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                  <text>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

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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-

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tom.

Local

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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

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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

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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

.......

/

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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

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. . 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

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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.

..
..
•

�'.

'

Wednesday, September 23, 1998

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'DtaMufid in 1948

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

TM Statiad wlcomn ,.,.,. to the edlttX from fNden on • IN08d,..,. of tDplu.
- - (3DO wonl• orl...lho•••,. ,.., chanc. ot l&gt;olng f'l'b/1-. 1Yf'Od lot,.~etret:~ Mtd •H INY 1» edited Each Mould lnclud• • tlgMture. add,.u,

Page2
Wedneldly, Septenlber 23, 1998

h1s name With a heart a!'i the final

Union welcomes
Kroger's desire to
stay independent

By JOHN NOLAN
Auoclated Press Writer
CINCINNATI- They are clerk'. meal cune" and can fetchers at your
neighborhood Kroger Co 'upermarkel And when someone talks about the
pos"b1hly that another company 1mght try to buy Kroger. you het the
employee' hear and talk ahout 11
So they appreciated 11 when Joseph P1chler. Kmger\ cha1rman and ch1ef
executiVe olTicer. sent worlers ;.~ lconer 'aying the ..:ompany wa .. not for 'ale

Berry's
World

TP·C Water District lifts restrictions
Restrictions on water use in the Tupper.~ Plains-Chester Water District
lw been lifted.
The voluntary restriction order was 1ssued by the district on Aug. 31
m Athens and Meigs countiel, and a mandatory water use ban wa.&lt; issued
for Letart Township. Due to recent rains and a break in the heat, the restrictions have been lifted.

Havel's rock 'n' roll revolution

llounsh after the ·r . has wh1mS1·
,.,. .,.
d
d h H d
MWI*YflmephoMnumber. s,.cc/yadllttlflhoro·u-•to•p,.vlouOirtk:lo
. cally nd en aroun l e
m cany
. ., ,._ - 1o: ...,.,.. 10 tho Eanor, r11e Senr/nol, "'coun st, Pomeroy, 011/0
cast le of lice' on a ch1ld's scooter.
L-.:~;.:7:.:;""::::'.:"'::.·.:.;FAX;;:;.;::to:.:;'.:;'..
;;;-::;.·,;,2';.;;•.:;7_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.... · o;omeu mes wears a Mex 1can Ind mn
tahsman wnstband to g1ve h1m more
energy. and decks the pre&gt;~dent1al
hmou,m(s hack wmdow With a
nng of pmk hean'
And 1magme a place that over·
threw Lemn wnh Lennon -- as the

P1chler said that. 11 anythmg. Kroger " lookmg to buy other compame'.
not be bought by anyone d'e He al'o 'a1d Kroger expect' annual earmng'
per share mcreases of at least 15 percent a' an mdependenl company
Umon officml M1ke Leonard welcomed the mformauon but 'a'd he "n't
worrymg about anyone buymg Kroger. even m a food reta1hng mdu,try currently awash wnh mergers
"They're a terrific company." , ,ud Leonard . a v1ce preslllcnl of the United Food and Commercml Workers umnn. wh1ch represents 110.000 hourly
Kroger employees "I thmk Kroger's more l1kely to acq01re than be
acquired ..
Pichler's leller followed weeks of pubh,hed speculat ion that Saleway
Inc .. of Pleasanton. Calif.. the nalwn \ No 2 'upermarlet cham. m1ght want
to buy No I Kroger The repons have noted. ,unong other thmg s. that a
merged Safeway-Kroger would have the market power ol a g1ant and would
enJOY maJor econom1es ol 'cale. Since 11 could ofler products at lower pnces
and capture a larger share of the market
But P1chler sa~d m hiS Sept. 10 lener that Cmcmna11-based Kroger
already IS able to do that w1th lls w1dely spread opem110ns The company.
w1th 212.1MMI employees. bas supermarkets m 24 'tales and operates 111 32
,tale' when n' food processmg plants and wnven1ence '!ores ,lfe mcluded
"The li&gt;rces that appear to be drivmg the mdustry\ consoliuauon are (a)
a de,ue by reg1onal companies to ach1eve the benelits ol w1de geographic
diversity and (bl the economies nf scale nnw avai lable to larger orgamzauons by vlflue ot technology and lngtst1cs ... P1chler wrote.
"Kroger " already the mo't w1dely Ulspe"ed supermarkel cham m
Amenca and we are reapmg the benef1ts of that diverSity ...
P1chler d1d not mentl()n Saleway. and Kmger 'poke,man Paul Bermsh
would not comment when "'ked Wedne,day 11 the feller w,1s relernng to the
Cahforma company. Safeway also has a 't commented on any possible merger.
But pubhcal1ons rangmg lrom Busmess Week to Industry lr&gt;de newsletters have= carriet.l spe.:ulallvc= rc=poi'h "'lOll~ Aug.uo.;t
Bu,mess Week reponed that s,,few,,y has built up,, $2 billion &lt;.'ash hnard
that could be used to buy another company Last year. Safeway bought Cal iforma-ba,ed Vons Co. 111 a $1 5 billion deal That gave Sateway mcreases
of .10 percent in ,,,les and 35 percent m mcome durmg the linal three quarters of 1997 Safeway recently acquired still another company. CarrGollstem Foods. wh1ch IS Alaska's largest retailer.
The expected earn10gs per share mcrease. wh~eh Kroger management
also had noted m July. " more than Kroger\ earlier proJecuon,. Management sa•d that " because the company ha' whlllled costs through mass buymg and IS benefiting lrom new technology and capital mvestmenls 1n store,.
The company has contmued to reuuce corporate debt 11 acquired 111 fendmg
off sepamte 19K8 takeover allempts by Dan Group Inc. and Kohlberg KraviS
Roben' &amp; Co.

Local News in Brief:

Ohio weather

I

ba.'ICd on our interv~ews With Ha•el. most animated when d1scus&gt;1ng his
He's a president who effuses the favorite mu.sic and what it meant to
ideallsttc refrJtn from ··lmagme:· him.
The music. he sa1d. became
the Lennon standard: ··1 hope some1mponarn
during the Iron Cunam
day you w1ll JOin us/ And the world
that
followed the bnel
darkness
wtll ll'e a.' one ... ··
period
of
openness
and reform
For a long t1me. these Iynes were
known
a.'
the
"Pmgue
Spring" nf
wnnen m large gr~ffit• on what is
known as "The Lennon Wall ... 1968 -- and ended when Soviet
down at the hottom of the hill from tanks rolled IR
.. After 19611 111 this country folthe Castle. near the Charles Bridge
and off on a qu1et lane of its own. lowed a period of darkness and all
The wall of protest and pop began !he music had to go undergruund...
not long after Lennon wa.s munJered Havel explained. " Rock bands like
the 'Piasuc People nt the Umverse·
in New York City in 19110.
Nightly. it would become a.' cm- had to go underground and also use
ical to the underground anu.Com- pseudonyms." It was the arrest and
munist re•oluuon as poster an trial of the 'Plastic People.. rnck
became in Poland or grJffiti-strewn band that mobilized Havel and olhwalls tn the People's Republic of ers to found. m 1977. "Chaner 77"
Chma. The wall would he whne- --a document &gt;~gned by mtellectuals
wa.shcd by authonties regularly. but calling for new freedom from the
new ponrdils of John Lennon and a CommuniSts.
Havel was so anx1ous to see a •ariety of revolutmnary sayings or
(The ' Piasuc People' Czech band
man like Patrick Henry that he lyrics fmm the 60s would appear.
toulns name frnm a song hy Amerdropped by the Wh1te Housc earlier
It wa.s not happenstance. then. Ican iconoclastic rnder Frank
m the day to attend the rehearsal -- that during one lengthy. e.clust•e Zappa. The late Zapp.1 served lm :11
which is unprecedented in \Va.shmg- mterv1ew by our associate Dale Van time as an nllicml Czechnslovakl:111
tun . It d1dn't surprise us. however. Alla late one evening. Havel became representative nn trade. culture and.
tounsm. after the revolut•on.)
·
"It was then... Havel explained
of the 70s. "that the forbidden mu,ic
bmught us together. a very broad
spectrum of people who were umted
hy the splfil of resl•lance. And
music. thus. bo.:ame resistance. 1r
was the lillie candle 10 a dark forest
that gradually became a torch ...
It was no a&lt;:c1dent that Havel
later dubbed the ovenhmw of the
CommuniSts as the "Velvet Revolution ... panly m remembrance of t~e
inlluence of last week's featured
performer, Lou Reed. whose 60s
band. the Vdvet Underground. pr\):
vided msplrJtion.
For the record: Reed d1d not perform his lone Top 20 hn from 1973.
"Walk on the W1ld Side." The Iynes
are a bit too close to Clinton· s confessed behavior and current troubles.
Jatk Anderson aad Jon Moller
an: writers for United Featun:
Syndicate, Inc.

music of depan·
ed Beatie John
Lennon o•ercame
the
destructive cult
of personality
around the Communist despot
Vlad1m1r Lemn.
That"s
the
real story of
Moller &amp;
Czecboslovalua 's
Anderson
1989 Vel•et Revulution. whose leaders took their
mspimuon from the Iynes and beat
of 1960s BritiSh and Amencan rock
and roll.
The underpinnings of the unusual
revoluuon were e•ident when PreSIdent Havel wa.s m town la.sl week for
a slate dinner. HIS maJOr request.
that legendary rocker Lou Reed perform at the black-tie gathenng.

A call for President Clint~n's resignation
,-----::::=~-,

JU•l•ce m the sex scandal -- that Wilham
JdleN&gt;n Chnton " no longer lit to
ot:cupy lhts nauon \ h1g.hest oftice

longtime
employees of the
Wh1te House
TrJvel Oftice
were fired and
replaced by the
president\
&lt;t&gt;Usin. Catherine Comehu,.
and the pres•·
dent''
close
Perkins
friend. Hnllyw1xld pnlducer
Harry ThHil:L'"'"· The While Hou.se
Jc:ma.l. ~lltt'k! lunc. •h.u the lirings w~re
nnlered by either the president or li"l
lady. or that nepotism or cronyism
played a role.
But two years alier the firings. a
memo 'urfaced. wnuen by former
While House a1de David WatkiO,.
show10g that H1llary Rodham Clinton
played a much b1ggor rule in the lrJvelnflke linngs than prevlllll.sly :.:knowledged by the Whne House
Th1s began 1he fanuliar pmctK:e in
While House scandal• of lymg about
the rule of either the pre,dent or liN
lady 10 uneth1cal or 1llegal acUv1ly.
Meanwhile. the White House tried
to cover 1h trJCks by nnpmperly calhng
'" the FBI -- 10 a dear abuse of presidential powor -- to gm up some kmd of
cnnunal evuknct! agamst the fira.ltrJvel-oftke wnrke". The mam wrget of
these trumped-up charges. fired Tm•el
Ollice Dua:tnr B•lly [}Jit. wa.s :•.:quilted by a JUry alter a mere two hou" of
dehbemunn
- Wtutt!water This scandal began so

For tho~ of you who' ve torgouen

long ago that most Amem.·ans don't

ahout Cltnton\ numerous scam.Jak
he~\ a ~Y il&lt;lp'''

remember what 11 w," all ahi&gt;Ul Let "'
refresh lhelf memnnes
Bill and H•llary Clinton were c1~
owrers nf a real estate venture - While-

By Joseph Perkins
"tl prom1se)the 11lOSl eth1cal admmi,tmtlon 111 the h!Sllll)' of the RepubliC ...
So smd B1ll Clmton in January 11)1)}.
shortly altl!r h1s maugurJUOfl ao.,; th1s

nat1on \ ~2nd preSident
Lawmake" 1111 Cap1tnl Hlfloughtln
be remmded nt Clinton\ wunls "' they
"'""der. live .md a hall )ears l.ller.
wh~th.!r hh cnnJucl 10 olli..:c! mt!nl..,
unpt:.u.:hnK:nl or mli!re cungress&amp;onal

ce:nsure
When the HI&gt;U&lt;e ultmtately cnnJuct~ ~~01ng~ -- llllpt;!~~ehn'k!nl ur l&gt;lhc!rWise -- the suhJecl manor should not he
lnmted to the pres1dentml sex sc'alldal.
For that " only the latest in a senes of
scandal, lor wh1ch the pre'1dent ha.' yet
to be held fully acmunlable.
Indeed. 11 a dec"'"" to 1mpeach or
censure the preSident Is made •lnctly on
the ba.-.s of his adulterous sexual aft:ur
wnh former Wh1te House 1111em Molllc.l Lewmsky. then .-en those lawmal&lt;ers who· w pubhd y rebuked the preSIdent .. Democmt' and Republican•
ahke -- would. no doubt. bend toward
the le,ser pumshmenl. 11 only to 'P""'
the nauonthe ordeal of impeachment.
But. agam. the Wh1te Hou&gt;;e sex
SL·~mJal 1s not an 1solated nccumnce.
ThiS president ha.' e'whhshed a pattern
of uncth~eal and unlawful conduct over
the course ofh1s O'al Otlice tenure.
And n " because of the 'um total of
tr::msgress1ons -· not JUst h1s p!!IJUJ)I.
Witness l:tmpenng ~Uld obstructiOn of

h1'

-- Tr.Jvdg.ue Nn So~lllOI!r hat.l Clinton
moved 1nlo the Os al Oftice that seven

water Devek&gt;pmenl - with Susan and re;:lcct•m campaign bmke vinually
Jim McDou~. who also owned Madi- every lederJI eie&lt;.11lm law on the books
Sllll Guamnty Savings and uJWI in Lit- For in-;taoo:, lederJI law requ•res that
tk Rock. Ark. McDnugal wa., suspect- presidential c-andidates abide by spended by ICtleml regulator.; to have diven- ing limits 1f !hey a1:1:ept tederJI matched fund, fmm the thrill to Whitewater mg funds ti'tm1lhe taxpaye".
Develornltnl.
A re&lt;.l!nt F.:&lt;JerJI Elec1ions Comm••·
Meanwhile. H1llary Clinklll. aJUnll.- su111 aud1l ""rtdodes that the pres1dent
partner lor Rose Law F1nn in Lillie 1llegally mcumvented the spen&lt;lmg
Rock. wa.s 1111 a S2.1KXl-a·nM&gt;nth legal hmil hy hav1ng the Del1u:mtic Nalk&gt;nn.1:uner w1th McDougal. In September al C.xnmlltee funnel $42 m•llum lo
I'!%. F.:&lt;JerJI Oep,;1t lnsurdlk.-e Corp. state parties for televiSion L~Hnn~en:•al•
mv.'Siigators "'liiCiuded that a dn&lt;:u- that """' nhVIIlU.&lt; ad' fill' the Chnton,
n~ent dmfted hy the future liN kldy ha1l
Gore tid,et.
bc..:n u..:.J hy McDougal's S&amp;L "to
One of the pn.'Sld.!nt's lop tund-nu•decelve federJI hank examiners."
er.. wa.s John Huang. a filmier Coq•·
Ultimately. Madison Guarmty went · men.-e Depanment a.ssist:ull secreta~)(
belly-up. at a c'OSI of $50 milh1m to tax- He illegally r.used atlea.st $2 million. in
payers. Had the liN lady not helped Clinton's name. hnm t&lt;&gt;re1gn nauonals.
McDougal dec-eive bank regulators. the
White House ollicmls originally
fL-derJI government would have been msisted they had never heard of Huang.
'pared that expense.
That W:t(. until federJlmvesu~ors dis•
The Whitewater S&lt;-andal hlew up covered thai the huckrJker had v1"led
following the suicide of White House the Whne Hr&gt;Use 7M tones in hllle 1111&gt;re
deputy "lllnsel Vincent Foster. Hillary than a ye:u- -- typ•cal of the hes the
Clinton's lonner partner at Rose Law White House ha' prumulgated to misFirm. No smner had Foster's dead lxxly lead scandal•nvesllgators
been d!SI.~&gt;Vered that White House :udes
Taken sepamtely. the pres•dential
rm,...-ked his offic-e k&gt;Oiung for White- sex «:andal. the TrJvelgate sc-Jndal. the
waterev1denc-e that might prove 1ncrim- Whitew.uer scandal and the campaign·
m.1tmg to the liN lady.
linan.:e ":andal may n1~ appear to 4ual·
White Hrlllse nllicials pn&gt;VIded led- 1fy as "high cnmes and m•sde·
eml mvest1gat1"' w1th an mventory nl llle'JR&lt;"'. " But token together. they adu
11ems '" Foster's n!lice. But many up to a c"nupt president who ha~
nuuhs had pa.o;.sed befOre investigalr"' repeatedly denlllllstmled contempt t&lt;l(
d1scovered that a file penainmg to the law' olthe land
Whitewater had been removed ln&gt;m
II Chnton truly lw.s the nat1on 's besi
Fostor\ safe.
mterests at hean. a.s he pn&gt;fes.scs. he will
The While House suggested that this res1gn before lhe year "nut. If he refuswa.s merely an ove"1ght on their pan. es to go wilhngly. lawmake!\ must do
But it wa.s an obv1ous obstruction of JUs- the11 solemn duty and remove h1m from
11ce. a pr'Jt..11ce the Wh1te H1lllse has mu- nllice.
.
tmely deployed when c'OIIfronted With
Joo;eph Perkirt' is a columnist ror
scandal
The San Diego Union-Trihune.
-- Dnnofl!ate The president's IW6

The two lives of George Corley Wallace
By DeWAVNE WICKHAM
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - Geofl!e Wallace hved two live, .
He entered the natumal spnthght
1n 1%3 a' a lire-hreathm~ race-hall·
mg Alabama governor ;;,ho stoked
~,~_.,........,__
the flames of thiS nat ton\ racial diS0 111911 by NEA, Ole.
content when he declared .. ,egregatron now. segregatiOn tomorrow. seg"Gtve me a copy 1n a plam, brown paper
. regation forever .. m h1s maugunal
wrapper. •
address
More than anyone m public otlke.
Wallace " responSible lor loosmg the
Amencan Knstallnacht. the South's
v1olent re'ISlance to the 1960s c1vil
nghts movement. Dunng hiS first
By The Aaaoclated Press
three lerms m the Alabama 'tateToday is Tuesday. Sept. 22. the 265th day of 1998. There are 100 days left house. Wallace wa.s an "on of Ku
Kluxers and arch-enemy of civ1l
in lhe yellt.
Today 's Highlight in History ·
nghts actiVISts During three camOn September 22. 1776. Nathan Hale wa.~ hanged as a spy by the Bntl'h paigns for the preSidency. Wallace
during the Revolulionary War.
plumbed the depths of racial hatred
from one sea to shining sea.
On this date:
In 1656. in Patuxent. Md .• an all-female JUry heard the ca.o;t of a woman
But the George Wallace whose
accu5ed of murdering her ch1ld. The JUry •oted for acqumal.
lxxly hundml.' of mourners - white
In 1789. Congress aulhonzed the office of Postmaster-General.
and black - turned out to see before ·
In 1792. the French Republic was procla1med.
his burial was a changed man.
Maybe the 1972 assassination

Today in history

,,uempt that left
hun paralyzed
from the waiSt
Jown
turned
htm from a b1gnt
to a man who
wanted to heal
the
racial
wounds he had
opened. Maybe.
as more and
Wickham
more southerners
came to accept
mtegrat10n. Wallace JUst changed
with the t1mes.
Whatever the reason. change he
did.
During his final term a~ go•emor.
Wallace named three blacks to hiS
Cabmet and many more to other
posts throughout his admini&gt;lllltion.
And in 1985 he joined Jesse Jackson
and other c1vil righL' leader.; to mark
the 20th anniversary of the Selma lo
Montgomery man:h - a ci•il right~ '
protest that Wallace went on
statewide television in 1965 to
denounce. jusr hours before it got
under way.

"I wa.s an Old-South governor anrl
a New-South governor.'' Wallace told
me seven years ago when I asked him
how he wanted to be remembered A'
an Old· South governor he fought to
hlock the push toward tntegrJtion As
a New-South governor- the term he
used to descnbe those elected "after
the mce que,llon was settled" Wallace told me he had wrongly
championed mcwl segregation.
"It's better like it IS ... he smd
about the outlawing of rJCial segregation .. A lot hetler."
Of course it's easy to be cynical of
Wallace's con•ersion. the damage he
d1d makes it hard for some to forget
- or forgive. But it's hard to find
fault with the good thmgs he did durmg the la.~t yeii!S of his life.
Shonly before his death in 1987.
Ros.' Barnett - the segregationist
who wa.' governor of Missis.sippi
during lhe early '605 - wu.~ unrepenlllnl over his efforts to undermine
the civil rights movement "Generully speakina. I'd do it all over &amp;Jain."
he said of his racist ways.
Both Tuskegee and Aluboma State

universities - two of the South's
lcadmg black h1gher educat1on mstitutions - awarded h1m honorary
degree'
For whatever reason, he changed
hiS views dmmatically about rJce
relations in thiS country -and hisll&gt;nans 'huuld acknowledge a.s mu,h.
So. ton. 'hould the re'l of us.
Thnlllj,rhout much of hiS public hfe
Wallace had harmful innuence )&gt;n
American life. but in the en&lt;l be \fill.'
squarely on the right Side of hi,to'ry.
A lot of people he onc-e tried to hoiJ
bad benefited fmm his conversion.
Like most of us. Wallace wanted
to be remembered fondly.
That's a.sking too much
But it is not unreasonable for people to embrnce the good man he
became late in life while rejecting the
hateful person he was during the heyday of the civil righL~ movement.
George Wallace deserves to be
remembered a.s a man who repudiated his segregationist views lllll1 •pt:nt
the la~r years of hi~ life trying, to undo
some of the great harm he caused tllis
nation.

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Cl1998 AccuWealher, Inc.

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Snow

Today's weather forecast
By the Associated Press
Ohio
Today .Mostly sunny and cool.
Highs in the upper 60rl Light nonhra•l Wind.
Tonight...Ciear. Lows in the lower 40s. Calm wind.
Thursday ... Mo,tly sunny and
pleasant. Highs in the m1d 70s.
Extended forecast
Thursday n•ght Mostly clear

Lows in the lower 50s.
Fnday... Panly cloudy. Highs in the
upper 70s.
Saturday...Panly cloudy. Lows in
the upper 50s and highs in the lower

Southea~tem

so..

Sunday...Panly cloudy with a
chance of sh.&gt;wers and thunderstorms. Lows from the upper 50s to
the lower 60s and h1ghs in the mid
70s.

Another cool night
forecast for tonight
By The As.•1ociated Pnss
Autumn arrived tbi' mommg. and
11 fell like it. Temperatures in Ohio
were mostly in the 40s.
And the same thing will be true
tonight, as a high pressure system
keeps the .slate's sk1es cloud-free, the
National Weather Serv1ce smd.
More southerly winds on Thursday will warm temperatures a bit,
forecasters said. H1ghs will be in the
upper 60s to mid-70s.
Clouds will increase lllll1 there will
be a chance of ram.
The record-high temperature for
thiS date at the Columbus weather
stat1on wa.&lt; 91 degrees in 1945 while
the record low wa.~ 33 in 1995. Sunset tonight w1ll be at 7:27 p m. and
sunrise Thursday at 7:21 a.m.
Across the nation
A chilly blanket of cool air settled
over much of the East this morning
while an arc of thunde"torms sliced
across the Plains. Florida nervously
eyed a hunricane sw~rling toward the

coast.

A wid front wa.~ pushing across
the Great Lakes region south across
the Ohio Valley. the Tennessee Valley, the Northeast the M•d-Atlantic
reg1on and most of the Southea~t.
A few localized shower.; were
expected over nonhem New England. brisk winds were sweeping
along the Nonbea.sl and frost wa.&lt;
predicted tonight in the mountrun valleys of the Ea.&lt;!. Temperature' in the
Nonheasl weren't expected to stray
much past the 60-degree mark.
As the cold front slulters southward and cla.shes with the warmer au
around the Gulf Coast, showers and
thunderstorms were expected to
drench Florida by afternoon Hurri cane watches were in effect for much
Q.f south Florida a.s the area braces for
the-effects of Hurricane Georges.
Showers also were predicted
across the Great Plains, pantcularly
from the western Great Lakes region
south across ponions of Nebraska.

flepu blica ns. ••

Continuectrrom page I

" misleading cover stories" for h•mself and Ms. Lewinsky

promised a job for my silence."
In response. Deputy Independent
Counsel Roben J. B1ttman wrote the
panel that the Starr repon cited Ms.
Lewinsky's statement 10 two place,.
And Billman noted that the repon
also stated that Clinton suggested

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................... ..4n
Akzo ...................................... 36'1,
AmrTech ...............................481.
Ashland 011 ......................... 48 '\.
AT&amp;T ..................................... sel.
Bank One ............................. 46l.
Bob Evans ........................... 20')•
Borg-Warner .........................39'o
Broughton .............................18'1.
Champion .............................10'1..
Charm Shps ..........................4').
City Holdlng ............................ 40
Federal Mogul ...................... so l.
Gannett ................................57'l•
Goodyear .............................54l.
Kmart .................................... 13'1.
Kroger .................................. 48'1•
Lands End ........................... 17.,_
Umlled ................................. 25'1.
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 16),
OVB .......................................40),
One Valley ............................ 33'•
Peoples ................................. 26!.
Prem Flnl. ..............................19l,
Rockwell .......................... 39\.
AD/Shell ............................... 49'1.
sears .....................................44'1,
Shoney's ................................... 2
Star Bank ..............................&amp;7l.
Wendy's ...............................21l.
Worthlnglon ........................ 11 '\.

The 'Daily Sentinel
(USPS ll:l-960)
Community Ncws~ptr Holdlqa.IDC.
hblishcd ovcry aftcJOOOn, Mondoy lluouJh
fridly, Ill Cout1 Sl . POffiCfl&gt;y. OhiO, by lllc
·Ohio Valley Publl1h1'1J Company Second c:lau
poltiJC paid at Pume!O)I, Otuo.
Meal»tr: The N~;ah.:d Press and the Ohto
'Newspaper Als4x:h•don.
Poaau~B: Send addKJI corrections 10 The
Dally Scnatncl, Ill Court SL, P()mcroy, Dttio
'4376';1

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Automakers slashing
prices on new models I Meigs announcements I
DETROIT CAP)- Falltyp•cally
isn't the best time of year to get a
good deal on a new car or truck As
the new model year begms, automak~r&lt; usually boost prices and reserve
di..:ounts for the previous year's
few leftovers
Not this year.
Aotomakers are in an all-&lt;&gt;ut price
war They're luring customers into
showrooms with lower sticker pnces,
rebates up to $5.000 and financing
rates below I percent. Deflation has
come to the auto 1ndustry - and II
may be here for a long while.
"Consumers are getting more for
their money than they ever have
before." analyst Lincoln Merrihew of
J.D Power and Associates said. "It
doesn't look like it Will change

soon."
What makes this fall unusual is the
discounts are on the rise while the
economy's running on all cylinders.
ga.wline 's cheap and summer sales
were robust.
The primary rea.~ons: There is
mtense competition, and the mduslry
has more capacity to build vehicles
than worldwide demand warmnts.
"The B1g Three almost resemble
OPEC now -they JUSt keep cutting
prices." sa1d econom1s1 Bill Wilson
of Come rica Bank.
OM's rebates are aimed at recovenng market share the company lost
after two devastating stnkes that all
but halted its Nonh American production m June and July Its US.
market share plummeted 10 percentage points to around 21 percent m
July and Augu.st.
The world's biggest autom:1ker
needs to get 1ls 'hare back ahove lO
percent. or it may be forced to slow

y~arbuok:-&lt; arc m

Last year's semors

and family member may p1ck up the
books or purcha.se them at $30
Re-viul ..,rvit;e;
Revi•al services at the Calvary
P1lgrim Charel nn Stale Rnute 141
w1ll .-.mllnue through Sunday The
Rev V.O Agan IS the evangeliSt The
Rev. Victor Roush, pastor. mvnes the
pubhc.
Hearing slated
A heanng on the Me1gs County
Depanmem of Human Services·
Me1g' County plan has heen sel for
I p m. Munday. Sept. 2X dunng the
regular meclmg uf the Mc1g~ Cuunly CnmmiSsu&gt;ners Cnp1es of the plan
are available for review at the M«g•
County Pubhc L1br.ry m Pomeroy
and al the commisstoners • office

normul ··

Two tickets net Buckeye 5 prize
CLEVELAND (APl - There
were two tickets sold nammg all live

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tue,day admiSsions - Dorothy
Badgley. Racme.
Tuesday discharges - Peggy
Hanman, John Houck.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Sept. ZZ - Luella
Carlisle, Nelda Ohlinger, Mary H•ll .
Blanche Kanhouse. Mrs . Robert
Jacks and son.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Stacey
Cline. son. Vinton, Mr. anrl Mrs.
Matthew Combs, daughter, Racine,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Powell.
daughter, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Sparks, daughter, Galhpolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Brent Zirkle. son.
Pomeroy.
'(Published with pemnisslon)

HICK DAVE"PORT

CorreCtion Polley
Our ...ta ..,..."' fa a U - b to bo

•~rete.

A Pomeroy woman wa&lt; shghtly injured in a one&lt;llt acc1dent Tuesday
on SR 124. the Gallia- Me~gs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Judith A Stewan. 43, 4 Oak St , was transponed to Veterans Memonal Hospital by the Meigs EMS fullowmg the 6·30 a.m. accident, acwnling to the patrol. She wa.' later treated and relea.o;ed, a hospital spokesperson said.
Troopers ,.id Stewan wa.~ ea.,tbound m Sutton Townsh1p when the
mmivan she drove went off the nght side of the mad and struck a utility
pole.
Stewan mformed the patrol her mmi•an wa.' forced off the road by a
westbound -.hide. according to the repon.
The minivan was shghtly damaged. and Stewan was cited for failure
to control.

"EET and GREET

Reader Serv1ces

Applications available
now for Regular HEAP

Yearbooks hen
The 1997-98 Eastern ll1gh school

A Pomeroy man wa~ cited by the Me1gs County Shcnffs Office to
Meigs County Court early Tuesday e-.ning on a complatnt of domestic
violence.
Ste•en D. Parsons is accused of chasing hts w1fe. Cmdy R. Par.;ons.
w1th a motor vehicle and holding up a gun for her to see followmg a verbal argument, according to a MCSO repon.

One-car accident causes injury

~

Democrat Candidate
for County commission
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24TH 7:00
AT
Meigs Co. Democrat Party Headquarters
220 E. Main St. Pomeroy
Deaaert Buffet will be aerved
Donation will be accepted
Pd lor by M. C. 0. P. E. Can P.O. b 80, Pomeroy, ""- Slavin, n..
..

numbers drawn m Tue,day mght's
Buckeye 5 drawmg. and each wmmng ticket IS wonh $100,()()(), the
Oh1o Lnnery sa1d.
The wmnmg tickets were purchased at a Sunoco Food Man 111
We't Carrollton near Dayton and the
EastSide Carryout m Gahon near
Mansfield.
There were 135 Buckeye 5 tickets
wnh four ol the numbers. and each IS
wonh $250. The 3,955 tickets showmg three of the numbers are each
wonh $10.

***************

[i] BIG

' " '•·

•

•.-o-. · ..

1 - 740·753 · 3 ~ 00

•

l\lo\'J£5

Mn!

n•·~• foHHl'4! '

i&amp;!

