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..._ .

Thursday

Weather

Sports

Septembel' 24, 1998

Area grid previews, Page 6
Phillies edge Reds 4-2 Page 4
Ann Landers column, Page 7

Today: Sunny
~gh: 70; Low:SO
Tomorrow: Cloudy

High: 80; Low:SS

•
Meigs County's

Sou hits
pair, ties
McGwlre

Page4

entine

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Volunw 49 , Number 105

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Fisher, Taft spar over debate format issue
CLEVELAND (AP)- Republican candidate for governor Bob Taft
said he would coosider the latesl proposal by Democrat Lee Fisher for
one-on-one debates in addition to
four-way forums.
Taft wants debates to include himself, Fi.her and two other candidates
on the statewide balloc: Natural Law
P.arty candidate Zanna Feiller and the
Reform Party's John Mitchel. Fi.her
wants lo lake on Tafl one-on-one.

In their latest ••change, Fisher
criticized Taft's position Wednesday
when the two had their first face-toface meeting of the campaign: a joint
interview with editors of The Plain
Dealer.
Later. Taft said he would consider what he characterized as a new
proposal from Fisher for head-tohead debates ..Still. Taft said. including all four candidates remains "our
position today."

Tourism
officials
gear up for
fall foliage

.

Voters had planned the forum . O~a­
nizers decided not to broaden the
one-hour m«ting into a four-way
forum . saying it would dilute the dis-

Fisher, in tum, said he wa.' willing to compromise and have some
debates with all four candidates if
Taft also agreed to one-on-one
debate.•.
An agreement could salvage a
debate scheduled Oct 22 in Dayton
but wa.• canceled this week.
The Your Voice. Your Vote sponsoring group thai includes the Dayton Daily News, mdio and television
stations and the League of Women

___,

cussion.

Taft withdrew this week.
"We an: disappointed thai Mr. Taft
has reneged on his commilment to

us." said Ellen Belcher. chairwoman
of Your Voice. Your Vote.
Organizers thought if they aired a
Fisher-only forum, they would have

Hurricane Georges forces
millions to evacuate homes

"'

By JAMES HANNAH
Alaocllted Presl Writer

Get ready...

(Continued from Page 7)

cn'gine hlock freezes and cracks.
you' II lind yourself in for a very ex pensive repair that could have easily heen prevented.

Check all the hells and hoses. The
heal &lt;)f summer can wreak havoc on
these mther delicate hut essential
parts of your cur, leaving them dry.

hrinle and ready 10 break at the first
cold snap. If any of them are showing signs of wear or don 't feel pli ahlc. have them replaced BEFORE
they hreak. If they break wti .e y&lt;&gt;ur
out driv;,,g, you'll have :o ooor.e .o
a scrcechir.g hall ;mmt&lt;·. :a:e')'-u;.L
you migh.· not ~ anyw .• e:--~ ::eo:_:
place to gel re,llaceme,'i p;:;~s .

:!

H:.1vc your hatle,·j cncc,ket. . .s
llu~rc

a murc disar.poi.nting Sound in
llu..· woriU than an cn~inc trying to
stou1 on a roll! winter morning when
thl' hattl·ry doesn't have cnou~ht

powt·r to kid it on? There you arc.
:-;ifliiiJ.! inlht'l'llld rar lisll'niiiJ! htlhc
last ~a.o.;p fro111 your startn, m IJCf·

haps, li stcniiiJ.! to nuthinJ.! 011 all . You
tan hdp fll~Vl'lll this hy si1i1ply
dtl·l'Lin!! the clc&lt;.:trulytc level in
"'your hallcry :nul havin!! it filled to
n: c.: umtHl' ntk·d level . Such an c~•sy
thing to llo thott may . prevent the
mos t l' t~mmon coltl WCillhcr
prohlcm.

Don 't forget the tires . In sum~cr.

the air in your tires expands. panicu larly when your running at high

-·.

wear faster. decrease your level of
steering control and have less than
optimum traction. Your car is designed to operate with greatest

safety and efficiency when the tires
are inOated to the proper level. You
can lind the proper level for your car
·'Y looking at the plate on the side
of the driver's door. You can gel a
simple lire gauge at most any auto
pans store and keep the tiresat the
proper pressure with the air pump
at your nearby service station.
Get the oil and oil filter changed.
A good reminder for chan!!ing your

oil and tiller is the simpl&lt; phrase
"change of season .- change your
oil". During the colder months of
the year. the difference between the
temperature of your engine when
you first stan and the temperature
while driving is much greater. These
more extreme changes in temperalure increase the condensation that
collects in the crankcase which affects the quality of the oil much

'

GOOD/i'EAR

',,,.,,,,

VIIMJI&amp;I AI.I·IIAIOIIIADW.
• High·ten1ile 1teef belts
• Smooth riding polyester cord
• Solid centerline and rib design
• Outstanding wei &amp; dry lroclion
• All-woather tread

'43!!13

fasler. So start the winter with a

fresh fill of motor oil and a clean oil

+P185/75R14
P185/70R14
+P195/75R14
PI95/70R14
+ P205/75R15
P205/65R15
+ P205/70R15
P215/70R15

lubricating system is at peak performance during the harsh winter

:.10nths.
If you 're in an area of the country
where snow tires are the norm,

speeds over super-heated p:n•emenl.
As the weather turns cook• . the air
in the tires contract·. lea\ n,g yoU

now 's the time to change to them.
Changing tires on a cold, snowy day
is no fun; so don't wail for lhatlirst
big snowfall before installing the

with underinOated tires that will

snow tires.

5AU

SIZE

filter to be certain that your engine 's

PIIICI

$41.43
$49.43
$49.95
$52.00
$56.09
$51.62
$58.62
$59.51

Blud.w.:l ~ ~ 'Mli~irroooul. at. 5I. A¥oilal:a.

Ohio:s trees are poised to trade
their coats of green for lhe red. yellow and orange of fall, and may
wa~te lillie time in doing so.
The colors could peak by the end
of September instead of mid-October,
Bob Butts. honicullurist for Five
Rivers MetroPnrb Cox Arboretum in
Dayton, said Wednesday.
"We ought lo have pretty good fall
colors," he said. "h will probably be
two weeks earlier. Bul I think we
should be preuy good on vivid colors."
Drew Todd. state urban forestry
coordinator. agreed that the leaves of
individual trees in cities and suburbs
and in some pockets of wooded
areas may tum early.
However, most of lhe trees in lhe
state's _f~J~~-e~_:.lll -1!'.?!~resilient to e.xtn;me couu.lllons anu...
probably will peak as usual In the
second or third week of October. .' .
"The trees have been at this for
eons and are pretty accustomed lo
this type of thing and will probably
change right on lime," Todd said.
He said the leaves will tum vibrdlll
colors a• long as there are sunny days
and cool nights. The cool night• hold
sugars in the leaves, and the sunlight
causes pigments in the leaves to
absorb lhe sugar. which intensifies
the color.
Todd said the changing of colors
in the stale moves from nonh to
!;&lt;lUih. with the besl viewing in heavily forested southeastern Ohio.
. "We do market the fall foliage
very hard," spokesman Scott Dring
said.
Dring said 22 percent of leisure
travel lo Ohio la.&lt;l year occulTed in
October, November and December.
He said the visitors also are allracled
to the state's festival&lt;.
Jim Lynch. spokesman for lhe
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, said many lourisls visit
stale parks, nature preserves and
forests in the fall to enjoy the changing colors of the leaves.
He said Ohio is one of the besl
slates in the Midwest to do lhal
because the wide variety of trees produces a wide variety of colors.
Beginning today. the department
plans lo pul photographs of lhe
changing colors on trees at state parks
on it• World Wide Web page to help
tourists lind the best spots for viewing. The site will be updated regularly
lllrough October.

Good Afternoon
not be undersold· We will meet any Goodyear
advertlseci price In our areal
2. Largest inventory of Goodyear tires In the area.
3. Complimentary shuttle service In the area.

Today's Sentinel
zSoctloas - 11 ......

Calcndlr
C!ass!Oeds

1r-------,r-------,~--~----,
SIIVICI COUPON II I£ Goodyear II SERVfCf·COUPON I
Oil, Lube &amp; Filter II fl 5
Hat II
s~~jDE
*J2 81 II
.
MAINTENANCE
I
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FREE IIA'('TEA~- I
1 Monday thru Friday II When Vo.u Apply for A II' ·,._.:=,:t:·
J
,by Appointment . · Goodyear Credit Caret ; ;r. $ 3995 .
I
I

Com!q

Ec!ilor!a!s

Local

7
B-9=10
11
l
3

Soorts

3

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L ...... ,.. ............ .IL ... -. ...... ---fl. ~--~~-

.,

Lotteries
OHW
Pick 3: R71 ; Pick 4: 8018
Super Lotto: 1- II -21 -22-42-44
Kicker: 994315

w.YA.

'o.lly 3: 922; Dally 4:2517

VISITS POMEROY • Hope Taft, WU. of Secretary of State Bob Tift, candidate lor gover·
nor of Ohio, wain POIIIIIIOY Wednesday mornto meet with
committee

R0··un..
·. ··

·

u·

to give Taft equal airtime orrisk hav- said details of the Cleveland debllle
ing their broadca.&lt;l lkensc:s chal- had not been finalized. The club~g­
lenged, Belcher said.
inally invited only Tafl and Fisher but
Taft campaign spokesman Brett is now changing the fonnat. which
Buerck said the four candidates will prompted Fisher lo reconsider his
debate at the Cleveland City Club on acceptance. she said.
Oct 30 and negotiations are under
way for two other forums . including
"We think that Bob Taft is afraid
one to be broadca.&lt;l statewide.
to face Lee Fisher in a one-on-one
"We are pretty confident there format. I think Bob Taft has a concern
will be a couple of debates, " Buerck that his message will not resonate
said.
with the voters of Ohio." Barbao
Fisher spokeswoman Judy Barllao said.

otflclala, Including Pomeroy Mayor Frank
Vaughan, right, about road Improvement and
other
Among tlloee accompanying
her to
Wll
Crow, left, regional

concern•.

DeWine.

KEY WEST, Fla. (AP)- Hurricane Georges bore down on the
Florida Keys today. and more than
three-quarters of a million people as
far nonh as Fon Lauderdale · were
advised to evacuate mobile homes
and low-lying area.&lt;.
Foreca.•ters predicted that Georges
-already blamed for more than 110
deaths acros.&lt; the Caribbean- would
slice through the Keys late today or
early Friday.
Hurricane warnings were posted
today for four counties - Monroe.
Dade. Broward and Collier- with a
population of 3.8 million. The warning&lt; meant thai hurricane-force wind'
of at lea&lt;l 74 mph could arrive by 5
a.m. Friday. Georges could be the
lirst major hurricane felt in southern
Florida since Andrew. which caused
$25 billion damage in Florida alone
in 1992.
Foreca.&lt;lers said similar conditions
were possible in live _more counties

I

:app'ro*ches·;, grand7jury

Georges hit some Caribbean
and Sara.~Ola coun1ics on the Gulf islands with 20-foot waves and storm
coast
. surges 5 to I0 feet above normal
Advisories recommending resi- tides. Some of the Florida Keys are
dents of low-lying areas and mobile as little as 7 feet above sea level. The
homes 10 evacuate were issued today highest point in Key West is 14 feet
in
Dade, Broward. Collier and Sara- above sea level.
Stan on Wednesday sketched oul
sota
counties. The evacuation ad vi "It doesn't take much to llood
the scope of material that he senl to
sorks cover about685,000 people; a those islands. With a storm su~e of
the House. telling Minority Leader
mandatory evacuation order issued 4 to 6 feet. it's still guing to cover a
Dick Gephardl. D-Mo.. that "we
earlier
in the Keys affects an addi- great deal." said Michelle Huber. a
have provided a copy of every docutiona I 80,000.
National Hurricane Center meteorolment cited" in the voluminous referln Cape CanaverJI. on Florda\ ogist.
ml of possible impeachable offenses
Atlantic coast. NASA ordered the
Stan submil!ed lo Congress on Sept.
By today, thousands had Oed
Discovery back to it&lt; giant hangar
II.
Thursday night. The space shuule had along U.S. I, the two-lane rood conThese include "grand jury Iranbeen rolled to its launch pad Monday necting the slender, II G-mile string of
scripts. FBI. interview memoranda. for next month 's scheduled mission islands.
audio recordings, and handwritten
"It's like a ghostlown," said Jim
with John Glenn.
and other statements." 18 boxes of
The wide area of the advisories Malloch. Monroe County's project
material in all . Starr wrote.
manager. "There •s very few people
The audio recordings apparently wa.• ba.&lt;ed on uncertainty in the fore- out on the roads. At least half. maybe
cast: The longer Georges' ce nter
are the secretly recorded tapes that
more. of the people left. "
Linda Tripp made of her conversa- · stays over Cuba. the less time it has
Oswald Fleming, 71, a Key West
to build before hitting the United
lions with Ms. Lewinsky and four
resident for 30 years, wa.• staying put
States.
But
a
slight
shift
in
track
could
messages Clinton lefl.on Ms. Lewinsky's answering maci\ine.
Stan has 20 more boxes of evidence that he did not submit to Congress. Gephardl requested thai malerial as well .
Starr said "we stand r~ady" to
provide it
COLUMBUS (AP) - If voters points.
Taft is running the ad now because
are yawning over the race for goverhe
believes the race will get closer
nor this year. a new ad by Republibefore
the Nov. 3 election and the
can Bob Taft could shake up the race
campaign
does nol want to take any
enough to snap them awake. an Ohio
political scientist says.
lead for granted. Taft campaign
Democrat Lee Fisher on Wednes- spokesman Breu Buerck said
day criticized the tone of the ad.
"We knew from day one this wa~
gy. said the Johnson-Mead plan offers which ponrays Tall as a crime light- going to very close." he said. "That's
the best chance for consumer savmgs. er and Fisher a.&lt; more concerned why we· re being aggressive."
while the utilities' proposal looks like about publicity than crime while he
The ad shows Taft surrounded by
a wish list
was attorney geneml from 1990-94. law enforcement officers and portra)'5
Tom
Holliday, an
AEP
The ad could help voters to focus Fisher a&lt; a publicity seeker during his
spokesman. said the criticisms by the on the race. said John Green. direc- tenure as attorney general from 1990consumer groups are not unex_pected. tor of the Bliss lnslitule of Applied 94. An announcer- not Taft-~)'5
"They have a cenain consiJtuency Politics at the University of Akron.
Fisher cut his crime-fighting employthey are advocating on behalf." he
"There's an unusual degree of ees by 15 percent while increa,ing his
said. '·From our perspective, their voter apathy this year." Green said. . public relations budget lo more thin
mncems and complaints are as much "Probably, lhal ha~ a lot to do with $1 million.
a reOection of a wish list of their con- the fact that the economy is good. ll
II also includes a photo from a
stituency a.• they claim,our proposal also could be the scandals in Wa.•h- 1994 Fisher campaign brochure of
i ~.· ·
ington. ••
the former attorney general standina
Johnson said the c-onsumer grnups
It's unusual. but not unheard of. with someone who appears 10 be a
awarded good marks lo the John- for the 'candidate with more money police officer. The officer then fillies
son/Mead plan in some areas. includ- and a lead in the polls to lire off the from lhe picture.
ing consumer protection and choice. first allack ad of a campaign. he said.
Fisher 's campaign responded thll
Taft's campaign reported on Sept Fisher. a.• auorney general, moved
4 that it had $7.7 million in ca.•h.
some employees around a.• he tear·
· The Olive Township Trustees compared with Fi•her's $6.2 million. ganized depanmenls and actullly
repon that because of the length of The actual ligures for both are low- increased the number certified by hla
time involved in lhe bid process, sev- er. though, because expenditures are Bureau of Criminal ldenlirlc:llion
eral bridges are still out on Olive not required in lhe monthly report• and Investigation from 114 to lll.
township roads.
Fisher said il was a sad day tor
aod both campaigns have been spend·
voten.
These include the bridge between ing heavily on TV ads.
"The fact he is Joins neplivc thltt
Two polls taken this month
Succ-ess Road and Stale Route 681 .
one near Lickskillet on Lickskillet showed Taft with a lead of 9 per- early means a number of thinp. He's
Road, and one on Hutson Road centage points over Fisher. although scared. He's dislolting the lnllh. He'a
between Lillie Forest and Lake one poll surveyed only likely volers violating his own pledp lO 111n a
Roads. 111e road through Boston while the other polled i-egislered voc- clean campaisn." Fishet 1111id while
Hollow is still impa...ible. it wa.&lt; ers. The margin of error for each poll unending an AFL-CIO conVCIIIIon 1ft
reported.
was plus or minus about 3 percentage Cleveland.

materials, possibly Jones files ·
WASHINGTON !AP) - President Clinton faces another.tonrent of
evidence: Gr.md jury transcript&lt; from
the Monica Lewinsky investigation,
coun materials from the Paula Jones
case and perhaps the videotape of
Clinton denying he had se•ual relations wilh the former intern.
With Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr's repon and Clinton's
grand jury videotape now on the public record, Round 3 of evidence production on Capitol Hill will include
thousands of pages of grand jury testimony from key witnesses like presidential secretary Belly Currie and
Clinton t onfidant Vernon Jondan.
The deluge of new material is ••peeled sometime next week .
And in Little Rock , Ark .. U.S.
District Judge Susan Webber Wright
could decide as early as Friday how
much to release of evidence that is
still sealed in Mrs. Jones' now-dismissed sexual harassment case
against the president.

The judge la.' l week turned over to
the House Judiciary Committee a
copy of Clinton's Jan. 17 videotaped
testimony in which he told Mrs.
Jones' lawyers, under oath. "I have
never had sexual relations with Monica Lewinsky. I've never had un alTair
with her." The videotape could be
among the items the committee
relea.sc:s next week.
Wright suggested Sept I she may
consider sanctions against Clinton for
heing less than fonhcoming in that
testimony about his relationship with
Ms. Lewinsly.
The judge wrote that she "has
concerns about !he nature of the president's ... deposition," hut "makes no
findings ullhis time whether the president may be in contempt'' of coun.
She has two motions pending one from Mrs. Jones's lawyers saying lhe judge should release a wide
array of materials and one from 12
news organizations seeking a prompt
release.

\

Analyst: Ad could shake
up Ohio governors' race

Consumer groups saying electric
deregulation plans need more work
By DAVID JACOBS
Auoclated Presa Writer
COLUMBUS -Bills that would
det:egulale Ohio's $11 billion electric
utility industry need more work. a
coalition of consumer-oriented
groups is warning.
Ohi!l Citizen Action. Ohio Part•
ners for Affordable Energy and the
Ohio Environmental Council gave
average lo failing grades Wednesday
to legislative proposals offered by
legislators and investor-owned utili·
ty companies.
Bills sponsored by state Sen.
Bruce Johnson. R-Weslerville. and
stale Rep. Priscilla Mead. R-Upper
Arlington, received an overall C
grade. A competing bill o.ltered by
investor-owned utilities recejved a
failing grade from the alliance of consumer. environmental and lowincome advocates.
•·
The deregulation plan advocated
by Johnson and Mead would open the
electric industry to competition on
Jan. I. 2000. for all consumers.
Utility compt111ie.• American Electric Power of Columbus. Cinergy
Corp. of Cincinnati. Dayton Power &amp;
Light iU1d FirstEne~y Corp: of Akron
have outlined a pruposal lharwduld
begin competitive electric sales at

frozen rJtes on Jan . I. 200 I. Under
lhal utility plan, consumers would
have live years ul frozen rates to
decide if they wont to pick anocher
supplier.
Though passage of an electric
deregulation plan appears increa.&lt;ingly unlikely this year us the cunrenl
legislative session nears un end. the
consumer groups hope to a..sisl in lhe
continuing debate.
"If we were going to sit down and
stun from scratch. that mi)!hl be a
good thing." said Shari Weir. consumer issues director for Ohio Citizen Action. " But we don't want to
continually delay passing legislation
because the longer we delay legislation. the longer we delay savings
from competition."
The bills were evaluated in several categories by the consumer groups.
induding consumer savings, energy
efficiency and consumer prolection.
111e groups criticized the plans on a
variety of fronts- customers paying
for future utility investments they
may not benefit from. high costs and
low consumer savings and a lack of
alternatives to pollution-producing
coal as an energy source.
Dave Rinebolt, executive director
of Ohio P..utners for Atl'orduble Ener-

Bridges still out

. :I

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•

give Georges more time over water to
rebuild into a major hurricane.
Looking down the rood. Georges
is expected to have plenty of time
over the warm. open Gulf of Me~ico
to buifd ·into a threat to the northern
Gulf lale Sunday nighl or Monday
morning.
For the Keys, the wind wa.•
already starting 10 pick up thi&lt; morning. John and Sylvia Phillips. who
lived on a boat docked off Key Wesl,
had an uncenain future after they
loaded backpacks and stuck out their
thumbs to hitchhike to the mainland.
"We had lo wail untilla..r nightlo
pick up a paycheck," said Phillips, a
waiter and bartender. They made up
their mind• lo leave during the night
when "!hal boa! slaJ1ed rocking." Ms.
Phillips said.
At 8 a.m.. the hurricane wa.•
inland over Cuba. about 385 miles
southea.'l of Key West. and moving
wesl-nonhwesl at 12
wind•

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�Commentary

Page2
Thursday, September 24, 1918

'!stah(rsfuri m 1948

By Ben watlenbelg

ligh~" .."httle

and Daniel Wallleltberg

toons.

plaor (m

post-OOctoral
English) "sec-

In the new movie. "One True
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
Thing," traditiOnal mother Kate
614·992c2156 • Fax 992·2157
Gulden (Meryl Streep) is active in the
Minnies, a small, infoonal women's
group in the Rockwellian New England college town of Langhorne. To her
daughtcr FJien (Rene Zellwegger). an
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ambiliru• New York glossy wnter, the
Minnies are a "cult" - insular, friv~:&gt;­
ROBERT L. WINGETT
lous pre-feminist relics like the VictoriPublisher
an homes lhalline Langhorne's stn:clll.
But these ladies do lllOIC !han lunch
(and lunch 1tself is harder to than it
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
DIANE HILL
looks. as Ellen learns when she ton:hes
G-.lllaMger
Comroller
an innocent chicken paillanl and garnishes il with !OXIC foxglove blosscms).
The Minnies are pan social service
Tlte SeallMI ..,leCNMI ,.,.,. to , . «&lt;lkw from t'NdMa on • brtMd , . , . of topa
agency, pan mutual support group and
ol """" pub//lh«J. Jn&gt;od ,.,.
part ciVIC associabon.
- - ,.,.,_ - .. ""'Y H odiiMI. E*"' lhould . . . _ o . , _, oddro..,
ontJ dlrllmo , _ - . Sj»clfy • &lt;Mil ff ,.,.., • , . , _ Ill • ptlliiOcll•rflcl•
Raising money for the eldedy, pro&lt;K · m: ~ m 1t1o Editor, TM SMIUnol, Ill Coun St., """'"""'' ONo
viding crucial emotional support for
..,.., or, FAX to 11...,-3157.
each other and bringing the community
together for festive holiday pageants.
the Minnies are a tiny node of "civic
engagement.
" Groups like the Minnu:s form the
stock of what social SCientists call
"social capital." Social scientists
By WALTER R. MEARS
believe
that •uch spont:meou.• social
; AP Special Correspondent
networks
are indispensable to the
WASHINGTON - R1chanl M. Ni~on deleted h1s e~pletives from lhe
strength
of
a nallon's larger political,
White House lllpeS. Pres1dent Chnton tned to e~purgate h1s adm1 s.~1on of
economiC
and
SOCial institutions.
• sexual misconduct when he testified on v1deotape in the Monica Ltw1nsky
Whether
they
are called "poml• of
affair.
It didn't work, then or now.
11lc words Clinton wouldn 'l confess were broadca..t on daytime televl. sion Monday, in an extraordinary airing of grand jury lesllmony, in the ques• lions. not the answers.
When a prosecutor demanded !hal Clmton say - yes or no - whether
• he engaged in a specific sex act with Monica Lewinsky, lhe presidenl said
only: "I am not going to answer exceptio refer tom~ statement." as he had
• again and again during 4 hours and 3 minutes of questioning. " I did have
• intimate contact with her that was inappropriate "
Two pres1denL• facing impeachment charges, 24 years apan. both wuh
tapes to be used againsl them - but so far. with a crucial difference.
No legalistic wording could save Nixon in 1974 when he finally had to
yield the clinchmg tape that proved his role in the Watergate cover-up. the
. so-called smoking gun lhal forced him to resign the pres1dency.
11lcre was no comparably compelling evidence for impeachment against
. this president. in the grand jury testimony taped on Aug. 17, nor in the 3.183
· pages of documenL~ sent to the House by special prosecutor Kenneth Starr
to support his findmg that Cl10ton comm1lled II Impeachable offenses.
111cre i~ more to come, 16 cartons of Starr documents and another Clin·
ton videotape, of his deposition in the Paula Jones sexual harassment case.
. with the denial of the Lewinsky affair that triggered the Slarr case.
But Starr's impeachment report lo the House on Sept. 9 made his case
with the most compelling ev1dence he had.
It's evidence. not proof. That is up to the lawyers and to Congress.
11lc House Jud1c1ary Comm111ee w1ll dec1de, probably qu1ckly. whether By Morton Kondracke
Wuh the presidenl weakened by
to recommend formal impeachment proceedings. Republicans have lhe
' voles there and 10 the House lo go ahead. w1th Democrats defensively ner- scandal. the country can't afford to
vous about that and the off-year congressional eleclions now only six weeks have House Republicans acting irre•.aw.-y.
..
..
.. ~" . $ sponoibly a.md the world economic
crisis, but that's what's happening.
· Nixon was convicted by his of;n word~ whe"'ll!e Supreme Court
GOP leaders insist on bringing
: him to surrender the tape recording m which he 'd told aides to invoke the
fast-track
trade legislation to a vote
CIA to stop the FBI from investigating the Watergate burglary. It proved
this
week
even
though its chances of
· he'd been part of lhe cover-up all along. and h1s shnnkmg Repubhcan suppassage
are
slim.
Meantime. they are
port against impeachment vamshed. persuadmg him to qu11.
dragging
their
feet
on replenishment
Clmton wa.• trying to explam aw~y his words. admiuedly d1shonest m his
of
the
lnlernallonal
Monelary Fund.
denials of a sexual relationship. to hiS closest aides and lO the American peoIf the House defeats fast-track. it
• pie. aftcr Starr took on the Ltw1nsky case eight monlhs ago. .
· HIS other cases against Clinton, includmg Whitewaler. alleged abuse of will ind1cate thallhe United States is
. FBI Iiles. questionable finngs 1n the White House !ravel office. were not backing away from free tmde, one of
the ch1ef engines of economic
· r~ised in his Impeachment report. or m the quesuomng ot Clmton.
growth m the world.
Ni~on·s offenses 1nvolved the m1suse of presidential powers over federal
Defeat this year likely Will ensure
agencies to cover up the scandal. Clmton told h1s interrogalors they were lry·
:ing to criminalize his private conduct. something he couldn't have cla1med defent again next year. delaying until
after the 2000 elections lhe ability of
:about the other, unraised phases of the Starr case.
. Starr accused Clinton of abusing pres1denl1al powers by cla1ming execu- lhe United States to take the lead in
. live privilege agamst tesllmony by Wh1le House aides and lawyers. Clinton mtemational trade negoliauons .
And if the United Slates does not
' !Wid in the grand jury appearance that he hadn't been trying to keep them
' quiet. "I did not want to put the presidency at risk of being weakened as an replenish the IMF's lending capacity
that agency Will be unable to support
•institution." he told Starr.
fore1gn
econom1es shaken by the
; It has been. Clinton losl the executive privilege cla~m m federal court,
world
cns•s
or to pressure lhem 4o
; and the Secret ServiCe lost 11s auempt to keep pres1dential bodyguards off
inslllute
reforms
; Starr's witness stand.
Last week. Wllh 1he crisis spreadJust as Nixon lost m court when he tned to sh1eld the While House tapes
JOg
from As1a to Russ1a to Latm
• under execUtive privilege. So he issued transcripts, cla1mmg that wa.~ full
America.
the IMF lowered JlS esu: disclosure that should end the case. ll wasn't. and 11 didn't He edJled out his
: own crude comment~ and curses. malung "expletive deleted" pan of lhe mate of worldwide economic growth
for 1h1s year from 4.2 percenllo jusl
: language of Watergate.
, What he deleted. incidentally, was tame stuff compared w11h the graph1c 2 percent Eventually. 1he crisis
could spread 10 lhe United Slates,
: and explicit sexual references m the Starr documents Times change.
, Chnton 's lelllimony shows the president evad1ng questiOns, and argumg 100
The udmlmstratJon certawly
: that he hadn't perjured himself m denymg sexual relations because of h1s
understandmg of what that meant. He sparred over the meamng of the word bears 11s share of the blame for lhe
fact that the United Stales can'tlead
: "is" and the word "alone "
lhe way m negotmtmg global free
trade pacts. Moreover. a strong presIdent m1gh1 be able 10 pul sufficient

ondary associations," groups ~ke
the Minnies per·
vade the American social landscape. 111cy provide armies of
volunteers who
coach, tutor. watch Waftenberg
polls,
prepare
meals, donate clothes, build housing.
read 10 the eldedy. save the whales and

Dec~ning

Social Capital." Just when
societies in the old Soviet Bloc were
lrying 10 revitalize social networks
aaophied by totalitarianism. Putnam
argued. civic engagement was in
decline in America, the nation of join·

ers.
Putnam had noticed thai while the
number of bowlers in America had
risen I0 percent between 1980 and

1993, those participating m league
bowling had, paradoxically, declined
by 40 pement over the sarne span.
While "bowling alone" proved an inesiSiiblc metaphor 10 journalistic !rend
~ Putnamcileda variety of more
much more.
'signifiCant indicators: falling voter
But these small infonnal groups are tumou1. a de-unionizing work fon:e
the quantum panicles of the social uni- and steep drops 1n the membership lev·
verse: They may be invisible 10 social els of a host of civic and fiatemal orgascience's conventional instruments of nizauons like the Boy Scouts, the
rnetiSiftmenL In a recent Bradley lec- League of Women Voters and the Elks.
nue sponsored by the American Enter- He was especially abtmed by plunging
prise Institute. ''Bowling With Toc- participation in the PTA. "a (ll!l1icularquevdle: Civic Engagement and Social ly productive form of social capital."
Capital," Everett Carll Ladd argues that
Ladd sees essential continuity
civic decliniSL• have underestimated underlying milch formal change in pal·
Amenca's social cap1tal. in pun terns of Ameri'can civic engagemenL In
because such groups have been under- a cornpetihve marketplace. people 3111
counted.
voting with their feet· the FJk.~ may be
The Ladd lecture, adapted from his down, but the Sierra Club is up; seoul·
forthcoming book. "The ladd Report" mg may be down. but youlh soccer
(Free Pres,,), is a reply of sorts 10 &gt;AJCi· leagues are multiplying. "Churning,
ologisl Robert Putnam's famous 1995 not dechne." he calls il And while
essay, " Bowling Alone: America's political volunteering may be down,

- -(3IJIJ-"' -)-,. ,.,,_

:Like Nixon, Clinton
~tries to stop the words

While some parents were lllllled off
by the nalional organization's liberal
politics, many Jusl wanted to retain
their dues money for local U&gt;C. By most
measures, Ladd shows, parental
involvement 1n education is actually
rising.
01urches and synagogJlC.' n by far
the largest centers of civic associalion
and action in highly religious America.
In this !iphere. l..add sees a similar ~nd
- away from large. ll'tlditionll, mainline Proteslant churches and toward
more dynamic. often evangelical.
denominations and decenlrnliml, nondenominalional "community" chun:IP
es.
But the smaller and lllOIC 111merou~
the groups, the harder they 3111 10 measure. One sociologist. J. Miller
McPherson. has estimated that in
America roughly I00.00:&gt; or more such
small groups ore typically IICiive in a
city of one million. Compdlen.,ive •
measurement may be 1mpos.•ible: A
Rockefeller
Foundation-funded
alleiTlpl to compile a COI11jlldlensive
list of nalional. state and local actors in
the civic revival movement wa.• simply
abandoned as an exercise in fUtility.
In a dema.o;sifying ArneriaJ. it JS a
mislake 10 derive sweepmg conclusions about our civic health from the
fate of an unrepresentative sample of
ma.o;s organizalion•. 11lc age of the
ma.o;.o;es is over. Long live the Minnies!
Ben Wattenberg is a s,ad'oc:ahd
write~
Newspaper Eaterprlse

!or

ASSC'J•-oa.

pressure on Congress to refill the
IMF.
On the
trade (roRL other
countries won· t
bargaio with the
United Stales if
the
pres1den1
doesn't
have
fast-track
Krondracke authority. which
guarantees that
agreements will be voted up or down
by Congress. n01 amended and renegotmted.
Last year, the admm1slration mistakenly delayed introducing fa.~l­
track legislation unllllhe fall. Suspicious of what the administraiJOn 's
bill would contain, Republicans and
busmess groups held off theu lobbymg campa1gns wh1le umons organized a vigorous (ampaign against

f0fi!e4

fa.~t-lrack.

