<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8607" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8607?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-04T15:10:30+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19029">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/3dfc08516ae54e15d094a3eb806e92ab.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3766565e5d4aa8cf0e775eaec75c786e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="27779">
                  <text>sunday, September 27, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Weaning ... ~c~oot~ioued~rrvm~o~-'----------------ance against di sea.~ an..! aOd"' some

NEW STORE· Mlddleport'l n - ' bualneu II Jean'l Furniture, Antiquel and More. Operated by Jean Gruel«, the bullneu
Ia located In the former Bahr Clothier'• building on North Second In Middleport. The merchandise emphaaia 11 on furniture,
baby fumllhlnga, toya, lampa, pictures, clothing, and decorative
antlquea. Grueur purcha- iteiM for her atore from lndlvldu·
ala. Houra are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tueeday through Friday.

Most area grain producers are
eligible for deficiency payments
GALLIPOLIS . Due to extremely low grain prices this sea...on. most
grain producers are eligible for deficiency payments on their crops.
All corn and wheat produced on
farms enrolled in theAMTA program
(lhe seven year program) are eligible.
AII Soybeans are eligible whether the
farm panicipates in the grain progr.un
or not.
Changes have already been made
to include producers who harvest ehgible feed grains in forms other than
whole kernel. such as si lage.lwylage.
cracked. rolled or crimped to be eligible for a deficiency payment.
Generally. these changes will
allow eligible farmers to receive
deliciency payments regardless of
how the commodity is harvested .
This way farmers are not forced to
make harvesting decisions or marketing deciSions based on Government policy.
These changes will go into effect
for all 1998 crops. There will be no

value to your prudu.:l.
A good cumprmnisc: for prnJoccrs
in this ar~a is pa.,lure weanmg. This
allows the calves tu stly in a fanliliar environment while the wws are
moved to another p-.L,ture ur farm .
Pasture weaned animals are less
stressed than traditionally weaned
calves and less labnr is re4uired with
this method. To make thi s sy,lem
wort well and to add pounds h&gt; the
calves. consider introducing fudbunks into the pa.&lt;ture 1-2 weeks prior to weaning. Use the cows to help
break
the calveli to the feedbunks. so that
the they will consume more feed during the critical time after the cows
lwve been removed. Using a preweaning V:~Ccination program will
help the calves through the weaning
proces~ with 1.-s illness. and again
this will add value to the linal product.
Calve. weaned in this 'ystem
could easily go to • gra.s stockering
program or into a drylot situation.
thus widening their marketability for
tbe cow-calf producer.
For the conscientiou~ producer

with fc:w focilillc,. tn: nkK'C upti,,n
ahovc lru~:k wc&lt;Jnin!! may be .. !'.ufl
weaning." Acco.-oling lu Juhn H. llall.
cxten,i••'V llccf 'JlC&lt;:iali" a1 Virgima
Te.:h.
there arc !r.UI1k! very gnud rcpmh
lrmn pmJucer' wlko ""paratc their
t.:nws and calves hy an elcctril.' or
!'&gt;lrt,ng llf.1ard f.:nce . alltJwing lhc (l'Jir
tn "'e. hear. smdl. anol lie dose tn
l"at:h t~lha
Report"' "'ay th;ll lhl" rc,uh' arc
very ~oud a"' lung a..' the lcnce prc v..:nts 1~ calve' frum nursing the
cow&lt;. One might 'JlCculate that the
disposition nf the L:ows would play a
role in the success of such an oper.ation . It i' likely that at lea.•t one cow
will always lin.t a way thrnugh the
fence . If
you •re limited in 'pace and facilities
and slill want to join the beef 4uality assuran.:e movement. thi s may be
a g&lt;wkl experiment for you .
The inJustry is commiued to helpmg cnw-calf produ~:ers make a bee ler pro.tucl for the consumer. but
strides cannot be made without taking some risks. Since farming is
already nne of the riskiest businesses. adapting to these industry stan-

dards is a logical step for cow-calf
producers. Keep up the gnnd work.
Fur more inli&gt;rmal"'" about weaning
practices and heef 4uali1y as.urance.
plciL'iC call the OSU Extension uflicc
at 740-44(,. 71MI7 .
All nrw•
TOBACCO
PRODUCERS:
Mark your calendars lnr Thursd•y.
October K. IIJ9K. at 7 p.m. for the
Pride-In-Tobacco As"&gt;eiation annual ballljuet and membership drive.
Guest speakers will be Louis Smi ther.
pre,ident of the Mi"oun Tob:~Ccn
Growers A!\s.x:ialion and Dave
White. uf the

Monday

Weather

Ohio Farm Bureau. Reservations are
due ln the extension oflice by Octoher I, IIJ9M and I he cost of the meal
i' SK .. Don't wail for an invitation ·
call the oflice for a reservation'
CALL OF THE WEEK : There
wa• no one 1upic that dominated the
phone' a1 the extension office thiS
week. but on ly because we are not
re'pon"ble for the dry wea1her. If
Mother Nature
P'"led a call of the week . there would
no 'P•:culallun nn the 'ubJ~&lt;:t.
.
Jennif.r L. Byrnes IS Galha
County's extension agent in agriculture and natural rHOUrces.

Today: Sunny
High: 80; Low:55
Tomorrow:' Sunny
High: 70; Low:SO

September 28, 1998

..

Cubs, Giants play tonight Page 4
Social Security news, Page· 6
Ann Landers column, Page 6

~~
..
' • :. :. r'

•
Meigs County's

By MARK WILLIAMS

Classifleds!
446-2342

Aseociated Prest Writer
NELSONVILLE- The Rev. Jesse Jackson marched through the treecovered foothills of Appalachia on Sunday. promising to set a new national agenda that focuses on a region left behind economically.
"We march to send a message to the nation.'' Jackson told union workers. students and others in this town about 50 miles southea.'t of Columbus. " We march to change public poli.:y. We march in a great tradition."
Along with labor leaders. aclor Man in Sheen and the Rev. Jerry Falwell. Jackson led supporters on a lhree-mile march from Hocking College to the town square and then back again.
Sheriff's Lt. Pat Kelly estimated the crowd at 2.500, but Jackson officials said college estimates were 5,000.
Jack.wn promised to make improved health care. education and housing for the region an issue in the 2000 election, whether he runs for president or not.
"I'm going to set the agenda. We 're going to set the agenda.'' he said.
Jackson said lhe nalional debate that has focused on President Clinton's problems should be changed to look at the problems of Appalachia.
a region where income is below the national average and poverty is above
it.
Jackson, United Mine Workers President Cecil Roberts and others have
been traveling through the hills of Pennsylvania. West Virginia. Kentucky
and Ohio for weeks as part of the campaign to draw auention to the
region's problems.
Jackson will lead a discussion at the college on Monday to discuss

l·
•

- ·

'

Ceremony
I" CHARGE • nm Silkily, recognized aa a leader in the area

of medicinal plant cultivation, hal moved to Rutland wHh hl1 wife
Heathar, where they will oversee the operation ·of the National
Center for the Preservation of Medicinal Herba. He Ia pictured

To honor all loved ones who
have fought the battle against
cancer, luminaries will be
placed around the track at the
~
Pleasant Valley Hospitai"Relay For Life" to be held
on Friday, October 16, 1998 from 6 p.m. to midnight
at the Mason County Fairgrounds.
Luminaries may be purchased from Pleasant Valley
Home Health &amp; Hospice for,a minimum donation of
$5/each. For information call, (304) 675-7400 or send
the luminary form below with your donation to :
Pleasant Valley /lome llealllr &amp; I111spice
Lumilrary Ceremony
I 011 Viand Street
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

with a patch of goldenseal, tha moat at-rlak medicinal plant.

Rutland Township property
being used for research and
educaiton of medicinal herbs

,,

I
I
I
Address:
I
I
City:
I
I
State: - - - - - - --- - - I
I
: Zip Code: _ _ _ _ _ _ __ I
I
II Phone Number:
I
I
I
I
I E-Mail:
I
I
I
1 Name Of Honoree:
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

191556 -AUTO., AIR COND., LEATHER,
RALLY STRIPES. MSRP $23,009

198597 4-0R. GS, AUTOMATIC
AIR. MSRP$18,146

~19,299 ,n5,299

Name:

88 FORO BRONCO
1979652
$7.4111
87 CHEVY BLAZER

90 FORO RANGER

IL&amp;I
------

.....

1986411

85 FORO F-160
4X2 1302601

#28811 h,IH
88 DODGE

95CHEVY
BLAZER
1980211

85FORD
W!NOSTAR
130150

CARAVAN 129883

$11.8811

...100

96 JEEP

96 FORD
EXPLORER

SZ.HI

.......

,

89 FORO F-260
4X4 #590382

CHEROKEE
1985921

$7,111

$11,. .

1984891
$22,181

88 FORD F-160
1990442

94 CHEVY ASTRO
1975341

96 MERCURY
VILLAGER #28580

$13,8811

94GMCJ!MMY
#985281

85 FORD F-160
4X2 #986871

$11,111
96 CHEVY S-1 0

.......

S14,HI

.,...

#968381
S10.HI

94 FORO F-160
4X41FORD

97 FORD F-160
1988382

$12,111

95 CHEVY BLAZER
1988151

S11. . .

S11,1H

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

with 70
Page 4

entine

Hometown Newspaper

Single Copy. 35 Cents

fedeml initiatives to help mcreii.\C the amount of money available to develop the regoon.
" We are here in NelsonVIlle to t•lk about the Americ•n dream," he
said. "We are here to close the gaps that separate rich from poor, have
from have -not.''
Jackson said movements such as the nght to organize worke" or the
right to vote for women started w•th people who demanded c~a nge&lt;. nol
Congress.
"They have always come from your house and my house up. When
we the people change our minds. the whole world changes."
People al!ending the rally said they hope the march w•lllead to more
auention to the region and beuer conditions.
"I think r~llies like this can make a difference," said Marilyn Kendall.
47. of Pentress, W.Va.
Despite living in the wealthiest country in the world. people in
Appalachia have to worry about what will happen to them linancially if
they get Sick. said Kevm Church. 41. also of Pentress.
Dave Davis. a 48-year-old coal miner from the southeastern town of
Chesterhill. said: "We have to support the people who don't have whal
we have ."
But one Hocking College student questioned Jackson's motives and
wondered whether he was interested in making life beuer for people of
Appalachia or just raising his stature for a possible presidential run.
" I think it is kind of a ploy for a campaign." said Gary Lawson. 26.
of Orrville. "I'd like to think he is here out of the goodness of his heart.''

JACKSON IN NELSONVILLE • Rev. Jesse Jackson, center, Is
flanked by Rev. Jerry Falwell, left, and UMWA President Cecil
Roberts. All were In Nelsonville Sunday to locus attention on
black lung disease and poverty In Appalachian communities.

1998 Sternwheel Festival
activities begin Thursday

~-""-"'"""~"'""""

"Relay For Life"
:
Luminary Ceremony :

fini~hes

Jackson leads march through Appalachia

Call Tribune

/Juminary

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
1
I
I
I
I
1

McGwire

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49 , Number 107

changes in beneficial interest rules.
but because these payments were not
ava1lable earher. to treat all farmers
equitably. those who ha~e lost benefic1al mterest w1ll be ehg1ble for payment based on the rate 1n etfect~n the
date of sale of loss of beneficial mterest.
During the pa.'l week we have
seen p-dyment rates of &lt;!Nibu for
wheal. 29¢/bu for com. and 55¢ for
soybeans. Remember this is a ca.•h
payment to you that is yours regardless uf what you plan to do with the
crop. BUT you must a.•k for it' Feel
free to call daily to check the day's
payment rate. We receive the updated price electronically and usually
have them calculated for you by 8:30
a. m.
If you have any questions plea.o;e
contact the Gallia-Lawrence county
FSA office at Ill Jackson Pike,
Room 1571 Gallipolis. OH 45631 or
call 1-800-391 -6638 or 446-8687.

IJ
r--------------..

Sports

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

--·-·

iszo V;tl/cy Drive 1 Point l'lcasanl, WV ~ (.~iH ) (1 75· 4.140

#98667 ·XL SPORT, AIR CONO.,
~1.~RP $14,225

1'¥!fi/7 •2-0A . AUTO , AIR COND
HOT PACKAGE MS.RP $15,050

111,599 '!12,699
95 FORD
WINDSTAR
#30140 $17.100
97 NISSAN
SUPERCA8 TRUCK

4X4 1990311
S1t1,8811

97 FORD F-150
S.C. #979362
$21,8811
97 FORD F-150
#986061
$13,8811
97 CHEVY
TAHOE *986371
$30,HII
97 FORD F-150
*990561
S21,HII

97 FORD F-150
*988481
S23,Hii
96 CHRYSLER
TOWN AND
COUNTRY
#98421 1
$24,881
97 FORD
RANGER
$10.8911
97 FORD F-150
#30260
$13,8811
89 CHEVY
CORSICA
*29041
$3,8811

88 OLDS CIERRA
*988311
$2,8811
92 MERCURY
SABLE *985081
$11,8811
91 MERCURY
TRACER LSI
#986001
13,8811
90 MITSUBISHI
ECLIPSE
*985701
$3,8811
94 FORD
ESCORT 2-DR.
*988551
$11,8811

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newe Start
Planting the JuttU'e
·(Editor's Note: This is the sec·ond In a series of reports on the
growing medicinal plant industry
in. Meigs County.)
A unique faci lity dedic•ted to
preserving medicinal herbs has been
established in Rutland Township.
and IS designed as an industry -wide
effort to preserve plants deemed to be
at risk from overharvestmg.
The industry in question is lhe
medicinal herb industry which cultivates. purchases and processes medicinal plants such as Ginseng, St.
John's Wort, Black Cohosh and Goldenseal.
The National Center for the herbs, deemed "at nsk" by the UDI!Preservation of Medicinal Herbs is ed Plants Savers. are of grave concern
located on 68 acres of rolling farm to the Blakeleys, Frontier. and others
land . dedicated to nurture and who have made a life of herbal ism .
research herbs deemed "at ri sk." The
Goldenseal &lt;Hydra.stis canadensis)
center. operated with funds from tops the list of "•t nsk " medicinal
Frontier National Products Co-op, an herbs, and will be studied and culti industry leader in the medici nal herb vated extensively at the Nalional
industry.
Center. A target of reckless wild:
Frontier is based in Boulder, crafting-- gathering plants thai grow
Colo .. and operates processing plants in lhe wdd ·· the plant is used as a
in Iowa and Cahfornia. the company tunic. an astringent and as • yellow
employs approximately 350 people. dye. Where there once were thouIts products include the world's most sands or goldenseal plants in woode:&lt;.tens1ve line of certified organical - ed areas. there are now few or fewer
ly-grown chemicals. as well as culi- of them.
nary herbs and spices and aroAccording to Frontier. goldenseal
matherapy products. Its profits have is harvested by gathering roots or
reached $30 million per year.
rootlets from the w•ld at an alarmong
While Frontier is the primary mte -- more than 60 million plants are
"caretaker" of the farm, it will be gov - being harvested annually without
erned by an advisory council of being replaced. It is considered rare.
meUicinal herb manufacturers. retail- threatened or endangered in more
ers. environ mentalists and growers than 25 stales.
and re ~ean.:ht!rs . all involved in the
In addition to goldensea l, the
medicinal h&lt;rh industry.
Natumal Center 10 Rutland Will also
Tim and Heather Blakely have focus on «'&lt;!arch on the propagation
Oeen rctainel1 to munagt! the farm. of American ginseng. black cohosh.
wh1ch was purchased from Boh and blue whosh, wild yam. slippery elm.
Jolene Rupe earlier this year. The Partrjdge berry. lilise unicorn. blood
land is adj•cent to land owned by nxJt. gold thread. Yerba mansu. Stone
Paul Strauss, a member of the Unit· rmt! and Lomatium .
ed Plant Savers board of directors,
Not on ly will the research underand land which is expec ted to be pur- way now at the Nmional Center
Chased hy UpS within 1he next year
atkJre"'" protec.:tion of thesl! at risk
·. Rich in nati ve herbs and boasting herbs, but wi ll also research growing
ideal fore st canopy fur herb cultivamethods-which will allow lhe popu tion, the property will be used exdu · lation of 1hese herbs to grow. and will
Sjvely for research and education . No
encoura~e farmer' and potential
herbs will be cultivated for for-prof· Jarmtrs to cultivate these herh.s in
ii sale, according to Frontier.
their woodlands.
The fate of seveml medicinal
Conlinued.f!.n page 3
) '

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newt Staff
Boats will begin arriving as early
as Wednesday for the Big Bend
Stemwheel Festival, wh1ch will begin
on Thursday.
Mary Donna Davis of the fest1val
committee said that a barge allowing
boats to dock at the amphitheater and
levee are• will be installed on Tuesday. The Pomeroy parking lot will
close at 6 p.m. in order to allow
crafters and food concessionaires to
"'l up their operations on the lot.
The charter boat, The P.A. Denny
w1ll arrive in Pomeroy on Thursday.
and will begin charter cru1ses on Saturday afternoon. concluding with a
spec1allireworks cruise on Saturday
night at 9 p.m. Tickets for the cruises .will be available at the committee's
souvemr booth.
Activities will begin at 6 p.m. on
Thursday with a llag-raising and
opening ceremony conducted by the
American Legion in Middleport.
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce will sponsor a Ca.•ino
Night fundraiser at the Pomeroy tire·
house. beginning at 7 p.m. The event
will follow a western theme, and
donated prizes Will be auctioned at
the end of the evening, to be purchased by "fun money" won at 1he
casino games.
Dee and Dallas will provide musical entertainment on the parking lot
on Thursday evening, beginning at 7
p.m.
The Meigs High School marching
band will perform on the parking lot
at I p.m. on Frid•ty, and the Dazzling
Dulls baton group will entertain at
4:30p.m. Karaoke entertainment by
Jeff North's Starhound Entertamment will hegin •t 6 p.m. at the main
stage area.
Saturday is lilled with aclivities on

the parking lot and downlown. beginnmg with a p•rade at 9 Ol.m.
A c•r show sponsored by the Big
Bend Stemwheel Committee. and
coordinated by Chuck Ritchie. will be
held at Don Tate Motors. StewanJohnson Post 9926 of Mason. W.Va .
I!. ill sponsor the annual chili cook-oil
on the parking lot. and registration for
that event is also at 9:15a.m .. with
the contest beginning al II a.m.
Awards will be presented •t 4:30p.m.
Registration for the line-throwmg
contest will begm at '!:I 5 as well .
That contest will be held at 10:30
a.m.
The Pomeroy Merchants Association will sponsor a Rubber Ducky
Race with donated prizes to be
•warded. The ducks will be launched
at 4 p.m. The association will also
sponsor a masquerade conteM at 7
p.m. That contest is open to the pub·
lie, not just slernwheeler~. and lash
prizes will be awarded in several categories.
Kiddie Tractor Pulls w111 be held
at noon on the parking lot. sponsored
by the Stemwheel Committee. The
event is free to all participating chi I·
dren.
A Sternwhee l Boat Show w• ll
begin at 2 p.m. and awards will be
presented at Saturday evening's Cap·
tains Dmner at 5 p.m.. sponsored by
Hart's Kounlry Kitchen of Racme.
According lo Davis. plans are to have
the dinner on a barge near the levee,
but it will be held at Carpenters Hall
in the event ol mclement weather.
H1gh Country will be the featured
entertainment on the stage on Saturday night. and the evening will con·
elude with fireworks. sponsored b)
Ohio Lottery.
All entertainment has been underwriuen hy Budwei&lt;er.

I

TO PRESIDE • Jamie Drake Ia the 1998 Big Bend Sternwheel
Festival Queen, shown here In 1he period costume she wore dur·
lng queen judging. She and her coun will be presented all 0:15
a.m. on Saturday, and she will preside over all festival activities.

Flu vaccine supply low, but problems not expected
COLUMBUS (API -Although
supplies of llu vaccine are low
nationally right now, health officials
don ' t anticipate problems meeting
demand during the next two months .
One of the four manufacturers in
the United States that produces the

vaccine has had production problems
because of changes in the strams of
vaccine. said Barbara Reynold s.
spokeswoman for the Centers for
D1sease Control and Prevention 1n
Allanta.
"But we're not certifying thi s as

a vacdne shurt•ge." she said.
Her agency expects 80 milhon
doses of the vaccine to be distnbuted
before wmter arnves. :Jbout the same
as last yea r.

The Ohio Department of Health
has rece~Vcd half nf 1he 2JO.OOO dns-

~'

it nrdered from manufacturers to
supp ly 1.12 mtnlly health depari ment s anl1~.: 1uH~o.:o.; .
Any l o~..: ~11 r~ljUt:'o.;h for more than
250 Jo:-.c:-. ar\! bt:tng \..' Ut tn half until

the

re~t

~aa.l

of the :-.tate \ ' uppl y arrive,,

Tlmy P.!)ton. 'uperVJ\Or

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

I Section - 10 Pages
CHiendar

6

Classlfieds

7-8

Comks

9

EditoriHI&gt;
Locul
Soorts

2
3
4-S
3

w~!llher

Lotteries
UHill
TOY RUN • The Mtlg1 County Blkera Allocletlon held 111 annual toy run on Saturday, to
klck off ltl drlve for toys and fundi to purchaae
toy• for needy children In the community. A

aunny end warm day made lor a
day
tor the run. Members of the club are pictured
11 they gather In the Pomeroy Parking Lo1 prl·
or to the event.

Pick 3: 170: Pick 4: 72.14
Sup&lt;-r Lotio: 12- ~ t - ~-l - .\H - 4.1-47
Ki,·kcr: 799074

'

f

"

J

,

�Monday, September 28, 1998

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'C.st/Jblisfrllf in 1948

Page2

'

lllandly, -

tamblf 21, 1...

6

By .III*Andll'lan
end Jln llalllr
BElUJN -The praidenl may be in

II'Ouble, and lhe !'lock nwtcec teelering.
but lite 1\merican dream i~&lt; alive and
well in. of all places. Germany
No1 100 f• from lite old Spandau
prifon. w1tm Nazi war criminals hke
Rudolf Hess served lheir life sentenCeS.. llllldl a curious monumem 10
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
lite country thai defealed Adolf Hiller'~
ROBERT L WINGETT
Thinl Reich in World W• II: TeXllll
Publlahtr
Town.
Modeled afler the gun.... inaing vit..
lap of lite Ameiican Old WeM. Te~as
Town comes complele with a !!aloon.
CHAA~NE HOEFUCH
DIANE HILL
black•mith shop and an outlaw's
a-ellleneger
Controller
cemetery. It's a hodgepodge of .1051
Americana thai many Europeans espectally Gennans - lind quite
I1&gt;IIWIIic.
The Gennan obsession wilh lite
American Wesl II'DCell back to a 19111
century author thai few 1\mericans
have ever heard of. Kart May. the most
widely read author in Gcnnany,
lhrilled his audiences with tales of
cow-punching. while·hat heroes.
shoot-em-ups and the siOries of a brave
American Indian named WinneiOU.
May claimed thai his novels were
By WALTeR R. MEARs
inspired
by his wandering the Ameri·
AP Splclel Corre8pondent
can
West
as a young man. Bu1 near lite
WI\SHINGTON - In these tell-~11 mnes, a.~ a disenchamed Democr.u
end
of
hi•
career. it wao; discovered tbal
reminded President Clinton, a preSident'&lt; private life is public. fairly, .. unfairly. That realily doesn't slop allhe While House.
Even the vague. unwnuen rules thai used 10 rt!llrain reponmg about the
se~ual affam; of pololical figure&lt; have fallen in lhe undenow of che Monica
Lewinsky sex !ieandal.
Shaky at be!il.lhey genemlly held that sexual conduct wa.sn't a public. and
so publishable. alTair unles. il affected the duties or decisoons of lhe official or
candidak onvolved. involved hypocnsy or hes. became known in officoal proceedings or was ,still going on.
In Olher words. unless it wa.s gennane to the job the public man or woman
held or sought.
That standard could be argued eother way about lhe disclosure thai Rep.
' Henry Hyde. chaonnan of lhe House Judiciary Commiuee. had an adulterous
affair almoot 30 yean ago. On one hand, his commiltee is dealing wilh the
impeachment ac'usations brought agatnst Clonton m lhe Monica Lewinsky
ca.se. On the ocher. what Hyde cwled a youlhful indiscretion- he wa.~ in his
40s at the time - ended before he even came to Congress. and when questioned. he dido 't lie but :14lmined 11.
By the iiCI:ount of lhe Avencum.. Fla., man who &gt;aid he was the source of
the story posted by lhe lncemel magazine Salon, he'd offered i11o 57 media
people before he found a Iaker.
Wilh the lncemel and lhe cacophony of Dmadca.sltalk shows and cable television added co lhe maonslream media ~r. lhere'll always be !akers And
once !here is one. the account of a polilicoan's past will spread in10 pnnl and
broadcast. as in the Hyde eptsode.
"Whether we !honk it fair or not. the reality is in 1998thal a presul~nt's private life os public," Sen. Joseph Ltebennan. D-Conn .. suid in his Sept. 4 Sen·
By Net Hentolf
~le •peech denooncing Clinton\ conduct "Contempordf)l media &gt;13ndards
Last spring. the law school of the
will have it no Olher way."
That can be said a.&lt; well ol Olher public men and women. II cenamly wtll University of Washington in Seaule
invited me to speak lo the faculty.
apply lo the candidates who run for presodent on 2000.
Hyde wa.&lt; the thinl House Republican wothon the month 10 disclose 3 past As had previous law schools lhat
adulcemus affair. each goong public because of an impendong new&lt; story. 1\t'ter have invited me. faculty members
the Hyde slory. House Republican leaders complained to the FBI of whatlhey had read some of my columns in
called a possihle auempt at onlimidatoon agatnsl impeachment. They sought an The Wa.shmgton Post on varinus
Supreme Coun cases and &lt;llher
FBI investigucion. su~geslong that Clinton allies were ~!.!hind it all .
The While Hous.: demed onvolv11111en1. and choef of stan Erskine Bowles legal issues
I lnld the professnr who called
said any Clinlon aid&lt;: found lob.! pany to pl:intong such stories would he tired.
that
I wnuld lalk ahout a current
"Their bun would be ktcked out. and they should be k"ked nut." said
anlt·dts.:runinallnn
case dtrecled at
political advisor Rahm Emanud ·· But the fad is. we· re now on a pnoc~ss
the
law
s&lt;h&lt;~&gt;l
it,..lf
hy Katuroa
criminalizing and pulitiLizong people's personal lives."
Smllh.
She
clauns
she
wa.s denied
Meanin~ Clinton\. In hos ~rand 1ury tcsllmony. hc cmnplamed thai some
admossion
becau~
of
her
color. She
questions went "too far in trying lo cnminalou my pnvale Itt e." and hc
is
whole.
The
law
school
pndes
wouldn't answer them.
That privale hfe involved sexuallimsons wllh an atde in his While House ttself on tis tnststence on havmg a
diverse sludent body.
office comple~ .
Her college grades had b«n htgh
By any guideline. such conduct would warrant n:ponmg.
The nrgumenl continu~s about the way th&lt; Republican se~ual dtsclosures and she had ranked tn the 95th permade it iniO print. Rep. Tom ~Lay. the GOP whop. who wanted Clinton ccntole of all those Iukin~ the Law
impeached Ions ago. said h&lt; was acllng on susptcoons. not proof. when he School Admission Test Moreover.
Smith. reared by a single mother
blamed lite White House.
He said on CBS that it lit the pauem of conduct there. "And unfonunale· along woth three other chtldren. had
grown up in poveny.
ly. I think more of this is going to happen ... DeLay saod.
Tn pay fur her education. she had
Probably so. with the ltd oiT scandal reponmg.
11 had been happening gmdually for a decad~ plus. sonce Gary Hun\ worked as a Janitor and as a conDemo..Tatic presodenlial .:ampaign was demiled by disdosures aboul his stru.:llnn worker. as well as at a cattle auctuon . To become a parulcgal.
aft'airs.
"They can't run a story likethos unless somebody said. ' Yeah. I dod il with she had gone to community college
him."' Clinton cOO(hed Genml~r Flowers. Then shc said JUst that. to a super- at noght. She finally groldualed cum
laude from the University of Washmarket tabloid. during his 1992 campaign.
Ms. Lewtnsky testined chat no one ever asked her to he. and that she wa.s ington School of Business Admonis·
no1 promo sed a job for silence ahout her hat sons wllh Clinton. But she had satd traltnn.
As s.:veral of t~e law professors
earlier thai Clinlon told her when the two people onvolved in such a reiOiion·
at
1he
university knew, I had been
shop o;ay 11 didn't happen. in effe.:ttl dtdn 't.
wntlng about rhos case in The Wash·
ongton Post before I came to Seaule.
I noted m those columns that Jusllce

Germans romanticize
old American West

lhe author never
even set fooc on
American soil;
hi• youlh wa.~
"()CCII in prUons.
1101 the pmirie.
Bulllte di.o;closun:
never aft'ecltd his
popularity. and
his novels shaped
Gennany 's pre·
v.ew of /\mer· Andlnon &amp;
ica.
lloller
Big fans included the likes of1\lberl
Eilllllein and even Hider. who was said
10 have devised his military offensives
for U.S. troop; on lite ba~i• of May'•
American ~pe; (lhi•- probably as ill-advised a.s Hiller's casual dillmi!i.'lal of the Briti!lh as a buncll of
"shop-keepers.. ).
May's boob conlinuc: 10 draw fan.~:
~ of Gerntam belontl 10 his
fan club. which ~~oo;t, a yearly l'e!;tival.
These fans have sparked Western spinoff groups. like the Cowboy Club of
Berlin. which created Texa.• Town. and
a growong number of Civil War reerua:tmenl clubs.
Cowboy Club ~idem Fritz Walter. who prefers to be called by his club
name. Ben Deslry. recently showed
our a.s.o;oco:uc Kathryn Wallace around

w•

Tc~w;Town.