Meigs County Junior Girls Celebrate "Women's Health Month"

The Meigs Counly Proseculing Atromey's Office and Ihe Meigs County Health Department will
hosl "A Women's Day for Sampling Heallhy Choices: Meigs Teen Health Fair" allhe Family Life
Center in Middleport, Ohio on Thursday, Seplember 24 from 9:30 until 2:30. Eleventh grade
females from the three Meigs Local Schools will be allending the even!. Teenage girls will have
1he opporlunily to gain knowledge, improve decision making skills regardmg health and risk
raking behaviors, improve personal wellness, discuss eating disorders, review self-esteem, and
.
explore career choices. The conference is provided through the Ohio Department of Health
Promotion and Risk Reduclion and Ohio Univcrsily College of Osleopalhic Medicine/Area Healrh
Education Cenler. Agencies mvolved in planning the conference include the Meigs County Health
Department, prosecuting Attorney's Office, Ohio Unive!Sity, OSU Exlension Office, Meigs Local
Schools, Holzer Meigs Clinic, and Family and Children Council. Numerous businesses have made
donations of prizes thai will be given away throughout the day. Food and snacks are being
provided by the Family Ute Cenler. Meigs Local nursing assistant class will be registering
participaniS in the morning and providing blood pressure screenings at noon.
Communily leadeiS are invited to stop by and talk lo the teens. Displays will be set up during

,,,,...... """'"""·

~

' .... '• 1:. ,_, ·'
~.

1!,

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production. close plants and order Trilll atncelled
layoffs.
Jurors summoned for duty in the
"We're going to be fighting for
Me~gs County Coun of Common
every sale we can get." GM ChairPlea.s
on Sept. 29 need nut repurt at
man Jack Smith said la.\l week.
that
time.
However. they may be
The latest rebates comcide with
needed
for
jury
duty on OcL I. Jurors
price cuts on some '99 models.
requested
to
call
the evening of Sept.
Ford Motor Co. is offering ils nag30 to determine if the trial will go forship Taurus LX sedan at $1.000 less
ward
than the st1cker for a comparably
equipped '98. TheSE wagon vers1on
Name omitted
1s down $1,840. S1milar discounL' are
The name of Kenny Ebh n was
offered on the Taurus'twin. the Merommed from a repon la.st week on
cury Sable.
On top of that. Ford is offering Improvements to lhe park system m
$500 rebates or discount financing Middlepon Eblin assisted with the
construction and installation of picrates on the Taurus and Sable.
Other automakers have kept prices nic tables at General Hanmger Park
unchanged. but added more standard and Dave Dile• Park.
equipment. The base sticker price of Volunteers needed
the popular Audi A4 sedan, for examVolunleers to work in the souvenir
ple. remains at $23.790 for '99, but
booth
at the Stemwheel FestiVal are
the car now includes keyless entry.
needed.
Mary Donna Davis IS
lockable headrests and a first-aid kil
requesting that those Willing to work
as standard equipment.
contmct her at 992-6107 Ill' call 992Though sales through August
5974 Volunteers are needed for
were robust, there lite some recent
Thursday. Friday and Saturday.
signs that the market may be softenThe P. A Denny. she reponed. w•ll
ing
be
here and offering rides on Fnday
An Spinella of CI"W Marketing
n1ght and Saturday afternoon. TickResearch said dealer floor traffic was
ets will be a•ailable at the souvenir
down an average of nearly 18 percent
nationwide for the month through !KlOth.
Sunday - an unusually sharp dmp.
Expo meetlnJ planned
The recent gyratiOns in the stock marTown and Country Expo meellng
ket may be panly to blame.
will be held this Thursday. 7·30 p.m.
Of course. •f sales fall. that o.ill
al the Meigs County fairgrounds.
only guarantee more incentives.
"It's really rough," sa1d Alan
Helfman. general manager of RIVer
Oaks Chrysler-Plymouth-Jeep-Eagle
111 Houston. "There\ hardly anyone
commg mto the showroom . h\ not

Domestic violence complaint filed

r clnel~.;.ti' ~..a· tea·
•

...-

dent mmors under 18. Wnllen •enficaiiOn of the ptev1ous 12 months
1ncome " required. Failure to pro-.de
required documentation wtll delay
the processtng of an applicatton.
The total household 1ncome of an
applicant must be at or below 150
percent of the 1998-99 federal poverty gu•dehnes, as follows:
One peoon, $12,075; two pmons.
$16.275; three people. $20,475; four
people, S24,675; five people,
S28.875; siX people. S3J.075
For households w1th more members. add $4.200 per member.
A copy of the applicant's fuel b1ll,
or a document showing their primary fuel and primary fuel supplies
must be provided. ApplicanL~ are also
a.sked to include a copy of thelf elec·
tnc bill if they do not have electnc
heat.
CAA staff are available to assiSt
Individuals wnh their application at
the centml office, 80 I 0 Stale Route
7 Nonh. Cheshire. the Gallia County CAA Outreach office. 859 Second
Ave .. Gall1pohs.llllll the Me1gs County Outreach office. 39350 Union
Ave • Pomeroy
Further informat1on "a•atlablc by
calling CAA at 367-7341 or 446·
6849 in Gallia County; 992-6629 or
992-5605 in Me1gs County, the Galha County Senior Resource Center at
446-7000, Meigs County Semor Citizens at 992-2161. or the HEAP hoiline at 1-800-282~80.
For the hearinl_!-impa~red with a
tclecommunicallon device for the
deaf (TTD), call toll-free al 1-til)().
686-1557.

A 19-year-&lt;&gt;ld Sandyville. W.Va.• man wa~ c1ted followmg a one-car
accident at the junction of state mutes 124 and 338 near Ponland Tuesday morning.
Shane E. Martin was eastbound on 124 when he failed to stop for a
stop s1gn at the JUnction of 338. accordmg to a Meigs County Sheriffs
Office repon. Manin's 1988 Mercury slid across the JUnction and struck
an embankment, sustaining light damage. according to the report .
He was cited on charges of failure to control and failure to stop for a
stop Sign.

------

• Columbua
--

~

Regular HEAP apphcattons for
the 1998-99 Home Energy Asststance
Program have been relea.~ by the
Oluo Department of Development
and are bemg distnbuted locally to
area busmes.'leS and public offiCeS
throughout Gallia and Meigs counties
for the a•ailability to applicants.
Among the places applications are
available include the Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency offices in
Cheshire. Gallipolis and Pomeroy,
JTPA offices, the Depanment of
Human Services. senior citizens center, Social Security. Veterans AdminIStmtion, county counhouses, post
offices, the electric company. bulkfuel vendors. pharmacie., banks. grocery stores and other business locations.
HEAP is a federally -funded program adminislered by ODOD's
Office of Commumty Semces. It is
designed to help low-Income Oluoans
meet the high cost of home heating.
HEAP makes a one-time payment
for most PUCO-regulated utility customer.. renecting their usage for the
winter heating sea.'IOII. Vouchers are
also ISsued to non-regulated utility
customer., ma.&lt;ler-metered and other applicants, who do not ha•e a utility b1ll in their name.
Applications will be accepted
fmm now until March 31. 1999.
A bousehold applying for HEAP
must repon total household mcome
for the past 12 months for all persons
18 years of age and older. Total
housebold income is defined a.&lt; the
gross income of all housebold members. except earned income of depen-

Area man cited following accident
INO.

~

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Sept 23

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moiler
You may say he's a dreamer. but
Czech Pre&lt;~dent Vaclav Havel "' not
the only one back home 1n Prague
Imag me .
lmagme a revolution agam'l
Commumsm so spawned by rock
and roll muSic that the first democ·
rauc prestdent there 111 40 years
descnbed 11 a.s the smgle candle !hat
kept freedom-lovmg hopes ah•e lor
the la.'t decade.
Imagine a playwnght-preSident
who sull spouts the h1pp1e rhetonc
ol the Amencan 1960s a.s 1f caught
m a ume warp -- talking about love.
peace and happiness: rouunely Signs

-

'

�,.

Sports
-·

The Daily Sentinel

Page 4 .:

-~-

Yankees sweep twinbill from Indians

.i
I

NEW YORK(AP)- Two down,
IW\)IO go.
The New Yorlt Yankees moved
lwo voclories closer 10 lhe AL record
for wins. sweeping a day-nigh! doubleheader from tloe Cleveland Indians
on Tuesday.
Rookie Shane Spencer hil lwo
home runs as !he Yankees won !he
opener I 0-4, !hen Hideki lrabu
pilched eighl suong innings for a ,_
I VICIOry
The Yankees improved 10 109-48.
The league record is Ill viclories by
lhe 1954 Indians.
"ll's somelhing 10 play for." Yankees fina baseman lino Maninez
saod. "Our division is clinched and
we have 10 keep playing and winning
ballgames. llhink I'd like to ge11ha1
record ."
The Yankees matched lhe secondhighest won lotal in learn hislory. The
1961 Yankees also won 109 games
while the 1927 club won 110.
"W hal means somelhing 1o me is
Ill wins." Yankees manager Joe
Torre said. "Two more would be !he
mosl ever for a Yankees learn. To me
!hat's significant"
The Yankees have five games left
10 reach !he Indians· mart sel 44

years ago.
Spencer went 5-for-7 wilh lhree
''ll's a part of our hostory and RBis in the doubleheader. He hi11wo
we're proud of it," Cleveland man- of the Yankees' four homers in the
ager Mike Hargrove said. "Bul firs! game 10 give New Yorlt a 101al
(Mart) McGwire and (Sammy) Sosa of 20 I, second-mosl in learn hi &lt;lory
have proven lhis year thai records are behind !he 240 hil in 1961.
made lobe broken. This franchise has
" He made a prelly good impres·
had !he record a long time."
sion loday," Tone said. "Hc's opened
lrabu ( 13-9) allowed three singles our eyes a lillie b11 with some of the
and a fiflh-inning double by Jeff power he's shown."
Branson. He slruck ou1 seven and
Spencer, Maninez and Scou Browalked IWO.
sius homered in a four-run second
"ll's nice 10 see him have a smile inning. Spencer homered agam in lhe
on his face." Torre said. "llhink lhe founh.
lalk we had in Boston did him a lol
Ramiro Mendoza ( 10-2) allowed
of good. He fell every pilch he lhrew four runs on seve_, hils in five innings
he wa.' pilching for his life. He's and became !he si~th Yankees pilchrelaxed now and llhink he worked on er 10 win 10 games lhis year. The last
his mechanics a lillie bit"
lime lhe Yankees had six I0-game
Chad Ogea (5-4) gave up lwo runs winners was 1977 - lhe laslleam in
in lhc firs! inning on Spencer's RBI !he majors 10 accomplish lhe feru was
single and Chili Davis' sacrifice fly. the 1987 Toronlo Blue Jays.
Rookie Ricky Ledee lripled home
Jim Bruske relieved Mendoza and
lwo runs off Ogea in lhe si~th. Ledee pilched three scoreless innings before
laler had an RBI grounder.
Joe Borowski pilched lhe ninlh.
Cleveland scored an unearned run
Dave Burba ( 14- 10) allowed five
1n the second inning when Jim
runs on eighl hilS in six innings and
Thome drew a leadoff walk. moved surrendered four ~omers . He was 410 lhird on Brian Giles' one-oul sin- 0 in his five slans coming into lhe
gle and scored on a lhrowing error by game.
calcher Jorge Posada as Giles slole
Maninez hil his 271h homer afler
second.
Bernie Williams drew a full-count

walk 10 give lhe Yankees a 2-0 lead
in lhe second .
Spencer connec1ed for hi.&gt; fiflh
home run and Brosius followed by
lining a full-counl pilch over lhe leflcenler field fence .
Spencer homered 10 cenler leading
off the founh for a 5-3 lead.
The Yankees scored five more
runs in lhe sevemh. Maninez hil a
lwo-run double and Brosius hi I a lworun single.
Notes: The slarl of lhe aflemoon ·
game was delayed IS minules
because of a showers .... Several players from bolh learn s were sli ll
auempling 10 contactlheir rela11ves in
Puerto Rico before 1he game afler a
hurricane slruck lhe island .. . lim
Raines underwenl an MRJ on his lefl
knee Tuesday. He has been expenencing discomfon for aboUI two
weeks and lhinks he is suffering from
1endm111s.... Darryl Slrawberry did
nol play afler being hi! on the lefl calf
by a pi1ch Monday nigh!. ... The four
homers given up by Burba were a
career high .... Williams entered lhe
game lied wilh Mo Vaughn al .334 in
lhe bauing race and wenl 2-for-4 wilh
a walk to raise his average 10 .336. Be
FOILS DOUBLE PLAY- The New York Yankees' Jorge Posada (20)
did not play in the night game.
is out at second base, but he gets in the way of Cleveland second
baseman Joey Cora

{'-

Rangers whip Angels 9-1, take two-game lead in AL West
AL roundup
By TOM CASTRO
Associated Press Writer
Texas Rangers manager Johnny
Oa1es' w"' pleased wilh !he end
result hi.,. team ·.,. ~cond slmight win
over lhe Anaheom Angels 1ha1 gave
!hem a two-game lead in lhe AL
Wesl.
But whal Oates really liked was
1he way the Rangers won.
.. A manager lokes lo see !hal."
Oales said after Te~as rouled Anah~im 9-1 al Edison Field on Tuesday
nigh!. lhe second slrJighl nigh! lhe

Rangers won by a 9-1 score.
Afler amvmg in Anaheim lied for
!he division lead wilh lhe Angels,
Te~as will try In complele a lhreegame sweep lonighl before finishing
lhe regular season wilh four games in
Seallle. The Angels wind up wilh four
al Oakland.
Helling (20-7) became jus! lhe
lhird 20-game w1nner in Rangers hislOry. allowong lhree hils over eighl
innings. The Z7-year-old righl-hander, who walked none and struck oul
Jive, allowed JUS! six balls oul of lhe
infield.
" II was a 11gh1 race comong in (lo

Quisenberry admitted to hospital _ _ _ _ _ __
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) ·Former Kansas Cily Royals reliever
ban Quosenberry. who had brain
tumors removed lhis year. wa.1 admilleu lo a hospilal Tuesday.
According 10 hi.1 family, lhe 45year-old is .. resling in GOO's peace."
'They a.1ked lhe public nol send cards
or nowers, bul said !hey would

appreciale prayers and lhoughls.
Quisenberry underwenl surgery in
January and June lo remove grade 4
lumors from his brain. Grade 4 is !he
mosl severe of lhe four gmdes given
10 such lumors .
The lhree-time 1\11-Siar who used
an unoothodo~ submarine pilching
slyle, recorded 238 saves wilh lhe.

45 horner' and a lll4!JOr l!!ague·
leading 157 RBis .
The Range" h&lt;!al Chuck Fonley
( 11-91 for lhe nimh consecu11ve lime.
In o1her AL games. il was Boslon
II. Tampa Bay 2: Toronto 7. Ballo·
more 3: Chicago 4. Minnesola I:
Delroio 14. Kansas Ci1y 4. and Sealtic 7. Oakland 6.
Red Sox II, Devil Rays Z
Boslon closed in on lhe AL woldcard h&lt;!nh behond Pele Schourek's
Jirsl won for lhe Red Sox sox we.:ks
after beong oblained from Houslon as
Boslon won at home In slay 3 1/2
games ahead of Toronlo.
Schourek ( 1-3 ) allowed six hir&lt;
over eighl innings and slruck oul five
wuh no walks.
The Red Sox Slaked him lo a 7-0
lead after three inmngs. getting Mx
runs on six hilS off Juloo Santana (5-

Baltmwre Onnk!&lt;~ .H SkyDorne .
Canseco s urp~a ssl!d hh prev1 ou\
career h&lt;!sl ol 44 1n I 4'1 1
Toronto has four games lei! whole
Boslon has five.
ToroniO's Chris Carpenler 112-7 1
improved to 6-1 over h1 s last nme
starts Mik~ Mus.,.1na ( 13-4 ) gave up
seven earned run.,. on e1ght h1ts m
seven 1nmngs.
While Sox 4. Twins I
Jamt:s B.tltlwm t&lt;..~me- wJthm three
outs of hos f11s1 career shutout and the
Ch icago Whole Sox won at Min nesota for 1hc11 liflh stra1ghl voclory.
Baluwon 11 2-6) .ollowed only one
runner to second base h.! fore he was
relieved by Bob Howry afler wa lking
Chris Latham leading off Ihe no nth.
Eric Millon (7. )4) was nearly '"

6).

double in 1he cighl h.
Tigers 14, Royals 4
Lu1~ Gonzalez homered and drove
m four run ~. kad1n!.! the Detroit
Tigers over the Kan sa~ C11y Royal s

ha~

Anaheim). and 1hese guys played
unbelievable ba-;eball. Obviously you
have lo like !he posilion we're on:·
Helling said.
The Angels. meanwhile. are slag·
gering.
"Our pride is al slake." Anaheom
manager Terry Collins said. "Our
guys won'! quil. These guys have
bounced back so many times. I'm
~ure they've got one more time in
them ..
The Rangers broke Ihe game open
m 1he eighlh w11h a three- run homer
by Luis Alkea and solo shoh by
Rusly Greer and Juan Gonza!CL. who

Royals from 1979to 1988 and was 22 wilh one save in lwo World Series.
He slill holds a share of lhe learn\
single-season saves record w11h 45 on
1983.
Quisenberry was formally inducled imo 1he Royals Hall of Fame in an
on-field ceremony on May 30.

Blue Jays 7, Orioles 3
Jose Canseco sci a new career
hogh wilh his 4Sih and 461h home
runs a.s Ihe Toronlo Blue Jays beallhc

good for

Rnhin

th~ Twin~

v~ntur.i \

until

g 1V1flg

(WO - OUI.

Scoreboard
Bw.eball

Plui&lt;Kklflht,,

71

1W

4ll~

1K'

M11111rr.t l

~' '14
.'i l ll.lfl

-4111

lK'
.'ill

I h••,~J.,

AL standings
II

lroom

101
M'i

Tnrunuo .

fill
11
JIJ

71i
h'l 1M

MJhHllllft'

T:tmpu Ka)

C'hll.I~O

77

Kan""' Cu~

71
M

Mm"""''"
l k 1 n~1

b'l

Tt':''

K"\ 1-'
74 K:!
7 1 Mt.

An.ttkuu
St:tnk

,o .. ~t. ~nu
l1111.h('(\ d11 1'

I)'J

'iiJ

fl !7

KK

711

'i\7

~~

KU

77

~ ~~~

74
"I!
M

K-4
K'i
KK

-4M

l.mm

CIM 'INN,\TI

:\til
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Mtlv.au~rt'

Pllh~mJ!h

7-Ctn Cnltnlillllt .l -11
K IJul'ollll Culln~o~n \ .(1
'J-Tul SJ h:~och!lll ·ll

-l:\~

p

llll'l-Hrun""'lL: C' l~ •~ l anJ 111 , . M.~rt••ll H •• rd 1n ~

.. Kn

77

I~ ~.'\ BI~J.Ctn

fl \

II'\

K~

.. u

( nillf,Min

,\tl.un:l..l . t·Jurn.l:t 1

(',.J"'·"'""

Ar11•11l.tiC
Iii I I'U\' 4 llt l\1\11~ II

.&amp;74

Il l'

J'i 1

IJ

11111 Ill It'

Muntrt':d '\ N Y \lrt \ 1
( ' lu~.lf" l 'uh., \ , ~111~ olii~ C't' !
l 1h1lulrlptu t Ill { 'I NC' IN N,\ Tl M

l.t" An~rlr ' 1, S,m D1t!!u!
S:.11 I r.uk N 11 14 l'm,hurl-'h !

TuNay's S&lt;"onos

11 11

Chtt.,~u Cut.._ tTr.t~h ,c l
IH.tll.jtk'-1 · !1! U'i fllll

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l"lnl.l;" \1. h1lt' "'"' -.1 ~h nlll!' ""·' I
Dc'll illl 14 1\ .m .. ,,, ( ~~~ 4
Tt'·'' '' i\11 ,11~1111 I
~~ uk 1 'l .•

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1 ~~~

r 111

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td 1 7 II;, p tl l
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,,.,.,,,k;.,r
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tkrlcmhc-.1.11· 11 7 ''~r m
l&gt;t!nul ol"lont' 7-111.11 Kan'"'" f111 tApp•tr 1-1•.
I&lt; II\ p m
Ch•• ·•!!•' \\ lult' \.•\ !11.mtut 11 ·1&lt;1 al Mulllt'\41la
1H,111.I.ill' 1 14!1it1'\pm
Tt\ :1• 1Hur~t'll 1&lt; - 1 '' .11 An.•hr•m Ill till) ~I
I Ul~pm

(), ,~l .tlltl II

),1111•1 7· 111 .11

St' ~lHit' ICiuu~k

li- 1111

Ill '\ fl Ill

Thursdu) 's gamrs
H.dWIHift' tl'on"lt' Il-KI al llno.:t un 1M~r1111tt IK71 7 ..... pIll
T.,lllfl·' H." 1 \b .utl " - ll l.tl N' Y:mltt'"
•ftlllt 1'! 7 t 7 '~rm
Ch'• ·'l!" "hilt' '"' tSn~dtr 7 - ~ 1 at Kan.,.., t'lt}

1t&lt;, ... ~~.1 .. 1 111 xu'\ r m
( '1.1· Vl.l.'\ N IJ I Wn~h l I ~ - 111 .11 M1nnr"ll~ IR.~tl ·
~t II 141 KII'\ fl rn
lr\ .I' IStlr ]1C - II1 .11 ~aUir iS ulill.l 1-11 IIIO'i

fllll

Atl.lhrt lll 1M•
11 -ICI lllll'i fl Ill

Oo11. rll

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NL standings

Nrv. Y,lfL

.

.

n ,...1'~1

1'&lt;1.

MM

~~'I

~tt

7!1

Thursday's ~ames
~ · \1 ,,1 S.m l ·r.ull.l'lutOnu

Ph1l.ulrlpl11.1 • ~•hil hn ' 1~ - 1~1 o~tl h•ml.1 tllrr·
1\;lllllrt 111 · 1~1 7 o ' pm
~t .. rurr d !\ ·'"1",. ' Ci 1~1 .11 S1 I ow' tO,ho•mr
4 -l1 K IO p 111
~llh•.ml.rr ' "~~"~l.ud Ill I~' .Il l .!'" An)!dt'
lt.th.~tll - 1i. lllll ~ pnt

Football

Mu1nr\ 1~1 \.(\
~Til\ F.1ll' \\1.tt..h JNI\1171 \ .1)
1-('ol l.&gt;t-\i,,J.-, 111~ ·1

4M i nt'n.lt~ll ·O
~-Ct n ~il N1l;h11la~ 1:!1 \ ./1
h rtiOHNVIU . ~. Sltl :fUIMN

I·C'untun M, Kmk} I I ::!1 l -11
:! -WaiTI'n HarJin~ tl .ll \.(1 ...

I

"~
":":"
,,. ,,,,
. I

1'1&gt;.

.237
.... 17K

STERNWHEEL REGATTA
CAR &amp; MOTORCYCLE SHOW
SATURDAY, OCT. 3

Registration 9 A.M.
HELD AT DON TATE CHEVROLET LOT
F1nt••Y Phttt will ~· t1klng plefuret

I I thfn) Crntt' r till '\ .(1
:!HI
2·Clll 1\;trtlt'~ lflll -11
J7'i
' · ll,un lt'r l'atnd li~nt) I ~ I l -11 .
14\
~ M.ulltnl&gt;lt':t-..:millJlll
117
Ci -Wr,l Jtlft' r.,on J -11
I ~4
f1 -N
S l{,lfl)!t' I l
1-MIIIt'r.tl Hitl).!t' '-II
70
K-Nt'll. M1dtllr'lu1Ln li(1rtlll_.! llrld Ill l II
CiCi
1J. \\',m-rn Kt'nnrd) 2-1
'i~
Ill Cil.llll~ IHt TK IMHI.I· \ .(1
4f•
{)lht'N n·.-dl int: 12 nr mnn.• ruinl, . I I ·R, ... L)
Rna lulh Wr .. t 1 '\1 ~~ 1:! -l!lullinn -l.l I \ !I lei·
HloottHI.tlc- llm "''nll. Ctilumhll .. fi11nr 4~ I ~ ·
WUI-IU I{SIH IIUi tiJ 411 lfi· HANNIUAI.I{I V
I H I'J 17 tl~~:t · Afl(ll.- t'rcrl. W.llnl.'J,tk . A.,h l.uid
Crt ,ll l~\\ \! llllllti ·Mtlhu t l Cit l .llth.tnl.' \'c-t ·

,r L._._._._._._._._..-. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

lun.•

1't&gt;
lh~

1 ~\

,.,~

I l-0 .

77

~ I 111.1.1'1&lt;1 ~7 ~~ · \\'clh11 llr ~ 4
~' ~ lnl dlc lu \t.ll h•n11.HI. ~ I ~ ~ - \ u mn111 \l;t \11 &gt;11
l.1 tl.u1~ 111 , 11J ~' lllc-H(ICIIMONI&gt; 1)/\1.1: '\!-.,

,,u llr-1 \1 \1

. 1 ~1

11 7
lUX

Ill l-11
t)tJ
7 JACKSON \ .(1
IN
K-Pnl •• nd Si=llllllilr~· Ill .l -0
H
1J-Akmn H11lxm \.u.
il
)IJ.('k lkll('th&lt;'IIOC 1 ~1 1 · 1
ffl
Oltwl"'l noct•h·laK 12 or mnl"l" puinh: 11 - D;~y
('h,llllll'l~tdt" · Juhtllllt' ~7 I ~ · Van Wtrt til .'\fl I l
Trt'nh1n b.l~t'\\uu•J Ill 4X 14 -Chagun !·all ' 1\rn
\ton -l4 l ~ · fl,,~ Vd!.t~r U.l) N It• Hrllnut til
l7 17-('u.,llt-.·lon Ill l.l IM ·CIIU'II·V IIll I 0
GAN 1-l .M \ l l'lllir l·t' tn Purrc ll M.trt.tn W111
lrr~ l tllt lt~tll.tn c·rrtl. ~h ::!I · Mitlllltl•'''" M.td!..,.tll
!.'i !::! Ott' I Hr'l•Ht W.- , 1 Hr.mdJ . Sh.-1 1'- ) :! II ~4
ll(lttTSMOl l'lll Ill IM ~~ · llu111m~ Valle) L'n11
Sdmnll-1

1~

r:b.

l'.riUP

1111

Division Ill

r..w
1-Y'"'

COLI IMJHIS . Oh1n II\ PI - tlt•v.· ;, , 1,11c: p:mt'l nl ' ~"''" ' V.flief' ,,n,l l'orl r:MI, ,I'Il'r' mit'' Oh11&gt; h tt=lt
"h1111l lutllh:~ll tram' m tht' liN ul f'll! lll Wt'tLIJ
I'NK 1'11.'11' fur The.- A'\4tt.' talt'd Prr" h)' OIISAA di·
' 1'11111" 11.11h \\llll-ln.,t mur.l .•nlillrl.ll (ll.•lflh tliN
plao.t ' '""' '" ra~nlht-.c!~l

illll1

W.!Ut'NII\1111~ · 1 .

