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Page oa ·,

• ., .....,

lbul_

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

~~'!~~fi!~~·~=~Co::::.:~::ilm.~l:,~~e
'"'ltN"d for ne&lt;t )tar\ produ&lt;1oon.
T•'''"~ !'rur ""I afiA:r fall harve't
ha' man) b&lt;nehl'-"''"are normally dner on the fall makon~ "ea,ier to
vbtatn accurate &gt;ample..
Sool '"mple re•uh' are normally
returned '""n&lt;r u1 .1he fall v,. 'Pring
&gt;ample re1ull\ hecau-.:e of the le,ser
"'"rklo.td at fhe lai&gt;o. in rhe fall.
Re...,arch ha, ,hown that faille,! '"~ 'llil' " "' ~~Ccura[e a1 wil 'amphn~ any l)lh&lt;r tilTh! of the year. once
the '"il 1ampl&lt; r&lt;'ulh are returned.
the l~ndo&gt;~ n&lt;r ha1 t•me to make any
needed lunc and fertiliur applicati"n' . Fall i' an eXc·ellenr time 10
appl j hme. Cu,tom applicator- can
u'uall ) gel w y11ur JOb 4uock&lt;r in the
I all. II c""'' the "orklnad. in the
, pring. anJ the '"'I ''normally drier
fnr lim" application. A pH of 6.0 to
7 0 i' tdeal for 1~ 1110\1 effident
"'ailabiltl) uf nutrient&lt; by mo't
.,·f()p....

..

Pho,phoru' can be applied in the
faiiiO 11111'1 all 'oiltyP.,s that do nlll
have an ero,ion hazard. Phosphorus
move' verv lillie in the Soil. But if
rhi"' nutrfc~t j,., ~urfa.ce apPtieU with·
out inLurporatiun it could be lost
through ero~i"n or runoff.

Pota'h can be applied to moM Soil
l)pe' 1n the laii. .Howewr, sandy soil
I) pe' can have pota'h leach during

,ubj«1to eru..ton •houkJ ha~e pota.\11
applied do..er to plantong lime.
of you ~· 1101 want to apply /
any needed nurnenl\ to a ""'' s:ompled field lhi&gt; faiL by :-"'"plin~ now
the Iandow?"' ha' the tnformatton at
hand to pnce the needed n~tnen~•
needed. Late falltnto early wonter.os
an ~~cellem ume to compare shop
fentlozer pn~s. So be ready for
'Pring ~y soil sampling thi• fall .
The Untted Slates Depa!l'!'"nl _o f .
Agncu lwre ~USDA I prohobttJ; dtscnmonauon 10 ols programs on the
ba&gt;is o~ ~ace. color: national ori~in.
se•: r~hgton. age. dt&gt;abohl_Y: polo local
beloets. and manta! or famohalstalus.
IN PI all prohibited bases apply to all
programs).
P~r&gt;ons with disabilities who ·
requ~re altematove means for coo:nmunication of program lnformation
(brai lle. large print, audiotape. etc.)
should contact the USDA Office of
communicadons at r202J720-279 I.
To file a complaint, write to the
Secretary of Agriculture. U.S.
Depanment of Agriculture. ·Washington D.C. 20250. or ,·all (202)720·
7327 rvoicet or r202J720-1127
(TDD). USDA i&gt; an equal employment opponu nity employer.

f"'"

Monday

Sunday.~~18,1998

Weather

The dirtiest thing in the house

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 70.; Low:40a

By REBECCA COWNS •
and C".JCh dtvide' every ., minute•. Litchen.
by 3M and finding' were rei~ to
GALLIPOLIS . When:: do you a yoo'll have 1600 bacteria in a hour.
You're prob-.obly thinking "Not help market the company'&lt; antibac·
think the most b3Cleria live-. in your Within "two hoors, you'll have 2'.61XJ my &gt;pnnge: If ""· ynu probably terial&gt;ponge•. But you don't hoive to
house'! On the toikl'! In the toiler! hacteroa. Lft's not think about what haven't heard of the Univer.ity uf buy new product• to enter into germ
Anywhere else in the bathroom' In happens when you leave that "POflge Arizona re~archer who te.ted · warfare. Ohio Swe University food
the F•re'! In the gamage can? lying in lhal warm. moi01 container di~ragl'/.ponge• and lllher kilehen ~fety ,peciali&gt;l&lt; recommend using
Nopr.
on your kilehen·sink overnight.
ittms daily in 10 Phoeni~, ar~a paper towel; w wipe down surface,~.
Believe it or not, it may be in that
Where does the bacleria come homes, and !hen confirmed h" dtS- washing your hand• regularly (dtd
•ponge innoi:ently lying on the ba.:l from in the first place? From ju•t heartening re,rulls by IA:!&gt;tin~ dis~ rag• .. you know t~ you need tow'!"" your
of your kitchen •ink.
about anywhere.
and sponges 10 Clticago. Mtamt. Los hands for at lea,120 seconds tn warm
s:u.1eria need&lt; four factors in
Your hanth 'are one place. Angeles. Boston and New York. j;tfdpy effectively el.iminate genps
nrder to .grow: food, moisture. the Whether you give your killen a Over.lll. about 20 percent _of the rags from your hands?). using antibacter·
right temperature and enough time. &gt;Cratch behind the ~"" or put raw and sponges were contamt_nated woth ial soap can add an ellrn mtoiSUre of
After it's used. a sponge or dishrag 'teaks under the broiler. the nell large number&lt; of baclen:t: In fact 'l:lfety, and using a chlorine bleach
can rasily have all four wrapped up thi~g· you tooch ctould become: cont· l~rc wa&gt; enou_gh bacteria in these , and water mi~ a.• a cleaning solution
into one messy linle package. In fact, amtnated with any _ bacteria you dtshrag.Ho ea.•dy cause ..lmonella ( 1/4 cup 11f bleach lo I gallon of
that ,ponge may seem like Disney picked up. And if that ne•l thing is food poi50ning and urinary tract water effectively kills genn.;), Final·
World to all of rhO.. linle germs.
the kitchen rag to wipe the raw meat infection~ just by handling them. ly. change your dishrag every day!
-When condition• are right; bacle- drippings off the counter. the kitchen Dishrags had about twice ... many
. Rebe«a Collin.~ is Gallia Coun·
ria can grow rapidly. If you've got · table and the top of the stove, Y\&gt;U've germ•. "" sponge•. on average.
ly's exlension agenl in·family and
JIKl cell• of baclefia on that dishrag just &gt;pread grnns all around the
Th1s panicular study wa• funded
"
consumer sdenc:es.

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 608; Low: 40s

New York Mercantile Exchange amid
optimism11 new interest rate cut will
spu~ demand. for the metals in industrial uses.

On other markets, couon and coffee future• continued tl!eir &gt;harp
retreat
' ·
Gold, silver. platinum, palladium

'•

Noting Ellington's 1OOth birthday, Page 2
Bengals lose to Tennessee, Page 5
What's apet owner to do?, Page 6

Meigs County's

C~~

Hegional September jobless rate
(By

Per~ enlage)

The unemployment rate in_Meigs County
- and throughout most of southeastern Ohio
- increased between August and September,
·w
the Ohio Bureua of Employment' Services
reponed Friday.
.
According to the OBES, the Meigs County
jobless rate rose 1.1 percent during the peri~
- ·from 9 percent to 10.1 p,ercent The bureau.'s
figures show 900 of the county's 9000-member
labor force as unemployed.
In neighboring Oallia County, the jobless
rate increased by .5 percent. According 10 the
OBES, 1,100 of the county's estimated 14,300member labor force were unemployed during
the period.
·
Other regional September jobless rates
(August percentages in .parenthesis) were:
Athens: 4.7 (4.4) percent; Jackson: 5.8 (5.6)
percent; Lawrence: 6.8 (5.9) percent; Scioto:
8.6 (7.8) percent; \(inton: 7.6 (7.9) percent; and,
Washinglon: 4.8 (4.6) percent
·
The stale's unemployment rate in September
was 4.3 percent, unchanged from August, the
OBES said.
.
'I'
Fluctuations in various industries offset each
other, OBES Administrator Debra Bowland
said Friday. The labor force decreased slightly
because student workers are leaving their jobs
to return to school, she said.
The U.S. jobless rate was 4.6 percent, up
from 4.5 percent in August .
The number of Ohioans )Yilh jobs was 5.551
million in September, down 1,()()(1, from August.
The number of unemployed worken; in September was 249,000, down from 252,000 in
August
.
· L'tljo,l...!~~
.
I
,, , .; Th~ ··September· unemployment'"1'!1l,.WiiS'
down from 4.5 percent in .Seplember 1997. lp
_::Siii':i~!i~~=~=i==ii=iiiiiii:l=iliJ
· the past year, the number 6f Ohi&lt;!ans' _w~)!king
.
increased by 78,000, up from .5.473 million. The num- a high of 11.4 percent in Morgan County. Ten counties
ber of unemployed (!ecreased by 10,000, down from had rates at or less lhan 3:0 percent Eleven had rates at
or higher than 7.0 percent.
.
..
259,000, OBES said.
The county rateS are unadjusted, meanmg they do not
Among the state's 88 counties, last month 's rates
ranged from a low of 2.1 percent in Delav.:are county lo take into account seasonal adjusJments in employment.

.r::====:;:::;:::::;:=:;:::::;:=;::::;::::;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:,

effort lo corre~.:t this. our a~ency i~

State Sen. Michael Shoemaker, at podium above, Wll the keynote 1peaker at the Melg1 Co1111·
ty Democratic Party'• Kenrlady Day Dinner held Saturday evening at the Melga County Multi·
purpoae Benlor Center. Shoemaker, pictured with Chairman Sua Mala.o n, Sheriff _Jim Soulaby
(bolh !*!Iaily hlddtnl, Commlaaloner Jaffrey Tl)ornton and Mlck Davenport, candidate for coun. ty commlllloner dlacuaaed the Democratic agenda aa It relataa to education and job devel·
opment. He a110 'dlacuaaed the differences betwesn rural politics and polltlca In urban Ohio;
Prior to the program Roger and Mary Gilmore performed a musical program 11 Sonny 1nd Cher,
below, which 111cludad a aatlrlcal adaptation of their aong, "I Got You Babe" e'ntltled "W~ Got
You, Ted," In honor of U.S. Rep. Tid Strickland. Tha Gilmore• performed tha 10ng 181t week
In fro111 of former Tex81 Gov. Ann Richerd• at a Strickland rally In Pika County.

,.

'

L___

Hollister hopes,for a repeat
.of history with Nov. 3 win

~92-2156

would Uke to congratulate and
thank.all of the families that bought
feed from us over this past year Our
feed has proven its quality.
Among the 'l.!,inners purchasing feed from us
were:
•Grand Champion Steer, Gallla Co. Fair
. r
and 6 out oftop 10 market steers
•Grand Champion Hog, Gallla Co. Fair
and 7th place hog
•Champion Angus Heifer, Gallia Co. Jr. Fair
•2 out of top 10 market lambs, Gallia Co. Jr. Fair
•Grand Champion Steer, Jackson Co. Fair
•Grand Champion Steer, Starke Co. Fair
•Reserve Champion Steer Open Show •
Ohio State Fair
•Reserve Champion Heifer, Ohio Beef Expo
·Summer Calf Champion, Atlantic National
•Reserve Champion International Heifer
Ohio Angus Review
·Grand Intermediate Champion Heifer
All American Futurity
•Reserve Intermediate Champion Heifer
Ohio State Fair
.

If we have missed anyone, please accept our ,
apologies and congratulations.

.14,640" !!U
M'r'lrM:l!'tiAStD ON l14,640.to WITH $UIKIIXI'MII'MI' t
W. TillE fut AMO\JNTf'IWitlOII2.140.iGAlUI '
FOil !0 d 'TO QI.WJIB) IMfiS. mAL IIWa
cw.aal,W .IO TOrAL .tMf Of M$ . 11~.312 .411.
IHI::UQ:S III:IATtS ANCI COLI.lOE QMQ t.QI'I,

II FGID IAURUS Sl
t1'30350 • f'Ml. 6 CYL ..
AIR. AUTO.

17 FORD ESCORT ll

16 UIC. CONTINEIIAL

129950 • 4 CYL .. I&gt;JA.
. AUTO. AM/FM. PS

$1].995

tl'30210 - fWD. AIR,
· V·B. AUTO., PS. P8

ti'98Sl71 • V-S. AIR,
AUTO .. PS. PB.

S11.995

$24,995

1990191-AUIO., V·8.
!&gt;JR. 4WD. POl fW.

$15.995

#985921 • AUTOS !&gt;JR.
PS, POL. CAS .

$26.995

$15.995

II FORD mJOUR GL
t1'291BO • f'MJ. AIR.
AUTO .. 4 CYL-. .

$14,995
IIIIEIICURY IIISIIOUE

*30340 · AIR COND., 4
CYL .• AUTO.. fW, POL.

$1¢.995

lliORD IIUSIAI&amp; GT
#985431 • AIR, V·B.
TILT, PB, PS. CASS.

$16.995.

17 FDID TAURUS 4-DR.

t1'30361 , 6 CY L.~R.
• AUTO.. PS. PB. ,
POL, TILT.

$14,995

17 CHEVY GED

n CHRY. NEW YDRl!R

1985312 • 2·DR . f'Ml.
4 CYL.. AIR. AUTO.

t1'9842l1 • 6 CYL.. AIR.
AUTO .. POL. fW. TILT.

$7.995

$12,995

17 FORD MUSTANG

li FORD ESCORT

*29960 • 6 CYL. AIR,
AUIO., PS, PB. CRUISE ,

tl'98670l · AIR, FWD.
PB. AIM'M. CASS.

$15,995

$5,995

II FORD CONTOUR

ISIIERC. COUGAR

*30200 • f'Ml. AIR.
AUTO.. PS. PB, POL.

ti'B90301 - 6 CYL ,!&gt;JR.
AUTO.. PS. PB. POL

S11 ,995

$11.995

IIUNt TOWIW
tl'984 152 · ~- OR , V-8.
AUTO.. PS. PB. AIR

S24.949 ·

84 FORD ESCORT
t1'983271 - 4 CYL.,I&gt;JR,
. AUf1l., PS. PB

S5.995

84 CHEVY Z-21

14FDROIAURUS

ti'9B3577 - fWD. 6
CYL. . AIR, AUTO, PS,
PB .. CASS.

17 f·ISD DIESEl

17 fORD F-150
1990561 • 5-SPO.
4WO, V-B. _AIR . CASS.

$21,995 .

S6.995

II CHEVY BLAZER

198591 - f'MJ, SCYL ,
AIR, AUTO., PS, PB •

tlf984S21 - AUTO.. S
CYL .. 4WO. PS, PB,
CRUISE.

13 OLDS II ROYAl£

$8,995
II fORD IEIIPO

#983573 • fWD. 4
CYL .. AUTO . AIR. POL.

S2,995

·$20.995

I&amp; CIIEVY S-1 0
*986361- 4 CYr.,
AM/FM CASS .. PS. PB.

$10,995

lliiERt. TRACER lS

16 FOIDWINDSTAR

SJ.995

$16.900

198600 I · AI~ ml. 6 · 11'30150 - JOL V-6.
. CYL .. CA S.
AUTO .. PS, PB. AM/FM.

15 JEEP CHERDlEI

92 fORD AEROSIAR
#982261 - 6 CYL.. AIR.
AUTO.. TILT, CRUISE.

$6,995

Good Afternoon

81 FORD RANGER.
4 CYL , AM/FM.
STANDARD TRANS.

S1 0.995

17FDRDf,150

Today's Se11tinel
I Section • I0 Pages

1986061 · AUTO , AIR,
BCYL.. CASS.

$13,995
81f0RDI·15D
#30260 - 6 CYL. AIR.
PS. 5-SPO , AM/FM
CASS . WIDE BED

813.995

Calendar
Classifieds
9

Coml(~

Editorials
·Locil
·Sports
Weal her'

2

4&amp;5

3

Lotteries

Riverview Farms/
Jim Baughman

OHIO
Super Lollo: 10-21-33-34-35-37
Kicker: 3-6-5-1-4-5
Pick 3: 7-1-9: Pick 4: ~-3-1 - R

dealer for
Umhurger Show Feeds

more Republicans elected to Con1
gres3.
Democrat~ . say lhe GOP is wasting its money. '
\
.. Alithe money in the world can't
prop up a failing candidate who has
huge problems with her own base,"
said Olivia Morgan, a spokeswom"n
foJ the Democratic Congressional
Campaign Commillee. "She doesn't
appeal to core Republican v~ters .
They are trying lo make a naltonal
.campaign for a local politician and
Nancy Hollister just doesn't sell."
Taxes, health' cure, jobs and education are dominant campaign themes
echoing nationally in other mces. And
in Ohio's poorest congressional dislrict,
tmnsportation and federalmon ~~ Now, Hollister wants her tum.
ey tor roads also top both campaigns
"It's,!! seal in play," Herb Asher, agendas. ·
prolessor emeritus of political science
Ro.thenberg and Asher ugreo that
at Ohio Slate University, said.
voter turnout aJ:ld eiich candiJ.,tc's
· .. This race is an impqssible nullo ability to energile their c'."" pa rty
crack." independent national pollster constituents 0nd sway the indcpenStuart Rothenberg said. "It's a toss- Jent ville ure keys In victory. An
unknown is ·· how, or if, President
up. "
Both national political panics are Clinton's conduct in the M·mka
targeting the race. It is the quinles - · Lewinsky scandal and the House
scntial swing district where the elec· . impeachment inquiry will allclil'vntlion outcome has hinged on no more ers. Rothenb~rg said it will hav.: an
than 6.096 vmes since 1992.
impact, Asher disu£rees.
Registered Republicans outnum Hollister has called on Clintun 1(1
"f!'e Voinovich e_odorsementswere
ber
Democrats
99.22
1
to
66.X57
in
a
resign.
Strickland s;oiJ Clinton 'should
pubhshed Sunday m the Akron Bea·
con Journal. Th~ Cmc.'nnau EnqUir- sprawling 1'4-county dislrkl. lnde- be censured und has .. L'UIH.h:mned ..
er and the Dayton Datly News. The pendent volers total 272, 156. eclips- his behavior.
On the plus side for Strick land is
newspapers said Voinovich is an ing both political punies. (The 6th
experienced. steady leader who ~~s District indudes unly u por1ion of his rt!lentless campaigning and t: n~r­
made state gpvornment more elh- Warren and Ross counties, but the gy. But he no doubt fa&lt;es a tough batcient. .
.
, numbers rl!llect total votc!rs in the tie in u conscrvative-lean111g d1 stn..:t
where he is the more libenol ca ndiThe Post sutd S11turtlay thut Tall counties.)
"We think Ted Strickland is the date .
has senSible!' i~eas-. ah,l\lt how lo curHollister bcnetits from hCr st'rung ·
ry out educatu~n~ll. r~ h)rn 1s already. most vuln~rubl~ Dcmocrl.l~ we"'re runordered Ur'!ti ~h e 1n1tmt~ ~~~ ~e has pro- ning aguin.t .in the. country," said GOP ties, but that could ·be" nega·
posed . "He ts u co_ns~;tenlluus. IHml-. Todd Harris. a spokesman for the tive if the independent-minded voters
work mg. prugmaw.· mml~nue . who National Republican Congressional. in the district perceive h&lt;r us a puppa~s al,l_&lt;nltun to the detaol ~ ol _
guv- Comminee . "We'll du what it Iukes, pel fur the GOP.
em_mg. lh&lt; newspttper smd m us odt- spend what ittuk&lt;s. to see that NanAnother unknown for Hollister's
ronal.
.
"Y Hollister is sworn in the 106th campai'gn is whethor there will be
GOP voter fallout !A-om lh&lt; dtvtsove
The (Cleveland) Plato D~aler on Congress."
Sunduy published endorscmonts 1n
The, Republican National Com· Republican primary.
· Hollister won the GOP primary
three stalewt de ruces 111 the Nov. 3 millee is spending hundreds of lhouS&lt;mds of dollars airing TV nds in the with a plumlity of 37 percent wrest election .
The newspaper suppurl.l Republi- district in support of Holli ster as pun ing lhe nomination from the: n)orc
ct~ n Beny Montgoml!r:y for r!!-de..:of n $37 million campaign to get conservative former Rep. Frank Crc By PAMELA BROGAN
Gannett Newt Service
WASHINGTON ~Ohio Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland · ~opes to
beat the odds on Nov. 3 and become
the first incumbent in the 6th Congressional District not to be -toss~d
out by the voters in three ·elections.
His Republican challenger. Lt.
Gov. Nancy Hollister. is gambling
that history will repeal itself. ·
In 1994. Strickland was defeated
by former Republican Rep. Frank
Cremeans as part of a Republican
tidal wave !hat lefllhe GOP in control of the House for the lirsllime in
40 years. But Strickland came back
in the '96 election and ousled Cre-

We

"JYA.
Daily 3: 3-4-3: Daily 4:

5- 5- ~- 5

0 199'8 Ohio VRIIey r uhliShllltt Co

Strickland wins endorsement;
papers back Voinovich, Taft
By The Assoclatad Pre~s
The Athens Messenger on Sunday
endorsed U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland of
Lucasville in the race for the 6th Dislrict seul . Slrk·kluml. u Dl!rnm·rut.
fttces Republican Lt. Gov. Nancy
Hollister.
The newsp11per sai ~ it was pleased
with Stricklund's energetic. hard'
working . upprmH.·h tn g~vernmcnt
and wHitngness lo cross pnrty lines
on socially conservative iSsues.
It said Hollister had positive qualities. but "may be tor1 much nf o1 temn
player. She might speak the purty line
instead of speaking up, for our
region."
Meanwhile. three major newspapers in Ohio have endorsed Republicun George Voinovich to r U.S. Senate. while Republican Bob Taft has
beeri endorsed for governor by The
Cincinnuli Posl.

litln as attornl!y

•

Single Copy· 35

State rate unchanged

News Hotline News Hotline
News Hotline

We Fc,·d Ch""'pio"•

Hometown Newspaper

-Democrats rileet-- Meigs jobless rate
up in September

and copper futures all saw sharp
gains as investon; reacted to the F~­
eral Reserve 's surprise quarter-poml
rate cut late Th~rsday. the second in
a• many week•.

encouraging participation from all
ethnic. racial. and gender groups.
Any farm owner including' spouses. operator.. tenants. share crOppers.
of legal voting age are eligible. to vote
and hold office.
dure,, and in .. truc tiorls.. Comminees
If yuu have any 4uestimis please
must -ee that county otlke operations mntacl the Gallia-Luwrence county
arc farmer oncnted and that farmers FS A oflke at Ill Jackson Pike,
receive good serviCe. The election of Room 1571 Gallipolis. OH 45631 rir
rcspon,ih le Lornmiuee persons is call 1-H00-391-6638 or 446-8687.
tmportant t'o ALL farmer~.
This yea" election will be conducted in LAA-3 which consists of ,Jackson hired by firm
Greenfield. Huntington, Raccoon.
GALLIPOLIS
Perry and Walnut Townships in Gal- • Angela Jackson
lia County. Also LAA-5 will hold an was
recently
election involving Perry. Fayeue. employed as a
Windsor. Union .and Rome Town- computer opera:-.hip~ in Lawn:nl:e County. Producers
lor at The Midget
in these to'":n~hips who wish 10 be Press on Fourth
placcJ on the election ballot or want Avenue in Ga1- 4--...::..:S..::iil
to nornin:..ttl! a candidate. may request lipolis.
11 nomination petition from our office,
She is a ~998
Jackeon
NOMINATIONS
MUST
BE gra&lt;luate of the
RECEIVED IN THE 'OFFICE BY GallipOlis Career College of GalOCTOBER 26. 1998. The slate ilf lipolis where she received an as,soci· nnrniner:s mu ~ t con lain a1 leasl four - .alc of applied husiness in microcomcanJidat~s. Tht!re are concerns that puter I Data processing and diploma
'
'
'
I
'
r.:crtain minority or special interest m
JUnior
accountmg.
gn\ups of people have been discrimShe resides in Vinton with her
'int~tt!d ag.ain~t due to lack of reprehushand. Michael , and their spn
.,~.:nta tion un county com miltees. In an
Aaron •ind ilaughler Taylor.

446-2343 .

Yankees now
2 games up
over Padre~
Page4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 114

FSA CommiHee nomination
deadline Monday, October 26
GALLIPOLIS - County FSA
Committee' are a vital link in the
cffctlivc atlmJ nistration of farm pro•
gnuJb locally. CountY,JCommiuee:o.
arl! re spon:"ihlc for carrying UJJl program:o. in w. T(m.lance with regulations.
National anJ .Stale policies. proce-

Sports

••

Precious metals, copper _ro~ket higher on rate cut
By CLIFF EDWARDS
AP Bu1ines1 Writer
Preciou s metals and copper
futures rose sharply Friday on the

October 19, 1998

g~ nt:ral.

'
,.

.

;n~an~ who got 34 percent.
Another anti-abortion candidate,
Mike Azinger, earned nearly 21 per· ,
cent of the vote. II is Holli•ter's abortion stance that rankles some conservative; . Hollister personally opposes·
abortion. but bdieves in u '"woman's
rightlu pri v.,cy:·
··1 personally can't vote for some. bndv who is pro-abortion.'· said Laurk Viars. hcaJ uf Ri ght lo Life in
Warr&lt;n County. " I plan to vote, but
plan 1·n ~kij} thai ~C:'-'Iin{'l."

But other conscrvutiv~s

,
l.Hl::

rally -

ing uround Hollist&lt;r against Stricklund whu is pro-choke .
.. , pl an to vote t'or Hollister,"

Atinger said. "The most imponant
thing is that we nec:d u strung Repub-

lica n majority in the House . The botltl!tl line is that Hnlli~t e r will vote for
Newt Gingrich. R-Ga .. as S~aker.''
Strickland\ campaign could slumhie if Democrat.&lt; stay hom&lt;. or if he
, is un :..ul'L:e:-.sful in luring a block of
independcn1

v~Hcrs .

In years when

there! has ~en poor voter turnout. ,

Republicans ·have

outnurnbere~

Democrats at the polls.
"Voter· tunwmt is ·U roncern."
StrkklnnJ sailL "The mor&lt; _people
who ,·om&lt; to lh&lt; polls. the h.!Uer
!.' hnm.·c I have of winning."

Strickland said h&lt; has hroad voter appe;.t\ beGtuse he j, not afraid to
~:ross swords· with tht: Democralic
lcaUer:-.hrp to protect the interests nf

his constituents. This yoar. Stricklahd
voted wilh tho GOP majority in Congress to override Pre:sident Clinton's
veto uf the hun on P"rti.,l-birth abortion.\,

"I think I hove crossed thatrhr.:shold of boing perceived as a Democratic congressman.·· Strickland said.
" Poople kno\Y I'm " Dem&lt;Krat. but
in t~rrns of how I repre,ent im.livlli"
""Is in the JistricL p;trty .,n;li.,tion
means absolutely nothing."
Holl is ter said she would win
~caus~ ~h~

;, th~ tlnly Ct)ll~~rvati ve
in the race.
'"11\:&lt;11 h"w the "dvnnt.,ge." Hol li ster ..;aid . ''I'm for h~s..; hi~ govern (Contlnued on Paga 3)

�•
J

•

q_ommentary
The Daily Sentinel
'E.rta!Jfulid"' l948

111 Coul1 StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992·2156 • FIX 112·2157
\

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlllher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

DIANE HILL.
Controller

ot,.,

1M SuUnel "'k:Dmft ,.,.,._ 10 ltM .a1tor trom IWid«'' on •llrr»d ,_.. of top,._
5hol1 , _ .
,_)_,UN - ,.,ooi- Typo&lt;~ lot
,.,. ,.. p,.flrr«/ Mil Ml INY N Nlf«J. &amp;ch MoukiiMiudrl • ..,..,.... ldd ,_

f30D-.,

IHJd dllytlmo pllono . - s,.dty • ., lloll to IA!fO&lt;O to lt&gt;o Editor.
..s189 or: FAX ro '144112-2167.

