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                  <text>hge 1o• The 0.1~ Sentinel

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POmeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Cell phone..r~ngs its way into public annoyance ~umber one ;
Ann
Landers

--

...

'"'·
.... _.,.. ao.
s,.._

n.e.

8y ANN LANDERS
· Dear Ann LaDders: What do you
think about people who receive calls
on their cellul4r phones in movie
theaters? . .
X..St week. a woman-seated a few
rows in front of me received two
·calls during a very serious and suspenseful film. At first, I thought the
ringing was part of the sound track,

but I realiwl my mislab when I
saw her take a pbone out of her
purse and start talking.
I assume the call was not an
emergency since she dido 't leave the
theater. Reporting the incident to the
manager would have meant further
distraction for me, so I waited until
. the n\ovie was over. I then went to
the woman and told her, "Keep an
eye on the Ann Landers column.
When you see a letter about people
· who receive phone calls at the
movies, you will know I'm referring
to you." ·
,
I realize this isn't one of society's
most pressing problems, but it is one
of those minor discourtesies that arc
becoming . more frequent in malls,

supennarkcts, restaurants and .theaters. Please, Ann, address it Thank
you. - Disconnected in New Jersey
Dear Disconnected: People who
receive cellular phone calls in the
theater are in the same class as people who blast their stereos on buses.
"Inconsiderate" hardly describes it.
They arc also showing off.
So are people who make calls on
their personal cell phones from
planes that are already equipped
with pho~s. Either way, it's disconcerting to be seated next to a person
who is carrying on a long-winded
conversation while you' re trying to
work or read. I speak from experience. Enough said.
Dear Ann Landers: I would like

to respond to "Stymied in Min- cy. I Jove the way my rcllders look
neapolis." whose son was bilten by a · out for one another.
friend's dog. "Stymied" and her
Insurance can be 1 godsend. A
family were visiting at the friend's 'grcat many people say they can't
home at the time.
afford it, but it can be the best
I have worked for a general sur- investment you will ever make and
geon for several years. We have you will certainly appreciate it when
taken care of hundreds of patients something goes wrong. Remember,
and have seen a great many acci- life is what happens to you when
dents. Mtiny people do not know you are busy making other plans.
Dear Ann Landers: This is about
that their homeowner's insurance
will cover an accident of this kind. · that woman whose husband saved
Please tell Stymied to have her over a million pennies and traded
friends check their policy, and I'll them in for a truck. That's over
bet they arc covered. -- Sue in N.C. $10,000! If he saved for 50 years,
Dear Sue: I received hundreds of that would be over 1,666 pennies per
letters saying, as you did, that inonlit. How can anyone spend
Stymied is probably covered by her. enough cash to get back an average
host's homeowner's insurance poli- of 55 pennies every day for 50

Ohio Lottery

•

Bulls outlast
Grizzlies with
23-polnt win

yean? And ainee a roll of pennies
weiJhs around. 1 third of a pound.
thil means he hauled over tine Ioiii
of pennies to the truck dellership.
Here's the really silly stidf, AM.
If those pennies had been ittYei!Cd
annually, he might have had eJIOII&amp;h
to buy 1 house instead of a truck. -;Portland, Ore .
Dear Portland: Thanks for a brilliant analysis. I could never haye
figured it out, but a Mensa-type
assistant in my office did. and she
says you are. right on the money. :

Buckeye 5:

1-8-11·14-36
Pick 3:
7-o-8
Pick 4:

3-1-6-4

Sporta on Page 4

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Send qnestionl to Ann Lande~

Creators Synclkate, 57fl W. Cea·
. tury Blvd., Suite 700, Loll Ancele..

c.nr. 90045

·

Vol. 47, NO. 131
0111116, ()!lio Velt.y Pubillhlng Comp1ny

TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Olive Towti,.. ship Trustees, Thcsday, 6:30 p.m. at
'-!he township building,

PAGEVILLE -- S.cipio Township
Trustees. Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. at
Pageville. ·
·
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r.:.

CHESTER -- Chester Garden
:: POMEROY -- Medicare forum Club, Wednesday, 7:30 Chester
.• :r'uesday, I p.m.. Senior Citizens United Methodist Church, will make
;t:enter. Laura Greenwalt and Dawn bird feeds. Members to lake tools to
•Pailey of the Ohio Department of work with. Feeders will be taken to
' 1nsurance to conduct.
nursing facilities in the county.

. .

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;: POMEROY -- CHOICE Home
.Education
meeting, Thesday,
10 a.m., Meigs County Public
. Library. Thanksgiving feast with pilgnmage dress !Uld potluck. Speaker,
•:roni Hudson, former teacher on
'Jndian reservation. Take own table
:service. For more infortnation con;iact Tammy Jones, 992-6743,

·..:

ALFRED -- Orange Township
:Trustees, 7:30 p.m. Thesday, home
clerk Osie Follrod.
.

;?f

MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
.!-odge 363, F&amp;AM. Thesday,
Masonic Teptple, election of officers. Refreshments.

.RUlLAND -- The Rutland
Township Trustees, , Wednesday,
6:15 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
Literary Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m. ,
home of Mrs. David Bowen, Syracuse. Mrs. Bowen to review "St.
Joan of Arc"· by Vita Sackville: West.
THURSDAY
RACINE -- Racine Post 602,
American Legion. ·Thursday at the
hall, business meting with dinner to
follow.

----~.------Military

the;'~

news_;_____

JEFFREY C. BIRCHFIELD
MONTY A. HUNTER
Marine Sgt. Jeffrey C. Birchfield,
Navy Seaman Monty A. Hunter,
SQn of James C. Birchfield of Rut- son of Judith K. Hunter of Rutland
land, recently wai; promoted to his - and ll.oy R. Hunter of Middleport,
present rank while serving with recently completed U.S. Navy basic
. Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron training at Recruit Training Com362, 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing, mand, Great Lakes, Ill.
Marine Corps Base, Kaneohe Bay,
During the eight-week program,
Hawaii.
Hunter completed a variely of trainBirchfield is a 1992 graduate of ing which·included classroom study,
Kyger Creek High School, Cheshire. practical hands-on instruction, and
He joined the Marine Corps in . an emphasis on physical fitness. ·
November, 1992.
Hunter is a 1996 graduate of
, JEREMY P. JOHNSTON
Meigs High School, Pomeroy.
Navy Seaman Jeremy P. John. DAVID A. POLING
Marine Pfc. David A. Poling
stan, son of Lawrence G. and Denise
It- Johnston of Ra¢ine, recently recently completed basic training at
completed U.S. Navy basic training , Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris
at Recruit Training Command, Great Island, S.C.
Lakes, Ill.
Poling successfully complete II
Johnston is a 1996 graduate of weeks of instruction on the Marine
Racine Southern High School, Corps' core values -- honor, courage
llacine.
and commitment, and what the

___;_Society

_u.:.w.
n~'s

By JIM FREEMAN
.
.
For the first time in living memory, Democratic officeholders will hold
the majority on the Meigs County Board of Commissioners, according to
unofficial results from the Meigs County Board of Elections.
Racine Mayor Jeffrey L. Thornton, in his first bid for county office, easily upset incumbent Republican Commissioner Robert C. Hartenbach of
Pomeroy for the commission seat commencing Jan. 2, 1997.
· Thornton won in all but four of Meigs County's 28 precincts, receiving
5,103 votes to Hartenbach's 3,888, according to unofficial results from the
Meigs County Board of Elections. ·
He will join incumbent Democratic Commissioner Janet Howard of Middleport, who beat Republican challdger Judith A. Williams of Syracuse by
a 4,623-to-4,190 margin to keep control of the commission seat commencing Jan. 3, 1997.
.
.
"First of all, I want to give all the praise to God and tell the people of
Meigs County I will be a dedicated commissioner and work hard for all the
county," Thornton said.
·
;,I plan on having public meetings in all townships to meet the people and
start helping them with their problems," he added.
Democrats arc guaranteed control of the board for at least four years since
Howard and Thornton were simultaneously elected to full four-year tertns.
Overall, Democratic candidates won all of four contested ra&lt;es in the coun-

LIVING ROOM SUitES
GLIDER
ROCKERS
Startl••••
$159~

HORNE BIRTH
James and Mary Beth Weeks
Horne of Obetz announce the birth.
of their first . baby, a boy. John
Christopher.
He was born Oct. 16 at Grant
Hospitai in Columbus.
..
Grandparents are Mrs. Alice
Horne of Obetz and John and Barbara Weeks of Pomeroy. Greatgrandmother is Mrs. Frances Scholl
of Pomeroy.