Moreover. admmistralion failure
to fulfill promises it had made lo varIOUs legislators am1d the 1993
NAFfA tight depleted suppon for
fa.~t-lrack. especially among Democrats.
When fast-lrack was about to be
voled on lasl November. whip counts
showed around 170 Republicans and
42 Democrals for 11, lanlalizingly
close to lhe 218 total neces.o;ary for
passage. Leaders decided not to nsk
defeat and canceled a vole.
The admm1stration figured that
1998, an el~c11on year, was not the
11me to bring the i.sue back and
divide the Democrallc Party, but

:Letters to the editor

Republicans have done il on their while the world bums." The Senate
own.
ha• approved S18 bllhon for the .
Last week. the White House lending agency. but lhe House ha• ·
denounced the IIJllVe as "en11rely only $3.5 billion pending.
political," ~s\~ to spli,l DemocWilson and other observers think
rals and curry favor for the GOP House leaders want to use full IMF
~mong corporations and farmers.
funding a.~ a bargaining chip in late· .
Even the chief trade spokesman session budget negotiations with the
for the Busmess Roundtable. TRW admmislralion .. poss1bly agreemg
CEO Joe Gorman. said in an inter- to the full $18 bilhon as part of an
view that he wa..n 't sure whether omnibu.~ spending package.
Still, there's a chance that negot1·
GOP leaders were staging a vote
beheving it could pass or to embur- ations could break down. or that antiruss Democr~ls ·• though, "if the IMF hard-liners like House Majority
leadership holds a vote, lliee'lf-.~v-r:;e:ai'OO Richard Armey. R-Texas,
could s cceed in blocking addilional
port 11. We have to."
After being assured by
funding.
ers that they thought fastk could
e administration is going allpa.s, Gorman said he deci e to out 10 secure IMF funding, with
help. The Roundtable is calli
sury Secretary Robert Rubin
members and is runmng ads in 12 telling Congress la.'t week that "at
Midwest CongresSional districts.
this cnlicul juncture. resoun:es of the
But both pro-business and New IMF are at historic lows. Every day
Democrat vote counters like Ed1th that Congress does not approve the
W1lson of the Progressive Policy president's request for IMF funding .
lnstilute think that lhe odds are 11\Crea...s o~r vulnerability to a crisis
against passage. They say Democra- and decreases confidence 1n global
lie suppon for fa.~t-lrack is down lo markets."
30-35 votes and GOP support 1s up
A h1g part of lhe countty's probto no more than 173, leaving the lem is that Congress doesn 'l want to
measure fanher short than it was in approve any of President Clmton 's
1997.
requests or give him any new author·
GOP leaders acknowledge they ity. like fa.~t-track.
don 'l have the votes now .. but claim
What's required of Republicans
they w1ll when votiAg machmes get now is to pick up the slack in leaderturned on lale th1s week.
sh1p by passmg an IMF refill and, 1f
W1lson said. " I think when they they hold a vole on fast-track, to profind lhey don't have the votes, they' II duce the votes lo wm it
pull it. Even so, by lhe message it
(Morton Kondracke is exeeusends, damage Will be done."
live editor of Roll Call, tile newsMeantime, she charges, on IMF paper of Capitol Hill.)
" the House Republicans are fiddling.

1Oth annual ASP Awards are announced

Dear Editor.

President Clinton seems to forge! a lol of thmgs. He forgot the sacred
' trvst the American people have placed m him not once. buttw1ce. by elect- By Joseph Spear
.ing him our pres1dent. He forgot his weddmg vows to his wife. H1llary. and
The Tenth Annual Olltr..geous Per·
he forgot the sacred trust placed m h1m by their child as well.
sonage of 1he Year contest is now offi·
There is an old saymg that power corrupts. and absolute power corrupls cJally open. Pop the corks on the old
absolutely. Clinton ha.s turned the power and prestige of the Amencan pres- bubbly. pleao;e, and let's have a toa.'il for
Jdency into a sexual farce of who ha.s done what to whom and where. There th1s milestone event-- may the next 10
are those who say we should forgive h1m and also supporl h1m as well when yean; be a.s fnulful as the pa.'il 10!
what we need lo support Js the sort of eth1cs that so many 10 Washmgton.
Actually. given the mexhaust1ble
D.C. have forgouen Clinton is not JUst lhe American presJdent. wnh the fall resources w1lh whiCh we deal. there Js
of the Soviel Union. Chnlon is lhe leader of 1he free world with millions of probably nothmg to worry about.
· people around the world ~ho look .to Amenca for leadership
- Already 1h1s year. we ha~e received a
What kind of leadership ha.• Clmton shown? 'That you can do whal you phenomenal 46 nommat1ons for the
want and if you get caught he all you can for as long as you can as Clmton dubious disllnctJon of being recognized
has lied to Congre~s while he was under oath, peljunng himself.
a.• the most absurd. asinine. goofy, hyplf he is to be impeached, or 1f he JS lo resign. or face any punishment at ocntical. mane. prepa;lerous or ridlcu·
all. is up to the American people ll is your vote that placed him in office and lou~ personage to Sltul across the public
il is your tax dollars that pay his salary a.• well. He has a duty 10 account to stage dunng the year 1998.
you for his conduct while he IS in office.
Our front runners at the moment
At one time in Amenca all most men could ever hope for was to find the (need I even say it?) an: B1ll Ointon and
love of a sood woman and then marry her. And if she was to bring a child K~nnelh Starr- but don'tlllne us out. In
into this world for him. gmng lbe greatest poss1ble proof of her love, her th1s wonderfully wacky year of Moohusband would never mJslreal her or ever do anything to betray her Clinton JC38ale, our chahce doth truly ovelflow
has f&lt;KJOilhat as well.
with pos.~ibililies. Send u.~ your nominaThis is our country. History does repeal itself, but ifthat 'repeat is good or lions, and let's see what happens The
bid is up to all of u.~. Even N1xon had sense enough to resign while he had process is simple and the rules are few:
the charK:e to do so. If Chnton is not punished we are telling those who come
I. 11lc OP awards are sponsored by
after him that they 100 can do what we want and if they get caught. lie your the Spear Foundation, a small but
way out anyway you can. 11lc time has come for us 10 stand up and to make spunky think lank. and the Associalion
all our voices heard while there is still the time to do so.
of Sagacious Pundits (which explains
David Edwlll"'ls why they are popu._.y reftmd 10 as the .
Pomeroy ASP Awards). !'mons as.'IOcialed with
these two group; are not ehgible. This

•

ehmmates the SF
pres1den~ namely
me. Sorry to disappomt all you
d1ttoheads. but
those are the
rules, pal.
·
2.
General
a.~persJOOS are a
no-no. Specific
acts of outrageous'ness
are
Spear
required. "Clinton
is a satyr" won't do JL
3. Groups and fore1gn na11onals are
not, eligible. We've got plenty of 01'5
right here in America. No need 10 export
our ASPs.
4.1lus isJoe'scontesLJoe writes the
rules. Joe geL~ 10 norrunate whomever
he plea.o;es. You don '!like i~ don't play.
Let's get on With the fun .
Among the nominees r=ived th11•
far are William Bennett, for having the
chutzpah 10 anoint himself the most
moral person in the kingdom; Dick
Morris. who was briefly banished from
Washington crrcles for sucking a
prossie's toes bul now deigns to judge
BiD OiniDn; Gecxge Slephanopoulos
and Dee Dee Meyers, former Ointon
aides who have borlered their loyalty for

•

lucre and lu.~ter; Jerry Springer. to
whom taste is an alien concept: Chris
"Hanlball" Matthews. whose screech
would chase owls from the trees. and
Ed Bradley, whose "60 Minutes" JnterVIew with K.uhleen Willey gave new
meaning to the word.• sotiball and powder puff.
And these lummaries:
·Rep. [}.m Burton. R-Ind. H1s oulmgeously parllsan probe of Demo,;rJiic
fund·ra~sing activities almost won him
an award in 1997. La~l April, he
refemd 10 the President of the United
StaleS as a "scumbog" mSeptember, he
was forced by inquiring reporters 10
ackmwledge thai he had once been
involved m an exll':lrnarital affair and
had fathered a child out of wedlOck.
• ABC White House rquter Sam
Donaldsoo. Following Bill Clinton's
confession of an alfair with Monica
Lewinsky, Donalclson angrily as.wdted
press secMary Mike McCuny and was
cautioned by UPI's Helen Thomas 10
cool it. "Sam. you'rt wallowing." she
said. "Well," snorted Donaldson. " I'm
going to wallow on."
Helen OlenowedJ. R-ldaOO.
1...151 November, the Cllfl'lerVative congresswoman called for Clinton's
impeada1oll; in August, she sugge.'lled

· ReP.

AccuWealhe,. forecast for

he res1gn from office on the ground.~ he
had "ahdicated the moral authority that
wa~ entrusted to h1m." In September,
she admiued that she, too, had once
been involved in an extendedextramar•
ital affwr wJth a former business partner.
· The Rev. 1".11 RoberLo;on. The 1".11'·
son took to the airwaves of his Christian
Broadcasting Network 10 coodemn the
cny of Orlando tO.. il' gay-friendly pohcies: " It'II bring about terrorist bombs;
it'll bring earthquakes, tornadoes and
possibly a meteor... Maybe the Parson
shoUld tie on the Weather &lt;llannel.
• Rudio jabberjock Oliver NIX1h. He
lied to Cong~eS.s during the lran-olntra
controversy but escaped punishment
when Wl appeals L'OIIrt threw out !he:
charges again.'il h1m on technicalities.
Clinton, Nonh says, does not dese!ve
such a break: "Peljury is a crime, and he
ought to be held aa:ountable."
The oontest clo;es when the ball falls
on New Year's Eve.
Send your nomination.~ to me, care
of the New&gt;paper Enterpri.&lt;e A.sociation, 200 Madim Ave, New York, NY
10016.
Joseph Spear Is • syndicated
writer for Newspaper interprllle

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

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clmlon's call lor JnlensJtied
etl'ons to deal w1th a w1denmg glob-

MJCH

INO

• •

\.

.'

W VA.

KY
&lt;C&gt;

1998 Accuweatner, tnc.

---~-

Sunny Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

Shown T.Jtonns

Rail

.. ~~
FUriet

Snow

Ice

Today's weather forecast
By The Associated Preu
Southeastern Ohio
Today...Sunny and pleasant. Highs
'" the mid 70s. Light and variable
wind.
Tomght ...Ciear. Lows in the lower and m1d 50s. L1ght wind.
, Friday... Partly cloudy and warmer.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Extended forecast. ..
Friday nighi. .. Moslly clear. Lows

from lhe upper 50s to near 60.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Highs m
the lower 80s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A chance
of showers and lhunderstonms sunday
night. Lows in the lower 60s and
highs 10 the mid 80s.
Monday ... Panly cloudy WJlh a
cbance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the lower 60s and
highs 75 to 80.

Today's livestock report
17.00; 500-600 lbs. 17.00-20.00. few
over 600 lbs. 21.00-22 00.
Boars: over 300 lbs . 9.00-12.00.
under 300 lbs. 12.00,.15.00.
Estimated rece1pts: 35.000.
Prices from Producers Livestock
Association
Thursday's trends:
Hogs: 50 cents lower: sows
steady. cattle 50 cenls to 1.00 lower
Summary of Wednesday's auctions al Galhpohs and Mt. Vernon:
Hogs:
Market hogs: 22.50-35.00: hghl
sows 15.50 and down; heavy sows
20.75 and down.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio-Indiana d1rect hog prices al selected buy·
ing pomts Thursday as provided by
lhe U.S Department of Agricullure
Market News:
Barrows and gilts: sleady to 50
cents higher; demand and movemenl
moderale.
U.S 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
pomiS 27.00-28.50, few 29.00-29.50
and 26.50: plants 28.50-30.00, few
3050.
U.S. 2-3. 230-260 lbs 25.0026 50; 210-230 lbs. 23 00-25.00.
Sows: sleady to 1.00 lower
U.S. 1-3, 300-400 lbs. 13.001500, few 12.50:400-5001bs. l500-

Meigs announcements
day begmning wilh a work sesSion al
I p.m. followed by supper at 6:30
p.m. All members urged 10 allend.

OhKan Coin Club
The OhKan Coin Club will hold
11s regular meetmg Monday, 7:30
p m. at the Middleport Arts Council
Building. All welcome. Refresh·
menls

Youth Grange
The Meigs County Youth Grange
will meet Saturday with a potluck
supper 'at 6·30 p.m followed by
meeling at 7:30 p.m. al lhe Star
Grange Hall near Salem Center. All
Meigs County Gm9ge Youth are
encouraged to auend. Plans for the
upcommg year w1ll be made.

Bike Run to be held
The 131h annual Me•gs County
B1kers Association toy run will be
held Saturday. I p.m. Pomeroy park·
mg lot Following the run, an open
buffet w1ll be held al the Watering
Hole
The toy rvn is a fund m1ser and
benefits hundreds of children who are
g1ven toys at Christmas 11me. Any
mterested '" helpmg may contact
Barb DoCZJ . 742-3050 or Kathy
Willis,, 742-4000.

St. Jude Bikeathnn
The S1. Jude Wheels for L1fe
B1keathon w11i be held Saturday at
the Kyger Creek Middle School.
Cheshire. Registration hegms a1K ·JO
a.m. w11h the evenllakmg place from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. w11h spec1al smging
1hroughout the day and refreshments.

Star Grange
· Star Grange 778 w1ll hold a work
sessiOn and potluck supper on Salur·

Council to meet
Racine Village Council will meel
m specml sess1on Monday. 7 p.m. to
discuss a financml maller and the
municipal bUilding roof.

The 'Daily Sentinel
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Community Newsp~ptr Holdlap. lac.

Published ~very afternoon, Monday through
Fnday, Ill Court SL, Pomeroy, Oh1o, by lhc
Oh10 Valley Pubhshl!lg Company Second dus

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Membu: The A~'\OC I;lt.:.d Prcu and the Ohio
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Postmaster: Send addre.os COrrcctiOilS 10 nc
Dally Sentmel, Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, Oh1o
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Other Services
Advertising....................... .. . .... Ext. 1104
Circulation .... ............... ......... ElL 1103
Clusllltd Ad.I ............................ExL 1100

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges
VVednesday,Sept. 24
Crystal Spurlock, Mrs. Brent
Zirkle and son; Mrs . Stacey Cline and
son, Mrs. Lawrence Powell and
daughler; Logan Layne, Mrs. Roger
Sparks and daughter and Mrs
Mauhew Combs and daughter.

little respon se overseas. But al least

the Dow Jones mUustnal average on

Alan Greenspan was lislemng.
The cha1rman of lhe Federal
Reserve Js sendmg a strong s1gnal
thai the central bank Will cut U S

Wedne,day. the tltth· bJggest poml
gam m fustory . and gave a b1g boosl
today to As1an markets I rom Tokyo
to Hong Kong .
In early tradmg loday on Wall
S1ree1 stock pnces turned lower as

ers meet ne"t Tuesday

traders sold shares to cush m on

Many pnvate economJsls predict
a series of mterest rate reductJons as
the Fed batlles to ensure a spreadmg
currency cns1s does not mean the end
of Amenca's economic good limes .
In congressiOnal testimony
Wednesday. Greenspan warned that
world policy-makers " have lo be
especially senslllve 10 lhe deepemng
s1gns of global dJslress."
He mdicated the cemral bank was
ready to act to prevent the w1denmg
global 1urm01l "from really spilling

Wednesday\ b•g gams.
Asked today about Greenspan's
m~ reased cuncerns over the global
1mpac1 on the Umled States. Trea.~ury
Secretary Robert Rub1n told
reporters. " I do lhmk what's happenmg abroad has clearly affected
some seclors subslant 1all y .. and I do
thmk !hat nsk 10 our economy Js
real. "
In a Sepl. 4 speech m Call forma,
Greenspan sa1d lhe Fed was growmg
more concerned about how long the

over and creallng so me very stgmti-

'"Umted Slates can remam an oas1s ol

canl dJflicullles for all of us "
Greenspan d1d nol spell oul whal
he meant. But pnvate econom1s1s sa1d
the b1gges1 worry now Js that the ec~:&gt;­
nomic troubles m Asia and RusSia
wJIIlopple currenc1es and stock markeiS m Lalm Amenca, wh1ch buys
one-lhird of U.S. exports.
"Greenspan feels the global cnSIS
JS mtens1fymg and begmmng to sp1ll
over mlo the prospecls for sJgnJfi(ant
weakening of domestic growth," said
DavJd Jones, chief economist at
Aubrey G. Lanston &amp; Co in New

prospenly." That was Greenspan's
firs I hint lhat rate cul~ could be on lhe
way
Jusl last week. Greenspan drove
markels m the oppos11e dJrectmn
when he threw cold waler on hopes
for coordinaled global reducuons m
mleresl rates by the maJOr powers.
Those expe\.'lal1ons had nsen part·
ly as a result of a speech in wh1ch
Clmton warned thai a JOint growth
strategy was needed to combat the
b1ggest challenge to the world economy m a halt cenlury.

Am Ele Power ...................... 47~.
Alczo ...................................... 38'1•
AmrTech .............................. 49.,.
Aahland 011 ....................... ..48'1.
AT&amp;T ..................................... 59'1.
Bank One .............................. 44'/o
Bob Evans ............................ 20'1.
Borg-Wamer ........................40 ~.
Broughton ............................ 18l.
Champion ............................. 11 l,
Charm Shps ............................4l.
City Holding .......................... 41 '!.
Federal Mogul ....................... so'l.
Gannen .................................57).
Goodyear .............................
Kmart ..................................... 13Y.
Kroger .................................. 51 1.
Lands End ............................. 1
Ltd ...........................................25
01k Hill Flnl ..........................17Y,
OVB ......................................... 40
One Valley ........................... 33~.
Peoples ................................ 2Sl.
Prem Flnl ............................... 19),
Rockwelt .............................. 39~.
RD/Shell ................................48'1.
Seara .................................... 44"·
Shoney's ...............................
Star Bank............................. 67').
Wendy's ............................... 22'1.
Woerthlngton ...................... 12"-

54"·
n,

The followmg actions lo end marnage were tiled recently m 1he office
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Lar·
ry Spencer.
Dissoluuons asked -- Fallh Roach.
Middleport. and Thomas R Roach,
Middleport, Sepl 23: Demse R

Stock report• are the ~0:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gslllpolla.

prerecessmn 19X9 levels
Lasl year. 13 1 percenl of Amen·
cans hved 1n poverty. down fmm 13 7
percenl 1n 1996. a decline led by
blacks and Ht.,.pantcs. the Census
Bureau s.ud today m ti s annual
meum~ and pov~rty report

The number of poor blacb
dropped by (J(X).(XMl 10 9 I m1lhon.
allhough more than one m lour
blacks still hve m poverty For Hl'·
pamcs. the poverty rate dropped to
27 .I percenl
Poverty also dechned m b1g c1t1es,
from 19 6 percenl m 1996 to I R 8
percem 1n 1997
AI 1he While House, Pres1dem
Clm1on hailed the reporl as ev1dence
that h1s economic polic1es are work -

Johnslon . Racine. and Lawrence G.
Johnslon Jr . Racme. Sepl. 23.
D1vorce asked .. Jenny L Cook.
M1ddleport. from Kenh A. Cook.
Coppenas Co~e. Texas, Sept 22
DJ~SolulJons granted-- Mary Ann
Myers and Thomas A Myers. Sepl.
23.

these good t1mes lull us 1nto compl acency We mu'l work even harder to make sure thai as our nallon
races forward . we gtve eve ryone a
chance to come along."

Eleven percenl of while Amenli ve m poveny The gap be1ween
1he wealthiest and poore'l Amenca"'
remamed the same between 1996 and
1997 The d1fference bel ween men's

can ~

and wom!!n 's earmng' dHJ not
change Women conllnuel.i tu earn 74
cents for every Jullar lor men

La'J year. lhe med1an household
mcome tor all Amencans rose I lJ .

percem lo $17.m~. nol slallstlcall y
dllterenl from lhe peak m 1989.
hetore the nallon tell min rec.:essum
Twdve . . tat e ....... aw real medtan
IOl:nme l( vcls n~ whale lour saw

drop,.
Slates see mg n~s . u~mg two·year ·
averages. were Alabama. Dela11.are.
lnd1ana. Kansas. LouJSiana. New
mg
··A ll Amencans ha ve a nghl to be MeXIco. Nonh Caroline. Oklahoma.
proud ol 1hese gams." Chnton sa1d m Soulh Carolina. U1ah. V1rgmw and
a wnuen statc:mc:nt. "But we can't let Washangton

Meigs EM~ logs 12 calls
Unlls of lhe Me~g' Count) Emergency Med1cal Serv1ce recorded 12
calls for assistance Tue . . day and

Counts. VMH
POMEROY
7 54 a m Wednesday. Tammy
Wolfe. HMC. Cenlral DiSpalch squad
asSJSJed.
RACINE
8:19 a.m Tuesday. Elm Street.
Dorothy Badgley. VMH. Racme
VFD '"mted:
6 33 p m Tuesday. V1ne S1reet.
Sieve Brown, VMH
RUTLAND
Ill'!)'! p m. Tuesday. Me1gs Mme
2. Robert Dorsey. O'Bieness Memonal Hosp11al . Central Dispatch squad

Wednesday Unlls respondmg mcluded ·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
8·31 a.m . Tuesday. Court Street.
Rae me, Roger Reeb. Vetemns Memonal Hosp1tal.
10 14 a.m. Tue, day. slale Roule
124, Rac1ne , Malcolm Gumlher.
VMH . Racme squad ass1s1ed:
12 56 p m Tuesday. Holzer Me1gs
Clm1c. Pomeroy, Fred Slenker, Holz·
er Med1cal Center.
7.08 p m Tue,day. Oak Street assisted
Syracuse. Mary Hendrix , VMH SALEM VFD
2 57 p m Wednesday. Buck wheal
pendmg lransfer lo Oh1o Stale Un•·
Road,
brush fire on Ron Srmth propverslly Hospnal VJa helicopter ambu·
erly
lance. Syra(Use squad a"Jsted.
8 14 am. Tuesday. Mam Street. SYRACUSE
6·37 am . Tuesday. VFD and
Racme. W11liam Fmkenbmder.
,;quad to slale Roule 124. molor-vehJ·
VMH .
I 0 52 am Wednesday. R1verS1de cle accidenl, Judy Stewart, VMH.
Aparlments, Middleport. Lesa Cenlral DISpatch squad asSISied .

Meigs land transfers recorded

Gallipolis livestock auction results

The followmg land transfers were
recorded recently in the office ot
Me1gs Counly Recorder Emmogene
Ham1lton:
Deed. James E. and Conme E.
Carl&lt;ton 10 Will•am and Mehssa
Myers, SaliSbury parcels;
Deed. Om lie Phillips lo Paul and
Diane Ph1lhps. SCipiO parcels;
Deed. V1ctor C. Young IV 10
Katherine M. Young. Pomeroy parcel.
Deed. Gamer C. Gnffin. decea""'10 Leroy Paul and Amy M Hendrix.
Orange parcels;
Deed, Gamer C Griflin. deceased,
Tony D. and Shem Hendnx. Omnge.
Deed, Kathryn J. and Delben
Ross to Larry and Sherry Atherton.
Olive:
R1gh1 of way. Archie Slegall lo
D T. Atha Inc .. Bedford. 188 acres.
R•ght ol way. Joseph J. and Ida M.
Stanley. Ronn1e Vance to D.T Alha
Inc .. Bedford. 86.3 acres:
Shenffs Deed, Harold Panerson.
deceased. Andy. Tem. Amy, Tim.
James and Tracy Patlerson. Connie
and Dav1d Keste rson to Home
National Bank, Sutlon parcels,
Deed, George W. and Mary F.
Price to Patnck and Penny Mullen,
Ohve, 15 !MI9 acres,
Deed, Ronald W. Vance to
Thoma' Denms and Rose Seward.
Olive parcel :
Deed, Waun1ta G Haynes to Wallage G. and Waunlla G. Haynes.
Syracuse:
Deed, Keith Ray Weber to Brenda Weber Johnson. Orange:
R1ght of way. Herbert and H~len
Grate lo Tuppers Plmn,·C hesler
Water D~&lt;lnct . Olive, 4.50 a(res.
R1ght ut way. Don Rose to
TPCWD. Sutlun. 17 1/2 acres.
Rtght ol way. Greg and Patge
Winebrenner to TPCWD. Orange.
10.95 acres.
R1ghl of way, John I and Deborah
V. Northup lo TPCWD, Chester, 30

Producers L1 vestock Markel
reporl from Gall1pohs for sales con·
dueled on Wednesday. September 23
Feeder Callie
200-31Ml# 51 $62-68. Hf. $55-$63.
300-400# S1 $63-$69 Hf $56-$62
500 650# Sl $60-64 Hf $54-$61
650-8()()# S1 $55-$62. Hf. $62-$58
Well Muscled/Fleshed $34-$37.
Med1um/ Average $32-$34:

Right of way. Richard J and
Joyce K. Vales to TPCWD. Chesler.
125.50 acres:
R1gh1 of way, Me1g' County Com·
munily lmprovemenl Corpora110n lo
TPCWD, Orange.
Right of way, Terry and Janel
Hollman to TPCWD, Chester. 22
acres:
R1ghl of way, Damel F and L1sa
L. Short to TPCWD. Chester, 1.2442

R1ght of way, Roscoe and Sandra
J. M1lls. Jarrod and Le1gh Hill 10
TPCWD. Sullon. 10 565 acres.
Deed, Cletus L. and Nan J Harder lo V1llage of Rutland. V1llage of
Rutland;
Deed. Ray Barber Jr to Evelyn
and D1ana L Barber, Oli ve .
Deed, Hilda Caroline Dav1stoJon
R1chard, John and Belly VanMeler.
Lelart parcels.
Deed. Lonng G Gomer 10 Vernita A. Gomer.

