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•

YOU KNOW?
,
C &amp; 0 MOTORS
LOVE TOYOTAILEXUS
SERVICE AND PARTS DEPARTMENTS ARE BOTH
-GPEN ON SATURDAYS.
WHY WOULD YOU EVER GO ANY PLACE ELSE?
VE LEX
LOVE T YOTA

Ohio Lottery

Pacers hope to ' - '
Improve under ·
Larry Bird

Pick 3:

345
Pick 4:
5162
Buckeye 5:
10-11-24-28-37

Sports on Page 6

Clear tonight. Low In
mid
30s. Thursday,
sunny, high near 60.

•

NEW 98 510 EXTENDED CAB
LS PACKAGE, AIR, AWM.
513,855
WHEELS &amp; MORE

Vol. 48, NO. 137
e;117, Ohio Vall.,- Publllhlng Compenv

AI
LOW
AI

EIPIISSVII
NEW 97 GEO
4X4
~$1.3;399
~'26,738
USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS

Ill FT., 3.0 UTEA-l.X, MERCRUISER ENGINE
WITH TRAJLER,

'9999

H CIR. UIOI41001414 LT

LEATHER.._!f'ICXYMD """ ElliTKJN, AUTO.,
AIR. 3150 UN., LOADEC,

ONLV 11,000 MILES. SIWIP
WAa

Pt--.--..-

HJ
.•.,,_

....

.

•

ED TRUCKS
.

;BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

"In order to get money from oth- service being provided in an emer·
er sources, we have to be able to meet gency room or somewhere else. Big
certain criteria, and in order to meet difference, and that saves money."
lhat criteria, we have to have levy
Jacobs explained that it is the
money to fulfill the local fund combination of.those dollars which
requirements to qualify for .the allows the Health Department to
grants," said Jacobs.
provide more than 20,000 individual
"It's like a domino cffccl, one services/visits to Meigs Counlian~
thing happens and then it trickles each year.
down all the way."
"The levy means a lono us and it · Many of the programs are geared
means a lot to the county," said to low-income families and offered at
no or low cost, said Jacobs.
Jacobs.
· "The whole county benefits from
But even those who never go to
it, regardless of whether they know it the Health Department offices for
or not. They benefit because we are assistance, benefit indirectly through
reducing the overall costs to the many of the services, like food sercounty by providing services at a vice and sanitary inspections, nuireduced cost as opp&lt;lscd to that same sance investigations. rabies control.

.• southern board OKs
.:.computer funding ~in recent years following tf.lc closing
of Racine ElementarY Scoop! in 199S
The Southern Local Board of as part of a spending reduction plan.
Education, meeting in regular sessio.n
The committee will ha'ic to con·
Monday. night at Letart Falls Ele- Sidt~ available resources, classroom
mentary School, approved School si;~;C and geography in making its recNet Plus funds totaling $94.000.
ommendations. all the while respectThe money will be used to pur- ing students with special ·needs,
chase computers In classrooms Lawrence said at last month's board
grades kindergarten through fourth meeting.
·while n smaller portion of the man·
The committee will consist of
"eycan be used for wiring to connect about 20 people including school
"liTe. computers and enable access to · board members. principals. special
·the. inte111ct. according to dimict educatio~ and special program teachSuperintendent James Lawrence.
ers. teachers representing each buildThe School Net and School Net ing and parents representing each
Plus programs were designed 10 area, and the district's transpottation
enhance Ohio Governor George V. supervi~or.
Voinovich's goal of having one com"We're looking for a smoother
puler for every live students. he said. · way." Lawrence said.
•. However. the program dC&gt;.&gt;s not
The board also met wilh Candace
,consider the cleclrical wiring needed Hecr rcprcs~nting the Meigs County
~o support a large numher of com·
Health Department who presented
pulers in !he classroom. Lawrence information on a wcllncss block
explained. Most of the buildings m gran1 program called Sex Can Wait.
the Southern Local Sch&lt;K&gt;I Dislricl an
ahstincncc·bascd
program
arc older and do not 'have !he clcctri· designed to combat 1ccnagc prcg.cal wiring necessary 10 handle com· nancy.
.rutcrs.
The school hoard decided 10 wail.
The board also discussed . laking no action pcndin!,! a review of
the makeup of the proposed district lhc program's curriculum.
I .planning com mince and sci up a
Ltwrcncc !he currkulum is whol.mcetin!,! for the commincc on Nov. ly ahstincncc·hascd and includes no
10.
discussion nf ''safe sex" since that
· ·. After three years of shifling dass- docs no! suppurt sexual abstinence.
:cs around the district. the committee
The program is currently used in
:-viii consider ways to make class !he Meigs Local School District.
!ocations more pcnnanent.
In olhcr husincos. !he hoard hired
· Cla.,scs. panicularly in the early Michelle Winchrcllncr. Aaron Schctclcmcntary grades, have hccn ju~glcd
Continued on page 3

Sentinel Newt Stiff

NEW

5 TAHOES
3 EXPLORERS .
2 SUBURBANS 16 S-10 BLAZERS '
54 RUNNERS
3 JIMMYS
6 GRAND.
2 TRACKERS
CHEROKEES 1 BRONCO
4 CHEROKEES 1 PASSPORT
2 WRANGLERS 1 AMIGO

P/SEATI. LOADED

=:r.~~~~~. . . . . . - '17,733

~

. In Meigs·County

·:Trick or Treat has been set fo.r
·•Jhursday in most communities
.CHESTER - Chester will hold Irick or lrcat on Thursday from 6
7 p.m. The fire siren will sound to alert 10 the beginning and end.
DANVILLE . Trick or treat has been set for Thursday from 5:30
1o 6:30p.m. in the Oanvillc community.
.
FOREST RUN COMMUNITY· Trick or treat in the Forest Run
area will be held from 6 to 7 p.m . on Thursday.
_. • HARRISONVILLE'JPAGEVILLE - Trick or treat in Harrisonville
and Pagevillc will be sponsored by the Scipio Township Volunteer Fire
Dcpanmeni and will be held from 6 1o 7 p.m. on Friday.
.
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport will conduct tnck or treat on Thurs·
day from 6 to 7 p.m. Those participating should turn on tbeir porch
lights.
POMEROY . Trick or treat will be held on Thursday from 6 to 7
p.m. in Pomeroy.
RACINE - Trick or treat will be held in Racine on Thursday from
6to 7p.m.
REEDSVILLE - The fire siren will signal the beginning of trick or
treat in Reedsville, Thursday from 6 lo 7 p.m.
RUTI..AND - Rutland's trick or treat will be held on Thursday from·
6 to 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE- Syracuse will have trick or treat on Thursday from
6 to 7 p.m. Residents who participale should Iurn on 1he1r porch hghts.
TIJPPERS PLAINS • Trick or treal in Tuppers Plains will begin at
.-: 6 p.m. and end at 7 p.m. on Thursday. The fire siren will signal the
·::·. beginning and end.
~· to

t5 CIR. 4141/4 fOil

SILVERADO. AIJ!Q::..~_R , 350 ENG.,
' P/WI~ P(Uil.;M, AWM. WHEELS,

~~M.trJO~...... .. . . . . ... . *20,440

OPEl
MOI.·FII. 9·9

satt-6

..

I

eral months aflcr lhe Court-ordered March 1998 deadline 1o fix the school
funding system. lawmakers will have 10 ask for an ex!ensiun . "I think !hat
if we're able 10 get something nn the ballot. the mun will look favorable
on thai ," said local Slate Rep. Tom Johnson. R-Ncw Concnrd. the chair of
the Ohio House Finance L:Ommiucc.
The comments of Ray and Johnson followed a meeting of a select Finance
Suhcommitlcc which has held hearings over !he hcsl.mcthoc.l for determining the cost of an adequalc education. YcS!crday. !he commillee heard a pre·
scnlation from !he Coal ilion for Equily and Adequacy of School Funding.
the plaintiff, who successfully sued the s!a!c over ils' school funding sys·
tern.

.

~

By JIM FREEMAN

VII IT.
UTiliTY lOT

ate G.O.P. members supported putting Gov. George Voinovich's $1.2·bil·
Iion·a-ycar penny sales tax hike on the ballot. Statehouse Democrats sat out
the debate instead voting against a process they saw as&lt;1 rush to the ballot.
Most Of those polilical forces are still in place suggesting the same dynamics for the General Assembly's second attempt to fix the stale's school fund ·
ing system ·-declared unconstitutional by the Ohio Supreme Court in March.
Conservatives are slicking to their no-new tax guns. while modcrale G.O.P.
leadership and Democrats seem to be more open to a tax increase . And if
lawmakers do end up voting for a package that hikes 1axcs, it will be subject to voter approval this May.
"In order to have something on the ballot this May. we have to have it
to the ballot board by February," said Ray. Since the primary would fall scv·

tvoters asked to renew
. one-mill health levy Tuesday
; Sentinel Newa Steff
: For every $1 in taxes collected
oJocally, Meigs Countians receive
~ about $3 in services from the Meigs
:; County Health Department. accord~ ing to John Jacobs, administrator.
; Jacobs gave those figures 10
: emphasize the impottance of renew~ ing.the one-mill levy to run for five
: years which will be on the ballot
Tuesday.
He explained that the approxi: mately $180,000 generated by the
: levy give'S the Health Department the
: leverage to get grants lmd other
· funding from state, federal and pri: vate agencies amounting to nearly a
half-million dollars.

95 . . . 101,
SUPER NICE BOAT.................. IIOW

.

· • COLUMBUS-·Itepublica~ legislative le~ders are within a fe~ ':"eeks of
presenting state lawmakers wtth several opuons on how to fix O~to s sch?&lt;JI
funding system, according to powerful Statehouse Fmance Commm~e chatrs.
"What I think we're going to be domg ts developmg some opttons and
. ~hopping those options around to legisla!ors and i~terest groups," said Senrue Finance Chair Sen. Roy Ray, R-Alcron. He declined to outhne what those
- options might be. but said they would be "surfacing within a few weeks."
• When the' full legislature abandoned the school funding debate in early
' August. the Republican-controlled legislature was split. Hardcore House con·
i servatives opposed any school'funding plan with new taxes whtle moder-

AIR, AMJRI CAS$., PWR.
STEERING AND MOREl

WTtER, AUTO., AIR, P/'MNDOWS, PJLOCKS,

A Gannett Co. Newspllpet'

Plan
to fix Ohio's school funding system ·near
.
By AARON MARSHALL
Qennet NIWI Service

MS "IDI414LY

2 Sections, 16 Pagee. 35 cen1a

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 29, 1997

water testing , and other environmental services, he explained.
Jacobs and Nonna Torres, R. N.,
nursing director, also talked about the
tnany other programs which bcncfll
residents including the sJ)cech and
hearing clinic which is funded by the
Board of Hcahh and made possible
by ·levy .funds.
"If we didn'l oiTer speech and
hearing therapy here, our people
would have to travel someplace. like
Athens. lo get !he service, and then
at a cost. while here it's basically free,
although in some instances Medicare
is billed." they said.
Jacobs wen! on to explain that
because Meigs County has an established clinic funded wilh local dol-

Iars. !he agency is ahlc In apply 10 !he rncnt sen-ices. and Torres, who is also
Ohio Children's Trus! Fund for grant working on grants for family plan· ·
monies for additional programs in the ning including abstinence .
speech and hearing clime.
A one mill fevy on which 10 oper·
"So there again we have the domi· ale the Health Depanmtnt was
no effcc1." he said .
passed in 1982 and has hecn renewed
The many o1hcr programs of the every rove years since. Prior to that
dcpattmcnt .. like medic al clinic time Jownships and villages conservices. such as immuni zations. tributed funds 10 carry oul services
children's health services. pregnancy · mandated by the .slalc.
testing and prenatal care. breast, cerJacobs explained thai should !he
vical, and prostate screenings, nutri- levy fail. then 1hc Health Dcpartmenl
tion education, communicable dis- would have lo go hack to the politicase control. and school health pro· cal subdivisions for funding .
grams ·- all require supporting funds
"Our programs make a·diiTcrcncc
from the levy, it was explained.
in !he lives of Meigs Coumians and
The Health Department just !hat's whal coums. We wanl 10 make
recently received a wcllness block that difference ," concluded Torres.
grant which will be used to supple-

Stocks climb
sharply again
this ·morning .
NEW YORK (AP)- Stocks •.rose
sharply again this morning, with the
Dow up more than 100 pdints us Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan soothed Wall Street wilh
assurances tlult the recent market tur·
moil could actually prove bcncticial
to.the U.S. economy. .
The Dow Jones industrial average
was 118.12 points higher at 7.616.44
after the flr.t hour of trading. ·
Wotll Street grew conlillcnt that its
record gain of the day before mighl
hold up when Hon~ Kong invcslors
sent the main index there up nearly
19 pcrccnl overnigh!. The rally
spread In Tokyo stock markcl. which
rose 3.3 percent. and London. where
the main indc• was up 2.1 pcrccm by
midaftcrnoon.
Greenspan. in testimony before
Congress !his morning. said that in a
few years the . markc!'s pullback
could help lhc U.S. economy by
slowing it to a more sustainahlc
pace.
On Tuesday. the Dow soared 337
points in its hi~£CSI one-day gain
ever. erasing more than half the previous day's rcl'nrd dmp of 554 points.
Trading today slowed consider-

ably from Tuesday's blistering pace.
which produced !he lteuvies1 volume
in Wall Street hiswry dcspi!c some
Jcchnology gli1chcs that c.lclayed
many invcst&lt;lr~ · orders.
Overall. more lhan 2.K billion
shares changed hamh Tuesday on big
U.S. exchanges thanks to a crush of
investors eager to make deals

aile~

PAVING FUNDED· The Peoples Banking and
Trust Company office in Rutland has provided
$1 ,000 to assist in funding the paving of a
street next to the bank, as welt as the parking
lot of the Rutland fire department. Branch man-

ager Des Jeffers preaanted the check on Tues·
day to Mayor JoAnn Eads, and Rutland Township Trustaas Charles Barrett, Ch!lrles
Williamson and Joe Bolin. The project was e
joint effort between the village end township.

MeigS Local School Board updated
on computer technology program
By JIM FREEMAN ·
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs Local Board nf Edu·
calion was updmed on lhe dislrie!'s
CO!l)putcr tcchnoiO£Y program when
it met in rc£ular session T~;w~llay
night at the board's central i1fTic c in

Pomeroy.
Technology coordina1nr Todd
Gardner gave a high·!cch pccsema·
tion restating !he goals "r !he pro·
gram whi'h arc:
-- To move computer tec hnology

unO rcsoun.:cs into the ~la!'l:-.mom
focusing up&lt;m student-centered lcam ing;
-- Provide :\(.;Cess to ~.: ompuh.: r
lcchnology for sin If and '!udcn!' !o
improve quality ol work and ~.:duc.l ­

trading was halted ahruplly hy Monday's sclloll. The Nasdaq Stock Market became so bogged down !hal il
was unahlc to calculate its compos~
itc indo. for more lhan 90 minutes
aflcr the close of lrading. The New tion ;
York Siock Exchange had ils lirst bil-- Provic.lc cducat ional orpt~rt uni lion-share day ever.
tic!'l LH !'~tafT ami the ~..:ommuni t y .
IBM's early announcemcnllhat il
Ongmng proJCCI~ indudc an
would .buy back up to $~;5_ billion Appo1lm:hian Regional Sy~tcmic lnt tiati vc prnjccl. School Net and Schc){JI
· Continued on page 3

Net Plus ~tate pn~jccls and training of

tcnchcrs tn implement the technology program.
In additilm. an internet wchsit~: has
hccn constructed for the high ~chool
whiL:h · L:an he accessed hy anyone .
Pl Llns af..&lt;i4&gt; call on ere at in£' om intranct
'i1c a! the high sc hool. An intrancl
~ite differs from an internet site in that
only computers althc school or in the
di~trkt~.:an accl':o.S it.
The ARC projccl a! the high
:-.chonl l:on~ish of 31 networked
L'mnputcrs m I X dao,srnmns. eight
additional networked computers in
!he new eompUicr lab and !We&gt; com·
pule" f&lt;&gt;r' graphics Jcvclopmenl, 34
networked computers in the h!Jsincss
labs and lour nclwor,oll administrative computer... for ;J total
79 new
~.:omputcr ~ and' two network ~crvcrs.
The hirh school curren!ly ha' a
to13l of 102 Penliurn-hased cnmpulcrs and three nclwork server"' and
seven Apple Macmtnsh computers

or

with internet acccs~ in the school
lihrary.
By !he end of the 199R-99 school
year. the district 'hould have 371
Penlium·hascd computers and 131
printers. Gardner said.
h!-.ucs the t.listricL fuccs ut the current tunc arc the costs of unfunded
ponion' of School Nc! and Schm&gt;l
N~:t Plu~ pro!!rams; network hardware. internet connectivity, carts or
other furniture . mouse pac.J~ and other supplies; electrical upgrades to
support the extra computers ant.l
space fnr computers in ~r:u.Jc~
kindcrgnncn lhrough fourth grade .
Board mcmhcr Randy Humphrey'
~:.ud it is imflOflant to :-.tart kids on
c.·. ornpUiers while they arc in the earli er £ri.ldcs.
Gurdncr ."iaid h:achcrs can mcorporatc comput. ~.·r~ Wllh regular learning and rcinfon,.:c da!oo~ lcs~ons with
~:om puler U!\C.
Continued on page 3

911 operator talks husband through baby's delivery
PORTSMOUTH (AP) - Pan- deliver a 6-pound. !·ounce girl.
Jusl hours earlier. Mrs. Runyon
time professional wres!ler Andy Run·
·had
been sent home by doctor&gt; at !he
yon said being body·slammed wasn 't
nearly as scary as helping to deliver Sou1hcrn Ohio Medical Center in
Portsmouth. who lold her she wa,n'l
a baby.
Runyon , 26, was pressed into ser- ready to deliver.
Now. Runyon found himself
vice early Monday when his wife.
Cindy, announced her water had bro- answering questions and taking
ken and there was no time 10 get to instructions from Ms. Wheeler. who
the hospital in Ponsmou1h, two miles alcncd the life squad.
" It's coming out, ma' am." Runysouth of this Scioto County village.
on
told Ms. Wheeler m the 911 call.
"She said we weren't going to
. make it and 1old me to call 911." which was !apc·rccorded .
"If the baby 's head comes out.
Runyon 5aid Tuesday.
With the assistance of Bcrky hold il with your hands and proJect
Wheeler, a·sheriff's dispatcher and · it," Ms. Wheeler replied. "Try to help
emergency medicallechnician , Run· her with her breathing Try to keep
yon helped his 21 -year-old wife her calm ."

"The hahy'' healh here, ma'am.
What do I do' Whal do I do !"
"Calm down ." M' Wheeler
advised. "Hoi~ the hahy'' head in
your hands. and Jell your wile 1o lry
and push."
"The baby 's here. II '' crying,
moving around. II wa' 'o quick ,"
Runyon exclaimed .
" Wrap the baby up good m the
towel. and make sure n·, brcalhmg
OK." Ms. Wheeler said.
"Honey, as long as the baby 's
breathing. you're fine, " she reassured
the excited father, lhen asked him if
il was a boy or a girl.
" You guys d1d a grea1 job. Con·

1

•

gratulations,'' Ms. Wheeler 'aid as
the paramedics arrived.
"When I heard the bahy ery. !hat
was great." Ms. Wheeler lold The
Columbus Dispalch on Tuesday.
"That was an cxciling moment.
We get a lot of calls from people in
labor. They usually make it on lime
or arc false alarms."
Runyon said he couldn't have
done it without Ms. Wheeler's assistance.
"She was just fanta,tic . If I could
sec her right now, I would give her a
big hug ."
Mother and baby were reponed to
he doing line at the Southern Ohio
Medi cal Cemcr.

�Wednaday, October 28, 1817

Commentary

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs announcements

OHIO Weather

Page2

Thursday, Oct. 30

Wednesd•y, October 29, 1997

AccuWeathc,e forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
• J

'

The Daily Sentinel
'EstabfisMa in 194&amp;
111 Court ltrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio
&amp;14-992-2156 • Fu: 992-2157

.2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT •
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Coni roller

TN Stalbwl wtlcomn ,.,.,. fo 1M dDt ftoom ,...,., on , bi'OMI ,..,. or top'".

-(3110-, -~-,.· EIH:h
,_,.,.,..
oii»&gt;IIIJ publlohod. JYp«&lt; ,.,.
,.. .,. , . _ lllld"" lilly be _ , , . _ • olgn.,., lllltlrou,
and • ..,,. pltoM numl»&gt;. SJ»r;;ly • rMN If I'Miw'l 1 ,.,.,~ tG 1 pfYvlout ~~

or lellwr.

.,.,,,.,

urroro ra .,. EdiiD&lt;; n.. ,.,,,.,,

111 court &amp;., Pomoroy, 0111o

45789; 0&lt;, FIOI ID 1144N41S7.

U.S.-Chinese relations
alternately· hot and cold
By DONALD M. ROTHBI:RG
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON -Allies in one war became enemies in the next. Cold
War decades of tsolation and hostility ended with warm embraces. as if by
long-estranged friends. But disillusion soon followed.
The hot-and-cold history of relations between the United States and
China is the backdrop for the meeting this week between Prestdent Clinton
and Chinese leader Jiang Zemin.
·
The perceptions and misperceptions thetr countnes ha¥c about each other
mevttably shape prospects for resolving the tssues on thetr contentious agen·
da.
Do the two presidents meet as adversanes or friends? Is China the last
commumst gmnt, a growmg military power inclmcd to bully us net.ghbors?
Is the United States a Western imperialist power determined to keep Chma
from playing its rightfu1 role in Asia?
·
In both countries different answers are heard to those questions. Liberal
Democrats and conservative Republicans are part of competing coalitions
.that support sanctions against China on the one hand and expanded ties on
1he other.
.
' "Throughout history we have vacillated between romance and hostility
toward China," said :Winston Lord, who was U.S. representative in Beijing
during the Bush adminimation and an assistant secretary of state under Clin·
ton
Emotionally powerful images often define the relationship:
-The U.S. pilots who fought the Japanese in China dunng World War II
:as members ·of the Flying Tigers, and less than a decade later the masstve
Chinese force that came to the rescue of commumst North Korea.
; -Prest dent Nixon's tnp to China, his mcctmg w1th Mao Zedong and his
·walk along the Great Wall.
It was cand1datc Bill Clinton who crlllciZed President Bush in 1992 for
his "indifference to democracy" in China.
· "None of us will ever forget the images of millions of Chinese people
demonstrating peacefully for democracy, the solilary young man staring
down a tank or the students raising a model of our Statue of Liberty in
1iananmen Square," Clinton said in a speech a few weeks before hiS election.

Now 11 is Clinton who is the target of critics who accuse him of coddling
the government that crushed the liananmcn demonstratiOns and has Jailed
dissenters whose only crime is calling for more democracy.
In a speech Friday setting the stage for his meeting w1th Jiang, the prcSI·
dent contendell that isolating China ·~s potentially dangerous."
He praiSed the Chinese leadership for nloving toward a more open econ·
omy and said il wo~ld inevitably lead to palillcalliberalization.

Barry's World
A Cott\VI.ETE SE1" Of" T~e.
"Wti1'1'"E &amp;o\01)~ ~ff£E TAPEs"'
\S AVAILA.8L£ FO~ '$ 5,095.!!
PLUS $19.~ FOR S\o\IPPIJolEI
A~ AA~t&gt;L \Net. CALL "mE
Pf.MOGRio.TIC N~\IOKA\..

CON\M\Tl EE A"f l-800- ...

The AARP: Kings of .d irect mailing
By J.-ck Anderaon
118was 3/8
$11.37,"
•nd Jan Moller .
according
The nation's largest lobby, the 10 a confi·
American Association of Rehred dential
Persons, has often decried the use of AARP plan·
direct mail by ·competitors and ning docuopponents. Yet the truth is that it is
.
. .
ment.
.
as depen dent on dtrect mat 1so1ICita·
tion as the smaller seniors groups.
The
act
the
AARP
often
spends
'
AARP
just.i: Moller &amp; Anderaon
I f
n
· .
ties thiS to tts
more to acqutre a n~~ member than volunteer leadership board by pointthe. S8 annual dues 11 gets '" return. ing out that the ave&lt;age AARP memThiS has been diScovered throug,h her, once acquired, belongs for nme
access to some of the orgamzatiOn s years. "Therefore, the 1994 amor·
most senSIItve financial and mem- . tized cost of membership solicitabershtp records by nur assoctate tion is $1.26 per year," the docu·
Dale Van Alta.
mcnt says.
AARP sources say that the orga·
f
1 r
R h'
nization sends as much as 100 mil·
Un onunate y or the AA P, 1 15
amounts to o simple accounting
lion pieces of mail out each year trick . The fact is, the money for the
acquiring new members and trying soliCilatton has to be paid in the year
to retain the members it alleady has. it\ done , and next year it will cost
This is huge by any standards. just as much to get other new metnThc average large-sized company hers So in 1994, the AARP took a
sends less than one mtllion pieces of $3 37 IBss for every new member
direct mail a year By internal AARP they signed up.
estimates, the annual volume is
The association makes up for this
enl)ugh to send at least 360 ISloss
by selling these new and current
wheel trucks full of AARI:' direct
members
so many profitable "sermail rolling down Amcnca's high·
vices" hkc auto, hom~ and health
ways.
Nevertheless,
AARP officials appar·
ently believe that the
more than $50 million
devoted to "membership acquisition" and
"membership retention" is money well·
· spent. So ·· for inter·
nal purposes only •·
the AARP annually
figures out how much
it took to solicit each
new member.
And ti)e fact is that
the AARP lays out
more to get each new
member than the $8
annual dues they
rece1ve from them.
For example, AARP
numbers-crunchers
found that "the solicitation costs for a new
member 10 1994 L....-I..JL

that Chinesemade products
enJoy m the
Umtcd States.
Now,
that IS not to
say that China
· has replaced
the
former
Perkins
Sovic1 Union
as the "Evil
Empire." Or that U.S. defense
strategists ought to develop a "con·
tainment" policy for China (at least
not at the moment). Or that the Unit·
cd States and iJ s allies ought to banish the world's most populous nation
to isolation.
But there ought to be no tllusmns
about China.
No matter what goodwtll ges-.
lures Washington makes toward BciJing. no matter how many summns
there arc between J mng and Clinton.
China will rem;un stuck in its
authoritanan ways. And Chinese
off1cials have told American ol'ficmls as much.
"We oppose any interference in
China's mtcrnal affairs." said Yu
Shuning. a spokesman for the Ch1ncse Embassy m Washington. " We
do not wekomc·· any advice from
the Chnton admtnistrauon, he
added.
Dcspuc such declarations. there

•

IToledo I 63" I

insura~ce · that they are flush with

ship.
cash.
A $30,000 ad ·in Prevention mag·
The AARP uses a host of strate- azinc was beuer, neuing 301 mel'(l·
gies to lasso in the new members •• hers, .or about SI00 per membership.
tactics which pulled in an average of
The.worst perfonner was a series
191,245 new members a month from a series of four ads in Newsweek
January to June 1996, according to which cost the AARP $375,000. All
one internal document.
told, the four ads brought in only
The cheapest way to go is to 125 members. Which means those
advenise througli the AARP's pages memberships cost the AARP nearly
on America Online, the World Wide $3,000' apiece.
Web and other online venues. But
Still, the king of AARP acquisi·
the seniors aren't exactly burning up lion tactics remains dir"ct mail, a
the keyboards. This draw only aver· . dowsing strategy the AARP blue·
ages 490 new members a month.
noses most abhor. Without dlfect
The second cheapest enticement mail, the AARP would have to fold
arc the AARP's ''house ads, " those up tis tent and leave town. Internal
that are placed m Modem Maturity reports show that the AARP routine·
and the AARP Bulletin. Technically, ly obtains more than five time_s its
11 costs nQthing to do this. But theo- new members from direct mail than
retically the ads take up space that from all other sources ·· outside
could be sold for a hefty fee to an advcntsmg in magazines. radio and
outside advertiser.
television. etc. ·· combined.
Interestingly. the AARP's "house .
So direct mail is a necessary evil
ads" pull in more than "outside for them·· and for l)lany companic$.
ads. •· According to an internal docu· A study by the Direct Markctmg
ment. for instance. a $50,ooe ad in Association last year found that
the National Enquirer netted only more than half of U.S. advcr1ising
183 new members -· meaning the expenditures is related to dtrect marAARP patd about $270 per member· keting. (A TV ad. for mstancc. "
direct markctmg if it
requires a d1rcct response.
like phoning an 800 number. Stmilarly, a ncwspa·
per or magazine ad is
direct marketing if it con·
tains a clip-out or drop-out
coupon.)
As any Amencan
annoyed with incessant
sales pitch calls might suspect, telephone marketing
ts currently the largest cat·
egory of direct marketing .
accounting for $54 billion
or 40 percent of all d ireel
marketmg advertising dollars. In second place was
direct mml, accounJing for
$31 billton or 23 percent
of the total, according to
the study.
Jack Anderson
and Jan Moiler are writ·
ers. .for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Thaw won't open authori.tarian
China·
...