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lit&gt;

.l.hll" Ktnlf' fl ~ I~ - IJ.:ot/,1 n~·r 11 1 ~Ci I ' M.t~l'idd
til ~l 14l·. tl\t"rf!nnl-l-.! 1 ~ - Ynu Cha!ll'} iiJ lh
Alltall•t' ll\ 17 -Nt'll. (',,rlt,lt TruiiH,ch I~ IK t.kntor l..t~t' C'ath "\(1 I'J ·WCH Mt.nl11 Tl.IU" :'.l
~~~ ('m Ruvt'r ll .twn ~ I ~ l - 1 1 .mn., tlh H11l~ N. mt~
Ill 17 ~:!tllt'I·Crhn.tMKh..,.,n I'

Ohio high school poll

Division I

Ewi:tl'm Di' "km

fum
•
:., -A.II.Inl .l lit •

I-I ~If .11 Mti\\ ,Jtt~c:t

l' ilhhtn !! h tl't'tn., ,. _,, , .n li.UII'r.m•Nit 1fi.ml
nrr 1 ! · ~1 \ l~ p 111
Atl.nu,t tSmoht J(l . lt at Flun~b tOt.tl.l :!-l•k
7·1t'irm
l'lul.ut.-lrtn, II'"""F•ol '1 · ~1 ,,, (' I NC' INN AT I
!l'am' " ·-It 1 11 ~ r '"
'-''•mr r.il ll'.n.,un 'i -ICI ,t\ NY '-1rh d11nr' •J.
l'il 7 -'O r m
AntPil.t tllrn&lt;' ~ I..I llt .11 1'" 1"1'-'lk&gt; 1,\ , .,... '" I \
I-l l K II ~ p 111
ll"u'h'l1 1Juhn"l •11 11· I I :u St l.t'lll ' 1Olt\'t'r -1- \J
K Ill p.m
S.m Dt~!!" t \.Jit- \ lfi 1J) .11 l.11' Angrlt ' ftiu
lwton '' lilt 1111\Ci I" m

l'ubl'-ur)!h ll )o:,"'n'
~ - 4 1 \ l'i fl\11

II J \ .IJ ..

,

Division V

Ill Ttlf111 l'11hunhtan J-11
n
Olht'r; n'f't•hlna 12 ur 11un·r pttint' : 11 Kmt'

Todayts games

I: VI·.I AND I

fnn1111u 1 B.,lllmon- l

HIIJ
'll
Kl

1}.(\tl

1&gt;11 N V Y.ml.r't• IH rt 1.\'1: 1. .\NI&gt; 4 NY
Y.,nl.~r' ~ ('I

? - S,IIcmt~ll ·U

~-NIIt' " ~hk.nll' )

lh~

Olhl'ro,: rrnh ln~tt 12 nr mnrl' pni ill~: 11 S rrm~ Krnwn Hul!-~ 7~ I ~ - Gr, m 1 tll c 121 M D ·
llrnlllrt.! 1-l ·t ·.uuun( cnl ( ',1th 111 'W I "'· Krn ·
1&lt;111 \4 II• Co• ld11a1c:-r 11 1?-ALI'I•n ~1.~n~ht'•l&lt;'t 11 1
\11 I K A. .. ~u .thu l .t U.1rh11r \..1 l'~ · l ' m W}lll\1111~ ' I
:!II Srm.t llt ~h \ ,, JJ~I ~ -l ~ 1·1'11\ITON I•J :!2 -Sulll 'an lii... I.RIIrrlll I M ~l - IM:O NfO N 17 ~ ~{"lc
( lr-.n~c- I fr ~.'1 -G I(anl I 'i 2fll lll' \·( ',1'i .1l i.t ~ 1.tf)!,11"t'l
1,1 MINHHHl. S.tndu 'l.l Pcrl. tn• 1~ . ~·J· l h t l&lt;~ l l

l'h

:!I If.
171
l.l9

2111

1-o.

111 Ch,•gnnl-'all., \ -11

Division II

I ·Za nt, \tll ~l~ l '\.(1
2-Ch.mlunt'it \ .11
l -l lmuniHWO 1.&lt;11-l' I \)l -U .
.l l.tl'o~nnn 111 \II .
'i -U.1rhtrtnntl1 \ .fl
fl -{'tulllu)Jhll r I 1 l -11

fb.

1J llrlh t il ~ Clc;1r hnlo. .1·11

~\

Tutsday's scorrs
'i41

...

Eltler Mtnl11r I l

wm
i.i:•J

70
. fll

2.'\ IK -Ci n Mueller 24 t~J lltCI· Ci,,h;uln.t Lm1·oln
Lal.t ll.l ll._l SJ l:t!.,.,:ml ~2 ~ 1 - Cln St. X. 1\lc! ttl 2~

.•n-. n"

\ "i.111 ll1q:u
s.• n 1 r.nll. I \I 'll
' -'" r\n ~ dr '

Division IV

llltl
)Il l
K7

H11h\\ \ ~111

N Unn1\l WtMM.I, Itrhl ~lnnrut Ct'lll . IK
~K l1 , hnn Andt'r' Hil 16 ::' 11 ll ltl ll 'l'AS VIIII .
V,\I II.Y M" '" 'lluuTu,J,m 1.\ \11-('0AI.&lt;iROVI.
DAWSfi N-HUYANl 14 \1 . 11.-dlotll C'h.111rl ll
\~Spun~ Lrth I ~

IriUil
.

I Ddftht" St John '
llcnl) Hll ' -U

11~1

l II

~ - St

l ·Nt' ll,tr~ (',11h 141 \.o
.l -Md)on.lltl\ II
'i lor&lt;~nlu 1! 1 .l -11 .

h·Ki d UHP!l&lt;llth I'\ 1.(1
7 C.-o l,n 11 lk I U
K i &gt;ch.nllt' ,\ )ch\ lllr1 ·11

•••••••••••••
COUPON
FREE HEARING TESTS

will be given In Melgs/Gallla Counties by

••
•

•
•
••

~·HEARING AID CENTER
Friday, September 25, 1998
In Dr. A. Jackson Bailes' Office
224 East Main, Pomeroy
9:00·Noon

• CaR TDII frn 1·800·634·5265 for an lmmel10te appointment.
Tht tests will be given by a Ucensed Hearing Aid Specialist

•

inning~

for his first career save.

Tim Belcher ( 14-13) is 0-4 life ~
t1me agamsl Derroil in Kansa.,. City :
Mariners 7, Athletits 6
Ken Griffey Jr. hiltwn home runs
and joined Babe Rulh and Lou
Gehrig as the only players 10 drive in
140 runs in 1hree conseculive seasons
as Seaule won al home.
Griffey hi1 solo homers in 1he third
and li flh innings lo give him anALIeauong 55 homers.
Seallle's Alex Rodriguez hil his
4 1sl home run 10 sellhe AL record for
home runs by a shonslop. He passed
Rico Pelrocelli. who hil40 home runs
Ill J%9 .
Jam1e Moyer ( 15-9) pilcheu s1~
onnmgs for lhe win. Mike Timlin
poiC~ed lhe ninlh for hos 181h save.
Jay Wilasick ( 1·2) was lhe loser.

·

T~!Ult
1-Cit'rn\.lntm,n \',,llr~ "" • 1~111 \ .o
~ - lklla1rr 1~1 \.1)
I ·\mand,t Clr~tfl f t'di. 1 II
w,~unr '~'
Ynu Ur,ulmt :l·H
fi -M.utut' Ferry 1::! 1 1·11
7-L una U.11h 111 \.0 .
K-Aun,r.tlll l -11

hm Ht"&gt;\l'f. Sh,t~t'r U1 ' II J 46 I 'i -M,I\\IIInn Pcrrv
4.'\ lfl-litlh.mllh11lhtm :!7 17-Wc .. lrr\ ll lr l\t1u1h

4\9

\\'t'"'""' Dh i .. i4~n

-&amp;Ill

.

ti n
1 \1(

111-Cirn'l' Cll} \ .fl
.
\II
Other~ rtt'rhin" ll or mon· puinh: II hr·
nwmt 1(,,._, ~~~ 1 ~-M :.n,litltl Sr ~.'\ I\ lllt'J-N C.tn-

-''J7

MIJ
M'i
Yl
It\

\\'Nt'm Dhi..Nn1
H'i 1:

\ " '"'"tun
('hll.l!!"

flii.J

Ctatr.l Oh hktn
.KH HI

~-CII.VI.L.-\:\'D

l ·~

I. 1'&lt;1.

liN -'K

\ · Nt'\1 Yor~ ..

lC'lr St l}! t\:.ll.llhl ll ~ - 1
-l -l iJlJlt'f Arltn~tnll \ -11
.'\ Wonlnnj:htll Ktlhuumc tl 1 \ .IJ
fi-Sir••n~"'lll't~l .lU

Ohi,iun

C~ nlr01l

FA"4rm f)h lsion

1~'\

up

two-run

Ju slln Thompson (11 - 14) had
0-.5 wtth one no-decision since
bealong Oakland IJ-4 on Aug. 14.
Frank Caslillo pi!ehed lour perfecl

~not:

• Anyone who has !rouble hearing or undersland1ng conversalion is Invited 10 •
1 have a FREE hearing lest lo see il!h1s problem can. be helped. Brong lh1s
• coupon wilh you lor your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
•
ARMCO, UAW, AND ALL OTHER
INSURANCE PROVIDERS
•
WALK-INs WELCOME
•

li

•

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

""rl. m ~ ·•l_.!rcr nk'lll \\llh i&gt;1t'llnu&gt;nl ol th~ S!M.llh Aj ·
IJ l&gt;.un 1llr l II
'\'\
1.11111~ Lt',t~ur thrnuj:h 10IXJ
10-l.ul\dh lilt \II
~4
Ulht·N n:ni\int.: ll nr murl' puinh: II No.:"
t"lur)~ll l !f'1n l• ll l.l.tnllt1147 i \ lnJ ~prrnkmr
Basktlhall
-lll 1.- T1H111 {.,1\nl 111 4:! I.'I I ,\NCAii TI.U
Nulinmtl l1111~k~lhMII A•'l••nd111Km
FIS HJH. C,\ rtl -11 ltlllli' I Diol.,ll,,rdtnN"nht'm . ·
I)I: NVJ·H. NlJGfii:'fS N.lllltll Mt~t D ' Antnm
Nr" lhl'mrll l7 Ill 1!1'11.111.- Si lohu ~ K JIJ Ill.- )·
~na~h . •1n d John 1.\H .I'. Mt~t' 1:\:m .. and l.11u1t
Alli\\CII' l'hm11uth ~7 2 1 Mtn ' ll"l ~4 :!::! lit e) ·
l),nn rutr a""tanlltl.il'ht''
Mlllt' r.. rurl Noll\ ..! ~ St l'u1l ~ I ~ -l - Kt111. 11ul ll
:!~ - C.Itlll I~
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YVednesday,~ernber23,

1998

Cubs' 5-2, Mets'
loss results in tie
in race for wild card

Phillies notch 10-8
victory over Reds
in 11-inning affair
ager.
By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNI\TI (AP) - Phillies
" I had never seen a guy come
manager Terry Francona saw back afler a sacrifice ny and hear hi&lt;
palience and huslle and 1hough1 il learn male&lt; say. 'Good JOb. sir....
was a beauliful lhing. Conc innali Francona ~.;aid .
1hird ba-;eman Aaron Boone jus! saw
Jerry Spradlin (4-4) pilched a
scoreless IO!h, and Ricky Bonalico
blight
"II was an ugly game," Boone gol lhree ou1s for his fiflh save .
" That's one of Ihe few limes Ihis
said of Philadelphia's I 0-8. 11 -inning
voclory over lhe Reds. "II was ugly year lhe key guys on our bullpen
couldn'l hold !hem," said Reds manon bolh sides "
Bolh learns failed to hold leads. ager Jack Me Keon. "I guess you
and in 1he end Reds reliever Todd could say lhe whole pilching slaff
Williams forced in lhe go-ahead run couldn't hold !hem. We juS! ran oul
of weapons."
wilh his lhird walk of lhe inning.
" My guys did a good job. They
Boone's bases-loaded double in
were pa1ien1." said Francona. who lhe sevenlh inning had given Cincindid nol order his bailers In wail oul nalo an 8-7 lead. Boone went J-for-4
Williams. making only his sixlh wilh lhree RBis.
Bul Pholadelphia lieu II on the
maJor league appearance lhos year.
"You don'! wanl 10 lake lhe bal no nih on Lewos' 1wo-ou1 RBI Single.
out of your guys hands in a silualion Scoll Rolen hil a 1wo-ou1 double ofT
like !hal. If !hey see a good faSiball. 1he glove of shonslop Damian Jack!hey should be able lo hil il," Fnon- son and. after a walk. scored on
cona said. "But !hey used good Lewis' hillo cenler.
'The kid jusl doesn 'I slop." Franjudgment and Ihey did a good job of
cona said o(Rolen, who also hil his
beong palient"
Wilh one out Williams 10-1) 31 sl homer. "Firs! base coach Brad
walked Bobby Abreu . Afler Mark Mills was yelling ' Here, here. here .'
Lewos singled. Bobby Eslalella and and Scouy jus! blew by him. They
Desi Relaford walked 10 give (Reds) had a chance 10 go home wilh
Philadelphia a 9-8 lead. Pinch-hiller a won. bul Scouy won 'I lei Ihem."
Rolen. who had hillwo home runs
Ruben Amaro followed wilh a sacriin a losmg cause Monday nigh!. said
fice fly off Keilh Glauber
The Phillies said lasl week 1ha1 he look lhe chance only 10 increase
Amaro will end his playing career his odds of lying lhe game.
"I needed 10 gel lo second ...
after this season and move to the
fronl office as assislanl general man- Rolen said. "When you lake chances,

Hous10n 4-0. Allama heal Flonda 41. Arizona ou1las1ed Colomdo 8-6
and
Los Angeles lopped San Diego lBy BEN WALKER
2.
AP Baseball Writer
Expos 5, Mets 3
11·, sure looking like !he Cubs and
New York wok an early J.() lead.
M e t ~ w1ll need an exira day 10 .,.ellle
bul Monlreal managed lo rally on lhe
th os \\lid-card lhmg. isn'l ol 0
The race for the NL's final play - road.
John Olerud of Ihe Mcts walked in
off ' Pol became lied Tuesday nigh!
lhe
Jirsl onnong. oymg Barry Bonds'
when ChKo.1go won 5&lt;:?: at Milwaukee
NL
record of reachmg base 15 con11 l11le New York losl 5-3 at home 10
secuuve
llmt:,. then grounded oul in
Montreal
lhe
lhiod
and Ji:ll one shoot of lhe
"' It'' down to a four-game seamaJOr
league
mark Ted Williams set
son... Mcts closer John Franco sa1d.
on
1957
1\ml 1ha1 may nol be enough to
Tile game wa ... t1ed at 3 mthe '1xlh
Jemie 11 If lhe learns are slill even
whL"n the regular season end.., Sunda)'. ~· hen Orlando c.,hrera·s hard .meth ey wi ll meet m a one-game plnyofl hopper hounced off rel1e\·er Dennos
Cmk's hack Side and wenl for a lwoMonday at Shea Stadoum.
(See NL on Pal(e 6)
" The more we play, the more it

.

look -.

Cincinnati Bengals
show displeasure
~ith running attack
By JOE KAY

: CINCINNATI &lt;AP) - When !hey
oumbered Ihe things Ihey could coum
tin lhis season. the running game was
· ~11he lop of the Cincinn:oli Bengal,·
l!sl.
The defense was young and &lt;! ill
learning. The passong game was in
1he hands of newcomer Neil O'Donrtell. The running game- now. Ihere
~as something lo hang some hopes
on .
: Half-year sensa! ion Corey Dilloo
~ould slaot from Game I lhis lime .
"Fhe offensive line was returnmg
oinacl . 'The game plan emphasized
!,Vounuing il out
: So far. il's nol working out
- "We lhoughl we 'd be able In run
l~e bllll he11er !han we have.'' cenler
Oimick Bnlz said. "Evemually, we
&gt;~'iII ...
: Three game in10 the season, lhe
g{ound game has been the Bengals'
biggesl disappnon1men1. ll 's secondJqsl in 1he NFL and coming off a
showing !hal matched lhe worst in
Fianchise hislory.
; The Bengals managed only 28
y~rds in 17 carries Sunday during a
lil-6loss In lhe Green Bay Packers.
equalling lhe worst rushing tolill in
f(llnchise hiSiory. Dillon ran l61imes
f(lr 28 yards and backup quanerback
Jeff Blake had no gain on an oplion
pjay.
· The Bengals are averaging only
76 yards per game on the ground and
hiiVe rushed for 1wo louchdowns n!ll al all whallhey expecled.
• Unable 10 run. !he Bengals have 10
roily on o· Donnell. a free-agenl quartirbad signed a month before trainil)g camp. and his slill-limited knowletlge of the passing game. That plays
ri@hl inlo lhe defense's hands.
: "Our rushin!l offen~ cnn'l be !hal

poor and we t.:otn't he that one·
uinoen"ClnaJ hecause then here they
come." coach Bruce Coslet said.
A nunoher ol I ac10rs have wntrihuled: hlocking fullhack Brian
Milne missed lhe lirsl lwo games
hecause of a sore back . backup KiJan:o Caner hroke his wrisl on lhe tio'il
game and Dillon has h&lt;!en slowed hy
H sore I high and knee. The line otl so
h;" played poorly on lhc las! 1wo
games. repealeuly missing hinds.
"The running game "n't !here
because somelomes lhe linemen tli&lt;ln'l gel much movement and somelimes Ihe hack made lhe wrong read
and somelimes lhe lead hlocking
back m:1de ...orne poor dect\ion ......
('os)cl saou. "II\ a cnmhina110n of
tho"! things und not the liUmF.! one on
ever)' pl.oy. "
Wilh Caner nul for 1he season. il's
up 10 Dollon In make lhe nonning
game go. So l:tr. he's shown only
occasional Jlashes of lhe run-'emover slyle !hal helped him pile up
1.1 ~9 yards las! season. a club rook ie record.
Dillon won'! talk 10 Ihe media. bul
his 1eamma1es say he's fruslraled al
how lhings are going .
"Corey gels u lillie frusmoled
somelimes bul llry 10 help him with
thai in lhe huddle - just sla) 1he
course. ju.st keep pluggong away,"
Milne said. "I read lhe hole before he
reads the hole. I'm ahend of him. so
I feel his fruslralion and I gel fruslraled jus! as much a~ he does. Bul
one of us ha• lo calm down and lry
to keep us going."
AI lhis poim. 1he Bengals figure
the lhing they need JIIOSI is patience.
"Are we where we thought we
should be? Probably not," Brilz said.
"Bul we will get there ."

h~e

Monday m1ght be a reah·

ro -.a id

INFIELD SINGLE -The Cincinnati Reds' Aaron Boone beats oul
the throw to Philadelphia first baseman Rico Brogna in the founh
Inning of Tuesday night's National League game in Cincinnati , where
the Phlllies won 10·8 in 11 innings . (AP)
sometime' il works and sorne 111nc ~ it
doe,n ·l. ..
Notes: Barry Larkin n11sscd hos•
lhir&lt;l cnnsecul l\ e game - and Jiflh
in !he past II games - because of .o
"'ore right ank le.
Reg~tc Sandt.'r"'
sat out h1 s second game w1th a ~;ore
back !hal he injured Sunday crashong

the center-field wa ll "' Wngley
Field ... Dennis Reyes made hi s liN
appearance in reliel . pllchmg for Ihe
fir~;~ time si nce g1vrng up Ma1 k
MeG wi re's 601h home run on Sept
5. He missed lhree scheduled &lt;!arts to
be with hi" wife and '-'O n following
complications dunng childh1rth
oniO

Lachance, Pelling expect full schedule
Lachance will sian on the r•il wilh
Shady Characler and also wilh Art IScape.
'The only lhing beuer is winning
lhe Jug:· said Lachance, who has
won lhe Jug four limes. " Having one
of lhe favoriles is lhe Jirsl slep. The
key is 10 win lhe race. Everyone
knows how Iough il is 10 win lhe
Jug ."
Three-lime Louie Brown Jug winner John Camph&lt;!ll is envoous of
Lachance's slarling pnsilio~.
" He's gol the raol bolh limes." he
said. " II\ a gmu spot m be in."
Bolh of Pel long's '''P horses have
hallle&lt;l heailh problems.
"Shady has never really been
whal you'd call a super heallhy
horse," said Pelling. who !rained
1996 Jug winner Armbro Operalive.
-He wa.~ kind of sick afler coming up
from Florida al !he beginning of the
year, but in the last six cir seven
weeks he's come lhrough il well. The
cool weather helps:·
Browning Blue Ch1p won lhe Jug
Preview Sepl. 12 al Sc1o1o Downs
and is !he favorile on lhe second divi sion. Campbell will be in lhe sulky.
"He did every1hing I asked him
and did il easily.'' he said. "Be could

NL roundup

oy fnr play on~ a playoff game." Fran-

Little Brown Jug to run Thursday

DELAWARE, Ohio lAP) - Moke
Lachance and Brell Pelling figure 10
have a busy day Thursday all he S3rd
edilion of the Lillie Brown Jug althe
Delaware Counly Fairgrounds.
Lachance is lisled as the dnver for
1wo oflhe favorites in lhe second leg
of pacing's In pie crown, Shady Characler in lhe firs! division and Artis·
cape in lhe lhird.
Pelling is lhe 1rainer of Cane Pace
winner Shady Characler and 1he
lhtrd-&lt;livision favorile, Browning
Blue Chop.
"He's been very consis1en1 all
year," Lachance said of Shady Char·
acler, owned by Sandy and Corinne
Goldfarb of Old Weslbury. N.Y.
"One of his be'l races was the
Cane ...
: Shady Charaeler has a shnl allhe
$250.000 bonus !hal goes lo lhe win·
rier of pacing ·s lriple crown. which
also includes lhe Messenger Slakes.
A year ago. Weslem Dreamer - wilh
Lachance driving - became lhe
Jorsl winner of pacing:,s crown since
Ralph Hanover on Iijll3.
" ll's more than lhe money.''
Pel long said. "If a horse wins !hose
lhree races. he already will have won
a lol of money.''

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pciineroy • Middleport, Ohio

have paced quite a bil more of I needed him 10. I -..as very impressed."
Pellong ha.' been ompressed by
Blue Ch1p's reSili ence
"When we fi rs! gnl hom. he was n' 1 Ihal sound.'' he said .. The horse

has improved by leaps and bounds
He won·, have a pmblem. We hav en·,
seen him leave oul of thai gale at
1.000 mph. hut I'm quile sure he ll do
wel l. "

The Cuhs won despile Sammy
So'a 'tay tng 'ituck 10 hts wnr"t slump
of I he year. Sosa swilched hals three
t1mes. hulwenl hot less on lour al ·hals
and dropped 10 0-for-21 sooce h111111g

Bengals' Sawyer
out for at least
eight weeks

CINCINNATI iAPl- Cincinnali
Bengals t·ornerbm:k Corey Sawyer
lw. 6J1d hom~ run
,~.,· ill be out at ka.,.1 eight week'\ after
''I' on 1ry1ng to change my luck.'' undcrgotng 'urgery 1u repatr tnrn carSo sa s;ud . .. But I can' I lind il rig hi
lilage on h" lefl knee.
110\\ .
Sawyer clluld h"ve h&lt;!en hack on
San Fr.mc1~co 'till had ,m out,ide
lhe lineup "s qLuckly as Jour weeh
chance 111 the wild coud race fnllow if lh&lt; uaon.,ged canilage had heen
mg ,o 1~ - 2 viclnry over Ponsburgh
remm ed. hut repairing 11 nn Tuesday
!hat put lhc Goanls 2 112 games
de~.:rea'~'l Jhl' n .. k nfhmg-h!rm prohbehond w11h Jive games lefl.
lcm,, Ben~al' 'fln~e~man PJ . Cnmh'
Sosa has hll 10 home runs niT ,;.ud
Brewers p11ching. hos lop tolal agaonSI
Sawy&lt;'. on his tiflh year nul of
an y team hut the closest he c~1me thi'
Florida Stale. injured !he knee Sunltme \1.1;1'.. a long foul Three lime'
day while makong a Iackie durong a
Mil\\o.tukl'e manager Phil G:1rner
I ~ -6 loss 10 !he Green Bay Packers.
changl'd pllcher-.; when Sn'ia came 10
He had h&lt;!en shanng one of lhe wrthe pl;tle .
nerhad 10h' w11h rookoe Anrell
·-rm nottrymg to u:e the ki~:kcr."
Hawk in'
G.1rner saod .
The Ben gals dod nol Jill Sawyer's
Terry Mulholland 16-)) pllchcd · rmacr 'pot on Tuc,day. C'nmb~o; .,.;ud.
e1ght eflertl \'e mnmgs. gwing up one
Agmn'l Detnut. Sawyer returned
run 01ntl siX hils. Rod Beck worked
an inlen.:cpt inn 5R yard' for a touchthe n1nth and allowed Jeromy Bur· down in o\'Crltmc for the Bengab '
nliL \ .~X. Ih home run .
only win of 1he 'cason
In other games. Sl. Louos &lt;lopped

Cnlumliia LGas@
ofQniO

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..
•••

�Wednesday, September 23, 199~
a

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Denver Nuggets name D' Antoni new head coach
By DON UrrtHELL
DENVER (APl - The Denver
Nuggets named Mike D' Antoni head
coach Tuesday. assigning him the
daunting task of reb•ilding one of the
worst teams in NBA history.
D' Antoni. who spent seven years
coaching in the Italian League,
becomes Denver's seventh coach
this decade.
•

General manager Dan Issei made
the announcement after the team had ·
gone several months with the vacan·
cy unfilled. It wa• created when first·
year coach Bill Hanzlik was fired fol·
lowing the Nuggets horrid II· 71 scason.
D' Antoni, who joined the Nuggets
as director of player personnel last
year, had surprisingly high expecta·
tions for Denver.

Sheridan's thievery
gets recognition
o.-·idson.
Chillicothe won just 13 games the
By RUSTY MILLER
previous seven years but is 3-0
AP Sports Writer
behind quarterback Adam Porter.
The celebration is on hold at San· who has accounted for II touch·
dusky High School. but it's going full downs: Howard East Knox had to
strength across town al Perkins.
forfeit its season-opening 14-7 win
Sandusky needs just one more vic- over Utica for using an ineligible
tory to chalk up the school's 600th. player: New Middletown Spring·
but the Blue Streaks are 0-3 heading field (3-0) has already won more
into Friday night's game against games.than a year ago when it was 2·
Findlay.
8; Lisbon Beaver broke a 13-game
Meanwhile. Perkins is·3..() for the losing skid with a 35-28 win over
first time smce 1985 - and the Brookfield; Mike Kohler ran for two
Pirates haven't done it by winning touchdowns as Liberty Township
squeakers.
Lakota East beat West Chesler LakoThe average score of their wins is ta West 15·8 in their first meeting
52-9.
since West Chester Lakota split into
STARS ON THE SIDELINE: the two schools last year; and
Upper Arlington is 3-0 and has Smithville's Keith Schrock moved to
outscored opponents 120..12. but is 135-79-3 in 22 seasons with a 20-14
still mi"ing tailback Jesse Kline. The win over Loudonville, becoming the
Ohio State recruit gained 2,315 yards winningest coach in .the Wayne
and scored 33 touchdowns last year County League.
as the Golden Bears made it to the
THIEVERY: Thornville Sheridan
state semifinals, but he has played has intercepted 10 passes so farsparingly because of hamstring and including six in a 15·7 win al Oresankle problems. Meanwhile, Colum- den Tri-Valley: Napoleon's John
bus Briggs· Jerome Buckner- who Huggle intercepted three passes in a
rushed for 1.917 yards a year ago- 14·7 win over Bowling Green: Mick
has been sidelined by mononucleosis. Bloomfield picked off three passes in
Coincidentally. his learn is 0-3.
Fin~lay's 35-32 win over Elida: and
RUNNING TOTALS: Newbury's Lafayelle Allen East totaled five
Justin Yates gained 392 yards and interceptions in a 2().. 7 victory against
scored six touchdowns in a 63-24 win Ada.
over Thompson Ledgemont. and has
DOING EVERYTHING: Warsaw
totaled R37 yanh on 84 carries with River View's Mike Hemming ran for
10 scores so far: Josh Holden had a two touchdowns. threw a 42-yard
schonl-recnrd five touchdowns and scoring pass and returned an inter·
gained 333 yards on 34 carries in ception 50 yards for another score in
Hudson's 40- 14 victory over Canton a 39-12 win over Crooksville: and
GlenOak: Canton McKinley's Mike Zanesville Rosecrans' David Peck
Doss gained 234 yards on 18 carries. kicked a 38-yard field goal and then
blocked a field goal and returned a a 36-yarder with three seconds left IO
kickoff 55 yards in a 34- 16 win over force overtime. had a 68-yard punt.
Massillon Jackson: Orrville's Dru was 3-for-3 on point-after kicks and
Robinson has scored on an 85-yard caught a nine-yard louchdo--:n pass in
kickoff return and seven runs this overtime of a one-point loss to Mil·
season. and is averaging 7.3 yards a ford Center Faitbanks.
carry: Milford Center Fairbanks' J.R.
THROUGH THE AIR: Antoine
McCoy has crnnked out 581 yards Dunklin of Cleveland VASJ ·had 10
and II touchdowns so far: and Sean receptions in a victory over Chardon
McHugh. Chagrin Falls' 6-foot-6. NOCL: Jeff Kirkendall had 10 recep240-pound fullback. has gained 609 lions fo~ 114 yards, and a touchdown
yards in 64 carries when not starrmg -m P.atnck. Henrys 39-16 vtctory
as a middle linebacker.
over Letpstc: and Scou McMullen
TEAM WORK: Richmond completed 14-of-22 passes for 311
Heights lost 51 games in mw from yards and three touchdowns as
19M51o 1989, and has only one win· Grandville defeated Grandview
ning season since 1983. But the Spar· Heights, 63-28 --; and is hilling 60
tuns -led by Mike Glodowski. who percent of his passes for 860 yards
returned after four awful seasons in and 9touchdowns with just one inter·
the 1980s- are off to a 3..() start. The ception on the year.
team had more yards in the first two
SHORT WORK: Zanesville wing·
games than they had in the entire back Jon Arnold has t~ree catches for
1988 season. Similarly. Millersport three touchdowns thrs year- covhas gone 48-159-3 with only one ering 86. 67 and 69 yards. while
winning season since 1977. but is 3- Ashtabula Harbor 's Ben Sedmak
0 under rookie head coach Mike gained 153 yards and scored lwrce on
Burkhardt.
three carries in a 49-13 win over
Pandora-Gilboa ended Findlay Orwell Grand Valley.
Hardin Nonhero's 36-game winnin~
GETIING KICKS : Mu.,illon
streak as Dan c r:f'\vfis intercepted Jackson's Tony Bartholomew has
four passes in the 12-7 upset: 20 kickedthree field goals of atleast45
miles away. Vanlue lost J..() tn over· yards, mcludmg a school-record 49·
time to Leipsic for its 34th straight yarder in a 34-'16 loss to Canton
Blanchard Valley Conference loss: McKinley: and Adam Logan kicked
Amanda-Ciearcreek has won 50 a 52-yarder for Ctrclevdle agamst
straight regular-season games: the Washington Coun House .
. .
Ohio Capital Conference's Central
Finally. there are 150 remmnmg
Division's six teams have a combined unbeaten teams m Ohto. That num·
16·2 record. including unbeatens ber will diminish considemhly this
Dublin CotTman. Worthington Kil · weekend, since there are 17 games
oourne. Grove City and Hilliard matching undefeated teams.

Scholastic sidelight

NL games ..

" Dan hired me 10 do one thing

that's 10 get us back to respectab•lt·
ty," D'Antoni said. "Respectability
to me means making the playoffs.
The 47-year-old coach said
achieving that respectability may not
be as difficult as many people think.
"On draft day we got a lot better."
he said, saying he could not elaborate
due to the NBA's labor dispute. "We
haven't been talking about basketball
for the la.stthree months for obvious
reasons (so) we tend to forget how
good we got on draft day."
The Nuggets acquired point guard
Nick Van Exel in a draft-day deal,
and the team has high hopes for first·
round pick Raef LaFrenlz, a forward·
from Kansa.•.
Forward Eric Williams. who was
lost to a season-ending knee injury
after the first four games. is expect·
ed to return to the lineup. And us the
rebuilding begin.s anew under Issei
and D' Antoni . a high priority is re·
signing popular forward LaPhonso
Ellis.
D' Antoni said he intends to shape
the league's doormat into a compel·
itive team by installing a fast -paced

C:..:o.:;;nl:..:in:.:ue:.:d....:.fro;,;;;;;m.:.P..:lago.:e..:5.:..&gt;- - - - -

L"....:..::&lt;

solo shot at Aorida.
Kevin Millwood ( 17·8). who will
Giants 14, Pirates 2
work
out of the bullpen in the pia)·
At San Frnncrsco. B:uTy Bonds
offs.
pitched
the first five innings.
homered. tripled and singled before
Kerry
Ligtenherg
became the first NL
leaving due to hack spasms and Kirk
rookie
to
record
30 saves since St.
J!,uelcr pitched six strong innings us
Louis'
Todd
Worrell
in 19!16.
)he Giants kept their wild curd hopes
plive.
Bonds. who drove in three runs.
"alkcd in the lirth hut appeared to
strain his back when he checked his
swing on the last pitch. He was lift·
ed for a pinch runner and walked
with a slight limp to the Giants
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) dugout .
LaToya Turner. considered among
Rueter ( 16·9) allowed two runs on the premier post players in the coun·
five hits. struck out four and walked try. made a verbal commitment to
two in winning his fourth straight play basketball al Ohio State.
decision. Jrin Lieber (8-14) was the
The 6-3 senior center from subur·
ban Pickerington High School said
loser. Ca.,.lnals 4, .\iti'OI 0
Wednesday that one reason she
Mark McGwire hil two fly balls picked Ohio State wa.• coach Beth
that were capght on the warning track Bu?,ts · hi.gh·energr l~ade~ship.
..
.~ium
as
Sl.
Louts
won
rts
She
ts
on
a
mtsston
nght
now,
at Busc h St""
·d fB
"'Sh
I
sixth in a mw.
e w:n\~/
1Tpmer s1ath o • umhs..
Mall Morris {7-5) struck OUI 10 IICCOm~ IS a 1e~ I tngs, ~~. S S
and pitched a five-hiuer for his fir.t notlellmg up unul she does .
· leag 11e shutout.
Turner averaged 21 .5 pomts and
makon Gant homered and drove in : I~ rebounds a game ~~~~ season
h
ns qs the Cardinals pn:vont· 1 wflen she made The As.soctated Press
~~~~tqo 'from winpinJ iii IOOth ! Divisio~ I All-Ohio high school basI ketball hst.
game. Bnvn ·,., Martlllll
· NCAA rules prohibi~ Bums from
Adaptq ~~ a team rw0f11 with ~08 · commenung on Turner s IUinouncellome run! when J!ddle Perez hn a men!.

out. 1wo-run single.

