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                  <text>Wednesday

By The Bend

The Daijy Sentinel
Tuesday, October 20, 1998

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 40; Low:20

Starting off married life with a controlling mother - in - law fTleans problems ahead
Ann
Landers ·

IW1 . t. .. Allltk&gt; T~~J~o~.~
Syl!dl.:llle ~w · C•.t~• ·•'"
5)· nd te ~IC

Dear Ann Landers: This is in
respon se to •· Bedlam in Oregon,"
whose daughter is getting married . •
The hnde 's future mother-in-law has
invited the whole town in spite of
!he request lo keep the guest list
small . Please warn the bride that if
she is havin~ problems wi!h a med dling , ovcrpowCring morher-in-law
.during courtship. i.l's only going to
:gel worse. If !hal groom is !cuing hi s
·morhcr run things with complele .
'disregard for his bride 's wishes, she

From Pordand, On.: I wish to
co(Timent on ihe letter from the
mother . whose daughter is gelling
co ntrolling , manipulative mother married. You overlooked a crutial
·eve,ry step of the way. Her interfcr- element -- the groom. I assume he is
cnc~ almost e nded our marriage_ at least minimally involved in his
more than once. No one told me own wedding plans. He should be
when I married my husband that ·I the one to take responsibility for
was marrying hi s mother, too . My dealing with his mother's flagrant
advic,e for that bride is to make it disregard for the wishes of the bride
clear to her future husband that lie and her parents, particularly since
,
must be firm with hi s mother. start- they are footing the bilL .
ing now, or their life together willl1e
My guess is that Mom has some
issues • with her son's impending
hell. --·Experienced in Texas
Dear Texas: If you've been in a marriage ~nd is malting her disp_leapower strugg le with your mother-in · sure known. If the groom is unwillJaw for 22 years, you are a bona fide ing or unable to discuss this with his
authority and probably have the bat· mother. my advice to the bride is
tie scars to prove il. Keep readmg . this: " Honey, you need to do some
serious . thi'nking Qefore you marry
for more :

this guy. If he can't stand up to his
mother now and put you first, it's
going to be that way from bere on
in." Ma,rriage is difficult enough
without an undeclared war between
a wife and her mother-in-law.
Wornsler, Mass.: Our future
daughter-in-law comes from a family of alcoholics .. She was scared to
death to 'have a big wedding because
with free booze, there was sure to be
a brawl. She asked me how I would
feel if she and our son eloped, I said.
"Fine." She is greatly relieved, and
so arc we.
San FraocisCo: That letter from
··J!edlam in Oregon," and your
response left me fuming. Supposedly, the mother-in-Jaw posted a wedding invitation on the bulletin board

at the school, and the bride and her

mother have concluded that the
woman has invited the whole town.
Give me a break. The whole town
could not llossibly have read that .
&lt;llotice. You told " Bedl.am·• to
instruct her guests to arrive early
and claim all the available seating,
leaving the groom 's guests to stand
outside. What a way to start life
togetbcr.
As the motbcr of four sons. I may
be overly sensitive to the rampant
mother-in-law bashing that occurs
around wedding time. One mother
of daughters actually told me that
the sole responsibility' of the mother
· of the groom is to "wear beige,

·

show up and shut up."
Ann, I love my sons as much· as

'

any mother loves her daughters. It
breaks my heart to know that one
day I will watch from the sidelines
as someone else enjoys the preparations and excitement of ·such an
imponant event. For the love of my
children, I will. keep quiet and shop
for a beige suit.
St. Thomas (Vi..Pn Islands): I
don ' t have a daughter. I have three
son•. I am perfectly content to be a
guest at their weddings, keep my
mouth 5hut and Jet the in -laws do all
the heavy lifting and pick up the
bills.

Meigs County's
'

,

A mcm ona l scrv1ce was held

·~

hy DAR members .
·
·
Eulogie s was. given for Mrs.

meetlng of Return Jonathan Weber by (ter daughter, Donna
Mclgs Chapter, Daughters of the Jenkin s; for. Mrs . Conroy by
Amcr1can RevolutiOn , at th e Mary Powell ;. for Mrs . Roberts
Racine Branch of , the Meig s by June Ashley ; for Mrs . Cook by
County D1s1nc1 Public L1brary. Anna Cleland; and for Mrs .
The.' memorial . wa• followed by . Haye~ by Patricia Holter.
markmg of 1he1r graves.
. Followin g the brunch and
. Honored at th~ memori~l scr- memorial service the group trav VICC were Margaret Weber, Clara cled to the Letart Falls Cemetery
Conroy. Frances Roberts , Caryl where ihe grave of Mrs . Roberts '
Cook : and . Helen Coast Hayes . is lo'cated. S)lc was the ,dau~hter .
Partlclpallng 111 t~e mcmonal and of Charles and Erma Roush lhle ,
grav~ markin_g: ceremonies were

and was a longtime hom.c ceo-

Paultne Atkms , regent; Mary
Powell. Donna Weber Jenkins ,
June Ashley, Mary Kay Rose,
J'atric1a Holter, Abbie Stratton,
and Anna Cleland.
Members pledged to continue
the work of the National Soctety
Daughters of the Amqrican Rcvo lution and carry out the respon sibllll1cs 1nsprred by the ltves of
lhose remembered in the service.
A prayer of : blessing was
offered by Chaplam Powell.
It was noted that the marking
of a grave C&gt;f a deceased . DAR
member .consl5ts of plactng a
DAR Instgn1a marker 1n cement
near the headstone of th e
, deceased member's grave.
. The lnSignta marker is .a replica of the DAR Insignia pin worn

nomics teacher in Meigs County
schools.
At the Chester Cemetery. the
grave of Mrs . Conroy was
marked. She was the daughter of
Philip Stace and Sophia Mae
Stone Stace and the widow of
George Conroy.
J
· Her ,Revolutionary War ancestor. under whose name she joined
the DAR se rved as a sergeant in
Captain
Peleg Sunderland's
Company of the Vermont Line .. .
Moving ·to the Beech Grove
Cemetery, the DAR members visued - and marked the grave• of
Mrs. Hayes and Mrs. Cook. ,
Mrs. Hayes, was a sc hool
teacher, a graduate of the Ohio
University and had close ties
with the West Virginia Universi- .

ty.
. She was recognized for carry·-

·

, eastern Ohio will be at their most brilliant by this weekend, as will counSentinel Newa Staff·
If you're planning a trip to seethe ties like Morrow. Knox and Holmes
~
fall foliage. you should pack your in northern Ohio.
Hocking Hill• State Park in Hockbags and head out this weekend. ·
Touri•m officials in Ohio and iw:tg County is a mus1-see for mavens
West Virginia say that the peak of fall of the brightly-colored autumn
colors will likely occur in most parts leaves, according to the Ohio Department of Tourism, as i•the drive along
of the two state• thi• weekend.
Tourists who travel in Ohio and the Ohio· River from Marietta westWe•t Virginia for the purpose of see- ward.
The West Virginia Division of
ing the fall colors are on the rise, and
both states have begun to capitalize Tourism promotes five fall driving
tours throughout the state .which
on these tOuri5ts.
Acconding to ,the touri•m experts highlight the routes most scenic for '
at I (800)' BUCKEYE, the state's .fall foliage viewing.
•The state's Sputhern Accent Tour
tourism hotline. Southern and South-

Calif. 90045

·

•

POMEROY - "Color My World
Drug Free" will be the theme of the
1998 Red Ribbon Week, Oct 23 to
·Ocl. 31, with area residents and
groups demon•trating a commitment
to drug free lifestyles.
·"Schools, businesseo, and community groups will seek to turn their .
dreams of a drug-free Mei gs County
into reality as they celebrate Red
Ribbons Week," said Julie Wandling, program specialist of Health
Recovery Services, in announcing
the observance.

~

Taft, Fisher continue
negative campaigning

.T.h e Sentinei .News Hotline!
.

.

To offer story suggestions, report latebreaking news and offer news tips

992-2156

Lane®

I R•cllnlng Furnilttre A111i ,5/,ee~

The
motes
effects
events

· HOLDING SERVICES - The Rev. Robert Stewart and his wife
Dorothy, will conduct revival services ~;~I the Syracuse Nazaren~
Church beginning Wednesday. Services will be held at 7 p.m. each
evening and there will be special music.

Community Calend~
TUESDAY '· . .
POMEROY ~ Meigs Counly
Heahh Dcpanmcnl, Immunization
clinic, Tuesday, 4 to 7 p.m, a! IIW
office, 112 EaS! Memonal Dri ve,
. Pomeroy. Children muSI be accompanied .by parenlflegal guardian . Take
child's immunizalion record .
MIDDLEPORT - Mc1gs Middle
School Boosters, Tuesday. 6 p.m. in
cafeteria.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literal)' CJ uh. 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Eileen Buck. PilyJJi ,
Hack ett to rev iew "Enchanted Cas1l c:
by Daphne DuMauner.

Church of tho Nazarene. Rev. Charles
R. Swigger. evangclisl. Special
singing. Services nightly a! '7 p.m.,
Sunday, I0:30a.m. and 6 [un.

Education, Wednesday. 6JO p.m
Elcrncn lary cafCII lriUin .

ill '

POMEROY - Prccu ptur Beta
Dcta Ctloptcr. Beta Sigma Phi , 111ufsday, 1&gt;:30 p.m. Luiher;m Church.
Mcmhcrs to wear Halh,1wcc n r.; hin.

Courlty Rcq clmg &amp; Lmcr' Prcvcn1 11;n

Ma11ha McPhail and Margaret Stew ·

ing will he taken for the musi t: mns .

program. spcc"d rec yc le day. Wedne,.
day, 9 a.m . to I p.m. O!;"ai"Jgc Tm' n-.lnp

;lrL hn-.lcso.,e..,

The Center serves meal s on
Tu esday and Thursday evening•
from 4:45 to 5:30 each week . The

hu.~o.

gantgc

p ;11 kmg

lot.

Tupper~

Plains Elcm,·niary Scho.il.
POMEROY -

Re,1val service''·

Wednesday thruu g:h Sunday.

Pomt::l"\ 1~

'

/0&lt;11~ "'"' rl&gt;l'hM•I r"j/nfoN'OI

'"Ill• ' ... M. ... d "''' ""''" ,..,,.•,

"'''"'' ''"' ..... ,.,..,, ""'~ ,, ,'"'"
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· FRIDAY

POM EROY - GOD'S Net, Main

prograrg is intend ed to offer a nutri -

S tt'CC I , Pnmcro)•. open to tee ns.() In 10

tional meal at a low cost of $4 per
meal plus an opportunity for fcllow -

p.ri1. F1 iU ay. Free rcfrl..'s hm cnls nnd
Sum.: huur~ Sa1urdny

ga111 c'- .

_
.;h ip with others.

~·•

''"",.,,I

'
"C;A NG RUS'Tt:R'" HIIII'-·A·&lt;:' UAII"
ROCt&gt;a:R Rt:CUNt:R
l hro If, , l cr lfn '"'" ,.,.,,.,.,

M

"'· ' .. ·~h •lrrr• ,,. '""' ~.,....
"·~· II... ,.,,

Single Copy- 35 Cents

begins &lt;Jn 1-64 at Huntington, and
takes in Cbarleston. Sand&lt;lone Falls,
Pipestem and Lewisburg. Tours of
glass factories in Huntington and
Milton, a visit to Tamarack: The Best
of West Virginia, an artisan•ceriter on
1-77 from Charleston, the New River Gorge Bridge and The Greenbrier
at White Sulphur Springs can add to
the trip.
1
• ViGtorian Wheeling is the starting point of the state's River Reflections Tour, which take&lt; travelers
along Stale Route 2 to Si5tersville,
Parkersburg, Point · Pleasant and
Huntington. Hikers and bikers are ·
likely to ~njoy the North Bend Rail

Trail near Williamstown.' Blenner- 1 'Virginia are now ablaze ·with co lor.
ha&lt;sett Island and Baule Monument and the Scarlet Heartland Tour •ugState Park in Point Pleasant.
ge5ted by the tourism division ta~es
• Autumn leaves have already travelers South on 1-79 through Morpeaked near Canaan Valley Resort gantown. Fairmont. site of a reconand Blackwater Falls State Park. the structed 1774 fort at Pricken's Fort
highlights of the Mountain Magic Stale Park, Port New Salem and
Tour, which includes State Route 150 Philippi Covered Bridge.
and U.S. Route 219. Attractions
•West Virginia's Ea!\tem Panhan along this route include Dolly Sods dle, including Harpers Ferry Nation Wilderness Area and Allegheny al Historical Park, is ·a suggested desFronl, Seneca Rock.•, Cass Railroad tination for the Golden Gateway
and Cranberry Glades, a natural Tour, which highlights several local
botanical garden of unique bog veg- festivals, antiquing and horse racing
etation and planllife living far south at Charles Town Turf Club.
·•
of their nonnal range.
Elegant inns and bed and br•ak·
•The mountains of central West fasts, as well as restored colonial

homes are found along Stale Rnure 9.

Martinsburg and its Blue Ridge Out·
let Center. l cx;a le~ in converted

a

woolen mill, b al ... u a highlight'·of the

tour.
Tourism experts also recommend
Berkeley Springs. whose state park
offers ex. pen mas..,.ages, and Cacapon
Reson State Park. which includes
cabins and a lod ge.
Those unable to travel far can still
enjoy heautiful fall scenery right
here. Forked Run State Parle and the
scenic State Route 124 along the
Ohio River are local allractions
which are guaranteed to highlight the
Continued on page3

Warner named cooperator

Goodyear ·Award goes to Kopec family

Holter who nominated the white oak is 67 feet tall and has a circumference Rice was reelected to the board of
COLUMBUS (AP) - Negative tal)' of state, Taft's main duty is to BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
supervisors . The other candidate wa&lt;
located near the Chester courth~u•e of over 16 feel.
Sentinel News Staff
campaigning continued to be a major uphold Ohio's election laws.
During
the
business
meeting,
John
~ontinued on page 3
Recognition of Meigs Countiarts in Chester. The tree, it wa&lt; reported.
theme as the race for governor head- •
"In the ~nd. voters have the pow. ed into il5 final two wee.ks.
er to stop what's going on," ~Jan for conservation practice• highlightA televisi.on commercial thai Melamed, Fisher's campaign man: ed the annual Meig• Soil and Water
Conservation District·annual meeting
. . Democrat Lee Fisher began airing ager .said at news conference.
1'he Fisher campaign also began held Tuesday night a1 Meig• High
Tuesday suggests that Ohioans sick
'
of negative ads make an exall)ple of airing a commercial emphasizing his School.
Named the outstanding cooperator
his opponent for governor, Republi - commitment to health insurance
for the year was Dave Warner who
reform.
can Bob Taft
"Say no to Robert Taft's dirty
The ad features a Columbus operate• a 250 acre ·fann in Scipio
campaign,'' the 30.second spot urges woman who ban led he ~ insurance . Township. He and his wife, Sara,
vo)er5. "Send a message to all politi- company over a bone marrow lrans- re5ide on.the farm which has been in
cians: if you lie, you lose."
plant her doctors believed wa&lt; nee- his family smce Abc Gotschall, his
At the •arne time, the Taft cam- essary io combat her breast cancer. great-grandfather, purChased the land
paign was accusing Fisher and his Fisher speaks directly to the camera in 1850.
In 1990, Warner purchased the
labor a1Jie5 of running ads with mis- and promi'!'S that he WOUld back legof his two brothers, cleared
•hares'
leading infonnation.
i•lation that give• doctors - not
away
the
roses and crabapple, put in
Both . campaigns planned to be · "insu.rance bureaucmts',' - authorisome
fencing,
and begiq;l ·llringing
. back before the Ohio ElecJions Com• · ty over medical decisi&lt;lns. ,
mi5Sion today with their latest accuTaft spokesman Breu ·Buerck the property into prOduction capabilaccused Fisher of being a hypocrite ities. He said he began with a I ,000
sations of deceptive advenising.
The Fi'sher ad, which is running for running the elections commission pound tobacco allotment and a
statewide. uses a series of newspaper ad. Buerck complained that Fisher dream.
Since then Warner has installed
headlines to remind viewers that the falsely ran an ad claiming to be the
Elections Commission on Friday only candidate promising a property three spring developmenl5 with
' found Taft's campaign guilty of tax cut Taft has pledged to increase pipeline and tanks, practiced rotaknowingly misleading voters with the homestead exemption for senior tional grazing with 50 head of beef
catile and has divided 100 ac~s into
one of it&lt; early ads. The Fisher com- citizens.
feeding 'paddock•. and ha• in51alled
mercia! also points out that as secreabout I0,000 feet of Stewardship
Incentive Program fencing that
given recognition at Tuesday night's banquet.
. GOODYEAR FARM FAMILY - The Kopeca,
· e.cludes livestock from woodland.
Hare Charles Yost, lett, presents a plaque to Mr.
Tony, Dawn end their five children were .s elect·
Named t~e Meigs County
.and Mrs. Kopec and their daughter, Aubrle.
ad as lhe 1998 Goodyear Farm Family by the
Goodyear Fann Family for 1998
t,telg&amp; SoH and Water Conaervatlon District a~
was Tony and Dawn Kopec and their
five children. The family operates a
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sup- Jum .educat.ion and olh~r. government 450 acre beef, corn and hay farm in
Rutland Tol\'nship. They were recport by black Americans for using serv1ces pnvate.
ognized
for practicing good con•ergovernment money 10 help children
The center is a national nonprofit
vation
by
strip cropping and by
auend the public, private or parochial institution that conducts research on
schools of their .choice has fallen issues of special concern to blacks. ,keeping hay on the steeper slopes and
since last year, but black •uppoilers Whites were also interviewed in the . highly erodible land, and by doing
still Qutn'umber black opponents.
random telephone survey of I ,606 ditch maintenance and cleaning brush
along creek• that run through their
A poll released Tuesday by the adults.
There was a similar decline of farm.
Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, found black support support for voucflers among whites,
Meigs County Pair hay show
of school vouchers at 48. 1 percent, from 47 .percent to 41 J percent. Sub- plaques and cash awlll'ds wenJ to
down from 57.3 percent last year. urban whites and senior citizens were David King. 75 percent or more alfalPorty percent were opp()sed, and 12 the biggest opponents.
fa: Howard Ervin, all gra55es: and
percent said they didp' t know. The
Among blacks, the greatest sup- · Roy Holter, 49 percent or l~ss
'margin of enur in the poll, which was porters were baby boomers and those legumes. ·
taken,la51 month. was 3.5 percentage Iivins in the Northeast and Midwest
District land judging award• were
points.
- parents and those living in areas presented to the Southern FFA whose
While oppositioQ to school vouch- with large numbers of troubled urban teams won both the agriculture and
ers become even stronger, however, schools. ·
urban judging contest&lt; held at the
dim"ling lhe chances that national
Opponents of vouchers were Gene and Marco letTers fann in
voucher legislation can become law. delighted with the results.
Columbia Township.
· so· far, opposi!ion by the Clinton
The high scoring individuuls in the
"These findings adtl to the grow· administration, teacher unions , ing body of research suggesting thai contest were first through fourth
, . school boards and parent-teacher the more the public know~ about the respectively, Amy Wilson, Brady
organizations ha• thwarted voucher impact of voucher proposals, the less Bowling, Kacy Ervin, and Matt Willegislation. State-sponsored voucher inclined !hey are to support them." •on. Winners in the urban .judging
experiments are under way in Cleve- said Bob Chase, president of the contest were Lori Sayre, Courtney
' OUTSTANDING
Werner who operates
land and Milwaukee. and privately National Education Association, the · Haine·s, Josh Larsen and Chris
a 250 acre farm In Scipio Township Ia Meigs County's 1998 Outsupported vo.uchers are ·expanding . .· nation 's largest teachers union .
Yeliuger, Jirst 'through fourth. Trostanding Cooperator. He and his wife, Sara, were recognized at
Last year's poll by the center was
David A, Bositis, ·senior political phies aod c~h awards were pre5entTUesday night's banquet of the Meigs Soli end Water Conservawidely ci!ed by voucher advocates analyst for the center..said there is a ·ed to the winners.
'
tion District at Meigs High School. Joe Bolin, left, chairman of
who argued that support was not lim- danger of read inA too much ihto the
Annually a big tree contest is held
the Board of Supervlsora, made the presentation.
-ited to conservatives who want to findings .
and this year's winner was Roy
Today's
2 Sections- 12 Pages

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

.l«f'l• 1••1./rJ

,.,u.... "' "" ....r

Appal~chian development agency begins era of stability

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Appalachian Regional Commission,
armed with more money and a
renewed mandate, will be able to do
more long-term planning, a top official said Tuesday.
The economic development
agency is perennially targeted by
budget cullers who believe it has outlived its usefulness .in ,the 13 state s, ·
including Ohio. where il operates.
But las! week , Congress formally
renewed the program ior lhe first
lime since 1982. giving the agency
more clout in upcoming spending
banles.
"We're looking forward . to a
future of stability and the ability to do

p.tn .

Mc•c'

at the

Vr• -~• • ,,,,,,.,..,,, ~ """:•· " ' '""
r

TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW Pos1 · material on how to 1akC cure of
~05:1, 1llUrsday. 7:30 p.m.
bulbs, when 10 plant, from 4 to 5
A blood pressure clinic wi ll ·be
conducted from 4 to 4:45 and Junior .
and Rita White wiJJ .begin playing at
5 :30 following th e meal. An offer·

TUPPERS PLAINS -

...'IIIF.BAU." I
I'AIMIVF.R l ' IIAIS•:

IUKKF,R RF.CI.INF.M

exchange .and Present educational

EAST MEIGS - Eastern Board of
Eastern

y

a

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Caring and S)lar- Activities planne'd at
ing Support Group meeting Thursday,
·
1-2 309 p.m. al Meigs Multipurpose Meigs Senior Center
Senior Citi zens Center. Topic: Report
Several activities h ave bce·n
on a trip 10 Alzheimer's Care Unit in, planned for this week at lhe Senior
Culumhus.
. Citizens Center,
Thursday there will be a program
HARRISONVILLE
Hm - by Hal Kneen, Meigs County E"enrisonvllle ScniurCJii1.cns Cluh , Thurs- sion agent, and the Meigs Master
day, 10:30 a't tow nhouse . Luncheon to Garde ners will conduct a tender
follow.
bulb (canna, dahlia, caladium) plant

Hometown Newspaper

Support for schoo.l
vouchers slips in poll

·

Red Ribbon celebration proawarene" of the harmful
of substance abuse. The
held during the week are
geare~ to encourage youth and
ad~lts . to live healthy liv es, said
Wandling.
She •aid the celebration originated following ihe murder of U.S.
Drug Enforcement Administration
Agent Enrique Camarena by drug
traffickers in February 1985. The
red ribbon became a symbol to eliminate the demand for drugs 1and to
stop vi 9lence and destruction caused
by alcohol and other drugs,
.
explained Wandling.
The annual celebration has been
Ohio's largest prevention event supporting drug free lifestyles.
Meigs Countians arc encouraged
to wear a red ribbon during week of
Oct. 23 and make a personal commitment 1,0
healthy, drug free
lifesryle. Highlighting the observance will be a rally at the Pomeroy
Municipal Building on Ocl. 29 from
6 to I 0:30 p.m. There will be
refreshments, gue51 speakers, recog- ·
nition of contest winners, and a
dance with karaoke by Jeff North. "'

Series lead
Page4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 119

By BR,IAN J. 'REEb

ing out the DAR program of cdu'cation by sponsoring the McKayCoast Lecture Series at Wesl Virginia University and sponsori ng
~c hol~rshiN at hoth schools: Her
Revolutionary War ancc'5tor was
Wi.lliam McKay.
, Mrs . Cook 's gravesile service
!at Beach Grove was marked as a
tribute wa5 given to her dedica.J.ioh t'o the chapter and her fa~i­
ly. Hc'r Revolutionary ancestor
was George Roush.
The final stop was at Miles
Cemetery at Rutland where the
grave of Mrs. Weber was marked .
Mrs. Jenkins led lhe •crvice and
·spo ke of her mother's devotion to
her family and the. print shop
bu•iness they operated.
At the time of her death she
was corresponding · secretary to ··
the DAR chapter.
Mrs . Weber a11ended Ohio
University and taught school at·
Harrisonville for a time before
her children were born .
The next. meeting will be held
on Nov. 14 at the Meigs County
Public Library, Pomeroy. Mrs .
Rae Reynolds will pre•ent a proMEMORIAL SERVICE - Five deceased members of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
gram on National Defense .
the American Revolutl9n, weRI remembered In a memorial service. Mary Powell, chaplain, and Donna
Weber Jenkins participated In the service.
·

Red Ribbon Week
activities planned

Yankees
take 3-0 -

Fall foliage to peak this weekend

Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suitt! 700, Los Angeles, ·

· Memorial service held and graves ·marked by Return Jonathan Meigs DAR
for fi_vc mem ber s during a rccc nl

Sports

Beat of the Bend, Page 7
Ann Landers column, ·Page 7
High school ratings, Page 4

Today: Cloudy
High: 50; Low:30

Pa'"''• 10

is 1n for a lifetime of misery.
My husband and I married 22
years ago and have been b~ttling hi s

October 21' 1998

Weather

/.r"r lo• 1 •r ,;,., I I&gt;"" '" '"" 1 •••1•'"1"' """ ,o,, ho "/1&lt;"'
/,..,.,,,..,,fi"'~I••~J... tl-.o,l " Ill! /o•••rl ''''"'•o oh~ol

I'"""' ,,on,, •••IMo·f', .,-...,,~ '"''n•w

"
..~ INUUST 0 " ~·~o,. 16:.!.

some planning," said Jesse White, the
agency.'s federal representative. "The
authoriz~tion will carry .us through
this administration and ,into the next

millennium."
White said the commission and its
local partners have tried to do longrange planning but were at the mercy of congressional budget leaders as
each fiscal year ended.
In adqitio.n to gelling the program
renewed through 2001, the commis•
sian got a provision in the JuDI' high way Jaw to use existing gasoline tax
revenues to complete the final20 per·
cent of a 3.025'-mile ·network of
roads through the Appalachian mountains.

The program also gol $66.4 million for non-road projects as pari of
the annual appropriations process,
With $450 million in ga&lt; tax money. ·
the $516.4 million for liscal 1999
represents the highest funding le•el
ever for the commission, White said.
Last year, the commission got
$170 million. Funding reached a low
of $105 million in 1987.
"We probably had the best year
for the Appalachian Regional Com.mission on Capitol Hill since we
were created in 1965," White •aid
during a telephone conference call
with reporters.
As recently as lust. ytar, House
Budget Commiuee Chairman ,John

Calendar
Classilicds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Sports
Weather

Kasich , R-Ohio, and other critics had
targeted the commission and its roadbuilding program. calling the program "duplicative and marginally
successful at besl."
·, But the program has powerful
advocates from Appalachian states:
Rep. Bud Shuster. R-Pa.. the chairman of lhe House ·Transportation
Commiuee. and Sen. Robert Bynd, DW.Va., who worked to give the program the gas tax funding stream.
White also auributed the legislalive succes. to a decision by !he com-

•creen, we adopted an aggressive
strategy of telling our story," he said.
In addition to highways, !he commission funnels money to states for
education. business development and
community health care, giving a
greater percentage of funds to the

estimated $6.2 billioJl in federal money to complete.
The new funding would help com-

OHIO
Pick J:

mission to tout i'ts successes.

plete one-third

"Whereas the strategy of the 80s
was to .keep our head down low, keep
out of sight and stay off the radar

by 2003 and pave the way fort he sys-

W.VA ,
Dail)· J :6 11

most distressed counties .

