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•

Monday

Sunday, October 25, 1998

Pomeroy_• Mld~leport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Weather
---

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 70; Low:45

October 26, 1998
.

Sports

Bengals drop 27-1 0 battle, Page 4
Eastern wins sectional, Page 6
Humane Society column, Page 8

-

Tomorrow: Cloudy
Hlgh:70; Low:40

Elam

boots
63-yard FG

Page4

•

a1
Meigs County's

1998 PARK

-1998 BUICK LESABRE

. Leather interior, memory power .seat, aultorr.ati•c I Power seat, cassette, power
Climate Control. Choose from "3" ·Factory . aluminum wheels. Extra clean with very
miles.I "5" In Stock/
Program cars! LOll Mll••t
ATTEND FARM SCIENCE REVIEW • The
South Gall Ia fFA recently attended the recent
Farm Science Review In London, Ohio. The
group, consisting of freshmen, sophomore and
.junior members, viewed the -machinery and
llvastock displays at the farm show and vlalt·

fd the lawn and garden displays and machin-

.

ery demonstrations. The group waa accompanied by David and Tom Pope, advisors, along
with Mrs. Tina Johnson and Mra. Brenda
Sanden.

Cattle jumps to highest since June
on expectations of strong demand
By CLIFF EDWARDS
AP Business Writer
Beef futures prices jumped·Friday
to their highest since June on the
Chicago Mercantile Exchange as
heavy supermarket promotions in
the past few weeks boosted hopes
new demand will help pare one of the
large.&lt;! herds in years. Purk prices
also advanced.
On other markets, wheat futures
rose, while com and soybeans relreat·
ed.
Cattle prices have been mired in

the doldrums for months amid record
production. which came as feedlot
operators speculated demand to Asia
would rise. Instead, demand fell, and
American consumers also ate less
beef than e.pected over the important
summer grilling season.
But prices have risen aboutiO percent in the p~sl two weeks as supermarket chains began to offer heavy
discounts on beef and pork because
of the low prices. Those sales .have
raised ptimism that meatpackers
next ·we k will step into th'e market
for heavy
·ng, market participants

said.
Pork prices rose on the same
assumptions.
Live cattle for December delivery
rose 1.05 cents, or 1.6 percent, to
66.17 cents a pound. the highest settlement price ·since Jupe 12; November feeder catile rose .90 cent to 73.25
cents a pound ; December lean hogs
rose .20 cent to 40.50 cents a pound;
February pork bellies rose 2.15 cents
to 50.80 cents a pound.
· Wheat futures prices advanced on
the Chicago Board of Trade. while
corn and soybeans retreated under
harvest pressure.
Corn and soybeans gave up their
gains from a day earlier amid perception warm, dcy weather-this week·,end in the Midwest will encourage,
active harvesting of bumper crops.
Government statistics condnue to
: show harvesting is proceeding 10•11
ahead of the five-year pace. and
investors are growing coneerned
there wi II be heavy sales in coming

weeks.
While corn and soybean market·
ings have so far been unexpectedly

light as farmers ~hoose to store their
{iops, market partidpants note many
storage bins are filling rapidly and
will be unable to hold the flood of
supplies.
Also. contributing to soy bean
. futures tumble was a report from the
U.S. Census Bureau that showed soybean oil stocks, a vegetable oil used ·
in cooking, were higher than expect-

24 900

8

••

1998 BONNEVILLE

Very loW •n:tiles. 4 In Stock. Power
7 pass., 2 bu~t-in child safety seats, caiiS.,I cassette, aluminum wheels, WliJ,II equlp&gt;pe·d.
Extra clean cars!
alum. wheels. Extended cha&amp;sis. Loaded!

19 900

8

'18,900

Corn futures also were pressured
as China incretlsed sales of its coro
crop, causing more iniense world
competition in a market whe~ export
demand already is weak.
Wheat futures advanced on news
from a day earlier that Bangladesh
would receive 350,000 metric tons of
donated U.S.' wheat and as market
participants covered their positions ,
on the chance Egypt could make a
large purchase. ·
·
December wheal rose I 114 cents
to $2.95 114 a bushel ; December com
fell 2 1/2 cents to $2.1~ 3/4 a bushel;
December oats fell. 112 cent to $1. 15
114 a bushel; November soybeans fell
7 cents to $5.48 112 a bushel.

day, but smaller-company names rose
again as investors continued 'to hunt
session, but the Dow 's winning streak for bargains iri that battered sector.
ended Friday as investors took some
The Russell 2000 index of ~mail­
profits after two weeks of nearly con- er companie~ rose 0.65 to 367.0'5,
tinuous gains.
extending its rally to eight consecuThe Dow Jones industrial average tive trading days and 14.6 percent.
fell 80.85 to 8,452.29, shrinking the
While the mood remains much
week's gain to 35.53.
improved compared with earlier this
It was the biggest dec Iine in three month, it was clear all week that the
weeks {or .the Dow. which just two blue-chip rebound was provoking
weeks ago was nearly · I,()()() poinll concern about whether the company
lower, threatening to slide beneath its profit outlook could justify any fursummer low of 7,400.
ther gains.
·
Most broad-market indicators also
The Dow liad risen for seven
-succumbed
to some protit-taking Fristraight sessions before Friday, but
.
- I
the first fnur ~ays of this week had
provided only 116 points nfthe near·
CHESHIRE William E. Casey, ly 600 gainod during that streak.
By finishing lower Fridny. the
Coal Equipment Operator-S at the
Dow
missed out on its first eight-sesOhio Valley Electric Corporation's
sion
winning
streak since December
Kyger Creek Plant, recently rece ived ·
1996.
~The sevenwsession string was
hi.s anniversary uw:ml for 30 years of
service hl the company. as annoum:e«,i its best since June 1997.
by ~alph E. Amburgey. plant man·

Casey .honored

ager.

Casey joined OVEC' on Oct. 9.
i96X. as a Laborer In the Labor
Department. In 1971 he transferred to
the Yard Department as a Coal Handler. and in 197-2 he advanced to
Barge Attendant. In 1974 he was pmr
mnted 1o. Tripp~r Operator und in

197H.to Coal Equ ipmen t Operator-B.
:.ami hi s wile. l' arplyn, resitle
in Gallipolis.
·

Ca:-.~y

ATTEN·710N KMAR7
SHOPPERS

1997 G
Power seat, cassette, power wlndows:,Balance
of new car warranty ..
WAS $16,900
·"

5PECIALAT • .•

NOW

· Peoples Bancorp.
Inc .. announced e:~rnings before
extr'aorUinary c.:harges fur tht: quurtt:r

and nine months ended September }0
of $2J~H.!JIK J and $7..104,000 compared ILl $2. i)K.0110 and $!!.:!R.I,O()
. for thi.! s&lt;trl1~ ·paioJ., la' t yea r.
im.:reao,;t! ~ of 7.9 pt!ll:Clll anU IY.4 pt!f-

cent. rcsp&lt;!ctivdy. On a diluted per
.share busis. t,;arning' were :N L't:fns
ilnd $1.::!6. C\Hnparctl to 40 b:n ts and
$ 1. IXf1)r the ~ami.' raitJd :1 year carw
licr.
To enhance fut ure earnin gs
through impmv~J m:t inlcre!&gt;.t incornt:
un&lt;.J net imcres t lll ~lr):! ins . lht:: ..:mnp;.\w
ny im: ur~l!d an extraordinary pre1:1x
cha r:gt: in the thinl quarter of 1998 of
$357.000 ($B2.1XlO after taxe&lt; '"
four cents per share I for prepayment
penahks of $ 1 5 .~ mi iliun of the company's long-tern! horrowings. which
had a weig!li Cd UVCnl£t' maturity Of
approx11nately eigh t year~.

Ranked second

•

.

~

\

Power Wlaeels' 'ride-on battery-powered
vehicles are featured in our
Oct. 25 Sunday circular, and in our

4,880!

.

RIVIERA

Loaded, power windows, power mirrors,
cruise, tilt. Remote Keyless Entry
"

Light Teal metallic, 3800 super charged V6, Astra roof, CD and cas~_ette. Luxury!

.
1997 FORD CROWN
VICTORIA LS

1993 LUMINA EUROSPORT

,,

'"'Only 2500 mllea. NOT a mlaprlntl

·Power seat, leather Interior. Local tni.de.

Local owner, aluminum wheels,
windows. Sharp!

7,495

8

SHOWROOM CONDITION! '

I

1995 BUICK CENTURY
White with blye simulated convertible roof,
beautiful car. Only 29,000 miles, power seat,
windows, etc. Gold accent pkg.

