<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9030" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9030?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-04T20:17:20+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19458">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/9b9a54aac92335f193e6589fe3dbbc7b.pdf</src>
      <authentication>469b0a36442ec05435756c8d4cafe8c2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29054">
                  <text>•

•
•,

'

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

•

IREI~
~

p

Ohio Lottery

·uT.H

-

",.

-

Ken Grlffev
·named AL'•

OCTOBER IS
HEVY TRUCK MONTH·
AT C &amp; 0 MOTORS!
ECK OUT THE SAV-I NGS
1998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
EXTENDED
CAB 414
.

·. Pick 3:
721
Pick 4:

Moat Yll~blt ·

Spofla on

,.•

..••
.,..

7185
Super Lotto:
8-15-25-30-35-36
Kicker:

page a

Cloudy tonight, chance
of rain, low In 30e. Friday,
chanca of anpw, high fn
upper .-eM.

307124

./

•
i.

"

'

-

••'

'•'

~
'

Ohio's first annual report cards to debut in April·
'

· COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio's first stan thinkins that way."
annual report Cl1'ds showinr student
The report canis will show, by disperfonnance in the state's 611 school trict and by individual school, student
districts and 3,700 individual schools perfonnance in: four-pan prolicienare expected to debut in April, the cy tests given in ·lhc fourth. sixth,
state Superintendent John Golf said. ninth, lOth and 12th grades; break"! hope we can use this as an outs by race and gender; and attenimprovement tool," · Goff said . dance and drop-out rates.
Wednesday. "Education has come
Tile repon cards are ·a resiX!nse to
along at the end of tl)e movement an academic accountability law
toward strategic planning. We hope enacted last summer as lawmakers
this is soing to help admini'.'is~t-ra_to~rs-_d_e..,b..,at.::.e.::.d.::.•_fu_nd_._
. n.:g..;p;_l,..•n-to_co_m_,ply

AS
LOW

AS ·

·with an Ohio Supreme Court ruling. district and indivtdual school· statisThe ruling set a deadline of Man:h tics on enrollment and student mobi 124, 1998, for preparation of a new ity rates. They will also repon persystem of state aid to local schools. studen~ expenditures on administraGoff said he did not know how tion, building operations. staff supOhioans would respond to the report pon, student suppon and instruction.
cards showing their local districts'
The state Department of Educaperfonnance. He said he hoped that tion has hired Cochran Public Relatheir release would not have any tions Inc. a Columbus company. to
influence if a funding plan is on the coordinate the repon cards'. design
May ballot.
and layout, and advise districts on
The report cards witralso include explaining them to local residents.

-•

2Sectlona,11PIIgM,35AGannett ca. Nltua.....-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 13, 1997

Air, Tilt, .Crul~e, Chrome Bumpers, Chrome
Appearance Package and Morel

Joe

"The average
on the street
doesn't. always understand all our
verbiage," said Goff.
The company, which will be paid
$55,000, will convene focus groups
on various versions of the repon card
and produce a prototype in the spring
that all Ohio districts can try out, Goff .
said.
He expects that even those districts that score well wi II be concerned about the repons.

In many states that already issue
such repon cards. "the first few years
are. very tense," Goff said. People
tend to make "best·t~worst" lists of
their local schools, no inalter how dtfferent their demographics, he said.
The department is considering
grouping ·similar districts - such as
big-city districts - ill relellSing the
repons so that people will not compare urban districts to .suburban or
rural ones, for example.

•

-

•

,

Classes canceled

.Eastern ~igh School damaged ·by vandals

1998 CHEVY
.S-10 .

By BRIAN J. REED

Restyled Froot Grille, Instrument Panel,
Bumpers, and ln~reased Horse Powerll

AS
LOW

AS

1998 CHEVY .S-1 0
EXTENDED CAB
Air Conditioning, Alum. Wheels, ~S Package,
AM/FM Radio, W/L Tires, and Morell

AS
.'

; ' .....

'

~~ .~1

·-

LOW

AS
*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEAl ER

998 CHEVY·BLAZER
4 WHEEL DRIVE
,.

Air, AM/FM Radio, Tachometer,
Locking Differential

AS

LOW

$

AS

.....

TOURISM PROMOTION - A vlaltor'l guide to p1 omotll tourlam
- ·II bllng devtlloped by the Mllga Tourllm office, Karin Johnaon,
dii'Ktor. John10nl'8porWd to the P~ ~ta Anoclatlon.WJ t 21~1)1!----J:WI$C!loblmarllatlng~PI·

.

*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEA' ER

.

*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

~of hllfl••leii'._..I&lt;M• ull;'ll' now lillie~

Mug
GIIM,rlght.

~"'•!rmn~tllt=~atudlnt
~~.lttl!~ to •

WM*~.
'

1ac~vwt~..., ·

-

.

Sentinel New1 Staff
The Meigs County Sherifrs
Department, Prosecuting Attorney's
Office and the Bureau of Criminal
Investigation and Identification were
at Eastern High School today, investisating extensive vandalism in the
building.
School was canceled after a cook
at the building discovered the damage early this morning. A $1,000
reWard is being offered by the .sheriff's department for infonnation leading to the arrest and conviction of
those involved in the case.
Windows on a number of interior
classroom doors were broken
throughout the building, vending
machines were damaged and burgled,
computers were destroyed and money stolen from numerous classrooms
and •.ending machines. An art display
case was also"damaged. ansi glass on

...Jl.lf)JM.iG~-.IIrokelt. l ..,

w.rrlar or

..

flii:'extent of the damage and the

estimated · ;tost of repairing bd
replacing damaged propeny was not
known It press time.
According to Meiss County Sher-

iff lames M. Soulsby, entry into the
building was forced after I a.m ..
when the building's security was last
checked. A staff member at the building said that a clock that had been
damaged in the incident was stopped
at 3:15a.m.
Soulsby saiCl that investigators
were not sure at this time of the point
of entry, but reel that the burglars had
entered the building in search of cash.
While a small amount of cash had
been removed from classrooms and at
least two ve.nding machines, no other items were stolen from the building.
The damage was limited to the
interior of the building, but took in
both the high school area and the
junior high wing, whic~ are connected by a corridor.
Glenda Benedum. a caok at the
high school, said this morning that
she discovged the damage wh&lt;ln ~he
reported to worlf eatl)l"this moi'ht~g.
and notified Superintendent Deryl
Well in person at his home near the
school.
Tile investi~ation will continue
Continued on Jlllle 3

BY CHARLENl HOEFLICH
Sentl"'l Newt Stiff

l;loliduy programs and promotions were planned during Wednesday's meeting of the Pomeroy Merchants. Association held at Trinity
Church.
"Come Home for Christmas Come Celebrate Sparkle" will be the
theme of the holiday events which
\\'ill kickoff on the Sunday after
Thanksgiving with a parade through
downtown.
Under the direction of Toney
Dingess the parade will line up at I
p.m .. behind the old junior high
school building, and move out at 2
p.m. Santo will he riding in the
parade and then will greet the children in the ~ini-park. Open house
will he held by most of the merchants
that day. Hartwell House will he
holding a grarid re-opening during the
entire week.
·Several other holiday activities
wen: diS&lt;.'!ISSed ii)Ciuding having Santa at Pcpli:s 1lank on Dec. 13 and
serving hot chocolate and cookies.
Tentative plaM call for the children
to have their pictures taken with Santa at that time.
It was noted that Samh Fisher has
made three foot high figurines which
will be set beside the flower pots
along Main, Court and Second
Streets. ThC pot•. now holding mums,
will be filled with gn:encry.
Susan Clark. president. reported
that the red holiday banners are
expected later this week and will he
put on the period light pole exten-

sions beside the blue historical banners. Merchants were' reminded to
outline their buildings In white minilights.
,·
It was decided that' a lighted tree
will be put in the mini-park and
another on the parking lot. It was
reponed that the Victorian figures
created by Wesley ~ne last year
for the park are in plac~. and that gar-,
lands and wreaths have been put on
the light posts along ~ streets.

~ disc~sion on ~roposed street
pava~g proJect~ dommated Tuesday
evenmg s meetmg of Rutland Vollage
Council. .
The vtllage is
ror an
Issue · WState

Project grant for repaving Larkin,
Elm, Nelson, . Bryant and Locust
streets m the vtllage.
Mayor Jo Ann Eads and Clerk
Rosemary Snowden Eskew have met
with Meigs County Commissioners.

Dottie Musser, 1reas4rer, reported
a balance of $4,708.19 with all bills
paid. Holiday promotions on radio
and television and in tbtl .newspaper .
were discussed with a committee to
come up with ligures 01i;amoun1s to
be spent on advertising.
Karen JohnSon, tourism director,
spoke briefly on a visito~l'guide, the
advertising for which is'l!eing sold
now by the Meigs High s'~ool marketing students of Dave Kuzma.
Johnson said that 10,000
brochures have already ~n printed
and that the visitors guide is a "total
infonnation" prodlu.~ whidt will be
provided when someone expresses
interest. She said it will• contain
"infonnation on educatibn, fConomic development, utilities. and lots or
oiher things." She also noted that the
students who are doing the selling
will receive profit from thcif sales.
Clark thanked Mr. and Mrs. Musser and others who helped with the .
amphitheater dedication held in October whe~ the beneractor c,me to
·"
town.

Robert A. Tift

CINCINNATI - Bob Taft,
Ohio's second-tenn secretary of state,
began his campaign for the Republican nomination for governor
Wednesday by saying he would give
· school funding top priority if elected.
Taft also proposed making computer literacy a requirement for high
school graduation.
Beginning a two-day, ninc-cit.y
lour across Ohio, Taft said he would
· work to lind more money for schools
· through budget cuts and increased
· revenue before he would impose tax
increases.
He gave no details of his plan.
"I have called for an education-

CIIDR

AND

MOTORS TOYOTA ••
ST. ALBANS

&amp; LEXUS

lll..fll....
IIT.H
lflll·all:l
•• 1-1·

•

,.
•

•
•

•

.•

•
•

..•

PrctliCiirtlng Attorney John
Ohio BCiwre
High
along with 1harlff'a
IMIIIbel'l inVMtlgating the b,...klng, entering and vandlllam at Eaatern High
School which took place 1arly today. Cia•- nre canceled to
enable lnveatlgators.to altllllllne the dlmage.
·

.

Herman Henry of

'

Santa Claus will be at ~oples
Members of the Middleport Community Association have planned a Bank after the parade. All children
will he given a treat and haw their
~eries of evenu to kick off the holiday season including a holiday open picture taken with Santa at no &lt;l!qe.
·
house, extended business hours and compliments of the bank.
Starting with the open house,
• parade.
;,.
Events begin with a Sunday holi- Middleport businesses will open
day open house on Nov. 23 from 1- Sundays through Dec. 21 from I to
' p.m. and a CluiSinlas parade will be S p.m. Starting Dec. 8, businesses
will also stay open until&amp; p.m., Monheld the ·~ day at 2 p.m.
day-Friday
through Dec. 23.
• The p-.de will form along Ash
On
Dec.
6 at 6:30p.m. a candle
Street between Imperial Ele&lt;:aic 111d
lighting
ceremony
will be held at the
Park Street and proceed along Beech
Streel, General Hlrtinger Plrkway, "T" at the junction of Mill Street and
South Second Avenue to Dairy Queen Nonh Second Avenue at the Christto where it will disbllld on Front mas tree culminatins with the liaht·
· Street.
ing or the star atop the Clvistmas tree.

concerning the proposed project.
It wa• not'ed that the portion of
Larkin Street in front of thl: fire sto\ tion and all of Lynn Street have been
paved in addition to the alley at Pcopies Bank.
.

· Work on a slip on Basham Street
is almost complete, it was noted.
Council agreed to purchase a used
backhoe and to advcnisc for hids to
sell an old dumotruck and hackhoc.
Con~in~d on page 3

fi"'t funding approach whkh guarantees that schools will he funded
before other orcas of government,"
Tart said during a speech at Mayerson Academy. a private school for
training teachers and school admin-

D-Ohio.
Tan, 55, faces a possible GOP primary fight from state Treasurer Kenneth Blackwell. who has said he is
considering his options for 1998.
Former Attorney General Lee
Fisher is the only Democrat to
announce a run for. governor. Fisher
faces a possible challenge from Toledo businessman Bruce Douglas, who
.is considering a self-funded campaign ror. the Democratic nomination.
Alan Melamed, an aide to Fishl:r,
declined to comment on Taft's
speech.
"At least not until we see the full

istrators.
The school i~ on William Howard
. Taft Road - named li&gt;r his great. grandfather. who was the 27th president of the United States.
Taft hopes to succeed George
Voinovich, who is harrcd by Ohio
law from serving a third consecutive
tcnn us governor. Voinovich, also a
Rcpuhlican, is planning a 199K candidacy for the U.S. Senate scat being tc.:d of his comments," Melamed
vacated hy retiring Sen. John Glenn , said.

trag orders U. S. out of country
following condemnation action

Middleport holiday plans announ~
•4.KRIIIG.
OU.. IOVWIMIC

•

Taft to seek governor's post 1n 1998
By JOHN NOLAN

.

-

IRAQ THUMBS NOSE AT U.S. - Iraqi Dlputy Pr11111 Mlnlltw

Tariq Allz, left, IIIMta with lrllq 1mbii1111C1or to 1M Unlttd Natlonl

Nlzlr Hamdoon WednHday It the am1M1111clor'l rnldence In
tMw ~Cifk. The U.N. Security Counclllpproved 1 raolutlon condlmnlngll'lq yaatardly Todly, II'ICI orderecl U. s. offlclllt out
of their country. (AP)
.
.

'

..•

Merchants plan 19~7
Rutland
Council
mulls
paving
projects
·programs, promoti'ons

'

'

ALL PRICES INCWDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCWDE
DOC. FEES.-TAXES OR
LICENSE FEES.

.

,

•
'

-.

UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The
United States was all but on its own
today in its willingness to threaten
force against Iraq, despite winning a
unanimous Security Council resolution condemning Iraqi defiance.
Russia,
Major countries France, China and Egypt - signaled
Wednesday that they were opposed to
resorting to military action to rorce
President Saddam Hussein to back
down in a standoff over U.S. anns
inspectors in Iraq. The confrontation
escalated today when Iraq ordered the
Americans out.
With neither the United States nor
Iraq showing sian~ of blinking, Russian Ambassador Scrgey Lavrov
warned that the crisis was "headed
for deadlock'' and was "very dangerous."
All IS Security Council members
voted ror Wednesday's U.S.-British
resolutioo, which condemned Iraq for
· failing to cooperate with U.N. inspectors, demanded an immediate and
· unconditional reversal of Iraq's original Oct. 29 order expelling six
American inspectors and slapped a
fon:isn travel ban on Iraqi officials
who interfere with the inspections.

~

••
•

,•
"••

••
•

•••

....•

•
~

~

..••

~

..•
~

~

••

-••
~

•

..•••
...•
..•
..•
...
.
•
••
••
••

..••
•

~

The price of unity was a resolution· ,
· that contained no threat of military
r•
force, referring only to a "finn inten•
tion .. to take unspecified "'further
measures" iflraq refused to comply.
Iraqi Deputy Minister Tariq Aziz,
•
in New York to make Iraq 's case to
•
the United Nations, declared his government "refuses this resolution " and
said Iraq would make good on its
demand that the American members
of the U.N. inspection teams leave
Iraq.
Today. uncowed by the resolution,
"•
Iraq turned back U.N. inspectio'l. •
•
teams for the IOth time in II days,
•
•
refusing to let Americans on the
teams throush to visit suspected
••
weapons sites. Hours later, it ordered
all American weapons inspectors to
'
leave the country immediately.

..

-

"

.....
-..
,.,.
~

A L• .N. official in Baghdad,
reached by telephone from New
York, saici the inspection team had
received no word from Inqi author- .
ities about the order to leave. Alu
Dacey said the.n: wu no sign of Inq
moving to enforce the order and no
finn deadline for the Americans to
get ~ul. •

•"

•

.~

•
•

••

...
....•

,.•
••
•

...

--------J·~--~~------------~~-------------.~-----~-•

�Con11nentary

•

Page 2 ·
Thlndiy, November 13, 1tfi'~

Thurtlday, November 13, 1897

'EJto.!JlisliL!l in 1948

Bl.ack-gay analogy is flaw~-d
By Ben Wattenberg
and Daniel Wattenberg

111 Court StrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio

Wilh his recent speech to the firs I
annual dinner of lhe Human Rights
Campaign Fund (HRC), Presidenl
Clinlon became the firsl silting president to speak to a gay-rights organi'
zation. His appearance followed
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Vice President Gore 's coming-out
gif11o
silcom star Ellen DeGeneres:
ROBERT L. WINGm
" When the character Ellen came
Publisher
out. millions of Americans were
forced 10 look al sexual orientation
in a new light. "
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Gays are now a powerful political
Controll•r
G-ral Manager
. force in lhe Democ{Siic Pany. Their
vo1er panicipation rates . are high,
and lheir wallets are fat. Bul Clinlon
Tllo ......., - - - . . , , . - - - "". - - oiJopotoo.
already collec1ed · their votes and
"'loaj ,. ,., of bolnfl publl- J)'pod · - . , . , . _ - ollmoy
Each
- - • olgllllln, - - .
checks on his way '1o re-eleclion lasl
aloyt/IM phono · -· Spoclfy•- Hf11MO'O.- ... ,..,..,. year. Beltway insiders puzzled over
fK - . to: ......,. ro ttoo E-. Tllo SMIIMI, 111 C""" St. ,..,.,.,..,., Ohk&gt;
why he would re1um now to gay
f171t; or, FAX to 61f-H2.2157.
rights,
" He likes firsts," one gala
allendce lold me. There was a significanl !ruth in his dry remark. Profoundly affected emotionally and
in1ellec1ually by the black civilrighls struggle. Clinton likes to see
himself as someone in 1he forefront
By WALTER R. MEARS
of
crusades for social justice.
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON. - To flatler voters or polcnJial donors. ask their advi~e .
In going 10 dinner with the HRC,
II is a teSied 1echnique for candida1cs and their panics, so imilalion polls on which sees ilsclf as the moral and
national issues oft en preface appeal s for nioncy or votes. The answers don ' t
matter as much as the asking.
'
Si'f 'DcmocraiS balked al a "cuSiomcr sali sfaction survey" Republican
congress ional leaders want conducted next year on lhe Internal Rev~nuc
Service and lhe complcxi1ies of I he federal tax code.
.
Congress would have to acl 10 get that done. and House Speaker Newl
Gingrich, who at first had lried lo gel il senI ou1 with 1997 income tax forms ,
gave up Monday on gelling legislation for 1hc survey now. He may try again,
and doing so in 1998 could ha ve GOP advanlages in a campaign year.
The GOP sponsors wanl iiiO go 10 an eSiimalcd 118 million laxpayers,lo
ask queslions on issues !hey will he pushing. " A polilical ploy:· Rep.
Charles Rangel. D-N.Y.. said .
Slill. il posts a difficult 1opic for Democrats. since a survey could work 10
their disadvantage. but blocking it could. t_oo.
Gingri\'h said Monday lhal he couldn'l sec why they were "so vchcmenlly and irrationally opposed " to a survey asking Americans abou1 lho
IRS .
.
He said Republicans are encouraging people 10 tell their lax stories.
Opposing the mass mailing survey, lhe adminislralion did nol rejccl the
idea of a 1axpayer poll on IRS problems. "Make it scienlific. make it a legilimale survey, make il something Ihal would he useful lo policy-makers,"
Presidenl Clinlon's spokesman. Mike McCurrv. said.
The Republican-proposed survey would have asked 14 queSiions, among
them ·whelher people would choose reduced income tax rales, simpler
re1ums or 1he current sys1em . Other questions deah with tax fairness. IRS
performance and whal should be done to reform and improve it.
Gingrich had said !he survey would be popular and that average taxpay- By Morton Kond111cke
ers wo.uld be gra1efultha1 somebody in lhc govcmmenl wanlcd !heir opinChampioning major increases in
ions.
biomedical research funding offers a
The Treasury Depanment 10ld House Democrats lhat taxpayer surveys magnificenl legacy 10 President
could be useful in an IRS overhaul , bul a more scientific samplinj! would be Clinton or a member of Congress:
more nearly accurale and far less expensive than 1hc Gingrich plan. the price For 1he neXI 50 years. he or she
of which is subject 10 widely varying estimates. Democrats say $80 million would share in the credil every lime
or more; Ihe Republicans pul the coSI al $20 million 10 $30 million.
a disease is conquered.
"Thai is a 1ccny amounl of money... Sen. Trcnl Loll. the majority leader.
Despile lhis and o1her economic
said Sunday. "Shouldn'l the rcopld1:wc every way possible 10 express their and humanilarian bcnefiiS lo he
feeling s abou1 lhe IRS ' ..
derived. big increases in research
The Republicans denied political molives. But lhe survey would have fit funding arc on the agenda for holh
their agenda for 1he off-year congressional election campaigns - an IRS the administration and Congress. hut
overhaul was their issue first. and they arc banking on rroposals for scrap- not a1 lhe lop. So. n&lt;Hhing·s been
ping the currcnl tall code a~ an issue ncllt year.
do~e .
Senate Rcpuhlicans. for instance.
pul doubling the budget for lhe
Nalional lnSiitulcs of Heallh over
five years as No. II on their liS! of
priorities last January.
Wilh the balanced budge!. 'lax
cu1s and electricity dcrcgulalion
ahead of NIH. il never got consid_crcd. Ncilher did clemicily rcfonn.
for that maucr.
Ncxl year. 1hough. would be a
great time for Congress to make a
heahh research iniliali vc happen. In
an election year. Congress could
take enonnous credit with every citizen who face s lhe fear of a dreaded
disease. Thai includes nearly every·
one cxccpl perhaps 1een-agcrs.
If Congress Slans a research train
barreling down lhe !racks, Prcsidcnl
Clinlon is likely lo hop aboard ,_ and
probably claim 10 be 1he engineer -hut Republicans surely can Slructurc
t~c vehicle so 1ha1 it hears !heir
imprint.
614-992-2156 • F.x 992·2157

---(3011-· bo-.

Asking Americans
if they like the IRS

historical heir to the
black
civil-rishts
movement, Clinton
found the perfect
Saturday night dale.
the archelype of
the black civil-rights
struggle pervaded
lhe rhetoric and sym·
bolism of lhe gala.
The HRC's Elizabelh
Birch quoled Manin .__ ___.
Lulher King twice. National Civil
RighiS Awards were bestowed -- on
1he Leadership Conference on Civil
Righu and Ellen DeGeneres, for
"making all of us feel good about
who we are." Clinlon, for his pan,
echoed Harry Truman's historic
pledge 10 lhe NAACP 50 years ago
to support equal righiS for all Americans. " And when I say all Americans, I mean all Americans." said
Truman in ihal speech.
"All Americans slill means all
Americans," said Clinton, in vowing
his suppon for gay equality. . ·
Unfonunalely, amid all lhe historical posilioning and appropriation
of the moral capi1al of the black
civil-rights slruggle. very liule was
said -- eilher by Clinlon or HRC
· leaders -- abou1 the aclual discrimi-

AccuWeather• forecast for

Doubling ·NIH funds offers legacy

Barry's World

.----

...,

l"..re ,..,.,.. • •

.. I
0 1187 by NEA, In:

"COOL hairstyle!" ·

Letters to the editor
Appreciates Pomeroy hospitality
Dear Ed ilor.
My famil y and I wish to Ihank Ihe citizens of Pomeroy and all·of Meigs
Counly for the wonderful hospilalily shown us on Oct. 25 during "Don Kronenberger Day." The dcdica1ion ceremony for the new amphilhcater. the
reception . and 1hc dinner al Trinity Church were very special c,venJS and will
he remembered fondly for many years 1o come. I am very pleased and proud
10 have panicipalcd in Ihe building of I he amphilhcalcr. and believe _il 10 be
a fiuing memorial for my parems. My thanks 10 all of you. and pan1cularly
1o Village Council Prcsidcnl John Mu.,cr. for making il all happen. I look
' forward 10 visiting Pomeroy in lhc fulurc
Don Kronenberger
Marietta, Ga.

Actually.
Republicans do
deserve credillhis
year for significantly increasing
Clinlon's hudgc1
proposal for NIH
from $13 .1 bil·
lion lo $13.6 billion. or from 2.6
percent a!love the
Kondracke II seal 1991 lcvc I
10 7.1 percent.
Leaders in lhis elTon include 1wo
champions of hcallh research. Rep.
John Poner. R-111., chainnan of lhc
House Approprialions Lahor. Health
and Human Services. and Education
suhcommiucc. who raised Clinton,s
mark lo $13.5 billion. and his Scnale
coun1erpan. Sen. Arlen Sf'CCicr. RPa .. who hiked illo $1J.7 IIi ilion. A
House-Scnale conference scnlcd on
$13.6 billion.
In an era of domestic reductions.
a 7. I percent increase for NIH issignificant. bul it docsn'l have lhe
magic of a drive In double lhe budgel over five years. which would
take increases averaging ahoul 15 ·
percent per year or $30 billion over
five years.
A major barrier 10 passing a doubling measure is the lcgilimatc queslinn: Where docs .lhc money come
from·&gt;
Sen. Tom Harkin. D-iowa. who's
been working on NIH doubling for a
decade. has intruduccd lwo hills uo
Ihe subject. one wilh Speclcr calling

for a I perccn1 tal&lt; on ins.rancc rremiums to raise $6.8 billion per year.
Harkin "s olher rroposal. co-sponsored by Sen. Connie Mack, R-Fla ..
would eliminate the deductibility of
lohacco company rayments under
1he rroroscd national sculcmcnl
with lhc s1a1es. raising about $4 hil·
lion rcr year.
Lasl Friday. Sen. Edward
Kennedy. D-Ma.« .. introduced his
own measure callin~ for a $1.50 per
pack tax on ci~arcttcs -- M5 cents
more than 1he na1innal sclllcmcnl
calls for. with $10 billion of lhe
annual proceeds In fund NIH and ·
SIO billion In go Ill early child
dcvclopmcnl programs and child
care.
1l1c rca~on seems In he ,that
Ha1d]'s Republican colleagues arc
furious with him for jnining
Kennedy in vurious initiatives they
consider ·•taxing and spending.·· and
the rrcssurc gm1o Ha1ch this lime.
Scnalc Rcruhlican leaders Trcnl
Loll of Mississif1pi and Don Nickles
'of Oklahoma rcrortcdly wanllo dictate their own terms on toh~u.::co and
don't want to I.'Ontcnd with u
Kcnncdy -Ha~&lt;:h prorosallhal would
enlisl 1hc surpnrt nf ruhlic hcahh
groups.
The siluation docs raise 1hc qucslion. however: Arc Scna1e. Republicans scrinus ahout douhling NIH. or
is ils position on their priority list
jUSIIalk'!
Tax.in~ tnhat.:co to create a 1rust
fund li&gt;r medical research 1,11akes

sense ho1h on the mcriiS and polilieally. Tobacco is a cause of numerous diseases, and its users ought 10.
pay a fee In gel 1he diseases cured. ;
Politically: taxing tobacco would;
free Republicans frum lhe charg"'
1ha11hcy have been bough! and pait(
for by the lnhacco lobby.
:
Bul !here urc olhcr polenlial•
funding silun:cs for NIH hcsidc S:
tnhacco or insurance. If there truly i ~
a federal hudgcl surplus. thai could:
he laprcd -- lhnugh il is nut a rcli-·.
~1hlc r.:vcnuc stream year iil and year:

.

By JoHph Spear
Forgive my heresy. out the Mandelas arc liring ..my mind.
Nelson and Winnie arc revered as
heroes around lhe world for their
brave stand againsl lhe brulal racism
that was ofiicial policy in Soulh
Africa for 40 years. I. 100, applaud
their courage. Bul thai docsn'l mean
I have 10 like them.
Winnie. you may recall. proved a
bil loo indiscrccl for her husband.
He divorced her. and she now goes
by lhc name of Winnie MadikizelaMandcla. She was conviclcd of
involvement in lhe 1988 kidnapping
of a 14-year-old ac1i vist. Slompic
Sipei, who was killed by one of her
bodyguards. Winnie Mandcla was
sentenced 10 six years in prison for
her crime .
Her punishmcnl was later
reduced 10 a fine , and she is once
again under inveSLigalion for possible complicily in the Sipei murd~r.
She recenlly put in an appearance
al lhc Million Woman March in
Philadelphia. where she was inlroduced by congresswoman Maxine
Walers of California as the " mother
of a nalion and lhe mother of us all.''
and a person who aspires 10 honor
"alllhe children who died in Soulh

· IND.

43°

•lcolumbus!4?'

•

..

Sl!owsiS T·storms Rain

ice

Flurries

Rutland Council mulls...

I

"

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

Via Associ816d Press GrapllicsNer

Today's weather forecast
OhioforealSt
Tonight..Rain cenlral and sou1h.
Rain developing north central...
Mixed wilh snow. Snow developing
nonhwesl and nonheasl scclions.
Snow accumulaling around an inch
northwesl and I lo 3 inches far nonheast. Some sleet and freezing rain
also possible far nonheast. Lows 30

10 35 north .. .Around 40 central and
40 to 45 south.
Friday... Snow...Sleel and freezing
rain far northeasl wilh. occasional
snow norlhwest. Rain ,, elsewhere :
Highs from 30 to 35 nonhweSI and
nonheasl seclions to 35t&lt;) 40 remainder of lhe north. Highs central and
snulh in lhe 40s.

Northern Ohio will ge~
·. rain, snow over weekend
By The Associated Press
Ohio could be in for a wei and
snowy weekend.
Rain is expecled throughout the

slate today wiih some northern areas
receiving some snow, lhe National
Weather Service said. Nonheasl Ohio
could see 1 to 3 inches of snow.