The 650 miles of highways still to

7
H-9-10

IL
2
_I
~-S-6

l

Lotteries

be built tend to run through rough.
mountainous terrain and will cost an

or the remaining miles

tem 's completion some 80 years.

ahead of schedule.

~~I: Pick~ :

~)

Duil)· ~: (tj 7 J

I'NI! tllm• \ ';1\IC',

I

.

r, 'f"!!!k. • •'"

I

,.

''·

.

I

"

42X 4

B~ckcyc5: ~ - 1 5- 1 7-27- .1 1

•

Put•ll'.tllu~

C l&gt;

�•

Wednesday, October 21, 1998

Commentary

Page2
Wednesday, October 21, 1998

. Ohio weather
• AccuWeathere forecast for da ·me conditiOOs, low/lugh temperatures

Primakov works on a program

~entinel

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Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
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The Stall !WI w.komH ,.,.,. to , . «&lt;ltor from
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Mttl dltytltM p/JOM ncmtbW SJ»dfY • dar. If rh.,. • • rat.,-.nce ro • p,.vlou• tttlcl•
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457P; or. FAX to l1f-flll2.2151

WASHINGlON - There was a 101 of talk about health care thts year tn W.e&lt;h
tngton. most of tt about plactng new rules on HMOs and 1111provmg tl1e quality of care
But recent news from the Census Bureau offers a remtnder that a stgmficanttf less·
dtscussed problem remams access to health care
The report found that 16 I percent o(Amcncans - 01 41 4 mtllion people - had
no health msurnnce for all of 1997, up from 15 6 pen:cnt tn 19% It wa' the steepest
lf1Cre.1Se m five year.;, and canJC despite a boomtng economy that created nullions ol
newpoo
,
""It's uomc and frightcmng "'saJd &amp;be Ra.&lt;ell , an economiSt at the labor-hacked ·
E.&lt;.'jJOOilltc Policy lnsUlute "If the umnsurcd rate ts gotn£ up dunng the hesl economic
sttuaOon we've had m 30 yean;, what's gomg to happen when we have a rccesston?'
The tncrease drives home the potnt that1mprovmg the health care systcmtnvolves
11 complex set of trndeolfs rnrely acknowledged wnong poltUctans lookmg to solve
one problem at a nme- whether tl he tmprovmg qual tty, expandmg access to care
or contromng cO!ilS
"It's pan of the metaphorical balloon You press on one s1de and tl pops out on the
other Side," sai&lt;fRon Pollac~ prestdcnt of tl1e consumer group Fwnthes USA
For eXlllllple, opponents of this year's unsuccessful dnve for new rules on healtl1
mamtcnancc orgamzauons say any such elTon wtll stmply dnvc up health care costs
- and thus lead even more compan1es to drop tnsurance coverage for thetr workers
Supporters of these HMO rules argue fu~ costs arc mtntmal and worthwhtle, and
won'tlead to more umnsurcd people
'
Cornplicanng the argument ts the fact that tt's not enorely clear why the number
of unmsumd Amencans increased m 1997
Econonusts mostly blanJC the tncrease on the prevalence of low-tncome JObs that
olfcr no health benefits, along wtth the steep pnce some workers must p.1y to usc
tnswance that ts olfered
Last year, about 6 mtlhon Amencans dtd not take tnSllfat\CC that wa.• oftercd at
work, a government study found. Part-orne employees may not be eligthle for msurance at all or be able lo afford 1~ saJd Pat Schoem ol the Nauonal Coahuon on Health
Care.
Although the number of Jobs grew, the number ol people wtth company-spon- •
sored coverage stayed relaovely steady, wtth 61 4 percent of Amencans geumg tnsurance from the workpliJCe, up from 61 2 percent tn 1996
Expens also poml to welfare changes, whtch place people mto low-wage jObs that
often don't olfer coverage Indeed, the Medtc,ud rolls have druppcd, and many ol •
tl1Cse people have not replaced thetr govemment-provtded coverage wtlh pnvate
mswance.
"People are etthcr losmg welfare ehgtbthty or JUSt movtng olf ol welfare be&lt;;ause
the economy ts p1cking up," srud Paul Fmnsun, of the Employee BencfiiS Research
lnsUlule, a nonparusan group backed by tnsurance compantes. other busmc~"'\ and
consumer and labor groups
'

By The Aaaoclated Preas

,
Todny IS Wednesday Oc1 21 rhc 2Q4th dn} ot liNK Tht:rt lrc 7 1 d,t) S lcf11n thr.;

~r.;,u

Todo.y s H1ghhght m H15tory
1'
J1
On Oct 21 1879 Thomas Ed1son 1mcmcd 5. workable dcc mc light l1 h1s l.tboratory m
Mer.lo Park N J
On th1s date
In 1797 the US Navy fngatc Consrnu11 on also known iH Old lrons1Jcs \\US laun r.;hcd Lrl
Boston's harbor
In 1805 a Bn11sh fleet commanded by Adm Hor.llltl Nchmn dcf~.:atL·d a Frt:!Kh Sparush
Oectm the Battle of Trafalgar, Nel son howc\cr. w.1s k1lled
In 191}. members of tHe Fmt DI V151Un nf the US Army tmm,ng 111 Luncv1 11c Franq;
become 1he first Amencans to see actmn on the front hncs of World War I
In 1944, dunng World War II , US troops r.;aptun:d the Gcrrnan c1ty of Aachen
In 1959 the Guggcnht:nn Museum opened to the puhhc m New york
In 1960, Democrat John f Kennedy and Republican R1 chard M NtMm cla~hcd m thcu
founh and final pres1dent1al debate
In 1967 tens of thousands of Vietnam War pro h~stcrs rnart:hcd m Washmgton lJ C
In 1971. Pres1de:nt Ntxon nommated Lew•s F Powell and W11l1Um H Rchnqui SIIO the US
Supreme Court
Ten years ago A federal grnnd JUry m New York mdu::ted former Pluhpp111c Prc s1dcnt Fer
dmand E Man.:os and h1s w1fe Imelda. on charges of fraud .tnd r&lt;~ck~.;tcm n g M::~ru) S dt~.:d
before he could be brought to tnal hts w1dow Imelda wa s acqUJIIed m 1990
Five years ago NATO m1mster5 endon;ed aU S plan to form hm11 cd pnnncrsh1ps w 1th
Russu1 and other former East bloc foes hut stopped shon of offenng fu ll11 ~mbcrshtp The Sen
ate reJected curbs on President Chnton s nght as ~.ommandCI" m dud to send troors to H 1111
The Philadelphia Ph1lhes beat the Toronto Blue Jays 2 0 m grunc five of the World Swcs
Toronlo sttllled the Senes 3·2
One year ago Reversing months of strong oppos1110n the Chnton .1dm1 mstratt en end{Jrsed
a n:v1scd Republican btll IQ restructure the Internal R cvc nu~ Scrvtcc .md sh1ft the burden of
proof from rhe taxpayer to the government m contested coun cases The Flond::~ Marlms bc,1t
the: Qevehmd lndnms 14· 11 rn game three of the World Scn~s
~
Today's Btnhdnys Baseball hull of farner Whttcy Ford ts 70 Rock smgc r Manfred Mann
ts S8 Muste1an Steve Crop)):r (Booker T &amp; the MG s) 1s &lt;li7 Smger Elvm Btshopt s 'i6 Ac tor
Everen McG1II1s 53 Mus1c1an Lee Loughnane (Cim:ago) IS 52 lsraeh Pnme Muu o;tcr Ben
Jamtn Netanyahu ts 49 Mustcmn Charlonc Caffey (Th~ Go Go's) ts 45 Ac tres~ au thor Came
Ftsher IS 42 Smger Jul1an Cope ts 41 Rock mus1c1an Steve Luknther(l oto) 1s 41 Rock must
.,;Inn Chc Colovua Lemon (J•mmte's Chtcken Shuck) 1s 28 Actor Jercm} Miller ( Grow mg
Pa10s") lS 22 ActorWtll Estes ( Krrk ) IS 21
Thought for Today '"There are thffcrent k.mds ol wrong I hc pcoplt! smncd tglll lh l arc nl)t
always the best"- Dame Ivy Compton· Bumcu English author ( 189:! 1969)

Berry's World

~

and cspectally
because he has
no pres1denttal
ambioons
But 1f, as
many
Muscovlles .uc predtcong. YeiiStn ts
forced to restgn
because of mcd1cal or other
problems, PnMoller &amp;
makov
would
Anderson
hccomc acttng
preSident for three months .. dunng
whtch umc the 1993 Russ tan Consutuuon rcqutres that he call a spec1al prest-'

schmoozmg ~tt a lnnc of cconom•c cns1s,

dcnu.tl clecuon

to head the new Russ1an Forc1gn Intclh-

when .tvcrage Russmns haw long-ago
soun:d on the pt otmscd !Jcncfil, of freemarket capttahstn

No one expect&lt; hun to throw hts hal
tnlo the prcs1denttal nng as he dtdn 1
even w.tnt to be pnmc rntntster A half·
go\cmmcnt ctn:lcs confinncd to out
assoct,Jle Dale Van Alta tlmt Primakov
rei used the PM Job when 11 was fu&gt;l
olfercd Only. after Yeltstn personally
unplon.:d hun and other lncnds suggested he was Ru.,sta's last best hope, d1d he

gence Servtce (successor to the KGB) m
late 1991
1
He served tn that post lor almo&gt;1 five
years-- until Yeltsm Deeded rum 10 shore
up hts saggtng populanty dunng the
1996 prestdenltal electiOn, when Pri·
makov began servmg as forctgn mtmstcr Its not that Primakov was popular,
but he could placate mcmOCrs of
Yeltstn 's most tntractable oppostllon, the

Jgrcc to take 11
One reason ts be(,.·ausc h1s greatest
ambitiOn - to be foreign nmustcr - had

CummumsLo.; and the nat•onahsts
That abllny to be everyone's comp
pmmtse-candJdate ts what bcx:Jstcd htm

Primakov Y.as the compromise can-

By LAURA MECKLER
Associs'ad Pnlu Writer

T9day in history

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
MOSCOW -- Ru.&lt;SJan Prime Mmtstcr Yevgcny Primakov has been engaged
m sa:rettooeUngs wtth anx1ous Amencan busmcssmcn over the la.~t several
weeks to rca.~&lt;ure them about tnvestmg
'" Russta
111at's a shatp departure for tl1C new
pnmc mtntstcr -- who has often been
descnbed as ' anu -West"' for postllons
he took as Russta's foretgn mmtstcr 1n
I996-98 Most Russnms would hkely be
surpnscd to lcar11 thatthetr n&lt;;w leader IS
spendmg i)ts ume wtth Amencan CEQ;
And more than a few Alnencan ollictals wtll he taken aback by such

J1Jate bmught tu the prtme mtntster's
post m mtd·Scptember by Prestdcnt
Bon' Yc\L"n He wa' tapped only after
Yeltstn \ first chotec. Vtcfor E:her·
nornyrdm. w.LS soundly I"CJt..-ctcd hy the
Dum.J (parh.u11cnt)

Lack of health insurance
a quietly growing problem
•

Pnmako\ won almost unan~tmous
suppun hct.:.tusc he •s not vJcwcd &lt;IS havmg: .my ~dllancc to ,my polntcal party··

"H1s message ts clear to us,"

explamed one bustnessman "He hopes
we II conhnue d1rect fore1gn mvestment,
despttc the d0wn1um And he told us,
agatn and agam, not to hsten to rumor:
He 1s not gotng tu ban tl1C dollar m RusPrimakov has pu~lii:ly
denounced th1s ban-the-dollar rumor, he
has not leltl be known how stgnlficantly he ts reaching out to Amencan CEOs
for help m thts cnsts
"What we've seen liom him are
good stgns," concludes Scott Blackhn,
headoftheUS OtambcrofCommerce '
here "He's mtelhgenl and should be
gtvcn a chance to tum thtngs around."
Frum a someumc-cnoc hke Black1m, who was not fond of Primakov'~
foretgn pohcy maneuvenngs, thts ts a
stgmficant ohve branch And many CJth.
e\'s ·· both Russ tans and Westerners ~ ·
are olfenng the same
But whether he wtll have the ume to
make senous changes before the pressure cooker explodes ts another matter
altogether
JackAndersoo and Jan Mollerare
writers United Feature Syndicate,

I

'

..

Winnir:~g

issues for GOP

By Joseph Perkins
• As recently as a month ago the
Republtcan Congress was on the verge,
11 appeared, of enlargmg 1ts ranks m
both tile House and Senate There wa.'
gtddy talk of a ~clo-prouf marg1D mthc
lower chamber and a cloture-affinmng
marg111 111 the upper t:hambcr
Now, however, the pany of Gmgnch

lic ha., weaned of
the
saturauon
cmcragc of Btll
and Momca, It IS
st,U1m g lo work to

and Lon 1s not so optumst1c And wtth

the GOP's dtsad·

good rca&lt;on A New York limes/CBS
News poll rclca.&lt;ed lhts week mdJcales
that publtc approval ot the Republican
Congress has fallen from 56 perc~nl 111
September to the present 43 percent
The lall -otf tn publtc support lor the
GOP Congress has been allnbuted to a
backlash ag.unsl the p.uty ol Gtngnch
.md Loti lm dmggmg out mvcstrgullon
ol the Willie House sex sc,tnd.tl
Wh1lc that notion ha" VI.!IIStJmhtudc.
the more s1grnficant factor n seems 1s
that the GOP hasn't done a lemhly ~oud
job ol publtctztng tiS legtslall ve record
over the pnst two yews ur selling forth
tts agenda for the next two ye.~rs
Indeed, when polltesponderts were
dskcd lO name somcthmg notewot1hy
thQt Congress hdd dune m ltic past yedr

72 percent could not name anythmg.
whtlc 16 percent menti oned 'lilc
uhpc4u.:hmcnt mvcst1gat1on
Su smc~.?- there's no rc~ord and no
.tgcnda for the American people tn

locus on thctr thoughts about the
Republican Congress arc b.L"'d almost
cxclustvcly. apparently, on Congress
, h.mdltng olthe Clinton sex scandal
·, 1l1ts smglc-tssuc focus on the scan·
d!ll worked lo the GOP's advantage a

month ago, when
the Starr report
first carne out, but
now that the pub-

vant,tgc

Perkins
ll on

IS

I11c qucsWnh thrc'e

weeks lett 'untll the nudtcnn clectto'1,

can the GOP change the subject !rom
1mpcachmcnl to IL" lcglsldltvc agenda
lor tl-.: Hl6th Congtcss 'And tl so. what
1ssucs t:oukJ the Rcpubltcans run on that
\\DUld IMvc rcsoriam:c wnh the Amellc,m p.::oplc enough to enable the p,uty

ol H.Jtch &lt;~nd Hyde not to merely mam·
1 a1111L~ m.ugms of ma.Jonty m Ihe Sendie t~mJ House, hut to mt:rc.L'\C them'

Well here ,trc lout. whtch the GOP
couiU 1clc1 to !L" ,\ muu-"Contracl Wnh
AlllCII\.: ,1

-- 1:,x cuts Alter ctght str. ught years
ol L'l:OilOtnll: growth w11h tmlhons of
JObs ,tdded 10 the US labor ml).r'ket, the
live ye.1r boom on Wall Street, and hts
tonc,tlly low mllat1 on and mlet-cst rates,
the ~tvcr.tgc Amcncan

l~mlly ts,
nonetheless,
hetter off. 111 tcmis ol
the '11e of tls JMychccks, than 111 1989,
when a Repubhc un prcstdcnt "as tn the
Wlntc Housl'
1l1c Amcncan people deserve a lax
(.:Ut And not .1 rnmusrulc $80 b1lhon t.:ut
(wl11ch House Rcpubhoans approved,
,md Senate Repubhcans rejected) And

no

el~ctions

cenrunly not the imemtc $9 2 btl!ton m
The way to sell thts tssue wtth the
targeted cuts (thatlnmd Senate Repub- Amencan people and, m tum, gel conhcans ulumately passed) But a sweep- gre&amp;"onal Dem(X:t;~~ts to agree to regu·
mg acruss-thc-board lax cui of, say, lalory reform, ts for the Republtcan
$275 b1llion -- a sum equal to the 1993 Congress to dramatize truc·ttrltfe reguChnton tax htke
. . latory horror stones, much a., heanngs
- Educallon Prcstdent Chnlon and on Internal Revenue Servtcc abuses led
congresstonal Democrats propose to to refonns m the way that agency does
spend $t2 4 btllton over seven years to ' bus mess
add I00.000 teachers to elementaty
·· Defense. It was mevnable, m the
scli'ools throughoul the counlry to pust-Co\d War era, thai Amenca's
reduce the average class s1ze m kmdcr- anned forces would be downstud But
' gartcn through the thtrd grade Yet, there after 13 sut.:cess1ve years bt defense
ts h&lt;~rdly any evidence whatsoever spendmg' cuts. even Prcstdcnt Chnton's
demonstrating a correlation between Joml Ch1efs of Stalf concede US mdt. smaller dasses &lt;1nd nnprovcd student lary readmcss has detenorated to the
perfonnancc
poml that ll cannot fulfill 1ls ma~tmum
But the1e ts cv1dem.::e that dlsadvan- mtss1un under the Pentagon's Nauonal
t,tged stt,tdcnJs. 1mrcd tn bhghted mncr- Mthtary Strategy -- thalts, to fight two
ell)' ~~ools, stand a Qctter chance of lllL'(hum~ sllCd rcgmnal w,us Simultanegelling a decent cducatton tl they are ously
g1vcn vou~.:hers or scholaP.-ihlps - that
1l1e latest fedeml bodgel actually
may he used for enrollment an pnvatc or calls lor another $1 btlhon m real
pa10chtal sch&lt;x&gt;ls A $12 4 hilhon defense cut' The pro-defense GOP
voucher p1ogmm would be far more should not have allowed thai to happen
hcncficl,ll to nccdlul students than and should pledge to mcrcasc mtlttary
I
'
smallct dass
Sizes
spendmg m cormng years to a level nee·
~ ~ Regulatton hl 1995 , Senale
essary to w,tge tho- cqmvalent of two
Rcpubhcans lell two 'votes shy of cut· SlmultanCous Desert Stonns
lmg off lloor debate and passmg a
Fur those who lollow polls. 11 hapswecp111g regulatory refom1 btll, one of pens that the maJOitly of Amencans
the 10 planks mduded m lfie GOP's favor tax cuL,, Iewer regulauons, school
1994 "Contract Wtth Amenca" La.,t vouchers ond sbonger defense that's
ycm, Senate Repubhcans tned ugam, why these would be wmmng tssues for
w11h .a scalcd-bac~ regulatory relorm the Republicans as they move closer to
incasurc Ihat s1mply would have the tntdterm clecoons
t-cqwred a cost-benefit analystS ol any
JllSeJ&gt;h Perkins is a columnist for
proposed new government rules that The San Diego Union·llibu'ne.
would cost Amcncan busmesscs more
"
than $\00 m1lhon a year

The price of
By TONY SNOW
Creators Syndicate
WASHINGlON -- The Republican
Pany IS &lt;uOcnng a slow, tortuous descent
mlo rcaltsm It has learned the hard way
thm 11 cannot tang1bly tnllucnce 1\.mcn·
c41 s dmxt1on or dc.,tmy unless tt holds
the Whnc House
1l11s cxplatns the w,mn-buckct·olsptl budget de.~ cut l,e&gt;t week hy the
GOP and B1ll Clinton Repubhc.ms
w~mtcd tax WL'i , school dHJicc and the
.thuhuon of noxtous or stupu..l go\oCm·
mcnt agcm.:1~s TI1cy wanted lcdc•-:.riJXll

K1d" h.tvc 1 it they h.td lmgcn:d ]on get II\
W.tshmg:ton thctr .1pr10' .11 rattngs
wnukl hmc t.:tmtlnuctl sltdmg FunhctlllOIC, they could llnly IM\ c ~1ught t!ll~m
selves tllOJ"e lrOUbJe (h~ ]li"CSidCtl ( lllt_ght
h.1vc pto\ okcd .mothi.;r Clmton ~,;]me ~
down ol the govcnum:nt - tiK' phr.N
U lllii.:S lrom rhc\0 11~.11 gi,\J t,IIOI Jun

Gul,J.uU
W1th b,:-; th.m three WL'Ch hclon.:
cll·Ltton Jay nell her p&lt;.u1y \\,lilted to g~:t

a divided government

mvolved m su;gc

of veto ovemde votes

warfare, so pohU·
cmns ~hose back·
home pandcn ng
over hard bargam·
111g m W,t..,hmgton
It's proh,tbly
lor tl1c best Our

Unlike George Bush, who got
knocked an:und by a Democratic Con
grcss, Chnton has a keen grasp ol exccutJvc power He knuv. s !""KJw to use every
tool at hts dtsposal Desptte hts low
st&lt;tndmg on C.tp1lol Htll, he ha&lt; held
Republioans at bay by usmg his bully
pulptl to sow doubts about the GOP's
moral probny (He .~so h!L' no sense o\
tro11y)
Whtlc he operates ellccuvely from a

dcmocrnuc system
move~

gldct.tlly. 11

,u ,til ·nus ensures
tl1c counuy will plod
.~JC.Jd on tl1e ha.&lt;ts of

Snow

tnugh

dcfcns1ve posrt1on. Rcpubltc.:~ms seem
bcwtldcfCI..i by the1r own T'Cl:Cnt pros{X!n -

fot"CC

ty Dcspnc havmg won the 1dcologtcal

const..: nsu~ rather th:m capncc or
It also mc.ms th,Jt Congrcs."i w11l
dts.tppmnt u~ f.u nnul' oltcn th.m tt
lll"iJ111'CS US

"lll.tl s ~:spcually !Juc nnw,llbys V..'c
]1\ c Ill .m .tstoundtngly st.Jttc tnnc Chn
hlll ha" no st,mdmg: .t" J 'ts1onary leader
llc h.L, no mtcrest 111 the mlc He will cut
nbhons hoSI lund r.ustng cvcnts .md
.lllllnpt to g:I\C WJ(k: I1C1th to t.:omd y
mtr..:·m" hutth.H "'11 no Btg IJc,Ls tor hnn
Sti ll th~· vclo powlit CIMhl~:~ htm to
ln.t sll .ttc hold thtnkmg b) Ihe GO!~ cspc~
u.tlly smu: [Xnl\x:rats rcm,u ncd s hock~
mgl y thsL tplt ned on C\ Ll)'thmg Irom p.u ~
tl.tl htrth .tiXJI1tons t(Jd~lcndlng the pres
tduu I: , en 11 RcpuhltL,ms ruck up Sll·
.1bk g.un s 111 lhc ll ou~c ,lfld Scn.tlc un
Nil\ ::! thl'y I"C sull llllt ltkdy IO Wtn .lint

h.1ttlc, they T1!11ldtn lnghte11L'l1 .md detcn ~
1l1c GOP g.unson m Congress listens more mlcntly to cncmtcs tns1dc the
Bclt\\ay th.m tu lncnds on the outs1dc
nus sort ol dnhcnng h,t,.. created a
~.:crt.Jlll unca...c amnng party t"cgulars 111
llyovc1 J.md Rtght-wmgl.!~ c.m't under·
~t .md why thcu le.tdcrs h.wc dcudcd not
to ass~ul Bill Chnton's nusdccd" and
~,.;h.u-..ldCI 0 1 mounl .1 full horc otlcnstvc
on bciMII ollmmed govcmmcnt Fot the
linil tunc 111 out hts101y thr.: fcm1 vil:l.!
J&gt;fC"ildcnt t.:ould .lpply to two r".:oplc
Yet Rcpuhht.: .lll p.mpndnun~ hold ~hen
tongues
In somL' w.1ys. these LOmp l.unJs .ul'
"i l\o C

ptcdlct.Ihlc

ldcnl~)g ucs ,J]W,l)" ·Wlllk

themselves mto a lather when pohDctans
sell ou~ tgnonng the fact that pohUcs
revolves an:und tl1C an of tl1C deal -swapptng a btl of punly on one tssue for
an mch of progress on another
Rtght now, Repubhcans can do no
heltcr tl1an mch ahead They don 'l have
the votes to run Washtngton So they
mu.' l bargam The same goes forChnton
Without the stimulus of a great threat or
dtsaster the GOP Congress and tl1e Clmton Whnc House' have no chotec but to
dwell on tiJC surface ol thmgs all talk, no
revolutton
TillS hnngs us back to our starttng
penni II t.1kcs a prcs1dcnt and a Congress
to move an agenda As a result, the
h) pcrvcriltl.\lmg cntt~.:" ought to g1ve ll a
rest
B1ll Clmton 1s ::1 mert:un.tl president.
Dcnu ll:rats cnuldn t get anythmg done
wlll:n they were rn control because he

nc\ct held sill\ lor tiJCrn Rcpubhcans
sul\.'ly won I do .my hcttcr Tc,un Gm·
gtu.:h m.lCic ,, tmy hu nl headway th1s
yl',l\ no 11lOIC

ll1ts stgTMb neither w.'tory or dcfea1
II \ JUst tl'k: pnr..:c of d1 v1ck..xi govcmmenl

Write Tony Snow, Creators Syndimte, 5777 West Century Blvd., Suite
7(Ml, Los Angele&lt;, Calif. 90015.

-~ 'J

/

, ~oltdo ·32:/4ff' '1 ""'-0

..

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-~~ &lt; • '-·-~~·-----.. . ,.;•:._.._.,=PA.~

~

r1

.. ~~!!O'!n 1 34'/44~
INO

I
,-........\

'

Go-g&gt;

'

r· 1..•. -~ •

Earl F.

'

Meigs announcements

weather forecast ·
upper 40s Chance of ram 30 percent
Extended forecast
Thursday mght Partly cloudy
Lows in the upper 20s
Friday Partly cloudy Htghs near
50.
•
Saturday Mostly dear Lows tn
the lower 30s and htghs tn the upper
50s
Sunday. Mostly clear Lows m the
upper 30s and htghs m the mtd 60s

By l'he Associated Pre88
Southeastern Ohio
Today Partly cloudy m the mom·
in g..Then becommg cloudy. Highs m
the upper 50s Northwest wmd 5 to
10 mph.
Tomght Cloudy Achanccofratn
showers. Lows m the mtd and upper
~Os Chance of ram 50 percent.
Northwe st wmd 10 to IS mph
Thursday Cloudy wtth a chance
of sprinkles early. Then partly
M4th cooler wtth highs in the
duudy
.

