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Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chrome Bumpers, Chrome
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\\&gt;1. 411, NO. 141
01187, Ohio llllley Publlllllng c:oinpMy

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By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A possible solution to the accessibilit~roblems at the Meigs County Vete ns Service office was introduced a the Meigs County Commissioners' gular meeting on Monday.
Last week, Denver Cunis, service
officer, and Hap Ingels, post commander of the Disabled American
Veterans post in Middlepon brought
to the board's attention the lack of a
handicapped-accessible entrance to
the county veterans service office on
Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy.

Commissioner Fred Hoffman said
yester&lt;,lay that he had talked with
Max Cale, the county's veterans service officer, to discuss remedies to
the situation.
"(Calc) said that his office has
never received a complaint from any
·veteran who has been unable to
·receive services through the office,"
Hoffman said: "(Calc) makes himself
available through house calls when
necessary."
Hoffman said that he had discussed the possibility of using spocc
at the board of elections office. next

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At the same time. he silid. "The declining numhcn; or who

10

AND

By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
.
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- With words, America pay~ tribute today
to its veterans. But many who served in the armed forces are .
asking whether their voices carry the same weight they once
did.
"Concern for veterans and their problems has diminished,"
said Kenneth Steadman, executive director of the Veterans· of
Foreign Wan;.
"In society as a
whole, veterans and the
An AP News Anslysls_
mil.itary do not hold the
.
same place they held 20
L-------------'---' and 30 years ago," said
Joseph Stemburg. a Vietnam veteran. "It's been jaded by the
Koreas and the Vietnams."
The hig issue for today's veterans is health care. a renection
of the aging of the veteran population. It also.retlects two highprofile medical issues that have preoccupied many who served
itt-Vietnam and the Jlorsian· Gul~ Agent Orange and the Persian,Gulf Syndrome.
President Clinton announced Saturday he was creating a
panel to monitor Pentagon researCh Into tbe mysterious illnesses known collectively as the Persian Gulf Syndrome. He also
pledged to work for more research funds and a liberalized benefits system for the victims.
The holiday that now honors veterans did not start that way.
Originally. Nov. II was Armistice Day and commemorated the
end of World War I.
After four years, that conOict ended at the II th hour of the
lith day of the lith month in 191l!.•Twenty years later, Congress made the observance a legal holiday; the' action came as
the world was·rccling toward World War II.
.
Less than five years after the Second World War in which
millions of Americans fought in Europe and Asia. U.S. forces
were again in comhal in Korea.
It soon became clear lhe nation wanted to set aside a day to
honor all veterans. The people of Emporia. Kan .. took. the ini-.
tiativc in 1953 and designated Nov. II· a.' Veterans ·Day to
hono( those who had served in the military.
Congress followed suit the next year and President Eisenhower signed the bill renaming the holiday.
Youthful veterans of World War II and Korea used the education and housing provision of the Gl Bill to put themselves .
through college and buy homes. Thill legislation to reward the
people who had.fought for the country ended up transfonnipg
it.
A populuti&lt;&gt;n shift to the suburbs was in pan fueled by the
federally insured, low-interest loans given to veterans. By
1950, 55 percent of U.S. families lived in their own home. A
decade earlier it was 43.6 percent. according to the Census
Bureau.
· A profile of the current veterans population is far different.
The last war to substantially incrca.•c the ranks of veterans was
Vietnam. and that conflict ended more than 20 years ago.
"Us 'young Vietnam veterans arc members of AARP (American Association of Retired Persons) now," said Rick Schultz,
executive director of Vietnam Veterans of America. who is in .
his 50s.
,
The end of the draft also contributed to a decline in the ranks
of veterans.
Nearly 26 million people nrc classified as veterans hy the
Department of Veterans Affairs. More than 8 million nrc from
the Vietnam era -· a group largely between ages 45 and 55.
· More than 7 million arc Wo.-Jd War 11-cra veterans, most of
them 65 to 80 years old.
"The demographks arc prcuy clear. the number o( veterans
"declining." said Phil Budahn. a spokesman for the American
Lci!ion. lhc nation's largest veterans organization.

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Veterans fear their
clout is fading aw.ay

door to the veterans service office, in
the event .that a veteran is unable to
access the veterans service otlice.
The board of elections office is ·
accessible through a handicapped
ramp.
The use of the board of elections
space in such cases requires the
approval of the board of elections and
the veterans service commission,
which Hoffman said he anticipates.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton said
that the proposal is acceptable to him
for the time being, but said he feels
that another site sbould be considered
as a permanent home for the service
office.
.
Thornton reponed ~n a recent
meeting held at the Meigs County

Department of Human Services
involving representatives of the Ohio
Department of Development. Buckeye Hills Career Center, the office qf
Senator Mike Dewine, and Universi.ty of Rio Grande President Barry
Dorsey. relating to job creation.
The board authorized the pun;uit
of demonstration grant funds through
the Appalachian· Regional Commission for the development of a catalog
.for local crafters.
'Thornton said that the catalog concept was de¥eloped at the .meeting,
with the Qclief that local handmade
crafts might aid in creating jobs and
relieving dependence on welfare.
Thornton also discussed Tuesday's failure of a half-mill levy pro-

posal for the operation of the Meigs whether they supported the home.
County Home.
and as far as I'm conccmcd. that dcci"A lot of people didn't vote for this sion stunds," Howard said.
levy because it represented a tax
The hoard also:
increase.'' Thornton said. "Bull feel
- Approved transfers of funds
that the county home should remain within the following dcpanmcnts:
open. I understand that people can't county
highway
department,
affordmorctaxcs."
$12000
$1600
d$30000
, , , ,an
• : comThornton said that he was invcs- munitycorrcctions.S3,317.18;board
ligating the possibility of "subsidi1.- . of elections, $279; substance abuse
ing" the home's operation through prevention, $2,000; dcpanment of
federal grants.
· . human services public assistance,'
Commissioner Janet Howard said $80.260.
she saw the l~vy 's rejection as a sign
that the community docs not support
-Approved the payment of bills in
spending money on the home's opcr- the amount of$106,156.92, with 302
:;llion.
entries; .
"When I voted to place this levy
Also present was Clerk Gloria
on the ballot. I wanted people to show Klocs.

•

Middleport
..-----Toys for Tots-___, ·eyes
threeyear waste
contract
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Middlcpon Village Council will
seck a three-year refuse contract to
replace the existing one-year contract
for village trash service.
Council mcmhcn; voted Monday
night to pun;uc a three-year contract
to keep from having to deal with the

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AGinnlttCo. Nauu1p.P•r ·

Accessibility issue addressed by commissioners

Washington Today:

Bumpers, and Increased Horse Power:! I

2Sec11ot•, 12P.... 3 S -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 11, 1997

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mld·30s. Wednesday,
cloudy, high In mid 40e •

is a veteran arc n01 ncccss;uily indil·ntors or whut needs to he
done. Wc'w hc~n ~1blc to get whnt we want"' on many issues so

far,
The top priority is improving the VA medical system. he
said.
"'I don 't hclicvc wc.'rc losing our voice in Congress." said
Schultz of the Vietnam Veterans of America. "Obviously, we
don't have as many members of Congress no\" who nrc veterans as we had post World War II. But we still have some champions in Congress...
Like Budahn, Schultz said "health care is a big issue."
Schultz expressed some regret that "unfortunately, in the
United States today we've turned it into a holiday. a shopping
sale day."
"I'm not opposed to that. but it's good for people just to
pause and remember." he said.
EDIToR'S NOTE: Donald M. Rothbertl has covered
national and International aft'airs for The Associated Pms
In Washington since 1966.

waslc issue on an aimual hasis.

The meeting was otherwise dominated hy a lengthy executive session
Muyor Dcw_;~ack Ht)rton said was
' l1clo In ISCUS.' "piif.,otfnel matters."
Councilman Eric Chumhcrs
reponed on a recent jail scminur he
had :mended concerning live-day
jails.

.'

He remarked that jails across the

state. arc overcrowded and that nne
facility in northern Ohio has a wait-

These 39 stuffed toY. msd4! by membere of
the Star, Hemlock, Racine, and Harrisonville
Granges were presented to Veteran• Memorial Hospital Monday to be given to children vi•·
·lting the emergency room. Grange members
have been providing toye to the hospital for

Leaf pickup
Leaf pickup in Racine has Qcgun,
it was announced at the Racine Village Council meeting last week.
Street Commissioner Glenn Rizer
advised council that street department
. worker,; will be picking leaves up al
the curb, but cannot clean leaves from
private property. Residents were
advised to call 949-2920 to ·arrange
for pickup.
CounCil accepted the resignation
of Matt Richards ._, village marshal
due to his moving from the county for
other employment. No action was
taken on the appointment of a new
marshal. A part-time officer, Bren\
Rose , is still on thejoh.
John Reed of Mcfadden Insur-

nearly 1 quarter century. Pictured left to right
are Rhonda Dalley, R. N., director of nuraes,
accepting. toys from Opal Dyer of Pomona
Gl'lnge, Betty Sayre of the hospital auxiliary
which handles distribution, and Barbara Fry of
the Hemlock Grange.

un~erway

ance of Nelsonville appeared he tore
council requesting permission to suh·
mit a quote nn liahilily insurance ror
next year. .
Councilmen John Dudding and
Henry Bentz were selected to rcpicsenl council on the Volunteer Fire
Department Dependency Board. The
fire department will also select two
memhcrs. und a mcmhcr from the
cmnmiucc will sclccJ n resident to
serve on the hoard.
Maynr Scott Hill reported that a
person will be soliciting the villages
offering family photography as a
fund raiser for the American Legion
Post. lt was noted that there is to he
a prior notice in the newspaper. and

s..

U.
seeks condemnation
of Iraq for not cooperating
By ROBERT H. REID
Associated Press Writer
UNITED NATIONS- The Unit·
ed States is asking the Security
Council to condemn lmq for not
cooperating with American arms
in~etors but appear,;_,Filling to
hold off on military force - for the
sake of international unity.
For the eighth time in nine days.
Iraq banned a team of weapons
inspectors that included Americans
today. The United Nations did not
attempt to send inspector,; on Monday, when a U.S. spy plane on a U.N.
reconnaissance mission new high
ovc'r Iraq for three hour,;.
U.S. and British diplomats, meanwhile, were drafting a resolution that
would condemn Iraq for its order to
expel American member,; of the U.N.
weapons inspection team and ban
specific Iraqi officials from traveling
abroad.
But diplomatic sources said the
French and the Russians opposed language warning of "serious consequences, " as called for by U.S.
Ambassador Bill Richardson.
The United States also avoided

I

asking the council to declare Iraq in
breach of the 19'11 Persian Gulf War
ceaseflre - which &lt;nuld puvc the
way for military fur&lt;c.
Diplomats said the Americans
were primarily interested in getting
all 15 council members tu juin in
declaring Iraq's Oct. 29 order
expelling American lnspect&lt;&gt;rs illegal .
No vote was expc"cd before
Wednesday.
Last month. live councilmcmhers
-France, Russia: China, Egypt and
Kenya ~ refused to go along with
imposing a travel ban to punish Iraq
for noncompliance.
" We are of the position that Iraq
must rescind its decision of29 October and come to full and unconditional cooperation with the Special
Commission," Russitui Ambassador
Sergey Lavrov said Monday, referring to the inspection team. "We
don't believe that any' threat or use of
force is going to help things."
The council met for 2 112 hours
Monday to discuss the Iraq crisis.
Before the meeting, Richardson
said he wou!d ask the body to adopt
Continued on pacr 3

in Racine there will he solicitations made aftc!
dark.
Council also approved a·rcsolutilm
authorizing SL~cral transfers in fumJs.
Clerk Karen Lyons said that water
leak insurance could be purcha.o;cd li&gt;r
19'18 at anytime. The cost is $1 2 for
the calendar year. Lyons said that sevoral residents have had their bills paid
li-mn the leak insurance program.
The mceiing was recessed until
November 17.
AttcOding were Robert Beegle.
Henry Bcnt7.. John Dudding, Dale
Hart and Larry Wolfe , council mcmhers; Mayor Hill, Clerk Karen Lyons,
Street Commissioner Glenn Rit.cr
and Bobbie Roy of the Board of Publie Affairs.
Councilman Henry Lyons was
absent due to illness.

ing list nf 642 persons who have hl."Cn

sentenced on misdcmcant)r &lt;,ffcnscs.
He said the Middleport Jail could
pnssihly increase its fees and thai the
village needs to cnntinuc In make
necessary upgrJdcs as funds allow.
One strong point at the Middleport
facility arc the meals which he said
arc tasty and meet or exceed the
· 2.400 caloric-per-day minimum. Ptw&gt;r
fm&gt;d is the number one compluint in
· ·1s. hc sm'd .
most Jal
"Overall ·we have a decent ,
hum:mc fadlity.'' Chambers said.
On the suhjccl of meals.
Clerk/Treasurer Bryan Swann said
meals for prisoners is one service that
should he bid out according to state
law. He acknowledged that the current cook docs a good jnb. but added
that since she is paid on a per-meal
hasis the service should he let out for
hid.
·
If she were hired as a regular cook
for the village, the village would have
tn buy the food. he said .
Cham hers had also prepared a list
' of items he would like council to
address before the end of the year
including: writingjohdcscriplions for •
the village administrator and superContinued on page 3

LEAVE NEWS CONFERENCE • Iraq's Deputy ~ Min.....
Tariq Azlz, right, II IICOrttd by NIZlr Hamdoon, left, his Unltlcl
Nations ambassador, •• they leave 1 news brt.tlna outSide the
Security County at the United Nations Monday. (AP)

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�••

,Cotnmentary

P•s.-2
TuHdlly, No,.mber 11, 11t7

.~-------------------&amp;------------~------------~--~--------------~

The Daily Sentinel
'Lstllbfisfrd ill1948

By JICk Andlr-.

MdJMIIallr

WASHINOTON -It's been nearly 30 years since the ~otorious Johnny A left the Mafia, and h;f roached
a sobering conclusion: "ft don't pay
to be straight"
Eusene Ayoue, known in the
Detroit underworld of the 1960s by
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
the ~oniker "Johnny A," risked his
life by defecting to the Justice
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Department in 1968 aod testifying
PubiiWr
for the government against several
of his former mob associates.
In 1974, he talked to us at length
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
about his days in the Mafia. It was a
Conbolar
Genenlllhn8ger
wildly sensational -'- yet verifiable -story about a netherworld of violence, corruption and profit
71loHis ··•es were peppered with
- - . - - ... ~-llw&gt; _ _
--l"•lll•wiMdolftMYIIo_&amp;ch _ _ .......... , t 11,
nameslhatsoundliketheywcrelifted off the pages of a Mario Puzo
or,.,..,, . , fD! ...,.,. the r.Mor, .,.. ......, ttr Court at, A•cuao), Ofllo
I "J Wh' " Tri I' "BI k
" - . , FAX to er~1$1'.
nove
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•P
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ac
L..:::::;.::;:=~::::=:::::,;.._____.________.....t . Bill" Tocco, "Pappa John" Priziola,

111 Court SlrMt, PomtrOy, Ohio
S14-112.Z158 • FIX 1112-2157

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Voinovich sees Internet
tax ban as burden to states
By JOHN McCARTHY
A•soclstad Pre18 Writer
COLUMBUS· 1be state is helping Ohio businesses sell their goods on
the Internet, but at the same time, Gov. George Voinovich wants the state 10
he able to collect taxes on those prOducts.
Voinovich 1s among the governors and local officials who oppose a bill
that clearod aU S. Senale committee last week. II would ban state and local
taxes a1med at Internet sales and online services.
Ohio takes 10 about $12 million a year in taxes on sales of online services
like Dayton-based Nexus. Counties around the slate collect another $2 milbon a year on those taxes.
As chairman of the National Governors' Association, Voinovich testified
about the bill in Washington last month.
After gearing up the Oh10 Department of llrevelopment's new Web sile
·last week, VoinoVIch talked about the importance of the sales tax and the
slates' opposition to the congressional ban. A vote by the full Senate is likely next year.
.
Ohio's sales taX produces about 39 percent of the-slate's total revenue. As
more businesses sell their products on the World Wide Web, bans on Inter. net sales taxes could cripple slate and local governments' ability to provide
services, the governor said.
Bill supporters say the taxes could hamper the lntemet's.ability to deliver products and services faster, easier and cheaper than current ways of
domg business.
Sponsonng Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said last week that current tax
structures are too complex to apply them 10 Internet commerce.
"To subJect it to as many as 30,000 taxmg turisdictions applying different rules of taxation would he a mistake," Wyden said.
Voinovich disagreed.
"Some states are passing legislation to preclude their taxmg of the Inter·nct- penod ~for economic development reasons," he said.
"We are concerned, though, that we would lose revenue that's very
.impOrtant to our state."
Voinovich and the governors' association want Washington to find a way
~ to ensure the taxes don't evaporate.
"What we're trying to do is to work out on the national level some solu. tion to try to compensate to states the loss of that revenue," he said. "But
.. ·you've aotto do II in a way that &lt;loein'l en&lt;~ l'8l'id -ae
. ·gy ,,
He said the cyberspace mduslry is resisting the governors' attempts by
.likening Internet busmcsscs to catalog_sales Stales lose about $4 billion in
~:ta.cs annually on catalog sales, ~nd Voinovich has said he's seen one esti·
.
·
• mate that Internet sales could reach $1 .5 trillion by 2002.
:
"There are people tn the mduslry, of course, wbo like to say. 'Forget
: about any kind of tax a.•pect of this thing. Let's just kind of·have a free-for: ·all,"' Voinvoich said.
•

of.........,.

~:• Letters

to the editor

•

~: Endangered species?

.-: The computer and electronic era versus the schoolteachers.
•: I understand the student is mtroduced to these machines at an early age:
:• arc we wasting our most valuable .asset to education. our schoolteacher'!
·~ Think about it!
•
Virgil Walker
•
••
Raclnt

:• The secret to becoming involved

""

"Turk" Prujansky and " Sparky"
Corrado, just to name a few.
It was a story of gangland love
nests and hangouts, of bizarre
cnmes and corrupt police. It was
also the story of murder, of men garroted with wire and encased in concrete At least one victim, according
to Johnny A, wound up in a Detroit

freeway.
He told ut
about
the
Mafia &amp;&lt;lclfathers - bow
they lived,
how
they
prospered,
how
they
died, m_osl of Mollet' &amp; Anderson
them vtolenlly.
He tned to explain that the mob
operated above and he yond the .law,
too rich, too powerful, too evil to he
slopped. "You don't understand,"
Ayoue would say. "It's just like a
second government"
We hadn't heard from Johnny A
since we published a series of
columns about him 23 years ago. A
few weeks ago, out of the blue, he
called our office, Ayotte IS now 71
years old, and for the past SIX years,
he has heen unemplOyed and m debt
He lives under an assullled iden·
lily that was created for him by the
Jus lice Department more than 20
years ago. And that's the problem.
His driver's license. Soc1al Security
card and other fonns of idenllfication given to h1m by the Justice
. Department "don't jive," according
to the fanner Mafia lieutenant.