Salem~

Deed. James S. and Teresa Eakins
lo Todd Cund1ff. Sunon:
Deed, Andrew Mahlman to James
T and Marc1a K Russell , Lebanon.
Deed. Andrew Mahlman 10
M1chael J. and Jul1e A. Russe ll.
Lebanon:
Deed. Toni M Hudson to Ray E.
Wellman. Letart parcels:
Deed, Eugene W and V~rgm1a E.
Michaello Jan A. and Donna L. Park·
er. Orange trach.
Deed: J1mmy B. and Angle
McClure to Randy K. and Candy L.
Lee, Pomeroy lot.
Deed. Mildred K Eskew 10
Charles R and Rcda F. HISle. Salem:
Deed. Palnck H. ""d M.i&lt;) E
O'Bnen 10 Ray E. Wellman ,
Pomeroy. 11!/IOOane.
Deed. Harold D. and Peggy S
Clark lo Ray E Wellman . Sunon ,
Deed, James E. Allhos lo Bene C
Allhof, Salisbury parcels,
Deed, Paul E Hams lo Paul E.
Harr1s Revocable Trust:
Deed. Paul E Hams to P,tul E
Hams Revocable Trust. Sutton tracts:
Deed. Beverly T and Joseph
Campbell. Glona J. Grabo. Phillip A.
and Sally Thompson 10 J M Lands
Ltd. Salem.
Deed. Beverly T and Jose ph
Campbell. Glona J. Grabo. Phllhp A.
,md Sally Thompson to J M Lands
Ltd , Rutland and Salem parcds .
Deed, May Mayle to Ca lvm
Mayle, Chester parcels.
Deed, Gold.e M. and James W.
Woltord to James and Debora B.1rk·
er. Syracuse lracls:
Deed. Richard W. and Rlla J Bailey 10 Joseph Bryan Wilcox Sahs·
bury/Middleport.
Deed. James W and Lmda L
Cunmngham 10 Wlll1am Todd and
Darla Zuspan. Chester.
Deed. Pual and D1ana S Phillips
to Brian K. and Stacy Ph1llips. Scipio

acres:

Couples issued marriage licenses
The followmg couples were
tssut!d marnage licenses rt!cenlly in
lhe Meigs County Probale Coun of
Judge Roben Buck . Josh Leroy Potts,

24. and Kand1 May Bachtel. 23. bolh
of Me1gs Counly ; Gra1g Thomas
Darsl. 33. Middleport . and Anna
Kalhryn W1les. 36, Pomeroy

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
TOM HANKS IN

POMEROY
Neer Pomeroy-Meson Bridge
992·2588
VINTON
G1lll1 County Dlaplay Yerd
15511111n St.

SAVING
PRIVATE RYAN R
SPECIAl SHOwnME 7:00
NO ONE UNDER 17 PERMITTED
WITHOUT A PARENT 44f.0823

388-8603

•

•

Thm/L1 ght $26-$32. Bulls $35$43
Back To The Farms
Cow/Calf Pam $450-525; Bred
Cows $250-$450. Baby Calves $10200: Goats $12-$65.
Spec1al feeder calf sale Monday.
Oc1 5. 7 p m
For free on-farm vtsats, please

call 6 14-446-9696.

-~-.

~ov,e:slO

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

~ ~
localed Rl 33
~ 7 Mmutes North of Athens

Th/111 The Final Nighl For Tli1 Time Sdte4ult

SAVNI PRNnE RYAN '"' 2:30,7:30
DrtE TRUE r. IAI 2:35, 7:00, t40
EVBI AFTBI (PG-!31 2:«1, 7:11, 11:35
IIOINIEII8 {RJ 2:45, 7:10, 8:45
IRJ
BlJIIE
2:50, 7:10, t40
. .- . ,,, !:55, 7:tli, t40
RUSH HOUR iPG·1lJ 3:00, 6:1&amp;, 7:30, t45
u IIIII I CMIII &lt;RI Hi, mt 7:25, t40
''54" iRJ
t.10t t20

•

3:2015:251 7:851 8:5(J
All BIIJ: Gilden Recelvll' iGI 5:20, 7:20

llrtJCIIIIfiRI •

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

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

[ ( ] BIG
•
Movtes

C""•' Mo•" Tom••

t-740-753-3400
Mal ln&lt;'t'~ rvrRro4r l

fllcquisitions J'ine Jewe['!J

Diamond Sale!
Over $2,000,000 in Diamonds - Sold!

Large Shipment Just Reteived
Chech Our Qualit)l and Price
Before You Bu)l An)lwhere!
From

.-t,
~~

Y,o

Carat to 2 Carat Solitaires

ALL SIZES ON SALE

SAVE

V
t~

~

m

!-,.

_._._

Wi\SHINGTON I API- For the
thtrd year runnmg. Amenc.:an house ·
hold mcome ros~ and poverty rates
fell m 1997. retummg the nauon to

Divorces and dissolutions

acres,

Stocks

American income up, report says

G re~nspa n 's

al currency cn l\ts may ha ve produced

ly three years when Fed policy -mak-

,,

York
won..ls had a maJor
1mpau on g lohal markets. Ha s
remotrh leO to ·• 257-pm nt JUmp 1n

tnterest rale"' for Ihe firsl It me m near-

nizations.

GOP should now lead on world economy

Sex In the White House

Greenspan may cut
interest rates Tuesday

Ohio weather

religious ani ocher non-polilial volunteering is up: no big disaster in a cull!lre
!hal has always preferred less polilical
fonns of civic involvemenL But on balance, we are "building up our supply of
social capital. not depleting it," argues
Ladd.
In the PTA's decline, Ladd sees
decentralization, not disengagement.
New research suggests lhallalge numbers of local parent-teacllrr groups
have simply disaffiliated from the
national PTA and established very
active, new, independent groups. often
calling themselves parent-teacher orga-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· Friday, Sept. 25

American civic engagement thriving

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 24, 1998

30%•50%
HUGE
• SOLITAIRES
•CLUSTERS
• EARRINGS

·r~am~~~~~TS

.9Lcquisitions J'ine Jewe[ry
lWO LOCATIONS:
151 2nd Ave, Gallipolis 446-2842
91 Mill St., Middleport 992-6250

lill3tle
.1

.

Expe..'!..~lr ry
...,.,...

I ..
•

�•

'

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
· . Page4

24, 1998

Brewers use Brown's error to beat Cubs B-7

Sosa's HRs tie McGwire for lead at 65
NL roundup
By TOM CASTRO
Auoc:latlld Press Writer
Although Sammy Sosa provided
yet another enduring image of Chicago's sea&lt;On with his 64th and 65th
home runs. the sight of Brant Brown
dropping a routine fly ball in Milwaukee may be what Cubs fans ulti ·
mately remember about 1998.
Brown's error with two outs in the
bottom of the ninth inning Wednesday allowed three runs to score and
gave the Brewers a shocking 8-7 victory in a game the Cubs led 7-0.
A win would have given the Cubs
a one-game lead over New Yorll in
the NL wild-card race. a~ the Mel~
lost 3-0 to Montreal. Instead. the
teams remained tied atop the stand·
ings with three games left.
" I don't know how to e•plain it."
said Brown. who went to left field in
the eighth a~ a defensive replacement.
"The bottom line is I clanked it and
we lost the game.

"You can say the wind. you can
say the sun, but those are elements
you play with every day. Hopefully.
it doesn't cost us thai much ...
With a 7-5 lead in the ninth. Rod
Beck 0 -3) loaded the bases with one
out. Beck gave up a single to Marll
Loreua and a double to Jeff Cirillo.
and then intentionally walked Jeromy
Bumitzto pitch to Marqui s Grissom.
After Gri&lt;Som popped up for the
second out. Geoff Jenkins hit the fateful fly ball.
"We've had a lot of tough losses."
Cubs manager Jim Riggleman said.
''The liming of that los. right there.
certainly. it 's excruciating ...
Sosa broke out of an 0-for-21
slump with back·IO-back solo
homers, the second of which gave the
Cubs a 7-0 lead. But the Brewers'
eight runs came in the final three
innings.
"If they had a four-letter word for
baseball. we'd probably be using it,"
Beck said.
Sosa tied Mark McGwire for the

major league home run lead. and his
156 RBis are fourth-best in NL history.
Chad Fo• ( 1-3) pitched one
shutout inning for the win.
In other NL games. it was Montreal 3. New York 0: San Francisco 4.
Pittsburgh I: Houston 7. St. Louis I:
Atlanta II , Florida 0: Colorado 14,
Arizona II , and San Diego 3. Los
Angeles 2.
Expos 3, Mets 0
Carl Pavano allowed three hits in
si•-plus innings a~ Montreal dropped
New Yorll back into a tie with the
Chicago Cubs atop the NL wild-card
standings.
The Met~ close ou1 the seao;on
with three games in Atlanta.
Pavano (6-8) also had an RBI double for visiting Montreal, which went
8-4 against New York lhis year.
Ugueth Urbina got three outs for his
34th save and seventh against the
Mets.
Bobby Jones (9-9) allowed five
hits in seven innings.

,

Giants 4, Pirates I
Joe Carter hit a go-ahead. threerun homer and Mark Gardner
allowed five hil~ in eight innings at
3Com Park as San Francisco won it'
third straight.
The Giants. who moved within I
1/2 games of the Mets and Cubs in
the NL wild-card race. has four
games left.
Gardner ( 13-5 ) woh his fifth
straight decision. matching his c:&amp;reer
high witll II strikeouts and walking
two. Robb Nen finished for his 39th
save.
Aslros 7, CIU'dinals I
Mark McGwire failed to homer
against Houston's Randy Johnson to
remain tied at 65 home runs with
Sammy Sosa a• the Astros won their
IOOth game.
Johnson ( 10-1) scauered eight
hits in seven innings to end the host
Cardinals' si•-game winning streak.
Houston's Craig Bigg1o became
only the second player this century to
(See NL on Page 5)

HITS 6~ HOMER- The Chicago Cubs' Sammy Sosa trots to first
base after hitting his 65th homer In the sixth Inning of Wednelday'a
National League game against the host Mllwaukea Brewers, who rallied to win 8-7. The shot tied Soaa with the SL Louis Cardinale' Mark
McGwlre for the aanlor circuit lead In this category. (AP)

Scoreboard
Baseball

AL standings

CLE\' I:I.A NI&gt; tGutw..kn K - fllo~l Mwn r ... &gt;C:•IRaJ·
Lt 11 -1-t!.M·IJ'i fl m
Tt,:L, IStlt 1~ - llt:ai .'W-alllt'tSu JuL•I · I !. Ifi: U:'i

San h :l nt'l"-'" ~ - IJut, hurEh I

P-"'·
An:.htimtMc()o"-tll .'i -JI ill

Molfllreal .\ . N.Y . Mtl~ 0
Hnu,IIWI 7, St. Ltllli' I
fulnr.atln l~ . AnltWI~ II
~n Oi..l!n _
l , Lt ... Anpde':!

11 -HJ. mct:'i

r m.

Atlant :t II . l-lumJ.all
Pluladtlpht •• -t. CINCINNATI !

0&lt;~LI ;m ti1Haynt '

t:.Nrrn Did..ion

W L fiL

U.

, .Nra YurL...

.... .......... IIH -IK

.Mtt

Busfttn . ..... ... . ......... ...... KtJ HI
TMW'IIO ... .
.... ... K6 7J
8 ahimnR .. ....
... ... ..... ..7K KU
TAmpa &amp;y ..... ................6) 95

. ~J

Friday's games

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al CINCINNATI: 7:05p.m.
N.Y _Mel' al A tl~ma . 7 :~1 p.m

Arto~htim

Sm.~ 11~1

C•RII"'II Oh·hion
............ W .6:!l.J
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.. .......... .......
11
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lntu, ................. .... . .1«1
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CINCINNATI ..
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Tonight's games
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Tamra B:..,IAh-urt"l 6-i.ll at N .Y Y~nlu~o
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Yankees tally 8-4
win over Indians

Phillies record 4-·2
victory over Reds

NEW YORK (APl - Shane
Spencer is rapidly becoming a part of
New York Yankees history.
The rookie hit his third home run
in three games a~ the Yankees defeated Cleveland 8-4 Wednesday night to
&amp;aw within one game of the AmeriCan League record for victories in a
seawn set by the 1954 Indians.
. Oeveland won Ill games that
sea'lln and the Yankees are now II 048 with four games remaining. all at
home against the expansion Tampa
ll!IY Devil Rays.
: · "It comes aroond once in a while
!-'hen you· re hot like that. It could be
~e tomorrow. so youjusttry to take
advantage while you can... said
SIX'ncer who is 10-for-1J with a walk
in his last 14 plate appearances. He
has three doubles and four homers
O\'er that span.
Spencer also singled and doubled
before striking out in the eighth but
didn't have hilling for the cycle on
his mind.
"I wa,n't thinking about it until
.Mike Lowell ... Spencer said of his
fellow rookie teammate.
The Yankees equaled the franchise
~ord of II 0 wins set by the 1927
)earn.
:: "To match the franchise record. to
-Have the same number of wins as the
1927 Yankees. one of the teams we
look up to. it's very special.'' manager Joe Torre said.
' New York has four games remaining to catch the Indians but will not
be able to surpass the major league
mark of 116 victories by the Chica-

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- Mark Portugal hopes he made a last impression.
Pitching his final game of the season - and perflaps his last for
Philadelphia -the right-hander had
a pair of hits and went 7 2/3 innings
for a 4-2 victory Wednesday over the
Cincinnati Re&lt;k.
He hopes the Phillies' la.'t look at
him convinces them to keep him
around for another season.
.. After missing seven weeh and
still getting 10 wins. I hope that tells
them something ... said Ponugal cIOS ). "We 'II see what happens ...
Ponugal. who turns 36 on Oct. 30.
is in the final year of a two-year. S5
million deal. There's a club option for
nut year at $2.75 million. but lhe
Phillies can buy it out for $:100,000.
"Am I worth that? If the Phillies
don'tthink so. I'm sure someone else
will.'' Portugal said. "I'd like to slay
here. I still feel I owe this team a lot
of gratitude for sticking with me."
His two-year stay with the Phillies
has been mar!led by injury. He wenl
0-2 last season. when he tore muscles
in his right elbow and had seasonending sul'!lery on May 12.
He pitched live innings al New
York on April 2 before hurting his
knee while running the bases. He
needed arthroscopic surgery and
missed seven weeks.
He knows all the things working
against him.

go Cubs in 1906.
"We'd like to do that." Tone &lt;aid
of the francliise record. "One more
and you have more than any other
Yankees team and the league
record."
Indians manager Mike Hargrove.
when asked about the pos.'ibility of
the Yankees surpa_~sing Cle~eland's
record in their final four games. said.
"I have a lot of pride in the history
of the Cleveland Indians. although I
had nothing to.do wilh that record. It
would be nice for the Indians to hold
on to it.
"But ll)ere is no neconl out there
that is :~afe. You might §.ay (Joe)
DiMaggio is safe. but someday
someone might come along and do
something with it." Hargrove said of
the Yan~ center fielder\ S6-game
hitting streak in 1941 .
Spencer hit his seventh homer in
51 at-bats to cap a five-run third
inning off Indians starter Jason
Jacome CO-l) .. who wa• making his
first start after a 17-2 sea'iOil in the
minors.
Spencer. who wa' 3-for-4. went8fur-11 with three homers and six
RBis in the final three games of the
four-11ame series.
"I'm seeing the ball well."
Spencer said. "I've been seeing the
ball well all year. Even in the minor
leagues."
Chad Curtis hit his lOth homer.
his first since Aug. 2. in the fifth to
give the Yankees nine players with 10
or more homers. New York has six
players with double figures in homer.;

GETS DOUBLE PLAY -The Clevellncl Indiana' lllttl WhltMI
retired 81 - . d 111M by New Vorlllhoitllop Derek Jeter,
getln Jeter'• wey -.gil to keep Jeter'1 throw to first from retiring
Eln11r Diu end getting the elght!Hnnlng double p1.y c1u1mg Wed!••
*Y nlghl'1 Ameltcll1 11101• 01111181 YIRUe Slldlltm. wtw. tile y.,..
U. _, 8-4. (AP)

doeln't

and stolen bases. matching the major
league record set by the 1991 Cincinnati Red,.
Ryan Bradley (2-1), the second of
four Yankees pitchers. earned the win
with three scoreless inning~ in relief
of starter Mike Jerz.embeck.
Cleveland scored three runs in the
second on Einar Diaz's !IOCrifice fly
and Omar Vizquel's two-run double.

Texas' 'magic number' falls to two

David Justice hit his 20th homer
leading ofT the third against Jerz.embeck to give Oe•·eland a 4-0 lead.
Chuck Knoblauch's RBI triple
and Derek Jeter's RBI groundout
made it4-2 in the third before Bemie
Williams singled. Tino Martinez
walked and Spencer homered.
Jacome la.&lt;ted five innings. allow·
ing eight runs on 10 hits and three
walks.

:Rangers beat Angels 7-1,. sweep series
AL roundup
By The Aeeoclated Prau
The showdown series in the AL
West turned out to be a mismatch.
The Texa.&lt; Rangers completed a
three-game sweep of the Anaheim
Angels with a 7-1 rout Wednesday
night. The Rangers, who were tied
with the Angels for the division lead
at the start of the series, now lead by
three games with four left.
"We f!Ol hot at the right time."
said Te•as manager Johnny Oates.
:"h's been awhile since we've had a
J;eries like thi•. We had fine pitching.
. good defense and some timely hits.
And it couldn't have come at a better time."
The Rangers dominated the !leries
at Anaheim, outscoring the Angels
25-3 and outhining them JS-15.
" It wa~ just an avalanche out there
for three games." said Anaheim
shortstop Gary DiSarcina. "The final
scores just blew my mind away."
John Burkel! (9-13) held the
Angels to two hits over eight innings
to win for just the second time since
Aug. 6. Todd Zeile drove in three
runs for Te.as with a two-run homer
and an RBI single. while Rusty Greer

Blue JIJS 6, Orioles J
hit a pair of sacrifice nies for the
At Toronto. Kelvim Escobar outRangers.
Anaheim scored il~ only run in the pitched former teammate Juan Guzthird inning on Cro~ig Shipley's RBI man. and Carlos Delgado and Shannon Stewart each hit two-run ~
single.
for
the Blue Jays.
In other AL ga~s. it was ToronEscobar
(7-3) went eight innings.
to 6. Baltimore 3: Boston S, Tampa
giving
up
three
runs and 10 hil~. and
Bay 4: Detroit S. Kansa~ City I; MinRobert
Person
pitched
the ninth for
nesota 7. Chicago 6 in 12 inning~:
his sixth sa~e.
and Oakland 8. Seaule 3.
Guzman ( I0-16 ). who spent 7 If2
Red Sox 5, Devil R..ys4
At Boston. the Red Sox clinched sea.'iOIIs with Toronto before being
a tie for the AI- wild-card berth a.~ traded to Baltimore on July 31. made
Nomar Garciaparra hit a three-run his first start against his former team.
homer and Tom Gordon tied a major He gave up si• runs and seven hil~ in
league record with his 41st stro~ight 4 213 innings.
'fl&amp;en 5, Royals l
save con~er.;ion.
AI Kansas Cily, Bryce Florie
The Red Sox can lock up the wild
card by beating Baltimore tonight in pitched seven smmg innings to snap
the opener of their four-game series. a six-game road losing streak.
Aorie (8-9) struck out nine and
Toronto. which trails Boston by 3 112
held
the Royals to three hits in earngames, must win its la~l three games
ing
his
first road win since beating
i!nd hope the Red Sox lose their la~t
Milwaukee
on June 6.
foiir to force a wild-card playoff.
Kansas
City
lost for the 48th time
Gordon got out of an. ei~hth­
at
Kauffman
Stadium.
breaking the
inning jam by striking out Paul Sorteam
record
for
home
losses
set la't
rento. then pitched a one-hit ninth for
year.
Detroit
extended
its
road
winhis AL-high 44th sa~e of the seawn.
ning
streak
to
live
games
and
comSteve Avery ( I0- 7) became Boston's
fourth Hl-game winner. allowing no pleted its first three-game sweep of
earned runs and five hits in fi~e the Royalssince 1991.
'fwlns 7, White Sox 6 (IZ)
innings.
At Minneapolis. Chris Latham's

two-out single in the 12th inning
scored Paul Molitor witll the winning
run a.~ the Twins rallied from a sixrun deficit.
The comeback, sparked by Brent
Gates' tying three-run homer in the
ninth. matched the biggest in Twins·
history. It is the eighth time they have
come back 10 win after trailing by six
runs.
Molitor started the winning rally
with a two-out single ofT Scott Eyre
(3-8) and Doug Mientkiewicz fol lowed with a check-swing single.
Molitor stole third and latham singled up the middle for his third RBI
in 30 prnes tllis season .
.\tilleda a, Mal loon 3

At Seattle, Eric Chavez singled in
the go-ahead run in the eighth inning
a' Oakland avoided clinching lasl
place in the Al West.
After Heathcliff Slocumb (2-5)
walked Scott Spiezio with one out in
the eighth. pinch-runner Rickey Henderson stole his major league-leading
64th base. With two oul' and Hender.oon on third, Chav~z singled up
the middle.
T.J. Mathews (6-4) pitched I 113
innings for the win, and Billy Taylor
got the la.•t four out• for his 33rd
save.

'

·------- j
·'

By JIM VERTUNO
HUNTINGTON. W.Va. CAP) •Even !hough Randy Moss is in the
NFL. quarterback Chad Pennington
keeps throwing touchdown passes
and Marshall keeps winning football
games .
Unddeated after three games. the
Thundering Herd and Pennington
are answering the skeptics who wondered whether they could win without Moss. whose athletic ability often
left defenses helpless and overshadowed his teammates.
With Moss. Pennington set an
NCAA record for sophomores with
39 regular-sea.&lt;On touchdown pa.•ses.
Without Moss. Pennington ha' eight
touchdown pa~ses- compared to II
after three games la.~t season - and
has yet to throw an interception.
Marshall went out of the MidAmerican Conference for one of the
biggest victories in recent school his-

tory. a 24-21 defeat of South Carolina on the road.
Other than some opening-game
hiccups at Akron in which the Pennington led a fourth-quarter rally to
win, Marshall's offense ha~ suffered
little without Moss. Atlea~t eight different receivers have caught pa~ses in
each of the first three games.
"This year it has to be more of u
team eftort. Our receiving corps is
still one of our strengths. I'm making
crisper decisions and spreading the
ball amund more and everyone s«ms
to he enjoying it,.. Pennington said.
"My main goal this sea'on wa' just
being more consistent. In two of our
three losses la'l year I had eight interceptions."
Pennington passed for 177 yards
and two touchdowns aJ!ainst Sooth
Carolina. II was u meager yardage
total compared to his437-yard game
u week earlier against Division 1-AA

Troy State. but it drew praise from
Marshall coach Bob Pruett.
"To be able to handle the checks
and tile audibles in that environment
wa.~ very good ... Pruett said. "He
works to get better every day."
Pruell. an a.~sistant coach at Aorida before coming to Marshall. says
Pennington is an NFL-caliber player.
At 6-foot-4. 220 pounds. Pennington
ha~ good size. scro~mbling ability, and
proven arm strength with deep passes 10 the speedy Moss la'l sea.wn.
To be sure. the victory over South
Carolina needs some perspe£1ive.
South Carolina ha' had only three
winning seawns this decade and just
one bowl victory in its previous 105
years of football. Marshall's 92 victories this decade are the most of any
progro~m in the country in Division IA or I·AA.
"Who is South Carolina? Our
winning tradition is beller than

theirs ... Marshall linebacker Gir•die
Mercer said. "They haven't won anytiling since Sterling Sharpe was here
probably."
Marshall isn'tthe first MAC team
to beat opponents from more p&lt;~wer­
ful conferences - Miami. Ohio.
seems to do it once a year. Still. the
victory looks impressive to those who
give the MAC little respect as a
league.
·· As our '-=onferencc grows and
gets better, the respect will grow and
get better," Pruett said.
Pruett has enjoyed e•traordinary
success in his first head-coaching job.
going 28-3 witll a Division 1-AA
national title and a MAC champi·
onship.
Should he keep winning. Pruett's
name surely will come up as when
schools with bigger budgets start
looking for someone to resurrect a
struggling program.

Hurricane may affect Marlins' season finales
ca

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September 24, 1998

Herd continues winning ways without Moss

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Nalioal Hocb) l.nrew

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Division 11'

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Olh..-.: •itb 12 ........ poiftl:~~;: 11 -Ht':.th

1!-0ld Wa.m. Hock. Trail -til. 1-'-W. Mill"n MiltonUnttKI ;\6. 1-1-W. t.arayttlt Kidft'Yo"UULI ~- l:'i-Ca-...
Marrat"t"tt~ 1!1. lhOil. Untnto 17. C'tlkl•·a~cr 16. I!I

!-Tallmadgt- t716-U. ................

Friday's games

ltlk

Wtdntsday's sro,...
Dt-tmil

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n

0al.bntl .. . .
t.-clinchtd lln • ~ic\fl

21

24' _

Dft·Won

... .. ..... .... ..... ________ ____ u

NL standings
Iram

.. ........... ........... !16

r~ ~

Sc.-111t~ -

!I
16'

rtthl'llnl!h I lk.,'CI\' ~ - :'i I a1 San i=rarlll:l ,~-~1 iOn•.r
.\ - ~ 1. .1: l :'i p.m
l'tuladdfhi:. iSt:htllinl! 1 ~ · 1-' 1 ill Flumla ttkrnamlu 111· 1- t. 7-U:'i r .m.
Mtt~ltrtaltVaJqutJ ~ - I~ ! at Sl Ltttll' tO..hurnt
~ - ~I . !1 : ICJ p.m.
Mii\\Otllktc 1\\'uud.HJ 111 - 1 ~ 1 ul l.o' Alll!Ck '
1~111 L'L 1 K-71. 111:05 fUll

Yalunw11e ;11 81hmn. 7-fl:'i p.m
Tamp.• It:.~ at NY . YanL«'- 7..1:'i p.m
OIH:~u Whu~ Sm. al K:tn \O t ~Ci l ~ . K:U:'i p.m
CLl:\'ELA NI&gt; at Minlk'..ota. ll:ll.'i p.111
Te\ ;" at St;1ttlt. lfi·U~ ll m.
Anaht1111 ~ ~ (k,LJan.J. Ill·,1:' p.m

Cfftlnl Dh·isioll
• -CLEVELAND ........ .. ... kK

Tonight's gum••

lktnnl at Tumfllu. 7·U:'i p.m.

3- Mtnlllri:!JH-U ........................... .......... 1.\ fl
~ - Rr11:L~ Kt, tr Ma!!mftt:atllt 7-1 .................. IH
~ -{"in St!l&gt;n 7·~ ----..... .... ...... ..
.. 1117
fi - H ~ r~a fl.~
....................... ll:'i

~ursday,

By JEFF SHAIN
MIAMI (APJ
Hurricane
Georges could mean the postponement of at least two Florida Marlins
games, forcing the worst team in
ba~eball to conclude its sea.&lt;On with
doubleheaders Saturday and Sunday.
"That's the la.'t thing we need. ..
IVLga~es

Marlins left fielder Cliff Floyd
DlOIIned. " We're not going to Fl
anybody·out to the games anyway. If
the hurricane hits the way they say
it's going to hit. who's going to come
to a baseball game?''
A hurricane watch raised the
pro•pect that South Florida '• spons

•.. _&lt;c_oo_ri_nu_ed_from
___

Pn_~_4_&gt;

calendar could be affected. including
the Marlins' season-ending fourga_!ne_series against the PhiladeJtlhia
Phillies. The Miami Humcanes are
scheduled to play No. 3 UCLA on
Saturday. and the Miami Fusion's
final regular-sea.'iOD game is Sunday
af!ainst Tampa Bay.

BR_ _II, MlriiM 0

enth.
Rockies 14, Dhm•Auklll
John Smoltz allowed one hit in
l'lllre! J. Da 'Itt• 2
.
Todd Helton homered twice IIIII .
five inninga and Andres Cil!llrraB• hit ·dro~e in a 'career-high five ron.• to
Andy Ashby pitdied sill IMinp

.

