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Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

t~ ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio -

Wednesday, November 18, 1998

Thursday

Honor roll announced for Meigs Local School District and Meigs Middle School ·

H
' ..

The elementary schOOls of the
Meogs Local School District and
Meogs Moddle School
have
announced the ·names of students
earrung honor roiiS!alus for the first
ntne-week gradmg period.
HARRISONVILLE
Ki'!dergarten: Austin Clarida.
Morgan Howard and Julia Lantz, all
A's; Ashley Edwards, Zack Jeffers,
Briaunna King and Billy McQuaid,
NB; First Grade: ian Bullington,
Justin Savage, Alisha Stevenson and
Hailey Williams. All A's; Dawn Bissell, Justin Couerill. Rebecca Donohue. Alysha Gcrlaugh and Christy
Lewis, AlB .
Second Grade: Elsa Gardner,
Mason Metts. Neal Napier. and Joan·
nah 'Findongan. All A' s; Chris Bi&gt;hop. Clonton Kennedy. Bethany Lee
and Amber Mitchell. NB; Third
Grade: Justin Gibbs. ~helsey Noel.
Carrie Phelps, Briuany Preas!,
Daniel Runyon , Kaylene Slater and
Hannah · Williams, All As; Jonathan
Black, Chris Craddock. Cory Gates.
Doug Herdman. Nicole Hill , Janella
Srover and Cory Wil son. NB .
Fourth Grade: Daniel Bookman
and Celeste Taylor. All A's; Sarah
Lanlt. AlB; Firth Grade: Tra1·is
Burbridge, Rachael Gardner. Ju,hua
Spires and William Taylor. AlB; CC:
Shade Caldwell. NB . '
MIDDLEPORT
Kindergarten: Brandon Crcmeans. Taylor Dowler. Damon Fosh·
er. Kyle John son. Colo Kerr. Shan·
non Mclaughlin. Ravcnnc Reed ,·
Tyler Cun4iff. Destiny Haning, Dan
Stewart; Kindergarten: Brandon
Bachner. Kri sten Hayslip. Du.,lin
Nash, Austin S~yre, Nicole Davis.
Ryan Payne. Qhandra Sian ley. Tan·
ncr Tacke! I.
Grade 1: Tyler Andre--:s. Andrew
Blankenship, Jacob Dunn, Tyler Fry,
Jennifer Pay ne, Jessica Shelton,
Cay Ia Taylor, Megan
'
Dunfee, Amanda Goode. Cynthia Kauff. Trinity
Kimes, Jake Lynch, Maranda Riggs.
Grade 1: Kastle Balser, Olivia Carpenter, Kayla Graham , C~arlcs
Hay sl ip. Tara Jewell Kiny Newell,
Cody Smith, . Shanalle Smith,
Zachary .Whitlach , . Bubby Will,
Latricia Smilh, Kel sey Wilson.
. Grade 2: Willie Baccus, Chad
Bonnell. Hailey Ebersbach, Jennifeo
,Fife, Laura Gheen , Nikki Lawson.
Caitlin Leslie, Court11cy Mayes,
McKinney. Zach Schwab.
•Jared
Nicki Smilh, "I:css Thmas. Chassidy
Wills, Megan Smith. Grade 2: Kyle
Campbell Amber Ebersbach', Amber
Hockman, Nicole Haley, Lian Hoff.
man , Ara Lawless, Chris Kimes,

•

Breanne Pancrson. Tara Capeharl.
Grade 3: Andrew Denny. Josh
Eakins, Ka1ie Eans, Robert Foreman,
Holley Geary, Chris Goode, Kayla
Jacks, Natasha Knapp, Tela Meloy.
Trevor Nichols. Katie Patlerson,
Lesley Preece, Phollip Sisson, Frank
SICwart,' Patti Voning. Cliff Wanh .
Grade 3: Justin Arnold, Mason
· Conde, Austin Dunfee, Cornelius
English .. Kay! a Gheen, Sarah Hollen,
Zac Konkle . Tyler Lillie, Breanna
Mi1chell Tiffany Simpson. Casey
Smiih. Lacey Stobarl. Losa Tiemeyer, Alexa Vcnoy. QHISLD Class:
John Lamb.. Patrida
Junathan· Hodge.

say McKinney. Jesse Mowery, GreSocond Grad.,: Nick Bailey,
gory Musser, Cas..andra Pancrson. Wyau Ball, &lt;;layton Bolin, Branson
Amoreue Salser. Molly Smllh. Kay- Cleland, Juston George, Ltlly Jacks,
lyn Spradling, Steven Stewan.
Morgan ~mes, Maria Meadows,
Fourth Grade: Zach Arms. AJ Jason Moms. Eug~ne Patterson. BnChandler, Me~han Clelland, Randy ana Wolhs, all As; Corey Huuon,
Colhns. Cccoha Core. Mark Cozan. Alexandna Jones. Vahsha Roch Ashley DeMoss, Jimmy Diamond. mond, Joe Sauerfield. Sarah
Evan Dunn, Rene Edmonds. Heather Woodard.
Elam. Kay Ia Grover. Courtney ' Third Grade: . Emily Davis.
Haggy, Sarah Jeffers. Day ion Jcnk- Kalle Doczi. Kon Priddy. Kei1h
ins. Scou Musser. Casey Richardson. Wolloams. all A's; Jake Barnes. TalBritnce Sauoers, Dakota Smith. isha Beha: Bethany Gibbs. Foionh
Stephan Will, Christecna Young.
Grade: Ketlah Jacks, Bethany King.
Firth Grade: Wcs Ault, Josh Josh Tayl'f· all A's; Andre~ Ban rum.
Bolin. Bryce Davis. Wcs10n Fife. · Cayla Le.e. Timmy Spires. Fiflh
Cody Hysell . Amanda Jeffers. Grade: Moranda Beha. Sarah Dawn
Nathan Jeffers, lilian Jenkins. Jake Jenkins, all A's; Valerie Diddle, CariKennedy. Josh Kennedy. Le1ha Lau· ra· Gardner, Tyson George, Adam
dcrmih, Adam Pellegrino-Pines, lor- Humphreys, Brittany Hysell. Taryn
dan Shank, Abby S1cwan. Whitney Lentcs, Scou Tobin . DHILD PRI·
Thoene, Jake Veno). Jo&gt;h Venoy. ~ARY: Terry Jewell . DHILD
Ali son Woods. Danic.l Youn~ .
INTERMEDIATE : Amanda MnrMH: Gene Buckley, Joauana ris, Nikki Parsons.
Fetty. Megan Johnson. Ka1ie Kihblc. SALEM CENTER
RUTLAND ·
Kindergarten: Samantha Gobl.o.'
Kindergarten: Au&gt;lin Adkins. Chelsea Stiffler, All A's; Juslon
Shcllic Bailey. Cameron Bolin . · Brown, Harley Miller, TJ Quillen,
Gretchen Cleland. Mauhcw Eblin. Jade Wallace; F:irSI Grade: Jordan
Adam Ell ion. Michelle' Haley. Duncan: Briuany Frazier. Joshua
Chel&gt;ic Hendrix. Whii'&gt;"Y · Hicks. Glover, David · Grim. Annisha
Aaron Maxson. Amanda Meadows. Kopec. Dustin McDanoel . Ashley
Tyson Morri &gt;. Cnllin Otwonh. Parreu, Shane Rose, All As; Mary
Braden Prmcr. Kayla Salser. Carlcc Choate, Adam George; Second
Smolh. Cohon Stewart an·A's; Bran· Grade:
Rebecca
Camcrbury.
.den Hankl a. Joshua Mtllcr. Jus11n Samantha ·McDonald, April Oiler.
Nitz. Kay Ia Williams.
All A's; Michael Bailey, Malthcw
First Grade: Micki Barnes, Dunkle. Michelle Eggers. Jonathan
Dus1y Eads. Chelscy Elliot!. Corey Handley, Briuany Kimple. Alyssa
Elliou , Hannah Elliull, Joey Ellis, Longstreth, Stacy Macomber, Skylar
Allison Engle, Ben Hood, Brad Compton , Robin Taylor, John
Hood,' . Pam Ke ss inger, Samuel Wilcox; Third· Grade: Seth John·
McCall ;' Dakota Oliver, Molly Prid- son, All A's; Joshua Burnem, Diania
dy, Adam Robinson. Maggie Satter" Canterbury: Corinna Cross; Fourth
field, an A's; Tanner Hysell, Kayla Gra,de: Raymond Reynolds, SamanKing. Cody Williams.
tha Shontz, James Wallace; Fifth

Mc{an

Cook. Mkhael Durst. Anna Hartrnbach, Brinney Jacks, Kay!a
McCanhy. Cory Shea and Meha
Whan, all A's; Justin Bell, Janue
Ellit, Kayla Fetty, Aaron Fife, ~
Hollen, Tara ~ Meghan les!te,
Autumn Mclaughlin, Bradley Smith,
Bobby Stone and Eric VanMeter.
SALISBURY
Khtdergartea: Alaine A~old,
Meisha Dei wert. Heath . Dettwoller,
Erica Erwin, William Folmer, Kelsey
Howell, Nicholas Ingels, Daniellc
King. Vinoria Lawson. Dustyn Lu,
Samantha lewis, Marissa McAngus,
Bo-Oara Powell, Kelsey. Shuler,
Mary Scarbrough, Stephante Smnh,
Bradley Stone, ConnO&lt; Swartz and
Charles Noland.
Fint Grade: Kelsey Bunon,
Darby Gilmore. Alyss Green, Breana
Hemsley, ' Scot! Kennedy, Bobby ·
King. Amber Ohlinger, Bryant ~US·
sd l, Cassie Smith, Amber Tnpp,
Megan Tripp and Gabriel Williams.
Second Grade: Crockeu Crow,
. Ruche! Davis, JT Evans, Amanda
Gilkey, Brandon Hanning, Shawn
Hawley, Morgan Kennedy. Ashley
Mayes, Andrew O' Bryaryl. Briuany
Paxton. Demetria Pearson, Jessamyn
Reynolds, Stepha.nie Stites, Cai!lyn·
Thomas.
Fourth Grade: Shauna Clark,
Raven J;'gan, Andrew Fairchild,
Andy Garnes, Andy McAngus,
Brandon , Pearson, Bradley Ramsburg; Dru Reed . Jennifer Smith,
Bradley
Soulsby,
Caitlin
Williamson; Fifth Grade: Brooke
O'Bryant and 'Christopher Van
Reeth.

check the

Sentinel

Galli
.
)

Home appllancet, electronics, lawn a garden and tools

ou'r entire store.is on sale

'
KttiiiiCIA! $~per Capacity PI us washer
witii·Qufet Pak" sound insulation. 29801
Sate 419.99. Reg~ 479.99

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FINAL SAVINGS 1102

Kenmore 'Super Capacity Plus dryer, 6nJ1.
323.99 after 10% savings. Reg. 399.99

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170

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Craftsman 75-pc. mechanic's tool set.
Over $120 value. 33474
Reg. 59.99

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FINAL SAVINGS 1 158

Bu sh. Shain~ C handler:

Dcannn Cundiff. R yt:~ n Curti s, Henry
Docrfcr. Em il y Fi e ld s. Lucrcshiu
HowarJ. Jonnthnn Howell, Sarah
1-luhhan.l. Jl!\sit.:a Jewe ll. Ravc_n
Jnlm son. \Vhillh,;y John so n, Jacla
Kirhy. Thon"os Klein . Ricky La uder·
milt. Tiffany M~.;Adams. Aaron
Oliplwnl , AkxanUr1a Path:rs1tn, Erin
Perkins. Alisha Quillen , Calcc
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MaUitcw Will.
Third Grade: Sam:onlha Acker-·
man.
Michael
Ball.
Jo,hua
Carau ohers, Renee Colhurn. A&gt;hlcy
Cre me ans, Kelse y Fife. JR Grady.

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ADDRESS: 430 SAver 'Bridge Plaza
STORE HOURS: SU 12·5, M·F 9·6, S8·6 PHONE: 740·446·1546

10%

'

tarr opens mpeachment inquiry
By LARRY MARGASAK

As!Jiodllled Pren Writer

House approves
life insurance
investment bill

Forked Run, URG Meigs may
receive funding under new bill
Forked Run State Park near
Reedsville may be a big benetidary
of th~ proposed State Capital Budget:
House Bill 850, now being consid·
ered by the Ohio House Finance
Comminee.
Stale Represenlalive John Carey
(R-Wellston). ·a member of the·
Finance and Appropriations Commince. announced that over $70 million is ·included in the Capital Budget for projects in .the 94th District.
· which includes Meigs, Gallia and
Jackson counties along with part of
Lawrence County.
House Bill 850 includes over $69
million for school buildings for the
94th District alone (a total of $505
million foi.the state).
Forked . Run Stale Park may
receiYe $895,000 for electrical
upgrades in the park. The park currently has 198 campsites, none with
electric service.
The bill also includes $50,0(Xl for
renovations to the University of Rio
Grande Meigs Center in Middlepon.
Carey said the House Finance

Good Afternoon
Today:s Sentinel
Calendar ,
Classifieds
Comics
· Editorials
Local
Sports
Weather

Thlll0vertt5emtnt mthJOt$ m•n~ rtdutiKJ'!, It,« iii p,jrchnes111'111 ~trill 11 our-~ low pnu Enwonmentat illfttllrtH wra
Wtltn out·of.ltoe•• ocrur )'Oll h - two option1 • A .ub~htult 1tem attne same Ptltel\11111 01st011nt d tht \ttm wu lfll~ted • An equal or IJP.tt~r ot~m •t me ldlll'rlli«l Pfil:t ~ the ilem wu not red~Xtd
IMPORTANT CREOil TERMS : Silles IBI, aetrVI!I'~ 0t rnstiiiiiiOil no ttncluc1M rn !TolM II"II~ pa,m~nts 'hoWfl Acluitl moflthly!M~ment '""Y w~r y d~pendlflll 011 )'OUI tulltnl account ~llntt ll'ld m1~ be 1li&amp;h~ hip In VT , luYfld br Stars Nationll fhnll..
0'4 fiNANCE CHA~E DETAILS I~ DIIHtdlr A~I•III:H lor q~11 Ired purch- wrlh Se111&gt; Del~ 8r'hnH Optron on Sears Cr11011 AcCOlii11S •Be 5\A'e 10,1511 Our lit~ !1550CII!,e to• thl5 Ollliofl InC detailS. S-400 at qllltllled merthlndiM r&amp;quite(lto open 1 S!Jin.Chlljll PLUS KtOiml, 'oil' it~ $100 mt!lmum I&lt;ICI ons
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Exftn:r!.l! I!Q111pm11n1 •&amp;llur'l!S some

u~ri:ll\' . "Thrcu&amp;f1 November 21 . E•ciuclft Da;;tptionat VIIUM, !PICIII pr.rn:h!1511$1ild eow• prlJducn. (!1998 SUit, ROII!bu t k lnd co.

' a'

7
12·13-14
15
2
3

4-5-6

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: Ill ; Pick 4: J2~5
Sup&lt;r Lnltn: 3-20 -27 -32 -41-46
Kicker: 803642
W.VA.
Daily 3: 817 Daily 4: 2Y79
II) 199 ~

•

Ohln Vullcy

WASHINGTON - Independent
Counsel Kenneth Starr opened the
third presidential impeachment
inquiry in the nation's history by
charging ~ident Clinton "en isused his authority and power" to
impede ci~il and criminal ca'les
against him.
"The hearing today is not a trial.
It is not White House versus Starr.
Nor is it Republican versus Democrat," House Judiciary Committee
Chairman Henry Hyde, ••honed his
colleagues today.
The hearings opened with rancor
a&lt; Republicans immediately thwaned a Democratic request to give the
president's lawyer more time to
cross.examine Starr. ••This is a grave
·disservice at a grave constitutional

moment," R"P· William Dclahun~ 0Ma.s .. lamented.
After frequCI)t interruptions by
Democrats. Hyde ~napped. "You are
disrupting the continuity of this meeh
ing... Starr waited to make his ca.'IC.
"On at lea.•l six different occasions- from Dec. 17, 199'1. through
Aug. 17, 1998 -the president had
lo make a decision," Starr said in his
prepared · testimony. "He could
choose truth or he could clsoo.&lt;e
deception. On all ~ix occa.•ions. the
preSident chose deception."
Starr wa.• the leadoff witnes.&lt; for
the historic event, with nine ·televi,
sion networks s:arrying the hearing
live. II provided highly panisan stan
lo proceedings aimed at deciding
whether Clinton ~hould be removed
from office by subsequent votes in
the full House and Senate. The hear-

a

'

ing wa• in the same room where the his wife and daughter for his "inapIa&lt;! impeachment proceedings propriate" relationship with Monica
again..r Richard Nixon convened a Lewinsky, Clinton replied: "I did il
quart~ century ago.
in a direct and straightforward manSeeking 1o end this lhreallo Clin- ner." Did they forgive him? "I
ton's presidency and prevent a per- believe they did. yes."
manenl blot ·on his legacy. the White
Republican members·of the Judi;
House sent Clinton's private lawyer. ciary Committee, undeterred by elec'
David Kendall, to interrogate Starr lion losses and negative polls. pres.o;ed
and make a cao;e on the president's ahead with plans to broaden the
behalf. Kendall. who ha.• accused impeachment inquiry beyond
Starr in court of proseculorial mis- whether Clinton illegally tried to cov·
conduct, sal with a squadron of ·er up his affair with Ms. Lewinsky. ·
White House lawye"' facing Starr.
They wero! ..seeking subpoenas
Clinton wasfar from the scene in today for four new witnesses9 H¥=1udJapan. where lie began a five-day ing Clinton lawy~ Rvben Bennett
Asian trip. Asked generally about the and presidential contidanl Bruce
pressures of his job, Clinton told a Lindsey, and have reque,ted a key
Tokyo iown-hall meeting today, "()f document from the JustiL-.. Depan·
course. sometimes you want, to get men! laying out allegations in the
away from it."
Democrats' campaign fund-raising
Asked how he had apologized to
Continued on page 3
.

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·'

•

.,

•

COLUMBUS (APJ- Terminal· policies.
Ohio's-law would not go as far as
ly i ll .bhioans may get help sorting
through offers from investors who regulations irl some · other states.
wi 11 trade cash up front in exchange however. Some States have set minifor their life insurance benefits after mum pay-out levels for viatica! setthey &lt;lie.
. . tlements. Ohio would only register
The House on Wednesday unant- companies that offer the senlements
mously approved a bill allowing the and regulate the form of the contmcts
·
Ohio Department of Insurance to reg· used.
.
Gloria
·Smith,
director
of
the
•
ulate contracts known as viatica! set·
llemenls. The bill now goes to the Columbus AIDS Ta.'k Force, said
oversighl of the industry is needed.
Senate.
Under the terms of such deals, ter- . She said her group receives solic·
minally ill people sign over their life itations from a lot of companies, and
insurance pQlicies to . in~~st~n. has no wuy'l&gt;f'lelling the sOj!llfrom
explained sponsor Ron Mottl, D- the unscrupUlous. The ' ta&lt;k force
Partna. The dying person gewneed- passes along the infonnation with a
ed ca.&lt;h, and the investor makes a warning 10 the clients to be careful.
profit on the difference between the
"We encourage our clients to do
cost of the policy and its value when their homework," Ms. Smith said.
Some companies pay as much as
the person dies.
Right now. the practice is unreg- 80 cents on the dollar, she added.
ulated in Ohio, Monl said.
Others are less generous.
In other action, the House unani"Currently. terminally ill people
are bein·g taken advantage of," he mously approved a bill requiring the
state to develop a uniform way to
said. .
· Some are gelling only 15 percent describe state-owned properly on
to 20 pereenl of the value of their real estate titles.

Kenmore

' COUNr ON SEARS FOR SATISFACTION QUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK
YOU CAN

Buckeyes
remain
unbeaten
Page&amp;

1-lometoWII Newspaper

2 Sections · 16 Pages

Kenmore 3-level Ultra Wash" . America 's
best-cleaning dishwash]ng system. 17795
Closeout 399.88. Was 499.99 While quanlities last

NIT cage results, Page 4·
Ann Landers column, Page 7
Beat of the ·Bend column, Page 7

Today: Rain
High: 60; low:40

i

'_,.,., 7

Conde, James Cunningham, . Brett

Curtis,, Calch Davis. Taylor Deem.
Autumn Ddv1oso.,, Erin Dunn. Kristin
Eblin . Corey Fink. Quenlel Garnes,
Veronica Grimm, Stephanie Hudson.
Hol ly Jel'krs. Ryan Jclkrs; Patience
Johnson. Ashky Laudcrmih. Adaon
Lavender, Max 'Little. Jess ica
McAdams. Autumn McDaniel, Ariel
Nilz. Shclhy Ohlinger, Erin Patter. &gt;On, .. Cc-Aria Powell. Richard
RcUicr. Jacnh Rofllc , Steven Searles.
Tyb Simpson, Cai1lin Tillis, Rvan
VanMcttr, Mcri VanMeler. . C.o1y
Will. Julian Young. Victoria Zabran .
S.cond Grade: Laece Anm,
Ad rian Bolin , Chan1e llc Brumfield.

berly Johnson, Aubrie Koj,ec,
Jonalhan Larkins, Sarah Lu, Aira
Uule, Christina Miller: Bobbi Napper, Justin Oiler, Ashley Payne, Erica
Poole. Briuany Powers. Amanda
Priddy, Stacy Pullins, Joshua ,Ray,
Jessica Smith, Miranda Stewart,
Ryan Slobart, Sarah SIObart. Clay
Stone, Abranda Storm$, Brandi
Thomas, Holley Williams, Jordon
Williams, Angela Wilson, Bryan
Wilson.
.
Eighth Grade: . Bridgeu Atkins,
Deadra Barndt. Ashley Banrum,
Brook Bolin, Lindsay Bolin, Benjamen Bookman, Troy Brooks, Andrea
Burdeuc. Steven Call. Melinda
Chancey, Ashley Colwell, Carrie
Darst, Loretta Darst, Kayte Davis.
Maria Drenner, Michelle Drenner,
Ashley Eblin, Derrick Fackler, Hoi lie Ferrell, Jennifer Foreman, Jackie
Frecheue, Robyn Freeman, Zachary
Gilkey, Jon Halar, Christopher Haning. Meghan Haynes, Heather
Hysell. Crystal Jacks. · Katie Jeffers ,
Brooks Johnson, Krista! Johnson .
Kelly Johnston , William Kauff. Mallory King, Ryan Lemley~ Shawna
Manley, Valerie McClintic, Matthew
O'Brien. Jessica Preas!, Ryan Qualls,
Jason Rosier,' Jeremy Roush,
Michele R,unyon, Benjamin See,
Brandy Shea, Joshua Simpson,
Tashia Stewan, Emity Story,
Stephanie Story-Schwab, Samantha
Tilley, Jennifer Walker, Elizabeth
Wilfong, Allison Wil)iamson Hannah Woolard, Jennifer Zielinski.
BRADBURY
1
Fourth grade: Ennne Kennedy
and Alex Sis~on, all A's; Steven Hudson, David Poole, Chalsie Manley,
Katie Rodehaver, Tani!ha Thomas
and Michelle Weaver, AlB; Filth
Grade: Samantha Cole, Ashley

.

·, .

\

Johnson ,

POMEROY
Kindergarten: Alexander Acker·
man , Jordan Anderson ..Zachary Barton. Hannah Cleek , Sclecna Dowell,
Briua Flowers. Nmhan Gilkey, Svannah Graham. Wade Harrison , West on Hi ~.: kman , Daniel Jenkins. Brandon King . Angel Lemley, Billy
McAdams . Michael McKenzie.
Johna1h an Michael. Jeremiah Myers.
Chelsea Paucrson. Garren Rifnc,
Kasey P-oush. Anthony Rowe, Hay Icy Spradling. Kmclyn Slacy, Sarah
Thomas .. Cody Weaver, Tyler Will,
Christ'ia.n Woods.
First Grade: Chesley Arms.
Kayla Bachlcl, Kri sten Ballard,
Shannon Barrett. Autumn Bush. Ivy

Grad.,: Zachary Weber, All A's;
Julia Johnson, Kelly Napper.
MIDDLE SCHOOL
Sixth G~: Grant Arnold,
Sheena Ash, Emily , Ashley. Renee
Bailey. Troy Barret~ ferfrey Baughman, Ashley Baylor, Jerri Bentley,
Jeremy Blackston, Eric Burnem,
Sar:lh Bush. Zachary Bush, Brandon
Carpenter, Miranda Casteel, Justin
Coleman, April Coppick. Alisha Crcmeans, Shawn Day. Jason Detnoss,
Justiio Demoss, Trevor Depoy, Jodi
Donohue, Patrick Dowell, Justine
Dowler. Peggy Duff, Walter Ellis,
Megan Garnes. Lisa Gheen, ~hley
Graham. Randy Han, Aaron lhle,
Josh~a Johnson, Gary Kauff. Madi&gt;on King, Michael Kirby. Matthew
KrawscLyn, Donna Lamben, Cassie
Lee, Tiffany Manley, Megan Mayes,
Carrie Michael. Marguriue Molden,
Carl Noel, Am,ber Poerce. Samantha
Pierce. Katie Reed. Mdissa Rich·
onond. Anna Sayre, Michael Sayre,
Regan Shuler. Clare Sisson. Adam
Snowden. Megan 1ibbeus, Brooke
Vcnoy, Ross Well, Donald Whan.
Che,tcr Wigal, Sarah Wilkes, Courtncy Williams, Natasha Wise, Jenni·
anne Young.
Seventh Grade: Jeremy Banks,
Tyler Barnes, Jodi Barren, Jessica
Blactlnar, David Boyd. Jaclyn Brad' bury. Nathan Brickles, Kara Buffington, Nicole Butcher. Kerbi Buzzard.
Kcnne1h Carsey. Jamie Chapman,
Kathryn Childs, Benjamin Collins, .
Jessica Curfman, James . David,
Jaynee Davis, Jeremy Dingey, Mac·
gan Dodson. Jennifer Dunn, Rosanora Eggers, Andrea · Felty, Tyler
French, Jesse Gates, Heidi Gilmore,
Bruce Glover,, Ashley Halley, Nichole Harper, Tiffany Hcrrlman, Jessi·
ca Howell, Michele Imboden, Kim'

Sports

Nov..,._ 1t, 1tlll

Weather

Pullh ~ hing

Cu

'

rttl

..

ELVIS IMPERSONATOR • Dwight Icenhower will do a lively
Impression of Elvia alnglng "Heart Break Hotel" In the Alverbend
Talent Revua '98, Dec. 27 and 28, at the Melga Middle School, Mid·
dlaport.

Committee is expected to approve the
bill today and send it to the full House
in December.
"The capitar budget is a process in
the works and none of these items arc
yet law. but having them included in
HB . 850 "-' submilted is a good
stan," he said.
,
Singers. dancers, novelty numbers
"Five million dollars are in the and impersonate"' wi.ll be included in
budget for improvements to the coun·
the "Riverbend Taknl Revue '98" to
ty fairgrounds in lhe stale," he added.
be staged at the Meigs Middle Sc~ool
"II , is not spelled .out yet how this
in Middleport al 8:15p.m. on Fnday
money will be distributed, but there and Saturday nights, Nov. 27 and 28.
. is a great need for such assistance in
· The· show, directed by Myron
our area."
Duffield. i~ sponsored by the River· Other regional projects include: ' bend Arts Council and the United
$125,000 for the Ariel Theatre in GalFund of Melgs County. The two
lipolis and additional funds for groups will share equally in the pro·
improvements to the University of ceeds.
Rio Grande and Gallipolis DevelopTickets for the show went on sale
mental Center: $80.000 for the Gal- last week. They arc $4 if purehased
lia County Industrial Park: $3.3 mil· in advance of the show, and $5 anhe
lion for the Sou them Campus of Ohio door on show nights. Advance tickUniversity in Lawrence County; ets may be purchased atthe Middle$125,(Xt0 forthe Markay Theater and port Department Store. Office Ser· '
funds for the Ohio Department of vice and Supply. and the Ohoo Rovec
Natural Resources office in Jackson Bear Co., all in Middleport. and at the
County.
.

SAX SOLOIST • Chad Dodson will preunt two numbera on hla
saxophone in the Rlverbend Talent Revue '98 to be presented on
Frldlly and saturday, Dec. 27 and 28, at Meigs Middle School In
Middleport.

Meigs talent show scheduled next weekend
Hanwell House and Swisher and
Lohse fllarmacy in Pomeroy.
Pre-show and during intennission
pianist Beverly Adkins, a "guitarist
and drummer, will present musoc. The
trio will also accompany several
numbers in the show.
·
·
."Wonderful Night" by Jason Riley
will open the show and then return
later mt the program with guitar to do
a Bob Dylan medley. Other s?lo!sts
will be Tammy Ttaylords·mdgmg
"Unforgettable"; Ka hy Hoo oong
"Dream a Little Dream M Me" and "I
Don't Know Why"; "Julie Riftle.
"Walk in' After Midnight" and "Sweet
Dreams"; B. J. Smith, "I Believe in
You" and "Insensitive", and Dixie
Sayre.
.
Christmas themed songs wi II
,

inClude. "Winter Wonderland" by lection of vaudeville-type instruBeverly Adkins and "Merry Christ· ments. and Marlena Burnside will be
mas Darling" by Sharon Hawley. To playing the Cajun spoons.
a vocal by B. J. Smith. "My Hean
Paulene Harrison and Tom DooWill Go On", Tim and Edy King will ley will do the jinerbug to "American
do a ballroom dance.
·
Honky Tonk· Bar Association" and
Chad Dodson will be featured on then Dooley will join Rae Gwiaz:
saxophone solos 10 "Memory and dowsky for a tap number, "Pun in' on
"Send iii the Clowns.".There will be the Ritz." Katie Childs and Carrie
duets with guitar accompaniment by Michael will lap dance to '' In the
Bill Crane and Lynn Plants whose Mood".
.
selections will include "If You See
David Icenhower will present his
Him" and "There You Have II", and El•is impersonation of"Hearl Break
vocalists, Beverly Adkins and Tam· Hotel", the Community chorus will
my Taylor. "The Most Wonderful do medley. a band made up of
Time of the Year."
Dwight Icenhower. ·Nick Michael,
Several novelty numbers have and J"'on Riley. guitarists, and Bryari
been included. Myron Duffield as Brown, drummer. will do some Bea,
ties numbers: and a clogging group
Professor MyRoni will be perfonning will do a routine to "Old Time Rock
on instruments from his unique col,
and Roll."

a

November tOp month for deer-auto collisions
COLUMBUS • Motorists should .an estimated 15 to 20 percent over the
pa sl two years due 10 a•gressive
exercise extra caution when traveling
•
on Ohio roadways during November. hunting regulations thai were
·
the peak month for deer-vehicle
col- des·o'gn•d
• 10 r•du,·•
• " deer abundance
the s·tat•.
the recent
li~ions, . &lt;tcconJing to the Ohio Divi~ a"ros·s·
...
... D•spile
...
,·lt'ne,
the
·
,
.
·rate's
deer
popularo·on
1·s·
de
sion of Wildlife and the Ohio lnsur•
ance lnslilule.
more than double its size from 12
ot· p•opl•
Despite a decline last year of live Y•ars·
• an&lt;&gt;.
• Th•number
•
• • Jo· v·
·
nn•
·
n
Oho'&lt;&gt;.
al&lt;&gt;n"
wo'th
the
number
percent in the number of reported 1 • 1
e
deer-ve~icle t:ollisions, morl! than 11. r•c•t
-..... ' s·tered ".,.;",ho·... . Je.··"·' and total mo.les.·
'
24.000 accidents involving deer driven
has also risen along with the
occur each year.
deer population.
The number of deer-vehicle co IIi- · "Anyr 1•111e y&lt;&gt;u h1ove a ho' enh ubun, ions has increased 24 percent from d'·on···
.- &lt;&gt;t' deer to •., 0 along wo'th more
·
veho'cles·
&lt;&gt;n the "N&gt;ud and onore mo'le·.,·
1990 through 1997, or un uvemge of
three percent annually. Yearly drl'ven , th•re
• wo'll be an t'ncre"se
~ in the
declines in 'these accident totals number or collisions with d~er. While
ac··• 1·dents·
occurred in 1995 and 1997. These Ihe numb•r
• ol· th•s·e
•
.
·
1
remao'ns·
ho'
nh.
yearly
a····o'dent
tOI"Is
I
h
II
year y deer·Ve ide CO ISIOn lola S
e
"
"
. include: 1997 _ 24.15·1; 1996 , involving deer have · actually
5 24 ,ou 11: 1'"'4
·- •
~4.636, : remained steady over the pust Jive
4 ,~
25 ..
&gt;.:199.
n
1993. 24.813; 1992 . 22.758; 1991 - years," said John Wisse, u Division of
20.776i·&lt;iffii· ·1990 -19.972.
Wildlife spok~sman.
01. t'-·
The Division of Wildlife says
'"' 24,151 deer killed on the
.
d
ht'ghway
t'n Ohio in 1997. here is how
Ohio's deer population has dec Ione

· the number of reported accidents
.. Mdst deer-vehocle collosoons
stacked. up by c.ourr y for southeast- occur from Iale October through
Oh
I
R 522 M k mid-December and during peri&lt;~s of
em
to trave ers: oss
; . us be.
.
d
ongum 516 ; .A!hens 493; Wa_shmglon darkness
shortly
·
Th h' lore
h sunnse
b an ,.
403; Jackson 389; Hocktng 3.84: aller sunset.
·
1e · og dest mom er o·
Coshocton 354; GALLI.A 347; Sctoto collisions 1nvo vmg eer o,ccurs 1n
·
326; Guernsey 323: Poke 268: Bel- November and when driving condo·
mont 242; Perry .242; MEIGS 242; lions are. very
• good. d
h
La wren. ce 213,· Vmton 203; Mornun
.
·-When
you see one eer cross
I o
•
·
174; Noble 139; a_nd M
. onroe 68.. road. look tl&gt;r other
d deer1 111 lnllow.
h ·d
There w~rc ~total of 5,848 deer:ve~~·-If you see a eer a ong I e" e
cle c_ollos10n~ reponed tn Wtldhte of the road or upon u roadway, slow
Oistnct4 d.urmg 1997.
..
down. honk your horn and llash
1 yhur
Some tops o. ffered by the Ohoo high-beam headlights
se•era
•
h dl ' htimes .
Insurance lnsll!ute '011)
and
the
Deer
tend
to
hxate
on
ea og Is. so
'
Ohio Division of Wildlife to reduce Jlashing the
may help preII' high-heam
·
the likelihood of striking a deer •enl a co osoon.
include:
.
--If it appears you arc going to hit
. ·- D_rive with extra caution. espe. • a deer, Idhen hit it anp stop your vehi·
c~ally on areas where deer crosstng . cle un er control. It's natural to
Stgns. arc
dbposted. and
I us~ seat bells us unempl. tnIswerve
b
hund a•oid
I striking
hrcquore . . y Slate aw.
. an unoma . . Ul I e resu IS of I is
-- Dnve at or below posted speed ttction can be fur worse than acluallimits to increase reaction time if deer ly· hilling a deer.
should be upon or near a roadway.
.. Ohio law gives resident drivers

.J..
I

of a vehocle mvol•ed 111 a deer-veho cle collision the first right of refusal
tu lake a deer from an accident scene.
Po·.··.·ession of·,., deer struck :and ko'll•d
,
d ....· · 11· ·
b·
e accompa·urong
db a co o.&lt;oon
· 1 must
h
"" ·
d
me
y
a
receop
1
at
can
b
1
1·
.."" ossue
y most aw en orcement olilcers. and
the
d Division
t' Oh ' ofWildlil'e,
•· Non
d -resih
ents
o
oo
may
notta•e
a
h b
kb
h' 1 eer 1 at
as een struc y ave oc e.
--Accident repons should be filed ,
with the proper law enforcement
agency and your insurance company.
The 011 is a trade association representing insurance companies and
agent groups for the propenylcusually indu,try. Its muin objecti•e is to
increase understanding or insurance
and related safely issues. The Division of Wildlife has responsibility and
regulatory authority to manage Ohio's
, tish and wildlife resources.