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"'•":~

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JORDAN JEFFERS

BEDROOM SUITES
'

WE HAVE

PRIME STAR
SATEWRS
DIIEnES

.QUALITY FURNITURE PLUS
42123 St. Rt 7
~.·Thu,..e-s

Fri. 9-6, s.t. 9-4

•

Acrou St1 ailllrom Flflllll'l Bank

Prealdent Clinton
unseated two-tertn Republican Rep:
Martin Hoke in the IOlh District. Ted
Strickland won in the 6th District
against incumbent Republican Frank
Cremeans. The result was a reversal
of the 1994 race, when ·Cremeans
ousted Strickland.
Eleven Republicans and six
Democrats won re-election to House
seats.
Republicans expanded their
majorities in the state Hoose and Sen:
ate. They gained four House seats and
will hold a 60-39 majority there, and ·
picked up one Senate seat, givi11g
them a 21-12 advantage in that chamber next year.
.
Half of the 33 Senate seats and all
99 House seats were up for grabs. .
Republican Justices Andrew Douglas and Evelyn Strauon were
returned to the Supreme Court in ![le
only race for statewide elected
offices.

Strickland edges out ·
Cremeans for Congress

Sentlnei .News Staff

CURIO
Wall &amp; Corner

Dick and Frances Jeffers.

·:·oemocrat·s seize
~najority on board
of ·commjssioners

control of both houses of the Legis- organization we put together was
laturc.
strong and solid .. . and that was the
In Cleveland, voters approved a reason we were able to put together
13.5-mill levy for the city's finan - a victory:" Leland said:
cially ailing school district. The levy
"I thtnk we c~? attnbute the loss
was the h 000-student city school to severalthtngs, srud Jtm Lynch, a
district's ..;swer to financial pro~ , spokesman for Dole's Ohio cam!ems that forced the state to lake con- paign. "Thanks to the governor's
trol of the schools more than a year· leadership, the economy was in good
·ago. Back«. said th~ levy 'would hands: letting Bill Clinton ride on the
generate $67 million. ·
. coa.~lall~ of the economy here. . _
Clinton became the first DemocWe re obvtously dtsappomted
ratic presidential candidate to. win . but we made a good final push in
back-to-back elections in Ohio since Ohio."
Franklin Roosev~ll. who did it in
Sandra Reckseit, Ohio coordinator
1932, 1936 and 1940. Clinton had fortbe Perot campaign, said the vote
won 40 percent of the vote in 1992 was "a sadtestimony to the peopl_e's
against then-President Bush. while • understanding of the 1ssues facmg
Perot had 21 (iercent.
this country."
His victory was the largest by a . The_ defeated )lfOPo.sal to ~n
Democrat running for president in etght nverboat casmos tn four Oh1o
Ohio since 1964, when Lyndon John- counties was on the ballot as Issue 1..
son defeated RepublicaJi Barry Gold- , "The people of Ohio have spoken
. water by II)Ore than I million votes. on~e ag_ain ......G~ bless them for
. The only other Democratic prest- the_tr wtsdom, satd Gov. _George
$~entia! candidate to win in Ohio since Vomovtch, who led the anu-casmo
then was Jimmy Carter, by 11,000 forces.
votes over Gerald Ford_ in I 976.
Kate Hubben, a spokeswoman ~~
No ~epublican candtdate has won ·Yes on Issue I, satd the economy ts
tbe presidency since 1860 without do\ng so ~ell right now and unemwinning Ohio.
ploy'!lent IS so low that ~ople ~re
S~te l,)emocr:'lic Party Chairman less ltkel~ to ~ke progresSive actton
Dav1d Leland satd Vice Prcstdent AI to create JObs.
,
. . .
Gore called him an hour before the
Republicans retained a m&amp;JOnty m
polls closed to thank him for Ohio's the state's U.s; Housedelegltton.but
vote.
Democrats g~med two seats.
.
"He thought the issues were
Democrattc state Sen. Dennts
importanl,' but he also. knew tl)e Kuctmch. a fortnerCieveland mayor,

Soulsby, Lentes win re-election

scrapbook~

..... '•
FOURTH BIRTHDAY
Jordan Kate Jeffers, daughter of
J,oe and Mary Jeffers, Middleport,
recently celebrsted her fourth birthday with a party.
.
A Winnie the Pooh theme was
~ed out with pizza and koolaid
being served.
·
Attending were: her parents,
brothers, Ryan and Chris Jeffers,
Connie Bailey, Cayla Taylor, Misty
Morrison, and·maternal grandmother, Jane Huffman. Sending gif~
were her paternal grandparents,

...,.,.. Soui"'Y

From AP, Steff Reporte
President Clinton and Gov.
· · h were the. t~o
George ".omovtc
biggest winners of the 1996 elecuon
in Ohio.
Clinton, a Democrat, c8Iried the
stateforasecondstraighttimeonhis
way to re-election, while a statewide
· casit19 gambling issue that Voinovich,
. a Republican, opposed was overwhelmingly defeated.
With 99 percent of Ohio precincts
reporting, Clinton had about 2.08
million votes, or 47 percent of the
state's presidential vote. Republican
challenger Bob Dole had about 1.81
million or 41 percent and Rcfortn
Party candidate Ross Perot about
466,000 or II percent, according to
unofficial returns tabulated by The
Associated Press.
Meigs County gave 4,212 votes
· (45.19 percent) to Clinton's re-eleclion bid, while Dole netted 3.S77 balJots (38.38 percent). Perot garnered
1,425 votes for 15.29 percent.
The !ileal count for other presidential candidates was: Harry Brown,
31 · John Hagelin 22· Monica Moore'
~. 34; and H~w.;.d Phillips, 20.
The casino proposal lost 62 percent to 38 percent, with 99 percent of
precincts reporting:
Clinton was unable to carry many
other Democrats to victory in the
state with him: Two -Republican
· incumbents won Ohio Supreme
Court seats and Republicans retained

j

' wcmls mean in guiding personal and
professional .conduct. ·
Poling is a 1993 graduate of
River Valley High School, Cheshire.
STACY L. CAMP
Marine Lance Cpl. Stacy L.
Camp, son of Richard and Ann E.
Camp of . Radcliffe, recently
received the Navy and Marine Corps
Achievement Medal. · ·
Camp was cited for superior performance of duty while serving with
. 13th Marine Expeditionary Unit,
Fleet Marine Force. Camp Pendleton, Calif. Camp was singled out for
the award because of his initiative in
making a significant contribution to
the accomplishment of the command's mission.
Camp is a I 993 graduate of Vinton County High School, McArthur.
He joined the Marine Corps in July
1993.

Of·

Ohio joins voting rush
·for Clinton's re-election

oil makes a
good egg

By NANCI HELLMICH
USA TODAY
Researhers have done something
fishy with chicken ens to produce ~
- I
what they say is a more nutrition- · ·
packed food.
.
"
The new eggs contain Omega-3 .'
fatty acids ~ly foull!l in fish .
oil)"and vitamin E. two nutrients
linked to preventing heart disease. ':
Pilgrim's Pride will roll out
EggsPius in Dallas and New Orleans
in January. They'll be sold nationwide by summer.
For years; eggs took a beating for
raising blood cholesterol, but recent
research indicates that eating three
or four a week is OK for most people .
This new egg might even
improve the diets of people who
don't eat enough fish, its developers
say.
To create the egg, Mary Van
Elswyk. an assisljlnt professor of
poultry science at Texas A&amp;M University, Ceyllege Station, fed chick-.
~
en• flaxseed, marine oils and soy- .
. bean oils. (They like the stuff,' she
.L...
. A_tota_l_o_f_88_0_M_e_lgs_Ca.,.
.
senior citizens turned out Thursday to get their flu shots at
says.)
Senior Citizens Center. Nur11es from the Meigs County Health Department and volunteers from the
The chickens laid eggs with the
Ohio University, College of OeteOpathlc Medicine, along with Retired Senior Volunteere, WQI'ked In
usual
amount of fat and cholesterol.
the program to Immunize residents. Judlva Jocelyn, a medical atudant at Ohio Unlver•lty, gives a.
two
of ihese eggs have about lis
But
flu shot to Jack Hawley of Middleport. ~e wss assisted by Mrs. Robert Burdat!:e, RSVP volunteer.
much Omega-3 fatty acid as a ~­
(Photo by Charlene Hoeflich)
ounce serving of red snapper or
orange roughy, and they prpvide a
worth of vitamin E.
'

2 Slctlona, 16 Page~ 35 A Ollnl'lll'tt
N&amp;WIIIIJ 1r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wedneaday, November 6, 1996

-Community calendar- ---------Fwsho~--------~ Adding fish
.. The Commwdty Calendar Is
POMEROY ·-- Eagle Auxiliary
publilbed as a free sei'Yice to DOD• 2171, Thesday, 7;30 p.m Refreshprilftt p-aups 'wlsiiiJII to aDIIOWlee . ments.
mii 1 DI and ,special e1'tllts. The
calender Is not desiped to promote ales or fund ralsen oltllly WEDNESDAY
~ lteDII are printed as space
POMEROY -- Regular meeting,
permit~ and CllllllOt be guanateed Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge
164,
to run a specific number of days. · F&amp;AM, Racine. Election of officers.