By Joaeph Perkins
The nauon 's capital is atwitter,
I'm told, over the forthcoming state
visit of Jiang Zemin. The White
House js planning to welcome
China's president with a black-tie
dinner. Much of the Washington
political establishment will be on
hand to take the Communist leader's
measure.
Jiang 's seven-day U.S. tour is
said to signal a thawing of SinoAmerican rclahons, which .took a
turn for the frosty lollowmg the
1989 Tiananmcn Square massacre
(which Jiang dcscnhcd as " much
ado about nothing:· )
But while thmgs may be wamiing
up between Washmgton and Beijing,
China IS far from bemg a friend of
the Unncd States.
Not as long as it conunues to
deny ns people the right to dcmocratically choose their leaders.
To brazenly trample upon human
rights by scntcncmg thousands of
political disstdcnts to slave lahar
camps.
To build up an offensive military
capabtlity that poses an mcrcasmg
threat not only toChma's immediate
ne1ghhors. but also to the United
States.
To pursue a protecuomst trade
policy that dcmcs American prod·
ucts the access to China's market

arc sull members of the U.S. foreign
pohcy establishment. so-called
"internationalists ... who continue to
hclieve that Bctjing ~an be sway~.
And they advocate policies toward
China that border on appeasement.
The most obvious example " in
the area of trade. Over the past
decade. Beijing has knowingly pursued a mercantilist trade pohcy with
the United States, lnnitmg tmports
of American goods and scrvtccs.
while building up ciports tn the
United States.
The rcsuh is a huge trade imhalancc m China's lavor. In Iact. the
Commerce Department projects a
record $50 h1ll1on trade dcficll with
China this year. That's up from a
record $40 bill ton trade dclicit in
1996, which was up from a rewrd
$34 hilhon in 1995.
So how docs the appeasement
crowd propose to rcducc . Amcrica '~
trade dclicit with China·•·By sellmg
the Communists nuclear technology.
which oslcnsihly would he used to
build elcctnc1ty-gcncrating reactors
(hut which also could he used for
weapon -making purposes).
The dectston is up to President
Clinwn. If hc'ccrtifics that China has
satisfied the conditions ol a 19K5
law. which permits commcrctal
nuclear trade only with those nations
that practtcc nuclear non-prolilcra-

.

lion, then Beijing will 'get American
nuclear components.
But it is hiJ)hly premature to certify China as a chmmincd memhcr
or the non -proliferation community
For while Beijing has acceded to
hoth the Comprehensive Tc"st Ba~
Treaty and the Nuclear Non-Proltfcration Treaty, that hasn 't stopped
Jiang's government from makm£
arms transfers to

Today in history

he'll
give
hans more in several other fanner
$500 mtllion
communist nations, Soros hopes to
to
Russia
keep them moving toward capttalover the next
ism and away from the state-run
three years.
economics that restnct financtal
He says 'the
opportunity and pro lit ,making.
money will
His donations to the old Soviet
be
used
bloc nations amounts to a pnvatcly·
amprovc
run Marshall Plan - a financial reshealth sercue effort thai gives Soros, the indi·
VIces. create
v1dual, more inllucncc in many of
more cduca·
these countries than most forc1gn
uonal opporgovcrnmcnr~ have.
tunities and re·
Wickham
As the ripple effects that were felt
train
former
around the world from the plunge In
soldiers for civilian jobs.
Hong Kong's stock market prove,
Russia will be a safer place to do fational borders and isolationist
business in if its people arc healthi- policies cannot safeguard one coun·
er, better educated and the soldters try from the problems of another.
whose jobs ended with lhc Cold War Members of the Fifth Estate- peocan make a rap1d transllmn to civilp ple like Soros. media mogul Rupert
ian life. Soros'·donatwn makes him Murdoch and Microsoft Chairman
Russia 's single largcs1source of for· Bill Gates - operate across these
t~gn atd bigger even than the hordcrs. ~hey have enormous
United States, whtch gave Russia wealth, money enough to ftllthe for$100 mill ton this year He is also one eign aid void created by the death of
of its largest foreign investors, hav· the Soviet Uni@n and U.$. budget
ing poured more than $2.5 billion of cutbacks. How they and others like
hi s money into Russian business them usc their wealth to affect the
ventures in recent years.
affairs of other nattons ought to be a
Soros'largcss gives new m.eaning maHer of great concern.
to the words "commercial dtplomaWhtlc they have the ability to do
cy. ,,
so, they lack the portfolio of a govBy pumping billions of dollars ernment minister. They arc neither
into Russia. and hundreds of mil- elected to pubhc office, nor the des·

tcrrori~t ~tate~

Indeed. harcly a year ago. a top:
secret CIA report revealed thaJ
China snld cruise missile's atlvanccU
radar components and nearly 4(J(J
tnns or chcmu..:als {lor wcarnn-making) to Iran . Prcvmus lJ S mtclli·
gcncc reports revealed thrtt Chin:1
sold mtssilc tcdmnlogy to Syria a~d
nuclear technology to Pakistan.
If the Cltntnn admintstrmwn
i£nnrcs these tntclligcm:c reports
and clears the way for China to huy
U.S. nuclear technology. that hardly
Will improve Stno-American relations.·
It will only signal to Bctjmg that
it can continue to condm:l husincss
as usual •· trall'icking in military
technology. practtctng unlair trade,
violating human nghts. staunchin#
democracy -- and the paper ttgcr of
the West will stt tdly hy.
Joseph Perkins is a columnis.t
for the San Diego Union-Tribune,.

---------'----'--------------~--

I

ignated representative of somcon~
who IS To the extent that they inOu~
cncc the actions of government~
around the world - and they do --J
they are a new for&lt;;c to he rcckoneJ
with.
·
-~
For the most part, they operalc!
. heyond the reach of the Logan Act,•
the 1799 law that prohibits privatcl
citizens from ncgotiatmg with for-:
cign governments That restriction is•
limited to matters that the Umtedl1
States and another country arc diSputing. No one has ever been con-j
victed for violatmg the Logan Act. l
Soros has set up foundations ml
40 co untncs· through which he fun-j
nels hts charitable giving. Most of it(
is used to promctc the spread or:
democracy.and capitalism. That's a:
commendable goal, but not the end •
game for George Soros.
~
The help he is givmg Russia is : 1
sore ly needed. He is coming to its '
aid at a time when pressure is ;
mounting in Congress to cut back on :
foreign aid spending in the fanner:
Soviet Union and elsewhere.
But there's a danger in allowing ·· ·
members of the Ftfth Estate- people who are ultimately motivated by ;
profit, not the perso.nal freedom of •
o)hers- to supplan.t the role of gov- ;
ernments in international relations.
•

I,

•

PA.

IMansfield ls2" I•'

Youngstown

INO

•lcolumbus!ss·

I

Election day dinner
The Forest Run United Methodist
Church will hold an election day din·
ner at the church Tuesday, 11·6 p.m.
with homemade vegetable. bean and
broccoli soups, sandwiches, desserts
and beverages. Take-out available.

Katherine Hull Allensworth, 98, of Wellington, died on Monday/October 27, 1997.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Jesse RaymondAllenswonh,
a native of Pomeroy. I
VFW turkey dinner
Survivmg are two daughters, Virginia McKinley, Olmstead Falls, and
Marjorie Allensworth, Strongsville; and several grandchildren, great grand· ""-..-Tuppers Plains Veterans of Forei~rr Wars Post 9053 will hold a
children and one great-great grandson.
turkey dinner Saturday, 3:30-6 p m.
Graveside services will be held on Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Greenwood
Cemetery in Wellington.
EHS senior night supper
Arrangements are under the direction of Nonon Funeral Home in Welling·
A senior night supper, spaghetti
ton.
dinner hosted by the Eastern High
School Class of 1999 will be held Fri·
day, 5·7 p.m. in the high school cafe·
teria. Meal also includes garlic bread,
salad, drink and dessert. All welcome.
Adults, $5. Students. $3.50.
A Cheshire man was in guarded condition today ~t Holzer Medical Cen·
ter with multiple trauma following a head-on colhs10n between two veht·
OhKan Coin Club
cle~ Tuesday on State Route 124 near Racine.
The OhKan Coin Club will hold
Michael R. Ste.wart, 40, 27756 SR 7, was transported to HMC by'the
its regular meeting Nov. I0. 7.30 p.m.
Racine umt of the Meigs EMS following the 5:40p.m. crash, the Galhaat the Middleport Ans Council build·
Mcigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported. .
mg. Contests. general auction,
Troopers said Stewart was westbound when the p1ckuptruck he drove
refreshments Visitors. guests and
went left of ~nter and collided with an eastbound car dnven by Donna
prospective mL!mhcrs arc weh;:omc.
J Guinther, 5 Second Street, Syracuse.
Stewart's pi up then continued on into a ditch and ovenurned onto
Flu shot available
its side, accordi g to the patrol.
.
The 1997 nu vaccme Will be
Guinther was also injured and was taken to Veterans Memonal Hosavailable Friday, 9-11 a.m and 1-3
pital by the EMS, where she was treated and released, a hospttal spokesperp.m. at the Metgs County Sent or Citson said.
izens in Pomeroy for those 55 or old·
Damage to the p1ckup was severe. and moderate to Guinther's car,
cr. and Monday. 9-11 a.m and 1-3
troopers said. The accident remains under investigation.
p.m. and Tuesday. 9-11 a.m. only, at
the Meigs County Health Depanment
in
Pomeroy for the general public .
The Galha-Meigs Post of the State H1ghway Patrol ctted Mclmda J.
Cost " $1 lor people 55 and older and
Bailey. 23, 102 Legion Terrace, Pomeroy, for fa1lurc to control followmg
$2 for those under 55, or free for
a one-car acctdent Tuesday on SR 124 near Salem Center.
those who have Medicare B who
Troopers said Bailey was eastbound at3: I0 p,m when the car she drove
bring
their Medicare card on Friday.
went off the left side of the road and overturned onto tis top.
The car was severely damaged. according to the report.

Local News in Brief:

Cincinnati 66°

Head-on collision leaves two hurt

W.VA.
KY.

~,~,~~~~

(f

Showero T·storms Rain

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

A~rrles Sn&lt;&gt;W

Ice

~

u

VIS Assocrsled Ptess Graph/csNet

Clerk/treasurer's report
The following balances as of
Monday were reported Monday night
by Middleport Clerk/Treasurer Bryan
Swann at the regular meeting of Mid·
dlcport Village Council:
General fund, $50,910.04; street,
$21.494.93; miniature golf course,
$1,199 .73,
law
enforcement,
$243 70; fire equipment, -$9,146.07;
fire truck, -$3,969.94; COPS FAST
grant. -$3,783.94, pool improvement,
-$2,521.75; cconomtc development,
$7,033.77; public transportation, $20.270.76; law block grant,

$5,210.78; Issue II, no balance;
revolving loan, no balance; ODNR
boat launch, -$1,467.28; refuse,
$37,844.83; CHIP, no balance; tree
planting, no balance ; disaster rehcf
grant, $2,821.00; water debt service,
$84,297; sewer debt servtce,
$61 ,980.55; water tank, no balance;
water system, $63,741.84; sewer sys·
tern, $43 ,934.33; recreation. $5,587.90; cemetery, -$5,355.18;
meter deposits. $34,749.23; cemetery
endowment. $81.062.77 : total,
$444.421.68.

Southern board..~ontlnued trom page 1
ter and Sharon Wickersham as sub·
stttute teachers and Max Htll Jr. as a
subslllutc bus driver.
The board also :
.. Approved Ralph Steinmetz on a
one-year contract to transport a hear·
ing·impaired student to Athens;
•. Approved the list of personnel
for each buildtng having access to
student records;
·· Acccmcd an Ohio Appalachian
Center for H1gher Education grant for

$6,000, applied for guidance coun·
sclor Shirley Sayre, to promote college to high school seniors;
•• Discussed auctioning off two
buses on Nov. 14;we talked about
having an auction on nov 14 to auctiOn off two buses.
Present were Lawrence, Treasur·
er Dennie Hill, board President Bob
Collins and board members Dave
Kucsma, Many Morarity, C.T. Chapman and Doug Little.

Meigs Local... cOntinued trom page 1
'

World should beware when Fifth Estate
By DIIWo\)'NE WICKHAM
G~ewa Service
WASHINGTON
George
Soros " a member of the Fifth
Estate.
And JUSt what is that'!
It's the product of what the bil·
lionairc buSinessman calls "the
golden age of capitalism." The ranks
of the Fifth Estate arc tilled wtth the
global economic players whose
wheeling and deahng can transform
- nations faster than a .neutron bomb.
The first three estates - those of
By The Aasoclated Prna
the
nobility, the clergy and the com·
Today IS Wednesday. Oct 29. the 302nd day of 1997. There arc 63 days
moncr - rose to power during the
left in the year.
French RevolutiOn. The Fourth
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 29, 1929. Black Tuesday descended upon the New York Stock Estate. the media, came of age dur·
Exchange .. Prices collapsed amid panic selling and thousands of mvestors ing the Iauer half of thiS century. The
Fifth Estate was born in the wake of
were wiped out as America's Great DepresSion began.
the fall of commumsm.
On this date:
Before the collapse of the Soviet
In 1682, the founder of Pennsylvania. Wilham Penn. landed at'what is
Un10n an~ its satellite states, Soros
now Chester, Pa.
In 1901. President McKinley's assassin, Leon Czolgosz, was clcctrocut· was just a wealthy financier with a
knack for making money - an
ed.
awful
lot of money. Afterwards, he
In 1911, American newspaperman Joseph Pulitzer died in Charleston.
put his dollars to work shoring up
S.C.
the fledgling democracies of Eastern
In 1923. the Republic of Turkey was proclaimed.
In 1940, Secretary of War Henry L. Slim son drew the first number - 158 Europe. Hts goal is to foster the
growth of capitalistic soc1ettes
- in America's first peacetime military draft.
In 1947, fonner first lady Frances Cleveland Preston died in Baltimore at where personal freedoms abound including the freedom for him to do
age 83.
In 1956, during the Suez Canal crisis. Israel launched an invasion of business in these emerging democra·
cies.
Egypt's Sinai Peninsula.
Last week, Soros announced that

Katherine Allensworth

MICH.

'

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Superintendent Bill Buckley
reported on the district's application
to the Ohio School Facilities Com·
mission for funding for emergency
repairs.
He said $286,000 has been
approved for replacing the roofs on
the high school gymnasium, Middleport Elementary and Salisbury Elementary. In addttton. the district has
applied for addiuonal funding to
install roofs that are built-up or have
thicker membranes.
Also, Buckley said he is seeking
funding to replace the roof at the
Mctgs Middle School in Middleport
and to install new doors.
The board approved a payment of
$5,058.32 for football equipment to
Ztdes to be paid from the athletic
fund.
Board President John Hood suggested that the athletic programs
check out the pnces at other places
before buymg from Zides, adding that
if Zides has the lowest prices that the
supplies should be purchased from
them
In personnel maucrs the board
accepted the resignation of Debbie
Cundiff as an aide to a handicapped
student effective Friday and hired
Marie Hampton as an aide to a handICapped student effective Monday.
John Sharp was hired as girls'
eighth grade haskctball coach with
Scott Williams bemg hired as hoys'
ctghth grade haskcthall mach for the

1997-98 season.
The board hired Melissa Conde,
Nancy Freeman, Kimberly Oliphant,
Tercsa Patterson. Wanda Shank and
Knthy Rupe as substitute education·
a) aides With board member Lanry
Ruj,e voting 'no' on hiring Kathy
Rupe, stating that, althou¢1 he is
unrelated to her, he wanted to avoid
any appearance of impropnety.
Cindy Fields, Patricia Clark and
Rosalyn Stewart were hired as substitute sccretanes.
Aaron C. Schetter was hired as a
substitute teacher forthe remainder of
the school year and Scott Christman
was hired as a tutor for a health hand·
icapped student for the remainder of
the school year. The board also
approved disabtlity retlfement for
Preston Gibbs, teacher at Meigs High
School, effective Friday.
The next board meeting ':"as. s~t
for Nov. 25, 7 p.m. at the diStncts
central office in Pomeroy. The Nov.
II meeting was canceled due I? t~c
Ohio School Board Assoctauon s
Capital Conference.

Stocks
Continued from page 1
worth ol its stock was seen as a turning pomt that erased an early 178point drop. Companies buy back
their stock to tighten the supply of
shares. boosting their value and making. them attracttvc 10 buyers

The Daily Sentinel

Troopers ticket driver after accident

Stocks

Meigs EMS logs 6 calls
Units of the Metgs County Emergency Medical Service recorded six
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
II :38 a.m., Mulbenry Avenue,
Pomeroy, Chnstma Holloway, Veterans Memorial Hospual;
I :04 p.m:, Noble Summit Road,
Middleport, Harold Mineard, Holzer
Medical Center, Middleport squad
assisted;
5:44 p.m. , state Route 124 and
Portland Road, Racine. two-car
motor-vehicle accident, Michael

Landa End .............................30 7Je
Lid ........................................... 23
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 20

OVB .........................................35
One Valley .............................38'.1
Peoples .................................43"'
Pram Flnl ............................... 25'1.
Rockwell ...............................49'1.
RD·Shell ..................................54
ShoniiY'&amp; ...............................4"1.
Star Benk ...............................9\
wendy"• ................................ 21'-

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana·
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Wednesday as provided by the U.S. Department of Agri.culture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: weak to most·
Jy 50 cents lower; demand light to
moderate cin a moderate movement.
U.S. 1·2, 230-260 Jbs. country
points 43.()().44.50. few 45.00; plants
44.50-46.00, few 44.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 41.00·
43.00; 210-230 lbs 37.00-41.00.
Sows: weak to 1.00 lower
u .S. 1-3 300-400 Jbs. 32.00·
34.00; 400-500 Jbs. 33.00-35.00;
500-600 lbs. 36.00-38.00. few 39.00.
Boars: 31.00-33.00. few 34.00.
Estimated receipts: 32,000.
, Prices from Producers Livestock Association:
Hog market trend lor Wednesday:
steady.
SummaryofTucM!ay'sauclions at
Eaton. Farmcrstown. Lancaster.
Wapakoneta and Caldwell.
Hogs steady to 2.00 lower.
Butcher hogs: 30.00-46.50
Cattle: steady to 1.00 htghcr
Slaught.cr steers· choice 60.00-

68.75; select 58.00-64.50.
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.()().
67.75; selcc1 57.00-64.00.
Cows: steady to 3.00 lower; all
cows 42.00 and down.
Bulls: steady to 1.00 lower; all
bulls 55.50 and down.
Veal calves: lower; choice 79.00
and down.

Worthlrtglon ••• _,,, ...................20).

-·-·-

Stock reports are the t 0:30
a.m. quotes provided by Adveet
of Gafllpolla.

=:

ADOLPH'S

.

~

Thu

~

·

rr---------------------~

'

'

HOLZER MEIGS CLINIC
NEW LOCATIO~!!

IUS PS 21.J.'Hi0)
Pu"l1~hcd c~n~ .tf1Nnt1\•n, MonrJ:n lhwu"h
Frtd .l~ . Ill Cnurl S1 Pom.:flly. Ohu1. 11~ the
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p.utl nl Pumi.'Wy.

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Nt!w~papcr A~~tl!:Mitun

POSTMASTER : St:nd nt kln!~s ~t1ffl.'~' l1t1n ~ 10
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t•n a thr~e Sl't 111 1~ m1lfl!h 111'1515. C'n:.dll w1U I'IC
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RINSE &amp;
VAC
We have aU
the chemical..
Do it yourself
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88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio
(Next to Veterans Memorial Hospital)

To Schedule An Appointment
Call

992-0060
or

rn :ucas

where home .:Rrurr sti'VICt: 1!1. avnila111r

Puhhshc r I&lt;'SC"cs lhc ri~~:htto adjust Uh:s OOr·
ing the sul1scr1ptmn ~mxl Suhscrlptton rAft
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dural Jon of I he ~uhsC11 ptlon

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
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1.1 Weeks ............................. $:!7J(I
:!h Week~ .. .. .
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52 Wecb ............................. $10~.$6

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clean your
carpet?
Rent ~ur

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1.1 Weeki .. ... .. . . . . .... ... . . .. $29.25
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HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.

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Holzer Clinic...
Here for Your Health, Here for Your Lifet.imel

Election day lunches
Election day lunches and evening
soup, sandwiches, dessert and bake
sale will be held Tuesday. II a.m. to
7 p.m. at the Grace Episcopal Church
Parish House in Pomeroy. All welcome.

Episcopal rummage sale
The Grace Episcopal Church
Women wtll hold a rummage sale Fn·:
day and Saturday, 9-4 p.m. at the:
church parish house next to Pomeroy•
City Hall People wanting to donate
ilems should call 992-2622 or 9922958 or bring items to the parish
house Thursday. 10-2 p.m.
I
Halloween party
,
. The Senior Cit11.ens Center will
have a Halloween Pany Thursday
wnh a visit from Pomeroy Elcmcn·
tary School third graders m costume
at II a.m. Professor Myroni and hts
Magnificc~t . Marvelous . Musical
Menagcnc will perform followed hy
Bruce Stone at I p.m. All welcome.

Chesler VFD fiSh fry
The Chester Volunlccr Fire
Depanmcnt will hold a fish lry Sat·
urday. II a.m. to 7 p.m.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

Am Ele Power ....................... 47\
AkZQ ..... ,................................&amp;~'&gt;
AmrTech ...............................&amp;&amp; r.
Ashland 011 .............................46
AT&amp;T .....................................49~.
Bank One ..............................51'!,
Bob Evans ............................19'4
Borg·Wamer ........................ 54~.
Champion ...............................18
Charm Shps ............................5'4
City Holding ............................40
Federal Mogul ....................... 41'.1
Gannett ...............................,.54\
Goodyear .............................61'!.
Kmar1 .....................................13'.1

Stewart and Donna Gumther, VMH.
Racine Volunteer Fire Department
and Syracuse squads asSisted.
MIDDLEPORT
6:32 p.m., South Second Avenue,
Don Dailey, VMH.
POMEROY
II :38 a.m., Nyc Avenue and Old
Route 7. Sandra Peyton , VMH .
RUTLAND
3:08p.m .. VFD and squad to state
Route 124. motor-vehicle accident,
Melinda Dailey, treated at the scene,
Salem Township VFD assisted.

VFD election dinner
The Columbia Township Volun·
teer' Fire Depanmcnt Autihary will
serve food all day Tuesday, electiOn
day at the firehouse on state Route
143 near Carpenter. Doughnuts , hot
dogs., bean soup and corn bread, pte
and beverages will be served.

446·4524

.

7

�Sports

....
•

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

NBA hires Kantner &amp; Palmer
as its first women referees

Paae4
VVednesday,~ober29, 1997

Avalanche get by Sabres 3-2; Stars, Kings, Ducks also win
•

By The Anoclated PrHa

remruned unbeaten (4-0-3) at home.
"Our guys were very, very feisty
in front of the net,:· Colorado coach
Marc Crawford said. "They were
very confrontational. That's good to
see.'' ·
Buffalo goalie Dom1mk Hasek,
last season's NHL most valuable
player. made 16 saves, but once again
was victimized by a lack of offensive
support,. The Sabres have scored two
goals or fewer m seven of hiS II

Patrick Roy rebounded from h1s
first loss of the season with a landmark victory.
Roy made 19 saves for h1s 355th
NHL win as the Colorado Avalanche
beat the Buffalo Sabres 3-2 Tuesday
mght. The goalie moved into a tie
w11h Rog1e Vachon for seventh place
on th'c career vactory hst
' "It's a step I guess, and 11's fun,
but th1s is n01 the ohJecuvc," said
Roy (b-1-4), who was coming olf a starts
3-1 lo» at Dallas on Smurday "Most
"I can't thmk about how many
1mpurtantly. we won thb game."
goals we wli I score," sa1d Hasek,
Joe S&lt;1k1c scored hiS e1ghth goal ol whose record dropped to 3-6-2 "My
tht: ..;c=ason and Enc Lm.::rm:x added job is to slop the puck and allow one
the clincher for the Avalanche, who less goal than the other goalie. IllS a

tough job, but! don't mind 11."
CurtiS Brown scored his first two
goals of the season for the Sabres,
who had only two shots in five power plays and remained wmless (0-52) 1n lhe!f last seven road games
" I think ourc!Tort tomght was our
best overall on the road," Sabres
coach Lindy Ruff said "We didn't
win, but it was a very good effort."
Elsewhere 'm the NHL, 11 WllS Dallas 3, New York Rangers 2; Los
Angeles 2. Flonda 2; and Anahc1m 2,
Toronto 2
Stars 3, Rangers 2
Richard Matvichuk scored two
goals m a 72-second span of the first
penod as Dallas won at New York.