I

1991 GRAND PRIX 2·DR.
Power seat, aluminum wheels, white with
cloth inlerlor.
·•

•&amp;,995

~~~L~IK~E~N~E~W~IN~T~E~R~IO~R~I~~~==~~~

U~S.

Consumer Product

like all other retailers, will be unable to sell
Wheels~

at this time.

Rain checks will be available to customers
who will be able to purchase the .advertised
merclumdise nt the sale price once

"" Power
Fisher-Pril· e has told Kmart tlr.at
Wheels® will be available again within 30 days.

' inconvenience to our customers.
We regret any

willing to pay higher taxes to start it. . ties to get 911 emergency telephone
Halleck hope• tho Legislature will &lt;ervice. thanks to a tax to pay f6r the
come up with a way to hdp. J-le sug- · $403,000 system. Residents also pay
ge~ts rnore of an emphasi~ on tele.50 cent• on each telephone bill to
phone-line charges rather than levic!s. support the service and pay off the
"Most&lt;verybody ha.• a telephone, debt to install it.
Last year, Hocking County votel'li
but not everybody owns the house
approved a tax for the &lt;ervice, which
they liv~ · in." he said.
Dick K(mmins, spokesman for the has not start!'d yet. Gallia County 's '•
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio. 911 system bei:arne operational in
noted th at many of the counties December of 1997.
Vinton County Sheriff Donald
without911 are in southern Ohio and
Peters said th~re · appears to be interamong the poorest iii' the state.
" It is up to local residentsto vote, est for a 9 11 system in hi.s southern
approve or somehow put into· place Ohio couruy of 12.000.
"We are stHrting to work on it 10
the ongoing funding of it," he said.
Earlier thi s year, Perry County see what we can c.ome up with,"
·
became t~e 76th of Ohio's 88 toun - Peters said.

By The Aeaoclated Prea1
John Geraci. senior project manRepublican Bob Taft received ager for pollster Gordon S. .Black
endorsements from three major news- Corp., which conducted The Plain
papers on Sunday in his campaign to Dealer poll, said the number of unde·
become governor, while two new cided voters usually is lower as the
CAPE €ANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
relaxed," said shuttle weather oflicer
polls said that about one-third of election nears. "This is very rare," he -After months of anticipation, the
Ed Priselac.
Ohio voters don't know who they'll said.
"
countdown began today for John
' Priselac put the odds of favorable
vote for.
Guido Stempel, professor emeri- Glenn's return to orbit aboaod space
launch weather at60 percent
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, The tus in journalism at Ohio University shuttle Discovery.
NASA also has u .meteorological
Cincinnati Enquirer and Dayton Dai- in Athens, said the number of unde·
NASA's countdown clocks began
worry of a ditl'erent sort: The Nov: 17
ly News supported Taft on their edi- cided voten was "amazing this close ticking at 8 a.m. toward a Thursday
Leonids meteor shower that is
torial pages.
to the election."
afternoon blastoff.
expected to be unusually severe and
They said he is more likely to
Taft, the current ~~ecretary ofotate,
·The 77-year-old seo~tor from
could damage an orbiting spacecr:tft.
improve on the success of outgoing said the undecided voters make the Ohio, who wa.• the first American to
NASA s,ays if Discovery isn' t
Gov. George Voinovich. who is· run- . Nov. 3 election very volatile.
orbit the Earth back in 1962, awoke
launched by Nov. 5. it will del'l )
ning for U.S , _Senate. They also
"In terms of the gap, eight to 10 some 900 miles away in Houston. He
liftoff until after the shower is over.
attacked Fisher's proposed $1.1 bil· is about where our numbers have and the six other Discovery astroThe only technical problem
lion property tax cut, which the Dai- been in the last two to three weeks. nauts were scheduled· to fly to
involved a faulty sensor on .,one of
ly News said "smacks of a ~espera- Obviously, we'd like our number to Kennedy Space Center this afterDiscovery's main engin~s . The sen-.
tion move, one Ohioans should not be closer to SO," Taft said.
noon . .
'·· sor normally is used to make sure th e
have to live with."
Fisher said he puts little stock in
NASA meteorolojjists kept a close
~ ngine nozzle is pointed the right way
Despite the e_ndorsements, all polls, ,c)llfing !~em. snapshots that in · watch on Hurricane Mitch.out.in the
befpre liftoff. Engineers will rely on
,IQHNGLENN
three newspnpetll said Fisher . was .J990 ·and"l994 were wrong aboul.his Caribbean. Although the~weiful
other s0urce r,of information qualified to be governor, citing hiA races.
•
storm Was moving away frpn\ Florihydraulic p•o.sure readings. for
experience in the Legislature and as ' · "I can. tell you that every indica- da, forecil.lters worried it might result
"If we hadn't had the hurricane, I instance - to make sure the engine
lion we have isthat· thi~ race is a dead in high wind come launch day.
a former attomey general.
think I'd have been much more is in ihe proper position. said shuitlo
Meanwhile, the Akron Bencon heat," Fisher said. '
Journal published a poll which said
The University of Akron 's lnstiTaft led 38 percent to 28 percent, with lute for Policy Studies conducted the
29 percent undecided. The margin of telephone poll of 714 registered val\\•
.'
error _was plus or minus 4 pe~entage ers for the Beacon Joumal. The calls
WASHINGTON (AP) _ Presi- year."
·,
• strength in the world community._"
points.
·
were made between Qot. 6-22. dent Clinton's personal problems
. "These ~re local races,"_ agreed .. B~t .. Democrats were d~fmmg
The Plain Dealer said Taft led 36 Reform Party candidate John Mitchel may not be a major factor in an elec- Rep. John Lmder, R-Ga., chatrman ot
gums m the Nov. 3 elect1on as
percent to 28 percent, with 33 pereent and independent Zanna Feitler ench lion that Republican and Democrat- the House Republican Campaign breaking even i_n the House. wh1~h
undecided. The margin of error was received support from 2 percent of ic leaders agree will be marked by Committee "F?r some time, I've the GOP now _controls 228-206 wllh
those polled.
·
plus or minus 3 percentage points.
low turnout and close races.
been saymg we d gam 10 to 15 seats oqe Democrattc-leanmg ~ndependent.
The newspaper also. said support
The Plain Dealer poll, conducted
Democrats said that in an off-year based on local political fundamentals. and 1_n ~he Senate, where the ,GOP
for the two candidates slipped since Ocl. 16-20, wa• a telephone survey of election where the party that conirols And I never did believe it was~ ref· margm ts 55-45.
.
.
a poll it published in September: 7 1,012 likely voters. Feitler and the White House usually loses, their erendum on Bill Clinton," he satd on
. The party m the Whtt_e House Ira·
percentage points from Taft and 6 Mitchel combined for support from 4 hope is break even ,in House and CBS' "Face the Nation."
dttiOnally Iuses 25 seats m the House
10
percentage points from Fisher.
percent of voters.
Senate 'ruces. Republicans said they
Democrats insisted that would be m off-year elections, Colo~1~do Gov.
will pick up seats, but there will be a plus as thetr candtdates. press Roy Ro~er, the D~mocrauc na~~onno repetition of the 1994 GOP land- themes of GOP shortcomings m such al co-~ha~rman .. sa1d on NBC. We
slide.
·
, aroas as education. health .care a~d . are gomg,t? gam a whole lot more
"This is clearly an 'all politics is campatgn fmance . Cltnton s role m than that .
.
k'
·d,
'
t'
..
Sen
M'tch
fnrgin•
Middle
East
peace
agreeRep.
Martm
Frost,
D-Texas.
chair·
,
11
1 lOll,
eec
.,. fIth
• .will resonate with voters, man o f Ihe House Democrat1c
. camWASHINGTON (AP) - The bug-ridden.· Some . even praised IocaI '" O!,'K
k h ad
ment also
M
C
II
r
y.
e
o
e
·
·
d'
d
"
c onne o . entuc
antitrust trial of Microsoft Corp. is Microsoft's browser. which provides
patgn commlltee, pre tete a very
Republ tcan c ampal·gn Com- they said.
fh
'
. Most ot' I he nat10na
. I
entering its second week with the access to the Internet, as technically Senate
'd "F News Sunday..
" President Clinton had one o _ ts c Iose eIect10n.
·
m1ttee, ·sat
.
computer software giant challenging superior.
.
. " on ·ox 1 ·ssue of any
finest hours," ci vii ri•hts leaderJesse po 11 s ~how th'IS ·tn a dea d heat. we
1
• · " Meet the Ih'mk 1here w1-1, be a 1ot o1· races that
The e-mails, many laced with There " no na· 1wna
the government's most important
· g nature thl·s Jackson told NBC's_
·
·
. ·
·
·
·
)()() d 2 000
witness, the head of internet rival obscenities, are important to rea II y pre d omma 1tn
Press." " It shows he still has real w1ll be dectded by 1.(
nn .
Microsoft, which is trying to show
Netscape Communications Corp.
·' James Barksdale, Netscape's chief
thatNeL~cape'sbusine.~sfuilureswere
h~ld'
executive officer. endured sharp its own fault, not due to allegedly ille·
cross-examination for three days last gal acts by Microsoft. Netscape once
WASHINGTON (AP) - . The
"What is the role of the CIA? Is region," Albright . .said ~n -t BS's
week by Mi crosoft's lawyer. John ·
. itrcn~!"~;.-~~~: · Senate intelligence committee will it to enforce a policy? Is it to be an "Fuce'lhe Natton.' She sa1d the CIA
Waoden . Concerned by the trial's ~~~:.~.-~~~J. ~~i
·
h CIA'
d' ·
arbitrator'' Js it to be bodyuuards? J has been ltghltn" terronsm there
h0 ld hearmgs
slow "pace , U.S. · District Judge half the market
on 1 e
s me 1a1mg
·
" · ·
··
~
·
1·
·
d
· ·
1 ·111 1h M'ddl
think not " Shelby said on "Fox smce the 1996 antt-terronsm con cr·
1
Thomas Penfield Jackson gave"WarIn the weeks before the trial, an monttonng roe
e
e
'
Sh
1 Sh 'kh E
fand-for-securit accood to deter- News Sunday." "I think we have to ence at arm e · e1 · , gypt.
den until today to finish questioning Microsoft subpoenaed copies of East
. h
. · f , ~k' P· l . . .
look at thi s,
Sen. Orrin Hatch. R-Utah. a mem·
mme I e cost o true mg a esttnlan
..
be f h. . II'
.
·f·
Barksdale and move ahead to other about 4 '000 e-mal.I"·• by Netscape
·
· ·
ft'
d h h A .
But Secretary of State Madeleine
r o 1 e mtc 1gencc comm1ttee, liS·
witnesses .
, ,.
employee"" wr1'tten over" the last
two
antt-terrore
orts
an
w
et
er
mer
·
·
h
·
'
·
.
· k
Albright said the agency, is no agreed Wtlh Shelby s appre ellstons
Microsoft was expected to con- years . The messages were part of the ICa~ age~l·-'.~~·~~'11; R-AI
h .stranger to providing on-the-ground about expanding the CIA's role. On
front Barksdale withe-mails from his company's informal "bad attitude" 'com:;le~~s ~hairmea/'said S~·~~a~ intelligence support to diplomacy.
CNN's "Late Edition ... lia~c h said
own employees, w~o complained . and " really bad attitude" forums, .in h• 'ts· troubled because the CIA,
"The CIA has played roles previ· the sp_ agency can ~lay ·a c·on·
angrily in the messages abqut their which workers griped abqut every•
k
th
under the agreement, would play "a ously in terms.of monitoring and ver- strucuve. r?1e tn ma ong sure a1
own Internet software as shabby and thing from cafeteria food to product : v•·s·lbl•
role ."
.ify ing other agreements ... in the these two stdes get along and ltve up
marketing.
•
.

.

1992 MAZDA 929
Top of the line luxury car. Power sunroof,
leather Interior. l!oadedl Local1 -owner.

7,995

oNLr 8

1992 BUICK PARK AVE.

test director Doug Lyons.
The start of a shuttle launch countdow n ty'pically draws only a few
reporters. This time, however, hun dreds of journalists already are
swarming Kennedy's press site.
Some 3,000 are expected for liftoff.
not to mention President Clinton and
. an estimated 70 members of Congres~.

Glenn will be the oldest person in
space by 16 years when Di scovery
takes off. In his case. age is an advuntage - he talked NASA into giving
him a ride so he could conduct geriatric tests in orbit.
The aging proce~s on E_arth, in
lll?,ny ways, is sjmilar to the effects
of weightlessness, and NASA wants
to know why.
Altogether, 83 experiments are
planned for the nme-day flight.

GOP predicts small gain!j5,
Democrats see standoff
..

Microsoft trial enters second
week; Netscape still under fire ,

-' 'fiii1my Henderson, 40. oJ
Cincinnati, a painter who supports
Democrat Mary Boyle.
On economic issues:
" I work in a restaurant. You don't
make~ whole lot of money in restaurants. I know Clinton has raised the
minimum wage. And a loi of people
in my work othink tho same wuy :
Lmking. out for the low people.
That's basically what I look at. taxes
and wages. Foreign policy and stutl
lik e th:ot doosn'l really relate to me."
- Tcri Sanders. 2'1. of Norwood.
a Cifu.:: innati waitress whn Si.lys. a ctmdidatos j&gt;oiiticul party doe sn' t deter-

crunch time, I get crunched."
Richard Moore. 31, of Cleveland.
who sells plantains, yuccas and 12
varieties of hot peppers at his stand
On the ~:anc..lic..lah!s for governor:
"I just don 't like either one of
at the West Side Market
them . Where I live . .there isn' t any
On schools:
work down there. You have to work
"Politicians always want to help
out of town all the time. They won't
with schools and make education bet·
ter,
but when they got electod it nevkoer the rou~s ur. The roads are in
er
happens."
tcrribl ~ shape....
- Paul Arick. 50. a Democrat in
- Charles Lundy. 34. of Proc·
Cambridge, who teaches special edutnrville, a Dcmo..:rat wt&gt;rking on a
cation to lourth-. fifth- and sixthCoi umbiu Gas crew in Urbana.
graders .
. On the candidates for U.S" Sen·
On trusting politicians: ·
ate:
"I'm
looking fo'r integrity. some
" I love George Vnincwkh, eve n
mi
nc
h
er
vote
.,
kind
ofhone.
'iy anymore. They're all
thou gh he's not a Dcmrx:rat."
On tuxes:
liars. everyone of them. You've got to
- Dwight McCa,kill, 50. a ,elf- .
'"
Why
should
I
vote
for
the
person
figure
out who's lying the lea,t."
employed r ui nter in Cleveland.
whu's
going
to
f';"ise
IUXC.
"
'.
I'm
puy
w
Jerry
Anderson, 49, of Cum· " I !Jon ' I sec I hut Voinnvkh tlitl
ing
enough
1&lt;1~c-;
as
it
i
....
I'm
a
small
bridge.
who
sells artistic glass deco·
anyt hin g w h~n he wu."' govt!rhor. ~o
hu
.
,
i
n
c,~mun
.
:.mt.l
when
it
~..:o
mc
s
to
rations
and
usually
votes Republican.
why 'lhoultll VO (l! l'or him nnw '!"

votes."
'
Frost's Senate co~~terpart, Se~ :
Bob_Kerrey, D-Neb., sa1d on ABC .s
•"ThiS Week" that Democr~t s would
do well. But w1th R~pubhc_a~s abl~ t~
&gt;pend more money m tho last.!O days
ot the ~amp:ugn. he added, I thmk
we can t come out there and presume,
tell the Amen.can people, that..we are
gmng to be p1ck1ng up seats._
In the last non-pres.•d_entml-year
elect1on,_ 1994, Republicans gmned
54 seats tn t~e House and nme m the
Sen~te to wm control of both cham'
bers.
.
.
Republicans probably w11l not
reac h Ihe i"l'b
1 1 uster· proq t'__ leve I o f' 60.
·!" 1he senate. Mcconne 11 sa1'd . ._,.
ne
:idd ed that .turnout .. wt'II probubl y "ve
even 1uwer than norma 1 be cause ol·
Ihe genera 1contentment o f' voters. "

hearl"ngs on CIA's. new Mi_
d_. die_East role .'.

Y_

By The Associated Press
·
ComrlJents by voters across Ohio
two weeks bl:fore the. Nov. 3 election:

Safety Commission and Fisher-Price. Kmart,
Power

By DAVID JACOBS
residents needin.g. medical or emerw
Auoclllted Pr.Sa Writer
gency assistance must call 992-6663 ·
COLUMBUS - Mike Halleck or 992-3371 for assi stance from the
hopes that sometime soon, residents sheriff's department.
in Columbiana County will be able 10
People in those area.• have to dial
dial 911 when they need help. The · seven-digit numbers to get.!.emerproblem is how to pay for il.
gency help. If they dial91 I. lfiey get
"The 911 would great. but of a fast busy signal or a message that
course there are ·a lot of things in gov- the service is not available.
Start-up costs for the service can
ernment that would be great," said
Halleck, president ·of the county be up to $4 million forsuch thiogs as
brnird .."We can give you all the gov- computers, communication!'~ equipernment you want, you just have to ment and around-the-clock personpay for it."
nel. 'Agencies within counties also
The eastern Ohio county is among have to. coordinate how the system
12 in the stale and an estimated 700 would work. '
nationwide without · 911 service.
Some counties say the lack of
Meigs County. in southeastern Ohio money is the:major rea'&lt;ln they don't
is included in one of the 12. Meigs have the service, and residents aren't

i

What's on Ohio voters' -m inds-two weeks before election

Due to the product safety recall recently
announced by the

..

.

G
' roup to

Christmas toy catalog.

Power Wheels'" dre available again.

BIDWF. I I - Charnpiun Ii iII . Bidfilll hl ·d d' '!'t.'P•1d [, lf/!-l''.,J ill fl..! gw
i"'tcrin••e: tl·lt' lllP·l "' u' h t.:cl c atrk in
Ohio h;.1vin'' rl'L' I.Jilkd Jl)O .hc~d of
Angus with the American Angus
Association during fiscal year 1998
which endeJ Sept. 30.
·
Wt'll.

1997 SUNFIRE 4 DR.

·PRODUCT- SAFETY RECALL

Announce earnings
POME~OY

The spark behind mo~t of the market's recent gain was the Federal
Reserve 's unexpected decision lale
last week to cut interest rates again .
It was the second rate cut in a month
by the ce~tral bank, which has been
tryi~g to combat the drag of economic crises abroad.
The Dow now holds a respectable
gain of544 points, or 6.9 percent, for
the year, but still sits about 900
points, or 9.7 percent, below the July
17 recood of 9,337.97.
3M led the Dow decliners for a
second straight session after posting
disappointing third-quarter results,
failing 4 to 77 7/16.
Microsoft fell 3.5/Sto 106 3/Sto
lead the Nasdaq retreat after jumping
nearly 10 points during the priorJwo
sessions in an earnings-driven rally.
In other trading F-riday, the Standard &amp; Poor-'s 500 fell 7.81 to
. 1.070.67.

•

Meigs County i~ one of 12 Ohio
counties still without 911 service

.

,,

NEW YORK (A P) - Small-company stocks rose for an eighth straight

By ·The Associated PreSs
A list of Ohio counties without 911 service: .
-Carroll
-Columbiana·
- Harrison
- .Hocking
-Lawrence
- Meigs
- Monroe
- Morgan
_;. Noble
- Vinton
- Walihington
-Wyandot
Note: Hockln11 County volen approved a 0.25 perwnt sales
lax last November lo pay for set:VIce which has not yel started.

Single Copy- 35 Cent s

Countdown begins for Glenn's flight·

Dow reak·ends, but small stocks
rise for eighth straightj
session
.
;

Counties without 911 service

Taft endorsed by three ·
major Ohio newspapers

·~

ed.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49 , Number 122

·~.

· '1998 PONTIAC
TRANSPORT 4 DR.

Hometown Newspaper

" No matter who you get in. they ty guurd at Cinergy Field in Ci ncin do what they want regurdless. It's like nati.
On nt:gative advertiSing:
marrying so meon~. You think you're
''There's
been so rnuch bickering
getting one persun and then after
·about
whu's
bdng negative against
you' re mnrried it's so meone else,"
- Sally Humphrey, 48. a house · the other cnndidate that I don 't real_.
ly know the issues. That's kiml of
sitter in Cambridge.
keeping me away fmm politics."
On morul ity issues:
- Site Bodi. 33, of Columbus.
"I guess the pmblem I'm having
who
works in p-harmaceutical sales.
with some politifians is how they
On Issue I to ban dove hunting:
politically become polarized instead
"As f'nr :t&lt; the dove hunting thing.
of sticking to whnt is obviously right
and wrong. Like Democntts getting chat's ridi ~ ulous . There arr sn man y
behind their man because he's 11 of them. The people who don't want
Democrat insteud of denouncing his them to hunt the doves ... next they
behavior on n10rul £1'1lUnds. I don't won't want them to hunt deer. They
have any kids but if I did. I wouldn 't won 't want th.:m to hunt squirrels.
want 10 rui se kids in an environment It's going to gct out .of hand." ...
- Eric Wilkowski. 23. a vegwh!!re right und wrong art! put a~idt::
etable
se ller ut Cleveland's West
for political expodiem:y."
Side
Market.
- Mit: hue[ Larkins. JY , u ~t:J..:uri-

tu these agreements." .
' .
Under t~e U.S.-broke~ed agreement concluded Fnday between
1· 1 · d th P· 1 ·f ·
h c ·IA
srue .1n
e a e~ '".'·'"s. t e
.
uld keep tra"'J ol· Pale ·tt'n'·
Wtl
'•
.
s mn
&lt;I torts to arrest and pun1sh terronsts
. a w·ly ,,,. a".suaool' n'•• lsr·lei·l ·~ ·u .
as · •
. ;~·
c ~ . •. · s,c rt· "
rY conc.t
· ·• ·n'·· Th
"· deal
. . would c·re u1e. •a
three-party medtatlon syste m '"
which Palestmtan and lsmeh sec~n~yColffiAt~oabl~ could present dtspute~ to
a
ar ner
·

Good Afternoon
Today's
Cnlcndar
Classilicds
Cnmks
Editorials

....,.,

'

·- ·-

" ., .

7
ll-9-10
II

2

J

Sports
Wcuther

4-5-6

J

Lotteries
OHIO
Pkk .1: (•~'!: l'ick 4: t10)'l
Super Lotto: 7 - ~ · 11 · ''~ ~.14 -.17
Kkkor: .!6~1).15
W.VA ,
Daily .1: :1 17 Daily ~ :3'13•1
~)

•

Sentinel

2 Se&lt;tions - 12 Pages

I'N l\ ( !h•1• \., \1 ~·~

l'utlll ~ liw ):

l'••

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

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

1

ROBERT L. WINGE1T

Publleller

DIANE HILL
Controller

recounted
our

BERLIN
Irs hard to belteve
thalli's been almost ntne years to the
day NO\ 9 1989 -- that the Berlin
Wall finally came down But Werner
Schmtdt remembers lhe mght as tf tl
were yesterday, and he wasn 1 even
there
Schm1dl a Gcrtnan, was traveling
by tram wtth hts Amenean-bom wtfe
from Bcrlm to Frankfurt that
evenmg But the news spread qutckly
through the lratn East Gcnnany
would' now be grantmg passports to
anyone who wanted to vtsn the West
effectively endmg a half-century of
..:parauoo between the twQ Ger
manys

TN MDilMI . . ..,.,,..,.,.,. to 1M lldlftN
on • tKQMJ,..,. at tapa
llhMIIfWw P«J WM11 or IHIJ
1»111pui&gt;IIIIINd Typfld lot,.,. .,. P'•lflnwJ Md . , INY ,. MllfH. EMil Mould~ • ~··

,.,thO

:ruesday,Oct.27

1 By Jack Ander11011
and Jan Moller

'l:Jt46frsfid lll 1948

trcJm,....,..of-,

That mght cele hraloons erupted at
J
h
•nd.,.,_,_num,.. Sp«Hy•thiiJIIf-u•••"'"'wto•prowouurltcl•
l e famous Bran den burg Gate
or Mttn. 111111 to ._.,.,. tD Ill• Editor. rr. ,_,...l, ,.,, CoiHt st PotMroy Ohio
Easllcs dro\C 1hc1r hule frabbu~s
1";.;•;;.11
.o....;.41;,;1f,;I;,;•.;"';:.·.;;
"AX;;;;.;;
;.H2;;;;-2;.;;f57;;.;.._.;.._ _ _ _ _ _,..._ _ _ _ _ _J • onto West Berlin lor the fJrstttme and
gleefully l&lt;xtk sledgehammers to the

Mid,....

to

anoc1ate.

Kathryn Wal
lace
But
wtth
nearly a decade
passed su~ce tis
downfall, the
psychologocal
wall butlt up
o• er the years
hetween the East
and West tn

Moller &amp;
AnderiOII

Europe's largest country rematns
deep

Today, all that remams of the actual wall are a few markers commemorating famous spots on the 100-mtle
banter around West Berlin And the
German government '" hoptng that's
all that wtll remam "Usually Ocr
man~

wantlo preserve anythmg older

40 years as a monument," a
spokesperson of the Construcuon
wall that had hemmed lhcm 1n fnr 30 Mm1stry m Bonn told us But reumh
years
cauon fever left very few tntact
The Schmodl' returned to Berlin pteces of the wall
less than 24 hours later to lmd a com
IOday the Zipper of land that once
plctely dtffercnt &lt;IIY Ihe wall JUst scparaled the two Derhns --known as
wasn 1 there ,mvmorc
S~,;hmldl ~he dcatlt &gt;lnp for the thousands

Despite Supreme Co.urt,
Congress could have
last say on cenSU$
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correepondent
WASHINGTON - In the long stalemate over the nght way to conduct
the 2000 Census the n~xt chapter wtll be wrmen by the Supreme Court but wtth no guarantee II woll be the last one There's sttll the matter of
money
Republicans are countmg nn the court to rule that the census musl be a
head count wllhoutthe sampling system, akm to sctenulic polltng, that the
administration wants used to reach otherwise uncountable Amencans
But even should the court approve sampling as consltluuonal a leadmg
GOP opponent of the system satd 11 wouldn't automattcally happen
The catchall appropnal10ns law passed Wednesday mcludcs $1 btllton for
the census but only unltl June 15, 1999 So the census wtll be up agam neXI
'i'rtng
On Nov 30, the Supreme Court wtll hear the case for sampling from the
admmtslralton and agamsl tl from the Republican House and opponents m
SIX states Both stdes say a dectston by March ts esscnttalto gel on Wtlh the
census on Aprtl I, 2000
'
The census determmes apportionment of House seats among the states
the shape of congresstonal and other polittcal dtslncts wuhm them and the
allocauon of about $180 btl lion a year dtstrtbuted under federal programs
Two federal courts have ruled that sampling cannot he used 10 2000 but
the, dcctstons dealt wnh federal law, not the constttuttonalny of domg u Wtlh
sampling as well as countmg The Consltl1utton reqUires an 'actual enumer
altOn' every 10 years, and Republicans /say that means counung every
Amencan, not a 90 percent count, 10 percent samplmg system
Delund the legal and stausucal arguments, there ts a pollltl'al one The
1990 census mtsscd an esltmated 4 mtllton people, an undercounl concen
tratcd among blacks and other mmortltes on largely poor nctghoorhood
s
"
Sampling would add them, and that would alter the shape of poltucal dtstncts presumably lo Democraltc advanlage
Thts dtdn't begm as a Democraltc tdea Wuh the census under challenge
- 1t was stx years before the Supreme Court upheld tl - Prestdent Georg_f
Bush and the then DemocratiC Congress agreed to have the Natoonal Acaif:
cmy of Sctences study the census system and recommend steps to make the
nex l one better That led to the plan for stai~Slteal samphng to cover the oth
crw1sc uncounted
And tl set ofT the argument th at hasn l been settled yet The Repubhca n
Congress tned to bar the usc of samphng by law but Prestdcnl Cltnton
blocked that by veto tn 1997 But the Republicans st1ll had the leverage of

I han

who died lrytng to flee Communtsm - has become the biggest construclton
'zone m Europe The govemmem has
pumped 20 btllton rnarb (about $14
bilhon) tnlO lhe project and IS also
(undtng the rehabthtatron of buddmgs that haven't been used stnec
World War II
Bnngmg the East up to Western
standards Will take more ihan a (eW
years or a hefty budget allocauon
The government has already shelled
out 100 btlhon maru, collected
through a 5 percent htke tn Germany's already usunous tneorne tax
rates, to pay for umficauon And that
wtll conttnue tnto lhe foreseeable
future The pnvate sector has mvested many Urnes that amoun~ 10 bring
the East up to spee(l " The East was
like 1920's Ge1111any,' a reumfJcalton uflietal told us "It " sun not so
great, but much better"
TrJlnsportalton, educalton, health,
environmental and commumcalJons
systems all needed maJor revampmg
Nme years ago, olfictals thought 11
would take 12 years to completely
untfy Germany opttmtsl&lt; now guess
that the process wtll take another 20

But while the East today stolllw a
dlSIInedy thtrd-wotld feel, tl was
acwally lhe more pmsperous half or
the cottnlry before: the war In the
1920s and 30s, East Germany had
more natural resources and was more
technologtcally advanced than the
West -- one reason the So••ets wanted tl when lhe Alltes can&lt;ed up the
coun1ry But the factones and techntcal centers alsO made the East a more
auracttve atr rrud target for Allied
troops, making the rebutldtng proce11
much more dtflicult than tn the West
And whtle the SovtciS were eager
to expand Cotitmuntsm' tnto Ger·
many. they weren't too mteresled tn
paymg for a masstve rebutldtng effon
after the war Smce the East German
government had hule money, 11 settled for throwtng uP a sencspf lifeless four cornered structureS'thatsttll
bltght the landscape
The only exception to thts was
Berlin, whtch was delltgnated as East
Germany's showcase for communtst
wealth apd power Ea.•l Berhn was
heavtly substd11.ed to create elaborate
structures hke the I, 197-fool htgh
telev1s10n tower that soared over
West Berhn
Yet desptle the subStdte s East
Bcrh n looks as though 11 has been
freeze framed &lt;tnce the war Secltons
of the cny -- badly damaged buddtogs, soot black from fire and polluhave never been rehabilitated
from the last funous baules ofWWII
Today many former East Germans have grown frustrated wtth the
seemmgly slow pace of change
Many are seeking refuge from high
unemployment and poor economtc
prospects by JOtnmg radtcal pollltcal
movements on the extreme left or
nghtthat fuel such rage wuh,.anu-roretgner, anlt-Weslern sl11ganeenng
Says author Ratner Haubrtch, a
noted German commentator, "The
wall came down m a few days, but 11
wtll take a few generatiOns to bnng
down the 'wall m thetr heads "'
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature Syn·
dkate, Inc.

tion --

Punishing the same crime twice
By Nat Hentoff
Durtng the robbery of a young
blac~ man hts assatlanl tnjurcs htm
so badly th,ll the vtclun ts hospllo~l
tzed for a constderable length of
tun e The crumnaf, who 1s also
black gets two to four years to
pnson
In ,mother case, m the same clly,
a while man ts assaulted by a robber,
a

blw.:k mdn whu

as

he

b~:ats

mously
agreed that
greater penal
ltes for hate
cnmes
are
constitutional

(Wtsconstn
vs Mttchell,
1993)
Accordtngly,

htm

a cnmmal can

- yells ractal epnhets That cnmtnal
be punt shed
1s sentenced to tw o to fou1 years
Hentoff
tw1ce for the
same U\.:l
ce nsus appropnauons, so the admmtstrauon agreed to a cumpromtse ol an plus an ,Jdd ltl onul two years
lb
e
motheroflhe
ftr&gt;l
vtcltm
lh
c
dependtng
on
what
he
satd or 1s
exped ited court revtew of samphng wtth the Census Bureau preparmg for
black
youngster
tsks
.m
,tsslstanl
!llcgcd
to
have
sauJ,
wh1lc
he com
the 2000 count on two tracks , with and wllhout sam phng
,
l11c House voted agam thts year to torbtd usc of sa mpling .md drew diStllcl attorney why the man -.ho nutted the cnmc
Fu1tlu;nnorc d the proposed
another veto threat Then II approved only half the money for the census and bc.lt her son so VIL:Iou-. ly 1s go1ng to
m,1dc the balance subject to another vote alter March 15 The ftnal mcasutc spend le ss t11ne 111 pnson th.m lhc Hate Cnmcs Prevenuon Act
t;;rJnlJn,tl who heat up the what~ man
hc,omcs law • as 1s \I cry l1kely
pruvtdes the lund1ng but only unto I June 15
fhc
~tsslst
ull
D
A
cxpluns
tu
her
hct;; ,lU SC ol the h01nly1ng murd er of
Thllt put lhc dt spute on hold The Senate ftnally confirmed the new Cc n
sus Bureau dpector Kenneth Prewlll head of New Yorks Soc tal Sctence that under the l.m the second c.1sc Matthew Shepard solely because he
there w1ll he a further
Research Counctl who s01d that unless samphng IS part of lhe process the 1n vnlv cd .1 h.ltc Clllll C And the was g.ty
ce nsus wtll he Slgntftcanlfy more expenSIVe than the current $4 btl hun bud , pen.tlty for (.l(&gt;lllm tllln g ,, rohbcry ' weakentng ol the double-Jeopardy
ge l &lt;~nd will tdkc more than the now-cstlln,lted 350 000 r.:cnsus 1akcrs to ,on- that 1s .1lso .t h.11e 11.:11111e 1s more dausc m the F1(fh Aml!ndmcnt to
severe
the Consllluuon ( Nor shall any
ducl 11
So
the
lll!
Jt
hvr
says
the
hmm
person he subJect fm the same
The Census Bure.1u has proJt.'cted added costs of $675 mtlhon to $BOO
nullwn and the admtntstralton argues thalli wtll be less accurate than wtth done to my son cdun ls fot less than oflcnsc to be lwtec put 1n Jcop.lrdy
the hann dono lo the whtle 111.1n'