'·

�J

Thursday, November 19, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Com1nCntary

Page2

•

Thllrsd8y, November 19, 119S

Ohio weather

Death Notices

Friday, Nov. 20
AccuWeathe.. forecasl for dayttrne conditions, low/htgh temperatures

The Daily Sentinel
'Dta6fislid in 1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ol!lo
614-992-2156 • Fax 992·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publllller
DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

Pollsters finally getting
a break from the critics
By WILL LESTER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Pollslers hstened to months of cnuc•sm about sur\cys that found tht public far more mterested 1n 1ssues than Impeachment
heldre they finally heard voters bear them out on Elecuon Day
·I can't remember a t1me when pollsters -.ere so pummeled." New York
pollster Mark Schulman smd at a gathenng of the Amencan Assoc1a110n for
Public Optmon Research last week
In the months before the electiOn, many people found 11 d1fficult to
believe that a ma.Jonty of Amencans weren't more upset about the prestdcnt 's behavwr wuh Momca Lewmsky
They asked Who are these people that are be1ng polled? How come none
of these pollsters ever call me''
" We heard more of that because an awfu l lot were not happy wuh what
the polls were showmg," sa1d Andrew Kohut, d1rector for the Pew Research
Center for the People &amp; The Press " When you don t like the message, you
shoot the messenger "
Of the 180 m1lllon adu lts m thiS country who are ellg1ble to be polled, ·,
only a lew hundred thousand are polled m a gtvcn year
Some people were susptctous that pollsters were only !nlervtcwtng people on the East coast or from btg ctt1es, a beltef fueled by the locatton of
many major polling fmns on the East Coast, satd Kathleen FrankoVIc, dtrector, of surveys for CBS News In fact, pollsters mtervtew Amencans from all
over the country usmg a phone survey techntque called random dtgtt dtallng
Because people expected the preSident's approval numbers to drop, polls
were taken more frequently and became a pan of the debate over Clinton 's
fne FrankoVIC satd
" Polltng became one of the poltucal actors,'' she smd. "There wa,s a
heavy round of attacks on the accuracy of the polls "
Polls accurately ptcked up on wtdcspread dtstaste for tmpeachment and
tdenttfied the late Pemocraltc surge by ltkely voters On Eleclton Day, ext!
polls found that voters opposed tmpeachment and tnstead focused on ISsues
ltke educatton, the economy and Social Secunty m dectdmg how they would
vote.
The result· Democtats gamed five House seats, the first ltme the preSIdent's party has gamed seats tn a m1dtenn electwn m more than 60 years
The dectston by Republicans to dtsregard the pre-electton polls on vot-'
ers' diSapproval of tmpeachment proceedtngs may have been lil-adv1sed,
smd Frank Newpon, edttor tn chtef of the Gall up Poll
' Leaders who stray from the people run a nsk ," Newpon sa1d "It does n't mean leaders shouldn t try to change thctr mmds But you don 't want to
dtsc aunt what people are telltng you "
The pollsters' pre-eleclton crtttcs mcl uded House Judtctary Commtltee
Chatnnan Henry Hyde, R-Ill , who dtsmtssed surveys suggestmg the publtc
d•dn' t want •mpeachment "Polltng IS an art , not a sc tence," he satd
Speaker Newt Gmgrtch, who helped orchestrate a pre-electton ad camp31gn that tned to link Democrats to Clmton's troubles, caught blame for the
GOP's poor showmg and has announced htS mtenlton to restgn from the
House

· II you make tt a referendum on a prestdent With a 67 percent'approval
ratmg , you shouldn t be surpnsed tf the eleclt on goes agamst you," Republi can Gov Tom Rtdgc of Pennsylvanta sa1d after the elect tons
Whtle tt 's w1se to be cauuous about mterpretmg results of a stngle poll
that mtght ptc k up a tran snoty gust of publtc optnton, months of polls showmg oppo"t"m to lmpe.Jchment prov1ded ev tdence of a steady wmd blowmg
across the country
Rep Bob L1vmgston , the LouJSmna Rcp4bl1 can who IS expected to be the
next speaker, says that wh tl~ leg •sl,ttors have a duty to carry out tmpeachmenl heanngs, the poll findmgs tn opposttton to tmpeachment 'would have
tu be constdcrcd tn the poilttcal arena "
The unwtlllngness by many to accept pre-clcctton poll results may have
been human nature

Letters to the editor
Parkinson's Disease
A m11lton and a half neople are aff11cted wtth Parktnson's D1seasc
(PD ), but add to that thctr spouses, famtly members, relattves and
It 1ends, and \he number of people affected •s staggenng
Who cares?
Congress appropnates $1 640 per AIDS patten! for research but only
$4 1 per PD patten! even though the number of people ts equal The
Udall btll , an attempt to ge t add tttonal fund mg for PD re search, ts
stalled So wh,u happ ens now?
Ftft y thou sand more each year JOIII the ranks of PD status
It ts not known why PD afll tcts peopl e, but research ts bnn gmg hope
In the future a patch may gtve even dJStnbutton of medtcatlon , no more
weanng off before ttme for another ptll
One of the greatest prob lems ts speech, the softemng of the vmce and
I he slurnng o f words

We now know th at augmenttng the vocal chords wtth collagen
can re store the vo1ce to a more norm al loudn ess, vocal chords will close
more tt ghtly
Worscmng of movement anU balan ce 1s unolhcr problem that causes
the PD p.l!Jent to fa ll lh JS occ urs 111 the advanced stage, along wtth
'frcc1. rn g" when moveme nt 1s am poss1hlc Ta7mar and M1rapcx, new
mcd• c~uwns , make It po ss ahl c lor more Sancmct (the hns u; PD lrc.ttm enl) to be used Athen.1 an 1nnovatave pharnl.lt:y ~crv a cc w1th home
delivery, s p et: aall zc~ 111 gc tt1n g lnl orm .IIJ on o ut t~hou t ncumlog'll.:al mcd l t;;a ll o n ~

The y even carry a gcncnc lon n of Smc mct .11 ,1 Jcduccd t:O~ I
A free ncws lcttcr 1 tcll s .thou ! rese arch und ~pvcs ,HJvH:c Irom sret: t.ll
ISIS Ill th iS f1cld
Athe na also wo rk s duscly w1 th surport gro urs '&lt; U ~ h .ts ours Dom1n1t:
M.m.: hc"c Athena rcprcscnt.lll vc wil l he hnnJ:l lllg u~ man y ~u nd lhm gs
when he srcub to OUI grour tha . . Fru.luy Novcmhcr 20th The Ga llarohs A1ca Parkmson:-; Suppm t G10up meets C.Jch than..l Pr1d.1y 2 p m c~t

th e Grace Un1tcd MethodiSt
C hun.: h Anyone Jntc1e stcd 1n hom e deli very o l mcd1~;allons .md /m
Parkmson s IS welcome to all cnd lnl ornMtwn he lpful adv Jt:C and su pport arc yo UI s for attcndtng II you h.tvc PO or know someone who
doc"!, thi s grou p II lor you 1
'
Juanita Wood
Galhpolis

•

History is past politics; politics is present history
By Ben Wattenberg
1lle telev!Ston documentary tells
htstory as never before Cons1der
some recent PBS programs
1lle new eptsode of "1lle Amencan Expene,..,.,," mnng this week, tS
entttled "Amenca 1900" (Consult
local tclevtston schedules for ltme and
dates ) 1l1e three-hour documentary
tells the story of harsh coal stnkes,
ethntc hatred among the mmers,
Amencans fighung tn Chma dunng
the Boxer Rebellion, the mcredtble
Galveston humcane that ktlled 6000
people. Scott Joplm 's "Ragume," the
assassmalmn of Prestdent Wtlllam
McKinley, the ascens1on of roughndmg Presideni Teddy Roosevelt, the
argument between Booker T Wash
mgton and WE B DuBots about
whether economtcs or-pollt1cs would
be the best route lor Afncan-Amencan progress
Tile h1stoncal footage 1s sensational, transponmg vtewers back to the
tum of the century Htstoncal documentanes, done nght, are an an fonn
that uses arch1val v1suals to ser\e as

ttme machmes When the ume penod
examtned follows the advent of photography and movmg ptctures. the
effects can be pantcularly enllghtenmg
By my hghts - surpnse' -· I only
w1sh these documentanes had more
stattsttcs and fewer anecdotes By
1900, staltsttctans, soctologtsts and

,----, anthropologtsts
were already hard
at work. Some htStonans
were
begtnnmg to feast
off thetr product,
JUSt as some do
today -- whtle loq
many conunuc to
1gnore or mtsuse

data m the serv~ce
Wattenberg of gnevance theory Others sull go mostly by Edward
A Freeman's myop1c dtclum "History IS past pohucs, and pohucs is
present lustury " (Full d1sclosure I
am workmg on a PBS sencs that
looks al Amencan h1story prmc1pally
through the ltns of data not anecdote)
One such early data-oncnted hJstonan was Fredcnck Jackson Turner,
who tonk a smg le Ime from the 1890
Census and turned It mto a monumen-

tal intcrprerauon of Amcncan h1stnry
The data showed that the Amencan
Fron11er had "closed "- that IS, there
was no more vast and contiguous
mass of lree and open land to be settled That Turner smd, would change
the Amencan character and perhaps
not forthe better He wondered What
would become of us'
In 1900, about two-fifths (41 percent) of Amencan s lived on workmg
larms In 2000, that rate wtll be
around 2 percent Yet we produce

FATHER&amp; SON TALKS...
WHAT 00

'11?\J KNOW
ABOUT THIS

CYRERG/RI. •

mattcaiJy? Ongomg white tmmtgrauon From 1880 to 1924, Amenca
wtlnessed the largest mlgrdtton m
human history 26 mtfllpn legaltmtrugmnts arrived, mostly from Southern
and Eastern Europe, and that on an
1880 base populauon of 50 mtlhon -half agam as many' By contrast, the
currenttmrmgral!Sln wave, from 1961
to 1995, amounts to 20 million, mostly non-Europeans, on a 1961 base
populatton of 184 mdbon -- about
Qne-nmth 1l1e earlier wave makes the
current Sltuatton look hke a npple
As "Amenca 1900" repons, durmg the Prestden!Jal electton of 1900,
the mcumlient Prestdent, Wtlllam
McKinley, dtd nol achvely campatgn
for re-elecuon. That was regarded as
tecture accommodated the ongmng beneath the dtgntty of a s1ttmg PreSIrestdenual change 1lle honzontally- dent
In 1996, by contrast, the stttmg
onented ranch-style house could only
become popular m a country w1th President, was, uh, campa1gnmg qutte
plenty of land avatlable, no longer on acuve ly, and runnmg Motel 1600 for
the wtld frontter, but JUSt outstde of fat-cat guests, oozmg soft money Btll
ClUes burstmg at Lhe1r seams
Moyers ' PBS program "Washmg:
In 1900, a huge proponwn of ton 's Other Scandal," whtch atred m
Afncal1-Amencans ltved m the South early October, ts much more recent
-- 90 percent Today, 53 porcent of documentary htstory Thts ltme die
blacks ltve m the South But blacks archtval footage mcludes candtd
today make up about 13 percent of the Whtte House vtdeotaped recordtng{
Amenc"'' populauon , not much of htgh-stakes money grubbtng, offer-·
change from the 1900 rate of 12 per- mg a devastattng presentatton of how
cent In '1800, however, the propor- the Clinton-Gore campatgn engaged
tton was 19 percent
m a fiscal feedmg frenzy Moyet:S
Why dtd the share of blacks m the ; concludes' that the acuvtty was cet-·
Amencan populat•on shrmk so dra- tamly tmmoral, and qutte posSibly
tllegal
An equal opportun 1ty scourge,
Moyers also takes off after the Republicans The prograJTI should be seen,
agam tf Attorney-General Reoo
. . . _ . . , PIW&lt;Iflll
approves any one of the three curret\'1
fMah.,.ri!UI•aol oom
requests for tndependent counsels to
mvesttgate the 1996 Prestdenttal cam-,
patgn (What mtght an mdependen't
counsel have turned up about President McKinleis financmg?)
In th1s mstance, present pohucs 1s
future hiStory.
·
Ben Wallenberg, a senior fello&gt;J
at the American Enterprise lnsli·
tute, is lhe author of "Values M11.t·
ter Most" and is the host of the
weekly public tel~vision prograiiJ
·
"Think Tank."
more and better food per captta. about
a th1rd of which IS exponed, making
America the world's largest agncultuml exponer
Amencans hked the cmes; they
also ltked the open spaces Census
Bureau data measure the begmmngs
of a somewhat untquc Amencan
blend, called submbs In 1910, followmg trolley tracks, about 12 per- '
cent of Amencans already hved m
whitt would uXiay be called suburbs
By the mid-1990s that rate was 52
percent It's offietal Amenca IS a
maJonty suburban nat1on, lhe firsl m
hiStory
Anolher recent and splendtd PBS
documentary, about Frank Lloyd
Wnght, show• how Amencan archi-

9'AH~R

Elections shoVied major parties dead
By Morton Kondracke

true that voters no
More than "status quo," the label that
longer
lavor
the 1998 electtons deserve ts "panty"
Democrats m House
1lle two pan1cs now have equal loyalty
races, but they don 't
among U S voters, settJ ng 2000 up to be
ult
Republtcan
a cruc1al lascmaung contest
c1ther
What 's been dtspmved -- fornow -- ts
In
the
that GOP Vlctoncs m 1994 represented
1990 n11dteon elecpan of a 'great parttsan realignment"
llons, Democrats
shtftmg maJonty-pany status to the
enJoyed a 5 percent
Republicans
Kondracke advantage m House
llmt 1dea ts almost as dead as the
votmg In 1994, the
once-cenatn GOP "lock" on the prest
GOP had a 5-pomt advantage
dency owmg to conscrvauvc, prochvtUes
But m 1996, the pantcs spilt the
tn the South and the West lllere has Hollo;e vote 5(~ 50, and thts year the GOP
been a realignment away from Democ- had an advantage of only 2 percent - a~d
rauc mOjonty-pany status, but for the 7..cm m conteSied dtstncts
moment the movement has stopped
Accordmg to Gersh the Dcmoc1ats'
Accordtng to 1998 extt polls, 37 per- top House clet:tmns analySt, h1s party
cent of vote~&gt; descnbed themselves as gamed live seals tlus ye,u owmg to theSe
Democrats, 36 percent as Republicans jactors tr.l(htJonally Dcmc:x;rallc scats
and 27 percent as Independents
were wrested b.tck from the GOP,
The way they actually voted for Democrats ran l:onscrvau vc candidates
House seats gave the Republicans a m conscrvatavc d1 slnt.:LII dnd Republicans
500,000-vote advantage overall m the ran canchd.11cs too nght wmg lor their
435 r.tees, but m the 341 contested races, d1stncLs
Democrats came out 900 O:JO ahead out
EXIt polls show tho1t only 31 pe~&lt;·cnt
of 53 mtlhon votes cast
ol voters \I. Crc most com.::cmcd ahout the
Accordmg to electtons expert Mark two Issues Dll Which Rcpuhllcans clfC
Ger.;h of the Nauonal Commlltee for an favo1cd as problcm-suhers -- the
Effecttve Congress, the electton wa.' so nal1nn s moral clmmlc (md tdxcs while
dose that a shtft of only 9,500 votes m 52 percent named cducat•on.Jnbs, Sdt!.tl
the SIX narrowest-wmntng ne~. GOP SLX:unty .md health t(m:, where Dcmoc
seats would have gtven DemocraL' con- rats have.:\ lupstJed advantage
trol of the House
1l1c polhng sl10ws that the Momc a
A shtlt of 23,300 votes m live d1strtct,s Lcv.msky sc.mdal d1dn t sway m.my voithat wenl Dcmocrallc, meantnne, would ce. but sumc .malysts thtnk n d1d hann
have allowed Republicans to lose no Dcmo(iJ,tt.s m .mother w.ly When 11
seats and keep tl\etr former II seat b10kc last wmtcl, tlprcvcntcd Democrats
maJonty
!rom rcuu1tmg then best c.mdtdales m
TIIC cxtt pollmg shows tt 's certamly sumc Winnable d1stn&lt;.: ts

"If tt hadn't been for Lewmsky, we'd
be looking at a Democrauc maJonty
now," saJd one Democrallc official
Democrats also gtve credtt for the
ptekup to dec!Stons made by Rep Martm
Frost (Texas), who as chairma11 of the
Democratic CongressiOnal COJnpatgn
Comnunee kept the DCCC staff at elecuon-year strength throughout the cycle,
gtvmg Democrats a head start tn recrunmg, candtdate trammg and fund ra1smg
The labor mmement was cructal m
tummg out tts members and gettmg them
to vote Democrnt1c A whoppmg 23 percent of the electorate has a umon member m the household, compared wtth 14
percent m 1994, and they voted 64 to 33
pcrc.cnt Democratic
Black turnout helped Democ(ll!S wm
key statewide races m GeOI]lta, Maryland, Alabama, North Caroh na and
South Carohna, but wa"1't cruc1al m the
closest House races
A htgge• factor was the ttmc when
voters made up thm mmds whom to ·
support Accordtng to GOP pollster Ne1l
Nev. house, those makmg up thetr mmds
on Elcctton Day favored Democrats by
57 to 41 percent, as dtd those who dectdcd m the la&lt;t week, 52 to 46 pen:ent
The GOP's late attempt to make the
Lcwmsky scandal an tssue,-- se1zed upon
by Democrats lor a counterattack-- may
account lo1 that trend, as well as supcnor
Dcmocmuc gel-out-the-vote actiVIties
Titcre's no questton that the 1990s
have been a good decade for Repubhcans and a bad one lor Democrats except
at the preStdenttallevel
Smce 1991, govemorshtps have shtftep from 2R DemocratiC, 20 Repubhcan

at)d 2 tndependentto 17 Democranc, 3I

Republican and 2 independent, wtth lhll
GOP controllmg rune of the 10 btggest'
states and goverrung two-thuds of the
nallon 's people
In 1991 , Democrats controlled 73 of
the natton's 99 state legtSiau ve chambers
Post-1998, they'll have 52 llley had 57
senators m 1991 and now have 45 Ther
had 258 Holl&lt;;e seats tn 1991 and now
they have 211
The 2000 elcctton w1ll dectde who
controls U S poltucs for the next decade
The new preSident ts likely to bnng m a
House of his patty Of the 19 Repubhcan
and 14 Democratic senators facmg ,..,.' ,
electton In 2000, SIX Republicans ana
seven Democrats were elected m 1994
by less than 55 percent
'
Repubhcans have a good chance to
extend thetr advantage m governorships,
wtth e1ght Democrattc seats tn play over·
the next two year; versus only four '
Repubhcan
Ult1mately what counts most IS who
the candtdatcs are, what they s~md lor
and what's on the vote,;' mmds Rtght
now. moderate voters arc m command,
accounttng for 50 percent of the electorate compared to ) 9 percent who call
themselves hbcml and 31 pen:ent con

r

'

By Josaph Spear
seem ready for a
The ltckmg the Repubhcans took rebtrth of '50s
on Nov 3 m1ght be the best thmg that horcdom
The
has happened to them smce Ronald quesuon ts, wil l
Reagan forswore hts New Deal the GOP get the
beltefs and JOtned the Grand Old message? The stgParty
nals arc m1x.cd
The electton debacle has .tlre,tdy
A good Sign IS
had the effect of lorcmg the reStgna- the clcvatt on of
uon of House Speaker Newt Gm
Rep Robc1t Ltv
gnch L1ke many Vlswn anes, the man tngr.;ton ..,
of
cou ld tnsptre, but he could not lead Lou1 st.1na to the
Spear
He played the rad1cal s classic rotc Speaker's cha1r He
He moved the stdeltne m.trkers, redc- ts a cl.tssl&lt;.: conse JV,liiVC who seems
lincd the lnmt s, cK.p.mdcd parameters
mclmct.l up tu &lt;l po11H to go along m
Even more than Reagan. perhaps, he order to get .tlong OUT fnJcl ,lthers
lcg ltlTlli ZCd conscrva11sm pulled ,\ \\role .t ConslllutJon thlll g.t\C us the
lclt-d nltmg electorate b.tck to the oppo11un11y to sculc ou1 dJIIclcnt..:cs
nght and cstabltshcd a new center
hy t.:ompronust he ICL:l' Tltly s.ud on
But Newt ' s pnlarwng "tyle ~ot ABC s ll11s Week · p10g t.un no t
very old VCI)' last Atm:m.: ans arc ' hy dt~ l .ttc
I \C got In wmk wl\h
mostly .l modcJalc pcorlc We .tre people who tlon I hcllcvc tht: same
t:cnU Jst 1n ou1 values .md we qut~.:kly w.1y 1do
Itt c nf bombast personal .ttt ac k .md
A h.td s1g n 1s the L:OilllllUtng yam
the wedgc-assuc .1ppro.u.:h to pollll l'S ' lllL'I ol 1dcologues who dmg: In 1hc
Newt was nasty amJ he g.IVC Ius party notum th.tt thctJ IIL:!ht \qll1! al!cnd.l !S
a bellu.:osc amag:e that w.Is bound to not the pr ohlcm the prohlcn~ 1s hmv
wear thm
they .m: ~.:onmlumc. nmg: thc1r pnn(,;J What the ~.: b unt ry wants , 11 now pl cs Newt thdn I ~e ll them the 11ght
.tppcars IS ,, return to the old da) s w.ty they s.ty Newt got m the w,,y ol
when q u1et ncgut1.1lton dnd cq.mpro- the mcss.tgc. they s.1y f hcy need to
mt&gt;c ru led the publtc p1occ&lt;s We locus on PR they s.ty

And then there are the fanattcs,
three or lour score m the Congress
and who knows how many thousands
on the outstde scrcammg tn Newt's
extremtst method of expressmg htmse lf attracted a lot of gadOtes,
eccentncs, oddballs and zealots , and
the Repubhc an pany ts more burdened than ever wtth them Somehow,
the) arc gomg to have to learn to fall
m fmc wuh the new trend m moderation, or they wtll have to be dumped
It " the m•rror tmagc of the problem the Democrats had m the 1970s
and 19ROs wtth r.td1 cal femmtsts, mtlttant m1nont1cs labor loudmouths and
g:ay- nghts ,\l:ll vtsts Btll Clanton and a
~.:Ciltii S t
organ iZati on called the
Dcmor.: tUIK Leadership Movement
llhH£1Th1hlci.l them and moved the
pany 111 Jhc 1111ddle and now the hb·
cr._t] C~ li CTlliSI S aiC ~ m1mm,11 bother
1l1ey "'sull ye lp as the unmn bosses
dtd v. hen Cl mton pushed through the
No11h Amet Kdn Free T1ade Agree
mcnt hut few people P•'Ythem mud1
.mcnuon

The Republlc ,ms must do the s!tmc
thing With the sm;ml conscrv~ltl vcs
the .mt1 ,\honmmsts -- even the suppl y-stJcts Rtght now. fm example, 1s
the Jde.tl moment to tell the utterl y

•

T-

.

Clev_~ 1311"144~

--~

- ....

'

.........

Dennis H. Staats

Mansfield 37°/44;-1 •

-

~

• Cotumbut

' ~viO· ~34"/46"
•

-

38"/46'

-~----~-

/

'

KV

C t998 AccuWeather, Inc

Sunny PI Cloudy

Emma Radford
Emma Radf ord. Pomeroy, dted Wednesday. Nov 18. 1998 at Grant Medtcal Center, Columbus, Arrangements Wtll be announced by tbe Pomeroy
Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home

0

By the Associated Press
Southeastern Ohio
Today Mostly cloudy. A chance
of showers thts afternoon H• ghs m
the mtd 60s Southwest wmd 10 to 20
mph Chance of ra1n 40 percent
Tontght Showers l1kely Lows m
the mtd 40s West wtnd 5 to 15 mph
Chance &lt;!,1 ram 60 percent
Frtday .Mostly cloudy w11h a
chance ot ram Htghs tn the lower

50s Chance of l"dtn 50 percent
Extended rorecasl
,
Fnday-, ntght .Mostly cloudy.
Lows m the m1d 30s
Saturday Panly cloud~ H1ghs m
the upper 40s
Sunday.. Clear Lows m the lower 30s and h1ghs 111 the mtd 50s
Monday Mostly clear Lows m
the upper 30s and htgbs m the lower
' 60s

More precipitation likely
By The Atsoclated Press
The prectpttavon - ram m the
south and r~m miXed wtth snow in
the north - will ilnger tor11ght, the
Nattonal Weather Serv1ce satd
It wtll rematn breezy wtth lows 111
the 30s
Snow flumes are ilkely 1n northern Ohto on Frtday. whtle the south
niay see some more ram, fOrecasters
said

Htghs wli l be 1n the 40s
The record -high-temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
staL1on was 73 degrees m 1985 whtle
the record low was 3 below zero in
I880 Sunset tomght wtll be at 5 13
p.m. and sunnse Friday at 7 22 a.m
Across the notion
A bnsk cold front was sweeptng
across the East early today, sendmg
snow into the Northeast

Today's livestock report

Denms Herbert Staats Jr. 77, Ocoee, Fla , d~&lt;d Saturday, Nov 14. 1998
at hts reSidence.
A truck Jnver. he was bum Jan I, 1921 1n Huntmgton. W Va son of the
late Denms Herben Staats Sr and Thelma Ftom Lee Staats He wa.&lt; a Navy
vetemn of World War II and a member of the Church of God uf Prophecy.
He ts surv1ved by five daughters and three sons-an-law. Patncm A and
Russell Maynard of Mason, W Va., Carolyn S and Harry Young of Pomeroy,
Rebecca J and Donald Hall ahan of Ocat:e. Brenda K Revel of West Palm
Beach, Fla . and Adda Lee Manm ol E-.ns, W lla . loor ~ns. Danny L. Staats
of Ocoee, Charles E Staats of Apopka, Fla, Dav1J S · Staats and Wtlllam
p Staats, both ot Ocoee, 22 gr.tndch !ldren. 20 great-grandchtldren
He was also preceded tn death by hiS w1le. Dorothy M Staats tn 1991,
two sons. Gary D. Staats and John Shennan Staats.
Serv1ces wtll be held Fnday, I p m at the Foglesong liu neral Home w1th
the Rev Dav1d Ftelds ollictaung. Bunal Will follow tn Fa1rplatn Cemetery,
Fatrplam, W Va wtth gravestde m1htary serv1ces by Amencan Leg10n Sm•thCapehan Post 140, New Haven, W.Va and Veterans of Foretgn Wars Stewan-Johnson Post 9926 Mason
Fnends may call Thursday, 6-8 p m at the funer-.tl home

problems
The comm1ttee al ...o pl.mned to
questl(&gt;n Damel Gecker, the lawyer
lor Clinton accuser K.1thleen W1lley
.tnd N.tthan Landow, a Maryland
Democrat who had contacts wrth
Mrs W1lley She has accused the
preSident of makmg a sexual advance
mstde the Whue House
Some Democrats have: sought to
turn the spotl1ghl on Starr, challengang h1s authonty lo mv e~ ta gate the
Lewtnsky affair and cnuctzmg hiS
mve stagat1ve method s In a t.1ped
lllh!TVIt:W wuh ABC. Starr respond ~
ed "In terms ol our h.mdmg th1s
anvestagatton we have done every·
thmg ac.:cordmg to trad1t1onal prosecutonal method s "
• In hts prepared tesllmony, Starr

Unus of the Me~gs County Emergency Medtcal Serv1ce recorded seven calls for asststance Wednesday
Untts respondtng included.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I0 0 I a m . Maples Apartn;tents,
Pomeroy, Mary Rhmehan, treated .tt
the scene,
10 46 am, H1gh Slreet. Pomeroy,
Besste R1fe,,Veterans Memonai.Hospttal,
'
12:39 p.m., Br-.tdbury Road, Mtddleporl, Arlene Davts, Holzer Med·

'

300-400# St. $64-$77. Hf $57-$67,
500-650# St $58-65 Hf $54-$60
650-800# St $57-$62, Hf $53-$60
Well Muscled/Fleshed $29-$35,
Medtum/Average $25-$29,
Thtn/Ltght $21-$24; Bulls $33$42
Back To The Farms
Cow/Calt Pmr&lt; $l2S-535, Bred
Cows $250-$475, Baby Calves $135,
• Goats $16-80
Next spectal graded feeder sale
Monday, Jan 18, 7 p m
Nov 16 results
Steers av eraged $69 cwt
Hetfers averaged $59 cwt
There wtll be no sale Wedne&lt;day,
Nov 25
For free on-farm vJStts, please1
call 614-446-9696

The 'Daily Sentine L
tUSPS 213· 9~)

Communll y Ne wspaper HoldinA~ •nt
Published -cvrry aftcrooo n, Monday 1h1nugh
Fnday, Ill Co1.1rl St Pomeroy, Ohto, by l~e
Oh1u Vall~,; y l'ubh~hl'lg Company Second clau
.postage paid at PiJmC!'OY Oh1a

The

M~l.lCIJtcd

Press and

1h~

Ohto

:'llcWs pilllCf A'OS.X:Iullll n
~
'r ustmlil~r Send :!dmcas co rrections to The
i.)a1ly Sc uunel t: I Cou rt St, Pomeroy 0t.1o
45769

SUBSCR!PTION RATES

By C•rrler or Motor Route
One Week
•
$2 OC

One Month
.. .$~ 70
One Year
S1C4 00
SINGLE C.)PY Pf".JCE
Da1ly.
JS Cents
1
..,ubsCflbcTS not dcsmng to yav tht: camer may
~ re m1t m adval'ite d1rct:IIO'ftl~a.ly Scn ~mel on
a th ree, s1x or 12 rr onth b;~fJs. Credit " h b'!
g1vcn camcr ere 1 weu
No sumcrmuor- by mall permitted u: areas
where hnmc came. 'iCT'f'ICC 1! £ba1l~bk..
Pubhshcr rcs,·rvcs lhe right •o adjust •.tiCS dur
mg the subM:np11on pcm&gt;d Subscu:mon ·nte
'c hungcs may he 1mpltm~nted hv clu:ngms tll:
d 111 1tlllfl of 11'1~.: suhs&amp;:rlf'IIIOn
M/\,L SU D SC~ 1Y1

26 Weeks
52 Wcc:k!:

ION

Mela1 C.-.unty

lnslde
13 Weeks

.S27 30
,

, •••• .$53 82
.. ,
$HJ5 S6

Rates O:.dside{Melats .:-'nunty

1_3 Wc~ks
26 Wcc:ks
52 Wcc:ks

,

,

Y $29 2.5
•• S5.S68
, .1:10972

.

Rfltlder Service's
I

!

:::oore'i:ilon Polley

Ou..- mlliP ...on.:tm In all stones Is '? be
accurate. •r you know or an error tn a
story. u ' l lhc newsroom at (740) 9')2.
2155. We will check your lnrorrnat.on
and make a ~:urrtdio..lif warranted.

Stocks
Am Eta Power .................. ... 49'/..
Akzo .......................................3Y,.
AmrTech .................. ........... 55'1.,
Ash 011 ...................•... ............49'!..

AT &amp;T ......,. .... ... .................. 61 "I•
Bank One ,. ..........................52
Bob Evans ............ ~ .. ..::.., .....23
Borg-Warner , ........... ,.............50
Broughton . ...... ,..,.,. .......... .18
Champion ............................. 1O'i•
Charm Shps , ....................... .4"/o
City Holdlng ............................33
Federal Mogul.. .... ........... 58'1•
Gannet!. ............................... 65'1•
Go,odyear ... ...................... 55'1•
Krnart.... ............ , ...... ... t5 '1.
Kroger.. .... ... ......... .. .. ..56'!.
Lands End ......................... .... 19i,
Ltd ... ..... .. .................... 26,,/"
Oak Hill Flnl....... ... .. . .. .... 17'/,
OVB .............. ................. 41 'h
One Valley....... .............. 33'1.
Peoples ... ... .............. .... 26
Prem flnl .............. ............... 18'1•
Rockwell , . . .. ........ .. .....48
RD/Shell .... .............. ..... ..47 %
Sears ..................................... 47~

Shoney's ........................... 1"!•
Slar Bank .. ... .• ... .. .. ... .... 73'!.
Wendy's .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. 20
Worlhinglon ........................ 12"1•
vl!'ter Services
! Ad l'e rt.isl;&amp;
g.

! Crculamm
IClasstlie&lt;l A.O.
-~

-*-*E:.t. t 1 ~4

bt 1103

.Ext. 1100

1cal Center,
,
3 28 p m , County Road 7A,
Pomeroy. Sharon Roseberry, VMH;
7 59 p m , Wrrtow Creek Road,
Pomeroy. R1chard Demoss, Pleasant
Valley Hospuat,
10·32 p m , Elm Street, Racme,
Vtclona Jackson , VMH
MIDDLEPORT
4 20 p m. volunteer fire depanment to South Second Avenue, power ltnes smokmg, Amencan Electnc
Power noltfied

Ffghts ahead despite
tobacco settlement
COLUMBUS (AP) - It took
years of ha~ghng before Oluo agreed
to settle a lawsUit wtth lhe tobacco
Industry. But even w1th a settlement
tn hand. tt appears more fights are
ahead
Attorney General Belly Montgomery. who announced on Wednesday the state wa., acceptmg a proposed $206 btlhon nauonal sellle
ment. descnbed tt as " a substanttal
and hastonc first step "
Ohto would recetve $9 9 btllton
over .the next 25 year&lt;, tnstead of
gomg to coun to recoup hundreds of
mtllions of dollars spe nt on stck
smoker; Only Callfomta, New York
and Pennsylvama would get more.
Montgomery sa1d
Montgomery prom1sed to fight
what could be federal attempts to take
some of the money for a port1on ol
us share of health-care costs spe nt on
smokers.
She also cautiOned groups that
want a share of the wmdlall
" It's premature to rush to spe nd
this money," she sa1d
A coalition of 29 health, parent
and teacher orgamzallons sa1d"
Wednesday it wants lhe LegiSlature
to set up a foundatiOn whose board
would dectde how to dJ&lt;trtbute some
money lor prevention programs
The foundauon board would be
"made up of health nrgamza11ons.
legtslators and advtsory groups.
Mary Yost, an Ohto Hosp11al
Assoctatton spokeswoman, satd the

asMX li.ltiOn wants ~orne mohey 'JX"OI

to help the unmsured. the poor and
peop le &lt;Jck I rom smokmg
Gov -elect Bob Tall ha.' &gt;old he
hopes lO ~pend some mone) un ~.:an·
cer preven11 on. school bUJidmg.., and
expandang health care for unm,ured
chtldren
Some wam the money to go to
school!'! . or returned to ta\pa) ers
T)p!cal Oh1o&lt;lns would nntu.;e 1he
... utement's effects most b\' what
they would no longer ~e - outdoor
,1dvert1 "mg for toba~.::co. Unhm11ed
bmnd name sponsorships and cartoon
characters suc h as Joe Camel who
p1tch tobacco
Ohtoans co uld not1ce more pre'
ve nt tun progmms
m lhetr ~.:ommum ttes and schools, as well a.' more
adverlt~mg agamst ~mokmg
The deal does not gtve the federal government authm1ty to regulat(
tobacco It al so does not protect the
mdustry agaanst future hiwsu1 ts
Oh1o was among 32 ~lutes that
have unttl mtduay Fnday to dec1de '
whether to s1gn the !'le tllenu~ nl
Cagareue makers have ~au.J they:
need a suttic1ent number of ~t ales for
the deal to proceed but wouldn't say.
how many The settlement also could:
depend op whtch, tf any, states refuse,
the deal
A spo)&lt;esman for the toba&lt;eo'
tndu stry tn Washmgton wou ld not
comment on the s•gn1ticance of0h10
JOtnlng the settlement

Middleport Court news
Mtddlepon Mayor Dewey Horton
processed 13 cases tn Mayor's Court
on Wednesday eventng
Ftned were Luctnda Sue Dawson,
Ractne, $100 and costs. diSorderly by
tntoxtcatton. Enc J Taylor, Racme,
$1 00 and wsts, dtsorderly manner,
$ 100 and costs, diSorderly by fightmg. John C Hannon, Pomeroy $200
and costs, dnvtng under ALS suspenSion , $25 and costs, no seat belt,
$25 and costs, dnvmg outstde of
marked Janes, $200 and costs,
obstructing jusuce , Thomas A
Bllllqgsley, Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
louenng, $100 and costs. contempt of

court, Denms D Booth. Rutland. $25
and cosls, fictitious tags $25 and
costs, no operator's ltcense . $ 13 and
costs speedmg. Joe Cwu:rtmew1cz,
$100 and costs, dtsorderly by mtox- ·
JcattOn, Jame s R Bl .H:kwe ll
Pomeroy. $100 and costs. disorderly
by IRIUXICaiJOn , Freddy E Boggess
M1ddlepon, $25 and costs no se,tt
belt, $25 and costs, no chlid restruml
and Kenh Mu sse r, Mtddleport. $25
and costs, exp1red o perator s l1ce nse
Forfetttng bonds were John
Hetskell , Cheshire. $60. runnmg red
ll ght Brady Gtlbert, Cheshtre, $49,
speecj, L,;a A Barnnz. New Haven.
W Vil ! $59, speed, and Lon L P1erce.
Mtddleport, $43, speed

Meigs announcements

Gallipolis livestock auction results
Produ coers L1vestock Market
repon from Galltpohs for sales cond~cted on Wednesduy, Noxember
18
Feeder Cattle
200-300#St. $6R-72, Hf $57-$66,

spared no words lor a prestdent he
has mvest1gated fOr four years at a
cost of $40 mtllton. Clinton. he satd,
' repeatedly used the machmery of
government and the powers of hiS
olflce to conceal h1 s relat1onsh1p
wuh Mom ca Lewtnsky from the
Amencan people, lrt)m the JUdtetal
process tn the Paula Jones case and
I
"
I rom the granu·' JUry
The prosecutor satd Clmton vsed
premed11ated false statements. prov1ded JOb asststance toMs Lew1nsky
wht:n she was a potential adverse Wit·
ness 1n Mrs Jones' ::;e ~uul harassment
case agamst the president. schemed to
conc.:eal gaft s, and used h1s own Cab111et members and staff IO 11nwttungly prov1de mace.: urate mlonnatmn to
the publtc and the grand jury

Meigs EMS logs:7 calls

over 600 lbs 19.00-20.00.
Boars over 300 lbs. 5 00-7 00,
under 300 lbs 7.00-9 00, few at
1000.
Esttmated recetpts 37,000
Prices from Produeers Livestock
Association
Thursday's trends
Hogs. steady, sows steady , cattle District 18 meetin&amp; slaled
A meetmg of the DIStrict 18 Execsteady
uttve
Commtttee of the B11ckeye
Summary of Wednesday's aucHills-Hocking Valley Reg1onal
ttons at Galllpoils and Mt Vernon
Development DJStrtct wtll be held
Hogs:
Market hogs 14 75-16.25, ilght · Tuesday, 10 a.m at the Holiday Inn
sows 15 00 and down; heavy sows tn Manetta The purpose olt/te meettng IS for the execu uve commtttee to
20 00 and down
select proJects for Round 13 fund1ng
All boars 10 75 and down,
under the Slate Capttal Improvement/Local Trunsport,tllon Improvement programS.

