<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8671" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8671?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-18T03:34:19+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19093">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/fec427d027806edd05396c2aef71c92b.pdf</src>
      <authentication>9c4382c43e6076cb840697bca2bd8b8f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="27971">
                  <text>..
•

r-1t9e 1o • me uany ::;enttnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Scientists detect increase
in cost of natural disasters
By JOSEPH B. VERRENGIA
AP Science Writer
SAN FRANCISCO - Scientisls
'·'Y lhis year's record!seuing El Nino
dcmonslrates thai 1he cosl of naiUral
ui&lt;asters is rising. both in lerms of
fi nan'dal costs and human lives,
u.,,pi le improvernems in risk fore. . .·a .aing.
More people in the United States
and other nations are living in harms'
"ay. they said, and are only beginning to seriously consider what might
happen if a severe storm, drought, fire
or other calastrophe swept through
thei.r area.
At the .same time. researchers
. said people have become depe ndenl
··on lechnologies arid pub lic infastruct ures lhat tend 10 get knoc ked oul
J uring disasters and are increasingl y
·' ulnerable.
So while El Nino aQd olher phenomena may intens ify weather con·

Ji tions, .the grea.ter problem may be

lhat people 1'\ke insuffic ient precau- social scientisiS discussed the impacts
lions despite a revolution in public of natural disasters and the shansafety warn ings ranging in time comings of predictions Tuesdaf in
scales from minutes to months, sci- special sessions at the meet'ing of the
entists and government officials say. American Ceophysical .Union.
.
By ignoring the risks, what might
In lhe first II monlhs of this year,
have.been a rough day or two could the Worldwatch Institute estimates
become a mega-disa&lt;ter on the scale that the world's economy has sufof Hurricane Mitch in Central Amer- fered $89 billion in losses from natica. which killed I0,000 in late Octo- ural disasters. The de:uh toll so far is
ber.
32.000; 300.000 people lost their
In the past decade, there have been homes.
·
more natural 'disasters that have
It is unclear how much·o r it can be
caused at least $1 billion in damages blamed on El Nino, the warm water
m.Ss formed in the eastern Pacific
than in past decades, scientists say.
" People o,re saying 'If my house that affects precipitation and lemper- ·
is flooded, ·maybe I'm dumb for liv- atures lhroughout the world. or its
ing where I ·am,'".' said William successor; La Nina..
.
Hooke of the U.S. Depanmenl ·of . But scientisls said·a wise approach
Commerce. " Dt·sas•- r costs· are dou- may be to ta.ckle 1·1 as a lt.festyle d
~
·
an
bling or tripling every 10 years. We pol itical because natural disasters
need I&amp; put llH)re responsibility on wiH always occur.
·
peharm
op~es'w
s syh.•?~lders for. living in
"It's not an on-off switch for cl.i3
mate-related disa&lt;ters. Every year
Ciimatologists. geologists and there are climate anomalies," said
:
Roger Pielke Jr.

'•

Wednesday, December 9, 1998

;

•' I.
,t

Thursday

I

•.

Weather

~

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 408; Low:20s

;.·"·

\

'

·j

covered that the City of Bmtherly removed two captains and withLove was known ·as one of the drawn the Philadelphia's 1996, 1997
nation 's safest cities panty because and some 1998 crime stati stics from
officers systematica!ly downgraded the . FBI's national registry. He
offenses such as assaults, rapes and declined to· be interviewed for thi s
rol&gt;beries, writing them off as "hos. story. .-,
pilaf ci&lt;~s. " "threats" and "investiAttorney General Janet Reno last
·gate persons."
month asst·gned the Jus·tt'ce· DepanAcross the country. crime stalistics ment to investigate Philadelphia's slaare often seen, as suspect since lhey tistics. For years, it's believed, the
depend on both victims and police to , creative bookkeeping has thrown off
report offenses accurately.
federal crime statistics and caused
" But Philadelphia is known to be • crimefighting efforts to be misdi am'?ng the worst offenders," said rected by pretending problems did
Temple University criminologist not exist.
James Fyfe, a New York police offiBefore the numbers were withcer for 16 years.
drawn, the FB'I ranked Philadelphia,
Nearly I in 10 of Philadelphia's population 1.5 million, the third95,000 .major crimes --:. .llpproxi: · safesl among America's '10 largest
mately 10,000 - has been tampered cities in 1996, and the founh-safest in
with, Timoney discovered, according .'997, with a reponed 2 percent dmp
to the Inquirer. Since then, ·. ~e has 111 cnme last year.
.
How much higher Philadelphia's
crime rate willl&gt;e when the numbers
are corrected isn't clear, but depanment spokeswoman Oftlcer Carmen
Torres said
"II 's for the
By 'JOHN YAUKEY
-and then designing a chemical to
Gannett News Service
combat it, all in less than a week.
WASHINGTON - On a clear,
In theory, such an approach could
windless night, a small plane cruises be used for vinually any pathogen.
over a densely populated city trailing Most conventionall&gt;iowarfare counan invisible. odotless cloud of lethal termeasures. such as the anthrax vueorganisms.
cine, are designed to combat specifSc ientists scramble lor an anti• ic organisms.
·
dote. But none exists because this is
Some of the tee~ no logy 'to geneta new. genetically . engineered ically map and then . genetically
· pa thogen.
·
thwan a biowarfare organism already
If you 've thought l&gt;iological war- exists, or wil.l within a year or so·.
fare is frightening. scientists already
Advances' in robotic gene mapare preparing-for the sequel- where ping, for instance, will .soon make it
te rrorists use genetic engineeri.ng to . possible to map a Staggering 100 mit -.
make even more virulent strains of lion base pairs, or steps along the spianthrax, small pox. monkey pox and ralmg genetic staircase, in one day.
vther naturally occurring microbes
It takes about a year to do that
used in biolog ical warfiii'e:V
n.ow.
In creasin g· concern over the
"The idea. is to be al&gt;le to do the
prospects of g~ne tically engineered sequencing of a pathogen in al&gt;out an
biological warfare has prompted the hour or so," said Boston University's
federal Defense Advanced Research Cantor. "And if you can do 100 milProjects Agency (DARPA) - the lion base pairs a day, you can do a
rese arch arm of the military .:.... to microl&gt;e in about an hour. "
ex periment with " re vo lutionary"
Cantor and other scientists
me thods of combating it by counter- acknowledge that genetic identificaallacking menacing microbes on the 'tion is the easy pan of the problem.
ge netic l&gt;alllefield - genes vs. genes.
It's step two c:.. developing and
"Genetic technology is out there deploying the coupterllleasures _
and it can't be contained unless you where the most vexing technical
want to eliminate sc ieiltific journals problems ari se.
and graduate programs." said Dr.
Cantor beli~v·rs possible to
Shaun Jones. manager of DARPA's attack a path en's genetic code
biowarrare_ cc)untermeasures pro- usmg some of e · same cut-andgram. " So you can either stick your splice.. techniques already employed
he'ad in the sand. or do something. in gene therapy. .
·
.
We've dec ided to get agg ressive. We . . "The id.~ai s sort of gene therapy
admit we 're doing stuff the NIH 111 reverse, he said. " You're trying
(National Insti tutes of Health) would- to damage the organism instead of
n't touch."
·
repair it. " ,,
, Th~t D'\RPA has entered the bioOne possil&gt;ility is to scramble the
logu.·al wartart! arena hqs rai sed some genes responsible for the virulent ·'·
eye brows.
secretion s from a pathogen that cause
The 40-year-o ld agency. · which illness.
·
pioneered stea lth technology and. laid
These secretions are common
the. groundwork for the Internet, has across many pathogen s. and the
a record of revo lut ionary break- genes respon sible for them would
throughs. but -not in biological sci- likely be retained in many genetically engineered· specimens.
ences.
Some biot'og ical warfare experts
. The mechanism for scraml&gt;ling
argue DhARPA"s geneti c engineering lhts seotion of the mkrobe\ .PNA
approac IS too rad ical and has little co uld be •another piece of DNA
hllpe nr success.
~~! s i gned to set~rch along the genome
. " I think there are serious ques- lor th e secretion gene., then di sable
l ions about wheth er or nol it 's possi- them.
·
ble t o de fend agai nst a ge netically
DARPA scientists,are looking into
engtnee red path ogen," said Leo nard the poss il&gt;ili~y of inserting the scram-'
Co le. author of the " The Eleve nth bier DNA into l&gt;acteria that would
Plague: The Politics of Biological and then transfer it to the pathogen. · ·
Chemtcal Warfare."
·
Scienti sts have already succeeded
So me of the nati on's ·leadinu in transferring DNA from one organ. ge nepc researchers think it :S e nl ire~ ism tu another using bacteri a and
ly poss ible.
viruses as genetic couriers thai rooDAR PA's 2 1st century biowarfare tinely spill them sel ves and their
cuunlermeasure'. ; program has attract- ge netic material into cells once they
ed the li kes of Charles Ca ntor. direc- have infiltrated.
·.
tor of BoSion Uni vers ity's Center for
The microbes that carry the scramAdvanced Biotechno logy, and Har- . bier DNA could conceival&gt;ly he
vard's Dan Branton. now pioneering sprayed over a contaminated area like
new methods of mapping ge nes an. insec ti cide.
yui ck ly, a process I hat can now take
With t~ e Internet and stealth tech,
several years for even a simple org an~
noJogy on its resume. DARPA ha.., a
ism.
·
reputation a' a llighl y aggressive and
Some of D.~RPA's research airns ~ucL"cssful agency known by some as ·
al wll at .seemed impossib le several
.. the spe(ial forces of. sL:" it: nce."
years ago: · mappi ng a geneticaily
." When you sw ing for home runs.
altered orga nism's DNA - so scien- you strike out a lot." said DA RPA"s
li.sts know what the/ re de:tl ing with Jones . " But when we connect. we' re
,revolutionary."

•

Counter-measures sought
to fight biological .warfare

.

--Page4·

.

By LARRY MARGASAK

bers of the Judiciary Committee appear likely to seitd lhe
House a resolution "impeaching William Jefferson Qinton, president of lhe United States, for high crimes and

misdemeanors."

.

Before a historic lame duck session of the House that
is likely next week, the eommittee must consider four
proposed articles of impeachment The articles will be
dissected and possibly revised before the panel voles
later this week.
.
·
: Today, investigators for bOth pa/ties give the committee's 21 Republicans and 17 Democrats their conclusions
based on reviews of the evidence.
: Making use of the same grand jury 'testimony, FBI
interviews and depOsitions, Demoi:ratic investigato~
Abbe Lowell is expected to find no impeachable offens'
es, said Democratic official""
.
His counterpart, Republican investigator David
Schippers, is likely to conclude there: was impeachable
conduct,,GOP officials said.
Both planned .to make the first public showings of
Qinton's videotaped deposition in the Paula Jones sexual h11111SSment case.
Just days before the historic vole, the Judiciary Committee was as polariied as ever.
·. f .
When While House counsel atarles F.C. ·Ruff neared
ihe end of his defense presentation' Wednesday, the
Repu.blican committee staff made public the .four proposed articles of impeachment that were crafted itt

officers listed the assault as pensation for his $5 ,000 in medical
"unfounded," meaning police came bills.
across no, proof of a crime. With no
The prtsident of the city's Fraterrecofll of the assault, the state victims nal Order of Police, Richard Costelcompensation board denied.Lehmann lo, blamed the problem on a few
he.lp.
· police administmtion.officials who ~e
Eventually, afler he had spent ·says encouraged officers .to di stort
hours po[ing over records of9ll calls statistics to keep di stricts looking
and finding eviden!'e of his distress gOod on paper.
call; police agreed 10 write a new
. "!imoney walked into a situation
incident repon and the stote decided that's like a war, with mines left
to pay all the bills.
buried all over the place," Costello
Eight yea.:s and $18,000 in med- said. "'His predecessors put a lot of
ical bills later, the.46-year-old muse- mines around, and he's having the
urn worker said he walks cautiously mi sfonune of stepping on !hem. But
through' the city. "
·
the fact that the police commission· "I'm better taking my chances er has acknowledged the problem and
with the muggers than thinking ,. is dealing with it is a step in the right
Philadelphia police would help me," direction."
he said.
While this might send an immeSimilarly, Philadelphia resident diate message to r~nk-and-file offiBill Johnson, 26, said he was jumped cers, it may take longer tb reach citand beaten by a gang and lost his job izens on the street.
after spending six weeks nursin g a
" I'm not surpri sed this happened
broken wrist and l&gt;ruised body. The to me," Johnson said. "People who
incident was classified a
live here know the truth al&gt;out this·
he

_

n«.

Warmmg·

a childs heart
,

·

'

or Ditta~ 180 minutes
Ce lar: 160 minutes

It
the plant fire department about two h'ours to put the fire out.
Operations continued in. other parts of the plant.
1 ' ·"'I
11.:'
I II
,.
t
II
rial was released outside.of the area
where the fire occurred.
·The company, based in Bethesda,
Md., runs ~he plant in Piketon,
about 60 miles south of Columl&gt;us,
and a similar plant in Paducah, Ky.

Good Afternoon

Rate

Plan

Today's Sen

.

Z Section'; - 16 Pages

280 minutes
or-'cDitta~
e lar: 250 minutes

'

Plan

' '

OHIO
Pick 3: 5-2-5; Pick 4: Z-2-0-8
S•per Lotto: .23-29-30-32-39-.43
Kicker: 0-0-3-4-4-5

Cellular phone

W.YA
DaDy 3: 8-1-6; Dally 4: 3-3-2-1

440

pur~hase

C l,9 980hio

. ·.,

·

.

" By JUSTIN HYDE

Months FREE

Pagers $4

Jeanne M. Bergqutst was
arraigned Wednesday· in Municipal
Court and was released after posting a $5,000 bond,. Judge Denise
Darn said.
Neighbors
watched
Ms.
Bergquist deliver the boy shortly
after 9 a.m. Saturday.
They immediately ~ailed police,
who found her c4rrying the newborn in a gym bag. The mother and
the full-tenn infant were hospitalized, police said.

mploy'"' of Peoplea ~nk
Middleport and
Rutland are parUclpatlng In the Coata for Klda program for the Mventh consecutive yaar. SarvlcNbla chlldr.n'a coata can be dropped off at the banka or at Pamlda or Vaughan'a . ato,.s through Dac. 31. Requaats for coata ara submlttttd
through chlldren'a achoola with bank amployNs latar delivering the coata.
Shown With some of the coata are, from left, Diana Nelaon and local Coata for
Klda coordinator Patricia Eblin.

9 95

Rate Plans $795

'

as low as

Some restrictions ap pl~.
Packages include both peak and off-peak local minu tes.

·

·''

'

'

.

'

.

I

ki. "It's a cut,anq-dried
Associated Press Writer
case."
WATERFORD, Mich. (AP) - Despi.te a videotaped
Prosecutors have been
death that prosecutors say is their best evidence yet chasing Kevorkian for
against him, Jack Kevorkian. remains confident he will years, but twice, 'murder
be exonerated in his first murder trial.
charges. against the retired '---:::--,-:
Dr. Jack Kevorkian
"This could never be a crime no matler what the pathologist have been
· words say on paper," Kevorkian said Wednesday afler thrown out. He was tried
being ordered to stand trial on charges of murder, assist- three times on charges of assisted suicide and was
ed. suicide and delivering a .controlled substance. "Do' acquitted each time; a founh ended in a mistrial.
you think I' m a criminal? If yes, you're happy. If no,
Kevorkian has admitted to some role in about 130
what am I doing here?" ·
·
assisted suicides this decade.
Kevorkian said that what he did for Lou Gehrig's disYouk, 52, had suffered from Lou Gehrig's disease for
ease patient Thomas. Youk was right even if it broke a four years. He was confined loa wheelChair, fed through
law, and compared it to letting women vote and drinking a tube in his stomach and had little movement left in his
during Prohibition.
·
arms and hands.
Prosecutors said the videotape Kevorkian made of ·
District Judge Phyllis McMillen rejected defense
Youk's death - portions of which were aired last month . arguments that Kevorkian had just meant to ease Youk's
"60 Minutes" - was the cornerstone of the case:
suffering. and that death was just a side effect.
The tape shows a figure - Kevorkian's face ·is not
"The intent to kill was premeditated and lhoughl out
shown - injecting Youk with a chemical that slops his · beforehand," the judge said. . ·
heart.
David Gorosh, Kevorkian's legal adviser, also argued
"We've never had as compelling eVidence as this," that murder ahd assisted suicide charges were mutually
said Oakland County assistant prosecutor John·SJuzyns- exclusive, and that the assisled
suicide charge
should be
I
.

on

CELLULARONE®

express
yourself

•I

...

-

.Common Pleas earlier this week to enler pleas to felonf :
charges following a ~~~~ grand jury meeting.
.: :
. Daniel Murphy, 18, Long Bottom, cnleml innocent:
pleu to cha!JlCS of receiving stolen propctl)o with spcclfi-:
cations, and foraery. The chiiJles stern from the lllle~
theft of'l checl which was then cashed, lllina ' fiiiJIIII 114::•
nature, for $ 1~. according to Meip County Prolccutol'1 :
investigator Paul Gerard.
•
Gerard said Murphy also fooes trial next week on 11
charge of felonious assault for allegedly atlempling to run
over a 17-year-old girl with a vehicle. He remains in lhC
Meigs County Jail.
'
Michael Bolin, 43, Syracuse, and Brent Bailey, 25,:
Reedsville, pleaded inn.ocent. to charges of cultivation
of marijuana..
·
Gerard_said that case was handled by lhe Ohio Bu~a~
of Criminal Investigation and Identification, which reponedly videotaped the two allegedly tending to marijuana:
plants found on Aug. 21.
.
aarcnce Owensby, 55, PomerOy, pleaded inn.ocent to'
charges of aggravated vehicular assault, a fourlh-degree
felony, and felonious assault, a second-degree felony.
He is charged with using a motor vehicle to cause·
serious harm to larry Banlett on Oct. 25, according to ,
coun documents.
-,
,.
ThomiiS M. Roush, 48, New Haven, W.\lL, was indidlld on
a charge of aggravated vehicular assault He is~ of using'
a motor vehicle to cause serious harm to Roger L. ColOns. '·
An indictment' was also returned against Daniel I.:.
Kuhn, 18, Middleport, on charges ofcomplicity to com-'
mit forgery and receiving stolen property.
·:
The charges stem from lhe alleged lheft of a check .
which was then forged to purchase $479.0S in goods, ·
according to the indictment.
In addition, Tara M: Block, 20, Pomeroy, pleaded inna: ·
cent on charges of complicity to commit forgery.
Amanda Miracle, 18, Middleport, pleaded Innocent i
to charges of receiving stolen propeny, forgery, receiv-. ing stolen propeny, illegal use of food stampS, coniplic: .
ity to commit forgery.
.
· ::
April A. Sharrer, 21, Middleport, pleaded inn.ocent to :
charges of receiving ~tolen property, forgery, receiving ;
stolen property and tllegal use of food stamps, slem·· •
ming from a Sept. 9 incident.
·
· Donald W. Becker, 29, Middle~rt, pleaded innocent tO ; ·
a charge of felonious assault slemming from an alleged ·
assa~lt Nov. 11 at!he Court Street Grill in Pomeroy.
.,
1
All with the ex&lt;:ejXion of Murphy are free on OOnd

Doctors recommend change in insurance coverage~

Kevorkian faces first trial on
murder charges in. Michigan

3 Paging ·
starting at

.

Lotteries .

Diita~
500 minutes
orCe~lular: 450
minutes

$ 95

Mother gives birth
outdoors; ccharged with
·c hild end,angerment
TOLEDO, (AP) - A 29' yearold woman who gave l&gt;irth to a
healthy boy in a wooded area was

Rate

~~e~s entered to grand Jury
.md1ctments In Meigs
._ .
County Common Pleas Court:
Several pecple wen: in the Me~ Coolly Court of:

PIKETON, (AP) - A fire in a motor forced the evacuation of 24
workers from ~ plant in this souther11 Ohio city that Cl\riches uranium for
"fuel for nuclear power plants.
·
•,
Four workers were treated at the Ponsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant
. for minor injuries frojllthe fire, whjch started 8150ut6: 10 a.m. Wednesday,
the Nuclear Regulatoty Comnlllllion said in aatalement. 1\vo plant operators suffered smoke inhalation and two of lhe plant's firefighlers slipped
and fell on leaking oil.
.
The fire involved lubricating oil used in an electric motor that drives
compressors to extra.ct ~s. the plant's owner, U.S. Enrichment Corp.,
.said in a news release..
The NRC said the eXact cause of the fire was not known and that a ·
learn of investigators is at the plant
.
.
"We'~e still examining and trying to detemiioe what the cause of the
fire was," Angela Greenman, a NRC spokeswoman from aticago, said
this morning.
A message seeking furthe~ comment was left with the company this

Plan

A~:~diovox

Single Copy- 35 Cents

advance.
·• detennine that he crOSJCd over that line and lh~t what for · process or the United States .for his penollll pin Inc!
Committee Republicans have left liUie doubt they him was truthful but
or non-responsive and eioneration" by lying in his Paula Jone:s deposition.
would send at least one
·
misleadi~g or evasive
- "Prevented, obstructed, and impeded the adminisarticle to the full
was, in fact, false.
tration of justice and ... engaged ... in a course of conduct
House.
"But in his mind ... to delay. impede, cOver up and conceal" evidence ct:
If
the
HouSe
and that 's the heart his relationship with fonner White House intern Monici
approved an article of
and saul of perjury Lewinsky.
impeachment
he thought and he
-"Engaged in conduct that resulted in mlswe lind
which requires ·only a
believed that what he alluse of his high office" by asserting legal privilep,
majority vote - it
was doing· was being using pol&gt;lic resources and providing raise infonnllion to
would be lhe first such
· evasive but truthful."
his aides.
Committee Democrats counlemllhe GOP artid~ of
act against a President
Ruff urged lawmaksince the Andrew
ers to allandon lheir impeachment with a draft proposal to censure Cinton,
Johnson case was sent
move
toward citing him for " reprehensible conduct with a ~
impeachment, .s,aying nate," Ms. Lewinsky, and demanding his signature on tht ·
to .. a Senate trial in
1868.
Conviction
Ointon 's "condu¢1, resolution.
·
'
"No penon is above lhe law and the presiclelii
requires a two-thirds
although morally repvote of the Senate.
iehensible, does not remains subject to .criminal and civil . penalties for this
Johnson was acquitted
warrant impeachment, ronduct," .the J)emQCratic proposal said. It does
by a single vole.
dol:s not warrant over- IICCIISe Qinton of perjury, nor does it demand he ply a
Qinton, searching
turning the mandate of fine.
for votes among ZQ-tothe American elecJust berore Ruff left lhe witness table, Rep. Undlef
Graham, R-S.C. unleashed a furious usault on Qinton.
30 nioderale Republi·
toratc."
.
White
House
.cans who apparendy day's tHtlmony before the HouM Judiciary
Graham alleged lhat the pre.~ident was ready to damhold the balance in lhe full House,. "will do what he spokesman James Kennedy issued a statement saying age Ms. Lewinsky's reputation, and changed his mind '
needs to do to save his presidency," said a White House that "nothing in the record, nothing in the facts, or the only when he knew evidence of their relationship existed
official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
law, or the Constitution" warrants impeachment.
· from a stain on one of her dresses.
On the second day of a presidential defens~ _before the
The proposed impeachment articles charge that Qin"I do believe for a ,noment i~ lime the president of~
Judiciary Committee, Ruff tried to win over GOP-mo_d· ton:
..
·
United States used the full power and force of the Whi~
crates who aren't on the panel.
·!
-"Willfully provided perj~rious; false and mislead- House to go after a young lady so she couldn 'I hurt him '
.Jegally and politically," Graham charged. " He was gning.
Asked by Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., whether ing testimony to lhe grand jury."
.
·
Ointon had lied, Ruff said, "Reasonable people ... could
-"Willfully corrupted and manipulaled the judicial ·to tum on her."

·Fire.causes uranium plant evacuation

Rate

\

'Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Oh.io

Asllad•ted Pra!i' Writer .
WASHINGTON (AP) -As President Ointon scrambles for Republican voles on the House floor, GOP mem-

,.

.

\
'I

.

·Republicans appear likely-to-send House articles pf imPeachment

McKinney and Ellis Myers, representing the
Ohio Educational Support Group. The post has
donated approximately:$8,000 to local schools
this year...Tha money Is used for school activIties.

&gt;

Syracuae

•

Meigs County's

Volume 49, Number 155

best. We 'll have better information of
wool's happening where . to effecli vely battle the situation."
Ms . Reno said · the problem
appears to be confined to Philadelphia and Boca Ralon, Fla., where the
police chief and a top. aide resigned
May af tertt· ·was 1earned that o!Ti111
cers had downgraded 400 serious
crimes.
Although police repons have also
been questioned in the past in Atlanta.
. Baltimore am! .New York, Timoney
took the rare step of.~hallenging his
depanment 's records and setting out
.to correct the problem himself.
" h's imponant for me to show .
thatthejol&gt; is not just to go out and
fight crime butlharwewill clean up
our house ," he said last week at a
Livable Cities Conference in Washington .
·
~rime vi ctims say the fudging of
stausucs has cost them insurance •
money and viCtims compensation, as
we.ll' as faith in the justice
When Lehmann wa~

upSet

.a1

/

SCHOOL OONAnON -The Rutland Amarlean Legion Post donated s1,ooo 10 Salem Cellter El•mentary School through the Ohio Educational Support Group•.Shown are, from left,
Post Commander Eugene Fink, school Prlncipal John Lisle, Post business manager Dennis
•

'

Mountaineers

•

-.

.'1] . •

Philadelphia poliCe caught ·f udging crime statistics
By MEKI COX
Associated Press Writer
PHILADELPHIA
Rob
Lehmann was wal.king down the
st ree t when a ihug. punchecf him just
·"" kicks. shattering hi s cheekbone
and crac king hi s teeth. Lehmann has
a steel plate in his face to show for
it.
As far as the Philadelphia Police
Department was conce rned. howev. er. the crime never happened. ·
Poli ce Commi ssioner John Timoney. hi red 10 months ago. di sclosed
~arli er thi s year that police have been
fudging crime s.tatistics in the nation's
fift h-largest .c i:1y. The Philadelphia
Inquirer tl rst reponed on the practice
in several anicles thi s year.
Timoney, a 29-year police veter.an credited with helping shape up the
New York Police Depanment, dis-

Meigs wrestling preview, Page 5
Viagra makes heat, not fire, Page 8
Space station· ready to enter, Page 7

Toct.y: Sunny ·
High: 408; Low:20s

~~r
.

Sports

~10,1-

. ·II

.

COLUMBUS, (AP) - Doctors who recommended .a lymphoma treatment for a Newark man .·
say the state Pul&gt;lic Employees Retirement Sys·
tern should change the language of its insurance
coverage to provide for the treatment, The
Columl&gt;us Dispatch reported today.
Medical Mutual of Ohio - one .of two administrators of the plan - had rejected Tim Angle's ·
request for ~overage of a stem -cell transplant
three times because it was judged to l&gt;e experimentaL
'
.·
But a final appeal by Angle succeeded Tuesday
when a review panel of do~ t o'rs said it doesn't consider the stem ,cell transplant experimental,
although the operation is defined as such unde r the
policy's language, Medical M.utua·l Vice President
Ben Zelman said.
"The doctors though! this should be changed,"
he said. "ft's a case of what does the benefit Ianguage say vs. what does current medical research ·
say."
.
. The state retirees' cove!age pays $10,000 toward ·
experimental treatments, ou t the stem-cell transplant
Tim Angle needs is expected to cost at least
, $150,000.
·
·
Stem cells live in l&gt;one marrow and are the prectirsor to red and white blood cells, as well as platelets.

II

.

.

..

.

1

.

,

The inore stem cells availal&gt;le, the more healthy blood :
cells th·at can be produced.
. ,
Dan Drake, assistant director for benefits for the·
retirement system, said the system will consider any :
recommendations.
;
He said that the organization already had beeii ;
looking at ways to cover experimental procedure$ ·
before the Angle case..
:
Angle, 59, was diagnosed with chronic lymphatic;
lymphoma in 1992.
·
His condition later'worsened to a form of the dis-:
ease known as non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
.
His doctors said that his only chance for survival:
was the stem-cell transplant. .
·
Angle, a retired Newark street department worker,;
received anot.her chance as a result of a patient-right.•:
law approved by the General Assembly.
·
,
The law, which took effect 'Oct. I, mandates that :
rejected cases be reviewed by an independent panel of ;
three doctors.
.
:
Although the law covers only health maintenanc~~
organizations, Zelman said Medical Mutual extend·:
ed it to all of its ins urance business as a matter or~
poli cy. •
•:
c
•
" When you have a situation as intense as 'lint:
Angle's, th at's what this law is designed to take care•
of," he said.
;:
•
•,•

,

.

...-••..'

'

�Commentary

,..,. .2

l'hlndlly, December 10, 1998

IDeath Notices I

T'hunldllr. 00.-lllbllaw10. 1~

The Daily Sentinel Injecting science in implant cases~
Br · rcoo~ll ,..IOns

Friday,

'""'"""&amp;.

of...,

.

ff
d
d
'
d
T.he Bard mtght be better 0
ea than rea ..:.

Your representatives

•

(J

The

newsp~per

•

..

Colder conditions will
last through weekend
By The Aaot:IM8d p,..
.
.
Aoold front will push lhrough the stale this week, bringing lower temperatures. the National Weather Service said.
Tonight, cloudy skies will oover lhe northeast. Overnight lows will be in
lbe 20s.
'
On Friday, high pressure will be building back into the stale, bringing
mostly sunny skies across the west and soudl, Skies will be pal11y cloudy followed by clearing skies in the northeast. Highs will reach back into the low
tomid40s.
The record high for today was 72. II was set in 1971. The record low fQr
today was -8, set in 1958.
Sunset today will be at 5:06p.m. Sunrise tomorrow is 7:43a.m.
Wealller foreallt:
Tonight...Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 20s. Northwest wind 5 to 10
mph.
.
.
Friday...Sunny. Highs in the mid 40s.
Friday night..Ow. lows in !he mid 20s.
Extended foreaut:
Saturday...Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 40s.
Sunday...Pa111y cloudy. Lows in the mid 30s and highs in the mid 40s.
.. Monday...Pa11ly cloudy. lows in the upper 20s and highs in the upper 40s.

Squads record six calls
.Unil&amp; of the Meigs County Emer· ·
(:HESTER TWP. VFD
gency Medical Service recorded six
2:11 p.m., barn/brush fore ?n
calls for assistance Wednesday. East Shade R!'ad, . Terry Sputh
Units responding included:
properly, no InJUries reported,
Bashan Volunteer Fire Department
assisted.
: CENTRAL DISPATCH
"POMEROY
.3 :50p.m., Lynn Street, Pomeroy,
7:41
a.m.,
Park Road, Ann GrifRon Pickens, Velerans Memorial
fith,
VMH,
Central
Dispatch ~quad
Hospital;
assisted.
1
.4:18 p.m ., St. Clair Road,
TUPPERS PlAINS
Pomeroy, Bill Gree.n, VMH;
p.m., Tucker Road, Maddie
7:20
7:13 p.m., South Second
Pullins,
Camden-Clark Memorial
,A.unue, Middlepoo:t, '!'fary Rager,
Hospital.
·tro:;oled at the scene.

••

RUtland Parade

ObitUaries

- --=n

I II I I •
lop I' .....

ao

I

..

. . . . . . . . ,

John Werner

·John Werner. 81, Mount Lookout. W.Va.. formerly of Middleport. died
Wednesday, Dec. 9, 1998 in the Summersville Memorial Hospital, Sum'
mersville, W.Va.
Born Oct.lO, 1917 in Middleport. 5011 of tbe late John and Rebecca Taylor
Werner, be owned and operated Werner Radio and Television in Middlepo~.
He was a ham radio operator, a membe~ of lhe First Baptist a.urch in Middlepo11 , and a member of the Middlepo11-Pomeroy Rolary Qub. ·
Surviving are his wife, Anna McClung Werner; two sons and daughlers-inlaw, Dr. Mark and Mary Ann McClung. and Marvin and Bobbie Alderson
McClung. all of Mount lookout; a daughter and son-in-law, Andra and Lloyd
Dempsey of Moun! lookout; five grandChildren; and several nieces and
nephews.
He was also preceded in dealh by his first wife, Alwilda Werner, in
July1986; and by a sister, Kathryn Werner, in February 1987.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Middlepol1 Chapel of the Fisher
Funeral Home, with Dr. Mark McClung officiating. Burial will be in the Gravel Hill Cemelery.Friends niay call at the funeral home" on Sunday from 12:30
p.m. unlillhe time of the services.
·
.

l.,locot-..-CST
· - · llog_ • .., I
$'

.:,

-

.

r

John Werner, 81, of Mount lookout, West Virginia, formerly of ;
Middleport, died Wednesday, December 9, 1998 in lhe. Summersville f.
Memorial Hospital, Summersville, West Virginia.
,
He was bum October 10, 1917 in Middleport, son of the late John
Werner and Rebecca Taylor Werner. He owned and operated Werner
l
Radio aad Television in Middleport.
He was a ham radio operator. call letters W8VUS, and a member of'
the First Baptist Church in Middleport.
.
:
He was also a member of the Middlepart-Pomeroy Rotary Club. He •
is surv~ by his wife, Anna McClung Werner of Mount Lookout; two
sons and diiigliters-in-law, Dr. Mark and Mary Ann McClung of Mount ..
Lookout, Marvin and Bobbie Alderson McClung of Mount Lookout; a ~
daughler and son-in-!aw, Andra and Lloyd Dempsey of Mtount look· '
out; granddaughters,• Anna Marie McClung and Jennifer McClung; ,
grandsons, John McClung, Lloyd Dempsey Jr. and Brio~ Dempsey; and
several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his parents, his first wife, Alwilda ,
Werner, in July 1986; and by a sister; Kathryn Werner, in February -:
1987.
'
Services will be beld at2 p.m. on Sunday, December 13, 1998 in the ,
Middleport Chapel of I he Fisher Funeral Home, with Dr. Mark :
McClung officiating.
Burial will follow in the Gravel Hill Cemetery.
,
Friends may call from 12:30 p.m. until the time of I he services at 2 ,
p.m. on Sunday, December 13, 1998 at the funeral home.

·Bloodmobile unit coming to Meigs Dec. 16 Racine's, 'Ch~lstmas IIJ :
"Miracles happen when you
The director said that all blood
give blOOd. All it takes.is about an types are needed, but due to lhe
hour and a pint of blood to woli&lt; a greater potenlial for car accidents
miracle for cancer patients, acci- nnd olher emergencies over !be
dent victims. surgical patients, and holidays, hospitals typically expemay others who depend upon rience an even greater demand for
donated blood to survive." said Joy · type 0 positive and 0 negative
Cuny, director of donor resources blood. '!Ype 0 negative blood is
al lhe American Red Cross Tri- lhe universal blood type. Cuny
State Region Blood Services.
said in an emergency, type 0
Curry said that every day negatige blood, found in ' about
patients in the country need more seven percent of the population,
than 20,000 people to donate can be tmnsfused to a patient with
blood.
any blood type.
'Every 10 seconds someone i~
Area residents will have an
our country needs a blood transfu- opportunity to give blood when the
sion," said Cuny. "Donated blood
is given to people in need - in
emergency situations and during
planned surgical procedures both in and out of hospital settinp."

bloodmobile ~;isits the Meigs
SeniorCenler, Wednesday, Dec. 16
from 1 to 6 p.m. The center is
located on Mulberry Heights next
to the ~pita! in Pomeroy.
Acrording to Cuny an adequate, readily-available blood supply must be
hand at all times.
Because of the testing and screening required for every unit of
donated blood, it's too late to
recruil donors once an emergency
\ happens. Curry emphasized that
the Red Cross and the hospitals
must be prepared to respond to all
· patient needs every day of the year.

the Park . tonight

'

.

Racine's annual Christmas in the Park will .
be held tonight at Star Mill Park.
Sponsored by the Star Mill Park Board, the :.
event will begin with a eandlelight walk around .:
the half-mile park track at 6:15 p.m., with the
Rev, Dewayne Stutler leading the walk. Partie- :
ipants are asked to bring candles, or flashlights '
for children.
Following the walk, caroling will be held by :.
the bonfire and Santa Qaus will give treats to ·,
children. Refreshments will also be offered.
The . miniature village will be set by the ,·
Cross Mill/Racine Museum building and fea- ·
lures cutouls of Racine buoinesses and other
eslablishments.
, ,,

on

,.

·•

To get a current weather
report, check the

•,

,.

Sentinel

..'

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...................... 4&amp;'1•
.Akzo ................................... ..40'~.
AmrTech ...............................57'1o
Ashland 011 .......................... 4&amp;';.
AT&amp;T .................................... 71"!.

I,

Bank One .............................. 53'h
Bob Evana .....:...................... 24'•

Borg·Wamer ........................45'·
Broughton ...........................17"1•
Champion .... :........................10\

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS Zl:l.MG)
Community Newapaper HoldlftJI,Int.
1

Nblilhed every aftcrnooo, · Mcnday 1hrouah
Frldly, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

Pllltnauler: Send addrcu corrcaions to The
Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomrroy, Ohio

.,769.

..'

'·'
•'

Charm Shpl ••·oa········.. ············4'•
City Holdlng .......................... 34~•
Federal Mogul ..........,....,.......so'l..

,,

Gannett ............. ;...................63'1.

Ohio Valley Publi!hing Company. StcOOd cluJ
postagt paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
,
Memlxr: ne AJiociat~d Pre55 and the Ohio
Newlf)aper Auocittion.

'

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrltr or Motor Roule
·one Week ................................ .S2.00
One Month ................................ S8.70
One Ycar................................... $104.00
SINGLE COPY PRICE
• Daily.......;................................ 35 Cents ·
Svbscribers not desiring to pay the carrier may
remit in advinOe diree11o The Oaily Sentinel on
a"thr~e. six or 12 month basis. Credit will be

world has lost a great voi,ce

''

••

f-

'

John Werner ·

o~aa~
-f4a,•~~
. . . . T~ --~ ~
Pu.1. u ~ · ~~

..., PtOoudJ ClouctJ

Announcements:

The auction of die dress-a-doll allltest,entries. will W&lt;e place at I pm.
on Saturday, Dec. 19 at the Farmers Bank. Dan Smith will be the liUCiioneer for die 30 costumed dolls mtcred in the contOIIL Pr01 eeds will tp to the
United Fund of Meigs County. The event is a community projc:d sponsored
by the bank.

Virgil Walker, 72. Racine, died Thursday, Dec. 10, 1998 in Holu:r Medical Center.
Amlngements will be announced by the CremeenS Funeral Home, Racine.

W. \Ol

-

Doll auction set ~. 19

Virgil Walker

0

Today In History

•

•

-~

0

'.