"

a.~

the

est forecast had Georges slicing
through the Aorida Keys by early
Friday.
The Miami Dolphins have this
weekend off.

•

______________________________________________

have 50 steals and 50 doubles in a Braves won at Miami.
lead the Rockies over the Diamondsea.wn. joining Hall of Farner Tris
The Braves reduced 10 one their backs at Coon Field.
Speaker, who achieved the mark in magic number for clinching the Nl's
Colorado's Larry Walker went 31912.
best record, which would ensure a for-3 to impro~e his NL-bellt battina
The Asuos clinched home-field home-field advantage in the first average 10 .360:
advaniage in the fir.;t round of the two rounds of pomeasoa play.
David Wainhouse ( 1-0) got the
playoffs.
Smoltz ( 17·3) retired the first 10 win. Dave Veres pitched lwo scoreHouston knocked out St. Louis batters. including IIC\'en on strikeouts. less inning.~ for his sixth llave.
starter Dam:n Oliver (4-4) in the
Arizona's Willie Benks (1-2)
Kun Ojala (2-7) allowed six runs
third.
.allOwed the plhead run in tile !ICY·
in four innings.

his 44th horner for Atlanta

None of the games had been postponed a' of late Wednesday. The lat-

)

for his fir.t victory in six weeks and
Tony Gwynn hOmered to drive in the
go-ahead run at Dodger Stadium.
A.,.by ( 17·9) became the NL's
fir.t 16-game winner on Aug. 12, but
had gone 0-3 with three no-decisions
since then. He allowed seven hits and
two runs while walking one and strik· ina oul sil.
Trevor Hoffman pitdied I 113
IC!IfCicA iminp io cim liis 52nd
. save in 53 opportul!ities.
.
· OwyM hit his 15111 homer in the
fifth off Briln BohiAon (7·11 ).

,

•

''I'm going to be 36 ne•t monlh,"
Ponugal said. " It's no secret. I've
been hurt. I'm gelling old. I don't
think it's any secret that I can still
pitch. either. They'll have to decide
in which direction they want to go
and they'll force my hand. I can't
force their hand. "
From strictly a performance standpoint. manager Terry Fro~ncona sides
with Ponugal.
" I love having him around and I
also undeNand the busine" aspects
and I he health aspects," Fr.ancona
said. "Vory honestly. if it works.out
that we Cftn ha\'e him back. r d IOI'e
to have him ood . If he's healthy. he
can pitch."
Portugal allowed four singles and
four walks as he finished off a successful season oo the road. The righthander was R-2 in 15 road stans with
a ) .06 earned run avemge.

" He knows how to pitch.'' Reds
manager Jack McKeon said. "He
changed speeds well. I[ you can wail
him out. you can give him 1rouble.lf
you're not patient. hell get you."
Ricky Bonalico gol the final two
outs for hi' sixth sa\•e.

Portugal also had a single and a
double as the Phillies took advantage
of a poor performance by Steve Parris (n-5). who lasted only 1 213
innings a~ain~t his former team.

Philadelphia piled up five hils and
three walks off Parris. who had won
five of his last six deci!o.ioris. Parris
fell to 0-J wilh a 7.00 ERA .in four
career starts against the Phillies. who

dr.tfted him in 1989 and wai\'eJ him
fnur years later.
" I think when I he Phillies released
me . I hey pul a hex on me ... Parris
said. "Evrry time I pilch against
them. I prelly much slink up lh•
joint"
A Dayton-area man won 82 acres
Kevin Sefcik had a two-run triple
of private hunting. fishing and trap- and scored on Desi Rclafor&lt;l's s.acri·
ping land located in Noble County in fice Oy to make it J-0 in I he second
a recent sweepstakes contest held by Portugal doubled and evcntuall)
the Ohioans for Wildlife Conserva· scored on Doug Glanville's sacrilice
lion.
fly in the fourth.
Marll Sears of Huber Heights
The Reds loaded the hases in the
won the land in the Labor Day draw- seventh and scored on Eddie
ing of the Save Our Heritage Sweep- Taubensee's gmundout Aamn Boone
stales II.
then singled 10 right for ;mother run
The sweepstakes rJised more I han but Bob Abreu threw Dmitri Young
Sl million for OWC which is out at the plate on the play.
attempting to raise S2.3 million in its
Note&lt;: The Phillies look 1\vo of
efforts to combat Issue I. a Nov. J three to fmish off their lirsl winning
ballot issue sponsored by Save the ~ason series against the Reds !o.ince
Doves. a group seeking to ban the 1991 Philadelphia was ~-4 overall
huntinl\ of JliOI,Imina dove• in Onio_ uaain~ Cincinnati..... Pnnur.al went
Televisilm advertisements both 8-fur-20 at the plate in his last eight
opposing and supporting the issue are starts. He hit .260 ovcmll C13-for-50)
now running ·in earnest. owe states and had live doubles .... Scou Rolen
it has raised slightly more than $2.1 singled. e•lending his hilling str•ak
million in its campaign.
In nine games.
Meigs County sportsmen have
r'Jised S5.4()() while Gallia County
sportsmen have collected $2.281 in
opp&lt;"ilinn tn Issue I. :tl'Cording to

Dayton man
wins 82-acre
bonanza

IKES to observe
National Hunting
and Fishing Day

owe

Save the Doves states its goal is
simply return the mourning dove to
the protected songbird li't in Ohio
while hunting advocates say Issue I
is fronted by national animal rights
Olllanizati&lt;ms including the Humane
Society of the United Stmes and People fur the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETAl which seek to ban all
huntin~ and medical research involv,ing animals.
Mourning dove season began
Tuesday in Ohio and hunters are
allowed a daily bag limil nf I~ birds.
The mourning dove is the most
abundant game species in the United
States. according to I he Ohio Di vision nf Wildlife.

·

Nat1&lt;mal Hunting and Fishing
Day Will he observed Saturday from
8:30 a.m.lo J p.m. at the IKES Farm
on Scout Camp Road near Chester.
The event will include instruction.
demonstmtions or panicipation in the
following: hunter safety and ethics.
~y tying and fishing . canoeing. lish
l•lleung. turkey calling. shotshell
reloading . trap 'hooting . .22 rifle
'hooting. munleloader shooiing.
coon dogs. tmpping and archery.
All activities are free and lunch
will be provided. For additional
information. call Henry B:thr atlJ8S3988 or Gary Dill at 98~-4274 .

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING:
• OHIO Co WU MEDICAID
• FEDERAL EMPLOYEES • COMPENSATION
•BO ILERMRK ERS
• CLAIMS PRO
• AETNA •EHPRESS SCRIPS •P.C.S.
•UNITED MINE WORKERS
• UNITED HEALTH CARE
•BLACK LUNii • PAID •WU PEIA
• URLUE RH
• DIUERSIFIED • BLUE CROSS • AND OTHERS

tO% DISCOUNT

To Pirtona 60 and Over
On All Preacrfptlona
Not covered bY ihird party.

THREE REGISTERED PIIARMACISTS

See ITs TouJ•••

SWISHER· LOHSE
PHARMACY
E. MAIN

992·2955

POMEROY, OH.

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charita Rl1fte, R. Ph.
Ronald Hlllnlng. R. Ph..

·

Ilion. thru Fri. 8:00 e.m. to 9:00 p.111. .
SilL: 8:00 ilrl to 8:00 pm: Sun. 10:00 un. to • P&amp;
• Frtenclly SeMce •

...

1

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thu~y, September,~4. 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ByTh~Bend

Marauders seek to continue winning ways against Tolsia
By DA~E HARRIS
BentiMI Comepondent
The Meigs Marauders hit the road
lhis Friday evening. when they make
lhe long trip down to the West Vircinia coal fields to play the Tolsia
Rebels.
The Marauders head into the conlest with a 2-1 record corning off two
suaight wins over Athens and River
Valley. Tolsia is 1-3. but that record
is misleading. Of the three Tolsia
losses. all thn:e have come at the
hand.&lt; of ranked teams in their respective divisions and states.
Tolsia lost their first game of the
year to Fayetteville 20-14 in overtime, then traveled to Portsmouth to
play the Spartans. POrtsmouth, one of
the lop teams in the Midwest this sea-

son. rolled to a 74-0 win. Tolsia then
defeated Allen Central (Ky.) 49-20.
before losing to Lawrence County
(Ky.) ~20 last week.
Tolsia defeated the Marauders
last season at Bob Roberts Field in
Pomeroy by a 23-20 score. The
Rebels finished the 1997 season with
an 11 -1 record. with the only loss
coming in the Class AA quarterfinals
to Magnolia 7-6.
Former Rebel assistant Drew
Waller becomes the second coach in
the school's history, taking over for
Terry Porter who was the head coach
for I0 years.
Only four starters return from last
season, led by tailback Mike Boone
a 5-7, 149-pound senior. Boone so far
this sea«&gt;n has carried 48 times for

270 yards and five touchdowns.
· Also coming back is 5- 11. 17~­
pound senior Ashley Pertee. Pertee
wa• tailback last year, but is also seeing .,.;tion this season as wide receiver. Pertee ha• carried 15 times for 85
yards and two touchdowns, and ha.'
nine reception.&lt; for 173 yards and two
touchdowns.
Senior Cameron Justice (6-3, 175)
moves from split end to quarterback
this season. as the Rebels go from the
ground attl!:k of the Wing-Ito a wide
open pro-set. Justice is 17 of 47 in the
air this season for 258 yards and two
interceptions and t&amp;chdowns.
11le Rebels were expecting big
things out of 5-7. 283-pound senior
defensive tackle Dave Meddings.
but Meddings was lost for the

remainder of the !Ieason with a knee
injury in the win over Allen Central.
11le Meigs offense ha.~ moved the
ball, as in thn:e games the Marauders ha• averaged 6.9 yards a play.
Meigs rolled up 509 lolal yant. in last
week's win over River Valley.
Leading the balanced Marauder
auack is 5-I 0. 205-pound junior
Justin Roush. Roush had his second
straight 200-yard game last week,
and it mark the fourth time in the last
five regular season games lhat he has
gone over lhe 200 mart, going back
to the final two games of the 1997
season.

Justin has picked up 540 yards in
89 carries (6.1 yards), Jeremiah Bentley a 5-9. 165-pound wing back/fullback ha' gained 214 yards in 36 car-

ries (5.9).
kids lhat have the ability to make the
The Mar.tuders passing auack is big play at any time. We need to conled by junior Grant Abbott. He has tinue to imjnuve ahd cut doWn on our
completed 28 of 57 through the air mistakes."
·
for 508 yards and five touchdowns.
Diredions to Tobia: Tolsia is
Bentley has pulled in I~ passes for located between Fl. Gay and Crum
225 yards. Senior tri-captain J.T. West Virginia on· U. S. 52. Travel
Humphreys has caught eight for 100 down State Route 7 to Gallipolis.
yards. John Davidson has four for 78 Cross the Silver Memorial Bridge
and take Route 2 to Huntington. Get ·
yards.
The offensive line of Andy Doczi, on 1-64 west (follow signs) and take ·
Derek Miller, Ryan Ramsburg, Ryan the Ceredo Kenova/ Airport exit l'um
Jeffers. Adam Bullington and John left after eliling, travel a short ~is­
Boling has done an elcellent job pro- lance and you will come to a stop,
tecting Abbott, or opening up holes and tum left again 'onto Route 52.
Route 52 willlilke you right to Tolfor the running game.
"Tolsia is 1-3, but they are not a sia High S.:hool, the high school is on
1-3 football team," Marauder coach the left hand side of the road about 12
Mike Chancey said. "The have miles past the town of Ft. Gay. The ·
played three very good ·football school is approximately 55 miles .
teams. 11ley have excellent skilled after you exit off of 1-64

By SCOTT WOLFE
This week. the Southern Tornadoes visit former Hocking Division
foe Alexander in a non-league grid
baule in Albany. The Spartans are 03 and Southern is now 1-2.
Last week, the Tornadoes came
and conquered their South Gallia foe
47-12 at Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field in Racine.
Compiling 445 total yards of
offense. Southern's well-oiled
machine methodically hammered a
young Rebel club, who showed much
poise in not giving up and ending the
evening with 299 total yards of
offense.
Southern seemed to have found

some newfound blood in sophomore grandfather, claimed top rushing honrunning back Buster Penix. Penix had ors with 119 yards on II carries with
shown much promise in his junior two touchdowns rushing and anoth varsity efforts. but on the varsity saw er on a fumble recovery run back.
limited running and most playing Adam Cummings. who ran just three
time as a line-man. When J.B. Boso second half plays gained I09 yards
who had two consecutive 100-yard on seven carries and also had two
games was mysteriously declared touchdown runs. Cumings broke the
ineligible by River Valley and Adam 100-yard mark, then on the next play
Cumings was still nursing a sprained Penil duplicated the feat. Quarterknee. Southern found itself in a bind. back Jonathan Evans JYdssed for 142
Penix solved the problem with Hying yards, hitting Josh Ervin once for
twenty yards, Adam Williams three
colors.
Two Southern runners rushed for times for 49 yards and Ryan Hill
more than one-hundred yards, a feat three times for 73 yards. Cumings
that hasn't been accomplished in also recovered a fumble .
Racine for some time. Sophomore
Cumings had two touchfullback Buster Penix, who played an downs, Penil three touchdowns (one
inspirational game in a tribute to his on a fumble recovery run). Andrew

Coffman had a field goal and two
exlr.t points. Brandon Hill had an
interception and interception return
of 53 yards for a touchdown, and
Brice Hill scored on a two-yard run
after selling up the score with a 20yard dash. The EP kick was wide
finalizing the score at 47-0.
Coach Dave Barr said, "We've
worted all week on culling down on
our mistakes. We take pride in that.
We haven't fumbled the la.•t two
weeks. Last week. we gave Jonathan
more time to lhrow the ball and ._, a
result. his pa.-.ing was better."
Barr &lt;aid of his 1\lelander opponent. "Alexander ha.&lt; a lot of talent.
They played some tough teams. but
I think we are on the upswing now.

We're looking forward to this week's
game. One key to the game will be
keeping Danny Metts in check. If we
keep his shoulders turned IO'!'ard the
sideline, we'll have some success. If
we let him get squared up and coming right at us, then he could present
problems. We have to contain Mens."
Mens is a defensive threat a• well.
. He picked olltwo passes for interceptions and a 12-0 Alelander lead
la'l week at Athens. Athens recovered to win 48-18. Mens also has
been Alexander's greatest ground
gainer. La.~t week though, he was just
12-47 yards. Michae.l Hawk is another back to watch. but not nearly as
explosive a.~ Mens. Hawk ended last
week with 12-48.
Eric Gabriel' is the main receiver

Ann
Landers
IWf. ......

By SCOTT WOLFE
The Eastern Eagles will try to get

their first football victory in one of
the Big Bend's biggest traditional
rivalries Friday night.
Add to the sense of rivalry the fact
that new Ea~tem mentor S.:ott Christman was a fonner Wahama assistant,
and a tank of oxygen is tossed on an
already explosive Harne.
Christman said, "No doulll, we
want to go in there and do well. Sure,
personally I've got some feelings
going in there. I coached those kids
and they are good kids. But they are

going to be saying things to pump half as the first round ended 6-0.
themselves up, and want to do well Eastern didn't establish an offensive
against us. Not only will Eastern be game early. but the defense repelled
eltra incentive for them. but two more Wirt County possessions.
(Wahama) for us too. I want to do
Ea.~tem came to life in the second
well. I want to show them we have quarter to tie the game 6-6 when
some intensity. We don't want to go Adam Sanders lofted a seven-yard
pass to Jeremy Casto. The two-point
over there and fail."
Last week the Wirt County Tigers conversion pass wa.• incomplete, but
sharpened their claws on the the new Eastern wa' very much in the game.
Eastern trill:k, then preyed upon the
Garrell Karr ran a 20 power play
Eastern Eagles 41-18 in East Shade for a 12-yard run to put Eastern back
River Stadium. The non-league bat- in the game. nine plays from scrimde leaves Eastern at 0-3.
·
mage on Ea stems' fitrs1 possession
of
Like the previous week, Eastern the second half. The two-point conheld steadfast for much of the first version pass attempt wa~ void with
•

••

'

.._..

.,_;&lt;"'-

'l'a

-r

the score 20-12.
Christman &lt;aid, "It will take consistency and intensity to win this
week. II has been a good week of
practice and we are ready. If we play
._,physical as we have practiced this
week we will be all right. We have to
erase mental mistakes."
"Last night practice was really
intense. The kids were really going
after it. We had a lot of competition,
but afterwards everybody •hook
hands. With that kind of effort. we'll
make some big strides, but we have
to take that intensity into the game.
We've made imp~emenl eve..,..

week and the kids see that."
"Against Wahama we have to be
tough early. Wahama will have confidence .. they have that tradition. so
we must show them we are there to
play football." ·
Last week. Sanders hit Casto
again on a 26-yard pass. The PAT try
failed and the score stood 34-18. Wirt
added another touchdown later and
added the extra's for a 41-18 final .
In rushing. Adam Sanders was 1673, Aaron Schaekel was 11-62, Garrell Karr 4-29, and Brad Willford 23. Adam Sanders was 6'20 for 67
yards and two t0 uchdowns. while
also throwing two interceptions.

predictions
By RICHARD ROSENBLATT
AP Football Writer
Talking about losses is not the
Nebraska way.
Not even when Washington -the
last team to beat the Comhuskers at
home - returns to Memorial Stadium.
"We don't really dwell on losses,"
coach Frank Solich said. "That was
an excellent team they brought in
here. They deserved to win and
that's about all I recall ahout the
game."
On Sept. 21. 1991, the Huskies
beat the Huskers 36-21. and Nebraska hasn'tlost in Lincoln since. Entering Saturday's game against No. 9
Washington (2-0). No. 2 Nebra,ka (30) has rolled up a 44-game home
winning streak - fifth longest in
NCAA history among major schools.
"h·s been awhile since we lost at
home." Nebraska center Josh Heskew said. "And hopefully we can
prevent it from happening Saturday.
If we stick to our game plan. we'll do

fine."
back and hurt you, he has speed
The game plan, for the liNt time, receivers to go deep and he can uti includes quarterback Bobby New- ·lize the short passin~ game to move
combe and !-back DeAngelo Evans down field."
in the same backfield.
In Nebmska's 27-14 win against
Newcombe, who played so well in Washington in '97, Huard was
his first start against Louisiana Tech. knocked out of the game in the first
returns after missing the past two quarter with a sprained ankle.
games with a strained knee ligament
In assessing Nebraska. Washing Evans. who missed '97 with an ton coach Jim Lambright can only
abdominal muscle injury. is set for his hope Huard is on his game.
liNt start now that he's also recovered
"We hope our passing game can
from torn cartilage in his left knee.
give us some edge." Lambright said.
"He looks like he's exploding off "And that's probably about it when
the ball.·· Heskew said of Evans, who you look at what Nebraska has done
ran for 716 yards and 14touchdowns in shuning down other programs up
in '96. "I can't wail to see him in a until this point."
ballgame."
The picks:
As for Newcombe, it's been tough
No. 9 Washington (plus 12)
sitting out, but he isn't worried about
at No. l Nebraska
being rusty.
Can't see Huskies defense stop"I predict myself going into the ping Huskers offense. especially with
game confident and relaxed, .. he "aid. QB Bobby Newcombe back. .. .
While the Huskers offense is NEBRASKA 41 -24.
healthy again. it's Brock Huard who
No.3 UCLA
worries Nebraska coach Frank
(minus 6 1/2) at Miami
Solich.
As long as Hurricane Georges
"He's a tremendous talent," holds off, Bruins can take care of
Solich said of the left-handed quar- Miami's Hurricanes .... UCLA 35-20.
terback. who is 43 of 80 for 496 yards
Houston (plus 25 1/l)
and five touchdowns. "He can drop
at No. 4 Temtessee

Washington Redskins place
Hostetler on injured reserve
By JOSEPH WHITE
ASHBURN, Va. lAP)- Nothing
is going according to script this season for the winless Washington Redskins. Even the usually simple matter of ruhng a limping. disgruntled

Fractured vertebra
sidelines Ohio
State's Penny
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)- Ohio
State fullback Sean Penny will miss
the remainder of the season because
of a fractured venebra.
Ohio State announced Wednesday
that Penny. a 6-foot-2, 215-pound
sophomore. has a stable fmcture in
the tlrst cervical vertebra.
Penny was injured during the topranked Buckeyes' 49-0 shutout of
Toledo on Sept. 12.
Penny played in I0 games last
year as a true freshman out of Ursuline High School in Youngstown. He
had nine carries for 54 yards.
Penny. who did not play in Ohio
State's season-opening win over West
Virginia. had no carries this season.

third-string quanerback out for the
season didn't get done without a
strange plot twist.
Jeff Hostetler is finished for 1998
after the Redskins placed him on
injured reserve Wednesday. It was
hardly unexpected. given Hostetler's
preseason knee injury and one-day
walkout last week. butt he story grew
more bizarre when the team
announced that the 15-year veteran
had reinjured himself while on the
sideline during Sunday's game.
"I didn't get into specifics with
him," general manager Charley
Casserly said. "He S&amp;id his leg was
hit. I believe by a helmet. and that
caused the instability in the knee."
Casserly said he dido 'tleam about
the sideline incident until Tuesday
night. Casserly, who has worted in
the NFL for 21 years. nl•o said he
couldn 't remember another instance
of a player being injured on the sideline.
Nevenheless, the net result was
the best possible compromise for
everyone concerned. The Redskins
didn't want to give Hostetler his
release. and Hostetler didn't want to

•

spend the season stewing as a negative presence in the locker room
because he wasn't getting a chance to
play.
"We know where we stand now,"
coach Norv Turner said. "So I guess
fmm that standpoint. (it's good) to
have that type of resolution."
Trainer Bubba . Tyer said
Hostetler' s surgery would repair
some damaged cartilage and possibly
the anterior cruciate ligament, necessitating a rehabilitation period of
ahout six months. Hostetler is 37
yeaN old. and he almost retired during the off-season to become a television commentator. so the procedure
could end his career.
Hostetler left Redskin Park without comment after cleaning out his
locker for the second consecutive
Wednesday. Last week. he had left
because he said he tht&gt;ught he had
been granted his release. The Redskins said he hadn't and made him
come back the nell day.
His replacement has no qualms
about working just about anywhere.

Looking for a big Vols letdown?
Nah . ... TENNESSEE, 41-20.
NE Louisiana {plus 45)
at No. 5 Kan!lll!l State
This is gelling monotonous. isn't
it? ... KANSAS STATE. 55-7.
Idaho (plus J6 1/l)
at No.6 LSU
Tigers better enjoy this - Georgia and Florida are next on the
schedule . ... LSU, 49-7.
Kentucky (plus 22)
al No. 8 Florida
Wildcats' last win in Gainesville
was 1979: Gators give QB Tim
Couch fits . ... FLORIDA, 49-28.

_ Dear Ana Lucien: Never have
~ been so motivated to write to you
as I am at this moment. It was lhe
letter from "Scared in Jackson" lhat
!fid it. She is the mother of a 3-yearold boy who wa.~ attacked by his
grandmother's pel chow. 11le child
)Was almost blinded and needed 60
stitches 1o repair lhe damage to his
eyelid. While the grandmother was
~ery upset, she refuses to get rid or
the dog, and .. Scared" wi II no

IThk •rfi&lt;oloo lc hmnl!ht to VOU IS a
service of tile Melp Co11aty
Health Deputmeat's Health Ser·\'kft Gmt, .Jackie Starcher ud
,Sharoa SDlhll, P"'IJ'IIIIl moniiDajJor, -istaat coordlaator rapec-

1tively).

Wahama lost last week 30-6 to
Ravenswood, but showed some
bright spots while falling to 0-3.
Wahama limite dthe highly ranked
Red Devils to just I08 yards rushing
and 176 total yards offense.
David Tennant who is capable of
the 100-yard game was 23-70 last
week and Eastern's main objective 10
stop defensively. Grant Huff was 810 and Beau Gerlach 1-4. Grant Huff
was passing I-I for 49 yards last
week and Ryan Russell was 2-7 for
20 yards.
Joel Lloyd caught two passes for
55 yards and Huff one for 14 yard.•. •
Game time is 7:30 in Mason.

,
I'

.

. Everyone knows eating breakfast
4s important. It fuels a body wilh
energy and nutrients that help both
:kid.• and adult.• meet the demands of
il fa.&lt;t-paced lifestyle.
· Breakfast eating parents lead to
:breakfast eating kids.
- II is especially important for par'ents to eat a nutritious breakfa.•t
:everyday. Why? Because parents are
)'ole models for their children. Chil-dren who see their parents eating
:breakfast are more likely to eat
)lreakfast too.
· Getting lhe forty plus nutrients
needed each day is more likely for
Jhose who eat a morning meal.
Breakfast skippers may never make
up the nutrients they miss.
: Children who eat breakfast are
jes.~ likely to miss class due to illness
than those who skip b~eakfast.
Breakfast eaters also score higher on
~ams and have better concentration
tlnd muscle coordination.
· Kids who eat breakfast are less

Baylor (plus 16)
No. 18 Southem Callromia
at
No. lS Colorado
(plU!l IS 1/l) at No. 10 Florida
·
Buffs
bringsBeilrs
doYin to earth
Stille
Imagine. it'nhe Trojans who are . after their upset of N't State. ... COI.undefeated and tire Seminoles with ORA DO, 44-14.
No. 16 Arizona (minus 14)
the loss .... FLORIDA STATE,41 -21.
at San Diego State (Thursday)
No. 11 Virginia
'Zona fought back from 21-0
(minus 10) at Duke
Cavs rallied
week, but won't deficit in last year's win: this time it
need such dramatics against Blue should be easier.... ARIZONA. 3511
Devils.... VIRGINIA, Jl-18.
North Texas (plus 33 1/2)
Northwestem (plu• 10 1/2)
at No. 17 Texas A&amp;M
at No. 14 Wisconsin
Aggi~s
fullback D' Andre HardeBanged-up Badgers better heal in
man
still
suspended,
but it won't mattime for dangerous Wildcats .... WISter against Mean Green Eagles.
·
CONSIN. 2~-24.
TEXASA&amp;M, 38-17.

likely to be overweight too. Unfortu- kids and for yourself.
nately, a recent survey found that as
many as 30 percent of eight to 13
Basic French Toast
year old children do nol eat break2 eggs or egg whites. lightly beatfast.
en
Everyone is short of time these
213 cup milk
days, but a healthy breakfa~t can be
8 slices firm white or whole
quick and easy to fix and eat. Try wheat bread
these breakfast in a minute ideas:
2 to 3 tablespoons butter
Ready to eat cereal with fruit and
Combine eggs and milk in a shalmilk, toasted bagel and cheese, fruit low bowl, beat with a fork waffle
.filled breakfast bars and yogurt, well blended. Dip bread slices into
toa•ted waffle topped with fruit and lhe mil to coat each side. Melt I
yogurt, or peanut butter on whole tablespoon buller in a skillet over
wheat toast. .
medium heat. Transfer a coated
Making breakfast together is a bread slice to the hot skillet Brown
fun activity for parents and children each side until golden brown.
on days when they don't have to
Continue with other slices,
rush out the door.
;Wd!ng butter as needed. Discard and
Some breakfa.~t !lleals can even leftoveregg mixture. Serve immedibe started the day kfoJe, using
ately. or wrap each slice tightly in
few creative idea.~. Eating breakfast foil, or wrap multiple slices together
as a family offers an opponunity to wilh each slice separated by plastic
spend some quality time togelher. wrap. and place in the freezer for
On busy mornings when it is impos- later use.
sible to eat together, encourage chilTo reheat frozen slices: The
dreri to eat breakfast at school. Call French toa.•t slices can be thawed in
your child's school and inquire a toaster set on HIGH for 30 to 40
about the breakfast programs seconds. or in an oven set at400! for
offered.
·
about 10 minutes. Once reheated,
Breakfast feeds the bruin as well you can: Stuff them with a spread
as the body. Parents can c~eate a made by combining cup part-skim
positive attitude toward breakfast by ricolta cheese, 4 teaspoons honey,
showing children how much they and cup chopped strawberries or
enjoy a morning meal. Do it for your peaches.

a.

Tell me, Grandma. if I can't
" read" a chow, how in the world can
you expect a 3-year-old or even a
20-year-old to do so? Most of the
attacks by chows are unprovoked or
for reasons nobody can explain. The
first bite I ever received as a novice
groomer was inflicted by a chow
puppy, and almost every chow I
have handled since has displayed
aggressive behavior.
Mom should keep her son away
from that dog and not be viewed as
spiteful. She is. in reality, a cautious
and wise mother.
Dear Readers: I'm sure to get a
ton of letters from enraged chow
owners, but what I have read has
. convinced me that chows are an
unpredictable bn:ed. My advice is,

get a Pomeranian, a Chihuahua. a
spaniel, a Pekingese. a poodle or a
Heinz-57-varieties mull. I'm vetoing the chows.
Dear Au Loden: Does this
qualify as a Gem of lhe Day? An ad
appeared in a Seattle newspaper as
follows: " Position wanted around
Dec. I. At present employed at City
Hall, but will work if I have to." -E.T.
Dear E.T.: Yes, it qualif~es, and
P.S. I'd like to know if he got a job.
Sead questions to A. Loden,
Creators Syadicate, 57T1 W. C.tury Blvd., Suite 701, Los A. . . . .