COLUMBUS, (AP)- Ohto-lndtana dtrect hog p\\ces at selected buymg pomts Thursday as provtded by
tl)e U S Department of Agnculture
Market News:
' Barrows and g11ts: unevenly
s t~:ady, demand ilght to moderate
wath a moderate movement
' US 1-2. 230-260 lbs country
pomts 13 50- 15 50, a few 12 75 and
lp 00; plan!~ 15 00-17.00, few at
14 00-14 50
U S 2-3, 230-260 lbs. I ~ 0013 50, 210-230 lbs. II 00-12 50.
Sows· unevenly steady.
US 1-3,300-400 lbs. 9 00-11 00,
few at 8 00; 400-500 lbs. 11.0014 00; 500-600 lbs. 14 00- 18 00, few

Mem~r

Jr~

Starr opens... Continued from page I

Cloody

Today's w~ather forecast

In 1998, moderates splu55 to 45 percent for Democrats tn House races but 52
to 48 pen:cnt for Republicans 111 governorshtp races The bottom lme ts that the
palttes are VIrtually ued, and dlC futilre ts
up lor grabs
(Morton Kondracke ;.. exl'CIItive
editor of Roll Call, the ne,.~paper of
Capitol Hill.l

Association

•
33"/42"

..

'

servauve

overrated rch gtous nght to chmb
aboard the Republtc.m horse or find a
nag of thetr own to rtde For all thetr
threats, demands and botsterous postunng , they could not even re-elect
the fundament altst governor of Alaba- 1
rna, Fob James It ts the perfect ttme
to tell Pat Roben so~ Jerry Falwell,
James Dohson and Gary Bauer and
the1r sc lt -nghteous rmm ons and Imi tators to get lost
One more good s1gn The first
week after the electrons. a new mem.;_
ber of the GOP House delegattot(
dcltvcrcd the p.1rty's week ly rad10
.tddrcss G1cg Walden ol Oregon
In VIted Prcstdt:nL Clun on to JO m '
Rcpubltcans ' m dcd Jc.tllng the next
two year~ not to p._trtJsanshap and postunng hut to real. honest to ~o,.ld n ess
problem solvmg where we debate
pohcJcs, not personalities
It IS my bcllel that by losmg, the
Rcpubltc.m Patty has t.tkcn the fi~&gt;\
step~ on ;m ;1rduou~ rn.JI.lto recovery
It won I IMppcn ovcrmght hut soun,
one prays tht s great nnt1on w1ll once
·'£"'" he led hy people who prefer
~;o nuty to combat
Joseph . Spear is a syndicated
wrtter for Newspaper Eentcrpr;..e

"

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1NO

Election losses·good for the Republicans

l
I

even ~

/

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Stock reporls are the 10 30
a.m. quotes provtded by Advest
of Gallipolis.

Hydrant nushing
Mtddleporl Publtc Wurks Department wt ll flush the vtllage fire
hydrants on Thursday and Fnday As
a result, water dJScoloratton may
occur

Board or fjducotlon to meet
The Eastern Local Board of Education Will meet rn regular sessto n,
6:30 p.m Monday at the Tuppers
Plmns Elementary School

TONIGHT

KU~t~,~lt~ IN I
ONE EVENING SHOW 7 30
STARTING FRIDAY
ANTZ 00
ONE EVENING SHOW 7.30
BARGAIN NIGHT WED.
ALL SEATS $2,00 448-01123

Open hou se planned
The R1 ve rbend Arts Counctl wtll
hold an open house Sundo~y Irum I to
5 p m at 1ts headqu,trters on Second
Avenue, Mtddl eport A doll exh• b.'t
wtll be featured and Will mclude BarbJes. Prec1ou s Moments, Amencan
dolls , and other coll ecubl es. Refresh ments Will be served
Free Thanksgiving dinner
A tree Thanksg1v1ng dinn er wli l
be served ut the Fa1th Chapel Fellowship Roo m. 923 Sou th Th1rd
Avenue. M1ddleport Sumlay lor anyo ne who w.mts to ,\Ut.!nd It wil l not
1nclude a churlh serv ll: e and tht:re
w1ll be no o tl enn gs taken
Speaker scheduled
C.tlvm Mmms w11l speak at the
Ash Street Free Wtllll.tpllst Church
111 Mtddleport. 7 p m Sunday. P.tstor
Les Hayman liWllt!s the pubhc
RACO to meet
RACO wli l med Tuesd.ty 6 30
p m at Star Mtll PI .trk There Will be
1hanksg1v111g pollud; danner

Hosp "tal news
Hot ei' Medical Center
Dischorges
Wednesday, Nov. 18
Eltzaheth Jenkms. Carl Wheeler,
S~mdra M.lxhuner Roger Dtngus,
Mrs Delmd Sperry ,tnd son, Mary
McGUire .1nd M,1tthew Sm1th
Births
Mr and Mrs Robert H,JII , a
d~IUghter Jackso n
. Mr .tnd Mrs Bn.m Thort.l a so n,
Rae me
Mr .md Mrs Enc.: WJII!amson. ;1
son Let.trt W Va
Mr and Mrs Nolan Yates, a son.
McArthur

SOLID OAK
DINING ROOM SUITE

�__,

"

-

.Sports '
...

~ ::::::::::::::::::::~··::::;;;;;;;;::::::;-~;:~::~~=-~~---:~~--:-~~--:-----.---~~~------~T~h~u~rs~d~a~y~,~N~o~v~e~m~be~r~1~9~,1~99~98~
;.
Utah State, St. John's
Scoreboard
Ptul~lptua

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40

7 4

16

40

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6 '
. 6 9 2

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14

4:t
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41
4?

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Xrf'n Hall ~ 1 Ot\'\d iO
·1empk (&gt;!'&gt; '' '"~1'-Mrt•r ~~

South
-\L1h .una ·\.\\\ ~1.1 . ,U:a-Hum~\llk 70
-\I,Nn St 1•~ - S11U1h t\lah:.mr•-+4
Allk"fll:m L: fli.J. H1•v.ard &lt;;; _l
EunH•lk "'· T.:nn -M.u11n 70
(;.-,,r~t.'wv. 11 •n G.: ,, r~•a St 61'1
J.oL ~~''"' 1lk 9!; , 1-lmnb "h ·..:h h;!

S 7

.Cal!!ary
CoiDr:1dn

\ C.lCCihn;t ~~ ~7. Camj,O.:J116
~ Prfl~fl. St ~6. 1\t. N~i!.SC: Sr tlol

Paritic

f1 h\11.'!1U

OIJ Oummn•rJ ~J. Harnptufl 6-J
S:.rnfnrd X&lt; Al·thl'l. Tenn -+4
\'a Conunnnv.t&gt;ahh 6.1. W Kt'nllldy 61
Yo .1 kc I urt"'t Rl. L' NC -Gu~·emt&gt;vro 4.'1

1\nahc•m
!.1•) An~dt'~
San Jn~L' •

~II

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O nawa m

~l wm i J 1 .~. Up~!mc B :ts il ~ t b:t ll

.

'

'X!

Amcrtl":•n U 70. M U -B;dttmu rL' Count y
Butl aln 70. Rhm f~ h l:m11ti l
h ll k igh 01d. mson C
W. La f;•yctt c 6.1
Fr;uKi~.

.~7

Pa 70

L:lu gh 4!;. Pr.in~.:l&lt;l n 40
Northea stern -~ 'J.t) umn •p m~ 54
Pmsbllrgh 4lJ . l'cn n St 46
~I

Romwt nturc 14, S1c nn 11

St. 71J

lnlli Jna St. A.\. E. Illinois -~6
Ka n $n~ St. I 02, t. Kentucky (l!~

Suuth1-1-tst
CJ I , Te;o;; l ~ ~2
Snu lhl.-"Tll ML:th_ 7K, T L",:IS A&amp; M 7'i
Te~:r s

South crrl 7K. St. Mar y·~. Te~ a .\ t'l 7
UN LV M, "1\:x;I~-Si rn An tuni,,6Q
We ~ l
S t. - B illi ng ~

:'iJ

: 'NHL standings

··~t'W
=

'·:

F.ASTF:RN CONFERI':NCI':
Atlantic lli v i ~ ion

ll: L I fu. !i.E Gd
Jmq

'J 6 0

I ll

fl I

'tan again thi' l.oe:l \00. Et.·:mgcl
12-0l " a' 2 1-14 b ' t -ea..on anJ

AMONG THE...

E \•t~ngel '-'lll~l r~\; o (f ag; r i n~t Point

men ·, fieiJ .

On S&lt;.Ji un lay. l t•ntr:tl Rihl,• \\ill

Our special page(s)
"For Chil.dren Only"

Central Bihle (5 -I) lini,hed la't play either Evangel or Point Park at
season with 31 wins and iS off lo a· · 4 p.m. Rio Grande faces either Evangel or Point Park in the 8 p.m. game.

I"

,.

By STAAT DOUTHAT

:-

HARTFORD. Conn. (AP)- New
England Patriots owner Robert Kraft
appears ieady to move his team to

E Connecticut.
,,.,'·'·

!~ Top 25 ...
~~
'·.,
(Continued from Page 4)
''o;, The Cardinal. who haYe won 37 of
;' their last 40 games at Maples Pavil-

.

,

Nationul Hocke)' League
NIIL S uspt'nde d Fl oll ll il Pnnthcr~ LW Peter
Wnrrc ll for thre e gmuc5 wi thnul pny, nod !'ined him
$1 ,[)00 fm elbow ing Piu 5burgh Penguins F Aluei
Momzov 111 a Nov. 14 gmn~ .
O"IT AWA SEN KfORS: Reo.::illed D Sumi Snlo
!rom Detroit uf the IH I~.
VANCOU VER CANUCKS : Wnived C Br;mdon
Co!wery.

~ -&lt;;

·'

~

ion, will plily host to Southwest Mis~
souri
State in the second round Fri..,
~ day.
.
. , , .
•, No. 7 Temple 68, 1\f!SsiSslpp• 52
:'
At Philadelphia. Rasheed Bro·
, kenborough scored ' 21 points and
0: Temple overcame a streaky perfor: : mance to beat Mississippi. .
:
The Owls {3-0) nearly . squan·
: : dered a 16-point halftime lead and
•: won despite getting only live poirts
:' from Lamont Barnes. ·
::
Mississippi's Keith Caner, who
:: scored 33 points in the Rebels' 87· 74
.. : victory over Temple last season. was
: • held without a lield :goal in the first
0: half and finished with 16 points.
~:
No. 10 North Carolina 65
:'
Georgia 58
:.:
At Chapel Hill, N.C .. Kris Lang
•: scored 21 points, Ademola Okulaja
:• added 14 and each took turns shutting
:: down Georgia star Jumninc Jones in
•: the second round ' of the , Preseason
~~ NiT.
~'
The Tar;Heel• Cl-0). who hlew n
;.: i 3-point second1half lead before rul-

b l)'ing for thl'

at the state Capitol.
Legislative, business and community leaders met with Rowland
Wednesday as repons circulated that
lhe Patriots had agreed to move from
Fo•boro, Ma..s., to the· Connecticut
capi1aL
ESPN .and sever.~l television sta·
tions in Hartford and Boston reponed that an agreemenl wa.' reached
between,Kraft and Rowland, and that
il would be announced by friday.
"There .is n01hing 5\;heduled right
~

·~

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•

ID

The Daily Sentinel

·-ONLY-

$}000
Per Picture
Prepaid
Please enclose self-addressed,
stamped envelope to return
your pholo.

now for that lo happen," said Patriots spokesman Stacey James,
responding to the report on WBZ-TV. '
''The. talks are serious. but they
are not there _yet." Hanford mayor
Michael Peters said.
ESPN, citing an unidentified
source close to Kraft , said Ro'l'land
gave the teilm owner until the end of
business Friday to make a commitment to move the Patriots lo Hanl'ord.
Any deal to move the Patriots
"IJ!IIl\'..,be approved by NFL owners.

.1·
.
.

Official
Entry

Form

I~

TATE OTORS,
•
(614) 992·6614. (800) 837·1094

POMEROY, OHIO

Mon.~Frl.

9 am•8

Sat. 9 ••·4 p111; Sun. I p111·5 pm

@'

!
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~ou r Energy Edge .Gas Log_s Offer
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today: 1-888-293-EDGE (3343).

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5315 Hebbardsville Rd .
·Athens , OH 45701
740-594-8381

I
I
I
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COLUMBIA OAS ACCOUNT NUMBER

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CHECK HBRE IF YOU ARE A SERVICE FOR A C.IFETIME MEMBER FOR

AN ADDITIONAL $10 DISCOUNT.

Columlii~LGas®

. ·.

·

: • Cornell. a junior guard, was 9-of·
· : 13 from the field and made all eighf
:: of hi s free throws to lop his previous
: • high of 28 points for Purdue (3 -0) .
·.: Richie Fram and Matt Santangelo
~ each scored 16 points for Gonzaga

Allow 6-B weeks lot ptocessmg

ofQrno

www.columbiagasohio.com
N

"C

~
~

.CI

Q

.

,.

No. 21 Indiana 91
~
Alabama-Birmingham 54
· ~ · At Bloomington, Ind .. AJ. Guy~ ton scored 21 points and Luke Reck~ er added 20 as Indiana routed Alaba-· rna-Birmingham .
~ The Hoosiers (4-0) used two hig
:: runs in the fir&gt;t half to ta~e controL
~
Guyton had II points during a 17. 4 streak midway lhrough the openmg
: period as Indiana went ahead 24·.11 ,
: The Blazers ( 1-1) closed w1thm mne
:points on two free lhrows and a bas• ket by Fred Williams. but u three·
: point play 'by freshman Kirk Haston
: staned a 15-4 Indiana run that put the
; ~arne out of reilch.

.s

·-

Q.

.CI .

"'·
=

·-0

~

'Ql

·~

~

0

.::-

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Natural gas logs come to life instantly with

E!

win. will pl:l} PuniiiL!

:-.; next Wednesday in the semifinals at ·
. •~ Madison Square Garden.
:: Georgia (2-IJ. tied it 55-55 with
; : 4:08 left. but Ed Cota sank a three:· pointer 15 seconds later and the Thr
•; Heels went on to win for the 53rd
::time in lheir last 58 games. Jones,
!-who was averaging 27.5 points, was
held to 12 ori ·5-for-16 shooting.
·
; ; No. IS Purdue 83, Gonzaga 68
:
At West Lafayette, Ind., Jaraan ·
::Cornell scored a career-high 29
· : points, including eight straight in a
::key second-half run. as Purdue
:·advanced to the semiliimls of the Pre·
: : season NIT.
·
.
Gonza~a 's upset hopes Were end;. ed by a late scoring drought. The
;.: Bulldogs scored only four points and
· : made just one basket in the linal sev·

.

&gt;

Patriots to announce move to-Ha.r tford today

••

'

(16 years of age,or younger)
Will be published
Wednesday, Decem~er 23rd

P"-"""

.
)
Kr&lt;!fl and Connecticut Gov. John
Rowland. who have been negotiating
the move, were to appear logether. at
a late morning news conference.
The Associated Press learned
Wednesday night the announcement
of the relocation to Hartford would
made within 48 hours.
Tire Hartford Couralll .. quoting a
source close to the governor, reported in today's editions that the formal
announcement of a deal would l)e .
made at an II a.m. news conference

~

"I lil e the lield again thi&lt; yenr."
•aid Redme n head coach E:&amp;rl
Thoma... ·."Qb\' iou ~o l y. we are much
more fam iliar with Point Park than
we are With c~ntra l (Jihle ;md E\ an: •.
gel: It· &lt;hnuld he a \'ery competiti l'e
tournament ami I think the r.m, will
enjoy the "l.'ekend." '

games when he wa.&lt; inserted for · Darnay Scott and Corey Dillon ha.&lt; of 10
for 107 yards and a
touchdown. He also ran the ball into
O'Donnell during the Bengals' Nov. struggled so much.
8 loss in Jacksonville.
"I don 't really have an answer for the end zone for a two-point converJustin. who had been Cincinnati's that." he said. "There is a lot of skill SIOn .
No. 3 quarterback all season, had said on this team. It' s just a matter of
' 'That means nothing," Justin said
of his mop-up rule.
before the decision was announced going out and doing·it.
Otherwise, he ha.&lt; spent the sea.&lt;on
lhat he understood why Bengals fans
''Sometimes you run into a litile
watching
from the sideline.
wen! calling for change.
funk that the offense gel~ into, but .
Blake has taken over for O'Don''The main lhing is that people just they break out of it ·eventually."
want something to happen," he said.
Coslet has been unhappy with the nell in three games and gotten on lhe
lield occa.&lt;iori'ally on third-down
o· Donnell. signed during the off- ' inability to sustain drives. 'season a&lt; a fre&lt;! agent, won lhe start··There' s no conlinuity on,otTense. plays a&lt; the Bengals try 10 use his
ing job in prese~&lt;on but has struggled There's no rhythm to it," Coslet said. running skill. During a 24-3 loss in
in the .las! month. The offense ha.&lt; " It's hunt-and-peck. It's all over the Minnesota on Sunday. he .sot to
managed a total'of two field g&lt;&gt;als in lot - however many different tenns hand off. throw and run in his riew
the la.'t two games behind 0' Done II. you wan! to put with it. The plays are role.
Blake took over for 0' Donnell in
Justin and Blake have replaced there to be made and for whatever.
the
fourth quaner and finished 6-ofO'Donnell in the fourth quarter of rea.&lt;;Ons. we're not making the plays.''
1
0
for
36 yards with one interception.
games recently. Bla~e has slruggled ,. Justin made some plays in his only
nearly as much a.~ O'Donnell.
appearance of the sea.wn. He relieved Coslet later pointed out thai Blake
Justin doesn ' t know why an O'Donnell near the end of a 24- 11 didn't fare much better than O'Don·
offense that includes Carl Pickens, loss in Jacksonville and comple1ed 7 nell.

\

4
ill

J

two outing, . Point Part. ( 1-2) ha'

~ omer Point

Part. College from l'itts·
burgh. Pennsyl.-ania, round&lt; out the

~

struggled a bit ot!t of lhe g&lt;~ te in J'J9H.

Park Friday al ~ p.m. \\hilc Rio
Gr•ndc C- 1) hro&lt;l\ Central llihlc in
the nightcap at R p.m.

American Mit.leasl Conference ncw -

PICTURE YOUR CHILD

enleP.. pi.J)' lh1' weeL.end a\·eriJ~i n g
101 JXli nl ~o per game lhrou gh ih fir-..1

,.,.,.
t•

Hockey

Hockey

•

,

Football ,

H IIU\Iun

~ood

/

I

ANGEL~ :

National F(t{lth:dl Lt'llgue
ARI ZONA CARD INALS : Wntved QB Cory
Sauter from the pructil'l! sqund.
•
BUFF ALO BILLS: CIJinlt'd LB Way ni! Si mmn m; uff wai\'Crs from the Kan~as City Ch ids.
' NBW YORK GIANTS: Sign ~ ,J TE Se nti Dra gns
ro the ll fil( ll ~ c ~u nd .
OA KLA N,D RAIDERS : W:1111·ell LO John Hi!nry
Mills l"mm injured r!!!&gt;erve. Placed DB Erk Allen on
111_jured ~c~~ r ve . Si gn&lt;;"d DU Buo.:ky Brooks. Signed
Rll Rc yrwd Rll therfnrd to the prnL:ti ce squad.

Nutrc Dnmc 7 1. llutkr 60
UC Sam.1 R a rb~ ra 10 I. Nn r!hV. t'~h! rn 1!9

By JOE KAY
. CINCINNATI (AP) On
Wednesday. the Cincinnati Bengals
benched Neil O' Donnell, who ha.&lt;n't
• led the offense to a touchdown in two
games. and chose third-siring quar• lerback Paul Justin to stan nex1 Sun• !lay against Baltimore.
o· Donnell, who staned the first
• I0 games this sea.&lt;ori, is listed as the
::second-siring quarterback for the
: jl.avens game. Jeff Blake will he No.
• I 3.
::: "We're looking for a spark on
• offense. and Paul deserves a chance,"
: c&lt;iach Bruce Coslet said.
•
The Bengals (2-8) have lost sev~; en of lheir last eight games. includ: ing Sunday's 24-3 loss to the Min~; nesota Vikings.
,
:;.
Juslin led Cincinnati's offense lo
1- its only touchdown of the la.•t two

.,'•'.

,r.,

:\fid'l'lt'St

Mnnlana 17. Mon t;nm

7p m

Nationul Leagut
.
. ~EW YORK METS · Agrt.•ed to terms witli l..HP
Demus Cuok un lllhrt.'c-ycar ~ontr&lt;~l.:l. Rt!- ~igned OF
A rnly Tnmbcr l111 aud C Pt'diU Grd'u/ lo mi nor·
ll.'aguc wn t rtl c l ~ . Named Tim To!ul'cl. Larry DOughty
aml Erwtn Bryant scout s.
I'ITTSIJURGH PIRATES : A~quircd OF Brian
G il es from !he Clevel:tnd lndmn s fo r LHP Ricardo
Hmo.: or\.

S&lt;Julh
Al :i .- H t mt .~vlllc 79. Alahanm' A&amp; M H
Cull uf Charld;wn 77, Cf!as t.11C:iro lltla 61!
~li:o mi ~~- 1-l;i lntrrn alinn;ll h.'i
Tennessee Sr} 90. Chattnnn0g01 77
UNC-GrccrP&gt;buro 69, N C- A~IK·vi llc .~ .~
Y o un g~ tnwn

1pm

C'~mh na.

I

THE NEW DUNKENSTEIN for North Carolina Is freshman Krls Lang,
who scores two the easy way against Georgia In Wednesday nlghl'l
second-round Preseason NIT game In Chapel Hill, N.C., where the
hosi'Tar Heels won 65·58 to advance to the semifinals at New Vor~'l
Madison Square Garden. (AP)

.Aolllell RHP Mnrk Hnr·
~ • gcr. RHP Rarnb n Or1iz and LHP Scon S~hoe ­
m·we-1 ~ to tlw -fO -man ru~tt: r . Sign ed RHP Breq
Ci rt'~. RHP .Michat'l Hanu ng. RHP Luis Pnlt', RHP
No rm ~ n Mon1oya. RHP Kev in Lomon , RHP Jeff
Wqrc. RH P Mike r:yrhi e. RHP Kev in T rolltma.n,
RHP Tram "fllurmond. RHP Mike Bovee nDd RHP
J r~ Ja~: nb5en; LHP Ot'Sean Want'll and LHP Ootrn:n
Wi n~ l nn: C- 113 -_I B Stew l&gt;eo.:ker: J U Tim Unroe ;
28 -SS. Jcff Huson: IB-OF Bcnji Sim1mtnn: OF EdJ, c Chnstian : UF- 1B-J B Jason HeHkk . ;mil SS
Loyo..·e Co\·cli .
TO RONTO BLUE JAYS : Released RHP Shunnon Withem. Puro.: h;1M:d !he ~:u ntrm: l~ of RHP Leon·
do Estrell a from Hag ~ rst ow n of lhe South A.U onlio.:
Lcal:ue, RHP Isabe l Giron fr om Knoxville of the
Snulh~ rn Le ague, ;mll LH P John Bale, JNF Jot'
l.aw'rettce. INF Com·y Blake imd OF Peter Tuco.:i
hom l)um:di n uf' the FSL.
l\NAHEIM

'

Far

.19

Transactions

'-i:.L~C\ 11

East

' I
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lK

!

Amrrkari Lrar;ut
,\L Ann o ullt'l! d ll ub Gib son will nil vi se Al
pr!!w:klll G ~ ri l" UudJg 11 11 di sci pli nary ded~iun s next

·

Regular-season action

•

S4

Baseball

:. NCAA Division I
:.; women's scores

•

12

4_1

son.

the "Bevo" Friday at 2 p.m. ~ io
Grande (J. I) play• We-t Virginia
Te&lt;h at 6 p.m. Friday.
On Saturday. the 2p.m. game realures We!\1 Virginia T\!ch again, t
either Sp-•lding or Taylor. Rio Gmnde
will play either Spaid in~ or Taylor in
the 6 .p.m. contest.
ll1e men 's tourn:omen\ hto&lt; a d~(·
inite Midwe&lt;\1 nair to i11hi\i sea~on a!'.
a couple of "'IM101&lt; from the "Show
Me State'' roll into Rio Gr:onde. l'en·
tral Bible College and Evangel Uni ver;ity. both from Springfield. Mi &lt;souri. are newcomers 101he ··oe\·o:·

l

Bengals to start Justin over O'Donnell at QB

l"nr••nlu :11 Hultalu . 7".'0 p.m
N Y Is tandi.!rs m D ~ II J~ . fUO Jl m
EJmt•nlun al An:ahcmt , 10·~ 0 p m
I'll! II! ni x :11 S r~n Ju~. 10 .lQ p.m

Exhibition

Green I'Ll.

19

Totunto I

W : a s hm ~ to n .

Ph•ladel phia :11

'

First round
11. Mi .~S llll rl ~Jl)
St&lt;111fnrd .1!6. Sourhern Mt:ih ~I

Buw lm ~

:ut

"I thin~ maybe I overworked
them." Majerus said. "We ran into a
highly motivated team."
In other Top 25 games. it wa.&lt; No.
3 Stanford 86. SMU 51 : No. 7 Temple 68. Mississippi 52: No. I0 Nonh
Carolina 65. Georgia 58; No. 15 Pura~ogance. ··
· due 83. Gonzaga 68: No. 21 lndian:o
Utah wa' runner-up to Kentucky 91 . Alabama-Binningham 54: and S!.
in last year's NCAA tournament, but John's 73. No. 23 M~ssachusetts 69.
· No.3 Stanront 86, SMU 51
the Utes didn't play like a Final Four
Mark Madsen. Peter S:ouer "nd
team against their intrastate ri•·als.
·Trailing 49·45 with 4:25 left, Jarron Collins each scored 12 points.
Utah State (2-0) rnllied to win its 27th and the Cardinal domin.:1ted inside to
maight home game by scoring on its reach the second round of 'the Prelast eight pos!&lt;essions.
season-NIT.
Stanford (2-0). which never
'T m awfully proud of our guys."
coach Stew Morrill said. "But both trailed. led 21-7 after I 0 minutes and
of these teams are going to get a lot 43- 17 at halftime. The Cilrdinal held
a 51 -38 reboundi~g edge.
better as tbe season goes on."
Preseascm All-America Andre
(See TOP 25 on Page 5)

ai Tant]'·l B;oy. 7.0~ J' m,
kr~y. 7 JO p m
St !.nub at Na~hvi\11!. ·I! p m
V at u.:ou~ e- r ;tl Ct• totado. 9 p m.
N Y Rrmgcrs :11 Lm Angt.'le'i. 10·10 p 111

NIT-quarlrrfinals

S\\-' M a~v u n St

..•

~o

range.

l'ill~hurgh

l'llnluc ~11 . G vn/,;Jg;• 6H
St John ·, 71. Masqd!il"'-'1h 6lJ

.••

49

1952-53 ~ 21-7 the following ..ca-

• :Rio Grande SID

Miller hild I 8 point&lt; and seven
rebounds for Ut:oh ( 1-1 ). but the Utes
shot only 34 percent from the field.
committed H tumove" and 11 fouls.
and. were 4-for-22 fr'lm three-point

Friday's games

Nonh Cnrohn:16:'\. Gl!ilfgia

•

By The MIOCiated Pre11

·

The 16th Annual Be•·o Francis
This year·s women·'&lt;i roumam~nl
Classic is slated for this weekend at reatures Rio Gro~nde hoo.ting Spalding
tbe Uni•·mity of Rio Grande. The Unive"ity rrom Loui&lt;ville, Kenannual men's &lt;~nd women·&lt; colle~e tuc~y. Wes1 Vir~inia Tech from
. ba.&lt;ketball tournament is held each Mootgomery. West Vif!linia. and Tay:.season in honor of the leJ!endary lor Univer&lt;ity rmm Upland. Indiana.
• :Clarence " Be\'0" Fr.mcis who played Redwomen head coach Da\'id Smal::,at Rio Grande from 1952-5-t.
ley is cautiously o ptimi\tic about hi,
; : Francis ~ld&gt; the rollesiate sin~le­ team's chaoces to repeat :L&lt; tourna: .game scormg record or 113 points. -ment champ.
.
• :Wh•ch he scored again&lt;t Hillsdale
"It'll be a competitive touma: .Colle~e on Feh. 2. 1954. He had 116 . ment." said Smalley. "We'•·e &lt;een
: 4&gt;oints in a ~a me against Ashland Spalding a0 d West Virginia Teoh
• :Junior College: however the official before. bul Taylor is a new one for us.
: -rec&lt;lJd gurus of the time would not We picked up a great win Tuesday
«cognize ·rhis mark becau&lt;o;e i1 came against Tmnsylvania and just want to
against a two-year school
keep 1he mpmentum going this weekHe is Rio Grande 's all-time lead· end.';
.
ing score' with 3.267 point s. Francis
Taylor !2-2) and Spalding open
,Jed a Red men team that wenr39-0 in

Carplin a at New

Tournaments

'·

10 .as

4~

Tonight 's games

far Wtst
/11r For&lt;.: X&lt;; fk,i!l~ 6.'1
San Fr&lt;Jn.:iS.:\1 71. UC San ta Barh.ua 70
St M ar}' ·~ C •l 7.1. S;\Jl J u~t' St '6
Ut:th St fl2. U1:1h 'i-1

!it

48

::Sy ANDREW CARTER
•

H11nd:t ;JI Uos ion. 7 p m
C •lgary nl Muntrt'al. 1 p m

I uhr1 H4. hd...,on St 4.'1

Colg;11c

-17

t\naht'tm 1. NY R&lt;LnJ!~r ~ 1
S;m Jose :'i. L u~ Anj!r:b ~

l.oU\~1;1 1\ :1 Tcdl n. ll;~)'lur 6;
Or:il Rntwrh 7 I. ,\ r lo, ,,n.~a~ St· 66
T"-'~; , ~C hmwm 74. Ne1-1 O r lean~ hi

7~.

45

.~2'

Jku ur t 6 . EJnlllOillli 2
Phuo;"niiO. 4. V:.n .. llu\er 1

Kent 6 7.. Y tlUil~Si nl-\-n Sr :'ih
llhrv, St 6 1. Kt•bt-tt To.l11rrn 41)
~ llhn m~ K~. S1 1\ mhru~ J-10
Widnra Sr ,~K. Fl 11f1da Atl;mta: l(~

Sacred Hcan

College cage roundup

44

.~s

'"'
17
lb

l , IJ

4 7 4

WMhm~t o n -1

Soulh'l\t~l

•

-'A

\\ledntsday's scores

76.1nll . .-Pur -IOOpls 66
Dral.t' 112. Stflll) Dnx1l. _q
1- llhnni~ 70 Indiana Sr 6 1
llhnt•iS St 60. W1 s -G r L'~n Ba)' 49
I no..han&lt;~ ~I. Ala - D nm• n~h;llll 5.a
Kans:t.~ St IIi. Wa~hhtJrn hO
l&gt;a~mn

r.,·nrgct"wn 1JU. St
luna ld. Arnw :'i~

Ill

9'2.:!0.1727
7 6 4 l~ 40 JK

\1id" n 1

Pre s fa~on

01, i ~ion
9 2 1

Dalla~

frt.'l~htnn 79 \1 1\Soun-Kan~ts (II~ ~H

•

~

,, 1 1
!I I( 1
7 K 2
1 s 2

V:III(OU\t.'f .

:\\.idJ!;On ')1 . N C.uo hn;1 A&amp;T 80
\ 1ou:lwao,l S1 %. A\l'tun 66

'••·
••

1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
The Daily Sentinel• Page 5
___:..:.:.:.:;::.:.:.!,....::.:.::.:.;.:.::.:.:.:..~--p-~·~-~-~-~-~~"~~lt

&lt;.·Teams from three states come to URG

Utes, No. 23 UMass

Soulhtlt"it Dh kioo

EdmontPn

J.IIIIL'~

'•

26

-·-

o'

S.t.ri.'J lk;m fl1_ MHnmnurh ' J fJI

....
•.

48

48

Utah coach Rick Majerus thought
his
team was overrated. and the Utes
llun.U .
6 6 '
15 .l .l
41
W :uhrntlon
6 7 ~
l!i .l7 4 1
didn't do an)&lt;thing to prove him
Tamp;:~ 83y ..
6 9 2 14 40 6 1
wrong.
Donnie Johnson scored 18 points
WESTERN CONHRI':NCE
Crntr•l Dh·"ion
as Utah State upset No. 9 Utah 62-54
fum
~ L I fu. !i.E liA
1l X 0 II! "i~ 4-1 . Wednesday night.
lktron
1 -l .J . Ul -l2
l.~
~~ UM~t~
" A lot of the guys felt overconfi:'li;r~h\tlll'
6 9 I ll 19 47
dent." Utah forward Alex Jensen
~1o ,_,
n JS o_,
Chi~OI~I l
said. ''Some of uS came in with an
~nh .. u-1 Ui' i~ion

l .•l l.l&gt;&lt;'lr&lt;' h~ l'ttllo..l.'h&gt;n -.17
Bu.~nd l

-4 :ci
19

7 1 4

C;u,,Jma

Ho&gt;h [r,~&lt; 6~. Hsrhlfd ~-

RrJ.·r 1J.

I~

Buflalo

''''nlre,ll

'

Ouo.ju&lt;:&gt;n.: 'i'l_ \\ell \'trgmu ~J
!-I J1 1arJ t,,2_ Ro •&lt;; h&gt;n Cntk·~c ttl

()u'~"'r'·"
M
1

I&amp;

t' :'i

_________

; Bevo Francis Classic to start Friday

upset ninth-ranked

42

s n1

1,17220:"7~

n ,,~ lun

Danrn1lull1M \l'rmf'fll ~
lkl.tv..u.: ~1 IKI.IV..IIC' sl 7~

·-

4J
..

Tor11n1o

Onav.a

Ea&gt;t
c~h '\)~

Ill
111

.a

~

Nonhrasw Dh Kion

Rt!!ular·st&gt;astln adion

'•

hl.llll.kt-s

NY Ran!!&lt;.-"fS.

NCAA Dil·ision I
men's scores

~

1 tt ..
g 10 0

7

PrtUbutf!h

N'

: ----.;---~...:..:_

The Daily Sentin.!!

.

t, •

Basketball

'

._.ThurSday, November 19, 1998

1998 CHEVY CAMARO
Auto., air, CD, till,

$1 ·6,500

cruise, 6,000 miles.