Revival slated
Revtv.tl wtll be held Fnday
through Nov I, 7 p m. mghtly at the
Rose of Sharon Holmess Churc~.
Rutland. wuh evangehst Rev
Thomas Remme I Paslur Dewey
Kmg mvlles the pubhc.
Church homecoming
Homecomtng wtll be held Sunday
at the Anllqutty Bapltst Church wtlh
servtce s at I0 a m followed by lunch
at 12·30 p.m. Pastor Jesse Wmgrove

.

welcomes all

Rain-snow mixture
likely in north tonight

Senior Citizen Center activities
The Sentor Ctttuns Center tn
Pomeroy wtll have a spectal eventng
on Thursday for the

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

..--Local briefs-----.
Man shot while turkey hunting
Th~ DllhtOn of Wtldltfe i&gt; tnvesugalmg a hunung·related 'hootmg that happened near Pomeroy Tuesday arQund II 15 a m
The' 1cum "Carl Bryant, 71, Pomero) who was hun11ng "'uh h~&lt;
brother. Benny Bryant. 58. of Willtam'oOn W Va
Carl Bl)ant wa.' apparently 'hot by h" brother whtk the two were
turkey hunltng near the Howell H1ll Cemetery. accordmg to Metgs
C'ounty Gam~ Protector K.:Hh Wnud
Wood sa1d Benny Bryant"\hot Carl Bl)ant wuh a 12-gauge 'hot-

gun lo&lt;.~f.lt:d "'-tth number:! 'hot The V!Clttn wa.., 'tru~.:L by three pel·

lm 1n the arm and abdomen. Wood satd
The two walked ou1 ot the wood~ and we01 to Veleram. \1emon·

al Hu,pllal tn Pomeroy Carl Bryant was later transported to Hol10r
Med1cal Center 111 Galhpol" where he was admtlted and lt~ted tn sta•
ble cnmlttton thtll rnorntng. accordmg to a ho,pttal 'po"e'v.ornan

Cause of the shootm;; has not been detertnmed Wood &lt;atd
rnve..;ugauon

l

evenmg meal program Hal Kneen,
Metgs County Agncultural and Nat·
ural Resources agent, and the Metgs
Master Gardeners w1ll conduct a
lender bulb (canna, dahlta. caladtum)
plant exchange and present educa·
tlonal matenal about bulbs from 4·5
p m A blood pressure cltme will be
held 4-4.45 p m and Juntor and Rtta
Whue wtll play old ttme favonte
muste at 5 30 p m followmg the
meal A free w1ll olfenng w1ll be taken The center serves a meal Tuesday
and Thursday, 4 45 to 5 301p m. and
ts tntended to offer a nutnttonal
meal at low cost, $4 a meal, plus
opportunuy for fellowshtp

State Route 124 between Ponland and Long Bo11om "til be closed
Monda) for a slip repa1r projeCt. accordmg lo the Ohto D&lt;partment
ut Tran . . pnrwttnn The road w11l be cJo,ed tnr apprmum;~lely lwo
week'
•
The clmure 1s part of an un-gomg $124 ~76 prnjecl b) the Alan

Stone Company. Inc. Chesterhill Dunng the clo,ure. mownsts wtll
have to detour vta &gt;late Route 681 because state Route 24S" closed
al another shp repatr proJeCt
Stale Route 338 below Portland ha&lt; been reopened

Middleport Court news
Middleport Mayot Dewey Horton
proces.,ed 20 cases tn Mayors Court
on Tuesday evemng

Fmcd were Mmdy D Pallerson,
MtJdleport $25 and""'' fa1lure to
yteld Rocky Sharr4r. Mtddleport.
$75 ,md cosl,.lmtenng. Todd L. Farky. Btdw&lt;ll. $100 ,mil costs, disorderly manner Shaun Lambert, Rut·
lanJ $25 ,mi) costs. delecltve
exhaust, Steve Arrowood, Pomeroy,
~100 and cusl&lt;. dtsorderly by mtoxtc.tllon. Dtana L Ztegler, Rutland,
$200 and costs, dnvtng under FRA
suspe nsion. Deborah J Abbott, Bar·
nesv1lle, $15 and costs. speed. Arthur
Meadows. Potnt Pleasant. W Va,
$100 and costs, undet;age consump·
tlon, Jamte Terzoppolus, M1ddleport,

B,trrows .tnd £tits. steady to weak,
UemanJ 4tnd movemenl hght to mod-

era!e ~

US 1-2, 230-260 \bs country
potnts 24 00·25 50. lew 23 50. plants
25 S0-27 CKJ. l&lt;w 25 00
U S. 2-J. 230-260 lbs. 22 50·
24 00, 21 0-23 0 lbs 20 50-22 50
Sows· near steady
U S J. 3, 300-400 lbs. · 13 0015 00, 400·500 lbs. 15.00-17 00:
500 600 lbs 17 00-21 00, few over
600 lbs 21 00-24 00.
Boa" 0\ er 300 lbs 9.00·11 00!
UQdcr 300 lbs 13 00-15 00.
E,ttmated recetpls 15.000
,Prices rrom Producers Live·
stock Association

Wcdnesd.ty"s trend s

error

Hospital news
APPRECIATION DINNER • The Meigs Coun·
ty Agricultural Society hosted an appreciation
dinner Monday night altha Graf1ge building on
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds. Dan Smith,
board president, spoke of the cooperation of
everyone toward making the 1998 Meigs County Fair a succe88. He emphasized the Important

.

Puhhshcd -every ~flcrnuon Monday th, ough

Fr1day t II Court St, Porn!;! roy, Ohm by the
Ohm Valley l'uhhsht'lg Company Second class
posllgc p:ml tt P~m(•oy 6hto
~em her 1 he A~~OCtJtcd Press and the Ohio
Nc...Jspa(tt.;f A.~fiC I.llton
Pu~1m11st~r Send .H.It.hc..s concc11ons to The
pady Sent mel lll Court St Pomeroy, OhiO

45769

•
SUHSCR!PTlON RA1ES
By C11rrier or Motor Houle
One Week.
.$2 00
One Monlh
S8 70
One Year
.. , • .....
St04 00

SINGLE con PRICE

•
35 Cents
mJt dcsmng to pay the carrier may
rcmttln adnnc.: dtrcct to ~a1ly Senuncl on
11 1hrcc st;o; or 12 month b:l~s. Credit w1H be
gtv.:n dmct each week
No ~ ubsc nptiOn by mall penmllcd m areas
whcrt.: home carr1er scrv1cc IS :o '~• labh:
Pubhshcr reserves the rtght to adjusl r•tcs dur·
D3tly:

· Stocks

~uhscnbcrs

mg

the

l h~ngc~

sub!\t!npuo n

pcrmd ~ubsctJpiJOn rate

may be 1mpl c m~nted hv ch angtng the

Llut \Utm of the

I

I

~ubslnpttn n

MAILSUUSCRIP'IION
Inside Mclp County
I 1 We:ck s
26 Wceh
'il Wee k~

S27 30
$53 82
$11J'i

¥i

Rates Outslde{MeiAs .:::oonly
13 Weeks ,
, $29 2~

26 W~o:cks

52 Wr.;cks

$5.5 CHI
.$109 72

Reader Services
,

Ltd ............................. ........26 3/8

Correction Polley

Our nulin .:;oncern in all !llories Is to be
p.ccurate lr you know or an uror In a.
stnry, call the new!lmom at (740) 992·
2t5S We will check your Information
and make a correction if warranted.

News Departments
The maan nun~hcr Is 992-1155. Depart•
111 ent utenstons are·
..Ed. tiOtl
General Man11ger. .. ,............. .
New~

3'.. .....................

Am Ele Power .................. 49 1/8
Akzo .............................. 37 13/16
AmrTech ............ .....................50
Ashland 011 ...................... 49 1/4
AT&amp;T ................................ 61 3/8
Bank One ........................49 7/16
Bob Evans .. ...................... 19 314
Borg-Warner .................... 40 7/8
Broughton ... ,.................... 18 1/4
Champion ............................... 10
Charm Shpa ................... 4 1/32
City Holding ...................... 34 3/8
Federal Mogul ...............50 5/16
Gannell ............................. 58 1/2
Goodyear ....................... 54 5/10
Kmart .................................13 5/8
Kroger .................... ...... 48 7/16
Lands End ......................... 161/2

I
or ExL !i06
. E•t. llOZ

I

Oak Hill Flnl ................. 18 7/8
OVB ................................. 41 1/4
One Valley ....................... 31 7116
Peoples ......................... 25 1/2"
Prem Fin\... ................... 19 3/8
Rockwell ...........................36 5/8
RO/Shell ............... ....... ..... .48 5/8
Sears .................... ......... 43
Shoney's ......................... 2 1/16
Star Bank ......................7115/16
Wendy's ........................ 231/16
Wosrthlngton ............. 1313/16

-·-·-

Stock reports ere the 10:30
a.m. quotes provtded by Advest
of Gallipolis.

role of the Junior Fair Board members end
commanded Julie Spaun, pictured, 1998 Fair
Queen, for her role In getting' a positive mea·
aage out about Meigs County as she has trav·
aled around the state. Saturday she will attend
the Pumpkin Show at Circleville.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Oct. 20 - Colleena
Clark, Jamte Sharp
(Published with permission)

Meigs EMS logs 8 calls
Untts olthe Metgs County Emergency Med1c,11 Servtce recorded etghl
calls for asststance Tuesday. Unus
respondtng Jncluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
6 54 .t m Overbrook ' Nurstng
Center. Mtddleport, Rose Isner, treat·
ed at the scene,
7 52 a nt , West Matn Street.
Pomeroy, Ntcholas McKmght, Vel·
erans Memonal Hospllal;
X 21 a m , OSNC, Pearl Adams,
Pleasant Valley Hospttal,

Couples issued
The 'Daily Sentin~1 1 marriage Ucenses
ComniUnlty Newspaper Holdings, Inc

Forfe111ng bonJs were Ralph
Smtih. Jr.~ Lexmgtoh: W Va., $60,
exptred tags. $250 dnvtng under sus·
penston. and $60, licllllous tags:
Jacque! me Rosltnskt. Galhpohs, $46,
speed. Wendell Gabbard. McKee,
Ky. $52. speed. Bnan Abell. Jack·
'on. $52. speed, Wtlltam D Stewart,
Rutland. $60, runntng stop stgn;
Darnck St C!atr. Mtddleport. $50.
speod. Dann y Hollman, Mason,
W V.1, $60, exptred tags, Guy Wayne
Schuler Mtddlepon, $60. passmg tn

Jeremy Ftsher was mcorrectly
tdenltfied "' Jeremy M1ller tn the
Southern Htgh School Homecommg .
photograph Sunday Ftsher escorted
sophomore atlendant Fallon Rou sh
dunng the homecormng t:eremony •
The Datly Sent mel apologtus for the

Hngs ste.1dy . sow..:' steady, catlle

The followtng couples were
Jssued marnage licenses recently m
the Metgs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck
Charles Wtlliams McK mney, 20,
and Amanda Elotse Roush . 25. P.,th
of Mtddleport, Christopher Edward
Bedwell, 35, Toronto, Onlano, Canada, and Sherry Sue Herdman, 31.
Mtddleporl, Adam Lee Gnmm, 25,
and Candace Lynn Lovms ,&gt;~ 4. both
of New Haven, W Va "

and col\to,, d1,orderly after v.am1ng.
and $200 and co,ts, re,lsllng arresl

Correction

ste,td y

(USPS 21J 960)

\ouenng. Vtncenl K

way slreet

Summary of Tuesday's aucttons al
Caldwell, Eaton, Furmerstown, Lan caster and Wapakoneta
Hogs
Market hogs: 21.25-27 00, hght
sows 13 00·22.60, heavy sows 16 75·
25.85
Feeder ptgs 5 00-25 00 head,
20.00-28 ()0 CWl
All boars 17 25 and down
Cattle:
Slaughter steers, ch01ce 55 ()().
64.00. select 50 CXl-57 .00
Sloughter he1le", chdtce 55 0063.25, select 50.00-57 00
Feeder cattle.
Yearlmgs steers 48 00-65 00,
hetlers 44 00-60 00
Calves steers 45 00-77 50, hetfers
44 CKJ-69 flO
Cows
Commerctal and uuhty 28 00·
38.75, canner and cutter 20 00· 33 00
All bulls 30 00-50 50

_Market News

co!'.t&lt;:;

Stone, l'(!tddlepon 52()() and costs,
assault $100 and costs. diSorderly
manner. Trenton 0 Quail&lt;, Mtddleport, $100 and cost• l01nlenng. $ 1()0

Albany. $60. wrong way on a one

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohto·lndt·
ana dtrect hog pnces al selected buytng potnts Wednesday a' provtded by
the US Department of Agriculture

$75 and

a no pa ...smg •zone, Cathy Wheeler.

northern Ohto on Thursday while
sktes wtll remam cloudy m the south
Htghs on Thursday will be 45-50.
Thursday ntght, the mercury wtll dtp
mto the upper 20s
The record-htgh temperature for
tht~ date at the Columbus weather
Statton was 83 degrees m \953 whtle
the record low was 17m 1952

By The Associated Press
Cold Canadtan atr swept into
Ohto by a frontal system could pro·
duce some snow mtxed wtth ram m
I he northern part of the slate tonight,
the Na11onal Weather Servtce satd
Cloudy sktes wtll prevatl }n the
south.
Some showers wtll hnger over

!IJc

mcu.lcml r~ma1n" under

Road closing slated

GraceD Wtll. 92, Canal,Wmchester, daed Tuesday. Oct 2o. 1998. at the
Manetta Center tor Health and Rehabthtat1on
She was a member of the Faith United MethodiSt Church and was a ret1red
school teacher wtth 39 yt-ars uf servtce
She is survtved by her stsler, Blanche Essex. meces and nephews
She was preceded m &lt;.Ieath by her husband. Montgomery Wtll. on Apnl
24, 1997.
Serv1ces wt\1 be held Thursday, 10 a.m at Spence Funeral Home. Canal
Wmche,ter, where lnends may call tomght. 5-i! p m.
Bunal wtll be Thursday, I p m at Mt Herman Cemetery, Pomeroy

WVA.

Cl t998 AccuWealher, Inc

_"~oday's

Lockett

Grace D. Will

""'

'

~Shotgun•

Earl F "Shotgun~ Lockett. 75, M1ddlepon, dted Sunday, Oct 19, 1998.
at Pleasant Valley Hospttal. Pomt Plea•anL W Va.
He was born Oct. 18, '1923, m Chflon, W Va. son of the late F1l"'n M
and Clara Ethel Compson Lockett He was employed m the matntenance
tkp~rtment at the former Foote Mmeml m New Haven. W 1/a and was an
Anny •etemn ol World War II and a member of the VeterJns ot Foretgn War;
Stewart-Johnson Post 9926, Mason. W Va.
He ts survtved by spectal ln~nds John D and Pamela C Wolle of
Pomeroy.
He W!L' preceded m death by a stster Evelyn M Lockett un Oct I
A memonal servtce wtll be held Thursday. 7 p m at Foglesong Funeral
Home 1n Ma.wn w1th the Rev George Hoschar oflictattng 1\lo.'Calhng hour&gt;
wtll be observed

Cincinnati '35'/50° ]

•

'

Ft~K:tt{ JUS um~crv.tfiVL'~ CIJ t1lpl.nt lcd
o~hout the "cave .md. run' strategy hut
.Lsk y{~llt'SCII Vvh.tt dtntLC (IJJ Ncwl s

,~

sources m and out of RussJ,m

to be the last-second pnme llliiiiSla"
chotee when Russta's ruble headed
south Some complained that, while he
had s1gmficant fore1gn policy experuse,
he had no cconomtC expenence, which
1s what 1s ¢-;petatcly t-'ed now.
Primal.ov helped fuel some of those
complamts by announctng -- now,
famously - that "we have no program "
He thought tl would be reassunng that
he was I n01 1mplemenUng anything
qutcldy But after commenlalors began
mocking his words, Primakov realized
that he had to do something an\:1 move a
htdc faster than the old Commumst m
him was mclined to do
The s1tuauon has become despentle
enough that even some tmportant Russtan cnucs have told us that they hope for
the best wtth him m th1s post. They've
lost all conftd~nce m Yeltstn himself.
And thus we come to the vtstOng
CEOs who have had unusual audtences
w1th Primakov -- at the pnme mtmster's
request.

r-----~-----;;;€)ot.;t;;;;;~~~~~::::::--------------------~--------~----~----l
. •~1a, ..Whtl e
~~tt't

(.',unp.ugn

was about Kosovo and GROUND TROOPS '

do7£n

already been achieved It was the capstone on a life of tmprobabic twtSls and
turns
Primakov had begun his career as a
rndto JOUmolrst, then a Pravda corre·
sjlondenl and sometime KGB spy, spe·
cmiUJng m the Middle Easl He won
such respect for hts academtc prowess
that he rose to become, '" successton.
dtrector of two of the most prestJgtous
Sovtel academic rnsotutes, the ftrst for
Oriental Studtes. and then for World
Econumtcs and lntemauonal Relaltons
He later lie&lt;;anJC a top advtser to the
last Sovtel prestdenl, M1khatl Garbachev, who tapped him for higher gov·
emment post&lt; Then YeiiSm chose him

I

11.:y to plt!t.:c t,'T\\Itcr v,tluc on mdtv1du.11
lrcL:dom th.tn on hurc.mt.:r.lttr. : teach
lh.:y got SliUtll TllL'Tl they went home to

Wh6n I talked about 'go1ng all the way JUSI now ''

Death Notices

. -Thursday, Oct. 22
MICii

The Daily

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

2 51 p m , Dewtlls Run Road,
Portland, Mtldred Knder, PVH ,
Racme squad asststed.
6 32 p.m., OBNC, Evelyn Murray,
PVH.
RACINE
2 02 p m., Vtne Street, Racme,
Mtchael Culhns, treated at the scene
RUTLAND
,
7 59 am., Salem Street, Ethel
Ntcholson. VMH,
8 55 am , Dexter Road, Jay Tay·
lor, Holzer Medtcal Center.
'

~

Squads answer five calls
Umts of the Me1gs County Emer·
gency Medtcal Se!VIce recorded live
calls for asststance Monday. Units
respondmg tncluded '
CENTRAL DISPATCH
II 46 a m , Leadmg Creek Road,
Rutland. Mary Day. Veterans Memo·
nal Hospllal .
7 05 p m.. Village Manor Apart·
menls. Mtddleport, Ed Gordon, treat·
ed at the scene. Mtddleport squad .
asstsled,

7 41 p m , Eagle Rtdge Road •
Chester, Geneva Maxson, VMH ,
Ractne squad asst sted
•
COLUMBIA TWP. VFO
9 52 p m , Weaver Road, structure
ftre on Donna Cheadle property, Rut:
land squad and VFD asststed, no
IllJUries reported
t
RACINE
9.48 p m.. State Route 124, Enn
Roush, treated at the scene

Goodyear A ward...Continued rrorn page I
Sh1rley Sayre Other board members
are Joe Boltn. ch,unllart , Marco Jeffers vtce ~,.;h.urm.m. Thomas Thetss,
se&lt;.:re t.lry -trea:-;urer, and Ch.1rles Yost
Mart1n Joyce olthe Ohto Depanmenl
ol Nalural ~t:suurt.:es, co nducted the

dect1on
Bohn

w.t~ ma ster of ceremomes
and w~komed members dnd guests
R1ce h&lt;~d the tnvocaltonal before the

dtnner served by Star Grange
Spe . lker was Conservalwnt st Lon
Ryan·Gnffin who served as a Peace
Corps Volunteer lor two years tn the
Cemr,tl Afncan Repubhc Frum 1984
to 1986 she worked as an tnl,md fish ·
enes -..oluntcer tt!~Khlng Atnc.m vill,tgers how to budd modern lish
ponds ,md huw lo r,use tish for food
.mJ prolll

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

Her sltde presentalton sh,tred the
JOYS and struggles ollhe day-to · d.ty
ltves of Afncan vtllugers '" wha t ts
constdered to be one u\ the world\
least developed n&lt;1llons She satd that
by gtvmg presentations on her experiences now. she 1s helpmg to a(.;com-

phsh another goal as a Peace Corps
volunteer·· that of •harmg what· she
learned

oversea~

She now restdes tn Zanesv11le v.tlh
her famtly and works as .t sotl conservattomst tor the Nutural Resourt.:es

ConservatiOn Servtce 111 Morgan and
Muskm gum Counltes

~~II f()/i~~e ...
Continued from page I
natural beauty of the autumn season
Maps and detailed 1ttneranes l or
the West Vtrgtnta lalllohage tours arc
availabl e !rom the West Vtrgmt.J
Dtvtslon of Tounsm s website at
www state wv'"us/tourrsm, or by cal l ~
tng the dtVtston at I (t\00) CALL·
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(Across from the Mason County Courthouse)

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�•
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Sports

The Daily Sentinel
I

--·

-~--

New York leads World Series 3-0

Scoreboard
Baseball

I H........

World Series slate

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lhe etghlh mmng.. to bem lhe

San Diego Padres 5-4 m Game J
"We fee l hke we're on the bnnk
of somethmg spec1al." st&lt;~ ning pitch·
er Da\' ld Cone satd "There's gomg
to he a lot of arguments hi stoncall y
aboul where this team fil s m "
Andy Pe111 11e \\Ill try to fim sh nlf
the Yankees' first Senes sweep smce
1950 when hq11tches against Kevin
Brown A wtn would g t\'C New York

an' overall record of 125·50 -

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a chance lo play

,mlhe World Senes, !hat's what you
+play for We'd like to gel 125. th,11
\\Ouid teel rea l!~ goc•l We' re m prel·
1y good shape."' '
No team m ha seb.11l f"'lory ha'
m•ereo me an 0·3 deflcn 1n the j)OSI·
scasqn. Now the Padres hope to do 11
agamst a team 1ry1ng to ceme nt li s
place as the best ever
" I'm not gmng to say we're
in v1 ncible. but we've defimlely got
the mome ntum:· Yankees star Ch1lt
Dav" S&lt;uil
On a mght wh en everythin g
seemed to be gomg n ohl for San
Diego- great plays. clu~ch pilchmg
by Sterlmg H1t chcock anrl key hns
from Tony Gwynn- Brosi us and the
Y~rkees rumed ''
For the second lime tn rhe Sf'rtes.
the Yankees rall1ed from a three-run
deficit m the late mnmgs ·BroSius
contribuied three hils. raising hi s
Senes ave rage to 538

TH E

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•

ny, then ran into the fence to grab
BroSius' drive in the second mning.
Held hitless for five mnmgs by
Cone, the Padres took a J.o lead in
the sixth on a burst sinned by Hitchcock's unlikely single and helped
along by Gwynn's RBI single and
nght fielder Paul O'Neill's throwrng
error.
Yet with 64.667 crazed funs roaring and the;.cranked·up rock music
blaring. the se Yankees would not
break
BroSius Jed off the se\·enth with a
home run a~am st Hl!chcock. MVPuf
the NL championship and a member
of the Yankees' rotation with Cone in
1995. New York closed to 3·2 in the
same mning, but shonstop Chris
Gomez made an eye· popping catch to
start an inning·endmg double play
In the eighth, however, there was
no one left to save the Padres.
O'Neill drew a leadoff walk from
Randy Myers - once again. the Yan·
kees' patience at the plate paid off and then Bochy made an early call to
the bullpen
It was Trevor Time. and Hoffman
walked mas AC·DC's "Hell's Bells"
senti he crowd into a fren zy. Hoffman
had been successful on 53 of 54 save
chances during the regular season,
though a blown chance m the NLCS
agamst Atlanta perhaps was a bad
omen

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way the ball bounced off the foot of
receiver Shevin Wiggins and into
Davison's anns.
Davison sa1d he hopes to be
remembered for more than a single
catch. Yet even 1f he won the HeJSman Trophy, he admits it would be
hard to eclipse that moment on Nov..