•

His driver's license and Social swindler in the Delroit Mafia who
Security card, for example. were used to speciali:ze in arson. " It's a
issued within three weeks of one mixed up affair," Ayotte told our
another in two different states locat- associate Aaron Karp.
ed more than 1.000 miles apan. As if
He has asked the govemmenl to
that isn't suspicious enough, official fix the problem, but "they' ve left
records show that he wasn't even me hanging," he said. "They just
issued a driver's license or assisned walked away from me. I've had a
' a Social Security number until he • miserable time ever since I went
was 44 years old.
with the government." The governAll this wasn't a problem in 1974 . ment has given him several thouwhen Ayoue, on his own, found a sand dollars over the past six years,
job that provided him with a steady but Ayotte says the small sum has
income untill991, when the compa· hardly been enough to live on.
ny he worked for went bankrupt
Justice Department srokesman
In 1974, there was no such thing Dave Branham said that he is proas a personal computer, and thus his hibited from commenting on a speempl&amp;yer never had the means to cific case. "The only thmg that I can
verify his background But Ayoue say," he said, "is when (individuals
SIIYS that every time he has sought a living 'under an asswmed identily)
job in the past six years, the prospec- have concern~. there is a liaison. if
tive employer has run a computer ~ou will, that works with the indicheck on him.
vidual ... to resolve (those) conInevitably they ask the fonner cerns.''
Johnny A why he got hiS drjver's
But this is what Ayoue says hiS
license in one state just three weeks lia1son told him: When h~ is asked
after bemg issued a Social Security about his Social Security nut;nber,
card in another state. They also want for example, he should Simply say
to know why he didn 't get either that he was given a new numher at
until he was in his 40s. "Where age 44 because someone else: used
were you before then•" he 1s often his original number. and. further.
asked.
that he was told never to give out the
Of course, he can't say he was a old Social Security numher.
Not surprisingly, "(prospective
employers) look at you kind of
funny when you tell them that,"
Ayoue allows. " I've heen running
into (problems with IDs) to~ s1x
years. I'm penniless .... I'm hack in
the same shape I was in when (the
Justice Department) first dropped
me off."
Ayollc told us that he docsn 't
want to be thought of as a "hard
luck story," but simply wants "to let
the public know " what ltas happened to him .
"I've been oul of trouble for 29
years," he said. "I did my part. I got
my own job, mi ndcd my own buSIness ... never bothered nobody. ThiS
is not my fault. For one time in my
life, I'm 100 percent right."
Jack Anderson and Jan Molter
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, lne.

Women weigh in on Promise Keepers
By Sll'll Eckel
Several weeks ago. I wrote a column about the Prom1se Keepers, the
evangelical Christian men's group
that is enjoymg enormou' popularity. The ~
.-ivod a lot or
pra1se for its ability to rally men to
commii themselves to being beuer
husbands and fathers, but also has
been criticize.d for encouraging men
to reclaim their role as the hcnd of
the family.

'*

After that column was published.
many Promise Keepers challenged
me to ask women how they feel
about the Promise Keepers. So I
asked women if they would want to
he married to a Promise Keeper.
Here IS what1hey said: .
Many Promise Keeper wives
wrote m to describe the wonderful
changes that hove taken place in
their husbands siqcc JOining the
organi1.a11on. "My three daughters
have seen a dad who is more attentive and compassionate and responSIVe to their feelings," wrilcs a
woman who describes herscll as a
"Promise Reaper." " It is time for
men to take up the reins of leadership -- and it starts in the home ....
(It) then goes out to the community,
the stale, the country and then the
world."

: : Dear Editor,
:
The secret to becoming mvolvcd is that you care. You care about your
: . friends and neighbors and you care about your commumly. It doesn't matter
if you are young or old. if you have good health or bad, you will find a way
:'to become mvolvcd if you really want to.
Many years ago a man died. He died so penniless and broke there was no
. money for the cheapest coffin and no money for a tombstone. The reason he
; died so broke was because, as the only grocery store owner in his commuBy ian Shoales
• mty, he had given to all free credit. He always made sure that the people, and
! especially their children, had food and milk, and clothes and shoes to wear.
There's this television commer:
Instead of hecoming one of the wealthiest men in his community, he cial: Goofy, the mysterious cartoon
: chose to put the teaching and principles of Almighty God and Jesus Chnst animal, appears as a cloud in the sky,
• ahead of the almight dollar.
sneezes, and his sneeze turns mto a
.
On the day of his funeral, he had the most beautiful casket that anyone Disney cruise liner. When mutant
: had ever seen, and at his grave was the largesl. finest and hest tombstone that Toons get the nu, apparently, it
: money could ever buy. Every man. woman and child m that community, all means fun for the whole family.
: 5,000 of them came to pay thelf respect. It took, five hours for them to file
But if Goofy takes an antihista• by.
mine,
will the cruise liner vanish like
:
This is a true story. told to me by one of those children, more than 70
: years after it had happened. One man left his mark on them forever. Anyone Cinderella's pumpkin coach, leaving
of us can do the Slime if we arc willing to take the time and give it to others thousands of fun-seekers treading
water disconsolately in the
: all 'around us. That is the sCc:ret to becoming Involved.
-Caribbean?
Think about this. Think about .it long and hard and then do somcthmg
•
: about it. Become mvolved, leave your mark on others.
I shouldn't worry about these
Ds\'ld Edwards
things
. It's JUSt cartoon physics.
••
Pomeroy
•
that's all. I should accept it and
move on. I think El Nino has made
me more jumpy than usual.

Indeed,
there were a
surprising
number
of
women who
wrole~ l)l •upport of the
male leadership role. "I
am willing to
'suhmit'
myself to someone who is looking
out for my hest interest mstead of
just his. loves and cares for me.
would Jay down his hfc for me. "
writes pne reader.
A · Massachusc:tts
women
describes herself as a fonner feminist who has seen the light: "YES 1
YES! YES! I would like for every
woman to be involved with a man
who hehcvcs m the honorable
promisc:s that the Promise Keepers
outline With a foundation like that
in their relationships. hopefully they
will avo1d much of the pain many of
us 'older women experienced "
And Jan says . in an e-mail that
even though she has cxpcncnced a
lot of autonomy in her lifetime --she
had a maSicrs degree and four years
of Peace Corps cxpencncc under her
belt belorc she mamcd at the age ol
31 -- she is harpy to subm1t to her
l&gt;ushand. "The president of the

United Stales makes decis1ons C.P., whose conservative Christian
which I do not like but I am bound parents were very disappomtcd
by them. My husband (who has less when she discovered feminism .
education and is eight years younger "They said I would be a very unhapthan I) may make decis1ons with PY woman some day and would ool
whi~h I disaarcc, but he ha.• to sivc have a good marriat!e. They were
an account to God t&amp;i' his Choices." very wrorig about that."
·'
. Fmally, several women said that
"I think''" great that these men
they would love to sec their husband arc so involved in working hard on
take charge and gi vc them a break: lhclf family situations," writes
"Yes, I would love for h1m to Kathy. a 65-ycar-old grandmother of
·become the leader of the house- I I. "However, I do not hchcvc that
hold. " writes a reader. "I could usc: it has 'to relate to whether they arc
the vacation!"
the 'boss' m the family -- that seems
But for every reader who pined · tO pOIDI Up thelf lnSCCUfltleS."
for a Promise: Keeper, there wa.' one
Indeed, many women noted this
who said no thanks. "I don't (c;p-e) paradox. "Do men have no hcuer
if one of these 'Promise Keepers' sclf'-1magc that they have to have
hcks my floors and tmlct bow)s aulhnrity over women to he men'!"
clean -- no way would I he marned asks Joanna f'rnm Kans:K
to one," wnles Valcrlc in an eMmail .
Finally, Patricia proffered an
"My answer IS an emphatic NO alternative dclimt\On ol masculmny:
WAY. Sounds hkc a bunch of men " My husbahd is a man m the true
looking for shocr numhers to unite sense: of the word. (He) is my hcst
the If home-hie power trips," writes
friend. my panner. ... My husband
Gretchen from Indiana (who. inci:
docs not need to the 'head' of the
dentally. reports that her Promise household, which stems from his
' Keeper ex-husband is delinquent in confidence, self-assurance and the
hiS ch1ld-support payments)
fact that he truly likes h•mself."
"I ·hnd it very strange that the
Sara Eckel is a syndicated
Prnm1sc Keepers and their wives
writer
for Newspaper Enterprise
don 1 t hclicvc two rational, grown
Association.
people who love each other can't
come to a mutual dcc1sion." writes

El Nino is everywhere these d·ays

~ Today

in history

Everything seems tenuous, random.
Why is Fred Astaire dancing
: By
A•oclated Press
.
w•th
a
vacuum cleaner? Million Man
:
Today is 1ucllday. Nov. II , the 31 5th d~y of 1997. lbere are 50 days left
• in the year. This is Veterans Day m the Unned St!lleS and Remembrance Day March, Million Woman Match -why is everybody marching? Does· in Canada.
.
,
·
n't anybody s oil any more? My
Today's Hi&amp;hlight in History:
·
.
local
news st on announced SunOn Nov. II, 1918. fishling in World War I came 10 an end wnh the signday
night
th t would report live on
: ing of an armistice betw~n the Allies and Oennany.
~..._,,_, ight
n in the stock mar·
: On this date:
ket on ay. What's the purpose of a
In 1620, 41 Pilgrims aboard the Mayflower, anchored oft'Massach
live
repon on something that hasn't
signed a compact calling for a "body politick." ·
happened
yet?
. In 1831 , former slave Nat Turner, who had led a viole~l insurrection, was
· executed in JeruSIIIem, Va.
What are those Pentium II charIn 1889, Washington be&lt;:ame the 42nd state.
acters in the radiation suits? Are they
supposed 10 be lovable~ Why are
they dancing in the streets? Should-

rt.

n't they be
back in the lab
handling dangerous isotopes
wnh
robot
arms~
Or
marching?
l•hould tum
off the sc:t, go
outside But I' m
scared.

I know that AII)Jre magazmc
cla1ms that Prmccss Diana learned to
"avoid the hair mistakes of her troubled years." Why do I know this?
Why haven't I corrected my own
half niiStakcs?

lan Shoslas

The weather has hecn unseasonably wann here m San Franc1sco,
but mstead of elcvatmg my mood,
it's making me nervous. It could .be
an insidious El Nmo tnck. I'll be
walkmg along, cnjoymg the weather, adjusting my shades, and wham!
A tidal wave will come out of
nowhere and wash me out to sea.

I asked my girlfriend if she wanted to go out, she sa1d, "Not while
th1s El Nmo thing 1s going on." I
said, "Really'' " She smd, "And I
have to wash my hair." More hair
mistakes! More El Nmo!
Why docs the notorious " pepper
spray VIdeo" remind me of a
makeover sess ion from hell' The
pollee look so intent on their work.
so thoughtful Why d•)cs Alan
Greenspan seem hke the favorite
unc lc I ne vcr had?

we supposed to hate Jiang Zcmin, or
sell him software'! And what docs El
Nino have to do w1th ,,.,
I don't know what's more irrotating, the anticipation of' El Nmo, or
the climatologist ~ that the mcd1a
have persuaded to come out of the
woodwork. Newscasters keep urging them to shriek, "We're
doomed!" the way a truly alanncd
expert should, but they Will only
vtcw the data with caution.
Tho~e

who view data wi1h cautiOn w1ll never find a new n1chc.
Come on, wcathcrpcoplc 1 If I'm
gomg to hve in dread, give me a rcason! Tell me 1t's gomg to rain mud
and callle, and half the coast Will he
'!lashed away!
Just d;m't tell me that El Nino
l&lt;x&gt;ksjust hke Goofy. That would he
too much

And what's an "entcrtammcnt
industry analyst?" On Monday, the
Associated Press quoted one about
the recent success of "Scream" and
(To rccc1vc a complimentary Ian
"I Know What You Did Last Sum- Shoalcs ncwslcllcr, call I-K00-9K9mer" : "If you put these: young tcle- DUCK or wnte Duck's Breath. 40K
vismn 1cons in thriller situations, the Broad St.. Nevada Cny, CA 95959 )
Why hasn 't "The X-F1Ies" tack-. movies seem to do, very well. It's a
Ian Shoales is a syndicated
led El Nino yet? It could he an alien new 01chc."
For Newspaper Enterprise
writer
phenomenon. Or rather, to . follow
Association.,
An American niche wants to sec
"X-Files" logic, 11 could be a govtwentysomething
sitcom actors get
ernment plot to make us think it's an
(For information on how to comsliced
up
by
psychos.
Could this municate clcctromcally wuh th1s
alien phenomenon by denying that
it's an allen phenomenon, to cover niche be haunted by El Nmo?
columnist and others, contact Amerup what the government is really
How did the death of a ch1ld in ica Online by calring 1-K00-827' domg. which is, urn , creating fake Boston tum into a debate on Irish 6364. ext. 8317.)
alien phenomena. I think.
prejudice against the English? Are
I now wear a wet suit everywhere
I go. The flippers don't enhance the
hipster 1mage I'm trying to cultiva)e.
but hey -- safety first! I think I can
get the sunglasses to fit under the
face mask 1f I put my mind to 11.

Tueed8y, November 11, 1Be7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• P~~ge 3

.-----Local briefs--

OHIO Wcatl1er
Wedllelday, Nov. 11

Accident investigated

AccuWeather" forecast for

James Earl Ferguson Sr.
James Earl Ferguson Sr., 72. Middleport, died Tuesday, Nov. II, 1997 at
his residence. ·
He was born on Feb. I, I 925 in West Columbia, W.Va. son of the late
Charles and Eula 'Illte Fergu,on. He was a retired iron worker w(th local787
in Parkersburg, W.Va. and \.as a Navy veteran of World War II.
He is survived l&gt;y his wife, Joanna Noble Ferguson ofMiddlepon; daughtets, Jenny Thomas and Jo Cinda Ferguson, both of Middleport; a son, James
Earl Ferguson Jr. of Ocala, Fla.; two grandchildren; two brothers, Russell
Ferguson of Deltona, Fla., and Jerry Ferguson of West Columbia; sisters and
brothers-in-law, Jean and Ralph Sayre, Sandy and Charles Hargraves, Alice
and Hennan Knapp and Clarice Wallace, all of New Haven, W.Va.; and s.-eral nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by a son, Howie Ferguson. and by a brother,
Bill Ferguson.
Friends may call at the Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home on
Wednesday, 7-9 p.m. Services will be conducted at the, convenience of the
family.
Memorial contributions may be made· to Holzer Hospice, MeiBs County Branch, 115 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy OH 45769.

tND

• IColumbus l4o~ I
I

W.VA.

Court in recess

for Veterans Day
Via AsJoclali&lt;l Pross Grlp/llciNef

Today's weather forecast
Extended forecast ·
Ohio
Thursday... Scattcred
flurries.
Tonight...Mostly clolj((y. OccaLows
25
to
30
and
highs
m
the
upper
sional snow showers nonheasl with
accumulations 1-2 inches. Lows in 30s to mid 40s'.
Friday... A chance of snow. Lows
the mid to upper 20s.
·
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy with a 25 to 30 and highs ncar 40.
Saturday...Scattered nurries. Lows
chance of snow showers northeast.
Partly cloudy elsewhere. H1ghs in the near 30 and highs ncar 40.
upper 30s to lower 40s.

Cold conditions will
continue across Ohio

DENVER (AP)- Brian Espe's
harrowing, rung by rung escape from
the bombed-out Oklahoma City federal building brought jurors to tears
six months ago. Not this lime.
The government veterinarian told
jurors at the trial of Terry N1chols
how he swallowed a "terrible fear of
hc•ghts"to gel away from the rubble
that was once a fifth-floor conference
room.
"I came down facing forward ,
away from the ladder, rather than the

traditional way," Espe said Monday.
A firefighter "talked me down every
step of the way."
Prosecutors called Espe and other witnesses to talk about the death
and destruction of the Apnl 1995
bombing, clearly anempting 10 break
up teilious testimony on drill bits and
telephone records.
But Espe's testimony lacked the
emotional tinge it had during Timothy McVeigh's mal carhcr this year.
when two juror.~ were left close to
tears. None cried this time .

Middleport eyes...

The Pomeroy Police Department investigated an accident on pri· ;
vate property on Monday mQrDing. No citations were issued.
Paull. Smith, 26, Rutland, was driving a 1990 International truck
owned by the Modem Sanitation Company when he backed into a
1986 Chevrolet owned by Vtncent E. Knight of Pomeroy.
According to the department's accident repon, Smtth'misjudged the
distance between the two vehicles.

Grant received
The Meigs County Council on Aging has been given a $100 grant
from Kraft Foods as a part ofthe company's "Share the Holiday~· gram •
program, operated in conjunctiOn with the National Meals on Wheels
foundation .
Accord1ng to Susan Oliver, executive Director ofthe MCCaA, the
money will be used to help the agency in providing 56,000 borne-delivered meals yearly to eligible M~igs County seniors.
Local residents will have the opportunity to join the in the program
by purchasing Kraft products and redeeming coupons which will be
insened in some newspapers on November 16.

Meigs announcements :
Project underway
ers will meci for aluncheon'saturday,
The Portland Elementary I'J'O Trinity Church, Pomeroy . Rev.
are taking donations on a boy's 24 Sharon A. E. Hausman, d~rcctoJ.
inch IO~peed bike donated by Toys- Mc1gs County Unncd Method1~t
R-Us for use in a fund ra1ser for the Cooperat1vc PariSh, wtll be the speakschool. The project will conclude on cr. Members arc reminded to take
Dec. 19.
canned food donations for the Pans h.
Volunteer hour rcpot1s arc due For
reservations, call 742-2141.
'
Shade River lodge
Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;~
.
will hold a regular meeting and Banquet planned
The Eastern Junior High School
annual election of officers Thursday,
7:30p.m. at the lodge hall in Chester. sports awards banquet will he Sunday, 2 p.m. at the Easter H1gh School
Refreshments.
gymnaSium. Friends and family invited.
'
Retired teachers Jo meet
The Me1gs County Retired Teach-

'

•

I
I

I
!