Rein likely lete tonight,
lowe neer 60. Thuredey,
occealonal rein, highs In
the IIIla.

u.s.

RESULTS -lnCIIII~
Rap. Frank C~ne .
cleughter Cer~ fir right, looked on Tueadey night ea camtreeaurer sm. Chipman 1nd hla daughter 51!ayn1
. out the numbers In the Slltlh Dlltrlct congre11ionel race
h•dquartara Jn Galllpollll- (AP)

By JOHN SEEWER
Associated Prell Writer
COLUMBUS - Former Ohio
congressman Ted Strickland never
stopped running for office even after
he was defeated two years ago.
He never stopped raising money
and he never stopped chasing the man
who knocked him out of Washington.
His persistence paid off
Strickland narrowly defeated
freshman Republican Rep. Frank
C:remean~ on Tuesday . to give
Democrats control of. Ohio's 6th
District seat, which covers much of
the rural southern part of the sta.te.
"I want to make it possible for the
·people who live in, my part of Ohio
to have the same opportunities ... that
are available to people who live in the
prosperous and wealthy parts of
Ohio," be said last month on the campaign trail.
.
Complete but unofficial returns
tabulated by The Associated Press
showed Strickland elected with .5 I
percent of the vote.

Strickland was bounced from
Congress by just 3,401 votes in the
1994 Republican landslide.
. .But he kept in contact with Democratic campaign experts during his
time away from Capitol Hill. He
piled up money at numerous fundraisers and even trailed his opponent
with a video camera, recording his
every move.
Strickland said he decided to
make another run at Congress
because he was not happy with 1~
way Cremeans represented the district.
.
''I don't think Frank Cremeans
realizes what he's done to hurt this
district,." Strickland said, citing his
opponents' decisions to cut funding
for programs that benefit the pi&gt;Or.
The son of a steelworker, Strickc
· land grew up not far from the Ohio
River in Lucasville. }jis family struggled like many others in a district that
still has high unempiQyment and
above average poverty rates.

Me·1gs Athens play· role ·1n dec· ·1d·1ng race

·
ty. Incumbent Sheriff James M.
· Soulsby of Pomeroy ·easily defeated Republican candidate and Salisbury Township resident Michael R, Canan by a
.
'
.
5,144-to-4,053 vote margin to gain a third tertn as Meigs County Sheriff.
From Afi Steff Reports
just as close during this campaign, Abele.
Jpcumbent Democratic Prosecuting 1\ltorney John R. Lentes of Rutland
The tables of heartbreak from two with many detertnining the race a
In local results of the State
beat Republican challenger and former prosecutor Steven L. Story of Pomeroy years ago turned to elation early this dead heat in recent days. Strickland Supreme Court races, Stratton defeat-·
by 4,868 to·4,190.
·
·
'
. morning for Democratic congrcs- . was.only one of two .former Democ- ed Marianna Dettman by a 3,437Overall, voter turnout in the county w~ lower than predicted with 9,640 sional candidate Ted Strickland who ratic congressmen nationwide seek- 2,311 margin while Douglas defeatnarrowly defeated incumbent Sixth ing their seats back.
·
out of 15,296 registered voters, of 63 percent, reporting to the polls.
ed Peter Sikora by a 4,696-1,380
. Earlier, eleCtions officials had anticipated that abolltll,OOO voters would District U.S. Rep. Frank Cremeans, · Meigs County vote~ supported margin. In unopposed races, Abele
i:cpOri to the polls.
·
.
R-Oallipolis, in a mirror result of Stockland by a reso~ndm_g 57 !'"r- garnered 4,861 votes in the Court of
The precinct with the heaviest voterturnout was West Chester Wtth 72.24 their !992 race.
cent-42 percent margtn, w1th Stock- Appeals race while Richardson colStrickland' edged Cremeans dis- land garnenng 5,227 votes to Cre: . lected 4,699 votes in the State Board
percent. The lowest showing was in Pomeroy's First Ward with a 52.04 percent voter turnout.
,
trict-wide by a reported 51 percent- means' 3,936, Strickland also carried of Education ·race.
· Six unchallenged incumbent Republican candidates were shoo-ins for re- 49 percent margin, with 'strong show- Athens Coun~. d~e matnly to a
Meanwhile,
Gov. George
election and merely garnered complimentary votes.
ings in Meigs and Alhens counties large O~to Umverstty student voter
Voinovich hoped defeat of a'
Those candidates were, shown with complimentary votes: Coroner Dou- giving the. former Democratic repre- turnout m support of Strtckland.
glas D. Hunter of Racine, 7,073; Clerk of Courts Larry E. Spencer of Racine, sentative the
to return to WashIn other state races, Metgs Coun- statewide riverboat gambling pro.
· ty voters s~pported Ohio Supreme posal would end the debate over
7 031· 'Treasurer Howard E. Frank of Albanv. 6.917: Recorder Emmo2cne . ington.
·H:.mil;on of Syracuse, 6,872; Common Pleas Court Judge (Juvenile/Probate
In 1992 ,. political newcomer Cre- . Court candtdates Evelyn Stratlon whether Ohio should have casinos.
But casino supporters said lUesDivision) Robert E. Buck, 6,747; and Engineer Robert H. Eason of Pomeroy, means defeated then-incumbent and A~rew Do_uglas, State Board of
day
tbcy don 'te&lt;pect that to happen.
'_6,584. ·
Strickland by 3.SOO votes district- Educatton candtdate Cy Richardson,
The
proposal to place eight casiwide. Pollsters tracked the race to be and Court of Appeals Judge Peter B.

votes

·

.

nos in fourc::ounties failed 62 percent
to 38 percent with 100 peiCent of
precincts reporting, according to
unofficial returns compiled by The
Associated Press. The vote was
approximately 2.6 million against the
Issue I. and 1.6 million for it.
Voinovich led the light against lhe
proposed state constitutional amendment and said the effort put 'forth to
battle it was · "the finest grassroots
campaign to defeat a statewide issue
in my memory."

,

"I hope today's resounding defe~ ,
of Issue I will at last convince those
people who have been promoting it
over the years that the people ofOhio
don't want casino gambling, not yesterday, not today, not ever,'!
Voinovich soid.

Carey nets comfortable margin t() win second term in statehou~e·
··

Incumbent State Rep. John A. Carey fended off vigorous campaigning by
Oallil County's Jeff Fowler to win a second tertn·representing the 94th Dis·
trict in 'IUesday's voting.
Unoflicial totals from the four counties comprising the district gave'Carcy,
Republican
and f9rmer mayor of Wellston, 1 2-1 edge ova- his -opponent.
1
Carey aotted 27,045 votes district-wide to 16,173 for Fowler.
.
unaurprilinaly Carey fnd best in his nlljve Jackson County, where he
polled 8,848 - t o Fowler'• 2,793. But he received signiftcant back,ins
l'lllm Meip County with 5,487 to J:owler's 3,569, and 6,317 in Lawrence
',:Gunty to 4,353 fur Fowl«.
, · fowler, an educator and farmer ftom the .Mercerville area, narrowed the

•
•

•

•

margin in &lt;lallia County with S,4S8, but Carey emerged with 6,393.
111e district consilii of all ofGallia, Meigs and Jackson counti~s. and eastem Lawrence County;
111e campaign was waged moslly on issues by the candidates undl the final
W!'C'ks, when the Carey camp launched a media and mailing blitz. Some
Carey-sponsored television ads questioned Fowler's record as Guyan Township clellc, 1 potil he held for two terms. which !'owler felt was a sign ihat
.
·
o•; · g on the 1·ncumbent's
h11
campatgn was .-mn
·
Issues in the campaian focUied on job creation, highways and education.
While Carey defended his record on those areas during his first term, Fowler

•

hammered aw~y a_t the l~k ?f new ~mplo~ment opportunities, little .or no·
~ad.consu-ucuon tn the dtstnct and tnequ111e~ tn fundtng for schools tn the ·
diStnct.
.
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fowler also labeled Carey a t~l of Republican bosses 1n Columbus~ .. r~
urgtng more aggress1ve rcp_rc~_ntauon for the ~,
· Although Carey won maJonucs tn Galha. Me1gs and Jackson, mults
Lawre~e were de!ayed due to ~peter problems at _Board ~fEiecti0111.
Electtons offictals told a Hunungton, W.Ve., televtston station that the .
,
.
alfunc · ned....
·
and .t.~--t
. board s computenzcd counter ~ , uo . ''""r 20 preciiiCts
-•':"''
release of unofficial results until this momma.

lh:"

from

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�p.