Flames defeat Penguins 6-3
CALGARY. Alberta (AP) - A
J .w .II t~r bcmg c.tllcd up from the
11\l.nor"". C.tlg.uy Flames rookie go.\ltc
Tyk1 M&lt;&gt;SS showed he can play m the
NHL
Mo» made 26 saves for hts first
NHL viCtory ,IS the Flames came
h,1ck !rom an c.Irly three-goal dcficll
and heat the P1llshurgh PengUJns 63 Tuesday mght.
·'The huttcrl11es went away after
the wannup. but they came hack pretty quiCk after the game started,''
Moss sa1d after holdmg !he Pengums
scoreless for the linal 51 mmutes "II
feels great to get the w1n . I JUS I want
to get my feel wet and show them I
belong here "
Plllshurgh's Ed Olczyk was
impressed wllh Moss
"He made some b1g saves really
early. evt•n though we got some hy
h1m," Olczyk sa1d. "It could easily
have been 5-0 But the k1d got hiS feet
wet and made some unbelievable '

.

'

saves tn the second period and some
key saves 10 the thlfd."
Olczy k was one of three Pengmns
to score in the flfst mnc mmutes of
the lirst period. He was later robhcd
w11h a glove save by Moss on the
goal line. Peter Ferraro and Alexei
Morolov also scored tor Pittsburgh.
"There arc no excuses We JUSt
d1dn 't play well, we'lllearn from 11
and go from there," Olci.yk saJd. 'By
no means d1d we take the Flames
hghlly We had a chance to bury them
and d1dn ' t. "
Jarome lgmla scored 1w1ce for the
Flames (2-8-2), who won for only the
second time thts season.
The Pengums (7-5-2) ended an
c1ght-gamc road lnp -the longes t In
lranchisc hJStory - w11h .1 5-2-1
record.

Trmlmg 3-2, Andrew Cassels !Jed
11 for Calgary with a power-play goal
Wtlh 4:28 remainmg m the second
penod.

"We got great goaltendmg and
thm gave us a chance to get back in
Jt," lgmla saJd "It has been tough for
me, I got off to a slow start I got
lucky The coaches have been telling
me 10 go to the net and good thmgs
w1ll happen "
Aaron Gavey gave Calgary 1ts
first lead. 4-3, wuh his hrst goal ol
the season at 4:22 of the thlfd penod. The Flames then added two empty-net goals by Marty Mclnms to seal
the win
Moss, a late cut m traming camp,
smd he JUst wants to show the Flames
he belongs in the NHL.
"It was a tough year The coach
told me he had no confidence m me,"
he sa1d "My confidence was pretty
much down to zero "
Bcstdcs the save on Okzyk's
shot, Moss also stopped Jarom1r Jagr
on a hrcakaway
"I knew who 11 wns The save was
more luck than anylhmg,"

Quest gets 98-72 win over Long Beach
LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) The long Beach SungRays offered
little reSistance to the defending
Amencan Basketball league cham·
p10n Columbus Quest, and their
coach could see 11 commg.
Tll..t:_:!Jucst scored the. first seven
points of Tuesday mght s game en
route to a 98-72 victory over the
StingRays before an announced
crowd of I,255 at the 4,000-scat

..' .
•
•
..
..

Pyramid on the long Beuch Stale
campus.
Columbus led by as many as 13
pomts m the lirst quarter and 25 in
the second period over the expansion
StingRays .
"It was the worst diSplay of basketball I've seen m my life," said
StmgRays coach Maura McHugh. a
college coach for 13 seasons before

takmg the Long Beach JOb "I could
feci II from yesterday's prucuce "
long Beach forward Yolanda
Grtll'ith, who entered the game as the
ABL's leading scorer and reboundcr,
had a season-low 10 pomts - nearly 14 under her average - hut
pulled down , a gamc-h1gh ntnc
rebounds She was 4-of-10 from the
field.

Scoreboard

..
Basketball

Ohio H.S. sports
- OHSAA football
computer ratings

ABL standings

.'

Eadtm Conftrt'11«'

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Tuesday's &gt;&lt;ores

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Bc:~~:h

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•

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COLUMBUS Ohio lAP) H~re Js tlw SI.O.: Ih n1
weekly fno1ball cum pultr rafln ~~ lmrn Ihe
Ohm Hl~h Sdmnl Athlcll..: An()(J,IIInn
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Division II

NUL standings
'

R.-,:wn b I

F.ASTERN CONFERENCE

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By CHRIS SHERIDAN

Another seven refs d1dn 't make the
NEW YORK (AP)- Dee Kant- CUI.
ner and V1ole1 Palmer wli I wear the
"They've gollen beller each time
same Jerseys, blow the same whistles out, " said Rod Thorn, NBA vice
and be held to the same standard s as president of operations. "Just like the
their co lleagues.
other referees, they've come back
When there's a light on the court, from the summ er, had trainmg camp
they' ll be e•pected to use thw best and preseason and have gotten used
JUdgment whether to mtercede
to bemg out there."
When a pl ayer or coach gets too
The 36-year-old Kantner was
demon strauvc, they' ll be expected to supervi sor of officials '"the WNBA
sig nal a techmcal foul.
She also has refereed four women's
Wh en there 's •Jump ball, they'll NCAA championshtp games, mcludbe expected to throw it straight up 10 IDg the 1997 matchup between Tenthe air.
nessee and Old Dominion .
Kantner and Palmer are among the
Palmer, 33, was an offi cial in the
NBA's newest officials On Tuesday, WNBA, and has officiated college
they became the first women hired to women 's games
off1cia1e regular-season games in a
In keepmg with league policy, the
men 's professiMal sport.
NBA would not say wh1ch games
" We had them m one exh1b111 0n they would be working- or if they
game, and I don 't see any d1flerence would be workmg at all - when the
m the female and male referees," smd sca,on opens Fnday night with 14
Donnie Walsh, general manager of games.
the Ind10na Pacers. "I think It's
Kantner and Palmer have been
going to be fine.
workmg cxh1b111on games the past
"The two ladies they have are three weeks They also offic10ted prevery well quallf1ed and Will demand season games last year, but did not
the rcspec! of everybody associated make the fin al cut for the 1996-97
with the event."
season
Kantner and Palmer were among
"I don 't have a problem with 11,"
five new referees added to the smd Utah Jazz coach Jerry Sloan,
league 's 58-member offic.almg staff whose team's exhibition game Mon-

first sholless period m the Kmgs' 30·
year h1story.
Mighty Ducks 2
Maple Leafs 2
Anaheim's Tecmu Sclanne scored
the tying goal in the third penod at
Toronro when a shot deflected off his
helmet
Ruslan Salei's wrist shot deflect ed oil Sci anne 's visor and wcntmto
the Toronto net at the 8:04 mark

Ohio hunters kill 1,207 wild turkeys
in fall season; Meigs records 50
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hunters killed 1,207 wild turkeys
during Ohio's second fall turkey
hunung season, the Div1sion of
Wildlife said.
The figure is down 19 birds from
last year's inaugural fall wild turkey
huntmg season harvest of 1,226
birds. The season was open Oct. 2025 in 22 southeast counties.
Preliminary harvest f1gures
released Tuesday showed the top five
coun11cs where hunters had theu
w1ld turkeys checked and tagged
were Coshocton 114, Guernsey 108,
Harmon 82, Jackson 77, Musk-

ingum 71 and Vinton 71.
Fall turkey hunters were allowed
to take a b!fd of either sex from onehalf hour before sunrise to sunset
During Oh1o 's rhrce-week spnng
turkey sell.&gt;on, only bearded gobblers
may be taken dunng the legal shooting period of one-hall before sunnsc
to noon.
The spnng 1998 wild turkey huntIng season will he Apnl 27 through
May I 6 m 50 counties.
The diviSion said 11 ~&gt;sued 9,043
permits for this year's fall turkey season, compared w11h the 10,200 permils issued last yeur.

Followmg IS the number ol w1ld
turkeys checked and tagged last week
by county, wtlh taken dunng the 1996
season in parentheses.
Athens47 (49), Belmont31 (5 1),
Coshocton 114 (86), Galha 54 (42),
Guernsey 108 (70); Hamson 82 (89),
Hockmg 44 (47), Holmes 49 (61):
Jackson 77 (7 1): Jefferson 34 (62);
Knox 53 (57), Meigs 50 (52), Mon roe 50 (58): Morgan 36 (38); Musk·
mgum 71 (74), Noble 49 (36); Perry
47 (48); P1kc 15 (7); Ross 7 (12):
Tuscarawas 68 (72), Vmton 71 (79),
and Washmgton 50 (65).

Game 7 of latest World Series shows
highest TV rating since 1991 - Nielsen
By RONALD BLUM

lowest ever behmd Oakland's carthNEW YORK (AP)- Wllh a sev- quakc-mterruptcd sweep of Sun Franenth game that produced the highest CISCO m 1989 Thts year's raung was
TV rdtmg for baseball since 1991. the 3 percent above the 1989 f1gurc and
World Scnes narrowly avmded huv- 3 percent below the 17 4 for last
mg 1t.s worst rating ever
year's Scncs hetwcen the New York
Game 7 had a 24.5 ruling and a 39 Yankees and the Braves The 29 share
share, Ntelscn Media Research satd lhts year matched the lowest ever, sci
Tuesday. h was bllScball's best show- last year
mg on network television since the
"G1ven the fact that we had a
previous seventh game, a 32.2 rahng shaky start at the bcgmning. 11 turned
when the Minnesota Twms beat the out OK. " actmg commisSioner Bud
Atlanta Braves m 1991.
Selig said. "We're gomg In try In lind
It was also the htghcst-mtcd sport- ways In 1mpruvc the ralmg. There's
mg event on televiSion since the 43J no qucstmn we have to work on
rating when Green Bay beat New that."
England in last January's Super Bowl
Through four games, the cumulaand h1ghcr than any NBA Fmals tive rating was 14.4, 15 percent
game Bu111 also was the lowest rat- below 1989. Don Ohlmcycr, .1 top
mg lor a seventh game since 1968, NBC executive, had hoped lor a lourwhen the St. Louts Cardmals and game ~wccp 1 saymg he' d rather have
De troll T1gcrs got a 21.2 lor an after- hJS enlertamment programs on the
noon game.
air Ohlmcyer suggested that NBC reThe World Scnes fimshed with a sell lis baseball TV rights to any net16.8 cumulauvc ratmg, the second-, work that would take them. including

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Dallas :11 W:utnnJion. 7 ;\0 p m.
Otlnw:. ;It Tampa lby. 7·JO p m
San Joae 1.11 Detron. 7:Xl p m
Vancouvno 111 Chli:illfJ tJ JO p m
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tun(.'cm (',uh 1-1 1111 'i Pt•rry 11 fll.I-IJ f1 W
ur.•ydtc Ru.l~~..-w,ll.., lll ~111
KI.'}!IUII 1-' 1-Hcllvtlk Clc.ll rwl.: ~~ m~l ~ ­
Ck: Dt:n~d l~.:ltnc I'J:!.~" ' I Wl'lhnfl illl 11J lf1Ht.
-I· IJULyruJ 111 2117 'i-C.I, I:th.t M.uj:.lfCit.l ( 'i 711 1
6-R1~~:ky M1wr I~ IMtl
Rcfllln
l"i
1-N IISONVIIU YOI&lt;I\
2l 21J2'i 2 Udl.urc 2 1 I I 10 ll.._lW. fSMOU rH
171.J7JO .J-IRONTON 17 'il~~ ~ M.trttn' I wy
11 :to~'i h-WHI:.ELI RSDUI&lt;G I :4i K~J..&amp;
Rt~t on 10 I-Gcrm11 n1 own V,111l~ Vt~w
11 -~ ~-'-' 2-0uaw ,,.(i l,uulurl lb OKH \(Ill
Wyomtne. 1~61011 J Kc111un J\Jrln 'i
CJarkntllc Cltntnn · M.•~'~t' 12 -H77 Ct-M 1rtun 1.!
Jlln 12-1271

est ever lor a su:th game. The lirst

hve games got ratmgs of 11 .3. 15 0,
15.6, 15.5 and 17 2

Division \1
RtJ.I On 17 IN l.1n1a Snuth R.ln!Jt' 1~ '1 \ltc;
2-Sulhv tm Blw.;k Rtvtr IS 6MKH 1-0rwdl Gr.~nt.l
Valley I 'i 6"~0 .f· Arplc= Creek W.tynl'tl.ll~
I~ 5666 'i·Wii\Ttn K(nll(lly 1.14166 6-RoutSIIlWI\

12 7611

R~ 1 1on l!i 1-M;mon Pll'aJ.mr 21 1:2n 2Hamler Pmm·k Henry Ill 161 2 1-But;yru~ Wyn
ford 166722 4-Ct~lumbusGrove lb 0166 Ho~~r
tyCenltr '" 'i 190 b-Sy~.:umorc= Mohawk 119l~l

ReJIOII 19 I HANNIBAL RIVER 23 6:\~::!. 2.
Amanda·Cieurcred; 20 6"11 '1-LUCAS VILL E

YAU.EY IMlS&lt;I 4-CROOKSVtLLE 171JMM ,,

John•lown-Mnnroe
Valley 146813

I~

2111 6-Dillnhndt:e P.ulll

•• •

year of compellllon. Next year's
compc uu on will he held m CIIIISJde
10 earl y October The players were all
trea ted to a steak d1nncr .11ter pl.1 y
and the 1997 season has come to .10
end There will he open go II lor the
rcm.t md crs olthc year at the two fmc
goll course
The resu lts ol thc matches were as
lo llows In best hall. Ty Rous h and
Demm Lunhcrt (RiverSJdc ) WID 4
and 2 over Rusty Saunders and Brett
Eplin g ol CIJ!fSidc. Rob Harns and
Jack Mal oney (RiverSi de) WID 5 and
4 nvcr Boo Km caid .md Ron Jackson
(C IJ!I sidc). Milch Roush and Ryan
Norn, (RiverSide) w1 n 5 .md 4 ove r
M•kc H.1ynes and Ron Ellis (C!JfiSidc) wh1ic Adilm Krawsczyn and
Gary Roush (R•verSJdc) wm 2 and I
over Danny Cox .md B111 Tawney
(('!.ffSidc). Ron Spencer and Scott
W1ck!Jn e (RJver&gt;~del w1n 5 .md ~
ovc1 M1ke Sh,1ver .md Bohhy Shoemak e• (Ch i!Sid e) while La nll Repp
and Jay Bos11ck (RJVersJde) Win 2

Baseball

Trick.

Nldion!llll.caxu..t'OLORAlJ() HOCK II S N.1111cd Utll Bllww~­
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HOUS'ION ASli&lt;OS N.iml•J Jdl ti.uu11h
~cncral 11141\Hl~l'r
K 1~'llll lllL~ 111 th.: 11,,, .,1, St 111
l.o.:l!!lk'
SAN FRANC ISCO GIANI'S I x~ru-.·11 1h~1r
11.1\JII np110 n un RHP M;arlt G,.ri.lu~.:J

•

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Ba&gt;ketball
Naliur\lllltu"k•lln~ll A~SIIf.laliun

NllA Su~(Wihkd ~u.r.llliLIII" Klll j!• I
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S2 'ill(] lc1r 1c,IVU\~ Ilk' h~·n~h olfl'ol dllrlllj! .tll.illlfc,t
111111 un Od 2-1
An.ANIA HAWKS W,u\1.:11 I M,111 SH).:CII·

nnd I over Don Sw1shcr ;md Tom
Moore. AI thUI p01nt . Rtvcrstdc let!

free aetfvatfott and 360 free Minutes for three MOnths.
"-. a fret TefeTAcn• or Toft phone.

IN--

Football

I

"" IIIJUrcd rcscr~c
CHICAGO BEARS WotiveJ DT Chm Znrtch
mll DB Tcrry CuLJ~i n S1~ncd FEI M•l.:~ Dulant.'y
.tnd G·C Gk'r, Hunltntcllln
ST l.()U IS RAM S Acltvull!d OL R)'llll Tu~:k·
cr rrmu the= rhY''~·•I1y - un.tbl..--w- perlorm 11~1 Rc:lca~d RB Run Mu11rc Pla~.:t.!o.l S Gerald M~.:Uur·
rnw" t.IIIIIIJtm:tJ ri.'M;fv~

)

NJIItMm11l Hockey lraaut

(ALGARY ~LAMES Rc~.:all~'tl 0 KwniJuhl
from Ol!L.lj!ll uf lht' IHL .md (' Jun Duwd .!lkl G
Tyler Mt 15~ hom S.ttnl Julm nr the AHL Sent D

1051 East State Street, Athens, OH (614) 594-773 5
Authorized participating 360• Communications Deale1'5

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NASHVILLE N:untd Scmt Lou dtrtdor of
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over Shoemaker (Ciill'sidc).
Carm1chacl (Cliffside) wms I up
over Harbour (Riverside) wh1le
Kruwsc'lyn (Riverside) wins 2 and I
over Swtshcr (CIIIfSidc).

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Reg 2 99

Men
High series: Roger Carpenter
(5 26 ): Russ Carson (~12)
High game: C.trpentcr (21 3). Bub
S11vers ( 191)
Women

High series: Helen Phelps (497);
Pat Carson (484)
_!ligh game: Carson ( 19~). Phelps

&lt;In&gt;

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Warm Pack 12 Hour
Heater Hand Warmer

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S&amp;S Sports Card~
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~=PolmGI~·
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Much Roush (RiverSide) wtns 2
and I over Kinca1d (CliffSide) while
Saunders (Cliffside) tics with Ty
Roush .
R1verside garnered 7 112 pomls to
Chlf'Side's 4 1/2 pomls to wm the cup
w11h a 19 1/2 total pmnls

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Side). Milch Roush and Wicklme
(R1vcmdc) Win 6 and 5 over Jackson
and Tawney (C!JfiSide) wh•lcSpenccr
an d Bost1ck (RlvcrSJde) wm I up
over Don SwJShcr and Epling (ChlfSidc)
Flfst day total s had RiverSide .11 a
l1 vepom tlcad over ChI f'Side. 8 112 to
.1/12. RiverSide scored 2 1/2 po1nts
111 the scramble wh1le Cl•ifSidC had 3
1/2 p01n1s
In the second day alternate shot
matches. Harns and Pat Harbour
(R1vemdc) w1n 3 and 2 over Jackson
.tnd H,tyncs (C!Jifsidc) whtle
Krawsczy n and lamhert (R1vcrs~de)
11ed w1th K1nca1d and Epling (ChiiSidc)
Rcpp and Norns (RI versidc) wm
3 and 2 over Cox and Shaver (ChlfSJdc) while Spencer and WJCkhnc
(R1vemdc) w111 3 and 2 over SwiSher u11d Carm•ch.Jcl (Chfl"de) Shoe11hikcr ,md Saunders (Chflside) wm
2 up over Mil ch Roush .md Jeff
Goebe l (RiverSide) .tnd Ron Ellis and
T,twncy (C!JIImlc) wm I up ovc1 Ty
Rou sh .mJ G.uy Roush (RiverSide).
RIYCisJllc scored 3 112 potnts
compared to C!J I! Side's 2 1/2.
In the smglcs matches, Haynes
(C!Jf!Sidc) won 5 ;md 4 over H.ITTIS
(Ri v&lt;lrsJ de) while W1cklme (RiverSide) won 4 and 3 over J.1ckson
(CilfisJdc) Cox (R•vcrSJdc) h\o,u Nor'" (C IJ!!Sidc). 4 and 1 wh1lc Sh.IVcr
(CIJ!fSJdc) w1ns over I up over Rcpp
(Rtvemde)
Bosuck (RJvcr~u.lc) wms 6 .mJ 5
over Tawney (Cit II Side) .md Lnnhcll
(R1vcrsu.lc) w1n~o .'~and 2 ov~,.· r F.ll1'
(CI J!fside)

6-0 10 pmnts
In scr.unhlc. K1nc.1id and Saun ders (C!J f!Sidc) w1 n I up over Roush
,md York Ingels (Riverside) while
Shoemaker ,1nd Momc (Chi'!SJdc )
w1n 2 .md I over Rcpp and Norns
(Ri verside ). Haynes .md Shaver
(C!Jf'l'sldc) ti ed wJth H,m" and LamR1vcrs1dc' s
G&lt;w hcl dckatctl
her! (Riverside) whil e Cox an&lt;l
Car m• ch.Jd (C!JfiSJdc) w1n over Erl•ng (C!JI!SJdc). 4 ,md 1 wh•lc
Krawszyn .md Gary Roush (River- Spencer (RIV&lt;r&gt;ldC) Wills 3 .md 2

Treat.

Al.11101:~

pt"Ojt:\:1~

-· ~·

"

Riverside team beats Cliffside
to capture _1~97 River Cup title

Transactions

1 H!I.ADI1 PHI/\ 7fll It S W \1\~.:o.l G Dt.nlt~
l'lk'llh
POI&lt;'II 1\Nil IH I\ 11 Ill AZI RS W,uv~.:d I
h·rrdl 1\dl ollld ( o·l J;un,JI Ku(lm~un
U II\H Jto.'/.Z W.11W1I (j N.1tc Ertlmmm .tn\1 (
( rrc~ l&gt;r~·1hn~
VI\N(OUV I R GRIZZI.II.S J\c4tnrctJ I Tuny
M.l~~oc nhnr~ .11111 ,, luturl' ...._,n nJ·t11UnU o.l ml1 p11k
!nun IIIL' Umtun Cdltu lnr F Roy Ro~ers 10 ~.:nl'll-­
!'kit' .m t·,uhn tr 1d~ A~4tm~·J F Smn M11~k !t(lm
lht• H nu~t u n Rtll:l:c'ls In (otmp1cl..- .tn c.11hc:r rr.1dc
W.Hh•l G LtiiL'rt,JI Grct.'ll r L&gt;:w1ll 8nnlh untJ C

\r.'l:;i '-!

BREAKS GROUND - On Tuesday, the NBA hired Dee Kantner
\Shown at right during a pre-season game with the Boston Celtics)
and Violet Palmer as Its first female referees. This is the first time
a men's sport has hired female officials for regular-season games.
(AP)

1

Rc~wn J l

~

'1.61~·".._' ·r -

tlk,·II\ IU f&gt;'t lli ~t

hdrk . ~ .......

t

stop the two teams Irom another line

l'HJ\I&lt;Ulrll' Ht)I&lt;NI "IS Wi"l\l(i ll.mtdl
Ml-c
l'HICMiO 1\Ull S W,u\"l:tl ( ' Inc Cim)!uhl I
K"rnd 0,1\ttl .md (J () ltllt' C.tl.,hn,,
01\\.I.AS MAVI.RI{ KS \\, 1n~tl (I Ju11nw
1\ll~n I IJ.:l· Nw,mlw" I C'.1rl ll ~ ,'ilr!IIIJ!, nu ol (,
1\.~ll'ln Whllll'tl
()( NVI H: NUtrCd I S W,u1.-d (l Slu.:rUJ,L/1
IJI'II!!I:IS
HOU SfON ROU::t IS Wuvcd (' l&gt;uu~
1\r,ltt\lt
I.OS 1\N(d US Cl 11'1'1 RS W.H'&gt;-~11 (j Kl ·
w.m ~ ( , tms l N IlL Hullm.m C Rt dJ Molllllllll!
.mtJ I' Rudnc) MLCr.t)
Mil W/\UKLI ltU(.' KS W.u\ctl ( A~1c l:.ul
NI :W Jl RSI. Y Nl IS Wa111.:d (, K.-nny Smuh
olllll {. I&lt;Pixrt wl'ld.llln Pl,ll."l:d (j SllVC H.:ll\1111 mt

Thorn also said IKantner and
Palmer w11l not be discouraged from
trying to break up fights.
"What we tell our refs IS if you
can mterJect and gel somethmg
slopped, you do 11," Thorn said
Combat general
YORK, Pa. (AP)- Anny General Jacob l. Devers, born bere in
1887, commanded the 6th Army
Group in World War II, which successfully penetrated Gennan-held
positions in central Europe and
helped achieve Allied victory. In
1940 Devers commanded the 9th
Infantry DJVJsmn, then led annored
forces from 1941 to 1943. After
overseeing 'the North African and
Mediterranean theaters, in 1944 .he
was appointed to command the 6th
Army Group of Umted States and
French forces Early m 1945 his
unns cleared Alsace. crossed the
Rhine River and swept through
southern Germany to the Swiss border. He eventually linked up with
Allied forces in Northern Italy. He
headed the anny's ground 1forces
before rettring m 1949. Devers died
tn 1979

The team from R1vcrs•dc Goll
Cluh has won the 1997 R1vcr Cup
from Chffs1de Golf Club. The hn al
total of 19 1/2 to I0 1/2 p01n1s gave
the home team the cup.
The rmny and cold weather d1dn't

LN~tUC'

;

,

1\r~.tlllltll

BOSTON RHO SOJ&lt; ()l!l.:lmcd 1l11:1r JI}IJ ~ UJI·
uuns un RHP Bn:r S.lbt:rb,,~cn .1 ntl HHI' J11 11 t't&gt;hl
SI!!OCi.l LHP Dn.m SIHIUM:
TORONTO BLUI. JAYS I ~~·h,,,.,Jtl11: 1 r
II.JIIH nf"'(Jonon ,LHP D.Ul Pb.1~

The hmngs had been expected
smce me league sen1 a memo to
teams during the summer ordering
them to set aside a spare room for
female offic1als. Thorn said no other
accommodahons have been made.
"From time to time players will
touch a referee, such as patting Jhem
on the back, and we don't have a
problem wilh that," sa1d Thorn, also
in charge of suspenstons and fines.
"If somebody bumps them on purpose, (the referees) should unload on
them and then let me handle it from
lhere."

at least we had a wonderful game 10

end the season," Sehg said
Raungs lor Game 7 unproved
steadily through the mght. It began
wnh a I8.8 Irom 7 55 p.m.-8 p m.
EST. went up to 20.8 lor the next hall
hour and 22 8 from 8 30-9 p.m
It then mcrcased lo 23 3, 24 0,
24 8 and 25 8 lor the lollowing 30·
mmutc penods, and peaked .n 28 7
lrom 11-11 :30 p.m. gcllmg a 51
share The rahng dropped to 28 I
from 11.30 to 1mdmght and 22 6 lor
the !mal 30 mmutcs ol the NBC's
hroadcast. which mcludcd the fin al
SJX mmutcs nf the game and the Marlins' cdehratmn
Smurday's Game 6 finished w11h
a 15.5 ralmg and 28 share. the low -

R..-f!IOn :!I 1-lndcpt•mlt:n ~.- 21 l"iOO 2 Nor
walk St P:lul 19 077 7 l Cuy.1lm~.t Hts I ~ I!MXI
4 l&gt;alton Ll)t:al I ) QCi"i~ '·Mt'lllllC\I Ik 11 Hf1 ll fl
Culumb1ano•l I 'ilKII
Ro:ttmn 22 1 -0...· lillk•~ St )ltlm ~ lJ CIIM ~
Fccnmnt S1 J ~~~cph I' H1l 1!A•Ji,m,:c Ay&gt;'hl lll•
1116142 -'-Elnmn- WtHllilllnr~ 12 7lJ:!() ~-t'rnilll~~;
I I %11 6 - l', m~n r. I -G!I hn, l 10 H222
Rc~HHI 2l 1 C.11 h ~ 110J'lll ~ , lh.dl~'llll
12 nL 1-Rcl l.urc ~~ Jt•hu II '2V41 -1 l'uwnw
I I 279J li-l ..1n~ l1~hcr C.11h !0 7111 h-Nl·w.ul
C.tlh 'J O"iJtl
R&lt;:J:Iun 2-1 1-Cc i.l.lr\'l lk I ~MUCt ~ ])c(,nill
RIIICr!1dC l h J0!\ 7 1-IJulu H.mhu Ntirlhlfll
1~ 4~00 .J-C.n Country O.ty 14 :!.Hl 'i N~· w Url'
men 11 \"i ~~ n-N l..cw1shurg 1 n.ltl Jl 1~ l7

Amtri(•n

day night against the Phoenix Suns
was offic10ted by Palmer and two
male refs.
"She was trying to be really
mvolved in the game,'' Sloan said. "I
got on her about an illegal defense
call and said something to her from
across the court. She d1dn 't respond,
and kept going about her bus mess."