Ben poinls 0U1 thai he penonally

wroup lite pri!IOII bon in lhe llherift"•
olfM:e. 1111 well1111he bank Idler's window5 and lhe bladwnidt d!op. The
Saloon. oucfllled in red velvcc and
wheel·well ctlandelienl. serve~
whifikey and ICqllila to thinly IOU,;,.c,..
The chtlldi. contplefc with a bell lhal
Ben uoed 10 ring unlil the rope broke
recet~~ly. is ako litMioning. Sevml
club membtB have been manitd
there. and olhelll have bltplizcd their
babie5 there. ~ family live~ on lhe
"lllllllkiJ1o" c-1 town in a boliCII', and
club membcnl ... qelher often for
meat.. chuck-wagon lilyle.
8ul bke their hero May. Ben and
the ocher 1!0 or till membm of the
Cowboy Club are long on enthll!liasm
but llhorl on hiSIOril:al accwacy. The
lrnditionlllllat! .:etetnony for lhe week·
end crowlk consisl.s of a troop d Civil
War Union !COidien, including women.
holding roll call and then man:hins
wilh IOrthes (a Third Reich tr.lllitioni
to lite tune of ''T:tfl"." Through lite din
rood ofTe~as Town. pi!'~ lite Longhorn
Hocel and lite metean~ile. the tmnp!l
man:h solemnly 10 lite Alamo monumem. where they islillt an et(lhl·gun
&lt;aluce.
Equally suneal is lite lOW' lhmugh
Ben's Hall of Hi&lt;IOI)'. Bel.•y Roo&lt;• i.s
depi&lt;.'led amort¥ a sroup of Navajo

'iutlday, Sept. 2t

CODtlaiMCI from J181t I
For Frontter and the Olher herbal
tnduwialiru onvolved in lhe pun:lwe
and oper.uion of lhe Nacional Center
for the Pre&lt;ervalion of Medicinal
Hcrbli. there has been a liCCOfld rll&lt;lli·
vallon 10 purchasing lite farm lbeor
purchase saved the 70 acre• from
whal they con&gt;tder the abomonation
of clear-cut logging.
The herbalost\ objccllon•lo clear·
.:uumg "easy 10 undcrsiJlod. for the
cultivation of most herbs. includmg
gmseng and golden&lt;eal. rely heavoly
on a naturdl fore.r canopy
And juSI why did the faciloty end
up tn Rulland'
According lo Blakely. con•idered
a lending herb researcher and grow·
er. the local ion next to the land to be
purchased by UpS was an auraclton.
but lite Jll()!;l tmponant con.,deraloon
was the ideal condition• for herb cultivation offered by Southern Ohio
and Meigs County. spertlically
Few. of any. areas in the entire
Unoled Stales can match Meogs
County in ideal growing condition•.
according to Blakely. The sod and the
clomate. along with an existing populatoon of al rosk herbli make thos the
penectlocatton for the Natumal un-

Wayne Hubbard

---

Letters to the editor

in a .:onvtrsa1ion

years ago
chat
while
individual
applicants •·
of any race or
gender
deserve c~Ydit
for o\·crcom·
ing such past
Hentoff
ohstacles
as
poveny. a genen.: preference fur
race or gender in admi,.ions vio..
lates the Equal Protection Clause of
the Founeenth 1\memlment. That
clause, Dougla.&lt; emphasized, "commands elimination of racial barriers.
not theor creation to satisfy our theory as to how society ought to be
organized."
At the faculty luncheon. huvong
referred to Douglas vtews. I asked
the dean. Ronald Hjonh. whether
Katuria Smith had been required to
state her race on her application
"No," he said. Theret&lt;&gt;re. I went on.
sonce Katuna ts not an ea.•ily cute·
gorizable name. I asked if she
would have been admiued ... on the
basis of hoth her academic achieve ..
ments and her ability to overcome
poveny -- tl she had been thou~htto
be black.
The dean was sming next to me.
He nodded aftirmalively us he said.
softly. "Yes." Several members of
the laculty also nodded in agree-

menl with him. Dean Hjonh now
assens that h&lt; never !lllid any such
thing. and that my account is suspect because I have wrinen "sever·
al versions" of thai exchange.
In each of the columns referrinl!
lo that aflcmoon. my question lo lhe
dean ts always about whether Smllh
would have been admiued if she
were hlack. In all but one. I cite his
posilive answer In my May 19 column. I mention the fiii.'Uity hut not
the dean because. cuuinll for space.
I l"ogured a law-school fucully
includes the dean.
When a reponer for the Seaule ·
Posl·lntelligencer asked me about
the &lt;lean bemg absent from thai lirst
column. I sent him a copy of my
oril!inal piece. The reference to the
dean wa.&lt; then:. with a line drawn
through it for reasons of space. He
is mentioned in all my ocher
columns.
The dean also cites that some 15
law professors whu were present at
the luncheon have submiued
"swum affidavits" that he did not
say what I reponed. I can unW:rstand. to some extent. their institutional loyalty in denying that their
dean had made an admission which
can be damaging to the law school\
defense against Smllh.
As a frequent reponer on police
brutality, I am familiar with the
"blue wall of silence" in police
precincl houses. &lt;You don't "rut"
on a colleague.) I see now thai il can
extend to some law professors.

Charlotte Nye McCullough. 86. Rtchmond. Va .. dted Fnday. Sept 25.
1998 She was the daughter oflhe late George B. and Genrude Fowler Nyc .
She i ~ survived by her husband. Roy E McCullough A memonal servtce
wtll be held a1 a later date

Orval L. •curly• Wiles
Orval L. "Curl y" Woles. 72 . 112 Wolfe Drove, Pomeroy. died Saturday.
Sept. 26. 1998, at hos home
A rcllred laborer for the former Foole Minet~l . New Haven. W.Va .. he
wa.s born Nov 30. 1926. on Almena, Kan . son of lhe latt John and Anna
Lenhen Wtles. He was a member of the Fi&lt;SI Bapti•t Church of Pomeroy.
a World War II veteran. second voce commander of lhc American Legion
Drew Webster Post 39 of Pomeroy and a member ott he Btg Bend Mtnstrel

w,. II velerolll. indocttillllll!d in N:Ui
es1 in 1\merica

A"socia1ion
(';

~~. ~r.

...,

'&amp;.my PI Cloudy

~
Cloudy

~~.-~&amp;~

•

.,

'

:.

81-. T -

.......
·
leo

Today's weather forecast
By The A11oclated Pre11
Soptheaslem Ohio
.Today... Mostly sunny with a le~s
h4mid aflernoon. Highs in the lower
!1\)s. Nonhwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
. :I'onight...Ciear and ~ooler. Lows
near 50 to 55. Loght and variable
wjnd.
Tuesday ... Mostly sunny. Highs in
\he upper 70s
!';~tended forecut.

Tuesday night .. Panty cloudy.
Lows in lhe mid 50!&gt;.
Wednc5day ...Panly cloudy. A
chance of sh&lt;Jwcrs during the ntght.
Highs near 80.
Thursday... /\ chance of showers
during the day... Dry al night. Mom, ing lows tn the mid SO.. Highs on the
mid 70s.
Friday .. Mostly clear Momong
lows SO to 55. Highs 70 to 75 .

Ja Anda-111111 Jan MaUl(
are wrlten for United Fealurt Syl\"·

Meigs announcements

lnlerestingly. the allidavit·sign.
ers make no commenl about my
having su1d 10 the dean ... and Ill
them -- after my initial exchange
with Mr. Hjonh. "Is this the lal¥
school's Jelinitilln nf due process!':
If the dean had not already admiued
In me that Smith's color explained
her rejecllon, why would I have
asked that question '!
·,·
On Sept. I. Heath Foster. a
n:puner for the Seuule Pnst-lntclli·
~enccr. revealed the "smnL!Ofl
gun" in rhos dispute . The Univer&lt;o\y
nfWa.,hin~tlln ' s Law Sehoul. fnstn.
wrote. hat) uclnnwl~dged on co,un,
papers nled in the Katuria Soni.t~·
lawsuit ... months bef11re I came '''
Seaulc -- that "il hall never denieil
admission to hlack students wilh i~;!
same lest scmes and grades as ~~~
white woman who is suing the
school lor reJecting her on 1994.·; •. ·
AI lhat faculty lun.:heon. therefore. the dean knew the answer. to
my 4uestiun. And that is why lie
acknow ledged 111 me what hull
already b.!en submoued, under oath,
by his law sch&lt;xll Some of the law
prnlessors around the table als&lt;l
knew thai hecau&lt;e they are wurkon~
on the Smith .:ase for the luw
school.
I'd like to audit a cuurs.: in legal
ethics at thai law s.:hml.
·
Nat HcntoiT Is a nationally
renowned authority nn the First
Amendment 11nd the rest of the:
Bill or Rights.

Cooler, drier weather
i.s forecast Tuesday
VIce said.

Highs on Tuesday wdl be 1n the
low 70!&gt; lo low 80s.

Revival Klaled
Revtval will be held beginning
Sunday through Oct. 6 atlhe Forest
Run United Methodist Church near
Miitersville wilh the Rev. Wesley
TMtcher as guest speaker. Special
music will be held nightly. Pastor
Chad Emrick invites lhe puhlic.

test ~

s..

He,. survoved by hos wofe. Deny Wile•. two sons and a daughter-on-law.
Larry and Ann Wolos of Racone and John Wole• of Pomeroy: a daughter and
son-in-law. Anna Kalhryn and CrJig Dar&gt;~ ol Middlcpon. fi ve grandchol·
dren and two grcat-grandcholdren. a brother. Bernoe Wtles of Pacific Palosades, Calif: two sostcrs. Doris Koelsky of Lakevoew Terrace. Wa.sh., and
Ardoth Bates of Yakoma. Wash.
Servoces woll be held Wednesday. 10 am. al Ewong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Paul Sllnlson offico•tmg Bunal woll follow in Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy, Wtlh mtlotary gravesode servoces by the Drew Web!&lt;ter Post
of the American Legoon
Friends may call Tuesday. 7-9 p.m atlhe funeral home.

rw----Local briefs-----.
Man charged
An Ill-year-old Long Bonom man wa.s jailed on a charge of f&lt;lonious assault following a Froday eventng incodenl on Cunis Hollow
Road near Long Bnnom
Daniel Murphy ''accused of strokong Dawn JohOMlO , addre" unreponed. With a motor-vehicle followong an argument at the Keuh Myer
residence. accordong to a Meigs County Sheriffs Oftice repon

Vandalism charge filed

woll be 45-55. Some palchy fog os
pussible. the National Wealher Ser-

39 of lhe Drew Webster Post.
Pomeroy. has received orders of nuls.
To pick up call Joanne Vaughan,treasurer. at 992-3637.

A 22-year-old Long Bottom man was jailed on charges of disorderly conduct by onlo&lt;tcatoon and vandalosm Saturday evenong.
Esther Powell . Hayman Road. Long Bouom. reported Joseph W
umaster wa.• o01oxicated and creallng a dosturbance. After being placed
on a Meigs County Sheriffs Dcpanmcnl cruoser, Lemasler allegedly
kocked and damaged a rear wondow on the vehtcle. He wa.s then sprayed
with pepper spray and placed on jail.

Accidents reported
A llVYear-old Chesler gorl e&lt;eaped senous inJury on a une-.:ar acco ·
dent on Oak Holl Road near Chester Fnday afternoon
Alison Rme was southbound on Oak Hill Road when she ""' mntrol of her 19'!4 Ponllac on the gr. vel road. accordmg to a Metgs County Shenlfs Oflice repon The car w&lt;nl off the left &lt;ode of the road and
struck an embankment and uuhty pole before rollong over and landtog on ots wheels. sustatntng heavy damage. the reporl slated.
Rose receoved a small cut on her scalp. the repon stated.
In an unrelated acctdent. Ru.sell Robson. 60. Belpre. wa.&lt; eastbound
on slate Route 6H I we&lt;t of Alfred e"rly Froday evening when he struck
and killed one of two mws standing on the roadway. causong moderate dama~e to h,. 1977 GMC truck . ac.:mdtng to a MCSO repon Rohson wa~ cited ftn dnv1ng under ~u:ipen:o.IOn

Special meellng
The Scopio Township Trustees
wtll have a spectal mecttng on Tue•day at 7 p.m. althe home of the clerk.
Spec:lal~~ervices
· · Special services will be held Sat- Connie Chapman.
urday, 7 p.m. at the Faith Valley
Tabcrnacle '• church, Bailey Run Revival
Clark Chapel Church on Clark
Road. Pomeroy Pastor Rev. Emmell
Ghapel
Road near Poner Poner woll
A Rawson welcomes the public.
hold revival services September 30
LEPC meellng
lhrough October 4 al 7 p.in. each
Ronnie Denny. Brudbury Rmd. Pomeroy. reponed Saturday
· The Meigs County Emergency evenmg. Rev. Tom Schoonover of
evenong thai four ures w~r~ cut. the wind,hoeld smashed and front seal
Plbnning Commiuee (LEPC) will Rutland will be the guest speaker.
cut on hos Dodg~ truck . ac.:urdong to a Meigs County Sher•:f, Oflice
meet in regular sc.-ion Tuesday,
report . In addlloon . •10 unoccupoed home was entered and a hole
11:30 a.m. 10 the conference room of Legion chicken dinner
knocked in a bedn&gt;om wall. the repon stuled
l~i! multipurpose Senior Citizens
The Racine 1\merican Legoon Post
B.~ilding.
Mulberry
Heights, will huve a fned chtcken dtnner With
i&gt;nltleroy. Regular business including trimmin8s Sunday beginnin8 II a.m.
The fnllowong &lt;~lallon ' were 1" ued hy Me1gs County Sh~rilfs
the revtcw of the annual haz-mat plan at the American Legion Post. Cost $5.
deputies Friday. Emmons A. McConthay. Bidwell. second offense drt·
and 1999 LEPC projects will be COO·
ving under the inllu~nce : Nancy Stewart. Bodwell. npen cunlainer in
du~ted. For more infonnution call
a motnr·vehick . Bohby Doll. Chester. parkong in roadway and con·
Southern parent/teacher confer·
Rob.!n E. Oyer. director of Meigs ences
sumong beer in a motor-vehicle .
C!&gt;unty Emergency Services and
Southern Local School District's
LEPC .:hairmun at9'12·6617.
first parent/teacher conferences wtll
be held Wednesday. 4to 7 p.m. If you
The following couples were 22. and Atncia Lynn Lane, 43, both
Legion fundraiser
want a conference and have not
• · -:"merican Legton Auxiliary Unu receoved informution from your 1s~ued marriage lu.: enses l,tst week in of Mason Cnunty. Mochael D Cog·
child's scllool. please call the school the Meogs County Probate Court of ar. 26. and Dawn D Howard. 26.
Judge Rob.!rl Buck.
both of Meogs Couontv.
al
10 schedule one.
Ricky Lee Johnson. JJ. and
!USPS JI).HO)
Melissa Dawn Cowdery, 27, lx~h of
~ Revival set
C'-••ahy NewiJlOptr Holdl.op, boc.
• Revival services will be held Oct. Meig~ County. Michael Paul Lane.
Publithc:ll every 1ftcmoon, Monday lhrouth
Fridly, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohk1, by the 1 5·10at7 p.m. nightly al Little Hock·
Ohio Vlllry Publl•hloa Company. Second dou · tng Evangeltcal Methodist Church.
'PCJillae peld 11 P•.11ncroy, Ohio.
There woll be special singing. Pastor
M. .ber: The A&gt;""'bo..J P&lt;CII and oho Otllo
Wuyne Vogelfong invites the pubhc.
N~wlj)lp&amp;:r Alwci111'on.
• P-.maller: Send addrCJ&amp; correttions lo Tho
John Elswick w11l b.! the evangelist.

Vandalism investigated

Citations issued

Couples Issued marriage licenses

. '} S , Th
. e 0 y enhne1 ·.

'llo lly Sentinel, Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
4S769.

"

Gathering to be held
Emmaus Gath~ring will b.! held
Oct. 5 7:30p.m. ntthe Cheshire Unlled Methodost Church.

SUBSCR!PriON RATES

By Ctrrler or Motor Route
One Week .................. ............ .$2.00

One Mnn1h ............................ sa 70

Sweden: c) Netherlands ; d) Hong
6. E. All uf the ubuve . Euch ol'
Kong; e) all of lhe ahnve
these foreign markets performed;
Here are the answers and a bener. on dollars, than the U.S.
brief uplanation of each :
market from Dec. 31, 19M2 In
I.
B. Companies have Dec. 31 , IIJY7. The big winner:
increased lheir eurninl!s per share was Ihe Netherlands. S l,f)(J() ,
over time.
invested in that country in 1982 '
Basically. stock prices lend to 8rew into a whoppin~ $23.346 by ,
follow .:orporate eurninss. So if 1997 .
you believe the e.:onomy w1ll
If you had allocated 15 per·
continue to expand and corporate cent of your portfolio to interna·
America will continue to tiona I sux:ks from 1'170 to 1'197.
increase prnlils, it makes sense you would h11ve lowered Y'"P .
to own stocks.
volatility without reducing ycSri
2. C. Twelve. Twelve correc· relurn .
tions since 1970 translates into
For more on The Invest Te.'\1 :
about one every two and a half and other education data in tht~ ;
years.
-'
campaign. cull (I!()()) 343·3548: •
3. B. False. History tells us You can also request infortnlll(ol[ :
that 51ock prices decline goins about Peter Lynch's "Key Things :
into a recession but will recover Every Investor Should Know" :
before the economy al larae ha~ and "lnvestina in Volatile Mar.:-:
. It,
recovered. If you're a believer in kets."
stocks. don't panic: ride it out.
Dlen Vujovlcll Is the autllcir
4. A. June 1949 to May 19~9 . of "Siralallt Talk About Mutu-'
The SAP ~00 returned an avcraae al Funds" end "Stralabt Talk
annual tolal relum of 21.4 per- About lanallaa for Your :
cent for that period.
Retire•••••" bolll of wlllcll Ill"-':
' · D. 3.0 pen:ent. Bond~ have publlalltd by McGrew Hilt. '·
performed well durin&amp; Klock mard quttlloea toller II eere~t :
ket c:rashe• •• another reason to tllla aewapeper, or via ....en et
own them.
MIIMutulaol.u• •

,

Snow

By Tho A11oclated Pre11
High pressure will bring slightly
cooler and drier weather to Ohio
lon)ghl and Tuesday.
· Lows tonight under clear skies

Take the challenging invest
generally optimistic: dl The population of the Uniled Slates has
grown.
2. How many market "corrections" (declines of 10 percent ur
more) have there heen since
1970? a) Five; b) Nine: c)
Twelve: d) Twenty·one.
3. Stock prices will decline in
a recesston. but they lend to turn
up at the same lime the economy
recovers. a) True; b) False.
4. Whtch I().. year period saw
the highest lotal return for 1he
S&amp;P 500 since 1926? al June
1949 to May 19S9; b) June 1980
to May 1990; ciJanuary 1988 to
December I\197.
S. The SAP SOO was down
21.5 percent in October 1987. lhe
monlh of the "Crash of '87."
What was the total return of
intermediate aovernmenl bonds
that month? a) ·10.8 percent; b) ..
5.3 percent; c) 1.2 percent: d) 3.0
percent: e) 14.3 percent.
6. A SI.OOO investment in lhe
U.S. stock market in 1982 would
be worch an amazing $11,271
Coday. In which of the followlna
countries would you have done
beller? a) United Kinadom: b)

". ' . '.' ',' ,.

~--

One: Yc1n........ ....................... . $104.00

1 had to emil a couple of knee slapptng guttaws when I read statements By Olen Vujovlch
made by Cnngre&gt;Sman John Kasich IR-Ohio) on the Sept. 23 an!de "Ka"ch :.
Every nnw and then. a fund
We need to govern ourselves". Kasich has a .yen lor blow~ng lalse puffs ot famtly comes along Wtlh a campopulist smoke regarding middle class tax rehef. Hts as.senton lhat .a Reagan paogn that 's not only eye·catch model of taxation would benetitthe mtddle class doesn I pa.ss the goggle test. mg but also chock -full of useful
In fact. u·s a real howler. In a previous leiter. I pointed out that after lhe Rea- onformation.
gao tax "reforms' 90 percent of the people ow~d m~re Ia. than ~!.!fore. .
Peter Lynch. portfolio managWhat conservatives in both pantes have done dunng_ the pa.&lt;t g~neranon . er of the Magellan Fund from
in etl'ect. is cancel the pmgres&gt;tve lax system: the pnncople that tux rates go May 1977 to May I'190, no I only
up a~ 1ncome nses Thos system. w!ltch was in pla..-e during the great g~wth _ pumped up appeal for fund
years of the moddle cia&lt;&gt;. placed the tux burden on the nch and corporations. investing. he also· made tens of
In 1955. the top tax mte was 91 pen:enl. Scventy~one pcn:entage pomls sep- thousands of .Jollnrs for share·
nrated che bouom from the top tax rJie. By 1996 11 wa.qust 24.6 potnl&lt;. The holders as the fund's assets grew
country's most powerful business.:s pay tax at a fmclion of the ~te they once from $20 million in 1977 to over
paid. If corporallons patd mcome tax on 1996 at the. rJte paid'" the 1950s, S 14 billion at the time he handed
the treasury would have collected an exira $250 btl loon.
the portfolio manager's baton 10
What Ka.sich wanl&lt; to do " cut ta~cs for the wealthy who are already his successor.
receivintllhe largest percentage of the nation's income since World War II
Today. Lynch is the primary
and force the reductoon of all discretiOnary govemment prollram1 excepl the player in Fidelity's latest TV and
mililllr)'. The present budget already reduces non-military discrecionary print ad campaian desianed to
spendinsto three percent of gross domestic product in 2002. 11te lowest level help educate investors. The cam·
!liDce World War II. Programs for the poor and near poor~ only 20 percent paign includes The Invest Test, a
ahll entitlements.
JO.. question quiz that's both chaiKasich calks aboulthe need to govern from the bollom upllld 1101 ""I~ lenaing and informative. Here
down. but one would never see htm engage 1n an all..eJUIIIItek onlhe htd· are some of the questions from
elm welfare stale whoch provides subsidies and beacf.. 10 lhe aftluenL If he that quiz:
walliS 10 put a premium on ethtcs. let him come de8n lboul who is nespon·
1. The primary reason Mock
sible for che astonoshing rise in economic! inequality dllrinJ lhe pa.~l quarter prices have risen over time is: a)
cenrury.lt has nOihing to do woth ~~·~from the top down. II has every· Investors keep pun ina new
thins 10 do with govemmenl $lnfltna riJ(IIwll'll.
money into stocks; b) Companies ·
Jeffrey Flelcll have increased their earninJs per
Middleport share over lime; c) Investors are

'~
~.·
.. ·
Rain
,_

Deflef Rllliler. or Wilborn Hazzard
"" he is known at lhe club. grew up in
Ease Gennany and never lltlllll u p(lsii,
live word spoken about America. Nt»o
all of his hobbiell are Westem..:en,..
tered. He juSI mumell fmm a vacatia;
tn - w1tm el&lt;e'' ... Texa.•. He 'li"a.t
awed by the wide..qJCn "P'JJ.'C'. wht:fe.
he say• thai human pntential is only
limited by the wealhcr.
'
Maybe Americans could lc;!in
"lllldlting from lhe German in!erJft·
tation of the American dn:am.
'
dlcate, Inc.

William 0 .
Douglas had
convinced me

Charlotte McCullough

know aboullhe West
Ben is a dccor.ded Gennan Wmd

«."

_[f.R..

Wayne llubbard, 52. 203 Rock St .. Pomeroy. dted Sunday. Sept 27. 1998
al Rocksprings Rehabtliwion unter. Pomeroy. Arro~~~gcments woll be
announced later by Ewong Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

sured llltifacl from "the greol u~.
l'lelidenl Ben Franklin... while the
generaii!Ore ocll• Miller Lite in a can.
Bul akhough Te~W Town ~lear.~ I'll
~ to any history ten pub..
lished in Ameri&lt;:a. many menlbeti aile
having 10 relearn everylhing they

Circling the wagons at a law school::

•

Rutland Township...