of hfe or lomb")
I he sa ntphng sysle m Repubhcan leaders contend sampling would be subject
Whi:lhcr 1 h 1te en me stututc
Congressman Charles Schumer's
to nggmg the ConslllUIIon requtres a person-by-person count - somethtng
mvolvcs
1he
r.ICc
scK
reltgton,
sex
Hale
Cnmes PreventiOn Act (H R
never actually accompliShed - and they wtll provtde the muncy to do 11
ual
onenl~tllon
01
dJs,\blhly
ol
the
3081)
makes VIolenc e committed
E•en wttH the case tn court Republicans have lhe msurance of the last
vtcllm 11 crc,llcs ,, spec tal degree of ag.unst anyone because ol hts or her
word or vole tn case they don'l get the samplmg ban they forecast
If the Supreme Court mtght rule that sampling IS legal 11 do~s not .luto- pun1shnwnt lor the sct1nc t:rmlc sex sexual oncntat10n ord1sab1ht; a
111.\llc,tlly mean \here wtll be sampling m the 2000 Census " smd Rep Dan Dtz,llrcly th e Supteme Court- - rul - federal enme Among other organtIMs unam
zat1ons, the Amencan Jewish Com
Mtllcr of Flond.1 chamnan or a House panel on the census and a lc.l&lt;llng lng on 1 st 1tc st.ttute
opponent of tile samplmg plan
' fhc Supreme Courtts gotng to rule on whether or not sampling IS leg.11
or cunsl lluttonal, nottf the Chnton sampltng plan wtll work,' he told the
House on Oct 14 ' That tssue ts very much dtbalable '

mtttee supports thts legtslalton Its to the tmperfect memory of the vtcexecuuve dtrector, Davtd I-Iams. llm and the absence of witnesses -told the New York Ttmes of "the mvcsltgators can be sent to fmd out
need for proseculton at the federal whether the defendant has revealed
level tf and when l~e local authon- raCISt or homophobtc alllludes m the
ltes fat flo act or when stale penahtes PtiSt
Belore members of Congress cut
1arc madequate '
However, as Justtcc Hugo Black 1nto double Jeopardy protecttons
satd, dtssentmg tn Bartkus v Ill mots any further, they should read 'Hate
(1959) The Court apparently takes Cnmes Cnmmal Law and Idenllly
the posthon that a second tnal for Polittcs' " (Oxford Umversoty Press)
the same actts somehow less offen- by New York Untverslly law profes""e tf one of the lnals ts conducled sor James Jacobs and researcher
by the federal government and the Ktmberly Pouer Here ts an excerpt
other by lhe stale Looked at from from thetr dtscusston of an IllinoiS
the standpmnl of the tndtvtdual who hatc-c nmc case People vs Lampkm
(Supreme Court of llhnots, 19g3)
IS bctng prosec uted, thts notton Is
too sublle lor me to grasp"
'The prosccutoon presented as
The mouvc s lor all alleged hate evtdencc ractsl statements that the
crunes arc hardly as clear as tn the defendanl had uuered stx years
murder of Mallhcw Shepard The before the cnme lor whJ~h he was
memory of a banered vtcllm can be on m al In effect a hatt -cnme mal
h.1zy Often there .uc no Witnesses
may become a wtde rangtng mqUtry
And when there arc wunesscs -- as mto the defendant s character, val
111 "ro.1d rage confrontations -- IS It
ues and beliefs "
always clear no mauer what words
The Amencan CIVIl Ltberues
hurst forth that an assault was 10111
Umon advm.::.lles hate cnme laws ated hy preJudtce• Under the Hate thereby follow mg the polls rather
Cnmes PreventiOn Act t\vo separate th an Us pnnctple s
JUnes can have a shot at that defenCount Baste used to say that
dant
every
tub should stand on tis own
'
Anolher bencf1t hate enme 1.1ws boltom So should every cnme
ha.c lor prosecutors ts the opportuNat Hentoft' is a nationally
nity to probe mlo the background of renowned authority on the First
the alleged perpetrator If thetr Amendment and the rest of the
mstant case IS weak - due perhaps Bill of Rights

Advice from a bear and a,bull

EDITORS NOTE - Walter R Mears, vtce pres1dcn1 and col umniSt lor - By Dian Vujovlch
The Assoctated Press, has reported on Washtngton and nauonal pohltcs for
Don'l know where to tum m thts
more than 30 years
'
titarkct or how to mvesl your fund
dollars&gt; Here are a couple of tdeas
from pros wnh dtfferent market oul ·
looks
Bcong a bear " paytng olf lor
money
manager Chnt les Mtntcr
By The Associated Press
He
's
the
portfolio m.magcr of two
Today ts Monday Oct 26, the 299th d.1y of 1998 There arc 66 d.1ys lcll
funds
that
have scored btg over lhe
m the year
past
few
weeks
lhe Comstock P,lfl
Tod.ty's H•ghhght tn Htstury
ners
Cap•
tal
Value
Fund up 17 4~
On Oct 26 1881 the Gunfight at the OK Corral took place tn Tombpcn::cnt
for
the
th1rd
quarter ,md the
stone Anz • as Wyatt Earp h1s two hrothcrs and Doc Holhday confront
cd lko Clanton s gang Three mcmhcrs of Clant on s gang were ktlled Earp's Comstock Partners Stro~te~y Fund
ahead t 3 70 percent
brothers were wounded
1 he dttlcrcm:c hctwce n the two
On thiS date
funds
ts where they mve"ii tht.! Strm
In 1774, the F1rst Contmcntal Congress .tdjourncd m Phtladelph1.1
cgy
rumlls
llHHC consCI\UilVi.;
But
In 182~ the Ene Canal opened m upstate New York connec ting L1kc
both
of
them
should
hr,;
hem:htmg
Ene .md the Hudson Rtver
In 1942, the U S sl11p Hornet w.1s ~unk 1n the Baltic ol S.ml.t Cruz hl.111d&gt; from u dedm~: Ill common s10ds
Mmtcr snys
dunng World W,n II
Mllltcl )i he 111sh oLUluok IS Udl.t
In 19 ~X Pan Amencan Atrw.1ys flo-. tl s first Dootng 707 J&lt;lliner trom

Today in history

New York to PMts m ctght hours and 41 mmutcs
In 1972 n,umn.ll sct:unty adv1scr Henry Ktssmgcr dl•c\urcd pc.tLL: ts
m VtciiMtn
"
In 1975 Anwar S.1d~1t bCi.:BillC th\; ltrst Egyptian ptt:stdcntiLJ p.ty
""' vtstllo the Unlled S to~les

111

.It

oll1

In 1977 the cxpemncntal space shunlc Entorpmc gilded lo ,, humpy hut
ron.;~.:

B.tst.:

In

httst:d (dcllltiOil llH.:,\Ils tiMt
th~..: pnc:c.::s of goods .md M.:l' l~o;l:s lH.:
~nmg d(IWil) Hl! s.1ys th.1t tlcll.J tlllll
h ts h~:~.:n Ill die~.: I tnt ,, numh~.:r ol
yt.:ms \Vhllr.: th~-:1c s 1 sweet srde Ill
11 thmgs t::l:ln get out ol h l!HJ 11 thetc

works through the system, 11 affeCis
carntngs And earntngs are the
ltfcblood of the stock market
In the Comstock Partners Value
Fund s portfolio, you II fmd 50 per
cent Tre.tsury btlls 18 percent 30year Treasury bonds I0 percent gold
stocks and 12 percent m dcnvnt1vc
produ~ts th,n represent o1cr 100 per-

' of
A Mtchacl Ltpper, prestdent
the mutual fund research firm bear·
mg hiS name sees lhtngs dtfTerently
Whtl e he admtts he 's not certatn
whtch dtrcclton the market wtll head
m the ncar term, he -s a long -term
~I
'
"The real damage was done tn the
seven weeks between the 17th of

"The whole concept of dollar-cost averaging
works well with volatile markets," says Lipper.
"If the market was going to go straight up, you
should put all your money in now. But if it's
going to go up and down, you want the market
going down when you're buyirrg. And I think
you ought to be a selective buyer here."

IIOIMry

lhllld

SUi.:(;Css lul landm g .II Edwards Atr

Ohio weather

Mouct.ly, Octob« 218, 1 ...

AccuWeathero forecast for daytime conditions, fow!h h temperatures

C.thhllnlil

In 1994 Pnmc Mmtster YII,IMk R.1hm nl lsr.~el .md P11111c Mumtet
Atxfcl Sdl~tm MaJall ol Jordan stgn..:d a p~.::.tl:~.: trl:at y dunng 1 u.:: rcmuny
.111endod hy Prestdcnt Ch nton
Ten ycdP&lt;i .tgo A French phannm:e utu.: al t.:omp.tny Rou~ sd Ud.tl
annoum.:ct.l 11 would h,ilt worklw1dC d1stnhu110n of RU 4H6 d pill to 1ndul:c
nhoruons hct.:ausc of an ouu.::ry qf opmton ,It home .utd \hw.u.l 1 hr.:
Frcm:: h government ordered the unnpnny tn l c\~rs r,; ll sdf 1\\ t) d.1y s l1tc1

IS OV~.:rlnVt.:~llll!.:l\1 CX\.:1-:SS lkht ,Uld
l:Xl:r.::o.s llp.luly 111 the ccn nnmy He
lrgur~.: s th \l wen.:: 111 th.ll p1dde now

II dd1.lllllll

\\,IS

IU'It dl! t1.t1Hlll

.md you wc1r.: .thk to buy shoes .It
lowr,; r [lll\.:~o;~ md gl: l dH.: lJll'l h.ur
I..Uls tfw, IIi IHII sl) h td It s ,\ !TOild
'
0
t I1111~ ., 1ys' M1nk1
Buill ddl.U1on

\.:t.;lll net shnll posn10ns

sholl In

July and lhc end of Augusl he s.1ys
Sr.!plcmhcr.w.ts ,, r.tlly Ol:tnhcr h,IS
hccn vohu1lc thus l ~tr hut ha~ s1.1ycd

IL' p&lt;lrtfolto you II fmd 'fl por&lt;onl
rrc.ISury "'"' 21 pc'lcc nl Tte ISUIY
honds 12 pctccnt gold stocks 12
pcr~.;r.:nt ruts .md 1 pcr~.:cnt til

.1hcwc the August lows Wlulc 11 s
poss1hle th II tlung s couiJ go down
lurthc1 most mvc~ltlls h.1vc to have
c~1 p1t .tl to me~.:t their tctncmr.:nt

Dcutlit.:h n1.1rks

needs lbcy need to ho llunk111 g
lnng tc1111 h~..: says
For thnsl: who !.:urrcntly own a lot
of equ1t1cs hr.: suggc.,.ts mnkmg sure
they ve got some nwncy rn money

The Sir.llcgy Fund "" t .tllowcd
to u~;c

lulurcs or sell

sto~.:k

If you hke h" sty le Mullor &gt;ug
gcsts not puumg: mote tiMn 20 pc.::r
ce nt of yow tot.tl tsscls mto i:l lhl'l
hl'.ll nundcd hmd

.'

market funds For the aggresstve
tnvestor Ltpper po1111s to the funds
that have been beaten down a lot
lately such as the emergtng markets
and Lat111 Amencan funds, or those
, tnvesung tn Japan lndta or spec talty
ove&lt;-the-counter funds
One thtng both Mtnter and Ltpper
agree on ts dollar cost avcragmg
That's an tn vestmcnt strategy that
tnvolves tnvesung the same amount
of money at specafic mtcrvals mto
the same mvestment
'The w~ole concept of dollar cost
avcragtng works well Wllh volaule
markets ' says Ltpper 'If the market was gomg to go stratghl up you
should put all your money m now
But tf 11 s goong to go up and down,
you want the marke1 gotng down
when you re huymg And lthtnk you
ought to IJc 11 sc lccttvc huycr here
Mtnler adds .1 cnvoal lo gel the
most out of dollar t;;Ost uvcrugmg he
suys Rcmcmhcr you hav~.: to h.tve
a very long time hnnzon .md be Will·
mg lo carry the program through
Dtan VujO\ ich is the author of
"Straight Talk About Mutual
Funds" ana "Stratght Talk About
lnveshng for Your Retirement,"
both of which are published by
McGraw Hill. Send questions to
h,•r in care of this newspaper, or
via e·mail at MisMutuulaol.com

.

MICH

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'

Cl1 998 AccoWeatller, Inc

Today's weather forecast
By The Associated Preas
Southeastern Ohio
Tht s afternoon Partly cloudy
H1ghs near 70 Ltght and vanable
Wtnd
Tnntght Partly cloudy~ws)
w 45 Calm wtnd
Tu~sday Mornmg suns 1
hen
&gt;ome 1ncrease tn clouds 111 the afternoon Htghs tn I he lower 70s

Extended forecast
Tuesday ntght Partly cloudy
Lows tn the mtd and upper 40s
Wednesday Panty cloudy Htghs
near 70
Thursday Partly cloudy Lows m
the upper 40s and htghs near 70
Fnday Partly cloudy Lows m the
mtd 40s and htghs tn the mtd 60s

Jones lawyers sought
Secret Service information
UTILE ROCK Ark (AP) Paula Jones lawyers accused the
Secret Servtce nf stonewalling when
11 ObJected to turnmg over evodence
1hat mtghl be helptul to her sexual
harassment lawsutl, documents
unsealed today show
Thos~ documents showed that the
Secret Semce objected 111 early January to four subpoenas from Mrs
Jones lawyers made before the Montca Lewmsky case erupted by usmg
the same arguments the agency
would rely on un successfu lly later
wllh Independent Counsel Kenneth
Starr
The Secret Servtce urged U S
qtslnct Judge Susan Webber Wnght
to create a new ' protecttve prov,lege
function" that would shteld a~ents
and otticers from havtng to testtfy or
provade tlm:umenls 1n the harassment
t:ase
Answenng lhe subpoenas 'would
tmpa1r the abtlll) of the Secret Sorvtce to perform lls cnllcalluncuon ot
protectmg the Prestdent's' phystcal
safety or. the secunty ol any other
Se..:ret Serv1ce prote~.:tees ' the gov
crnment con tended tn early January
The Secrel Servtce JUst weeks Iuter, would m.1ke a s1m1lur LLrgurnenl

be lore a federal JUdge tn W.tshtngton,
DC 1n ti s efforts to ltght subpoenas
from St.trr seektng to compd agents
.1nd umlonned otftcers to le &gt;llly
bdore a grand JUry tnvesug.umg the
Lewut&gt;ky m,otler The .lge ncy lo&gt;l
1ha1 court banle and tts agents and
nttt~.:ers , ancludang ~.:h1ef presu.Jent1al
bodyguard Larry Cockell were
forced to leslt t

---

The Daily Sentine1
!USPS liJ9611)
Community New8paper llokllnp, Inc
Pull1 shcd 't'o'cry ~tflcrn•XJn

Monday ltMugh
I nd ty I l l (t uri Sl l'omcroy Ohio hy lht:
Oh o Vnlky l'uh lt~ lu'\g C'on~pany St.-cond etas.~
(X)~htgc p111d 111 Pun1c ny Ohio
McmMr 1 he As~oc l:lhod Prcsn and 1hc Ohio
Ncwsp !per As:~tK: IJ!I on
l'••~lmiiSil!r Send nddrcuo concclluns lo I he
l)ully Scnltnd, Ill Ctlurt St F'umnoy Oh10

4S769
SUIJSC N!I'TION RA1 ES
Carrier or Motor Route

8y

One Week
One Monlh

J2 00
$8 70

One Yea r

$104 00

SIN(,U C0PY PRICE
J5 Ctnl~
Suh~cnbcrs not dcsnlng lo pay lhe carrier moy
remtl n ad11anct: d!fC!.:I In 11!tipa!l)" Scnll~cl on
11 lim e s1x (lf 12 n onlh hntf~ . Credit Wit! be
gl11cn camer ere 1 "Wer.c
Nu ~uhscrtJ•IIOI hy mall perm!llcd m ueaa
where home L:Mih ~C I"\'I i:C I~ rl IUio hlc
I' 1hllshct re st r&lt;~ lhe nah t 10 ndjust r~1es tlur
mg the suhSl.:rlpltull pcdt'll Subscnptlon :nte
~.: hung~.:s mny Ic 1111\)lc n ~ nlc:U hv chllnaln&amp; the
Da1ly

\I111U 1 1f lhc o~;• h!. ~ flfllllm

MAlL SUUSt'MII"I UlN

Inside Mrii{J C.,unly
11 WefkS
26 Wc~ks

11 Y.cck~
26 Weeks
~2 Week~

,S27 :JO
SB K2

IJr,MtiRS ,

S!ll~U
mmly

v $29 25

S5o\ 6d
.$1UQ 12

Roader Services
'

c,mei:tlon Polley

Our multi ~onctrn In all 5lnrics Is to be
1n:: curolc If )'OU know of nn rrror In a
slol'y, tnll 1he newsnmm ut (740) 992·
215Ci \\e will chl'ck ynur lnfurnultion
and makt a I.'Orrtction lfwarntnl~

News Departmentll
I he main numtM.:r Is '92· 21S5 Depart
n•tnl extcn•lu ns are
Gtnt:ral Managuc... ..... ............... Ed. 1101
Ell llbl
orExl !106

NfW!\

Other Services
Advrrtl!!mg. •
Circulation

Ctmmed Ad&lt;

J(,odyn Renea Turner wa.• sltllbom Saturday. Oct 24, 1998 tn Holar Med·
ocal Center
She wa.• the daughter of Lt&gt;a Carol Turner of Potnt Plea..ant, W Va , and
1imothy Allen McClure of Mtddleport
Surv1vtng tn add1t10n to her p-drenl'\ are m01lernal grandp01ren1' the Rev
F Cly.re and Carolyn Turnet gf Pomt Plea.,ant, paternal grandparent~. Robert
and Ellen McClure of MtddlepcJ[1, maternal great-grandmother Opal Dyu
ofRO'iwolle, Ga, paternal great-grandp-.trent&lt; Bershel and RhoJean M&lt;.·Ciure
of Middleport, and Pauhne Snow.ren and Fred S•mmon' of Rac1ne and two
uncles and an aunt
She wa.' al.o preceded tn ileath by grandparenL•, John Wtlltam Dyer, Ray
mon4 Arthur and Della Turner, and Bud Jr Durst
Gravestde servtces wtll be I p m Wednesday tn the Henderson Ceme
tery, Hender&gt;On, W Va, woth tile Rev F Clyde Turner offtctallng Fnend&gt;
may call at the Deal Funeral Home, P01nt Plea...nt from 6-9 p m Tue.;day

Four killed on Ohi~
roads over weekend
'

'

52Wt:ck.~
R•tt.."!! Ouf

Death Notice
Kaitlyn Renea Turner

(

'

EJtl 1104
E~tl l103

.E•t. 1100

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page2

Psychological wall still divides Berlin

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General M•naeer

Monday,Ckrtober26,1998

I
'

In a court document filed just days
after the Lewmsky case became pubhe 111 late -~anuary , Mrs J,ones'
lawyers alleged that the Secret Ser\lce had "stonewalled' on respond·
mg ~o subpoenas that demMded any
mtormallon about posstble presJden·
ual atTatrs
Subpoenatng the Secret Service''
"simple and enttrely legtttmale to
obtatn evtdence oltlllctt sexual relauons between Defendant Clmton and
women to who federal Jobs were
offered, ' they argued
Mrs Jones' lawyers asked Judge
Wnghtlo order the Secret Servtcc to
provtde lists of tls agents who prolect
the preSident and any documents
·refernng to or dtscussmg a sexual
relattonshtp between Defendant Clinton and a woman other than hts
wtfe '
The JUdge ruled agamsl Mrs
Jones lawyers on Jan 30, telling th e
Secret Servtce tl could tgnore the sub
poenas
Another document made public
today shows Starr successfully asked
Wnghtto modtfy her gag order tn the
case allowmg wttnesses m the c,tse
who had been subpoenaed by the
prosecutors office to comply Wtlh
subpoenas and turn over document s
Pros~cutors "must determm e th e
veracuy of deposlltons, allidavlls
.wd other sworn ftltngs before thts
court. Starr wrote on J,tn 27 less
than ,, week onto the Lewtnsky m.ll
ter
,
M" Jones sued Clinton on M.ty
6 1994 - two d.1ys be lure the sl.ltute
ot hmtlattons exp tred on her cl.111n
that the preSident sexually ho~russed
her m a Lillie Rock hotel room 10
1991 A federal JUd~e dlsnussed the
clatm f'prtl I ,md a fed eral appe.1fs
court p.1nel meeltn g Ill Sl P11UI
Mwn heard her plc.1 lasl week to
reinstate the c.tse
Alter an1ttal obJeCtiOns trnrn the
prestdent, Wnght has dectded 11&gt;
ume.Jimosl of the c:ase s previOusly
secret court ftles
The court has s.11d Clt nlon s do:,po
s!l1on IS not l.lmOn}.!. those llcms to be
released

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Ot::,l 23 - Tcres.1
Haner Bertha Whtlltngton Nu\llnt
London Juamla Turner Elhd H.tsk
tns Curly Markham How.u d Stew
.1r1 Mrs Roch.ml M.1ttox .1nd d.tugh·
ter
Discharges Oct. 24 -; Lcon,1
Roush Jew e l M.1ys Mts Bruce
Mayo .md son Chnstopher W.1sc h
Dtrlh - Mr and Mrs John Per
ry daughlor Jackson
Discharges Ocl. 25 - Mrs Bnun D1xon and son
Btrths - Mr .md Mrs M.ltl
Byus daughter Wellston Mr and
Mrs Brann Dnc.un son Wellston
(Published with pernussion)

SATURDAY:
By The Associated Pres&lt;
DELAWARE - Bryce J Ma,on
rour people dtcd In weekend traf
lie accodenls on Ohto the State HJgh- 18. of Wcsterv11l~ an a one-car cra:-.h
on a Delaware County mad
way Patrol reported today
FINDLAY - Lelah Lauck 78 of
The fatahltes -.ere counted from
Arlmgton.
dnver 10 a two vch1l:le
6 m Fnday through Sunday
accodent
on
slate Route 15 tn Han
he dead
c&lt;,.;k County
fRI AY:
GAHANNA - George Burrow&gt;
D ~TON - Jenntfcr Ktrkland, 9
of Oa on pede~tnan 1n an w.:c1dent 33, no homelown h'ted, drtva of a
moton:ycle 1n a lWO veh1cle accHJcnt
on a ell street
i
on slate Route 161

To ay's livestock report
COLUMBUS, CAP)- Ohto-lndtana dtrecl hog prtces at se lected buymg pomts Monday '" provtded by the
US Departmenl of Agncuhure Market New'
Barrows and gtlts open tng I 00.

an stances I 50 lower with some con
tacts out of the m-arket demand light
on moderate movement

U S I 2, 230 260 lbs country
pmnts 24 00-25 50, few 23 50 and
26 00 plant&lt; 25 50 27 (X) lew 25 tMJ
U S 2-3 230-260 lbs 22 0023 50, ZlO 230 lbs 20 00-22 00
Sows mosl steady
US 1-3 100 400 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
Boars over 3(MJ lbs 9 00-10 00
under 300 lbs 13 00 15 00

Man cited ,
after mishap
A Pnmemy man wa~ Cited alter
stnktng a telep~&lt;i ne pole 1n a Saturday auto acctdcnt
James R Bl.tckwell, IY Pomeroy

"''s linvmg on Sprmg

Av~nue

when

he struck .1 power pole He Wds c1l

ed lor Ia• lure to control. no se.\l belt
and reckl ess operattnn
Blackwell reported 10 the tnvesugallng ofttcer that somelhtng had
JUmped tnto the path ol 'hts vehtcle
Accordtng to I he Pomeroy Police
Department Bl.1ckwell sulfered
nunor VIStble tnJune s and was later
lr.ut&gt;pnrted to Holzer Medtc.d Cenler

Esumated recetpts 35.00()
Prices from Producers Ltvestoc k
A.•soctahon
Monday's trends
Hug' steady, sow&gt; steady callle
steady
Su~t~mary of last week's aucuuns
at Bucyru&lt; Caldwell Creston Eaton
Farmerstown, Gallipolis, Htllsboro
Mt
Vernon
and
Lancaster,
Wapakoneta
Hogs
Market hogs 20 50 39 00, light
sows 1300-2260,heav) sows 16·75
22B5
Feeder ptgs 39 (XJ head and
down, 2tfOO 28 00 cwl
All boars· 7 85-17 25

Court news
Eduor s note A lawsut t outlines
the gnevant:es ul one pMty aguanst
another It does nm establiSh guth or
1nnocence
Two law,ull &gt; were ltled recently
tn the Metgs Counly &lt;:;ommon Pleas
Court of Judge Fred W Crow Ill
K.tren and G.try Moore, Ractne
tried sLut .tga111st Andrew C
M.thlm.tn, Long Bollom ,1lleg1ng
bre.tch of l1nd cnn lracl They s&lt;ek
resumpltun ot the agreement or
$6 000 A Jury trutlts demanded
Nancy Sptres MtddleporL,eeks
damages tn cKCess of $25 000 from
Susan Ann B.lrnttz, Cli fton W V,\
stemnung from a Jan 24 1997
motor-ve htcle acctdenl 1n M1ddle
port

Meigs announcements
Corrtctlon
Julie H.•ynt.~n was rn1stdenttlied tn
1he Sund,•y Tuncs-Sentmel on the
phologr.tph ot the E.tstem Homecom tn g Cour1 The ncwsp.lpt!r regrets
Jhc crmr

Stocks

23/ ,.

Shoney s

-·-·-

CINCINNATI CAP) - Repobhcan Joe Deter&gt; had a •hm lead over
Dcmo&lt;.rat John Donofno tn the r..ce
for Oh1o trea,urer but ht&gt; colleagues
'" u1hcr \tatew1de race~ le'-' more
dearly a pclll -.od
The Ohoo Poll releaM!d Saturday
&gt;atd Rcpubhcan' kd on the t:tce, fur
attorney ~eneral o.ecretary of ~tate
and audllor
rhe telephone poll of 540 hkely
voter&gt; &gt;ho"ed Deters leadtng
Donofno 44 percent to 39 percent
wnh 17 percent undec tded The poll
was conducted Oct 8- 1S and has a

margtn of error of plu' or mtnu~ 4
percentage pooni'
In a poll Oct 2-7. Detef' was
ahead 41 percent to 31 percent
The more recent poll •atd both
candtdates are havong trouble betng
recogntzed Roughly 54 percent satd
lhey have heard of Deter&lt;, whtle 43
percent satd they had heard of
Donofno
In the attorney general's race,
Republocan 1ncumbent Belly Montgomery led Democrat Rtchard Cordmy 62 percent to 23 percent wtth 15
perc&lt;nt undrc tded

'

Divorces and dissolutions
The

f,JIIm~ ang

al'lmn' 1u end mar

nagc were filedrecently tn the office
of Met g.• County Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer
Dtw&gt;luuon a&gt;ked Betty Cald·
well M1ddleport und Bruce Caid
""'' Middleport, Oct 20
D1vorce~ a~k~d
Sandra Lee
Hollman Ractne lmm Donny Ray
lloffman Pomeroy Oct 22 Ray mond D Pnddy Moddlepurt from

Ruth Ann Pnddy. Mtddleport, Oct
21, Barbara Thurner Mtddleport,
from Ru•sell Gordon Thurner, Mtd·
dleport Oct 19. Janet L Luca.~.'
Langsvtlle from Rtcky Ray Lucas,
Nelsonvtlle. Oct 16
Dtvorces granted -· Toby A Curlis from Carolyn S Cun~&gt; Oct 19,
Russell E Wooten and Rebecca L
Wooten, Oct 19 Andy L Patterson
from Tern L Pauerson Oct 22

EMS logs 13 weekend calls
Unth nf 1he Me1g' County Emergency Med1cal Servoce recnrded I 3
c.tlls for aS&gt;tstance Saturday and
Sunday Un at"i respondmg 1ncluded
ct:NTRAL DISPATCH
12 05 .1 m Saturday Ash Street
Mtddlepnn Ella Stewart, Holzer
Medtcal Center, Mtddleport squad
i.l"""i l'~,{l!ti

I i6 a 111 Saturday Mam Street,
Pomeroy Btl he Laudermtlt Veterans
Mcmonal Hospital Pomeroy squad
ass 1 :-.t~d

II 09 am Saturday Pearl Street
Ractne Melissa John son, VMH,
10 30 p m Saturday Spnng
Avenue motor·veh"le acctdent, J R
Blackwell HMC, Pomeroy Volunteer
Ftre D~partment """ted,
4 16 a m Sunday, Ltb~ rty !inc
Pomeroy, Chnsty Barton, HMC,
12 53 p m Sunday. Pleasant
Rodge Pomeroy, LISa Haggy, VMH,
Pom~roy squad a&lt;ststed,
2 59 p m Sunday slate Route 338

Racme. Stella Durst, HMC, Ractne
squad ass1sted,
9 24 p m Sunday Mt Unton
Road, Larry Bartleu Metgs County
h~l1pad pendtn£ to transler to Grant
Medtcal Center, Rutland squad a..stslod
MIDDLEPORT
' 49 p m Saturday Overbrook
Nursong Cente r Everell Delaney,
Pleasant Valley Ho&gt;pltal
12 36 am Sunday South Thtrd
Avenue. Terry Mullhews, VMH,
Pomeroy squad a&gt;SISted
POMEROY
2 07 am Saturday Htgh Street,
lila Darnell treated at the scene
REEDSVILLE
12 0 I am Sunday. state Route
681 Ea.•t Rtck Hammt1ns, Camden·
Clark Memonal Hospital Central
Dtspulch squad asst&gt;led
RUTLAND
6 30 p m Sunday. Wells Road,
James Gtbbs, HMC

Existin~ome

sales slip for
the second consecutive monthWASHINGTON (AP) - Sales of tng wuh sales remammg ut htstorlex tstt ng stngle-famtly
homes cally strong levels, ' satd R Layne
declo ned sltghlf y 111 September ft1r the Mom II , prestdent of the assoctallon
Sales have been supported by
s~cond l:onst:~ UIIV C monlh but
plentttul
Jobs (unemployment thts
rt:mwncd much stronger than last
sprtng
touched
u 28 year low), a
ye.tr
stock market that surged unltl mtdS des slipped I I percent to 11 sea
s(ln Iff) ,\djUsleU .t(IDUUf rate of 4 68 summer, and the lowest mortgage
mil loon th e N.tuon.tl Ass(](taloon of rates tn three decades
September sa les I ell 4 9 percent m
Re.tltors s,nd today That fo llowed a
3 7 percent drop from a 4 91 m•lhon the South to ''" annual rule of J 76
rate on July, lhe htghesl stnce the mtlhon They sltpped 0 8 percent tn
the Mtdwest to ·• · I 17-mtllton unu'
group began trackmg s.1les m 1968
1h~ September rate was nfarly 9 rate and we re unchanged m the
percent ht g h~r than a yeo~r earl1er and N!:!rtheusl at a 660 000 rule In the
lf,ldc .lssOct.tllon ts plojecllng sales West, sales JUmped 5 H percenl to a
lor ,,II ol l'l% "111 htl u record 4 75 I 09 nul lion rate
The medtun pnce of .1n exosllng
~mtllton. 10pptng la &gt;l yeur's record of
home
was $131 300 tn September, up
4 22 oulhon
4
4
Irom u year earlier
Allhough we re comtng off
unprecedented sales acllvtly, the
houSing m.~rkel " sel for a soft land-

~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~·~~~~~~~~r ~~ ~~;~~~::~ }
tcr cull Ruhcll Pull1ns at (740) 667
3H31 or Rtck Sm11h &lt;1l (740) 667-

Am Ele Power
........ ... 48"1•
Akzo
.38''1.,
AmrTech • ..
.. 5'11
Ashland 011
48'1,
AT&amp;T
.64 /,.
Bank One , .
, ........... 49
Bob Evans ,
20
Borg-Warner
44
Broughton
.1~
Champion
9[,
Charm Shps
3'!.
City Holding
, 35 •,,
Federal Mogul
50 i..
Gannett
...... .. .-............ 61 ),
54 '''1•
Goo d year . ..
Kmart
14 •
Kroger
, 50'!.
Lands End
15'/,.
Ltd
25'1•
Oak Hill Flnl
19'/,
OVB
40
One Valley
.. 31 lo
Peoples .
23 i.
Prem Flnl ...... :·... .....
1Bi,
Rockwell
38'/,.
RD/Shell
46"1•
Sears
44"1.
Star Bank
Wendy s
Wosrthlnglon

Hunter Education Course
A hunter ~duc~ttton course wtll bt:
held Nov 4 6 II and I' 6-9 p 111
ntghtly .11 the Coolv tlle Ftre Slal1on
CompletiOn of a hunler educauon

Poll: Republicans
leac!ing state races

1\951

Spe&lt;tal recycle days
A &lt;pec~o1l recycle day will he hdd
Wcdnesd"y 111 Sctptn Townshtp IJ
.1m to noon .11th~ 1ownsh1p g.tr.l£1:!
.1nd Col umbt.l Towns hip I p 111 to 4
p m at the fm~ st.tllon Mutcrt.ds

-Of CIIJCI(Y IAI 8:00, 6:10, 7:1, 8:4&amp;
MGIIT AT Til ROXUY 1r&lt;i "' 1:00, 8:4&amp;
PWSANTVI.LE IP&lt;l '" 3:to, 7:00, 8:80

rnyded will IIH.: Iud~ new:-.p.tpers
phone books rn~tguzmes

BROVED IAI
HOLY MAN '""'

c:.~ tulogs

c..ms glass &lt;.::nntaaners rmlk JUgs ht~r

houle-. t:.m.lbomd .mll olht!r 1tems
The Junk T1re Compnny wtll have a

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

truck .11 the s1te"' to rcL.:yt.:le used 11rcs
tor,, fee stdftmg
'
~tt 80 1.\!nts em:: h lor
p.1ssenger L:LLr ttres

•••••••••••••••
BIG

[U Mov1es
•

.,,,

WE NEED YOUR HELP!!!
If,.

.67'1,
23'/,

M ..

u.,.. ... f l tU \ P 41'

ON TUESDAY,
NOVEMBER 3RD,
PLEASE VOTE

FOR THE
CARLETON SCHOOL
MEIGS INDUSTRIES

ag,EVY

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

(lllll•l1M"""' ' "' " ~

1· 740 753 3400

YES

13'/,

Stock reports are the 10 30
a m quotes provided by Ad vest
of Gallipolis

3:18,7:4&amp;
4:48, 7:15
"'' 5:00, 7:80

Prun 1ry cluss sludcnts frorn left lu nght Lukl Shelby tnd Drudlcy lcurn
shnppmg sk dls dunng 1 comumntt) oullllJ.: 11 Kroger s with llltitructaon rl
.tsslstuut IJ1 tn 1 Ash

WHEN YOU GIVE IIELI', YOU GIVE HOPE
For more information, please conl01t Steve Beha at {7 40) 992-6681.

~\.t'lOH -'Cit.

(,;~tx q~

(5

PLF:AS.E

VOTE
VF.S

~
&lt;to
;1'11'8/HDI!~\~

�•

1

.

Sports

The Daily. Sentiq~l

Monday, October 26, 199.8

Oakland gets off to best start since 1995

Raiders tally 27-10 win over Bengals
By ANNE M. PETERSON
40 yards for another touchdown and
OAKLAND Caht I API- Don- ·Greg DaviS added two field goals as
ald Holla.• hadn 't thrown a •ouch- the Ra1ders C5 2) won 1he1r founh
duwn

m MX years On Sunday
two
Oakland s baclup quarl&lt;rback.
mal10g hiS "'"ond stan 10 pl~ce of
InJured Jeff George senled 10to the
Rau.Jcr"' offcn~IVC! "'chcme and
Na)l&lt;lleon Kaufman ru shed tor 143
)ards 10 a }7. )0 m tory ov&lt;r the
Cmunnala Bengals
(YJ!o!S

~threw

~ lra•ght

thrown a touchdown pa:-i' st nee 1992

Hollas. fimshed 9 uf-2 1 for I73
yard&lt;. wh1le Kaufman had a careerhigh 3 I carnes
The VICtory gavel~ Ra1ders the~r
beststart smce they went 5. I 1n 1995
While Hullas found hiS offense,
the Beng;~ls lostthe~rs N&lt;~l O' Donnell hll Corey D1llun wllh a 17-yard
"onn~ pa..s and Dous Pelfrey added
a 5 I-yard field goal, 6ut for the most
pan Cmc10nat1 (2-5) was sloppy and

- .when he wa.&lt; w1th the Bengal\

1netf~t1VI!

Hollas who struggled two weeks
D~&lt;go

ago agam&gt;t San

had not

,,

Agamsl has former team he h1t

Tw1ce the Bengals fumbled lead-

T1m Brown With a I~ yard smnng
pass and James Jeu with a 39 yarder
Lance Johnstone returned a Ju mblc

mg to Ra1Jer~ touchdowns Cmcln-

nall had Jumbled JUst once thiS seagomgrintp Sunday 's gamt;

~un

I

Damon G1bson fumbled a punt
return, wh1ch wa.&lt;recovered by M1ke
Monon 10 put the Ra1ders on Cmcm·
rt~ll's 20-yard line wnh 3 41 left 1n
the first quarter The m1stake led to
Brown s tQUchJown 'all:h. whtch
g;JV&lt; the Ra•ders a 7-0 lead
The Ben gals, who had only, three
~ards total offense m the first quarler, lied 11 '" the second &lt;JUarler on
0 ' Donnell's touchdown pa..s to D1l·
Jon
But the Ra1ders rebounded on the
next senes with len's 39-yard touchdown catch wnh 4 I8 left m the half.
They extended their lead JUst two
mmutes later. when Darrell Russell
sacked'O' Donnell and forced hun to
fumble Johnstone "')Oped up the
ball and ran 11 back to g1ve the

-

By The Associated Press
On a day when twn NFL g.1me&lt;
featured noth10g but l1eld goals
k1cker Jason Elam stole the spotli ght
10 a game that produced SIX l&lt;luchdqwns
•
Elam booted a 61-yard field goal
Sunday lymg Tom Demp-ey s 2M
year-old kague record to help Denver beat Jacksonville 37-24
'It's an old record and I'm proud
to have a p1ece of 11.' Elam s.11d " I
swung about as hard as I can swmg
alii I h1t II really clean '
Elam's field goal on the last play
of the first half at M1le H1gh Stad1
urn matched the mark set by
Dempsey tor New Orltans aga1nsl
De troll on Nov 11-, · 1970 Dempsey
watched Elam's k1ck on' tel~\lslon
and smd he cheered when the balI
went through the goal posts
It was a great k1ck, ,a great
effort You have 10 admire. 11."
Dempsey smd ••' As good as people
are getung now, I knew 11 was JUS I a
m,uter of lime People are kiCking r
them longer and longer ·
K1d ers were the stars 10 three other NFL games Sunday
- M~am1 s Ollndo M.ore booted
four tleld go.lls. mclud1ng a 43yarder 10 overtune that g.we the Dolph lOs a I2·9 w1n over New England •
- Chicago's Jelf Jaeger k1cked
three t1eld goals, mcludmg the gameWinner tor the second stru1ght week.
a 33-yarder With I 03 Jell that l1tled
the Bears over Tennessee 23-20

'
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AMERICAN CONFERENCE
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NCAA Division I scores
Snturduv's lU.:tum

49•1'!128, Rams 10
At St LoUIS, Steve Young threw
three touchdown passes .tnd Jerry
R1ce set an r.(FL record by catchmg
a pass 1n 184 consel:UIJve games a~
San Franc1"0 (6- I) beat the Rams (2 5) lor the 16th straight t1me
Dameii'Walker had two Jlrst-half
1n1ercept1ons that led to scores, Terrell Owens s«&gt;red tw1ce and the 49ers
sec ked Tony Banks e1ghttunes R1ce,
who had Jour recepllons for 64 yards,
broke Lhe mark lor conse~.:ut,ve
games w11h a catch set by Art Monk
Irom I980-95
Saints 9, Buccaneers 3
At New Orleans the Samts
snapped their three game loSJng
s\reak 1n a b.mle ol 1nep1 ollensos
Tampa Bay (3-4) got only II llrst
downs. one fewer than New Orleans
(4-3) Eac h SJde was 4-tor-lo on
thtrd·down converSions
Seahawks 27, Chargers 20
