<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8602" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8602?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-04T18:05:27+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19024">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/9999cded9c70db3e9ad1c16e7590bbe3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>46cc2633d5724319e639501dadfe9b1e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="27764">
                  <text>T'

-

•

• •

•

hge12 • The Dally Sentinel

bday, September 21' 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Albright urging Despite problems, Gore trying
more pressure to stay in control of_his career
on North Korea
By LAURA MYERS
Aasoclated Press Writer
NEW YORK- The United States and Japan must "keep the heat on"
North Korea to abide by its promise to give up nuclear weapons development in exchange for free energy supplies, Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright says.
"Neither of our nations is under any illusions about the government
of Pyongyang or the potential threat it poses to peace and stability in the
region," Albright said Sunday after she and Defense Secretary William
Cohen met with their Japanese counterparts.
Although Japan has delayed its $1 billion contribution to build two
light-water reactors as pan of the 1994 nuclel~J' freeze pact, the Tokyo government suggested it eventually would adllere to the deal and put aside
its anger over an Aug. 31 missile test by the North Koreans. The rocket.
in a failed attempt to launch a satellite, flew over Japan with no waJDibg.
The agreement is "the best method for preventing nuclear development
by North Korea," said Japanese Foreign t,Jinister Masahiko Komura. "On
this score, Japan and the United States see eye-to-eye."
In light of North Korea's ballistic missile development. the United
States and Japan agreed Sunday to conduct joint research on a missile
defense system that could protect the island nation from attack.
"No one should doubt our commitment to defend our interests and to
work together for peace and stability in Asia," Cohen said at a news conference. "And this is the best way to protect both the United States and
Japan."
The United States has I00,000 troops in North Asia, about one-third
of them guarding the always tense demilitarized zone between North and
South Korea.
Japan ha.~ conducted preliminary studies, some with this country, on
ways to defend against missiles. The United States is developing several theater missile defense systems as well, although American scientists
haven't been able to overcome technological hurdles to knock a fast-moving target out of the sky.
The U.S. and Japanese government~ also called on North Korea to halt
all missile development and stop exporting the dangerous materials and
technology to other countries.
On the nuclear freeze deal, the $4.6 billion agreement to build light
water reactors is in danger of collapse because of North Korean missile
tests and concerns about an underground facility U.S. intelligence suspects
could be hiding nuclear weapons development.
The United States also has fallen behind in sending heavy fuel oil to
North Korea until the reactors can be built. Last week, the House voted
to block $35 million to finance the fuel , panly in protest over the nuclear
rumors and Pyongyang's defiant missile tests.
Albright said U.S. and Japanese leaders cannot afford to see the nuclear
freeze fail. " We must keep the heat on Pyongyang by meeting our commitment~ ... even as we press North Korea's leaders to meet theirs," she
said.
.
The annual U.S.-Japan meeting of top defense and foreign affairs officials took place the day before the U.N. General Assembly begins two
weeks of sessions.
Komura and Defense Minister Fukushiro Nukaga are new, coming in
with Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi, who will hold his first talks with President Clinton on Tuesday. Those talks will focus on Japan's faltering economv.

By MIMI HALL
USA Today
WASHINGTON- There's been
a sense of entitlement around AI Gore
since the day he was born a senator's

son.

nothing if the roiling stock market
tumbles badly, inflation soars and
jobs are lost.
Gore's most immediate crisis is
the uncertainty over the future of
Clinton's presidency.
During an interview Friday with
the Concord Monitor in New Hamp&gt;hire, the vice president declared that
Clinton not only will stay in office
but will be hailed for his perfor-

But aftt:r a life charting a path to
the presidency, the man known as the
nation's most active and influential
vice president may be losing control
of his political destiny.
As the lrllditional start of the mance.
"The way it'll end up is he will
presidential campaign approaches
this fall, Gore has plenty to be anx- finish his term with a distinguished
ious about as he contemplates a set of record and will go down in history as
serious problems almost entirely out a virtuoso performance, producing
of his control.
economic recovery and an American
Threatening his aspirations: how renaissance with new solutions to
Congress will handle the Monica problems once thought impossible to
.Lewinsky scandal, whether Attorney solve," Gore said.
General Janet Reno will appoint an
But even if Clinton survives, there
independent counsel to investigate is little question that the Lewinsky
his role in 1996 campaign fund-rais- scandal will tarnish the legacy of his
ing and the possibility that a global . administration, and Gore has to be
financial meltdown will cause a wondering whether the tarnish will
recession at home.
rub off on him.
Hardly a week giles by that Gore
"There is no evidence so far that
and President Clinton don't boast any of this has taken a toll on AI
about the economic recovery they've Gore's image with the public," said
presided over during the past six Democratic pollstt:r and strategist
years. But Gore knows as well as his Mark Mellman, who sometimes
boss that "it's the economy, stupid," advises the White House. "But the air
as their 1992 campaign mantra had it, of inevitability that once existed for
and six years of good times will mean Gore among the cognoscenti is fad-

ing."
It's an odd situalion for a man who
has worked so metbodically to reach
this point.
Gore has spent his career establishing a Boy Scout image of competence and trustworthiness. And
conventional wisdom said Clinton
enhanced Gore's image when he
made him a hands-on partner.
Bw now, that partnership J=Sents
a burden as Gore prepares for the culmination of his long career in politics:
his own presidential run.
With the scandal swirling around
him, "the only thing that Gore can do
now is do a good job," Mellman said.
Gore is spending his days delivering speeches on issues he cares
about. from the environment to economics, and traveling state to state to
campaign for fellow Democrats
before November's congressional
elections.
Aides say Gore is dett:nnined not
to be sidelined by Clinton's problems
and has instructed his 1talf to focus
on issues, not indiscretions.
That doesn't mean he'stuming his
back on Clinton.
The day after the president's tele-.
vised admission on Aug. 17 that he
had "misled" the public about his
relationship with the former White

House intern, Gore intmupted hi1
Hawaiian vacation to declare he was
"proud" of Clinton and "honored to
have him as a friend."
'' I don't think it ever crossed his
mind to respond any other way ·
besides total loyalty and commitment." said former Gore aide Marta :
Romash. "He is disciplined and :
focused."
Despite the chaos around them, :
those close to Gore take bean that
amid all the talk over whether Clinton should resign or be impeached.
few questions have been raised about
Gore's competence to take over.
Some also wonder privately
whether the man who honed such a
clean-cut image could actually benefit from Clinton's personal problems. Gore may have the aptitude for
the job, supporters and critics have
said over the years, but he's a stiff and
dull campaigner who can't connect
with people the way Clinton can.
Now, some hope that a boring family man might be more attractive to
voters who were drawn by Clinton'•
considerable chann but who've had
it with his shenanigans.
Analysts from the Republican
camp say Gore's backers arc deluding themselves.

State control of insurer leaves cases hanging
CINCINNATI (AP)- Like 3,500
other Ohioans, Oma Turner is waiting for her day in court to prove that
a doctor committed malpractice
involving themselves or their families.
But that day may not come anytime soon. Their cases are hung up
because state regulators have taken
control of PIE Mutual Insurance Co.,
the Cleveland company that insured
the doctors they sued.
State regulators took over PIE in
March, saying the company is insolvent and must he liquidated because
claims exceeded assets by $275 million. A Franklin County judge issued
an order that stopped all lawsuits
against PIE until at least Sept. 30,
even the collection of evidence needed for the cases.

Mrs. Turner's lawsuit alleges that win their ca.o;es they may not recov- sutTer.
a surgeon failed to properly diagnose er all they are awarded.
Claims against PIE-insured docand treat a gangrenous section in the
Damages likely will be Gapped at tors are being handled by the Ohio
intestine of her44-year-old husband. $300,000 under terms of a state fund Insurance Guaranty Association, a
who died in October 1996. The doc· that covers insolvent insurance com- nonprofit group that pays claims on
tor denies any wrongdoing.
panies. The policies PIE sold were behalf of insolvent insurance com"We're frozen in place," her supposed to cover claims up to $5 panies. Companies that pay into the
lawyer, Robert Trainor, told The million.
fund already have been assessed $47
Cincinnati Enquirer for a story SunThe uncertainty is taking its toll on million. with most of the a.~sessment
day.
'Mrs. Turner, Trainor said.
because or PIE, said Frank Gartland,
Besides pending lawsuits, others ! "The financial impact was appi'e- the a.~sociation 's president.
who have settled their cases can't col- 'ciable," he said. "The emotional
The assessment could force the
lect their money.
impact of his death and the absolute insur.mce companies to raise rates
"You can't begin to believe what lack of closure that a rapidly pursued consumers pay, he said.
a mess this is," said Gerry l..eeseberg, malpractice elise can bring ha.~ caused
The public also is paying for the
a Columbus attorney who chairs the her emotional problems to worsen." criminal investigation into the matter
PIE Oversight Committee for the
But those with pending claims and has hired the Calfee, Halter &amp;
Ohio Academy of Trial Lawyers, a against the insurer, which insured Griswold law finn to handle the liqgroup of plaintiffs lawyers.
nearly a third of the state's doctors at uidation proceedings. So far, the
Even if Mrs. Turner and others one time, aren't the only one likely to finn has been paid $1.4 million.

Everybody's Talking AbOut
City National Bank's New Pomeroy Office!
City has low-rate auto
financing!

You don't have to be a
City National cu5tomer
to qualify...

Monday, September 21 Thru Saturday, September 26
• Register To Win A$500 CD, Longaberger PicnJc Bubt, Or Cooler!

• Free Popcorn, Soft Drfnb, Refreshment. And Balloonat

• Grand Opening Deposit Special• -Available This Week Only!
13 Month CD 5.6096 Interest Rate/5.75% Annual Percentage Yield
18 Month CD 5.8796 Interest Rate/6.00% Annual Pen:en~ Yield

• Great Everyday Low-Rate Auto Financing6.99% APR New Vehldu
8.99% APR Used Vehidu (1991-1997 Model Years)••

• Pick Up Your Free City National Bank Mini-Depoait Bag You May Find Some Bonus Cash Inside!

• Home Equity Lines Of Credit With No Cluing Coats

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

• $500 minimum ..... to
open. CDin aaiGINIIQI)J

for....,

_l._ .......

Today: Cloudy
High: 70S; Low: 60s

992~5990

'

Our Pomeroy
office staff:
Madnellld(cd,
ElalaeO,.and
.JJms......... ,

'

'

Sepl22, 1998

Sports

A message about equal rights, Page 2
Cowboys hand Giants 31-7 loss, Page 5
Memories of a track giant, Page 7

Reds defeat
Phillies on
grand slam
Pages

•
Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 103

Single Copy· 35 Cents

Self-i nsu ranee .--visiting crafte
fund may need
premium hike
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The condition of Meigs County's
self-insurance fund wa~ appraised by
an actuarian at Monday's regular
meeting of the Meigs County Commissioners.
David Rubadue, an actuarian hired
by the commissioners to assess the
fund's condition on an annual ba.•is.
said that the fund should be subject
to a 17 percent increa.o;e in premiums
in

or~r

to maintain its current con-

dition.
The county operates its own selffunded health insurance plan for its
employees, which is administered by
Medical Claims Services of
Ravenswood, W.Va.
The county pays a share of premiums, as do employees - currently $227 per month for single employees and $575 for family policies. In

the past two years, user fees of
$100,000 and $150,000 have been
paid by various departments to supplement the fund which is used to pay
premiums.
Rubadue did not indicate that the
recommended 17 percent premium
increase, which he recommend' making retroactive to August, should be
passed on to employees. only that the
increa.~

be made to the insurance

fund.
In other action, the commissioners
met with a contingent of residents of
Tuppers Plains - Loretta Murphy.
Randy Kidder. William Buchanan
and Pam Parsons - about the county's responsibility to finance the cost
of residents connecting to the new
Tuppers Plains Regional sewer system.
Murphy. who ha~ mel with the
(Continued on Page 3)

Donna Sue Groves, coordinator of the Ohio Appalachian Arts Initiative, met with crafters in
Meigs County on Monday to look at their wares and encourage their participation in a statewide
directory of crafter&amp;. She Ia pictured with Nichola Moretti, a Pomeroy native and a member of
the Ohio Bicentennial Commission staff, and Karin Johnson, Meigs County's tourism director.

Eyesore
targeted
Pomeroy Council
presses for action
on dilapidated W.
Main St. building
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A longtime downtown Pomeroy
eyesore wa.• a topic of discussion at
Monday night's meeting of Pomeroy
Village Council.
Council discussed action over the
longstanding ruins of the old Century Bar building on West Main Street.
While the facade and walls of the
building remain intact. the ceiling and
interior have collapsed. creating a
health and safety hazard, council
members contended.
Council members earlier instructed Yillage Solicitor Chris Tenoglia to
meet with building owner Ben Ewing
to discuss the building. There are
concerns that removing the walls may
weaken adjacent structures, it was
noted.
However. council members are

saying something must be done.
"Somewhere, sooner or later,
something has got to be done before
it falls out onto the street," said Councilman George Wright, who
ings about Clinton and whether he expressed concern over the building's
should leave office.
facade .
But Republicans said Clinton con"It's an eyesore ... a death trap," he
tinued to be evasive.
added.
"I think most people who saw the
"There is a procedure in place that
tape would say the president dodged will hring it to a head in 30 days,"
questions es.,entialto determining if 'aid Village Administrator John
he committed perjury," said Rep. Anderson. He said council can
Lindsey Graham. R-S.C .. a member declare the building to be unsafe and
of lhe House Judiciary Committee set into motion a 30-day period for
that will decide what course 10 take. the owner to demolish the building.
"Failing that, we can tear it down,"
"There is a lot that points in the said Anderson.
direction of lhe need for such an
However. council members said
inquiry. " said Rep.' Charles Canady. they do not want the village to
R-Fia .. another commillee member.
(Continued on Page 3)

Congress considers next move after video's release
WASHINGTON (AP) - Lawmakers see impeachment proceedings against President Clinton as
likely but are willing to hear a direct
appeal to Congress by the president.
an option the White House is actively considering.
Struggling to digest a historic but
wrenching avalanche of testimony,
the people who now hold Clinton's
future in their hands say the presi~t
may have gained some sympathy
with the airing of his grand jury testimony Monday in the Monica
Lewinsky affair.
But while no one says the nation-

ally televised spectacle severely damaged Clinton. neither do lawmakers
suggest the president 's troubles will
go away. One Democratic senator
says he is absorbing details under the
assumption he will sit as juror in an
impeachment trial.
··As a member of the U.S. Senate,
I'm a potential juror in this case."
said Sen. Robert Torricelli, 0-N.J ..
for years one of Clinton's staunchest
defenders on Capitol Hill. " Whatever affections I've held for Bill Clinton are entirely eclipsed by my sense
of responsibility."
Torricelli said that if people con-

elude that the se~ual detail about removal from office fell from 35 perClinton is being made public mainly centto 32 percent. and those who said
to embarrass him , "there is very like- he should not be impeached increa,ed
ly to be some sympathy."
from 60 percent to 66 percent. roughIn fact, Clinton 's standing rose ly the same . tlgures as recorded a
slightly in one public opinion poll week earlier.
taken after the videotape of his testiBut there was no significant difmony was released, and fewer people ferem:e in those who thought he
thought he should be impeached.
should re&lt;ign- 39 percent on MonA CNN-USA Today-Gallup poll day, compared with 40 percent Suntake-n · Monday showed ·the presi- day. The poll of 631 adults nationdent's approval rate rising to 66 per- wide had a margin of error of plus or
cent, compared with 60 percent Sun- minus 4 percentage points.
day. and his disapproval rating down
An ABC News poll conducted
to 31 percent from 34 percent.
after the videotape was shown found
Those favoring impeachment and no signiticant change in overall feel-

Jackson tour spurs speculation
about third try for White House

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections - 12 Pages
Calendar
Ciassitieds

8
8-10

r

/
236 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

~

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 70; Low: 50s

Come
and see us!

1111111111• s.,c.rior2J.26,1Mtl.
hnoi(J
wlllldnwll.

-Willi ...-111 ......, ,_
a Q(J lilllonll ...II dl M Ill
el
ltf1MI8111411111ject to . . . .

Weather

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
Will weW-anended rallies in coal
country influence Jesse Jackson's
decision on whether to try a third
presidential campaign?
Jackson answers questions like
that by saying he's pnly trying to redirect political debate with his multistate, campaign-style bus tour
through Appalachia this week.
Though far from his urban Chicago base, Jackson has the ability to
draw large, admiring crowds, said
Sally Maggard, editor of the Journal
of Appalachian Studies and associate
professor at West Virginia University.
"There is a great deal of respect
and admiration for Jesse Jackson in
the coal fields, " she said. "I think he
really understands the kinds of struggles that coal communities have gone
through."
That perception goes back nine
years, when Jackson showed up in
person to support employees of
Piuston Coal Co. during a long. bitter strike in southern Virginia.
This week. Jackson 's llilck in coal
country, driving through Kentucky.

I

Tuesday

Lotteries
QWQ
Pick 3: 8-0-1; Pick 4: 0-3-8-5

Buckeye 5: 2·3-12- 15·25

lUA.

Daily 3: 8-9-7; Dally 4: 3-9-9-0
o 1998 Ohio V.lley Publishina Co.

West Virginia, Pennsylvania and
Ohio to draw attention to the problems of rural , working families .
Jackson hasn't ruled out a third
run for the White House in 2000. but
when he joins Ohio miners Wednesday at shift-change time or shares a
rally stage on Sunday with the Rev.
Jerry Falwell, his audiences won't be
looking for hidden political motives.
she sa1d.
"There's a lot of people who come
here for backdrops for campaign
commercials who don't come here
when the trouble hits," she said,
recalling a visit by Robert Kennedy
that introduced a previous generation
of Americans to Appalachia 's poverty.
"I don't think Kennedy would
have been here during something like
the Pi IIston strike."
Historian Roger Wilkins, who
was part of Jackson's 1984 and 1988
presidential campaigns. said his longtime friend knows there can be a
potential political reward for helping
any constituency, but that's not what
draws Jackson to Appalachia.

"Jesse's instinct has always been
to turn auention to the poor wherever they are ." Wilkins said Monday.
"One of the truly untold stories in
this country is the white poor. They
have no advocates who dramatize
their issues.
"The white poor are truly invi sible."
Jackson said he hopes his bus trip
will highlight the problems of the
working poor: people with skills and
desire who can't find enough work to
adequately provide for their families .
To under..core that he's talking
about working families, the lour and
rally are being arranged in pannership with the AFL-CIO and United
Mine Workers union.
Jackson has been asked along the
bus tour route about his plans for
2000 and whether his Appalachian
trail is intended to lay the groundwork for a campaign. His answer
each time is that he hasn't decided
whether to run - but whether he
docs or Mt, he wants to inOuence the
debate.

Rutland man pleads guilty
to corrupting minor charge
A 38-year-old Rutland man pleaded guilty Monday to four counts of
attempted corruption of a minor.
according to Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes.
Dwayne White, Nicholson Hill
Road, entered hi s pleas before Meigs
County Common Pleas Court Judge
Fred W. Crow Ill.
White was charged a' the result of
a lengthy investigation by the prosecutor's otllce under direction of a.•sislant Prosecutor Christopher E.
Tenoglia and the Meigs County Sheriffs Office, Lentes said.
The investigation revealed White
had a long-term se~ua l relationship
wilh a teenage girl that began when
the girl was 13 years old. Lentes said.
.The investigation discovered numerous leners and tape recorded tele ·
phone conversations detailing the
&lt;exu&lt;~l relationship. he added.
Each counl of anempted corrup·

lion of a minor is a felony of the ttfth
degree and carries a ma~imum penalty of one year on each count. and the
sentences could be ordered to be
served con'&lt;!cutively, or one after the
other, for a total possible sentence of
four years in a state penal institution.
Tenoglia, who represented the
state at the plea hearing, indicated the
stale would ask the court to order all
se ntences bo; served consecutively.
Lentes said his ofllce vigorously
pursued this matter because "it has to
be clear that anyone who engages in
any S&lt;!~ua l activity involving children
is committing the worst kind of
crime."

He pointed to recent convictions
nf sex offenders in the county as testimon y to that l'ommirment.
Sentendng was continued ttnlil

Nov. 1 at HUll a.m. White is free on
bond and is represented by Gailipo·
lis auorney William N. Eachus.

QUILTS GALORE -A total of 46 quilts were displayed at Expo '98 and the favorite selected by a vote of visitors was the family quilt of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King. They received a quilt
top made by Bunny Kuhl. Above, Calvin Holley, Kathryn Johnson and Sara Mellan view the
display.

Telling a story in pictures
King family's quilt chosen as favorite at Expo.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
It was the uniqueness of the
King quilt which caught the eye of
visitors to Meigs County '98 Town
and Country Expo staged at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds over
the weekend.
The ~uilt, a golden wedding
anniversary gift to Mary Deloris
and Virgil King from their family,
was made by their daughters. Judy
Coomer. Grace Scoll. Mary Felts,
Geneva Stanphill and Helen Vin-

their parents, their children and
their grandchildren.
Activities on the farn1 and in the
community are also depicted in
photographs on the quilt. Mrs.
King, a schoolbus driver for 25
years. is pictured with a bus: her
hu.sband, Virgil. a lifetime farmer.
with a tractor.
Complementing the story in
pictures is a pieced border of print s
depicting life down on the farm the animals. garden tools, tractors.

works on the farm.
Embroidered on the quilt is a
poem wrinen by John Vinson of
Monterey. Va., husband of the former Helen King, which tells the
story of the King family's lifestyle.

crops. sewing and other home-

hand.

making skills .
' It was one of the 46 displayed
Mr. and Mrs . King. who have
at the E~po quilt &lt;how. :md lhe one spent all their married years on lhe
which 141 of the li51 visitors volfarm , haw significantly con·
ing selected as their "favorile."
tribuled to 1heir community. school
The quilt is the story of Mr. and
and church. They belong to the
Mrs. King. and their family life on
Calvary Bible Church and are
the farm .
active in Gideons International. Mr.
Photos transferred to fabric
King is a former township trustee
highlight the pattern. Featured are
and school board member.
the wedding picture and the 50th
In addition to their five daughanniversary picture ·of the couple, _ ters who wor~ed on the quilt. they
surrounded by smaller picture\ of
have a son. David. who lives and

It reads:

Mother and Dad gave us life
And a wa v of life on the land.
We worked tngether througl1
sn1smu and weather.
While lmding our 11eighbors a

son.

We plmrted our corn

Milked cow., and made hav
Dug our hoes in strawberry
mws.
And watched rhem grow ripe in
Mav.

"'"'II

We
.wn11s of praise
111 rhose family days,
A.1 Mother and Dad taught us to
pray
.
And to walk in tht Savior's way.

�Tuesday,SephHnber22,1998

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'Esta/J{isfrd. in l'J48
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 ·Fax 992·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

DIANE HILL
Controller

GeMralllan•ger

Candidates stay out
of range of dove fight
By PAUL SOUHRADA
AII80Ciated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Candrdates lor statew1de and legrslatrve offices so far
have managed to keep out of the cross-fire between backe,-,; and opponenrs
of a baiiOI imuauve to ban mournmg dove huntmg m Ohio
Unhke two other ISsues that appeared on the s1a1ew1de baiiOI m recent
years -lhe repeal of the l..eg1slature"s auemptto revamp the Slate\ worke,-,; · compensatiOn system and the penny mcrease in the state sales tax for
education - mterest m the dove ques11on seems to be hm1ted to pan.sans
on either Side, observers say
"I haven't seen where thiS has been a b1g 1ssue mother races," sa1d RICk
Story. a spokesman for the pro-hunung Oh1oans for Wlldhte Conservation.
" I JUst haven't heard that much about 1t," added Bnan Rothenberg.
spokesman for the Senate Democratic caucus.
"It's been strangely qu1e1 ··
Then agam. Rolhenberg n01ed. the ISsue d1dn ·, really pop up m the 1994
elecuon, either. That wa' the year the Legislature resurrected Oh10 \ dovehunting sea.,on m a contentious. lame-duck vote.
l..eadmg up to Ihe vote, lawmakers were gellmg SO to I 00 leiters a day on
the subjeCt, he recalled
B1ll Long. an orgamzer. with the Save the Doves campa1gn. thmks there
1&gt; still time for the IS&gt;Ue lO oevelop.
For one th1ng. the pro-huntmg group planned to stan a $2.3 m1lllon
advertrsmg blitz that could sh1ftthe debate from the back-at-the-sports- seclion outdoors column~ lo livmg rooms across lhe state
"As the campa1gn develops I think II Will become more of an ISsue a.'
people are a., ked about 11." Long sa1d.
The pro-hunlmg Side ha.' tned to frame the '" ue m terms ol the "domino theory," portrnymg the dove- backers as ammal nghts extremiSts For-t
dove hunting. then fur lrappmg. !hen zoos and an1mal research. the theory
goes.
Though the pro-dove Side v1gorously den1es that scenano. Story\ group
'' countmg heav1ly on sell1ng thai me-sage to the I m•lllon Ohmans who
hold fishong licenses anu the SCMJ.lKX) With huntmg licenses
Long doesn 't thmk !he stale's sportsmen w1ll vole as a bloc
"The number •&gt;f hunlers who hun! lh" bird " wry small,'' he sa1d. normg thai Ihe Oh1o DIVISIOn nf WtiJiile puis lhe figure al h,rween 40.1KKI and
SO .lXXI
But who knows. Long added Bob Taft and Lee FISher. the two mam contenders to become Oh1o \ next governor. have dosplayed so few dofferences
al thiS stage of the campa1gn. the d&lt;We.rssue mrght be enough to push one of
them over the top. he suggested.
·
Taft. the Republican secretary of state, has declined to state a posr11on on
the issue because of an ongoing legal banle over the leg1timacy of Save the
Doves efforts to put the proposed huntmg ban on the Nov 3 ballot.
Fosher. a Democrnt and former attorney geneml. favors the ban, sa1d
spokeswoman Judy Barbao. qUickly addmg that the ISsue has not come up
m campargn stops
"People are much more mterested m where the candrdates stand on
everyday rssues that affect therr hves - hke health care. safety. educatron
and Jobs," Ms. Barbao sa1d

Letters to the editor
Firehouse or cabin?