I

0

..,_

diJtlu!ed

Will the stock ·market's
dreams come true?

J

I,_ l»"IW I
l,

.

Tbooe illlaatcd in participating in Rutland's Christmas P:uade on Sunday an .aill regisler by calling Kim Wilfonl at 742-2103.
The parade lineup wiU begin at 2:30p.m. at Depot and Brid .,__The
parade will poaed up Main Sired to Salem SIRCI, wben: it wiU disp:ne.
All enlries are welcome.
.

later G. Johnson. 75,1'arUnbolg. W.V..., died Friday, Nov. V, 1998 in the
Cborleston Area Medic:al Cenler.
Born in Mason County, W.V..., oon of doe lak: Homa- G. and UJtlie E. Howell JohnsoD. be was a U.S.Anny meran .o fWOiidWu n. He was a member of'
51. Andrew's United Mc:lhodilt Qourch. Parterl!burg. where be served on the
financial board and at one time was a Sunday School teadlcr.
A gradu3le of Manhall University, he did his polt-pduate work at the Uni·
•versily of Michipn. He was employed by the Internal Revenue ~ice for 32
yem. and. was a mernberofVtenna Masonic lodge 172. Calvary Commandery
3, Knighls Templar and had been a DcMolay chapter advisor for sever.il years.
He is survived by his wife, Ruth M. Board .Johnson; a 5011 and daughter-inlaw, David G. and Sharon E. JOhnson of Cool•ille; a daughter and :son-in·law,
Mary Susan 'and R11111ell K.eaton of CanVa., W.Va.; two gJ3ndsons; two sisters
and a brother-in-law, Bernice and Edison Baker of Middleport. and Beulah
Grimm of Carey, N.c.; a brother and sister-in-law, 4'nforcl D. and Juanita
Johnson of Naples. Fla.; and several nieces and lleJll.ews.
Services were hdd Monday, Nov. 30, 1998 in the Leavin Funer.il Home.
Parkersburg. with the Rev. Paul Russell offiCiating. Burial' was in the Mount
Olive Cemetery.
,,

Dec. 11

that:

;,; ;,; .; , ....,_,.__ 6podfy·-·-····-·-..·-

I'

Lester G. Johnson

Ohio weather

Furthernooft. it stain. lhtre is ton finally lnlc:ting down Jolul Doe No. 2. ~
uno evidence that silicone a~~~feueslhal he alone bombed the f~ ~o_Jd·
breal imphrots pr-ecipitaoe novd ing in Otdahoma Cily. Or the media
immune rcaponsn or induce anocher letter from the IO&lt;alled U~,. ,
systemic inflammation."
whidl couldn'l possibly have been wnacn by · •
And in plain terms thai the Jay Kal:zynski.
.
.
'
public can understand, thucienll'a a pity that breast_ornplan~ manufactums
lists declared that, after lwo were unjuody c:lwged w!dl ~~ng a hazardous
yem of analysis of "the moot produd on the marl&lt;d, woth cnm1nally endangerrigorous and relevanl scienlifo&lt;: · ing the lives of women. ~ •t's a shame that the •
information" available on breal """-time I~ silia~~~e Implant maker, IJool.&lt; •
implants, "there was no consistent or meaningful Coming. was forced into ban~ 10 ~ - :
association" between silia~~~e gel and any of the illdf from billions of dollars •n pmonal lnJuty
medical condilions that the plaintiiU' lawyers doims.
.
.
have claimed.
'
But if""" good thmg comes out of~~ bn:alt
These scientific findings ought to bring closure implant litigation it iii thai Judge Poulter has .
to five years of breast implant litigation, including alablished a precedent
hopefully, fedenl
a_massive multibillion:OOIIar dass-action suit. and state courts will follow •n fuiUre wheJ:I perinvolving more than 700,000 women, still pend- sonaJ injury daims are based on
JCJence.
ing before Judge Pointer's Birmingham court, and
For by appointing a panel of ~em~ behold· .
more than 4,000 individual personal injury suits en only to die court. the panel's ~entrfic conclu- _
in stale courts throoghout the country.
lions have far mori ·~imih~ •. and, dlus, ·
The repol1 from the scientific panel clears should carry far more weogh'. woth Judges and :
breast implant makers of making "thousands of juries, than die scientific clanns. and COU?Ier· .
women across the oountry sick," of putting the claims of "experts" bought and paod for by either "
lives of these innocent. unsuspecting women at . plaintiffs or defendants.
risk.
C Fl•ltii•••NEWSM."DD BlUst £ It's like police discovering dlat a one-armed
Jouph Pertdns .. • c:olumnlet for Tile Sen,
man really killed O.J.'s ex. Or federal investiga- Diego Unlon-Trtbuns.

Imagine. if you will, thaa hMd evidenoe came
to light proving beyond a reasonable doubt thai
O.J. Simpsoo did no~ in fact. kill his ex-wife and
111 Court St, Po!Mroy, .Ohio
her waiter friend.
740-4182·2158 • Fax: 11112·2157
Or that feder.il investigaton unrovered con•incing new information clearing Timothy
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
McVeigh of the Otdahoma City bQmbing. Or thai
exculpato&lt;y documents' turned up lihowing that
ROBERT L WINGETT
Theodore Kaczynski has been misidentified as
Publisher
lhe Unabomber.
Well, that's roughly the equivalent of whal
DIANE HILL
.ocawred !hit week, when a panel of four scienCouballllf
lists, appoinled two years ago bY a federal district
court in Birmingham. Ala.. issued an authoritative
repor1 concluding -- unanimously and unequivon.Smtlnd 5 ,. . , . .......... , . , , . . , . . . . ~,.,.., ....
cal!y
-- that there is no Scientific evidence thatsilb. ...,. ...,_ P{1IJ ....,. or "-} Mw ,_ ...., ct.tw:.
PliT 'W.
,.,.., ,.,.. . . ,. ..... .., .-1 .. ,...,.,. ...... &amp;eft l!ltould #neluiM • ...,.,....,
icdne breast implants cause disease.
These findings amount to vindication, all-too. . . . _ . . 111 ,.,.,, , . . M: .....,_ to ,_ _ . , .,.,.. Smtirwl, rrt eca..t sr..
belaledly, lot much-vilified silicone implant manP
'h ONo tf!IJM; _.,..FAX lb 1-...-z..ZtM.
ufacturers -- including Dow Coming. BristolMyers Squibb 9&gt;., 3M Corp. and Baxler lnlemationa! Inc. -- who ·have bun portrayed by avaricious plaintiffs lawyers as the 'corporate equivaIents of Simpson and McVeigh and Kaczynski.
Indeed. as one trial lawyer told a Reno, Nev.,
jury three years ago, in a personal injury suit
By JOHN CUNNIFF
resulting in an outrageous $13.9 million judgment
AP Bulin lid Anlllyat
against Dow O!emical Co. (parent company of
· NEW YORK (AP) - Investors seem to have a insatiable appetite for Dow Coming). die conduct of Dow and
~----------.
ideas about die future of stocks, such as forecasts, opinions and outright &lt;&gt;~_her breast implant makers " was crimi.
....
guesses that foster grand possibilities in their minds.
~- ·
nal," and because of their reprehensible
Tlfli LINE~ Tal~!­
But there are some realities looming in lite distance that no amount of llctions -- thai is, the manufacturing and
romanticizing can obliterate; they must be faced and somehow neutralized sale of silicone gel implants -- "thouTHfRE MIIST SfAHUNDRED
- if no1 by the unfolding economy, then in their own minds.
· sands of women across the country are
KIDS ·IN FRONT OF YOO!
Every forecaster knows of them, and they have been discussed regularly. sick."
in market letters, but few have really dealt with lhem. Understandable, per- , , . But the panel of scientists, working at
haps, because in thiJ markel obstacles somehow seem to vaniSh. ·
,
· the "behest-of Judge Samuel Pointer in
The first is lhe rale of consumer spending, which has been running at a Birmingham, who is overseeing breast
rale 5 percent higher than a year ago, spurred on by pay raises and a gener- implant litigation in the federal courts,
al high level of confidence. That's good news- for now.
exonerated Dow Corning. ei al., this
The queslionable quality of that news is its durability. While people have week.
assets such as houses and stocks, they also have debts, which have been •risThey found no link between silioone
ing. Households now owe money equal to a year's disposable income.
gel and the myriad diseases claimed by
That's a record high, and it seems to be stuck .there, explainable in part by plaintiffs' lawyers, including lupus,
the relatively low level of interest rates, especially on home mortgages. HoW arthritis, immune systems disorders and
long can it persist?
·
an exotic new medical condition, invenl·
That question became more significan! in recent weeks as the savings ed by the plaintiffs' lawyers' scientists·
rale, already al all-time lows, actually dipped into a negative position. That for-hire, called atypical connective tisis,.consumers spent more than they earned, borrowing to do so.
sue disease. ·
Various factors, including a return of inflation and the loss of jobs, could
The several-inch thick report, divided
cause consumers to retrench, thus lessening their positive effect on.econom- into four sections covering toxicology.
ic growth and, in lurn, on the level of the stock market.
immunology, epidemiology and rheumaThe other factor is what economists of just a few years ago thought they'd tology, was blunt in its assessments.
SlA~~
never see, a condition under which producers have little pricing power.
There is · "no association," it con-.
Remember when producers set prices• They can't do it now.
eludes, "belween breast implants a?d
•
· Among the major reasons for creating this situation is the flow of goods any of the ·defimte connective t1ssue diS-. aCIIPIIIIT11Wrf99&amp;.
from depreSsed foreign economies, the collapse of some commodities prices eases...
or
the
· olher .,._.s........
and lbe very efficiency that allowed manufacturers to overproduce.
autoimmuneirheumatic conditions:• '
As a result, the latest Purchasing Managers' report shows the manufac•
turingsectorcontractedinNovemberforthesixthstraightmonth,andthat
companies were cutting inventories and laying off workers.
The ·combined effect of 1 oonsumer sector that might begin 10 limit its By Ben Wattenberg
"something resembling receiver- ton, George Ooapman and Thomas their image were born the first fully
spending and a busin~ss sector without its usual pricing power might be . 8ncl Daniel Wattenberg
ship," the department is being led by Dekker -- were all in some S!'DSe individual, fully human beings.
reflected in lower corporate profits next year.
.
Alack. Shakespeare has not had a a botanist who specializes in plant influenced by the social conditions of
If Bloom has lillie use for deter-.·'
No matter that the fact has been sometimes ignored by· currenl slock marood 1
be
d"
·
h
very g
cu lure war.
.
respiration, until a new chairman .is Eliza than England. Therefore, minists (Freu 1an, Mamsl or ot er· · '
ket investors; profits remain the basis of stock prices. And if the growth rate
In 1996, the Georgetown English found.
;,
Middleton, Chapman and Dekker wise), perhaps this is part of the rea· · '
of profits slows, stock prices might not reach expectations.
department dropped its Shakespeare
And Bloom's magisterial new were all in some sense .., like Shake- son. Shakespeare invented exactly
The lwo factors are hardly independent of each other, since the consumer requirement for English majors. book on the Bard is itself an implicit speare? Certainly not in the sense lhe kind .of· self-aware and changing
is the ultimate user of manufactured products, and the well-being of con- Laler that year, the neo-conserva- and valuable answer to the reductivist they might have wished. "Individual personality that resists deterministic
sumers depends on holding a job with producers.
·
lively tinged National Alumni literary theorisL• of the academic left. genius disappears completely'" in this explanations nnd schemes of con' ··
AI they say in the marketplace, stocks climb, a wall of worry. And it can· Forum published a study showing .
Like the great Shakespearean approach, said Bloom in an inter- trol. Shakespeare can tell us fllr: •
not be denied that earlier ogstacles disappeared during lh.,.long ascent of ihe that of70 elite universities surveyed, critics Samuel Johnson, William view. "Originality is destroyed."
more about delerminists, Bloom
market. But thc:sc: two haven't yet showed signs of e~apora!ing.
just 23 required English majors to Hazlitt and A. C. Bradley, Bloom .,
Another big problem:. the deler- . seems to say, !han determinists can·
take a Shakespeare course.
reads Shakespeare from the inside · minist approach is... arrogant. tell us about Shakespeare.
or course, given the way he is out. "Immerse yourself in the text Shakespeare, Bloom maintains, is
Bloom's book was 12 on the New ··
In the U.S. Senate
read by fashionable literary theorists and its ,speakers, and allow your not just the Western tradition's York Times bestseller list last week &lt;
John Glenn (D)-503 Hart Building, Washington, D.C. 20510; 202-224- in today's academy, the Bard might· understanding to move outward greatesl poet, but its greatest thinker ~nd has sold, he says, 101,000
3353; Fax: 202-224-7983; or, Room 600, N. High Street, Columbus 43215, be better off dead than read.
from wh~t you read, h.ear and see to also. He had our ideas before we did. copies .in five weeks, And it is the.·
614-469-6697
For examp!e, Harold Bloom, whatever contexts suggest them- Indeed, we have them because he kind of classic study apt to remain ii.;;
, Mike De Wine (R)- Room 104, Russell Senate Office Building, Wash- author of the new "Shakespeare: selves as relevant," he w.rites.
. had them first.
print and sell for a long time. Who•;
ington, D.C.; 202-224-2315; Fax 202-224-6519; or, Dime Bank Building, The Invention of the Human,"
He ·· contrasts his traditional
The book's boldest and most dis- reads the Marxist and· feminist crit•' '
200 Putnam St., Suite 522, Marietta 45750, 740-373-2317; e-mail: senator recently received a letter from approach with that of the now fash- tinctive argument is that Shake- ics? "Nobody," answers Bloom.'
dewine@dewine.senate.gov; homepage: www.senate.gov/-dewine.
Anthony Hecht, poet and retired ionable historicists and social deter- speare invented us. The grealest "They sell three or four thousand·
In the U.S. Houae
deorgetown professor, telling of a minists. The latter method is "to Shakespearean characters, he holds, ·copies, when they sell well, moslly::
Ted Strickland (D)- 336 Cannon House Office Building, Washington, Georgetown professor teaching begin with a political stance all your did nol merely represenl existing to librarians and to one another." : .
D.C. 20515; 202-225-5705; Fa.: 202-225-5904; or, 1236 Gallia St., Romeo and Juliet who "tells the stu- · own ... and then to locate some mar- states of consciousness; lhey
But Bloom remains ,deeply pes.· · :
Portsmouth 45662, 740-353~5 171; toll-free: 888-706-1833; Fax: 740-353- dents that Juliet and her nurse are gina! bit of English Renaissance embodied new ones created first by · simistic about the survival prospects '8014.
•..
having a lesbian affair."
social hislory that seems to support ~.hakespeare. In particular, they for true literary scholarship in the
In the Ohio Houae
But maybe, just maybe, the tide is your stance," he writes. "Social embodied a new self-awareness. academy. As long as the academic
John Carey (R) - Ohio House of Representatives, 77 S. High St., beginning to turn. The Duke Univer- fragment in hand, you move in from . Because of their self-awareness, tenure system survives, he says,
Columbus 43266, 614-466-1366.
sity English Department-· exemplar oulside on the poor play, and find they were able to "reconceive" "these covens and sects can propa·
In the Ohio Senate
.,.
of the -academic nouvelle cuisin.e in some connection, however estab- themselves and, thus, change them-' gate themselves, choose !heir own
Mike Shoemaker (D) - Ohio ' Senate Office Building, · First Floor, the humanities (feminist ,criticism, lished, between your supposed . selves by acts of will. Literary char- kind and only their own kind."
'
Columbus 43215, 614-466-8156
·
pop culture, Queer Studies-- chicks, social fact . and Shakespeare's aclers and people underwent change
Maybe. But if Shakespeare ca~ ·
flicks, and ... ) ·· is "self-destruct- words." Outside·-in. Or, as we non· before Shakespeare·· but these were invent the human, surely someone '
ing," according to a recent New academic critics say, a;;s-backwards. understood as mere changes of for· can invent an allernative to tenure.
York Times article. An external
Bloom sees fatal flaws in the his- tune precipitated by forces outside Let's hope so.
review
team
"found
the
department
toricist
or determinist approach. For themselves -- disease, aging, the
Because if we're left with Eng•
Today is Thursday, Dec. I0, the 344th 'day of 1998. There are 21 days left
'without
anyth[ng
we
would
be
disone
thing,
it's
absurd.
Yes,
Shake·
caprice
of
the
Gods.
Shakespeare
lish
departments that don't need
in the year.
.
On Dec. 10, 1948, the U.N. General Assembly adopted its Universal Dec- posed to describe as an undergradu - speare -- and his largely forgotten · creates the first characters that are Shakespeare, then who needs Engate or graduate curriculum."' Under contemporaries like Thomas Middle· the authors of their selves, and in Iish departments?
laration Q.n Human RighL,. .
On this date:
In 1817, Mississippi was .admitted as the 20th state.
In 1869, women were granted the right to vote in the Wyoming Territory,
..answered to no one. In . a
ing us the math 'on $ocial SecurHy, hoping thai :
In 1898, a treaty was signed in Paris officially ending the Spanish-Amer- By Sara Eckel
I once got a letter that was written to Joseph world where so many punican War.
one day we would get it. He was grabbing us by :
the collar, shaking us, telling us, "I know this
In 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt became lhe first American to be Spear. An angry reader placed It in an envelope dits arc little more than pol itisn't a5 interesting as the president's sex life, but ·
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, for hel,ping to mediate an end to the Russo- addressed to me,' and I laughed when I realized ical flacks -- who aim only to
that Joe must have received the outraged missive promote or disparage a partrust me, it's much more important."
! apanese War.
that
was
supposed
to
land
in
MY
mail
box
.
It
was
ticular interest
Joe
· That's what made Joe • ·great columnist, but I
In 1931, Jane Addams became a co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize,
one of the best compliments I have ever received, remained fiercely indepcnalso want to explain why Joe was a great man ..
the first American woman so honored.
why he was so beloved at the NEA offices and
In 1950, Ralph J. Bunche was presented the Nobel Peace Prize, the first for there is absolutely no writeo I'd rather be dent. His reach was wide,
hated with than Joe Spear.
more than 200 newspapers
why his death has prompted such an outpouring
black American to receive the award.
.
.
I
have
been
a
Spear
fan
for
nearly
a
decade
but
it
also
rod.e
of
grief.
nationwide,
In 1958, the first domestic passenger jet flight took place in the United
now.
It
began
when
I
was
a
junior
copyeditor
at
just
below
the
radar
of
the
mainstrea1n
media.
His
The reasons seem very ordinary, but I think if
States as a National Airlines Boeing 707 new Ill passengers from New
his
syndicate,
Newspaper
Enterprise
Assoc
iation,
audience was bankers in Carlsbad, N.M., and I list them you'll get an idea of what an extraorYork to Miami in about2 1/2 hours.
In 1964, Dr. Martin Luther King Junior received the Nobel Peace Prize and I would read his column at the company schoolteachers in Marinette, Wis., rather than dinary person he was' He always filed on time.
printer while waiting for my own copy -- at the magazine editors in New York or television pro- His copy was so clean you could eat off of it. He
during ceremonies in Oslo, Norway.
time,
a dreary assemblage of horoscopes, puzzles ducers in Hollywood.
·
rarely made mistakes.
·: •
In 1967, singer Otis Redding died in the crash of his private plane in Wis·
and
decorating
tips.
Years
taler,
I
had
the
great
You'd
never
know
it
from
talking
to
him,
but
He
·fe!88tre--you
immediately
if
you
made
4·
~:
consin.
.privilege
Of
being
his
editor.
And
that's
when
I
Joe.
had
a
very
impressive
resume.
He
was
mistake.
When
you
,praised
his
wo'rk,
he
seemed
:
In 1978, movie director Edward D. Wood Jr. ("Plan 9 From Outer
learned
that
the
man
behind
the
words
was
as
columnist Jack Anderson's chief of staff for 10 genuinely pleased and surprised. When you criti- . '
Space") died in North llollywood, Calif., at age 54.
years, and he was a journalist in residence at cized his work, he was never defensive and actu• :
Ten years ago: Soviet President Mikhail Oorbachev visited the republic delightful and wise as his work.
So it is with great sorrow that I report thai Joe American University. But to me, and to a lot of al.ly seemed to appreciate the attention. If he : :
of Armenia, the scene of a devastating earthquake that had killed an esl'i·
passed away over the Thanksgiving holiday. The readers, I suspect, he was just Joe-- a great writer detected a note of sadness in your voice, he asked ,
mated 25,000 people.
newspaper
world has lost a great voice, and I have with a delightful sense of humor and an unending if everything was OK. If he was having troubles •
Five years ago: South African President F.W. de Klerk and African •
lost
an
esteeme'd
colleague and good friend .
capacity for ou.'rage. _In fact, Joe's ability to stay of his own, he kept quiet about it. And he always, :
National Congress leader Nelson Mandela accepted their Nobel Peace Prize
What's
the
world
going
to
do
without
Joe?
It's
mad was possibly h1s greatest strength. For he . always made you laugh.
'
in Oslo, Norway. The crew of the space shultle Endeavour deployed the
, a question that keeps popping into"my head. I sec ~as as horrified by:_the current Republican
What's the world going to do without Joe? Go,
repaired Hubble Space Telescope into Earth orbit.
One year ago: The Supreme Court narrowed double-jeopardy protections thai stores are still open and buses arc still run· Impeachment proceedmgs as he was by the on, I guess. And know that while the world might
for people who face both civil fines and criminal prosecution for the same ning and people are still going to their jobs. On Democralic hearings on Clarence Thomas at the be a slightly darker place these days; we are all
the surface, everything's lhe same. IJut deep beginning of lhe decade. He worked hard to show very lucky for the light he brought to it.
conduc~ ruling that three Oklahoma men could be prosecuted in a bank faildown
I feel that Joe's passing creates a void that us what really mattered, and had a remarkable Copyrlghtt11811 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
ure case even though they'd already paid civil fines for their actions.
will
be
felt throughout lhe nation .
ability lu lake mind-numbing budget topics and
Send comment• to the author In Clrt ol thl* · :
Today's Birthdays: Actor Harold Gould is 75. Former Agriculture Sccre·
Joe belonged to the old school of column-writ· turn them into riveling copy. Time after time, he'd nawapaper or aend htr •·m•ll It ••raeu• •
tary Clayton Yeu.tter is 68. Actor Mako is 65. Actor Tommy Kirk is 57. Actor
'''
ing. lie said cxaclly what he lhoughl, and he w:~rn us about the cscalnring ~arional debt, show· m1ol.com.
Tim Considine is 57. Actress f:'ionnula Flannagan is 57.

The Dally Sentinel• P9 3

Pomet fYIJ • Middleport, Ohio

· s:iven carrier ca~;h w.cck.
No subscrtplion by mail permilled in areas
where home carrier service is available .
Ptiblisher reserves the right to adjust rates durlns the subscription period. Subscription rate
chanaea may be implemented by chanJing the
d111ralion of the subs.;:ription .

,.

Goodyear.............................ss•t.
Kmart ....................................15~.
'
53'',,.
Kroger ..................................

Landa End .............................20'·
Limited .......... :......................27'1•
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 19'~
OVB ....................................... 43'1.
One Valley ...............................34
'Peoples :................................ 25'1.
Prem Flni ............................... 1B~
Rockwell ........................... 51%
RD/Shell·............................... .46 ~
Sears .... ................................... 41
Shoney's ............. .................... 1'1.
First Star ..............................71 ''•
Wendy's ...... ,... ...................... 1~),
Worthington .........................12 I•

BABE: PIG IN THE CllY (PG)
7:30 &amp; 8:20 DAILY

H o w do you get the great

'3:30

in that one holiday

stocking? Give -him or her a trip to Alabama's Robert Trent
Gin C!AnFtCAT!I AVAILAIL!I

Jones Golf Trail. It's a perfect stocking stulfer for the one on
your list who can't get enougb championship golf. With a golf

'

-·-·Stock reports are the 10:30

and hotel pack.a!e starting at '1697 you can give that special
'
golfer 3 days of unlimited golf playing what Tbe Nm York Ti=•

a.m. quotes provjded by Advest
of Gallipolis.

called "some of the best public golf on Earth". Buy before

MULTI TOOL POCKET
SURVIVAL TOOL

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
Inside Mclp County
13 Weekli,,,,,,,,,,,. .. ., .......... .S27.30

o~tdoo.;.

,.

December 25, 1998. Valid until August, 1999. Call today and give

26 Weeb ............................$53.82

S21Veck• .......................... .SI05 .56

him or her a package as big as all outdoors.

R1ta Outside Mtll• County
13 Wceks ............................ S29.2.'i

26 Weeks ............................$56.68
52 Wceks ......................... .$109.72

0

.

I·IOG-257·3465.

''

Cart not included
',

Reader Services
Corr•cllon Polley
Ou.r main concern In 111 stories Is to he
accurittc. Ir you know or tn error In 1
stol')'1 call the newsroom 1t (74UJ 9911155. We will theck your Information
and make a corntlion If warranled.

·'

Newa Department•
The main numbu Is 991·1155. Dep1rt·
ment nten.11ions •n:
General Managn ............... .. ....... fo:xt.IIOI

•••

Ncwrt ............................................. t:xt. 1101
or t:xt. 1106

Other Services
Advertl,lnj!. ................................. tJ\1. 11114
Cln:uhuion ................... 1. ... .. ........ Ext. 1103

ClasslOed ,1\d~ ...............................b:t. 1100

www.rtJgbll.com

"'****"'****"'****
BIG
.. ,,.r,.,,

&gt; I

c,uf.,,~,

0·753·3400
[ [ ] Movies 1·74
,,·""''"
fllUIPJH'

,:•

L-----------------------~------------------~ 0 ;

•'

"

,,

�'·

I~

Sports

I

I

·

The Daily

Sentinel~
Page4 :
•

UMass beats UConn; West Virginia upsets No. 13 Syracusecollege basketball

road Vlclory Wednesday nigh!.
"1be word lernfic doesn't ~orne
to mmd, but !he word lousy docsn 't
ei1her."' UConn coach Jim Calhoun
said of his team 's performance.
UMass !railed by only lhree
pom1s followmg Ajmal Basit's dunk
-with 2:05 lett. but a basket hy
Richard Ham•lton and two foul shots
by Khahil El-Amin wuh 36 seconds
left kept Connecticut (7 -0) on top.
Lari Ketner scored 15 pomts and
Basil added I 2 potnls and nine
rebounds for UMass (I -4 ), which
has lost rour in a row since winmng
its opener over Nmgara It's the
Mmutemen's longest losi ng streak

m a game set by Chns Collins in
1996 and tied by TraJan Langdon in
1997. The Blue Devils made a season-h•gh 16 of 23 shots beyond the
arc , Including 8-for· 10 by Avery.
West Virginia 73
No. 13 Syracuse 59
At Morgantown, W. Va , Elton
Scou scored I9 points and reserve
Brooks Berry had e1ght of his careerhigh I6 points m a key second-half
run as West Virgima won its Big
East opener.
Syracuse (7-2) lost for the second
t•me m five days.
West Virgmia (4-3), wh1ch trailed
32-30 at halftime , used a zone
SIOCC 199()
defense early m the second half to
'' If we can play this hard every hold the Orangemcn scoreless for
night , we 'll be m the (NCAA) tour- seven minutes.
nament wnh UConn," said UMass
Wisconsin 63, No. 16 Temple 56
guard Charlton Clarke. " We played
At Phi !adelphia, Wisconsm madC"
with a lot of bean. Don ' t lett he 1-4
fool you We proved we can play
with anybody tonight "
Hamilton. a preseason al !American who came m averagmg 20
pomts, was held to I I, and
Conneq•~r was forced to play
By ED SCHUYLER JR.
most Iy tlult -coun basketball But the AP Sports Writer
Huskies got a boost hom reserve
MuSic has long been a staple at
Alhen Mounng, who led them wuh sporr~ cvems. Now 1t can be pan of
13 points.
your tall-gate pany or liven up. a
''I'm more Impressed with our £"me of hoops m the backyard .
benc h than our starters n E?.ht now:·
Jusl slip a diSc into a portab le CD
Calhoun sa1d Mounng ,:;ade some player and listen to an Alphabet C.ty
b1g shots lor us."
sports record mg.
In other Top 25 games. 11 v.as No
Mich1gan fans can add~omc spl \:C•
3 Duke I I6, Flonda 86. West to thw barbecue wh\lc wa1ting for
V~rgmw 73 , No 13 Syracuse 59; the big game to start by Jislmg to
W1 scons1n 63. No 16 Temple 56: " Go Blue. The Ultimate Mtch1gan
No i8 St John's 73. No: 20 Sports CD. Slad1um Anthe m ~ &amp; H11
Pmsburgh 52. and No 25 Utah M7, Songs That Rock the Wolvcnnes."
Weber State 74
After an an ope nmg montage by
No. 3 Duke 116, Florida 86
the Alphabet Cit) Ali -Siars and Vicki
At Durham, N C., Wilham Avery
made a school-record c•ght thrcepomters as Duke routed prevtously
unbeaten Flonda.
The Blue Devils (8-1) scored 63

13 three-pointers to hand Temple its
founh straight loss.
The Owls (4-4) lost four in a row
for the first 11me since the 1992-93
season and only the third time in the
John Chancy era. The Owls lost five
straight and finished 14- 15 m 198283, Chaney's first season.
Sean Mason scored 14 points and
Ty Calderwood had I3 pomts for the
Badgers (8- 1), who were 13-for-2 1
from long range.
No. 18 St. John 's 73
No. 20 Pittsburgh 52
Bootsy Thornton scored a careerhigh 23 points, including 15 in a 216 run that helped St John 's beat
Pmsburgh at Alumni Hall.
The Red Storm (7-2, 2-0 Big
East) won their fourth straight smcc
losmg consecutive games to
Stanford and Purdue P•ttsburgh (7-

3, O-Il has lost three of its last four, •
with all the losses against ranked
teams
Ron Anest added 15 points on 7 ~
of· I I shooung for St. John's, while '
Tyrone Gran! had 10 points and I I .
rebounds .
No. 25 Utah 87, Weber St. 74
Andre Miller scored 19 points .
and became Utah's career leader i~
sreals.
,
M•ller had six points and an assist .
durmg a 15-4 run m1dway through
the second half that blew open a :
close game. He got his 92nd career
steal early m the second half to pas~
Josh Grant on Utah's hsl.
Hanno Mouola scored 17 points
and Alex Jensen had 15 points, eight
rebounds and e1ght assists for Utah
(5-3) Harold Arceneaux Jed visitmg
Weber State (4-3) wirh 23 pomts.

New company expands market
for 'jock rock' COs to bookstores

poml s m the l1r.s t half and wenl on to

match the h1 ghe st p01nt total ever
CAN'T TOUCH THIS- West Vlrginnia's Javis Johnson (25) pass- against Florida (5 -I)
es the basketball to a teammate and out of the reach of Syracuse's
Avery, who fmtshed w1th 26
Etvir Ovcina (40) as the Orangemen's Tony Bland also defends on pmnts and mnc assists, broke the
the play during Wednesday night's Big East encounter in
Duke record of seven three-pointers
Morgantown, W.Va., where the Mountaineers won 73·59. (AP)

:
'

Scoreboard

i, .

Loyola Marymoum 84. Cal S1 -Fullerton 56
61 San Fr.~ncmu 56
Oregon St 59. Portland 55
Pepperdme 90 CS Nonhndge 86

Basketball

AUL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
fum
.ll: L f.t:l.
CO lUMB US
l'lul 1dclphm

''

t lucago
N~w

'

2

Englaml

-·-

r-. ,,,h\ llk

•

2

'

1.B

4'

IR 2

5'.
6'·

S4 Bclml W Branch 48 {0T)
Avon Lake 81, Fottrvtt'w J9
Bay SJ. Rocky ver ~I
B e~vercreelc 71
'ayne 49
Bedford Chanel 6 Mentor Lake Cmh 50

727

Drechvtllc 60 1 Joseph 46
Buckeye Trru 6 Snmhmllr Shenandoah 68
Canal Fulto n W 46, Loutn1lle J3
Canto n S 1 Marh ng1on 22

WESTERN CONFERENCE

\\ t .. ................_,. ..... Pet GO

:ft··•l!le
S,:m Jose
!hil and
&lt;foh,rado
I

2

7

778

7
5

4

6l6

I

4

S56

2

2

7

21.2

•
•

.

Tonight 1:1 game
Seatt le .11 C11111r 1do 9 Jl m

Friday's games
N;~~h\ l llt•

.11 Nl'w En gl md 1 p m

c St•.!llk .11 l't)rllmd 10 p m

'
I

l'h ll. l i.l~l ph la

at Sn n Juo;c 10 10 p 111

~CAA Division I
1111en 's sc orel
•
F:nst
ilTPII 11M Hoi) C'ro~s ~ 1
Cnn 1 1e~ ll lUI ~9 ~ ~ J~"&lt;Ic h usws ~"'

',

It
1
1

•
I
1

H 111lunJ l'l'l

NL'\\

ll llllpdml

\m~·1J c .1n

Nurlhl,lq ~·rn

: w,.,,
t

l'
'
I'
'''

Wi~ L "I\'111 hi

lcn1ple

~6

South
Oeth u11&lt; l '" 'km 111 1 1 Sll'\~1111 6~
Chmklt• Jn SlllJt h,r n 111 S t.uul111.1 S1 'i8
Du h 116 llot11 l ~i&lt;6
Furnhlll M~ Meru: r ll7
Sotllh l\l.1h ~m1 4 ~ C1,lt' 1adn S1 40

MidYoest
Hrndle 1 61 l'c nn S1 ~-l

:
t

Dcuuu 60 ( l'lll J\11dlll_!.ll1 'II
K~nl ti ll St JI"·I'Jlh' lnd q
f.. ft dllg,IIJ Xt. I \\id ll~ an (1\

•

Mt ~s oun

'•

n

U ~~
(J I S1 !'ct~f ~ ~~
l'n,Ju'l o1U flS ll iJd,ndl 27
Sd•HI Hill fiX \1llnnma ~~
St Jnhn' I I f'1 mhLJreh ~~
Vt:rnhJnt /l 'all· r12 ·
1
\n~llll,l 71 S) r.~,,,~~ ~·J \

M:ul&gt;l l'iO

!Ill \1k 1'1111' m1,t t•11
~ Ne t&gt; rask &lt;~ 7t. C 1 q~ht1•n (I{)
~ SW M1 ssntm S1 liO I nnl! llc •~ h S1
• fokdo 74 X.tHLril?

''•

~!

Suuthwcsl
R ILe~ I, I O\ j'o l&lt;lll.l C•1 ll r~c ~I
"-''a~ ,\,~f.. ! IJ

1J l ulant·

Anah~m

(,~

1-1 Tol Wnuc 11
l1•l SlOttfl'i l ol Woud\\at d lO
rol St Urm la fi9 rol B n w~hc r 47
Town to 61 Conotton Val 44
r1oy ~~~ W Cm rollta n 40

•

Ne1 1d 1 'l.l San D•~gn \1 7 ~
:-;an 111\L St 'i'l "i~, nm.ntu St ~6
Soutll&lt;'lll (',LI 79 L1o\nl1 \l1nnH&gt;u111 4 1
Ut~ h !'i7. \\cher St 7 ~
Wymnlll)t ~J7 Culi•r.1dn 611

W.1tl ~ wor th

14 Cuyilhng;'l

rail ~

" 'omen's scores

P111 ~h1u gh ~~ Sunn H.li l -1h

•

Rlh}(lc ldand K1 H &lt;~nnrd 77
Pr o 1u.I~1K'-' .J~

•

Rur gcr&gt; 80

•

'\t U unavrntu r t• 71 Cml, lu• r,11
St Jn,l·rh s ~~ Vll l,mul,\ -. ~

:

• Appnl.1c lu an Sr
~

t

~
:

••

South
71 NC

i\~h.. ••lk ~~

Kentud) 76 f.. !J anu Oh••' ~6
l lHJI~I II/1 L ll' ch &lt;14 NE Lnul ~ l.llll 4K
Virjol lma red1 77 Ea st C:1rohua -t~

fum

Nl'l' Jcr~ l'Y

Plulidclphul

NY

Midwe."Jt

Cl'nt 1\hdu )t.lll 7K Ch1cago Sl q
• /Ja)'ton 7'i \\ n~l 1t S1 'i4
Knnsas S! 67 Kr m 6.J.
- M~t: lug.m 8~ Ill" ' hnJI. (, reen 71
' M1 d ug:m St 1'J o HIO 67
~ w , ~ -M•h• MJI-.l't: X7 Ball St 1&lt;1

Snufhwe.'Jt

l lllill\111
lhill ,ilu

On ,m,1
llll\1011

II &lt;dill I

w,,,lull~l••n
I

tllll'l ll11

,,..,.,

71
71
OK

'",,,,
&lt;'

I

,, ,,, ,,
" "
'
" " '",,, "
'
"
II

7

I{ l'i

S• mtht•tL ~I
{

2l
111

Nurl hc-ast lJI\ 1Ston
I~ 10 '
I \ &lt; &lt; \I
4
.::0'1

~II ' lllf l' I I

I IIli hi

Fnr Wesl

10 10 ?
10 17 0

hl.tnolu~

1

'

J)i•i ~i uu

lYLifiL!:i.l: W1
J ..
71
ll &lt; 5 ]~ 69

Pln\bm)tll
NY R .ln)tr)~

JJ

IJ.!