Pickerington's
Turner commits
to .Ohio State

and

offense, a stnllCgy ls.sel preached dur·
ing his tenure as Denver coach from
1992-95.
"I've always played very fa.~t."
D' Antoni said. "I want to pressure,
I want to get up-and-down and I want
to take advantage (of the defense)....
We just have to connect with the
players and get them to play the best
they can play. The rest of it will take
care of ilself."
·
Issei said 0' Antoni's basketball
philosophy and communications
skills influenced his selection.
"The main reason that Mike is
hired as our head coach is that philosophically we're all on the same page
- ba,ketball-wise," Issei said. "I
think Mike is going to play basketball
the way thai I think we have to play
10 be successful."
Before joining the Nuggets,
D' Antoni compiled a 144-68 coach·
ing record with Benellon and Milan
of the Italian League. His team.' made
the playoffs each seao;on. and Benet·
ton won the 1997 Italian League
Championship.
He also had success a.~ a player.
helping Milan to five league cham·

pionships. two European Cup titles
and two Intercontinental Cups in 13
seasons. He spent four years in the
NBA and one in the American Bas·
ketball Association.
D' Antoni served briefly as the
Nuggets' interim GM after Allan
Bristow wa• fired in February. Issei
took over the team in March. and
D' Antoni finished the sea.•on as an
a.ssistantto Hanzlik.
As interim GM. his most notable
move wa.• signing point guard Cory
Alexander. who played a pivotal role
in helping the Nuggets avoid the
worst record in NBA history.
They avoided thai dubious dis·
tinction by winning six of their final
19 games to finish two games beuer
than the 9-73 record set by the 1972·
73 Philadelphia 7~rs .
0 ' Antoni 's assistant coaches,

announced Tuesday, are former NBA
head coach John Lucas. former
Nuggets player and a..sislant coach
Mike Evans, and IOrmer player Louie
Dampier.
There is hope for the Nuggets
because they have money under the
salary cap to spend in the free agent

TH E

ROBERT

MIKE D' ANTONI
market. But, like other NBA learns.
their efforts to get ready for the ne~
season are hamstrung by the league's
labor dispute.
·,.
The owners locked out the player.;
July I after failing 10 reach on a new
collective bargaining ugreeme~t.
There has been liule progress in
negotiations. The regular season is
scheduled to begin Nov. 3.
.

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3 to be questioned by the commission.
The Mayo Clinic. he said. apparently doesn ' t do all the testing
requested by the commission.
If he regains his license. Tyson's
first foe will be a fighter who is
mnked. In his lirst comeback fight
after being released from prison in
1995. Tyson knocked out Peter
McNeeley in the first round. Both
Tyson and Finkel are looking for a
stronger opponent this time.
"You want credibility in the per·
son he lights," Finkel said. "We're
looking for a rated opponent."
If Tyson is allowed to return to the
ring. he is expected to fight in late
No\'emher or early December. most
likely at the MGM Grand hotel-casi·
no in Lts Vegas.
Finkel predicted the fight will he
bigger than Tyson's comeback
against McNeeley. in which he got a
$25 million purse. However. the
money was split in half by payments
he had In make to promoter Don
King and his co-managers.

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feet floor game with a 30.33 effort,
ten assists, and two dinks: Stephanie
Evans also had a great effort of 18·
23 with six assists, and Karr wa.~ I·
I.

Southern was led by Kim Sayre
with a 10-11 serving night. seven
points, and another awesome floor
game, selling 54-56 sel' with two
kills. Kati Cummins also played well
with seven points and a 9-10 serving
night with three aces. Stacy Lyons
wa.s 7-9 serving with four points and
8- 12 spiking with two kills; Kim Ihie
was 4-6 with four points, and a 1415 spiking night with four kills: and
Kara King was a perfect 6-6 serving
with two points.
Fallon Roush wa.&lt; 13-16 spiking

with six kills and a good effort on the and Belpre wins. Eastern is now 8..().
front line. Heather Dailey was 2· 2
Belpre dropped to 0.9 and South·
serving and 2·2 spiking.
em fell to 94.
Eastern won the reserve game 15·
Against Belpre, Evans was 15· 7
4. 2-15, and 15·8. Eastern wa.' led by with three aces and 12 points, Wolfe
Cinda Clifford with eight points. wa~ 1()..10 with three aces and eight
Amber Church six. Sarah Clifford points. Hayman wa.&lt; 7-7 with three
five, Kristin Chevalier five. Danielle aces and five points, Chevalier was 5·
Spencer two. and two each from 5 with an ace and four points, Karr
Tiffany Hensley and Sarah Frank. was 7-7 with an ace and three points.
Molly Heines and Whitney Karr Bailey was 6· 7 with three points.
each had one point.
Leah Sanders 4-5 with three points.
Southern was led by Sarah Brauer and Alison Rose 1· 1.
with 14. Rachel Allen six, Stacy Mills
In spiking Karr led with 17-22
three. Emily Stivers two. and Tammy anempls for seven kills and four
blocks in a dominating performance.
Fryer one.
In an earlier game. Eastern defeat· Brannon wa' 16-17 with six kills,
ed league foe Belpre 8-15. 15·3, and Bailey 6-6 with three kills and two
15-9 in three sets. After the Southern blocks and Chevalier was I· 3 with a

block.
Evans wa.s 23-32 with six a.•sisls
and Hayman 19-28 with five assists
and a dink.
•
Jackson said, "Belpre opened our
eyes by beating us the first game. II
took us awhile to get s.tarted and
when we did, we played aggressive.
at limes. We fell for the old trick of.
'we're not very good and haven't won
a game so please take it ea.sy on us.'
The game staned out that way and we
didn't recover until the second game.
"We have 10 learn 10 play hard the
whole game not just pan of it, or just
when the game gets close," Jackson
;aid.
Eastern plays Miller Thursday.

Autopsy results remain inconclusive ·

Griffith Joyner showed no
By JEFF WONG
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
night before she died, Florence Grif·
lith Joyner felt "a lillie tired" but
ilhowed no outward signs of illness,
fler former coach said Tuesday.
· "Losing Florence suddenly wa.s a
shock to the family. " Bob Kersee.said
:al UCLA's Dmke Stadium, where he
:Once coached Griftith Joyner. "It
:took me the whole night from St.
·Louis to believe it. I don't know if I
:Uccept i~ but as a Christian, I under:Stand it."
; The 38-year-old Olympic gold
1Tledalist was found "unresponsive
:Und not breathing" by her husband,
:AI Joyner, on Monday at their Mis·
:sion Viejo home. Medical examiners
•were working to determine why yet
:another outwardly healthy athlete

outw~rd

nothing wrong and released her.
died at such a young age.
" It's just a mystery to us." he said.
Three-time world champion hur·
Her death reignited questions
dler Greg Foster said he wa.• told by
the family that Griffith Joyner died of about whether Griflith Joyner. moth·
a heW1·related problem. Kersee, how· er of a seven·year-Qid girl, had ever
ever, said she never had any heart used performance-enhancing subproblems but did suffer from exer· stances during her track career.
cise-induced asthma and migraines.
Her sister-in-law, six-time
On Sunday, Griffith Joyner went Olympic medalist and world hep·
to Santa Barbara to appear at a gym· lathlon record-holder Jackie Joyner·
nastics meet and had stopped by her Kersee. urged everyone to wail for
mother's house, Kersee said.
the autopsy results and notlo jump to
According to Kersee, AI Joyner conclusions.
told him that she reported feeling "a
"AI this time I don't feel that it is
lillie tired" and wenllo bed, but oth· appropriate, but I do know that there
erwise there were "no signs what,o· is going to be speculation. but right
ever that Aorence wa.s ill."
now we don't have lime to be con·
Asked about a seizure Griffith cemed about that." Joyner·Kersee
Joyner had in St. Louis two years said on NBC's "Today" show.
ago, Kersee said she wa.s hopitalized
After her three gol.d medals in the
overnight but doctors could find 1988 Seoul Olympics, opponents

signs of illness

and some U . S~ sprinters accused
Griflith Joyner of using performanceenhancing drugs. She denied using
any drugs. attributing her success lo
a strenuous workout program.
Kersee was adamant that no ath·
lete he has coached ever failed or
avoided a drug test.
"How would you feel if someone
was spreading false rumors about you
and your daughter had 10 read about
this?" Kersee said.
In 1989. U.S. sprinter Darrell
Robinson said in the German magazine Stem thai he bought banned
growth hormonedor Griffith Joyner.
Robinson was paid $25,000 for his
interview with the magazine.
Griffith Joyner denied Robinson's
charge that year, saying: "Darrell.
you are a compulsive, crazy. lying

lunatic."
Arne Ljungqvist. vice president of
the International Amateur Athletic
Federation and the organization's
top anti doping official, said Tuesday
that it would be unfair to speculate
about Grillilh Joyner.
Griffith Joyner, who won gold
medals in the UXl· and 200-meter
da.&lt;h and the 4ll0-meter relay at
Seoul. exuded an appear.mce of good
health, a&lt; have other major athletes
who have died young.
This decade. at lea.&lt;! three well·
known athletes died of heart-related
conditions.
- Olympic figure skating gold
medalist Sergei Grinkov died during
a 1995 pmctice sessional age 28. An
inherited genetic condition caused his
death.

FLORENCE GRIFFITH JOYNER
- Loyola Marymount ba.,ketball
star Hank Gathers collapsed during a
game in 19'Xl and died. He had been
sidelined that season because of a
hean condition.
- Boston Celtics forward Re~ie
Lewis collapsed and died while ca.\U·
ally shooting baskets

~CAA penalizes Louisville men's basketball team, university
By STEVE BAILEY

: LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -The
NCAA banned the Louisville men's
~sketballteam from poslsea.o;on play
for one year Tuesday and placed the
ichool on three years' probation
because of rules violations.
The nine violations in the men's
ba.,ketball and women's volleyball
~rograms involved exira benefits.
recruiting. linancial aid, institutional
control and ethical conduct.
. The. Division I Comminee on
Infractions handed down other penal·
ties a.s well. including a reduction of
scholarships in both sports. The volleyball team forfeited three scholar·
ships over the next two years, the ba."
ketball progmm one each the next
The basketball progr-.1m 's postseason ban also will include this
year's Conference USA Tournament.
"We had nearly 100 percent
agreement with the NCAA Enforce·
men! staff on all facts of the case."
university president John Shumaker
said. "The NCAA's response ha.s
been tough but the sanctions are fair
and I respect their conclusions."
The allegations came to light ear-

ly last year and, following an inves·
ligation that produced hundred' of
pages of testimony. the NCAA in
April issued a formalleuer of inquiry
into both programs.
The leuer labeled the alleged violations as "major," including a
charge of "lack of institutional con·
trol" in the volleyball program.
The university acknowledged sev·
en of the volleyball infractions
involving recruiting violations and
rules prohibiting extm benefits for
athletes or their families. II disagreed.
with the two other allegations, that it
did not sufficiently educate volleyball
coach Leonid Yelin about NCAA
rules and thai then-assistant ba.sket·
bull coacli Scooter McCray obtained
a discounted hotel rate for the father
of forward Nate Johnson.
Louisville was placed on proba·
lion for two years in 1996 after an
illvestigation unearthed questions
concerning former player .Samaki
Walker's use of two cars in 1995.
Because the new violation involving the basketball program occurred
within five years of the starting date
of the previous penalties. the commiuee applied its repeal-violator pro-

Meigs varsity spikers
notch wins vs. Federal
Hocking, Alexander

sw•ng versus

·RotltRT TuNr JONES CoLr

The Eastern Eagles rose to the charge with a 12-12 nigh~ an ace and
occa.,ion against arch rival Southern, eight points: Jessica Brannon had a
slopping the Tornado winning streak 10-10 night with an ace and six
10 remain undefeated in eight matc~ ­ points: Valerie Kan had a 7-9 night,
es Tuesday night with consecutive two aces and six points: Stephanie
15·11. 15-12 victories.
Evans was 8-8 with five points: Angi
The Tri· Valley Conference Hock - Wolfe was 44 with one point. and
ing Division game was a crucial Juli Bailey was 7-8 with an ace and
game in the standings and allowed four points.
Eastern 10 establish a stronghold on
Eastern had a great effort on the
tije top spot.
front line, where its size dominated
.: Eastern coach Don Jackson said, the Southern home front. Valerie
:we played our best game of the year. Karr was 12· 18 with seven kills and
We really clicked tonight. We made a block; Brannon was 6-8 with a kill
slime changes and it seemed to real· and a block; Angi Wolfe wa~ 7-7.
ly spark our effort and help our tim· Bailey 5· 7 with three kills and a
in g. The girls put forth a tremendous block: Evans 2·2 with two kills: Hayeffort when they had to."
man 1-1 and Angi Taylor 1-1.
Juli Hayman led the scoring
In selling. Hayman had a near per·

two sea..lions.

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Eastern var$ity sextet gets win vs. Southern in two games

Tyson must have psychiatric exam
before NAC can give him license
The examination was ordered by
By TIM DAHLBERG
the
commission following Saturday's
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Mike
six-hour
hearing on Tyson's request
'
Ty son is searching for an ranked
for
reinstatement.
He has been
opponent and a doctor. The doctor
banned
since
the
commission
comes first.
revoked
his
license
July
9. 1997. for
Nevada boxing authorities have
biting
Evander
Holyfield's
ears.
given the former heavyweight cham·
leller
sent
10
Tyson
and his
A
pion a list of three facilities where he
must undergo a psychiatric examina- advisers Monday from the commis·
tion. They also have set a deadline of sion said the leum of doctors evalu·
Monday for the doctors 10 submit ating him must include a psycholo·
gist. a psychiatrist and a neuropsy·
reports on Tyson's mental stale.
lfTyson is cleared by the doctors. chologist. The boxer must he given
the Nevada Athletic Commi&gt;.&lt;ion is comprehensive neuropsychological
expected to give the former heavy· testing as well as an MRI of the brain
weight champion a new boxing and a complete drug screen.
In addition, the commission wants
license on Oct. 3.
" No one wants to go see doctors, the doctors who evaluate Tyson 10
but he's eager 10 get his license look at videotape of his fight against
back," Shelly Finkel, Tyson~, advis· Holyfield as well as from posl·fight
interviews and license reinstmemenl
er. said Tuesday.
Tyson gets his choice of being hearings in New Jersey and Nevada.
Finkel said he was trying to find
examined at the Mayo Clinic in
Rochester. Minn .. Massachusells out which oft he three facilities do all
General Hospital in Boston or C.F. the testing required by the commis·
Menninger Memorial Hospital in sion and whether he could get three
doctors to come In Las Vegas on Oct.
Topeka. Kan.

Wednesday, September 23,1998

The Mei~s Marauder volleyball
team picked up two more wins Mon·
day evening over Federal Hocking
and Alexunder. The Marauders
defeated Federal Hocking 15·0 and
15-6. and went three games on Tucs·
day to defeated Alexander 16-14. 815 and 15-8.
Meigs with the 1wo wins :~re now

8-2 overall and 7· I in the Tri· Valley
Conference 's Ohio Division.
In the game against Federal Hock·
ihg Tangy Laudermill hud an excel·
lent game with 20 li&gt;r 20 serving. 18
points, one kill and live assists.
Melissa Werry was seven for seven
serving with six points. Tmcy Coffey
four for foUl' with two points. seven
kills undone block. Tony a Miller wus
three for three with one point. two
kills and one assist . Tricin Davis was

three for live with three points, Amy
Hysell was one for two serving with
four kills and Shannon Price had six

visrons to the case. said Bonnie Slat·
ton, the committee's acting chair.
"It's fair 10 say the (postseason)
ban wa.&lt; primarily because of the
repeal violator status." Slatton said.
"Underthe repeat-violator penalties.
we could prohibit all competition for
two years in a sport. We chose not to
do that. "
Neither Yelin nor basketball coach
Denny Crum were present al the
afternoon news conference.

Louisville athletic director Tom
Crum, transferred Mc&lt;:my lo an
administrative post and froze both Jurich said he did not know whether
sion,'' Crum. who wa.o; on a recruit- their salaries. II also suspended Yelin the scbuol would appeal the penalties.
"I mle any penalty a' severe nn
ing trip. said in a statement released for a month without pay and froze his
by the school. " Regardless of the out· salary. reprimanded an assistant vol· maller what it is because I hate like
come of the decision. I am ultimate· ley ball coach involved in many of the hell 10 be in this situation." Jurich
ly responsible for our basketball pro- violations and canceled the volleyball said. "I want to be a stand-up, take·
gram and I feel bad thai it has had team's preseason trip to Japan la.st my-medicine kind of person. I want
our department to understand that
such a negative effect on our program year.
Slauon said the committee tonk we' ve made some mistakes and thai
and this university."
After the investigation was made those internal sanctions into account it's not OK 10 break the rules.
public, the university reprimanded before imposing its penalties.
" Certainly. I'm deeply disap·
pointed and saddened by the deci·

Double Minutes
~u t/t/wJ you 're I
.

.
dreamllniJ
as
low
as

•

as~ists .

Against Alexander. Tonya Miller
was 12 for 12 with eight points and
10 kills. Tracy Colley was II for 14
with eight points. one kill. one assists
and one hlock. Amy Hysell wus 12
for 13 with six points and seven kills.
Shannon Price was nint! li.lr nine with
sevt!n points :.mc.J nine assists. Tangy
Laudermilt was nine for II with four

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points and eight assists. Brooke
Williams wus four for five wilh two
points. Tricia Davis w"s six for six

with three points and one kill. Mel is·
sa Werry was three for three with one
point and one assist and Tiffany
Hallhill'had four kills.
Meigs won the reserve game !loth
nights. they defeated Federal Hock·
ing 15-8 and 15-6 and Alexander Is .
9. 15-7. The reserv&lt; learn is 9-1 on
the year.
Meigs will tmvel to Miller on
Monday. Sept. 28to play the Falcons.

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Wellston captures TVC
Ohio Division golf title
Wellston broke the Meigs
Ma{auders streak of eight stmight
TVC golf championships Monday
evening with a Ohio Division win al
the Meigs County Golf Course.
Wellston won the final TVC
match of the year with a score of 151.
followed by Meigs with a 153.
Alexander was in third with a 154.
followed by Vinton County ( 169).
Belpre ( 180) and Nelsonvill~- York"
(231 ).

•

Jon McDonald of Wellston fired
an even par 34 to take home ma~ch
medalist. Nick Oeuwiller led Metgs
with a 37. followed by Jared Woods
and Tommy Roush each with a 38.
Zach M~ows had a 40. Andy Davis
a 45 and Carson Midkiff a 48.
On Wednesday afternoon Meigs

a minute

Mlilional me plans ~

will take pan in the Tri· Valley Conference Interdivisional Golf Touma·
ments.
The top three Ohio Division teams
will play the top three Hocking Divi·
sian teams on Wednesday afternoon
a1 Riverside. The bottom three Ohio
Division teams will play the bouom
three Hocking· Division teams at
Oxbow.
Ohio Division
final standlnp
Wellston
Alexander
Meigs
Belpre
Vinton Counly
Nelsonville· York

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By The Bend

Wednesday, September 23, 1998

The Daily Sentinel

Holzer Medical Center announces second
annual 'Girls Time Out' on Sunday

PageS
Wednesday, September 23, 1998

As another of the special events
planned to mark Women's Heallh
Month. the Holzer Medical Center
will host their Second Annual
"Girls T1111e Out" on Sunday. September 27, from 2 p.m. - 4 p.m ., in
the hospital's French Five Hundred Room and adjoining patio.
according to Bonnie Mcfarland,
RN, BSN, Wellness Coordinator.
The theme for Sunday afternoon's program will be "Strategies
for
Developing
Nealthy
Lifestyles.
Guest speakers for the event
include Karen Stocker. RD. LD. a
dietitian in the hospital's Nutrition
Services Department, discussing
nutrition and focusing on the
impact of fast foods and snacks in
the development of heallhy eating
h~bits ; Dawn Halstead, Director
of Volunteer Services, demonslratMAKING PLANS • Preparing for Sunday's Second Annual 'Girls
ing ihe benefits of line dancing as Time Out" at the Holzer Medical Center, are Committee Chairman
a pan of physical activity and Bonnie McFarland, RN, BSN, (seated center), Wellneu Coordinator
exercise: and Nancy "Benny" at the Hospital, with her committee members: standing left to right,
Gooldin. RN. MSN. Associate C&amp;rolyn Taylor, Susan Morgan, and Dawn Halstead. Seated (1) Is
Professor at the University of Rio Kim Painter, and (r), Edith Stout, RN, ET. Committee members not
Grande's Holzer College of Nurs- pictured Include Allca Grlcoski, II.D., Jackie Killen, RN, Eula
ing. who will emphasize the need Adkins, RN, Marsha Rodgers, RN, and Jennl Dovyalt.
tor and value of humor and laughter in coping with the stresses of good grooming and beauty tips as celebration, while they learn about
everyday life.
well. All of the afternoon exhibits ways to stay healthy and have fun
This full afternoon is free and are provided by community busi- al the same lime.
open to mothers. daughters, nesses, organizations, Holzer
Refreshments will be served,
grandmothers. aunts. nieces and Clinic and Holzer Medical Center. door prizes awarded. and casual
friends, from the sixth grade up.
"Our goal is 10 concentrate on dress is the order of the day.
For additional information on
Participants will receive infor- promoting wellness for women of
mation on various heahh care all ages", McFarland said. She this Second Annual "Girls Time
issues. and have the opportunity to added, "We encourage the women Out" at the Holzer Medical Cenvisil the numerous heahh in forma- and young ladies of the communi- ter, contact Bonnie McFarland by
lion displays, which will include ty to altend and take part in our calling 446-5679.

National Depression Screening Day can offer hope for many Americans
I was apprnat:hing menopau~c

Ann
Landers

and thought my mood problems

l'N7 . 1... Allp.io:• Ton""'

ness or inability to handle my problems. Luckily. when I heard about
National Depression Screening Day.
I went to the free education program
and screening that was held at a
local hospital.
The clinic ians e.plained that

S)nU... :&amp;~o.· .llltl

ur

were due to thi:-. change
life or.
worse. due to some personal weak-

Cru~&lt; •r­

S)I'I~oho.&lt;lk

Dear Ann Landers: List September. you primed information
about National Depression Screening Day. I had been feeling down
and sad for a while, crying a lot and
feeling lonely. helpless and wonhless. I wasn't motivated. had very
lillie energy and didn't enjoy doing
things that I once loved to do. I juSI
didn't feel like myself.

nt=~..·a u't:

Many have thoughts of death or sui cide.
This year. Nalionallbepression
Screening Day will be on Thursday.
Oct. 8. The program is free and
totally anonymous. No one asks for
a name or makes any judgments.
The clinicians and staff are there to
help. educate and cornfon . For lh&lt;"e

mort: than KO pen.:ent of
people wilh '.kpre~siun can bt: tn:al·

ed suc.-e&gt;&lt; fully with medication.
psy.-hotherapy or a mmbination of
thl! two.

Cnmmon symptoms include a
per'i'tent. sad. ~nxious or .. empty"

nl&lt;H&gt;d. difficulty sleeping. changes
in appetite and loss of pleasure in

depression is :..1 treatahle illness. not
a wealmess. and that il wasn't my

gram. ·-- Irene From Iowa

Depre"ed (J&lt;!ople often have difti-

fault They helped me find a thera-

Depression Screening. Day was a
tremendous success. reaching some

pist in my area and reassured me thai

I would feel beucr with appropriate
help and medi.-ation .
Ann. I am "'-' glad I took that first

Dear Irene: Last year 's

N~ttional

H5.000 people. Depre"ion strikes
17 million Americans each year. and

le" than half of them receive the

cully nmccnlrating and may experi ence fcdings of hopelessness. hclplt: ..;sne ~s. wonhlc..;sness and guilt.
Some peoplt: ha ve vague medical

complaints like aches and pains that
won., go away. headaches, backach-

ailmenh.

who may be experiencing 'ymptoms
of depression or know someone who

is. please call the toll -free number
that has been set up especially for
my reade". It is 1-N00-242-22 11
(TTY for the hearing impaired is 1S00-855-2S80). These numbers are
available staning today. and yqu will

he told the: hx:ation of the screening
.. ile in your area. The lines are open

24 hou" a day.
Screenmg pan&lt;c&lt;pants will hear
an educational presentation and
have the opportunity to take an
a no nymo us. written screening tesl.

pick up educational brochures and
meet individually with a clinician
for a bric:f screening intervit:w. Any ·
one who 01ppcar~ to have symptoms
of dcpre..;~ ion will be directed to a
treatment facility in hi s or her urea.

S.:nd qu.,tions to Ann Landers,
Creaturs Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, los Angeles,
Calir. 90045

Breast Cancer Awareness Day to be observed
The Second Annual Meigs County Breast Cancer Awareness Day
will be observed on Oct. I with a
program at the Meigs County Courlhouse.
In a ceremony at 1he courthouse.
a wreath will be placed on the t:ourthousc door as a reminder that Octo·
ber is Breast Cancer Awareness

Were now on the downside of September- yep. already - and
October will rolling in, hopefully with its "bright, blue weather".
Next month will see the opening of a new restaurant in Athens
by a Meigs County Family. Jim and Jennifer Sheets and their
youngest son, Adam. will be opening a W. G. Grinders restaurant.
Being from Prairie Junction . I'm not familiar with the Grinders
chain but I understand it's an up and coming organization.
Jim has retired as a teacher at the Meigs High School and will
operate the restaurant along with Adam who will be taking some
time off from his studies at Ohio University.
The new establishment will be located on West Union Street in
Athens in a Slructure formerly occupied by Lam 's Garden which
was also a restaurant. The structure ha.' been undergoing remodeling and redecorating processes as the Sheets' preparing for the
grand opening of their new venture.
This Friday. Sept. 26. is the final day for you Middleport resi dents to register a.' official participants in the second ye llow llag
yard sale. The first one was held in May and included Pomeroy as
well . This sale. however, is just for Middleport.
It will cost you $5 to register as a panicipant of the sa le being
sponsored by the Middlepon Community Association You can du
this at tbe Middlepon Depanment Store. the Office Service and
Supply Co., and at The Ohio River Bear Co.
As a panicipant you will be entered on the official listing of
locations of panicipants and the sale woll be advertised extensively. All of the proceeds from the registration will go in promoting
the sale. You ' ll receive also a yellow llag to display at your location. In May scads of shoppers journeyed to Middleport to check
out all of the locations. A locator map and listings will be distributed prior to the sale.
And when will be sale be 0 It will be a two-day event on both
Friday and Saturday. Oct. 2 and 3.
If you have any questions just call '192 -41 '17 or 992-5438.
Sounds like fun.

Month.
The ceremony will be

geare~

Re.sidents are invited to attend a
wreath hanging l:t:rcmnny which

the disease that has claimed the live,
of so many women. Thi s ye;~r, an
estimated 2.100 Ohio women will
die from breast cancer and X.6(K)

will take place at noon on the frnnt
steps of the counhouse. The Meigs

highest ratings of the year,
spokesman Howard Polskin said.
Only Aug. 17 was higher.
Fox News Channel recorded the
highest all-day viewership in its twoyear history on Monday. hreaking a
record that had been set less than two
weeks earlier the day after Starr's
repon was released.

Count y Commissioners will sign a
prodamatiun de signating Ckinber as

Breast Cancer Awareness Month at
that time . Speakers will be Maxine
Griflith and Judy Bunger. cancer

have annual breast examinations and

survivors. and Norma Torres. RN .

mammog rams. Experts agree thai
yea rl y mammogram"' are most
important for women aged 40 and

BSN , of the Meigs County Health

o l~er.

Department regan..ling mammogram
and cervical screenings/services

II WLJ~ noted that many mammog
raph)· fa~.:ilit ic::'\ offer rc:duced rates
on mammogram:\ during October.

available to Meigs County women.
Pink ribbons Will be will be distributed to funher promote awareness, along with literature on mammograms and self-breast exams.
I'I'JM marks the 23rd National
Breast Cancer Awarenes.s Month .
Health professionals advise women
to do regular self-examination~.

4

The Southeastern Ohio BreaSI
and Cervical Cancer Project oilers
rn:t! mammograms. breast t!x.ams

and Pap tests to women who qualify
and for more information on those
ex amination ~ residents may 'all the

Meigs County Health Department at
9'12-6026.

Society S_
crapbook:..__
. -------'--.. . r',.:,.&lt;.;UMW discusses projects
Projects were discussed when the
Reedsville
United
Methodist
Women met recently at the church
with Diane Jones as hostess.
Emma Du&lt;'it gave the prayer and
Gladys Thomas read the purpose of
the UMW. Scripture from Proverbs
was read by Grace Weber
A total of 53 ..;hutin calls were
rt!ported and ~:a rJ s were ~e nt to
friends . Meetings for the Alhen~
District were announced and &lt;1
pled~e to missions was paid . It was
noted lhat the nominating commiuee

will meet in May and that there will
be no meetings in June or July.
Potted llowers were given to two
members who have had recent
deaths in their families . Frances
Reed was appointed to assist the
treasurer. The memhers \1n ted to

have a pecan sale in November.
Helping kits are to be made and a
fam1ly in need will be remembered
at Christmas time. A circle of prayer
closed the meeting.
A game was played with prizes
given. Regina Reed won lhe door
prite . Refre,hmenls were served to
tht)..;e named and Emma Dursl, Ann

LaComb. Julia LaComb. Pearl
Osborne, Nancy Buckley. Nina
Boslon. Rosemary Vance. Re~ina
Rec~ . and Lilian Pi.-kens. Next meting will he with Delores Frank.

The hospital just announced the
formation of Pediatric Clinical Trials International Inc. (PCTI). which
will be housed on its main campus.
making Children's just nne of two
institutions in the nation to be affili ated with an organization dedicated
exclusively to pediatric pharonaceu-

ceutical development. With nearly
three -quarters of all drugs prescribed to children not approved.
new regulations from the FDA now
ensure full-scale clinicals for all
existing and proposed pharmaceuticals with pediatric applications.

lical re search and tesling.

rescar.-h conducted by PCTI will
benetit children today and well into
the future .
At the end of I'197. the FDA
Modernization Act was passed, call- ·
ing for the inclusion of children in
research trials of pharmaceuticals.
Having pharmaceutical research
con~ucteu at Children's will allow
Ohio's children with acute and

PCTI is founded on the principle
of children helping children through
research. As one of the nation·s first
Site Management Organi zations
(SMO) dedicated exclusively to
pediatric pharmaceutical research
and testing. this new venture is

Children's Hospital announces
new venture
Children's Hospital in Columbus
has recently emerged as a national

launched on the foundation of more
than 15 years experience as a Clinical Studies Center affiliated with
Children's Hospital in Columbus.

leader in the ;J rea of drug research
and te •·il ing for childrl!n.

PCTIIaunches at an exciting time

for pediatric healthcare and pharma -

~..· hmnic medical problems access to

the latest pharmaceutical advancements. as well as affecting the lives

of chiiJren everywhere .

?ihb. to,drug ."nd alc~hol addiction.
In the )Os, I m cool. .
Donn~ calls their on-camera
reun1on a great opponuntly to gel
our talents back out there to the mass-

Brothers. Don?y would love to have
Hanson. today stop teenybopper tno.
on the new show.
Marie is thinking a bit more
grown-up. Her guest wish-list

Regardl~ss of wh~ drops in._ the
Osmonds f&lt;gure what s bemg sa&lt;d "
the key to , 11 ractmg an audience.
" If we have a great conversation
with our gue sts and make them feel at

es.

ease and have a great time. talk about
some great stories. 1he audien~e is
going to have a great time ... Donny

llleir toothy grins and whnle,ome

Just don't expect anything nasly or

includes Oscar-winning actress Mery l
Strcep and comedian and tdevision

hanter invaded the nation's living
rooms on Friday nights from 1974 to

exploitive a Ia trash talk king Jerry
Springer. !Shocking tidbit' Donny

pioneer Milton Berle. whom the duo
worked with years ago.

watchc~ Springer and says. "Jerry
~oes his thing very well.")

"There is enough out there that's

dressed up in outlandish cosrumes.

discouraging and depressing." Donny

He wa' 16. She wa.' 14.
Twenty years later. Donny "nd
Marie are reuniting for a syndicated
daytime talk show that debuted this
week (check local listings for channel
and time).
After the '70s series ended. they

sa1d. "I want a lillie enlightenment."
But baby boomers yeaming for
some of the old hits ("It Takes Two,"
''I'm Leaving It JAil) Up to You" )
may be rewarded.
" I think it would be wrong if we
didn't address it There's definite pos-

splitto pursue separate careers. Both

sibilities of doing so me of the old

released albums. appeared on Broad-

things. in a tongue-in-cheek kind of

way and in regional theater. Yt:t. as

way or an updated version of it,"

adults, they never matched their teenage successes.
Then, in · the cyclical nmure of
things. Donny and Marie found the
clean living they espoused 20 years
ago had become hip again.
"Maybe I never did drugs. I saw
friends of mine throw their careers
away over substance abuse aod I didn't want any pan of it." said Marie.