8.
"It would probably take a lot to
make people forget about that catch,"
Davison said Tuesday.
Unless you' re a Missouri fan,
why would you want to?
Top-ranked Nebraska tra1led 38·
31 when quanerback Scott Frost led
the Huskers 67 yards in the final I :02.

executiye directon and presidents '"
the htslory of this union. And
lawyers. And somehow, we are
unable to have a conversation that
gets us any negotiation."
One day after the union lost its
guaranteed contracts arbitration
grievance before arbitrator John Feerick, then! wa• an internal debate as to
what's the next best course of action.
Some thought the wisest move
would he to contmue to present a um fied front and resist accepting a bad
deal -even if the lockout lasts 1nto
January.
Others, including a vocal minonty of the agents' council, were push·
ing for decenification, a move that
could lead to a multiyear fight w1th
the owners.
Players earlier thls summer gave
the umon'sexecutivecouncil the go·
ahead to decenify, so a vote among
the rank·and-file would not , he nee-

World Series ... &lt;Continued from Page 4)

Tom Kite ,

ers pllchmg, ch1ppmg. sand play
a nd putting
The S.Yste.m uses two h1gh speed

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By CHRIS SHERIDAN
NEW YORK (AP)- Should the
NBA players un1on stay the course
and conrinue to resist a bad deal? Or
would the best move be to decenify
the umon and try to heal the owners
m a long, draggedoOut court fight?
That was the question to be debat·
ed today in Las Vegas at a meeting of
the player agents' advisory council.
On Thursday, Michuel Jordan,
Scottte Pippen and Karl Malone are
IIJTlOOg those e.pected in attendance
at Caesar's Palace as the umon holds
a meeting open to all players.
Commissioner David Stem and
the owners, meanwhile, would prefer
to be back at the bargaining table.
"I can tell you," Stem said. "This
union leadership stymies us. Russ
A Qr&lt;\D,ik, deputy commissioner) and I,
~methmg over 50 years com·
bined, we've been able to negotiate
with every other combination of

mstr uctton that is unique to

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passed 11 out to Schneulc;r.
"There was a &lt;eramble in froot
and the puck ended up at the pomt," '
said Edmonton's Doug Weight. play·
mg h1s fir'il game arter coming back
from a contract holdout. " I didn't
even know. how 11 got out there." ''
Schneider saw Essen&lt;a come out
oft he net and fall after blnckmg Har.
vey'&lt; hard &gt;hot.
" 1'h&lt;Ke are the best ones for me.
when I JU&lt;I hit the middle of lhe net ~'
Schneider said.
The game wa.&lt; officiated by two
referee&lt; - Don Koharsk1 and Dem &lt;
LaRue. The NHL. hoping to crack
down on ob&lt;trucllon pe~allles and
blatant allemp4s to lnJU"'. i&lt; uSinj! the
TRYING TO SCORE- The Carollllll HurrlciM ...' Tundlty nlalrt'• NHL game In Greensboro, N.C.,
two-ref system in &lt;electiVe games
Keitt! Primeau (left) trln to put the pudl put y.,.. wheN the tfurrlau~H won :J.1. (AP)
this season for the firstt1me'" its hir couver goalie Garth Snow durl~ the first period of
tory.
Their comb1ned penalty calhng over San Jose and Dallas over Cal- a qetlection,
unbeaten and kept San Jose winleis.
resulted m 15 power plays- nindor gary.
Primeau, who also a~sisted on Ray
A goal by the Ayers' Colin Forbes
the Rangers and stx for the Oilers.
Hurrkoann 3, Canucks I .
Sheppard'S' goal to open the scoring, snapped a 1· 1 tie at 3:20 of the third
Each team convened two
Keith Primeau scored his third tallied hts third goal of the season period. Lindros put the game away
" We have to stay out of the box goal 1n four games as Carolina I :56 into the second period on a pow· with a wrist shot at 15·48.
and he more d1sc1plined." We1ght downed Vancouver to run its home er play. Sami Kapanen alsri scored 1n
Brind'Amour'and the Sharks' Jeff
s31d. " I know that's what the coach· unbeaten streak to four straight, •· the second period to give the Hurri· Friesen traded power-play goals ·in
es are gomg to he tellmg us tomor- 1ncluding three ties.
canes a 3.0 lead.
the second period of a game domirow''
Goalie Anurs.lme, who faced 18
Flycn 3, Sharks I
nated for the most pan by excellent
In the night's other three NHL Vancouver shots, lost his shutout 3 02
In Philadelphia. Eric Lindros and eoall~ndmg and tenacious defense
games. the hometeam won 3· 1· Car- mto the final period when rookie Bill Rod Bnild' Amour each had a goal
olina over Vancouver. Ph1ladelph1a Muckalt scored his first NHL goal on and an asstst as the Flyers remained

W1th seven seconds to play at Mis· me at that point. ... I knew I caught
souri's 12. Frost looked left, then it. I JUSI wanted to make sure the offi·
cial knew I caught it."
threw right
Kns Brown kicked the extra point
HIS target, Wiggms, bobbled the
to
force
ovenime. Three plays later,
ball near the goal line as two Mis·
soun defenders converged. W1ggins Frost scored on a SIX·yard run. Four
tumbled, and the ball bounced trom plays after that, Mike Rucker sacked
Missouri quanerba.:k Corby Jones on
h1s reach as time expired.
But before it fell , W1ggin s k1cked founh down.
the ball over his ljead- about two • ~ Game over. Nebruska 45, Mis·
yards mto the end zone. Davison soun 38.
While the narrow win dropped
came from nowhere to scoop the ball,
saying l,tter he could feel the turf Nebraska from No. I to No. 3 in the
rankings, it preserved what would
below his fingers . .
"It all happened so fa•t. " Davison become a 13·0 season and kept the
recalled. " I can 't remember every Huskers contendmg for a national
deta1l. I guess I had God looktng over utle they eventually shared M~ith

Michigan.
"It has just selm 1~ me over time
that it (the catch) was bigger than I
thought at the time," Davtson sa1d.
And instantly, Davison wa• no
longer just a freshman rec~iver from
Tecumseh, Neb. The catch won
ESPN's Espy award as the play of the
year in television sport•.
"I don't mmd people a.&lt;king me
about it," Davison said. "I just try to
stay humble. I know I didn't do anything great. I was just the guy who
was at tbe right place at the right
time ...

And what about Wiggins? Unlike
Davison, Wiggins ~ly discusses the

play in detail. Now a senior. he main·
tams he d1dn 't kick the ball intenuonally. wh1ch could have resulted in
a 15-yard penalty.
'
" I thmk 11 wa.&lt; just a natural reac·
uon , just somethmg that haP.pened."
W1ggins sa1d. "My body wa.• going
backward. My foot was coming up."
. MISsoun coach Larry Smith
agreed.
" I don't think he knew what he
d1d, to he honest," Smnh sa1d this
week. "That's a bunch of baloney (to '
say) he did it on purpose "
Told that W1ggms claims he did·
n't kick the ball on purpose. Davison
laughed

NBA players debate conti.nuing resistance vs. decertifying
. union

The new Robert Trent Jones Golf 'rrail
Academy of Golf ts a CompuSport
Teac hing Center, oiTenng golf

1'1:!

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By TIM KORTE
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)- Nebras·
ka's Mau Davison set a school record
with 167 receiving yards against
Texa• A&amp;M earlier this month. I
That doesn 't come close in Comhuskers lore to what Davison did last
fall m Columbia. Mo.
As the No. 7 Comhuskers (6--1. 2·
I Big 12) prepare for Saturday's
game against No. 19 Missouri (S- 1.
J.O), Davison has been recalling the
miracle catch that helped Nebra•ka
beat the Tigers la.•t year.
Listed in the playbook as "99
Double Slant," it became popularly
known a.• "The Flea Kicker" for the

.
'
YES! - The New York Yankees' Scoll Brosius shows his pleasure"
with his lhree·run homer off Trevor Hoffman In the eighth Inning ot
Gam~ 3 of the Worl~ Series Tuesday night In San Diego. The van•
kees 5·4 victory, built on ttle strength of the second of Brosius' two
homers, gave the Bronx Bombers a 3·0 lead In the Fall Classic. (AP)

sw ing to 1m pact to fOllow throug}, ,

1 ~ 11

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'
The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Nebraska's Davison finds.J fame from ~- 'Fiea KicJ&lt;er' lit:lgers on

"There's nothmg. more fun than

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A chan~e 1n &lt;cener) d1d not
change San D1ego \ fortune' Bt!'~len
l\\ ice tn Ilie Bronx. Ihe Padre"' agmn
came up 'hon am1d the palm tree\.

Ji,h taco' and heachball' of Qualcomm Stadium
The Padre' &lt;eemed to have luck
on their side from the \tan. Cen1er
fiddcr Sieve Finley made a jugghng
ca1ch on Chuck Knoblauch'&lt; leadoff
(See SERIES on Page 5)

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··Th'" gameJ~ache~ m ant.! gmblil
gut~ out... Padre ~ manager

your

Schneider admiUed. •
But Manny Malhotra. the
By KEN RAPPOPORT
Rangers' top pick at the NHL en1ry
NEW YORK (API - With all draft last spring. got New Yod stan.
their scoring problems this season ed when he jammed in a loose puck
the last thing the desperate New Yod for his first goal at IS:l 0.
Ranger. needed was to have a goal
"(The puck) came in and took an
disallowed.
absolutely strange bounce m the corSOin.,how. they managed to over- ner," 01lers coach Ron Low said
come that disheanening blow and "And then 11 took a weirder bounce
beat Edmonton 3-2 Tuesday night for when it hit (Edmonton goalie Boh
thetr first victQrY of the season.
Essensa There we"') a lot of strange
Defenserilan Math1eu Schneider bounces out there."
scored the tiebreaking goal at8:38 of
Josef Beranek put Edmonton
the th11d period as the Rang= avoid· ahead 2·1 when he scored a power·
ed matching their wont stan in 40 play goalnn hi s own rebound at 9 23
years. They stopped a five-game of the second. The Rangers ued it on
winless streak (04·1 ), one shy of a power·play goal by Leetch 30 sec·
theirsix..game spin (0.24) to start the onds mto.Jite third perind.
1958·59 &amp;ea.&lt;On.
The Rllngers thought they had the
"We had to get that first (wm), tying goal earlier when Wayne Gretand I will enjoy it tonight," Rangers zky put a rebound tn the net al 16: II
captam Brian Leetch said after the of tbe second periOd. But it was disallowed because Adam Graves wa&lt;
R~gers also snapped a five-game
wmless st..,ak against the Oilen (0· ruled to he in the crease.
2·3).
The Rangers managed to keep
Before Tuesday, the Rangers had thetr composure, though. and score
been outscored 17·7, and it looked the game's last two goals. Schneider
like it was going to he another one of heat E.&lt;sensa w1th the goalie on the
those mghts when Bill Guerin scored ice after blocking a shot hy Todd Har·
a power.play goal for the Oilers JUSt vey.
I :SI into the game.
Harvey made the play when he
" We struggled in the beginning," grabbed the rebound of his shot and

Sc oil Br"'IUS brought the Yankee'
.·t&lt;&gt; the verge of the1r record 24th IItle
He lui two home,.., mcludmg a three·
run shot off relief ace Trevor Hoff.

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Ohio H.S. football poll

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On Tuesday mght. the Yankees
moved withm one victory Of the only
goal they've had thi&lt; year. wmning
the World Senes. They can wrap 11 up

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SAN DIEGO tAP)- H ~&lt;tory i;
,calling the New York Yanke.-. and

NHL roundup

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Division 1

F:AS fF:RlS CONFF:RENCE

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I

Rangers defeat Oilers 3-2,
claim first victory of season

. Page4
.Wednesday, October 21, 1998

-... --·

~ -~

Wedn11day, October 21 , 1998

Bernie W1lhams cume close to
putting the Yankees ahead. hittmg a
ny ball th at Gwynn caught on the
warning track m nght Tmo Munmez
followed with a walk and then Bro·
SIUS, moved up to sixth m the balling
order because the Yankees played
Without a DH, homered to ce nter for
a 5-3 lead
"We wanted to he agg ressive,"
sa1d Hoffman, who struck out Br0o
sius in this year's AII·Siar game. " I
wasn't aggresSive enough to the butter ~fore . I JUS! tinkered around. not
punmg pitches m the zo ne The Van·
kee s are patient. and they're not

gomg to swing 1f it's not over"
Hoffman had not wnrked in five
days. his longest 1dle penod of the
season. and clearly was not effective
With his miX of changeups und fast balls. He gave up another hit in the
e1ghth before ending the innmg.
"With Trevor, he's the type of
pitcher that you know you have to
buttle and hope you gel a p1tch to
hit." Brosius said. "On the second
p1tch. he threw me a fastb,lll that I
fouled off. Later. he came back with
another one thut I stayed buck on and
hill! ..
Brosius' shots marked the 41st
mult1homer game in Series history,
commg after Greg Vuughn 's perfor·
mance 1n Game I for the Padres.
Regg1e Jackson was the last do It lor
the Yankees, hittmg three in the
clinchmg Game 6 in 1977.
The Padres tried to rally in the bot·
tom half of the e1ghth. w11h a douhle
by Qu1lvio Veras. u smgle by Gwynn
and a sacnfice Oy by Vaughn closing
the gap to a run .
Mariano Rtvera held on for n sctve.

workmgaroundapmroftwo-out smgles by Carlos Hernandez and pinch·
luller Mark Sweeney by stnkmg out
Andy Sheets with runners mthe cor·
ners for the last mit.
Rtvera has pit ched 12 scoreless
1nnmgs in nme postseason ilppc&lt;~rnnces th1s Iall . reco11.hng frve saves
HnfTmnn wound up wrlh the l()ss.

essary.
"The players will not back
do~n , " union d!Tector Btlly Hunter

DiMaggio
to remain
in hospital
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP) - Joe
D1Maggio Will remain m the hospi·
tal for at least a few more days after
having hiS lett lung dramed agmn. a
longtime friend sa1d Tuesday.
"He'll eventually he out . maybe
three or four days." attorney Morns
Engelberg smd "If he were 48, he 'd
be outlast
' week. He has SIX doctors
Tiley aren't gomg to discharge this
guy unless he's perlect."
Officmls at Hollywood Memorml
Reg1onal Hospital refused comment ,
on the condition of the New York '
Yankees' Hall of Fame center-lield·
er.
D1Magg1o, who Will he 84 next
month, was admitted Oct. 12 fur
treatment of a lmgering case of
pneumoma. D1Mngg1o al'o hacl llu·
1d drained from hiS lungs last week,
Engelberg said.
Yank ees owner George Stein·
brenner Cillled on Tue~ dn) to offer hi s
encouragement . E n~elbe rg said.
Engelberg said D1 Magg 10 hus
been w~tchmg the Wm Jd Senes tele·
castS und wa s not surpnscd the Yan·
·''kee s were ahe.rcl of the P.tdres.
.. He knew when the season starl ed they were the bes t tcmn in b.tse·
ball. " Engelberg smd of l!re Yan~~es.
" Th~y're tough Ill heat."

Quest signs
Steere to fill in
for injured
Still
r,.
COLUMBUS . Ohio (AP) - The
Columbus Quesl signed Ch&lt;ma Steere
to a two-week contract Tuesday to fill
the void left by forward Valene
St1ll\ knee lllJury. 11 was nnnounced
by Quest gener,tl munuger B1ll
McGillis
Under the 1e1ms of the ngreement ,
Columbus hus the op11 on of extending the de.11 for the remainder of the
season afle1 lht' two-week pe1 md.
. . Stl!ere. a 6-loot -5 cent er. played
I0

sc.t ~ ons 111

lldl y and w;ts n te.tm-

while Ram1ro Mendozn won in re lief.

mute of ltmnt:r Quest pl ll)'e' Anclrc.t
Lloyd lor the 1995-96 and 1997·98

" We ' re nol by nny me:ms over-

sem;ons Ltsl season, Steere avcmged

confident ut this poult. Ohviously.
we're ecstut1c lo he up ~ - 0." Cone
saiCI. "But KeVI n Brown probably
has some other thought s."
Notes: Quu1comm Stadnun 1s the

lirs1pnrk to hold the Wo1 ltl Senes and
Suror Bowl m th o s.une c.tlondar
year... . Cone smgled, makmg htm ] .
for~R hfet tme·111 the Wotld Sen es
The Yankees' lnst World Series sweep
was ove r the PluJ,,dclplu.r Plulhes m
1950

I &amp;. I P&lt;llllls ,md 12 5 rebounds for the
lla lt.J n Lc.1 guc runner-up S.1mil.\
Scluo
Steere played her co llege bal,l m
San Dte~u Sll.11e niter transfernng
from Nonheast LotiiSinnll.
St1ll.the MVP of both ABL champtonshtp sc11cs. underwent reconstructt\•c s u1 get y on her rig hi knee
Monda~ She sull ered l1 gament and
car11lage damage du11n~ the team \
1irst ex hlhiiiOI,l game earlier thi s
fnnnlh

said. "The sooner the owners realize
this and end the lockout, the quicker
we can avmd enormous damage to
the sport of ba.•ketball."
By decertifying, the union would
remove Itself as the official bargain·
ing agent for the players. A coun
inJunction would then be sought to
end the lockout.

'

If an injunction wa.' granted, the
owners would lift the lockout, opeq
camps and impose new work rules.
I And If the new rules were mofe
restrictive than the old ones. the play·
ers would be expected to file an
antitrust suit against the league seeking treble damages.
NFL players opted for the decer·

ttfication route after their strike railed
in 1987, and their coun fight ·with
NFL owners dragged on for five
years before a settlement wa.'
"'ached.
NBA players who currently have
long-term contracts might benefit
from a decertificatiOn move.

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175 WALNUT ST. • MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-2131

,.

�..
Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Mld.dleport, Ohio

By The Bend

wernesday, October 21,1998

OSU's Murphy uses tal~, physical tools to rattle foes
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)- Rob
Murphy. is no choi r boy. He puts the
offen~ive in offensivt lineman.

the one he piay&lt;.
" I do my thing I'm going to go
out and do my JOb and that'&lt; it," he
said.
There .is little que&lt;lion he '&lt; the

.. 1 love being con&lt;idered an
offensi\'e lineman nastie'it of Buckeyes. He sa1d he
mean. nasty. rm allthO&lt;e things· rm doesn't really care what people oth·
a dirty player. That"s the altitude. er lhan hi.;; le3mmate'i. thmk about
you've goi to have." saod top-ranked hom - although he put~ it in con·
Ohio State's 6-foot-5, ,,3(J().pound siderably more colorful language.
JUnior from Cincinnati. "You do
As a redshirt fre&gt;hman in 1997,
what' you have to do to survive. Tyson Walter started his fir&lt;l colle·
Sometimes it\ breaking those rules." giate game a! tackle. nghl next lo
Murphy ts to line play what Gen- Murp~y He was stunned by what he
eral Sherman was to military strate· heard and saw.
gy.
"He's constantly running hi s
The three-year starter at guard mouth." Walter said. " I was amazed
taunt&lt; and belittles opponeins. talk· at some of the lhings he was 'i.aym.;.·•
ing a ga me as good if not better than
Asked lo give a sahitized version
aggres~ive

of Murphy 's act. Walter .aid that
wa&lt;n'l po&lt;&lt;ible.
"I guess we've got a tough 'ide of•
the line. Not many people in the Bog
Ten like u,," Walter said. " But Rob
lake~ ilia a new level ~ometime"' on
the field. Some of the thmgs he say'
are deflntlely not politically cor- .
rect. ··
Murph y &lt;ee(hes with petty inju&lt;·
ri ce&lt; jull to motil'ate himself.
Ohto Stale tral'els to Nonhwe11em
th JS week and fvr Murphy it'&lt; a day
of vengeance.
He ha&lt;. a vtvtd recollection of
watching the videotape fmm three
yeaf\ ago when Ohio State lost to
Michigan. As the Buckeyes lost.
Nonhwestern's players celebrated

that they would be going to the Rose
Bowl in &lt;lead of Ohio State.
Murphy never fi&gt;rgot those smile&lt;.
"Throughout the game they
n:J. ~ hed

boJCk. to

Ev~n~lon

and have

them &lt;itting around the TV laughing
at u&lt; because we were losing." he
sa1d. "'I'm going to hold thai ngamst

them. That 's what I'm playing For. I
get thi s picture. all of them laughing
at us when we're losing to Michigan.
I want to go nul and show them."
Murphy believe~ he not only must
blook the man on the' other side, but
he al ' o must prolecl his leJmm;Jtes.
T.hree weeks ago in a 28-9 win
overthen-No. 7 Penn State, Murphy
flr;t controlled his man. then told him
about it in detail.

" Basocally. Rob was saying. 'Get
off the field' ' He was awful. I Feel
bad saying it. but Rob was just manhandling thi&lt; kid. In practice, he was
gening more than from this kid, so he
was really lening the kid know that
he didn' t deserVe to be on the field,"
Walter said.
In Saturd.ty's 45- 15 1 ictory over
Minnesota, Murphy said · he badgered Freshman defensive tackle MaJt
Anderle.
."1 had him so ranled toward the
end of the third quaner. We got in a
linle fislfight there all he end It was
just because .1 was talking to him all
game. He kind of got Fed up at the
end," Murphy said. "If I can take a
player- a good player or a bad play-

er, regardless- and have him thinl&gt;ing more'about me than stopping the
ball carrier, then thai's great. I'll have
him take shots at me all day as loll!:
as Mike Wiley or Dave Boston or
whoever is getting the ball and we're
pulling il in the end zone."
He said his fall)ily is opinionale4.
His father, Bob, played fullback at
Miami of Florida and professionally
with the San Diego Chargers. His
brother Ryan is a backup linebacker
at Kentucky.
"In my family, we're brutally
honest." Murphy said. "If everyone
was -real honest with each other. i
think life would be a little easier for

everyone.··

Upper Arlington's Slager keeps family's .pas~ing tradition alive
ol

Scholastic sidelights
By RUSTY MILLER

•

AP Sports Writer
It's tn the bloodlines at Upper
Arhngton High School.
The Golden Bears' Kyle Slager hit
15-of-20 pa.,ses for 336 yards and
Four touchdowns in a 44-7 rout of
Thomas Worthington. making him
75-for-129 tor 1,433 yards on the
year.
Slager almost had to be a great
quat;terback: his father, Rick. was a
fine quanerback at Notre Dame and
leitered three years ·in the mid 1970s
afld his grandfather. Dick. played the
posttion at Ohio State in 1947 and
'48.
Elsewhere, Bellefontaine ha.s been
mvolved tn only two ovenime games,
and bmh have !&gt;een victories over
previously unbealen teams on lhe

Chieftains' homecoming - Springfield Kepton Ridge la.&lt;l year and
' Urbana la&lt;t week.
· In a 56·0 beating of Heath,
Granvtlle's Scolt McMullen passed
fot'255 yards, Nate Colon carried 14
limes for 248 yards and five touchdowns and David Randall caught
eight passes for 170 y~rds a,~d two
scores.

'

·

. Huron is 7-0 for the first time
since 1976. even though in those 22
years tt has had 16 winning seasons
and made four playoFF appearances.
Pandora-G olboa is 6·0 in ihe Blan·
chard Valley Conference for the fir;l
111ne stnce 1981.
Columbus Grove was called for
20 penalttes total mg 174 yards, b~t
still beat Ada 24-8.
Two weeks ago, Amanda·
Clearcreek was ranked third in the
state and had one of Ohio's longest

•

regular-season winn1ng slreaks. Now

,

the Aces are going the other way.
with back-to-buck losses including a
15-0 setback to Teays Valley in
which they totaled minus- 18 yard&lt;
rushing.
BIG BACKS: Robert Jackson
rushed for a schoof-record 373 yards
and .five touchdowns - on runs of
61, 67, three, 83 and 81 yard~- on
20 carries in East Ltverpool's 41 -22
victory over St. Clair;ville; Ayersville
beat Edgerton 28-20 behind Jeremy

Edmonds 319 yards and two tou&lt;*,,
downs ·rushmg ; Earl Haynes •set a
Fairfield record with 286 yards on 40
carries ina 17-16winoverCincinnall ·
Sycamore; Mike Bailey ran for 277
yards and scored four times in
Thomvtlle Shendan 's 34·0 win over
McConnelsville Morgan. giving him
I,369 yards and 17 touchdowns so
far; 220-pound fullback Kenny How ell rushed for 244 yards and tive
touchdowns as Bellaire St. John 's
beat Old Washington Buckeye Trail;
David Whtte collected 242 yards and
four scores on 24 carries a.' Trenton
Edgewood beat Lemon-Monroe. 35·
7; Hanoverton Umted L,ocal's Roger
Kelly pockeled 242 yards on 27 carries and scored four timeS in a 33-K
won over Salinevtlle Southern;
Aaron Parker ran for touchdowns
of 72, 75 and 93 yards and caught a
29-yard touchdown pas~ while rush'lng For 240 yards in Monroeville 's
48-6 win over Mapleton: Mike
Bowles scored on runs of 20. three,
39, II , 14 and 17 yards while picking up ' 236 yards as Jeromesville
Hillsdale won its first game ol the
year; J.R,. Atkinson had 232 yardsand Brooklyn had minus-12 yards of
total offense - "in Richmond
Heights 39.() win; Carl Diggs carried
33 limes for 23 t ~ards on Warren
Hardtng 's 31-7 win over Youngstown
Boardman; and Geneva's Mark Bmce
stacked up 229 yards on 29 carries in
a 43-27 win over previously unbeaten Ashtabula Harbor.
Ben Swallow of Beloit West
Branch completed JJ .u'f- 16 passes
for 312 yards. and four scores in~ 35. 16 victory over Canal Fulton North west.
HEROICS : Defending Division
VI state champion and No. !-ranked
Delphos St. John's beat No. 2-ranked
St: Hen,Y 34-6 behind Chad Schulte's
three touchdowns and 151 yards on
25 carries and lac Metzner's live
catches for 136 yards and a ·73-yard
kickoff return; Mentor went8.3 yards
in the last40 seconds, scoring on running back Tom Mitchell's 43-yard
pa.&gt;&lt; to Nate Spackman with four sec,onds left, to upset previously unbeaten Cleveland Heights 21-20; Shannon Alson caught a 14-yard pa.&lt;.s from
Joe Hada wilh four seconds left as

Painesvtlle Harvey beat Jefferson
Area. 23·21 ; and Mike Steiner caught
a 22-yard touchdown pa.ss From Jon
Kose wuh 28 seconds left lo give
Cory-Rawson a 24-20 win over Leip-

St. Wendehn's quarterback is Nick
Moes; Carey's is Nic Boes. ·
DO EVERYiHING: Jim Campagne ran for two touchdowns,
pas.&lt;ed for another and intercepted
SIC
three passes as Ashtabula Sts. John
Fostoria St. Wendeltn's Nick · and Paul beat .Cleveland Heights
· Moes scored on a one-yard plunge Lutheran East 24-12; Scou Mackar
wtth 18 seconds left to toe the game ran For 208 yards on just seven car·
and Fred Reinhart ran in the two- ncs, scon ng on runs of 62 and 76
point conversion for a 20-18 win over yards, caught a 24-yard touchdown
Carey. Ptty the poor PA announcer· pass and kicked eight extra-points in

top-ranked Chardon's 56-20 victory will drop from lhat list as Akrooj .
over Vermolion; Tony Colleue carried , .,Hoban plays Cuyahoga Palls Walsh
just three times- but scored on runs Jesuit and Sparta Highland meet&lt;
of 75, 70 and '7 yards ...., as Martins Richwood North Union. By the way,
Perry edged Fairport Harbor 92-0; four schools haven't won in the last
and John Huddle intercepted three two seasons: Cleveland Central
passes and also caught a touchdown Cathohc ha.&lt; lost its last 37, Union
pass in Napoleon's 24-6 victory qver City Mississinawa Valley its la.&lt;t 29
Fostoria.
.
and Columbus Linden McKinley and
Finally. there are 51 unbeaten Casstown Miami East, which have
teams left in the state, including only dropped their last28.
six m U•v•s•on I. At least two more

North Carolina suspends Daveport, Halt
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (1\P)' North Carolina quarterback Oscar
Davenpon has been suspended from
Saturday's game against Wake Forest
for violating unspecitied team rules.
Coach Carl Torbush also satd
Tuesday that offenstve Iineman Jon
Hall will remain suspended for the
rest of the season Hall, a fourth-year
junior guard, pleaded no contest to
simple misdemeanor ass.ault\involving a temale student at N&lt;1rth Carol ina.
Davenport 'was injured on the
fourtb play ot'the Tar Heel~· seasonopening loss to Mtami of Ohio. The
senior staner missed the rest of that
game and the ·Followong week's loss
to Stanford.
Davenport played in the Tar ·
Heels' loss to Georgia Tech o.~ Sept.

26 and started North Carolina's wins
the following weeks against Clemson
and ·Piusburgh. Davenport has completed 34 of 63 passes for 428 yards
and three touchdowns this season.
"It's unfortunate to have to do
this, but the team ha.s rules by which
all players 'must abide. regardless of
one's position .on the team,:· Torbush
said. ''I'm disappointed for our team
and for Oscar. but it's a situation we
have to deal wolh and continue to pre·
pare For our game with Wake Forest."
Freshman Ronald Curry will start
for the Tar Heels (2-3, 1-1 Atlantic
Coast Conference) agaonst Wake Forest (3-3, 2-1).
Davenport is 7-2 as a starter, his
only losses commg against Florida
State last season and the Miamo
game on Sept. S. Davenport Failed to

complete both of those games due to
injuries: Curry is 0-2 as a staner. los-

h1 ~ career turn sour when he turned

pro?
Test averde's 12th NFL season h ~s
taken a somewhat unexrected turn .