If-.. o o

·~• .,,.. 11&gt;

o prnrlt&gt;uo . -

TIN - - Ill COUrt 51., -JO•Ofl 0/110

Abortion could prQve to be
deciding factor in 1st District race
By LISA CORNWELL
Associated Press Writer

( INCINNA n- Abon10n long an emnt1onalossue m pol1t1cs could be
r u;lor'" thiS year s I st CongressiOnal DistriCt race observers say
l11at IS the Issue that seems to draw 1he most pass"mate response from
'"PP'"'c" on both s1des and those voters seem to be among the most d1sc1
phncd and orgamzed sa1d Gene Beaupre who teaches poht1cal sc1ence at
I

d..:~.:ILhng

X 1vu:r Umvcrslty

MondaY. October 111 1181

WASHINGTON On the same
day that the House voted to open an
Impeachment IDqUirY of Pres1den1
Chnton a group of Amencan lnd1
ans was trymg to make htstory of a
different son
Across the street from the House
chamber 1n a packed hearmg room
of the House Commmee on
Resources about 40 members of
M1ch1gan s Swan Creek Black R1ver
Confederated OJibWa lnd1ans had
come to ask Congress for federal
recognn10n
II s not the first lime Amencan
lnd1ans have asked Congress for
recogn1110n as a tnbe but 11 may fie
the mosc bra7..cn atlcmpt ever made
to short c1rcutt a process set up to
ensure thai Amcnca s lnd1an her

1tage ISn t expl01ted for a qu 1ck
buck
When a group ol Amenc an lnd1
ans want rccogmt10n a" a tnbc they
normally apply through the lntenor
Departments Bureau of lnd1an
Affa1rs There sa stn~,;l set ol~.:ntcna
that must be met before a tnbc IS
rc~.:ognJZcd Apphcanls must dncu
mcnt their tnbe s history and cui
ture and prove to the government
that they were once a separate tnbe
w1th their own culture and 1rad1

lions The apphca
lton process can
take at least I0
years and often
much longer
Members of the
Swan Creek band
say the govern
mcnt unjustly took
away their autono
my m an 1855 Moiler &amp;
treaty that consoli Andertorr
dated several tnbes
mto one ent ity the Sag maw Ch1ppe
wa tnbe of M~eh1 gan Now the )()()
or so folks who cla1m to be Swan
Creek Black R1ver lnd1ans want
Uncle Sam to make them whole
Gerald Gould who heads the
group made an ImpasSioned plea to
lawmakers to remedy thiS h1stonc
IOJUSIICC
But thiS mo&lt;lcrn day lndJan war
has hllle to do wuh hi story and
cverythmg to do w1th money Lots
of money For 1f the Swan Creek
lm.lmns get thc1r federal rccogmt1un
they almos1 cenamly w1ll usc that
slatus to open a shmy new casmu m
suburban Dctron
F1ghtmg thiS proposal arc the
Sagmaw Chippewas whodcns1vely
rcler to the Swan Creek folks as a
small sp linter group and who
don t want their tnbc spill apart But

the Sag maw Ch1ppewas are also
worned that a DetrOit casmq would
hurt their own financial' balance
sheet
The Sag• naw Ch1ppewas current
ly own the second largest Jnd1an
casmo m the country With more
tharl 200 000 square feel of gam
bhng space where locals can lose
thetr money Just thi s summer the
lnbe opened a $90 m1lhon, 500
room hotel next to us Soanng Eagle
Casmo JUSt 150 mtles from Delroll
'The new d1gs come complete wnh
Ita han marble floors Amencan lnd1
an sc ulptures and all the amen111es a
gambler could expect on the Las
Vegas stnp
Wnh thc1r proXImity to DetrOit
the Sag~naw Ch1ppewas are one of
the b1g and few lnd1an gammg
success stones Ever s1nce the
Supreme Coun opened the doors to
lnd1an gam1ng '" 1988 hundreds of
tnbes have tned to cash 111 Only a
few have truly succeeded smce
most of Amcnca s 557 tnbes mhab11
rural stretches of land that attract
few tounsts Though some tnbes
have become nch beyond thctr
Wildest dreams most lnd1an reserva
lions rcma111 nle wnh unemploy
mcnt and poverty
The Swan Cr""l iacuon docsn t
have that problem They cla1m their

( lnCIIln \ll

It could be a pnme motivator for some pro cho1ce Republican women

vo1crs to support her Ms Anderson sa1d
But nne Democratic female vbtcr says the 1ssue of the late term abortions
" one rc ISOn she plans to vote Republican and why she has lormed Democ
rtls fnr Chahal vh1ch has .1bout SIX
' In pan1cular we approve ol Steves fight to end pan1al h1rth abortion
s ud l1ll Wandstrat
But Ms D,IVIdson sa1d late term abortion 1s not the mam ISsue
We hear mostly about ISsues such as Soc1al Sccuruy education and
he tlth 1el orm she sa1d
Ms Qualls "an clfect1ve campa1gner bu1 laces an uphill light to wm the
diStnct e s pec~ally 11 voter turnout IS low Beaupre s,ud
B 1scd nn lhe diStrict s votmg h1 st&lt;Jry the clccuon would seem to be
Ch 1hot s to lose he sa1d

Today in history
By The Associated Press

old stompmg grounds are tn south
eastern M1chtgan where m1lllons of
Detroit area residents would have
easy access to their slot machmes
and blackjack tables Consequently
they don I want to wall the 10 years
or more 11 m1ght take to get recog
mzed by the BIA
We vc been wa1t1ng a long
ume
Gould explatned
The
(applicauon) process 1s d1fficult and
complicated for people who don t
understand II '
But 11 appears that Gould and hts
followers understand the legiSlatiVe
process qUite well They ve learned
that all 1t takes to succeed 1n Wash
mgton these days os a congress10nal
patron and lots of money
Instead of gmng thro~gh the BIA
for re cog muon the Swan Creek
folks asked Rep Joe Knollenberg
R M•ch to mtroduce a b11l that
would accomplish the same thmg
w1thout all the messy overstght
They also found financial backmg m
one Anthony Soave a Detron area
businessman
folho ~
been
bankrolling the tnbc s efforts m
Washmgton Although we were
unable to locate Soave, two of h1s
1numa1es confirmed that he's back
mg the Swan Creek effort to the tune
of tens of thousands of dollars per
month
One of the mumates added that
there 1s no contract agreement or
wntten mstnucllons between Soave
or any other pany to commllthem to
gammg m the event that the 1r1be 1s
recogQtzed
The other s1de has 1ts own lobby
ISIS trymg to make sure Knollen
bergs btll doesn 1 get through The
c1ty of Detro•t for mstance doesn I
want a new casmo to compete wnh
the three casmos currently under
construction there now
Says Kev1n Chamberlam chatr
man of the Sagmaw Chtppewas
Money IS what broughl somethmg
like this to the table That s the ktnd
of precedent I find h1ghly alarm

The hundredth year of Duke Ellington

Iod 1y IS Monday Oct 19 the 292nd day of 1998 There arc 73 days left
111 the yc 1r
: loday s Highlight 10 Htstory
; On Oct 19 1781 Bnt•sh troops under Lord Cornwallis surrendered at
Yllrktown Vt as the Amcncan RevolutiOn neared ns end
On tlus d lie
: In 1765 the Stamp Act Congress nlcet111g m New York drew up a dec
I"'''"" ol nghts and hhcrt1cs
In 181 2 French lorces under Napoleon Bon.1pane began their retreat
trb m Moscow
In 1944 the Navy announced that black women would be allowed mto
Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Serv1ce (WAVES)
In 1950 Unncd Nauons forces entered the Nonh Korean capllal of
P~ungyang
..,
..
~
• In 1951 Pres1dent Truman Signed an act formally endmg the state of war
wtth Germany
By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
In 1953 s111gcr Juhu s LaRosa a regular on the CBS program Anhur Gannett News Sarvloe
d'udfrcy flme was fired on the atr by Godfrey who accused h1m of lack
WASHINGTON - M1kc TYson
mg hunuhty
Is JUSt one more pmnful conccsston
In 1960 the Umted St lies Imposed an embargc on expons to Cuba cov
away from gctung back h1s hoxmg
ctlllg 111 commod111es except medical supphcs and certam food products
(1cense
In 19H7 1hc stock market crashed as the Dow Jones lndustnal Average
Last year the Nevada Athlcuc
plunged 508 pmnts or 22 6 percent m value - Its b•ggest ever percentage CommiSSion gave the fonncr he IVY
drop
wc1ght champiOn a hfeume sus
rcn years ago E•ght Israeli soldiers were k1lled m a su1c1dc car bomb pensiOn lrom the fight game alter he
1H.14.:k 111 sout.h Lchanon Three Wesl Germans were named wmners of the
tw1ce h1t Evander Holyfield s c "
Nuhcl Pme II\ chcnliStry three Amcncans recc1vcd the Nobel Pnzc m dunng II mle bout '" Las Vegas
physic' fhc Los Angeles Dodgers dcleated the Oakland As 4 3 m game
Last month the p.mcl ordered
four ol the World Scncs
Tyson to undCf@O a scncs ol psycha
l1ve years ago The United States mterccptcd 1ts hrst sl11p hound for Ha111 atnc exams as a l1rst step tow 1rd
" m~.:~.: 1.111 01\ and weapons cmhlugo was rcunposcd hy United Nattons
rcmst~ttmg hox.m\! s t:ush cow A yc 1r
Bcn111r BllUito was returned 10 the prcm1crsh1p ol Pakastan The foronto art cr hi s ouster lyson tcm uns th~,;
Blue J 1ys took a 2 I lc 1d m the World Scnes hy dclcqung the Phllldclph•a ~port -; h1ggcst altr \t:lum Cumnus
l'llllhcs Ill l
sam meml&gt;crs hopt tl the shrmks
One ye II ago Spcual u s envoy DenniS Ross trnvcd mlsr lei lor tnoth
woultl g i'JC tum 1 k 1 hill of he tlth
~.:r10und ol meeting s 111 m cltort 10 rush the M1d~.: '"I pc Ill..: prtK.:css lorw ull
IOjUsllly l dcCISI &lt; ' ' k1 Tyson li~lll
lite Cbcl md lndmns dclcU!Cd the Flond 1M uhn' 6 I 111 •line two ol lhe tg m1 - md h111 hag munc y mJ
\VmiJ S~.: 11cs cv~.: ntng th~: scrh.:s at on~.: ~ 11m: lfliC Ll'
1 ms h ~ek to p10lcssmnul hoxm g
1&lt; d 'Y s Birthday' Former amh ISSidlll to Russ i 1Rohe1t S St1 1uss IS KO
But o,;amply ~cllmg h1m to uod~..:1go
\~tn..: ss I uWmda Page 1s 7K ALlor Gc• • g~.: N 1tlcr 1s 77 Colummsl JaLk
three d tys ol p!~iyt:hllll H.: t~.: s lln!_! w Is
\ndcr' •n IS 76 Author Jnhn k C 1rrc 1s 67 ArtiSt P&lt;tel MIX 1s 61 Actor II t SUIIIC!Cill l:llOUgh lot lhL"' JCCISI( 11
Mllh 1d Gamhon 1s ~8 Al:tor John 1 1th1; 1w '" 'i'\ Nut1on 11 O•g 111111\lon hu
the.:: ~.:ommtss1onct s w mt to m tke So
Wmncn l'tcSident Pmnc11 l1elmd 1s ~l Sm•er l&lt; mn1e ( R1k y "~l 1.1lk they prr.:ssu1cd lyson lor pcrml"iSil n
:-ill\lW ht :-.1Chari h.: Chasl: 1s 46 R\)l:k smgcr musi L tln K u I W 1llmgc • ( Wtuld lo nnke puhhc the other&gt;"sc wnh
Pall vi" 41 S1nger Jcnmlcr Hoi lid I) IS lK Roc k smger ""'' 'u 111 Iodd I' 1rk dcnu 11 H;.,.ulh ol h1 o,; psy d1 1Ill H.:
Mohr IB•g He 1d Todd md the Mon , tm) " 11 Amy C triL~ " 11
\;;t;, 1111 Hl: \! 1\l: m mll th~.: roult w 1s 1
hum1h umg mv 1s1on ol lyson s pn

to be a graph1c
artist a held m
wh1ch he had
considerable tal
0
ent )
Over 90
percent ol those
graduatmg lrom
the
Ellington
School of the
Ails go on to
college
and
beyond
The
Hentotf
sehoul s d111pout
Jatc IS less than I
pen;ent and Jt hiJs the loulth IHghc st
stmddrdlzcd tes( scores 1n tile DIS
tm:t ol Columh11 Snme 60 pcn.:l!nt
ol the students come li om the po01
est sct:l1011s ot W 1sl11ngtun
I knew Duke El lington smcc I
was 19 and I learned a lot lmm h11n
H1s m1ss1on w 1s to ch1nnH.: Ic the
black cxpcncncc m Amcnca ,md llc
t 1ught me about that
In the 1920s he told me he llnd
gone to FletchCI Henderson le tder
oJ an mflucnllal JaU orchcstla
Ellington suggested Wily don 1 we
drop the word jalZ We ought to
ca ll what we rc domg Negro
muSic Then there wouldn t be any
con i us1011 Henderson was not per
suadcd
Its too late for that now any
way Ellington s nd one 11tcrnoon
The muSic has become so mtcgrat

cd you can t tell one pan from the
other "' far as I m concerned
But Ellington s own mus1c has
always been mstantly d1Stmgu1sh
able Nobody could copy Its textures
and rhythm s only he could wnte 11
and on ly he could create the highly
personal context he prov1ded for h1s
soloists
Large sccllons of h1s work were
devoted to black hiStory and prohles
ol hlm:k pc1sonaht1CS He was 1n11at
ed when some younger black Cl\ 11
11ghts actiVIsh aL:L:uscd hun dunng
the 1960s ol bemg IDSCDSIIIVC tO

man cars and a 70 foot baggage car
We parked m each stauon and lived
tn the Pullmao cars The nauves
would come by and say What s
that/ Well we d say that s the
way the preSident travels
Olf the stand though elegantly
courtly Ellmgton was a pnvate man
He did not often reveal h1s deepest
feelings H1s fnend and h1Stonan
Stanley Dance remembers the ume
Ellmgton went to Buenos A1rcs lor
the first ume In the car hctore
gomg to the a1rport people clutched
at h1m through the opened w1n
rausrn
dows Dance wrote They were
PeGplc who thmk that ol me
crymg and thrust g11ts on hun g•fls
Duke told me haven t been listen
on wh1ch they hudn t even wnttcn
mg to nur muSic Fot a long umc thc1r names It was one of lhe lew
sucml protest md pnde ol the Negro limes I saw h1m moved to tears
have been the most Sl£nlhcant th1ngs
In a 1944 New Ynrker prohlc
m what we ve done
, R1chard Boyer told of .t poltceman'"
The huge body of work ol the l11n Crow crt St LouiS grcctmg
most ongmal and w1de r.mgmg com
Ellington enthuSiastically II you
poser 1n Amcncan h1sWry mcludcs had been a while man Duke the
Black Brown and Betge (,1 h1Sto
pohceman sa1d you would have
ry bf hlacks 111 Amenca) The Deep been u great mus1caan
South Suuc
Black Beauty
In has customary regal manner
Harlem A1r Shaft and A Tone Elhngton sm1lmg answered coolly
Parallel to Harlem
I guess tHmgs would have been d1l
On the road Ellmgton took pnde fercnt 11 I d been a while man
m never bowmg to Jnn Crow From
What a loss to h1s natton and to
19J4to 19'16 for example we went the world that would have been
tourmg deep 1nto the South Without
Nat Hentoff ts a nattonally
the heneht of federal Judges and we renowned authority on lhe Ftrst
commanded respect We d1dn t trav
Amendment and the rest of the Bill
el by bus Instead we h 1d t"(O Pull
ot Rtghts

\ IL}

J

I

I
I

mc1dcnt when he appeared before the
commiSsion last month But now that
he s gotten a green light from his
shnnks to get back mto the rmg the •
commtsswncrs are mststmg on a
plauSible explanation ot what hap
pencd 1n Maryland
II s expected that TYson Will say
somctlung nhout 1ha mc1dent when
he m 1kes h1 s next appe ~ranee before
the Nevada Athletic CommiSSIOn on
Monday It he docs 11 II be yeranoth

nently taktng away h1s livelihood w1ll
probably do more harm than good
Holyfield seems to agree He s
accepted TY on s apolo~y and has
wnttcn a letter m suppon of hiS rem
statement
The psych1atnsts who cxammed
smd
TYson knew about the Maryland mc1
That s
an
dent and factored 11 mlo the1r cvalua
1wful cxaggc ra
11on Rather than probe an event that
t1 on Wh,lt the
happened before he was ordered to
report d1d say "
sec the shrmks the Nevada conums
Wickham
th 11 Tyson has
ct costly L:onccsston
s1on should heed the1r recommenda
both CllllltiOil II
W11hou1 a gr 1111 of munun11y lion and reqUire TYson to submll to
and e:\C!..:Ul\Vc (,;()Jllrol prohl~.:m s mJ wi11L:h the ~.: nmnus~ 1on has no aulhnr
l&lt;&gt;ng ler111 psychmtnc ¢ate It&lt; u cond1
r.ccds to sec 1 psyduutn ~o;t on 1 n.:gu
11y to ot kr - Tyson shouldn t he 11on ol hiS reinstatement
l1r has1s tor hdp lllllll,glll g h1s cmn
f o iL:Cd to c..hsL:U ss the details ot thl!".
I have no sell esteem but the
lions md ,mgcr Thl: do~.: tOt !'i 1lso sud L: 1sc 111 u.lv~m~..:c ot h1s hcanng Mak
h1gges1 ego m the world TYson told
th llllfllng lyson s suspcnsu n would mg hun do so as n um&lt;.hllnn tor g~.:t
the dnctms lhc goal should he to
help ullc\IHic some ol till su ~.:ss~..:s Ill\~ hl...:k h1s boxmg hccnsc ton;cs ensure thlll ryson IS lllcntaiJy rc 1dy tO
...:ontnhutmg to h1s d~.:pt i.!".S i n n
lum to l:hOosc hctwel:n Ius umstllu
rr.::lum tn lhc nng not to slnp lum of
uon tl Jlll tcUH 11 H! unst se ll 10\.:flllll
Now lOillllll"~wn munh~.:1 s s 'Y
v.hal little sell esteem he has lell
the only th111 g st mthnl! 111 th...: way ol n Hum .and th~.: d1 IIKC to n.: lurn 10 1
FnrL:m~ hmt to mukc conlldcnual
(yo,;on &lt;,; IC\Il Sl HCilll: lll I"' Ill dh;g~.;d lU l l 1{1\ l 1.: lit:\: I
medlcdl records public and demand
road 1 t~!l.: IIK id~.:nt 111 AU£U!".t Two
In 1 ~.,;nlumn ltst y~: 11 I sud Tyson 1ng th 1t he expose hamsclt to unn~,;;t,;
1111.!11 ~ll q!l: th 11 th~.: ht Xl:l IS" IUII n l
s iH uld he h 1111H:tl 101 hk 110m Oox
css.1ry leg tl JC!1pardy 1mglll g1vc the
them titer 1 mmo1 n...:..,;ld~.;nt on 1 mg lo1 th._; hllm!l muJr.::nt I w 1s Ncv ad 1 Athletic Comm1ss1o11' the
On~.: "'ud he w as
kiLl ed m th~.: ,g 11 111 and lh !.! nlh~.:l
tL:Ui s~o;d

l yso n ol

th~.: 111..: 1.:
Fa~.:llll!

pun~,.h Ill.!

tum

Ill

1 L: llllltnal 111\!-itkmcum 1
..:h ugc l y-.on 1clusctl 1, d t:us-. tile

WI

ng

As h td \S \\ h \l h~.: thd w IS ryson
docsn t d~.:"l.:l\1.! 1 ltkumc sus1xn
sum Wllu h ~,;; ne~.: tktl w 1~ psyt:hllllll:
help md "11111.: 11h1~.: IW IY I! om th~,;;
spolt I&lt; g-~..:1 h1s h~.: 1d h l'l:lhel Penn 1

'onl1dc.::n'c 11 n~.:eds tn 1csu nd
Tyson s suspcnsum
But m the hn 11 analysis 1t lillY to

more

to

Iunder lh 111 help Mike 1) son

ovct~.:nm~.:

Iu s mcnt1l prnhlcms

l

\,

rerooved

The recycling days are for all Me1gs County re"dents For more 1nfor
mallon contact the Me1gs County Recycling &amp; Luter Prevention olfice
992 6)60

I

One-car accident injures area man

/

~-

A Nelsonv1lle m"" wa&lt; h""p•tali7~ follow•~t a one car '!"reck on U S
33 near Pomeroy Saturday mommg
Wilham J Goodm 29 wa&lt; nonhbound wile~ he drove off the nght
••de of the road and Struck a ditch an&lt;l embankment. accordmg to a Me•gs
County Shenffs Office repon
..He was transponed by pJlVate veh1cle to Vetemns Memonal Hosp1tal
m Pomeroy and later transponed to 0 Bleness Memonal Ho•pual m
Athens for treatment
Damage to h1s 1987 Mercury was listed a.&lt; heavy He was cued on
charges of failure to control and driVIng under suspen&lt;~on

Much cooler conditions
forecast for this week

Two were c1ted followmg a h11 sk1p wreck on Brodnck Hollow Roiid
near Pomeroy Saturday evenmg A P'.!rked 1979 GMC van owned by Yvon
na S1ambaugh Let an W Vu was struck 1n the rear by a 1979 Chevrolet
Camara dnven by Rocky Sharrer 18 M1ddlepon causmg moderate dam
age to both accordmg to 1Me1gs County Shen II s Ollice report Sharrer
then lett the scene aecordmg to the repon

(
W VI.

",) ~-·~~

S..nny PI Cloudy

Ctoudy

T 110m10

-

Alln

..
•

F~m01

Snow

Ice

Deputies ticket two following crash

Sharrer

By The A1soclated Pre••
Oh1o can expect cooler weather the next few days as a h1gh pressure sys
tern draws Canad1an a1r 1010 the reg10rr forecasters sa1d
Lows tomghl under partly cloudy sk1es will be 15 4S H1ghs on Tuesday
w1ll be mostly '" the 50s Showers are posSible m the northeast
On Wednesday dayllme temperatures m some areas won \ climb out of
the 40s the National Weather Serv1ce sa1d
The record h1gh temperature for thiS date at the Col umbus weather sta
lion wus 85 degrees m 1953 wh1le the record low was 25 m 1896 Sunset
ton1ght Will be at 6 46 p m and sunnse Tuesday at 7 47 am
Weather forecast
Tomght Mostly clear Lows m the lower 40s Northwest wmd around lO
mph
Tuesday Mostly sunny H1ghs 1n the m1d 60s
Tuesday mghl Clear Lows tn the upper 30s
Extended forecast
Wednesday Panly cloudy A chance of sh9wers dunng the n•ghl Much
cooler H•~hs m the m1d 50•
' ~ '"

wa.~

cated on {;harges of faalure to control leavmg the st.:ene

and no operator&lt; license Carla Stew an address unreponed was cued on
a charge of allowmg an unlicensed dnver to operate the veh1cle
Two subject&lt;'" the same car were 11cketed early Sunday accordmg to
an additional MCSO report
Depuues cued Donald L Edwards 26 Pomeroy on a third charge ot
dnvtng under the mfluence and dn vmg under susP.I'nSion The passenger
owner Dan1el Kuhn 18 Pomeroy was c1ted on u charge ol wronglul
entrustment

One.. vehicle accident yields citation
A: 21-year-old Pomeroy man was cued followmg a one veh1cle acc1
dent on State Route 7 near Chester Sunday mommg
Jeffrey M Stetham was nonhbound when he lost control of hiS 1997
Doclge truck after he swerved to IniSs a deer In the roadway accordmg
to a Me1gs County Shenffs Otfice repon The truck struck an embank
ment and came to rest 111 a ditch sustammg heavy damage
He was Cited on charges of fa1lure to control und no seat belt

Search for superintendent
Tickets now available
for Farm Bureau dinner goes slower than expected
T•cket! are now ava1lable for the Me1gs County Farm Bureau R annual
meeting
•
The steak dmner w1ll be held at the Me1gs County Multipurpose Sen1or
Center on Oct 27 117 101' n1 , Ettnllen Vessels u loc 11 gospel group w1ll
prov1de entertamment The groUf&gt;IS based m M1ddlepon and associated wllh
the Ash Street Freewill BaptiSt Church
Dunng t~e dmner members will elect trustees and delegates and w1ll vote
on resolutions relatmg to the slate ballot State trustees wll I also g1ve reports
T1ckets for tho dmnor are $5 SO for adults and $3 50 lor ch1ldren T1ck
ets may be purchased from any board member or from the Farm Bureau office
located at 382 E Second St Pomeroy Reservations can also be made by
cnlhng 992 2403

Prize goes to $20 million
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no llckets sold nammg all s,.
numbers selected m Saturday n1ght s
$16 milhon Super Lotto drnw1ng so
Wednesday n1ght s Jackpot Will be
$20 m•lhon, the Oh•o Lottery sUld
There were 77 Super Lotto uckets
wllh live of the ijumners and each"
worth $1 409 The 4 242 t1cket~
showmg four of the numbers are each
wonh $80
In K1cker no player had the exact
SIX d1g1t number to cla1m $100 000
The two K1cker llckets showmg
the tirst live d1g11s ure each wonh

$5 000 The 52 w11h the f1rst four
numbers are each wonh $1,000 The
554 w1t 1 the first three numbers are
each wonh $100 and the 5 576 wnh
the l1rst two numbers are each worth
$10
The Oh1o Lottery will pay out
$817 22 1 50 to wmners m Saturday s
P1ck 3 Numbers daily game Sales m
P1ck 3 Numbers totaled $1 305 186
In the other daily game P1ck 4
Numbers players wagered $423 607
and Will share $241 900
Sale&lt; 111 Super Lotto totaled
$3 945 567 and players shared
$441853 There was no SIX of SIX
JaCkpot wmner Sales m the K1cker
totaled $616 726 and players shared
$173 160

COLUMBUS CAP) - The gov
ernor elect may get to have some
mput 1n selection of a new state
school supenntendent after all
The State Board ol Education says
the search for a replacement lor the
ret1nng John Gofr " proceedmg
more slowly than expected and prob
ably won t he completed belore the
N&lt;lv 3 election
~
,..... 1
If !hut occurs the bOill'd w1lltry
to giVe conSiderauon to the governor
elect board PreSident lenmfer L