Donn y said.
"Those songs, as silly a' they
were. meant a lot to people at that
age ... Mane sai~.
In a nod to hiS days as aliger Beat
magazine poster boy when he was a
membe r of the singing Osmond

who lost her friend . singer Andy

SENIOR PICTURES
with a Hot Rod or Custom
Motorcycle

LEARN TO
DRIVE!

said.

"Witat cYt'J
WoHLaK SltoNld
!J(n,ow rAboJti
0Jff:fJjtJ ro1i1"
Holzer Medical Center's
Women's Health Month Celebration
Monday, September 28 at 7 p.m.
French Five Hundred Room
Ricky D. St. Onge, MD
"Introduction to Osteoporosis"

J. Timothy Betz, RN, BSN, MS, FNP
·Director of HMC Therapy Services
"Reversing the Effects of Gravity"

C!w.. .1 '99

Marjorie Lang, MS, RD, LD
"Importance of Nutrition with
Respect to Osteoporosis"

Rodney B. Stout, MD, Endocrinologist
Holzer Clinic and HMC Staff
"M anagement of 0 steoporos1s
."

Get Them Before the Weather turns
Call For Appointment
740-985-3658

FANTASY PHOTOGRAPHY

for those wild older drivers- they're high risk
ti~tics .

Jf"ilp
"CM;d,cine

The national anJ international

Osmond siblings bring toothy smiles to daytime TV lineup

1978. when the youngest-ever hosts

Nielsen estimates 22.5 million views Clinton's testimony

di sease.
By ce lehraling Meigs County
Bre:.a:-.t Cancer Aw:.~rene~s Day. the
Retired ami Senior Volunleer Progra m of Meig ~ County and the
Southca:-.tcm Ohio Breast and Cervical Cancer Project hope to increase
awareness of how early detection
can ~ave lives.

to

of a weekly national television show
pelted each other with pies and

The ChriSima.~ catalogs are arriving. They tell me in the cities,
stores have decorated Christmas trees on display and their Christmas decorating ·departments have opened for business for Christmas, 1998. I don't want to go there. yet, do you'' Let's have Halloween and Thanksgiving. Do keep smiling.

women will be diagnosed with the

demonstrale a commitment to light

LOSANGELES &lt;A_P) - lie used
to be a little b11 mck n mil. She used
to be a little bit country. Together.
Donny and Marie Osmond were
either America's favorite brother-siste~ act or the m('ISt annoying .

In a recent column. I noted Jean Alkire and some of her friends
were trying to come up with the source of the expression some
years back:
"What a revoltin ' development this is".
I don't know if Jean and her group were successful in figuring
it out but thanks to readers I have the answer.
Roger Williams, Shirley Simmons, Bob Beegle, Edwina Scott.
David Sayre. John Tillis. Lil Han and one other' caller who did not
identify himself. all phoned that the expression was one used often
by William Bendix on his television' show, "The Life of Riley".
I appreciate all of the calls and I'm convinced it was Bendix.
That many readers can't be wrong. And by the way. it 's preuy
encouraging to me to know that I not only have readers, but I have
sman readers. Thanks.

'Clinton. however. gave a hig

es and frequent

activitit&gt;..; that were once enjoyabl~ .

By Bob Hoeflich

boost to the all -news cable networks.
CNN's audience during its broadcast
of the testimony was nine time.s bigger than it is on a normal day. For the
full day. CNN received its second-

trnl of my life . It is my hope that I
can be an inspirJtion to mhers who
suffer from this dcva:-.tating illn~~o,s _
The I'I'JM Natwnal Depre&lt;&gt;ion
Screening Day is Oct. R. There will
be more than J.O&lt;MI free anonymous
screening sites all aero:-.., the ~..:uun ­
try. Please urge your readers to take

~tomach

tn:Jin"lt:nt they nc:t:d. This is trtJgic

at.Jvanrage of thi . . importanl pro -

Beat of the Bend ...

NEW YORK (AP) - AI least
22.5 million viewers tuned in to
wak:h the tape of President Clinton's
testimony before Kenneth Starr's
grand jury on Monday, Nielsen
Media Research said.
The audience for the four-hour
duel between Clinton and prosecutors was dwarfed by the 67.6 million
people who tuned in during primetime Aug. 17 to see Clinton speak to
the nation hours after he addre&gt;Sed
the grand jury.
Nielsen's figure measures the
audience for ABC. CBS. NBC.
CNN, Fox News Channel and
MSNBC. People who saw Clinton
on other channels. like C-SPAN or
Coun TV. were not mea.~ured and
neither were people who watched the
testimony in the oftice or some public place. Nielsen does·not keep track
of those audiences.
CBS had the bigge.st audience of
the networks - 5. 1 million households - presumably because CBS is
the long-time ratings leader in daylime television. said David Poltrack.
chief of research for CBS . NBC was
second and ABC third.
In general, CBS's audience for
Clinton was about the same as it
would gel during a normal day's progmmming of soap opera.1 and game
shows. he said.
"They traded a few soap opera
fans for news fans and came n ul :..11
about the same place." Poltrad said.

:-.tcp. Thing:-, really tumcJ around for
me . I fed \0 mu~.:h bellcr and in lon-

FREE TO THE PUBLIC
For more information contact
Event Coordinator Bonnie McFarland, RN,
BMC Wellness Department. at 446-5679
Door prizes awarded by Holzer Clinic: Radiology Dept.

r

John C. Wolf, D.O.

Otit

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

0

=.:=~'I

....J..

The premiums we pay are set
to cover the insumnce company's
costs for providing the desired cov,
erage for a large number of similar
individuals. Your good driving
record may save you a few dolla&lt;'i
on your premium, but the ba.'ic rate
is based upon the predicted expenses for insuring those of your age and
driving a vehicle like yours.
You might think !hal a.' a pe&lt;'ion
develops inlirmities, he or she
would voluntarily stop driving. The
statistics clearly show that this isn't
so. Drivers 80 and older have accident death rates greater than that of
teenagers' In addition 10 having this
greater risk of death from an accident, they also have more accidents
for each I 00,000 miles driven.
So the answer to your question is
thai on a statistical basis, older citizens are "high risk" drive&lt;'i. But, it is
also true thai most older drivers and most teenagers - are quite careful and competent. Because state
governments keep such careful
records. it just takes a few bad expe-

POWELL'S
STORE HOURS

Monday thru
Sunday
8AM·10PM

298 SECOND ST.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
GOOD THRU SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1998

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Village Council, special meeting. 7
p.m., for consideration of personnel
matte&lt;'i.
RACINE - The Red Brush
Church of Christ on Bashan Road,
special services Wednesday through
Saturday 7. p.m. and Sunday. I0
a.m. and 6 p.m. Guy Mallory of
Winter Garden, Fla., to speak.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District,
annual planning meeting. Thursday.
I0 a.m .. Pomeroy LibrJry.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars ·

CHESHIRE Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency monthly
bo;~rd meeting Thursday. 4 p.m . at
the Guidtng Hand School.
Riverbend
REEDSVILLE Garden Club. Thursday, 7:JO p.m . at
the home of Ruth Ann Balderson.
New oflicer&lt; to be installed.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. Thursday. tUO p.m. at the
Luthemn Church. Members to ta~e
salad and wear purple.
POMEROY - The Caring and
Sharing Suppon Gmup of the Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Cenrer will be
held Thursday at I p.m. Flynt
Adkins of Holzer Clinic will discuss
sleep diwrde&lt;'i.
FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Trustees. special meeting. Friday. township garage on Joppa
Road. 7:30p.m.

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

c

PEACHES
2901.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

c

t ••~~ •••• sl'' ..._.;;;;;.LU_C.,;;;K'-S___.

huck

PINTO
BEANS
150Z

KRAFT 14 oz. DELUXE
MAC &amp; CHEESE OR 12
oz. ORIG VELVEETA &amp;
SHELLS DINNERS

KUFT SHREDDED

Cheese ••••••••••••
(Asst. var)

2/$

POINT PLEASANT - Revival
services, Lifeline Apostolic Church.
Point Pleasant. 7:30 p.m. Friday.
Saturday and Sunday. Evangelist
Aaron Bounds.

oz

4.5. 15.5
LIMIT 12
PLEASE ADD
PURCH 2/B9¢

STIVERSVILLE - Stiversville
Community Church, hymn sing. Friday. 7:30 p.m. at church located on
County Road J I. The Crusaders will
be the featured singers.

'

29c

920Z

CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN
NOODLE SOUP

SATURDAY
HarHARRISONVILLE risonville Lodge 411 F&amp;AM. Saturday. to host Scouish Rite Players
Club of Columbus. Masonic Temple. Dinner at 6 p.m.; play at 7 p.m.
Dinner is free . open to public.

2/$1

SUNDAY
RACINE - Eagle Ridge Community Chun:h homecoming. Sunday. Basket dinner at noon; singing
al I :30 p.m. featuring the Bissell
Brothers and Harvest lime.

2/$
TIDE
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

STOKELY'S
VEGETABLES

10.25

oz

$5''
KLEENEX
COTTONELLE
BATH TISSUE
4ROLL

-

c

--~----~---

DOMINO
SUGAR

MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission. 7:30
p.m. Monday. Veterans Service
Office. Mulberry Ave .. P.omeroy.

$199

Ostriche meat _gaining propularity with gourmet restaurants
MADERA, Calif. (AP) - They chance to pay SSS.OOO for a single
·provide red meat with less fat und breeding pair. As each hen produced
cholesterol than chicken, yet more at least 40 chicks a year, he built his
iron and protein lhun beef. They herd to 600 ostriches on three thriv·breed at exponential rates and reach ing ranches.
And thnee years ago. he and six
-adulthood in a mere 14 months.
Yes, we're talking ostriches- a other ostrich ranchers in the San
s-pecialty meat finding its way into Joaquin Valley formed the Ostrich
restaurants and gourmet stores Meat Co. The compnny operates one
. of six ostrich processing plants in
across the United States.
Ostriches, once grown for their the United States that have full-time
meat exclusively in South Africa. Agriculture Depanment inspectors
got their stan in the United States in on site.
The company pacltages ostrich
.1989, when ranchers were allowed
to import 70 birds for commercial steaks, ground meat. patties and
jerkies and sends them to stores and
use.
-David Tellins leaped at the ~urants across the nation, from

LIMIT 1 PLWE.IDD.

O'SAGE
RAGGEDY RIPE

-:------Community Calenda
9053 meeting Thursday. 7:30 p.m .
with name drawing 10 be held .

24PKCUBE

2 LITERS

Question: I recently received my judgment that ultimately result in
car insurance bill and noticed it had accidents. Judgment error is respongone up. My insurance agent said sible for most accident~ involving
the price ha.1 incnea.&lt;ed since I am young drive&lt;'i. Drivers over65 make
now 65, and thai alone makes me a judgment errors too, but more often
high-risk driver. I am a very careful their accidents are. in pan. the result
driver, as are most of my friends. of specific health problems.
Two newly published studies
Are older drive&lt;'i really "high risk?"
Answer: A person's age. by itself. show that those with decreased
has little to do with his or her ability vision were more likely than similar
to manage the complex tasks people without vision problems to
involved in driving. However. traffic have been recently involved in an
accident statistics do show that cer· accident or to have recently received
lain age groups have greater pmb- a "ticket" from the police. Vision
lems managing these complex skills wao; measured in these studies with a
simple eye chan or more complex riences to give insurance companies
than others do.
I think everyone is aware that visual-pen:eptual testing. Restricted the rationale to raise rates for all of
young drivers are more pron~ to movement of the neck and falling those in your age group.
accidents. Typically. they pay an within the past two year&lt; also made
increased premium until age 25 or it more likely that a person would be
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
so. New drive" of any age also pay involved in an accident.
.column. To submit questions,
The likelihood of having one or write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
more for several years, and "new"
includes individuals who have been more of these health problems University College of Osteopathic
. oUtside the USA for lwo years or increa.\es with age, and that is why Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall,
your insurance rate has gone up. Athens, Ohio 4570 l.
more and then return .
Drivers of all ages make errors in Insurance is a business based on sta-

The Communi I¥ Calendar is pub. lished a.' a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar is not designed to promote sales
or fund rJise&lt;'i of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
he guaranteed to run a specilic number of days.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

San Fmncisco to New York. The
meat also is exponed to Asian countries including Japan, South Korea
and Taiwan.
"This still is a specialty niche
product at this time. We do have
some gourmet stores in the San
Francisco Bay area and Los.Angeles
that sell our meal, but we're primarily · in the service industry like
restaurants," Telling said.
Ostriches are native to South
Africa. which owned the world market for more than I00 years by
enforcing a ban on live bird exports.
That rilonopoly allowed ranchers to
command as much as $800 to $900

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Wednesday, September 23, 1998

Page 10•The Dally Sentinel

· Wednesday, September 23, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

When allergies attack, don't wheeze and whine, fight back·
By BILL SNYDER
The Neahvtpe Tennessean
Ragweed.
It's called the "Rodney Dangerf~eld or illnesses .. because, experts
say, it doesn't get the respect or
anention it deserves.
The common allergy doesn't
cause disability or deaths the way
more "serious" diseases can, but it
COlli.&lt; the nation bi II ion.&lt; of dollars a
year in medical expenses and lost
work days.
Among children. poorly controlled allergies may be a leading
cause or lellllling impainncnt.
"They don., get a good night's
sleep - they're waking up all the
time. They're tearing. sneezing.
They can't focus," says Dr. John J.
Murray. an allergy expert at Vander·
bilt University Medical Center.
Benadryl, possibly the most common over-the-counter medication
ror allergies, has a sedating etlw
rurther reducing their concentration.
"In today 's competitive academic environment. that can do damage
to their future," says Dr. Phil Lieberman, clinical professor of medicme
and pediatrics at the University of
Tennessee College of Medicine in
Memphis.
As ragweed season blooms. now
is the time to think seriously about
allergies. experts say. A national
education campaign, Allergy Action.

is distributing a free brochure that
promises "Fifty Ways to Outsmart
Your Allergies."
To obtain the brochure. call
Allergy Action at I (HHH) 272-9791.
Allergy Action is a program or the
Schering Corp., maker!&gt; or the antihistamine Claritin. in association
with the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America.
People who are allergic to ragweed pollen already have received
the news their eyes are watery and
itchy. They' re sneezing. and their
noses are runnmg.
Ginna Anderson knows. "I've
been sneezing a Jot - sometimes up
to I5 time. a day ... say&lt; the 25-yearctd gmduate student in bitx:hemisrry
at Vanderbilt. "I walk around with a
Kleene&lt; all day ...
Allergy sufferers might already
have tried to limit their exposure by
spending more time in air-condition~d indoors. and by driving with
the windows rolled up and the air
conditioner blowing.
1r they exercise outdoors. they
time their workouts for the late
afternoons mgweed spores are shed
primarily in the early morning
hours .
And they're loading up on antihistamines and decongestants.
That's part of the problem. allergy ex pens say.
"A lot of people don 't seek med-

ical care or they try to selr-medicate
with over-the-counter products, ..
Murray says . .. A Jot of people ... just
think that's the way it's supposed to
be -they don't know what it's like
10 breathe through their nose ...
"People don't have to surfer. and
yet they do," adds Liebennan.
Many people swear by their overthe-counter rem~dies. But others.
like Anderson. have found greater
relief- and fewer side effecu- in
the newer prescriptioo drugs. which
range from Claritin to steroid nasal
sprays. Allergy shots, which can
"desensitize" the body 's immune
system to allergens like pollen, also
are effective ror many people.
In addition. while ragweed may
seem to be the culprit, many people
are even more allergic to mold and
dust mites. By retreating indoors,
they are ironically increasing their
exposure to the very things rhey're
allergic to.
The answer" See your doctor.
Not everybody needs to see an
allergy specialist. " But if a primarycare doctor can't get you to a normal
quality of life within a reasonable
amount of expense and education, a
boartl-cenified allergist can make a
dramatic impact on the quality or
your lire." says Dr. James Seltzer, an
allergy specialist and pediatrician at
the University or California at San
Diego.

Board certification indicates a
doctor ha.&lt; taken training and passed
an exam in a specialty area.
Allergies should not be treated
lightly. They are a major trigger for
a.&lt;thma - the most common cau.o;c
of hospitalization in children. " In
approximately 85 percent of people
with asthma, allergies play a significant role a• precipitating factors,"
Seltzer says.
In addition, both allergies and
a•thma are on the rise.
More than 20 million U.S. resident• suffer rrom hay fever, and
another 40 million rrom other allergies. Experts believe hay fever.
known medically a• "allergic rhinitis." will rise by about 8 percent a
year during the next decade.
The reasons: More people carry
the genetic susceptibility for allergies and asthma.
If one parent ha.s allergies, the
child ha.s a 35 percent to 50 percent
chance of developing allergies
sometime during his or her life.
Seltzer says. If both parents have
allergies. the child has a 75 percent
to S5 percent chance.
Genetic susceptibilities are very
specific. If you were born with an
allergy "gene .. to cat dander but not
ragweed pollen. you won't stan
sneezing even in a field of mgweed
-unless a cat is rubbing up against
your leg .

But the greater - and earlier your exposure to your inherited
allergy. "the more allergic you tend
to become," Seltzer says.
Unrortunately, in today\ urban
environment. there is more ex~un:
to pollutants and other inhaled iriitants.
"We are even creating new allergies because we are altering the
environment." says Dr. John Estrada. an immunologist and assistant
proressor of pediatrics at Meharry
Medical College in Nashville, Tenn.
Low-income people who live in
inner-city neighborilood.• are panicularly vulnerable. E.~trada says.
because !hey may be exposed 10
more industrial pol.lutants. Poorly
kept .housing may increao;e exposure
to mold and dust mites. And smoking is "the No. I allergen in poor
household• ... he says.
Fonunately, help ror allergy surrerers is on the way.
Ander.;on. the graduate student,
is participating in a Vanderbilt study
or a new 24-hour antihistamine
called Zyrtcc.
Another Vanderbilt study is trying to determine whether Claritin.
by relieving allergy symptoms in
people with asthma, can also rt:lieve
their a.~thma. says Brendie Keane. a
registered nur$e and clinical
research specialist at the Vanderbilt
Asthma-Sinus-Allergy
Program

(ASAP).
The new medications are expen- .
sive. Claritin, for example, costs S2
a day.
One or the aims or the ~search is
to encourage employee health plans
• to cover the newer antihistamines by
demonstrating that the higher-priced
drugs can lead to lower overall
health cosL&lt; and improved productivity. Murray says.
On the horizon is a potential biological weapon that may attack
allergies at their roots.
Called the anti-lgE antibody. thi$
immune-system molecule is manuractured in mice to attack the lgE
antibody. which works overtime io
people with allergies to trigger the
cascade of snifnes. sneezes and
itchy eyes.
Early tests of the treatment.
which probably would need to be
given a.• an injection every two tu
six weeks, are encourdging. Longterm studies currently are under
way. .. Any time you fool with
Mother Nature. you want to look a1
it carefully,.. says Dr. Bob Lanier. a
Fort Worth, Texas. allergy specialist
who is researching lgE.
The cost or the treatment has nt~
yet been determined. but potentially
the treatment could help a wid.:
range or people, no matter what is
causing their allergy, Lanier says.

Understanding of allergies leads to new treatments for all those who suffer
By BILL SNYDER
The Nashville Tennessean
Most na...al allergies result from
an overreaction of the body 's
immune system to pollen. mold or
other "allergens" in the air.
Antibodies are immune-system
proteins that circulate in the blood·
stream and serve as a kind of roving
patrol ror foreign invaders. A speciric antibody. lgE, is involved in aller·
glc reactions.
It attaches to a special kind of
immune system cell. called a mast
, cell, that contains chemical
" weapons. such as hislamine and

Jeukotrienes, to fight off the
invaders.
When an allergen like a particle
or ragweed pollen gets into the
bloodstream. it attaches to the ends
·· of the lgE antibody that are protrud; ing rrom the surface of a ma.'t cell.
' In response. the mast cell opens up.
spilling out its chemical contents.
These chemicals act on other
body tissues. and trigger a cascade
nf inflammatory reactions that cui·
minates in allergy symptoms from itchy eyes to lung congestion _
Some scientists believe JgE
developed as a way to rid the body

But these medications are limitof parasites. such as round worms.
Unfortunately. the round worm ·pro- ed. says Lanier. because they're like
tein that sets orr the immune-system paper towels. trying to mop up the
of
histamine
and
alarm is very similar to the protein "spill"
of allergy-causing pollen~. says Dr. Jeukotrienes that have alread)
Bob Lanier. a Fon Worth. Texas. occurred.
Lanier and other scientists are
allergy specialist who is researching
testing an anti-lgE antibody, in an
lgE.
Antihistamines block the actions attempt to block lgE before the
·
of histamine on body tissues. Newer "spill" occurs.
"It's · like a hunter-seeker misasthma drugs, which some doctors
also use to treat severe hay rever, sile," he says. "It trys to lind the
block the other chemical.•. allergic antibody. It couples with it
and ties it up . ... It's like putti~g a
Jeukotrienes.
Astelin. a new antihistamine pla.,tic plug in an electrical outlet. ..
Whether the anti-JgE revolutionnasal spray. can get into the bloodstream through the tiny blood ves- izes the treatment of allergies
sels in the nose more quickly than remains to be seen. however.
Another current approach is to
can oral medicalions. "You get
some systemic absorption ... within suppress local immune reactions in
five to 10 minutes, " says Dr. John J. the nose by using steroid nose
Murray, an allergy expen at Vander- sprays like Na.&lt;acort.
"The nasal steroid spray is the
bilt University Medical Center.
"Ciaritin may take one to two most effective medicine." says Dr.
hours ...
Donna Sandidge. a Nashville. Tenn ..
Antihistamines have few side allergist. ··Jt blocks the reaction
effects and probably can be used for berore the reaction starts ...
A nonsteroidal nasal spray.
years witht&gt;ut causing problems.
says Dr. James Seltzer. an allergy Nasalcrom. is available over the
. specialist and pediatrician at the counter. It also works to reduce
University of. Calirornia at Sun inllammation but must be used rrequently.
Diego.

"

Allergy shots try to outwit the
immune system by injecting small
doses of the offending allergens
under the skin. Eventually, the body
becomes accustomed to the allergens and no longer sees them as roreign invaders to be attacked.
In I5 percent to 20 percent of
people. allergy shots will "cure ..
them of their allergies. Murray says.
In addition. "H5 percent will have
substantial benellt ... he says.
The shots may take two to three
years to give a full efrect. But if they
aren't working within IH months.
"you generally stop,'' Seltzer says.
Herbal allergy remedies are
enjoying increasing popularity.
The Chinese use an ephedrinecontaining herb. known as ephedra
or Ma huang. to treat asthma. But
ephedrine is a stimulant that can
increase blood pressure and cause
other potentially serious side effects.
Other herbs are touted as natural
remedies for colds and inllammation. But !heir effectivene.s in
relieving alle&lt;!;y symptoms has not
been scientifically determined.

The Meigs Marauder Band is
performing in new uniforms this
year.
They consist of black pants
and maroon long coats with gold
buttons and braid accent. Cost
for the 79 outfits totaled
Sl7.000.
Individuals. organizations or
businesses interested in donating
to the uniform rund may send a
check to the Meigs High School
Band. 42091 Pomeroy Pike.
Pomeroy.
The new uniforms replace
Ihose purchased I I years ago.
Senior band members wearing
the new outfits pose with trophies which the band has won in
competitions this fall.
At the Lancaster contest last
Saturday. the group placed first
overall and qualified for state
competition .
NEW UNIFORMS • Shown here In the new uniform&amp; with Bridget Vaughan, center, left, flag captain,
end Bonne Smith, field commander, are from the left, front, Melissa Holman, Alyaon Patterson, Jennifer
Lambert end Stefani Pickens, second row, Jennifer Heck and Dwight Icenhower, and back, Adam
Williams, Melt Juetlce, Ben Craig, and Jason Young.

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Tips for allergy control

,

f~" ~'Nash~li'le ~~~~~~
v&lt;c

••,.

' .·

Ultimately. proper control of allergies is up to the patient:
.
Find out what you are allergic to and minimize your exposure if ~!

~ ~~-

-~

;)/

- Jr it's mold and dust mites. check ror areas of moisture under ,·
;:C the sink and in the bathroom. and clean thll!le areas thoroughly with ·.
f&gt; diluted bleach or commercial disinrectants like Lysol. says Dr. James ,
:': Seltzer, an allergy specialist and pediatrician at the University of •.
~/-- · California al San Diego.
- Use a dehumidifier. if necessary. to dry out the house.
- Vacuum carpels and upholstery thoroughly to pick up any
remaining mold spores and dust mites.
- Get proper medical control. with the help of your physician.
and take the medications a&lt; directed. If one avenue doesn't work, try ·
another- including allergy shuts. ir necessary.
- If you're a parent. watch your children closely for signs of '
allergies and get appropriate treatment. Children may have a hard
time expressing themselves. and they may not realize how severely
allergy. symptoms are afrecting their concentration at school.
-Push Jluids. say~ Dr. John Estrada. an immunolngist and a..sis- ..
tant professor of pediatrics at Meharry Medical College in Nashville.
Tenn .. particularly in &lt;·hildren who are congested a.&lt; a result of their
allergies.
Good hydration helps them cough up nasal dminage and lung
; &lt;, secretions. Without it. they are at risk nf developing bronchitis ur
''·Z pneumonia. he says.
",;

Meigs Marauders get
new band uniforms

~ Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Sentinel News Hotline

992·2156

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GALLIPOLIS

Thursday, October 1st

Federal Reserve chief appearing before Senate committee
WASHINGTON (AP)- Federal one of concern about inflation to one
Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, or concern about inadequate
who ha~ the power to send financial growth," said McDonough.
markets soaring or plummeting with
"I can assure you that as I go into
a few well chosen words. could be that meeting I will continue to be
gelling ready to tell investon what very aware of potential weakness in
they want to hear most - that the our economy," McDonough told
Fed will cut U.S. interest rates 10 fight reporten arter a speech in London,
a widening global financial crisis.
rererring to next Tuesday's closedExpectations of such a move were door discussions by the Federal Open
heightened Tuesday by comments or Market Committee, the group of Fed
Wjlliam McDonough, president of governors and regional bank presil)(e New York regional Fed bank. dents who set interest rate policies.
"The balance of risk has shifted from
lr the FOMC does move interest

DALLAS ( AP) - Texans Jove to
brag, though most are ready to stop
talking about one or the hottest,
deadliest and costliest summers in
stale history.
The calendar says today is the first
day of autumn, but the heat is hang• ing around: IOO.degree temperatures
were roreca•t in many parts of the
Lone Star State.
Texans would like 10 be done with
the summer or I998, the season that
gripped the Dallas area with 29
straight days or I00-plus heat.
They're not likely to- be nostalgic
over making it through the seconddriest summer on record.
Mary Jo Walker's kids will recall
how they were dragged to the library.
pool, shopping mall and twice to Colorado - just about anywhere there
was air conditioning or tooler weather. " You can't do Chuck E. Cheese's
every day, " Ms. Walker said.
Security guard Beth McDonald
said she would "go home, tum on the
air conditioner. strip and play on the
computer."
Dalla•-Fort Wonh endured its

sn State Route 7

IO,ICE
Owners or agents of Pomeroy rental
ho~•lng units, Inspection permits are
req~lred per Pomeroy Ordinance #622
by November 15, 1998. Penalties will
bt assessed after this date.

'

ing, the mere fact that he was
expressing growing concern about
financial turmoil was enough to propel the Dow Jones industrial average
10 a 381-point gain on the fint trading day after his comments, the
biggest one-day point increase in history.
But last week, Greenspan sent
nwkets in the opposite direction
when in an appearance berore the
House Banking Commince he deflated e~pectations or coordinated interest rate cuts among the world's seven largest economies. His comments

can remain an oasis of prosperity
unaffected by a world that is experiencing greatly increased stresl."
Greenspan went on to say that the
central bank had switched f'rom being
womed about too-much growth in
the United States triggering innation
to being more concerned about the
financial turmoil oversea&lt;, which at
the time of his speech had moved
rrom Asia 10 Russia and wa• threatening Lalin America.
While he didn't promise any rate
cuts or give any hint to possible tim-

sent the Dow plunging the next day
by 2 I6 poin!S rollowing huge drops
in Tokyo and other overseas markets
because of disappointment that the
Fed will 001 soon act.
Lower U.S. interest rates would
help a number or countries sbllggling
to defend their curr!'ncies by lowering the value or the. U.S. dollar on
global markets. The lower U.S. rates
would also bolster global confidence
by assuring roreign businesses that
the Fed stood ready to insure that
U.S. growth would continue to serve
as an economic engine

hottest May-August on record. Overall temperatures averaged 85.9
degrees. exceeding the 85.6 average
in 1980.
Fifty-one times- more than seven weeks in all ~ afternoon highs
reached or exceeded I00 degrees.
Sundown brought little relief; with
overnight lows or at Jeast80 a record
38 times.
At Jea.•t I3 I people died of the
heat in Te\as, including 5 I illegal
immigrants near the Mexican border.
About 100 died or the heat in 1980,
excluding illegal immigrnnts.
Searin~. unrelenting heat al'!'&gt; took
a deadly toll elsewhere over the
summer: At least 3 I died in
Louisiana. 22 in Oklahoma, seven in
Alabama, three in Missouri, two in
Pennsylvania and one each in California, Arizona and Oregon.
Many or the heat's victims in
Oklahoma were elderly people who
didn't have air conditioning.
"There were a 101 of people who
said they were tired and sluggish, said
they weren't resting well," said Candy Richardson, city clerk and trea-

surer in Altus, Okla., which recorded 89 days of triple-digit heat. "I
think everyone here is ready for winter."
The drought of I998 barely dampened Texas: With 5.84 inches or rain
rrom April to August. only the Dust
Bowl year or 1934 was drier.
The heat ravaged Texas' cotton
and com crops. Agricultural losses
were estimated at more than $2. I billion. making it the costliest drought
since a seven-year dry stretch or the
1950s.
Trees, shrubs and grass are
scorched brown. Many plants simply
gave up. Similar stories could be told
of surrounding states. especially
Oklahoma. where rainrall was a foot
below normal.
Autumn or not. some Texans had
no plans to tum off the air conditioners.
Sheryl Boyles, an office courier
who drives more than 300 miles
every day, is among them. Don'ttry
telling her it's fall, she said, "not until
the temperature changes ...