Meigs EMS logs 3 calls

Units of the Meigs County Emer- Vclcranli Mcmonal Hosp1tal ;
6:02 a.m , Sisson Road, Albany.
gency Medical Serv1ce recorded three
Continued from page 1
Horton also said Johnson could calls for assistance Monday. Units Allen Gerlach. O'Blencss Mcrnonal
Hospital. Rutland squad assist~d .
the record low was 20 in 1957. Sun- intcndenls, employee code of conduct usc the mayor's office m his work for responding included:
By The Associated Press
POMEROY
Cold northerly winds w1ll keep set tonight will be at 5:19p.m. and and employee gnevance forms, an the village, which also includes flood CENTRAL DISPATCH
11 .07 a.m.. Mcmonal Dnvc.
12:12
a,m.,
Rocksprings
Rehah•lmventory
of
village
equipment,
winplam
admmtslrator.
sunrise
Wednesday
at
7:13a.m.
Ohio's temperatures below normal
JoAnn
Fctro. Pleasant Valley Hosr•Ccnler,
Pomeroy,
Lora
Kenny
.
ltation
lcr
emergency
contingencies.
upgradCurrently,
the
paperwork
and
and likely will produce snow in the Across the t¥~tion
.
..
. .
.
tal.
A storm front brought more than ing water and sewer testing, design- information used by Johnson, which
northeast part t&gt;fthe state tonight and
'
a
foot
of snow to the Great Lakes ing sewer syslel)l upgrades. recre- · mUst be made available to the pubhc
Wednesday.
· ·
The National Weather Serv1ce today and a chill to the Midwest and· auonal needs. pool programmmg, on demand, is stored at Johnson's
predicted snow accumulations of 1- East. Heavy rain fell on the Southern street cleaning programs, msurance, home. Horton's offering the use of his
upgrades to the water well, addition- office will result m the paperwork
California.
2 inches in the northeast.
Ten inches of snow had fallen by al mamtcnancc vehicles, safety bemg moved to v11lage hall.
W-'SHINGTON (AP)- As they suffered at the hands of their nc•ghLows tonight across the slate will
early
today
at
Phoenix.
Mich.,
in
the
equipment
for
employees,
nvcrbank
Council
also
approved
advertising
aucmpted
to move onto property they hors. a white family, m Belle, W. Va.
be in the m1d to upper 20s. H1ghs on
state's
nonhwcstcm
corner.
Heavy
enhancement
and
a
possible
incentive
for
a
central
purchasing
clerk,
a
purChased
in West Virginia, Craig and
The nc1ghhors on different occaWednesday will be 35-40.
snow
also
was
reponed
at
Houghton
program
for
outstanding
employees.
move
recommended
by
the
state
Gloria
Smith
were
faced
with
a
fence
sions
met them wuh a kn1fe and a
· The record-high temperature for
and
Marquette.
and
up
to
another
8
To
discuss
all
these
maucrs.
audito~'s
office,
ac~ord1~g
to
S~ann
.
and
a
roadblock
put
in
place
by
their
gun.
threatened
to put poiSonous
thiS date at !he Columbus weather
inches
was
posSible
by
tonight
across
Cham
hers
said
addillOnal
meetings
.
.
~
"
w1ll
make
11
ca..,er
for
v1llagc
new
neighbor.
snakes
in
their
yard
and to douse: their
station was 74 degm:s m 1927 while
northern Mich1gan
would be requ~red, suggesting Nov. offiCials to follow th~ purchase
That was·only the beginning of the young children with AIDS-tainted
17, Dec. 3 and Dec. 15. Council orders. makmg sure each IS apprnvcd harassmcntthc black couple said they blood. and put up a cross hung wnh
approved the sessions, makmg the several times before a purchase is
hlack ducks.
Dec. IS into a planning meeting. All made. Swann sa1d.
The Dcpanmcnt of Housing and
meetings will he held at 7:30p.m. 10
Instead of hiring a new employee,
Urban Development last month
council chambers
the posiuon of purchasmg clerk will
announced ~,;hargcs agmnslthc ncig:hCouncil then mel with building likely ·be. an odditiooal duty for •1&gt;11
hnr.\ thlll cnuld lead 1n a maximum
inspector Aroold Johnson who wa.' existing employee. he said, adding
$11,000 fl&lt;nalty for a f1r.;t offense
crit1cized at the Nov. 3 meeting by that a contingency fund will be cstab·
under the Fair Hnusin~ Acl ,
Swann for rcfusmg to distnhute VII- hshed for emergency purchases.
lagc income tax fonns to contractors
In routine business. cnunctl
Winifred Evelyn Ridenour, 73, of Cheshire, died Monday, November 10, applying for building remtits in the approved the minutes of the Nov. J
village.
mcctmg and apptovcd the mayor's
1997 at Holzer Medical Center.
Johnson
said
it
was
not
his
1'\:Sponre(X&gt;rt of $4.54M, $3.301 of which
Born May 2. 1924, daughter .of the late David and Mamie Fraser
Mauhcws. she was a member of l1ght House Assembly of God m Gallipo- sihility to hand out the tax raperwork. were old fines.
"I feel I've done a good JOh here
The hulk of the meeting was held
lis.
in tho VIllage." he said. "This made in executive session to discuss :·perShe wa.• Born Again and her sins forgiven through fa11h in Jesus 1n 1976. me look had "
·
snnncl maners" wi1h strecl departSurv1vmg arc her husband, Claude Ridenour, whom she married May 6.
Swann said Johnson could hand mcnt cmrloyccs. Swann. was also
1947 at Weehawken, New Jersey; (hrce sons, Ronald (Lori) Ridenour of
nut the tax paperwork as a "convc- asked to leave eounc1l chumhcrs durLawrenceville, Georgia, David (LuAnn) Ridenour of West Liberty and nicncc to contractors" who arc
mg the session
.
Richard (Colleen) Ridenour of Boulder. Colorado: a brother. David (Max- rcqu1rcd l&lt;l file the mcomc tax fonn
Council voted to leave exccu1ive
inc) Mauhews of Rutland; a sister. Virginia (Fred) Taylor of GallipoliS: and before receiving a ouildmg pcrm•t.'
scss10n. adjourned and left the counseven gmndchildren.
"It's a piece of paper we're talking c1l chamber through the police
In addition to her parents. she was preceded 1n death by five brothers.
about." he sa1d.
department all without reopening the
Charles. Wayne. Merlin. Stanley. and Carrol Matthews.
Johnson suggested that contractors door to council chambers, meaning
Semces w•ll be 2 p.m. Thursday November 13. 1997 at WilliS Funeral
be giVen the form when they pay for Swann was unable to d1scuss a linanHome. with Rev Kamlh L Stone and Rev. David Ridenour officiating. Burthcir construction permits at VIllage cia! mancr with council. Swann told
i.tl will he at Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on
hall.
Honon afterwards that the VIllage
Thursday from 12:30 P,.m. until the lime of services.
Horton said the mancr would be needs to consider takmg out a loan to
worked out cndmg the discussiOn.
close out the year.

HUD announces crackdown
on hate crimes across nation

Stocks

Winifred E. Ridenour

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buymg JKllnts Tuesday as provided by
the U.S. Dcpanmcnt of Agriculture
Market News
Barrows and gilts. weak to 50
cents lower: demand hght to moder-·
me for a moderate movement.
U.S 1-2. 230-260 lbs. country
points '42.25-43.50. few 44.00, plants

The Daily Sentinel
(LISPSliJ-960)

,

Puhhshed every af1ernoon. Monday lhr~ulh
Frid.1y ill Cnurt S1., Pnmeroy, Oh.o. by lhc:
Ohlll \l:llley Puhllsh.n- Cnmp~ny/Oanllll:ll C.o.,
Pnmtmy, Otlm 4"7it9, Ph. 992 - 21~h Second
claiS posta~ p~1d at Pomtl'fly, Oh1o
Mtmbtr: The Aisuci:rucd Prc!\1, aRd the Ohto
New!lopapcr i\JIOCIRIInn
PO~MASTER: Send address corrtc:IIOns tn
The Da1ly Stntmd. Ill Cmut Sl , Pnmetny.
OhM~4~7b9.

SUISCIIIPTION RATES

BJ C1rritr or Motor A•k

One ~ck .

. . ...
01'11! Month .... ... .
Ont Year. . .

.

.

... . . ... S2 011
. .• ... SK 7tl
.. S IIJ.4 CX)

SINGLE COPY PRJCt:

Da1ly .... ....... ... .. .. ....

... . .. J~ Cen:s

Sublc:r~tlen notdrsiriRK lo pty lhe cRrrler may
rem11 in advance dirt'CI to The Dally SentiMI
on a lhrH.sfJ: or 12 m0111h !'~Uti. Crcdil will he
•IWII carrier eKh wed;

N(l subscnptu.\1 by mall pemuued in uus
whert h6mf: rarrtn sel'\'ltC! IIIYIIIatllf-

Putthsher retervtS IM MJhl m adjusl rates dur·
101 the JWscnphon period SWscripuon rate
thanat• nuy be impfcmenled by chlnJinllhe
dural.oa oflflt MlbsctipiiOO

MAtUUISCRJmONS
t-Mtlpco..ty
13 \YetU .............. ..................... " ...... $27 JIJ

26\lftu. . .... . ....... ............ .. ..Sll.Hl
llllftu .................................. SIIIS511
Rata Clot- Mtlp CooO'J
13 Wttkt.. ,.......... . .................. 129.25
21&gt;\lftkt .. ..
. ... .
.. ... l.l6.f\l!
llllftkt.......... ... . . . ...
..11119.72

.

U. S. seeks condemnation
I
·
1

43.00-45.00. few 42.50.
U.S . 2-3. 230-260 lbs. 40.00Continu eel •orom page l
42 .25 ; 2 I0-230 Ih1. 38.50 -40.00.
Sows. steady
a "strung resolution" to condemn
~
U.S I-3 300-400 I ..s. 31.00- Iraq. demand full compliance with
33.00: 400-500 lbs. 33.00-34.00, UN orders, impose a travel ban on
500-600 los. 34 00-36.00. few over Iraqi orfic1als who mtcrlcrc with
600 lbs. 37.00.
.
. mspct:uonsand warn or"scnousconBoars: 30.00-33.00.
sequences to foiio:ov.".
Estimated receipts: 33.000.
R1chardson sa1d 1f the council
Prices from Producers Live- refuses. ··an hets arc go. all opuons
stock Association:
arc open "
.
Hog market trend for Tuesday. 50
It was dear that the ~ounc1l was
cents lower
unncd 1n opposmg Iraq s a~uons 10
Summary of Munday's auctions at harnng the Amen can mspectors and
Hillsboro. Crcsum:
rclusmg to cooperate fully wuh the
Hogs: 1.50 lower.
U.N. inspection team. But few or
Butcher hogs· 42.50-45.00.
Callie: steady to lower.
Slaughter steers: chmce 61.5067.50: select 58.00-63 .00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 61.00-'
67.K5: select 58 00-64.00.
Cows: 3.\)0 highor: all cows 42.00
and down .
Bulls steady to lower: all hulls
47 00 and down
Veal calves: steady; ch01ce 115.00
and down.
Sheep and lambs: lower 10 4.00
higher, choice wools •72.00-80.00;
choice clips NA; feeder lambs 90.00
and down; aged sheep 38.00 and
down.

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Dis&lt;:bai-ges Nov. 10- Mrs. Don
Keels and daughter, Mildred While,
James Curnutte, Clarence Marker,
Rohert Wiseman, Thelma Prms, Darlene Fisher.
Birth · - Mr. and Mrs. David
Lucas, son, Crown City.
(f'llblished with permission)

much ess sunclltm - rm 11ary Ioree.
I
De
Pr
M'
T ·
raq1 puty 1mc 101ster anq
At.iz. who arnvcd in. New York curly Monday. wants to ar rcar bcfnrc
the council to argue 111s gnvcrn ml.!nt's case that the Amcnt: ..lns .m:~
manipulating the U.N . mspection
learns.
But Richardson smd the Umted
States opposes allowing Aziz Ill take
part m the discusSions because he IS
"unwilling to change the Iraq• (X&gt;SI ·
•tions . ... All he docs is dccc1vc. all he
docs IS move ahead with dcmals and
all he docs is move ahead with more

them-:iap:ipe=a=rc:d:r:c:ad::iy::u:':'h:r:ca:t:cn==:d::c:la:iy:in::igi:::la:c:tic:·s:.':'=====
~

jresh Cut Arrangements
• Silk • Pilgrim Glass • Crafts
• Personalized Crocks
• Beaumont Pottery
• Leaning Tree Cards
• Love Ute Candles

BURG·UNDY &amp; BRASS
Florals &amp; Gifts
Pearl &amp; Third

R•clne
949-ROSE (7873)
Teltflora

-·-·-

Stock reports are thee ~~~~~111
a.m. quoles provided by-~
of Gallipolis.

The Meigs County Board of Health
and Staff of the Meigs County Health
Department would like to make this
opportunity to thank the citizens of
Meigs County for their continued
support of the Health Department's
1.0 Mill Renewal Levy. the passage
of the Health Department Levy will
allow us to . provide the needed
services as offered in the past to all
of our County Citizens.
· We would especially like to extend
our gratitude to the people who gave
of their time to serve on our levy
committee, and financially contributed support to our levy campaign.
Thank you so much Meigs county.
Respectfully Yours,
Jon D. Jacobs, R.S.
p..J lor by Levy Commlltw, P.O loxl31, Pom•oJ\ OH

·---.--.---

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•

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.T he Dally ·Sentin~!

Sports

·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Trail Blazers rally to beat Pistons·86-82; Spurs top Raptors

'ru11day, November 11, 1997

By BOB BAUM
~long those Jines. I thi,nk we're buiJd.. .
POR~AND, Ore. (AP) tng some_ confide~ tn ~·re able to
Anotherrught, another foarth-quarter do this ntght after ntght..
rally for the Portland 'fra!l Bt~r:s·
The Ptstons are endunng the oth·
The Blazers ran thetr wtnntag er end pf the NBA emottonal seale.
streali I~ five Monday night with~ They've lo_st nve in ~ row. ~ir
86-82 VIctory over t~ J?etr~tt Pis- longest sk1d smce DOug Colhns
tons. It marked the thtrd t1me m four became co4ch.
.
Even though. they wen: conun~ off
tnes that I~ Blazers ~ave won a
game m whtch they traded entenng a tmng, detlaung 104-96 overttme
the.~nal quarter.
,
.
loss to Vancouver on Sunday ni~ht,
Character, man, satd Kenny the P1stons came out strong, shooung
A~derson, who scored 15 o.~ his 29 ahead. 13·3 and leading by as many
pomts m the fottr!h quaner.. It feet.~ as IS tn !he second quarter.
great when rou wm g~~s hke t~t.
Detrott l~d47-35 at the break, a,nd
Portland s 5-l start ts tU best smce the Blazers offense was awful. .
1.~~· w.hen the Blazers went 6-0:
"The first half we.came out wtth
We re a ~?ung team, but I hke lazy ~ses. We :were slow, on. our
our character, Portland coach Mtke . executton. The ptcks weren t nght.
Dunleavy_ said. "There has been zero We.~eren't really_ tlowinJ and it cost
qu1t, penod, not even a thought us, Dunlea•y said.

Niners down Eagles 24-12

l

l
1

l

It's seldom you see that happen, but
game was barely a minute old.
By JOHN F. BONFAm
some
guys don't know the rules."
Lee
Woodall
knocked
the
ball
out
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Hall
Four
plays later, O~n Heant
and Oates, the halftime entenain- of Watters' hands on the came's
ment, played their hit song fourth play. The ball stayed on the. ran the ball over from ~c one, and
"Maneater." By then, the San Fran- ground for a second or two before the Eagles were denatea.
"We've made enough of those
anyone seemed to realize it was a
cisco 49ers were already well-fed.
kind
of mistakes all year long to kill
Feasting .on mistakes by the fumble. Menon Hanks then scooped
us, and they did," Rhodes said.
Philadelphia Eagles, the 49ers pulled it up.
"The
ball
hit
and
stuck
like
a
The Eagles' kicking team woes
out to an 18-pointlead aftertwo quarters and coasted to a 24-12 victory magnet," Hanks said. "On turf, y~u · continued later in the second quarter,
expect the ball to go somewhere, or when Chuck Levy, the backup punt
Monday night. .
The 49ers' NFC-best record bounce away, and that ball just hit returner behind the injured lheanyi
Uwaezuoke, went untouched on a 73·
improved to 9-1. and San Francisco and died."
The
Eagles
offered
little
resistance
yard
return.
can clinch the NFC West title if they
as Hanks ran 38 yards for the touchPhiladelphia's punt coverage team
beat Carolina on Sunday.
"That was one of our goals this down.
might as well have stayed on die ~ide·
Philadelphia's defense did its job, line; not one player got within five
season," tirst-yearcoach Steve Marshulting
down the 49ers on their first yards of Levy.
iucci said. "We have a chance to do
three possessions, and the Eagles
"I don't know if there are enough
that."
Not many people gave the 49ers managed to move the ball into posi- .guys that understand the importance
a chance to do it so early in the sea- tion tOr Chris Boniol's two field goals of special teams;" Eagles safety
Michael Zordich said. "After 10
son after they lost their season open- that made it 7-6.
Then the Eagles' dreadful specials games, you think we'd understand."
er 13-6 to'Tampa Bay.
The 49ers followed Levy's touch"I'd like to dig up all the articles teams, already penalized on two
from the first two weeks of the sea- kickoffs, helped the 49ers put the down, which came with 4:04 left .in
the second quarter, with Gary Anderson," quarterback Steve Young said. game away.
Freddie Solomon signaled for a son's 31-yard field goal with four
"There was not a soul that I heard
fair catch on a punt, but he, Eagles seconds left in the half, making it2~­
who said we'd finish over 8-8."
Young didn't have a great game, tenmmate Tim McTyer and San Fran· 6 at halftime.
Playing with a lead, the 49ers
finishing 13-of-23 for 103 yards. And cisco's Curtis Buckley arrived at the
the rest of the San Francisco ofti:nse same time at the spot where the hall defense took off after Eagles quarwasn't much better, gaining only 213 camc down.
terback 1Y Detmer. Philadelphia's
Solomon didn't catch the ball banged-up offensive line was no
yards.
But a lot of offense wasn't need- cleanly, and Buckley hit Mc'!yer. match for a defensive line led hy
ed, as Eagles .coach Ray Rhodes who was knocked into Solomon, jar- Dana Stubblefield, who had 3 112 of
ring the ball loose. Buckley recov· the 49ers' eight sacks.
pointed out.
"There was a touchdown scored cred the fumble at the Eagles 26.
"Stubblefield played huge,"
"Usually when a guy is close to Rhodes said. "Ho was constantly in
before our defense even got on the
the ball, they clear out," Buckley the backfield disrupting things."
field," he said.
While the 49ers can clinch a playRicky Walters gave San Francis- said. "But if the guy is in front of the
co its first touchdown when the returner, you can run through him. off berth next week, the Eagles, at4-

Sharks coach Darryl Sutter said.
Sclanne, who scored in nine
straight .games as a rookie with the
Winnipeg Jets du,ring the 1992-93
season, is now five games away from
tying the NHL record for most con·
sccutivc games with a goal.
The record of 16 was set during
the 1921-22 season by Harry (Punch)
Broadbent of the Ouawa Senators.
Sclanne scored three goals in one
period for the first time in his career,
extending his goal-scoring streak
andgiving the Ducks·a 3-1 lead at
12:58 of the first period.
"Obviously. we knew the guy has
been playing tremendous hockey,"

said Owen Nolan, whose shorthanded empty-net goal ended the scoring
with seven seconds left. "But you
can't be chasing a guy all ovci the ·
ice, because it will get you out of
your game plan."
Brennan beat Guy Heben through
a screen at 7:10 of the third ·- just
seven seconds after Jason Marshall
went off for interference.
Friesen then got the game-winner
on a rebound of Nolan's shot. The 12·
second gap tied the mark for tbc
fastest two goals scored by a Ducks
opponent, set by Calgary's Theoren
Fleury and Wes Walz on April II,
1994 in a 3.0 victory at Anaheim Are·

'

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WRAPPED UP - Phlledltlphla running bll!lk
Ricky Watters (32) Ia wrapped up by San Frsn·
cisco defender Lee Woodall (54) aa Eagle lineman Steverltt and 49erl defenelve end Chrle

6, arc all but out of the ·postseason
picture. They admiucd as much by
giving third-string quarterback Boh-

Dolemen (fllr right) take part In !he play during
the first quarter of-Monday night's NFC battle at
Veterana Stadium, wh- Jhge 49ers won 24-12.
(AP)

by Hoying his first action ufthc sea·
son in the fourth ·quarter ..

