORDAN JEFFERS

BEDROOM SUITES
'

WE HAVE

PRIME STAR
SATEWRS
DIIEnES

.QUALITY FURNITURE PLUS
42123 St. Rt 7
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Fri. 9-6, s.t. 9-4

•

Acrou St1 ailllrom Flflllll'l Bank

Prealdent Clinton
unseated two-tertn Republican Rep:
Martin Hoke in the IOlh District. Ted
Strickland won in the 6th District
against incumbent Republican Frank
Cremeans. The result was a reversal
of the 1994 race, when ·Cremeans
ousted Strickland.
Eleven Republicans and six
Democrats won re-election to House
seats.
Republicans expanded their
majorities in the state Hoose and Sen:
ate. They gained four House seats and
will hold a 60-39 majority there, and ·
picked up one Senate seat, givi11g
them a 21-12 advantage in that chamber next year.
.
Half of the 33 Senate seats and all
99 House seats were up for grabs. .
Republican Justices Andrew Douglas and Evelyn Strauon were
returned to the Supreme Court in ![le
only race for statewide elected
offices.

Strickland edges out ·
Cremeans for Congress

Sentlnei .News Staff

CURIO
Wall &amp; Corner

Dick and Frances Jeffers.

·:·oemocrat·s seize
~najority on board
of ·commjssioners

control of both houses of the Legis- organization we put together was
laturc.
strong and solid .. . and that was the
In Cleveland, voters approved a reason we were able to put together
13.5-mill levy for the city's finan - a victory:" Leland said:
cially ailing school district. The levy
"I thtnk we c~? attnbute the loss
was the h 000-student city school to severalthtngs, srud Jtm Lynch, a
district's ..;swer to financial pro~ , spokesman for Dole's Ohio cam!ems that forced the state to lake con- paign. "Thanks to the governor's
trol of the schools more than a year· leadership, the economy was in good
·ago. Back«. said th~ levy 'would hands: letting Bill Clinton ride on the
generate $67 million. ·
. coa.~lall~ of the economy here. . _
Clinton became the first DemocWe re obvtously dtsappomted
ratic presidential candidate to. win . but we made a good final push in
back-to-back elections in Ohio since Ohio."
Franklin Roosev~ll. who did it in
Sandra Reckseit, Ohio coordinator
1932, 1936 and 1940. Clinton had fortbe Perot campaign, said the vote
won 40 percent of the vote in 1992 was "a sadtestimony to the peopl_e's
against then-President Bush. while • understanding of the 1ssues facmg
Perot had 21 (iercent.
this country."
His victory was the largest by a . The_ defeated )lfOPo.sal to ~n
Democrat running for president in etght nverboat casmos tn four Oh1o
Ohio since 1964, when Lyndon John- counties was on the ballot as Issue 1..
son defeated RepublicaJi Barry Gold- , "The people of Ohio have spoken
. water by II)Ore than I million votes. on~e ag_ain ......G~ bless them for
. The only other Democratic prest- the_tr wtsdom, satd Gov. _George
$~entia! candidate to win in Ohio since Vomovtch, who led the anu-casmo
then was Jimmy Carter, by 11,000 forces.
votes over Gerald Ford_ in I 976.
Kate Hubben, a spokeswoman ~~
No ~epublican candtdate has won ·Yes on Issue I, satd the economy ts
tbe presidency since 1860 without do\ng so ~ell right now and unemwinning Ohio.
ploy'!lent IS so low that ~ople ~re
S~te l,)emocr:'lic Party Chairman less ltkel~ to ~ke progresSive actton
Dav1d Leland satd Vice Prcstdent AI to create JObs.
,
. . .
Gore called him an hour before the
Republicans retained a m&amp;JOnty m
polls closed to thank him for Ohio's the state's U.s; Housedelegltton.but
vote.
Democrats g~med two seats.
.
"He thought the issues were
Democrattc state Sen. Dennts
importanl,' but he also. knew tl)e Kuctmch. a fortnerCieveland mayor,

Soulsby, Lentes win re-election

scrapbook~

..... '•
FOURTH BIRTHDAY
Jordan Kate Jeffers, daughter of
J,oe and Mary Jeffers, Middleport,
recently celebrsted her fourth birthday with a party.
.
A Winnie the Pooh theme was
~ed out with pizza and koolaid
being served.
·
Attending were: her parents,
brothers, Ryan and Chris Jeffers,
Connie Bailey, Cayla Taylor, Misty
Morrison, and·maternal grandmother, Jane Huffman. Sending gif~
were her paternal grandparents,