Calif. 90045

1-----(Community Calendar---THURSDAY
POMEROY- The Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District.
annual planning meeting, Thursday, 10 am., Pomeroy Library.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains Veter.ms of Foreign
Wars 9053 meeting Thursday,
7:30p.m. with name drawing to be
held.
CHESHIRE - Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency
monthly board meeting Thursday,
4 p.m. at the Guiding Hand
School.
POMEROY - Expo meting,
Thursday, 7:30p.m. Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
REEDSVILLE - Riverbend
Garden Club, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
at the hdme of Ruth Ann Balderson. New officers to be installed.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at
the Lulheran Church. Members to
take .alad and wear purple.
POMEROY - The Caring and

City has low-rate auto
financing!

I got a fantas~c

h•••

SENIOR PICTURES
with a Hot Rod or Custom
Motorcycle

nowhere and for no particular reason, he lunged at my sister. Thank
heavens, my grandmother was close
by and grabbed the dog just in time
to
prevent him from ripping up her
more:
face.
From Los Antdes: You were
Harvey, La.: I have been a pelabsolutely right to agree with
"Scared in Jackson's" decision not care professional for·l4 years. and I
to visit her mother until she gets rid want to say something lo lhe owner
of her dog. I know firslhand that of that chow: Wake up, Grandma.
chows can be extremely vicious. My You are protecting a potential killer.
grandmother warned my mother not The chow is, in my opinion, the
to accept a chow puppy a.~ a gift. most unpredictable of canine breeds.
regardless of how Huffy and cute, I long ago stopped handling chows
but my older sister insisted that because of their erratic temperachows, if treated well, make won- ment. I have been criticized for
derful pel~. Unfortunately, my moth- being unwilling to "learn to read" a
er listened to my sister and accepted chow and anticipate the animal's
• a chow. The fluffy and cute lillie pup sudden change from being docile to
grew up, and one day, out of becoming vicious.
in a grandmother's life. --Another
Grandma in Costa Mesa, Calif.
Dear Costa Mesa: Thanks for
your testimony. Keep reading for

ing and Fishing Day
Saturday, 8:30a.m. to 3 p.m.
IKES Farm on Scout Camp
near Chester. The event will
include instruction and demoostration.&lt; hunter safety and elhics.
Hy tying and fishing, canoeing,
FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE- Olive Town- fish filleting, turtey
shot.22
ship Trustees, special meeting. shell reloading, trap
rifle
shooting,
Friday, township gar.1ge on Joppa
shooting, coon dop, trapping
Road, 7:30p.m.
archery. All activities are free
lunch will be provided.
POINT
PLEASANT
Revival services, lifeline Apostolic Church, Point Plea.~nl, 7:30 SUNDAY
RACINE- Eagle Ridge Comp.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
munity Church homecoming. SunEvangelist Aaron Bound.&lt;.
day. Basket dinner at noon;
singing at I:30 p.m. featuring lhe
STIVERS VILLE
Stiversville Community Church, Bissell Brothers and Harvest
hymn sing, Friday, 7:30 p.m. at Time.
church located on County Road
POMEROY - Revival ser.31. The Crusaders will be the feavices at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel.
tured singers.
State Route 143, to continue
through Sunday. Rev. V. 0 . Agan.
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Har. evangelist.
risonville Lodge 411 F&amp;AM. SatI
\t ~
urday, to host Scottish Rite Players MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs;Coollty
Club of Columbus. Ma«&gt;nic Temple. Dinner at 6 p.m.; play at 7 Veterans Service Commission,
p.m. Dinner is fn:e. open to public. 7:30 p.m. Monday, Veterans Service Office, Mulberry Ave.,
CHESTER - National Hunt- Pomeroy.

Sharing Support Group of the
Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center will be held Thursday at I p.m.
Aynt Adkins of Holzer Clinic will
discuss sleep disorders.

Everybody's ·Talking ·About·
City National Bank's New Pomeroy Office!

\

'

bilitation ""the knee.
the seventh round this year by the
"Corey's a~ sparky, competiiive Pmsburgh Steelers, who traded him
player who CO?Cedes nothing to his Aug. 24 to the 49ers for prior conopponent.·· Ben gals general manag- siderations.
er Mike Brown said. "You miss a guy
Rubio was on the inactive list for
like that."
San. Francisco's season opener
Also Wednesday. the Bengals agamst the New York Jets. and was
acquired de(ensive tackle Angel . active but did not play on Sept. 14 at
Rubio on waivers from the San Frnn- Washi.nJ!Ion. ~~e..49ers ~~d an open
cisco 49ers.lloubio. 23. was drafted in date m the ..,a.,&gt;n.'t; third week.

longer bring her child to visit.
Chows have earned lheir reputalion for being dangerous. My parents bought a chow when I was very
young. but after hearing some hairraising stories about the breed. they
dido 't keep it long. Some family
friends were not as fortunate. 11leir
darling liUle boy has a badl~ scarred
face (after several surgerie$), and it
was a chow th~ did it.
.
That grandmother is no "loving
grandma" if her potential killer is
more important than the safety of
her grandchildren. I hope "Scarell in
Jaclcson" will hold firm. No child
will be safe at Grandma's a~ long as
that chow is there. Grandma will
have to accept that fact Of: miss out
on some of the most enjoyible times

Wake your kids up to breakfast

for quarterback Carl Stump. averag- :
ing 25 yards per gamo.
Barr said, "We have to keep their
quarterback in cheek and keep him :
under pressure. If we give them time.:
they can be successful. They have the ·
potential for a good' pa.&lt;sing game.
Our secondary has to be prepared to .
stop the big play."
·
Last week. Southern's timing was·
much bener. The Tornadoes worted:
hard on timing again this week and
hitting the holes. Southern's line was .
much improved and the Tornadoes.
spirits are high. coming off last
week's big win.
·
Barr said, "It's been a good week
or practice."
Hopefully, Friday it will be a good
game. Game time is 7:30.

Sawyer's season~ending injury
makes Bengals r~shuffle secondary
CINCINNATI (APJ - The
Cincinnati Bengals have ended backup cornerback Corey Sawyer's season early. because or a knee injury
that required surgery.
That means some reshuffling is
needed at right .cornerback as the
Ben gals prepare to play Sunday night
in Baltimore. where Ravens tight end
Eric Green has haunted them. But the
Bengals indicated they don't plan to
go out huntir.g for another defensive
back. at least not for the moment.
Green has consistently hurt the
Bengals during his career with Baltimore and formerly Pittsburgh. He
has caught six career touchdown
passes against Cincinnati.
Sawyer had been the main backup to moL:ie Artrell Hawkins at right
cornerback. Former New York Giant
comemack Thoma.&lt; Randolph. a liveyear veteran signed as a free agent
during the off-season. becomes the
third comer. Ric Mathias, a rookie
free agent from Wisconsin-LaCrosse,
is to be activated for atlea.~t Sunday's
game against the Ravens.
Ashley Ambrose remains the Bengals' starter at left comemack.
Sawyer gave the Bengals their
only win of the season when he inter. cepted a pa-. and returned it 58 yards
for a touchdown in overtime Sept. 13
at Detroit. He tore a ligament in his
left knee while making a tackle in
Cincinnati's IJ-(l loss Sunday to
Green Bay.
He underwent anhroscopic
surgery Tuesday to reattach the lateral meniscus cartilage to the bone.
On Wednesday, the Bengal•
placed Sawyer on the injured reserve
list. meaning he won't he eligible to
play the rest of this season. He was
to immediately begin physictll reha-

T-

s,...-..

Washington-Nebraska game· head-s ,Saturday'sr agenda
College football

AaFa

S,.U.:* Mil C'n:-.

Eastern heads across .Ohio to take on Wahama Friday
Sentinel Correspondent

·
Page7 :
Thursday, september 24, 1 •

Chow could turn on anyone - readers call the breed potential killer

Alexander to host Southern in inter-division bout Friday
Sentinel Corrnpondent

The Daily Sentinel

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�Thursday, September 24, 1998

_"Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

II

992·2198

MUFFLER SHOP

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WHERE: M.mnsvilk (\&gt;.)Speedway
WHEN: Suncloy,
Sep&lt;.TI

•

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DEFENDING CHAM·
PION: Jet! Button

ID'

EVENT OUAUFYJNQ

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c •.

RECORD: Ted Mus·

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"""'·Ford. 94.129 mpb,

Sept. 23, 1994.
Gordon, CMvrolet,
82.223 mph. Scp&lt;. 22.

'i•

01llER FORMER

&gt;-.
_%

Burton

•

active drivers widl 11 victories. Date Earnhardt

-

and Rusty W.U10e each have aix, Geoff Bodine rour, Ricky Rudd and Jet! Gonion "'o
each. Others to bave

POINTS STAIIDIIGS

'i

(.)

WINSTON CUP

DUSCH

I Jctr Gordoa, 4,121

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2..M-':Midia, l ,9ll
). Dele Jar~e~t. 1,190
w..~aoc . J.6J7

l.f1111t1~),669

• •-r
8at1bf

5
l..abo.lr, ) ,419
6. Jaaly Mayfidd. ),419
1 kif a..-.
l DIJc Eamhardl, ),112
9 Jolin "'-imti. 2,989
10 Ttny Ybonfc. !.9S4

un

D . ~lr.,l,'166

l N. Mc:LM~plia, 1,5(8

l. bR~l.ll4

4. 11J S..r, 2.921

' .....,, I...Uoic, ),a10
6. T1111 Ftckw.. 2.979

lT•r...,_2.920

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10 llt1'1'41t s..Ptl. 2.830

==·
................
,_,_
-~

-

This week il was Mark Marlin's
tum lo keep Jeff Gordon at My,
1nd he was m•gniftceot Martin
led 380 out of 400 laps at Dover
Downs and .picked up hit sillth
viCiory of the season.

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

I . kiDdy Tolsllll, Ul'
II Mite W.U.CC. 2,661

1

I.

What? 1\vo 5traight nCJn ·wins
2. Mark Martin (2)

Hanging in there
3. Jefr Bu"on (lJ

likes Maninsville
4. Dale Jarrell (4)
Sasging a bit
5. Bobby Labonte (6)
Hack on uack

6. Rusty Wallace (7)
Still knocking, no answer
7. John Andretti (9)
Up there every week
S. Dale Earnhardt (5)

Sta"ed last, finiJhed 23rd
9. Ernie lrvan (8)

Hustling
10. Jeremy Mayfoeld (NR)
Back near the front

"'" ""'
"""

-' i

(.)

NAf'AA11iUD~

On2!i

100, lotlniMvillc:, V:r.
UAW-GM 500, Concotd, N.C
Wi111ton 500, Tt.lladtp. Ala.
Pepsi 400. Oaytooa BelCh, Flo
Dura· lube~- Aotondllc. Ariz.

Nov I

AC.Delw

"'"

NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga.

01.1. I 1

4(.0,

\991 Winner

Pole

I . &amp;non

W. Bunon
G Bodine

lam:n
T. Labon~
And1cni

Rndiii'CNm. N.C

INM

Skinner

Jane~

Hamilrun

Hanuhon
8. llbonte

8. Labonte

G Bodine

fiUD Of THE WUK
Jeff Gordon vs. NASCAR
The aoveming body bllck·

The Daily
Sentinel
111 Court St.

Pomeroy
992-2155

SI)HJ.:
-.ldhlu.a.com
See us tor Your Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accesso~

IJaaaed !be point leader after it
allegedly ca"8bb a crow member
prytng the sheet-metal out on Jhe
frontleDder. S11ch an aerody·

namic "adjustment" is not
allowed unless the tires are rubbing. "It could have got us cauaht
up in a wrctk," said Oordoa.
.. We'll bav~ 10 talk 10 NASCAR
and find out wht the jtJdament

was because I've never heard of
aaytbina like lhat."
"We have templates that Kllhe
fender so it could be no wider
than the width of the tire, " llid
WiMon Cup Series di"""'r Oary
Nelson. "Off1&lt;:ills w1tdl il durin&amp;

ending IIIII having 10 be bock, 10
tmelllfely. Thoteforj, I 111 on my
&lt;lOUCI&gt;Ihll
with my lidrels
· oo the IJble in front of me,
sealS 31-32 11 a of over Slm
ror my ~ 10 Adlnta and bock.
My oonoem and dismay is with
the opening of each ....er\1: the
angina of our National Ao&lt;hem. I
am very polriolic and proud or my
""'"try, the lias it Dies and the song
wr: 1110 u ow Nllional Anthem.
What rtally ticks me off ~rtlhosc
who decl 00110 pay lribule 10 their
Jolin Oarl!.oNASCAA ThD 'Mft
""" CXJUntry~ flag and anthem ..
Dale Earnhardt Jr. says he has no regrets about the 'Iough love' his famous father has used 10 push him (they)""' be ills paenled. l,.. per.
in his career.
oonnel SUtndina in the pit areas
milling arourod, laug!ting. lpilting
By Monte DunoD
their chew or whatever, as If they
career, bullhose wert my
NASqjl Thil Wm
e"'dtmn obout their her·
thooshts, Rlf reCiinp, Ill IIOIIJ.
'
Is there any doubtlhll Dale
illlso. This malrea me want to lluow
I' ve never wanted 10 be given
Eanthlrdt Jr. Ia destined to fol·
up, latowing that I .. gi&gt;ling up 1
anything just because he is my
low in his
'I rather."
lot of the freedoms of ycu ...
taking for gnnted.
great
HAVE YOU EVER HAD
John L Andenon
father's
lliE OCCASION TO COMHM2 (SW, FMF) USN ~ive.
footsteplf
PLAIN ABOUT HOW HARD
Still in
HE IS ON YOU? "I Un&lt;lelltand
lr you've JOII quesdon or 1
hi~early
my rather. He knows thai I will
axnmcnt, wrile: NASCAR This
20s, the
never be a~ good as I could be
Week Yoor Tum, c/o The Oasaon
third·
Omne, ljOO e. Frlftldin Blvd.,
ir I don't have to work ror it.
Gastonia, N.C. 2805-4
gener11tion
I've never had any reason to ask
star is
him when he is goin&amp; 10 stop
almost a
being hard on me. That's not
shoo-in 10
Earnhardt Sr.
lhe way it works."
capture the
MARITAL STATIJS: Single
DESCRIBE 1liE RELA·
• Dapitc the trauma
Busch Grand Nalional crown in
CAR: No. 3 AC·Delco
TIONSHIP BE'IWEEN YOUR·
rau~u., ,_ the death
his rookie Season, with plans 10 Che•rolel Monte Catlo, owne~
SELF AND YOUR FATIIER.
of driver Bllll!lliolt~
defend the Iitie next year and
by Dale Earnhardt Inc.
"U:t me lhink. My dad is lhe
father, Mike Beam litd
move up to Winston Cup in
MUCH HAS BEEN MADE
kind or person who, just when
the Mdloaaid'a C11W
2000.
OF lliE 'TOUGH LOVE'
provided aubsdlllle drMr
you begin to think he doesn't
"Linle E" has already won
SHOWN YOU BY YOUR
Man tc.oe.. wlth a car
care abuut you, really that's the
seven BGN races.
FATIIER. WHY DO YOU
llat he could drive 10 one
exact moment when be shows
HOMETOWN: Raised in
of the-~ ....
TIIINK HE HAS BEEN SO
you that he does."
impr&lt;al"' perfonolftCel,
Kannapoll~ , N.C., now lives in
HARD ON YOU? "I wouldn't
a sl&gt;th-plaoe ftniah in hb
Mooresville, N.C.
have it any olher way. He has
first Winstoa Cup lllrt.
AGE: 23
been rough on me in my racing

the race so tbe tums doD'I pull it
out A damaged fender can be
puUed out, but not past the tire.
Once the car came back in, the

· ·.~ "

'*'1M!

... Just when you
think (dad) doesn
care about you,
really that's the
exact moment
when he shows
you that he does.

• . '" ;q; · - ....-

WHO'S NOT? Dovet Downs is
Ricky Rudd's best track, but still
he could not produce his lint
top-five finish of the stllQn .

Public Notice

George Ellioll, who died on Sept.

Mall Kl:Metb chauflcurtd
Elliott's No. 94 Taurus in Sunday's
MBNA Gold 400, llnishing sixtb
in his Cup debut.

Elltott's most recent top-five
ftnish OC&lt;:IIrT1&gt;C! at Martii!S\'jlle, Va.,
on Sept. 29, 1997, a span orJO

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ® by Larry Wright

Free Preview

Channel64
Septe~nLer 15-27

Frldly, September 25
7:20PM
9:00 Plot
11:20 Plot
I :40 AM

3 Nir1as (PG)
Oomie Bruc:o (R)
Hoodltrm (R)
Ofiglnal Gangstas (R)

Saturday, September 26
6:40PM

TlteMit!orHUTwo
Faces (PG·t3)
9:00 PM IJni'l8f1al Soldier: Brollter11n
Arms (T8D)
•
t0:45PM UnMni!Solcler
!2:40AM Mitt!
Tme

SUnday, september 'l7
5:15PM

9:00 PM

Alaska(PG)
CopAndA
Half (PG)
Jeny Maguire (R)

11 :30Piot

e-~

7:15PM

CABI.EVISION

ON ADVERTISERS!!
Advertise on this page

Oall992·2155

Dave Harris Ext. 104
For More Information
~=:;:;=::;~===::::::::=::::::::=:-======::=:=.L__.:..:.:..~~=::::.:~..JJ
..'
CO .... UNICATIONI

LAIDSCAPI
DISIINS

•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Cheater, Ohio

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

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

: ADDENDUM TO PART 1,
·
ITEM G (2)
: SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
·COMPANY-MEIGS MINE
· ·'l: NO. 31
.
LEGAL NOTICE
·Southern Ohio Coal
Company, Malge Mint NO.
31, P.O. Box 4VO, Athtnt,
Ohio 45701, haa aubmltted
on adlacenl aru application
to Coal Mining and
RilclamaUon Permit Number
0•0354·6, ' to tlta Ohio
D~partmenl of Natural
Reeourc11, Dlvlelon of
Mine• and Reclamllllon. The
propoatd coal mining and
reclamation operation will
bit conducted In Melga
County, Rutland Townahlp,
Section 38; Melga County,
Sitlem Townehlp, Secllona
•'

CELLULAR PHONES

urday 26111.

AJ.I, Yllnf IIIII -

Be-ln-.

DEADIJNE: 2:00 p.tn.

1111 "" -~~~~~~~
to to ""'· Suncllly
od-·2:00p....
Ftlcloy. . . . . . , . , • 10:00 a.m. illlllnlly.

360" Communications

" WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF
113 W. 2ND ST.

740-985-4422

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addltlona
•New Garage•
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
· Alao Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

()

•
•

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO. ,
Umestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Septic System &amp;
Utllltlea
Estimates

(614) 992·3838

Public Notice

Public Notice

12/18/lln

8,13, and 18. The propottd County Court Houae,
underground mining areaa Second Street, Pomeroy,
encompiiHI 18 acree and Ohio 4571111 lor public
It located on the Wllkeavllle viewing. Written comment•
7 1/2 mlnuta U.S. G. S. and/or roqueel for an
quadrangle map, In tho Informal conference may be
town or Danvtlle and on the aent tot he Dlvlalon of
Rutland 7 1/2 minute Mlnaa and Reclamation,
U.S.O.S. quadrangle map, t 1155 Fountain Square
1. 7 mile a aouth of Court, Building H·3.
Haneavllle, Ohio. The Columbua, Ohio 43224·
application propoata to 1387, within 30 daya of tha
expand the area for full coal laat date or publication of
extraction mining by lhla notice.
longwall mllhoda and room (8) t0,17,24
and plnar ""nlng. _
(10) 1
The application Ia on ftle 4TC
at lht ofllct of
recorder,

POMEROY, OH.

Movrng. Must Sell! 21 Henkle
Ave. Sat 26th Only! 9:00· ? .
Kitchen , Clothes. CB Rad io,

Cheapl

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yenl Salea Mull Be Paid In:
Advanc:e. Deorlllne: 1 :OOpon llle·

WlftRSCAPES PLUS
740-992-4427
33933 Flatwoods Rd.

Racine, OH 45771 (5 Points)

10% Off Flexible &amp; Preformed Pond Uners
20% Off Fountains

Commercial and
Rnldentlal

FfH Elltmetee
No Job too Small

Brian Morrison
(740) 985-3948

(Siock Items Only!)
Sale Ends 10-17·98
Mon.-Sat. 11 :00 A.M .-5:00PM .
Call for Appointments- Closed Wed . &amp; Sun.

Rick Pearson Auction Company.~
lull lime auctioneer, complete.
auction
service . Licensed•
t66,0hlo &amp; Wesl Virginia. 30-t· ·
n:J.57850r304-n:H447 .
:

1/211/111 2 mo. pd.

SUNSET HOME
CONStRUCtiON
New Construction &amp; Remodeling
Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Insured
Free Estimates

Wedemeyer' s Auction Service.:
·

Gallipolo. Ohio 740·379·2720.

Computer Ptrformonce UPf:.ldtl

90

"Your Computer 1Shop"
Custom Bulh Computers, Networks Modems, Hard
Drins, Printers. Upgrade Your PC To a Penllum CPU
and MB Today. Pre-Owned Compulen.
740-992-1135 For A Price Quote!
Frognot Internet Sign-up point ror
•
Meigs and Mason Counll..
111 ·- &lt;J 114 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Locoled In the lnsunncc Plus BuUdlaK

A
..

u.....

ELECTRIC OR
SATELLITE
SERVICE

:Business Is Booming
Pos~ions now open
lor mobile home service
technicians and drivers.
llasic knowledge of con·
struction and plumbing a
plus. Musl be hard working,
honesi. and care aboul the
customer. No
Sunday
work. Starting pay range
$9-$12 per hour. BenelilS
Include Vacation, lnsur·
ance, and 401 K. If lhls
i;ounds like you then·
please apply at or send a
tesume to
Grten Valley Homea, Inc.
· 3V021 Like Logan Rd.
· Logan, OH 43138

New

CARPET
P:LUS

Call

Professional
Floor Installation

992·6320

FREE ESTIMATES

Local Satellite
Provider
Best Electric Pomeroy

7 40-698-9114

or
740·698-7231

COUNTRY CAIIDLE SHOP

"I've got two other appllcanta to ...
·before I malat my final choice." _

30 scents available
• Candle nutklng Sllp(lllls

HeljS W111ted

1oo·s of Items.
OHIO RIVER PLAZA
OH
441-9849

WAYNE'S PLACE
Presents

OJ-HERB
Friday &amp; Saturday .
Sept. 25tl:l &amp; 26th
GOOD TIMES
Presents AMIX Uve
tor Bikers Weekend
· &amp; Toy Run
Fri. &amp; Sat., Sept. 25 &amp; 28

RN,DON
at (304) 273-9385 or
apply In person at
200 S. Rltchl Ave.,
Ravenwood, WV

26164
EOE

Sat10·4

Rt 124 Mlnemille, OH
740.992-4559
"Ask about our candle
parties"

Jacks Roofing
&amp;Construction
Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings .
•Sidings
Free Estimates
Joseph Jacks

740-992·2068

In Memory
In Memory

Of

HENRY"BIII"
DURST
who passed away
Sept. 24, 1992
In the IWHt by lnd

by,
We lhall meet on thlt
l!tlutlful ahore. ·
But untH WI do,

•ltlih
• Yarilly ol Gilts
Tues-Frl1 0·6

my

dear huaband,
I wiN mlu you Ill the

more.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Ta~e the pain out of
painting, and let me
do it for you.
Interior

Buying Hardwood Timber

Clean late Model Cars Or ..
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer:
Smllh Buick Pontiac. 1900 Ea5t ..:
ern Avenue. Gallipolis .
J &amp; 0

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

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
740-985-3813
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:00.4:30 Weekdays
9:00.12:00 Saturday
4121111""

Before 6 p.m .
leave message.
AllerS p.m.
(740) 985-4180.
f:ree Estimates
7~/98

t mo. pd .

J&amp;LSIDING &amp;
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding •Soffit
•Fascia
•Seamlesa Gutter
•Rooftng

•Replacement
Windows
·Stationary Docka
•Blown lnaulatlon
•G1ragea •Decka
24x24 Pole Building
atartlng at $5995
740-992-2n2

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

r.!!'!!!!!

__,.

"Ea1y Orrer tlte P/torte Barth Firtancing"
Air Conditioners As Low Aa 128 a mpnth
Heat Pumps Aa Low Aa •38 a month
*Free 5 .Parts Warranty
*Free Digital Thermottat
*Fret Eltlrnitet

BENNm'S HEATING &amp; (OOUNG

Your Loving Wlfl,

.. .,..,.. QIUJiily Dorsie., COli .... "

QI'I!Ce and flmlly

740-4488418 •1-loo-872..Q87 .

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Low Rates)
1-0n-t Uve, 1-900-329-0859 E11.t.
3957: $399 Per Min. Must Be 18
Yrs. Serv·U 619-645-8434.

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614·992·3470

Slart dating lonighll Have lun
playing lhe Ohio Dating Game, I·
800-AOMANCE, eXlenslon 9015.

WHAT WILL THE
FUTURE BRING?
LOVE, MONEY, TRAVEL?
CALL NOWIIT'S FUN,
IT'S EASY
t-900-7..()-6500 Ext 359S
$3.99 Por Min. 18+

Sei\'·U 619-645-3434

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

30 Announcements
New To You Thrl~ Shoppo

•New HomBs
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

9 West Stimson. Athens

740-592· 1842
Quality clothing and household
Items. $1 .00 bag sale every
Thursday. Mond!IY thru Saturday
9:()().5:30.
Seltlt'a HMiklp o-~~ou

Milo Ridge Rei.

301471-2121
Hardy FaN Mums
$3.00..."' 10 lor $25.00

7/22/tln

PARTS
"H1111

lnventery·~

•Roof Coatings
"VVnyl Skirting
"Water Heaters
"Door/Window•
•Electric/Plumbing
Suppllea
"FFberglsaa &amp; Wood
Stape

DIM:ount Prlc.e

BenneH-Supply
740 441 M11
1331 leffoftl

·SChool Rd,
GaiHpolla, OH

..

Apple G,.,...., WV. 25502

985·4473

MOBILE HOME

Personals

Share Your Thoughts With Girls

HAULING

40

Giveaway

4 Puppies, 8 WMkl okl. 1/2 Rot·
!weller, t/2 German Shtpherel, to
goocl Homo. 740-44e-0874.

Aulo Paris. BuyinO:"'
wreeked or salvaged vehicles ..

304-773-5033.

Wan1ed To Buy: Battle Day".
Dresses Call Tina Alter 5 P.M_·.,
741}669-6403.
Wanted To Buy: Junk Auto's Any.:

Condition. 740·446-9853
Wanted To Buy: Used Mobil&amp;'

Homes Call 740·446·0175 , 304-'
675-5985.

992·9107.

Allo suophono, great lor begin·
..... 304-675-21110 lilt&lt; iipm.
111ac1r wa-. 304-675-3819.

Dalmallon Dog Over I 'lllar Ota
To AGood Homl, 740 ue 3882.
Two Btaullful Mal• Killona, 4
Wtlkl Old, AIIO Mother Cll,
7-1-1316.

F1M F - 1 Flt11 Come. Fltll
s.n.t 740 111 e:Me.
~~ Wltltl, ioltg ltllrtcf.
......... lo IIOOif 2!01
Lincoln Ave. l'olnl Plllll~l.

1.

'

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

''''''''"'''''''''''''''''
-MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES'-

Dollar Tree Stores. The Nations :
largest $1 Price Point Retailer Is •
Currently Seeking MANAGER&amp; ·
For The Gallipolis Area. Excellent ·
Opportunity For Candidates Who ·
Possess Supervisory SkiMs &amp; Pri· ·
or Hardgood /Retail Exp And :
Thrilte In A Fast Paced. Rapidly .·
ExpanlUng Organl7allon . Com..;
petmve Sa-tary Ana E•cellent •
Bentfils Including 401 K arld Prolit ·
Sharing, Dental &amp; Heallh. Send '
RasumeTo:
:
Dollar Tree StorAS. Inc.
Attn: VP Of Human Resources

·.

HunUngton Ma"
P.O. Box 4063
Bart&gt;ours~tte .

wv 25504

EOE MIF

msmmmssuusmuss ·
Acquis itions Fine Jewelry of 91 :
Mm Streel, Mladtepon- part lime/ ·

lull UITII help. Jewelry experience.:
prelerred bul nol required. Ac· .
cepring appllcations Monday ·

lhrough Friday. 10am·2pm. No :
phone calls please .
ADDITIONAL DRIVERS NEED· '
ED IMMEDIATELY ARE YOU :
READY FOR WINTER DRIV· •
ING1
'LOCAL FAMILY
Owno&lt;l Company
'PERSONALIZED Dispalth
. 'MID E~ Heollh &amp; L11o
IOSU"anctl;

Dentaiii'ISUianct

'HOMEW-nda

'Run OH To The SOUTH And
SOUTHWEST
'401K

'Lato Mo&lt;tet ff1ighltlner

•

CONVENTIONALS

6 month old yellow male cat, 740-

"""*'01&amp; ..........

o~

Small Acreages ok . 740-2S8 ..
8172
.