Dan McGilli~ goal with 4:24
Elsewhere in the NHL, ·it was remaining. a noatcr fro.m the blue line
Edmonton 4, Buffaio 4,; New Jersey over Buffalo goalie Steve Shield~'
3, the New York Islanders I; St. Louis shoulder, tied it ~4.
7, Dallas I; and Calgary I, Chicago · .
Devils 3, Islanders 1
1.
. New Jer&gt;ey gfi&lt;llie Man in Brodeur
OUers 4, Sabres 4
stopped ·28 shots' at New York AI Buffalo, Jason Dawe scored including 13 in the third period- for
three goals in a six-minute, IS-second his seventh straight win.
span of the second periOd to rally the
Rookie Patrick Elias broke a 1-1
Sabres from three goals down.
tic with a goal in the second period
Edmonton forward Mike Grier, as the Devils.won fnr the eighth time
who had a racial slur yelled at him by in I 0 games.
Washington's Chris Simon over the
Valeri Zclcpukin and Bnhhy,Car·
weekend, scored his first goal of the pentcr also scored for New Jersey.
season. Simon has been suspended by
Blues 7, Stars I
the NHL for the incident and faced a
Pavol Demitra scored two goals
hearing today.
and Brett Hull added a goal and three
assists in St. Louis' rout at Dallas.
AI·Maclnni• · and ScO!t Pellerin
scored short-hande~1 rl!oals and Hull
na.

•

lly TERRY KINNEY

I

CINCINNATI (AP)- Jeff Brant·
ley was sounding a lot like the St.
Louis Cardinals' new closer only
hours after being traded by the
Cincinnati Reds - especially since
Dennis E&lt;:kcrsley has filed for free
agency.
"I don't think they would have
traded for me if E&lt;:kcrsley was coming back," Brantley said Monday.
The Reds made no secret of
unloading Brantley's salary, $?.6
million over the next two years. In
return, they got Dmitri Young, a first
baseman-outfielder who has not spent
a,full season in the major leagues ..

'Tm very excited," Brantley said.
"The Cardinals have a good ballclub.
They_'re building a ballclub to get to
the World Series, not just to the playoffs. Obviously they have a lot of
offense - instant offense,"
The 34-year-old Brantley spent
most of last season on the disabled
list. He did not pitch after May 19.
and had arthroscopic surgery June II
to repair injuries to his right shoulder
and rotator cull
"I went to Birmingham today to
speak with Dr. (James) Andrews. The
Cardinals wanted to know firsthand
from him that everything's OK. He
gave me a I00 percent clean bill of

health," Brantley said.
"My shoulder is actually stronger
now than before I h:id the surgery.
I'm throwing the ball quite well.
Everything is looking good. I feel
good about my arm."
Brantley had 44 saves in 1996,
matching the Dodgers· Todd Worrell
for most in the NL, but developed a
sore shotJ!dcr during spring training.
He needed arthroscopic surgery to
repair tom soft tissue in the back of
the ihoulder capsule.
. Jeff Shaw took over the closer's
role for the Reds and saved an NLIcading 42 games, making Brantley
expendable. Shaw makes $6SO,OOO

"Bohl'&gt;y i!l guingtn gel a lut more
pjaying time fmm nnw nn." Rhodes
suid. ·

NBA standings

At_ ..._

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MilliN ................ ,...................... 2 .1167
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WF..STER.Jij CONFERENCE
MWWHI Dhtslon

W _,_ .....,..._ ..- .. - - L Pd
San Anh~nin .......................... 5
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Toaiahi'IP...

~vcr • New YnrL 1:j) p.m.

7.;10p.m.

Siall~ • Arlaala. 7:30p.m.

Olit...,_o 111 CLEVELAND. 1:JO p.m.
S.. A....,_ II Mi,.._, J p.m.
LA. l.ak«J 11t DIIJal. &amp;:lO p.m.
L,.A. Oppmat \lancocwer. IOp.m.

Wednaday'•pma
Drftwr 111 Bot•oa. 7 p.m.

,..lon«&lt; • lftdi-. 7 p.m.
s.~ • Orhutllo. 7:~ p.m.

New York II TOIOMo. Hp.m.
w.-nJf\111 al Chkaao. 8:30p.m.

,.a.xrphia" HouJIOft. S:JO p.m.

Y~wr 11 \JI... 9 p.m.
Mil•..,_ • JlllocniK. 9 p.m.

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-·-

NATIONAL (.'ONFERENCE
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Arizona ar New Yott Gianu. I p.m.
AIIIUII.m• Sr. l...oois. I p.m
CINCINNATI~ !'Ut.,_J)l, I p.m.
Denm- 111 Kanw Cily. I p.m.
Ona Bayllllftdilnlf'Oti•. I p.m.
T~~- • Jacbont'illc, 1 p.m.
Minnnota a1 ~ . t p.m.

New ~lll!d 01 To~mpa Bay, I run
Philodelphia • lakimore. I p.m.
Selnlt •tirw Or~. I p.m.
W•hlnpon II [)allp, 4 p.m.
CHi• ar San francikv, 4 p.m.

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Ottnl!a :11 l•hihtdcl11hiu. 7:.10 run
Chit:agu ut l\1WIIIJI, 7:.\011.111.
Culumdu ;~t llctruil, 7:.l0 p.m.
Tan1f1a B:r.y lll rtu~eni11 . \1 p.m.
Vun1.11UYL'f 1n l.us Angl'l~s . 10:.10 p.m.

Our statrstics-Bhow that mature
drivers and home owrers have
fewer and less costly losses
than other age groups. SO H's
only fair to charge you ·tesa for
your lnBUrance. Insure your
home and car wHh us and save
even more with our special
mul~l·pt~llcy discounts.

connected &lt;m the pnwer piny fnr his ·.
first goal since Oct. 25.
Blues ~ackup . goalie J;tmic
MCLennan stopped 25 shots.
Flames 1, Blackhawks 1
Calgary pull~d goalie Dwayne
Roloson for a sixth skater and tied it
on Andrew Cassels' tip-in with 55
seconds remaining at Chicago.
The goal spoiled a shutout l'&gt;id hy
Hawks goalie Jeff Hackel!, who
played for the first time sine&lt;; Oct. 4.
The tie snapped Chicago's fi•cgamc winning streak and enabled the
Flames to end a four-game losing
streak. Calgary is winless in its last
six (0·4·2).
Hackel!, who stopped 29 shots,
hadn't played since suffering a
sprained right ankle at San Jnsc during Chicago's second game.

strained his left shoulder in the

game's opening minutes.
In the only other NBA game, San
Antonio edged Toronto 1()().98.
Spun 100 Rapton 98
San Antonio ~allied from a 15point first-half deficit and overcame
sloppy play as Da•id Robinson .
scored 32 points at Toronto.
Robinson made 12 of 17 shots
.from the field, and the Spurs made upfor 28tumovers by shooting 63.1 per·
c~nt.
·
Sean Elliou added 17 points and
Tim Duncan had IS points and eight
reboun6s for the Spurs. .
Doug Christie scored 26 points to
lead the Raptors, who had a chance
to win in the final seconds. But ,
Damon Stoudam ire's desperation
three-point shot at the buz1.er rimmed
out.

'

TO
VOTERS OF
.SALISBURY TOWNSHIP•••.
MY
ERETHANKSFOR .
YOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT.
TH
YOU,
BILL SPAUN
Pd. lor by Bill s....,n, I 011&lt; St, Po'l'""'Y• 0H 4l7el

A pessimist burns his
bridges before he gets to
them.

***
Peacock: a chicken

it4 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

9112-11887
A.~ Imw'anee
Life Home Car Business
I

n. ';f,

By CHUCK SCHOFFNER
AP Sporta Writer
Old Dominion coach Wendy Lar·
ry was wringing her hands, wonder·
ing what was going to happen. If
point guard Ticha Penichciro carne
back, everyth'ing would be fine. If
not, Larry'sjob was going to be a lot
harder.
Then Penicheiro walked into the
office and delivered the news: She
was staying.
"I asked her if she was absolutely sure," Larry said, "Then once she
said yes, she was. obviously we
were very, very happy. Then I hugged
her neck and said, 'Get back to the
weight room."'
Pcnicheiro's return makes Old
Dominion a national contender again

and keeps an intense. crowd-pleasing
player in the college game for one .
more season. She and Tennessee's ·
Chamique Holdsclaw were the top
vote getters Monday on The Associated Press preseason all-America
women's basketball team.
Holdsclaw. a 6-foot-2 junior who
can dominate a game by herself,
received 39 of a possible 40 votes
from a national media panel, and
Pcnicheiro was named on 35 ballots.
They were joined on the team by
Connecticut's Nykesha Sales (33
votes), North Carolina's Tracy Reid
(28) and Louisiana Tech's Alisa Burras(21).
,
Penichciro,' whose team lost to
Tennessee in the national champi.'
onship game last March, was given

.·

the option of coming back by an
NCAA rule granting an extra season
to non-qualifiers who cam a degree
before their fifth year.
'
Without that rule, Penicheiro' s
eligibility would have expired. ·
"The whole idea of Ticha returning is she fell short of the finish line,"
Carry said. "Certainly this basketball
team understands that. I think we can
play awfully deep into March if we
get the right kind of perfonnance
from certain people."
Penicheiro averaged a modest
10.9 points last season, but she also
averaged 7.5 assists and had a knack
for genipg the ball where it needed to
go at the right time.
"She just has a tlair for the
game;" Larry said. "That's the only

•

Rutland Bottle Gas
742·2211

aniJ the o~her

way to describe it."
get: the beuer my team will get. 1
Holdsclaw is the only repeater know they rely on me.".
from last year's preseason team and
Sales, a six-foot senior. is now the
was the.only non-senior to cam first- focal point at Connecticut after
team all-America honors in the post- spending her first three seasons
season. She averaged 20.6 points and alongside national players of the
9.4 rebounds as a sophomore and led year Rebecca Lobo, Jennifer Ri1.Zot·
Tennessee in eight statistical cate- ti and Kara Wolters.
gories.
She averaged 16.4 points and 5.6
But the . most impressive thing rebounds last season and sci a school
abbut floldsclaw is her impact on the record with 143 steals, but she's had
team. Tennessee has won the nation- a rocky start this season. Sales conal title iri each of her two seasons, and tracted mononucleosis in October,
her Christ the King High School was bedridden for eight days and
teams in New York won the state only re&lt;;ently returned to practice.
championship all four years she was
Once she's healthy, coach Gcno
there.
Auriemma will e~pect big thin~s
"I want to be the best player I can from her.
·
be,take my game to the next level,''
"She's always had a tremendous
Holdsclaw said. "I think the better I understanding of where ·she was rei-

ativc to the team," Auriemma said.
"This. season will be no different.
She'll live. up to her own and the
team's ex.pcclations."
Reid led the Atlantic Coast Conference in scoring (20.8) la.~t season
and at5-ll also was the top rebound·
er (I 0.8). Always a strong inside
player, she worked on he&lt; outside
shot during the offseason to keep
defenders honest.
"Tracy had an incredil'&gt;lc year la.&lt;t
season," North Carolina coach Sy!via
Hatchell said. "And a.&lt; good a.&lt; she
was, it's hard to believe that she could
be any better this year, hut she is ...
BUrras. a 6,.1

li.CNort

was-one ut'

five new starters at Louisiana Te&lt;:h
last season and become the lop pcr_formcr on a 31-4 team.

By laking a few simple·
steps this winter, you can
do a lot to keep the cold
out and make your home
more energy 8fficient
I

f, ;

And by reducing the amount

of energy you use, you'D be
able to k8ep
cash tor
yourself... without sacrificing

more

any COI!llort.
II.&lt;/ • '

.. ,

(I

I I

(. ; I I I

') tl :

1. -..l•lrle•ka.

.a. lnat.ll • high

Around doors and windovvs,l•
ol course, but don't forget 1-c---'
openings around pipes,
chimneys and wires.

wfllclencv fuuuwce.
The new models usa much lass

:a. lneul•t• _.tlca.
outside walls and floors over
crawispaces.
3. tt.vayour

furn•c• cl-nacll
•nd tuned. Clogged
burners can wasta fuel.

energy.

e.

lnat•ll • clock
&amp;Ita: nw•t•t to automati·

----ically tum down,the heat al night
and when you're away.
10. Con•ldiar •
p;olew•lanal eneugw
. - - - 1 •ucllt for axpart advice on
~~...,
the individual needs of your

home:

1-• lnaul•t• -•tar.

•

one t.n.

plpaa•nd . . . .t

ducta running through
unheated areas.

e.

lnaul•t• your
w•t•r t.nk and the
firet six feet of the hot water

~

We ••ver quit at
Rutland ••ttle
Gas. Don~t be
left 011 In the
cold. Hurrj In
for ltstLP Gas
Prices In Town.
lt.124,11111M,OL

keep one out

in

bloom.

*-.tr*

~s.m­

reach the Final Four last season, avcraginll9.1 points and 9.4 rebounds
while shooting 54 percent from the
field. His decision to return to North
Carolina was one of the big reasons
the Tar Heels were ran)&lt;ed fourth in
the preseason poll.
Three members of last year's preseason all-America team - Wake
Forest's Tim Duncan, Utah's Keith
Van Hom and Cincinnil!i's· Danny
Fortson- received all-America honors after. the season.
Duncan and Van Horn were
seniors, while Fortson and Ron Mer·
cer of Kentucky declared for the
NBAdraft.
The other preseason honorees last
year were Vaughn and Brcvin Knight
of Stanford.