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Page2
Tuesday, September 22, 1998

Ohio weather

Self-insurance fund may

YVednesday,Se~.23

(Continued from Page 1)
commiSSioners m the past to demand
full paymenl of connection cost• and
lhe costs of destroymg ex1st1ng sep·
11c tanks, Said that she had contacted
the office of the state audnor regardmg whal she says are •ncons1s1encies
between the Commumty Developmen! Block Grant a• submitted and
the manner m wh1ch funds were
spenl
Hoffman noled !hat all gran! pro·
grams are audued on an annual ba.m.
and sard that any rmproper expend!·
lures would have been detected
through those aud1ts
The comm1ssroners obtamed a
$500.000 gran! through the CDBG
sewer demonstratiOn program. as
well as Issue Two funds to asSISt 1n
lhe construCliOn Of the projeCI
ThiS summer. they pledged
$90,000 - $50.000 m CDBG formula funds and $40.000 m fair housmg funds - 10 assiSt !he very low
mcome m connectmg to the system.
Murphy smdthat the fa1r hou."ng
funds wtll nol be ava1lable due to
asSistance prov1ded through the program to Oood VICtims
"We're JUSttrymg to get what we
feel the grant and the commiSsroners
have stated !hat they would do," Murphy said ... Now you can play hard·
nose wuh the s1a1e auditor·
Denymg any wrongdomg on the
pan of the board. Comm1ssroner

SSSA penalizes kids who 'make a wish'
By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moiler
We thought we'd seen boreauCr:lliC Witlessness at 1ts worst when
an anonymous official at Ihe Intemal
Revenue Service suggested recently
that the person who gave back Mark
McGw1re' s 62nd home run ball
m1ght be slapped with a major "g1f1
tax .. for h• s charitable act.
W1sely. the IRS quickly backed
off when a furor erupted.
But like McGwire's record,thrs bout
of brainlessness was qu1ckly
matched by the Soctal Secunty
Admmrstration -- whtch has taken to
pumshmg children who suffer from
hfe-threatemng Illnesses.
"Joel" lives m Pennsylvama wnh
hiS mOiher, who doesn't want their
full names or exact location used for
thiS story
Just 23 hours after coming mto
thiS world, Joel was on the operatmg
table.
The hnmg around hrs bram had
swollen through a small hole m the
skull. and hrs lungs were fa1llng
D&lt;x.1ors were able to remove the
swollen !Issue and stan his breath·
mg. bultheJrdtagnosrs wa.,n't good

Joel
wouldn't
make it pa.~t the
age of two.
Joel 1s now
12. but hiS life
remams
filled
wilh pain He
suffers from scoliosiS. three of h1s
vertebrae
are
fused. and hi s
Moller &amp;
spme extend• sev- Anderson
eral inches mto
hiS bram. He ha.' endured more than
50 bram surgenes A computerized
shunt moflllo,-,; pressure on the part
of hts bram that can't drain cerebral
fluid.
"I have a shunt. and I am very,
very s1ck." Joe\ told us. "But I try
not to have a sad face."
Over the years, Joel's 1llness ha.•
vutually depleted what little money
hiS mother and father were able to
save To surv1ve. hJS now-wrdowed
mother relres on monthly checks
lrom the Supplemental Secunty
Income program. wh1ch helps out
famrhes With drsabled luds.
In December 1995. Joel became a
beneficrary of the Make-A-WISh

Foundation, which granted him h1s
greatest wish: a tnp to Drsneyworld
and a chance to meet hrs TV hero,
John Stamos.
But a month after returning from
the Mag1c K1ngdorn. Joel's fam1ly
got a leiter from the government
saying that their Supplemental Secunty Income would be sla.•hed by the
cost of the trip. Joel's mother. who
had reported the tnp lo SSA offiCials. forcefully objected. When the
dust settled. admmi~trators agreed to
deduct only S800 -- the amount of
ca.•h given 10 the famrly to pay for
meals and souvem,-,;
" We are frusrrated." said Ann
Fisher of the Western Pennsylvama
chapter of Make-A-Wrsh.
" We are trymg to do something
good, and the fam1ly are someumes
penalized. We always tell the famrhes that wrshes come wilh no stnngs
attached. and thiS " a preny b•g
stnng."
Joel's ca.'e is not unusual . Jusl
la.'t week. Victona Schall mformed
an SSA bureaucmt that Make-AWrsh had grven her 15-year-old
daughter a shoppmg spree -- only tn
have Soc1al Secunty threaten tn

DELIVERS HIS

dock her check for next month
When Schall objected, 1he SSA
offic1al a.'ked to see the rece1pts
from lhe shoppmg spree . The
rece1pts are currently bein~
reviewed
FISher. lhe Make-A· Wish spokeswoman, said !hat although the foundation doesn't keep formal records
of such lhings. her office has been
fieldmg calls from upset SSI parents
for over a decade
It turns out that the fate of families like Joel's uh1mately rests wilh
bureaucrats. The letter of the law
requrres that families on SSI rece1ve
no cash awards. But the agency also
g1ves its case officers the nght to
exercrse therr own Judgme nt m some
instances.
" There have been some cases
where we've been able to get Iemen·
cy. and others where we haven't ...
FISher sard.
There may soon be rehef on lhe
way. Rep Ph1l English. R·Pa .. ha.' a
htll that would amend the Social
Secunty Acl In " except a cas b
award of not more Ihan $2.000...
when 11 ts made by a chanty lrk~­
Make-.(\-Wrsh.
The b1ll IS scheduled for a vot~
this week and Will likely pa" ea."IY
And that's OK With the Soctal
Secupty Adm1mstmlinn. whrch isn ·r
eager to be seen a.' an agency that
pumshes srck chrldren. " It's certmn·
ly not the intentron olthiS agency to
disadvantage (Make-A-Wrsh) or drsadvantage any child who's received
a g•ft from a chantahle orgamzatlon." the SSA's John Trollinger told
our assO&lt;Iate Ashky Baker. He
added that he can 't comment on spectlic case' Wllhoul knowmg more
al&gt;outthem
But M1chelle Atkms. pres11.lent ol
the Western Pennsylvania Make-AWish, sa10 !hal even lhe m'"' allluent lam1lles can end up on SSI 11
thear son or daughter gels s1ck
.. Most rne,.hcalmsurance cornpames have a cap on benelits lhatthe&gt;O&lt;
families quockly reach ... sa1d Atkm•:
"That means they have to tum to the
gnvernment.
In order to 4uallly l&lt;&gt;r SSI bene·
lits. they have In h, h,low ,, certain
•nc11me level They are lor&lt;ed to
g1ve ~•way everythmg 1hey own -lndutlmg 1he1r home-- to 4uahly for
SSI henelil' "
Jack Anderson and Jan Molle•
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Sending a message about equal rights
By Sara Eckel
The boxes -- 100 m all .. were
delivered to the Senate on Sept I0.
No. 11 wa,n't the Starr report. The
documents contamed m the boxes dru
nul derml creative uses for a cr~ar.
children would not have to he shi~ld·
ed lrom the1r content' Ralher. these
were pellllnns and letters from
IO.OIXl women across the Umted
State~ . urgmg Senate member~ to mt·
•ly lhe ConventiOn on the Ehmma·
t1on of all Forms of Dlscnmmal•on
Agmnst Women .
The whal' II you· ve never heard
ot th~ conv~nt1on. you· re not alonl!
ll 's no polh&lt;Hier. It prov1des no lod·
tl~r lor late-mghl comeJ1a0s, und It
won't msplre any healeU uebatcs at
the w.iler cooler.
In lac!. II would he hard to lhmk ol
a government document lhat would
he l!!ss L'Ontrovers~al to the Aml!m.:an
puhl~e. smce nearly all ol !he pro·
P'"eu measures m thiS U N treaty
have h,en part ol U S law lor years
Th~ lfllem:ltlOnal agreement on

women's nghts
advocates liberties
that
Amencan
women have
enJoyeu
lor
decades -- such
a' the nght to
vote. hold public ollice. own
property and
choose a husEckel
band
So you would th1nk that the Un1t·
ed Slates would be a great source ol
msparataon to tht! women ol countnc!s
such as Bangladesh, Mulaysm and
lra4 Bul actually. all ol th, .tbove
etlunlnes have raulieu CEDAW h's
the Unned States thai " behmd the
curve
In lact . !he UnHeJ Slates 1s !he
only mdustnallzed na11on 1h.1t has
reluset.l to make 1h1s otti~.:ml endorse·

Dear Editor:
It " my unJerstandmg !hat m May lhe Rutland Volunteer F~re Depl
asked the village ol Rolland lor prOJlt'rtY 10 lhe Village In hUild a new lire·
house that would allow them to be out ol a h1gh waler area
Recent reports on 1he newspaJlt'r have staled Rolland counc1l members
plan to put a cabin 1n !hiS area msleaJ Does !hiS cabm have any hiSionc
value to Rulland 1 The H.~ruer cahm IS .1 beaut1lul structure hut do we need
thiS more !han a firehouse' The lire department does have property m the
v1llage (thai IS my understanding I but. would you bUild a new bUJidmg
which w1ll pmbably wsl near or more than $ 1(X).(l00 tn an area wh1ch may
ment ot anternat10nal women\ righh
flood! I don't lhmk as reSidents nl Rutland Village we should ask these vol·
Anu 1ha1 says Rep Lynn Wml,ey.
unleers to do thiS
D-C.thf . l"i a hu ge embarr.t"i,mcnt
The f1re deparrment owns 11selltherefnre o1her than ,t levy or smne small
state funds this lire department operates on money that they earn them·
selves. To serve all of us Can we ask them to hu1ld 1n a Site wh1ch may he
flooded after many volunteer hours have been donated to make money to
provide thiS to Rutland V1llage reSidents ' Not only to the v1llage bur also to
somewhere It's
outer lying area.' that these men and women serve
By Jan Shoales
1 do know that dunng the lastllood two olthe firemen were out helpmg
Excerpts trom the Kenneth Starr probably beuer
village reSidents while thm own house was heong over taken by llood report appeared m my local paper learned on the
waters But. you do not hear them complam they conunue to prov1de the ser- (The San Fmncrsco Chronrcle) last Intemet wnh the
vrce that we very much need Thonk about 1f the lire department was bUilt Saturday. published m anguiSh by Us president and
outside of Rutland . what would thiS mean' Lunger response 11me T1me IS a editors. who wrote. ... we recog· hiS helpiUI asSIS·
.cry prec 1ous thmg when you're m need ol emergency care. Not wantmg to mze that some readers would be tant than from .
mJSiead anyone. the lire department and squad are separJte 1n Rutland The olfended by 1he graphic descnp· say. therr par·
Once
squad is located 1n the back of the C.v1c Cenrer. thiS IS out ol llood reach lions" But ·· IllS our lundamental ents
So why not putlhe fire department m the same area' They are nor askmg the responSJbllny as a newspaper to agatn. a humnalion
vtllage to bUild the bu1ldmg. JUslto ,Ill ow them 10 purchase or lea.'e Ihe land ensure that our readers clearly anu bled
ought to bow us
Rutland reSidents need to speak up. and yes. one person could change _ fully understand ..
thmgs!
I see. They're doing me a lavor. head m grat1·
tude
Personal vendetta.' need to be set aSide council members. do whaiiS nght Thanks'
Shoales
The publish·
for the communuy. You are elected by Ihe communuy to do whalrs best for
And Kennelh Starr. of course. IS
u.s. Emergency workers are there rhrough thKk and thm no matter what. And domg Amencan JUstice a b1g favor 1ng mdustry owes all of lhese people
the cost to move Ihe cabm al thousands of dollars could possibly he used hy 1Ssu1ng thts report. JUs\ as we owe .o huge 11p ol the hat lor the books
elsewhere m a more feasible way Through FEMA there w1ll be more prop- Congress a b1g kiSs for dec1omg to that woll be clunenng our bookstores
eny bought. why not put in a park w11h equipment !hal llood water would place 11 on the Internet And nl over the next few years. Linda
nOI hurt. ThiS &lt;4u1pment could be hosed down after a llood. And allow that course we owe the b1ggest sloppiest Tnpp. Momca. Hillary Clinton,
property to be g1ven 10 !he lire department that would benefit not only Rut- kiSs to PreSident Clinton und Mom- Kenneth Starr. George "I've seen
land but outer lymg areas that also uepenu on them.
ca Lewmsky for makmg thiS enlire the light' " Stephanapolous, Newt
Gmgnch. the Professor and ManThe current lirehouse needs floonng. a ce1llng. and many other lhings. I event pos&lt;lble.
do know rhat the lin:men and olhers nol alfillated w11h !hem have been
Pornographers probably owe anne .. they ' II h, proVidmg work for
working on trying to getth1s cleaned up. ReSidents of the v1llage: speak up. them all a debt for revealing the ghost wnters unlil well pa.,tthe milbe heard. Fire protection IS somethmg ,ihat IS 1mportantto everyone.
Oval Office's erot•c potential. I lenniUm Anu fur years after that,
1s a cabm?
wondered brielly if the Umteu punJots. cnt1cs. scholars and scree nLeta Fetty Clarice Carpenter, L.D. Carpenter, Alex Grueser, JefF Stmes government. concerned as 11 wnlers Will lavor us with cogent
Snowden Da~ny Tillis, Larry Haynes, Fred George, Cris Ellis, Duane is 1n all its many brandies with the CllillliiCnt:lfy We are blessed.
0 hrave new world 1 Favors.
Weber. Warren G. Black, Paula Hicks, Sam Hicks, Brenda Bolin, Rkk welfare of " the children." should
Boll• 'Ronald Collins, Joan Collins, Merlin Mikhell, Eric Mitchell, expose our nation's young well apolngies and shrill accusatrons will
Ronnie Ellis, Esther Black, Debby TiiiL'i, JtfrTillis, Hester Eblin, Henry &gt;Urfers to such sulacious materi~l. · Iall ll&gt;rever l1ke a ~ctentle rJin on the
Eblin, Jerry Eacfs, and Paul Searles, all of Rutland
But hey. I guess they have to fin~ heads of a gmtefu l people.
But hoWo.-grJteful are we a.s a
nul about the birds and the bees

Not only does 11 undermme the
nat•on·s credibility a' a morJI leader
on human nghts, but1t's a slap on the
lace to women txxh h,re and abruau.
·Thts mac110n sends a message to
women m thiS country and all over
rhe world· The plague ol dtscriminarory laws. domesuc abuse and rape
are not 1mportan110 !he U S government." she said al the Sepl 10 press
conference.
"The faJIUIJ' ol the Un1ted Slates
Senate to rallry. let alone take a vole
on the treaty. 1s nothmg short of an
1nsult to the wmnen ot th1s nation and
rhe ent•re world."
There have been anempts lo get
CEDAW passed. PrtSidenl Carter
sogned 11 back 1n IIJXO Then 11 went
1o the Senate Fnre1gn Relations ComnHilee. where 11 cnllecred dust li!f 15
ycurs
Therl! was ~orne t!;tU.:Ih!mcrtl back
m 191!4. when PreSidenl Clinton resuhmmed the lrealy In !he Senate.
Bul wuh !he 'IJ4 ~lt'l·louns hlmmg.
Republican lliCmhers ol Cnngress

succeeded in delaymg the vote. artd
the Democrats mn nul oltune. S1nce
then, the document has sat on the
desk ol Jesse Hdms -- where, not
surpnsmgly. 11 has I,JngUJshed.
Th~&gt; is a shame The muntnes thai
h.1ve raulied CEDAW ,tre voluntanly
subjectmg themselves to appra~&gt;al by
tnt~rnalttmal and ntmgovemmenlal
orgamzauons They have made ~
pledge Ill improve the status ol
women in their counlnes. Many havi
a lot of work to uo The Umted
States. with us envmble equal nghr:,
and opportunilles l,tws, could serve
as a moral authonty lor the world.
But 11 wnuld mean thai the Senate
would have to stale publicly !hal
women .. all women ·· have nghts.
Consldl!nng ~.tome of lhe otht:r
lxoxed rep&lt;&gt;rts thai Congress has to
wreslle Wilh, ynu wnuld 1h1nk this
one wnuldn 't be sn hard But appar·
ently illS
Sara Eckel i• a syndicated
writer for N~wspaper Ent~rprise
As.'Cieiation.

Thanks for the civics lesson everyone

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

nauon. really?
Just la.'t week, I was readmg an
article m the Los Angeles Times
about one ol the m~n who kidnapped Frank Smatra Jr. back on
I%3 I guess he wants to sell h~&gt;
st&lt;.-y 10 the movies. and the heartless
Smatm fam1ly is standing 1n his way
In las! year's "Sonarra Behind The
Legend." author J. Randy Tafobelll
4uotes the fdon . " Virtually everythmg I had outlined m my plan of
opera110n had worked. Fa1her and
son were hugging. Divorced parents
were reunited m the moment.... It
couldn't have worked better if they
had paid me to do 11. whJch. by the
way. they hadn ' t." Those ungmteful
Smatr~s . Couldn 't they cough up a
httle ransom'? Look at the huge
favor he was d01ng them 1 There's
nolhmg like a l1ttle extort•on and
death threats to bnng a family
together.
Wh~l
bout us? Are sleaze. political o
sm. hald-faced lies.
and extmm
sex bringmg the
nation together'! Are we our own
most-favored nutron·&gt;
Well. we've been livmg in the
free market for awhile. for which
government officials f~uently do
favors. In return. the free mari.:et
often gives favors Cin lhe form of

donalions) to pohucal partres.
All arounu the, world. as a matter
of lact. people are scratchmg ea~h
Other's hack . oancmg With those
who brought them, greasmg the
wheds, mak1ng calls. courtmg
favor. retummg lavors.
So thanks lor the sexy CIVICs les·
son. everybody You really brought
those old ury textbook definllions ol
the Impeachment process imo !he
20th century. h 's all so relevant I
could JUst spil.
Sull, though I know 11\ for our
own good. forg1ve me if I seem a lit·
lie leery of the whole process . We
w1ll proceed carefully. Sill cautinuS:Iy through ev1dence. Drug it out 4);
long a' poss1ble. "Do your.;elf u
favor,.. the experts wi ll say. "get
yourself a Ia~&lt; yer. Thrs could happen
lo you " "Do yourself a favor. Gel
yourself a lawyer. You could make
this happen to someone else. "
•
Do yourself a favor LiSten
Whenever people say they're domg ,
you a favor, it means they want one
of two thongs: your attention. or you(
money These days they're pretly
much the same thing
lan Shoales is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper En\trpr~ .
A.s.'iOCiation.
··

Evelyn Blanche Rife
Evelyn Blanche Rrfe, 90, of Matn Street m Rutland, d1ed on Sunday, September 20, 1998 at Veterans Memonal Hosprtal m Pomeroy.
She was born on January 27. 1908 m Rutland, daughter of the late Elza
and Dora Nelson Carpenter She wa.• a homemaker
Surv1ving are a brother and srster-m-law, Lawrence and Clance Carpenter of Rutland; two srsters. Marg1e Grueser and Kathleen Carpenter, both ol
Rutland, and several meces and nephews, three of whom she helped rear m
her home Joan (Tom) Wolfe, Jeanme (fred) Wolfe and Trav1s Grate, all of
Racme.
Bes1des her parents. she was preceded m dealh by her husband Raymond
A. ll.1fe, three brothers, Edgar, Henry and Perry Carpenter, and a sister, Anna
Clme.
Semces w1ll be held at II 30 a.m. on Wednesday, Seplember 23, 1998
at the Birchfield Funeral Home m Rutland. wnh the Rev Alan Blackwood
offic1atmg Bunal Will follow at the M1les Cemetery m Rutland
Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday, Seplember 22, t998
from 6-9 p.m.

INO

Meigs announcements

Clearing skies, cooler
temperatures forecast
By The Aasoclated Press
High pressure bu•lding in to Ohio tomght Will bnng clearing skies and
much cooler temperatures, the National Weather Service said. Lows will be
'"the 40s.
Sunshine will be abundant on Wednesday as the high settles mto the Ohio
Valley region. Temperatures will be cooler with h1ghs in the 60s
Fair skies and more seasonable temperatures are expecled to continue
through the week
The record-high temperature for th1s date at the Columbus weather station was 95 degrees in 1895 wh1le the record low was 37m 1995 Sunset
tomght will be at 7:29p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:20a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Mostly clear. Patchy dense fog after midnight. Lows near SO.
Ltght north wind.
Wednesday... Mostly sunny. Highs from the upper 60s to near 70.
Wednesday night...Ciear. Lows in the m1d 40s.
Euended forecast:
Thu,-,;day... Partly cloudy. H1ghs in the mid 70s.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 40s and hrghs m the lower 70s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s and highs near 70.

Council presses for action
(Continued from Page 1)
a."ume the habrhty for destructiOn Of
the bu•lding
Ande,-,;on sard as an altemauve,
lhe VIllage can levy a da1ly fine after
the 30-day period exprres.
Council asked Mayor Frank
Vaughan to mv1te Ewmg to lhe Ocr
5 council meetmg to discuss the
bUilding. In addition, Counc1l President John Musser suggested srndmg
the letter regardless, puttmg a 30-&lt;lay
time period into mot1on
Anderson sa1d an ongomg sewer
investigation has revealed large
amounts of cinder, like that useu in
snow removal. in the sewers along
Mam Street.
He asked Vaughan to conSider
askmg the Oh1o Departmenl ofTmns·
portat1on to stop usmg cmders on
Mam Street, which also serves a'
U.S. 33. because 11 plugs the storm

to a lack of water tlowtng lhrough the
hnes. Anderson explained, addmg
that the odor w1ll diS&gt;~ pate once water
resumes tlowmg through the sewers.
He also sard he is pursumg a grant
for m•lling and pavmg Mulberry.
Umon and Butternut avenues, and
La'ley and Bnck streets Tolal proJeCt
pnce will be between $300.000 and
$400,000 mcludmg pavemenl m1lllng
where needed
In other busoness. counCil:
• Approved sendmg Vaughan and
Musser to a mayors' conference 111
Columbus on Dec. S for a total cost
of$240 ..
• Re1mbu.-.ed a Lmcoln J-!111 reSIdent for $300 spent on repa~rmg a
srorm sewer servicing Lmcoln Hill
and Brown Alley:
• Accepled Reatha Bush and Clay
Crow a.' jumor firefighters pendmg
sogned approval by F1re Ch~ef Danny Z~rkle ,
• DIScussed the cutting of weeds
along 1he nver in preparalion for the
B•g Bend Siemwheel Festival 10 -be
held Oct 1-3.
• Met m executive sess1on to d1s·
cuss personnel mauers
Also present were Clerk Kathy
Hysell and counc•l members Gen
Walton. Dave Ballard and Larry
Wehrung.

sewers

"We JUSt use plam salt," Anderson
sa1d
Anderson also noted that b1ds for
a proposed sewer project should be
presented to counc1l at the Oct. 5
meeting and said that addnional
waterlme reparrs wrll hkely be conducted along Mulberry Avenue.
Complamts about the sewer smell
prevalent m areas of the town are due

The Daily Sentinel · Special meeting
(USPSUl-960)
• yields no action
Com•ualty Nt...,.ptr
(
Holdlap.l~w:.

No aclion was taken dunng a spe' cml meetmg of M1dJiepor1 Village
Coune~l held on Monday evening
The meeling was called for lhe diScussion of personnel. and council met
m executiVe sessron for that purpose
A spec1al meetmg wh1ch was
scheduled for Wednesday evemng
1 has been cancelled. accordrng to
Mayor Dewey Horton

Published every afternoon, Monday through
Fmtay, Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Ohto by the
Ohto Valley Pubhsht'l£ Company Second class
postage pa1d al Pome!'tly, Ohto
Mmabm Tbe A•~iJh.:d Pn:a.s and the Ohw
Newspaper Abx:iJtKNI
POIIIDUCtr: Send lddR:.iS COrrections to The
Da•ly Senttnel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Oh10
4S769

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Canter or Metor Rol:te
One Week ............................. .$2 00

One Monlh ................ .............. $8 70
One Year.... . •... ................ ... $104.00

Ret:eption planned
The Me~gs County Oh1o B•centenmal Commutee will host a reception Monday, Sept 28 at 7 p.m at the
Me1gs County Museum. Butternut
Avenue, Pomeroy
The commmee was orgamzed
under the ausp1ces of the Meigs
County CommtsSJoners to represent
all residents. Margaret Parker was
appointed chairman
In announcmg the reception, Parker called for the cooperation of all
areas of the county 1n planmg fort he
observance of Ohio's 100 years of
statehood.
"We have planned thiS recep11on
that you might have the opportumty
to join us, learn what we are doong,
and share your 1dea.' for celebralong
woth us," said Parker
Meeting canceled
A specoal meelmg of M1ddleport
Village Council for Wednesday
evening ha.• been canceled, accordmg
lo Mayor Dewey Horton
CAA meeting
The Gallia-Me.gs Communily
Act1on Agency w1ll hold 1ts momhl)

board meetmg Thursday. 4 p.m. at the
Gu1dmg Hand School m Chesh1re
Bus trip canceled
A bus tnp pl anned by rhe Me.gs
Athletic Boosters for Fnday mghtto
Tols~a. W Va where the Me~gs
Marauders will play has been can·
celed because or the late response or
those mrerested m the tnp.
Revival set
ReviVal semces w1ll be held allhe
Clillon Tabernacle Fnday. Saturday
and Sunday. 7 p m each evemng
There Will be a guest speaker each
mghl
Hymn sing set
St•versv•lle Communuy Church
woll have a hymn song Fnday leatur·
ong The Crusaders. 7 30 p m The
church IS located on County Road 31 .
Homet:oming announced
The Eagle R•uge Community
Church Will have us homecommg
Sunday There woll be basket umner
at noon and smgmg at I 30 featunng
the BISsell Brothers and Harvesr
T•me

Two tickets win Buckeye 5
CLEVELAND (AP) - There were two tiCkets sold nammg all five numbers drnwn m Monday n1ght's Buckeye 5 drawm g, and each wmnmg 11cket
1s worth $100,000, the Oh1o Louery sa1d
The wmnmg ttckets were purchased at Hulfman 's Market m Columbus
and Sterling Food Store m Toledo
There were 151 Buckeye 5 trckets wrth four olthe numbers, and each rs
worth $250. The 4.529 tickets showmg three of the numbers are each worth
$10, and the 42.394tJckets showmg two of the numbers are each worth $1

rcm •t in advano: dna:tto TiloDally Scntmd oo

J

a lbrec. Sis: 04' 12 month bat$s Cmhl wtll be
&amp;•"en canter each week
No sui'ISCrt!&gt;UOn by matl pcrmmed m •rea•
whc:n:. home earner sen tee 111 1: 1atlablc
Pubhshc:r restrvcs lhc uahtlo tdjttsl r1tcs dur
tng lhe suMcrtpiiOn period Subscnp110n rate
changes may be tmplcmcntccl bv cftanama the
durallonoflhcltubscnpliOn
IJ'
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION

lllllde Me'-' Couoty
13 Weeks.. ....•• .. ..•... • ••• .S27 30
26 Weeks .... . ...................il3 82
52 Wecb ............ .......... JIOSS6
111101 O.bld&lt;.Me... CottlliJ
13 Weeks ............ ..... ....... J29.2l
26 Weeks .••..•....••. .•••.••....• Jl6 68
l2 Weeks ............. ............$109 72

Reader Services
CorreCtion Polley

Our main ......., Ia 111 stories is 1o be
ICCUrlle.

tf you lulow of ID error In

story, c:oll the

DeWII'OOIII

I

II (740) f9l..

1155. We will cbeck your lafoi'ID.Itioa ;
ond make 1 contelloe If w1nuletl.

News Departments
The mala au•ber is 992·1155. Depart·
mntHieuloasare:
Geaerol Monqer ...................... .Exl. 1101
Newt ........................................... Ext. 1101 1
or Ext. 1106 '

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................... 46 112
Akzo .................................. 36318
AmrTech ....................... 4815116
Ashland 011 .....................48 5116
AT&amp;T .............................. ,58 7/16
Bank One ........................ 46 9/16
Bob Evans .............................. 20
Borg-Warner ........................... 40
Broughton .................. .......181/8
Champion ......................... 10 518
Charm Shps ....................4 13/16
City Holding ............................ 40
Federal Mogul ...............49 15116
Gannett ........................... 57 7/16
Goodyear .......................... 53 518
Kmart ............................. 1311/16
Kroger ............................. 47 1/16
Landa End ....................... 18 3/16
Ltd .................................... .24 314
Oak Hill Flnl ......................161/4
OVB ...................................40314
One Valley .........................3 3/16
Peoples .................................. 26
Prem Flnl ...........................191/8
Rockwell ....................... 38 13/16
RD/Shell ............................47 318
Seers ............................... 47 5116
Shoney'e .......r: ..........................2
Ster Bank .......................... 68 314
Wandy'e ..........................21 5116
Woarthlngton ................ 1111/16

-·-·-

Stock rt~porta 1re th1 10:30
AshertloU.a.............................-....Eod. 1104 1 •.m. quotH provided by Adveet
Cir&lt;alolloe ......... ······-········ ...•..Ext. 1111.1 ' ol Olllllpoll8.
Cioullled Ads..............................Ext. 1100 I !;========;;!I

Other Services

.