WATCH lOR DErAILS w•llllll• ...

005

Anliques, top prices paid, River~
Jne Antiques , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner. 740 ·992 &lt;

Shares : Also Pine Saw Timber ,

REGISTER NOW $5.00

WICKS

AYOnUO. GaAipotO, 740-446-2842. :·

992-6576.

OCTOBER 2ND &amp; 3RD

(Lime Stone·

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll· .
ver And Gold Coins. Proofsets ..
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold·
Rings , Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc_ Acquisitions Jewelry :
• M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second.

Antiques &amp; clean used lurnlture, ..
will buy one piece or complete:
household. Osby Marlin, 7&lt;40· ..

MIDDLEPORT

8111/Mifn

Wanted to Buy

2526.

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

740·742·3411 .,.,... .....

Auction
and Flea Market

80

each Thursday. October 1 thn(
December 17 except ThanktgiY""
lng . Concenions. Hartford Coml
munlty Building . Auctioneer
11220, Fred &amp;ilivM.

P/8 Contractors, Inc.
•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General

day before the ad Ia to run,
8und11 &amp; Mond11 ldlllon1:OOpm Frldly.

Auction· variety ot new ltemi·

25% Off Birdbaths &amp; Concrete Planters

'

GNC
50% Off Sale

Dover qualifying.

.,........

Yard Sale

Bowling Atley. Kanauga. 8--C, Sat-'

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services

PAUL HILL GREENHOUSES
Letart Falls, Ohio
$2.00 each
740·247-2012

taken il seven I'ICr£ in a row before
he nelled the 33rd pooilion in

70

614·992-5479

HARDY MUMS

jn 1151 plaoe, having taken the ex·
c:hampiort's provisioltal oormlily
rac:rvcd for Waltrip, Who hid

pot Colt 304-675-22110.

Free Eellmatee
Owner: John Dean

QNA &amp; LPN positions
available. Full time &amp;
part-time. Must be
available to work any
shift. If interested you
may contact:
Donette Dugan

starts in Sunday's 400-miler. Earnhard~ in flcl, start«~ his 600tll roce

Lost end Found

LOST: Btacl&lt; I tan houna. cnttdC

Phone 740-992·3987

Ravenswood
Village
Health Center

TWO CELEBRATIONS IN '
ONE; Both Earnhardt and Teny
Labonte made their 600th cateer

17 at the age of 74, was instrumen·
tal in the NASCAR careers of his
three sons: Dan, Ernie and Bill.

2211 .

Found! Pair ol Tehnls shoes on
Al7 South . Colt 740-~176.
'

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yre. exp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured

"Build Your Dream"

.........

not race at Dover Down~ .
The 42-year-old Ford driver, a
four-time Dover winner, was in his
hometown, Dawsonv ille, Ga ., to
mourn the k&gt;ss of his father.

While Shephlrd &amp; Come mixed,
malo pup. 8· 1Owka old. »&lt;-~ ·

80

Remodeling

Mil

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed propoNia for the
"Village of Ruland Haurd
Mitigation
ProjectDemolition of Propertlea"
will be recalvtd at tht
V)llage of Rutland Hazard
Mitigation Pro1ect ofllca,
P.O. Box 420, 337 Main
StrHt, Rutland, Ohio 4$775,
Attn: Boyd A. Ruth, ·until
10:30 a.m. Friday, October
16, 1998 upon which time
bJda will be opened and
reed aloud.
· Speclflcatlona and bid
forme may be aecured from
the above office. A alto
ll)lowlng tor thia work Ia
acheduled for 10:30 a.m.
Friday, October 9, t 991 at
tile above office. (740) 742·

(1161"1~~t

Prom the first rilet of 1967
through the second rilce of
1973. Richard Peuy won 10
Mil rtinsville races oul of a
possible 14 . During his career,
The King scored I~ victories
on the .526- milc oval, or 7.5
pcrct:nt of his c.ueer tota l.
lnt:identi.llly, during lhe 1967·
73 streak, Petty scored nine
victories in a Plymoulh and
the last one in a Dodge.

'.

Sm1ll Chlhulhua Llkt Ftmalt
Dog, 3 Year• Okl Appro•. s tt&gt;aj

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
(No Sunday Calls)

614-742-2138

110

team ror. yes, Dandl Waltrip ....
year. That way Waltrip, lhe thRetime dwnpion, c:ould wann a seal
for Earnhardt Jr.. while atlhe same
lime Wallrip's farewell tour would
be handled under the markeling
direction of lhe Earnhardt
brain trust.

t*l. 304-882·3477.

614-992-7643

Joe N. Sayre

Custom Homes

~11'0 11 '1611 'tt IP'IJIIIOadr( C6ll.. PDI~po~~tj 'I

NASCAR Th is Week
DOVER. J)el.- Bill Ellioll did

Small black mlud bread doQ ,

speyld, hu h1d all 1hol1, 1yr.

t st House On The Left Below

2. Who Will lhe last driver lo win the Cup cnampionship without •aborttrack victory?

By Monte Dutton

PROLONG SUPER LuBRICANTS

-"

of

The rich history of NASCAR

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

992-6611

--------------~----~--I. When was the last time: one make car led every lap?

Bill Elliott misses race to mourn loss of 74-year-old father

Supply

555 Park St.
Middleport

.....

FROM THE ARCHIVES:

Ridenour

949-2168

Reuoneble Rete•

Public Notice

TRIVIA

WHO 'S HOT'?
Jeff Cordon and Mark
Man in have each won
two of 11le last five ~aces .

Chester, Ohio

''

I·

"

viol1t.ioa wu corrected to
NASCAR 's satisfaction."
NASCAR This Week writer
Monte Ouuon sives his opinion:
"Nelson was making a statement
There didn 'I seem lo be much of
a problem, bul be cenainly made
it clear that the point leader and
his team bad better keep it on !he
str1igh1 1nd narrow."

985-4422

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umeltone &amp; Gravel
Septic Syltema
Trailer &amp; Houae Sltea

· Each bid mull ba
tOocomptnled by either a bid
bond In tho amount ol 10%
O:f tha bid
with
surety
3foreNid Village of RUtlancll
cit by certified
ceohlera check, or
credit upon • aohrent
In the amount
than 10% of the bl~,f:":.~:=
In the favor ot the
1/tllage of Rutland.
b.onde
ohall
ba
accompanied by Proof
A:uthorlty of the official
agent algnlng the bond.
(9)20,21,22,23,24,25,27
1.tc

Valley
Lumber&amp;
Supply Co.

156
To pl~~.~~~,~~.~.~~~, !. !~:~

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

0704.

-y

011 THI SOIOIULE
Sept 21
Ckr 4

For More
Information

to...,...

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES

by NASCAR Thts Wttk writt'l' Monte IJ\mon. Lw we-ek's

Jeff Gordon (I)

Ext.104

I too am oeld&gt;r1ting 001 only my
50th year of 18"· but the fact lhal
I'm abo lliliiiCJVin&amp; my &lt;XlWIU)' orr
active duly in the Navy. I hov&lt;: had
the opponuoily 10 alltnd mly one
Winston o.p 1100 (the Primeotar
500 in Adlnta~ IIIII d ,.. 11in
delayed until the next day and I had
bodt 10 my oommand the
morning after !be 1100 WD Nn.l did
not have lime. - . , the race

race, tightening his point race with
Dale Earnhardt Jr., who lini~hed
eighth.

TOP TIN
rankin~

Dave Harris

believe it is one ol the: few remainirw true linlily sporll ...... leftand
ooe witb AU-American an vaJues.

--

Rick Carelli held off Ron
Hornaday to win lhe series debut
11 Gateway lntematiooal Ractway
in Madison, Ill., near St. lo11is.

PAGE
Call992·2156

40

740-246-~ .

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Downspouts

9.

The Dally Sentinel •

- ·. ·. -· - ·-·

ON THIS

Dear NASCAR This Week,
I am aaavid lin of NASCAR and
truly enjoy one of the 111tion's
fasteR powing sports. I rtally

1U Roa Barf.rld . 2.6SO

Malt Kenseth was jusl as dominlnt in winning the 200-lap BGN

Weekly

and Ernie lrvan.
NOTABLE: Martinsville is lbc: okbc ICtive
tJad. on the cirOJit, "avina hotted NASCAR
even11 Iince 1949. Red Byron won lhe firsc
race. .

RECORD: Riel! llictle,
Chevrolet, 92.796 mph, M_,o.e
Sept 26, 1997.
RACE RECORD: Rich 11ict1e, Ooevrolct,
n.m mph. Sept. Tl,tm.
01llER FORMER WINNERS: Joe RUIIIIW
and Mike Skinner have abo """ on the -.ty
ftal oval w:ilh lbe CXJnatle tum1.
NOTABLE: Emic lrvaa wu ruoocr-up a yar
qo. BdJby Hemilton has a pole.

Dale Earnhardt Jr.

•.""'
"'"--2.14'
,._,Heasley, !,.142

1

- ~=-==--

WINSTON CUP SERIES

WHJI:I: Sotunlay, SepL
26.
DEFENDING CHAM·

• - ...

Gutters

,.,.._

ADVERTISE

·-·

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Agricultural Ume,
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

PIOflll

l.ltarl ~,. 3.318

4 Flloll S.•Je~. ),014

I . Elli011 Sidkr, 2.91~

visited victory lane include MOIJIIl Shepherd,
Dave Marcis, Mart M.mn

TRUCK
I. Jd Spqpr,l,l2J

fiOMWTWHI

IAI'MJ

WINNERS: Dam:ll Walamo111

trip is the leader

IDC

Sf&gt;oo!lway

TIIAtilK QUAUFYJNO

t996.

c&gt;

Marliotovillc(Va.)

PION: Rich Blctk

RACE RECORD: Jeff

rnt:

JEFF
WARNER

What 's that saying?
In the South, if you rry it, they
will come.

SERIES
COMINOUP: NAPA
AldoCaJe 250 WHERE:

..

Howard L WrlteHI

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

106 North SecOftd Ave. • Middleport, OH

CIW'I'SNAN TRUCII;

MartloniUe Ia typial or a thousand
Soulhem towna, full of reuonably
priced, simple food propmd well.

-~

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

DLEPORT.

AUIOSJ HOME COOICIIIG

Business Services

Yau'WQaiQ! liM i .. W.'WGaiAIWI 3 S.

THE WINSTON CUP CIRCUIT

Q

a

oun~

!ill • aiC ~

Guaranteed Service

-•
I

~

c

Thursday,,September 24, 199~_

"'-~'-""
0~

Muffler&amp; TailPipe

888 Pinecrest Drive

1111&amp;

992-2198

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Requirements : Age 23, Cla11 A '
COL And Good Driving Record. "';
Pltllt Call Toll Free 1-888·790-

0008.
ADOITIONAL OWNEA OP!IIA·

10RS NEEDED IMIIEDIATELY
'local Family Ownad ~

,_,._lltl!la1cll

"Up To $1 .00 "*- l""*dng
A&lt;:cellorlll ~)

-..ornt Wttl&amp;ndl

'Run From CJH

Ton. Sault

And'bt

II

"l'llrmllll'!owldlcl ~No

a..

Carol,....

.

"lltllll'lld.
•
'Fuel
Roqulrelnenll: Ape n . Cilia A •
COL And GooG ~ "-"1 '
PleiN C.M 'lbll l'rlt t .....,_; :
0001, Alk

For GemM.

•

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1~,

Thursday, September 24,

~~y. SeJ?fember24, 1998
t
. .
, -

Pomeroy •lllddlepor".. Ohio

a

~OOP

ACA088

FARf.1 O,UPPLIES
&amp; LIV E'=&gt; TOCK

Computer UHrt Needec:l. Work
j)wn Hn. S20k -1751&lt; !Yr. 1-800-

Southeastern Business Colteoe.
Spring Valley Plaza . 7:to-••&amp;·
•367. 1-800·214·0452, Accredit·
od Mornt&gt;er, ACICS Reg t~-05 -

348-7186 Exl. 1113. www.amp-

12748

l!eautilul Now Two S(ory Colonial
3 Bedroom. 2 112 Balhs. LR. FR.

180 Wanted To Do

Dining Room With Hardwood
Floors. Oak Trim Fireplace , 1 112
Car Garage, Appraisal Gu1ater

lnc.com
Coametologiat Wanted. Full 6
Part-Time, Hourly Versua COm·
mi11ton. Ptld Vacation•. Other

Furniture repak', refinish and rn-

-Sam's.

toration , also custom ordarl. Ohio

Ofto&lt;ed.
740-446-7217.

Oetec:Uve · Private Investigator
Trlli-1. Good Wageo. 614-523·
11490.

Valley Refinishing Shop, larry
f'Nipo, 740-992~576 .

Georges Portable Sawmill. don1
haul your logs 1o the mill ju51 call
304-675-1957
Have 2 Openings Fat- 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Eldertv Of Handicapped. 740-441·1536.

ULTRASOUND TECH •• Requirements: Registered Olagno&amp;·
11c Meclleal Sooograpl¥ Gertlllea·
tiorl, AW. Approwd RadloJogK:al
Tocllnology Training. And Abillly
To Operale Ultrasound Equip·

"*"

Quality care lot your klved ones.
certifted home health aide. references available. call Kathy. 740-

992-5t65.
Will Babysit in my HOml , Any
Hours . Bidwell School District ,

C81740-388-9889.
Will do babysitting ln. my home

IIRJ TECH -· Requirements :

ARRT Ctr1WICa1ion In Radiology
And MAl, AMA Approved Ra ·

-

dlological Technology Training ,

Ability To Operate IIRI Equip·

Only Qualified Appllcanll Need
Apply To Holzer Clinic ; Human

Monday thru Friday, 740·6982183.
Will haul junk or crash away. $351

J&gt;Od&lt;t4&gt; load. 30H75-5035.
WUJ Woflt For $4 .00 !Hour, 740·

367-()140.

Relations Department ; 90 Jack·

oon Pille: Galllpollo. Ohio 45631 ·
1562: Fax To 740·446·5532: Or
Coli 740-446·5189. Equal Oppor·
tunily

En'cllo¥or-

ttELP - . . Eq~tov••'
.,...,.,., ollloinl-

ttilg-AI f'lllitions.

DIMirl&amp;~t

-s-au.

Home Heallh Agency Offering
Pan· Time &amp;' Temporary Part· Time

Positions. t.tay Be Permanent To
CNA'I &amp; HHA's, llany Exlras
W1111 Full· Tlrna Employmanr. Only

FINANC IAL

Business
Opportunity

210

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do busi ·
ness with people you know. and
NOT to send money throuoh the
mail until you have invesHgated

thO-ng.

Experienced Persona Need Ap-

ply. IIUST Be Avoitable For
- d l &amp; Holiday Hours. May
Ptck·Up ApplicaUon "' 762 Sec·
ond A.venue. Gallipolis. OH Mon-

day Thru Friday From 8 -5 P.M.
Mttgl COunly Coli 740-992·7900,
Health Management Nursing

Sorvtceslnc. EOE.
Housekeeper ·uve In • fOf' Prac·

dslng Columbus Anornoy. Goner·
al Houaehold Duties Plus Some

Cote, Soma Orlving. Room. Board
and Salaty. 614-267-5354.
Immediate openings for 4 peopJe
to do tes11ng in the surrounding
area . Full training provided tor
outgoing enthusiastic men I
women. Excellent earnings S36K·
54K . Management posllions

IYillable. don1 diaquaJily youroaH.
For more information on thit carHr opportunity, catl bttween 1O-

itn-2pm lor personal Interview. 1·
188·992·5987 or 740-992-4472.
Ask for Mr. Brown , dependable

"""' reQUired .
LPN's To Work PAN Please Call

All real eSlate advertiSing in
tilts newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Ac1
of 1968 wt1ich makes it illegal
to advertise ·any preference.
hmitatton Of discrimination
based on race. color. religion.
sex familial status or national
ongin. Of any intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or discnmination."
This newspaper witii'IOI
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real estate
which is in violalion of tne
law. Our readers are herebymtormed that au dwellings
advertised in ·this newspaper
are available on an equal
opponun1ty basis

Modi Home Health Agency. 740·
441·1779.

WllllngToWal&lt;. 740-388-9616.

Now Accepting Applications For
STNA. Clasaes . Transportallon
Provided To And From Training
Site. Lunch Provided Daily. Earn
Pay WhiOI Anendlng Class. Inter·

estad Appllcan1o Apply In Parson
Monday -Friday 8:00 A.M. -4:30
P.M. Contact Tammy Price , LPN

Or Mary Sheets. AN At 740·446·
7150.
Overbrook Center , 333 Page
Street. Middleport has lull time
STNA positions available for all
shifll. Anyone interested please

sto9 by and fil ou1 an application.
Part time Materials HaMler
ResponsibiliUes include (and are
not limited IO) unloading freight
trucks . verifying materials re ·
calved, &amp;locking ol materials, re·
Ofderlng , picking and issuing ma·
ttrltil and preparation ol pap8r·
work associated wlrh these lunc Uons. Computer knowledge Is re·
quired . Must be available on
short notice and be available to
work different shills and wee ·
kends . Location of warehouses
art near Wilkesville and Albany,

01\lo
An Equal Opporlunity E""loyer

Send resume to:
SouJtem 01110 COOl COmpany
Human Resources Department

P.O. Box 490
AthenS. 01\lo 45701
Plrt time RN needed In Pomerov
1r11 lor Home Heallh . Day shllt
houra wlrh only occasional weetlend work . Competitive wages .
App~ In person o n~

at 1400 Co-

legate Drtvt, Marlena on Monday,
September 28th between the
hours ol 9a-3pm or Wednesday,

TAXES S30f/YR.

t·-273-:!MO
RED BRICK

·A Little Counuy In Town·- 1ar11e
restored Victoria n home situated
on 12 acres . Village or Middle port. Secluded and private, close
to schools and churches . Private
brick circular drive. brick pat.lo.
modern kitchen, family room w/
fireplace, 3· 4 bedrooms , two
baths, large formal LA and DR,
large foyer. tour original stained
glass windows . 30 minutes from
Athens, t5·20 minutes from Gampolis . For appointment call 740-

992·5696.
2 Bedroom Hous.e And 2 Apart·
ments, Bolh Rented . 13 Pine
Street, Gallipolis, Call 740· 446 ·

RANCH

Style

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

304·675-2924.
3br. 2-bath home, new roof. vinyl
siding &amp; &amp;hudderJ , so lid oak
kitchen newly remodeled . dish·
washer. vtnted·mlcrowave , large
family-room. wood-stove . living
room wlfire -plaee . ce ntral/air.
large lanced lot . Mu st See!

$.77,000. 304-675-6258.
4br house. lenced yard. 1 block
from schOols. new lurn ace &amp;
central air. recently replaced root .
new 200amp breaker bo•. recently remodeled bathroom. lull

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1500 Down on any t4x70 in
stoell., limited number. free deliv·
ery. Calll-60().$1~777

$999 Down on any 98 mode l
DoutMf!lwide in stock . Free Deliv-

383-91162.

2217.
14 170 3BA, $099 Down &amp; ONLY
S179 per mo. ffee air &amp; free skin-

lng. 1·888-926-3426.
t4l&lt;SO 38R, make 111 &amp; last pay·
mom &amp; move in. 304-755-5566.
197 1 Hillcresl, 12J~:60 , two bed·
rooms, washer. dryer. stove &amp; refrigerator. air. underpinning,

14500. 740-992·5039

Price reduced· "1990 Sp1uce
Ridge 14x70 mobile nome, very
goOd condition, 2 bedrooms. 1 &amp;
112 baths. washer &amp; dryer, stove.
refrigerator. certral air. 8x8 out·
&amp;ide buildln!l. immediate posses·
sian, 740-992-6582.

p 11111nt Valley Hospital is currently accepting resumes lor a

Social Wdrtfr. Bachelors degree
kt SOC..! Work or a four year de·
grH In Heallh Care Admlnl&amp;tra·

tlon. A minimum ol two years ••·
porllnCIIn on ..,.,. care semng.
Must be able to transfer patient
from acute cart l nlo the moat

Rock,

Calling Fans , Pant ry .
Southw~&amp;tern School. Appoint·

manto. 740-379-9887.
In Middleport- newly remodeled.
siding, root, windows. kitchen ,
electric neat pump, fenced In
yard. three bedroom, bath and

modlcolly opproprlott and coat
olllclont setting . lluat have
tcnowfedge of medical termlnoto-

hall, 159.000 negotlabta, 740-992·
3465.

and chart review. Send re-

Newly Rorf\Odtad Country Home.
OIOirs quiet country living on a

=~mo 10 Poroonnol o1 PJouont

Vollty HOopl..l, 2520 VOlley Dr.,
Pt. Plt-n1 wv 25!1e0. "' fu to

private 2 1/2 acre lot with local
schools and doWntown shopping

SocrotiiY WoniH: Mollo'o Uoed

ly pleating amenities Including
new kitchen , Hardwood floora, 2

304-f?W447.NJEOIE.

Cora . Coli For Appt. bltweon

101m..fpm. 304.f7&amp;-e1'53.
Wonted· oomeono to wort In

ldull fiiOO.IP llolne. . . 01 nlgNI.

lest titan 10 minutes away. Fomillroplocu, lomllylhomo olllco
space. 3·4 bedrooms, 2 112
batht, many extras! IN,OOO.OO
call 740-446-8782 or 740 -448·
4514

U1illties Paid, 94 Locust. $260/ wr~er, groatlng card . - . adu·
callonal &amp; fun game" to nu·
Mo.• P1ul Oeposi1. 740-446-1340.
merous to mention .

Furnished Apt:. Near Library, Employed Person Share Apartment
Wllh A Teacher Gospel Singer.

Gracioul living. 1 1nd 2 be«oom
apartments at Village Manor and
Rtveralde Apartments In Mtddle port From $249· $373. Call 740992·5064 . Equal Housing Oppor·

9621
New 1998 14x70 three b911room,
Includes 6 months FREE lot rant
Includes skirting, deluxe steps
and setup . Only St87 .08 per
month with $1075 down . Call 1New 1998 3 Bedroom , 2 bath,
$998/Down . $189 per month. Includes Delivery &amp; Set-Up. Can 1-

NEW BANK REPO'SI
ONLY 3 Left/ Still under warranly.
Only At

01kwwod Homes

N~ro. WV.

304-755-5885.
New Bank Aepos-Onfy 2 Lelt ,
Never Lived ln. Call 1-800·948·

5678.
New Doublewlde 38R, 2 bath
$1.325 Down &amp; $205 per mo. 1·

888·929·3426.
Rt. 35 Stave Branch Rd. Frazier's
Bollom , Box 955 Evergreen Ad. 1
acre land &amp; mob ile home .

House trailer on Broad Run Rd . 2
Miles from Sporn Plant. 3br, 1· 112
baths. 2 a&lt;XJed on rooms, lot, garaoe. 2 AIC 's, household items.

$17.000. 304-882·3426
We Finance Land &amp; Home With
As little As SSOO Down. 1·606-

928·3426.
Make 2 Payments . Move ln. No
Payments Aller 4 Years! 304·

736-7295.

330 Farms for Sale
50 Acre Farm. Hall· lenced . 3
Year Old 2 Story House, 3 Bed·
rooms, 2 Full Baths, LA . Kitchen.
Laundry Room, Walk In Closet,
Full Front Porch , Cape Cod Look .
Swimmino Pool. Black Top Drive-

way, 250FT Ring lor Horsas /Cal·
lie. 32FTX 60FTBarn $210,000.00
74()..367-0219

340

Business and
Buildings

Commerciai ·Oitlce or Retail , 87

Mill St. Middleport. 1,450 Sq Ft

2 Bedroom Housa. $350/Mo .• Deposll , No Pets , 740·••&amp;·4313.
74Q-446.0879.
2 bedroom houae. stove , 'refrigerator, washer and dryer fur·
nished, $300 /month with a $200
securil)' deposh. available Octob·
er 1st, 740·742·295-4.
• Room House 52 Olive Street.

740-446-3945
S•,ooo l oca l Gov 't. 6 Bank
Aepo's Call 1-800-522-2730 . X

1709.
Clean two bedroom houl8 In

Po-

meroy, $350 plus deposit, HUD
accepted. will consider contract
for purchase . no pets. 740-698 ·

7244
Economical &amp; nice 2br. deposil

required, no pets. 30H75-5162.

740-245-9633.
New House For Rent : Near Rio
Grande. 2 Bedrooms . Gas Electric Heat, 1 Year lease, S350/Mo.
7~·9032, Cel&lt;Jiar.

Two bedroom, free gas and water,
full basement . air, 3 miles out of

Portland. $400.740-643-5129.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
12x60 Mobile Home . $300/Mo ..
Deposit Required , References, No
Pets, 7-40-446-0885.

Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment ,

740-446-0390.

North Third Avo. MlddOiport, OH.
2br unfurnished apt. deposit &amp;
relererte81. -882·2566.

Fnendly Ridge. 8.5 Acres $7 ,500,
Publ iC Water. Back on The Market 10 Acru . Teens Run Ad .,
$12 000

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouae
Apartments $295/Mo. , 740-448·

AERATION MOTORS
Now accepting appUcaUons 2b+'.
carpeted, appliances furnished. Repaired. Now &amp; Ralluitt In Stodt.
Iota of closet space, central air, C8ll Ron Evans. 1·600-537-9528.
e$ectric heat Laundromal &amp; play·
ground on alta. Manaoer &amp; mainKimball Organ, Pedals On Floor.

Has Guitar. Drums Elc. Available.

Housing Opportunlly. Contacl
Andrea VanMe1er 304·682-3718

Bought New At Brunicardl's , EJI:·
celtent Shape! $1 ,200, 740·446-

10am.·2pm. MDn-Fri. or atop by.
located at the corner of 6th &amp;

Klndlewood Stove For aala, In·

94n.

One bedroom apartmAnt in Mkj.
McDonald's Beanie Babiea. 96 &amp;
dleport. no pets, references and .
98. Unwrapp&amp;d McDonald's toYS.
&lt;lepoSil requrod. 740-992·5633.
45-rpm records . Call 304·662-

7906 9am-5pm.
Twin Riwrs Tower now accepting

applicallono lor 1br. HUO subsld·
ized apt. fer elderly and handi·
capped. EOH 304~75·6679 .

Furnished
Roome

450

Circle Motel Lowest Rates In
Town1 Newty AamodeiAd , HBO,
Clnemax, .S howllme &amp; Disney.

3339 alter Spm.
Sam Somerville's Original Army

camounage beSide ol SandyviiOI
Post Office. Fri-Sat &amp; Sun 12Noon-Spm. Othef Oays-Hra. Call

-273-5655.
Sofa and loVeseat, southwestern
colors and design&amp;, ucellent

ooodillon. $365, 740-98!!-3685.
Super Single Water Bed With
BookcaJe Headboard, New Mat-tress &amp; Heater. Comfort Sheeta &amp;
Mattreu Cover Included, $150,

740-245-57i6:

Wealtly Ratts, Or Monthly Rates.

There lo A Colle&lt;tors Closet The

Construction Workers Welcome

Corner Trlird Avenue And Court
Street, (Gallipolis) Antiques. Mod·

740-441·5696. 740.441 ·5167.

460 Space for Rent

ern ClOthes. Jewelry, Arts , Crafis.
Visit and Check Out The Bargains!

Mobile home tile available btt·
Ween Athena and Pr. .nmoy, call

446-7537.

2 &amp; 3 Bedroom Mobile Home's.
CA, Stove. Refrigerator. Water &amp;
Trash In cluded, No Pets, Must
Have References, $300/Mo ., &amp;

$350/Mo., Plue Deposit. Near
N.G.H.S. 740-368-9688.
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, No
Pets, 1225/Mo.. Includes Water,
S100 Deposit, Reference Re ·
Qulred, 740-446-3617
2 Bedroom Trailer On Addison
Pik e. S220/Mo .• Includes Water
$100 Deposit, No Pets, 740-446-

740-365-4367.

Treadmill. Litestyler 8 blended

Aent 6011.90 trailer lot In Henderson, WV. 304-67S.3216.

Stride Like Now Condition S¥0
Firm: Weight OlltrlbuUng Trailllr
Hitch With 1,000 lbs. Bars 1100,
Call A"!!lma 740-446·8788.
'

Trailer space In Middleport, 740·

992-3194.

MERCHANDISE

510

Houeehold
Goods

Appliances:

Reconditioned

1637, 740-446-3437.

Washers, Dryers , Ranges, Refrt·
gralors . go Day Guarantee!

2 Bedroom Trailers , In Small
Trailer Park , Deposit &amp; References Required, No Pets 740·446·

French City Maylag , 740-446·
7795.