Old Dominion gets Penicheir~ for fifth year; Holdsclaw repeats

How to

Gas

The real labor question: is
five o'clock yet?

~~~~

Pierce averaged 16.3 points and
6.8 rebounds while leading the team .
with a 47 percent mark from threepoint' range. Many thought both
LuFrentz and Pierce would be gone
to the NBA instead of coming back
to be' the cogs for the Jayhawks, who
are ranked second in the preseason
poll.
"I am very happy for the two
youngstcrs,thcy are very deserving,"
Kansas coach Roy Williams said
Monday. "Both are outstanding players, and the fact that they chose to
return to Kansas as opposed to going
to the NBA shows that they also
enjoy college life, and I think that
makes for a healthy atmosphere. •·
Jamison helped . the Tar Heels

..

ly
DaYe
Grate
· of
Bottle

One ~dvantage of a bad
memory: you can keep
enjoying the same jokes
without getting bored.

V:llk.'uuVl..- 111 Sun Jose. 10::\0 p.m
Mon1~ala1 Amlbcint, IO:JO tun

Arizona coach Lute Olson saidMonday. "The way Mike amd Miles per·
formed throughout last season was
outstanding, but the real key for thC.m
to receive this type of honor was the
way they played in the NCM tour·
nament, particularly in the Final
Four."
One of the three No. I seeds Ari·
zona knocked off on the way to the
title was Kansas, which held the No.
I ranking for the final 15 weeks of
last season.
LaFrentz .averaged 18.5 points
.and 9.3 rebounds last season while
shooting 58 percent from the field.
He stepped up when seniors Scot Poilard and ·Jacque Vaughn missed time
wtth mJuncs.

I I

. .• * *

at Piu11burF-h. 11un.
NL'W k'tSC)' al N.Y. Ranp.'tl. 7J() p.n1.
N.Y. blahlbs al llorid&lt;J, 7:.1tJ p.m.
Boston all);llla~ . 1'1 : ~0 J).m.
Cntulinu Ill &amp;Jmmuun. VI'·"'·

America from last season. was the almost 40 J!Crccnt from three-point
leading vote-geller. He was named on range. He was believed to be the first
69 of the 71 ballots cast by a nation- freshman to lead a team to the nation·
al media panel.
·
at championship as the Wildcats won
· Jamison, a 6-9 junior forward, was it all last season with an overtime vic·
second with 67 votes and was fol- tory over Kentucky in the title game.
lowed by the Arizona backcoun of
Simon, who missed the start of
Bibby, a 6·1 sophomore whu jast season for academic reasons,
received 59 votes, and Simon, a 6-5 ·averaged 18.4 points and 4.2 assists
senior who had 32, and Pierce, a 6· 7 while shooting 41 percent from three·
junior forward, who was named on point range. He saved two of his best
28 ballots.
games for the last two of the season,
Notre Dame senior forward Pat and with (he top eight players back
Garrity and Duke junior guard Trajan from last season's team, the Wildcats
Langdon were the only other players are the preseason No. 1 team.
to receive more than 10 votes, gelling
"Not only is it a great bonor for
22 and 1.2. respectively.
Mike and Miles, but it also a great
Bibby averaged 13.S points and honor for our program to have two
S.2 assists last season while shooting guys picked to be on the same team,"

Women
High series: Susan Mossman
(51Xl); Margaret Eynon (483)
High game: Eynon (I HO). Mossman ( 179)

Its mlstak~s. we have some
glorious future coming up.

Wednesday'• game•

· By JIM O'(fONNELL
AP Baaketball Writer
Kansas teammates Raef LaFrentz
and Paul Pierce and Arizona team·
mates Mike Bibby and Miles Simon
were named today to The Associated
Press' preseason all-America team.
They were joined by North CaroJina's Antawn Jamison as two players from the same school made the
preseason team for the second an~
,.., third time. Since t,he preseason allAmerica team was .first selected
before the 1986·87 season, only
Duke's Bobby ·Hurley and Grant
Hill, priorto the t 992-93 season, had·
been chosen as a teammate tandem..
LaFrentz, a 6-foot-11 senior for·
ward and the only returning all-

Men
High series: Loren Cnlenmn
(528); Jerry Curry (517)
High game: Coleman ( 192), Curry (184)

***
If mankind really profits form

W~hinalon

lit: liA

27 b4

MondMy'lliiOOI"e8

We
Mahlre
Drlverf, Ho••
Ownjrsaltl
MoblliHome
Owners Special
Savings.

.~2

CONFF.RENCI\

lk,ruil
....... 12 .1 .1
Unllas ......................... - ~ !i 0 - ~ 212 I~
12 •L. 2
Phil;lllr.:lphia ........................... b 0 AOO 170 11 ... -..1\1. l.otJiS ..
O;tllas...........
.. ....... 10 6 .l
1\ri;a~ , .............................. J K 0 .200 170 2..l0
Photni11 ........ ,.....................7 7 2
Cc-nlnll DMUon

Gra-n Bn, .........................!1 2 0 .KOO :2~.1

·D

EASTERN CONFERENCE

.II'. I. I rll. rE fA

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0 .fltiU 20.\ 1$2

Columdu ............................. K J ft 22 !li~
Anahl:im ............................ JI 6 4 20 4K
Lu~ Ant~elt:8 ........................ 7 7 4
IK ~7

l:dnkmlon ........................ :..~ 9
San JJ\liC ............................ :fill
Clllll~Y --- ............ ,... ,......... J 12
Vnm.,~u~r ., ................. ,..... J 12

NHL standings

KultniiMwW...
N.Y Giunt• ...................6 4 ·O .Mil 11)2

I.UO
.7~

2~

CtnlrMOi•Wan
Jocbunvilll..• ........................ 7 .l 0 .700 262 202
Pill~ttutJ:h .......................... 7 .l 0 .100 l-11 200
Tt."nJM.'~lil.'\: .......................... !'! ~ 0 - ~ 111 IY1

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Sun Anwniu 100. t ..onco 9tl

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ln~liom:aptlhi.. ...................... U 10 0 .IJUU '"' 2.'1M

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Al..,_la ..........: ........................ 6
Milwaukl.~...............................f

C'hllrlou~ ................................. -'

!Bttm Dl•ilktn

..............................? 10 I

Parifl:r 01,.._

Hockey

AMERICAN CONFF.RENCE
liJI

Chi~o:nao

'forunto ................... ............4 K .l

Mtlnda,, N09. 11
Buffl•lu u1 Mhnni. 11'r.m.

NFL standings

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ita

NL"W Yrll'k k·11 ;11 Otkltjtu. -4 p.m.
Oakland a1 San ll~l!.tl. Mr.m.

Football

if we come out and play.; hard as w~ ·
did, we'll be in most gaines and have
a chiii!Ce to win most games. lf we'd
played last night in Vancouver the
way we did tonight we would have
won the game." '
Detroit twice pulled within three,
the last at79-76 on Hill's drive with
I:23 to play. Augmon, who left
Detroit last season after a rift with
Collins, scored four points in the last
1:34, 1ncludmg a seven-foot jumper
that gave Portland an 81-761ead with
34.5 seconds 10 play.
Lindsey Hwner's three-pointer
sliced the lead to 84-82 with six sec·
onds to go, but Anderson hit two free
throws to ch?"h the win.
Once agam, Detroit was without
Joe: Dumars, who pulled his left hamstnng m the season opener. He came
back Sunday in Vancouver, but

AP names women's college basketball pre-season all-Americans

Mason Bowling Lanes results

next season, while Brantley will get
;,o
$2.8 million each of th~ next two
l&lt;:arly
Wednesday
years.
Mixed Bowling League
The Reds arc trimming their pay·
· (As or Oct. :Z9)
roll, which topped $30 million last
Iwn
Recon!
season.
Life
On
Mars
46-34
"Jeff will be missed, but this deal
46-34
was made for financial reasons and is .Tony's Carryout
Thunder
Alley
Lanes
42-38
consistent with our commitment to
Meigs
Co.
Golf
Course
41-39
get younger and cheaper," said genS&amp;S
Sports
Cards
38-42
eral manager.Jim Bowden.
·~
, 3~·47
The trade gives the Cardinals F.O.E. 2171
another closer in case Eckersley docs
Team high J;les: S&amp;S Sports
not return. Eckersley, at 43 the oldCards(1814)
ii!',
est player in the major leagues last
Team
high
game:
Meigs County
season, had 36 saves last season.
Gulf Course (6S8)

Scoreboard
Basketball

turnovers in the fourth quarter, when
he was hounded by Pbrtland's Stacey
Aur,non.
. ..
., He ~as It~. ~ugmon, an exPiston, said ofH1IL 'They played last
night. 1- .wouldn't want t~ take _on
Grant Hill when he wasn 1 playmg
back-to-hack mghts because he is
awesome."
Hill gave Augm,on credit.
"It seems like the guys we get rid
of conic back to haunt us," Hill said.
"We probably never would have
gotten rid of him if he'd played that
well for us."
Brian Williams had 19 points for
the Pistons. Theo Ratliff, a last·
minute substitute for Grant Long in
the starting lineup, had II points and
II rebounds.
"The effort was great," Hill said.
"We still aten't all the way there, but

Kansas;.Arizona see teammate tandems receive early honors

Reds trade 'B rantley .to St. Louis for ·Y
oung
.
·
•

\

Then the Portland guards revved
up. Anderson. stepped up t_he tempo,
the Bla_zers !•ghtened thetr defense
and Isatah Rider bwke too~. fr~ a
first-half slump to score mne thtrdquarte~ points.
· Gomg t~to the founh quarter,
Portland lralled JUSt 62-60. ~
Ande~on ~ored Portland's first
seve'! pomts m the fourth quarter,
then clinched the victory b~ goiQg 7of-8 from the free-throw hne down
the .~tretch. He also had II assists.
,Kenn.y Anders.?•, was spec~utar, Colhns s~~d. Its the best I ve
seen htm play.
. Arvydas Sabonis had 20 points
and _II rebounds for Ponland before
fouhng out wtth 4:08 to play.
Grant .Hill scored 21 for Detroit,
but was JUSt 6-for-19 from the field
and had just four points and three

AP names men's college basketball pre-season all-Americans

Sharks, Oilers, Devils, Blues ·&amp; Flames record victories
By The Associated Press
Even Teemu' Selanne's latest goalscoring frenzy couldn 'I match one by
the San Jose Sharks.
Selanne scored three goals in the
first period Monday night to e&lt;tend
his goal-scoring streak to II games,
but Richard Brennan and Jeff Friesen
scored 12 seconds apart in the third
period Monday night to lift San Jose
to a 6-4 win over Anaheim.
Selanne has scored 17 goals during his streak after managing only
one during his first seven games
while he adjusted to the absence of
holdout and linemate Paul Kariya.
"He may not be the best player in
the league, but he sure is the holiest,"

The Dally SanUnel• Page 5

supply line.

e.

Ch•nt~•

your

fu.,...o• filter allaast
once a month.

11. s-ltoh to - · ·

II you don't have a riatuml gas ·
furnace or water heater. switch·
ing to gaa can have a dramatic .

impact on your energy bills. Not
only is g8s the most comfort·
able way to heat, ifs the mosl
economiclll,.too.
So take a law simple steps
to keeP the cold out and the
cash in this winter.

7. "nnrn do-n your
w•t•r .._tar to the
"warm* setting (120. F).

COLUMBIA GAS
1 &amp;aa N.t....l Glaoloe

http://www.cotuinbleenergy.com

•

•

�I

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tueeday, November 11, 1997

I

I

Our hearts and
sincerest gratitude
go out to. every
· man and woman
who has·served this
great land.
Their devo.t ion to
duty and C011Dtry
does not go .
unrecognized. ·
On Veterans Day we
remember and
honor these heros~
Ple•se join us in
this special salute.

I

I

'•
I

l

~·
I
I

-~::-··

.

16

.../

__.

.

f

!
I

.

IN HONOR OF

CORPORAL
DELBERT
PATI'ERSON

IN HONOR OF

IN HONOR OF

- STAFF SGT.
HARRY K. ClARK

PAUL&amp;GEMMA
CASCI

1937-1941
u.s. ARMY, wwn
Love,
Your Family

Korea· 1950-1953
Army
Love,
Wife, &amp; all your family

Germaliy 1945·1947

Navy, WWII
Love,
Family

On land.
By
ai-r.
.
B.y s~a.
.()n Veter~ns ·oayJ
. ·we salute' the men
··~ and women·ef ol!lr ·
·· arm«~(j ferces· ooth
.

~

*
•

"

To All Uvlng &amp;
. Deceased Memben of
American Legion
Post#39,
Pomeroy, Ohio. .
We Salute You
. The Girolam~ Cud &amp;
Strickland Flimlties

.

CPL .
PAULR.KARR

1942-1945 .
Army (Purple Heart,
Bronze Star) WWII
Love,
·Son, Robert, Sue, Jamie,
: Aad,_.

1943-1945
Marines, Guam and Iwo

'

.

' I

Jima
Love,
Kalbryn· Sister

IN HONOR OF

IN HONOR OF

P.F.&lt;;•
LEWIS F. WALKER

CORPORAL
CLARENCES.

1942-1944 .
Army,WWII
Love,
Wilker Family

FRANK
1952.1953
Army, Korean Conflict
Love,
Louise Frank· Wire

•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

USNWWII

992-6491

BRUNOCASCI
USAWWJJ ·

GEMMACASCI

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•

WAVEWWJJ

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Arnly Air force

WWII
Love,
Yourramlly

IN HONOR OF

SPECIALIST
ROB HARRISON
1987-1992
Army, Detert Storm
Love,
Mom &amp; Dad &amp; FllROy,
Chuck &amp;J••

Sept. 195(1. Sept. 1954

1952-1954
Army, Korea
Love,
Your Family

U.S. Air Fon:e, Korean
Conflict
Love,
Wire &amp; Family

Mate 1st Class
10/42-12/45
Navy, WWII
Love, .
Your Family

IN HONOR OF

IN HONOR OF'

IN HONOR OF

SSG/E-6
LARRY G.
BUNGER

SN ANDREW (ANDY)

CORPORAL
. TIMWILUS

1970.19110
U.S. Army, ~tDam
Love,
Wlrt ·Judy

PHALEN
1""-1958
U.S. Nny, Korea
Love,
Mille, Gina, Karen, Delcle,
Nuq, Juo• &amp; IP'Dd kldt

1988-1992
Army, Daert Storm
Love,
Your Family

RENZO MENCHJNI

93- Current

BRUNO PIEROTTI

95- Current
Army (Both)
We Love You and Are
Proud or You,
Love, Mom &amp; Dad

INHONOROF

P.F.C.
ROSCOE J. FIFE
194:1·1945
U.S. ARMY 465th Medical
Collectlaa Co. WWII
Love,
Youlr F11RIIy

VALLEY .
LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
COMPANY
I

K&amp;C
Jewelers
POMEROY, OHIO

'. 992-3785

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6611

•

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!

USAFWWII
USAFWWII
USAWWJJ

GINO PIERO'ITI
USAWWII
Wo Solute You,
Guido Girolami· WWII &amp;
K·Vot &amp; Fomily

·

Ridenour
Supply ·.
CI:IESTER, OHIO
985·3308

IN

CORPORAL
PAULR.KARR
. 1943·1946
Marines, WWII
LoYt,
Your Family

.

BAUM
TRUE
LUMBER
.. CHESTER, QHIO
985-3301

·DOWNING·
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&amp;
CHILDS .
LOHSE
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JIMMY FONTANA

IN HONOR OF
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MUGRAGE
E-4 JON "TRAVIS
MUGRAGE

~:

These Businesses Salute Our Veterans

·Fruth
Pharmacy

USAWWil

DONE. REA
· Aviation Electrialan

'

'

PAULCASCI .

SGT. IVAN WOOD

...

.

•

•

'

f

USMCWWJJ

S/SGT.
ARTHURT.
WARNER

...

'·

-·

12/S/42- lll14/45
Army, wwn (GGicl CeMIKI .

SERGENT
PAULE.
HAPTONSTALL

'

'

BOBCASCI

IN HONOR OF

.

f·

IN HONOR OF
CARL BARSOTI'I

IN HONOR OF

· ~ fo~ -tli~i.r~ Qr~yefY,. ·
.~.:~ £ledication, an(j
·. co·mmitment to
·u~ldir;tg ttl.~ idea,s .
. ,·an(ffrSedems we ··.
"enjoy toda~..
•·

IN HONOR OF

IN HONOR OF

!'(

'

'

P.F.C.
JOHN A. SMITH

.
Love,
Wlrt· Imoaene &amp; Family

.

~stand
pr~sent,.
.

'

IN HONOR OF

Meidl~ VictGrl Mtdal)

.

•

"

IN HONOR OF

TS
JAMESH. ·
CUNNINGHAM

.

t

..

IN HONOR OF

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Celebrating
The 78th ·
Observance
Of
Veterans Day

I

_Tueaday, November 11 , 1997

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�'

Tueeday, November 11,1887

The Daily Sentinel
.By The Bend
Questionnaire puts lif9 in proper perspective
.

·

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

,

Page8

8CIHI71HEH CALL 1ltl

Tuetday,N~ember11,1997

Did the tests you took last week
reveal you have cancer?'
·
Did your child get hil by a car?
Did your husband (or wife)
announce the marriage is over?
· Did you lose your job?
· Did you get shot at?
Did your young son run away
from home?
Did you just discover that your
best friend and your spouse are having an affair?
Did your daughter phone from
college to say she's pregnant?
Did your business go bankrupt?
Did ~ tornado, hurricane. cyclone
or flood hit your house?
Did you ·suffer a hean aitack or

Ann
Landers

IW?, L,,. An~Ckl TiltiCI
S)'l'dKIMt 1nd Ct~llilh
5)'flliin&amp;e.

Dear Ann Landen: People oflen
complain about what a rouen day
they had when they catch a cold or
miss a bus. Here is a questionnaire
that should put things in the proper
perspective for those who think they
had a.rouen day. Answer yes or no to
rhe following questions:·
Today ··
Did a family inemher or dear

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

Beat of the

Bend~ ..

by Bob Hoeflich
The Riverhcnd Ans Council has
located an art instructor to replace
Carol Tannehill who has served as
an instructor for three years. She is
Melanie Quillen. an teacher at the·
Meigs Junior High School in Middlepon.
Classes arc scheduled to hegin in
January so you might want lo be
signed in. You don't have to he an
anisl to take part since instruction
will be VCI)' basic.
Willie "Tony" Jones of Tuppers
Plains has been 1hrough the mill