At San D1ego Joey Galloway
scored on an K1-yard reception and a
74-yard punt return 10 the llrst halt,
then made a diSputed c.uch m the
fourth quarter that sol ~p R~eky Wat ters one-yard touchdown run
The Seahawks (4-3) com1ng oil
the1r bye week, snapped a three-game
losmg streak Ryan Leal had hiS best
game for the Chargers (3-5). completmg 25 of 52 pa«e' lor 28 I yards
and a touchdown
Bears 23, Oilers 20
At Nashville. the Bears 13-5)
forced four turnovers and converted
them 1010 17 pomts aga10stthe 011(See NFL on Page-S)

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

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TIES FIELD GOAL RECORD brates after kicking a 63·yard lleld goal at the end of the flrsl hall of
Sunday's NFL game against the visiting Jacksonville Jaguars, who
losl37·24. The field goal tied Tom Dempsey's 1970 record-setting kick
for the New Orleans Salnls. (AP)

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Investment and Tax Consultant
740-992· 7270
Sccurlllcs o ffered lhrough H D Vest
Investment Soc:unllcs Inc Adv1sory
'i'
Services offered through H D Vesl
Advisory Services, Inc 6333 Nonh Stale
Highway 161, Fourth Floor, lrv1ng TX

15038-(972) 870·6000

'

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Meigs County will be providing grant funding to qualified homeowners
within the Thppers Plains Sewer service area for the sewer hook-up and
septic tank abandonment required by the District. This funding is
provided through a CDBG CHIP.and Formula Allocation grant.
The work will be bid out to those qualified/experienced contractors that
are bonded, carry Workmens Compensation, if applicable, and liability
insurance. The work will be bid in groups of five (5) hook-ups/tank
abandonment. Contractors must warrant the work for a one (1) year
period against defects. Contractors will be paid by the County grant when
work is completed and approved by the Sewer District and the Meigs
Health Department.
The Meigs Grant otlice is •·eqoesting any qualified contractor who wishes
to receive notice of the request for bids on these projects to contact Jean
'
Trussess, grants Office, at 740-992-7908.

1

David Green and Jeremy Mayfield
tangled m tum one. and aoolher came
on lap 43 when Brett Bodine h:ld a
fire go 00.. n and h1tlhe wall between
turns one and two.
Afler that. the green flag remamed
out from lap 51 until lap 18!. "hen
rookie Kenny lrwm stopped m the
th1rd tum By that lime. Waii.ICe was
110hdly m char];e m h1&lt; Ford holdmtz
--~
--/
leads of up to a full straightaway on
~l~J.
r
h" closest compehtor
RUSTY WALLACE
Ram betzan falhn&amp; a&lt; the field "as
under the fourth caution flag of_the
day. brou&amp;ht out on 247 when rook- 1
1e Jerry Nadeau spun and slammed 2S6 1-4S~.K30
·I-ll Ward Burt~:~ SOuth ~ Va. Pan
rear-end first mto the wall between llx- 256 5182)1'1
I~ c l?t T1-'d Bodu~ f'lltmunc N Y Chn~
turns one and two
kt ~ S:!A.U~~
The leader&lt; pllled. and Wallace
Ill flh M1U Sttnntr Swin\tlle C"ahf Chn~
easil} led the way back onto the tmck ltl :!.~ S10 ~~
17 t2~JRflhtn ~~ley A*t~l~ NC Ford
moments before a hard nun came ~~ $207~
IH f)~llueNenw..:hck laktl;u)IJ A;l Cht•n..
down, bringm&amp; out the red f1.1g and
kt :!~ S:!6711U
sending. many '" the crowd of more
Ill I lUI Dick TriClde WJ..con..tn Rolpids Wt'l.
than 100.000 scurryuig for their cars
Fnrd 1-SI. $27 :\KO
20 t42tChadLmk Spubne W....t. J;Jrd 2~
N '\SCAR waned almo't .m hnur
SZI l4~
before endmg the race
~ 1 140) 8ohfloy Ham 11lM Na ..tn tile Tenn
2~"i Sln 1170
Dale Earnhardt wound up th1rd. Cbruokl
22 Ill ken Sdwwler Ftnton M11 Cht'o'mka
followed by Jeff Burton, Ted Mus- . 2'i~ S~tH'i
21 c171twbtt) Uttloo1e Corpu' O.n.,.• Te•a"
grave, John Andrelfl and Gordonl
Pnnuac 2''i 11116:!0
Terry Labonte, who started a
2.J ll'i) Ste~ Park Ea.., Nnnhpnn N Y
record 600th consecuuve race. che. . mtt"' 2'iS sue 77CJ
2'i 1211 W~o~lly Dalltnl'tach B:mh Cnlo
wound~p lOth_._
ChtHnkt 21'i SH 74'i

' .. .

l.i!~
,

,

NASCAR offictals tried to wan
out the wet weather, but eventually
had to giVe'" to the mevnable..,. ram
continued. thunder boomed and
&lt;treak• of hghtnmg ht up the desert
track
Mlll'k Manm, workmg hard 10 an
apparently futile effort to catch Gordon. had Ju•t taken over second
place on a p1t stop when the race was
stopped Gordon came out of p1llane
m seventh place
The ram ended Gordon's chance
to extend hts string of top-five finIShes to 18, wh1ch would have
matched the record set by Dav1d
Pearson m I%8
The result ai!IO cut Gordon's lead
over Manm from 358 to 329 pomt&lt;, J
but left the defendmg sertes c~amp
and wmner of two of the last three
fttles With a v1rtuallock on the 1998
champton•h•p.
The 27 ·year-old racer needs only
to fintsh 40th or better next week m
Rockmgham. N C.. or Simply to start
each of the last two races to wrap up
another crown.
Wallace, 42. p1cked up the 48th
vtctory, tying htm for lOth wnh '
NASCAR p1oneer Herb Thomas on
the career hst.
Ken Schrader started from the
wle. and led the first 53 laps before
fqlhng back into the field, That 's
when Walla_. took command, movmg to the lead for the finn t1me on lap
54 and leadmg all but e1ght lnps
thereafter
The challengers rematned close
for a wh1)e as the field was kept
bunched up by two early caut1on
flags
The lirst came on lap I I when

Here are tbe results of the DuraLube 500 Wmston Cup race at
Phoen1x International Raceway, w11h ,
stanmg posttton tn parentheses, dnver, hometown, make of car, laps
completed, reason out 1f any, and
money won
I 16)

Ru~y W~tlluce

51

Lool'~

Pord 2"17

$78.00~

2 (Ill M.. rk Martin Blllrll\'lllt Ark Frud

w.no

1 fl9). Dale F..arnhanh K11nnupnlrN

2~7

NC

Che•mkl ll7. 1!7 Ill

4 ( 111 Jerr Burton Soolh Hotllon Va fMJ 1~7

S~l'\12

~ !Ill! Ted Mu~ra...e Franl:lln Will Ford l:'\7
51!~

6 1191 Jubn AndreU•

lr~hunaroh~

Pontuec

2~7

$48 1''"'
1121 Jell Gordon Plll~hnm Che.,.mlel 2~7
$47 0411
I (3) Kenny Wullace S1 Lnun Ford 2:'17
$:1(111110
9 11~1 J11hnny Ben!tOO Orni'I!J Rapd~ M1~ h

fltrd 2,7 $11,7:10
II) 129) Terry Llltlonle Corpo!t Chmli Tuall
Chevrolet 2"17 $40 KXU
II I 51 R1ch B1cklt edJtJ1rm W1:. Ford 257

5'1 2111

'-'

12 ( 16) SltrlmJ Murhn

C~Jiumbi11

Chl'm1ltl 2:'16 $21910
!l 1'2~1 Kt'~lll ltpt~Jt Shtlhurnt Vt

Tenn
Pord

26 I IIIIJunmy SJ'ffl-"C'f ~d P.o~ ~lfll 2:q.
S:!"i.620
11 1211 Rid.:} Rutkl Che..aptuke Va Furd
2~ " $:\1 tw'i
2K 1 BJ JriY Glft'n WhutiK'IU!It' Tenn Che~ nlltt 254 ltl 470
2'J 171 M1~k M~t"l l.extnjlnn Vu Ford 2~

s

Sl8 44~

\

30 1411 Rid) Crll\'tR Newhor~h Mault Pun
IIlli: 2'i4 524 920
11 t41l D;urell Wa1mr Fro~nkhn Tmn Pont!
:~~; 2~1 $1~ W'i
12 1201 Dale lafl'tll HIC"-ory N C F11rd 2"iJ
$14 "ill~
11 tll'll Otrr1ke COf'll" Sp:tna\\ I) Wa'h Pon
I lac' 1~' $22 07(1
14 ~ 2tu Genrr Bot.llnt Cht'mun~ NY Ford
2~1

S22 04~

l'i IHI Mtke Hh~" M1IV.11Uk1e Ort CIIC'\Rllrt 2.5:2 Sl'i020
11'1 11 II K~le Pell) Randkmam N C rr.t11tUC
2'12' $21 IJII'i
17 I'll Oa\ld Grun O~en~hnm K) C"ht\m
Itt 2"il 521lJ:'CI
1K 141811111hnu O.twMifl\111~ Gu Furd 2~0
S~lllt,ltl

liJ 11~1 Jerry Nulk-uu IJomhul) Coon I ord
247 {nt'h SIA Mllll
.au Ill kenn) lnun lndtunup.llh Furd 247
$1111'}()
41 !lRJ Gury Rrudl'ttrr, Chti'&gt;C'u Al11 Fclll.!
l4l '""htllllnj; t14 11,1,1()
4~ 121.1 Jc=t~my Ma)fi~kl Owen~horo K)
Furd 2\7 S211NII
41 11 :ll Hrru Bodmt Cik'mung N Y Fnrd 46
hnndhng S21 Kl.ltl

Lightn'ing, Kings, Coyotes win

ii,i;'

Norlhwul IJJ .,.]slun

.
MS l ERN CONFERENCF
Alhuulc

,

vcr
Etltmm11111
( 111).1 1ry

NHL standings

Smtih
Appulnd mmSI 1] \\ Dtl nrtl h
At1h1ft n \2 I 1 111 ~ mn I ~dt 17
Ct:nl rl nntlti -1 2 sw I (IUt SI I\11110

SEEKING ASEAM In lhe Cincinnati Bengal&amp;' defenae, offered by
Glen Steele and Sam Shada, Is Oakland running back Napoleon Kaufman In lhe fourth quarter of Sunday's AFC game In Oakland, where
Kaufman's 143·yard effort helped the Aalders win 27·10. (AP)

Vun~m

Hockey

114

l

, 0

tX~O

( 1973 and 1975) as the only players
10 reach the I, IK~J-yard mark 1n seven games
Jets 28, Falcons ~
AI East Rutherford Curl~&lt; Manm
gamed over I00 yards lor the fourth
slratghl game V1nn) Testaverde
threw for two touchdowns and
Aothony Pleasant led a stmgy New
York defense
Jerome Henderson "enl 53 yards
w11h a fumble return and Ke1th Byars
had a 22-yard touchdown re,ep11on
for the Jets (4-3), whu shut down the
Fakons (5·2) and their 44-year-old
quarterback, Steve De Berg
Packers 28, Ravens I 0
At Green Bay. Breit Favre broke
out of hts three-week funk by throwmg for two touchdowns and runn10g
lor one
Roel) Preston got hiS third touchdown return of the season and LeRoy
Butler was turned loose on the blitz
as the Packers (5 -2) snapped a twogame losmg streak The Ravens (2·
5) lost their third stratght and have
now gone I3 quarters Without an
olfenSJve touchdown
VIkings 34, Lions 13
At Ponuac, Randall Cunnmgham
threw two touchdown passes, and
M1nnesota scored 17 consecu11ve
pomts 1n t.Jith~rd quarter to remam
undefeat,a:
·
Robert Smllh rushed for I 34
yards, mclud1ng a 57-yurd touchdown, us the V1kmgs (7 -0) beat
Detr011 (2 -5) for the second nme thiS
season.

Punlu&lt;

1

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wr

2

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I 7-14
1 011

0 I 000
I 7 ~0

Suturday's scares

"·~·

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lege hll "t&gt;•llp~ ·ll &gt;lith lu 'l l lilu l&gt;lln II 1 utntln
1~~ ~ ~~llrt l • thr 11 jth 0 I ~ 4 llll l I jk ll\1\ h I\UI 1 I
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ll"'.th fiii!.Cit&gt;lt tnl l lU'-.11\~IIIIIl\ l&gt;fllll~ •
l lh l

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Iolctltl
lent Mtdt
0 N lilt 1l11S
W Ml lJl
I M1 d1
11~ 11 Sl

Wm

AP Top 25 college poll
l11e h1p

291 • l l

Uig ien standings

I oniJlht's
l'm~hUrjl.h

1

0

1 7~

Yt•tl.. Jd, lK At! 11 1 I
( oh lll l\ 11} 1 ~ 11 111111\lfl 1(1
Mtn l\l \tl!ll ' -' l&gt;t tnlt II
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lin 11~ l I l~llllll\&lt;1.: 'O
Ot1lllmd '27 (IN&lt; I~N 1\ 1110
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Yur~ 0111111 ~ l'lul11dclphm Wu~h tll}ll\l n

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MAC
ll w hnjot (lle~l42 Kt'nt 21
MANS HAll 42 II til St 10
I 1lulp 24 1\krnn 17
N llhm1t s l't-, I ~11dltlo(llll 14
Ctl11 Mn.:lll l!llll 2h W M1d1 gnn 24
Nun confrrfnl c
Mttll111 4 1 C.: tn ~: mntu 0

.NI llh
IM l 144
'&gt;4 121
I 'i2
147 I 92

7 () ()()() 12K

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St \IIIl i~
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MARSfiAII

NA'IIONAI. CONI'ERENCE

:t...u
I&gt; 111n•

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IR
21
19

(emf

7 I) !I I {)(){) Nil ill
'i 1 (I 714 II~ 121
_..lOM711H 101
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4 I {) 'i 71 1 ~ 4
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lliNtllreDnme
17 Syrucuse
IM Mnsoun
19 rul tmc
20 Vuguun Tc~ h

I~

R47
Rl l
fl21
476
4J2
46l

MAC standings

llhl~lnn

Wtstern

Sc unlc
Sr i DIC!lll

IQl

" "'

'iU2H610~

60
() I

22 M1dugurt
'I 2
2~ I
21 Gcorg111 lc~h
li 2
IH
20
24 Colorudn
n 2 IM
11
2~ Mr nm1 (f In) ~
42
IIIJ
Olhen rtetlvln~ ~olu All Force I I I Te!CIIS
lc ~ h 1)4 Wn•lnrlftort 77 MARSHALl 62 I SU ~6
I c_. \) 44 Wyomtlll! 21J l&lt;cnt u ~ky 22 Snulhern Cui
1} Cnlorndo S1 4

1!1: l!A

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4 1 0 "i71 I "iN llN
4 ' n ~ 1 1 110 ll2
4 l 0 "i71 IM 122

ljldiBnnrnh~

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I~ Vtrgnuu

2 1W~ ~ IV ryt ut

Ulvl ~lon

F.llsltrn

New Orleans' Doug Bnen
three field goals. mdudmg a
50-y.lrder to help the Sa1nts heat
Tampa Bay 9-3
There were no touchdowns tn
Mmrm or New Orleans the first t1me
10 10 years that's happened 10 two
NFL games on the same day The last
11me wrrs Nnv 20, 1988, when there
were no touchdowns rn three games
In other games. 11 was New York
Jets 2H, Atlanta 3 Green Bay 28, Ballllnore 10 M1nneso1a 34. Detroll 13.
San FranciScO 2M Sl LoUis 10 Oakland 27, C1nc1nna11 HI. Seanle 27.
San P•cgo 20 and Buffalo 30, Carolma 14
Dolphms 12, Patriots 9
Dan Manno moved the Dolph10s
52 yards 10 the fmaltwo minutes of
regulation to set up Mare's gametymg 25 yard f1eld goal 10 the bailie
between AFC East co-leaders
In overt1me, a puss mterference
penalty on Ty Law on th~rd-and-10
allowed Mmm1(5-2) to keep possesSIOn deep 10 liS own terntory, and
Manno s completiOns ot 25 and I0
yards set up Mare's game-wmner
The Patnots (4-31 h.1d won four
straight agamst the Dolphms
Broncos 37, Jaguars 24
At Denver, Terrell DaviS became
the th1rd player to reach I.000 yards
rushtng m seven games, and the
Broncos unproved to 7·0 for the tlrst
11me 10 the~r hJStory
DaviS, the NFL's leadmg rusher
I1m shed With I 36 yards to reach
I 001 lor the season He JOined Jun
Brown (I 958) and 0 J S1mpson

Wallace gets win
in Dura-Lube 500

way

I•
I

NHL roundup
TAMPA, Fla (AP) - Vmcent
lecavalier's parents headed back to
Quebec w1th a pnzed souvemr -the
puck from their son's first NHL goal.
Lee avaher, lh~ No I overall p1ck
m the June draft, scored midway
through the first penod as the Tam·
pa Bay L1ghtnmg beat the Vancouver
Canucks 3:2 Sunday mghl
"I was very happy to get it m front
of them They're Jeavmg (today),"
Lecavaher satd "It took me etght
games, but I finally got 11 "
The 18-year-old center scored on a
low w11s1 shot wh1le falhng over
goahe Gnnh Snow to ue tt at I
Sandy McCarthy set up the gdnl w11h
a pass from behmd the net
"Sandy made a good pass onto my

Woman removed
from NKU cage
team sues school
'·

st1ck - I Just had to lap 11m," Lecnvaher sa1d "It's over now and I urn
thinkmg about the next game"
He had only un assiSt m hiS first
seven NHL games after dom10n11ng
the Quebec MaJor Jumor Hockey
League the past two years He had 44
goals and 71 nsSJsts 10 58 games last
season for the R1mousk1 Oceamc.
"Every game, I h111e more confi •dence Thut's the b1ggest thmg.''
Lecavaher satd
Jassen Cullimore broke a 2-2 lie
"uh a power-play goal "1lh I2·23
remammg as Tampa Bay mcreased 11s
wmnmg streak to three games. the
L1ghtnmg 's longest streak smce a
four-game run Feb 20-25, 1997
"We haven't seen hockey hke thiS
10 a long lime." Tamp.1 Bay coach
Jacques DemeJS sa1d "Everybody
part1c1pllled 10 thiS wm- C\ery smgle player d11l "hat they h.1d to do"
Tampa Bay's Wendel Clark 11ed 11
at 2 m the fi"l nunute of the th1rd
penod wuh hiS litth goul of the sea·
son and 299th of hJS career
Vancouver delenseman MulllliS
Ohlund had h1~ lirsttwo-goal game,
sconng twtce on rebounds of hiS own
shots Todd Benuw recorded ' Ius
I OOth c.~reer p01n1 wuh un a&lt;Stsl on ·
Ohlund's second goal
'
The Canucks entered the game
Wllh the NHL's second-best Pf'\\er

COVINGTON. Ky (AP) - A
womun who nlleges that she wus
ktcked off the Northern ~entucky
Umversuy basketball team because
she ts a lesbum has sued the untver·
Slly
Jatme Game(, 22. a sen1or from
R1chmond, Ky. filed a I.IWSIIIt Fnday
10 U S, DIStnct Coun ngmnst the unt·
vers1ty,the women's baskethull conch
and the school's uthleucs dtrcctor
G.1rner was the team's secondleadmg scorer last season wllh 11n
11 6 poml average
She &lt;~lieges that she was removed
from the team m May hecause of her
sexual onentallon The reason g1ven
for her remm nl w.IS thut "she
destroyed the te 11 m chenuslry," _
nccordmg to the lawsull
The sull asks for unspec 1fied d,101 •
ages and remst.uementlo the tetlm.

NFL action...
(Conunued lrom Page 4)

ers (3·4)
Nushv1lle had a chance to send the
game mto overt1me when 11 tned a
' 49-yard Jield goultn the closmg seconds- But Crmg Hentnch's low kick
went mto the hne. and the Otlers also
were penuhzed for I2 men on the
tleld
Bills 30, Panthers 14
At Charlolle, Doug Fluue completed 18 of 22 pusses for 282 yards
and two touchdowns to lead Bullalo
over wmless Carolina
Flulle. whose lasl·mmute touch·
down run helped Buffalo knock otT
undefeated Jacksonvtlle last week,
gutded the B1lls (4·1) tnthm founh
consecutive VIctory The Panthers (07) have lost mne m ~row

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

UCLA, Tennessee, Florida
State continue winning ways

Gordon puts Winston Cup title In reach

PHOENIX lAP)- While Ru&lt;ty
Wallace Wllli cndmg a S9-racc wmles&lt;
stnng. Jeff Gordon wa&lt;all bul chnchmg h1s thml Wmston Cup chamJII·
onsh1p tn Sunday's ram-sh011ened
Dura-Lube SOO
Wallace. who hadn't won smce
March of I997 m RJCgmond. Va..
was declared the wmner after ram
halted the ocheduled 312-lap event
after 257 tnps around the one-m1le
oval at Phoemx International Race·

Ra1ders a 2 I-7 lead at hall lime
O'Donnell. who finiShed 16-of-26
for 137 yards, wa.s pulled In favor of
backup Jeff Blake 10 the founh quarler
6ms k1cked field goal&gt; of 22
yards and 46 yards for the Ra1ders 10
the second half '
NFL ottjc1al Boh Boylston broke
hiS nght h1p 1n the second quarter
when Kaufman a&lt;:cldentally ran 1010
h1m The game was delayed five mmutes. and Boylston was taken off the
field on a can
Holla.s, "i'"'"g for the Ra1ders
wh1le George nurses a grum InJury.
played forthe Bengals from 1991 -94
and made two starts He also started
two weeks ago aga1nst San P~ego.
before the Rmders' bye last Sunday

Elam ties field goal mark 'in Broncos' win
k~ekcd

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. By MIKE HARRIS

Patriots lose; Vikings remain undefeated

NFL roundup

Monday, October 26, 1998

play. but f,uled to score on fi1 c
ch.mces The L1ghtnmg went I-for-4
Under the NHL's reviSed diVIsiOn·
al ahgnment and schedllle, the game
was the only reg~lar-season contest
between the two te.tms lh1s season
In other NHL gam~s Sund:t) mght.
Los Angeles ~e,11 Carohn.1 1-2 und
Phoemx and Ann~tm pl.1xed to a 22tle
Kings 3, Hurricanes 2
At Greensboro, N C , Sandy
Moger scored w1th 2 $4 left and Luc
Rob11a1lle added a goal and an asSISt
111 Los Angeles's \lctor) over Cnrolma
Manny Legnce, mukmg hts lh~rd
appearance for the Kmgs 1\•nh regular goal1es Slrphane FISet und Jnn11e
Storr SJdchned by grom IOJullcs.
made 29 saves Glen M11rray .1lso
scored fnr the Kmgs
G,lfy Roherts .md Rohcn Kron
scored Ior the Hurm: .mes
A
Coyotes 2, Mighty Ducks 2
AI An.1heu11 Cuhf , Tee0111
Selanne scored once and setup Steve
Rucchm 's go.11 w1th 4 28 left .IS An.lhelm lied Phoenix
N1kohu Khah1hullu slopped An.l·
he1m's liJSI 26 shots hef01o Scluune
SCOICd hi'&gt; thud gu,JI ol th~ SC.I'il'il1
wnh II 38 left m the th1rd penod
Oleg Tverdovsky and Ke11h Tkachuk
scored for Phoentx

Lumberjacks beat Ice
INDIANAPOLIS CAP) - Jnson
Bonstgnore and Breit Harkms each
scored 111 reguln11on and added
shootout gonls to hft the Cle1eland
Lumheqncks to a 5-4 11ctory mer the
lndumapohs Ice on Sunday mghl 111
the lmernallonnl Hockey League
The Cleveland LumberJacks
moved from lust to first place 111 the
Centrul DIVISIOn w1th the wm
Brent Peterson scored hts second
of the season, and Xavier Deshsle hJS

5-~

first forCie1elund
lndtanupolis got goals m regula liOn [rom D111 1d Hymm liZ, M,lfc
Duputs. Sylvam Clouher .md Ry.m
Vandenbu"che
Bob Lachance "ored the Ice's
only shnotout goul

Goalie Zac B1erk p1cked up h"
second wm of the se.ISon mnk1 ng J I
saves on J5 shots Jeff S~I.IJkO
stopped 35 of W for the ke

College football
roundup
By RICI:IARO ROSENBLATT
AP Football Writer
College foocbaiiJS set to begm ns
h1gh-tech 3J'P1'011Ch to selectmg teams
for •t• natiOnal t1tle game
'The first Bowl Champ1onsh1p
Series standtngs are set to he n:Jea'ied
today. and wlio knows whether the
comple~ formula will deny No 1
Oh1o Stale a chance to pia) for 1ts
first na11onal ch.1mpumsh1p m 30
years
The BCS stand10gs w11l a"'gn a
pomt total to teams based on the AP
med1a and the coaches' polls. three
sets of computer power raungs.
strength of schedule and won-Joss
records When evetythmg ,. calculated. the two teams that fare the best
get llckets to Tempe, Anz for the
F~esta Bowl on Jan 4
And SJnce thiS 1&lt;lhe first hme college football~&lt; usmg such an 1ntncate
selecuon process, nobody knows
how 11 Will end up when the final
standmgs come out on Sunday. Dec
6
Try thiS scenariO' Oh1o State ends
up w11h a perfect sea.&lt;On, finiShes No
I m the polls and doesn't getiOvlled
to Tempe because 1ts schedule IS too
weak
Or thiS' Flonda Stale fimshes
w11h one loss. IS ranked fifth m the
polls and stJII gets a b1d tl&gt;'play on
Jan 4
On Saturday, the top-ranked
Buckeyes (7-0) got no help with their
strength-of-schedule ralmg as they
beat a weak Northwestern team 36·
10. while two of their toughest earh·
er opponents - West Vtrgtma a~d
MJSsoun -lost Oh10 State has only
one Top 25 opponent left - No 22
M1ch1gan
Flonda State (7-1). meanwhile,
has a good ch.mce to gam ground
under the new system After a 34· 7
wm over No 23 Georg1a Tech. the
,Semmoles mo\ ed up to No 5 and
have tough games left ag:unst No 15
V1rg1111.1 and No 6 Flond.1 They also
ha\ e an earlier wm over No 8 Texas
A&amp;M
Second-ranked UCLA. a 28-16
wmner mer Cahforma. also had a
produc111e weekend Not only d1d the
Brums (6-0) remam unbeaten, but
thetr strength-of-schedule ruling
rece1ved a boost from wms hy Texas,
M1am1. Anzona and Oregon UCLA
plays 11s rescheduled game agamst
the Hurncanes on Dec 5, and 11 has
already be.llen Texas, Anzona and
Oregon
For those who thought the polls
alone created enough re.lsons to
argue about who's No. I. ha1•e fun
when 1~ BCS stnndmgs 1.1ke 01 er
That's when 1t'llnlso be lime to ask·
Who's No.2"
In other Top 25 games Satu&lt;d.1y,
11 \vas No. 3 Tennessee 35. Al.lh.tma
18 , No 4 Kansas Stale 52.1owu State
7: No 7 Nebr.1ska 20, No 18 MIS·
soun n , No 8TexnsA&amp;M 17 Texas
Tech I0. No 9 WJSconSJil 1 I. Iowa
0. No 1I Georg1.1 28. Kentucky 26:
No 12 Oregon I7 Southern C.lll·
lonua 13. No 13 Anzomt45. Nonh- ·
e.\sl Lout,t.ma7 . No 15 V1rguu.1 ~'l.
Nonh l;arohna Stale 13. No 16
Notre Dame 20. Anny 17. No. 19
Tulane 52, Rutgers 24, No 20 V~r­
gtnla Tech 41. Al.1bama-Binnmgham
0, No 25 M1am1 34, No 21 West V~r­
gmla 31: and Kansas 33. No 24 Colorndlf 17
No. 1 Ohio St. 36
Northwestern 10
AI Evanston, Ill . Duv1d Boston
broke a school record w11h hts 27th
and 28th career touchdown catches ns
the Buckeyes (4-0 B1g Ten) beat the
Wildcats (2-6. d'-5) lor the 21st
strmghl lime Joe Gerrnnme had hiS
thu'd stmlght300-yard game. throw-

mg for 342 yards and three touch- Dav1son caught a pass IR the end
downs
zone after 11 wa• k~eked by teammate
"I've been 1n d loog enough that Shevm Wiggms The Huskers went
I apprec1ate a v1ctory," Oh1o Slate on to wm 4S -38 m overtune
No.8 Tna~ A&amp;M 17
coach John Cooper &lt;ald. "It may be
T~tusTtc:h 10
ugly, 11 may not be as one-"ded as
At College Station. Texas, holdef
some people would have hked for it
lo have been, but l'llt.1ke 11 any day Shane Lechler tluew an 8-yard touch·
of the week."
down pass to Dame! Campbell on a
fale field goal to help the Agg1es (7No. l UCLA 28, Coliromia 16
At Berkeley. Cahf .the Brums (4- 1. 4-0 B1g 12) beat the Red Raide_n
0 Pac-101 won their 16th m a row a.s (6-2, 3-2 )
Cade McNown threw for two touchNo.9 Wi.Konsin 3J,Iowa 0
downs and Jermmne LewiS ran for
Ron Dayne ran for I64 yards and
one and pas&lt;ed for another
a touchdown as W1scon&lt;1n (8-0, S-0
McNown was 15-of-27 for 182 B1g Ten) won 1n Iowa Cny for the
yards and also scrambled for 57 yards first hme smce 1974 The Badget'
as the Brums are otT to the1r best stan won their e1ghth stra1ght game m one
smce opemng 7-0 m 1988
sea&lt;011 for the firs111me "nee 1901
No.3Tenneosee35
AI!IO
Alabamo18
- GeorJ;•a quarterback Quincy
At Knoxv1lle. Tenn . Peerless · Caner ran for 114 y.~rds and pa•sed
Pnce broke open a clOse game wnh for 147 and Georg1a &lt;6·1. 4·1 SEC)
a 100-yard kickoff return m the th~rd held on for a 28-26 wm at Kentuc~y
quaner for the Vols (6-0. 4-0 SEC), (5-3. 2·3). wh1ch fa1led to gel oil a
who beat the Cnmson Tide (4-3, 2- last-second, 49 yard field goal
1
3) for the fourth strmght year
attempt
No.4 Kan""" St. 52, Iowa St. 7
- W1thou1 InJUred runmng back
Reuben
Droughns, Oregon C6-l, 3-1.
At Manhattan, Kan • M1chael
B1shop threw for 216 yards and Pac-10) held off USC (5-J. 3·2) 17-.
three touchdowns before llmpmg to 13 at home on quarterback Akih'
the sideline and Enc Hickson broke Sm1th's 62-yard touchdown run ear·
school records for career rushmg ly m the fourth quaner
yards and rushmg touchdowns
-At Morgantown. W Va • Scott
BIShop left Wllh I3 mmutes to go Covmgton hll Daryl Jones with a'
m the th1rd quarter. and h1 o s1atus for three-yard touchdown pass w1th I :37
next week's game at Kansas was left to I1ft M1am1 (4-2, 1-I B1g East)
unclear The W1ldcats (7-0, 4-0 B1g over West Virgtma (4-2. 2-1) 34-31
12) mcreased their w1nn1ng streak to Edgernn James had three touch15
downs for the Humcanes
No. 5 Florida St. 34
-AI Tucson , Anz. Keuh Smith
No. 13 Geortlla Tech 7
threw two touchdown passes to DenAt Atlanta, the Semmoles (4· 1 niS Nonhcull and mn for a third
ACC) broke open a light game w11h score, all 1n the first I5 07, as An zona
a 24-pomt founh quarter to create a (7-1) topped Northeast loUisiana
three-way ue for the league lead
45-7
Peter Warrtck caught two touch·
-At Charlottesville Va. Thomas
down passes and scored on a 16-yard Jones "ran for 117 yards and two
revel'l'C. and Laveranues Coles added touchdowns as V~rgm1a (6-1, 4·1
" a 60-ynrd touchdown run
ACC) bounced back from a loss to
The Yellow Jackets (5-2. 4-1) are Georgia Tech wllh a 23-13 wm over
fled for the ACC lead w11h Flonda N C State (4-3, 2-2)
- AI Lawrence , Kan . Dav1d
State and Vtrgmta
Winbush rushed for a career-h1gh 268
No. 7 Nebraska 20
yards, the most ever allowed by ColNo. 18 1\.fls!iOuri 13
At Lmcoln. Neb , the Tigers (5-2, orado (6-2, 3-2 B1g 12). and scored
3-1 Btg 12) were looktng for a mir- three touchdowns 1n Kansas' 33-17
acle catch lhJS 11me, but couldn't find upset. Kansas (2-5, 1-5) snapped a
one as the Comhuskers (7·1. 3-1) ral- I0-gnme losmg stre,tk ngmnst r,mked
lied for the wm,lhe~r471h straight al teams
- Notre Dame (5-1) needed J1m
home.
Backup quarterback Monte Chns! Sanson's career-best 48-yard field
to rnn for two second-half touch- . goal wllh I 06 left for a 20-17 wm
downs to g1ve the Huskers the lead, over Anny (2-51 at South Bena. lnd
Elsewhere, Sh.wn Kmg threw
but MJSsoun had n chunce to 11e 10 the
final seconds At the Huskers' 22 four touchdown passes and ran for
With mne seconds l~fl. Corh} Jones' two scores as Tulane (6-0) routed
pass went though John Dausmun 's Ru1gers 52-24 for 11s best stan smce
h.mds m the ~ml znne Jones w.1s I973
Empon.1 St.11e 's Bnan Sh.1y
sacked on the next play to end the became college footh,lll's career
game.
rushmg le.1der when he gamed 2 11
Last year, Nebraska tted tt on the yards m a 56-24 wm over Central:
final play of regulation when Man MJSsoun State

•

•

DELINQUENT REAL ,ESTATE
PROPERTY NOTICE

.

In compliance with provisions of Section 5721.03 of the
Revlaed Code of the Stata of Ohio, there will ba published
on November 13th and November 20, 1998, In this
newspaper, a delinquent land list containing the
deacrlptlon of the property as It appears on the tax list, the
name of the person In whole name the property Is listed,
the amount of ,taxes and penaltlea due and unpaid.
Each person charged with real property taxes and
penalties may pay the full amount of taxes at the Meigs
County Treasurer'• Office. by 4:00 p.m. on November 6,
1998, to avoid publication.
To avoid additional Interest charged on December 1st, a
taxpayer may enter Into a written agreement with the
County Treaaurer to pay one-fifth (1/5) of the delinquent
taxes.
Nancy Parker Campbell
Meigs County Auditor

:Jree 23reast0xam Clinic
Clinical Breast Exams Will Be
Performed By PVH Physicians
Wednesday, October 28, 1998
6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Well ness Center
Call For Appointments: (304) 675-7222
Walk-Ins Welcome
Refreshments Wi 11 Be Served

•

II
All attendees will receive a gift certificate
for a reduced price on a,mammogram that
may be used during the next 12 months

I

�•

•

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, ()ctober 26, 1998

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Division IV sectional volleyball action ends

.

By The Bend

1

Eastern downs Oak Hill; Southern loses to Ros$ Southeastern
By SCOTT WOLFE
SenUnel Correspondent'
The Ea.'tem Eagles "on the DIVision IV sectional volleyball title la\1
Saturday 31 Alexander H1gh School.
where they beat the Oak Hill Lady
Oak! 15-9, 15-3.
The Eagles. ninth ·ranked in the
\late. are now 19-2 overall. and
advance to the di~trict' tOurnam~nt at

Athens High School on Saturday at
4 p.m. where they m&lt;&gt;&lt;t likel y will

play Fr•nkfon Adena. number two in
1he 'tate.
~Stali\IIC!t for the gime were
delayed via e-mail Sunday night. so
re&gt;ults will appear irl The Dailt.l' Senline/ Tue~y.

in the D1vi,iun IV &gt;ection•l volle) ·
ball final,.
Southern bow, out at 15-S. "h!le
Rovli continues in the di!t.lrict ar 5- 16.

Southern led 8-7 a.\ lhe game pro·
I
. gres~d •lowly. Tied at 5·5,the two

teams continuet.l one point at a time.
TornadoeS bow out
SHS
went up 6-5. Ros• tied 6-6; SHS
Also at Alexander High School
Saturday. the lowly R &lt;&gt;&lt;s-Sou the~,l · went up 7-6. Ross toed 7· 7 until Ro"
ern Lady Panthe101 overcame an 8-7 finally built up a 11 -H kad late in the
deficit and went on to upset the , game. R"'s added ihree more for a
Southern Tornadoe• 14-16 and 7-15 . 14-8 lead. then Kim Sayre hrought

Southern back to apparent J;afety
when 'he &gt;eored 'itven &gt;lraightto tit
the game at 14-14. On the next serv&lt;
Karen E.step served up the game point
for the Panthers and _the second game
ended up m a one-&lt;~ded 15-7 rOt_TtP·
Sayre led Southern w1th II pomL•.
Heather Dailey had seven and Kati
Cummin&lt;three. S. Duckwonh had 12
for R&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;. _SideJO&lt;. Estep and Grubb
eachhad ltve and Summers four.
Ktm Sayre handled 41 of 41 per·

fectly in the fint game, setting 69-71
overall for the day. Sayre continued
to etch her name in stone as one of
' the best sellerS in the entire area with
anotlJer outstanding game. Sayre also
served a 'perfect 10-10 in the game
with an ace, a dig and a kill with
another S-S in the sc:cond game and
another kill.
St.acy Lyon.&lt; wa&lt; 8-9 with two
kills and four blocks in the fi"l game
with a tofal 10-15 overaJJ .with three

kills and six block!. She was 2-2
setVing.
Fallon Roush was 19-20 spiking
wilh nine kills overall and Kim lhle
was 17-20overall spiking with eighl
kill...feather Dailey was 12-12 serving with an ace and Kali Cummins
was 7-8 serving.
.
Southem ended yet another fine
se;15011 under the tutelage Qf coach
Howie Caldwell. posting the best
three year mark of any team from
Columbus southward.

Chicago Fire notch 2-0 win. vs. ·o.c. United, capture MLS Cup

..__-

.4 ••

By KEN PETERS ,
"E:"tern Bloc" player'. fini,hed
PASADENA. Calif. (API - The \1 hat was a texthook hit of p:Ming tn
expansion Chicag&lt;l Fire ended D.C. give Chicago the lead in the 29th
Uniled's 1wo year re•gn a' Major mmute.
League Soccer's only champion" ith
Gutierru staned the '"')lienee
a .2-0 victory Sund"y -in the MLS . just oul\ide the D.C. box. pa&gt;&lt;ing to
Cup.
Luhoo; Kubik. fmm' the Czech Rcpuh. In the process. coach Rnh Bradley lie. Kuhik pa"ed the b:ill to Peter