_

'

A&amp;E. remarks he later apologlled
for.
"For all the gnashmg of the teeth.

R~:!lmn 20 1-Cnl H.1rtley l0.1t 176 2·(tlldw.t
16 71Bl 1-W Jdl crsnn 1~ olOOO J - S!dllc~

K1 w r V114.w IIJ II'U4 \-Cnl W.ti\Cro.ttll l:-1 "\l:lt)K J -

&lt;irl"CII~IIk

14 seconds left in regulation, anp the
game ended m a he even though
Florida outshot the Kings 26-12
Florida led 2-0 midway lhroul!h
the third penod, but Craig Johnson
scored for los Angeles at II 04 and
Stumpe! tied it in the closmg second s
after the Kmgs pulled goalie
Stcphanc F1sel for an extra skater.
Steve Washburn and Jody Hull
scored lor Florida, wh1ch outshotlos
Angeles 7-0 in the first pcnod - the

Diyisinn \II

('4•1 llrcn,J..h.l14'1l 1172 11 'i-1Jul'!l1 11 S,l tl!P
I6J2:!.2 () C11l J :.i~lltlnHr I" t(~7h
lht!lu n K l·l..t.:h;UIIIII ~~ 'i~:!~ ~-C111 ll:•'f.lt
IJ,I\\\1\ J! 20110 1-(l'llllol Ill J~j(ji -1 M,l\1111
17 Mtbfl li-(h!uhl I.JI,lw,uhl.l 17 1000 fl ·

Malvlchuk scored at 3:07 and 4: 19
or the first period to gJVe the Stars a
2-0 lead. Both goals came with the
teams skating four-on-four.
Dallas took a 3-0 lead with 23 seco nd s left m the first period on a goal
by Joe Nieuwendyk, but New York
pulled to 3-2 on a pair of goals by
Mike Keane.
Kings 2, Panthers 2
At Mmmt, Jozef Stumpe! scored
the tymg goal for Los Angeles with

Houra
M·Sat 9:30.5:00

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9 Ol ilerOsol (8862751 Reg St 89

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

,'
~

~Pace.rs hope acquiring Bird as coach means championship
t

• By STEVE HERMAN

~DIANAPOLIS ~AP)

Pac·

oflndi111a four years earlier The

The ers had the No 1 pick in· the 1978

- 10
1
lndtana Pacers weren about
let
r the shy.
country hoy get away
a second ttme.
. F.
begms n·
When the
· day ntght, LaJ;Y
the Pacers bene •. ac tnl ras·
etball after five years tn vtnua tm·
ho,
the
team that
let htm sltp through ns fingers 19
years ago.
.
10
When
dectded
on to
Phtladelphta
last sprmg.
movewas
Btrd
only
man the Pacers
want·
ed. Luckily for them. they were the
only team he wanted to coach.
"I think we recruited each other,"
Pacers president Donnie Walsh
'recalled of his efforts to bring the
'native Hoosier back home. "Once he
lnade up his mind to coach and want·
ed to come to Indiana 1 didn 't go
after anybody else." '
It's safe to say that without having
coached a regular-season game, Bird
already is the most popular Pacers
coach since Slick Leonard left the
bench in 1980. Two years before that.
. !,.eonard passed up a chance to draft
•'Bird out of Indiana State.
.; Btrd never held a grudge. though.
, " I wanted to be the Pacers coach
.i n the worst way .... This is my home
:S tate . Every kid from Indiana
·watched the team. You get caught up
: with it. !felt if I didn ' ttake the oppor: tunity now. this might be my last
;:opponunity, " Bird smd. "''ve always
been very competitive. If you want to
:Compete in the NBAyou have to play
:Or coach. I' m too old to play, and the
P.,Jy other option is to coach ...
·- Bird, who grew up in southern
Indiana, was a two-time all-America
at Indiana State and was college bas.[cetball) player of the year in 1979,
'When he led the Sycamores to the
ilation 's No. I ranking and 33 straight
Nictories before a loss to Magic
.IVhnson 's Michigan State team in the
·lik:AA championship game.
: • Bird was eligible for the NBA
'draft in 1978, though. because he sat
out one season after he dropped out

~n

had

draft but Bird
made it known he
intended 10 return 10 Indiana State for
h'
.
ts
left the
p
.1h Atl ta as free
10 .
he n':.Jed
diate 'help at forward and couldn't
wait another ear for Bird 10 gradu·
Y
ate So Leonard traded the No .. I pick
10 Portland for uard Johnny Davis
and the No 3
which he
sed
d
f.
f
ard
R'
'k
u
to ra t orw . ·~ .RobeY·
The Boston Celttcs, ptekmg stxth,
were. wtlhng to gamble. They. draft·
ed Btrd, waned a year to stgn htm and
rode his shirtt~il to three NBAcha~­
P•?nshtps tn hts I 3-ye~ career. Btrd
was an All-Star 12 umcs and the
league's MVP three ttmes.
No wonder the folks back home
gre~ted hi,s return with such a frenzy.
I don t really get mvolved ~n that
stuff, becau~ I had so mu~h of 11 over
~y career. I JUSt so.~ of hke to ~~and
m the background, Btrd satd. But
It has caused a lot of excttement.
which I'm hap~y for. because at le?st
people arc sttll mterested m what I m
doing . I'm back home, coaching a
~rofessional team in m~ home 1stalf .
I m excited about that.
U
Btrd, 40, rettred tn 1992 because
of a bad back and was a Celucs spe·
Ctal aSSIStant the next nvc years.
mamly as a scout. He satd he started
thmkmg about rctummg as a coacha
couple of years ago, then gave tt scn-

bl~nd
S~~~e:~~:Roundfield
NBA~ason
Bt~ w~ll ~· stt~mg 8;~~ Le~~~~;lt
i~me·

coacht~g home-~tate
L~ Brow~

~election

Arctic park
GALLIVARE, Sweden (AP)
Padjelanta National Park. in north·
western Sweden, is one of Europe's
largest parks, covering 776 square
miles. Established in I 962, it contains several lakes as well as mountains, valleys and glaciers. The park
is home to such species as the
wolverine, Arctic fox and brown
bear. lis birdlife includes the golden
eagle and merlin.

Herniated disc in neck
:to .sideline Spielman
of season
Jor remainder
.
'

By BUCKY GLEASO~

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP)·The Buffalo Bills will be without
;liftebackerChris Spielman for the rest
:ofthe season after he sustained a her·
:niated disc in his neck.
: : Spielman had felt numbness
;throughout his body for more than a
week before telling team doctors
;Sunday afior Buffalo's 23-20 ovet::,
·time Joss to the Denver Broncos. The
:i'!)ury could require surgery and
:tlireaten the linebacker's 10-year
:clrccr.
,
· • " He was heartbroken," Bills
:coach Marv Levy said. "But he
;upderstands . It's not a shoulder or
· a~kle . It could tum into something
:sorious if he isn't treated correctly. I
:know Chris told me, 'I'll be there
: n~M year,' but I just don't know."
1 ' The fonner Ohio State standout
1 r~fuscd to speak with reporters on
;Thesday, when he was replaced on
;the injured reserve list.
• • The Bills signed free agent Mark
:Maddox, who played six years for
· Buffalo before being cut during trainil1g camp. First-year linebacker John

Holecek, held out last week with an
ankle injury, is expected to stan Sunday against the Miami Dolphins.
Spielman Jed the Detroit Lions in
tackles for eight seasons before signing a four-year contract wonh $8 mil·
lion last year with the Bills. In his
lirst season with Buffalo, he estab·
Jishcd a team record for tackles with
206.
· "He's a great, great player and a
great individual," Levy .said. "And
he's tremendously meaningful to our
team."
Spielman is considered one of the
toughest players in the league and
was one of Buffalo's Jcadcrs on
defense. He and Damicn Covington
were tied for the team lead with 97
tackles through Buffalo's first eight
games this year.
In 1995, he sustained a .torn pcctoral muscle in the season opener
against the Pittsburgh Steelers, but
played the whole season and led
Detroit with I 37 tackles. He had not
missed a game since 1990, when he
missed tour with a separated shoulder.

:NBA's newest refs ••.
:"Any rcfha.&lt; to read the situation, hut
;if~ou think you can help. you jump

;inf
· · Both Kantner and Pal mer wnrkcd
:four exhibition games this preseason
aller ofticiating two apiece last sea·
~ son .

: • They will he among the referees
:r.iplacing Mike Mathis. Jess Kersey .
:&lt;Jtorgc Toliver and H~nry Arm :Slftmg. who were in.dictcd un tax cv:.~­
·sitm charges. Toliver ami Kersey

(Continued from Page 5)

resigned after entering guilty plea.&lt;.
Armstrong and Mathis have bccn
suspended with pay while they await
their trials.
The hi rings were applauded at the
Women's Sports Foundation, the
long Island-based organization ded icated to women and their role in
sports.
" You have lo hand it to David
Stern," c.ecutive director Donna
Lopiano said.
'

GANNITTFOUNDATION

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
[

Each year, the Gannen Foundation makes contributions to
qualified nonprofit organizations to improve the education.
health and advancement of the people who live in Gannett
communities. We value proJects which take a creative
·• approach to such fundamental issue.s as education and
neighborhood Improvement, economic development, youth
development, community problem•solving , assistance to
; people who are disadvantaged, environmental conservation
; and cu~ural enrichment.
Proposals for funding are currently being accepted through
The Daily Sentinel. For more information and an application
for your qualified nonprofit organization. please contact
Charlene Hoeflich at The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio, or call 992·2155 . Completed applications
must be returned to The Daily Sentinel no later than Friday,
November 7, 1997.

"There's things I will tell these
guys, and I hope they listen, to help
them become a bener basketball
player," Bird said. "I've been there .
1 knnw what it takes, and I'm sure
they ' ll listen, and if they see it work·
ing. they'll work on it more on their
nwn.
·
"It is definitely a players' game.
'lbcrc is no question about that." he
said. " I have said that all along, even
when I was playing. I say it today.
Players arc the ones that make the ·
plays and they make the haskcts."
Bird takes over a team that went

ous consideration when Brown began
hinting he would not return at the end
of last season.
"The last 2 1/2 yean;, my hack has
been feeling great, and the last year
and a. half, I started thinking ahnut
coachmg, because you don't get 11 on
a golf coun;e," Bird said. "I said if
this job opens up, I' m going to scri·
ously consider taking it."
It didn't take much persuasion.
Bird signed a contract reportedly
worth $4 million to $4.5 million a
year and promised from the start to
he a "player's coach."
'

3~·43 and missed the playoffs for the
first time in eiaht years. He drafted
Austin Croshere, a 6-foot-9 forward
from Providence, and acquired Chris
Mullin from Golden State to sive the
Pacers more scoring in the frontcourt.
" With teams double-teaming Rik
Smits and putting a guy on Reggie
Miller and staying with him, we felt
we need some scoring from the small
forward position, and everyone
knows Chris can do that," Bird said.
" He 's hecn very good. Hopefully, vic
can get d.ouble-teams and swing the
hull around to Miller and he'll be able

By DOUG FEINBERG

racy test for many younger players
who never experienced the old arc.
For veterans like Mitch Richmond, Glen Rice and Dan Majerle,
the change shouldn't be a problem.
For Miller, it's a welcome relief: He
was one of the most outspoken crit·
ics of moving the line in .
Of the 10 most accurate threepain( shooters last season, Nos. I
through 9 - Rice, Steve Kerr, Kevin
Johnson. Joe Dumars, Richmond,
Miller, Dell Curry, Terry Mills and
Mario Elie- have been in the league
long enough to have played with both
three-point distances. Voshon Lenard
was lOth most accurate.
There are many young three-point
marksmen , like Lenard, Damon
Stoudamire, Allan Houston and Allen
Iverson. who entered the league after
the line was moved up to 22 feet and
are untested at the longer distance.
" You've got to be a little more
cautious about when you take it,"
said Stoudamire, a career 37-percent
shooter from behind the arc. "If you
come up short there arc going to be
a Jot of fast breaks.
"But it's really no big deal for
me," the Toronto guard said with a
smile. "I was taking that shot in college all the time."
When the
· . line was first

tI

•

n

introduced in the 1979-80 season,
teams took an average of 5 I12 treys
a game. The Atlanta Hawks took 75
that entire season and made only I l
In 199~ -94 , the last season before
the line was moved in. teams took an
average of I0 three-pointers a game.
The next season, with the shoner line.
teams averaged 15 1/2 per game. By
last season, it was up to 17 .
"The huge consensus was that the
shoner three-point line was causing
a game that was not fluid. " said Rod
Thorn, NBA senior vice president of
basketball operations. "There were
too many three-point shots bcing taken and a lot of people IA(erc taking
three-point shots who shouldn't have
been taking them .''
He said he expects the number of
attempts to decrease to about nine per
game.
Some of that decrease should
come from the likes of Mourning.
Webber and Detlcf Schremp!'.
Mourning, whose three-pointer in
Game 6 or the Eastern Conference
semifinals last season helped defeat
the New York Knicks. ha.&lt; made 28
of 96 three-pointers in his career.
Another player whd"will attempt
fewer treys is Washington center-forward Webber, who wa.• 0-for- I 4
before the line was moved in but took

·The Daily
Sentinel
.
.

.'

VVednesday,October29, 1997

Wife can't get over hubby's past l&lt;;&gt;vers
~

Ann
Landers
1¥17, Lu

An,e~

Tlraca

SyMhuw and Crc•hlrl
Syndiu~e .

Dear Ann Landers: I have a
problem that I' m afraid will ruin my
marriage if I am unable to resolve 11.
I recently got married. I was a virgin, and my husband was not. I
learned this shonly after we s!arted
to date and was devastated. They say
your first is the one you will always
remember. I feel that because I was

145 three-pointers in 1994-95 and
I5 I last season, making 33%. (He
was out much of the 1995-% season
with an injury).
"It's not going to change my
game, it's going to make me better
because it brings other· people out
there wider," Webber said. ' 'But a
person like me, who did shoot well
last year, I will take Jess shots."
Although three-point percentages
went up when the line was moved in.
overall . field . goal percentage
declined.
In I993-94 the league shot 33%
from behind the arc and 47% from
the field . Last season, the three-point
percentage ro~C to 36% and field goal
percentage dropped to 45%.
· The return to the old three-point
line is one of several changes this
season intended to improve the game.
Players will no longer be able to
call timeout while in the air and
tailing out of bounds, and a defensive
player can no longer keep a fnrcann
on a player who's facing the basket
with the ball.
The league also expanded the nochar~e zone hy painting a doued
semicircle beneath each hasket.
marking a four-foot arc in which secondary defenders will not bc allowed
to draw a &lt;:harge.

not his first it didn' t mean as much
'
10 him
1k ·
h 1
me ·a Jot but 1
·
hurt thai there
JUSt can
01h g .!fore me 1 also w9n.
1 0m in ·me with his
. der •.f he
who were
rienced. Somemuc 1 · h 1
waited 10 have
times, ·~:s arried We would then
sex untt
hav;J been
how to stop the
. ease 1 0 f
d ' f men
pam, Ann.
won
their
h comp e eK ri·
who marry

n~~ e~ ~~~~0
w~r~ ·~
~ ~~ne~s
prev~ou~orc e~
ha~'t
,?' .. ·

te~~~~
t~n
e~
vt~t~s
~~~"::,~~~~ ;~y ~a~e~~;pt w~.

w•nt to be the only one in my husband's thoughts when we are making Jove but I' m afraid this is
impossibie now. Please help me sort
this out .. Second Place in Buffalo
Buffalo: You can't • saw
sawdust. Tonuring yourself about
the women your husband 'slept with
before he met you is a waste of time
and accomplishes nothing. If you are
nagging your husband for details of
his past bed partners. I hope you will
sto
·
only thing that matters is that
he ;narried you and not one of the
1
If you continue to obsess
.

Dea~

~e
oth~rs.

about this problem, please consider
counseling. It could help.
Dear Ann Landers: My new
husband and I Jived overseas and
have recently returned to the States.
Several sears before I him ,
"Claude" had gone through a difficult divorce and received a lot of
support from a woman wtth whom
he worked . "Thelma" is also
divorced, but she is old enough to be
Claude's mother -· .no romance
there . She has no chtldren of her
own and considers Claude a son.
All three of us are now Jiving in
the
city. The problem is that
.

~arne

my kind-hearted hu sband feels
deeply. tndebtcd to Thelma, and she
IS mantpulattng htm to the max. She
telephones him several tim.es a day,
both at work and at home. She has
managed to invade our social life
and wants to go everywhere wtth us.
When we are together. the woman
acts to tally helple ss, and Claude
indulges her completely.
I mentioned thi's to Claude
recently, and he became defensive
and went mto great detail about how
much he owes Thelma. It h.as gotten
so the mere mention of her name
sends shivers down my spine. I am

Rutland Friend.ly Garde.ners meets
.The Rutland Friendly Gardeners
met Oct. 22 at the home o[ Marjorie
Davis with the meeting called to
order by ·newly elected President
Janet Bolin.
Also present were Lorri Barnes.
Rosemary Eskew, Judy Snowden.
Kimbcrly Willford . Linda Boyles
and Debbie Buffington.
Devotions were by Davis who
.read "No Regrets".
A thank you note was read by
Bolin from Rusty Bookman, princi pal at Rutland Elementary School,
thanking the club for the bcauufication project done at .the school. Bolin
also told the club about a conversa·
tion she had with Mary Powell about
writing a letter, stating the group's
intended efforts in .regards to the
· beautification project at the site of
the Higley Memorial.
During old business. it was noted
that the scraphook for the bcautifica; tion project contest sponsored by the
. OAGC •hould include ptctures of
: the group's year-long efforts around
: Rutland, the post oftice window a.nd
Rutland Department Store's wm·
·
dow.
Under new business. the OAGC
Region I I meeting was discussed. A
.. urkshop for . the Carleton School
Christmas Flower· Show will be.held
Nov. 2 1, during the regular monthly

~G1-e::c

meeting at the Rutland Church of.
Christ. It was decided to do a work·
shop instead of !he program and
educational for the November meet·
ing.
.
For the Sunshine Basket Report,
Joy Cremeans. Katy Cremeans, H~r­
vey Earliwine. Jean Kennedy, Btll
De am and Kathleen Ti Ilis w~rc
added to the shut-in list. It was also
noted that Beulah Grate. Cecil Wise
and Bernice Nelson were now
deceased. Lily Robinson will
receive a Sunshine Basket for Octo·
bcr from Marjorie Davis .
Kimberly Willford had a display
of pinecones with a pinecone d~eo­
rated like an angel proving most
popular. It had a halo made of beads,
a head made from a wooden acom
and wings made from mesh and gold
ribbon.
Debbie Bullington presented the
program on holiday decorations for
a wall or door. She made a swag
from a plastic vine lidding white
lights, white silk poinsettias and hly·
of-the-valleys, and gold star garland
and accented with curled gold pipe
cleaners. She demonstrated how it
d
I d
could be place on a mante . oor·
way or stairwell.
She also showed us how to make
an incKpensive and easy wreath. She
shaped an ordinary wire coat hanger

into the shape of a heart. Then she
made small, individual bouquets of
pampas grass as the base , the added
purple salvia, feverfew, gold tansy
and a single dried rose. This was
secured with Ooral tape to the wire
heart, one after another, until the
heart was full. You then make a hook
out of the hanging pan of the hanger
and finish with a bow or ribbon .
Janet Bolin also explained how to
decorate a wreath she had bou.ght

and explained.what it contained. She
also showed tbc group how to make
3 wreath using tinsel garland and
flowers.
Garden Pal gifts were exchanged
and the meeting adjourned .
Marjorie Davis provided an
assortment of food, highlighted by
Halloween cookies and a choice of
decorative candles or hand lotion for
door prizes.
·
·

not askmg that we drop thts woman
compl etely, Ann. I J.ust want to
achteve a happy . medtum . Do you
have any suggestiOns? .. Three Is a
Crowd m Cahforma
Dear California: Apparentl y.
you and Claude have prov1dcd tht&gt;
woman with a complete .soctal hk
Can you fix Thelma up with an
bachelor. a wtdower or an amusmg
friend' Please c~nstdcr II.
Meanwhtle,lt seems .'o me th?t
Claude has patd hts due, . He doc&gt;
not owe Thelma. in':'Jusinn for the
rest of her hfc . It s ume he
yqu
first , and you can tell htm I satd '"·

old~r

p~t

R•Eiact

.

.

It's about Being
Educated and
Active Together.

BEllARD D. GILKEY
Far

SALISBURY TOWISBIP ftUSfEE
NOI·PAII'I'ISOI
Member ol: Amertcon Legion, Potl128 - VFW Pool 9926 DAV • Chopter 53 - Vtltron ol World Wor II

Ea,..U..e•lll - QluallfW -

c..,.w.

Pold lor by condldote: Bernord D.·GIIkty, 3110 Ath St.. Middleport, Ohio

~~~.C-h~e-c~k~Y.~o-u-r~~~~~~~~~~~--~;r;;~-,
This Week For
The Month1IV

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•

Kroger
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Family .

f you're 60 years of age or
older, we've got an exciting new program for you.
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It's called SemorBEAT (Be
· Educated and Active Together).
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As a member, you'll receive
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You II be invited to special _
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----------r1
I

Medicine

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor

•

.:rdgen neuralgia IS a real
:pain in the neck ... and t~oth

.

: Question: 1 had a tcrrihle attack topmost branch • cames sensations
· of-tooth pain. After several tnps to fro'!' the eye and rorchead to the
' my dentist. ·my family doctor. and bram;
. .
.
finnlly to a neurologist. they diag·
CJr The maxtllary nerv~ · the mtd·
nosed my condition as trtgemmal die branch ·conveys scnsatton from
neuralgia. They say my tce~h arc the upper teeth . . th~ upper hp . the
fine and that the pain comes Irom a car. and the smuses. and
prohlem wtth the nerve. Can you tell
'ff The. mandtbular n~~·c .· the
.·
r
•
ondt'
tt
'
on
·
~
IOWCf
diVISIOn transports SCnsaliOR
mcmurca ho uI [hi ~..
·
·
·
·
d
Answer: Trigeminal neuralgia. fr~m the teeth ol. the Jawbone a~
which also goes by the name tic sktn ulthe lower pw and upper part
douloureux , describes a set of symp· of the neck .
.
.
. . .
th
•m
a
specilic
iliseasc
Whtle
all
three
ol
these
hranches
[h
toms ra d·c r n •· one· in which· there
· · per fonn sensory 1·unc tlons·· l'k
reel
.
·
The con
1110 1.5
.
•
·
d 1 1 •catur.·
·, · 10
· the areas of tlie face and mg pressure. pam un cmpcr c.
ths r;•~. d b 11 or part of the fifth the mandibular nerve also perl~lfms
' ca sci rvc y a
motor functions . Thm IS . II hast tbcrs
crama nerve.
1· h
·
· Th '.
. ou'have probably that control mnvcmcm o t c ·~us·
" nerve, as y
I
od
I al ·x pr . ·ston .
'already guessed. is also called the des t 1at pr ~c.e act .c cs. s
· ·
·
und those used lor chew mg.
•tng.;:;mal n;rvc~ can have several
In trigeminal neu~al~ia. the pain.
1110
e
con
.k
h
er
can
he Jimtted. to a smgle
hranch ol
·
50
causes and u stn es t osc ov
.
1
"r
f
th
.
1
1
1
c
nerve.
or
11
may
10\'
ll
vc
lwn or
years o age more requcnt 1y an 11
•
.. ·
n•er individuals . all three.
.
occuts '" you ~ .
.
..
n 1c pain typically occurs 4u1te
Women arc also stricken WtJh thts suddenly and at its onset is 4Uite
more often than ~en. • has three se"crc . Man.y dcscrihc it ns an eke·
The tngcmma nerve
tric shock or a sUlhbing puin.

I

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The ophthalmic nerve · the

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The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

to knock down the shot for us. We
think it's key for our team."
In the preseason, the Pacers went
6-2, winnins their last five games. So
far, Bird said, nothing about coach·
ing has really taken him by surprise.
"The one thins that I got lucky
with is I have some veterans that if
there arc problems .they usually get
together with the team and talk it
out," he said. "Whether it is practicing hard or getting something done,
they usually take care of it them·
selves. It has been an easy transition.
I have no complaints."