Indians; a ~ine bulfalo pie ICrapcd
off lhe T- pbiM is enmned nexc 10
cannonblllb allied from Civil Ww bul·
deftdck (All of Ben'• dC!IcriplioM are
followed "' the ~ "Thai ;. p·
uine llltide." ) Ben poutled out a Ilea·

(IRliJilpnda ao a young boy. His inter·
came from walchill)l
movieo of hi• hero. John Wayne. Tht
lilrM prumpced him to launch ll1e
Cowboy Club wilh 3 friend in I'BO. ·
1\nolhcr membel. Jan Prell, grew
up in lite fonner Cucho!llovakta undtr
•'ORIRIIIrti""'. wltm olfteiul informoltion aboul lite Wes&amp; wa.• confined no
Manisc di:tlrihes on lite evils of capotaliMn. But Kllrl May boob wem)t
banned. and that's what sp-~wPI&lt;il
Pn:ll's lifelong fa...:illlllion wilh Alllef;
il:a.
. :
Alice Bischoff. rolling her own cigOIICite Ul the Texa.• Town Saloon.
e~plained thai she loved lhe We~
b.&gt;.:ause o( the i~nuity nf lhe pc&lt;ljlk.
"Finding u new way i• admired," !'he,
says. "You try lhin~ different here (In
Germany) and you're a trwblem:

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

·ohio weather

Germans romanticize old American We.st

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992-2158 • Fax 992-2157

~~~~~hcommentslaughable

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

SINGLE COPY PRICE
D11ly........................................ ll c....
Sublcritk\rw not dcAirina eo pay lho curior m1y
rcmrt In advance direct to ThN&gt;1rly Sentinel on
1 lhrcc, t ilt or 12 month ~. Credit will be
aivcn c1rrkr c.ch week .
, No ar.rhKrrpllon by m11l ptrmrtlcd rn ucu
whe~ home cwncr ~ervicc 11 1:11ilablc
' Pllblistu:r fCICf\'CI tha rrahl 10 Jdju•t fiiCI dur·
)RJ lhc subscripuun p:riDd. Sutncnptlon ri iG
chiOJCI m.1y ~ impk:mcnted bv chln&amp;lna tbc
cluntion of the: llubicription.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ....................... 47),
Akzo ...................................... 37),
AmrTech ............................... 48'1.
Aahland 011 ......................... 47'~.
ATAT ....................................59'BIInk Ont .............................. 46 ),
Bob Evena .............................. 20
Borg-Wamar ....................... 39"·
Broughton............................. 18'1.
Champion ...............................10
Charm Shpa ............................4,,
City Holding ........................37"1..
Federel Mogul ......................~
Gannett .................................
Goodyear ......................... .,.. 54.,.,
Kmen ..................................... 13'1.
Kroaer ..................................50.,.

MAIL SUBSCRIPriON
llllldt Mtlp CDUnly
ll W..ks...................... .. $27.30
26Wceu ........................ JSJ.82
5l Wceu .........................SIOS.S6
Rolet Ootlslck ,...... eo..., '
• • Il Weeks ........................ ,.J20.25
26 W.cks ...........................JS6 68
. S2 Weeks .............. .......... .$10!172

ComC:tlon Polley
Oir 111111 .......,. lo aU lloltel Is 1o bo
ln'DI'

•
( : ] ., IO\'ICS

55"

Reader Services

O&lt;ellrale. U JOU lulow of II

•••••••••••••••
BIG ',. ,... " .. . ""''

tn.l

Jo I ,

tiD!'Y, ..tl 1110 ...,....,., II (740)
11$5. We wll cllec:k 7oar hllonaallotl
aokl make a &lt;On't&lt;lloa lr wamoatod. ·

News Depenmenta
IOIIbor lo f92·2J55. Jletoatt•

Tlot IIIIa

~..~na. enc1 .............................1a'l.
Lid .........................................24'1.
Ollk Hill Flnl .......................... 18'•
OVB ....................................... w40
One Velley .............................
Peoplel ............................... 26'1.
Prem Flnl...............................20!.
Rockwwll ...............................38'1.
RDIShlll ...............
48,,
Sell'l .............................................
Shoney'a ............................... 1.,.,

33,.

w ...............

mnle........,.ore:
Qeaeral Ma.....,.....................Etd. Uti ·
'lewl .......................................... Exl. ll02 f" Ster Btnk .............................H).
·
ar Exl. 1106 : WenliY'a ...............................

m

·'

Woetthlrtgton........................13'·

·

Other ServiOM

1

-'-'-

Aat'"' 11.......... ......... .............£at. tiM (
Stock reporta are the 10:3
Clradlllotl ....... - . ....................111. UfJ I a.m. quotet provided by AdYeet
Claisltled Adt.............................Etd. ueo
of Oelllpolla.
.
·
·~~~~~~~~~

.

...

1 7·10 IS.l

J•oo

.,.1 ,,,,.,. 11t'·'•'ll

ter for the Pfe§trValton of Medicinal
Hetb&lt;.
Convenely. the National Center
for lhe Preservacion of Medicinal
Herbli ""'Y be the petfecc indu.try for
Metp County. The medicinal hertt
indu&lt;try. ""ording w Blakely, i•
"desperace" for new growel'&gt;.
"Twenty years ago. chose of u•
who were enlhusia.\li&lt; about herbalIsm were a.•kmg people to use herbs.
and now, we've almost begun 10 ask
people not to use them. •imply
ba:au..., they're beong nvcrfw,..esled,"
he satd.
Teaching local residents and
potential growers from across lhe
country can only benefit the medicinal herb induscry. Teachong farmet'li to
cultivate thelle at ri•k herbs will
relieve the demand for wildcrafted
herbs such illo goldenselll and ginseng.
Fronlier has made a goal 1o 1110p
buyong any woldcralled hcrtt•. and
other •upphers are likely to follow
suol. causing the demand. and hence
the price, of wildcrdfted herbs to
plummet. whole the demand for herbs
by lhe con•umer will continue: to
oncreao;e.

Everett Leslie Crow Sr.
Evereu Leslie Crow Sr. lovong falher and fnend to all. depaned this hfe
on Sept. 26, 1998 10 be with the Lord. Mr. Crow wa.s a hfc long member
of the Solvenon. W.Va. Unlled Melhndtsl Church. Mr. Crow is survived by
hos wofe. Inez Salser Crow: lwo sons. Everell Leshc Crow II and David Wade
Crow of Ravensw&lt;Kld, W.Va.: three daughters. Mary Virgonta Cruw-Cald·
well of Ravenswood. Ruth Ann Crow-Garreu of Hunlongton. W.Va. and
Georgie Ernest one Crow-Boso of Ravenswood. He os also survtved hy one
brothrr. Elmer E. Crow of Ravenswood and two stsle,., Georgoe Poole of
Los An~eles. Calif. and Ernestine Tnbett of Ripley. W.Va.
He w.., a promonent Ravenswood busine-.man and enjoyed a hfe long
love for hunttng and fishong He was a veteran of World War 11 s.:rving in
Geurge S. Puuon's Thtrd Army tn lhe 256th Engoneer Battahon: wa.s a rectpienl of the 1\mcrican Thealer Ribbon and the Good Conduct Medal. He wa.•
a member of lhe RavenswO&lt;ld Veter~ns of Foreo11n Wars 6669. the Abo! Is and
Rayburn Post II Hof the Amencan Legton 10 Ravensw01ld and 111&lt; Mountaoneer Coonhunters Club
Mr. Crow was precclled in death by hos parents, William Davod Crow
and Mary Valentme Hunler Crow. one granddaughter. Krosty Lynn Crow;
two brothers. Wilham Roc hard Crow and (infani) Claore Crow. and two sisters. Vtrginia Crow Shockey and Agnes Crow Ktbble.
He will be missed so much by hos famoly that loved him dearly anll hy
hos many friends .
Funeral servtces wtll be conducted Tuesday. Septemb.!r 29. 1998 al2 p.m
at the Roush Funcr.l Home on Ravensw••ld. Mol nary graveside services will
follow at the Ravenswood Cemetery woth the Abels &amp; Rayburn Post II H
of the American Legion serving as pall bearers and the Ravenswood Veterans ol Forcogn War 669 servong as the rille squad.
Fnends may visll on Monday. September 2K. 1998 from 2 to 4 p.m. and
7 to 9 p m. al the Roush Funeral Home, Raven•wood ..

Meigs EMS logs 9 calls
Unols of the Meogs County Emergency MedKal Service recorded ntne
calls lor a&gt;Sislance Saturday and
Sunday. Units respondong oncluded:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2.27 p m. Sunday. Sprong Avenue.
Pomeroy. Madeline McClung. Veteran' Memonal Hospital:
5 2K p.m. Sunday. Mulberry
Avenue. P11meroy. Bradley Colburn.
VMH:
11 ·4K p.m. Sunday. Wtllow Creek
Road. Pomeroy. Richard Demoss.
Pleasant Valley Hospnal.
POMEROY
I.31 p.m. Saturday. volunteer fire
department and squad to West Mam
Street. motor-vehocle accident. Don
Ellis. VMH. Patricoa Arnold and
Casey Arnold. treated at the scene,
Central Dispat.:h s4uad assosted.

RACINE
K· l7 p m. Sunday. slate Route 124.
Lolly M.:Gee. VMH .
9 55 p.m. Sunday. Rainbow
Rodge. Long Bonum. Mosly Evans.
lreul~d al the scene.
RUTLI\ND
1·51 a.m. Saturday. VFD and
squad lo state Route 124. moiUr-vehocle accident. Enc Knous. VMH .
Salem Township VFD and Central
Dispatch squad asstsled,
6 57 a m Saturday. Metgs Mone
31 . Danville ponal. Roger Saltsman.
Hnlter MeJoc.tl Center. Central Dispatch 'quad """ted.
2.53 p m Sunday. VFD and squad
to ' late Rout&lt; nK I. Donna Vane anil
Pete Aldo to O'Bieness Memonal
Hospotal, Sropio Townshop VFD
ass1sh:d .

Hospital news

Veteran• Mem&lt;lt'ial
Saturday admissoon' - none
Saturday discharges - Edith
O'Dell
Sunday admossoons - none.
Sunday discha~es - none
Holzer Medical Cenler
Discharges Sept. 2S - Darlene
Freeman. Marilyn Godholl. T&lt;mya
Tatum. Fredenck Carpenter. Thomas
Bowman. Chmty Wolhams. Mrs

Steve McGh&lt;e and daughler. Owen
Moore
Discharges Sepl. 26 - Kevin
Bostic. Ohler GtJy. Venose Bryant.
Carol Groves, Austin McDaniel.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Davod
Howe. son. Galhpohs .
Di.charges Sepl. 27 - Nan neue
Powell, Benjamm Kruscump. Lmda
Dyer
(Published with permission)

The Pomeroy Office of
Farmers Bank will close
Wednesday
9:45am to 11:15AM
so employees can
attend funeral of our
fellow co-workerCurly Wiles

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Page.:

,Monday, September 28, 1993

-.

-

Scoreboard
Dab
NY G..,.~ .

Baseball
Tonipt'• pmo
\lotld -~.Md rt;.)•,ff

ALst;tlld~

~~ ~

f.r,;l..,..

r.. Nt• \'ur1.

on..._
lt

~

I'll.

..t•

Y:2

:'U
"'4

W

~:2

\.l'

111

n)(

!fl

"N

411-Y

4\
"H

lUI
7'1

lbh •'hl•t
T.t"lfl.t H.!)

b'

7u.o

~

11

\.W

*I

·~

~
""'' .

, ...

"--'lit)

~

M mr'C'to~ot.o~

111 'I!

llttn ..,

M

Y7

II

1n

Jl!

1'1

Mil

! -1

XII
""

An.olhc'un
'M-••k

.,,.
7J

OM.I..n..l

7-4
71

\J l
\;\

~c..

..17~

kM

J~1

\

I!
IJ

\ · 1Uifi.JJI I...IIflllllor

,._,,., .,.,kJ n •••l

Saturd»f• scorn
-'.rt.ahcm1 l
Tcu• !,

Chll"l'" ~ htk \u• I l K.odl ""'' Cn ~ \
Ck• r~ '' t.lonur.,.,..., '

Sunday'•
1'""'""!

u.. ...,,lfl ''

&lt;· ,, ~ to

NL standings
El~rnDi,....._

'r\1t..n1o~
f\c-~o~o
L

v..

~

U

b\J
*41

M..,lfk"J Uc,..,.,...,
hnk) 1'\JUhr-un

M

•n

.,"

t- :. ..... ~a

\...1 11""

ln

ue
K9

Nl

""'

"''

N

\C

77 M\
7J IU(
HI ''1

("INI: 'INNAll
M1i"' .wLt-t"
1'111-"ur ~ h

'-1'1

..1 7"
J~ 7

J~h

"....,.,,..,.Df\·W...

t7 .M. Nfii . ..I~H
~"I

~C

Juhn ~o~on . ~olllk . ~ll .

k

C·onr

~

,,lfi.. ~,.,

..,.., H:.llunutt" lilt• 1-..\-n"ll \..o~ulr l":'tl
SA VI:\ l.unJun Ht h lun Jtl ... rHI\:~1. Ani! ·
lk'Hn . J~ Wnltl.urd. Tt~a~ -1:! . 'I J"'L"''" Oc\t·
l;moJ __.., Aruokr ... MottiJC"ofl\o~ . \K . ~1 Hncr;t. Nc--o

,,,.,.

YnrL If,: 1 Molfllt•Oflk'f) . K.111...,.. C il) . 'h

II

"

Football

7\

~~~

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

7~

Iii~

f..-..t«n Dh·t..ion

( .. &gt;6 .., .... ~.

.)IIJ
Ml
77

M~

~1:\

Ari/HfU

M

Y7

JUI

\ ·l iHk l~etl o.hl l"lllflllllr

S1:1turdt~y'" KCorn
A!l.uJio~ 4 . 1li \' t.trh u
( INCINN U "l h . ..,u.. ~u;h:
".an t"fJIII.I"'" K. (",tk,-..do• J
Anmn.a I \ ;.o n l)t&lt;' ~ll:!
Ch11..a~n C utt-. l H.11N1on:
UH Ht,,J,. ~ . Ptlri...Jrlplua I 11111. Hnr111,, I
Mui..Jr-lptu~ '''I''

\1 ..nllr.al 7 ,. l.uu+' n
M+l"-o~ul.n"h . I..A""'

~t.~

I~

T""If" u..,

~

~

O.Uuo

J II II I C(j
I 1 tJ )Jl
II l fl 1111

70
7:!

C1uc;op&gt;

0Jf1Jili7MW

Sc"'

"''......

lam

Mwm
Nc.-ll l·n"l ....kl
N y J~l:
Rutfo~lo•
lrll..h ;m.ap•l•~

l iii:L.,.III\IIk
......~lf~h
Bwilonlltf"r
CIN( "JNN A.T I

Tcnnc'&lt;oC"C .

,\n#ck .. I

Sunday':oi UJUhtr-season nnal~
lUI Hnu.J~ l• . Ph•I..U..Ifllua " " f'h +bJtlplu.o 7
l·lilfiJ;.o .1
Atl.mt:~ 7. ~ Y Mrh ~
CINCINI\ ,\TI ~ . t'm..ttur 1=h I
St l ..o&gt;~u• h . M•orllr&lt;'&lt;~l t
fto lli'''"' J . Ch+l" J~'' Cut... l i Ill
Cnl•lfaolo'l \ .111 h.llk"l"'-"' ' M
'-"' .\n]:rlc• ~- M ,t .. ~u~rr I

Orn\cf
\co~!llc

.

Kan""' Cll) ..
O;.olbml
"i;~n Dlt}!t • ..

11: L

1 II
I
I 1
II 1
U .&amp;

r

II
II
0
II
II

l'b.

I ill
M7
lll
IIIli
lUI

u

I'A

77

-'"1

~H

o

-~-u

M
\-1
h.l
..U.I Ill!

0 .\4111

\41
7JC

I 1 II :!\11
I \ U :!\11

7M
lUI

-~

~

W...cenDht..intl
.. 111111111~1
\ I II 7'il1 lll'i
I I II 7:\11 Ill
.1 1 II ~Ill 'iK
~

-·-

:! II

~~~

1

~~~

Cr•tn1 Dil hiM
..111111111 'Jh
1 1

~

~:!