. finally won a game against his. lon g· Nowak of Poland. who f~d Aone
time friend and former bo". Bnice Ramv as the United defenders tried
Arena.
.
an offsides trap. Razov rolled a perJerzy Podbrozny and Diego fectly, paced pass beyond the ddcn·
Gutierrez scored goals 16 minutes sive line and Nowak sprinted to the
apan in the fir" half apd goalkeeper b:tll and dribbled toward the kft P"''·
Zach Thornton and the Fire defense with goalie Tom Pre&gt;thus forced to
did the resl before a nowd of SI.J50 come out on him.
at the Rose Bowl ·on a warm. "'"ny
Nowak rolled the ball ,lowly
4

day.

'

Bradley's long association with
Arena includes 1996 and 1997. when
he wa-. Arena 1 ~ a"sistanl as O.C.
United won the new league's fir&gt;~
·two championship go:1mes. Arena,
who already owned un NCAA -tournament win over his pal. guided D.C.
United to two regular-se:tson victories over Bradley's Fire thi&gt; year. by
scores of 3-1 and 4-1.
Arena is widely regarded "' the
lop candidate for the vacant U.S.
national team job.
Thornton had eight '"""' "' the
Fire shackled United·, high -powered
offense. including leag ue MVP Mart:o Etcheyerry and strikers Jaime
Moreno aMd Roy Lassiter. p.c. outshot the Fire 22-10 and held an R-4
edge in shots on goal, including 6-0
in the second half.
The fir&lt;l half feature&lt;! continuing
anacks by both sides, with D.C. tak ·
ing three shots in the opening four
minutes. and Chicago also came forward on Ihe allack .'coming close-Ito
scoring early when Chri' Arnw,· 'hot
was cleared by United dclcnder Jeff
Agoos just inches from th e line six
minutes into the game.
Podbrozny. a native of Poland
who is one of a quartet nfChicagn's

acrns~ 1he gnal mnulh ;,md the charg-

ing Podbrmmy tapped it inlll.thc open
net to complete" scoring sCC)Uence in
which half the FirC's posit inn player'
touched the ball.
Gutierrez . . a Colnmhian who

of MLS. and. also called on him to • U.S. Olympic team.
""'
&gt;crvc as hi&gt; a"i'tanl for the 19%
Thornton. out of Loyola of Mary-

land. played a total of just six 'games
in is fi"ttwo MLS seasons with the

Continuing lockout may cancel all Nov~mber games

New York/New Jersey MetroS tars.

· ·

.

·

NBA, union set me·e tings for this week
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
NEW YORK lAP) - Looks like
the basketball world will find outthi'
week if ~nmpromise or confrontation
will prevail in the NBA loc kout.
Commi ~sio n~r

David

St~rn

and

Board of Governors is expected to
meet wilh dozens, if not hundreds, of

players.
Plans for such an assembly have
not yet been finalize&lt;!. but both sides
are talking like they expect such a

union director Billy Hunter met over meeting to take place.
· If it happens. it could be Stem\
the w.,:ek!!nd
·dnll will rncct auain
•
e
soon. pos~ibly this aflt:rnoon . Com- best chance to make a bold move that
ing otl a contentious we~k th~t will bring the sides closer to a settleincluded arbitrator John Fee rick's ment of the dispute that has forced
decision that players with guaranteed the league to cancel games for the
contracts \hould .nol be paid during first time in its history.
The owners are seeking an
the lockout and the union' s militant
meetirlg in Las Vega'i, this ri1a,y be the absn lul ~ limit on player salaries. or a
time for the sides to move toward the hard cap. to replace the "soff' cap
that was exceeded last seascm by
middle.
The bi~gest day to wmch should more than two-thirds of the teams. By
be Wednesday. when the league\ the 21MM)-01 sea.son.the league wants

to have the percentage of designated
revenues devoted to salaries reduced
from 57 percent to 52 percent..
. .~~yers, however. voted unanimou'li'ly last week to never accept a
' "hard" salary cap like the one the
owners currently have on the table.
Stern. Hunter and others held a
three-hour meeting Saturday. and
Hunter and NBA deputy commi&gt;·
sioner Russ Granik planned to speak
by·lelephone this morning to make
., plans for the neXI meeting.
Whene\ler such a session materializes, it will be just the seventh time
the sides have mel. since the lockout
was imposed by the owners July I.
Barring a quick senlemenl, the rest
of the November schedule - and

perhaps some December game• will be·canceled this week.
At their meeting amid the bright
lighls of La• Vega&lt;. the players heard
ba.&lt;eball union chief Donald Fehr tell
them to stick together np rriauer what
tactics the owne" employ, and football union director Gene Upshaw
urge them to file for decertification.
Some .proponents of decerti ficalion have said NBA owne" may elect
to declare an impa&lt;se,liftlhe lockout
and impose new work rules. thereby
forcing the playe101 to go on strike.
Ownen; could make such a move and
not be liable for antitrust damages
unless the union had decertified.

missed all of last season wilh Kansa"
City because of torn lig;i'ments in his
left knee. g ~ve Chicago a p:id hy
be in~ in the right place at th e riglll
time ll1 1he closing secom.l" of the fir., I
half. Now:tk got off a &gt;hOIIO\\':II'(l fhc
center of the gnalthal PrestlHIS muld
h:ll'e &lt;topped. hut the ball cknectcd By SCOTT WOLFE
In spiking Brannon was 8,8 with points; Chevalier 5·5 with four poinL~; Brannon was also perfect with
niT Gutienv an&lt;l \'eered into the left Sentinel Correspondent
seven kills and five digs; Karr was 6- points; and Bailey, Evans. Leah
13-13 serving and seven points; Angi
corner of the goal.
The Eastern Eagles defeated 7 with five kills. one dig and a block; Sanders, Angie Taylor, and Alison Wolfe "'•• 10-11 with seven points;
With a two-go"l kad in the second Miller and Fairland, then lo&gt;tlo Riv- Bailey 4-5 with a kill and three digs; Rose each a point. ·
and Juli Hayman wa~ 10-ll .with an
half. Ch ic:tt'" r&lt;'ll!nt&lt;d 1!1 the &lt;kkn - er Valley to conclude their regular Stephanie Evans 3-4 with a kill. KrisIn spiking, Bailey was 7-8 with six ace and five points; Bailey was 7-10
sive stance 'that was its trademark season on Oct. 20. Eastern defeated ten Chevalier 4-4 with two.k.ills and kills and a dig; Karr 6-7 with five· with four points; and Evans was 9-9
during .the regularse:tson and a two- •Miller in two games 15- 11 and 15-1. Angi Wolfe 2-4.
,,
kills; Taylor 4-5 with a kill; and with three.
game sweep of Los Angeles in the
Eastern. ranked ninth in the state
In setting '· Hayman was 14-21 Hayman 1-1 . In selling, Hayman wa&lt;
In spiking, Karr was 14-.17 with
conference playoffs.
in Division IV at season's end, with four assists; and Evans,. was 13· 11 · 14 with seven assists and Evans 6- nine kills, four, ~locks. and five ·digs;
The ties between Bradley tmd Are- claimed the Tri-Valley Hocking Divi- 14 with e.ight assists. Evans had a 6 with two assists.
Brannon was 18-21 with six kills;
na go back to 1982-83. when Bradley sion championship outright for the hand in twenty-two of the team's 30 . In the last regular season game. Bailey was 8-10 with three kills, a
was an •1ssistant under Arena at the second consecutive year.
' points.
Eastern fell to defeat in three games block, and two touches; Wolfe was 4·
Uni1•ersity, of Virginia. Bradley left to
Stephanie Evans led the scoring
Against Fairland, Eastern rolled to a tough River Valley squad. River 5 with two kills; Hayman was 2-3
become head coacll at his alma ·with 16- 17 serves. four ace s; and 14 eas ilyio the win in the tri-match with Valley .ended the regular seao;on at 16- with a kill; Chevalier was 3·6 with
mater. Princeton. and he guided the )10ints; Jul i Hayman was H-H with ;on River Valley. Eastern claimed 15-0 6, handing Eastern, now 18-2. only its kill; and Evans 1-3.
Tigers to the NCAA ' semifi nals in ace and five points, Juli Bailey w:" and 15- 10 wins.
second lpss of the season, River VaiIn seuing, Hayman handled 32·39
1993 --;: where they Iosito Virginia 5-7 with four points; Jessica Brannon
Hayman was 11-12 with ·eight ley won the match 15-12, 8-15, and with 14 a..sists; Evans wa&lt; 26-30 f'Jith
and his old hoss.
.
5,5 with three points; Valerie Karr4 - points and two aces; Karr was 7-8 15·7.
si• assists; Bailey 1-1 , and Karr 1- 1.
Arena hired B'mdley again for · 5 with an a~e and three points ; and with five ace.&lt; and seven points;
Valerie Karr led the scoring with
Brannon had I0 digs. Karr eighl.· BaiD .C. Umted for the u1auguml season , Angi Wolfe 3-3 with a point.
Rrannon was S-8 with an ace and six · 12/12 serving, an ace, and eight ley ,five, and Sanders. four.

Eagles win two of last three regular-season matches

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-

The Daily Sentinel
Page7
'
Monday, October 26, 1998

•

Buzz Aldrin encourages America to wish John Glenn 'Godspeed' on-Thursday
Ann
Landers
1'197, Lot
S~aioe

""fda T..a
IIIII Cra&amp;on

"""'"'
Dear Ana Landen: My good
friend and fellow astronaut John
Glenn will return to space on Thurs·
day, Oct. 29. after 36 years. This uue
American hero captured our hearts
and imaginalions when he became
the first American to orbit the Earth
back in February 1962. ·
During the countdown of that
historic flight , fellow Mercury astronaut Scou Carpenter echoed the
nation's silent sentiments. whim he
spoke the wo~ds '' Godspeed. John

Glenn."
It is my desire to repeat hislOfy
on an even grander scale for this
launch. I would like to encourage
everyone from · around the nation
and the world 10 participate in the
send-off by watching the Iaurich of
the space shuule· Discovery and
joining in a resounding "God&lt;peed,
John Glenn and the crew of STS95" at launch time, approximately 2
p.m. (Eastern Standard Time) on
Oct. 29. This expression of goodwill
and support for John Glenn and the
entire crew will indeed make this
one of the greatest moments in the
history of space. -- Buzz Aldrin,
astronaut
Dear Buzz Aldrin: What a
splendid idea! I hope my readers

around the world will make an effort
Thunday afternoon to wish godspeed to John Glenn and the ctew of
the space shuule Discovery. My best
wishes for a successful mission and
a safe re.wm.
Dear Ana Llulden: My 17-yearold son has ,left the bouse. I \lidn' l
throw him out. He chose to leave
because I told him to take some
classes and gel his OED or find a job
and keep it.
"Todd" dropped out of school
13$1 year after years of struggling
with attention deficit disorder and
some other mild learning disabilities. He had all the help 1Je could
ever hope for. I spoke with school
teachers and counselors. Todd was
given medication but refused lo take

Humane ·society news
and medium-sized.
• .Red chow/shepherd mix with
fluffy and black face. Maliumllarge
dog .
ety
PEN THREE
There are many, many dogs at the
• PROBABLY ADOPTED
sheller now and the nights are get- CALL FIRST! Beautiful female
ling colder. There are all shapes and German Shepherd. Purebred. black
sizes of dogs and even two litters of and silver. Has recently had pups.
liny ' pups who need homes very Very sweet and friendly but also
soon. Are you , or anyone you kno,w, , alert. Should make a good watchdog
able to take in a warm, fuzzy friend . and house; companion.• ~ks and
who needs a home this fall apd win- acts very intelligent.
•
ter ,(and forever after)? Please con*JPups,' about six weeks old, half
sider giving one a place in your life German Shepherd, appear to be part
and home.
Australian Shepherd, too. Varying
The following dogs are available colors of cream/sable gray with
as of October 22. The hours at the black on faces.
dog paund are 9 to 10 a.m. and 4 to PEN FOUR · ·
5 p.m. on weekdays and II a.!ll. to 2
• Another chow mix, with soft,
p.m. on Saturday. The pound is fuzzy red fur. very fluffy with black
located adjacent to the Rock Springs face:Very sweet expression.
Fairgrounds. More dogs arrive daily
.• Red short-haired lab/chow•
so stop by to see who's there.
mix. Medium/large.
PEN ONE
• Doberman/Rouweiler mix.
(Puppies and small dogs):
Docked lilil. Female. · Short for a
• Black pups, about seven to Rouie or Doberman (about 50 lbs.), .
eight weeks old, inquisitive and but nice-looking dog.
playful but not too wild. Look like a
• Medium/large all creamy-white
Labrador mix but could be many husky mix . Has rougher coatlike .a
, other breeds, since black is a geneti- shepherd, though. Seems to really
cally dominant color. Will probably like people. F~male.
be medium-sized dogs.
·• Beagle arid hound mix.
• Long-haired Chihuahualdachs- PEN FIVE
hund, very small, friendly and out*Purebred sable (Lassie) collie,
going, reddish brown with some male, riot a young dog. Coat is terriblack mixed in. Beautiful silky coal bly matted and dirty. Needs lois of
and really cute face. About ·10 TLC, but looks just like the Lassiein
pounds. maybe less.
the movies and on TV. Looks like an
• Shar Pei mix, short-haired, extremely nice quality of coat with a
0' cream and tan colored, small, about classic collie look, but needs cleaned
25 pounds.
up and loved.
*JBiack and
tan Cocker
• Yellow Labrador Retriever or
Spaniei!Basseu hound mix. Very mix, very calm. Medium-sized
cute and interesting-looking· dog. (small for a Labrador).
Shorl legs. long coat, about 20 OTHER PENS .
pounds.
• Two · male adult Rouweilers,
•
Two
Beagle/cocker one more outgoing and aggressive.
spaniel/Australian Caule,dog mixes, The other more friendly.
one with longer hair. Interesting
*JBiack Chow or Chow mix .
look mg d0 gs, mottled cream and red Acts ve'y friendly for a Chow. Has
coloring, drooping ears. about the black tongue and profuse black coat.
size of a beagle.
Any dog adopted should be talien
immediately to the veterinarian for a
PEN TWO
•JBiack and white mottled checkup and vaccinations. The
Meigs County Humane Society
hound/pointer. Large , calm dog. .
· • Labrador/German mix. Black. offers help with the cost of spay ing
long -haired dog , looks e~actly like a and neutering for those who qualify.
long -haired black lab. Very sweet

1

By'SANDY STEALEY
Melga County Humane Soci-

it. He's bUn to psychologists, fami- this. I've cried until there are no
ly counselors. medical dac1ors. you more tears, and I'm totally messed
name il, all in an effort to help him out.
cope and succeed. The problem is,
I fear for Todd's safety while
Todd is not willing to do anything to he's bouncing from .friend to friend,
help himself.
house to house: I don '1 know if he's
When Todd dropped out of eating or where he is, and ifs only
school, I told him he either had to ~n a week . I pray constantly for
take classes or go to work. He's had his safety and hope 1hat he will
three jobs since then and quit them eventually come to his senses. I also
all. He jusl' wants to hang out with pray to have lhe strength and peace
his friends and would come home 10 getlhrough this. but I'm having a
only to eat and sleep.
hard lime keeping it all together for
The whole family decided we my husband and our other two chil·
could no longer tolerate his behavior dren. Any advice for me' .. Greensand stand by while he wasted his boro, N.C.
life. We all love him dearly. and he
Dear Greenslioro: You didn ' t
can come back any time he wants, as throw Todd out. He chose to leave . It
long as he follows the rules .
sounds as if you have made a valiant
I am physically ill because of effort to help this boy. hut he is

MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
. Veterans SerVice Commission,
. 7:30p.m: Monday at the Veterans
Service Office, Mulberry Avenue,
-Pomeroy.
RACINE - ·Southern Local
Board of Education regular meet·ing Monday •. 7:30 'p.m. in the
Southern High School, cafeteria.
CHESTER - Meigs Counly
l.K.E .S. meeting Monday at the
club house. There will be a vole
on Sunday hunting on I.K:E.S,
land by members.

T30C Siring Trimmer
• 30cc engine
· • 17-in'ch cutting swath
• Tap &amp; Go string trimmer head

JS60 WIIII·Bihlad Mawar

•

• 6.D-hp engine
, • Seven cutting halghts
• Handlebars fold aasily tor storage

LT133 Lawn Tr1Cior ·
•13· hp overhead-valve engine
• 38·inch mower deck
• S·speed in·line shilt transaxle

325 Lawn &amp;Danian Tractor

Between October I. 1998. and
March 31, 1999, about 33 million
workers between ages 40 and 47
will receive a Personal Earnings
and Benefil Estimate Statement
from Social Security. About 24
million statements will be mailed
before December 15 , with the
remainder to be mailed between
January 15 and March 31, 1999.
The statements win display t_!le
year-by-year earnings 1hat have
been posted to workers' Social
Security records and provide estimates of the Social Security .benefits they and their families may be
eligible for now and in the futur~. ·
This information is intended to
help workers better understand the
~alue of their Social Security benefits 'and help them plan a secure
financial future.
Because workers' Social Security benefits will be based on the
earnings Social Security has posted. it's. impo~tant that they make

sure the statement rellects their

deductibles

correct earnings . If it doesn' t, they

amounts?

• 11·hp air-cooled angina
• «·Inch mower deck
• Hydrostatic drive

www.deere.com

l in

Chapter holds meeting
Preceptor Bela Beta of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority held its regular
meeting Oct. 23 at the Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy.
.
A request from Dorpthy Sayre for
a year's leave of absence due to her
husband's illness was approved.
Officers' reports were given and the
serviced committee reported on
serving the bloodmobile canteen this
month.
Games were played wilh Jane
Walton and Charlotte Elberfeld. wining the prizes. :rhe sweatshirt con·
test was won by Rose Sisson.
Members were reminded to wear
their pins io future meetings and
failure to do so will result in a find.
Next meeting will be Nov. 12 at
6:30p.m. at .the church with Norma

'•

'

this to Social Security~ 'Instead of
paying rent. they 'll be working in
the yard and doing housework .
A. Yes. Whenever someone
moves iniO or out of your home .

you must report this to Social
Security within I0 cale ndar. days
after the month of the move.
Q. How long do I need to work

become insured for Social
Security disahihty benefits?
A. The amount of work you
need depends on your age at the
time you become disabled.
to

As a young worker under age

24. all you need is a year and a
half of work in the pastth(~e years
to qualify for bcnelits.' At age 31,
you would need to have worked
five out of the len years right
before ihc disability began.

Custer and Charlotte Elberfeld as
hostesses . .
Seasonally decoraled donuts and ·
cider were served by Martha
McPhail and Margaret S\ewart.
Attending were Jane Walton, Ann
Rupe, Joan C1:&gt;rder, Shirley Beegle,
Jane Brown, Donna Byer, Vera
Crow, Norma Custer, Charlotte
Elberfeld. Martha McPhail, Jean
Powell, Rose Sisson, and Margaret
Stewarl.
Seminar on innkeeping offered
A semin~r for new or aspiring
innkeepers or those new to .the bed
and breakfast industry, a unique pro·
gram is being offered by Hocking
College and . th ~ Ohio Bed and
Breakfast Association (OBBA).
"B&amp;B Vision-to-Plans" provides

In additiu·n, a seminar panel reppaructpants ·with firsthand experience and how-los presented by top resenting '·area Chambers of 'Commerc'i\,_Small ·Businesses Develop·
industry professionals.
Designed in two weekend ses- mcnt (.:enter, tounsrn assocmuons
. sions, the first seminar will be held and banks will provide necessary
Nov. 21 and 22 :with the second ses- start-up support infonnation.
Cost for · both weekend seminar
sion to be announced, at the collegeowned and operated Ramada· Inn . · packages is $295 .(four credit hours
Participants will be trained and and a copy of'So You Want to Be an
meritored by B&amp;B ow ners, OBBA Innkeeper") for the first participant
members and Hocking College hos- and $195 (one credit hour) for an
pitality faculty, .including hand s-o n additional family member or busi·
training in Hocking College culinary ness partner. Persons planning to
labs at Ramada Inn. Participants will start a B&amp;B in one of six designated
be guided in developing a cus- Appalachian coun ties will have
tomized B&amp;B Planning Portfolio additional OBBA membership benethat includes a business plan. partie· fits .
'
Addit'ional information may he
ipants will also learn (rom the inside
during an on-s ite eXperience· at obtained by ·co ntacting Bonnie
se lected OBBA bed and breakfasts Prince, dean of Alternative Educa,.
· lion at Hocking College,
throughout the state.

The Bible? 'Don't Know Much' isn't an excuse with new book to help public
A more serious prob!Ctn is that says " most scholars" agree tltat it
Davis cloaks the comp lexity of bib- was a parable rather than literal his·
lical issues with rhetoricalllounshes tory (true) and that it was wrillen
and flatfooted declaration&gt; . The con· about 350 to 320 B.C. (no such con·
sensus; the 'dating is a cnmplicatcd
tin~al omission of oplions is likely
to mislead the "Don't Know Much" problem).
.
Speaking of Jonah, "Don't Know
level of reader.
For instance. Davis reports on the Much'. points out that the prophet
modern rediscovery of ext ra wasn't swallowed by a "whale" but
Gospels wrillen by .the Gnostics, an un specified "big fish ," and that
whose beliefs were declarc.d hereti· . Adam and Eve ate an unspecified
cal by the early church. He says " fruit," not necessarily an ~pplc.
these Gnostic writings "make one · Other oft-noted Bible tidbits:
thing clear: The earliest Christians Moses likclv led the Exodus !ln'llugh
did not agree on what we cal ( the a marshy "sea of reeds," not \he Red
New Testament." That assumes the Sea. Two Bible books, Esther and
Gnostic Gospels were written as far Song of Sqlomon, never mention
back as the four New Testament God. And the desig nation "666" for
GQspels, an interesting theory that the beast in Revelation 13. seems to
e&lt;perts dispute and for whicpthere's be a coded rcfCrcnce .to the Roman
Emperor Nero.
no hard evidence.
Or take the book of Jonah. Davis

·

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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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Invites You To

TRICK or TREAT
Monday, October 26, 1998, 7:00 pm • 8:30 pm
Ages 0·12

l-888-657-0977
•Pomeroy

•Lebaoon

'Gallipolis

• Nelsonville

'Dayton

• Middletown

'Sardinia

'Hillsboro
• Sprin&amp;fidd
•Cin:l&lt;•illc

•wcstUnioA

•wilminaron

'Washibalon

EVERYONE. IS .WELCOME

music videos by MIChael Jatk·

I son and Mariah Corey.

any re nt . do I still need to report

···=··

Rockspring$ Rehabilitatio.n Center

A dancer and uage actor, Tahj
I Mowry (SIIUJrt Gwy) has perfonned

' NOTHING RUNS UKE ADEERE•

donations are

I

I

Scctlritv Income (SS I). If I take in
a boarder and don 1 charge them

coi nsurance

SJ50 ror 12 moathl ·

POMEROY - lmmunization
clinic at the Meigs County Health
Department. 9 to ll 'a ,m. and I to
J p.m. Tuesday. Child must be

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

Calif. 90045

'

rz.~·--===-

P.OMEROY - Drew Webster
· Pos·t 39, American Legion Au&gt;il·
1ary, Tuesday. 2 P·"': at the hulL

u

and

should contact Social Security as
A. Yes. If your month I ~ mcome
soon as p(lssible.
is $1 ,194 or less ($1.603 for acou.As required by law, Social pie), your state may help with
Security began m'ailing the forms your Medicare costs. Contact your
in 1995 to individuals age 60 and local welfare office to sec if you
older. Since thed, the mai.ling~ ·.. meet, th~-guidclines.
have gone to younge~ w~rkers .
I
•
.
Q. How much of my Social
Beginning October I. 1999, all
workers age 25 and older will be Security ta• dollars•go to pay be~­
efits and how much goes towards
receiving statements annuall,y.For information about the stale- administr~ti,'e expenses~?
A. Out of every dollar paid in
ment ,
visit
thi s
'w ebsite
Social
Security and Medicare
www.ssa.gov/mystatement.
For additional infoimalion ta.es, 99 cents goes to trust funds
about Social Security benefits, that pay retirement and survivors
visit this website,www.ssa.gov or benefits, Medicare benefits and
call this toll -free number, 1-800- · disability benefits .
Administrative costs are paid
772-1213.
from Social Security trust fund s
and are less than one cent of every
Questions and Answers
Social Security' tax dollar coll ectQ. Is there assistance available ed.
to help low-income. Medicare beneficiaries pay Medicare premiums.
Q. I receive Supplemental

By RICHARD N. OSTLING
fessor, he's more accurately
AP Religion Writer ,
described as a popular writer.
.Decades ago, there was a si'lly "Don't Know Much" depends on
radio game show called "It Pays ,To classier popularizations such as
Be Ignorant. "
"Biblical Literacy" by Rabbi Joseph
Ignorance certainly pays oJf for " felushkin (1997) and "The Good
writer Kenneth C. Davis. Not his , Book" (1996) by Harvard chaplain
accompan·ied by parenl/legal own, but thai of customers who snap Peter Gomes. Davis freely admits
2uarrllnn
and
immunization up his "Don't Know Much About his indebtedness.
record musl be presented.
..." books. Topics in the series
One of Davis' aims is to show
include "History," " Geography" · • "which biblical teachings may have
POMEROY - Winding Trail and "the'. Civil War." And Davis been just fine for an ancient, semi·
Garden Club. Tuesday, 7:30 p:m.\ even has . a Web site: www.donl- nomadic world, and which may still
· knowmuchabout.com.
home of Kay Frederick
apply to life at the dawn of the 21st
· Davis' latest book, "Don't Know century." That's an important ambi·
WEDNESDAY
Much About the Bible" (Morrow, lion, but beyond the limitations of
SYRACUSE- Third Wednes · $25), which is also available in this sort of book.
,
day Homemakers Club, Wednes- audio formats, should find a ready
Pondering the dictum in Proverbs
day, 10 a.m. the municipal build- market, too. since polls show consis- 13:24 often paraphrased as "spare
ing . Potluck at noon. Project, tently that many Americans are the rod and spoil the child," Davis
. decorating boards .
ignorant about Scripture.
.asserts: "In an era of commonplace
Don't know, however, that child',abuse, even hinting that the
POMEROY - GED test in "Don'i Know Much" is 1he best Bible condones such behavior is a
Meigs County Wednesday and choic~ for folks who don 't know grievous mistake."
Thursday. Call 9920-6247 for much.
The Davis book zips right along,
more information, 9 a.m. to 2:30
Davis, who was raised Protestant, but the relentless cuteness gets
p.m. Monday thr!Jugh Thursday. calls himself a "historian," which annoying · after awhile. Do people
or 4 to 8 p.m. Tuesday through uses the term loosely. Not a college
· think of God as the "Cosmic

TUESDAY
RACINE - RACO meeting,
Tuesday. Star Mill ·Park . Potluck
at 6:30 p.m New members wei·
come.

•Ill•

•

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

Thirty - three million workers to receive Social Security statement

---Community Calendar-...:...__The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non -pro fit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. hems are
printed as sp.ace permits and can·
noi be guaranleed to run a specific number of days.

doing ''ery little to help himself. ·
(Refusing to take his malicme is a
very imponant clue.)
Please contact BILY (Because I
~Love You); an excellen1 support
group for parents who have difficuh
teenagen;, at P.O. Box 35175, Los
Angeles,
Calif.
90035;9998
(www.becausclloveyou.org), o~ call
toll-free 1-888-443-4481.
·;
, Good luck. dear. Please write
back, and let me know how you are
doing.

..
..

•

•

�.
Page

8 • The Dally $8ntlnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October

Monday, October

26, 1998

26, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel •

Gallipolis All Stars Unlimited earn awards at Meigs artisans win ribbons
Kings Island cheerleadin_g championships
at Bob Evans Farm Festival
. The Gallipolis All Stars Unlimit-

Meigs County artisans took first
and second place in the Bob Evans
Farm Feslival judging held recently.
Judging was ba,sed on quality of
the work: the ability of the demonstrator, auire of the demonstrator,
presenwion, and uniqueness of display.
· For the second year, Eloise Drenner .of Pomeroy look first place for
stitchery. At the festival she demonstrated her skills and displayed a
variety of her products including
snowmen, bears, moose, turkeys,

ed Cheerleading Teams recently
added two more awards to Iheir collection, by earning lwo fifth place
finishes at lhe 1998 Kin~s Island
Cheerleading Championships. Both
lhc youth - grades 4 - 6 - and 1he
\ junior - grades 7 - 9 - , All Star ,
Squads finished_fifth in lheir divisions. wilh only lwo and one half
poinls total separating the youlh
di"ision third, founh and fifth place

~

teams .

The Kings Islands Chccrlcading
Championships hosled more than
~ .000 cheerleaders from Ohio, Wesl
Virginia, Pennsylvania. Kenlucky,
Georgia, Indiana. Michi~an an.d
Tennessee.' In it~ 14th ye,ar. the event
jo; considered one of the premier

&gt;\

'"

40
1~.

Ready To Go! 740·258·6703

....... 4MeuaQI .

and pillows.
.
Taking second place was Tem
Haynes of Middleport who showed
her creativity in art 'e"ilh birdhouses.
slates. benches, and stgns. Dunng
the festival she demonstrated paint- ,
ing techniques.
Haynes owns Always'and Forever Gift Shoppe in Pomeroy and both
artisans show and sell., their work
there .
This was lhe second year for holh
Drenner and Haynes to participate
in the juried display at the Festival.

Pcnin~ula

Upper
in 1951
what they saw. Over
the and
n~xt Iiked
few
years, they took noLc of the b1impcrto-bumper traffic ·headi ng n&lt;Jrlh on

Because part of

the challenge. ••
..

Public Notice
'Notice ol Election on Tax
Levy In Exc..a ol the Tan
Mill Umltatlon
RevlHd Cq~s. Sections
3501.11(G), 5105.19,5705.25
NOTICE It hereby glvan

\

or

In Historic Oowntown Pomeroy
. 992·7696

Custom Homes

of

with

The family of James Jr.
would like to
thank everyone who
helped in anyway during
illness and death.
it was with a

"Build Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ·

This Is Golf
, Worth the Drive.
IN

ALABAMA

WWW.RTJGOLF.COM

Randy Reeves.
Grandchildren-Rachael,
Jodi , Brandi, jill &amp;

(No Sunday Calls)

Pomeroy, Ohio

44087 Wlpple Rd.

Joe Wilson
(614 992-42n

-~ Washers

• Hot Water Heater .

• Ranges
, • Refrigerators

• Freezers
• Dishwashers

'

~11211111 mo. pel

By Calling

Sma ll Sized Puppies . 5 Weeks
old. 740-256-6016.

.

•

.

'!'4!!/!!l
-,:·

I

.•

10116198 1304) 874-«102
Lost temale Siamese, dark brown
markings, beige In color, 20 years
old, never been outsltse, $100 reward , last seen 519 South front
St. . Middleport, 740-992-3947.

70

740•742•34.11

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
ill YardS.._ Must
Be Pllld In Advilnce.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
lho cloy befote lho ...
11 lo run. Sunday
edition. 2:00p.m. ·

Frfcley, Mondoy

PomarO)',
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

10115/!mo. pd.

Heat Pumps A a Low At
FIRST PLACE WINNER - Eloise Drenner took first place In
stitchery In artisan competition at the Bob Evans Farm Festival.
Here she displays her blue ribbon. Drenner is pictured with Dan