He\ staned half of the New York
Jet s' three games, and won them all.
Glenn Foley. the incumhert quarterback. is 0-3 and InJury-prone.
So what's up with Vinny ?
Fo~

one thing. his confidCnce 1s
SO&lt;If,lng . For another. his coach, Bi11

Parcells·. has faith in him. For yet
another. he's surrounded b~ good
ofl ensove talent in runnmg backs Cur·
lis Martin and Leon John&lt;on and

Here are the pairings for Satur-

a~y's Division' II sectional vQIIeyball
toumame~t

at South Webster High
School in So~th Webster.
2 p.m.~ Vinton County (3-17)
vs. South Point (8-8).
3 .p.m. - M~igs ( 15-3) vs. Galli a
Academy (7-14). Winner goes to distridt at Rio Grande on Saturday. Oct.
31 at II a.m.
4 p.m. - Waverly ( 19-1) vs. Vin·
ton County-Sout~ Point winner. Vic·

tor goes to district at Rio Grande on
Oct. 31 at4 p.m.
5 p.m. - Portsmouth (4·17) vs,
~ock Hill (7-11) •
' .
. I
6 p.m. - Northwest (,JJ-6),
vs.
Jackson (10-11). Winner goestodis·
trier at Rio Grande on Saturday, Ocl. • , .
31 at 4 p.m.
7 p.m. - River Valley ( 16-6) vs. '
Portsmouth-Rock Hill victor. Winner
goes to district at Rio Grande on Saturday, Oct. 31 at II a.m.

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

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1997. Lot MJCia T~mo:J
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Beat of the Bend. ;..
By Bob. Hoeflich
Dear Aunt Mau\le,
•
i
We were· glad to receive your letter of October 17. It's been a
whole since we heard Froll] you so we were espectally pleased. I am
sorry that you are so concerned about 11 costing so much to mail a
leiter to us. I know 32 cents is a bit high for someone ltke you who
can remember when three cent Stamp did the JOb.
However, I wtll be glad to pay the 29 cents dtfference that you
have to pay to correspond with us and will send it along just as soon
as my social security check comes in. In the meantirrte, it might be
well for you to remember that you do.n't take anything woth you. I
know you've always said if you couldn't take it with you, you
weren't gonna go, bull don't believe that's really the way the sys·
tern works. · We'll see.
I'm sorry that life has been so dull for you up there. It has been
an entertaining summer for us' here. We 've had one festivai after ,
another. In fact, I somettmes thmk we overuse the word, Festtval.
At any rate , there's been a lot of acuvity throughout the summer
and fall and now among other thtng~ .we're preparing to welcome.the.
Christmas season. You really should come viSit us during the holi·
day season sometime. You'd be amazed how our communities light
up.
. Remember at one time when vre were asked to o:jjscontinue decorating with lights for the holiday season to conserve electricity. A
lot of us at that lime felt that the activity was gorie forever. However, a few years later the hghts are burning more brightly than ever.
Those decorating for the season here really light up our lives·. I'm
thmking of wnting a song dedicated to the decorators. Thought'l'd
call it "You Light Up My Life" .
Sonce you are .still in the horse and buggy mode, I know' it is of no
great concern·to you, but our reSidents remain mystified about the
prices of gasoline atlhe pumps. Last Saturday we were in the Belpre area whtch IS pretty close by. Along the way gasoli'ne prices
ranged from $1.04.9 down to 87.9. We haven'tthe faintest idea why
the pnces vary so much especially 10 such a small area. Oh well,
sweet mysteries of life.
By the way, Aunt Maude, I've been meaning to ask you. Is there
really a' Betty Crocker? For years on end, products carrymg Belly
Crocker's name have been recommended and popular with homemakers. But some of us were talking the other day and we' re wondenng of Belly Crocker IS a real hve gtrl or .the product of the tmag·
inatoon of big business.
. ,

a

None of us could remember ever seemg her photograph in a

magazine, heanng her on radio or setmg her on television . That's
"fUite a contrast to toc!ay's Martha Stewart who ftequently IS qutte
visible with her recipe for us to love the ptcturc perfect life-a good
theory but not necessanly workable. Would you let me know about
Betty? I have this Feeling that if, mdeed, she is a person she must be
gelling pretty well along by thi s time.
Well, Aunt Maude, it's ltme to journey down and t;nake sure the
meat grinder is sull w ~rking at Kroger's. That's such an enjoyable
activity for those of us who have nothmg better to do. Watching the
river is good 'too. I' II close now and hope things are wonderful with
you And I will se11d 'along the 29 cents plus and extra 29 cents to
take care of your next letter JUSt as soon as my shtp ~ omes in. Meanlime, as you httch old Dobbtn to the shay, do, keep smiling.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Literary Club, 2 p m.
Wednesday at the home of
Eileen Buck. Phyllt s Hackell
to review "Enchanted Castle :
by Daphne DuMauner.
EAST MEIGS - fiastern
B·oard of Education, Wedne s·
day , 6:30p .m. at fiastern Ele·
menlary cafetorium.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Meigs - County Recycling &amp;
Litter Prevention program,
specia l recyc le day, Wcdnc s·
day , 'I am . to I p on , Orange
Thwnship at the bus garage
parkong lot , Tuppers Platn s
Eleme nta ry School
POMEROY -

Rcvtval

scrvH.:cs. Wednesday through
Sund;ty, Pomeroy C hur ch of
the Na1arcnc . Rev. Chdrlc..,
~ 1n g m ~. S~.:rvic.: c '

r11 ghtly
at 7 p.m .. Sund.1y, I!PO tl.ln

HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonvtlle Senior Cmzens
Club, Thursday, I 0·30 at
townhouse. Luncheon to fol·
low.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 , Thursday,
7.30 p.m .
POMEROY - Preceptor
Beta Beta C hapter, Beta
Stg ma Pht , Thursday, 6:30
p m Lutheran Clturch . Mcm ·

Page7
Wednesday, October 21, 1998

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Mnrtha McPhail and Mar·
gJrct Stewart,

FRIDAY
POMEROY

ho ~ t c sscs

-

GOD ' S

Ncl. Ma111 Strci,;t, Pomc10y,
open to t l.:c no.,; , 6 tu I 0 p .m

Fn.:c refres hment s
and g arnc~ . Sumc hours Sat U!Uay
I.ONCo BOT'I OM -

IJntl ·
cd Method"! Church , Frida y

end was stuck m an almost-closed

position. I am grateful to that reader
not only for helping me avoid a fire
but for a lower electric bill.
Dear Ann Landers: Our son and
his wife have se parated after two

months of mamage and will be
divorcmg shortly. They want to
know what to do about the weddmg
gifts. Should gifts be returned when
the marriage does not last six

months? Many friend s have satd
their gifts should be kept and that
my son and his wife should dtvide
them. Gifts of money were alre_ady
spent on the honeymoon and on fur-

SeniorBEAT to celebrate anniver- from a tnp through West Vtrginta,
sary
VtrgiOta and North Carolina. They
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital visited Tom and Janel Sturm, Powell
will hold a second anniversary cele· Point, N.C. and toured Bodte Light
bration on Thursday at 2 p.m. in 'House, Currituck Light House and
honor of ots SeniorBEAT program. bndges 10 the area. They especoally
The event will be held in the confer- enjoy the leaf changes they saw on
ence rooms at the hospital.
their journey.
The public is invtted to thJS free
Visitors of Nma Robonson were
social opportunity to learn about Tammi, Greg, and Celine Crum.
membershiP. benefits of the seniors Naulvin, S C. , Janet and Bnan
program while enjoying music by Robinson. Belpre, and Rev. Hal
Home Remedy. and humorou s read· Doster, Ga.
ings of "The Wtlgres Letters" by
Jamie Tevis and Joe Agranoff. The
first 100 people to attend the pany
will receive a SemorBEAT magnetic Harrisonville news
memo board.
To date there are more than 350
Mrs. Vtrginoa Gtbson and Mrs.
seniors who participate in the Gladys Cumings spent the weekend
SeniorBEAT program whoch was wuh thetr sister, Mrs. Juanita
designed to keep them educlued and Richards in Dayton recently
active. Refreshments will also be
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alktre visited his sister, Mrs. Caelle Campbell
served during the celebration.
To receive more Information in Belpre Sunday even mg.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Atkins of
about the,anniversary celebration or
membership in the SemorBEAT pro· Washington spent the past week
gram residents may call .the O' Bie· wuh hos mother, Mrs. Stella Atktns.
Mrs. Margaret Douglas has
ness medical socoal servtces departreturned
home after spe ndong a,
ment at 592-9337 .
month with Mr. and Mrs. Don Gib·
son m Santee, S.C.
Mr. Bud Mullens of West Virginia was a recent guest of Mr. and
To celebrate birthday
Pearl Marie Pius Summerfield Mrs. Bob Mahr.
will celebrate her 90th birthday on
Oct. 28.
She js the daughter ·or the late
Joshu• and Delilah j316ve.-Pitts and Reed reunion held •
the wife of the late Earl R. Summer-·
field.
'
The Oscar Reed -Charles Reed
Mrs. Summerfield has two sons, reunoon was held Sept. 20 at Rutland
'
Roger Summerfield of Murrysville, Firemans' Park. ~
Pa., with whom she resides , and
Officers elected were Guy
Sherman Summerfield of Liule Hysell, prestdent, Jane Hysell. vice
Hockmg; and two granddaughters, prestdent·secretary, Carol McClure ,
'
Tara and Whitney Summerfield of treasurer. Gtfts were presented to the
oldest, Dora Hysell, youngest ,'
,
.Little Hocking.
Cards may be mail ed to her at Bradley Hy se ll ; traveled Farthest,
4743 Christy Rd., Murrysville, Pa .. Ronn.ie Hy sell. Jr. of Kernsvi11e,
15668
.
N C., and the door pnze wns awarded to Jessica Rbush.
Auending were OtJVJd Haggy Jr..
Alfred news
Athens; Frances Hagg'y, Minersvtlle ;
Nancy Rose and Dora Hysell . Long
Shtrley and Larry Roush of Pion · Bottom; Ronnie Hysell Jr. of
da were recent visitors of his sister, Kern sville, N.C.; Mary Jane and
Mary Jo Barringer
'
Bradley Hysell of Ravenswood,
Martha, Joe and Will Poole and W.Va. ; Flosste Hy s~ ll of Rutland ;
Nellie Parker attended the Gospel Dean, Karen, Benjamm, Jason
Hymn Sing sponsored by the Schrock of , Ewongton; Terry"
NatiOnal Federation of the Blind at Spencer, Syracuse; Janet. Jed' and
Rtchland United Methodist Church, Kenny Jr. McKmght of Syracuse.
Tom and Tommy Varian of West
Athens.
Florence and Richard Spencer, Columbta, W.Va.; Carol McClure,
Phtltp Boyles, local, and Eleanor Leon, W.Va.; Angela and Btll y'
Boyles of Belpre, and . Mary Lou McDonald, Pt. Mitchell, Ky. ; Greg
Lutz of Washington, W.Va. returned Lou, · Dave and Bridget Holsmger,

.

tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045 ·

,.
Cmdy Haggy, all &lt;&gt;f Belpre ; Matt- arsh1p rcc1p1cnt Carrie Bell Brown,
son. Mathew and Tina Haggy of Davod Stone . Ne ighborhood Mtn·
IStries, LarrJ Jones, Feed lhe Chil Plymouth.
Ronme and londa Hysell, Paul dren We Support ; Baoonc College m
and Charll&gt;ue Hysell, Buddy and Mu skogee. Ok! J. and the Mctgs
Tim Roush, Misty. Christma, and Coopcmli\c Pm1 "h Flood Re lict
Christopher Betty John son, Kay and
Time wn~ ~pe nl mak1ng program
Kyle Johnson, Bob Joh(lson, books for ncx.t year, na ming hostRochard, Bilhe, Des11hy and 1)1ickey -esses and program leaders Mrs
Sayre. Mike, Joy and Joshua Hysell Hayman IAiC nt ove r white cross quoof Mtddleport, Boll , Ann &lt;;arswe ll , tas and chec k~ were g1vch for thL:
Genia and Cody Hy se ll , Roger. overseas payment phm.
Mary K Yost led the program.
Jane , Boll, Janelle and Cody Hy sell,
Guy Hysell. Gary, Tammy, Heather "That 's Not Ntce. Dear," using qucsHysell, Mary and , Ryan Carthers. t1ons and answers from Ephesia ns
Kathy, JesSica, Rachel and Casey 4:25-27. 31-32; Proverbs 27.5 and
Roush, all of Pomeroy.
Luke 11.43- 54. using pass il'cncss.
agJ!ressn:cness and assertive ness m
the answers

Better Health Club
The Rockspnngs Better Health
Club met recently at the home of
Barbara Pry.
President Pry opened the meeting
with the Lord's Prayer and the
Pledge of Allegiance. Devotions
were given by Lenora Leifheit lltled
"October" and "Simply Joys." Offi·
cer reports were given.

Dorothy Jeffers wtll prepare
booklets for members. It was decid·
ed that members wtll supply Jtems to
the Cooperative Parish since the
county home " no longer a project
for the club.
There will not be a meeting in
November, tt wus announced .

Plans were completed For the
annual .Chnstmas dmner which will

l&gt;e held Dec. 17, noon at the church
There wtll be a gift exchange . Mrs.
Fry will prepare the turkey, have a
small program and devotions. A
carol sing wtll be held .
The contest was presented by
Phyllts Skinner and won by Barbara
Fry and N&amp;ncy Mom s
Refreshments were served to
Dorothy. Jeffers , Phylhs Sktnner,
N.ancy Morris , Lenora Lctlhcll al\d
France&gt; Goeglein.
·

Clostng was held wtlh all sayi ng
the prayer and stngong "Open My
Eyes That I May Sec." The ' next
meetmg wtll be held at the home of
Mary K: Yost.

Laurel Cliff Women's Missionary
group
A program on missionaries Harry
and Ruth Wonslow serving in Hong
Kong by Sue Pullins highlighted the
Oclober mectmg of Women 's Mis-

sionary International held at Laurel
Chff Free Methodist Church.
Pomeroy. ,
Ptayl)r request was for Equador
for sptritual battles bemg faced by
the Free MethOdiSt Church 111 Qutto
D01lnJ Gilmore also read an artk lc
on Jcavmg the stress zone . Novcrnber will be the thank offering month
fur ffii SSIOOS

Vice prestdcnt Brenda Haggy
pres1ded at the mcctm g with prayer

betng gtven by Mabel Tracy ami
devottons and scripture by Kathy
Pulhns
Refre shment were se rved by Mrs
Haggy and Jean Wright. Others
were Jnn1cc Haggy
Shirley Meadow s, K.1y Clark, Ctnd;
Bateman ~ Pam and E1111 GI.11.CI. Ash-

au~dmg

Icy and Juicy Eh ltn and
Ehlon.
' Missionary society meets
•
'
The Bertha M. Sayre Mo ss10nary
Society of Rae me met at the home of
Lolliao Hayman recently wtth 14
members present . Roll call was
nnswered woth a Btble verse.
Barbara Gheen opened the meet·
mg Wtlh devotions using an arttclc
about Came· T-e n-Boom .
Thank you"·notes For donations
were read from Karen Stoner, sc hol ·

Beck ~

WONDER FLOW
EXTERIOR LATEX

Researchers may have pinpointed virus that causes MS .
MILWAUKEE (AP) - The discovery of herpes in 1the brains of
those with multiple sclerosis could
lead to new treatment for a disease
that affects more than 300,000 peopie in the United States, researchers
say.
The findings announced Tuesday
provide corcumstanlial evidence that
the viral mfection may cause the
debtlitating disease. Scientists have
long suspected a virus triggers MS,
which prompts the immune system
to attack nerve Fibers, causi ng paraJysis and m very rare cases, death.
Experts sa td more research was
needed, but said they , hoped the
study IS a step ' toward· rew treatments for MS.
"We may noi be able to stop it

100 percent, buttfwe can stop it by
70 percllltt or 80 percent, the effects
on patients wtll be dramatic, " said
Donald Carrigan, a co-author of the
study presented at a conference of
the Amertcan Neurological A.socta··
tion on Montreal. " That's really
what we're hopdul to do "
Human herpes vjrus-6 was found
m the brains of eight of II MS
patients studied by scientists at the
Institute for Viral Pathogenesis in
Milwauk ee. The virus was ~ lso
Found 10 the blood of 14 of 25
patients.
The blood finding s confirm a
study pubhshed last December
Dr. Robert Li sak. CO·dtrector of
the Multtple Scleros is Clmical and
Research Center at the Detroit Mcd·

Meigs Count31
Deserves
A Full Time
Commissioner

VOTE

ong Thur-cl.oy. 1· 2. 10Y p.n) . at
Meigs Mulllpurpos c; SCnmr
CJtJI.cns· Center. , Top1 t::

PATTY G. PICKENS

U1nnc r prct.: cc.hn g Saturday al
5: .' 0 p.m . prccc dang scrvu.:c .

ON TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3

111. ' \llghtly , spcolkcr

Send questions- to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·

•I

Philop Scarhctry. Car ry -in

r

make I hem feel _wp r~c.

.

v u.:c, 7

thH !ugh Sunllay. rc viv;1l sc r-

nishing the house
Please answer qutckly so we wtll
know what to do. ·- Splitsville in
Wyoming
llear Wyoming:, According to
Letitia Baldrige. foremost authonly
on etiqu~ue, the couple should keep
the gtfts. There ts always the possibilit y that they wtll get back together before the dovorcc os final, and if
not, fnends will Feel so saddened by
the news that a returned gift would

'

Shat tng Suppor! Group mcct-

Cartng and

been takong longer and longer to dry.
After reading that col~mn, I decided
to check the vent. Not only was it
clogged wuh lint, but the flap at the

ical Center. satd the study . doesn 't
convmce htm that the vtr~s IS solely
tp blame for MS Past st udt es have
been unable to confirm that. he satd.
" It would be mce tf thos were
true. I'm not saying it can't be."
LISak ~atd "More ,study needs to be
done. "
People often carry the herpes
virus-6 and many other types' ol
voruses and bacteria, he sa id, and
MS may ha"e multiple causes.
Carrigan ackoow le,dged that fur·
ther research ts needed but smd the
vorus was present only m bratn areas
acllvely damaged by MS

"',,
"':"' . ,,,',.
. I

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hers to wear Halloween sh1rt

t~ ndf,pm .

I'OMEKOY -

CELLULAR

Report on
a tnp , to
Alzheimer's Care Unit in
Columbus .

R. Swiggcr. cv angcltsl Spc· , I '1 1tl:.1y .
dal

rHURSilAY

express
yourself

.

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· ~v•·
:·:.;,~i:,
r·-rs..f!J
"W:·.c.
'···,.·e
, ·
&lt;

·!Community Calenda~

proud of our guys, bec;~use tliey

,

'

rnilhon on property damages. Lack buildmg defects , wrong exhaust before my husband ever got to 11. I
of vent maintenance is the leading hoods .. all produce the same block· couldn't believe it was happening.
cause of dryer fires, and lint, which age, and all cause dryer fires. All Waiting that extra day was almost
is a hidden fire hazard, is the mater- these fires are preventable. Please too late for us. Please tell your readoat most likely to ignite.
get the word out. -- S.S. in Ocean- ers to get the. lint out of their dryers
Even a cleaned lint screen trap's only . side, Calif.
•
and vent hoses TODAY. '
.
75 percent of the hnt. When ' lint
Dear Ouamide: The word os
Independence, 'Mo.: My husbuilds up in dryer vents, the dryer out -- thanl(s to you. Since I don:t band and I are very thankful to the
motor has to labor harder and can know much about clothes dryers, I • reader who ' shared her problem
overheat, igniting the hnt.
was unaware of this hazard. I now about clogged dryer vents. When my
It tsn' t just clothes-dryer vent know a lot more than I did. Read on: husband ' read that column to me, I
hoses that need to be checked, Ann.
From Green Bay, Wis.: Recent- decided to check our dryer. I pulled
Clogged hot-screen compartments, ly, you 1\ad an article from a reader out the hose and. much to my surdisconnected or ripped 9ryer-ve•tt about how the lint from clothes dry- prise, Found it was ripped and· brimhoses , smashed hoses behind the ers could start a fire . When I read ming with lint. We were wondering
clothes dryer, bird nests in dryer that, I asked my husband to check why it look three cycles before our
vents. poor dryer-vent design, the vent hoses He reluctantly said, clothes wore even partially dry. ·
screens placed over the exhaust " I'll get to it tomorrow."
Orlando, Fla.: Bless,. you For
point, use of white plastic vent hoses
Thank God I was home because printing that informatiOn about dryer
instead of aluminum fml ones, the lint in the dryer caught fire vents. For months, my clothes had

He's 1-0 after Poley was benched.
'Tm comfortable wtth wh;~t we 're

Joh nson and Dedric Ward ." ·
"It\ a lillie early )o tell." Parcells for the foreseeable future. It \ Vinny's
sa1d after Testaverde threw For 294 • job
,
yards and three touchdowns in Mon"Obviously. he's heen arotlllll. ..
day mght\ 24-14 victory at New said Wnfd. who cnught a 43-y m·d TD
England " I think, that he likes the pn..;s 10 clmch the victmy at Foxhoro.
system :mll 1t'r,; nol a real b1g udJU""1 - Mass . "H~'s a seasoned \'et who has
mcnt from the systems he's been in . &lt;ecn a lot of thmgs and pl ,\yed Ill a
There.aren 't many gu) " in the league lot of big games i~ that span. He
who can throw the hal IItke him.
know'\ how lo hrmdle 11 ·•
" He manage'&gt; a g.1me \\e ll and he
Whoch is why P~rcclb lt:rd enough
work" d1l1gently"
truc.;l in Tt"~taverc1r In lt~ t him lhrow
Te staverde is workmg e" tra h:ud when h~ CO JOid have II&lt;C&lt;I Martin to
to erase the •mage of bemg lhe lmcl
try 10 run out the clock against New
of quarterback who makes the key
England wnh the Jets up by three.
mistake. In hi s career, he\ made th e
"We've got to be aggressil'e and
playoff&lt; on ly once, wtth the 1994 we didn't want to gtve the ball back
Brown-". who were coached by rurto Drew Biedsoe with just a threerent Jet s defen"J"e coordina1or B111
point lead." Parcells sao d. " We needBelichick.
ed to put some di !~ tance ~twec::n us
Otherwise. u ·, been lots of lo-.-.e . .
and be aggressove "
111 Tampa Bay. Clevehmd and Balli·
So Testaverde answered the ch~ l ­

•

ing lo Stanford and Georgia Tech this
season

The Daily Sentinel

Clothes dryers start more residential fires than any other appliance

Fotey .v/as injured earlier th1 s fileason .

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP) Could thts be the same Vmny Testa'"rde football fans have belinled
For more than a decade?The guy who
won the Hetsman Trophy, then had

more.

,,

Meigs, Gallipolis, River
Valley to play in Division II
sectional tourney Saturday

New York Jets don't .
lose with Testaverde
c;ts ·their quart~rback .: ;·
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By
BARRY WILNER

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Pd. pol. ad by PGP Elootton r .. m, 36215 Toxoo Rd., Pomeroy, OH

•
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Plfltf/U IMROWARE

Mason, W.VA.
304·773·5583

•••••••••••••
COUPON
FREE HEAliNG TESTS

will be given In Melgs/Gallla Counties by

&amp;&amp;..e· HEARING AID CENTER
Friday, October 23, 1998
In Dr. A. Jackson Bailes' Office
224 East •ain, Pomeroy
9:00·Noon

Call Toll Free 1·800·634-5265 for an Immediate appointment.
• The tests will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist
• Anyone who has trouble hearing or understandtng conversatton is 1nvlted to
• have a FREE hearing test to see il thts problem can be helped. Bring th1s
• coupon with you for your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75 00 value
ARMCO, UAW, AND ALL OTHER
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1

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Page 8

• The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, October 21, 1998

Pomeroy ,s,Middleport, Ohio

Rotary Governor Mel· Simon -visits 'Middleport Pomeroy Club with message and 'Challenge Rotary District 6690 Governor
Mel Sunon visited the MiddleportPomeroy 'Rotary Club on Oct. 12 to
bring greetings and a personal challenge from International President
James L. Lacy.
·
· Lacy announced this ycar.'s
· theme, "Follow Your Rotary
Dreams" and challenges' each
Rotary Club to help the children in
their community.

·

Simon brieny described his
activities in helping needy children
in the Philippines. As pan of a medical contingent they examined 2.000

.

patients and operated on 234 this district conference tQ be held in Gal- • club included : Maxine Gaskill's
p.ast year.
lia County. May 12-16. 1999. Dis- birthday, David and Lisa Averion's
"Serving others ts such a privi- trict sc&lt;Sions will be utilizing the second ~versary, and the I 50th
lege and joy," he remarked.
University o( Rio Grande facilities. anniversary of the founding of
Simon challenged the club to Dinners will be held both at URG Sacred Heart parish.
focus on helping, local children at and downtown Gallipolis.
Loudest shin night was observed
risk , senior citizens, and any other
Lloyd Blackwood was, honored with Howard Frank the owner and
people in our community in need. for hi s perfect attendance record this wearer of the loudest shin .
He reminded us of the support that past year. Charles Blakeslee 'was
ROTARY PRESENTATION the Rotary Foundation gives both to . recognized as the Most Senior Mid- Mel Simon, right, Rotiiry District
local and international causes. He dleport/Pomeroy Rotarian. Rotarian 6690 governor, presented a
asked members to seek out other H:trold Newell reported that $(i56 Rotary ·International . banner,
loc'al men and women to join Rotary was raised for the Meigs County · "Follow Your Rotary Dream", to
to help ass(st others in need.
Heart Walk.
Dave Snyder, president of th8
Plans 'are being finalized on the
Celebrations recognized by the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary
Club.
•

..

. In Hl11torlc Downtown Pomeroy
992-7696

I if9K·l 1)()9

Homes

B

ship with curre nt news, the Sunday
Times-Sentinel will not accept wcd &lt;lings after 60 days from the date or
the event.
Weddings submilled after the (1().
day deadline will appear during the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
G:tllipolis Daily Trihune .
All club 'mee tings and other news
· arlidcs in lhc society -,cctwn rnusl
he su hrni1ted within 6() day' of
cR,:currcncc. All hinhda) ' rnu,( he

submined within 60 day' or the
cx;c urrcncc.
All material subrnined lor puhh cation is subject to cJitin~ .