21'1
14

1! ,,,
,,,
JO
,,,
"
"
'" '

1&gt;11 Isum
11 I 0 &lt; .::OlJ
'l I()

~6

' lJ

1(,

San Jose

5

35 66
5 4 34 69
11 6 ' 24 61
11
17 57
IJ 7 17 54

'
'

37

50
66
17

"

IJ\}

D

1995 CHEVY
CORSICA

Co lor.ld5 2 NY Kanf!,e rs I

Ronda 6 OllaY.CI5
0 HLa,ow l Edmont on I
S~ n J n~l' ~ Oollas ' I IIC)
PIL•~n t .'( 4 Mo mrc,ll 2

Auto, air, stereo

$6.495
or SJ39 per m~nth

v.lllUlUI CI ~ An.lheHII ~(lie)
Lm. Angcl.:s 2 Wa~hu1g1Dn I

Tonight's

g~tmes

Um tnn .n Cnrul1na I J1 tn
Nt'w Jc t ~c~ .11 Ph1l.1delplnn 7 10 11 m
S.tn J1)SC ~ I N~~h v dk .X p m

No

Friday's games

1998 CHEVY
CAMARO

Cnli!a•y 11 li!mp.l ll.1 y 7 O'i p m
NY R .m~e r s ill Flutl .tln 7 IO p m
Edmontnn .11 [~.·troll 7 10 p m
Toromo 11 Ch11agn !-! ~0 p m
Muntrcnl .11 D all n.~ ~ lO p m
Wn~h m giLin ut An;lltl'llll 10 ~0 Jl lll

GM #1706, Auto,'air, CD
player

Transactions
Baseball
Amt'rleao l.eukuc
IIUS ION I&lt;EIJ SUX \io'·:.:d In term~ 11 11h RHI'
t\1mk Portuz.nl nn n 1111&lt;.' war , ornr.•ll
'I A~1flA ll AY DJ:VIL RAYS Agrl'l'd 111 term~
1\lllh OF J o~t: CanselO
rEXI\S RANG[R S Agrc&gt;l'&lt;ltu te rms ~&gt;llh LH I&gt;
fl. 1~ h Rubcmo m ll n a mmor lcag ul' ~on tra~l anti m vll
cd hun to spnnjl: tlallllng
National Ltagu ~

CHI CAGO tU BS Named J u~ How..cy E.1 s~
Con~! ,, ouun g supcrvtso r Agreed 111 lrnm 1111h C

Bc mtu S, uUI.Jgu un .1 une year commt t
COLORADO IWCKIT.S l'ln d:tl Or lkrm~
Whne no 'wa1vcrs
PHI LA DELPHIA PH II.I.IES 1\grccd to t e rm ~
1\ llh RHI' t yler (or&lt;.'cn on a one y~·ar ~Ollt lall

Basketball
Hi\ RI EM GLOOEl ROlTERS S•11 ncd J· I m -e
H1pp I I rl'nl Pulh nm and G GJ.on liaJlL IS
Naltooal Dusk,lbull Amx:tutiun

1

Hm:: key

Natwn11l Hock e~ League
I LOR ID A PAN '! HERS A •· • ~nc d C Stell
\\ ,i ~hi'" llll "' Nt·~~o. ll .1\ &lt;,; n nl tlw ,\ HI nl\ a 111 !H\ Ct 1-.
&lt;,, ' lllltlli\lll!LJ!.

(614) 992·6614 • (800) 837·1 094

Mon.·Fri. 9 am·8 pm; Sat. 9 am·4 pm; Sun. I pm·5 pm

, Wednesday's scores

,IS~ I )!Iltnell t

1'1111 /\IJ/1 PH IA rLYI RS l 1• m~d I \\.D D.ut
1\ rd11. 10 Gr.1nd I&lt; ,IJlld~ 111 tho: Jil l
I'll rS BURGH PI.NGU INS '' "'•).!m·d D 'h •m

II ( t1 11110ll In S\l •llli\C nf lhl Ali i
S I I OUIS HI UI.S ;\~SII,! IlO.:tl
'\,.l nqL'I «llh1.• A HI.
'

(,

R1d1

l' ,nt'lll

111

Cnlle~ c
I o I \!.;;li N N ll\l&lt;,;d H1L h K• •chi ~ U L/ PlkH'III
,'l'•'hiL:Ln11lL and ,1.. ~1- I I IILt ht:,\d 111,1,h
RU I ( ,J J.t ) I ,1 \'lld.:d dJC •·' Jill I I Ill kll \ Sht'.l
I ''l Ill " olch "IL \co !IIIUUCh Ill&lt; ~ 01)1 ''-'1'11 11

$15,950

.• HOUSTON (AP) -The father of
OJymp•c
gymnast
Dommique
'MOceanu te stified Wednesday that he
~~ with a privare investigator to
learn where hiS estranged daughter
living.
1-DumJtru Moceanu spoke at a
hearing in which a JUdge will decide
whether to grant the I7-year-old gold
medalist's request to make pennanent a temporary restrammg order
•
against her father.
' Moceanu sometimes rolled her
eyes dunng her father' s testimony
uOde r questioning by her courtaP.pointed attorney, Ellen Yarrell. She
also ignored attempts by her mother,
Cilmelia, to make eye contact in the

was

TATE MOTORS,' I C.

65

NI:W ENGLAND I'A I KIU IS S1pncd liJIJ,,nn
Cn11rcll1o the 11ra( t1 n squ.1d
NEW OR LEANS SAINlS Au l\ .ll ct! l E Jush
W11L oll. lrom the prall llC ~t1 u ad Si!!llt:d LB M,1r..
l1lhhndgc tn thl' practtce squad
PHII. ADELP HIA EAG U:S S1gncJ 1)1' J:dward
J,1spcr II' ,1 o lll' )C.If conlru: l SiJ!.Ill'd WR Hnnq
r.hddlctllll IU the pr ,IW CL' !&gt;'/II old
Sl LO UIS R o\MS PLilcd WI{ l s. 1n~ B111lc on
llltll r,•,,l J &lt;.:~cr\.t'

CONFERENCE

"10 7 7 !7"

9
7

77

re ~er~e

NHL standings
Atlanlt(

BY TERRI LANGFORD

POMEROY, OHIO

Padfic Dnuion
16 1

:5

,.

National foothall Lrague
CINC INNATI HENGA LS Plaled QB Neil
0 Donndl un InJU red rt: se r\'C Cla uned RB R: l ~
Zcll.us off Wlll\ ers from the New O rle;m~ Sam1s
GRJ: EN B AY PAC K ERS SII! J\Cd WR Rum·\1
(OJk: land Plnced WR l:llll S.:h rO&lt;.·dcr nn IO) ttred

Hockey
E~STERI'I

67

.72

Football

lt

1\mo.: m

It

28 79
10 ll 4 24 78
9 15 2 20 71

NEW YORK I IFILRI Y N,uneJ R1li11C AJubatn

Easi
"
'"

"

66

. SAN DIEGO (AP)- Durable in
the ring, charismatic and somewhat
mysterious outs'1de 11, Archie Moore
left a remarkable legacy.
Moore died Wednesday at age 84,
remembered as much for being a
great person as a great boxer.
He won the light-heavyweight
title at age 39 and had a record 141
knockouts He knocked down undefeated heavyweight Rocky Marciano
before losing, and was nearly 50 and
just months from retirement when he
hisl to Muhammad Ali.
Known for hi s ready sm1le and
his knee-length hoxmg trunks,
MO?re also had a soft spot for youth,
havmg spent 22 months in a reformatory. He spent his retirement caurioning young boys to stay away
from drugs and set up a mentoring
program to help disadvantaged
youth.
President Eisenhower once invued Moore to the White House to JOin
a group li ghtmg juvem le delinquency.
Eisenhower aide s quoted the
president as say mg Moore should be
a cO ngre ss mari
"Are you a
Republican or a Democrat?"
Eisenhower said .
" Neither," Moore said w1th a
laugh. "I' m a diplomat "
Moore was clearly one ot a kmd.
· " There wasn ' t anything about
him that wasn't unusual or fun, "
longtime hoxing pubhCISI B11l
Caplan sa1d "Everythmg was my sterious. He created his own mys tique. He never needed a public1st to
make himself colorful. "
Even his modest San Diego home
had a unique touch - a swimming
pool shaped like a boxing glove.
"My dad lived a good life and
wj,'re not sad," his son, Billy, said.

Down

1997
CHEVY
'
TAHOE
LT, 4x4, leather, CD, loa,~ed

$27,450

98 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE 5 speed, sport pkg, 1400 miles......1.; ............................ $19,400
.'
92 FORD AEROSTARVAN V6, auto, air, 4x4 .................................................................$6,500
94 BUICK LESABRE V6, auto, all power, low miles ................................................... $11,500
96 DODGE STRATUS, Auto, air, stereo, iilt, cruise .......................................................$9,800
94 CADILLAC DEVILLE, V8,1eather, 11ocal owner ....................................................$13,900
93 OLDS 88 LSS, leather, V6, loaded .............................................................................$8,200
95 FORD ESCOR'r LX, auto, air, stereo, 34000 miles ..................................................:$6;500
96 PONTIAC GRAND AM Auto, air, PW, PL, till, cruise .....................................,.......... $9,300
96 OLDS 98 ELITE, V6, Leather, all power, 1owner ...................................................$14,900
93 EAGLE VISION, V6, auto, air, PW, PL, tilt, cruise .....................................................$6,800
91 CADILLAC SEVILLE VB, leather, loaded ..........................................:.......................$4,500
94 FORD F·150 4x4, XLT, va, auto, air ...........................................................................$9,500
96 DODGE XCAB PICKUPV8, auto, air, lilt, cruise ..................................~ ................. $17,500
92 CHEVY K1500 PICKUP 4x4, Z71, V8,5 speed, CD player ..................................... $11 ,500
97 JEEP WRANGLER Soft top,. 5 speed, stereo .................................... ~ ................... $12,500

courtroom.
: Dumttru Moceanu satd he never

p41d a pnvate mvestigator even
though, he met with one three time s
The gymnast had not told her parents
ot her new addres s stnCf!: state
D;strict Jud ge John Morytgomery
ggmted her adult status owOct. 28.
: "I talk with mvcstigator just to
find the address."' sa1d Dumirru
Moceanu, a Romanian tmm.Jgrant. "I
dM' t pay htm "
: Her father also denied followmg
h~ daughter, but conceded that he
a!!ked her to pull over at a stoplight
aU.er school recently.
• Smce she attamed legal adult-.
hood, Moceanu says she's endured
verbal threats and stalking by her
falher. Police are also inves.tigating a
pr.ivate investigator 's claim that

tuus ly hi . 1 hc.tl.

Jr.;-:

Fr.~: ..

so; :

.

Jr ~~..-

'

Jr. ~.!.

Sr.-•
Fr.·
Jr.
Fr. ;
Jr.· .•
Jr~ .:

Fr.i .~
Sr ·-·
Jr: ·.
Fr.•

.,.

baseball writer, dies at 87

Dumitru Moceanu offered lo pay
$10,000 to have a fnend and her
coach k11led .
Tape recordings thought to
include threats were submitted by the
Houston Pohce Department this
mornmg for the judge's rcv1ew m
chambers. They were not entered
formally into ev1dence.
"The threat of danger from my
father hangs over me every day,'' the
gymnast said in coun papers filed a
week ago for the restraming order.
The gymnast was supponed in
coun hy several friends and her publicist, Janey Miller. The conflict
began when she dec1ded 10 fight fot
control over her millions in earnings
and has escalated ever since.
"It's just awful,'' M11ler sa1d . "It
IS 'hterally teanng them apan"
The stormy relationship between
father and daughter caught public
not1ce in late October, when she fled
from her home w1th the help of
fnends Marcy and Bnan Huggms
and her coach, Lummua M1scenco.
Huggins had befriended the
Olympian while perfon:ning some
work at the $4 m1l lion Moceanu
GymnastiCs Inc foc1111y north of
Houston.
"Things have been gcning rough
for a while . a lot ol people don't
know, " Moc eanu sm d m her ongmal
lawsuit. "We ' ve been trymg to keep
things h1dden. "
The Huggins have also obtamed a
restraining order aga mst Dumttru
Moceanu.

'Jock rock' CDs...

V l l: dl

Sr.::

'

Cincinnati Bengals fined h1m a day
. CINCINNATI (AP) - Punter after they released him.
Ue Johnson is,n't surprised lhat the
"It's typical for the Bengals," he
sa1d.
The Bengals rel eased Johnson on
Monday and fined htm a day later for
suggestmg that the front office needs
(Contmued from Page 4)
to change 1f 11 wants to wm
By movtng again st Johnson, the
: The CDs are so ld through
front
office left coach Bruce Cos let
F~&gt;otlocker sports apparel outlets.
awmni group s and college book- '" an awkward positmn and promptcd players to watch what they say.
sltlres
Coslet declined on Wedne sday to
: "The 1dea was not to go through
talk
about the dcc1sion to fm e
tradlllonal mus•c outlets." ' D1chtcr
Johnson
one game's pay
-s4id. " The Footlocker situation was
$20,588
24
- for condu ct detnm enright for us."
tal
to
the
team. John son was
: People see the CO's next to hats,
Inform
ed
of
the
fine by mail a day
jatil'ets and T-shms. smd D•chter,
ge
neral
manager
M1kc Brown
after
Mphabet City presi dent. "They treat
relca&gt;ed
lnm
.
it:likc 1t 's a hat. We came to reali7c
Coslct asked reporters to avoid
our core c ustomer was the mal e
the
subject with him
sPorts fan "
"No.
I, I don'ttalk ahout fines. I
: ACD se ll s for $14.95
never
have
and I never will, " Cos let
• Currently. Alphabet Cny has prosaid
"Nu
2,
I understand you have
dl.ccd 20 COs that include the NBA
to
pursue
th
e
story
, but you have to
Ch•cago Bull s, th e NFL Green Bay
und
erstand
the
predicament
I'm tn .
Ppckers . and Denver Broncos , th e
base ball New York Yankees and th e So I'm not going to co mment on tl
UQIVCrstli es of Miclugan, Nchraska anymore ."
Players al so we1e reluctant to talk
antl Kentucky
about
how the team dea lt w11h
In the process of bcmg prodm:ctl
Johnson.
who was tile Jranch1 se's
arc COs on the Mmnesota Vikmgs .
last
lmk
to
its 1988 Super Bow l
Dallas Cowboys and New England
team.
Patriots and a vo lume 2 of the
" I plead the F1fth (Amendment),"
Yankees One nn Ohio Slate nlso Is
Jeff Blake said.
quartc1back
planned
Brown
was
out of town at an NFL
# " Wc'sJ USt g01 ng to co ntmu c to do
mee
ting
and
wasn't a'{_~ ilahlc for
as many as we c.m without affcctmg
comm
ent
on
Wednesd
ay.
the qualit y of the production ,': II ller
Johnson
got
Jn tJOuhJc WJ ih
sa'IJ o/ Ius .mJ Dichter's marn a~c of
m'u~m: ,mLI ~p1111 ~ m c munc~ - a Brown hy suggestmg after a 33-20
li ve

Fr.
So ..

..
Merle Heryford, veteran Dallas '...

By JOE KAY

10

-·

ful:

Wresder
Weicht
John Krawsczyn ........ ... ............, .... ........................ .... .. 11 2
Ben Mitchell ... .. .. ... .. .... .. . .. . ..
119
Ben Molden .. .. ... ....... ... ... .. .... .. .. .. ... .. ..
. I 25
Chns Krawsczy n .. .. ... ... .. .. ... ... .. .. .. .. .
130
Darnell Robmson ... ...................................................... I 35
Paul Michael .. ............................... .... .. ...... ........... .... 140
Brant Dixon.......................... ........................ ..... .... ....... 145
Chris Imboden .............. ...... ........ .. ...................... 145
Dave Shuler .
. .. .. . .. .. . .. . .. .. . . . . .. 152
N1ck McLaughlin . .. .. ... .. .. ... .. .
....... . .. .. 152
Shawn Workman ........................................................ 160
Zac h Davis ................................. . ...... ......... .. .. .. .... ... . 160
C. D Ellis ........' .. ....................... . .............. .. . ....... . 171
Jeff Brown .
.. ... .. .. ... ... .. . 189
Rees Wyant
. .... .. .. .. . .. ... .. . . .. I ~9
Franco Romuno ...
.. ............................. 230
Andy Doczi ...... ... ... .... .. ............................................... 230
Ben Haley . ...... ... .. .................. .............. .............. .'.. .... .275

Encouraged by fellow athletes,
mcluding gymnast Kun Thomas, to
take more control of her finances,
Moceanu dogged her father and
mother for answers about how her
earnings, secured tn a trust fund that
they alone have access to, were being
spent.
"I k11l myself tratnmg and gomg
to school, and what is he domg w1th
my money?" Moceanu told the
Houston Chronicle" at the ume .
"They haven't been workmg since
I996. Where does their mcome come
from? Me"
After months of stoncwalltng, the
young alhlere decided her only alter·
native was the counroom. W1th her
coach by her side, the gymnast
phoned an attorney from a shopping
mall pay phone. Wuhm days, she
flied suit against her parenls, asking
a judge for adult status so she could
legally begin asking for an accounting of how her trust fund was spent.
" It always had to be about the
gym," she said then about her rel ationship with her parents. "I would
think, 'Don 'I you guys know anything bes1des gymnastics'? Can ' t we
go out for tee crcarn'! Can't you be
my mom and dad in stead.of me being
your business'&gt;"'
She al so revealed how her every
move was momtorcd by her lather.
that she had yet to go unchaperoned
on a date. She al so revealed that her
fath er has h1t her "a couple of tunes"
and that she "never had " childhood."

Dum1tru and Camelia Moceanu
fueled her Olymptc dream starung at
age 3. They brought her to Houston
so she could be coached hy Bela
Karolyi.
AI 14, M1ss Moceanu was the
youngest American ever to wm an
Olympic gold medal in gymnastics
dunng the 1996 Summer Gomes m
Atlanla.
Wuh carnmgs generated by public
appearances and compelllion, her
parents built a 70,000 square-foot
gym JUSt north of Houston a few
years ago.

DALLAS (AP)
Merle
Heryford, a longtime baseball writer
for The Dallas Moming News, has
d1ed. He was 87
Heryford worked at The News for
29 years. He covered the Dallas-Fon
Wonh Spurs of the ,Texas League,
then lhe Texas Rangers from the time
they moved to Arlington forthe 1972
season until his retirement in 1976.
"He was a great guy to Jearn the
husmess from, " said Fort Worth
Star-Telegram columnist Randy
Galloway, who worked alongside
Heryford for five years. "He was old
school m that he never wenl snoop·
ing through the clubhouse lookmg
for din. Instead, he thought the game
and the play on lhe field told the
whole story."
·
Heryford d1ed Sunday after a year
of declining health. Services were
planned for Wednesday.
In retirement, Heryford remained
involved with the Rangers as an offi-

cial scorer. He was a regular press
hox visitor until his health began to
detenorate.

Heryford was born Nov. 27, I 9 I I
in Humboldt, Kan., and married
Margaret Dull on Dec. 6, 1941.
Dunng World War II, he served as
caplam m the U.S. Army.
Heryford. wh9se w1fe dred in.
1980, died on what would have been :
their 51th anniversary.
He is sumved by sons Steven Lee ,
and Richard Allen; daughters-rn-Iaw .•
Sherry and Laurie; seven grandchih ;
dren and lwo great-grandchildren.

loss to Bullal o on Sun&lt;.lny tlmt th t:

fronf office should consider doing
things d1fferenlly The Bengal s
haven't had a wrnning record since
Brown took control of the team
before the 1991 season.
Brown read his comments m the
newspapers the next mormng, and
Johnson was pulled out of a spec1al
teams meeting and told of his release
by the team's personnel d~rcctor.
Brown sa1d the relea~e had noth mg to do with Johnson's comments.
He smd the team wanted to see if
pract1ce squad punter Brad Costello
can be counted upon for next seaso n.
Brown conceaed that he was surpriscd by Johnson' s comments, but
seemed to absolve h1m dunng an
mtervicw on Monday. Brown sa1d
the punter probabl y was "ba1tcd"
tnto makmg th e comments and
shrugged them off as somctil tng sa1d
out of fru stration after a loss
" I know from first-hand ex penence that you start sayi ng thi ngs that
probably you ' d he better off not
(say ing)," Brown satd.
Johnson ~.:o ntend s he was released
because of the comm ents. He sauJ Jn
a telephone mtervicw Wednesday,
that the fmc IS more eyidcncc thot
he 's correct
" It 's funny You can look at 11
both ways," Johnso n smd. " If he
fired me hecause of tl1c thing s I sa1d ,
then you could say. 'O K. maybe I
shouldn ' t have smd 11. · Then ile
danns he didn 't file me ~ccausc ol
what I sa id . wluch makes hun loo k
lll OI C foo hsh ''
Johns on sa1d he probably Will l1le
a gncvoncc over ht s

trca un ~.:nt.

.•'.
'

•

Sports briefs

WASHINGTON (AP) - Former
Washington Redskm s coach Joe
Gibbs has Joined Sam Grossman's
b1d for the franch1se , agrecmg to tako;
an ownership stake and superviSory
position if Grossman acquires the
club, The Washington Posl reponed . .

GIFTS AT NAPA!

·'

19"' EDITION TOY TRUCK

NAPA HAULER
&amp; RACE TRUCK
1!426N

Bengals fine ex-player for comments
~bout management after l&lt;?ss to Buffalo
.
'

d1.tJU.:C

,.

, 1998-99 Meigs Marauders

f'!loceanu's father says he never hired PI

54

eLint h

You M oo ney lK Warren H .ud m~ ~~
;r...ulesvllh.! Rno;eanM ~~ eul Har1lcy 4Y

111 L 81 Gt'IH)!l \\a ~hiiiJI~&gt;n 1~
U111Wn 7•} nmrnn IJ hJ
Monmouth, N J 79, St 1-i .lllt l, NY~(,

20

1' 12 l

Wom,n'~

Warsaw R1vcr Vi ew 59 Morgan l8
W~lhnglon 40 Obtrhnl'1rekm ds 28
W1ndharn ~~~ Root&gt;tow n 57
Xema 61 Spnng Sou th lO

•
•
~ CAA Division I

9 14 2

92
77

Northwu.t Dt\islcJn
Dll 2 28

Los Angd es

h1l R.1gc1~

.,

"' "

Edmonton
Vancouver
Calgary

Ctn Mar1emon1 \4 C1n Wyonung JJ

I

84
9 8 6 24 60
9 " 1 lJ 64

Co lorado

Phocntll
Dallas

Claymont 87, Cad1z 44
Clevelnn d Ht s Luthr mn East Z1, Maplewood 7 1
' Col Df.Sales 54 Newark Cath 51
Croo kS\ 1lle S4 W Mu ~ kmgu rn 15
Day Cnlo nl'l Whne ~ I Dny Relmont 14
D.1y Dunhar 66, Day Meadowdale 46
Ddnw;m,. 'i l Wluteh ~ II - Yerrllll (l \5
Dover 6 1 Cambndr;c 44
D1esden Tn V.11ley ~2. John Glenn J8
E Clc•el nn d Sh~w 6 1, Parma 44
Elyn a ~0 Clevdnnd Hts 46
El yn a C~ th W Parma PaJ ua &lt;0
F.l yria M11h1ew 'i' I ormn Or noks1de II
Euclu.160 L 1kewood 18 •
r.urmont 'il Spnn i! Nor1h 42
G.1rfu: ld Hu 75 fl t'dford 61
G 1rrcmv tllc -1 2 Streetsboro l7
C1erH!1n 6'i Ashtabul .1'i I
Grccmllk ~0 Vanrlalln 1\ utkr 40
H t~&lt;hon 7.J. Bt unsl\h:k n
l nd 1 ;~n V,1l .U, Coshoc ton 4'i
Jdfcr~o u ~7 Cn nneaut ~I
KciiL'I IHg l".m iHont 52, S pnn~ North -1 1
Lt1rn1n Clcar\IC W 75. Lora1n Kc)'Ston&lt;.' 'i.j
Mndu.un ~ I S1dney 18
M~ m tu a Crt&lt;&gt;t,., uod 74 Ra ven nn SouthL':llt 41
Mnplc Hts fiO Pnrma Norma11tl y ~2
Mnyflc ld 70 Wnrrcnsv tll e Ht s .JR
r-1e.u.lowh10ok 58, New Plul.tdelphiJ -1'
Mcchn&lt;t 6'i Lod• Cloverleaf 'i7
Mog,\dore Ft eld ~I . Atwnter Wmerlno 47
N Ol msll:d 54 Amhcr!il 52
,New I e~mg l o~l "i6. Sht'rldolll 'i 2
Nonh mont 44 P1q ua 42
Ohcil1n 'l2 Avon 20
0)m $lcd ra lls 49 We~t l a kc 24
P .unC ~ \ille H n ne~" Ashtabu l.l Hruhnr ~l
l'.lmcs\lllc R1 ve r ~ tdt: Sl K i! nMon 44
P~ rma Holy Name Sl Clt&gt;vd nnd Cen l tath -14
l'c nm ~ul a Woodndgc :'\9 Mn~.1dnr1' -11
Philo ~0 Mavsv1llc l l
l'ol;~nd 49, sPnng fidd Local 40
Pommuut h Clay ~ 1 New Bus1m1 ~I
Pym.1t un mg Val 74 As ht abu la Edgewood 4'i
Ra,l':nswood W Va 45 K!ILIIIC Soulhell14 ~
Solem 6 1 Canton Cent Cmh 5J
Salem Nullh'-' es t46 LoutHllle 11
Sh1k er I its ~U Menlor-19
Spnn~ f1 e ld ~4 W~st Rmnch 4!1 (0 n
St ChnTS\ tile 66 Steubc0111J1c C:u h C'c 111 66 l.!
S yn Hlk:: ~ Vnl -l :!, Co~ I Grove .IJ
lui C~ nt 0 1th XII Tol Slart 19

Ponl.mJ 70 Ph!ladelph1a 6fl

It's A
Winter
Wonderland

.ll: L I fiL Gl: !iA

Detrou
S1 L ou• ~
Ch1cagt1
Nashvtlle

Carrol hun 4 Mtnc~o 47
Cer11erv1!h: 51 , Fauborn 36
Cm Roger Bacon 57 Kenenng Aller 51

&lt;

Wednesday's score
):

Iwn

'
,\ kron Spnng fteld

lj!l

800

m

Cenlral Division

By BERNIE WILSON

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Meigs wrestlers
to start season
at home Saturday

t;lvil trial of Olympic gymnast vs. her parents continues

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

2

6
7
9

-·-

Nc~ada

Sue Robinso n's rendition of "Turn was founded by two 30-year-olds - ,
the Beat Around," you hear a rad 1o Kenny D1chter and Jesse ll zler, who .
sportscaster screaming ·'The longest also signs and raps as Jesse Jayl)leS. ·
run m the hiStory of M•ch1g an foo tThe company has provided mus1c .
ball" as he dcscnbt s Butch v1deos of teams' theme soQgs that are
Woo lfolk 's 92-yard run agajnst shown m at least 25 arenas on both, ·
WJSconsm on Nov 3. 1979
the coll ege and pro leve ls.
That's how 11 gocs - dcscnpuon s
" We got the idea (for the team
ol M1ch1gan spans h1ghh ghts alter- CDs) from fans response to the m ~ •
nate wnh songs. A segment called songs." sa1d Itzlcr. the exec utive pro- ,
" Glenn Rt&lt;e 3-point Exf!losiun duccr, who wrote and also perfonns :.
(1989) IS sandwiched be1wcen the some of · the songs on the yanous ·
Pomtcr Sisters smgmg. " I'm So COs " We we nt first to the Kn1cks..
he ned " and Bu ster Poi ndexter We put radw play-by-plays calls it&gt;
doing " Hot Hot Hot "
'
between songs to reach sports fans as
Alphabet Ctty Rec ords, a sub- well as mu stc fan s "
sidiary of Marquee-Alphabet Cny,
(See CDs on Page 5)

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Light-heavyweight champion
Archie Moore d·ies at 84

Thursday, December 10, 1~

offense was stuck in first gear, topranked Connecticut found a way to
Top 25
win.
Massachuseus lorced the Huskies
into a half-coun game and held them
By The Associated Press
30 points under their average, but
Even though its high-speed UConn still came away With a 59-54

'
I
I

Thursday, December10,1998

NAPA 14-PC.
SCREWDRIVER SET
W/FREE UTILITY
KNIFE

.,__,

1899 5217

~~

••••• --;z

"AlLCVT"
CUTTING TOOl

19' PLASTIC

TOOLBOX

11\15215

(YolooJIP19100T
(G"'i IPII\110

NAPA HEDIVM·DliTY
PRESSURE WASHER
(1,200p~

16gpm)U1-611

lllfD IM/1181·614

Olfvtt good lhrough December J I, 1998, "'whole supplieslosl, o1lhis porticopollng NAPA AUTO PARTS Sio&lt;e.

157 Walnut St.

''Middleport

992-2131

�,
~·

I.

1

1
Page 6 • The Daily SenUnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Avalanche beat Rangers 2-1;
I Panthers, Coyotes also win

Thursday, December 10, 1998

NHL roundup
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
How important is Peter Forsberg
to the Colorado Avalanche' Only
thjs: Whenever he scores, they never
lo&lt;e - or at least they haven' t for 30
~ a mes .

Forsberg did it again for the
Avalanche on Wednesday night ,
&gt;t-nring the tie-breaking goal to lead
Colorado to a 2-1 victory over the.
New York Rangers at Madison
Square Garden.
Thll gave the Avalanche a 23-0-7
record in 30 games the past two seasons whenever Forsberg scores a

goal .
"For&gt; berg carried the puck all
n1ght .'" Rangers forward Todd Vancouver 4 .
·
Harvey &gt;aJd. ·• Hcs a great passer.
Panthers 6, Senators S
and he 's so hard to knock off the
Ray Whitney scored Florida's
rock ."'
• ~
. fifth power-play goal of the game
Forsberg, Who also scored the with 5:29 left to lead the Panthers
g&lt;.lmc-w_tnncr for Colorado in over visiting OttaWa.
Tuc.;day night's 2-1 victory ovq the
The Panthers took a 4-0 lead in
Ne" York Islanders, has been one of the first period and led 5-3 entering
tl 1c kC) players as the Avalanche the third period. But Senators rookie
h,1\ ~ turned their season around. Marian Hossa scored his first NHL
Thry have won five straight and are goal and 1hen a.~sisted on a break1.'· 7- 1. since an 0-4-1 start. They arc away goal by Radek Bonk, tying it at·
ti ed for first in the Northwest 5 with 8: 17 lcfl.
D1 \ 1sion.
•·
Whitney also had "two assists as
\'v'ith his ninth gnal of ttie season. Florida beat the Senators for the first

Cub_
s, Santiago ·ink
$2M .contract; ·Devil
Rays get Canseco

•

•

:I

By PAUUNE AARILUGA
AIICI cl8tacl Preq Wrlt8r

fur

the

Blackhawks.

By ELIZABETH NEUS '

Edmonton's season-longest w1nless
stfcak was stretched to four ~ames

(0-3-1). •
.
Coyotes 4, Canadiens 2.
At Phoenix , Jeremy Rocnick and
Keith Tkachuk each had a goal and

Gannett Newt Service
WASHINGTON - The American Academy of Pediatrics for the ·
r'~rsttime made a firm recommendation Wednesday in favor of using
injectable polio vaccine for·a baby'•
fir.~t two shot&lt; rather than the traditional oral version.
• Since 1997. the organization has
l;)fgely left it up to parenl&lt; and doctors to decide the be51 combination of
oral and injectable vaccine in ordtr 10
avoid the slight risk of polio caused
by the weak live virus in the oral vaccine. Injectable vaccine: io based on
the dead virus.
"111!: number of neported cases of
vaccine-associated paralytic polio in
tbe United States has fallen to about

Florida goalie Sean Burke night's NHL contest in Orlando, Fla., ·where ~
Panthers tallied a 6-5 victory despite Ho1sa get·
Hossa .from gt!tting through during Wednesday ting a goal later in the game. (AP)
his lifSI victory in more than a month games. the Kings led in the first peri·· Ducks.
as Los Angeles defeated visiting od and managed to hang on after los' •
Hedican 's score. which came on a
Washington to snap a five -game los: ing II of their previous 12 games: 2-on-1 break wiih center. Mark
ing streak ..
The slump dropped them mlo last Messier, completed the ()nucks'·
Fiset, playing his 300th NHL plooce in the Western Conference.
rally from a 4-2 deficit in the second
career game. missed 16 games last
Mighty Ducks 4, Canucks 4
period.
.
month with separate groin injuries.
At Anaheim, defcnscman Bret
Vancouver 's comeback spoiled
He hadn 't won since Oct. H when Hedican 's short-handed goal with the first career multiple-goal game
the Kings beat New Jersey 4-0.
10:53 left in the third period lifted for Anaheim rookie center lohan
For just the second time in II Vancouver into a tie with the Mighty Davidsson, who scored twice .
''
GETTING DOWN -

an assist and Mike Sullivan scored a gets down to prevent the shot by Ottawa's Marian

short-handed goal in the second peri·
od as the Coyotes beat Montreal.
Rick Tocchet also scored for the
Coyote.s • .whose !&lt;tiring of 14 games
wilho'ut a loss ended in Edmun t o~ on

Dec. 2. Phoenix is 14-1·3 in its last
1.8 games.
·
.
Montreal lost for the lOth timl! in
13 games.
Kings 2, Capitals I·
Stephanc Fiset made 32 saves for

kxJay th'at the Orioles· nrc 11 ffc ring a
. Pa,ckag~ of at l e a~t thri.!.C players- a

homers from its mOst productive

right-handed -batters Bubba
l:cft-ha11dcd reliever, hclievcd to he Trammell (12), Bobby Smith ( II )
n nhur Rhodes. along with second and Mike Kelly ( 10).
ooscman Jerry Ha~rston and th ird

By RACHEL LA CORTE
.
The hope is to get him to breathe
· HOLLYWOOD. Fla. rAP) - Joe on hi s own, but with the increased
DiMagg io's t ~mp~.:nn urc w~.:nl up congestion DiMagg io will not be
oycrn igh t ·anJ hi !'! lung congCstion taken otf the respirator anytime S&lt;IOn,

ll ared slightl y, hi, dnctor su1d todaY,
" h 's nut nl!n:..,..,ari ly for the worst,

4 CYL, AIR COIIt,

AIR COIIITIOI, CRIIIE, POWER,
IPOILIR, LDAtll

4 CYL, STEREO

STEREO ··

'·

9Q
"EftttSPORTRAMOER
SPORT
Plll, lURED,

0

APR FOR'
48MONTHS*

ON ALL 1999 . Jh .
ESCORTS • CONTOURS • WINDSt, RS

OWL TIRU

$10,950°0

011 &lt;1 rt.:.., plr:l!CJr at M t:-lllllrlal Rcgi llll'.tl
I f, ,..,pit.d . ;r wing ol wh1~h j.., 11-illH.: d
lor thc lornwr ..,fugg..:r.
ILunm \: ud DiMt~g t! rn \ fJI IJ).' IU l
.., ,.., ,.., gu;udcd &lt;lfld d:1 y to d ay ami hi..,
U HHiill on 1\ ... tahlc Th e.: pl1y.., rc1 an
..,:t ld h ~,; \._.;,nt&lt;...•d tn ..: larll y wha t he
l.,dlcd tllhlllh1Hl ldlll•n hc1 n ~· l !.:fl t•rli.: d

:dJ!iiJt I)J ,\l. J ~L' J o · ..,,_ tJ IHIIIHII\
I 111 n 11 1 ·~ ··11111 ~· ru tell yll u lie·.., 11111

"e:Wt999 ESCORT ZX 2
NOT PKI, AIR, AUTOMATIC,
AMifM CAll, LOADU ·

$12,950°0

1"1 11 no~ ~ ~·ll l!! lrt
.~ n y 111 111 11\L: t lrlll ~" ht.:L au . . c he

north of Mi:11111 on Oct. 12.
Sinu.' hi.., "tup.:ry. hL' has ..,u1Tt.TL'0

!!1•111)..' 1t1 \ lll \ 1\t.:

I"L'L" Urlln !! pncunwnia in hi s k:J"t lun!! .

... ay

lh: . . rdc . . rrc ;llm.:nt with three antihrtl lit.: \, lv.; ;,rl\11 lws hatl lluid draim:J
f"rnnr hi . . l u n ~.., \t:VCr:rlrimc:-. .

1,; 1n

.,t 1ll

turn

,I!I•UIII I itlld

hc:n Jidull y. ·· lu_: ..,; ud .

"lli V I n
' ;

four in the l.w two yem, down from
a previous average of 8 to 10 a year:
c~ of vaccine-lt'lated polio are the
only ca~ of the disease in the Weotem Hemisphere, where polio has
been eradicated.
Not all doctonl and parents opted
for safer combinations of oral and
injectable vaccine. even after feder·
al health ofrocials recommended more
use or' the injectable in 1997.
The recommendations made that
year by the AAP. the Center.~' for Disease Control and Prevention, and the
American Academy o(Fainily Physicians focused on different angles of
the issue. ""and confusion did arise,"
said Dr. GeorgesPeter. a member of
the AAP committee that makes
immunization recommendations.

About40 percent of infan.. still go
the all-oral vaccination route, said
John Salamone. who began campaigning for increa&lt;ed U!l&lt;" of
injectable vaccine after his 8-year-old
son, David, contracted polio from a
vaccine a."' an infant.
The up-to-you guideline "created
a lot of confusion before." l1e said.
"You really didn't f!ave a&lt; high a
national compliance (with the recommendations) a~ hoped. "
Survey• ohow, however, that the
majority of physicians now routinely immuniu children with either a
combination of oral aod injectable
vaccine or just with the injectable
vaccine, the AAP said.
"I think some pediatricians chose
to give IPV from the beginning, in

numbers higher than I" d thought,''
said Peter. "But pediatricians do rely
on their own organizalion far recommendatiomt ••

The AAP now falls in line with a
new recommendation made quietly
la.t October by the CDC, which now
also recommend~ the injectable Salk
vaccine (IPV) for the first two of four
immunizations given 10 an infant, at
2 and 4. months. The other vaccinations are received betwee.n 6 and 18
months anti 4 to 6 years.
A previous CQC guide line had
favored two injectable vaccines fol lowed by two oral vaccines, but also
left parents and doctors the option of
using all oral or all injectable. Now
the CDC strongly ' recommends
against using all oral vaccine except
in certain ci rcumstances. The AAP's
move and the new CDC recommendations - to be published in January
- are the first steps toward the even•
tual discontinuation of the hi storic

children by mouth ~ine&lt; its creation
in 1.960.
The oral vaccine prevents people
from JYd.&lt;Sing on the yirus even ifttley
are not sick themselves and was key
in slowing. and in 'oOme places shipping, the &lt;pread of the disease worldwide. The injectable Salk vaccine,
developed in 1955. doesn' t providt
that additional protection.
"Assuming continuing progress
towards global -eradication, a recomonendation of IPV-only immunization
for children."in the United States . is
anticipated by 200 I," the pediatrics
group said in a statement. World
health officials expect to have polio
eradicated by 2000.
Fears that the additional. injections
would lead parents to avoid immunization for their children have not
borne out. Two- and 4-month infants
already get three shots at those ages
agai nst hepatitis B. diphtheria·
tetanus-pertussis and Haemophilus
lnOuenzae IY(l&lt; b, a farm of• menin-

98 FORD WINOITAR, FULL POWER, REAR AIR, ..............·•'18,988" IMia:f",.,~,

TAURUS WAGON
AUTO, ALL POWER EOUIP, JU
SEAT, 6 CYL, 4 VALVE .