(USPS21! 9601
CoJUaun&amp;ly Newapapcr Holdlnp, hte
Published '}:very afternoon Monduy lh10Ug,h
Frld11y 111 Cour1 Sl Pommly Ohlt by lhc
Ohio Vall~y Publll'l hl.,g Con p•n)l Sc~nr.l clau
poslDIJC pak111 Pome 1 y Oh o

Me111ber 1'he

A!IW&lt;:Ial~;d

Prus and !he Ohio

Naw1pupcr AHOCUI!•on
Pvsh'haller Send oddrcas torrcclion~ to The~
Oalty Sentinel Ill Court St Pameroy Oh1o

45169
SUBSCRIPTION RATI:S
By C.nitr or Molor Route
One Week
.$2 00
;~.

S!l. 70

Unus ot the Me1gs County Emer
gency Med1cal Servtce recorded 14
calls for assiStance Saturday und
Sunday Umts respondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3 52 u m Saturday Lasley Street
Pomeroy Leroy Landers relused
treatment
H 3K a m Saturday Country
Home Mob1le Park D.trwm Ann
Gnflllh treated at the scene
9 5K u m Saturday Rocksprtngs
Road Pomeroy Wyatt Radford
Holzer Med•cal Center
II 14 u m Saturday Bu1ley Run
Road Albert ~oush Veterans Memonal Hospital
2 22 p m Saturday Rocksprmgs
Reh.tbdnauon Center Pomeroy Ver
na Rose Camden Clark Memonal
Hospital
The follow1ng couples were
I 24 am Sunday Pomeroy Pollee
1ssued marnage licenses recently m Department R1ck Stone treated tt
the rv!e•gs County Probate Court of the scene
Ju&lt;lge Patnck H 0 Bnen
6 04 p m Sunday Broadway
Steven Edward Grady 27 and Street Middleport Denms Robmson
Brenda K.ty Reed 29 both of M1d
Jr treated at the scene
dleport Joseph Ray S•gman 20 and
8 50 p m Sunday Race Street
Knstabell Coleen Hall 23 both ol
• Shade

Marriage licenses

Hospital news

~!'Ctnt!l

Stocks

Sulr.iqlkr1 not dcslrma to pa~ lhc carrier n ay
emil m adYtnce direct lO 'ftl~a1ly Sen1ine\ on
a lhrcc six or 12 month bafls. Crtdll will be
aven carrier etch week
~rm utcd

No Sllbscft1)tiOn by mall

In tttas

where home can er sell'\! ce It ~ allabte
P1.1bllshcr rcsenoOJ the rlaht to adJ .,, "'" dur
Ina the subsCription pclriod Subscription rotc
~:hunit~ may be mplcmcnted hv ch•h&amp;lna the
du nil' nor till.: ~ubscrlptit!n

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
lnlkl• Mtlas CouniJ
13 Week~

3'E7 30

26 W«ks

U3 82

S2Wotk
SIOSf6
Ratn Outsldt~Mtt,ls .:tNII•IY

13Wceks

26Wccks

52

W.:cks

$292'

$5~68

.$109 72

Reader Services
CorreCtion Polley
Our main c:onctm In allstorie!l Is tO be
accurate If you know ur 10 error in a
slm-y, caH the newsroom at (740) 992
li!S We will ch«k )'our lnCormallon

Nawa 01pa11menta
9922155 Depart

General M•na&amp;e•:....................... Ext
Now~

1101
.............................................. Ext 1102

...

or Ext

I

'•061
I

Other Services
Admthlnl!-

Ctn:utalloa
tasstned Ads

Ext 1104
Exl 110.1
.Ext 1100

Holzer Medtcal Center
Discharges Oct 16 - Cathy
Jackson Ralph Parry Carlos Hulf
mun Luther Thomas Carol Taylor
Storn\le DaviS
Discharges Oct 17 - Mrs lei
frey Wamsley and son Mrs Kelly
Murc1nko und daughter Ru-sell Tay
lor
Birth - Mr and Mrs Donald
Mapone dnughter Jackson 11
Discharges Oct 18 - N1k11a
Hasseman Floyd MusSie Mrs Don
aid Mnpone and daughter Peggy
Ge•ger Knslln Brown A.tron Shep
herd
Blrth - Mr and Mrs Daryl
Dempsey daughter Oak H1ll
(Published with permls.,Jon)

M1ddleport. John Little treated ut the
scene

COLUMBIA TWP VFD
3 45 p m Saturday Gaston Road
brush fire no IDjunes reported "
MIDDLEPORT
6 22 p m s,,turday Lmcol n
He1ghts Pomeroy Haym.m Barmll
VMFI Pomeroy und Central DISpatch
squads

Ll.sststed

1 40 p m Sunday South Third
Aven11e Ouv"J Vanan VMH Central
DISpatch squad """ted
RUTLAND
10 51 p m Sunday Langsville
Ken Burnett Pleasant Valley Hosp1
tal Central DISputch squud asSisted
SYRACUSE
II 07 a m Saturday Condor
Street Pomeroy Mary To&lt;ld treuted
It the Sl,;l!ne
6 23 p m Saturday Pme Grove
Road Peggy Hall VMH

-·-·-

Stock reports are Ihe 10 30
a m quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis

The Darly Sentinel • Page 3

Hollister hopes for a repeaf
• {CGntlnued from-Page 1)
ment and return1ng mnre dollar' to

I awrence L uun1 y and t J S 15 ,,..
Rn . . '\ ( ounty

the \tate&gt;
Holh,ll!r charged that Strickland

The lmdu.I&lt;Jh!' a11.,.4.l ha"e 'harp '

ha.-. been rnelted1Ve 1n Cun~re"-. and
c1te ... tran.._p:,rtattnn &amp;4nd tal( p.,,ut!' a'

prune exa1npk'
... uppon

lax

refomt bu11ha1" wh.:re the ''m1lar
111e' end
A' a m&lt;m~r ul Congr&lt;" I will
not vole h,r new taxe'

Hnth,ler

Ted S1r1ckland vutcd lor 1hc

btggcst tax lnL:n:a-.c 1n hl ,h tr) o.,hc
:or.au.l mak1ng d rderen~,;l! tH the IW1

budget deal

diiT&lt;r&lt;n&lt;&lt;'

&lt;HI

heahh car&lt; and ed1

llolfl..,h.:r r~JVor ... a Cil&gt;P pl.m . . t
would unpro'oe lhc- tJU&gt;.~IIt~ au J }

•

oppu\\!'

:J

DcflltK.faii L: pl;Hl to ;.~!low '
\U~

W

pUlh!nl"t

ULJnJg.cd

loire

pru\'1Jcr.,
What the Dermx;rah and Stm. ~
IJnd 'UPJll&gt;n ''a p tUcnh hollul rub
n:e-ulallon and l111gauon ltollhtc r
o.,a1d
Con~re" laded 111 apprm·c euh ~.: r

plan 1fu . . Conf:;rt.:" hut ~Ill

~~eve ry

ltc :J I\o ' 11&lt;.1 he I nmr!oo l JlfiVfJlC
hcJI1h L:an.: "')' tent where patrL:nt\ Lan
he Lmt:rcJ hy pn\ I(C JndOf\ pr)
ltt1ed from 1hu~' 1n IIH!nat;t..""l
~.:arc &lt;.~nd t!ilvcrcd hy gnHrnm~:ntal
proe ram"' ... u~:h a~o Med1ca1d pr

tune

'

glnt:kland ~au.J h, . , c..trnpal_gn ha'

put up a Web &gt;~tc to cxplam HolliS
ter s long h1~tory ul ... upportmg
htgher tax~' on wurkmg fan11he~ tt
www ra1scdtaxcs cnm
Holli&gt;ter '"'" Stnckland " d"
tonmg her record I m &gt;orry I jU''
havo to laugh ' he 'a1d
On tr.mspcrtallon the twn 'and1
dat~\ al~o arc al oJds
Slnckland sa1d one ol It " h1 ~
accompll,hmcnh W&lt;Js to '1~~.:r C:, ;~ S
m1lllon m highway pr&lt;&gt;Ject' W &gt;~&gt;ulh
ern Oh10 under a $2(Kl bill1on Iran '

ponallon b1ll approved by Con.J;rc"
thiS year
He also sa1d a ~Jan by Holl,t er to
pull a IS m•le "retc h lll the
Port smouth bypass 10 Sc101u Cuunt)
nut ol the Appalachian H1gltll!,,y
System could re su lt 10 the unravel
tng nl tht: road program
Th1s I S das~IC th II 'tcr saul
He (!oesn ' t undcNand how In du
transportatiOn smart

HolliSter sa1d her plan would
:-.tal~

t

"""""'hiloty ul h&lt;ahh &lt;ar&lt; But 'he

Strllkland tkh.:nt.J.., hi ' wx rct:ord
I J11 v~:ry proud ol my n:l{lrd nn I&lt;JX
c~ Stndland ''.m..l
I hav..: i.t \Upcrh
record uf cuumg t~Xl:' for "''1rlm~
IfRple I II put my tax rect1rd .-gam o., t

lcY erage

'

!
!

callnn
... a.IJ

Both cant.J1Uate-.

'a1d

...

&lt;.mcJ

l e d~.:r

1llr 111sporta

uon dollars to complete 1wo "1llcd
projects the Chesape 1ke bypass 10

1

~

:
•
:
{

i

rc\llslllh~.:

!

' "u ~: 111 January

S1r1~.:~land ,a1J h~: '" a 'tmn~ :
)I the lh:rntK:raiiL: l'aiJclll., •

uho~,;a.h:

•

Billuf R1 ght '

Mt!dJ~:arc

II

n~:Lc ..,.., al

•
~

,f
!

!
:

v

•

On cdu~::Jtlon '"uc"'

liulh:..tcr....:
. . ;.ud the role t I the federal goH'fO,.
mcnl . . tmultl h~: In return feLler a! dol -...j"
l~r. to 111.: ''"'e' throu~h block grant~ •
tO dm: ~.: ll~ 11.1 ..,d1unl d1o.,tnds ""

thai

She ulst•criiiCIJcd S1r~ek l and 1\&gt;r '"''"'
mg &lt;.~~a n. . t Ihe Dollars to tht! Cl!.'-~"' -.
room Ad
wh d1 Holh "tcr "uJ
\o\Ould n.:lurn more federal dollar~ tu.
Oh10 't:hool..,

Aver' '"" uf the h1ll "tud&lt;d IOI&lt;t
an ommbu~oo '!Jl: ndln J bill o~pe~..:tcd "' ~
bt: ap~rov.:_d by ( m,reo&gt; on TucMla) '
But S1 nd lmU "1 U he vult!d ag UJl "'t

the bill hecuu" the Oh1o Department''
ol ~ Uut nu 1 'PI'H \cd 11 It ~ hould
be call ed J)olla" tn the Gnvcmor '
Oll 1cc Sir ell and '"'d StncklanJ

sa1d

th ~

Oh1n J)ep crlment ol Educ 1 ,

tum e . . tu l&lt;Jil:tl 1111.: -.lak would lo, ...

$11

j

million under the bill

•

Meigs announcements
Board meeting
The Eastern Local School Board
w1ll met;l 111 regular sess1hn on
Wednesday 11 6 10 p m at the cal e
tenum at Eastern Elementary SL:hnol

Recycle day
The Me1gs County Recycling &amp; ,
L111cr Prevention program Will h 1Ve, 1
a spec1al recycl e day Wednesday •l,,
am to I p m 111 Orange Townshl~ ul -;"
the bu s g tr 1ge p ukm g lot by Tuppc"
Pla1ns Elcm&lt;ntlry School

Gnd s NET program
Fnday ll!cnagers 1re mv1tL'tl tn the

Rev1val slated

lun I&lt;K&gt;d and ldlowsh1p pre )eel ut
Gods NET N\llnt1nn 1l Inod will he
a\al lubl e lree ol charge lor snackmg
atlhl! l:l!nter Teens ~.:an pluy non 'Ht
lenl v1deo g unes ~..:o mpllh;r pro
grams and «.;anis m the ...:enters gam~:

Rcv1 v II

sl:rVI ~.: ~.;s at

the I ong Bo P

tom United MethodiSt Church w1lf he
held o,, 21 25 7 p m n1ghtly wul1
' P" 1ker l'hil1p Sc 1rbcrry A cMry ui
d1nner wil l h, held Saturday even•ng
prece ding the 'CrY Icc ut S 111 p 111 Al1 ''
room lot:atct..l on M am Street 111 wcil.:n nc
Pomeroy There ,,.e poolt1bles avl\11
able lor use al u mulrmal fue Mus1c Preceptor Bet• Reto
,
IS played wh1le the center " open 6
PlecephH llet 1 Bet 1 Will me l!
p m ttl I0 30 p m The g 1n&gt;e room 11 fhu rsd •Y 6 10 p m It the Luther u{' •
lhe Center 11.1 open the same hours on dtull:h M!.!lllhcrs II~.; tn wcur a H 11
Saturday
lowct.:n ~tun llo.,.tt: s~t~"' wdl hi!
Martha McPhail mJ Murgurct Stew
Llfl

Death toll in thief-inspired
Nigerian inferno tops 400 .

'

today

LAGOS N1genu (AI'l - Hun
dreds ol vanda ls trytng Ill 'lphon
g. 1sohnc trom a p1pclln~: ' P arkl!d 111
mlerno that swept thrnugh sever 1)

poor ro 1d"' md N1gcr1u s nntl)ri()U~Iy

VIllages 111 sout hern N1gcn

b 1d telephone sy, telll

1

Atlcusl

422 people were killed m•ny ch 1rred
bey&lt;lnd n:~.:ogmlmn news p lpt:r:s sud
tnd 1y

Ollic111s were not suro 11 a spark
Irom u v uutal s tools., or u ~o:urtllc.:siio
smoker wus rcsp&lt;mSiblt lor the hl11e
wh1ch bcg.1n Saturday and w,IS sti ll
ragmg late Sunday It w 1s not d e 1r
,r lire lighters h 1d ex tinguiShed 11 hy

Cnmmun u; tt1nn w1th the town ~

w" very &lt;lilllcull because ol the hrp,
,

An llllu II Jeath toll was !lot

L lg&lt;~&lt; b...e&lt;lc
Guudmn 1~wsp lpcr sa1d I lth.ly Its
reporteiS h 1d coun1 cd 41K) hod1es •if'
th(: st.:cn~ neur the town of J..:ssC !H~

,,v ul•bk

mtks sm th~.:

hut the

l"t

ol LugL~s At le 1st 22

other peo~k died 1n are 1 hospitals

••'U

&lt;,;I ttl

Actions to end
marriages filed.
The followmg ucuons to end mar
nuge were filed recently 11\ the otl1cc
ot Me1gs County Clerk of Courts Lar
ry Spencer
D1vorcc asked - Ha1el Darlene
Dunaway Racme from Wilham Mtll
son Dunawuy Oct 12 Tnna G H.111
n"' Pomeroy lmm Juck A Hunnan
Pomeroy Oct 12 Knn McClellan
M1ddlep&lt;lrt I rom Floyd McCiellun
K1ll Devil Hill N C O.:t 9 LISa R
Dorst Albany I rom, David M Dorst
Shade Oct 9
Dissolution granted - Danu Ray
Willinms Sr and Shelby Lynn
Williams Oct 9
D1vorces gr 1nted - Jacqueline S
M1lum and Wilham Ira M1lam Oct
9 Teresa A Whlllock and Mi chaelS
Whlllock Oel 14 ],1mes Ke•th H m
mg md Mary Susun Hamng Oct 14

NOIJIICE

and make I' cor~tlon IF waiTinttd
rho malo number Is
ment ntnslon1 4re

Sheets s 11d Thursday
The panel hud set an Oct 31 dead
line for nammg a supenn tendent
The two maJOr candidate&gt; fur
governor Republican Bob Taft and
Democrat Lee FISher both had asked
that the dec1s1on be delayed until alter
the elecuon so the governor elect
could have a say '" the selecuon
i\t the ume the board 1u1d It
wanted to name a superintendent ear
her than that 1n order to ensure a
smoot h tranSitiOn Goff IS ret1nng
Dec 31

Units log 14 weekend runs

The Daily Sentine1 1

Oa11~

I
\

•

IND

OneYcar
.,
$\040Q
SINGLE COPY PRIC&amp;
• "

Tyson needs long-term mental therapy not banishment

M ttylmd h1gh\.\ tv

The Me•g• County Recycling &amp; Litter Prevenllon will hold •pec•al
I'I!Cychng day••n Orange Columb1a and Sc1pt0 town&gt;htpsa. pan of Oh1o
Recycle Month th~&gt; month
The schedule ,. a.&lt; follows Ol".mlle Town&lt;hlp Wedneoday 9 am to
I p m at the TUPP&lt;" Plams Elementary School parlung lot Se1p10 Town
•h•p Oct 28 9 am to noon at the town&gt;htp gamge m Harnsonv1lle
Columb1a Townsh&gt;p O.:t 28 t -4 p m at ihe township lire stallon
Recyclables 1nclude newspaper&lt; {With ads and mo;erts) can' (alummum
steel b1 rnemll glas; contamers (clear brown and green wnh lids off)
magazme&lt; c:ttalogs phone book• No I plasllc bevemge and liter bot
ties !'lo 2 pla.&lt;llc m1lk jugs water. detergent fabnc softener corrugated
cardboard and paperboard Items should be lightly nnsed w1th lid&gt;

r

One Monlh

Shnnks say
Tyson s crazy
but he s Fit To
F1ght
the
headline
Ill
Wednesday
New York Post

Special recycling days scheduled

'

Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers tor United Feature
Syndicate, Inc

f'iext year w1ll mark the IOOth
anmversary of Duke Ellington s
b1rth Recently I called a mail order
house that specializes m out of pnnt
recordmgs I was searchmg lor a set
ofV d1sc transcnpuons
'
the Ellmgton
orchestra made dunng World War II
The first two people I talked to
had never he ard of Ellington The
thtrd sa1d cnthus•a~ucall y What a
wonderful L:Omposl!r he was
I
mentioned her colic 1gues bemuse
mcnl at the name Oh she s;:ud
11 s my age
Some years ~• go 1 spent an allc1
noon tn Harlem playmg Ellington
rc~.:urdmgs for lccn 1gC1s Fo1 the
most part they were pohtcly un1111cr
cstcd
In h1s nauvc WISh mgton DC
on the other hand young people who
have gona.: to or arc now allendmg
the Duke Ellington School ol the
Arts an~ very much awa1c of h1s
legacy
ThiS public school IS the only one
m the country heanng hiS name
Staned 10 1974 the year of Elling
ton s death 1ts graduates arc '" the
Amencan Ballet Theater m m&lt;lVIcs
on stage and on the proless10n II jaZz
scene
They have also made the1r mark
at the dcmandmg Parsons School of
Des1gn m New York Cuy (Wilen he
was young Ellington hrsl mlcnded

Local News in Brief:

AccuWpatiJe..- forecast Jor d

~ng

By Nat Hantoff

-

Tlllldilly, Oct:-20

Tribe sees dollar signs in recognition
By Jack Ander1on
and Jen Moller

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio weather

5

If general voter turnout IS low m November as expected then an ISsue

that draws the more diSClplmed voters could definitely become a dcc1dmg
Iactor
fhc Ist D1stnct, whtch comb~nes strongly Democratic mncr cny ne1gh
borhoods With the conservative overwhelmmgly Republican suburbs IS pn
manly Roman Catholic and abon10n has often we1ghed he~v1ly m var1ous
elections Jhcre
Republican mcumbent Steve Chabot who grew up m C•ncmna11 and
Democrat Roxanne Quails who ts the cny s mayor have been on oppos1te
s1dcs of the 1ssue Chabot supports a constitUtional amendment to ban abor
t10n wh1lc Ms Qualls has conststently supponed abon10n nghts
Both also have rece1ved campa1gn money th1s year on the bas1s of their
poslllons
Ms Quails has received money w1th the help of Em1ly s L1s1 a nat1on
w1dc network that helps Democratic candidates who suppon abonion nghts
Through June 30 the latest pertod for whtch records are ava1lable Ms
Quails had rece1ved $54 000 from Em1ly s Ltst supponers and 1ts pollt1cal
action commmee
Chabot 1s gettmg asststance from John and Barbara W1llke Cmcmnat1
residents who founded the natiOnal R1ght to L1fe movement m the early
1970s They have mailed a fund ratsmg letter to thousands of antt abon10n
activiSts m the diStrict, urgmg contnbut1ons for Chabot s campatgn
Chabot has conSIStently cr1t1C1ZCd Ms Qualls for what he terms her lack
of support for a ban on a type of late term abortion that opponents of the pro
cedurc call parllal-b.nh abon.on
Tins 1s one where Ms Qualls IS way out on the left he sa1d dur~ng a
debate last month
Ms Qualls has repeatedly demed Chabot s cla1m
The mayor IS opposed to pan1al btnh abonton and she w1ll vote for a
han as long as II makes exceptions for when IllS medtcally necessary to save
the life or health of the mother ' sa1d Beth Dav1dson a Qualls campatgn
spokeswoman
I he abortion ISsue m1ght Win Ms Qualls some votes 1n the Nov 3 elec
tum sud Jane Anderson a political sc1encc professor at the Umverslly of

Monday, October 19, 1998

Page2

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.

•

5 AVER REPAIR
CLINIC '
FRUTH PHARMACY
786 N. 2ND- MID

OHIO

'

'

�•

•

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Page4 •

Monday.~ober19,1998

Yankees down
Padres 9-3, lead
World Series 2-0
By BEN WALKER
NEW YORK lA P! - Wunder no
more "hy thc"te New Yurk Yftnkee!l.
arc 'o "pe' llJI
hom tht

~nnmg.

fir,t

\Cr)

noated to freedom le» than II)
month; ago and helped &gt;ave New
York ' &gt;ea"'n "nh a Will on Game 4
of the AL champoon&gt;hor &gt;ene&gt;
E•aclly a year after ho; younger
half·brother. Ln an Hernan de&lt; ,
potched Flnroda pa&gt;t Cle•eland on
Game I on h" way 10 hecomong
MVP of the World Sene,, the quorky
El Duque &lt;hut dow~ San D.'ego on

El

1Ju4ue &amp; &lt; o demon&gt;trated for all part~&lt; uiMiy the l'adre. hnl"
they 'e " "" 121 ga me&gt; and staked
their do.um a\ the greaiC\1 team 111
ba\thall hi'IOr)'

Orlando Hernandez domonated on
the mouood Bernoe Wollmm&gt; and
J&lt;&gt;r~e Po,ada homered to lead a
rdemle" anack and Yankees fieldong
'l'·•rklcd Sunday noghl on a ~ ·3 romp
t!Vt r San Doego fur a 2·0 lead on the

one run

~ell out

Alter 11o nnong Game I by playong
r~n derby the Yankee&lt; &gt;hm•ed
"I I tlocor 11 holc potent package on

tJ,,,,

(Jam~.:

2 I he Padre'

haJ ,,

Ot'Vcr

1n ~even

mmng:.

B) the tome Po&gt;ada'&gt; two-run
homer on the fifth made ol 9·1 the

0

WoriJ Scnc!t

Marshall struggles, .
but beats Kent 42-7.

ch.onle 1101h rnokte Rtcky Lcdec'&gt;
IHII 'lnglc onakong ol7 0 on the tlurd
.md lh•"'"' oil &gt;tarter Andy A&gt;hhy
rh.ll 1\ "' more Ihan plent y for

crowd of 56 692 wu' g01nJ;;

cra1y "'hole 'everal Padre&lt; player1
were •tandong wuh head, down and
hand&gt; on hop&gt;
The Padre&lt; face a to~gh la&gt;k on
tryong 10 regroup for Game 3 on
TueMJ,ty noght at San Dtcgo Da vod

NICE STROKE, BERNIE!- Seconds after hitting a two-run homer
off Andy Ashby, the New York Yankees' Bernie Williams (right) gets
tha hlgh-flva from lhird base coach Willie Randolph In the second
Inning of Game 2 of the World Sari" Sunday night against the San
Diego Padr" at Yankee Stadium. The Yankees' 9-3 victory gave !hem
a 2-o lead In the Fall Cla.. lc. (AP)

Cone Will \lar1 for New York UJ;Uin'-1
NLCS MVP Sterlong Huchwck a

San Doego's best opportunny
came on th~ fir&gt;t Tony Gwynn gnl hO&gt;
lourth hn of the senes and Greg
Vaughn walked. but nghl fielder
Paul O'Ncoll made a leapong c.uch a&gt;
he crashed onto the w.tll on Wally

former Yankee&gt; potcher - of the rrc
vonu' 44 team&gt; to take a 2 0 lead tn
the Sene\. 33 ha• e won the chaonpo
onsh op

fh:rn.u1llu the Cuhan Jcfe(;\or who

By JIM VERTUNO
~
HUNTINGTON, W Va I API Mar&gt;hall 17~1. 5~J Mld-Arnertcan
For one half of f&lt;N&gt;tball Maf'hall ConfereoiLe) ..cored con II&gt; fir.l fi\e
found IUoelf &gt;1 ym1ed deep 1n the po'&gt;e.&gt;Oon' on the.'&gt;&lt;'&lt;ond half to put
opponent'' terrotory
Kent awa y 42-7 The Golden Fla;hFour droves to wnhm o.conng c• who "ere forced tu play wuhout
ranj;e Saturd.!y noght agaonst Kl!nt mJurcd ' ''" recel\'cr Eu~rne Baker,
produced JU•Itwo field goal• and a 6- were hdd 10 70 yard~ ru&gt;hong on 38
0 hal(lnne lead over the wonle•• auemph l'hey do&lt;.ln 'l scnre unlll
Golden Fla•hes II wa• onl) the~ · Jn&gt;e D:Ov" pa&gt;&gt;ed io Scull Coyne
ond tome "net' the 19'J5 Dl\ ~&gt;ton 1- w11h K 36 lelloo11he game
AA tnle game that Mar.hall had heen
Kentl0·7 0·4) blew 11&gt; only nthheld wolhout a touchdown on the""' or twn good ""onng chances when
half
Da• '' threw two ontercepllon• deep
Mar~hall • sconng slru~gle' wme ooo Mar.hall terrol&lt;lry. oncludtng a
a week after coach Boll Prue11 &gt;atd p1ckolf by Maunce Hones on&gt;~de the
the Herd sen led for "'" many field Mar&gt;hail 5 IC1 end the fiN half
goals on-read of touchdown' m ,, voc 'We had a prelly gnnd first h"lf,
lory '" cr Ohoo
but on the second hull they JUM wore
'I lhonk sometomes we waol In u&gt; down'"" much. " saod Kenl co.1ch
kock 11 on," sa1d Ma,.hall tatlb.tck Dean Pee• ' Our paso delensa m the
Doug Chapman. who rushed for 127 fiN half was prelly good Bul 1we
yard&gt; and two sci:ond·half llluch- knew m the setond half they would
downs 10 spark Mar&gt;hall\ 42 7 voc- figure ol all out ""'"er or later '

Joyner'&gt; drove lor the linal out
From then on, 11 wa&gt; all Yankee&gt;
Wolloam&gt; hot h" nonlh career post· ~----...;..Sports briefs-----~ca&gt;on homer and Ledee, a rookoe
FcH!Ihall
9 Wo-collhon .ond No 10 Penn St.ole
playmg Wtlh exceptumOJI pm~e
NEW YORK I AI') - 1 he top" ' Georgta nl4"Cd ur tWl) pl.tce" ,,, No
(S..e SERIES on Page 5)
te.nn' rcrn.uncd the "'~me 111 l"hc II . fnllo,.cd l&gt;y ('lo 12 Oregon, No
A'"'oc1atcd Pn: .. ,; lop 2~ l:ollc!:?c ll 'Wco.,l Vtrgtnld, No 14 ArrZltn,a,
loot hail poll fop·mnked Ohoo St,tle an~ No 15 Ark.tn,,t§
reCCI\Cd 64 of 7() liN pl.oce \Ole&gt;
Vu gu11.1 lo ... t for the' lir!oolltnll! IIU!.
fielder, ' re.oll) kllCl\ls lht&lt; g.tme lie ,ond I 74J pooo11&gt; lwm the 'POrt&gt;· ,e,t&lt;nn ~ to Georgw Tech - ,tnd
knm" "'h,,(.., ('otmng next. y, h;tt v.ntcr" and hro,uJc.t..,lcr"' em the AP dropped none pl.oce&gt; 10 Nn 16 Col·
potche&gt; "
'
p.rncl UCl A \\ ,,.., No 2 "1th 01\C or.tllo ",,.., next ,11 No 17. followed
Jwo o,ecu1 11 y gun rdo., were o n h tnd li"t pl.tcc 1n1c oncll 647 pool! I&gt;. lui· hy No IX Nnlre Dame, No I'I Mt&gt;·
t~rouncl the LinCk In ensure D1M.1g~
In" ed hy Nn ] Ieomc,-cc (three .ond 'oun .1n d No 20 GL·or~p,t led1
goo\ f.tmed lm e of p11v.ocy "'" I 61K). No 4 K on'•" St.tlc (two ,tnd S) o.ICII &gt;&lt;. lul.tne Vtrgono.t Tech rc,pcUcd dunng h1"' ho"'pltiJI -.;1,1} To I 55~1 No 5 florool.o.ootol No 6 rlmo· " tm h ul"1 druppetl nrnc pmn,, In
getthr!ttogh 10 ht&lt; ronon .lithe hn&gt;po · d,t St.uc
No 21 .ofte1 .1 &gt;hcock 10g lo&gt;s ICl Tern ·
I,JI nnfy t,:,tlil: ro, U"'lll £ ol"irC't:t.li fl,l"~ ·
Nchr.t . . k.1 go1h:tLk ott lite\\ Htntrlg pic ---::; M' '""'"' flPI St.tll~ rlfld n•1(,t\
"nrd were accepted
lr.tL: ~ .111d rntJ\ c&lt;lup ,tnotch tel Ntt 7.
Tech rounded ""' the 1 op 25
lolln"cd I!) No 8 re x.t&lt; A&amp;M , No

DiMaggio expe~ted to 'leave hospital this week, friend says
11r111 YWOOD. Fl.o fA I' I H.I \Ch dl

r fl

rnm t.:rC:rHHrc h from .r holll o f

monr r In IL:.I\e the
~o 11d
ll!!~:lhug

d.t)"'
I

Holl) wcx&gt;d Me moo oal Regoon,ol Hu,.

pncu

ho~o pll..tl "- llhJn

l11 ~o: nd

1lnngtum.•

It ..,

nor rltlC

hcwg 111 the ho"'pl -

.111ornr.:y

"iitld

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'They re lr) ong 10 knock noollouo
month' o! darn.t~c 1n l"n \~cck''
rngclberg '"'d Out "he, a &gt;t.olloon
He '&gt; Iough
I he lnrmer Yankee w o!Lhcd S.uunJ,,~ . , Wodd Serre . . opener m ht \
ho...p!l.tl room wtlh Engdherg

Mom . .