NBA ~hifts three-point line except at corners
A81oclated Preas Writer
For Reggie Miller, Rex Chapman
and other guards with exceptional
range, the switch back to the old
three-point line just means hitting
from fanher away. For Alonzo
Mourning, Chris Webber and other
big men, it means their long-range
shooting careers are probably over.
For the NBA as a whole, the
change hopefully means. a return to
the smoother game of the 1980s and
early ' 90s.
. ·
"I think that rule change could
open the game up a lot," Washington
Wizards coach Bernie Bickerstaff
said. "Moving the three-point line
back will free up more space in the
post and prevent defensive players
from being able to defend down low
and still get out to cover long-range
shooters. 'This will place a premium
on good three-point shooters."
The league Board of Governors
voted this summer to abandon its
three-year experiment and move the
line back from the uniform 22-foot
distance to the original 23 feet. nine
inches- except in the corners where
it has always been 22 feet.
The change will take the trey away
from players who shouldn ' t have
been taking it and provide an accu-

.•

Wednetd8y, October 29, 1897

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

www.obleness.org

'

WILLFORD

•

-;:;..,

,I

For

I
I
I

EASTER LOCAL
·SCHOOL I
Pilei for by conclldllt'•..;...ltloo. Bevelty Wlllfol'd, Trou. Box S3, l\JI&gt;Ptll Ptotno. 011

•

•

�.·.·.•
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Plge 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, October 29, 1997

Secrets of getting into Ivy League schools exposed
I)' ANNE WALLACE ALLEN
"--ated Press Writer
CORNWALL, Vt. (AP) - So
you want to get into the Ivy League?
First, don'tlet your mother write
yeur application essay.
Don't bother to have your parents' influential friend lobby the
admissions director.
Do donate a million-dollar building to the campus if you can; don't
annoy admissions officers with tales
of your privileged background, a
fonner admissions officer at Danmouth says.
"Why has no one wriuen this
k.ind of book abcut Ivy League
admissions before "" Michele A.
Hernandez asks in the introduction
to "A is for Admission: The Jnsider's Guide to Getting Into the Ivy
League and Other Top Colleges,"
published by Warner Books ($24)_
Her answer: "You need to be
leaving this job to write the inside
5!0ry, because you probably won 't

cles."
Hernandez analyzes the way
applications and interviews are
treated at the most selective schools
in the United States.
No surprise here: Grades count.
Selective colleges give much more
weight to academic rankings than to
personal or extracurricular rankings,
Hernandez says.
She explains in meticulous detail
the Academic Index or AI, which
she describes as "one of the central
mysteries of the Ivy League admis·
sions process."
. 'The A1 is a formula that combines average student test scores
such as the SAT and high school
rank in class. These figures are represented o~ a scale of I to 240, with
240 being the highest.
"No mauer bcw many books you
have read ' on admissions, you will
not see a reference to this index,
because it has always been a kind of
;rade secret," she writes.

in the Ivy Leasue. If you're a little teed.
slow in calculus, it definitely helps
AI Dartmouth, the overall accepto play up any concen appearances lance rate is 20 percent; the accepat Carnegie Hall. published books or tan.ce of legacies is double that.
science 1wards in your background. Dartmouth, Princeton and other
Sporu are also important.
selective colleges still reject 60 per·
"Coaches f.Ce the extremely dif- cent of legacy applications, she said.
ficult task of finding · lop athletes
Offering to build a new science
whose academics put them into an complex at the school you like deliacceptable range," Hernandez nitely helps. Smaller effons won't
writes. "In some spons, that is near- have much impact on admissions.
ly impossible."
"Sending in your yearly donation
There's also the essay: cenainly of $1,000 to your alma mater will
not a critical factor on its own, but not l!ive your child a greater
still a way for applicants to either chance," she writes.
bore or thrill the admissions officer
In the end, fewer thim one in 100
wading through their file. Heman- incoming freshmen get in because of
dez' advice is to write something their parents, she said.
extraordinary.
Hernandez has no problem with
"I'd much rather read a slightly these spc:cial cases. but she does take
rougher essay that had real feeling in issue with the quality 'of work in
it than a dry but perfectly crafted admissions offices, which she said
one," she says.
are made up of talented young gradIf you're a legacy - that is, if uates and " lifers," p,cople who genone of~our parents attended the ~ol- crally "did not graduate from any
lege- your chances are better, but highly selective college. let alone an

So don't be too subtle about your
accomplishments, or they might be
missed.
"The very best of applicants will
often be brighter than many of those
who will be evaluating them," she
writes.
Hernandez also advises playing
down your father's position as a
banker or your mother's job as a law
panner.
'
"During my years in admissions,
I was sometimes surprised by the
bias Ivy officers held against privileged students, especially those who
wcnllo fancy private high schools,"
Hernandez writes.
Hernandez probably won't get
her old job at Danmouth back after
writing this book.
"It's a very glib, superficial view
of what it isthat goes on." said Karl
Furstenberg, Danmouth's dean of
admissions and financial aid.
"I think that there arc a lot of
people out there making a lot of

books, Furstenbel'll said. "I think
these books kind of feed the para·
noia that's out there."
Furstenberg called Hernandez'
descriptions of admissions officers
. ''inaccurale .. and "preposterous.
"The people who do this work ...
they're well educated; they're
bright; and they do it because they
care about students and the institutions they work for," he said.
Hernandez, 30, spent four years
in admissions, and moved :m 10
teach high school English.
She is taking time off from teaching to care for her 5-month-old
daughter. &gt;e
She said she wrote the book to
help point applicants in the right
direction.
" Kids feel unwonhy to apply to
these schools, and it's a shame," she
said.
"Snidents have to keep in rnind
they don't have to appeal to a panel
of Nobel Prize chemists."

Boo·k·or..praye~rs,·tor·~n,eal-ly eVerySituation
By DAVID BRIGGS
AP Religion Writer
Looking for a new way to say
~race before dinner''
How ahoutthis prayer from Scot·
land:
"No ordinary meal. a sacrament
. awaits us on our table spread.
_ "For men arc risking ·livcs on sea
alld land that we mav dwell in safety and be fed ."
·
Or this Arabic grace from Egypt,
based on the Gospel of Mark: •:o
Lord who fed the multitude with
five barley loaves, bless what we arc
about to eat."

Open The Doubleday Prayer Collection and also find prayers of
grace from C~ina. Martin Luther.
Queen Elizabeth I and numerous
others spanning centuries and
denominations.
Editor Mary B,atchelor has compiled some 1,300 prayers- covering nearly every pufPOse - in the
bcok, which was-published last year
in England and is due out in November in the United States.
There are chapters with prayers
devoted to forgiveness and to the
world around us; prayers for the day
and prayers for the night; prayers by

and for·children: and prayers about
growing old.
There arc special prayers for
AIDS victims and prayers for alleviating the suffering of the poor and
oppre.Scd.
In taking on the daunting task of
compiling such a comprehensive
prayerbook, Mrs. Batchelor said she
often looked far beyond traditional
sources. searching for unusual
prayerbooks wherever she went.
"I must have bought about 20 to
30 books of prayer," she said.
If they fit into the book's categories, she would jot down prayers

from the radio or a magazine, or
even a particularly meaningful
renection she heard in church.
And in some cases where there
were not enough prayers on a subject she felt was important -:- such
as adoption of a child - the British
evangelical would write some herself.
Her goal was to offer Christians a
variety of prayers, from the ancient
to the contemporary. that woul4 give
people "a lot of joy and help."
Mrs. Batchelor. author of the
popular "The Children's ·Bible in
365 Stories," says she tried to recog·

nize that people approach prayer in
their own ways.
"Some ways of prayer are helpful to some people in some moods in
some stages," she said.
In the prayers for the young, she
includes prayers written by children
themselves.
A prayer by John Livesley, whose
age is not given. says: "Dear God.
thank you for a lovely day and my
friends and family .... Please guard
me for ever and please give me
swecj dreams. Amen."
And among prayers for those
growing old, she includes the words

of the poet Robert Browning:
"Grow old along with nie'
The best is yet to be.
The last of life. for which the first
was made:

Our times arc in his hand.
Who saith ·A whole I planned.
Youth shows but half; trust God:
sec all nor be afraid!"'
Not surprisingly, the No. I source
of prayers is the Bible.
After compiling 1,300 pra)"crs,
which ones does she keep coming
back to in her life?
The Lord's Prayer and the 23rd
Psalm.

...·•
:YVednesday,Ckrtober29,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

.

-

frhe verdict is still out on John Paulll's influence

•
:: By JOHN OMICINSKI

: O.nnett Newt~ Service
:; Jonathan Kwitny's "Man of the
:C_entury" is the most comprehe_nsive
btography to date of a complicated
Polish man called a world-class nag
by some and a great modem saint by
:Others.
;: Kwitny calls John Paul ll a "mis11'nderstood" visionary whose "nonA-iolent mass .movement has changed
'inodem history" and the most spiri{Ual ·pope of modem times.
- The former ·Wall Street Journal
ieporter has attemptell a comprehenSive picture of the man born Karol
~ojtyla who has, in almost 20 years
as pope, left an indelible mark on his
i:hun:h and his times.
·: His book exhaustively explores
the many sides of the prismatic
jlope: his Polishness, his consuming
jnterest in difficult modem philosoplties, his studies of married life, his
~kills as an actor, his roots as a
~orker, and the torrent of doctrinal
interpretation that has nowed from
ihis remarkable man.in hundreds of
.speeches, pronouncements, and
'llncyclical .
.: Perhaps the best index of Pope
John Paul II's greatness is the fact
,that few hold no strong opinions of
{he man.
It was the same with the other
standouts of the century - the Roo~§&lt;:velts, Churchill, Truman and De

Gaulle.
And, like jts subject. Kwitny's
book is going to prompt some fierce
arguments.
·
"Man of the Century" ignites a
debate abcut John Paul II's exact
role in the events in Poland that triggerCII the collapse of Warsaw's 45·
year totalitarian regime and led to
the fall of the rusting Iron Curtai.n.
Kwitny's book minimizes the
role of CIA aid to the embattled
Poles, and gives most credit to John
Paul II for guiding his beleaguered
countrymen.
He calls it "untrue" that American aid kepi the Polish Solidarity
movement alive, calling these an
"attempt ... to rewrite history and
steal credit for work really done by
the Poles themselves."
Carl Bernstein - whose book
"His Holiness: John Paul II and the
Hidden History of Our Time" first
reported that a secret alliance
between - tlte pope and President.
Reagan led to U.S. aid being fun·
neled into the Polish undergroundcharges that Kwitny "ignores t~e
truth to serve his own agenda."
Bernstein says Kwitny's book
maltes "knowingly erroneous and
sweeping generalizations."
Bernstein said his own book
doesn't endorse what he calls an
"absurd. simplicity" that U.S. aid
toppled the Polish communists, but

"reflects the complex forces" that
were at work.
He faults . Kwuny for omitting
former CIA director Roben Gates'
accounts of CIA help. Kwitny 's con·
elusion is that U.S. aid was little,
and late.
On other debatable points, Kwit·
ny also concludes that the Soviet
KGB didn't recruit Mehmet Ali
Agca, the assassin whose ' bullets
almost killed the pope in 1981.
Largely, Kwitny describes Agca as a
madman who acted on his own.
But he fails to give an insufficient
detailing of motives to completely
wrap up this case for everyone's sat·
is faction .
Kwitny breaks new ground in
many areas.
He says that John Paul II's treat·
men! of El Salvador's Arcltbishop
Oscar Romero - who was assassi·
nated in 1980 ~ "are
injustice
like no other he has done anyone."
The pope was getting ready to reassign , Romero, Kwitny reports, for
siding with Salvadoran factions
described as communists.
His explication of John Paul II's
encyclicals is thorough and clear
and touches the major points well .
He goes where few have trodden
Kwitny has made a brave effort
- allempting to explain this pope's
to
attempt
a book that covers the life
·fascination with Husserl's modern
·
and
thought
of this most remarkable
philosophy of phenomenology in
man
.
more than broad-brush fashion.

an

I! is a great and welcpme addi·

tion to the John Paul II bookshelf.
one likely to stimulate new discussions.

"Man of the Century: The
and
T1mes of of Pope John Paul II," by
Jonathan Kwitny. (Henry Holt; 800
pp. $30.)

these

Chester Council Dau.ghters of.America hold meeting
Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America, met on October 2 I at
the hall, with draping of the chaner
for Ada Morris. whose family memher, Karen Smith, was present.
The charter was also draped for
Cora Beegle and Charles "Red"
Carr.
Councilor Esther Smith presided
at the meeting . The pledge to the
c;hristian Flag was given, and John
f~ :·IO· 15 was read.
The Lord's Prayer was recited in·

unison and the pledge to the American flag was given. The first stanza
of the Star Spangled Banner was
s·ung by all.
During initiation. Manic Mae
Teaford joined the council
Appointed to national and state
off&amp;ces and committees during roll
call were Joann Ritchie, district
deputy; Esther Smith, past state
councilor; Erma Cleland, judicial.
comminee; Jean Welsch, credentials
commillee: Janice Zwilling, com-

mittee; Margaret Cottrill, national
The death Elsie Swisher, past
representative; Esther Harden, State Councilor, was reponed. Bob
deputy of Guiding Star 124.
·
Thompson, husband of State Vice
The second meeting in Novem- Councilor Florence Th~pson has
ber will be a baby shower Jor Dawna passed away. Estil Beckett of DisArnold.
trict 7 had a heart attack and Blanche
Reponed ill were Ruth Smith. Mouldeney is in the hospital.
who had eye surgery; Elizabeth
A card was read from the Cora
Hayes, who is recovering; and Ethel Beegle · family was read. Thelma
Orr, who received a go.od report · V{hite ihankcd those who helped in
from her doetor.
any way during the death of her
Joann Ritchie read "A Message brother, Red Carr.
of the Christia!l Flag."
Bette Biggs, past district deputy.

who conductec;l inspection, was
escorted to the altar by ·nag bearers.
Joann Ritchie presented a gift from
the Chester Council.
The meeting closed in regular
form.
After the meeting, refreshments
were served. Gifts were won by
Everett Grant and Joann Ritchie.
Those present were, Bette.Biggs,
Nathan Bi~gs, Janice Zwilling, Margaret Cotrill and Esther Harden, all
visiting members from ·Guiding Star

Community Calendar
ship Board of Trustees meeting
The Community Calendar is pub::- · Wednesday. 7 p.m. at the township
lisbed as a free service to non-profit building.
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is THURSDAY
not designed to promote sales or
MIDDLEPORT - Open door
fund raisers of any type. Ilcms arc ses.ion with State Representative
printed a.&lt; space permits and cannot John Carey Thursday, 2-3 p.m. at
be guaranteed to run a specific num- Middlepon Village Hall. Carey will
ber of days.
meet with constituents on a one·IO·
one basis.
WEDNI';SDAY
Alcoholics
PORTLAND - Lebanon TownPOMEROY

Anonymous will meet on Thursday
at 7 p.m. at the ~acrcd Heart Church
on Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy.
FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Emcrgency Medical Service squad wiener
roast and hay ride Friday, 6 p.m.
People who helped in the Come
Home to Rutland Homecoming are
invited. Bring covered dish and hot
dog sticks.

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Holiday craft
show at Pomeroy Elementary
School Saturday: II to 5 p.m.
Refreshments will be available.
BASHAN - Special services
will be l.eld at the Red Brush Church
of Christ on Bashan Road Saturday,
7 p.m. and Sunday. 10 a.m. and 6
p.m. with Denver. Hill of Foster,
W.Va., speaker.

Sorority enjoys hayride
Xi Gamnia Mu sorority met
rc&amp;ently at the home of Roger and
Paula Gaul for an old-fashioned
hayride and wiener roast.
A shon business meeting was
presided over ' by Vice-president
Becky Triplett after the wiener roast.
Those members attending and
their guests were: Maurisha and Don
Nelson, Sandy and Don Hanning.

Sharon and Speed Prall, Barb and
Denzil Welsh, Pat and Dan Arnold,
Jackie and Rick Hoover, Kay and
Ron Logan, Lynn and Mike Wright,
Beth and Don Stivers. Roger and
Paula Gaul. Mary Woods and Ben
Slawtcr. Connie Aldridge and Mike
Brothers. Kay Adkins, Niescl Ger·
ard, Becky Triplcll. Sheila HI!'Tis.
Debbie Lowery. Debbie Finlaw and

Yotef•

IICHOliON

Kathy JohnsOJt.
The next meeting will be held
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the Bradbury
Church of Christ 'with members to
bring items for the "Do Your Own
Thing Christmas Auction" and
canned goods for · the United
Methodist Cooperative Parish which
is one of the group's community service projects.

Trustee

Better Health Club views mammography program

Thank You

"VSA MADE" IN OBJO
eCOAIS
•VESTS

•BIBS
eCHAPS

Coats In: Brown, Orange, Hunter Orangelnaeta.

JOY &amp; PLANTATION DOG FEED
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COLLARS; LEADS &amp; COUPLERS

...De
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:

.DAVE GRAHAM

Superior

FOR
Letart Township 'lrustee

-Hot Dogs
12oz.
pkg

I 11'Dntto-thank everyone who in any way helped put on the benefit that was
held for me. Thanks to my church family at the St. Paul United Methodist Chun:h
in Tuppers Plains for spearheading the event. Thanks to the Eastern School
·System for J!lvlng the use of the Thppers ~~mJiementary. I want to thank all of
the singers that appeared, especially Hariy Gorrell for his help and sound system.
Thank you to all the businesses and Individuals that donated rood and items that
were auctioned olf and a gtnt big thanks to Dan Smith and his wife Donna lor
conducting the Auction. My heartfelt thanks to everyone and anyone who
volunteered to work and who ancnded the benefit. I will never he able to express
just how much It has meant to me.
I especially want to thank everyone who prayed for me during my Illness and
surgery. God hci:mJ those prayen. I am doing wtll and God Is continuing to heal
me. I ask that you continue to pray ror Jenny and me. \lbrds cannot express what
your love and kindness .ha•·e meant to me. May God bless each and every one of
Jenny and Ralph P:irker (Crazy Legs)

NEW SALES &amp; SERVICE

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Russet Potatoes 15 lb/ bag $1.59

Thank You

Ch~rry

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Limit 2 Please
2:1

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Tomato ·Juice

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Umlt 2 please

Mike Sells

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Festival

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Products

1/2 Gallon

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rices Good Thursda October 30th, ONLY

Please Be-Elect
.1.

Roll call and officers reports Dorothy Jeffers. Skinner. Leilheit,
Jn observance of Breast Cancer
Blackston. Dixon and Npncy MorAwareness Month Lenora Leifheit were given.
A
discussion
was
held
on
updat·
·.
ris.
showed a film on mammograms at
~ recent meeting of the Rock· ing _thc sick and shut-in list fo~
springs Better Health Club held at Chnstmas.
More plans will be completed at
tile' home of President Barbara Fry.
• Fry led members in lhe Lord's the November meeting io be hosted
by Dorothy Jeffers with the program
Ppayer and Pledge of Allegtance.
Devotions were given by Chap· by Fry and the contest by Lcilheit.
The contest was presented by
lain Helen Blackston entitled
NEW SHOWROOM AT 114 W. 2ND ST.
"Thank God for Little Things" and Phyllis Skinner and won by Barbara
I illllllll
"SERVING oHio siNCE 1953" .
"Quit Supposing" by Helen Steiner Fry and Aggie Dixon.
Fry served refreshments to
lticc.
··".~ · ,. . ·- . t
JIM YOUNG, OWNER
985-3561

**
** ~ ,(P(,.:,;..-,_. ·."c;. , fi'IMil.
** 1· rI~1 .·

Council I24 in Syracuse; Deloris
Wolfe, Erma Cleland, Lauro Nice.
Opal Eichinger, Mary Holter, Sandy
White, Charloue Grant, Everett
Grant, Doris Grucser, Elizabeth
Hayes, Ella Osbome, Opal Hollon.
Thelma White, Esther Smith, Mary
Barringer, Marcia Keller, Kathryn
Baum, Joann Ritchie, Goldie Frederick, Julie Cunis. Dorothy Myers,
Jean Welsh and new member, Mattie
Mac Teaford.

•

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

'

PRICES EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 30,1997 ONLY

I

;

�,·,

Page 10 • The DaHy Sentinel ·

.. '

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; ":

.. .

....
.

'

Wednesday, October 29, 1997
.' · -PmY*o'v • ~lddleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • MiddlePOrt. Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Wednesday, oct~r 29,1997 .
'

...
. .

'

STORE HOURS
Monday thru .
Sunday

8 AM·IO PM
LIMIT 2 PLEASE

298 SECOND ST.
WE RESEm IHE RIGHI TO LIMII QUANtiTIES
PRICES GOOD IHRU SATURDAY, NOV. 1, 1997

ADD PVRCH $5.49

RC COLA
PRODUCTS·.
2 LIIERS

HEALTH OFFICIALS QUESTIONED - Nicky
Kollar, left, asks a question at the Masuk High
School auditorium during a town meeting in
Monroe, Conn., held by local and state health
officials Tuesday. Hundreds of residents who

. raceived flu shot• at town-sponsored clinics
were In a panic Tuesday after learning 'they may
have been exposed to viruses that causes
hepatitis and AIDS bacauae a doctor failed to
change syringes. (AP)

JIF PEANUT
BUTTER

Hundreds of people fear flu shots
exposed them to hepatitis, HIV
MONROE, Conn. (API - Like
thousands of old~r Americans across
'the country, hundreds of people in
tiny Monroe decided to get flu shots
. after their doctors said the illness
;. strikes the elderly especially hard .
Now the people who got the free
flu inoculations fear they could have
been exposed to the AIDS and hepati·
tis viruses. 'The doctor who administered the vaccines used fresh needles
for each patient. but failed to change
• ;yringes each time.
;
He gave the shots to 468 people
• this month at three clinics sponsored
: QY Monroe, in southwestern Con-necticut about 10 miles north of
Bridgeport.
More lhan 450 residents. rnost of
them elderly and many of them
frightened , packed an auditoriulf] at
• Masuk High School on Tuesday to
: question state health officials about.
: the risks.
"I don't understand how something like this could be happening in
this day and age. Thio is really hor-

rible." said Mary Ann Marini, 63.
State officials assured people that
the chance of expooure lo any bloodborne virus was extremely remote.
Still, they recommended that those
who received the flu &gt;hots be given
a free hepatitis B vaccine as a pre·
caution .
Dr. Cla~de Light resigned as town
medical director on Monday after
state health officials received a complaint that he failed to change
syringes for each patient.
Light said he didn '1 realize Ihatthe
federal Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention now require that the
oyringe as well as the needle be
changed for every shot.
He used one syringe for each vial
of flu vaccine. Each vial contains
doses for 10 to 12 people.
"I thought the procedure I was
using was perfectly acceptable,"
Light said by telephone from his pn·
vale practice. "When (the standards)
changed . I probably should have
changed, but I didn't know. !thought

what I was doing was risk free. no
problem."
Light said·no blood was drawn, so
there was little risk of contamination
of the syringes.
Epidemiologist Aaron Roome 'of
the stale Dcpanment of Public Health
and Addiction Services called the risk
"extremely low," saying exposure
could only come if blood from an
infected person was drawn back into
the syringe and injected into the next
person.
He said HIV ·exposure would be
even. more remote because the AIDScausing viruo is not as hardy as
hepatitis B and not be as easily transmined.
'The first of three dose&gt; of the vaccine were to'be adminiotcred at a free
clinic today.
The town will pay bills not covered by insurance if residents want to
go to their private physicians for HIV
and hepatitis B tests. A state health
dcpanmcnt spokesman said Light's
actions at the town clinics will be
investigated .

'

:
'
•

· a bill saying astronauts registered to
· vote in Tc.as - where most of them
live- can cast ballots from space. ·
Using new software developed by
NASA. Tony Sirvcllo Ill. Harris
County's elections chief. sent a hal·
lot last week to U.S. flight controllers
in Moscow. They transmitted it to
Wolf on Mir. 240 miles above Eanh.
· The 41 -ycar-old .doctor and enginccr. who arrived Qn lhc stnlion in
September lor a four-month stay. will
open the e-mail on a laptop compul·
cr. He has until 7 p.m. ori Nov. 4 -

:Town mourns .death of young

.

·**
**

ANKIN

Orenge Twp. Trustee

The

0110

who will make f'
11
0

diffi
1
erence on range wp.
Ronda.

Pd for byu caMidate 42192 St. Rt. 7,

Tuppe,. P1aine, Ohio 45783

Santa Claus is eoming to ·town!
Applications for toys to be donated by the Meigs County Bikers
Association will be taken at the ·Meigs County Health Department
beginning November 3, 1997. Applications will be taken for two
weeks. 'lbe final day to apply for toys is November 14, 1997. No
txceptions. Applicants must apply in person (ABSOWTELY NO
PH()NJ! CALLS). Proof of income is required to verify eligibility
(M~cal card, pay stub, unemployment, etc)
·

'

A SAFE AND HAPPY HALLOWEEN.
••

.,•

KEEBLER

.

MT. TOP PUMPKIM, ~PPLE,

p•

••••••••

Che

***
**
*

$

260Z

9
19

•

STOKELY'S
VEGETABLES
14.25·
15.25 oz

29c

KEEBLER
ZESTA
CUCKERS
160Z

2 POWDER

CHARMIN WHITE
BATH TISSUE

c

41?K.

DETERGENT

.,
.
•

992-5829

1\vinOak
Pennzoil

•

•
•

'

''

.•
.•
t

(

KEN'S APPLIANCE
Sales &amp; Service

..
..'

Areas only Full Serice
Agent for all
Major Brands
Pomeroy

Cheapest Fuel Priees
In the Area
992-5829

Forni•.....
Have a Safe
Halloween
Rutland, Oh
742·21

&amp; Jewelery; Inc.
$/t.. Bel•
40~

#

D:l

•

· Stop by for a
great meal

Have a Safe
Halloween

Happy Halloween!

BAUM
Win A Bankroll
This Week
Powell'$ Super
Value

•
.·'
'

•

••
•

•
•'

$200

,&lt;•
•I

Free Cash,

igh
~enders
St"', Shop, &amp; Save

Have a Safe
I
Halloween·

Farmers Bank
Reminds you to be
safe this
Halloween season
992·2136

LUMBER
Have a Safe, Happy
Halloween
985-3301

•!'

•I •
'

'

i
?•

·.

•

(

"•

Ridenou
Supply

992-5335

every week.

$ 99

Shop &amp; Save
. 1-800-426-5581

..

oz

Stop In The Store
For Details '
I

.

Mon.frl-8:00-7:00
Sat s:oo-s:oo
Sun 1:110-4:,

e

••

$149

79

,.
(

Family Gard
Smok' Detector $3.99
Fire ExtiQgulsher $8.99

.''

•

!;J2·103

•

Owner
Tracy Hupp

':

"The Healthy
. Alternative"
Call in your order for
Fast Service

992-5020

'

TIDE ULTRA

BOUNTY PAPER
TOWELS
4

Walk· Ins.Welcome

'.t•

$ 9.9

Wesson Oil
P~CH$1.79

Have a Safe
Halloween.

.•

oz

$ 39

ADD.

ARTHUR TREACHER'S

'..
''

. I

,'r

LIMIT 12 PLEASE

UMIT 1 PLEASE

Middleport

''

TOWHHOUSE

·

-******~****
Jill' :

THE SPONSORS LISTED ON THIS PAGE WISH ALL OUR AREA CHILDREN

,.•

On November

•

..

3/$

*
*
*
*
**
••
·"*·
*
**··.
4th *
*
* J. . .Elect
. *
A R
OHN

.

15 oz.

Ms. Manly said. "She told her par·
·ents she was ,glad they were her best
· friends." .
Sunday, morning. Kalan a told her
aunt she wasn't feell~g well.
An ambulance made it to ' the
house after ~ing dragged part way
by a four-wheel-drive truck. Kalana
was taken to St. Catherine ·s Hospital,
·in Garden City. where doctors were
· unable to save her.