$17,950°

0

w

.

tlE t999 TAURUS LX
. . AUTO, Ill R, V6, LUKO

91 MERCURY SA8U WAGON, SID SEAT, TEUPHOME '"" 115,988" .
98 RANIER SUPERCA~ 4 DR, AUTO, KLT, LOADED ........... 117,988"
98 VILLAGER, QUAD IEIIU, FULL POWER, LOAm ............ 118,988"
98 CHEVY COMVERIIOM VAN, •u1o, F.lll rowu. OMll "" •tllt ••• . 118,988"
97 FORO F2SO IUPERCA8, t!ESU, XLT, .AUTO ................. JOADEO
97 MUITANO IT, AUTO, EVERY OPTION, 15,000 II ILEI, ...... '17 1 988"
97 FORO F2SO, 4K4, OIUiL, LOW 111111 ........................ 122,988"
97 LINCOLN TOWN CAR, LOADED, ........·...................... 124,988"
•
,97 FORO CONTOUR, AUTO, LOADED ............................... 110,988"
96' LINCOLN TOWN CAR, L.EATHER ANt LOADU, ............. 119,988"
9S FORD THUNDERBIRD, VI, AUTO, FULL POWIR ............ 110,988"
9S CHEVV SUPERCAB, 4X4, DRW, SILVERAIO, LOAIED ..... 119,988"
9S PONTIAC ORAND AM, AUTO, AIR ...............................18,988"
9S FORD CONTOUR, AUTO, AIR, LOADED .......................... 18,988"
94 OQDOE DAKOTA SLT, IIUT0~ ........................ ;............. '7,488"

.

94 PL~MOUTH LAZER, ............................................... .•6.988°'

AIR COMtiTIU, SPORT PliO,
SPOILER, STEREO, IILIM
· WHEELS

visit.

$12,950°0

tlEW
1998 MUSTANG GT
Vt, AC, All POWER
EQUIPMENT

Thursday, December 24th
.;

'

..

"'rap-tip·

•

Register.To Win
Beanie Babies
Halo &amp; '98 Holiday
Teddy
drawing Sunday
Dec. 20th

•

After Shave_,

30o/tJ Off

. LEATHER, EVERY OPTIOJI

$J2 ,950°. 0

. 1998 EXPLORER XLT
CD PLAYER, 4 DR, TRAILER
TOW, ALL POWER-, LOAOU
I

$25 950°

0

1999 ESCORT

'0.9 FINANCE ON

MONDAY•FRIDAY 9°0 AM." 7°0 ·PM
SAtURDAY
9°0 AM· 5°0 PM
SUNDAY
CLOSED

177 EXIT 132
RIPLEY, WV
(304) 372·3673
(·800) 964~3673

..

our machine
Buy 4 ounces,
get z·ounces
FREE

Prince Matchabelll

'Buy r Christmas

Cologne Sprays

Card .&amp; 'Receive a

. 75 oz.

4. C1l, 4 OR, STEREO

$9,950°0

•

Men's Colognes, Huts-Fresh from
Gift Sets

"i~98 EXPEDITION EDDIE BAUER

%ippo
&amp;ighlettl
50%0H

·Reg. $5.00
Only $3.39

Christmas
Wrapping
Paper '

e""',e""a-,
ea-,_'-,

112 Price

f /2 ~t-te.e

Christmas
Ornaments
&amp; Ughts

Designer Imposter
'
Body Sprays for Her
.5 oz.

1/2 Pric
Russell Stover Looney
Thnes Christmas
Ornament wilh 2 oz.
chocolate balls

89¢ rRusse/1 Stover
'Box of candy jor17 ¢

Reg. $2.49
Only $1.73

,,. ~o-tell-

.

Reg.99¢
Only 49¢
Earrin11

Complete
Stook

Price

Amity BillfoldsMen's &amp; Women's
·1/2 Price

Sale .Prices Good 'Through
Decem her 1Sth

··,•

•

CtiQioTMAo .GQEETINC EDITION

CONTOUR LX

II ' ,J

giti5.
.
A CDC st udy of children in two.,
large West Coast HMOs publishe.t ,
la&lt;l week found that adding injectable
vaccines to the vaccine schedule did "
nbt' cause immunization levels to ~·
drop. The report also said that:
injectable vaccines had increruoed ·
from 6 percent of all polio vaecinej:'
in 1996 to 29 pen:ent in 1997.Ex pert~ '
ex~t the di~~ease to be rradicate!l.'.
woildwide by 2000, and the oral vac·
cine wil! play a role until then. After '
that, they expect .to be able to recommend injectable vaccine for area•
of the world where eradication h~
been proved and to end vaccin~ti011
altogether when they' re sure the di~• gone.
ea11e 1s
_
There are exceptions to the AAI'"
recommendations:
• Oral vaccine is acceptable if till:
parents balk at the number of shots ll
chi ld might receive in one doctor's

98 MERCURY SAllE LS, IVERY OPTIOI, MOON ROOF, LI~UR 1 18,988"

DiMaggio, who had lu'ng cancer

IU\t

mal cover for the fourth pin got loose'
and floated away; he Joo.t two tool•
tiom.
during Monday'• spacewalk. " I cion"J:j
In a ten.. and meticulously believr this,'' he groaned.
:~
planned operation. Newman also
"It was the second time tbos w«!1
pried open a J&lt;tuck antenna on~·· that R~&gt;~• and Newman floated 0111
After ""ver.al poke• wiJh a 10-foot work on the 35-ton station UkinJ'~
pole. the 4-footstrip antenna ..hot out. shape in the shuule's cargo IY•y.''
"There it goe•! II'• gone!" Ross During a 7 112-hour opacewalk on
shoo ted.
Monday, they connected eltttricat .
"You got it dtpluyed. All right," aod data cables to Unity. enabling if;
Mi.sion Control r.tdioed up.
to be powered up.
. Other •pacewalking chorrs comOne more opacewalk i• planned • .
pkted by RO'I&lt; and Newman incltld- for Endeavour's 12-day mi&lt;~i on. On; .
ed erecting a sun•hade over a com- Saturday. R&lt;&gt;&lt;• and Newman wi(l
puter mounted to the outside of Uni - conduct a photo survey and take out .
ty and covering three of four pro- a &lt;aek of tool&lt; that will be used by,
truding pins on the chamber with future staaion visiron. Newman alt;O ;
thermal blankets.
may try to unjam the other Zarya·'
Unfortunately for RO!Is, the ther- antenna.

99 FORO F2SO LARIAT,IUPERCIII, m, LOIIDID.................'J1,988"

Barron said.
. Jno nia in hi s good lung and an
intestinal infection. When his fever
shot up over the ':"'JCCkcnd, doclOrs
summoned relatives and fri e nds of
the form er New York Yankccs"'ccntcr
tic ldcr.
His condi tion was so grim that
doctors even discussed sig nin g a "do
not rcsusd tatc" form.
His improvcinc;nl h\:gan a'tcr doctors inserted .,, tube into D.iMaggin's
tra~ hca on Mon&lt;.h1y h1 ..,ur.:11on. the
l n lct:lcd area .
Barron ~a id it 's impo:-.sihlc to pre ·
d rct how lnng DiMagg io Will remain
111 the hospi tal where he hus hccn
kept :-rt.:datcll ~o he c.:;m rest anll hopclull y hc;ll .
IJ1M:rg gi11 ~.: nt cn.'d Ihe hospital

have to rely on the 'J'Of'ddlc coverage
provided by Ru.-ian groood ..u-

Contractor, CSP not responsible
in '.95 death of dump truc.k driver

hut it clearly would he hctter if he surge ry on Oct. 14, is nghting pn&lt;·u. didn ' t ha ve thi ~ ... :-. aid Dr. Earl
Barro n, who 1., trca tm ~· the Hall of
·Farner.
"H i" blood rn:...... urc i:-..good. his
heart &lt;.,cc m" ..,o l 1d and hi:-. killncy
func.:tion i ~ cxc~..·Jic111,'· tlc..,rih.: the
low -g rade ft:vcr and 111\.: n•.: a ~c d l ung
inf'cl.:tiiHl . he ..,a ill .
· DiMaJ:!t'io. w ho hattlt:d hack l"rom
a I fl 2 1h.:grcc f~o:v~.; r ;'md I(IW wh itL:
hlofld -Lc ll count tlw. . wcckcmJ, 1.., ..,t ill

permanent station crew. &lt;eheduled to
arrive in January 2000.
The :work will continue through
Friday. when the astronaut&lt; will exit
the &lt;pace llation and clo&lt;e the harche• to get ready for Tuelday"• retum
lv awesome."'
·
10 Earth.
Once insidt, there's plenty of
On Wednellday. in preparation for
work to be done.
.
their journey insidt the sl3tion, Ros•
Cabana and astronaut Jerry Roos and astronaut James Newman venwill wire up a communications sys- tured out on a seven-hour spacewalk
tem inside Unity. The odters will con- and attached two 100-pound antennas
tinue on into the Russian-built Zary~ to the outside or Unitr.
control module, where cosmonaut
The antennas are part of the comSergei Krikalev will replace a charg- munications system to be ·wired up
ing component on a faulty battery.
today. Once activaled.the syst.em will
Other duti&lt;J include tramferring providt a direct, virtually unintertools from the shuttle to the space lila· rupted communication link between
tion for later use. The a"ronauts will Unity and Mission Control. Othereven leave behind cl\)lltel for the first wise, U.S. flight controllers would

The following land transfers were
Deed, Floyd M. and Denise D. Kenneth E. and Carol L. Tolliver,
.
reconded recently in the office of Reitmire to Floyd M. and Denise D. Chester;
Sabin vaccine, given to milliuns .of
Deed.
Lois
J.
Payne
to
Kennetll
H.
I
•
Meigs County Reconder Emmogene Reitmire, Syracuse;
Payne,
Salisbury;
Hamilton;
Deed, Debm L. Thoma.•. Debra L.
Deed. Harry S. Yarbrough to VirRight of way, Eric and Jacque · Jenkins to Debra L. and George M.
gil Eugene and Sharon Lou JacRs,
Rock to Leading Creek Conservancy Jenkins; Salisbury; .
.
District Columbia·
· .
Deed, Htlda Dav1s to Jack1e Todd Pomeroy ;
Deed, Lee and Adda Martin to
.Righ't of way, Ja"mes R. and Tracy ·- and Peggy Sue Cummins, Letan
Orville
Lee Martin Jr., Chester;
L. Fletcher to LCCD, Columbia;
parcels;
Deed.
Leah R, Rose to Harold E.
Right of way. Todd W. Hysell to
. Deed,' Ruth L., Ruth E., Ruth
. LCCD, Salisbury;
GJihlan to Joseph D. and Laura E. Rose, Letart;
Deed, Leah R. Ro~e to Harold E.
Right . of way, Jame s and Teresa Casena. Bedford;
. .
Rose,
Letan;
Crisp to LCCD, Rutl and;
Deed. Roy L. and Patncta Holter
Ea.•ement,
Orland L. and F. Diana
Right of way, David and Cheryl to Alan and Edward Holter, Chesler
Staats
to
Columbus
Southern Power, ··
Fisher to LCCD, Rutland;
parcels;
T
Deed, Carmen L. Bilikam rust to Lebanon;
Ea~~Cment, Larry R. and Lois J.
· Deed, William Hametty to Rebec- Gayle L. Estes, Olive and Orange
Dragoo to CSP, Lebanon;
· parcels;
ca W&lt;JOO, Scipio parcejs;
•
Deed, Linda H. and Donald J.
Deed, · Michael . and Rhonda
Deed, Martha A. Lee, Ethel L. Orr.
Sanders to Michael and Rhonda
Marilyn and Edward Newman, Janet H~ndrickson to Leroy and Judy Hen Sander.!, Olive parcels;
Grueser, Janet and George Mara to drix, Olive.
Deed, Roben W., Golda M. and
Goldie M. Reed to Guy Sargent. Bedford;
Deed, Virgil R. Lee to Maxine
Lee. Salisbury;
Deed, Charles L. and Anna S.
Defendant• in a lawsuit stemming from the April 2 1, 1995, death of a dump
Pickett to Robert E. and Donna Y. truck driver working on State Routr 7 near Pomeroy received summary judgJacks, Bedford parcel;
ment Tuesday in the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas.
Deed, Larry James Marshall ,
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill ruled thtll Kokosing Construction Company Inc . .
deceased, to Jason Lee Runyon, and Columbus Southern Power were not responsible in the death of Rodney
Olive;
·
·
Allen Marshall of Belpre. ·
,
.· ·
. Deed, Ralph A. Topping to Taylor
Marshall was electrocuted during construction on the portion of SR 7 from
Florence Topping, Pomeroy lots;
Rock Springs to Five Points when he raised the bed of his dump truck into
Deed. Henry Jr. and Kathleen ·a 7,200-volt electric line. Kokosing was the contractor on the project.
Cleland to Robert T. and Carol Y.
The suit against the companies wa.&lt; filed by Marshall's widow, Mary MarSouthern, Middleport parcels;
. shall.

tlEW1998 MUSTANO LX'

tlEW 1999 RANGER XL

ESCORT LX 4 DR

...

DiMaggio still needs respirator,
remains !n stable condition

but it'• aloo e111emely rewarding,"
•huule comlllliiKier Roben Cabana
oaid tOday. "When you gel to look
out the window and oee Zarya and
Unity joined together. and k"""'ing
that you gel to go inside ... it '• pret-

Meigs recorder posts land transfers

~

:r. "

Using flashlights to guide them.
they were to float one by one into the
lint piece or the 0111p011. the American-made Unity module. The 36-foot
cylindrical chamber will be pit&amp;h
black. so the astronauts' fint ofrocial
act is to flip on the lights.
"It'll be kind of this momenlo!JI,
'Zi ng! The lights come on,'" Castle
laid.
The utronauts will •hare the
moment with the wodd: They will
have a camera that ohould provide
everyone back on Earth with the first .
look inside the space !llalion since it's
. ~in orbit.
"This is our goal - building a
space stasion and setting the pace for
the future. It"• e~tremely challenging.

Pediatricians·make recommendation -on injectable polio shots

heal visiting Edmonton .
Tire victory was the fourth in five

games

.....'

'

11ory Jpace swion.

SPACE CENTER. Houston
With most or their outside w.n .._,
Endeavour '• astronauts prepared to
go iMide the international liJ!3Ce station for the first time today to tum on
the lighl&lt; and prepare the outpoO;t for
future assembly crew•. .
"I think this is a very •ignifocant
and almost momentous event."
NASA's lead night director, Bob Cut~. md of the first in-orbit 50joum
into the belly or the fledgling outpost
2SO miles above Earth.
Jug before 2 p.m. EST. the crew
of five American astronauts and one
Russian were to begin opening a
series of hatches that connect d!uule
Endeavour with the two-pan, seven·

time in eight games (1-5-2).
Sla"' 3, Sharks 3
Darryl Sydor had a goal ana two
assists to help Dallas rally from a
two-goal, first-period dtficit for a tie
with San Jose.
Tony Hrkac 's power-play goal
late in the secood period capped the
Stars" comeback, drawing them even
at 3. Sydor and Jere Lehtinen also
scored with the man advantage for
the Stars, 4-1 -1 in their last six
games and 9-2-2 at home this season.
Goals from Patrick Marleau,
Owen Nolan and Mike Ricci put ·san .
Jose ahead 3-1 in the first period.
Blackhawks 3, Oilers I
Eric Daze scored twu goals and
Jocelyn Thibault . made 24 saves,
allowing just a fluke score that
dtflected off a teammate as Chicago

By RONALD BLUM
AP Sports Writer
The Roger Clemens chase will go
iJ1to the weekend. Jose Canseco and
Benito Santiago didn't wail that long
~ l eave the Toronto Blue Jays.
.• ; Santiago agreed Wednesday to a
S2 million, one-year contract with
~ Chicago Cubs, while Canseco
·atreed to sign with the Tampa Bay
Devil Rays.
·;. While they were .free agents,
·Thronto general manager Gord Ash
\ept up Clemens trade talks and said
enc team has made an acceptable
~Her ~ altho ugh the Blue Jays
baven't accepted it.
th e offer, Ash
.,.&lt; By mentioning
'.

baseman Ryan Minor.
Ash said the team that made an
acceptable proposal didn't contact
him Wednesday and that he talked
with only two clubs.
One of those was Texas. Rangers
general manager Doug Melvin, who
traveled to Toronto and talked with
Ash for 90 minutes on Tuesday, mel
with him· again in the morning.
" I even paid for breakfast," Ash
said.
Money is an aspect of the
Clemens· negotiations, too. He has
salaries of $5 million next year and
$6.35 million in 2000, and Toronto
owes $5 million in deferred money
from the first two seasons of the deal ,
·•~creased press ure on other teams to which currently guarantees a tnini-raise their offers for the .five-time Cy mum of ·$31.5 million over four
~oung Award winner.
.
years.
·- "I have an offer from a club that
Clemens, who lives in Houston, is
from a player point of view satisfies convinced Toronto won 't contend
~ur needs," Ash said. ''What I've and asked to be traded closer to
~~ggested to that club is that they get home or to . a contender. When he
1!1Jidance from Roger's representa- signed with the Blue Jays after the
tives on how they should proceed 1996 season, Toronto agreed to comfrom there ."
ply if he ever asked for a trade.
: It was believed that the offer didSantiago, 33, is a 12-year veteran
p ' t come from one of the top three who played in only 15 games last
;ontendcrs - . the New York season for the Toronto Blue Jay s folYankees. Texas and Houston - and lowing an auto accident last January
ti)at Ash was dealing with a team he in which he strained ligaments in his
.Was n't sure Clemens wo uld accep,t.
right knee. He rejoined the team in
" I guess what I'm direl:t ing that September, batting .3 10 with five
cluh to do 1s make sure ttiey quah- d'oubles and four RBis in 29 at-bats.
fy." Ash saJ&lt;) "They had a. lot of
" Hc"s 100 percent. The Cubs did
·questions for me th at I cou ldn' t th eir homework to make sure of
l.tllS\VC f. ''
that ," said Santiago's agent, Lonnie
Th~ m ost ltkely (Jndidate to fit Coo per. "This is where he wanted to
that de ~ niptiu n is Clevela nd. play. Hes very comfortable with the
although it's possible that it cou ld be manager and the general man age r."
Baltimore or a Nationa l League
Santia go gets a $ 1.5 million
te am, possi bly the New York Mcts or sa lary and the chance to earn
mavhc cv~r\ Colorado or At lanta.
$500.000 i• performance bonuses.
. ' "The calls today have hccn a little Chicago's option is. for $3.5 million
less frl'qucnt. I don ' t ·have a reason with a $500,000 buyout.
fer that ." Ash sa id . " I wou ld sav
Canseco hit .237 with I07 RBi s
ftom the lack of convcrsntitm. th1 s i~.., and 29 •tolen bases for Toronto, hi s
~.ing to drag in to the weekend. ·ror best total s since 1991. Six of
~rc.
·
Canseco 's homers came against
" The (Baltimo re) Su n reported Tampa Bay, which got a total of, 33 ·

•

~·'

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7 .: •

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Shuttle astronauts ready to enter space station ·-

I

1

and . team-leading 33rd point,
Forsberg capped a two-goal rally
within a span of 98 secoods for the
Avalanche.
Colorado trailed New York 1-0
since early in the first period when
Joe Sakic scored the tying goal at
II :56 of the third. Forsberg then
scored the game-winner at 13:34.
"I thought we played very well
(from the start)," Colorado coach
Bob Hartley said. " Luckily, we were
able to generate some chances in the
third period."
Mathieu Schneider gave the
Rangers a 1-0 lead at I :29 of the second period.
In other NHL games, it was
Florida 6, Ottawa 5; Dallas 3. San
Jose 3; Chicago 3, Edmonton I ;
Phoenix 4, Montreal 2; Los Angeles
2. Washington I; ·and Anaheim 4,

I.

Thursday, December 10, 1998

With wreaths of holl,. ..-nd misletoe, sto«:ldngs
hung ·L ,. the fire and scenes Llanketed with
snow, C~ristrnas en-=ornpasses warrnth and
good «:heer as we cherish the Llessing!!i we'~e
shared this past ,.ear. For us it rneans !liB'fing
"thank!!i" to 'fOU, our rnan,. friends, old and new,
whose kirid support
. we'll alwa'fs treasure.
.
Doing Lusine!!is with 'fOU is our gr~atest
pleasure!

Wish all your customers and friends
a very Merry Christmas in our
Christmas Greetings Edition o
n December 24th

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR DAVE EXT. 104
992-2 156

THE DAILY SENTINEL

'.
''

�-

.•-.
..:--·.
•

•.

·-

•

Pege I • The Dally SeiiUnel

Thursd8y, December 10,1918

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursct.y, December 10, 1198

want her new clothes, either,
Dear N.C.: You have almldy once opin.
,
beeatUe her taste is so different from told "Miss Bountiful Gift Giver"
When planning__i:.w~ing, who
. mine. Unfortunately, nothing I say that you don't want any more of her pays for what? Who ilinds ~?
seems to make any difference.
clothes. If she persisu in bringing "The Ann Landers Guide for
My daughtm feel the san\e way them over, simply say, "These IO¥e- Brides" has all the answen.
about this woman's clothes. We are iy thing&lt; are goinsto Goodwill and
Send a self-addressed, long,
all short, small-...,...., short-wai•ted a few other charities that I am inter- business-size envelope and a check
ash blondes. Our "benefactre51" is a emd in. I. am sure they will be or money order for $3.75 (this
tall, slim brunette who loob terrifiC appreciated." That ought to do iL . include• postage and handling) to:
in colors none of us can wear. She is P.S. Kup reading for another excel· Brides, c/o Ann· Landers. P.O. Box
also a shopaholic with an eye for lent charity you might consider:
what looks best on her and has plenDear t\an Lmden: This letter iJ
ty of money to spend.
about giving to charities. I would
Even wrn,n she buys oomething like to see a plug for one thai will
nc:w ftir one of us,. it is in her style, give you the biggest bllllg for your
not ours, the color looks hideous, buck.' I am talking aboul the Sal~a­
and the shape is all wrong. We end 'lion Army. Its handling of contribuup wa&lt;ting a lot of time retumin;, lions and disbursements of funds is
things.
.
. - so superb that it was recently written
I have tried to tell this relative up in Forbes magazine as an examtactfully that I don'l want any more pie of astute management. How
of her cloth..&lt;, but she continues to about .a word of praise from "you,
bring over dresses, coal5, blouses Ann ? -- Joyce in Murfreesboro,
and so on. Some people would say Tenn.
thi• i•n't anything I should complain
Dear Joyce: l have hcen heating •IJAIIIOf•
about, !xJt it'• beginning to .irritate my tambourine for several years in
me. and I'd appreciate your help. -- praise of ' the Salvation Army.
Perplexed in N.C.
Thanks for the opportunity to do it

Vete~u 10 be remembered by

liminary winner in the 52nd annual
Winner&lt;
were
recently .
American History Contest at Ohio announced in the 1998 Poster Contest sponsored by the Meigs Soil
University.
This year. more than 17.000 stu- and Water Conservation District.
dents from 360 Ohio high ,school s The theme fur this year's contest
panicipatcd in the preliminary mul- was "Wildlife in my Schoolyard."
Overall winners were Kayla
tiple choice examination at their
respective high schools in Octoher. · Collins and Craig Hensley, students
As top scorer in the county, Hoback at Eastern Elementary School, and
was eligible to take the final Olivia Dudding, Syracuse Elemenround's three-question essay exam- tary School. They received $25
ination.
each from the district.
Other winners, by school, were
Sludenl recognized.
Shauna Clark, Amber Burton and
Mason G. Fisher of Syracuse . Caitlin William•on, Salisbury;
was among students -recently hon- Jimmy Diamond, Christeena Young
ored by the chemistry and biochem- and Megban Clelland, Pomeroy;
istry department at Miami Univer- Daylon Jenkins, Cecilia Core and
sity in Oxford, receiving the Lubri- Heather Elam, Pomeroy; Amber
zol Chemistry scholarship and. the Bing, Christina Miller, and Valerie
Malcolm E. Switzer, M.D., award. Carpenter, Bradbury; Angela Casci,
He was · initiated into Gamma Whitney Smith and Amanda SharTheta Phi, the chemis)ry' honorary tiger, Bra&lt;\bury ; Zack Priddy,
society.
Andrea Banrum, and Ashley Taylor, Rutland; Anthony . Davis,
Honor Jtudenll announced
" Brandy Nottingham and Brittney
Washington Slate Community .Rife, Salem Center; Ashley BrownCollege recently announced the ing, Constance Wyant and Joshua
names of 86 students who were Williams, Harrisonville.
named to the President's List for
Kay Ia Collins, Amber Wilbarger
the fall term.
and Hollie Richard, Eastern; Craig
The students maintained a per- Hensley, Erin Weber, and Brittany
fect 4.0 ara"e point average 4uring . Bissell, Eastern; Sarah Boston,
the quarter. In addition, 148 stu- Samantha Brown. and Brittan)
denll with grade .Point averages Watson, Eastern; Olivia Duddins.
belw&lt;~en 3.S and 3.99 .were. pamed
Chance Collins, and Jesse McKto the dean 's list for the same term . night, Syracuse; Bethany Vance,
Local students named to the Shannon Cottrell and Brittany
Dean's List were Heidi Legar, Kersey, Portland.
Pomeroy. and Melissa Williams.
First place in each class received
Rutland.
$10, second place $5, and third
place $3 . Pencils were awarded to · ·~
Contest wlnners·named
all partlctpants.
·

Ann

IA~tlon .Audllary

Veterans at the Athens Mental
Health Center will be remembered
· thi&lt; holiday season by the Auxiliary
11f Drew Webster'l'ost 3&lt;1, American
Legio n.
· Members are in the proccn of
collecting gifts to take to the Athe~s
Mo•pital on Dec. 16 when they
stage the annual Christma• party. A
· hox for Rift contributions is in the
office of Quickel Insurance, corner
t~f Second and' Court Streets,
l'omeroy. Personal items like tooth
paste, shampoo. toothbrushes, and
sha•ing cream are suitable, along
with !-shirts, billfolds, radios,
, &gt;Wcaters, lap throws and quilts, and
~wea ters . They should be left
unwrapped in the box this week.
. On [)ee. 17 members will go to ·
Chillicothe to help with the veter11115 holiday obser.ance. Unit 39 has
'~lready contributed $200 for gifts
for those veterans.
. On Nov. 20 the auxiliary had a
t~rkey dinner at the Athens faciiily.
~qthers conlribuling were Middleport Unit 128, Racine unit 602,
'Jilnction City unit 276, Lancaster
ttnit II, and Drew Webster Post 39,
\ .PoJTleroy. A special donation
toward the project came from Osby .
Martin.
'' "''omeroy unit members prepared
and served the dinner 10 the Athens
Center under the leadership of
George Eherts. volunteers coordin;.uor.

,.

Fnr Veterans. Day, the Pomeroy
, auxiliary sponsored a poster con·
test. The winners were Wcs Ault,

first place, .$3; Tim Caudill, second
place. $2. and lake Kennedy, third
place, SI.
Alfred UMC holiday dinner
The Alfred United Methodist
&lt;;:hurch held its holiday dinner after
church services on Sunday. _Pa.•to~
Sharon Hausman gave the grace.
Other churches represented were
Chester United Methodist Church,
Belpre Calvary Community, Keno
and Marietta.
Present were Nina Robinson,
Sarah Caldwell, Thelma Henderson, Victor Bahr, Russell Archer,
Dave and . Mary Jo Barringer,
Richard, Florence, and Tim
Spencer, Lloyd and Doris Dillinger,
John Taylor, Bettie Bow, Osie Foilrod, Kathy Watson, Marilyn Robinson, Dan, Sheila, Kirt, Danielle,
and Tiffany Spencer, Charlotte and
Warren VanMeter, Janice Weber,
Joe and Pat Mayhew, Sarah ·Yost,
Katie Hoxsie, Laurie, Matthew~
Ashley, Jessica, and Janae Boyles,
Carrie Crow, Lloyd and Ruth .
Brooks, Nellie Parker, Sandra Massar, all local; Eleanor Boyles, Belpre ; Janet Connally, Reedsville;
Lea Ann Piok, Grov~ City; Norma
and Gerald Swartz, Marietta; Mary
Lou Lute, Washington, W. VIi.;
Jackie and Jody Brooks, New ·
Marshfield.
·
Hoback preliminary winner In
OU history contesl
David Hoback, Racine, a student
at Southern High School was a pre-

~---- Com·munity Calendar'-------Thc Community Calendar is published as a free service to no ~ - prolit
gmups wi~hing to announce meetin gs and special events. The calenuar is not designed to promote sales
ur fund raisers of any type. hems arc
printed as space permits and cannot
he guaranteed to run a specific numhcr of day s.
l'HURSDAY
, . MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local
fimptcr, 17. OAPSE. Thursday, 7
p.m. at the
;Meigs Middle Schqol, sixth grade
!building.
·

'.

the Meigs County Fairgrounds show .Mark Grucser, and Mrs. John Cook
arena. Members may register and and Mrs. Gene Yost.
weigh-in two steers but only market
steer may be exhibited and sold at
POMEROY -, Holiday fair at
the 1999 Meigs County Fair. Failure the Fur Peace Ranch, Saturday, 10
to register/weigh-in steer at this time a.m. to 6 p.m. Live music, door
will disqualify steers .from exhibi- prizes. gift ideas from Appalachian
tion and sale. Contact Joann Cal· artists ranging from homemade
a:way. 985-3414.
crafts to fine art, and gourmet' holiday treats..
,.
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, DAR, regular meet- SUNDAY
ing Saturday. 10
Pomeroy
CHESTER - Chester Volunteer
Library: Hal Kneen to present Fire Department annual Christmas
Christmas musical program. Host- party at the fire station Sunday at 5
esses, Mrs. George Skinner, Mrs. -p.m. All memhers and others who

a.m ..

helped with fund raising arc
to attend.

:acta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Soror·
\ily, Thursday. 6:30 p.m. home or
·Chariouc Elocrfeld. Members to
~ake donations for Serenity House,
: TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
)'ost 90B, Tuppers Plains. Thursday, 7:3p meeting, dinner at 6:30

r·r1·

·

16 FORD F·1
PICKUP 4X2

96 PONTIAC GRAND AM
4 Door, 4 cyl, autto:--wr-r--,:r--r--rT
A/C,AM!FM
Mr. and Mr•. Scott Melin

-KANAWALSKY-MEL.I N-

97 CHEVY ASTRO
VAN
Quid C.pt chlllr, 7 pua, conv1r.

sf6~995
94 FORD T·BIRD LX
'

V8, PW, POL.
P. nat, C.D

8,995
97 FORD,.,,TAURUS
.
VII, A/C, PDL, PW, AM!FM
'cauattt, DNIH, tilt

$13,,995
95 FORD RANGER
_
4X2

4 ayl, 5 ap, XLT, A/C, flbtrgiiM
topper, OliN

MONDI\Y '
PORTLAND ~Portland PTO, 7' I
p.m. Monday, at the school.
POMEROY Meigs Local
Board of Education regular meeting
Monday. 7 p.m. at the district's ccn·
tral office in Pomeroy.
POMEROY ...,. Right to Life will
meet at ( :30 Monday at the ,
Pomeroy Library.

I

! POMEROY - Preceptor Beta

i~vited

News Hotline 992-21,56

97 FORD CONTOUR
4 DR
Auto, PW, PDL, cruiH, tilt
·
&amp; mor•

$11 995
97 FORD EXPLORER
4 DR

rncnt s.

XLT, !CIIdtd

RACINE - Chrisunas in ·the
Park beginning 6:15 p.m. at Star
Mill Pnrk with a ca n~t e li ght walk,
:rn.mfirc, caroling and r~.: frc s hm c nt s.

4 TO CHOOSE FROM

.~ .

SAVE $$$ .14 99
, .. 5
;

.-RIDI\V
LONG BOTI'OM - Hymn si ng
1tnU Christmus dinn er ut the h1ith
. hymn ~ in ~ ut
~ l.i 'n William ~

Burlingham

Co1111p. MoUcrn W11mlnu; n, annuul
S~11urd;1y .

3 to 4

Interest 1wte

. run . HI !he hall. Tho~c attend in~ lt1

'"k c u covcrcU tli ~ h . Puhl il..:

~n v it c ll

tn

!IIICIU.J.

I'OMEROY - I')'N market &gt;tcc r
wchth -in, SlUurtlav. lJ to II u.m. al

To get a current weath.er
report, check the

Sentinel

.

'

'

Auto, A/C, CIIIMttt

:s ,\'l't i Rili\Y

Chri:-.111\il' dinner,

'

lX

7 p.m. with Ted and
All wck:o mc.

I'OMI:ROY

'

89 FORD PROBE

Yull fiospcl C hun.: h nt Lonp Bouom
Friday wi th dinner at 6 p.m. and the

8.99%

J\nnua[ Percentage 'Rate

\
e
,..... At the new SuperBank in the Big Bend Foodland ·
.

Mn,xim 11111 tcn11 of 48 Ill onths and min unum lonn nmount of $2.000.00 nvni lnblc with crcdit11pprovn I.
b nmplc: Amount ~nnn cc&lt;l $l,OOO.fKl nt H.99"'o • 48monthly payments of$1 26.52.
-t&gt;nn processing fl' ' &lt;1f $85 .00 • ~ . 8 7 8~·, AI'R.) RATE IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE.

Nicole Lynn Kanawabky and
Scott Allen Melin exchanged, wedding vows on June 13 on the Valley
Gem Sternwheeler in Marietta.
The Rev. John Douglas officiated ··
at the double ring ceremony.
The
bride is the daughter of Carol and
Craig Greening of Belpre, formerly
of Reedsville, and the bridegroom is
the son of Jan and David Powell of
Marietta.
The bride's dress was a sleeve,
less, diamond white ballet length
gown which featured a scalloped
neckline, a· bodice with pearl beading, and arow of satin roSettes at the
back.
Maid of honor was Letitia
Holsinger, friend of the bride and the
best man was Jesse Lucas, friend of
the groom.'
A reception followed on the Val-

.

ley Gem Sternwheeler with a scenic
trip down the Ohio and Muskingum
Rivers.
The bride attended Eastern High
School and graduate4 from Belpre

The Wildwood Garden Club
recently celebrated its 60th anniversary with an open house celebration
at the Racine branch of the Meigs
Co'unty Public Library.
A program about medicinal and
culinary herbs was presented by Dr.
Frank Porter, and special tribute was
given to Etta Roush and Minnie
Scott, who founded the club in Jan~·
ary, 1938.
Aowers were presented to Mary
Katherine Roush, the club's only living charter member, and to Kathleen
Scott. Both are daughters-in-law of
founding members, Ena Roush and
Minnie 'Scott. Members and guests
were welcomed by Sara Roush ,
president. The devotions, "Everywhere I Look, I See God" was given
by Debbie Jones.
The history of the club, written
by Etta Roush, was read by Betty
Milhoan, along with many of the

NEW YORK (AP) -Lewis Carroll's personal copy of "Alice's
Adventures in Wonderland," one of'
six original 1865 editions l&lt;nown to
exist, fetched a record S1.54 million
at auction.
: The book was among 38 Alicerelated items offered Wednesday at a
Christie's auction markin$1he IOOth
anniversary of .the death of Charles
Lulwidge Dodgson, the Oxford University mathematician who wrote
under the pseudonym Lewis Carroll.
.: The anonymous buyer's final
price was a record for a' children's
book and a I 9th century work of literature, said Francis Wahlgren,
Christie's head of books and manu scripts. The record had been $1.2
million for a sale in London of
William Blake's "Songs of lnno·

ByREDBOOK
AHe.ncMapdne

months, you can relax. Here are
some guidelines for some of the

For APSpec:W F Kids have alway~ had their unfair

more common ailments:

share of colds, sinusitis and ~ar
infections, wrote Stephanie Wood in
an article in the December issue of
Redbook. And they're getting even
more, now that they're exposed to
m6re germs through day care and
preschool.
. You know you don 't !&gt;ave to run
to the pedialrician for every little
sniffle (or cough). But just when
does your child need medical care?
A whopping majority of these illnesses are viral; they can't be treated
and ~they'li pass by themselves, says
Dr. Steve Shelo•. author of the
American Academy of Pediatrics'
new book. 'The Guide to Your
Child's Symptoms: Sinh Through
Adolescence."
" Certain symptoms dictate evaluation sooner, but it's absolutely
safe in most cases to wait and see,"
'says SfJelov, whu is also.chairman of
the Depanment of.Pediatrics at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn. a borough of New York City.
"Viral illnesses tend to be worse
at night, better during the day, " says
Dr. Charles Woods, a specialist in
pediatric infectious diseases at Wake
Forest University School of Medi.'
cine in Winston~Salem, N.C. fi Bacterial illne~ses, which may require a
doctor visit for an antibiotic, will
cause more around-the-clock dis·
comfort."
If you're still worried, by all
means pick up the phone. Sometimes the reassurance of a call to the
doctor is what you need. But usually, unless you've got a baby under 6

~:~:~~·::~2~~u~~':u~i;~~

Sore throat: Give it a day - at
least. "Your basic sore throat doesn't need treatment," says Shelov,
But if it gets wone and worse o•er a
24-houi period, your child might
have a strep infection, which
requires antibiotics. An untreated
strep can lead to rheumatic fever,
which in tum can damage the hean
and joinl5.
"llle clue to strep is the severity
of symptoms," says Shelov. " Your
child will be very uncomfortable,
have a fever and very red, swollen
tonsils, and may not be ahle to eat."
Other telltale signs include a stomachache, vomiting and a belly rash.
If your kid has any of these &gt;ymptoms with a sore throat, · see your
doctor. ·
·
Fever: Kids spike fevers that
·would be terrifying in an adult.
" Even temperatures as high as I 04
degrees F to IOS degrees F are usually harmless if they 're of short
duration," says Woods. "Chances
are, if your child 's still playing,
drinking and not too out of sorts,
you'll be told to give him children's
acetaminophen or ibuprofen for 24
to 48 hours, then call. back if the
'fever &lt;)ocsn 't pass or if other symptoms develop."
But call your doctor if your child
is lethargic, pale and not responding
to acetaminophen or ibuprofen, or if
he also has an earache, a stiff neck .
urinary pain or a severe cough. You
should also call your doctor if your
child has ever had febrile seizures;
you may need to he more aggressive ·
about keeping a temperature down :

, •. J

••

.•.