Commentary

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Wedneldliiy, November I, 1996

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OHIO Weather

The Daily Sentinel· Drug abuse·plagues America's seniors
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

I

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
o-ral Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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... -

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.,. IIUII/OCf 10 -.rt.,., mwt I» o/ptMd •nd

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·. th.rn·31JD- Alii.,.,.

nuriJ.
bor. No . _ , _ , , _ """ , . ,..,btlofrod. Loll.,. •ltould 1» In ·gdod ,..,.,

•** •

.,,,....,not~

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Phannacy, recalled the case of one elderly, who may experience addiolder woman admitted to a hospital tional medication problems from the
for "drugged behavior." Indeed. She hospital drug regimen.
-- 1\vice as malty people in Amerwas taklng 75 different prescription
ica die from prescription drugs every
year as from illegal narcotics like .
cocaine and heroin; of all drug-related deaths, experts have found 70 per·
cent involve prescription drugs. Apd
of these prescription drug-related
deaths, at least half were individuals
and nonprescnpuon medications. over 60 years old.
Convinced that she needed all these
.. The chances that a doctor will
pills to remain healthy, she was prescribe a drug during an office visgoing to many different pharmacies it is three in ·five. That's partly
-- and lived in fear of having the because of pressure from the patient.
drugs taken fnim her.
Older Americans in particular view .
Our associate Dale Van Alta, who drugs as panaceas, because they were
interviewed dozens of experts and conditioned earlier in their lives to
reviewed trade literature on the sub- expect such. miracles with the disject' of prescription drug abuse, covery or penicillin and the poyo
learned the following about this cri- vaccine. If a doctor fails to prescnbe
a drug when tbey see an elderly
sis:
patient,
that -patient may go to anoth-· As much as 10 percent of all
hospital admissions in America can er doctor who will.
be attributed adverse drug reactions
•• Many seniors tend to take drUgs
caused by mismedication. The great- prescribed by different doctors at difest portion of that number are the ferent times, when those drugs

WASHINGTON •• Older Americans have a serious drug problem.
Election-year attention has
focused on teen-age drug abuse, but
" the other drug problem" in the Unit·
ed States, equally large and paten- .
tially just as fatal, is prescription drug
abuse and misuse among the elderly.
One-third of all prescription drugs
in this country are bought by people
over 65 years old, evep though they
represent only l3 percent ofthe population. And senior citizens are particularly vulnerable to addiction and
tragic side effects from misuse of
those drugs.
1be late Rep. Claude Pepper of
l'lorida told us time and again how
shocking it was when senior citizens
would come to his health subcom' miuee hearings with large plastic
bags filled with pills of every variety.
."These were medications that had
been prescribed forthem , and which
they were supposedly taking simultaneously," he recounted. ·
William Simonson, professor at
Oregon State University's College of

'£sl4hfisfwf in 1948

·.,'

Excerpts ·from other
Ohio newspapers

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller

Excerpts of editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio news·

papen:,

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Deytoa DaUy News, Nov. 4
'The United States is trying to remain constructively engaged with China, but the effort wears thin.
'
Chine is pretty. good at arresting human-rights-prone citizens at a time ·
w~n the United States is trying to engage in talks. The Chinese want to send
1 signal that they aren't going to loosen up their choke chains, especially :
when the United States comes calling to talk abour improving relations.
This week, after a State Department official finished talks with some high
officials in Beijing, the Chinese socked an !!-year prison sentence on Wang
Dan, a democnltic activist.
Secretary of State Warren Christopher is scheduled to go to Beijing later this month to set up an 'exchange of visits between President Clinton assuming he wins re-election -and China's president, Jiang Zemin. The •
White House said Christopher still plans to go. Maybe the State Department
figures that the Chinese won't humiliate Christopher after the meeting
because the Chinese did their litthi crackdown number BEFORE the visit
this time.
The United States hopes to do enough business with the Chinese.la promot.e more capitalism, at least. That could promote' some moderating influences as China's new leaders shake out. So the effort makes sense.
Meanwhile, the United Siates has to reckon that it has niuch more promising relations with other nations in that part of the world and has to invest a
Jot more i.n those political and trade relationships. ·

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The FBI's exoneration of Richard Jewell as the Olympic pipe bomber is
too little, too late, and, given the ugliness of the agency's zeal, too limp.
Jewell, the security guard who found the bomb and warned people away
during the Sunimer Olympics in Atlanta, thus limiting casualties, found the
might of government arrayed against him:
His three months of hell included the treachery of a pal with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation who wore a wire when he dined with Jewell;
round-the-&lt;: lock ·shadows: and the laundry of his life hung out on·an international newsline for the rubberneckers and commentators.
Three months of suffering and uncertain financial future will not go away
with the FBI's acknowledgement, without apology, that, pending· new evidence, Jewell is no longer an FBI targ&lt;:h
_
An apology is needed, and perhaps a proffer of cash and job possibili. ties to make amends for the socioeconomic pall the FBI cast ori Jewell's
•future.

.

' Ponsmouth Daily Times, OcL 31
Evidence of area youth gang activity is being weighed in a statewide survey of the continuing threat it represents, according to last week's announce'· ment by Attorney General Betty Montgomery:
Studying reports from more than half of the state's various law enforce:
, ment agencies, the attorney general's staff has helped Toledo lawmaker John
Garcia draft House Bill817, to deal with t.he conclusion that youth gangs
now count more than 11,000 active members linked .with serious, ongoing
· crime.
In addition to a dramatic enhancement of penalties, House BillS I 7 would
set procedures to close g"''g houses and seize gang-related property, alert
authorities to gang victimization of children, and create a statewide gang
intelligence database to help develop more ·effective countenneasures.
The prospect of legislation providing punishment that· fits the crime is
welcomed by every concerned citizen.
·

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The (Yourigstown) Vindicator, OcL 30

·
Even if there was nothing, to hide, the asinine ploy by the Democratic
National Committee to avoid filing a pre-election financial report has again
turned the spotlight on the DNC's fund-raising practices and gilien Repub, licans more ammunition with which to attack President Clinton on the question of ethics.
,
lbere is only one way the committee can extricate.itself from this politically sticky situation: full disclosure. ,Anything less, such as the announce.
ment Tuesday that "raw data" would be provided to the Federal Elections
Commission, will simply feed the suspicion that someone is trying to bury
embarrassing information.

'

t!Je standard of steadfastness -- his
administration has been disappointing and deficient and sometimes
simply tawdry."
·

Joseph Perkins
The Boston Globe chimed in,
saying that "If the race were to be
judged on moral and ethical grounds
alone, then this endl!rsement might
take a different line," 1be Globe con. tinued, "We wish Clinton would be
more fonhcoming on Whitewater,
and the abuses of power," such as
Travelgaie and- pulling the files of
potential opponents, are unsettling.''
Now these are the unvarnished
assessments of Clinton by newspapers that actually endorsed him. This
proves that, no matter that he . is
returned to office for a second tenn,
he is held in low esteem even by
many of those who voted ·for him.
' That'really''is a sad comm~ntary
on wl\at we have come 1o as a natiOn.
We have a 'tlan in the White House
who has brought more ill repute upon
the office of the presidency thim any
other occupanf of that position in this
century, .save for Richard Nixon.
While Clinton and his inner circle
may consider his re-election an exon' eration of their conduct during the
previous four years, they can take no
comfort in the fact that a vast number of Americans believe their pres-

Conspir~cies

Berry's World

If it wasn 'i forthe mail I get from
normal people, there are times I
would think the whoie world had
stripped its gears.
Most of the cacophony stiU comes
from the right. We hear warnings that
Timothy McVeigh is being framed
for lite April 1995 O_klahoma City
bombing; that members of the
" world socialist elite" .are about to
invade the countr).; that American
officials are conspiring with the United Nations to create a New· World
Order and herd their countrymen into
concentration camps.
Bill Clinton's alleged crimes have
created a cottage ill\fustry. A video
called " The Clinton Chronicles"
accuses the president of being
cocaine, addict, a Casanova of epic
prowess, a member of an hiternational drug combine, a party io
numerous murders. Half·a·million
copies are said to have been sold.
From the left -- yes, there is still
a left ·- come the hoary tales of corporate conspiracies, of government
schemes to spread deadly diseases,
~nd now a new version of an old tale
charging the CIA with creating ttie
crack-cocaine epidemic.