----Hospital news---veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions - Neal
Boneculler Sr., Pomeroy ; Alisha
Gilkey, Langsville; Ronald Davidson,
Racine. .
Wednesday discharges - Ronald
·
Han.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Nov. 12 - Cassandra

Allison, Brady Curry, Melissa Colburn, Marilyn Slagle, Sybil French.
Harold Mcrrtman, Cassandra Owens,
Paul Gheanng. Dana Zerkle, Norma
Peare, John Troller, Jessrca Gauze,
Bonnie Shafer, Ada Chambers. .
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Bnun
Caldwell. son. Gallipolis.
(Published with permission)

Continued from page 1
Don Davis encouraged council to
apply for a granl 10 conslrucl a new
access road 10 1he sewer plant. The
exjsting road is flood prone, making
the plan I inaccessible durin g times of
high waler.
Council is also examining another granl from lhe stale 10 help fund ·
repairs 10 emergency shellers.
II was reponed that work on the
new heating system for the Civic
Cenler should begin Monday. Council is also checking on inslalling a
new furnace in the council office.
Council also received prices on
new computers and is seek ing more
eSiimales before purchasing a new

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................... 47').
Akzo ...................................... 84%
AmrTech .............................. 7o";.
Ashland 011 ...........................45'!.

AT&amp;T ....................................... 48
Bank One ............................ .49'/oo
Bob Evans ............................ 18':1
Borg·Warner ........................ 51 '1.
Champion ............................... 17
Charm Shps ..........................4 ·~.
City Holdlng .......................... 40'o
Federal Mogul ...................... 44'·
Gan neH .................................54'·
Goodyear ............................ .so;.
Kmart .................................... 13'1•
kroger ....................................34\
Lands End ...........................34"1.
Lim lied ................................. 24~.
Oak Hill Flni .......................... 20),
OVB ......................................... 36
One Valtey ............................. 39),
Peoples ................................. 43).
Prem Flnl ................................. 26
Rockwetl .............................. 45';.
RD/Shell ,................................. 52
Sears ..................................... 46~
Shoney's ................................4'1.
Star Bank .............................. 47'.1
Wendy's .................. ~ ............. 20'&gt;
Worthlngton ..........................20~

_._fl_

computer which will be used by he
police depanmenl lo electronically
file !raffle citations with the slate.
Frank Zuspan of Modern Sanilalion, which handles trash service at
lhe Civic Center and sewer plan!,
called on council to see if there were
any problems with lhe service. No
complainiS were aired.
Eskew presenled lhe following
financial report: general fund ,
$8,425.62 ; ·civic· cenler, $8.047.97;
police, $822.29; law enforcement,
$487.33; street. $3,768.03; highway,
$5 ,604.68; water deparlment,
$9872.19; sewer, $8,526.73 ; sewer
deb1 fund , $17.971 .15; utility depanment, $12.382.35; replacemenl fund,
$20,196.18; FEMA fund, $68,472.14;
tolal, $136,332.51.
In olher business, council
approved lhe mayor's reporl of $487
wilh. lhe slale's share of $120 and
approved the minutes of the Oclober
meeling.

Chimney fire reported
Only minor smoke damage was reported following a chimney fire a1
an Enlerprise residence near Pomeroy early Wednesday evemng.
Firefighlers of lhe Pomeroy Volun1eer Fire Departmenl, assisted by
Middleport firefighters. responded 10 the home of Brian Hupp, according to Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny Zirkle.
The residence had a defective chimney liner full of creosole that caughl l
lire, Zirkle said.

Hit/skip investigated

. .. . . .

The Pomeroy Police Depanmenl invesligaled a mmor h•t/sk1p lO CI·
denl at lhe Kroger's slore in Pomeroy Wednesday even mg.
A pickup 1ruck owned by William Stuckey. Rac!nc, was struck by
anOiher vehicle whose driver lhen left me scene, accordmg to a Pomeroy
Police Departmenl report. The !ruck suslained light damap:e.

Employers to benefit
from Wall Street windfall
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
employers will get a break on 1heir
workers' compensalion bills after all.
A big year on Wall Slreet enabled ·
1he Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation Oversighl Commission lo
unanimously approve a $1.3 billion
dividend for companies lhal pay inlo
lhe employer-funded syslem, officials
said Wednesday.
The news came a week after voters overwhelmingly rejeclcd a sweeping rewrite of the sys1cm thai the nonpanisan Legislalive Bud~el Office

said would save companies aboul
$100 million a year by reducing benefil s and li ghlcning eligibility rules.
~
The slate-run in surer against
claims for workplace injuries earned
18.6 percent on its investments dur·
ing the 12 monlhs ended June 30.
said Terry Gasper. the agency's chief
financial officer. The bureau had
budgeted for a 6.75 percent rclurn .

Meigs County
announcements

Meeting set
A meeling for area craflcrs intercited in panicipaling in a color crafls
Continued from pa1e 1
calalog will be held on Nov. 19 at
throttghoutlhc day on Thursday. No 6:30p.m. al the Meigs Multipurpose
announccmenl has been made as 10 Senior Center.
whelher classes a1 the high school
will b&lt;; in session on Friday.
Dance to be held
Soulsby asked lhal anyone wilh
A round and square dance will be
infonnation about the incidcnl con- held allhe VFW Posl9053, Snlurday,
tact the sheriffs department.
-_.., '
8 10 II p.m. Guy Thoma and True
Country will provide lhc music and
,caller wilt be Jim Brown.

Eastern ...

POMEROY
Near Pameroy-Maaon Bridge
992·2586
VINTON
Gallla County Display Yard
155 Main St.
388-8603

ofVetera~~ Memorial Hospital

nut
It alsn makes sense for a series nl~

··stn... tax~s -- nn akohnl . cnvtrnn . . :

mcnt:ll polluJion. and maybe even;
lhc fal conlcnl of JilUd -- 10 pay for:
rl!s~an.: h .

Yet another source would he 1o•
hrcak dnwn the hudgct agrccmcnrs;
filcwalls hclwecn domcslic spend-;
in~ and c.lcft.!nsc to create. a mec.li&lt;.:ul ~
LruSI fund.
The npponunity and challenge;
for Rcpuhliran s is tn figure nut -- :
and soon -- how to pay for an NIH •
iniliativc or else allow Kennedy and:
his fellow Democrats to slcal lhe;
issue hack and poinl lingers al the
GOP's tobacco stains in the process.:
Bull he hesl solulion of all would'
he a Climon-GOP-Kcnncdy-HarkinMack-Sf1Cclcr-Poner-Gingrieh
grand initiative 10 conquer disease. ~
(Morton Kondracke Is execu·:
tive editor of Roll Call, the news··
paper of Capitol HOI.)
•

Over

~

26

eard

,.
I

grour's tcrrorisllaclics againsllsrucl ·here are without morals," he said;
with a public embrace of Arafal. Then a few days later. he rushci
"We regard tho PLO as one of !he hack lo prcscnl Gadhafi, h)s "dear
mosl progressive liberation move- brolher leader," with Soulh Africa·~
mcnls in the world," Mandela said, highcsl award for foreigners .
;
"and we are goin@ 10 conlinuc 1ha1
Whal Mandcla now waniS In do.\
friendship."
analysts believe, is broker an end ,.,.1
In July 1991 , Mandcla Slopped 1he United Nalions sanclinns thai;
off in Havana. where diclalor CaSiro were imposed un Tripoli after Gad:~
awarded him lhe Jose Mani medal, hafi refused to release lhe Libyani
Cuba's highcsl 'hoimr. The 1wo men agen1s who arc thoughlln he rc spon-;
hugged and Mandcla praised Fidel 's siblc for lhc '1988 bombing of Pan t
revolution .
Am Fhgh1 I 03 over Lockcrhic,•
The lesson thai the Cuban rcoplc Scolland, thai took lhc lives of 270~
liad 1augh11hc world, Mandela said. penplc.
t
was that "rio mauer wha1 1hc odds,
This is where Mandela's infalua-'
no muller whal difficulties you have lion wilh despols gets loo gamy for ;
had lo struggle under, there can be my laste.
•
no surrender." And then he added. lo
he kisses Ihe scum ball :
. When
' .
a populacc 1that is decidedly unfree : Gadhaf1. how can he not lhink of 1hc•
"his a case of freedom or dcalh. "
mothers, fathers , daughlers , sons.:
In September 1990, while trihal sislcn; and brothers who were blown •
warfare raged in South Africa. Man- ou1 of the sky on thai cold December :
deJa !raveled 10 Libya lo hug Moam- evening'? How can he no1 laSie 1hc :
mar and -- no joke -- 10 receive lhe hlood of lhc innocent college slu- :
Gadhafi lnlcrnalional Prize for dents who were on their way home •
Human RighiS.
for the Chrislmas holidays'?
;
Last monlh, 1he Soulh African
I'm sorry. bul the whole thing
leader returned to Tripoli -- no1 once, nauscalcs me.
bul twice in a single week.
'
On 11\j: inilial visit, he lamb sled
Joseph Spear is a syndicated :
the Uniled Slates for crilicizi hi s writer for Newspaper Enterprise '
trip. "Those who say I shoul nol be Assoc:iation.
:

•

IMansfield !43• I•

'

.

· Africa's rcvolulion.'-'
Nothing like
bein@ preached lo
by sinners.
Nelson MandeJa , prcsidcnl of
South Africa since
1994, spcnl 27
years in prison in "-'-=defense of his
Spear
principles and .is
thus regarded as a model of moralily. This is ironic, as he has demon-'
straled a boundless affection for
such tyranls and terrorists as Vasser
Arafal, Fidel Caslro and Moammar
Gadhafi .
Up to a poinl, this is understandable. These aging praclitioners of .
riot and revolution succored Mandela and his African National Congress wilh money, manpower,
weapons and words during lho long
struggle against apanheid. Mandela
deeply apprecialed !heir suppon and
has demonSJrated a frerce loyally.
He mel wilh Arafat in February
1990, jusl weeks afler being released
from prison. in January 1992, MandeJa visi1ed the Palestine Liberation
Organizalion 's headquaners in
Tunisia and tacilly endorsed lhe

•

IToledo I 40' I

Holzer HOme ·Care

The Mandelas
are too much to take
.
.

6:31 p.m., volunteer fire departUnits of lhe Meigs County Emerment
and squad to Enterprise, chimgency Medical Service recorded six
ney
fire
at Brian Hupp residence, no
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units
injuries
reported, Middlepon squad
responding included:
assisted.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
'
4:38 p.m., Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, RUTLAND
1:51 a.m., Meigs Mine 2, Terry
Kalhryn Jacobs, Holzer Medical CenWard,
O' Bi en~ ss Memorial Hospital,
ler, Pomeroy squad assisted ;
9:21 p.m., Overbrook Nursing Central Di spatch squad assis1ed;
5:40 p.m. , Depo1 S1ree1, Bonnie
Center, Middlepon, John Nelson,
Searls,
PVH ;
Pleasanl Valley Hospilal, Middlepon
9:31
p.m., Hysell Run Road, Betsquad assis1ed.
ly
Williams,
HMC.
POMEROY

coodilions and high

MICH.

Why compel tolerance in federal '
nation and harassment faced by gay
Americans loday.
law when intolerance is being :
Clinlon eloquenlly expressed the steadily eradicated from lhe cuhure? :
ENDA
proponents
would
argument for gay equaliiY• renecting
lhat gayness has nothing 10 do with counler. "Why nOI?'' For one thing, ,
"lhe ability to read a balance hook, congressional aulhority lo ban pri- ·
fix a broken bone or change a spark vate employment discrimination is :
plug."
highly circumscribed by the Consti-:
But when a movement sees itself tution. After decades of congress1on- ·
as a civil-rights movement, il al mandates on private employers. :
inevitably seeks civil-righls reme- Congress should lie forced lo look al :
dies. Not coincidentally, the primary constitulionallimiiS to iiS power in a
legislative goal of the HRC is pas- more open light.
'
sage of lhe Employmenl Non-Dis· Seco~d. the scope of anli -dis&lt;
crimination Act (ENDA), a bill criminalion law is oflen expanded ·
which' would prohibil privale far beyond congressional intent by ·
employers from discriminating . 1he regulalions lhat implemenl il and :
against gays and lesbians. ·
lhe court rulings lhat enforce it.
:
While the bill has been carefully·
The HRC argues that i1 is s1ill •
legal in 39 stales lo fire someone for written to preclude a new category:
being gay. True. bul with limited of hiring preferences for gays based,
exceptions. private employment on statistical imbalances. il could
decisions are left lo private employ- slill resull in exlremcly confusing'
ers . Legally, they can fire someone and conlenlious new sexual harassfor being homosexual -- or for being men! rules. lnlenl io discriminale
sexually promiscuous, adullerous. will have 10 be proved, pulling the
sexually abslinenl or lefl-handed. burden of proof where il belongs -They can. bu1 do lhey"1
oh lhe plaintiff.
The analogy be1wecn the gayWhere anti-gay · discrjmin~ti.\!D•
righls movement and the black civil- docs occur, it can be bannejl!ly O!!ln:
righl~ struggle may mask more lhan
pany policy or slale law. Add il
it reveals. Before the civil-righiS should be denounced and s!llm-- •
revolution. private discriminalion lized. The public is educa!lle on tho
against blacks was n01 subjecl of homosexuality. and recent :
jusl rermissiblc; il social hislory demonslrales 1ha1 pub· ·
was widely and per- lie service campaigns can be highly .sislcntly pracliccd -- cffcctivc in discouraging undesirand legally prescribed able bChavior like smoking. drunken .
in lhc segrcgalcd drivinj! and drug abuse. ·
Sou1h .
If lhc wcll,funded 'gay-righ!S c
Amcri&lt;:ans began movemen1 reallocated some of ils.· ·
looking at sexual ori- lobl)ying and PAC money lu a puh- :·
enlation iQ a more lie service campaign. il could probaopen light long before • bly persuade many mon: Ame.ricans ..
Ellen came out. 1hat being gay has no1hing 10 do with
According to Gallup the abilily 10 change a spark plug; in .
polls, the perccnlagc facl. il could probably persuade
of Americans helicv- more Americans lhal being gay has
ing lhat homosexuals nolhing .lo do wilh lhe conlenl of
should not he discrim - one's character. ci1her.
inalcd against in the
Ben Wattenberg is a senior fel·
workrlacc rose from · low at the Amerkan Enterprise
56 ·percenl in 1977 lo Institute and is tbe moderator of
SO perccnl today.
PBS's "Think Tank.".

...---Local briefs-.....,

Meigs EMS logs 6 calls

OHIO Welltller
Friday, Nov. 14

The Daily Sentmel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

•

'

'

During National
Home Care Month

Holzer Home Care
of.Veterans Memorial Hospital

honors its highly skilled
staff for their dedicated and
caring efforts to provide
quality care to their patients.

�.

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

·
Page4
Thursday, November 13,1997

Hawks get by Pacers 89-86; Wizards shock Bulls 90-83
now we ' ve lost four of our tlrst
eight," Steve Kerr said. " I cenainly
don't think we 're panicking, but

"It's a combination of us putting focus. It's just great effort," Atlanta
him in bad positions, of him trying to coach Lenny Wilkens said. "The
do too much and of him laking bad great thing about this team is they
shots," Kerr said. "That's every- trust each other. Different guys hit the
body's fault. Don't pin it on him." . big shots."
In other games, Phoenix defeated
Suns 103, Bucks 9S
Milwaukee 103-95, Philadelphia surAI Phoenix, Jason Kidd had 16
prised Houston 114- 100, Sacramen- points, 13 rebounds. eight assists and
to drubbed Orlando 115-89, Utah four steals as the Suns beat Milwaudowned Vancouver 98-80, New York kee al home for lith straight time .
shelled Toronto 93-70, Denver beat
Cliff Robinson had his best game
Boston 96-86 and Detroit clobbered yel as a member of the Suns, scoring
Golden State 102-71.
21 points. Rex Chapman also scored
Hawks 89, Pacers 86
21.
At Indianapolis, Travis Best's
Milwaukee, which entered the
game-tying three-point attempt game with the best three-point field
rimmed out at the final buzzer. He goal percentage (.462) in the league,
was taking the final shot becaus;, went only 1-of-8 from behind the arc
Reggie Miller, who scored 30 point!!! as its three-game winning streak
fouled out with I :21 to play. It was came to an end.
just the second disqualification in the
Glenn Robinson led Milwaukee
past three seasons for Miller.
with 31 points and Ervin Johnson
Dikembe Mutombo had 25 points added 16.
and I5 rebounds, Steve Smith had 21
AI 4- I, the Suns are off to their
points, I0 in the fourth quarter, and . best stan since 1992-93 when they
Mookie Blaylock had 18 points, opened 5- I and went on to the NBA
including a 19-foot jumper with eight Finals.
seconds left that helped finish off the
76en 114, Rockets 100
Pacers.
At Houston, Allen Iverson had 26
The Hawks, the last unbeaten points and 15 assists and the 76ers
team in the Eastern Conference, have held on ·for their tlrst victory of the
yet to allow I00 points in a game.
season.
"I'm really pleased with our
After trailing most of the game,
.

we're concerned.''

By CHRIS SHERIDAN

AP Basketball Writer
It's already a long way from the
top of the Central Division to the
region of mediocrity presently occupied by the Chicago Bulls.
That's the 4-4 Chicago Bulls.
purveyors of pedestrianism, for those
of you who haven't been paying
attention.
The defending champs are already
four games behind the Atlanta
Hawks, who improved the best stan
in franchise history to 8-0 Wednesday
night with an 89-86 victory over the
Indiana Pacers.
Chicago, meanwhile, had another
poor performance and lost 90-83 at
home to the Washington Wizards. It's
the first 4-4 start for Michael Jordan
and the Bulls since 1988.
Last year, by comparison, they
didn't lose their founh until Dec. 26.
In the previous year, marked by
Chicago's 72- 10 record, defeat No.4
didn't come until Feb. 4.
"It was a disaster the last two
years whenever we lost a game, and

"The past couple of years. teams
would come in thinking they didn't
have a chance. Now people are starting to think we're vulnerable," Luc
Longley said. "I don't really have a
gond answer for what's happening .."
Chris Webber scored eoght of hiS
17 points during a 12-2 second-half
spurt and drew a technical foul
against Dennis Rodman that precipitated a game-clinching 5-0 run.
Washington held Chicago to 30 second-half points as the Bulls appeared
weary from an embarrassing 101 -80
defeat at Cleveland the night before.
. Jordan scored 28 points but was
only I0-of-28 from the floor. He is
shooting 38 percent and averaging 24
points - nearly eoght below his
NB A-record career norm.
"He has a couple of excuses that
he's not going to use- a dinged-up
wrist and finger, which cause him to
shoot nat," coach Phil Jackson said.
"As a team ... our shoot ing was
pathetic."
_
Jordan refused to talk to reporters
after the game, but Kerr said the
team's leader is obviously frustrated.

the Rockets built a 90-M4 lead with
10:45 lo play. But the 76ers didn't
fold.
Houston made only two more
field goals the rest of the game and
the 76ers ouiscored the Rockets 174for a 101 -94 lead with 5:46to play.
Kings liS, Magic 89
At Orlando. Mitch Richmond,
who has led the Kings in scoring in
all seven of their games, had 25
points as the Kings crushed Orlando.
Mahmoud Abdui-Rauf added 20
for the Kings. who placed six players in double figures and reached 100
points for the first time this season.
, "Mitch played like a true rock
tonight ," Sacramento coach Eddie
Jordan said. " We haven't seen too
much of that this year. but he has a
lot of pride, he's a fighter and a heck
of a pro. When he plays like that, I'd
like to have him on my team for a
long time."
Jazz 98, Grizzlies 80
At Salt Lake City. Karl Malone
scored 26 points and Jeff Hornacek
added 19 for Utah, which made two
changes to its starting lineup as
Adam Keefe replaced Bryon Russell
and Greg Foster took over for Greg
Ostertag.
"We'd been playing so had at ·

times - all of us - the last few
games. that (coach) Jerry (Sloan) just
decided to shake things up a little,"
said Hornacek, who scored his season-high in just 28 minutes, including three three-pointers.
Foster finished with 10 points on
5-of-6 shooting and Keefe scored
four points and grabbed nine
rebounds as Utah improved to 3-4.
Knieks 93, Raptors 70
At Toronto, Larry Johnson scored
27 points, more than twice his season
average. and New York coasted.
Patrick Ewing had 17 points and
eight rehounds and Chris Dudley had
II points· and a game-high II
rebounds for the Knicks, who led for
almost the entire game .
Celties 96, Nuggets 86
At Basion, Antoine Walker had 19
points and 12 rebounds and the
Celtics won for the first time since
opening night. Ron Mercer added 16
points, including eight in the founh
quarter, and Travis Knight had 17two shy of his career-high.
Denver dropped to 0-6 under
rookie coach Bill Hanzlik.
Pistons 102, Warriors 71
At Oakland, Lindsey Hunter
scored 22 points and Brian Williams
added 19 us Detroit broke its fovegame losing streak

Devils slip past Rangers 3-2; Capitals beat Penguins 4-1
assist to ex.tend his point-scoring
streak to eight games. " We just
· haven 't played well enough at home
to get our fans into it."
The Devils were leading 2-1 when
New Jersey's ·Bobby Holik unleashed
a 62-foot shot from just overthe blue
lone thai beat Rangers goalie Mike
Richter high on the stick side at
10:14.
That shot, only one of three for the
Devils in the third period, proved to
be the winner as New York 's Niklas
Sundstrom scored his second goal.of
the game less than two minutes later
to pull the Rangers within a goal.
" He had it coming pretty good,"
said Richter, "but at that distance I
still should be able to react. I take
credit for that one."
The Devils, who entered the game
with the NHL's top defense and the
NHL' s top goaltender in Martin
Brodeur. held on to extend their winnong streak to four games. They are

By The Associated Press
The ice is usually lousy, the fans
are always rowdy, and that's just the
way the Rangers like it at Madison
Square Garden. This year it seems
their opponents Iike it, too.
The New Jersey Devils added to
New York's home-ice frustration
with a 3-2 win Wednesday night that
dropped the Rangers to 2-4-4 this
season in their own building.
What 's going on here, Wayne
Gretzky'!
"It's frustrating now because it's
too gond of an arena and too much of
an advantage for the home team and
we' re just not taking advantage of
·' that and we haven 't given our fans an
.• opponunity to get involved in any of
the games," said Gretzky, who had an

10-0-0 this season when leading
after the second period.
.
" We got a break on our side,"
Brodeur said. "You usually don 't
beat Mike Richter from 60 feet."
The loss in the first meeting this
season between the metropolitan-area
rivals, broke a three-game unbeaten
streak for New York ( 1-0-2).
"We played a good road game for
40 minutes," Holik said. "We could
have {llayed better for 6b. But our
system has been great. Everyone has
been aggressove and pressuring the
puck."
Petr Sykora and Brian Rolston
also scored for New Jersey.
Elsewhere in the NHL, it was :
Washington 4, Pittsburgh I; the 'New
York Islanders 2, Florida 2; Boston 3.
Dallas 3; Carolina 6, Edmonton 4:
Vancouver 5, San Jose 2; and Montreat 4, San Jose 3 in overtime.
Capitals 4, Penguins 1
At Pittsburgh, Adam Oates scored

•

Scoreboard
.•
•

Wednesday's scores

Basketball
NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantk Di¥1sion

w
.......·............. .4

Ira

New Jcracy ...

J. l&lt;l.

,I

.ROO
2 .71-4

Mi11m1 ...... ... ........... ....... ..S

_._ .. s

New York .....

•
•
•

.1
......... .1
......... ..... .2

Orlnntlo .
w ~sh in,lon

Buscon ,. ...... ..
~iladeiJihia ....

•' .429

................. 1

.615
.1429

!ill

-

'·

2
2'

4
~

.2!16

~

.167

·'

-~'·)

Untrll Dh-iMn

"

A.llanla .. :
OI:Lrlnlle ..... .... ,.
Mitwauk« ........

•

•
•

.4
..4
OIIC~!J ···-' ............... .. . ........4
ClE ELANIJ .......... ... .. ..... J
Delroit .. _
...J
lndinna ....
2
Torumo .. ................ ....... 1

-·-

1.00
2 .667
2 .667
500

•·'

·""' •
,..

.J75
l 2R6
6 1-U
~

~

I' .

Midwnt Diwbion

.w
San Antonio .... .................... 6
Minnc-~ul;l .

•

............. .... ........ .4
................. ,...... J

D:1llas
Hmu1ori' ... ..... ............. ..... J
..... .. .. J
Uwh
V~Ri:I'KIYI!f .
.......... J
O.:nvcr .. ................ .............0

Padftt Oiwiston
l.A Llkcu
........... ~
Ponhmtl
......... ---- ~
Pht~eni.l.
.... ___ .4
Scmtlc .. .
.. ................. ~
Sa..;r.UI~I\10 ...........
..... l
l...A tl1ppb1 .........
.. .. 1
Gultkn S1a1~ ...... .
...0

L tiL

!ill

2' 667

I' ·
,.

K~7

I

.• Ill

)
)

.ICJil

- '.'!'

42'1

'I

.\75
OliO

6
0

100

I

ltH

I

.ROO

2
~

'

J':
S':

-' '
I
I

.m

.2!16
.167

!i

•
•

4':

1 .0110

New

En~tl;md ... ,..