Vomiting: Don't get excited if it continues to Ff thicker might siJD!II,
happens just once. "With vomiting, an acute sinus infection, which calli;
you really have to look at the other for antibi()lij:1," says Dr. Max April,
symptoms," says Dr. Katherine co-director of pediatric ololaryn&amp;dlLing-McGeorge, a pediatrician at ogy (ear, nose and d.- medicine)
the Children 's Hospital of Michigan at Lenox Hill Hospital in New Yott
in Detroit. For·example, you need to City. Other clue• to sinus infc:ction
see a doctor if your child also devel- include facial pain, fever and bad
ops a significant cough, which could breath. School-age kids are ITl&lt;ll'e
indicate
pneumonia;
severe susceptible tha:n toddlers.
headaches, which occur with menin Ear iot(ed._: When a baby br
gitis; or fever over 101 deg~Us F for toddler's sniffles turn into ·a fever:
more than 24 hours, which can indi- and nights become siecpleu, gel 14
cate a more serious illness such as the doctor. Young children i)ave
appendicitis.
immature eustachian tubes, whi&lt;;li
But vomiting with no other allow congestion to drain back inld
sympt!)ms often signals the stan of a the middle ear. resulting in a painiUI
viral illness, such as gastroenteritis, ear infection. Older pmchoolen
which usually passes in one to two usually tell you their ears hun. But
days. You do have to be ale,n to the younger children co mmunicate
possibility of dehydration. Kids can mostly through extreme crankinesS:
become dehydrated quickly, so if especially at night or naptime. whet!
haven't. kept down Auids for '12 lying down increases the pain;·
to 24 !lours, call your doctor for " Most ear infections are trigge~
advice about administering an elec- · by cold virus, so if your child hai
trolyte solution.
just a runny nose. the diagnosis 4,
Diarrhea: It 's unnerving. but fairly easy," .notes Woods. Still, you
your child might not need immedi- need to see y.our doctor to confirm:ii
ate treatment. " It depends how well and to determine 'if antibiotics wiq
·
he's taking liquids," says Ling- help.
McGcorgc. " If diarrhea lasts more
Coughin&amp;:Most coughing il
than one day, take your d!ild off a harm less, but t"" croup virus call
dairy diet (no milk or cheese) produce scary-sounding wheezing;
because she won ' I he able to process While there's no cure, some symp:
t"" lactose . For j~ice, should your toms can be greatly alleviated bj
child insist, offer white grape prescription medication. As a genet!
instead of apple, which can aggra- al rule , the typical cough is almost
•ate diarrhea." If symptoms last always worse at night, when tht!
more than 48 hours, or your child body's steroid hormones drop orr;
isn't drinking liquids. is vomiting or explains Woods. Your child proha•
there 's blood or mucus in the stool, bly needs treatment only if thi
see your doctor.
'
cough isn't bener after 48 hours, 4f
Runny nose: Give it a week. interfering with his ability to plat
" Nasal drainage thai lasts longer and function, or is accompanied by. a
than ·S to I0 days, changes color, and fever.
•

can

' '""Y

Meigs Farm -Bureau delegates attend state mee ·

•

.

,,

'

News policy

The Sentinel News Hotline 992·2156 ··

Sentinel
~.

· • Rubber outsole for Improved traction
while running In and out of.house for
forgonen condiments.
• Foam cushioning adds comfort while
standing around waiting for stubborn
b&lt;Jrger to cook.

• Soft. comfo~able· leather Is easy
to kick on before passing out in a
food coma.

cencc and Experience."

The original copy's pre-sale
value was estimated at $·1.5 million
to $2 million .
Bound in red Moroccan leather,
the book was used as a guide for the
production of . "The . Nursery
'Alice,"' a simplified version for
toddlers published in 1889. 11 has the
writer 's own lavender-ink notations
and editing marks, and contains I0
original drawing s by his famed illustrator, John Tenniel.
The original 1865 e~ition was
recalled after Tenniel ·complained of
p,oor quality printing of his engravings . The boo k was reissued the next
year, but a few of the originals survived and si K still exist - one in
· England, one in Switzerland and
four in the United States. Wahlgren
said.

•.
•.
•.

a bachelor of science degree in occupational therapy. She is presently
Delegates from Meigs County
employed by Greene County Educa- Farm Bureau joined more than
tional Service Center in Yellow 320 official delegates at the Ohio
Springs.
· " Farm Bureau Federation's 80th
The groom is a 1993 graduiue of annual meeting in C)eveland,
Frontier High School and graduated Dec. 2-4.
from Ohio State University in 1998
Members of Meigs County del with a bachelor of science degree in egation were Nita Yost , Racine,
respiratory therapy. He is presently and David King. Pomeroy. During
employed•_by The ·Children's Med- the meeting delegates set policies
icai Center in Dayton.
that will chart the course of the
Following their honeymoon to organization for the new year.
the Bahamas, the couple reside in
During the meeting Ken Davis
_: of Leesburg was re-elected to the
Dayton.
"
position of president of the Federm~rks ation. Delegates, elected to repre~Jr
sent each of the 87 county Farm
j
Bureaus in the state, addressed
. 1
such subjects as farmland preserclub's projects, such as the sign and vation and low commodity prices .
plantings at Gilmore ·Cemetery,
Theme of the meeting was "A
which h14ye remained the club's Voyage to E&lt;eellence."
main servfte projects.
The Ohio Farm Bureau FederaPorter displayed an extensive lion's mission is "To improve
.:
e&lt;hibit of herbs used for both medi- rural standards of living, to
cinal and cooking purposes. He told increase net farm income, and to
of. the growing interest on he,rbs protect personal property rights ."
throughout the world, and the It is the largest general farm orgaadvantages and disadvantages of nization in the state with more
MEIGS DELEGATES- Nita Yost of Raclnt and David King, Pomeroy, represented the Melga Cou~ty
their many ·use s.
than 194,000 members.
, Farm· Bureau at the Federation's annual mteting held In Ci.a veiand, Dae. 2-4.
..
.
Pictures, scrapbooks and memo·
ries
were
shared. Annabel
.1
Houdashelt won the floral table cen·
•
terpiece, and gifts and refreshments
In an effort to provide our readet·
were served by· the newly-elected ship with current news, the Sunday
officers: Sara Roush , president; Eve- Times-Sentinel will not accept wedlyn Hollon, vice president: Peggy dings after 60 days from the date of
Moore, secr':fary; and Janet Theiss, the event.
treasurer.
Weddings submitted after the 60·
Doris Grueser, the oldest active day deadline 'will appear during the
member, was unab le to attehd due to week ih The Daily Sentinel and the
illness.
·
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and other news
To get a &lt;:f.rrent weather articles in the sociely ·section must
be .submitted within 60 days of
report: check the
occurrence. All birthdays must be
submitted within 60 days of the
occurrence.

W"ildWOOd Garden.. f.lub
·
60th anniversary With program .

Alice in Wonderland'. copy
sells for $1.54 million

19,995

Neef( more .c[ou li
· · . tliis lio i ay season?

CHESTER Shade River
Lodge 453 F&amp;AM regular meeting
,Thursday. 7:30 p.m. with open
· •installation · of ofl'k ers. Refre sh-

When should you call the doctor?

IIS62, Chicago, Ill. 60611-{)S62. (In
Canada, send $4.55.)
To lind out more about Ann Landen and read her past columns, visit
the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creaton.com. ANN LANDERS (R) COPYRIGHT 1998
CREATORS SYNDICATE. INC ·

9,995

--·
The Dally SeatMel • Page i ::
·...

Pometoy • MiddlePort, Ohio

Viagra helps the fire burn brightly, but doesn't start the blaze
activ1ty that helps him get in the
mood. That it the key. A loving pannet who is willing to "help him
along" can make a world of differLanders
cnce.
I( a male pops a pill but has not
been properly stimulated. he will not
be able to function. To suggest that
Dear A• Lanckn: I am the an "old geezer" tool&lt; Viagra and
manager of a urology group in the then abu.oed a woman for ignoring
Nt&gt;t'lhwest that treats males . with his advances is ridiculous. The man
erectile dysfunction. I continue to be. was a lunatic BEFORE he took ,.,.,.
hullrated by letters you print that pill'. Don' t blame it on Viagra.
&lt;U~gell Viagra has turned docile
This medication has helped thoumen •nco ~e.: -c rv...e:d animals.
sands of couple• restore a .atisfying
Viagra does not affect a male '• pan of their relationship. Viagra is
tihido. A male with no interest in notthe enemy. The•cnemy ls a lack
...:xual acti•ity wi!.l not dc•elop an of information and poor communiilllcrc.t if "" takes thi• diug. What cation. I hope thi• lencr will put to
some wives and panners arc experi- rc•t some of the bil.arre claims peoencing io the difference in a man ple arc makin; regarding thi• drug. who had a strong libido all along but - S.C.S. in the Northwe•t
wa.&lt; unahlc to act on it.'Viagra helps
Dear S.C.S.: You have set the
him functi.M suually.
record straight, and I thank you.
Please corte•1 the misconception
Dnr Ann Landen: What can I
that this is a miracle drug. ~o male do. •hon of outright rudeneso, to
.:an get an erection by simply swal- convince an in-law that I do n&lt;~
lowing a pill. There muSl be some want rn,r discarded clothe•'! I don't

••

Built lor the way you really llve. "''

·;, .be Shoe Place
N. Second Ave.

992·5627

Middleport

..

�•

Thursday, December 10, 1998

..•

The Daily Sentinel·@
Southern High School

·•

SISSON

;; .Ev~ year l1IOfe and more k!enagns commit suicide, II is becoming
pwnstalungly clear that depRssion in teens L&lt; more common than previous[f. thought
'
; Suicide _is lhe fifth leading~ of death in peqple ages 15 through 24,
Expau estunat.e that 5.000 teens commit suicide each year. (lot many belic!ve
0,:.rate may be two or tfut:e times higber than statistics show. What causes
~ns to kcomc depressed? And why has teen suicide been increa.&lt;ing over
~ pa.&lt;t few years? More and more researcbers are looking for the 3411'wers
IQ tbese and similar questions.
'
·
:, It is fourid that teenagers who are under l;uge amounts of stress such as
(liv~. alcoholism in lhe family. domestic violence, or sexual abuse become
ll)icidally depressed. Depression i• even more frequent when a close fami(J' is or has been depressed, Although it is more com moo for depressed teens
\It have experienced situations like lbese, it is emirely possible for someone
~ be'.:ome depressed and 1101 have e~perienced anything of this sort.
' . DepressiOn may 1101 only be psychological. but may be biological as welL
tJ] recent studies it has been found that some pwple who suffer from depre•~ have altered amount&lt; of certain brain chemicals. Studies have ai&lt;O shown

Page10
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, December 10,1998

that aggres&lt;ive or impu,isive people who have auemp1ed suicid.: have low- uation may be serious.
.
.
er amount&lt; of lhe brain chemical sero1ooin.
Teens wbo contemplate suicide most often feel alone or re.JCCI~. They
In recem years the University of California. San Diego IUCSDJ. and San are more likely to have these feelings if they have drug or alcohol abuse prob-_,
Diego State Universi ty conducted a study with the hypothesi• that young leJll&lt;. According to a recent government report. 13 percent of lhe people who ..
smokers are more likely to suffer depression. Using data supplied by near- · commit suicide do so because they have alcobol abuse problems.
.
ly 8.000 U.S. teenagers, they concluded this: within four years 11 :5 percent
Teens who suffer from depressiou may show the following elllOiional and ··
of the teen •rnokers who didn't repon depression symptOOt&lt;had acquired these behaVjpral changes: sleeping more often. crying. lack of energy. JROCCliP3Iion .
symp1oms as time went on: 15.3 percent of the girls acquired these symp- with death, insomnia. changes in appetite. signifocant weight loss or weight
IOOL&lt;. while only 8. I percent of the boys did. The same study showed lhiu gain. lack of concenlmlion, feelings of restlessness. hopeles.sness or guilt. · ..
girls who had rebellious behavior char.u:teristics and lacked parental support mood swings. withdrawal from family or friends. or a loss of interest in activwere prime laJgel&lt; for depression. wherea.s boys who panicipated in sports ities they once enjoyed could all be signs of depression.
were less likely lo become depressed.
Depres.&lt;ed teens may not feel comfOrted in the relationships they have with · .
Although the study did not address how smoki ng might cause depression family and friends. II is important to listen and lo take .the problem serious- ·
in teens. the question really is does sinoking cause depre.sion, or does depres- ly. Encourage them to talk about their problems. Teens suffering from depres- . ·
sion lead to smoking·•
·.
.
sion may feel as though no one wants to listen to them. It's important to be ' ·
It is quite common for teens to feel unhappy at times, but the difference patient and to expect negative or irritable responses from depressed teens. · .
between normal feelings of sadness or anger and de pre" ion is ba.o;ed on the Often the best solution to depression is professional help from a tbenpist or .:
amount of time the teen feels unhappy. and how large the changes in behav- psychologist, or antidepressant drugs. Nearly 90 percent of all depressed peo- ·
ior and personality are. When these feelings la.st for over lwo weoks the sit- pie respond to such treatments.

What's
'hot' this shopping season
.

. py KIM McDANIEL ·
flhd RACHEL MARSHALL

.

·, It's lime to start shopping: Every-

One wants to buy the perfect gift for

Fiction:

.

will be popular. Other games like
Bauleship and Star Wars editions of
Tnvial Pursuit are disappearing from
shelves quickly. These are just some
gift idea.' lor older children. ·Others
are the 9ame Boy Camera and Furbies.
•·
The most popularTy beanie baby
this sea.son is Glory. The new Christma.• beanies from Ty will also be a
good choi,e.
One of the most sought after Barbie is the Second Edition of the
Davidwn Doll. This Second Edition
will only be available at Toys "R" Us
and Harley Davidson dealerships.
The barbie will sell for about $60 and
should have arrived in stores starti ng
in November. According to Beckell's
magazine, "She's cool, and what an
investment!" Other popular barbies
this year include the 1998 Holiday
Barbie. Nascar Barbie. and the X-File
Barbie.

~Yeryone on their list If someone
~cds an idea for a gift maybe this
4rticle will help them.
;- According to Beckell's Hot Toys
magazine. some of the most popular
ri?ys for children this year are TeleGmbics. Beanie Babies, Legos, Hot
· ,Vheels, and Godzilla. G.l\ Joe, ·XRJe. Spawn and Small ·~icr fig·
rlrines. Spice Girls and Biiibie dolls
¥e supposed to be flllPUiar for young
gfrls.
\
&gt;,
Qher sources say babies will love
llfocks, rattles. and board books.
:~ For pllischooiers they . suggest
lfjlins and Pound Puppies along with .
aline of Fisher Price products includ·
irfg kitchens. rescue heros, Family
Qiinper. Nature Campsite, and the X·
"tme machine.
· Popular toys related to T.V. shows
an. Blue's Clues-Singing Blue, WalkWhile WfltJRg on the topic of
ri.lfalk Elmo along with Toss-n-Trck- dolls. the most popular Spice Girl
h&gt; Me Elmo, Bounce Around Trgger, doll is said to be "Ginger Spice." The
Oisnefs Winnie-The-Pooh beanie, reason is believed to be, she le[ the
liiJd Arthur and Rugrat products.
group but is still thought of as the
:"Sources suggest yo-yo's and hula leader.
~ps will be coming back. Aside
(rom that. the 50th anniversa"' edi,
S
d
·' .
According
Toys, 1G.L
l~ns of cmbble an Cootie games J
ct" r to Hasbro
h
·
,oe a 10n 1gures a.ve a ,new me.

Different stores will be distributing
different series of G.l. Joe&lt;.
Most people probably think teens .
are the hardest to buy for. Well, here
are a few suggestions.
S o me
popular ideas are South Park.
Wrestling. and Nascar merchandise.
Other popular items include C.D.s.
Nintendo 64 and Playstation games.
"Don't forget to mention Zelda".
(nintendo game) said Lee Williams of
Southern High School. If you're
unsure what \he teen you are buying
for is interested in. gift certilicates are
always a safe giic.

A Christmas wish

Another type of newer pants are
the flared-legged jeans. These panls
arc a lot like He ll bnuoms.
One uf the most popular pants are
the wide-legged jeans. These pants
are also for boys and girls of all ages.

•"

By TERESA BUSH
On Dec. 24. lillie Keri Garrett knelt before her window. staring ai the
midnight sky. She knew that there would be no chance of her daddy ·coming_ho~e for Christmas, because his job took him away from home most
of the lime. Not even Christma.&lt; would keep hini at home. Weeks before
she had written a letter to Santa Claus. telling him her wish. The next day
she found a Jetter from Santa. It read: "Dear Keri. I know how much you
.want you daddy home for Christmas. but I don't perform miracles. I will
get you lhe best toy that you could· ever receive!"
Keri lore up the leiter. ran into her room, threw herself on the bed and
cried. The only thing.she could think wa.•. "I don't want no stinkin'toy."
As slie was staring at the sky, all of a sudden she saw a shooting star.
She made the only wish that was in her heart. "I wish my daddy would
come home for Christmas." she said softly, and fell asleep leaning on ihe
windowsill,
1 •The next morning. Keri woke up to a breakfast of pancakes with the
smell of the Christmas turkey in the oven. She knew it was Christmas
because it was the only time that her mom ever cooked. Keri's mom
worked all the time, the oame a.&lt; her daddy did. Keri knew there wasn't
any rea.•on to hurry.downstairs for Christmas. because there were no presents and no tree this year.
After breakfast,'Keri went outside to play in the snow. She quickly
became tired of playing alone and just sat in the snow and watched her
neighbors with their families having a great day. Gloomily,' she went in
the house and drank hot chocolate by herself in front of the fire. A few
minutes later she heard someone blowing a hom. She ran to the window
and saw her daddy getting out of a cab. She went to the front door. opened
it. a?d mn down the sidewalk to ber daddy. Keri said happily, "I'm so glad
you re home, daddy."·
Before Keri went to bed on that special Christmas night, she knelt
be for~. her window and looked up at the stars. She said, ''I'm so glad my
daddy could come home for Christmas."

If you are buying for the more alh·
letic type. Nike. Reebok. Adidas,
Fi Ia, and Tommy arc some good
choices. These brands have T-shirts,
sweats hirt~. socks. shoes. paius. and
wi ndsui ts. This style is also· for gi rls
and boys. old or young.
Some other clothes are the Disney
clothes.
These clothes include Pooh.
, Many articles have suggested cofMickey
Mouse. and Goofy. just for
fee machine.•. alarm clucks. the Page
Writer. camer•s. sports equipment. staners. Disney makes T-shim. bibs.
and recreational gear for adults on walches and socks. 111ese clothes are
your list. If you need a cheaper gil .. for mostly gi rls, but they are also for
some suggestions are soap, lotion and little boys and young kids. Teenagers.
bubble bath from Bath and BoJy mainly girls, also wear Di sney
Works. Colognes and perfumes may clo~hes .
. also be an idea.
"
Camouflage pants are another
If you are going In buy clothes lilr good idea. There are se veral different
Christma.• here are a couple of ideas. pauerns to choose from. Camouflage
The ideas come in a variety of style&lt; pants, shJrts. and boots are worn by
and for different age group.s.
g~rls and boys of various age&lt;.
One of the honest styles of pants are
cargo pants, also known as Khakis.
These
· 1 pants are worn by boys and
g1r s.

This arti&gt;le was wrillen to help
make people's shopping easier. These
:~re just some ideas to choose from.
Have fun. and enjoy shopp 1ng.

~isten up! Mini~reviews Ot latest musical releases
.

~·

I

I

''··I

.

'$A Today
on this double disc or' adventurous.
·~Pearl
Jam.
"Live
on
Two
Legs"
electro.
nic-sha_ d_ed funk 'n' jazz. The
(IL .
rm:e an d 1/2 sI ars ou t of'10ur) Few 20 p1ano.· d nven songs sho. wcase
.
k
c~rrent
roc acts match the passion
Hornsby~ keyboa.rd VJrtuoSJty and
aoa punch of Pearl Jam onstage, and knack lor ghdmg. bHtersweet
1
rc·y;er sr·ll
·
· th at me lod.1es an d warm tnSJghttu
· · · 1 1yncs
·
succe ed '"conveytng
·"'zle o a I've e d" Th S 1
ho 11 ed b
·
s,.
n ' r cor mg. e ea · a Ul aw
ut engagmg protagolie: quintet's first authorized live nists. His ch:~racter .sketches ring true,
•'-- · 1 d f
boo
aJOUm ( oa so concert . I legs cir- whether he's observing eccentrics in
dilate among fans) captures not ooly " Pete &amp;. Manny, " snake ~andlers in
th.e" band ,s trademark primal energy,
"Preacher in the Ring Pts. I &amp; 2" or
but I .1
1
.
fid
h
J
G
a sots recent eaps '"con ' ence. I e 1ate erry arcia in "Sunflower
t4t;!t musicianship and relaxed chem- 'Cat " ("Some Dour Cat") ("Down
, i.ry. While Eddie Vedder's supple With That" J. Infused with the Delta
..
i' bllfitone remains the axi s, his bandQavors of gospel and blues, Horns. niates provide. lhe &lt;anic bla.,ts that by's sixth album demonstrates not
n'-h our ·such emoiJ·onal wn' ngers· as· JUst
·
·
'""'
ptano
prowess, but a winning
'':Qiack" and "Daughter" The set
· f·
·
...:corded dur,· ng two legs. of the .' 98• miX o •mprovisauon and discipline,
....
traits no doubt honed on forays with
tcjlr, includes everything from hits the Grateful Dead. Ambition over('"Even Flow," "Corduroy") lO ,,·de s restrar·nt ,·n the occast·onal
•· d odd" ·
Rd M
pnze
Jiles (" e
osquito," crowded composition; he's best in
·~FC") and from the gentle (:·orr such graceful tunes as "Line in the
tje Goes," "Given to Fly") 10 the Dust" and lirst single " Great
Vl#eanic ("Do ihe Evolution"), Divide."_ Edna Gundersen.
~na Gundersen.
OJ Quik. " Rhythm-al-ism" (three
~; Bruce Hornsby, "Spirit Trail " stars out of four) For his fourth
Utiree stars out of four) Don't read album, producer/rapperQuik stirs up
t~ much into the .goofy cover of
an intoxicating cocktail of funk and
Jtomsby's bug-eyed Uncle Charlie munch. Quik's quips about sex and
'f\th a cigarette in his ear, an image ·good times get extra zing from his
litter suited to "South Park" than booty-shaking beats. And he has
~uthern charm - a key component plenty of guest-starhelp as welt: The

'

sensual "EI's Interlude," which fea· SJmmering 'Tm Only Human," · receives the blessings of former praised opera. in recent yeac;. The
lures El DeBarge, is the perfect set- while MeShell NdcneOcello and James Brown/Parl•"ament Funkade1 ·c
1 1995 piece is finally on disc, with an
up for the no-hold.s-barre·' "Medley K b' M · d ·1·r e
h
·
b · B
"
e
o Ira e n s on t e grllly
ass•," ootsy Collins and folk/blue- excellent cast. starring Jill Gomez as
' for a ·v."· with Snoop Dogg, Nate . "My Soul Dan't Dream." Other grass guitarists Mac Wiseman and the sex-hungry. scandal-prone
Dogg, AMG. 2nd 11 None and Hi-C. . highlights include the Jazzyfatnastees · Doc Watson. "Howdy" samples.· the D h
uc ess of Argyll, an.d the composOn the album's only really se rious teaming with the Roots on the smooth late comed,·an M•"nn"•e Pearl's· ,.,·gnu·
er conducting. If anything, it surtrack, the poignant "You'z a Ganx - " Let It Go·· and the O'Jay' Eddie t.ure saluta_lion. Country classics nasses ex""ctations with its· as·ton - ·
ta," the Compton-bred Qut"k den 1·.,. I.e
· · ·
"
"'"
•
vert JOtnJ~g sons Sean and Gerald " Blue Moon of Kentucky, " "Wabash ishing level of musical invention. The
rumors that he had anything to do un " Where Would I Go." On the oth· Cannonball" and "Walkin ' After style could be described as Kurt Wer"ll
with the shooting of the Noror1·ous
h d f'
b
h
M'd · h "
·
•
er· an . de &gt;orts y sue stars as Ste1 n1g t rece1ve electrifyingly on Quaaludes. but even at its he 1·••hts
B.I.G. - Steve Jones.
v1e Won er. D" Angelo and Boyz II irreverent treatments. The novelty of of discombobulated raucousness. .
"Down in the Delta" (two and 112 Men's Shawn Stockman are solid but bluegrass dance mixes wears off
stars out of four) One of the best not particularly insp•ring: - Steve after a few tracks. and some grooves there 's always a clear sense of musi- .
things about multianist .soundtracks· ,·s J
.
h
cal str~cture and purpose. The char- :.
ones
ave grown stale, but if "Groovegthe opportunity for creative pairings
Th~ Groov~grass Boyz, ''Groove- russ 101" is the beginner's course, the ac 1ers are so ceaselessly unsavory,
that otherwise might not happen. It 's grass 10 I " (two and 1/2 stars out of advanced classe; are going 16 •be one somellmes wonders why the ..
composerlavished s·o much attent 1'on
a1so common Ihat an abundance of lilllr) "Groove•0•rass 101 ,.. may have wild. - Brian Mansfield.,
·
1
·
on t_hem. But their renegade qualities . ,
supenor ta ent won I necessarily heen recorded in 1993. ut it's st ill
Thomas A·'es, " Powder H.er
. ld spectacu Iar results. It works arguably the most innovative major- Face" (lourstarsv out of four) Now the eaSily
YJC
r Ad match the fearless contidence ··
both ways here. Luther Vallllross und
lahel album our of Nashville this year. world cai• decide. "Pow.der Her o
es' music. It can be heard live
Cassandra Wilson meld nic··ly on the· S
R
·
..
tonight. Thursday and Saturday at the .
•
coli ouse s bluegrass/funk hybrid Face. by the young British com - B kl
A d
takes both genres seriously and poser Thomas Ades. is the most
roo yn ca emy of Music. !"'!!!!'!!"~!!""JII!II!"!D!'I'avid Patrick Stearns.

..

CALl Dl
'.

:·,

V The
•·.

Writer's Block

•

My Memory
By MAGGIE L. SMITH ·
J. went back there today
Nothing had changed
A little piece was ll)issing
Soon. I'm afraid, it will all be missing
Btcuuse it is a memory

•
••'

.'"'.•..
.~·.

,,··.
••

;.

,...

"" . When I look to the future
I see the fog my fate shall bring
If I had only learned before.
That notbi"ng lasts forever...

..
!--'

The anxiety I am forced to feel ,
Reminds me of the memory.

I
~:

.

408 General
Hartinger Parkway
992·3471

Something that I retrace
Something that is sure to fade
It was what it was
Though nothing more
I hold it dear to my heart
My slowly fading memory

·, .

&gt; •.
.'

Vaughan's
Supermarket

·'

~ .

I

·RUTLAND
BOTTLE GAS
Suppq.rtlng all the area
schools &amp; youth.
Stop In and say "Hi"
to Dave or Herb.

742-2211

•

CONVENIENCE STORE
Fuel - Groceries - Deli
Familv Restaurant
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

AM 0 NG THE. ••

Our special page(s)
"For Children Only"

show counts the milestones -and

keeps on gr~wing.
:"'
There's little doubt that the series
was a pioneer in children's programming when it premiered. Yet while
everyone else is a lillie older. the
.show hasn't aged a day. h's ._still
fresh , funny and, most importantly
to parents, commiued to the same
goals · respecting the need s of a
diverse , multi -cultural audience,
providine a blend of research, content and-production and delivering
accessibility to all. Is it any wonder
t~n that (according to Nielsen data)
noarly 10 million U.S. residents
(including kids, parents, .teachers
and care givers) view the show in an

(16 years of'age or-younger)
Will be published
Wednesday, December 23rd
•

ID

The D.-ily Sentinel
'

-ONLY- ·

average week? So what 's new on
" Sesame Street" thi s year?

A lot, according .to executive pro-·
ducer Michael Loman.
· " As we approached the 30th season, we looked at how the world was
changing and talked about were
" Sesame Street" should go in the
new millennium. We sat down and
analyzed the .program's basic structure." Loman says. "The result is a
ser•ies of bold and innovatiVe deci·
sions that affect every aspect of the
show."
New this season is "Elmo's
World," a self-contained 15-minute
segment within the show, which
looks at the world through the eyes
of a 3-year-old. Throug~out the year.
the show's curriculum will focus on
values and morals, motivation and
building self-esteem. A single theme
also will run through ea,ch show to
beller hold the auention of the
young viewers. And then there's the
new character, Alan (actor Alan
M~raoka) , who is the new owner of
Mr. Hooper's updated store.
Of course, all the old favorites ·

$}000
Per Picture
Prepaid
Please enclose self:addressed,
stamped envelope.lo return
your photo.

•

'SESAME STREET' TURNS 30, but continues I'! educate and entertain children.
Ben. Ernie, Big Bird. Oscar the
Grouch, Cookie Monster, Elm are
back for another season of fun and
adventure. With "Sesame Street's"
,huge television followin g, it's not
surprising that Sesame Street toys
are consistently a favorite of young
children. Consider that in 1996 the
"must have" holiday toy was Tickle
Me Elm. And last year's hot toy?
Sing and "S nore Ernie.
"'Sesame Street' has been educating our kids fQr 30' years. The
popularity of the 'Sesam~ Street' toy

collection truly underscores the Bird stan to walk and talk. For ages
impact that 'Sesame Street' pro- I and one-half and up, $29.99.
gramming has had on American cul· Toss and Tickle Me Elmo.
ture." says Ne1l Fnedman, president When kids tickle Elmo, it sparks a
of Tyco Preschool. "Pare nts and series of prompts: "Wee, toss Elino
children alike are enchanted by the higher" or "bouncy. bouncy." For
chance to share the magic of · ages 2 and up, $39.99.
'Sesame Stree!' ."
· Sesame Street Beans. To celeSo what 's in store ' on the brate the 30th a~nivcrsary, 24 of
"Sesame Street" toy front this holi - ·kids' favorite "Sesame Sesame"
day season?
characters are available in bean bag
· Sesame Street Walk ' n Talk pals. For all ages, $4.99 each.
Pals. With just a press of their sneakers, Elmo, Cookie Monster and Big

Official
Entry

Form

Books of taste to please the cook on your Christmas list
By JOAN BRUNSKILL
.
Fayeueville, traveled the world to
Associated Press Writer
photograph the dt shes in their approNEW YORK (AP) - Many priate senings. Hong Kong is the
cookbooks feed the eyes and the selling for J.M. Pei 's orange-glazed
mind even before they 're carried off chicken . A building deSJgned by Pci..
tu the kitchen to be put to work to ism the photograph's background . ·
feed the family.
· About half of the 160 recipes
Some .of• the more elegant may wer,;: provided by the artists, Lam make it no farther than the coffee beth said. "Many of them are cooks.
tabhi.
... Elsa Peretti and (architect Massi Either way, cookbooks of taste mo) Vignelli created recipes special make wonderful gifts. Here are ly fur us."
some glossy examples that have
Other recipes were created by
·mouthwatcring visual presentation .
James from artists' dcscnpuons or
"Cuisine . of the Creativen s talem~n t s.
(M iami Dog Press, $49) is a collaboration between James Lambeth_, an
A 60-minute CD of carol s sung
architect who took ~II the photos, by cathedral choirs is slo11ed into the
and Miles James, his son-in-law, cover of chef~ Willi Elsener's
who is chef-owner of the James at "Menus and Music for Christ·
tfie Mill restaurant in Fayeuevillc, mas" (Mat millan. $25) to form an
Ark.
angel's hal o.
The book was born. Lambeth
Elsener is executive chef of Lonsays, when he and Jan.1es dec ided don 's Dorchester Hotel. Each of his
they· could explore the connection 12 chapters sugge sts a fes tive menu
between food and creativity togeth- centered on a dish that is tradnional ·
er.
.,to a particular country. accompanied
. Some 50 architects, chefs and b"y recipes fr om other countries. all
photographers were selected for the adapted for Amencan cooks. The _
book. Among them : Pop art 's Andy English chapter features Granny's
Warhol; chef Wolfgang Puck and hi s fruitcake; the American chapter feaWife artist Barbara Lazaroff; and lures roast turkey with pecan nut and
j~e'Jer-sculptor Elsa Pereui. Each is pine kernel stuffing .
The book is illustrated with color
represented by recipes and photographs of favorite dishes.
photos of the food, as well as with
• Lambeth, who also li ves m VJgneuesofpaintmgsanpprints, and

comments on national food customs
and traditions. •
"A Celebration of HeirloDm
Vegetables" (Artisan. $35) by
RogcrYepse n is generously illustrated 'with the author's own watercolors . What Yepsen is celebrating are
the old-time varieties; the li ving
ant1ques of the vegetable world
A full-page spread on potatoes
featureS the Yellow Fum, the All
Blue, the Caribo and the · lri~h Cobblc . Go past the infonnation on how
to grow potnt oes to rind recipes for
charcoal baked potatoes and ovenroasted potatoes wuh rose mary.
Vegeta bles ranging fr om beans
and beets to.. mCions and rutabagas
are surveyed, with dozens of co lorful images and practical diShes.

Getting down to basics are "UIIi·
male Beer" (DK, $29.95) by
Michael Jackson and "Ultimate
Bread" (D K, $24.95) by Eric
Treuille and Ursula Ferrigno.
Both are large-fdrmat books,
shining wilh thi s publisher's usual
clean design and print quality. Both
arc packed with relevant infonnation and recipes.
The beer book is a connoisseur's
parade of bottle shapes and labels. It
recommends heers to serve with
shellfish and beers to sip with

chocolate.
.
Another one-top1c book: "The
Complete Meat . Cookbook"
(Houghton M•fflm, $35 ) by Bru~e
A1dells and Dents Kelly. The boo.k.s
subt1tle spells oulthat thiS \ IS A
Ju1cy and Authornat•ve Gu1de. to
Sclecu.ng, Sea~omng , and Cookmg
Today s Beet. Pork, Lamb and
Veal. " .
.
TillS JS not a large- format p1cture
book , but there JS plenty to read and
learn.
"Classic Asian Cuoking" (DK,
$24.95) .by Sri Owen is another gem 1
of deSJgn . Picture a dish of fried
chicken, photographed on a blueand-white plate, with the ingredients
arranged ·stylishly )ike a fan radiat·
ing around the plate . Recipes , _,.
regi'onal tastes apd spices are
e~ plained and illustrated.
Finally, "Le Cordon Bleu Home
Collection" (Perplus Editions, $12
per volume) is a series of about 20
titles. each in a slim hardback vol·
ume . Titles cover such themes as
Winter, Chicken, Potatoes, Sauces
and Chocolate. Each has a selection
of recipes with full-page color. photos. Each is self-co ntained. Collecti ve ly, they could add up to a cook's
personal encyclopedia ...

~

0

{}~(wJM&lt;

333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio
45760
(740} 992-6472

Ofiio !Rj.ver

13ear
Company
992-4055

.

ffi. MICHAEL RETTIG
l'&gt;jew York University School of
Medicine
:· If your work· or hobby - typing,
kil illing or playing the piano involves frequent , repetitive hand
,.,;'otions, then you may be familiar
With the pUJn, tingling or numbness
s(!metimes experienced after long
hnurs of the activity.

HOME
NATIONAL

BANK

Racine 949-221 o
Syracuse 992-6333

Downing Childs
Mullen Musser
Insurance ·
111 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
992-3381

OHIO (~IUALIY GIOUr

'

night.

.

One of the greatest mJsconcep~

tions about carpal tunn el syndrome is
that repeti tive stress injUry and carpal
tunnel syndrome arc Interchangeable
tCrms that descrihe the same condition
In fact, tpost repetitive stress
injuries arc not carpal tunnel sy ndrome .
When the National Institute lor
: ·The syndrome is caused by prcsOccupational
Health and S&lt;.~lcty
.s(lre on the median nerve wh1ch supptics ..,cn.sations to the fingers and cxnmmed the employees of one large
ci'introls the thumb muscle. It occurs company, they found Ihat I5 percent
WJ,crc the ·nerve pa~ses through the of them had a tendon-related disorder.
" carpal" tunnel. formed by the wrist but only I percent had carpal tunnel
hc:incs and H ligament just under the syndrome .
Typ1ca l u mscs ol cmpal tunnr l
.sU..facc of the skin. Sim pl y put, the
n~rvc become-; trappcd by the intlcxi - "syndrome ,\rc rheumatic or arthritic
condnions, a wnst inJury. diahctcs ur
hlc bones and ligament.
: When the mcdmn nerve is com- th yroid disea.&lt;es. Commonly. the
cause ol the carpal tunnel sy nJromc is
pl~sscd , a variety of sy mptoms occur,
including pam, tmgling and numh- unknown. Pregnancy 01' usc of hil1hmiss in the thumb. index. middlp and contrul pills can also produce !lUJd
riOg fingers , swollen lingers, shooting_ retention and hand swe llin g.
If you have ·symptoms of carpal
pqin in the ann. gc~_eral wca~nes~ of
the hand. or dJfhculty graspmg. tunnel syndrome, il is impmtantnot to
Oiten, these sympto~s arc worse at ignore them or hope that they will go

away on their own.
If you have very mild symptoms,
simple exercises can relieve the di scomfon . for example. gent ly stretching between each finger or extending
and fl exing the wrist.
. Cutting hack. on repetitive gestures
can help, as can taking a break every
30·minutCs from activity that requires
repetiti ve movement Chang mg your
work environment ca:n be advantageous; adjusting your scat or the
height of a computer keylloard or
screen can mmim1 zc s trc s~ on the tendons and reduce symptoms.
When cxcrc1sc or uttering the envirnnmcnt docs not relieve the problem,
a d1agnosis ul carpal tunnel synJrome
,·an be confirmed by an electro-diagn o~ti c study. usually pcrlonncd hy a
neurologist or rehabilitation specialISl.

fhi s test provi&lt;..k:s information on
ho"' scve1'c the comprc-;sion 1s to the
~arp a l 1unncl. Once pnticnls have
been dmgno!-ied w1th carpal tunnel
syndrome they arc usuolly referred to
a hand surgeon for trcauncnt.

..u·-

~

e
~

z,

....c .

~ffective treatment for carpal tunnel syndrome

\'

.,

Asbury Park Presa
lma~ne a place where your next
door netghbor rs a big yellow bird, a
grouch that lives in a garbage can or
a scruffy blue monster who loves
cookies.
In fac!. it was imagination that
conceived and created them all in a
colorful neighborhood that millions
of families have come to know as
"Sesame Street."
And believe it. or not. "Sesame
Street" (and "Children · Television
Workshop, where the show was conceived) has been on the air for 30
years.
. Thirty years of educating, nurturIng and entertaining. Thirty years of
singing. dancing. laughing, jumping
and settling into a comer to. hear a
story. A courtship a marnage. a
birth, a death and an adop1ion ... the

•

'9 92·2l55'
COOLS POT

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11,:

~y~~~~~e Street' turns 30, but hasn't aged a bit ~;;c~;;·.;~~~~~1t

Suicide is wrong answer to teen depression
·~BRENNA

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

There are several dilTcrcnt treatment options avaiiablc. One frequent·
ly used treatment is to place the wrist
in a sphnt to immobilize ft and minimize irritation to the mcd1an nerve.
Injections of conisone steroids into
the carpal tunnel arc another way to
decrease the inflammation. If these
treatments do not work within 3 to 6
months, then .surgery could be recommended.
Surge'ry is usually performed on an
outpatient basis. A local anaesthcltc IS
injected at th.e wrist and a small incision made in the palm . over the carpal
-tunnel. An incisi on is made in the li gament ' to allow the carpal tunnel to
increase m s 1zc. ll1 is diminishes the
&lt;.:omprcss ion on the median nerve.
Some people gel immediate relief
after the ·surgery. · Others with mQrc
severe coinprcss10n may st ill feel pain
or numbness for a Jew months. Most
people can re sume full activit y after
I
about 6 wee ks. Wn. st support
may be'
needed. Finger exercises may he rec ommended lo decrease joint st1ffness.