~----------------~1

...

Heston fails to mention
Hollister at fund-raiser
SOUTH POINT CAPt- Charlton utes Without ever ment1omng the canHeston talked about gun control. d•dale
To demonstrate lhe need lor
prestdentiUI problems. lhe foundmg
fathers and other topics Monday at a firearms nghts. Heston 11cked oiT a
roster of despots Hnter, Sralln. Pol
fund-rJ~&lt;er for Nancy Hollister But
he d1dn ' 1 menuon rhe Republican Pot and Saddam Hu sse m He sa1d
thu~e ··monsters" were able to setze
congresSional candidate hersell
The acwr and Nauonal R11le Asso- power m p.ar1 because ol controls on
Ciallon preSidenr represented hts own lire arms.
He said the foundmg fathers
poliuc,tl aclion commillee at the
ensured
the nghts ot gun owners 111
Lawrence Counly Republican Party
tlie
CnnsliiUIIon
luncheon. anJ not !he NRA. Thai
He also sau.J the nat1on wouiU surgroup has endorsed Holllsler 's opponenl, DemocratiC mcumbent Ted VIVe the turor over Prc:\1dcnt Clinton 's relatwnsh1p With Momca
Stnckland
More than liM) people pmd $50 l..ewmsky 11 II" qu1ckly resolved
ap.ece for lhe luncheon at a holel m
!hiS Village al Oh10's southern lip
Holllsler. the lieutenant governor.
could nor anenu because her husband
was hospll.tll zed Sunday With an
undiSclosed atlmenl
Heslon spoke lor about 30 mm-

Bidwell man sentenced
to prison for trafficking
A 22-year-old Bidwell man was sentenced to e1ght years 1n pnson la.'t
week 1n the Me1gs County Court of Common Pleas
Mrchael J Sm1th was sentenced on three charges oltratlickmg m crack
cocame after earlier pleadmg gu•lty to the charges
Two ol the charges were puniShable by 18 months 1n pnson. wh1le the
thrrd count was punrshable by five years m pnson smce the oflense occurred
near a school
He was arrested m May as the result of undercover mvesugarion by the
MaJor Cnmes Task Force. admmistered by the Me1gs County Prosecuwr\
Offrce. The Mrddlepon Pollee Department and rhe Mergs County Shenffs
Office also partrcrpated 1n the operauon

***************
BIG

[0 MovteS
•

EMS units record 6 calls
Umts ot lhe Me1gs Counly Emer·
gency Medrcal Serv1ce recorded SIX
calls for asSistance Monuay Unns
respondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
7.38 am . Eag le R1dge Road.
Chesler. Bonme Walker. Holzer Med·
1cal Center. Pomeroy squad a\SISied.
10 27 am . Bashan Road. Racine.
Audon Caranza. Veterans Memonal
Hospital. Racme squad asmted.
Racme and Bashan volunleer lire
uepartments asSisted.
I 56 p m.. South Th~rd Avenue.
Middleport. Kathenne Moore. VMH.
4 30 p m , Cole Streel. M•ddlepon. John Fink. VMH , Middleport

squad asmled,
10 48 p m. Stale Roure 7. Mid·
dlepon. Kenneth Barnell, Pleasant
Vall ey Hospnal
POMEROY
8 31 am . Pomeroy P•ke, RICky
McChellen. VMH

Mospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Sept. 21 - J1mmy
Vesl, Siephen Deaver, John G1bson,
Allison Holley
Birth Sept. 20 - Mr and Mrs
Robert Jacks. son, B1dwell
(Published with permission)

SINGLE COPY PRICE

Dally. .. ........................... 35 Cents
Subsaibe11 no1 dcsinng to pay the earner may

Janet Howard referred the group 10
the sewer district board, wh1ch was
responsible for the expenditure of the
funds.
Howard esumated !hat I0 to 20
very low mcome households w1ll
receiVe as&lt;~ stance through the funds
commmed by the commiSSioners.
Buchanan, Ktdder and Parsons all
sa1d they mtended 10 sellthe1r homes
becausr the cost of connectmg 10 the
system 1s CO"it-proh1b1tlve
The commiSSioners labled ac110n
on b1ds from five contraclors lor live
FEMA bridge replacemenl projects m
rhe county The b1ds . separale for
each proJeCt, were rece~ved from
Dav1d J Sktnner Construcuon. Bel·
pre; Precon Bndge Co Inc. Manetta, Ma1den Jenk1ns Construct•on Co .
Nelsonv1lle: and The Oh1o Bndgc
Corp . Cambndge
The commisSioners also
• Approved appropna110n adjustments and trnnsfers of fund s for the
Dog and Kennel Fund. Prosecutmg
Anomey and Departmenl of Human
Servrces.
• Approved day care contracts
With Nova l..eammg Center ol Athens
and Bundles of Joy m Belpre.
• Met tn e;~;ecu11 ve sess1on to discuss personnel. w1th no ac11on fol·
lowmg
Presem wer~ (omm1ss1uners Hoi fman . Howaru and Jeff Thornton.
Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes,
and Clerk Glona Kloes

SENIOR PICTURES
with a Hot Rod or Custom
Motorcycle

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners and
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.
Our stalisl•cs s how that mature
dnvers and home owners have
few er and less costly losses
than other age groups So rl's
only falf to charge you less for
your msurance Insure your
home and car With us and save
even more w1th our sper.1al
mull•·pohcy d1scounts

The Light
Toach
By
Dave
Grate

of
Bottle
Gas
Today anyth•ng that s moder
ately overpnced IS a barga•n

***

Wisdom IS d1v1ded mto two parts
1 havmg a great deal to say. and
2 not saymg 11

'The

***

***

To the opt1m1st . all doors have
hand les and hmges . to the
pesstm•st. all doors have locks
and latches

***

We wonder why they re called
the secrets ol success Every
body IS always tell1ng them to
everybody else

OOAN

FANTASY PHOTOGRAPHY

Ma11nees EVERtoM r

marvelous th1ng about a
vacal•on IS that 11 makes you leet
good enough and poor enough
to go back to work

CIJ.u. .I '99

Get Them 83fore the Weather turns
Call For Appointment
740-985·3658

c~llFotMovu:•Times

1·740·753·34 00

~

RNER _:

nurance Services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

1

Ill 1117

.....o.l •.,. ' - " '
Ufe Home Car Bualrleq
n. 'iti ,.,_.
-

Come and see our new
selection of vented and
unvented heaters and
our new arrivals of our
ventless fireJIIacas. All
heaters and fireplaces
are backed by the best
e~nd most effident
.s~~kt ~partment in
Ill~ (tale' $,88 Jim.

.

···Ttrt~ '
Rutland
Gas

Bo"'-

lt. 124,1.... OIL

142-2211 ·

�Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 22, 1998

Vaginitis: One of the most common cause of discomfort for women
By DR. MIRIAM GREENE
physical exam, a history of past and
New York University ~hool of current medications taken, including
Medicine

For AP S~lal Features
Women who have an unusual
vaginal discharge accompanied by
ilching and burning or pain during
intercourse, may be suffering from
vaginilis. While the symptoms can
be uncomfortable, generally the situation is not serious. In fact. vaginitis
is one of the most common reasons
women between age 18 and 40 visit
a gynecologist.
Vaginal infections are not all
alike. Ninety percent fall into one of
four categories: candida (commonly
known as yea.&lt;t), bacterial ·vaginosis,
trichomoniasis and atrophic vaginitis. To treat the patient, a doctor
must first find out the exact type of
vaginitis causing the discomfort.
This means a thorough history and

birth control pills, infomnation about
sexual partners and detennining
whether the patient is under unusual
stress. The exam should include a
smear that is examined under a
microscope or sent for study in a
certified laboratory. Once identified,
most infections can be remedied
easily and quickly.
Candida is the most prevalent
vaginal infection. It is caused by an
overgrowth of yeast. Often, it may
be related to a change in homnones,
which may explain why many
women complain that their symptoms appear just before their
menses. The relationship to hormones also explains why such infections are prevalent among those in
childbearing years and even more so
during pregnancy. Birth control

pills, steroids, antibiotics and dia~tes also create an environment for
a'!\ overgrowth of yeast. For relief,
some women turn to alternative
methods not necessarily approved
by the medical profession. They try
to restore the normal environment
by eating yogurt. Others use boric
acid vaginal suppositories or boric
acid compresses. These alter the
vaginal pH, thereby suppressing
growth of the yeast. Ice-milk soaks
are another home-alternative remedy.
For medically sanctioned solu-·
tions, there are many over-thecounter drugs commonly used to
treat candida. Azole drugs, such as
the generics lotrimazole, butoconazole and miconazole, are usually
effective. Many patients know these
drugs by brand names, such as Fernstat, Gynelotrimin and Monostat.

'

Some ate' used for three days, and
others for seven days. More often
treating the situation for 6-to-seven
days works best.
Bacterial vaginosis is another
very common form of vaginitis. The
primary symptoms are a foul
smelling discharge and mild vaginal
discomfort. Some researchers
believe pregnant women in high-risk
populations have a greater chance or
pre-temn delivery if bacterial vaginosis is left untreated during pregnancy. The benefit of treatment in
these cases far outweigh the risks of
non-treatment.
Nobody knows exactly what
causes vaginosis, but an overgrowth
of multiple bacteria is the result.
Since this form of infection may be
sexually transmitted, sexual partners
of those who have the infection
should be treated. Infections from

bacterial vaginosis associated organ- Examples include urinary tract
isms pose a threat to the patient's infections or chemical allergies IQ
reproductive health, so proper diag- detergent, soap or bubble bath, a_,
nosis and treatment is e'5ential. well as allergies to silk or nyloh.
Drugs, such as metronidazole (Met- Menopausal women can also suffer
rogei-Vaginal) or clindamycin from symptoms of vaginitis due tQ
(Cieocin) , should clear up the infec- low estrogen levels called atrophic
vaginitis. Thi s problem can be
tion . •
Trichomoniasis is the third most solved by using an estrogen cream
common type of vaginitis. It is that can be prescribed by a physi,
caused by a sexually transmilled liv - cian.
Whatever the cause of vaginitis.
ing organism. Symptoms include a
discharge, itching and. often, pain it is important to remember tha~
with intercourse. If you have tri- although the condition is common, \t
chomoniasis, your partner absolute- is critical to get a correct diagnosis
ly must be treated. Recommenda- and treat the problem before it
tions are a one-time, single dose of 2 develops into something more serigrams of metronidazole taken orally. ous.
Sometimes problems unrelated to
bacteria or yeast cause similar
Dr. Miriam Greene is Clinical
symptoms to vaginitis, which can Instructor of Obstetrics and
confuse women treating themselves Gynecology at New York Universiwith over-the-counter remedies. ty School or Medicine.

Society Scrapbook University of Rio Grande cheerleaders honored

LAURA ELIZABETH PULLINS
DAUGHTER BORN - Tom and
Stacie Pullins of Long Bottom
announce the birth of their third
child, Laura Elitabeth. July 28 at
Camden Clark Hospital.
The infant weighed seven pounds
and 15 ounces and wa.&lt; 21 inches
long. Mr. and Mrs. Pullins have two
other children, Audrionna and Kirk.
Paternal
grandparents
are
Theodore and Becky Pullins of
Long Bottom, and paternal greatgrandmother is Mattie Pullins of
Alfred. Maternal grandparents are
Nancy Hall of West Columbia and
Dave and Susan Hall of New Haven,
W. Va. Maternal great-grandmothers
are Sally Bland of Letart and L.era
Hall of Point Pleasant.
Rutland Garden Club
A program on planting in containers by Hal Kneen was a feature
of the annual open meeting of th.t.
Rutland Garden Club held recently
at the Rutland United Methodist
Church.
Kneen showed a series of slices
on preparing containers for planting.
and then displayed some he had
made. He also led the group in a
song of praise.
Devotions by Betty Lowrey
included "Summer Beauty". "A
Summer's Eve", "My Favorite
Poem", and "The Wedding of the
Flowers."
Cheryl Jewel gave a tribute to
Pauline Atkins. and the club presented her with a basket of gifts.
The 35 garden club members
anending represented 10 clubs.
Past Councilors' Club

•

Past Councilors' Club of Chester
Council No. 323. Daughter&lt; of
America. met recently at the lodge

hall, with Mary Jo Barringer and
Pauline Ridenour the hostess.
Dolores
Wolfe.
president,
presided at the meeting. She read
Romans. chapter 15.
The Lord's Prayer and the Pledge
of Alkgiance were read in unison.
Members answered the roll call by
naming their favorite sportsman.
There were readings by Erma
Cleland and Mary Jo Barringer, and
Charloue Grant and Thelma White
gave the secretary and treasurer's
reports. Games were conducted by
White and Mary K. Holter. Door
prizes were won by Cleland, White
and Margaret Amberger.
Also present were Goldie Frederick. Opal Eichinger, Laura Mae
Nice, Marcia Keller, Opal Hollon.
lnzy Newell, Belly Young.
Eblin reunion
The 31st Samuel A. Eblin
reunion was held Sept. 5 at Dave
Diles Park in Middleport.
President Sam Eblin gave the
welcome followed by the business
meeting and contests. Winning dolls
were: Barb Eblin, Barb Colmer,
Hyllia Eblin. Angie Eblin. Leah
Whillekind. The aluminum can
drive wa.s won by Ryan Polling.
Monetary gifts were given to Acrica
Blackwell, Mike McDonald , Roger
and Karen Eblin.
Grace was given by Adria Eblin
before the potluck dinner.
Attending were Sam and Vera
Eblin. Sandy Polling, Bob and Hyllia Eblin, Tony and Pat Eblin. Middleport: Art and Adria Eblin, Wanda,
Becky. Ashley and Juley Eblin,
Juanita Eblin. Lawrence and Bam
Eblin, Penny Clark, Jacob Smart,
Harold and Dame[ Whmekend,
- Mamie Stephenson, Jerry ?nd Barb
Colmer, Shan Amber .Anca, AJa.
Destinee Blackwell, Austin Hendricks. Jimmie Snyder. Megan Johnson. Carl and Sue Delong. Jeff and
Heidi DeLong of Pomeroy: Artie
Eblin, Roy, Shari, Bobby and
Michelle Eblin of Syracuse: Ken,
Donna and Lois Eblin. Doris Murray. James. Tressa; Mike, Joey and
J.T. McDonald, Russ and Darlene
Fields. Henry and Hester Eblin of
Rutland: Travis. Lori, Lizzie and
Ryan Poling. Sam Eblin Jr. of
Athens: Roger. Karen. Justin and
Myklia Eblin. James and Angie
Eblin of Columbus: Diane Brush of
Centerburg: Tabitha and Arik
Horner of Newark: Nancy and Leah
· Whittekind of Huntington. W.Va.:
Bill and Pam Colmer of Wellston.
Guests were Kay Clark. Ryan Will.
Chad Freeman and Tresea Pullens.

Herbal remedy used by orostate cancer
patients may cause blood clots
USA TODAY
An herbal remedy touted by
prostate cancer patients for il~ ability
to slow tumor growth is so rich in
plant estrogens that it lowers levds of
the male hormone testosterone to
those seen after ca.~tration. says a
study out Thursday.
Researchers fear that the over-the·
counter supplement. like prescription
estrogen. may ~ause potentially dangerous blood dots.
The report is one of several in
Thursday's New England Journal of
Medicine about problems with alternative medicines. They' re the latest
salvo in a generations-old feud
between doctors. who argue that all
medicines. hemal or not. must be subjected to 1he same scientific tests. and
advocates of relatively untested
dietary supplements, a modem industry whose historical roots reach back
to folk medicines. traditional herbal
treatment~ and vitamin pills.
In 1994, Congress exempted suppleme'nts from most government regulations. say the journal's editors, Marcia Angell and Jerome Kassirer. In an
editorial. they assert: " It is time for the
scientific community to slop giving
alternative medicine a free ride ...
As an example. they cite the
~tate cancer remedy, PC-SPES,
whose name combines an abbreviation for prostate cancer and the Latin
word for hope. The supplement is
remarkably poten~ say lead researcher

Robert DiPaola. of the Cancer Institute of New Jersey, and his colleagues.
"No one has ever shown hems to he
this potent - to lower testosterone to
ca.&lt;lration levels in men." DiP-Jola
says.
Like human estrogen. PC -SPES
helps fight prostate cancer by culling
off the tumor's supply of tc&lt;tosterone,
which can drive tumor growth. Also
like estrogen. it appears to cau~e
breast tenderness and may cause
blood clots. Due to these side effect~.
estrogen has fallen out of favor as a
prostate cancer treatment.
Instead. about half of prostate cancer patients undergo surgical ca.~tra­
tion. removing the testicles. or socalled medical ca.,tration, using the
drug Lupron, which has fewer side
effects than estrogen.
The researchers. who studied PCSPES in eight patients, say they
ordered it by mail from Botaniclab,
Brea. Calif. The limn's telephone ha.s
been disconnected. and comJlWiy official~ could not be reached for comment.
In other reports, Food and Drug
dministration doctors say other
mal supplements have been found
• he contaminated with a naturally
occurring fonn of digitalis, a heart
stimulant And the California Department of Health Service&lt;~ tested 260
traditional Chinese medicines and
found that one-third were conlllminated with heavy metals.

t

Local Cheerleader Jennifer
Lawrence. daughter of Jim and Barbara Lawrence of Syracuse. was
recently honored as part of the University of Rio Grande cheerleading
squad which won top honors at the
Universal Cheerleaders Association
cheer camp in Knoxville, Tennes.'!ee.
The event was held in August at the
University of Tennessee.
Rio Grande's 14 member squad
placed first in fight song competition,
second place in both Cheer and Sideline categories. received four "superior" ratings on pre-competition evaluations. and was the winner of the
1998 UC A "Most Collegiate" award.
That award is for small co-ed
cheer teams for outstanding overall
perfomnance and crowd appeal.
Only eighteen awards were given out
nationally in this category.
"Our cheer team did an e~cellent job
in all categories," said coach Rick
Callebs. "We faced some stiff competition this year from some very talented programs, and we were evaluated in the "small co-ed" category
which adds an increased difficulty
factor in stunts," Callebs noted.
"We have some great matet ial for
the upcoming Rio Grande ba&lt;ketball
sea.son, and we'd like to invite everyone to attend a Redwomen or Redmen game to see us in action."
Rio Grande basketball begins
Tuesday, November 1Oth. The Redwomen Ia awa at Wilberforce
and the ked:nen ~ at home in th~
L
C te
. W'lbe
yne ~n r.. a1so P1aymg I rforce Umverstty.

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
PageS

. Tuesday, September 22, 1998

Tarasco delivers pinch-hit
grand slam to give Reds win
By TERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI -OulfielderTony
Tarasco asked to talk with Cincinnati
Reds manager Jack McKeon . It
turned out to be a very profitable conversation.
"He came in, he didn 't complain
about not playing. he just said, ' I
understand, I got off to a slow start
because I was hurt. But don't worry:
if you need to use me, I'll be ready,'
" McKeon said.
McKeon went to Tarasco to pinch
hit Monday night with the bases
loaded, and Tarasco hit his first
major league grand slam to beat the
Philadelphia Phillies 8-5 .
"I told Jack, 'I don 't mind working for it. I'm a fighter,'" Tarasco
said. "I've only got six games left to
give them something to remember
. ~bout me in spring training. Tonight
: w:as a small, baby step."
: :: In the only other NL game, it wa.•
· San Francisco 8, Pittsburgh I.
: · : Tarasco was on the disabled list in
: May with a strained right hip. was on
: ihe Reds' roster brieOy in June and
-then spent the rest oflhe season with
: Indianapolis, hitting .3 13 with 16
: home runs and 45 RBis. He was
•ealled up Sept. 9.
: :: The only question about his sev: ~nth-inning line drive was whether it
: had enough height to clear the right-

field fence. It did.
It was the first pinch-hit grand
slam for the Reds since Lenny Harris did it on Aug. 31, 1996. against
Florida.
"We needed a lift from somebody
off the bench. and Tarasco delivered," McKeon said. "I didn't know
be would hit a home run, but I knew
he wduld put the ball in play. and
that's what we needed."
The start of the game wa• delayed
by rain for 2 hours, 23 minutes. Once
it began, Scott Rolen had two home
runs and a double a• the Phillies took
a 5-4 lead.
Scott Sullivan (5-5) got the win in
relief and Danny Graves finished for
his seventh save.
Phillies reliever Mark Leiter (7-5)
blew a save chance for the 12th time.
He loaded the bases on a hit bat•man,
a walk and a fielder's choice before
Tara.&lt;eo homered.
The Phillies bullpen kept starter
Tyler Green from getting his first win
since beating Tampa Bay on June 26.
Since then, he's 0-7 with three nodecisions.
"There's just nothing you can.do
about that," said Green, who allowed
five hits, struck out one and walked
five in five inning.s.
. Mike Remlinger wa• spared from
becoming the first Cincinnati pitcher to lose more than 15 games in a

season since Jay Tibbs was I0-16 in
1985. He allowed six hits. struck out
five and walked two in six innings.
Rolen doubled in the first and
scored on Kevin Jordan 's double.
Rolen's solo homer in the third gave
Philadelphia a 2-1 lead, and his 30th
homer made it 5-3 in the fifth.
It was Rolen's fifth two-homer
game in the majors. His only other
one this season wa.' May I0 against
Arizona.
Philadelphia manager Terry Fran,
cona said he didn't consider Rolen's
homers wasted, even though the
Phillies lost.
"If he doesn't hit them, we're not
in the game." Francona said. "The
kid gives so much effort. when he hits
them I'm thrilled. "
The Reds scored in the second on
consecutive doubles by Aaron Boone
and Pat Watkins. Sean Ca.sey and
Remlinger later added RBI groundouts and Damian Jackson singled
home a run in the sixth.
Giants 8, Pirates I
Jeff Kent hit a three-run homer
and Ore I Hershiser (I 0-10) pitched
seven strong innings to break a sixstart winless streak.
The Giants moved within 3 112
games of the idle New York Met~ in
the NL wild-card race with their
fourth victory in five games.

( c

-·

-.
GRAND SLAM - Cincinnati Reds pinch hit·
ter Tony tarasco hit a grand slam home run In
Monday night's game against visiting Phlladel-

Hershiser allowed one run and six
hits, walked three and struck out f1ve.
Kent has 30 home runs and 122

RBis. Joe Carter also homered for
San Francisco.

Jose Silva (6-6) wa• the loser for
the Pirates. who have lost II of their
la.'t 13 road games.

:Sanders shines as Cowboys romp 31-7 over Giants

CAMP CHAMPIONs-In this photo, taken outside the Thompson-Boling Arena on the University of
Tenne88e8 campus at Knoxville, the University of Rio Grande Cheerleaders celebrate a team cam·p
championship. Pictured are, 1-r, Erica Donl~y (Oak Hill), Mandy Warren• (Jackson), Heather Wiseman,
caplalo, (Beaver); Tiffany Wells, captain, (Mtnford), Haley Peraln (Oak Hill), Michelle Dalton (Jackson),
and Jennifer Lawhorn (London). In the second row Is Jenny Jones (Jackson), Melody Layford, (Ripley,
Oh.), Clndl Ellllott (Gallipolis), Caml Carroll (Chillicothe), and Rlchelle Edwards (Oak Hill). In back Is
Frank Souders, Student Assistant, Tim Switzer (Gallipolis), and Rick Callebs, Coach/Advisor. Absent
from Photo Is Jennifer Lawrence of Syracuse.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)
- Even with Troy Aikman out with
a broken collarbone and Emmitt
Smith hobbled by a groin injury.
there's still another facet that makes
the Dallas Cowboys a threat Primetime.
And Deion Sanders didn't let the
Cowboys down Monday night
against the New York Giants.
Sanders scored on a 59-yard punt
·return and a 71-yard interception
· return, set up another TD with a 55yard pass reception and had 226
yards on offense. defense and special
learns in leading the Cowboys to a
Jl-7 win over the Giants.
"He played phenomenal," Cowboys linebacker Randall Godfrey
said. "We lose our leader, Troy Aik-

man. Emmitt is out the second half. divisiOn titles, killed New York with
Who else, man? Next man step up the big play in a game played before
and that wa.&lt; Deion. He stepped up a record crowd at Giants Stadium.
and took control. That's what it 7H,039.
Besides Sanders, Jason Garrett,
takes."
The win left the Cowboys (2-1) a.s filling in for Aikman, might have
the only team in the NFC East with made the biggest, combining with
a winning record. It also raised seri- Billy Davis on an 80-yard scoring
ous questions about the Giants, the pa..s play late in the second qua.rterto
defending division champions (1-2) snap a 7-7 tie. The touchdown came
who have now played very poorly in just three plays after Danny Kanell
threw a 36-yard touchdown pass to
losing their last two games.
"If you can go home tonight and Amani Toomer.
Richie Cunningham's 40-yard
sleep and be happy with yourself
after everyone in the world watched field goal stretched the lead to 17-7
you get your butt kicked, you've got just before halftime, and then Deion
trouble," Giants defensive end took center stage again after intermission.
Michael Strahan said.
His 55-yard reception set up SherThe Cowboys. who slipped to 6man
Williams' 18-yard third-quarter
10 last season after five straight

touchdown run, and Sanders oced the
game by recording his eighth career
interception return for a touchdown,
one shy of Ken Houston's NFL
record.
"He had a super game," said
Smith. who wa.s limited to 21 yards
on seven carries after suffering a
groin pull in the second quarter. "He
played a superb game. Anything less
would be uncivilized. It was a nice
game. He made plays. He made
things happen. It was just doing what
De ion always does ."
Sanders did everything Monday
night despite having to sit out much
of the second quarter because of
dehydration. He left aftet his punt
return. a play on which he faked left
and outmn the Giants around the right

Women tackle new frontier of home repairs- and succeed
By BARBARA MAYER
ceramic tile, painting walls and hanFor AP Special Features
dling power tools.
Women have been pumping their
The couple split up, but she conown gas. unjamming the office copi- tinued buying buildings and keeping
er and installing their own computer them in repair. In 1992. she took a
software for quite a while. Now, it's four-monlh leave from her job at a
time to move on to the next frontier law limn to build hor own house in
- fix-it projects around the house.
Bakerstield. Calif.
"Women actually can be quite
"The house and lot cost too
good at home repairs." says Karen much: $95,000. But I look on it as a
Dale Dustman. "We are patient, success because I learned so much,"
detail oriented and willing to ask for the author recalls.
help when we need it. What we lack
Ms. Dustman says that with 6.5
is practice. Fathers ask their sons, million· households headed by
not their daughters. to hand them the women under 45. women increastools. "
ingly need to know how to do their
A lawyer-turned-home-builder, own simple home repairs. FurtherMs. Dustman has written "The more, about 60 percent of American
Woman 's Fix-It Book: Incredibly homes are more than 20 years old.
Simple Weekend Projects and These are the ones with those leaky
Everyday Home Repair" (Chandler faucets, outdated shower heads .
House Press $14.95 softcover) to inadequate outlets and other irritatprovide technical direction and ing Oaws that can be fixed fairly eas·
moral support.
ily.
The book tells how to do com"Any job that doesn't take brute
mon household repairs such as fix- strength is well within a woman's
ing a leaky faucet, unclogging a capability." Ms. Dustman insists.
drain, adding a telephone jack or
This message seems to be fin&lt;ling
rewiring a lamp. There is also a willing listeners. Married women
basic tools list. including a glossary have taken over many home
with labeled drawings of tools like a improvement projects from their
Phillips screwdriver and an Allen husbands, acco.rding to a 1997 surwrench.
vey sponsored by Owens Corning.
" Neither of my parents used Women under 45 are especially
tools." says the author. She learned prone to getting involved, with 72
her ba&lt;ic skills from a boyfriend percent doing more work around the
with whom she bought and renovat- house than they used to do.
ed a small apartment building in the
Asked lo evaluate their manual
mid-1980s.
skills. 33 percent of those surveyed
" At tirst , I just helped. " she said they were equally or more
explains. "I saw it wasn't all that skilled than their husbands. Some 32
hard."
percent said they do projects themSoon, Ms. Dustman was chang- selves because they can ' I get their
ing door locks. hanging mini blinds. husbands to do them .
patching holes in the wall. installing
The survey found that 25 percent

of women planning a project expect- doing.
ed to do the work themselves. comAbout 130 women showed up in
pared to 21 percent who would ask March when Habitat for Humanity
their husbands to do it. The rest were in Westchester County. N.Y.. asked
planning either to hire a contractor for female volunteers to build a
(42 percent) or ask a friend ( 12 per- house. The group considered the
cent). The telephone survey of 500 turnout excellent.
"Aside from the good it does, a
households has a margin of error
plus or minus 4 percent.
· major benefit of the program is
Both The Home Depot and learning how to measure and nail,
Lowe's home centers say about half how to hold a hammer, use power
their customers are women.
tools and apply sheetrock and spa~:kBob Tillman, president of ling,"' says Patricia Wilson. who
Lowe's, says, " Women initiate the helped organize the recently inaugumajority of home improvement _pro- rated "building women" program in
jects and today many more of them Westchester.
actually do the work."
In another project, women volunSince many women haven't teers at Habitat for Humanity are in
learned how to use tools as kids, training to build a house from the
they need to get their skills up to ground up.
speed. One avenue is to learn by

ROBERT

TRENT

GOLF

side.
"[ wa.s feeling funny before the
game," Sanders said. "My feet
weren't with me. I felt tired after the
fir.a two series and I lost all my substances on the punt return ."
After getting Ouids at halftime,
Sanders was even better in the second
half.
"I don't have to tell you. he's a
special athlete," said Garrell. who
completed 12 of 28 passes for 222
yards and no interceptions in his firsl
start sin~:&lt; 1994. "He does some
unbelievable things, and he does
them over and over and over again."
The Giant• played like the Giants
of old. the team that was one of the
laughing stocks of the league until
Jim Fassel turned them into a winner
last year.