"

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PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Malgo County
Shtrlff'a Department will bt
ollerlng lor Sale. The
vohlcloa llated below.
lnttreatod partlu, may In
wrlllng oubmlt a oaaled bid
by mall or In poroon, bY.
November 4. 1998. TO:

Sheriff Jemoo M. Souloby
104 E. 2nd Stroot
Pomeroy, OH 45789
Bldo, will bo opened on
tho 4th day ol Novomber ot
I :00 P.M.
· t997 Ford 4 Wh11l Drive,
Extondod Cab, F·250 Heavy

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
· Limestone • Gravel
'oirt • Siind

"985·4422
' Ohio .
Chester,

Duty, Power Stroke Dlesal,'4

OHIO VALLEY • GALLIPOLIS
BIG BEND • TWIN RIVERS

OODLAND

MEIGS COUNTY FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL' MEETING
Tues ., Oct . 27, 7:10PM
at Meigs Senior
Citizen Center
Adultd $5.50, Child $3 .50
Entertainment "Earthen
Vessels". Door Prizes .

oz.

48
BOTTLE

'•
'

10/25/98/ttn

Overdrive

New lo.
No warranty or
. Condition, Loaded with guarantee auggutod or
Implied. Any or oil bldo moy
Extroe, 37,000 Mllea
VIN: I FTHX26F9VEA44n13 boreJoctad.
Minimum Bid: $25,000.00
vehtctu may be uon at tho
1985 Honda Gold Wing, Shorlll'o Office.
Bid paptra m~y bo picked
Model G-12,
VIN: 1HFSC1414FAI03018
up at tho Shortff'o Office.
Jamoo M. Souloby, Sheriff
Minimum Bid: $4,000.00 ·
· VthiCIII oold llrlctly on . or Melgo county
caah ba111. Vahlclea aold aa (10121 ,22,23 3 T

PLEASI\NT VALLEY HosrJTAL
1ftt.J
V1 . Thoo famiYr:l ~ .
'
"To be the resource
for'
community health service needs"

Various specialties and s hifts avallab lc.
Full· lime and Part-time employment.
Competitive wages and benefits.
Please apply or send resumes ' to:
Plcasan t Valley Hospital
CI 0 Personnel
2520 Valley Drive
Pl. Pleasant. WV 25550
Fax(~041675-2447

'

J

•

'

Free Estimates
Joseph Jacks

•.

STAFF NURSES
LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES
NURSING ASSISTANTS
UNIT SECRET~IES
RADIOLOGY TECHNOLOGISTS
RESPIRATORY
THERAPISTS
' .,
ULTRASOUND TE~HNOLOGISTS

HALLOWEEN PARTY at
SONNY'S
Oct. 24, 9 PM -1 AM
KARAOKE &amp; Food
Everyone Welcome
"Dress to Impress"

POMEROY, OHIO
W. VA. f023477

Jack's Roofing .
PERRY'S
&amp; Construction. CONSTRUCTION
New Roofs,
Repairs, Gutters,
Coatings, Siding,
Drywall, Painting,
Plumbing

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

AA / EEO

"

QUALITY
WINDOW SYSTEMS

Pleasant Valley Hospltalls currently
accepting applications/resumes · for the
following positions:

RACINE GUN CLUB
Nease Hollow Rd .
Every Sunday 12:30 pm
• Limit 680 sleeve
.737 back bor.e

''

&lt;""',.::~;:r-,ANY SIZE UP TO 93 UNIYJD INCHES IN
~
EIIITING WOOD DOUIU HUNG OPENING
'OPTIONS AVAILAILE

. CALL MR. FORD

Spaed

HI.

Farm Sausage

'

Peak
•
P1nto Beans

Ca!l Now for lnatant Ape[ovaJII**

Transmission,

ASST. VARIETIES

------------------------.
64 OZ. BAG

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

ROLLS

$10.00 OR MORE ADDITIONAL PURCHASE PLEASE.

LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON &amp;

·

UMIT ONE WITH COUPON &amp; $10.00 OR MORE ADDI!IONAL

~"-e~aMS
·
. FARMS•
I

c

1 ·

·

740·843~5426
10!14/98 1 mo.

CARPET
PLUS

I

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

..

Kellogg's
Corn Flakes

!!''
1 .':""~
' " ":

I
I
I
I
I
I

I
L

S

~

EA

18 OZ. BOX

lOS

195.00

Dozer, Endloader,
Backhoe,
· Sight Preparation,
Utility Lines,
Build Roads
Licensed for Septic

1 (740) 367-0280

740-992-2068

10/1 /1

mo.

1Cift{l ""' ' 4.

P/8 Contratlors, Inc.
•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
•Masonry . ,
•General
Commercial and
Realdenllal
Free EellmiiiSII
No Job too Small
Brian Morrison
(740) 985·3948
1/21/0B 2 mo. pd.
..--~----.,