a

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•rm drinking to foffJBI - to foffJBI s/1 those
irrftsUng POLITICAL ADS.•
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shouldn't be mixed at all. Worse, one
expert explained to us, "these children of the Depression hoard and
loan." When a doctor takes them off
a drug, they save them for use at a later date. And &lt;:&gt;ften the elderly swap
drugs among family members and
friends , without ever consulting a
doctor.
-- 'The elderly often mistakenly
assume that if one pill is good for
tbem, then two must be better -- a
dangerous misconception.
-- Finally, they figure medicine
that can he bought over the counter
is harmless since it requires no prescription. Interestingly. this is not
even true with vitamins. Studies
have found that megadoses of vita,
min C taken by the eiderly can cause
diarrhea, kidney stones and even .
senility. Excessive amounts of vita- .
min A can cause loss of appetite, dry
skin, bone' calcium loss and an
increased pressure on the brain that
feels like a tumor.
One of tbe two best methods to
curtail these problem is a "brown
bag" review. A conscientious doctor,
before prescribing for an elderly
patient on the first visit, should ask
the patient to gathdr up every prescription and over-the-counterdrug in
their medicine cabinet 01; elsewhere
and (ake it in a bag 'to the doctor's
office. Only with such a complete
picture can a doctor properly pre~
scribe ·a new drug regirpen for 81!
.elderly patient.
The second-best controlling mea:

~

in~ton

Post and the. Los Angeles
Ttmes conducted thetr own investigations and fpund little evidence to
back the CIA-contra drug-ring story.
The Mercury News sub~equently
backed off sc;&gt;me of 1ts major asserh~n.s and cl81med tis work had been
cotics. In the story's current confor- mtsmterpreted.
·
h. Cl · ·d h
malton, t e A IS sat to ave abidIn truth, the Mercury News n~ver
ed, if not abetted, Nicaraguan contra qutte dt~ accuse the CIA of dt~ect
benefactors fn the 1980s when they comphc1ty, but 11 certamly advertised
introduced crack cocaine into the the series in that manner. IL• Internet
ghettos of Los Angeles as a way of · posting displayed the CIA's insignia
raising money to fund the war against and a man smoking crack. The
the Sanqinistas.
reporter who wrote the stories, Gary
-During the Reagan years, this ':Vebb, has been hitting the talk-show
specific allegatiott was thoroughly circui~ has been offered a movie deal,
investigated by several congression- · and is reportedly circulating a book
a! committees. The worst the probers proposal. He wants to "explore a thecould come I!P with was the relative ory," he told the Los Angeles Times,
certainty that the agency was aware that the "contra war was not 8 real
that some of its contra friends were war at all. It was a charade a smoke
dealing in drugs, bot prefemd to turn screen ... to provide cover for a masits head and leave the problem to its sive drug .operation" by CIA agents
law-enforcement colleagues.
and their friends.
This didn't stop the San Jose
Some black leaden, ever on the
(Calif.) Mercury News from pub- lookout for a conspim:y theory that
lishing a series in August based · can be de1J181oJued into a passionate
largely on the self-serving stories of cause and political support, leaped on
drug runners and cocaine traffickers. the »tory. Usin1 tbe same standard of
The New York Times, the Wash- proof popUlarized by ex-FBI man and

Joseph Spear

•

Galna County crash kills
.one; three others injured

System to bring an end
.to warmer temperatures

·'s 1·IVest·o·ck
0 da·Y

ingly support him, like the e~itorial
pages of the Times, the Post and thj:
Globe, concede that his presidency
has been immoral, unethical, disappointing, deficient and tawdry. Ye(,
when his non-Democratic critics
voice the same criticisms, he dismisses them as right...ving Republican hatemongers. ·
But I, for one, do not hate Bill
Clinton, or his wife or any member
of his administration , pastor present.
I just hate the damage they have done
to the presidency.
·
'
Throughout the history of · this
Republic, Americans' have bee~
blessed to have great leiiders occupy
the highest office in the land, leaders
whom they could look up to, even if
they did not always subscribe to their
political philosophy. But in Clinton
we have the complete opposite -- a
leader whom most Americans do not
look up to, even if they happen ttl
agree with him on most counts. '
In sum, Clinton has proven himself an unworthy heir to the hig~
office held by Washington and Lincoln and Roosevelt and Reagan. Ana
there i.s nothing imaginable that he
can do that can change the harsh his'
torical jud~ment that almost certainly awaits him when he finally leaves
office.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
for the San Diego Union-Tribune
and the authorof"Rilht Like Me"
(Union· Tribune Publishing).
•

Mel"gs announcements

11f.tereste~

i1f. ope1f.i1f.J a ~est•ur•d?
Let us help you Jet .Cooki1f.J!

Restaurant Seminar
I·"'·

Stocks

Meigs EMS runs

Hospital news

06 . . . . . . . .

.au~or

·. right-wing
Gary Aldrich -- that!
· rumorswhichcan'tbeknockeddown•
are facts- - the leaders held rallies and :
demanded investigations. The Rev.:
Jesse Jackson called for hearings,:
Rep. Maxine Waters, D'Calif., vowed 1
~
h 1
10 "make somebod
.
Y ~y .or w at t
they. dtd to our communny." Corne- l
dian Dick Gregory promised 10 "nev- l
er cat another drop of food" til th ,
h .,
th
. un
c arg s are oroughly mvest•gated. ;
.
,
;
ThiS could be .about the hun; 1
dl'OOth fast that the h~able loon~ Gre·~
g~ry has launched smce the retgn of
R1chard N1~on. In th~ past, he has
declared hiS belief that the 1981 :
Allanta child murders were_ ext;eutecl ,
Wtth governm~nt _comphc1ty In tho :
tnterest of sc1enu~c research, and :
. promoted the notton that Lyndofi •
Johnson. colluded in the assassination :
of Martm Luther King Jr..
~

°.'

Friday, II I Coun St., P9mcroy, Ohio, by rbe
'Ohio.Valley Publiahlna Compa~~yJQIU'Inett Co..
, J'omero~. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156 ..S.COIId
.c_lan pos1D3e paid,at Pomeroy, Ohio.

-Member: The Auoclated
.
Preu. and the Ohio
New~ Auoclation .

¥0S'I'MASTER: Send addreu corrections to
The ~ly Sentinel, Ill Coun SL, Pomeroy.
llblo 45769.

Keep the letters eomina: S~~~e :
folks aoua stick together.
' .
J01eph Spear II a •JDC~~eeled: l
writer for NeWI(IIIper Enterp.-..., •

.

,.

RockMII ...............................551,.1.

Royal Dutch/Shall ................ 159
Shoney'a ..................... ,....... :...7'1.
Stlir Bank ..............................90\
Wendy' a ................................2ct/.
Worthlng1on ..........................21 'A.

-·-·-

Stock report a are .the 10:30
a.m. quotee provided by Advea1
of~Uipolla.
.

SUIISCRII'TION RATES

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a, C.rrltr or Motor Reale

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POMEROY

5:27 p.m., West Main Street,
James 'tankers, refused.
RACINE
I:54 p.m •• volunteer fire department and squad, brush fire on Johnson Road, no injuries.
RUTLAND
- 2:40 p.m,.." Weaver Road, Donald i
Little, VMH.
·

OneMoolh ............ ,................................... $8.70
One Year .......................... ,...... ........ ..... $104.00

SINGLE COPY PRICE

Dalt~ ............... ,....................................35 C.nu

Bublcribcn nol detirlnaro pay dte carder may
remit in advGnce dire~tt to The Daily Sentinel
&amp;n • dne.•ix. or 12 monlh bui•. Credh wiU be
J6ven carrier cP week.
·

·

.

hbuaher MeMt the riaht to tdju1t riRI •u·
tna lbe llb~ertptlon period. Subt~ption rate
ct.ca ml)' be implemenled by chii"JinJ tbe
~LIUBSCR~ONS

1- Molp CeoniJ

,,

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Non/oM

"Sa.rrr A 7;.,;;,. 'Stt. ~ Sn I{ 11

C

---....

ALL AGES WELCOME

...

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

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Visit our scare during .. Homes tOr chc Holifiays" from

'

NoY&lt;mb&lt;r 7th through II th and scc the mosic for younelf!

Out Notth Pole tnd Diclcms' Vill'l!e ' Sran A Tradition· Sort
arc :twilablc a1 an introductory Event price of $6,. F..ach ~

'

Coat $5 Per Person
(Cove,. Both Daya)

includes two lighted shof". acc&lt;ssories, ,_ .nd snow. Save $20
off tht manufacturer's regular sug;ened $85 mail from
NO'Itmb&lt;r 7rh through 17th.

reate the magic for the holidays with Department 56
lighr«&lt; Villogn. Our Diclcen5 Vill'l"' "' new Notth
Poh::'·' "Srart A Tradition'" Sets are a perfect way ro begin.
Whcrber ynu'rc cre:uing a holiday unn:rpicx:e or o1. fircpla«:
mann~l you'll loYc m:lng rhc holiday drcoradng aAd sift lcltu
at (]Ur nurc. Ask for our fret "Holiday Idea Guide" durins
"Homes for the Holidoy&lt;' fmm Nov.mher 7th through 1 Ith.

THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY
4:30·6:00 AT MEIGS
HIGH SCHOOL
CAFETERIA
.

ollhe tubo&lt;ripdoo.