New York had II penalties for 92
yards. with the offensive line called
for live procedure penalties. The
Giants also failed to register a sack
after getting a league-high 13 in the
·first two weeks.
" I'm confused a little bit right
now with where this team is mentally." Fassel said. "We're not showing
the mental toughness. the focus and
all those things."
While happy beating the Giants on
the road. no one in Dallas locker
room seemed ready to say the Cow·
boys are back.
"We have a long ways lo go
before we are back,'' fullback Daryl
Johnston said. "It's a great start and
a step in the right direction, but we
are nowhere near where we want to
be."

0

::1:

0

LX173 Lawn Tractor

LX173 Lawn Tractor
• 15-hp ove:h~ad-valve engine
• 38-inch mower deck
• Shift-on-the-go 5-speed transaxle

$2,799*
LOWEST PRICE EVER

NO INTEREST.
NO PAYMENTS
UNTIL APRIL 1, 1999·
ON LX SERIES LAWN
TRACTORS &amp; ATTACHMENTS

JONES

TRAIL

I..:1 =--a..vt'
0

Ill

••
•Ill
== .. -...:1
Ill
••
u
- ...•Ill -.
..
• ..-..
u
0

~

The Sentinel News HotUne

992-2156

phla to give a Reds an 8-5 come-from-behind
victory. (AP)

~

To offer story suggesOO!ls, r~rt ~e­
bang news and offer a tips

A

': .. some ofthe best
public golfon earth."

If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis
Toll Freel

T30C Strlnt Trl-•
• 30cc engine
•17-inch cutting swath
• Tap &amp; Go string trimmer heed

JSCiO W.lk·Bftind Mower
• 6.0-hp engine
• Seven cutting heights
• Handlebars fold easily for storage

LT133 Lawn Tractor
• 13-hp overhead-valva engine
• 38-inch mower deck
• 5-speed in-line shift transaKie

325 Lawn &amp; Glnltn Tractor
• 17-hp air-cooled engine
• 44-inch mower deck
• Hydrostatic drive .

- Paula DiPerna, The New York Times

We didn't mean to make the decision tough, but with a full-line of products priced like
this • we understand If it takes you awhile to make a decision. This sale is for a
limited time so hurry to your partlcip~ting John Deere dealer
. today..

1-100-Ut-44-4-4
J n.v-1 NIGHT Gou/HonL
.......,..ITMTATSIU
SeviN

Stret

!N

ALAIAMA

www.deere.t:DIII .
WWW.RTJGOLP.COIII

NOTHINGJIUNS UKE ADEERE•.

""

�'

Page 6 o The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

Riverside Golf League
race again tightens
The Riverside Senior League Golf pin winners wen! Don Fields on numchampionship race ha' again tight- ber seven with a near hole-in-one.
ened with Keith Woods of Bradbury Jack Maloney. the league president.
holding a narrow lead over Jim was a distant third at 148 points. Don
Wikoff of Shade. who cut deeply into Fields had moved into the top five at
Woods si• -point lead Wednesday this point and currently holds onto
with a great score. Woods had just fou11h place. Woods and Dana Winerecovered the lead last week after a brenner took the win pushing Wouds
week of work in his semi-tractor trail- to the top and Winebrenner solidly
S e n i or
er. Woods sti ll holds a one-half point into the top fifteen .
lead over Wikoff. 163.5 to 163.0. starting times have now been pushed
Followmg are the
With a pos.ible 36 points remaining. back to 9 a.m.
all contenders but the first fifteen top fifteen players: I) Keith Woods.
have numerically been eliminated for Bradbury. 163.5: 2) Jim Wikoff.
the championship . The tight race is Shade, 162.0: ))Jack Maloney. Gal accented by the top four players lipolis. 155.5: 4) Dale Harrison.
heing separated by less than fourteen Syracuse. 150.0: 5) Charley Georgi.
points. This week's winner was the Pt. Pleasant. 148 0: 6) Donnie Fields.
team of Dale Harrison of Syracuse. Hartford. 147; 7) Harold Lohse.
Fred Smith of Ripley. and Bob Hysell Pomeroy. 145.5: 8) Ralph Sayre.
of Pomeroy at ten unr,ir par. while New Haven. 139.5: 9) Milt Ma•well.
second place was 'llarnered by Chester. 139.5: 101 Peal Carnahan.
Wikoff. Clark Greene of Hurricane, Chester. 139: II) Dana Winebrenner.
and Jack Fo• of Clifton at nine under Syracuse, 139: 12) Earl Johnson.
par. Two teams were tied for third at Mason, 137: 13) Joe Bradley. New
eight under par. The doses! to the Haven. 133.5: 14) John Bobb. West
pin honors for the week went to Clark Columbia. 13 1.0: 15) Bill Yoho.
Greene on fourteen. and Joe Bradley New Haven. 131.0.
of New Haven on number seven hole.
Only three weeks remain on the
slate as the countdown to the awards
presentations and banquet on September 29 resumes.
Ear I i e r
Woods missed a week to go out in the
18-wheeler. relinquishing the lead to
Jim Wikoff. but upon Woods' return.
Bradbury's Player of the Year.
responded to regain the lead, 146144.
The last !August run saw
Woods' team take third place in the
45-player field. Nine teams teed off
for the day with the team of Jack
Maloney. Joe Bradley and Dana
Winebrenner Shooing nine· under par

I

for the win. At eight under in second
place was the team of Lew Gilland.
Peat Carnahan. Don Kay and Milt
Maxwell. There was a three way tie
for third. Closest to the pin winners
were Winebrenner on number seven
and Harlan Whitlatch on number
fourteen .The first September meeting
of the seniors saw Woods team with
Dana Winebrenner for the big win at
len under par. At nine under was
Randall Browning of Mason . Jim
Wikoff. Ray Oliver of Racine. and
Herman Knapp of New Haven .
There was a tie for third place
between two teams composed of. 1)
Harlan Whitlatch of Mason, Don
Roush of Racine. Charley Georgi of
Pt. Pleasant. and Ralph Sayre of New
Haven: 2) Bill Yoho.Joe Bradley of
New Haven. Jim Harris. and Charley
Yeager of Mason .The closest to the

.,

Tuesday, September 22, 1998

Wahama takes seventh in Riverside
Golf Invitational; Meigs finishes 11th
In the Rircr\idt: High School
lnritatinnal Gnl f Tournament Sat uruay at Mason . W.Va .. Gallia Academy heal Par~er,hurg South ~96 -.1~2
hl wm the tram champinn\hip.
Behi1ulthem in the 16-team lin~ ­
rc,t were Jad,on 031 l. St. MarY'
(W.Va . l :B:!. Logom . G ilmer Count y

I W.Va .) Choth ... hot .\3J..; . hut Logan
g()l ll flh plan· on the tic-hrcal-. crl.
Wah:una i.1Yi l. Athen ' tl .1 Kl.
\Vill iam\hl\\ 11 ( .\ .t II. Virlloll c~HIII I }'

(.1511. Meig' . .Waterford lhnth ,!Jot
Jfl J,_ hut M~..·j~ , I no~ II th pl:in· nn

the tie- hreaker) . Trimhle (3711.
Abanuer C3791. Warren Local ()821
and Rirer Valley ( 3901 .
Gallia Aca&lt;kmy\ Aaron Epling
\ hot

;1

h 7 to earn tnr(hlli't honors.

Wahama \ ... corer!'~ were D:~ve
Reed (79). Sterling Shields (811.
John Smith t86). Jason Fraley (89)
and Ryan Rou'h (9~) .
The Ml'ig... ...corer" were Zarh
Me:ulow' tKOl. Jared Woods (87).
Nick Detwiler (1!61. Carson Midkiff
t•JXJ and Tommy Rou'h (991

Trimble tops Eastern Junior High team
. while in spiking Becky Taylor hit I
High volleyball team ." 2 games w I in of I with a kill. Alyssa Holter I of I,
favor of Trimble: 5-15 Trimble. 16- Katie Robertson I of 2.
Coach Jessica Radford said. "The
14 Eastern. 6-15 Trimble. In serving
Stacy Smith was II of 12 with si• gi rl s played really well tonight.
points. Jessica Boyles I of 5 with one although we did not win. we did
point. Tia Prall 8 of B with four many things right . we served really
points. Becky Taylor 8 of 9 with four well tonight. but our down fall was
points and one ace. Rachel Elliot 2 of our nerves. I believe that since thi.,
3. Alyssa Holter 15 of 15 with II game is over. our nervousness will be
points and one ace. Katie Robertson gone and we can put the complete
package together."
0 of I. and Andrea Warner 0 of I .
In setting Stacy Smith w:" S of 5
Trimble defeated Eastern's Jr.

Woods takes commanding
lead in Riverside Seniors

Riverside records 22nd ace of the season

Ladies Association and was nlavino

FLORENCE
GRIFFITH JOYNER

By BEN WALKER

tell you how great
our courses are,
but GoH Digest readers
beat us to it.
" .... Alabama ranks fourth in the nation in BEST
STATES FOR GOLF"
"_ ... Alabama ranks fifth in the nation in BEST STATES
FOR SERVICE"
" .... Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail ranks
firSt, second, third and fourth in the nation for
BEST 18-HOLE PAR-3 COURSES"

****

" .... Highland Oaks in Dothan gets
out of five stars BEST.COURSES WITH
MAxiMUM GREEN FEE LESS THAN $50"

m

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Florence
Grillith Joyner's nowing black hair.
skintight outfits and glittering 6-inch
fingernails brought a model-like presence to track and field. where she left
still-unequaled marks as the fa"est
and most fashionable woman sprinter in history.
Grillith Joyner. 38. died at her
Mission Viejo home early Monday.
An autopsy wa.' being conducted to
determine the cause. Her husband. AI
Joyner. the 1984 Olympic triple jump
champion. called authori.ties ,after
finding her "unresponsive and not
breathing."
"She died in her sleep sometime
during the night." said Lt. Hector
Rivera oflhe Orange County sheriff's
department.
A decade ago this week. Griffith
Joyner won three gold medals at the
Seoul Olympics, where her sister-inlaw, si•-time Olympic medalist and
world heptathlon record-holder Jackie Joyner-Kersee. also starred.
Griffith Joyner still holds world
records in the I00- and 200-meter
dashes.
She set the I00 mark of I0.49 seconds in the quartetiinals of the 1988

Texas takes over AL West
lead; Clemens wins 20th

We wanted to

Southern
volleyball
team romps

1
;2

" .. _.Alabama's RobertTrentJones Golf Trail's
$199 golf/hotel package (three rounds of golf, two
nights hotel) is compared with packages in Myrtle
Beach, S.C., $441; Kauai, Hawaii, $973; Scottsdale, AZ,
$1,055; and Monterey, CA, $1,609."
Come play some world-class golf with us and you'll see why Golf
Digest says" ... Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail is very cool."

AP Baseball Writer
Todd Stottlemyre is trying to win
this AL West race all by himself.
The Texas Rangers took a onegame lead over Anaheim in baseball's
last division chao;e as Stottlemyre beat
the Angels for the second time in a
week, 9-1 Monday night.
Texas won the opener of the
three-game series at Anaheim behind
Stonlemyre (5-4). Picked up from St.
Louis on the day of the July 31 trading deadline, he pitched seven scoreless innings against the Angels.
"You pitch well against a club and
then you have to face them five days
later. that makes you nervous before
·the game. My stomach was chum:ing," Stottlemyre said.
The majors ' best pitching performance of the day, though. belonged
to Roger Clemens.
Clemens earned his 20th victory.
winning his 15th straight decision
and striking out 15 as the Toronto
Blue Jays beat Cal Ripken and the
Baltimore Orioles 3-1.
Clemens (20-6) has the longest
winning streak in the majors since
Gaylord Perry won 15 in a row for
Cleveland in 1974.
Ripken. whose streak of playing
2,632 consecutive games ended Sunday night, returned to the Orioles
lineup and had two hits off Clemens.
In other games. Boston split a
doubleheader with Tampa Bay. winning 4-3 before the Devil Rays came
back for an 8-4 victory.
Also. Cleveland beat New York 41, Seattle defeated Oakland 5-2.
Chicago downed Minnesota 7- 1 and
Detroit defeated Kansas City 7-5.
Stottlemyre 's biggest jam came in

Olympic trials at lnd~anapolis , and
since then no one has even broken
I 0.60. At Seoul. she won the gold
medal in a wind-aided 10.54.
Griflith Joyner then smashed the
world 200 record in the Olympic
final. docking 21.34. American Marion Jones. with a 21.62 at the World
Cup in South Africa earlier this
month. is the only other woman to
run the 200 in under~ 1.70.
She also won a gold medal in the
400 relay and just missed a fourth
gold medal when the U.S. team finished second in the 1,600 relav.
which Griffith Joyner anchored.
" It's an amazing legacy. Many
have tried and all have failed in terms
of her records." said nine-time
Olympic gold medalist Carl Lewis.
Her de~th " is something that impacts
the span when the sport is hurting
very. very bad."
Track and field had never seen
such an e•otic creature as Griffith
Joyner. At the 1988trials. she stun ned
fans and competitors by running in a
purple bodysuit with a turquoise
bikini brief over it. but nothing on her
left leg. She called the design a "onelegger. ..

Granik, Hunter
acknowledge
talks nearly
resumed

the first inning when the Angels 14 in September by dropping the secNEW YORK (APJ - David Stem
loaded the bases with one out on a ond game.
and Billy Hunter agreed almost two
double by Randy Velarde and two
Tom Gordon extended his single- weeks ago that it was time to resume
walks. But Stottlemyre escaped by season major league record by con- collective bargaining talks.
striking out Darin Er.;tad and getting verting his 40th straight save chance
But when they tried to work out
Garret Anderson on a groundout.
in the first game. Bret Saberhagen the details. the whole idea quickly fell
The Rangers chased Steve Sparks (15-7) was the winner.
apart.
(9-4) in the fourth as they took a 5-0
Keith Mitchell. who has spent
Granik. the deputy commissioner
lead.
most of the season in the minors. hit of the NBA. and Hunter. president of
Rusty Greer hnd four hits for a tiebneaking single in the sixth the players union. both acknowlTexa' and Juan Gonzalez drove in inning for his first RBI with Boston. . edged Monday that talks aimed at
two runs, giving him 156 RBis.
Bubba Trammell homered and ending the lockout nearly resumed on
Royce Clayton, acquired with Stot- drove in five runs in the second game. Sept. I 0. though they differed on why
tlemyre from the Cardinals, had two At 63-93, Tampa Bay ha' avoided such a meeting never took place .
hits.
"We invited players to come back
100 losses in its expansion season.
"This is the worst . game we've Indians 4, Yankees I
to the table. and they declined ...
played in about three months."
Enrique Wilson hit his first major Granik said. "They said a.' long a' we
Angels manager Terry Collins said. league grand slam and Cleveland would be talking about a hard cap or
"We have to recognize that it does- won at Yankee Stadium in a match up some system that set a defined pern't matter if it was 9-1 or 19-1. We of AL division champions.
centage of revenues to go toward
just have to come out tomorrow and
The Indians and New York have player salaries. they didn 't see any
play well. "
split eight games this sea.son, and point of meeting."
Blue Jays 3, Orioles I
have three remaining. The teams are
Hunter said he proposed small
Toronto moved within 3 1/2 unlikely to meet in the opening round meeting. with four representatives
games of Boston for the wild-card of the playoffs.
from each side . But when Stern
spot behind Clemens· performance at
Winner Charles Nagy ( 15-101 asked that the meeting be held when
Sky Dome.
allowed five hits in eight innings. the eight members of the owners
Clemens. bidding for his record Andy Pettitte ( 16- 11) struggled for labor committee were in town.
fifth Cy Young Award, posted his the seventh straight start.
Hunter declined.
fifth 20-win season. He tied Atlanta's White Sox 7, Twins I
" I just don't think it's progressive
Tom Glavine for the major league
or
beneficial
when there are 40 peoJim Abbou improved to 4-0 on his
lead in victories and also leads the AL comeback. pitching six neat innings ple in the room ," said Hunter. who
in ERA (2.58) and strikeouts (260).
as Chicago won at the Metrodome.
nonetheless tried to call Granik on
Since starting the season 5-6.
Ray Durham had three hits and Monday to discuss moving the
Clemens is unbeaten in 21 starts dat- scored three times. He leads the AL process forward.
ing back to May 29. He struck out 14 with 123 runs.
Only one formal bargaining sesin the first seven innings and added
Minnesota's Paul Molitor tied sion has been held this summer. and
one more victim in the eighth.
Eddie Collins for eighth place on the the league is expected to begin canRipken passed Babe Ruth for career hits list with 3,315.
celing exhibition games later this
34th on the career list with 2.875 hits. Tigers 7, Royals 5
week.
Red Sox 4, Devil Rays 3, 1st game
Rob Fick, called up from the
Training ~.:amps are due! to open
Devil Rays 8, Red Sox 4, 2nd game minors during the weekend. and Oct. 6 and the regular season Nov. 3.
Boston moved a bit closer toward Bobby Higginson homered as Detroit but without u new collective barthe wild-card spot by winning the won at Kansas City.
caining agreement the leag ue will be
forced to cancel games
opener at Fen way Park. but fell to 7-

a

Scoreboard
National League
East Division
w
L
Pet.
GB
I0 I
.643
56
• -Atlanta
69
.561
IJ
New York
K8
.462
X4
28 1/2
Philadelphia
72
~4
.397
3K 112
62
Montreal
.327
49 1/2
105
Florida
51
Central Division
Pet.
GB
w
L
.631
x - Hou~t on
99
58
12
.554
70
Chicago
K7
19 112
.506
77
St. Louis
79
.47 1
25
Cincinnati
74
83
.462
26 112
84
Milwaukee
72
.442
29 112
87
Piusburgh
69
West Di'vision
GB
Pet.
w
L
.611
x-San Diego
96
61
II 112
.53K
San Francisco
84
72
16 112
79
77
.506
Los Angeles
.478
21
Colorado
75
82
Arizona
62
95
.395
l4
x-clinched division title
Monday's Games
Cincinnati K. Philadelphia 5
San Francisco 8. Pittsburgh I
Only Games Scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Atlanta (Millwood 16-8 ) at Florida I Medina 2-4), 7:05 p.m.
Philadelphia (Loewer 6-XI at Cincinnati (Tomko 12-12). 7:05p.m.
Montreal (Thurman 3-51 at N.Y. Mets (Reynoso 7-1). 7:40p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Mulholland 5-5) at Milwaukee (Pulsipher 3-2). 8:05
p.m.
Arizona (Dual 7-121 at Colorado (Wright 9-13). 8:05p.m.
Houston (Hampton 11 -6) at St. Louis (Morris 6-5). 8:10p.m.
San Diego (Hamilton 1.1- 12) at Los Angeles 1Park 13-9). 10:05 p.m.
Piushurgh (Lieber 8-131 at San Francisco (Rueter 15-9). 10:05 p.m.
American League
East Division
w
Pel.
GB
L
x-New York
107
48
.690
Boston
87
69
.558
20 112
Toronto
84
73
24
.535
78
78
Baltimore
.500
29 112
Tampa Bay
.404
44 112
63
93
Central Di•ision
w
L
Pel.
GB
67
• -Cleveland
88
.568
.487
Chicago
76
80
12 112
71
84
.458
17
Kansas City
.423
Minnesota
66
90
22 112
27
Detroit
62
95
.395
Wesl Division
w
L
Pel.
GB
Te.as
84
72
.538
73
83
Anaheim
.532
71,
.47 1
Seallle
82
10 1/2
Oakland
71
85
.455
13
•-clinched di vision title
Monday's Garnes
BoSion 4. Tampa Bay 3. 1\t Game
Tampa Bay 8. Boston 4. 2nd Game
Toronto .1. Baltimore I
Cle\'eland 4. N Y. Yankees I
Chicago White So• 7. Minnesota I
Detroit 7. Kansas City 5
Scaule 5. Oakland 2
Texas 9. Anaheim I
Tuesday's Garnes
Cle\'eland 1Burba 14-9) at N.Y. Yankees Clrabu 12-9). I :05 p.m.
Tampa Bay !Santana 5-5) at Boston CSchourek 0-3). 7:05p.m.
Baltimore (Mu S&gt;ina 1.1-81 at Tnrunto (Carpenter 11-7). 7:05p.m.
Cleveland COgea 5-31 at N.Y. Yankees !Mendoza 9-2). 7:35p.m.

''Girls Time Out"- Ceiebr~ Wouwt!.r Hea,/;t/'[,~Mo~
Sunday, September 27 • 2- 4 PM • Holzer Medical Center
FREE and open to girls in 6th grade and up - Grandmothers, Mothers, Daughters, Nieces
• ''Adopt-A-Daughter" and bring her along! • Casual dress • Refreshments

TOPIC: "Strategies for Developing Healthy Lifestyles"
SPEAKERS: * Karen Stocker, Registered Dietician

* Dawn Halstead, Director ofVolunteer Services
* Nancy "Benny" Gooldin, RN, MS, Associate Professor ofNursing, URG Holzer College ofNursing

INFORMATIONAL TABLES:

serving.
The Southern reserves won in

three sets after losing the first game
11 -15. then coming back to win 159 and 15-13.
Rachel Allen led with 15 points,
Stacy Wilson had seven, Emily
Stivers had four. Stacy Mills had
four. Macyn Ervin had si•. and TamIJlY Fryar had four.
Southern plays Eastern tonight.

Et1reka. a racing piBeon. \Von a
race from Havana to Wa\hingrnn.
D.C.. in 1928. the only one' to finish
among 28 starters.

with Becky Anderson of Pomeroy
and Norma Stanley of Mason who
are both members of the Association.
Teresawas the second lady to record
an ace at Riverside this year.

In the May issue of Golf Digest's 'PLACES To PLAY' we received
so many honors we had to make a list.

The Southern Tornado gals rolled to
an impressive road win at Vinton
County Monday night in girls TriValley Conference inter-division volleyball action. claiming 15-2 and 151 wins over the Vikings.
Coach Howie Caldwell was well
pleased with the win. stating what his
club lacked in size. they made up in
spirit.
Southern toppled the bigger
Vikings in hi gh style. taking a 7-0
lead, before Vinton County got on the
board. Heather Daily had three
points in that string then Kim Sayre
started another string and brought
home the win at 15-2 .
Sayre led with five points in that
game. followed by Stacy Lyons with
four. Dailey three, Kati Cummins
two. and Kara King one.
Sayre started the second game off
with ten straight points. forcing two
VC substitutions and a time out to
break her momentum. By the time
VC could call another t1me out.
Southern led 11 -0. Lyons added the
nex.t marker. thc:n Kara King added
two more before Vinton finally got on
the board . Daily add.ed game point
for the win .
Sayre had II in the stint. Lyons
two, King two. and Laraine Lawson
one.
Overall. Sayre hit 18-19. serves.
had four aces. five kills and a 38-41
selling night. Lyons was 6-8 serving
with two aces. and four kills: Fallon
Roush had a great lloor and net game
with a 7-7 spik ing night and four kills
with two dinks ; Kara Kmg was 6-6
serving. Da1ley ~-4 with an ace and
two kills: Kati Cummins 5-5 with an
ace. an X-9 spiking night and four
kills: Laraine Lawson I- I and 2-2
setting: and Kim lhl e 7- 10 sp1king
with a three kills .
As a team Southern. was 4 1-45

Olympic track star FloJo
is found dead at age 38

Two weeks remain in the 1998 Mason. Ray Oliver of Racine Elmor
version of the Riverside senior Click of Cottagville. They shot
Men's League. Keith Woods of Wing under Par.
Bradbury has now taken an eleven
The closeset to the pin for tag
point lead on his closet rival, Jim week on the seventh hole and Dewey
Wikoff of Shade, Ohio. Dale Harri- Smith on number fourteen .
son. a retired coach from Meigs High The Top Fifteen Players are:
School has taken over third place at
I. Keith Woods- Bradbury. 174.5.
162.0 points or a distant twelve and 2. Jim Wilkoff-Shade.
one-half points behind Woods.
163.5 3. Dale Harrision-SyraA league record showing of fifty- cuse. l62.0
4. Jack Maloneytwo players were on hand for Tues- Gallipolis,l57.0: 5. Charlie Georgedays play. This meant that first place Pt. Plea.sent. 152.0; 6. Harold Loitsewould be wo11h
Pomeroy. 149. 7. Don Fields Hartthirteen points. The team of Bill Yoho ford.
148.5 8: Ralph
and Herman Knapp of New Haven. Sayre-New Haven.l48.5 9;
Joe
Jim Harris of Mason. and "Cuzz" Bradley-New Haven. 148.5: 10.
Laudermilt of Pomeroy shot 10 under Dawa Wingbrenner-Syra. 148.0; II
par to win the first prize.
Bill Yoto-j\jew Haven. 144.0;12. Milt
Dale Harrision used his second Mo. well-Chester. 143.5 :13. Earl
place finish to vault into
Johnson-Mason, 143.5; 14. Herthird place for the year. Dales team man Knapp-New Haven, 143.5; 15.
was made up of Lew Gilland of Peat Carnahan-Chesler. 141.5 .
Teresa Cremeans of Middleport
has aced the fourth hole at Riverside
to become the twenty - second hole
in one for the 1998 golf year. Teresa
is the president of the River.;ide

The Daily Sentinel o Page 7

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 22, 1998

St'v~n

IR

Sit~J

in

Alabama

* Dr. Bridget Skinner &amp; Jan Frazee - Teen Information *Sandy Belville- Mary Kay
* Mane Designers - Hair &amp; Nail Care * Becky Adkins - Uncommon Scents *Bobbi Hood - Make-up Tips
* Karen Meadows - Mini-massage *Becky Collins - Teen Information * Edith Stout - Self Breast Exam
* Drs. Smith &amp; Jorgenson - Dental Care * Gallia County Health Department - Health Information
·* Karen Stocker - Healthy Snacks
* Wellness Department - Body Fat Analysis

ClrampiotrshipCour.~ .' ·-~

DOOR PRIZES DONATED BY: Mane Designers, Beauty Control, Uncommon Scents, Bob's Market, McDonald's,
1 . 8 0 0 . 9 4 9 . 4444
I

www . r i J g o l f . c o m

Bob Evans, HMC Activity Association, Virgil Bentley, Kim &amp; Brad Painter, Eula Adkins, HMC Gift Shop, Jackie Killen,
HMC Wellness Department, Bqnnie McFarland, HM~ Physical Therapy; Colony Theater, On Cue, Criminal Records,
Spring Valley Cinema, Drs. Smith &amp; Jorgenson.