~

!!::

~

Q,

fol'f

"CC

••

c

i

z

"'
"CC

·-:ua
~

f

1

~

r=

-

"'=

~

Col

..

, !!:: ~...c
....c "' ~
!!::
=
!!:: "CC fc =

0,
~

~

~

~

-r.f)

~

Deadline: Friday, Dec. 18 at 3 p.m.
•

Mail or bring the entry form:

The Daily Sentinel
.•·.

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ·

·

.: .·~

~u~~uu~uuw~~:._:

... _

�)

~age 12 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December

10, 1998

:·~:~~::~~~::~::::~~--------------------~--------------~~:::r::::Pu:b:l:lc:N:m::ke::::~==~P=u=.b;l~lc=.N~o~t~lc~.==~r===~P~ub~I~~N~m~lc~.==~r.:~P;.u~b~ll:c~N~m~l;ce;=~

h t
k
t
d?
If
•
t' f f
k a rna es a · oy goo . 1 s un.

}w•
·-..

; ~y PATTI MARTIN

buttons all al the samd &lt; time. Who
:-: Asbury Park Pn1s1
lclcphoncs on loy shelves. But n(l knew your body cou l move into all
.: Great toys provide hours (not to o1hcr phone offers this. a special pro- those positions? ·
: ment1on weeks and months) of enjoy- grammable feature lha.t allows chiI. Fish in' Around. Milton Bradley.
!1 ment. Great toys spark imagination drcn to learn their own telephone Ages 3 and up. $20. If you're looking
""d creativity. Great toys provoke number. Younger children can also for a "reely" good time, you' vcfound
: '"unds of laughter and :·wow' "
. dial up their favorite Disney character it here. As the mechanical fish spin
: Be&lt;~ of all , great toys allow chil- and talk and talk for hours.
around the motorized pond, young
.
;ctrc n to engage in their "work"- play. ·
. Ni1ro Dozer. Maltei-Tyco. Ages 5 anglers try lo hook them w1th magWhi1e sonic of our picks may not and up. $69.99. There'·s just no sleep- . netic rods. The hook? You have to
1 h.: instantly recognizable, they arc all
ing when this remote co mrol ve hicle catch them in color-coded onler · as
1greal fun . Just ask the students in is aroond. Look at it once and it's a de termined by the game's cards.
·
ld
: D~anc Buckley's· fifth grade class at turbo-charged race car. Look at it Nothing fi1shy here, JUSt some o ·
othc West Belmar School in Wall , N.J.. again and it's been transformed into a . fashioned fun.
! who l1ad the chance to play with and don't-mess-with-me conslruclion
· Real Live Babe. Equily Toys.
!'Vitc the review for Bounce Around · vehicle. able to smash through piles Ages 5 and up. $40. This li ttle piggy
''Hgger.
and leaves and ' toy fortresses with a ~i~h\ ~ave ~?ne to ~ollywood, b~
~ · Bounce Around Tigger. Mattei. single nipof the.wrisl.
e s ng tat orne Wit youngsters.
f\ges IS months and up. $30. With a
. Bedtime Bubba. Matte i. Ages 4 special interactive chip allows Babe
~cnt lc pal to his head. this rambunc- and up. $40. Every chi ld needs a hcd- to know the time of day so hi s pl ay is
)ious Tiggcr springs into act ion. Not time buddy, and who hctter 10 fall on the san1e schedule as a child's,
·
· 1ud'mg te II'mg bed lime
·
· at
11nly
docs he bounce, but he' parlays asleep with lhan a buddy who not . me
stones
l1ke Tiggcrs do hcsl. Bouncerific fun onl y reminds you to go to the bath- nighl. Kids will no doubt ham it ,up
everyone.
room, bul who also brings a (work- with thi s plush porker. .
.• · Betty Spaghetty. Ohio Art Co. · ing) IIJshhght to hcd with· him. With
· Space Shuttle. Leap Frog. Ages 5
Ages 4 and up. $ 12,'19 Who ever said over 200 diffcre m phrases. Bubba is and up. $40. Space is in, thanks to
~lringy hair isn't in'? Not Betty. whose never is al a loss for words. Bedtime John Glenn. and what better way to
1ingui ne- like. hair is a sure hct for has never Occn so much f,u n. ·
learn about '·'the great beyond" then
llll~rs of fu n. Add to that, Betty and
. Totall y Tw1stcr. Milton Bradley. from a game thai doubles as a toy?
)1cr friends (Han nah and Zoe) all have Ao0 cs 6 and up. $24.99. So you Players can lake space qu1zzcs and
tnterchangcablc parts (allowing for · 1hought you got yourself inlo some discover facts about stars, bl ack holes
t:ountlcss looks} and you ' re looki ng jams wi41 Twister? You haven' t seen · and othCr spat:c p~ c no mc na. When
S2S. Surc.thcre is any number of play

1

rur

Xnr endless "pastahilitics .··
~,· Fol low - thc-Li _~I h ts

;myth ing yet Thi ~ new hand-held vcr-

Talki ng
,fhonc.
Mattei.
1
!f
months
and
up.
.. ,
~
· "·
·'

sion of the class ic game has you twist1ng. turni ng and tnuchi ng the co lored

!:·

they ' re dune learning, they can fuel

~11 of o 100 ocro lot Ho.

' ""

OHIO

Public Notice

·

logllooo ,

Public Notice

deceaeed the unknown

h•lrs, devlaaea, legate•·,

helre, dtvltio,a, legatees, exoculoro, odmlnlttrotoro of

Cleo Haley, II living, If

decoued tho unknown

executofa, administrators of

Annie Feredey, deceeeed;
George Jonoa, II living, It

helra, devlaeee, lagateea,

If

living, 11 docoolld tho
unknown holre, dovllllo,
logotou , oxocutoro,
odmlnlotrotoro of Floronco
Haloy Wlnwood, dacooaod;
Wllllom Kerr, 11 living, 11
decelled tho unknown
he ira, dovl .. u, helro,
devl .. u,
leg111.. .
exocutoro, edmlnlatratora of
William Korr, docollod;
Rolph Korr, 11 living, 11
docaoood tho unknown
holre, dovlaooo, loglloee,
exocutora, odmlnlttrotor• of
Rolph Korr, docou,.d;
Norman Forodoy, llllvlng, II
decoued the unknown
holre, dovllell, logalool,

fHI to lowor alloy;
litM•..C. HI 1/2' W 100 '"'
olong oold olloy wott ono
hundrod (tOO) loot to on
llrlll, thlnco S 9
E ono hundrod (100)
1
to the place of

duo ond poyoblo •• of tho
dolo of tho llnol ordor
horoln bo pold; thot tho
coots ot thll octlon,
Including plolntlll'o ottornoy
fila, bl paid to tho Clork of
Courto, oil of which oholl bl
peld from tho procaodo of
VOl. 42 pg 5I aold aalo ; that the
1
deod delondanta bl roqulrod IO
Porcol 111 forth any lnterut which
120-00359.
they moy hovo In u ld rill
Pr1yer of aold comp111n1 11t 1 to, ond ony dofonae
lathot tho abova da.Crtbod which tilly may hovo, or b1
roo I eetolo be portlllonod forever barred therefrom·
eccordlng to low, ond thot · thai tho plolnllll'• IIIIo b~
tho lnloroet of tho qulalod; ond for ouch olhor
dolandonll bo 111 off to ond lurthor rollelu moy be
thom, lhol II thot II not .Juotondoqullablt.
.
1

Nc,~,';";!~~":.':!:~.~: ~·:- !'!~dth:n:"-t~-:: •:::~

Tholmo llorle Foroday, 11 dolondant ba pold lhtlr
living , 11 deceaood tho
according to t~elr
unknown holra, davlooeo , lnl•t rell therein; lhtt Poul
logotoea , oxeculoro , roulmg'bunr•aod Hfo"r"',~. ,,b,•1
odmlnlotratora
Tholmo
"
llorle Forodty, of
docooood;
the unknown helro ,
dovlaeu,
legatee a,
exocutore, admlnlatratora of
~=~z;· ~~~~·· J:~::~e1i .
· liVIng, 11 docoalld tho

complolntla to acquire title
to
tho following described
real eatate by partition, and
to quito title thereto,
~~ecordlng to laW.

Sold roal eatate 11
Sltuotod In the Village of
Syracuat, Townohlp of
Sutton, County of Molgo

QllteNo. 98-CV·104

devlaeea ,

heirs, devisees, legateea,

and etate of Ohio and

oxocutora,.admlnlotratora of
oxocutoro, admlnlotratoro of
Eleanor (Nell) Jonoa Haley, docoaoed tho unknown Cleo Holey, deco11od;
decaaaod; Mary Turnbull, II heirs, davlooao, lagateoa, Chartoa Haley, II living, II
living, II deceuad lho executors, admlnlatratoro, deceased tho unknown

Jiknown heirs, davfeeee,

unknown heirs, devl11ea,

lfgateea,

legl'teea ,

executora ,

executore ,

or Earl Jones, deceased;
Emmett Jones, If living,

deacrlbod aalollowa:
PARCEL ONE: Bolng
llotod on thl tax duplicate
of 1897 and 1898 In the

heirs, devisees, legateea,

name or Matthew McBride,

executtJra,admlnlatratoraot

to-wit: Being In 100acre .lot

ai algns of Thomaa W.
Jo nll deceuad; Zelda J.
Jo nao, aka Zello ·Jon~a, II

admlnletratoro of Mary whose lilt known
Turnbull, deceased; Mallie residence was Torre Haute,
Kart, If living, II decoa10d Indiana, It decoued the

Charles Haley, decea'eod;
Zelda Haley Pollock, · II
living, II decoaaed lhe

No. 299, Range 12 Sutton
Townahlp; and being 23/100
of an aero described on tho

11'c:lng, If deceaaed .t he
~known helra, devlaeea,

the
unknown
helra,
devlaeea,
ltg1t111,

unknown heirs, devlaeea,
legate as,
exacutora,

tax duplicate as 100 fl.
aquarelower alley.

l'itgatooo , executors ,
t!'dmlnlslrotoro of Zelda J.
J ones, deceased; Louie

JOnes, If living, If deceased

tho

unknown

unknown halre, devlaeea,
legatees,
executors,

execLIIOra, admlnlatratore of administrators of Emmett
Mattia KMr, deceased; Jonas, decoaood; Thomes
Thomaa Jone1, II living, II Haley, II living, whoeo loot
deceased the unknown

known

residence

was

administrators ol Zelda
Haley Pollock, deceased;
Ruth Haley Colly, II living,

If dac,aaad the unknown

heirs,

heirs, devloou, legatees,

Chllllcolho, OH,II docooood

heirs, davlaeeo, legateoe,

dev l aaea ,
legatees,
executors, administrators of

axacutora,admlnlatratora of
Thomas Jones, deceaaed;

Lo uis Jones, doceoaod;

the
unknown
halra,
devleeea,
legatee a,

Annie Fereday, II living, II executors, admlnlatratora of

Daniel Jonas, If living, II

deceased the

executors, admlnlslratora ol
Ruth Haley Caaey; Mildred
Haley, II living, II docoaoed
the
unknown
heln ,

unknown

Thomas Haley, deceased;

Referonqe VOl. 98 pg 42
Melgo County Oeed
Recorda-Auditor's Parcel
#20.00358.

PARCEL TWO: Beginning

forty-five fet~t eaat of the
aouthaaat corner of a lol

Dec. 121h, 7-9 pm
Waynes Place in ·
Middleport, Oh Presents
"Fanlasia"
s izzling hot fe ma le show
Tickets on sale now!
$10 in advance ,
$15 atlhe door

Mackenzie Joshua has .
a big sister Grace
Anna~5 yrs. old &amp; a
big brother Colton
Daniel- 3 yrs. old.

A. Jenklne and In the aouth

1998 Martin Street

Hemlock Grove R&lt;l
Pome10y, OH
Ph. 740-992·7285
(Sal, Sun. lVII.)

NOTICE FOR THE
GUYS!!

Maternal gra:ndJ1ar.~nt!; 1
are Bob and Peggy
Ellis of Middleport.
Maternal Greatgrandfather Dale Ellis
of Rutland, Paternal
grandparents arti Carl
&amp; Paula Hall of
Pomeroy. Paternal
Great-grandmother
Ruby Frick of
Pomeroy.

We sam I

"Build Your Dream"

BIRR'S LINDSCAPE
NURSERY

He weighed 61b 6 oz
and was 19 in. long.

doodad by McBride to John

uY:ire~=i;~u1h~p"
Uptndt lbll old compt~lerforebout l/2 1br cml ofnrw!

Pine with root ball S6/fl
Plant after Chrlatmaal
Or choo~e a Cut Pine
or Spruce $2.50/lt.

'

"Best Prices of
the Season"
.JII4(
Vickers
@==: ...~ Wood Heatin1

Christmas SpecltJ U6-CPU riiB 14" moa 56K V.90 1.5
Win 98 Calor Printer! $899.00
'

TREES
....~ ' CHRISTMAS
Uve Spruce, White

Danny &amp; Tracy (l:IIISJ', I
Hall of Pomeroy
announce the birth
their son,
Mackenzie Joshua on
October 7 at Holzer
Medical Center.

Good Times
presents
Th e Slater Brothers Blues Band
Friday &amp; Saturday
Dec. 11th &amp; 12th 9 pm · 1 am

Rel'!'lodellng

Mil

' Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

complaint within twonty·
olght doya tiler tho loot
publication of thll notice,
which wlu bo publlohed

740-992-5884

Custom Homes

f'

ro~~~recld~~•n:~;~:r ~~=

defendant. In elegal action

executora, admlnlotrotora of
Thomu Holey, docaoltd;
Cleo Haley, II living, II
deceoaod the unknown

J.tGAL NOTICE SERVICE
~PUBLICATION
·
1'Thomu W. Jonao, II
lltlng, II decooood tho

onlhll-·
.
.
In """ of tho falluro of
thO dolondlnloto • - or
d
olhtrwlao roapon .II
roqulrod by Ohio Ruloo ·o:
~\r,11 :.ror~~':~t::~~~t
tliam lor the rellof
Int.
domondod In tho comp1•
Lorry E. Spancer, ~ork
g~~::;, ..::~~~~oun oun Y
( 2) , , ,
1 10 17 24 31
(1) 7 6TC

leg lieu, executors,
ldmlnlatrotoro of Vernon
Allen Jone1, deceased are
hereby nollllod thai lhoy
have
been
named

Daniel Jonu, docouod;
Elotnor (Nell) Jonoa docoaood, tho unknown
Wholoy, lfllvlng, II docooaod holra, devleooo, logolooo,
lhl unknown helro, executoro, odmlnlltratoro,

ofGeorgeJonea,daceaaedi
Earl Joneo II living, 11

1
~~d .~:w:-";.11 -:Jlmmed

unknown heir•, devleeee,

~,PAUL EUGENE HAR.RIS,
!'lAINTIFF VS THOMAS W.
J.0 N E S,
E T.
AL,
DjEFENOANTS

legateea,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 13~

Pomeroy • MiddlePOrt, Ohio

e1ch week
lor •li
oa1oto toxoa which Pou I onceNCUil
ko tilt lui

their im a£i n au o~s as they transfonn entitled Paul Eugene Harrlt,
. a 11and· 11eld roc ke t.
plaintiff
Thomoe thlo
W.
the shuttle mto
Jonoa
olol,VSdelondonlo;
ocllon hll been aaalgned
caoo No. 98-CV-104 and Ia
,,
pan ding · In the Common

Public Notice

1998

~~ld::~H~~~n~==~
~.
~::. ~:i ~~~~ :.-!-=o~~"~t:a:~~.~~ ~:~~~.::.:r"1.~.·~;~
Flor111C41 Holey Wlnwood,
Plum Street ono hundrod thot tho rool oololo toxoa
ty
hi dllyo

dovlaooa ,

Ohio,
OhioCounty,
45789.
J':=:::;=;;::;====l-==;::;:;::;;=;;::==T-=::;::;:;:;:;:=::::-r~=;;::;;::;;:::==i
Pleaa Pomoroy,
Court, Melga
~
The obJect of tht
• · .Public Notice
PL.EAS
:,~, ·INTH.E c'o"MON
...
•~OURT, MEIGS COUNTY,

"Thursday, December 10,

r;.u !lee pf Ampodcs.

740-991-1135 lor 1 Prkt Quotr!

Joe Wilson
{614 992-42n

•

A00 1r _1.._00
AOO 15' 40.00
AOO:IMCPU
50.00

111 - ~

.I"-

AOOl5GlGHO 1\1.00
AOO ll GIG HD 11.011
AOO• .ao

A .

CAR...ET

CHRISTMAS TREES

P:LUS

Wreaths - Swags
. Roping &amp;
Grave Blankets

Professional
Fl.o or Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

$10 &amp; Up

740-698-9114
740-698-7231

Rt. 124,

.

742·3051
11 TO 9:00

1/11101 ...