with heohh problems
He has several life threatening
diseases. Earlier it was found that
tL•re is a treatment called chelation
which it was believed might
improve his condition. However, it
now has been determined that
Tony's general health is not adequate f&lt;ir him to tolerate the treatments. So all that appears to be left
is prayer and your good wishes.
I'm sure that you will keep Tony in
mind as you move alon~. He and his
family will appreciate that
I wanted to remind you that the
an~ual bazaar will he held this
Thursday evening in the auditorium
of Sacred Hean Church. Women of
the church will he serving ham or
chicken dinners beginning at 4:30
p.m .. and there will be craft, baked
goods and game booths.
I understand Joe · Gloeckner o[.
Pomeroy will be marking a hinhday
annivcrsal)' tomorrow-Wednesday.
Joe shares his beautiful nowers
all during the summer ·and thought•
fully makes tapes of some of his
favorite music from his music
library to share with his. friends so I
thought you might want to note the
hinhday.
And upriver. '!'roy Zwilling. well
~nown Syracuse resident. will he

on Sunday. Nov. 16.
get mail
at P.O. BoK 99, Syracuse. The zip
there is 45779.

ment
A famil·
iar chil·
drcn's song
says "make
new
friends. but
keep the
old: one is
silver and
the other gold."
Friends really arc treasures · as
treasured as gold and silver. Some
friends become almost pan of the
family often because of.the length of
time or thai friendship.
Others enter late in life but
· become treasured for .the role they
play, even 1/rough the time of that
friendship may be shon. ·
Everyone' needs friends. The
need for friends docs nor diminish
with age. In fact. friendship provides
intimacy. fun . new experiences. and
reinforcement
of
self-worth,
whether a person is married or sin·
gle. with or withoul children. or
young or old.
·Friendships arc often based on
common interests or doing things
together. Friends can be the same
age. younger. or older. They can be
the same sex or rhc opposite sex.
The key to building a fricnds~ip is
developing trust in eoch other and
lccling that each person is valued for
himself or herself. nor for some ulle·
rior motive. True friends share and
confide in each other.
Friendships for adulls may
incrca.&lt;e after children leave home
and are on their own.
Daily parenting responsibilities
may be lessened. Opportunities for
friendship may appear through work
or community.
Retirement may affect friend·
ships. however, because many

•

DATB.IIII
......
,,.m.t7•
Onlytull'w-

stroke?
Did your lover annOunce he or
she "needs more space" 7
Did a bomb explode in your area?
Did you just discover a trusted
employee has been stealing?
Did your spouse surprise you
with divorce papers?
Did somel1ody break ·into· your
home last night:'
If you answered yes to one of
these questions, you have a right to
complain that you had a bi!d day. If
not •. as Ann would say ·-quitcher·
beefin', and count your blessings.··
C. W.• St. Clair, Mich.
Dear C. W.: What a great letter to
help put things in proper perspee-

'

LUMP AND nOKER COAL
H.E.l.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILliLI

614-992-7643

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Umntone • Graval
Dirt • Sand
9!15 4422
Chtlter, Ohio

(Free Discount parts list)

Same Day Repair Service

'

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

Houri:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00 p.m. Monday thru Frlcllly

1 Q/2II/9Min

7:00 •m to Noon S.turda

3D AMOunc:.mtnll

BANKRUmY

HEIRLOOM CONNEOION

Rutland.Amerlcan Legion

· Heirloom Quality Crutom Furniture
* t:omplete Kltehens
* Kltehen t:ablnet Befaelng

Gun Shoot
· Beech Grove Road
Rutland, Ohio
Starting Sunday, Nov. 16th

Chapter 7

• Antique Reproductions
Handcrafted Using Meigs Co. Hsrdwood
814-992-4106
Free Eatlmates
Still Takln Orders for Christmas

'1:00 p.m.
Door Prizes

HolM l11provtmlllts

men~

Middleport, Ohio 457M
New Ham.., Adclltlona,
Roofing, Siding,

metale &amp;

Complete MachiDe Shop Service Fabrication

1

'

Bazaar

SAYRE .

I

TRUCkiNG

Sacred Heart Church

Thursday
November 13
Dinner starts at 4:30
Attendance Prize.
GameS; &amp; Misc.

-

· H•uling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching.
Umeetone &amp; Gravel
Septic Syettma
Trllltr &amp;Houee Sites
Re..oneb/e R•ff•
. Joe N. Sayre

Custom Homes

Remodeling

PAGEVILLE - Scipio ·Town·
ship Trustees. special session ,
Thursday. 6JO p.m., Pageville Town
HaiL
REED~VILLE - Olive Tolvn·
ship Trustees, special session.
Wednesday. 6:30 p.m. at the township building.

(614) 992-4277

742·2076

10121/171 mo.

t

113 W. 2ND ST.

Double Reclining Sofa with Tray· Love~eat· Matching Rocker Recliner

•Room Addltl-

•Roallng

•lnt•rlor I Exterior
P•lnUng

Alao Conerfie Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

POMEROY, OH.

182.f215
Pomaroy, Ohio

614-992-5479
. __..;..____..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,..

·r

RADIATOR REPAIR

. SitS HONOR SOCIETY - Ten students were lndut:ted In the Southern High St:hool chapter of
the National Honor Sot:ltty last -k. lndut:tees Include, from.left: front raw - Jesee Little, Suzanne
Evana, Chad Clark, Lindsay Smith; beck row- Amber Bird, Jeremiah Johnson, Jennifer Carleton and
Christa Circle. Also Inducted but not ahown were Kim Sayre •nd Kara Klng.

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators,
Oxy • Accetl Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder
Stick • Tig ·Aluminum Welding

1

----"Society·scrapbook

/

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•New G•r~t~~••
•Elaetrlcel I Plumbing

" WARNER INSURANCE
JEFF

I

YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK.
Calif. (AP) - Cars would be
banned from Yosemite Valley as part
of a sweeping plan that also calls for
increasin~ park trails and teoring
down the visitors·cenler. newspapers
reponed today.
The National Park Service pro·
posal would require visitors to park
their cars outside Yosemite's bound·
aries in one of four areas and tnkc a
bus into the scenic valley, the Los
Angeles Times, San Francisco

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

ber meeting.

992·5583

.---------. ·

MY PLACE ·
Handcrafted Wood
Projects

Swings, Benches, Tables,
Misc. Items
34718 St. Rt. 7
Ph. 985-4198

""....,........,.,.,,
..................
,_ ...,,._"

Puppln. Pari Doberman Plut U.b :

a Weelc.s Old, nc....e-3523.

•

Smal Tan I Blad&lt; Dog. Ono Yoer '
Old Mixed, HouHbroken, Loves :
Chlldrtn. Goo&lt;! Homt only, e 14·

446-1455.

Lost and Found

,eo, ·

Yard Sale

70

'Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard -llust
Be Paid In Adnru:e.

PEAP'-Itlf: 2:00p.m.

&amp; VICinity
All Yard S.l.. lluat Be p.&amp;d In· ·
Advanca. DHdllne: 1:OOpm the ,
day balara the ad Ia lo run, ·
Sundav I Mondey edition· ·
1:OOpm Friday.
•
'

Auction
and Flea Market

...

IN(IIflfllf. •

614-949-3060

John Wllllama,
Owner
Llcennd
Eltctriclan

Furnac.. '2SOO • month
•

FrH Estlmete•

month

24 hr. •mergency

Free &amp;tlm1t11

ANNOUNCEMENTS
114-441-8411

~1~.-.a72===llllll~7:::
. •.• ·- ····::13:9:1==~~=====~

carsThe
in the
populardocument
tourism spot.
291-page
- for· ;;.
mally called the Draft Yosemite Valley Implementation Plan - also
calls for removing 2,300 parking
spots and restoring 147 acres of the
valley 10 their natural condition.

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
2S YEARS IN BUSINESS

"FAaftRY

DIRECT
PRICES''
Quality Window Systems

..

•
wv tiCI23417

Pomeroy, Ohio

1..00.281·!54100

WY. 304-675-5404.

.,
AUCTION Christmas Sale New
Deatert,, new items, Auctioneer :' •
Brenda Fruiltf .,3\S Every ,
Tuesday 7:00pm. Road Side
AuctiDn Cenltl' Rt 62 Butwo.
••

Rick Pearson Auction Comptny,
lull lime auctioneer, complele
atrviee.

auction

licensed &lt;

168,0hio l Well Virginia, 304- _
773-5785 Or- 173-5447.

Wanted to Buy

90

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sit- ·.
ver And Gold Coins. Proofllla,
Diamonds, Antique JiWelry, Gold ·
Rings, Pre-1030 U.S. Currant~. ·
Slefling, EIC. Acquisilion&amp; Jewelry .
• U.TS. Coin Shop, 151 Second ,
Avenue, Gallipotis, 814-446-21W2.

Antiques, lOP price• pale!, Rlv.rIn&amp; Antiques. Pomeroy, Ohio,
Ruu Moore owner. 61-4-992-

4

2528.
·Anliqun- nO 118m too large or roo
amall . Also estate&amp;, apprai1ala.
refiniahing, custom ordets, 81•·

9112-6578.
Cltln lite Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1090 Models Or Newer, •

om AYirlOI. Gallopois.
J&amp;
AuiO Pans. Ouying sal- . I

o·.

vage v.hieles. Selling patll. 30C·
773-5033.

EMPLOYr.1ENT
SERVICES

Ht1p Wanted

110

I . L).(NCERS$$
Need exua Christmll cash Call
af1er 6pm Wed lhru Sat. No ex·
peritnce necessar~ . Soull'llork
~Bar

30&lt;-675-511S5.

AVON I All Areas I Sh l ~ler

non:

- Easy Bank Financing Heat Pumpa lnlttlled' 138

g.s.

ford's Flea Markel, HenderSOr\ :-

ACCESS To Human Ruource
DevfdoptMnt Is Accepting Appli- .
carions For The Following Posi- .

'
00

Space $5.00 Ouldoor $3.00 0Pf!1
Everyday. Store hours
Craw· ·•

Spoors. 304-175-1429.

RACINE, OH.

110 Court St.
llt2-411tl

'

t/ol/lfn

811118 8 COOLING

CHECK THE WANT ADS FIRST!

Miked BrMd Puppiel, Oob«mt~n '

lRo- Mi&gt;td, 81+3117·7515. ,

Smith Buick Pontiac, 1000 Eall· :

MabUe lame Furnac.es
and Beat Pumps.='=&gt;-,

since Yosemite became a national (Payments Dao«J on IPIIfOV8d C!Odll)
park in 1890.
Reducing traffic has been dis·
cussed for years but this is the first
time officials have fonnally pro·
posed severe restrictions on private. Serving SouthHitem OH &amp; WV

.

Home. &amp;14-448-1280.

pd.

Gravel·
LimestoneSand- Dirt
614·992·3220

360° Communications

Chronicle and Fresno Bee reported.
Once in rhc sprawling park. visitors
could walk. hike or take shultle
huscs to get around, .
Park Superintendent Stanley
Albri~hl said it was ··a vision for the
21 sl ccntul)' .. . a compre~cnsivc
blueprint for reducing traflic. restoring natural resources within the .valley and improving visitor faeililies
and services."
The proposal calls for some of
the biggest changes in public use

Mixed BrMd Puppito. To A Goo&lt;!

80

S&amp;L

l

Plan calls for eliminating cars from Yosemite National-Park

lion (814) 446-17!01

ATTENTION VENDORS: Indoor

•

I

Mediterranean I It ·long dreuer:
high double nimws, Good Condi-

Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp;Regtlar
Detr 5ftSOft

Joe Wilson

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45169

CELLULAR PHONES

Michael Cantrell of Vinton is a
member of the homecoming com·
"!illcc at Ashland University. A 1997
graduole of ·River Valley High
School, · he is the son of Nedra
Cantrell, and is a freshman ar Ash·
land. The commiucc plans campus·
wide events during the cclchrarion
week of homecoming for students
and alumni.

Good tlom• male bobtail car.
fi&gt;td. - o d: 3 - old_,.
Rottweiler, good wlkidl ; 114-&amp;853357.
•

It to Nn. Sundoy
odlllon • 2:110 p.m.
Frtdoy.llondoy odlllon
• 10:00 a.m. Satllldoy.

11/3197 1 1110 pd

L•a

13155.

OILER'S
DEER SHOP

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Aonnle Jones

and Thanksgiving." Readings ·
included "The First Thanksgiving
Day·· hy louise Radford; a song.
"Fur the Beauty of the Eonh" by
everyone. a reading. November:" by
Nancy Well. and one hy Frances
Goci;lcin. "Novemhcr." A contest of
guessing the number of candy corn
pieces in a jar \'IUS by Rosalie Story.
' The Dccemher meeting will be a
potluck at fdO p.m. Meal will be
furnished. Members were reminded
to take canned goods to the Decem·

Aluminum storm daar. 304·875 -

tho """ ....... tho ld

.RACHEL A. ASHLEY

Contests were dis~.:usscc.l when
Hemlock Grange mel recently at the
hall .
h was reponed thai the toys fmi!J
the 1997rny .:on1cs1 will he present·
cd 1his week to Vclcrans Mcrnnrial
Hospital. The legislative report was
given hy Roy Grueser. He discussed
the new $1 coin 10 hc minted hy the
government und Bill ld3 which perrained to Sunday hunting.
TI1e literary pmgram was given
l&gt;y Opal Grucscr and was titled "Full

'U"·

814-388·8712. .

Open Now &amp; Will Be
Open Dtning The Bow

"BuDd Your Dream"

pard work
I love you all.
Qex. [. &amp;enefield

I

n1

Lost: Male Bilek &amp; While Cat, in
The Vicinity 01 O.J. White Road,
&amp; Phil Em-ends Offlca, Route

DuMP TRUCK SERVICE

TO THE VOTERS OF
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
My Sincere Thanks,
For Y('ur Vote And Support
· ThankYou,
ROBERT HAWK

112 Boaglt 112 Tonier. 2yr old ,. ..
male dog, l l ~~:td and hou•• bro··
lien , good comp1nion. Call 304 -:
675·8022 after Spm. or leav•

1725.

TRUCKING

Deaf acti vitics ccrti ticatcs were :
presented to Linda Montgomery.
Star
Junior Grange;
Janis
Macomher, Star Grange; Mary East· :
crday. Racine Gronge and Helen
Quivey, Meigs County Pomona
Grange.
Ovcmll c.lcaf aclivilies prng:mm
recognition wcn1111 Janis Macnmhcr ·
of Star Grange and Linda Mont·
gomcry of Slar Junior Grange.

Giveaway

40

S.R. 325,
Langevllle OH

granddaughters for
· your planning and

·

E•U1791 . Mutt Bo 11Yrw.

LOST: Docnlhund on Jtrlello Rd.
male, no collar. Reward. 304·G75-·

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soii,.FIII Dirt

M&amp;J

Catherine. Carl. Lou.
Qoy and Linde and my

'

$2.111 Per llln. 1-&amp;00· 211· 1245,

614-992-3470

much to me.
Thanks al!lO to

614-742-2138
..
...
·"' .... ..

Pauline Atkins, Harrisonville;
Jean Alkire. Racine; Sylvia Midkiff,
Hemlock and Opal Dyer.. Star all
received distinguished secretary
awards.
Star Grunge mcmhcrs MaKinc
Dyer, Puny Dyer, Opal Dyer. Waid
Nicholson. Pauline Rite, Christine
Napier. Tom BarJicy, Manha Bart·
Icy. Janis Macomber. Stacy
Maciunhcr and Ray Midkiff all
received tr~veling granger awards.

.-...,.

50

(UmeSIOneLow R1ta1)

HAULING

250 Condor Strwt
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
ADivisiOn on NichOls Metal, INc.
·Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-773-5661

Thanks to lhe
friend&amp; end family that
surprised me &amp;nday ·
for my 70lh birthday.
Your friendship means.. •

·~ ·

...

WICKS

Big Bend fabrication,
Mach~ne. &amp; Wilding Shop

Can Us For A FrH Esffmate

I

\

Radiator Repair &amp; Rtplacemeat
Monday-Friday • 8:00 a.m.· 4:30 p.m.
Saturday· 8:00a.m. · 12 noon

Card of Thanke .

114-742-30e0
114-742-3324
114-742·3076

985-4473

Steel s.Ja, WetcUaa Supplies,'Industrial
Gu
.
'

motor bloCka.
614-992-40251-1

Pale B•rne, ·
Det:kl, P•lntlng

•NewHomta
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
71221tfn

eppll•ncn, batterl••l

3381 Hoppy Hollow Ro.d

Chapter 13

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact: .
William Safranek,
· Attorney At Law
614-592-5025
Athens, Ohio
•
tttm.W • - ,..

na
Plt:k up dlet:ardad

KiNGS'

ROIIRT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

~ ~111r11. ¥-~QIItb..PJai;c

Community Calendar

'

I. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

STATE ROUTE 124
,
ApproxlrMttly 1.4 mt111 tilt of Routt 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO
614-384 6212 '

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

Racine and Slar Granges with a gold
seal to Star Orange.
f1-teigs County received a certifi·
calc for having 7S% participation in
community service; Linda Mont·
gomel)', Star Junior Grange leader
received a leadership award; Star
Junior Grange also rece'ivcd an
action proclamation cenificate with
seals for Small World International
Project, Kelly Farm, Our Eanh
Needs You, membership growth and
community service.
· Star Junior Grange members
individually brought home ·the foilowing awards: Jenny Bolen . siKth
place. recycled milk canon; siKth
place. catch all can; first place. spool
animal; and third place, poster;
Emily Ashley ·. seventh pla~c. recy·
clcd milk canon; Stacy Macomber fifth place, poster, first place place,
creative writing; Chelsea Mont·
gomery · first place creative writing.
Albany Junior Grange members
individually received the following:
Mallhew Ashcraft. • sr.conrl nlncc
poster, fifth place catch-all can. siKih
place gift wrapped binhday present;
Meghan Vail, · first place spool ani·
· mal, and third place, gift .wrapped
binhday present.
Danielle Vail,. · first place, gift