Evans, Susan Dodson, left, and Nelda Mockey.
I .

Public Notice
o'clock A.M. and r•maln
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
ol aald day.
By order ol the Board ol
Elecllona, ol Mslge County,
Ohio.

Public Notice
'Notice ol Election on Tu
l.lvy In Exc111 ol the Ten
Mill Limitation
Reviled Code; Sectlone
3501.11(G), 5705.19,5705.25
NOTICE Ia horeby given

· Public Notice
An additional uix cl 1.5
mills at a rate nol excHdlng
1.5 mills lor tach ono dollar
ol valuation, which amounla
to tlftetn cente ($0.15) lor
each one hundred dollare ol

that In pureuance of a

valuatiOn-;- lor a continuing

Rlla D. Smllh, Director
Dated Sept. 8, 19911
(10) 5,12,19,28
4TC
Public Notice

Roootullon ol the Vllllge period ol lima.
Council ol tho Villogo ol
The Poll a lor· eald
Middleport, Middleport, Elecllon will open at 8:30
Ohio, paned on the '27th o'clock A.M. and remoln
day ol July, 19118 there· will open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
bl· aubmltttd to a vote ol, ol aald day.
NOTICE OF ELECTION
I he people ol 11ld By order ol the Board ol
· 1 11 horeby given oubdlvlolon at a General Elecllona, ol Melgo County,
Notice
Election to be held In the Ohio. • .
that purauant to a
ruolutlon adopled by lhe VIllage ol Middleport, Ohio, John N. thlt, Chairman
Boa(.!d o1 Ed ucaono
II
1 th • at the regular p·lac11 ol Ri'·
~ D. Smllh, Director.
Mega
1 LOCt1s ChOC 1Dl ltr.1C,1 voting therein, on the 3td Dated Sept. 8, 1998
day ol November, 19118, the (10)5 12 19 28
County ot Mela•.• OhiQ, on quaaUon ol levying a tax, In 4TC ' ' '
lht 2tot day or July, t998, exceoa ol the ten mill
lhtre will be oubmltlad 10 llmltallon, for lhe benellt of
lhe quolllltd electors ol Middleport Village lor tho
aald •school dlotrlcl at the pur":"ll o1 Fire Protection
election to be held on the
•·- tox bolng:•
Said

outoldo ol Ihe lon·mlll
conllltutlonol llmltotlon lor
the benefit ol the Melgo
Local School Dletrlct lor the
purp·o ea ol permanent
Improvement• at a rate ol
live (5). mills lor each one
doll or 1$1.00) ol · tix
valu·a- tlon,.whlch amounts to
lilly cento ($0.50) lor each
one hundred -dollars
tax valuation,
y01r period,
c~;'g~':lf!~fto~wllh
lax year
1
year2000.
polla will be open
6:30 a.m. lo 7:30 p.m.
on eald date.
.
By Order ol lhe Board ol
Election• ol lho County ol
Malga, Ohio,
Rita D. Smith
. Director
(10)5, 12, 19, 28,4 tc

In Memory

In :Memory of
· 1fJa(ler ('Bob)
Coucfi
os/18127· ro/26196
Our memories will
never die.
We love and miss
you .
Your 'Family
Isabelle, Janice, 'Bob,
'Ron, 'Ric, Jeff and
Jennifer.

Services

5$

. '

110 COURT ST.
1-800· 291-5600

Joe N. Sayre

614-742-2138

St. Rt.

c:orrier

Come into
IMPERIAL TIRE
· and have your car
· winterized. Have your
anti-freeze checked , Oil
changed, New Iires,
Snow Tires, Brakes
checked, &amp; Exhaust
Check oul our
discounted tires.
Lar e varia of 'sizes

7

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
740·985-3813
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Ft,lll Line Of Water Storage Tanks.
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" tllru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • P.ole B)Jildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

'

,.

Call 740·843·5426

LANDSCAPE
bBSIGNS

Computer Performance Upgr1d11

Custom Built Computers, Networks Modems, Hard
Drives, Printers. Upgrade Your PC Th a Pentium CPU
, and MB ·Today. Pre-Owned Com pulers.
740-992·1135 For A Price Quote!
~· rognetlnternet Sign-up point ror
Meigs and Mason Counties
.....
114 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 'It - tf'
.,

I&amp;

All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
·Commercial
·Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester;• Ohio
740·985-4422

.

~t.ilt'RIJtfn

MIGHTY MAC
AERATION SYSTEM
New light weight,
!I berg lass slate and
county ipproved with
two-year warranty.

740·742·2566
D. Howard 10/lt{l tT&gt;O.

SATELLITE

SOUTHERN
OHIO DISPOSAL

SERVICE

· cail

992-6320
Local Satellile ·
Provider
Besl Electric Pomeroy

.

12/18/lfn

..

..

-

'

2.99/mln. Muot be 18.
Serv-U 619-645-843~
__......
·-· ..... . . . '"

I

'

.... .

10/2 S/96111n

'

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

i

5/28/lfn

8/1 IIPI trn
• •p•

P/B Contractors, Inc.
(

985·4473

-.

7/22/lln

YOUNG'S
·CARPENTER SERVICE

Howaril L. Writesel
I

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

"'

;'

'
1

;

'

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

·"

(Lima Stone·
Low Rates)

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

614-992-3470

I
'

'

Antiques. lop prices paid, Alvar·
In a Antiques. Pomeroy. Ohio,
Russ Moore owner, 740·992·

2526,

household, Osby Mart in, 740·
992-6576.

RUTLAND; OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BUCH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

Clean Lata Model Cars Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontlac, 1900 East·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.
J &amp; 0 Aulo Parts. Buying
wrecked or salvaged vehicles.

304-773·5033.
Wa n ted To Buy For Family Pet:
Dachshund, Pup Or Young Dog,
Cal! 740·446·2342 E11t. 1 &amp; Then
20 Days: Or 304·675-4293 EvenIngs.

Factory Choke
· Onl

Wanted To Buy: Junk Auto's Any
Condition, 7~6·9853.

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
•Vinyl SIQJng •Soffit
•Fascia
•Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
•Replat:ement
Windows
•Statlon ifry Docks
•Blown Insulation
•Garages •Decks
24x24 Pole Balldlng
starting at $5995
740-992-2772

Wanted To Buy: Used Mob ile
Homes, Cali 740·446·0H5, 304·

'

675·S965,

MOBILE HOME
PARTS
'

''

"Huge lnvenlory"
•Rl:iol Coatings
•vinyl Skirting
•water Heaters
•Door/Windows
•Electric/Plumbing
Supplies
•Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Steps · ·

Demonstrations

~nd~s

• Salh &amp; Body
• Fragrances •Aromatheqpy
• Skln Care • Children's Gil'tl

.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11 o
'

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spears, 304·675·1429.

Gallipolis Career Collage 11 Now
Accepting Resumes For lnatruc~
tors In All Disciplines; Accounting. Business Adminllratlon,
Communications. Computer Sci·
Economrcs. Medical Term!~
noiogy, Medical Transcription. In·
suranu Coding (CPT; ICD·9),
O!llce Admin istration {lnctu&lt;llng
Shorhand , Typing, And Worel
Proc asslng). And Pollllc.al S.cl·
ence. Please Forward Resumaa
To : P.O. 801 542 , Kerr, Ohio
45643 Ely November I.
HOSPICE C4SE MANAGER,
Full· Time 8:00 -":30 Mpnday
Through Friday Wilh Rotating
Evening And Weekend On ·Call
Responsibilities. Ouail11catlons Include One ·Year Recent Clinical
Experience tn Acute Care Or
Home Care. Beneflll Available
With Opportunity For Advance~
ment. Applications Available At
280 East State Street, Athena, ,·
OH 0. Call 74().594-8226. EOE ,
MDS NVRSE

POSITION

Centurion Managemenl Group, A
Progressive Long Term Care ·
Company (Med icare &amp; MediCaid
Certllled). Is Currently Taking Ap. .
pll catlons For MOS Nurses. Ex··
cellent Working Environment An&lt;f •
Benefits. Oualllicauons tnc tu ele
Ohio RN license, Bachelors. De- '
gree Preferred The Succeutut
Candidate Will Need Strong COni-·
cal Skills And EJCperlence In MOS
Sut;lmlssion. Please Submit A Resu'm8 To Terry Quinn. Director Of
Quality Assurance, 215 E. Weng·
er Road, Englewood, OH 45322.
Needed lmmedi atet.y Ohio Ll·
censed Physician To Assume A ·,
General Practice In A Health
Care Provide r Shortage Area .•
Present Physician Will Be Leaving . Novem~er t4 , t99 8. Approx·
lma\ely 100.000 Patient Fi les.
Current Physician Has Practiced
For 39 Years. Call 740·286-4104
At Soon At Pos~blel ·
Pleettnt Valley Ho1plt1l Is currently accepting applications for
·a Pharmacy Technician. The ap· . ·
pllcant must be registered In the
state ot West Virginia or certified
In another state or certified by the
Pharmacy Technician Board. The
Individual musl be able to provide proof of certlllcatlon/ regis·
tratlon at the time of application ..
Con tact Perso nnel, at Pleasant.

Valley Hosp llal, 13041 875-4340
or fax to (304) 675·2447. A.AJ~EO

Poslllon Opening
Gallla -Meigs Community Acllon :
Is Seeking An Operations Dlrec· ·
tor IFtscat Officer To Work In Tht · .
Main Office. Posillbn Is Respon&lt;
sible For All Fiscal Operations Of
The Agency . Applicant Must
Have A Bachelors Degree In Accounting Or Related Field, s :
Years Account Experience, .
Knowledge Or Fund Accounting,
S'-'pervlsory Experience, Good
Organizational Skllls And An Un·
derstandlng Or Nonprofit , Ac·
counJing .
Send Resume With Three Rerer·
ances To GMCAA. 8011 272,
Cheshire, OH 45620 By J 1!13198
GMCAA Is An Equal Opportunity
Employer.
Registered Nurut
Llc.nled Practical Nui'H• and
CertHied Nursing Astl&amp;tantt
Fresh Challenges Leading to
Professional Growth I Currenlly
taking applications tor full and
part·tlme positions on all shifts.
Responsibilities irn:lude,the cfl·
reCI care ol our residents, "admln·
lstratlon and documentation,
medications and treatments.
Must be licensed and certified In
Wv. Medical, dental, vlsion 'and
lila Insurance, 40t(K) and tuition
relmburseman offered.
Quality; Commitment.. The Keys
to Our Success!
,
Ravenawood Center
20D South Aitci'lie Avenue
Ravenswood, Wv 2128-t

·(304)273-9385
A Glenmark·Genesis Facility
EOE

Addlllonai Drivers Needed lmme·
di8tely Are You Ready For Winter
RN'S TO $30,00 /HR. LPN'S TO
Driving ? ' local Family Ownec:l
$22
!HR . Immediate Need Full Or
Company "Personalized Dispatch
1 'Paid .Employee Health &amp; life In· · Part·Time, !CU . Tele,'M!S , ER.
surance; Den tal Insurance • Work In Southern &amp; Central Ohio
Home Weekends "Run OH To Requ ires t Year Minimum Veht
, Discount Prices
The South And Southwest '401K Or Hospital · E:11perlence. Call For ·
1
1
Local Interview;; October 28 th ,
·Late Model Frelght11ner Com·en·
tiona Is Requirements: Age 23, 29th . Gallipolis Holiday Inn. Call
For An Appointment 614-846- .
I Class· A COL And Good Driving
8398.
7 40·446·9416
Record. Please Call Toll Free t·
888· 790·0008, Ask Fof Garnet Or Three Fuii· Time Registered
1391 Safford
Angre.
Nurse And One Full· Time LPN
School Rd.
Pos
itions Available In Oak Hill
An
Ohio
Oil
Company
Needs
Ma·
Galllpolls, _OH
Community Medical Center's Mad
ture Person Now In Gallipqlis
/Surg Department And Long Term
Area. Regardless Experience.
Care. Ohio Licensure Required .
Write LO. Read, P.O. Box 696,
Candidate Will Ut i lize Nursing
Dayton, OH 45401 .
Process While Provldng Care. 01·
An Ohio 011 Company Needs Ma· rect /Gu ide Patient /Fa mily
ANNOUNCEMENTS
lure Parson Now In The GALLI· Teaching. And Function Within
POLIS Area. Regardless 01 Ex· Scope Of Dep{lrtmentai EJCpecta ·
per lence , Wr ite l.O . Read, P.O. tlons . It Interested. Please Send
005
Personals
ReslJme To: Oak Hill Community
8oJC 696, Dayton , OH 45401.
Medical Center, Attention: Brenda
ASK QUESTIONS,
Carpen!&amp;r· el':perlenced only In all
McKen~ie , 350 Charlotte Avenue,
CALL
PSY - phases ol reslc:lentlal work. Apply Oak Hill, Oh 45656.
in person only.' be!Ween 8·11 am.
CHICS 1·900- 740·6500 Ekl:
Monday thru Friday. Bring refer· EOE,
3596. www.thehotpages2.com/ns/
ences, Pullins El':.cavatlng. 33334
psych rct25D291.htm $3.99 /Min.
US 33. Pomeroy, 0 1'110.
Over the Road driver Needed,
18• Serv·U 619·645·8434 .
Flat bed Experience Needed!
Casting • Movie Extras Produc· Call: 304-675·5873.
Start dating tonighl l Have fun
llor:~ Trainees. Major Film Studio,
playing the Ohio Oallng Game. 1·
Two Full- Time And One Part·
614·523·9952.
BOO· ROMANCE. extensi on 90t5.
Time Cerliliad Nurse Assistanl ·
Certified Nutting Atlatants
Posi1ions Available . Candidate
30 Announcements
C8rtrlled nursing aslstants needWill Utilize Nursing Assistant
ed for facility staffing In the Rav·
Process . II lnterested ,_ Piease
New To You Thrift Shoppe
Bf'\Swood area. Competlll\18 pay
Send Resume To: Oak Hill Com·
9 !M!st Stimson. Athens
anc:lllexlble scheduling . Six
munlty Medical Center, Attention:
740·592·1842
months experience preferr&amp;CI. For
Brenda McKeozie, 350 Charlotte
Oualily clolhing and ho usehold
more Information. contact Pleas·
AVenue. Oak Hill. OH 45656.
Items . $1 .00 bag sale every
ant Valley Private Dury at (304)
Thursday. Monday lhru Saturday
675-7400, AA/EEO
EOE
9:0().5:30

Bennett Supply

AGJ~~~~~~:R~I

1

,,
I

Awnue. Gaiiip&lt;;la, 740-448-2842,

..

ROBERT BISSELL .
CONSTRUCTION

1·900-976-3339
ext. 9765

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

Antiques &amp; clean used furniture,

SERVICE
Agricultural' Lime,
Limestone • Gravel I
Dirt • Sand
'
985·4422
Cj:lester, Ohio

'

Wanted to Buy

will buy one piece or complete

DUMI;I TRUCK

'l

Get tons of free stuff
from On-Line
Services!
PI us 30 more amazing
$ecrets

-

8/25/98 2 mo. pd.

I
t
'

ON·UNE
SECRETS! ..

•Resldenilal$11.00/month
•Commercial
;Senior Citizens ·
Discount
•Dumpsters
•Monthi,Y Payments
Call tor best prices:

•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General ··
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates
No Job too Small
Brfan Morrison
(7 40) 985-3948

-.

90

10/1/1 mo.

. 10/111 1!10.

•

~
IJjf.!)tf.;J ~ "';;'
tlt!•J ·L_1_~a_o_o_.a-'ol!!9~·!!:7L!7!!!2!c1l!!U
101131, mo. d.

ELECTRIC OR

,.

'(614) 992"3838

ALL PRO
GUN SHOOT .
CARPET &amp; UPHOLSTERY ' CARPET
'
• Racine Gun Club
' PLUS
ClEANING
Nease Hollow Rd.
• Fall SpecialProfessional
3 Rooms &amp; Hall
Every Sunday
Floor Installation
$59.95
FREE ESTIMATES
12:30 pm
(Maximum 500 sq. fl .)
740-698-9114
•Limit 680 sleeve
740-378-9807
or
.Free Estimates
.737 back bore
740-698-7231

HOWARD'S
• TRI·COUNTY
SANITATION

~

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

Deslg~s

.

740·992-2068
.. .

· R. L. HOLLON
HOWARD
.
EXCAVATING CO.\ ' TRUCKING
.

Computer Graphics

"Your Computer Shop"

Joseph Jacks ·

4/21/11 lfn

Wedemeyer'p Auction service,
Gallipolis, Ohio 740·379·2720.

Dozer, Endloader,
Backhoe,
Sight Preparation,
Utility Lines,
Build Roads
..
'J
Licensed for Septic
1 (740) 367·0280

Free Estimates

Auction
. and Flea Market

Alck Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer, co mplete
auction
nrvlce.
Licensed
t66,0hlo &amp; West VIrg inia, 304773-5765 Or 304· 773-5447.

PERRY'S
CONSTRUCTION

New Roofs,
Repairs, Gutters,
Coatings, Siding,
Drywall, Painting;·
Plumbing ·

Open:
, .l
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
9:00-12:00 Saturday

.

10/14/98 1 mo.

-

Wlnler Is around

80

POMEROY, OHIO
W. VA. 1023477

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

~

I, J
,·,l

Oct. 26·28, Clifton, WV, 8·7. 8'
truck topper, bed liner, rubber bed
mat, Tonneau cover for 6 112'
bed, baby ltema, Hobart 5hp sin·
gte phase meat grinder, beauty
shop equipment and other misc.
Items, 304·773-5424.

MINIMUM PURCHASE MAV BE REOUIREO

LOtiG'S
COHSTROaiOH

A

28th,

QUALITY
WINDOW SYSTEMS

"Wftere Quality Doean 't Co1t More"
740-446-9416. 1-800-872-5967

Loralcd In the lrisurance Plus Building
ac ross

· Moving sale- baby items, kitchen
wares. lamps. Fifth Street, Racine
near doclorldentlst offices, Oct.

19 5.00 INSTALLED* ,

ANY SIZE UP ro 93 UNIRD INCHES IH
Ellsr!NG WOOD DOUILE HUNG OPENING
'OPTIONS AYAILAILI

BENNETT'S 'HEATING &amp; COOLING

.

TRUCKING

.·

(740) 4t8-8800 OR
'I"'..IQ::.72-8178

*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

~- ~ ~ ~ f.l) ~

lite

Shear lilusions welcomes
Massage Therapisl
Janice S. Haynes. B.A . L T.M
Licensed by Ohio Slate Medical Board
SHEAR ILLUSIONS
293 S. Second Middleport
740-992-2550

·

Owner: John Dean

Reasonable Rates

CALL OUR OFFICI IT

5 Parts Warranty

Free Estimates ·

BULLETIN BOARD

*9" column.Inch Sunday

ciLt. Ma: nao

.,

...

Get Your
Aero••
Wit• &amp;Dallr SeatliMI

'7" col,u~nn Inch w..k.ays

• *Free

139 • month

1:OOpm Frfcley.

·• ALCOA

ALL VINYL DOUBLE HUNG
INSULATED GLASS
TILT•IN FOR EASY CLEANING

'·

Call Now for Instant Approvalll...

New Hom&amp;s &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
[I] '!I
27 yrs. exp.I
Licensed &amp; Insured
,
Phone 740-992-3987

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

•••••1•

No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Respectl

•28 o month

'• 'Air Condl,tloners As Low As

CiJ

WORRYING!!!

, "Easy Ot•er tlte Phone Bnnk Fimmcing" ·

All Yard Sales Must Be Ptld In
Adv'anca. Deadline : 1:OOpm the
day balore the ed It to run,
Sundey &amp; Monday editiOn·

REPLACEMENT WINDOW
SPECIAL
5

-on

·10:00 a.m. Setunlay• .,

Free Estimates

.Insured

12121118 1 mo.

!

·

OHIO VALLEY PLUMBING &amp; HEAT,NG

· Roofs • Decks • Garages

No Credli • Slow Credit· Bankruptcy
Repo ·. Divorced
·

&amp;mExtrl$1$$$
HOLIDAY HELP NEEDED
.
Wilh Taking Gif1 Ordera &amp; HoJI·

1nlant Sho&amp; at PPHS FoQtbali
Field ; Size 2 White Tenn is
Shoes . Hanes Kid Wear. found

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Sldlng

CREDIT

Director or Nursmg ; Reglalered
NUJM with tour Of more .,.,.,. iW"
pervlsory nursing ••Ptrlenc•. •
provtn lraek record In geriatriC ,
nursing admlnitUaUon and a '
valid West Virg inia nursing H- .
cense requ ired . ,Knowledge qf
stall' and federal regulations end
OBRA guidelines a must . Co.,..
tact Kelll Garriton . Point Pl•as~ .
ant Nursing &amp; Aehabllilatloh
Center, State Route 62 N. Point ·
.Pleasant, wv 25550. A a.nasll
EIOercate Facirty. EOE

Flower ShOp. Call7~44&amp;-1770.

New Construction &amp; Remodeling .

1-800-809·7721

7~7261 .

Golden Lab, Pup in Camp Con~
Area . 304-875-2201

'

3 or more families $25.00 per mo.

'

..

Cosmetologist Wo~nted , Full 6
Part· Time . Hourly Versus Com•
million . Paid Vacationa. Other
Benelils Ol!o&lt;ed, Sam't,

(740) 992-2036

per mo.

$11.00 per mo.

Pan

Puppies. Beautiful, Healthyl Clean.
Well Cared For &amp; Wormed, Free
To Good 1-t&gt;rne. 7.0.256-6647

SUNSE,. HOME
CONS,.RUC,.ION
-

Businesses Save Money, Tool

~

Grve away Black Puppies
Lab. 13041-67$-6908

44087 Wlpple RQad (Five Points Area)
Pomeroy, Ohio
Nick and Eleanor Leonard

Small Dumpsters
. for

Free IUilelll. 740-992-2806.

Computer Ultra NHdtCI, Work
Own Htt. S20K -S751C f'fr 1-601).
349·7186 Ext 1173. www..1mp-:
inca&gt;m

Call Tracy 7~441-1982

SOUTHERN
OHIO
DISPOSAL
THE APPLIANCE MAN
$1 0.00
With Poly Cart

740·448-11346.

HelpWanted

60 Lost and Found ·

(Cut Out for Fut11ro Dllcount)

"Need repair on any make?"

kMng homes, 740-992·5755.
Free Firewood! Easy To Get To!
1st Come, 1st Serve, In Log Form.

. Call for appointment

Pomeroy, OH 45769

Residential Pick-up

Darling mother cat &amp; five pre·
cioua. kittens desperately SMidng

Tbne to gel ,our furna~e
ser..-ic:ed for winter

(740)992-1344

1

Residential &amp; Mobile Home
: Ajr Conditioners &amp; Heat Pumps·

~f food,

flowers , money, prayers
a smile"and a hug,. it
never he forgolten .
Special thanks 10 Dr.
lr.lml1es Stone, Dr. Mark
!Walker, Holzer 's Chemo
Hospice, VMH
Home · Health, Rev.
Butcher and Middleport
pel of · fisher's
Funeral Home . Your
! support· and kindness
' II be remembered
!forever in our hearts.
Wife- Bonnie, Dattghlterl
&amp; Son-in-law -Angel

992·2284

New &amp; Used Tires
Computer Balancing &amp; Mounting

'

·'

mental of levying 1 renewal tax

Card of Thanks

614-992-7643

1!2 Lab Mr1. Atttr 3:30PM, 740·
441 -1707

·I

Carleton 3rd day of November, 1998,

rota r d a II 0 n
and
developmental dlaablllllao
Said lllx being:•
An additional tax ol 1.a
mille at a rete not exceeding
1.a mlllo lor each one dollar
ol valuation, which omounta
t 0 1 1 ht
1 ($0 18) 1
g ttn cen 1
or
•
eoch one hundred dolloro ol
valuation, lor tlve (5) yearo.
The Polio lor oald
Elecllon will open at &amp;:30

THE FABRIC SHOP

L &amp; L Tire Barn

I

Call K1n Young
(740) 985-3551

School
and
Meigs al lhe regular plocoa ol
lndualrtea .workehop lor vollng lhtreln, lhe qu11t1on
panone

FREE ESTIMATES

Our Customers Are Special

Remodeling

:• Dryer

a John N. lhle, Chairman

Rtlolullon ol the Boord ol
County Commlaolonora ol
the County ol Melga, Melge,
Ohio, pu11d on the 27th
day ol July, 1998 thoro will
be submitted to a vote or
tha people bl aald
aubdlvlelon at a General
El action to be held In lhe
c
1
1 M 1 Ohl
oun Y 0
ega,
o, • 1
the
plac11 ol voting
on th e 3rdd ay OI
1988 • lh •
le~lng
a tax,. In
queallon
.,
axceto ol the tan mill
limitation, lor the benallt ol
Molgo County lor tho
purpose o I Ma lnt enance,
cap II a I cone t rue lion • and
operation

SITES

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Baby Gifts

• Hartwell Hares.

'

r::::=;:::::;:::::====::r==;:;;.~~~===-T-==;:::;:7,::=;~:;:::==:;-,r-=:;::======-

that In pureuance

the fun in life is in

SEVEN

Room Additions • Roofing

Birdhouses • Clocks • Frames

7 S..utilul P -. 7 W..U Old

• Singer Sewing Machine Dealer
• Sewing Cabinets, Sewing machine repair
* Dry Cleaning Service
• Scissor Sharpening • 1\Jxedo Rental
• Sign up now for,quilt classes

Garages • Replacement Windows

Toland Flags_. Camille Beckman Lotion

. • Soap •

The Fabric Shop

· New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

Antiques • Lang Calendars • Candles

Couple builds thousands of birdhouses.for love, not money

i

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •.

HARTWELL HOUSE

Sentinel

weekends and decided "if it was so
wonderful up there , we were going
to go up there to live," Mrs . Harris
says.
Harris ran a gun shop from their
Cedarville home unti'l retiring about
five years ago.
The couple look up the birdhouse
hobby almost by accident. They dis'overcd lrc e swallows nesting ·in a
tree that had been hollowed out by
woodpeckers and decided to make
, them a belter pla'e to live.
· So they built birdhouses, developing a pass ion for birds as they
went. They began photographing
them and pulling on slide shows for
local schools, churches and civic
group~ ..

7~0-~46 -

5 Beautifully Marked Kitten&amp; .

cheer C\'Cnts.
In the Junior All Star Divisions,
thC team scored _fifth out of 19
squads , just behind perennial powerhouse River Cities. Hurricane.
ALL STARS UNLIMITED cheerleaders recently picked up more awards at the Kings Island Cheer·
W.Va .. Gymtyme of Louisville, Ky.,
leading Championships.
,..
Pep CJuh .. Lexington. Ky .. and
~::.,tll'r ~{ Jn~ Cheer~ fnnn Anderson,. learn is shown as the sc,ond pla'c
ing Asso~.:iation . sc lcl:ling the ASU four teams for cheerleaders in
squad at the Nationals The Twinkle pmgran1 for more honors. Out of grades I ~ 12. For more information
, In the Youth All Star Division. Stars All Stars Unlimited team - 75 .000 \ hecr squads. the All Stars call Ru1hgcb at 446 - 9603.
tile "I""" placed - liflh place . with grades I - 3 - arc pictured standing Unlimited teams have hecn selected
on I~ two and a half points behind the with their National C h ampi o ns Ban- as one of the lop 1.000 chccrlcading
To get a current weather •
ttip !-.core .
ner and trophy. as well as hcing list- programs in the couinry. Rothgeb
For the third straight year, the All ed as National Champion~ for the said. "1l1is award speaks of the dcd report, check the
SECOND PLACE WINNER - For her unique birdllouses, berich·
Stars Un limited teams have made 1998 Caoiam lntcrnat,ional Cheer- it.:ation of our ~.:hccr lcadcrs and their
es,
slates, and signs, Terri Haynes took second in the artisan comtlic Septembe r/October issue of leading Competition.
parents. and to our goal to be the
petition
at Bob Evans Ftrrm Festival. She demonstrated her artwork
·~American Chc.crlcadcr" magazine.
Coach Becky Rothgeb recc1vcd · very hcst I hat we ~.:an he .··
lor
the
festival
visitors. Terri is pictured with Jacob Davis, left, and
On the "We did ' it!:' page, the youth notice from the National Cheerl eadThe All Stars Unlimited h ave
Dan Evans.

"We never did find out who left ·
it. Nobody ever hinted," says Mrs .
Harris, 77, who paints fan cy designs
on the houses meant for sale.
Tourists from as far away as
Florida and California have bought
lhe house s and written appreciative
leners,
The houses arc so ld for $22 at
the Pine Cone, a local · gift shop ,
Others ~aye ~een sold at the annual
· Bluebird Fest ival in Jackson to benefi t the Michigan Auduh 0 n Society,
They· vc raised $6.700 in less than a
decade for the society's endowment
fund. spokes man Bob Whiting says.
"Harry's one of those people
who has lube doing something, and
he loves bird s, so it works out a lithe
way around," Whiting says.
Raised in the Flint area, the Harri ses too~ ;t hunling trip In lhc

To GooCJ Home.

3897.

M&amp;J

tree swallows and bluebirds,. arc a
common sight around the eastern
Upper
Peninsula
village
of
Cedarville, where the Harrises have
lived since 1956.
They mount dozens each spring
along the two-lane highway that
runs through town: including one
outside the post office., arid remove,
them in fall. Harris and a friend
place more than 100 on poles in
shallow Lake Huro·n waters around
the Lc!l'Cheneaux Islands.
"You sec them along the road, in
the marshes, everywhere. It's unbe lievable, " says Bob Sherlund, man ager of Cedarville Foods.
Harris visits the slore regularly to
retrieve its castoff fruit crates. a pri mary source of wood (or birdhou ses.
Over the years. others in the area
have donated materials. Builders
provide scrap lumber. One day an
anonymous donor left 20 pails of
paint at their house.

110

Liner Trained HouM Female K1t·

'

By JOHN FLESHER
Associated Press Writer
CEDARVILLE, Mich. (APJ
Hurry and Helen Harris build houses for the birds .and sell them for a,
sung - or give them away, if
you're short of cash. Afte. all,
whaJ's a few dpllars between
frlc,nds of fowls?
, "!tell people if you 'II put 'em up
and t'ake care of them and take !hem
down in the fall and nut let them
,, •stand there and rot, you can have all
you need ," says Harry Hams, who
at age 81 can still assemble one of
1
his creations in a few minutes.
By their reckoning. the Harriscs
have made more than 5,000 bird houses in 35 years and have given
away 4.000 of them . But if their
project hasn 't been a golden egg,
neither has it cracked their bank
· , account, for they crafl the houses
entirely from secondhand wood and
nails .
The houses, designed mostly for

Giveawey

Page 9 .

'

�•

Monday, October 26, 1998

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Cro••word Puzzle
. PHILLIJ'
ALDER

ACROSS

•-ae-.

1 Crw11110 L11

T CIWglt ....
........ •

Wanted 11VAC Installer ISt NICt
Tactmlcran Mu&amp;\ Be EPA Carll·
lied , Send Rupon u To CLA
455 cio Gallipobs Oatly Tn bune
825 Th•rel Avenue Gall•pohs OH
45631

Wanted Part-Time employee lor a
local Pel Shop Pn::k Up ,i,pphca
11ons 24 13 Jackson Ave (No

Pllol&gt;o Calls)

Wa nted· Subslllule Hyglemst tor
maternity leave December 18th
th rough the second weak of Fe·
bruary Excellen t work mg cand1
uons In a moctem offiCe w•th "eat
pay Plea&amp;e ca ll 304 71'3 5620 or
send rasume to P 0 Box 38 0,
Masoo WV 25260

Work At Home
Growing Compa ny Needs Help
No w, $250 · $500 A Week , Part·
T1me. Fuii·T ime Easy &amp; Fun We
W1ll Tram No EKpenence Need·
ed SarllluS lnqunes Only 1 800
204 7048

3 Bdrm Hoose on Jay Of , ClOse
To
HMC
C1ty
scnoott
$6200000 7-40-446-6541 Of 740446-1990 Bo1h After S OOPM

3 Bedroom Home Locared On
Kelley Orl\lt Georges Creek
Road, LlvW'o&lt;) Room , Fanily Room

Kilchen 18a1h uundry

SOlS On uroo Lot Willi Plen1y 01
Troos, Largo Bad&lt; Var&lt;l

3 4 Bedrooms full dry basement,
lire place, torced air/gas furnace.
A/C fenced corner lot 36 Wind
sew Ct 304..&amp;75·7285
3 br 11vlng room chn mg room
fam ily room 1 bath central au,
newer carpel &amp; roof replacamant
w lndows family neighbo rhood
privacy fenced yard 2-tft abo~o~e
gro und pool many upgrades
mo~o~ e tn co nd
Pnc ed •n 70 s

304-675-2924 -

Business
Training

Gallipolis Career College Spr1ng
Valley Pla za 740 446 .. 367 1
800·21 4 0452, Accred ited Mem
ber, ACICS Aeg 190-05-12748

150

Schools
Instruction

Mag ic Years Day Care Pre
Sc hool spaces available eK cel
lent skills fo r your ch1lds devet
opment Call u s tor more mlorma
liOn 304-675 5847 M F 7 30-5 30

180 Wanted To Do
Ce rt1 fled day care prov1der as
s1stance ava1lable 740 742-061 2
El&amp;ctri c ma •ntenance ser vice
breaker boxes light llx
lure heat1n g s ystems &amp; More
304 674.0126
W~r~ng

Fun)llure repa1r rertn lsh and res·
torat1on also custom orders Oh1o
Valley Ret l mshl ng Shop Larry
Phillips 740-992-6576
Georges Portable Sawmill, don 1
haul your logs to the mtu just call
304 675 1957
(
t

Have 2 Open lngs For 24 Hour In
ttome Care Of Elderly Or Handl
capped 740 441 1536
Mature christian lady will babysit
In your home dapendaDie exce l
lent references 740 742 2091
Will care for the elderly Day or
N1ght I Have EJC perlence and
References (304)675-7961

FINANCIAL
210

Buslne88
Opportunity
INOTICEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus I
ness with people you kn ~ w and
NOT to send money th rough the
mall until you have 11nvestlgated
the otlerlng

AMERICA'S 11 CO OPENED
UNITED KINGDOM Ground
Floor Opportunity Unlimited Ae·
zldqle Income Friends? Re l a·
tl11es? You? Free Msg 888 571

8753

VENDING Profitable • Easy Call
For FrM Brach &amp; Prepd Calling
Card 800-820·6782

230

Professional
Services

D &amp; A Home Repair Free Es
tlmate D Oodrlll Owner J Ad
klns Manager 740-386 9638
Llvlngslon's Benment Weter·
Proofing all basement repai rs
done free estimates llfet me
guarantee t2yrs on job eJCperl
ence 304-89&amp;-3887
Livingston'• Be. .m'8nt Water·
Proofing, all baseman! repairs
done lree estu'nate s l•le t lme
guarantee 12yrs on job expert
Pnce 304-89&amp;-3887
Storm Damage ? Need Bids For
Insuran ce? Call Christian &amp; Sons
Construction We Do Roofing
Sid ing /Windows Awnings Gutter
,;nd All Type s Of Bulld l.ng And
Hgme Improvements Over 20
Years E!o:penance And
eren ces We Have Crews

able Call740 968 5835

Beorooms, I 1/2 Ba1hs, LA

tti1s newspaper 1s suOjectto
the Federa l Fa1 r Hous1ng Act
of 1968 which makes 11 •ll egal
to advert1se "any prelerence
I m1ta110n 9r a•scnmmat•on
based on race colm religiOn
sex lam11at status or nat•onal
ongm or any 1ment•on to
ma~e any such preference
llmtta!IOn or d scnmmat1on
ThiS newspaper w111not
know•ngly accept
ad11ert1Sements for real estate
WhiCh IS In VIOla! On Of the
law Our rea ders are hemby
1nformed that all dwellings
advert1sed 1n th1S ll8wspaper
are available on an equal
opponun~ty b&lt;~sls

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes for Sale
'A Lil lie Coun tr y In Town' Pn ce
red uced large restored lllctor lan
home si t ua ted on 12 acre s VII·
lage ol Middleport Secluded and
pr 1va te close to sc hools and
ch urc hes Pr1vate brick c1 rcu tar
drive brick patio modern k: tchen
family room wlftreplace 3· 4 bed
rooms two baths large formal LA/
OR la rge Ioy e r lo ur or igi nal
st ain e d glass wmdo ws 30
minu te s \ ~o m Athen s 15 20
mlnute.s fro m Ga lli polis For a p
pointmenl call 7 40 992 5696

1192-6227 Snytrnl

RENTAL S

1990 14x70 mobile home. two
bedrooms one bath appl•anco,
central air Included, must move,

7.-o-667-6630

112 baths, washer &amp; dryer, sfove,
refngerator, central air laB out
side building Immediate posse&amp;·

""" 7&lt;0-992-6582
1993 Clayton 1-4X70. 2 bed·
room s 2 Full Baths Osume The
loan 304-875--1!53

410 Housel for Rent

~wide