Auto., air; CD, tilt,
cruise, low miles

1995 GMC SONOMA PICKUP 4X4 Ext. Cab, air, stereo ................................. $13,500
199S GMC SONOMA PICKUP, V6, 5 speed, stereo, SLS ............................;...... $8,500
1994 CHEVY S·10 BLAZER, Tahoe Pkg., 4 Dr., auto., air, 4X4 ....................... $14,995
1996 ~ONTIAC GRAND AM, auto., air, PW, tilt, cruise, stereo ......................... $9,600
1994 BUICK LESABRE, V6, auto., air, tilt, cruise, PW, PL.. ............................ $11,900
1996 BUICK RIVIERA, leather, all power, loaded ................................;........... $16,500
1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, V6, auto., air, PW, tilt, crulse ............................ $6,500
1997 JEEP WRAN~LER, 5 speed, stereo, 4X4, convertlble ...........................$12,900
1995 GEO TRACKER 4 X4, Convert., 5 speed ..........................:..............:......... $8,500
1998 CHEVY K1500 .PICKUP 4X4, 371, 3rd door, ext. cab .............................. $25,900
c

'

•

~"'

·-u
:5!
.CI

Deadline: Friday, Dec. 18 at 3 p.m.
Mall or bring the entry form:

The Daily Sentinel
.·

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•· ·.

~~~~.rddi~itil~~~u~~~

�•
Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Sheriff
UK's Watts
with DUI
after wreck
By
I

.\

"

COLUMBUS. Ohio (APJ- Ohio
State "'"'"h Jim O'Brien &lt;aid the
Buckeye' struggle to defeat Roben

The Bu&lt;:ieye- blocLed I0 .Jtnt,,

for "''·en bloch. while the Colonial'
didn't b!ock an).
... John&lt;on played hi' be'r game
this !1-ea.~n." 0' Brien !\aid. ··Ken was
ju•t awesome and he enLsed a lot· of
mislakc" for us.·•

LEXINGTON. Ky. (APl- Kentucky f001ball player Ja&lt;on Walls h."
been charged with second-degree
JASON WATTS .
manslaughter and drunken driving
after his blood-alcohol contenl was finale :.u N(&gt;. I Tennessee loOming
1.5 limes the legal limit.
,
Kentucky returned to prartit·e Tue'·
The charges. announced Tue&lt;day. day for tht" firsr time ,jnce the cra,h . .
stem from a Sunday rruck crash thai Coach Hal Mumme refu~cl tn comkilled rwo others- Walls teammate ment when asl;.t"d about the char~l'\.
Arthur Steinmetz and Chri&lt;topher
The university issued a blan~et
Scon Brock. a student at Eastern " no commenf' on the t·hargr'1 on
Kentucky.
behalf of Kentucky players and
1
Pulaski County Anorney Fred inslrutted the media not 10 que ... rinn
Neiki~ said a criminal summon' ha..;
players about · the latest .developbeen issued that orders Wans, who is . mem.
hospitalized with a 12-inch ga&lt;h in
··with this becnmm£ alt"gal mathis right arm. to appear in Pulaski ter. we will not. make any further
District Court Dec. 17.
comment .'on the i'\.-;ue.''· Kt'n,tucky
· Watts was upgraded to good con- athletic dirertor C.M. Ne11 ton said in
dition at Universiry of Kentucky a statement. "Our be.;;t wi,l1e' and

thing' in college·basketbalL
"People ask al! the time why we
play team' like Robert Morris,"
"hich finished 8-19 lasr sea &lt;an,
o·Brien said Wednrsday nighrafter
hj&lt; team held on for a 6 I 49 victory.
"There are traps our there all the
time thai you have ro be prepared
for,'' he said pointing In a game this
season in which Indiana had to mlly
to defeat Indiana · State 76-70.

Rnber1 Murris

On a night when neither team
could hit 45 percent from the Ooor,
Ohio Slate's shot-blocking ability
may have made the bigge•t differ·

:"m

Dear
Land..,: I recenlly
changed JObs ~nd am now learning
how to mamta1n and repair escalators and elevators.
Some people avoid elevators
because they are fearful ofheighrs or
enclosed spaces. This is unfonunare
because lhe rruth is, you are. a lor
safer in an elevator than on an esca-.
lator. Your chances of being in an
elevator that falls are exrraordinarily
small. If the elevaror has a mechani-

in three games a·r their new Vnlue

ence.
~

Ciry Arena. The defeat was the first
of the sea,on for the Colonials 13-1 ).
Ohio St:ttes Michael Redd and
Robert Morris' Kevin Cm·ert had II
points apiece and were the only nth·
er players in double figures .
Ohio State was limired to ~6 field
goal' in 60 attempts for 4J .3 rercent.
bul Robert Morris went 20-for-59 for
33.9 percent. The Buckeyes had 15

ME~998

IM~lioo

Sound of silence works
for Ohio ·state's Boston

AUTO, ALL POWER EQUIP, JRD
· SEAT, 6 CYL, 4 VALVE

'*18,488°0

has said anything ehallenging nbout
the othe r - at least, not in ruhlic.

.

NE'~~ 1999 TAURUS LX
AUTO, AIR, V6, LX PKO

dar is nol designed to promote sales
'

By Bob Hoeflich
TO THE HOOP -Ohio State's Michael Redd goes to the hoop as:
Roben Morris' Gene Nabors (back to camera) tries to defend on the:
play In the ilrst half. of Wednesday night's game in Columbus, Ohio,:
where the.Buckeyes won 61·59. (AP) .
'

ME'~~t998 MUSTANG LX

,.

~E~999 ESCORT ZX 2

AIR CONDITION, CRUISE, POWER,
SPOILER, lOADED, 5 SPEID

HOT PKO, AIR AUTOMATIC,
Alllfll CASI, LOADED •

E'H

.

ME'~~t998 MUSTANG GT
VI, AIR CONDITION,
ALL POWER EQUIP

$17,988°0

NE'H

1998 F1SO 4X4

Guaranteed No Busy Signals!
·I-888-657 -0977
• Pomeroy

'Nelsonville

*Lebanon

•Ga llipolis
• Dayton

•wilmington

•Hillsboro

•washington CH ·

·s~rdinia

• Springfield

•west Union

'Circlevi ll e

• Jnmcstown

•Midd l ~.:town

LEATHER, MOOIIROOF, EVERY OPTION

$JJ,988°0

$16,988° 0

1999 CROWN VIC
VI, AUTO, AIR CONDITION
POWER EQUIPMENT GROUP

aoo

•

MONDAY-FRIDAY 9° AM· 7' PM
SATURDAY
900 AM· S•• PM
SUNDAY
CLOSED
0

177 EXIT 132

RIPLEY, WV
(304) 377-3673
(800) 964-3673

..

The lively members of ·the Racine Area Communiry Organization will be holding their semi-annual food drive this Saturday
from 8 a.m. ro 12 noon.
Members of the organization will be at the corner where Bur- .

gundy and Brass is located during the designated hours and rfsidents may .contribute canned goods or money lo the food dnve.
The collection will be turned over to the Meigs County Cooperative Parish and anyone issuing a check \O the projecr should make
it payable to the parish.
.
.
,
'
For those \Vho can get to the dnve Saturday, there ts a drop box
for the project located in the lobby of the Racine Home Narional
Bank. Also RACO members will provide pickup .servtce for those
wishing lo give but have no way of gelling 10 the drive location.
For pickup service you should call Ann Zirkle at 949-2031 or
' Kathryn Hart at 949-2656. ·
There appears to be a considerable amount of interest in the first
of three contests being staged over the holiday season hy the
Pomeroy Merchants Association
The first , rhe cookie baking contest, is Salurday and there were
over 20 enlries in an early count so rhere will undoubredly be t(tore.
The contest will be held at The Farmers Bank and the public can
·visirthe bank until noon to vi~w the entries: Prizes wtll he $50 for
first place and $25 for second. The prizes will be in the form of
gift certificates. Participanrs are to have thetr entrtes- stx cooktcs
on a paper plate for each entry-at the bank no later than II :30
a.m. Sarurday. Enrries will be received starting at 9 a.m. so there
will probably be an excellent display of entries well before the
deadline. The toW? grcclcrs in their attractive costumes wtll be on
hand for the contest
'Tis the season for rhe catalogs to fill your mailbox. It's always
good to keep rhosc "shipping and. handling charges" in mind . They
add to your costs. It's also a good time of rhe year 10 hide the credir cards. Now w~ere else co uld you get these money -savmg lips?
Do keep smiling.
'

Former 'Sound of
Music' . star may
never sing again
: NEW YORK (AP) - The sound
of music may never be heard again
from Julie Andrews. Parade magazfnc reports .
. "[ don't think she' ll sing again
...:. it's an absolute tragedy,"
-Andrews' husband, direcror Blake
Elowards, told the magazine for an
iWm in this Sunday's issu e.
• The . 63-year-old actress had
s~rgery more than a year ago to
r~movc non-cancerous throat nod u,.es. Her voice hasn ' 1 bocn the same

!0.9 FINANCE ON SELECT VEHICLES W. A. G. SEE

0

Ever hear of Excel Communications?
. I hadn't eilher unlil I had a char wilh Roger Stewart of Middleport.
.
Roger who has been named a regional direclor wirh the company says Excel is the feurth largesl communications company in
. the United Srares. I know you are deluged on the terevision and
~ telephone by long 'disrance companies wishing to add you lo their
: cusromer list Excel doesn't use these merhods of promotion,
Roger reports. The company offers long distance calls. ar seven

,AIRCONDITION, STEREO, 4X4

'

N'~98 EXPEDITION EDDIE BAUER

Let' me share wirh you a bir of. humor contained in a letter I
received from Bob Schmoll, Pearl St. Middleport.
The letter has food for thought and I hope Bob doesn 'I mind my
sharing il wirh you. It goes like this: '
"Dear Bob,
"As the old rime leuer opener goes, wilh pen in hand and longue
in cheek, I though!, perhaps, we could look al rhe last election
results.
"I am sure you must be ali pleased as I am at rhe results. II
would appear rhar both parties ran on the.same plalfonn. so it didn't really maller who won. They pledged to 'fight' for us. I really like rhar word fight, don't you, Bob• It shows real detennination. I know we will all come out winners. Our educarion syslem
will certainly be i"!proved. Our highways will be improved-at
last. Social Security will be saved. Thai's a relief.
"But tonigh~ Bob, as we g~ to bed, the best thought of all runs
through our head . Taxes will be cut!!-in your droams".
"P. S. I read in lhe Senlinel a few days ago lhat property taxe s
will increase on the average of 17 percent-Sweet dreams". ·

agents. \YOrking in Meigs County to offer Excel's service 10 resfdents. If you need more facts, you can reach Roger ar992-~875.

AIR CONDITION, SPORT PKO,,
SpOILER, STEREO, ALUII
'wHEELS

9J BUICK REGAL, Auro, AtR ................................; ...............;.. 15,988"
94 DODGE DAKOTA SLT; AUT0 .......................................'7,488"
95 FORD CONTOUR, AUTO, AIR, LOADE0 .......................... 18,988"
95 FORD THUIIDERBIRD, VI, AUTO, FULL POWER ......... 'I0,988"
96 LINCOLN TOWN CAR, lEATHER, AMO LOAD£0 .............. 119,988"
' .,, ..;o, 98.8"
96 StO SUPERCAB, 4X4, LS, -V6,AIR ..............................
97 LINCOLN TOWN CAR, LOADEt ................................ 14,988"
97 EXPEDITION XLT, LOAOED .................... ~ ........... ,; ...}25,988"
97 EXPLORER XLT, LOAO'EO, ONLY 17,000 MILES .......... ,.... t22,988"
t7 RANGER SUPERCAB 4X4, , XLT ................., .. ~;........ '15,988"
97 MUSTANG liT, AUTO, EVERY OPTION, ts,ooo MllU........ '17,988"
98 CHEVY CONVERSION VAN. AUTO. fUll POIIR. 0!111600 ~ll11 1 18,988"
98 VILLAIIER, QUAD SlATS, FULL POWER, LOADED, ...... ~ ... '18,988"
98 DODGE NEON R/T, LOADED, IRIOHT RED.::................. '12,988"
98 RANGER SUPERCAB. 4 DR, AUTO, XLT. LOADED ........... 117,988"
98 MERCURY SABLE WAOON, IRD SEAT, TEUPHONE ....... .'15,988"
98 ·FORD WINDSTAR, _FUll POWER, REAR AIR ................. 118,988'0
98 MERCURY SABLE LS, EVII'f OPriOM,IIOOM ROOF,liArNiit .. 118,988'0
99 FORD F250 LARIAT, SUPEACAB• 4X4, LOADED ............ .',.,988"

her of days.

ceilts a minute, seven days a week, ·and Roger now ,}las some 14

!~"-_ _ ___, M t999 CONTOUR LX

since. ·
: "She was told she'd be .OK in si•
weeks, the voice would actually be
b~ller," Edwards said. "lt:s over. a
~ar. and if you heard n. you d
weep."
.
: Andrews starred in the mov1e
versions of " Mary Poppins" and
·(The Sound of Music," and in the
original Broadway versions of "My
Fair Lady" and "Camelot."

or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and ca~not
be guaranteed to run· u spcci ric nurn-

.

THURSDAY
'•
HARRISONVILLE ~ Senwr
Citizens Club, II a.m. Thursday,
dinner to follow meeting .
POMEROY -

Free blood pres-

sure screenings this month in obser-

vance of -National Home Care
Month by the Holzer Home Care of
Veterans Memorial Hospiral, Tucs·
day and Thursday ahernoon. noon to
3 p.m. at rhe office .. formet offices of
Dr. Wilma Mansfield and Dr. James
Witherell.
REEDSVILLE Riverview
Garden Club will meet Thursday.
7:30 p.m. at the Reedsville Church
of Christ for a Chrislmas workshop.
Members are asked to bring · finger
food for the meeting. and gifts for a
nursing home.
1 ,

Holiday rtans
Plans for preparing a Chrislma s basket for a . n'C cdy family
were roade . when the Reedsville
United Methodist Women met at
the home of Mrs. Ann LaComb.
The basket will be prepared by
Frances Reed and Grace Weber.
The meeting opened with rcad in~
of the UMW purpose and prayer
by Delores Frank. A total of 57

input from anyone, oo your sister lhe uncle who left it to them. 1114
should MYOB. Keep reading for were both so sweet and said. "You
one more lener on the subject It are our sister. and we will all share
warmed my heart:
equally." And we did. ·I was trult
· • Dear Ann Landers: My younger rouched by their generosity and
brother and sister have a differe..t broke down in tears.
father because !llY. molber remarri~
By the way, Ann, I never had aR
after she and my dad were divorced. unkind word to say about eit!Jer or
I was never adopted by my slepfa- my siblings. Our mother died recent·
ther because I still had a wonderful ly. and !here were no problems with
relationship with my own father. My her estate. I wish everyone had a
stepfather died many years ago.
brother and sister like mine. -, Sonja
Not long after that, his brother from Augusta, 'Ga.
died and lefr all his nieces and
Dear Sonja: So do I. My mail
nephews quite a lot of money. Of would be a lot lighter.
course, I was not included nor did I
--·Send questions to Ann Lan,c
expecl to be. My brother and sisrer ders, Creators Syndi&lt;ate, 5777 W.
wanted to share their inheritanre Century Blvd., Suite 700, Loo
wirh me. I told them it was their A el Carr
moneyand I was not really related to -'' ng es,
L 90045

p.m. and Sunday, 2-5 p.IJI. at the
POMEROY - Ewings Chapter. Meigs High School cafeteria.
Sons of the American Revolution , Prospective hunlers musl complete a
year-end meeting Thursday, 6:30 hunter education course before-they
p.m. at the Meigs Counry Museum . tan purchase an Ohio hunting
Speaker wi II be Alan Goldsberry, license. This is an open course and
JUdge of the Athens County Court of no preregistration is required .
1
Common Pleas. lnsrallation of officers will be held a~d new members
HARRISONVILLE
Harinducted.
risonville Chapter, Orde'r of the
Eastern" Star, annual insrallation.
FRIDAY
Saturday, 7:30p.m. at the temple.
RACINE -Meigs County Public Library Board, Friday. I p.m. at
EAST MEIGS -Eastern Arhler.'
the Racine Branch.
ic Boosters High School fall spoi}S
banquet, Saturday, 6:30 p.m. high
POMEROY -Arthritis Support school gymnasium. Meal provided.
Group, Friday, 10 a.m. to 11:30 a:m. Take covered dish.
conference room. Senior Citizens
Center. Medical students from Col-'
RACINE - RACO sponsoring
lege of Osteopathic Medicine at OU food collecli01i, Saturday, 8 a.m. lo
to talk on manipulali ve medicine lo noon, corner of Third and Pearl
benefit
Streels. lteiJIS IO go to rhe Meigs
.. arthritis.
Cooperative Parish Food Pantry.
RACINE - Racine village's last
leaf pickup F•iday. Call 949-2920.
COOLVILLE - Gospel Hannony Boys, at lhe Coolville,Methodist
Church, Salurday, 7 p.m.
SATURDAY
POMEROY -A free Ohio Divi- SUNDAY
sion of Wildlife Hunter Education
CHESHIRE Hymn sing,
Course• will be held Saturday, 9-5 Poplar Ridge Baprisr church,

America will be held on Dec. 5 at
the
Syracuse
Presbyterian
Church.
Plans were made for the holiday dinn er to be held at 1 noon fol lowed by a $3 gifl exchange,- al a
rece nt meeting at the halL Ella
Osborne opened the meting wirh
the pledges to the Oags, scripture
and the Lord's Prayer in unison .
It was noted that Laura Nice is

Cheshire , Harold and Peggy Clark
and The Clark Family. Sunday. 6
p.m.
RUTLAND
Thanksgiving
hymn sing. Sunday, 2c30 p.m. alii¢
Communiry Church. Main Street.
Rutland. located across from Birc~­
field Funeral Home.· The Roach
Brothers and other singers ro partie;
tpate. ·
MIDDLEPORT - Free Thanks·
giving dinner, Faith Chapel Feho...:ship Room 923 South Third Avenue,
Middleport, for anyone who wan~s
lo anend. Not a church service, no
offerings, no donations.

'

.

MIDDLEPORT
Darren
Smith, Welch, W. Va. to sing, Sunday, 7 p.m. at rhe Hobson Chrisriait
Fellowship Church.

MIDDLEPORT - Community
Thanksgiving service at the Presb}'·
terian Church in Middleport, Surjday, 7 p.m. Those anending asked ro ·
lake a can of food.
'

.'

not well, that Alta Ballard is
Ritchie, Esrher
improving, and that Ethel Oir has Helen Wolf, Mary Barringer,
broken rihs.
Elizabeth Hayes, Shirley Beeg le ,
A feller was read from State Pauline Ridenour. Betty Young. ·
Councilor Florence Thompson Eva Robson. Opal Eichinger,
and the Welsh family. At lhe next Julie Curtis, Kathryn Baum,
meeting ' quarterly birthdays will Everett Grant, Goldie Frederick.
be observed.
Mary Holter. Deloris Wolfe. Jean
Attending were Marcia Keller, Welsh , Erma Cleland, . Ella
Charlotte Grant,. Opal Hollon. Osborne.
Thelma White, Doris Grueser.

shutin calls we re reported and
ca rd s .were sent ' to friends . Due s

were collected for the year and ~
game was played . with prit.cs
, ,going

!O .th~

winners.

Refreshments · wt.:rc serve d to

tho se

named · and

Ro ..;cmary

Vance, Diane June s. Pearl
Osborne , Debhie Weber. Nancy
Buckley, Regina Reed. Lillian
· Pickens.

· and

guests

Julw

The Daily Sentinel's

LaComb· and Michelle Buck'ley.
Members wdl ha ve · dinner oul

for th e Dec. 8 meeting. The Janu·
ary meeting will he lw,tcd hy

.Osborne. Reed received the door
pnzc .

Enjoy visilors
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cbrk of
ScOttsville . Ari1.. spent u week
here wilh Mr. and Mrs . .Chester
Buckley and Mr. ·and Mrs . Phil
LaComb and Julie.
'
Dinner
planned
The annual Chrisrmas · dinner
or the distnct deputies and pnsl
councilors of the Daughters

DEER SLUGS

$19~c&gt;x

Christmas Kick-Off
Edition
..

,- - - - - - . - - - - -

We sell hunting license, deer tags, wetland
stamps non-resident license and arnrno.

~mington.

amount of money direcrly to us. her
daughrers. and we should split the
amount between our children as we
see fit. Sis' two children would get ·
5500 each. and mine would get
$250.
I believe whatever Mom wants to
do with her money is up tq, her. She
already has been more lhan generous to all of us over the years. I'm'
heginning to feel guilty about this
because I have more children than
my sister, and I certainly don 't feel
comfonablc telling my mother whal
10 do with her money. Any advice? ·
- Wondering in Wisconsin
Dear Wisconsin: What your
mot her decide s to do with her ·
money . is strictly her husiness .
Apparently. she is not asking for

---Community CalendaF--r_ __.. ;.
ings and special events. The ca'lcn-

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with several packages should use the
elevalor. .
The holidays are approaching.
and it would be a shame if your family had to bring your gifts to the hospital while you were having ski n
grafts. --Dallas Reader
Dear Dallas: Thank you for .a
warning that could save lm,bs and
hospital bills. We are a~l in your debt
because you took lhe lime to wnte.
Dear Ann Landers: My sister
was blessed ·with two love ly chi!dren. I have four. Our dear mother
wants to give each of her grandchil- ·
drcn 5500 apiece for Christmas. My
sister tells me. "Whatever Mum
gives to the grandchildren is coming
out of our !nhentance. She thonks
my mother should g1ve an equal

groups wishing tu announce meet-

SPORT PKO, STEREO,
OWL TIRES

M1'199 TAURUS WAGON .

Page7
~ursday, November 19, 1998:

The Community Calendar is published as a free scn·ice to non -profit

48 MONTHS*
ME~99 RANGER SPOilT

in it. you can call for help on the
phone installed for that purpose.
Escalators are anolher story. They
can be inQCorized meat grinders. Par- ·
enls with strollers are warned to
STAY OFF and for a good reason.
Should you lose your grip, the baby
would fall on hard, sharp, metal
steps. If lhe child falls going down.lle orshe could be caught at the bottom and risk losing a body pan. The
same thing can happen ro' older children who think running up and
down escalalors is fun .
Another serious hazard is shoppers who insist on carrying large
packages while riding escalators.
They cannol hold onlo the hand rail
or see where rhe steps end. Shoppers

Beat of the Bend....

APR FOR

preuy tnme this week. Neither team

Dragon Internet
Full Unlimited Acc~ss
as low as $12.50 per Mo.

Ann
Landers

Jim 8rK1ne

The founh annual Warren Girls'
three-point attempts. but connected
Baskerball Preview will be held on
on
just one by Brian Brown .
Medical Center after 01 third surgery prayers continue to be with the fam- Friday at Warren Local High School.
Thofl.e nuinbers won't win many
·
The preview will ·fearure eighl
today to clean rhe wound. Dr. James ilies affecred by lhis lragedy."
games. but 0' Brien said his 1eam 's
Lovett. a plastic f\urgeon at the holiiPulaski County Sheriff Sam reams playing lwo-petiod contests.
overall performance reOected conpital, said unless there were compli- Catron. who is handling the cm~h The first game will pull!elpre againsr
. _ . .\
cations. there likely woulu he no need investigation. said hio,; dcpat.unent Frontier at 6 p.m. River Valley will tinued impro\'ement.
" In my mind. our tea.m 1s ge-ttmg
to repeat the procedure . .
meel Eastern at 7 p.m. Marietta will
wa~ ('Onducting intC'T\' iPW'\ of people
be tier withmir being effective ' on
.Neikirk &lt;aid rhe Wildcats' st;tning in Luington and, Somerset and play Federal Hocking at 8 p.m. At 9 .
offense."
he said.
center will formally be ch:~rged with awairing rhe results of-auropsies and p.m .. lhe host Warriors will play
Ohio State didn'l pull aw;oy' until
Meigs.
·
two counls of second-degree an accident reconstruction expert.
midway
through the secnnd . half.
manslaughler and one count of
"It's going to take some lime" to . The preview is presented by the when a 9-2 run made rhe "'"e 51-~ I
drunken driving.
complete the inves.ligation, Calron Scenic Hills Lions Club. Admi«ion
with 7:'!0 to play.
is $3.
Wans is nor being arresled. said.
Neikirk said. The man&lt;htughter
Brock and Kenrucky quarterback
charges are felonies. meaning Wans' Tim Couch grew up tog~ther in lhe
case likely will be waived to a grand eastern Kentucky mountain town of
jury for possible indictment. Neikirk Hyden and had been best friends
said. "
since childhood.
· Watts ' blood-alcohol content wa&gt;
Couch said Tuesday's practice
0.15. Neikirk said. The level at which was a welcome disrracrion.
a driver is presumed intoxicated i!'o ' · "I thought we were really
0.10.
focused," he said. "! .think it was
The senior was th~ sole survivo1 • good for all of us 10 gei focuse.d ."
Of the Sunday cr~sh. in which hi!&gt;
Mumme said the session went
.
pickup went our of control and O\'er- well.
turned on a rural. two-lane highwa)
" I think we threw one incomplete ·
ni&gt;nh of Somerset Warts and the vic· pass," he said. " I expected. it to be
tims were thrown from the vehicle.
really bad."
,
The men were headed for a farrr
Brock's funeral · was scheduled
near Somersel where lhey planned I&lt; roday in Thousandsr icks. near Hyden.
hunl deer. The football teaiT] had nr Services for Steinmetz, a defensive
ESCORT LX 4 DR
EXPLORER XLT
pracrice Sunday, following Satur· lineman who rransferred from Michiday's 55- i7 home vietory over Van· gan State to Kenlucky in August, are
4 CVL, AIR COND,
CD Pt.A1ER, 4 DR, TRAILER
derbilt.
Thursday·in his hometown of Edge·
'STEREO
TOW, ALL POWER, LOADED
· With Saturday's regular seasor wood in northern Kenruc~'y..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (A P) pass 'receprions. Boston wasn't perDavid Boston knol"s now that rhere mitted lo speak with reporters 11fter
are limes when the best lhing to say the Buckeyes defeated Iowa last Satabout .an opponent is nothing at all. . urday and at the pl11yers' weekly
He hasn•r said anyrhing aboul interview session Monday:
Michigan lhis week as his Ohio
Several weeks ago. Roston hrielly
Stare team prepares for Saturday's talked about his comments before the
. game. at Ohio Stadium against the Michigan game .
· 'Wolverines.
"I learned from ir and mo,·ed on."
Lasl year at lhis time, he said he said. "I don't want ro c-omment on
: Michigan's Charles Woodson was no it. ,,
bener rhan cornerbacks he had faced
Boston wasn'r .rhe first player in practice.
and probitbly not the last - whose
· ·Woodson responded wirh a 78- comments h;l\·e added to the rivalry's
yard punt return against Ohio St:tle at rnosphere .
'that may have clinched the Heisman
In 1995, Ohio Srare widecreceivTrophy for him as Mic-higan won 20- er Terry Glenn guamnteed the Ruck: 14.
eyes would go to the Rose Aowl "We came hack after thai game a trip thill co uld only he made with a
and sat on my couch and he was like. victory over Michigan. The Buckeyes
'Man. I should' ve kept my mouth lost to the Wolverines that year and
shut,"' teammate Dee Miller said. NorthWestern went to Pasaclenn.
"And I was just like. :That's just
In 1994. Michigan's W&lt;tltcr Smith
something you have to learn.' 1
said he wanled to keep dcfe&lt;tting the
"After that game, he really under- Buckeyes tmti'l Ohio Slate coach
stood What this game was ahout. Pri - John Cooper got fired. Ohio State
'9r to that , I think he wnsjusttalking won thai year. 22-6.
and just being 11 confident · person.
.
I n compaqson,
lh'!ngs' have heen

cal problem aod stops when you are

S&lt;tid John'l&gt;n "was a huge f;octor in
the game. He allows the Ohio Stme
guards to go put the pressure on tHe
ball. ... II was a good experience for
our kids ·1q play . a~ainst a sholblocker I ike him:·
Sroonie Penn .cored 17 poin" as
the Buckeyes (3-0i stayed unbeaten

"There's no gimmes oul lhere."

Warren Girls'
Basketball
Preview Friday

ro~1ch

The Daily Sentine~

Reader warns of risk in using escalators- they can cause se·rious injury=

._.ll'ith crnter Keri John ...on r~pon,ihle

Morril;j prO\·es lhere are no sure

nM WHITMIRE

And sometime!\ you h;we to just hold
.in what you want to say."
Even though he has broken tJte
Ohio Slate record with 170 c11reer

By The Bend

Ohio State men top
Robert Morris 61-49

~harges
•

Thursday, November 19, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport; Ohio

or

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November 25th
Don't Be.·left Out
Call 992-2155
Dave Harris Ext. 104
For More Deta·
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NOVEMBER 23RD

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*

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~------------------------------ ·

,,

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Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 19, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Art.

Flag craftsman guest speaker at SUV meeting
"ork rather than •egetable dyes of
the 19th cenlu'). He pointed 01,1tthal
&gt;iher pamt for stars in the Civil War
actually contained silver filings
"hich tarnished on the flags and
became black. Real gold filings arc
no longer used in gold paint: brass
filings are used inslcad.
Ohio bailie flags are pho·
tographcd. Copies of the photos can
he obtained froin the Ohio Historical
Societ) . Currently. that society has
begun a fund dri\'c to restore the
more than 200 flags in their possession at a cost of SIO.OOO to Sl5.000
each.
The West Virginia Arc hi•·es will
be displaying the West Virginia unit
flags in Charleston. W.Va. in March,
1999. Manv Ohioans served in West.
Virgi nia Union units since Ohio
unit s \\'ere fulL
A report on the Buflington Island
Battlefi eld preservation cffons was
given ·by Keith Ashley, camp commander. He also reported on the pro·
jcct of identifyi ng a possible black

A craftsman spec ializing '"
reproduclion Civil War bailie flag&gt;
was the guest speaker at the recent
regular . mectmg of Brooks-Grant
Camp No.7. Sons of Union Veterans
of the C1v1l War. ·
Capt Michael Sheets of the 36th
Virginia Infantry recnactors (Confederate) spole. Besides being a
pubhc schoolteacher. he reproduces
authentic Ci,·il War flags for Ci•·il
War reenactment groups.
Sheets explained that a Civil \\'ar
regiment usually wore out a flag
every year and had to be issued
another. These flag s were made
from China silk . .,.hich he slilf uses
1oday for reproductions. Most flags
of regiments ha\'c painted art work
o n them. which he must reproduce

accurately. Flags are usua lly six fee t
hy six·and·a-half: feet m size. The
cords for the flag s have lo be
ordcrCd and arc handmade rcsull ing

in a -high cost. A reprOduced flag and
curd will cost S800. '
Modern oil paints arc used for art

sold1er in the white 91st Ohio Volunteers. lbc research on this will be
handled by Myron Jones of Oak
Hill.
The camp amended its constilu•tion 10 change the day for meeti ngs.
Beginning next year, the camp will
no"' meet on the third Thursdays of
the odd months of the year. Cancellalions will be broadcast by WMPO
ra!lio if weather is poor. ·
Thomas Ball of Syracuse sent a
report on the evaluation of the si1.e
and conditions of the Meigs Coomty
. Civil War statue by the c01,1rthouse.
The last remaining phase is to idcn·
tify it dimensions. This will be sent
to the natjonal organiiation in the
"Save our Sculpture" project.
James OiJer of Thurman was recognized fOI' the :micle on him in the
Sunday limes-Sentinel concerning
research for West Virgi nia Civil War
Union soldiers m~dals stiU available to claim.
The charter held a memorial to
Daisy Anderson, the last livi ng

[fjep

I

BALTIMORE(API- On vitwal
\he Baltimore MuseJm of Ar1 is lhe
Cone Collection, an important group
of 19th :n.l early 2llthct!lll..-y Fiench
art worts. The collection wa.&lt;
anta.'&lt;.ed by Dr. Claribel Cone. who
willed it to her sister, Ella. who lefi
it to lhe miL&lt;eUm in 1949. The Cone
sisters were Baltimore resident• wh!&gt;
spent much li me in P:uis. They were
fri.,nds of Pablo Pica.&lt;so. Henry

widow of a black Civil War soldier.
She died in Septemher. This leaves
on remaining Union widow, Mrs.
Bertha January of Tennessee.
Officers were elected fOI' 1999.
Thcy will be Myron E. Jones Jr. of
Oak Hill, commander, Terrence
Cummings of Spencer, senior vice
commander, Keith Ashley of Rock Mo~Q.'&lt;o;e andoiher:.tist&lt; and acquired
Springs. junior vice COI'Dtnander; many of their wort.&lt;. The Cone Col-

Thursday, November 19, 1998

leclioo also includes works by
Eugene Delacroi~. Pierre RenOir,
P:wl Uunnr and Pierre 8onnanL
lrollilll il a.t
NEW YORK (AP) - A new 101111
psyc-hological
self-awareness and
10
proonality may he found on the ironing board. •·How we choose and go
about our dai ly routines and hou.&lt;ehold chores may reveal a.• much
about our emotional &gt;~rength.&lt; and
weakRCll.&lt;es a.• a few hours on lhe
analytic couch," says psychologist
Vivien ,Wolsk.

By CLAIRE VITUCCI
Ass«iated Press Writ«
LOS ANGELES (A P) - Two
unidentified Texans paid S350,()(Ml
for a diary thai challenges one nf
the most popular legends in their
state's history : that Davy Crudet..
proudly foug ht Mexican lnKlfls ho
the end of lhe 13-day siege at the
· Alamo. ·
The 200-page manu s.:ript, purchased Wednesday at an auclinn in
Hollywood, is supposed ly a Mexican · army officer's . eyewitness
account of Crockeu ·s dcalh nn
Man:h 6, 1836.
The controversial diary says the
King of the Wi ld Frontier was captured and executed with nther vnl. unteers in lhe force of 200 whn
were de fending the former Spanish
missi9n in lhcir fight to crcalc the
state of Texas out of Mexican territory.
Many e xperts douh1 1hc account .
said lo have been diclalcd in Spanish in the 1840s by Lt. Col. Jose.

f

•-----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===~-.,

U'.:::::. AIr:JI.""E
Pre H 0 l ; d ay
l
r
c

97

· The nexl meeting of tbe camp
will be Thursday. Jan . 19 at 7: 15
p.m. for the installation of officers.

ESCORT
4 Dl

Aula, .rr condition, pwr ..t,
pwr bi 1... AMIFII

97 FORD UNGER
fiT CAB

4X4, 4.0L, V&amp;, eutu, XLT,

AMiRI " ...ne

A/C,

98 FORD CONTOUR Gl
I .

.1

f)

I

•
'·.&lt;""'-?{
. &lt;-&gt;

.

,

•

~

' i ~ ,.,.

Methodist Copperati ve Parish. Stu·
dents arc to bring canned, non -perishabl c food s and place 1hem boxes
provided at the sc hoo l.
Business discussed was the profit
from lhe shotgun 1and Longaherger
baskcl raftlc . The group also voted

··~

to pay baskelballleague fee s for lhc
school . A meeting will be held co ncerning the bas ketball pro gram.
A Beanie Baby Valentine Bear
will be raffled slarting Jan. 4 and
running through Feh. 12.
R-oom co unl ~as won hy lhc sec -

1..

•

/

''

(

31NSTOCK ·· .)D

.15,995
, 95

a nd grade.
President Debbie Cundiff led the
group in the Pledge -of Allegiance
and Lord 's Prayer. Th_e next meeting
will be held Jan . 12.

.CELEBRATE BIRTHDAYS- Kody Dean and Tristen Andrew Wolfe,
'chtldren of Joe and Betty Ann Wolle, recently celebrated their birth·
·days with a dinosaur and Barney theme.
· , ·
Kody was four on Oct. 6, and Tristen turned two on Oct. 13.
Attending were the children's grandparents, Wilson and Anna
Wolfe, and Joseph and Alberta Loft(s. Othets attending were
V.:endy, Zane, Zac, and Brett Beegle, Stephannie, Tony and Danielle
Ktng, John Pnddy, Amanda and Bryan Schwarze!, Joyce, Danielle
and Samantha Cline.
..
'
Sending gifts were Fred, Barb and Zac Priddy, Ruth Ann Boyer
and Bev Fetty. ·
:
.
'

JAR RET LINCOLN DURST

TURNS THREE Jarret
Lincoln Durst celebrated his
third birthday on Nov. 3 with a
Tonka construction . themed
party at his home in Middleport.
He is the son of Tim and Kristi
Durst.
Attending the party were Ed
and Ruth Durst, Roland and
Jean Durst, Jim and Pam Durst;
Jim and Jackie Reed, Conne and
Stephen . Browning, Mandy,
McKenzie, and Nathan Redman,
Ann and Ryan VanMatre, David,
Mary end Nathaniel Shuler, Bill, ·
Kathy and Megan Dyer, Seth \
White, and Kenny Carsey.
Sending gifts were Mitchell
Glen Parsons, Martha Blain ,
Ralph and Madeline Painter, Vic,
lis and Sandy Painter, Bev
Fetty, Cheri Williamson and lam·
ily, Butch and Penny Brinker,
Todd and Darla and Jak'e Zuspan.

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a 1993 graduate of Ohio University
wilh a bachelor of science degree in
education. He is employed with the
Gallia County School as a foutth
grade teacher at Southwestern Elementary. .
,The wedding will take place on
November 21 , 1998; ·• at 1he Little
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.

Locka &amp; more.

·99"*. •21.56.

KODY DEAN WOLFE

MIDDLEPORT - John and
Delores . :Tyree ' of Middleport,
~nnounce ' the engagemenl and
upcoming marriage of !heir daughter. Stacy 'l)'ree to Craig Wright
The bride elect is a 1990 graduate
9! Meigs High School. She is a graduate of Hocking College with an
~sociates degree in nursing and is
currently employed as an RN super·
visor at Scenic Hills Nursing Center.
The prospecli ve groom is the son
of the lale Barbara Humphrey s

V6, auto trans, AJC, power
seat, power windows &amp;

The Sentinel News Hotline

TRISTEN ANDREW WOLFE

TYREE~ WRIGHT

98 FORD TAURUS SE

Syracuse PTO plans food drive through December 11
A food dri ve for the holiday season was among the lopics discussed
a11he rccc m meeting of1h c Syr a~ u s c
PTO.
The food dri ve will continue
through Dec. II with il ems donaled
10 the Meigs Co unt y Unit ed

Stacy Tyree and Craig Wright

12,995

NURSING GRADUATES- Th~ commencement program for the 199B class of the Practical Nursing School of Buckeye Hills Career
Center was held Sept 25 with 30 students receiving their certificates and school pins. Shown are, from left: front row: Tina Goddard, Buffalo, W.Va.; Tonya Clark, Vinton; Wendy Crago, Gallipolis; Deborah George, Vinton; Amy Hemby, Gallipolis; Dalberta Cox, Bidwell; Jamie
Ward, G"llipolis; Sherri Delaney, Oak Hill; Peggy Antonara, South Webster; Elizabet_h Roush, Pomeroy; Stephanie Frazier, Wellston; and
Nicole Wallis, Vinton; second row: James Sims, Columbus; George Skeans, Wellston; Polly Hurd, Oak Hill; Tammy Ha\'.!ks, Vinton; Sherri
Higginbotham, Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Sonya Parker, Wellston; Margaret Boyd, Rio Grande; Oline Haner; Gallipolis; Candy Lee, Gallipolis
Ferry, Y!V; and Christine Kerns, Thurman; third row: Phyllis Brown, coordinator; Pam Moran, instructor; Brandi Rollins, Gallipolis; April
Craig, .Wellston; Sherleena NorveiJ, Jackson; Sara Beth Sharp, Jackson;·Crystal Session, Bidwell; Keri Lindsey, Langsville; Donna Shong,
Bidwell; Shannon Goble, Vinton; Lori Moore, instructor; 'and Rebecca Stump, instructor.
.

.

By TRACY BOYD

The Detroit News

31NSTOCK

.

96 WINDSTAR
VAN
3-in
stock