Cok&gt;r.Mk1,... , .......................... A

6

.400

~~~::::~::::::·: :::::::::::::::::·:::j

:. :~~~

Pomeroy, Ollin 4S769, Ph. 092-2 151\. Secolad
c:lau pas1age paid a1 Prunetoy, Ohio.
The AssociMed Prtll, and the Olllo

New~p~per Auoci11tion.

Otuo 451119.

100

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C.nin" or M.....- .....

One Weelt.................................................. S2.00
One Monii'I ................................................SX.70
One Year ........................._.................... SIH4J.wt

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dlily .................................................... :JS Cen11

Sublcriben· 1101 desiriaaiO PlY thl: Cartier msy
rcmll in advance direct 10 The Dslly Se:nllnel
on slhre-e, Jill or 12
halls. Crcdl1 wUI M
pven earner cacti week.

moM"

No Jubacriplion by mail permiued in art••
where home carrier service It available.
Publiner reserves the riJhl to acfilul ra1u dur·

Ina tiM subscription ptriod. Subtcrlpltol'l ule
cha~ainattat

,_,.....c_,

MAIL SVIIICIIlmDNS
1:1 Weeltl................................................. $27.30
216 "'eeta.....................- ..........................SSJ.H2

52W..u ..............................................SI~ .56

..... ~M&lt;Opc_.,

13W..u................................................ I2'J.25
26 ............................... ......................... 156.111&lt;
52 ...................................................... 1109.72

J!

+I

(I~

~:!

• " "'"" "'
' "
1.1
Ill
Ill

---- .1 12
. .... " IJ 2

:'i:!

ol

"'

71)

Colortu.ll~ ttl oPhiiOOelphm, 7 JO p.m

Toron1n m Ch1 ~11~n. IL\() jl .nl
Bosmn lll St. louis. K. ~II run
Monlrtal at Phoeni x. IJ p.m
Car_olina at Cal11-a.ry. IJ run. ·

Sa n Jn~c 111

Ln~

.

Allj!.dcs. IO:.ltlf'-111

Friday's games
Pm-bur~th nl N Y . lbnt~cr ~. 7:;10 p m.
Colorndo at New Jt!UC)' . 7:30 t•.m.

Porllal'IIJ at Seattk. 10 p.m.

N.Y. Isl:mUers :uT:1mp;1Ray. 7:JOp.m

Philadelphia nt Floridn. 7:.10 fl·"'·
\lancollvcr a! Anaheim, IOJO p.m.

Hockey
NHL standings

Transactions

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Adanllr DMtien

W J. I lb. Cif
25

~9

24

~ -~

Baseball
Ameril'lln Lrat:u~
~ CLEVElAND INDIAt'JI S..A~rct:~ tu terms
45
wllh lHP P11L1I Anenmochcr on 11 IWO•)'CI1r con·

~·

lflll.1 .

•

Christmas Kick-Off
Edition
Is Coming On Wednesday

November·· 26th
Don't
Be Left Out
.
Call 992-2155
Dave Harris Ext. 104 or
Don Riffle Ext. 105
'

Octroi! al OU:IWII, 7:JO rIll

friday's game

:IIi J
New J~y ....................J 2 S 0

24 .17
20
20

Tonight•s games

Tonight's games

PhiiMlphia ..................... II

"

Wushingum 011 Buft'alu. 7 p.m

Wednesday's scores

Iual

'

''
•

•. 7
.......... IC 7
...... ,.... jIll
6 12 I

n

-~()

47

Oi,i~tlun

, ...... ~.IJ

...

Bnston \Dalla.~ J (tiel
Carolioo 6, Edmonton 4
V!Ul..:OU11er ~- Som )&lt;l!;.: 2
Montreal4. Anaheim J (0Tl

COLUMBUS 96. Srm JoK 70
Seolilh: M6, Pbilacklphia 79

POSTMASTER: Send addrtu- correc:tiofls to
The 01ily Sentinel, Ill Court S1., Pomtroy.

II
1.1

~'!

~·
4o

NY . blnndcn 2, Flori\~;• 2 Hit: I

England all Allant:l. ?:.lO p.m.
Phil!ldtlphi:t ru Ponla.ntl, I0 p.m.

Published every arternOOrl, Monday rhrouah
Friday, Ill Coun Sr., Pomeroy, Ohio, by lhe
Ohio Valley Publishing CompanyJOanncu Co.,

IK

41

Wa•hinc,ton 4, PiUNburtth I
New krsey .~.N . Y . Rnn~cn 2

.6.'\6

6 .-':'i.lli
K .273

- ~:'i

26 60
24 61

'•
"' '
'

Wednesday's scores

!I~J

~w

(USPS ll3-H41)

cUnp1 may bt implemt1led by
daralion of tile sublcriplloQ.

PadFk

Wnltrh Confrnncr
P0r1huut... ....................... ....1 J
Lt'"l &amp;nc:h . .......... .. ...... 6 5

The Daily Sentinel

Mn~btr.

.. ... ?

Phil.:kklphia...
·---- ~
1\tl:mm ....... .... ............... ........ ~

...

·'

Color:klo .......
Annheim ...
Lo5 A np;dcs ..
Edmunrun ....
SanJ~ .......
Calgary .....
VM~cnuv~r ...

J. l&lt;l.
1
4

""

lO

~s
••• ~·

Occroit ..
Sl. Lollis ..
12 I 2
Dalla~ ..
....... ,.. 10
Phoenix ... ................. ...tl J l
Cllkt1gn .......
I
Toromo .......
.. S

Eaar-rn Confrnn«

w

. . '' •·'
'
•
'
-·-

)9

.00

scored for the C;,m~ks, whn won for
the 11rst time since a 5-1 victory over
Dallas un Oct. 21.
Gnaltendcr Arturs lrhc, a limner
Shark, turned awuy 30 of shots to
help deny San Jose 's bid for its first
three-game winning streak in two
years.
Canadiens4
Mighty Ducks J (OT)
At Anaheim, Calif.. Valeri Bure
scored with 52 seconds left in overtime as Montreal won its sixth
straight game.
Vladimir Malakhnv gntlhe tying
goal with I:37 left in the third period , Martin Rucinsky extended his
scoring slrcak lo four games ;,md
Saku Koivu also scored fnr the CaQadicns, whose winning strcuk is rhcir
longest si nee Octoher 1995.
Montreal goalie Jocelyn Thibault
made 22 saves and ended Tecmu
Selunne's career-high 11-gamc goalscoring streak.
Joe Sacco sr.:orcd on lhe lirsl
penalty shot in the Ducks' five -year
history.

The Daily Sentinel's

~2

Crn1nal Dl¥i.'lion
WI. I Ell, (if {iA
42
27
' " 12 4

r..m

ABL standings
....... IU

....

+I
4R

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Tumntn .:n Bt.l!ifnn . 1 p.m
Miami m lntlia.M. 1 r m.
Dl=nver a1 Orlando. 7::.0 p.m. ·
Sa.:r.uncmo ill Allama, 7:.l0 p.m.
L A. L&amp;ka.~ ;n Hous lon. K p m.
Charlolle 111 Chkago. IUO p.m.
Seanlc :11 U1ah. 9 p.m.
Phocni• a1 Pnnlantl, 10 p.m

COLUMBUS

.

PiUshllrgh .
Comlina ..
Bol'li1lu ....

Friday's eames

Iual

61

'·~"

14

.~2

... 12 4 2 26 60
. 10
2 22
.......... ... 9 J
21 ~~
20 ~ -l
..7 9
17 ll
.... ~
14

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

DllliWll ..

0

·'
•·'

6 10

Northtast Di¥1sion
Bo~ton .

CLEVFJ...AND al Nl.'W Jer~y. ? · ~U p.m
W~~l1in ~ro.n m Minnestl tlt. K p m.
PlulaUclpllia m D:lllil ~. KJO p.n1
L.~ . L1ken u1 San A~1\lnio, K : ~ p.m.
Mllwallk« ll1 L.A. Chrpcr~ . IOJO p.m.

..

22 .14

Montll:al

Tonight's games

,,

Wm•hingwn ...... ........ ...... 10 7 2
N.Y. hlan~okr): ...
...... 7 7 4
N_Y. Rangers ...
... ..4 7 7
Ftorid&lt;1.
..... S
Tnmpa Bay _..
.....1 I] 2

''

De! roll :11 St:tula!. 10 p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Iwo

Bus10n %, Denver K!i
At lama ~9. Indiana 86
S:Knmw.:mo 115, Orlando K9
New York IJJ, Toronto 70
W&lt;~shinj! lon 90. Chu:ago 10
PhihwJdphi!l I I-'. Huu~1un 100
Ulllh 11K. VancouY~ r liD
Pbocn1x 10~. Milw:tukl'\! 9~
[.l\:lmit 10'2, Gul!.kn St:nc 71

one goal and assisted on two others the icc for a sixth attacker. the Bruin a four-goal second· period.
ins tied it when Donato rurpcd u
Capitals goalie Olaf Kolzig lost bouncing puck oiT Stars dcfcnsc1nan
his shutout with 58 seconds left in the Dcrian Hatcher and p&lt;L&lt;l goalie Ed
third period when Jiri Slegr scored.
Bel four.
Washington ended a four-game
Boston is 3- 1· 1 in its lust II vc
road losing streak while the Pen- games.
guins' wiolcss streak reached five
Hurricanes 6, Oilers 4
games (0-3-2).
At Edmonton, Alberta, Smni
Islanders 2, Panthers l
Kapancn recorded his lirst r.:arccr hal
At Miami, Brie Fichaud slopped trick as Camlina c•tcndcd Edmon·
37 shots and New York scored two ton's season-high winless streak '"
goals in a I :26 span in the second seven games.
period.
Kapancn, a 1995 draft rick from
New York had a potential ~arne­ Finland, scored twice in the second
winning goal waved on· with 2:25 left period when the Hurricanes huilt a 4in regulation. Green's blast gra1.cd the 2 lead.
left post and wa.' disallowed after
He "'mplctcd his three-goal night
being reviewed .
· in the llnal period with his te~m-lcad·
Florida also missed a chance to ing IOth goal.
win in regulatic&gt;n when Juhan
Canuek.&lt; 5, Sharks l
Garpenlov hit the cro&gt;sbar with 24
At San Jose, Calif.. Pavel Burc
seconds left .
scored on " penally shot, igniting a
Bruins J, Stars 3
thrcc-gmd lirst period_as Vuncnuvcr
At Dallas. Ted Donato scored the snapped its duh·recun.l I 0-~mn~ los·
tying goal with 41.5 secumls left after ing streak.
·
BostQn pulled its goalie.
Steve Stains, Trevor Linden, JyrWith goaltender Byron Dafuc niT ki Lummc &lt;md Mike Sillinger alsu

For More Details
ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS MONDAY
NOVEMBER 24TH

12 NOON

•

Thursday, November 13, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

Six Meigs County
player get all-TVC
volleyball honors

--

Eastern dominated the selections forthe i997 aii-Tri-Vallcy Conference
Hocking Division volleyball. team as Eastern's Valerie Karr earned "Player
of the Y~ar" honors in the Hocking Division and Don Jackson earned "Coach
of the Year" honors.
Three other Eagles- senior Michelle Caldwell, junior Valerie Karr and
senior Kim Mayle - earned first-team honors. The Eagles ended the season at21 -3, the best record .in school history.
Southern had two players earn first team honors in senior Cynthia Caldwell an~ junior Kim Sayre. Eastern's Jessica Brannon earned second-team
honors as voted on by the si• teams' coaches in the Hocking Division.
In the Ohio Division, Pam Boone of Belpre earned "Coach of the Year"
honors, while Alexander's Mel Krumme and Belpre's Christina Eaton shared
"Player of the Year" honors.
Meigs players Tanya Miller and Carissa Ash earned tlrst-team honors.
All-District 13 selections will be released later this week.

'

I I
1

CYNTHIA CALDWELL

Ohio Division
COI!&lt;h of lhe year: Pam Boone, Belpre
·
Co-player of the year: Mel Krumme, Alexander; Christina Eaton, Belpre
Olher firsl-leam members: Carissa Ash and Tonya Miller, Meigs;
Clare Ring. Belpre; Mandy Thompson, Natalie Bobo, Alexander; Punky
Buchanan, Wellston
Second-team members: Aimee Adams and Ali Shafer, Nelsonville-York;
Renee Lawson, Belpre; Alicia Artin. Wellston

Olher fint-leam members: Michelle Caldwell &amp; Kim Mayle, Eastern; Jessica Duffy, Miller; Cynthia Caldwell &amp; Kim Say"', Southern;
Tammy Huck &amp; Tisha Skinner, Waterford
Second-team i'nembers: Jessica Brannon, Eastern; Valerie Castle, Federal Hocking; Bobbi Lent, Trimble; Katrina Greene, Waterford

Jury awards former
Oregon State softball
coach $1.09M in suit

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Tonya Edwards scored 21 points and
Katie Smith added IS as defending
ABL champion Columbus routed
Sun Jose lo improve to I0-2. Charlotte Smith led San Juse (3-R) with 21
points.
Reign 86, Rage 79
At Seattle. Shalunda Enis was at
her hcst for the Seattle Reign .
"I don't think I've ever seen her
as hot as she was 1onight. When we
wcren 't s~:oring. Shalonda still was."
lcammatc Kal~.: StarhirJ said after.
Seattle hcat the Philadelphia Rage
86-79 on Wednesday night in the
ABL.
Enis had 33 points, 12 rebounds
and si• assists. She was 12-for-1'1
from the field. includong 3-foP6
from three-point runge.
"Sometimes they Iilii. and sometimes they don't," En is said. ·"I've
got that hunger to win. and I' m tired
of losing."
In the other ABL game Wednesday night, Columbus beat San Jose
\16-70.
Aycock, Val Whiting and Starbird
each had II points for the Reign (58). Adrienne Goodson led the Rage
(5-6) with 20 points. and Dawn Staley had 16.
.
"We could not get the ball to
bounce our way, or the game to go
our way," said Philndelp~ia coach
Lisa Boyer, whose team has lost four
straight. "Seattle played with poise
and made some big shots."

VUH~s OU·i~t~~~~~

......

,.

;,~.....
KIM MAYLE

\.\ ~:·

.

·-;}'

KIM SAYRE

TONYA MILLER

Coaches post all-District 13 picks for Division Ill and IV

Coach of the year: Don Jackson, Eastern
Player of the year: Valerie Karr, Easlem

Quest,
Reign get
victories

..,~.' \
VALERIE KARR

Hocking Division

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) - Vickie
Dugan's sof1ball teams didn't win
often ut Oregon State University. hut
she was a big winner in her ICdcral
lawsuit accusing the school of gender
discrimination and violation of her
free speech rights.
An all -woman jury deliberated
aboutl4 hours over two days hcfnre
awarding Dugan $1.09 million from
the university and $185,000 from lormer athletic director Dutch Baughman.
"We hit a grand slam," Dugan
said.
The $1.28 million award stunned
university otllcials and elated Dugan,
who spoke to reporters as she left the
counhousc . .
"We wanted to make a difference
and we wanted a me~sage sent oul
that you don 't treat people ohat way
hccausc of their gender," she said.
"You don 't treat people that way
because they stand up against
inequities . That' ~ what it was all
about."
University spokesman Bnh Bruce
said state JUStice department lawyers
would review the verdict befllfe
deciding whether to appeal.
"We arc disarrointcd hy the decision," Bruce said. "The issue we
hclicvc was inadequate pcrfonnancc.
not disr.:rimination, and we intend to
review the decisiun carefully with the
Department of Justice hcforc considering any other ar.:tion."
Dugan, who r.:om:hcd ut Orc~on

•

State from 1988 to 1994. had contended that she was illegally paid less
than her male counterparts and
deprived of the resources she need ed to succeed. She also alleged thai
her constitutional right to free speech
was violated when she was punished
for speaking out on gender equity
ISSUCS .

The university argued in the 16·day trial that Dugan was paid fairly
and that Baughman did everything he
could to help her but that her performance was not up to the job and he
eventually had to 'replace her. Dugan
had a 64-201 overall record and a lJ112 Pac-10 record at Oregon State.
Three Pac-10 coaches testified at
ihc' trial that Dugan had done a
respectable job. considering_the pro·
grarn 's lim itcd resources.
The jury ruled that the university
·should pay $750.000 in compensatory damages. $329,485 in economic
damages and $13,49S ""violation of
equa.l ppy laws. Baughmar. who
resigned earlier this year, w·as nrdcn:d

Russell Stover
Assorted Creams
1 lb.
Reg. $6.50

1411

Timex Watches

Caldwell, J~ckson get top honors
~outhern's Cynthia Caldwell was named District 13 Division IV "Player of the Year," marking the third straight year that a Southern player
has garnered that top honor as voted by the head
coaches at the latest districtassoeiation meeting.
She will represent District 13 in the slate allstar match in Columbus.
Caldwell joins her sister Keri Caldwell and
Sammi Sisson as Southern latest representatives
in the district. The past three years, Southern has
compiled a 54- I5 overall mark in dominating
southern Ohio clubs. ·
Christina Eaton, named · the "Player of ·the
Year" in Division Ill , will represent Belpre and
\he district in the all-star match. She joins coach
Pam Boone as a District 13 honoree. Boone
claimed "Coach of the Year" honors in Division
III.
At Eastern, Don Jackson brought home
"Coach or the Year" honors as voted on by his
peers in District 13. He led Eastern to a 21-3
overall mark in 1997.
Eastern players selected to the All-District 13

Cold Pop

2

Your Clloiee

Second-team players -Jessica Brannon,
Eastern; Aimee Newsom . Oak Hill : Sabrina
Muuncy, South Gallia: Talitha Pattcr\on.
Symmes Valley: Bnhho Lent. Trimble : Shanmi
Grant. Coal Grove Dawson-Bryan! : Jamie Dinwiddie . Fairland
·

.

-li~

Zippo ·

..

..

- - II

-·

_·

~

'I

Tilt, crul.., power wlndowe, cauette, only

10,000 nillel

1995 PARK AVENUE
"2" One owner low mileage, caM, leather, CD
players, Etc. Mllea In 20'1 Balanca of naw car
warranty

CasseHe Tapes
Country &amp;Oldies
Reg. $4.99

·a~

Christmas Cards
Box of 18

Tuesday
November

PH. 992·2955

Pdmeroy, Oh.
'lill9

1995 CADILLAC SEDAN
DEVILLES
Chooae from "3" clean low mileage premium
c1ra. Covered by Bpr to Bpr factory warranty.

1995 RIVIERA'S
"2" low mlleage1 owners. Check out these
outstanding valuea on Buick's Beat. Leather &amp;
loaded.

s

15,000 to 27,000 miles

8271

1 Hanning, A. Ph.
Mon. thru Sal. 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
E. Main

'

TRANS SPORT

Prices Good Through

PRESCRIPTION

· Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.

20 /aoff

OniJ

age

:fur

-- · "'1997 PONTIAC

1

Reg. $4.99

Jfoliday Collectior 'Box
70 'Tissues

Player i\_ school
Christina Eaton. Belpre
Clare Ring. Belpre
Heather Crigger, Chesapeake
Dru Battinta. Chesapeake
Valerie Karr, Eastern
Michelle Caldwell, Eastern
Jessica Duffy. Miller
Ali Shafer. Nelsonville-York

18

95,96 &amp; 97
GrandAms
2 Doors &amp; 4 Doors!

sg
.
From
'

Sr.
Sr. ·
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.

Coach of the Year, Division Ill - Pam
Boone, Belpre
Planr ·or the Year, Division Ill - Christina Eaton Belpre
Coach ofthe Year, Division IV- Don Jackson, Eastern
Player of the Year, Division IV - Cynthia
Caldwell, Southern

Women's Colognes

••,. off .30 /a off

20 /a off

District 13 picks
for Division Ill &amp; IV

Lisa Chapman. Oak Hill
Rachel Waugh. South Gallia
Cynthia Caldwell, Southern
Kim Say"', Southern
Crissy Payne. Symmes Valley
Donna Adkins. Symmes Valley
Punky Buchanon. Wellston

to pay $125,000 in punitive damages
and $60.000 in compensatory damages.
Assistant Attorney General John
McCullough , who represented ·the
university and Baughman, predicted
the award would be reduced by U.S.
District Judge Michael Hogan, who
presided over the case.
McCullough said it was the first
time in hundreds of cases in which all
the jurors were the same gender.
"It's ironic, and in li~htofthe verdict , perhaps unfortunate," he said.

1

Comic Books
1

team were Valerie Karr and Michelle Caldwell.
Karr was a leading spikcr and front line player.
·while Michelle Caldwell doubled as a front line
player and ace server for the Eagles.
Joining them on the rirst team was Southern
premier setter Kim Sayre.
Jessica Brannon was named as a second tcain
selection.

4 Wheel Drive
Chev. Blazers
Good.Selection!
94, 95, 96 &amp; 97 Models
2 Doors &amp; 4 Door!

�hge 8 • The O.lly Sentinel

(2riffey captures
AL
MVP
honors
"
;;

'

Pomeroy • Mlddlepo....., Ohio

New York Yankees first baseman
Tino Martinet was second with 24
second-place votes and four thirds for
248 points, followed by Thomas
(172 points) and Baltimore reliever
Randy Myers (128).
Three of Griffey's teammatesRandy Johnson (II th), Edgar Martinez (14th) and Jay Buhner (19th)received votes.
Griffey became the Mariners' first
AL MVP. A year ago; Seattle shortstop Rodriguez was second after
winning the batting championship,
finishing three points behind Juan
Gonzalez of Texas. Griffey was
fourth in last year's voting.

Woods brings new crowd to golf
lines and not eager kids with unlim- majestic tee- shots, then stomped
ited future. And those young people down the fairway, his stoic stare linnwho do find their way to the game ly in place until a child's voice
have difficulty locating adequate curved the corner.&lt; of his mouth into
practice facilities and instruction.
a wide smile. .
And in a sport where the Nation"Hey Tiger! Over here!" would
al Golf Foundation says only 3 per- come the high-pitched cry.
cent of golfers in the United States
"Tiger! Tiger! Tiger!" several
arc black and only 2 percent arc His- youngsters would chant in unison.
panic. Woods' success represented a
At times there were simply
signilicant breakthrough in tcnns of squeals of delight. Always. it was the
expanding the popularity and calls of,the young- and not the beldown the road - the talent pool for lows of the old - - that touched
the game.
Woods and made hini smile.
"The most important challenge · In Dublin, Ohio, at the Memorial
the game has is to build on the Tournament. a seven-year-old girl
unprecedented level of interest in golf waited shyly for a glimpse of Woods,
by kids and women and minorities clutching her stuffed Tiger doll as her
and tum that into long-term growth," patents nudged her forward to ask for
LPGA commissioner Jim Ritts said an autograph.
Wednesday.
At the Byron Nelson Classic near
Woods got kids and minorities Dallas, school groups and church ·
onto the golf course in 1997. If the groups of pre-teens swarmed around
game is to continue to grow, now il the autograph booth waiting almost
~ay.
~, The obstacles to growth in golf arc has to ligurc how to keep that new
patiently for Woods' autograph.
l!learly that in major urhan areas, audience on the golf course - this
Even at Augusta National - the
1111unicipal courses are overcrowded, time not as funs but as players.
most staid of ~ol f courses - a
~ublic courses are overpriced and.pri·
Woods made that seem possible young hoy reached out from the
crowd and patted the startled Woods
'vale courses are overly exclusive.
this ye~.
.·; Further, most new golfers are
In city after city, the scene was on the back after hjo:played a spot on
:tlaby Boomers with creeping waist- repeated. Woods launched one of his No. 15 in the final rounll of his historic Masters victory.
"
ay RON SIRAK
JI,P GoH Writer .
·: If part of the enonnous impact of
'{iger Woods in his first full year on
Jhe PGA Tour was to get a new gcn~ration - and a new demographics
~ to look at golf, the trick now for
4he game is to kc,cp them there.
: If Woods brought the word
:'inclusion" to golf, the buzzwords as
the game heads toward a new centu0 arc· "access" and "affordability.''..
c
Toward that end, a coalition ol
;.;.ajor U.S. golf organizations func~ioning through the World Golf FounDation will announce today a multihi! lion-dollar plan to create hundreds
nr new golf facilities over the next 10
;tears to bring a more diverse group
sf people into the game.
:" The project, called The First Tee.
.Will be introduced in New York and
bctroit today and in Houston on Fri-

••

1981-82.
"I think their defense was excel-Maybe il's time to stop being sur- chances al&lt;,tying the game, but lent," he said. .,111eir offense is
prised when Princeton knocks off a Damon 'l'llomton 's turnaround , always highlighted and credited all
big-time opponent.
jumper bounced off the rim and Ben- the time, but their halfcourt defense
With a non-scholarship Ivy jami~'s attempt at the buzzer as he was outstandina."
League roster of throwback players was falling was also off.
Earl led Princeton with 15 points
who look·for the extra pass and make
"It wusjust a dt;fensive bailie out and James Mastaglio, whose threedefense a team activity, the Tigers there," North Carolina State's C.C. pointer with I: 17 left gave the Tigers
have started the 1997-98 season with Harrison said. "They came up big a 36-33 lead, added II.
wins over teams from the Big 12 and with n few seconds left. We still had
Kenny lnge topped the Wolfpack,
Atlantic Coast Conference.
a chance, but it just didn't come up who shot 42 'percent, with eight
They beat North Carolina State for us. They really executed their points.
38-36 Wednesday night in the cham- ·offense and hilS off to them."
In the third-place game at Contipionship game of the inaugural
The low scOre was hardly a sur- nental Airlines Arena, No. 19 GeorCoaches vs. Cancer Classic, a .day prise as the game was a matchuD gia beat No. 22 Texas 89-87 in
after beating No. 22 'Ibxas.
between last season's No. I and 3 Wednesday's only game involving
· "It's a pretty big win for us. teams in tenns of scoring defense. r~nked teams.
We'~e won some big ones in the past. Princeton led the nation for the ninth
· It was the fir..t victory for Ron JirWe're coming into our own," said consecutive season.
sa, who took over the -Bulldogs this
Princeton's Brian Eari, the tourna"That was two evenly matched season after serving two years us top
ment MVP who scored the Viinning teams. and I can't remember playing assistant to Tubby Smith, who moved
basket when his backdoor layup was a team that guards as well as North on to Kentucky.
goaltendcd with 2. 7 seconds to play. Carolina State," Cannady said.
Michael Chadwick's two free
"I know people say they don 'I overWolfpack coach Herh Scndck saw throws with I :37 left gave the Bulllook us but maybe they're really his team held to its lowest point total dogs the lead for good at 86-KS.
thinking about it now. We're a team since a 39-36 .loss to Virginia in
to be reckoned with."
There isn't a coach in the country
who wants to see Princeton on his ·
schedule. Georgetown, Villanova and
Arkansas were all lucky to .escape
with NCAA tournament wins over By The Asaoclated Preas
In an otherwise light day of signthe undennanned Tigers. UCLA wasOn Wednesday's first day-for the ings and commitments, Cincinnati
n't as lucky when the defending signing of national letters of intent to landed a hometown prospect in 6-7
champions were beaten by Princeton play Division I basketball, Ohio Vni- forward Eugene Land, who averaged
in the first round in 1996 on, what vcrsity signed f911r players. including 20.2 points and 8.6 rebounds a game
else, a backdoor layup.
twin brothers. ·
at Roger Bacon High la.•t year.
"I know we're known for backJason and Justin LaFerla, 5-lootOhio State has received verbal
door cuts, but we dido 't get too many 11 guards from St. John the Baptist commitments from three players
as we struggled all night," Princeton High School in Smithtown, N.Y.. said whom they arc expected to sign this
coach Bill Carmody said, referring to they would become Boheats.
week: 6-4 Akton Buchtel guard D0ythe 33 percent shooting (15-of-45)
The lel't-handers averaged I K.4 lan Robinson and a pair of players nut
against the Wolfpack.
and 18.8 points per game resf!&lt;.-.:tive- of Laughlin High School in Bronk·
They got the one that counted.
ly last year as juniors. Both arc lyn. 'N.Y.. 6-8 Will Dudley and 6-3
North Carolina State had tied the marksmen from the perimeter, with Brian Brown.
game 36-36 on a three-pointer by Jason shooting 83 percent at the line
Akron signed 6-7 l(&gt;rward David
freshman Archie Miller with 38 sec- and Justin hitting 80.3 percent. B&lt;ith Falknor, whn avcr.tged 16.K points
onds to play. Princeton worked the ·also finished in the top four in their and K rebounds per game ntllcllevue
ball around the perimeter and Gnhc league in threccpoint percentage.
High Sc hnol.
Lewullis found Earl cutting to the
basket and Ishua Benjamin was
called lor the ob¥ious goaltcnd.
Early Wedn~y
Golf Cour..c (695)
Lewullis, who was only 1-of-9
Mixed
Bowling
League
from the field, made his third assist
(As of Nov. 5)
Men
of the game sound easy.
Reyon!
High series: Jerry Curry, (5'.13);
"I guess the guy who wa.• guard- 1'wo
52-46 Roger Carpenter (556)
ing Brian got picked off up top and Tony's Carryout
Life
On
Mars
48-40
High game: Curry (207), CarBrian wus wide open down low," he
48-40
Thunder
Alley
Lanes
penter
&amp; John Tyree (tied at 204)
said. "If I didn't throw it to him, I
Meigs
Co.
Golf
Course
47-41
would have gotten killea. I had no
S&amp;S Sports Cards
40-4K
Women
choice but to throw it to him." .
35-33
F.O.B.
2171
High
series:
M~rgurct Eynon
Bnrl had to make•surc he got the
'
(532);
Helen
Phelps
(4K~) .
shot off:
·
Team
high
series:
Meigs
County
High
game:
Eynon
(206), Betty
"I was worried ahout getting·
Golf
Course
(
1955)
McKinley
(
I.K'.I)
blocked so I knew I had to get it up
Team high game: Meigs County
quickly," he .aid. "I also knew (the

Laferla brothers sign letters
of intent to play hoops for OU

Mason Bowling Lanes results

I'

•

.••

•

-

By taking a few simple

And by reducing the amount
of energy you use, you'll be
able to keep more cash for
yourseH ... without sacrifiCing
any comfort.

steps this winter, you can
do a lot to keep the cold ·
out and make your home
more energ}l efficient.

I I tf,in!J·'

.tJOII

&lt;"~lll

,),_.

•
'r

How to
•
•

keep one out

~

'

-.

aniJ the o~ber

1. a.•l •lr le•k•~
Around doors and wirldo•ws.l
of course, but don't forget 1--openings around pipes,
chimneys and wires.

e. lnet•ll • high
•fflclencv fur~U~ce.
The new models use much less
energy.
til. lnatall a clock

:z. lnaul•t• •ttlca1
outaide walls and floors over
crawlspaces.

.----1 thea naoatat to automatically tum down the heat at night
and when you're away.

3. Have your
furnace ol-ned
ancl tun•d· Clogged

1 o. Canald4itr •
prot.••'-leneugy
•ucllt lor expert advice an

bumers can waste fuel.

the individual needs of your
home.

4. lft...late water

•
••
••

•

one Ln.

'•.

plpe••nclheat
duct:• running through
unheated areas.
B . l - l. .eyour
water tank and the
first six feet of the hot water
supply line.

~

•••

..•

11. Switch to •••·
If you don't have a natural gas
furnace or water heater, switching to gas can have a dramatic
impact on your energy bills. Not
only is gas the most comfortable way to heat, It's the most
economical, too .

r

e.c~~a...-yO..
funs•a• filter at least
once a month.

•

•

•

t--

Snowstorm ~evelops
across northern Plains
By Tha Aaeoclated p...,..
Moderate to heavy rain fell in central Aorida early today, while rainfall
was lighter in the rest of the South,
along the West Coast and in the
southern Plains. Scattered showers
also hit the upper·Midwest.
'A stonn system developing along
the Gulf Coast was expected to
spread raiq,across much of ihe Southeast today. Rainfall amounts of up to
3 inches could fall from Louisiana
east into Georgia.
On the northern edge of the sys-

By JIM O'CONNELL
officials) W(MIId call it."
EAST RtrrHERFORD, NJ. (AP)
The . Wolfpack had two final

•

•
•

The Dally Sentinel • P~ge 7•..;,

Princeton downs N.C. State
38-36 in championship _game

-iJIMCOUR

•-

~.November 13, 1997

Thursday, November 13,.1117

Inaugural Coaches vs. Cllncer Classic ends

.

Runner-up to Frank Thomas of the
Chicago
White Sox for the award in
~- SEATll..E (AP) - II was a nob(aincr, right' Nobody else had Ken 1994 despite an AL-lcading 40
Qriffey Jr.'s numbers in the American homers, Griffey received the biggest
honor of his career a little more than
t,.eague last season.
a
week shy of his 28th birthday.
._· He led in home runs with 56 and
Griffey, who will earn $7.75 milwas tops in the majors in RBis with
lion
to play for the Mariners in 1998
.:47.
and
is
contracted through 2000, is an
:;; The Gold Glove center fielder also
eight-time
All-Star.
lrel his league in runs scored (124),
award
means a lot," he said.
"This
1'1!'11 bases (393), slugging percentage
(:646), extra base htts (93 ) and mien- "You always think about being the
MVP."
tiOna! walks (23).
It would have meant more if the
-~ Still, Griffey wasn't sure if he was
Mariners
would have made it to the
ioing to get his first Most Valuable
(!layer award on Wednesday. He saw World Series, Griffey said. Unfortunately. Griffey didn't hit much (.138)
~at happened to Seattle Mariners
and the Baltimore·Orioles eliminatt~mate Alex Rodriguez last year.
" "I didn't really want to think ed Seattle in the playoffs, spoiling the
aoout it," Grilfey said. "I've never Mariners' second AL West title in
Men in this situation where I was three years.
"We fell a little short this year,"
Galled the front runner. You know
ne
said.
"Hopefully, we'll get back to