**

''

1. Don't go It alone. Trick or treaters should always go in groups, and younger children
should be accompanied by an adult.
2. Beware of tricky costumes. Avoid masks that obstruct vision; theatrical makeup may be a better alternative.
Additionally, make sure the costume allows child to move and run without tripping.
3. Maintain a high profile. When trick or treating at night, carry a flashlight or attach reflective
tape to child's costume.
4. Teach street smarts. Remind your children to look both ways and to cross only at comers.
Children should stick to a predetermined route and shou.ld be given a specific time at which to return home.
5. Don't Invite trouble. Only accept treats at the front door.
Never enter a stranger's home or car for any reason.
6. Play It safe. Discard any unwrapped candy and have a parent inspect all treats before eating.

BEANS

13·16

Election Day -to get the ballot back ·
to Sirvello via Oight controllers in
Russin.
Sirvcllo will read Wolf 's e-mail
and punch a 'ballot by _himd with the
astronaut 's choices.
"He·,; lost thai one bit of secrecy,
.but that's a give-and-take situation to
where that's the only way he can
vote, " Sirvcllo said Tuesday.
NASA plans lo usc similar soliware on1=e the intcrnalional space station is up and running. Construction
is scheduled to begin next summer.

.

HALLOWEEN SAFETY TIPS

CUCKERS

tr~nsplant patie~t

LAKIN, Kan . (AP)- A 7-year- 50 mph winds cut powe~ to the
old gtrl who had heart and lung trans· Calkins · home. three miles outside
. plants was among the victims of the Lakin. 35 mib cast oJ' the Colorado
autumn blinard thai buried the Rock- state line.
ics and Plains over the weekend.
The J'amily began a desperate
Kalana Calkins , who had the -· ol'fnrt to take Kalana l&lt;l Kearny
tran.splants in 1994, died after the County Hospital. just 3 1/2 miles
• storm cui powcrto her house- and away. While tryin~ to reach the high·
• the machines that helped her breathe·. way ncar t-heir home Saturday morn·
Snow drifts that closed roads pre- · ing, the Calkins four-wheel-drive
vented her parents from taking her to vchide got stuck in thick mud. They
the hospital and blocked help from managed to return home and call for
reaching their home.
hCip.
·
"Everybody around here j,; really
Emergency ctcws tried to reach
: sad that this happened. but it 's turn- lhc family 's home in special snciw
ing into a celebration of her life. too.'' vehicles. but a downed power line
said Lori Heman. a close friend of over the road forced them to detour.
Kalona's parents. Peggy and Roger Rescuers also got stuck .
Calkins.
With his daughter's situation
Kalana's health began failing in worsening. Roger Calkins wrapped
. recent weeks . Her body was hegin- Kalana ·in a blanket and headed out
ning t&lt;• reject the transplanted organs. across snowy fields to the nearhy
• and her condition turned worse just home of Kalana s aunt. Tracy Man·
' asthchliuardsetincnrlySaturday. ly
Nearly a font or snow driven by
. " She was up and down all night,··

HaUoween can be a real treat if you use a little
common sense and follow ·these important safety rules.

·SHOWBOAT
PORK&amp;

·Astronaut. to become first
American to .vote·from space
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)
- A couple hundred miles won 't
come between astronaut David Wolf
and his right to vote.
Thanks to a new Texas law, a balJot has been sent to an American in
orbit for the first· lime.
Lawmakers made the change after
John Blaha, the U.S. astronaut on
Russia's Mir space station a year ago,
couldn't caSI Dballol.
Under the old law, an abocntce
ballot had to be sent by U.S. mail. But
in June. Gov. George W. Bush signed

c

I

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, October 29,1997

The Daily Sentinel• Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, October 29, 1997

10 Lost IIICI Found

IRS bill escalates turf war between accountants, lawyers
WASHINGTON (A:P) -A major
lobbying baltic is in die wings over
• a provision in !he IRS overhaul bill
!hat gives acrounranu and others a
cherished piece of turf now reserved
· for lawyers.
The bill would extend the privi·
lege of confidentiality. normally
accorded to anomey-clienl discussions, to accountants and others who
practice before the IRS.
The provision threatens to erode a
· . keY. reason for seeking a lax auorncy
in dealing with the IRS. The confi. dentiality ·privilege prevents the tax
man from fon:ing you to divulge your
defense strategy.
:
"It puts you at a tremendous dis-

· PUCO clears
· way for
competition
in Gallia
exchanges
~

'

advantage if lhe IRS can discover
whal you rell your advisers in confidence," said Lawrence M. Hill, counsel for Brown &amp; Wood LLP in New
York.
The abilily to keep client conversarions secrel "has been one Qf rhc
main ad-.nrages rhal lawyers enjoy
over nccounlants in the tax cnmcx.l."
Hill said.
" This bill reprcscnls a walcrshcd
for the accounting profession." said
Hill. saying il would " lcvcllhc compelilivc playing field h&lt;;rwccn tax
lawyers and tax 34-.'countants. ... I
rhink ir's wonh in !he millions and
millions of dollars."
For now. law finn~ and major

legal trade associations, such as lhc
American Bar Association, haven'r
raken formal positions on rhe issue.
Several legal and accounling experts
expecl a major lobbying showdown
when lhe bill. now pending before rhe
House, goes lo lhc Scnalc ncxr year.
" I rhink il likely will be a major
issue:· said former IRS commissioner Larry Gibbs. a partner at
Miller &amp; Chevalier in Washington.
One treml underlying lhis issue is
rhc rcvululinnary change in lhe
a(cnunting

industry~

involving the combinations of
KPMO Peat Marwick and Emsl &amp;
Young, jusla .1onth afler Coopers &amp;
Lybrand and Price Waterhouse decided 10 combine.
"The legal profession is now concerned thai accounting profession is
beginning lo encroach on its sacred
rurf. This would make lhis alleged
encroachment a Iittle easier," said

Arthur Bowman. publisher of Bowman's Accounling Report, an Atlanta·
based ncwslcller.
"Lawyers will w~rto fighllhese
provisions because rlrey are already
threalcned by Ihe number of occounl·
ing firms already hiring lax lawyers,"
Bowman said.

where major

finns arc cxranding rapidly inro rhe
cunsuhing business. Such competitive pressures underpinned merger
announCements earlier lhis month

LootllGI'I1......,.~•~•

!lind ..r, oHI.. "' llutllwrr

A-1. brOWn 11M collat,lt'·
7o!Z-

Orher accountants disputed rhe morally right change," Dunn said.
assertion !hal exrension of lhe confi·
David A. Lifson, an occounranl al
denriality privilege would cause a Hays &amp; Co. in New York, pur il !his
boom.
way: "The clients' rhoughl process
"This alone is not going 10 do should be prorecred. "
anything," said Mark Ely, KPMG
Gibbs argued that extending lhe
Peat Marwick. "! rhink !his will help confidentialily privilege 10 non·
us provide the one stop shopping that lawyers could create new conflicts of
clienrs frankly want and deserve."
inlerest al accounring firms.
The item was added inlo lhe IRS
Accountanrs would be lorn
overhaul bill ar rhe behesl of Reps. between rheir duty to keep clienl disJennifer Dunn, R· Wash., and John . cussions privale versus !heir duty 10
Tanner, D-Tenn. To Dunn, exlending provide rhe public wirh an tndepe~ ­
the confidentialiry privilege ro non- denl opinion on rhe sratus of a b~s• · ·
lawyers pracricing b•fore · lhe IRS nesses' financial condition, he sa1d .
would give people who can'! afford
Gibbs also said lhc proposal could
a lawyer important prmeclions.
create confusion.
11

113 W. 2ND ST.
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

a

monlh.

Before rhe marker gyrations of
reccnt ·days. many analysts had been
belling !he Fed would raise intcrcsl
- rares when it next meets on Nov. 12.
,Thai prediction was based on worries
Greenspan expressed in October.
At rhal rime , rhe Fed chairman
frcned that the economy was,OQ an
··unsusrainable track" wirh the reemergence of inflation rhe greatesr
:. threal facing rhe economy.
Greenspan also warned rhal il
would be unrealislie loexpccllhallhe
stock marker would conrinue rising at .
,anywhere near the rare of the pas! two
years.
Thai warning eonrinued a refrain
''Greenspan first voiced in December
pf las! year when he worried rhar
•'irralional exuberance" could be
pushing stock market prices to levels
. ' nru supportable by lhe underlying
-economy.
The marker ignored Greenspan's
original warning bul may have a
more sober view of die silualion in
light olthe record 554-poinl sell-off
on Monday. Even lhough the market
rebounded Tuesday wilh a record
337-poinl gain, the wild volatilily,
triggered by rurmoil in Soulhcast
Asian markers, had caplured the
actenlion of American inveslors.

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

614-992-5479

STATE ROUTE 124
ApproKimately 1.4 miles east of Route 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO
814-384-6212

;,,~

Red/Bik 53K miles, auto, sunroof, all oplions,
recovered theft, Insurance paid off, over $7000 Firs!
$4500 614·949-2311 Days 614·949-2644 Evening

''FACTORY
DIRECT
PRICES"
Quality Window Systems

Hour•:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00p.m. Monday thru Friday
7:00 am to Noon S.turda

110 Court St.

•Ohio Valley Bank
"Superbank" Services
•Greeting Cards
•Floral Sales
•We accept credit c~rds

c

14-16 oz can

CoHage Cheese

Flour

34.5 oz.

c

WINTER STORAGE SPACE
AVAILABLE
At lhe Meigs Counly Fairgrounds
Inside Storage Space $3 .00/LF
Open Shed Slorage $1 .50/LF .
Call 992-6954 or 742·2865

Sib. bag

2/$

Friday, October 31
Saturday, November 1
9:00a. m. 10 4 :00p.m.

Bananas

•t•

Mardi Gras
Paper Towels
. Single Roll

Free PVH Speech &amp;
Language Screenings
Thursday,
October 30, 1997
3 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Lay's
Potato
Chips

lb
8
2 3'-------

For Children Ages 2 and Up
Children's Clinic
(2801 Jackson Ave.)
Call (304) 675-5250 for an
Appointment
Walk-Ins Welcome

614-992-7643

992·5583

(No Sunday Calls)

Public Notice

Public Notice

Nollce of Elecllon on Tax
Lavy In Excess of lhe Ton
Mill Llmlllllon

Notlea of Election on Tax
I.Miy In exe- of U.. Ton ·
MIK Umllllllon

350t.11 (g), 5705.19,
5705.25
Nollcola her~by given thai

5711!1.25

OL

Holly Farms

Chicken Leg
Quarters

CubeCI .·•.

BeefBucbt
.
'

I

Steak ..

EASTMAN'S

Up

'

2 Uters

ggc

BIG BEND, BUCKEYE,
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO VALLEY
'
TWIN RIVERS

USE SIDE DOOR
810 SOUTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT
OCT 28 THRU NOV 4

I

HOLIDAY CRAFT SHOW.
Sponsored by Pomeroy
Elemenrary PTO
November t , 1997,11 -5:00
Tables, 14ft. $15, 12ft. $10
Crafters conlact Susan Reeves 614·

SUPERMARKETS
·--

NoUca 11 hereby gtVlln 1hll
In
purtuonct of a

Henry l. Hunter, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, DlroctOf

Dated Sepl. 8. 1997
(10) 8, 15, 22, 29 4TC

7•2·3411 : ReHa Day 614·992·3269

or pictorial errore.

•

!

I

The Meigs
County
Community Housing lm
4

provement program will
accept epplinllCH1s lor the

Conlrocl or tllglblllly llatlng
from general contractors
end apecl•lty contrectora

(electrlcel, plumbing, heel·
log, .. puc eytlema, and
lnoulallon). To bo eligible lo
bid on lhl up~omlng
houetng rtheblllletlon pro-

Ject•. all contractor• mual
be on th• llatlng In order to

bid on 111111 houelng rtheb
projecto. It It anllclpaltd
lhat 35 houre will be tllglbtt
lor tht program.

This fine tUUI'l'
is turning
"80"
"Gotcha"
All our love,
Your thoughtful

Contr1ctor lppllc•tlone

ore evalleblo at the CHIP
offiCI IOCaltd ll 31350
Union Avenue, Pomeroy,

Ohio belween 8:00 a.m. and
5:00 p.m. Contractore are
rtqulrld lo provldt proof of
w~rkmen'e

614-592-5025

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

985-4473
71221Un

compeneatlon

and llablllly lnturance .
Quullone may be
oddruted to J ..n Truuell
al 992·7901.
(10) 21, 3t (11) 5 3tc

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING

Athens, Ohio
11Ctr'no'f1 ' ,..._ ,..

I

saturdl1 Nov. 1. 1887 The Cru·
aader&amp;, \Our 3 TD 12 Yeillr Oldl)
Ara Hav ng A Rummage, Bake.
And Crah: Sale. Thia Will Be Held
At Our Church Hall Behind Tha

First Church Of God On Garliold

Avenue, The Hours Art 8 A.M.

Toe P.M.

SALE

SALE

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy
All Yanl Salts Must Be Pilei In
A-vance. DNdlint: 1:00pm the
day btlort tile ad Ia to run,

Monday •41llon

4

Clean-ou1 aale, Friday, Saturday,
Ora Ban residence, SR , 24, Syr.
acuse, 8t4·992·5006. Complete
storm door. two tirtl and wheels.
aluminum Chrislmll&amp; ltee, antique
recorda; mini blinds, and mora.
9:ooam.

80

Auction
and Flea Mal1&lt;et

ATTENTION VENOORS' Indoor
Space SS.OO OuldoOf S3.DO 0ptn
EWtryday. StCH"I hour&amp; ll-5. Crawford'• Flea Market, Henderaon,

wv. ~7&amp;-540&lt; .

Rick P41araon Auction Company,
lull Urn. auctioneer, complete

aervic:t.

auction

Lic:enaed ~

IB6,0hlo I Wnt VIrginia, 30·7n-5785 Or 304-n3-5«7.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Silver And Gold Colnl, Prcollttl.
DiamoMs, Mtique Jewelry, G(!'d
RinQI, Pre·1i30 U.S. Currenc:y,

Slefling, Etc. Acqulsi~ons Jewelry
· M.T.S. Caln Shop, . ~51 Second
Avoouo. Gallipo~ ••614-448-2842.

Antiqun, tap prices paid, Rive;lne Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Rust a.toore owner, 614-Qg2.

25l!B.
Antlqun· no ltam too lar(lll Of 100
amall. Alto ettalea, appraisal•,
relinlshing, cuslorn order1, IU·
11112-6578.
Clean lal&amp; Model Cars Or
Truckt, 1ggo Models Or Newer,
Smith Bui&lt;:k Puotiac. 1goo EUI·

em """"'" GaDipolia.

'
J &amp; D'a Auto Parla. Buying ulna• vehil;:faL Selling parll. ~- '
7n-5033.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Wanted: Standing Timber Or

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio
,..,...,.,.,

EMP LOYMENT
SER VI CES

Chipped Wood, 614·388-9188,
Or 014-31111-1747.

110

Help Wanted

Secretar~ Needed,
Nights, And Saturdays, Experi·
ence Nei:essar,.. Resume &amp; Rei·
antne81 Required. 614-441 ·1570.

"Part· Time"

SAYRE
TRUCKING

HEIRLOOM CONNECTION
Heirloom Quality Custom Fumiture

* t::omplete Kltehens

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umestone &amp; Gravtl
Septic Sy1tems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rat••

* Klteht-n t::ablnet Refaelng
* AntlqnP Rt-productlon"

Handcrafted Using Meigs Co. Hardwood
614-992-4106

Joe N. Sayre

Free Estimates
Still Taking Orders for Christmas

YOUNG'S ·
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Additions
•Naw Garages
·Eieclrlcal &amp; Plumbing
,Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exlerlor
Palnllng
Also Coocrele Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

OILER'S
DEER SHOP
S.R. 325,
Langsville OH
Open Now &amp; Will Be
Open During The Bow

&amp; Regular

Deer Season
742·2076

992-6215

Pomeroy. Ohio

10 21 '97 1

mo. pd.

(Lime StoneLow Rales)

All Carpet-Upholstery
Oeaning

WICKS

CHEVALIER'S

HAULING

CARPET CLEANING

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Carpel-Upholstery

614-992-G077
Middleport, OH

614-742-2138
ANNOUNCEMENTS

DOS

Personals

Do Vou Haft Hard Choice&amp;? let

A Payc:hic: Help. Ju•t Call 1-ooo-1045, Ext 0017, 13.91/Min.,
MUll Be 18 Y rs . Ser~-U. 11 g.
1145-11434.

IHe1a1 Pumps Installed '38lll a month
Free Est/miteS

MOBILEBDME
BUill 8 COOLING .
Serving Soulheastern OH &amp; W-1
614-446-t411
1.fl00.872·5117 , 1391 Safford School Rd .
OH

S25.tllO 10 t27,0DO. AI!Hst one
rear ol axperitnct in Individual

and family therapy. Pleue r•·

apand by sending reaumea to:
Action Youth Care 217 6th Scraec.

Ptoasanl, WV 2SSSO "' cal 1·

Pt
888-813-2487.
dalt il Oc:L 31 .

E.O.E. Cloaing

Avon 18 ·118 IHf, No Ooor ,,ToDoor, Ot.tlck Cash, Fun &amp; Ralax it'Q, 1-800-736.0168.

AVON . $8 -$18 !Hr. No Ooor To
Door. •aonusea' Fun &amp; Eaaytl 1·
800-296.01 38.

--o..-Oualilica--

males, 2 black male W/4 white
feat, ~ blac:klwhlle male. 304·

o£1'11. C•dlica ion

•2 Ylata Experienot

17&amp;-3228.

11~140

Abandanltd Two Klllena, Mull
Give Away (014)44 HII04

Aclorlblo

Btac:k Lab Puppleo Five

- O l d (014)2Sa 88911
Madlum Yollowllalt Cet-M·

brolllr\ G - _,Fat Senior

au.,I14-371-K12.
Stvoral busholo block watnu11,

jroa&lt;~y .. go. ~75- 3818'

Srn111 Gr!IV ~ ro Good Home.
ot•--7541.
Tolovislon, 25" S.lrt Sensor •

Furnaces '2800 a month

piSI lor our PL Pleasant area office . Applicant must be 1 Maarttl level Social worket, Coun·
1elor. Psychologist or R.N. eligi·
ble ro be licensed. Salary Ia

4 kilt*'ll, tOwka old, 2 black It-

. Touch, Hal Sound, No Picture,

- Easy Bank Financing -

ACTION YOUTH CARE, INC, io
suking a Child &amp; ·ramily Thera-

s.r.-u
40

~====1:()-:3-:97:1:m:o:·:pd:.~=6=1:4:-::::9::::9:2:-:3:4:7:0=~ et ....
MobUe lome Furnaces
and Heat Pumps
INftlfflfiiM.
~ I

AVON I All Areas l Shirley
Spoors, 304-615-1429.

Babysiller Needed 3:30...:1 :30 P.M.
3 Houri A Day, Motherly Type
LONELV? Neod To Htlf A Sort.' P111lerred, Rilerances, 61.t-446Smiling Volca'P?? ~ -800·255- ll639.
0800, Ext 1788, 13.80/Uin. 18•
819-045-11434.
DAVII WHIT!! SERVICES
Fuii-T'""' HVAC hslalaion
Giveaway

.W0..&amp;3QCI.

Femelt Brown Dog
wilt1 Blut ond Whlll floe Collar,

Found: SmaU

Found In Johnson trailer Park

-

(114j4404t31

Found ; Snow White Cat, 1 Blue

Eye, 1 ~low Ere. Vlctn;JV: Clark
Cl'\apel Road, Par•r, 114-381-

--

Co~

I seen Or

Found, Pleas• Call 814 ·2451101 .

Lost: 32 Dtgrtt Masonic ring
..., llont. good 014-912-

5107.

Lost: - . d, Cllltcrs Po~ 1n the
Vldnltr 01 Galtll Academr. Btacil
Car With Purple Collar, Can •' 4·
o(oll-3537.

Domino'• Pizza Now Accepting
Application• At Gallipolis&amp; Po-

-·Apply In P&lt;non.

Domino's Pizza-Now hiring all
poailions, Pl. Pleesanl . area,
mutt be ~lyn. old . 30&lt;t-675·
5858.

Driver... Company Paid Driver
Training Prog. W !Oppty. To Earn
Up To .27~ IMi. 1 It 'Yr.l Eac:el.
Bentfitl I Good Hometlme. Eap.
Driven &amp; 010 Welc:omt. Harold
1\oes Tru&lt;Nng 800-&amp;42.0853.

ooll Awn. Cll814·114li-IIOOII.

Eztcutlve Director Pa1ltloa

Avoi-

The Gallla County Cha~r Or
Commerce Ia In Meed Or An E'a·
tcautva Director Tc Manage And
Supervls• The Cally 0r»et"atlone
or The Chamber Olfico. Quail,_
Appli&lt;:anJ Will Bo DelOit Orltillolrl
Ana Posten Superwiaory, Or·

ganir:ationel And Fiacal Pllim'"G

Lost In Rio Grande; Rewardt 1
Female Long Halrtd Black I
While Cat: 1 Male long Haifed

Brown Doclawod

-275-21111

Earn exltll money for Christmas.

60 Lost and Found

\

•

Fi"' Ctllrch or God. 1:00 U 5:00
P.ll.
'
SALE
SALE
SALE

1:00pm Friday.

Limestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Syetema
&amp; Utllltlll
Eatlmetee
992·3838

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek,
Attorney At Law .

Garfield Ava., In Brick Bttlde

Sunday I

HOWARD
EICAVAIING &amp;
TRUCKING

Chapter 1_3

50% OFF

NOTICE TO GENERAL
AND SPECIALTY
CONTRACTORS

GARAGE SALE

''·

We R...,.lhe Right to llmH quanutiH • Prien effective Thru Seturday Nov. 1, 1997. USDA Food Stamp• &amp; WIC Coupone accepted. Nol re1ponalble

Chapter 7

Revloed COlli, lecitlon
3501 '11 (g), 5711!1.11,

'Reoolullon of lht Board of Reoolutlon of till Board of
commlnloner• of lhe Education of lhl Ealllem
Counly of. Melgo, Pomeroy, Local School Dlttrlol,
Ohto, passed on lho 18th ReedtiVIIII, Ohio, poCied on
day of Auguot, 1997 there u.. doy of July. 11117
will be aubmiUed lo a vote !here will be tubmiUed lo a
of the P"'PII of aald aubd~ vote of !he poaplt of aald
vtalon at a General Election IUbdlVIIIOn ll I Gentrll
to be held In the County of Elocllon lo be held In the
Molga, Ohio, al lhe regular Eoottrn Loeal School
places of voting lhortln, on Dlotrlcl, Ohio, 111118 regular
lho 4th doy of NoVllmber, placet of vollng lhnn.• on
t997, lht quntlon of levy· lha 41h day of NoVllnlber,
lng ·a lax, In exceoo or lhe 1997, lhe quetdlon of ltvyten mill limitation, lor lhe lng a wx, In exctH ol tha
benefll of Cou"ty of Melgl len mill UmiWion, for tha
lor the purpose of mainte- benolll of Eaoltrn Loco!
School Dlllrlct lor U.. pur·
nance and operation of a
pooe of providing !undo lor
County Home,
·
current
oporollng expenoeo
Said lax being:' an odd~
Ilona I lax ol1/2 mill ala ralo and for lht ocqutolllon, connot exceeding 1/2 milia lor struction, enllrgem~nt, reneach ona dollar of value- ovallon and financing of
tlon, which amounll lo five permanenllmprovementa.
cents ($0.05) lor each one
Said tu being:' an adell·
hundred dollar• of valua·
Ilona! lax ol 4.7 mlllt al • ·
tton, for 'five (5) yeoro,
rale not exc.edlng 4. 7 milia
The Pplls for aald Elecllon
for each one dollar of VIIIUI·
will open al 6:30 .o'clock
lion, which amount• to
a.m. and remain ·o pen unUI
lorty·HV.n cenle ($0.47) lor
7:30 o'clock p.m. on lho aach one hundred dollars of
sold day.
valuation, for lwo (2) yoore,
Tho Polls lor Hid Elecllon
·By order of the Board of
will
open al 6:30 o'clock
Elecllona, of Molgo County,
a.m. and remain open until
Ohto .
Henry t. Hunter, Chairman 7:30 o'clock p.m. on Hie
Rita D. Smllh, Director aatd day.
Doled Sepl.-8, 1997 By order of !he Boord of
Elections, of Meigs County,
(10) 8, 15, 22, 29 4TC
Ohio.
•

Recognition of National
Diabetes Month and Home
Health Services Month at
PVH Free Screenings ,
Door Prizes and
Educational Materials
Tuesday, November 4,
1997 a.m. to 3 p .m.
Well ness &amp; Rehab Cenler
For more information please
contact, (304) 675· 7222

814·742·3080
614-742·3324
614·742·3076

BANKRUP!CY

1n

Pepsi Cubes

• 19

•

1/Wn

Public Notice

Asst. Varieties
24 Pack

Libby Solid Pack
.·. lcaless Round

(beside Pomeroy Municipa l Building

Chiquita

II
Tyson

RUMMAGE SALE
Grace Episcopal Church

Golden Ripe

112 gallon

181b bag

IOIC8 '

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

a

Gall Us For A Free Es/lmate

Richard's Lawn &amp; Garden
Gravely!Dealer
Spencer, W.Va.
1-800-827-4551

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

of

3351 Happy Holl- Roed
Mlddltport, Ohio 45711
New Homea, Addltlona,
Roofing, Siding,
Pole Barna,
Decka, Painting

&amp; REPAIRS

Agricultunil • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy - Acceti Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

pursuance

Home l•prove111nls

Pomeroy, Ohio

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

In

KINGS'

1-111)0.281-5600

RADIATOR ·REPAIR

United Valley Bell

'

Velvet Ice Cr• Bars 12 cL

a-·

C AR.111N4.

Hudson Cream

Ice Cream

Pumpkin 29

I Nfi'&lt;'fP- Dlt&gt; ci£T
--f!l( I-IA~(r OF
)A£..1!-· 0 ·/.Af'4T6~

··Self Rising • Plain

4 roll

,.. ""'' ,_.

Buy, Sell &amp; Trade

250 Condor Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on Nic~ols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992-2406
Fax: 304-773·5861

Revlnd Code, Section

Velvet Supreme

'

Lb.

2/S

Stokely
Vegetables
.Chase &amp;
SanbOrn Coffee
Soft'N Gentle
Bath Tissue

Trail Blazer
Dog Food

Red/Bik, 107K miles, 5 spd, sunroof, all options,
w/warranly, minor damage, repa~rd, $6500 080,
614·949-2311 Days· 614-949·2644 Evening

.lhl dlr btlorolllt ad
Ia to""'· Sllndlr
odlllaro . 2:00p.m.
Friday. llondar odltlon
• 10:00 a.m. Slturday.
· Moving Sale: Saturday O&lt;t 18th,
Sal 0&lt;1 25th, Sal. Nov 111. 11 1

r.ur flaM 111111 IHir
........ ...w. ......