71

c..rttfliUI

Suoday's scorn

ha111:t..._.,. \J

71(
~~~

Toni&amp;ht'• II"'""

-.·,_..nJ
,,,.ro. '"

f"""

~

I

1

h LS U
7 PcM~I

IC Hurrd...+

l-1

1.!7~

Jl(

\ .CJ

1~t

1
~

tl

Hnndo~~ .

, _,

1 . 1~1

Ill

l.llfi'J

II

II
1~
11

s,r.. u~
r ot"l"f!'"'
w,..,..,'"''n ..

HI

:!· I I H\11
\.(I
1,171

P

I~

A r11o111;.

Ill VnJ!IRiil TC\"h
:!II \1\a, hm}!l"n
~ 1 ~~~~thrrn c .al
!~ Ari.:on...;,, .
~l M+\"'llll"
llr N111rc Uank'

-1·11
.&amp;-U

KK~
JC~l

-1-11
:!- 1
"'"''
ll

7111
ll!b
hi.\

1.\

I.&amp;

Ito
·~
Ill

::t"l

~7U

17

!·I

41J!

~"

~9·

l- 1
J.IJ

1tU

IIC

~- 1

~ IJC

4-CJ

~!It

~~

. ~· 1
! IIC
:!.1
.. ! ·!
b-1
Othton ,...,....t,i"K , .. ,...: Tru' Tf"\h n l Tubnr
~ l -'n1•N St "Itt Kcnt1.11.·L, 11 . N (';,~,lfina Ci1 :!!.
Tc•;a\ IK. Mt\"''" 'l'fl' St lh. Gc.-tlfj!'l;l Tc\"h 1!. Ml ·
AMI•OHIOJ 1~ . Au hu..·c Ill. Mt;Jntt (1·1.. 1 K.
H11rho~m Ynurir: 7 . 06.106hllflt&lt;r~ ~~ h. Ut:di h . 4.1~·
m;, '\. MAR'\IIAI.I . ~ - Co~l+lnrn1a :! . t.t+nnc....llo~ I
~~ Mw.; b1~MI

MAC

e... r.

MIO! IIll .

~7

OHIO ...

loll
1M

A~run

..

Bl•" hnJ! GJttn

&lt;JI

C"rm Mtdu[:an .:.
Tu~c.-00 .

. 1:: Midllf;JO .

tn..ra~1

ll: (. reo. \\
,

II

I Ill

J

~

II

rn.

I Ill

... . IOICII\0100
I II I .UU
I .\ 1\1:1
I
I .:'1"111
2 I .M7
u u .mu u .1 .1u1
....0

l~

!6. 1::. t.t-.iupl !J

OHKJ 17 . W Wrcta.pn '\

Sallll"'lay'•llal•

I

.1111:1

"N Dkl"'ion
I H 1.111
I I ~II
I

. '\UII

II

RICKYRUDD

ltAC

!lilf JIJNIOfto.. IbN

s..

otuo,. &amp;o.li_, Grem
E Mdir- a1 ka1r
M~ ill MAR~HAI-l

Mid•p

"-,..,.

.•.

~ ~, ....., .

s.

Division I scores

Brn.n !:1 ~l.nnk :! 1
Bu..i.nrtJ 17 . COiu~ :!II
tlulln lb. v..·..-...n :!J

-1

(Ill

I

M7

~·~~

"l

HITS 70TH HOMER - The St. Louis C..'dinals'
launches what became his ~ ~ during Surldq ~al
League game against the vtsltlrig Monbeal Expos. The homer, the second of McGwlre's two long shOts, helped the cardinals win 6-3. (AP)

McGwire hits 70th homer In finale

c......... 11. s.m. 1

Colpk ~ H¥' ...-J 1.&amp;
fOMt'dM.lll fl) . \' •k ~I
Cnmdll7. Hnh Cr~ 'I

~)I . Sl Jufw+".._ N\" .1
Fauflrid 1-'. Gt.wp-w,..n. DC 17
11-..u :!.&amp;. S:cre"ll Hr.M"I J.
lt-h!Jh ll. f"n111.~on !J tOT I
t.t.;unc IJ. [}-,utm.;IIUih 1
~14ri" !6. &lt;;a l"ckt ·"' t
~~uc~n .. '\I . Mufl:do• ~1

NurthrNtTft !4. llhuck f.Jand 11
iCidtm.;lfld \.&amp; . Prnn I It

R.ohert ~It,......-'~ . C'C'fll Cnnnr~1~e.~ ~ 17
!7. Arm) I'\
Tr"'"'"' .\~ , hwdfurn U 10T1
Y11lotM\a -':\. W1lll:un N. ~till) 1~
W:.pn .&amp;S. S1 . 1-r.ll'k:t-.. P:. U
w~ Vi,.Pni&lt;. .u. Tuh.. :!I

Cubs, Giants
to play tonight
for wild-card berth:

ICUIJt"f"

NL roundup
By The A.uoclated Press

S.lk
tt.. , ,, K+•Nn 7
Arroabrhliolll '\.1 :!fl. "The r.a....trl 11
..\r\ .· Pinc BluH !7. Ak.ltflt St IIC
8c1hunr·Ct•"'-•n;,n f1.l v,,,,,... St ~71111 OT1
E. k.cnt~~~t:t.)· 1K. M..J.Ik lc~"'" 1J
Emory I: 1-knt) !7 _l),,Mt..lfl :!J
l·lonab '\1. KCftlta.:L) J~
A.bh;UIIit AkM I h.

lbkb MM .l l . Tcn,._OC"C Sl
Flaoda St ..'CJ. S.utwm ( ·al IU

~\

Funnan '\I . VMI 1-1
Gttqi;. Suulhrm J! . Cho.ltaftii'I!OI !\
Gr-..ri:l Tt'\""h .o. Nnnh ( '"'"''"" 11
H&lt;~ntptlti :!K. Gro~mhlin}! Sl . I~
Ja~.·L""'Ifl S1 . -1'\. M'""· V, fh 1\t. 7

J:a·L:"'Ifl'iUcSI. !I . Nkht"(,St ~ll
J;une , M..dt.... lfl l'l. f.lun I~
Kan ...... Ab -Mmnmr:lum 17

w.

LSlJ '\ \. ld:tht, ~~
Lthtn) 11 . C.kn' lllc

~1 . ""!

Loutw•lk ~1 . R.,..,.IVI Cootlq:c 1JC
t.br)"bnd .\11 Tr"'f'k 1il

M..:Nt-tw S1 1\'\. All ·Mtllllk"rllu 7

'"''"'""'flf'i Cnlkft \:'1. J:a·i;... lfl\ilk IJ
Mi "'~'""'if'f'• S1 .ll'l. Snuth C':on•ltll.l U

standings

~1r\I&lt;'III.\U .

JUJ

1

Ul Vn~lll lol.

Kcm

,,

l'b. l!:at.

\~J 1.7.17
. 4JI I .MI.J

-1

Tr,-rn

11: L I l'b. l'f I'A

. ~ :! II lfOUU

......

1.\+&amp;
15\IC
4·11 Ut1.1
.\-11 I. \11;\
t ..u t .!'IJ.

'I

"'

Dtt..RV~Ir) ~ . 1 .-.s..lkll

Thr To'fl ~\ lt".un' 1n Thr ,\, ...
p,..,, ,.,.,.
ki!C ''"" l'l.tll pltl "'"" ltr,.. ·pl"'r
p.arcnthc ·
,.-, u·.. , ..J, lhuou)!lt IW-pi !h. tool..al I'"''"'"-"" un
~~ j"'l'lfJ1 • hw"
f'l.-...c "llc' thn111(h •w putnc h•
" !\th (tl.a·c ,,,.c ..00 +&lt;r~nL•nr 1n prn M""' pull

.l Tcflnt•"'C'c l:!l .
J U&lt;"LA•It
~ K.itN\ Sl 1:!1

0

~~.11 . fk.~rc7

Drt ..... . K 1ft p m

t ~I'll

2 1DJ

!jiJ

~

AP Top 25 college poll

f. OHIO \"T

JIIIU

S..lunlooy's liCorn

.AJI&lt;M~to~ ~I

kl

7?
-II

•tAK~AI.l..

NCAA

U.d1111••n· H CIN&lt;."I"ti.ATI ~-~
Hull&lt;r~L.o 'l•:.m+. Nc• t-nri:•Ptl . Nc"'
y ,.-L kt •

lwJo

J
J

A1n.. • ""'"""""

OPP~

o11

I
•

T ukdn • Cftll t'kond.
Nt:: '-'-~ • W M id~tJM~

Mtnnc11fto~ Jl . Cb.c.p• ~M

T"'"r" Ho~)

.000

llt.11 !JI. T...tnlo o I-I

OA.i;.nJ 11. l&gt;&lt;r~lb&lt;. I:
PMt..tlut11!1 \ . ~4111tk ltJ
Nt"Vo ' nd L1.o1111 , \.1 ~- lllctu I,.
~"

.Jl.l

I

c,..,w

em

"'""''"" !CJ. St ~ ...... 17
(Xn,cr 1X. "'.,...hm~ .. Ill
Gttn8i1) )7 . (..,..-!lu~o~ "Wt
J..:L•.umrlk ~7 . Tmnc•OC"C 1~
kMI...-. Cit) 1~ . Phd...Jclf'haot ~I
Nnl O.k~h 19. lndl.ll""'f'fol.i' I 1 10T1

~n

i'AIIt'rn Dh i\kln
Anmna

Hll

.4-J
f+ll
~
H
'19 liS
Sl 7S

J U .WIJ

U

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Iwa

H

"' I II b117
... I J 0 .1.'\tJ

S• '-'"''~

~

JJ
JJ

Sallll"'lay'oo&lt;orn

. l 0 111110 6~
l o 0111.1111

Orkillh

S... fr:n. t&lt;oeo

.. I

Al.rlM .S1. IWt St I.&amp;
Aron.h U . &amp;. ...., Cl.e.te
Ct111 Mtdup -Uol. K,.. 7

" '......,..Dn*-

17 OrC j!llfl
I ll Tc•;.o ~ A.tM

NFL standings

fill"

Si~Uhoilld ... ll

~UUIJIIIII

·~ (", • .,,u,
lh \\'r"" VllflmJ

f\J

l.oto. A.nFrir•

f

Er... ~ .

IJM

l ·'i.m 0H":!41

Gt«tl 8"}

nc·•r ·

STICIKI .OUT\ Cltmcn .. . lmunh• . ~11. ...

c.... ,...~;,..
1;

I )tl

Lro~o "' '"''"'' K

I'M

-"• \

,, ,

fN

t.tMtUW/ _

'('""' 'folfl. 1:1 l041U.ifWT.l Bt""'lti ~~~
Hll\ 1'\ ko ~llj!IKr o..c-••uk ~I l M V""'fhn .
Ko o.JJII" ~~ l&gt; Jrtcr "',,r -. Yurt. ~n Kclk". {ltt~,.., .
~" ~~~ (Mfll"f\'(f.a Kot"IWI . 1'1'\ Ju..n co...v.odct
l no~• liJ\ OUtun..n . K.an...-"' \11~ I'll 0 flric1ll .
!lor" ',,.·~ 1'&lt;1
I&gt;Ol'I:H I·\ Ju.a11 ("iu nt.altl lr \.1' 'tl . lklk .
(h•~"r" .u. l:. lto~r lm t J 1\c.attlr Jh l••hn
\o.&amp;km 1n
+4. ( l)cl~.-1&amp;• Turun&amp;f• J\ . W
oO&lt;onJ• Ao...tw-•m J1 Luc•• t O.J.Ioiiii.J J! T "-.al~
n Mtnur... oto~ -41 C. AnUtr •un A.n.Jkoun -41. '4
lr . ... Jl
OUI'II \ ()tttTnl.lll K.An...,, Cn ~ . tl l&gt;.orno .. .
K.an..,., ( ''~ 111 'llonn T.anlp..t K.a~ '-# c,_.,,..,...n ..
Ko"-a.1111 ~ I&gt; k1o Nr-v. \ uO •. K l&gt;uttl..m (""hio.,r&lt;~

IUft

M""l

n.k-'r"
... ..,,,

1Wo.~ul...- I~ U R .. mutt

Wal.cl~~rk.l . 8uWifl

7~

lloou...,lfl

i\~ C11lln h

11: L 1'&lt;1.

f'hlloillrlf"IU
........... ~J

1

ITMond• A~Ut\c-nn IJ' . 1t~V.knh n . ~IJI Ill
lklk (1-."f:" II l
KHI Ju..n(iolflt.MI Tn," l"i 7 fklk Ch-..op•.

l .. . tl ..n lk- • clo~rMI \.I . \lc .. .an TolfoKll" ~I A. Ro•·
•h• ).' uo '-&lt; ..nlr Jt. Ottrrnun Ko~n"'·'' C11~ J'l
H l lf~.UMn . Ut1r•&gt;~l .c . l lH••I~o~m . tc,.-.. \IJ
PfT("HI!'I.G liM lhl\l&lt;on" I) Wclh . Nr" Yclf1 .
1• -J . Milt . l .t•J Clcmrn •. T"'''""'· 1U-fot. ""lt.IJ
11'1:\. tklhnl! Tc'"" 11!-7. 7.11. JJI . Cunc . N&lt;YnJt•. 111·7 / JI 1\~ . f' ~t.utUk"t Hl'""'"'· lll -7
7\i . ! .K., . Ho~ld1111n . fb1~"l!n ll · fl . fill~ . ~ l:!

"".ohrlll• J IJo~~l.: uJ ~
Trl. ... 1~ . ow..ult"'

r-

I !1 Ourh.o~m

HOMI Kl ' ' ' (;llllt) Jf '-r.oulr (f&gt; _ U.. llc- .
Ch••-'1!" Jt,l ( .111-.c'&lt;~ • To&gt;! Unh•. .Uo M R.uuurJ
Cl nd.wJ J\ Ju .an ( i unto~ltl lno~ • J~ K
l'.tiOlC"IIII U.olllu•lfr -' \ ,\ K"tlllt-'11&lt;""1 \c:'.aulc- -'~
\lOll ' II \'- 1 \ HcnJr••.. n o ... ~ t.• u ol M

"''"loor"'""'n linalt-.

N Y \ .lll~t'C ' K lo~mj\:1 Ho~~ l

.04tlfftl:t6~

1J .4 II .000

s.... nlc

t.4o~nonc,

l

Ch14 •l' ' l~b A Ktlllii)! UC'I. St-.o~nk t :: \ C,r1llc'~
Jr St-o1Uk . I ~II Kuutol- h firt.co .,. 'f td. I 11 . l:.d-

It 0

Uctrull I
H.ollm i'&gt;IC J

Ch-.o~;:•• \A h11r .,.,, 7 K""""''
Mulflt" .,.llo~ r. ( "lr•ri.mU ~

l ~l .

n...n..

Oo~LI.aN.U
~

Pt..~&amp;&lt;!

W.t.Jwnp"'

!Jo"'•••

K.dtunur~ ~ " ""'' on !
T,.,. .., .. \ IK111111-' (I l1
N y Y...... N"... 1 "I ,.,Of'J H:t) I
Soule

u

!:J,,...,.,tl

I."'J l.&amp;"i -' kalflj.'WI ~•rnk 1!4 . T

"N.,...D!\t..il&lt;•

• Tn.,...

G:..r~t.tp:oon.l

11

~I

1W

C...niDftNe.

BATT!~ H Wtlh.tm• St• 'ftlf1. .Hif •1
\'.o~urha B• .... •ot~ ll 7. 8t'llt Chw.·"l!" 1:211 . l:
8 .1illtnUIC '\~1
ktn Nc ... Ytd, \~~ ­

u.....

~·· la.t

CJ

"' 0 ~..

Cltcc-'P.' t T1.a.it'C"I I.&amp;-M1 M117 p m

I"
--JH.: h:\ IJ Jc1c1 Sc• Ym~

l"dlniDh ......
' .Ck• rilWIIJ
Chk.,••

II

AL 1998 leaden

y

11-4

' tt.... •
Tt• ••·

Fro~l'll.t.,.n J C~&lt;&amp;~dntf

Soan

!

N. (.an"ina A&amp;T .17. Fa\t1lc1illc St :!CJ
NnrfuiL St . .Ut. Mtw.:.n St J .1 10Tt
S. C;arnhno~ Sa 14. Juhn"'lfl C. Smnh II
~hrm ttt ..... ~~ . SW l.nui...,.na II
!NII.IIhcm U .lJ. Alotto:.ma S1 . !7

Tt'nnt.. ~ .e . HttUMun 7

Trny S:a !7. S;tm(ui\J ! .'
Tulant -'1 . Nony 2-1
Vir1101a !-4. lluLt' !I
Y1r~m•~ Tt'd+:!7. l'tii.Jttu ~h 7
W. Cotwlm;~ .\I. E T &lt;'nnc-•...:-c S1 :!-I 11 OTt
W. Kt'nlttd) ~ - Au,lln JY;~y 1-1
W;&amp;kt' htf"t"t !•J. C'lcm..un 19
Wuffllfd 111. Clwtll'\11111 SC!tUtrm fl

Ev~n extra inning&lt; cou ldn't
decide the NL wi ld-card race . It will
tale an extr-• game tonight at Wrigley
Field to detennine .the league's final
playoff spot.
"Maybe somebody is looking out
for us ... Cubs shortstop Jeff Blauser
said Sunday after Chicago and San
Francisco finishedl62 games tied at
89-73. "What would somebody with
a death-row reprieve say" Whoopee.
We've got another chance."
About a minute after the Cubs lost
4-3 in II innings at Houston. Neifi
P~rez's ninth-inning homer oiT Robb
Nen !7·7) gave the Rockies a 9·8 vic·
tory over the Giants. San Francisco
wa.&lt;ted a 7-0 lead at Coor.; Field.
''I'm halfway up the stair.; coming
to the clubhouse. and people were in
here celebrating." said Cubs closer
Rod Becl. who allowed a leadoff
triple to Carl Everett in the lith and
Richard Hidalgo's sacrifice ny.
"llnew it wasn't because we did
good." Becl said. " People were
jumping up and down shouting.

. :~o

l

'The rt ·s a tomorrow! Thefe·~ a
tomorrow!···
AI CooN Field. Gianls mana~er
Dusty Baker had just heard ahuutthe

Cum." loss.
"lllere was a 30-second swong
between them losing and us losin~ ...
Baker said. " We are happy going tu
Chicago. We could be going home to
paint the garage."
Had the Mets heaten the Brm:s in
Atlanta. there would have been a
three-way playoff. But New York
IKK· 74) fell behind by five runs and
was elimin~ted with a 7·2 loss.
The Mets lost their linal five
games. scoring just ~ven runs in
their last 44 innings. During three
days in Atlanta. the Mets strdnded 32
runner&lt; - II on Sunday - and ieft
the ba.~s loaded four times.
" I don't know what happened.''
Mets manager Bobby Valentine ..aid .
" If I knew, I would have done smile·
thing about it. That's the frustrating
pan. I couldn't do anything about it.
I should have done somethin~. I
should have done something .....
At the Astrodome. Sammy Sosa
(See NL on Page S)

-

•

0

· :I:

0

--=
!i'

LX173 Lawn Tractor

2

LX173 Lawn Tractor
• 15-lov overhead·valve engine
• 38-inch mower deck
• Shift·on·the-go 5-speed lransaxle

$2,799*
LOWEST PRICE EVER

NO INTEREST,
NO PAYMENTS
UNTIL APRIL1 . 1999'
ON LX SERIES LAWN
TRACTORS &amp;ATTACHMENTS

..."

•1:. "
Ul
.. d
Iu
- •• -=
a :..
IIIII"

THE ONLY THING TOUGHER THAN A
JOHN DEERE, IS PICKING ONE.

•
1110

IIIII"
IIIII"

0

~

1:

TJIC String Trl' 30cc engine
•17·inch cutting swath
• Tap 8o Go strin~ trimmer heed

JS&amp;O Wtllt-Bthind Mowtr
• 6.0· hp engine
• Seven cutting heights
• Handlebars fold easily for storage

LT133 Lawn Trector

3Z5 l.twn 6 Gardin Tractor

•13-hp ovarhead·valve engine
• 38-,inch mower deck
• s-speed in-line shift transaxle

•17-hp air-cooled engine
• 44·inch mower deck
• Hydrostatic drive

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

NOTHING RUNS UKE ADEERE•

\

-

I

:z::

E

:Rudd
:takes flag
'. jn NAPA
AutoCare
500
By HANK KURZ Jr.
MAR'riNSVILLE. Va. lAP) Not long into the NI\J'A AutoCare
500. Ricky Rudd's seat wa' burning
his backside and he figured there was
no way he could go the distance in
heat approaching 150 degrees inside
hi s race car.
" It was like sitting on a hot iron
and knowing you· re gettinll burned.
but mentally just blocking the pain
. out," Rudd said of Sunday's race.
But while looking for the right
time to tum the wheel over to Hut
Stricklin. Rudd also saw an opponu·
nity to win his fir&lt;t r.i'c~ of the year
and ma~e history. and there wa' no
way he "as giving that job to anyone
else.
"If our car wasn't so darn good, I
lnow I would have fiven the steering wheel over to Hut ... he said. But
"I could taste Victory Lane today."
Blistered and exhausted. Rudd
had to he helped from his car at the
. end. but hecause he was in Victory
Lane for the first time all year. and
because he had set a modem.era
record for consistency. he said it was
wonh it.
"This was a long time coming,''
Rlidd said.
His 20th career victory extended
. to 16 his string of seasons with a victory. breaking a record he shared with
Dale Earnhardt and Darrell Waltrip.
Getting there couldn't have been
more difficult.
First. his cooling system that
makes the inside of his helmet and
his ~at bearable in intense heat quit
after five laps. Then. his well-meaning crew hosed him down with scaldIng water when they were trying to
cool him.
: "They ended up burning me up
Instead of cooling me orr." Rudd
~aid .

: It was during an early pit stop
ivhen Rudd's crew doused him with
a glass of water. "I said. 'Man. I need
more than a glass of water. I need a
~arden hose.· .. he said. "They used
the cool down machine. which is
liasically ice water. hut I guess they
weren't paying attention and the
£lose was r~ying in the hot sun. so it
'(t.•as about 150 degrees and it just
~bout cooked me ."
: But Rudd abo said he couldn 't
bavc finished without his crew.
: "Tod:Jy was probably an example .
ef the ere" sticking in there. (crew
~hiel) Bill Ingle talking me through .
Without him lalking me through. I
prohably wouldn't have made it to
lhe end of the race." Rudd said.
: Several drivers didn't. seeking
(dief from the intense heat. And most
who went the dist:Jnce immediately
wught refuge in air-conditioned trail ers or the infield care center. where
~1ey were pumped with lluids and
exygen .
: Series points le;Jder Jeff Gordon
followed Rudd into tum one out of
ihe lith and finnl caution with 51
laps remaining. but never made a
serious bid for the lend and wound up
~econd. his 14th consecutive top-five
iinish.
"I feel like I was in a microwave
~n high for about three or four
hours." Gordon said after receiving
liquids and oxygen after the roce.
• "He did a heck of a job," Gordon
1
•
·•
5aid of Rudd. "That s an amazong
' cord to win as many races as he has
ver the years. That string is amazg. You could see the tire and that
jlesire in him today. It wa.' a great
effon."

~
I

':

Mark Manin finished third and
(ell another five points hehind Gordon in the championship race. Mar~n trails by 199 points with six races
I'&amp;! ft.

: Rich Bickle finished founh. the
'1est showing of his career. followed
lty defending champion Jeff Bunon .
teny Labonte and Bill Elliott.
: The top seven were the only cars
left on the lead lap.
: Rudd took the lead for good with
«.16 laps remainilli when he ducked
ljnder the wiggling cars of Bunon
tiKI Bobby Labonte in tum four. Burtoo was Ieiding at the time. and
Cabonte was fighting to stay on the
I~ lap.

The Daily Sentinel •

NL games ... (Comin~

Ravens tally 31-24
win over Bengals

28,1998
-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

rrom Page

P~

5

4&gt;

didn't homer but singled for his I 58th a J .alltie in the seventh with a three- •
RBI. founh-best in NL hiscory. going run shot otT Carl Pavano (6-9).
" I think it will stand for a while.
2-for-5. Only a four-homer game someching that'&lt; been done just 12 I know how grueling it is to do what
By DAVID GINSBURG
wa.&lt; 15-for-20 for 254 yards.
I' vr don&lt; this year." MeG wire said.
times in baseball history - can gain
BALTIMORE (APJ The
Pickens caught seven passes to
him a tie with McGwire.
"Will it be broken someday" It could
Cincinnati Bengals knew what Jer- 1110\'e pa.&lt;t Cris Collinswonh atop the
''I'm not thinking about home be. Willi be alive' Pussibly."
maine Lewis could do. They had no Bengals' career list. He has 418
John Fra-catore (3-4) was the
runs:· So&lt;a said. " I have to sacrifice
way of knowing Priest Holme' also catches.
myselffor the team."
winner and Juan Acevedo got his
would be difficult to corral.
Much of the sellout crowd was
15th save .
Scott Elanon 12·1) pitched two
Holme.. making his first NFL still milling around the concourse
perfect innings
Padres 3, Diamondbacks 2
stan. ran for 173 yards and two level when Tremain Mack took the
Greg Vaughn hecame the founh
In other gam"'. St Lou" heat
touchdowns and Lewis also scored 'i&lt;'Cond-halfkickoff 97 yards to bring
Montreal 7-ll as Mar\; McGwire hit player to hit 50 homer; this ~ason,
twice a&lt; the Baltimore Ravens heal the Bengals to 21 · 17 .
his record 69th and 70th homer&lt;: San joining McGwire. Sosa and Ken
the Bengals 31·24 Sunday night.
Lewis made it 28- 17 by u'ing ley
Diego beat Arizona 3-2: Florida beat Griffey Jr. (56).
DOAK WALKER
111e Ravens (2-2) scored on their bloch from Duane Starks and Tyrell
Vaughn hroke a l·all tie in the
Philadelphia 6·5 in a doubleheader
fir&lt;t three possessions to go up 21 -0. Peters to break free for his o;econd
opener. then lost 7-3: Cincinnati beat eig hth with a two-run shot oiT Aaron
then held on after Cincinnati (I · 3) punt return for a touchdown thi ' 'eaPitt,burgh 4- I. and Los Angeles beat Small 13· 11. Before thi s year. then:
twice cut the gap to four points. son. He also ran two back as a rookMilwaukee 2· 1.
had never been more than two 50Holmes scored on runs of three and ie lasr season.
The Padres open the NL pl ayoff, homer player~ in a single ~ason.
15 yards. and Lrwis caught a 73-yard
The Ravens opened the game
Tuesday night at Houston. while
Hoffman got three straight outs for
pass from Eric Zeier and returned a with a 13-play. 80-yard drive that
Atlanta plays the San francisco· his 53rd save in 54 chances. tying the
punt 87 yards.
Holmes capped with a three-yard
Chicago winner at Turner Field in it&lt; NL saves record set by current ItamBaltimore secured the victory with &lt;weep around left end. Zeier was 4opener Wednesday.
mate Rondy MyeN. who did it for the
an 11-play drive after the Bengals for·4 for 33 yards and Holmes ran
Rockies 9, Giants 8
Cub&lt; in 1993. Matt Clement (2-01 got
used a 67-yard touchdown pass from eight times for 48 yards.
The Giants , who trailed the Cubs Ihe win in rehef.
Jeff Blake to Carl Pickens to make it
Holm"' then accounted for nearby fove games with I0 days left . led
Marlins 6, Phillies 5
28-24 with II : 18 left.
ly half the yardage in an 82 ·yard
7-6 in the seventh before Vinny
Philli•s 7, Marlins 3
A 41&gt;-yard field goal by Matt march. including a 15-yard touchCastilla hit a tWO·run homer orr
Th~ Marlins. who swept the
Stm·er put th~ Ruvens ahead 31-24 down run behind a crushmg hlock by
Julian Tavarez. San Francisco came Phollics on Smurduy. fini,hed at 54with 5: 15 remaining. and the Benguh guard Wall)' Williams.
right back in the eighth and tied it on 108. the worst record in the majors
never got c loser than the Bulllmore
The Ravens used a different
Jeff Kent's solo homer oiT Pedro si nce 197'1. when Oakland also
32.
approach the next time they got the By ROBERT WELLER
Astacio.
dropped 108 and Toronto lost 109.
Blake wa- playing for Neil ball .. On the first play. Zeier hooked
Colorado\ Larry Walker went 2- The Marlins had the worst record
DENVER IAPI- Doak Walkrr's
O'Donnell. who bruised his ribs up with Lewis on a 7J.yard score for friends sa id he fought the crippling for-4 and won his lirst halting lillt! ever for a defending World Series
after being sacked in the third quar- a 21-0 lead. Lewis put a fake on Ash- ski injury that claimed his life as hard with a .363 average. nine point\ champion. hreakint the pre\'iOu"i low
ter. He left the field under his own ley Ambrose that left the Cincinnati as he ever fought on the football ahead of New York's John Olerud . 174·8K 1 '"' by the 1991 Cincinnuti
power. hut did not return .
cornerback on the turf.
Jerry Dipoto (3-4 I pitched a .core less Red, .
fields that made him famous .
1lle Ben gals limited Green Buy to
The Bengals closed to 21 · 10 at the
Ruben Amaro Jr.. playing his
"Doal would not give up. He w;os ninth.
86 yards rushing last week. but half. taking advantage of two fourth - tough until he died. His spirit. alii Braves 7, Mets 2
final major league game before
Holmes hud 88 after the first quaner. down interference calls against Jude. everything was incredible. very
New York. in a three· way toe after hemming the Phillies' a"istantgen111e secnnd ·year pro from Texa' had
DeRoo Jenkins to extend each scor- positive. He was a courageous indi - Friday's games. wns stymied by er;~ l rn;magc:r. 'inglcd home the )!0run only seven times for ~6 yards ing drive . After the second nag . vidual. .. said friend John Nichols.
Greg Maddux ( 18·91. who he lped ahe:od run in the \Ccond game. Kevin
before hecoming the third tailback to O'Donnell hit Pickens on a one· yard
Waller. the 1948 Heisman Trophy Atlnnta to its 106th won. the most in Sefcik drove in a con:er-high four
stan for Baltimore this season.
the NL sinre the Mets had I08 in runs for the Phillies in the opener at
touchdown pass.
~&lt;· inner who starred on two NFL
Holmes carried 27 times. His 47championship teams. was paraly&gt;cd ·1986. Arm;ondo Reyomsa 17-3 ) was Mi:1mi .
yard run in the third quaner was the
hih in
Brian Meadows (11 -13) won the
George Blanda. a quanerhack and in a skiing accident earlier this year. pounded for five run-. ami
Ionge,;! in the Ravens' three-year his- place-k icker. played pro football for He died Sunday at age 71 .
I 213 innings .
opener and Antonio Alfonseca got his
tory and his 173 yards was the sec· 21l years with four different teams.
Cardinals 7, Expos 6
eighth 'ave. Tyler Green (6-12) was
He was at Routt Hospital in his
nnd most behind the 176 aomossed by
Mark
McGwire
finished
a
mindthe IQser. Carlton Loewer (7 ·8) won
beloved Steamboat Springs. the ski
Bam Morris last season.
nine
home
runs
ahead
of
boggling
the second game and Rafael Medina
reson
100
miles
nonh
of
Denver
Mark Moseley of the Redskins. a
Ravens quanerback Zeier. also place· kicker. scored I fil point' in where he had made his home for Roger Maris' old record .
12-6) lost.
making his first stan of the season. 19M3 without making a touchdown .
" I don ' t know if I want to break
years.
Reds 4. Pirates I
The hospital said the cause of my own rewrd." M.:Gwire said. " I
Cinconnati put together the
death was com pi ications from the think I'd ruther just leave it as is."
McGwire. who hit live homers on mojors' forst all-brother infield paralysis.
Walker was injured Jan . 30 when the final weekend. connected ag;1inst Barry and Stephen Larkin. and Bret
he hit a change of terrain. was tossed rookie Mike Thurman in the third and Aaron Boone - and won on
into the air and then slammed into !he inning at Busch Stadium. then hrokc Aaron Boone's lhree·run homer. ·
hillside . Nichols. who wa' with him
Eastern's seventh grade volleyball
The spikel'i were Tara Fisher with that day. said he never saw Walker
team defeated Kyger Creel at River 2-2 and 2 kills: Nikkie Phillipswilh I· play loot ball hut had no doubt he was
Valley High School 2-1 in two 1: Jessica Dillon 1· 1.
Ky ge r ··a genuine hero. He was a man who
games. Kyger Creek won the first Creeks leading scorers were Ashley didn't speak negatively about any .
game 16-14. then Eastern came back Cox with 3 points: Holley Johnsnn body or anything ."
15-8 and 15-10.
with 4 points: Brittany McDade with
Staff at Craig Hospital in Engle·
The leading servers were Alyssa 7 poonts: Nicole Watkins with I wood. where he began rehabilitation.
Holter who was 7-10 with S points point: Sophia Myers with 2 points: marveled at his determination to
and:! aces: Stacy Smith was 16- 18 Laura Harrison with 5 point-:Tonya recover.
with 12 points and 6 aces: Jessica Smith with I point.
Walker had regained some of hi s
Boyles was 6-7 with 5 points and 2
Eastern also dropped two other ability to talk thnough rehabilitation.
aces: Kass Lodwick was 0·1 : Ruchell contests to Trimble· ;on~ Vinton Coun· during which he received thous:mds
Elliot was 0-0: Becky Taylor was 9- ty. In the II- 15 9-15 loss to the or lettel'i and faxes from well -wish·
12 with 8 point' and 2 aces : Tiu Prall Vikings Eastern\ leading servers ers and fans worldwide.
wa:s 2-2; Kutie Rohenson was 1~ - 16 were Lisa Smith 4-4. ]points. Tara
"'His eyes would come alive. his
with II points and 5 uces: and Fisher 2·2. !point. Nikkie Phillip, expression wus wonderful. he was
Andrea Warner was 4-5 with 3 ID·ll. Mpoints. Jessica Dillion I 0- 11 . able to talk in shon phrases. " said
points.
9 point,; Jcnnili:r Chadwell 6-6 . 4 Rod Hanna. a family spokesman.
SILVER LAKES, CAMBRIAN RIDGE
The k01ding seller wa' Stacy points. Krystal Baker 0-1 . Ashley
Shonly before he ~icd his wife
OR HIGHLAND OAKS
Smith with 3·l The leading spiker Boyles 8-8. 5 points Spikers were Skeeter had gollen him a dog trained
was K&lt;~ss Ludwick with 1·2 und I Tam Fisher 1- 1 with I kill. and to help him get around him.
kill .
Nikkie Phillips J.J. with I kill. Je,The accident that rohhed him of
Kyger Creek\ Leading scorers sica Dillion 1·2. Jennifer Chadwell I- the use of his arms and leg' wa' espewere Kandi Sander with 2 points: I. and Krystal Baker 0·1.
cially tragic for a Hall of Fame foot Jenny Zerkle With 12 points: Stacy
AI Trimhle. the Tnmkittcns won ball player known for hi s hroathtak HAMPTON COVE, OXMOOR VALLEY,
Rankin with 3 points: Beth Moore 15-5. 14-16. and 15·6. In serving. ing "l'ori ng run~ . He i~ immortuli:tcc.l
with 3 points: Geri McF:onn with 7 Siacy Smith was 11 - 12 with 'ix h: the annual Doak Walker Award.
GRAND NATIONAL OR MAGNOLI A GROV E
points: Erica Taylor with 7 points.
points. Jessica Boyle' was 1·5 with which honors th~ nul ion's 1op college
Eastern ln"l to the Vinlon Tigers at a point. Tia Pratt 8-M with four runni ng had~.
Ea,tern. 2·1. In the forst game the points. Berky Taylor 8-IJ with four
His caree r included four years at
score was 15- KEastern. Vinton came pnim ' anti ;marc. ;md Holter 15· 15. SMU and si' years with the Detroit
II points. and an ace.
back to wtn 15·\1 and 15·1.
Lions. The Dallas·horn athlete gave
Stacy Smith was 5 of 5 selling. In up the spun in I'15() to pursue other
Leading Servers were Alyssa
March I-May 31
Holter I0· 11 . 8 points. I ace: Stacy spiking. Becky Taylor was I of I kill busint!!'&gt;!- interest!'&gt;.
Smith 13·14. 9 points. I ace. Becky and Alyssa Holler I of I. and Kat ie
"I don't think he had any peers.
3 DAYS OF UNLIMITED' GoLF AND
Tuylor 5·6. 3 points: Katie Rohenson. Rohertson I of 2.
He wa:-. the last of the gn:at single ·
5-7. 4 points. Andrea Warner 3 ..3. I
2 NIGHTS OF ACCOMMODATIONS
wing tailb;teks." 'aid Jim Sid Wright .
Coach Jessica Radlilrd said. "The
point. I ace: and St&lt;~cy Smith w01s 0who played ;Jt SMU before W&lt;Jiker.
Avatlable Monday-Thursday.
1 for the night setting. while Jessica girls played really well tonight . " He was the best all-around tailback
'One 18-Ho/e Championship round and unlimited
although we did not win. we did thnl I ever snw ...
Boyles was 3·3 for the niglot.
additional play on the Short Course each day .
Spiking for the Lady Eagles were many things right . we served really
He did everything. pl&lt;~ying run·
Additional 18 Championship holes pe~ day
Katie Robinson 2·2 and Andrea well tonight. but our dow11 filii wa~ ning hack. wide recei ver. quao1erhack
our nerves . I believe that since thi s and defensive hack in college and the
Warner 1-1 with I kill .
available at 112 posted greens fees per facility
Eastern daimed another win m-er game is over. our nervousness. will be NFL. He al'o punted and returned
KygerCreek. 15-13and 15-10. The gone and we can put the complete punts and ki cks.
leading st"rn.•rs were Lisa Smith who package !ogether."
was 1·2 with I pnint: Tara Fisher was
]unel-September 30
11 - 12 with. 10 points. and 2 aces:
Nikkie Phillips was 5-6 with 2points:
3 DAYS OF UNLIMITED GOLF AND
Jessica Dillon was K·9 with 5 poims:
Jennifer Chadwell was 3·4wilh I
2 NIGHTS OF ACCOMMODATIONS
point: Krystal Baker was 6-7 with 4