...,.,.. Soui"'Y

From AP, Steff Reporte
President Clinton and Gov.
· · h were the. t~o
George ".omovtc
biggest winners of the 1996 elecuon
in Ohio.
Clinton, a Democrat, c8Iried the
stateforasecondstraighttimeonhis
way to re-election, while a statewide
· casit19 gambling issue that Voinovich,
. a Republican, opposed was overwhelmingly defeated.
With 99 percent of Ohio precincts
reporting, Clinton had about 2.08
million votes, or 47 percent of the
state's presidential vote. Republican
challenger Bob Dole had about 1.81
million or 41 percent and Rcfortn
Party candidate Ross Perot about
466,000 or II percent, according to
unofficial returns tabulated by The
Associated Press.
Meigs County gave 4,212 votes
· (45.19 percent) to Clinton's re-eleclion bid, while Dole netted 3.S77 balJots (38.38 percent). Perot garnered
1,425 votes for 15.29 percent.
The !ileal count for other presidential candidates was: Harry Brown,
31 · John Hagelin 22· Monica Moore'
~. 34; and H~w.;.d Phillips, 20.
The casino proposal lost 62 percent to 38 percent, with 99 percent of
precincts reporting:
Clinton was unable to carry many
other Democrats to victory in the
state with him: Two -Republican
· incumbents won Ohio Supreme
Court seats and Republicans retained

j

' wcmls mean in guiding personal and
professional .conduct. ·
Poling is a 1993 graduate of
River Valley High School, Cheshire.
STACY L. CAMP
Marine Lance Cpl. Stacy L.
Camp, son of Richard and Ann E.
Camp of . Radcliffe, recently
received the Navy and Marine Corps
Achievement Medal. · ·
Camp was cited for superior performance of duty while serving with
. 13th Marine Expeditionary Unit,
Fleet Marine Force. Camp Pendleton, Calif. Camp was singled out for
the award because of his initiative in
making a significant contribution to
the accomplishment of the command's mission.
Camp is a I 993 graduate of Vinton County High School, McArthur.
He joined the Marine Corps in July
1993.

Of·

Ohio joins voting rush
·for Clinton's re-election

oil makes a
good egg

By NANCI HELLMICH
USA TODAY
Researhers have done something
fishy with chicken ens to produce ~
- I
what they say is a more nutrition- · ·
packed food.
.
"
The new eggs contain Omega-3 .'
fatty acids ~ly foull!l in fish .
oil)"and vitamin E. two nutrients
linked to preventing heart disease. ':
Pilgrim's Pride will roll out
EggsPius in Dallas and New Orleans
in January. They'll be sold nationwide by summer.
For years; eggs took a beating for
raising blood cholesterol, but recent
research indicates that eating three
or four a week is OK for most people .
This new egg might even
improve the diets of people who
don't eat enough fish, its developers
say.
To create the egg, Mary Van
Elswyk. an assisljlnt professor of
poultry science at Texas A&amp;M University, Ceyllege Station, fed chick-.
~
en• flaxseed, marine oils and soy- .
. bean oils. (They like the stuff,' she
.L...
. A_tota_l_o_f_88_0_M_e_lgs_Ca.,.
.
senior citizens turned out Thursday to get their flu shots at
says.)
Senior Citizens Center. Nur11es from the Meigs County Health Department and volunteers from the
The chickens laid eggs with the
Ohio University, College of OeteOpathlc Medicine, along with Retired Senior Volunteere, WQI'ked In
usual
amount of fat and cholesterol.
the program to Immunize residents. Judlva Jocelyn, a medical atudant at Ohio Unlver•lty, gives a.
two
of ihese eggs have about lis
But
flu shot to Jack Hawley of Middleport. ~e wss assisted by Mrs. Robert Burdat!:e, RSVP volunteer.
much Omega-3 fatty acid as a ~­
(Photo by Charlene Hoeflich)
ounce serving of red snapper or
orange roughy, and they prpvide a
worth of vitamin E.
'

2 Slctlona, 16 Page~ 35 A Ollnl'lll'tt
N&amp;WIIIIJ 1r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wedneaday, November 6, 1996

-Community calendar- ---------Fwsho~--------~ Adding fish
.. The Commwdty Calendar Is
POMEROY ·-- Eagle Auxiliary
publilbed as a free sei'Yice to DOD• 2171, Thesday, 7;30 p.m Refreshprilftt p-aups 'wlsiiiJII to aDIIOWlee . ments.
mii 1 DI and ,special e1'tllts. The
calender Is not desiped to promote ales or fund ralsen oltllly WEDNESDAY
~ lteDII are printed as space
POMEROY -- Regular meeting,
permit~ and CllllllOt be guanateed Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge
164,
to run a specific number of days. · F&amp;AM, Racine. Election of officers.