wrapped binhday present·, fifth place

friendships arc work related. This
would he especially true if rcrircmcnt brings a move to a new community. These friendships can hc TUESDAY .
maintained through phone calls. letSYRACUSE- Syracuse PTO, 7
ters or visits. But il docs take effort p.m. Tuesday at the schooL
to keep ~p a long-distance relationship.
CHESTER -Chester Township
Relmionships with adult children · Trustees, regular session, Tu.esday, 7 .
are important but do not replace p.m. at the Chester Town Hall.
companionship with other adults. A
close friend can help relieve the
DARWIN - Bedford Township
depression and loneliness that may Trustees, Tuesday, 7. p.m. at the
come with retirement or widow· town hall.
hood. Starring and continuing
friendships rake work. how-ever.
POMEROY- Revival services,
Both panics must be ahlc to give the Calva!)' Pilgrim Chapel, Route 143,
time and effon nccessal)' if the Pomeroy, Tuesday through Sunday,
friendship is to develop.
7 p.m. each evening. Bill and Noami
Friendships develop as individu- Tillis, speakers.
als share. themselves and their life
c~pericnces. Be open to sharing WEDNESDAY
feelings, memories, dreams. and disPOMEROY - Revival services,
appointments. Perhaps taking a class MI. Hermon United Brethren in
or working on a project together will Christ Church off Texas Road,
help a friendship develop.
Wednesday through Sunday, 7:30•
h takes time for a new friend&lt;hip . p.m. Rev. David Canfield, evangeto grow. As hnth people j!el to know list
each oth!:r. their interests, values, .
and experiences will become woven
REEDSVILLE - Revival Fcl·
into the friendship. Keep ll)'ing 10 -lowship Church of. lbc ·Nazarene,
develop the friendship. even if it feel Reedsville, Roben Elswick, speaker,
uncomfonable at times.
Wednesday through Saturday, 7 p.m.
It is may he necessary to reach nightly. Special singing.
out and try new things to meet new
people. Put the effort into finding THURSDAY
places where potential friends may
POMEROY - AA. 7 p.m.
congregate. That could include the Thursday at Sacred Heart Church.
library, college, church. civic Mulbefl)' Avenue, Pomeroy.
groups, volunteer opportunities.
organizations for people with simiTUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
lar interests. or at work.
Plains, VFW Post 9053, Thursday,
Having others help with intro- 7:30 p.m. Refreshments, 6:30 p.m.
ductions or social activities may be
helpful and more comfonable. HavPOMEROY - !.'receptor Beta
ing another pe111on along cart break Beta meeting at the Episcopal parish
down the barriers and make evel)'· hnuse, 6:30p.m.
one feel more comror~able. If that
isn't possible. however, tl)' it alone.
LONG BOTIOM - Mt. Olive
Smile, offer a handshake, inlro· Community Church, Long Bottom.
duce yourself first, and talk about an Special services, Thursday through
interest or hobby. Before you know Sunday. 7 p.m. nightly. Evangelist,
it, you will be on your way to a long Paul Gootlwin. Marietta.
and lasting relationship.

IIIIIII

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Rachel As·hley named Ohio State
Grange Fe·maleYouth Ambassador

spool ammal; Connor Laughlin ·
second place dough art. second
place spool animal; Alisha Laughlin
. llrsl place homemade necklace,
first place recycled milk carton;
Candy Pcfl)' • second place . dough
an . third place, hanncr. third place
recycled milk canon. siKih place
Kwanzaa craft. and third place, an
ponraits; Tiffany Green· first place.
still-life an work.
Rosalie Stol)', Hemlock Grange
placed s.ccond in rhc adult phOlogra·
phy category or family stars.
Florence Ashcraft, Alhany
Grange, placed first in the adult an
catcgol)' landscape/seascape. ·

•

s.v.u 111 ••s 113~.

live. I hope my readerS will clip this . and his wife. Gladys did not see the grandchildren. What can I
column and !ape it to the bathroom improve , and my nephew and his do? --Heanbroken Granny in
mirror. It's something we need to see wife adopted the children. •
Lafayeue, Ind.
eVel)' day.
Dear Granny: Can a family
Here's the problem: My brother
Dear Ann Landen: My oldest is pushing me out of my grandehil- member or a close friend intervene
daughter, "Gladys," married a man dren's lives. They live several hours on your. behalf/ It is sad for the
who had a drinking problem and away, and I don't have the resources grandchildren, too, to be deprived of
abused her. I never liked him. They to visit as ofteh as I would like on your love and the joy that you could
had three children together. After my own. I have asked my brother to bring' to their lives. I hope someone
several years, she left him and let me know when he is .going to in the family will help .to get you
moved into an apanment of her own. visit, and he promised he would. included. Good luck. dear.
Gladys had trouble keeping the Now, I find he has gone several
house clean, and there were always times without me ..
· Send questions to Ann Landers. Crc·
problems with her job, the kids or
II doesn't make me happy that ators Syndic~te, 5777 W. Century
something. Orte day, she tried to kill my grandchildren are being raised Blvd., Suite 700. Los Angeles, Calif.
herself. When the doctors diagnosed by someone else, but I know they
her as schizophrenic, the children are bener off. I can't undersland why 90045
went to live witb !"Y brother's son my brother ignores my requests ·lo

111\d

•

. ...... Bo 18 ..... Old.

I

Rachel Ashley, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Ashley, Pomeroy,
was named the new Ohio State
Grange Female Youth Ambassador
Thank you for making the recent al the 125th annual session of the
60th wedding anniversary obse~­ Ohio State Grange held recently at
vance of Allegra and Norman Will the King's Island Inn and Conferof..the Rutland area such a great ence Center.
occasion.
The Male Youth Ambassador is
Allegra and Norman are still just Scou Russell of Miami County.
elated over the honors and love Selection was based on Grange
showered on them for the annivcr- · knowledge. community achieveSUI)'. There were gifts, Oowers and
menl and ambassador potential.
special recognitions in addition to Ashley and Russell will represent
93 cards and leuers of congratula· Ohio at the National Convention in
tion. Couldn't have happened to a Greensboro, N. C., in· Novemher,
nicer couple.
'
1998. The youth recognition pageant
Manha and Jack Green~ way have included appearances by the retiring
head to the sunny south for the win· youth ambassadors Jennifer White,
ter after having again spent the sum· Hardin County, and Jim Russell,
mer months in Meigs County.
Miami County; Norman Tooker,
Well, they didn 'I re~lly spend all Gatekeeper of the National Grange
of the summer here. 1Some of the and Master of the Nebraska Stale
time was spent aboard the Queen Grange; Phyllis Tooker, First Lady
Elizabeth 11-a delightful 30 day of the Nebraska State Grange;
adventure.
Remnrrl ~h,..,mnkPr. Mnster of the
Meantime, Martha has created a Ohio State Grange; Helen Shoemaknewsleuer. for friends detailing the er, First Lady of the Ohio State
eKperiences of her and Jack not only Grange; the 1997-98 Junior Prince.
on the ship but other activities tht;y and Princess, Adam Gotthard, Geau·
enjoyed during the summer as well. ga County. and Nicole Grafton,
So we'lllook forward 10 welcom- Franklin County.
ing Jack and Martha back home
Coordinating the youth activities
come spring.
was Lee Dan!. ~t.ate Y!ll!lhiY""Pi
Adults director. The slate youth
Thanksgiving seems late this commiuee · members are Rachel
year so small wonder probably l~al Ashley, Meigs County; Sarah Kidd,
people are already rushing into Washington · County; Eric Klick.
·chri!ltmas activities. Decorating is Stark County; and Mall Marous.
normally quite a chnrc .so is seems Ashtabula County.
logical to pur the "stu~· in place
At the youth luncheon. Ashley
early in order to enjoy it as long as also received the Spirit of Grange
po.-iblc. By the way.rhe lamp posts award.
in Pomeroy which have been
Other . local winners included
· adorned with greene!)' garlands and blue rihbons on CWA repons for
wreaths. do hx•k good don't they? Racine. Harrisonville. Hemlock and
As you mull over the thought thai il Star Granges, certificate of apprcci·
is. indeed. ahnur lime to gel ready I ation for Star Grange and Hemlock
do hope you can keep smiling.
Grange for making 20 or l]lorc ABC
Quills; Ccnilicatc of recognition for
community service to Hemlock.

Time Out For Tips
BY BECKY BAER
Melg• County Extension Agent
F•mlly and Coneumer St:l·
encell Community Develop-

f

AHXIOIII7

10 •no1110HEt
TilED Of' lit AT OLD 11M

Personals

005

232 E~ephtil Color Photos U To
Bota Strv. P.O. Boll 28D, Rio
Grandi, OH 45e74.

ROMANCE ·STAT~ OF
lltEART

Feel

Finance A18lela"l /Accounle
Aecelnble: Applicanlt Must
Havt A Post High Sehool Oeor..
In Accounltng Or EquNalent Ex·
ptrience And Trami'IQ . Previous
Experience In Comp:uttrized AC·
counts Receivablt, Chant 81lling
Oiracfly Working Tl'le Chenli
Concermng Their Payment Ac·
count Statui And Grant Retm·
bursemen11. Begmnmg Rale Of
Pay It $150 Ilk

Apphcanlt For This Position May
Submit A Resume To Jtannlt
William•. Human Resource Man·
ager, Acceu To Human Re·
•ource Development, P..O. Boll

..

•
,

·
'

"

316. GaMipolis, Ohio 4S631 .
TP'It Otadlint For Acctptmg Appl!caliont 11 Frldty, November
14, 1817 5:00P.M. For Additional
lnlormatlon Call 814· 44, ·3010, · '

B:OO -5:00 PM .. Monday Thru Fro·
day. Acceu To Humsn ReIOUfct

u

.,

0&amp;Y&amp;Iapment II An AAI

A Unte Awlu1111rd, Shr. Or FE:;:E::.O.::Em~!Jio'l::::.:":::·_ _;_ __

Marb• Uncomfortable Is Asking
Somoont For A Dttt? Thon Gel
Wilh Tho Progroml

..
Awn $1·•11 IHr. No Door ~ To.
Door. Quick Caon. Fun &amp; Rolu·

lng. 1-~188.
Try A.n Exciting Different Approach To Finding Thai Spec ial
Somtont! The Power Is All

AVON • $1 .$20 !Hr. No Door To
Door. Eaar Calhl •&amp;onusea• 1·

'lours ... AI Your Olscr,uon, At I00-211S-111311.
Your Corwenl.nce, At Vour Fin·

gorlipll
CALL NCM'I
800 ·2U · 1077 Eot131&amp;, $2.11
Per Minute, Mu11 Be 18 'r'rs,
Strv.U 8111-645-8434

An Ohio Oil Compony' loll·
ture Parton In Tho Gol~a

Arll.. Regatdltll Of hptritnce,
Wrile M.A. Read, P.O. Box 6DI,
Olylon. Ohio 4!).&lt;01

.,
..

�P... 10•The Dally SenUnel

Pomeroy • .Middleport, Ohio
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

ALLEYOOP

,..
1=. . ......-

NIA Cro••word Puzzle

PHJI,IJP

1

ALDER

~

ora- ,,,.,

Do Vou Have Good Solid Exl*i·
ilf1CI And SkHia In One Or More

Now accepting appllcarlons fDr

Au•traUa~t

Tlweo btdn&gt;om, ""''· will 3 ..c.
ant lots, 2 are level, ••callanr
building polenlial, 140,000 080:

kll&lt;hon a wallreu llolp. t.oean•·
na Mexican Restaurant. SCN-e?S711 5.

hOVII divided Into two apart-

. _ ,.,.., pollllliol, be In ono

-Hnng

and rent other,

Of The Following Areas: At· Ru Restluranra, Gallipolis. All
caunta Receivable, Accoun11 Shift&amp; Anllable, Flulblt Houfl,
""r•ble And Payroll? Ou• Clorl· Experience Praterrt&lt;t. Apply

1~0 ,000

090,

bolh In Yllllge al UidDhpart, G14-

a-u.

092·22GCI.

Te&amp;ltd Wolin.
For 10 -Key, Keyboard And Baoic
Pari· Tlmo Help Needod In Rolall
Accoonlirlg Cleficol Kno~.
Vou Can Lal Know About Your- S1Dro Oowntown, Gallipoll~ Sond
Mil By SUbmittinG Your Rtsumt Retume, P.O. Box 1-41, Gdlpolls.
With Your Worlt Hi start And E~ · OH 451131.
petler&lt;e To 5ando HiD Coal Co.,
Inc., Attn. : "Job Oppof ..nily," P.O.
Box 050, Hamden. OH 45834. No
TIIGp/lono Cals PI,.... We Oiler

ca Job Candldatea Are

Wril COnsldor Lind Cclnltocl Will

Down Payment, 3 llt&lt;lrooms, 2

1250~

btlna 111c1n for

rental houM tocattcl fn Ch1111r
..... ~ Dtc. t , 014·885·

Poodle pupplea- tiny toy; 1110
miniature Schnauzer, champion

.

bloodline , malt, AKC; 014·007·

A Competitive Pay And A Good
Benefits Package, Including
40 1 (~).

We Are An Equal
Opporwnily E~or
All Qualilied Applicants Will ReCIIive Consideration For Emplow·
ment WithoUt Regard To Raee,
Color, Religion,· National Origin.
Anceslt'j

Wut

OUIIIIf)' For Thla Bank Financing,

9 K 65

area now. Call 1· 800-513-4343

Kawal Baby Q,.nd Plano, Ap·
praised At S10,000, Bttt Otfer

tHO ·11190 cars For $100111
SeiZed And Sold .
LocallyTt'is Momn
Trud&amp;a, -ix4'a. Etc.
1·800-522-2130, X31101.

Or Sex.

Country Remodeled 3 Bedroom

Area.
Very Clean, Wo

Poir 01 PV ~~ Wilh t 5 Inch
Block Widow
i11r1 Sill Undor

bage . Tennant

Warranty ISDO, firm, 11•·388-

S300 Doposil,
441·2205, 01

Srmkers. No Pela.

Houso Wilh !hove, Wuhot &amp; 1::---:-'~--~--­
Dryor· Hook-Up In Basemen• No
Poll, $450/Uo., 814-440-1062.

For

bedroom _.,.,.,, In Middleport
814-1112-2171.

Soulb
2NT

OADSURN BLANKeT !!

1911 Cullau Calaia,

quad 4, bod hood goolcol or hood,

t3!10. 014·247·2901 .

Up10n UMd Can At 62·3 Miles
Sou1h ol Leon, WV.· Flnanclne
· - · 304-458-111611.

720 ltucks for Sale

420 Mobile Homes
Jar Rent
per""""'· ... 014-742·2714.
14~~;80

11-11

1880 Dodge 4 Spood, Gopd Condillon, New Tlraa, New $hockt,
New Fronl End .SDOO, Call Even-

12x85 trailer, 2 bedroom, 1250
Trailer ~ Bedrooma, WID,

Large LR, Porch, AC, 014·258·
10« (References) Available tat
01 Dec.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

ingl.l14-441·7058.

450

Furnished

1UIO Ford F-100 Pick-up, 351
. Windsor HO, ilood· ""'po, loto ol
par11. 12.000 080. 304-m 5054.

Rooms

2 I 3 bedroom mobile homtl
UeO-t300 , aewer, water and

1UIU GMC pickup, VB, 5apd, ,
S6.500. 304-55-3364 .. 304-8953441 .

lrUh included, 8t4-w.!·2117.

2 Bedroom mobile home, furniatt.d or unfurnished, depaalt,
Utlllllea partially paid. 30.·075·

- - - 'QI(.~Y.,,.,ow

HSALTH
CLUB

tUI2 Chavy S2,500; 1968 Horl·
zan ,1,200; 1888 300 4 Wheeler,
.2.200, Bt4-448-2o470.

1••70 trailer, 2 bedroom, $300
per monlh, ... 814-742·2714.

·,

1993 Chevr 1J2ton Vft, auto wt

1994 Chevy s-to 4wd, v-e. 304·
882•3711. Col altar o4pm,

2 Badfoom lraller 1275/depooir,
S275/mo. Reference&amp; required,
no - 304-875-41118.
·

2-4x4 1·Jimmia 1-Biazer bott't
have rebuilt molora and good

2 Bedroom Troller 12'1115' Elec1r~
$&gt;4,500 On One Acre Rented Lor,
Rt. 2 Pt Ploosan\ 814-440-1757.

U-Hiiul Co. Has UHd Trucks For
Silo, Cal 1·800-262-8575.

2 Bedroom Trailer Partially fur-

no vans &amp; 4-WDs

THE BORN LOSER
~YS, DO II£ ~-----,

bodies. Ca! 304-875-6171 .

nlohod, $200 Depo~~ $275/Uo.,
Dwlrboking Beoudful, 0~ RiWf,
No Petal Foaret's Mobile Home

fo.. Ffo..V~ ..

1184 fcrd Ranger 4WO, 1990
fuel injected V-1 engine, chrome
wheel1, lender flares, sun visor,
bed liner, 6U- 948· 2142 alter

Pari&lt;. 814-«Hlt8t .

2 Bedroom Trailer Water &amp; Tralh

1185 ford f·t 50. 4x4, 300 0 c,.
Iinder. Very Aeli•bl• B1• ·••s 7SII.

Southeast Ohio, 386 Ric:hland

M., Allent, OH 45701.
EO&amp;t:SP

1~1 Wilsubilhi ..... Plck· Up, •

HARTS MASONARY • Block,
bfiQr. I atone work. 30 y81.rl U·
perlence, reaaanable l'llttt.

30•·

895-35U1 aher O:OOpm, no job 10
Ea.rn extra montty 1m Chriatmaa, - 1 OfiD BIG. WV-D212116
... Avon, col 614-9411-9009.

Eaay Workl Excellent Pay! As·
atmbll Products At Home. Call
Toll Free 1·800-487-5566 Ext

livingston' s baaemenl waterproofing, au basement repairs
done, tree estimates, IUetimt
guarantee. 10"t'rl on job experi·

enco. 304-875-21 cs.

12170.
HEAVY EQUIPIIENT
IIAJNTEIIANCE

Should Bo tn Rtpairing. Welding,
And T1011bielhooting.

We Ofllr Compeilliwl Pay And A
Good Banofila Package. lr&lt;lucing
Malee Application At Our Main
Oflict At 38701 S.R., Hamden,

Ohio, Monday Thru Fnday, 8 A.M.
To 4:30 P.ll.; OR Sobmil Your Resume To : Sanda Hill "Coal Co.,
P.O. Bor 850, Hamden, Ohio
'583• . No lttlephone Calls

Pleasa.
Wt Are An Equal Opponunity

Employer. All OUIIIIIed Appllconll
Will recein Conlldtration For
Emplo~r W!~ut R~rd To

Rice.

• All real estate advertising in
this newspaper ts !lJbtea to
the Fadet'al Fair Housing Ad
of 1968 which makes it iltegal
to attvertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination
baled on race, color, miiQiOn,
se~e familial starus or

nalional

"make any such preference,
Hmhatlon or discrimination."

This newspaper WlA not

knowingly accept
acJvenlsements fof real estate
whk:h Is In ..,...ion Cl tho
~w. Our readln am hereby
informed that all dwtllingl

this--

a&lt;lvertlaod in