Available Monday-Sunday.
points: Ashley Boyles was
with 7 points.and 3 aces.
,10-11
..

Heisman
Trophy
winner
Walker
dies at 71

"i"'

Youngest Eagles beat
Kyger Creek sextet

0

$199°
Spring

Summer

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

You Don't Need To
Be Ricb'To Start
Investing, But You
Need To Start
Investing For A
Chance To Be Rich.

Fall

Registration 9 A.M.

HELD AT DON TATE CHEVROLET LOT
Fantasy Photo will he taking pictures

OctoberJ-November 30
3 DAYS OF UNLIMITED GOLF AND

2 NIGHTS or

ACCOMMODATIONS

Available Sunday-Thursday.

DAIRY VALLEY

call 1-800-949-4444 for Trail Packages and tee times.
/

Call Me For Details!

ALABAMA'S

Karl Kebler III, CPA
Investment and Tax Consultant

740-992·7270
Securilies offcRd lhrouJh H.D. Vest
Jnveslmenl Securilieslnc. Advilol)'
Scovica olfcotd throup H.D. Vest
Advisooy Sc1Vi&lt;es, Inc:. 6333 Nortb Sloto
Hi&amp;JoW11Y 161, Founh Floor, lovin1 TX
7.5038-(972) 870-6000

'

j

.

SUN. ·SAT. I O:OOAM· 10;00 PM • tt:l.ooaG
WWW.IIT~QOLF.COM

''

'

�The Daily Sentinel~~,

By The Bend

Monday, September 28,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

1998

70

Page&amp;::;

Monday, September

-. - - . .

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
6 VIcinity

28, 1998 ~~·

Ann suggest writing for 'Figtlting Cancer-; book- phone company -swamped with calls:~
Ann
Landers
IW1. L ... 4a,.: ....,
!h~-.:

n........

and Crr;~ll,...

s' """"'

Dear Readers: I recently mentioned that you could receiv~ a free
copy of the book "Fighting Cancer"
by calling a toll-free number. Well,
on the day that column appeared.
383.000 people attempted to call the
Bloch Cancer Foundation for a copy
of the book. The next day. 325.000
called. The third day, 168.000 tried
to get through. The phone company
was so overwhelmed that many calls
were misdirected. One poor soul in

California received over I,000
wrong number.;.
Please, foils, if you want a free
copy of "Fighting Cancer," WRITE
to the Bloch Cancer Hotline, 4400
Main St., Kansas City, Mo. 64111.
Ask for a copy of ''Fighting Can·
cer," and be sure to print or type
your name and address.
Dear Ann Landers: My 6-yearold granddaughter, "Lee," has been
overweight since the day she was
born. As a toddler. she was very fat.
She thinned out somewhat a• she
grew, but she still ha.' a pregnant·
looking belly and a sway back.
Her mother (my daughter) is
slender and an expert on nutrition.
She gives Lee nourishing meals with
one low-cal treat a day, but Lee's

aJl!M'tite is voracious. She ea1s like a
truck driver and snacks between
meals. Even though the snacks are
nutritious, the calories still add up.
What makes matter.; worse is that
Lee's father, who was slim and trim
when he married, has ballooned and
is now almost 50 pounds overweight, with a huge gut and an enormous appetite.
He is in complete denial over his
and Lee's weight and begs like a
child for second.• and third.•. Natu·
rally, my daughter cannot do much
about her adult husband, but they
often al'!!ue about Lee's portions.
My daughter does not want to
stress the connection between
overeating and being overweight,
since she fc;els this is a negative

BY ED PETERSON
District Manager
Athena Social Security Olflce
Many people don't realize how much of their Social Security
taxes counts for the protection of their families when they die. But
it's true that your Social Security survivors insurance protection
could be worth more than the commercial life insurance you may
(or may not) have.
While most workers have life insurance policies, the average
value of a group policy is less than $30,000 and an individual pol·
icy less than $40.000. Under Social Security, however, the survivors protection of the family of a worker who dies at age 2~
with ovem!!e earnings is worth about $313.000. The average benelit payabk to a widowed mother and two children in 1998 is
$1.522. And these benefits increase with the cost of living, something few private plans offer.
The chance of collecting survivors beneril• is greater than
most people realize . Social Security actuaries estimate th01t
today's 20 year old faces roughly a one in six possibility of dying
before reaching retirement age. And virtually all workers have
Social Security survivors protection. For some families, Social
Security benelits help them maintain their life.tyles in the
absence of a wage earner; for other.;, it helps keep them above the
poverty level: and for others. particularly large. low-income families with young children. Social Security benefits have been
known to make the difference between staying together a~ a family or splitting
If you are interested in more information on this important
Social Security protection, call the Social Security offke and a.&lt;k
for the booklet, Survivors.

I

Are You an Employee or an Independent Contractor?
Some employers may not withhold Social Security taxes from
their worker's salaries because they may consider the worker an
"independent contractor" responsible for their own tax~s .•This
often happens with household workers. beaut.icians. barbers and
other service occupations.
There are rules for determining whether a person should be
considered an employee or an independent contractor. Foi example. a person who is an employee is hired. can be fired . receives
employee benefits such a.s vacation time and sick leave. takes
instrw.:tinns from his or her employer. and is provided with tools
and working materials. The employer sets your hours, determines
your place of work and pays you hy the hour. week, or month.
What this means is that the employer controls or has the right to
control how, when and where the work is done .
An independent contmctor, on the other hand. usuully_operates
under the terms of an agreement or contract and doesn t receiVe
employee benefits such as vacauon time and sick leave. The contractor usually provides his or her own tools and work equtpment,
may set his or her working hours. hav~ an opportunity to reahze
a prolit or sutler a loss and cannot be ltred as lon¥ ashe/she pro·
duces a result that measures up to contr~ct spee~hcatmns. If you
are unsu1e about whether you are an employee or independent
contractor. we su~gest you contact your Social Security office.
However. if you operate a trade, business or profession. ~Y
yourself as a panner, you are self-employed. Nc;t earnings of $400
or more in a year must be: reported on your kderJI mcome tax
schedule SE. If you earn under $400, your eamtngs cansull count
for Social Security if you decide to compute your eammgs USing
one of the optional methods of reporting. Call the Internal Revenue Service for information on the opt1onal method of repon1ng.
The Social Security tax for self-employed workers is 15.3 percent, an amount equal to both the employee's and employer's
Social Security tax. You will be able to deduct half of the Soc1al
Security ta• when you file your federal income tax return. .
Remember. you can't rely on anyone for the accuracy of rour
Social Security earnings records. You must tale respons•b• hty.
We make it easy for you to check your account With the "Person·
al Earnings and Benetit Statements," and you should do so whenever you have reason to believe your wages are not beiRg report·
ed accurately. hut no les.s than every three years.

Kaltlyn Gilkey

By OANIELQ. HANEY
AP Medical Editor
SAN DIEGO (AP)- An experimental new nasal spray not only
takes the sting out of nu vaccination,
it also appears to work substantially
better than the "andard flu shot.
Research pre~ented Sunday
shows that the spray vaccine did a
surprisingly good job of protecting
children from last winter's flu bug
- a stmin that the regular flu shot
was virtually worthless against.
"These results are very promis·
ing," said Dr. Nancy J. Cox. a flu
expert at the National Centers for
Disea.o;e Control and Prevention in
Atlanta.
The vaccine. called AuMist, is
being developed by Aviron of
Mountain View, Calif.. which spon·
sored the latest study with the
National Institutes of Health.
Finding a llu vaccine that avoids
needles ha.' obvious advantages for
children and anyone else who hates
shots. However. the latest data sug·
gest that the spray approach may
also provide more powerful protec-

Daily Sentinel

time for a warning. What do you say,
Ann? We'd appreciate your input.··
Scared to ~ath in New Orleans
Dear New Orleans: This woman
enjoys the attention she gets when
she sneezes and screams, scaring the
daylights out of her fellow workers .
Too bad it's the only way she can
distinguish herself.
All sneezes are preceded by a few
seconds of warning ·· time enough
to grab a tissue and head for the
door. Put this column on her desk ··
with a box of tissues.

tion against the flu.
El~eh year. the CDC, the World
Health Organization and the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration
choose the three strains of the flu
virus that appear most likely to be
problems during the upcoming tlu
season. These are used to make the
nu shot. which consists of killed
viruses.
Going into last winter. the agencies chose wrong. They picked
strains called NShenzhen. A/Wuhan
and B/Harbin-like. The true culprit
turned out to be a variety of tlu
called NSydney. Cox said the llu
shot offered only marginal protection against this strain.
The na.'al spray variety did much
better, even though it contained the
same three flu strains. A study of
1.358 children last winter showed
that it was 86 percent protective
against NSydney.
"What happened last year with
NSydney is very exciting. This was
a true test, and the vaccine pa,sed
with flying colors. Right now, it
looks like the spray has udvun·

By DONNA MURPHY WESTON
As."&lt;OCiated Press Writer
TRENTON, N.l &lt;AP)- Getting
schools wired for the Internet was
the easy part.
Now that 7&amp; percent of the
nation's public schools have access.
administrators are struggling to
establish appropriate controls to pro·
teet children from the seedy side of
the online world- and themselves
from the threat of litigation.
Legal experts say it's unclear
whether schools that allow children
access to the Internet are liuble when
qudents become victims of a
pedophile or perpetrutors of computer hacking. harassment or copyright

" It's not as simple a.• some
schools and libraries thought. There
are First Amendment and liability
issues that get raised," suid John
Sobel, general counsel for the Elec·
Ironic Privacy Information Center, u
Washington group that advocates
privacy rights for online users.
"It all remains to get sorted out in
the courts," he said.
The situation leaves school ofti·
cials nervous.
"There's a whole h&lt;1st of legal
issues to consider," said John Pmel·
Ia, spokesman fc: 1he New Jersey
School Boards Association . "The
courts haven't caught up with the
technology and so districts are in a
protective mode ...

violalions .

·•

RACINE Racine Village
Council, special session. Munday, 7
p.m. to discuss financial matter and
municipal building roof.
CHESTER - Meigs County
IKES regular meeting Monday. 7
p.m. with election of officers. Trapshoot at 6 p.m. All members urged to
attend.

Owner: John Dean

Custom Homes
Send questions to Ann Landen,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission. 7:30
p.m. Monday. Vetemns Service
OtTice, Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy.
RACINE - Southern Local
Sehoul District Board of Education,
7:30 p.m. Monday at the the high
school.

RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club regular meeting Monduy, I
p.m. ut the home of Pauline Atkins
with Betty Lowery as hostess.

POMEROY- Public hearing on
Meigs County DHS Meigs County
Community Plan. I p.m.. Meigs
County Commissioners' oO'ice.
Review copies available at Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
and at the commissioners' otlice.
Public invited.

MIDDLEPORT- OhKan Coin
Club regular meeting Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the Middleport Arts Council
Building. All welcome . Refresh ·
ments.
TUESDAY
POMEROY -

., ,.IW ..,...,

jollll

rh

M&amp;J

Calif. 90045

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS
Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hotlon
Chester, Ohio
740-985-4422

-

...

SCIPIO - Scipio Township . _
Trustees, special meeting, 7 p.m., . ·
home of clerk Connie Chapman.
·

Lebanon Town·

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

E·matl your
nomination tor
Carlyle's cal
Hall ot Fame to
twrlghl@detnews.com
.. Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Tho VIllage &lt;Of Pomeroy
dealrea to recalve aoaled
bldl for the following
vehlclea.
1991 Ford Crown VIctoria
minimum offer ol $600.00
197e International Dump
Truck minimum offer of
All sealed bids shall be
received In the Clerk's
office at 320 Eaet Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio on or
before October 16, 1998 at
t 2:00 PM EST.
The
Pomeroy Council roeorvaa
tiM right to accept or rajoct
any or all blda.
KalhyHyaetl
Cieri&lt;
(9)2e
(10)5,12

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
A viewing lor closing

Public Notlce
various roada and portions
of road• In Solem Townahlp
will be hold on October 19,
1998, ao lollowo:
8:30 e.m.-Parklnaon Road
(T41)
9:00 a.m.-Wells Lane (T373)
9:20 a.m.-Unto Road (T84)
9:40 a.m.-Oenlson Road
(T332)
10:10 a.m.-Rile Road (T330)
10 :30 a.m .-Hala Road
(T335)
11:00 a.m .-Croaa Road
(T225)
11 :30 a.m.-Swan Road
(T71); Davia Road (T449);
Parkor Run (T18)
A bearing on these roads
witt be held at t :oo p.m.,
October 19, 1998, In tho'
Commissioners' Olllce at
their regular meeting.
Gloria Ktoea, Clerk
Molga
.County
Commlaslonort
(9) 28

(10) 5

2TC

Owners or agents of Pomeroy rental
housing units, inspection permits are
required per Pomeroy Ordinance #622
by November 15, 1998. Penalties will
be assessed after this date.

(No Sunday Calls)

P/B Contractors, In(,
•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates
No Job too Small
Brian Morrison
(740) 985-3948
8125198 2 mo. pd .
110

Help Wanted

STNA .
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital is looking for
caring, dedicated State
Tested
Nursing
Assistants. Part time
and lull time positions
Apply
in
available
person or call Veterans
Memorial
Hospital,
Human Resources at
740-992-2t04

Immediate opening lor Direnor
of
Sot:iol
Servites.
ResponsibiUties
include
iepatienl hosp~ol ond long
T11m (are Unil. LS.W.required,
M.S.Wpreferred. Duties include
MDS inHiol ond fallow-up lor
long Term Core ond supervising
the hospital department Send
resume or apply in pe.!)OR~
Velilotll Memorial Hosp~ol,
115 E. Memorial D1ive,
P01t1111oy, Ohio 45769, 740·
992-2104. Human Resources.

GALLIPOLIS
Thursday, October 1st
7:00 PM-1 0:15PM

HOLIDAY INN
5n State Route 7

Business Is Boo11lng

MA. J/12197, pop l
Anand Alex o. Oaen't ' - ' - •lght lou h~ll Mmtnar and 111 "'" hours 1e1m nutrtlion and body metabolllm, txp~~teta tor ~
hid! powtnod fat -ling~
• a dellbtntM and oyatemat~c bonanlment o1 1111
deolmytng tacbuology.
1alltodtd Alu\ ,..,._ ...;,~~~., JOJ lbJ. 12 -"ulaur,

belt-

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
.. $7.00 .P.ER DAY.

tloJI I$() U11. I frel trN~I ~..., ,_. nGII t,plcll
AnlhOtly &lt;JiiayiJdta, BuslnW Owacr, NY, NY
"/o 7 III&lt;JIIllu, I knt4J lbJ. 01111 "'1 wiJr Mllflt loll 7V

IN.. 01111 slw loob /oNintk!"
Ridlon!- Quli'Y ~.!,__rille. TN

llllclea wll

New Positions now open
lor mobile home service
technicians and drivers.
Basic knowtedg~ of con·
structlon and plumbing a
plus. Must be hard working,
honest, and care about the
customer. No
Sunday
work. Starting pay range
$9-$12 per hour. Benefits
Include V&amp;catlon, Insurance, and 401 K. H this
sounds like you then
please apply at or send a
resume to
GINn v.u,y HoaiM. 1M.
:11021 Lib LIIQIII Rd.
l,.ogln, OH 0131 ·

\

..•

2112/WII1n

Computer Performance Upgrades

Custom Built Computers, Networks Modems, Hard

,.

Frognet Internet Sign-up pnint ror
Meigs and Mason Counties

......

or

~ 114 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

"' ·-

A

740-698-7231
e/11111

·

Dri•es, Printers. Upgrade Your PC To a Pentium CPU
and MB Today. Pre-Owned Computers.
740-992-1135 For A Prtce Quote!

740-698-9114

lotaled in the Jmmrance 1•1us Buildin~
across from the Court llot~se.

,·

ttn

740-992-4427
33933 Flatwoods Ad.

painting, and let me
do it for you .
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After 6 p.m.
(740) 965·41 60.
~rae Estimates

Racine, OH 45771 (5 Points)

10% Off Flexible &amp; Preformed Pond Liners
20% Off Fountains
25% Off Birdbaths &amp; Concrete Planters
(Stock Items Only!)
Sale Ends t 0-17-98
Mon.-Sat. 11 :00 A.M .-5:00P.M.
Call lor Appointments - Closed Wed . &amp; Sun .

7/24/98 I mo. pd.

Rick Pearson Auction Com~any.
fu ll lime auctioneer. com~lete
auction
serv ic e
Licensed
166,0hio &amp; West Virgin ia. 304 773-5785 Or 304-773-5447 .
Wedemeyer ' s Auction Serv tce.
GallipoliS . Ohio 740-379-2720

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Si lver And Gold Coins , Proolsets ,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Amgs . Pre -1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc . Acquisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
A~nue . Gallipolis, 740-4&lt;46·2842

R.l. HOllON
TRUCKING

Antiques . top pnces paid, River ine AntLque s. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Ru ss Moore owner, 740-992-

2526.
Ant1ques &amp; clean used furniture ,
will buy one p1ece or complete

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

Auction
and Flea Market

Auct ion- variety of new items.
each Thursday. O c tober 1 th ru
December 17 except Thanksglv- ·
ing . Concession s. Hartford Commun ity Build i ng . Auclioneer
t 1220, Fred Sullivan.

1012S/96/t1n

WATERSCAPES PLUS

Ta~e the pain out of

80

12/1B/IIn

- -.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

odlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Mondly OCIItiOn
-10:00 o.m, Saturday.

F~dly.

(614) 992-3838

....

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

""' dey bOiore "" od
Ia to run. SUndly

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

CARPET ~
PLUS
"Your Computer Shop"

household . Osby Martin, 740 ·
992·6576.
Buy ing Hardwood T1mber on
Shares . Also Pine Saw Timber
Small Acreages ok , 740-256·
6172
Ctei'tn L ate Model Ca rs Or
Truck s. 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eastern Avenue. Gal11polis

J

....

&amp; D Auto Parts . Buying

wrec~ed

Howard L Wrltesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters ·
Downspouts
..Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

or salvaged vehicles .
3)4-773--5033.
Small artific•al electric lireplace,
preferably fr om bend area.
doesn't h11v e to be in work ing
condition. 304-882-2436.
Wanted To Buy: Junk Auto's Any
Condll1on, 740-446-9853.
Wanted To Buy : Used Mobile
Homes Call 7-40-446-0175, 304-

675·5965.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

949-2168
11 0

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding •Soffit
•Fascia
•Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
•Replacement
Windows
•Stationary Docks
·Blown Insulation
•Garages ·Decks
24x24 Pole Building
starting at $5995
74()-992·2772

" ..
•

""MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES""

360° Communications

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

ANNOUNCEMENTS
J/27fTfN

005

ELECTRIC OR
SATELLITE
SERVICE

1'\EO

f\1'-'-'i '"'s\1

Call

Local Satellite
Provider
Best Electric Pomeroy

JONES'
TREESEIMCE
GALLIPOLI!PHIO 4563t

t-900-740-6500 Ell! . 3595
$3 .99 Per Min. 18+
Serv-U e19-645-8434.

30 scents available
• Caftd~ maki"i supplies
•Refilk
• Varltty of Gilts
Tues-Fri 10·6
Sat 10·4
Rl. 124 Minersville, OH
740·992-4559
"Ask about our candle
parties"

,.I

TRPPIIn
,_,..,.D*t

Hunllngton Mall
P.O Bo~~: 4063
Bartoursv•lle. WV 25504

9:00·5:30.
Settle's Hllhop Greenhouae
M1le Aidge Ad.

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

$3.00oa . or 10 lor $25.00

40

Giveaway

2 S mall pup p,ies. mi,ed bred

304·675-7676.
3 While Kinens . 3 Black Kinens
Plus ,Mother , 4 Weeks Old , 740-

4&lt;16·0770
black k1nens. 7 wks.. 2m. 2 I, 740-

BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;COOLING
"Wit ere Qucrlily Does11 '1 Cost More"
740-446-9416. 1-800-872-5967

992·1453.
Free Kinens 6 Wks old 740 ·44 .. 1731
Free Puppies To G1veaway. 7-40·

SS$$$$$$SS$SSS$$$$$$$$$$$$$
AVON ! All Areas
Spears. 304-675-1429

ACTION YOUTH CARE. INC . is
seeking a Child and Family Thar apLst lor our Mason County (Pomt
Pleasan t) olt tce Applicanl must
be a Masters level SocLal Work er. Counselor o r Psychologist
ehgible to be 11censed. At least
o ne year of exper•ence 1n tMivi\1uaf and family therapy. Salary
range 1s $26 10 $28 .000 . Clos•ng
date rs Sept. 30 For more Infor mation. write Action Youth Ca re,
Inc . 2t7 S•xth Sl. Po1nt Pleasant ,
WV 25401 or call 3Q4 -675·1324
or Ia~~: resume to 304 -675- 1326

EOE
ADDITIONAL DR IVE RS NEED·
ED IMMEDIATELY ARE YOU
REAllY FDA WINrER DAlY·
lNG?
'LOCAL FAMILY
Owned Company
' PERSONAUZED 0Lspatch
' PAID EmplOyee Heallh &amp; lite
Insurance, Dental Insurance
*HOME Weekends
•Run OH To The SOUTH And

SOUTHWEST

256-1070.

Joseph Jacks

ROBERT BISSELL

WICKS

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

CONSTRUCTION

740-992-2068

HAULING

MOBILE HOME
PARTS

Limestone,

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

"Huge Inventory"

614-992-3470

*Roof Coatings
*VInyl Skirting
"Water Hoaters
*Door/Windows
*Eieetrlc/Piumblng
Supplies
*Fiberglat• &amp; Wood
Sttpa
Dl•count Prlc•s

985-4473
7/22/tln

The Fabric Shop
• Singer Sewing Machine Dealer
• Sewing Cabinets, Sewing machine repair
• Dry Cleaning Service
• ScissOr Sharpening • 1\Jxedo Rental
• Sign up now for quilt classes
TH.E FABRIC SHOP

Bennett Supply
8418

· ,

992-2284
Poi!*OY• Ohio

Tear down 2 story house for lhe
lumber. 304-895-3707 or 304-927 ·

2936

•
"

CONVENTIONAlS

A·:

Requ1rements Age 23 , Class
COl And Good Or1ving Record .
Please Call Toll Free t -886· 790 ·

0008.

To loving hOme . female cho ·
co late lab. Syrs old . 304-674·
4658 .

60

•

'401 K
'Late Model Fre•ghthner

Call Anylime 740-44~·3801

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

! Shir ley

/l. r. Q:.~i s1 •ion s Fine Jewelry of 91
Mill S:rgel . M1c:ldleport· part time/
lull 11me help Jewel ry experience
preleffed but not required Ac ceplmg app l•cal•ons Monday
thr ough Fr1day . 1Oam -2pm No
phone calls please

Rabbit Dog. 10 Weeks Old . Male ,

Free Estimates

13111 'Seffor!l
Seflool Rd.
.Glljlpolll, OH

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson. Athens
740-592-1642
Quality cloth1ng and ho useh o l~
11ems . $1 .00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thr u Saturday

Hardy Fan Mums

Heat Pumps As Low As 138 a month

Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings
•Sidings

30 Announcements

- Apple Grove, WV. 25502
304-576-2621

"Ensy Ot•er tlt e Pirone_8twk Fitw11ci11g
Air Conditioners As Low As 128 a month

Jacks Roofing
&amp; Construction

740-4~8

r.. •.lndit'll

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

COUNTRY ONDLI SHOP

Dollar Tree Stores. Inc.

AM: \!P 0 1Human Resources

EOE MIF
WHAT WILL THE
FUTURE BRING?
lOVE, MONEY, TRAVEL?
CAll NOWI IT'S FUN,
IT'S EASY

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

.•

I

st~~~o\IN't

lcl·" ,~,n'~IO'~a,IQ@,Idit1
0

Personals

D ollar Tree Stores. The Nalions
largest $1 Price Pom\ Retailer Is
Currenlly Seeking MANAGERS
For The GaK1polis Area . E~cellent
Opportunity For Candida te s Who
Possess Supervisory Skills &amp; Pri or Hard good /Reta •l Exp And
Tl'1 rive I n A Fa st Pa ced. Rapidly
Expanding Organizal•on . Competitive Sala ry And EHe ll ent
Bllnefi1s Including 40 I K ana Profit
Sna ring. Denta l &amp; Ptea lth Send
Resume To:

Start dating tonighl! Have lun
playing the OhiO Dating Game . 1·
BOO-ROMANCE. extension 9015

crrrz.EN

Help Wanted

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$1$$

CELLULAR PHONES

992·6320
LPNs
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital is looking for
caring,
dedicated
Licensed
Praclical
Nurses. Must have
current Ohio license.
Part time and full time
positions available.
Apply in person or call
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital,
Human
Resources at 7 40·
992·2104.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

REGISTER NOW $5.00
WATCH fOR DETAILS 9/18/981 mo

614-992-7643

OIREGOR OF SOCIAL
SERVICES

Actt....,

.

FREE ESTIMATES

CNA &amp; LPN positions
available. Full time &amp;
part-time. Must be
avai lable to work any
shift. If interested you
may, contact:
Donette Dugan
RN,DON
at (304) 273-9385 or
apply in person at
200 S. Rltchl Ave.,
Ravenwood, WV
26164
EOE

Buttercup,
who lives
with sisters
Kate and
Meredith
Slavens ol
!lew Castle,
Ind., loves to '-'\.JJ&gt;../\./,.,
listen to Kale
and Meredith play the
plano. Sometimes she
evan gets up ·
and plays
herself.

,., , _ ....

Hundnlds

OCTOBER 2ND &amp; 3RD

Ravenswood
Village
Health Center

3TC

NOTICE

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

$1,000.00

ship Board of Trustees regular meeting Wednesday. 7 p.m. at the town·
ship building.

MIDDLEPORT

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-42n

t 998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

614-742-2138

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

Room Additions • Roofing

"Build Your Dream"

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

4121(91 tfn

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

lafk-olt""-~"''""•-•~««•,tlf•Jbt""lkrJIIII!l.

8/5/il1mo.

Garages • Replacement Windows

One of the simplest things a dis· the trouble. legally speaking.
trict can do is have someone present
"They're probably not really
whenever a student is online and going to insulate schools from liabilmonitor where students are going, ity," he said.
Patella said.
Many schools have installed soft·
But students also must be ware to filter out objectionable
accountable. Most districts require material .
students and their parents to sign an
Steve Caml, direch&gt;r of informa"acceptable use policy" - basically tion technology for the schools in
a set of road rules for student com· Haddonfield. N.J.. said that in addi·
put~r use and a disclaimer to protect
tion to using CyberSitter blocking
the school district. Such policies are software. the district requires stu·
recommended hy the National Edu- dents to be supervised at all times ·
cation Association. the nation 's while online. It does not provide stu·
largest teachers· organilatinn.
dents e-mail accounts nr chat room .
But John Piazza. head of claims . access. And children are advised tn
for Summit Risk Services. a Hat- avoid giving information ahoul
boro, Pa.. insurance tirm, said the themselves.
permission slips may not be wonh

Emergency Planning Committee
(LEPC) regular meeting Tuesday.
11:30 a.m. in the conference room of
the multipurpose Senior Citizens
Building. Mulberry Heights.

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

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Meigs County

· You'w tnld ~ llld IIOCIIIng 1111 WGrfllJd...-(n ~.. 4J. \
Thle It dtalgntd to work!
jl:.ll':""...t~ ·
~~'W
You can 1-111-20 lbe. per month, dMIIoy your
&lt;.&lt; '/"
~
eravlngs and doolros lor second helping, break your
compulsMt addictive eating bellavtors end beCome lull
twice as laat on llalf the lood or your moMY btc:IL Plain
COMPLETE
and aimpte. Got your atiOnlion? One ·a mulls:
SEMINAR

I
I
,_.fa,..
ul1....,..-,_.,.,..._
,.,...,,..,.ollllkotJ-.,tr.
s.rorMJIIeJIJoH•.,,_,.._.,_,_a.
I ,..J n.c Ne•"-·

Remodeling

St. Rt. 7

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

740•742•3411

SAYRE
TRUCKING

G&amp; W PlASTICS AND SUPPlY

New Construction &amp; Remdeling

.

tages," said Dr. Dominick lacuzio of against slrJins of the nu virus that
are not included in the vaccine.
the NIH .
While the vaccine is likely to he
Even though the two vaccines
were not compared head to head. aimed initially at children, Belshe
researchers said they feel certain said it probably .will make sense for
that the spray variety wa' substan· healthy adults as well . Researchers .
ti:illy hetter, at least in last winter's suspect that for the elderly, who are
especially prone to serious flu infec·
outbreak.
Results of the study were present- tions. vaccination with both the