Rein likely lete tonight,
lowe neer 60. Thuredey,
occealonal rein, highs In
the IIIla.

u.s.

RESULTS -lnCIIII~
Rap. Frank C~ne .
cleughter Cer~ fir right, looked on Tueadey night ea camtreeaurer sm. Chipman 1nd hla daughter 51!ayn1
. out the numbers In the Slltlh Dlltrlct congre11ionel race
h•dquartara Jn Galllpollll- (AP)

By JOHN SEEWER
Associated Prell Writer
COLUMBUS - Former Ohio
congressman Ted Strickland never
stopped running for office even after
he was defeated two years ago.
He never stopped raising money
and he never stopped chasing the man
who knocked him out of Washington.
His persistence paid off
Strickland narrowly defeated
freshman Republican Rep. Frank
C:remean~ on Tuesday . to give
Democrats control of. Ohio's 6th
District seat, which covers much of
the rural southern part of the sta.te.
"I want to make it possible for the
·people who live in, my part of Ohio
to have the same opportunities ... that
are available to people who live in the
prosperous and wealthy parts of
Ohio," be said last month on the campaign trail.
.
Complete but unofficial returns
tabulated by The Associated Press
showed Strickland elected with .5 I
percent of the vote.

Strickland was bounced from
Congress by just 3,401 votes in the
1994 Republican landslide.
. .But he kept in contact with Democratic campaign experts during his
time away from Capitol Hill. He
piled up money at numerous fundraisers and even trailed his opponent
with a video camera, recording his
every move.
Strickland said he decided to
make another run at Congress
because he was not happy with 1~
way Cremeans represented the district.
.
''I don't think Frank Cremeans
realizes what he's done to hurt this
district,." Strickland said, citing his
opponents' decisions to cut funding
for programs that benefit the pi&gt;Or.
The son of a steelworker, Strickc
· land grew up not far from the Ohio
River in Lucasville. }jis family struggled like many others in a district that
still has high unempiQyment and
above average poverty rates.

Me·1gs Athens play· role ·1n dec· ·1d·1ng race

·
ty. Incumbent Sheriff James M.
· Soulsby of Pomeroy ·easily defeated Republican candidate and Salisbury Township resident Michael R, Canan by a
.
'
.
5,144-to-4,053 vote margin to gain a third tertn as Meigs County Sheriff.
From Afi Steff Reports
just as close during this campaign, Abele.
Jpcumbent Democratic Prosecuting 1\ltorney John R. Lentes of Rutland
The tables of heartbreak from two with many detertnining the race a
In local results of the State
beat Republican challenger and former prosecutor Steven L. Story of Pomeroy years ago turned to elation early this dead heat in recent days. Strickland Supreme Court races, Stratton defeat-·
by 4,868 to·4,190.
·
·
'
. morning for Democratic congrcs- . was.only one of two .former Democ- ed Marianna Dettman by a 3,437Overall, voter turnout in the county w~ lower than predicted with 9,640 sional candidate Ted Strickland who ratic congressmen nationwide seek- 2,311 margin while Douglas defeatnarrowly defeated incumbent Sixth ing their seats back.
·
out of 15,296 registered voters, of 63 percent, reporting to the polls.
ed Peter Sikora by a 4,696-1,380
. Earlier, eleCtions officials had anticipated that abolltll,OOO voters would District U.S. Rep. Frank Cremeans, · Meigs County vote~ supported margin. In unopposed races, Abele
i:cpOri to the polls.
·
.
R-Oallipolis, in a mirror result of Stockland by a reso~ndm_g 57 !'"r- garnered 4,861 votes in the Court of
The precinct with the heaviest voterturnout was West Chester Wtth 72.24 their !992 race.
cent-42 percent margtn, w1th Stock- Appeals race while Richardson colStrickland' edged Cremeans dis- land garnenng 5,227 votes to Cre: . lected 4,699 votes in the State Board
percent. The lowest showing was in Pomeroy's First Ward with a 52.04 percent voter turnout.
,
trict-wide by a reported 51 percent- means' 3,936, Strickland also carried of Education ·race.
· Six unchallenged incumbent Republican candidates were shoo-ins for re- 49 percent margin, with 'strong show- Athens Coun~. d~e matnly to a
Meanwhile,
Gov. George
election and merely garnered complimentary votes.
ings in Meigs and Alhens counties large O~to Umverstty student voter
Voinovich hoped defeat of a'
Those candidates were, shown with complimentary votes: Coroner Dou- giving the. former Democratic repre- turnout m support of Strtckland.
glas D. Hunter of Racine, 7,073; Clerk of Courts Larry E. Spencer of Racine, sentative the
to return to WashIn other state races, Metgs Coun- statewide riverboat gambling pro.
· ty voters s~pported Ohio Supreme posal would end the debate over
7 031· 'Treasurer Howard E. Frank of Albanv. 6.917: Recorder Emmo2cne . ington.
·H:.mil;on of Syracuse, 6,872; Common Pleas Court Judge (Juvenile/Probate
In 1992 ,. political newcomer Cre- . Court candtdates Evelyn Stratlon whether Ohio should have casinos.
But casino supporters said lUesDivision) Robert E. Buck, 6,747; and Engineer Robert H. Eason of Pomeroy, means defeated then-incumbent and A~rew Do_uglas, State Board of
day
tbcy don 'te&lt;pect that to happen.
'_6,584. ·
Strickland by 3.SOO votes district- Educatton candtdate Cy Richardson,
The
proposal to place eight casiwide. Pollsters tracked the race to be and Court of Appeals Judge Peter B.