tipw superstitious I am. When anythe
playoffs
next year. My goal in
f1ody wanted to talk about it, I said,
''l"e'll wait and see what happens."' baseball is to win the World Series."
In receiving all 28 first-place
;.. He didn't have to worry. In fact,
votes
and 392 points in balloting by
he became the league's ninth unanithe
Baseball
Writers Association of
Mous MVP.
; - "Sure, I'm happy," he said. "I'm America, Griffey became the first
i\'ill in a little bit of shock. I'm still unanimous AL pick since Thomas in
Oi:rvous. l really don't know what to t993 , and the 13th unanimous selection overall.
'~Y or how to react."

.

7. Turn down yqur
water . . _ t _ to the
"Warm" setting (120' F).

COLUMBIAGAS
~N. ._IChOioe

http:ltwww.colt.mblaenelg.com

.. _. ..

So lake a law simple steps
to keep the cold out an!l the ·
' cash in this winter.

te10, the Ohio Valley and midAtlantic should see mixed rain and
snow. And clouds should increase in
the Northeast as the system approaches.
The other weather player today
should be a powerful -.:old · front
pushing through the northern Plains.
The front was expected to brush all
the way into northern Oklahoma by
tonight. Gusty winds and snowfall of
up to 6 inches were expected for the
eastern Dakotas and Minne.sota.
Lighter snowfalls were expected in
Wyoming, Nebraska and Colorado.

l'. -it.lf¥ P, P·,If* ;t .W.,Ilf H}ffW''"'"* ;t IYf «)t( . _
._· PICTURE YOUR CHILD .~:
!MONG THE •••

Watts submits proposed
constitutional amendment
COLUMBUS, (AP)- A Repul&gt;lican legislator has submitted his proposed constitutional amendment that
would end the state's race and gender preference programs and others in
. Ohio municipalities.
"I've had this drafted for
months," Sell. Eugene ·Watts, ·R- ·

Columbus, said Wednesday. "This
legislation is exactly the same as
Proposition 209."
.
California's Proposition 209,
upheld by the U.S. Supreme Coun
last week, was the nation's first
across-the-board repeal of programs
giving preferential treatm~nt.

Our special page(s)
"For Children Only"
(16 yean of age or younger)
Will he published

WINTER HAS ARRIVED ··Richllrd Kou, 86, lllld hla wife, Ingrid,
71, take an early ert.rnoon walk u a blanlwt ~ lake-efi4!Cf1110W
. reala qn a beach Wedneaclay at the North Ctuirtln R818t'Vatlon
In the Cleveland Mtttroparklt In Willoughby Hille. The couple

•

Thesday, December 23rd
•
m

reside In Bratenahl. (AP)

The Daily Sentinel

A paper fight - legal
joust-over mental defect
defense a~ Unabomber trial
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) With !,he trial of Theodore Kaczynski under way. defense attorneys
zeroed in on the death penalty as a
top concern and argued in court
papers that the Unahomber suspect is
schizophrenic.
A neatly dressed and carefully
coiffed Kaczynski watched closely as
his lawyers asked potential jurors
about their feelings on capital punishment. Eleven jury candidates were
questioned on Wednesday, the trial's
first day, and four were excused for
hardship or cause.
More questioning was Scheduled
for today.
While jury candidates marched in
and out, some of the key action
Wednesday took place on paper. The
defense lilcd documents opposing a
motion from prosecutors that seeks to
bar Kaczynski from offering a men-.
tal defect defense.
In the liling, Dr. David Foster said
that af\cr examining the defendant
five times for up to three houf" each
tinic and reviewing Kaczynski's writings, he concluded that Kaczynski
suffers from paranoid schizophrenia.
The mental disorder often causes
its victims to believe that they arc
hcing persecuted.
.. A central organizing feature of
Mr. Kaczynski's delusional system is-

a belief that every aspect of his existence is controlled by an omnipotent
organization against which he is
powerless," Foster said.
Kaczynski's illness also leaves
him afraid of psychiatrists, Foster ·
said.
"I attempted to proceed cautiously in each of our meetings ·and be
respectful of .his lifelong fears and
concerns," Foster said.
Despite those efforts, "Kaczynski hccame visibly upset and shortly
thereafter discontinued the meet·
. ings." he said.
Prosecutors oppose the mental
defect defense partly because
Kaczynski has refused to submit to
government-selected psychiatric testin~. They say without that, they cannot counter expen testimony from the
defense.
Defense lawyer~ Quin Den vir and
Judy Clarke said prosecutors can ade·
quatcly prepare by having their
experts review other materials,
including Kaczynski's writings.
· "The government does not seck to
--IC•cl the playing field, but essentially asks for a guilty verdict and a·death
sentence he lore the trial begins," the
defense argued in the papers.
U.S. District Judge Garland Burrell has yet to rule on whether he will
allow the defense. ·

Pair convicted in
World Trade .
Center bombing

(CHILO'S NAME)
Parents' or
Grandparents Name

Per PicturePrepaid
Please enclose self·addn:SSCll,
stamped envelope to return your
photo.

PILLOWCASE
Official
·Entry
Form

219 N. Second

992-5827

Middleport

312 GIFTS
FOR THE PERSON WHO HAS EVERYTHING
1 YEAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO
THE DAILY SENTINEL
•

NEW YORK (AP) - Only nne
suspect remains at large in the World
Trade Center bombing. and prosccu- .
tors tempered their pleasure at the
conviction of the plot's mastermind
with a vow to catch the la.~t man, .
Ramzi Youscf, 29. and an accomplice, Eyad lsmoil, 26. were convicted Wednesday of conspiracy and other charges in the Feb. 26, 1993.
hom bing.
The blast killed six people. injured
more than 1.000 and did more than a
half billion dollars in damage to the
twin towers. Four Islamic extremists
already have been sentenced to 240
years in prison in the bombing.
The jury heard more than 100 wit-

g
f
~

E

=
• "'·;.,

Q

.t:l

u

.s

a.

:a

52 WEEKS

FOR ONlY

nesses and viewed hundreds of

cxhihits over three months. Jurors
deliberated l(&gt;r three days before
voting toconviq the men. who could
get up to life in prison.
Youscf is to be sentenced Jan. 8;
lsmoil on Fch. 12. Their lawyers said
· they would appeal.
It was the fihh time in l(&gt;ur year.&lt;
that prosecutors have prevailed at terrorism trials. But t).S. Attorney Mary
Jo White said it was toq early to relax
while one suspect is still ut large:
Abdul Rahman Ynsin. who was horn
in Bloomington: Ind .. and moved to
Iraq in the 1960s.
· ~This case in\·csli~ution will never be over until we tra~k down anyone associated with this type of terrorism," she said.
It was the second terrorism conviction for Yousef. He represented
himself la.'t year in a conspiracy tri·
al for killing a Japanese man with a
plane bomb in December 1994, and
for plotting to kill 4.000 Americans
in two days by bombing a dozen airliners over the Far East. He has not
yet been sentenced.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Lev
Dassin told jurors in his closing
arguments that Yousef and lsmoil
"bombed the World Trade Center
because of their own prejudice and
their own hatred for Israel, for the
United· States and for the people of
the United States."

-ONLY-

"'1:1c

-.•.

'

~

$88.40

~

E!

.t'

z u
Ill

.."'

~

!

1

..

"'f

1:1

1
"'c

~

~

a

z•
•"'

"'u-:a

THE. DAILY SENTINEL
"YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER"
PLEASE SEND A GIFT SUBSCRIPTION OF THE DAILY SENTINEL FOR 1 YEAR FOR ONLY
118.40 (Payment Included).

-c

lie

IJ

0

..
...

~

1:1

!!:

f

t ...
....= :tc
O;t;l

"'
E
m.•

"'~

t:IJ

0

~-

IDeaAe: Frldar, Dec. 1,., 3 ,.... 1

8U18CRIPTION GII'T FOR:

NAfi--r-------~-----------------------------­
~EU------~--------------------~---------­

CnY----------------------------------------srATE

ZIP

Mill or bring the entry form:

The Daily Sentinel
111'Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

': . ,

. .

li·ltHift'YUta'......fiti#efli·'fJiif

,

�..•
..
•

-

•

, . I • The Dallf Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

.

Compulsive gambler tells .real story
Ann
Landers
1991.

~ AnJtlts

,,.....,_

nnw::s

Synd,;w llld Cn:aton

Dear Ann Landers: I'm Tom.
f'm a compulsive gambler. Last
December. I told my family that I
would go into treatment when the .
new year began . l had gambled for
about 40 years, since I was a teenager. I gambled on anything and everything and realized for several years
that I had a problem but believed I
could stop whenever l wanted. In the
years l was out of control, I man ·aged to lose the trust of my family
and friends, maxed out credit cards
and borrowed from credit unions,
loan companies and my retirement
fund. It finally affected my health
beCause of worries over my job and
the turmoil at home.
I heard about Gamblers Anonymous earlier this year and decided it
could be the answer for me. Just
being with people who had the same
problem made me feel better. Now I

know that gamblers like me have a
sickness. It's something they can
overcome, but they need a lot of
ltclp. I have found my help at GA. ,
Things are slowly beginning to
. tum around. My finances are
becoming manageable for the first
time in years. and I can now sleep at
night. My blood pressure and diabetes are under control.
I realize that! will always have to
be on my guard and will have to
work hard to regain" the respect of
the people I love. I am following the
program one day at a time. It is very
challenging, but I have put my trust
in a higher power, and I'm sure I
will succeed.'
Here is a quiz to find out 'if you
are a compulsive gambler:
I. Have you ever lost time from
work or school due to gambling?
2. Has gambling ever made your
home life unhappy?
3. Has gambling affected your
reputation?
4. Have you ever felt remorse
after gambling?
5. Have you ever gambled to get
money with which to pay debts or
otherwise solve financial difficul -

Community Calendar

ties?
6. Has gambling cau~ed a
decrease in your ambition or efficiency?
7. After losing, have you felt you
must return as soon as pQssible and
win back your losses? ·
8. After .a win, have you had a
strong urse to return and win more?
9. Do · you often gamble until
your last dollar is gone?
10. Have you ever borrowed to
finance your gambling?
II . Have you ever sold anything
to finance gambling?
12. Have you ever been reluctant
to use "gambling money" for normal expenditures•
13. Has gambling made you careless of the welfare of yourself and
your family? .
14. Have you ever gambled
longer than you planned?
15. Have you ever gambled to
escape worcy or trouble?
16. Have you ever commined or
considered committing an illegal act
to finance gambling?
17. Has gambling -caused you to
have difficulty sleeping'
18. Do arguments, disappoint-

ments or frustrations create within
you the urse to gamble?
19. Ha\'e you ever had 111\U'ge 10
celebmte any good f011une by a few
hours of gambling?
Have you ever considered
self-destruction as a result of your
gambling?
_
Most compulsive gamblers will
answer yes to more than half of
these questions. · ·
. Remember this is a hidden compulsion, not like drugs and alcohol,
where the symptoms are visible. For
the nearest Gamblers Anonymous
group, consult your local telephone
directory, or write Gamblers Anonymous, P.O. Box 17173, Los Anples,
Calif. 90017 . (Internet: www.garnblersanonymous.org). GA celebrated its _40th anniversary Sept. 13. -Just Tom
· Dear Tom: You 've wriuen a letter that could save lives. Thank you
on behalf of all the people you
helped today.

zo.

1996 LINCOLN

MARK VIII .

1996 fORD
TAURUS Ll

VI, IUIO, clltnf8 CCHII!ol,
AIIIFII"O... tilt, crul..,

Ill power, llilllllf

. •15,949

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

CHECK THE WANT ADS FIRSn

The Community Calendar is pub·
lished as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetin~
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or
Fund raisers of any type . Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific num·
ber of day s.

POMEROY- Hymn sing, Sunday, 6 p.m. Hillside Baptist Church,
THURSDAY
Music by Hood Family, Humphrey
MIDDLEPORT - A concert of Family. John and Belinda Dean,
prayer, 7 p.m. Thursday at the First Gary and Joshua Jones, and Sandy
Baptist Church, Middleport, Sixth King.
and Palmer, in observance of International Day of Prayer. Sponsored
GALLIPOLIS - Revival Sun·
by the Middleport Ministerial Asso- daY, through Nov. 23. White's Road
Church of God of Prophecy near
ciation.
Holzer Hospital. John Elswick,
POMEROY - AA. 7 p.m. Athens evangelist; special music
Thursday at Sacred Heart Church .. Nov. 20 by Dan -and Faith Hayman
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.
imd Marty Short.
CHESTER Shade River
Lodge 453. F&amp;AM. regular meeting
and election of officers, 7:30 Thursday, lodge hall in Chester.

AUT~

Parish, to speak. Members to take
canned food donations for parish.
SUNDAY
CHESTER- Hymn sing. Saturday 7 p.m. at the Harvest Outreach
Church, Chester. Featuring singers.
the "Gabriels" and "Rejoice".

EVERY OPTION YOU WANT
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS $29,421.00
'J~

-=jresh Cut Arrangements
• Silk • Pilgrim Glass • Crafts
• Personalized Crocks
• Beaumont Pottery .
• Leaning Tree Cards
• Love. Lite Candles
.

1996 FORD ·
. ESCORT lX
2 Dr, auto, 11r condition,
PS, PB, AM/FM CIIS,
1lum wt111la, lpollar

1995 ~ERCURY
COUGAR

.Florals &amp; Gifts
Racine

XR 7, ve, 1\ltO, sir cond,
AM/FM c1.., all powar

949·ROSE (7673,

EAST MEIGS - Eastern Junior
High School sports awards banquet,
Sunday, 2 p.m:, Eastern High School .
gym.

1995 HONDA
ACCORD LX

1997 EXPEDITION EDDIE BAUER

AIR CONDITION, ALUM WHEELS,
XLT PKG, AM/FM CASS,
LOTS OF OPTIONS
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS .
. $15,230·00

LEATHER, THIRD SEAT, TRAILER .
TOWING, CD CHANGER, LIMITED SLIP,
LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$39,465·00

$10,988~

$23,988·

00

2 Dr, 4 cyl, 5 1pd,
cond, AM/FM· Clll,

1997 RANGER XLT

00

$34,988·00

.'

CIUIN, Ill pGWir lqlllp.

•12,949

BURGUNDY &amp; BRASS
Pearl &amp; Third

FLARESI~E
LA~T
4X4, LEATHER, .OFF ROAD,

1997

0

equip, Low Mites

1994 FORD
PROBE
4 cyl, 1uto, 11r

AMIFM CIIIS, UH,
111 power. More

1997. THUNDERBIRD LX 11 V8 11
AUTO, AIR, V8, POWER EQUIPED,
SPORT PKG., TRACTION -L&lt;&gt;K AXLE
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$20,940·00 ,,

~:::f,J

Cl

•

1997 TAURUS SEDAN
AUTO, AIR, AM/FM CASS, POWER
WINDOWS, FLOOR MATS
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$18,755·00

1997 ESCORT LX SPORT .
AUTO, AIR , REAR DEFROST, SPORT
. PKG, SPOILER, LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
. $14,925·00

.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains,-VFW Post 9053, Thursday,
7:30p.m. Refreshments, 6:30p.m.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta meeting at the Episcopafparish
house, 6:30p.m.
LONG BOTTOM - Mt. Olive
Community· Church. Long Boltom.
Special services, Thursday through
Sunday.. 7 p.m. nightly. Evangelist.
Paul Goodwin. Marielta.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township Trustees, special scssipn,
Thursday. 6:30p.m .. Page ville Town
Hall.
Shade River
CHESTER Lodge 453 F&amp;AM regular meeting
and annual election of officers .
Thursday. 7:30 p.m. at tltc lodge
hall. Refreshments.
FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church. 7 p.m. hymn sing
with David and Debbie Daily.
Thanksgiving dinner at 5:30p.m.
SATURDAY
• COOLVILLE- Gospel Hanno·
f)}' Boys, 7 p.m. at the Coolville
United Mcthodost Church. Concert
ilt free.
SALEM CENTER - . Star
Orange 778 and Star Junior Grange
878 annual Thanksgiving super add
fun night, Saturday. 6:30p.m. at the
pge hall.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers, noon. luncheon.
Saturday. Trinity Church. Pomeroy.
~v. Sharon H3usman, Meigs Coun·
· ty United Methodist Cooperative

'Pre-Hoi iday
&lt;Dimwmd Specials
,,,..

Ill

~·J1f

J,r. _~..

~:~

.__

~

'tt'~' ,

•

""40{~

., _.;;

1

499
111 c•.T.w.

f~1s/•ious!
1499
'
R,[ 17'1')
111( Basueue ·

240

Selinire Rina

fMrinp

112 C1.

LADIES &amp; GENTS
GOLD BANDS
1.5 MM LADIES

~~

-'19.95

.; .... i..~'
· '
....

,..,....,......;'39.95

FORD

--~:f.~'.'
~~....

LAYAWAY

4x2

~~

1399

Ad'. sm

104

4mm

S5l.IJS

NOW FOR

159.91

lmm

S6i.'l5

$72.91

6mm

119.95

179

R.f.$239

U4 Ct. Of ·
Diamonds!

nso 4x2

r.

1997 AEROSTAR 4X4 XLT

AIR, CRUISE, CASS, POWER ··
EQUIPMENT, THIRD SEAT, KEYLESS
ENTRY, LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$22,88000

QUAD CPT CHAIRS, REAR AIR/HEAT,
PREM CASS, LS, LOADED WITH
OPTIONS
.
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$28,645·00

$17,988·00

$23,988·00

399

1

1994 FORD
F :so 4x4

~-

"-

..

149 J. .
~•
.

1
lift. $229
GenWrw Rut., at:
........ Diamood
. R;..

~

.

~

AM/F , we, tilt, cr~1111
PS, PB, ORI ownar

.

, ...

lj'S,
"

8 cy , auto, air .,,.,,..

""f'i'~-

.

_,

ve, auto, air concl, AM!fl
CIIU,

Oneown1r.

AIR, AM/FM CASS, ALUM WHEELS,
POWER EQUIPMENT, LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
-$24,525·00

-•;13,949 .·

1
FORD
EXPLORER XLT
4 Dr, Vi, auto, 1lr COniG,
AM/FM Clll, tilt, ""'•••·
Ill power, etc.

1994
SAFARI

ve, 1uto, 11r cond, AIIJR
CIIM,

tilt, crulu, PS,

1997 EXPLORER EDDIE BAUER

1997 EXPLORER SPORT

Ult, crulu, PS,

'·

RJ. Sl.f9

00

1997 TAR US GL WAGON

Rof. $599
C...MdEmonldk
Bos- DWnond R;..

.

1

FORD

$20.888·

~c;...
.... 'i36
&amp;~'Rilla

14-1.91

AUTO, AIR,CRUISE, KEYLESS
ENTRY,ALUM WHEELS,LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$25,780·00
.,

Exci~ing 14K B~t
Di:~.mand Fashion Rina:

CHRISTMAS
..-~ !!.¥2 .

3MM GENTS ··

1997 CROWN VIC LX

Di:amond Fashion
Ri
112 c.~'r: w.

'899
DiamonJ

Diamond Sl:ud

•

C.-.:citiuq 13a£tuette

~

• --I.!.:_-~

Harrisonville News
Eleanor Updegraff of Birmingham. Ala. spent a week with Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Alkire.
Mrs. Louise Eshelman and son,
Budd celebrated her 78th birthday in
Columbus visiting her three sisters
and brothers.
Robert Chapman of Syracuse had
he·art surgery in Columbus hospital
recently.
M.-s. Louise Eshelman and Budd
· visited her gmnddaughter. Terri
Gilley of Otway recently.
.
• Gordon Atkins of Washt ngton
spent the past week wit~ his m?ther,
Stella Atkins. He also vtstted hts SIS·
ter. Gloria Kloes of Symcuse.
Ray Alkire of Columbus was the
weekend guest of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Alkire.
Mrs. Louise Eshelman recently
underwent kidney surgery. She is
now recuperating at home.
Dr. and Mrs. Don Gibson of Santee, S. C. was the recent visitor of
Margaret Douglas.
·

,,

',.

·~

f

$21 ,988·

00 ~;,

S;VINGS

VB, ALL WHEEL DRIVE, AUTO, AIR,
POWER EQUIPMENT, LEATHER,
LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$33,050· 00

ON 1997 FORD CONVERSION VANS
CHOOSE FROM MARK Ill, UNIVERSAL,
GLAVAL, HIQH LINE CONVERSIONS

$28,988·00

UPTO

$10 000·00

PW, PDL, More.

~- 1~,94
.
'

l

.•

'

..•....

�P8ge 10 • The Dally Sentinel

.•.

c

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

MUFFLER SHOP

112..z181

s.estev.~n~w•

NO'IlfiNG
RUNS •
UKEADEERE"

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

112·2181

s.~~~ tt~\-- ~UlJt't,..
~

Muffler &amp; Tail Pipe

888 PI! tea est Drive
GaiHpolla
Aaau from Gallia Auto Sales on old Ate. 35 Weet
New Summet' How8 Mon.·Fri. 8-5; SaL 8-3

&lt;T.ultd

4flsountTHtRD ·

..,

PtiONEH2·2111

101 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

I:E

lil

Guaranteed Service

992-2825
•

HE WINSTON CUP CIR'CUI
CGHIIm UP: Nov. I&amp;. .NAPAIIOO
-1:-Moto&lt;Spoodway,
....... Go.

•

MOUT THE TRACK: ThankiiO Brulon

- · ~~~~
· roconllgura·
tiPn.
lion

r::'"'-::=-:-.,

trook.
Now ""' In tho

~

lntiroly -

~··hlp·
Of
Olhtr Spudway

THIS

WEEK

UUMLUMIER
St. Rt; 248

MotOrtfiO'Ialrocka

1185-3301

-

AIIONG THE fAVORITES: Dolo Elm·
hardt"&amp;"'ut vtceory Wll here. Call J1r·
rea - I n lho aprtng onc1 Ia
oomlng off 1 slmlar perfot'rnanc1 at
BKI Elliott hu- pr-od .
on hit home track .

-lx.

I D l l ' l - CHAMPION: llollbY

• ..,.,. a. au llrJr.¥tt c....

.Labonte.

·-c..-eoo

once. Patlk:ularly tho11 with a tute
for chill doga.

lif

( t .1!22 to 1.54
m. .) and ohopod B. La~
InCa lhe truncated
trl...aJ prof....... by Smith.

5p.m. •.......,.•TNI&lt;

TOHO

...

allghUylanglhonod

I_IIAICAII_IIIII_

••

IJ

•

hu,...I'VW-to-

On TV AltllmN E8atem

Chesler

..

at Ct.rsone and
Fori WOrtft, AMS

The Varsity, locatod lull otl tho
i1llrlbde on 1he north 11d1 ol AttMIII
Goorgll Tool\, ~ ona of lhl
city't more fllfiC)UI lnltiMionl. HUge
linea, '"'"*Y rapkt tervlee, and 1111
ataccato eound ot em~e" bart!·
lng out ordett make The V1111ty a .
place e~t~ery visitor ahoulcl try et !aut

R-

Tllllll WHO COULD IUR-:
llollbY .......... wllllly htr1110 win In
hll flntl,_ willl
Potty. KoMy
Scltrador MOmiiO boon t h o - of

StihiPower Tools &amp;

. ,

I

'it
_

~

Ridenour
Supply

with

poinllng -

ICIYTOTHI

·- -'

1 ,,,

tw:l: Dongot'lurkl

.

.......,wh~Non­

-

•·

•

groovotrook. flvO!d.

ADVERTISE ON
THIS PAGE

~
--:~.

B. llllolt

ttm to Jtlltlordon.-- only to
nnllh 18th to win h l l - Winoton
c:ltlmplanohlp.

Cal1992-2156

eo.

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

Call:JEFF

WARNER

,.,

o··

............_.........

·-7-

Olloo:-

'u:l1t 1121111

·-IOWOUP

I. JIIIGanlan, 4,581
I . r::. Jlmlll. 4.521
3. Milk IIW!In, 4,51'

10. Tid......._3._ '

I D. H1tmie s-t, 3~

I. Fllndt~ 4,211

1• .a.clc$prlgut,

·•5.•0..
'""~ Earniwd.
l.aiborllll. 4,rnT
1. !ltlbv l.liblnl, :S,tll

Dave Harris
Ext.104or
Don Riffle
Ext.105
For More
Information

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
SERIES: Joe Nemechek's vic·
tory a1 Homestead, Fla., WBI
Doth ImpressiVe - holed 121

f.

'

\

•

I...,.,.~

3,21T

.. ChucllloMI. 3.112 '

line were urtea
Randy LaJoie,

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

lng Rick Carelli.

~ ranklngo II&gt;' NASCAR Thlo
.....tl'trrilngilmJ*.ill !HI .

Wook-

1,IJolo- (1l

e. Tony

(e)

Big dif!erenoe from '96
7.11obbJ ..._ (7)
Knocking on llle door

3.--(3)

8.llobbJ ~(I)

Bricty•rd 400 thlt year. He hp
also appeared in Busc::h Grand
Natioital, ARCA and Craftlmaa
Ttuct Series events in vehicles
owned by Elliott AI you are no
doubt aware, Starr, who will be
20 on ChrlstmU Day, Is Elliott's
daughter by a previ001 m•r·

No preuure
O..liiam.*lMI (I}
lallwln--

10.~-tdl

5.

-

KnowltoptOwelf

-

'

Eliott

- - . - Qor.

oo.or

u - Slttoo Auto Club.

......,

W. Burton

When he lolneil lht

IUixl

BodineIIVIO
T. Llbonle

UAW-GM CUlly 500, Chlrloltt
DltHird 500, ,....._..
.

HlmiiiOn
HwniltOn
Jarrett
(B. """""•) (8. LAbonte)

B. Labonla

AC Doloo 400, Dll'l LUbt &amp;00. Pl'loeMt
HAM 500, AlllrU

v--

Late In tht 1M 11110n,

Irwin lolnod tho Truck
lh,.. mcaa. Thle ,.., he
.hla now ....,
wlth t ftourllh, wlnnl119

auperaDMCIWtly rtCI8 at
Homeatpd, fll., and

FEUD OF THE WEEK

Ford vs. Chevrolet
After two .....,.In w111c11

lhiCMorloCorto

Fort

--·Dale

Chovy-JoiiOortlon. Two
Jar·
roll ond IMrk Mortin, are polled

---thll-

up""
"Gontooi-·
-·'Ford
0!-. giVOI hll

doli.wtecl,
Fonll-. hod

-Thla-·a-

to llick

-

plocoo, - ·

opinion:
.... to ""'llle lablo by

-.g lho .......... ohompi-

aon,lho lilt

lorlhiTIU&gt;

C&gt;niNp lalla -

-.t.llul
tho moot -

Crown racea.

Sorlri and compotod In

23 CO&lt;:ultllncl, ·•....
1Mwlnnrn
lnPii«il'as•,
• Fnl
r101 ~ on ICfteclule.

tlglooo-.

Croltoman Truck Sarlol,
he al,.ady hod won oll!hl
USAC mkla-t, uwn
oDttnt tll1dlour Silwr

W:tory In llle

~·r.ce.

ttoweJ8r,

"·-to1 0 - t w
Gordon
c-

Gonion

wtnnJng

tho- '
CupdtMng ~.lllfl
tmtly In l h o - of

lmtglne

In 1 ""' without ttltlrog lho

~"­
oflllem.'

Woi1h, Teut.

Toll .. ln tOO....,.!",_
fitly you *tl&lt;a'wly Irwin. One
- " " blclrlwnloom flo

,_,. 1 NASCAR 11ia.... SoNI
to:

Y"'"' "'Y

cton•a M'CCIIIII no doubt
ono ollho t'IUOIUIIor
lrwln't rtJIId riM. Irwin,
IIIII Gord0n1 nrnocl hit
...., flmt arlvlng open•
whulad e~ra In tha

WHY
, . I U"•
41111&amp;
ru; ~
-.,."" wmar wo

noxt _..,,
Konny Irwin to folloWing
tlrtll tlnaady by

JMott

......,

!!00.- - .

-

tlike owr hla f1moua No.
28 Touco/Havollno Ford

----

ON THf SC HfDUlf

-8tJlt. e WII'IR:In Cup 400, Aichmouct
Sept. t4 . _ ~h 300. Loudon, N.H.
Sopt. 21
s.pt. ..
Oci. S
' Ocl12
Oo:t. If
Nov. 2
Nov. 11

11Y Manto Dunon

(1G)

•tc•"TtiiiWIIIt

Truck Sorin ao • woy Into NASCAR llclng.-

NASCAA This WHk
Who Ia tlllo young driver
Robert Yoleo h"" hlrtd 10

lall·run for l&lt;lng Rlclta'd
I. BIR Ellloll (II
Strong here k1 past

4.Jo11BIIrton(4l

....

....... .,. I ..

Kollny 11w1n ..-tho -

2. Jtll Gao;dan (21
- t o finish 18111

Waiting In lhl wings

· ':It lurned out to be an excellenl
day. Many sludents and parents
h~lped out, and everyone left wilh a
full slomach."
: That was according to Gordon
Fjsher, Southern High School princi- ·
p~l . referring to Soulhern Junior
J:ligh and Southern High School's
annual ttirkey and ham dinner held
l'lov. 2 at the high school.
. • This particular event was a huge
sUccess, Fisher said.
.:: Whal this dinner has provided for
SHS so far includes the in-school
Qllevision program and videos which
aie used "for speech, drama and the
School morning news program, four
wideocasseue recorders, storage cabInets, overhead projectors and other
equipment needed by the student
body.
: Fisher Sjlid man~ of the school's
~tudents;'reacllers: fac'Ulty and parents
helped our at the dinner. Forty peo·
pie total helped serve and prepare
food for the approximately 400 people who came ..

Ron Barfield ICf'lel 11 a test
driver for EIUott's Wiaston Cup
• team and competed Jn tHe

a.-.Lilt

LaMonte

NA&amp;CARllio _..,., Llko;
ciO TlltGIItllftiiiZIII, 2SOOE.

-

2105C.

IIW.. -·N.C.

11oo- tor wtov llko
o.vtd p...,., 11 J.W.

Thoma o1 Salford, N.C.

• AGE: 28
• MARITAL STATUS:·
~rtate
• HOMETOWN:
lndlanapotis, Ind.

8 CAR: 1997, Craftsman
Truck Series, No. 9B
Raybeotoa Ford. owned
~ Jim Herr!~; Winston
· CUp Serles,.No. 27

Hasll&lt;o Ford, owned

~David Blair· 1998,
nstor) Cup Series, No.
28 Tel&lt;8c0/Havollne Ford,

owned by Robert Yates.

riap. He and aam:nl wife

Cindy have 11101her child,
Chase, born on Nov. 28, 199!5.

• WHY. DID YOU CHOOSE

THE CRAFTSMAN
TRUCK SERIES AS AN
ENTRY INTO NASCAR?
•for me II was an o~lunlty. A year ond a hall
ago, Whtin 1111 or thla come
down, I hed on opporlunl·
ty to go lr=llyle racing
or ttud&lt; r
. My whale
kM'IQ·ttrm
WU
Wlnaton Cup raolng. So I
figured KI do tho! Qntly)
then I will nol/80' ond up

Dear N!ISCAR This W.ek,
Do you htve an)' information
on a Jeff Gordon fan club? ·
Barb Bollnow
Soulh Haven, Mich.

Dear N!ISC!IR llac:e Fan,
The Jeff Gordon·Na1ional
Fan Club may be conlacted

where I wanl to be, or it
will be many years down

Valley
Lumber&amp;
Supply Co..
555 Park St.
Middleport ·

via the ln1erne1 11:

the road.
TO BE THE HARDEST
PART OF WINSTON
CUP? ·an flucks, we run a
tot of shoner lraclta, and

hllp://wwwJeffOordonFanaub.

.....

• WHAT DO YOU EXPECT

992-6611

Winston Cup tracks as

there areln the BuiCh
Grand National ~trios . h's
certainly gotng to take a ·
while to get uUd to lht
Winston Cup trooka. On

By BRENNA SISSON
; A trend is something that is pop·
tjlar.
' Trends are fun and easy ways to
show your individuality, and at the
siune time, trends are easy ways to
tl»llow the crowd.
• There have been many trends to
.Weep through Soulhem High School
iii pasl years, but here are a few of the
~rrcnl trends in fashion, music, and
movies.

a family.
If you'Ve 0011 qr Jtll•n ar 1

the other hand, we do run
a wide variety of tracks,

--:HAICAR

TNa Wllk "-Tum, 0/0 The

so that Is an advantage.•

-

Goatia, 21100 I. Frllll·

Un - · · O.lloollo, N.C.-

WHO'S HOT -WHO'S NOT
trHO'SHO!'!
• Dille Jtur8llla

ClEW OF 'DIE WEB
scM Blnllnd h l l -

t. Whole llogan waa 'Wheno Uanoy Buys

coming ofllho moat

helped Jol1nny- win •

Speed'? •

apec:ltt:ular driving performtnct of

hll
carlllf and is within llrildttll dlllanca of
Jeff Gordon for • polnta d1tmplonahlp.

2. Who -

Buoclt Grind )lationoj chlml&gt;k&gt;r1ohiP In 11185 for owner

lho 'l&lt;Jng Of ... Conwrtiblea'?

~. Thefolow'o&lt;g

3. Who wmlho 1801onllna~ at Atlanta
Motor Spoodway on tho day hll brother won
his ti8COntl Winston Cup c:hlmplontohip?

WHO'S HOT!
• Dale Earnhardt wu lpeden•laf when

he lalfwi&gt;n, which wu on March 10.
1998, a t - Motor Spoadway.
However, that win was 58 raon ago.

year Randy I.IJolo climbed
1n1o eau~·· No.,.
and Bird loti

c-.

-~effort
In Florida, L1Jo1e modo ~

twc In a row tor hlmlelf and
t1t&lt;ee In a row lor Bird and
Baumgardner.

iy BILLIE SELLERS
: The Southern High School choir is
now under the direction of newly
ltired teacher Kent Howell, who
replaces Miss Montgomery. who left
the dislricl due to her marriage.
• Howell is a graduate of West Lib·
efty College where he studied to
h&lt;.come a band director, which is one
rhson he was hired at Southern: he
i~ here 10 try and stan a band al SHS .
· He already has some people practicing some of the differ~nt instru·
ments he has to offer and hopes by
next year there are enough people to
start playing at football games.
But until he gets enough people
for a band, he is here to teach choir.
This year the choir may even perfann
a Christmas show. Howell said he
may continue lo leach choir after the

,,_
!:#!.. AROUND THE GARAGE

FIOM THE ARCHIVES:

--

...hlldtlti-... ..,.
llutldy-old_,.,...._""
S;

'lUI).

By-Dutton

-anci-

NASCAR This Week

CHARlOTTE - A court nAed
In ltYor o f - Mot........
Inc.
lilt
Brulon Smith'alaMUit tl)lirtlt
PMt lrwoMng """"'''&gt;iP of

tn ht t1r11

--oiR.J.

Rl!ltiOidl ........ lip.

1m,

allho

-·
- ........
--.

RACING ON THE WEI

Court dismisses.Bruton cas·e against NCMS

'NAICAII:
1111 ""' ~ "'
Tho-Cup-

North Catollna- Sc&gt;aodwey.
Smith h o d - tho l8le
of 70 - o f tho Aocidng.
hom lr8cll'a tlloC:k 10 P,......oln
North Catollna llullneU Court.
AI a r8IIJit of the OOUII. dec&gt;

World

St I I hi) In I Nord

~Dodgo.

llntl --~~~~ ~
yw. wllh DIIYftl " wlrri'tg In . . -

lion, NCMS thlreholderl will

maot on Dec. ~ 10 CCN1Iider the
merger of PMiancl NCMS.

. -rllflll'--.. . -"·
-·Mifary.

~

Sprloklng tor - · Motor·
paut's
r - Gr8Qllkt, lhe
dec1elon ila

clolr oflirmatiOn o f - wt
haw oaid alllllong: ht Mr.
Smith'' claim wu t r 1111 anc1
oompletoiy without mo&lt;lt. We
are pe..ed wlh the r.wta and
Iooft forwtrd lho cuotjAotluo•
Of h merger.•
Smith dici nat Immediately
respond to tho doolllon.
LET'S IIIAK£ A DEAL: Dar·
rei -.tp Is .,opriled that
dal11 oo tho Wlnotcn Cup
5erleo can be ~ht and lOki,
1M he il not c:rlticil of lho ldoe.

to

Traclta In Tt&gt;tll ond New
Hampol1ire got datoa lh~ Ill·
aon aflor lho reapactlve .,.,_
- Bluton Smith and Bob Bahre
- each . , . - tlalf Of North