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

~~~~~~~~~1~~~

OILER'S
DEER SHOP

YOUNG'S

PIB CONTRACTORS, INC.

Skin,

Cut,

Wrapped
&amp; Freeze

740-742-2076
You Kill 'em
We Chill 'em ·
11{17/H 1 mo.~

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
·
·~
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing , S iding
&amp; Residential
~ 27 yrs.Commercial
exp~
Licensed &amp; lnsur.e d
Phone 740-992-3987
~

;...

Free Estlmares

lll!!i

Owner: John Dean

c
0

N • MASONRY

· :i'~
MI.

III•!J ·

f@
~

iii'~

• CONC.RETE • BACKHOE SERVICES
:. BOBCAT SERVICES ·

c

I!A

M
A

S
0

•Maintenance
•Planting
•Design
•Lawn Care

••
,,

•

Phone: 740-843-5572

Degree Certified Landscape Specialist
from OSU-ATI
.
Jeremy L Roush

LOrtG'S
COrtSTRUCTIOrt
• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates
·

Call 740•843•5426

L.--------------;.;"-;;;;,;.;.'.;."",;.j'

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

Just in·side the Big Uend Foodland in Pomeroy

Air Conditioners "' Low AI
Heat Pumps At Low Ae

. 740-446-9~16

WICKS
HAULING

•Live

•Grave Blankets

$5 to $25 _

&amp;

Cut

Trees
•Poinsettias

BANKRUPTCY can reliev~ a debtor of
keep "exempt" propert y for his or her peroonal
use. This may includ e a ca r, a houae, clothes , .and

house hold goods,

•1-800-872-5967

Law

(7 4.0) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

THE COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP
AND MORE
Tues.-Fri. 10 to 6
Sat. 10 to 4.

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

..

GUN SHOOT
Radne Gun Club
Nease Hollow Rd.
Every Sundciy
12:30 pm
Umit 680 sleeve
.737 back laore
.

Open Dally 9·5
Sunday 1·5

HUIIARDS
GREENHOUSE
Syracuso, Ohio
992-5776
We honor Golden Bu&lt;keyt Card!

R~

L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Computer Graphics
Deslgl)•
All Landacaplng &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commerclol
•Realdentlll
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Cheater, Ohio
740·985-4422
Cousin's Home
Improvement ond
Pointing &amp; Cooling
Residential &amp;
Commercial
"No Jolt too liiiC or
too....U"
Free Estimates
(7 40) 367·0412
(740) 992·4232
1 2/1 ~

EXCAVATING CO.
Limestone Hauling
Hous&amp; &amp; T1111111 Sltea
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
· Septic System &amp;
Utllltltl
Estlmattl

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agrl~ultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985·4422
Chester, Ohio

, . ••. • Member FDIC

·

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

29670 Beahan Road
Raclno, Ohio 45771
7 40.949-2217
Sizes S'x10'

CLASSIFIEDS!

to 10'x30'
. Houre
7:00AM· PM

. '

1111i/tl

o. pd.

CHRISTMAs ··
TREES

740·992-4559

Moonlite

Skinned • Cut
Wrapped
Maplewood Lake
Racine, Ohio

949·2734
l1!ll0t'1

1

.'

ma.

1/2.!{1

Se,..,ing Pom eroy, Middleport &amp; Maooro

992~0038
Charter Available

1i/13 1 mo.

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
St. Rt. 7

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
740.985·3813
4 " thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks b
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
· Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
9:00-12:00 Saturday

3596,

www.theholpagao2.comlnlipay·
Cll~ 1250291. hlm

4121/M tfn

.

rLL Tol your FuiJn,

• • • .-,.~

Serv·U(619-64$--8434

• .. .._,

NOWIII
1·100-420-3012
: ::
3.99 per min. Must bl18 yra . • •.-.J

.•

'

. ''

..

,

"'

the Ohio Da~ng Game, 1. ·,
BOO.AOMANCE, "'"mlioo 901 1.• • .: . .
30 Announcement• :~ : :
"Ne-w""F""a-rm-,-..-=~"'ob'"a-cc-o-=c"'o'"."'IN~e.: · ~ .· ,
p~ytng

~

Ripla~ Ohio, Is se lling tobacco\o4 :

days a week, cal l for app. Orville- "'
Whalen t -888 -844-4365 or EdP' .:
son Mayes 3Q.t-675- 1858.
· : ...,

•.

New To You Thrift Stloppe

•... •,

9 West Stimson, A.then1
740-592-1842

•"":
..... '

Quali ty cl othing and houaahoLt:
Items. S1 .00 bag sale avery •
ThuraOay. Monday thru Salurdt~:

,._

9:00.5:30.

. •~

A.T'( :

No: Hunting , Tranapasslng ,

or Dumping on Sprague Land o~ ·
Summll Ad .; Morgan Town lh'P" _
VIOlators wm be Proeaecutedl
• ...

.ovJ

.~E,..Ioc-lr.,..lc-s-lov-o-,av-on-d""o.:.os""n1-WOI1\~~!

·''.

40

Giveaway

• -~

Free Puppies, Beagles. Attar 3:0&amp; ~
740-441-()4 17..
.
.. .•
Friendly Gray Flu ffy, Cute Kit·:;

lent. 304·882·3324.

• ·:

1

Half, Bla~· ~ab &amp; hall Chow,

goqt!

.,)

..

,

(1~

,: .,
'

tl ·l l

" .,,,

Noreglon ElkllOund s, 1 MonNt•

•; ~::l l

•

-~

Old, 304·675·5621.

.

.-·

walchdog, male, 740·742·3076. • -: ...

·:

Rabbit Free WUh Cage, Fe ldt!~ ;
And Utter Box. 7-40-256- 1739.
... - ~
Gl tler lan mixed pups 6 wks .

good home 304-773-5972.

• •
to.:...:.
~

..

-·

Lost and Found : ::

&lt;·'

Found : Beagle Male On RacCOQIF:
Aoad, Brown Collar, Very Sh~ ·

' .......

740·441-()417.

•

Yard Sale

::

'"
"'
.

(•

' I
• I

''

•l

,

..

••

'' • .

.
. ·'

QliAQUNE: 2:00p.m.
the dey before the ad

Ia to run. Sunday
edldon · 2:00p.m.

.,

••

•

Friday. Mond8Y edition
. • 10:00 a.m. Saturday.
Cl ay Townflouse Lo11ers

·•

.•

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

.

"( I

·:

Lost miniature Alaskan hulk~ ao li!l wtHte , lost ·ln Muo n Sat .. ·
afternoo n, re ward olfer ed 304"":
773·619 5.
..~ . '

· 70

· Bennett Supply

' '

-Start- Dating
--'-------"...,;···
Tonlgnt! 'Havelud .:

"Huge lnventorr"

·School Rd.
Galllpollo, OH

.,

S3.99/Min. 11+

Strv·U 619-645·1Jo134.
_....:.:..:..:...:.:.:..:..:.:..:..:.::.;:..._;..

MOBILE HOME
PARTS

740·446·9416
1391 Salford

' ''
..··,

Lost: Missing Since Noll8mbe ;:.
21st, Yellow lab Female In VI et~&lt;
ity Of Kyger, Any in fo, Great()e.
Appreciated, 74D-367·75$4.
·"'

•Rliol Coating•
"VInyl Skirting
•water Heaters
•ooor/Windowa
"Electric/Plumbing
Suppllaa
"Fiberglan &amp; Wood
Step•
Dlscounr Priess

.

I ~ '\

ASK QUESTIONS,
OETANSWER8
CALl. AMERICA'S 11 PSY· •
CHICS 1-90C).74o.e500 Ext . •

AU Yard S.IM Mut t
Be Paid In Advene1.

7/22/Un

DEER
PROCESSING

2Yo Miles South of
Tuppers Plains on
St Rt. 7
· (740) 687·3483 or
(740) 687-3073
Open Evening• and
Weakond•

~,.QI(d{};elftirj

985-4473

1012519Bitln

HILL'S
SELf STORAGE

e Is your bank open 1 days a week? WE ARE!

CONNOLLY'S

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

...'"
,.

Per.onale

740-949-241t .

12/18/lfn

ROBERT BISSELL .
CONSTRUCTION

,.

'.

.'

(614) 992-3838

Weekly Sales and Drawings
thru Christmas

PoinseHias In 6colol'l
PoinseHia Baskets
Holly Trees
Cui Christmas Trees
Grave Blankels -Wrealhs

,'

ANNOUNCEMENT S

60

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE
Now open for lhe
Ch ri~lmB~ &amp;BSOn

~.

•,.;

614-992-3470
Rt. 124, Minersville, Ohio

...

Quick Lube

HOWARD

For lnformution Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

William Safranek, Auorney At

"WIIere Q11ality Doesn't Cost More"

.p.,.,.

ltara'• Cutrol

•Roping

financial obligutio;ts und arrange a fair
distributj on of ussets. Debtors- in b ankruptcy m ay

139 o mpntb

·BENNETT'S 'HEATING &amp; COOLING

(Lime Stone·
Low Rates)

·'

mpntb

·~ree 5 Parts Warrantv.
*Free Digital Thermostat
*FrH Estimates

Checll us out at w·ww.pom.tfu..n.com
Or phone (740) 91t·6U7
11/1/to' ••· ~&gt;'~·

OHIO VALLEY BANK

'28 I

,.

,.:

43370 St. Rt. 124
Minersville, Ohio ·

740.148-2118 '""" mo

"Eaay Ot•er tlte Plwne Bank Fir1ari·rir11.tr"

...

Cut Your Own
Fn~eh Cut
Any Scotch or White Pine· $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends
Rt. 33 to DaiWin, East on Rt. 681 , 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd., 1V. miles to tree larm. Follow signs.
Dally 10 am til Dark
N v. thr Dec. 21
"

brake1, 1hoclu.

•Swags

.

'

21 -

(No Sunday Calls)

You're Treated with Respect!

. •Wreaths

...._._

.-

614-992·7643

Speciah on oU
cllafl(!ea, rirea,

-Complete Auto Seroice-

,

,.

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·9909

·TRPPRn

..
..

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment ... ·

Racine, Ohio &amp;
50 West, Albany Rd., Athens, Ohio

Residential &amp;Mobile Home
1
Mr Conditioners &amp; Heat Pumps

"

Gl11JJ1l OpenirJ&amp;

SUE'S GREENHOUSE

•

Quality Affordable Web Pa•e Du._n
· for Small BUIIIIUI In Mt..l, Athen1, and
Gallla Co. Ohio and M11on Co. WV.
"tet u1 put your buslnen on the Internet"

Garages • ~eplacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

CHRISTMAS TREES
BRAD'FORD'S

Ncar the 338 &amp; 124 splil in the Great Bend

•

.'

"""'"'

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

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

.,.,i:

·Lawn Care
•Mulching
•Retaining Wall &amp;
Brick Patio Construction

Former-"Velvet H'1m1rne~-"
52954 State Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio

••
.,

..

Dave's

•

, *9?2·1696

'month pel.

'

.

~·

ROUSH LANDSCAPING BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Briau Morrt.•m I Racine, Ohio (7~0) 985-3948

.,

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11th
10:00 a.m.

wv

y

E

*U.P.S.

*fill•

Road

R
RESIDENTIAU///1/////COMMERCIAL
N
E FREE ESTIMATES .........FULLY INSURED R

T

11,,,,

After 5 pm

74o-949-1701

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
MaJn St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburtt
Progre11lve top llno.
Lie. II D0-5C!1 1

CARPENTER SERVICE

2310

BOB SNOWDEN'S LO,.

or

•ROOitJ Addltlona
•New c;Jaragea '
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Alao Concrete.Work
(FREE ESTIMATES) . 1
V.C. YOUNG Ill ·
. 992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

304-576•2255

•

lt - If

llarlwett

,•"

..

La n ~. ·

Thurs.,F·I.,Sal., 9:00AM· 4:00Pfol.

ColorT.V., Blankets, Bed Cloth11.
Clock, Lots 011!ems.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Verd Selee Mull Be Paid In :
Advence . Deedline: 1 :DOpm

thJ

day before the ad Ia to ru ri.,
Sunday &amp; ~ond a y e dltla~
1:OOpm Friday.

80

'.·

Auction
and Flea Market

.,

Wedemeyer's Auction SerVIce, '
Gallipolis, Ohio 740·379·2720.

'

i

�· Paqe 14 • The Dally Sentinel

~. o.cember 10,11N

Pomeroy • Mlddlepoft, Ohio

Pomeroy,• Middleport, Ohio

PHILLIP

ALDER

The Dally Sentinel •

IlEA Cros. .ord 'Puzzle
!·;
------------------~------------------------~
--~
ACfiOM
......

540

FUc4t P. .rson Auf;tion ComplftV,

11182 Norrlo. leFI X TOFT. Vioyt

t66,0hio &amp; Wett Virg inia. 30'-

-All Etoetric
6Nng1oo.
2 ldr. .... Pordlfl,
2·
~
Clrpott. . 740-258 BJ • •

run t.lme auetionttr, compJet•
auction nr.,.lct . LicenuG
n:J.5785 Or :JOol.n:l-54&lt;17 .

00: · Wanted to Buy

J&amp;L Cltanlng, Ltl Us Do Vour
HolidiV CleaninG For Commercial
&amp; RHidenlal Br The Ho\K Or Br
The Job. 740-441 · 1357. Jacbo&lt;&gt;;

740-28H510.

t9¥'1 Gt Joe Figurtl • Accet·
...... 740 • •• eno AllOr 6 P.M.

Aboolule TOf&gt; Dollar; All U.S. Sll·
ver ~nd Gold Coint . Prooflttl,
Otatn()I'Mjs, Afltiqull!ll Jewe6ry, GcMd
Alnga, Prt-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sior1lng, Eu: AcquloitioM Jowe1-r
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Awooo. Galipolio, 7-2142.

Antlquea. top~pr~a paid.-Fliver·
lne ~ntiquet . Pomeroy. Ohio,
Ruts Moore owner,· 7.40· 992·

2525.

21 0

992-6576.
Clean Late Model Cart Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Hewer.
Sm11h Buidl Pontiac . 1900 East·
ern Moue. Gdpolil:.

1ft&amp; Sunettlne "x71, 3 Bed·
room1, 2 8athl. CA, 7"0· 388-

Malon Tr- 2 llodroomt. 12851
Mo.. • 0oooM. ..,...,.HTQ.

Double Wide New IHI·Down
tziT- mo. f f M - • ,...
up. 1-l~m .

Fo-T-I'art.

Twq (2) S.Oroom llobllo - ·
-Requirld,
211.,Oopot;l
• --_ ,,

ProlesllioMI

Two btttroom mobile home Jn
Middteporr. no pell, 7-40·992·
5008.

Llwlngston' t leHment Wt..,...
Proofing, all battmilnt repalrt
done , fret ettlmattl, Ufetlmt
guar•ntet. 12yrs on Job txptrJ.

.........-.....

h•utiful Aiver '~'- tte Aiver
SlrM1. J&lt;anaoua. Dopooir. encet.
No Pe11. 140·U1..018t·

$3995. Oulcll dollnrr. Coli 740·
385-9121 .

SOCW. IIECUIIITY Jllfl
No Fee
w. Win!
I -181-512·:1345

u.-

Hew 141170 $500-Down $199-por
mo. Free air. lklrt. 1· 100·611·

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

em.

11112·2211.

New I 6&gt;&lt;10 1500·Down 1245-por
mo . F(tt air, lklrt. 1·100·691:

1 s.ctroom Apertment, Pr•valt,

Ouio1. \lti)',Nioo, ~!;-!MO .

1 Beidroom, Economical Gil
HW 1999 1.. x70 UUN bedroom, · Htal, WID Hooi&lt;-\Jp, Neat Clneml
S . . . - FREE lot rant $279/Mo.. P1uo Utilltloo. ~ &amp;

Ind..,., w.- &amp; dry•.

Help WanteCI

~VON

! All Areas ! Shirtev
Speaf1. 304-e75-1429.
Babysitter needed in homt 4
da~l a week . 9·5. Mercer~tllte
Area. Days: 740·256·1252, Eve.:
740-256--1618

Caraftorl Wanlld, 304-e75-t935.

lnc1udH
oldrtlng,
deluxe 1l1p1 and letup . Onfy

All real -.JoinU In •
thll NIIWIPI'pet' 6s ~ tD
lhe F-.. Flit Houllng Ad
of 1N1 wlllcl1 , . _ Mllopl

1200.74 par monlh wllh Sf 150
down. COl I -800-f31·3238.

pr.....,.,..
-MX ,.,...
........
""""· rollglon.
ft.MUI Of,.....,.

PRIVATE IIITTJNQ
3 Btdroomt, 2 Bathl, 100· 383·

to ICIYotiJoe 'ony
Mallon or dilu~••.ao.•

6662.

SIHGLIPAIIENT8PECW.I'INAHCII!KI
AVAILAIII.E
NEW 6 USED REPO'&amp;
CREOIT HOTUHE
304-711-71t1

lfll'-.,

CtJmputer Users Needed, Work
Own Hrs. $20K ·$75K Nr. 1·800·
348·7188 Ext. 1173, www.amp·
inc.com

or1gln. or
make_,. ~ pr ..... IOI.
llmJtatlon Ot .... ~·. 1111111011 ..

Eldertv Lady ln, n,eed of Dally
Care, do you. need extra money
or aomelhing to do? Call : 740·
-4333

odV...==-

HELP WANTED

lnionnod thai ....... QII

11111'*"- wfl ...

We Finane• Land &amp; Home Wllh
AI L.itlll AI 1500 Down. 1·808·
926-3-126,

..,;"" Ia I n - of llw

..... (lu'

JNdiJI ""......,

3 Btdroomo, 2 Bo1hl, Wl1h AJC
S~rt 122Molo.. 1-61J0.383-6862.

thll .......p f"'
. . IIValltltt on aniiQUII

~In

GaUia ·Melge CAA II Accepting
Applleatlone For Tht Following

~

Posltionl.
Trainer 4 /County Ccordlriator:
Th is PosiUon 11 Flesponslbie For
JTPA Field Operations In Meigs
County And Supervl&amp;ion 01 The
Staff Alligne&lt;f To The Meigs Office.

Trainer 4 /MIS COOf'dlnator: Poal·
tlon Is f.l.eaponslbte For Supervision And Coordination 01 JTPA
MIS And Related "At:Uvltlea In
Both Gallla And Meigs Counties.
Appllcauon~t May Be Obtained AI
Tne FolloWing GMCAA Facilities
Or At The Ohio Bureau · Of Em·

ploymoni, Buckeye Hill&amp; Aold.

A~

Grande . Appllcalionl Must Be

AacelwJd Br December 22, 1998.
Gallla ·Mel!iiiS Community Acllon

Agency
8010 North Slate Route 7
Cheshlre, Ohio 45620

740-38H342
. 7-40.~·6629
859 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45831

740-441HOt8
33105 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-992·2222 '
Equal Opportunity EmplOyer
· Local TruCking Company Seeking
Oualllled Truck Driven . Good
Pay And Benefits . Sef'KI Aeaumi
To: P.O. B01c t09 Jackson, Ohio
4!640, Or Cal11 · 740· 266·1463
To Schedule An !nterwiew.
Mechanic For Automotive Repair

Shop. 304 ·675·4230 Dayo Or
30+875·4853 Evenings.
Nnd Baby &amp;tller In My Home. For
7 Month &amp; 2 1!2 Year Old Beglnlng ln .January, 740-245- 5623.
Rural Action seeks muratlsl for
communlly generated mural pro·
}eel tn Pomeroy. Must be accompliahed artist E•pertence in community work preferable. FOI' Oetalts
on 1alary and project information,

call Llea. 740·767-4938.
UNDEAGROUNO UTILITY
LOCATOR

.......

340 Bualnesa and
Building•
or RetaiL 8T
Mill Sl. t,!k!dleporl. 1,460 Sq Fl.

Commerclai·Ofllct

REA L ESTATE

3 -4 Bedrooms. Full Or~ Basement, Fireplace. Forced Air /Gas
·Furnace. AJC, Fenced COrner Lot,
36 Windsor Court, Stan Burdette,
304-675-7285.

3 br. 1 ba . new heal pump, new
roo! .with corner lol , cion to
IChOOI &amp; ltortl II 621 4th ST.
Nft' Haven wv.304-882·384!5
6yr, 2-3 bedroom&amp;, loft, IOnjJUif
groove, pellet IIOVI, HP/CA, BP·
pllances, garage, epa, acre, BulB·

Pike, 740.387.()286.

Bv ownar, ?28 Paga Street, Middleport1 house &amp; 3 Iota, mu11 181
to appreciate. will &amp;ell house wlthouJ 1011 for 589,000, 740·992·
2704, 140·992·569fl.
By owner· three bedroom, fenced
yarc;t, J)Ool, double tot, tn Gatllpo·
lis Ferry, can 304·675-.t 10' after

6pm

Home &amp; lot lor sate, 4 bedrooms,
2 bath&amp; , SI ,OOO down, W.A.C.
easv terms, located near Rutland,
coo~ct 0~, I ·800-448-8901,
Hou&amp;e And Lot For Sale, 4 Bed·
rooms. 2 Bath1, S1,000 Down
W.A.C. Ea1y Terms Contact oa:
vld, Caii1·B00·448-6909.
Hou11 On Slate Route 1 South
Leas Than 10 Mtnutu From
Downtown Galllpoll&amp;, Private 2 1f2
Acre Lot With Breathtaking River
VIew Approx. 2,000 Sq. Ft. 3 Bed·
rooms, 2 112 Baths, Famllv Room,
2 Flfeplaces, Hardwood Floors, 2
Car Garage, Lois Of Extras!
5'35.000 Ready For Immediate
Occupancy. 7'0·446· 3248, 740·
446-4514.
'
Modern 3 bedroom houae,. 2
bathe, country kitChen, large 2 car
garage , on 112 acre lot, "rupptrl
Plains, Oh., sewer atreadv hooked
up, $75,000, 740 ·985·3611 or

...99DOWN
3 BEDAOOMS, 2 BATHS
FREE DELIVERY
I SET·UP
ONLY AT
OAKWOOD HOMES
NITAO,WV
31M·7&amp;5-6U6
Uml*' Offer

Wanted- manage• &amp; part lime
weekend worker lor an adult lamlly
nome. 1-5 restoence with 24 hour
care , 74 0·992·5039, 740-992 ·
«tO ask for Kathy.

Bualnasa

·Training
Galllpolle Cereer College
Wlnler Quarter Starls Janu ary
4,1999. CaHTodayt 740·446, 4387. t -800·214·0452, R&amp;g ~~0.5· 12748.

180 Wanted To Do
Ele ctr lr: mainte nance servlct .
WJrlng , , reaker bo•es, light l llc·
t u r~t , healing 5W'Stem s, and Ae ·
modeling. 304·6.74·01 26
Furnt!Ure repa ir, refinish and res·
&amp;ofatlon, atso custom orcters. Ohio
Valley Rallnlshtng Sho p ~ Larry
PflllllpS, 7o4Q.992·6576.
Georges Portable Sawmill , don't
neul your togs to th&amp; mill just call
304·675-1957.

·I

Ha\f e I Openmg For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Handicapped , 740·441· Hi36 .

ary. Calll-8()9·591-8117 .
$999 Down on any 98 modei
Doublewldt In 11ock. Free Oellv·
ery. Call 1·800·691-6777.
Abandoned Ho.me Take Over
PaymentS, Or Make Ollar. 1·800·
~

1979 Falrmonl UFI X 60Ft. Can
Ba Seen AI K&amp;K Pt Pleasant.
Ca~

740·... 6 · ~31 0

2 br. rurn. or unlurn. ept dtp.&amp;

rfl. roquirld 3CJoi.662·2MII.

2bttrm . apts ., lOtti tteetrle, IP·
pile~• furnished, laundry room
laellltJtl, close to IJChool In town.
Appllcetlons avallabl• at: Villag•
Green Aptl . 149 or calt 740-992·

3111 . EOH.
3 Ill'. apt. ba1h &amp; half. 6prlno ,.,. ..
Pomeroy, 1280 per month, 1100
illpolil, 7~7·3083 -!pin.

3 Roorno IJ1d t&gt;attt. lurnllhld o1fl·
cltncr: lilt u1ili1y paldl Down s•-••·
919 Second Ave . $275. Month.

Oallll Co.: Ju11 Soulh 01 Town,
FrlendiV Rldgt Rd .• 15 Acr11
114,&amp;00 Graal Homel&amp;ll &amp; Hunt·

lng. Plilllc Water, Cl1y Schoolsl
Melga Co.: Wt 'vt Got The
County Covered! Ju1t 011 SA 7
Below. New High School, K~t ·

baugh Rd .. 5 Aerts $14,000. Near
Carpenter, Dytlvlltt, Very Rtm·
ott 11 + Acrtt SI0,500. Rultand,

WhiiU Hill Rd .. Ju11 011 New
Lima, 11 Aerts 11,,000 Or 9
Acral $12,000, Public Water.

Danville, Briar AldQO.• Go11 Ado .. ·
7 Acrn Wl1h Nice Pond 121.000
Or 8 Acrtl $13,000 Or On SR
325. Nice wooded 17 Acres

,118,000, Clly Wallr,
Cell For Fret Maps + Owner fl.
nanclng Info. Take to-t. 0" Ulled
PriCes 0!'1 Calh PtMChallll
Lot lor salt, Pltaunt Ridge rd.
Gallipolis Farry S2000 .00 080

304·882·2972
Nlc1 1 Acre Wooded Lot 4- Mites
From Point Pltuant. Route 2
North. $12.000, 30H!7!;-S578.

360

·Real Eatate
, Wanted

We Buv Land : 30 · 500 Acres,

We Pay Caoh . 1-800·213-8365.
Anlhony.Lan&lt;l CO.

R ENTAL S

410 Houua lor Rant
2 br. $350 . + dep. and vou pay

ulll. 304-&amp;75-2535
2 or 3 btdroom houte In Pomer·

ay, no pots, 740·992·5858. ·

3 Bedroom•. HUO Approved,
VInton Area, 740-368·9326 ..
New home, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
Falr.,.law fld . $425./mo. Plus Oe·
posit. Must hav• Ralertncut

(740) 446·2801
Nice 2 or 3 bedroom ho"use In Po.

meroy, no pets, 740-98H658.
Nice two bedroom houu In Po·
meroy, $350 per month plul dt·
posit. no petl, wnt conllder land
contract alter one ~ear, 740-898·

Two houses In Raci ne, one In Po·
mercy, lor rent or aett on land
conltact, 740-598·1620.

420 Mobile Homaa
lor Rent
1 Mobile Hom• And 2 Apart·
menta. No Petsl740-388- 1100.
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homea , air
conditioned , 1260· $300 , sewer ,
water and tra1h lncl udec1. 7o40·

Up, CIA. $43~0 . , Including Wa·

ltr, .StWa!illl. Giarbagt ~ C~II Toll·

Fr• 888·840-8521 .
For Lean; Unlurni1h1d One
BedroOm Apartment• Corner of
Second And Pint. $250 .00 Per

Monttt Pluo Ull111loo. Securlly And
Key OtpOIII. Atltrtncu At•
qulrld ..7~-'"25.
Furnlehed .c Rooms &amp; Bath, completel~ Redecorated, Clttn, New
Carpel, No Pets Or Smoking, Rtf·
erence &amp; Depoeit Rtqulrtd; At10,
Furnished 2 Rooms,-&amp; !alh, Up·
stairs, 740·446-1519.

Furnlshe~ l.ipatairl Apartment
Clo11 To Gorcerv &amp; Downtown
Gallipolll, Relrencea And. Dtpol·
n. 740-4-40·1 1611.
Gracloul living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartmenta at VIllage Manor tnd
Rivtrlidt Apartments In Middle·
pori. From $249·$373. Call 7.40·
99.2·5064 . Equal Houstng Oppor·
tunillea.
New furnished one ~Jedroom
apartment In Middleport, 740-092·

919\.
New Haven 2 Btdrooms , Fur·
nlshed Or Unlurnl1htd. Deposit &amp;
Rererencee. 304-882:2568.
Nlct 2 bedroom aperlmenl In Po·
mtroy, ell utllltltl paid, no pets,
140·911~·5658 .

2 Bedroom Unlurnl1hed Mobil e
Home $265!Mo. Includes Water,
4 Trash 74o-44&amp;-9568.

3446.

9669
2 br. trailer, Tupper&amp; Plain• trea,
$250 per month, $100 deposit,

74().667·3083 '""!pin.

&amp;373.

441!-3-481.

Ylhltl WhltJpool AtfrlpratOf

1125: -

llay1lg

ary. 175;

.

520

Sporting
Goode

Camo Huntlng Btindl, From 180
Up New Or Demo, Indian Creek
AI Alo Grande, 740-:z.l~747 .

530

Antlquu

Buy or 1111. Alvtrine Alltlqu.,,
1124 E. Main St,dl. on At. 12.4,
Pom•rov. Houn : u .T.W. 1(1:00
t .m. to 1:00 p.m., Stnday t :OO to
6 :00 p.m. 740·i92·2626, Run
Moore owntf,

540 MlacelllnHIII
MerchlndiM
"WNW Ul&gt;r-

Furnace. Heat P~. &amp; Air Con·
dlti_oning. Fret Ellimatiilllf You
Don't Call U1. Wt Both Lo1•t

MERCHANDI SE

Houeehold
Goods

7~12.

1998

McDonald's

Teante

Beanies Se1, 740·448-{)3!50, After

5P,t.l.

GUARANTEE!
Nal&amp;nl. Of', Rtcommtn(led,

_ _.:17:..:40.:;)44~1-·1.:.;98::2___

Church l)eWt for tale, t 2 lwel~t8
foot, • ren foot, S200 each, 740·
'
948·22t7.

Cof1oaroom
- · 1ulte
end -J1SO.OO,
· fiiO.OO gun
b•d
cabinet $40.00, dreaur with mlr·
ror $100.00 304-468-1783

Do Your La1t Minute Chrlttmll
Shopping AI l&lt;etler'l Service
Center, Ste~ Routt 87, loti Of
Great Gift Ideas To Cl\ooN From:
Farm To~• . Tractor Radio's And
Umbrttla'l, .Fieddy Heaters,
Homellte Saws And Trimmers,
Prenure Wt1h1tt, 12 Voll Pow·
tr Pan And M"ch Morel 304 ~

1411.000. 7 - 1 . .
Block. brlcll. sewer plpn. wind·
owo. Un .. lt. ttc. Cloudo WlniMI.
RIO Gtandt. OH Call 7.u:J · ~-46·

5121 .

560

Peta lor Sale

A Groom Shop -Pel Groomtng .
Ftalurlng Hydro Bath . Don
Shott . 373 Georges Creak Rd .

~-- 6.14 Willi 260 l..l&gt;ldai, Gao IUOO; 11182 811YOrldo
2600$1 1.t00. Old Corrrotl 1:10.
7&lt;1Q.MUT31 .
Me"or210DieuiFinloh...._.
&amp; Blldt $4,700; 3 0 0 - f'orl·
able W•ter Tank 110, 140·2.45·

r&gt;/47.

T40..o46-D23 1.

AKC Maltase Male 3 Months

$275, 7 - 8 7.

667 ' 3090 ,

Tractofl From 20 To 31 HP. All
Slzeo Of 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Tfactorl 1 Hay Equipment, John
Door&lt;
SIHr ..........
With Us Aboul Financing On
Lawn f(ltiQrt And L.ow Alt. Fl,
nancing On New And Uttd
Equipment Carmleftaers Farm &amp;
Lewn GalUpolll, OH 7.. 0, Aofe·

sw

2AI2 1.B00·-111 I.

830

AKC
Atglatered
German
Shepherd Pups, 6 Week&amp; Old 12/

~5198. Be Lorua Oogo f150 ·
. 1115. 7-40·38&amp;-89fl2. • . .

AKC
r•glsttred . Miniature
Ouhouno , 1 I:Hit4.11ng pelr of
COCIC8flll&amp; with Cage , 7A0·99'2·

c.-

plano or. 740·44l!·4!525

·AI&lt;C Bhe itle•· malea 1200; ft·
mate 1250: two Ptrsten•. on•
blue cream, one tortol•• shell,
$150 &amp;: up; femait ferret. 1100

4 Year Old P1ndi• 8r•d Mlrt 1
Will Foal In August 1198 1

II ,2CO.OO. 740-~.

4·H Fair Col1 f800 .00 1 htadl
(740)37f.2370

Border Collie Puppies , 7 Wtekt

332#.

Hey &amp; Grein

840

FOil. tarrlers- 3 mat,.&amp; , 1 lemala,
$100; Boston bull bablea , 3
males, 2 females, can be regll·
tered, $150 without papert, 1300
with papen , All above puppies
1111 docj(td, dew clewS removed.
will hold 1111 Chrlltmas with depot·
II, prlca ntg&lt;&gt;Vabla, 740·992·41!81.
Fuii· Biooded Autllal lan Blut
Hail\tr. Pup&amp; , 0 Weeks Old, 2
Males, 1 Female. Ju1t In Time
For Chrlstm'asl $75, Each, 740 ·

245·5615.
Golden Retrle\fer Puppy, AKC
Shot &amp; &amp; Wor med, S250 Each,

good, $1110, 7~0.992 · 3129 .

Maytag standard washer, $100,

740-849·2287.
. Mull Sell Moving: ke ivlnator
Matching Wa&amp;her /Dryer With
Super Size Capecl tv Appr6x . 4

Years Old,,$250, 304-eTII-8858.
Pentium 15 Compultr $250; PentIum 133 COf!lJ)Uitr $400 14"
Monitor $100, 7'0-o446·6630 After
Prlm1111r $49 lnatatlatton . One
'month free , free hOliday gflt )u&amp;llor

•-"•

c.illfy.....

·-·

-,

DOWN
t leeuccnrhA

21A••••.,...

" 21~1«

(% .....

........

2 , .....t .....
Jk'rt-

7£1"""' .....
.c
..... -·~

--

. ........ ac

I folal• boXer ·-:
10'2 ...
:~
II 1'11111nip
,

Wftll,.....
J NT

Jack Rbuell terrier puppltl,
three matea , o·ne female, $250
each, deposit will hold ·lor 'Christ·

mOB, 740·742·20110.
French City Pet Grooming by Ap·
polntmtnt. "t.IUre Waah lathing
8v1tem ~ 6~0 Second Ave . Gatti~
poili. 140·445·1528 .
One matt Bolton Terrier puppy,
$175, 740-742·13tl71111ort .tpm.
Pomara lnean pupplet AKC reg Istered, :l· male $260.00 each ,1lemale $300.00 304·773·5052
Spayed Female 90% Border Col·
He . Appro~tlmately 1 112 Years
Old . l. ovlng, Enargellc Dog .
Found As A Strpy, Need1 Good
Horn et 304·891!i· 3328 Eventng&amp; .
St . Barn ard puppln , purebred,
$150 , will be 7 waekl old Chris!·
mas, pick of tnt Uttar $&amp;l will Mid
until Chrlatme.s, 740-~9~ ·2232 .
Wanted : AKC Roil Wa ller '"iFIJd
Se r~lct , 740·379-9053.

570 ·

,.,...

12 """""'

1t ..... !
.

P-

.• .

IY.,.unll

,

Mutlcal
lnatrumenta

! Place Pearl Drum Set , Black/
Chrome ,· Excellent Condition .
1650.00. Waal P.A. Syatem Wl!h
2 Four Twtlva Cablnata. 1300.00

calling. 800.263·2640.

740·256·6889,

Bunk Beds New Never Ustd Mat·
tress . 2 Beds , 2 tnner Spring
Ma1tre11e1 Included, $295, Proc·

Satellite Sya1am1- 18" OtrectTV
dish , total purchasa .Prlca $99 .
Aak about free programming . 1·

Sto rv &amp;1Clark Plano E~~: celte n t

IOrvllle, 740·896·6373.

800·779·8194,

COOdlilon $850. 304·6 78·451 B.
Wurlllzer Omnl 3600 • 4600 , Hal
Bend In tt .. 740·245·9393.

'87

mllctaUIIIy

EM
All Ill"'

:unn.2e o.nulne

--.. .....

FRANK A EARNEST

COIWtrjJOii 11a11 , HVtfaJ II8W
l)lrt$. 13600. 740 tit liOOI.

CUlT e.a,o"'"''~'~'

lfTI Fori! F· l60. 4.... 381. llf(l Englno, c-t. AuiDmtllc. All
30W76--..
1Pf5 Chav' 6ou111arn CoO&lt;h
Convtrf.JotJ Van , Wtll •bcw•
ovoroga condlllon. Sellllrada lor
plcll· up; aq..l vaiUf. (740) 378·

-"'""'End,

A#I.OVNI&gt;, e~,,f.

'

tr

.1AVA

IIAAN "

ANI&gt; You '

r.NO'II IT I

•

•

1991 Cl&gt;lv}' Lurnlno APV. 7 p.,.
- · . . -.... .000.00. 090.
Aunt Good. 740 418 89112.

THE BORN LOSER

1995 ChOYy Plct·l!p, 112 Ton. A
WD, ! .1L. 2 Topparo. 8' Bed .
.oe.ooo MIIH, 118.500 Firm, 7AG-

c-. RillY

w-.

~61fTS 1

Y01.Jit; 61FT~ '?'

a&amp;..na.

_..,...

-"' .

•

Pwtctuef ,,

, •

12 .....

: ::

44-1-

....

•~ K5 blotar. ':150 motor. aulo.

pow•r

11 ,ooo.oo
7-12·2443

740

windowt&amp;

IOC~I .
304 ·182 · 3~1!1

uo.

Motorcycln

1981 Yomaho Worrlor, Good

1996 Honda 300 4x4, red , tront ·
and back bum~r, rode 3 houra,

I 1186 Hondo 300 f X 13,400.00,
740•- . e .

710 Autoa lor 8111
1950 Ponllac SIIYtr Slrllk,

'

IU50. 740-742-310~.

TRA NSPOnTATIO N

~

Door Cclupe, Runt Good, Ntedt

.AeOiored, f2 ,000 080, 30-1·595·
3911.
..

Hondo 3 whaalar 350X , good
condlllon, ••~o ports. $800, 740·
247·29111 .

Sentinel

John1on Motor Fullv Equipped,

fl3,800. 740-·2971 .
su·mmere not over! Kawuekl

1887 V•8 Oldl CuiiJII Suprlme,
142K. runt good, 11..!500; 1988 V·
8 Oldl Cullom Cru111r 6W,
7~0 ·

t988 Bonn.vllle LE, maroon. 4-dr,
new tlrtl &amp; braktl, good cond.

$3,200. :!OH75-S782 alllr !pin,

1888 Plymou1h Corovallt, runo
UOOd· 1700, CIII740-99N271 II· ·

"'l!pm.

1988 Cnryolar LtB4fOn COUPf, 4
Crllndor. Aulomollc, Air, 80,000
MIIH, 11,200 080 740·2118-12:13.
1818 OldlmOblla II 4 Ooofl, 11

Shlptl Now Tlrn, Now Palnl Joll,
740-«G-~361 .

1990 New York Fifth Avenut. Ex·
cell•nt CondiUon , Low Mileage •

$6,500, 740·386-9916..
1991 Chrylltr New Yorker Ott'!
Avenue, Excellent Condition, New
Tirtl, I Owner, Nevtr B11n

matching Kawau.kl 1kl vtltl 1nd
lralltr all gQ ~ith it . Prlc«&lt;to Hfl,

VES, MA'AM ..

·Asovr nus

; 8001&lt; ..

DO WE HAVE
TO REAP TI-lE

W~OLE

A LITTL.E

(

f9 PRLEITERS
INT NUM!!RED
IN SQUARES

MA'AM?

SCIIAM-LITS ANSWUS

Campera &amp;
Motor Homn

26 Foot Coachman, Elctllen't

COrt&lt;llllon. 740·256·15~ .

High Lint Prtmlert 32 Ft. 1888, ·
E•ceHent Condition. Call After :

8;30 740-44H565.

Ytllowat(lne 13Ft. Cemper. Al1o··

Capo For S·10.•Qna 'eng Btd, •
One For Aeg. Bed, 740·21!8,1538. ..

SE f!V ICE S

810

$8.000 080, 740·388-9678,

Home
· Improvement•
IAI!IIENT

1998 C h•~Y Prism L.S.L Loaded ,
18,000 Milts, Aeal Nice, 7-40·2Mi·

6783.

• I

WATERPROOF~O

Un condtllonlll llltllmt guar11ntet.
Local re1erenc11 lurnf1h1d . El·

1998 Pontiac Trlina -Am , V-8,

la~ohtd 1975. Call 24 Hro , (740)
44&amp;·0670, 1-SOD-267·0575 . Rog·

Fully Loldld ,

trs Wattrpmollng.

7~0· 445 - 4548 ,

II

NO An&amp;wtr Ltl\'1 Mtlllgt, Or

740·446-7178 . •
84 Nluan 300 ZX , nlc·e car.

$11!00, 740.7~2· 1 1107 after 5pm .
6&amp; ford ueort wagon, eut o.
~5;000 mllea, Iron! wh . dr. run1

graal $1 ,500.00
304-678,38911 .

304-89~· 3691

or

Ohio Vallav Bank Will Oitlr For
Sale By Public Auction A 19 &amp;7

Wlllyo Truck 0811766 , A 1991

C hev~ l.umlna U49818 , &amp; A

1989 Pontiac Grend Prl" 112181,.:.1

On

1211~186

AI 10;00 A.M. AI

. The 01/8 Annu, 143 Third ~vt ·
nue . Oattii)O itl , Ot-t . The Above
Wilt Be Sold To t-tlghut Bidder
"A&amp; II - Wher e II " WithOut E~ ·
pra u ad Or tmplled Wimilntv
And May Be See n By Calling
Keith Jopnson A!140 -441-1 03B.
OVB Atnrvn The ftlghl To Ac·
Clpl Or Rejact An~ And All Bids,
And Withdraw Proptrly From
Salt Prior To Bale. Terms Of Sat.:

CASH OR CEATI1'1ED CHECK .

Appllancs Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Ove r 25 '(tare Ex·
per ltnce All Work Ousrantetd,
Frtn ch c;:11~ Maytag, 7&lt;10·-448·

1.'95 .

.

C&amp; (~ Ganerat Horne Main·.
tentnct • Painting, vinyl lldlng,
carl)tntrv, ooors , wlndOWI, balhl,
mobtlt homt repair and more . For
fret tstlmtte call Chel , 740· 992·

6323.

Proleulonat. 20 yrs e1pirltnot
with ail ma1onery, brick, btool&lt; &amp;
l lont . Als o ro om additions Ql·
rages , etc. Free lltlmates. '304·

773·9550.

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Flesldtnllal or commercial wiring ,
new &amp;ervlce or rtp111r1. Master ~1· .
ctnltd fif l ctrlclan , Ridenour

Elt01riCOI , WV000305, 30HT!·
t78e ,

I ·

..
••'

..

. ·!

' .,

' •• ,1

In a

. ''

..

• ·, .
... ·~

." '.'
"''•
,.~

.•

.,

"···
., '•

•,.J

..
"'

Fervor· Razor , Shift • Melody. HE:4RD
My neighbor is a born gossip. Her idea of keep1ng a
secret is not telling where she H§:ARD it.

, WIS.

1992 Hondo Accord; LX, 2 Door
Coupe , 5 Spttd , A./C, Crul ...

. .·'•

..'

Tf.IERe. 1-lLIH,

New gas tsnko l boOy Plflt. D l
R Aulo , Alploy, WV. 304·372•
3833 Of 1·800·273-9328.

Smokod In, SUOO 740·368·

,,.J

·'
•·' i•
, ... r .

Auto Parta &amp;
Acceaaorlea

780

..,.r.
l4lffta

SARCASM

6001&lt;?

14200, 740·949·2203 or 740·848.
20-415, will consider tr•d• for 1
good pon!Oqn boll.

760

Flew-- ·'.,••

SO
52 a-loll

I

..

for Sala

STS Jot ski, 01111 unilor worran1y.
1887 Chtvy Cllobrlly $1,100. · lhrtt lllliellr, 83 hOIIti)OWtr,
GoodCOn&lt;llllon,740·266· 1192,
bought naw oluly of '87, thrtt

•.:'11 •

.. w...,

'53
pt one or lllem on his own, oulnum- L-I.....I....J.-L-.1....
bered, he beoon~et more yellow lhan a
,.,.lc
bw1ch or bananas.
At the bridge table, it helps to know
how to deli!nd yoartl!lt. !And It it oven
better if ,your partner knows the
moves lllo.l To tat yout'll!lf, look only
at the Wnt a11!1 North hande. Again~t
three no-trump; you lead the spade
tis; four. jack. ldng. Declarer plays a
VZEJDZR
'IC
EPXVT
E P H
EDJRS
low club from hit hand. How do you
defend? ·
0. p ~ y p
Perhaps you lllink North's·lllree noEPXVMA
ZDH
trump wu an overbid. But It pays to
be qgrenive in bidding pme. Also, it
E 1· J Y P
VZEJDH
YZV'E
OXEP
lsn1such a bad contract. Finally, true,
you can snake live clubt with thil Jay.
CHYZI . •
010
CBRZV
oat. Yl!llhatls never euy to bid with
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "The New Age? 11'1 ju11 lh8 ol~ age 11UCk
limited hijlh·card content and no sin·
microwave oven for 11fteen I8COOdl."- (Maglclan) Jameo Rand!
gletons or voide.
From trick one, West knows that
South hal the opade ace. So. after a ·
labllshlng hl• ouit, West needl an en·
try to caoh thooe wlnneF'I. The only
14ltt4 lty ClAY I. 'OI&amp;AH _;;__ _ __
candidate Is the club klnJ. Ergo, West
must play .tecond hand low at trick
learrange · ltftert of the
four oc:romblod wordo bt·
~wo. 11 this dan&amp;eroua? No, because If
low to 1orm four limp~ wordt.
South 11M the club ace, he would have
played the ace and another club. For
NEFTOS'
all South knows, East hat the •Ingle·
ton ki71J.
2
Alter East win• with the club ace,
he returns his 1econd.1pade, Which
deleala the contract. .
Note that if South ducklal Irick
one, Eaet must •witch to diamonds.
And II declarer slarh club• from the
dummy, Eaet must go up will! the ace
- ·an Interesting dichotomy, If that 11
the word I need.

24 Fl. Pon11on Boat 111 Horn

1989 -Tauru1, Fully loldtd.

........

To ·get a.current weather
report,
check.the
.

750 Boat• &amp; Motora

1984 C11maro Z-28, 350 'i·l, Au·

42-

I rllll

s~~epa , u.~oo.oo 7A0·378·28ot ·

•,

40=:.:..:;:

'::~:~:~' S@~4UlA-~t-~s·
0

•

NlorS.OOPM.

112K. runo good, $2.000.
11&gt;!8-27011.
'

WIJC ~0 ~Tt\1~

~TN.L

Would LIQ To Buy Round Balao
Of Hoy. 740-2511-17:z.l.
'

K,~DOI ~ ?'

'(OU'IIE~

2Ii0-*MI.

.....- . Btuo.1-1e-tt.

,..

,...
NO

. •

21C.o;• '•

held!ldle.~
.
·ror some llnlnge-. IItts Flllde · ln+-4-~~+--+-­
me lllink or pnp who "br~WeJY' beat
up wtl'otlunate Wdlmt. Yl!l when you 1...+4~~+--+-­

'

Chov' Alko •on, llar11 111

. .

Mil ,,

22T-

Lewis Carroll •tole. " 'I'm nry
bnwe ~attj; he went on ln. 1 low
\'llk!e; 'only today I happen to haYe I 1...--1---1--

Har
..... -I1nortll!)fl
AI. 2,lorSquare
BaiH,
.0Q.f2.00.
Sei~N&lt;Ur on!): 304-&amp;7~.

11.2!0.00.' 740·258-8689.

C.ute II a IPtCkltd pupl Regll·
tertd Bluttlck puppies, rtadv,
hive thota &amp; wormed , cell 740·
74-2·~086 eller Spm , will hold till
Chrlllmat, Z. Bo~n .

740·245·5358.

Longaberger 811ketl. J.W.' a,
Cr tac o, May Bukets &amp; Many
Moret 304·878-1&amp;49.

25~-'ZT
ofllelll
FSJ FIFJ

• Q It ••

:u Ur.. .

Keep going low

1987 Y•moha Vtnturo 1300 co
Full Foctory Drttt $2.876. 304·
87-18.

linn; 740-9112·11073.
Now Open SundaVI 1·4. Mon·SII
11·6. Fish Tank &amp; Pet Shop,
2413 Jackeon Ave. Polnl Pleas·
ani, 304-6715·2063.

730 VIlli .l 4-WDe

600 .. Air,

Llveatock

91189.

Htallhclvne BX-5000 ol(ygen gen·
erator, comptetelv relurbfshed, an . Jack Ausuli tttrler pupa, aeven
new pariO. $700, 740·992·5200 .
weeki old, white/brown, t&amp;UI
docked, llrlt shols , $300, 740·
Hnvy duty lilt chf11r, nice, worka 696·7055.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aopalrt&lt;l. New I Rebulll In Stock.
Cal Ron Evano. 1-600·537·9!26 .

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

By Pllllllp Alcler

1987 Chavrolal 11 1500. 4.3. 5

1988 Eocorl G. T. $800 .00. Aloo

Grubb's Plano· luning &amp; repalra.
Problem•? Need Tuned? Call the

11-_.... ""

Ml

,.-~ ·

TWD If

r,

Purebred , No Paptrl; Call Bet·.
wten Cark &amp; 8:115 P.M. 304·895-

coli 304·875·3423 or 304-575 ·
0831

21~
·~=~=
_,.,M
SN"""""

:IOCGM- . .

II

Skidder 4 Tlml&gt;trjack Knuclrla ·· 92AT
boom, John o .. Powtr Unil, 1988 Jeap CMroua. 4 Whaal
Mounted On DleMJ Tarttum tnt Or/,., 12.800.00. 7-ID·37f.2809.
740-24~.
Nlorf;OOPII.
You, Area John Otttt Dllflr
li81 ltnu Trooptr 11. •••· olr.
For RatJdlntlaJ, ~ Comrnerei•l 12.600;
Mo,lag wathar. good
Lawn fllulpmenl: COmpact U!Hitr ...-.f75,7-.ooN.

Electric Scooters , Wh11lchair1 ,
New And Ulld, Stairway Eltve•
tori, Wheelchair And Scooter
Lilli, Bowman'&amp; Homecare. 7o40·

(7~5!588

.. F11 far

lrr++-

tomatlc, 12.800, 740-446-48!8.

RodiO 150; Coal Stove $30; Largo
Btan 6119 $25 (Coolo 150 New)
740-6112~731
.

20 CIFI I • .,._

Opening lead: .. 6

.48xA8 lnttallar.d Building ta F(
Cellng Haight 2 SlidinG Oooro. 4
Inch Concrete Floor I. Foolaft ,

Old $100 Each; Paronll On
Praml111 ; 3 Malll, 1 Female;

Exerclu Bike Air Gometer $76;
Health Rider Uo; (21 10 Speed
Blcycltl S30 Each: Old Singer
Pofllblt Sewing Machine $40 ;
King Size Watarbed, S175, Soli
Sldt Wavelell; AnUque Zenith

.... ........

47Pro-(far . .

31 blnclor

685·3874,

446·7253

• "-.......,

f311.000. 7~71

AKC Ragistered rollweUer pups
Parant1 on prtml&amp;el gentle .
$200.00 each 1 mallft/ 3 ltmaltl
Computer For Bate, 288 Proces- had thots 1 wormed' 304 ·875·
tor, Call For lnlormatlon, ?40~ . 7026
441-1286.
Oa)t bed style walt[ btd, .Iuper
11note wilh 3 deep- drawtlt, good
c:ond. $2110,00 304·662·3397.

ICII.

,:o•

9 I' I 4 3

• I' f

He 00H'T
Neeo

7~103.

.oe.ze Building. 1 611&lt;1ir111 Ooor. I
,.., Ooor, ~ 1nc11 eona... floor

.AKC R~gistered female Beagla ,
fully trained , wlll nol run tralh ,
Good Condition, 304·878· 1885 dttr and fOK, OOB 7/4/94, 1300
Aflef 5:00.
llrm ; AKC Aeglsta rtd Seaglt
IOTTLEDwtLLPOWEAI
pupt , 3 1/2 months old , thotl
LOSE up-to-30 Lbt,
114rled, wormed, $100 taeh: 740·

THIRTY OAY MONEY BACK

,.......

41 GGol

.

D c - t - · HIFIIWII '

eAK 5 3

'

1 THINK I'L.L. GIT
TATeR A NEW

1991 6-10 5 Spaod, 12JIOD ·
'fllll!l. Conct f2,79UO. ltN e.
10 Jl'k:lwp, 10.000 IIIIH, 'I .f. 4
Spucj, I1.111J5.DO. ~ llo1Drt.

Building

4 Pltct Bad room Sulle 1225

-

... ··-

WH1TE'I METAL OETECT0111
Ron All ... n, 1210 - d A.,._
nua. Golllpollo. Oblo 7.00·..._
.3311.

......

1

• .1,

.. Q 7%

I

-.DO

5

.....

===:==

. II Qo
';A
17 Eww
II 'YIN ·~•

H

EM

• A Kt

!

11160 S.fl Of will •
101 :zt.a liD II. ..,., Ill :
oqllol ..,.. I llllllo1 IIHrtl'-&lt; .
-5-flllt-IOf
•

- .Ohio. 1-fOO.t71«i21

w..

6P.M.

510

.... ll!ird -

s.... m.lrlf!Or-. $.460,

w.(lredalet· born Oct . 30, 1918·
lhret boyl, four glrl1, t•H•
740 448 8308. HI00·281-D0911.
dOCQd. oho1t &amp; wormtd , roglo·
12 lt.Wtlll Cargo tnciOIId widt tered, Uking $ 2 00 IICh . )0.4•
body tadtm '"" uaner. wide rtll S63-8351.
door -wiln fold down ramp, lidt AKC Golden AetrMrt 7
kl
door, 5 new rlmt&amp;rtrtt. tlte. Old, 111 ShOll &amp; Wormed. $225,
braktt,and Inter Ughtl, nice trdlt· Will Hold Fo• Ohrl.-mas With A
tr II ,500.00 304-67~1.
Dapoo11. 740-2611-16M.

450

7~0·385-4367 .

'.
,.
· 1.$ ........ 740-" .
'

.., c._, s -10. V'lf, ..-

1150: Bed!C&gt;Om

Suppllet

Little tykea cottage bed. jenn~
nnn·baby bed/ mattren blue tod·
dlaf bid 304·615·3?65 .

Mobile home 11te a11allable btl·
watn Athens and Pomeroy, call

Sullo.

550

Lerge buck &amp;tovt, practically
ntw 304·676-3801

460 Space lor Rent

Watt\er /Or~tr

720 T:rucb for ....

lg'lf '"'' 17,001) ..... 741J•.'

446·4039. (740) ~·11»4

740·«1-5167.

• "%

AOII
IYAIII InEIITU,IIIEI
"
' -fi1lingo
-

Two· 2 bedroom 1 bath apafl ·
manti, In Middleport, new carpet,
lmmtdlalt occupancy, call 740·
992·1350 for more lnlormallon,

7~0· 441-5698 ,

C01'111117-IO 31111 8611.

-·-·-·

-.--. 7~112.

Johnton'l Ulld Furniture: Btdl·
new 11nd Ultd, mattrta111, Kitch·
en appllanc11, Olnettes, Wash ·
era, Or~e11, Fretztrs, tiel {740)

Circle Motel Lowest Ratts In
. Town , Newt~ Remodeled, HBO."
Clnemu. ShoW'tlme &amp; Cisney.
Weektv Rlltl, Of Monthly Rate1,
Conatructlon Worktr&amp; Welcome

,.
•• 1'1
" f.

..-.

Twin Atve11 Tower now accepllniJ
applications lor 1br. HUD eublld·