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SITUAnON GLOOMY • Fermera work the
fields harvesting com In Berlin, Ill., Tuesday.
The com and soybean harvest Ia picking up
acroaa the state, but the aituetlon Ia very
gloomy for lhe farmers. The price of com and

soybeans Is the lowest IIgurs In a decade. 1111·
nola fanners sre trying to IIgurs ciut how much
grain they should store and how much they
should sell at prices below thelt coat of production. (AP)

U. S. farmers continue
protest of imported
grain from Canada
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP)- Larry Neubauer has had it with trade
officials who oversee the increasing
now or imported grain rrom Canada
that he claims is killing the market ror
his crop.
"The peaceful ways, the talking
ways, the diplomatic ways, have
ba&lt;ically been exhausted," he said.
Hundreds or farmer!&gt; and ranchers
like Neubauer staged a fo~r-hour
blockade Monday to keep trucks
carrying Canadian farm products
rrom crossing the U.S. border at
Sweetgrass. Mont. They also rallied
at Canadian ports of entry in North
·Dakota and stopped a Canadian
;Pacific train for about 20 miiWtes
'! near Portal, N.D., by putting a trac·
tor on the tracks.
; "These little towns are drying up
:- farmers don't have any money,"
·said Hank Zell of Shelby, Mont.
: _ Frustration with trade policies ha.•
intensified so much that North and
,_·South Dakota officials began pulling
; over Canadian trucks last week under
~ tougher inspection programs ror
~ wheat and livestock.
;
"Our market just keeps slipping
: away from us," said rally organizer
~- Ron Jensen of Sweetgra.". "We just
: can't arrord 10 produce a bushel of
: grain for $2. The federal government
: says it costs us $5.54 to produce it. ..
'
The farmers have been through
: this argument before.
:
From June 199] through May
: 1994. Canada shipped nearly 91 mil• lion bushels of wheat south. Under
: pressure from farmers and farm: state lawmakers. the U.S. govern•. ment adopted limits that year on the
:. amount of wheat Canada could
~ export to the United States without
i paying tariffs.
.
• Those quotas - wh1ch allowed
i- Canada to ship only 55 million
: bushels of wheat annually before tar•iffs were imposed - were lifted a
year later, and grain shipments from
Cnnada rose to 73.2 million bushels
in the last year.
• The law used to impose the tariffs
;as abolished during negotiations in
f995 under the General Agreement
qn Tariffs and Trade. said Neal Fish~r. udministmtor of the North Dako-

• LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jim
(;arrey suffered a minor neck injury
l{uring an altercation wh1le fil~mng
Iris upcoming mov1e about the hfe of
lhe late comedian Andy Kaurman.
·: Carrey and pmfessional wrestler
ltrry Lawler were filming the last
scene or the movie Tuesday night
when. as part of the script, the comedlan spit atlhe wrestler. Carrey man~ier Eric Gold ~aid.
.. Lawler then allegedly attacked the
comedian known for such movies as
''Liar Liar," "The Cable Guy," "The
1Tuman Show.. and "Ace Ventura:
pet Detective...
: "Jim was immersed in the role as
.Iindy. played it as Andy would
have," Gold said. "Mr. Lawler acted

HOLIDAY INN

is possible Greenspan will
s1gnal\ such a change in remarks he
was sq.eduled 10 deliver today before
the Scrlate Banking Committee.
The ~ed has not changed interest
rates smce March I997 and
Greenspan in the past ha.• liked 10 put
financial markets on notice of an
impending change in fed policy . .
At present, however, markets arc
perplexed In a Sept. 4 speech delivered at the University or Caliromia at
Berkeley. Greenspan warned that "it
is not credible that the United States

Officially, at least, the brutal
summer of 1998 is over in Te~as

ta Wheal Commission.
Now, the most-talked about and perhaps only - option for the
rarmers would be to get the federal
government to bring a case against
Canada berore the International Trade
Commission ror allegedly dumping
grain at below-cost prices.
To do this. the government would
need to know the prices set by the
Canadian Wheat Board. which
exports all wheat grown in western
€3ftada._However. efforts by Congress' General Accounting Office to
audit the board have failed . ·
Not everyone blames the Canadi ans. Ford Runge, an economics and
law professor at the University of
Minnesota. said Canadian grain
imports might have some modest
regional impact on prices, but in the
main, farm prices are ·set by larger
forces of supply and demand.
"This is just a rellection of farmers' frustration with low prices and a
series or bad years ... he said.
Canadian officials contend that
they're simply meeting customer
demand and are not dumping wheat
on the American market.
"It's customer satisfaction we're
capitalizing on now in the U.S.," said
Jim Pietryk. a spokesman for the
wheat board. "Our durum. the last
couple of years, has been diseasefree."
•
A North Dakota State University
study last year found durum and barley producers in the upper Midwest
had lost nearly $270 million in
income in three years because of
Canadian grain dumping. Processors
said they were forced to buy Canadian grain because of disea.&lt;e-plagued
domestic crops.
U.S. farmers dispute this, saying
there is plenty of good grain south of
the border.
Another problem for farmers is
that U.S. trade officials tabulate
wheat import figures on a nationwide
basis.
·
A spokesman in the office of U.S.
Trade Representative Charlene
Barshersky. who spoke on the condition he not be identified, pointed out
that .the United States exports 28
times as much wheat each year as it
impons from Canada.

Comedian Jim Carrey.injured on set

7:00 PM-10:15PM

~-it

••

unprofessionally and he auacked
him. He attacked him and he injured
his neck...
Police and paramedics were not
called to the scene or "Man on the
Moon." Carr!'y was treated and
released at a hospital.
Attempts to contact Lawler and
his agent were unsuccessful Tuesday
night.
Sixteen years ago, Kaurman was
hospitalized when Lawler performed
a "piledriver" move on him during a
wrestling match. Later. Lawler
slapped Kaufman out or his chair during a joint ap~. on "Late
Night with David Lettennan."
Kaufman died of luna C:IIICCI' in
1984 at age 35.
·

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MAKING
A DIFFERENCE FOR
NEW MOTHERS.
Our commitmenllo delivering complete maternity care is the big reason
why we offer the service~ of Michele
Platt. a Board Certifted lactation consultant, al 0' Bleness Hospital.
You see, sometimes a simple and
natuntl process like breaslfeeding can
cause mother.. a lol of frustnttion and
can pose a lot of questions.
So we help by oft'ering the loving
support lhal makes breastfeeding as
natuml as it oughl to be. With classes
and per..onal attention before the baby
is born. With bedside education in our
perinatal unit. With follow-up sessions, a support group and counseling
by phone.
The way we see il, by building a
new perinatal unit, by offering breastfeeding help and by featuring a variety
of birthing options t(Jr new mothers.
we're investing in our future, as well
as your...

CLASSES EVERY SIX WEEKS.
NEXT CLASS SEPT. 29

O'BLENESS
Memorial Ho.pital

SS Hoopillt Drive, "!liens, OH 4S11ll • 6l4-593-555t
WWW.obiellca.OIJ

A IIM,u.l ,, ea illl H,JH'tlfM of,

..

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Hurricane Georges barrels into

...

ll

u

THE FAVORITE- Vlllitonl voting on their favorltll of the 46 quilts displayed at Expo '9818iect·
ed this King family quilt, 1 college of photos telling the story of Mary Deloria and Virgil King's
life on the firm.

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

It was one of the 46 displayed

at the Expo quoit show. and the one
which 141 ofthe651 visitors voting selected a~ their "favorite."
The quilt is the story of Mr. and
Mrs. King. and their family life on
the farm .
Photos transferred to fabric
highlight the pattern. Featured are
the wedding picture and the 50th
anniversary picture of the couple.
surrounded by smaller pictures of

their parents. their children and
their grandchildren.
Activities on the fann and in the
community are al.~o depicted in
photographs on the quilt. Mrs.
King. a schoolbus driver for 25
years. is pictured with a bus; her
husband. Virgil . a lifetime farmer,
with a tractor.
Complementing the story in
pictures is a pieced border of prints
depicting life down on the farmthe animals. garden tools. tractors,
crops. sewing and other homemaking skills.
Mr. and Mrs. King. who have
spent all their married years on the
farm. have significantly contributed to their community, school
and church. They belong to the
Calvary Bible Church and are
active in Gideons inlemational. Mr.
King is a fonner township trustee
and school board member.
In addition to their five daughters who worked on the quilt, they
Have a son. David. who lives and

works on the fann.
Embroidered on the quilt is a
poem written by John Vinson of
Monterey. Va .. husband of the former Helen King. which tells the
story of the King family's lifestyle.
It reads:

Mnrher and Dad gave u.&lt; life
And a way of life on rht land.
We worktd ln!lelher rl!muJI,h
.fea.rofls wrd wtather.

While lendillJI, our nei11hbor.1 a
hand.
We planted our com
Milked cows and made hay
Dug our hoes in .&lt;rmwberry
rows,
And watched rlrem grow ripe in
May.

·'""II

We
mng.• of pmiu
In tho.&lt;e fairrily davs.
As Mother and Dad raughr us ro
pra1·

And to walk in rhe Savior's way.

PORT-AU-PRINCE. Haiti (AP)
- Hurricane Georges brought its
violent winds and rains to Haiti
today, prompting residents to race for
shelter ahead of the fla.~h floods and
land.~lides that were sure to roar down
the eroded mountains of this impoverished Caribbean nation.
Huge waves swamped the seaside
boulevard in the nonhem city of CapHaitien. and tin roofs new off homes.
"We're scared a little. but we have
a lot of faith ," said Pon-au-Prince
supennarket clerk Nadine Augustin,
19. Like most Haitians, her family
had done lillie to prepare for the
storm.
As Georges marched relentlessly
to the nonhwest. a hurricane watch
wa~ posted today for south Florida,
including Monroe, Miami Dade,
Broward and Collier counties. Warnings were declared in Cuba from
Sancti Spiritus province eastward
and in the central and southern
Bahamas.
At 5a.m. EDT. Hurricane Georges
was centered over the Windward Pa•sage 640 miles east-southea.r of Key
West. Fla. It was moving west-nonhwest near 15 mph.
Georges· winds dropped from II 0
mph Tuesday to near 75 mph today
as it moved across the island of Hispaniola, but were expected to
strengthen over open water. At least
21 deaths were auributed to the
storm so far.
The mammoth stonn wa&lt; on a trajectory that could send it crashing
into the Florida Keys by late Thursday or early Friday. Visitors there
were urged to take airline flights
while they were still available. or to
leave the island chain before traffic
jammed the Over.;eas Highway. the
only road linking the 110-mile ribbon
of islands.
In Haiti, the poorest country in the
Western Hemisphere. few people
had means to prepare for the impending disaster. The Haitian government
wa&lt; able to muster only $130.000 for
emergency assistance. said civil
defense spoke•woman Yolaine Surena.
Mountain erosion and a lack of
maintenance have left drainage systems in Haitian cities choked with silt
and unable to alleviate flash lloods.
said meteorologist Renan Jean-Louis.
In November 1994. tropical storm

Dominican Re pulll i ~: . t wo apparent·

side

ly were looters shot to dcaoh hy
police.

authorities said it might take da~s
before the full scope of the damage

was

Custom Homes

"Build Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street

Public Notice

740•742•3411

6/5/llOtmopd

refused to give details.
" If we can reach agreement over
certain technicalities which ha~e
been holding up the process, then the
trial could be under way within
weeks ... Swire told The Associated
Pre;s. He spoke from the Tunis airpon, where the men were waiting for
a !light home.
The United States and Britain propose to try the suspects in the Netherlands by Scottish judges under Scottish law. Libya has accepted the proposal but continues to argue about
specilics.

-

2/12.'92/tfn

BARGAINS GALQRE
Come in and Look il Over
Phone 992-3725

10/2~/96/tln

4121/W t1n

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE
MIDDLEPORT

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

145 N. Second Street
Middleport, Ohio
Store Hours II :00 to 4:00 Tuesday tluu Friday
We also Buy
Public Sale and Auction

- ~ ·•• or

Call

GALLIPOLIS
Owned and operated by
Bobby and Vanessa Muncy (#3462)
430 Silver Bridge Plaza
Sun. 12-5, M-F 9-6, Sat. 8-6
740-446-1546

PUBLIC
AUCTION

~lassHieds! -

992-2156

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1998
10:00 A.M.

Located at the Auction Center on Rt. 33
Mason, W. Va.
Dorothea Fisher has
110 Help Wanted
confined to a nursing home, we will be -~" 1 "" 1
her personal belongings lrom 200 Lincoln
Pomeroy, Ohio to the Auction Center to beMelgl~ I
along with another consignment out of
Co. Ohio.
FURNITURE
Excellenl marble top Viet. drop well dresser, i
poster spool bed w/canopy, marble top
CNA &amp; LPN positions
mahogany Gov. Winthrope secretary, marble top Viet.
available. Full lime &amp;
sland, mahogany settee w/Mother Pearl Inlay, 12
part-time. Must be
tall flatwa\1 cupboard , curved glass china cabinet
w/clawfeel, 12 tin pie safe, marble top wash stand .
available to work any
•w,untn
Viet . bone dresser. Viet. love seat w. carved
shift. If interested you
. Viet. dresser w/ fru&gt;l pulls. oak wash stand, 2
may contact:
top Viet. tables , Viet. walnut table, drop leaf
Donette Dugan
&amp; 8 chairs, walnut Viet. chairs. early drop leaf
RN, DON
, Turtle top &amp; oval Viet . tables. Viet. drop leal
•••,•nn, square oak table &amp; 4 Queen Ann chairs, 4 Viet.
at (304) 273-9385
back chairs. Pr. balloon back Viet. chairs, wicker
apply In person at
l Viet . rocker, carved fern stand, wing back chairs,
200 S. Rltchi Ave.,
pub table, sewing rocker, early walnut candle stand,
Ravenwood, WV
small tap desk, contempary sofa, Emerson microwave.
lawn furniture &amp; more.
26164
GLASSWARE
EOE
Beauliful selection of milk glass. compodes, baskets.
butter dish, ruby glass. 8 pl. setting rose Chintz by
Bro. England , candlewick, occupied Japan
cruets, salts, sev. sets of quality stemware,
pitchers, min. tea set, two green glass eagle
dec:anters. fiddle bottles, banquet lamp. oil lamps &amp;
more.
COLLECTIBLES
Paper adv. signs-Heinz spaghetti- Falstaff beer. paper
adv. in frames. Korrect Shape Burro1ap shoes , Epco
giants 5¢ cigar- The Centlivre Tonic- Uncle Johns
Syrup- Adv. signs- Lee Tires- Sky Chief Texaco· Fire
Chief Texaco- Diehl 's Bread- Standard Red CrownRochelle Club Beverages- Dads Root Beer &amp; others.
Putnam Dye cabinet, Rare Dills Best Cigar Box, 1945
Texaco Easy Pour Oil Can, A. C. thermometer, Wulfing
Grocer Co. thermometer, Lindstroms Air Way game ,
Rails of Fun marble game, kids wooden blocks, leaded
glass window, wash - board, Latour Paris . Brass &amp;
HARDY MUMS
.
Mother of Pearl Binoculars. sm. German doll &amp;
PAUL HILL GREENHOUSES
dolls, Hallmark doll chesl. O.G. mirror, Beautiful Gilted
·.
mirror, Eagle mirror, Sterling mirror, early pictures &amp;
Letart Falls, Ohio
frames,
Oriental pictures. bird prints by Bruce Knon. Pr.
)
$2.00 each
pictures matked Godneys Fashion Jan. 1870, old
740-2~7-2012
scrap books, books- The Journal of Andre Gide (set).
Lg. - selection Tates of Edgar Allen Poe, The Best
Plays of 1945-46 by Mantle Harpers, Metropolitan
YOGA
Everyone welcome, Beginning Level
Grand Opera (Memorabilia Books). Good old Cook
Thursday 6:30-8:30 pm, Sept. 24-Nov. 20
Books. Brass &amp; Marble Candelabra w/cut glass prisms.
Rutland Civic Center, $5.00 per session.
stainless steel sail &amp; pepper shakers. cast iron wall
Bring 2 s!Ufdy Dllnktls &amp; dress comfor1ably.
plaques. VIet. candle slick, jello molds, lg. iron, lg . bird
•\); fi;;.,ot..J
Cell to arrange child care.
cage &amp;more.
Hopewood Farm
698-3422
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: Good quality auction!

Ravenswood
Village
Health Center

Sears Cord
and save

..

'

or

on-

.

.......

.

$585 ""''""'

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66

GNC

(2

50% Off Sale

M1aonW. VI

1oo·s of items.

Of

OHIO RIVER PLAZA
Gallipolis, OH
441-9849

I

..

Ru. 773-5785 or Auction Center 773-5447

Tenna: Cuh or check,w/ID.
P.O. A. Jennifer Sheet1 .
Not rwponalble for ICCidtnta or 1018 Of property.

l•

•

OCTOBER 2ND

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

Jacks Roofing
&amp; Construction
Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings
•Sidings

WATCH lOR DETAIL~_9n~-~~~

&amp;'!~.:!~&amp;
"Your Computer Shop"

Custom Built Computers, Networks Modems, Hard
Drives, Printers. Upgntde Your PC To a Pentium CPU
and MB Today. Pre-Owned Computers.
740-992-1135 For A Price Quote!
. Frognet Internet Sign-up point for

•

Meigs and Mason Counties

'Ill ·- 'I 114 Court St. Pomer,.y, Ohio45769

A

Located in lht lnsuranct Plus Huildin~
across rrom the Court lloust.

WA,ERSCAPES PLUS
740-992-4427
33933 Flalwoods Rd.

Racine, OH 4577t (5 Points)
Flexible &amp; Preformed Pond Liners

10% Off
20% Off Fountains
25% Off Birdbaths &amp; Concrete Planters
(Stock Items Only!)
Sale Ends 10-17-98
Mon .-Sat. 11 :OOA.M.-5:00 P.M.
Call lor Appointments - Closed Wed . &amp;Sun.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

CELLULAR PHONES

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

'
...
JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

360° Communications

•

113 W. 2ND ST.

(614) 992-3838

·Bobcat Service
•Concrete
·Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates

COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP
30 scents available
• Candle making supplies
• Relilk

CARPET
PLUS

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

• Vmiety of Gifts
Tues· Fn 10-6
Sat10-4

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

HAULING

Rl. 124 Minersville, OH

740-698-9114

8/ 25!98 2

20 Yrs . Exp. • Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

mo. pd.

WICKS
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

or

7 40-698-7231

Ta~e lhe pain out of

painling, and let me
do ill or you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After 6 p.m.
(740) 985-4180.
~ree Estimates
7/24/9fl 1mo pd

ELECTRIC OR
SATELLITE
SERVICE
Call

992-6320
Local Satellite
Provider
Best Eleclric Pomeroy

ANNOUNCEMENTS

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

985-4473
7/22/lln

Personals

005

Share Your Thoughts With Girls
1·0n · 1 live, 1·900-329-0859 El&lt;t .
3957 . $3 .99 Per Min. Must Be 18

Yrs . Serv·U 6!9·645·8434.
Stan dating tonight! Have lun
playing the Ohio Dat1ng Game. 1.

BOO· ROMANCE , extensiOn 9015 .

WHAT WILL THE
FUTURE BRING?
LOVE, MONEY, TRAVEL?
CALL NOW! rr·s FUN,
IT'S EASY

614·992-3470

6111.'98 ttn

LINDA'S
PAINTING

3127/TFN

P/B Contractors, Inc.

Free Estimates
Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

"Ask about our candle
parties ·

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

12/18/lln

No Job loo Small
Brian Morrison
(740) 985-3948

740-992-4559

&amp; 3RD

REGISTER NOW $5.00

""""'"

JEAN'S ANTIQUES AND MOD

I

Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:D0-4:30 Weekdays
9:00-12:00 Saturday

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

~!i~r~~ :~~~~~~··:1: ~u~(fr.Qrp~ t~e· 'Ciassifieds!

Moved to Balu- Clothing store
In The Heart of MiddJeport.

ftCfl

4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks •
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
7 40-985-3813

SAYRE

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Shop
· ,. "''""

(Formerly Pomeroy Thrift Shop)

359

St. Rt. 7

New Homes ·Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

JEAN'S ANTIQUES AND MOD

~ ~.,&amp;.

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

f.t.

•

Regular HEAP (Home Energy Written verilication of the previous
Assi,tam:e Program) applications for 12 months income is required . Fail I'NK- IIJ'I'I have b~en distributed ure to provide the required doculocall y to area businesses and public mentation wi ll dday the pm.:essing
office' throughout Meigs and Galli a &lt;1f your applicati&lt;ln.
The h1tal huu ,ehold incume of an
counties. the Gallia-Meigs Commuapplkant mu' t he at or bt:low ISO
nity Action Agency anm&gt;un.-ed.
Among the places applications are pc:rcent of the 1998·1999 federal
Thursday, Friday and Saturday only
availahle: the Community Action poveny guidelines as follows. size of I;
Office' in Cheshi re. Gallipolis and household follow~d by household
September 24, 25 and 26
Pomernv. JTPA offices. Depanmenl income for 12 months: on~ person. 1
·. -...
of Hum~n Servi.-es. Senior Citizens $12.075: two persons. $16.275: three
Centers. Socia l Security. VeterJns persons. $20.475: four persojls.
AJmonistration. County Counhouse. $24.675: live persons. $28.M75: six
po't office,. electric company. bulk- pc:rsons, $J3.075. For households
fuel vendor-;. pharmacies. banks. gro- with more than six members, add
cery ,tore' and other business loca- $4.200 per membt:r.
A copy of your fuel bill or a doction s.
HEAP'' a federJIIy funded pro- ument showing your primary fuel and
~ram administered by the Ohio
primary fuel supplies must be proDepanment of Development. Oflice vided. Also. please include a copy of .
of Community Services. It is your electric bill if you do not have
de, igned to help low-income Ohioans electric heat.
129.99 w......
-80.00 s,,...
meet the high costs of home heating.
Community Action staff is avail·20.11
.....,..
HEAP pays a one-time payment for able to assist individuals with their
399.99 '""low~"'
649.99 "" '""'
most PUCO regulated utility cus- application at the Centml Oflice.,
99.99 .... low ....
109.88 =~•ntlt.as last
tomers retlecting th~ir usage for the HO 10 N. State Route 7. Cheshire, Gal-40.00 '''" 10%
-64.99 ·~· 10%
-9.99 ·~.. '""
. 10.99 ·~.. 10%
winter heating season. Vouchers are lia County CAA Outreach Office.
99
issued to non-regulated utility cus- K59 Third Avenue. Gallipolis, and
''"'' ,,.,
tomers . mastermetered and other Meigs County Outreach Office,
lncludn lcamaklr
Panasonic
20
·1n
TVt4-head
VCR .
applicants who do not have a utility J9350 Union Avenue. Pomeroy.
Cl'lftsman 12-voll cordless driiVcJrlver .
Crlftsmln
24·CC
gas
bklwerNacJmulcher.
MTS
ste1eo
sound,
PanaBiack
ptl.tUre
tube
.
Kenmore 18.0 cu. ft! .
bill in their name. Applications will
Funher information is available by
Includes carrylnc case and light. 27495
185-MPH peak .elotity, 385-CFM. 19793
44868 (Mb #PVM20'J8J
top
freezer refrigerator. ~
be accepted September through calling Community Action at 3677341 or 446-6849 in Gallia County;
March J I. 1999.
A household applying for HEAP 992-6629 or 992-5605 in Meigs
D1WALT
~
l~ K•''"'"! '!j
•Whirlpool
\I\) 1\l,
must repon total household income County. or Gallia County Senior Cit·
for the past 12 months for all persons izens Center, 446-7000: Meigs Coun'1'011 CAN COUNT ON lEAR$ FOR SATISFACTION GUAIWITE£D OR 'I'OUR -EY lACK
n. ~ IIY:Iude ~ fiiiUctV!s . 101011 ~and ens a1 our MfYdly low l)'lCt. ~ 1Uidllrles fltrl
1R years of age and older. Total ty Senior Citizens. 992-2161 or the
._..,. M-41-llldll IICGI' ~ " - tw ..-ns • A~ rMrn fl tht~ ~ dlxoll o( ot t1'114tl'!l WISI'Iduc«&lt; • An equal DC11t! lltm allht ~I !ItO pntt ~ the •lem "''iiS IQ rfOI.(.Kl
II'OIDNT CIIUifT TUits. Sllel W , deMr}' or IIIOillllon not ltiCfullejj ., mantiWJ ~ lh::lwn .t.ttu11 ~ ~ "'1'1 ~ii'Y drp!nd•na on ycur cur~tKtOUot bllarct ll'lCI I1IIY tl! ~ ~ 111 VT Ml.wl ~ s-s N~ an
•
hou.,.,hold income is defined a• the HEAP hotline at 1-800-282-0880.
f t rtwa: QIAIQI DnM.S ,.._..,...): Awalllblt lew~ purdiiSIS wiCtl Sew.. ~ ~Clition on Sen Clldt Ac:tculli Be Sl.l1! 1o &amp; 001 ~ ASOCll t! 11:r tM op~JCW~ n O!tatb ~00 01 QUill!.:! mettllndlse ~!Ql.-:~10 Qpln 1 5emCt\ql PlUS • .
crms income of all household mem- For the hearing impaired with a
«nunt. woltiiKJO ~ ldd Gr$. ~ Clldit a.m. tPPfY lfter 0\ fii'III'ICI en., pil'l(ld. S... Clfld 'flriM: AnrMI ~rate 1$ 2l'JI. ~ !.1 111~ f'l'll)n!hly llnat~ee ct\q! ot S 50 ~ PlUS T.-rn~: Arn.l81 ~ rJit • 2t"\ AA ""• tJ • ,
9t'IJI. biJt ,..,_.,..,_Wrwnumtn0f'lt1y mtn:e d'lqed $.50. ~ ~ 26. Cn'1C11 blll3td b 8ost produds, Eaptional Yalun. deWery, ma~ntenanct &amp;IJ8tfMrl~ . II'ISIIIIatml.lbat, mll!lld tlotnlim4WO;!fMIIt l)n)dwcts and MrWa sw. Qift
•
her.;. except earned income of depen- telecommunication device for deaf C...
~ ttlillasllld credit C.-.:1 . . . . .. "PP*ft:t ptiCes Ill b ....... C., COI'IniC1IIn lnGitemlklf I'IDOIHIP lldn. TV ICMit Sil'f 'tlfUUted d~ll, ITotll tapdy. Cl l998 Snrt, bbuck 111(1 Co.
"- •
dent minors under 18 years of age. tTIDI call toll free 1-800-686-1557.
' ,I

'

· Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Insured
Free Estimates

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
TRUCKING
Sealad propoaala lor the
New Homes &amp; Remodeli ng
Hauling,
Excavating
"VIllage ol Ruland Haurd
'li" Garages. Pole Bu ildings. Roofin g, Siding ~
Mitigation
Project&amp; Trenching
Commercial &amp; Residential
~
Demolition of Propentea"
1-111•
,Jll_l
Limestone &amp; Gravel
will be received at the
Licensed &amp; Ins ured
'" 27 yrs. exp.
Septic
Systems
Vjlla~e of Rutland Hazard
./ln..
] ! II o
Phone 740-992-3987
Mltlga1ton Protecl office,
Trailer &amp; House Siles
P.O. Box 420, 337 Main
Free Estimates
Reasonable Rates
Stree1, Rutland, Ohio 45775,
Owner:
John Dean
Joe N. Sayre
Attn: Boyd A. Ruth, until
10:30 a.m. Friday, October
614-742-2138
16, 1998 upon which time
bide will be opened ond
. - . ....
read aloud.
30 Announcements
Speclllca11ono and bid
YOUNG'S
Howard L. Writesel
forma may be oocured from
CARPENTER SERVICE
1he above office. A aile
Business is Booming
showing lor thla work to
•Room Additions
scheduled lor 10:30 a.m.
New Positions now open
•New Garages
Friday, October 9, 1998 at
for mobile home service
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
the above office. (740) 742·
Gutters
technicians and drivers .
•Roofing
0704.
Ba sic knowledge of con Downspouts
·Interior
&amp; Exterior
Eoch bld muat ba
struction and plumbing a
Painting
aceompanled by either a bid
Gutter
Cleaning
plus. Must be hard working,
Also Concrete Work
bond In the amount or 10%
honest . and care about the
Painting
of the bld amount with a
(FREE ESTIMATES)
customer. No
Sunday
ourety aatlolactory to
FREE ESTIMATES
V.C. YOUNG Ill
work . Starting pay range
31oreeald VIllage of Rutland
$9-$12 per hour. Benerils
992-6215
949-2168
or by cer1llled check,
include Vacation. lnsur·
Pomeroy,
Ohio
5!2l\ltfn
caahtera check, or letter of
ance. and 401 K. II this
credit upon a .aotvent bank .---..--...,....----------__;----, sounds like you then
In the amount of not leaa
please apply at or send a
than 10% ottha btd amount
,
't-IJCimB..; .
.
resume to
0
Re Le HOLLON
Green Valley Homes, Inc.
39021 Lake Logan Rd.
Logan, OH 43138
TRUCKING
Computer Graphics ·
accompanied by Proof of
Authority of the official or
Designs
DUMP
TRUCK
agen1 algnlng tha bond.
All Landscaping &amp;
(9)20,21,22,23,24,25,27
SERVICE
7tc
Lawn Services
Agricultural Lime,
•Commercial
Limestone • Gravel
•Residential
Dirt · Sand
Owner, Mickle Hollon
985·4422
Chester, Ohio
Chester, Ohio
740-985-4422

use your

HEAP applications distributed

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-42n

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

NEW LQCATION

tor.; with a greater effect on the lives ical spectrum. and it's not yet clear all the various viewpoints into a
of ordinary Russians -higher prices how the government will incorporate coherent economic policy.
and joblessness - also showed signs
of worsening.
Inflation, which was running at
GALLIPOLIS
less than I percent a month before the
Owned
and operated by
crisis hit, soared to43.3 percent in the
Bobby and Vanooaa Muncy (#3462)
firsttwo weeks of September. Mean430 SNver Bridge Plaza
-whil_e, joblessness increased last
Sun. 12-5, M-F 9-6, Sat. 8-6
month to reach 8.35 million people,
740-446-1546
"The store you know is now close to home"
or 11 .5percentofthewol'kforce.The
rate is expected to rise even higher.
These recent numbers show the
seriousness of the problems facing
Yevgcny Primakov, who ha' been·
prime minister for just II days and
ha' yet to announce a comprehensive
plan to deal with the worst economic crisis since the 1991 Soviet collapse.
In the meantime, several key government posts. including the job of
finance minister and the head of the
state tax service, have not yet been
lilled. Government spokesman
Andrei Korotkov said fonnation of
the Cabinet should be completed
within the next few days.
The new government already contains politicians from across the polit-

SUNSE,. HOME
CONS,.RUCTION
New Construction .&amp; Remodeling

incommunicado, and

Gadhafi meets representative
of British Lockerbie families

Remodeling

M&amp;J

was known .