I J -.................,.............................,,129.~

Saturday: S:OD-6:00
Sunday: 1 :oo-5:00

CHEERLEADING
'CLINIC ·

mall pandtted In 4IUI
fllbere home eanier scryJccl&amp;available.

:16-................................................. Slii.IIIJ
5!1-;..... ,...............,....................... $109.72

Evenl Hourt:

Mondlty_: Frlday: 8:00·6:00

· Will Sponsor A

.

13 - .............: ................................... $17.31)
~-. ........................................... , ....$!3~ •
52 ........................ ,......................1.,
'
-~MtlpC...,

EveN S..tpAeellktail

Meigs High-Cheerleaders

'
No sub.ICJ'ipdon by

-

$()5.00Set

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One ~............,.................................... $2.00

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Allocletlon.

repo
.· rt

COUnty court cases ended :~E~~::~=!~=~":.

-- they're everywhere! . l

111e story _is rooted in the CIA's
achvthes dunng the Vtetnam War,
when the spy agency looked the oth~
er way as its field agents dealt in nar-

by Bob Hoeflich

Martha Greenaway, who will be dent of a local man, involved in a
leaving soon with her husband Jack love triangle, having been shot to
to winter in l'lorida, brought by a death. The remainder of the newspaNov. 30, 1899edition ofThe Leade{, per basically kept to the confines of .
a weeldy Pomeroy newspaper from the comings and goings of residents.
Since 1899, the world has become a
way back when.
The edition is full of small per' lot smaller and let's face it, we do like
sonal items relating incidents in the the "sensationar· news that we've
lives of Pomer6y residents as :-vell as· become accustomed to and is on all
those about the county. t's a far cry sides of us.
from today's newsp~pers which are
David and Chris Ebersbach, sons
forced to shy away from these kinds
of Mr. and Mrs. Larry and Sally
o~ things. Today, residents are afraid
they'll get ripped off if it appears in Ebersbach, were here recently to
the newspaper that they are doing a attend the funeral for Sally's mother,
bit of traveling. We've been urged to Mrs. Edna Roush of New Haven,
W.VA.
W.Va.
use caution about thai and we are.
David is located at Bluffton Col. It was Thanksgiving time whe~
the 1899 edition was published and lege in Bluffton, Ohio, these days,
the New York Clothing House, which where he is a graduate assistant foot. lasted for a long time in the commu- ball coach. He also attends Bowling
nity, was going strong. It advertised Green, where he is workin g on his
men's blue and black beaver over- master's degree in development al
coats for just $5 but you could buy ·kinesiology..Chris is Jiving in Bedsome in other materials for from $8 ford, Ohio, and works as a Jab techto $15. A shoe by the name of "Eiec- nician at Cuyahoga Steel &amp; Wire in
A Gallipolis area woman was Green Township Road 362 (Pleasant tric" for men was advertised at $3 a ·Solon.
. killed and three others were injured Hill) when he lost control of the car pair and there were some "swell Lit·
Keep in mind there is a free
in a two-vehicle crash Tuesday on he drove in left-hand curve and went tie Vestee suits" for boys ranging
from $1 .50 to $5 .
health fair from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. thi s
State Route 141, according to the over the center line.
The car was then struck in the side
Sears advertised in the paper, giv- Thursday at the Meigs Coun,ty
By The Associated Pre"
Sunset today will be at 5:23p.m. Gallia-Meigs Post of the ~tate High- by a westbound pickup truck driven ing readers the change to purchase . Library in Pomeroy.
· A brief warm spell will be ending Sunrise Thursday will be at 7:0S a.m. way Patrol.
The fair is sponsored by the Home
Killed in the 9:50 a.m. accident by LeahJ. Johnson, 20, !57 SR 775, $29 a Vermont marble grave monuWeather forecast:
abruptly as a cold front from the
.
ment with the lettering being done · Heal.th Service of Veterans M0mori Gallipolis.
was
Mary
E.
Sparks,
29,
450
Patriot
, Tonight...Rain developing west.
Plains reaches Ohio on Thursday.
The crash severely,damaged both free .of charge: The Ii &amp; 0 Railway · al Hospital and a number of health
. . The cold front will be preceded by Rain likely east late, Lows in the 50s, Road, a passenger in car ' driven by, vehicles and injured Johnson and printed a schedule of runs and they .. · care businesses and agen cies will be
· James A. Sparks, 33, also of 450
abundant cloud cover and winds except near ·60 extreme south.
James Sparks, who were transported were numerous, since rail-travel was · represented at the event. Services
from the south: Today's high ternThursday... Occasional rain and a Patriot Road, troopers said.
The accident also injured 3-year- to Holzer Medical Center by the Gal- big in those days. George Wilhelin offered are free so it's a g9od opporperatures will reach the lower 60s in chance of thunderstorms. Rain may
and Josiah Davis were among the tai- tunity. Paula Eichinger, RN, BSN, is
old
Jennifer Sparks, 450 Patriot lia County EMS.
northern ·ohio and the lower 70s in be heavy at times west. Highs mostJohnson was treated and released lors in the community, and you could director of the home health service.
Road,
who
was
transported
from
the
southern areas of the state.
ly in the 60s with the temperature
for a strained neck , while James buy a tailor made suit, all wool, made sponsoring the event, which is open
· The cold front will begin to influ- dropping back into the 50s west and scene to Cabell-Huntington Hospital, Sparks was treated and released for just for you at $15 and up.
to the public.
Huntington, WVa., by tbe HealthNet
ence the weather late today. Rain is north during the afternoon.
fractured ribs, a hospital spokesperRobert R. Steele, a graduate of the
air ambulance.
Extended forecast:
likely 'for ionight. Overnight lows
son said.
Massachusetts College of EmbalmI hope you made your vote count
Jennifer
Sparks
was
listed
in
seriFriday... A chance of showers.
should reach into the 50s.
James Sparks was cited for left of ing, joined the staff at the R.H. Rawl- in Tuesday's election. If you lost a
ous
condition
today
in
the
hospital's
· There is a 100 percent chance of . Lows from the mid 30s to the lower
The
pediatric intensive care unit, a C-H center in the accident, which marked ings &amp; Sons linn in Rutland, which candidate or two, not to
. rain on Thursday, with thund~l'litanns 40s. Highs in the 40s.
the county's fifth traffic fatality of th~ . also boasted anew hearse. •
. . world goes on. So do ke(~~mi!iing.
·
possible as the cold front passes.
Saturday... Chance of snow flurries spokesperson said.
The newspaper offered readers an
Troopers
said
James
Sparks
was
year.
· Temperatures will drop through- rionbeast...Otherwise partly sunny.
opportunity to become hypnotists,
out the day on Thursday. Highs in the Lows middle 20s to lower 30s. Highs eastbound, a quarter of a mile west of
and provided infol'll1..ation on anum60s are expected across the state. but in the 40s.
,.
ber of over• the- cou~remedies for
may reach the 70s in eastern parts.
Sunday... Fair. Lows in the 20s.
I
whatever ailed you, whether the difHighs in the 40s.
Summary of Tuesday's ProducBulls: sieady to 50 cents lower; all ficulty was diseases of the stomach,
bulls 45.00 and down.
consumption, ulcers, cancer or just
Veal calves: uneven, lower to plain nerves.
5.00 higher; choice I 10.00 and down.
/!. Pomeroy merchant, W.H.
The following c~ were .resolved $25 plus costs; possession, $50 plus Wapak'!neta and CaldweU:
Sheep· and lambs: steady to 6.00 Osborn offered school supplies of
last week in the Meigs County Court costs;
Hogs: uneven, 75 cerits lower to
lower; choice wools 77.75-86.00; every kind and a Pomeroy businessof Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Btjan J. Wolfe, Racine, speed, l.OO higher.
choice clips 76.25 and down; aged woman, Mae Blazer, not only asked
Butcher hogs: 44.00-52.75.
Fined were: Patricia A. Jones, $22 plus costs; Tracie L. Gandee,
Cattle: steady to 2.00 higher.
sheep 40,00 and down.
women readers to buy her hats but
Reedsville, failure to control, $20 Spencer, W.Va., no OL, $50 plus
Sl h
h · 64 00
cattle:
uneven,
I
.00
lower
.
Feeder
also offered them a wide range of vel- .
aug ter steers: c otce
· ·
plus costs; Keith A. Romine, costs; Richard Hubbard, Pomeroy,
.
.
d
..
75.25;
select
61.00-68.00.
to
1.00
higher
vets,' feathers, ,silks, ribbons. linens
Slaughier heifer§: choice 62.00.Pomeroy, speed' $30 pIus costs; Rod- . tmponunmg, costs, 10 ays J"' 1susYearlings: steers 55.00 and down; and perfumes at reduced prices yet.
ney J. Vickers, New Haven, W.Va., pended, two years probation; Shan R .. 75 75 1 60 00 67 00
heifers 53.00 and down.
The paper displayed very little in
. bel t, $15 pus.
I costs; Corne I'IUS G
Reedsvt'II e,uomesuc
~
· vto
· Ience, ' ·Cows:
; se ect
' 1.00
- · lower
·
seat
, ates,
uneven,
10 1.50
Calves: steers 58.00 and d,own; the way of ''exciting" news as we
·Dotson, Daytona Beach, I'! a., speed, costs, three days jail suspended to one higher; all cows 40.50 and down . .
heifers 50.00 .
look at it today. There was one inci. ~30 plus costs; Richard L. Duncan, day, one year probation, restraining .
' 'Poe"! W.Va .• speed, $30 plus costs; - order issued;
.
Chanty W. Moore, Ashland, Ky.,
Willia111 H. Collins, Albany, via.
.
~peed, $30 plus costs; Jhomas H. lating a protection order, '$I 00 plus
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American
~entley, Pataskala, speed, $30 plus costs, six months jail suspended to 30 Shower planned
Legion,
will be held at the annex in
A
shower
will
be
held
for
Lester'
costs;·
.
days, fiv.e years probation; .Jack F.
Middleport
Sunday noon .
, Harold L. Waugh, Proctorvdle, King Jr., Pomeroy, driving under the and Shirley Wise, who lost all their
sf1CCd, $30 plus costs; Roy A. Steele, influence, $850 plus costs, I0 days possessions in a recent houSe fire .
.
· Ripley, W.Va., speed, $30 plus c~sts; jail suspended to three days, 90-day The shower will be held on Friday at Center dinner
baked
steak
dinner
will
be
A
6:30p.m.
at
the
old
American
Legion
Margaret C. Pryor, Proctorv~lle, OL suspension, one year probation,
served
-at
the
Senior
Citizens
Center,
""
speed, $30 plus costs; Mark A. Clark, jail·and $550 of fine suspended upon Hall in Middleport.
Thursday, 4:30 to 5:45 p.m. Cost $4'
Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus costs; completion of residential tteatment
per person dessert and beverage
Timothy M. Fredericks, Spencer, program; Harry R. Butcher, Pomeroy, Party set
The Ohio Hunger Task Force will included. "The Sounds of Country"
.W.Va., no operator's. license, $150 no OL, $100 plus five days jail susstage
a party for Linda Brightville at will play following the dinner with an ·
plus costs, 30 days ]all su~pended to pended if valid OL presented within
S•tJ4r~4f1 Nmmbtr 16, 1996
7 days, two years probation; speed, 90 days, costs. one year probation; Overbrook Center, Saturday at 3 offering to be taken for the musicians.
Public
invited.
·
p:m,
Brightville
is
a
former
paid
$59 plus costs; Chester W. Brown, Tracy L. Morman, Rutland , speed,
employee with the agency which is
10:00 ~J.m. t11 1:00
l;leMossville, Ky .. no OL, $75 plus $30 plus costs.
BoU orderlifted
administered
through
the
Meigs
costs, thfee days jail and $75 sus- rr===========:.
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
At tlu Mtigs Coudy .
County Department of Human
}lended if valid OL presented within
District
reponed
that
an
order
to
boil
Resources. A business session follow
45 days, one year probation; speed,
Ch~Jmbtr !Jf C!Jmmtr&amp;t offi&amp;~
water in Olive Township, Reedsville
the social.
'$28 plus costs;
and
Rushville
Hill
has
been
lifted.
Am Ele Power ....................... 41'·
Shari M. Carter, Ravenswood,
The last samples tested are were conTopics to be covered: Insurance needs, bank
Altzo ......,................................. 63
Veterans Day dinner
W.Va., stop sign, $15 plus costs; Paul
Ashland
011
...........................
42'1.
sidered
safe.
The
Veterans
Day
'
dinner
of
i).. Gowen, Hurricane, W.Va .• no OL.
financing, advertising, etc.
AT&amp;T .....................................34'1.
$100 plus costs, three day.s jail and
Bank One ........................ ,...... .4~
$50 suspended if valid OL presented
Bob Evans ............................ 12 :4
Sponsored by the Meigs County Chamber
within 30 days; falsification, $25 plus
Units of the Meigs County EmerBorg-Warner ........................39'1.
Veterans Memorial
C::hllmplon
.............................
22'1.
costs; seatllelt, $25 plus costs; posgency Medical ~ervice recorded si~
of Commerce Tourism Board. For more
Tuesday admissions - none.
session, $50 plus costs; Cheryl T. Charming Shops .................. 4"1.
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
Tuesday dis&lt;;harges - none .
City Holdlng, .........................21 ~
. Gowen, Hurricane, W.Va., wrongful
ri,.pon~ing included:
details, or for registration infQ_rmation call:
Federal Mogul ....................... 24'!.
Holzer Medical Center
cntrusttnent. $50 plus costs, three
MIDDLEPORT
Gannen ................................. 76'h
Discharges Nov. S - Mrs. Robert
(614) 992-2239
&lt;jays jail su~pended ; falsification,
12:18 a.m., State Route 143, Lin- Dickens and daughter, Dustin StanGoodyear .............................. 46'1.
K-mlrt .....................................9'1. . da George. Veterans Memorial Hosley, Celia Knapp, Clyde Clark.
·- ....
Landa End •••.•••••••• ••••••••••••.... 21\
pital;
(Published with pennission)
Umlted ........................
19~
5:23 a.m., ~ocksprings RehabiliOhio
Valley
Benk
....................
36
The Daily Sentinel
tation Center, Eldon Walburn, VMH;
One 'Valley ............................. 32'1.
· 8:43 a.m., Children's Home Road ,
(USPS11~)
Peopl" ·Bencorp................. 27\
Byron
Watson, VMH.
Pram Flnl............ ~.................. 12'!.
PUblished every afternoon. Mond11y throuah