Enrique de Ia Pcna. It defies the Ira· in 1955 in the hands of a Mexican
ditinnal story of the Alamo's cap- coin dealer.
lure ·in which lhc volunteer fon:e
" It doesn't have 110 years of
die&lt;.l nn the wall s or in hand-to- 1 human records behind it," Musso
han~ cnmha1 wi lh Gen. Antonio said, assetti ng that nol enough
Lnpa de Santa Anna's troops.
fore nsic lests have been conducted.
'lltc lraditinnal story holds that
Critics have dismissed de Ia
l'n-.:kcll. lhc ronncr · congressman · , Pe na's me mOir as a fa-ke ~ver since
frnm Tcnnc,scc, fought to the end, an English translation by San Anlowichlin~ h is long-ri fl e, " Betsy,"
nio archivist Cannen Perry was
like a d uh hefnrc he fell ncar the· publ ished in 1975 .
Bill Groneman, a New York
frnnl d&lt;Nors nf the Al amo's chapel.
Lillie wa.' know n about the buy- arson investigator. called lhe jourcrs &lt;~her than lhat they purchased ·nal a forgery in his book, ''Defense
. Ihe diary through a New York deal · of a Legend: Crockeu and 1he de Ia
cr wilh the intent of keeping it in Pe na Diary." He has ' acknowi Tc.as, said Gregory Shaw, vice · edged, however, I hal he cannot
prcsidcn l of Bulterficld &amp; Buller· ·, prove it.
llcld auction house.
.
But James Crisp. a history pro·
Among crilics of lhe diary is fessor al North Carolina State UniJnscph Musso, a Los Angeles- based versity, has sl udied the doc umenls
historic illustrator who is research- and are convinced they arc genuine.
ing a hiog raphy on Xlamo comman·
" I have no doubt that they are
authentic,': C,risp said Wednesday.
der James Bowie.
Musso questioned the validity of " They have passed every .test."
the documcnl s becau se they
Shaw said the memo ir was writ·
seemed to surface out of nowhere ten o n paper of high rag con1cn1.

typical of 1he early 19th century.
Musso acknowledged there are
many who would refuse to believe
thai Crockell did nol go down fight· .
ing. He said he is not one of tl1em .
"If lhe document is real l 'don 'l
lhink it should change people's perceptions of Davy Crockeu.
Whether he died swinging his rifle
... or whether he was brought before
Santa Anna" ' should not maucr,
Musso said .
'
The diary had been at the John
Peace Library at the University of
Texas at San Antonio for nearly 25
years. bu1 was sold by John Peace
Ill. son of the man for whom the
library was named.
. Do n Car leton, di,rector of the
Center for American History at the
University of Texas, said Texans
associate the Alamo with a g rcal
sense of patriolic pride. so many
would be offended a1 1he lhought of
Crockeu surre nderi ng.
" Many Texans like to hold onto
their his10rical my th s." he said.

Diaries can help doctors treat women ·with severe PMS

Auto, AJC, cruise, Pwr
windows, · Pwr locka,
AMJFM cen, &amp; more

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Contrary account of Alamo hero Davy
Crockett's death auctioned for $350,000

Tad
sccrerary;
JamesCockier
MourniofngShade,
of Middlepofl.
treasurer; and Rhett Milhoan of
Pomeroy. first year camp council·
man. The other appoinled posilions
~ • •, - ." ' '
will be announced in January.
In honor of the declaration
Thanksgiving a.• a holiday by Presi&amp;!
de n1 Lincoln, the camp had ~
-a
~
Thanksgivi ng din ner. About 30 1-~;;;::;;_::;..#;:;:~~CZ,;;;;...;~;;;...-CZ,~~;;:I~~~~~.::::;.~--1
;~~-bers and guest~ shared the
.

c

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Low mllea, power
equipment

16 995

By JOSEPH B. FRAZIER
retlt:e to their rooms upstairs, boys
Associateci .P ress Writer
downstairs .
'' And that's it," Principal James
CRANE, Ore. (AP) - Across the
high de sert of Oregon's largest Haugen said emphatically_, adding
~oqp\}'\ !her_~ are . plenty of &lt;:illlle,
Ill;!~ _
boys caught upstairs are kicked
Sheep and sagebrush. Range land out of the dontl&amp;. . ·
seems to go on forever. People· are
Mosl students sleep lwo to a
few and far between, and schools are room lhat is small but not cramped.
scarcer slill.
'
Some decorate lhe wall s with pi cCrane Union High School draws tures of family back home .
from an eastern Oregon territory that
The dorms have' no janitors. Slu·
is roughly lhe size of New Jersey, dents clean, mop, vacuum and scrub
Delaware and Rhode Island com - windows. They wash the dishes and
bined. Studenls talk aboui lheircom - haul the garbage.
It may be a no-frill s life, bul ever
mutes, not in miles, but hours: two,
sin ce Cran e became a boarding
three. four ... .
Thai's why lhe school boards school in 1931 it's been free to kids
nearly all of its 88 students during within the dislrict. Many nearby di s·
the wee k. It 's one of only a handful · tricls without high schools pay some
of pulllic high schools nati onwide or all of lhe $2 .500 a year lhat covthal for reasons of sheer remotene ss ers room and board for outsiders.
lodges its learners.
About 65 of the 88 sludents at
· ·: "You learn to deal with olher Crane live in the dorms-and go home
people in. the dorms. ... You grow up most weekend s.
earli er," said senior Betsy Cl ark.
When Haug-en arri ved three years
" You know everybody, you know ago, he brou ght a no- nonsense style. •
ilie teachers, you make longer and
Parental permission is required
beuer friendships. "
for students 10 leave campus. Previ Haroey County, whi ch strelches ou sly, lhe principal said. "Kids were
from east-central Oregon to the jumping in lheir cars and sayi 0g
Nevada li ne, is ranch country, a they were heading off somewhere
- palchwork of rugged spreads with that sounded legitimate when it
name s such as Roaring Springs ahd lurned out that they weren't."
Double 0. There are more than
He al so took the televisions and
100,000 head of beef cattle, but only VCRs out of the dorm rooms, which
7,500 people.
eliminated the late-night video
, This makes the act of going off 10 games. There were howls of indigCrane for a high school education nation, he recalled. But li sts of those
one of sacrifice for many families; with "U " or unsatisfactory grades
who end up losing valuable . ranch went from long 10 short.
•
· hands.
.
.,
"If kid s want to succeed. they
"My parents have to put in a lot can here ," said Linda Bennell, · a
of overtime," said Joe Sherburn , a . counselor. curriculum director and
s'enior who has been making lhe Spanish tQj!.cher. " We have tieuer ·
. two-hour trek every school week control or'the kids with the dorm .
since he was 14 .
We can call over and say 'I wanl you
Added Andrea Dav ies, who has in my room NOW." '
.
two children at Crane: " The em ply
The U li st comes oui weekly. Stu·
·nest sy ndrome hils early here. "
dents on it must spend ex.tra
But it is 1his rural atmosphere of evenin gs in the computer lab or wilh
sacrifice, hard work and family that a teacher. Failing students are barred
makes Crane students a different (roin extracurricular .activities for
breed. Most come from liny, often that week.
oii.e-room, schools scattered acmss
· That 's a severe sanc tion in a
the county 's 10,228 square miles.
sohool where almost everyone is
"These kids were brought up on involved in at leasl one sport, and
ranches and they have a cl oser-knit - alhlelics arc about the only di verhome life," said Denni s Mill s, lhe sian.
.
county sc hoo l superintendent. " It
"Sometimes if a student can be
produ ces beller-disc iplined kid s. doing ,A work and is gell ing a C I'll
They know what 'no' is. They don' t pul him on the U list because he is
question ·authoril y."
not workin g ~p to abi lity," Bennell
Vice principal and wood shop sai d. "A lol ofo ther teachers feel the
1eachcr Ed Goff wouldn 't exac tl y same way."
sqy bi g-city problems such as drugs
Fres hman Tony He rrell said he
arc nonexislenl , "but we have' more linds even Crane 1oo crowded. He
troul)le with chewing tobacco than hopes lo return to hi s family 's 7,800
wt do wilh drugs."
acres of hay and ran ge land and
·"Here you do n' t worry about eventuall y run it .
drugs or violence," .added Clark. " If
As he practices a tec hnique in
thai comes up the te achers lake care weldin g class ,- in stru clor Don Beno( it and it doesn 'I happen any nell corrects him .
" I like doing it thi s way," Bcrrcll ·
·,. more. "
&gt; The dorm s have live -in aduh pro tested.
" Bac k on the fann I don't care
chaperones and clearl y spelled-our
rules.
how you do it, but in my shop you'll
AI 9:30 every ni ght, the telcvi- do it like I te ll you," Bennell said.
sion in 1he loun ge goes off, and an
The boy obeyed.
h9ur later .lhc lights go out. Gi rl s

. Diaries aren 't j ust fo r love lorn .
· angst-ridden leen-agers anymore :
Gyneco logists want women to keep
them, too.
AI some point in ·their li ves, an
estimated 40 perce nt of lhe female
population suffers from premenstru·
al syndrome, a calch-all tenn that
refers to physical and psychological
_·symptoms during ' the 1wo weeks
hcfore a woman's menstrual period
starts. Because PMS can have more
lhan I 00 symptoms, doctors say a
diary helps define a .trealmenl plan
lhat is customized to the patient.
The idea of recognizing PMS as a
legitimate medical complain!, much
less the concept of individualizing
treatment for each woman, is fairly
new, As recently as 10 years ago.
women were told that PMS was ereated in lheir minds.
" I was told lhai as a woman, I'd
have to ·learn to deal wi!h it," says
Deborah Robbins of Edmonton,
Alberta, Canada, who had PMS for
24 years and finally· devised her own
program of lifestyle modifications.
Tnday, physicians such as Dr.
William Anderso~ at ffenry Ford
Heallh Syslem ask women to write
down all of their symptoms , including psychological and emotional
ones, to confinn that PMS is indeed
in the head - but these day s the.
doclors mean it lilerally.
Most PMS experts believe the
di sorder is related to serotonin, a
· chemical in the brain thai regulates
mood and appetite , says Anderson, a
gy necologist who speciali zes in
behavi oral gynecology. By looking
at a woman's di_~~ of s ymptom ~:·:"'
doc1ors can dete rmine when medi ca'
lion could help .
_
Though 1here is no way to measure the chemical 's levels in a medical tesl.the brai n' s inability to prop·
erly use serotonin is believed to co nlribule to PMS , depressi on and sleep·
disturbance s. Anders on says good
re sults oc cur when palienls with
severe PMS lake drugs 1ha1 regulate
serotonin, such as anti-depressants,
in small doses throughout the month
or in larger amounts during the
affected day s when those lev els
drop.
"When you feel stress, one of the ·
chemical~ . that reacls to that stress is
serotonin," Anderson explains. ·
" People with PMS have a deficit
in !heir abilily to respond with that
sero1onin output, so even a small
stressor is perceived as a big one. "
Keeping track of those emotions
in a diary has helped elevale the control of PMS inlo a sci.ence, Anderson
says. When doclor and patient study
the pallerns that emerge over a
three-month period, decisions can be
made regarding medications and
lifestyle changes lhat are specific for
each patienl, rather ,lhan one-sizefits-ali.
Even if your symptoms are nol
serious enough to warranl medical
attention , "jusl being aware of whal
your symptoms are and when you
can e&lt;pec t them really helps, " says
Dr. Stephanie Lucas, an endocrinologist at ·SI. John Hospital in Detroit,

Marriage announced
Kimberl y Roush and David VanJnwage n were unitf:d in marriage on
Ocl. 30 in Call ensburg, Ky.
Th e Rev. Martin Gut e performed
th e doubl e ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Roger and Christy Roush of Racine
and _ i's emp loyed at Wendy's in
Pomeroy. The groom is the so n of
Jerry and Linda Vanlnwagen of Flat·
woods Road,

Pome roy

and

who has sludied PMS and treats bullet is a·co!nfon , and knowi ng it's
patients wilh Ihe cond[tion. " Know- there often mea ns you won 'I need to
ing that you' ll probably bawl at a use it," she says.
movie or yell at your husband o n
Doc tors agree that PMS' psychoWednesday helps both of yQ.u' to logical component can al so be idenurjderstand and prepare. " .
tified through lhe diary. Dr. Andi
Carol Keeger of West Bloom- Coleman , a gynecologist in Detroit,
fi eld. Mich.. says her logbook really says thai women wilh poor·coping
helped in planning her day s. Before skills and low self-esleem oflen
she had her two children, the 42- have .more severe cases ofPMS .
year-old says, her pre-perind depres"''m not saying PMS is all in lhe '
sion was " horrible."
head , but sometimes Ihere is an
" I used to plan meetings and underlying cause and reason for, the
appointments around those two or . symptoms a patient is having. · By
three day s when I was in my 20s, " identifying them, we can make some
Keeger says. " II was just awful . leeway in treatmenl," Coleman says.
Nolhing could pull me out of that After a patient keeps a .diary for
funk, till a couple of days went by · three months, Coleman ·sits down
then I felt perfeclly fine. It was fru~· with her to discuss physical symp·
trating ."
, lams as well as the patient's satisfac· Diaries al so can reveal tendencies tion with job, family life, sexual
for extreme anxiety. Logging a gen· relationships and other personal
eral feeling of anxiousness that has 1ssues.
_,
no real basis for a few day s helps
" Women with true PMS should
doclor&gt; offer ways to control it. only have symploms in the second
Lucas sometimes prescribes an anti· half of the cycle , and they di sappear
an&lt;iety pi II for such patient~ to have when the period slarts," Coleman
just in case her symptom becomes says. "If a woman has problems all
unmanageable. " Having that silver the time that continue during her

period, whether phys ical or psyc hologica l. we need to consider anolher
diagnosis."
The goal of the diary. says Anderson, is 10 help patienls function in an
appropriate m·anner. all the time.
" We wantlhem to be able to feel
emolions such as anger or sadness,
but we don't wanll hose 10 be exaggcrated or prol onged," he says.
" Keeping a log can reall y help us to
treat the whole situation more accuralely."
Leslie Roc helle of Detroit says
lhal knowing when to expect her
backaches, irritation, snappiness and
chocolate cravings help.
" I can deal with .it better," says
Rochell~ •. 28. "It's a relief to know
it's me. not the person I'm snapping
at, and it makes a big d_ifference iq
how I react."
And the diaries aren' t just for
women, either.
. "I give the s~me diary to tbe hu sbands of my patients," says Lucas.
"It helps a woman see what his perception is of her during the month,
and gives the men an outlet too."

-Come on over to Bo•'s Market
·'

GALLIPOLIS
GARDEN CENTER
..
.SATURDAY,NOVEMBER 2IST
,

s:oo am til 9:oo' pm

"Its A Winter Wonderland"
Giveaways each hour plus register to win $100 Gift
Certificate to be given away at 9:00 pm
-No purchase necessary to register- Need not be resent to win!
. Bob's Fully Stocked With:
Christmas Decorating Items ...
• Wreaths. Garland
• Ornaments
• Ribbons

• Ready Made Bows

Li£ fit 'Reji·esfiments

.

Jresh Jrom the greenhouse

IJeautiful
Poinsettias

• Artificial Trees

- Great Gift Ideas -

BOB'S Now CARRIES:
• Cats Meow Houses
• Lizzie High Dolls
• Beanie Babies
• Many Beautiful Crafts &amp;
Home Decorating Items
• Bird Houses and Feeders

Arriving Thanksgiving Week

Fresh Cut Christmas
"Best selection in
Tri-County Area"
• FRAZIER FIR
(Cadi/14c of
Christmas Trees)
• WHITE PINE
• SCOTCH PINE

is

employed hy Continuity of Care and
the En\c rgc ncy Medical Service in

Pomeroy.
Th e couple reside in Pomeroy.

2400 Eastern Ave. ·
(Across from K·Mart) Gallipolis, OH
446·1711 ·

•

�Thursday, November 19, 1998 ·

.

Page.10:
Thursday, November 19, 1~ :

·Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~~~====~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~·

Clinton urges Japanese people to be .
patient with their government's
efforts
.

.

::

TOKYO (AP) - President Clinton today called upon the Japane&lt;e
people to be patient with their ~ov·

®Eastern High School.com

emn1ent's t:ffon' to revive a Mrug-

gling economy but also u111ed more
openness to Amerjcun-made goc:x:L-...

"If Japan is very strong, that brings
back Asia." he said.
"Don't be discouraged, but do be
determined. That would be the advice
of a friend ," Clinton told a polite
audience of about 130 students, mer·
chants and other workaday Japanese

--------------~------------~--------------------------~-------------- ·

•

Fac·e lift provides EH·s
with new look, facilities
Eastern High School looked a lot year. and studentJ; in grades K-8 are
diiTerem in August than it did in May. now located right next door to the
when school was finished for the high school.
year.
Most students and faculty are
. During the summer. workers from pleased with lhe new buildings,
various contracting companies gave allhough they have found things they
the high school a facelifl. installing don't like, or are having problems getnew floor and ceiling tile. painting ting u&lt;ed to.
rooms and lockers, and completing
"We have without a doubt the
major structural work which changed finest campus anti facility in South·
the locations of some cla.mooms. ea.&lt;tem Ohio." English teacher Scott
oflices and library facilities. and Wolfe said. "The centralized location
expanded science and an rooms.
has made it nice for parents with
The new school year was also dif- children in both school buildings, and
ferenl because, for the first time ever. student morale is high ."
all of Eastem Local's students were
"A restructuring of curriculum
on the same campus. The new East· which would match the building.
em Elementary School opened this especially at the high school level.

would make this the finest learning
facility in the state."
Kristen Devaney. a first-year English teacher. also likes having both
schools next door to each oth&lt;r.
"I think it's wonderful having th~
schools combined. It can really open
up communications among the
grades." Mrs. Devaney said.
Eastern student Kay Hunt also
&lt;ees a more pmctical benefit to the
new campus.
"If a high school student has a little sister or a lillie brother. and they
need to contact one another. a teacher
can get the brother or sister quickly."
Hunt sa!d. "However, parents and
kids who work must pay more taxes
for our schools than before."

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

.

"I did it in a direct and straight· World War II.
forward manner," Clinton replied. A'
So•ne Japane"' at"' are iried b)
for forgiving him. "I believe they did. wa~hinglon ·~ r lm.cr (nga£~m~nl
ye•.'' he said. 4uickly adding. "That\ with commumo.;r China. In hh TV
really a que.tion you could a.•k them appearance today. Clinton defended
better than me ...
his effons to impro\1: relation' "ith
Sensing the awkwardness, the TV · Beijing.
modemtor quickly inteljeeted: " Let's . "I did not intentionally go o-.r the
change the topic now...
head' of the Japane" people in '
Clinton acknowledged at the out: establishine better relation' with Chi·
set efforts Japa~ese ·leaders have na:· ClintOn said. adJine lht-~1 ~ wa~;
unde"aken to combat the nagging plea,~d Chinese Preo.;id&lt;! n1t Jiang •
recession.

Zemin was about to pay an oflic1a l :

during the taping of a '"tow n meet-

Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi visit to Japan.
ing" for broadca.'t to the nation later announced earlier thi' week a $196
White House officials hoped that .
in the day.
billion package of spending and tax Clinton could use the televi-.ed "town •
"We re~ret that you have the pre· cuts to spur Japan's economy, the hau ·· 'eso.;ion to pur a per~nal louch •
sent economic challenges thai you country's eighth recovery plan. and on his message . It j, a dt:\'ice that
have but we l!on't think you should largest, in eigh\ years of economic Clinton ha~ u~d recently on other :
be too pessimistic about the future." distress. Obu1=hi said he e&lt;pected it to foreigrl trips, including jn Bl!ijing and .
he said. noting that the Japanese put Japan on a ''recovery orbit" with· Shanghai during hi s China vi,i t la.' t
showed after World War II that they in two years, · but the White House summer. and in Mo!&gt;.co.w.
· have a capacity to change and pull fears the package will turn . out ·to
· And personal. it was.
together as a nation.
have less punch than advertised .
Th~ first que·, lioner wa nted to
·'So now you have the laws on the
Yet, Clinton said. "I think, to be know i(Ciint9n got g~ grades as a •
. boo~s and I would urge you to sup·
fair to the presen t leadership, they young~ter..
pon your government." Clinton said have not had enough time for people
"Mo~tly.' ·. the normall y talkative .
in his appearance at the studies of to make a fair judgment. They just president replied. End of subject.
Tokyo Broadcasting Syslem.
recently entered oflice. The problems
Another wan!l!tf to knuw his. ~
Clinton was asked a wide array of that Japan has today will not be favorite lliiih, and how many nights a .
que stiOns. some personal. as he solved overnight."
month he ate dinner ·with hi~ wife_
kicked oil a four-day trip. Clinton is
Clinton skipped a summit meeting The first answer wa-; eao.,y: chicken
visiting Japan and South Korea. two of Asian and Pad fie. rim nations in enchiladas, he said. As for the second. of Asia's most important economies . Malaysia earlier this week to remain the president noted that r;nany times ,
and home to, the only two permanent in Washington to &lt;leal with the Iraq he or Hillary Clinton - or both - .
pt1stings in Asia of American troops. crisis. But he arrived in the Japanese ·are out of town or have separate ·
. Clinton lielded several questions capital today intent on pressi ng evening engagemt!nts . Sli ll. he said.
United Stales thursay. the President is on the
CUNTON ARRIVES JJij JAPAN • President
about strained economic: relations Tokyo to take aggressive mea~iures to they dine together about four nights
first ~ay of a 5-day visit to Japan, Korea and
Clinton Is happy to be In Japan after arriving
· between Tokyo and Washington dur- revive iL&lt; economy. .
a week.
guan. (AP)
on Air Force One after a 14 hour flight from the
ing the program. which lasted just
Obuchi was elected prime minisAfter the taping. Clinton ·went to
over an hour. An~ to his apparent sur~ ter in July and first met Clinton in
Akasaka Palace. the French-style .
prise. he also was asked a number of New York in September.
residence of Crown Prince Naruhito, :
personal questions, including one
American pressure on Obuchi for a dinner hosted by Obuchi .
. about Monica Lewinsky.
and on his predecessors - to lead
In a toast, Obuchi hailed "the furA woman from Osaka bluntly Asia's economic reCovery has grated
th,er development of U.S-Japanese
a.'ked Clinton how he had apologized on the Japanese. who believe they are
WASHINGTON (AP)- Neither Security before politicking for the idea of indivi&lt;.lual investment to his wife and daughter for his affair doing what is necessary and polili · relations." Clinton . responded that : :
President Clinton nor Republican 2000 presidential race makes com- accounts. has expressed unea~e about with the former White House intern. cally po'-'ible to end their country's "lhe relationship he.tween our lwo .:
countries has always been important. ; ·
leaders are prepared as yet to be the promise too difticult. Neither Clinton stock market risks. ,
and whether they had forgiven him.
worst recession since lhe end of but never more important than now." ::
first to endorse any specific Social nor Republican leaders have
Security fix, even as the clock ticks endorsed a· particular course of
· •on their pledges to aim For a solution action. however.
next year.
~
"It's not going to happen by a 1
''I'm frankly not sure it's even congressionally introduced plan. in
doable if the president fails to lead," my opinion." Archer said. "I think
said Rep. Bill Archer. R· Texas. chair- there will be too much backbiting ...
man of the House Ways and Means and political o~upmanship."
Committee. Archer's panel oversees
Senate Md~rity Leader Trent
the nation's retirement program and Lon, R-Miss ., also ha.&lt;qlled on Clin·
was scheduled today to ·hold the lirst ton to make the tirst move. and key
congressional hearing about it since Republican committee chairmen are
the Nov. 3 elections.
not preparing to go forward unless
Despite increasing pressure •from ihe president does.
Archer and others, however, adminBut Sperling said, "at the
istration omcials say Clinton has no moment. the overwhelming amount
plans for now io send ·congress a of members of Congress we ~peak to
blueprint. for making sure Social would like a chance to further study
Securily doesn't run out of money in "this issue and to. h;.ave an opportunithe next century.
"
ty to work among them-selves and to
"Deciding-what's the best role the consult With the administration
president should play ... is a key before We were to rush out and put
sttaiegic issue that should be taken down ~ spef:ific marker. ·•
IIIII
very seriously and not rushed into,"
A White House conference on
said Gene Sperling. the administra- Social Security on Dec. 8-9 will stan
tion's pointman on Social Security.
that process, Sperling said. But he
In the past, Social Security's added that "a day-and-a-half confertremendous popularity has spelled ence isn'l going to produce a magic
•Tommy .Hilfiger ·
political trOuble for anY who suggest plan to bring everyone together."
1
OVER 27 DIFFERENT
change.
•Adidas
Sen. Judd Gregg. R'·N.H .. who is
Many Republicans are rrustrated to attend the conference. said some·
STYLES
•Winnie the
. that Clinton gets more credit in pub- thing as hard and fast as legislation
SUGG. REG. $19.95 • $32.95
Pooh
lic opinion polls than they do on isn' t needed from Clinton, but Gregg
LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER
Social Security, even though the added "as long as he is functioning
preSident hasn't taken any stand on on a plane of the ethereal. we can't
the program's future beyond a gen- move.''
eral demand 10 set aside government
"What we need to hear from the .·
surpluses until it's lixed.
president is which· of the options that
Clinton has met several times this are out there he would be willing to.
month with top advisers, including consider." Gregg said.
Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, to
Possible solutions for Social Secu(Total Weight)
revieW Social Security options. But rity's coming cash crunch include
.
. Reg. $299
,
Rubin rejected an invit~tion to te sti· such politically uh.savory steps as
fy at today's hearing and planned to raising the retirement age or trim,.
send an assistant, D!!vid Wikox, ming retirees' yearly cost-of-living
When gold sold for over $800.00 per ounce, '14 kt gold jewelry retailed tor $50 - $60
instead.
raises .
per gram. However, today most 14 kl is sold for about $22 · $30 per gram . The price
"That does not set a good tone for
Many Republicans and some
Reg.
SALE
of gold has dropped Ia $292 per ounce today. Our low price ltal.ian 14 kl gold is
•
bipartisanship." Archer si1id.
Democrats suggest that workers
currently
aboul $16 per.gram for most Rope and Herringbone chains. This weekend
CARAT* ............. $1899
$999
Sen. Phil Gramm. R-Texas, could gain more. by putting retirement
•
' among mnk-and-file lawmakers from contributions into the stock ma•ket
$2699' 14 kt is only $15.44 a gram and "10 kt is only $11.44 a gram. All of our jewelry slates I·'
4 CARAT* ............. $3600
I
both political parties who have been than Social Security now gains by
the gram weight on the price tag. We have always been the besl place, to buy ·gold
5
CARAT*
.............
$4300
$2999
eJ&lt;l&gt;licit about their visions for the investing the money in government
chains and bracelets. We are stir!.
''
• All White Diamonds
retirement program, planned to te s ti~ honds.
'
fy:Ut today's hearing.
Clinton, while not rej ec ting the
:"The debate over Social Security
.
~an in earnest last year and the .
;•
onfy player mi ssing was the presi·
Track the progress
I.
1/4 ct.
deltt." said Gramm's spokesman,
L:p-ry Neal.
t
of your favorite
$299
•
· Without changes, experts predict
tea through·the
•
Social Security will run short of cash
Reg.
•I
in;2032, after the nation's huge baby
1/2 ct.
1

, INDUCTED - These alydenls were Induct·
ed Into the National Honor Society at Eastern
High School at ceremonies on Friday. They are,
from left, front, Jessica Marcum, Leah Sanders,
Jessica Brannon, Stephanie Evans, Molly

Heines and Aaron Schaekel; back, Josh Broderick Sari Putman, Jessica Pore, Josh Will;
Heath Proffitt, Valerie. Karr, Aaron Will, caasle
Rose and Jenny Starcher,

Clinton nor GOP are not expected·to
endorse Social Security fix- at this time

Jtcquisitions !Fine Jewe[ry

PRE-HOLIDAY

'

.l

........
~

u'1

. .,

'!..

:: MEDIA CENTER- Engllsh.sludenls are pic:-lured working, In the new media center at East·
·' :ern High School, The new center Includes com·
.

FRIDAY· SA,.URDAY • SUNDAY

puler work statlons,.periodlcals and other ref·
erenca books, and Ia connected to lha school's
newly-refurbiah&amp;d computer laboratory.

,....1.-0-K-·G_O_L_D-Cili!IIH_A_RM,....S

ron ranks quality teachers as priority
~annell News Service
percent) called teacher quality the
: WASHINGTON - Americans greatest influence on learning. Aca&amp;clieve putting. qualified teachers in demic standards (30 percent) and
¢very classroom should be the first requiring achievement tests in core
~riority of education reform, accord- ·. subjects ( 14 percent), also were pop·
iqg to a ·poll by · Recruiting New · ular solutions.
And 78 percent said rai~,ing
Teachers Inc .. a nonprofit teachers'
~avocacy group.
·
salaries would help recruit more
: "Teaching is the essential profes- qualified teachers.
sion," said David Haselkom, the
Kathleen Lyons, a spokeswoman ,
mport's author and RNT's president. for the National Education Associa·
"The public believes that investing in tion. a teachers' union, said this
q~ality and providing a . qual ilied repon validates what educators "know.
toocher in ~very da.woom trumps all
''It ta,kes a special person to be a
olher reforms."
teacher and the public knows that
: The poll was designed to measure gOod teachers are made, not born,"
public opinion' on education reforms Lyons said. '
'
ir\ the wake of a shortage of teachers.
But teachers' unions got mixed
I:Y&amp;mand for educators is elltpected 10 rev1ews.
''Yell to 2.2 million by 2008.
While 55 percent of the respon·
: Respondents overwhelmingly (55 dents agreed the unions support s~l·

~Poet's · corner---

ling high standards t(lr teachers, 53
percent said that often the unions
"stand in the way of real reform ...
"That may be the public percep·
lion, but the fact is that the AIT has
been in the forefront of setting high
academic standards," said Janet Bass.
an AIT spukeswoman.
And Sandra Feldman, president of
the American Federation of T~achers.
said that teacher quality is rlnly part
of the solution, noting that higher
·academic . standards. professional
developement and better salaries are
also needed.
Most Americans, 61 percent, said
they favor lengihening the school
year to allow for teacher planning; 36
percent opposed that.
And 62 percent said teachers ' con·
tributions most benelit society but 39
percent said they would recommend
teaching as a carter to a ramily member.

.•,::"'c••.,.

SENIORS - These senior students were
Inducted into .the National Honor Society; or
were previous members, at Eastern's National

Honor Society Induction ceremonies, 'held last
Friday.

School page staff organizes
Melissa Barringer has been named
student editor of . "The Daily Sen·
tinei@Eastern High School." The
Daily Sentinel's monthly page writ~
ten and photographed by students at
Eastern High School.
This is the second year that The
Daily Sentinel has produced inonth·
ly pages devoted to activities at the
school. written from the students' .
point of view.

Students in grades nine through 12
were invited to join the staff. whose
members will work closely with the
staff uf the newspaper to produce the
page.
Other members of the staff are
Bobbie Jo Dill, April Milhoane. Jennifer Starcher, Robin"·,Barringer and

Kay Hunt. Other students interested
in participating in the project during

the 1998-99 school page should. con·

'

'

tact Barringer for an application.
"The schqol page wi II give us. as
student&lt;, some of the responsibilities
that we will need to develop to •.
become productive adults," Barringer ·.
said. "By giving us due dates and .
deadlines, and allowing us 10 work
together as a team. we will need to.
work together.,It will also aJiow us-,to .
uoderstand our fellow students better."

Once I was a princess ·
'
With multitudes of-luxurious things
I took what I wanted .
I was the Queen of all Kings .

.

But now I am a beggar · ..
A spender of all that is good and wise
I give without wanting
And share what is mine.
- Jennifer Starcher

408 General
Hartinger Parkway
992·3471

Looking but not touching
Feeling but not expressing
Loving but not telling
I worship your dwelling.

RUTLAND
BOTTLE GAS

Without you I am empty
I am like a well without water
A sea without fish
You are the piece of pie .
that I miss.

Supporting all the area
schools &amp; youth.
Stop In and say "Hi"
to Dave or Herb.

I need. I want
.I long ... for you.
Be mine
And make my dreams
come rrue.

'

.14K GOLD $1544 .
1:5, . . . $1144
.1OK GOLD

. DIAMOND BRACELET

1 CARAT DIAMOND$

-1

742·2211

CONVENIENCE STORE
F!J!I - ~rQ!;;eri!§ • D~::ll
Ff!mil~ R!§1S!!J[S!D1
Coolville Exit off Rt. 7
667-6100 Store
667·6101 Restaurant
Owner: Bryan White

R&amp;G
Feed Supply
'

"Stuff" for Pets
Farm Animals • Stable
Joe Evens, Owner
992-2164

333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio )
45760
(740) 992·6472

Ofiio 2Q,ver
'Bear
Company
992-4055

HOME
NATIONAL
BANK

..··Sentinel ·· ·

:: Ponions of Forked Run St:~te Park ject to the specilic conditions of the
ncar Reedsvi·lle will be opened as ofticial hunting map for each park.
SJ.tnday hunling area."i, according to Hunt~rs should contact the individual
the Ohio Division of Wildlife.
park uflice for more information or

: While all Ohio Division of questions concerning h1,1nting regu\Vildlife puhlic hunting areas are lations.
open to Sund~\Y hunting. in order to
Sha\Vnee and Strouds Run · slate ·

111 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
992·3381

\
GROU~

Sports pagest ·

ONLY

GRAM

DIAMOND EARRINGS

provide additional recreation oppor·

pa·rks do not allow Sund:~y hunting .

tUnitics for the hunt~r. the Ohio Divisifm of Parks and Re~:reation designated 26 state park areas throughout

Th ese parks hnve designated hunting
lands that also in(orpnrate pop.~llar
trails for hiking, horseback riding._

the state that will permit· Sunday
hUnting.
~ Ten of these olft~as are loc uted in
s~utheastern Ohio. They are. in addition to Forked Run. Barkl:amp. Burr
O~k. Dillon. Great Seal. Hocking
Hills, Lake Alma, Lake Logan, Salt
Fork and Wolf Run.
•, Huntinoe in tht!se state park,o; is sub-

bicycling. and other non -h.unting
a..:tiviti~s- Hunting on tksi!.!nateU
art:'as in these p:;rks is per~niueU
Monday through S01turday only.
The Divi ,io n of Wildlife encourages hunters to plan &lt;~head \llld take
1

udvantage of the camping. and lodg -

ing facilities these parks otfer.

YOUR CHOICE

llEGULAR OR LEVEIJ BACK
QUARTER CARAT* .................... s1s9 SALE
HALF CARAT*
......................~ .. :··.. Reg. ssg9 ·sALE
.
CARAT*
......................................... Reg. $3200 SALE
*Total Diamond Weight

•'

.

$799
compare at $1299

i

OVER $600,000 IN DIAMONDS
IN STOCK AND ON SALE.

.

. Downing Childs
Mullen Musser
Insurance

'
OHIO CASUH!T

c

Sections of state park
Qpen
for. Sunday hunting
.

Racine 949-2210
Syracuse 992-6333

'GRAM

2

: Both political parties say they
wdnt to y;ork together to mend Social

@@~

ONLY

DIAMOND BRACELETS

· bdom generation retires.

·coOLSPOT

CHAINS

BRACELETS

in

Vaughan's
Supermarket

Without you by my side
I might as well have died
But instead I just cried.

-Jennifer Starcher

$1288

. DIAMONDS

When I first saw you
I thought it was a dream
' hun
But when my he\Jn
I thought l might sc ream.

Our Lowest Priee Bverf

AND

. The Reckoning

Reality

ROPE AND HERRINGBONE

comp'are at $2499

Before you buy a Diamond anywhere at
any prrce- shop Acquisitions for
outstanding quality! Unbeatable prices!

HUGE SELECTION!

•

•I

l ONLY

2 CARAT EMER~LD AND
DIAMOND NECKLACE
m Ct. ~meralds, $

y, Ct. D1amonds

69 9

EXPERT JE~ECRV REPAIR SERVICE

,.

I

'·
•

·

Yl.CQ11Sirri09\[S :JifJ\[f£ JC£Wf£L~
446·2842
992-6250

I

Reg. $1395 . ·
GALLIPOLIS STORE ONLY