'th~.:
1cann ~
t

fUidlld ~ l Mond.J) for lrc.trml'nl ol .1
lmgenn~ l.lsc o f pncumont.t

II Joe DrMo!,!H:! IO \ houJd

Sund.t} "lie..,

llr.: II he out "'UnlL' d.1y next

v.cd Y
DtM.tJ:!g to MJ

to

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WinS

Pepsi400
By JEFF SHAIN
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla &lt;AP)
- Unl1ke the pa~l three year., Jeff
Gordon "lakong all the •u•pen&gt;e out
of the W on&lt;lon Cup champoc&gt;n•hop
By holdong p ff hard-ch~rg'ong
Bobby Labunlt to won Saturday
mght's Pepso 400, Gordon VIrtually
auured that he'll clonch ht• third title
on four years before lhe """"'"finale
at Atlanta
It'• the ktnd of ktller mslonct that
often marb a dommanl era lr Gor·
don can carry h1s momentum thrr01gh
one more week, he woll have the
champoonsh1p wuh 1wo race• left
" We can'l change the way we're
·doong thmgs." Gordon sa1d afler h10
lith vtctory of the ..,a,..m and 40th
10 only.,. year. on the clrcuol " We
can'l say the champoon&gt;hlp " ouro
yel "
1
Thalos lokely to come IKXIII, how·
ever Saturday noghl's r.un·d&amp;!layed
won oncreal&gt;td Gordon '~ lead to 35H
poml• over second-place Mark Marton, a vonually on&gt;unnounlable ad1an·
!age
As long a;~ Onrdon finl!dlC-. amnng
the lop 32 tn each of the final three
race&lt;, he'll won the lllle He -. mtued
that only once lht~ year. fint ..hln"
b

37lh m June's Pcm11ac EKCIIement

400 at Rochmond , Va
Smce then. he's never been out of
lhe top the - a stretch of J7 r.ICC!oi
In I~, o f t hos.e event II, he I1as I"lnl s hc d
tint ur second
'lbut'!i dOmtnance
1
' We've got h1m It 's l1ke the Bulls

r have (MI(;hael)

Jordan." CrCW Chief

Ray Evernham saod " He makes th~
dtfferen'e Somebody else cuuld w1n
10 that car, but not the way he docs

'"'"her

thrce~umc

(joJd Glnve

h.1~ "'~ plcmy of 111nc C,tmtm1t
ru&gt;bed "" thm-. and 11 was too h1gh
lur Joyner. an error thai enal&gt;led

Knohlauch W "-CCJre

eng one ~hop dtlitl've a lot of cred11"
So doe• Oonlon "We gave h1m a
real noce gun and a lrn of bullet1
tc11ugh1." Evernham •aod "But he htl
the bullseye on hto own"

Ch olo l)av" and Scoll llros1us
•ddcd RBI ""~le. and even though
all rhrec run ... were une.srned, they

'

-·-

Here are the re•ult• Saturd.!y mght
oflhe Pepst 400 Wm•ton Cup race at
Daytona lnlern.tlocon.tl Speedway
wnh ~lart tng pclliillon tn parenthe~~es,
drover, bomttown, type of car, lap•
compleled, rea"'n out, 1f any, and
prize money
1 lfh ldl' Ciordoo Pmo.Mm lnd l'twu1lkf
10
" 1t',~, ~~ 1.....,.._, "'"""' Ch""' r, ...
"'"'"" '"' IJJIIJil'
l I''' M1kl Sl.tnntr Sut.an••Ut c.~~11 1 ('MHo

kt lfJO 1?1.47~

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lilt w rJ u nm !it'ltlth u.~hrn. vu Pmlll

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K INJI!rnu~ !n un St~hnU\ {ali( l'tlilllii. lfii'J
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1lt•t Ken !lc:ltr""'r fl""''"' M•' (~vn,lel
I~Kt~71~ l);:rlt fultlhMth Kannlftnlt~ NC
Chwolt~ ''" m m

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14 1141 Mm Alllfrrm

otu•h•p chaHe Itt over Dulc Earnhardt IMI 1~~ ;~~~ 1111 ,, 1111)(1 1 ,,,w~oj)"' 111t 0 11 ,,,.,.11 1r,u
\Wsthe last dmer to clonch wolh two \4ll"'
races )eft, When he WOO Ihe J.tsl OJ hiS
lh lft1 ..11irL. MIU11U lluu.o-1 lilt Ark P11rt.l IOU
Seven 1/t)eS in '19()4
$4? :~:-i!~?!Jne Nt"trlr~hcok l11~1!" h111d l1l11 C'ht!HI~
"We've gollhree ra•cs lei!," saod '" ''" Will'
Gordon, "hose Win SuiUrd,,y was hiS
"' 117) St~rhn ~ Murllu C'••hunh1t1 Ttnn
Clltvmlct l fMI ''2 fllll
first 1n lhe months of Octnher or
I'J '"' Jrcry NmJeuu l&gt;unhurr C1111M fl111d
November " If we hnve rrouhle. 11 " '"' ~1II14117
"
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bnngs I he ch,,mpiOOShip r,ICC bnc; k IO c rn~h "'lJ 2~ ,
1
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Goruon speu s rom e"pcnencc
22 14 2 1 K)'l~ l't~uy KunJi crmm N c . l'1 nt•~~~o:
Before wonnong hos llrollotle on 1995
IW
{he watched a 302·pOIOI lend wnh
2' !lillule Jurr~u l~ldr:nry "'l flmd 1 ~'J
UKU.U
four races leh shnnk to 14 nvcr E.trn ~
:24 r2lt Andy lflllenN1rw !1?11wn~hurM lml
Chn wlft I ~'I \ \fllJ7:'i
hardt aI lh C en d
l, (IIJJIIreullndlnr (httllllll~ NY Pntd 1~1,1
Two years .tgo, Gordon led b~ Ill 111 noo
lfl 1401 Johnn)' ll ,n ~nn Orund Rupld- M l~ h.
PnJOCH WHh four rucewlcfl bul wound
r
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I h
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27 14 11 M
l,ky A"'" riNr&lt;ukr Vu ~""'
And last seuson. he led Muoton by 125 "'' 542"'
1
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vJIIh four rnces left, then beat Dnle ut:, I~"
Slt!JW~
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lY il-l&gt; s~rv• Cirb~un CHui.Ucn Alu r litHo
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Clutch rally helps
49ers top Colts 34-31
I

\\llh Mm,rnll.!llt,nn on

l!ruu11du .,,

JEFF GORDON

If Gordon earn~ 12 more pOintS
than Martin next week I he c h.1mp1

• SAN FRANCISCO r AI' I - l'cy·
1('111 Munnong ClllllC nl 11gc '" u qoollo ·
ltob11ck, only 10 be nutclon.: hy 11gc·
1e" Stc\c Young
• The J7 ·)CIIr·old Yuung.throm ong
11;1d nonnong "11h the 11bundnn nl 11
rnokre. pn~cLI lot two touchdowns
unct s'ored on 1t1urth-qum lcr run.., ol
one und 21 ) urd, li S the Snn rIll ti CI,.
co 49er" nvet1cd tht!' lmliunnpnhs
Colt'' upset btd 14·.1 I Sund11y
Ynung 11lsu led the 50- yllt~l doovc
endtn~ on W11clc Roche; 's 2~ ·ynot l
field gnn l "rrh ltvc seconds ll!lllllllk
mg g11111g the 49e" (~ I I the to only
lend of 1he dny
Mnnnmg, the top pock oo1thc doni I
who c11mc m w1th n l4!upt1c-lu gh 14
ontercepltOII&gt;. llc'c l n Coils tooktc
rccn1d wtth thtec tou~,;hdown pno.,l\t'"

11 wa11 cor~

Myc:r11ro -

lhm.l n.,\Crn~ul Ken C.am1ntt1 Dt\f'l1t

~ 2~~

•, Thts year os different. though
,2
Gordon's top-five streak woul d be ..
tl: nol for thul problem .11 Rtchmnnd
•"d tncmg under ll"hl ~ for the fnst
I'V 1
o
••tne al Duytonu didn ' t f~ze hllll alllll
""Cd with
• Th e rtH.: e Wa S red • fln C'l'
ft~e lops left alter ol ru&gt;ned for the
1t{ird 11me Restnrled utter n J7•
minute del fly none 01I GoreIon s
cW!ie· lollowln g pursuc1s could
n(ounl u c ho II engl!
• M1kt= Skinner und J~,•rcmy M.1y ~
lteld~ \\COl Sl&lt;lil·by·sode. IWillllg Ill
• slingshollhelr Wily to chul lenge Gor.
dOn Then Bobby Labonte went three
wl,de und took over second, but Oor·
don blocked hos chnllenge cammg
out of Turn 4
"I lhought I cou ld gel 11 run on
him," Lnbonle suocl ''I d1dn 'I gel nny
help "
The restroc101 plates used on Ctlr·
burelors ul Dnytonu lind T111iudeg11
have m.tde the dtlference In Gordon's
bQIIIe woth Murltn In the lour mces
al'lhose tracks, Oorilon hus three top·
ft.e lin1shes nnd a 16th place. Mur·
1111'• besllinosh hus heen 16th ,
: "Restroctor-pl111e rncong tnkes 11
strong motor nnd u lot of horsepow.
e~" Gordon smd "Those guys on the

( ire~

recti) ruleJ no play - and 1hen lhe
lca&lt;.I&lt;JII m.m c•conplolicd the Yan·
kcc' p.oloclk:e at the plate, dr.owong an
cogltt pooch ""lk
One out later 0 Neoll ' l"pped a

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"111 m lour,'' Engleherg

to

Uond4Y. October 19,1998

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ymd tnuchclown oun pullmg Snn
Frnnctsw to 31 ·29
It ''·l"i Ynung\ 40111 l.'IIICCI tumh ·
down ttoshtng I) ong Jnck Kcn1p's
NPI letlmll(u tnuLiuhmns rush1ng.
h)' II l)lllltll'l hill k
Then Young t.:Olllli.'I.:IL'll tor the

'

In the fourth quarllr of Sunday's AFC Central bat- lunc
tle In Nllhvllle, Tenn., where tha Dilere won 44-14.
Woll1,on1\ ty, u run homer htgh·
(AP)
lo~hted a three run thord lino Mar·
lone/ and llro"u', "ho e.t&lt;:h had three
"f the Yo.nk cc'' I(, lui ;, "' '"glcd lo set
up IA'dee' Kill &gt;onp le oo the lhord
l'h111 w," all for A&gt;hhy. and 11 wasthc1r mo ~r~t IXU!ll.., \ I nee Dct: clllhcr
I he fin1,1l "''l:Orc L:Uuld l1.1vc hccn
n't
untol rcloe•cr ltro.tn Boll"hrtnger
I'J'JI , when they heut the K.tulcr&gt; 47 · evcoo worse nte Oolc" lhoooo~hl ohcy
potdtcd
I &gt;cnrclt&gt;&lt; rou rth that Padres
17
'cored 110 u 7fo·yurd lttonhle return hy
ptldw r... rcltrcd even two h.ttfcrl m a
Mt.:N,ur scored nn ~one y.ml run J''"h Ev.m~ H1 the lhlHJ LjU.utcr .uu.l
and tcos&gt;ed .t4S ·y.trd~r 111 Dy &gt;ott, .ond evcnloned up It&gt; ktck lhc ex u,opooh t ntw
lh: rn uHic1 me uw.!ule !-.CI Lh)wn
he fim~hcd lll:of·2 1 lor 277 y.ud\ t ~tr HtJ I the oln~.:l.ll!l. held .1 "'CI..'ond 4.:on ~
Ill
, ,r,oo ~ lll h,ollcr' no the moddle
the 'iCcond·hes t mo long ullm c.ucer lcren~c ,tnd ruled O'Donnell \ I'•"' w
1nnootg&gt;
Wttlt I" ' n "y hl ue sock~
George had hos tlurd IUIJ·y.trd g.m1c 11ollon had l&gt;ccn ootcomplctc hd"re
pulled
l11!!
h 111 . . unu ~o t~otl urn:ay Qf
!Ius se.oS&lt;101 wolh !5 curroc&gt; loo lll7 the luml&gt;le
lnOIIOfJ\ ,tnd J'lldtL'"' 1,1med h1Uen
yard&gt;
Gregg Wollo.uro&gt; the Oolco ' dclw·
who hud 11&amp;:\l!r l .ltc d !11m
Byrd .tnd ()y""m ~omh!.'IIL'd for "vc ~.:oon fHM iur, ..,,ud he lhnuJ!hl IIa;
lite l'.ulrc&gt; &gt;lllll llcd theor loneup,
none c,uchc&gt; and 115 -y.ord; "hole ofloco,ol• w.otchcd lhl\ ••pl,oy &lt;HI the
•e ndon ~ &gt;nen l, lt ·li,ondcd hollers
c1gh1 player\ caught ll·'''C'~
h1g '~rct n 111 the ~:ntl /OIIc
.IJ.:·fllhl the ngllly ll ctt~o~ndr.:l It d1d
'I have to g11c them credo!
" I hey changed the or n11noh" he
nco gcood. '" Lllluquc struck oulsev·
hec.ouse they went CIUI there re l,txcd ,,ud
en
t~nd g.avc up . . u lui'
and they dod ullth.u we ,t&gt;kcd them
Nulc•: Thc.l)oler&gt; &gt;wept the &gt;c,o·
M1kc St,mton n:ltcved lo !&lt;.l .trt the
In," saod McN,ur
&gt;on &gt;Cooes w11h the ll&lt;ngal&gt; l&lt;&gt;r the
The Bcngnls got tnto TcnnC!&lt;.~t~Cc fir"'t lime smcc 1'J91 .tnd now lc,1d the 'coghth .tnd Sun Doego s~orcd twoce
PuH. h ~ hlll Cr Ruhcn R I\Ciol COUSin of
tcrrotory only ""'c before h,tllllme nvcrull ~cncs 3 1·29· 1
McN.ur\
and had only 72 yaods tol.ol coffense touchdown on the scwml &lt;IIIIIJ1cr w.&lt;&gt; Ylmkcc"' L:lo;,cr Mdu.uw HJvcru, hJt
.111 IWI dnuhlc .ootol ,,ored on ponchWhen they got thc1roffcmc gotng, Jt rhc 12th tout.: hdnwn ru .. l!l ng n! h"
hltrt r M.1rk Swct.'llcy s s 111 gll!
wus too laic Corey Dol loon swred •urcer ,ul&lt;l secoomltlto s &gt;c.tsoon lloc
Nnh·"': f'h 1.., w,1, 1hc 21stun111vcrC111~:mnat1" s lir-.;1 rouchLinwn on .,1 2·
Ode!'~' t). rmnutc, 2~ - .. l'~oon d dll \l' rn
,,,ryol R~ ~!! IC r .,t~ &gt;:&lt;otl\ thrr.!c ~homer
yard run wllh t\ lllefttllthe thtod 11nd the &gt;ecund qtJ.trlct w.o&gt; tlt&lt;oo lnngc't
~ ut 1hc seem: tu :\().7
1h1s tiCU'iOn
The "'IL IOIY 11ho "" 1. . pc1I01111.111 ~.:e ltll the Ynnkccs m the
0 Dunnell dod lind l),nnoon Chh· lite liN 11111c the (lolc" h.11c 111ln &lt;1 111 chon ~ (wm 11 olthe 1'177 World
..,on nn .a76 ~ y.m.J touchdown cMiy tn t.:OIN,!CUitVC ~.nnc~ !.lllt.:C L1 . , 1No, em· S(.•J IC"' .tgU IJl"" t I.Cl~t Angeles
potchcd lor th e Y11nkecs tn
the lnUrlh qu,trtcr. but he lonond hom· heo rhe llcng,ols C.OIIlc Ill wo lh Ihe lloeh1utgcr
1
New York
sell on the bench lnr Jell Olake l.ue Nl·l.'s lowest ntoml!er ol toornm er- Ihe 1196 Wnold Seroes
"
II ~ . 7&lt;) on Seroes g11mc• 'I he P11dres
111 the game O'Donnell "nund up "''h nne .tnd h,od notlumhl&lt;~ ontheu
nrc 1·11
V.oughn, who homered
ll -of·22 for 192 yards
' live prc vooous g.tmc&gt; They woountlup
IWOW 10 Ci,t/l1C I SW II ~ heLI ltnm left
"They're 11 good fnlllh:tll tc.11n \ uh nne
lle,ilong l'llt ,~urgh h,.,.
I' ll g1vc them thul," smd 0 Donnell ~ n t hecn good lu ~.: k lm { lllc.:llltl.lll , lochlt r&gt;1&gt;11 lie onos,cd mnst ol the
Nl CS hL!c.tu ~c ol 11 slrmnl!'d IL':ft
"I know wh,tllype ol &lt;lelcnse they whoc h h,ts lostldter&lt;'lleh (11 11 ' 111,1"'
h.tw They (&lt;ltll) gllve liS snme nh· Vlctoroes llYCOPollshurgh. ol ilootg hill k qtuodooccps 11110 m11nugcr Bruce
llnchy wnntcd In gove 111111 11 bellcr
Iems '
too I'lX~
dt.IIH.:e Ill heal

SACKED - Cincinnati defenelve back Sam
Shade (lower left) elame Houston quarterback
Steve McNair (8) to !he turf for an eight-yard ion

Oilers roll over Bengal$ 44-14
By TERESA M. WALKER
NASHVILLE, Tenn lAPJ - rho
Tennessee Oolcro finally are wormer&gt;
mtheir new hometown
The OoleL'· who had lnstthc~r first
two games on Nashvolle. scored on
lheor lint •ox po•sessoen• on routong
the Ctnctnnau Bengals 44· 14 Sunil~;
The team lhal moved from Houston
on 1997 played on Memphos la•l senson
"We talked about thos before the
game.thal we h,td to esl.tblosh a hnone
lield, " •aod safely Blaone Boshnp
"rhal's what we set out In do lodny
We executed real well on all pha&gt;es
and were .tble tn do lh,tl
" Hopefully. It's *olng to contohue
1nto next

week'" gume "

The Otlers made lhemsclves cnmlonable at theor 1empor11ry home 10
Vanderbt)l Stadoum wuh the etghthbest offensive performnnce- on frnn ·
chose htolnry. tutaltng 51 S y.trds
Steve McNuor. wuh hts two start·
tng recetvero out wtlh onJurtes nnd
bandaged Irom wrost lo elbow h11d
one of the best g.tmes ol hi s career
He run for a tou~ hdown 11nd threw lor
another
AI Del Greco kocked three field
goal• and backup runnong b11ck Moke
Archoe even got onto the acloon W)lh
an 18·y.mltouchdownto.s
Cl~clnnull coach Bruce Cnslct
satd lhe Oolers simply whopped hts
Ben ga ls
" It 's hurd Ill won n game when
they score every ume they touch the
ball on lhe first half," he s111d
Maybe tl wa• a letdown fromlnsl
week's lttsl ·second VICtory over the
Pollsburgh Steelm, but lhe Beng11ls
(2·4) couldn'l gel unythmg gumg
behond Neol O'Donnell 11nil Cnrl
Pickens
O'Donnell. theAFC's htghcst ·rlll·
ed qmorlet buck, repo!lllcdly overthrew
receivers He IC1st Clnctnnuu's l,usl
fumble !Ius se11sonln the thltd qu11r·
lcr when sucked by D11rryll Lewts
Joe Bowden pocked off the bnll on the
mr und scored I rom 12 ynrds, givmg
!he Otlers n Jo.o le11d
"We went from one exlreme lo
the next," saod corneobuck Anrell
Huwkons ' ,
It hndn 'lloc\ked so promt&lt;tn9 for
the Otle" (1·1) before Ihe guone
Couch Jeff Fosher w11sn'r sure tf
McNuor's elbow would lei him pluy,
und rece!Yeo·s Wtllte D11vts (clle&lt;l)
1111d Pro Bnwlet Y11ncey Thogpen
(htp) were bnlh deneltvttled Rookte
Kevm Dy•on tond sccond·yetlr lstt!IC
Byrd wound up m11kong the litsl slttrls
of lhetr NFL curecrs.
'You defuutely wnnl lhem 111 the
gume, but we huve con lodence mlhe
younger guys," satd ught end Frank
Wycheck
McN111r huddled wllh Ius recetvcrs
belnre ~ockoff nnd told them to IllS!
hove lun The replncements d1d 111st
line, wolh plenty of hclj&gt; fiClon McNtUI
nnd [ddoe George
The Otlcrs w0 uncl up cnllltnlong
the cluck lor J6 ~5 1 hey ulso sc&lt;ucd

1

r•

Because part of
the fun in life is in

the ·challenge.

-sports brlets-nnsfhnn
NEW YORK (AI') -

Ool11ndo

He1n ..mdo1 dnmmnh!d nn thl.' mound

um.l Bermc W1\hums und lntgc Pnsndti homered to lend I6·hll nllnl k '"
the New Ynt k Y.onkccs hcul thL'\~1111
Docgo l',ldt~s ~ . ~fool! 2·0 lc ,11loo11hc
World Sc11cs
'
The Ynnkt't.•' ln&lt;'k .ILh unlilgL.' 1\l
P11tl1cs thtod hll&gt;ell\1111 KL'n ('11111111111\
thrnwmg CliO! Ill the tlt'\l Si.:OIIIIg
thu~c uneurncd 1uh ~ 111 the mumg
Chn~k Knnhl11toch ,, !lied lln the o11e·
lllll ettnr, ttnd Choli ll:01 os uml Swll
llwsnts 11dtlcd IWO·OLII Rill s on ~ k &gt;
lWl lr (lllllll t.:Oil\ ei'iiOII ()ll ol fll\ lriS IO J!!f •
Allct Dcock Jetct's !1111-scOolng
ry Rocc wiHHIIIItct lt&lt;•d At! Mnnk 's songle mul Wollt ums' """' '"' homc'o
{.' l\ICl'l lt:~l.: llHI h~ -.:.lh:hmp ll ptls!&lt;. Ill hi'
111 the "iCll)IHI Rtd') I c tll'C 1\l.l dC 11
IR1111 strntghl g11mc
7·0 w11h .111 RBI ''"Nic on the lhooLI
Young 11 ' " 11 nl ~I lot 111 ynrds ch11,111g stu1tc1 Andy Ash h) " "'""'' \
I h.: dii\L' tn the Wllll1111~ licld ~l~nl U\lHllll hnmct mlhc nnh mmll' ulJ.
"'' ~ ,udcd h} u .27-yunl p Ll"i' mlcl - I llct llllllliC7 •hut clown Sun DOL• go
li.!!Cllt;C on Tyumc Poole nne nl n on one n1n m ~t~cve n IIUHilgs I li t!
sene' nl,ulls !hut hurt the Coil' (I · su uck out "iC\C'll nnd gnvc up -.;1:-; lui s

scoo es of 61 so XltoiCI f11111 )'Ill ds I k
fonoshed IH ol ~0 lnt 2l l yaods
But Yooong, 11h0 aim sc· t "" NFI.
recm'tl hy thro" ong lnr mooc thnn 1(X)
y1udo.; 111 .1 s1x.1h sll'111glu l! lllll~ Wil'~
- 6)
n01 I~&gt; he &lt;kouedj

'•&gt;untcd The Padre&gt; even lc&gt;Hked
'l1.1 ~ y ge11111g the l.t&gt;l out of the
oomong. when \Cll on&lt;l l!a-.cman Q01l·
• von Vcn" dropped l'os~da's lone dr1·
"c and nwdc ,, l"•or throw harely 1n

This L'&gt; Go(f
Worth the Driue.