..

which is kept by responsible doctors
and pharmacies. The OUR is a com:
puterized list that tracks all medication the patient has used or is cur' rently using. ~orne computer programs automatica11y raise a red flag
if drugs appear on the list that shouldn't be mixed.
. Neither of these methods ·are fai !safe because they are both subject to
the same human error: the ·patient
who may haphazardly ol deliberate,
ly provide an incomplete brown-bag
selection or list.
But they 're a start to slowing
down the growing prescription drug
abuse problem.
.
Jack Anderson and Jan Mollem
are writers for United Featu~
. Syndicate, Inc.
.

identto be sorely lacking'in characler.
'
indeed, Clinton has set a new standard for pursuing and holding the
highest office in tbe land. Our expectations of political figures has sunk so '
low that a man can engage in numerous. sexual .dalliances outside of his ·
marriage, can boast a business partnership with convicted felons, can
knowingly hire serious drug offend.
ers to work for him, can accept hundreds of thousands of dollars in payola from access-seeking foreign
nationals, and he still would not disqualify himself from being president
of the United States.
Well, maybe it's old-fashioned,
but there are a lot of Americans -including yours truly -- who long for
the days when presidents were men
of character. They may have been in
a different party, they may have
· advanced policies with which you
disagreed, but 'you never questioned
their integrity, their trustwonhiness,
'That's how many · Republicans
felt about the last Democrat to occupy the White House, Jimmy Carter.
They found Carter's foreign, domestic and economic policies too liberal
for their tastes; but they liked him as
a person. He was a man of hoqor,
worthy of the respect of Americans of
all political stripes.
Alas, the same cannot be said of
. Bill Clinton. Even those who grudg-

Beat of the Bend ...

Mary L. Phillips, 79, Gallipolis, died Thesday. Nov. 5, 1996 in Holzer
Medical Center.
Born Oct. 22, 1917 in Red House, W.Va., daughter of the late Joe and
Etta Hurley Luikart, she was a bookkeeper for McKnight-Davis Hardware
for many years.
A 1934 graduate of Rio Grande High School, she retired in 1986 from
the Gallipolis Developmental Center as supervisor, following 27 years of
service'. She was an active member of the First Baptist Church, Gallipolis,
the Betty Starn Sunday School Class and the Ladies Missionary Fe11owship.
Surviving are a son, Jeff (Bridget) Phillips of Bidwell; two daughters, .
Deanna (Dr. Thomas) Morgan of Naples, l'la., aod Donna (Dr. Charles)
Dowler of Versai11es, Ky.; four granddaughters and four step-grandchildren;
three sisters, Irene (Charles) Weaver of New Haven, W.Va., and Margaret J.
SuUivan and Barbara (William) Smeltzer, both of Gallipolis; and six nieces
and nephews.
'
She was also preceded in death by two sisters, Marie Glassburn and Elenor
Thomas.
'
Services will be I p.m. Friday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wether·
holt Chapel, 420 Firs: Ave., Gallipolis, with the Rev. Alvis Pollard officiating. Burial will be in the Vinton Memorial Park. Friends may crul at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Thursday.