ed by Dr. Roben Belshe of Suint spray and the shot may be better
Louis University at an infectious than either alone.
Aviron upplied to the FDA for a .
disease meeting sponsored by the
American Society for Microbiology. license to sell FluMist in June. hopIn the study. 917 children ing to get the vaccine on the market
received the spray vaccine. while by the 1999-2()(Xl tlu season. How441 got dummy sprays. Two percent ever. the FDA sent back the applicaof the vaccinated children got the tion la&lt;t month. saying it neetied
nu. compared with 13 percent in the more information on manufacturing
issues.
comparison group.
)_ Leighton Read. Aviron's chairDoctors believe the spray works
better because it is made with a man, said Sunday the company now
weakened virus rather than a dead hopes to sell the vaccine for the
one. When sprayed up the nose, the 2000-2001 llu season.
virus causes a harmless infection
He said the company hus not
and produces new copies of itself.
decided how much to charge for the
"We believe the live vaccine spray, although it is likely to be
induces a fuller complement of more expensive than the flu shot.
immune responses... said Belshe.
This ·gives the body an edge even

WEDNESDAY
PORTLAND -

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
ill" Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
;...
Commercial &amp; Residential
;Ji~r
~ 27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
.fp.
Phone 740-992-3987
fl~l l
~

1/r...

Free Estimates

---------Community Calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Ohio Bicentennial Committee will
host a reception tonight 7 p.m. at the
Meigs County Museum. Butternut
Avenue. Pomeroy.

SUNSftROME
CONS,.RUCTION

·
.,

Schools are wired for the Internet, but are they legally protected?

BIRTH ANNOUNCED • Bill
and Julie Gilkey announced
the birth of their daughter
Kaltlyn • Katie" Anne. She wee
born July 21 at11 :45 a.m. She
weighed seven pounds, 12
ounces and waa 21 Inches
long.
Maternal grandparent• are
Anna Hatfield of Pomeroy and
Bill and Linda Hatfield of
Columbul. Great grandmoth·
er 11 Ellen Hatfield of
Pomeroy
•
Paternal grandparents are
Earl and Nancy Gilkey of
Pomeroy. Great grandparenta
are Ruth Gilkey an d Rl c h ar d
and Dorothy Whited of Mid·
dlepon, and Glarence Gilkey.
Grllt grandparents are the
late Mae and Paul Nunley, Bill
Capehart and Anna and Tom
Hatfield.

Get the latest in sports news from the

However. no 6-year-old should
be dieting. Lee's mother ought to get
her into a good physical exercise
program and make sure she sticks
with it. She should also take the
child to a pediatrician for a complete
evaluation and get some guidance
on how to help her without nagging.
Dear Ann Landers: We have a
woman in ·our office who screams
when she sneezes. She says she has
allergies and c'!n't help it. Her
screams come with no warning and
scare the daylights out of those who
happen to be near her.
Some people in the office think
she should be made to leave the area
when she feels a sneeze coming on.
Someone else suggested she yell
"S neezing'" She says there is no

Nasal spray flu vaccine shown to be more effective
than flu shot - should be ready by 1999 - 2000 season:

,--~----------------------------------~
•

Social Security IS
a legacy of hope

approach. Instead, she talks about
the health issues of eating properly. I
think this is unrealistk.
Lee has just entered fir.;t grade
and is the heaviest child in her cla..s.
You know how cruel children can
be.
Is there anything wrong with let·
ling a child know that overeating
leads to belng overweight and possibly ridicule? To me. that would be a
stronger motivation than saying.
"It's not good for you."·· No Name
Out Ea.&lt;t
Dear N.N.O.E.: I agree whole·
heartedly that a 6-year-old girl will
uot give a hoot about what is
"good" for her. She would care a
lot. however, about being made fun
of at school.

AU, Yonl Solot Muol
Be Pllld In Advanol.
OUQUNE: 2:00p.m.

Lost and Found

Computer Use rs Needed . Work
Own Hrs S20K ·S 75K /Yr. 1·800·
349-7186 E~t 1173 . www .amp ·
1rx:.com
Cosmetol og•st Wanted , Full &amp;
Par1 -T1me . Hourly Versus Com ·
mission , PJ1d Vacauon's, Othe r
Benellls Olrere-a, Famastic Sam·s.
74Q-446-7267

Found! In Bidwell Area , 2 Large
Dogs, 1 Male, 1 Female. Cal With

Ag.scnplion. 7&lt;40-245-9172.
Lost· set or car ktys, Rt 7 &amp;
Union Avt . vicinity, 740-992·
s:J!jl,

LOST: Black

a tan

hound, childa

ptl. Colt 304-675-2260.

70

Yard Sale

Pomeroy,
Middleport
l Vicinity

Elderly gentleman born and
reared In Pomeroy . a veteran ol
WWII and the Cold War, (resld ·
ed In naty for 11 years betora and
alter war) , is a retired professor
after 35 years teaching at a small
upsta te New York co llege , is
seeking Individual as housekeeper and restden1 In his home.
Needed for company. preparing
dally breakfas1 (other mea ls will
b1 ordered In), ketp occupied
quarterS of house c6ean, and perfodic laundry of clothing and bed "'

Nnen. No smol&lt;ing wt1 be

~ocl

In tho homo. Gon- Is In 11&gt;0&lt;1
hoalth, buloyos9111 Is lmpolnKI by

:
•

All YIIN laiN llual Ia Patel In flU' and extre caution I&amp; roqutrocl •
,....... Daajtl•: 1:01lpn tM wlltri wotklng lutta llltCIIaniCat .'
dey lleforo ._.ad to to run, Wllkll). Wl(lel 10 110 GiiCUSiad '
Votarana Holj)ltal or Ill nla
auodar a llon4ar .aditio•· 11
IOtldonct.
1:0epRMIIJ.
.
•

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, September 28, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:~onday, September 28; 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

• 1

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9
5

BRIDGI:

NEA Crossword Puzzle

41"""'
47

PHILLIP

ALDER

Boutceol

1 Fabled l'telll

Iodine

.....It

11 P!MMory blnla
1311Mu
13Qol.a..r.y 118 Actor L.orne 14 Lolle
118 T-ctty
11 llllaed tllrlpe
(2 wda.)
ol elolll
57 lll8tort8d
11 Theltllf dl*1ct 118 Actlcllllt8 •
17 8loux (JICIIan
bird

7 Joellea

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
PRODUCTION
COORDINATOR

ADDITIONAL OWNER OPERA·
TORS NEEDED -EDIATeLY
"Local Family Ownoc! ~ny
·$1'\.!&gt;To
00 MlOiSj)81Ch
(Including
Acooosorial Pay}
--nds
'Run From OH To The Sou1h
And SoulhweS1
"Parmlts PIOIIIded At No Chalge
"Tolls Paid
"Fuel card AV81\allte

Requirements Age 23 , Class A
COL And Good Onvlng Record

Plean Call Toll Free 1-888-7900008, Ask Fof Garnel

We Are A. Highly Respected In·
ternatlonal Distribution /Manufacturing Company, Located In The
Columbus . Ohio Area The Person We Seek Must Possess The
Following . 4/5 Years Production

Planning , PC ·Skills Both Ex cell
And Excell Spreadsheet . This
Pe1aon Also Must Be Very Ana·
lyti&lt;:al Come With A DIStribution I
Manufacturing Background And

SUr&gt;nQ Paople Skills.
We Provide Excellent Benefits
Can You Meet Or Exc&amp;ed Our

Gallipolis Dally Tribune. 825 Third

Avonue, GalUpolts, OH 45631 .

ULTRASOUND TECH •• Ae qutrements Reg istered Olagnoatic Medk:al Sonography CertlllcaUon, A.MA Approved Radiological
Ta::hnology Tramlng , And Ability
To Operate Ultrasound Equipment
YRI TECH •• AeqUtrements
ARAT Carllficalion In Radiology
And URI , AMA Approved Ra diological Technolog)l Tralmng,
Ab11i!y To Operate MAl Equip-

SEEKING LPN'S: Excellent opportunlly to Join the tong term
health care field Seekmg LPN's
for rotattng shifts . Intermediate
care facility. West Virginia ll·
cense required . Point Pleasant
Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center.
State Route 62 . Route 1. Box
326, Point Pleasant, wv 25550
A Genes1s Eldercare lac1h!y

EOE.

ment.

SUPERVISOR

Only Qualified Applicants Need
Apply To Holzer Cllntc. Human
Relations Department. 90 Jack-

aon P1ka. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ·
t562; Fa~t To 740 -446-5532; Or
Call 740-446-5189 Equal Opper·

tunity Employer
Experienced Hairdresser Needed
For Busy New Salon . Senetlls .

74(}44 1· 1880 (I' 740-25&amp;-6336

HELP- [mplojooat
Domino's of Point Pleuent
Now H1ring-AJ1 Positions.

DrMI&lt;1i &amp; Management
~~

Home Hea11h Agency Offering
Part-Time &amp; Temporary Part-Time
Positions . May Be Permanent To
CNA's &amp; HHA' s. Many Extras

With Full·Time Employment, On~
Experienced Persons Need Ap·
ply IIUST Be AV3IIable For
Weekends &amp; Holiday Hours. May
Pick·Up Applicalion At 762 Sec·
ond Avenue. Gallipolis. OH Mon·
day Thru Friday From 8 ·5 PM
Meigs Counry Call 740-992-7900,
Health Management Nursing

Servlcoo Inc. EOE.
Housekeeper "Ltve In • lor Prac·
tlsing Columbus Anorney. Gener·
al Household Dulles Plus Some

We Are A. Highly Rf!Spected tn lernahonal Manulactunng /Oistri·
but1on Company, Located In The
Columbus, Oh10 Area The Po&amp;~ ·
11on we Have Open ts For A
Production Supervisor Tne Per·
son Selected W111 Poness The
Fo!low1ng

STRONG LEADERSHIP
Vol YEARS DISTRIBUTION
/MANUFACTURING
· BACKGROUND
AS A SUPERVISOR
EXCELLENT COMPUTER
SKILLS
ABILITY TO SET PRtORmES
MUST BE FLEXIBLE TO
CHANGE
WE PROVIDE EXCELLENT
BENEFITS. CAN YOU MEET
OR EXCEED OUR NEEDS?
RESUMES WHEN SUBMITTED
TO ADDRESS BELOW MUST
INCLUDE SALARY REQUIRE·
MENTS TO: CLA 453, clo Galli·
polls Da1ly Tnbune, 825 Third
A...-enue. Gallpolis. OH 45631

TECHNICIAN WANTeD
For The lnstallaUon And Service
Security Alarm Systems , C C
Systems, Satellite TV Sys·

care, Some Orlvlng. Room, Board
and Salary 614-267-5354

Huntington OB· GYN 0/flco "
needmg expenenced registered
Ultrasound Sonographer lor full·
time or part·tlme position Week·
days only, no call, no holidays
Send resume to P.O Box 3:::184
Huntington . WV. 25702 or lu

Be Able To Work Effectively
. Dependable, Honest And

(Bonda,llle.
Previous Experience In Alarm
Systems Or Low Voltage Wiring
Is A Plus, As Well As Some
I Ccomputer Training Or Experl·

3:)4.525-3400.
Local Trucking Company Seekong
Qualified Truck Dr ivers . Good
Pay And Benefits. Send Resume
To . P.O. Box 109 Jackson, Ohio

SOutheastern OhiO 5atelltte

45640, Or Call 1·740·286-1463
To Schedule M Interview
LPN's To Work PAN Please Call
Modi Home Health Agency, 741).
441 ·1779
Need Driver &amp; Loader For Local
Service . Must Have COL' s &amp;
Wi~ngToWo11&lt; .

740-38&amp;-9686

Or Mary Sheets. AN At 740-446·
7150.
NOW HIRING
$215 PER WEEK /PART-TINE
(GUARANTEED SALARY)
Men And Women Needed To Do
Telephone Operator Work Fo&lt;
LOCAL RADIO STATION
PROMOTIONS
• Do\Y &amp; EVENING SHIFTS
AVAILABLE
• FULL 6 PART-TINE
OPENIN,G
• NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
•WE TRAIN
• OPPORTUNITY FOR

Appty In Person At
17 Plne Street
GallipoliS, OH
Corner Of Ptne Street &amp; First Ave

Saptermer 28th.

TIJeoday. Sap1ember 291!1,
Wednesday. September 30th

3 ·8 PM Only
Aslt For· Mr Ray
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE I

Wanted· someone to work In
adult group home, days or nights,

740-992·5023

tog yard 304 -675-5159
Wanted. Personal Care Aides ,
No Experience Necessary, W111
Tra in Call Math Private Care, AI

740-441·1&amp;n

140

Business
Training

Southaastern Business College.

Spring Valley Plaza . 740·446·
4367. 1·600·214·0452, Accredit·
ed Member, ACICS Reg 190·05·
1274B

180 Wanted To Do
Furniture repair, refinish and restoration. also custom orders Ohio
Valley Aeltnishing Shop, larry

Phillips. 740-992-6576
Georges Portable Sawmill , don't
hAul your lOgs to the m11l just call

304-675-1957

1

Th1s newspaper w111 not
knowingly accept
advertisements lor rldal estate
which 1s 1n VIOlatiOn altha
taw Our readers are hereby
1nlormed that all dwellings
advertised in ttus newspaper
are available on an aquat
opportun.ty bas1s

310 Homes for Sale
2 Bedroom House And 2 Apart·
ments . Both Rented . 13 Pine

Streel , Gallipolis, Call 740·446·
4999, Or 740.594-3033
2b r, appro• 3 acres . Wyoma

A&lt;lge. 304·675·7071 .
3 Bedroom . 2 bath , heat pump, 2
car garage on 1 acre 1n Letart,

3()4-jj75·2924
3br, 2-bath home, new root, vinyl
~1d1ng &amp; shudders . solid oak
kilchen newly remodeled . dish·
washer, vented-microwave, large
lamlly·room, wood·stove, living
room wlflra -place. central/air,
large fenced lot Must Seal

sn .ooo 304·675-6258

Syr. 2 ·3 bedrooms, loft, tongue/
groove, pellet stove. HPICA, appliances. garage, spa, acre , Bulaville Pike, 740..367·0286
Great location Close To Gallipolis Nice 3 Bedroom Home Approx t 600 Sq Feet. New Siding,
New Central Air, Fireplace, 2 Car
Garage, Large D&amp;ck, And All Ap·
pllances Stay, Call For More Info.

74o-446·9664

Ohio.

M Equal ()pporturjty Eflll/Oyer

Send-to
Soutltorn 01110 Goal C0111&gt;0"Y
Human Reoouroos Deportment
P.O. Box490
Athons- Ohio -45701

Part· Time Apply In Pe,.on At A&amp;
A Auto Detailing Shop. 220
fotl1ll A....,., Gallipolis.
Part· Time Retail Sales . Experience Preferred Bul Not Neees -

wy, Apptleatlona Accopted 10-4
011/y, Apply Tope's Fum111Ke CO..
151 Second Avenue . Gallipolis .

Nol'hontcall-.
to WO&lt;k In o -. mull be
eblt 10 u11 computer, enawer

-

wttll

~· tmnedlott poolllon SUO/

ttour to ohtrt. Can 8118-890-1901
Of740 . . 0'00

exua Income . Set your own
hours Mm . Startup. No strings
No pressure Call Sheila after

Spm. 304·675-5277
VENDING: Lazy Person's Dream .
Call
Rece ive Into &amp; Free Pre·

a

paid eating card. aoo-&amp;21H353.

'

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
' A L11tle Country in Town'· PriCe
reduced. large reaklred Victonan
home Situated on 12 acres, Vil-

lage of Middleport Secluded and
pnvate . close to schools and
churche s Pnvate bnck circular

d&lt;/Ye, I&gt;&lt;ICk patio, modern k/U:hon,
tamity room wlfireplace, 3-4 bedrooms. ..., baths. targo 1ormo1 LA!
OR, large foyer, lour original
stained gl111 windows. 30
mlnutll from Athena . 15-20

mlnutto lrom Gallipolis. For appoittlmltrl caN 7404112·5898.

40-3-

Kanauga, Warer Paid $270/Mo.,

Baby bed, swing, stroller, car

_Pt_ua_Dopostt
_ _._7_40-t1811__
71_02_._ _

soat &amp; hlgn cnar. 304-675-4548.

1 Bedroom Nicely Furnlthed ,
Central Heat &amp; N:,, AJI UtHWu In-

1

Brand Newt Great Gtltl COMdeo
storage unit. Black and cherty

eluded, Except Eiectrto, Co!Monl·
ent LocatiOn, 740-44&amp;-2602.
1 Bedroom Overlook&amp; Galllpollo
Perlt &amp; River, $375/Mo., Utilities

Nl\'lr our of box. 1125. Holda up
to 940 disco, also holds tapes.
Call 740· 992·8638 alter 5 pm .
COs &amp;
Included.

Selmer Trumpet $250, 740-245-

Included, Deposit Required, 74.0-

Brown, Early American couch

9880.

'-not

o. .

383-6862
trailer, can be used lor offtee tra1ter. $3.000 WithOut air condllloner. $-4 ,000 with , 740·949·

2217
$179 permo Free air &amp; tree skirt·

ong 1·8811·928·3426
14x.80 3BA . make 1st &amp; last pay·
men1 &amp; mQ\'e in 304 -755-5SU
1988 Fleetwood , 14.:70, 2 bed ·
roo ms . 2 baths 30~~:38 detached
garage. 2 out l:lulldmgs on 1 acre
+I· on Gunv11le Road . call 304 ·

895-3$98
1989 Clayton t 4:1170 furnished on
pnvate rented lot. Chestnut
R1dge . Mt Alto area $! 7.000

3:)4.895·3814
Price reduced · 1990 Spru ce
Ridge 14.:70 mobile ho me ....ery
OOod condition . 2 bedrooms. 1 &amp;
112 baths . washer &amp; dryer. si0\'8,
refrigerator. central a1r. 8x8 out ·
side building, 1mmediate posses·

1 Bedroom , AJC, W/0, Hook-Up,
Near Holzar, $279/Mo.• +Utilities.
Deposit
Lease Required, 740-

Church pews lor sakt, 12 twelve
foot, 4 ten fool, $200 each, 740·

448·2957.

949-2217.

Rented Lot. Ready To MOlle Into.
740-o14IH409 2To 8 P.M.
Buy in Sept. No Payme nt Unlit

1999. caP 1-1100-948-567&amp;

Huge 28x80 3BA . 1 1/2 bath
StartlrtQ et ONLY $39,999. Many
options ava1lab le . 1· 888·928·

34:18.
La~

ulec1ion ol UHd homos. 2

or 3 bedrooms. Shirting

at $2095.

Oulck delivery Call 740-385 -

9621

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

•• 3 2

720 Trucks for Sale

• J 10 7

1943

good. $2,500 OBO. 304·578·
2810.

t 991 Chevy Cheyenne WT 1500

1br apt. in Mason, stove &amp; refrtgerator &amp; utilities rurnlshed, AJC.
laundry room. ceiling fans &amp; garbage disposal, very nice, no

Be Entitled To Receive Your Oia·
betic Supplies At No Cost To
You . For More tnlormatlon 1·888en-&amp;561 .

$17,000. 304·882·3426

pets. 304· 773·5352 or 304·882·
2827.

Dozer ·J o 450C, 78, 6/Wfl'/ Bid,

We Finance Land &amp; Home Wllh
As little As $500 Down. 1·606·

1br. rurnlshed apt. In New Haven,
deposit &amp; reterence1. 304-882-

Rops, Painted Call Huntington
304-736·9131 Or 304·525·5359
After 6 P.M.

928-3428.

2568.

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

2 bedroom dOwnstars aparlment,

$250 per month, plus utlll1y &amp; 00·

736-7295.

posit, Third St., Racine, Oh, 740·

247-&lt;4292,

lie 32FTX 80FTBarn $210,000.00

340 Business and
Buildings

Electric Scooters, Wheelchairs,
New And Used, Stairway Eleva·
tors, Wheelchair And Scooter
Lifts, Bowman's Homecare, 740

446-7263.

2bdrm. apts ., total eiectric. appliances furnished, laundry room
facilities. close to school in town .
Applications available at Village
Green Apia . •49 or call 740· 992·

3711. EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to 1358. Walk to shop
&amp; movies. can 740·446-2568 .
Equal Housing Opponun/1y.

Lot lor sale · Ga llipolis, 90x172,
nice neighborhood, Quiet, 740·

448·4n2
Scenic Valley at Apple Grove.

WV. Building lots, slngla wldes
accepted , public water. 20
minutes from new BuMalo Bridge
on Jerry's Run Ad . Clyde Bowen

Jr. 304-576-2338.
FOR RENT · Trailer lot. Locust
Road. Point Pleasant. On Right.

Gracious 1/Ying. I and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
port From $249-$373 . Call 740·
992·5064 . Equal Housing Oppor·
tunltles.

Ground lloor apt 2br, w/d hook·up,
references &amp; deposit, no pats .
304·675-5182.
Large 3br in Pt. Pleasant . $275.
Security deposit required, part

furnished . 304·875-7783 HUO
Accepted.
Moc:lern 2 Bedroom Apartment,

Problems? Need Tooed? Call the
plano Or. 740-446-4525

dealer and see how long they
warranty there drive train . Keel·
er's serv1ce Center St. At 87 .Pt.
Plea&amp;ant &amp; Ripley Rd . leon, WV

Hlda·A·Bed &amp; Swivel Rocker &amp;
10xt2 Area Carpet. 740·U6-

West 2 Bedroom Townhouae

Apartment&amp; $295/Mo., 740·44e·
6515.
One bwdroom apartment in M1d·
dleport, no pets, references and

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent
t Bedroom House Across From

JET

UnHs lor sale. 1=5030 82hp 4wd,

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Aeooolt In Stock
CaJI Ron Evans, 1·1/00-537·9528

2 Bedroom House, $350/Mo .. De·
POSit, No Pets, 740·446·4313,

below Gallipolis Deposit Re·
qulred 7•0·44t-1917, Leave

APT AVAILABl; ojOW

450

Furnished
Rooms

4 Room House 52 Olive StriP!

Circle Motel lowest Rates In
Town, Newly Remodeled. HBO.
Clnemax. Showttma &amp; Disney

740·446·3945

Week~

Messago

1 ·5 BEOROOM HONES FROM
$4 ,000 local Gov't &amp; Bank
Repo ' s Call 1·800· 522·2730. )(

1709
meroy, $350 plus deposit, HUO
accepte&lt;S. will consider contract
lor purchase , no pets, 740·698·

7244

House Available 1011/98 714
Th~rd Avenue , Gallipolis , $375/
Mo . 1 Monlh's Deposit Plus
Lease R8Qt.ir&amp;d, 740.446-2308.
New House For Rent· Near Rio
Grande. 2 Bedrooms. Gas Etec·
trlc Heat, t Year Lease. $350/Mo
74o-612-9032, Cellular

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
12w.60 Mobile Home, $300/Mo.,
Oeoosit Required. References. No

Pets, 740-~S.

992·2167
2 &amp; 3 Btdroom Mobile Home's,
CA . Stove. Relngeralor, Water &amp;
Trastl lncludeo. No Pets , Must
Have References. $300/Mo ..
$350/Mo .. Plus Oepos1t, Near

a.

460 Space for Rent
George's Creek Road. References Roq&lt;Jinld, 740·446-1142
Mobile home site available bet·
ween Athans and Pomeroy. call

740.385-4367.
Trailer space In Middleport, 740.

992·3194.

MERCHANDISE
--------.

510

Household
Goods

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Relrlgrators , 90 Oay Gudrantee!
French City Maytag, 740·446·

Deere Skid Steer Loaders . Check
With Us About Financing On

Prlmeeter· $49 lnstalletlon, only
$25.99 per month. free bonus,

800-263-2640.

$500.00. T'wln Bad, New Ma\lflii
&amp; New White Metal Hood &amp; f'Cl3t.
board, $100.00. Large Mtcrowaw

Oven $50.00. 740-38&amp;-Q213.
Sam Somerville's Original Army

Super Single Water Bed With
Bookcase Headboard, New Mat·
Ifill • Heater, Comfort ShellS
Mattress Cover Included, $1!10,

1-888·818·0128
Polly'o -

• Usod FumHu"'

Flags &amp; Army Surplus!11
2101 Jefferson Ave

Open 9.30 · 500 Mon-Sat.
304·675-SOFA (7632}

2 Bedroom Mobile Home For

Washer $95: Dryer $95 ; Refrig·
erator $95, Relngerator Frost

Relrences. 746-367·0632.

Free, $150; Upright Ffeezor $t 75;

2 Bedroom Trailer On
Ptke . $220/ Mo.,

Electric Range S75 . Whirlpool
Washer $205 , 1 Year Warranty;
Skaggs Appllancea, 78 Vine

s...t. Ganlpoli•. 740-44&amp;-7398.

530

Antiques

740-245-5778.

a

..,.

Merchandise

...,

2BR Trailer. References
De·
posit , Locust Road . Point Pitas·

Fur1111Cw, - · Pumpo, &amp; Alt COnditioning. Froo Eotlmetlll If You

ant On Right 304-675-1076.

Don't Call Ut, Wt Both LOlli

740 u8 noe. 1-800-211HXJM.

Mobile Home For Rent1 14FT X

70FT. 3 Bedrms, 2 Bat/to, Dlpoeit til7 Horizon fi()O. 1811 llazer
And Relroncoo Requited. 740· . $3;100. 13' Camper iiOO. Regie·
lllld Ll1110 SUII•IIMOI. Old .
367.0121.
II'Q, 104 IIIII :1742.
Ne• Mobile Home for Rent 'No
Palo/ In Country, ~ + RofW.

-~. 740

uuete

.

Thora Is A Collectors Closet Tho
Corner Third Avenue And Court

Strati, (Gallipolis} Mtlques, Mod·
ern Ctothu, Jewelry, Arts. Cralts,
Visit and Check Oul The Bar-

gonsl

Upright Freezer, Earthenware
Pottery, Raised Toilet Seat, Walker. Reflux Wedgt, Booster Seal.

Night Time Feeder. 740-448·

0839.
Wanted· advertising collectibles,

Coke, Pepsi, etc.. Including old tin
signs, 740·992·5053
Waterline Special: 3/4 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 100; 1" 200 PSI
$37 .00 Per 100. All Brass CompresSion F1111ngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson. Ohio, 1-&amp;0Q-537·9528
We buy antiques and parllai or

complete estates, bally Items. and
old Fiestaware Jean's Furniture

&amp; Antiques Tuesday through Frl·

ltU Cub Cedot riding mower
·~·1,3!!0. 3041111113013.

Building
Supplies

1993 Chevy 4X4 Z 71 , Stepsldt,
Loaded, 350, 5 Speed, Sharp,
CD Changor.740.24S·5474, 74Q·
245·9099, ~... message.

740-446·9317

Soulll

BARNEY

I NT

I NEED FOUR HAM
SANDWICHES FER
US CARD PLAYERS,
MAW

YOU GOT SEVEN

FELLERS

OUT THAR,

PAW

WATCHERS H

..

II

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

A.tt Makes A...ailctl6e

1·8()()-290-2262, X 3901
1982 Ford 3/4 ton 400 e ngln&amp;:
4spd, many new parts $3.30~

1988 Toyota 4•4 4 Cylinder:
$2.700: Range K1ng Pro Gardert

1993 Ford Aerostar XL, &lt;4 .0 Iller.,
99,000 miles, runs \lery good, oM
tire&amp;, clean, $5.500, 74()-742· 1..00
1994 4x4 Subu1ban. excellent
condition, IGaded, 51,000 miles\

French Alpine Goat. Doe. 2 Years

Old Milking, 740-992-7779.
Trail Horses For Sale: 112 Quarter Horse, 1/2 Morgan Mare tO
Yeare Old, 4 Arabian Horses, 1
Tennessee Walking Horse, Call

Af1er S P.M. 740-388--6358.

Hay &amp; Grain

Round bales of mixed hay. 800 lb.

bales, $12 each, 740·742·7405
days or 740-742·2088 e''"'!tQs.

740

Firm 740-992·4568.
1982 Oldsmobile 98 Regency
looks good. Askmg $800
runs

a

OBO. 304·882·2925
1984 Chevy Seville. 4 New Tires.
V·6. Auto, Rebuilt Alternator,
Brand Naw Alternator Belt, New
PS Belt, Auto, Runs Excellent!

40x30 was $6,212 will sell lor
$3 ,497 , 50x86 was $17 ,690 will

sell $8,970 Chuck 1-800-320·
2340

Pets for Sale

Floor Boards And Stick Stoppets
GOOd COndition, $3,800, 740.446·
9364 .
•

7olt).446.-Q231 .

Jack Rus11ll Tarrier Pups, Tall&amp;
Docked, Dew Claws Removed ,

740-441-oe81,Aitore P.M.

BIG NATE

fell.

$4200, 740·949·2203 or 740·949,
2045, will consider trade lor' li

·

, 1985 Chevy. 304-578-2835.

New Auto Body Parts &amp; Accessories tor all types of vehicles .
Transformers Auto Pans . 304·

6 Ford flop

7 Weirder
11 E-lcal unit
8 llldllvll poem 12 Dick IIICf
Jene'a cloa
3t Anclenl ch8rlol 9 Drlc:Uia IU1IIor
IMoMI'
11 Hawaiian food
40WI8•umbrltge II

10 Large -.,at

21 Concur

Wa&amp;

Pua

Nortll
I •

S NT

22 Dripping wet
23 On --with

(equal)

24 Arrived

25 Plrtl of the

26:.

a2

Girdner

211 Clola1ered

one•

20 Roman dale
30 Cillo'• river
31 tlecldiCI

Eu&amp;
I •

mltertll

All p818

37 lleceme
llrelned

Mlnerll
41 ADoll's

38

The toughest
kid on the block

lprlng

HouM&amp;U111or
42 IIMr blrrell
43 Pollee
Informer

44~
molcltng

45 -one's top

47!r;:'
lull
48 Coupd'-

41 Mt..,._

t50Urge
52 Campau pt.

54 Endtnglor
glob

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos
Ctlebfty Ciptw CfYPIOQflll'l'll are created rrom quotat1001 Dy tii'I'IOUI peoptt. ~~~ and pretNI'WI
Eac:h lift.r in lhe cipiMr IWidl; ICM" llnoltler T~y's diJIJ II «/UU Y

RZWJ

I Y H A D A. J

LG

SEQ

DL.'

HYM

PZWJ

G p

EZBB

cJ

WYI L

"CZIJCZBB

z

RHJZL

L E J

P G G B I

COBB

LJHHU

P D HI L

C Z· l J W Z M

· PREVIOUS SOlUTION: "Acting Is not punlng up a maak. Each time an actor

ecta he dole not tftde; he exposes

himaelf/ - Jeanne Moreau

....

'0«:\\l\~-~~tfs·
- - - - - - IWIIH
ClAY
POllAN _;..,._ _ __
TII&amp;T DAILY
PUIZLII

WOlD

~y

Rearronoe · t.nen of
0 four
ocrambfed -d•

1he
be-

low ro form four tlmplo wordt

GHINKT

IIIII
0 V A RS

I;.'

.--------,"'

I
I
...--r.,s·,.....-r,l6,...,.,--r,-.,lr-1
I8
S L E WH

Teachers should ask for a
' I .. ents
raise in mid summer. The parwill tle willing to give them
I I I
..---..;,...---.....:...,any thing they · - • - • -

FROCEF

.PEANUTS

•

•

Complete rho chuck le quoted

•

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

1

1 ~~ &gt;lAVE TO MAK~

WHAT I TI-l INK
1(0 15 60 INTO TOWN,
AND STAND SOMEPLACE,
LIKE MA'f8E ON A
CORNER ..

~

Q

~Y Mltng in the l'hissing words
L....JI.-..1..-..I.....JL-...1.-J you develop from step No 3 below

SURE I LOOK
SOP&gt;I15TiCATeD..
SCitAM.lETS ANSWERS

Banen • Cubit- Frond • Lesson • ANCESTORS

675-3324

young man was retiring. He found thai thrift is a virtue espectally tn your ANCESTORS.

New gas tanks &amp; body parts 0 &amp;

A Auto. Ripley, WV. 304·372··
3!133 or H/00-273-9329.
•

790

Picnic

5 VIew

31Tol
38T.-

•

'

Chureh

calendar
4 Author ol

32 .......
' 33 Type of book
S4Bou-

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessorlee

IMONDAY

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

SEPTEMBER 28 I

t 982 Coleman Pop Up Campef.
Gas Furnace, Like New ConditiOn,
Call Before 4 :00 PM 7•0·44'6 .-

8015.

SERVICES

810

Pwr.

Stierlng, Pwr. Seats, Cruise,

Tilt, Autom .. Grey, 63,000 miles,

Askng $950.00 74()-258·1011.
1987 Ninon Maxima $3,000
1984 Custom Chevy Van, dlesol,
$3,500. 30&lt;1·895-3929.
1988 Bonn..,illa LE, maroon, 4dr,
new llras &amp; brakes . good cond .
1988 Chevy Corsica 4 Doors ,
Power Steering, Power Brakes, AJ
C, Yery Good CondiUon, A.pprOIC .
740· 245·~~97

1988 Cutlass Calais, Runs &amp;

Dr... Goo&lt;!, 740-441·1083.
1881 Ford Aeroatar, 6 Pa~&amp;enger
Mini
.
Condition, Good

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPRODRNG

Unconditional lifetime guarantee .~
Local rerarences furnished Es-.

labiShed 1975 can 24 Hrs 17.40~
446·0670, 1·800·287·0576. A09·'
ers Waterproofing

Appliance Parts And Servica .A:tr
Name Brands Over 25 Years E11·:
perlence All Work Guaranteed.
Frencl'\ City Maytag , 740-446 ·
n~ .

Big River Painting, Painting Inter~

or &amp; Exterior. No Job Too Big Or
Smalll740-&lt;146-0670.
C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence· Painting , vinyl sidlf\Q,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths
rnobUe home repair and more.
frH estimate call Ctlet. 70-G02·

FcJ

6323.

--·Ill.

Frenc/1 City "-1 Groom~by Afl·

1991 GEO Tracker soft-top, 2

polntrnent

thing

whHI drive, 5spd, stereo, stlllng

with all rna&amp;onery, brlc:lo, block • ,

Syo...,• 850 Second AYI. Galli·
pols. 7~1528.

lor pey-ofl 13,000 Cell ahar Spm.
304-1182·2997.

FuttorEtocu1c

House wtrtnQ, light fixturu,

Also~­
rog hoatlrv,jayatom&amp;.
304-67401:18.
Professional . 20yrt e•perltnte

Pets Plua Sliver Bridge Plaza, 1992 Mltsubiohl N/co car. S2.200
Gelflpoll&amp;. Pupa· Vory Ra"' Blue OBO; 1987 Plymouth Voyogo;
Merle Sholtl, Mini, Long·Holred Mini von Nice van $1,600, 090
Oechohund&amp; IWtllh Coral. Cairn ?40-44Hli!84 .
Tlfrier. Verlouo Flaf&gt;, Aquertuma,
lllnlo And Cageo, Other Dlfll,.nt 108S Gflnd AM GT 4 Door Red,
Small,.,,, Mon ·Sot, 11).8, Sun euoo Mt/oo, ss.soo, 740·367t-5. C81740-441-Cl770.
0211.

stone Alao room additions , Qo~: · .
rages, elc Free as1tma111 . 304;·

n:J-9550.

840 Electrical and

,,

Refrigeration

Re&amp;idontlal "' COinmerc/ol wiring. -

new sorW:e or