~~~--~~~~~~
TWO LOCATIONS:
CORNER SECOND AND CjRAP.E, GALLIPOLIS
91 MILL STREET, MIDDLEPORT

•
'~

•FREE; PARKING
•FREE GIFT
WRAPPING

1

'•
•

·'

�'

•

' · Page 12 • The Daily Senti nel
•

lsra~li

.

T hursday , November 19, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

40

6508. 3)4.67•11!108

and barbed wire. " If we have to slay
. tions.
in addiiion to the $3 billion in mili- trol.
,
No army bases or Jewish settleThe first pullback will leave tl"o inside a fortress, I don 'I think anyone
tary and economic aid Israel receives
from the United Slall::s every year, ments wi ll be dismantled. Instead, Jewish sottlements. Ganim and· will want to stay and raise children'
requires congressional approval, the lsrd&lt;:li troops will move black-and- Kadim, o;ast of the Palestinian town here~" Sinwani told Israel radio.
In the first s1age of 'the acconl,
yellow road markers the size of of Jenin. surrounded on three sides by
reports said.
Israel
also pledged to release 250
In the tim stag~ of the pullbaek. washing macbines to demarcate the Paleslinian-controlled areas.
2 percent of tbe West Bank, or 44 new lines of division.
One sett ler said that isolation will Palestinian prisoners. The Palestinians have complaintd Israel is offersquare miles: will be transferred
The government has set aside $45 prom pt some Israelis to move.
from JsQie Israeli control to joint million for reinforcing 18 settleAvner Sinwani said' he would ing to;&gt; free mostly criminals rather
Palestinian jurisdiction. In addition, ments. At the Psagot seulement near leave Ganim, a settlement of 5 1 fam- than security prisoners, and 'it was not
7.I percent of the land, 100 square th~ Palestinian ' town of Ramallah, ilies. if the commun ily' tumed into a clear whether the dispute has been
miles, will be moved from joi nt · troops built cement rreitches today, fortified enclave with watch towers resolved.
jurisdiction to sole Palesti nian con- apparently to be used as firing posi-

behind the original schedule.
Seven of 17 ministers voted in
favor, five agai nst and three
abstained, the radio said.
The pullback was expected to be
completed by Friday.
Israeli and Palestinian comman-

ders met Wednesday .night to complete ·preparations for tfie Israeli pullout. lsradi media reports said the
United States is to give Israel $ 1.2
bi Ilion to cover the cost of the·ti'OQp
p~ ll back . The grant. which would be

"'

-~-·- ·--·

'-

"

..~~~~~~ ft~ ~ ~f.t~ r-B-1-SS-E-LL_B_U_I_LD_E_R_S,-1-N-C•...., r-~--/}.--n--__, IUTWID;OH.
:: ~ JD COISftDCftOI t,
't~a;rlv~r~
, AMERICAN .
.r...

New Homes &amp; Remodel'
.0· Garages, Pole Buildings. Rooting
ong, S iding •:f.!!
."·
.~
Commercial &amp; Residential ,
27
,r...
yra. exp.
.
Uce nsed &amp; Ins ured
-'
~
Phone 740-992-3987
~

. urncane
· •
'' Mit.c h VIC
•· .t lmS
•
-"-- UN
. . appea 1s f or al'd f or H
)

,
- ·
,

·,

~ .

OWner: John De an
Jln..lfno.MA 1111~ X
IIi'!/
~.!~ ~~~ ~~~ '!ii~- ~~~'!1

e

"•
: .. '

.
:

' ,,

!Bolkt

'J~ufay, c:No!7embet 20, 1998 - 7:30 fo·~·
rfJoint rfJ feaiallt ~ uidfe · ~choof

..
.'

'

·Artist Series

.·. SEASONS GREETINGS

I

-MIDDLEPORT VILLACE MERCHANTS

THE MI:DJ)LEPORT.COMMUNITV-ASSOCIATION

l·
,l

::· tif_

~-

Midd~:;;: ~:::~Store

'

Acq~~s~~ons

Carpe~

t.if .·

Millie's Restaurant

Dalry'Queen

fence posl at a 4-way ranee
corner, said corner post

"BAD HABIT"

tt

General Tire Sales

Sub\tfty

corner of section 2; thence

Fri. &amp; Sat., Nov. 20-21

Middleport Trophies

·ift

·: t

Tees
,.

Mill Street Books
Office S ervice

North 21 degrees
minutes 34 aecondl Eaal
167.00 feel along tho
centerline of sold Townohlp
Road 174 N; thence aoulh
75 degrees 32: minutes 18
seconds Eall 577.381oello

Corner Res'tlurant

lnge l's Furniture
Locker

being at lha Southwell

Family DQIIir

Antique Craft Mall

.tt

,-,:tt

&amp;

Tri-State Water
Foreman and Abbott

219

an lrori rod on the South

Valley Lumber

&amp; .Supply

line of Section 2 and the
·North line of aocllon 1, oald
Iron rod . being at the

McClure's·Restaurant

S hoe Place

. ·

NorthweBt corner or Dykea

Tony's Carry Out

lt TheVillage
Village Qpen Hous~
Begin 0~ Sunday, November 22. ••
Lighting Service:
Park
S•h 6130 PM
J)rawings

C~ndle

D~s

Dec.

fl: . · Shoppp1g Hours: Week Days Til8 PM Thru. l&gt;ec•.23rd.

~

.

~

(No Sunday Calls)
Custom Homes

ROAD ,

WORRYING!!!

992.0038
Charter Available

.

.OBERT BISSElL .
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes ·
•Garages
•Complete ·
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473
, 7/22/lln

' .•1

Racine Gun Ouh

,

many~l1&amp;

Nease Hollow Rd.

motor blockl.

~. Every Sunday
"

12:30 pm
Limit 680 sleeve
.737 hadlltore

.

Residential Pick·up $10.00 per mo.
With Poly Cart $11.00 per mo • .
for

3 or more families $25.00 per mo.

ADO 1S" IIonl10r ~-110
AD0266CPU
50.110

'

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

Free Estimates

.

Sundays

I

to

5 PM Thru. Dec. 20th.

.•·
·.

k~~~~~~~~1itdMtt~~~W~*jVtiiilit~,d

Parcel ao described In the
Melga County Deed

Recorda Volume 254, Page

795 ; !honea South 40
degrtta 14 minutes 02

seconds Weal 120.00 feat

along the West line of tha
· Dyke Parcel to an Iron rod;

thence North 8~ degrees 35
minutes 02 aoconda West
548.20 leal to tha point of
beginning passing an Iron
rod at at (ale) 516:20 loot lor

CHARLES H.
MULLEN

7 40-,992-2!?!!. ,._

2310

10·23·1888
11·19·1948

Political
Leader
Businessman
Printer's Devil

Cousin's Home
Improvement ond
Poinfing &amp; Coating

·
•

CHRISTMAS TREES
L.lv~ Spruce, White
Pine with root ball $6/ft.
Plant after Christmas!
or choose a Cut Pine
or Spruce $2.50/ft.

"·

New &amp; Used Tires ·
Computer Balancing &amp; Mounting'
44087

Rd.

Pomeroy, OH 45769

• • •44

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

l .:

''

William Safranek, Attorriey At Law
(740) ;i92-5025
Athens, Ohio

"I •

'~ ·~.
•
•

St. Rt. 7

. 30"

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783

740-985·3813

Congratu{ations!
'Emily 'Ba66itt
for :J{onor Stuaent
far Octo6er at
'.
' . j{e.ritage Cfiri.&gt;ti,an
~caaemy.
"Prortd of our

Parents: Larry and
Debbie Babbin
JGranc!pa,re nlts: Bernard &amp;
Bernice
I

4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Lln.e Of Water storage Tanks •
·
Septic ... Cistern -r8' nks ·'···
"'
''
·
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Ga~; Pipe &amp; Regulators
1
Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
. 9:00·1 2:00 Saturday

c

P/8 CONTRACTORS,
INC.
'.
'

0

• CONCRETE

• BACKHOE SERVICES

M
A

N

"MASONRY

" ·BOBCAT SERVICES

S

c

.8

E

T
E

• Congratu!ations
'Emify for Jlonor
Stuient for .
October..
We're proua.of
you!
Love,
'U nde 'Bernanf
&amp; ~unt Punl(ie

Don, Barb &amp; Hovd

I

·,

I

'

Two 2 mon1t1 old IOfiO haired
bAat* 'kittens, 740-378-6«MS.

60 · Lost and Found

Found-·t weelc agD.just past 0 &amp;

M Pizza, srriall male Beagle with
col~·- br-.1. 740-9411-2902 .

Lost key&amp; on flexible white band
304.67S.1815 ·~

Lost: 1000-1200 lb. tbl ack and .... .
white Holstein stee r with horns.

one week ago. west end of Swin..

del l Rd.,

7~ 9 -

325 Nonh. Name: Princess. Ae·
ward $100, 740-245-5186.

YOUNG'S
'

CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addition•
•NewGaragn
•Eiectrl~al &amp; Plumbing
•Roo1[nlf" .. , . ., · _.
•Interior &amp; EX1erlod "
Painting
AIBo Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Lost!· Male DOg. Ught Red, 1 Slue
Eye &amp; 1 Brown Eye. .Records On
Colla r, S.R. 218. 740-446-3358.
Reward $100!

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolla
&amp; VIcinity
ALJ. Yard S.les Muat

St Pold In Adv.,..,
2:00p.m.
the day boloow .... od
ls to run. Sundly
edldon • 2:00p.m.
Friday. Mondoy odldon
~ 10:00 e.m. Slturdlly.
PF&amp;QLINE:

Hemlock .Grove Rd
Pomeroy, OH
Ph~ 740·992·7285
(Sat., Sun. eves.)

Only 9· 7 Don't miss the onell
1:36 18 $late Rt 7 Eureka

At the OLD ArviERICAN LEGION BUILDING
•
'
•"

..

Middleport, Ohio .
Food to be served by the
LUNCH LINE
of Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phooe 74D-992-6670
or 74D-992-5827

'

M

FREE ESTIMATES ......... FULLY INSU,RED

R
y

Friday, Saturday Nov.20 .21 . Rt.
2. GaiUj)olls Ferry. Fumlture, etc.

WICKS

'

'

HAUliNG

Wedemeyerra Auction Service,
GaUipolls. Ohio 740·379·2720.

Limestone, ,.

90

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli,

Fill

Dirt

HIll'S ,

EXCAVATING CO, SELF STORAGE

Ti~e to gel 'fOUr furnac:e
· ser~ic:ed for -winter

Call for appointme.nt
(740) 992-~036

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771
740-949·2217

Umestorie Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading •
Septic System &amp;

Sl

Utilities
Estimates
(614) 992·3838
12119/ttn

zes

5 , )(1 0'

to -10'x30'
Hours
:oo
AM-8 PM
7

Antiques, top prices paid. Riverine Antiques , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner, 740·992 ~

&amp;

OHIO VALLEY PLUMBI"G
HEATING
44087 Wlpple Road (Five Points Area)
Pomeroy, Ohio
Nick and Eleanor Leonard

1

c

• ommerclal
_. .
•Resldentl~l
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio

740 _985•4422

PLUS

Judy L. Stewart
992-1194

p

rofesslonal
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES
740 69
- 8 9114
·
"
•
or
740! 698-7231
~1110.

'"'''""

ANNOUNCEMENTS

PARTS

........._

,;En~y 01•er 1/1~ Pltone Bnnk Firrrmci11g~'

'28 a month
Heat Pumps Ae Low As '38 a mpnth

"Air Conditioners As Low ~s

s

*Free Parts Warrahty
*Free Digital Thermostat
~Free .E stimates

BENNETT'S 'HEATING &amp; COOLING
, "WI1ere Q11ality Does11 '1 Cost More''
740-446-9416. 1-800-872-5967

QUALITY
WINDOW SYSTEMS
110 COURT ST.
1·800·291-5600

POMEROY, OHIO
.
W. VA. #023477

MINIMUM PURCHASE MAY-BE REQUIRED

·-·~~ge ln~entoty"
*Rbof'Coatlngs
*VInyl Skirting
•water Heaters
•ooor/Wlndows*Eiectrlc/l;'lumblng
Supplies
*Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Steps
· Discount .Prices

Bennett Supply
740.446·9416
1391 Salford
School Rd . ·
Galllp&lt;?IIS, OH

005

n

. www.thehotpages2.com/ns/psy·
chlc1250291.htm $3.99 !Min. 18+
Serv·U 619·645·8434.

ASK QUESTION_
S,
GET ANSWERS
CAll- AMERICA'S t1 PSY·
CHICS 1·900·740·650Q Exl.
3596, ww.w.th&amp;hotpages2.comfnsJ
psychic 1250291.htm $3 .99 fMi r\ .
18+ Serv-U 619·645·8434 .

30 Announcements
New To You thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson , Altlens
740·592-1 842
Quality clo tMinc and hou se ho ld
Items $1.00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

' 9 00-5;30,
TRICKUNG SPRING
COUNTRY STORE
Ju st Opened, Bulk Foods, · Coat·
lng Chocola te, Meat, Cheese,
Spices &amp; Morel Stop In At Cad·
mu&amp; Road, Or C$11740-379-91110.

11119ron

992·8576,
Clean 'Late Model Ca rs Or
Trucks, 1990 Mode ls Or Newer.
Smith Sulek Pontiac, 1900 East·
ern Avenue, Galllpc~lls .
J "&amp; 0 Auto Parts. Buying
wrecked or salvaged vehicles . ,

304-773-5033.

.

Looking Fo.r A Good Used Li ft
Chair. 740·245-0334.
want ed To Buy: Useel Mobile
Homes, Call 740-446-0175, 304·

DON'S HEATING &amp; .COOLING
"Done right the first time"
"Priced right all the time"

4 beautiful kittens would love tb
Hnd home .lor the holidays, Can
you help? 7 40-992~ 9040.
·

304-89S·3013.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

1-!elp :VVanted.

'NOW HIRING" Experience s
Grill Cooks.
Full Time/ Part Time. Must be
available weekends. Apply In per·
son MoMay thru Friday, between ·
2:00 p.m. &amp; 4:00 ·p.m. Golden Corrail
AVON 1. All Areas I Shirl ey
Spears, 304-675-1429.

19 ADD.ITibNAl DRIVERS
NEEDED ARE YOUR REA'DY
FOR WINTER DRIVING?
'
*Growing LOCAL FAMILY
£&gt;Nned Connpany .
'PERSONALIZED Dlspa1Ch
. "PAID Em pklyo~ Hoal1h &amp; Lito
lnsurer'ICe; Denial Insura nce
•HOME Weekends
*Run OH To The SOUTH
And SOUTHWEST
'401K, GREAT_BENEFITS
*Late Model Frelghtllner
CONVENTIDNALS
Requirements: A g~ 23, Class A
COL Anel GoOd Drivi ng Record.
Please Call Toll Free 1·888·790·
0008.

Giveaway

1 Cream Colored &amp; 1 Grey Tiger
Striped Killen , To A Good Home,

• Sales · ·Service
• Installation
Great DeBis On New Furnaces
Starting As Low As $900.00, Installed
Call Don today at 1-740-742-2842
RSES and EPA Certified

Anll(lues &amp; clean used fu ~nllure,
will buy one piece or complete
household, Osby Martin, 74 0 ~

Personals

ASK QUESTIONS:
GET ANSWERS
CAll AMERICA'S t1 PSYCHICS 1·900-740·6500 Ext.

40
Pomeroy Eagles ·
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
pergeme .
$300.00 Cover~ll
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Uc. # 00·50_ .••.

2526.

675·5965.

~96,

MOBILE HOME

Antiques &amp; Colleclables, Buying
1 Piece Or Estates, 740·446·

2707.

11/19/981 mo pd

Computer' Graphics
D_eslgns ·
All Landsc· a.1plng &amp;
Lawn Services

Wanted to Buy ,

Abaolule Top Opllar: All U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofaets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency, .
Sterling. Etc. Acquis itions Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Secon,j
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446-2842.'

20 Yrs. E-xp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie-Jones

HOWARD

IMPERIAL TIRE
andhaveyourcar
winlerized. Have your
anii-lreeze cheeked, on
·changed,·New tires,
'snow Tires, ·arakes
checked, &amp; E'xhausf ·
Check out our

Auction
and Flea Market

RICk Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer, compl8te
aucllon · service . · licensed · .
t68.0hlo &amp; Wee' VIrginia, 30+773-5785 Or 304-773·544?-

Briun M-.,rriHn/ Racine, Ohio ( 740) 985-3948

'PilPPiln

All Ytrd. Still Must Bt Pilei In
Advenca. Deadline: 1:00pm the
dey before the id 11 tD run,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition·
1:OOpm Frtdoy.
·

80

0

RESIDENTIAU///IIiliiCOMMERCIAL

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

,Pt. Pleasant
&amp;VIcinity

(Lime Stone·
Low Rates)

4/211t8 Hn

_'Emily Jade"

To A Good Home, 2 Male Ger·
man Sheptwrd P\.4)p..,S. I Weeki
Old. 1&gt;40-258-1935. .

Monttls Ol d, 1600 Sta te Route

10/2$196/rtn

.'

~;::;;:;:;:;;:'·;::;::;·~-·='=;::::·=====~ ~:;;;;::=:;:===;=: (';::;:;;;;;:::;:;;;::;;;';·:·~. ,'---------""'!!!!~~~~~~~
Santa's Gift
r
Winter '• around
LANDSCAPE
G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
'';;,,::;;r
' DESIGNS
\ CARPET Wrapping Service

•

3125.

9:00am-?

·

' financial obligations and arrangea fair
dlstrfbution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for his or her per~onal
use. This may include a car, a house, clothf:s, and .
h
h d
ouse ol goods.

•·

P-urebred y•Uow Lab, neutered ;
older male Chihual'lua ~ 140-2-'1·

LoBI: Female Rott Weiler Pup , .8

Chester, Ohio

Auction ~very .
Saturday at 6:00 p.m.

614·992-3470

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of

DANCE

Basket Weaving Class
Sat. , Nov. 21 , 1998
Country Qottage
Craft Mall
For Info : 675-8030

If

wv

BARR'S LANDSCittE
NURSERY .

"NoJolr too lrfr or
too •mall"

Our Customers Are Special

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

Cheer Station/Old NGHS

985-4422

'

We Chill 'em /
111111111 mo. pd

..

$3 .00

~

A
.

Road

•

FRL , NOV. 20
8.-10 P.M.
GRADES 1-3

lt...

304·576·2255 After 5 pm

Joseph Jacks

(740) 367-0412
(740) 992-4232

You Kill 'em.·

-·

....

AOD 1.5 GIG HD 75-911
ADO 1.3 GIG HO 11.110
ADDs..911.110

_"Best Prices of
the Season"
-s·.-.,.:::.;:::.· · Vickers
®=...•
Wood ~eating

Jack's Roofing

1-800-809-7721
12/21198 1 mo. pd:

··

'

Free Estimates

,------,---,--·___,_L &amp; L Tire Barn

.

'I -

.A

(614) 992-42n

Businesses Save Money, Too!
By Calling

' 740-742-2076

.

·-~ ADO 17" llonilor 1~.110

Reaidential &amp;
Commarclal

Small Dumpsters

,W rapped
&amp; Freeze

.'

740-992-1135 for a Price Quolr!

~~675·

324S.

Indoor Sale Sat tHday 11121 / 98

SOUTHERN OHIO DISPOSAL

Skin, Cut,

-

SERVICE
Agri.c\tltural Lime,
. Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

.

OILER'S
DEER SHOP

' .. '

·

Joe Wilson

'

DUMP TRUCK '

We cam a fyll line ofAq;morics.

"Builcl Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street
.Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
•

Shop"

Upgradt that old compuler for about 1/2 the cost or arw!

~

· Pick up discarded
appliances, batterle1,

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

.
Christmas Special261i-CPU 32 ram 14,; inon S6K V.90 2.5
Win 98 Color Printer! $899.00

Puppies. Part Beaglf! ,

Slug &amp; Shot
Matj:hes

mo. pa.

111131

~m'pull!!oo1or'!',.nce Upgrodft

No Ernbarrasament ...
You're Tf8ated with Reepectl

..'·· GUN SHOOT

. GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

Servirl8 Pomeroy, Middlepon &amp; Maton

&amp;J

' &gt; .

LEGION
BEE~H GROVE

Remodeling

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

tt

~
if

FREE ESTIMATES
614-992·7643

Moo
· nUte

1

- : ·p-~~~~"~~~""~"~~"~

..

!

'

an·

''.

~:..
ill~

·

''THE STEADFAST TIN SoLDIER"
·Ch.'l,iitm~

f.:'

·· New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • ReplacemenfWindows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENnAL

·.CREDIT

.

a

' ·
' ·

'
'.

·~

Free Estimates

li1J..