LONDON lAP) - The issues
delaymg the trial of two Libyan suspects 1n the 19HX bombing of a Pan
Am jet could be resolved "in a matter of weeks ... two Britons said today
after meeting with Lihyan leader
Moammar Gadhafi.
Jim Swire. who speaks for some
British famil&gt;es. and Robert Black. a
law professor at the Univc"ity of
Edinburgh in Scotland. said thei r
talks Tuesday woth Gadhafi in Tripol i
were constructi ve and they wi ll soon
submit new proposals to U.N. officials to speed up the trial. They

The Dally Sentinel e Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Haiti ~ ~

Gordon killed at least 1.000 in Haiti 's
Hurricane Georges caught San~
southern provinces. drowning them Domingo, on the south coast, almo!(
in torrential streams or burying them entirely unprepared Tuesday since
in mudslides.
forecasters had expected it to hit tll.e
In the Dominican Republic. east, nonhern Dominican coa't.
of Haiti, soldiers enforced a curfew
City officials didn't open shelter.;
in the capital of Santo Domingo until hours after stron2 winds and
heavy bursts of rain had reached the
today after Georges ravaged the
nation. Atlea~t 12 people were kil led capital. People continued to stream.
into shelters even as the full force of
by the storm. which also unleashed
Georges hit.
·
looting and street violence.
Authorities said 80 percent of the:
Looters waded wa ist-deep in
roads in Santo Domingo were:
water. balancing televisions and air
conditioners on their ht:ads even as
impassable because of downed trees
110-mph winds toppled trees and and power lines and widesprea&lt;i
crushed houses. Bands of youths with
llooding. One highway overpa" nor-·
machetes and pisools roamed the mally 22 feet above ground was at
streets, many of them drunk .
water level.
"We are occupying Santo DominSome bands of youths used their
go to prevent criminal acts, which we
machetes to hack away fallen trees or
see practically as acts of terrorism."
to cut open fallen coconuts, but othsaid armed forces chief Ruben Pauli - ers threatened passers-by. pulling
no Alvarez.
open car doors.
Of the 12 ofllcial dealh s in the
Much uf the Dominican country -

More signs of trouble for Russia's economy
MOSCOW (AP) - Russia's
economy is shrinking and impons are
down. lnllation is climbing and so is
unemployment. With each day. new
statistics are showing the depth of the
country's economic crisis.
The State Customs Committee
delivered the latest piece of bad
news Tuesday. reponing that imponsplummeted 19 percent in August
compared with a year ago. With the
national currency. the ruble, rapidly
losing value, the price of many
impons ha&lt; doubled since the crisis
erupted Aug. 17.
A day befor~. the State Statistics
.Committee reponed that the country\ economy shr.mk 2.1 percent during the first eight months of the year
- before the worst of the current crisis hit.
Industrial output. another important indicator of economic health.
also is declining. After showing signs
of modest growth at the end of last
year. output was 11.5 percent lower
in August compared with a year ago
- the sharpest drop since 1994. the
statistics committee reponed la~t
week.
Meanwhile. other economic fac-

. Wednesday, September 23, 1998

Wettnesday, September 23, 199~

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

1·900-74().6500 Elll. 3595
$3 99 Per Mtn 1B•

Serv·U 619-645-8434
Wish i nformation on ancest ors
and early lite of relat~s Oav1d E.
Graham - Ci ted 1944 : Gertrude
Whittingt on Graham - d1ed 1966

Can Clarence Eawards. 828·891 5027, wnta Box 1615, Etowah, NC
28729

30 Announcements
New To Vou Thrift Shopp&amp;

9 West St1mson. Athens
740-592·1 842
OlJahty cloth1ng and household
i1ems S 1 00 bag sale every

Thursday. Monday thru Saturday
9:()()-530.

Residential &amp;Mobile Home
Air Conditioners &amp; Heat Pumps
·TRPPRn
, ..... _._

.S~
/Mil!

,'

"ErUJ' Orer tire Pl.one Bn11k Fi11n11d11g"
Air Conditioners As Low As *28 1 mgnth

Heat Pumps As Low AI 139 1 mpnth
*Free 5 Parts Warranty
*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

MOBILE .HOME
PARTS

Sente's Hilltop Greenhouse
Mile Ridg@ Rd
Apple GfCM!, WV. 25502

"Huge ln-entery"

Hardy Fall Mums

*Roof Coatings
•VInyl Skirting
*Water Heaters
*Door/Windows
*Eieetrlc/Piumblng
Supplies
*Fibergl ..s &amp; Wood
Stepe

Dlacounf Prf"•

Bennett Supply

BENNm's HEADNG &amp; (OOUNG

7*-4488418
1311 Sifford
School Rd.
GeiHpolla, OH

"Where Q11alil.y fJH1n 'I Coat More"
740-446-9416 •1-800-8'72-5967

...

3{M-576-2fi21
$3.txlea . or 10 lor $25 .00

40

Giveaway

4 Puppies. 8 weeks Old, 112 Rot·
twtihlr, 112 German Shepherd. to

good Home

74~7·

e monlh otd yelk&gt;w male cal. 740992-9107
Puppies~.. to good homo. 2501
Lincoln Ave. Point Pleasant.

Ewntngs I attemoons.

Sm•ll black mixed brled dog,
opaye&lt;l. has had all &amp;hots. tyr.
Okl304-U2-34n.
Small Chihuahua Like

Ftmolt

Dog, 3 YHII Okl Af)prox. 5 lb&amp;,
1-5691.

�•
VVidnesday,~rnber23,
,..a:
• .

1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

u

The Dally Sentinel • Page 15 ..
5

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHII.IJP
ALDER

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

ADDITIONAL OWNER OPERA·
TORS NEEDED IIIIIEDIATELY
"Up To $1 .00 /Mi. (Including

BowH"ii AHoy. Kanauga. 8-4. Sat·
urtlay 28111.

AalolsOriall'ay)

AU. Yarcl8alaolluat
Sa Paid

ln-.

QEADUHE: 2:00p.m.

"HomeWea-

•Run From OH To The South
Ard-est
"Permits PIOYidod AI No Charge
'Tolls Pskl
•F,.; Cald Avai-

tlleday-lllead
Ia ID run. Sunday

ocllllon • 2:011 p.m.
Frlcley.llonday adltlon

·10:011a.m. Sahlnlay.

Pomerov,

Doublawklo 3br, 2 bath, $1,3•5.

'l1lC8I Family OWned Company
'I'Orlonalizod Dl&amp;patcll

1&amp;I House On The Left Below

Requlromonls: Ago 23. Class A
0008, Ask For Garner.

HELP- EmpiO)IIII
Domlno't of Point -

ery. HI00-691-&amp;m.
All real estate advertlstng in
this newspaper is sub)ect to
the Federal Fatr Housing Act
of 1968 which makes ~ illegal
limitation or discrimination
based on race. cOlOr, religion ,
sex familial status or national

origin, or any intention to
make an~ such preference,
limitation or clscrlmlnatlon .~

advertisements tor real estate

Home Health Agency Offering
Part·Time &amp; Temporary Part-Time

which Is in vkHation of the

day before the 1d 11 to run,
Sunday 6 Monday odltlont :OOpm Frlcley.

Positions, May Be Permanent To
CNA's &amp; HHA's, Many fl{tras

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, complete
auction
service .
Licensed

Persons Need App(y, MUST Be Available For
Weekends &amp; Holiday Hours, May

Heallh Management
SaNices Inc. EOE.

Wedemeyer's Aucllon Service,

Housekeeper •uve In ' for Practising Columbus Attorney. General Household Duties Plus Some
Care. Some Drtving. Room, Board

GaiC&gt;olis. Ohio 740-379-2720.

Nuralng

and Salary.614·287·5354.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Tap Oallar: All U.S Silver And Gold Coins, Proolsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings. Pre-.1930 U.S. Currency,

Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jowelry
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
A_,., Gallipolis,

7~2842 .

AnUques, top prices paid, Riverine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner, 740-992·

2526.

992-6576.

8172
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,

Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·
ern Allenue, GaillpOtb.

9706.
2 Bedroom House And 2 Apartments, Both Ranted, 13 Pine
Street, Gallipolis, Call 740·446-

4999, Or 740-594-3033.

el&amp; And Bucket Operator in The
Mercerville Area . For Information

2br, approx

3 acre&amp;, OVyoma

Ridge. 304-675-7071 .

Silo. Lunch Provided Dally. Earn
Pay While Anendl"ii Class. tnrorMonday ·Friday 8:00 A.M. ·4:30
P.M. Contact Tammy Price, LPN
Or Mary Sheets, AN At 740·448·
Overbrook Center. 333 Page

Street, Middleport has lull limo
STNA positions available for all
shifts. AnyOne interested please

stop by sncl fiH out an application.
Part-Time Apply In Person At A&amp;

A Auto Detailing Shop, 220

Carpet, Kallay Drive, Phone: 304675-4230, 740-367·7172, Alter 6
P.M.
3-4 Bedrooms full ,dry basement,
fire-place, forced air/gas furnace,
AJC, fenced corner lot. 36 Wind-

sor Ct. 304-675-7285.

3br. living room, dining room.
family room. 1 bath, central air,
newer carpet &amp; roof, replacement
windows, family neighborhood,
privacy lanced yard, 24rt. above
ground pool, many upgrades.
move in cond. Priced In 70's.

304-675·2924

Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis.

3br, 2· balh home. new rool, vinyl

J &amp; D Auto Parts. Buying
wrecked or salvaged vehicles.

Part· Time Retail Sales, Expl!lrlence Preleffed But Not Neces -

:!C*n:l-5033.

sary, Applications Accepted 10-4

Wanted To Buy: Junk Auto's Any

Daily, Appty Tope's Furniture Co.,
151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis,

kitchen newly remodeled, dish·
washer, vented-microwave. large
family -room. wood-stove, living
room wffire-place, central/air,
large lanced lot. Must See!

Concli1ion.

7~9853.

Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile
Homos Call 740-448·0 175, 304·
675-5965.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110 Help Wanted
ISII$SSISISIII$1SIISIIISISI
-uANAGEIIENT
OPPORTUNtTJESDollar Tree Stores. The Nations

Largest S1 Price Point Retailer Is
Currently Seeking MANAGERS
For The Gallipolis Area. Excellent
Opportunity For Candidates Who
POssess Supervisory Skills &amp; Prror Hardgood fRetail El{p And

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently accepting resumes for a
Social Worker. Bac~Mttors degree
In Social Work ar a four year de·

greo In Heallh Care Admlnlstra·
tlon. A mJnJmum or two years experience In an acute care sartjng.
Must be able to transfer patient
from acute care Into the most
medically appropriate and cost
efficient setting . Must have
knowledge of medical termlnolo·
gy and-ctlarl review. Send resume to Personile! at Pleasant

Valley Hospllat, 2520 Valley or.,
Pt . Pleasant WV 25550 . or fax to

:!C*675-2447. A.IIEOE.
Wanted· someone to work In

aduK group home. days or nlghls,
740.992·5023.

140

Business
Training

Thrive In A Fast Paced. Rapidly
Expanding Organ1za11on . Competitive Salary And Excellent

SeneiKs Including 401K and Prolil
Sharing, Dental &amp; Health. Send
Resume To :
OOHar Tree Stores. Inc.
Ann: VP Of Human Resources

Huntington Mall
PO. Box 4063
Barboursville. WV 25504

EOE MIF

ISISIIISIISSISIISSIIISISSSI
AVON I All Areas I Shirley

Spears. 304-675-1429.
Acquisitions Fine Jewelry of 91

Mill Street. Middleport- pan time/
full time help. Jewelry experience
preferred tlut not required . Ac ·
cep!ing applications Monday
through Fr iday, 10am-2 pm . No
phone cab please.

,I(DDITIDNAL DRIVERS NEED·
EO IMMEDIATELY ARE YOU
READY FOR WINTER DRIV·
ING7
"LOCAL FAMILY
OWned Company

"PEIISQNALIZED Dispatch
•PAID Employee Health &amp; Life
lnst.I'Snce; Dental Insurance

"HOllE WOSkerdS
•Run OH To The SOUTH And
SOUTHWEST
"401K

ed Member, ACICS Reg 190-05·
1274B

180

Please Call Toll Frao 1·888· 790·
Computer Users Needed. Work
Own Hrs. $20K ·S75K fYr. 1·800·
349-7188 Ext . 1173. www .amp·
inc.com
Oetectl~e

· Private Investigator

Trainees. Good Wages. 614·5239490.
FULL·TillE POSITIONS

AVAILABLE

~- Salary Ard

Exceptional Fringe
Bonefil Packaga

ULTRASOUND TECH •• Ra·
qulrement&amp;: Registered Diagnos-

tic Medical Sonogrsphy Carllllca·

tton, AMA Approved Radiological

Wanted To Do

Furniture repair, refinish and restoratk&gt;n, also custom orders . Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop, Larry

Have 2 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care 01 Etderty Or Handi·

capped. 740-441·1536.
OuaMty care tor your loved ones.
.cer11fled home health aide, refer·
ences available, call Kathy, 740-

992-5185.
Will Babysit in my Home. Any
Hours, Bidwell School District,

can 740-368-9689.
Will do babysitting in my home

Monday thru Friday, 740·698·
2183.
Will haul junk or trash away. $351

pickup load. 304-675-5035.
Will Work For $4 .00 /Hour. 740·

367-0140

FINANCIAL

diological Technology Training,
Ability To Operate MAl Equip·
mont.

210

Business
Opportunity

iNOTJCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do busi ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through lhe
mail until you have Investigated

the offering.

Farm

House.

15

Mlnules From Gallipolis! Bright,
Open Throughout, 3 Bedrooms, 2
112 Baths , Newly Remodeled
Kitchen ·White Cabinets. Nice
Dining Aoom, Fireplace, Gas
Hear. New Carpet, Flooring, Sheet
Rock . Calling Fans, Pantry .
Southwestern SchOol. Appoint·
ments, 740..379-9887.

F~RECLOSED

Homes

From Pennies. On $1 Delinquent
Tax. Repo's, REO's. Your Area.

Business. Medical BHis.
NMrRepay.
eau Ton Free
t-600-218-9000 Ext. G· 28t4.

port. Secluded

, close

Only Qualified Applicants Need

flroplact. 3-4 btdrooms, lwo
baths , large format LR and DR.

Relallonl Departmonl; 90 Jack·
aon Pike; Gallipolis. Ohio 45631·
1562; Fax To 740-448-5532; Or
Call 740-448-5189. Equal Oppor-

reroe Ioyer, tour original ltalned
glall wlndowa. 30 mlnutel from
Alhena, 15-20 minutea lrom Galllpolll. For appolnlmanl call 740·

--·

Appllcallona avallablt at VIllage
Green Apts . 149 or call 740-992·

from $279 to $358. Walk to
&amp; movies. Call
Equal

Brand Nowl Groat Glhl CDivldoo
storage unit. Black and cherry.
Never out of box. S125. Holds up
to 940 discs, also holds tapes.

$17,000. ~-882-3428

330 Fanns for Sale
50 Acre Farm, HaH -Ienced . 3
Year Old 2 Story House, 3 Bed·
rooms. 2 Full Bath&amp;, LA. Kitchen,
Laundry Room, Walk in Closet,
Full Front Porch, Cape Cod Look,

Swimming Pool, Blaci&lt; Top Driveway, 250FT Ring for Horses /Cal·
tie. 32FTX 60FTBarn 5210,000.00

740-367-()219.

340

Business and
Buildings

Commercial-Office or Retail, 87

Mill 51. Mlddlaport. 1,450 Sq Ft
$400 mo. Corner Building . 740·
992-6250 Acquisllions (next
door).

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
112 Acre corner lot In Camp Con·
ley area, good location. 304 -675-

3734.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Aiveralde Apartments In Middle·

tunities.

Ground

noor apr 21tr, wid

references &amp; depoalt, no

304-875-5t62.
large 3br in Pt. Pleasant. $275.
Security deposit required, pari

carpetect, appliances lufnished,
Iota of closet space. central air,

Gallipolis
Beaulilul New Two Story Colonial
3 Bedroom. 2 1/2 Baths, LA. FR.
Dining Room With Hardwood
Floors. Oak Trim Fireplace. 1 112
Car Garage. Appraisal Greater

Than Asking Price 01:
$167,500
TAXES $30!1/YR.
1-304-273-2940

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

383-6862.

10' long, sht 6' long, oak, good

Electric Scooters, Wheelchairs,
New And Used, Stairway Ele~a·
tors. Wheelchair And Scooter
Lifts, Bowman's Homecare, 7•0.

446-7283.

Festival Food Booth, Fully·
Equipped, Moving Musl Sell

JET

large Capacity Washer /Dryer

44&amp;-4722.
Scenic Valley at Apple Grove.

WV. Building lots, single wldes
accepted, public water, 20
minutes from new Buffato Bridge
on Jerry's Run Rd. Clyde Bowen

Andrea VanMeler 304·882·3716 McDonald's Beanie Babies. 96 &amp;
1011m.-2pm . Mon·Fri. or stop by. 98. Unwrapped McDonakt's toys.
of 8th &amp; 45-rpm records . Call 304-8823339 after Spm.

360

Super Single Waler Bed With
Bookcase Headboard, New Mal·

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land: 30 ·500 Acres,

We Pay Cash. t -800-2 13·6365.
Anthortl Land Co.

tress &amp; Healer, Comfort Sheets &amp;
Manress Cover Included, SHiO,

APT AVAILABLE NOW
Twin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications lor 1br. HUD subsid-

ized apt. lor elderly and handi·
capped. EOH 304-e75..-;e?9.

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

450

Furnished
Rooms

Circle Motel Lowest Rates In

eralor, washer and dryer furnished, $300 !month with a $200
security deposit, evallabte Octob·

740-245-5776.

There Is A Collectors Closet The
Street, (Gallipolis) Antiques, Mod·
em Clothes. Jewelry, Ms. Crafts,
Vlsn end Check our The Bar·

446-7537.

Construction Workers Welcome

Treadmill, Lllastyler 8 Extended

740-441·!1898, 740-«t-5187.

Stride Like New Condition $250
Firm; Weight Distributing Trailer

4110

Space for Rent

Hitch With 1,000 lbs. Bars $100,
Call Anytime 740-448-8768.

or tst, 740-742-2954.

For Rent: Trailer Spaces On
George's Creek Road, Referenc-

4 Room House 52 Olive Street.

es Required. 740-448-1142.

Two Wood Used Garage Doors,
7'x9' &amp; One Opener Call After 6

Mobile home site availatlle bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

Wanted- adv8rtlsing CQ!Iectibles,

740-446-a945

1 ·5 BEDROOM HOliES FROII
s•.ooo Local GOV't. &amp; Bank
Repo's Call1·800·522-2730, X
1709.
Clean two bedroom house In Po·

740·385-4367.
Rent 60x90 trailer lolln Hender-

son, wv. :!C*875-3216.

meroy, $350 plus deposit. HUD

MERCHANDISE

accepled, will consider comrac1
for purchase . no pets , 740-698·

7244.

51 0

Household

Economical &amp; nice 2br, deposit

Goods

required. no pols. 304-675-5t62.
Farm House For Rent : 3 Bed·
rooms . 2 Baths. CA, Large Yard,
Large Garage Barn , With Water.
4 Horse Stalls, Tack Room. Bring
Your Dogs Or Horses Welcome,
At: 1667 Clayllck Road, Patriot ,

Appliances :
Recond itioned
Washers, Dryers. Ranges. Refri·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!

P.M. 740.446-7141.

Coke, Pepsi, etc., including old lin
signa. 740-992·505':!.
waterline Special : 314 200 PSI

$21 .95 Per I 00; t• 200 PSI
$37.00 Per tOO; All Brass Compression Fittlf196 In Stock

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson,Oh~. 1·80o-537-9528
We buy antiQues and partial or

complete estates, baby IIams, ancl
old Fiestaware . Jean's Furniture
&amp; Antiques. Tuesday through Frlday. 11am--4pm. 145 .North Sac -

French Cliy Maytag, 740·446· :ond::;:.,;::M;:kltl::lepo=:;.:rt;.,
. ----7795.
1
550
Building
Ex•a Long Sola, Excellent Shape,
Supplies ·
$125, 740-446-23t6.
GDDD USED APPLIANCES Block, brick, sower pipes, wind·

New House For Rent : Near Rio
Grande , 2 Bedrooms, Gas Elec·
tric Heat, 1 Year Lease, $375/Mo.
740-285-1268, Cehular.

1-888-818-0128.

Stell buildings never put up.

Three bedroom house in Middle·

port, no polS, 740-992·5658.

Pol lY 1 Now&amp;U

F
r-~
lad umlturo
lags
Army Surpluslll
2101&amp;Jelfer1on
Ave.
Open 9:30 · 5:00 Mon·Sat.
:le*&amp;75-SOFA 176321

40x30 was $6,2t2 will sell lor
$M97, 50xee was $17,690 will
sell $8.970 Chuck 1-800-320·
2340·
560 Pets lor Sale

French Alpine Goat,

Doe, 2 Years

Cross-Bred Cows, All Cows Have
tor 4 P.M . Friday, Up To Sale

740.592-2322, 740-698-3531 .

Trail Horses For Sale: 112 Quarter Horse, 112 Morgan Mare 10
Years Old, 4 Arabian Horses. 1
Tennessee Walking Horse, Call

Mer 5 P.M. 740-388--6358.
Two Registered A.l. Angus Bulls
3 Years Old &amp; 6 112 Month Old

Excellent Bloodlines. 740·4411716.

TRANSPORTATION

linder. 740-742·280a.

Oe&lt;i

llotl..
lNT

1400.
1993 Chevy 4X4 z 71 , Stepside. •
Loaded, a50, 5 Speed, Sha~ ;
C.D. Changor.740-245·5474, 7&lt;10- • ,
245-9099. leave ~ressaoa.
: ·:

Two bedroom. lree gas and water,
lull basement. air, 3 miles out of

Portlard. $400,740-643-5126.

420 Mobile Homes

for

Rent

12){60 Mobil e Home. $300/Mo .,

Used Furnllure Store Below Holiday Inn In Kanauga, Twin Beds ,

Complete $1t5; Full Sods Complete $135; Bunk Beds St60;
Dressers , Couches, 740-4-46 -

4762.

520

Sporting ·

Required, Rolerence~ No
PaiS. 740-4ol&amp;--oil85.

Depos~

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

992·2167.

2 Bedroom Trai lers. In Small
Trailer Parte, Deposit &amp; Rafarencea Required, No Pets 740·448·

1104.
2 Bedrooms W -W Carpet Natu·

ral Gas Hsat, in Gallipolis, 740·
446-2003, 740-446- 1409.

Lovely 2 Bodroom, with Fireplace,
Rio Grands Area. $450.00 month
Plus Deposit. 706-864-3493.

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 ancl 2 bedroom apartmenls, furnished and unfurnished, secur1ty

Nt\'lr Lived ln. Call 1·800·948- deposit required, no polS. 740·
992-22t8.
5678.

GoOds
Complete set of m•n•a golf clubs

·1500 Police Impounds. All

Makes Available. Call 1·800·522·
2730 Ext. 4420.

'

w/golf bag. $150. ~75-t283.

530

Antiques

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques ,
1124 E. Main Strllt, on Rt. 124,

Pomeroy. Hourt : M.T.W. 10:00
a .m. 10 6:00 p.m., 5unday I :00 10
6:00 p.m. 740·992·2528, Run

French City Pat Grooming by Ap·
polntmenl. "Ultra Waah Btlhlng
Syetem• 650 Second Ave . Galli·

t980 ·1990Trud&lt;sSI00-$500 .•
PoliCe I"''''UrdS

Tractor 19 HP $1,800, 740·4 6·

3982.
1993 Ford Aerostar XL, 4.0 tit r,

99,000 miles, runs very good.
llres. clean. $5500.740-742-1400.
Motorcycles

1976 Harley Davidson Sporlster
XLH-1000. lots of chrome &amp;new

parts. $3,800 OBO. 304·682·3661
·

THE BORN LOSER
,..,
....

1986 Honda 200-SX 4-wheetei-.'
14ft. Flat-bottom boat w/swivel .
seats &amp; trailer. Small utility trailer. 304-675-2484.

\-IREJ-.1 WE WEIZ£ [»..TIW., '(OU
~li.\D [ TOOl(.

1986 Yamaha 3 Wheeler, Good

CondHion, $800, 740-2!18·1631 .

$2,000 Nag .. 740·4-1 Hl4at.

Moore owner.

1j84.Chevy Seville, 4 New Tires,
V-6, Auto , Rebuilt Alternator,
Brand New Alternator Bell , New

PS Boll, Auto, Runs Excellenll
740-446-75a7
1986 Chevy Chevello $250. 304·
675· 1112 Can be seen at 429
Cypress Ct. Point Pleasant.
t988 BonnevUie LE, maroon, 4dr,
new tires &amp; brakes. good cond.
1988 Chevy Corsica 4 Doors,
Power Steering, Power Brakes, AJ
C, Very Good Condition. Approx .

(&gt;..'fol{'..'(

1988 Ford Aarostar. 6 Passenger
Mini Van,•Good Conditkln, Good

Toes. 135.000
441-1407.

Ml~s.

$2.000, 740-

1988 Ford Tempo, 11100; 1989

81,000 mites. nice c_ar. 304·875·
1991 GEO Tracker soft-top, 2

•

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

bought now July ol '97, three
matching Kawasaki ski vests .fnd
trailer all go with it. Priced to setl,
2045, will consider trade lor ~t­
good pontoon boat.
., ·

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

-· .
.-·

35t Cleveland High Perlromance
Race Raadyl740-446-3912.

446-2971 .

THAT WAS A 600D

New Auto Body Parts &amp; ACces'·
sarles for ali types of vehicles". ~
Transformers Auto Parts. 304· '

PRACTICE,IIUH.MARCIE?

YABMupt•
Pun'C&gt;I. &amp; ~ Con-

Like New Bundy Alto Sartophono,
$800, 740-446-7903.

580

Frultl &amp; /
Vegetables

lluma far 5 far 110. Cummln'a Ollltlllouaa IC- from
Racloe Locko 6 Dtm, llondly

AC DC Arc Weidtr Llko Ntw,
1275. 740-379-2831, After 8 P.M.
""" Batunloy, flm-8tlm,

1817 Red Pontiac Sunftre, auto,
sun -roof, am·fm stereo, 35,000

mllaa. 2 Burgundy buckll a1a1s
filo 1tl7 Ford van, like new.
150ea. 304-675-3734.
1991 Trona AM V-8 Fully Load·
ocll 740-«+-4548

(a fiN)

26 Dayton'•

NGI'III

Pau

3NT

OpeniDg lead: • s

42~

An added
complication

43PorUre
45 Go to tho
bonom
46-polaon
47 lloclal tnl8flt
4tlngttcl

........•

50=-101
MICtion
52 8l8lua-

53.._.
llerbl

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

c..rtv Cipher ac::;•r• .,. Cf..-cl from (fUDCIIIioM: bftamoul people. pat lAd present
EliCh

'C XL
IIJE

__ . . c:idWIIMdlfor~ Todly'•W.: D..-K

OKTEEJVO
VPZCLE.
TZG

BJTCO

TEL

KELKTEPZY

GELOOLG
OPZYPZY

0 J

SXLLEIIWN

z y ..

PZ

UEJVZ

T

SXTENLO

DWETNC
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "All, to be sevenly again."- Georges Clemenceau,

on passing a Pf811Y girl on lhe street on his eiglttleth birthday.

S@\\dllA-~£trs·
- - - - - - Ultotl .,. ClAY I. I'CI&amp;UN
Rearra"91 lettwrs al !flo
0 four
acrambled words be'""
Nll.l
PUIIlll

....

WOlD

low to form four simple words

8 E NL I 8
P I NE R

I

,. .
rI

rI I

-M-A,-W-5-p---.1:::..: ,

I r I ··

I

To master your fate you
should contemplate your powers .instead of your •• - - ••••.

I0

OPYROL
1--..-~-,r,....-rl_,r~l~

I

IWEDNESDAY

1991 Slh Wheol Dutchman Clas·~
sic, Like Newt 740·446-1675 · :

Days; 740-446·8127. N9hts

,," •'

,, I

SERVICES
Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime 9uerante• . ,
local references furmShed . &amp;s... ·