~~~~~c
2
=
A"TRO·GRAPH

·

Milas, 12,000, 740Lltgl AKC Slberltn Huoky Pup· ,,..11 _ 1m 7
ptoo, Bluo Eyed Mile l Famoloo, -~:--'------­
Rere Co/oro, 11~0 ·1200, 740- 1981 Otdsmoblto, 98 Ragency,
446-8127.
Litre - · 89,000 miles $2,895.00.
1989 CaY&amp;tlior, 2 door, Autom .• /oJ
Milt I Female Adult Rat Terrioro c. 79,000 mllto $2,195.00 Cook
740-245-5597.
Mo10rs 740-44e-0103.

•uttra W•lh

N~1~1
~ IACN\f:&gt;_,

Summers not over! KawasaKI
STS Jel ski, still under warranty,
three seater. 83 horsepowrH.
bought new July of '97, threa
matching Kawasaki ski vests and
trailer all go w1th It Priced to

1987 Ford Tempo, Pwr. WindOws,

30 MP Gallon, Asking $1.495,

AKC Registered Goidtn Retr!Yer,
1-0111. 7~744 .

5f&gt;..1U~'(

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

760

3

740·446·7537.

$3.200. 304·675·5792 attar Spm.

A. Groom Shop ·Pel Grooming.
Featuring Hydro 9et.h. Don
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd.

W~N WE WE({£ 1».11~, 11 Wk')

1997 Honda Fourtrax 4x4 Has

Chevy a Ford truck beds from
down south, also lront end for

1'982 Cutlass Supreme, 2 0, 260
V8 . Good Cond1Hon. $1 ,500 00

~

Motorcycles

741).245-5677.

1980 ·160 HONDA CARS $100
·$500 Police Impounds, All
Makes Available, Call 1·800·522·
2733 Ext. 4420

,

2:00 p.m Seller 1eserves r~t 10
reject any or all bids For mont inolormation or lo see truck, please
call740-992·3705 alter 5:00p.m. '

Budget Priced TransmissiOns
an:j Engmes. All 'f\ipes. AccS"Ss
To Over 10,000 Transmissions.,

message.

•

P.O. Box 2629, Athens. Ohio
45701 by October 12. 1998 ~~

71 0 Autos for Sale

1954 Ford 4dr Sedan, goC'd
shape . 304 · 675·2035 Leave

D

1995 Dodge 1&gt;2 ton pickup, 4WD.

good pontoon boat.

TRANSPORTATION

a

. C&gt;

SLT, running boards. roll bar. 48K
miles. &amp;lcellent condition. San~
sealed bid to Sowash, Carson $
Fe~rier. Attn : Herman A. Carson.

parts. $3,800 OBO. 304·882·3661
or 304-862•2524.

lor Satoot 740-388·9033

..
...
.. . •• •

$20,500. 740·742·7405 days o1
740-742·21J6ti 9Y8nlnge
•

Cyprets Ct. Point Pleasant.

Steel bulldtngs never put up

.

630

1986 Chovy Chovelle $250. 304·

Rio Grande. OH Call 740·245·
5121

7~0-446·

24121-800-594-1111 ,

Livestock

0

304-675·2219.

~-

-

2 Cale I U -

23 PalM
27 P!Malng

42 Door clap

By Phillip Alder
Wilson Mizner claimed, '"Life'sa
tough proposition, and the first hundred years are the hardest." Well, we
can modify that for bridge: Defense
is a rough proposition. and the first 12
tricks are the hardest.
There are many as~ts to good
def~nse. but a.~king yourself this one
key question will often point you in
the right direction: From where are
we getting the triclls we need to
defeat the contr.!Ct?
This week. let's see how that
thought can make defense easier.
starting with a fairly simple example.
But first. look only at the Nonh hand .
You open one diamond. East overcalls one spade, and South responds
one n&lt;rtrump. After West pa~ses,
what would you rebid?
Now move into the Ea.~terly chair.
Against three no-trump. your panner
leads the spade nine. How do you
plan the defense? ·
With seven sure tricks. Nonh
should jump straight to three notrump. Give panner just the acequeen of spades:. on a spade lead.
there are nine top tricks. Don't rebid
three diamonds. which is only invitational. suggesting you would like
panner 10 have a maximum (or a fit·
ting diamond honor) before he takes
a shol at game. And don "t even glance
at five diamonds when you have no
shollllge.
From the bidding and lead, South
is marled with the spade king. So. if
you give tleclarer the first (or second)
trick. he will run for home. taking the
club finesse if he needs it. The only
chance is to win the fi"t trick and
switch to heans. (Leading the two is
best, in ca.., South has queen-founh.)
Here, this should defeat the contract ·
by two tricks. ...

1997 Green 350 XLT 4 Doors, j
Ton, Pbwer Stroke. $2,750. 74().
~-

Tractor 19 HP $1,800,

=~I.Maon

Flnnleh flret

Opening lead: a 9

I DON'T FEED

•

1980 -1990 Trud!s S100 ·$500
Pattee ImpoundS

1

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

1993 Extended Cab, Diesel , Tu,_
bo, 4 Wheel Dnve $16 .900 01!1

675-7112 Can be seen at o&amp;28

Block, brick, sewer p1pes, windows. lintels. etc. Claude Winters,

~.

540 Mlec:ellaneous

1400.

1976 Harley DavidSon Sportstet
XLH·1000. Lots of chrome &amp;nevY

a 640

550

APPLIANCES

Lawn Tractors And Low Aale Fi·
nanclng On New And Used
Equipment. Carmichael's Farm &amp;
Lawn Gallipolis, OH 7-40·446·

Feeder Ptgs or Butchering Hogs

Extra loog Sola, Exce/O!nt Shape,
$125. 7~2316 .

Rent. $250.00 Plus Deposit And

2 Bedrooms W -w Carpet Natu·
rat Gas Heat, tn Gallipolis, 740 446-2003, 740-446-1409

•

day. 11am·4pm. 145 North Sec·
ond, Mlddlapon.

USED

Your Area John Deere Deater
For Residential And Commercial
Lawn Equipment Compact Ulillty
Tractors From 20 To 39 HP. All

740-66~.

n95.

Washers. dryers. refrigerators ,
ranges . Skaggs Appliance&amp;, 76
Vine Street, Call 740·448-7398,

Ohio on Jackson Pike. 740·446·
2412 or 1·800-594·11 11

Sizes 01 4 WD And 2 WD Farm

$500 New, AsklrtQ: $150, Reads:
Heart Rate Milos You Walk, 740·
446-7537 .

740-441·5698, 740-441·5167.

Your area bush .hog dealer lor
parts, rotary cutters, loaders, till·
ers, finish mowerS, ect. Car ·
michael's Farm &amp; Lawn midway
between Gallipolis &amp; Alo Grande,

Tractors. Hay Equipment, John

560

No

$23,500. 1=4630 55hp. 2wd

Battle Day Dresses Or Will Make

Construction Workers Welcome

N G H S. 740.388-9668

$100
1637,

2 pump HydrauliCS, 8x8 syncho
sttuttle trans, 129hrs. $24,500. 1=
5030 same specs 250nrs.

Dresses Call Tina Alter 5 P.M.

Tread Mill Brand Newl Electric.

GOOO

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mob(le homes, atr
condllloned. $260·$300 , sewer,
water and trash inc:tuded, 740·

3339 after 5pm

Rates, Or Monthly Rotea,

For Rent· Trailer Spacet On
Clean two bedroom house In Po·

98 Unwrapped McDonald's toya.
45·rpm records. Call 304·882-

Siegler Fuol Oil SkMI: 1970 Ford
Brnnco For Pans. 740-2!56-14n.

appl/cotlons for I br. HUD subald·
tzed apt. for elderly and handl·
capped. EOH 30&lt;1-675-6679.

2 Bedrooms, Route 7 S, t 3 miles

McDonald's Beanie Babies. 98 &amp;

oteport, all utlltles paid, $100 dt·
posit, $270 month, call 740·992·
7808 8am-51)m.
Tw1n Rivera Tower now accepting

740-446-0879

hlde·a·bed with queen size mattress: lift chair (taupe) vel ...et, all
in good condition, 740·992· 1098
...anlngs

One bedroom apartment In M1d·

Campus $300/Mo. , Deposit Re·
quired, 74IH41 ·1005.

Senes . 6 cylinder automaJic,
72 ,000 miles, good clean truck,
runs eJtce llent, $5500, 740·74~·

25123 304-895-3674
Ford New Holland Tractor Rental

Camouflaoe beside of Sandyville
Post 01/lce. Fri-Sat &amp; Sun 12·
Noon·Spm. Other Oays-Hro Call
304·273-5655.

deposlt roq&lt;Jired, 740-992·5633.

• 74
a K8

7845.

Queen Bedroom Suit, Like New,

Now Taking,. "ppl/catlono- 35

We Buy Land : 30 ·500 Aetas,

draullc wet disc brakes all 4
wheats; DIUerentlal lock front 4
rear, dual hydraulic remotes,
ROPS and Canopy 16x16 Trans·
mission fully synchronized lor·
ward &amp; reverse &amp;huttle, zinc
coated sheet metal, .t year or
4000 hour drive train warranty.

Pleasant &amp; Ripley Ad. 304·895·
3874.

740 446 0390.

Real Estate
Wanted

Radial tires all 4 wheels, lnde·
pendent 540 and 1000 PTO, Hy·

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs

Lazy Boy (light green velvet}
men· s lounge chair &amp; matching

Little Kyger Road, 304-523-2450

Tractor 5670 63 PTO H P. 4
wheel drive. world famous aircooled diesel engine, Goodyear

Check your JO, MF, FNH or CIH

Commercial-Office or Retail, 87
Mill St Middleport. 1,450 Sq Fl
$400 mo Corner Building . 740·
992 · 6250 AcquiSitions (next

tO Acres Mineral R1ghts, Utlltlts,

Agco-Atllo Spoc/ol

same specs as above $18 .500
1•3930 45hp. 2wd 811:2 trans, 1
valve. 230hrs $14,900 Keeler's
Service Center St. At 87 Point

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

• Q 10 7

1983 S-10 Tahoe, V-6, auto, alt,
chrome directional wheels, $1200.
740-247-4292.

300 Gallon Portable Tank, $75;
210 MF 21 HP Tractor, Wllh At·
lact&gt;ments $5.000, 740-245--5747.

Mtles trom Sporn Ptant 3br, 1·112
baths . 2 added on rooms. lot. garage, 2 AJC's. household items

Sottlll
a Ka 7 •

1983 Toyota new tires, battery,
brakea, red, automatlc, 4cyl, long

DIABETIC P/ITIENTS: You May

Eu&amp;

1 A Q J 10 I
• A42
• 8 5

1979 El Camino looks &amp; runt

44_1_
· 1_00_5_.________ $75. Will dollver If needed. !lll41675-3440

siOn, 740·992·6582
Yindale 70'x14 ' W1lh E.:pando 2
Br., 20' livmg Room, Large Mas·
ter Br . Excellent Condition ! On

COOiilldn, 740-992-7473

Weai

a IS
•KJt85

ed, 1750, 740-441·9518.

Economical &amp; n1ce 2br. depos1t
required. no pets 304-675·5162.

$500 Down on any 1411:70 In
stock. limited number, free deliv·
ery Callt ·800-691 ·67n

Alto saxophone with case, good

DOWN

21 Athal Fuu-&lt;1

s

1998 Trans AM Y-8 Fully Load~
edl7~548
,'

Gas Heat. $279.00 Plus Utlllt19S
Depoilt Aequlll!d 7~2957

In Middleport· newly remodeled ,
sidmg, roo!. windows. kllchen .
electuc heat pump , lanced in
yard, three bedroom, bath and

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Musical
Instruments

• A K Q J 10 t
I A Q ·S

• 6

Special 18x80 3BR, 2 bath .
$1,325 Down, $205 Mo. Free air
&amp; tree sk11ting 1·1/00-691-llm

Anthony Land Co.

Newly Remedied Country Home.
Oilers qu1et country 11vtng on a
private 2 1/2 acre lot with local
schools and downtown shopping
less lhan 10 mmutes away. Fami·
ly pleasing amen1ties including
new kitChen. Hardwood floOfs. 2
fireplaces . fam1lylhome office
space . 3· 4 bedrooms , 2 1!2
baths, many extras I $98 ,000 00
cal! 740 · 446·9762 or 740·4•6 ·
4514

570

1997 Oodgo Neon, 11,000 miles,
4 cylinder, automallc, Good Cdilditionl $8.800 00, 74o-«1.0337' '

bod $1,400 304-674-0093.

We Pay Cash . 1·800·213·6385,

5292

brlndto, S2SO. 740-992-6215

-orcu,.
20 Aclar Demon

oeo.30+882·3Z!4

610 Farm Equipment

4000.

Neat one lloor plan house. livmg
room . dinmg room . kitchen . two
bedrooms wllh bath nestled between All rooms are good size
and Interior has nice style . Vinyl
siding, 11ardwood lloors, closets
Stove and refrigerator go with
. house InteriOr walls need repaint·
lng. Nice back yard . Located at
205 Spring Ave , Pomeroy, a good
buy at , $14 ,500 , call 740 ·992 ·

Registered Boston Terrier pup-

pies, 5 wka. old, 3 bladr &amp; - · 2

1a Ptwllx for

Nonlt
.. 52

Complete Kitchen Cabinet Set.
Double Sink &amp; Cook Top lnclud·

360

hall.-$59.000 negotrable, 741).992·
3465

Reg. fomale Boxar, $250, Chinese
PUQ, $75; 740-992·9190.

1994 Camara Z· 28 5. 7L, auto,
while wlblack Hops, good Urea.
new ballery. well kept . $9,500

1 Bedroom, Near Cinema . Rio
Students Welcome! Economical

304-675-1076. Aela&lt;ences.

12~~:60

ATIN WORKING WOMEN: Earn

_992-::-·:!2_11_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1AC DC Arc Welder Like New,
1.Aftor 8 P.M.
1 Bedroom Goraga Apartment In $275, 7

a cuddly SSea. 304-

688-928·3426

House and land· letart Falls. 2 1/
2 acras, 350' river frontage , 5
rooms, 2 story, electric only TPC
available, needs TLC, good filler·
uppe1 tor handyman, 740·949·

Will Work For $4 00 /Hour, 740·

the oflor"!J

depoalt required, no pets, 740-

a.

New Ooublewlde 3BR, 2 bath .
$1 .325 Down &amp; $205 per mo 1·

882·3438.

1 and 2 bedroom apartmtnta,
nithed and unfumlthed, secuf1ty

door).
4br hOuse. fenced yard, 1 block
·from schOols. new furnace &amp;
central air, recently replaced roof,
new 200amp breaker bo.:, recent·
ly remodeled bathroom, lull
basemen! 304·675-5320.

Aband oned Home Take
er
Paymenls . Or Make Offer 1·800·

re co mmends lhat you do buSI·
ness w1lh people you know. and
NOT to send money 1t1rough the
matl until you ha'ole tnveSIIQalf!d

5678.

740.367-()219.

Wttl Baby sit 1n my Home . Any
Hours, Bidwell Schoo l Dis tr ict ,
CaU 740·388-9689

INOTICE/
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

New Bank Repos-Only 2 Lelt.
Never Lived ln. Call 1·800·948·

50 Acre Farm. Half-fenced . 3
Year Old 2 Story House, 3 Bedrooms . 2 Full Baths, LA , Kitchen,
Laundry Room , Walk in Closet.
Full Front Pord'l, Cape COd LOOk,
Sw1mming Pool, Black Top Drive·
way, 250FT Ring lor Horses /Cat·

ery Caiii -6/Xl-691 ·6777

Buslneaa
Opportunity

NEW BANK REPO'St
ONLY 3 Lalt1 StiU under warranty
Only At
0 1 - Homel Nltni,WV.
30ol-7t5Hiflf5.

3br, living room. dln1ng room ,
fam 1ty room , 1 bath, central a1r,
newer carpel &amp; roof. replacement
w1ndows. lam1ly neighborhood
privacy lanced yard, 24ft above
ground pool. many upgrades,
move in cond. Pr1ced In 70's .

992·5185

210

Responsibilities •nclude (and are
not limited to ) unload 1ng lralght
trucks . vertly ing mateual s re·
caWed . stocking ol matenals. reordenng . picking and tssulng materials and preparalion ol paperwork assoctated wtttl these func·
tiona. Computer knowledge 1s re·
Quired Must be avatlable on
shOrt noti ce and be available to
•ork ditferent sht11s and wee·
kendl Location of wareh ouses
are near Wilkes... ute and Albany,

1100-948-5878

a.

330 Farms for Sale

$999 Down on any 98 model
Doublew1de In stock Free Oeliv ·

FINANCIAL

New 1998 3 Bedroom. 2 bath,
$998/0own $189 per montl'l. Inetudes OeiiWtry
Set·Up. Call 1·

wv 304-882·35 18

Quality care for your loved one s.
certified home health aide. refer·
ences available . ca ll Kathy, 740 ·

367.()140.

1100-837-3238

House trailer on Broad Run Rd. 2

14 x70 36R, $999 -0own &amp; ONlY

Part Ume Matenals Handler

'

No Phone CaUs Pkta68.

Have 2 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Handl·
capped, 740-441·1536

ADVANCEMENT
• HOMEMAKERS WORK
WHILE CHILDREN ARE
IN SCHOOL
o COLLEGE STUDENTS
WELCOME

~. -UOplng and -

240 Upper RIYor Road
tlalllpotls, 911~ 45631

WANTED . Fork lilt operator for

Now Accepling Applications For
STNA Classes Transportation
Provided To And From Training
Site. Lunch Provided Daily Earn
Pay While Attending Class lnterflfil&amp;d AppliCants Apply In Person
Monday -Fr tday 8·00 AM . ·4:30
P.M Contact Tammy Price, LPN

Monaay,

All real estate advertiSing 1n
th1s newspaper IS subtectto
the Federal Fa1r Housmg Act
of 1968 wh1ch makes it Illegal
to advertise "any preference.
llmitallon or discnm1nation
based on race. color rehgion.
sex familial status or natiOrlal
ongm . or any mtent10n to
make any such preference .
limitation or discnm1natlon •

Needs? RESUMES WHEN SUB·
NITTED TO ADDRESS BELOW
MUST INCLUDE SALARY RE·
QUIRENENTS TO: CLA 454 c/o

FULL·TINE POSITIONS
AVAilABlE
Com!letltive Salary And
Excopuonat Ffirge
Benelit Package

Rabbits cute

New 1998 t4x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes skirting, delux' atepa
and setup . Only $187 .08 per
month with $107§ down Call 1-

rtpa/ro. ~~toter

u,

censed electrician . Aldontl\rr '
Eltct~cel. WV000308, 304 -&amp;~J&lt;&lt;.
1786.

.

(

·~

~=~===

Tuesday, September 29, 1998
Be llexible and prepared to make
adjustments in situations thai are
materially meaningful to you in the
year ahead. Even if some sacrilices
are required, the returns will make it
wonhwhile
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0.:t. 23) Don't
settle for second b.:sl today in an area
involving your career. You have what
it takes to achieve your goals. Trying
to patch up a broken romance'! The
Astro-Groph Matchmaker can help
ypij understand what to do to make
the relationship work. Moil S2 75 to
Mll!chmaker, clo this newspaper.
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station,
New Yorlt. NY 10156.
SCORPIO (0cL 24-Nov. 22) Do
not put on a show today. because oth·
e13 will be l1lOR: impressed with the
~ you. The secret to success is simpie: utilize your natural God-given
gill&lt;.

..

SAGITIARIUS (
I) Be optimistic in all your dealings
today. Lady Luck will be acting on
your behalf in both inactive and pas·
sive capacities. You'll recognize her
handiworlt.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Usually it's good politics to keep our
no.&lt;es out of our friends' affairs. However, probing could uncover lKlllle·
thing very constructive for a pal
today.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
You'll get llKlfe tnsight from your
inluition.&lt; than from reading a book
today. Heed your instincts.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20) A.&lt;
. strange liS il may be, sometimes
we're unprepared for good news. If
sometlting beneficial tran~ra tOO.y,
don 'I discount its merits. Accept it
joyfully.
ARIES (Man:h 21-April 19)
Don· r deal willt menial tasks because
you're capable of major adlievemenL~ today. Luck ia on your side Ill
thiK time. 10 dwell with the hl!&amp;vy hit·

ters.

''

erully speaking. social encounter.~
should prove fonunate for you today.
Whether you· re with old or new
friend~. get out there and mingle.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Because you respond well to clJallenges, you could be eKceptionally
fortunate in any competitive involvement today. Focus the stakes on
something perwnally meaningful.
CANCER (June 21-July 22J
Although you usually choose to act
independently. team up with a partner today. Seek out !IOIIlCOt)C who bas
your attributes and reap 'great fortunes.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If events
appear to take an unexpecled twist
today. don 'I gel shakeq up. In all
probability. il will werk ciur to your
lldvanr.,e.
VIRCK)(Au~~.22)You·~

exc:eplionally shmid in social.sittil·
tiona today. 10 bUll yourself ~- .
your~ !he need 10 llllke a c1ee1s1oa. Odlers will cmul-_lte your.actions.
t·'

------------ ..---~-------..;_-,~----.a:.,..----

I·

.

'

•

�•

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 28, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

IAvailable dogs at the pound I
By Sandy Stealey
Meigs County Humane Society
Are you. or ts somebody you know. able to take in a warm. fuzzy
friend who needs a home this fall and winter (and foreverthereafter)''
There are several wonderful .. warm fuzztes .. available who would
just love to be your protector. bed warmer an.d TV. radio or reading
and walkong buddies on these beautiful fall days and cool nights.
Please consider gtving one a place in your hfe and home. Remember that the Metgs County Humane Soctet) can help wtth the cost of
spaying or neutenng your pet.
The followong dogs were avatlable as of September 24·
PEN ONE
Puppies and very small dogs.
Very young beagle/Shetland Sheepdog pups. Tan. In-colored and
tan whtte. Should be small to medium-sized dogs. friendly and trainable. Presently very young. about seven weeks old.
Small black and white Spttz mtx. about 15 pounds. Good. alert
watchdog wtth long hatr. white wllh black patches. Tail curls over
back and ears stand up ltke a Chthuahua's.
Two young Chow/collte mix dogs. Very mild-mannered, happy
and friendly ltke a col lte. hut have black faces and tongues and lots
and lots of funy coat - look hke sweet golden teddy bears.
Blond cocker span tel mtx. shy - looks almost like a purebred.
PEN TWO
Female boxer Tan with white chest. Calm but friendly. Obviously purebred wtth natural ears
PEN THREE
Beautiful female German Shepherd dog. Purebred. black and silver. Has recently had pups. Very sweet and alert. intelligent. Should
make a good watchdog and house companton.
PEN FOUR
En~ltsh cocker span tel mtx - sociable. black and white mottled
colonng. Slightly higger than an American cocker spaniel size (about

25 pounds). Coatts in bad shape: needs a lot ofTLC but should be a
beautiful Jog when coal is groomed and cleaned up. Seems to like
people a lot. but ts nut pushy with people or other dogs. Gets along
well wllh oth~r dogs.
Purehred sable and while Shetland Sheepdog (mini collie). Very
alert. barks a lot. Strong temperament

Yellow Labrador retnever or mix. very calm. Medium sized
(small for a Lab. l
OTHERS
Two male adult Rottweilers. one more outgoing and aggressive.
The other IS more friendly.
Black chow or chow mix. Acts very friendly for a chow. Has
black tongue and profuse black coat.
The shelter is h&gt;eated adjacent to the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Hours are 9 to I0 a m. and 4 to 5 p.m weekdays and II to 2 on Saturday. The phone number IS 992-3779. More dogs arrive daily.