votes

·

.

nos in fourc::ounties failed 62 percent
to 38 percent with 100 peiCent of
precincts reporting, according to
unofficial returns compiled by The
Associated Press. The vote was
approximately 2.6 million against the
Issue I. and 1.6 million for it.
Voinovich led the light against lhe
proposed state constitutional amendment and said the effort put 'forth to
battle it was · "the finest grassroots
campaign to defeat a statewide issue
in my memory."

,

"I hope today's resounding defe~ ,
of Issue I will at last convince those
people who have been promoting it
over the years that the people ofOhio
don't want casino gambling, not yesterday, not today, not ever,'!
Voinovich soid.

Carey nets comfortable margin t() win second term in statehou~e·
··

Incumbent State Rep. John A. Carey fended off vigorous campaigning by
Oallil County's Jeff Fowler to win a second tertn·representing the 94th Dis·
trict in 'IUesday's voting.
Unoflicial totals from the four counties comprising the district gave'Carcy,
Republican
and f9rmer mayor of Wellston, 1 2-1 edge ova- his -opponent.
1
Carey aotted 27,045 votes district-wide to 16,173 for Fowler.
.
unaurprilinaly Carey fnd best in his nlljve Jackson County, where he
polled 8,848 - t o Fowler'• 2,793. But he received signiftcant back,ins
l'lllm Meip County with 5,487 to J:owler's 3,569, and 6,317 in Lawrence
',:Gunty to 4,353 fur Fowl«.
, · fowler, an educator and farmer ftom the .Mercerville area, narrowed the

•
•

•

•

margin in &lt;lallia County with S,4S8, but Carey emerged with 6,393.
111e district consilii of all ofGallia, Meigs and Jackson counti~s. and eastem Lawrence County;
111e campaign was waged moslly on issues by the candidates undl the final
W!'C'ks, when the Carey camp launched a media and mailing blitz. Some
Carey-sponsored television ads questioned Fowler's record as Guyan Township clellc, 1 potil he held for two terms. which !'owler felt was a sign ihat
.
·
o•; · g on the 1·ncumbent's
h11
campatgn was .-mn
·
Issues in the campaian focUied on job creation, highways and education.
While Carey defended his record on those areas during his first term, Fowler

•

hammered aw~y a_t the l~k ?f new ~mplo~ment opportunities, little .or no·
~ad.consu-ucuon tn the dtstnct and tnequ111e~ tn fundtng for schools tn the ·
diStnct.
.
.
..
.. .
fowler also labeled Carey a t~l of Republican bosses 1n Columbus~ .. r~
urgtng more aggress1ve rcp_rc~_ntauon for the ~,
· Although Carey won maJonucs tn Galha. Me1gs and Jackson, mults
Lawre~e were de!ayed due to ~peter problems at _Board ~fEiecti0111.
Electtons offictals told a Hunungton, W.Ve., televtston station that the .
,
.
alfunc · ned....
·
and .t.~--t
. board s computenzcd counter ~ , uo . ''""r 20 preciiiCts
-•':"''
release of unofficial results until this momma.

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from

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•

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