W11ke1bon&gt;

s,&gt;w;liiO), .........

lily to.-~ down.
"t never tf"iiO..gtt I'd see the

day wl1on NASCAR would allow
thlt; llliCS O.W. "It takes
NASCAR out oflho equation
and klop&amp; them ftom being !he
bod guy, There aren\ 81fy more

--·but

-nt

will- you 10 buyHASCAR
a race •ack

and lll&lt;oli10Se cltteo and do
aomethlng with lhom. H'a just
olgnlflcan! from the
lhat lt'o a dlllorant WfiY of .,,.
nlng tho sport.
·
, gueaa Kyou're aelllng the
triCk ancj maklna a lot of """"Y·
It'&amp; all right. llh~k NASCAA is
doing OVOfYilOdy a lallllr, to tell

Mllll

=::==.

1'1WmMtln1.h1m

you lho tMII. They're toelplng
lho little guy wl1o doesn\ ha"' a
fulwe In the aport get a retum
on his""""'""'"'· and a pretty
good one. And they're hetpinci

OW•uiSA.AgrMI:a:w•;!! !on

.

~,......,.~.Adc.

----.Tho~ta
• . - -.... - p l i o a of 11m0e11 20 MwMn ,..

ihe grcwth of the_.. So, It's a
win-win aHuation ""'""!"" got
right down to ! . But l'a ju1t ·
intereoting tl\alconcept ie being

-·""""""
L.oldl of hIIWiMIIV
hll-lnlorrnailol I·

_'"' ·
---·-~

Llllld. I ......, would haw
thought abo,Jt doing h 1nat way.
Most Umes In the past, have tried 10 got a date before
they build alacillty. -they .
bulfcla taciUty and then staotiO
monlpu~te ways get a date.
So H'o a 'lOu build H. we'l come'

-

of """"""-

polnla: 11ia " ... unoftl.
c:lol ..., w!1iclllo not"' NY • II

-

lhy of lnftHIIWIIOii. lhtrt it Ol"q

to

ont 1"1010 of IIIIROC Clr,

lnd

""'"""Godgo~-

1hlt ha now bNn IU'JIPI mect·

....,.no. Somehow, we'll figure

.....

out a wa~ •

Call992·2155Dave Harrjs Ext. 104 or Don Riffle Ext. 105
For More Information
'

HUGE SUCCESS- The annual SJHSJSHS turkey and ham din·
ner has helped pay for many Items used by the district's students.
Here teacher Bill Beegle and retired bus driver Dan Smith 1alk
over dinner In the high school cafeteria. (SHS photo by Tara Rose)
One of the students who.helped. like these."
Stacy Warden, said, "I had a good
lime working for the ham and turkey
The people behind the event invitdinner. and I think other sludenls ed everyone to next year's turkey and
should help out al school functions ham dinner.

I talked with quite a few of my fellow classmates about what they
thought were some of the biggest
trends. Some of the favorites were:
Levi's Silver Tab jeans, beaded necklaces, and anything corduroy. Polyester was alSo a favorite malerial for
shins. jackets. and pants.

nis shoes, while Regina Manuel. a
junior, loves her "killer" hip buggers.
Here al Southern High School there
arc many guys sponing metal wallet
chains, camouflage cargo pants and
giant-sized metal bead necklaces.
These necklaces are so trendy even
some of the girls are wearing them.
When asked who a few of her
favorite
bands were, Maggie Smith.
Ashley McKinney, a senior, told
-said she likes The
a
freshman.
me she likes wearing bright colors
and sporting her very trendy Fila ten- Smashing Pum~kins and The Mighty
Mighty Bossi ones. Some of the olh·
er bands mentioned were Marilyn
Manson. Oasis, and The Spice Girls.
Some actors and actresses who are
popular are Ewan Ma.cGregor. Will
Smith, Claire Danes, George
band gets stancd if it can fit into his Clooney. and Leo Dicaprio.
Chris Yeaugcr, a freshman. said he
schedule.
When asked about problems likes Alicia Silverstone, while he ·
Southern has had with keeping choir feels the Pamela Anderson Lee craze
teachers for more than a year or two. in over!
he said he was hired to leach and that
. is what he is going 10 do.
Howell also teaches at the other
schools in the Southern Local School
District.
Some of his younger students ·
said they enjoy having him as a
teacher, because he teaches' them
more than just music ... he teaches
them how 10 play music.
Many of tbem arc looking forward
10 playing in the ban!] when they get
10 high school themselves, so il
looks like he is going to have his
work cut out for him.

What would be nicer than an out·
door picnic area where students and
faculty could enjoy their lunch'!
That was · the .idea shared by
Southern High School Principal Gar·
don Fisher and media center coordinalor Kim Phillips. At the beginning
of the school year, their plan went
into effect.
Limestone was put down in a formerly under·used area between the
voc'ational agriCulture room and the
cafeteria, creating a counyard along
the breezeway connecting the two
buildings. The industrial arts class

•
'
'

•

.
..
·•

.

IN!NBHlB til.ulllE'IT INt:.
• Ripley, WV'26211

.

Bus.Phone(304)372~73

HIOCHI64·FORD

By JOSIE JARRELL
Asst. Student Editor
In recent years , Meigs Coumy has
been ranked number 10 in the stale in
percentage of teen pregnancy, · but
was ranked number 55 out of 88 this
year, according to the Meigs County
Health Department.
As you can sec, this means a dramatic drop in teen pregnancy.
If you can not see yourself being
a teen mother or father al this point
in your life, you had better think
again because. as one teen said, "I
didn't ever think il could happen to
me, but believe me il could happen 10
anyone."

Another said, "If you arc not
ready lo settle down or take a lot of
rcsponstbility. don't have a baby."
There arc many pressures facing
young mothers who arc in school.
One teen said she feel s a~· if pco·
pic do nol respect her as much, leach·

Come See Ua For All Your
Parts and
Service Needa

..

constructed in the spring by the then·
freshman and sophomore students.
One of the benches is inscribed in
memory of Shawn Harris, a student
killed in an all· terrain vehicle crash
last month. The bench was his last
project, Elberfeld said.
Elberfeld said tbe benches arc
made of prcssurc·treatcd 2X4s and
2X6s which were bolted and screwed
together. He· anticipates the benches
should la&lt;t about 20 years, or even
longer.
Now that the weather is turning
colder and dreary, some students say
they can not wait for spring.

Mill Street
Bookstore
992-6657

CONVENIENCE STORE
EUII·I.Jrocl[lll-12111
ElmiiX B•tat.uiDI

Feed Supply

Coolville .Exit off At. 7
667 ·61 00 Store'
667·6101 Restaurant
Owner: Bryan White

"Stuft'" for 1\!ts • Farm
Animals Stable
Joe Evans 992·2164

Wheal Horse

Ohio River
Bear
Company
1
992-4055

TRACTORS
and RIDING

333 Page Street
Middleport, Olio
45760
(614·992·6472

crs and peers. Another is that you
somclimcs have trouble conccntnlt~
ing because you arc loo busy think·
ing of all the problems you arc facing.
There arc many other pressures
thai young mothers rcpor1 having to
face each and every day, such as
when they get up in thC morning to
go to school they do not wanlto lea vc
their· babies at home all day while
they are at school. Then, once you do
gel home you are too busy with your
baby and do nol have lime to get your
work done for school.
Another factor is sleep. To begin
with you have to stay up lo gel the
baby 10 sleep, then when you finally
get to sleep you have to get back up
to fix a boltlc or change a diaper. If
it is a good night you may only have
to do this once or twice , then you
have to get up and gel ready lo do it
all over again. This is what one morh:

COOLS POT

MOWERS

BAUMLUMBER
State Route 248
Chester

985-3301

'

Rt. 21 at the Rlplty-FIIrJHin Exit 1132

made nine picnic tables. and by September students started enjoying their
lunch outside.
"It is so much nicer to have somewhere lo cal besides the cafeteria,"
said senior Hillary Turley.
Fisher said he is very pleased with
the new addition.
"The picnic area has come in
handy for things olber than lunch," he
said.
Some classes, such as art class,
usc the area when the weather is nice
enough to work outside.
Industrial arts teacher Michael
Elberfeld said most of the tables were

Teen pregnancy prompts radical change

...,
.

AITENTIONADVERTISERS!!
Advertise on this page

By STACY WARDEN

New choir director looks
to build band foundation

Bill Blurngardnor'a lACE

tlonal agriculture building - Wl'alher penni!·
ling. Here, seniors Erica Arnott, left, and
Ranetta Wheeler braved the cool autumn
weather for a little fresh air.

Under-used campus area
now outdoor lunchroom

.What's 'in'? Just ask these classmates

If you do no1 have lnteme1
acc:c!\8, wrile the club It
P.O. BQx 515, Williams, Ariz.
86046-QSlS. Dun 1re S19.9S
for an individual and $24.95 !:&gt;r

not as many of them are

NEW PICNIC AREA- Southern High School
sludenla and faculty tired of eating lunch inside
the cafeteria can now usa a new, court·yard-llke
picnic area between the cafeteria and voc•

By SHAUNA MANUEL

Dear NASCAR Rice Fan,

·

November 13, 1997
Page 11

One opinion shared by most sludents
thai took the test is that they could
have used more time lo complete the
test.
Giving advice to those who have
yet.to take the test, Josh Ervin said,
"If any of you younger sludents plan
on going to college, take the test lhe
first time you feel tomfonable and
don't wait unlit you are a senior. This
way you can take the test more than
once so you can beuer your score."
Future test dates during the school
year include: Dec. 13, Feb. 7, April
14 and June 13. Area lest centers
include Ohio University, Gallia Academy High School, the University of
Rio Grande and others.

Annual ham,
turkey dinner
assists school

Karen M. Ferrell
Jamestown, N.C.

TOP 10

-.m, ,_ me calling

•

Enterpri5e.

Mark Martin, Glenn Allen lf1d
Jimmy Spencer.
CR!IFT1111AN TRUCK
SEIIIIS: For the oecontl week
In a row, fuel r, .ileage helped
Joe Ruttman win lhe Suj)Ofl'ruck
race. In the season finale allBa
Vegas, Ruttman 881Umed the
lead with only a few laps
remaiNng, 1hlnkl to tht fatter·

out o1300 1apa - and dramatic.
h was the same track where his
younger brother, John, wu

champion

Palrz•-~

l

READaS. ~ liiE ~­
Dear NASCAII This Week,
I 1m a Bill Elliott fan. I would
like to know what bappened to
Ron Barfield. who drove the
Busch car for Ellion. I saw him
in two of tbt truck races but not
in thell}useh car. I would also
like to know what happeMd to
Elliott's girl Stan. Is abe ln
NASCAR or somerhing else?
I enjoy your anicle in our
newspaper, the Hl1h Point

FROM LAST WEEK

. ICI"DDI the

---J-·..........-

,,

a. Eluaklnot ..~one~. s.t .Tnt........,Ufe

kllleclln • truCk roco during the
apring, Following N -

.u..~

"•\

3. .bt~.II.MI

7. Eb~. U52

I . Ill EIID&amp; 3.711

)«&lt;OHOiflC

.t

I. Aun ~•.1,4011
I, All* CMI, 3_!11
I
1. Jlf1 SNit, U07

.. Ebs.dlr. 3,411

• . AI-, - - .. 3.531

' "' '
. ,.
f.·

3.7'111

a. Rll:tlliclklt. u2a

2. Todllloclnt, J,818
3. Slwt Pwll. 3,115.1
. . .... ~.3,517
$. PN p__.., 3,4!0

4• .1118unon. 4,224

H.•. .

Kenny Irwin

1997 POINTS STANDINGS
For Homeowner s
Insurance

' PROFilE

Rt. 248

nlng·111t, . . .

''

they will take the test until they earn
that score.
The ACT consists of four parts:
English, mathematics, rel(ding and
science. Students are givep a specified amount of time to complere each ·
section. The test usually takes some·
where around four hours to complete
and studenls are given one break ~f
about 20 minutes.
· Several juniors at SHS took the
test for the first time last month,
while others tried · to bener their
score.
Opinions on the ACT varied from
student to student. Some felt the tesl
was easier than expected. Others felt
it was very difficult and challenging.

"I have already taken the ACT
twice. I scored a 17 on the last one
and I need at least a 27, so I'll keep
trying 'til I gel the 27 I need."
That's according 10 Teresa Bush, a
junior at Southern High School, con·
cerning lhe American College Test,
better known as the ACT.
The ACT is an assessment lest.
The score lhat a student earns on the
ACT is used by colleges and univer·
sities when considering a panicular
student's acceptabilily.
Like Bush,'mostjuniors are plan·
ning on taking the lest again. Some
are aiming for a certain score and say

hu-ollghl·

8 ..m. • SUndly • ESPN2

t2:40 p.m. • S&lt;may • ESPN

By SUZANNE EVANS
Student Editor

Accessories

·--.,..

i~l ~\\\.:.-......._',
h
'
'
.

' ;.... ··..
n
•. '
!,...--·....

Thursday

3rd year ACT challenge

See us for Your

1 vlelO&lt;y. Tarry
,.' /" ·~ ·.,
Ltllonto -~~~ lllto
l.,,.. ·· o;\on ., to-ldiup-

~

The Daily Sentinel @
Southern High School
Southern students face
•

4110 DlEPORT • 0"'

Starting at $79.95

(614) 446-2412 or Toll Free 1-800-594-111

Thur.clly, November 13,1997

..

""""'""•" Hill Rd.
Cheater. Oh 45720
WV25550

er had lo say when asked what one of
the hardest parLs was about being a
mother and having to go to school.
Another teen said it is really hard
10 have a social life, because when
you want to go out you can not jusI
go ... you have to get the baby ready
before you can even think about
yourself. Sometimes you want to go
out without the baby so you have to
get a babysitter... then the whole lit11e
you arc gone you arc worried about
the baby and you can not really have
as much fun as you had planned .
One young mother gave advice to
other young people who might be
thinking of having a baby : "You have
the rest of your life to have kids, so
usc your lccn life wisely because you
can never gel it hack."
"So please think twice before you
do something that will affect the rest
of your life."

ARTHUR
TREACHERS
Tired of Burger. and
Fries
Try
Healthy
Alternati Grilled Menu.
Call In your ordar

i'

Owner

Twin Oak
Pennzoil
The Area's MOSI

•
Competitive
Fuel Prices
Pomeroy, Oh St. Rt. 7

1192-111129

KENS APPUANCE
Salas &amp; Service

We Service What We Sell
The areas only full
service agent for all
major brands
Owner
Jim Young

flutland
Bottle Gas
Supporting all the
area schools &amp; youth
Stop In and aay "HI" .
to Dave or Herb.

742-2211

�I
Page 12 • The DaHy Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Eastern Local · School District
announces honor roll students
The Eastern Local School District has announced the names of
students who have achieved academic distinction for the first nine
weeks grading period.
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
Grade 12: Kelli Bailey, Heather
Naylor, Michael Weeks, all A's;
Robert Bartitnus, Christopher
Buchanan, Brandon Buckley, Jamie
Drake, Joanna Gumpf,)(eni Hetzer,
Jeremiah Kehl, Shaun Long, Abe
Rach. Angela Riling, Nichole White,
and Cory Yonker, overall.
·
Grade II: Stephanie Evnas,
Heath Proffitt, Mike Sobieski, all
A's; Lacey Bunting, Jessica Burchard, Radley Faulk, Jodie Ihle,
Valerie Karr, Jessica Marcum,
Jacuelynn Parker, Sari Putman,
Heather
Rockhold ,
Jennifer
Starcher, Angela Wolfe, overalL
Grade 10: Maureen Heines, Jessica Pore, Edward Schaekel, Joshua
Will, all A's; Jason Barber, Matthew
Boyles, joshua Broderick, Chasatie
Hollon, Cassie Rose, Jessue Rupe,
Leah Sanders and Eric Smith, over·
aiL
Grade Nine: Joshua Kehl, all A's;
luli Bailey, Quana Barringer, Kristen Chevalier, Amber Church, Josh
Clark, Sarah Clifford, Phillip Cooke.

and Wesley Crow, overall.
Grade Eight: Tamara Bissell,
Bradley Brannon, Lindsey Cross.
Tina DeLaCruz, Ben Holter, Garrett
Karr, Christopher Lyons, Kimberly
· Marcinko. Jonathan Will, all A's;
Theresa Baker, Janet Calaway, Tricia Conger, Darlene Connolly,
Jonathan Duffy, Holly Broderick,
Tiffany Kidder, Sara Mansfield,
Danielle Rucker, Stacie Watson,
overall.
Grade Seven: Sonya Frederick,
Tyler Simmons, all A's; Joshua
· Bashan, Miranda L. Buckley, Carrie
R. Crow, Nichol Honaker, Erica R.
Lemons, Leann Marcinko, Nicholas
Miceli, Thomas Simmons, Jennifer
Thoma, Ryan Wachter, Philip Werry,
and Chelsey Wood, overall.
RIVERVIEW ELEMENTARY
Grade Si.: Jon Bartimus, Sandy
Powell, Hollie Rose, and Anneue
Tucker, academic achievement.
Grade Five : Morgan Weber, All
A's; Jaime Reel, Casey Smith, Krista
White, academic acheivement.
Grade Four: Shawn Reed , all A's;
David Maxson, Ashley McCaman,
Brooke Parker and Tiffany Smith,
academic achievement.
TUPPERS PLAINS ELEMEN·
TARY

Society Scrapbook
Title J meeting planned
A meeting will be held for parents, grandparents, guardians and
others interested in learning more
about the Title 1 program at the Salisbury Elementary School, Monday,
Nov. 24 at 6:30 p.m. The Title I
staff will attend to discuss the program.
The meeting will include infor·
mation concerning the Title I pro·
· gram, information about the competency based education program, the
proficiency tests, and a program pre·
sented by the individual building
Title I students.
·
Christmas party planned
The annual Christmas pany at the
Ohio Valley Christian Assembly was
announced for Dec. 1 at 6 p.m. when
the Bradford Church of Christ Lydia
Council met recently at the Bradford
Church.
The dinn~r will e prepared and
served by the men of the church. An
ornament exchange will be held and
secret sister gifts will be exchanged
and secret sisters will be revealed.
New secret sisters will be drawn ar
the January meeting.

Arrangements were made to provide Christmas for a needy family.
Paula Pickens opened the meet·
ing with prayer, officers repons
were given. and devotoins were
given by Carolyn Nicholson using
PhiL I and Psalm I03. Tilles were
"Autumn" and "Thank God In All
Things."
Sunshine gifts for November will
be taken to Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Gilkey and Josephine Phillips.
Brenda Bolin an d Charlotte Van
Meter will handle communion in
November and December. Baby
items are needed for the pantry, it
was noted, and for the kitchen in
December, dried beans, noodles and
pasta are needed items. The need for
household cleaners and plastic siiverware was also noted.
New officers will be announced
at the December meting.
Hostesses, Tina McGuire and
Carolyn Nicholson served refreshmcnts to Megan and Kathy Dyer,
Charlotte Van Meter. Sherry Sham·
blin, Paula Pickens, Suzie Will,
Charlotte Hanning, Jackie Reed,
Sherry Smith. and Nancy Morris,
Sherry Shamblin had the closing
-pra)'Cr.

One in five Americans may
: have lrritable,Bowel Syndrome
• By SUE McDONALD
:; The Cincinnati Enquirer
•• Some topics are too uncomfortable
to talk about - even with a doctor.
And a cMdition like irritable
bowel syndrome. with a name "''
unsettling as the sy!J~ploms it produces, can leave people suffering
alone or in silence out of embarrass·
ment.
"It's a frustrating condition for a
patient to have, and it"s almost as
frustrating for a physician 10 II)' to
treat," said Dr. Janice Rafferty,
assistant professor of surgery at Universily of Cincinnati Medical Ccn·
ter.
Irritable bowel syndrome also is
the most common bowel disorder
and 1~ ' second most common reason
- tohind colds - that people call
in sick to work, said Dr. William B.
Salt III. a Columbus, Ohio, gastroenlerologist and author of "lrritable Bowel Syndrome &amp; the MindBody Brain-Gut Connection"
(Parkview Publishing: $19.95; to
order, call (888) 599-6464.
"It's a huge problem in our country. We think a' many a.~ one out of
five people have the symptoms of
irritable bowel syndrome," Salt said.
"Yet people are somewhai rC!uctant
to ta,lk about it because it's very per·
sonal. and they're embarrassed to
talk about bodily functions and
bowel habits."
Irritable bowel syndrome affects
each person differently. but symptoms include stomach pain, diarrhea.
constipation, nausea, headaches and
extreme discomfort. sometimes after
eating.
Irritable bowel syndrome is
called "spastic cq,lon." "spastic
bowel" and. "nervous stomach."
•
Michael Kreines, a Cincinnati
gastroenterologist. likens it .to a
"Charlie horse in the gut," because
of the pain and discomfort. Some
people endure the symptoms - fre·
quent trips to the bathroom, gas,
diarrhea- even avoiding meals or
social occasions until problems
become severe enough to affect
lifestyle, work or social opportunities.
Traditional doctors link irritable
bowel syndrome to muscle spasms
along the length of !he digestive
lract, as well as to extreme sensitivi-

ty to certain foods, stress, possible
infections and the overuse of antibi·
otics that kill naturally helpful bacteria in the gut
Treatment involves changes in
diet, exercise, stress management
and medicines to relieve the muscle
spasms in the intestines (common
drugs arc Bentyl and Lcvsin),
Dr. David Dahlman. a chiroprac·
tor and nutritionist, said holistic
hc~lth care providers look at o!hcr
aspects of the disease- imbalances
of digestive enzymes 'or short-chain
fatly acids in the gastrointestinal
traci, food allergies, absence of
health flora (bacteria) in the gut and
parasites.
Natural products - amino acids,
· enzymes, herbs - often can calm
innammation, restore natural bacteria and balance digestive enzymes,
Dahlman said. Treating infections
also sometimes eliminates the con·
dition's symptoms.
Salt said more alternative
approaches to irritable bowel syndrome are being considered. In his
book, he cites a loss of stomachcalming herbs recommended by Dr.
Andrew Wcil, author of "Natural
llcalth, Natural Medicine" (New
Harmony; 1995): peppermint, ginger. chamomile, acidophilus. gentian, carob powder, passionflower.
valerian, dong quai (for women),
ginseng (for men) and echinacea.
Tell your doctor about natural
remedies you are laking. and lind a
nutritionist or herbal specialist
whose advice you trust.
In all cases, patients should mooitor and change eating patterns to
avoid certain foods, products or
"triggers" that make their symptoms worse, Salt said.
Treatment must be launched on
several fronts . Changing diet.
increasing exercise and managing
stress and medicines help control
symptoms.
Does stress cause the condition?
Most doctors say no, bul.lhey all feel
stress plays a role in the stomach
upset and pain produced by it.
People who have the condition
and who are under high levels of
stress may see their symptoms warsen, said Janice Rafferty of the Uni·
versily of Cincinnati Medical Center.

Public Notice
N011CE Of' PUBLICATION
lloophenD.IIIIM,
Allomey II Low
11W.~Avenue

Dllrton. Ohio 4&amp;402
Tho i:otelo of Kolllorlno
W..V., Unkr.:»wn, helra,
dovl-o, legotuo, oxeeu·
ton, IXICUtriXII, admfnla~
tratora, admlnletrlllxu ond
oulgnou, and John Doo,
Unknown Spouoe of
Kolhorlno Woo-, Som
Steinmetz, Paul Slolnmotz,

Public Notice
plot of oold Vltoge.
Ex..ptlnt from Lot No. 15
lhll portion oonvtyM by C.
C. Cuckler·to Dono Wolch
by dMd recontod In Volume
222, Page 187, Molga
. County Deed Rocordo.
Tho grantor horeln further
gronto unto tho Orontoea
and their oulgno tho right
to uoo wotor from o wotor
w.U on a lolldjacontto Log
No. 11, now or lormorly
ownod by Harold D. Qrahom
Md Jonot K. Qrohom, ond
tho aold Orentooa ahall
havo tho oxcluolvo right to
uao tho woll until a public
wator oupply lo prDVIdod, In
occordonco with tho
provlolona of tho deed ·
racordod In Volumo 247,
Pago 443, of tho Molga
County Dood Rocordo. The

Grade Six: Jessica Boyles, Hailee
Cline, Chrissie Gregory, Katie
Robertson, Nicholas Weeks, acade·
mic achievement.
Grade Five: Brittany Barnett,
Katie Hoxsie, Darren Scarbrough, and Ann llarreH, and · If
all A's; Christopher Carroll, Adam deeuaod, all holra, davl·
Dillard, Andy Francis, Jennifer Hay- 1111, legete11, executora,
IXICUtfh(ll, · ldmlnltlrl•
man , Joshua Hayman, Jessica Kehl, tore,
admlnlatratrhc:ea end
Bryan Minear, Sarah Yost, academic aaolgnaoo whooo addrua
achievement.
oro unknown, will hereby
Grade Four: Brian Castor, toke notlco that on October
Nicholas Kuhn, Ashley Miceli, Sara I, 1117, USDA Rurol
Wiggins, all A's; Christopher Davis, Dovolopmont, flied lie
Complaint In Foraclooulo Grant••• ahall 1110 have
Bryce Honaker, Joysse Nutter and onol'llorahalllng of Uono In tho right ol lngroaa end
Ashley Welch. academic achieve· tho Common Plua Court of ogrooo to ont.or upon tho
Molga County, Ohio, bolng well alto pramlooa lor the
men!.
Cue
NO. 87.CV·I25 ogolnat purpoeo olleylng, ..toying
CHESTER ELEMENTARY
Eatoto of Katherine ·and molntalnlng aold wator
Grade Six: - Brittany Hauber, Tho
Woovor, proylng tor llno to tho promlooo do·
Jonathan Owen, Alyssa Holter, all ludgmonl In tho omount of acrlbod herein.
A's; Kass Lodwick, Stacy Smith, $71,110.78 with lntorool
And that Darendonle, Tho
Andrea Warner, and William Woods, theroon occordlng to tho Ettllo ol Kathorlno Weovor,
Ierma of tho nolo from unknown, htlrl, dtvleeea,
academic achievement.
Augliot 4, 1917 until pold legateea, executoN, execuGrade Five: Derek Baum, Cody ond for forocloouro of oald trlxea,
adm'"latratora, adDill , Sara Pore, Chelsea Young, all Mortgogo Dood on tho mlnlatrotrlxoo ond aaalgn·
A's; Ashton Well, Ross Holter, Car· following daocrlbod raal 111, and John Dot,
rie Elberfeld, Ken Amsbary, acade- oatato, of which oold Unknown Spouae of
Delendont, Kathorlno Woo· Katherine Weaver, Sam
mic achievement.
ver, Ia the owner of:
Steinmetz, Paul Stolnmotz,
Grade Four: Andrew Mcintyre,
Sltualad In lho Townolllp and Ann Barroll, and II
James Will and Amanda Windon, of Scipio, County of Melgo deceaaed, all helra, davl·
end Steto of Ohio:
academic achievement
1111, leg11111, IXICUtora,
Being In the Vlllogo of oxocutrlxoo, ldmlnlatratore,
Horrtoonvllle, Molga County, admlnlatratrlxee and ••Ohio, being Loto No. 15 ond olgnou ba roqulrod to oet
No. 18 11 ahown on tho flrat up ony lntoreat they may

Thu~y,No~ber13,1997
Public Notice
havoln oold pr1111IIIi or bo
lorovtr blfftd, thot upon
failure of Hid~ to
poy or to ...,..to be ptld
oald ludgmont within t"'"
doyo from Ito rond!Uon thll
on Order of Sate bo loauod
to tho ShoriH of llolgo
County, Ohio, to epprolu,
advortlo• In tho Dally
Sonllnol ond eoll uld raol
11lato, that tho promluo bo
aold lru ond clur of all
clolmo, llono ond l-oot of
any of tho partlu horoln,
that tho procooda from tho
aalo of aald pr1111looo bo
oppllod to tho PlotntiH'a
ludgmonl ond lor auch
other rolla! to which USDA
Rural Development Ia
antlllod.
Said Dalandanto oro
dlroctod to tho Complaint

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

, . Thu~y. November 13,1997

Public Notice
wHI bt rondo,.. accore-

SiX -

old

lllniaRJIO OoiJorftWI

P'Jppiol, 1WO ....... ,.., lomoln,

lngly.

USDA Rural DeviiDpmonl

014·11411·2&amp;42.

Plalnllll
ll8pllln D. lllloi,-Y
110) ,.,; 111) •• 13, 10, 27;

Smal Ton l Block Dog, Ono Yeat
Old Uiutd, Hautabraken, LOYtl
Childron, Good Home Only, &amp;14·

1121 lite

448-1455.

Public Notice
Nolloo of Avlltablllly For
Public InliP I ~an

S.R. 325,
Langsville OH

PARTS

DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

,.
·,

113 W. 2ND ST.

Ohio

WYI023477

&amp; REPAIRS

lost: Black and Whlte K1Uen, In
The Vicinity of Big Bear 1n Galli·
polis, late Sundar (614) 4480647
1

POMEROY, OH.

area ot Rayburn

..

Pick up dllelrded .
appllancea, batterlaa,
many metals 8o
motor blocka.

Homelmprove~~ents
3351 Happy Hollow ROlli
Mlddlaport, Ohio 45TH:
New Homes, Acldltlona,
RQ91lng, Siding,
Pole Bama,
Decks, Painting

614-992-4025 I ...a

Public Notice
Call Us For A Free Esllmate
LEGAL NOTICE
Tho Molga Soli ond Water
614·742·3090
Conaervatlon Dtatrlcl Ia
614-742·3324
eccoptlng .-aled blda tor
614-742·3076
lha purchaao of a no-IIH drill
end/or trado·ln or oolo of
1994 John Duro drill.
PubliC Notice
All bldo muat be rtcolvtd
by tho Molga SWCD by 4:30 vlaora r11orvoo tho right to
p.m.
on
Wtdneed1y, occopl or ro(oct any or ell
November 19, 1917. Bide bids or porta thoreol.
For bid tpoclllcollona,
will bo opened ot 8:15 p.m.
614·992·6147 or write
on Wldneadoy ot tho boord
SWCD, 33101 Hiland
mooting ot 33101 Hiland
Po•nor&lt;oy, OH 45719.
Rood, Pomeroy. The Molgo
SWCD Board of . Super·
1

( fX~ ,2!1-IIIT]

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
1185-4422
Cheater, Ohio

·--

Complete MacblDe Shop Service Fabrkatlon
Steel Sales, Weldlna Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday- 8:00 a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday • 8:00 a.m. • 12 noon

Big Bend .fabrication,
Machine. &amp;Welding Shop
250 Condor s\reet .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on· NichOls Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992·2406
· Fax: 304-n3·5861

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

(UmeSton•
Low Ratea)

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

HERMAN®
by .Jim Unger

Rd. off Sandhill

AEWAADI 30H7s.8040.

Chapter 7

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

Lost: Malt Black 4 White Cat. in
The Vicinity Of O.J. Whitt Road,
&amp; Phil Edmonds Otr.ce, Aou1!1160,
814·388-8712.

LOST : Tri ·color male Beagle in

614-992·5479

Yard Sale

70

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclnlly
.Al.l. ~ard Slln Muo1

Chapter 13

For lnformatioQ Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek,
Attorney At Law
614·592-5025
Athens, Ohio

Be P1id In Advanct.
PEWit«: 2:00p.m.
dlo drt bor...1ho 011
t. to run. Sunday
, HIUon - 2:00 p.m.

Frlday.Mooday odNion
• 10;00 Lm. So1urday.

Big Yard Sale: Willow Valley Mil·
s10n, 27a) Ewmgton Road, ViniDn.
614-388 -8033 Call For Oireclions.

1111i2219'11 - - ,..

KINGS' .

I

60 Lost and Found

BANKRUPTCY

Gravely Dealer
Spencer, W.Va.
1-800-827-4551

.

I '

'110 Court St.

Richard's Lawn &amp; Garden .

11/3197 1 mo pd

;

Quality Window Systems

Buy, Sell &amp; Trade

LimestoneSand- Dirt
614-992·3220

kids, 814·949-3403.

" WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF

(Free Discount parts list)
Same Day Repair Service

.Gravel-

I

CELLULAR PHONES

IRAIILY ftACftll

TRUCKING

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

JoeWllaon

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

S&amp;L

two yoot old male
labrador, neulerad, good with

360° c;:ommunications

PRICES''
1998 Martin Street

To good homo,

26 YEARS IN BUSINESS

omECT

to/21/87 1 mo. pd.

actla glvon.
IMglnnlng November 111,
Said Delendanta will teko 1887.
nollcothet It be roqulrld to' 111) 13, lTC
anowor aold Complaint on
or before tho tot doy of
Jonuory, , ... or (udgmont

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

"FACI'ORY

Open Now &amp; WIH Be
Open Dlrlng Tile Bow
&amp; Regular
Deer Suson
742-2076

tho 110n1t of Robert Wingett,
Dlroctor, 1317 Colfogo
wherein notice under '"' Road, By-, OH 4177t,
·telr debt collection proctlco during lha 180 day porlod

Remodeling

M&amp;J

DEER SHOP

Tho Em..t Mid Mulne
Wlngatt
llamortol
EdUclllon 1I'U8I hoe lhd Ita
MNIII return of I prlvole
loundoiiOn, ...,.,,, wlllllhll
tnternol Rovanuo a....tco
tor nacot ,_ t816o17. In
ICCOrdiACI with lntornll
revenue Coda Section
8104Cb), thle form le awlt·
ab1a lOr public IMp latlon II

CLASSIFIEDS!

Custom Hpmes

OIUR'S

Winter · Clothing, Coats, To~s.
Household hems, Kitchen Items,
LOIS Of Misc. Item&amp;, Rain IShlne,
In Case Of R&amp;•n Sale Will Be In·
aide Camp D1ning Hall, 11/Hth,
15

HEIRLOOM CONNECTION
Heirloom Quality Custom Furniture
* ,...omplete
Kltehens
'-'
*Kitchen Cabinet Befaclng
* Antique Reproductions

1h.

Moving Sale, Washer, Dryer,

lawn Mower, Misc . Furnllure,

MuchM~rel614,___. 178