1104

Extra Long Sola. Excellent S,_,
$125, 740·446-2316.

2 Bedrooms W -W Carpel Nalu·

ral Gas Heat. In Gallipolis. 740·
446·2003, 740-446-1409.
28A Trailer , Aelerences &amp; De·
posit, Locust Road . Point Pleas ant. On Right. 304·675·1076.
Lovely 2 Bedroo'm. with Fireplace .
Aio Grande Area . $450.00 month

Plus Doposn. 706-864·3493.

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. lurnished and unfurnished, security
deposit required . no pel&amp; , 740·

992·2218.
1 .Bedroom Apartment Across

From Wai·Mart. $300/Mo .. $300
Deposll . Utllilies Paid. 140·245·
5893

GOOD

USED APPLIANCES

washers. dryers. refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Appliances , 76
VIne Street. Call 740·446· 7398 .

1-888·618·0128.

Sporting
Goods

520

Antiques

530

Buy or sell . River ine AntiQues .
1124 E. Main Street, on At. 124.
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. 10 :00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m.. Sunday 1:00 to

Waterline Special: 3/4 200 PSI
121 .9S Per 100: t' 200 PSI
$37 .00 Per 1OO; Ail Brass Com·
ptesslon Fittings In Stock

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson. Ohio. 1-800·537-952!1

Building :·:
Supplies ·

550

A Groo~m' St'lop -Pel Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Bath . Don

Now Open Sundays t -.4. Mon·5at
Shop,
11·6. Floh Tank &amp;

14 HP riding mower, good oondl·
tion , 2 112 years old , $500, 1110·

ant 304-675-2063.

-----:-----:--:-:t br apt. in Mason, stove &amp; refr)O·
erato r &amp; utilities furnished, AJC .
laundry room, ceiling tans &amp; gar·
bage disposal, very nice , no

2 Bedroom Apartment• Fur·
nlstled, Air Conditioning, In Galli·

Katbaugh Rd . • 5 Acre Lots polls. Rtleroncas a Deposit Ro·
lt4,000Ea. NEMeJgsCo., Oyes- q lad 7404411519 Loava
ville. Vary Ramoto 11 + Acres
ur ·
·
•
$10.500. Rutland, Whltta Hll Rd.. _Me.:. uage;.:.: :. · -----Jull 011 Now 'Lima. 18 Acres 2 BR. 1112 Balttl, LA, DR, Central
$14,000 Or 9 Acru $12,000 . Air, Fully Ca rpatod, 311 Third
Darwlle. Briar Ridge + GonAds., · 1~,,.,.... Gllllpollo , 740-446-9364
7 Acres With Nice Pond S12,000
Or 8 Acrto $13,000, Or On SA
325. Nice Wooded 17 Acres
$18,000. CllyW.....

Shoots . 373 Georoes Creek Rd .
740-446-0231 .
•

.e••

2• 13 Jacltaon Ave . Point Pll!l&amp;l·

'

992-8833.

15ttp. $1,350. 304-895-3013.
3 Piece Bedroom Suite Dr11ser,
Bookcase. Headboard. Standard

Size Bad. Excellent Shapal 740441!-1712AIIIr 5.
3 Ploce Sectional, Collet Tobie.
End Table, 01111 Tops. Good
Condtionl740-448-e189.

3 SHAMA I'WAINJICK£TS

FOR 1/ALEI
At The Cl1ar1tslon CMc Cortlor
Wednesday, ~ 2t, 1999
It 7:30 P.ll,
S100 Por T1cl&lt;ot OR

" 'lllu Tallo AI 3 Tlt:b1l -

-::-:o.:-"Tldilt.'

25123 304-895-3674.

apace

250hra .

123.500. 1a4630 55hp . 2wd
same specs as above $18,500
h3930 45hp. 2wt1 8•2 trans. 1
valve, 230hts. 114,900. Keeter's
Service Cent11 St. Rt. 87 Point

Pleasant &amp; Ripley Rd. 304·885·
3874.
T030 Ftrguson Trac1or &amp; Equip·
..... 740-251H1629.

Your Area John Oeere Dealer
For Residential And Commercial

Lawn Equipment Compac1 Utility
Tractora FrDm 20 To 39 HP. All
Sizes 01 .. WD And 2 WD Farm
Tractors, Hay Equipment, John

Deere Skid Steer Loaders. Chad&lt;
Wiih Ua About Financing On
lawn Tractors And low Rate Fi-

nancing On New And Used
Equipment Carmlchallt'a farm I
Lawn Gallipolia, OH 740·4•8·

2412 1-600-594-1111.

Uvestock

2 Nice Stack Angus Heifers,
Weighino Appro• . 400 lbt. Each.
$450 For Both. 740-446--11053.
French Alpine Goat, Doe, 2 Years

·Old Mii&lt;Jng, 740-992·T779.
Saturday September 26, 1 P.M.

1993 Chevy 4X4 Z 71. Stapsldo,
Loaded, 350. 5 Speed. Sharp.
C.O. Changef,740-245-5474, 740-

massage.

245-90119. -

.

t997 Green 350 XLT 4 Doors; 1 :
Ton, Power Stroke , $2,750. 740- . •

388-8619.

~

-......-

1980 ·1990 Trucb 1100 ·1500

1966 Toyota 4x4 4 Cytlnditr·, •
12.700: Range King Pro Garoan •
Tractor tO HP $1,800,

740.........._ ~

I

1993 Ford Aeroatar XL, 4.0 liter,
99,000 miles. runs YOt'f good. -

I

740

I

!

1978

I

'

Motorcycles
Ha~ay

Davkloon Spoft11ar

XLH-1 000. Lots ol chrome &amp;new

parts. $3.600

oBo. 304-882-388t

or 304-682·2524.

1986 Honda 200-SX •-wheAIIr. ~
t 4ft. Flat-bollom boat w/swlvet
seats &amp; tralter. Small ullltty trailer. 3)4-675-2414 ·
t990 Yamaha RT 180 OWtbike, 2.
Stroke Many New Parts, $700, •
740-44 1- 1716·

TRANSPORTATION

=

CondiUon! $2,000. 7~

~:::::~-·....,

f

or

Sal

8

1996 SEA· DOO Jet Ski SPI

89 .

Summers not overt Kawaaalri . ·

STS Jtt ski. still under wanan,Y.
three seater, 83 horsepower,
bought new July of '97, three
matching Kawasaki ski vests a~

'88 Thunderbird, sunroof, runa
good, $2000 DBO. 740·992·9190.

Ford 4dr Sedan, good
shape. 304·675-2035 Leave

1980 · 1980 HONDA CARS 1100
·$500 Pollee Impounds, All
Makos Available. Call 1-600-S22·
2730 EJCI. 4420.
1982 Cutlaso Supreme. 2 D. 260
V6 . Good Condition . $1.500 .00
Firm 740-992-4566.
1982 Mercury Grand Marquis,
Aunt, Orlvts And Looks Great!

20•5, will consider trade for a .
good pontoon boat.

==~--:---;..

760

Auto Parts &amp;

$2.000NaQ.• 740-441-()439.

740-446·7537.
1986 Chevy Chevene $250. 30-4·
675 · 7112 Can be seen at •2a

C. Very Good Condition, Approx.

30 MP Gallon. Aoklng $1,495.
740-245-5597.
11188 Font Aarostar, I Pusengar
(!ood Condlllon, Ggoct
Tlr1•• 135.000 Mllal, $:!,000. 740441-1407.
"11~1 ·von,

1868 Ford Tempo, $1100: 1989
Cftoyy s-t0:.$850: 740-742-2;157.
1989 Pontiac 6000 wfalr, auto,

61.000 miles. nlct car. 304·87~·
3324.

Pe::--:~:-ro_rnance::-! :

'35"'1:-C"I:-ev-e-:-la-n-:d-:-H::-Ig-:ft-:
,
__
Engine Parts. G.T. 390 High Per· :
forma nee Engine Complete

Race Roady! 740-44e-3912.

wheel drive, ~spd, stereo, selling
lor pay·o~ $3.000. can alter Spm.

Chevy &amp; Ford truck becls frQm,
down south. also front end lor ..

67!!-3324.

Mu•lcal
Instruments

SERVICE S

---:-:----..
810
Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG
Unconditional lifetime guarantu.
Local references furnished . Ea· .

Jabtlshecl 1975. can 24 Hrs. (740)
441-0870. 1·800·267-0576. Rogers Wattrprooftng.
•. 1

Appliance Parts And SerYico: ..... ·
Name Branda Over 25 Yoars

E•-·:

French Clly llaytag, 740-448·

n95.

Big lll\ler Pointing. Painting tntorlor &amp; ExteriOr, No Job Too Big Or
Smalll740-446-0670.

740-e!IN023.
'•

..

General

Homo

Main·

Fullet E brealcar boittl, all. Allo chactt·
lng hooting systoma. 304-6740126.

wh~o wibtack Hops, good tlru,

Proloulonal. 20yro ..porlonco

now battery, Will kapt. SV.500

wl1h ell maoonory, brlcil, blocl&lt; ·a
stone. Also roOm addiUona, ga• .

rages, etc. FrH olllmotos.

very good cond , S8k·mllu.
$8,700. 30W7!H263.
5 Plect Drum ~~ Wl1h 2 Cym- 1997 Rod Ponllac Sunllro. oulo,
,:bo:;":·.:'1..:56;::.;,7..:.~;,....:..:,73;,.7.;.5_.- - - 1 sun-rool, om·lm s1aroo, 35,000
S 5 Y11 Ot• mllu 2 Burgundy bucket oeats
Bundy
II Alto "
"
• 1111 1VI7 Ford von. llkt now.
Good Condl1ionll400,
740--256·
5778.
$!10oa. 304-f71!-3734.

ITHURSDAY

·

'140-446-6854.

570

tT..

1991 5th Whlel Dutchman c1..; •
sic, Like Ntwl 740 · 446 ·t 675. ~
n.... 740-446-8127 .....,,.
_,.:
• ' •...,.
·,

House wtng, light llxturea,

1184 Nl11an Ahlma wfalr, auto,
pw, pl. sun-rool. rodlo w/ca.._,

.....
:,,.....,._
7---

............."

......

8tlort
4 Tlglr Wooda'

7 e

~~.­
• 8uld

I

s7

I

Akl~ 111~

10-

n3-i55Q.

304·

840 Electrical and

RlfriQemlon
RoaldortllitJ or oornrnomat

wtna.· '

or ropolre. lloltlr lilconsad oloclrlclan. Rtdl~ou~ ;
Eleei~COI, WV000306, 304..7~·
1788.

'II

II PI

EI

REPG

BUDEPYDK

XI!JIIIYJK
EAFDXB

IIJ

lPYXD

y K

U II K

TYGD

BUD

RUYXU

E J

IIIW

OIIPIDT

BUill

ADDJ

T DI B

LPESKB

.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The sparrows are preparing lor winter. dressed m
~ coalund singing a cheeflut eong:- Charlet Kurah
.

'::~:t~'

'O@\\.clllA-l££ifS•

------ -

0

lAIII

C&amp;AY I. POllAN

of 1ho
four ocramblod words beRoor-

I

1oJ

....

Ionero

·tow tv fOr-m fiiur simple words.

REGOWR

I

• r:~~:~~~~~~RES 11r r 1 15I' I' I'
I ~~~tRM&amp;lf FORI I I II I I I I

· your

today and you .

to complete a
out.
I~~!:~~~~~~~~!!!!!~;!~;~~dtinances.
make important
advances
with
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
~
If you get
a powerful
Be aware of the potenlial reward'
A"TBO-ORAPB
Ul'l)e aboul something. don't blow il
and work will go smoothly 1oday.
off as a whim.
. Friday. Seplember 25. 199R
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dcc. Peei away lhc: first layer and even 1he
21)
l1lO!tl arouous las~s will Qppellr sim·
Two people in your social circ!e
Your gifl of persua.ion will dou· pie.
may play ~ instrumenl~l role '"· ble today. Even those who wen:
GEMINI (May 21-June 20
helping you Improve certain areas of n:luclanllo yield in lhe pa.'t will suc) Business and pleasure do not
your life. Be open 10 suggeslions and .:umb 10 your many charms.
always make be!illhe bedfellows. but
all those involved will be slrengthCAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) they will go hand·in·hand today for
eiic:d in the process.
Have contidt:nce in you~lf and lhe the drafting of on importanl agree·
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 231 Don
pn)bability of defeal will be slim
I.
'I be afmid 10 assert yourself today. Challen~cs will seek you oul menCANCER
(June 21-July 22)
today. Somelimes il takes bolder but you haVe no need 10 worry.
Since
your
creative cycle is
methods to acco1nplish your aims.
inten.~ today. use this time to beauGetli
·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
tify your sutTOUndings. ~ minor
.Jump on life by understanding the
If you help someoae achieve a changes will be in it for the lotlg halll.
influences lhat govern you
gOld. you will also prollpC1' from the
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
In the . coming year. Send lbe go&lt;Xi deed. Something you've been
Go ilhead and take that calculillrequired refund fonn and for your hoping for can become a reality.
ed risk today to improve your po5i·
Astro-Graph predictions by
PISCES (feb. 20-Man:h 20)
lion in life. If you believe the odds arc
· mailing S2 to Asuo-Grnph, c/o -·
Yw will do quile well in a jui111 in yoilr favor. sUGCCU will follow.
lllis. newspaper, P.O. Box 1758. .
venture today. Shine by pulliiiJ in . VIROO (AUJ. 23-Sept. 22) .
Mum1y Hill Station. New York, your two cents.
.
Do whalcycr It lakes to fJIIIhcr
NY: IOI~. Be sure to state your
ARIES (MIIR:h 21-April 19)'
rD1!f peuolllll lnla
IOday.liWJIJI ·
Zodiac sign.
You may linelly receive the'*' the rip ~lnd ofdaenniNIIion. you'U •
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
es.wycooperllion you've been lleek: inlte peM llrides in.~r life.

=

'

I
I

Nibble • Ripen - Swamp - Poorly • PROBLEMS
To master your late you should contemplate your
powers instead of your PROBLEMS.

TIIROWSA
STICK,ANO
I CHASE

8015

1892 Nluan Santra 104,000

080. :JO.W82.322•.

3CDIIIIFI

SCIAM-liTS ANSWERS

SOMEONE

Gas Furnace. Litle New Condition,
Call liolore 4:00 PM 740·4~6·

MIIea, Low Alder, Custom Wheels

Reg. female - · 1250; Chinese
pug, 175; 740-88241110.

lHAT 6AME
WIIEKE

Coleman Pop Up Camper,

carpentry, doors, windows, balhl, •
rnooM ltoma rapalr and mont. For
lrH estlmale call Chat, 740-992·
6323.
•· •

1994 Comoro Z·28 5.7L. auto.

I LIKE

Now gao tenks &amp; body parts. 0 &amp;
·A Auto ," Ripley. WV. 304-37.2·
3933 or 1·600-27H329.

1992 Mllsublohl Nice Car. $:!,200,
OBO; 1967 Plymouth Voyager
Mini van Nlce ·van $1,800, OBO
740-44Hl584.

srolem" 650 Secord AYI . GaNI·

2 Teltae....,.

4

"

Large AKC Siberian Husky Pup-

potll. 740-446-1526,

1 Panlllla

»ACt ...

As an example. on lllis deal. whal
is lhe correcl d.:darer-play in four
spades after West ha.' led a low dia·
mond ID his panner"s king'!
Perhaps you lhink thai North
should have raised only lo lhree
spades. However. when you know of
allea." a nine&lt;anllil, always be happy 10 overbid a lillie. Nine lnlmps are
much beuer than eight. The exira
1rump usually ~enemies al lea.•l one
more trick in llle play. (Ten trumps
are better than nine, bu1 noc by nearly a.' m~~~:h as nine are beuer than
eight.) Also. lhe good live-card SUtl.
two kings and an ace all make lhal
hand worth the jump to galllt!.
A heart start would surely have
ki lied the contract. Bul Wesl had an
understandable aversion to leading
fmm a jack. And lhe diamond lead
wuuld have been successful if Soulh
had won lhe first trick. Afler Soulh
draws lrumps and lakes the losing
club finesse, East returns a low dia·
mond 10 West's queen. Then a heart
1hrnugh dummy's king gives lhe
defenders four tricks.
_
However. Soulh foresaw this pos·
sibilily. So, he ducked the tirst Irick.
Now West couldn't gel on lead for the
heart switch. Soulll won !he diamond
n:tum. drew trumps. and took lhe
club tinesse. leaving Ea.~l willl no bel·
1er defense lhan 10 cash lhe heart ace
lo stop lhe overtrick.
.
Try to accommodale badly placed
honors.

PEANUTS

New Auto Body Parts &amp; Accll·
&amp;orles lor all types ol vahlclll .
Transformers Auto Pans . 30• ·

C&amp;C

pointment. •utttl Waeh B•thlng

- :~~·rca

; 11 AIICM (poll.)
12-KMI

AJ

t98S Chevy. 304·576-2835.

=-~:.::::.:.__-:--:-:---· f tenenct· Painting , vinyl aiding, ·

a lnlorlor. High Spoiler. 18.000.

2!.::
.. ;.,7....

l a.ttttnelor

..

&amp;.• .

parlance All Work Guarantlld,

1190 Font Tempo. PS. automatic.

'

•

Accessor lei

304-662·2991.

Fmtctt Clly Ptt Grooming by Ap-

~ lt.N!lE ~

I"'1-\E. ~N D t'£. WOULD t£\ IAE...,
~ Lf.:;,s fQII:. -me
r--....._
~ PP,.'(

750 Boats &amp; Motors

1250. 740-44 Hl881. Allar 6 P.M.

i'

'How CAt-l '(OIJ "!,ott\ ex:"6ET..,

trailer all go wllh H. Priced to sal;
$4200, 740-949-2203 or 740·9411'

1891 GEO Tracker soft-top, 2

740-245-5597.

THE BORN LOSER

1996 Honda 300 EX 4 Whealer,

446-9364.

1716.

c-

reason.

I

ties, clean.l5500. 740-742·1400.

HP Ulca New. Asking 12,995, 740-

$1600, caM 740-742-2944.

. Male 6 Female Adult Rat Terriers

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

I

Aller 5 P.M. 740-388-8356.
3 Years Old &amp; 6 112 Month Old

-··

By Phillip Alder
Many inexperienced players lllink
1hat the holdup play 01.-curs only in
no-trump conlracl•. They are wrong.
II is ju!il lllal a holdup in a suil con·
lracl is usually done for a different

1

3982.

Two Registered A. I. Angus Bulls
E•cellenl Bloodlines. 740-,.41·

Jab

55o-.darned
ltDdgle
5I ac.- lloilfl••
:t'lllppedonlce 17- ....
k'l I lwllll)
IDOie
DOWN

Not only in
no-trump

"

able, Athans LIVOS10Ck Saleo. 250X Stodt Cam 140: Stocl&lt; Carb
:..:740-::.:592::..:·:1322=:.:·7..:..40-698-=-:=.:..::353::.:..1· ::-- 1 140. 740-446-7375.

hog&amp;, mate or female, can 740·

pits, Blue Eyed Male &amp; Femftles.
Rare Colors. $1SO •5200 , 740·
448-6627.

. OVER SOME
DESSERT

AIMal&lt;elHI00·290-2262. x :an.

Moving Must Sell : 1987 TR)(

no ruat, very good condition,

Jack Ru11ell Terrler j P,ups, Tails
Docked , Dew Claws Removed .

BUT--I COUlD ASK
TH' Bl.ESSIN'. ....._

t

ments Welcome, Hauling Avail·

For sale or trade· baby hedge·
992·6073.

PAISONU WE: WAS
FIXIN' TO EAT
. SUPPER·WON'T YOU
JOIN US?

.,:

Moving Must Sell: 1991 Honda
CR 125, Completely Radona. Race
Ready! CaH 740.446-7375 Alklng
Price: li.700.

tar Horse, t/2 Mo rgan·
Years Old, 4 Arabian Horns, 1
Tennessee Walking Horse. Call

54

Well

I

730 Vans &amp; 4-WO.

Selling 14 Llmousln &amp; Charolalo
Cross-Bred Cows. All Cowl Have
Been Vaccinated, &amp; Are Brad To
A Blacll Bull. CattOI Accepted AI·
ter 4 P.M. Friday. Up To Sale
Time On Saturday. -'11 Consign·

Trail Horse• For Sale: 1:~~--:·.

J[ 4

•

....

26

2 pump Hydraullco . 8x8 oyncho
shuttle uans. 1291vs. 124,500. 1a
same

•

11~

51

.....
....
•• ....

BARNEY

Ford New HOlland Tractor Rental
Unrtl lor sale. 1-5030 621-!&gt;- 4wd,
5030

41Anrrfonllr

V1IIDenble: Bolla
Deller: South

Service Center 61. R1 87 Pl

1988 Chevy· Corelca 4 Door1,
Power Steeri'lg, Power Brakes, AI

Pets for Sale

t

Pleasant 6 Ripley Rd . Leon, wv

Steel bu il dings hever Put up.
40x30 was $6,2t2 will sell for

740-446-6306. 1·800-291-0098

1998 Cub Cadet riding mower

t~S

• Jt17l

6AQJU54

dealer and aee how k)ng they
warranty thlfe drtve train. Ktef-

1988 Bonneville LE. m111oon. 4dr.
new tlras &amp; blokes . good cond .
$3,200. 304-675'5792 aher 5pm.

1 Bed room Nicely Furnished.
Central Heal &amp; AC. All Utilities lrtcluded, Except Electric, Conveni-

tered Limo Butl-18mos. ot4l .

• Q t I

ows, lintelS; etc. Claudal'flnters,
Rio Grando. OH Call 740·245·
5121 .

560

$850. 304-895-3742.

c:ond.l1 ,000. 304-675-2916.

1829.

Cypress Ct. Point POiasanl.

540 Miscellaneous

......

1977 Chevrolet 112 ton pick·up,
350 cuttic englnA, •ulo. goOd

Chedt your JO. IIF. FNH or CIH

•ooO

Blodt , brick, sewer pipes, wind-

2340.

$3.900. t 3' Camper $800. Regis·

9 A Q Itt

PS Belt, Auto, Runa E•cellentl

Moore owner.

1987 Horizon $800 . 1988 Blazer

• •s2

ond. M~dlepon .

'

•AJ1171
IIIII&amp;

Vlc0ie,740-44&amp;-2897.

1984 Chevy Sovllle, 4 New Tlree. 790
Campers &amp;
V·6, Aulo, Rebuilt Alternator,
Motor Homes
Brand New Alternator Belt, New 1..:=::-:::::::~:'-:::::--;::-;:::::::-

•wARM ue1•
Furnace, Heat Pumps, &amp; Air Con-

1 Bedroom Overlooks Galllpolls
Park &amp; River, $375/Mo .. Utilities
Included, Deposit Required, 1•0·

Eaoy Bank Financing For Used
Vehicles. No Turn Downs, Call

We buy antiques and part'~! or
complete estates, baby Items, and
old Flestaware . Jean's Furprture
&amp; AntiQues . Tuesday throuGh Friday. 11am-4pm . 145 North.~Sec ­

1 Bedroom Garage Apartment In
Kanauga. Water Paid $270/Mo.,
Pius Deposit. 7t0-886·7102.

ent Location, 710-446-2602.

Credit Problema? We C.n Help.

9IJ

menage.
Wanled· advertising collectibles,

7.

-~-·

-- =
t:
20 I

• J[
• J[ $
t I I I

EEK&amp;MEEK

1979 ChelrJ ltucll, 6 Cyt., - ..•
11 .000.00. 1981 Chevy Trucll, 8
Cyl., Autom. 1700.00. 740-441;

19~4

Coke, Papsl. etc .• Including old _Un
signs, 740·992·5053.

90 Gao Storm OSI, ground ef·
lecU, air. good condition. 13.000
080, 740-992-- (Amy).

PPI51815illl.......

41 Gun gop.

1S--IIIoe
1 7 -. . . . .
1SONtilt ....

mission tully synchronized forward 6 reverse shunle, zinc
coated sheet metal, .4 year or
hour drive train warranty.

7'x9' &amp; Ono Opener Call Ane! 6
P.M. 740-446-7141 .

$3.497, 50x88 was $17,690 will
sell $8,970 Chuck 1·800·320·

ditioning . Free Estimates! II You
Oon't Call U&amp;, We Botti Lose!

ROPS end Canopy. 16lc18 Trans-

'92 Nlnan Stanza, 4 door, 4 cy·
Iinder, 740-7o42-2803.

6:00 p.m. 740·V92·2526, Russ

Merchandise

Radial tires all • wheels, lndependonl 540 and 1000 PTO. Hy·
drauUc wei disc brakes all •
wheels ; Oifterential lock fronl &amp;
rear, dual hydraulic remotel,

Two Wood Used Garage DoOrs,

complete set ol men·s gon clubs

wlgoH bag. St50. 304-675·1263.

cooled diesel angina. Goodyear

630

sort 740-256-104-1.

992·2187.

Available All Over The County!
Just Oil SA 7 Above Chester,

P!loea On Cash Purchases!

JET

OLD ASH VILLAGE APTS

George 51. Now Haw!n. WV.

Agco-AIIIt lil*lol

Tractor 5870 63 PTO H .P. .t
wheel drfvt. world famous air·

2412or HI00-594-1111

651S.

tenance on site . Safe 6 friendly
environmem for ct111dren. clOse to
school, store &amp; bank . Equ•t

ss.ooo. 740-24~747 .

Your area bush hog dealer fo1
parts, rotaf)' cutters. loaders, tiller~. finish mowers. eel . Carmkmael'a Farm &amp; lawn midway
between Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande.
Ohio on Jactc.son Pike. 740-448-

Tread Mill Brand New! Electric,
$500 New. Asking : $150, Rtlida 1
Heart Rate Mites You Walk , 740-1

pots. 304·773·5352 or 304·882·
_28_2_7·- - - - - - - - : - -

nanclna lnlo. Tau 10% Off Lilted

446-7283.

Gaorge's Creek Road, Ralertnc·
es Raqulrad. 740-446-t142.

• ·
Molgo Co. : Wt Have Land

Call For FrH Maps -t Owner Fl-

Electric Scooters, Wheelchairs ,
New And Used, Stairway Elevators, Wheelchair And Scooter
Uft&amp;. Bowman's Hornecare. 7•0-

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

Gellla Co.: Gallipolis, NeighborhOO&lt;l Rd., Nice 10 Acre BuikUng
Sill $19.000 Or 22 Acres With

Price.

iah.. leu

For Rent: TraiiAf Spacu On

1 Bedroom, AJC , WID, Hook-Up,
Near Holzer, $279/Mo., • Utilities.
Deposll &amp; laaae Required , 740·
4&lt;46·2957.

Cash

1Z

furnished . 304-875 ·7713 HUD

Accepted.

441 · 1005. - -·
--....::;~-------

$21.500

to 9'0 discs . also hOida tapes .

Call 710 -992 ·6636 al1er 6 pm.
COo &amp; lapel nollnduded.

Complete Kitchen Cabiftt Set.

BRUNER LAND
740-441-1412

Pond

Brand Ntn!1 Great Gil11 COMdao
storage unu. Black a~ ct.erry.
- r OU1 ol box. 11~. - up

Large 3br in Pl. Pleasant 1275. Double Sink &amp; Cook Top Jnclud·
Securlly deposl.l required, part od. $750, 740-441-9516.

APT AVAILABLE NOW

Large selection of used homes. 2
or 3 bedrooms . Starting at $2995 .
Quick delivery. Call 740·385·

30'·

1o· k»ng, six e· tong. oa[··good

Female Roommate Wanted : 1
Block From Rio Grande Campus .

3426

s·t~s .
·'&lt;

Ground floor 11)1 2br, wid -....,. condition , call 740-9o41-2217.
reference• &amp; deposu. no pets:. 7:01larn-1 0:00pm
304-675-5162.

Buy In Sept. No Payment Unt+l
Huge 28x80 3BR. 1 112 bath .
Starting at ONlY $39.999. Many
options avai lable. 1-888-928·

675-1263.

Clturctt pews, -

One bedroom apartment in MldcUeport, all utilities paid, S100 de·
pos1t, $270 month, call 740-992-

1999. Call 1-800-948-5676.

lire--- ·

Boys t2spd bike l gl{l's 10spd

(Shower), Oownltairl. Single Bed . . 1om Including color monitor &amp;
Clean. No Pats, Rltere.~ &amp; 0. I color printer. Also complete
pos~ FlecJJied, 7-4Q-.U6-151St.
• home 10flware library including
Furnished 3 Aooma , Upstairs, word processors, taqn paper

AI : 1687 Clayllck Road. Patriot.
$650/Mo .• Plus 1650 Security De·
poo~ . 740--448·3545.

Charming Farm House , 15
Minutes From Ga!IIS)olls! Bright ,

Heal. Now Carpet. Flooring, Shoel

-"'"*·304-etl2·25611.