SEVEJil SITES• IN

ALABAMA

WWW.RTJGOLF ,C OM

~

�-·

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•

·B y The Bend

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_,

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f
The Daily Sentinel
Pagel

illonday; October 19,

Monday, October 19,

lhtrds of ·,he pros1i1u1es surveyed
suffered from posHraumaiJC •Ire"
diwrden."
Researchers · intervocwcd 475
pro11i1ute• in · lhe Unned Slate&gt;.
South Africa, Thailand, Turkey and
Zambia. Sixly-two perce nt reponed
being raped, 73 pcrccnl said lhey
had been a.. auhcd, and 68 pe rce nt
said lhey had been threatened wi th a
weapon.
Nearly 70 percenl of the wome n
had e xperie nce\) po&gt;t·traymauc
stre$S disorder, wh1ch i&gt; al&gt;o kn own
•• shell shock or batt le fati gue. They
suffered from deprc.sion.. . anxiety.
insomni a, Oa s hb ac k ~ anti n1,g hl ·

Ann
Landers
J~J~JJ ~..o~

........

.,...,...,

·-

Mt*t

r.,.

-.:~ rr~•Jt •

Dear Ann L~n: I'm •ure a
lot of people write 10 you aboul
career choice• and look lo you fnr
guidance. PleaK, Ann, if anyone
should ask about being a hooker, I
hope you will diocourage it.
A o.c tent ific &gt;tudy conducted by
Mchs.a Farl ey, a psychologiSt at
Ka10cr Pcrmancnt e, one of the
natwn'• largest heahh mainlenancc
organwlllon•. concluded a1 foll;&gt;wo: ' mare!li .
"Working a• a streetwalker can he
Heard enough'! I hope ''"· --

Sacramento, Calif., Ann Plum
act of losing I0 pounds could &lt;ignifDear Phan : l don't reca ll ever icantly reduce my blood pressure.
being a&lt;ked about prostitui!On as a
Why would four il&lt;x:tors fail to
career ch01cc, but if such a letter tell an overweight patient to lose
duJU id cro's my desk, I wi If remem- weight to reduce blood pressure? I
ber your commen ts and describe lhc had to find out by reading on my
ba/ard\. Tha nli you for all the own that even a modest weight loss
w'Jmen ) 'UU may have ~aved today.
can reduce blood pressure. l lost I0
Deur Ann Landen':-1 am over 50 pounds, and my-blood pressure fell
and uvcrwcight. I h ~vc had hi gh . into the normal range.
hloc&gt;d pressure for the 1..1 five year-s.
Alcn your readers to this "sin of
In that time, l have seen two gyne- omission ." -- Irritated.With Doctors~.:nlo~ • sb and two int crni 11h. All
tn Texas
nouccd my elevated biO&lt;&gt;d pressure.
,Dear Texas: Your·sweeping conand the lasl doctor cho&gt;e 10 treat it demnation of doctor~ is unwarrant ,, woth da1ly medication. Although all ed. Cond emn , instead , your •elecof the-. doctors were concerned. not tio n of doctors. You describe yourone of the m. including ·the doctor se lf alii "overwe ight " but give no
who prc"tcr1hcd the medicatio n, clue as to how much overweight you
ht!thcrcd to me ntion thai the simp l~ arc. If dropping 10 pound' rnadc

doorsteps. Instead, he was givett a
year behind bars afLCr he submitte4 a
coun-ordcred urine test for dnlgs
and 11 came baA positive-- for pr~nancy.
:
Nnw, back to lhc question fr~m
the Dardanelles. What do l thtjlk
happened? l th ink the thief got tis
girlfriend to supply the urine, whiCh
rcs ulled in a double whammy. ·~e
duplici ty backfired, pulling him :in
the slammer and hitting him with tf'e
joll y news that his sweeti e was pr~nant.
·

such a huge difference in your blood
pressure, I would suggesl that you
drop an addilional 10 pounds as
"heallh insurance." Of course, you
will have 1&lt;&gt; alter all your skins and
slack&gt;, but I'm sure il will he a pleasure.
Dear Ann Landen: My husbana
and I enjoy the off-beat new s items
you print, in your column. Here is a
strange one from the Ark ansas
Dcmocrat-Ga1.cttc in Little Rock.
We thought it might qualify. P.S.
Ann, what do you thmk happened'! - The Dardanelles
1 Dear Dardanel\.. : II qualifies,
all righL Here it is:
A 20-ycar-old man in Pain esv ille.
Ohio, wa-' cli gi hl c lo rct.:ci vc proha~
lion for stealing Chri stmas gi_fJS off

•. r----------,

In l:flstorlc Downtown Pomeroy
992-7696

•• 'C ustom Homes

BY ED PETERSON. MANAGER
Social Security Office In Athene

:'•

I

Fallln1 -blrth rale Is a key l••u•
The growing perception that the retirement of the 77 million
buhy htiomers will stres• the Social Securit y system in the ne xt
ce ntu ry mi sses the implicati nn!'l of the si1.c ,of lh'c next generati on,
about 46 million.
Al ong with increasin ¥ life ewccJancies, d ~c linin g hirth rates
arc pulling pressure o~ the Social· Sec urity system. The baby hoom •
generation begins to reach Social Security re11remcn1 age starting
ahout 2010, but due lo the falling birth rates, the followin g ge nerati ons arc much small er. This means lhatthere will he fewer work ers supporting a larger number of retirees; by 20J O, lhe ratio of
workers 10 beneficiaries will have declined from about 2-to- 1.
The number of live births per 1,000 women aged 15 to 44 in
1955 was IIH .3. By 1990. that dropped w 70.9 births per 1,000
1

,

women.

' '

I

Some have suggested mcreasing immigration rates lo boost the
work force. The U.S. Census Bureau projecls that the U.S. will
lake in aboul880,000 immigrants per year. In any given year'" the
past few decades, immigrants coming into the U.S. have account·
ed for less than I percent of lhe lotal U.S. population .
''
These are some of the issues involved in the current dial og ue on
the future of Social Securlly. To fully understand how they· affec t
Social Security and 10 bencr evaluate proposals for change. you
need 10 kriow how Social Security operates today. For more information on how lhc Social Security program works today, call our
toll -free number, 1-H00-772-1213 , and ask for lhe booklet, Social
Security : Basic Fuels. Or you can visit Social Security Online at
hup://www.ssa.gov, our Internet wc&amp;site.

.

By Alden Waitt
. cir usc any sort cif physical punish- cats will oflen li ghtly f1 ick a killen's
Meigs County Humane Soc I· ment. Well. ydu ' hould not be hit - car when il acts up: and I have tried
ely
ling a dog either, of co urse . Doing that , ending with an indi gnant and ·
Ihat only teaches your cal (o r Jog. · insulted - hul doc ile - caL
So. you hear the stories and to~s too) to fear you.
Mak1ng certain behavi ors imposhack oiT the cuff. smart an , wer&gt; :
·You can 1ram your cot not to per- !tihlc i ~ another la, tir.:. Th ink "child*,
"We have j u' l had a baby, and the for m majlprnpriatc behav ior . hy pronfi ng" and keep fun~ in conlijln cat " ac ting out in all kind' of train ing your cal to pe rform other ers, keep hrcakahle Md dangcr&lt;ius
w;~ y . . ." My answer: " Would you
beha vior alternatives 10 or in com- objects out of reach, mak e sure lhal
cm" idcr givi ng up the baby," duc.l- _patihle wilh the inappropnatc heavy obJects. such as tahlcs, arc
n' t go ove r that welL
behavior. Now cats hate 10 be sur- stahle.
·
I have been told (a nd mu st priscd. so you can usc water hollies,
Loo k J'or c hil~ - proo 1in g ·gad gets
a»umc thai Ihi s is lhc lrulh) that fitr clapping , hi ssing, a can full of pen- and hints and think how you can
.1ome people, thi., 1.1 not lhc right nics, and other sudden nC&gt;iscs (.&lt;uch apply them to pre venting cat prclb~o iUiion . So let 's look for a moment
as snapping , " No' ") to slOp unwant- lcms. Even when the analogy isn't
1., at ~ orn t: po ~s 1hl c way s to co pe with ed heh;1vior. However, be aware that perfect, phy; ically preventing probca t mi., behav ior.
these tactics will not wqrk when you lems is still a good guide. For examFirst t&gt;f ail._you cannvt discipline arc not present. In addition, immcdi- pic, if you arc defrosting meat , put it
cats us you would dogs. Dog.1 forn1 acy is key : t;.ven seconds laic may in the unheated stove. not on the
sot:ial hierarchie s that yoU can take render it ineffective. You musl do it countennp.
ad vant age of by pladng yourself al as soon as the cat starts the behavior.
II is alway s best to train your cat
the 1np. Cats form socml groups only
The face-push consists of push- away froin undesirahle behavior as
by necess ity and the arrangement i' in g the palm of your hand inlo the st&gt;on as possible , as young as possihH SC(I &lt;m rcspCct ing territory, not by • eat' s face . This is best used when · blc. You will have the most success,
respecting [he "t&lt;&gt;p dog ." .
discouraging something like biting. in tmining your cat when it IS young'
Many mi stakes made with ta ils Don ' l hit the cat! Simply push its on what is acceptable to scratch and
arc Glue w thinking that they will fac e hack gently. You might accom - what is not . Never tolcrale it when it
react ltkc ,dogs. Do not ever hit a cut pany it with a firm "no!" Mother is "cute" since .it .will not always .

'

'· l
Questloni ·Mnd answers
Q. From Mr. Allen C. of Pomeroy.
If l died, how much would my family receive in survivor' s ben ,.
efits from Social Security'!
A. The higher the earnings of the deceased worker, the higher
the benefits will be. The actual henelh amount is a percenta~c of
the deceased worker's basic Social Security hcncfit, and ranges
from 71.5to 100 percent, depending on the survivor's age and type
or benefit.
'
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.
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Q. From Ms. Accy L. of Pomeroy.

Is it true that the retirement age will change·&gt;
.
•
A. Yes. Presently. the full retirement age is 65, But. hci:ausc of
longer life cxpccumdes. the full retirement age will he increased
in gra~ual steps until'it reaches age 67 . lll!S change stun s in tlic
year 2000 and allects people horn in 193H and later. No mailer
whnt a person's "full " rctircrncnt ngc is, he nr she may !i lart I'Cl.: ci v ing u rcdut:cd retirement hcm:fit us curly us 02 For nwrt.&gt; infmmu lion, _~all Social Sec urity 111 1-H00-772-12 13 ('7 ll.ltl. to 7 p.llt) and

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Q. F(i&gt;m .Mr. Roy J. of Athens.

.
l _rccc•vc Social Sccurlly (l~&lt;uhility benefits. When wiJI I he eli gible for Medicare'! Do I need to contact Social Securily tu apply ''
'A . You will he eligible for Mcdi curc ul'lcr you recei ve di suhili ·
ty benefits for 24 consecutive months. You will get inftlrmullun
about Mcd1carc several months before your Medicare covcntgc

starts.

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More workers lo receive benefit Slatemenls
Between October I, 1998 and March 31 , 1999, ubout 33 million
· workers bclwecri ages 40 and 47 will receive a Pcrsonul Eurnings
and- Benefit Estimutc Statement from Social Security. As required
hy !aw, Social Security begun mail'ing the sU\lcments in 1995 to
individuals age 60 und older.
Since then, lhc muilin~s huve gone lo younger workers. Begiu ,ning ,Octoher I. \999, the slalemcnls will j:JC senti&lt;&gt; ull workers 25
and: older each year. For information uboul the stutemcnt, cull
Sqciul Security's toll-fre e number, IH00-772-121 3, or visit this
wChsitc, www.ssa.govlrny stutcmcnt,
•· '
'

-----Flu shots urged for eldcrl x - Mcdic.ure pays

\ . •
l~1c Public Health Service recnllllltends nn annual llu shot for
people over ugc fi~ . even if they nrc generall y henlthy. The cost of
hoth pneumoniu vtu.:L:inutions unO f1u shots is covered by Mcdir.:t\fc
Pori B (medil:ul insumncc). The best tim e to get a llu shot is mid·Octobcr to mid -November. Mcdicttrc Purt B pays the rcasonullle
upprovcd ltmount f~r either shot. If the cost e&lt;rceds the approved
amou_nt , the hcncfi t mry i' rcsponsihle for the difference.

.

.

.

..

Peacocks cause problems for neighbors
Uy The 1\ssocl~ted l'ress
ARCA DIA . Calif. (AP I
1\
g1lld min~.:r \ d ~l: l ..,lt ln 111 hn ght cn th e
cn vmms .wnh u few Lo lmlul llCUcocks more thnn u ce ntury ngo ·hu'
Lrcut cd

MlllH.'

1.' 1lntc n1porary

hcnd ui.: h~,·~ .

llHincc hy the Cnlifomi n Philhnrmon h.:. On:hc:-.tru.
An.:ml1u IHls puhlishcd n
hruL'I\urc. " Our Nr: ighhllrS th~ l)~ u ~.
..: o~w· h ." wh il.::h su g!!c:-.t ... wnys tn di s ~
~.: ouru gc the hirLis fwm tukm g ovl·r.
One tdcu : wut cr hoses.

Elias J. "Lucky" ll uldwm. the
l'ounll cr

m1h:s

or tlw~

~.·n s t

nf

suhurh ahmll 20

Lo~ · A n g~.·lc s,

In Sl:( puir!l. nl pcm.: tl\'b

UIH.I

hrnug:ht
pcuhcns

m the ,cal'\ y IK ~ l b .
The tlod•. ha. . ~ IIH.'I.' mult1plicJ Ill

ahout 1.21XI tu rkey -"'" hu·~ , .thut
latd y luwc llCl' n -.tomp tn_g ncrus:..
roots, j lflin ~ on ~111'\k· n . . nnJ l nh.: r fcr ing with traffic
.
" You ~.·un ~:ompnn:· _l t ·to n 1.k cr

pmhlcrn ." said Ah.lul S1 tuhkluon .
"They' re prcuy unlllthcy mm·c lllhl
your

hu..: ~ \

llrd ."

&lt;lo

Thc1 r ,i,nc k~ Wl' l"l' 'u L'l lr-. pln tin g
tlmt lhcy disruph.:d a lo\:tll pcrful·•

I

•. 1998 Martin Street

HOI.DINCOFI!Ri l. Minn {AP I

, On Sept. 26thc hand CO!flpeled in · ipatcd. the Meigs Band has received .
Ripley, W. Va. and brought horne a rating of superior.
;
awards for overall guurd, overall
The band is directed by Toney
field commander, lhird place band in Dinsess, assisted by Dave De'cm,
class A, third place percussion and Ben Wright, Susan Clark, and Mjssy
lhe outstanding soloist award given VanMeter. Saturday lhe band comto senior trumpeter Dwight Icen - peted at lhc Battle of the BandS in
hower.
._ ',
'
Point Pleasant, on Oct. 24, the "\UsiIn all of the Ohio· Music Educa- cians will go lo Mariclla to compete,
tion Association sancti oned events and on Oct. 31 to the stale'finals'.
in whi ch the Marauders ha•e.partic-

The Commimity Calcndur ts published us a fre e serv1ce 10 non-profit
groups wishing to announce mcctlll gs und special events. The cal endar is not dcsign..:d to promote sah!s
til" fu,,tl rai sers of un y type , ltl!ms arl!
printed us spa~: c rcnnit s ami t: annot
he -g uarantcctlto run a specific num ~
her of duys.

WEDNESDAY
M-IDDLEPORT
Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wedncs~ay at
the home of Eileen Buck. l'llyii!S
1-lut:kcll lo rcviL!w "Em.: hanlcd Castl e: by Daphn• DuMauricr.

TlJESDAY
I'OI\1 EROY - Meigs Co ui11 y
Hcnlth Dcpurtmcnt , immuni l.nt ilH\
clinic. Tuc~duy. 4 lu 7 p.m. 111 the
office. 11 2 Eust Mcmoriul Dri yc,
Ptlmeroy. Children mu st he accullt·
ptln ic tl hy pun·nl /h.:: gnl ~ u nrclinn .

"'.........
S~eclal

'

4121/M ttn

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ser..-ite:e 1or winter

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B
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am
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Pomeroy, Ohio

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fi;t
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--- ft
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Gutters
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Gutter Cleaning
Painting
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949·2168
5/2&amp;Jtln

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&amp; Construction
New Roofs,
Repairs, Gutters,
Coatings, Siding,
Drywall, .Painting,
, Plumbing . ·-

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740·992·2068
'
1o../1 mo. d.

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across (rom thl' Cnurt llnu)oc, ,

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740-592-1042
OUallty clo thing and hous eh ol d
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Put!llc Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION

1899, collec;:t1on y•ar 2000.

al lhe rtgutor plocto ol
voting thtroln, on tho 3rd
doy of Novtmbor, 111118, tho
quoallon ol ltvylng • tox, In
oxctoo ol the · ton mill
· llmllllton, lor tho bonollt ol
Mlddtoport Vlllogo lo! lho
urpoot _of Flrt Prol..llon
. td ta• btlng:•
An Jdtllonat to• ol 1.5
mlllo at a roto not excoodlng
1.5 milia lor Itch one dollor
of valuation, which tmounta
to llllotn eonta ($0.15) lor
uch one hundred dollora ol

Notice Ia h•r•by given
th1t pureu1nt to
a

Tho polio will bo optn
from 6:30 a.m. lo 7:30 p.m.
on sold dolt.
By Order of tho Board ol
Eltcllono of lht County of
Melgo, Ohio
Rllo D. Smith
Director
(10) 5, 12, 18, 26, 4 tc

rtootullon odopttd by tho
Boord ol Educotlon ol tho
Mtlgo Loco! School Dlttrlct,
Cc~nty cl Mtlge, Ohio, on
lhl 211t doy of July, I 098,
Tukc dultl 's llllii1Unltut ion fl't:onl.
thtrl will bt eubmllttd lo
qualltltd otoctora ot
MIDDI .EPO RT - Mcig' ~1idtll c tho
told tchoct dlotrlct ot lht
Schonl Btlu ... tl· r-; , Juc..;duy. (' p.m . in election to be hold on tho
Public Notice
3rd dey ol No~tmber, 1998,
al tho rogulor ploceo ol 'Notice ol Election on Tox
·voting lhtrtln, tho qutallon -Lovy In Excou of the Tin
ol levytn.u • renewot tox
Mill LtmHotton
ouloldo cl tho lt&lt;1·mlll
Rovlood Code, Socllono
oonalltutlonal llmlllllon lor 3501 .11(0), 5705.19,5705.25
lht benefit ol lht 1Mtlge
NOTICE II hereby gtvon
Locol School Oltlrlcl lor lht thil In purouonco ot 1
urpoet ol pormontnl Roaotutlon ot tho Vlllogo
mprovemlnta •t a rate of Council of tho Vlltogo of
live (5) mille for toch ont Mlddloport, Mlddtoport, ,
dollar (SI .00) ol lox Ohio, pooood on tho 27th
1(tluotlon, which omountt tc day ol July, 111118 thoro will
lilly conto ($0.50) lor lith be aubmltt•d to 1 vote of
ont hundrod dollart tho people of oald
($100.001 of ttx volutllon, oubdlvtolon 11 1 Gonorol
lor I live (5) yoor porlod, Election to be hold In tho
commonctng with IIX yoor VIIIIQe of Middleport, Ohio,

r.

'

'