lztd apt. tor elderly and handl·
capped. EOH 304-675·6679.

Furnlahed
Roome

• It 4
•AK
• 1%
•Q UI 7 5J

2 oontrollort . 4

"*

For sale IOIId oak gun cabinets

Tara Townhoull' Apartments,
Very Spaclo..,a, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Floors, CA, 1 1/2 Bath, Futly Car·
peted, Patio, No Pets. Lea•• Ptue
Securtty Oepolll Required, 740·

:.

Wolatlino S~; 31• 200 PS1
121.95 Por 100; 1' 200 PSI
U7.oo ,.., IOO; .t~l ar... c-

~.

Now AccapJing Application• For
All Electric, Ona Bedroom Apart ·
mentl, Waaher /Drvar Hook-Up,
Water, Truh JSewage Pa id,

.. 1·1616, 700· 446·0957 , 740 ·
446-6515.

..... .

6uftk tl!t&lt;JI,
btdl. matt,tiHio drft:Hrl.

U"" f4K"""'O Store- ,-

daY' Inn In

Firewood all hardwoods $3,00
Load . "'2 loads for $60 .00 ,

Now Taking Appllcttlont- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhoutt
Aparl-ments, tnctudea Wallr
Sewage, Trun, $2915/Mo., 740·

· 304-17U4!50.

• ••
140..

Ollar llioe. ~75--.

Nice Ctean 2 bedroom, rtftrtne·
Washer lOver Hook·Upl 304-.e7!·
5162. .

$279/Mo., 740.446·9811

-

•

Utod - - ·· f1!10-SJOO . ...
1&gt;1Jitc140
......
- age.
· &lt;117-·
eroo ......
mtl
not nome.

Uted
10 Springo
Ytar Warranty
Still""'
In
llori
' - -·
Plttlic. Proctorville, 740..J81·

E.STATE6 , 52 We1twood Drive
lrom 1279 to $358. Walk 10 oltop

9112-2187.

2 Bedrooms ln. Ktrr, 7-40·446 -

1981 , 14Ft X 70Ft , 2 Bdrms , 2
Battis, VInyl Siding. Great Condi-

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

COuntry S~t Apartmtnt: L.argt 2
Btdrooml, 2 Bathl, W/0 Hook·

1980 Fairmont 141t'70 3 Bed·
ro oms. 1 112 Baths, All Etecltic,
Ver y Solid, Well l&lt;ept, Many Up·
date5 , Needs Moved, 740·682·

tion, $17.000.00. 740·446·6113.

-

I Bodroom. PrMIIo Dr-oy. 2·11
2 Block1 from Univer1ity or AkJ
Grandt. 1200.00/mo. (740) 3611-

350 Lota &amp; Acreage

Small House, Rodney (Jackson
Pike) No Ptts. Oepostt ReQuired ,
Available Now 740-245-1,18.

Oown on any t4N70 In
IIOGk, li mited number, tree dellv·

.

2 llodroomo, lnc1udifl9
Ulilltiao. $.450/Mo., Dapooll Ra·
qulrod, 1~11.

• moylel . Call 740·445·2586;
Equal HouolniJ Opportunlly.

7244 ,

·ssoo

363·8862.

1 Bedroom, lnclu~ing UtllitJ...
$350/Mo..

lionel Dr Re!OII. 740..ue-D139 Or
1.W U6 1383.

985·3511.

Central Locat ing Ser vice , LTC .
t-tas tmmec:uate Openings tn The 740·667·3304.
Athens , Meigs , And Gall lpoH&amp;
County Areas. OuaUIIed Applic- RED BRICK RANCH Strle
ants Must Enjoy Outdoor Work , , House. EKctlltnl Condition, Par·
Be Sell Motivated . Ha11e A GoOd !Iaiiy Flnl1h•d Basement, 2 Car
Garage, Serious lnqulrltt Only!!
Orl~tlng Record And Be Orug
Free. I(Je Are A Successlul . Rap · 740·446-3385.
Idly Growing Company That Oilers Restored VIctorian home. &amp;ttuated
Paid Training , Major Medical , on 12 acres, VIllage Mlddteporl,'
Dental. ·ufe And 'OisabiiJIY In · uctudad and ,pri\'Biil, appplntsurance. Company Vehi cle, Pa!d ment, call740..992-5696.
Vacation , Holiday s, And olOtK .
For Immediate Considerat ion 320 Mobile Home•
Please Catt 800·276·0966 M·F 8
for Sale
A.M. ·5 P.M For An Application.

140

Oownlown , Firtl Floor Offlct
Space, S•eond Avenue. Proftl·

3 bedroom, country kitchen, llv·
lngllamUy, 2 bathl, detached ga· ' 220 acres &amp; mlltl from Toyota.
rage on t 112 acrea, country let- · .,.ery prlvltt $350.000. PO. ~OK
464. llo11a10WV 25033.
ting, Chester area, $48,000, 740-

~lie

...... Requirld, 7~2957 .

1400 mo. Corner Building . 740· ' (740)-992·8250 Acqultlllont (next
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
40or).

310 Homnlor Sale

- -.Ohio.

.

enr.

11 0

L.Mng-5oilo. 2Piooe. UHd f275 , CoU 740· H6~373

AAnon4 WhirlpOOl Waohor $100;
l(aM&gt;ora Dr)Of $75; Whi1f
G.E. w,.n., 118; can After 5
7.0 it6 toM.

1 llld 2 bodroom _ _ .. ,...
rHhed and unfurntlhed. MCUiily
depotl;t required. no pelt. 7-40·

H-.

f

rr/~ f

Tool 8o.-: For TruQ. 150. 4Hr•d

-

Good setecrlon of uttd homtl
""" 2 or 3 bedrooms. Starting a1

TURNEO.DOWN Ofl

Supot

If',

•QU7 1%

Tral-

T-For-. 7&amp;&lt;146-1279.

Services

. 304-773-5033.

In-

• Pori&lt;. Aolr- ' ' - " ' Ro....... Ho-. T-1104.

recommend• that you do but i~
neu with people r-ou know, anCI
NOT 10 oend money lhrOiJOh lht
mall until you have irw...Ugattd
""'olfOMg.

wrecked or salvaged vehlcltl.

roomt, Furniahed E~:eept Bed·
room Fvtnfture. Ho P.u. Ref•-

-RoqoQd. T - 1 8.

Bualnesa '
Opportunity

IIICmCEJ
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHIN&lt;I CO.

J &amp; 0 Auto Parts. Bu-vlng

--·- -.3-·

Hloo 2 8drM T -

~ "

Ill d11nd1N

·1640
- -·
Slllrlifta,
c.Mrol
A~.3 Nlu,
30+
17UI65.
·

1!117.

230

Antiques &amp; dean uttd furniture,
will buy one Piece or compltle
1'10uleh0id, Oaby Marlin. 7"0·.

~

~t. l~l,' ·~ ,;.,~ .

Mllcelllneoul

....

'·=~=
7:.'
,_ w:..
,,=._
fl.....,.•_ .a_,....
•c .,.,
1

420 llotllll HOII II
for Rent

P~ae15...,

ASTRO·ORAPH
Fridu)'. Dec. II, IIJllh
EMMbll ~ hlny. mnre umhltlouK
objectlvc11 fur yuurKetr could be your
uppermoKC drl.,.e In the yeur uhead.

l'hl• ' lliiUid poy orr hondH&lt;IIIIOiy If
ynu dun't tukc nn mnre thun you can

hundlc.
SMIJ'I"I'i\RIUS !Nnv. 2J ·Dec.
11) Lc ~~"~ mlln11ke~ nrc li'kcly If you
alve credtnce tu your uwn ln~lahtM

· unci p&lt;rccrllon• l&lt;llluy. Don'l poy
1mentlon tn the udvh.:c uf 11 know· It·
1dl who In reullty may knnw vel)' lit·
· tie. Know where tu lnok f'nr rmnnnce

oncl you ' ll nnd h. The A.rn&gt;Ornph
Mutchmuktr in11tantly rcveubi which
rdiJnll Qre mmuntlcully perl'ec1 for
you . Mull $2.7~ to M111chnuaker. clo
of i~li nc:w•pu1'Cr, P.O. UU! 175K,

Murroy IIIII Sto11on. New York, NY
10.,6.
CAPRICORN rDec . l 2-!nn. 19)

mlg:hl -~'U the d11y If you link up
. 1111 '"! '' ''~ ,1 !1•• ulwa~M tr1u to·
llllrre" ' · . h~r\11 \~ 1d1 hiM ur hllr mote•
riu weullh rul~r thun enju)'lna the
muural Jk!rb In life. Be t4el«llve

when •oc:lulldng.
PISCES (l'oh. lO·Mar•h lO! Any
llft'l"~IKh ~huvlur nn yuur behulr
cuullJ L'UUM! nther~ lulo110 NP'ipect fur

you nllher thun u1.hnlre yuu tnd11y.
Evlfn II' ~~~ urc' su~rior In '"nne Wily.

111' 1tul aullnunr h.

.

ARJiiS fMu"h li ·Aprll I~! II
wnuiJ ht M~lf·di!L:i!pllnn lhut l'UUILI
lt:OO Ill )'IIUr d11\\llf1tll tuduy It".)'UU

)I'll cun ~rform ~omethlng
\\~!II "'hh uuly u few \kt:IC~~ of
lnrnrtnlilhlllut )nur J l ~pu.\ul . •.

think

T.ll 'I!US 1.\prll

~O · MII) ~fl)

O&lt;i

U f"w ntur" fUL'b 11\HJ opinlnflll bclfurc
Jumping Into HllmettlinJ nnunclul
thttt a f'rlen!,) fetl ll wou.I J M 11 aoutl
(Jeul. She ur he muy mcun well. but
couiJ be tnlully nliMinfnrn~J .

OF.MINI 1May 21 ·Juno lO! 1111

De Cllreful ubout f{)l.;ulllng on lhelndl·
11lefi nr odterll hHJuy, 11 coultl cnu*l
them to tuke o cl~1~er inuk ut )OU, und
beln&amp; uru.Jcr thC mna~lfylnJI gl111111
may CUUIIC )'~IU diKL·mnlnrt. ,

who ore watchlna ynu tuduy mu~ not
necu11urlly be your admirer~ . 110 If
yuu find yourr«~lf at the center of
uuentlun, keep thlt In mind und
JUUrd ""uln11t' who.t Y'•u tuay or Llo.

A011i\RIUS Uun 2fl· Poh. 19) II

· CANCER (June 21 -lllly ll) Be

•'

neither tno hur11h, nnr tou wlllh)' ·
WWih)' tutluy when munu,vlri, tho11e
whn ure In need nr your cure und clm·
lrul. An\1 ubuve all, -.Jon 'I usk lhemlt'
do wrnethlna yuu wouldn't do your·

.. ~r.

LEO !July 2J · Au~. lli A fullure .
ht du e•erylhlna thUI I• required ur
you In u hu!l'lU!I tn11iler tOOuy cuuld
tum a potenlllally prontuble v.:n!Ure
Into a "bummer.' ' O.m 't lreutlhlna!l
lndlnerently.
' Scpi, 221
\'IROO (i\u~

Tllc1c ·JC o Mtrona pth · ·i hly JuJuy thllf
ynu muy have to contcnr.l with a few
lndivlduuiR ynu u"ually tnukc an
etfortlnllvold. Ynur metde rul&amp;hl he
t~tcd on how you hundle the ~ I IUD·

lion.
LiBRA (Sepl . lJ·O.:t.lJiln the
ni!lllanalyiii1CidAy,il won't be whm
you ~ay lh111 will counl. but whul you

octuolly clo. Allhouah you ml11h1 be
u &amp;001.1 Ullker, be a aOOIJ producer ~~
well.

SCORPIO !O• t. 24· Nn• . l 21
Unlc~iK ynu lrUI)' uml hunc~tly knuW
whul YttU're dulng: lu~uy. It IK not
wise 10 mu~tcrmlnd the llnum:iul

ul'f ulu ol' u rrlend or luved mle. F.mlr!t
cuuld ~.· uu~e hlg IU'IIii: K,

\'

L

•'"•
,•
•

�'

,

Page 11 • The Dilly 81 1Unel

Friday

Thursday, December 10, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Hemings' offspring burial rights split Jefferson descendants
·By DEE•• CAIJCHON
UMToclly
CHAIU.OJ11:SVILL£, Va.- The deKendants of Thomas Jdfcnon are
lndina for an "'IY confrontation over whethu 10 allow his offsprins by lhe
~lave Sally Heminp in10 lhe family pveyard at Monticello.
Some fllmily members on bod! llide5 of lhe debate e~pec110 quitlhe Montketlo Auociation in pro1es1 • and possibly sue- if lhe vOle goa againJI
:lhem at !he family's annual meeling here in May. 'The Monticello As•ocia·
·lion is a goup of 1100 Jelfmon descendant&lt;.
' l,ucian Tnncoil IV, a writer and sixth-generaliiln Jeffe1110n de&gt;cendanl.
:ha inyi?EI of Sally Hemings' de&gt;cendants 10 attend lhe annual meeting
a&lt; hi• &amp;
He e~pecll ~ Heinings des.cendants will come to !be two-day
reunion.
affair ~iously men~ed for !be off&lt;pripg of Jeffe1110n's legit·
imate dau&amp;hten. Martha and Maria.
~, defy diem 10 kkk !be Hemingsesout of the room,"Truscolt says. "I'm
:JOin&amp; 10 tell my side of lhe family, ' You should 1ook our slave descendants
:in !be face when you vote 10 e~clude them from our family Ond our graveyard.· ••
The dissension in Jefferson's family i!l part of lhe fallout from new genet·
ic leots that ·show Thomas Jdfmon wu al111011 certainly the falber of Sally Hemings' you11ge" son. Eston.
Jdfmon's legitimate hein must decide, by majority vote, whether to
111.-cep! Hemings' de&gt;cendants u relatives entitled to burial at Monticello.
&lt;, The graveyard has been in Jefferson's family since 1773. Every year,
:SOO,OOO tourists walk paot the cemetery during toun of Moqtkello, the
·famous Jefferson home seen on lhe nickel.
Slaves were buried in unmarked graves at Monticello. Sally Hemings, who
died in 1836. 10 yean after Jeffer100, was buried somewhere in Char-

Inspectors
blocked
.. from Iraqi
party HQ ·
'

l
presidelll'a gra~e.
'
An additioldl half-acre was acquired in 1923 when lhe Thomu Jefferoon Memorial Foundation bought Monticello. Thoma.&lt; Jeffcr1011 Randolpll
IV and his brother Hollins Rwldolpll were given lhe land "ror the descen·
dants of Thomas Jefferson." The land wa.• later transferred to !he Monticello Auociation. .
Truscott said his uncle, who will become pre5ident oflhe association next
year, told him that many "crusty old-time Southerners have threatened 10 quit
if one member of the Hemings family is allowed i~,"
.
.
"They face 1 \llwsuit if they refuse to letlhe Henungses tn, and I wdl happily join that law~i~" Truscott said.
.
Truscott said Gillespie had once prop&lt;l'ed creating a separate graveyard
for Hemings' descendants. a notion that Truscott said smacked of segresa·
tion. Gillespie said the Monticello Foundation would have 10 provide additional land for such a graveyard.
·
"A lot of mcmben of !be association are ... very uncomfortable with the
whole situalion,".said Roberi Coolidge, the a.&lt;sociation's historian for more
than 20 years.
He strongly supports welcoming the Hemingses into lhe association and
its graveyard iflhe DNA evidence, which he hasn't seen, shows they belong.
"I could resign if the Hemingses are unfairly kept out, although I hope
The Mon,tcello Association is very much influenced by lhe traditions of • it doesn't come 10 that," said Coolidge, a retired history professor from Quethe old SoUth, when: blOod relations matter. Adopted children are not per- bec.
'
mitted to be buried in lhe graveyard, nor are they included in the officilll
Coolidge said the a.•sociation's e~ecutive committee declined 10 publish
record of Jefferson descendants.
a leuer he wrote about the issue. "I suspect the part.of the leUer that annoyed
, The sraveyard is controlled by two deed&lt;. The oldest part, where Jeffer- them was when I said that perhaps some of us should have our DNA tested
son is buried, was kept by the family when Monticello was sold in 1833 to 10 prove we really are Jefferson descendants, too, .. he said.
'
pay debts. But this ·part is no longer used for burials. 10 ayoid crowding the

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

A11oc181H Preu Writer

.GAZA CITY. Gaza Strip - It's
not-d'actly the kind of company President Clinton normally keeps.
In the Gaza Strip~ the welcome
mat i~ out not only for the American
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - U.N.
leader, but for hun~ of now-aging
in•pecton searching suspected
veterans of the era when Palestinians
weapons sites in Iraq will not be · p;e.sed their cause the world over by
allowed to enter an office o( the
hijacking airlinen, shooting up air·
ruling Baath Party they were ' ports and staging guerrilla raids.
denied access to earlier, a party
The centerpiece of Clinton's visit
offocial said today.
to Gaza on Monday is a meeting of
U.N. inspec1011 have insisted
the Palestine National Council, a
they have the right under U.N. resnearly 600-mcmber parlia'ment-inolutions 10 enter any site in Iraq
e~ile, which along with other Paleswithout conditions, and the United
tinian groups is to reaffirm in his
States and Britain have threatened
presence that the Palestinians have
military . action if Iraq does not
renounced
the goal of destroying
comply. ·
Israel.
The'two countries have left an
Like much else connected with the
armada in the Pe,..ian Gulf to
visit - and the Wye River hind-fore~sure that Iraq abides by its
security accord Clinton is coming
promise 10 cooperate with weapons
here to promote - the Gaza gatherin.•pectiom.
ing is viewed very differently by th~
A Baath Party leader, Latif
two·sides.
N,..yyif Ja.•sim told reporters IOday
Palestinians consider the •~·fight·
the inspecro,.. would not be
allowed inside the offtce.
·
"They won't ·enler," Jassim
told a news conference at the
office in Baghdad's Adhamiya
neighborhood. "You will not find
inside this office any materials
rtlated to what they are looking
By KATHY BERGSTROM
for."
DH Moine• R-elllter
The office is inside a two-story
DES MOINES, Iowa - Trivial
stucco building behind black gates.
Pursuit had to start somewhere.
and ha&gt; no sign 'outside indicating
So do X-it, Rules of the Game and
it is an office of Iraqi President
Bla•t Ball.
Saddam Hussein's party, although
Many probably never heard of any
·there is an emblem of the party
of the three. ·
over the door.
That's all right. There was a time
. Jussim- a former information
when no one had an inkling of the
-minister who is the Baath Party
likes of Uno, Trivial Pursuit orT-Ball
·~hief in Baghdad - insisted the
- · the three popular games after
.office was private property. and it
which the new trio of pastimes are
·was his decision whether anyone
roughly patterned.
could enter. He said the party
The inventors of x :it, Rules of the
works on political matters and not
Game and Blast Ball would like to
anything related to the inspectors • think that some day their games, too,
work.
wil) be household names.
"My base is protected, and no
'- 'All three have recently used Des
one can enter except a party memMoines-area outlets for lest runs of
ber or an fi'uqi national," ·he said.
sorts.
On Wednesday, a team of 12
Here's a look at how each is far·
inspectors was turned back when it
ing.
tried to enter the office.
"We were absolutely nobody,"
The inspectors left after an Iraqi
safd Cary Vernon, a native of Co'rnotlicial demanded they first proing; who invented the card game Xvide a wriuen declaration "on the
it. But a combination of luck, money
material and items" they sought,
and persistence helped Vemon and
the official lrnqi News Agency
his brother persuade Toys R Us to
·said. The otlicial was not identified' carry the game in some .of Its Mid·by name.
western stores.
Later Wednesday, however. an
An emergency medical services
Iraqi otlicial suggested the Iraqi
helicopter pilot in Windsor, Calif., he
escorts had made a mistake in
said he got the idea for X-it one night
declaring the site sensitive.
in early 1997 while playing cards
The United States, which has
with his son.
threatened military action during
He· and his brother, Curtis, of
two previous standoffs between
loveland, Colo.,teamed.uplo devellrnq and U.N. inspectors this year,
op X-it into a marketable product.
wus caulious.
The .same has a cin:ular board and
"As the president has said, it
involves two decks of cards. II comUNSC0!'1 cannot do its job effec·
bines elements of solitaire, hearts and
li ~ely, we remain poise!I to act,"
rummy,· but is its own unique game,
·David Leavy, a spokesman for the
he suid.
National Security Council. said
Cary Vernon ""id he's the creative
Wednesday. He declined to say
fon:e, while Curtis has the business
what would trigger U.S. military
smarts and provided most of the
uction.
financial backing.
.
.. In . Britafn, which also has
Just like playing a can! gume, the
threatened military action, a Forluck of the draw also pluyed a part in
eign Office spokesman said today
their business.
that "ull problems over inspection
Last spring Curtis Vernon was
are u serious concern. ••
teamed up with two .Toys R Us store
He added: "Iraq hus undertak·
managers in a golf game. He told
en to provide full cooperation. Its
them~ about X-it, and they gave him
response so far is not, in our view,
a contact at the Toys R Us distribu·consistent with full cooperation."
tion center in the Kansas City urea.
The spokesman spoke on custom·
Cary tlew to Kansas City to show
ury condition of anonymity.
. the center's inventory control speJassim's , lalemenls today came
ciul ist the game, and they formed an
just hours aFter a full contingent of
agreement to sell X-it at 41 ll'Y' R
inspectors resumed searc~es of
Us stores in the Midwest.
s u~pt!cled weapons sites . .
A compuny in Hong Kong print"Everyone's gone out I&lt;Kiay.
ed the game. and it's being IL'sembled
llllempting to carry on their normal
in China. The first shipment of
activities," said Caroline Cross, the
I0,000 games should now be in
stores.
inspectors' spokeswoman. "We're
just carrying on with ·our scheduleil
The Vemons have done all of their
aclivilies."
·
own marketing. They split up the
stores and personillly delivered proCrus.' said the teums had nfude
motionul signs and banners. They
no changes in their routine.
also will distribute games to tadio sta·
"There is no reason why we
lions for giveaways and tried to
' hould stop," , he said.
schedule media interviews along the

ers auending the session to be heroes Lauro cruise ship in which an elder·
of a national struggle that they hope ly American passenger was shot dead
will culminate in Palestinian stale· in his wheelchair, and Mohammed
hood.
Oudeh, implicated by Israeli and
Israel, however, is all but holding American intelligence experts in
its nose at the prospect of bringing . planning the hatched hostage;taking
tosether what it regard!; as a notori: at the 1972 Munich Olympics that
ous who's who of, terrorism, a rogues' left II Israeli athletes dead.
gallery responsible for taking hunUsing its security veto over who .
dreds of innocent lives.
enters Gaza, Israel has banned some
"It's certainly not a group or body ex-fighters now living abroad, inchldthat we value,IO say the least," Israeli ing members of the radical Syriangovernment spokesman Moshe Fogel based Popular Front for the Liberasaid of the Palestine National Coun- lion of Palestine, from auendins the
cil.
session.
Some former guerrillas are hoyBut Israel cannot keep too many
couing the meeting to express their PNC members away or it will defeat
continuing opposition to any peace the main purpose of the meeting,
with Israel.
which Israel itself insisted upon:.
"What will happen in Gaza does amending the Palestinian national
not reprei'Cnl the n;al will of the charter to nullify clauses calling for
Paleotinian·people," said PNC mem· . the destruction of the Jewish state.
ber Leila Khaled, a onetime PalesThere is sharp disagreement
tinian commando who hijacked air- between Israel aad the Palestinians
liners in 1969 and 1970.
over how exactly that should be
Those expected to auend include accomplished.
.Mohammed Abbas, who oversaw
The Palestinians say they already
the 1985 hijacking of the Achille renounced the offending claUiiCS in a

New card game inventors hawk
their product on the test market
'

1996 meeting of the PNC and in a
subsequent leiter from Arafatto thenIsraeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres.
Reflecting that, o t l Palestinian
invitations .to the g · ring merely'
a.&lt;k those anending
listen to a
speech by Clinton in ~upport of the
pence accords.
·'
Palestinian leaders have said the
abandonment of a call to arms agains~
Israel will be affirmed by acclamation, not by an actual vote. Butls~l
wants a formal tally, and warns that
without one, the peace acconl is off.
"We're not going lp. accept any
halfway, vague actions by the PNC,"
said Fogel, the lsnu:li sffkesman.
Whatever distaste lsrllel has about
the session is amply reci\?rocated by
some of the former 1'\llelilinian tight·
ers who plan to attend.
Oudeh, the reputed Munich mastermind who is better k9qwn by his
code name of Abu Daoud; \insles out
Israeli Foreisn.Minister Ariel Sharon,
whom many Palestinian~ ~lame for
the 1982 massacre of hUndreds of
Palestinian refugees in Lebanon by
Israeli-allied Christian militiamen.
"Who is he to talk ahout us having blood on our hands?" he said.
Some of tliose who wijl .be rub-

'

way.
The brotheni have invested about
$100,000 in the venture so far. ·
Cary Vernon ha.• big dreams for
the game, including the possibility of
X-it tournaments on college campuses. He hopes after this test run
Toys .R Us will agree to carry the
game nationwide.
"I'm hoping," he said, "it will be
one of the staples of family curd
play."
The .game will sell for $24.99 at
some Toys R Us stores.

He hired u patent auomey, and
now both the game and the base have
patents pending; the nnme also . is
trademarked.
A major•sporting goods manufacturer is making a prototype. Once
that's ready, Bravard will ~ave 1o
negotiate an agreement with dJe·com·
puny to produce and sell it.

Meigs County's

By JOHN McCARTHY
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Stale Sen. Jeffrey
Johnson, who will give up his seat next week and
focus on over1urning his conviction last month on
exrortion charges, said the decision was made for his
constituents.
"Until I clear this up, they don't need to have it
hanging over them,"the Cleveland Democrat. said at
a news conference Thursday.
Johnson is to be sentenced Feb. 5 after being convicted of violating the federal Hobbs Act, which prohibits public officials from using their office \O extort JelflniV Johnson
money. A Cleveland grocer accused Johnson of pres·
suring him for campaign contributions and loans.
"Despite my belief in my innocence, I know I must take responsil&gt;ili·
ty in having put myself into a po5ition where my hone~ ty has bee~. brou~ht
into question. I simply chose the wrong person to assoctate w11h, he sa~d .
Johnson's resignation will lake effect Wednesday. Although the LegiS·
. ·
lalure. could have sought his
removal, Johnson said the decision

'"

.,

Dragon Internet
Full Unlimited Access
as low as $12.50 per Mo.

. 1-888-657-0977

Good Afternoon

Today's
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
'
Edilorials
Local
Soorts
Weather

liteJ!. Jj

8

8-10
11

2
3
4&amp;S
3

Lotteries

·

OHIO
Pick 3: 4·8·1; Pick 4: 3·3·1-8
BuikeyeS: 14·16-17·24·27.

•'

Tim MO~T BMOTifUl ~~tECTION Or
TREE~ IN THE TRiiCOUNTY AREA!

W.VA.

Daily 3: 9-4-0; Dally 4: 1·2-3-3
C 1998 Ohto Vallty Publishing Co.

Single Copy· 35 Cents

1

~!~-·~ '

..... '

'

was his own.

He said he was grateful to Senate President Richard Finan, a
Cincinnati Republican, for not pressuring him. ·
"He (Finan) said to me if it is my
decision, he will abide by that,"
Johnson said.
Finan was traveling on Thursday and did not return a telephone
message left .with his office.
Senate Minority Leader'" Ben
Espy, who was at Johnson 's side at
the news co~ference, said the resignation will allow lhe Senate to
focus on its·work.
•
"If there is a cloud over this
institution, it does stop the people's
work," said Espy, a Columbus
Democrat.
Johnson said he was proud of his
accomplishments during his eight
years and would return to public
service if his conviction is set aside
or overturned on appeal.

mEE OF UGHTS - A large tree adorned with gold at•r ornaments given In rem•rnbrance or
In honor of a loved one diiCOrata• the Melga County Senior Citizens Center. More than 60 per•r• being •dded dally. The $5 paid for an ornament
110naUzad its111 h•ng on the tree now and
goes ·Into tha C•nter'• home delivered me•l fund. Thla Ia the alxth year that the Center h. . had a
tr•e of llghta. Hitre Emma·Adams of Racine, left, adds on• In memory of her husband, Cleo, and
Gar•ldlne Cleland of the . Bertha !'t'J. Say111 Missionary Society of Racine, hangs an orn•ment In
remembrance of • deceas•d m•rnber.

mor•

Voinovich lawyer predicts investigator will prove governor's innocence
UL SOUHRADA

·

p~ ed p Writ
As~~~0MB~ Ohioe{AP) _A lawyer for
· · h
h' r 1 1

By

Gov.

Georg~ Vomovlc says ~s ~~\: %et~

~~:r;~s :~at 1~:~~~~~;J :':;~~::laundering

.POtNSJ]TTtAS

6 lh" Pot

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 Pages

it'IJ~~)·

Hometown Newspaper

Mason jail
• •• escape to be
investigated

.

I)

8" Pot

fJoh's Jor: Jnslt fndt,
bukm, Blllk
eiDitlfl

·

'

By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) ..:._ In a pivotal day reached
only twice before in Ihe nation's history, Republicans are
primed to muscle through the House Judiciary Commit·
tee an impeachment resolution ,that advocates .~emoval
of President Clinton from office.
Tlie committee where legal arguments are commingl_~d with raw partisanship is to debate four articles of
·impeachment today before making its recommendations
to the 435-member House.
The articles accuse t~e president of lying under oath
to a grand jury, lying tinder,oath in !he Paula Jones civil
lawsuit, obstruction of justice and abuse of JlOWer. All ~f
Clinton's actions were designed, they say, 10 conceal h1s
extramarital affair with a former While House intern half
his'age, Monica Lewinsky.
.
Clinton met late Thursday wit~· his advisers to discuss
the possibility of delivering another ~lateme.nt of conlri·
lion to help stave off impeachment.
.
.·
The presjdent was open to the id~a, but told aid~s. he
wanted to sleep on it, and would g~ve them a dec1s10n
~~
.
An adviser who attended the meeting, speaking on
condition of anonymity, said Clinton told them he would
~'lake a crack'' at writing the statement overnight. If he
decided to proceed, Clinton could issue a statement as
early as today, aides say.
A staff draft of a proposed presidential statement calls
his conduct "terribly wrong" and says, "I understand
today how reasonable people could read from my testi·
mony in the (Paula) Jones case and conclude !"crossed
the. line. ltr.ied not to, but that is no excuse." The draft,
first obtained by MSNBC, has not been read by Clinton,
the adviser said.

..
Guaranteed No Busy Signals!

Ll

I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 156

bing eiDows with Clinton at the Gaza
gathering have distanced themselves
from pas! acts or violence.
Abba.•, who oversaw the Achille
Lauro hijacking, has said publicly for
several years now that the operation ·
was a mistake. ·
.
·
Other PNC members remain defiant, insisting · their bloody tactics
were a legitimate means of bringing
the Palestinian plight to the world's
auention.
Leila Khaled, now a S4-year-old
women's activist anrl mother of two
children. said she had no regrets
about her hijacker pa.•t.
"'Not ever - never ever," she said
in a telephone inten~iew from
Amman, Jordan, where . she now
lives. . ·
Oudeh, 61 and a lawyer in the
West Bank town of Ramallah, was
never charged in the Munich mas·
sacre and does not acknowledge.
direct involvement in it: But ~e says
attaeka like it ultimately led to peace
negotiations with Israel. ·
, ·
"It was a field of struggle, he
said. "Maybe w~ fought too much,
but we suffered too much, too. Now
we've come halfway ~c~ss th~
bridge. It's time the lsraelts dtd,too.

Lefebvre said Major League
. $150 for 12 months
International wants to add the game
to its programs immediately. It will
Web TV or Computers all at local call!
wait for Bmvurd ·to . package the
UNLIMITED Pdrsonal Access, Personal E-Mail Account
&amp; 10 meg of Personal Web Space! Regular rate is $16.95 per mo.
..
Bryan Bravanl saw how soccer game.
The
game
qlso
has
a
retail
appli·
succeeded at auracting young enthusiasts and decided he might he able calion. and he said he's talked with
~
representatives for Ken Griffey Jr.
to help baseball do the same.
about the idea. He said Lefebvre also
Soccer modifies itself for younger
"Pomeroy
·children, which helps keep them has talked with some other sportina
/ Gallipolis
"Nelsonville
•Lebanon
•oayron
interested and playing the game, fie g&lt;*is manufacturers.
'Middletown
''I'm really cautiously optimistic
said.
~Wilminglon
'Hillsboro
'Washington CH ·
still," Bravanl said, "but it's been
•sardinia .
T-Ball attempts to do the same for ,
'•springfield "West Union
really exciting."
baseball, but the number of players
'Greenfield . , 'Circleville
"'Jamestown
and length of the games hinder its
effe&lt;tiveness.
He'd love to see Blast Ball
Bravard, who is marketing direc·- become a new lead-in for Lillie
tor for ServiceMaster in Des Moines, League baseball or T-ball. "That
lllso has a background in teaching and would be the ultimate for me - .to
coaching.. He decided to resurrect a say I left my mark on baseball."
game from his youth and invented
Blast Ball.
The game uses a foam bat and
ball~ a tee, a noise-making ba.&lt;e 11._nd
a boundary marker on the third-base;
side. Players hit the ball off the tee \
and run to the base. '
If the hiller makes it to the base
before the outfielder catches the ball
or fields it and yells "Blast," he or ·
~he is sure. The game ca~ be modified to include just a few players and
can be played in u .shon period of
time.
It teaches basic baseball skills, but
is fast-paced and easy lo learn.
StiHt Frant EhiMr le11llhlly Sha11 ltl flllller Fir,
White Pine\.
according to Bravanl.
"llit Elte• II Chrlm.s Trees or Tl'llllla•lll Wltltt Plttt,. &amp; Scetcll Pille
His idea started to take oil" when
he brought the game to an exhibition
Alto Anl••h: Ill &amp; lAp Trt11. AI frill •• perhctlr ...,_;.., 1111a•lllilr
' at the Iowa Stale Games in Ames this
. prkeL Slz11 1'11111' Jn. 6' It 10' S.pplueffll trill nllttltH...
summer.
~. Shtp E.lyl d , ...Ills,,,. ...... M1 tn!IIIM.r
A spectator put hirro in touch with
Jim Lefebvre, a former major league
Fresh From lhe Greenhorue
player und current hitting coach for
the Milwaukee Brewers.
Lefebvre liked the game so much
that he took ilto Major League Inter,
national, an arm. of Major League
Baseball that promotes the sport
Ami/able In ... Red- Pinlc. White·
around .the world. "We need to creMa1rble • Jil.p BeU. ·
ate games to get people involved at
an earlier age and in a much easier
way," he said in a telephone inter·
view from his Scousdale, Ariz.;
Doll't fO,.t
delfclovs
home. ·
,
"This is a simple way to get pen·
e~u~st,..
&amp;.Nm
pie excited about the game. I find it
" · Located 1/4 Mile North ol Pomeroy Bridge, Mason, wv
really exciting."
Phone (304) n3-5721 or (304) n3-5900 .
Rather than'trying to develop and
sell the game himself, Bravanl wants
to potent Blasi Call and negotiate
Rt. 7, Upper River Rot!d, GaiHpolls
licensing agreements with companies
to manufacture and nmrke!' it.

Eckersley
announces
retirement
-Page4 .

•

.Ex-Palestinian fighters plan to greet Clinton
By LAURA KING

Redwomen beat Wilberforce, Page 5
Amusingly stupid criminals, Page 8
Iraq inspectors return to field, Page 6

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

loaenille- noc at Monticello- in •location unknown today. said Cinder
Stanton, senior hillorian 11 Monticello.
Julia Jefferson Westerinen, a great-great-gnnddaughter of EsiOn Hemings
who lives in New YOtt, said she wants 10 have her ashes buried at !be Monticello graveyard.
Jefferson family memben who oppooe leuing in the Hemings' descendants say the is!lue is about family tradition and property righl&lt;. not race.
The property deed.• and wills that kept the cemetery in the family for 225
yean give owne,..hip only to descendants of Thomas Jefferson Randolpll,
the .on of Martha Jefferson Randolpll, Jefferson's older daughter, they say.
"That means - or I think it ohould mean - that the descendant&lt; antic·
ipated or acknowledged at the time are the ones that the gravtyard wa.&lt; conveyed to," said Richmond lawyer Robert Gillespie. president of the Monti·
•
cello Association, which control• the graveyard.
"Since we are ownen of the property, we can choose what to do," Gillespie added.
"The question is, do you rewrite history or adhere 10 the idea that the property was conveyed to the descendant• of Thomas Jefferson and his two
acknowledged daughten?'' Gillespie said.
Gillespie said he expects resignations regardless of what is decided.

Sports

December 11, 111118

Weather

· 1 · h's 1994 re-election campaign.
pIan mvo vmg 1
. .
.
" There is not one scmulla of evtdence that
.
the governor participated in a scheme to d lvert
· f d " Col b attorney David
campalgn.d un s, h · . umT~sJtday before the
Young sat. at a ean~g. u
Ohio ElectiOnS Comm1ss1on.
. The commission voted ~~~~niiTiously to hire
a special investigator to look into the allega·
·
tto~~We are not in the position to investigate
lh 1.s .. sal'd member Norton Webster.
I~ particular the seven-member commis·
·
nts the' 1·nvest 1'gator to sort through
s1on wa
nflictins testimony and fill in holes in
co ords. turned over by federal prosecutors
rehco uncovered evl·dl:nce of the alleged camW
paign law violations during a grand jury
1
· · · to another matter
mq~~~~ission Chairman Alphonse Cincione,

a Democrat, promised that the
investigator would have the authority to take the investigation wherever it leads
Also Th~rsda the commission
dismissed a simJ~r complain! filed
by the head of the Trumbull Coun. .
.
ty AFL-CIO. Cmc1one sa1d the
1 · tfil don beh If 0 f H old
comp am 1e
a
- ar
Nichols of Warren duplicated
charges included in the other com1 . 15·
Pam
Philip Richter, the commission's executive
director, said there is no deadline for hiring the
investigator but he said he expected fairly
quick actio~. Cincione said he wants a report
back within 90 days.
Richter added that he did not see any conflicl of interest in the commissioners overseeing an investigation into the man who appoint·
ed them. The commission includes three
Democrats and three Republicans appointed
~y !he gove':"or. ~e seventh member, an
tndependent, IS appomted by the oth~r boanl
"members.

i

•

,

Voinovich, a RepubHcan,
has been accused of approvmg a
plan to use a middleman to co.nceal
the source of $60,000 transferred
from his campaign treasury to his
brother, Paul, and a Statehouse l?b·
byist during his 1994 re·elecllOn
b'd
1·
. fil d
Among · the matenal 1e
·
·
·. ·
w11h the elecuons commtsswn was
a deposition by Vincent Panichi,
Voinovich's campaign. treasurer,
. .
· · h u d d 'th
descnb1.!'g a ·I 994
. meeung e a en e WI
Voinovich an~ hiS brother.
.
h
Panichi slid that at the meetmg, l e gover·
nor approved a plan to u~e a now-decease~
political fund-raiser as .• mtddleman to funne
h $60 000 p 1~
h and Statehouse
l e . ' . to au om.ovlc
lobbyiSt Mtchael A. Fabtano. The money was
· b
f
ts they made to
relm ursement or paymen
Cl I d
Anthony A G~llagher, a former , eve_ an.
labor o. fficial, 'fo_r working on . VolnOviCh s
d to records f1led woth the
campa!g~, accor mg
commiSSion.
George Voinovich has sald he can't remem-

,

be'i :lh~ meeting, and doubts it took place.
Pan1ch1 later conceded that he moy have miS·
unde~stood the governor's ·comments at lhe
meetmg.
Both George and Paul Voinovich, as well as
Panicdhi,_ Fab~ano and 17lated; ~m:anie~ wer~
name '" t e comp 1amts.
a~e eme
wrongdomg.
L
f p · h'
d lh ~ · vch ·
awyers or an1c 1 an
e o1no 1
b th
h d k d th commission to dismiss
ro ers a as e
e
.
.
all cha~g~s but s_nid th~y were satisfied With
the deciSIOn to htre an mdependenl mvestlgator
·..
.
lh h
d true
1
f The ~~v~rn~ ~ehev~~ ~ .?n~~u~gn said
acts o,ug o
roug 0 1 ·
·
;;~hatever the honest and true facts are, so be

1

Donald McTigue, who represented
Nichols, also said he was pleased with the
decision to hire an outside investigator.
Voinov-ich could be fined as much as

S10,000 if found guilty. He could have lost his
job as governor, but he'll leave that job any·
way on Dec. 31 when he prepares to take over
John Glcrtn's scat in the U.S. Scnatc. 1
·

POINT PLEASANf, W.Va. -A
complete investigation into Thursday's escape and response to the
escape of !Wo Mason County Jail
inmates will be conducted, according
to Prosecuting Attorney Diana Johnson.
The fugitives were captured by
local enforcement officers later in the
day in Rio Grande.
. The safety of both law enforce•
men! officers and the entire county
was endangered by the early Thurs·
day escape of felons Michael Wilson,
19, and Jonathan Eatmon, 27, both of
Poinl Pleasant, Johnson said.
•
Wilson was indicted in September
on three felony counts of breaking,
and entering, one felony count or
grand Iarceny, and misdemeanor petit .
larceny. Eatmon, who had been extra·
dited from Tennessee, is charged with
felony offense grand larceny.
"There is no excuse for the failure
to immediately notify local law
enforcement and the citizens of
Mason County to beware of these
escaped prisoners. The fact that unsecured weapons were stolen from the
sheriff's office raises additional con·
cerns regarding security," Johnson
said in a release this morning.
"These men should have been
considered 'armed and dangerous'. •
The public had an absolute right to
know that these prisoners had
escaped into the community. Concern .
for the safety of \!thers should have
taken precedence over the embarrass·
menl ~uch an escape might have
caused the stteriffs department,"
Johnson added.
Wilson and Eatmon told a correc·
lions officer around 2 a.m. Thursday
that they needed to go clean the sher·
ifl's office, according to Sheriff Troy
"Shorty" Huffman. The corrections
officer lei the men out of jail.
The duo proceeded to the court·
house annex office, a building sepa·
rate from the jail, where they found
keys in the secretary's office. to Cha~­
lie Stearns' office where ev1dence 1s
kept, the sheriff said. The men drank
alcohol and look four pistols before
leaving, Huffman said.
Johnson's statement said sheriffs
department records show lhe escape
was nol discovered until approxi·
mately 6 a.m. She said that in addir
lion to the handguns, cash was stoleO
from the sheriffs office. .
Emergency Services Director
Chuck Blake said the 911 office was
riot made aware of the escape until
early Thursday afternoon. Johnson
said OES was never requested to
issue a BOLO or stolen · gun report
when they received the information.
However, they did issue a BOLO,
on their own initiative, ror the
escaped prisoners. Neither the Poin~
Pleasant Ci ty Police Department nor:
the Point Pleasant Detachment · Wes\
Continued on page A3

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="420">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9844">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="27973">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="27972">
              <text>December 10, 1998</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="91">
      <name>walker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="252">
      <name>werner</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