~~~:~Jn

Handcrafted Using Meigs Co. Hardwood

&amp; VIcinity

614-992-4106
Free Estimates

All Yard Sale• Mul1 Be Paid In
Advance. Deadllno: 1:oopm 1ho

day belore the ad Is lo run,

~!;::~S~t~ll=l===~O~rd=e~r:s:f:o:r~C~h:r:ls:t:m:a:s==~sundar

1 :OOprn Friclav.
&amp; Monday

80

RADIATOR REPAIR

Auction
and Flea Market

ATTENT·ION VENDORS: lndoar

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

Space SS. 00 Outdoor 13.00 Open
Evervday. Store hours 9-5. Crawlord's Flea Market. Henderson,
wv. 304-675-5404.
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer, complete
auction
service.
licensed
#66.0hio &amp; West Virginia. 304-

773-5785 0. 304· 773-5447.

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

614·992-3470

odltlon-

90

Wanted to Buy

8' Regulation pool table wlslale
top. 3)4-773-9567.

992·5583

Absotute Jop Dollar : All U.S. S1l·

...~~-"'1 t,r-"iii;'iR'aiiinM;.U;.;;iiw.R----r
And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
YOUNG'S
II
MINING ·verDiamond~
Anfique Jewelry, Gold

r---~

CARPENTER SERVICE

Full House

$15,000 .................................... 7
$10,000 .................................... 4
$5,000 ...................................... 5
$1 ,000 .... , ............................... 19
$400 ....................................... 45
$200 ..... ' .... ' ............................ 70
$50 .......... ,............. .......... 42,435

41handGoal

$1 ,000 ........ .... ................. 5
$500 ................................ 8
$200 .. '' ............... ' .......... 80
$100 ......................... 1,820
$50 ......................... 12,196

Harvest Gold

$1,500 ........................... 11
$900 .............................. 25
$500 .................... ., ........ 14
$300 ............................ 219
$100 ............................ 635
$60 .......................... 2,200

Fat Cat

$30,000 .................................... 5
$10,000 .................................... 6
$3,000 .................................... 15
$1,000 .................................... 24
$300 ......... ,.... , ..................... 201
$100 ......................... ~ ........ 1,099
$50 ............................. .... ... 9,685

lhankYIUI
COIIII alalatlonsl
Happy 811111daVI
Happy Annllei'SBIYI

$500 ..................................... 795
$100 .................... .~ .......... 10,352
$50 ' ................................. 39,282

•

23n1Annlm'sary

MUll•

$1 ,000,000 ..... .......................... 1
$50,000 .................................... 2
$25,000: ................................... 2
$1 0.000 ............. ' ................. ..... 6
$5,000 .................................... 11
$1 ,000 .................................... 28
$500 ............. :.................... 1,389
$100 ........ = ............ ......... 5,955
$50 ... ... ............................ 38,955

Join In lhe Wlnnl•

$2,000 .................................... 14
$500 .............. "'. ,.,, ......... "' ..... 55
$100 ...................... ............... 221 '
$50 .................................... 3,559

LumpSUID
$3,000 .............. ........................ 3
$500 ................................ ......... 6
$100 ....................... .)............ 424
$50 ...... ' ....... " ............... '' ... 3,585

Millie Carlo

$3,000 ...................................... 3
$2,000 .................. ' ................... 5
$1,000 ..................................... 8
$1 00 .... .............................. 3,059
$40 .................................. 11,105

Hot cash

$1,500 ...................................... 1
$1 ,000 ......... :: ...................... ..... 1
$500 ....................................... 13
$300 ....................................... 16
$200 ..................................... .. 36
$150 . "" .. " .............. " .......... 36
$100 ................................. 491
$60 .......... ... ...................... 601
$50 ........................ .......... 807
$40 ..... :......................... 1,024

30 Announcements

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB GUN
SHOOT
SLUG MATCH
EVERY SUNDAY
UNTIL DEER
SEASON 1 P.M.

Hunt lor Cash

$800.:............................... 22
$400 ............. : ................... 10
$200 ................................. 42
$100................................ .45
$50 ............................. 3, 180

L.ucky FOlliN

$5,000 ............................... 3
$1 ,000 ............ ................... 2
$500 ......... ......................... 5
$100 ....... ''" """"" .... "" ......... .46
$50 ........ :........................... 2,823

Count Your Lln:kJ
Hearts

$10,000 ................................... 2
$1 ,000...................... .............. 11
$500 ............ ......................... .62
$250.................................... 121
$100.................................. 1,837
$40 ........... , .. ;,,,,,,,,, 10,078

23rd Anniversary
Cellllallon

$2,300 .................................... 17
$100 ..................................... 310
$50 .................................. 11,877

Baseball Legends
$4.000 ... ............ ....... ..... ........... 1
$1 ,000 .................................... 15
$400 ................ ' .......... "" ........ 28
$100" .. "." ............................ ·' 72
$80" ....... " ....... ' ................... .44 7
$40 ......... "·...... " .................3,&gt;309

Scraicll Pole• _

$15,000" .................................. 2
$2,000 ...................................... 2
$1 ,000 .. " .................................. 7
$500 ....................................... 25
$100 ." .... " .........................3, 753
$50 ................................... .7,017

DallY DOUble ·

$4,000 ...................................... 1
$500 ......................................... 1
$1 00 ............ "' "'"" ................ '75
$50 ..... "" ...... ....... " ............ 1,850

Blcanlalinlal oann

$599 ........ " """ "" ...... "" ......... 15
$100 ........... '"""" ...... "" ....... 483
$50 .......... .''"'""" ...... " ...... 6,083

Mllllllltr Cash
$599 .... " ...... "" ..... ''' ............ "". 7
$1 00 .. '"' "''" ........................ ' 101
$50 ............... "" .. ,.,"" .......... 826

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY FRIDAY
NIGHT UNTIL
SPRING
7 P.M.

•RoomAddltlono
•New G.,ag..
•Eiectrlcll &amp; Plumbing
•Rooltng
"nterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting
Alao concrete work
IFREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG 111
192-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Rings, Pre- 1930 U.S. Currenc~.

S!erling, E!c. Acqu i~!ions Jowei•Y
STATE ROUTE 124
'· IUS. Coin Shop, 151 Second
. Avenue, GaPipolis, 6'4·446-2842.
Approxlmate~y 1.4 miles east of Route 32.
Ant1ques, top prices paid, RiverWELLSTON, ')HIO
614-311+6212
An&lt;iques, Pome•oy. Ohio,
LUMP AND STOKER COAL
h;1R
u
ss. Moore owner, 614 -992 ·
2526

H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ICCE..TED
DELIVERY AVAILABLE

Gun Shoot
Beech Grove Road
Rutland, Ohio
Starting Sunday, Nov. 16th
1:00 p.m.
Door Prizes

HARTWELL
HOUSE

i

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

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

ud leal Pumps

'"'"'flflll , 1L
*2800 a month
Heat Pumps Installed '3SOO a month

1111111 8 COOLING

f

AT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS .,
Large 16" Deluxe $12.99
Large 16" Three Item $9.99
992·9200
We Deliver

HIDE-A-BEDS
Queen and Full Size
Starting at $350.00

· LANE ACTION
RECLINERS
Starting at $225.00

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Mon. thru Sat. 9-5; Ph. 446-Q322
3 Mile&amp; Out Bulaville Pike

r ~:o"&lt;''""

I cloH my eyea, and I drill away, Into
meglc night, I softly 11y, a tllent prayer,
dreamtrt do, then 1 cloae my eyea end dr411~n.
dreema of you. In dreamt I walk with you,
dream• llllk with you, In dreema you're mine,
ot the time, we're together In draema. But
before tho dtwn, I awake and find you're gone,
1 can't help It, I can't halp It II I cry. I ren11m1bar
when you nld goodbye. lt't too bad tllat 111
thlnga cen only happen In my dreama, only
drtema, In boautltul draema.
Happy Birthday Mom, Nov. 18th 11R3111-111111.
On t11lt day I'll burn 1 cendla lor you and look
your pretty lace In the glow, blcauaa we do
you eo.
We Love You,
Bob (Nancy) Manley
Ray, Freel 8o Family

R•aonable Raffa
Joe N. Sayre

61

Be

18 Vrs. Serv-U

LET A PSVCHIC ANSWER
VOUR QUESTIONS! 1·900·329·

6t4-446-9416
. I , OH

CORPORAL
ELICTRIC
RACINE, OH.
614·949-3060
John Wllllams,
Ownar
Ucensed
Electrician

FrH Estimates
24 hr. emergency
eervlce.

•New Homes
•Garagea

•Complete
Remodeling
StQp &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473

Handcrafted Wood
· Projects

Swings, BeiKhes, Tables,
Misc. Items
34718 St. Rt. 7

PI). 985-4198

r-,_.uom ....
llodnwtt•ar.,.
t-Mllf31PIM8"

Opportunitv.~

P.O.

900 · 772-3889, Ext 6403, $3.99
Per Mm. Mus! Be 18 Yrs. Serv ·U

Opporwnity E~er
All Qualified App licants Will Re-

619-645-8434

ceiye Consideration For Emp!ow·
ment Without Regard To Rate ,
Color, Rellg1on, Na tional Orig1n,

SPORTS
RESULTS
SPREAOS!I! 1-900-285-9&lt;13.
E•t 3207, $2.99 Per Uin. Must Be
18 Vrs. S&amp;"v-U 619-645-8434.
ROMANCE • STATE OF
]liE ART

o,

Feel A Utile Awkward . Shw.
Maybe Uncomfortable Is Askmg
Someone For A Date? .Then Get
Witl'1 Tno Program I
Trw An E •citinG Different AP·
proach To Finding That Special
Someanel The Pawer Is AI!
Yours ... At Your Discrtlion. At
Your Convenience, At Your Fingerttpsl

CALL NOW!
, -900-289· 1017 Ext.1386. $2.99
Per M1nute. Must Be 18 Yrs,
SeN·U 619·645·8434

40

1 Yellow Killen. 814-448-3732.
3mo old female Baagle

m11

Ancestry Or Se1t.
An Ohio Oil Company Needs Ma·
ttJre Person Now tn The Gallipoh
Area . Regard less 01 Ellperience,
Wr1te M.A. Read , P.O. Boll 696,

Oay1on, Oh1o 45401
Avon $8 ·$18 !Hr, No Door -To •
Door, Quick Cash, Fun &amp; Relax·
tng. 1..QO(). 736..()1 68.
AVON • $8 ·S20 iHr. No Door To
Door. Easy Cashl "Bonuses· 1·

800-296·0 139.
Carpenters with e•perience in
suspended ceilings, metal stud,
doors and interior trim. Send r•·
sume Clo The Daily Sentinel, P.O.
Box 729-55, Pomeroy, Ohio

45769.

Giveaway
pup.

pY.
Yaltowtwl'11te cal. Grar kiuen .

MY PLACE .

Inc., Attn.: · Job

' 8434
.
FRUSTRATED!!! Need Someone
To Ta lk To'? Call No)V F'or
Someone Who'll Und8ftland l!l 1-

CHILD CARE-Working couple
ueks energetic &amp; experienced
tadr to c:are for newborn In our
home during the day. Send inquiry &amp; reaumea to: P.O. Box 2:k
Millwood, WV 25262. References

Raquirod.

304-675·55110.

ROIEIT IISSEll
CONSTRUCnON

Oa You Have Good Solid E•penence And Skills In On&amp; Or More
01 The Following Artas : Ac ·
counts Recti\lable, Accounts
Payabfe And Payroll? Our Clen·
cal Job Candidates Aru Teated
For 10 ·Key, Kewboard And Basic
Accounting Clerical Krowledge.
YDu Can let Know Aboul Yoursell By Submlffing Your Resume
Wtth Your Work History And E•·
per1ence To Sands Hilt Coal Co.,
Box 650. Hamc:len. OH 45634. No
Telephone Calls Please. We Offer
A Competiti ve PaY And A Good
Benef1ts Package. Including
401 (1&lt;).
Wa Are Ar1 Equal

1169, EKI. s•o7, $3.89 Per Min.

Musl Be 18 Yrs, Serv-U 819-845·

Furnaces

Hauling, Excevltlng
&amp; Trenching .
Umeatone 8o Gravel
Saptlc Sy1ttm1
Trailer 8o HouH Sltll

$2.99 Per Min. t-900-289-1245,
E•t 9791 , M\JSI Be 18 Yrs..

MEET YOUR COMPANION! 1 •
900-285-9119, En 7055, $2.99

I

~ Easy Bank Financing .:.

TRUCKING

ACCOUNTING
!PAYROLL CLERK

LETS
BE
FRENDS

Per Min; Uutl
619-645-8434.

Help Wanted

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

100·285-91 11 EXT. 1740
On~ $2.99 Per Mlnu1e
- Uust Be 1BYeatS Old.

MobUe lome Furaacas

KICK·N·COUNTRY
KARAOKE

11 D

Ser\I·U 619-64S.S.34

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
t-ecio-an-5967
1391 Safford School

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Personals

ANXK&gt;US?
TO MEET SOMEONE?
TIRED OF THAT OLD BAR
SCENE?THEN CALL THE
DATELINE

614·992·7643

In

Appearing Friday 8:00·12:00
POMEROY EAGLES CLUB
Members and Guesllnvited

Newer.

, 1900 East-

Jlc

J &amp; o ·s Auto Parts . Buying sal·
'tlage 'tlehides. Selling parrs. 3Do4 ·
773-SCXI3.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Free Estimates

Twelfth Annual
ARTS &amp; CRAFTS SHOW
Senior Citizens Center
Mulberry Heighls
FRIDAY, NOV. 4 10:0-6:00
Public Welcome

I Cars Or

·~,;-·,;~,r;;!,' or

:...---..1. etn A\lert~e. Galiipolis.

Rutland American Legion

FRIDAY, NOV 14
THROUGH
SATURDAY, NOV. 22
Stop In And Register For
A Free Beanie Baby.

1tem too large or 100 ·
estates, appraisals.

custom orders, 614·

Hours:
7:00 a.m. thru 4:00
Monday thru Friday

(No Su

OPEN HOUSE

no

4 Kintn's Litter Trained , Good
Mouser's, Indoor, or Outdoor
(0141 256-6780 ltawt aMes-

ooge

Computer Usera Need.a . Work
own tlours. $20k to $50kly r 1.

800-34&amp;-7186 .. 508.

Free Klltens To Good Home, 614·

Computer Usen Needed . Work
Own Hrl .. 120K To SSOK /Yr. 1·

388-9700, OIL,.... Message.

800-348-ltiMI X 1113.

Good home· mile bobtail cat,

fixed. de&lt;:lawe&lt;l;

3 rear otd lemlle

Rouweiler, good w/11ilds: 814·985·

3357.

Oopendoblo

And

Floxlblo CN~·o

Needed For In Home C1r1. Clll
Adrienne Or Anot At 1·100·411 ·

e:t:M.

Mtdlt.,rane•n 8 It long Clreuer
high double mtf~ora. GOOd Condi·

uont611l446-1756
Milled Breed Puppies, To A Good
Home, 614·A46-t280.

Earn t»r:trl money for Cllriatmas,
tell Avon, cen 614·948--QOOQ.

\

�•

Thurtday, November 13, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• P8Qe15

ALLEYOOP

NBA Crossword Puzzle
ALDER

Nl&lt;e lwO be*oom hoooo In Pomeroy with b81ement and ntw
wlndowl.
S3!010 ""
plua ...
poall, option
1tuJ"""""
wilh roltrenc:·
11 on. conltact within a ynr, no
pe11,e1._7244.

E11y Work! Excttlenl Pay I AI·
aemble Praducta At Home. Call
Tqll Free 1· 100-417-SSU ht.

12110.
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
IIAINTENANC£

Hou11 With Stowe, WuheJ &amp;

Oryol Hook-Up In Besomon1 No

. . _,Ohio.

Ala, S45o.t.lo.,

top, Jackson And Gallia Countiet

11~10112.

Two btdrOQrn in MlneraVIUe, IOtal

Wt Are Sttking Experienced
Heavy Equlpmtnl Maintenance
Personnel. We Would Prefer
Someone Who Has Service Ve-

hl&lt;lt And Tools. Experience
Should Bt In Repairing, welding,
And Troubleat.x»tlng.

tl•cttlc, 1275 month , depoai1,

FINANCIAL

210

114-HHII7.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Business

Opportunity

Ooubltwidla Must Go! e. egtt~t
Fixed Rate On Stlocled llodols,
INOTICiil
Wo Oltof Compoldnve Pay And
OHIO
VALLEY
PUBliSHING
CO.
Goo&lt;! Bonefi~ Pacl&lt;age, Including
304-736-34011.
recommends that you do busi&lt;OI(kl.
FIISTTJII£ BUYERS
nus with people you know, and

12lfl5 trailer, 2 bedroom, $250

l*......,_cllll14·742-2714.
14x70 ll'llltr, 2 btdroom, S300
cell 814· 742·2714.
NOT
to
send
money
through
the
E·Z
FtNAHCINO
2
&amp;
-3
bedroom
mobile homes
Uake App lication At Our Main
Office Ar 38701 S.R. , Hamden, mail until you have investigated 2 or 3 Bedrooms around S200 PI' $260·1300, 1ewer, water and
, _, 1.S00.251·5070,
lrUh lncludtd, 114-1192-2187.
()No, llonciaV Tlvu Friday, 8 A.II. !he otfefing.

To 4:30 P.~t; OR Submit 'fbur Re-

sume To; Sands Hill Coat Co ., Beauty Tanning Salon Wltn
P.O. Box eso. Hamden, Ohio Equipmenl, Two Working Girls f
45134. No Telephone Calls Good Cllnrele. Great Loca1ion,
Good Price, 81 ~.()2,..
Please.