If current smoki ng patterns persist ber ot dealhs from smoking of any
Smoking already is causing about , study said.
the total will be 10 million deaths. a · .
in China -where two-t hird• of the country, having recently overtaken 750,000 deaths a year in China, and
Wn rldwide, c ig:l)'ell~s will cause yeai by 2030, with 70 -percent of
men become smokers he fore the ag~ the United States.
that will rise to 3 million people a about 4 million death.• a year by . them coming from de velopi ng
of 25 ~ tobacco will kill about 100
And the !rends seem to be mir- year by the middle of tbe next cen- 2000. split between rich an~ poor nations, said Dr. Alan Lopez, chief of
million of the 300 mi'll itin males now roring what occurred in the West · tury, when the young smokers of countries, -it said.
· ,
tile Werld Health Organization's
under 10 . . accord ing to the years ago as smoking spread across today reach middle and old age, the
If current smoking trends persist, · Division of Epidemiologv
researchers.'
.,._.. the globe, with deaths increasing sev- -==::==::=====:-r==::==::=:::;::====-r-:::;;:;:::==::::~~=;=:'1==:::::::=::~:===:
Surprisingly. smoking was found c!ral deCadcis after the main rise in 1·
to _be decreasing among Chinese · smoking.
.
_
Public Notice
Public Notice
' Public ,Notice -'
Public Notice
•\i&gt;omen. having dropped from 10 per,"If we don' t have action rig hi NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS rotaronce, conlalnlng 1.10 Cantor, Ohio.
·
to...,. ao Chief of Pollee.
ce nt before 1950 to ) percent today,' now, we will suffer after 20 or 30
Sealed propoHio lor tho acroo In Section 2 and 0.64
The application Ia on lila orTdaHinEedR~2._RE ; be II
ffi r d ·dt
Th · •
1
S
h
PurciiUe and lnatallaHan of .ctel In Section 1 for a total at the office of the Meigs
'""'
h
h
say 1 e researc ers, a 'oate WI
years. en Its too ate. owe ave HVAC ·syatam In newly ol1.74 acroo, more or lass, County Recorder, Meigs
Pursuant to the Ohio
England'sOxford University, Comell to let all of society know these conotructed
Racine EXCEPTING all legal county Court Houao, Revl,aed Code 737.15, the
University in the United States, and results.'' said one researcher, Wang Volu- Fire-VIllage eaoomonll and rlghta of Second Street, Pomeroy, requirement thai the Chlol
the Chinese Acade mie~ oft&gt;n;ve_ntive Kean, president of the Beijing-based
_
of R.clne, Melgo County, way.
Ohio 45769 lor public of Pollee of Pomeroy, Ohio
p
Ohio will be rocetved .... tho
Former Grantoro, Jeffrey vl-lng. Wrlttali commenll become a raoldent of lh•
•
·
Medocone and of Med oca I Sc ten.~s.
Ch'tnese Academy of reventove Ill el g a
• J. wany, and/or- raquosla 1or an vlllllll• within olx month• of
1
·h h'
co u-rn 1 y S. Worry and RU!iY
.
Ch
. ona now ogs I e oghest num- -MediCine.
Commloslonora It their hereby EXCEPT the oil, gas Informal conleranco may be hlo appointment· by the
olllco altho Courthouao, and other minerals HntlolhedlvlolonoiMinei mayorandconllrmallonby
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789 until underlying the above and Recl.amallon, 1855 the loglolallve authority II
10:00 A.M., Doe. 14, 1998 deacrlbed conveyed real Fountoln Square Court, hereby waived.
- -~
UNITED NATIONS (A P)- The have said that they want to take · Debt reliefror the battered nations and tilton 1111:00 P.M. ataald eotale and further RESERI,IE Building H-3, Columbus,
Further,
I hal
lhla
United Nations will launch an--apP.,al., advantage of this disaster, of th~s was.) lso,, dl8c~s_s~ at. length at . office opened and read all rights · to receive Ohio 43224, within 30 days oanrddlneaffneccel b• 1nh 1U 11alrollrec11
1
1 1 1 8
to cover emerge ncy -needs for the tragedy, on order to devose new poh· Wedrl(~
~-1-.~ ·• losed meetmg -and alOUd lorlhto following:
procaedo, man leo, anii/or ·I of I he last dale . of dale allowed8by
law.
··
'¥
•
Purchou end lnotallellon royalties which may ba
publication ollhls notice.
next'•ix months in hurricane-ravaged cies and build new societies, new "the~ w" ·. iffen!nces of opinion," of: 1. Gao Fumoea Upllow or become due from the (10) 29"
Paoled thlo 16111 day o1 Nov:
Central America.
·
countries~ not more of the same," said James ~dstave Speth, adminis- Syatam-100,000 ~U Input oxlotlng oil and gao -wells (11)·5,12,19 4TC
1998.
·
., .
U.N. Emergency Relief Coordi - Vieira d~ Mello said.
trator oftht U.N. Development Pro- 94,000.
llluated on tho ·above
'' ·
ATTEST: Kathy · Hyooll,
n~tor Sergio Viei ra de Mello, .who·
No target amounl has yet been se~ gram.
2.
.control
Air described convoyed ro~l
Public Notice
ClerkiTraaouror,
Frank
d
h
·
I
k
·d
th
h
'd
,
F
·
C
ba,
Austn' C ada, the
Condltlonor--«1,000
BTU, 10 oatale.
RESOLUTION
_
Vaughan,
Mayor
14 98
toure I e regoon ast wee ·, sao e
e sao .
ranee, u
a. an
Seer rating Spoclllcatlono
Thoro Ia EXCEPTED from
John Mus-. Proaldent .
The announcement came after the Unite,d Slates, Spain and other coun- provided In Bid Packet.
the above described real
BE IT RESOLVED-by tho David Ballard, Scott Dillon,
appeal will foc us on food, health and
shelter. He said it will also take the first meeting of U.N. task force and tries have announced they will parProopecllva blddero oatale, all altha coat known Coun&lt;;ll of the Vlllagbe of Gorl
Walton, Larry
Pomeroy, all mom ora Wah
G
w 1 ht
first steps to start building better major international financial institu- don all or some of the countries' wishing to view end lnopect as No. 8 Pomeroy vein wIth thereto concurring:
rung, eorgo r g
homes. schools and roads.
lions on the crisis sparked by Hurri- debl~.
the proloclelta may contact all end severally tho rights
Thai the Clerk(Treaourlll' (11) 19, 27 2TC
·
Scott Hill at 1·740.9411-2296 to mlno said eoal ao the
" All governments in the region .c ane Mitch.
to lnopocl the prolect alto lima was conveyed In that of tho VIllage of Pomeroy,
adjust
the
1998
Public Notice
-and lpr any further certain deed from Adelaide
th
1
1
1
at ono n · °
qullt.lona 11 to.tho project. Simi or vir to H.J. Maynard appropr
;
various accounts.
Plano, Spoclllcatlono, and at at by warranty deed datod
.$peclal Fuorda, Account
RESOLUnON 13.98
bid 1ormo may bo nc:uro'• · l December 27, 1
IBI&amp;B211 Increase . by
BE IT RESOLVED by 1ho
ol tho office of . Melge recorded In Volume
Council of the VIllage of
County Commloolonero. A Page 378, Meigs Co~nty $85~·:· Fund, Account Pomeroy, all membere
depoell of 0 dollaro will be Deed Records.
#B16B240 lncreilso by thereto concurring:
required lor aoch .., of
Reference Deed: Volume
Thai the Clerk/Trueurer
'
51
plo.no and opoclltcallono.
44, Page 283, Molga &lt;;ounty
~~,.p0::~.
Fund, Acco~nt of tho VIllage of Pomeroy,
'•,:
· Each bid muot be Dood Recorda.
IE1~11 Increase by
transfer the sum of $20,000
occomptnled by olthor a bid
Auditor's Parcel Noo.: 11· $1V,200.00 .
Account (Twenty·thoullnd) dollart
bond In an amount ol100% 00981 .003 and 11-00982.cioo #E15A240 decrease by .!rom the General Fund to.
of tho bid amount with a PROPERTY
ADDRESS: $
00
the street Fund lor the
auraly aotlelactory to the 30024 Happy 'Hollow Road,
~~~- this an emergency operation of current ·
k II d 1 th
aforesaid Molgo County Mlddltport; OH 45760
axpanaaa.
Commloolonero or · by REAL ESTATE APPRAISED ·~;o~n:: 0 un s .n e.
This resolution lo deem
certified chock, coahlero AT: sro,ooo.oo. Tho real PASSED: Nov. 16, 1998
an·emergency due to lack of
check, or Iotter of crodll ollate cannot be sold lor Frank A. vaughan, Mayor
lunda for currant expenaee.
upon a solvent bank In the Ieos ' tha~ two-thirds the K a.t h y
H y a ell , PASSED: Nov. 16,1998
·\
'
amount of not loss than appraised value.
.
Clerk/Treasurer
Frank A. Vaughan.• Mayor
0
10% of lh• bid omounl In TERMS OF SALE: Cash -on John·Muoaor, Preoldenl of 'Kathy
Hyaell,
favor ollhe aloreNid Melgo delivery of deed. Sold Council
·
Clerk/Treasurer
•TICKETS:
County Commloelonero. subject to accrued real (11) 19, 27 2TC
John Musser, Prealdent of
Bid Bonds ahall be estatetaxeo.
Council
$7/PERSON .
accompanied by Proof of Jamoo M. Soulsby, Shariff
Public Notice .
(11) 19, 27 2TC
Authority
of
tho
official
or
(11)
5,12,19
·
$5/SENIORS &amp; ST\JDENTS
. agenlolgnlng tho bond.
ORDINANCE NUMBER 655
Bldi shall be sealed and
Public Notice
WHEREAS, It Is the desire
Public Notice •
marked ao Bid lor !lacina
of the VIllage Council of
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
Volu"taer Flro House HVAC
Pomeroy, Ohio to provide
COMPANY
NOTICE
,
'1he Steadfast Tin Solider" tells the
Project and malted or
lor the public safely and, .
MEIGS MINE NO. 31
Salem Township Trust"'
delivered Ia: Melga County
WHEREAS, It Ia the duly
ADDENDUM TO ITEM 8,
Hans Christian An~ StOI)' of
Comll!llalonora,
of the mayor with the advice regular monthly meeting
ARPFORM
Courthouee, Pomeroy, Ohio
and consent of the will take place on November
, LloGAL NOTICE
honorabl~ ~dler.
45769
feglslatlve authority to 24 at 6:00 P.M. at the Salem
' . '
Southern O-hio C,oa l appoint
(11) 19,23
a
Person Fire House. Tho Board ·Wtll
Perfoimed by the touring Mid-Ohio
P 0 I N T P L I A I ·A N T
Company, Meigs Mine No. designated as chief of be appointing a new board
(12) 3 3TC
\ .
31, P.O. Box 490, Athens, pollee, and,
member to 1111 tho vacancy
,
Valley Ballet cotnpany andiJM!Ially funded
Ohio 45701, hae submitted
Public Notice
WHEREAS, Ills the desire created by tho death bl
an application to Revise a of the VIllage Council" of' Board Prealdenl Stanley
by the MasOn County Board of Education.
NOTICE OF SALE
Coal
Mining
and Pomeroy, Ohio tO attract · Hutton.
By virtue of an Order of reclamation
Permit and retain qualified persons (11) 19,22 2TC
' l·
Sale 111ued out of tho numbered R-0354024, to the
Common "ltaa Court of Ohio .Dapartment of Natural
Meigs County, Ohio, In the R11ourc:ea, Division of
&lt;:aao of tho Farmora Bank &amp; Minoa and Reclamation.
Savlnga Company, Plaintiff, The proposed coal mining
va. James W. Cleland, el al.,. and reclamation operation
De.londanto, upon a will be conducted In Melga
Judgment therein rendered, CountY; Salem Township,
being Case No. 98-CV-035 In Fraction 2,6,and 12. The
aald Court, I will o_ffer lor
proposes to
aala altho front door. of the.
amount of cover
From
·
Court~ouae In P,Omeroy,
required to reclaim
Meigs County, Ohio, on the the existing coarse refuse
.11th day of Docombtr,199p, disposal area and $lurry
at 10:30 a.m., the following Impoundment
In
Ianda and tenements, accordance ''with section
located at 30Q24 Happy 1501 :13-9-09 (B) (3) (d) of
Hollow Road, Middleport, tho Ohio Admlnlstradva
And
OH 45760. A complete Coda. Tho oporallon Is
legal doacrlptl.on of the real located on the Rutland and
. RT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS'
eatato Is aalollowe:
Wilkesville 7 1/2 minute
Situated. In the Township U.S.G.S. quadrangle maps
Buy any Large or X-Large at
of Rutland, County of Meigs approxlmataly 1.2 miles
Reg . Pprice , get Second lor
and Stale of Ohio: ·
.east/north east of Salem
· S,ltuale In Rutland
Shop In Middleport, The Christmas Village And Reg,ster To Win
1/2 PRICE
Township, Meigs County,'.
&amp; Deli•ve rv
State of Ohio and baing In
A Share Of Over $2000 In Cash,And Prizes From
. . Sections 1 and 2, Town 6
·• North, Range14 Wool ottho
The F~llowing Merchants:
Ohio Company's Purchase
WAYNE'S PLACE
and being described sa
presents
. lollofio:
· Bs'jllnnlng 0 1
D.J. HERB
lnleructoon of the
centerline (ale) of Townahlp
Fri. &amp; Sat., Nov. 20-21
FisheF-·Funeral Home
Ingel's
Road 174 N and the South
Uno or Section 2: aald point
Mlll .End Fabrics
Wicket Buggy.
being south 88 dagrell 55
minutes and 32 seconds
GOOD TIMES
Ohio River Bear Co.
A to Z Variety . ,,
East 662.00 loot from a~d
presents
Iron rod at tho ball of a
Snouffer ' s Fire &amp; Safety .
LD Kennedy DDS

LONDON (AP) - China is expe· · riencing ·an epidemic of smokingrelated deaths that w! ll ki ll a tf)ird of
; ~ its young men if current smoking patterns continue. a new s tuily_says.
. The study. published in . this
week's issue of the British l"!edical
Journal. is the first to examine smoking ~rends in a deve loping nat ion and
involved 1.25 million C.hinese. making it the world's largest invest igati on
. d h
.· o f smok·ong eat s.
The survey found that not on ly .
was the rate of deaths from smoking
higher than expected. but that the
Iypes of d osea&lt;es cause d by smo kong
also varied widely fro m the West-.

GIVUMY

Lost. ·aurr~ Large oranot labOV
Family ptt t.tt Vernon IJefttr·
""' If ..., call 30U75-

.:= Researchers: China faces growing epidemic of smoking deaths
.

The Daily .Sentinel • Page 13

Cabinet approves first troop pullback

. .JERUSALEM &lt;APl
Israel 's
Cabinet removed the final obstacle to
a West Bank troop withdr-.1waltoday
by giving the go-ahead to the first
- stage uf the new . Mideast peace
agreement. according to Israel radio.
h was lhe first lime in nearly rwo
years that Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahus hard-line ,government
handed over territory to Palestinian
'
'
control. Approval came
after- a series
of delays and disputes with the Pa l~s­
- ti nians that put the pullback five days

-"

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

4 females siberian husky!Austra·
llan Sheppard wormed 7 wks old

304·682-2922.
Free puppie s, 6 Wk s. old , 74 0~

1

992·2927. ,German She Ppafd puppy, 3
months old , only.. -!o good nome.
Richard Fuller 675·012S

A11l1tant ACIIviUes Aide: For In· .
termediate long term care facility,
Part ·tlme. App ly Poi nt Pleasan t
Nur sing &amp; Aehablll ta1ion Center..
State Route 62 N, Point Pleasant, wv 25550 . A Geneslli Eldercare facility.
BUFFALO AREA. Por1llme
claanlng help needed tor onice
and plant areas. Various shifts .
Previous experience with buffers
and cleaning eq~.tipment a plus.
20 10 35 hours per. weeki abOve
omln. wage phone office &amp; commercial deaning 1·304·768·7290
leave message with bast time to
call you ba ~.

�'

Thursday, November 19, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

•

thursday. November 19, 19911

The Daily Sentinel• Page 1S

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OOP

BRIDGI
PHIILIP

-

WBIDtlcol ........
411 All deco

ACROSS

ALDER

1F-

7 lltlclu 1111a

13~-..-

~ "'" and pan- tnl!l
............ Fast trioOOir

21 0

auno&amp;phefl Sen&lt;! resumes clo
Thl Daitr Stnt1net P 0 Box 729-

75

-O't

OlliO &lt;5769

!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Computer Users Needed Worll
Own Hr1 S20K $75K IYr 1 800
3497186Ellt 1173 wwwamp

recommends that you do bus1
ness w1ttl people you know and
NOT to send money lhrough ttu3
mall unhl you have lnveshgated
lho ollorong

n:oom
Dancers Needed 10 Days Xmas
cash Soulhfo&lt;k S00w Bar R1 2
North
Pt
Pleasant
WV
(3041675 5955 Aller 6 30 PM
Wed Sat (7..((1)992 6387 After
noon 7 Days answer

230

e..

Livingston a
ement Water
Proofing all basementrepatrs
done tree est1mates ltfe!lme
guarantee 12yrs on job e11perl
ence :JOC.-IOS.3887

caii304-:J.I2-6100 ... b' lASIIo
E11perlenced Commerc1al Retrig
eratlon Tech FQf GallipOlis Char
Ieaton Huntmgton Area Two
Years ¥m mum Expenence Ex
cellent Pay Benahts Company
Vehi&lt;le 304 722 2247 304-722
1810 .... For Frank

Llvlngtton 1 Batemenl Water
Proollng, all basement repa rs

erce 30Wt5-3a87
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
"""' F9e Unless
w

we n'

1 688 582 3345

All real estate adv'ertis•ng m
th1s newspaper s sub eel to
the Federal Fa~r Housing Acf
of 1968 which makes 1 Illegal
to ad\18f11se any preference
"' I m1t at on or &lt;Mer m1nat on
based on race colOr rei g on
sex fam1~al status or na11onal
or g•n or any Intention to
make anv such p eference
I m1tat on or d scr m'inat on •
Ih•s newspaper w II not
knowingly accept
advertiSements for real estate
wh ch IS n VIOiatiOO of the
law Our readers are hereby
nformed that all dwellings
advert sed m thcs newspaper
are avallab e on an equa l
opportunity bass

One Full Time Reg1slered Nurse
Pos ition A!Ja1lable In Oak Hill
Community Medical Centers
Emergency Department Oh1o L•
censure Requ~red Candidate Will
Utlllt ze Nursing Process While
Provld ng Care Olr,Jct /Gu de Pa
tlent /Family Teach ng
And
Fun ction W1thin Scope 01 De
partmental Expectations II Inter
ested Please Send- Resume To
Oak Hill Community Medical Cen
tar AttentiOn Brenda McKenzie
350 Charlotte Avenue Oak Hill
OH45656

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
1141MMEDIATE DISPOSALII
Reposessecf / Must Sell 2 Brand
New R30 Prem sta llated Prefab
Home&amp; Highes t Ouahty Easy
Construction N111ar Erected One
Is 4 Bedrooms 1 800 874 6032
Sacrifice I
3 4 Bedroom Ranch Style Home
$67 000 741).446-4173

EOE
Seek 1ng respons ble compas
slonate person to ll!Je In w1th el
derly gent eman Lig ht hou se
keeping cook ng personal ca re
yequ lred Roo m and board mod
est sala ry prov1dad ref required
need to begm 1mmed 304 895

3942

I

Wanted Full lime emRioyment In
your own home as a Home Serv
Ice Worker w th Buckeye Com
munlty Serv1ces We prov1de sa
ary plus benef•ts and a dally room
and board rate You provide a
hOme gu•dance and friendship In
a lam ry atmosphere ~equ res
ability to teach personal IMng skiM
and a commitment to the growth
and development of an lndtv dual
with mental ret arda tion Home
must be 111 Me gs Co uniY Send
Letter of mter&amp; st or resume to
P 0 Bo.x 604 Jackson Oh
.t5640 0604 ATTN Cec ilia No
later than 11/20/98 Equal Opper
tu niry EmplOyer
Wanted ProJect Manager And
Est mator Fo r Bulld1ng Contractor
In Southeastern Oh•o Benefits
And Salary Package Commens u
rate W1th EJ.penence And Edu
calion A Knowledge Ot Excel
Tlmb erl ne Or Pnmavera Com
putar Programs W111 Be Helpfu
SEnd Resume To PROJECT
MANAGER P 0 BOK 268 NEL
SONVILLE OHIO 45764 An
Equal Oppo tunny Employer

140

ery Caiii.-Hm
$999 Down on any 98 model
Doublewide '" stock Free Dehv
ery Calli 600-691-am
Abandoned Home .Jake O~Jer
Payments Or Make Gffer 1 eoo-

383-6862

1970 Buddy Mobile Home (740)
446-7525
1974 12x65 mobile home 2 bed
rooms total slectnc 740 742
2803 after 5pm

1988 Clayton 14x70 3br 2 ba
w1th heal pump will del iver lo
cal~ $11 900 304-675-3000

Needed Part T1me SeMtrs Oav
And Evening Shift Apply in Per
son Between 2 OOPM And
~ OOPM Monday Thro Fr day 28
Cedar 51

1

$500 Down on anr 1•h;70 m
stock hmited nuntHJr free dellv

1979 Fa1rmont 14Ft X 60Ft Can
Be Seen 1\t K&amp;K Pt Pleasant
Cail740-446-4310

LPN Fu ll T1me M F Secretar al
Skills A Must For Med ca l Equ pment Business 41 2 Second Ave
74().441 1975

ce i!Je tralnmg and a:~:i~:,-:; ,;~
with their job search th
the community 20 hours per
at $5 1 5 an hour Program enrol
lees also ha ve 9 pa1d holidays
aM up to 40 hours ol paid eave
time annual y Por more mforma
tlon call Jea nnine Flnoey T tie V
Coordinator at 740 594 8499 T
lie V Is a proJect of t11e Co rpora
lion for Ohio A.ppalach•an Oevel
opment of Athens Ohio and Is an
Equal Oppo tumty Employer

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

.::6pm:___ _ _ _ _ _ __

TURNED DOWN ON

Local Manulactur-sd Hous ng
Dealership Has Immediate Open
ing For Full Time Office Poslrion
Expenence Preferred Excellent
Opporlun ty Call For lnter!Jiew
French City Homes Inc Galhpo
•• Ohio 740-446-9340

The Senior Community Ser!JICe
Empl oyment Program (T tte V )
has openings n Galtla and Me gs
Counties II you are at lea&amp;t 55
years of age or older and have
had dllliculty m your job search
we can help Tille V emollees re

Three bedroom ranch home lull
bath large LR alld k tcnen easy
to heat fuel suwe heat ($30/mo)
atr eondlllomno well Insulated
large yard 1~ pool with dAck
new v1nyt s•dmg on the T of
Beech Grove ana Jacks Ret '"
Rutland. 710-742 1049

1969 Commun ty mob1l• hOme
done tree estimates lifetime .. 12x56 ask ng $1700 740 843
guarantee 12yrs on Job exper
5310 days or 740 843-5147 after

Group Sates Manager Theme
Parit SplashDown Olllo 1 Newest
Water Park Is Seeking A Year
Round Group Sales Manager
Must Have An EnthUSiaStiC Per
sonahty EnJoy Working HAAO tn
A Fast Paced And Youthful At
mosphere Minimum or 5 Years
Man
Sales E11penence 3
agement Expenence
Computer Wnlten Budget Plan
n ng Phone PresentatiOn And
Customer Ser!JICB Sk1lls Amuse
ment Hotel Or Recreation al
Backgroun&lt;:l Prelerred FAX Your
Resume To 740 184 1361 TO
OAYI

1

ProfeBBional ,

Services

Empl oyer In Jackson eounty
WV toolli"Q to l'llre 30 productiOn
workera Day and n1ght shllt
ava•lable Must be JTPA e11g1ble

'

Business
Opportunity

Business
Tramlng

Galltpol s Career College Spring
Valley Plaza 740 446 4367 1
800 214 0452 Accredited Mem
ber ACICS Reg ff90-05 12748

180 Wanted To Do
24 hour babys1ttmg n my home
re f available espons ble adult
res pnces w/TLC 304 674 0089
Electric rna ntenance serv ca
Wlnng breake r boxes 1 ght llll
ture heating systems and Re
modeling 304 674 0126
Furniture repa r rellnlsh and res
tora tlon also custom orders Oh1o
Va lley Rei n1sh 1ng Shop La ry
PhDIIps 740-992 S576
Georges Portable Sawmill dnn 1
haul your logs .to the m1tl just call
304 675 1957
Have 1 Openmg For 24 Hour In
Home Care 01 Elderly Or Hand•
capped 740-441 1536
Professional c lea ning reason
able rates home or office 304
773-6159
We Tear Oown Mobile Homes I
(3041 882 3842
Would like to tea r down old
Barns tor lumber 304 675 8894

1988 Skylne mobile home 14x70
3 bedroom 2 bath cathedral ceilIngs excellent condition lns1de &amp;
ou1 cia &amp; skirti ng Included
$1 4 500 740-992-6227

1990 ClaytQn 2 Bedrooms 1 Bath
Very Nice AJC New Carpel All
Electnc S12 500 lmmed1ate PossessiOrll 740.441..0221
Make reasonable ofler 1990
Spruce Ridge t4x70 mobHe home
wry good conditiOn 2 bedrooms
1 &amp; 1/2 baths washer &amp; dryer
stove refrigerator cenllal ai r 8x8
outside building 1mmed ate pos
seSSIOn 740..992~582
1992 16FI X 70FT 2 Bdrms 2
B aths All Electric Appliances
Porches Carport $20 300 CO
740-25&amp;-6336
1994 brought in 1995 2 bedroom
2 lull baths treated de c/~ with
awning all electric ale Underp n
nlng Owned by Widow Woman
$16 ()()() (740) 245 9435
1999 close ou t sale

save big

Double W de New $999 Down
$237 per mo Free delivery &amp; set
up t 800-691 6777

Large sel&amp;elton ol used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Starting at $2995
Qu ick dell verv Call 740 385
9621

3 br 2 ba 2 car garage on 1 acre
lot Approx 2 miles from tow n on
Broad Run letart 304 882 3518

Oakwood Homes Barboursville
Model Close Out 304 736
3409

5 yr o d br ck ra nch lull base
men! lormal tv dn ca thedral
cell ng 2804 P ne A~Je 112 mile
out Sand Hlll304-675 1889

Mobile Home for Rent 2 bedroom
gas heat air In city (740) 446
1409

6yr 2 3 bedrooms oft tOngue!
groove pellet stove HPIC A ap
pi ances garage spa acre Bula
villa P ke 740.367.0286

Mobile home n Okeechobee
F orlda with lot two bedrooms
two baths kitchen I v ng room
large Florida room on front ut1llty
room large shed tw o po rches
asking S30 000 741l-992 2376

By ow ner 125 Page St eel M•d
dleport house &amp; 3 lots must see
to apprec ate will sell house w 1h
ou1 lots l or $89 000 740 992
2~04 740 992 5696
For sa le on land co ntract 2 bed
room house In Pomeroy 3 bed
room house 1n Aac1ne 4 bedroom
house n VInton County 740 384
4808 or 740 384 0138
Large fam ly home lor sa le on ten
lovely ac res Four bedrooms two
and one hall baths two fireplaces
forma living room and lam ly
room fou r car garage an d two
storage buildings two apartments
which are complete y lurnlshed
Please ca 1740 992 2292
Modern 3 bedroom hou se 2
baths country k tchen large 2 ca
garage on 1/2 acre lot Tuppe s
Pta ns Oh sewer already hooked
up $75 ooo 740 sas 35 t t or
740 667 3304
REO BRICK RANCH Style
House Excellent Cond 1 on Par
1allv F nlshed easement 2 Car
Garage SerlolJs Inquiries Only t
740-446-3385
Restored Vlclonan home slluated
on 12 acres VIllage Middleport
secluded and pri!Jate appo1nt
ment cal 740 992 5696
New bnck Ranch 3 bedroons
:2 bath Den 2 car garage Stor
age
All Ecectncl 1 2Acrea
127 500 304 675 8959

s

bedroom ranch kitchen wl
app lances bath LR lurmture
curtains 18x20 back deck Oul
build ngs c ty water blacktop

I $A:jd~l.9w00a:terlo o

Rd
Leon WV
1 800 486 8555

740-4414412
Melgt Co

wv

New 14x70 $500 Down $199 per
mo Free au sk t 1 800 691
t5777

·=.:..f.--------'~
'

NEW 141180 3BR
GLAMOUR BATH
$199 Month Only At
OAKWOOD HOMES
NITRO WV
304-756-S&amp;aS

New t 6lC80 $500 Down $245 per
mo Free a1r skir t 1 800 69 1
6777
New 1998 14x70 three bedroom
nclu.des 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes skirting deluxe steps
and se t up Only $187 08 per
month w th $1075 down Ca ll 1
600 837 3238
New bank rapes on y 2 lei! nev
er I Y8d In call1 8D0-948 5678
NEW BANK REPOS
O~LY 3LEFT
Still In Warranty
OWNER FI~ANCING
AVAILABLE
304 755-5865
Used smgle w de around $100 00
per month ca 11 800 948 5678

We Fmance Land &amp; Home With
As L•ltl e As $500 Down 1 606
928 3426
4 Bedrooms 2 Ba th s $229/Mo
1 800 383-6662

340

Business and
Buildings

65x65 Building 4" Styrofoa m
Pressed Panes Metal On Both
S des Foo ter w th 4 Concrete
Floor Total Erected &amp; Painted 2
Slldmg Doors $70 000 740 446297 1
Commarc lal Office or Aelall 87
Mill Sl Mlddlepo I 1 450 Sq Fl
$400 mo Corner Build ng 740
992 6250 Acqu s lions (nellt

door)
Downtown F rst Floor Ofl ce
Space Second Avenue Pmles
sona l Or Retail 740 446 0139 Or
740.446 4383

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Seen c Valley at Apple Grove
WV Building lots smgle w des
accepted
publ c water
20
minutes I om new Bullalo Bndge
on Jerry s Run Ad Clyde Bowen
Jr 304 576 2336

Computer lor salt\ amd k6-2 300
mhZ cpu 32 mags pc-1 00 sdram
2 54 gig hard mt.oe 24 x Cd-- rom
15 s~Jga monitor $12 00 304

We ve Got The

County Covered! Just Off SR 7

Below New H1gh SchOol Kee
baugn Rd 5 Acre Lots $14 000
Ea Near Car,:~enter Oyesvllla
Very Remote 11 + Acres
$ 1(] 500 Rutland Whll8&amp; H1ll Ad
Just Ott New Lima 11 Acres
SU 000 Or 9 Acres $12000
Public Water' Danville Bflar
Ridge + GDff Rds 7 AcrBS With
Nice Pond $12 000 Or 8 Acre&amp;
$13 000 Or On SR 325 N1ce
Wooded 17 Acres SIS 000 City
Water Many More To Choose
From!

Gallla Co Just South 01 Town
Fnendly R1dge Rd 15 Acres
$14 500 Great Hoonesite &amp; Hunt
lnQ Pttllte Water C1ty Schools

FumiShod 4 Rooms &amp; Balh, Completely Redecorated Clean New
carpo~. No Pets
SmoiUng Rei
8,_.f'IC8 &amp; ()eposl1 ReqUired Atao
Fuml.shed 2 Rooms &amp; Bartl Up.
Sial'S 746-446-1519

a.

675-&lt;1802
Craft&amp;man 8 Tabla Saw table
1.t x26 R1p Fence Miter Gage
Eldra saw blades. {140)245-9378

Diamond cluster nng SIZe 8 apFurnished Apanment t Bedroom prox 113 carat 14K band 1300
Second A~Jenue Gallipolis No 740-84~2202
Pets! AU UtllltJes Pa1d Referenc Ditch w tch trencher d1gs 4 feet

"85 740-446-9523

deep S2 500 740-694-1842

Grac1ous frvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V llage Manor and
Rtver&amp;tde Apartments 1n Middle
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
lu,_

Dometlc camper relugerator
52x23 runs by 12 !JOlt battery
eleclnc Of' l)fopane gas call 740742 3805 anEH 6pm

7-=•

AKC Sheltie pupp1es (miniature

-~-and-mil~

each also female ferret S12S
740-992 5()13

Now Open Sundays 1-4 Mon Sal
11 6 F1sh Tank &amp; Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave Point Pleas
ani 304-675-2063

CFA Register Persian K1ttens
very flat face auorted colors
$25() .. 304-675-7273

S•berlan husky puppies AK C
registered 1st shots wormed
$200 304-675-4860

AnlllonylandCo

RENTALS
~-"""I

410 Houses for Rent

Firewood for sate $40 00 Truck
load spht delwered 304 88 2
3893 ca11 alter 6 oo pm

Siberian Husky Pup 8 9 Weeks
Okt Female $55 740-44&amp;1286

Firewood For Sale $35 Per Truck

2 Bedroom Kitchen L R Sm 0 R
122 112 V ne Stre et Gallipolis

740-446-0670
2 Bedroom 1 Bath House 2304
Wash ngton Aveunue
Poi nt
Peasant No Pets Secunly De
pos1t Reqwred $375/Mo + Uliti
lies 304-675 4297

~~:i~~~~~:~l
Load 740 245-9337
~;
For Sa le Fill D irt Will Deliver
~£!~~~~~~~--~

$300 .per month $200 deposit
Hud approved references re
qulred 740...742 2896

Po

Nice two bedroom ho use In Po
meroy $350 per month pius de
posll no pets w111 cons 1der land
contract alter one year 740 698
7244
Small house 5 room &amp; bath 608
F1rst Ave $300 a mon th plus
ulll ties 740 446-0260

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14x70 tra1ier 2 bedroom rent
$250 $150 depos I no pets 740
742 2714

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
con ditioned $260 $3 00 sewer
water and tra sh Included 740
992 2167
2 Bedroom 14 X65 Gas Heat

Stoves Water Heater $350 oo
Includes cab le water trash
(740)446-0368

2 bedroom In S Gall a Hannan
Trace Ad Scho ol D•st $290
month Plus Depos t (740) 256
1686
2 Bedroom Mob•le Home For
Rent $225 00 Plus $225 Depos t
Relrencas 740 367 0632
2 Bedrooms $325/Mo P us Utili
1 es &amp; Dep os •t No Pe ts Plus 2
bedroom house 740 446 4313
740 446 0879

2 Bedroom s Water &amp; Tras h Pad
NO PETS Bul av Ia P1ke 740
388 1100
2 br in Gall po Is Ferry 30 4 675
4075

86 Uberty Tra ler 14 • 70 $7 500
304 882 2649
Someone to share ren t with two
other college people 3 bedroom
2 bath tra ler m Athens Close to
Oh o Un ~Je r slty and Hocking Co
iege Total rent $500 month and
depoSit plu s ut t es N tce qu et
country sett•ng 740 992 5065
Beaut lui River V1ew 198 Rver
Street Kanagua Deposit Reier
e nces No Pets 74 0 441 0181
FosterTra11er Park

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
n shed and untu rnished security
deposit reqwred no pets 740
992 2218

2 Bedroom Apartment In Wa lking
0 stance 01 R1~rande Campus
No Pets 740 245 5843
2 bedroom fur apt dep -t ref
North 4\h Ave Middleport Oh10
1 304 882 2566
2bdrm apts total electr c ap
phances turn shed laundry room
lac• 1es c ose to schoo n town
App catiOns ava laDle at v llage
Green Apts 1149 or call 740 992
371 1 EOH
3 br 106 7th St available now
rei req 304 675 ea06
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
hom $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; mo&lt;J es Call 740 446 2568
Equal Hous ng Opportun 1y
Beech St M•ddlepo rt 2 br fur
apt uti pd dep + ref 304 882
2566
Downsla irs Apartment Water
Paid 91 Cedar Street Gall pohs
NO PETS 740 388-1100

heavy duty extra large

ca

pac ty 8 cycle 2 speed washer
less tha n 2 yrs old Kenm ore
hea\1)' duty dryer 7 yrs old ask
lng $340 for both 740..992 1117

3 bedroom house In Pomeroy

N1ce 2 or 3 bedroom hOuse In
meroy no pets 740 992 5858

For Sale 45 Inc h Two Stage
Snow Blower Fits MTD Yard
Tractors 740 446 1759

____..;.:,:..,:.:.;.:::.____ 1 GE

2 br $350 + dep a nd you pay
Util 304-675 2535

3 br 2100 L nco ln available 1st
week of Dec rei req 304 675
6806

304 675-6734

s•te
ween Athens and Pomeroy
740 385 4367

Grubbs Piano tuning &amp; repa~rs
Problems? Need Tuned? Cali the
plano Dr 74()..446 4525
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aepa red New &amp; Rebui t In StoCk
Call Ron Evans 1 BOO 537 9528

Private Tra1ler lot For
1/2 Acre 6 M es From Galllipc,lis.l
740 446-9552
--,-------KISS tiCkets 2nd 3rd &amp; 8th rows
floor seats prices va r y~ 740 949
MERCHANDISE
3315 aher 6pm

510
Goods
Appliances
Washers Dryers
gra ters 90 Day
Fren c h c ly Maytag
7795
washe r s
ranges Skaggs
Vtne Street Call
1 868 818 0128
Used Furniture Store
day Inn In Kanauga
Complete $115 Full
plete $135 Hutch $75 Dilroeties.l
Dre ssers Co uches 740
4762

520

Sporting
Goods

Wanted to buy one m 1 garand
1e 304 675 2902

Antiques
Buy or se ll Riverin e Ant q
1124 E Main Street on Rl
Pomeroy Hours M T W
am to 600 pm Sunday 1
6 00 p m 740 992 2526
Moore owner
Oak wash stan d $200 00
dtnlng table and corne r h
$1 000
bed and c
$400 00

540 Mlacellaneous
Merchandise
WARMUP!
Furnace Heat Pumps &amp; Air Con
d !Ianing Free Estimates! 11 You
Don t Ca I Us We Both Lo se I
740 446 6305 I 80D-29t 0098

1 C ypt &amp; Plate $350 740 367
7864
19" color TV wrmger washer
$50 each 740.992 2900
2 bucket seats/ console $40 00
2 studded 16 snow t res used 2
wks $60 00 304 675 1256
2 K ng S ze Headboards For
Sale llke-Newl740 446-1320
4 used 70ll335x 15 ra sed lett er
tires $15each 740.9492780
Almond Washer $125 oo Wh te
GE Was her $100 !!JO While
more Dryer $85 00 Almond May
tag Dryer $85 00 White Whirlpool
Refng S100 DO Call After 5 OOPM
740 446 9066
BEANIES FOR CHRISTMAS
121 P eces 64 Aet1red 53 Cur
rant $3 000 Cash Only 740
245-5180 Leave Message
BOTILE WILL POWER!
LOSE up-to-30 Lbs
THIRTY DAY MONEY BACK
GUARANTEE!
Natural Dr Recommended
(7 40)441 1982
Cat 553 Sheep Foot Rolle
$40 ooo 48 Inch Double Drum
Ro l er $3 2d~ Over 200 Hang
Bracke1s $8 000 3 Pa rts Trailer
1 laTurner Grader $7 500 2 000
Pd Headache Ball 550 Ga IOn
Fuel Tank $350 t Trent Box
$4 500 2 000. Gallon Water Tank
$600 Top Can Trencher $4 500
P pe Laser $4 500 V bra tor
Temp 4Ft Cap 416 740 643
2916 Afte r 4 740 643 2644 AI
ter 6 00 740-643 2300
Ches t Freezer G E Relrlgerator
Ethan Allen Love Seat Deacons
Bench Cherry Br oyh 1 Head
Board Full /QUeen Dm ng Table
White /Bu tcher Block 4 Chai rs
740 446 2927

like New 32" Smk &amp; Cabmet
740 379--2281

Mov ng Sale Solid Maple Kitchen
Table 2 Leaves 6 Chars Seep
er Sola Lovesea t Whlflpoo Au
tomatic Wa&amp; her Metal 011 1ce
Desk New Oak Vanity 740 3792720 AFTE-R 6 PM
New Rainbow Trlstart And Eure
ka Vac uums 50% 011 While They
La st l Days 740 446 4553 E~Jen
ings 740 446 6161
Parts for 197 5 Jeep C J 5 Also
m1xed Flrawood $35 00 P ck Up
load 740 44&amp;-6568

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment

oo

Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Residential And Commercial
Lawn Equip ment Compact Utility
Tractors Fro m 20 To 39 HP All
Sizes 01 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Traclora Hay Equ ipment John
Deere Skid Steer loaders Check
With Us About Financing On
L.awn Tractors And Low Rate Fl
nancmg On New And Used
Equipment Carmichaels Farm &amp;
Law n GallipOliS OH 740 446
24t21-800 5941111

630

Livestock

3 Pure Bred Angus Heifers 8
Months From Registered Stock
$425 OBO Serious Inquires Only
740 441-1162

Prlmaater 549 nstall at on $100
worth of lr ee program ng I ee
Holiday gilt pack 800 263 2640

Deer processing and summer
sausage WV Sausage Company
907 4th St New ~aven lf.N 304
6e2 3114

Army Orl g nal Camo uflage by
San dy ville Post 011 ce Sams
Somerville Frl Sun 12 5pm Olh
er days afte r 4 pm Insulated
Coveral s $35 00
304 273
5655
Satelllle Syatema 18 O~rectTV
dish tot al pur Gh-ase pr ice $99
Ask about free pro gramming 1
BOO 779 8194
Signs Large I ghted portable
changeable etter sig ns $349 00
Free Letter s /De livery Pla st c
letters $55 00 bOll {second box
lree) AAA Signs 1-800 533-3453
Stokermat•c Stove Used 2 Wm
ters Very Good Cond tlo n $900
740-388 6159
S t o~Je
W th
Double
0'.1811
$200 00
Small Refrigerator
ISO 00 27 RCA TV $50 00
Needs Some Work 740 388
8632

Tandy 1000 RL compu te r key
board printer monitor &amp; hard
dri&lt;Je great l:leginner s computer
1200 740 992 6227
Used natural gas cooki ng stove

n good cond very cheaP $30 00
304 675 3308

b onk ey s baby Jacks 1 mmla
tu re Jack 34 Inches (740) 446
11 ~8

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay for sale one mile Mrth on
At 2 Square Bales $1 00 $2 00
Saturday only 304 675-4869
Lg round Da les $12 00 a bale
m xed hay 304 675 13651 304
675 5028
Round Bale Hay Orchard Grassy
Clover Tom Kes sel 740 446
7787

TRANSPORTATION

71 0 Autos for Sale

1980 1990 HONDA CARS $100
$500 Pollee Impounds A ll
Makes A1Ja1lable Call 1 BOO 522
2730 Ext 4420

ta11s

Want Flrewood1 Cut Delivered
Stacked $45 00 Per Load 740
446 2847

19 87 Cadillac Seville Dev ill e
White 4 Doors All Opt1ons
80 14 0 Miles New Tires E~ecel
lent Condition 740 446 2300

Was her/Dryer god working condl
lion For sa._t $125 00 740 367
0224

1988 Ba1a garage kept like new
100 hrs 740 256 1378 after 9pm

oo

Water li ne Spec ial 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
press on F nlngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Oh o 1 800 537 9528
We buy ant ques and partial {I t
comp lete estates baby 1tems and
old F estaware Jeans Fu n lure
&amp; Antiques Tuesday through Fn
day 1 1am 4pm 145 North Sec
ond Middlepoft
WHITES METAL DETECTORS
Ron AI son 1210 Second Ave
nue Gall po Is On o 740 446
4336
Whltl eld Ouest Pel el Stove Pad
$1 599 W I Sell $1 000 Like New
740 388 9024

550

Building
Supplies

Block bnck sewer p pes wind
ows ntels etc Claude Wmters
R o Grande OH Cal 740 245
5121

1988 Bonne!JIIIe LE maroon 4dr
new t res &amp; brakes good cond
$3 200 304 675 5792 alter 5pm

31~-

West

3.

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

7.

601N -AWAY

8 Seuonof

5 Pointer o1

11 - de F111nce

4 BeehlveStel8

luting

10 Prtnter 1

bllllerinoo

meeau,...

11 occupied •
benCh
13 Shaped like •

clgor

18 Woalltlor
19 Lllotayllable
oto word
20 Guggenheim,
lor one
22 Anorney
23 Scolll
24 Printed
mlltakel

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

-

25 Fumed

27Swlurl32 Beouty end -

Atf.

~omething

•

new every day

s

By Phillip Alder
Ntcolas Sebasuen Roch Chamton an 181h century French wnter
reportedly ltved lor yean; by hts wn
1f no1 by hos wlls Somewhat unkmd
but Chamfort dtd wnle wmelhmg
w11h whtch I agree The most wast
ed day ol alt" !hat on whtch we have
not laughed
Today s deal comes from The
Bndge Player Who Laughed by Ron
Kltnger (Hutchmson 1984) Dunng
u class Kltnger asked h1s Sludenls 10
play'" seve n dtamonds telling them
to draw trumps betore dtscardmg
thetr losers on dummy s clubs
Sounds ltke good advtce nghl?
Well soon Khnger wa• called to a
table and asked the score tor seven

fRANK &amp; EARNEST

1997 F 250 H eavy duty powpr
Diesel XLT e•t cab with
exactly 50 000 miles 740 441
9893

ttO~P.
PLf'Mf' l&gt;ON'T ~UM ALONG

H ••• ANI&gt;

S tro~Je

vlt41U ON

ro Ttte Mu:ZAJC •••vou·,e

1997 Ford Ranger XLT 4x4 4 0
Engine 5 Speed Tra nsmission
740-379-9381

riOT SUPPOS't\? TO
Bf' EN~OYII'I6

97 Ford ranger 5 speed trans
mlss•on au rally wheels cd
p layer 17 000 m1les askmg
$6 ()()() 304-675-3230

T~IS
~XPE,If'NCE."

98 Dodge 4x4 1500 Series
13 000 miles 740-742 2803 after

Spm

THE BORN LOSER

lh 1monds two down vulnerable How
~

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1977 Chevy custo m van r uns
good m good shape $1 000
OBO 740 992 4163 If no answer
leave message

~

drd that happen '
In lhts aucloon North s four club
rebul show s a good hand for dta-

~

CM1 II Wf&gt;.\1 \ILL \J.\1":&gt; N'\~
Cl\1€-f 7 l'to\
TO WI'IC.f\. I

34 Clluoe1ol
Nln
35 Drawl out
39 Ronoo atato
43 Slllllng 1hlp
45FCI8m
47 Lllln

4849 Do

Energy
wrong

50 Cllvllr
52 Agnuo~
53

!rump rs Roman Key Card Black
wood the reply showmg etlher two
m:es or as here one ace and the d1a

mond kmg a cnucal card for South
Ftve no trump announces grand slam

"':j

tnlt:~re s t

1984 CheVy KS Blazer Campj,r
Speical 4x4 AC AT New Tlrea f
Exhuast Must Sell! $3 300
740 446 3580 leave Mes&amp;ag•
Before 5 00

North could show

kmg~

but

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos
Celebrity Ciph!K etyptograms are eteated !rom quotaboos by larnous people pall and Pfesant
Each letler n the cipher standi lor anothe Today s cA. W fiQUIJ!S U

uc

y I

GYNC

S K T R H

T

RDACSM

X Y N C

G YZ C

SCVTIIC

RZ

1991 Chevy lumina APV 7 Pa~
sanger Loaded $4 500 00 Runs
GOOd 740 446 6962
1996 Chevy 3!4 ton 4x4 Low
m11es
exce llence co nd ltlorl
$16 500 740 446 2927

Motorcycles
ask ing

Dummy p1ped up commentmg
II s ,oil n,;h1 for the experts bul I

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

knew 11 was tar 100 dang~rous to btd
even a small slam on these cards

19aa BaJa 216 Garage Kept Like
New Hours 740 256 1378 Alter 9
PM

HKTBC

something like the way a Sw1ss wa1ter

ACT I

talks· -

Raymond Chandler

r.trs·

IAMI
'::~:~:~' S©~~~- ~ --=------ - , - - , . - - ' - - lollted ., CLAY a

'I'OU 6ET MARRIED

MARC IE I'M NOT GOING

TO '(OUR BRI DA~ SHOWER

Your
rketpf

0 four

Rearrang• letters of the
acrambled words bt
low to form four s1mple words

FLAEYS

I I
S AT E E

I. I_ I. ~"'~: :',

A fellow says you can find
out how you look whtle sleep.
.
1ng All you have to do IS stand
,.---......,----...;...~_, 1n front of a m1rror and
L ACREE
your • • • •
h7.-~~;.6..:..;1,....::..,;19;....:;1...:.c,l--l
Complete the chuckle ~uotod

I

5

I

\)

HUT0 Y

16

.

.

.

~

.

.

I0
•

by fll

ng

n

fhe

m u1ng

w o rds

you develop from step No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED li