Dream Homes
On~ S999 Down 6 Ill!% 1n1eres1
Rate Free SateHite Ci1sh w/Pur

OntyotOo-Homoo

FA /Firepla ce Corner Lot 1 1/4
Acres Sm Orchard, 2 Car Ga
rage Heated W/ Shop Bcrrn
Buildmg Heat Pump CA Deck
Natural Gas Co Water Cheshire
OH $85 000 Good Fam1!y Hon'le l
74 0 367 7401 1 BOO 835 0726
Ext 367
6yr 2· 3 bedrooms. Jolt, tongue/
groove pellet stove HP/CA ap·
pllances garage spa. acre BuJa

lillie Pille, 740.3eH28e

By · Owner (Relocated) 3 Bed
room s Brick /VInyl, New Vinyl &amp;
Deck Great Cond1t1on, 2902 An
n!ston Drive Point Pleasant, WV
Price Lowered To Upper 70 s Will
Cons1der Renting 304· 675· 4054

Nftro, WV.

304-755-5116
2 Bedrooms 2 Baths 14)170

bile Home Gas Heat, 740 245

5628

S· Bedrooms 3· baths with over
2 OOOSQ It Under $350t mo 1·
800-251 ·5070
5 Bedrooms, 3 Baths With Over

2,000 Sq Ft , Undet 1350/Mo

304-45&amp;-183S

I

800-251 - 5070
8x30, o ne bedroom fi.;l l bathm
kitchen. stove relngerator and
lurnace $1500 7-40-742-8282

ABANDONED HOME
3BA Assume Loan
, low Monthly Payments
Financing Av1lllbll

(Lon )Or 740 44Hlt35 (l&lt;sm)
BY OWNER

6 Mit es N of Bulfato 1n Maso n
Co 1f2 mile oil At 62 Brtck
ho me on 10 acres W12 400sq ft
l1v 1ng spa ce overs i zed doubl e
garage 3 large bedr ooms, 2
baths large family room w/llre
place bonus room large utility
room, new carpet ceramic tile In
baths &amp; kitc hen newer heat
pump &amp; app li ances Large rear
deck 24 above ground
very private but convlently I
ed on black top road wlcity water
Price $1 39000
C11t torappt

Mo~

304· 755-5566
Double Wide New $999 Down
$237 per mo Free delivery &amp; set
up 1 801).691..fJ777

E·Z Finance

,
Renters &amp; 1st Time Buyers
2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms

Under $2001100
1-800-251-5070

Easy Finance. Renters &amp; 1st
Home Buyers We Have 2 &amp;
3 Bedrooms Around $200 Month,
limited Time Only! 1 800 251·

5070

3 bedroom, m Chester, new fur·
nace up dates, references &amp; de
posit requ ired 614 501 8339 after
6pm

3 Bedrooms In Rodney , 4 Bed·
rooms In Bidwell 740·379·2540
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths $300/Mo •

304-736 7295

Re nt 3 Bedroom one bath Ap·
pie Gro~o~e Wv HUO Approved,
Wate ri Sewer Pd $320 DepoSit ,
$320 Month (740)247 2575

1 ·S BEDROOM HOMES FROM
14,000 Local Gov't &amp; sank
Repo's Cal l 1·800· 5-22 ·2730. X

1709
House lor Renl wllh option to.,
buy 4 bedroom, 1/2 baths, 1 car
garage fenced In yardl Central
a•rl heat washer!Oryer Hook· up
Lg Deck Stove. Refrlg, Dlshwa·
ter lu(nished S52! Plui Deposit

(304)67S.7873

House For Rent 2 Bedrooms 1 1i
2 Baths Full Basement Patriot
740 379·2882, 740-379-2855
Nice 2 or 3 bedroom house in Pomeroy no pets 740-992 5858
Pomeroy four bedroom HUD WI
0 newly remodeled, near play·
ground relerences SID can 740·
992-6885 after 5 30pm
Small House For 1 Or 2 People
Hud Accepte&lt;l 740-446-0974
Three bedroom house near the
locks at Apple Grove on At 2 No
HUD available 1111198 304·575

2642
420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

By owner three bedroom fenced
yard pool douDie lot m Galllpo
Its Ferry call 304·675 1105 alter
6pm

Large selection of used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Starting at $2995
Quick delivery Call 740 38!·

1 Bedroom Trailer In Gallipoli s
Nice Yard &amp; Porch $250/Mo
$200 Oepos1t, Releren ces Re
qulred 740-1446-9342

Cunningham Realty Broker 372·
5969 Jackson/Mason Co line to~
calion "Mint condition· 5yr old
bnck ranch on mostly level 4 6
acres 3 car garage • workshop
formal living &amp; dini ng canning
kitchen/ utility/pantry
fully
equipped kitchen St79 000
Tombleson Run 4 46 acres-+/ 1/
4 mile on rlgiht $21,000

Mobile Home older Model Trailer,
furn i Shllld Pus Washer/Dryer

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, a1r
conditioned $260· $300 sewer
water and trash Included, 740·

9621

(304)675·4b75

New 14x70 $500 Oown $199~per
mo Free a ir. skirt 1·800·691

e1n

NEW 14x80 3BR
GLAMOUR SATH
St99 Month Only AI
OAKWOOD HOMES
NITRO,WV

Home lor sale three bedroom
one bath niCe home, priced right

304-755-5885

740-949·3226

House In Middleport three bed
room bath and 112, $59 000, price
negotiable call740-992 3465
Newly Remodeled 3 Bdrms 2
Baths Brick Ranch LA FA OR
Hardwood Floors New Carpet
Custom Buill Oak Cabinets and
Mercerville
Trim Throughout
Area 740·256·6577
Nice one floor plan home at 197
Mulberry Ave Pomeroy 2 bed
room dining room kitchen living
room tlath &amp; sun porcn suitable
for a den or office, lull basement
big window a1r cond itioner good
relrlgerator &amp; stove go with prop
arty suitable lor your residence
or an exce llent rental un it

$23 500, 740 992 S292
RED BRICK RANCH Style

New 16x80 $500· Down S245·per
mo Free air, skirt 1·800·691·

em

New 1998 t4JC70 three bedroom,
IncludeS 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes sk ir ting. deluKt sttPI
and setup Only $187 08 per
month with $1075 down Call t

600-837·3236
NEW BANK REPOS
ONLY3LEFT
Still In Warranty
OWNER FINANCING
.t.VAILABLE
304·7155·5885

Repo s For Sate, 2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms
Qualify By Phone, 1·800·251-

5070

REPO'SI
For Sale
2 &amp; 3 Beclroom

House Excellent Cond ition Par~
tial ly Finished Basement 2 Car
Garage, Serious Inquiries Onlyll
740 446-3385
Right In Cadmus Great Location l
1/2 Acre MfL 3 Bedroom House 2
Baths Living Room Dining Room
Nice Porch 1/2 Basement W1th
Good Dry Concrete Floor, Nice
Big Shop Plus A Gbod Garage
Top Notch Garden Barn Has 1
Horse Stall Plus A l.lttle Pasture
County water And Well Good
Furnace In Basement For Heat
Priced Just Right! Roman 0
Hershberger 155B5 State~ Route
141 Patriot OH 45558
New br ick Ranch 3 bedroons •
2 bath Oen
2·car garage, plus
storage area All Ecectrlcl 1 ~
level acres $1 27 500 304 675·

$500 Down on any 14JC70 In
stock limited number, tree dellv·
ery Caii1 ·80D-691-6T77
$999 Down on any 9B model
Ooublewlde In stock Free Oallv·
ery Gall 1 800 891 S777
Aband o ned Home Ta ke Over
Payments Or Make Ollar 1 800

383 6862

121160 Holly Park With 12x1 6 man
u laclured add on room SS 900
740 985 3564
1406 95 Wesl Indies mobil e
hOme two bed room , two Dath
central air 74Q-9§2·5428
1963 Windsor. 1011.56 two bed·
roo m very good condition must
move I rom Long Botto m Ohio,
304 675 B7B2
1969 Co mmu nity mobile nome
12x5 6 asking $2 300 740 84 3
53 10 days or 740 943 51 47 alter
61)m
1971 Hlllcrest 1 12x60 two bed ·
roo ms wa sher dryer stove &amp; ~e ·
lr lg era tor air under pi nning
$4500 740 992 5039
197 4 14x70 K•r kw ood Mobile
Home 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath Total
Ele ctr ic Heat Pump 740 367

7104
198 7 Clayto n 3 Be d rooms 2
Baths Cen tr al Air Gas Heat
Great Condl tlonl740 388 8475
1988 OakwoOd 14X 70 2 Full
Baths 2 Bedrooms Heat Pump
Ve ry
Goo d
Cond ition
$ 11 5 00 0 0 Negotia bl e! (304)

n3·5t03

Ouallly by phone
1·800·251 5070
Aepoed Double Wide On Lot,

304·73e·7295

House trailer on Brood Flun Ad 2
Mites !rom Sporn Plant 3br H/2
baths 2 added on rooms lot, gerage 2 A/C s household Items

$17 000 304·682·3426

Wa Finance Land &amp; Home With
As little As $500 Down 1 B06·
928 3426

340

Bualneaa and
Buildings

story commercial
tor sale 505 Mulberry Helonts,
Pomeroy cedar siding basement
ale hlp, $150 000 740·992·6288
Commercia l Office or Retail 87
Mill St Middleport 1 450 Sq Ft
$400 mo Corner Building 740·
992·6250 Acquisitions (neJCi

992 2167

2 And 3 Bedroom Mobile Homes
on McClaskey Ad Stove Refrigerator, Water And Trash Pald No
Pets $300 00 And $350 00 Plus
Oapos1t 740·3B8~9686 After

5 OOf'M 740.368 6371

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, $200/
Mo Deposit 9 Miles Out State
Route 218 Gallipolis 740·446·

8172 740 2S6-6251

2 bedroom traiJ!t If\ Aac!lie good
ntlghborhood, carport &amp; porch
S300 pe r month, $300 deposit
reference• reQuired, 740~949·

2217

2 bedroom trailer In Tuppers
Plains, $200 per month plus de·
posit &amp; uti\IUes. 740·667·3487
2 bedroom tra i ler ln Racine, 3
bedroom trailer In Middleport no
pets, 740-992·5858
2 Bedroom Trailer In Small Trailer
Park Deposit and Retrences Re·
qulred No Pats 740-446 1104
2 Bedrooms $375/Mo Plus Ullll·
ties &amp; Deposit, No Pets. 740·446·

4313 740·446-0679

2 Bedrooms 14x70 Mobile Home

$400/Mo , $400 Deposit 7l O
245·5626
14x70 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths In
Crown City In Quiet Neighbor·
hood, References 740·256·1968

1 38 Acres laval WI12Ft X 60Ft
Mo bile Home 24X24 Garage
9FtX.10Ft Storage Bui lding

$3e 000 00 740 388 8884

5 Acres with 2 Mobile Homes m
Mason County
4 Builde ns
$30 000 Co ntact Lee (304) 532

0646

61acres· good bu iiOing sites, 10
minutes !rom town public water
owne r
llnanc tng
ava1labla
$26 500 304 675~59 11
Appr011imately 3 5 Acres Perry
Twp For Sale 740 446·4609 or
740-446-1104 Afte r 5 OOPM
Commercial Or Aesldenll81 Triple
Lot With In co me In C10wn Clty
On Route 7 $53 500 740 256
1426
Flat acre otf Jerlj' Run Ready for
building! Apple Grove Mobi l
Home t 2 X6 5 sm o ke and soma
wate r damage Inside New Fur

nacel (304)576 2690

Sc e nic Valley at Ap pl e G rove
wv Bu•l d lng to t s s ngl e wldes
pub liC water 20
acc epted
minu tes !rom new Bu11alo Bndge
on Jerry s Ru n Ad Clyde Bowen
Jr 304 576-2336
Several 5 acre parcel• re mote
beautiful land Meigs Countv SCI·

p10 Twp SR 692 iju51 off SA 143)
owner llnaocing ($1800 per acre )
Call for good map 740 .593 8545
Vacant lot In Middlepo rt 75K1 20
deect restnct1ons 740 992t2l26

Nice Clean 2 bedroom referenc·
10yer -Upl 304-87s-

w.-

poii 74(1.44U893

Grubb 1 Plano· tuning &amp; repairs
ProblerM ? Need Tuned? Call the
pl81'10 Dr 7~52..5

No~ Taking Appl;cat1ons - 3!5

Qne bedroom apartf!'lent In M1d
dleport all u11111ie&amp; paid, $tOO de
pos1t $270 month call 740·99 2·
78068am-5pm

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nished and unfurnished se curity
deposit required no pets 740

992 2216

1 Bedroo m Eco nomic al Ga s
Heat WID Hook Up Near Clnerna
$2791Mo Plus Utilities Depos 1t &amp;
L.ease ReQuired 740 446·2957
2bd rm apts total el ec tr iC ap
pllances turnis hed laundry roo m
faclhlles close to school In town
Applications available at Villag e
Green Apls N4 9 or call 740 992

371J EOH
BEAUTIFUL APARTM ENTS AT
BUDGET PR ICES AT JACKSON
E ST-.TES 52 westwo o d DriVt
from S279 to $3!:&gt;8 Wall\ to shOp
&amp; movies Call 740 44 6· 2568
Equal Housing Opportunity
Furnished 4 Rooms &amp; Bath Com
ptetely Redeco rated Clean New
Carpel No Pet s Or Smoking Rei·
e rence &amp; Deposit Required Al so
Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Up·
stairs 740 44&amp;- 1519
Furnlst1 ad Up stairs Apartment
C lo se To Downt ow n Ga llip olis
Also 3 Room Cottage Aetrences
And Deposit 740 446 11 58
Gra c1ous living 1 and 2 bedroom
apar tme nt s at V1ll age Manor and
Riverside Apartments 1n Mid dle
port From $249 $3 73 Ca ll 740
992 5064 EQual Housi ng Oppor
tun Illes
La fayette Mall Gallipolis 2 Bed
roo m s 2 Baths All Utilitie s In
el uded $4 50/ Mo Dep os it Re
qulrad 740.441 · 1005

Kenmore gas dryer $50 740

992·3575

Kitchen Cabinet&amp;. Cooktop Sink
Range Hood lor sale Remode ling
See Before Remo ved 740 446

One Bedroo m Apa rtment , Fo r
Aent In Rio Grande 74 0 245
0114 After 6 PM

0418

Primest.r· $49 insta llati on only
S25 99 per month , free bonus
800 263 2640

One bedroom apt m PI Pleas ·
ant furn ish ed edra nice &amp;
clean No pets 304 675-1386

Qullung Machme &amp; B1nd er (S1ng·
er) Excellent Cond lt•on, $2,700

One b edroom furn ished apart
men1 In Middleport 74 0 992
9191

74d 643-2562

Aed &amp; white concesskln trailer w/
cotton candy &amp; tunnel cake ma·
chine fountain drinks etc Meets
health dept req u iremen ts/ sup

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bed room s 2
Floors CA., t 112 Bath Fully Car·
paled PatiO No Pets Lease Plus
Security Deposit Requ lretl 740

pll.. S6 000 304-682 2246

446-3481
AP7 AVAILABLE NOW

SALE·Kitcl'len Cabinets 63%0FF
list prtce If pu rcha sed by the end
of October Free In home est •·
mates Tn County D lstnBu tors
Inc 1 80().352 3147

Tw1n Rivers Tower now accepting
app lications lor tbr HUO subs1d
•zed apl for elderly and handl·

capped EOH 304 675 6679
450
Furnished
Rooms

SATELLITE SYSTEMS 16' RCA
Dish $19 99 pe r Month Ask
Ab o ut Free Programmmg No
Credit Check From 8 OOAM

9 OOPM 1 8Q0.32S.7636

C1rcte Motel Lowest Rates ln
Town, Newly Remodeled HBO
Clnemax Showtlma &amp; Disney
Weekly Rates Or Mpnthly Rates
Con&amp;tructlon Workers Welcome
74()..441 ·5698 740.441 ·5167

Slate Shingles 22"JC11" 740·441 ·

1983

Super Smgle Waterbed W1t h
Heater And Chest 01 Drawer s

Co nd $6 0 0 0 740
Wanted· advertiSing collectibles
Coke Pepsi etc lnclud1ng old tin
signs 740 992 5053

Mobile home slte available bet
ween Athans and Pomeroy c:all
740..385-4367

490

For Lease

Equipped beauty shop ale heat·
ed &amp; ready to go 740·992·5370

MERCHANDISE
510

Household
Goods

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers Ranges Aelrl·
gratbrs 90 Day Guarantae l
French City Maytag 740 446

.t.gco-AIIIa Spoclo1

Tractor 5670 63 PTO H P. 4
wheel dr iv e, world famous aN'~
cooled d iesel eng lna Goodyear
Rad1a1 ures all 4 wheels, lnde
pendant 540 and 1000 PTO Hy·
draull c we t disc brakes ~~~ 4
wheels , D•lferential lock front &amp;
rear dua l hydrau lic remotes .
ROPS an&lt;t Canopy 1t~1116 Trans·
m1ss1on fully sync hro nized for·
ward &amp; reverse shuttle z inc
coated sl'laet metal , 4 year or
4000 hour dr•ve t ra in warranty
Check your JO MF FNH or CIH
dealer a nd see how tong thty
warranty there drl~o~a lraln Keef~
er's Service Center St FH 87 Pt
Pleasan1 &amp; R1pley Ad Leon WV
25123 304·895·3874
Wa nted To Buy · 350 CheVy En·
740 44 1052
Qlne
6Your Are a Jo hn Deere Dealer
For Re si dential And Commercial
lawn 'E Quipment Compact Utility
Trac tors From 20 To 39 HP All
S1zes 01 4 WD And 2 WO Farm
Tra ctor s Hay Equipment John
Deere Sk1d Steer Loaders Check
With Us AbouJ F i nan ci ng On
Lawn Tractora~And Low Rate Fl
nan ctng On New And Used
Equipment Carmichaels Farm &amp;

Building
Supplies

Pets for Sale

Featunng Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad
740-446 0231
AKC Aeglster&amp;d Chinese Pug
Pups, 2 Males 3 Fema les All
Fawn Co lored $250 740·446~

4816

AKC Registered mini dachshund

pups 740·992·9969

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

AKC Registered Yellow laD Pups
1st Shots &amp; Wormed $250 Each
740 256-6733

1

Now Open ·sundays 1·4 Mon Sat
11 ·6 Fis h Tank &amp; Pet Shop
241 ~ Jackson Ave Point Pleas·
ant 304 675 2063
CKC St Bernard puppies 1 male
1 female b o rn 71 9/98 sh ots
wormed $175 74 0 9 49 2052
740 949·2225

16 11 wood Garage Door with
Hardware Make and offer (304)

Doberman Pm scher pupp1es 6
wks old p&lt;,lrents on premise s
$100 740992-411 1

675 5696

2 Baby Car Seats &amp; Stroller
Black Window Shutter 63' Long
Also 46" Long 740 245-5064

HAPPY JACK TRIVERMI~DE
Re coQn lzed Sale &amp; Etfectlve By
US Canter For Velern lnary Medl
cine Agamst Hook Round &amp; Ta·
pewo rms In Dogs &amp; Ca ts Avail
able 0 T C J 0 NOFITtf PRO·

29 People Wanted
To Get Paid SSS For
The Pounds Or Inches
You WUI Lose In The Next
30 Days. All Natural /Qauranteed
Call Tracy At740-441·1982

OUCE 740·446·1933 BROWNS
TRUSTWORTHY HOWE 1740
446 882B
Inc com)

3 112 ton Bryant heat pump with
10KW20 electric furnace good
condition $7d0, 740-992 3102

Male Boxe r Puppy 7 weeks old
AKC Regi stered Fawn S ~ :i O 00

(304)695 31 17

5)!8 utility traller w•th wooden side
and tUI bed $450 740 992 4144
after Spm

French C 1~ Pet Groo ming by Ap·
pol ntment • Ullra Wash Bathing
Syatem ' 650 Second A11e Galh
poll s 740-446· 1528

Large Rocking Horse. Baby bed
High cha1r, Swing Stroller Car
Seat 304 675 454B

Poodle puppies tlny wh1te males,
shots and wormed 74D-667 3404

aeanle Babies Currant &amp; Retired
San ta 98 Teddy Ze ro Loo sy
Roam Britannia Bears Call after

Rabbi t Beag le s for sale! (304)
675 2t 33

5pm (304)675·7223

S heltle Pupp ies 6 We eks Old
Also Pygmy Billy Goal 740 3B8

Chu rch paw s for sale 12 twelv e
fo ot 4 ten foot $200 aach 74 0

9971

949·2217

Siber ian Huskey Pupp1es Pure
Bred Blue Eyes $50 00 Each
Al so Regis tered Femal e Large

Co me Get You r Cu t To Lengt h
Sla b Firew ood At The Saw mill
Just Outside Of Patriot On Pat riot
Road $15 A Pi ck Up Load Buy
One Gat The NeKt One Free
Thru Oct

Sized $tOO oo 740 446 8627
570
Musical
Instruments

K1 mDall Splnnet plano Call alter
2pm 304 675 1879

Ele ctr ic Scooters Wheelchairs
New And Used Stairway Eleva·
tors Whee lchair A nd Sco oter
Litt s Bowma l} s Homecare 740
446 7283

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Elvi s McCormick Decan ters Still
Sea le d, Al so Elvi s Re cords
Bo oks Doll s Etc Call 740 682·

7694

610 Farm Equipment
FIREWOOD

1020 John Deere wide front end
gas good co ndl!iOn $2 BOO 740·
247·2961

Cut Split Delivered! Jared 740

446-6566 Chad740 446 1271

I

~,

740-742 2367

TRANSPORTATION
710 Autos for Sale
1969 Bronco. excellent condition

$5 000. 740·949·2217
1980 ·1910 HONDA CARS 1100
-$500 Po ll ee Impounds All
Makes Available Call 1 800..522·
2730 E!o:l 4420
1982 Cutlass Supreme 2 D 260
V8 Good Condit ion $1 500 00
Firm 740 992 4558
1984 Cavalier excellent condl·
tlon $1100 740·378·9806
1986 Mercedes 190 E Nice car
second owner $6 80 0 304 675

6539

1987 Ford tempo $700 00 304 ·

375 6339

1988 Bonneville LE maroon 4dr
new !Ires &amp; brake s dood ~ond
$3 200 304 675 5792 after 5pm
199t Chevy Caval erAS co nvert·
ible red with white top, very clean
e11ery 3 0 00 miles maintenance
performed am/lm cass new tires
98 000 miles auto asking $3 950
74 0 94 9·2 3 1 1 days 740·949·
2644 91/es

10 lr a

11 .,..,....

1

FRIED CHtCkEN OR

POlk CHOPS ??

31c
.••
37

Pua
Pua

Slor8ge .,._

Palo
Allpou

By Phillip Alder
Allhough you gel out of 11 lhe
same way every day, there have probably been 11mes when you have mut·
tered the famous "wrong s1de of the
bed" phrao;e
F1rst. look al only West's hand.
You are on lead agamst six clubs. The
declarer on your nght has opened two
clubs, strong, an1fic1al and fon:mg
North responded two d1amond•, 1he
negattve reply showmg fewer than
e1ght potnts. South reb1d three clubs,
h1s pnma11)' sun. Nonh ra1scd to four
clubs South cue-b1d four d1amonds,
he's probably got the ace. North cue·
bid four hearts, which, gtven your
hand. probably shows a singleton, bul
perhaps a v01d South cue-b1d four
spades Nonh Jumped to the slam.
Which card do you select?
Underslandably, West led the heart
ace Bul now the slam wa• unbeat·
able Declarer ruffed h1s three heart
losers in the dummy and !hscanled
the spade four on dummy's diamond
kmg
A spade lead is falal. Declarer can
wm with the ace, cash the dtamond
ace, play two rounds of ltumps to gel
mto lhe dummy, and discard hts
spade four on the d1amond ktng. Yet
now he has only two tru!llps lefl m
the dummy for three heart ruffs, he
loses two heart tricks
A trump lead looks good too If
declarer wms, cashes the d1amond
ace, and euts w1th a bean, East Gan
wm and reiUm ~1s second trump.
However, South ha• a counler He
exits wnh the heart queen at trick
three. wh1ch forces West to win the
lnck
After the deal, West commented,
" Bndge 1s 'not a bed of roses."

8e Ford F 150, 302 Fuel Injected ~
Auto Tr&amp;n$ Air, Rebuilt Trana.a
Go od Body $2,600 ( 304)899'~
32370f895-3237

Motorcycles

t983 Honda Odyuey 250 LoiS
Of New Parts Runs Good With
Extra Parts Odys&amp;ey 740·44,..

•

THE BORN LOSER

•

1991 Honda CR125 Completely
Red o ne Ra ce Ready $1 600 ~
740 446·7375

P"I WONDU:.IF 'ffiu:£ I~"'
51J~T 6roUf' ~ ~N
(.0'::£~?

condition $2 5QO (304) 895·3080,
or (304)895·3237
,
750 Boatl l .tototors
for Sale
1990 Stra1ot 20 Ft Fish &amp; Ski,
17! HP Evimude, Call For Detail~
Best Offer 740 245-9109

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

BuOget Priced Transmlsslarfi
and Engines. All Types Accet{il\
To Over 10 000 Transmissions!
740 245-5677
• ~~~

.)

30 HntillfM

for

~'~•

38-depj'unw
41

81._
Tom-

Opening lead: ??

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Cornlll
24Sencl
25 LodgH
21 Cl'llld'o

block""
28~··

42Upon
43Pu--

'

19 98 Ford Winds tar GL v.i.n
52 190 mile s red metallic with
gray mterlor non smoker. frVreqr
ale, tlll wheel , cruise stereo ask
lng $13,400 OBO. 740·949·2311
days 740-949·2644 ave&amp;
:

23::::
building-

Eat

t995 8-10 Blazer 4114 Low Mllef
Garage Kept Loaded Must See,
740.256-1222
...
•

B•ilrCI
44 ............,.
(2-)
45 l&gt;ovlnt otone

47 Tennllllrm

.~1Ted-

48 Plelno lndlon
!IOIMrW

;wtwork

52 Quobec town,
VII54 ...

-n--

mouM?

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campo•
c..tdy Clfll'* ar::l1n11are ctMted fn:lm quo&amp;atlona by lwnc:M.M P«JP'e put and prnet14
Elch
In . . c:ipMf .tlndllor anot.r Todq• clue X~ 8

PZZ

~

A CUI

XEZELJNPZ.

PLY

PTU

PACZUAUK

RTS

KRUPM

(c

RTSHPLEAI . '

R

CSFMUI

HPDU

CBBU

z·p

IUT)

p

zz

ULJZEKC
SH

JSTVEU

'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'The truth of the maHer Is lhal muggers are very
lnteraotlng people • - (Brllllh film director) Michael Winner

sca~Q{llA-~~tfis· tAM I
---:
, - - - - 141lo4 loy ClAY I . POllAN _,;..._ _ __

WOll

111A1 tAlLY
PIIZLII

R~rrange ~tters of
0 tour
ICrambl~ words

low 10 form four

~mple

tht

be-

word1

'A D G A M E

G I R D'N

r

r

1

.~ 1• I, I

-rrE_Lr.G-r-E_,or-"i,o'"...,:::,,

.

~

1

L U0 N0 F

II---.,-..,,. .

A great Statesman once
sa1d, "The right to be left alone
is the be!31nnmg of • • • • • • • '

IQ

-,1'17,....;TI...;_T"--I

•

New gas tanks &amp; body parts Q &amp;.
R Auto Ripley WV 304·312·
3933 or 1 800 273-9329
~

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

.

.

Complete tho chuckle quoted

by flll1ng In the m•ss•ng words
" " ' - ' ' - - ' - - - ' - - " - - ' ' - - ' you develop from slep No 3 below

.

790

• n.w..,w.-

12 Feminine oulllx
11 •• boll21 Claolly
22 Long lot
oomethlng

rlvol

There are
days like this

760

Hay &amp; Grain

• 8oiNI .

211 Meny (2 -

1995 Citevrolet TahOe .tx4 E~~
ceuent Cond ition, 44 ,000 Mllea,
Garage Kept . Loaded! Oougl.ae
Flurryon 7.W.:4lia-1272
:

Round Bales Of Hay Stored In
Barn 740 245 5117

6

Pau
Pau
Pau
Pau

:

Large Bales of Hay $11 00 each!
304·675· 1365

640

SUPPER, PAIAII-"

1988 JMp Cherokee Limited, 4 0
L power everyth•ng. AC 4 wheel
dr ive , CO playtr $4200 080,

Summers not over! Kawasjlkl
STS Jet ski &amp;1111 under warrant)',
three seater, 83 hdtsepower,'
bought new July of 97 three
matching t&lt;awasakl ski 11ests and
trailer all g~ wlth It Priced to sell,
$4200 740·949·2203 or 740.9..92045 will co nsider tr ade lor a
good pontoon heat

Registered Angus Built
Months Old 740·388 9708

WHAT DO YOU WANT FER

304-875-6539

Custom Slaughter and ProcessIng Deer process ing and sum·
mer sausage WV Sausage Co
907 4th St New Haven, WV 304
882·3194

:14--. 7.._

.

r r I' r 1• I' I~ I
TO I
IIIII
II
•

•

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS

•

UNSCIAM8lf lETTUS
GfT ANSWER

IN THfSE SQUAUS

I

1983 Motor Home Chevy Chassis Self Contained Generator, 2
"'Gas Tanks A/ C A·t Condition
74Q-367 7093 or 740·367·7070

SCIAM·LETS ANSWIRS
Eulogy· BanJO - Fetus • Gender· OLD ONES '
"Life Is a teacher,· the professor lectured, "that gives
you new problems before you've solved the OLD ONES"

1985 Coachman Slide In Camper,
Air, Furna ce Holding Tank Re
frlgerator Water Heater Stove 4
Hydraulic Jack, Tape Playe r,
Good Condition $3 500 740·256·

6036

1992 Terry 26ft Oak Dlnnet/ Cab
lne t s, CA Cente r Heat Ml·
crowave Twin Beds ~ Excel Con:'
dillon 304-773-5996
!
91 Motor Home 460 Ford Engtn8.•
30 000 ml Loaded Super Clean.:
Demeo Kar Kaddy 11 Tow Dolly
304·675·2915
For Sale 28 Ft Camper PriCe Re- .
ducqd Also 18 Ft Nomad 740· ,
i
245-9613 7 40-446·9833

(www- happyjacl&lt;

Happy Jacks Pet Ba t h-G roo m
2 201 Jackson Ave PI Plea s
ant Wv (304)675 2696

42' van Base W ith Fo rmica Top
Sink Fa ucets And Medicine
Cabinet Excelle nt Cond ition
$1 00 00 Call 740·446·2510

ooo,

1985 Harley FXFI cuslomlze(f
!owrlder severa l trophys, too
much to llat l 1 000 miles no
reasonable olfer refused for Info

Baby pigs for sale 740..949·2908

Bo;;lbec;k

5 ...., lbllr.
I Bille II clly

I

351MW
31 01 I ,..,.,
40 Figure of

z

WHI

1.S00.290-2262, X 3901 .
1985 Ford 4x4 4 S~eed V 6,
Price $3
740 367- 0219,
740-3&amp;7·7272

~1

Livestock

Billy Mid ldn
33 ....... 1 •
¥01c81Mt

Dealer: South

All~~":

1982 Kawasaki 750 CSA nsw
rings, head gasket. new paint job
must s&amp;e $1800 74CH42·8282 •

Rom on

8oodll

a Moth uun
'D~-­
4~
aant.n~c•

•AKQJI04

1i90 · 11MK»Truc:kl$100 -$500

Stock Cam &amp; Carb For 87TAX

CO

9 J I 7 S
eQJlOI
•• 5
• A 4
1
•
Q 10 •

(n•r11011:1a)
2 - . - """'

Vulnerable. Both

Wanted I Troy Butt! Tiller With
Electric Start 740-441·1013

A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques
I 124 E Main Street, on AI 124
Pomeroy Hours M TW tO 00
a fTl to 600 pm, Sunday 100 to
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Rus s
Moore owner

730 Vana &amp; 4-WOI

740

oo

::-·&gt;IJ

• A

24 12 1·800·594!1 11

we pay Too Pncea for Timber

•KQZ

•I

Lawn Gallipolis OH 740·446·

BUYINGDMREALANDB

Eul

9 AK I 4
•• 54 2

15.000 080 7&lt;0-742·2370

1. c.:.:..:.:c..c..:::..::._____

~

DOWN
1....,.,_

......

23~ ....

• J •• 5

.'

93 Ford ~anger )(LT. 87,000'
miles. lOoks new runs like new '

96 Yamaha :150 Wamler. Exc

pte'S 4 females I male $200 $50
deposit will hold till ready to go 3
black.&amp; tan.:2 red, 740·992·3265

Wllh Scope 740-446 7730
530
Antiques

K I 7J
• I 7S2

XLT

wanted to buy Mason or Gallla
area 1
Acres More or Lass
Farm wood /Land Call (304 )·
6756363

5 AKC registered Oashound pup·

Rugar Mark II 22 Caliber 6 718'
Bull Barrel Government Model

301-875-3614

t 50

complete estates baby Items. and
old Fiesta ware Jean s Furniture
&amp; Antiques Tuesday through Frl
day 11 am 4pm 145 North Sec
ond Mleklleport

5121
560

Sporting
Goods

85 Ford Truck

merslltlle Wll26651

Block, brick. sewer pipes wind
ows lintels etc Claude Winters,
Rio Grande OH Call 740 245·

Used Furniture Store Below Hoi•·
day Inn In Kanauga Twin Beds,
Complete S11 5 Full Beds Complete $13~ Hutch $7!, Oak
Table 4 Chairs $80 Dressers
Couches 740·446·4782

"WABMUfl'

Flnanc1ng As LOW At 6 9% With
John Deere Cred il Approval On
Used Tracto rs Car michael s
Farm &amp; lawn , Gallipolis Ohjo
740446-2412 Or I 800..594· 1111
Also Ste The "New- 4000 Seriea
Compact Ut1llty Tractors -Several
In Stodl

We buy antiques and partial or

550

e

STOCK

·--I

• 5

HI

5I

11T-eaop
2G R
21 Tl ilftc light

• 10 I 7 S

•

1996 JO 970 Utll1ty Tractor .CWO 1
33HP Diesel B5 Hra. $13 000 , 1993 Chevy 4X4 Z71 loaded,
1996 JO 513 AOIII'V Culter, 350 5 Speed, Many Extraal
1
1997 eush Hog 60·06 Booke $14, 000, 11 1.000. 740·
'
Gradmg Blacte. 1500 Call 740· 245-9099
446 1206
1994 F 250 2 wd . 7 3 power~
21 USED TRACTORS IN stroke. 5 sp . while . 740 949·

setsl Low Monthly terms (304) 630

1 688 618.0126

3rr~~

Waterline Specla1 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100, All Brass Com·
presslon Fittings In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson. Ohio 1 800 537 9528

675 3775 Also 1998
Sate! Margaret Pierce

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

1891 S 10 2wd New Ti res ,
Brakes, ShOOts Batt Clutch. U·
Jolnls, 4 3 5sp, Air, Tilt, Cruise,
Sunroof, Extras $4,000 F 1rl]tl

land ready to cut now or teattv to
cutin 10 to 15 years or Timber·
land cut recently we also by
Timber on the stump For more
Information Call Toll Free without
obligation 800 326 8325 ext
234orwrlle BlliBrlght
Land use Corp Box 460 Sum·

World Book Now on Sale Save
S2BO 00 Limited number of sa le

7795
QOOD UBED APPLIANCES

520

buck, EJCctllent Condition 740·

682 7318

620
to Buy
446· 1';~~~~~~~~~

6656
Good

460 Space for Rent

12 hp Cub Cadet tra ctor and
composter , also need a 2 Ded
room l~ller 740 992 2378

Windsor 14x65 MObile Home For
Rent Or Sale On Land Contract
1989 Cavauer $1 200 740 446 1610

Repelred, New &amp; Rebt/ilt In Stoek
catl Aon Evans 1·800-537.19528

..U51S

Trailer For Rent Beautllul River
VIew 198 River Street Kanagua
Depostl Relerences No Pets
740 441 018t Foster Trailer Perk

740·963 4607

AERATION MOTORS

Apartmtnls , \nc ludtS Water
Sewage . Traah, $295/MO 740·
441·1618 740·446·0957, 740·

Furnace Heat Pumps &amp; A1r Con
diUonlng Free Estimates! If You
Don 1 Call Us. We Both Lose!
740·446·6306 1·800·291.0096

Two (2 ) Bedroom Mobile Home
Route 218 $300/Mo Rent, $300
Deposit -+ References, Required

JET

Wt11 2 Bedro om Townhouse

160 A BarkO LoaderiCTR Saw·

......

111 IF
14U...,.
IIICII*•11 Call'ed
fS7 TrMII
11 CkMII
Ill Ycll11
17 Nouollot Felber
~yw

s ooo.

Gattway 2000 Co mputer Le n
Than 1 Year Old Asking $1 400
OrB&amp;stOIIer 740-367·7893

Now Acceptmg Applications For
One
Bedroo m Apartment• .
Washer /Drytl Hook-Up Call F.or
More Info From 10 AM ·9 PM

C&amp;mp Con ley Ttalter Court
12x65 porch, lanced In yard
Call (304) 675·6030 01 (304) 895·
3536

door)

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Gas Furnace And Air Condition
lng Unit Used 2 112 Years. For
Rent 1 Bedroom House In Galli·

7-11

Leave Message

DoublowldoC--Solo

For Sale F1 ll D1r l W11l Deliv er
304-875-873'

r-tewly RemOdeled 1 Bedroom
Apt GaUipolls Ferry. Large Yard ,
Deposit /1 stmonths rent! 304 ·
675--326911 304-6756131

5162.

Price reduced· 1990 Spruce
Rrdge 14x70 moDIIe home. very
good condtbon, 2 bedrooms. 1 &amp;

OR

8959
320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

A111 rea l estate adverti SinQ in

Wt Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres,
We Pay Cl$h 1·800·213-8365
Anlhxly Land co

chase

~

140

Room Oul

atde Storage Burldtng Sack And
s""' Patio, - Carpet, New Rool,

Merchandise

for Rent
1988 Silyllna 14x70, three btd·
room two bath excellent condi·
lion 1and out. COf\tlal "" and
VInyl underpinning Included, 740·

1:t , . I, a. I. _

540 Mlacellaneoue

Apllrtmenta

...,

47 Cupid
11 Clly In Ol1lo
53Aaaf-

~c.

440

~.,

4Z ::;""
cenll

1992 Caval ier R/S All Options
S2 895 00 1991 Uodge Shadow,
$2 495 00
1988
Beretta
$2 295 00 Coo k Mo tors , 740·
446 0103
1"9 93 Fo rd Explorer XLT 5 9 262
m•les 4x4 aut o ale cruise pw
pi dark green alloy wheels ask·
•ng $965 0 740 949 23 11 days
740 949 2644 evas
1993 Gra('1d AM GT 4 Door Red
69 000 Mlles $5 000 740 36702 19
1995 Cutlass Sierra Old s v 6 4
Doors Maroon 33 000 Miles All
Power
E xc ell ent Co ndi tion !
$7 995 00 740 256 916 1
1996 Plymou t h Breeze , 49 BO O
mil es whlte with gr ay Inte ri or
auto cr uise, afc amlfm cass 4
dr , as king $8 400 740·949.- 23 t1
days 7 4 0·949 ~264 4 e~~t~s
1997 Mus tang Loaded II 6 Au ·
tom 23 000 Mile s Adult Dr iver
Extra Clean $15 700 00 740 446·

1635

199 8 Pontiac Tran s Am Fully
Loade d V 8 Will Take Pay 0 11
Or Ta~e Over Pay me nts 740
4.!1 6- 4548 If No Answer Leave
Message Or 740 446 7764

90 GMC runs good 1 loaded• 80
Cheveue Runs Goodl (304) 773
5878
92 Chevy Caval•er AS 104 000
miles $2 200 89 Ponhac Sl.lntmct
LE 98 000 m•les $14 00 gj Geo
Tracker 5 sp 4114 cfd playe r a1
c 54 000 miles $6 500 740·992
7094

SERVICES
810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINQ

0~
~~~Ol
3llldS'f l ~ ~