Tuesday
Weather

Washington's aglitter; the gala season is here

Today: Sunny
High: 80; Low:SO

By DONNA ABU-NASR
Assotiated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Men in
white tat is bent in a kiss over gloved
hands. Willowy dancers twirling

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80; Low:SO

•

waltzed to the Blue Danube. Opera
and ballet with dinner - lobster.
pheasant and dainty cakes washed
down wilh zesty wmes.
.. Am I in paradtse?" gasped
Hoda Maher. the Egyptian ambassador's wife, as she walked into a
sea of while. red and pink roses ns-

ing from tall pedestals at the Viennese Opera Ball.
Washington\ gala season is here
- receptions and balls. in black tie
or white. muted or extravagant, .lll
elbowing for room tn this city's busy
soctal schedule.
.. It's dtfticult to pick a date for an
event in Washington," said lngeborg
Kolodney. executive director of the
second annual white tie Voenn&lt;se
Opera Ball on Friday.
Indeed. five events vied for auen·
tton and attendance the past three
days: On Thursday, the Ambassadors Ball and a gala marktng
Umon Station's 90th anniversary:
Friday. the Viennese Opera Ball and
a fund-raising gala for the Nina
Hyde Center for Breast Cancer
Research; and Saturday. a German
evening at Wolf Trap. a performtng
arts center in suburban Virgtnia.
In addition to offering opportunities to see and be seen and for power
and diplomacy to mingle. these
events raise money for chanties.
The National Multtple Sclerosts
Soctety's Ambassadors Ball ratsed
$500.000 on Thursday. The Vtennese Opera Ball made about
$100.(XJO for the American branch
of SOS Children's Villages, an Austrian-based group that assists more
than 200,()()() orphaned or abandoned children worldwide.
Attending so many functions on
top of diplomatic receptions may
seem ltnng. but the relaxed atmos-

Two members of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters uf the American Revulution attended the Southeast District DAR's annual conference
held at the Best Western Inn in
Lancaster recently.
Going from here were Paultne
Atkins. regent. and Anna Ctrcle
Cleland. recording secretary of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
Ohto State Regent Mrs
Ronald J. Wetzel conducted the
meeting.
Other state officers allending
were Marilyn Vagl ia. vil:e regent;

Rosemarie Clarke, chaplain Jack-

Military News Notes
Teni Hodge
Air Force Senior Airman Teni R.
Hodge has graduated from the information

management

apprentice

Meigs County's

Minter V. Fryar Ill
Minter V. Fryar III
Mtnter Vaughn Fryar Ill. son of
Minter and Kathken Fryar of Syra·
cuse. graduated U.S Navy Boot
Camp at Grant Lakes. Ill on September II.
He will cont1nue h1" tra1nm!! in
the filed ol dantag~ mntml wh1ch
includes firefightlng. hazardous
matenals and chemtcal warfare
He can be contacteu at DC
Mmter V Fryar 5905. REQ· 333.
class 9RJ54 Butlding 21h. SSC 320
A Dewey Ave . Great Lake'. Ill .
li0088-5400

no-name Internet meanies alike are

intravenously hooked to it.
Never mind getting booted.
Might President Clinton get hooted
from office•
The Center for Media and Publtc
Affairs. which tracks the content of
late-night comedy with numbing

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Commissioners reviewed and approved for
inspectton the Meigs County Plan of
Cooperation and Meigs County Community and Transportation Plan. suhmitted by the Meigs County Department of Human Services during the
regular meeting of the commissioners on Monday afternoon.
Director Michael Swisher. Barbara Chapman. Cynthia Mills and
Mary Hobstetter of the DHS, Tom
Reed ofthe Gallia/Meigs Community Action Agency, and John Costanzo.
superintendent
of
the

DANCING THE NIGHT AWAY • Guests at the Viennese Opera Ball dance while raising money lor the
Nina Hyde Center lor Breast Cancer Research.
phere is conduc1ve to gettmg work at the Ambassadors Ball.
The office of Jeanne Oates Angudone. satd Jordan's ambassador.
But nearby. Sen. Joseph Lteber- lo. chapter prestdenl of the National
Marwan Muasher.
man. D-Conn., couldn't escape com- Mult•ple Sclerosts Society. IS clut··You m1ght meet a congressman pletely. Many guests lingered to tered with charts of last year's seator a senator. Many times a five- or praise his stand• on the Lewinsky 1ng arrangemenl.
10-minute inleractmn is worth much affair. And he had to a"ure dtplo"When somebody says to me. 'I
more than an office meeting where mats that the scandal .. won't affect didn .tltkr where I was.' I know not

says Robert Lichter. president of the

tromc forms preparation .

research mstituhon.

She IS the daughter of James L.
Hodge of Palm Bay. Fla .• and Becky
Walker of Coolville.

.. What's remarkable is that Clinton IS a laughingstock and it doesn't
se~m to matter, .. he said.
Wtlliam Weld. former Massachu-

Michael J. Oeltjenbruns
Army Reserve Pvt. Mtchael J.
Oeltjenbruns has entered basic military training at Fort Jackmn in
Columbia. S.C.
During the eight weeks of lratnmg. the soldier will study the Army
mtsston and will receive instructton
in drill and ceremonies. weapons.
map reading, tactics. military courtesy. military justice. physical fitness. first aid. Army history and traditions. and spectal rraintng in
human relations.
He is the son of Karen and Roger
OeltJenbruns of Coolville. and ts a
1998 graduate of Federal Hocktng
Htgh School.

setts governor and Clinton's choice

News policy
In an effort to provtde our readershtp Wtlh current news. the Sunday
Times-Sent mel wtll not accept weddmgs after 00 days from the date of the
event.

Weddings submtlled after the 00-day deadltne wtll appear during the
week m The Daily Senltnel and the Gulltpohs Datly Tnbune .
All dub ml!etings anJ other news articles in the soc1ety stctJOn musl be
'ubm itted w11hin 60 days of occurrence. All birthdays must be submttted

w11hm 60 day' of the occurrence.
All matmal submtUed for publication is subject to editing.

for Mexico ambassador last year.
wondered whether snickers cuuld
reach critical mass ... If everybody's
laughing when the president of the
United States walks into the room.
it's time to go ... he said on PBS.
Laughing at the president may
also help the nauun heal -a yuk to
cure the yucks. That role for wit was
cited by the dead white guys of
Western philosophy. one of whom
constdered laughs ··rhe natural signs
of an increase tn freedom ...
A common defense. submitting to
barbs and IUrntng them IO ones
advantage. appears unavailable to
the president.
Ponrayed as wooden. Vice Prest·
dent AI Gore exaggerates hiS woodenness and charms the crowd. But
no one expects Clinton to ham 11 up
over women.

Others are busy doing that.
" Macy's has a Clinton Day
sale ... goes one joke from cyber·
space ... All pants half off...
Asks another: Why does Clinton
have a lady 's undergarment strapped
to htS arm ·&gt; .. That 's the patch - I'm
trying to qutt. ..

Hometown Newspaper

you tend to :-.ay thmgs in a structured
manner. wh1ch 1s not always effec-

our international involvement. We

to "eat them there,'' said Angulo.

can count on Republtcans and

!Jut Kolodney satd her Viennese
Opera Ball v.ould have attracted
more than the est•mated 1.400 who
attended 1f the Nma Hyde gala was
not schedu led at the same time.

tive ... Muasher said at the Ambassadors Ball.
For U.S. polillctans. the events
offer an escape from Capitol Hill's

Democrats to continue to work

contentious atmosphere and the

1.300 people- go without a glttch

Montea Lewinsky scandal.
.. It's nice not ro have to worry
about the current events of the day...
Rep. Benjamin Gilman. R-N. Y.. satd

is challenging. considenng the range
of headaches including the menu .

g1 ve the ball the standmg m the

the seating and a nval gala on the
same night.
~

events schedule of Washington wtll
take many more years ...

together on foreign policy ...
Ensuring that such btg events which sometimes host more than

1e Walker L1v1ngston, recording

members from each of the 22

"We are so much in the beginnmg stage." saH..I Kolodney. ..To

Daughters of the American

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The Southern Local Board of
Educatton will seek additional funding from the state School Facilities
Commission toward the construction
of the district's new elementary
school and renovations to the high
school.
Superintendent James Lawrence,
Treasurer Dennie Hill. Jack Ponmeyer, architect for Marr-Knapp-Crawfis
Associates Inc., New Philadelphia.
and construction manager Roland
Tokarski. of the Quandel Group.
Columbus. were to travel to Columbus today to address the facilities
commission.
Pottmeyer said the con$[1UCtion
budget as established by Quandel
requires an additional $1.8 million
above the $7,727,400 already
pledged by the state and local residents.
The building project is funded by
a 23-year, 5.39 mill bond/levy issue
passed on May 5 which will raise
$4,042,000 matched with $3,685,400
donated by the state under a school
building funding. plan began in 1990.
Pottmeyer stressed local residents
are not being asked for additional
funding. but noted that the shortfall
i!due to intlation occurring since the
funding plan was approved in 1990.
and new mandates including computer technology. preschool and
space for the talented. and gifted
(TAG) program.
Pottmeyer said the district wtll
likely receive some additional funding from the facilities commission.
but probably not the entire amount
requested. Nearby districts including
Vinton County have recetved additional funding. it was noted.
"If we don't get it. we will get by,"
he said.
"We are not doing anything different than other schools have done,"
said Lawrence.
Pottmeyer said the action may cost
the district a couple of weeks on its
building schedule. but added that the
time will be made up during the
drawing of construction prints.
He said the new school. which
will replace Letart Falls, Portland and
Syracuse elementary schools, Southern Junior High School and Southern
Kindergarten, should still open at the
beginning of the 2000-200 I school
Continued on page 3

Revo~

secretary: Kathleen Dixon, corre· chapters in the Southeast District lution
The State Theme for Ohio for
sponding secretary.
were tn anendance.
Seidel noted that this was the the current admtnistration period
Wintfred Cloran. organillng sec·
retary: Janet Bruns. treasurer; first time in the past 25 years that is ··Together Un1ted ...
Sharon Snyder. registrar; Kathy each chapter in the dtstrict was
Greeltngs from the National
Pulltns. htstorian: Carey Burton. represented at a dtstrict confer- Off1ce wne presented by the Mrs .
librartan; Darlene Lewts. North- ence. There were I 60 members Jo,eph Cui burn. National DAR
west Dtstrict director
present.
Htstortan General and Honorary
She called for annual reports Oh10 State Regent.
Janet Welty. Northeast Dtstnct
director. Anne S~idel. Southeast and future plans from each ol the
Swte
Regent
Wetzel
Dtstnct director: Patsy Gaines. state officers and state chairmen. announced that the Ohio State
She urged members to contin- DAR Conference wtll be he ld on
Southwest Distnct director.
Twenty two chapters an,wered ue their enthusiasm and keep'" March 5-7. 14'1'1 at the Wyndham
mil call by the Southeast Dtstrtct one of thetr goal retention. rein- Dubltn Hotel. Dubltn. Ohio. It
Director Mrs. Anne Seidel indi - statement and recruttment of wtll be the I DOth Ohio State Conea1i ng t hm the re e:;"e;;;n;,:l_::a;::nd::...;s:;o:,:m;::e~..;m.::.::,e:.;,m;;:h;e~rs:..:;o,:.f.:.'h:.;,e:.,.:.N;,;a;,;t;,;'o;,;n;,;'.:..'l..;-'.:..'.:.."..;'i t&gt;:;..t..;v-::_r;.."'_e_n_,·-e'"':'-.

Get the latest in sports news from the

Dail Sentinel
TAKE3
MONTHS
TO PAY

PRICED
AS LOW AS

$89

Sertarest II

$89

SERTA
ANGELICA

Twin
ea. pc.

Reg.
Full ea. pc .. $259
Queen set $499
King set $799

$139Twin
ea. pc

Sale
$139
$339 Full ea. pc.
$479 Queen set
King set

Reg.
$369
$699
$999

Good Afternoon

Perfect
Sleeper®
Chaparral Plus

Serta Perfect
Sleeper®
Chaparral Elite

Twtn
ea

Twtn
ea.

$21 9 $239

Sale
Reg.
$209 Full set.
$649
$449 Queen set $799
$649 King set $1099

Sale
Reg.
$469 Full set.
$669
$529
set $899
$799
$1199

ANDERSON'S
Furniture, Appliance, Floor Coverings

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat.
9:30 to 5:00

Athens/Meigs Educational Service
Center. were at the meeting to present
the plan. which is a document out-

fare rolls. Those long-tenn welfare

lining various cooperative arrange-

length of time that they can recetve

ments between the DHS and other
agencies in order to comply with the
slates new welfare reform legi,latlon.
Copies of the plan are avatlable
for tnspection throughout October at
the commissioners' otlice and all four
branches of the Meigs County District Public Library.
The plan. according to Swtsher.
represeots the changes in relationship
between the county and state DHS
offices. and stresses a trained work
force for local businesses. and job

tra1mng for lhose on Ihe current welrec1p1ents are nnw lunited in the
public assistance, and re4u1res lhat

they fond work or jub training that
will make them better candidates for
employment.
Transportation plans. chtld care
arrJngements and other details are

1ncludod in the plan. which attempts
to eliminate as many duplications of
services as possible.

The commiSsioners must approve
the plan by the end of October in
order for Meigs County to be deemed

a "partnershtp county" wnh the state
DHS and r~ceive max1mum fU'ldmg.
Reed outlined a plan to be implemented by the CAA •n cooperation
with the DHS whtch wtll provide
hasic educatinn and job lratning for

Single Copy· 35 Cents

Today's

Sentinel

I Section - 10 Pages
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Soorts
Weather

Sale
$499
$639
$899

10
7-8
9

2
3
4-S

3

Lotteries

I VISA] .

nHID
Pick l: 5M: Pick 4: 11742
Buckeye 5:

~ - IU- 2X 29- ~6

Dally 3; 1142. Dally 4: 7276

POMEROY- 992-3671

0 liNK Oh1u V:~Uc} Puhh1otunll Cu

'

"Rather than havtng a htllton d•fferent excuses for not working. lhn;

program wtll allow parttcipants to
eliminate excuses." Reed said

While the program emphast zes the
placement of workers tn pubhc sec-

those now rece1ving welfare assis-

lor work environments, such a.o.; town-

tance. The program. which Reed

ship and county projects. it is hoped
that the program will allow for the

sa1d is "heavy on case management,"

will a..sist wllh GED training and
ba.&lt;ic job skills.
The $222.000 program will work
to eliminate the problems that many
workers under the former General
Relief and General Assistance programs faced.

transition inlo regular private-sector

johs. Reed \aid
David Jenkins. who has worked
on a county msurance committee.

met with the board to discuss the revelations of David Rubadue.the county's insurance actuary, about 1he condition of the county's insurance fund.

Jenktns 'aid that he felt employ-

Southern
board eyes
aCJditional
state funds

precision, has never seen suL:h a torrent. But Clinton seems inoculated,

management of publtcattons. forms
and records. mail handltng and elec-

entine

Commissioners give nod to cooperative plan

By CALVIN WOODWARD
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - David
Letterman said traffic was so bad .. I
had to squeeze through spaces that
were narrower than Prestdent Cltnton's definition of sex." Fellow
comic Bill Maher dreamed up a
cream rinse that the president cou ld
use "after a day of splitting hairs ...
The Clinton-Lewinsky melodrama is playing out against u riot of
ribald humor. Late-night comics and

Biloxi. Miss.
The student learned administrative support and oftice management
for the functional staff elements.
The course included instruction on
keyboard functions. mtcrocomputer

j

Cubs win
wild card
tilt 5-3
Page4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 108

The slings and arrows
of outrageous jokes

course at Keesler Air Force Base m

operations. document and computer
secunty. message communicatJons.

Detroit stops Tampa Bay, Page 4
Ann Landers column, Page 6
AL playoffs to begin, Page 4

gauzy. turquoise scarves as they

DAR Southeast District Annual Conference Held

ATTENDS CONFERENCE - Pauline Atkins, regent of the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution,
right, was joined by Katherine Colburn, DAR National Historian
General at Southeast District Conference.

Sports

September 29, 1998

t!es' insurance premiums should be
paid 10 advance of coverage, rather

than after coverage. and was told by
the commissionl!rs that they hud con-

- - ---- --- --

..

. . - -. - . .

~-

- . . . . .-

. ~

~

~

- ...

~

-

.

...

~

-

~

. .-

.

--

~

-.

~·

..

The commissioners also:

-· Awarded a monthly bid fur bitumtnous materiab to Asphalt Matenals Co .. Gallipolis:
-- Awarded a live-project FEMA
bridge replacement contract to Ohto
Bridge Corporation. Marietta;
.. -- Met in executive session with

Swisher and Pr\'secuting Auomey
John Lentes regardtng personnel matters.
Presenl were commissioners Fred

Hoffman. Janet Howard and Jeffrey
Thornton. and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Middleport OKs
tougher curfew law
tric Power performs necessary work
at the plant.
The vtllage ts currently using
waler from the treatment plant in
Pomeroy during the daytime hours.
due to problems relatmg to the chlomeetmg on Monday evening .
The ordtnance. whtch was pre- nnation system in Middleport.
The Ohto EPA recently required
sented by Pohce Chief Bruce Swift.
was passed as an emergency mea- the village to replace its gas chlorisure. due to what Sw1ft and counc1l natton system with another system.
Horton commended Sam Eblin.
members have deemed a stgnifocant
problem with juvemle de linquency members of the recreation committee
and other volunteers for the tnstallathroughout the vtllage.
According to Swift. at least 50 llon of II new ptcnic tables in the vtl·
juvenile complatnls. ranging from !age's parks.
Horton wa&lt; challenged by Jean
curfew Violations to underag~ consumption of alcohol and grand theft. Craig about a new policy requiring
have been filed against Middleport those who address council to give
youths stnce the beginning of Sep- four working days' notice of their
need to address council. Horton has
tember.
Swift estimated that 70 percent of cited the late hour that some council
meettngs have adjourned as the reathose violations occur after II p.m.
The new ordinance also places son for such a pulicy, and said that he
responsibility for a juvenile's viola- would have final say as to who
tions on the parents. who will be sub- addresses council during meetings.
Cratg satd last night that she
ject to either mmor misdemeanor or
fourth-degree misdemeanor charges. planned to complain to the Ohio
The new curfew requnes minors Attorney General and the Ohio Ethics
to be at home from II p.m. to 6 a.m. Commission about Horton's policy,
unless accompanied by a parent or which was not approved by action
engaged in excepted activities such as from counc1l.
In other act1on. council:
school or church acltvities or work.
-- Met w1th attorney Linda WamMayor Dewey Horton. in proposing a $3,000 transfer of funds to the er about a pending legal matter and

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A new beefed-up curfew ,&gt;rdtnance was approved hy Middleport
Village Council during thetr regular

AVAILABLE FOR ADOPTION • Rubber Ducks
are still available lor adoption lor the 1998
Pomeroy Duck Derby, to be held In conjunction
with the Big Bend Sternwheel Festival on Sat·
urday. Pictured with some of the ducks are, I·
r, Brian Howard, chairman of the event, and

Bobble Karr, representing the Pomeroy Merchants Association, and Wendy Thomas and
Gretchen Anderson from Anderson's Furniture
and Appliances, one of the participating mer·
chants.

Merchants finalize plans for festival
The Pomeroy Merchants Assoctation finalized plans for acttvtlies
during this weekend's Big Bend
Sternwheel Festival.
A Duck Derby. masquerade costume contest and special sales and
promotions will be sponsored by the
association beginning on Thursdzy.
Prizes are still being collected for
the 1998 Pomeroy Duck Derby. to be
held on Saturday.
Numbered rubber ducks will be
released at the levee area and will
race to the finish line for prizes. First
prize for the derby is a $250 U.S.

Savings Bond from Peoples Bank.
Second pnze is a $1 00 savtngs bond
from the Pomeroy Merchants Association and third prize a $50 bond
from N.ncy Hollister.
Other prizes mclude a Dale Earnhardt clock and an oil change from
Don Tate Motors. as well as several
cash prizes. gift certificates and food
prizes from area businesses.
The cost for adopting a duck is $5.
and certificates will be issued showing ownership. They may be purchased through Friday at Powell's
Super-Valu. Peoples Banking and

Trust Company tn Pomeroy. Anderson's. McDonald's of Pomeroy.
Gloeckn!'r's. Hartwell House. Coun
Street Gnll and Clark's Jewelry.
Cash pnzes will be awarded to
both adult and child winners of the
masquerade contest. to be held at 7
p.m. on Saturday. Categories for the
contest are prettiest. ugltest. most
original and judge's chotce.
The Merchants Assoctatton and
Sternwheel Committee both urge
members of the general public to participate in the contest, which is open
to the public. not just stern wheelers.

School vouchers agrument continues
COLUMBUS - For the Rev.
Martin Williams. the state's experiment in school choice isn't a test to
figure our the constitutional line
between church and state.
It's a matter of economic opportunity.
.. Children shouldn't be held back
because there's a law that says there
should be a separation of church and
slate."' said the pastor of Untted
Chnsttan Fatth Church tn Cleveland.
He attended arguments before the
Ohio Supreme Court on Monday
about the experimental school voucher program, which provides state
money for some Cleveland-area students to attend private schools,
including some aftiliated with religions.
The $8.7 million program. now in
its third year. provides grants of up to
$2,250 for 4.000 children from lowincome families.
Proponents say it provides hope

for students stuck in the troubled
Robert Chanin. a New York
Cleveland school system. and the lawyer representing opponents. said
competition wtll help the public the analogy would be more accurate
if the state worker also received a list
schools improve.
Critics say it hurts the public of I0 state-approved stores where he
school system by diverting students could spend his paycheck- eight of
and public money to private schools. which only sold religtous articles.
He said only the Wisconsin
Opponents suing to stop the progmm
include two pa.'t presidents of the Supreme Court has ruled tn favor of
Ohto PTA. two mintsters. a Cleve- a program that gtves unrestncted tax
land publtc school student and the dollars to reltgton-aflltliated schools.
Ohio Federatton of Teachers unton.
Justice Alice Robte Resnick. one
State SoliciiOr Jeffrey Sutton of two Democrals on the court. satd
asked the court to overturn a state she was troubled that 80 percent of
appeals court decision that said the the students in the program attend
program violates the constitutional schools affiliated with churches.
separation between church and state.
David Young. a lawyer for the
Sutton said the voucher program families fighting to save the voucher
gets around the constitutional prob- program, said that shouldn 'I. matter
lem by 'ending money to the parents - the money goes to the students
and letttng them decide where to send because they are poor. not because
thetr children.
they belong to a partiCular rei igion .
He likened the process to a state
Other justices seemed more interworker signing over his government ested in the claim that the program
paycheck to a religious group.
Continued on page 3

Poll: Most like private investm_ent options
CLEVELAND (AP) - Fiftyeight percent of those surveyed said
they favored the option of privately
investing their Social Security contnbutions. according to a poll published today in The Plain Dealer.
Thirteen percent said the country
should raise the retirement age. II
percent favored raising payroll taxes
or doing nothing and 2 percent chose
lowering Social Security benefits. the
poll said.

Privatization was most popular percentage points.
In other results. 76 percent of
among people with larger incomes
and the best educated. About 70 per- those polled identified Social Secucent of college graduates favored pri- rity as a very important issue for the
vatization. compared to 42 percent of next Congress.
About 64 percent of poll responthose who attended high school only.
The Gordon S. Black Corp. con- dents less than 65 years old said they
ducted the poll from Sept. 10 to 14 were ellher '·nor at all confident .. or
for the newspaper. The telephone sur- ..not too mntident .. that Social Secuvey of 1.0051ikely voters in Ohio had rity would be available when they
a margin of error of plus or minus J retire. Eleven percent said they were
very cuntident.

village watt::r improvement fund.
announced that the village was now
in the process of repairing 11s water

personnel 1ssues;

-- Approved trick or treat for
Oqober ~9 from 6 to 7 p.m.

system. equipping the system with a

Present were council members

new chlorination system. V1l lage

Robert Puuler. Sandy lannarelli. Rae
Gwiazdow,ki. Steve Houchtns and
Roger Manley. Horton and Clerk
Bryan Swann.

superintendent Brent Manley said
that work on the new system wtll
continue as soon as Amencan Elec-

Challenger Cordray attacks
Montgomery on gun control
CLEVELAND (AP)- The candidates for Ohio attorney general disagree about whether state and federal handgun buyer checks are needed.
The issue emerged Monday as
Democrat Rtchard Cordray picked up
the endorsement of gun control advocate Sarah Brady. who chatrs Handgun Control Inc.
She also was a dnving force
behind the so-called Brady law. Her
husband. James Brady. was wounded in the 1981 assasstnation attempt
on President Reagan
Cordray accused incumbent
Republican Betty Montgomery of
leaving Ohioans vulnerable to en me
by not impostng state background
checks on all potential handgun buyers.

Montgomery responded that every
person who wants to buy a handgun
in Ohto has a criminal history
checked. although it may not be
through the state.
The Brady law mandates a fiveday waiting period to give local
police time to check the backgrounds
of people who are buying handguns.
But the U.S. Supreme Court in June
1997 struck down a provision in the
law requiring states to do such
reviews.

After the ruling. Montgomery
made handgun background checks
\loluntury.

Last December, Montgomery· s
office and the federal government
struck u deal under which a two-tier
system was set up: if a gun buyer
signs a form permitting a hack~rnund

check. the state perform' 11.

'
.

\Ide red the opt ton but dectded agaonst
11 becau'e they felt it would create a
'ttuatlon where employees were paymg twu:e for coverage and that it
would rr~ate a financial hardship on
'orne employees.
Jenktns also satd that he planned
to request a state aud11 of the fund.

When gun buyers won't stgn the
form. the Franklm County Sheriffs
Department IS patd to do a check
using federal records.

Cordray argued that the county's
background check ts less complete
than the state's. allowtng some guns
to fall into the wrong hands
.. People are rejected for handgun
purchases tn the state of Ohto at only
one-quarter the rate of the national
avemge." he sa1d. '"That is a s1tuat1on
that endangers people on the street
and endangers law enforcement.··

Montgomery satd Ohto had to
drop the mandatory background
checks after the Supreme Court ruling last year because it had no Brady
law and her office couldn't legally
require them .
..We looked high and low to see
if there were a way we could legally
do 11 ... Montgomery said . .. 1 have
writt!i!n the governor. I have written
the speaker. I've wriuen the Senate
president and encouraged them to
pass the Brad) law in Ohto. It would
make my life a lot eaSter...
Montgomery 's otlice said 374 of
41.947. or .89 percent of applicants
for handguns were rejected in Ohio
this year through Sept. 14.
Mrs. Brady. who spoke at a small
fund?atser for Cordray. described
him as a longttme ally of gun control
forces .

.. He has been a strong and con·
sistent supporter of the Bmdy law and
other measures to keep handguns
away from convicted felons. fugitives
and ktds."' 'he 'aid.

1

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="417">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9841">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="27781">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="27780">
              <text>September 28, 1998</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="867">
      <name>crow</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="259">
      <name>hubbard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5968">
      <name>mccollough</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5969">
      <name>nye</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="714">
      <name>wiles</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