FAMOUS llllliONAIAE·IIAK·

We Are An Equal Opporrunity EA RIYtall Excldng ~tw Woya
Employer. IJI Qualified Appll&lt;tnts To Eatn 50-10oK A 'Mar F11t1 24
Will receive Cansldtration For Hr. llog. lllll-~
Employment Without Regard To
Race. COlor, Religion, National Or- 220 Money
Loan
~in , Ancestry Or Sox.

to

I*......,_

88S.35G1 aner 8:00pm, ,.., job 10
small Of 10 BIG. WV.fJ21208

One

Part·
Positions
/Surgical

Tim~

Open In

Department At Oak
CommuniCtnter.
Qualified
Candidate Will Provide Nuraing
ty Medical

livln!fiiOn's basement waterproofing, all bailment repairs
done, free ealimates, lifetime
guarantee. 1Dyrs on Job exp&amp;ri.enca. 304-875-2145.

Care Directly To Patients Of All
Age~

Eaen CaMiclaWi Mull Be A
· ·oraduale From An Accredited
S&lt;:t'olol Of Hurting And Currtnlly
Registered Wlltl fhe Ohio State
Board 01 Nuralng. Experience In
Medical /Surolcal Oepaument Is
Preferred. Ptease Appty In Per""' Or Send Re"""" to: Oak HiD
Community Medical Center, At·
tenrlon; Brenda McKenzie, 350
Charlone Avenoe, Oak Hill, Ohio

"'pe11. :J04.07-le.

a51.

EOE
Oak Hlil, Ohio Based Trucking

Compony II SeekinG E~
OTR Semi· Tractor !Trailer Orlv·
an. Excellent Pay I Jnaurance
Pnckogo

CoUt448HIIt3. ·

In
Down-.
Gallipolis.
Rtsume, P.O. Box 141, Gllliptilio,

Pan·Tlmo Holp -

Rotl"
Sond

s..,.

OH45831.
PINKIRTON SECUIIITV

Now Accepting Applications For
Tho Gallipok Area.

Tills OOWSflaptr will

not

knowti1Qiy accopt

"""eata1e

advertlsemenlslor
which is in violation of the
law. 0\Jf readeq a10 llereby
ir'ltamed that ~~~ dwellings

adverlised In this newspaper
are avallabte on an equal
opportunUy baSil.

'Ditn".ilbeiiNIIIniUtlr'let
• Opt. Otnlal o1.iltlnaurenct

To Quilty Appllclntl-Th•F-ng:
• It IIY- Of Aat Or Older
'Ha.. ACitanPollc.• llull It Able To - A Drug

-

QuiCk deiiVtrl. Call 014·385· nlshed, $200 Dopooll, 5275/llo.,
9621 .
OvorNplooklna lleeudlul, O~o Ri-.
o eta I.Foster's Mobile Home
llobilo Home. 2 Ganogu, on 1.o1. Parik 814-441.0181.
Pos~blt LaM Conne1. Locolion: I :.::::..:.:.:~.:.:_:::;::_____
c,_,Cily, &amp;14-258·174o4.
2 Btdroom Trailer Wlltr 1 Trult
Paid, NO PETI, Near Port•,
New 1908 14x70 three bedroom, 814-388-1100.
lncludta 8 monma FREE lo1 root
Includes skirlino. deluxe steps e20 fourth Annue, 2 Bedroom
and lttup. Only $187.08 ptr
month with $1075 down. Call1 ·

Trailar, Water Pllid S3001Mo.,
614-441-o573.

800·837·323&amp;
Furnished, 2 bedroom, on lhe rtv·
New 28x80 3 or 4 bedroom. er In Mlddleporl, utilities paid,
139,095. Free delivery. t ·800- 814-SII2·SO.O.
691-8777.
ThrH bedroom mobile home, no
Oakwood 28x56 3 bedroom, 2
814-112·5168.
1
19
~~ 1h;;;~~~~;h~ D per ma. Trailer In Tuppen Plains, t200
per mon1h plua depoolt &amp; udilltl.
Single Parenl Program. Why Rtnl 814-887-3487.
When You Can Own. Special Fi- Two bedroom ualler tar rent in
nancing Available, 304-738-7295.

'*'

Westwood Home Show Used •
Repo Sale As little As 1500.00
Down And 1150/Uo., Free Oeliv·

ory, , -800·251·5070.
Westwood Home Show-Uaed &amp;
Repo Salel AI Little As 1500/
Down $ t 50 Per Uonth. Free 0.-

llvety, 1·800·251·5070.

Two mitea outside or Rutllnd on
Crtmllnl Rd., two bldroom, DUll

ph--·

$4,000 1 -5 Bdrm., Local GOY't. &amp;
Bank Repo' a Cal l 1-800·522-

SCOTTOWN, OHIO.

dlntng room, unattached single

car garage, near Pomeroy an At
33, mid IWIIfltieS, 81 .. ·378-7814.

RE~ITAL S

410 HouSII for Rent
Downstllro Apenm.n~ 4 Roome,
2 Bedroom nousa In Ntw Havtn, Wiler Ptlcl, NO PETS, Gl Cedar
t2115Jmo. 30•·773-8171 leave Stret\ 114-3111-1100.

..._

2 Bedtoom house. depolit I ref·

..tnctl. 304-175-2072.
AN'S S11.00 ·121.00 HR.
Three bedroom house m S~ra ­
ChooM Your Own Houra PriYale c~ae , basemen! , garage, new 2 a.droom, ltcwelrelrigerator InDuty And Supplementll Slalfing, wtndows, deck and all remOdeled cluded. S250/mo. ''50 depoolt

lmmedlale Work Available
Gallla, Meigs, And Ron Caun·
tiea. Vent E~ep.,ience Or ACLS
Poalarrod ~·Hoi Required.

&amp;11&amp;.

Inside, 814· 742· ,345, 814·982-

Coll304-875.e574 """ Spm.

Three bedtoom, bath, with 3 vacant loll, 2 are level, excellent
building potenlial, s.-o,ooo 080;
house divided Into two apart·
menrs, rental potenhal, live In one
and rent other, 120,000 090
both in Village of Middleport, 614:

Avenue, Gallipolis, $3001Uo.

call Marie For Appointment. 6148&lt;6-13118.
WANTED: Reliable experienced
green house worker. Cell 304152-3120 Ltave information I

,._,..._,

180 wanted To Do
Bebyal11ing In my llome In Roc:lne,
refefencM available, 2 yeara old
&amp; up, 814-11411-1311.
Don't Ltl Tht High Prlct1 Of
Servicing. Kttp You SnoiOCid Un·

der Cfll E I II And Wt Will Gt1
You Reedr For Tht So11on, Wllh
A Pric• 'that Will Be Pleaaen.
114-·U1·1230 Frt• Earlmates,
EPA!:«-.
Fumlnwe repair, rtlinllh end rnllntktn. alto CUllOm orct.ra. Ohio
Voller Rtllnlshlng Shop, lorry
-pa, e1HIINI5le.
a-gee l'otllbiO s.-11, clcin'l
houl ,..... loal 10 lit mil jull eoll line, ... bedraam, ... illlh, Iorge
kitchen wilh island, heal pump,
3Q4.&amp;75-1H7.
dlahwa"'"· • -· 111 tltclrlc, on
~- tllcltnllnd lhor· rtnled 101 ln country Mmng. call
ough, Fotloncl, Rlclnt, Pomeroy e14·8411·1 4CO or 304· 773·5005

,,..._FtH 81tlmllel. refrlt'tncel,

814-11451110,

atwrepm.

3 bedroom, stova, rtfrlierator,

1 ~ Experienced Hon•at An6 doorl, ............. concldon,
Roiliblo And Will Anond To Tht on rental lot, $3500, 304-882·
~lciOrly In Their Home, Rollronc·

........

H , lt4·25e-1433, Alk For Anlla

II.

Prole- Trte Strvlet, Slimp

R.,_l, FrH E111ml1tll IO·
- . 114-3117·7010.
· Ohlo. l14·381-

.

.

2 Btdrooma 1 112 Bems.

Efficiency On Eattetn Avenue,
Waaher &amp; Dryer, UUii11ea Paid,
3400,814-44&amp;-2615. '

e Wllllt

Groclo&lt;lo liVIng. 1 oncl 2 btdroom
Plus Deposi~ et4-444-4072. e1.0: aporlmtrlll II Vllllge Manor lncl
440-10N.
.
Rivorslclt Aporlmtrtll In lllddlt;
2 Btdroonlt. 2 IIIIth HOUH Wllll port From '238·S!I04 , Con 114·
Dishwaaher Built-In Appliances 11112·5014. Equ1l Housing Oppor·
Utility Room, Flrtplooe, SltuOiad 1Urilla8.
On 2 Atttl In Crown City', Now Wodern 1 BedrCMom Ape;rtmenl,
Available. HUO Approved, 11•· 01 ... U80380.
Will Consider land Comract Wllh 441-11511, Or 81 4-4&lt;08-3!123.
Down Payment, 3 Bedrooms. 2
Nl&lt;e ciHn 211tdroom, wiCI hook·
Baths, t .8 Acres, Super Nice I House tor rent In Pt. Pluaant, up. References. Oepoall. No
Southwelttrn School Di alrict can 304-e75-244t
peiL :104-175-5112.
8,.·379·9887,
•
2·3 bedroom houae In Pornetoy, Nice 0rtt Bo&lt;room Unlurnlahtd
81.1 furnace, two car garage. A - L RI(IIIO I RagrlgaroiOr
320 Mobile Homes
t400,114-742·2317.
Provldtd. WII ir I &lt;llrboge Paid,
for Sale
2bedrnm. newly remodeled Dtpooll Roqu rod, con 114-440·
,4x70, 1892 ; Oakwood Mobile houae In New H.ven, $300/mo. 4345Afltr8 P. •·
HolM, 2 Bedrooms, 2 Balh&amp;. Heat 13001depoait Available Dec , IL
OLD ASH 'llllAGE APART·
Pump, G.E. Appliances, EICell. 304-812·21120" 304-182.32l4.
IIEHTS. Now. oecepting oppllca•
Cond. , leon, Wva., $13,500 614tiona. N.wty renovated. 2bed3
Bedroom
•450/mo.
+
1250
dt~980 .
poait • Ulilltltl, ba1ement, 01• rooma . Llundromat I play
1Q7Q 14x70 Budd~. Nice COndi· - · patio &amp; large ,ard. 304-175- ground an sl,•ht. Traah I water
pelcl. C.,.rol h•L EOH. 3114-112·
tian , On Rented lot, 81&lt;1-441 37181illn&gt;2im llor&gt;fri.
1327, 814·446-2805.
3 Bedioom Ooubte Wide ttorn., 1
1994 Sultan Oefuxe 14x72 2 Bed- 1/2lliltt Oullldo Depoal1
room. 2 Baths, Refrigerator, I ReftrtneH Rlqulrld, il14-318Range, Electric Heat Pump, And 11354.
10x12 Oeek, Call Aller 5 P.ll.
3 ~room house, 150Dimo. Oe814·448·31153.
poalt 304-e'IS-1371 .
1etH 14x7o Spruce Rldve Sky-

LOCAL INTERVIEWS'
Tues., Nov. 18th, 1 -1 P.M. Or
Wed.. Nov. 181h, 8 A.ll. ·11 A.ll.
Holiday Inn, S1111 Rou1t 7, Galli·
polls, OH.
WDI ERN IIEDK:Al
992·2290.
SERVICES

DlopiOf Doubltwldts UH Down
lr'tcludes Dlfi~)'. Sei·Up, &amp; lilll·

... 304-736-34011.

"'*

Ooublewlde On Land $250 De·
Aaquirocl, 304-738-nH.

Pav1mtn11

Low As $G9. To
Bank Financing,

-·

3 Hdroom. •400/mo.

Oepo~t

3D«&lt;i75-4e11ill¥lllftiiiiOI.

Applletllons - btlng - n lot
rental houH loc•ltd In Chft1er

-.fltr . . ..

aru, avaHable Dec. 1, .,......

Houst I llobllt Homt Fat Rtnl
In Country, Pa~IOI ArM, Rtflr·
- - • Dtpoei\11-1052. .
Two bedroo,.,.. houa• •nd ont
bode oom IPituntlllln lllcldloport
814-1182-2178.

• 7 4
tAQJ64
• 6 2
Seulb

Vulnerable: Both

•

Mobile home aile available bel·
ween Athens and Pomeror, call
814-385-43117.

Wet1

Tr1i..r kn lor rent, rtftrenctt ,..

Powtr Whtola Bapd bike, coffee
table, dlnello llblo. 304·875·

l14-448-3e17.

qulrtd. 304-175-1018,

Dbl

[ FIXED UP TH'
aUEST ROOM FER
yORE BROTHER
BUSSA, MAW !!

Ultd&amp;ArliquH
Fumlluro.
304-773-5341 .

Houaehold
Goods

Rlcllntr, living Room Chuo. So·'"'·
Drop loaf Tobie, Frlgldolro
Condlilon, 814-441·1000, Loa.. · Upright
Fftezer, Large Chell
llusaga.
2 Pc. Living Room Suite, Good

Appliances:
Recond111onld
Washers, Dryers, Rangel, Rtfrigtators, ·eo Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 814 -•US-

THE BORN LOS.tK

freezer, Au1omatic Whirlpool
W.lher I Dry.- wtitt, 814-37$-

r

t'll~W't'~

2720, AFTER I PJI,

COFfte.,

Rttao 10w bar &amp; hlleh V·5 $50.
Alto Cavalier pans, Call 304·
875-!5063,

~'(

abla Letter Signs Reg. $399.

'1375, 814-11112-7288,

Singer Overlock machine, new.

-

ul8d, lntlruc'lon vldto and
$150 000: Amloo me111
dtltciOr, two hiOcll, works good,
SliD: 114-742·2502.
booklt~

Sola I chair with matching side
chair, llkt new. $275. 304· 773·
5710.

Ear corn I round &amp; aquare t.ln
of good qullity hoy ... salt, 114-

11112·282:1.
Hay br ..... 304-875-2801.

BIG NATF.

oaks Hay For Solt, Round Bells.
$15, Delivery avollabla (8141
387-7554

SO 'I'OUR GIR\.FiltEND
PI D A I!&gt;EAUllFUI..
PAINTING~ WH'I' AltE
'C'OU ACTING SO
COMPETITIVE
ABOUT IT ?

Square balta S1 .5Q to S2.25 1
1e85 Ford F·150 4x4, 300 e cy~
mila N. Rt 2. 3114-8J5.3111111.
Iinder. Very Reliable 814-•48·
73311.
TRANSPORTATION

1988 ChtNrolet Allro Cargo van,
good condition,· 12250, 614 -~92·

71 o Autos for Sale

8154,

Mitsubishl 4l4 Pick-Up, 4
'91 Pontiac Grand Am, deluxe Cylilldor, 5 Speed, AIC, S3,900;
model, compultr checked, runs 1 SJ89 Oodot Oekoll Sport 4l&lt;l y.
and looks great, $3000 080, 8, Au10, A/C, $4,800, 814·448·
7618Aft• 4 P.IA. ,
8 14-809·24~ ask lor Chuelc.
1969 Bu lek GS 350 4 Speed, 19119 GMC SOlon Cus10m, S4,950
Faci"V Air, $3,000 , 614 ·682- 814-448·4222
7512.
1994 Jeep Cherokee country,
520
Sponlng
The Pomeroy T~rift Shop- now
111611 Nova SS Original 396, 375, auto, 4X4, 4dr, new lires &amp; balGoods
-::::-:~~-=-~..,,-,,-- 1 ...,;,',.,11lovl jeans only, mtn's, Bur::keta, leSI Motor &amp; Trans , tary, all power, hllch. 304-675·
:1•
and ctildren'l, also little
5428.
1 -30-oe Bolt Action Winchester girts drHHI, toyS. dOlls and tod· f3,1100, 814-882~ 7512.
Model 70 WISiing and Scope dler car aeats, Tuesday through 1978 J20 Jup Truck, 314 Ton, 4 85 F'!2!i0 , 4X4 ~. 4 sp., Ao,
1375: 1-170 12 Gauge Rtmlf10111n Friday, IQarn.otpm, IIHII2-3725.
WO, Standard, 11,800, Runs Tilt, Aluminum Wheels, $5,800.
Wlngmloll&lt; wllltertlu- Benal
Goodl
1e10 Ford Courier Truck, (814) 388-81114
1375 (304187!HI738
Woltrlint Special: 314 200 PSI
Runs
Excellent
$500; tg86 Ford
$21.85 Ptr 100: 1" 200 PSI
Moto~cles
Chlntll M· 14 SA; Eagle AR·15; S37.00 Per 100; All Bran Com- Aero Slar Van, 80,000 Miles Fulty 740
Loadedi814-258-GI19.
814-378- 7e 14.
prasolon Flnlnas In SIOCk
1995 Yamaha Blaster, 2 11rolle
GOlf CLUBS:
RON EVANa ENTERPRISES IG79 Corvette, l-82 Excoll. CoM. twiatlhrotlle, hole 1ho1 tires ltiU·
Taylor lladt Tommy Armour Ete. Jackaon, Ohio, HI00·537·115211
510,000. (8141 387·0328 Aller ar hilch, Nurf bars. Skid Ptate,
backrack, $2000 firm, call e 1&lt;1·
4:30
Or Cus10m Buill Clubs, lndlon 550
Building
H2-611115.
C-Goll, 814-245-57U,
198!1 Dodge Oynally LE 3.0 new
530
Amlquea .
Supplies
wa1er pump &amp; radiator. $2,500 1996 Wolverine 4X4 Excellent
Condillon, $3,800, 614-258-111119.
Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind- 000. 304-773-5054.
Buy or sell. RIYtflne Antlquel, OWl, linitis, ttc:. Claude Winters,
1124 E. Main Street. on Rt 124, Rio Grandt, OH Call 814 ·2~5- 1eas Mercury Grand Mar.quis, 750 Boats &amp; Motors
Pomtroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 =5~12;:1:..
. ~::-:-:,-"":"--­ Automatic, 302, V·8, Remanufac.
for Sale
tured Engine Hu Leu T~sn
a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:Oo to :
40,000
llilu,
$1,200;
1980
1:oo p.m. 614-992-2528, Run 560 Pets for Sale
1988 Ranger 373V 18' 12 ·24V
Dodge CaraY&amp;n, Automatic. 2.SL, Trolllno Motot, 150 XP Evinruda
Moor• OVINI'.
1 Year old, male, Chihu•nua. 4 Cyl., Clean, Reliable, 13,200, Oulboard, SII.SOO. 814-11112·2770.
114·448·7215.
540 Miscellaneous
""'• - · 304·773-5178.
Merchandise
Blloglt pupplu, lull·blooded, 1ees Niuan 3oo:· 1878 Chevy 760 Auto Pans &amp;

co,.., nose, hunting dogs, "o

1 El•ctric Furnace $305: 1 Gal
Furnace 100,000 BTU $MIG, 814- - · t50oo. 014 ...41 ·1887. '
440~. 1·800-21l1-liOIMI.
A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.

Featuring H~dro Bl.th. Don
Shettt. 373 Georges CrHk Rd.
814-448.()231.

Botton Ttrrier All Sholl
30 ·Ptoplt Wanltd To LOSI UP AKC
o.o .a . 711r97, S250, 814·25e:
TO SO POUND I In ,Tilt NtXI 30 11354,
Daya, All Natural, Dr. ReCommended, GuerwntMd, Call Tracy AKC German Shepnerd puppy,
AI 114·441·18112, Fret Somplea.
t2wk&amp; old, lamale, 1at shots &amp;
-mecl.
304-e7S4111311.
AlumiN.tm Storm Windows Oltfereni·Sizas For Oldtr Home: Spor11 Hurry I Only 4 lelt. AKC R•o
Card COIItelion, VCR Vldtos, Golden Retriever pupa, vel
Mu11Stll814-388 o•211.
checked, shots &amp; wormed, !Mks

old,

3-malea-1150, 1-l•mala

Beanle Babies, ..r&lt;J to 011 lpotl
card inHrtl, rare eomk:l, hlrd 10
find action flgu;es. Prk:ed Hlow
current market Wllue. Ju1t In time

S175. 3114-1115-33811.

qlnd - · ·
· 814-80~-311111
INVt miiNOf
before
5:00pm, or

AKC rtglllertd Dalm1d1n pup-

lor Clwl-. Call lot 111t11 prlct

AKC Rtg. Sharptl cnoeololt It·

molt. 814-H2-e1G2.
pita, -

br llmpefarnor&lt;, .......

Mlablt, olso taking depotlll lor
5:311-UIIIpn.
Chrillmll bobitl, 814-749·3342.
By Rtdwlng, Chippewa,
Ton~ Lama. Gutranteed AKC Rtglsltrtd Dllmodon pups.
Prl&lt;ta AI Shot Colt, &lt;lll·
11-ald,
::.:.;::_
-.-~,_,----1
ro:d~~o
go, 114-148·3107 or
7
::
81
2245.
eoll -

P•

WliEil. 1

Special S!l49. Fftt Dollvery Incl.
Lenetl. Plastic Letters $55 Bolf'"'
(Stcond Box Frttl. AAA SIGNS. Alpha &amp; .Orchard Grass Mixed,
Phone: 614·448·1 104, 814·441·
I-80Ci-&amp;33-3453. llllflimo.
0450.
Simplicity riding mower, 12 hp.,

.

112 Caret Diamond Engagemenl
Ring. Paid 11 ,400 Will Sell Faf
• 7011. 6 14·388.el !il,
.

~~

T-----~

SIGNS: Lorge Fonable Change·

ae· cui, exceUen1 condition,

-·nd-.

810

Home

1~02 Plymouth Sundance Wtitt,
Sporty, 2 Doors, Atao Air 75 SOD

Wo1Mproofino.

e

lllln Askir1g $3,850, OBo 14· Appllonce Parts And Service: All
258·8430, 014-2511-7,
Nl:f!1t Br1nd1 Over 25 Yeara E•perttnce All Work Guaranteed
1e13 Camaro (new stylel. V·8 French City Waytag. e 1 4 • 448 ~
autD, red, loaded, extras. 38,400 7795.
mllto. Exc . Condl $10.000. 304·
175-3087.

Wormed 114·258-8338 Afltr e 18:83 Dodge Intrepid Loaded,
51,1100 l.tlles, Now Tlrts, S7 !500
P.ll.
114·2!51-881111
. ' '
Brown ICrohlt~ lov• ltal, very Btoglt Puppl11, UD Eoch, Roc·
tH3 Hyundai Excel Automatic,
good eondlilon. t75. 304·773· - -. 81-1-0417.
5423,
SUrwoof, AMIFM Stereo Cauette
1Ogll 111111 HI up apocllll. Fl"' 35 IIPG, 33,000 Orlglnalllilu:
Tonk &amp; Pal snop, 2413 Jockaon $2,150, 814-379-2845.
Ave. Point Pleaunl, 304-815·
2083. .
18D3 Oida Cutlau ·supreme, ail
power, new tires, $5500 080

114-1182-5280.

'

Bosaon Tlf'rl• fo' sale. 814-112·
Credit Problema? We Can Help.

Electrical 1nd
Rlfrlgerstlon
Resld.,tlal or oommerclal wiring
new llf'Yict or rlpairs. M~ller

u:
Cocktlll, llalts tnd Ftmolto, Eur, Bank Financing Far UsN ctnttd etec:trlclan, Ridenour
Veh
cles,
No
Turn
Dow,
I,
Call
(1141 -..e714
~;:~rlcal, WV000301, 304-1 75.
VIckie, 814-446-2897,

·=~

h,_
7CtMa

11 loul (Fr.l
21 luul

llol.tnlllln pMk

lnlll*

10Cublc-

: ~::;""

IIOIN

2•

Paas
P..s
P..e

nw;ltlolllld
22tllsCIMmln
24 Fourpa k.

1211ejilll&amp;

13 -nation

....
.r:.,..._
....

3NT

All pus

..,_
32 .....
_......,
33,. . . .
34--3lldle
31bllllld
caheuatl

·=of41 FICtional
~

:~-

-

45 Flify-11111
47Zoo

euclaeu,.
50 Compoew

BtrbiiWky

51Pwl

52 011154 Allow to

5I Atty.'a dig.

S J I

'CGICYG

VGT 8 F

T F

OTAG

LTMMIF

FIUGFJGE

fl&amp;f DAILY
Pllllll

DWBFIL -,

FJ G

u ..

- - - - - - 14ltotl ~y ClAY L POlLAN

'-"•r• Of
0 Reorrante
four scrambled wordJ

fh.
below to form fouf silftpNi words.

C AF L

II I
I

I Is J' E/ 1~ I
l
I I I

~::::::::::::::~ ~
A U T 1.:,
s

Our new boss

L

seemed very

~

C(&gt;nfident in her abililies. A col-

:

league remarked lhat. ·Anyone

~a~-~a_n~le the helm if the •• •

~ 17 G)
I -L.-L.-""·-""·--'·'--'·1

~"iF '(OU SEE A CCWOTE
WI:ARING MICKE'(
MOUSE SHOES, 6RA!I
fUM!''

GMGDRGB,

....
S©~~lA-~f..!/iS*

A p A MA N
'' REMEM!!E~ ~OW I TOLD
'!'OV T~AT M'( WtAL.Til'(
F~IEND MICKE'( MOUSE
LEFT SOME SHOES HE~E

YG

SJRVG

I

PEANUTS

DWBRL

VTBFB.'
CTWY
JRMNGDRFJ.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "PSYCHOANALYST: a p8r1ect stranger at lhe
btdllde of my mind.' - Vladimir NabokoV.
.
•
·

0

I I I I

Co~~t01e

1no cnucklt qu011d

by ltll•ng in the miSSing wordJ
you de ... elop trom Atep No. 3 below.

.A

PRINT NUM8Eif0 lEITUS
'l:r IN THESE SQUARfS

FOR THEM?''

I

. . UNSCRAM&amp;LE LETTERS
V fOR ANSWER
.

SCIIAM·LITS ANSWEitS

Alpine • Fifty· Imply· Gal/on· F/NALL Y
"Your point of view,' lhe psychology professor leelured, ·could be the resull of What you FINALLY

ROBOTMA.N

ASTBO·O-.vH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

.

AKC Yellow Lab Pupa. Stiota I

1383.

Eaot

t•

lJHURSDAY.

814-84Q-3117.

1892 Cnovy Lumina, 3.1 llultiport
lmprov8JIIInts
V-8 engine, air, tilt. c:ruiH, arwlm
aterto caueue, automatic '
BASEIIENT
door, new til"' exn ct.n in ~nd
WATERPROOFING
0111,.:111115, 014-1112·8824,
Unconditionalllltlime ~uarantee.
1182 Otds D•lta 88, 4 Doors, Local references lurn•ahed. Eslabll&amp;had 1G75. Call (6141441·
loldtcl, !'1,1100, 11+4182-7512.
0870 Or '1-100·287.0578. llo1111rt

-

IUioe-

21 lcclllv

Nerlb

Accesaorles

8UDOET PRICE TRANSIIIS·
SIONS, Used IRebuill, All Types,
1888 T·Bird V·8, Au10, loaded , Access Over 10,000 Tra,amlt·
Naw Pain~ S2,200, 114-4o48·7B18 lions, &amp; Clutches &amp;1"'"245-5677
Afltr 4 P.M.
New gas tanks, 1 ton uuclc
1000 Old a Cutlau Supreme, wheels &amp;· radiatOrs. 0 &amp; R Auto
Loadtd, Slandard, Leather Seals, Ripley, WV, 304·372·3933 or 1:
CO, 88:K, Excellent Condition 1100·273-9329.
·~1011. 614-448-4222
SERVICES
199, Thunderbird . 3.8 V8, red ,
aunrool, new Michelin radials
prl&lt;t redu&lt;ed. 304-876·55116.
'

jacllat
.. • upln;

·

1988

wreck8f, 480 Holmes bed, duat
wlncties ; call 61,.·948:·2355 or

:n~:

21-Gal•

By Phillip Alder
In his recommended beginner's
book, "Bridge for Dummies," Eddie
Kantar lists the 10 best players of all
lime. I guess four would be on
everyone's list; perhaps five; maybe
six . Who is the most surprising omission? I suppose it is AI Roth. Edgar
Kaplan said that if Roth had applied
himself 100 percent, he would have
been the best player of all time.
Roth is renowned for his table
presence. He will often pass early in
the bidding just to find out what
everyone else holds before commit·
· ting himself. (It is an Old joke that
what Roth. needs · for a one-level
opening bid an Englishman would
consider worth a strong two-bid!)
This rubber-bridge deal highlights
Roth's style. When the opponents
stumbled into lhree no-lrump, Rolh
doubled. (True, perhaps North should
have run 10 four clubs .. five clubs is
makable -· but there is a matter of
honor.) Then Roth found a demonic
openin&amp; lead: a low spade.
South thought lhat if he lost the
first trick to Easl, a diamond would
come flying back and he would be
!!own without the option. So, declarer called for dummy's queen. East·,
Dorothy Hayden (now Dorothy
Truscoltl. lOOk lhe trick with the king.
Then South compounded the error.by
discarding a diamond!
After a diamond to his jack, Roth
returned the spade jack, intentionally blocking the suit to ensure a sec·
ond diamond lead from East. So, the
def_enders took four spades and five
· diamonds for a lucrative penalty of ·
1400 points.

GflAMMA~ ...

....... Wv

Buy, Sell, Traclt

of

37 ..., ... bell

Who are the.
10 best ever?

ANIMAL.

RI8Fumlluro

j

loll • Thrlllar Miter
• n ,.,.,
N Up to 11t11 point
12 -·1
10 8oft -~ft

Opening lead: ??

MO~E

71115.

MERCHANDISE

510

Pus
Plu
Pus

g«burQer Bliaketa, Cats Meowa

Mobile Home Space For Rant,

• MollO
17 Did I •

Dealer: South

Stlurdoy Novembtr 15. Located
11 74 IIIII Crttk lid, Galllpoila:
Olk Entertainment Center, LonOld Jara and Wuch More:
(8141-10

=~
___.,.