--

'

I
I

-·
-.

---•
J

J

.-·

~

�Tuesday, September 22,

.-

By The Bend

Page
September 22,1994

,Sex~ afaiiy a~ie-, ·can "t)e~wonderful - if couples desfre to ·pfease each other
Ann
Landers
IW1. Loa AaJCb lill'el
and CrP.uwo

Sylll.l~

Syldicae.

Dear Ann Landers: You have
printed several columns about married couples who don't like sex. I
have been a fan of yours for over 40
years and was reading one of those
columns on the saddesl day of my
life. While I was waiting for my husband, Henry, to return from his
morning walk, the doorbell rang . It
was my neighbor telling me thai my
husband of 45 years was lying in the
driveway. He had suffered a massive

ITime Out For Tips I
BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family and Consumer Sciences/Community Development

(

t

I

According to the Ohio Depanment of
Health's Vital Annual Repon, Meigs Counly had 210 marriages and
125 divorces, annulments and/or dissolutions during 1995.
One hundred and forty children in these families were affected by
the break-up. Why are some families strong and others fragile? Why
do many families stay together while others fall apan? Do strong
families have easier lives, beller health, less stress, more money?
Two researchers, Nick Stinnell and John DeFrain from the University of Nebraska, wanted to find answers to these questions.
Stinneu and DeFrain surveyed over 3,000 families, about 80% of
whom were from the United States. Thiny percent of the families
lived in rural areas while 70% were from urban areas. The participants were from all economic levels, two-parent and one parent families, black and white, from all educational levels. and many religious
persuasions. They ranged in age from the early lwenties to the midsixties. In spite of culturJI, political and language differences, the
strong families within and outside of the United States had similar
characteristics.
Joyce Shriner, Family and Consumer Science Extension Agent in
Hocking County, noted that the researchers found that strong families
share six major qualities. Let's see how these traits contributed to a
strong marital relationship.
Commitment Webster's Dictionary describes commitment as a
pledge or promise. Strong families make their relationship a high pri ority. They take an "until death do us part" altitude. These families
live in the same world as everyone else - they have difficulties. hard
times, quarrels and troubles. But, bad times don't destroy them. They
work together to correct problems.
Appreciation: William James, a pioneer in the field of psychology
io the United States has identified the need to be appreciated as the
most important need of all . Strong families let each member know on
a daily hasis that they are appreciated.
Communication: In the book The Friendship Factor A. L . McGinniss said that the average coupTe spends seventeen minutes a week in
conversation. This is in contrast to the information supplied by strong
families in the Nebraska studies. Strong families spend a lot of time
in conversation. They talk about the trivial mailers as well as the
complex issues in life. Because members feel free to exchange ideas
and information. strong families are more eiTective problem solvers.
Time: Strong families spend lots of time together. Family time
eases loneliness and isolation, nunures relationships and helps to create a family identity.
Spiritual Wellness: Strong families believe in a greater power that
can transform lives. can give strength to survive the difficult times
and can provide hope and purpose. Having spiritual beliefs can help
to create a bond between family members.
Coping Ability: Some families fall apart when faced with terminal
illness, death or other crisis. Others pull together and draw strength
from each other when challenges come along . Stinnett and DeFrain
identified six strategies that strong famil ies use when they face crisis.
They are: maintain a positive perspective. pull together. get help from
their local support system. use spiritual resources. keep communication open and adapt to change by being nexible.
Understanding what it takes to become a strong family is the first
step toward becoming one. Nunuring these characteristics within
one's family is the work of a lifetime.

TUESDAY
RACINE - RACO, Tuesday.
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park. New
members welcome.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Village Council, special meeting, 7
p.m., for consideration of personnel
matters.
RACINE - The Red Brush
Church of Christ. special services
Wednesday. 7. p.m. and Sunday, 10
a.m. and 6 p.m. Guy Mallory of
Winter Garden, Aa., to speak.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District.
annual planning meeting, Thursday,
10 a.m.. Pomeroy Library.
11JPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
with name drawing to be held.
CHESHIRE - Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency monthly
board meeting Thursday, 4 p.m. at

•

land, Ohio
Dear Michael Smith: Too bad
you weren't around during the Johnson administration. Lyndon took a
lot of ribbing for going around the .
White House turning off lights. You
could have helped him look good.
Dear Ann Landel'!i: I am writing
to you at the suggestion of my
boyfriend. He and I have been invited to attend a wedding. The brideto-be owes me money, which was to
have been repaid in installments. As
of now, the debt remains largely
unpaid.
My boyfriend feels that since she
owes me money, I do not have to
give her a wedding present. What is
your opinion?-- Generous to a Fault
Dear G.T.F.: If you plan to

attend the wedding, you should def;'
initely send a gift. (it need not be
lavish.) The fact that the bride owes
you money should have no bearing
on the situation.
•
My laugh for the day (Credit
leader's Digest): A man on a tight
schedule was told his night from
Istanbul to Germany would be
delayed 24 hours. He lost his temper
and began screaming at the ticktt:
agent. "It will be OK," the agent ·
assured him. "I can still get you on:
yesterday's flight. It hasn'tlefl yet'':
Send questions to Ann Landers,:
Creatol'!i Syndicate, 5771 W. Cen-:
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,:
Calif. 90045

although he produces fancier creations for other people.
"It's a little odd, but I just like to
make dessens - I'm not much of a
dessert eater except for ice cream,"
Chef Bennison said.
From Chef Bennison's recipe
collection, here are 1wo that feature
ice cream and are sure to be a big hi I
with youngsters of all ages.
Rocky Road Brownies
I pound butter
I pound unsweetened chocolate
or baker's chocolate, chopped
I0 whole eggs
4 cups granulated sugar
3 cups cake nour
In a medium-size saucepan, bring
the butter to a boil and add the
unsweetened chocolate; whisk until
smooth. In a mixing bowl , combine
the eggs and granulated sugar until
the mixture is a pale yellow. Add the
butter-chocolate mixture 10 the eggsugar mixture; mix unlil smoolh.
Fold in nour until smooth. Pour
into baking pan. Bake in a 350 F
oven for 15 to 20 minutes.
Ganache Topping
I quan heavy cream
2 pound• semi-sweet chocolate,
chopped
Bring the heavy cream to a boil
and add the chocolate; whisk until
smooth.
Topping Ingredients
14 peanut buller cups, chopped
I large bag of small, colored
chocolate candies
I bag of small marshmallows
To build Rocky Road Brownies:
Cover the brownies wilh lhe warm
ganache topping, then cover the top
wilh the peanut buller cups, the candies and the marshmallows. Refrigerate for approximately I hour, and
cui into triangle-shape pieces. Serve
with ice cream. Makes 15 brownies.
Grilled Banana Split

~ ... ~AJI&gt;.~Ifr...,/[i!:..~~~N!:.NI'­
Custom HoMes
Ii~·; l.f~·~ IJJ!•. ~ iii!•. Jl.!ll ljl~~ ~·. it\.!~ 1 ili·~l ~ftll . if. 1.11

~

JD COISftUCtiOII

By RICHARD N. OSTLING
AP Religion Writer
Thanks to development of a lavish animated fealure film by Jeffrey
Katzenberg and Steven Spielberg,
pop culture is again turning its gaze
upon Moses.
Moses' life , filled with spectacle,
mystery and miracle. has all the
makings for a great story suited to
the imaginative art of Hollywood's
pre-eminent figures. Many book
writers are also capitalizing on the
current Moses chic.
As intriguing as Moses' life
might be, his death is also gaining
renewed interest ll's a puzzler.
Instead of leading his people into the
Promised Land, Moses di_ed in the
the Guiding Hand School.
wilderness after the Israelites had
REEDSVILLE Riverbend wandered 40 years.
Why didn't God allow Moses to
Garden Club. Thursday, 7:JO p.m. at
the home of Ruth Ann Balderson. enter the Promised Land? That old
question is raised anew by William
New officers to be installed.
H.C. Propp of the University of CalPOMEROY - Preceptor Beta ifornia at San Diego, in an anicie in
Beta Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi Soror- a recent issue of Bible Review magity, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the azine .
Like many Bible critics at ' U.S.
Luthemn Church. Members to take
universities,
Propp believes the Pensalad and wear purple.
tateuch, the Bible's first five books,
POMEROY - The Caring and was knitted together from various
Sharing Support Group of the Meigs sources that sometimes contradict
Mult 1purpose Senior Center wtll be each other. By contrast, tradition~lisl
held Thursday at I p.m. Flynt scholars among Jews and Chrrsttans
Adkins of Holzer Clinic will discuss_ e!llphasize the unity and coherence
sleep disorders.
ofthe Pentateuch. The conservatives
also point oul that after more than a
century
of intense work. the critics
FRIDAY
cannot
agree
ori which verses belong
REEDSVILLE - Olive Townto
which
of
the
proposed sources.
ship Trustees, special meeting. FriAs
Propp
splits
up Scripture, the
day, township garage on Joppa
"D"
or
"
Deuteronomic"
source
Road, 7:30 p.m.
treated Moses as the perfect ":ro,

STERNWHEEL REGATTA
CAR &amp; MOTORCYCLE SHOW
SATURDAY, OCT. 3
Registration 9 A.M.
HELD AT DON TATE CHEVROLET LOT
Fant11y Pheto will he taking pictures

a.~

~

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
~
11
'1.
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
~
Commercial &amp; Residential
,tn..
:Ji"'
&amp;
I
ed
•li"·
' ~ 27 yrs. exp.
Ucensed nsur
Phone 74o-992-3987
~

./ln..

f;::

ELECTROLOGY FACTS

"Build Your Dream"

Roofs • Decks • Garages

(614) ~!~277

740·742·3411

6151181 mo.

Room Additions • Roofing

Call

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

992-6320

FREE ESTIMATES

Local Satellite
Provider
Best Electric Pomeroy

(No Sunday Calls)

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
74()..985-3813
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks •
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
9:00.12:00 Saturday

614-742-2138

Take the pain out of
painting, and let me
do it for you .
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After 6 p.m.
(740) 985-4180.
I= rae Estimates

,.~ '·'.

'

CARPET
PLUS
Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-9114
or

CHEF MARK BENNISON, of the Radisson Airport Hotel, always
looks tor the 'wow' factor before serving desserts.
brown. Build each dessert plat~
6 bananas
I loaf chocolate pound cake
using a banana slice next to a slice of
I pint vanilla ice cream
pound cake, topped with a scoop
1/2 cup chocolate sauce
two of the vanilla ice cream, chocO:
I cup caramel sauce
late sauce, caramel sauce anlj
I quart whipped cream
whipped cream. Have fun and &amp;e
Slice the banana' in half length- creative. Makes 6 servings.
·
wise. Grill the bananas until lightly ·

whereas passages he attributes to the Because of fearfulness and faiihless- cannot agree on what Moses' sin
"P" or "Priestly" source underscore ness. God condemned the people of was. Propp's view is that Moses
Moses' naws.
Israel to a generation of wandering showed lack of faith by hitting the
For instance, in Propp's recon- in the wilderness. Moses was pun- rock instead of relying on speech
struction of "P." the first mention of · ished along with his people. Propp alone. The discussion is fascinating,
Moses says he had "uncircumcised says "D" treats Moses as the inter- complex and inconclusive.
'
lips'' (Exodus 6: 12. 30). Moses did cesser who identified with the guilty
But what about Propp's mairr.
have a speech impediment or anoth- people he represented and was pun- point about "0" disputing '"P"?
er problem in speaking. but lack of ished for their sin.
Traditional commentators have a
circumcision was a powerful Jewish
But Propp says the "P" source ready explanation. In Numbers 14
put-down, signaling a religious fail- disagreed. contending that Moses the people, Moses included, were
mg .
wa' denied entry because of his own . condemned collectively to die out~
(For some reason. the Jewish sin rather than the sin of his people. side the Promised Land. In Number\
Publication Society's Bible transla- This interpretation stems from Num- 20, many years later, Moses himsel~
tion nallens the phrase into "imped- bers 20. There the Israelites were made the same mistake of unfaith·
ed speech." omitting the circumci- dying of thirst and God commanded fuiness and received repeal punis~~
sion point altogether.)
Moses to take a rod and order a rock menl for his individual sin. Sure:
So. what about the Promised to bring forth water. Moses struck Moses is shown as a contmdicto!}o
Land? Numbers 14 and a summa- the rock twice instead of simply figure. both heroic and flawed, say:
rized accouill in Deuteronomy I tell speaking. The water appeared but the conservatives. But so are mos(
of Israelite spies who scouted God said Moses would not enter the major figures in the Scriptures.
,
Canaan and returned to report that Promised Land.
Memo to Katzenberg and Spiel.
the occupants were too big and the
This is one of the knouiest pas- berg: Don't try to squeeze thi~
fortresses too ·
~a~n~i~nv~ats.io~n~·~~~·~~~~~-; because exoens debate into a cartoon.

COUNTRY CANDlE SHOP
30 scents available
• Candle making supplies
• Relilil
• Variety of Gihs
Tues-Fri 10-6
Sat 10-4
Rt. 124 Minersville, OH
740..992-4559

MIDDLEPORT

OCTOBER 2ND &amp; 3RD
REGISTER NOW $5.00

•

I
Classifieds!

Call

WATCH FOR DETAILS 9/ 18198 1 mo.

s\lp.EO NIOP. CI"TI'ZEN
f\l\.\.'( ltl
sE olscouN1

JONES'
TREESBMGE
GALLIPOLIS; OHIO 45631

Public Notice

NOTlCE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed propooalo lor 1he
"Village of Ruland Hazard
Mitigation
Prole.ctDemolltlon of Properties"
will be received et the

Village of Rutland Hazard
Mitigation Projecl office,
P.O. Box 420, 337 Main
Street, Rutland, Ohio 45775,
Attn: Boyd A. Ruth, until
10:30 a.rt). Friday, October
16, 1998 upon which lime
bids ·will be opened and
read aloud.
Specifications and bid

110

Help Wanted

Ravenswood
Village
Health Center
CNA &amp; LPN positions
available. Full time &amp;
part-time. Must be
available to work any
shift. If interested you
may contact:
Donette Dugan
RN, DON
:at (304) 273-9385 or
' apply In person at
· 200 S. Rltchi Ave.,
Ravenwood, WV

'!}f!'f1'1

t]~ :t!!!j.{] .~turnP
l~=~e•rnc,vl•• I
_!Uilr!·_
20 Yrs . Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

440

caahlers check, or letter of

credil upon a solvent bank
In the amount ol not leas
thon 10% of the bid amount
In the favor of the aforesaid
VIllage of Rutland. bid
bondo
ahall
be
accompinlad by Proof ol
Authority ol 1he official or
26164
agent signing the bond.
(9) 2D, 21' 22, 23, 24, 25, 27
EOE
7 tc
KIT 'N' l:ARLYLE ® hy Lorry Wright

Cross Pointe Apartments
Now accepting applications for the

-·

G)

Wallminster, MD,

loves to pull out

his owner's

hair cur1e11 while

: . she sleeps.

..-

.......
E-11111,_

Clllylt'l Cit

HlllllftMII

Supplies
•Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Steps
Discount Prices

Wish tnlormahon on an ces1ors
and earty rue ot relaltves: Dav1d E
Graham - d1eC 1944; Gerllude

Whl1tinglon Graham - died 1966.
Cal1 Clarence Edwards. 828-891 5027, write Box 1615. Elowah, NC

28729.

30 Announcements

740-992-2068

New To You Thnh Shoppe
9 West Stimson. Athens
740·592·1842

Quality clothing and household
items . S 1.00 bag sale every
Tnursday. Monday thru Saturday
9J)().5,30.

P/8 Contractors, Inc.

Bennett Supply
7 40-446-9416

1391 Safford
School Rd.
Gallipolis, OH
J&amp;L SIDING &amp;

INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding •Soffit
•Fascia
•Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
•Replacement
Windows
•Stationary Docks
•Blown Insulation
•Garages •Decks
24x24 Pole Building
starting at $5995
740-992-2772

R. L. HOLLON

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

•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Residential
Free Eslimales
No Job too Small
Brian Morrison
(7 40) 985-3948

40

Frognct lntcrnd Sign·up puint fur
Meii!S and Muson Cuuntic~
IAKl:llcd in thr lnsurnnn· J•Ju.' Huilllin).:
a~.:ru.-•s rnlm lht• ('uurt IIHU:O.\'.

1 Krtte n C1nnamon Color, And 1
Bound ) 740 · 446-3587 All 3 Are

Lrner Trameo.
4 Female Kinens . 11 Week s Old.
Lrii!H Trarned. Call Alter 2 P_M
740-446-9935 .

8/25198 2 mo. pd.

4 Puppies. a weeks old. 112 Rot·
tweiler. t /2 German Shepherd. to

good Home. 740·446·0874

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

Smo. old temate yellow k1tten . to

good home. 304·675·2718
Fe ma le peacock to g•veaway ,

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickie Hollon
Chester, Ohio
740-985-4422

740·742·3043
PuppieS free to good home. 2501

lincoln Ave _ Poi nt Plea sant .

Even tngs &amp; afternoons.

60 Lost and Found
Found . small male mtmature CoU1e
type . New L•ma Ad vtcmity. has

onfleacollar.740·742· 1065.

70

CELLULAR PHONES

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

Howard L. Writesel

All Yard Sales Must

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Be Paid In Advance.

DEADLINE ' 2'00 p.m.
the day before the ad
lsto run. Sunday
edition • 2:00 p .m.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

F~day.

" WARNER INSURANCE
JEFF

Your Message Across

With ADally Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
1 00
7 column inch weekdiiJs
1900 column inch Sundar-

113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479
Shop at home...

_Buy from the Classifieds!

~~ , SHi&gt; ~·II:~

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

949-2168

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline : 1:OOpm the

day before the ad h to run ,
Sunday &amp; Monday edltlon1 :OOpm Friday.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

80

•Room Additions
•New Garages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Auction
and Flea Market

A1ck Pearson AuctiOn Co mpany.

l ull t1me auwoneer . com plet e
auc t1on
serv1ce
Licensed
•66 ,0hto &amp; West Vtrgtnta , 304

773-5785 Or 304·713-5447
Wedemeyer 's Auc1ron Serv rce .

Gallipolis. OhiO 740-379-2720

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All u S Sliver And Gold Cams. Pr oo l 5els .
Oaamo nds. AnliQue Jewelry_ Gold

Rmg s, Pre-19 30 US Currency.
Sterling , Et c. Acq uisr\1ons Jewe-lry
- M .T. S Com Shop, 15 1 Second

Aver1ue. Gallipoli s. 740-446-2842

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

Antiques. tvp pnces pa1d. Arver -

ine AntiQue s. Pomeroy. Oh1o .
Ru ss Moo re owner. 740-992-

WICKS
HAULING

2526.

Anlique s &amp; clean used fwMure .
wr ll buy o ne ptece or c omp lete
hou seh old. O!&gt;by Martrn 740-

992-6576

Gravel, Sand,

Soil, Fill Dirt
614·992·3470

Top

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

Bu ymg H ardwood Trmber on
Shares : Also Pme Saw Ttmber
Sma ll Acreage s ok. 740 ·256·
6172
Clean La te Mode l Cars Or
Tru cks, 1990 Mo de ls Or Newer .
Smrth Burc k Pon t rae. 1900 East ·
ern Avenue. Gallpolrs

&amp; 0 Auto Pa r ts. Bu yrng
wrecked o r salv aged vehtcle s

J

304·773·5033

Wanted To Buy . Junk Auto's Any
Condltton. 740·446·9853.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

985-4473
7122/tln

Mto- /1/oL

Help Wanted

ADDITIONAL DRIVERS NEEDEO IMMEDIATELY ARE YOU
READY FOR WINTER ORIV·

lNG?

HARDY MUMS
PAUL HILL GREENHOUSES
Lelart Falls, Ohio
$2.00 each
740-247-2012

'LOCAL FAMILY

Owned Company

(Cut Out lor Fuluoe Vool

THE APPLIANCE MAN

From All Areas for New
Craft Mall in Pt. Pleasant.
For Info: Call

Sentind
Classified a

992-2156

...

~.COlli

•
•
•
•

•

"Run OH To'The SOUTH And

0008.

~

~1121/111 mo.

Insurance; Dental Insurance
•HOME Weekends

' 401K
•late MOdel Freightliner
CONVENTIONALS
Requ1rements: Age 23, Class A
COL A.nd Good Onving Record .
Please Call Toll Free 1-888-790·

Washers
• Hot Water Heater
Ranges
• Freezers
Refrigerators
• Dishwashers
Dryer
C1ll Ken Young
(740) 085-3551

"PERSC)NALIZED Dispalch
"PAID Employee Health &amp; Lile

SOUTHWEST

"Need repair on any make?"

GRAFTERS NEEDED

304-675-4689

Monday edition

- 10'00 a.m. l;aturday.

360° Communications
Get

Yard Sale

4/2!91/lln

Limestone,

740-992-3055

Giveaway

Grey Cat , Al so Himalayan Cat
(look lrke Sas sy On Homeward

5/26/lln

(Slack Items Only')
Sale Ends 10-17 ·98
Mon.-Sal 11 00 A.M.-5:00PM
Call for Appoinlments - Closed Wed . &amp;Sun .

Equal Housing Opportunity

......
LENDER

$3.99 Per Mrn . 18·

Se"'·U 619-645-3434

Joseph Jacks

•EJectrlc/PI~mblng

20% Off Fountains
25% Off Birdbaths &amp; Concrete Planters

stove and refrigerator furnished.
Government Subsidized.

WHAT WILL TilE
FUTURE BAING?
LO\IE, MONEY,TRAVEL?
CALL NOW liT'S FUN,
IT'S EASY
t-900-740-6500 E•t 3595

Free Estimates

33933 Flalwoods Rd . Racine , OH 45771 (5 Po1n1s)
1Oo/o Off Flexible &amp; Preformed Pond Liners

Rent based on income. Total electric,

'Jt&lt;E' l-cVE ~

Pal Bailey of

•Roof Coatings
"VInyl Skirting
•water Heaters
•ooor/Windows

"' · - I 114 Cuurl St. Pumcmy, Ohiu 45769

elderly and disabled.

800-ROMANCE . extensiOn 9015

Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings
•Sidings

740-992·4427

CALL OUR OffiCI AT 992·21$~
Snowball, who lives with

PARTS

WATERSCAPES PLUS

forma may be secured from

the above office. A site
showing lor this work Is
acheduled lor 10:30 a.m.
Friday, Oclobor 9, 1998 a1
lha above office. (74D) 7420704.
Each bid must ba
accompanied by either a bid
bond in the amount ol 10%
ol the bid amoun1 with a
surely satisfactory to
3forasald Village of Rutland
or by certified check,

Yrs ., 5erv-U 619·645-8434

Jacks Roofing
MOBILE HOME &amp;Construction

Cuslum Buill Cum pulers, Nclwurks Mudcms, Hard
Drives, Printers. Upgrade Yuur PC Tu a Pentium CPU
and MB Tuday. Pn:-Owncd Cum pulers.
740-992-1135 Fur A Price Quut&lt;·!

Apartments
for Rent

1-0n-1 live . 1-900·329-0859 Ext

"WI1ere Qualily Dopm'l Cosl More"
740-446-9416. 1-800-872-5967

rl#p)D1Tt.,-I~- f:~~
9.~~~~
'
Compuler Performance Upgrades

'J"',.

Share Your Thoughts With Gills

Start datmg tonrghP Have tun
playmg ttle OhiO Oatmg Game. 1·

B

..e.

Personals

HENNEn's HEATING &amp; COOLING

"Your Computer Shop"
1'rif1\

005

3957, $3.99 Per Mrn Must Be 16

10125t96.rth '

992-2156
Public Notice

12/18/lfn

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

"Ask about our candle
parties"

or

(614) 992-3838

6111198 lfn

.

"You're fighting the King In the semifinals,
10 Just duck once and he won't get too tired."

Limestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates

740-698-7231

7124/98 tmo. pd

...,

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

*Free 5 Parts Warranty
*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

4/21{98 ""

LINDA'S
PAINTING

frl WOJil1'1l UfLU'l80
D1' CLA81U't8DI

'28 a month
Heat Pumps As Low As 138 a month

"Huge ln~eftlory"

St. Rt. 7

Joe N. Sayre

HERMAN® by Jim Un~ter

2112Jt2Jtfn

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

Reasonable Rates

..

"Ensy 01•e r !I.e Pl1011e 8m1k Fi111111('i11g"

';:=======:.

Garages • Replacement Windows

614-992-7643

Free Estimates

Insured

~ ;4·

Joe Wilson

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites

'!4!!:/!!!

$2.99 per mm .
Must be 18 yrs .
Serv-U (619) 645·8434

ELECTRIC OR
SATELLITE
SERVICE

SAYRE
TRUCKING

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

Air Conditioners lis Low As

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

·Only form of et[miDIIDI tlalr Bllm!ldlo
•Sate and Effective.
•Major Medical Journals Document Success.
~Works on all Skin Colors, Hair Colors and Hair
Types.
Free Initial consultation. Contact:
SANDRA McFARLAND, Ucensed Electrologist
760 1st Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
446-1991 or 888-441-1900

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding

..

1-900-860-4400
Extension 7450

L.-------------,,IO=i{,j,j:l¥i.U;I

New Construction &amp; Remodeling

,_

&amp;J

Free Estimates
~ 199S Martin Street
!i(oo,
Owner: John Dean
ilL
!ff:..~IIP-~~~~~.._.IIfn..~~ Pomeroy, Ohlo45769
1
1
if Ill Ljtll [ ~-t_
-l l ftt!! filii_.! ft~l , ,i, ~ 1 f.it!tt fi{1-( :Jl~l_t Llt !f \Jl~l

SUISftHOME
CONStRUCtiON

.•.

ARE YOU
READY FOR
ROMANCE?

1!1(:..