taliiiShed t975. can 24 Hrs. (740)
«6·0870, t-800-287.0576 . Rog-. ·
oro Watorprooling.
··
arion.

~~~~~:!::::::"!!::::==~distance.
__TRO·ORAPH
SAGI1TARIUS
•&amp;_R

Appliance Parts And Servlce::i&lt;lr•
Name Brands Over 25 Years Experience ~II Work Guaranteed,

French City Maytag, 740-446·
n9s.

Thursday. Seprember

24.

1998

In rhe year ahead. there is a
strong probability lhal you'll enter
into a uniqc and fullilling pannership.
You will not always see eye-to-eye.

(Nov. 23-Dec.

21)

Though il may seem like you"re
•
•
thriving at work today. you ~ gomg
to have to take proactive sreps locaptl'alt'ze on th~sc opporttlnilies. .

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You a~ favored ro beat our the
odds roduy. If you win a competition.
'-· a modes I and gracious winner.
LIBRA (Sepr . 23-0ct. 23) Do
I ""
AQU ARIUS !Jan. 20-Feb. 191 1
nor uuempt to light fate today.
· 1see you
t t's· highly probable that you will
Let yourself go and you wtl
.,u,·-·.·n-tht' noyou've'-·.. n•·sir·
ac
have more conrrol :hun ever before.
.., ·~ ~·"
""" ""
- h
t'no, but 'o·r u he'ty sum.
look for romance in the ng I
" PISCES
'' (Feb.'' 20-Man:h 20)
Plaees .and you"lllind it. The Asrro·
You thought Lady Luck had
Gr.iph Marchmaker
abandoned you in recent rimes. bur
instanrly reveals which signs a~
today she 'II return. Though il may be
romantically perfecr for you.
'""nlto believe. you"ll undou
_ btedly
Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker. c/o
'"'
feel her p~s.:ncc.
..
• ARIES (MIII'Ch li-Ap _
this new5paper, P.O. Box 1758.
MutTay Hill Station. New Yortt.
rll 1. You have WI' opponuniry .
but you will creale a dynamic
allian~e.
'·

Fuller Eloctrlc

light !IJiturss,

brNker - s . aH. Also checlt-

lng head"iiSy&amp;lams. 304-6740126.

Professional. 20~rs experienc;e .. :
with all masonery, bride, block r '"
stone. Also room additions, ga~
rages, ate . Free estimates. 304.,

•

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or comma~~:ill wiring, • ' :
aorvlct or repairs. Maarar Ll·
cansed

27 Weight unlta
21 Photocopy
30 Orient
31-for
Alhenl
J7 IRS eammljllo!_w,..,.
38 Aquallc
rnamrMII
40 Jolly
41 R'-ln

J!ut
Allpau

NO! ITHINK I BROKE
ALL Ml{ ARMS AND
THIRT'r' FIN6ER5 ..

1952 Coleman Pop Up Camper,
Gao Furnace, Uke New CondilioO.
Call Before 4:00 PM 740-44.6· _ .
8015.

840

-

25 lnv. lnitlllle

.... PRINT NUMBERED
V LETTERS IN SQUARES

Campara &amp;
Motor Homes

773-9550.

Idlllonlng. Free Esllmaloll If You

Weal

23 ~-IIRI

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

Complete the chuckle . quoled .
by t.llrng 1n the miSSing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

I'

II IIII III

Zither. Plain- Vicar- Unwind· WATCH

Mlnr Van Nice Van $1,600. OBO
740-« 1-()564.

new battery, well kept. $9,500

a

21 Splgol
220...

Television hasn't ruined conversations in our house.
We talk a lot about what we are goirig to WATCH .

1992 Mitsubishi Nice Car, $2,200,

1994 Camaro Z·28 5.7L; aulo.
while wlblock Hops, good lire&amp;,

11 Ave. Cl

.....-.

chlqctar

A Auto, Ripley, WV. 304 -372 ·

House wiring,

12F.,_.,

10-evla
11 He clllltra par1a

SCJIAM.UT5 ANSWERS

080 ; 1987 Plymouth Voyager

740-446-11654.

41~-.cl

Z4T..-

New gas tanks &amp; body periJ. 0 &amp;

810

., ~:::i'......

• Hari(Ft.) _

31 Enllcad
44Dina

PEANUTS

4 Firestone Radials Good Tread. •

2a5·85-Rt6-IOPLY, $140, 740'

790

._

COIIMIWMI

•
~
_
•
_
~
.
L--1--L-.L.-1'-...L--'

wheel drive. 5spd, stereo. selling
lor pey-oll 13.000. Call ahor Spm.
304-862·2997.

F~. Hill

Don't Call U1, Wa Both Losef

-r

Summers not overl Kawasa"l
STS Jet &amp;kl, still under warrarity,
three seater, 83 horsepower,.

ao MP Gallon, Asking St,495,
740-245-5597.

Merchandise

1740 f48 11308. 1-600-291-001111.

~~'l'f\

Moving Must Sell· 1987 TAX ··
250X SIO&lt;k Cam $40; SIO&lt;k Citt&gt;~

$3.200. 304-675-5792 after Spm.

oeo.304-512·322A.

540 Mlacellaneous

YOU~

Movl"ii Must Sell: 1991 Honda
CR 125, COrr4&gt;ieiOIY Redone, Rp
Roady! Call 740·4-16-7375 A1Wr91
PriCe: $1,700.
· •.•·

1

Reg. lemale

Musical
lnatruments

DO 1 ~TILL TN'E

1990 Yamaha AT 180 Oirtbik~ 2

3933 or 1·BOo-273-9:129.

1992 Nlssan Sontra 104,000

570

,...

Stroke Many New Parts. $70Q,
740-441·1716.
.

750

• AnnJ

; 35 Olllcllll
! IWOCIM18IIOn
1351&gt;uzde
J7 - Scali King

.

1988 Toyota ·4x4 4 Cyli
$2, 700; Range King Pro Ga en

1982 Mercury Grand UarQuls,
Runs. Drives And Looks Great!

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

So.,. $250; Chinese

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

All Makes Ava

740-446-7375.

• K5Z

By Phillip Alder
We all know abour the holdup
play. which is especially important in
no-trump contr-..cls. You hold back a
winner, hoping to break rhe uppo·
nencs· communication in the suit It's
not 100 com pi icared. burrhe play can
appear,
chameleonlike. in dille~nr
.
gutses.
How would you declare this threeno-trump conlrJct'! West leads the
heart six, Ea.~t pulling up rhe queen.
Some pairs might ~ach five clubs,
but most would stop in three notrump after the given auction.
He~ · s how South assess.:d lhe
deal; Fil'lit, I'll check my top tricks.
There are seven; rwo spades, one
heart (given trick one), three diamonds and one club. Obviously. rhe
club suit will provide the necessary.
and if Wesr has the club king. there
a~ ar least two overtricks in my
futu~. Is there any danger. even if lhe
club finesse is losing·&gt; Surely not.
Those hearts look ironclad.
So, South won the lirst trick and
immediately took the club finesse.
However. after winning with rhe
king. East placed rhc heart nine onto
rhe table. Suddenly Sourh saw his
caslle crumble. Wharever he did. lhe
defenders had lo cnrlecl four heart
Irick&lt;: one down.
Trying ro eliminate the hean danger, South must duck the lirst trick .
Then, when Easl rerums the heart
nine. there is a dnuble-duck posirion.
If Snuih incorrecrly covers wilh the
jack (or king). West must duck 10
defear rhe cnntract. Bur if South
ducks a secnnd time. ewrything is as
safe as houses.
When rhere ure two choices ••
duck or win •• consider lhem both .
When you can play eilher high or
low, analyze both.

HIOQ-290-2282, X

675·3324.

polis. 740-446-1528.

pug, $75; 740-992-9t90.

RUN
OVER
?!!

:

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs _•• :

1982 Cutlass Supreme, 2 D. 260
VB . Good Condition, $1,500.00
Ann 740.992-4568.

3324.

740-2.5-5597.

OVER IN
LUKEY'S
BARN"

AN" GIT

Three 4x-4's Blazer 1985 $2,500; ,

----~~--~~----·

Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd.
740-446-o23t.

Male &amp; Female Adult Rat Terriers

WHISPER IN HIS EAR-"THAR'S A CARD GAME

1997 Green a50 XLT 4 Doors, t

shape. a04·675·2035 Laavo
message.

1989 Pontiac 8000 w/air, sulo,

$250, 740-«Hl681, Allor 8 P.M.

UNCLE SNUFFY!\

1996 S - 10 Blazer LT. 4 DoorS":

Engine Parts, G.T. 390 High Pj.tr·
formance Engine Complete &amp;

A Groom Shop -Pel Grooming .
Featuring Hydro Bath . Don

Jack Russell Terrier Pups, Talis
Docked , Dew Claws Removed,

I HOLLERED BUT
I CAN" T WAKE UP

37.000'MIIes, $19,300, 740-388·
8304.

$40,

3W..
4 Fora. botdng
charlp
5 Conopuelr .......

Vulnerable; East-West
Dealer: South

1991 Chevy Cheyenne WT 1500
Series. 8 cylinder automat!~
72,000 muas, good clean truck_ •
runs excellent. $5SOO, 740-742· •

or 304·882-2524 .

Cherie~

2 ChMtll'ltl •

• KJ 42
t K S
• Q J a•

1954 Ford 4dr Sedan, good

1180 ·1990 HONDA CARS $100

• Q g 5
• J 10 7.

4

1984 S-tO 4x4 auto, 2.8 Amer~

740

·=-M ~ Nlald
11 ....,.

•AKI

$4200. 740·949-2203 or 740-9o\8· '

'92 Nissan Stanla, -4 d«Jor, 4 cy-

• A 10 I I S

lloldll

Chevy 5-10, $850; 740-742·2357.

1·soo-69Hm.

New Benk Repot· Only 2 LeU,

Livestock

'88 Tllunderblrd, sunrool, runs
good, $2000 OBO. 740-992-9190.

5121 .

- - - Nltn&gt;,WV.
3CM-7u-SIM.

630

Tread Mill Brand Newt Electric,

$500 New. Asking: $150, Reads:
Hearl Rate Milos You Walk, 740·

VIne Stroot, Call 740·4•6-7398.

NEW BANK REPO'SI
ONlY a l.elll Sllll uncle&lt; wamonty.
Only AI

24121·800-594-1tll .

71 0 Autos for Sale

740-245--9633.

1999. Calll-80o-IM8-!1878.

With Us About Financing On
lawn Tractors And Low Rate Fi·
nanclng On New And Used
Equipment. Carmichael'&amp; Farm &amp;
lawn Gallipolis, OH 740-446-

gaHnsl

14 x70 aBR, $999 Down &amp; ONLY
S179 per mo. Free air &amp; !rae skirt·
ing. I·SS&amp;928-3426.

Buy in ·Sept . No Payment Until

Deere Skid Steer Loaders. Chock

Corner Third A"tenue And Court

ows. lintels. ale. Claude Winters.
Rio Grande, OH Call 7-40·245·

Rented Lol, Ready To Move Into,
74o-448-14092To HM.

Tractors. Hay Equipment, John

Time On Saturday. All Consignments W~lcome. Hauling Available, Athens Livestock Sates.

Washers, dryer&amp;, refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 7e

740-992-~.

Traclors From 20 To 39 HP. All
Sizes Of • WD And 2 WD Farm

tenanca on site. Safe &amp; friendly
environment for children, close to
school, atore &amp; bank . Equal
Housing Opportunity. Contact

Female Roommate Wanted : 1
Bloctl: From Rio Grande Campus.

Price reduced· 1990 Spruce
Ridge Ux70 mobile home. very
good cond~ion, 2 bedrooms. 1· &amp;
tl2 baths, waahar &amp; dryer, atove,
refrigerator. central air. 8){8 out·

Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Residential And Commercial
lawn Equipment Compact Utility

AI.-IIID PNvlatw Puzzll

11 . . . . . . .

. 34 L.-•clo dll-

• t. z

24~9 .

9062, Or 740-446-7278.

32=

' »Whole-

Eut

• 3

1982 f·700 Fonl Our~'~', 10 1/2 Ft.
Bed. Telescope Holst, Very Good
Condition. Also Misc. Parts. 740·

304-875-2875 aftar 4pm.

1 Maley.....
7 1ftle of cloud
1au.ve•

25 Tllma
. . . .,,. ed

• Q 7 54

• g.

1829.

Truck 1985 Ranger $2,000; Jeep ,
1986 Suzuki $1,900, H0-388• l

Lot lor sale· GaiRpolls, 90xl72.
nice neighborhood. quiet, 740·

$250; Electric Sto\'1 $158, Good
Concllllon, 740-448-2370.

1979 Cheloy Trucic, 6 Cyl .. Autom ..
$1,000.00. 1981 Chevy Truck, 8
Cyl., Autom . 5700 .00. 740·441·

Ploaaanl &amp; Ripley Rd. 304-895·
3874.

Ohio on Jackson Pike. 740·4462412 Qr 1-600-594-1111

.EEK &amp; MEEK
eat

Ton, Power StrokB, $2,750, 740·
~~•
388-3879

Saturday September 26. 1 P.M.
Selling 14 Llmousln &amp; Charolala

t&lt;lndtewood Stove For sale, In-

1977 Chevrolet 112 ton pick·uP. ..:.

can racing wheels. $2,000

41llawgrrn' n

~=--

Nadll
• J 10 3
• 7
t A Q 52
• A 10 t 7 4

350 cubic engine. auto, goqd
""""· $1,000. 304-875-2916.

same specs as above $t8,500 .
h3930 -45hp . 2wd 8x2 trans, 1
valve, 230hrs. $14,900 . Keefer's
Service Center St . Rt. 87 Point

cellent Shape! $1,200, 740-«694n.

2217.

$4500, 740-992·5039.

5oao same specs 250hrs.
$23.~00 . I =~6aO 55hp. 2wd

Old Milldng, 740-992-m9.

$650/Mo.. Plus $650 Sacurily Da·
poSit, 740-446-3545.

1971 Hillcrest, 12x60, two bed·
rooms , washer, dryer, stove &amp; refrigerator. air, underpinning ,

2 pump Hydraulics, 8X8 syncho
shuttle trana, 129hrs. $2-4,500. 1•

Kimball Organ, Pedals On Floor,
Has Guitar, Drums Etc. Available.
Bought New At Brunicardi's, Ex -

12x60 trailer, can be used for olfk:e tnlilll, $3,000 withOut air conditioner, $4,000 wUh, 740-949-

t6x76 :4tlr, 2 bath $1,195. down,
$193. per mo. Free air. free skirt .

UniiJ lor sale. 1=5030 62hp. 4wd,

electric heat. Laundromat &amp; play- sert. 740-256-1044.
ground on site. Manager &amp; main~

2 bedroom house, stove, relrig·

414 Third Avenue

Ford New Holland Tractor Rental

Utile Kyger Road, 304-523-2450.

In Middleport - newly remodeled,
siding, roof, windows, kitchen,
electric heat pump, fenced In
yard, three bedroom. bath and

PRIME
LOCATION

25123 304-895-3874.

Been vaccinated, &amp; Are Bred To
A Black Bull. Cattle Acceptld AI·

Weekly Rates. Or Monthly Rates,

3465.

ors Service Center 51. Rt 87 Pt.
.Pleasant &amp; Ripley Rd . Leon, WV

Your area bush hog dealer for
parts, rotary cuners, loaders, till·
era, linish mowers. act. Carmichael'&amp; Farm &amp;.lawn midway
between Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande,

AERATION MOTORS
relerences. 304-882-2586.
Repaired, New &amp; RtbuHI In SIO&lt;k.
Now Taking Applications- as ca1 Ron Evans. t-600-537-9528.

OLD ASH VILLAGE APTB
Now accepting applications 2br,

dealer and aee how long they
warranty there drive train . Keel-

Church pews, twelve 12' long. tour

North Third Ave. Middleport, OH .
2br unfurnished apl, deposit &amp;

6515.

Chad&lt; your JD, MF, FNH or CIH

T030 Ferguson Tractor &amp; Equip·
!!'eM, 740-256--6829.

furnished. 304·875· 7763 HUD $2,500 OBO, 740-245.(18()3.
Accaplod.
-M-od...:ec.r_n_2_B_e_d-ro_o_m-Ap_a_r_tm_o_n-t,·l Grubb'a Piano- tuning &amp; repairs .
Problems? Need Tuned7 Call the
7
40-446-QJ90.
plano Or. 740-446-4525

West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Uo .. 7-40 ~.W6-

draulic wet dlec brakes all 4
wheels; Dtfterenllallock front &amp;
rear, dual hydraulic remotes,
AOPS and Canopy. 16){16 Trans·
mission lull~ synchronized forward &amp; reverse shuttle. zinc
coated sheet meta l, 4 year or
4000 hour drive train warranty.

Call 740·992·6636 afler 6 pm.
COs &amp; tapes ,..Included.

port. From $2C9·$373. Call 740· condition, call 740·949·2217.
992·5084. Equal Housing Oppor- 7:008m-IO:OOpm.

Cinemax, Showttme &amp; Olaney.

hall. $59,000 negotiable, 740-992·

Complete Apple computer aysrem including color monitor &amp;
color printer. Also complete
home software library Including
wofd procusors. term paper
writer, gretltlng card maker, educational &amp; fun games, 10 numerous 10 mention . $175 . 304·

675-1283.

Broad Run Rd. 2

Make 2 Payments, Move In, No
Payments Alter 4 Years! 304·

52 Inch HitaChi SCreen T.V., Aak·

1ng 1700. 740-388-9413.

_37_1_1_.EOH
__. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ &amp;aby bed, awing, stroller, car
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS 1 seal &amp; high chair. 304-675-4548.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Boys 12spd bike &amp; girl's IOopd
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive bike, ilte - · $50ea.

740-446.0879.

Vindele 70'xt4' With Expando 2
Sr., 20' Living Room, Large Mas ter Br., Excellent Condllionl On

to schools and churchn.
tlrlch circular drWe, brick patio,
modern kitchen , family room w/

2bdrm. apts., total electric, ap·
pllancea furnlehed, laundry room
taclliUes. clouto school in town.

posit, No Pets, 740 · 446 -4313,

slon,

•A Lilt~ Country In Town•. large
restored VIctorian home attuattd
on 12 acres , 1
of Middle·

MessaQo.

Toll Free (I) 800·218-9000 Ext.
H·2814 For Current UsllnQs.

skle bulldl"ii. Immediate possas-

REAL ESTATE

polis, Reltrencea &amp; Depdall Re-

Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,

304-895-3814.

College. Scholarships.

pen&lt;lenl 540 and 1000 PTO, Hy-

•r Galli·

2 Bedroom House, $350/Mo., De·

private renled lot. Chestnut
Ridge , Mt. Alto area . $17 ,000 .

FREE
CASH
ClRANTSI

nished. Air Condllionlng,

Mites trom Sporn Plant. 3br, 1-112
baths, 2 added an rooms. lot, ga·
rage, 2 AJC's, household Items.

1989 Clayton 14x70 furnished on

Apply To Holzer Clinic; Human

U11fy~.

Charming

on

Agoo-AIIIa Spoclol

Tractor 5670 8a PTO H.P. 4

2 Bedroom Apartments Fur-

S1.a25 Down, $205 Mo. Free air
&amp; lree skirting. t-800-691-87n.
tra&lt;~r

210 MF 21 HP Tractor, WithAltachmenll$5,000, 740-245-5747.

wheel drive, world lamous aircooled diesel engine, Goodyear
Radial Urea all • wheels, lnde·

$25,000
:!C*582-5840.

House

720 Trucks for Sale

3824.

pots. 304-773-5352 or 304·882·
2827.

Jr. 304·576·2336.

t4x80 aBR, make lSI &amp; last pay-·

ment.

And MAl , AMl Approved Ra-

vllle PlkB, 740-367.0286.

ment &amp; 1'1'10\18 1n. 304-755-5566.

Technology Trair.mg , And Ability
To Operate Ultrasound Equip-

IIRI TECH •• Rtqulremenll:
ARRT Certlllcallon In RaCiology

8yr, 2·3 bedrooms, loft, tongue/
groove. pellet stove, HPICA. appliances, garage, spa, acre, Bula-

Georges Portatlle Sawmill , don't

haul your logs lo tho mill just call
304-675-1957.

mo. Free sk.,. t-600-691-67n.

10 Acres Uineral Rights, Utlltles,

4br house, fenced yard, 1 block
from schools, new furnace &amp;
central air, recentlY replaced roof,
new 200amp breaker box, recently remodeled bathroom, full
basement. 304-675-5320.
·

Phillips, 740-992-6576.

CONVENTIONALS

0008.

sn.ooo. :1)4-675-6258.

GOV'T

Southeastern Business College,
Spring vaney Plaza. 740-446·
4387, 1-800-214-0452, Accredit·

•Late Model Ffeightliner
Requirements · Age 23. Class A
COL And Good Driving Record .

siding &amp; shudders. solid oak

No Phone Calls Please.

New 3br SQOO . down, $149. per

300 Gallon Portable Tank, $75;

etcenent. $2,400 OBO. 304 ·67~

quired, 740·44t-t5t9 Leave

New t998 3 Bedroom. 2 balh.
$998/Down. $189 per month. In·

736-7295.

3 Bedroom Home New Roof, New

Now Accepflng Applications For
STNA Classes. Transportation
Provided To And From Training

bage dispoaal, 'tery nice, no

Easy Bank Financing For used
Vehicles. No Turn Downs, Call

;V=~~.7~40-~~~28~9~7~
· ----~ ~

.Hiddlil.._

14-rlllng
(GIIMIIIII•I 17 -ggr d
15 Cl*ry cobred
11818b
DOWN
171111Mr"allnd
11 Ninny
1 Dill; •

Credit Problems? We can Heljl. ·

610 Fann Equipment

9N Ford farm tractor, looka &amp; runs

AIC.
laundry room, cemng lans &amp; gar-

. Special 16x80 3BR, 2 bath.

Nftded Experienced Tree Climb-

7150.

Buying Hardwood Timber on
Shares ; Also Pine Saw Timber.
Small Acreages ok, 740-258-

112 Acre, 3 Bedrooms, Full Basement. Garage In 30's. 740-446-

""""· -ss:J.0038.

C811740-592-4585.

9e21 .

Bottom, Box 955 Evergreen Rd . 1
acre land &amp; mobile· home.

Medl Home Health Agency, 740441-1779.

e&amp;ted Applicants AppJy In Pef10n
Antiques &amp; clean used furniture,
will buy one piece or complete
hou&amp;eho.ld, Osby Martin, 7-40-

310 Homes for Sale

2906 Maple Ave . 3br ranch all
brick, covered deck, fenced back
yard, central-air, garage , exc .

LPN'S To Work PRN Please Call

erator &amp; utilities furnished,

At. 35 Stave Branch Rd . Frazier'S

County Call 740.992-7900,

t88.0hlo &amp; Wosl Virginia, 304·
173-5785 Or :!C*173-54-47.

or 3 bedrooms. Starting 11 $2995.
Quick delivery. Call 740-aBS·

Now Doublewide 3BR, 2 bath.
$1,325 Down &amp; 1205 per mo. I·
SS&amp;928-3426.

opportunity basis

Pick-Up Application At 762 SecMe~Qa

1br apt. in Maaon, stove &amp; refrlg·

S00-948-!1878.

Informed that all dwellings
advenised in this newspapef
are available on an equal

Experience~

ond Avenue, Gallipolis, OH Monday Thru Friday From 8 -5 P.M.

Large selection o! used homes. 2

New 1998 14K70 three bedroom,
include&amp; 6 months FREE lol rent
Includes skirting, deluxe steps

Limo Bull·18mos. old.

I Bedroom. A/C. WID, Hook-Up, 1850. 304-895-3742.
Near Holzer, 1279~ .. + Uti-. 1996 Cub Csdel riding mower
Deposit &amp; Loose Roqulrtd, 740· 1!111p.$1 ,350, 304-895-3013.

446-2957.

eludes Delivery &amp; Sei·Up. Cali 1·

law. Our readers are hereby

tere~

3426.

80().837-3236.

This newspaper will not
knowingly accejll

All Yanl SOlei IIUit Ba Paid In
Adnnco. Dud liM: 1:OOp01 the

80

options available. 1·888·928·

and setup. Only $187.08 per

304-4715-6851.

With Full·Time Employment, Only

Huge 28•60 3BR. I 112 bath .
Starling Sl ONLY 139,999. Many

month wilh $1075 down. Call 1·

Now Hwing-AII Poaitlons.
0r1w1rs &amp; Management

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

1987 Ho~ton 1800. 11188 Blazer
$3,800. 13' Camper $800. Reglt-

down , $217 . per mo. Free dallv·

to advertise ~any preference,

COL And Gooo Driving R&amp;eord .
Please Call Toll Free 1·888-790·

FARr,l SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

ACROSS

electrician . Ridenour

Eleclrlcal, WV0003011, 304-87~ .

1788.

.

l

. I

NYS~~i~IO (Ocr. 24-Nov. 22)

91

a

~

today ro change for rhe better. pilt·
You taay have 10 hold
iicularly , yoor · financiil iff)lin; 111111115 lenJih tOday If YOII Wlllt 10
• :Someone close 10 you mighr . R.
• ....,. •"'i and don •j under- adYtrnc:e your penOullalenls. H~ .
experience public ~~eruti~y today. Be : · ~marn•...,.rmr.. c
·
. your dieCb and bllaitcils lkilla.
cweful YOJJ' re nor mlli'n!d by usoci- , mrne thrs proII~ !1111~.
. .
•
.
• .

~·

'

20
(April
)
wh·rrh your.pof pulariry on the rise,
rhe c an~e o an acquatnlance
.....
· - a1
·
po 'ble Be
uo:comtniJJC' ousts very s." .
carcful.nor to follow suit. for envy is
an undesirable trait.
.GEMINI M 21 J
?O K
I ay • une- ) eep•
tng 1
til
'II ak
a ow pro 1 e wt m e you more
""ect'rve 'rn c"-r
alters roday
eu'
~~~ m
·
·
Too much visibiliry only leaves more
'
·t · ·
Do n"t be a t arge t'.
room ror en rcrsm.
C..,NCER (Jun 21 J 1 2?)
!-"
e • •hiu Y
B
l""k- good
ewa~. you mrg
· dg
odaY- If you stay a 1crt an d
JU mcnll
• 11y Hurvey Ihe 511Ualton,
•
•
' II
can:.u
enr 11
w top you
ev 1!11 Y come o on
•
LEO (July 23-Aua. 221
Sray on your roes t-'·y ,,·..;...
"""'
·~~
· financial trends are very- milted for
Don't all
the ..a,; 10 1
youl. h ""'o.w
ne.,....ve ou we
u"' posuve.
. . VI ROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

SEPTEMBER 23 I

�,

Page 11. The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 23, 1998 .

Lewinsky documents show undercurrent of privilege fight
WASHINGTON (AP) - The tint time pRSidential
adviler Bnace UDdsey appeuu1 before the Monica
1.-insty gJIDd jury, be ~efused to answer 50ille of the
questions, saying be wu "potentially coveJCd" by a
variety of legal privilegea.
The next day, the deputy White House counsel got
IDilft specific, actually claiming executive privilege,
governmental attorney-client privilege and penonal
attomey-client privilege. It turned out to be a good
move.
"If be bad come in beJC today still not claiming any
privileges and simply telling me be wasn't going to
aDSWer the questions, be would be in D.C. jail by now,"
O!ief Judge Norma Holloway Johnson brusquely told
lawyers 011 Feb. 19, according to court documents that
were released along with the videotape of President
Ointon's testimony in the case.
The documents give an inside look at the legal wran-

Polls show support
for Clinton unshaken I
by video release
·
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Democrats fougbt the release of the
videotape of President Clinton's
appearance before the grand jury,
but it appealS to have helped him in
the battle for public opinion.
I
Polls taken just bours after the
videotape was shown nationally
Monday indicate the president lost
no public support because of his tes·
timony, and might even have made
slight gains.
Most Americans said they don't
want him removed from office, even
though two-thirds said they thought
Clinton was evasive in his answers.
Even more said they don't buy the
narrow definition of sexual relations
he used.
Clinton's job approval rating
ranges from 60 percent to. 68 per·
cent, according to surveys taken
Monday night by ABC News,
CNN/USA TodayfGallup and CBS
News. And about six out of 10
oppose his resignation or impeachment, said ao NBC News poll.
The president's job approval rating climbed from 59 percent to 68
percent in tbe CBS poll when the
same iCSpondents were called back
after his testimony was televised.
The president's taped testimony
dido 't live up to some piCdictions
tbat it would shock viewers, already
overwhelmed with information
about the president's relationship
· with former White House intern
Monica Lewinsky.
"People were expccting some·
thing worse," Robert Shapiro of
Columbia University, wbo specializes in public opinion and the presi·
dency, said Tuesday. "He looked
good compaiCd to their expecta·
. tions. There was nothing new there.
. They had heard all the sex slllff."
. While most say Clinton should
not be removed from office, 68 per·
cent in the Gallup poll said the
Lewinsky matter is causing significant harm to the country.
It's not clear yet who will pay the
biggest political price. In the Gallup
poll, Clinton is blamed by 43 per·
cent for the cunent situation, lode·
pendent Counsel Kenneth Stan by
32 percent and Republicans in Con·
gress by 16 percent.
White House aides say privately
they are watching the polls to see
what kind of marks congressional
Republicans are getting for their
conduct of tbe investigation. At this
point, the public disapproves of
Republicans' handling of the Lewin·
sky investigation by 62 percent to 34
percent, according to the ABC poll. ·
Six out of 10 said Congress was
wrong to release the videotape and
prosecutors were wrong to ask about
such intimate details. The president
was right not to answer such questions, according to 70 percent of
those in tbe ABC survey.
"The overnight polling data suggest that the American people now
have a more sympathetic view of the
president than they had before," said
Senate Minority Leader Tom
Daschle, 0-S.D.
But not all of the poll results were
good news for Clinton - 68 percent
who saw the videotape described his
answers as evasive. And four out of
five disagreed with the narrow legal
definition of "sexual relations" that
Clinton was given at his deposition
jn the Paula Jones sexual harassment
(:UC and used in his grand jury testimony.
They said the term applies to oral
sex as well as intercourse. Clinton
testified his intimate contact with
f.ts. Lewinsky did not count as sexpal relations. Not everyone accepts
!he polls as significant.
"Poll taking is an art and not a
tcience," HOuse Judiciary Chairman
Henry Hyde, R·lll., aaid Tuesday
\vhen aaked · about Clinton's postvideo numbers.
. Such reactions are understand•ble, pollstell say.
"People want there to be more
fUC!ion. Thclre 's frustratipn," said
NldiCw Ko~ut, director of the Pew
Researcb &lt;1nter. " It's ~rt of a
lsboot the messenger ' reaction .
TheJC 'a been a rons:ensiiS witbin ~b.e
polls on this tbal gJVea lhtm legJII·
111acy. But · people should stay

tuned,"

1be CNNIUIA Tocle~allup
poll of 6$1 ldulll and lilt
poll
of 6961Cluba bid I'IIUIIftl of onor of
p1111 or minut 4 P'"*'IIP points.

.,

gling that went on !Jetwcen the White House and lndeSometimes !be battles were •efaeed by Joo- in
pendent Counsel Kametb Slair over who would be the stem fashion displayed in Fdlnwy. Bat 011 sevCAI
allowed to testify to allegations that the piCSident bad occasions the disputes were ~ppe~~led all the way to the
sex with Monica Lewinsky and then tried to cover it up. SupJellle Court.
The wrangling is still going on.
Critics say the litigation - mudl of wbidl the OinIn JUs Sept. 11 ~eferral to Congress, Start revealed ton administration ultimately lost -not only Slrippcd
that top pRSidential aides iDcluding lindsey were mal- the presidency of much of ill luster, but it also dragged
ing further claims of executive privilege. In the case of oul the Lewinsky investiption by JJ!OI!Ihs Starr recentWhite House lawyer O!eryl Mills, the claims cover coo- ly estimated that the probe bad COlt tupeyers 11 least
tact with preaideotial secretary Betty Currie, a key wit- $4.4 million this year.
ness in the Lewinsky probe.
The first conflict occurred Feb. 18, when Lindsey
The earlier White House claims 011 executive privi- balked at answering some of the questions poeed to him
lege and attomey&lt;lient privilege were designed to keep by Start's aides. Among other things, lindsey invoked
lindsey and other presidential advisers and lawyers executive privilege over a lunch conversatioo he had
from answering questions.
with Vernon Jordan, a friend of the president's and
The Secret Service also raised a novel privilege, someone wbo had tried to help Ms. Lewinsky find a job.
"protedive function," in an attempt to keep its normalIn previously sealed court filings. White House
ly tightlipped employees off the witness stand.
Counsel Charles F.C. !luff argued that conversations

between the pRSidcnt and JUs aides had to Jelllain CXlilfi.
dentialto ensuJC bigb-aliber decision-making.
"Yet the indcpcndcot counsel now asks the COW1 to
strip away this ooostitutional protection on the ground that,
metdy by oompleting a subpoena form and sending it to
one of the pRSident's lawyers or senior advism, he
becomes entitled ... to invade the legal and other CXlilfiden·
tial advice 011 wbicb the pRSident must rely," Ruff wrole.
The White House tried to quash testimony from presidcntial aide Sidney Blumenthal on similar grounds, but
Johnson issued an order requiring Lindsey and Blumen· ·
thai to testify 011 May 4. Ruff appealed, but Chief Justice
William Rehnquist refused to delay the testimony on
Aug. 4. The matter is still being appealed to the full .
court, although Blumenthal has supplied his disputed
testimony.
·
The Seaet Service also launched its own effort to
blol:k the testimony of its employees.

EASTMAN'S

FOODLAND

OVER

ONE STOP CONVENIENCE

We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Money
Postage Stamps
Film Developing
Pre-paid Phone Cards
Foodland Gift Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rentals
Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets

$275,000 in Priees

Edno Denois of Oollipolis Fcny wu the firs! k&gt; win ooc of thr&lt;c 1998 Ford Rangers, the top prizes
in tbe "iutbys-Trtld&lt;s .t. Cosh Match Game," sponsored by Food land. The oontest covers over 62
Food land local ions in a four-llale area. Loc:al participating stores include Eastman's Food land
locations ia Poittt Plcasan~ Pottteroy, Bidwell and Oollipolis. Pictured in lront ol the truck, lrom left,
B~lll Eulmla, vice president IIIII di...:t'1f of promotions; Bill Gardner, manager of TWin Riven
Foodland; Ocnai&amp;i Kevin Eastman, vice praidc:nt and direaor of pricing; Larry Howard, &amp;cnen1
manaser of Ohio Valley Supermarkets, lnc.oand Gary Vaz.ell, advertising manager, Super Valu of
Milton. wv.

FOODLAND VALUABLE COUPON

MT. VERNON

2%MILK

(exc:ept Buckeye)

2/8

•Ohio Valley Bank
"Superbank" services
•Greeting Cards

•Floral Sales
•We accept credit cards

Limit 2 w1t11 coupon and $10.00 or more additional purchase.

Good lhru Sat. Sept. 26. 1998

L-·-··---·-··---·-·----·-··---·-·----·-·---··---------~

Assorted Flavors

RC and Diet Rite

s 19
12 packs

2/84

Asst.

~to Chips
Archway 2/811
Sugar Free . U
14ozblg

Cookies

&amp;3/4oz

~·2··
Snaps

Diet or Reg.

7-up

S II
12 packa

Oscar Mayer 1 lb.
Meat Bologna or
Kraft American Singles
12 oz. pkg

2/S

16oz

Asst.
Rocky Top 24 Packs

Fresh

Broccoli

Oreo
Cookies

'211

Nabisco

3/S

Fig Newtons

'211
12·16oz

Broughton

Hormel

Ham Loaf

Orange Juice

•I!!I

•4!1
Armour

Velvet12d

'241

Pushtreats

Velvet 12d

Fudge Ban

Asst. Flavors

Velvet Natural Rounds

8Jft

Ice Cream
1(2 gellonl_

2/

Big Bend, Buckeye, Gallipolis,
Ohio Valley, Twin Rivers

Canned Ham

•4!!
THURS-Ffii.SAT ONLY

.
''

'

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