17 -leland
1t Coollr
208a;l
'
_,.
23 Meo- -tun;
DOWN
24 Olllr
27 Binger Franldln 1 Criad
a 'llltM outwll'd 2 A&amp;tor NcMIIo ·
s Author GNy
31 Fiber piMt
4 llorcllrl
31 Led;llr31 Eta d.ii'"-'
5 IDCIIty.....

• AJ 5
t KI 8 7
•AKJ878

Like niW Brother word processor
wlseparate monitor. $100. 304·

-...Silo Fcum 10 am., 5pm

4514 daya, leave maaaagt or

• 5 2
• 9 5

1llvlwl
• CaiiiM
11 D aS;
11 AulliDt
lllonl.ilp&amp;f
14 Thin IIIII hillt1c
1111 Plnl or oak

. .....

JET

814-11112·2817 _ • .,..

•AK3
• 10 v a 6 3 z

• J 10 6 2

AERATION MOTORS
Rtptlrod. New I Robuln In Stock.
Call Ron Evana, Hlllll·537·95?of.

875-1015,

• Q 10 4
Eut

Weat

BARNEY

Problomt? Natd Tuned? Cllllht
plano0r.814-448-41525
I

WARII UP: High Elticltncy Nalur~l And LP Ga1 Furnace•. llf•
time Worrlnly On Heel Exchanger. "II You Don'! can Us Wt Boih
Route 7 SOuth, Crawn City
Loser Fru Eltlrna.teal Add-On
Open 11-5, Sa1 &amp; Sun
HUI 1'\tmps Only Slighty Higher.
Coli Us Today. 1997 Is Tht
UICid Furniluro SIOre, 130 Bula· Twenty Seventh Year In The
ville Pike, Electric Stoves, Btda - Hae.tirt; &amp; Cooling Bulinen! e1••
Baby Btda. 'JY-iltra, RoCking ot40!~, HI00•211HIII96.
Chairs, Onkl, Lamps, Hide-A·
Badt, CouchH, Good Used Mit· STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evan1 En1trPJilll,
""""'· Mon ·Fri., Hrl 10-4.
Jacltson. Ohio, 1-800·537·115211.

BUY HOliES AS LOW AS

Four bedroom house, Ol'lt bath
li~i~o room, kitchen, utility room',

Credit, Uuat Make
I Take Home, Down

Grubb's Pi•na· tuning &amp; rep8lra.

whHicholf tcceulblt, 204
Nonh Second A~~tnu•, Middlepori. Con11c1 Christy, 814·992·

OWl,

WI-.

31 0 Homes for Sale

• Provldt A Lltl Of nrH Paraohll Reterenc• Who Are Not
Aelatlvaa Wl111 Their Complete Basment, Fireplace, Like New. 4
Nemaa, Addresaaa, And Teie- Years Old $115,000 , 61&lt;4 ·6&lt;13·
pli-Ntonborou-.
2924, Or 814·843-2522.

-ber

Large bU11ne11 ~pace lar rent or
IHtt. grnt llarefront and wtnd·

nlshed and unkrrnlohtd, oacurl!y GOOD ' 'useD APPLIANCES
dtposl1 roqulrld, no ptll, 114· Washtra, dry&amp;ll, rtffigerators,
330 Farms for Sale
1112·22111.
.
ranges, Skaggs Appliances, 78
NEWIIIIIFARIIS
Vine Str.eel, Call 814-448-7398,
1 Bedroom All Udlltln lncludtd 1.S00.4110·34H.
GAI.UACOUNTY
Newer House W /i)ool + 50 Acr· $31 5rllo., Dopollt Rlqulrld, 414
11 Barns, Meadowa, Pond, Etsl CO}IoOt Sir- Rio Qro-. Rofrtgtrlllr,
llryor, Color
1 188114CHlt52t.
$225,1100
T.V., VCR SSO Eoch, 814·250·
SCIOTO COUNTY
,1238.
Wood IS1one Home + 18 Acres 1br Ouplu, 1·2br IPI.- lbr
apll,
aomo
ullllllts
includtd,
A!VEASIOI WHOLESALE
Bet"' Fond, Mee-., S14o4,900
114-:115M188
Extra Land Available, 1-800.213· central location with-In walking
distance ol Polt Oflice I Foo8365.
dland, r•toNble rent &amp; low ft.. Bunk Beds Camp. $225: Sola &amp;
poai1. 304-e7S.2053.
Chair $248; 4 Coun•y Pine Ta~a.
Bench I 3 Chairs 1235; 7 Pc.
2 bodloom aperbntnlln """-· Codar BR S711G ; Ouk Curip Cab.
utilities pa.ld, no pets, eu.gg~.
S150; PDttery, Utxlcan Blsnketa,
5858.

9 Miles From Proctoville, 3,400
Sq. Ft. Living Area, 2 Story, 3
Bedrooms. 2 112 Batha, Finished

Applk:anll Will Be Accepted For
The Gallipolis Area On Friday,
14, AI 10 A.ll. llll/x AI
The Gallipolis Holiday Inn. EOE/
IA.f'IOIV

460 Space for Rem

Auorttd misc. houHhald lurnilure Including beclrooms, lamps,
prints and mlrrora, very good
condjon, 8t4-G8S-31187. ·

REAL ESTATE

Namaa Adlfre..ea. And Tele·

I

&amp; LI VF STOCK

440

1 lnd 2 -00111 _.,..,., fur.

• 10 3

EEK&amp;MEEK

f ARr,1 S UPPLIES

tltclrle, 814-742·2103.

Apartments
for Rent

•KQ

A Natd A Cor? No Crodil, Bed
Credll Banllruptey, Wa Can Htlp

450

77115.

Able To PI'O'IIde Cf!!Mitte 2730, X 170G,
Employment Hlatory For The
COUNTRY HOllE
Paat 1D Yeara With Complete
ONUCAES,

• h

Uplllin 21r opl lot rent 304-e7S.

11-li.J'I

•Q98754

300 Thru 2,000 Gollons Ron Wolf Hybrids, cnowa, H'uaklts, 1GG8 Ford llultang GT U lllar
Evans En.;z;•••· Jlckaon, OH ............. &amp; - . IIUII Soli I Red, 17 Inch Tlrea, Laded, Ex814-388-(M;a
1-800·537.
celtent condition, 20,000 Miles.
$18,500,114-3704270.
Flr-od $30. You pickup. 304· 570
Musical
87S.280t.
18GI Plymoulh Nton, red wllh
Instruments
grar inlerlor, two 4oor, 15,000
miles, ... -,114·742·1110o.

2532.

-.,e...

Bonelli h:lucle:

• Corr&lt;&gt;etilw Hou8y Wl1gta
• l'ul Or Pari wort&lt;
• FWd Vacations
• Ult. And Acclcllollal Detuh And

Laroe 111ection of uMd homes. 2
Of 3 bedrooms. Starting at $2895. 2 Btdroom Trailer Panlally Fur-

Roelrw, I14-8112·1503D.

• AN real estate advel11alng In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Acl
of 1968 whiCh makes it Illegal
to advertise ~any preference,
limitatiOn or discrimination
based on race. cotot, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any intention to
make any sucfl preference,
limitation or discrimination:

potod, Adult Paol &amp; Beby Pool,
Pt1lo, S11r1 •350111co, No Ptll,
l - Plua Stcllrlly Otpoall Roqvlrtd, 114-4411-3411, 114·440·
0101 ,

2 Btdroom mobile ~ome, fur- j~j;;M.,Ii,
nished or unfurnished, depotit,
Mo., 1-800-251·!5070.
utilititt partially paid. 304·075·
814-441-!508,
For Sale Of Allum• Loan-1H4 6512.
ClaytoniEattwlnd 14xeD 2bdr, 1 2 Bedroom Mobllt Home, e1~· Sleeping rooma with cooking.
bcllh. 304-8'15-!IOSI.
448-H88.
Alao trailer apace on rlvef. All
Fr" air, lrH skin, 14X70 3 bed- 2 Bedroom lnlller 1275/deposlt, tiook·ups. CaU altar 2:00 p.m ..
room, St,055tdown, $1911/mo. $275/mo. Referencea required, 304-773-5151, ll11on WV.

NEED A LOAN? Apply Tho Elly Freo olr, lroo skin, IOx80 3 or 4 2 Bedroom Trailtr l2'•11!i' EltclriC
bedroom ' 1•350idown, ' 299rmo. 14,500 On Ont Acre Ronlod Lol,
Cllll-800-8ill.f7n.
RLZPL
114-440-1757.

Home Health Agency Hiring Way -By PhOne. Friendly Loan,
CNA's And HHA's Starling At 814-388-9835.
se.og Per Hr. Full·Time And Part;
Time Positions Available. Send 230
Professional
Resume To: Healtn Managemenr
Services
Nursing Services, Inc. P.O. Box
1165, Gall ipolis, OH 45631, Or 2 Openings for preschool childStop By Our Ofllce, At 782 Sec· ren lull-time Mon. -Fri. 6:30amand Avenue, Gallipol is, OH, To 5pm. Call Jan01 F. Hill. 30-.&amp;75Pick Up An Application. In Gallia
County No Phone Calls Pleeae, tn 21106.
Melos County can 614-992-7900, HARTS IAASONARY . Block,
EOE.
btick &amp; atone work, 30 years experience, reasonable rates. 304·

Tare Townhouse Apartments,
Verr Spacious, 2 Bedrooma, 2
FlOors, CA, I 1/2 Belh, Ful~ ca,

·concrete &amp; Pilalic Septic Tanka,

Firll Time Buytra E·Z Financing
2 Or 3 Bedrooms, Around 12001

Coli 1-800-8111-t&gt;7n.

N

,,2$,

Counlry R-dtled 3 Bedroam

.• 't

We Are A Surface Caal MininG
Operator With Mini Sit" In Yin-

Nlnt ~ old Boxtr pupa, lral 18G5 Cl¥111tf Uodtd, 22,000
aholt, - cl- ,_td, lOlls lliltt, eu "'' 0381.
docMd,
114-742-2S25.
1GK So11rn SC2. Allllmoulc, All,
I'Godlt puppftl· llny 101'; 1110 Crulae, AU/Fa.l Cusette, Trunk
mlni1ture Schnauztr, champion Release, $1~000 cal Alltr. 5 P.IA.
bloodline, molo, AKC ; 814·887· (Serious Inquiries Only II eu3404.
4*4016.

,.._.....,

ACR088

PHILLIP

•

Friday.~ov. 14, 1997
New social involvements wilh
new people could make lhc year
ahead a banner year. Do not wait for
Qthen to come to you; take measures
to ao oul and meet them .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) In
order to insure an enjoyable day
today. associate with friends who
share an interest with you. You could
be of help to one an01her. AsttoGraph year-ahead predictions make
great Chrisanas stocking stufTen for
Ill signs of the zodiiiC. Mail $2 for
CIICh to Astro-Gnph. c/o this news·
paper, P.O. Box 17S8, Murray Hill .
Station, New York, NY IOIS8. Be
sure to state lhe zod.iac signs you

SAGITTARIUS (N\)v. 23-0cc.
21) Material conditioAS continue to
,favor you today. For bcsl results,
focus your attention on profitable
arrangements that are under way.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· lan . 19) A
subslantial payoff could bC likely for
yo u today. You have devoted a lot of
,lime and energy to the . project, bu1
leave it up to chance now.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-l'eb. 19)
Beginning today, you might experience sudden changes in your financial circumstances. Gains may
emanate from two unrelated areas.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Take
advanlage of any opportunities you
gel today to mee1 new people . Two
individuals who could help to
advance your hopes might become
involved.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) You
could be lucky both in friendships
and in career mailers today. Each will
usher in pleasurable experiences in
their own unique way.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Competitive involvements couhj hold
a panicular appeal for you today. If

someone drops a gaunllel, I think .
you' ll understand what I mean.
GEMINI (May 21 -June , 20)
Changes precipi!ated by others today
could work more for your ultimate
advantage than il will for theirs. Let
events run lbeir course unabated .
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) This
could be a storybook day where
important associations are concerned.
Loyal allies might help you achieve
objectives you couldn'l attain unaid·
ed.
LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) Material
circumstances loo~ exceptionally
promising for you tOday. Chance and
llends may open windows of oppor·
tunity where none existed previously.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Do
what's expected of you today, an~
even morc if possible. A job well
done will altract auention and offer
hidden benefits.
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Lady
Luck might take an interest in your
desires today and provide you with
something for which you ·ve been
lonaing secretlY.. Maintain your faith .

The lagond

•

seer

NOVEMBER13I

'

�..

.....-· .

,

-

OCTOBER
IS
·uT.H
IFill C..
CHEVY
TRUCK
MONTH
•. 1-1
AT C &amp; 0 MOTORS!
CHECK OUT .T HE SAVINGS
1998 CHEVY FULL-SIZEEXTENDED CAB 414

Ohio Lottery

Cleveland
Cava roll by
Nets 85·74

~~··

• ..fii.H

Sports on

Pick 3:

282

Pick 4:
6617
Buckeye 5:
5-6-9-11·35

page 4

Cloudy tonight, chance
of rain, low In mid 30a.
Saturday, chance of 8nOW,

high In low« 401.

.

I

•

~r..· •;
""·l.:'r'
'j ',J

,I

j ~

,fp;l\

•.

.

Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chrome Bumpers, Chrome
AppearanC?~ _Package and Morel
AS
·LOW
AS

.. !\

1998 CHEVY

'r'-i.l

*.41,N0.141

.'

01117, Ohio 'IIIIey Publllhlng Comp~ny
'

.

.

Retai-l sales fall 0.2 percent in October
!3Y JOHN D. tJ!cCLAIN
A11.oclated Prell Writer
: WASHINGTON- Retail sales fell 0.2 percent in October, the sec·
;Ond straight decline as falling auto sales offset an increase in clothing pur·
-chases spurred by cooler temperatures.
.
: 'The Commerce Department said today that sales totaled a seasonally
;adjusted $213.7 billion, down from $214.1 billi.on in September. But
-excluding the drop in autos, sales were up 0.4 percent.
: Many analysts had expected a 0.3 percent overall gain. Sales in Seplember were revised from an initially reponed 0.3 percent advance to a
il. I percent dip. Prior to September, sales had risen for three months.
: Retail sales account for about one-third of the nation's economic activ;ity, and the recent sluggishness has caused some concern over how robust

S-10

Restyled Front Grille, Instrument Panel,
Bumpers, and lnweased.
. Horae ·Powe~ll
'

AS •$

·LOW
AS

*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

1998 CHEVY S-1 o··t"
EXTENDED CAB
·Air Conditioning, Alum. Wheels, LS Package,
AM/FM Radio, YJ/L Tires, and M9rell
AS
LOW
AS
*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEAl Eq

998 CHEVY BWER
4 WHEEL DRIVE
Air, AM/FM Radio, Tachometer,
Lock!ng ·Differential

. *PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

•••m

All PRICES INCLUDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
UCENSE FEES.

*4.ft FII'IIG•
.iUPIOV.IMIC
cwmr ~

OTORS TOYOTA
ST. ALBANS

&amp;LEXUS

·

the holiday shopping season will be. The Christmas season often accounts
for half of a retailer's earnings.
·
There have been few signs of accelerllling inflation, penniuing lhe Federal Reserve to keep interest rates unchanged at a meeting on Wednesday rather than raise them to slow the economy further.
Sales of durable goods sl4mped 0.9 percent after falling 0.8 percent
a month carl ier.
·
Auto dealers saw a 2 percent drop following September's 1.4 percent
decline.
-There was weakness in other durable goods categories as well. Sales
of building materials and hardware were ilown 0. I percent, while pur·
chases of furniture and other home furnishings were nat.
Nondurable goods such as food and fuel managed a 0.2 percent gain

......... ··

-·

on top of a 0.4 percent advance in Scpten1ber.
Department stores rang up a I. I percent incrca.-;c. erasing a 0.4 r&gt;cr·
cent dip a month earlier. CIO!hing store sales increased 0.9 percent. but
failed to wipe out September's I :9 percent drop.
·
Earlier weakness in department store and apparel shop sales had been
attributed to warmer-than-usual temperatures.
Purchases at grocery stores were up 0.3 percent following a 0.7 percent gain a month earlier. Gasoline station sales rose 0.4 percent after a
I .5 percent increase the previous month. Drug store sales advanced 0.7
percent, slower than the I .3 percent gain in September.
Checks at restaurants and bars were off 0.3 percent l'ollowigg a 1.4
percent increase a month earlier.

Athens residents take prop~ne
.
·complaints to supreme court

Two Athens County residents arc
asking the Ohio Supreme Court to
have propane gas suppliers regulated
as public utiljties.
The case stems from a complaint
filed in January against Rutland Bot- ·
tied Gas· Service by two Athtns
County women, according to a
Brown News Service article.
On Jan. 10, Rebecca Haning and
Melvina Stephenson filed a complaint with the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio, alleging the com·
ARRIVE SAFELY· United Natlon8 armelnapectorelll'rive at the
pany refused to maintain uninter·
• border town AI·Karameh In Jordan aarly today. A lage group of
rupted service except on unjust arid
: U. N. l!lfNponlln•pectora left f!agl)dld at deym today In protest
·."fill 1n'e exptlalon of Anwlaan ~ otthe lnepiCtlon teams.
unreasonable terms. an&lt;l faile.d to
comply with natural gas company
•( ...-, ' ·;,
_...... "'·" .
standards under Ohi() law and com·
mission regulations.
In their complaint, Haning and
Stephens.on claim that Rutland
refused to maintain uninterrupted
J
gas service except upon unreasonable
ana unjust tcnns and charges.
They alleged Ru1land wrongfully
and unlawfully altered the credit.
payment and minimum delivery
had informed Saddam that a "win· tcnns of the · contract which denied
j!y SUSANNE SCHAFER
.dow" i• which a U-2 flight could take
AP MIIHary Writer
WASHINGTON- With Amcri- place would open "sometime this
.can weapons inspectors out of Iraq weekend." Iraq lias threatened to
prid other · U.N. personnel leaving sliool down planes Oying over its.ter·
loday. an American pilot and his U- ritory.
COLUMBUS (AP)- Dcmocra·
A
Pentagon
source,
speaking
on
2 arc set to fly more reconnaissance
tic lawmakers and civil rights advo·
tnissions to check on Saddam Hus- condition of anonymity. said the cates vow not to make the same miswindow for ttic U-2 llight would take their counterparts in California
• sein 's arsenal
: At the same time. the top U.S. mil· open Sunday.
.did when affinnative action pto·
Prior to that time, the bulk of a grams came under attack.
itary officer in the Persian Gulf
tegion, Gen. Anthony Zinni, contin· . U.N. weapons inspcelion team was
"Just because the numbers look
ued his talks with friendly Arab expected to be out of Iraq. lr'l'j good today docsn 't mean that tomor·
nations there, Pentagon spokesman · ordered all six American inspectors row things can't change," Sen. Jef.
Kenneth Bacon said.
expelled from the country, and by late frey Johnson, D-Cleveland, said
· Asked if Zinni was seeking autho· Thursday the inspectors had driven Thursday.
·
rization to launch air strikes against into neighboring Jordan.
"We're not taking this lightly."
Iraq, Bacon replied, "He's talking to
In response the expulsion, .the
Johnson spoke at a news .confcr·
our frjends in the gulf about the sit· chief U.N. weapons inspector, encc to mount a counterauack against
uation ... telling them what he sees Richard Butler. an Austt'alian, said two Republican lawmakers who have
the stakes to he and getting their the remaining inspectors- regard- propose.d a constitutional a~end·
sense of how they feel about it.··
less of their nationality - would · ment that would end the state's race
"I don't believe that he ·is asking leave today. A skeleton staff would and gender preference programs. ·
ihem for anylhing right now." Bacon stay in Baghdad, he said.
·
The legislation. pending in the
President Clinton called Iraq's Senate and set to be introduced in the
laid Thursday.
While asserting that a diplomatic expulsion order "clearly unaccept· House. was given 'little chance of sue·
solution still was being sought with able and a challcnl!c to the intcma· cess by leaders of either party.
Continued on page 3
!raq, Bacon said the United Nations
"This bill is dead on arrival," pre·
dieted House Minority Leader Ross
Boggs. D-Andover.
Added House Speaker Jo Ann
Davidson: "I w~uld he very surprised
to sec . that resolution .come out of

--

-United States weap.ons
observers o·ut of Iraq
U-2 flights to continue

them the opportunity to purchase the
gas they needed to continue to heat
their homes, bathe and cook at a time
when the weather was very cold and
they were almost or completely out '
of gas.
The two contend Rutland's refusal
to deliver any less than 1501200 galIons of propane, and its demand of
full cash payment in advance of any
propane deliyery breached thC service
contract and was unlawful. Haning
claimed Rutland owed her appro ximately SSO worth of propane gas
which it refused to deliver, and that
Rutland's contract allowed for credit
tenns and promised· to provide the
respective premises with "uninter·
rupted gas service."
As a result, Haning said her and
her two teenage children were
deprived of gas to heat and cook.
Stephenson was allegedly forced to
break up her family and sent her two
small children to a' babysitter's heal·
ed home for six days last December
while she tended· a kerosene heater
and tried to prevent freeze damage in
1

the home.
,
Rutland denied the allegations. In
July, the PUCO dismissed the com·
plaint, saying Ohio's Consup1cr Sales
Practice Act should apply to propane
sales.
"Historically. the business of sup·
plying LP gas to customers has not
been regulated by this commission.
·and we do not believe ... that the state
l~gislature ever intended LP gas scr·
vtce to be I'\!£Uialcd as a puhltc uttl·
ily ~ervice." the PUCO wrote in its
ruling ..
Hantng and Stephenson then
joined~ith four other peoplo who
had filed a similar un.&lt;uct:lllsful com·
plaint against another LP gas com·
pany, Level Propane Co., and
requested a rehearing. They argued
the propane companies arc public
utilities and fall under PUCO juris·
diction.
The PUCO denied the request for
a rehearing, leading to the appeal to
the Supreme Court
"What our basic argument is is
that propane gas suppliers like Rut·.

'

land... should he regulated by the
'Public Utilities Commission ," said
. attorney Robert Romakor or South·
eastern Ohio Legal Services, which is ·
representing Haning, Stephenson and
the others.
According to Rutland Bottled Gas
attorney Joseph Vanity, Rutland is
maintaining its position that it is not
a public utility and should not be reg·
ulatcd by the PUCO. He said Rutl~nd
is not a monoroly like telephone or ·
electric companies, bul rather has to
compete with i&gt;lhcr gas s~ppliers.
He also said the courts and the
PUCO have sided with Rutland in
each step tihhc· prnoess: municipal
coun in Athens, the appeals court, the
PUCO's decision 10 dismiss the com. plaint filed by Huning and Stephen·
son. and the ~.:ommissinn's decision
not to rl!hcar the case.
Accor&lt;lin~

tn the PUCO. Rulland

serves ahout 6.5(X) custnmcrs in 26

Ohio counties. It supplies gas to
ahilUI M percent or the residential
propane energy market in Athens
County.

Lawma_kers ready for fight over affirmative action

. Additional pleas are given
in man's drowning death

AS
LOW
· AS

2 Sectlont, If P~~gH. 35 c A Ganrwll Co. Ne•IIP..,..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 14, 1997

Two people pleaded guilty earlier this week on charges stem·
ming from a July 7 incident resulting In the drowning death of a
Pomeroy man.·
MeUnda Stanley, 27, of Pomeroy and Oift'ord ''Boomer" Smith
Jr., 22, of Syrac:use pleaded guUty to similar charges of attempt·
ed tampering with evidence and receiving stolen property,
charges stemminJ from the assault and robbery ofTodd C. Johnson of Pomeroy, a 30-year-okl schoolteacher at Harrisonville Elementary School.
Jason HyseU, 23, of Pomeroy is serving 18 years In prison after
pleadipg guilty to charges of lnvolunllry manslaughter and rob·
hery in the Incident whUe WOlle Kauff, 20, of Pomeroy Is spend·
lng eisht years In prison for felonious assault for his involvement.
Hysell and Kauff brutally beat Johnson al a swlmmlna hole on
Leading Creek near Dexter. Kaulr kicked Johnson Into the water
where he eventuaUy drowned.
Meigs County l'rosec:uting Attorney John R. Lentes said Ibis
moraing that Stanley attempted to push Johnson's pkkup truck
into lhe water to make the inddent resemble an accident. Smith
lied to lawmen ln•estlaatlng the death, saying it was an. ac:cldent,
Lentes added.
The two also had poue~~lon of Johnson's wallet at the scene;,
resulting In the receiving stolen property charges, Lentes said.
Attempted llmperln&amp; with evidence Is a felony of the fourth
degree punishable by 18 months In prison while recelvin1stolen
property Is a Mlh-detret felony punishable by one year in prison.
The plea agreement indkated the prosecuting attorney's office will
- k the maximum penalty allowable. .
Sentendn&amp; has been set for Dec. IS.

•

introduce legislation today !hat would
mirror California's Prorosition 209.
was not discouraged.
Wise noted it took supporters of
Proposition 209 four years to get the
issue before the voters in California.
"If we can't gel this done in 1998.
fine,'' he said. "This issue is not
going to go away."
Proposition 209, upheld by the
U.S. Supreme Court la.•t week. wa.'
the nation's first acmss·thc-hoard
'repeal of programs giving prcfcrcn·
tial treatment, and aflccts hiring,
contracting, college admissions and
scholarships.
Sen. Eugene Watts. R-Galloway,
introduced nearly idcriticallcgislation
Wednesday.
Boggs said all 39 House Democrats were opposed to the idea. They
could also count on the support from
at least two Republicans - Ann
Womer Benjamin pf Aurora and Don
Mottley of West Carrollton - who
attended the news conference. That
seemingly . would block Wise from
winning the 60 votes needed in the
99-mcmber House to place the issue
commltiCC.
But Rep. Michael Wise. the Cha·, before the voters.
,
grin Falls Republican who planned to
Wise pointed out thanupporters

..

would still have the option of col·
lccting signatures of voters if the pro·
posal stalls in the Legislature. Back· ·
crs would need roughly 335,000
valid signatures to win a spot on a
ballot.
Opponents also vowed not IU lake
the issue for granted. blaming apathy
by civil rights groups for Proposition
209 ·s passage.
"We arc not going to sit hock and
let this happen." said Rep. Charlcta
Tavares. D-Columbus.
Wise and Watts say they have
nothing against afTinnativc actiondelined by lhcm as reaching out to
minorities and women to make'them
aWare of oprortunitics in education,

employment and government pro·
jccts.

his quota!&lt;' hascd nn grnup all'ili ation that they wan! to outlaw.
Davidson, Gov. George Voinovich
and Senate President Richard Finan
-all Republicans- all dccl ined to
commcnl directly on the prorosals
from Wise and Watts.
"That's something we're going to
have to study," said Voinovich
srokesmim Mike Dawson . Dawson
added that Voinovich su~gcsted' I8

COMMENTS·
State Rep. Lloyd Lewle (D-Diyton) atllnda I1HI' a plaque honoring Abrahim Lincoln •• he
applauded eommentll by Statll
Sen. Jeff Johnson, (D-Cievelancl) at the Ohio Stateh- In
Columbua.

months ago that the state move from
an amnnativc action program based
on rate and gender to one that targets
socially or economically disadvantaged Ohioans.

Meigs ESC to merge with Athens County
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
Sentlnal News Stiff
A resolution of intent to merge
with the Athens County Educational
Service Center was passed by the
Meigs County Educational Service
governing board at its meeting Thursday night
The Athens County board also
passed th_e same intent·to·merge res-

olutton m tis session last night, adjacent county.
according to John Riebel, Meigs
The superintendent said that a spe·
·county superintendcnl of schools.
cial joint board meeting has hccn set
The action was taken by the local for Dec. 4 at 7 p.m. at which time
board to comply with state legislation ' details of a mcr~cr resolution will be
which requires that all education worked out. The resolution iscKpect·
service units serve a minimum of cd to be pa-.cd sometime after the
8,000 students. Meigs County has first of the year, Riebel said, giving
4,200 students, said Riebel. Counties the new hoard time to implement the
by law are required to merge wilh an program by the deadline of July I.

Riche! said that the initial board
will be comrosed of all I0 board
members, live from Meigs and live
from Athens, and that "probably"
there will be offices in both counties,
Current board members, he said,
will continue to serve until their terms
expire and then probably a IO·member board with representatives from
Continued on paRe 3

Eastern High School students return to class today
Eastern Hi~h School students
were back in class this morning
after a vandalism incident forced the
school to close on Thursday.
S~perintendent Deryl Well said
Friday that the Meigs Local School
District provided maintenance work·
ers to assist Eastern staffers in cleaning the building and restoring as

much of the d~age as possibie.
Volunteers from the community
have also been at the school, Well
said, .Ssisting in the cl~anup.
.. Meanwhile, investigators from the
Meigs County Sheriffs office. the
Meigs County Prlisecuting Allor·
ney's office and the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Identification· and lnvesti·

gation completed their preliminary ing. The cash was stolen from desks
investigation at the site by mid-after- in classrooms as well as from vendnoon yesterday, according to Well .
ing machines, which were vandalInterior windows were broken, ized.
computers damaged and an undis·
Sheriff James M. Soulsby has
closed amount of cash stolen from the · offered aS 1,000 reward for infonnahil!h school in the incident, which is lion leading to the arrest and convicbelieved to have taken 'place some- · tion of the person or persons involved
time after I a.m. on' Thursday mom- in the incident.

r

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="406">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9797">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29056">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29055">
              <text>November 13, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