Reviving an old mystery about Moses leads to debate

Community Calendar
The Communily Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar is not designed to promole sales
or fund raisers of any type . Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.

bulb, but if you are leaving the room
for more than I0 minutes, you
should definitely tum them off. Here
is why:
A 100-wau bulb lasts 750 hours.
A bulb left burning eight hours a day
five days a week would last 19
weeks. At I0 cents per kilowau
hour, turning off the light for two
hours a day would save Sl .87 every
19 weeks. An even bener approach
would be to use nuorescent lights.
They last longer and save more
money in the long run.
If there were more people like
" Fargo," electric usage and pollution from power plants would be
drastically reduced. -- Michael
Smith, regional ballast manager,
General Electric Lighting, Cleve-

Ice cream desserts can be elegant end to meals·
By LINDA BEAULIEU
For AP Special Features
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)
What do you do when 2,000 people
are coming over for dessen?
That was the challenge facing
Chef Mark Bennison when be was
asked to prepare the sweet ending to
Zoobilee, the annual fundraiser for
the Roger Williams Park Zoo in
Providence, R.I.
Food from two dozen local
restaurants was offered to the massive crowd that came to "feast wilh
the beasts." But it was Chef Bennison;s 4.000 mini-pastries and 40
cakes that dazzled the partygoers
who meandered through 1he zoo for
a glimpse or two of the elephants
and giraffes, monkeys and polar
bears.
Bennison is executive pastry chef
of the Radisson Airpon Hotel, an
education facility of Johnson &amp;
Wales University. So he ha~ all the
space, equipment and manpower
needed to accomplish such a daunting task.
"I always look for the ' wow' fac tor," Chef Bennison said. "When
people look at one of my dessens, I
want them to say 'wow' before digging in to eat."
At the Radisson, Chef Bennison's
desserts change daily, and three specials are offered every day. Chef
Bennison says he gets his dessen
ideas from reading about what other
pastry chefs are doing and from
experimenting.
Chef Bennison's day begins at
the hotel at 5 a.m. For the greater
part of each day, he works with eight
to 12 baking and pastry ans students
who are hungry for hands-on experience in the kilchen. "They learn
how to make every1hing from bread
to ice cream," he explained.
Plain and simple ice cream is this
pastry chef's own favorite dessert,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentine
Tuesday,

hean anack while walking. My is this: Be desirable. Shower, shamneighbor called 911, and my hus- poo, brush your teeth, be nice, and
band was rushed to the hospital, but do whatever it takes to please your
it was too late.
beloved. You never know when it
The night before, Henry and I will be the last time. --Greensooro,
had gone to a restaurant for dinner. N.C.
There was a sheet of brown paper on
Dear Greensboro: Good advice
the table along with a box of for lovers of all ages. I could not
crayons. While waiting for dinner, have said it beuer.
he wrote, "Sex tonight?" He was
Dear Ann Landers: Your
playful, even at 70. I wrote, '"OK." response to "Fargo" indicates that
When we arrived home, he asked if you are in the dark about lighting.
I was too tired. Actually, I was a bit "Fargo" said she gets annoyed when
weary, but thank heavens, I said, her roommate walks out of a room
··No." never dreaming that after 45 and leaves the lights on. You said it's
years of wonderful lovemaking, it "small potatoes" and that turning
would be the last time.
the lights off and on causes wear and
Mutually satisfying sex can make tear on the bulb.
a good marriage bener. The message
It is true that turning lights off
to all married couples from 21 to 91 and on will shorten the life of the

1998

Comp uter Users Needed, Work

pel

Own Hrs. $20K -$75K /Yo. 1-80().
349·7186 Ext. 1173. www .ampinc.com

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 22, 199&amp;

·Tuesday, September 22, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~LEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHil.. LIP
ALDER

"MUUISEEII CHA'S N£ED£0"
Full Or Pan-Time, Compellltve

Wogo &amp; Benell1s Available Apply
Or Sene! Resunos To
Ma~nor Health, 1720 17th Streat
Huntington, WV 25701, Attn Hu·
man RIIOlR8s
lllllutrrn1mnnrrrrsa

LPN's To Work PAN Please Coil
Mado Homo Haallh Agency, 740441·1779
Part-Time Retail Sales, Experience Preferred But Not Neces-

sary. Applications Accepted 1tl-4
Dally, Apply Tope'&amp; Furniture Co .
151 Second A\lenue , Galllpolla,
No Phone Call&amp; P1oasa
Pleasant Valley Hospital Is cur·
rently accept1ng resumes for a

• Dollar Tree Stores. The Nations
l.algnt $1 Price Point RetaJiar is
Currently Seeking MANAGERS

For Tho GaRipOiis Area Excoiiant

Opportunity For Candidates Who
Poon11 Supe&lt;VISOf'/ Sk~i&amp; &amp; Prt·
or Hardgood !Retail Exp And

TMve In A Fast Paced, Rapidly
Expanding Organization Com·
pellllve Salary And Excellent

llonefi1s Including 401 K and Profn
Sharing, Dental &amp; Haallh Sand
Reaume To.

Dolar Tree Stores. inc
Ann: VP Of Human Resources
Hurlington Mall
~0. II&lt;&gt;&lt; 4063

Baltlounvllle, wv 2S504
EOE&gt;NF

Socoai Worfler Bachelors degree

in Social Work or a tour year 138gree in Health Care Admlnistra·
tion. A m1nlmum of two years ex·

porlenca in ao acute care seltlng
Must be able to transfer patient
from acute care into the most
medicany appropriate and cost
efficient setting . Must have
knowledge ol medical termlnokr
gy and chart review Send resume to Personnel at Pleasant
Vallev Hoapttal, 2520 Valley Or.,

Pt. Pleasant WV 25550. or fax 10
304-1175-2447 M/EOE.
Wanted· someone to work In

adult group homo, days or nighta.
74().992-5023

. .SQiatSIS$SSISSUSSISSI

Spring Valley Plaza. 740-448·

Acquisitions Fine Jewelry of 9 t

4367, 1·800·214·0452, Accredit·
ed Member, ACICS Reg t90..Q5·

S~eat.

Middleport· part limo/

ful time help Jewelry experience
preferred but not reqyired Ac·

capling applicalionsi' Monday
through Friday. 10am-2pm No
phone ca1s please

AODITIONAL OWNER OPERA·
TORS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
"Lccai Fa,.iy Owned Company
"Pononalized Dispatch
"UpTo$1 OOIMI (lnduding
Acalssoriai Pay)
*Home W&amp;Mends
'Run From OHTo The South
And 5outhwes1
•Penms ltrtMdld At No Cha.rg&amp;
-ToMs Paid
'Fuel C.nl AvaoRequirements Age 23. Class A
COL And Good Onvino Record

Please Call Toll Fro• 1-686-790·
0008, Ask For Garne1

=:::..:.=._:_...:..______ I

Southeastern Business College,

12748

180 Wanted To Do
Furniture repair, refiniSh and restoratiOn , also custom Miers Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop, larry

PhUHpe, 740-992-6576.
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your fo9• 10 the mill just call
304-675- 1957
HaYe 2 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care 01 Elct,rly Or Handi-

capped, 740-441-1!1'36

Will Baby&amp; ll in my Home, Any
Hours, Bidwell School 01stnct ,

Call740-398-9689.
W1ll do babysitting 1n my home

Monday thru FriOey, 740·698·

9490

Will Work For $4.00 /Hour, 740·
367..()140.

FINANCIAL

Seeking Part-Time Person Who

Social SeMces

Lutheran Social Services
Of Central OM
750 East Broad Straal
Columbus, Ohio ~5

Or Fax To 614-228-1471

Bachelors Degree In Accounting,
p C &amp; Data Base Experience A

Pius! Send Resume To CLA 452

clo Gallipolis Dally Tribune . 825
Thrrd Avenue. Gallrpohs, OH

""""'304-578-2487
3br, 2·balh home, ,_ roof, Ylnyl

INOT1CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bual tless with people you know, anc:s
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have investigated

llle ollering
ALL CASH PROFITS!
Average

$45K

/ Vr

Restock

HERSHEY IFRITO LAY Displays
In Your Area Work 6 -7 Hrs /Wk ,

inv $7,500 Free Into 1·800·757·
6339,24 Hro
AYIIilblt VENDING RIOI •
Muel Sell By 1011 Advll, Atka
Selllef:"BltndAids. Tylenol, Etc

$4K ·S6K Roq 100% F1nence W I
Good Credil Earn $4K+ /Mo. , 1·

888-538·9508 Ex1 41 14
VENDING: The 'UIUmate' Col'""
$10 • $20 Bills, Cash Profits, Call

For Free Sample 1-800·820·
6762

230

Professional
Services

Llvlngeton'e Bleemenl Wtttr·
Proofing, all basement repa~rs
done, free estimates, lifetime
guaranlee. 12yra on job experl·
anca 3Q4.815.3887.

440

Tratler with add-ons. 1 acre tot. 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, central heat
&amp; air, in good shape $21 ,000

2 Bedroom Upatalra Apartment,

304-773-5040.

'

Make 2 Paymenls, Move ln. No
Pavmenta After • 'Years! 304·

736-7295

340 Business and
Buildings
Commercial-Office or Retail, 87

Mill St MiddiiiJOrt 1,450 Sq Ft
S400 mo Corner Building 740·
992·6250 Acqui&amp;IUono (noll

10 Acres Mineral Rights, Ulllles,
Lll1le Kyger Road, 300-!123-2450

from schools, new furnace I

control air. recently replaced roof.

ViHe Pika,

7~36Hl286

Charming Farm House, 1~
Minutes From Gallipolis! Bright,
Open Throughout, 3 Bedrooms, 2

360

112 Baths Newly Remodeled
Kitchen -Whilo Cabinets. Nice

C~da

Bowon

Haa' New Carpe' Flooring, Shoot

We Pay Cash 1·800-213-8365.
Anthony Land Co.

........ 74().379-9887

prox. 1600 Sq Feat, Now Sldrng,
New Cenual Air. Fireplace, 2 Car

RENTALS

410 Housea for Rent
2 Bedroom Housa, $350/Mo . De·
posit, No Pals. 740·446·4313.
740-446-0879

In Middleport· newly remodeled,

2 bedroom house, stove, retrlg ·

half. $59,000 negotiable, 740-992·
3485

PRIIIE
LOCATION
414 TIWd A"""""
Galipolis
Beauttful New "TWo SIOry ColOnial
3 Bedroom, 2 1/2 Ballls, LA. FR.
Dln~ng Room W1th Hardwood
Floors. Oak Trim F1reptace, 1 1/2
Car Garage, Appraisal Greatet
P~

Of:

$117,500
TAXES $301/YR.
1-31M-273-2140

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Abandoned Home Take Over
Payments, Or Make OHer 1· 800-

383-6862
12x60 trailer; can be used lor of-

fice trailer. 13.000 wllhout air conditioner, $4,000 w1th, 740· 949·

2217
14 x70 3BR. $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 per mo Free air &amp; free skirt-

ing 1-888-928-3426
14xeo 3BA, make 1st &amp; last pay-

erator, washer and dryer fur ·
nlshtd, $300 /monlh wllh a $200

7-3945

1 ·&amp; BEDROOM HOMES FAOII
$4,000 Local Gov't

&amp; Bank

Home Health Agency Ollerlng
Part-Time &amp; Temporary Part-Time
Positions, May Be Permanent To
CNA's &amp; HHA's. Many Extras

With Full· Time Employment, Only
Ellpenenced Persons Need Apptv fiiUST Be Available For
Weekends &amp; Holiday Hours. May
PICk-Up Application AI 762 Sec·
ond Avenue. Galllpohs, OH Mon-

day Thru Friday From 8 ·5 PM

Meigs County Call 740·992·7900,
Heal1h Management Nursing

Service&amp; inc EOE
Immediate open1ng1 for 4 people
to do testtno In the surrounding
area, Full tra1nlng provided to r
outgoing enthuSiallic men &amp;
women Excellent earnlogs S36K54K . Management poaitlons

Aak for Mr Brown . dependable

auto reqU&lt;ed
Needed Experienced Tree Climbers And 8\f(kel Operator In The
Mtrcerv!Ae Area , For lnlormahOn

Cali 740-592-4585

osted Applicanll Apply in Person
Monday -Friday 8 00 A M -4 30
P.M. Contact Tammy Price, LPN

Or Mary Sheats AN AI 740-4487150.
Our companv hal 1mmedtate
opening for an Administrative
~

·A Utile Country 10 Town· · large
restored V1ctorlan home Situated
on 12 acres. VIllage ol Middle·

port Secluded and prwata, close

Now Accepting Applications For
STNA Claslll Transportation
Provided To And From Training
Site. Lunch Provided Dally earn
Pay Whilt At1endlng Class tntar-

Becrttary. Thil

31 o Homes for Sale

a part-lime po-

altlon trAonday-Frlday Experi·
ence In customer relations and
Microsoft WordPerfect will be
very helpful 10 the SUCC8IIfUI

candidl11. Apply in person at
Otnorll Refuse Service, 97 Hub·
bard 51. Gallipolis, OH on Mon·
day Sept. 21st from 8 00·12:00

• 1\JtldiY Sept. 22nd. lrom 8 00·
4:00.
Overbrook Center, 333 Page
Strtll, Middleport hoi lull limo
STNA positions available tor all

ohlftl. Anyone lotertlltd pltlll
~ll!'andllfloutanlflllllicallor1

to schools and churches. Private
brick circular drive , brick patio,
modern kitchen, family room wl
fireplace , 3·4 bedrooma , two
bathl , large tormal LA and OR .
large rover, tour original stained
glass w!ndowa 30 rrrinutes from
Athens , 15--20 mlnutes from Gallipolis . For appo intment call 740·

992·5696
2 Bedroom House And 2 Apartments , Both Rented, 13 Pine
Street, Gallipolis , Call 74Q-446·

4999. Or 740-594-3033
House Sale 2.000 Sq Ft House

3 Bedrooms. 1 Bath. Family Room.
1 3 Acroa ()n AI 7, 16x32 lngroon:J - · 740-448-1063.
2908 Maple Ave 3br ranch all
brlctl;, covered dedi, fenced bad!.
vard. central-air, garage, exc

cond. 304-983-0038.

Btdroom--- ·-

Fumlahed

Room a

Circle Motel lowett Rates In

Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,

460 Space for Rent
For Rent Trailer Spaces On
George's Creek Road Referenc-

Rent 60x90 trailer lot In Hender·
800,

wv 30+676-3218

Economical &amp; nice 2br. daj)osil

New House For Rent Near Rio
Grande, 2 Bedrooms, Gas Electric Heat, 1 Year Lease, $375/Mo

HIOO-ll9t-ll7n

510

Hou~ehold

Goods
2pc. Living room suite 304·675·
7082 after 2pm
Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refrlgrators, 90 Day Guarantee!

1971 Hilicresr. t2x60, two bodrooms, washer, dryer, skNe &amp; refrigerator, alr,

underpinning,

$4500, 740-992-5039
1983 Mansion, 14x52 total gas,
stow. new refrigerator. underpin-

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Extra Long SOla, Excellent Shape,
$125. 7~ 23 18

Complete $115, Full Bods Complete $135, Bunk Beds $160,
Creasers, Couches, 740·446·

4762

ning, air, YOry goo0 cond $8.000
oeo 30&lt;-e7s-n92

Daposll Roquored, References, No
l'l!IS, 740-441Hl885

520

1989 Clayton 14x70 furnished on

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
conditioned, $260·$300, sewer,
water and tresh Included. 740·

es ReQUired, No Pets 740·448 ·

1104
2 Bedrooms W -W Carpet Natu·
rat Gas Heat, In Gallipolis , 740·

Price reduced· 1990 Spruce
Ridge t4w70 mobile home. \l&amp;ry

good condlilon, 2 badrooms, 1 &amp;
112 baths, washer &amp; dryer, stove,
refrigerator, central a~r, axe out
side building, Immediate posse&amp;-

slon 74D-992-6582
Vindale 70'xt ~· Wlih Expando 2
Br . 20' LIYing Room, Large Master Br, Excellent ConditiOn! On

Rented Lot, Read'/ To Mo•e Into.
740-446·14092To6PM
Buy In Sept No Payment Until
1999 Cali t-800-948-5678
Doublewldo 3br. 2 bath, $1,345
down, $217 . permo Free deliv-

ery 1-1100-691-6777.
Huge 28x80 3BR. 1 112 bath
Starting at ONLV $39,!)99, Many
options available 1-888·928·

3426

Quick delivery Call 740·385-

9621
New 1998 14x70 three bedroom,

includes 6 monrhs FREE 101 rent
Includes skirting, de luxe staps
and aatup Only S187 .08 per
month wnh $1075 down Call 1·

llOo-637-3238
New 1998 3 Bedroom , 2 bath,

$996/Down $189 per month Includes Delivery &amp; Set-Up. Call 1-

800-94&amp;-5678

448-2003. 740-446·1409
lovely 2 Bedroom, With

F~reptace,

Rio Grande Area $450.00 month
Pius Deposit 706-864-3493

440

Apartments
for Rent

t and 2 bedroom apenm~~nts, fur·
nlahad and unfurnished. security
deposit required, no pets , 740·

992·2218
I Bedroom Garage Apartment In
Kanauga, Water Paid $270/Mo
Plus Depos~. 740-886-7102
1 B&amp;droom, A/C, W/0, HOOk·Up,
Near Holzer. $279/Mo , • Utilities,
Deposit &amp; Lease Required, 740·

446-2957

tbr apt in Mason, stove &amp; relng·
erator &amp; ulililiea furnished , A/C ,
laundry room, calling tans &amp; gar·
bage disposal, very n1ce, no

poll 304-773·5352 or 304-682·
2827
2bdrm . apts , total electric, ap·
pllances furnlshed , ~au room
facilities, close to s
town
AppUcatlons ava11a e at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740·992·

3711 EOH

lrom $279 to S3!S8. Walk to shOp
&amp; movies Call 740-446-2588

Equal Housklg Opportunity.

NEW BANK REPD'Si
ONLY 3 Lolli Sliii ,_,warranty

l

••ranees.304-882·2586

~AI

Brand Now Apt In Rio Granda,

- - -Nibo,WV.
304-755-5111.

Ohio Area . Now Available , All
Utilities Paid. Walking Dletance

Now Bank Rapoi·Only 2 La11.
Novof Livtd In Cali 1-SQ0-9485678.
New Doublewtde 3BA , 2 bath

II8IH28-3426

At. 35 Stave Bronch Rd Fraziofo
Boltom. BoiC 1156 E&gt;or!JHn Rd. 1
acre

land

&amp; moblle Plome.

$2!5,000
304-5452-6&amp;10.

Drive. Pttone: 304- Spectat 1exeo 3BR. 2 bath.
675-4230. 740-367-7172, Afttr e •1.325 Down, $205 Mo. FrH air
a'* aldrtlng. t - t - e m.

ne.,

992-3442.

530

Antiques

1649.

New Black Futon Bunk Bed Set
$150 With Red &amp; Black Ma«rass.

Door, $2SO, 740-245-9613
Reconditioned Guaranteed To
work Harvest Gold Stove $50,
While G E. Washer $75, Whl1e
Kenmore Washer S85, 3 White

Dryers $60 Each; Whlto WP Refngerator $t 00, Call After 5 PM

52 Inch Hitachi Screen TV, Ask-

ing $700. 740-368--9413
Like New Bundy Alto Saxaphone.

1800. 74().446-7903
AC DC Arc Weider Llke New,

$275, 740-379-2631 , After6 ~M .
~75-4546

Boys 12spd b1ke &amp; girl's 10spd

bike, Hke new: S50ea
Complete Apple computer sys·
tem lncludmg color monitor &amp;
color printer Also complete
home software library Including
word proce&amp;liors, term paper
writer, greeting card maker, edu·
cat1o nal &amp; lun games, to nume rous to mention 1175 304·

Brand Newi Great Glnr CDMdeo
storage unit Black and cherry.
Never out of box. $125. Holda up

IO 940 diiCI, aiiO holdl tapes.
Cali 7&lt;0-092-8638 alter 6 pm.

Carpets . 11ft.w171t. Brown earth

ron11. 1111 x1711. Blue frosted .
Very clean $75aa. 304-7735033.

Church f)IWI, twoi'M 12' long. fw

Thera Is A Collectors Closet The
Corner Third Avenue And Court
Street, (Gallipolis) Anilquos, Modern Clothes, Jewelry, Arts. Crafts.
V1sil and Check Out The Bar·
gain&amp;I
Tread Mill Brand New! Electric,
$500 New, Ask1ng· $150, Reads
Heart Rat&amp; Milas Vou Walk, 740Two Wood Used Garage Doors .

7'x9' &amp; One Opener Call Aller 6
P.M 740-448-7141
Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21.9~ Per 100 , I' 200 PSI

We buy antiques and partial or
comJ»ete estates, baby 11ems, and
old F~astaware Jean's Furniture
&amp; Antiques Tuesday through Friday 11 am-4pm 145 Norlh Seeond, Middleport

Building
Supplies

550

Block , bnck, sewer p1pes . wmdows, lintels, etc Claude Wmters,
Rio Granda, OH Call 740·245 ·

5121

Utmuu Paid, 94 Loculi, $260/
Mo., PU Depollt, 74()..4.48-1340.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rltlllll In Stock.
Col ~on EYIIII, 1-eo0-537-11528.

Grectous IIYing 1 and 2 bedroom
lpartmlr111 at VIllage Manor and Kimball Organ, Ptdal1 On Floor,
Rlvtrolda Ap1rtm1n11 In Middle· Hal GvM11, Drum1 Elc. A - .
port From $248-$373. Call 740- •Bought New AI Brunlcardi'l, E•·
m-5064. Equal Houalna ()ppor. 'Cifltnt Shlpol 11,200, 740-44f..
' 9477.
~

lu--

1,;

Pleasant &amp; Ripley Rd. 304·895·
3874
Your Area John Deere Dealer
F&lt;lr Resktantlal And Commeraal
Lawn Equ1pmen1. Compact Utitity
Tractors From 20 To 39 HP All

Sizes Of 4 WO And 2 WO Farm
Tractors, Hay Equipment, John
Deere Skid Steer loaders Check

With Us Aboul Financing On
Lawn Tractors And Low Rate FI-

630

740 · 4~6-

Livestock

Black &amp; Red Club Calves Limousin Chi-Angus Cross, 740- 388·

740-592-2322. 740-698-3531
Two Reg1stered A I Angus Bulls
3 'Years Old &amp; 6 112 Month Old
Excellent Bloodlines, 740-4411716

TRANSPORTATION

'87 Cavalier, good gas mileage,
very dependable, $1000 080,

740-742-7200 or740-742-2675
'BB Thunderbird, sunroof, runs

good, $2000 OBO, 740-992-9190.
'92 Nissan Stanza, 4 door, 4 cy-

7~0 -

Pets for Sale

1 Toy Poodle, Female t 1 Months

Old, AKC Registered $200, 740446-ll119.

74Q.446-ll231

AKC Basset Hound Pups , 1st
Shots 1 Wormed $175 Each. 740Now Open Sundays 1-4 Mon-Sat

11 · 6

Fish Tank &amp; Pet Shop,

SPELLIN' TEST !!

·w~LCOMt TO MttiACOMP\Jntt'5

24-fiO\J, tifLPI...INE.

Tractor 19 HP $1,800. 740-446· :
3982

IF YOU tiAVf rftN
¥1 AITING ~US

lllef', ·

ve~ good, ne_w :

tires, clean, $5500, 740-7&lt;42·1400

•

TtiAN 24 ~0Utt5,
PLfAS~ ttfMAIN
ON T~t 1...\NE ... •

Motorcydes

'•

· ·

1986 Honda 200- SX 4-wheeler •
14fl Fiat-bottom boat wlswwe~'
seats &amp; trailer Small utility tra~ - .

THE BORN LOSER

or. 304·675-2484

Condnron. $600. 740-256·1631

( WN-.ITE..D "'i:l(,l-\T-~D MAA

I"
2

1 WT N--1 W'.IUEJ f\ffi.. 1

Oop:.'

Stroke Many New Parts, $700.
7~1-1716

Call &amp; Save 90 Ultra Casste Wilh
Matching Pull Behmd Tra1ler.

$13,500, 74().256·9227
CR 125. Completely Redone, Race
Reaoyl Cali 740·446-7375 Asking
Pr~e $1,700
Moving Must Selt· 1987 TAX

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
I"&gt;•J'T IT- WEIRD TO
II.UN AC.AtNST '50t1E ·
ONE 'I'OU USED TO
IN LOVE WiTH 7

1986 sea Ray 19·11211 t70hp
304-675-

Pollee Impounds, All
Makes Available, Can · 1-80()-522·
2730 Ext 4420

bought new July of '97, threi' ,
matching Kawasaki sk1 vests and
tratler ali go with 11 Priced to sell,

1982 Cutlass Supreme, 2 0, 260

2045, will conside r trade for a •

t982 MercUry Grand Marqu1s,
Runs, Drives And Looks Great!

$2,000Neg. 740-441«31
1984 Chevy Sev1Ue, 4 New Tires,
V·6, Aulo, Rebuilt Alternator,
Brand New Alternator Bell, New
PS Belt, Auto, Run s Excellent!

740-448-7537
1988 Bonneville LE , maroon, 4dr,
new tires &amp; brake&amp;. good cond

$3,200 304-675-5792 after 5pm
1988 Ford Astra 6 Passenger

Mini Van. Good Condilron, Good

Syatem' 650 Second AYe Galli·
polis. 740-446-1528

tery, $1,995,
Weekdays, 8-5

Pets Ptua Silve r Budge Plaza
Blchon And Spitz Pups , (All
Males) Unadvertised Store Spe·

1989 Pont1ac 6000 wlalr, auto .
8 1,000 miles, mce car 304·675·

Musical
Instruments

5 ~ieee Drum Set Wilh 2 Cym ba~.

$150, 74().446-7375

Bundy II Allo Saxophone, 740-

448-6524 Aher 8
Bundy II Alto Sax 5 Years Old

Good Condllioni $400, 740·256·
5776

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Mume for • • 5 tor $10. Cutn+
mln'a Q'"nhouse acro11 from

Racine locka I Dam, Monday
IbN Beluodoy,lltm-8pm.

FARf\1 SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STO CK

f98ti DoOge Dayton 2 Door Halch
740-446· 6174

3324

OBO

Paaa

Pass

P&lt;•ssoble. You woll become accustomed to the types of questoons
asked . wh1ch woll make it eaSier to
score well . S1milarly. in a hndge col umn. tj at the start the author gives
you a big hont as to the nght
approach. 11 w1ll be simpler "' lind
the key play.
So. today. no hint (unless you read
Y"terday\ column'). How would
you have bid th&lt; North-South hands''
How would you play tn live doa monds after West has led the hea rt
king'
The best contract is three notrump by South. which has I 0 top
tncks. Yet it is very drfficult to reach
that contract. Here. North 's three-dramond response is a limit raise showing so me 10- 12 points with at least
four d~amonds.
If East has the spade ace.there are
no prnblems -·you will lose one tnck
ill each hlack suit. Buttf West ha.s the
spade ace. y.&gt;u will have to hope the
cluhs are splitting 3-3. Also. you must
eslahlish lhe 13th club withouilettong
E.t'l "''"a lnck. or else he woll poke
a spade through your krng
Ho~o~ c.m you establosh the 13t h

a dub. draw trumps. cash the club
ace. play a dub to dummy' s ~mg. and
rull .t dub rn hand. When they spirt
l-J . return to dummy With a trump
.tnd discard a sp.ode on the last club
But 11 the dubs don't hrc"k. cmss to
dummy with a trump .tnd kad ,,

OH WE WERE NEVER
IN l.OVE! I MEAN.
lol£ I..IKEO EMH OTHER,
&amp;UT

SOME

IT WASN T" L1KE

KUC,E ROM.O.•KE

OR AN'('THINC,

spatlt:. hoping East has the ace

$4200, 740-949-2203 or 740·9Ag.