GRAVELY TRACTORS
PARTS

lilloldtn-.

Ph. 985-4198

(Free Discount parts list)
Same Day Repair Service

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine. &amp;Welding Shop

1987 PORSCHE 944

Eggs

Lb.

'

Monday-Friday-8:00a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Salurday ·8:00a.m. • 12 noon

8 89

Brach's
Pick-A- Mix

wv 1023477

992-4118

Radiator .Repair &amp; Replacement

13-14 oz bags

Medium Grade 'K

(except

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-42n

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

LUMP AND STOKER COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILABLE

1991 TOYOTA

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright---..

1..----::--

Pf"! tN£: 2:00 p.m.

34718 St. Rt. 7.

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas

Ground Beef

We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Money
Postage Stamps
Film Developing
Pre-paid Phone Cards
Foodland Gift Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rentals-·
Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets

Handcrafted Wood
Projects

This is a common·sense and

5 lbs. or More
Tenderbest Quality

\.

,.

POMEROY, OH.

Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication

ONE STOP C:ONVENIENCE

ALL. Yanl-11. .

"Build Your Dream" ·
I

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy

MY PLACE

Swings, Benches, Tables,
Misc. Items

" WARNER INSURANCE
JEFF

By AARON MARSHALL
Gannett News Service

WASHINGT0N (AP)- Wildly
gyrating stock markers may nor be
good for inveslors wirh weak stomachs, bur rhey could rurn ourro be
'blessing in disguise for die U.S. economy.
Alllhe markellurmoil, both in !he
· . United Stal&lt;!s ·and many Sourheasl
· Asian countries. will mosrlikely end
up slowing U.S. economic growth in
coming monrhs, many analysts are
now predicring. And rhar slowdown
is just what the Federal Reserve had
been hoping would occur 10 keep
• inflation at bay.
·
" This had been an economy rhar
was threatening lo grow too fast This
rurmoil could rum ou11o be a substitulc for Federal Reserve ac1ions 10
raise interest rates.·~ said Robert
·Dederick. economisl al N~rthcrn
Trusr Co. in Chicago.
Many analysts predicted thai Fed·
• era I Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan. scheduled to restify
_before lhe congressional Joint Economic Commiuee today. would signal less concern about a runaway
economy than in testimony last

81

BRAMBI MIIIIO

FOOD LAND

Remodeling

360° Communications

York Peppermint PaHies, Hershey
Kisses, Cookies 'N Cream,
Reese's Peanut BuHer Cups,
Hershey's Miniatures

Wild stock
· markets might
=be good
medicine for
U.S. economy

Custom Homes

CELLULAR PHONES

EASTMAN'S

COLUMBUS -Competition in
· local phone service has recently
· spread to seven new counties including Gallia County. according to
recent filings with the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio (PUCO).
Several exchanges in Gallia County and the other six counties join por·
·.lions of 32 other Ohio counties that
· already have alternative choices for
local calls.
Cleared to compete with
Amerirech in Gallia Counry 's 256
(Guyan) and 367 (Cheshire)
· exchanges is LCI. a Columbus-based
communications company. The fil ings are the initial procedural srep
towards offering phone service in a
given exchange.
· The reccnr filings arc part of
PUCO's "fresh look" framework. ,
Under the fresh look rules. lelephone
cusromers under long-renn contracls
with incumbenr .relephone companies
arc given a 180-day window during
which !hey may rerminate !heir exisl·
ing contracrs lo rake advanrage of
. offers from competing companies.
The fresh look clock begins five
· days after rhe firs! allernalive local
service provider enlers a marker and
begins offering its services 10 the
public. New providers must notify die
POCO when they complete their
firs! commercial call.

Yanl Sale

70

Skills. Wuat 81 Creative, Anlcu -

tl.lt And Decisive. Applicant
llull Aloo Bo Sllillld 1n The Operation Of V~rioua Computer
Software Pro~rama Such A•
Windows IS. MICrosoft WOrd, At-

INI Pag-kor And Omnl Pogo.
A Proltulon&amp;l And Paaitiva Anitude Ia A Mutt. Submil Reaume

To:

�Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel
. Qctober'29, 1997

.. '

Pomeroy • ,-..lddleport, Ohio

_A(LEYOOP
..
.

.

PRlLLIP
'ALDER '

-

Beau-don Wanted: 1-2 Daro Pot

210

Wttk, App ly In Person At:
Scenic H1Us Nursing Cent•. Gal-

FINANCIAL
-----Business

IHOTICEI
OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISHING CO.

-we-mo.

Catting - Movie E1tras, Prody,.
tlon Tra lnua. Film Studio, 814·
523-11920.

Charletton newspapers nttdt
lndtpendenl eontractor 10 dellv.r
newapaptra from Riplty to liCin.
For lnfOtmation and U lnttrtllecl,

pleo10 call 1-304-372-8017 or 1--1397 E1151311 or 1787.

~.:::..==

CHILD CARE ·Worklng couplt

N-~

CoiTol Froi
1-«&lt;I-211-i000 EnG- 2814.

tHkl tnargellc &amp; tlptrtenc;ed
lady to nre lor newborn In our
horN during tht day. Send lnquity &amp; resume• to: P.O. Ba1 ~

220 Money to Loan

Computer Users Needed. Work

NEED A L~N? Api&gt;IJ Ttit Eur
Woy ·By PhOne. Friendly Loon,
61•·381H11135.

MiUwood. WV 25202. Roferonc:to
Requwed.

Own Hrs., 120K Tp ISOK /Yr. 1·
D00-347186 X 1173.

230

Professional

Services

Cosmotologlat Neaaed. Gaur·
anteed Wagea , Paid Vacation,

HARTS MASONARY - Block,
brick I ttont work. 30 years IX·
perience, reaaonable re111. 30..,
8D5-35D1 after 8j)Opm, no Job to
1111111 or 11 BIG. W\l-0212lll

Froe CEU Hour. Full &amp; Part Wanttd Olher Benefill Included, 614·

448-7atl7.

Expttlenced Phlebotomist Needed For Early Uorning Dravn.
Send Resume To: P.O. Sox ·33,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

livlngatan'a basement waterprooflng, all basement repal"

done, fret tatlmatea. lifetime

guo111nt... 10yra on Job toper!, _ 30oHI75-21 &lt;16.

Healing &amp; AIC lnst.aUer w/ahttt
me1al experience. send resume
to : P.O. Box 489 Pt. Pleaunt,

WV25550.
Housekeeper needed In Racine

area· cooking, c:leanlng, all duties
ol ruMing a household required.
Uving arrangements available if
needed. PleaH tend relerencet
&amp; resume 10: P. 0 . Box 420,

Radno, Ohio •5771 Ill' Novolnbor
10, 19D7.

' All real estate advertising in
this newspaper 15 subiect to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it illegal
to advertise ''any preference,
limitation or discriminatiOn
based on race, cokJr. religion,
sex familial status or national
ong1n, or any 1menti0n to
make any sucn preference,

Need 6 Lades To Sell Awn Call
81~335.!.

Ohio Based Trucking Company
Looking For OTR Orivera. Single
On Team Drivers. Must Be Ov.,
25 Yean Old Wilh 2 Yean Ex·
parlance And Good UVR. All
Equipment Is Late Madel Con·
venlionat Tractors With Reeler.
Weekly Pay, Health Insurance
A&gt;lailabto

l•mitation or discrimination:

1-800--137-87&amp;1.

This newspaper will not

knowlfl\lly accept

Part dme bartender, apply in per·
son at.Jell's Cilll'/ OUt be_, •
12. No p/'&lt;lno calli.

I

at:Nert1sements 1or real estate
which 15 in 'liolatlon of the
law. Our readers are hereb~
Informed tnar all dwellings·
advenised in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

Physician Servicea Needed For
Multi-Center Planning Agen~;y,
Contract Position 01 Approx·
imaraly 3 -10 Hours Per Week.
Day And Evening Houn Avail·
able For Gyn Exams And Birth
Conttol Services. STI Exams Fat

REAL ESTATE

Bolli Male And female. E•cellont

310 HomestarSale

apecial

government

b8cktd

adng Officer. Send Reaume Ancl
Thrtt Emplormont Roleroncta
To : Planned parenthood Of
Southeaot Ohio, 381 Richland
A•e., Atheno, OH •5701 . EOE I
ESP.

PIHaant Valter Nurllng and Rehabilitation C..,ter hat opening~
ror certified nursing aulaantL
Both lull-dmt oncl
poollions. Must be able to work 12

por.-..

hour ollllta. holldayo, and wMkenda. Mutt be 1 "rtified nur•
ing lltlatanr. Contact Angla Appro•. 2 Acflt, Soutwealern
. Rouoll, Alit Director of Nllrllnt. School 01-t On Povtd Rood, 3
~ •75-•- uc~
Bodrooma, 2 Botho, Lorge Uving
;..~li:EB:i~~~-~j;;~~-;;;;i;p;: Room. With Flrepleco, Dttachtcl
SALES: looking lor 01111 QIIIC I*· Gatagt, llult S.. To ADorociata,
oon 11 loll reploclrllent wfndowa Owner Will Conalcltr Flnanclng,
and doora. E•ptrltnc• In lolling 114-37D-Na7.
oncl marlu&gt;dng pr-ed. Roply 11 Brlcil, Ronch Family Homt, 1.7
Oualitr Window Syattmo, 110 Acrtl Juat Mlnuttl From Golll~:7~. Strttt, Pomeroy, Ohio polio. GolllpoNa City Schoolo, 3
--,---,--:-..,.-------1 BR, DR, FA With FP, 2 Bolho,
VACANCY: Cook 9vlliflca!lono: Nft: - · - · , . , . , 11+-MIH.S. Diploma /OED, Quondty l'G02.
cooking background, Exporltnce
working Willi Chlldltn. Contact: IUY MOIIE8 AI LOW AS
Gollio -Jackaon -VInton JVSD, ~~.!o~il~-=:.
014·2•5-533-4, En 201 lor ot&gt;QII- 2730• X t7lll.
calion. PfttdMOI· 11M7 EEO.

I

=•=

Woekond bond -kl vooollat
and blltlat, muat have

Chrll118-117.

3715., ou DolO 31181

WORK AT HOME·5 local people
nHdad to do Talernarkellng far
Local Company In lllo following

areaa: Apple Grove. l.O!'J, WI·
aon, Pt
Pleuant-all
local """""
calla.
llakt
125 11 '50
I* good

retpontt. Wuat have rellphaM
ancl ,,..llent phone lkila. Send
10: Box CW-30 CIO Point

~;;;~R~ftl~a!'~'
~20ro~M:o~tn~l~t.~
WV. 256150.

::

Wanted To

---=---,.;.,----....,-I
Child Core S, Tht Hour Dtr Or
Wftk. Loving EnvlronrMnt, Agt
Appropriate Actlvltltl, Eutern
-.,.ArM. 110--a131.
furniture repalf, rtfinllh
-tlon. oloa ..,,... ordtrl. Ohio
Valltr 11tllnlahlng Shop, Larrr
Phillpl, lt4-DD2-857t.

Met,..,

Gtorgn Por•t:H s.wmtll, don't
~tout "'"' logo to flo mil Juat call

304-171--1857.

Prolollional TiN Service, S"mp
Ramwal. FrH Eatlmataal In·
eurance, Bidwtll, Ohio. 114-311M41. 814-317·1010.

Lorgo ttltctlon of uttd h0mt1. 2
or 3 btdrooma. Sllrting at $2D95.
Quick dtiiVtrJ. Call OU-385DI21.
LOT LOCATORS. Coli 30•·755-

5581.

Mobile Horne, 2 Garagea, On loL
Foa~ble Loncl Conlrlet, Location:
Crawn City, Ohio. 61•-256-17....
MUST SELL. Uy lou, rour gain.

3bedraom &amp; 2 bath, cloae to
town. Ask for Frank 304· 755~

New 1DD8 1•110 lhrH bedroom,

lncluclta e monthl FREE lot rent

lncludea aklrtlng, deluxe tlepa

menr Until Dec. Hl87 800·251 ·

440 ,

I oncl 2 bedroom

--II,

1 Bedroom Ground Floor, Near

2 Bedroom In GaUipollo, 50 112
Grape SUtt~ e2501Mo., Only
-

fumlahtd.l14-388-1708.

2 bedroom, lurnlahed, gorago
opertmtritln Clifton, t250/mo.
piUI cltpoolt, 304- ~5040.
2bdrm. apia., total tlectrh;, ap.
pliancas furnlahed, laundry ,room
taclfioea, c1o10 10 tchoolln town.
Appllcatlona available ot: VIllage
Green AptL 14D or call 114-DD23711.EOH.

Efllciency On Eutern Avenue,
Wuhor l Dryer, Utllltlta Pold,
$&lt;100, 11-2515.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Unimproved lc:reage· Meiga
County (Pamaray): approa . three
ur11 located on hillside behind
cream colored concrete block
house. Eooemant bj noces~ty bi
buyer. Asking $440 per acre.

WritolcoU Paul Porttr, D10 Loktc:raal Ortve, Seneca, SC 29672,

11114-382..1176).
Wanted lO buy· acreage In Meigs
Countr. preferablt l.leiga local

no--

FOR REI(T: 4 Room Upotalra
API(Imtnt - Nowlr Romodofed
Kltc:hon, New Carpet And Pain~
AU U~idoo Plld Excopl Goa Hoo~
Lorge Bedroom, Cloot .To Down..., $3tJM,Io., Oopoolt And Rof.
erencea Required, Can Su At
1403 Eaatern Ave., Galllpolia,

114-4411-451 •.
G111cloua livii'Q. 1 ond 2 bed,_.
apartmtnll 11 VIllage Manor and
Riveralde Apartmentl In Middle·

port From $238-1304 . con 118992-50&amp;1. Equot Houalng Opporlun"tt.

t.lodern 1 Bedroom Apartment,

81H48{1311(),

Nice 2br, reftrence'a. &amp; deposit,

no po~ 304-875-5182.

OlD ASH VILLAGE APARTMENTS. Now accepting applie&amp;·
Ilona. Newly renovared. 2bed·
rooms. laundromat I ptar
ground on aight Treth I Water

paid. Control r.t EOH. 00.-8823718111111&gt;3pm llor&gt;-fri.

Small Eftlc:ltncJ Aportmtnt living
Room, IINoom Combined. Kitcf&gt;.
on &amp; Both, Furnlshtd, Downllaira
Uni~ 114--2502.

Tara Townhouae Apartment&amp;,
Very Spacloua, 2 Bedrooms. 2
floor~. CA, 1 112 Both, FuiiJ CorpOled, Adult Pool &amp; Bob~' Pool,

Potio, Start S350/llo. No Ptta,
Leau Plua Sacurity O.poolt Ro118-488-3481, ou ....,.

1'-TWin-------T-. ,_ accop•ng
RiVWI

oppicttiono lor tbr. HUD aubold·

lzed apt fCM" . .&amp;darlr and handl·
copped. EOH 30oH17H87D.

450

Furnished
Rooms

Kings Motel lowell Ratti In
Town, Ntwly Rtmodtltd, HBO.
Clnemaa. Showlime a Dlanay.

WMfdy RatH, Or lolonth!J Ratoa,

Construction Workera Welcome

Two Car Garage~ Private Drive

(

'13 Ford Aeroatar Sport, lully

oigeniama

Collet Table, E•cetltnt Condition,
1400. 61~0008.

30 People Wonted To LOSE UP
TO 30 POUNDll In Tho Noxt 30

Days, All Nsturaf, Or. Rtcom·
mended, Guaranteed, Call Tracv
At81&lt;1-841 -1Q82, Fr.. Sart'I'IIIL
Beanie Habit Haven Need Any
Bearne·• Currant Or Retired Call

AKC Boxer puppies. 1 malt, 1

4•4, 8/c, automatic:. e•&lt;:eUent

condloon, $7500, 114-DQ2-7014

talla docked, dtclawt removed,
lemalts·$150 malta·$100. Yar
neg ollttlt. 300-e~74.

8031.

For ult, modtl 2D Atm. 12
gougo,tul-. 114-742-0101.
Furniture Office Equipment. Gym

Equipment, lots UIK. llama in
large Amountl In Barn, For 1
Prlct, Chtaplllutt Buy Alll814-

11~~

Motorcycles

Piano~

tuning I repairl.

Probltms? Nttd Tuned? Coil thO
plano Dr. 014--wl-4525

tresa ••• &amp; oak TV atand. 304·
5pm.

17&amp;-1885 -

Old &amp;toiler radla10r hllttrl wirh
-lll*lgo, 11-HIZ-1541.

~Tf\\1(:,1--W&lt;&lt;':&gt;?

f~

i

I'

BUH\Y !t-It'&lt;*\I W-1~ -.'(f.)\ ~
O'..D ~ fi\.Y l£FT 01'\E; f&gt;.ND \'\"~

.J\.b\ fiNE I

l

~~.

i

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BIG NATE
IT SA't'!&gt; THAT' EVEN

THOIJ(:oH YOU.

o,a,~

AAE .

6ii/INC:. QDT- C.E!,IERIC

.c,a,wt&gt;Y, 't, wo.TE', HA.o
A&amp;!&gt;OL.UTE.L"'' NOTHING.
TO DO WITH T'HI5
SAA11EFUL ()E.O~ON 1

i

.
,.

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..

1•to.
AKC Yallow Lob Pupo, Sholl I
Wormed 814-250-6338 Alter 8
P.U.
1 -J~a-c-k::R-uo-o-ol-1T::-e-rr-le_r_1_7_M_o_nt-ho
Old Female Whlta Had All ShOll,
Speyed,l150, 814-367-7724.
570
. Musical
Instruments

·"

wELL,Till5

TIIEN J.IE

616

KJO WAS TAKING SAID HE WAS
ALL TJ.IE
601N6 TO
CRA't'ONS, SEE?
PONCII ME
JN TJ.IE:

..

CELEBRITY CIPHER.
by Luls Campos

~ Cipher Cfyplogr..,. are e~~tlifd from quotalloos by tamous people , pa11and prnent
Eact'l Jener 1'1 the cipher stands for another Today 'I CW S ~II' M

.z0

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NIT X

KA ,
I ZS

·R P T B P

SZMIJAO

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BIJ X
B J N

BTLDE'FA

JN

R Z E.'

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W T Z P W

KAAP

X T

P Z M A' V

SIR? 't'Oll

I-llS MOTIIER
COMPLAJNI!D

KNOWWJ.IAT

ABOVTME?!

I

Tl-llNK?

'(OU AND I SJ.IOUL.D
GO OUT TO DINNER
SOMETIME, AND
TALK A~OUT ·THIS ..

IUIO, red, lllrl'l, 38,400mllel.
S10,500. 31M-875-3087.

"I

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wo ..

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the
be·
low to fo rm lour simple words

&gt;

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NEDROV

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•

T A QR U

1-

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A boring conversationalist
is never interesling ..until he
reaches the point of .• •••

r--r:~~~B~e:-T"'TI~~-

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.. '

-.

Complete the chuckle. quoted.

...

II I, 1~
.

. . .. UNSCRAMBLE fORI
V AN SWER
.

r I' I' r 1· I'
I

I

111111111

1Dil" Cornaro V-8, 5 Spetd, AIIJ

FM Caeaelll, Forrest Green,
711.000 Mioa, •.DDS 5, 614-

.

441-1815.

111D5 Sa"'" SC2, Automotlc:, ~Ar,
Cruise, AM/FU Catsene, Trunk
- · · S12.000 Col Allar 5 P.ll.

CStrioua tnqulrlta Onlyl) 114·

21 Ft. RV Air, ExSiltf)l s;,, 11•·

Dutchman, lurnac:e, relrig.
etc:, loaded, assume loan,

-

poymtr4. 304-875-5522

441-&lt;1015.

~?~~~-~peer rrc~s ;~s u:rric:~~a-c&lt;:~ifv'
NYIO
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc . with !he ir thou ght s instead of your
2 I) If you have a beneficial idea. il's own .
best not to disc uss it prcmalurdy wilh
GEMINI tMay 2 1-Junc 20 ) Be
o thers today. Someone might try to tolerant with co-w&lt;1rkcrs toda y. espe:
walk oil with your concept .
cially those wh o don 't graJ;p ideas as
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) rapidl y as you d o. It won" t hun you
Tod ay. steer clear of shops that arc
to repeat info m1ation.
promo ting exotic merchandise . Yo u
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) his
might end up huying gadgets or items best no t to horrow money from a
for which you 'II have no need .
friend today if you"re un ce rtai n aho ut
AQ UARI US (Jan . 20-Fcb. 19)
when you ' ll he able 1o' repay it. Do
Tod ay. you might forsake your us u·
not jeopardize the relati onship.
allcna.:ity and wind up taking your. LEO (Jul y 23-Aug. 22) Today. if
self out of the running just when the
you"re indecisive about
issue that
goal is wilhin sight.
affeciS everyo ne . wipe it from your
PISCES (Feb. 20 -March 20 ) mind for awhile. You can come bac k
Before springing into aclion on a
later when you have a fresh perspecflash of in spirali on loday, put your tive.
thoughls down on paper so that they
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Se pl . 22) It
can be studied funher.
· mi ghl be wise today 10 shelve lemARIES (March 2 I · April J9) If porarily any assignmcnb lhal arc
you' re working on a new endeavor.
very exac tin g. Your concentration
be prac tical and patie nt . If yo u try to might no t be up to par.
accomplish all objectives in one leap,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 A n
you could misfire .
easy-come. easy -go an irudc today
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Us u·
could cause you 10 lose un o,pponunit y. Indifference m1ghtl el 'omet lnng
ally. you' re not influe nced b y companions. Today, however, you may
importa nl slip thmugh your fi nge rs

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

&amp; LIVESTOCK

Equipment
I

pane &amp; natural oat, on

1\CM'.

Sider'o Equi_., 300--87&amp;-1421.

Masae~ Harr11 Ferguson Wfc:ultivatall, hit wide lranr and, good

nanz• 1-.. Flnancll'lQ lor se
montha. NH 472 T Harblne
••.ooo. NH 881 II' Hayblnt
$8,700. NH •112 II' Delu• Hty-

CARS FOR $1001 Trucko, boata,- l-:--::---::--~-----­
• ·whtolo&lt;l, motor hOmto, lurnl· Applionce ·
And Sarvict: All
ture, -'lctronics, computer• ele. Name Branda Ovtr 25 V.ra EJ.
bj FBI, IRS, DEA. A¥1llablt rour ~t 1
All W k G
area now. Call 1·800·513~4343
r ence
or
uarantted
E11. S-03Ill
ronch City Mortag, e18•4• 1:
77D5.

11110 -111110 Corffcwl10011
StiNd And Sold
Locallr Tt'io Monti\

Trud&lt;o,

4,.-._ Etc.

1-«10-522·2730, X31101.

CIC General Homo Molntenence. Palntlng, vinyl aiding
corpontry, doors, wlnclowo, btN'
mobile homo rtpolr oncl

mor.. Fei

Credit Probltml? Wt Con Holp. ho ttomata can Chtt, 11 •-11112·
Eu1 Bank Flnonclng For Uud 11323.
Veh1clea, Na Turn Oownt, Cell
Rager't Plumbing Service, E1 ~
Vockla.l14-441-a1D7.

blntiD.OOO. HH 130 se~::: Seized C•rt From $175, PGrKht02BU ,4,500. , •. 185
1 nsu
100. Nil fill . . , _ tl, Codllloco, ChtvJI, IMW'a,
lf711U H.400. ,. Font nttarl &amp; Corvtttoa. Aloo Jttpe, • WD't.
Vaur Are•. Toll Free 1·800·211·
lllf' ~
... - o f ()c. 8000 Ext. A-2118 For Curront
1..
lor 31 ,.,.,..
3.. lor 41, 1.. r 10. Kttlera IJitlngt.
Servl&lt;:t Center S1. Rt. 87 Point Upton Uud Cora Rt. U -3 lllltt
Pleount I AIPifJ Rd. 304-1115- South
of Loon, WY. Flnoncina
3874.
Avttllblo 31M 45110811.

ae.

Pseudo · Above - Hasty - Luxury· YOU were BUSY
One colleague to another. ' Write lots of memos. Jt
will show lhat YOU were BUSY."

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

OCTOBER 29 I .:..

.. .

FARM SUPPLIES

Farm

'

'

Rearrange leners of
0 four
scrambled words

. . PRINT NUM8fREO

I WEDNESDAY

·1

,,

'::~:~~~,
~4.11A- ~
- - - - - - - ldltod br CLAY I . POlLAN_;;.,._ _ _ __

' W lETTERS

8&lt; A UJol Cot lwi (hod o.. the
S.W.,. in the Clrnsifrod S..tJon.

,.,. '

RZVR

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ETLWDJN .
PREVIOUS SOlUTION: ' A useless life is an ea~y death.' - Goethe.
' LIFE: sobs, sniffles and smiles , with sniHtes predominating.' - o. Henry

. .,YI-="'gE;;..lr-11 O

PEANUTS

ASTBO·GB.APB

610

r

47 Unlit
48Trlm
••
50 Gravl!l
I ' _!
ridges
51 Japanese
~
eborlgl111
,. 0
52 Capture
55 Containing ''
nltrogon
Cpref.)

.
.
.
•
.
.
..
by filli ng in rile ' m1ss1ng words
L---L-.L.........L--'-.....1--' yo u deYeiop from step No. 3 below.

2472.

.,wn. v..,t ''" gaa _,,.,.,

Oak btclroom oulte w/Sttly mot-

t-JOTI\II&gt;IG TO Fi!'f.T ~I~"''
.U&gt;'I' p...::,tt,t.~ Of t&gt;.(:,lt\G, , e£Uill!l 1

OCC.Oto'f..l~~~'(e,;,pl I~

r-P".

~

Registered Labrador pupa,

Coli Ron E..,._ 1-«&lt;I-537-i528.

Magic Chel electric: cook stove,
good condition, evetythlng works,

....

This deal conlained some interesting features . How did Sourh try to
make his ambitious six diamonds
after West led a spade?
When North cue-bid three hearts, .
South, Brian Gunnell, expected bolh
a slronger dummy and a hean lead.
'However, West had'a good excuse for
no! leading his partner's suit!
Soulh decided to' play for a 4-4
spade break, which would allow two
dub losers to be discarded. Ye t dummy ,was short of entries. So. afler
throwing a club on the spade ace,
Gunnell ruffed a spade in hand, then
led a diamond to dummy's ci g hl.~
(This finesse looks dangerous. hut .
with the inferred 7-0 heart break.
West was more likely 10 have the
trump 10.) Declarer conlinucd with a
spade ruff in hand , ·a trump to dummy's jack, a nd another spade ruff,
gelling the bad news.
After drawing the last trump . •
Gunnell played a club to dummy 's
ace , fine ssed the heart queen , and
exited with his last club. Bingo! East
had .lo win with the king and return
a heart. allowing ileclarer 10 repeat
1he finesse. South's 12 tricks were
one. spade. lhree heans: seven diamonds and one club.
. No doubl you noliced that the
defense missed ·a chance. Under the
club ace, East must sacrifice his king.
Then, when declarer exits wilh the
club nine , West must go up with the
queen to ingest East's jack; the socalled Cr&lt;X:odi le Coup.