ROBER
. J BISSELL'
.
· '
CONSTRUCTION

•New Hom· es
•Garages
·•Complete

Remodeling
Stop &amp; compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473
7/22/lln

~~~f;;t~~~1t.'~1.t~\t! ·

.. C!?!!!~c:!! a

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE ·
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
'

Factory Choke
Only

SAYRE
·TRUCKING
Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Sepllc Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

614-742-2138

Cu•tom Built Computers, Network!i Mudem•, liard .
Drives, Printers. Upgrade Yuur PC fo a Pentium CPU
and MB Today. Prt·Owntd Computers.
740-992.-1135 For A Prl&lt;c Quotc!
Frognel Internet Slgn.upll1Jin1 fur

.....
Meigs ond Muson C~ unllcs
'1\ .. _ -1 114 Courl St. Pumcroy, Ohio 45769

",A

•. ·

Localed in •he ln~urance 1•1us Uuildlnt:
acro!i!i from lhe Court Hnu,.:e,

MOBILE HOME
PARTS
"Huge ln-entory"
*Rbol Coati nge
*Vinyl SklrUng
*Water Healers
*Door/Windowo
*Electric/Plumbing
Supplies
*Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Steps
.. Discount Prices

Bennett Supply
. 7 40·446-9416

1391 Safford
School Rd.
Galllpolla, OH
'

GUN SHOOT
Racine Gun Club
Nease Hollow Rd.
Eve~y Sunday
· 12:30 pm
Limit 680 sleeve
.737 back bore
. CARPET &amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANING
• Fall Special3 Rooms &amp; Hall

$59.95
(Maximum 500 sq. ft.)

740-378-9807 .
Free Estimates

•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roollng
•lntarlor &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

•Residential·
$11 .DO/month
•Commercial
•Senior Citizens
Discount
•Dumpsters
•Monthly Payments
Call lor best prices :

SERVICE

·

·,

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS
Computer Graphic•
Deslg"s
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Servlcea
·C~mmerclal

•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Cheater, Ohio

740-965-4422
412/NIIttl

HOWAR[) ·
EXCAVATING CO.
Uniestorie Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Slles
Lpnd Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sysle!ll &amp;
Utilities
Estimates

{614) 992-3838

. 12/tll/tln

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE .

CflASSUIFUfEDSI

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

ASK QUESTIONS,
GET ANSWEAS
CALL AMEAICA'S •1 PSYCHICS 1·900· 740·6500 .flit. '
3596, www.thehotpaae&amp;2.comlnsl t
psychlc/25029Lhtm $3 .99 /Min . ·
18-. SerY·U 6 19-a45-8434 .
Star t dating tOnight! Ha\le tUn

ELECTRIC OR

1-i!00-809·7721 '

A

ALL PRO

SOUTHERN .,
OHIO DISPOSAL

992·6215

•

'It -- tf
''

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Pomeroy, Ohio

IA'!I

"Your Computer Shop"

AL.C:OA

S
INSTALLED*
ALL VINYL DOUBLE HUNG
INSI,ILATED GLASS
TILT-IN FOR EASY CLEANING

You're Treatad with Reepectl

1-900-976-3339
ext. 9765

Free Estimates

·

.

N:-

Free Estimates
Own~r: John Qean

.11···-

MINIMUM PURCHASE MAY BE REQUIRED

Over 20 years experience.

I

I
I
I

WORRYIND!
!! .
· No Embarra11ment ...

110 COURT ST.
1·800·291-5600

LOHG'S
·COtfSTROCTIOH .

Call

740•742·3411., 01,.11 ~:

Co(:llmerclal &amp; Residential
27 yrs . exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
,.
Phone 740-992-3987

-~

·

Free Estimates

f1J

141MJ..J72-8178_..-..~

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF, TENDERBEST

Heiner's
French

a Oz.
Potato Chips

lnsured

REPLACEMENT WINDOW
SPECIAL

"WI1ere Q111rlity Doe111 '1 Co1t More"
740-446·9416. 1·800-872·5967

,.

~

~-------~~~

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced
·

"EtUy Over 1/oe Pl1011e B~nk Fiiu111ci11g"
Air Condltlqners ,tit lAw As •28, inopth
Heat Pumps At Low At 139 a mpnth
*Free 5 Parts Warranty

~

Minor Repairs ·• Cabinets • Siding
· Roofs • Decks • Garages

BENNETT'S HEATING &amp; COOLING

2 LITER BOTTLE

Snyd~r's

1·800·809:~~1~•-

CREDIT PROBLEMS

.........._

TR~

FLAVORS .

By Calling

TllPPiln

"

oV£1

20 Vrs. Exp. • Ins. OWner: Ronn1e Jones

New Construction. &amp; Remodeling

3 or more families $2S,OO per mo.
.
Businesses Save Money, Tool

*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

..tD WlN WlTH
A
~ p\.A'I "

~

for

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

COCA·COLA CLASSIC

.

.

• Freezers
• Dishwashers

Call Ken Young
(740) 9B5·3551

CAFFEINE FREE COKE, DIET COKE

PUMPKINU

•Ohio Vallay Bank' :
. "Superbank" Services
•Greeting Cards
•Floral Sales
•We accept credit

• Hot Water Heater

• Ranges
, • Refrigerators
', ·.• Dryer

get your C11ns for College
SeholRrship applieRtlon.

THE

OH 45769

With Poly Cart $11.00 per mo.
Small Dumpsters ·

,.
• Washers

&amp;

DON'T FORGET

(740) 192-1344

(614 992-4277

44087 Wlpple Road (Five Polnta Area) ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
Nick and Eleanor Leonard

M..

APPLICATIONS NOW AVAILABLE!
Stop by your loeal Foodland store

Foodland

or

In an effhrl to provide our reader·

Call for appointment
(740) 992-2036
OHIO VALLEY PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

{lf!jMI.

ring your alu•ninum cans to Foodland.
we'll recycle them into money for education. One lucky student from each
Foodland region (9) will win a $1500 scholarship to ~elp with college tuition. Help us help
those who are college-bound! Look for the
white barrels at Foodland and deposit your
al~min'um cans •.. for college.
·

We Sell Money Orders
We Wire, Mooey
Postage Stamps
Film Developing
Pre-paid Phone tards
Foodland Gift Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rentals
Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets
(except Buckeye)
AEP Electric

Pomeroy,

"12 .... .,.

;-----::-~----~-----, r--------------, :=.==========::,..fY::-Ar.&gt;.f.f/::' ~An.N:o.~_,._N?:&gt;
(CutOutlorFuture!Mtcou~
SOUTHERN OHIO DISPOSAL
SUNSft HOME
~ '-"Jo coistiuc-li'ioit"·~&amp; Remodeling
THE
APPLIANCE MAN Residential Pick-up $10.00 per mo.
CONSTRUCTION :t" Garages,'NewPoleHomes
"NL.ed repair on any make?"
Buildings , Roofing, Siding

.

ONE STOP CONVENIENCE

44087 Wlpple Rd.

Full Une Of Water St'o rage TanksSeptic &amp; CiStern TanKS
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulator•
Open:
s:OD-4:30 Weekd1y1
'9:00·12:00 Saturday

Time to get ,-our furnac:e
_,...-ic:ed for winter

Computer Balancing &amp; Mounting

. Joe Wilson

4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

1 Our Customers Are Special
.L &amp; L Tire Bam

"Build Your Dream"
:1 998 Martin Street
• Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

992·2284 ,.

'

New &amp; Used Tires

lnt of yard work, so I'm not com·

News policy

Remodeling

740--985-3813

THE FABRIC SHOP

(No Sunday Calls)

10/1fmo.

'

tusto~

'

614-992-7643

M&amp;J

: Question: I'm a 65-year-old man.
a~d I am thinking about starting an
exercise program. I've just had a
pliysical. exam. and my doctor said
that my heart was in good shape.
Though I haven't ·had a formal exer- ·
· ise program in. a long time, I do a

"Family Medicine" is ~ weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
University College of Osteopatl!)c
Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

• FREE ESTIMATES

. • Hartwell Hares

l ntcr aati

.

~OMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

• Soap • Baby Gifts

Shape up America:
VValking is . good
exercise for seniors

impro~es .

Room Additions • Roofing

Birdhouse$ • Clocks • .Frames

Tuppert Plains, Ohio 45783 :

SL Rt. 7

• Singer Sewing Machinc·Dealet
• Sewing Cabinm, Sewing machine repair
• Dry .Oeanlng Service
• Scissor Sbarpeniflg • 'lllxedo RentaJ
• Sign up now for quilt cbsses

Garages • Replacement Windows

Toland Flags • Camill~ Beckman Lotion

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

. The Fabric Shop

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

Antiques • Lang Calendars • Candle$

f?amily Medicine

pletely out of shape. I would like to
lo&lt;e about IS pounds, though . I'm
not sure what type of exercise pro·
gram ,~o start. Is walking a good
Cll:crcise, or is running better'!
Answer: From a physiCal fitness
standpoinr, walking and running are
both excellent fonits of exercise.
Recent research shows that a daily .
brisk walk'. can burn off calories
almost as effectively as a good run .
It: is important to realize. though.
t11;1t a "brisk walk" mea'ns walking at
a · fast, steady pace of about four
triiles per hour.
: Losing weight is more complex
l~n choosing the most vigorous
form of exercise. , Weight gain is
caused by an energy imbalanc~ .
W)len the amount o.f calories eaten is .
greater than the . number that are
used by the body. Exercise does
increase the use of energy - that is.
it·burns up calories - but the problem of food consumption must also
be addressed to safely bring about a
lasting weight loss.
No maner what kind of exercise
program you embark on, don't
expect to lose huge amounts of
weight if you don't modify your cat- .
ing habits. For instance, the energy
used by a !50-pound person walking .
briskly for 45 ,minutes three times a
week will only consume about 18
pounds of that extra fat in a year,
assuming he ·Or she doesn't start eating more.
If you're looking to lose weight,
running a mile will only burn off
about 20 percent more calories than
w-Jiking the same distance. I think
fast walking is a much beuer form
eXercise for a beginning exercise
po:tJgram because it places less stress
"" feet, ankles. knees and hips. Certrunly ynu burn more calories run'ni)lg a given distance. but most peoPh: can walk farther than they can
run. So, if. you take a walk tonight
and lind you can travel a distance nf
tWo miles comfortably, you'll be
burning off considerably more calories than if you go out running and
give up after only a few blocks .
In addition to modest weight loss.
walking and running can have other
beneficial effects as well. Healthy
adults who e•ercise briskly for an
hour or so three times a week often
lind their an•iety levels. are lower.
. lheir cholesterol levels·go down, and
. their hearts work belter.
Many people stan exercise' programs, but at least half of them drop
oqt within six months. To avoid this
fate, adopt a plan that makes reason·
able demands on your time, emotions and physical abilities. And
remember to (to liS you did -check
with ,your doctor BEFORE you stan
ariy new e.ercise program. Also,
rernemberto start off slowly. There's
no truth to the old adage "no pain,
no gain." The duration and vigor of
yOur activities can be incrcas·cd later
as your physical conditionin g

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

HARTWELL HOUSE

playing the Ohto· Qatlng Game. 1·
BOO· ROMANCE, 8Ktenslon 901.5

30 Announcements·

SATELLITE

Call

992-6320
Local Satellite
Provider
Best E; leclrl c Pomeroy

10113/1 mo. r~d .

40

Giveaway

lOFt . Alummum Satetlile DISh

wt".

Pole. 4 AL Wi ndows 304 · 882· •

2755.

•

3 tlil!lens 8 weeks old , 1-all.
white. 1·black , 1 gray /spots. L11er
trained . 304·675-3771

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
·Vinyl Siding •Soflll
•Faacla
•Seamleas Gutter
•Roofing
•Replacemenl
Windows
•Stationary Docks
•Blown Insulation
•Garages •Decks
24x24 Pole Building
starting at $5995
740·992·2772

HOWARD'S
TRI·COUNTY
SANITATION
MIGHTY MAC
AERATION SYSTEM
New light weight,
fiberglass state and
county approved with
two-year warranty.

740· 7 42-2566·
D.• •Howard 10•1811 mn

COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP

30 scents avallabf ·
• (andlo making supplies
• Rlfllls
• Varlo~ of olfll
Tues-Frl 10-6
Sat 10-4
Rl. 124 Minersville, OH

740·992-4559
''Ask about our candle
parties"

5 Month Ole! Female Spitz, Great
With Children, Very Friendly!

14q·446·1127 .
8 Beaulllul Puppies, 6 Weeks Old

112 LAb Ml); Also l Killen After
3:30PM. 740·44 H 707
BM Side Pony Chair, AMI Nice
304-675-3734
Free Fu ewoo d You Ha ul Away.

740-446-2796 .
Mother Cat &amp; 4 Kiltens . Littered
Trained, Bla ck &amp; Whlte ,. Grev
Wh1te. 6 We eks Old , 740·367 ·

a

7947 .

�'

Wednesday, October 21, 1898

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

I

NJ:A
Cro11word Puzzle
'

PHILLIP

ALDER
320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

FIIIAII CIAL
FrH F re-wOOG , ,tJittady Cut 11\d

t)tacuo n

Ga. lll ~ ~ ~

Area 7"0·

446 -{)6"'
2 Jet ~ LOif41ty Krttan1 to a

0000

-Y~:IJI

COimetO tOQrll WJn ... ~ Full I
Pafl ~T ifN HOUrly Vtrlul Com~
mrUIQR, Paid VacaUOI'II. Othef
Benefill O*ed, FltU.iUC Sam I
7A04A6-72'67

Otttctor Of NurJrrlg AtQJtWted
NUrM wrtn 10tH Of
VQit ~t~·

mor'
ptr.vrsory nur11f\Q expttrtnc. , a
One R(.. .A Contole TV Wort•
l(l(J"ot t..mfi 30&amp;-882· 2I5M

Botton Temer &amp; mlx-

Pupp tts

60&amp;0 M n awre Dalmatlaln ml-..d

to • 0000 nome

304 882 2178

S•l&gt;trlf1,n H.J sky Yo ung 740 «6·

6627

S x yea r olo female Btagte,
hou lebrok.&amp;n spayed, 740 992 71!4 1
Two Bea vtd ul Fern1 740 ·2.566431

60 Lost and Found
Black And'IJ , Bull Reward! 304·
675--1204 or 740-441.0788

proven uacll. Jteord m l)tflltrtc
nursing actmJOll tt&amp;tlon and 11
valid West Vug1n1a ftUIIlnO II
cansa requu ed kno wledoe of
liaS. and federal t891Jh~OOM and
OSRA gu•dehnel a must Con·
tact .K.tllr G1rrr1on. PDtnt Pl ta1~
ant Nurttng &amp;. Rehablltta tton
C.nter, State Route ~2 N. Potnt
Pleatant,
2~~50 A ~nettt

wv

EJOetcar• ~

Growth Opportunttil l Apply In
PtrfOn Only, Thurl~ay Between
II AM •t PM 15 Ohro R1v1r

Found po t be lhed Dtg. wett Au~

dand ~~Qn~ty 741) 1-'2~2123

Fou nd wM• and black male
spamet, ,~ coRar older and Qtn·
tie o lJ v•cJ nlly cal) 740· 588 ~
6120
Loll 'CindY' while/ apricot POO·
ate 8 tblo bhut cotlar Pleasanton
area Alhen &amp; rarge rewar" 740·
594-6710
Lo st female S•ame11 dark brown
marlung&amp; bt•gs In color 20 yeats
old ntr~et betn outtlde 1100 re·
ward las! t.een 519 Soc.r th Front
51 M&lt;1d~porr, 740-992·39-17,

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
&amp;J. V1rd 811ft Muot
B1 P1ld In Adtllnce.
pgAQl!NE: 2'00 p!tm,
tho dey before tho ld
I• lo run. 8und8y

edltlon • 2.00 p.m.
Friday MondiY edllJon
• t 0 DO 1 m Slturdoy.
Fncay Sa!Urday a 5 e 153 Srare
Route 160 3 Miles From Holzer
Ho1pllal Store Going Out Of

Bua•neas Sale! Plua Suildtng Sup
plies W1ndowa Door• Shelving
Show Casea Farm Fence Post

Tools Clothmg Loll New /Old
016hts 8edroom SUIIU Furn!·

ture

All Yerd 81111 Mutt Be Peld In
Advance Deedllne 1 OOpm the
d•r b1lo re the ad Is to r un ,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition·
1 OOpm Friday

80

Aucllon
and Flea Market

Ri ck Pearson Auction Compaf'ly,
full time auctioneer complete
auct1on
s •n~ 1 ce
licensed
166 'Ohio &amp; West V1rgm1a 304
773-5786 Or 304·773 5447

HoiZM

Poaruon II 'A Par1 1
Po11Uon Available
Profnslonal (1 e LPN) If Interest·
ed In Applying Please stop By
380 Colonial Odve. Sidwell fntet·
v1ew• Will it Conducted Aller

eoe

AppliCatiOn ~
HOSPICE CASE MANAGER ,
Full· Time e oo -4 30 Monday
Through Friday With Aota~~ng
evening And Weekend On Call
AeeponllbHitiea OusliflC&amp;tJont lnelu de One ·Yea~ Recent Clinical
,Experience In Acute C,1re Or
Home Care Bentfltt A'llallable
WUh Opportunity For Advance·
mtnt Applications Available At
280 E111 Statt Street Athens ,
OH Or Catl7.00.~94-8226 EOE

Ant iques &amp; clean used furniture
w1tt buy one Piece or complete
hOusehold Osby Martin 740992 6576
Ctean Late Model Cars Or
Truck s 1990 MMe ls Or Newer
Smith BUi ck Pontiac 1900 East
ern Avenue Gallipoli s
J &amp; 0 Auto Parts Buy 11 g
wrecked or salvaged Yehlcies
304 773·5033
Wan t9d To Buy For Fami ly Pet
Dachshuncl Pup Or Young Dog
Call 740 446 -2342 E11t 1 &amp; Tt1en
20 Cays Or 304 675 4293 Even
lngs
Wen led To Buy Junk Autos Any
Condition, IJ!40·446·9853

EMPI.OYMENT
SERVICES

110

HelpWanled

~VON

I All Areas
Spears 304 875-1429

I Shirley

Accep tin g appllca.tlons lor luil l
ti me news rep or ter at the Point
Pleasant Re gluer Must have
atcong backg round In English/
Writing type a minimum or 40
wpm and have a vai!O drivers 11
cense Computer ski lls a plus
Send resume to Mmdy Kearns
Editor Point Pleeunt Aeg1ster
200 Main Stree t C!t Pleasant

Carpentttr upenenced only In all
phases ol res idential work Apply
1n person only between 8 11 arn
Monday thru Friday Br ing refer
ences Pullins E•cav8tlng 33314
US 33 Pomeroy Oh10
Computer Users N.aeded Work
Own Hrs $20K $75K I Yr t 800
349· 7186 Ext 1173 wwwamp
Inc com

-

~ 740-38H631

1108 NURSE POSITION
Centurion Management Group A
Pro grtltlve Long Term Care
Company (Medicare &amp; Medicaid
CtrUIIed), It Currentfv Taking Ap·
pU callons For MOS Nurlft EK.·
~ue nt Working En¥1ronment And
Benellll Oualfl lcallont Include
Ohio AN Ueenae, Bilchelort De·
gree Preferred The Succeulu l
Candk1ate Will Need Suong Cllnl
cal Skltlt And Experience In MOS
SubmlsakJn Plaaae Submit A Re
tume To Tarry Quinn Director 01
Ouallly Auurance, 216 E Wang ·

or Rood, Englewood

OH .45322

NHdld EKperlenced Tree Cli mb
er1 And Bucket Operator In The
Mercerville Area For lnlormatloll
Wanted· Substitute Hyg1em1t tor
maternity lta¥e December 18th
through the second week of Fe·
bruary Excellent working condf·
llonJ in a mooern oHice with great
pay Please call 304-773 5620 or
&amp;8f1 d resume to PO B a~e 380
M8son WV 25260

WANTED:
Exp er ienced Painters-Send re
sume to Bo• CW·9 c/o Point
Pleasant Reg ister 200 Main St
Pt Pieaeant WV 2!5!500

Business
Training

Gallipolis Career College Spring
Valley Pla1a 740· 446 4367, 1•
aoo 214 0452 , AccrM ited Member AC ICS Reg 190 05 12746

150

Schools
Instruction

MaQIC Years Day Care Pre
School space• BYal tablt ·excel·
lent skill&amp; lor your ch•tds devel·
opment Call Ull l or more lnlorma
lion 304 675 5847 M F 7 30 5 30

180 Wanted To Do
Ce rtll led d8y care provider as
sl&amp; tence avelteble 740-742·0612
Electr ic ma ntenance serYice
Wiring breaker MKel, light tix ·
l ure heali ng sys tems &amp; Mcrfl

304·674 0126
Furniture repai r refini sh and res·
toratlon al~o custom orders Ohio
Valley Aelml&amp;hlng Shop La rry
Phillips J 740·992 ·6576
Ge orge s Portable Sawmill don 1
haul your logs to the mill lus t call
304 675 1957
Have 2 Openings For 24 Hour tn
Home Care 01 Eldorty Or Handl·
capped 740 441 1536
Mature Cllnsllan lady w111 babysit
In your ho me dependable allce t
ienr relerences 740 742·2091
WiJI give plano lessons "in my
home al so teach ch ord ing and
tra nsposing 11 Interested 740·

992 5403

"'"" .. OollwoodNltto, WY.
304-7IIHIH.

•A l,..dllt Counrry In Town•. Price
rtdue41d 1 1ar04 rettored V~ortan
home liluattd on 12 acru VII
&lt;II Mlddtoport S.dudod and
p11vate clo1e to 1chool1 and
churchel Prtvlft bfrCk ein;ular
d&lt;Ne bric* pa!JO, modern kltchtn,
1am11y room wlflrtplau , 3-4 bed!
room~, two batf'lt, lafQIIOfmal LRI
OR laro• ro.,et tour erlginat
Jtained dl11s windows 30
minute• from Alhent , 1~-20
mrnutet lrom Galhpoht Fat ap·

Baths, to4..-70 Mo·

•

Will stay w11h elderl y person In
lhelr home night on ly Nursing
Technician 304-675 1698

7o40· 2o4S ~

5 Beo room• 3 bathl, w1tl'1 over
2 OOO.iq fl Under 1350/mO 1
800-2S1 -0

5 8edroom1,"3 Baths Wrlh Over
Under 1350/Mo 1·.
8ll30 one btdroom, full balhm
llovt, rtfrigerator and

740-7 42-8282
ASAHOOHEO HOME

2 B1droom1 1 Bath , OR LR .
kitchen. Ulr li l~ Room &amp; Attached
Gafage WID ' Refr igerator,
Stove Included 108 Kinton
Onve. 740· 446 · 3488 , 740·44&amp;·

"'*"''"'I

304 7M--6666

1--- - - - -- -- -

3br hvlng t'oom, dining room ,
lamlly room 1 bath, ctntrat arr
newtr ca rpet &amp; root replacement
wtndowl family neighborhood
prlvacv fen ced yard 2411 ab0\'8
ground -pool many upgrades.
move In cond Priced In 70 1
304 675 2924

4 Bedroom1 t 1/2 Balhl LA OR
FA /Fireplace Corner Lot 1 11-'
Acres Sm Orcha rd 2 Car Ga
rage • Heated WI Shop Barn
Building Heat Pump CA Ceck
Natural Gas Co Water Chel\hfre

OH ,85 000 Clood Family Homot
740·367·7 401 ' 1·800 835-0726
367

e•

2~3 bedrooms loll tongut/
groove, pellet IIO\It HPIC A, 8P·
pnanees garage spa acre, Bula·
vme Plkl 740 367-Q2B6

6yt

By Owner (Relocated I 3 Bed ·
rooms Brick /Vinyl , New Vinyl &amp;
Deck Grea t Condition 2902 An
nlslon Drive Point Plea18nl WV
Price lowered To Upper 70 1 Will
Cons1der Renting , 304 67!1·40:54

(Lori} Or 740·441·0135 (Kent}

5056
L.arge selection or used t)dmea 2
3 bedroom• Slart~r'IQ .!)t $2995
1 delivery Call '7 4 0·38~
New 14x70 $500·0own $199·J)tr
mo Free atr, lll lrf 1·800·69 I ·

6777

Newly ' Remodeled 3 Bdrms 2
Baths Brie~ Ranch LR FA OR
Hardwood Floors New Carpe t
Custom Built Oak Cabinets and
Tr im Thro,ughou t Mercervi lle
Area 740 256 6577

S1y lo

House E ~ceuenl Cond ition Par·
tla ll y Fln1sheO Ba sement 2 Car
Garage Se rious Inquiries Onlyll

740 446- 3365
Sandhill Ad All br c~ 3br 2 tlath
den 2-o ar heated twage plus
work &amp; storage area 1 2 acres

$127 500 30 4 ·67~- 8~59

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
$500 Down on any 14x70 In
stock ilmtted number !fee dellv
ery Call t 800 69 1 6777

Abandoned Home Take Over

NEW 14x80 3BR
GLAMOUR BATH
1199 Month Only At
OAKWOOD HOMES
NITRO, WV
304-758-6815.

1969 Community mobil e home
12ll56 a s ~mg $2300 740 943
5310 days or 740 943 5147 altar

1988 Skylln&amp; 14:o;70 three bed·
r,oo m two bath excellent condl
11on lnskle aM out cen1rat air and
\ltnyl underpinning lnCiuCled 740
992 6227 anytime
1990 14 K70 mob 1le homa two
bedrooms one bath appllnn cas
cen \l al air Included mu st moye

740·667 6630
Price reduced · 1990 Spru ce
AldQ8 14x70 mobll t home very
good condition 2 oeorooms 1 &amp;
H2 baths wasner &amp; Oryer stove
refr igerator cen1ra1 ei1 6x8 ou t·
alOe building Immediate pos session 740 992 6582
1993 Clayt on t4X70 2 beet
rooms 2 full BalhS Osume The
Loan 304 675 1553
1994 Nom s Clayton t4X70 2
BMroo ms 2 Baths 2 Decks CA
BX ! 0 Metal BIJIII"l lng
256
68!'\ t

ro

'313 7~78

44&lt;1-roD3. 740-44&lt;1-t409
Trailer For Atnt Beaullful River
Vitw 198 Alvtf Strfll, Kanagua.
Oepotfl, Aeteten cll No Pttl,
740-44 1.01 81 FONr Trailer Part(
Two (2) 8edtoom Mobfre Home,
Route 218, S300/Mo Rent, S300
Deposit) + Reference• "•c!Ju tred,

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bfdroom apattmentt fur·
nlahed end unturnithed, neurlty
t:fepotll required, no pets 740·

New 1998 14x'70 three bed room
Includes 6 monfht FREE lot ren1
tnctudet ski r ting deluxe ste ps
and tetu p Only $ 187 08 per
month with $1075 down Ceil I·

600 837 3238
'

Shil In Warranty

AEPO Sl
For S81e
2 &amp; 3 Bedroom
Qualify by pllOOO
1 800 251 5070

3711 EOH
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOCIET PRICES AT JACKSON
ES TATES, e2 Weetwood Orfve
1279 to $3!18 Walk to shop
movies Call 740·448 2e68

Furnished 4 Rooms &amp; Bath Com.
ptetelv Redecorated Clean New
Ca rpet No Pets Or Smoking Ref·
erence &amp; Deposit Required Atao
Furni shed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath , Up·
&amp;1al ra 7404461519

304 736 7295

Gracloul IIYing 1 and 2 bedroom
apartmentt at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartmtntt In Mlddtt·
po rt From $249· $373 Call 740·
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor·
t(.Jnllle!li

House trailer on Broad Run Rd 2
Miles lrom Sporn Plant 3br t 1!2
baths 2 added on rooms lot ga
rage 2 A/Ca., househ old Items

La fayette Ma ll Gatllpoaa 2 Bed·
roomt 2 Satha , All UIHII III In
eluded S4&amp;0 /Mo , Oepo sl1 Ae·
(lulred 740 441 100:5

Repoe d Double Wide On lot

$17.000 304 882 3426
We Finan ce Land &amp; Home With

At Little AI 1500 Down 1·606·
926-3426
&gt;

340 Business and
Commercial Ol llce or Retail 87

Mill St Mlddlepor 1 1 450 Sq Fr
5400 mo Corne r Bu ilding 740

992·6250
d9or}

Acqutolllons

Newly Remode le d 1 Bedr aom
Apt Ga llipoli s Ferry Large Yard
Cepoall L 1stm on th&amp; rent I 304 ·
67~ · 326911304·6756131

Nice Ctean 2 bedroom reterenc·
washer lOyer Hook·Upl 304·875·

Buildings

(n e.r

Kerr Road, 740·367-QIJS
6/acre a· good building site s 10
minutu fr om town publ ic water
own er
lln8nclnQ
aveltab te

$26 500 304 675 5911

740

One bedr oo m BRartment In Mid·
dleport all utilities paid $100 aaposlt $270 mont h call 740 992
7806 Sam !Spm
One bedroo m apt In PI Plea s·
ant f urni shed e~tra ni ce &amp;
clean No pe ta 304 675·1386

Scen1o Valley at Apple Grove
WV Building Iota sing le wtd es
accepted
publi c wate r 20
mtnutes 11om new Bullalo Bridge
on Jerry s Run Rd Clyde Bowen
Jr 304· 576 2336

Tara Townhouse Apartment s
Very Spac toue, 2 Bedr oo ms, 2
Floors CA, 1 112 Bath FUlly Ctir•
pete d, Patio, No Pe ts Lease Plus
Sec ur ity Depo sit Requ ired 740·
446 - 3481

Se'llerat 5 acre parcels remote
beautiful laM Meigs COlllily SCI·
plo Twp SA 692 (lust olf SA 143)
owner 11nanclng ($1600 pe r ac re)
Call lor good map 740 593 8545

Thr ae bed room In New Haven
area st-ove, refrigerat or, au utili
ties Included $425/mo plus de
posit 304 773 9171 leave mes
sage

We Buy Land 30 500 r'Cres
We Pay Cash 1 800 213 6365
Anthony Land Co

9191

APT AVAILABLE NOW
Twin Rive rs Tower now accepti ng
8ppllcallons for 1br HUD subsl d
lzed ap t lor elderly and handl ·
capped EOH 304 675·6679

450

Furnished
Rooms

w

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent
3 Bedrooms ii! Baths S300 /Mo
304 736-7295

t ·I BEDROOM HOMES FROM

14,0 00 Loc al Go v t &amp; B an ~
Aep o s Cal! 1· 800 522 2730 X
17 09
House For Rent 2 Bedmoms 1 11
2 8811'\S F1JII Basement Patrio t
740 379· 2882 740·379 2955

Circ le Motel Lowest Rates Jn
Town Newly Re modeled HBO
Cl nem ax ShO wtlme &amp; Ot sney
Weekly Rates Or Monthly Ratet
Construc tion Workers Welcoms
740 441 !1698 740 441 5 t67

460 Space for Rent
Mob ile home sl1 e available bet
ween {l.thena and Pomeroy call
740·385 4367

490

Pomeroy lour bedroom HUD WI
0 newly remodeled near play
ground relerences, SID call 740
992 6886 alter 5 30pm
Rent 4 bedroQm FA basement
AC large yard Llnc oln Avenue
30 4 675 ·3402 available prompt

ly

For Lease

EquiPped 8/c heated &amp; ready to

go 740·992·5370

New dOlfl)le wide In Mason th ree
bedroom s two ba thS sunroo m
very nice 304 882 3826 later

5pm

MERCHANDISE

510

2642

75 Gat Aquarium wl111 WoorJ CobIn II, all accenet $150 00 Set
Radar O.tectier J?S 00 304 713·

6808
Bundy B·Fiat Ctanna1. 8undy II E·
Flal Saxophone. Gtmlnhardt
Flute Variety 01 Current And Rt·
!Ired Ty aea ntt eablll, Ancl A
Smith And Corona Word Proce'"
tor, All rn Mint CondiUonl 740·
Church pewt lor sa te 12 twel\18
foot -' ten foot S200 Bactl, 740·
949·2217
Combulllonter , Stoker

s,.... 1!100 14o 388 977t

Coal

DIABETIC PATIENTS You May
Be EnUtted To Receive Your Cia·
~ollc

446-7283

'
FIREWOOD

Cut Split, Delivered I Jared 740

448·8568 Chad 740 4411-1271
Gae Furnace And Air Coni:nllon·
tng Un it, Ueed 2 112 Vear s For
Rent. 1 Btdroom House In Galli·
polio. 740·446-0893

Household
Goods

7795
USED

APPLIANCES

WAshers dryers refrigerators
rang.es Skaggs Applian ces 76
Vtne Stree t Call 740 446 ·7398

1 888 818·0128

1993 F01d 112 Ton XLT. 2 Whttl
drivl, o46,000 Mrltt 7of0· 388·

570

7110

Vans &amp; 4-WD•
1979 Oodge Maale van 318 au·

Gradll'fO Slade, $500, Calf 740

44&lt;1-121)8

TRACTORS

WASHIN' PAW··

IN

Financing Aa low AI 8 &amp;•k Wllh
John o,ere Credit Approval On
Uted Tractors Cermlch.tl'e
Farm &amp; Lawn. Galllpolll Ohio
1-800·~94·1111

AIIO SH The 'Ntw• 4000 Strfll
Compact Ullllty Tra etor1 ·Stverat
In Stock

Agco-Affll 81*111
Trac tor 5670 63 PTO H P 4
wneel drive world fa mous air
cooled dille) engine Goodrear
Rad ial Ur11 all 4 wheela lnde
pendent 540 and 1000 PTO, Hv
draullc wet dl1c brakes all 4
wheelt Dlllerenllal lock front &amp;
rtar dual hydraulic remotes,
AOPS and Canopy 16x 16 Trans•
mlulon fully lynchronlzed for·
ward &amp; r everse ShuUJ e zi nc
coa ted shett me tal 4 year or
4000 ho ur dri\IB train warra nt y
Check your JO MF, FNH or CIH
dea ler and sa.e how long they
warranty thete drive, train Keel
era Service Center Sl At 87 PI
Pteaunt &amp; Ripley R ~ Leon, WV
2~123 304-89~·3874

230 Maney Fer guaon Tra ctor
With Bush Hog $3,000 740·446·

7833

FETCH

1985 Conver~ion \'an new motor
new transmtulon Biking 13500

740-ll!r.!-7637
19915 Chevrolet Tahoe, 4•4 Ell·
celfenl Condttfon 44 000 MUll
Garage Kept, Loadedl Oouglal
Aunyon 740-448-1272

S·tO Btazor 4x4 LOW

Ml ~l

740·256• 1222
1998 Chevy S·10 4 WD Air Tl~
Crulle. ~ SpOid $13. t OO " '
•

740

Motorcycles

1962 Kawasaki 7!50 CSA new
rings head ga1kat new paint job,

mu&amp;1 '"" 12000 1•0 742 8282 ,
1983 Hon~a Odylloy 250 Lolo
Of New Part t Aun t Good Wl1h
Extra Parts Odyuey 740· 440 ·

8881
198!5 H arley FXA cullo,m lztd
lowrider. uveral trophyJ too
much to 1111 1 t 000 ml1 11 no
reaaonable otler refused, lor Info

304

740 44ll·7375

Red &amp; while co ncession trailer w/
cott on candy &amp; tunnel cake ma ·
chine fountain drlnkt etc Meets
health oept requ lramen t!I/IUP ·

630

pllos $6 000 304-882 22 48

1179

SAlE •Kitchen Cabinets 63%0fF
list pri ce 11 purcha11ed by the end
ol October Free In home estl
mates Trl Cou nty Di stribut ors

18 month old herelord cross

rnc 1·800·352·3 147

9 OOPM

1· 6 00·32~·76 36

Wa nte d· advertising co llectib les.
Co~e Pepsi etc InCluding Old !In
signa 740·992 !5053
Waterline Spe cia l 314 200 PSI
$2 1 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pression Fillings In Stoc k

RON EVAN S ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 800 537 9!528 i'
We buy antiques and partia l Gr
complete es tate11 baby Items, and
old Flestaware Jetln 1 Furnit ure
&amp; AnUquee Tue sdav through Frl ·
day 11am·4pm 145 North Secone! Middleport
wo odburnar &amp; Coa l ACid On To
Furn ace Bl ower 130 000 BTLJ's
28 l ogs $300 740 367 74 13 AI
ter 3 PM

550

Building
Supplies

Block brick se wer pipes wind
OW!I li ntels etc Claude Winters
Ri o Grande OH Call 740 245
512 t

580

Pets for Saia

A Groom Sho~ ·Pet Grooming
Fea turi ng Hydro B.a th Don
Shee ts G7:J Georges Cree~ Ad ~
740·446·023 1
Aire d ale Puppies AKC Regis
terf!d Mate &amp; Fema le Ellcell ent
Wat c h Dogs Good With Ch ild·
ren $200 740·388- 8692
AKC Poodle Male t 112 Years
Good With Chi ldre n Shots
Wormed $?~ 00 740 256 6t62
AKC Registered Ch ihuahua Fe
male Shots And Wor med Ellcel
ten1 Dl apos ll lon $250 00 740
446 0119
AKC Reg is tered Chinese Pug
Pups 2 Males 3 Female&amp; All
Fawn Colored $2~0 740 446

46 16

Llveetock

1 Yearling Filly Colt an d t Year
ling Pain! Stud Colt 740-446·

1200·1300111 740·992·7456

Large Bales ot Hay $ 11 00 eachl
304 675 1365&lt;Round Bates 0 1 Hay Stored In
earn 7402 45·5 t 17

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale
92 Probe 3 ltr 3 speed air 75K

call 7&lt;0 992·370 1
'93 Ch&amp; Yy Ctw aller
8t 000 miles S2650

2357

1860 · t880 HONDA CARS 1100

1986 Mercedes 190 E Nice car
second owne r, $6 800 304 675
1987 Ford tempo $700 00 304·
37~

6339

1988 Bonneville LE maroon 4dr
new tires &amp; brakes good cond
$3 200 304·675·5792 alter 5~ m
1990 Mltsublsnl Mirage Auto
air am· lm 72. 000m ll&amp;S Fair
Condlllon Wou ld make a good
wor~ car1304 7735 155 attar 5pm
1990 Plymouth Lese r 1 8 4 cy
Iinder 5 speed loadedl 304 937
2681
199~ Dodge Neon Automatic &amp;

NC $4 850 060 740·379 2726

Hanel tamad cockallals 304·882

1995 Pontia c Ftreblrd 3 4 IJ·6
52 000 Miles Full Power T·Tops
New Tires Ellcellen t Cond iUon

Homing Pigeon sI Excellent For
Tr aining Shd Dog s 740 256
1671
Fret'lch City Pet Grooming by Ap·
polntment 'Ultra Wuh Bethlng
Svtttm" 650 Second Ave Ga lli·
polls 740 446 t526

$8 .~0 0

Shawn, 304·682·

3718
Summer s not overt Kawaukl
STS Jet ski atUI under warranty,
three seater 83 horsepower,
bo ught new July of 97, three
matchlno Kawaa8kl ski vests and
tra iler oil go with it Priced to aen,

.·

$4200 74Jl.949·2203 or 740·949·

760

I'LL. TAKE

740·448 2300
1997 Che'lly Lumina AMIFM AJC
Cruise Conuat E:o;cell ent Cond l
tton Must Sell $11 ,500 740-682

34 46
t 997 Dodge St •IIU8 PW Au ·
tomattc AI C 26 000 Miles

A DOU6~NIIT, BUT

R AUIO Rlploy. WV 304·372

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Norill

PUI

1•
2NT
PUI

Puo

Pu1

'.

For Sale 28 Ft Campar Price All
duced Al so 18 Fl Nomad 7cl~-

740·446·9633

SERVICES
Home E
Improvements
B45EMENT
WATERPROOFINQ
unconditional ttlettme guarantee
LOC.!II relerences furnished E•·
tabllsh&amp;d 1976 Gall 24 Hrs' (7 40)

446 ·0870 t -600·287-0576 Rog·

ASTRO·ORAPH ·

ers Waterproofing
Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
perlence A ll Work Guaran teed ,
French City Maylag 740 44 8·
7795
C&amp;C Qenerat Home Main·
tenence· Pa inting viny l siding,
cA rpentr y doors wlnd!)WI, 1:18 111 1
mobile home repair and more For
IreS estimate call Cha t 740·992·

6323
Proles.slonal 20yrs experience
with au masonery bricK block &amp;
atone Al so room additions gA·
rages etc Free estimates 30•·

7739550
SUtord Roodlng Shingles and
new roo ls free es t 740 886·
9887

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Restden11al or commercial wir ing
new ser"VIce or repairs Masler Ll·
censeo e lec tr ic ian Ridenour
Electrical WV000306 304 675
1786

20 OIIIM br1nr

11 Letch-

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12

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27=
atljiNIIIniM

21 Qr8mm&amp;IM"e

by
C'"'
ehenoo

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ISCMM*'II

22HM~ame

( 2 -.)

13--11-INI

23FCIIIMI

,.._.,.,
of-1
25 Pnp1r1 for

27~rlglll

timon
21llnUMd
29 DlofW1

•• u

By Phillip Alder
Wh¢11 you· re IICndtng a leuer, !K it
mcwe tmportam to have the nght City
'name or nrne-drgil ZIP c&lt;ldc'l
When you' re_playi ng m three notrump, rs tl more rmportanl to !ICC
your ntne trrcks or the rou1e to col·
leer them·• What 1s your plan tn lhts
deal? West lellds the heart juck.
Nonh and South •howed good
Judgment rn the biddrng. Wtlh II
pomls, you mtght pa..s out one notrump, but not when you have aceking, ace, and a five-card sun. Similarly. South was right to bid game
wnh his five-bagger.
Both a.•pects are vital. Here, you
have seven lop trrcks one spude.
three heans, one diamond and two
clubs. The other two will come from
dtamonds it the mi~sih• five cards
spln3-2. a.~ they will .arne two-thtrds
of lhe lime But you must retain com·
muntcatron with the dummy. Win lhe
first trick with your heart queen and
duck a dtamond Win the heart return
and duck another diamond. Now,
whatever comes back you arc safe.
(Try it again, winnrng with the diamond ace early •
The U S Postal Service stresses
ustng lhe ntne-digit ZIP code. Sup·
po ~e dly. that and the house number
are suffrctenl for u letter to reach tis
doslrnulron However. I recently sent.
m' the astronomical overnight rate. o
letter fu u lrrend who lrves rn Pula
Alto. Calrf, not knowing thot his
pust·olnce box is rn neighboring
Menlo Park The letter took three
days to reach him II was posoed
-uround all lour post ullices rn Palo
Aho before someone decided to
check the Z IP code. And I wusn't giv·
en a relund.
, Don't belreve everythrng you reud
.. anywhere'

~,

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33-~
31

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44 Author
Huqter

41 Ao10I' Grant
47 Aelnglldn!e
only

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10 8eflar (el.)

52=nlon

113- culps

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lui• Cempoa

Ce6lbl1fy Opt., crt::fwn1n ~from~~ Mrnout P"QPW, pal and priiBnl
sa
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION· 'The chambermaid always survive• the palace
revolution Someone hu to mekelhe bade • - Fay Weldon, Brltlah novelltt

1

Will
::~:;~' S~Rclllv\J&amp;
~~s·
IAMI
, 141tH
CLAY R. POI&amp;AN _;:,.._ _ __
~

R.orronge
0 four
ocrambfod

fottoro

ol lhe

wordo b.·
low ro l~rm lour llmpr. word•

I

FRIEHE

I·

rrt:1l

I

IA LI'L II

1

l ~=~'

After listening to lhe candl·
dale
my
fnend
com.
mented,'People reveal a lot
r--:--:--::-~
· +I ~~=-, about themselves by what they

5

vou

develop from atep No 3 below

r 1• 1, 1• I' 1• 1
I I I Ito I I I I I
I' 1 ~
•

_

•

•

•

•

•

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I

91 Motor Home 460 Ford Englf\1
30 000 ml, Loaded Sup nr CleM
Oem co Kar Kaddy II Tow OQIII;

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
23• You
may huve to I buck nn thul grent
· eKcuse ol ··rhe sprrrt wus wtllrng, but
your llesh was weak."
SCORPIO (Oct. 24- Nov 22) It" II
· be your own fault 11 you ,socralrzc
wrth someone who has treated you
decertfully rn the past und does so
again today Smarten up and learn
from your past experiences
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Snould you get mvolved today
wuh a stranger you know little about.
keep a close.eye on your pnssessrons
You cou ld be rubbing shoulders wtth
a dishonest person

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jun 19)
In nt:der to gel yourself out of a J•m
today. uv&lt;l1d tellrng\ Uttl tules Tho
fuels wrll be verified Iuter. Yno wrll
h.K lk worse tl you luls1ticd ur cmbelltshed your rnvolvemonl.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 191Be
able to dtsllngursh between wrshlul
thinking and gcrlurhc lllllllltlsm t•xlay
Ynu c..:ouhJ end up Wllslmg u lot ol
vnluublc ume chusr ng unreu lisuc
duydrenms
PI SCES (Feb 2n-Murch 20)
Before Inking the plunge into invest·
ing money toduy. fully mvestrgnte the
friend "s llp Though II rnuy he well ·
rntentroned. 11 could be tr costly mrs·
lake.
AR.IES (Mttrt:h 2 I ·Aprrl 19) The
company you keep Will huve u greuter
rnfluence on you tod.ty than you rnuy
realrze. lt"s rmponantth tkl you seloct
co mpnnron s whose lhinkttlg mtll
behavror you trCsp..-cl.
TAURUS (Apni 20· May 201 A lrt·
lie 111 fur tal muy' be m oruer today
when smn~une you prurnrsfd tnlrclp

.

•

'

M IUttiW

• ,...,Miglll

OCTOBER 21

740-31!1 7093 or 740·367·7070

•

27,.., ........
:10 .........
120111oCI1y

The best partnership is between an opt1m1st.and a
cessrmtll On11 r.nuniR nmfils whrle lhe other the Rl SKS

1983 Motor Home Chevy Chas·
ala Sel f Contained Generator 2
Gl'&amp; Ta n~ &amp;. A/C A.· 1 Condition

810

au1pu1

2t T•n• II

ICIWMm ANSWIIIS
Kitten- Order - Quash • Wtsely ·RISKS

Two Winter Snow l'lrea With
Studt Mounted On \~· Wheete ,
Fo1 GM Cars, $60 740' 446·0 195

24 ~·96 13,

Wnl

16

DOWN

e ~~~~LEFOII

NEWSLETTER ON ~ARTil.

3933 or 1·800·273·9329

•

.....,.

.,. PRINT NUMBEIED
9 LETTERS IN SQUARES

I WOU.LDN'T READ 'fOUR
NEWSLETTER IF IT WERE T~E

New gas tanka &amp; body parts D &amp;

304-675-2915

11111n -

..zav....-·•.,..,.,

L.....I-..L.-.1..-1-...1-.J

740·24~·5877

790

20 Ao" fdl •""

liiZIIi,

t-j-ril~rLiri.,IrA-ilr.;..u,l-;-•~1 •. ~;,;1;; -.~"~.:"~~:.~,~v q~~~~~

Auto Parts &amp;
Acceuorlea

6539

Copper nose Beagles. 5 months
old $50 each 304 675·2075

3436

Mariner IHI!tr lm LeiS tha n· 1-0 ·

Hro

2730 E" 4420
1982 Cutlass Suprema 2 C 260
ve Good Condition $t 500 00
Firm 140·992·4569

I

Boat 11¥8 woll 1997 011 Injected

1978 Chevy Ptck·Up 112 Ton , Cell
Alter e PM 740·446-3243
-$500 Pollee Impoun ds All
Makes Avallabta Call 1-800-!122·

";r

ULY·

1992 Terry 2811 Oak OlnnoU C'b·

Budge! Priced Tr anamiBI!I lana
and Engines All ,Ypaa Acci11
To 0¥e r 10 000 Tr~~onsmlsslo n a

Hay &amp; Grain

'Yt:u..().J,•A::&gt; 1~:1HE: C.Ol.CJ(i:.Of
u::r.&lt;oo~·

,..o~\·ac.ow,"~ tfii, 'LOW ·COOjfll,....

t 990 Stratoa 20 Ft Fish &amp; Ski,
17&amp; HP Evlnrude Ca11 For Details,
Best Offer, 740·245-9109

Llmoual n tiUII 6 ve8r8 o ld gen
tie registered 304 4&amp;6 1727

640

...

for Sale

204~ will co n sider trade lor a
good pontoon boat

.698·3531

!

750 Boat• &amp; Motors

Cuatom Slaughter and Procel l·
lnQ Deer process ing and sum mer sausa ge wv Se uaage Co
907 4th St New Haven WV 304
882 3\94

Special Fall Feeder· Cal f Sale
Selurd8y October 24t h t PM
Ca ll ie Accepted Alter 4 PM Frl
day All Consignmen ts Welco me
Hauling Available Athena Uve·
stock Sales 740· 592·2322 740·

I

,... .

Stock Cam &amp; Carb For 67TFIX
211DK.$40 Each 740-4411-7378

201t 1996 Generatlon a 3 Pontoon

600·263-2640

1-\UmC.f&gt;.,NE 1-\!&gt;.lTIE:. 0'~1:.1-,
WOULD YOU Pl.€:~ ~U..
' "YE:.U...OW' fOI:. U:&gt; 7

1991 Honda CRt25 Comp letely
Red One Race Ready, S1 600,

620 Wanted to Buy
Wan ted! Tr oy Built Tiller With
Electric Start 740 441 1013

,.THE BORN' LOSER .,

87~-6~39

24 121-800·594·11 11

Prlmteter· $49 ln&amp;1allallon pnly
$25 99 per month free bonus,

•

FRANK &amp;: EARNEST

Garage Kept Loaded, Must Stf

367 0241

•mille

11 ~ I
..
.. , _
II U111111Y17 Ai:INiie

The town
or the ZIP?

140· 446· 3580 Lta\'1 Me uage

Call Ron Evans 1 800 &amp;37 9!528

Grubb'S Plano· tuning &amp; repairs
Problema? Need Tu ne~? Call the
plano Or 740 446 4520

..

Slk.. 500

in ets CA, Canter Hea t, Ml·
crowave Tw in Bed s Excel Con·
dill o n ~ 304·77:&gt;-5996

Or Boot Offer. 740·317-7893

YORe

hhuaor Mull Sotrr 13 500 OBO

199~

11'2 ,,;. . .
17-111
11 IIIII MJ 1

Opening lead: • J

II

198-' Chf\IY KS Blazer, Camper
SpeJeal Ax.fi, AC AT, N...- TlrH I

S.Utll
INT
3NT

-

,l'M DOIN' TH'

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa ired. New &amp; Rebuilt In Stoc k

Galtway1 2000 Computer Le11
Than 1 rear Old Asking 11.400

'BARNEY

...

n •ar •
11...1tcfiZ)
,._
40CCIIII•M•
11.......
-12
• ....., 40Doou I I
1

Vulnerable· East-West
Dealer: South

eMf 304-fl'HOI.

AIIMairOtAvolable
1-80().290-2262. X 3901

f1 000. 1997 Buoh Hog 80 06

740·448-24 t2 Or

6AKS85

Polioe ,._,.,.,.

33HP Oltltl, se. Hrl, J13 000
1998 JO 513 Aotarv Culler.

USEO
STOCK

•• 5 3

IMOO

1980 ·1990 Truckl 1100 .f!IOO

199tl JD 970 Uflll1y TractOf 4WO,

$9 300 080 7'0 379 2726
./

Ford Truok !50 XLT

610 Farm Equipment

2•

•Q 5

torna1lo f2!10, 70-ilt2 33-12

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIV ES TOCK

• KJ
• Q 10 7 4

•• A 6 3

For uta. '88 Ford R•no•r !rue)

aft.,

• KJ I 7
•• 4 2

lloalll

90e2.

85

-

e

• J. 2

304-67~3614

Mualcal
ln1trumenta

Kimball Spinnt1 p lano Call
2pm 304-67~1879

$5500, call 7AO 742 780S leave

Your Area John Deere Ota ltr
For Au ldent iat And Commercial
Lawn Equipment Compact Utillly
Tra ctors Fro m 20 To 39 HP All
SitU 01 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Trector a, Hay EC!ulpment John
Oeer~ S ~ld Steer Loaders Cheek
With Ui About Finan cing On
Lawn Tractors And loW Rate Fl·
nancl ng On New And Used
EQuipmen t Carmichael's Farm &amp;
Lawn Ga lllp ollt OH 740·446·

AKC Registered mini dachshund
pupa 740·992·99 89

Appliances
Reconditioned
Wasners Oryars Ranges Al!llrl
gra1ors 90 Day Guaran tee !
French Ci ty Maytag 740 446

GOOD

Three bedr oo m hOuse near the
lock s at Apple Gro~e on At 2 No
HUD IIVBIIS ble t1 ' 1198 304 576·

29 Pioplo Wanled
To Got Pald Ill For
ThO Pour&lt;ll 0&lt; fnciiOI
Ypu Wll U&gt;H In Tho N11&lt;1
30 Oayo All Nawrat 1Gaur_,_
Csllracy AI740-4U·1982

Now Taking Appli cation•- 35
Wut 2 Bedr oom TownM ute
Ap art men ts
In cludes Water

Sewa ge, Tr.,h, $295/Mo

btooded l&gt;oag!O pupPIOI AKC. 3

12 hp Cub Cadet tractor and
composler, a teo need a 2 bed~
room lfailer, 740-992-2318
~

SATELLITE SYSTEMS 18' RCA

One bedroom furni shed ap art
ment In Middlep ort 740·992

Real Estate
Wan led

12 1'1 Rowboet With Motor. 2 New
Slato f2!10 00 740--t473

Di sh $19 99 per Month Ask
About Free Programming No
Credi t Check From 6 OOAM •

Approxima t ely 3 5 A.cres ' Perry
Twp For Sa le 740 4&lt;16 4609 or
740 44e 1104 After 5 OOPM

Va cant lot In Mlddlepoll 75K120
deed reslrlcllons 740 992 2326

dltlonrng Free Ettima'-sl It You
Oon 1t Call Ua. We Both Lo. .t
740 U6 13DII I·B00-29Hl098 •

5162

441 · 1816 740·446·0957 740·
446 65 15

!5 Acree Ftel, Road Frontage

Hell Pumps, &amp; fUr Con-

Electric Scooters, Wheelchairs,
New And Used, 61afrway Elevators, Wheel chai r And Scooter
Lifts Bowman 1 Home ca re 740·

lurnlshed. utilities paid dtpollt
&amp; reltrtnctl 304·882·2588

Aepo 1 For Sale 2 &amp; 3 Bedroomt
Qualify Sy Phone, 1· 800· 2!11 -

t

2-bdrm, apls , total llectrlc appllanc" furnllhld laundry room
lacllilltl, ctost to achoo t In town
Applications available 11 VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740·892·

Bee ch Stree t Middleport, 2br,

OWNER FINANCING
AVAILABLE
304-788·8888

"WAffM UPI"

WHI
• Q2
• J 10 • 1
• Q 10 6

11r11 , ltandard 1h11! ov1rdrlv1.

....._

...,....

fAI7f2

good, Tonn•au t.0111r new e pfy

011d exuiWnt huntino btoodll nl.
arre Kl.tiber'1 Stfl dam Aam,.Yt
Cucket U, a110 1n·COiortd full

· 740-,.2· 1049
_ . tiny whito malH ,
lhOtl w wormed 7.t0-667·34(W

Merchandise
"

One yoar ora rnaJo Beagle. "'"""

""'"· 3 -

S279/Mo • Ptuo Ullllt!Oo Depooh &amp;
~.o
Required. 740-446-2957

EQual Houtlng Opporlunlty

NEW BANK REPOS
ONLY 3LEFT

540 Mlteellaneou•

Suppflu At No Coli To
You For More Information 1·868·
877·8!181

...

6777

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

245-&amp;4-13

1 Bed roo m, Economical Gas
Heat, W!O Hook Up Near Cinema

New 18d0 S500 Down $245 per
mo Free air 1~ir t 1·800 691 ·