C=-Y
40 Fathers
41 In lhlo

m1nner

42 Married
......,.n'othte
43Sitongy
affirmative
44 Function

46Actrwa
Palmer
47 Skinny
fllllel
48 Formerly,
IGnMity

50 Uma' ldn
52 UK lloura
53 Actor Ayru

CELEBRITY CIPHER .
by Lula Campos
c.tetny Cll)hef CfWIOOtams are created hom quotatiCJM by famous peopte. put and pre&amp;enl
Each 18ftei lfl the cipher &amp;lands foranolher Today'• cJu. X~ U

'H S,

IT

1992 Nissan Sentra 104,000

DUTY DUG

BYUOUJBUHX

LHGGRJD

H

TJ

G IV U U I

1994 Camaro Z-28 5 7L, auto,
white wlblack t-tops, good tires,

new banery, wail kept. $9.500
OBO 304-862-3224
1994 Nissan Ahtma w/alr, auto,
pw, pi, sun.roof, radio w/cassette,
very good cond, 56k-mlles .

$6,700

~76-1283

1995 Toyota Tercer 5spd, A/C,
new 11re1, 55,000 miles $5,500

304-675-e156.
1997 Re&lt;t Pontiac Sunflre, auto,
sun-roof, am- fm ttereo, 35,000

miles. 2 Burgundy bucket seato
fits 1987 Ford van , l1ke new

304-675-3734

1998 Trans AM V-8 Fully Load·
ldl 740-44-4548
Credit Problems? We Can Help.
Eaay Bank Financing For Uud

IF VOV CUT LEFT, THE
BALL WON'T BE THERE'

~y

0

Rearrange letters of the
four scrambled words be·
low to form four Slmpl., wo~ds

HIZRET
1

2

I 1 1 I I
ANL I P

....,c_RTo:-AIVr-lr-"11~
...',
• 1 1

~

Tel ev 1sto n has n •t ru tn e d
conversatiOns 1n our house
.
•
•
.
We talk a lot abOut what we are
, . - - - - - - - - , go1ng to- -- • -

I

THAT'S NOT A

I I

I

.

•

Compieoe the chuckle quoled
by fdl•ng 1n tt,e m1 ss•ng words

UNSCRAMBlE ABOYI lllTIRS
10 GEl ANSWfR

BAD IDEA .

New Au to Body Parts &amp; Acces sories tor atl types or vohtc les
Transformers Auto Parts 304 -

Cho1ce- After- M1m1c · Bother - FROM HIM
No one has ever gotten a gtft
FROM HIM
He's a man of rare g:fts

675-3324
New gas ranks &amp; body paris 0 t.· :
R Auto, Ripley, WV 304-372- •
or t-8()1)-273-9329
·•

ITUESDAY

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

SEPTEMBER 22

ROBOTMAN

1991 5th Wheel Dutchman

Like Newt 740-446·1~5'
Days. 740·446·8127, N&gt;ghts

SIC,

SERVICES

Home
Improvements

g~t

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lilellme guarantee
Local relerences furnished EstabliShed 1975 Cali 24 Hrs (740).

446-0870, t -800-267-0576 Aog·
ars wararproonng
Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex perience All Work Guaranteed,

French Cily Maytag. 740-446-

ngs ,

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence- Painting, vi nyl sid1ng,
carpentry, doors, windows, battts ,
mobi$1 home repair and more For

free estimate call Chet, 740·992·
8323

Fuller Eltcttlc
House winng, lightllx1ures,
breakllr boxes. ail Also dledc·

Upton Used Cars Rt. 62·3 Mllte Prolesa1ona l. 20yrs experience
South of Loon, WV. Financing with all masonery, brick, blOCk &amp;
AY111abie304-458-1069.
atone Also room additions , !l•

Your area buth hog dealer for

1977 Chr~roltlt/2 ton plck·up,
350 cubic angina, auto, good
oonc1. $1 ,000. 304-e75-211te.

era. llnlah mowara, eel. C.r·
mlchatl'l Farm &amp; Lawn midway t8711 cn..y 1luc*. 8 Cyt. , Autom .•
GoltlpOIIs &amp; Rio Grandt, St,OOO.OO. 1881 Chevy Truck, 6
Ohio on Jackoon Pike. 740-«11· Cyt., Autom. S700.00. 740-441·
2412 or t-eo0-594-1111
' 1129.

rages, etc . Free estimates JOA .I,J '~

nJ-9550.

840 Electrical end
Refrigeration
Roo-t or comrnorcrat wiring,
-eonaed
or repatra. llalilf
iJ.
alectrlclan
Ridenour
Eltelrfcal, WV000306, 304-875·
1788.

WOlD
GAM I

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Vohlctu, No Turn Downs, Call lng heating systems. 304-e740t26.
Vld&lt;lt, 740-446-2887.

720 Trucks for Sale

IS U

A PRINT NUMBERED lEITERS IN
~ THESE SQUARES

PEANUTS

4 ~lrestone Radials Good Tread , •

7~8854 .

T J

URDSIRUIS

I

~

"'on~rrS,tnrc

to you .
today.
you confronlthese
f,rsterl
and
odd' arc you'll
th~y·ll get resolved.
llloo.:hewme dose frrenJs
'==~====~~~~~==~ SAGITTARIUS (Nov 2.'-Dec .
TAURUS (Aprr l 20-M.ty 201 J
AflTRO·GRAPH
2 1)
usl because your 1deas are excepWednesday. September 2l 199H
Seek the assisrance of a clever
trnnaltoday do&lt;;sn ' t me,tn ~hu should
frrend to help you hrainstorm rn- thrnw all caut1on to the wtnd. Be
In the year ahead. you wrll achiev~ resolving a problem. Additional inpul
sclecliw ano.l ulrliu your...rreativity
suc-cess by relying on your talents. Be w1ll he instrumenlal in solving your
wisely.
conlio.lent ano.l don't he afra 1d to rad- drlemma.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
le new prnJects. Play 10 wrn~
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. I'I)
A s light change of pace might be
'LIBRA (Sept. 2.'-Ckt. 2JJ
Focus on your career and
in order for you today. Make plans
You will he in a so&lt;:tal selling linances today. Do not attempt to
that will stimulate both your mtellect
today where the "PP&lt;•rtunity 10 come waste onvaluahle 11m~ by pursurng
and th~ child within.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
10 .-. 1 meon~'s md wtll pre-cnl it sdf. other a'enues. Slick to your goal&gt;'
Lend a helping hand and you could
AQUARIUS &lt;Jan. !0-Feb. I'll
Make changes loday concernmg a
make a ne" friem' . Libra.
Today you might be ab le to over·
silualion that will never reach per·
treat )OUrself 10 a birthday grft. com&lt; a frustrating situation. Condifection. Apply yourself and do lhe
Send the required refund form and tor lions Will ~ase up. allowing you to
besl you can. SolutiOns wrll tall rnlo
reduce the probkm to a manageable
place.
Your Aslro-Graph
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
)l rediclions for lhe y~ar a he a d h y si£e.
PISCES &lt;F~b. 20-Man:h 20)
Play the role of peacemaker
mailing $2 and se If-a dd resse d
Stup
procr.tstinaung
on
a
side
today
when an incidenl occurs withstamped ~ nvelope 10 Astro.
•
Graph. c/0 Ihis newspapo:r. P.O. venture yuu • ve b«n meamng tu I Ill·
in your close group of friends. Your
Box 1758. Murray Hill Slalion.
ish. Weigh your risks seriously and
diplomatic skills will save lite dU)r.
New York. NY 10156 • Be sure 10 complele lite lll.~k. lt\ lime lo move
VI ROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221
slale your Zodiac sijln.
on.
,
Some of the idea.~· swimming in
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
ARIES (Man:h 21-April 1.9 ) your head can be more lhan mere
Resolve any grievances you
Don'l be
pipe dreams today. Think innova•~
quick 10 judge u new acquain- livel•, and you-IIIIChieve J!reatness!
rmghl have loday. Don •I 1el loo,;SC

rssu~s. th~

,,

~·~ h:tnrc

~-

\I

'

'

D A V Y

LV U II Z
SRG

TJ

':!~:~:~' S©\\.dillA-LG£~'6"
- - - - - - - Edltod
CLAY I. POLLAN

235-85-R16 · 10PLY, $140. 740- '
446-2971
.

810

HDHRJ

GUFUJI -Z

N U

1987 Plymouth Voyager

Miles, Low Alder, Custom Wheels
&amp; Interior, High Spoiler, $8,000,

22 01 nerveo
23Swear
24 Nonproi~J ·

L-....1-...L-.I.......JL---L--' you develop from step No 3 below

Race Rea&lt;lyl7-3912

7~1-()584 .

m.aocullne
nor feminine

herofne
31 Cruel reign
33 Taunt
38 Unit of
SlarMM

I

351 Cleveland High Perfromanc&amp;
Engtne Parts, G T 390 H1gh PeJ •
lormance Engine Complete &amp; .

796-

Arkin

29 Hardy

NIWNUD
1--rl--rlll:'
s_,.l-rl-,lr-1 0

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

760

Mini Van Noce Van $1 ,600, OBO

TD30 Ftrguoon Tractor I Equlpmanl. 740-2156-8629.
parts, rotary cutt111. loadaro, 1111·

5•

l'ul
l'ul

1990 Z24 Good ConditiOn, $3,000 Must Sell 1973 26' Dual Axle InOBO, 740-256-1758, After 6 PM
truder Camper Easv To Pull. Nice,
Loaded , $3.000, OBO 740-245,
1992 Mitsublshi Nice Car, $2,200, 9613

~a .

610 Farm Equipment

3t

VB Good Condition, $1,500.00
boel.
Fwm 740-992-4568
I=:.:.:.::.;...;.:;;,.;.;=;....----

Back AT, Air. New Tires &amp; Bat-

570

Pass

duh whtl~ guaranrecmg that Ea'l
nc:\ cr !.!t:h the kaU' Thl! 'cere\ 1s to
duck th~ npenrng kad
W111 the sc:cond heart. Lh"il';.m•.hng

250X Stock Cam $40: Stock Carb
$40,740-446-7375

·1500

French City Pel Grooming by Ap·
pointmen1 "Utlrt Waeh 81thlng

Reg. female BoXBr, $250, Chinase

-oq

I"

C.tY~"-\

1986 Yamaha 3 Wheeler, Good

lhree soarer, 63 horsepower.

6471

pug, $75; 74().992·9190

It

Opening lead: • K ·

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1988 Toyota 4w4 4 Cylinder,
$2,700; Range Kmg Pro Garden •

$7,500

20 Aide or
21 Neither

28 Dill aeecl

If you must lake an examma11on .

19&amp;4 Full Size Blazer 4x4 305, 8'
Lift Kll New Paint. Wheels, Tires,
740-245-9162

Mercru1ser

18 Soul (Fr.)

practice on as many earlu:r tests as

1980 ·1990 HONDA CARS 1100

Tires, 135,000 M1tes, $2,000, 740441-1407

ciaisl Mon -Sal, 10·8, Sun 12·5,
740-4-lt-ono

Eaat

By Phillip Alder

O~ttb1ke,

~ :rn:~Oregon :~=-~~else:'"

B Mh-o!
g Glye off (heat)
11 Maralhon
12 Firm
13 Individual

NEXT TO?

STS Jet ski , still under warranty,

560

Nortb

WHO WAS YOU SITTIN'

1980 ·1990 Truclll $1 00 ·$500
Poiloe impounds
All Makas AYSiable
1·800-290-2262, X3901 .

1990 Yamaha RT 180

7 - - of lWa
Cltleo

Pranunclatlan

Ballesteros

West

730 Vans &amp; 4-WOs

or 304·862-2524

35 Car lrlpa
311 Declare

Actreoa Arden
Uud a chair

25 Poner'o
27 Golfer

Soutb

Keeping you
in the dark

99,000 mUes, runs

mark

Pees.!

A 3 2

Threo 4l4's Blazer 1985 12.500,
Truck 1985 Ranger $2,000, Joe~
1986 Suzuki $1,900, 740-3889062, Or 7-7278.

While Runs Great $2,500. Must 4622
See To Appreciare. 740·245Summers not overt Kawasaki
9613

2340

UNC SNUFFY!! I GOT
"A" PLUS ON MY

-79.

40x30 was $6,212 will sell lor
$3,497 , 50x66 was $17,690 will
1111 $8,970 Chuck 1-800· 320-

e ...

1 Reotorela
health
2 At-In
Belgium
3 Bare
4 Apr. 15 arv.

23
28
2:1
30

tAQ98652

Moving Must Sell 1991 Honda

710 Autos for Sale

• Q J 9

•

1996 5·10 Blazer LT 4 Doors."

1976 Harlev Oav1dson SportSter •
XLH-1000 Lots ol chrome &amp;neW :
parts. $3,800 OBO 304·882·3661· ,

A Black Bull, Canto Accepled AI·

• 7 3
•&amp;75

• 5

BARNEY

Doe, 2 Years
Old Molkong, 740-992·m9

tar 4 PM Friday, Up To Sale
Time On Saturdav All Consignments Welcome , Hauling Avail able, Athens Livestock Sales,

I&gt;QJIOI7
Wl09764

DOWN

Dealer: South

740

Saturday September 26, I PM
Selling 14 L1mousln &amp; Chsrola1s
Cross-Srtd Cows, Alt Cows Have
Been Vaccinated, &amp; Ara Bred To