lETTERS
•

~':"ombOo
~'surra

I I I I Ixour I I I I
•

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Harbor De1ty ·Aware

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

WORD

POLLAN

8
W~EN

M R

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "I wnte m a sort of broken down patoiS wh1ch IS

.

Summers not over! Kawasaki
STS Jet sk i \still under watranty
th ree seater 83 horsepower
6o ught new July of 97 three
matching Kawasaki ski ~Jests aod
tra• ter all go with It Priced to se W
$4200 740 949 2203 o r 740 949
2045 will consider t rade for a
good pontoon boat

y H

TPM

TIRWYGK

South could convert to seven no

trump
When Klonger arnveu the declar
er s.\ td I drew !he !rumps JU St as
you satd Then I entered dummy and
pi tyed the clubs And on my htgh
clubs I threw all my low dtamonds
Bul tl lhe end I sttll had lo lose t
sp.rde tnd u heart

RZ

PTYIDRU

B T W G

'M K C

wolh hos sohd su11 he JUmps to sev
en clubs
.on excellent btd Now

oeo:

wwrr ere•

54 Cozy room

monds w1th strong clubs Four no

1960 1990Trucks$100 $500
Poltce Impounds
All Makes Available
~"
1 800 290 2262 X 3901

Shanty- NO WHERE

Its an old adage but very true Worry IS l1ke a rock1ng
charr It keeps yo~ movrng but gets you NO WHERE

8; Chevy Camaro for sale kn
parts fiberg lass hood 740 9&amp;5
3408

!THURSDAY

Budget Priced Trans miss ons'
and En g nes All Type s Access:
To Ove r 10 000 Tr ansm •ss OM
740 245 5677

790

3 Ulleoummer

Opemng lead • J

PRESENT

1997 Chevrolet
10 4 3 vorlee
Balance of Factory Warranfi;
CD Player Cruise 740 44&amp;-2959

760

33 Actres1
Gene 36 W.nnlh
37 Alghlleu bird

1 -BeiiKappl
2 commandto
Ro-

1

-v.

~6'1 ',).~ ~T IIIO~t~ Ct.tl't OOilO~~. 9JT

11vt

FoWQ 11-11.1 MONtY, C0Mg!N£D W1'11\ cm:sflllY
COMQ!N~V Wll\! ~ DEtr BAR\1llHt Will OFID-J
SHUR'O A CI.OSt APPllOXIIIIAI!ON

Campara &amp;
Motor Homes

1983 Motor Hom e 56 000 Miles •
In Good Shape 740.367 7093 or'
~40 367 7070

••
0
~-----.. 1
810
Home
.·1
Improvements '
SERVICES

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Uncond tiona I lifetime guarantee
Local ref ere nces lurn1 shad Es
tabllshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (74W
446 0870 1 BOO 287 0576 Aog
ers Waterproofing

ASTRO-GRAPH
Fnday Nov 20 1998
ProVIlled you keep your pnontles

he! o re
the hu1 se substantial Ul:l:l 111phsh
mcnl are hkcly rnr you 111 the yeur
ah~ u.l Tlke the lime lo cons1der ull
IRVe,tmenls. thut reqmre your 11me or

Appliance Parts And Ser!Jice All
Name Brands 011er 25 Years Ex
per lence Ali Work Guarantee(!
French City Maytag 740 446
n95

1991 Geo Metro 5
R unnmg Cond lion Wlndlohio,ld
Cracked Needs Mult ler
C&amp;C General Home Man
740 245 9008
lenence Pan ting !Jinyl sld ng
::::~::---------- 1 carpentry doors windows ba ths
1991 Mustang Corwertlb e
mob1le home repa r and more For
over Red NC P W POl autom lree est1mate cal Chet 740 992
Trans Cruise 4 cylinder 304
6323
675 4067 Belore 5 00 304 675
::---::---------'1606 After 5 00
Profess ona i 20yrs experience
wlth all masonery bnck blo ck &amp;
1992 F.ord Crown V1ctor la 4 door stone Also room additions ga
Sedan V 8 fully loaded ! 60 000 rages etc Free estimates 304
miles $6 000 (740) 245 5229
773 9550

I :-:-:----------

1993 Chevy Aslro Exl,d ed Ven
Tilt Cruise llJc Roose H ch Exc
Cond $5 900 00 1740)446• 9278

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

1995 LeBaron com fortab le G T
Mmt Condit on Orchard While
Top 26 000 M les
740 446
1443

Resident a or commerc al wlnng
new service or repairs Maste Ll
censed ele ctncla n Ridenour
Etectr cal WV000306 304 675
1786

H~: 1Ith ) nlllnu'm md wtshrul tf110k

mg

tn order and neve r put the c 1rt

1969 Dodge Daytona body and
nterlor 10 good shape $1 000
080 304 675 7537 afler6pm

South
4NT
5NT

A BODACIOUS

weeKs

o-

1968 Bronco eliC&amp;IIent condlt on
$5 000 740-949 2217

I'LL GO GIT HeR

ABOUT 2 OR 3

New gas tanks &amp; body parts
&amp;
A Auto Ripley WV 304 312
3933 or 1 800 273-9329

1986 Medium Blue Chevy Astra
Loa ded
77 000 ml as
Van
$2 500 OBO (740)256 1233

Used pQ rch&amp; steps no
$175
304 675-3000

1 ReCKON

1991 S 10 Excellent CondltiGn:;
Sport S•oplng $2 795 00 1965 S:
10 Blal8f 4 X 4 $1 495 00 Cool&lt;
Motors 740-446-0103

93 Yamaha Blaster
$1800 304-118? 3921

• 9 5
.. 9 8 5

Wondarlul Lifo

••

ooo

740

30--

Vulnerable Both
Dealer North

1991 s 1o 10
Milas
BlaCk $2800 5 Speed 7 7318
,

v6

9K8743

.. 3 2

1985 3/4 ton Chevrolet pickup,
good runnmg condition askln~
13000 740-992 2042
5

DOWN

29 Gungrp

o AQJ863

BARNEY

John Deere 650 G dozer excel
lent c:ondit1on 740-992 7880

Used Ditch Wltcn Trencher
$1 500
Call74(}.694 7842

• 9 8 6

• A Q 5
• A 6

1984 Ford Ranger automatic •
cyhnder body good runs good
11200 740-698-6129

cab S1 1 500 wltho\Jt topper
and $12 100 with topper 304
682 3336

Tobacco air press bailer&amp; strip
per 304-675 32461304 675-4075

East

•

South

720 Trucks for Sale

1989 Jeep Comanche
304o675-1256

55W-aawoy
21 Slloep8M
!ill Keyboard
23SUn-"
bul1on
26 llllwalfM 1ood 57 Iron
n.tl
58 DII'Ktor a call
268a-lll

Archlbllld

Wesl
K 10 7 2
• J 10 9 5
• 10 2
.. 7 6 4

48C"
51Tolef.ted

18""-"1

o K 7 4

eng""

S2 000

II 19!1!1

•AKQJIO

s1al'ldard ~ cty I\JI'bO ex
otllent cond•tion new
only
10 000 mileS under warranty new
turbo fuel pump water pump and
radiator asking $3000 call 7-40
992 5024

98 Ford Ranger XLT extended

POLE BUILDINGS
by LaredO any style any size
740 586 1608

North
• J 4 3
• Q 2

88 Chrysler LeBaron 2 door 5

IP"Cf.

o!&amp;Elq&gt;ar... -.l

Hemohh&gt;&lt;'iNWnarvy

78 corvette silver anmversary
350- 3 sp auto t tops
cassette
304-675-5195 aller 5 pm

24
USED TRACTORS IN
STOCK
F nancing As Low As 6 9% With
John Deere Cre dit Appro"Jal On
Used Tracto rs Carmichael s
Farm &amp; lawn Galllpolls Ohio
740 446-2412 Or 1 600 594 1111
Also See The "New• 4000 Senes
Compact Utility Tractors Several
In Slock

Pipe For Culver! Or drams PVC
Type
Some 112" Wall 6 =
$1 20Ft 8 - $1 SOFI 10'· $2 00
Fl 12'- S300FI 740-256 6112

Queen S1ze Water Bed $50 740
44t 9653

17--

1997 Chevy Cavaher 2 Door
Blue AJC AutomatiC Anl1 loc:k
Brakes Tilt Wheel Cruise C D
AWFM Sunroof Theh Deterrent
25 000 Miles Excel1onl COnditlol(
1895000 740-256-9161

Registered Australian Pups wllh
papers Red Merlas Brown &amp;
White Wormed &amp; Shots $125 00
each Registered 1 year old
$150 00 740 38e-0578

We Buy Land 30 500 Acre s
We Pay Cash 1 BOO 213 8365

16-

1996 Geo Metro 4 Door 4 Cylin-

A Groom Shop Pel Groom1ng

French C1ty Pet Grooming by Appointment •Uitre Wesh hthlng
System • 650 Sscond Ave Gallt.
polos 740-446-1 !26

Real Estate
Wanted

4 30pm.M-F.

6467

682 3436

Several 5 acre pucell remote
beautiful land Me gs COunty Stl
pt0 Twp SA 692 (juSI oH SA 1-13)
owner t1nanong ($1800 per acre)
Can llr good map 740-593-8545

15W-

740-992 5465
Featuring Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Rd

45Dry... -

1990 BUICk LeSabre Llmft~
740-992 2166 8 30 am IQ

der Autom
A/C Cassetta
53()()() Moles ~ 400 00 740-256-

Psvdne· PuzzM

dump&amp;

(2--)

S5500

5 Esk mo Spllz Pupp1es Full
Blooded Ail Male 125 00 Each

Hand fed tamed coetl:ateals 304-

Mobile Home Lot Ava labia In RIO
Grande Call740-446-3617

360

29 Gallon Ftsh Tank Lights
Stand Filter And gravel $80 00
740-25&amp;&lt;&gt;132

CHRISTMAS PUPPIES! While
Toy B~ehln Frise $250 00 Posat.
ble OeiM!fY 740-37U061

Call For Free Maps + Ownar Fl
naf1C1ng Info Takflo 10% Off Listed
Pnces Or Cash Purchases!

Elflc•ent clean two bedroom
depos t relerences no pets 304
675 5162

3 bedroom coun try kttchen hv
lngllam ly 2 baths detached ga
rage on 1 112 acres country set
tlng Chesler area $46 000 74Q985-351 I

c.n

Church pews lor sale J 2 twelve
foot 4 tat~ toot $200 each 7 4094!}-2217

BRUNER LAND

ABANDONED HOME
3BR Assume Loan
low Monthly Payments
Flnancl"g Available
304 756-5566

For sa le or rent mobile home
14x70 Venture 1985 three bed
room total elec tr c price $8000
rent $300 per month $200 de
posit and utilities no UC 740
992 9052

BY OWNER
6 Miles N of Bullalo n Mason
Co 112 mile o fl At 62 Brick
home on 10 acres w/2 400sq ft
living space oversized doub le
garage 3 large bed ro om s 2
ba ths large family roo m wl f1re
place bonus room large utility
room new carpet ceramic tlle In
ba ths &amp; ki tche n newer heat
pump &amp; appl ances larg&amp; re ar
deck 24 abo&lt;Je gro und pool
very pri!Jate but convle ntly locat
ed on black top road wlc1ty water
Price $139 000
lorappt
304-458-1635

Level

LDLCal74().4.46.2927

1 5 BEDROOM HOMES FROM
S.t 000 Local Gov t &amp; Bank
Aepo s Call 1 800 522 2730 X
1709

Factory Goo!! II Save Thousands
Calli 800 948 5678

929 Hysell Street Middleport 7
room s one bath completely re
modeled inside nice lot $25 000
ca 1304 773-521 8

2 Acres Centenary Rd

$$$ 2 3 4 bedro om homes Tr
State Homes ST ALBANS WV
call 1 S00.948 ~7 8

3 bedroom 2 baths centra l a r
Spnnglleld TWP 3 miles from
While Rd w th 5 acres can alter
600pm7404419693

3 Bedrooms 1 112 Ba ths CA To
tal Electric 2 Car Garage Galli
polls City Schools By Owner
740 '1;44 t 9865

14 Cold period

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

a.-~

mon~y

-

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22 ) IF
you lack the net:essary self d1sc1p l ne
m manugmg your rcsoun:es tuday
there .. an excd lenl chance you m1ght
mlluiJ;e 111 somethmg yo u II later
regret Aslm Gr.ph ye 1r aheud pre
dl(tluns make ~real Chnstmas Ntod.;
mg stuffers for all stgns or the zoc.ll
ac Ma1l $2 rur ea\: h to Astro Grap~
r:.lo th1s newspaper P:O Box 1758
Murray Hill Stuuun New York NY
101 58 B~ sure to state the: ZIXh nc
Sl!l ns you deme
SAGilTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
2 1) As s.nmeor1e who ts ou t of step
today you mny dtscover that every
one 1s movmg m one llu-ec110n whde
you re g01ng m another The answer
mtght be une you II d1~ hkc
CA PRK ORN d )ec "2 Jun IIJl

possesses a line hne ul ll ~u rn:
oon It you do nnt heed th1s af'\d crn"s
O'o't:r the hne thmll s that ~houh.l be
success lul r.:nu ld turn 1nt 1 lmlures
AQUARIUS CJun 211 Fel&gt; 1 ~1
Later you cnuld be dc'o'astuted In henr
th 11 you we re unly n~~o:e lo r.:erl un
people ~~.:a usc you hoped they (mt hJ
do s llnettnne lur yuu Dun t play th&lt;~t
g une f11r tht: t:tl'\lts ton h11;h

PISCES !Fch 21) Mar( h ::!nJ In
Oi Khlt':Vllll! llhjt:(!IVt':'i t 1iJ1y
I I
rul~ t! r llUtthllc I\ I! I In!
11 he: 1k'" tl Sit 1uld th~ gnm~ get
h 1f h ~ u I ) t 1'dt 111\!C:ad nllo•"
il!'r

)'i

)llllr I

10 1! 1 1 lh~ lm.\ d

AR II S 1M tr~h :!I Apnl 19)
Althc u~h ) ou rc l&lt;..nnwn II 1 h IVtflJ;
many mten:-;tmg lids It ynur hngcr
ti ps dm1 t pretend hi bt: l&lt;..nuwh:dj;C
able aboul somt!lhmy yuu vagudy
know

It cnuld make you luok fool

osh
TAURUS (Aprol 20 Muy 20)
Don t allow yourself to be pl1~,.;ed 1n
a fMNIIon today where you could end
up paymg part ror someo ne c l st= s
mt stnke If yoo can t call the shnls
call a ~ab

GEM INI !Muy 2 1 June 201 Nut
everyone 1b1lles hy the h1 gh st m
c.Jartl' you set for you ~ll llus 1s nne
ul lhose Uays when you need to kl!t!p
your guard up espeu dly negot1atmg
wnh a relltiVe stranger
CANCER (June 2 1 Ju ly 22)
AlthuuJ;h you dun t h lYe any pmh
lem~ ~rnspmg the b1g p1llure 11 II be
the Jet a Is that ~.:~Juld (ause pr 1blems
today r~ad ~.:ard ully tnd Jon t tn p
over the hlll e thmgs
LEO (July 2' Aug ?"~) Benmg
shou ld no t be poarl of the ptt;ture
mvolvtn~ any lype of l:ompetll lve
u:IIIJII) today Be 11 mental ur pflys
JCal play the game l or the game s
sake
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 221 Toke
t1me to he cert1un yuu have 1ll the
hct-. when a !lil!'nnus t:ons 1derut10n
n ~ed" to Ill! mnde toclay Don 1JUmp
lo my conclusions anJ don t ~a'ie
JUlle-menh un skelchy mlor nal 10n
LIBRA !Sept 13 Ou 23) A
lure yuu th1 ught would tx a p1e'e ul
L 1k ~ may prnve no1 It he s t! sy 1s
11 lnok.ed on the dn.m mg t\1 tfll
H 1\o\t:ver tht'i dt'lt'sn I nc 111 th I II
:-.houl J he quld: ly ~u IPI ed

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•••

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GSMII44Downlnlha

12FINANCIAL

•••

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

NOVEMBER19I

�Friday

y

Page 16 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, November 19,1998

Weather

I

With little success

URGES PEOPLE TO RESERVE JUDGMENT. Microsoft Chairman B~ll Gates wants people to reserve judgment until his own
executtves take the witness stand In his company's antitrust trl_al to explatn e-malls about Industry rivals.

,
People Urged to reserve
. I
J"udgment ··n anb t"t
I rus t t na

(AP)
WASHINGTON
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates wants
people to reserve judgmem until his

road, professes not to remember key
events and frequently asks Justice
Depanment lawyer David Boies to
re,state his questions.
own ext"«:uti\·es take the witness
stand in his company's amitrusi trial
. Gates, speaking by tekphone from
to e.plain e-mails about industry hIS company's headquarters near
s
rivals.
. eatt1e, accused Boies of " doing his
Gates, who also accused the Jus- best over many. many ion~ days to
tice Departmem of attempting ''to put put words in my mouth ." - .. ·:'·
·
words mmy mouth," said in an inter- . .·• Usmg
the videotape in this way
view Wednesday night that govern- JS, 10 a lot of ways, it's more about
overn
PR .
. .
ment lawyers were " trying use the
g
ment . . than the substance
e-mails in a very misl eading way." of the case," Gates said.
.
. k
.
Six witnesse~ for the government
A J us (1ce.
spo eswoman Gma
•1. .
have test ified so far.
., Talamona, · ·d h'
Sal f. "b· _co mfp amts
"The best !hing is, if people "reflect M'c
1 roso t s o vwus rustra.
t
.
.· would juSI wait until the Microsoft lion at its inabimo
J o exp 1am away a11
people actually get up there and talk of the government's evidence about
about these relationships." Gates told Microsoft's illegal behavior...
The Associated Press.
In one of the most important busiGates also appeared frustrated ness trials in a centul-y, Ihe govern· that government lawyers showed ment contends that Microsoft ille· hours of videotape recorded during gaily wields its intluence in the hi hhis three days of sworn test imony last tech industry because of its r~le
summer.
making the dominant Windows com'"! answered every question, com- puter operating system.
pletely._ truthfully through many,
The Justice Department and auormany. many long days." Gates said .. neys ~eneral from 20 states allege
"The fact that they're taking snippets that Mtcrosofttries to maintain what
out of that and holding them 'up with- they describe "-' monopoly power
out having me there because they over the software that runs most of
chose nor to call me as u witness. I the world 's computers. and that it
think. is quite novel."
attempts to use its influence to
Gates is not among the 24 wit~ expand into new areas. such as the
nes,"ies who will testify in person at market for Internet software.
the trial. But under court rules, the
To help build its case, the govgovernment can show videotape of its ernment has used internal Microsoft
lawyers questioning Gates.
e-mail messages in which rivals and
The J-ustJL·e Department respond- business strategy were discussed.
ed by calling the Gates deposition
In deposition segments played
"relevant and admissible evidence." Tuesday. for instance. 'Gates was
In a statement. it noted that Microsoft asked about an e-mail he wrote in
also has designated parts of the October . 1997 complaining that
videotape to play at trial. ·
Microsoft could work more closely
&amp;n the tape, Gates appears to with IBM "if they weren't .•uch rabid
evade qu~:stions he believes overly Java backers" - a reference to the
Sun Microsystems software.

to

. Hund_reds of diehard stargazers -

d1sapp01111ed &lt;mce already when
.douds blocked their view during the
peak of the most sensational cl!lestial

fireworks in 33 years- tried to catch
the end of the Leonids meteor show.
Clouds, howewr. blew in anain
just t~fter ~u n se t ~eJnesday. aned it
wusn.t until early •today that streak' mg meteors became visible to those

gathered atop Doi Suthep at the hi ston e mountaintop Buddhist temple.
.

For nbout two hours, the mefeors

t. r~ced V.:hite streaks across the inky
r~sk.1es. Spectators, many of them

cuded on st raw mats under bllu1kets.
pomted

skyw ar~

rrs

new

appeared every 20 minutes or so.
The overall verdict was that
today's sho~ was more satisfying
than Tuesday night - when up to
10.000 people flocked to Thailand's
' peaks - but still not as spectacular
as hoped.
'
Wichai Thepquanyem. 18. made a
· few wishes on falling stars, asking for
health and longevity. "I don't think
the wish will necessarily come true ,"
Wichai said. "But it's better to be sate
than sorry."
·
Unlike Tuesday night. authorities
in the nearby city of Chiang Mai did
not turn off city, lights to enhance the
view for stargazers and there was no
major police presence to direct tmf-

ones

1J ·

eht nlc and religious enclaves- peraps tempting targets for powerful
neighbors such "-' Iran and Turkey.
"While seeking to topple Saddam.
the Americans don't want a weak and
f
·s
a ragmented lmq to follow." said
ean Boyne, an analyst for Jane's
Intelligence Review.
The United States it.&lt;elf. experts
said . . was far from decided on the
most etTective way to topple Saddam,
' · h 11 h b .
.
. w1t at eo v1ousop11ons-acoup
or an msurrectmn - either fraught
·h
bl ·
. .
w1t pro ems or d1fhcult to lmplemenl
, "Th •11 h ·
,. .
ey
ave to get lucky. smd
Terry Ta~lor. a former U.N. arms
Jns.~cto.r mIra~ who il~es ~~ Bnta~n.
He 1s runmng ~pretty ught sh1~;
and that IS pulling II rather m1ldly,
Taylor told The AssocJUted Press.

fic up the slopes.

·:But the regime is also insecure on
acc-ount of the narrow base of supporl
it enjoys and that might at some point
cause some destabilization.''
Saddam, 61. ha' wielded power
for 30 years. Possibly the most ruthless Arab leader in modern times: he
ha.&lt; systematically suppressed all dissent. j~iling or executing tens of thousands.

Barely a month after his defeat in
the 1991 Gulf War. he swiftly crushect
si multaneous revolts by lmq's Shiite
Muslims in the south and Kurds in
the nonh. Five yeaiJi later, his army
returned to the north to smash a CIAbacked Iraqi opposition group.
Iraqi opposition groups. whi.ch
range from Kurdish . guerrillas to
communist activists. face just as
grim a fl}ture.
Inside Iraq. they contend with an
elaborate web of security agencies
led by fellow clansme n and a deep
culture of fear that leaves members of
the same family unable. to trust one
another.
Outside the country. groups based
mainly in London and Tehmn are preoccupietl' with infighting and ideological differences. hampering a unified stand in opposing Saddam.
In a bid to unite Hussein's opponents, Britain said Wednesday it will

host a meeting of lr.~qi opposition
groups next week.
The Foreign Office said Londonba.-.ed representatives of more than a
dozen opposition groups have been
asked to meei Derek Fatchett. a minister at the Foreign Office, on Mon day.
Chulabi, of the National Congres.&lt;. said Wa.&lt;hington 's a.'sistahce
could yield result•. He advocates an
insurre&lt;:tion from inside Iraq a.s the
most fea&lt;ible way of replacing Saddam.
Speaking from London, he said
his group had put together a military
plan· to operate from western or
~uthem Iraq under aerial protection
·provided by the United States and its

lighting. Already. the departure of
severJI groups since 1992 ha.' con·
sitlerably weakened his organizalion.
As a result, Boyne said, some in
the CIA are believed to favor a coup
und remain behind the Iraqi National Accord: a shadowy opposition
group some exiles believe was intiltr.lled by Saddam.
That option. too, ha.&lt; iL&lt; detractors.
Chalabi and others believe a coup
is nOI pussible since the army ha.s no
sizable units in Baghdad. Those
deployed elsewhere in lr.~q are poorly armed, have little ammunition and
their movements are severely restricted, they said.
"Army units are secured against
allies.
~
each other," said Andrew Duncan, a
"What is needed is an area to military analyst ba.o;ect in Britain. "No
assemble milita(y forces and 'the one can act without someone else
declaration there of a provisional watching."
government." he said.·
!
A well-armed, special force indeBoyne, the analyst, said Washing- pendent fro·m the army, led by Sadton appears to favor Chalabi's insur- dam's son Qusai and .)!elieved to
rection scenario, as evidenced by its numb.·.r e~hout 16,000, is deployed in
decision to provide military aid to the Baghdad to protect Saddam and ,
Iraqi opposition.
guard his palaces and vital installaBut, he said, other factions 'Nith- tions, Iraqi expert.&lt; and opposition
·
_
in' the U.S. administration favor dif- otTicials say.
ferent courses of action. Some doubt
"It is not the efficiency of the
· grou11.s like Chalabi'.s Iraqi National security apparatus around Saddam,
Congress could hold the opposition but rather its ruthlessness," Duncan
together in the event of sustained said.

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By LARRY MARGASAK
will. appear lor sworn interviews in
Associated Press Writer
closed session. but it is not clear that
WASHINGTON - The House they would testify at hearings.
. impeachment inquiry is moving
Clinton, traveling in Asia. said
beyond President Clinton's affair today he did not see any of the hearwith Monica Lewinsky. after an ini· ing but did get a "cursory" briefing.
tial hearing· produced a heated clash He did-take issue with the commitbetween Independent Counsel· Ken- · tee's vote to subpoena Bennett.
nelh Starr and presidential lawyer ' "As far as 1 know, there has nevDavid Kendall.
er been a ca.se where a person's
Starr made a grueling. · 12-hour lawyer was a.&lt;ked to come and testiappearance before the committee fy,'' Clinton told reporters at Tokyo's 1
Thursday, fencing with hostile Haneda airport before boarding Air ·
Democrats and basking in Republi- Force One for a Oight to Seoul, South
can praise before engaging in a Korea.
much-anticipated showdown with
In an hour of high drama, Starr
Kendall. Starr was so 'much in the and Kendall. two tit~ns of the Washspotlight that the facts of his ington legal establishment, battled
impeachment referral on the Lewin- each other as if they were performsky matter barely got .a mention.
ing for a counroom jury.
Before exhaus~lawmaken we,nt . . "l.et111l' begin wit,h the sim~le Qut
home, they met in closed session to ·. ~werful truth that r\othi!JS, ,in this
extend to move the inqu1ry -into the overkill of investigation amounts to
Kathleen Willey ca'le and other mat- ajustitication for the imPeachment of
ters. Majority Republicans approved the president' of the United States,"
subpoena.&lt; for Clinton's lawy~r in the· Kendall said betore extending greetPaula Jones· case, Robert Bennett; ingsto Starr.
It was one of the last peaceful
Daniel Gecker, attorney for Mrs.
Willey, a former White House aide exchanges between tpe two.
who says Clinton groped' her near the
"I thought that what we were here
Oval Office; and an acquaintance of tOflay to discuss is a referral, which
Mrs. Willey. major Democratic donor we believe contains substantial and
Nathan Landow.
credible information of potential
Committee ofticials announced impeachable offenses by the presithat Clinton'.s closest aide, Bruce dent 0 f the United States." the prosLindsey. also would be subpoenaed. ecutor told Kendall after the lawye.r .
No vote w~s required, because kept attacking Starr's conduct.
Kendall asked at another point:
Democrats did not object. All four

Disagr~ement

Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 Pages

~ryers

Coffee Tables
Book Shelves
STORE HOURS
Monday-Saaanlay
. 9:30to 5:00
'

trouble for any who suggest .c hange.
Many Republi cans are frustrJted that Clinton gets more credit in public
opinion polls than the y do on Social Security. even though he hasn't taken
any stand nn the program 's future beyond a general demant.! to set aside gov- .
emmenl surpluses umil it's fix~ll.
·
Clinton has met several times thi s month with top allvisi!N. including
R.ubifl. to review Social Security options. But Rubin rejecled an invitation

to t&lt;;stify Thursday. sending David Wilcox instead.
"The president in his State of the Union address said 'save Social Security first.' We all applauded ... but to thi' puint it's just a 'logan.'' said Sen .
Phil Gramm. R-Texas. among the lawmakers from both political parlies who
have been explicit about their

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Dash has counseled Starr on a
wide range of issues for the past four
years, reviewing evidence and participating in the process on whether
grand jury indictments should be
sought.
Dash, chief counsel to the Senate
Wute•gate Committee a quarter-century ago, has been a lawyer for nearly five decade s and teaches at
Georgetown University Law Center.
Dash, a registered Democrat, ha.&lt;
long said that if Starr didn' t heed his
advice, he would not stay on in the
post.
. At Thursday's House Judiciary

.......,......,.._..,.........,........~...,...,....,..~,.,..-------__.,

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics

6
8-10
11

2
3

E~itorials

Local
Snorts
Weather

4&amp;5

3

Lotteries
QH.Ill
_. Pick J: 0-9-7: Pick 4: 9-5-6-8
Buc~eye

5: 6-13-2(i-30-32

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Daily 3: 6-7-I; Daily 4: 6-4- 1-5
0 !998 Ohio Volley Publishiil8 Co.

historical look at leukemia patients in
Marion.County in hopes of finding an
explanation for a higher-than-normal
incidence of the disease.
Epidemiologist Robert Indian said
here Thu.rsday the department will
conduct a detailed case study of residents diagnosed with the disease
since 1992.
'
Patients will be interviewed about
their work and dietary habits. the pets
they owned, the pesticides they used
and a host of other topics.

Committee impeachment hearing.
Starr gave no indication that Dash
was quitting. hailing his "great w'isdom t.!uring my tenure" and noting
that Dash. had consulted on the
impeachment referral that accused
Clinton of abusing hi ~ presidential
powers.
"We were guided by Sam Dash.
who had very strong views on that,"
Starr said.
Amid strong critio.:ism of Starr's
Lewinsky investigation. longtime
associates of Dash in the legal profession have questioned him privately about why he continues to work for
the prosecutor. lawyers who know
·Dash have said.
Until now, Dash has strongly

for the retirement progrJ.m.

Without changes, experts predict Social Security will ruo short of ca'h in
2032. after the nation's huge baby boom generation retires.
· Both politjcal parties say they want to work together to mend Social Secu·
(Contlnued on Page 3)

"And has anybody been tired from
your office. Mr. Starr. for leaking'/"
"No, because I don' t believe anyone has leaked gmnd jury information: Mr. Kendall," the prosecutor
snapped back.
.
Republicans c~aracterized t~e
subpoenas as the next logical step to
move the inquiry forward. Members
now have heard marathon testimony
from Starr and read mountain~ of evi·
dence he submitted in September to
back his allegations that Clinton
~om mined impeachable offenses,
including perjury and obstruction of
justice. in the Lewinsky matter..
READY TO TESnFY - Independent CounHI Kenneth Starr
"I think we're just going forth.
was sworn In Thursday on Capitol. Hill, prior to te~tlfylng before
\f)'ing to make sure that we' ve got all
the Hou1141 Judiciary Commlttae'slmpeechmant hearings. (AP)
the evidence," said Rep. Steve Republican resolution that refused to with Ms." Lewinsky and _denied he
Chabot, R-Ohio. "I think that we' re recognize attorney-client contiden- had any conflicts, he willingly agreed
making some real progress,"
· _tiallty in the- inquiry: 'Lindsey. a with Republican assertions that ClinTo Demc:JCrats, the new subpoe4J~ deputy White House counsel, has ton lied time aod agairr to conceal his
were a .Republican admission that the unsuccessfully ruised that issue in rtlatiorishlp with the former White
evidence so far ' has led to no' t&lt;:derJI CllUrt to keep from answering House intern.
'
impeachable offenses- not in the some questions in Starr's investigaAt the end of his appearanc~.
Lewinsky case and. as Starr admitted tion.
Republicans gave the former appeiThursday, not in the White House's
Throughout the day Thursday. late court judge a standing ovation.
misuse of FBI files or firings in the Democrats pounded Starr with' aileStarr's testimony was the tirstthe
White House travel office.
gations of misconduct - accusing commiuee had taken since receiving
"That comes to bad news for tl1t him of failing to disclose contacts boxes of his evidence this fall . While
most · angry Clinton · haters," said with Paula Jones' lawyers to the Jus- the full GOP-controlled House has
Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass. "Hope tice Department and by discouraging voted for an open-ended inquiry.
springs eternal in the breasl&lt; of the Ms. Lewinsky from calling her Republican appetite for prolonged
right wing. but I think it's less and lawyer la.st January. when prosecutors . proceedings has diminished markedless likely they're going to come up . and FBI agents working for Starr first ly in the wake of election setbacks.
with anything."
·
confronted her about the affair with Thus, it was. not clear whether.-' or
in the closed session , the com- the president.
when - articles of impeachment
mittee also voted party line for a
While Starr denied misconduct would ever emerge from the panel.

State health officials plan case study
to target_high ·incidence of leukemia
Good Afternoon

Gun Cabinets

.

David Wilcox, a Treasury a.sistanl secretary, told the committee. "He will
continue to review ... whether proposing a specific plan would help move
the process forward."
Clinton ha.' consistently stated his intention to begin nonpartisan talks on
Social Security early next year. Wilcox said:
GeneSperling, the administration 's point man on Social Security. said earlier this week that deciding the best role for Clinton is "a key strategic issue"
for the administration.
Archer said earlier this week that Republicans in Congress would push
next year for both Social Security changes and a large tax cut; and that both
were possible.
·
Treasury Secretary Roberi Rubin told reporters that he believes the nation
should "first address Social Security and once that's been done, take up whatever other questions people want to put forward, whether it be questions of
Ia" cuts or other programs."
'•
·
In the pa.st. Social Security's tremendous popularity ha.&lt; spelled political

spurs Starr's ethics adviser to resign

By PETE YOST .
\ your usual professional decisionmaking by accepting the invitation of
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Sam Dash. the House Judiciary Commiuee to
Kenneth Starr's ethics adviser, ' appear ... and serve as an aggressive
resigned today after strongly urging advocate for the proposition that the
the speciul prosecutor not to testify in evidence ... demonstrates that the
the . House impeachment hearing president committed impeachable
against President Clinton.
. offenses."
"As independent counsel you
"You have violated your obligations under the independent counsel have only one narrow duty under the
statute and have unlawfully intruded statute relating to the House's power
on the power of impeachment," Dash . of impeachment," Da.•h wrote. "That
one duty ... is to objectively provide
said in a leuer to Starr.
"I resign for a fundamental rea- for the House substantial and credisons." Dash said. "~gainst my strong ble·information that may constitute'
advice. you decided to depart from grounds for impeachment."

MARION (AP) - The Ohio
Department of Health plans to take a

, I;

992-3671

I

By, ALICE ANN LOVE
Associated. Press Writer
WASI:f!NGTON - Neither President Clinton. nor Republican leaders arc·
prepared as yet to be the first to endorse any specific Social Security fix, even
as the clock tick~ on their pledges to aim for a solution ne'l year.
"Without a specific plan from the president, a very difficult job will
become muc~. much harder," Rep, ,Bill Archer, R-Texa.&lt;, said Thursday as
his committee opened the first congressional hearing on the issue since the
Nov. 3 elections. Archer chairs the House Ways and Means Committee. which
oversees the nation's retirement program.
Despite increasing pressure· from Archer and qtliers. however. administration officials say Clinton ha.' no plans for now to send Congress a blu!'print for making sure Social Security doesn't run out of.money in the next
century.
.
"It has been the president's judgment thus far that for us to put out a plan
would not have been helpful, and could have served to polarize the debate."

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Volume 49, Number 142

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Page4

for impeachment inquiry

1998 LESABRE

Curios
So las
W11shers
M11ttresses
.End Tables
'
Recliners
lange's
llelrigerilfors
D11ybeds
'·
Sectionals
Computer desks

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 40s; Low: 20s

New Sl.Jbpoenas ordered

Satan
worship
investigated
in Colombia

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) Authorities were searching for clues
in the killings of 25 c'hildren whose
remains- mostly skelelons- were
found this week at the huttom of a
ravine and scattered about afl over~
grown city lot.
Forensic experts estimate the oldest victim was 16 and at least half
were I0 or younger. Liquor boules
were found beside some remains, and
two victims were tied to lrees and
apparently tortured. according to
mayoral aide Luis Fernando Henao.
Prosecutors said Wednesday they
were considering all possibilities.
including that the children in Pereira.
a western state capital 110 miles from.
Bog01a. may have been killed by vig- .
1lantes as part of a "social cleansing"
campaign of suspected juvenile delinquents.
Officials said they also- were probing the possibility that satanic cults
were involved in at least some of the
deaths.
"It's a city where satanism is
widely practiced. and there's a lot of
talk that children are used in riiUals,"
Henao said. ·
Mayor Luis Alberto Duque said,
however. that accounts linking the
deaths to cults had "in a 'high per- .
cent age been ruled out."
"It's very distressing and disturbing . ... It's truly a mystery," Duque
said.

Smaller crowds gather
for last-ga$p meteor show
DOl SUTHEP. Thailand (A P) It was. at least. a spectacular sunset.

CAIRO. Egypt (APJ- Its latest
standoff with Saddam Hussein now
pa.st. the United States is couning the
lmqi opposition with the declared
aim of toppling the !rnqi leader.
But standing between Washington
and the emergence of a new ·fmqi
reg1me are a fragmented opposition
that often suiTers from a lack of credibility and Saddam himself. a man
with a singular repu1a1ion for survival .
:'(Saddam) immune to coups, and
h~ 1s the best amo~g cons~imtors, ··
sa1d Ahmed Chalab1, head ol the Iraqi
Nahonal Congress. an opposition
umbrella group considered a favorite
to receive nearly $100 million in U.S.
military a.«istance. Chalabi met with
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State
Martin lildyk on Wednesday.
But Iraq experts in the West dismissed the U.S. aid- approved la.•t
month by Congress to oust Saddam
-:--as a futile gesture. Some opposit1on groups even rejected the offer.
. Many. in fact, fear that an Iraq
wllhout Saddam would splinter into

Ohio State-Michigan preview, Page 5
In need of loving support, Page 6
Thanks for many promises, Page 6

Today: Rain
High: 40s; Low: 30s

Washington courts lraq'.s opposition

Sports

November 20; 1998

defended the prosecutor to 'these
associates. telling them that Starr is
being unf~irly criticized by Clinton
loyalists and that St~rr is conducting
aggressive but faii' investigation.
Dash recently has come under criticism from critics of Starr's oflice for
the $400 an hour Dash charges the
government for his services as ethics
counselor to the prosecutor.

an

Dash said that he worked many
free hours for Starr, pulling his actual compensntion at closer to S I00 an
hour. Dash's pay is capped :Jt
$118.400 a year.
Dash has played a role in anumber of Controversies su rrounding
Starr's otlice.

Construction
budget wins
committee's
full approval

COLUMBUS (AP) - Republicans and Democrals, who three
weeks ago were spending millions to ·
knock each other out of their House
seats, put their differenc.es aside
when it came to dealing with a $1.7
\liliion state construction budget.
Members of the H9use Finance &amp;
Appropriation Commillee voted
unanimously Thursday night to se nd
the bill to the full House for consideration.
House Sp,eaker JoAnn Davidson.
R-Reynoldsburg, aitributed the relatively smooth passage of the bill to
lessons she learned on her first capi1~1 appropriations bill two years ago.
Then. a rancorous debate over
money included for spans stadiums
nearly derailed the bill and kept lawmakers at work into the smaiF hours .
.
of the m?rning.
There !vas little evidence of partisanship Thursday. even though the .
bill incl~ded $44 million for football
stadiums for the Cleveland Browns
and Cincinnati Bengals.
.. 1 tried to be more sensitive to
members' needs.' ' Davidson said.
That meant spreading around a
sizable chunk of money for local projects - such as mu se ums. parks and
theaters -

that member.'i can show

off to voters back home.
· Lawmakers on the 31-member
commillee spent most of Thursday in
closed meetings trying to squeeze out
a few more dollars tor the so-called
··.community projects." In the end,
they came up with an extra $3 mil lion for projects such"-' League Park
Tourist Museum in Cleveland. t~e
Columbus Fire Museum and other
things that don ' t necessarily have
anything to do with state government.
But members of members of both
parties were most pleased with the
record amount of money· to help
school districts repair or replace rundown buildings.
"What we have been fighting for
the .last two years is to imp(pve edu:
cation and to itnprov e our sc hool

facilities:· said Rep. Barbara Boyd,
D-Ckveland Heights. "This bill does
that ." .

The bill include' $505 million for
school repairs ami constructiOn over.

the two budget years ending June 30.
2000.
.

expected, Indian found in a study
released in August.
The high rate of leukemia is largely due to the prevalence of one type
of l~ukemia among women 60 and
older. Indian found 15 women with
chronic lymphocyiic leukemia when
1.9 cases would be expected.
In order for the case study to
achieve statist ical significance, at

least 50 patients will have to cooperate. Indian said. So far. he li'as contacted 10 patients. All were eager to
assist. he saitl.
•
·
While Indian searches for com"This is the only way we're going
to find a risk factor:· Indian said . mon risk factors among all the
"We're after where they were 20 patients. he also will conduct a separate analysis of the older women
years ago, 10 years ago." ·
Meanwhile, the OHio Environ- with chronic lymphocytic leukemia
mental Protection Agency and the to see if there 's a c01:nmon link
Army Corps of Engineers will con- between them.
tinue their assessments of the coun-

Indian 's study is expected to take
ty's soil, air and water.
at
leust
a year to complete.
Leukemia. a cancer of the bloodThe
Ohio
EPA said it plans to conforming cells, can take decades to
develop after an exposure to a duct an exhaustive tesl of the drinking water Nov. 30 at River Valley
leukemia-causing agent.
Between 1992 and 1996, 57 Mar- · High School, where a forfner military
ion County residents were diagnosed dump has been founcj on 5 acres of
with •he disease when 39 would be school grounds .

Thursday lor the excavation they will be doing
to reduce arsenic rrom ditches this weekend at
River Valley High School In Marion. (AP)

MARKING TI-lE SITE.- Paula Figura, a•soclate hydrogeologlst, and Mike Gilmer, field
team leader from Montgomery Watson·, an engineering construction company, placed markers

-."

•

•
' .

·'

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