~~~~O~r~M:a~k~e~O:II:••~1~6o~o~ . l 360
14K78 95 West Indies mobile
home two bedroom two bath
central air 740·992 54128

"t2

91!2 2218

renced
yar(l pool double lot In Ga lllpo·
lis Ferry ca ll 304·676·1 10!1 alter
epm"

House 1n Middleport thre e bel:l·
room bath and 1/2 $69 000 price
n199ollable, call 740 992 3465

Jn Small Trailer
Part~; Deposit and Aefrtncet Re·

740-98:HSD7

av owner· three bedroom

Great looatlon Clo&amp;e To Ga111po-1
1111 3 Bedroom Home , 1600 S_g.
Fee t New Siding New Central Alr
Fireplace 2 Car Garago La roe
Deck App lia nces Stay Price
Reducedl740 446 9664

Bedroom Ttalfer

2 Bedfoomt W W Carpet, Nalu·
rat Gas Heat, In Gatllpolit 740·

Ea•v finance , Aenttrl &amp; 111
Time Home Buyers We Have 2 &amp;
3 Bedroom• Around 1200 Month~
Umlled Time Ontyt 1·800·2~ I ·

''" to600pm Sunday10010
fl 00 p m 740 992 252e, Rull

Furnaa~ ,

t-101).251-6a70

!S070

Cunningham Really, Broker 372
5969 Jackeon/Meson Co line ro
cation • Mint conditio n• !lyr old
br ick ranch on mostly level 4 6
acres 3 car garage workshop
ror ma t living &amp; dfnlng canning
kitchen/utility/pa nt ry
l ully
tCiulpped ~liChen $179,000
Tombre aon Run -4 46 acrea...f· 1!
4 mile on rlght·$21,000
\

pota70-ilt2·M58

2 Sldroomo 14k70 - . Homt
1400/Mo , UOO Oepo111 , 740·
245-5628

For Sate/AIIume loan , 1994
ClaytontEutwJnd 14dl0 two
bedroom one blth , 304 675

$62 000 00 740·U&amp;-6541 or 740·
•46-!900 Bolli Altor ~ OOPM

no

E-Z F-lnl-·
·Aemeft &amp; 111 Twne Buvers

~~r~~ ~

Suy or Jell R rvtrUII AniiQUif.
112" E Mam &amp;trH1. on Rl. 124.
Pomtroy Houri IW.T W 10 00

.,

301'-&amp;5-524-4 :
t 992 Ford C......, .....-; halt 1011,
6 cv~rnaer good ccnctttlon , looks

~tlquea

530

2 bedroom uatler 1n Aacln1 3

2 llfdroomot J:mwMo . Pfuo Utli·
1Jot &amp; Oooooit. No Poto. 7.00·-

3 ~rm House on Jay Or CION
To
HMC
CIJy
Schools

$4500 740·992 5039

T111s nowspapnr Will no1
knOwingl y accept
advot1 tsemon ts tur rer11oslnlfl
WhiCh IS 1n VIOI,I tiOII 01IM
law Our road or s aro llOroby
1nlunn od 111&lt;1i ,til owoll ngs
M vo n1sod 111 thiS nowdpaper
aro i'IYAit&lt;ttliO on .t tl GquJI
up portwul~ bosls

740-667·3ol87

Double Wide NeW S999·0own
t237 pet rno Fre.e 6elwery &amp; HI·
up 1 8()0.691-t\777

1540

1971 Hlli CI!ISl 12K60 tWO bed·
rooms washer dry er stO\Ift &amp; re
lr lgerator air underpmnlng

'

2 bedroom trailer In Tupptrl
PlatM $200 ~r momh ptu1 Cle·

Rent If lnteretled call 30•~675 ·

A.. t~bll

6pm

Ali rodl estate Odvor!ISmg 1n
tt ns nuwspnpur Is sub1uct lo
111n FM ornl Fa r Housing Act
or t 968 wh•ch n\ a~ e s lt •ilogal
to acNon1s o any preloronco
lim1ta t•on or diSCrlmlnallon '
b a~ ed 011 ruce Color rellulon
so~ tmml nl stnlus or natiOnal
ongm or M y m1ention to
moko i.l ·~ s u ~:: l1 pr&lt;lturmtcu
IHr\ltiJIIOMOr (hSC tlfTMat!Of)

on

2 _..., Home
Krlnor · 128!/Mo lnoludol Wa·
" '· Traftl $100 ~1rt. No P•ll
' " -· 7.00 U6 9!!69

2

• 10. 54
• AK3

Joinll, .t 3 5tp, Air, Ttlf CruiH
Sunroof, E•u.as 14.000 Fltl'ltt

air

2 Bedroom Mobile Home for

5070

RANCH

rnol&gt;lo-

condthoned. S260·t300, uwer
water and truh mcluded 1•0

"""' &amp; -

New Tirtl ,

eral&lt;4o. ShOekO eau Clut&lt;h U·

QU&lt;od No l'etl 740-446-lt()l

38R ' .tuume Loal'l
Low Momnty Payments

,.,._, cal 7 0-ilt2~

BR1CK

2 &amp; 3--

6~ 10 2wd

1981

QUold. 7 - 2

bedroom lraler 1M fAiddleporl,

31 o Home• for Sale

REO

flt

$200 DlpOSrt, Rlftr•nc:tl

99Z.Zt67

REAL ESTATE

""cr ao.-67~·7285

wv 2~550

Add1tlonal Drivers ' Needed lmme
dlately Are You Ready For W1nter
Driving ? "Local Family Owned
Company 'Personalized Dispatch
'Pa10 Employee Health 8 Ute In
su rancl!l Denial Insurance •
Home Wae~eMs "Run OH "f"o
The South And Southwest "4 01K
"Late Model Frelghtl1ner Conven
llonals A,equlremenls Age 23
Class A CCL And Good Dr1vmg
Record Phtase Ca ll Toll Free t
888 790 0908 As~ For Garnet Or
Ang1e

0 &amp; A Home Repa ir Free fl·
tJfnaUI 0 Oodr di· Owner, J AIJ·

1 800-•84-6800 ""'" 54!12

!40

2526

Services·

t &amp;tdroom Trantr rn Gaii•P'&gt;J••
Hrct 'tau~ &amp; PDref'l, J2SO/Mo ,

chaM

Protesslooal

Immediate janitorial Mlp needed.

90

Antiques top pnces pa1d River
Ina AntiQues Pomeroy Ohio
Au&amp;&amp; Moor e owne r 740 992 ·

230

Bedrooms full dry basemenr,
forced alrlgas furnace,
AJC fenced corner lot 36 Wind·

Wedemeyer a Auction Service
Galllpoll&amp; Oh1o 740 379 2720

Absolute Top Dollar All U S S1l
ver And Gold Coin a, Proorsets
Diamonds MtiCIU8 Jewelry Gold
Rings Pre, HI30 US Currency
Sterling Etc Acquisit iOns Jewelry
M T S Coin Shop 1 51 Secon~
AYenue Gelljpolls 740 446 2842

Onlyl9111llloom ~--~
Raw Free Saseflr&amp;e o.th w/P..

Hll\

1

Work At Hom e
Growing Company Netdl Help
Now $250 $500 A Wee~ Pari·
Time Fun Time Eaty &amp; Fun We
W1il Train No E•perle nce Need·
ed Serious lnquries Only 1 800·
204 7048

Wanted lo Buy

...... 0&lt;...,,.....,..

~

taoe

Plaza. Gllllpoltl

Ca ll740-~92 .. 58~

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

OotA:N .... Cllt . . . . . . .

tho-""'

OoHar P&amp;us- 8f.,act N•w GaJIIpotrt
S1Dro, OponlnO Goon ,_,., l.lanag•menl &amp; All Poenrons Avlll·
able Rapid Eapan110n &amp; Career

, Buslnea•
Opportunity

I NOTICE!
OHIO VAUEV "'JBLISO&lt;ING CO
tteommtnds 1t1a1 you &lt;So bus• ~
nell with peopie you know, and
HOT to send rnon.ey lhr~h lhl
mad unt1l you have rnvtthgaled

EOE

Boston ltrrJer.l·:.\,~.,f,o:!~'~,c::~~~!::~;~~.~f

Found malE
Bathan Rd v~ermty, cal 74()...-949,
2610 to d&amp;m

210

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

·-- - -.1:=
. ··-·
:: : .=40COII

but drdn"t wtll turn the table on you
What gnes armrnd wrll surely come
uround.
GEM INI (Muy 21-June 20)
SllJ H~one

who

trt cs tn

mumpulule

people for hrs or hfr advmnage mrght
have you m mrnd today Be on gutlrd
'&lt;l you won"l be un easy target.
CANCE R (June 21-J ul y 22)
When unportunt decnaons nre
rnvolv~d todn y. take cure to make
ynur nwn d~ctsllHl S

nnd n o t be mllu·

cncc&lt;.l by others whu nrc nnt uwure ql
ullthe rumrfr catron s. Thrnk for your·
se lf
LEO (July 2~-A ug 22. Allhough
you ure rnnately endowed wi th
e~ccpttOnul pnwcrs ol Ueep cnn c~ n ·
truuon. they rnr gh l not be up to pur
today. Be curefulthrs does not re llect
on your work
VIRGO (Aug 2.1 -Sept 22. II you
yreltl tu tmpulses lor J Ustunt gruttli ·
cu11on t&lt;xluy. u shopprng excur'&lt;on
wrllturn nut ln be an expeu\rve drver·
src&gt;n Fmd other nUtlets lnr seckrng
lun

I

�'•

•.

_Pa~ge~1~2-o~n.~D~a~il~y~Se~·n~t~lne~I----------------------------~P~o=me~r~oy~o~M=I=dd=l~e~~~O~h~=-------------------~W~ed~ne~~-d~~~·-~~---2-1,_1_~_ ;
•

•

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

2/$
.......,,.,•.
STOlE HOUIS
Sull~f .

12PK120ZCANS

IAM·IO PM

LIMIT 2 PlWI

ADD. PUICH 2.99

291 S.ECOND ST.
.

~

WE IESEm THE IIGIT TO liMIT QUANTITIES
PJUCES GOOD THIU
OCTOBER 24, 1991

CHECK PRESENTED - A check for
$39,554.82 will be 1hared by Olive Town•hlp
and Meig1 County •• a r111ult of la•t year'tloOging In the Shada River Fol'ftt. The E111tern
Local SChool Dl8trlct .will receive a eeparate

payment. From left are Paul White and Jim Mil·
II ron of the Ohio Depattm'iitnt of ' Natural
Reeources, Eaatem Local Superintendent Deryl
Well, and County Comml••loner• Janet
Howard, Jeff Thornton and Fred Hoffman.

Azinger endorses former rival for Congress
COLUMBUS lAP) -The anti- .
abonion congressional candidme who
surprised Ohio Republicans by
pulling 21 percent of the primary vote
ag'aimt beuerlnown Nancy Hollis!er
and former ~p . • Frank Cremeans
now has been persuaded to rally
behind Hollister.
Mike.Azinger of·Marietia. whose
strong showing in May demonstrated conservatives' distaste for the
JlCnerally moderate . Hollister, has
endorsed Ohio's lieutenant governor
in her general-election race against
Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland.
Azinger told The Columbus Dis-

patch that Hollister is the better of the
two choices on the 6th District ballot.
"She is pro-choice, but is not
(\early as pro-choice as Ted Strickland," Azinger said. "A vote for Nancy is a vote for Newt Gingrich and a
vote for (Rep.) Henry Hyde (R· Ill.)
to chair the Judiciary Committee. A
vote foT Nancy Hollister is a vote to
indict Bill Clinton."
.{}iogrich, the House.speaker, was
among those who asked Azinger to
make an endorsement, the Dispatch
reported.
Republicans hoped Azinger's

endorsement would carry weoght
with the social conservatives who
have proved in pa&lt;l elections to be an
important 6th District voter bloc.
With less tha·n two weeks remain·
ing until the Nov. ~ election. Hollister sti II was working for the support
of that pan of the GOP base. She
"still ha&lt; a whole lot 'of work to do,"
said Chris Norman, director of Ohio
Right to Ljfe. an anti-abortion group.
Lori Viars, head of Warren County Right to Life, said many of the
social conservatives she knows don •t
want to v,ote for either Hollister or
Strickland.

RC COLA
PRODUCTS
12 PI • 12 OZ CANS

FRESH CHICKEN

c

T ighs••••• •••••••••••••••
Lb.

PEAK PINTO
BEANS

Meigs ·land · trans~ers posted
The following land transfers were lor, Middleport parcels;
recorded recently in the office of
Deed, Lawrence, Doris L. and
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene Karrel David Lemley to Karrel David
Hamilton:
Lemley, Pomeroy parcels;
Deed, Larry and Paula J. Pickens
Deed, Robert K. and Charlene E.
lo Chesler and Lori Casto. Salisbury; Hoeflich to Samuel L and Paula J.
Deed, Ralph and Ocie McCune to Pickens. Pomeroy lots;
Brian K. and Page B. Jsaksson, RutDeed, Henry a~d Patricia Thomas
lund parcels;
to Ricky Allen and Melba June StoDeed. Jay C.. and Deborah.J. Rus-' bart, Chester, 2.4 acres:
sell to Vi~!"' C. Young IV, Pomeroy
Deed, Patricia]. Waller, Patricia J.
parcels;
Robinson, John Doe and Patricia J.
Deed, Wanda and Donald H. Halley to Federal National Mortgage,
Wyeth to Roben W~llman, Scipio . Salisbliry;
·
parcels;
~Deed, Joseph and Barbara F. MasDeed, Mark and Nola R. Proffitt ters to' Rod W. and Lora A. Dement,
to Larry D. and Amberly K. Johnson, ' Olive;
Sutton, ,70 acre;
Deed. Mark Allan and Tracey L
Deed, Robert D. ~nd Sue Ann Oddl to Peoples Banking &amp; Trust.
Peck to Alice Lieving, Columbia, 40 Salisbury parcel;
. acres:
Deed, David Hanley t9 Cynthia A.
Deed, Coleen A. Mahaffey. to Burkhart, Scipio parcel;
.
William J. Mahaffey, Columbia.
Easement, James Alan and Tama21.04 acre;
ra Pickens to Columbus Southern
.
Deed, )ames A. and Georgia Power, Sutton;
.
Kroegelto James E. Kroegel, Olive;
Easement, Westvaco Corporation
Deed, Carter P. and Carolyn S. to CSP, Lebanon;
French to Mark and Denise Michael,
Deed, John T. and Judith A.
Middleport;
Williams to Larry W. and L, Jane
Deed, James Jr. and Grace A. Banks, Sutton, 1.2099 acre;
Johnson to Donald K. and Karen K.
Deed, Maurice E. and Margaret D.
Lisle. Middleport parcel;
Johnson to Robert R. and Sherri D. ,
Deed, Hilda E. Yeauger to Cass Tobin, Salisbury parcels;
and Trenton J. Cleland, Suuon
Right of way, Jan A. and Donna
parcels;
Parker to Tuppers Plains-Chester
Deed, Phillip M. Shoemaker to WaJer District, Orange, 25 acres;
Roger , Dale Shoemaker. Salisbury,
Right 6f way, Rollin and Nancy
.03 acre; .
.•
·
Radford .to TPCWD. Salisb~ry,
·. Dee!!, Mary Susan Haning 10 93.602 acres:
James K. Haning. Scipio;
Right of way, Erik J. and June Ann
Deed, Barbara E. Bowen to Don- Aanestad to , TPCWD, Chester,
nie R. Hoffman, Salisbury parcel;
13.411 acres;
Deed. Clara F. and James E. San· ·
Right of way, Edgar A. and Jaore
oom·.James E..and Clara F. Sanborn. Abbott to TPCWD. Sali.&lt;bury, I a'l:re; •
Marcella L, and Richard A Worner,
Right of way, Tony D. and Sherri
Clyda M. and Donald L. Eastman, Hendrix to TPCWD, Orange. 8.94
~Ierman Taylor to Michael R. Taylor,
ncres;
John 1.. Taylor and Franklin R. TayRight of way. Eunice L. Jones to

TPCWD, Chesler, 17.49 acres;
Righi of way, David and Michaella Rees to TPCWD, Chester, 2.046
acre;
.,
.
Right of way, }\Iva and Grace M.
Hplsinger to TPCWD, Olive, I acre;
Right of way, Michael and Rhonda Sanders to TPCWD, Olive, .437
acre;
Right of way, Howard H. and
Eleanor H. Knight .to TPCWO,
Chester;
Right of way, Ronald F. and Keily L Robinson to TPCWD, Orange, ·
I, I 05 acres; ·
. Deed. Kermit Cole to Kermit C.
Cole and Colleen · C. Ashworth,
Lebanon parcels;
Deed, Charles A. and Julie L
Leach to Glenn and Lois Thompson,
Middleport lot;
Deed, Delores Aeiket, deceased,
to Faye Aeiker, Pomeroy;
Deed, Leonard E. and Fay E.
Amos to Ronnie D. and· Tanowa J.
McGrath. Orange, 1.6819 acres;
Deed. Loyd M. Priddy, deceased,
to Zachariah Priddy, Rutland, 3.15
acre;
Deed. Beverly Rene man to Roger
P. Hysell, Pomeroy;
Deed, Paul Lee and Priscilla Flo- ,
ra to Priscilla Flora. Pomeroy parcel;
Deed; Alfred Conard to Mark D.
and Cathy A. Hudson, Bedford;
Deed. Kenneth R. Uttto Steven L.
Story, Pomeroy parcel;
Deed, Marlin Wesley and Carla
Raynell Davis .to Gary and Kathy
Spencer, Columbia parcels;
Deed, Grace Allen lo Earl and
Clarice L: Wiilford, Lebanon;
Deed, Federal National Mortgage
·ro Charles David Jeffers, Salisbury;
Deed, Juanita E. Bryant to Tonxa
J. Shaw, Bedford.

In Memory .

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

In Loving Memory
· 01 My Hus_band

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT Of MEIGS COUNTY
POMEROY, OHIO

rttpond 11 required by tho
Ohio Rultl of Civil

Co una
Meigs County Common

Procedure, Judgment by

Pleaa Cou'rt By: Monica

CHARLES R.
MASH, JR.

Hazel Darlene Dun•w•y,

will

doloull
bl rendered
Plalntlll, v.t William Molton ogotnat you for tho rollaf
Dunaway. Defendant. Coot damondod In tho complolnl.
Dated: 10·12·98
Number 98-DR-143 ·
·Lorry E. Spencer, Clerk ol
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
To
William Motoon

who passed away
Oct. 21, 1982.
Ouneway, whoae leat known
II I had all the world to
addreaa waa Hurrlc1n1,
give,
W"'l VIrginia: you oro
I'd give It, yes, and
horoby notlllod that you
more,
have been n•med dtftndtnt
To hear your voice,
In a legal action ontttlod
~ HIZtl Oarltne-- Dunaway,
To see your smile,
And greet you at the · plaintiff va. William Molton
Dunaway, defendant. Thlo
door.
action h11 bttn 111lgned
God saw that you were
calf number 98·DR·143 lnd
weary,
It ptndlng In tho court of
So He did what HI common plea.: ol Mtlga
County, Ohio 4S769.
thought beat,
Tho objocl of tho
He came and stood
complaint
to to obtain •
be1lde you,
divorce end to conclude 111
And whispered coma · metter• pertaining lo the
and rut.
morrltgt end tho proyor It
II broke our hearta to
for divorce end for co1t1.
You ara required to
lose you,
on ower lht complaint within
But you didn't go
28 doyo oltor tho 'lilt
alone,
•
publlcotlon of thlo nollco
For port or us "!tnt
which will be publlthod
with you ,
once each week lor alx
The day God called
IUCCtlliYI WHkl. Thtllat
you home, ,
publication will be ·m1de on
Nov. 18, 1998 ond me 28
Sadly missed but not
days
lor onewtr will
forgotten, Wife Ann ,
commence on thet date.
Children and
In Clll Of your failure to
Grandchildren.
anawer or ~ otherwise

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October 2

�</text>
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