. Public Notice
vtluatton, for 1 conllnul~g
~rlod ol limo.
Tho Polio for nld
Election wilt opon ol 8:30
o'clock A.M. ond rom 01n
opon unlit 7:30 o'clock P.M.
olttld dty.
By order ol tho Boord: of
f;ltcttone, of Melge County,
Ohio.
John N. lhlt, Chtlrman
Rllo D. Smith, Oln~Cior.
Dlltd Sopl. 8, 111118
(10)5, 12,19,26
4TC

~~~

There's no
way around it,
·Classified Ads
Work!

Public Notice

·'

Resolution of the Board of
County Commissioners of

tho County of Metga, Meigs,
Ohio, paoaed on tho 271h
dey ol July, 1998 there will

Please a pply or send r esumes ' to:·
Pleasa nt Va lley Hospilal
C / 0 P&lt;'rs onnd
2 520 Va li&lt;'Y Drtve
Pt. Pleasant. WV 25550

ba submitted to a vote of
the people of aal.d
subdivi Sion at e General

Election to be held In tho
Co unty of Meigs , Ohio, at
tho regulor pl•ceG ol voting

,,

Fax (304) 675-244 7

therein , on (he 3rd dey Of
November,
1998,
the

qutBtlon ol levying a tax, In

M / EF.O

excess of th'e ten mill

30 Announcements

tit Yovr ••qa•Acto.s..:

' .., Wit• ADally -Stntlntl

IULU.ON IOAtD ..
\~ coJ•mia lnch'wetktlays
.,. column. Inch Sunday
CAll OUR OfFIC'E AT 992·21

Gun S hool
-Rac.ne Gun Club
Nea se Hollow Rd .
EvJ ry Sunday 12:30 pm
Limit 680 sleeve
.7'.37 back bore

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
Limestone Hauling
Houae &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing ~
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities •
Estimates

(614) 992-3838
·

Public Notice
lhnltatlon, lor tho btntllt of
Melga County lor tht
purpolt ol 'Maintenance,

'

Pam Burson Is a
1972 graduate of
Meigs High School.
She is battling cancer.
We would appreciate
all ol your prayers.
If anyone would like to
send her a card her
address is:
Pom Burson
SS 1 N. County U~ Rd.
· Sunbury, Olt 430 74

pa·raona

P/B Contractors, Inc.
•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Residential

Free Estlmlltas
No Job too Small
Brian Morrison
(7 40) 985-39.4 8
8/25/18 2 mo. pd.

12/111/tfn

'Notice ol Election on Tax
~avy In EKCOSI ol lht Ten
Mill Llmllatlon
Revlaod Code, Sections
capital construction , and
3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25 operation of Ca'f laton
N0TICE· to ~ere"by given School and
Mtlga
that In pursuance of a lndualrltB workshop for

•
Various s pecia lties a nd shift s avail a ble.
Full-time and Pa rt -ttmr. e mploym ent.
Competitive wages nnd benefit s.

f '

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS
Computer' Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
·Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon·
Chester, Ohio
7'40,985·4422

Pleasant Va lley Hospita l is curre ntly
accepting a pplica tions/ resumes ' for the
followin g pos itio ns:

·

'UNLIMITED Personal A~. PtuSOnul E-Mo.il AQcoWII
.t I() tnqt of PersOnal Web Space! R•plur ftlll II J/6.95 ptr Mo.

'

POMEROY - Meigs County
Garden Club, Mondny, 7 p.m. nt the
Pomeroy Library. All garden dub
reprcsenlillivcs urged· to mlcny.

LE'1ART FALLS - . Lcturt
·Town ship Bomd of Trustees mee t·
ing Montluy, 6 p.m. ul tile township
huihling.

992-2156

614-992-7643

The Fabric .Shop

; ·~P:o:m:er:o:y,:O:hl:o:45:7:69::::::'6:1~4)~9~92:;4:27~7~ !::==~(~7=4~0~)=9~9~2=-1~3~4~4==~ L...---N-Ic_ka_n_II_E_Iea_n_o_rL-e-on_a_rd_ ___. ~ ~ ~ .W:.. ~fir!:.~~..,._ Ant~'*'

The Sentinel News Hotline·!

I

. RAC!Np , Rucine Village
Council. 1• p.m. special session.
Mondlly ul municipal building to
discuss roof. rondwnys and parking
lot drninage at village park .

scat.

:

cufcteria.

MONDAY
CHESTER ·- Ptllllcmy Cllaplcr.
Order of tho Eustcrn Star. Monday. 6
p.m. lll the Shmk Ri vcr Lodge 111
Chcslet·, Potluck with mcu{ 1\a•nishcll . Ncw 1oflice rs to be clc ~..: tcLI .

POMEROY - S tri c klan~'H n l ­
lislcr dchttle.'Monduy, 7 p.m. to K::lll
p.m. ut the Mei gs County Scnim
Citizens Cenicr. Bntl1 vy ing fm
Ohio'• Sixth Co ngressi &lt;&gt;nul Distri ct

1

•

t0/1/mo.

"Build Your Dream"

.

'

Community Calendar

.

Remodeling

'·

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

"Easy Ot•er tl1e P/rorte Brmk

Meigs Band.brings home the trophi·es at area competitio~s

'

ask for the pamphlet ."Retirement".

.

remam so.
1
Ca1 s can be ~ orne jealous upon the
arnv,al of a new baby. So rea.ISvre
the cat that you still love it by plyi'ng it plenty of auention . ln · lhe
cxha.u1\ tlcm and turmoil of a .n~w
haby, the callS often neglected, and
thi s will add 10 its resentment. •
There is a mylh thai cats will .ill
babies. so some people abandon oots
or give them away .atlhat point. 'The
superstition is that they·' II "s tea W I~~·
baby's breath ; the latter day ex"' ~:
natiun is that they will lie on babies
and suffocate them . While the i:at
may like the bahy's warmth and njay
curl up next toil, it will nol oflen~ie
on the baby and in any case will.
move when the baby begins lo mcive
its arm s and leg s.
Most cat s arc trustworthy around
babies after getting over any jcaJ,
ousy, cspeciaUy if it is tramed Ml to
usc people ;ts tays:-'howcvcr babies
and young children s!Jould nevei be
lcfl unsupervised around any :animal.

'

In competiti ons al Ripley, W. Va , dan High Schools. The• Maruu~cr s
Athens, and Nelsonville over the were given awards for being outpast three we ekend s, the Meigs . stand1ng in marching and muncuvcrMarauder Band brought h&lt;Jinc ing .
numerous awards for pcrfurmuncc
At the Oct. 3 competition, the
Cll.ccllcnr.::c.
Marauders marched their way to
On Oct. I 0 the Meigs hand par- v1ctory al the Athens invitational by
tictpatcd in the Nclsunvilh.: march- defeating Gttllia Academy for the
' ing band competition and received fir st place honors in Class A. The
ftr st place honors in contests with hrmd ;dso received f1rst place in perAtllcns, Frunklin Heights und Sheri- cussion and lirst place in guard.

•

·M &amp;J

Calif. 90045

.

BJSSELL BUILDERS, INC.
· New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages· Replacement Windows

Antiques • Lang Calendars • Candles
,." Toland Flags • Camille Beckman Lotion
Birdhouses • Clocks •"Frames
·'
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• Soap • Baby Gifts.
• Hartwell Hares

•

Send questions to Ann Lancl,-s.
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. C•n·
lury Blvd., Suite 700, Los AngeiJ!s,

'

HARTWELL HOUSE

When
kitty
misbehaves~ what is an owner to do?
JSocial Security News
.
J

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1M

Study says being a prostitute as tr~umatic as going to war
as lraumauc as gomg to war. Two.

1998

w.lth

mental

retardation
ond
developmental dlllbllllleo
Said lax baing:•
An addlllonal llx of t .8
·milia at e rate not excHCttng
1.8 milia fer otch one dollar
of vatuallon, which amounla
to elghloon coni• (SO. 18) for
each one hundred dollaro of.
valuotlon, tor llvo (5) ytort.
'The Pallo lor otld
Election will open at 8:30
o'clock ·A.M. and romoln
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
ol said day.
By ordor ol tho Board ol
Elections, ol Meigs County,
Ohio.
John N. lhlo, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
Doled Sept. 8, 1998
(10) 5,12,19,26
4TC

SMALL
WANT ADS

PACK ·

ABIG PUNCH!

ROBERT BISSELL .
CONSTRU~TION
•New Home$
•Garages
•Complete
'Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
_.;· FREE

~STIMATEES

. 985-4473
7/22/tfn

R. L. HOLLON

GUN SHOOT

TRUCKING

Radne Gun Club

DUMP TR.IJCK
SER.VICE
Agricultural Lime,
1,-lmestone • Gravel
•' ~~ rt • Sand
9BS-4422 .
Chester, Ohio

Nease Hollow Rd.

Firewo od to giveaway, 304 ·675·

Every Sunday

'12:30 pm
Limit 680 sleeve ..
.737 back bc!re

1Oi25!96fl1n

ALL PRO

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

• Fall Special3 Rooms &amp; Hall
$59.95
•
(Maximum 500 sq . ft .)

614-742-2138 .

..

7 40-378-9807
Free Estimates

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

SOUTHERN
OHIO DISPOSAL

ELECTRIC OR

•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

•Resldentlal$11.00/month
•Commercial
·Senior Citizens
•Discount
•Dumpsters
• Monthly Payments
Call lor best prices:

SERVICE

1-800-809-7721

SATELLITE

. Call
"

INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding •Soffit
·Fascia
•Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
•Replacement
Windows
•Stationary Docks
•Blown Insulation
•Garages •Decks
24x24 Pole Building
starting at $5995
740·992·27'72

Mother Cat &amp; 4 Kitte ns. Li tte red
Tr ained. Black &amp; Wh ite, Grey &amp;
Whtl e, 6 Wee~s Ot d. 740- 367 ·

7947

.

.

"'I

•

Small Home To Giveaway Mu st
Be Removed Or Ta ~ en Dow n.
Cheshire Area 740·367·7920.

Lost and Found

Found· young femate Beagte. can
to ID, 740·992-6282 ·

Found: ri ng, call to des cribe and
clai m, 740-992-7696
Found : Ve ry Ex tremel y Frie ndly
Female Beagte:. Upper Route 7.
Nea r Dr tv&amp; ·l n. 740·4 41 · 1625
Leave Message
Lost On 10110!98 Female Golden
Re tnever Arounrl 0 .0 . Mci ntyre
Park Area, \le r y Love d. Child's
Pet, Answers To Name "Minnie "
740 ·379·9042.

Los t! Female Walker Coo n Dog
Ne~med • Fern· On Dodritt Rd ..
Vmlon . Area , Now Mtssing 7
Day s Reward! Call Prlsctha Dodntl740·388·81 93.
Los t· white lemal8' Tamer, prick
ears. 10•. Southern Athens Co.,
reward, 740-696- 1317

Yard Sale

7p

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

992-6320
•
Local Satellite ·
Pro~lider
Bes t El ectric Pomeroy

10 /1311 mo. pd .

AU Yard Sale1 Mull
Be Patd In Advance.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
the day before thtt,ad
It to run. Sunday 1
edition · 2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday edition

.

. J&amp;L SIDING &amp;

Full bl ooded temal e German .
shepherd , 10 months old, to good ·
coun try hOme, 740·992· 7301

60

CARPET &amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANING

Joe N ..Sayre

6236. •

Three free kt ltens, 740·446·9536.

SAYRE

Reasonable'Rates

6 kittens, 4 bot&gt;talts, 992 ·7696.

• 10:00 a.m. Seturtlay.

HOWARD'S
TRI·COUHTY
SANITATION
-MiGHTY MAC
AERATION SYSTEM
New light weight,
fiberglass state and
county approved with
two-year warranty.
740-742·2566
D. Howard 101t1-.

(()UNTRY CANDLE SHOP
30 scants available
• Condit mokilg suppii11
• Refdls
• Vocllty ol Gif~
Tues-Fri 10-6
Sat 10-4
Rl. 124 Mine~ ville, OH
740-992-4559
"Ask about our candle

parries"

Sold HGme - Movi ng
Ol!er ~

'Ma~e · A n·

Sate . Clothes. Chtldren~ I

Adults . Furmlura. Hom e Inter tor.
Otshe s A11t1ques Chrtst mas. Numerous Hems 1 lndoClrs Amn I
Shme. Thursdcty, Fttday t0/22
10123 10 A M " 312 Kee ter
Road

Pomeroy,
Middl eport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sates Mui t Be Paid tn
Advance, Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day be f ore t he ad 11 to run,
Su n d e~ &amp; Monday edltlon1 :OOp m Friday.

�I

Monday, October 19,1998
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

ALLEYOOP
•

NEA Cro••word Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

AI¥

OJ 10 Pt1111~ W Puzzie

-

7 IW I fw
12 lollr~ 111

Auction
and Flea Market
Au cti on var ety ol new 11ems
each Thursday October 1 thru
December ~ 7 e.11cept Than~sg lv

no

ConceSSIOn $ Hafllord Com

mun•ty

BUIIdmg

Auc tron eer

11220 Fred SuHIVan
Rick Pearson Aucl on Company
lu!l lime auctiOneer complete
au ction
ser v1ce
L censed
166 Oh o &amp; West V1rg1ma 304
nJ-5785
304 nH447

o.

Wedemeyer s Auct on Serv•ce
Gafi~IS Ohio 74(}379 2720

90

Wanted to Buy

sa 89 91 92 94 Happy Hollda~s
Barbie Good cond l ion &amp; n the
box 304 882 2790

A.bsohJte Top Dollar All U S 5•1
ver And Gold Co ns Proofsets
D amends Ant1que JeWelry Gold

R ng s Pre 1930 U S Currency
Sterl ng Etc Acqwsl!lons Jewelry

M T S Coin Shop 151 Second
AvenLIE! Galhpot s 740-44&amp;-2842
Ant ques top pnces pad A•ver
rne Ant ques Pomeroy Oh10
Russ Moore owner 740 99~
2526
Ant ques &amp; clean used !urn lUre
w 11 bu y one p ece or complete

househOld Osby Martin
992 6576

740

Clean Lale Model Can; Or
Trucks 1990 Models Or Newer
Sm th Buck Ponl!ac 1900 Easl
ern Avenue Gal polls
GoOd Tred Mtll n Good Condl
110n1740 24 5 5165
J &amp; D Auto Pans Buying
wre cked or salv aged vehicles
304 773 5033
Wanted To Buy For Fam ly Pel
Dachshund Pup Or Young Dog
Call 740 446 2342 Ext 1 &amp; Then
20 Days Or 304 6 75 4293 Even
ngs
Wanted To Buy Junk Aulo s Any
Condltlon 740 446-9853

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted ,

AVON
A I Areas I SHhiB'f
Speas 304 675 1429
Accep t ng app ca l ons lor ful
t me news reporter at tr.e Point
Pea sant Reg s, er Must have
Str ong backg ound n Eng Ish/
Wnll ng lype a m n mum of 40
wpm and have a val d drivers h
cense Computer skills a plus
Send re sume 10 Mindy Kearns
Ed !01 Po nf Pleasanl Register
200 Ma1n Street Pt Pleasant
wv 25550
Compu ter Users Needed Work
Own Hrs $20K $75K IY 1 800
349 71 86 Ekt 1173 www amp
nccom
Cosmeto og st Wanted Full &amp;
Part l me Hourly Versus Com
m ss on Patd Vaca t ons Other
Benehts OHered Fantast c Sam s
740 446-7267

Babysctter Needed In Our Home 3
To 4 Days A Week Centenary 2
PM 4 PM Call 740 446 0279
Reterenoes A ~ust!
Needed E•penenced Tree Ct mb
ers And Bucket Operator In The
Mercerv liB Area For lnlormahOn
Call740.~2 4585

Dollar Plus Brand New Gallipolis
Store Opening Soon Retail Man
agement &amp; All Posh ons Avail
able Rapid EKpanslon &amp; Career
Growth Oppor)un ties Fax Re
sume 304 736 3092 Or Ma 1 Po
Bow 10 Barboursvlle WV 25504
Ex per enced Ha rdresser Needed
For Busy New Salon Beneftls
740 441 1880 or 740 256 6336
HOSPICE

CASE

MANAGER

Full Ttme 8 00 4 30 Monday
Through Fr iday W th Rota! ng
Even ng And Weekend On Ca 1
Responsll:l Illes Qual 1cations In
elude One Year Recent C n ca
( Exper ence In Acute Ca e Or
Home Care Benef ts Avatlable
W11t1 Opportun ly Fo Advance
menl App l cat ons Avaljatsle At
280 East State Streel Athens
OH Or Call 740..594 8226 EOE
ACCESS To Human Resource
Development /ACCESS Head
Start Is Accept ng Apptlcal ons
For The Fol ow ng Posi! ons
Early sum Home Vltltor J$erv
Ice Coordinator Ouahf cat ons
Ch ta Development Associate
Credent at LICensed Practi cal
Nurse Soc al Work Deg ea As
soc ate Degree In Ea ly Ch d
llOod Or Related Field Bachelors
Deg ee In Early Ch ldhood Or Re
IaIed F eld Prev ous Ekper ence
Work ng In An Earl y Childhood
Sen ng Espec ally W th lnfanls
And Toddlers A Pus
Appl cants For Th is Pos t•on May
Su bm 1 A. Aesum.e To Jeannie
w lhams Hurnan Resource Man
age r Accf!ss To Human Re
so ~&lt; ce De velopment P 0 Bo~
31 6 Gall pol s OH~ 5631
The Daadlme For Acc eptmg Ap
pi c etton s Is Fr day October 23
199:8 5 00 PM For Acldt1onatln
lormahon Call 740 44t 3010 8 00
5 00 PM Monday Thru Fr day
Acc ess To Human Resource De
velopment An AA fEEO Employ
er IS A Cert I ed Menta l Health
Age ncy Serv ce Ga ll a Jackson
Ancl MetQS Count es
AccouoUng MIDIOtr
Pon t P!easa nl WV Compa ny Is
S!lek ng An IndiVIdual W lh A B S
n Accou nt ing Prev o us Su pe
.., sory And Acco untmg Expe
eoC4 Along Wl! h Compute And
t1 c ~soft Of hce Skills Is Re
'1U red
Out as W 11 Include
Oversee ng And Part c pa tmg In
0dlly Accounting Func ti ons F
nanc at Report ng Cosl Ana lysis
And Federa l And Sta te Com
pi ance Repon ng Peas e Send
Resume W th Salary H story To
A11l1tant Controller
PO Box 12"
Ch&amp;rlerot PA 1$022.(]1 24

large selecuon of uiMtd home• 2
Of 3 bedrOOms S&amp;ar ling at S2995
OUiclc. delivery Call 740 385

9621
Ne~ 14w70 $5()().0own 5199 (&gt;4tr
mo Free a r sldrt 1 800 691
67n

WANTED

Rapes For Sale 2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms
Qualify By Phone 1 800 251
5070
AUreal estate adVerts ng n
th1s newspaper Is subject to
tile Federal Fair Houstng Act
of 1968 which makes t Illegal
to advert se Many preference
I m•tallon or d scr mna11on
based on race color rei g on
se:ortam I al status or nat onal
ong n or any ntent on to
make any such preference
I m tat on or d scr mlnat on

House n Middleport three bed
room batr. and 1/2 $5\J 000 price
negot~abte call740 992 3465

Gallipo s Career College Sprmg
Valley Plaza 740 446 4367 1
800 214 0452 Accred ted Mem
ber ACICS Reg M90 05 2748

150

Schools
Instruction

Magic Year&amp; Day Care Pre
SchOol spaces ava lable excel
ent Skills tor your childs devel
opment Call us for more nlo1ma
Uon 304 675 584t M F 7 30 5 30

Make offer free heat must se I
tllree bedcoom two bath ranCh
w th 10 acres gas wei nground
pool I sled lor $98 000 U'l s spring
740 742 3711
Price reduced will consider sell
lng on land contract 3 bedroom
spt I level new 3 ca garage new
heat pump and a r new carpet
lhroughoul very n ce home 740
742 4000
RED

180
Ce 11fled day care prov i:ler as
ststance ava labia 740 742 0612

E eel lc ma intenance sarv te
W ring breaker I:IOkeS light 1 x
ture heal ng sys1ems &amp; More
304 674 0126

Georges Portable Sawml don t
haul your ogs to the mil just ca ll
304 675 1957
Have 2 Openmgs For .24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elder y Or Hand
capped 740 441 1536
LINK approved day care provider
r.as room tor three presclloo ers
between the hours of 6 30 5 00
Monday Frlllay cal Janel Hall
304 675 2906

W do housecleaning call

7~0

992 3446 before 6pm

W II 9 ve plano lessons n my

BRICK RANCH Style
Ekeellent Condttlon Par
I
Basement 2 Car
lnqu res Only II

Sandhill Ad All br ck 3br 2 bath
den 2 car heated garage pus
work &amp; storage area t 2 acres
$127 500 304 675 8959
Well maintained 2 bedroom
home Features full basement re
modeled kitchen w th dishwasher
cen1rat air new root and carpet
Pr Ced to se ll 304 675 7693 or
304 675 5094 atier 5 pm

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
$500 Down on any 14w70 In
stock I mlled number I ee de lv
ery Can 1 801) 691 6777
$999 Down on any 98 model
Doublewlde In stock Free Dellv
ary Call I 800 691 6111
Abandoned Home Take Over
Payments Or Make Offer 1 800
383 6862

home a so teach chordmg and
transpos ing I mterested 740
992 5403

12k60 tra iler can be used for of
lice trailer $1500 w lhout al 740
949 2217

W II slay w th e derly person In
their home night only Nurs ng
Technician 304 675-1898

1969 Commun ty mobile home
12x56 ask ng $2300 740 843
5310 days or 740 843 5147 afler
6pm

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

INDTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

recommends that you do bus
ness w th people you ~now and
NOT to send money 1r.rough the
mat unlll you have investlgaled
the offering
Ell VENDING FUe- Mutt Sell
By 10/31 10 20 LocaUons $4K
S8K $4 000 t/Mo Income 100%
Finance With Good Cred t Toll
Free 1 888 538 9508 Ex! 4114
\lENDING P ofttable .., Easy Call
For Free Broch &amp; Prepd Calling
Card aoo 820-4353

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes lor Sale
· A Little Country In Town Price
reduced large res1o red V ctorlan
homes 1uat8'd on 12 acres VII
lage ol MlddlepQrt Secluded and
private close to schools and
churches P 1va1e brick circular
dr ve bric~ pat o modern kitchen
lam ly room wlf replace 3 4 bed
rooms two baths large formal LA/
DR arge Ioyer lour ortglnal
stamed glass windows
30
m nu1es !rom Athens 15 20
mlnuleS !rom Gall pols Fo r ap

~~~~:_e;:a~II!_7~40~99~2~56~96~=­
2 Bedrooms 1 Bath OR LA
K !c hen Uhl ty Room &amp; Attached
Garage WID &amp; Relr gerat or
St ov e Includ ed 106 Kmeon
Or ve 740 446 3 ~88 74 0 44 6
540
3 Be d roo ms 1 Bath Clo se To
Hosp tal Sprtn~ Vat ey Area
Rear Deck Ranc h Sty le 740
44&amp;-:-91 40
3br I v ng roGm d n ng room
tam y room 1 bath cer'llra a r
newer ca pet &amp; roof replacement
w ndows fam1ly ne ghborh oo d
pr vacy lanced yar d 2411 above
gro und poo l many upgrad es
move n con a Pr c~d n 70s
304 675 2924

Apartmen.,
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments 1ur
nished and unfurnlahed security
deposll required no pels 740
992 2218

ThiS newspaper w II not
know ngly accepl
advert semen1s for real est.ale
wh ch IS m v olaf on of the
Work At Home
law
Our readers are hereby
Growmg Company Needs
nlo med that all dwell ngs
Now $250 $500 A Week ••••- ·••
adven sed nth s newspaper
Time Full Ttme Easy &amp; Fun We
are a va~ablo on an equa
Wl11 Tra n No Erper ence Need
~d Senous tnqurle&amp; Only 1 800
opportun ty ba ss
204 7048

Business
Training

Trailer For Rent SeatAhful River
Vtew 198 A.ver Street Kanagua
Oeposct Reterences No f'ets
740-44t.Ot81 Fo51erTratlef Park

440

We Are Also H ring Friendly En
ergetlc Crew Members For
D!ysh It Please app y In Person
740-446 3400 Burger K ng

140

can

30 Acres Farm Houn Barn
Outbultdmgs $300 00 Oepolll
$300 00 Rent Refrences Re
quired Patnot Area 740 886
7052

Rura l Action seeks muraliSt lor
community generated mural pro
J8CI n Pomeroy Must be acootn
pllshed mural patnter Exper ence
m community work preferable For
del a Is on salary and prOJ&amp;CI to
format on call t sa 740 767
4938

ElCperlenced Palt'lters Send re
sume to Bow CW 9 c/o Point
Pleasant Register 200 Man St
Pt Pleasant WV 25550

Bedrooms t 112 Baths tn Pontr
Artta Oepoatt Ancl Relrence At ....
qwred
740-38&amp;-9162

29 People Wanled
To Ge1 Paid $$$ For
The Pounds Of Inches
You WiK Lese In The Nexl
30 Days All Naturat /Gauranteed
CaiTracyAt740-441 1982

3 Shania Twa n T1ckels

RE

OUCED PRICE If You Take All
3 Tickets
S55 Per T1ckel Or
$70 Per Ticket Caah Only No
Rsfunds Call After 5 30 PM
740-379-9378

430 Farms for Rent

Pleasant vauey Hospital s cur
rentty acceplmg ruumes lor
Regtstered Resptratory Therapy
Techn cans Certified Resp l ra
tory Therapy Techmc1ans and
EKG s TechniCians Must have
current WV license Send re
sume to Personnel .111 Pleasant
Valley Hosp11a1 2520 Valley Or
P1 Pleasan1 WV 25550

Seen c Ht11s Nur&amp;mg Center 311
Buckndge Ad Bidwell OH 456t4
IS Now Accepttng App/lcatcons
For Fnendly Outgoing And De
pendable STNA s Please Apply
In Person At The Front Des" Bet
ween 8 30 AM 4 30 P:M

Copper no&amp;a Beagtea ~ monlhs
""' $50 oach 3d4-675-2015

3 Bedrooms 1 1/2 Batl'ls and 2

Two (2) Bedroom Mobtle Home
Route 218 $300/ Mo Rent $300
Depos t + Aeferef'!Qtt Requtre&lt;l
740-1183-&lt;4607

Needed Immediately Second
Shell Chtfd Care Your House Or
Mme Green School District Cat
740-256-6419 Any11me

D rector of Nu sing Reg stared
N Jrse w th lour or more years su

perv1sory nurs111g exper ence a
proven tr ack reco rd n ger atr c
nurs ng ad min stra l on and a
va d Wes V rg nla nur s ng r
cense required Know edge of
state and ladera f&amp;g ulahons and
OBRA gu1del nes a must Con
tact Kell Gar !son Polnl Pleas
ant Nurs ng &amp; Rer.ab I tatlon
Cen er Stale Ro ute 62 N Po nl
Pleasant WV 25550 A Genes s
Elde oare Faci 1y EOE

4 Bedrooms 1 112 Baltl1 LR OR
FA /Fcreplace Corner Lot 1 f/4
Acres Sm Orchard 2 Car Ga
rage Heated W/ Shop Barn
Bu ld ng Heat Pump CA Deck
Natural Gas Co Water Cheshire
OH 585 000 Good Fam ty Hemet
740 367 7401 t 800 835 0726
Ext 367

97t Hillcrest 12x60 two bed
rooms washer drver stove &amp; re
fr gerator air underp nmng
$4500 7-4~0~99~2:..5~0~39~--~-1990 14x70 mob1le home two
bedrooms one bath appliances
cenlral air Included must move
740 667 6630

REPOSI

FOf Sale
2 &amp; 3Bedroom
&lt;lually by phone
I 800 251 5070
Aepoed Double Wide On Lot
304 736 7295
House tra~ler on Broad Run Ad 2
Mtles tr.om Sporn Plant 3pr t 112
baths 2 added on rooms lot ga
rage 2 AIC s household 1tems
17 000 304 8~2 3426

s

We Finance Land &amp; Home Wlth
As Lllle As $500 Down 1 606
928 3426

340

Business and
Burldlngs

Commercial Off ce or Aeta 1 87
Mil Sl &gt;,\tddleporl 1 450 Sq Fl
$400 mo Corner Bu ld ng 740
992 6250 Acqwstl on s (nex l
door)

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
3 Pr me acres JUSt ofl Rt 33 Ma
son wv Serious inquiries only
304 8132 3772
3 two acre lots on C emeans Ad
oil New Lima Ad Rutland 740
742 2803
5 Acres Flal Road Frontage
Kerr Road 740 367-Q138
6/acres
m nutes
owner
$26 500

good bwldmg sties 10
hom !own public: water
financing
ava I able
304 675-5911

An Ullllles Already There Cente
nar~ Area Green School 740
256 1664
Approklmate y 3 5 Acres Perry
Twp For Sale 740 446 4609 or
740 446 1104 After 5 OOPM
Seen c Valley at Apple Grove
wv Bui ding lots single wldes
accepted
public water 20
m11utes Irom new Buffalo Br dge
on Jerry s Run Ad Clyde Bowen
Jr 304 576 2336
Several 5 acre parcel• remote
beautiful land Meigs County Sci
p o Twp SA 692 UlJst off SA 143)
owner llnancmg ($1800 per acre)
Call lor good map 740 593 8545

360

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy land 30 500 Acres
We Pa'f Casr. I 800 213 8'365
Antr.ony Land Co

RENTALS

410 Houses lor Rent

t br apt In Henderson water sew
er and garbage furnished Re
!renee and deposit {equlred $200
per month 304-675-t972
2bdrm apts total eteclrtC ap
pllances furnlshe\j laundr:f room
rae lilies close to school in town
Appllcal ons available al VJI1agf
Green Apts N49 or call 740 992
3711 EOH
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 lo $358 Walk 1o shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446 2568
Equal Housmg Opportunity
Beech St eel Mtdd lepo 1 2br
furn shed uttlll es paid oeposlt
&amp; references 304 682 2566
Furmshed 4 Rooms &amp; Bath~ Com
.plete y Redecorated Clean New
Carpet No Pets Or Smokmg Ref
erence &amp; Deposit Required Also
Forn shed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Up
stars 740 446 1519
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartm&amp;nts at VIllage Manor and
A verside Apartments In Mtdd a
port From $249 5373 Ca ~t 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tun tes
Lafayette Mall Gallipolis 2 Bed
rooms 2 Baths All UtI tees In
eluded $450/Mo Deposit Re
qulred 740 441 1005

Now Tak i ng Applications 35
West 2 Bed oo,m Townhouse
Apartments
ncludes Water
Sewage Trash $295{lv1o 740
441 1616 740 446 0-9'57 740
446-6515

54 000 Local Gov r &amp; Bank
Repo s Call t 800 522 2730 X
1709

Double wide Cleerance Sele
Double w de Dream Homes
Only $999 Down 6
Interest
Rate Free Satell te Dtsh wiPur
chase
Only et Oakwood Momea
Nitro WV
304 756 6885

Rent 4 bedroom FA basemen!
AC large yard l nco In Avenue
304 675 3402 available prompt
Three bedroom holJse near the
locks at Apple Grove on At 2 No
HUD available 11/1 /98 304 576
2642

5 Bed ooms 3 baths w th over
2 OOOsq It Under $350/mo 1
800 251 5070

420 Mobile Homes

5 Bedrooms 3 Baths Wtth Over
2 001:1 Sq F! Under S3501Mo 1
800-251 5070

1 Bedroom Tr.aller In Gal polls
Nice Yard &amp; P(jrch $250 /Mo
$200 Deposll Refe rences Re
quired 740 446 9342

tor Rent

ABANOONED HOME

2 &amp; J bedroom mobJte hOmes a r
cond Honed $26 0 $30 0 sewer
water and trash Incl uded 740
992 2167

Double W de New $999 Down
1237 per mo Free_ delivery &amp; sel
up 1 800-69 t 6777
E Z Finance
Renters &amp; 1sl T me Buyers
2 &amp; 3 Bedroom s
Under $200/mo
1 800.251 5070

Tara Townhouse Apartmenta 1
Very Spactous 2 Bedrooms 2
F oors CA 1 1/2 Bath Fully Car
peted Pallo No Pets Lease Plus
Sec:url ty Deposit Requ red 740
446-3481
Three bed r oom In New Haven
a ea slove relngerato r all t.Jt 11
I as Included $425/mo plus de
posit 304 773 .,9171 leave mes
sage
APT AVAILAB~E NOW

Tw n Rlve(s Tower now accepting
applications !or I br HUD subsid
lzed apl for elderly and handl
capped EOH 304 675 6679

Furnished
Rooms

460 Space for Rent

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

Appliances
Recond tloned
Washers Dryers Ranges Refrl
graters 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740 446
7795
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers refrigerators
ra:nges Skaggs Appliances 7f.i
V ne Slreet Ca ll 740 446 7398
1 888 818 0128
Used Furn ture Store Below Holt
day Inn j n Kanauga Twm Beds
Complete $1 t 5 Fu t Beds Com
p eta $135 Hutch $75 Oak
Table 4 Chairs $80 Dressers
Couches 740-446 4782

530
Buy o r sell A ver lne Ani Que&amp;
1124 E Main Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am 10 600 pm Sunday 100 to
.e 00 p m 740 992 2526 Rus s
Moore owner

Merchandise
WARM UPI

2 Bedrooms W W Carpet Nalu
ral Gas Heat In Galt pols 740
44 6 2003 740 446 1409

Bec:keJt 0 I Burner Assembly
$300 740 446-2278 Altere PM
Ekldroom Su t W th Metal Frame
Home lntenor Baby Clothes Boys
2 &amp; 4T Matermfy Clothes Plu6
Sczes 740 367 5027 740 367
7705
Bundy B Flat Clar net Bundy II E
Flat Suophone Gemlnherdt
Flute Variety Of Curren! And Re
tired Ty Beanie BabiM And A
Smllh And Corona Word Proces
sor All In Mint Condlflonl 740
245 5443
Ceramic Top Aange 2 Years Old
5600 Paid $1 400 Commode In
Good Shape $10 740 446 0753
Churcr. pews for sate 12 twe ve
foot 4 ten foot $200 each 740
949 2217
Combuslioneer Stoker
Stove $500 740 388 9771

Coal

DIABETIC PATIENTS You May

Be Entitled To Receive Your D a
betic Supp lte.s At No Cost To
You For More lnlormahon 1 888
677 6561
Ele ctric Scooters Wheelcha rs
New And Used Sla rway Eleva
lors Wheelchair And $cooler
Lifts Bowman s Homecare 740
446 7283
FIREWOOD

Cut Split Delivered Jared 740
446 6566 Chad 740 448 1271
For Sale Fill D r1 WI t Deliver
304 875 6734
For sa le member$hlp a1 Royal
Oak flesort Club make offer 740
653 0347
Grubbs Plano tuning &amp; rep a r~
Problems? Need Tuned?. Call the
plano Or 740 446 4525
Heavy Treslle Table Wtth 2
Benches $200 Large Chest
Freezer $75 Bolh Good Cond
11ont 740 245 0603

JET

One bedroom apt In Pt Pleas
ant furnished exira mce &amp;
clean No pets 304 675 1386

540 Miscellaneous

2 Bed ooms $375/Mo Plu s Uhl
Ues &amp; Deposit No Pets 740 446
4'113 7404460879

Beautiful brand new Bassett sola
bought for 1800 sell lor 5375
304 675 1843.