1 ~!r:M '!lt\1. '9111\11.

-~lf!J ~~ ~ .IJI08'q
~.IJHcJn 0"'~

i

Unconditional lifetime guaranlelt,.•
Loc al refer ence s lurn1shed Established 1975 Ca ll 24 Hrs (740)
446 0870 t 800 2B7 0576 Rog·
ers Walarproo llng
Appliance Parts And Serv ic e All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
per len ce All Wo rk Gu aranteed
French City Ma')4tag 740·4 46--

7795

C &amp;C Genera l Ho me Main·
tene nce Pa in ting vinyl siding
carpentry doors windows baths
mob•le home repair and more For
!rae estimate call Chet 740 9~2·

6323

Pro fe ssio nal 20 y rs experien ce
with all maso nery br1ck: block &amp;
slone Al so room additions g aJ
rag es etc Free estimates 304·

773 9550

'rYJI. 1\UIII .IJ'iJ 9N'Itl

•••

1

Si ttord Aoodmg Sh ingle s and
new roots Free e st 740 8 86 ~ !
9887

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Re sidential or commercia! wiring,
new service 01' repairs Mester LJ·
c ensed ele ctr lcl af'l Ridenour
Electrical , WV000306 304·675·
1786

.....__..llo.-_...
I

out first we1ghmg
insignificant m-atters
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jun. 19) tssue, the de-cJstons you arrtve al
Perform to lhe besl of your nbth· Assoctate today only wtth those today wtll be rtght on larget.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
lies where your work or career is con· whose behav1ar and thmkmg you
Showmg
u w1llmgness to g1ve a hi·
highly respect and admire You' ll dis·
~erned 1n the year ahead Posttlons,
tie
makes
others equally complmnt
rn1ses or bonuses prevmusly dented cover ways to put the1r phtlosophy to
and
coopemtive
Shanng ts the key to
lo you w1ll be forthcommg.
work succe"fully tor you.
unlockmg
a
floodgate
of opportum·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)An
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)
Should a club, orgamzutton or cor· 1mponant mutter lhul affects you as ttes for you today
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
porauon ask you to serve on a special well us others could take a Mgntficant
Socml
contacts you' ve established
commtllee, accepl the post. Some· change for the better today. Act on 11
over
ume
may prove to be extreme·
lhtng fonunale may result for you. promptly
ly
helplul
to
you loday They' ll make
PISCES (Feb 20-Man:h 20) If
MaJor changes are ahead for Scorpto
m the commg year Send lhe required you put yourself forward loday. you tl possible for you to at.::hteve some·
refund fonn and lor your Astro· can be the catalyst to. pull everyone thmjl you could not do on your own
r:Eo (July 23-Aug 22) Any mat·
Graph predictions by ma1lmg $2 and 1ogether m developmg a suttable
that are meumngtul to you mate·
ters
self-addressed stamped envelope to , arrangement that wtll benetit all
nully
should not be ignored at th1s
ARIES (Murch 21-April 19)
Astro-Qraph, c/o th1s newspaper,
lime.
ThiS
ts because the a•pects md1·
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Htll Stauon, Openings and opporluml1es for
New York, NY 10156. Be sure to advancement thai are not obv10us to cate larger retums 1han nonnalloday
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl 22) Some·
others wtll be apparent to you today
state your Zodiac s1gn
thmg
advanlageous or ef en highly
For these retLo;ons, you'll be lucky
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
profitable
could resull today from
21) Thtnk big Joday The stage is set where your work 1s concerned
hobnobbtng
Wtth fnends who have
TAURUS (Apnl 20-Muy 20)
for you to p1ck a pnme postUon of
real tmportance Whatever you do. Smce you're not ltkely to make any real clout Seek oul encoun1ers wtth
don 't waste your ume away on Judgments or draw conclus1ons With· lhose who mt ghl Iii lhiS htll

ASTRO·ORAPH

Undeu;over

�•

,
Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Eastern queen crowned

loween remains an overblown rilLiltiage unisex sugar high. In fact, the
N~;~tional Confeclmncr$ Association
ranks Halloween number one in holCUE'!'N C~OWNED- Sari Putman was ·crowned 1998 Homecoming Queen at Eastern '.
. School on Fr~day ntg~t. Her escort was Wesley Karr. Pictured aft!'r the crowning are, 1-r, Elaine Putman , iday ~.:andy sales, rakin·g jn , more
and Bradley Brannon, fres~man attendant and escort, Kristin Chevalier and Chad Nelson, sophomore than$950 milium during Oc10ber.
attendant_and escort, Seniors Lacey Bunting and Aaron Will, P.utman and Karr, -and Juli Hayman and
Now, as in decades-gone- by, kids
Bill Schultz, and Leah Sanders and Josh Will, junior attendant and escort. In front are Seth Guthrie and appreciate good stuff.
B_rlanna Buffington of Eastern Elementary School.
·
,·
. Sacred Halloween candy corn
ha' 'old out to a red-and-pink Valentin e· \'Crsion . Peanut butter cups
l"omc shaped like Easter eggs and
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
holdovers .. Pract1 cal Magic ." take the top spot from the witch Chmtmas trees. Apples or homemade t re.ats pose a safety risk.
AP Entertainment Writer
" Antz ". and " Bride of Chucky ...
nick "'Practical Mag1c 1' . wlw.::h
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Audi"PieasaAiville ... the story of brought in an estimated $8.8 mil Here arc some alternatives :
ence s 'oug ht hope al the box two 1990s teen-agers who give a · lio n.
Color-coordinated crudites:
office as two life -affinning film s, black-a nd- white TV town a color'"Antz " also remained stro ne
Peel
and
s lice carrots into thin
"Pleasan tville " a nd '•-Life- i• ful and hopeful splash of reality, after a month in release . bringing
match,ticks.
Stick through the holes
1
Beautiful, .. drew big crowds whil~ ·\:ollected $9 million o n 1.636 ' in $8 .2. million for third plae&lt;; . .
·
in
piucd
olives.
•J. the bleaker "Beloved .. tumbled ,n
sc reens for a $5.50 1-per-thea\cr
" Bride of 'Chucky" loS! more
- Mashed potato ghosts: Cut
its second week, according to average, the highe st among the Ihan 40 percent of 11s audienCe in
se
rving-size.
ghost-shaped pallerns
industry estimates Sunday.
wide-release .films.
the·second week hut still co ll ected out of waxed paper. Place on
Two other films, "So ldier " and
The mov1e exceeded 'the cxpcc· $6.7 million- a rcspectahlc grm&gt;
greased cookie sheet. Stir a beaten
"Ap t Pupil ," opened to lukewarm t,ations of its ow n studio.
for a hurror film to fi ni sh egg into enough stiff mashed''potabusiness behind the resilient
· "Pleasantville" m.anagcd to fourth.

'Pieasqntville' pleases public; "Beloved' plunges in second week

toes for four servincs. Fonn a layer
of mashed polalOes about I and onehalf inches thick over pattA:rns.
Insert eyes made of sliced olives, if
desired. 'Piaa: in freezer until finn.
Peel off wued paper, set ghosts on
plate and microwave until hoi. Or
peel off waxed paper and •bake at
350 deg=s in greased, non-stick
pan until hot but not brown.
Do-it-yourself
Devil's
Dessert:. Snip licorice into tiny
pieces. Mix ,into softened orange
sherbet.
Creepy Crawler Gelatin:
Makt orange Jell-0 'according 10
package directions. Pour into 9-inch
pie plate sprayed with a · non-stick
coating. Refrigerate until slightly
thickened. Press gummy wonn~
dbwn into gelatin and return 10
refrigerator until set. When ready to
serve. dip bouom of plate in wanm
water for 15 seconds. Unmold on
plate.
Marshmallow
Beetles;
Microwave I cup each chocolate
chips and bullerscotch chips until
melted. Mix ·in 2 cups chow mein
noodles and one-fourth cup peanuts.
Add 2 cups mini-marshmallows and
stir until cool. Drop by teaspoonfuls
onto waxed paper. Use additional
chow mein noodles for legs.
- Ghosts in the Graveyard: Prepare two. 4-serving size packages of
instam chocolate pudding with 3
cups cold milk . Stir,in 3 cups Cool
Whip or other whipped lopping and
I cup finely crushed chocolate sandwich cookies. Spread in a 9-by - 13
inch pan. Sprinkle with I cup finely
crushed chot;,olate sandwich cook ies . Refrigerate I hour. Just before
serving, insert· -Pepperidge Farms
Milano cookies, cui crosswise, into ,
pudding for tombstones. Make

Day Sale

'

.

.

,.

.

'

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

29 oz.
Limit 3 please

Lb.

8.5

Muffin .Mix
oz.
4/$

FRESH CHICKEN

JACK FROST

· Leg Quarters
10 lb. bag

c

',

5#
Limit 3 Please

Lb.

,t

us #1

c

20 oz.

10#

PEDIGREE CANNED

Gallon$

gallon

Dog Food

_/' '3 /$

\.

LIMIT 6
PLEASE

f,.i

Ice.Cream
$ 39 '

·'

'

I

·&gt;

·'''

13.2 oz

R.C. COLA

STOKElY LT. RED
'

Kid.ney Beans
3/$1
15 oz

.

Products
12 pkg. 12 oz cans $
99
2 please
'·

Li~lt

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE OCT 27, 28TH, 1998 ONLY

Sports

October 27' 1998

Weather

Beat of the Bend column, Page 8
Time Out for Tips, Page 7
Ann Landers, Page 7

Today: Sunny
High: 70; Low:50
Tomorrow: Cloudy
Hi!fh: 70; Low:40

Steelers
slip past
Chiefs
Page4

\

'..

,.

Meigs Co~ntys

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Nu mber 123

Single Copy - 35 Cents

As result of a state mandated reappraisal

Meigs real estate assesSment
values
up
17
percent
-----.
;~ .
-.
- ·'
BY CHARl-ENE HOEFLICH
Piopeny owners will begin payin~ ues are appreciably increa..W in a
Sentinel New Staff
taxes on the new appraisal figures in reappraisal, it usually means that taxA state mandated reappraisal of all Januaiy for the 1998 tax year.
es will go up.
Meigs County real estate in 1998 has
Campbell stressed thai while the
"The values on some properties
resulted in an average increase of 17 a.•sessments have gone up an average will go up a lot due to iiDprc&gt;vemenls
percent in assessment values across of 17 percent, it does not mean that while some will go down because
the county.
, .
taxes on every property will go up 17 buildings have beCn removed or the
. The values o( agricultural, resi- percent.
property hasn't been kept up," said
denlial, industrial and commercial
Some will go up more than the 17 Warner.
property a.• a whole have risen a total percent, some will go up less. some
But nol only will property owners
of$24,158,470-- from $142.280,790 ,will remain about the same. and olh- see changes in taxes from an
to$166,439.470, according to figure~ ers could go down, said Denver increased a.&lt;sessed value of theiJ re~l
released today by Meigs County · Warner. an auditor's ollice employee estate, but also from voter-approved
Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell. ·
dealing with appruisals and taxes for . levies.
"That's a 17. I 87 average increase nearly 30 years.
Among several levies passed in
in assessment (value) of properties in
How~ver, both Campbell and
May and not yet on lax duplicates is
Meigs County" the auditor said.
Warner agree that when property val- the 5.39 mill bond issue for con-

'
slruction of the ~ew building in the• manenl improvements in the district.
Southern Local School District. That
Whatever decisions voters make
will be included on January tax bills
next week will also he reOecled on
for residents of the district for the first
their January tax duplicates. Th&lt;;
time.
reappraisal values. up or down. a&gt;
Next Tuesday voters will decide
''ell a.&lt; levy decisions. all go back lo
on several other issues which will Jan . I. 1998 for tax purposes, Warnaffect their tax bills.
-'
cr noted.
A new county-wide 1.8 mill levy
Campbell explained that the Slate
for the Board of Mental Retardation
has a "reduction factor" which can
(Carleton School/Meigs Industries)
result in some reli~f for taxpayers.
will be decided by voters. In MidSuch factoring. she said, is deterdlepon a new 1.5 mill penmanent
mined by the slate and since thai
levy for fire protection ·will be voted . · wnn'l be done until after the Nnvemon. and in the Meigs Local School ber election when several :iAsues wil)
District. voters will decide on~ live- be decided. the auditor said her
yea(,renewal of 5. (five) mills fo~per- oflice cannot come up with' actual lax

'

Ohio gubernatorial candidates
differ on dove hunting issue
Republican gubernatorial candidate Robert Taft Monday
announced his opposition to State Issue I, a Nov. 3 ballot measure· which would outlaw mourning dove hunting in Ohio.
, In a letter sent to Ohio hunters, anglers and tl'l\ppers, Taft
assured the sportsmen that, as governor, he will • make sure that
the rights of Ohio's hunters and sportsmen are not restricted In
the coming years.
,
·
"I opp&lt;l!ll: State Issue I which wo,uld ban the hunting of mournIng dov~" he continued. "I believe we should look to wildlife
management professionals in the Ohio Division of Wildlife for
guidance ..on 1his issue. As you know, they have concluded that
doves are (abundant) and that the hunting of mourning doves
would not significantly reduce the total number in Ohio."
Taft, who now serves as Ohio secretary of state, faces Democrat candidate Lee Fisher In the gubernatorial election. A spokeswoman for Fisher said earlier that he supports the ban on mourn-.
lng dove hunting.
'
Taft joined all regional candidates for state representative, state
senator and Congress in opposing the measure.
·
Friday, the Ohio state organization of tlte United Mine Workers, AFL-CIO also-announCed opposition to the measure, staling
that hunting and other outdoor sports are a chief recreation of
members of the-labor organization.

Commissioners hear
alternative proposal
for expense of. funds
.,

"

2% Milk
79
FESTIVAL

ar
59

Old Fashioned Bread

UNITED VALLEY BELL
&lt;

'

BETSY ROSS

Russett Po.tatoes
Chiquita
Bananas
29C lb

LA T

JIFFY CORN

"

Peaches

c

WHILE SUPPLIES

.

ROSE DALE SLICED

Chuck Roast
,

ghosts by swirling canned whipped
topping or mounding Cool whip. Put
eyes on ghost with mini chocolate
chips.
- Hallowieners: Thaw a package of fro~.n bread dough. Divide
dough and roll between hands into
12-inch snakes. Wrap each snake
around a hot dog. Compress alJil
shape head end into an oval. Cut a
horizontal " mouth" and prop open with foil . Mlike crosswise slashes ;
across tail, to resemble. a raulesn'ake. :
Poke holes for "eyes" and push half·
a raisin into each. Brush with egg :
and let rise 15 minutes. Bake at 350:
degrees for 15-20 minutes until _
golden brown. Remove foil from mouth and ,insert a red licorice rib- : .
hon, forked al the end.
Pizzaween: Bake a frozen
round pizza crust until half done.
Remove from oven and spread
thickly with Chee? Whiz or other
Orange, proce'ssed ':. chccse . Make
jack- 'o' -lantern eyes. nose ·and
mouth with strips of red bell pepper,
ro'lnds of red onion: and sliced
o lives (for eyeballs). Return to the
over) unlil crust is done and c heese is
bubbly.
- Blood 'n' Guts: Break pieces
in half and cook &amp;-ounces of macaronelli (uncut -tnacaroni) until very
lender. Drain, 'add two 16-ounce
cans tomato sauce and 1 can drained
red kidney beans. Throw in a package of cocktail franks , if desired.
Heal and stir until hot. Serve with a
dollop of ketchup on lop.
- Don ' t tniss colored Halloween
Rice Kfispies and ·monster-shaped:
Spooky Fruit Loops. Grown-ups
will appreciate the ship-in-lhe-bollle : .
technology Qf Pillsbury Halloween
slice-and-bake cookies, with a buillin jack-' o' -lantern.

Prices Good Tuesday, Oct. 27th &amp; Wednedsay, Oct.. 28111 only

NO RAINCHECKS

Tuesday

Scare up some Halloween 'Jun treats'
By DEBBIE SALOMON
Burlington (Vl) Free _Preu
Halloween food just gel&lt; scarier
and scaner. Those bare-bones U'eaiS
of yore- candy apples. candy com,
or.ange-frosted devils-food cupcakes
- have snowballed to include Halloweiners, Jell-0 wonns, a seasonal
Edy's ice cream plus a wiiChes brew
of producu from cereal10 beer.
Ca1Ch that disturbingly graphic
Samuel Adams ad, where a thirsty
Grim Reaper tomes a-calling. And
do have a happy Budweiser Hal·
loweekend.
' Kraft presents the best of its Hallowee n mucations on a Halloween
Web site: Www.kraflfoods.com.
Where else would yoo learn that
grape Jcll -0 plus orange Jell-0
equals black Jell-0'
Wilh some exceptions, Hal-

.--

Monday, October 26, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By BRIAN J. REED
$63,616 for books. uniforms and nthSentinel News Staff
er supplies for participants.
The Meigs County CommissionPrograms suggested by the uniers heard an·alternative proposal for versily include u certified nursing
the expenditure of $222,000 in stale assistance training program. com.Welfare-to-Workfunds during their mencial driver's license training for
truck and bus drivers. and other
regular meeting on Monday.
The Galli a/Meigs Community "vocational" programs.
Mike Swisher, director of the
Action Agency earlier this month '
unveiled a proposal to assist 26 · Department of Hu,man Services, said
recipients of cash welfare assistance that the program was "a positive
in finding employment in the pri~ate · , one," with an emphasis on jobs
or public sector. The commissioners presently available in the com!J1unimised issue with the administrative ty.
'
· costs, which. including salaries for
The program would also emphastaff members who would operate the size issues such as personal responprogmm,lolaled $134,000, according sibility, motivation and the eliminato Commissi_o ner Janet Ho~ard. ..
lion of negative behaviors, according
Dr. Barry Dorsey, preSJdenl of the 10 Sorga, and child care would be
University of Rio Grande, and Dr. provided for participants.
Greg Sorga, met with the commisA stipulation of the program is that
sioners yesterday to outline the uni- all courses, with the exception of the
versity's proposal, which would cov- COL driving course, would he conertuition, books ·and other costs a."o- dueled at the university's Meigs
ciated with vocational training. County center in Middleport, which
According Ia the university's pro- would eliminate long driving disposal, which was solicited by the lances for participants and would
commissioners ·after the C$-.A pro- help secure the future of the local
posal was made, 100 clients would be branch.
Job training is a integral pan of the
serve.d by, the university's program.
Tuition would make up the largest slate's welfare reform program.
part of the program cost. -- $I 41,446. which provides local funding for job
Other expenses would mclude 'iraining and gives more local control
in the operation of Departments of
Human Services.
CAA has bee asked 10 submit
another proposal with decreased
administration costs, Howard said.
SECURITY
Mike Canan. bailiff for the Meigs
2 Sections - 12 Pages
Cnunly Common Pleas Court, mel
with the board 10 discuss a grunt
anticipated
by the county for the
7
Calendar
installation of security equipmenl in
8·9-tO
Classifieds
the courthouse.
II
Comics
The Ohio Supreme Court has set
out mandates rel.ating to courthouse
2
Editorials ·
security, and the funds, to total
3
Local
upprox imalely $71l,Oj)O, would be
. 4·5-6
used 10 equip the county courthouse
3
Weather
with metal detectors. X-ray machines
and other security equipment
required ·ro satisfy the new,mandates.
Lotteries
Canan noted, however, thai the
grant
could not be used lo pay
OHIO
salaries.
and ~aid that at leasl one
Pick 3: 254 : Pick 4:6191
employee
would be required lo mon· Buckey~ 5: 14-25-27-30-37
itor
the
courthouse
entrance w~en the
W.YA , .
security equipment is installed.
Daily 3: 669 Daily 4: 6417
Canan said that the Meigs Coun4) 1'-19~ Ohio Vall~)' PuUII shlnt; Co.

Good Afternoon

Today's

Sentinel

Continued on pag 3

t •

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'

'

figure&lt; lor prop&lt;rt) owners at this
time . The only ligures avai lable 10
taxpayers n"ow are the new appraisal
values.
The complicated fonnu la of inside
and outside millage was explained by
Campbell who said the reduction factor app lies only to out&gt;ide millage
which includ~s voted kvies.
She said in side millaee is the
amount of propert y lax- I hal is
allowed to grow with inllation and ·
without voter approval .
As for what gets reduced through
factoring. she said neither bonds nor
emergency levies are factored. but
Continued on page 3

Middleport Council approves terms for
replacement bridge·project at Hobson
'same location as the existing bridge. the chlorination system now in place cil to discuS&gt; a drainage problem on
By BRIAN J. REED
which wili eliminate the need for with two new unils in accordance Sycamore S~reet and ·Gene Johnson
Sentinel News Staff
discussed the problem of junked cars
The replacement of the Hobson · many of the environmental studies with direclives from the EPA.
Council member Sandy lannarel- on private properly and parked along
Bridge in Middleport will begin with and other work that often delays road
li said thai the village should begin village streets.
the awarding of bids nextlune. Mid- construc,lion projects.
.
Councilman Steve Houchins notdleport Village Cooncil passed a resIn other business, Village Super- immediately to seek gnlnt fundiqg for
olution agredng to the terms of the visor Brent Manley reported on .the a new water well and distribution sys~ ed a sewer odor in various~ locations
construction project during their reg- . status of impr,ovements to one of the tern. She also suggested thai Jeff in the village, which Manley said was
\ village's water wells, which has been Chrisller from · the Ohio EPA be the result of low rainfall._
ular meeting on Monday.
invited 10 the November 9 council
Council member Rae GwiazMayor Dewey Horton read a let- out of service.Manley said thai t(le EPA is meeling to discuss public concerns dowski reponed a st reet light outage
ter from the Ohio Department of
Transportation and introduced a res- expected to approve plans· for the over the water and waste water sys- on North Second Avenue.
tems.
Council also approved two transolution, which was pa..sed by coun- well improvements in a matter
After
meeting
in
executive
ses;
fers
of funds from the village genercil. that set forth t~e village's respon- days. and when lhal approval is
sibility to replace any water lines and, received. repairs will be made. Until sion. council voted to hire Deanna al fund : $2.000 lo the water improveother utility equipmentlh~l spans the . that time, water frnm Pomerny will Barber as a full-time police dis- ment fund and $8.000 Ia the fire
.
bridge.
• conJlnue to be 4sed in the system dur- . patcher and -Dean McKnight as a equ1pment fund.
The new bridge, accqndi hg to ing th,e day.
p_art~time weekend police11f&lt;J'llilcber. ·-· ':Al!to present were Council mem. .,._ _
. _ ,
Horton, wi II be .constructed in the
Lawrence Powell met wilh ·coun- bers Robert Pooler and Rae"Gw1azTlie· vi lluge u!So plans lo ~place
.
• dowski and Clerk Bryan Swann .

or

Halloween

~afety

parents' big concern

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
..
Lighted ·decorations, elaborate
costumes and parties at home are all
examples of how the interest in celebrating· Halloween has grown \o
recent years.
Concerns about ·tri.c k-or-treating
helped stan the growing trend toward·
"alternative" celebrations. according
lo .Zella Junkin of Wilton Enterprises, which supplies holiday entertaining supplies. Halloween is not just for .

1

chtldren anymore either. A growing
number 'of adults have begun 10 celebrate the autumn holiday in a big
way.
'
In fact. according to Junkin, while
Trick or Treat continues to take place
in neighborhoods around the country,
Halloween is the most popular holiday for hosting parties ~~ home.
The history of HaJioween goes
beyond treats . and costumes, tmd
dates back to se.veralthousand· years
ago. when pagan Cells throughout
Europe celebrated October 3 I as the
mid-point between the vernal
equinox aqd the winter solstice.
ALL OUT - Cindy StanleY, and Donna War-. flags and a scarecrow make their yards a popThese "early celebrants painted
·necke ot Pomeroy, next-door neighbors at
ular place tor the nieghbors. Pictured are: l·r,
their faces blue, danced around bonPomeroy Cliffs Apartments, go all out tor the
Chandra Slanley, Shaine Chandler, in his Hal·
fires and cavorted through the forests
hol.l days, and Halloween Is. no exception. Spiloween coslume, his brolher, AJ, and Charis10 honor their dead ancestors, accordderwebs, skeletons, mums, pumpkins, autumn
sa and Cindy Stanley.
ing 10 Junkin.
With the advent of Christianity.
lion didn't begin until the early 20th holiday. The trttditional juck loween." Junkin said. "You're really
the holiday changed: · November I , century.
o'lanterns are now being joined by onlv limited hy just how crazy you're
became All Saints Day to honor the
Now, inf,ddilion IO the tradition- . skeletons, lomb.~tones, and -spider . wiliing tb let ypur neighbors think_
.taithful dead, and October 31 because
al door-to: oor J?egging !(or treats. webs.
'
, ,
you are
All Saints (or Hallow's) Eve. Trick or familie~ make a project of decorating
"There are sq many different ways : "This is the one tihle of the year:'
Treat. the modern,children's celebra- ~ their homes-- inside and uul -- for the that you can decorate a house lor HalContinued on page 3
··

Next Tuesday's voter turnout may hit recent low
COLUMBUS, (AP) - With a number and significance of local
week to ·before the Nov. 3 election, issues and contested races.
Ohio's ca.ndidales are out in force
Taft was among politicians who
hoping to stir up interest in an elec- fanned out acrQSS the state Monday
lion thai is predicted lo'huvt'lhe low- lo drum · up voter support for I heir
est voter turnout in years.
campaigns.
. The secretary of stale's oflice on
The candidates for the U.S. SenMonday predicted Ohio's voter 'ate seal being vacated by Democrat
turnout at about 50 percent, the low- John Glenn were in the Dayton area.
est for a major statewide general elecRepublican
Gov.
George
lion in the last 20 years of available . · Voinovich and U.S. S~n. Mike
records.
De Wine. R-Ohio. toured an eight-unit
D.!spile a record of nearly 7.2 mil- apartment building being rehabilitallion registered Ohio voters, the offoce ed through the Daytorr Youth Build
estimates thai only 3.5 million will Program.
vole this year.
'
" It 's an excellent example of a
'Secretary· of Stale Bob Taft, a public-private partnership where fedRepublican running for governor. eral. stale and private funds are utipredicted voter turnout on projections lized lo help at-risk youths nol only
supplied by Ohio's 88 county election receive an education but help them
develop skills 10 get jobs after
boards.
They looked at turnout in similar school. ·• said Voinnvich carnpaign
elections. perceived interest in r spokeswoman Caryn Candisky.
statewide issues and races, and the
AI Beuvercreek High School near

go

Dayton. Voinovich's opponent.
Democrat Mary Boyle. acCWied him
of suggesting th~t families shou ld
consider selling\mc of their cars to
help fi11ance their children's educa -

tion.

•
••J bet your families and ynu ;w.re
already saving. and I bet you don't
have a whole lot of extfa cars urolmd
yOur house thai you cou ld sel l in
order to go to college." she told the
students. "I don 't think that's the
answer."
In th'e campaign for governor, T&lt;Jfl
told reporters in Columbus that he
isn't pulling much stock in political

'

Jav."
·Also in Columbus. U.S. Rep.
John Kasich, R-Weslerville. preJict·

ed Democr:Hs would be

atl~cted

mo5t by low voter participation.
"Their turnout may not be terrible.
but their turnout is not going 10 be
what they hoP" it•lo be." said Ka.Sich.
who Was campai gning fnr Republi can Nancy Hollister. Ohio's lieu·

tenant goVernor.. Mrs. Holli ster 1s
challenging U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland.
D-Lucasville. in Ohio' s 6th Con-

grc,sional District.
1 K~1 sic h altributes the general lack
of voter intere-.t to hiner disappointpolls that indicate he has an eight-to - m~nt in PrdiJent Clinton, a Democ10-poinl lead over Democr~l Lee rat. ~·ho has hcl!n caught up fo~
Pisher. a former st~te attorney gen- months in u sex scandal. " I can tell
eral.
yo(J that what tht:: prc-.ident has done
"We've been ahead in the polls is aJdeU tn cy ni ci:..m in the;: t..:ountry."
throughQut Ihe campaign ... ," Taft Kasich said. ·· t think. it \l:reated more
said. "The issue is turnout on election voler apathy, and really. disl!ust."
-

.

'
I

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