Baby bed, swing. stroller. car
seal &amp; higtl c:hai". »&amp;--6]'5--4$o48 ,

- - - - - - - -1bike,
Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath 1 Complete Apple computer sya·

Farm House For Aenl: 3 Bed·
rooms. 2 Baths , CA . Large Yard.
Large Garage Barn, Wtth Water,
4 Horse Stalll. TaCk Room, Bring
Your Dogs Or Horses Wetcome ,

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

NO Pilot-. Cell Ptoose.

Beech Street. MiddiAport . 2br,
furnished, utilities paid, deposit

Vindale 70'114' With E•pando 2
Sr.. 20' Living Room . Laroe Master Br .. E•cellent Condil1on! On
Atnl8d Lot, Ready To Move Into.
74()..4.46.1409 2 To 6 P.M.

vHie Plica. 740-367-&lt;1286.

112 Baths , Newly Remodeled
Kitchen -While Cabinets . Ni ce
Dining Room , Fireplace . Gas

RENTALS

1 ·5 BEDRODII HOliES FRDII

1989 Clayton 14x70 furnished on
private ren!Ad lot . Chestnut
Ridge, Mt . Alto area . $17.000 .
3&gt;4·895-3814 .

-

Uti!es.

qurlld. 740-441 ·1005.

groove, pellet atove. HP/CA. appliances, garage, spa, acre. Bula·

15t Second Avenue, Galhpolls.

Anlhony l..wl Co.

lice lraller. $3.000 wi1hou1 air tnr&gt;

6yr, 2·3 bedrooms, loft, tongue/

Open ThroughoUI. 3 Bedrooms. 2

We Buy Land : 30 ·500 Acres ,
We Pay Caan . 1-800-213-8365,

1 Bedroom House Across From
Campus $300/Mo .. Deposit Ae·

dllioner. $4,000 with. 74-0 -949-

300 Gallon Portable Tanll, 175:
210 IIF 21 HP Traclor. Wlth. A1·

740-446-4335.(6:00-9:00 P.M.)

12"60 tralfer, can be used for of-

Par1·Tima Apply In Person At A&amp;

oory, Apptleatlono Accepted 10·4
Doll'(, Apply Topl'l Furnlrure Co •

Real Estate
Wanted

360

Abandoned Home Take Over
Payments, Or Make Offer. 1-800.

$400 mo. Corner Building . 740 ·
992·6250 Acqulsillons (nell
door) .

Part· Time Recall Sales. EKperl·
ence Preferred But Not Neces-

304-675-t078. Ralarences.

ery. C8lt 1·900-ti9Hn7.

basement. 304-675-5320.

Fo&lt;.f1h Allonue. GaJIJpoJJI.

Mineral Alghll, Utitties,

FOR RENT: Trailer Lot . ·LOCUli
Road . Po1n1 PlaiSant. On Righi .

September 301h between hours ol
9om-3pm. EOE
A Auto Detailing Shop , 220

Actn

740-446-3385.

Spec1al 16x80 3BR . 2 bath .
S 1.325 Down , S205 Mo. Free alr
&amp; lroo skrting . l-600~9 1 ·6777 .

3 Bedroom Home New Roof, New
Carpet, Kelley Drive , PhOne: 304·
875·4230. 740·367-7172, Aller 6

1o

U1t1e K\'V&amp;f Road. -523-2450.

4999, Or 740-594·3033.

Ridge. 304·675·7071.

610 Farm Equipment

l

House, Excellent Condition, Partially Finished Basement, 2 Car
Garage, Ser~ ul Inquiries Only!!

2908 Maple Ave . 3tH ra nch ail
brick . covered deck. fenced back
yard. central-air. garage, e.1c .
2br, approx 3 acres. Wyom a

Jr. 304-576-2336.

3734.

$25,000
304·562·5840.

cond. 304-683-0036.

Scenic Valley at Apple Grove.
WV . Building 1011, single widll
accepted, public water, 20
minutes from new Buffalo Br'dfe
on Jerry's Run Rd. Ctyde Bowen

112 Arll corner lot In C~ Con·
ley area. good location. 30-4-675-

600-948·5678.

NHded Experienced Traa Climb-

C8lt 740-592-4585.

Than Asking Price 01:
1117$0

600-837·3236.

REAL ESTATE

Need Driver &amp; Loader For Local
Service , Must Have COL's &amp;

era And Buckel Operator In The
Mercerville Area, For lnformaUon

nice neighborhood. quiet. uo.

446-4722.

41:=-r......

·=
.
.
.
.1 4=- ·="
, . . . . I'
1 . . . .......
11Witf-ol

11~111

1998 Trans All V-1 Fully Load·
od! 740 ue 1541
·

-ID

40U.eoMIIn

tnde

Lot tor Slie· Gallipolla, 90•172 ,

..

NEA Crouword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

AVON I All Areal I Sh1rley
Soon. J04.e7HI29.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11
. ,.
s;,;. ; $

a

SEPTEMBER 24 I

�Friday

Page 12. The Dally Sentinel

.....,_

Thursday, September 24, 1988

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather
Today: Cloudy

A lollll of $10,(XIl wa&lt; ccmmilkd
conlinue the ~ Ohio project
when the Boanl of Tru--. of the
Ohio Valley Ami Ubraries held il.~
rqular meeting r=ndy in Wellsloo.
The board appRMd a m;olution
liom the Ubr.lrians' AIMoy Commiaee regarding lhal proja:t. !:lim:tor
Eric S. Anderson reviewed the
propess of the oommillce ~ng lhal
the group has made considerable
J!IO&amp;it&lt;S on the Boob By Mail and
10

Conliooing fdncalion services.
Kay Whir. who .avcd a.&lt; the flllil
rqwesetllalive of the Oak Hill Public
Ubrnry on the OVAL Board. was recognized.. along wilh ronner employees. Kalltken Chaffin and Raman
Davis.
On JIIOiion of Roxie Underwood
represating the Jrto;on City Lilnry.
the Boanl approved an alliliale member.ihip conlr.ll:l wilh the l'orumoulh
City Schools. This increa&lt;es the number of affiliare memb:IS to 12. it was

lleudldl-.1
'ill
The anooalllltdi"l! of the Sheller:
ing Anns lbpital ~ Inc.
will be held Tue&lt;lay. at 1 p.m. The
foundalion is the corpcralion lhat operates O' Bienes.• Mea-ial Hospital.
The meeting will be held in lhe mnfer,
ence room atlhe hospital.
The tenn of John W. Knable. D.O.•
expires atlhe meeting bul he is eligible
ftr re..:leaion to a second flU-year
tenn as aiiUSicc and has belen pblccd in
nomination by lhe nornina&amp;ing com-

rqutcd.
Founded in 1973. OVAL is Ohio's
oldesl chan=d regional librnry syslem. In cooper.llion wilh noembea pub-

lic lihrarie&lt;. OVAL provides~
sharing. libr.uy development and
boob by mail servas lo more lhan
260.1XXJ residenl• in Athens. Jack.'iOO.
Ulwreoce. Meigs. Pike. Ross. Sciolo
and Vinton counties.

Wanda Eblin sertc~ on lhe OVAL
Boanl and is a ~vc of Meig.•
County Dislrict Pllblic Ubrar

miocc,of lhe bowtl of bU.'illle.&lt;. He is a
n::li~ u~embti of the o· B~enos.• Hospital medical slalf and is Profcs.-.or
~ of internal medicine and
chainri:!n of lhe [)q&gt;arlmenl of Specialty Medicine atlhe Ohio Univmity
College of Osleopalhic Medicine.
-n..lllltding is open 10 lhe public as
well as the voling members of lhe
foundation.

. . . . . ¥•

u ... rum. . . . . .

The Episcopal · Church Women

Hlgh:80s; Low: 50s

Guild have finalized plans for its fall
rummage sale.
The sale will be !leld in lhe Parish
Hall behind lhe GrJCe Episcopal
Chun:h in Pomeroy. Oct. 2 and 3., 9

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 50s

Why Clinton ought be impeached, Page 2
Yankees notch 111 th victory, Page 4
Simple faith of children, Page 6

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Doing better?

New smog
rules rattle
regional
industry
£1St 1111 n.
, . . . . .4

POIDOY
·837·1014
l.. ..

earane

Year·I

1998 Bukk Regal LS

'·.,

1998 Pontiac Sunfire GT

3800 V6, all power, auto.. air. Santa Fe

1998 Chevy S·l 0 Pickup

2 Dr. auto .. air, tilt. cruise. black.
MSRP

red.
IISRP

V6, auto., air, cruise,
PW, PL, cassette.
MSRP $\~.&amp;95 .

LS, air, 5 speed,
cassette.
MSRP $14,081

$17,570

llw

New Only S11

79

1997 Chevy 5·1 0 Pickup
1999 hick LeSabre lilitetl

Brand New! 5 speed,
apple red.
MSRP $11,682

1997 GMC Sonoma 414

V6, auto .. air. plalinum beige.

V6, SLS. 5 speed, air. BRAND NEW!

llw O•lr

$2o,3CMI

•••

4X4, auto., air, tilt,
cruise,
MSRP $24,011

5 speed, air. aluminum wheels, black.

V6, auto., air, Emerald green.

v,a.

IISRP
$15,070

NewOnly

1998 GMC Sierra 414
Loaded, platinum beige, lealher.

VB. auto .. air, locking diff., white.
IISRP

2] 950

llew O•lf 5

1999 Buick Century Custom

1999 GMC Sierra 414 Ext. Cab

VS. auto., air, platinum gray.

NewO•Ir

VS, auto .. all power, pewter metallic.
MSRP
$29,857

SJ8,940

1998 Buick

New Only

1997 GMC Safari AWD Van

V6, auto .. air, Bordeaux red.

V-6. loaded, cherry ice.

S2J,300

1998 Chevy KISOO Ext. Cab

00

$27,271

s25, 990

1998 Chevy Tracker

S

S

V6, auto., air, tilt, cruise, PW ...........

Auto., air, stereo, white ....................

stereo .......

auto,

PB ..................

$

Auto., air, PS, PB, stereo .................

$

6500 or 148 Per Mo.

1998 Chevy Monte Carlo LS

Now Only 517,950

llew Only 518,875

......

Auto., air, stereo . .............................

1994 Pontiac Sunbird

375

New Only

~~~:s=~~e!.~~. ~i~~~ise 9500 or S197Per Mo.
!~~~ !~~!. ~i:~~.~!. . . . . ,. . . . .59200 or 5189 PerMo:''
~~~a~hs~!!o~~~~~~~...................56SOO or s135 PerMo:·
0
!~!~ !~=::~. . . . . . . . . . .58500., 5175 Per._
V6, auto., air, tilt, cruise, PW ...........

Auto., air, spoiler, white . ..................

3.8 V6, auto., air, leather, Torch red
MSRP $22,933

V6, auto. ,air, TorCh red,
keyless entrY.
MSRP $20,155

Auto .• air, tilt, cruise,

White,

1998 Chevy Monte Carlo
Z-34

5

799 Sor 16SPer Mo.
1994 Buick Century
S
S
6800 or 155 Per Mo.
1997 Olcls Achieva
s
s
9800 or 187 Per Mo.
1997 Bukk Skylark
s
s
cass ................ 9800 or 187Per Mo.
1994 Pontiac Grand Prix
1997 Chevy Cavalier
s
s
9900 or 189 Per Mo. 9
~!. a!~-~:~u~-~r~ise,
1997 Pontiac Grand Am
s · s
cass. ,
AJC .................... J0,500 or J99 Per Mo.
!~:~:!!o~~~~
1997 Pontiac Sunfire
s
s
J0,500 or 199 Por Mo.
66
Several to choose from! ..................

SJ6,589

1999 Chevy Monte tarlo LS

Conv. 4X4.
Air, cassette.
MSRP $17,298

New Only 513,942

1995 Chevy Corsica

97 • 8. 75% APR •
months
96 • 8. 75% APR , 60 months
95 • 8.89&amp; APR • 60 months
94 • 9.24% APR • 54 months

•-

V6, automatic, CD,
tilt, cruise.
MSRP $20,243

4X4, VB, Silverado,
auto. Loaded!
MSRP $29,374

Now Only

SJ7,250

1998 Chevy Camaro

llew Only

1998 Chevy K1 500 Pickup

1998 GMC Sono~~a

1999 Buick LeSabre Custom

New Only

V6, aijto., air, CD,
tilt, cruise.
MSRP $19,632

New Only 59790

II!IRP

1999 Chevy Malibu

f

'

SSSOO or 5194Per MD..

s8500 or s194 Per Mo.
$7SOO or 5144 Ptr~.
All R1blt11 to dMier, tax a title
not lncluclld. All PIYJIIInla
aubjeet to crldh epprovel.
PIYJIIIilbi ftgurld on 00
plyllllllbi It 0.1% APR.

1999 Olds Cutlass GLS
V-6, automatic, air, CD,
leather, cassette ..
MSRP $20,450

New Only

SJ8,850

1998 Olds Cutlass GL
V,6, automatic, air, CD,
cassette, leather.
MSRP $20,150

New Only 517,550

1998 Olds Cutlass GLS
V-6, auto., air, CD &amp; cass.,
PL, PW, white .
MSRP $19,505

New Only

SJ7,2SO

1998 Olds Intrigue
V-6, automatic.
Loaded! Silver.
MSRP $21,609

Now Only 519,400

1998 Olds Silhouette

GLS Van
V,6, loaded, leather, CD
MS.R P $28,370

Plckup ....................... $17,900
92 Olds Cutlatls International ............... $8,500
96 Mercury Marquls ............................. $12,900
97 Buick LeSabre ................................. $16,900
91 Chevy Caprlce ................................... $6,800
98 Olds 88 ............................................. $18,995
96 Buick Rlvlera ................................... $16,400
98 GMC Jimmy Maroon , 15,000 miles ..•• $22,500
97 Chevy 5·10 Ext. Cab ....................... $12,500
97 Chevy K1500Z·71 ............................ $22,500
96 Chevy 5·10 Ext. Cab .............. : ........ $10,900
95 Chevy K1500 4X4 ....... ..................... $14,900
98 Buick LeSabre ................................. $19,900
96 Honda Accord .................................. $14,500
97 Honda Accord LX ........... ................. $16:000
Olda Cutlass Conv. ........................... $8,900
95 Cadillac Sevllle ................................ $21,900
Mazda B400Q 4X4 ............................ $10,500
98 GMC Jimmy 10.000 miles .................. $23,500
90 GMC Safari,Van ................................. $6,900
GMC Sierra SLE .............................. $22,900
95 Olds 88 ............................................. $11,900
Tbyoti4X4 Plckup ............................ $8,800
93 Old a 88 LS ......................................... $8,800
95 Chevy Camaro Conv. Black ............. $12,500

Results from
annual Little
Brown Jug
Pages

•

a.m. to 4 p.m.
i
Anyone who would like to donale
furniture. drapes. curtains. clothinj.
espeo.ially ror c-hildren and men. or
olher items. may bring them to the
Parish hall by 0..1. 2. For pickup of
items. residents may call 992-2958
or 992-2622.
Volume 49, Number 106

•

Sports

Sept. 25, 1998

.
I

!

WASHINGTON CAP)- Tougher
federal a1i' pollution requirements
were welcomed today across the
Northea.-1. but in the Ohio Valley.
where power plants likely will bear
much of the cost. the response was
anything but favorable.
On Thul'day. the Environmental
Protection Agency for the first time
entered the long-standing dispute
between Midwest and Northea~t
states over drifting inlerstate air pollution.
The EPA directed 22 states from
Missouri to Massachusells to cut
smog-causing nitrogen oxide &lt;missions by 1. 1 million tons by 2003. an
action primarily aimed at scores or
large coal-burning power plants that
dol the landscape from Illinois to
West Virginia.
Many of the plants have smokestacks as high a• a 100-siOI)' skyscraper and send smog-causing
chemicals high into the air where
wind currents carry the pollution for
hundreds or miles.
The EPA action. while aimed primarily at reduciQg the long-distance
flow or pollution from the Midwest
into the Northeast. also will prO&lt;.Iuce
cleaner air in the Midwest and help
communities meet new air quality
standanls announced last year. EPA
otlicials said.
Nilrogen oxide is a component or
ozone. an essential part of smog during the summer months. Smog causes respirator)' illnesses and exacrrbates childhood asthma.
EPA Administrator Carol Browner. estimating the annual health benefits at $3.4 billion. said 138 million
people "will breathe cleaner air"
because of the additional pollution
controls."
But 1he tougher requirements.
estimated by the EPA to cost $17 billion over 10 years. brought immediate criticism from state officials and
utilities in the Midwest and Ohio Valley.
"The federal EPA has once again
chosen a heavy-handed. punitive
approach over sound science and
responsible regulation." complained
Ohio Gov. George Voinovich. Ohio
would have to cut nitrogen oxide
emissions by nearly 133.000 tons. or
36 percent.
· Ohio, Wesl Virginia and several
other slates faced wilh steep pollution
reductions by its utilities had proposed more modest cuts, arguing
lheir plan also would resolve the
long-range pollution concerns bul be
cheaper.
These slates' proposal was rejected by the EPA. "II was no! a sign if·
icant step forward... Browner said
Thursday.
Voinovich. as well as oflicials of
Ohio-based American Electric Power. one of the country's biggest utililies. lefl open the possibility of a
court challenge to the EPA's action .

Jackson finds some improvement
as tour criss-crosses Appalachia
Appalachian Regional Commission.
The agency. a partnership between
the federal government and the 13
Appalachian states. has spent $7.2
billion since it began in I%5. including $4.5 billion on roads.
The result Per capila income is
up. infant mortality is down and there
are more high school graduates and
jobs. the commission said.
"Over the years. that's made a
tremendous difference ... Speer said or
!he ARC's work.
Even Jackson admits progress has
been made.
"Where 1here ha.&lt;been investment
The images were so slriking for
Jackson thai he !old the people of and opportunily. people have taken
southeast Ohio that he would return advantage... he told reporters last
in the fall for a rally to bring nation- week .
But no! enough has been done.
al auention to the plight of
Appalachia. The rally will be Sunday Students still go to sc hool in trailers
in Nelsonville. a town more than an and many residents remain poor and
hour's drive southeast of Columbus. lack access to adequate housing.
But 1he picture of poorly educat- health care and good-paying jobs. he
ed people with linle or no access lo said,
.. Progress has been made, except
adequate jobs. housing and health
care is not lhe true picture of we slopped the Great Society before
we had a great society." he said of the
Appalachia anymore. experts say.
"There is a long-standing stereo- anti -poverty programs started by
type of Appalachia as a culture or President Johnson .
poverty. !hal people here are impovSpeer agrees.
erished.'' said Jean Speer. director of
"Some places an: prelly appalling.
the Cemer for Appalachian Studies al Nobody wants to look over !hat." she
Ea:-.t Tennessee State Universi·ty in said.
Johnson City. Tenn. "In facl. it 's a
In lac!, ARC records show !hal. as
place where a lol of people want lo of April 1997. 97 of !he 399 counties
come and live ...
in Appalachia were considered dis"Some parts of Appalachia are nol tressed because or high unemployonly doing well . but maybe beuer ment and poverty rates and per capithan the national average" in income. ta incomes below national averages.
educalion and other factors. said Most or the counties were in Ohio.
Randy Hunt. director of the Gover· West Virginia and eastern Kentucky.
nor's Office uf Appalachia. This is
" It's a very spony situation." said
especially !rue of !he areas of Jack Frech. director of the Athens
Appalachia near big cities. he sa1d.
Counly Department of Human SerMore than 22 million people hve vices. "Some places seem lobe sluck
in the region thai extends rrom south· in an economic rut things just aren't
em New York 10 northern MISSISSip- happening . Other pockets have
pi . Appalachia includes 29counties in improved quile a bit. ..
eastern and southeast Oh1o.
In Athens County. for example.
The construction or roads 10 make Ohio Umversity and a major highway
the mountainous region more acces- that extends through southeast Ohio
sible, job training progmms. con- have helped the local economy. he

By MARK WILLIAMS
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The images
were powerful : sewage llowing
through yards. rusting appliances silting on fronl porches and the weal)'
faces of poverty.
They were !he kind of images thai
the Rev. Jesse Jackson wanted !he
reporters following him on that pleasant April day to see or Appalachia. a
region he contends has been left
behind during the economic good
times that the res1 or the coumry bas
experienced.

VISITS MINES - The Rev. Jesse Jackaon,
right, Ia - n with United Mine Worke111 of
Amerlcalntemlllonal President Cecil Roberbi,
center, Ed Fire, president of the l.ntematlonal
Brotherhood of Electrical Worl(era. left, and

Southam Ohio Coal Co. miner Cecil Dillon of
Albany, behind Roberta. Jackson visited the
Meigs Minea as part of hll tour of Appalachl,
an mining communltiea.

Jackson explores issues .,,.
during tour of Meigs Min·es
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
'This is an area of rich soil and
poor people."
In keeping with the theme of his
visil to Appalachian communities
and Sunday's March for App~lachia
at Hocking College in Nelsonville.
the Rev. Jesse Jackson addressed
issues pertaining to coal miners and
mining communities during his visit
to the Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s
Meigs Mine 31 on Thursday.
Jackson was joined by Cecil
Roberts. president of the United
Mine Workers of America International . and several members of his
Rainbow PUSH Coalition. based in
Chicago. The group took an underground lour or the mining operation
and met with local labor leaders and
mine management.

Jackson was in Gallipolis last
weekend ror the city's Emancipation
Celebration. and has toured other
Appalachian communilies. induding Marietta. Portsmouth and several mining towns in eastern Kentucky.
His visit to !he area will conclude
with Sunday's rally. beginning at
noon.
During Thursday's visit to the
Meigs Mines. Jackson and Roberts
emphasized the va'l differences in the
non-union mining operations in Kentucky compared lo the union operation here .
Jackson said he was especially
touched by his conversations with
miners in Kentucky who suffer from
black lung. and noted the relationship
between safe mine operations and
comprehensive health care.
Jackson commended the UMW~

and management or the Meigs Mines
for their working relationship.
'To find managemenl and labor
who have worked together for com_.
mon ground is an enlightening experience," Jackson said.
Especially im(IOrta~! to Jackson.
he said. was a campaign or universal heallh coverage for all Americans.
a program that he said is especially
needed in Appalachian communities.
"If workers in tHe coal mines of
Russia and Eastern Europe can have
the advantage of health insurance
which is subsidized by lhe U.S. government. then !he working people or
America should expect no less."
Jackson said. "There must be the
same resources available to American
workers as there are in the countries
whose operations we subsidize."
(Continued on Page 3)

struction of water and sewer systems

said.

and other social development efforts
have helped cut the 1965 poverty rate
in half by 1990. according to the

"Ten miles outside of !own. !railers are falling apart and people don't
have any water... he said.

Farm Bureau
urges defeat
for Issue 1

Florida keys feel fury
of Hurricane Georges

KEY WEST, Fla. (APJ - Hurricane Georges lashed !he Florida Keys
today as the core of the menacing storm moved closer. The I00 mph winds
sent waves cra~hing onto streets and knocked out power.
Shelters and hotels from Miami to Orlando lilled up after more than I
million people from Key West to Tampa were urged or even ordered to leave
coastal and low-lying areas and mobile homes.
"The wmer has been sucked oul of the bay. There's a boat high and dry
that's gollen loose and in the Oats... said Marion Sargeant. who lives with
her cousin in Key Largo on Florida Bay between the island chain and Ever·
glades National Park. "There's nonnally 4 feet of water where !he boa! is
silting - and that's now in inches."
A hail of leaves. branches and palm fronds blew across the Overseas Highway in Marathon. in the middle Keys. and 76 mph gusts lifted rainwater oiT
roofs. In Miami. where the smell of seawater spread 10 miles inland, bands
of slanting rain repeatedly shot ashore.
"A big old tree fell on my house, crashed right down by my head so I
fi gured I mighl as wdlcome outside." Marc Hightowersa1d a.s he stood outDale Heydlauff. AEP's vice pres· side a converted icehouse. "You're nol any safer in an old wooden house."
idenl for environmental aiTairs. said
The eye of the sprawling storm was expected to pass west of Key West
the utility would "encourage... states
by
II a.m .
o
10 continue to develop 1he1r own.
The
slight
shift
meant a milder storm for lhe slate's densely populated
more modeS:l emission reduction
Atlantic coast. but " is probably the worst possible thing" for Key West. said
plans despite the EPA directive.
Jerry Jarrell, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami: The storm's
harshest allack has been on the eastern edge.
The eye or a hurricane often brings a storm surge. and a surge of 7 feet
was forecasl for the Keys. Key West's top elevation is only 14 reel. and some
other islands lop out al 7 feet.
" We are as ready as we can be. and we pray that the human and maleri·
al cost will be limited ... Presidenl Clinton said in Washington.
Today's
" It looks like Noah's ark in here." Vince Taporowski said this morning
2 Sections - 12 Pages
as he watched the roiling water from his home on Big Pine Key. north of
Key West. "Noah had a good idea - bring two of everything. So are we ."
Among those staying in his home were his two grown children ·and their
Calendar
6
spouses. two grandchildren and two pel ferrets.
Classifteds
8-10
Comics
11
Editorials
2
Local
3
The resolution was approved al
The Southeastern 0hio Regional
Council's board of directors pa~sed u the board's quarterly meeting TuesSoorts
4&amp; S
resolution to support the Ohio day.
_]W!!eawlll!!lear~-----'3z... .. _ ..
Crawfonl said ODOT presented a
Department of Transportation's
proposal to some southern Ohio comSouthern Ohio Highway Proposal.
Lotteries
The resolution was passed to sup- munity leaders on Aug. 20. The proport etlorts to complete live of the posal's projects included u.s/ 50
seven main corridor projects in south- from Athens 10 Coolville. 1he U.S.
Pkk 3: 0-6-2; Pick 4: 4-4-3-1
em Ohio. acconling to Sam Craw· 3311-77 Connector Road in Meigs
Buckeye 5: 7-29-~34-37
County. U.S. 33 from Athens to Darford. SEORC executive director.
win in Meigs County. the Chesapeake
goal
of
the
council
for
many
The
lY.YA.
Daily 3: 1:6-8; Daily 4: 5·5-8-1
years ha.• been to have !he major Bypass in Lawrence County. U.S. 35
0 1998 Oflto Valley Publilhina, Co
highway corridors start and end at nn at Richmondale in Ross County and
the Portsmouth Bypass.
interstate highway.

The Ohio Fann Bureau announced
earlier this week that it "strongly

opposes" state ballo!lssue I. an effort
to ban mourning dove hunting in
Ohio.
"Once again. animal rights
extremists are allempting to force
their philosophies on all Ohioans.
The activisls' latesl anack on personal rights is lheir effort to ban dove
hunting in Ohio. an effon that the
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation is
opposing." !he group announced.
The slate's largest farm organization is urging a "no" vole ori ballot
Issue I. This issue seeks to change
existing law and remove mourning
doves from Ohio's gamebird list.
"In typical fashion . animal rights

,

•,
'•

organizers have hidden their anti -

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

WAITING FOR GEORGES_ Robert Myers and Marie Johnson
embraced on the Whl.t e Street Pier In Key West, Fla., today as they
watched the 1pproech of Hurricane Georges, which has left at
IIIII 250 dead In Ita wake In the Caribbean. (AP)

Regional highway proposal gets SEORC's nod

o.um

SEORC is also supporting the
completion of the Nelsonville and
Lancaster bypa~ses on U.S. 33 and
U.S. 35 from Gallipolis to
Charleslon, W.Va.
"SEORC will continue to wor~
with local leaders. slate and federal
ullicials to 'line tune' the proposal."
Cmwli&gt;nl said.
"Our la•k is 1hree-fold : lhe lir.;t

p4ntation Re view Advis(lry Commit-

lee (TRAC) and the lhinl is 10 see
whal can he done to gel the
Appalachian Regional Commi,.,sion
(ARC I highway miles redesignated at
the federal level,"· he added .
"ODOT's proposal does not give
us everything we would like lo have."
Cmwfonl said. "h will bring over
SJH million highway construction
task is lo se-e what we can do to dollar.; In soul hem Ohin ($19H.3
address local concerns. the second is million from the state: $120 million
to' see whal we can do to get a favor- rrom the ARC and $15 million from
(Continued on Page 3)
ahle ruling from the state's Trans-

meal campaign behind a well-crafted
message !hat hides !heir true agenda."
according 10 Keith Stimpert. vice
president of government arrairs ror
OFBF
"This isn't about doves. The ani·
mal rights fanatics think thai if they .
are successfu l a1 banning !he hunting
of mourning doves. they will have
taken another slep Inwards !heir uhi male goal of a meal·less society.
"If they're successful. what's next'&gt;
Do they !hen wan! to stop hunting of
other animals. stop the prO&lt;.Iuction of
livestock. the use of animals in medical research '' Are zoos and circuses
outlawed'' Do we have to give up
owning pets?"

The Ohio Fann Bureau ha.' joined
Ohioans for Wildlife Conservation. a
1.:nalition of citizens and organizations
oppnsed In Issue I. OWC has mised
more than $2 million to campaign
against lhe issue .
"Fanners have always led the
charge to protect the rights of the
individual." Stimpert said. "All of us
in this coalition recognize this proposal for what il is: an auack on our
(Contlnu~ on Page 3)

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