Kitchen Cabmets Cooktop Sink
Range Hood tor sale Remodel ng
See Before Removed 740 446
0418

Mob1le home stte available bel
ween Alllens and Pomeroy call
740 385 4367

~

Beanie babies lor sale Bear&amp;
$30 $40 Buy a Beanle gel $10
off a bear Currents ancl retired 9
3 October 19 23 Riebel t Used
Cars 740 985 9835

One bedroom apartmen t n M d
dleporl al ullhttes patd $100 de
postt $270 monlh call 740 992
7806 Bam 5pm

Cl role Motet Lowest Aales In
Town Newly Rem odeled HBO
Cinema~~: Showtlme &amp; Disney
Weekly Fjates Or Monthly Rates
Co('lstructlon Workers Welcome
740 441 5698 740.441 5167

1 5 BEDROOM HOUES FROM

6 Awnlngl 34 36 38 70 mchea
Wcdths 34 Shuttert 35 39 83
tnches n Lengths Good Cond
Needs Painting! Price to Sate!
740 «ll-&lt;)639

AERATION MOTORS
Repa1 ed New &amp; Rebu It In Stock
Call Ron Evans I BOO 537 9528

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths $300/~o
304 736 7295

Pome oy four bedroom HUO W!
D newly rem odeled near play
ground references StD call 740
992 68a6 after 5 ~Opm

For Sale/ Assume l oan 1994
Claylo n/ Eastw nd 14x60 tw o
bed roo m on e bath 304 675
5056

c

450

1994 Norris Clayton t4X70 2
Bedrooms 2 Baths 2 Decks CA
8X10 Metal Building 740 256
6851

Eas y F nance Aenl ers &amp; 1st
T mo Home Buyers We Have 2 &amp;
3 Bedrooms Around $200 Month
L m ted Ttme Only t 1 800 251
5070

1 Bedroom Economical Gaa
Heat WID Hook Up Near nema
$2791Mo Plus UUUtlee Deposit &amp;
Lease Required 740-446 2957

1 Bed oom House Across From
Campus $300/Mo Deposll Re
qulred 740 441 1005

Ni ce clean 3br references &amp;
deposit no pets 304 675 5162

3BR Assume Loan
Low Month y Pay!'llllnts
Financing Available
304 755 5566

1 Bedroom Economical Gat
Heat WID Hook Up Near Cinema
$279/Mo Plus Utlllfi8S Oeposll &amp;
Lease Required 740-4-t&amp;-2957

Ntce Clean 2 bedroom referenc
Washer fOyer Hook Upl 304 675
5162

Price reduced 1990 Spruce
R dge 14X70 mobile llOme ve y
good condi tion 2 bedrooms 1 &amp;
1/2 baths washer &amp; dryer slovo
refrigerator cen tra l air Sxa out
side bu ld nQ Immediate posses
slon 740 992 6582

m ..

...

,.,

310 Homes for Sale
Appllcat ons Stung Taken For
Delivery Person Cook /Wanress
J manetli 1 P1zza 30 Pleaaanl
Valley Road A10 Grande

Fu na c~ Hea t Pumps &amp; Air Co n
d t onlng Frae Estl ma1e s1 II You
Don Ca I Us We Both Los e
740 446 6306 t eoo 29 t 00913
1982 Olds 9tl Regency a~t c ellen t
condition Armstrong Fuel o I fur
nance I 55 000 BTU Amana
t2 000 BTU air co ndtl lo ner st
lJnde r wa rran ty $t 200 00 30 4
882 2925

f'rlmeetar $49 Installation only
$25 99 per month lree bonus
800 263 2640
Quasar VCR w th 60 tapes 2 ker
osene heaters rolottller small
eleelrlc edger 740 992 1304 be
lore noon o after 5pm
Red &amp; whlta concession trailer wf
co11on candy &amp; funnel cake rna
chine tountaln dnnks etc Meets
heallh depl requirements/sup
plies $6000 304 8132 2246
Aoma 1ce Books Good Condition
58ooksl$1 oo 7404469415
SALE:'KIIchen Cab nets 63°A.OFF
list pr ce I purchased by the end
of Oc!OI:Ier Free n llOme est
mates lrl County Dis tributor s
Inc 1 aoo 352 3147

Hand tamed cockatels 304 882
3436

=~u,:r~ 1 f_.;.:;

=
1

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

61 0 Farm Equipment
t996 JD 970 Utility Tractor 4WO
33HP Diesel 85 Hrs 513 000
1998 JD 513 Rotary Cutler
$1 000 1997 Bush Hog 60 08
Gradmg Blade $500 Call 740
446 120ll
24
USED
STOCK

TRACTORS

IN

F nflnc:tng As Low As 6 9% With
Jottn Deere Cr~lt Approval On
Used Tractors Carm1chae11
Far\)1 &amp; Lawn Gallipolis Ohio
740~62412 Or 1800594 U11
Also See The "New" 4000 Series
Compact Uti I ty Tractors Several
In Stock
Agco-AIIII Special
Trac:tor 5670 63 PTO H P 4
wheel drive world famous air
cooed diesel engine Goodyear
Rad ~I 1 res all 4 wheels lnde
pendent 540 and 1000 PTO Hy
draullc wet dtsc brakes all 4
wheels Dtfferenttal lock front &amp;
ear dual hydraultc remotes
ROF'S and Canopy 18~~:16 Trans
mss lon fully synchronized lor
ward &amp; reverse shuttle zinc
coated slleet metal 4 year or
4000 hour drive tra in warranty
Check your JD MF FNH or CIH
d'eale r and see how long they
warranty there dr1ve Iran Keel
er s Service Center St Rt 87 Pt
Pleasanl &amp; R pley Ad leon WV
25123 304 895-31374
To 30 Massey Ferguson Tractor
W th Bush Hog $3 000 74Q 446
7833
Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Res dent1a And Commarc al
lawn Equlpmenl Compac t Utllty
Tractors From 20 To 39 HP All
s zes 01 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Tractors Hay Equipment John
Deere Skid Steer Loaders Check
Wllh Us About Financing On
Lawn Tractors And Low Rate Fl
nanc ng On New An d Used
Equ pmenl Carm chae s Farm &amp;
lawn Gallipolis OH 740 446
2412 1 800~1111

630

Livestock

12 Year Old Saddle Bted Gelding
Broke To A de /Onve Sorrell With
3 While Legs 16 Hands Tall Oan
Hershberger 1 1563 Slate Route
141 Pat ot
18 mon1h old hereford cross
1200 1300111 740 992 7458
Custom Slaugh ter and Process
lng Deer processing ahd sum
mer sausage WV Sausage Co
907 4th 51 New Haven WV 304
882 3194
Ho ste n heifers 4 to freshen In
No'.'ember 4 10 freshen In De
camber call M ke 740 992 2143
or 740 992 6373 after 5pm
L mousin bull 6 yea s old gen
tie registered 304 458 1727
Horses two mature mares very
gentle one Is a Sorre tine s a
Bay 740 446 4792

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Round Bales 01 Ha'f Stored In
Barn 740 245 51 !'7

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale

91 Probe aUiomatlc elc PW
runs &amp; looks great highway miles
$3600 740 742 3711

Waterline Specla 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pression Fitt ngs In Stock
RON

EVANS

ENTERPRISES

Jackson Ohio 1 aoo 537 9528
We buy anllques and partial or
complete estates baby Items and
o d Flestawara Jeans Furn lure
&amp; Antiques Tuesday through Frl
day 11 am 4pm 145 North Sac
ond Middleport
Woodburne r &amp; Coal Add On To
Furna ce Blower t30 000 BTU s
28 Logs $300 740 367 7413 AI
ter 3 P:M

550

Building
Supplies

Block b lcM sewer pipes wind
ows lintels ate Claude Winters
A o Gra nda OH Call 740 24 5
5121

560

Pets for Sale

A Groom Shop Pet Groommg
Fealurlng Hydro Bath
Don
Sheets 373 Geocg~ s Creek Ad
740 446..0231
Adorable AK C par co orad
Cocker Span e s ava ta ble n
2wks Bred lor fam ly pe ts
S250 ea 3 references 74 0 99 2
64 12

Wesl
•• 4
• Q J 5
• K Q ee
• Q 9 ••

L

92 Probe 3 llr 5 speed a r 75K
call 740 992 370 t
19?8 Chevy P ck Up 1f2 Ton Call
Alter 6 PM 740 446-3243
1980 1i90 HONDA CARS $100
$500 Pollee Impounds AI
Makes Ave laDle Call 1 BOO 522
2730 Ext 4420

1982 C41tlass Supreme 2 0 260
V8 Go od Ctlndtl on St 500 oo
F rm 740 992 4568
tl:laa Buick lasabre Limited two
door coupe every option new
1res like new condlllon 92 ooo
actual miles 5 0 11er lJ a $2200
DlckWr.lted 740 992 6719
1986 Mercedes 190 E Nice car
second owner $6 800 304 675
6539

A red al e Pupp es AK C A eg s
tered Ma e &amp; Female Ex ce llen
Wat ch Do gs Goo d w th Ch ld
ren 1200 740 388 8692

199 Cor s ca 6 Cyl Me r We 1
Manta ned $1 99 5 740 367
7264 Home 740 441 7p03 Work

AKC Poodle Male t 1f2 Year s
Good W tO Children Shol s
Wormed $75 00 40 256 6t62

199 1 Gao Stor m 5 Speed Good
Shape $2 500 1986 N ssan P ck
Up 5 Speed $900 740 2j6 11&amp;7

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
'

1980 1990Trucks$100 $500
Pollee Impounds
All Makes Available
'---1~8oo-c:..:mc.:.._22_s.:;2_X:..3:..90.:....1__;. :
1984 Chevy KS Blazer Camper ,
Spelcal 4x4 AC AT New Tires I
Exhuast Must Sam $3 500 OBQ ~
740 448 3580 Leave Message ,
Before 5 00
1

t

.,

t985 Conversion van new motor •
new transmls&amp;lon asking $3500 '
740 992 7637
,..}

THE BORN LOSER

t91~5 cg~~~~f~nTa:~~ocix~~~~~ .-

Garage Kept Loaded! Douglas
Runyon 74D-446-1272

,

WI-IH 00 '(00 WN-IT
c.l Tl-\1') CALL

1996 Chevy S 10 4 WD Air Till
Cruise 5 Speed $13 100 740
367 0241

'I
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C.t-\IE

~ LITILf ~ !'O!OiflLE.t &lt;.U CJ.Jfl,-,

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l'roOOC.T ~Q.I( Al":i:li - - - 1

GP\11-\EI:.~ ~

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I

Motorcycles

94 Honda 4 wheeler 300 2WD
running boards windshield 1
lender flares gun rack e•cellent
condlt on $33QO 304 882 2457

198 5 Harley FxR cus tomized
towrlder several trQphys too
miJch to hst 11 000 mile&amp; no
reaeonable oiler refuep,d lor Info l
304 676 6539

0

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1983 Open Bow Fiberglass Brink •
er Boat - 140 HP Inboard Me(
cruiser W th Trailer Fair Shape
Runs Good $2 000 Or Trade For
Camper Or 4 Wheeler 740 448- • •
4514
•
1990 Cobia 18 open bow 120r',.
hp top and bOw cover goOd condillon $5000 740 992 0017

'

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1

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I,

LET'S COII\PM'~
SIR AND SEE IF'
60T Ti'IE SAME ANSWERS

''TRUE FALSE MA~SE,W~O KNOWS'
Wll'f' NOT' SURE WHEN' TI-IE'f'
DID' SOMETIME,! DID NOT, W~O
ME' IT WAS DARK,AND EVERVONE
WAS 6ETTIN6 IM-j6R'f'''

I

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1

•••

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes
•
~~~~~~~~~---; ·•

For Sale 28 Ft Camper Price Re: ~:
duced Atso 18Ft Nomad 740..w•
2459613740.4469833

·&lt;
~
•

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Home
.,.
'

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BASEMENT
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Res de nttal or commercial wring
new serv ce or repa rs Master Ll
censed electnclan Aldenou,
Electr cal WV000306 304 675
1786

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION "I 1111nk your whole lifo shows 1n your face and you
ahould be proud ollhat • - Lauren Bocall

'::~:~:~' S©\\~lA-~t.trs·

WOlD

I AMI

141to4 ~r ClAY I POUAN - - - - - - - - - - -

0 four
iearrange '-""' of
ocrambltd words

tht

be

IrI I I 1 I
low to farm four llmpl. word1

BEAMOA

2

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THUAN

1111'

I

~R;u~H~E;::s~~~o:,'

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A good adage IO live by
"Swallow angry words 1t s bet·
ter than hllvrng to • • • • •• 1
Complere !he chuckle quoled
by flllmg In the m ssmg words
you develoJ) fro,., step No J below

OCTOBER19I

New gas tanks &amp; body parts D &amp;
R Auto R play WV 304 372 ~
3933 or 1 800 273 9329
~

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Nordl

Bronco Flung Mower · Hero1c HOW LONG

:c---'-=--------------'' '.

840

WHt

Puo

-

I remember when people worned as much about how
much rt cost to buy someth1ng rnstead of HOW LONG

Budgel Priced Transmlssiorr~
and Engines All Types Acces.' ...
To Over 10 000 Transmissions t
740 245 5677
•

WATERPROOFING

--tile-

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
;;::-:;::-:-:--:::-:--:---=---.:.=~~

Unconditional 111e1 m$ guarantee
Uilcal reference s furnished Es
tabllshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446 oato 1 aoo 287 0576 Rog
ers Waterproof ng

I

10 Lodge

11 Ninny
13 Cur11et
11P-ol

20 More
22 Child •

L

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lmproveme11ts

Pr"'*'u,.

7lMge-un

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~

1996 Genera11ons 3 Ponlooo
Boat live well 1997 au Injected
Mariner tl llllrlm Less than 10 1
Hrs $8 500 Shawn 304 882 1
3718
- 1

SERVICES

I

for Love

~~·mb

19 Slm_,_

By Phillip Alder
When you re decl""'r 1&lt; 11 more
1mportan1 to have your en1nes
stra1ght or 10 count wmners'
Today s deal occurred durmg the
European Un1on Champronsh1ps.
held lust Apnl m Salsomaggrore.
haly How would you play m four
hearts• The defense begrns wllh the
d1am011d kmg a dtamond to East s
ace and a trump sw11ch
To many Amencan eyes. Nonh s
hand '" too weak for a one-spade
opemng Yet 11 has a wonderful s1x
card major some suppon for the o1h
er maJOr and excellent controls (aces
and kmgs) If you add two d1stnbu
non pomts for the long spades (do not
&lt;:ounl shortage pomls when conlem·
plallng an npenmg b1d) you amve at
13 enough to open
Rather than lrymg to guess who
holds the dub queen you should play
to establisH dummy s spade sui!
Wm the hean sw11ch. cash the other
top heart play a spade to dummy's
kmg d1scard a club on the spade ace,
and rulf a spade m hand Let's
assume West overruiTs and returns
the diamond queen (Dtscardmg ~&lt;n 1
beuer) Rull 1n the dummy and trump
another spade m hand Fmally play
a dub to dummy's king and drscard
your last losmg dub on a lop spade
II " vital to count Winners and
check entrres You plan to wrn 10
tn&lt;:ks v1a three spades lour hearts
one dwmond ruff m the dummy and
1wo dubs To esrabhsh the spades.
assummg the hkely 4-2 break you
need three enlnes two lor the spade
rutls rn hand and one 10 reach the setwmner These must be a top spude,
---. "' "'" d•amond ruff and the dub kmg

1990 S1ratos 20 Pt Fish &amp; S~t t
175 HP Evlnrude Call For Detail&amp; :
Best Offer 740 245-9109
111

790

o.tfor
4 AclreN
Cempborll

n.m

word

For sale 88 Ford Ranger truck T'.
call304-675 4014
'

•

clollllng

Monday, Oct 19 1998

•

f

5F-

Which Is more
important?

1993 Ford t /2 Ton XlT 2 Whee!"
drive 48 000 Miles 740 388 •

760

3~

21 !loct.ly111f91'

1992 Ford Custom heavy hall ton •
6 cytmder gooct condti!On lookS'
good Tonneau cover new 6 ply.
fires standard shift O¥erdrlve •
$5500 call 740 742 7605 leave•
'
...assa'"

Summers no t overl Kawasak
STS Jet ski still under warrantY
three seater 83 r.orsepower
bouglll new July ol 97 lllree
matching Kawasa~l s~ vests and
lraller a I go wltll It Priced to sell
$4200 740 949 2203 or 740 949
2045 will constde tra de l or ~
good pontoon boat

men--

Operung lead: • K

1400

2~11

1 lnwhlllwoy?

2

II

1 991 Chevy work truck
Ser[es 6 cylinder aulomall~ ~
72 000 miles runs very good :
nl~ truck 15250 OBO 740 742 '

1986 Olds 88 Roya Brougham 1 --~-------,-------__:_
l 15 460 M es New G M Trans
Appl ance Parts Anct Service All
mlstlon $1 750 740-446 3407
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex'
parlance All Work Guatan teed
1988 Bonnav lie lE maroon 4dr
French City Maytag 740 448'
new llras &amp; brakes good cond
7795
$3 200 304 675 5792 after Spm
C&amp;C Genera
Home Ma i n
1988 Suba ru Justy GL STO lenence Painting vlnyl sid ing
Transm is sion All New Fronl carpentry doors w ndows baths
Brake Aolors Battery Front Tires
mobile home 1epa1r and more For
$650 740 446 3407
free esttmate call Chel 740 992
6323
t 9B9 Chevy Suburban Loaded
Excellent Cond1! onJ 125 000 Profess ional 20yrs experhwc9
Mnes S9 ooo 740 245 5797
w th all masonery brick block &amp;
stone Als o room addlllons ga
1990 Geo M~ l r o STO Transn 6
s on I as 00 0 Miles New Head rag es etc Free ashmates 304
773 9550
Gasket New C utch $1 650 740
41:\6 3407
1990 Plymoulh Las e,
8 4 cy
inder 5 speed loaded 30 4 937
268

CASUALTY

•
1500 •

740

.,.3

8oulb

4•

TWAR WAS ONE

720 Trucks for Sale

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

• Q 10 9 3
• 10 4
t A 1 54

Vulnerable Both
De,tler North

91 VW Passat llatlon wagon "' 'I
tpNd .auiO 67 400 miles NADA

9082

-

8oullo
.. J
•AK917
t ID 8 3
• A J 10 5

Sharp 96 red Camaro Z 28 350'!
lT1 engine S!Bjldard power
windoWs/locks eXtras S15 000' 1
30+675-1251
j

Dish $19 99 per Monlh Ask
About Free Programming No
Credit Chec~ From a OOAM
9 OOPM 1 800 325 7836

Wanted advertising collect ble~
Coke Pepsi etc Including old t n
s gns 740 992 5053

I

17800 asking se ooo 740 742
f312

RCA

Sola 92 loflg southweste~n co
ors &amp; design like new $200 740
985 3595

199~Dodge Neon Automatic
NC S&lt;850 OBO 740-379 2726

• 6 3 2
• J 1
• K 1

Hima layan Ktrten5 5100 Each
"flonllac F1reb1rd 3 4 V tl
74Q-379 2282
I 'O:I.UliO UIIM Full Power "f. Topl
:.:::.:=-:~=::________
T1re' Excelle nt Conchllon
Jack Russell terr ier puppies 7 740-~2300
weeks old IHst shols wormed
1997 Chevy Lumina AM/F~ AJC '
tails docked $250 each 7&lt;40
698-7055
Crulae CMtrol Excellent Condl
tlon Mutt 5ell $1t SOO 740-682
French C1ty Pel Groommg by Ap
3446
polnlment ·uttr• Wllh B8thlng
Syllem· 650 second Ave Galli
1997 Dodge Stratut PW Au
pobs 740 446-1521
tomatlc AfC 26 000 Mllel ... r
$9 300 OBO 740-379-2126
:

86 Sunblrd S t 200 OBO 79
Chevy Camara excellent condl
ton $4000 740 ~85 9820

SATELLITE SYSTEMS 18

•AKI752

•

~ I/W-\llt:$~ ~r:,;;..

~~A~S~T~R~O~-~G~R~A~P~H~=;_i~CAPRICORN

!Dec 22-Jnn 19)

LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) DISCI·
phne ,. e&lt;senual 10 your hnuncml
allaii'S today AvOid buym g thmgs
yo~ can I allord or makmg loans to
those who are a poor nsk Show some
prudence 1 Trymg 10 patch up 11 bro
ken romarrce' The Astro Graph
Mat&lt;:hmnker can help you understand
what to do to make the relatiOnship
work Mall $2 75 to Matchmaker c/o

You d JUSt be askmg lor a &lt;lash ol
w1lls today 11 you attempt to mhltrute
groups or chqoes whose 1deals are
d!Umemcully opposed to yours Mmgle wllh your own kmd
AQUARIUS (J,m 20 Feb 19)
When we try too hurd "llh an excess
"'
ol emotion we tend IO sliT up more
problems for ourselves I han ne«s
sary QUiet yourself and set your sm ls

!his newspaper PO Box 1758 Mur
ray Hill Stauon New York NY
10156
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22 )

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
PIS&lt;:es knows bemg mtkx1ble " .1

m calmer w,tlers

lut1le behav10r Nevertheless yuu
1mgh1 lind II u11fi cuft to y1eiJ ,my

~~~,:k:~~~~~~~~;e 1~0~~~~~~~~;~

ground to those who oppose yuu
today
ARIES(Mar.:h21 Apnll9) It sm
your ntllure to be shunng and g•vmg
but you m1ghl be.:nme uncharacter·
1St&gt;&lt; tlly llghl lhled on holdmg onto
what you deem to be solely your.;
today
TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20)
Don 1 mvlle trou~le or problems

olhers today Lei them know you re
w1llmg to cooperate Associates will
take their cues Irom you
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) It won I do you any good 10
dodge what you re reqUired to do
today Your tasks and duue~wrll no!
diSappear by their own volition Roll
up your sleeves tnd gctlo work 1

'

when revrewmg 1ssues w1th your
spouse or partner today lnste.td of
lakmg an opposmg pos111on look lor
ways to •omprom.se
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) Tasks
thut m1ghl appear di&lt;tusteful to you
w1ll only bel:ome more thlhcult to
accomplish 11 you approach your
re!iponsabthltl!s w1th a neguttve outlook
CANCER (June 21 July 22)
Because you m1~ht have trouble
attt:mpllng to

dts .... uh~.; )OUr honest

feelmgs today you nu"t he extra •au·
llous when you a1e awund people
you genumely dislike
LEO (July 21 Aug 22) There sa
P'""b1hty that your "'"" could be
thwarted by unloreseen obstacles
today However don 1 t.tke out your
lruslrnllons on mn&lt;X:enl by~tanders
VIRGO (Aug 2~ Sept 22)jt you
trent othe" 1n a cool lash1on today
why should you expe&lt;:t warmth und
cooper.mon m return ' Remember

wh,u goes uround

L:Oill~~

around

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Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 19, 1198

Pomeroy • Mfddleport. Ohio

Par~nts uneasy about way today's children are growing up
By DEIRDRE DONAHUE
USA TODAY
On the surface. the maJoroty of
Amen can choldrcn enJoy hves of lux·
ury and ...,ret). 'The 101despread pestolent ~oiler- of the pa&gt;lloke poho have
'am;hed. Molhon; of muldle-dass
~'d' pia} "oth computers whose
'"''ant "'""' to knowledge would
ma•c "holar&gt; of earlier eras weep
wuh en'·) Cm:npanic~ \ te lO enierwon and C&lt;MCI them - from Nickclodcon '" ll"TJCY to Gap. It is a
world of rar &gt;eats and bike helmets,
. hahy ""'"''""and parenting' class.
Yet a per'a."vc unease grips many
people "hen they li••k at children on
th" wumry Cnmc may be dropping

A generation ago. most people
say, parental onOuence and hmned
access to information protected chit
dren 's mnoccnce
Today.that has changed to degree'
un=n in prevwus dccalles. lc'vmg
children exposed 10 a raw carni\ al of
sex talk, scandal ·and con&gt;umensm.
Even the government has felt the
need to step in. prev«Jnng televi;um
.and the movies to rate their content
and fordng TV. manufacturers 10
install "v:chips" to all ow users to
block inappropriate shows. For ns
part, indu&gt;try is putting warning
lahe ls on suggestive CDs and &gt;elling
software programs like Net Nanny ro'
parent5 can limit their kids ' access to