are available on an equal
oppont.Wlily balls.

, Rlloooon. National Or·

iV"- Ancelt1y Or Sooc.

Quick delivery. Call 81•·385-

614·949·2128 ......,;ng,.

IIObile Home, 2 Garogea, On Lc~
Poslil&gt;lo Lend Conlra&lt;~ lo&lt;llon:
C""!" Cily, 6 14·258· t 744.
Ford Uuetang ntedt re-

siOred. S700. 304-8715-4230 doys
or 304-675-415.'1 ~
1 and 2 bedroom tpar1m8nta, fur·

186U Buick GS .350 4 Speed,
Fac1ory Air, 13,000, 614·8827512.
.

nlstled and unfurniahed, aecurily
deposit required, no pttl, 01•·

1182-2218.

REA \ ESTA1E

$39,8U5. Frea delivery. 1·100·
891.fJ777.

.

Oakwood 28x5e 3 bedroom, 2
bath, lllrling at St9D per mo.

Ciiii1-800-III1-G7n.
Single Parent ProQram. Why Rtt'll
When You Can Own. Special Fl ·
nancing Avail-. 304·'7.18·7295.

TIRED Of WEST VIRGiliA 1110'1·
ing lO l8111, mult Hll my tlome
-tAsk lor Sid 304-755-5588.

1 Badroom All UdlldH Included
t315/llo., Dopolll RoqulrJd, 414
E011 COiogo SUM~ Rio Grande,
1 888 8100521.

1989 Pontiac Flreblrd, 13000,

814·247·21104.
1D75 Cadillac, Drivelble, Needs
Steering Column For Sale, 2 New
Tires, Radiator, 1400, &amp;••~41-

0247.

2bdrm: apta•• Ioiii tltctrlc, ap~ lu.-, IIII"*Y,..,

Runs E11cellent SSOO; 1886 Ford
Aero Star Van, 80,000 Miles FUIIr

Loadedi814-258--Get9.
1984 Dodge

llclllllel, cr... 1D ochool ·tn toon.
Appl~ationa avaiilble 01: Vlllogo
Green Apll. ...a or call 014-11823711.EOH.

Ltss Than 1 Milt From ., Lane'
Cai1Aitar5~M.814-441-'!54t. '

458 t/2 ... GallpoNJ. 2 Bedrooms. N:., Applloncn,
S425/llo., 12.25 Depolli~ Ulillllat
Paid, 61 4-448-2)211.

RENTALS

807 Second Avenue, 1 Bedloom.
Utilitift Paid, S2115/Mo., 014-4.41·

080. 304-773-5054.

1SISID Olds Cullatl Supreme,
loaded, Sta!'ldard. llllhll' S.ta,
CD, IlK, ErceUenl Condilion

$5,600, 814-441-4222

1SISI1 Thunderbird, 3.8 Ve, red,
sunroof, new Michelin radials,
price rodJced. 304-875-5596.

Flr~l

A¥1rw,814-441-8221 .

1SISI2 Oldl Otltl 18, 4 Ooofl,
looded, so.eoo. 11&lt;HII2-75t 2.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JN:.KSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drlvo
lrom '280 to h34. Walk to lhoo
&amp; movloo. Call 014·441·2588.
E~ Hauling_Qrlllor.,nlt)'.

Sporly, 2 Oooro, Also Air, 75,500
Mlleo Aaking $3,050, 080 614·
256·8430, 614-258-6467.

o.wn.n Aporlmonl, 4 Rooms,
Water Paid, NO PIT8, 81 Cedar
Sntl, 114-311-1100.

1993 Ford Thunderbird. Low
Mileage, Sunrool, LHthllf' Seats,
CO, Anti Theft Srsrem, Cellular

1992 Plymouth Sundance White,

Phone, 614-446-3106.

EHiclency Aporunent, Close To

Wlr:~dows,

AUtFM Cast., Uaroon

4 Doors, AC. AMIFM, Maroon
lnL /Ext.. New Tires, t2.000, Call

Gnoclous living, 1 and 2 bedroom
aporunonra ar VHiqo llanor and
Rlvoraldo Apor1men1a in llldclopotL From 1231-•304 . can 11 ,._
092·!1084. Ecproi HcU~fltl Oppor-

814·440·11122 Afllr 5 P.M.

1D98 Ford Wu11angoGT • -8 liter
Red, 17 Inch Tlrea, Loaded, Ex·
cellon! Condlllon, 20,000 lilies,
.10,500, 014-37N270.

AKC Yellow Lib Pupa, Sholl &amp;
Wormed 11•·258·8330 Allor o

P.M.

•

,,

.'

IIAPPENEO 'I'E5TERDA'I:

1 WENT TO A
8001&lt;STORE TO 6ET
SOMETIIIN6 &amp;tf ERNIE
P'r'LE .. THE'I' NEI/ER .
HEAAI' OF 111M ..

•

Ripley, WV. 304·372·3U33 or 1:
100-273·113211.

SERVICES

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Uncondllional llfelimt guaramae.
local relerencea furnl•hed . El·
tabli&amp;hed 1V75. Call (614) •46·

0870 Or 1-800-287-0570.. Rogers
Waterproo!ng,

Main·

mobil&amp; ~ r81JB1r and more. For

lree talimale call Char. 814·982·

8323.

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

Rtlldenlil.l or commarcial wiring.
Clrfo, ve, IU10, air, - or ropolrt. llasJOr u .
Ill - · SU,500. 304·895-3364 canaad etec:trltiln . Rld8nour
Eleculcel, WV000306, 304-875·
.. 304-8115-3441.
1886 Monte

17118.

- .....

·•

..

•

BILL .. I JUST

•

DON'T KNOW ..

ROBOTMAN

New gaa tanks, 1 ton truck
WhMII I radiators. 0 I R ~lo

.

•

.__.._...__.'-..._,_._,..J

Pans &amp;
Accessories

Home

•

I DON'T KNOW,

~uto

General

•

Complere the chvckf*r quoted
by ftlltng i'n the miuing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

,~~~~~~~.LfTTfiS

IN

1, 1, . 1, 1• 1• r 1

6 ~~·~M~r.E lEUfiS I I I I I I J
verse aduhs if we can leam to laugh at OURSELVES.

·'

I

JI

..•. ... . .

f--T,.;:_;,-=-,1,:;
·:....:,I;.S.;.:_"IC.-11Q
I

ac11 10.

1983 Old&amp; Cuda11 Supreme, all Roqer' a Plumbing Service, E•·
power, new tirea, $5500 080, per+enced, Free Etlimatea, Call
614·1192-5260.
Alter 5, 014-448-11588.

. ,.....

WE QUAFF A FEW
ROOT 6EER5 ..THEN
TELL HIM WJ.IAT

BUDGET PRICE TRANSMISSIONS, Used IRebuih, All Typeo,
Acceas Over 1(1,0DD Transmit·
oiono, &amp; C~IChei81H45-5877

C&amp;C

--..

..

-·
,.

m

Visual- Scout - Erase - Clever- OURSELVES

Int. /Ell. 57,000 Miles, Excellen! lanenca· Palnling, vinyl aiding
Cond.. $~.500: 111115 Dodge Aries: carJJ:41ntry, door&amp;, window,_ baths:

- · ilhoiit:014-31145.

•Q

By Phillip Alder
. hrf--.f--.tConlinuing yesterday's theme o(
queens and princesses, let's lum to.
lllitph Conrad, who wro~. "Being a
woman is a lerribly difficult ltade,
since il consists principally of dealing with men."
In bridge, queens try lo evade aces
and kings so that lhey can win 1ricks.
Tfi..L YOU!r MUSG,.fS
• However, somelimes a queen has to
,be sacrificed -- a! in lhis deal.
·
_., TO PIC.K IT UP.
South opened two no-trump,
which showed 21-22 points, but he
upgraded his hand because
...-...........\ sun. ruT FIJS'T sensibly
of alllhose aces and kings. North had
CELEBRITY CIPHER
YOU TfLL.
an easy raise, and Wesl had an even
by Lui• Cempoa
easier lead: lhe spalle queen.
GMVITY
I
Celebrity ~c:::.;,.cn:...~~~T%.,~1la~w~
started with six top tricks:
TO "fT GO• . i · twoSouth
spades, one heart, one diamond
I
and rwo clubs. The exira tricks would
,.,,...'\1-!Avi,S' •
'HAWSU
HNW
X X
HNO
IITC
s N 0 II
presumably have ro come from lhe
minors.
PABCWKGCKII
IITNII
EWAPWNG
Not wanting a heart switch, Soulh
worftli'e.firsr Irick and concinucd wilh
,.~iOP T~l-IC. ill.£
HAWJCU.'
PCAWPC
WC,ftSSL
·
a
diamond to dummy's 10. East had
~ Ll-ru:N.l.Y I
no winning play now. If he won with
HXSS .
lhe king and rciumcd either a spade
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "We live by the Golden Rule. Those ' who have the
or lhe heart 10, declarer would win
gold make 11\e rules." - Buzzie Bavasi, major league baHball executive.
and play a diamond 10 dummy's jack.
Suddenly four diamond tricks and the
conltact would fall in1o his lap. So,
TIIAT DAILY
Easl ducked. Bul declarer immediPUULII
_ _ _ __..:.;....::; 14to.4 ~y CLAY l . PO&amp;I.AN _;;__ _ __
aJely finessed his club jack. When it
won, South cashed rite club ace,
Rearrange letters of the
four scrambled wOtds be·
returned to dummy wilh a diamond
low to form .four simplt word!
ro the ace,. and played another club.
When 1he queen appeared from East,
CHEKEL
Soulh claimed nine tricks: two
A!&gt; · U!&gt;UI'L,
spades, one heart, two diamonds and
HE COMPLETELY
.
four
clubs.
MIS!&gt;Et&gt; THE
WI-IOU! !'OINT.
East wasn't happy. "Why didn't .
you play rhe diamond queen at trick
D0 N
two?" he asked his partner. "1ben we
can defeal the contracl if I worit out
to win the second diamond Irick."
"Sorry, partner," fCplied West. "I
• Bl AAC _
While skiing 1 know it is imhad ~ifficulty seeing the importance
1 14 I I
portant to remember how many
in
"
'--.J
. -..L-L.-1---1- . bones the human body has and
G E E R MR
that each one can be~ • • , - : !

1p86 Ranger 373V 16' 12 ·24V
Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evinrude
Ou-rd. $8,600, 614·992·2770.

810

--

My brother-in-taW believes that we only become di-

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

760

''t

Eut
All pall

$1 ,80D, . ·
.

18SI3 Hyundli Excel ~lomatlc,

Fumllhod Efficler&lt;y, AU UUinles
Paid, Share Bath '185/llo., ltD

Nortb
3NT

1INI7 Suzulcl 80 •·tme.ler $800.
304-875-332• .

080814-448-0173.

11 Coo " 111111

e LMI-.

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS

SUm10l, AIM'II S1erto CaiiOIII,
35 MPG. 33,000 Original lllleo, Appliance Paris And Service: All
Na'!"' Branda Over 25 Years E•·
t2,150, 614-3111-2845.
penance AU Work Guaranteed
1DI3 Oldl Cutlan Sl, V-8, Auto ~~ch City · Maytao, &amp;1•· 446:
Trans., N;, 2 Doors, Pwd. Door• 1

Avenue

PIM

Motorcycles

\\'etcca•l81......,..2515.

EUlc:ltncy On E11111n

MAULDIN'S HOUSE ..

N:., 43,000 Mileo, 614-245-1513. '

Watmart, Construction Worker a

Wothlf &amp; Oryor, Utllllioa Paid:
$400, 614-440-2115.

I 60 OVER TO 61LL

11185 To- T100, 4x4 Reg. Cab,

1988 T-Bird V-8, Auto, Loaded,

New Pain( $2,200, 81 4·446· 7616
Ahor 4 P.M.

0573.

Apartments For Rtnt On

Dyna., LE 3.0 new

water pump &amp; rad1ator. t2,500

~RI( 1/ETEAANS

1 Owner. like Hew Condilion AT

740

diCidl

IF-

7 Ra11'1ttg

-~dllla

'

199-4 Jeep Cherokee covnuy,
auto, 411:4, 4d,r, new rires &amp; ba1tery, all power, htrch_ 304·075·
5421.

1995 Yamaha Blaster,

1976 J20 Joep Truck, 3/4 Ton, 4
WO. Slandard. St ,800, Runo
Good I 1980 Ford Courier Truck,

2 bedroom · - • in Pomoray,
utilities peld, no poll, 814-992·

2.07 acres 5mi out on Sandhill

Wooded Buildi"tt Loti, Some Reoli&lt;lion. locsled Root SL Rt. 150

$3,000, 01.+862-7512.

1 Bedroom Near Holzer. WID
Hook-Up, Gal HH~ S20WIIo., +
UtiildH. No Poll, OH 440 21157.

15868.

Wanlld to buy- acreage In Ueiga
Countr, preferably Ualga Local
Schoo District, 11•·092-5053 af.
18rflpm

Buclce11, Leaa Motor I Trans,

1 llt&lt;lroom Aparrmont On Flnl
Avenue, Gallipolis, S250111o.,
Plus Depoeil. 814-441-1071.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
RoOd, S1t,OOO. 304-875-3018.

1968 Nova SS Original 3118, 375,

1981 Blazer •r• Tatlo Package
Red /Black, Sharp! ExceptiDnall)'
W•II· Uaintained, Have AH Sarv·
iu Records Slnce Purchased

61-1·446·0857, 814-446.0852.

10 ClrlcUn

.

IJMIIIIFOI

alpl

... ,.....,r
gl-:·1-

5 Ylly..ty

I~~!:=··

19110 Cllovy C20 llork lit, 75,000
milts, excellent shape, $7300,

9621 .

32 -~Price •
32 Caftlrii1M1ICI
34 GaiiW

I:1'11]1
us

11189 GIIC Safari Cusuwn. $4,950

New 28K80 3 or • bedroom.

origin, ·or any lntertion to

401(11).

61.·448·4222

1100-837-323&amp;

tnSoultMIIOhio.

Personnel. We Would Prefer
Someone Who Hu Service Vehicle And Tools. EJperienu

Llfge &amp;election ol Used homel. 2
3 beckoomt. Slarling: at S2105.

Of

~ew 1998 14I70 three bedroom,
includes 8 months FREE kM rtnl
lncludee alclrtlng, deluxe ateps
and setup. Only $187.08 per
month with 11075 down. Calli·

We Are A. Surface Coal Mining
()ptf110r With Mine Sites In Vin·
IDr"', JICkiOn And Gallil Counties

We Are Seeking E•perienced
Heavy Equipment Wainlenance

bedroDm ,1,,50/dGwn, '299/mo.
Coll1-«10-8111-67n. ,

Cyhndor, 5 Speod, AIC, t3.900:
11M Oodae Oako1a Sport •x4 y.
I, Aulo, f./c. $4.800, 814·448·
7018 Altar 4 P.M.

frH air, lrH lkitt, 11SXIO 3 Ot ·4

~=::=.
31 Wound

.Ir--r-1,_I=-rrll,l-=,1-t

0B0. G14.W2·&lt;00t.
au me,

1 Greek rnu"
2 Royll
1-11
3 w. tout coli.
4 Stop-~~~~ ...

'.
r

'

0

1811 Chwr Silverado •x•. 350
automatic, air, 135..0DD mites,
biiiCk, e11ceUen1 condition, Sfl500

And Salary RequirorneniS To
R. Attcint, Planned-~

DOWN

wanll?
21-

S©\\G\llA-l&amp;t.trs· ::::

5:30pm.

Paid, NO PETS, Near Porter,
014-318-1100.

,__

•

pwwdrive, 18,QOO. :IM-875-1,857.

051~

=~~

to

The theme
encore

HAWII ll

258-1150.

Wm

Openin~ lead:

YO'RE HOLLERIN'
AT TH' WRONG

STOP HAWaiN' TH'

silo Or Trade: 1882 otdsmo·

For aalt·

In~

20 Todclllnl'

Dealer: Sou\h

bile Firtnza, 4 Ooota, Auto, PS,
New Tlret, Good Condition, 814·

Two bedroom houae ·and one

anscdotea

Vulnerable; Both

Vlcldo.l14-440-21117.

FARf.1 SUPPLI ES
&amp; LI VES10CK

e8

Soutla
• AK32
9 A J 4
• 5 3
• A K J 10

Credil Problema? We Can Help.
Easy Bank Financing For Uttd
Vehicle&amp;, Na Turn Downs, Call

84311.

• K

• Q83

• 7 62

En5-8308

814·258-1114.

Pomeroy, 107 Pleuanl Ridge, 3
bedroom, t and hill balh~ S312
plua deposit, callwenlnga 814·
·11180002.

Eoot

• 8 7s
• Q 10 9 I

• Q J 10 9
• Q. 2

Acrosonlc Baldwin plano. portoc1
conct.. It ,300. :J04.41?8-2-

•

•854

CARS FOR '1001 Trucka, boall,
-'·whlelera, motor homea, lurnitl.ttt, eftcltonlcs, computer• etc.
by FBI, IRS, DEA. ~vailable your

MUSical
Instruments

tor Sale

EEK&amp;MEEK

RtEatabllah Credit, Uuat Make
$150 Wukly Take Home, Down
Pa1mtnl1 AI Low Aa t90, To

17 Collection of
II

• A J 10 1 6

014-441~7.

3404.

320 Mobile Homes

11·11-17

• I 4
• 73 2

A Nted A Car? No Credit, Bad
Crldlt Bankruptcy, We Can Help

lll63.

4485aflot4pm.

11HIN
13 Grn1l1r
MHub

11 Being

· .12.000 Cd- 5 P.ll.
(Strloua lnquirltl Ontyl) 614·
4-15.

-·

•HaiiJfl.tMide
41 lleglnnlng

15 Olllo ctly

Crultt, AMIFM Cltltlle, Trunk

. 10gol lank 101 up opecloil. Fish
Tank I Pal Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave. Point Plouan1. 304·075·

Baths, 1.1 Acrtl, Super Hlcel
SOuthwllttrn School Dlatrlct,

114-3111·0187.

•so.

•

lfUIIEFII

13 Et•uta
14 Pollrid'l
Lech-

..--••
-

. , Tltglltm

1eus Sa.,m SC2. AuiOIMtlc, Air,

NSOR, $75, 014-M-2121...,.
ln111: ! purebred ,
lt4·8D8-

3 bedroom. l.ao/mo. Deposit
304-171-4111-.. m
ge
Awllcollona -

lllapllltnl pvp•, e

,a,_.IDPesutau• Puale

It Church-

e.~CIISO'

ACCOUtmNG ,
JIIII.YAOI.L ClERK

......

31 0111111 • dlilllc

ACROSS

•
•

•

~
may deal
someone
York, NY 10156. Be
who can'l do things for him or her- ·your zodiac sign.
~ self but is smart enough ro shift rhe
~~=======~=~~,-; SAOITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.l- burdens to you.
21) Guard against squandering
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) MovASTRO·GRAPB
rcsources eannarkcd for necessities ing in extravaganl circles could put a
on foolish impulses 1oday. Uncon- big dent in your budgec today. Try to
trolled extravagance generales . hang out with people who don't need
BERNICE
spender's remorse.
·
· ··
h
ood
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22.Jan. 19 ) expensiVe ~Uvrues 10 ave a g
BEDE OSQL
lime. · ·
Try nor to expect too much from
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Proyoungsters loday. Remember. chil- ceed cautiously tqday where an ambidren aren 't capable of reasoning or lious endeavor is concerned. The
perfonning like adults..
foundations you 've laid rhus far
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19) could be beginning ro show a few
Today. you might eschew your usu- cracks.
Wednesday, Nov. 12, 1997
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Do nor
In lhe year ahead, you may devel- al op1imism and view everything negop unique opportunities for yourself atively. If you court failure, you'll wasle any IJIOre time \oday trying to
through your ingenuity. Whar you figure oril a way to meet your expec- convince someone who is negalive
conceive will be a conslructive rations.
abour a matrer you're promoting.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Keep Find new prospecls who already
adjuncl to your present field of
your objectives wilhin reasonable evince a real inlerest.
endeavor.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Joinl
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) If limits today in terms of material
rewards
you
hope
lo
receive.
Alack
endeavors
may not be yourcupoflea
you don't treat responsible matrers
realism
sows
seeds
for
disap.
1oday,
so
don't
let a smooth talker
of
wirh the rcspecl 1hey deserve today,
involve you in something which is
some problems lhat could have been pointmenl.
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9) Make not too good for you.
resolved already may linger even
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct 23) Your
longer. Scotpio, treat yourself ro a your own decisions today in matters
that.
reflect
upon
your
repulation.
If
desires
and lhose of your male's
birthday gift. Send for your AstroGraph predictions for the year.ahead you let others lhink for you, you could be poles apan roday. Privately
esltiblish a common ground so there
by mailing $2 and SASE 10 Astro- could end up looking bird.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Do won't be any disputes in fronl of othGraph, c/o lhis newspaper. P.O. Box
1758, Murray Hill Sra1ion, New not be too generous wilh your advice. ers.

I TUESDAY.

NOVEMBER11 I

·.

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