11lD3 ComiAI , _ otyl8), loadtd,

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. Now &amp;RtbuiMIn Stock.

THE BORN LOSER

r
.
.
~
DOC,SitU ~y ~~ E.'ml\,Tf\E.
flt:(&lt;.RINI'.? IN ~y LffT W. f\1\":&gt;

Yorkthirt Puppitt. 1at .• Shots
oncl Wormed. C014) 387-7105
A~C

:&gt;

35 li'l:!..apon,
e.g. (2 wds.l ""
40 Small
·~
hairpiece
43 Rain clouda
45 Si8kel'a
partner
.
46 Square

nament.

1DIID GMC Bolari CUIIDm, $4,1150

-wl-1052.

Grubb's

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

AKC Roglatared Baooot Hound,
Puppioa.
AKC Reglotortd

30911.

Firewood Seasoned Hardwood,
Dellve•ed Of Pick· Up, 814·258·

Pass

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

AI&lt;C Roglotartd Rottwoilor pupPJ,
male, 13 weeks old, lriendl~ and
grear wilh kids, $250, 8U·7•2·

30•.fi7S-4s.&amp;

3•

East
2•
Pass
Pass

AKC Reg Roltwollor pupploa,

rwo black males, all thota, dew·
clawed, good lon'ily dog, 114·1112-

Dretaing rable, bab)' bed, car
ttlt, atroller, awing, play pen.

t•

"''"

tnllrument .. "
26 Occurrl9g
,.•
tnvolumartty
21Acii'HI
. '
Bu..tyn
"
30 Lounge lazily , '
31 went quickly ~
33 Genllemln
\Ito

By Phillip Alder
The J01h lnlemet d aily bulletin
from Albuquerque included no deal s.
However, there were several in the
printed version ·available at the tour-

altMSpm.

't'ES,'SIR.
MR.PRI"'CIPAl. ..

aale, Studio Muter Strokes
8x10'a and regvlar size cards for
tale. I have the following Beanie
Babiea i:Jr aale: Pani· $30; Ouak·

oro- S25; Happy- 130; Spot- SSO;
SIJ- 120; Blacklt· $25; Ptanut145. Colllor.lnlormation, 114-Q••

bever-ve

25 Wind

column

Toll Froo D00-522·2730 • 4420.

Dbndru10 'Studio" Bx10 cardolor

North

" "

22 Prickly ahrub .•.
24 Pepper
'··

Nothing by wire,
only on paper ·

1885 Chtvy otO Blaztr, .. 4
Auto, Clun, Low Mllta. 13,000
0110. Cll•l•t·n-o584
18$8 Chtvroltt 112 ton pickup

Month. Truc;ks. 4x4'a, E1e. Being
Uquidared In Your Area Now. All
Makes &amp; Models Available. Call

300 Thru 2.000 Gallona Ron
Evan• Enttrptilll, Jecksan. OH

20 Napped

V Short book

Opening lead: • 3

BREAK HIS LECI
?!

13,400. 3114-182-:11158 altor 8J1111.

female, 1125 or uade. 30-4-895- 1-:"-:--::-:-~~~:......,~-- 1Dil4 Horftr Davidoon 883 Sport3117.
1D80 Olda Cutfou Supremo, alar, block. exc. cond., 17,200.
Loeclld, Stanclord, L•lhor !leota. 30oHil'5-382•.
AKC Cocker Sponte! pupo, 3moa CD, IDK, Excolltnt -Condltlon
18DI Honda 300 EX Loto Of Exold, 3 lemaleo, 2 block/white, SS.IIOO, 814-841-4222
trot Excellent Condition, Aoklng
1bull, S150eo. hod ahoto. 3041137-2733.
1DQ1 Black Grand Am LE 2 13,700, 11-:la.S.
3956.
Dooro NADA S5,150; Our Prlco:
AKC Doberman Puppioo, $100 $2,985; 1DD2 Tempo, GL, 8 11117 Wovorlne 350, 4 WO. PurBoots By Redwlng, .Chippewa, Each, All Colora, 614-481-DDI8 Oooro, Loaded, NADA $8,000 chased In Auguat, Mutt Still
Rocky, Ton~ lama. Guaranteed Day or I18-251-8D83 Alter 5 pm Our Prlco: 12,4115, Cook Motora. 15,000, 11•·37Q-2612, Leovt
llnoego.
lowell Prices AI Shoe Cafe, Gal· and on Wooktndo.
61 .,_-we-'l 103.
Upoi~
750 Boats &amp; Motors
BUY CARS FOR StOOIII
for Sale
Seized And Sold Locally Thlo

Concrete &amp; Plaadc Septic Tanks.

DID TH' VARMINT

MY MAN SNUFFY IS
STAYIN' HOME WITH
ME TONIGHT

1D6D Hondo 300 lour oox, ohah
drive, good cond., $2,000. 304175-3013.

Beautiful woad·finith multimedia

Har- 00.-875--4084.

6t

1113 Cht¥y S-10 Bluer 8wd,
VI, 2.1 lltar, 5apd, rtbullt tnglne
WIWitrll'\ty, well matnr1intd,

740

614-381-8185.

10SOftc- • •
11 Dry
'
16 - counter
' •.

&amp;Reoch
7 Midday
8Ghoelly

- . $4DOO, callte-DD2-2500.

Ohio Volley Bonk Will Offer For
Salt A t892 DodDf caravan, s.
•lot 12118Qh2532nrS0432•. Publk
'""lion W• Bo Held At Tho OYB
~. 143 Third Avt., Gallipoll~
lH ON t1111D7 At 10:00 A.M.
fho Above Will Bo Sold To Hiah·
111 Bidder •Aa to• Without e.nuatd Or tmplltd Worranty
'nd ~.B• S..n Br CaiHng
&lt;till!
oon At 114·441-1031.
lVB Aoatlfto Tht Right To Ac:op&lt; Or ~ ""' And All lllda,
And Wlthdrow Property From
Salt Prior To Sate. T.,. 01 Solo:
CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK.

MARY K COSMETICS-Potty LH,
llory K Beauty Conoultant. 308- ollape S1,500. Alllo Cholmtro B
wlwide front tnd, runt good,
e7S.2848.
"
1
S1,000. 300-175-3828.
New 1s· Wtotorn Saddlt. 304Oct- Hew Holland V.klt Bo-

-OJ.

114-782-254!.

814-258-80 12.

Steeping rooms with cooking.
AJso lraller apace an river. All

Mobile home aile .vall•bta bet·

'82 Chevr Converaion van, lour
new c«tlnge, runa good, •100,

8 WO S-10 V-1, Loll 01 E•oool

3 Place living Roam SUite, With
Wooden Arm1, 2 End Tables, I

Check out our Gat UnventeG
Heatera (Natural or Propane, .
Starling 11 tHS4.8S. We alao
have Buck Stove Brand of Gat
Instant Fireplace. Paint Plus

3.

Vans &amp; 4-WDs

-wi-D330

$100, 014-7•2-3081. .

hook-upo. Call olttr 2:00 p.m.,
304-173-5651 , 11aoon WV.

730

1DD7 Chryoltr Town 1 Countrr;
LXI Mini Von. Low Mllul (IU)

540 Miscellaneous

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

I t

11lDI J"p Choroktt, 11,800
llltta With A 31,000 Mile Worronty, Con Bo SHn At 1513 St
Rl 110, GallipoWo, Ohio, Cl'olor l
Toler Insurance) Or Call 114·
4411-5 For llarelnlomlttlon.

IIH41 -58111, 11 ...... 1-5187.

Tlvough Wooda, Ctnter of tao wHn Athena and
coil
Acfea Wotdlond OH County 114-~.
Rta4 and Routt 217 can
.. 1.,.41 :1114, C*ll')llltl-71111
Moblto Homo Spect For Ron~
Wit
11&lt;1-841- 12x11112 Bedroom lloblle Homo
l11~1!4!4·~·!1~7~
· ----------­
Waugll StretL Fomoror. Nice 3 1·
nte.-.__u ma
F«Satt, eo~m
Bodrooma, Woahtr Drrar Hook· Stmi prtvo,. molllo homo opoce
Will t.ul Jur*
. 1311 1171 Kirkwood 12110 f2.300 , Up, $350/llo., Dtr&gt;oolt Rtqulrod, for rent in Point Pleaoan~ tar~
. . . . -11144115-1031.
114-....... Orl1 ......747.
Col51:1-574-25311.
111l30oHI75-1~

or-

South

58:18.

•

1-800-53H528.

fwD
Ramodettd
1~~~~~~~~~::
New. Bodrooma,
Full S.aarn~~.,
Nllural Llu I:

a.

Antiques

530

Furnlshtd Elflcloncy Short ,Bolli, lhelf, holda 860 COa: also video
1160/Uo., UtiUtiH Poid, 107 Sac- tapes or cu11ttea. Brand new,
oncl Avenuo, GaMipolla, 61'1-4•1- assembly required. Retail price
1300, uklng $150. Coli 618-BB20573, - 7 P.M.
6636alter6 pm. .
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Black Tonneau Topper With
ESTATES, 52 Wutwood Drivt Frame ExteUen1 Condilian, For
from $2110 10 1334. Walk to ohop Short Wide Bad Truck. 814~448 ·

WANTED family to move intO
3bedroam 2Darh mobile home.
Coll304-755-5&amp;e1.

~ 'r.iEe,rt'

·

1
"

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

11a. J11p Cherok11 counrrr.
outo, 4x4, 8dr, new tiroo &amp; batterr. all pow11, hitch. 304·87&amp;·

Cinema, Economical Gu HML 01
Marchandlse
W.-.up, Air, $2811111o., + Util&gt;
Uoa, Depoolt &amp; Loaao Req. No . 1 Electric Furnace $395; 1 Gaa
Furnace 100,000 BTU $890, 814Pita, 61-2957.
-63015, I-800-2D1-Cl01l8.
2 Bodroom Aptrtment 1375/Mo.,
No Ptto, Uuot HIM Relorenc:et, 2 Burgundy swivel rockers, 1yr.
71 Pint Strut, Olfllpolla, 114· old, S100 lor poir. 30•·875-83Q•
841-73111, Or Aftar 2 P.ll. 118- Coil alter!ipm.
387-71181.

.

.. 9 7 6

nlohod oncl unlurnlohtd, 10eurity Buy or un. Riverine Antiqull,
depoalt required, no peta, o18- 1128 E. lloln Strlll~ on Rt 128,
DDZ-2218.
Pomeroy. Houra: II.T.W. 10:00
Lm. 10 6:00 p.m., Sun*' 1:00 11
1 Bedroom Apartment On Flrtl 8:00
IU-DD2-2528, Ruu
Avenue, Golllpolla, 1250/.llo. , Moorep.m.
a.vner.
Pluollepoli1. 114-f46-t07D.

I movi11. Call 114· 448· 2568 .
Equal Houling Oppor\lnlty.

Two bedroom hoult with atave
onc1 rofr~oor. dopooil roqulrod,
114-DII2-30110.

Do-....,

1-«10-oiOII.:WIII.

s-

fill·

· 41 old . ·

. ..

Woodburnot, Complete With Flue
onc1
6t...,..1-oaoa.

Apartments
for Rent

5070.

-tmont

_7,_.._

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhera·, dryara. rafrlgtriiOtl.
rangoa. Skagga Applloncta, 71
Vlnt StrH~ Coli 11-1· 73Q8,

2 bedroom 12115, clean, nice.

Call1-800-8111-8777.

School Oiotric~ 11'1-892·5053 al·
~='
tor 6pm.
ICOTTOWN. OHIO.
g lllloa From Proctovllle, 3,800
RENTALS
Sq. Ft. Llvlnt Area, 2 Story, 3
Bodrooma, 2 1/2 BoiN, flnilhod
Bumtn~ Fl&lt;oplect, Llkt New. 4
Ytora Old $175,000, IU-143· 410 Houses for Rent
2124, Or 114-t43-2522.
1BR.. DupJ., Located on 5111 klo.
For Sale 135,000, Two Bedroom No Pttol 1275. Pluo UtilltJ ond
Hou•. New Windows, New Sid· Dfr&gt;ooiL (01•1 -NIXI
ing, All Hew Kitchen Will Toke 2 Bedroom S275/mo. 1200 dtTra&lt;»-tn Or Halp Willi Down Ply- pooiL 30-t-875-e$78.
ment, 114·317·0403, Paging No:
1-eoo-3115-ZI3 7, 1576.
2 bedroom home, clean, reapecr.
obit. Rtltrtneu. Dapo~t 13001
Gao rae• creak Road. 3 Bed· mo. Dlac:ount wllh promp1 pay·
tooma, 2 Baths, large Li¥ing
Room, Lorge Kitchen, flmitJ .... No po~ 311'1-882-31121.
Room. BoNmtr1~ 2 Cor Garage, 2 Bedroom , Water Paid, Near
Largo Outbuilding, 2 Rental Mo- PDrtor,o1~1100.
bllt Homta, 1 Aero Lor IIIL 8 ••4441105. s.loualnqulrioa Orir.
2 Houan. Zo~-~75-2 .. 1.
GOV'T FORECLOSED Homu 3 bedroom. 1400/ma. Dapoalr.
From PeMIII On 11 Oelinqueru :Jl4-875-&lt;1878 - ......go.
To•. Rtpo'a, REO'o. Your Ar...
Toll Fr" C11 100-211-11000 Ext 3 Bedroom. Living Room, Don, 2Balha Gilden Tub. WfW Carpet.
H-2814 For Cu.- Ullinga.
LaundrJ Room..Buu;lul. 3:pm •
Hou10 oncl - t y . opprox. 40· l:pm. 181.)-wl-1-tOII.
cres. kiNI atarler home. BHCh
Nice 3 bedroom, lrtshlr' decorat·
St.. f'on*W OH. 3114-182-am.
ed . References. Oepoait Ho
Muon- l.todutor homo on 1001 potll. Zo~-~75-5112.
100 lot, thrft bedroom, two lull
balhl, large lr!dr combo, kltllr Nice IWO bedr9Qm hoUII In Po·
merar. new windows, rtadr br
wlf1 .nlng fp. utllty ftiOrl\
comH equipped Whh 110ve, , • • November 1, 1350 pius depoaH..
frlgeroiCH, dllh walhor, oncl gor- no lnoido pota, 114-8111-72....
bago dlopoaol, OtnO'ol olr, tWO cor
garage and 11orage bulletin; in· 2 IINoom Hou10 NMr Galipolla
· Kitchen With Applianc:•s:
eluded •. privacy renee In back,
Hook ·Up. O.pollt,
split r11lln front, rwo porches, 142s.t.lo.,Drror
014-...,._21100,
eu-IWO-DOOot.
Two bedroom hou11 and one
bedroom
In llldclopor~
814-H2·2171.

Will cort lor lilt tick In raur
30oHil'5-11114.
'114 141115 ... btdooum, .,. btl\
Wit cit - " . , ., nlllf\l. oil appliMcoa, lolancl Ill'*. colllegood rellrencol. 304-f 75-23-17 drol ctMinga, ..... - · 'DOOO
080. 114-&amp;12-413.

~

r•

Frtt olr, "" ttkirl, 11x80 3 or 4
bedroom S1,3501down, ~11/mo.

. ACROSS

.

. '-ta.!'~ A IJ I~
PIE:C£ Of LUJRJ&lt; .

Bollttl Dining Room Tobie,
Hutch, Sl• Ct.lrL Excottont Con·
dltton Stso OBO. C818,...114555
Alter 5 p.m.

s-.

NEW 111111 HOMES 2 &amp; 3 BEDROOMS. UD5 down, S185/mo.
2D38 Mt-b&lt;ook Dr., hed- FREE OELIVERY l SETUP. 3042bath ll¥in
1 -~
rooma,
I.
t room, d n·
lng room, tamilr room, 2car oa·
rage, rtnced in back Jltd, 1,700 New 28•80 3 or 4 bedroom.
13D,9Q5. Fret doflverJ. 1-800oq. It 30oH176-31121
8111-fm.
·
3 -• Bodrooma, Optlon.t Family 01kWood 21111 3 bedroom, 2
Room, CA, 2 Bi.thl, ln·Ground bath, otortlng at ltDD per mo.
Pool, Nur Hoapital &amp; Galllpolio, Cllll1.aoo-tllt-8777.
113,000, 114-4411-41'13.
-Big SSSS Col Cred877 l.eGronct. Blvd., Newly R• Rapoa
It Lint 1100-251-5070.
modeled Ranch Home, Grean
Schools. Must See I 1114· U8· Single Plront Program. Whr Ronl
2"21 Cal~
When Yau Can OWn. Special Fi·
nonclng Avoilol&gt;lt, 304-l'J6.72D5.
5 Rooms I Bath In Crown Citr.
$25,000, 114-2511-12'10.
Take Delivery In Stpl No Pay ·

~

EEK&amp;MEEK

s-.

~ 2 1 u. • ..., 2 FP. CA.
LP Gil, CIIJ Wat.,, 1115,000
8l........,1131.

Under Supervision Of Agency
lledlcol Dir11&lt;11r And Chlol Opot-

Appllancea:
Reconditioned
w.~. Dryoro, Rangto, RtM·
gralora, go Dar OuaraniHI
French City May!Og, 114-441·
77115.

mortgagoa ovalltblt lor a limlltd Ralerenc11. Deposit. $32Simo.
dmo. AppiJ by phone 308-755- Discount wll.h prompt paymant.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gillon
5581.
No poll. :J)4-882.,'!82e.
Rt~lg.,.tor.
Washer, Drr- Uprlgh~ Ron Evana Entorprlaea,
Jodcjon, 'ONo, t-800-537-D528.
CuaiOm Built Doublewlcltl Over 2 Bedroom Traiktr Far Rent 814- ar, frMzor, VCR.I14-251-t231.
250 Avolloble ()poona, You Pick olol6-0722.
T.V. Sot $75; Nlnttndo With Squort Bllfl 01 oood ctoon
RIVERSIDE WHOLESALE
Tht Floor Plan, You Control The
Gamoa, Allochmenta, 175, 114N11111 Hollond Hoy Rolli In
114-:111-811111
· Price. Thouaancll leae Than Uobltt home tor rent on larm,
. 258-1125.
.
EIICtlltnt Condition, •1110, 114Other Cullom Built Homoa. Foc- good deal fgr 1 person, will ac:Bunk Bedo Comp. S225; Solo &amp; Tht Fomoror Thrift Shop- now 848-0103.
tory Oirfct, No lllddltman, 308- cepl 1 small child, referenc11
·CI'alr
S24D; 4 Country Pine Tobit, buying levi jeans onlr, men••,
738-3a.
.
I!Jired. 304-570·2950.
TnA NSPORTA TION
Bench &amp; 3 Chaira 1235; 1 Pc. WDmon'l oncl c:lllidron'O, ofoo fltllo
Discount Mobile Home Parts &amp; One Bedroom ualler With Udllty Cedor BR $7DD; Ook Curio Cab. glrlo dre100a, toyo, doPa ancl todACCIIIOrles, Vlnwl Skirting Room, 5 t.llnules From Town 11 SO; Potttr)', lla•lcan Blanuto, dler car Hilt •.Tuesday through
S2DD.15, Anchora 15.00, Awn- $275 llonlh, $200 Depool~ 2 Rtf- lnclano, Etc.
71 0 Autos for Sele
Fridoy, 1011m-4pm, 814-992-3725.
ings, Ooora, Windows, Plumbing .,.,.., Raqulred l614)-2
Route 7 South, Crown City
Supplies. WAter H11•rs, Furnt.c·
Tror Bulb TuffY TIUar, l.lU New: N '81 Mulling GT, I opttd, Hurat
Open H, Sat &amp; Sun
fl. llberglua Stepo, Coli., • • Roush Ren~allt now accepting
Gtgt Modol Rollrood 3•7 Ft. - · flownutlr fllhoull.••e-a-11 Bonnett's Supply. 13D1 rental applicationa. 304~ 773·
Hanging Boord ReodJ To Ron 5 wind*•· sunroof, new palnl, 5
Singer
Sewing
Machine
OVer
50
Safford School Rd, Gallipolis, 59....
Engfntt,
13 Cara, Transformer atar rima.~"" everything, ••Veara Old $tOO; AUiltallan
oalllnt ... lllillon, 114-287-31101.
Ohio.
Etc.
814-245-11432.
Three bedroom mobile home, na Shepherd, R~lttartd S MDnthl
Old Coppor/ Whlto (118)388- Worm Morning Wood Cool SIIVe, 1D81 Cadllloc ~ldorollo Runo
Doublewlde Displays Mutt Go. pots, 814·892-5858.
11061
Good, Rtol Good Body I lnltrlot,
Sevtl1,000, 300-731-:l.atl.
S250, 814·388·8532.
Two bedroom trailer on New Lima
Won't God In Rovoru, $500
U11d Furniture Store, 130 Bull· Waterline Specltl: 3/• 200 PSI Firm, 114 14U8113
Ooubltwlde On Ltncl uso De- Rd., coll614-742-2al3 aher 6pm.
ville l'ikl, Electric Stovoo, Boclopoait Roqulrtd, 304-7311-72115.
.Q5 Per 100; 1" 200 PSI
Two bedroom trailer, garage, cen- Bobv Btda, Tr-itero, Rocking
100; All Braao Com- 1Dl3 Thllnderblrrl Good Condl·
Fr" olr, kH lklrt, 14xl0 3 bod- tral air, quiet kH off Bradbury Rd., Chalra, De1k1, L1mpa, Hide-A·
tlon, Runa Wtll, 11,000 080,
In Stock
room, ,1,0551-n, S1DIImo. 1300 par monlh plus depoalt ancl Bodo. Couchn, Good Uffd Mo~
ENTERPRISES 814-lM~
utilities. no po" 614-992-5030.
Ctii1-!00-8111-em.
trnttl.llo(l-fri, lira. IIH.

ond utup. Only S187.08 per
1_1 N:le ...,._ 11 Bridll RMch. 3 monlll with '1075 -n. Coli f8 1dr
12 ......_
D00-&amp;37-32311.

tnlhood Federation 01 Amtrict
Standarda And Guidelines,
OSHA And CLIA RanuiJtmontl.

-"~-··

coon Creek Near Cora, On Cora

1DI7 llodtl Slngltwldto Muat IIIH Road, 1350/Mo.. Sank1r OioGo. -11,000, 304-731 340D
counr Available, 814·878·5532
Altere.
111 Tlmt au,.,. E·Z Flnoncina 2
Or 3 Bt•oom• Around 1200 Pw 2 a 3 bedroom mobllt hom••
..... 1100-251-!0lO.
S2BO-I300, oowor, wottr and
-Included, 814-1192-2107.
ATTENTION flrot Tlmo Buroro.

71D1 .

OpportUnity For Added Income.
Medical Degree With Training
And Eaperience In Gynecolo9y.
Licanted To Practice In Oh1o.
Stntllivt To Women 's ltauet.
Pra~;tlce Under Planned Par·

:::"1::'
~":;,
t1an Con•--. eou

Year round countrr hOmto, Jolno ~~~-~-----Chltf Cornotaik, 2mllta 10 near· 51 0
HousehOld
fit ntlghbor, tralla lor ATV'o &amp;
Goods

ta831Malac:k 141tl0 AI ESec:rrlc.
2 Btdroomo, Major Appliance, Wilking. Also looking for a care·
S8.ooo Negotili&gt;lt, 814-f...33tl taker (prefer man &amp; wife), free
2btdroom furnished home or will
rtcommanda rh&amp;l you do bull· """' I Alk For Jamlt.
nno with people J1H1 know, oncl 1Q85 1•110 Wlndoor, $10,500, negotiate, hoo gorcten, ofocUiclor
wood heat, 1/C, carpeting . 304·
NOT 10 ltl1d lllrougl\ 1M 118-QQ:!-31184 or o18-11112-!1883.
571-2D1o.
mail undl you havt lnvtatraarec~
lllf Olforii'Q.
1113, Century Brtvo 14x70,. 3
Btdrooma, 2 FuH Balha, Cant,.l 420 Mobile Homes
FREE
for Rem
Nt 'Mill Htll """"" Pllil' Off Only,
CASH
117,700, Or Aaaumo Poymont,
CIIWIJSI
1QQ3
llobllo
With Forchea, 2
AnllablolmmadlatofJ, 11•·245Bedrooms, Scanlc View On Rac8388

lipolio. Br NoYeni&gt;er 1, 1897. 114-

NEA CrOBIW9Td P.u zzbt

• 1 Actrno Pilla
5 Author Cloroy
' PicniC .
9 Knlclta' org.
. 48 ·Lovtni
12 Arrow ·~n 4t Oer!Un
13 Slour tndlon
· IUbtnoitt'll
14 Hockey great 53 Wor area, for
Bobby thor!
15 Shlp'o guide
54 ,.,. In tho
17 Roman 7
Pacific
North
10-29-97
18 Goodnight girl 56 Prolix lor cycle
• A J 75 4
19 Spice-rack ftem 57 Folkalnger
21 1958 Olear
Joan • 10 8 3
movie
58 - ond fll•
• J 8
23 Building
59 canine Olin.
• A8 3
60 Ltave - tddltton
West
East
24 Hawaiian
Beaver
•Kt08 32
.. Q 9 6
Umber lrH
61 Loyal
', "
•K 9 76 5 4 2 27 Departed
29 Electric fltheo ·
DOWN
o tO5 2
• 7
32 VIolent one
•Qi0 542
• K J
34 Computer type 1 Pueblo Indian
2 On - - with
36 Elactoroto
SGuth
Coquot)
37 nny
3l&lt;oep
36
Vaot
period
of
¥AQJ
4 Employing
time
tAKQ9643
5 Small
39 Pitcher

MERCHAtlDIS[

OpportunHy

.

peri.ncad, Ftte Eatimaln Call
'

AIIM 5, 11.......,_1511.

840

Electrical snd

Refrlgll'lllon

-•lal

Ratidtnlilll or
wirinG.
- - o r rfllliro. ....., 0:
cenald eltcrrlclen. Ridenour
Electrical, wvoooaoo, 304-87517111.

Thursday. Oct . 30. 1997
Material conditi o ns look · better
than usual for you in the year ahead .
New developments could offer you
additional resources and gi ve you a
good year financially.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Yo ur
sa lesmanship qualities might not be
as dynamic and convincing as usual
today. and you might lei your
prospects off the hook by being a
poor closer. Know where to look for
romance and you ' ll find it. The
Aslro-Graph Matchmaker instantly
reveals which signs are romanlically
perfect for you. Mai l S2.7S fo March·
maker. clo thi s newspaper. P.O. BoK

an

I

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