In part, they blame the technol..,y
'The parenu at the Baltimore focus mort likely 10 hold this view. as are
that ha&gt; exploded in choldren'' love\ groups sound embaulcd. The mood is blacb and the elderly.
In .,,.,nee, kids have a full-time JOb gnm. They gather on a recent
Plrenu feel "they are fighting
tl\c..c days when ir.comes to "..crecn evening at a nondescripl office pad. against • culture that is hostile," 5ays
tome," averaging an a&gt;tonishmg 35 to discuss the mosttmportant thing in social commenwor and radio lalk
hou~ a week on lelevi!llion, mo\'lc~ .
theor loves - their kids.
show hosl Michael Medved. '"There
'1deo and computer game; and
'These fathers and mothers range haS been a shift from a supportive
vtdeOiapcs, accordtng to a study coled acr&lt;»s America's social spectrum of culture ... to a deliberately assaultive
hy expert D~ane levin on her book. race. marital staiUs and economic culture." Just the Olher night, he and
"Remote Control Childhood."
achte"ement. Some have babies in his' wife had 10 answer quesuons
" Hnw can I fight 500 channel&gt; on diaper.. others teens in private about oral sex and Presidenl Clinton.
TV '!" a1k&lt; Patricia !Omsey. a prMc&gt;- schools.
asked by one of theit preteen daugh"" at Mount Ho,lyokc College and
Dcspite their ohvious and not-so- ten.
the mother of two boys 16 and 9. "As oiJv ious differences. the majority feel • The presidential scandal, in fact,
a parent. I'm dealing with things my under siege from a culture 1ha1 has driven home to many parent5 just
parents ne,•er had to deal with." ,
.educes their children with the notion how exposed their kids are to
" Everything is much more on the lhat happiness can be bough!. It bar- u~ly messages. William Galston
tahle th"e'iC days," says focus group mgcs them with images of sex, vio- is a professor of public affairs at the
and the co~nomy thrt\1 tng. but Amcr· offensive matenal.
· member Jeff Pollack, a Baltimore
lcnee and ,nihilism - a sense backed Univeuity of Maryland and a fonner
Sti ll , parents say. dcapitc tho~ accountant and the f~ther of a boy. up in a survey by 1he American Psy- domestic policy adviser to President
at:an' '-C'n'l' "'mcthing I) going very
'-''m n~ m thl! "ay "'c,ra1M! our young... effons and their uw n repeated
12, and a girl, 8. "Drugs. crime. SC&gt; chological Assocation. It found lhal Clinton.
·Aimt''' nme tn 10 people in a new attempt~ ar inrcrvcnuon. they m~tl y .. .' coming from the ncwlto, com1ng hy time children leave elementary
By the time he got home from
USA TODAYICNN/Galiup Poll say arc left to watch. worry and wonder from the TV, t•oming from mo' r c~. ...:hool, they have seen an estimated work on the Friday afternoon that the
II 1"' h:.m.icr hKi&lt;ay to ra1sc kids to be
about the effect of a l'ullurc gone commg from CDs, coming from the S,OOO murders on 1V. ·
repon on the activities of Clinton and
.. ~.x&gt;d pe&lt;~plc" th:J~ it was 20 years to&gt;tc.
Nirucndo."
·
.. Kids become artificially sophis- ''former intern Monica l..ewinsky was
a,go. .md lV~.o in three ~y parents arc.
··All parl'n~~ fee l an ommnu'
Parent s also despair that in J'I'JH . llcated," says focus group memher · released, his 13-year-old son " had
dntn'g a wor.,c JOh. , ·
sense- like diJoJtant rumble!'. of thun - childre n\ live; differ dramatical lv "llwmas Roche. father of two daugh- read 400 pages of (it) on the Internet.
, The n;a,on~ hch ind thi s· shi ll arc dcr mo\:ing do!'lcr and doM'r - that from the childh&lt;!Ods thcv remember. tm. I I and 17. "They talk · like It's a Washington scandal every adonot alw:~ys ub• ious. True, bad even their child could he caught in Even allowing for nJ!\.f&gt;L:;)Inrcd re4.'ol - adults. they know things like aduiL,, lcscent boy can understand. You can 't
'd"""- illegal drug&gt; arid, most t'erri- lhe deluge of'adole.ccnt dy,functiun lectioijs, there has hecn &gt;lark ;, nd hut they 're nut. They don 't really shut it OUI."
f ) ant1. 'r:h,xjl ~h ootings. spike every ,,·! swee ping lhc nation .'' says Patricia
dcmonstrahle change.·
know what 's behind it."
The non-stop Oow of crude scxumom :1nd dad's fe:1r factor skyward. · Hctsch: ii\ her new hook... A "fribe
" Is it alannist or mcn; ly ~cn ... ihlc
'111i&gt;view extends far beyond Bal; aLty devoid of emotion or meaning .
Bu1 the poll and interviews nation- Apart: A Journey Into the Heart of lO ask about what happens to the timorc.
,
.preserus ··jiarents 1oday with a chaiw1dc fl.'\~&lt;.t l that this unea~ over American AdolcM:cnt·c."
souls of children nurtured. a.., in no
The USA TODAY poll re~ult s and lengc fac¢d by no previous generahn.ngliog up hab}' also is triggered by
For many parents. whether pol ill- past society. on image; of rape. tor· expert&gt; nationwide . underscore the tion. Pll(ents resent the raw language
the ou tward ly benign ac tivities go1ng cally left-leaning or right. we ll -off or turc, brlmbing~. and mas~m: rc thta! arc deep di;may and se nse of hopeless- and gamy subjects that permeate pop
on · in I he l11•ing rooms and dens of just gelling by, the mo&gt;l frightening chann eled in to the ir home&gt; from ne" that many people have aboulthc culwre. A sniggeri ng coarseness is
Amcncan homes. ·
issue today is the sense that' they can- infancy'! " ~rites Harvard scholar cultural environment in which they st.anQard fare on 1V. Wildly popular.
. USA TODAY explored the roots
not shield !heir children from outside Sissel a Bok in her new book. "May- are 1aisi ng chi ldren.
t'hc 'j;lfow ."South Park" presents 8of thi s nervousness, interviewing influence~ deemed undesirable.
hem:
Violence
a.&lt;
Puhlic·
EntertainFifty-onc
percent
of
those
polled
'
Y.ear-olds screaming profanity at each
1
dotcn\ of pro fess ional experts and
Although 75 percent of those ment."
ag ree wit" this despairing assess- other.: laughi ng about death and
practical ones.....:. the garent5 trying to polled say they have taken specific
Says Bill Mc Kihhcit , a writ er mcnt: "There arc so many bad inOu- ' learning ihat one of the character's
raise go&lt;'od kids in troubling times. sleps to do'jusl that , almost the same about c,ontcmporary life : " If one had cnccs out ther~ that even for parent~ mdiher is sexually promiscuous.
The newspaper sponsored' two focus number - 73 perce nt --:. concede set out to create a culture purposeful- who dO. a good job, there is a good
, ".My greatest concern for all my
groups of parents, in Baltimore, Md:, thai limiting chil&lt;(ren's exposure to ly damaging to children. you couldn 't · chanct their children will get into kids is growing up in a society where
to talk aho ut ·raising kids and polled popular culture ·is "nearly impossi- do much. better than Ameri ca at the serious trouble."
,
there is no hope. It comes through in
1.() 1.1 adulls nationwide.
b.le.:·
end of the 20th century."
Poorer poll respondents are even the music; it comes through TV, it

Tuesday

comes lhroo&amp;h movies,"· says focus
group mc:mfir l..auren -Blackwell, a
social worker and the mo!her of five
children, ages II to 22.
" And if there is a hope in these
mediums, il is a hope of, ' Be happy
in sex. be happy in drugs. be happy in
doing whatever yoli feel you want to
without worrying aboUI the consequences.'"
An array of prominent activist5,
writers and therapists share Blackwell 's concerns.
•
" I think parents feel like they are
sun:ounded by hostile territory." sayt
Gary L. Bauer, president ~r the conservative Family Research Council in
Washin gloll, D.C. Popular culture
today offers " too much emphasis on
violence and t\)0 much presentation
of explicit sexuality out5ide of the
context of marriage," says Bauer. He
points cut that "a million kids a day
wau:h the 'Jerry Springer Show: "
Actually, it's more than that. From
July 27-Aug. 23, according to
Nielsen Media Research, 800,000 ·.
children aged 2-11 and 1,390,000
children aged 12- 17 tuned into the
·talk show.
Among topics during this period :
A woman who is pregnant. by her
half-brother whik married to hi s
stepbrother and a, mother who lives
with her 13-year-o)d 's ex-boyfriend.
. It's no suoprise, then, that the poll
finds deep disapproval : 7.6 p,ercent
say TV, movies and 'popular music
are negative influences on children.
Ancf it may ~ worse than even
worried parent5 think.
" "People have"Wo idea what eight
year olds are exposed to," says Harvard 's Bok . To· research l)er book,
" Mayhem," she watched the violent
films and video games currently
avai lable

washed (a n apple is th e ideal
portable snack food). Ch illed, then
grated and eaten quick for a tangysweet snack. Washed, peeled then
'through a hand-cranked ,food
mill (for a sort of instant apple
sauce.
A favorite way to eat apples is to
.combine fresh. unpeeled apple slices
with a dab of natural pea"ul buller. It
makes a ,beautiful liule dessert or
late-night snack, and is nearly free
of all food \'ices.
Alone, apples we "low irt fat and
high in ,fiber. natural sugars and Vitamin C. They also contain modest
amounts of potasSium and vitamins
A and B complex.

run

But for some li ght-cooking apple
adventures. here arc two recipes
from Jay Solomon's " 150 Vegan
Favorites" (Prima Publishing, J99R,
$14).

Tomorrow: PwUy cloudy
High: 50s; t.ow: 30s

Meigs County's
Volume 49 • Nu mbe r 114

CINNAMON APPLESAUCE
8 tart apples, cored and diced (do
not peel )
4 to 5 tablespoons water
2 tablespoons honey
one-half .teaspoon ground cinnamon

.

In a medium saucepan. com hinc
the apples and water. Cook over
medi um heat for 25 to 30 minutes,
stirring occasionally, until the appl es
have a mashed consistency.

''

Lure .

Sprinkle tllis topping evenly qv'et
the fruit. Place the pan in the oven
and bake until the fruit is lender and
the lopping is lightly browned , 25 to
30 minuie•.
Remove from the oven an.d serve
warm.
Jf .. desircd, offer a frozen, non dairy dessert on the side.
Makes 6 servings.

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• 15-hp overhead·valve engine
• 38-ine-h mower deck
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I

..

By JIM FREEMAN
al.ong with four other highway proSentinel Newa Staff
jects.
.
Ll. Gov. Nancy Hollister and U.S.
Meigs Counly has sided with .
Rep. Ted Strickland debated ~ num- Strickland in lhe last three congres~r of subject5 in Pomeroy Moilday
sional elections. Hollister apparently
night, but one topic quickly and clear- sought t~ undo that s~ppo_rt by ac_cusly m~ to the front: highways.
ing Strickland of sab4i.lagmg proJects
The lwo were in Meigs County as · dear to Meigs counlians.
pan or a series of debates being held
"I want to see Route 33.finished
in each of the 14 counties compris- ... I want to see the Ravenswood Coning Ohio's Sixth Congressional Dis- nectar finished," she said.
trict.
"However. this pa.•t week. ConHollister, R-Marieua, is auempt- gressman. Strickland blocked $81
ing to wrest the congressional scat million that would finish the Athens
away from Strickland, 0-L~a..ville . to Darwin (highway) and $62 million
Approximately 150 allended 'the that would finish the Ravenswood
forum held at the :Meigs County Connector.
"(The Ohio Departmenl of Tra.tis• Senior Citizens Center, sponsored by
the Meigs County Chamber of Com- ponation) suppons this construction.
meree and Meigs County Council on ODOT suppons this' proposal and I
Aging.
believe the people of Meigs County
The event w\IS mo&lt;)erated by also support this proposal as do the
MCCoA Director Susan Oliver. Serv- citizens of JacKson, and Athens and
ing as panelists were Robert L. Ross and Lawrence. as well a.• Mr.
·: Wingell, publisher of the Ohoo Valley Strickland's home county of Scioto... "'
Publishing Co.: Tom Payne. broad"Despite this, the congressm•n
caster for WMPO radio: the Rev. _ went to President Clinton and a.•ked
Roland Wildman: and Gina Pellegri- him to kill the congressional Janno-Pines, director of the University of guage designating these project•." she
Rio Grande Meigs Center.
said.
Hollister quickly launched into the
To illustrate her point. she protopic of highways during her opening duced a brief le!!er from White
st~!~.!!l~llld&amp;Cusing., StriRkland last
Hous~Chief .o r.. ~laff Efik•ne B.
week or personally IICUUftng a mea-. Bowles to House Spea~erNewt Gin·
sure which wouldfund completion of grich: "This is to inform you that if
U.S. 33 from Athens to Darwin and the Omnibus Appropriations bill were
the U.S. 3311-77 Connector Road, to include ihe redesignation of the

By BRIAN J. REEI!I
Sentinel News Staff
Answering the 2000 U.S. Census
could go a long way in helping the
. community.
·
_
• . · Cynthia King of the Census
Bureau met Monday afternoon with
the Meigs County Commissioners
: and emphasized the imponance of the
involvement of local governments·in
promoting the census and encouraging local residents to return their cen·
sus forms .
. The federal government conducts
its head count every 10 years, and
bases much ,of its business on numbers derived from it.
According to King , communities
such as Meigs County with high .
numbers of low-income residents
, can be adversely allected because
low-income households, as well as
rural households and minority fami lies, are less likely historically to
answer the census.
This results in an inaccurate low
count for the community, w,hich then
affects the community's eligibility f':'r
federal assistance, including block.
grants and other programs.
,"People in rural areas like Meigs
County oflen feel that they ure overlooked by the government," King
said. "B~tthis could be because low-

• I

· ON LX SERIES LAWN
TRACTORS &amp; ATTACHMENTS.

•

..

Good Afternoon
Today's

i

Sentinel

l Sections - 16 Pages

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We didn't mean to make the decision tougtt, but with full-line of p~oducts 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.
/

w!Nw.deere.com

NOTHING RUNS LIKE A DEERE•

Single Copy- 35

.

Calendar
Classifleds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Sports
Weather

"-#

z

00
00

10

6:7·8
9

l
3
4&amp;5
3

Lotteries
•Offflr ends October 31. 1998 and •Ssub,18Ct to lf)PfOYed credit oo Jot11
06ere Credit Aewlvtng Plan. 101' llOil·conmtrual usi only. 10,. do'Ml
POI'I'Tl&amp;nt required Alter profTlC]IIOnat penod. linar~e charge Will.
lltlg•n to i'Ccrue att5"'\ APfl for transactiOns betwetll S1 .S OO&amp;
atld S5.000 and 13 9% APfl owr SS.OOO Wltll a &amp;o.SO per
mo1th minimum Pnces and Models may vary b1 dei16f.

OHIO
Pick 3: 7-8-2 : Pick 4: 9-2·9-0
Buckeye 5: 4-18-2 2-25-D
W.VA,

Daily 3: 6-1-9: Daily 4: 2-6.-0-7
0

t' .•

•.

IC,lC)!\

Oh to YDlley Puhlishinw, Co

Cea_t~

Spending
package
vote set ,
for today

· DISCUSSING HIGHWAYS - Highway fundIng was the blggeattoplc at Monday's debate
between U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Lucasvllle,
left, and Lt. Gov. Nancy ·Hollister, A-Marietta,
l'ortsmouth by-pass of the Appalachian Ohio Highway System, the .Pres'
ident would veto the bill."
"Finishing these r'?ads is ,bigger
than the election," she said.
Earlier.· this . year. Holli ster
annoum:ed a pl an to use add itional
money from the Appalachian Regional Commission and matching s(~le
transponation dollars 10 help com,
plete live southeastern Ohio highway'·
projects under a proposed redesigna-·
.!ion .of a portion., of the . Ohio
Appalachian corridor in Scioto County.
0uring a later question on economic development, Strickland said

right, Strickland's chalienger In the Nov. 3 plectlon. The two debated before a crowd of about ·
150 at the Meigs County .Senior Citizens Center.

he is committed to the Ravenswood community. to do it in a surreptitious
Connector and said Hollister'• com· way. to slip .it in the budget bill.to gel
ments that he wao,; proud of having the a nonhern Ohio congre~s rn~n to do it
funding stripped from the federal without any consu ltation with Scioto
budget were "not true, absolutely not · County commissioners and to do it in
true."
a way that i.&lt; devoid of sunshine and
"I was proud of the fact that we public discussion .'" he added.
didn't all ow u community to IJe
Rather, he blamed the Voinovich
roiJbed of highway mileage without administration and ODOT for lack of
any consultation with their local progress on the project, quoting a letcounty commi«ioners for political ter from Pomeroy attorney und Route
1_3 advocate . Stev•~ Story stalin"•
purposes," he' .s·'o
• 'd .
"Those. of us-.who. live. here in "promises have been maue to this
southern Ohio undersland right and county aM promise&lt; have been broWrong. and it 's wi-nng to steal. and it· s · keq.."
~
wrong to steal mileage from a co rn - .
"I have gotten nearly $5 million
munity th at has been promised to that
(Continued on Page 3)

Census Bureau s~eks -L
.l ocal help _
w ith count

:::;

LX173 Lawn Tractor

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

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0

Hometown· Newspaper

Strickland, Hollister argue project
funding during Pomeroy debate

In a large mixing bowi. combine
the oatmeal, Oour, sugar and cinnamon.
',~
With a fork or pastry ·tool,.eul_lhe
margarine into the dry ingredient~ ·
until the mi'&gt;ture has a crumbled lex-

--·

New
York
posts
win
over Patriots
Page4

Congressional
candi·d ates spar.
over highways

tli

Stir in the honey and cinnamon.
juice of I lime
Remove the apples from the heat
one-half teaspoon ground nutmeg
and let cool for ~bout fi.ve minutes.
. one-half cup old fashioned rolled
Transfer the ,mashed apples to a "oal,lileal
.,
·
'
blender and blend until ,smooth, . ' bne-half cup unbleached all-pur·
·
about 5 seconds. (For a chunky .po~e Oour
sauce, mash the apples wjth a spoon
one-half cup brown sugar
by hand.)
one-half teaspoon ground cinna- .
Chi ll the sauce for at least an moo
hour before serving.
four tablespoons vegan (dairyMakes 4 c up~ .
free) margarine (soy-based versions
widely available)
APPLE-PINEAPPLE CRISP
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.
I can (20 ounces) pineapple rings,·
In a mixing bowlr combi~e the
drained
pineapple, apples, honey, lime juice
2 large, tart apples. sliced
and nutmeg. Spread the fruit mixture
2 table ~P9ons vegan honey (or over the bouom of an 8-inch-square
regular honex)
. baking .•dish.

Final days' rush toward pork, Page 2
World Series resumes tonight, Page_5
A memorial for the fallen, Page 10

Today: Sunny ·
High: 60s; Low: 40s

- ----Fall_'s fre.sh apples are a boon to vegetarian diets----By CORYDON IRELAND
Gannett Rochester Newapa·
pers
·To buy the hesl apples, buy fresh,
buy regional and ~uy now. Fall is
when 'the apples fall.
Look for apples that are finn and
bri ghtly colored . At· home, store
them in the rcfr ige r~tor. Those conditi ons prese rve an Sipple 's moisture
anJ ce ll struct ure, f;tctors that retain
crispness.
There arc eating apples (Deli' dous. Emp ire, Mutsu, Macon. Macintosh. Stayman) and tarter, fonner
apple va rieti es that sh ine on pies. like·
Granny Smith .
One can eat them whole' and

Sports

October 20, 1998

Weather

inCome residents and minority residents are hard to count."
The commissioners were a.•ked to
assislthe Cen~us Bureau by promoting the census and by working closely with village governments und
township trustees in encouraging residents to participate.
.
King also said that local residents

By ALAN FRAM
Aasociated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Friend, and
foes alike expect the House and Senate to vote decisively in favor of a
$500 billion spending package that
finally would end tile IOSth Congress
and send lawmakers home for their
re-election baules:
The Hou ~e planned to vote today
on the mass ive measure, a compro·
mise that congres~onal leaders
'reached last week with President
Clinton. Senate passage is likely
Wednesday - less th:Jn two weeks
from the Nov. 3 congressional e.lec- .
lions.
Tbe package - said to be 4.000
pages long- would linance dozens
of agencies from the huge Department of Health and Human Service.
'to the tiny U.S. Institute of Peace. It
also has billions for financially ailing .
farmers and the Pentagon, $1.2 bil lion to begin hiring more · reac~ers.
$18 billion f"r the International Monetary Fund, modest· tax breaks for
'some busi nesses and families. and
provisions aimed at strengthening
anti -~ru ~ law enforcement.
House conservatives, perhaps the
likeliest 'source of opposition. were
said to be split. The measure contained wins for them. su~h as language blocking federally financed
needle exchange progmms for d~g
addicts.
'
But it also had items thatthey.dislike, such~ using anticiplue&lt;;l federal surpluses to pay for both the IMF
, money and $20.8 billion for socalled emergencies like preparing
federal computers for the year 2000 .
They were particularly angry
about the emergency spending provisions because of Clinton's calls l()
not use the suoplus until a way is
found to cure Social Security's longterm budgetary problems.
&lt;
'" It 's. unconscionabl~ . it's 1;1"11· •

will work in their own communities

for the census as census-takers .and
other project employees. Testing for
the positions has begun~ and 40 people will be hired to work in Meigs
·County .at a rate of $7 .50 per hour.
· Jim Milliron of Wayne Nationa!
Forest and Paul While, a district
forester, presented the commissio.ners
with u check.. for '$39,554.82, «presenting the county-wide share of
revenue derived from logging in
Shade River Forest.
The funds will be divided among
the commissioners and Olive Township, while the Eastern Local Schoof
District will receive an additional
$19.000 under legislation passed in

count. Areas like Meigs County are often ~nal­
PARTICIPATION ENCOURAGED - Cynthia
lzed for low jl,\lrtlclpatlon, she said. At right Is
Kln9, s regional worker for Census 2000, met
Commissioner
Jeffrey Thornton.
with the Meigs County Commissioners Monday
to en,courage local promotion of the head
,
·
b
·' 1
Thornton ulso suid th at work on
wilh the co mmi ss ioners to discu ss recommended that the p1:m e upua1996. 'h k ·
·
· p1an, cd, s·ao·d tltal the L:nmmiss ioners th e plan could in\.: orporilte &lt;.'~nsus
ng the county .s strategoc
Th e c ec IS presented annually to upda!i
·
·h
h'
pr&lt;omotion, us well.
1
·
1
·
1·
-tin
the commission~rs by ODN R an d a compre henswe P an 15 gl infra• should meet wll towns tp· trus ees,
The commissioners held a pub lic
1•
· r: 1 structure. service providers and oth·
vi ll age authoriti es and sorv tce agency
· h
will be use d 11) t e coun y·s gene a ·
.
.
.
.
h
heurin
1• 0 11 til l.! va d llj l.ll.! ot' ri ght s of
·
e needed for econom1c man.Uners to ensure t ul t11_e P_1;.m •s.
~
. fund .
er servlc ~
e
1 w.ay for sevcml rtlalls in S;,1lttm Tow~-·
•
"
1
t
·
compl~te and th;.1t no t..l uphcatton &lt;l
h
Perry Vamudoe·, t e county s eco- • ...eve opmen_.
..
(Continued on Page 3) 1
nomic development director. met
Co!l)mosstoner J~lt Thornton. who services exists in the pl ,tn.
'
., 1 .
,
,

American. it's untruthful." said one
opponent, Rep. Tom Coburn, R·
Okla. ·
But with most members of bOth
panics likely to lvote for the measu re ,
Coburn and others were predicting
easy pass:Jge.' To allow time, Congress planned to send Clinton a measure lening agencies stay open
.through Wednesday. the lifth such
stopgap bill. si nce fiscal 1999 began
Oct. I.
Only a few copies of the bill were
available Monday. and none were
inade available lq the public . But a
person familiar with the legislation.
speaking 0~ condition of unonynut~,
said it contai ned sever.] late ad~t­
fio'ns. including:
• L~nguage by s~ n . Alfnnse
D' Am:~to. R-N.Y.. requiring health
insurers to cov~r breijsl r~co nstru c­
tjon fo l\ ow(~g

llli;lSICC(OIIl it!S.

• $2 mi II ion to help start the
Robert j .. Dole Institute for Public
·Service and Public Policy at the Uni- '
versity of Kansas . honoriirg the forl.mt!r senator m1U, GOB lpr!!siJential
·ca ndidate.
• $1 million for ll Mark Hatfield
School of Govl!rnmcnt at Pllrtla1id
Stale Univer~ity in Oregon.

Debate livens up loyv-·key campaign to ·replace Glenn
··
·
d I'll\ 1
Ohio now for et~htyear&lt; an .
e
the people of Oht o JUd ge my leaderthe education deb~tle." shot
Shl·p ·•tt
v

By AARON MARSHALL
silting comfonably on a 15-pointlead
. in the polls, th e cand 'd
t ates spatTed
Sentinel Columbus Bureau
COLUMBUS - As retiring U.S. re centl y at their onIy sc hed· u Ied
Sen. John Glenn prepares l!J blastoff debate inDayton .
·
At the hour-long town haII -sty Ie
again into space. a pair of Earthbound
Cleveland veteran politicians are try- meeting. Boyle went on _the altack
ing to complete their mission lo against Voi,novic h's educat1on ~cord.
replace him thi s full in Washington. accusing him ol·r'"'·1·mg to provt de th e
Run'nin g for Republican., is Ohio's ,necessary resources fur Ohi o\ r.g
best-known politician this side of million schoolchi ldren.
d II
f
Glenn, two-term Ohio Gov: George
Noti.ng that . ewer o ars are
· Voinovich - a GOP moderate who · availaiJie now as a percentage of the
pushes the importance of protecting state budoet for education Ih'.' " when
soc ial securi ty, health-care reform Voinovich• became governor tn 1990.
and returning power from the feder- Boyle said he had tailed to keep his
woid 10 be the "education governor."
al government to the states.
··why is it govemorthat you have
Ohio Democrats answer with their
own lakefronl candida,e. Mary Boyle failed 10 keep your 1119st important
··•. B.oy 1e.
- an underfunded but sc rappy cam- Promi se to our ch1'ld re.n·.,.. smu
paigner who clashes with Voinovich a Cuyahoga Count y ct&gt;mnw;s10ner
over educational. environmental and from 1985to 1996. "And why shuuiJ
· 1 a &lt;eat
your failure be rewttrded Will
!rude policy issues.
While thi s race has remained low - in the Senate?''
"I've been gove rnor of the state of
key through the fall with Voinmlich

,.

.

back Voinuvi~.:h .
Durl.ng the debate. he. pointed to. a
55 perce nt in crease . 11~· l!t~ucaiJOn
f&lt;oot&lt;!ing . over $600 11l11l1on m fundt' ngl·,, rl uw~we althdi strkt s;,mU $5.50

million in t\!c hn ulogy funds dunng
11·, ,. , ·, 1ne in oftkc as evidence ofmak.ing an '"enormous impac t" on edu·.~- ato'on .
Att acking Voinovich's environ·
lltentul record. Boy le said insect
infestations related to a mass ive egg
farm located in Hardin County and a
abnorma lly high leukemia rate
uncovered in Marion County prove
that Ohio's environment ha s suffered
under the Voinovidl a&lt;hninistration
Voinovich responded by stating
that the air and water al'l.: clt.!aner than
25 year~ ug? and that ~tream!'l are ~4
percent more " fish~th lc" 1han m

-~

0

199 ·
· ·
" We have done an outstandmg job·'
in thi s state tu try and balance ...
. goou
environmental poli cy aml .. it's
" I nnp ~cl
u
on economi..: devdopml!nt. te sal ·
Perh aps tht' dearest co n tm~t .
b~tween the candidates
y came
·
· 1over
trade policy i~su es.. o1n.ov1c l, d''
~l anch supporter ol the lrec tra e
Ul'~ reem ent known .us NAFTA
•b ,
daioned th at 147,000 JObS hau een
created throuuh exPa mh:!d I raJ~ with
•
,
NAFTA 111 t.: mbcr s Can:.u.la and Mi!x.
ico. He said th e two border co untm:s
1· ·
were resppnsible for over ha I ol
Ohio's exports.
But Boyle bhtmed the free trade
agreement fur rc:-. ul,ting in A.merican
J'obs heing shippetl to MeXICO . dSh_e
suid a Huffy hike phont locate
. b tn
Cel ina. Ohi!) hll&gt; moved 960 JO s lo
Mexico as a direct- r\!~ult of tht! agree -

dobate responding to Boyle jabs. he
did attack 'her ove r the issue of "soft
mon ey."
Referring to an ind epe ndent ud paid ·
for by Ohiu Democrats that attacks
hi s record, VoinoviL:h said Ohioam
should be aiJie to know where every
campaign dollar is comi ng from in an
d~ction.

"Show

me the mone y,"

h~

quipped, borrowing the line from the
popular "Jerry Maguire" movie.
Boy le responded by sayi ng that
the Ohio Democratic · Part y is
roquired to report their expenditures .
She noted that Voinovich had refused
to ~grce to voluntary spending limits
in the campaign.

While the Senate ca ndidmes &lt;pent
' much of th eir debate lu.,\ing over
differem issues, they agri!cd un the
importance of pmh!clin g. ~lX:1al St!C ll·
rity and reforming he alth -t:~ue ~)stem
mt! nl.
(Continued on Page 3)
While Voimwi ch &lt;t&gt;&lt;;nt ""'" nf the ·

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