• A 643

• K QJ 8

• K 5

1400

1993 Ford Aerostar XL, 4 o

~~~ower

Eut

54 Income
55 Odors
5&amp; See 42-Acroso
57 Contort

Vulnerable: Both

9352.
French Alpme Goat,

17CtwhHt

Soulb

1991 Chevy Cheyenne WT 1500
Series, 6 cvlinder automatic ,
72.000 miles , good clean truck,
runs excellent , $5500, 740·742-

Ton. Power Stroke. $2.750,

K J 10 4

West

1989 S·tO. 5 speed, Y&amp;ry sharp .. ·
short bad, runs good. $250Q ·
OBO, 740.742-7200 or 740·742· '
2675

1965 Ford Galaxy Mini Condition,

Grubb's Piano- tuning &amp; repalro.
Problems? Nead Tuned? CIU the

poll Roquiocl, 740-4-4&amp;-1519.

1988 GMC 1500. Good Condillon.
Must Seill $1,90000 740·256·
1758, AllOr 6 PM

Steel buildings never put up

Furnished 2 Roomo &amp; Bath

Furnished 3 Aooms, Upstairs,

t-3930 45hp. 2wd 8x2 trans , 1
valve , 230hra. $14,900 Keeler's
Service Center St Rt 87 Po1nt

linder, 740-742-2803

condition , call 740·949·2217,

plenollt'. 7~

same specs as above S18.500

Lawn Gallipolis, OH
241 2 HI00-594-1111 .

1978 715 IH Combine Diesel,

Singll Bed
Clean, No """· Reforlt- &amp; De

250hrs.

Solid Wood Ch1na Cabinet, Glass

With Light in Front Door $200
080,740-245-9813

1755 Hours, 810 Oulck Atllch
Floater 13 Fl Grain Head And
643 4 Row Marrow Cornhald, A~
ways Shtdtd Fltld Ready $45: 8
Inch Cardinal Groin Auger 57
Feat Long, 5 Year~ Old $1 ,300,
740-370-2895

Downatan,

apeca

1=4630 55hp 2w0

nancing On New And Used
Equipment Carmichael's Farm &amp;

10' long, six 6' long , oak, good

7'!lOam-t O:OOpm.

same

740-44&amp;-9068

Babv bed , swing, stroller, car

seat &amp; high chaw

5030

(PSi£ 10 ~ ,.,

Goosenec1&lt; Hi1ctl $4.995 Or OBO.
740-398-9352

$23,500

A 3 2

t

• K 10 6 4

With

longaberger Baskets J W 's,
Cr~sco, May Baskets &amp; more
Excellent Condition . 304 ·675 -

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

'

Ton

1997 Green 350 XLT 4 Doors, I

New Blood To Area From New
Orleans. Get Ready For Christ mas! While Reg1stered Toy Poodle For Stud Service. 740·256-

1996 Cub Cade 1 ridmg mower

Chevy C30

shunle trans, t29hrs $24,500 1•

Moore owner

15hp $1 ,350 304~·3013

1986

Condillon, 740-448-2370

2413 Jackson Ave Point Pleasant, 304-675·2063

740-446-roo&amp;. 1·800-291-()098

can racing wheels. $2,000 080.
3()4-675-2675 after 4pm.

2 pump Hydraulics, 8x8 syncho

Units for sale 1=!IQ30 62hp. 4w&lt;f,

EEK &amp;MEEK

37 lmpoNnt time

38.....,_1ncrlme
1 c.rt.ln
40 Chllter
-"'tiel
42 Willi
6 F - Auntie 56-Aerou,
10 Laen lll8lk
Brltlell pi8nlat
12 In lhe
45 Ulllprecedlng
(dagrw)
month
46 ActOr ......
14 African48 Unlock 8pln
ArMI!an waters 51 Homelier

w

ot-22-111

.. 9 2

1984 S-10 4x4 auro, 2 8 Amari·

ACROSS

(2 - -)
15 Vltemln e
component
16 Before, to a

Nortb

CondHion, Also M1sc Parts, 74Q·
245--9449

Large Capacity Washer /Dryer
S250, Electnc Stove $150, Good

1124 E. Main Street on At. 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T w 10 oo
am to 6 00 pm ,.Sunday 1 00 to
6.00 p.m. 740·992·2526. Russ

"WARN Up!•

can

1962 F-700 Font llur'1J, 10 1/2 FL
Bed, TeLeacope Hoist, Vary Good

37,000 Milos. $19.300, 740-3888304.

256-1686

Buy or sell Rlvenne AniJquas.

dealer and aee how tong they
warranty there drive train Keel·
er's Service Canter St Rt 87 PI

Ford New Holland Tractor Rental

To Campus. Pieau Corne &amp; See
niC81(740)245-5tOO
(SOOwar).

$1,325 Down &amp; $205 por mo 1·

Goods
Complete set of man's golf clubs
wlgolf bag $150 ~75-1263.

coa &amp; 1ap11 noc-.

Beech Street. Middleport. 2br,
furnished, utllittes paid, depoeit

Ford •x4 Tractor Model 4630·
60hp 655hrS.
~75-6269.

Featuring Hydro Bath Don
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Ad .

675-1263

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Wtatwood Drive

King alze springs and manress,
rug, 91(12, $100, 740·
$150,

A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming.

Sporting

Furnace, Heat Pumps, &amp; Air Conditioning Free Estimates! If You
Don't Call Us . We Both Lose!

New 3br $900 down, $149 per

mo Frao skirt t-800@t-lln7.

USED APPLIANCES

Used Furniture Store Otrlow Holldav Inn In Kanauga, Twin Beds,

12x60 Mobile Home, $300/Mo ,

private rented lot, Chestnut
Ridge Mt Alto area $17,000,

sort 740-2515-1044.

Pleasant &amp; Ripley Rd. Leon. wv
25123300-695-3874

French City Maytag . 740·446·

n95.

GOOD

Two bedtoom, free gas and water.
lull basement, air, 3 miles oul of
Portland, $400, 740-643-5128

Kindtewood Stove For sale, In-

p&lt;e11Sion Anings In Stock
RON ~11ANS ENTERPRISES
Jacllson, Ohio, 1-SQ0-537 9528

MERCHANDISE

mission fully synchronized forward &amp; reverse shuttle, zmc
coated sheet metal, 4 year or
4000 hour drive lraln warranty.

Chock your JO, MF. FNH or CIH

$37 00 Per 100, All Brass Com-

required, no pali 304-e75-5162

ROPS and Canopy t8xt6 Trans-

32 Bulb Wolfe Tanning, 8 AM ·2
P.M 740·388·8903, Aher 3 PM .
304-675-4340 Ext. 317

446-7537

ranges Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vone Street. Call 740·446· 7398,
1-888-818-0128.

Carpi!,
Ktlloy
3
~M .

450

port. no pets, 740-992-5856.

or 3 bedrooms. SISrting at $2995

888·992·5987 or 740·992 4472

applications lor 1br HUD &amp;ubsidozed apt. lor aldtrly and handi·
capped. EOH ~75-6679

Washers, dryers, refrigerators,

Large Btleclion of used homes 2

REAL ESTATE

posH. $270 month, call 740-9927806 8am-5pm.

7244.

Block From Roo Grande Ca"l!us.
74().245-9633.

Equipped, MoYing Must Sell
$2,!100 080, 740-245-{)603.

New Electric Cook Stove Frigi·
daire, Bla~ &amp; White Glass Front

740-365-4367.

Female Roommate Wanted . 1

Fully-

One bedroom apartment 10 M1d·
dieport, all utlitles paid, 1100 de-

accepted, will consider contract
lor purchase. no pets. U0-698·

At 1667 crayilck Road, Palriol,
$650/Mo • Pius $650 Security Doposl, 740-446-3545

Booth,

George St. Now Hoven. WV

Mobile home site ava1tabte bet ·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, can

Farm House For Rent . 3 Bed·
rooms , 2 Baths, CA. Large Yard,
Large Garage Bam, Wtth Water,
• Horse Stalls, Tack Room. Brino
'four Dogs Or Horaes Welcome,

Food

R....,.lble, 740-245-9813.

Three bedroom house In Middle·

740-441&lt;)221

For more Information on this career opportunlry, can betWeen 10·
am-2pm for penonat IntervieW. 1·

.actlool, atore &amp; bank Equal
Housing Opportunity Contact

16x76 4br, 2 bath $1,195 down,
S193: per mo. Free air, tree skirt.

1990 Clayton 2 Bedrooms. 1 Bath,

available. d0n1 Olaquailfy youneW

erMronment lor cMdren, close 10

740-2115-1218, Cellular

Very Nice, AJC, Call Ahtf 6 P.M.

Th1s newspaper w111 not
knowingly accept
actven1sements for real estate
whiCh ts m violatiOn of the
law Our reaoors are nereby
1nl01'med that all dwethngs
advertised m this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

ground on lila Manager &amp; maintenance on site Safe &amp; friendly

mono &amp; """'In 304-755-5566

homo 2br, 1 bath, w/outbullding,
$10.000 304·875-5211

All real estate advert1s1rg 1n
thiS newspaper IS subteet to
the Fedefal Fa1r HOUSing Act
of 1968 wh•ch makes it Illegal
to ad\lert•se ·any preference
limitation or d1SCflm1nat10n
based on race. color, rehgton .
sex familial status or natiOnal
ongm , or any 1ntentl0f1 to
make any such preference.
hmitatiOO or discnmnatl0f1 •

oiec1llc heal. Laundromal &amp; play-

Pomeroy, $350 plus deposit , HUD

Clean two bedroom house In

2 Bedroom Trailers, In Small
Trailer Park, Oepos1t &amp; Referenc-

OrM&gt;n &amp; Manegement
30W7ii-5156

Now accepting apptlcollono 2br.
carpeted, appliances furnished,
Iota of closet space, central air.

Aepo's Cali 1·800·522·2730. X
1709
es ftaquired, 7-1142

1990 14w60 Fleetwood mobile

Now Hiring-~H PositiOns

Apartmonll $295/Mo , 740-448·
6515.

740-441-5698, 740-441·5167

Full· Time Retarl Position, Local

Domino's of Potnl P...Nnt

304-882·2586.

4 Room House 52 Olive Street

992·2167

Emplc&gt;yooll

7~.

Cmemax, Showllme &amp; 01sney
Weekty Rates, Or Monthly Rates ,
Construction Workers Welcome

304·895·3814

HELP -

Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment,

-

7190

Festival

security dapo~t. available October 1st, 7«)-742·2954.

4!631
Hardware Rep~ To CLA 451, c/o
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. 625 Thwd
A""nue, GailipOI~. OH 45631

«&amp;-7283.

Aocopltd.

APT AVAILABLE NOW
Tw.n Rtvers Tower now accepting

Garage, Largo Deck, And AH Appliances Slay, Cali For Mora Info
7-9664
siding, roof, w1ndows, kitchen,
electric heat pump, fenced in
yard. three bedroom , bath and

furnished . 304-675-7783 HUD

draullc wet diac tlrakea all 4
wheals, DIHeranllal lock front &amp;
rear, dual hydraulic remotes.

10am ·2pm Mon·Frl or stop by.
Located at the corner of 6th &amp;

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy land . 30 ·500 Acres,

Great Location Close To Galltpa·
111 Nice 3 Bedroom Home Ap·

Security deposit required, part

lora, Wheelchair And Scooter
Llfta. Bowman's Homecara, 74Q-

Andrea VanMeter 304·882-3716

Dining Room , Fireplace, Gas
Rock, Calling Fans, Pantry
Southwestern School, Appomt·

pandant 5-10 and 1000 PTO, Hy·

OLD ASH YIUAGE APTS

on Jerry'&amp; Run Rd
Jr. 304-578-2336.

Ageo-Aillo Sptelol
Tractor 5670 63 PTO H.P 4

Electric Scootera. Wheelchairs,

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse

Scenic Vallev at Apple Grove,
WV Building lots, single w1dea
accepted, public water, 20
minutes from new Buffalo Bridge

tachments $5,000, 740-245-5747

New And Uoed. Staorway Eleva·

references &amp; deposit, no pets

1/2 lv:;ra comor too in Camp Cor&gt;
ley araa, good location 304-67ii3734.

446-4722.

5000 conL wan (6250 wan surge).
tO hp B&amp;S eng. lass than 12 ln.
run time, Cobra 29 LTD CB w/ ex·

210 MF 21 HP Tractor, With At-

wheel drive world famous aircooled diesel engine, Goodyear
Radial tires all 4 wheels. lnde-

Ground floor apl 2br, w/d ,_...,,

North Third Ave. Middleport, OH

bel...... 304-675-6320

Cratlsman/ Generac generator,

tarnal 'diesel' speaker. 740-992-

2br unfurnlahed apt, deposit &amp;

Lot for sale· Gallipolis, 90xl72,
nice neighborhood, quiet, 740-

tv

34 Smithers, Gatipolla, $250/Mo.,
$150 DoposH, Rolrlgaretor, Stove
Fumishod,7-3870.

350 Lota &amp; Acreage

new

200amp breaker box, recent·
remodeled bathroom , lull

300 Galion Portable Tank, $75:

Large 3br in Pt. Pitaaant $275 .

4br houso. lanced yard, 1 bioctr

sn .ooo 304-675-6258.

Apartments
for Rent

304-375-5182

--)

Buslnesa
Opportunity

210

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

aiding &amp; shudders, so11d oak
kitchen newly remodeled , dish·
washer, vented-microwave, large
famlly· room, wood -stove , living
room w/lhe-place, central/air,
large fenced lot Must See t

Than Aaklng

Entry leve l Accountant For Ex·
pandlng Company Must Have

3br house, plus an old store
building on adJacent lot In Glen·

k&gt;ad 304-675-5035.

Will Be Responsible For Coord!·

EXIICIJIM&gt; Director For

112 Aero. 3 Bedrooms. F~l Basement, Garage In 30's, 740-448·
9706

Will haul junk or trash away $351
pick~

natlng Disaster Rellel Services
And Developing New Programs
Through Ecumenical Church
Working Relationships In Southeast And 5orM cantrei OhiO. The
Successful Cnad1date Will Have
Demonstrated Experience In
Community OrganizatiOn And /Or
Program Development Skills,
Creatwnv To Develop And Mam·
tatn Servtees In A Vanely Of lo·
cauons . And Knowledge Of The
Lutheran Church Professional
Quahhes Include Good PubiJC
Relauons Sk1lls, Fmanc1a1 Man·
egement , And Organlza11onal
Skills Bachelor's Degree In So·
cial Work ReqUired , Master's De·
grae Preferred Lutheran Soc1al
Sarrvicas Offers A Comept111ve
Salary And A Comprehensive
BenafiiS Package
Send Resume To

304-675-2924

2183

Detective • Private Investigator
Trainees Good Wages , 61•·523·

DIRECTOR OF SOUTHEAST
OHIO MINISTRIES

ground pool, many upgradea.
move In cond Priced fn 70's

pliances, garage, spa, aero, Buta·

AVON I Ali Areas I Shirley
Spears, 304-675-1429
MNI

privacy fenced yard, 24h. aboYO

6yr, 2-3 bedrooms, kilt, tongue/
groove, pellet sto\le, HPICA, ap-

Buslneaa
Training

140

3br. living room, dining room ,
family room, 1 bath, central air,
newer carpet &amp; roof, rapllcement
wlndowa, family neighborhood.

The Daily Sentinel• Page 11

.

I

�Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 22, 1998

Situation 'critical' after hurricane slams Puerto Rico
By JAMES ANDERSON
Aaoc:lated PreiiS Writer

I
I

i'
'

SAN JUAN. Puerto Rico - Hurricane Georges' II 0-mph winds
roared through Puerto Rico and the
northeast Caribbean. nipping small
airplanes, turning trees into missiles
and leaving at least si~ dead.
Georges' powerful thunderstorms
Monday spawned tornadoes. flooded
hotels and exploded shop and car
windows. The stomn whisked away
satellite dishes. forced tens of thousand• into shelters, and left hundreds
of thousands without water or power.
"The situation is critical." said
Mayor Anibal Melendez of the hardstruck ea,tem resort town of Fajardo,
where dozens of homes lost roofs.

officials moboli zed to assess damage,
expected to soar well into the hundreds of millions of dollars.
Georges headed for the Domini can Republic and Haiti. where many
of that island's IS million people live
in substandard housing that could
leave them exposed to the hurricane's
fury.
At 3 a.m. EDT today. Georges'
cemer was oil Puerto Rico's western

Turks and Caicos islands. A hurricane
watch was posted for eastern Cuba.

and police station. A curfew was in
dfe&lt;:t there to prevent looting, said

Concern was growing even in 1-lorida, where workers put shutters over

government spokesman Erasmus

the windows at Key West's City Hall.
One of the most powerful stomns
to hit the Caribbean in years. Georges
unleashed a landslide in Toa Alta near
San Juan that killed three people. CIVil defense officials .said. Two people
died of heart attacks in shelters. and

Williams.
"We would definitely appreciate
assistance," Williams said.
Advance teams from the U.S.
Federal Emergency Management
Agency. the FBI and the American
Red Cross planned recovery efforts in
ohe Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico.

shore. about 35 miles west-southwest

one person was reported missi ng in

Both territories activated Nalional

of tho west coast city of Mayaguez
and moving west at 15 mph.

another landslide in Trujillo Alto, a
southern suburb of San Juan.
One woman died in St. Kitts.
where 70 percent of homes were
damaged. as were the hospital. airport

Guard troops to help.
More than 20,000 people huddled
in shelters in San Juan. Arecibo.
Mayaguez and other Puerto Rican
cities. and officials said the figure

Hurricane warnings were posted

for the Dominican Republic. Haiti,
the southeastern Bahamas and the

could rise to 50,000.
Hospitals in several cities reported moderate damage. and three priva~ planes were damaged at San
Juan's international airport. .
As it moved westward across
southern Puerto Rico, Georges
spawned tornados in the centmltown
of Barranquitas and the eastern island
of Vieques. Gusts reaching 175 mph
were reported in the interior mo·untains, where damage reports were
sketchy.
Georges also caused extensive
property damage in the U.S. Virgin
Islands, Antigua and other smaller
Caribbean islands.

In St. Croix, raging winds bent
palm trees to a third of their height,
shoved a 50-foot sailboat ashore and
destroyed part of the boardwalk.
In Antigua. the stomn split ope~
government-built homes and ripped
corrugated roofs off hundreds of other houses and wrapped them around
trees. "Me house gone. Hurricane
mash up my life," said Verna
McHenry as 'he surveyed the

"

Meigs court news
Suit filed
(Editor's note: A lawsuit outlines
the grievances of one party against
another. It does not establish guilt
or innocence.)
A suit for foreclosure was filed
Sept. 17 by Farmers Bank &amp; Savings
Co.against JohnS . Miller, Long Bot-

,

fig. I
(remove old logo)

tom.

Local

,
,
,

shotgun were stolen sometime in the

last two weeks from his residence.
according to a Meigs County Sheriffs
Office report.
Marijuana confiscated
Deputies of the Meig s County
Sheriffs Office confiscated marijuana Saturday from an outbuilding in
the Reedsv ille area.
Possession c harges are pending

agai n" Russe ll Cremeans. 35. StAte
Route 681. Reedsv ille, depending on
the weight of the marijuana, according to a MCSO report.
Crash reported
No injuries were reported fo llowing a two-car accident on SR 124
near Rutland around 8: IS thi s morning.
Melissa D. Werry. 19. Middleport .
was eastbound on 124 and slowed to
tum right into a parking lot when a
followin g car. a 1989 Chevrolet Cavalier. driven by Florraine Walker. 19.
Rutland, slid into the rear of Werry's
1991 Chevrolet Coni~a- according to
a Meigs Co unty Sheriffs Office
report.
Werry's car sustained moderate
damage while Walker's car received
heavy and disabling damage. according to the report . Walker was cited on
a charge of failure to control .

: : . .mny

•
Meigs County's

WASHINGTON (AP) - Congressional Republicans are working
to snuff out new talk of a punishment
for President Clinton short of
impeachment, an idea noated by
Democmts a.s poll numbers show that
most Americans don't want Clinton
removed from office.
Both parties jockeyed for political·
advantage, as leaders of the House
and its Judiciary Committee were to
confront each other today over the
political nastiness that clouded the
opening days of an impeachment
review.
Republicans intend to bring a formal inquiry of impeachment to the
House floor within the next two
weeks.
"The decision about culling a deal
is very, very premature," Rep. Henry Hyde, R-111., chairman of the
Judiciary Committee. told reporters

---- . '

entine

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Tuesday. "It makes an interesting sl()ry. but I don't know of any substance
to it"
Renewed discussion of a lesser
penally - perhaps a congressional
censure and a fine - came from
Democrats, who believe it's possible
to avoid an exhausting congression·
al inquiry into Clinton's affair with
Monica Lewinsky.
"The president has to accept this ,
problem is not going to go away and
I think Republicans have to face the
reality that an overwhelming majority of the American people do not
want the Clinton presidency to end
and are likely to resist, with vigor,
attempts to impeach him, " said Sen.
Roben Torri&lt;:elli. D-N.J .
"That would indicate to me that
reasonable people s~ould come
together."
Hyde said any deal on a puni,h-

ment would have to be made in the
Senate. which conducts a trial if the
House approves articles of impea&lt;:hment.
However, with some Democrats
suggesting that Clinton appear before
Congress to make an apology. Hyde
said the president "would be welcomed" if he asked to appear at Judiciary Commiuee hearings .
But Hyde doused any hope of
such an appearance without approval
first of a formal impeachment
inquiry. A resolution to authorize an
inquiry is expected before the House
in early October, and is virtually cerlain to pass.
In preparation. according to seveml Republican sources speaking on
condition of anonymity, work has
begun on drafting the terms of an
impeachment investigation - along
with rules to empower the panel to

Single Copy . 35 Cents

\
\

I

'

I
I

fig.2

I

__ ... ,

,,

I
I

\

\
I
I

Logo Cavity

I

'

WHAT
ISA
LOGO·ECJOMY??? .

fig. 3
(implant new logo)
~­

/

/

. ___ , ,

-- '

I
Amazing surgical
procedure explained!
A l.OGO-£C10M'IIS NECESSARY WHEN 1WO

'

._...

,,

MILLIONS
FEB. EVEN •tiER IN

I
I

SECONDS!!!

---

/

1

-,
1

()()MIMIES JOIN lOGEIHER. IT IS AI&gt;AOCEDURE BV WHICH ONE COMPANY'S N.AM£
(1000) IS

Cellular. Paging. Long Distance. And More.

R61QVED (FIG. 1 AND FIG. 2)

popular diversion for passersby In the
Pomeroy parking lot like those shown here.
According to the U.S. Coast Guard, Huntington,
W.Va., the barges were under tow by the MV
James K. Ellis owned by the McGiness Company of South Point when they sank just before
3 a.m. Friday.

Some newspapers that printed reprinted Starr's report. including
Kenneth Starr's entire report on the The New York Times, The Washing·
Monica Lewinsky affair decided not ton Post, The Philadelphia Inquirer
to print word-for-word coverage of and the Arkansas Democrai-GazeUe,
President Clinton's grand jury testi- published full transcripts of Clinton's
mony.
testimony.
"We didn't think there wa- very
"There was some overlap of
much new information here." said things that had come out before. but
Chicago Tribune ombudsman George there wa' also a lot of substantial new
Langford. whose paper only pub- material." said Charlotte Hall. man ·
lished excerpts of Clinton and Lewin- aging editor of Newsday. which
sky's grand jury testimony in Tues- printed a 16·page section on the C'l inday's newspapers after reprinting all ton-Lewinsky transcripts. "If you
of Starr's report in its Sept. 12 edi- devoteu 'uhstantial space to Starr.
tion.
you nt:tc...led lo rome back amJ Lie vote
Some editors declined tu rehash substantial space to thi'i. especially
~he often-sleamy details of Clinton's
given lhe fact th:il this i' the presi affair with the former White llouse dent's ver-.. ion of hio,; conduct."
intern. The deluge of broadcasts of
The Clinton testimony wa' dirti Clinton's videotaped testimony also cult f11r nt!W'ipapers Ill reprint hecause
made editors wary of overkill .
it wa."' not 111ade a\o·a ilahk in ea!-iy· toStill. several newspapers that use rorrnah

J

___ _

RECOVERY UNDERWAY • Recovery began
Monday morning on two coal barges that sank
In the Ohio River at Pomeroy last week. A
barge-mounted crane Is shown here removing
coal from the sunken vessels so a second
recovery tow anchored nearby can lift the
barges from the river. The operation proved a

Fewer papers reprint president's
testimony compared to Starr report

.......

/

-

condl)cl its own investigation of the
facts .
Polls taken after Clinton's televised grand jury testimony Monday
show that two-thirds of Ameri&lt;:ans
surveyed thought he was evasive in
his answers. bul most didn't wanl him
removed from oftice.
The per&lt;:entage who thought the
president should be impeached and
removed from oflice. 41 percent. had
not grown signilicant ly in the past
week but had innea,ed by II points
in an ABC poll since Sept. I J. JUst
after Starr's impeachment yfort was
made pub Iic.
"Poll taking is an art and not a science," Hyde told reporters in
response to Clinron\, over:. tll fa vorable numbers - including a job
approval mting that ranged from nO
per&lt;:entlo 68 per&lt;:ent m several poll s.
Margins of error ranged he1Ween 4

percentage points and 5 points.
In a letter to Rep. Zoe Lofgren. DCalif.. a Judiciary Commiuee member who e. pressed concern about the
panel's procedures, Hyde also laid
oul lhe likely ground rule~ fur presi·
dcntial participation in impeachment
proceedings. He said the Watergate
inquiry again~t Richard Nixon should
be the guide.
Hyde said Niwn and his counsel
never were granted access to all
materials. only relevant infomnation
presented by staff counsel to Judiciary Committee members behind
closed doors.
Nixon's side was allowed to attend
these closed sessi_ons and receive
copies of the materials. He then was
granted a chance to respond and
submit requests for the panel to hear
additional infomnation.
Nixon and his counsel also had the

AND ANOtHER'S (UXIO) IS IMP!AN'Im
(fiG. 3) IN liS PlACE.

The Associated Pre&gt;&lt; made the
full text &lt;&gt;ITlinton'' testimony available Monday on a 'pecial Internet site
and provided newspapers with long
and short excerpts on its regular news
wires. The AP was unuble In provide
the full Lewinsky tex t until Tuesday
be&lt;.:ause of &lt;.:omputer formatting problems.
The two &lt;;els of te, tionnny totaled
523 pages. Their release put more
pressure on editors. who just 10 days
earlier printed the 445-page Starr
report in special sections without
advertising to make room .
" I don't remember a report that
was dumped on them this way," said
Stephen Hess. a senior fellow at the
Brookings Institution in Washington
who follows media covemge of politics . "Both the timing of both the
Starr report and .the tape have not
heen done by press-friendly people."

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Ovt!rcn1wding at the kindergarlen
class at Rutland Elementary School
was addressed at Tuesday nighl's
meeting of the Meigs L&lt;x:al Board of
Education .
The board. meeting at the district's
central oflice in Pon1eroy. met with
approximately 10 parents of kindergartners al lhe school who said there
are currently 32 children enrolled in
lhe kindergarten class.
The group wa' repre sented hy
Rutland resident Richard Adkins who
said the class should have no more
than 25 chi ldren. Parents also said
aide., 1.1rc not ~pending enough time
with the class and ohat chi ldren are
not rc&lt;.:eiving adequate rt:ct:~s lime.
The o,;ilu&lt;ttion follows in the wake
of lhe board\ Uecision to imp l em~nt
al l-d:iy. everyday kindergarten in
order to &lt;.:ontinue receiving funding
under the Disadvantaged Pupil
Income Assistance program. Superintendent Bil l Burkley explained.
Under DPIA guidelines cstah·
lished by the state. districts lirst have
lo addre.,s ail -day. everyday kindergarlen ht&gt;fore us ing the funding in
olher areas including reduction of
rlaso,; 'iLe and remediation .
That \ why everyone went to ail day. evef.)'day kindergarten . he
exphunedJ

Kim.krgallen lias~ ~izes vary
lhroughoul the district, currently II
(hiiJrt!n ar~ t:nrollt!J in linJcrgart~n
;ll Salt"lll Ct&gt;nlt'r Elementary.
" I lnow ) uu're concerned &lt;.~hout
)our ~i&lt;h '" you wouldn't be here ."
Ruddl!)' ~aid . "The easiest thin~
would he if there were &gt;&lt;lllle people
who wanted to go to Salem Center.
We have a bus that goes to Salem
Center from Rutland everyday."
When one parent sait! it would be
unfair to send Rutland children to
Salem Center to alieno kinuergarton .
Buckley said it would likewise be
unfair to make Salem Center children
go to Rutland.
"We'll certainly try to addreS&gt; io.
hut I can tell you it won't make
everyone happy." he said .
Buck ley said he would be out of
town Wednesday hut wouh..l go nul to
Rutland Thursday morning to look at
the situation.
Parents also Jiscw,;~ed conl: e rn~
over head lice at the elementary
school ami suggested the school senLI
notin:o,; horne whencYer nuthreaks
occur.
In other business. the board agreed
to purchase a wireless computer nel working system for Meigs Middle
Scht~&gt;l in Middleport .
The system utili'" wirde"
receivers and tran~millc:rs and v. ill he
purchased from TCBC. Marie'"'· for

H.c ~ ... h.~•c.

..,est 001 yO"'-• S~.Kcen, yO"'- 'tiWl;.
.,., it. """'e.._ reople see ~ ...ew

""lV.e lo,o-ectc»o\y -..~

u.s ... si.,,le C:&lt;l""f ..."Y ...t tL-~

tL-Ie ir..e.,,H\, powt:• ,.._..,
C:'-P"''bili+y of t-wo

l-ie"' so?

The f""o.AI.I.ct - s
'ooJ., Ho.e s~c~

'Sho.y

""'•e . . ,.,. . . . wiwelen r"'~'
~ Mve pl"""e.A, ~~~ 'tl~

A"'Y l"'!t

\01&lt;11\S e!llc:elle"~~.t.

~ ~~e C"-loOI!I!: ~H-.~· t-c~

....oor..,s?

~y ~"'"'111!!7

l&gt;&lt;c,... ALL't'£,, /

\

*

I

ko.&gt;~.eJ. .

This is jldt
~e,i'll..,i~.

~

. . ccn their pun.:ha~i ng power eroded.
they maint:..&amp;ined.
Opponents saic...l an incrca~ would
hun \mall businesses and cause unem·
ploymenl. It "could a&lt;:tually have an
advcr'c impact upon our economy"
elcdicm~.
amlcouh..l UIU~c unemploymenl ··that
The measure, ddeated hy a )1-44 hurl\ the low - in~o:omc workers the
yore. would have rai,ccJ the minimum hardc,t ," Sen . Rod Grams, R· Minn ..
wa,ge earned hy -.omc 12 mill ion ... aiel hcforc the vote.
Americans to~~ I 'ion Jan . I. 21KKJ
Sen. l:dward Kennedy, 0-M itss.,
The lirst )(kent increa'e would haY&lt;: chief hacker of the iocreasc. 'aid the
taken el'fcct next New Year\ IJay.
vote ' howed that the Repuhlicans
Supporter\ \aitl a minimum wa~c wen: in the ~ way of husincs." inh:rc' l".
in&lt;:reao;e was needed to heir hanl- li e told r&lt;:portcr&gt; that for D.!nllli.'C.Ih
working American~ \ tnlgJ:!IIng to gel the minimum wagl! incre:.llrrie! "w ill he
by. At a time of unpamllclcd prosl"'r· a cclllral j...,, uc in tht: cuursc ot thi ~
ity. people who work in ltu.:loric,, l· &lt;~nlra,gn .
Prc,illc nt Clinton ~aiJ in ;t ~lo.tle ·
restaumnl!-., holcl .... retail hu-.i nc"'-.C"
and in nlher motl.~'l joh' m.: tuall y have tn~,;nl that 01 hno'l in the minimum

WASHINGTON CAP!- - A propoo,;al to raio,;e the minimum wag~ hy
SI an hour wa., defeated TuC\day in
the Senate. and Dcmtx:rati&lt;: ' upportcrs vowed to camraign hard on the
j,~ue hetwccn OIJW i.lnt..J the NtJVCitlhcr

wage would have "helped ensure
that parents who work hard and play
by the rules do not have to raise their
children in poverty."
Workers l!arning the minimum
wage make an avemge $1U.71Kl a year
-- ~2.9\Kl helow the oftidal poverty
lcvd fnr ;.t family of three . ~upporlcr:-.
ar~ucJ . But Sen. James Jetl"orc.ls. RVt.. L'ited statistiL:s showing that more
than half of minirnum wage workers
live in families with annual incomes
ex&lt;:c~ding $2).U!Ml. and that the
majority or the worker' an! young. sin·
gle and l'hildbs.
Democrat' rounh:rt!\lthat ~i oce th~
!jiSt federJI wage innease tmk etl'e&lt;:t
i year ~'gn. new joh" have hlo'\somed.
In his statemt!nt. r linton ...;.\id that
avemge wages for Americans h~ve

$5.723. However. Bu&lt;:kley said the
pri&lt;:e will increase slightly due to new
modular classrooms at the school.
In personnel matter&gt; the hoard
hired Grace Chen. Larry Haley.
David Ramey and Gloria VanReeth
'" tutors for health handi&lt;:appeu studenls at a rate of $15 per hour not to
exceed five hours per week .
In addition. John Fleming. Mary
IIIII . Roy John,un. Kim Oliphant,
[)ana Williams :md Donald Yost
wc.&gt;re hireJ as suh,lifute leachero,; for
th~.: currenl srhool ye~tr to be used on
an a~ · needed ha~i ~.
The board accepted the resignation of substitute teacher Beth Ann
Hollanbaugh due to other employment.
The board also:
-- Approved permanent appropriations for the 1998-99 liscal year in
the amount of $18.354.030.50:
.. Approved the following grants:
Carl D. Perkins. $101 .443.56: professional development. $13.025.56:
School Net Plus. $226.649.24; Tille
I. $78.1.6 74: Title VI B. $151.904:
Dwight D. Eisenhower. $19.507.72:
Title VI. $1.1.9.1.1:
.. Approved creation of a new
handicapped bus route .
Present were Buckley. Treasurer
Cindy Rhonemus. board Vice president Scon Walton and board mem·
Roger Abbott.
Randy
bers
Humphreys and Wayne Davis.

Kasich: We need to govern ourselves
DETROIT CAP) - U.S. Rep.
John R. Kasich. R-Ohio. who i' con sidering a run for the 2000 Republi can presidential nominal ion, ~ays the
country needs to govern il self.
··We need to stop running this
country from the top down anu run it
from the bouom up." Kasich said
Tue sday in a speech to lhe Detroit
Economic Club.
He saiu the only way to """ the
puhli~: schools is to make them com ·
pete with private schools. He al '-o
called for drastic lax cuts and sug·
gested a "Ronald Reagan model "
where there would be two llat tax
rates. one about 12 percent and one
about 25 percent.
"The taxes today are lou h1gh for
the miudle class ... Kasich said. " We
need to fix the ~ystem."

He urgetlthe elimination of many
government regulations that he 'iaid
don ' t make sense . But with deregulation come s re.;ponsibility.
" In a deregulated society. there
has to he respect." he said'. "A nd
huilJing wa lls will not be the answer.
·· Virtue and values are without
4ue,tion e~sent i al to a society that
want to se lf-govern."
Ka~ich. chairman of the House
Budget Committee, was one ol the
architcds of the halanl"ed budget drive in Congress. He has argued thai
hudget ~ urplu~es should he given
hac~ '" tax cuts. while other Republi ca n ~ want the money 10 he used to
protect Soc1al Security.
Dn Tuesuay. he repeateu ohat he
horou President Clinton woulu &gt;lep
Jown in li ghl of I he Monico Lewin -

Senate defeats minimum wage proposal 55-44; Democrats refuse to give up
ShOOI,t:• ~hAll.
~~ .... R~.-..ly ~.,..

right to object to examination of witneso;es or admissibility of testimony
and evidence; and the right to question any witnesses.
" If and when this committee
begins an impea&lt;:hment inqui'ry relating to President Clinton. I will strongly urge the committee to grant President Clinton these same rights, "
Hyde wrote.
While Hyde was writing about the
guidelines. the White House and
Slarr's ofli&lt;:e were sparring in letters
to the committee.
Clinton attorneys David Kendall
and Charles F.C. Ruff wrote that
Starr's report included ISO pages of
"g ratuitous and graphic sexual
details " but omiued Ms. Lewinsky's
'latementto the grand jury: "No one
ever asked me to lie and I was never
Continued on page 3

Parents address Rutland
kindergarten overcrowding

' ,_

I

Briefs:

Burglary investigated
A compound bow and a 12-gauge
shotgun were reported stolen from a
Portland residence lasl week.
Brian Lawrence, Portland Road,
reported the Parker Premier bow and
Smith &amp; Wesson 12-gauge pump

~~~

Yankees
defeat
Indians
Page4

Republicans reject new censure talk

Countless roads and highways were
choked by fallen trees and poles.
dangling power lines. antennas.
awnings, tin roofs and other debris.
Police took to the streets of San
Juan in force to fmd the hardest-hit
areas and deter looting of damaged
stores and businesses.
With island residents facing the
sobering task of recovery today,
President Clinton declared Puerto
Rico and the U.s·. Virgin Islands disaster areas. authorizing immediate
release of federal recovery aid.
Scores of federal and Red Cross

Farm Credit Services of Mid
America ACA. Washington Court
House. filed suit against Dennie V.
· and Tracy L. Nuuer, Reedsville.
Divorces, dissolutions
The following actions to end marriage were filed recently in the office
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer:
Dissolution asked - Ronald
Nathan Hysell. Middleport. and Linda Kay Hysell. Middleport, Sept. 18.
Divorce asked - Crystal Whitlatch. Racine, from William D.
Kautz, Racine, Sept. 17: Carrie L.
Jenkins. Reedsville. from Jerry A.
Jenkins, Reedsville, Sept. 16: Lois
Gail Riggs, Middleport, from Jason
A. Riggs. Racine, Sept. 21.
Dissolution granted - Todd
William Hysell and Kimbley Lee
Hysell, Sept. 21; Rose D. Fife and
David A. Fife, Sept 21.
Divorce granted - Cynethia S.
Haye from Christopher P. Haye,
Sept. 21.
Judgments issued
A summary judgment was issued
Sept. 17 in the foreclosure case of
Homeside Lending Inc., formerly
known as BancBoston Mortgage
Corp. versus Jerry A. Derenberger, el
al. Homeside lending was awarded
$18,02130 plus interest with the
foreclosure of property in Pageville
Road, Albany. ordered if the amount
is nol paid within three days.
In addition. Peoples National
Bank wa~ awarded a judgment of
$25,300.60 plus interest from Larry
L. Sellers Jr. in a suit filed on a delinquent promissory note.

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 70; Low:SO

Sports

Beat of the Bend, Page 8
Ann Landers column, Page 8
Reds lose in 11th frame, Page 5

Volume 49, Number 104

no water. lhe government said.

I

Today: Sunny
High: 60; Low:40

On the French island of Guadeloupe. a man who tried to take
advantage of the stomn to escape
from jail was shot and killed by
guards.

from immediately responding to calls
for help. and the upscale Conquistador Resort. which overlooks the sea
in Fajardo, sustained e~tensive damage.
More than 80 percent of Puerto
Rico's 3.8 million people lost electricity and more than 70 percent had

I

September 23, 1998

Weather

remains of her home near Bolans.

The hurricane prevenled rescuers

,,

Wednesday

risen since then :tnd unemployme nl is
at its lowest leve l in 2X years.
Demtx:rats have holstered their
arguments with a study by the laborbacked Et:onomic Policy Institute !hat
round no dis&lt;:ernible JOb losses among
l!ntry·level workers. induUing teen ·
:.u;ers, from the latest raise .
The study found that the inl'rease
hoosted wages for almost 10 million
workers. of whom 7 I percent were
auults and 5X percenl were women .
The House has not acted on su&lt;:h
an i ncreu."e .
Kennelly had pu,hed to have his
pmpo. . al ac...luptt:d ~~~ an amendment In
legi-.lation to overhuul the pt:Nonal
bankruptcy laws anu make it harder
ft.- people to ,weep away their dehts.
In 'eparate at·tion on that mea~ure.

ohe Senate voted. nl ·~&gt;n. to kill a prorosa! by Sen. Jad .Reed, D-R.I. . to
push ncdit card wmpanies to tighten
their standard" fnr extenJing credil to
consumers.
Kenned y · ~ strategy wa~ si milar to
ohe one used hy Democrats 111 19%.
another election year. when they held
up action on otht!r legi slatinn until
Republicans agreed lo vole to rai...e lhe
federa l minimum. then $4.25 an hour.
to $5 . 15 by September 1997.
UnderSC(Hing the political ptllency
,,flhe i~'ue.two Repuhlirath 'eeking
rc·c le&lt;.:titm. Sen~. Alftnl\l' D. Alll\ltll tlf
N~\\' York o.•nJ Arlt:n Spc~o.· tcr nf Penn·
,y(vo.mia. \ nted with the DenKK..'rJlS tn
support the minimum wage increase.

;o. ky affJir. But he said lhe nation has
h;.1J a ~.:ham.:e to grow be~.:au!\e the
'l·anJal give'i people an opportunity

to ronder what kind of leaders the
&lt;.:ountry need ....
In a nl·wo,; n mfl!rence hefore the
speech. the l'ongre;sman 'aid he didn't think people were looking for
'aintly leauers.
··1 think people want our leaders
to Jo things that ~:&lt;.In makt! them
proud to have I hem as leaders."
Kasich 'aid . "They really are very
di"tppointed.
" In the future . politicians. people
who seek leadership positions. will
have to keep that in mind ."

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentine

2 Sections - 16 Pages

Calendar
Cla•sifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Soorts
Weather

9

12-13-14
IS
2
3
4-5-6-7

3

Lotteries
QHID
Pick 3: 9-15: Pick 4: 1769
Buckeye 5: ~ -7· 1~ - 21&gt;-27
W,VA.
Daily 3: -loO: Daily 4: 8022
t. &gt;l 1N IIIlhu1 \'.tlk~

PuN• ~ hin~

Cu.

..
..
•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="417">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9841">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="27766">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="27765">
              <text>September 22, 1998</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="566">
      <name>carpenter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="373">
      <name>rife</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