Clinton supporters hold th~ir noses . . :
It is. unsurprising to anyone
acquainted with the editqrial pages of
the New York Times, the Washington
Post and the Boston Globe that these
.journalistic pillars of the Eastern liberal establishment endorsed Bill Clinton for a second tenn of office .
But what was remarkable about
, their endorsements is just how underwhelming they were. It's as if the editors of those influential newspapers
were telling their readers to hold their
noses and vote for the Democratic
incumbent.
·
Indeed, the New York Times
almost apologized for its ' endorse·
ment, saying "Readers of this page
will know that we share many of the
public's concerns about Mr. Clipton's
resoluteness and sensitivity to ethical
standards in government."
·
The Times acknowledges that
"Many Americans do not trust him or
believe him to be a person of character," adding that " Afraction of the
electorate, of course, will never forgive his reputation for philandering."
The Washington Post ·was even
less charitable. "The choice for pres.
ldent this year is pretty bleak," it
lamented. "Mr. · Clinton ~s shortcomings are more evident and
inescapable t~an they were four years
ago."
The Post further savaged .the president, declaring that "On too many
fundamental issues -- above all, by

rorecut for daytime condition&amp; and

· Mary L. Phillips

sure is the drug utilization review.

'•

The (Toledo) Blade, Nov. 1

Death Noti

Thunday, Nov. 7
Aec:uW~

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

November 6,1996

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(

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Sports

VWedneeday,Nov.mnber6,1896

The Daily Sentin,s\

·aulls outlast Grizzlies; Cavs lose:·
Spurs just keep beating the Cleveland
DENVER • Terry De here hit three
Cavaliers.
free throws in the final IS seconds
With !he All-Star center among . and ~ Los Angeles Clippers overthe injured, San Antonio overcame a came poor shooting to defeat the
17-point deficit in the second half to Denver Nuggets 82-78 Tuesday
beat the Cavaliers 74-68 ;I'uesday night.
Slanley Robens led the Clippers
night.
The victory, San Antonio's first in with 21 points, including a free
three games this season, was the sev- '. throw !hat tied the game at 78 with
enth straight for the Spurs against 1: iS remaining. Dehet;e's trio offoul
Cleveland, dating to 1993.
shots ~rovided the winning margin.
The Cavs, with the second-loweSJ
The Clippers, who have won four
point total in team history, lost for the of their past five meetings with the
fii'St time this season after winning NuggetS, shot only 37 pewent for !he
two sttaight on the road..
game and trailed 66-60 going into !he
With Robinson, Chuck Person final period.
and Will Perdue all sidelined with
Dale Ellis scored 25 points and
injuries, the Spurs needed a contin· Mark Jackson handed oot 16 assists
gency plan. They got it from for the Nuggets, .who are winless in
Dominique .Wilkins and Vernon two home games. Bryant Stith added
Maxwell. ·
17 points for Denver, which turned
Wilkins and Maxwell each scored the baU over 22 times,
eight points in the second half, hitting
Loy Vaught pulled down 13
key baskets during the Spurs' crucial ·. rebounds and Rodney Rogers had 15
30-13 run over 13 minutes.
points for the Clippers, who held
CllppenlU, Nugels 78
Denver wilhout a field goal for the

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)"The crowd was fantastic, but he
Even thou&amp;h he is from Stockholm. overpowe!ed me," Edberg said of
Nicklas Ku!ti miaht be remembered Kulti. "He· had nolhing to Jose. I
as the most unpopular winner of a don't think I played too badly to be
honest, but I played against a guy
match in Stockholm Open history.
· Playing against Stefan Edberg for who was very hot,
"Nicklas sU!prised me the way he
the flfSt time in big-time tennis, Kulplayed.
i didn't have many chances.
ti won Tuesday's first·round match 76 (7-5), 6-,3, ending Edberg's dazzling I felt a little bit slower !han normal
14-year Grand Prix and ATP Tour and !here was a little bit of tension ·
when I walked on the coun.''
Career:
Not only was this is last tourna· The pro- Edberg crowd in !he soldment,
the Stockholm Open has
out Royal Tennis Hall - the only
always
been
very special for Edberg,
lompty seats in the building were in
lhe Royal Box - clapped and who has played the tournament for 15
i:hee!ed for one of the spun's great· straight years since losing in the fmt
est gentlemen between vinually round at age 16 to fellow Swede
Thomas Hogstedt in 1982.
every point.
"I often took the subway across
i But it w.s all in wain . .

fust four minutes of the founh quar~
tel. Los Angeles outsco!ed Denver
45-31 in the second half.
Timber)ll'olvea 98, Swu 95
;
PHOENIX -James Robinson's 3,
pointer with I: 19left put Minnesota ·
ahead and the Timberwolves went on
to beat the Phoenix Suns 98-9~Tiles:
day night.
·
Robinson's big shot, which made
it 94-93, was the fiflh and last field
goal of the fourth quarter for the'
Wolves, who went into the final 12
minutes with a 79-67 lead.
Tom Gugliotta added two field
goals wilh 47 seconds left after fouling out Danny Manning of the Suns,
and l!.obinson and Doug West tnacje
one foul shot apiece in !he final 16
seconds.
Gugliotta scored 19 points, West ·
and Sam Mitchell had 16 each, and
Kevin Garnett had 14 points, nine
rebounds and four blocks.
·
Manning scored 24 points, and
Sam Cassell had 23 and 12 assists for
!he Suns.

JORDAN DRIVES- The Chicago Bulla' Michael Jordan drlvaa
peat Vancouver's Blue Edwards, left, dur.lng second half action
l'uadaY night In Chicago. Jordan scored 22 polnta •• tha Bulle
beat .tha Grizzlies, 96-73. (AP)
.

Scholastic sidelights
•

Coaches postpone
retirement parties

where the people cheer for someone ering pass rush led by defensive end
that still stands.
·
else,"
Cohen .said. "This will be for James Russell, .who is just four sacks
Glenville State coach Rich
the
conference
championship. Win or away from selling a Southern ConRodriguez, whose team lost 49-17
Sept 14 at ETSU before a crowd of lose, both of us will go to t])e play- ference career record. ·
"This will be a ·tough test," said
6,087, said the Memorial Center is offs. But this is for the ring."
Cohen, with tonsillitis, is one of Marshall tackle Mike Webb, who
raucous.
.
"We didn't think wilhjuSJ (6,000) several Herd players who are injured muSJ block Russell. "He has long
arms, and as far as speed goes, he's
peo~le in !here it'd be !hat bad," or ill this week.
Marshall's offense has been potent one of !he fastest I've seen."
Rodriguez said. "But there's no way
The winner takes a big step toward
for the noise to escape. ... With a behind Florida transfer Eric Kresser
packed house, you won't be able to at quanerback and Aorida State home-field advantage through the
hear anything. You'll have a hard transfer Randy Moss at receive.r. But playoffs and earns at least a share of
time talking to the guy standing next East Tennessee counters with a with- !he league ·title.
to you."
·
Marshall defensive lineman B.J.
Advest, Inc. &amp; University of Rio Grande Invite You
Cohen isn't. worried.
.
and a guest to a Trusts &amp; Estate Planning Forum.
"I like to play in an atmosphere

.Cooper discusses
·gambling, title game,
injuries at Ohio State

'

Preserve Your Wealth With

• Living Trusts .
• Charitable Trusts
• Inheritance Trusts

icst" he said.

Cooper spent 14 years as an assis. taot coach at five different schools
: befonc becoming a head coach in
· 1977 ai Tulsa. He's never forgotten
what it's like to be an assistant, and
still feels compassion for those left
wilhout a job when the .higher-paid
head coach gets fired or resigns.
"The saddest thing you do in my
profession is to go to the national
coaches convention and see assistant
. coaches out of work," he said. "It's
· sad to see a 55.-year-old guy out of a
job. It's a young man's game::
He said he was also concerned
· about several areas of his own team.
- On au ankle injury to stani 0 g
quanerback Stanley Jackson: '·'If
he's healthy and can practice, he'll
stan. But it all depends on· how
healthy he is at game time.''
Jackson is wearing a special suppan boono restrict movement to his
sprained ankle. If he is not ready to
go, Joe Gehnaine will get the call
with Tom Hoying backing him up.
. -On the loss of backup tailback
Joe Montgomery to a season-ending
knee injury: "We're concerned about ·
deplh at that position.'' .
He said Jermon Jackson would .
move in as Pepe Pearson's under- .
study. If a third-team tailback were
needed, fullback Man Keller would
most likely be moved

Do these.investment strategies fit into ;)!QY[ estate
plans? Ad vest, Inc. &amp; Uni:versity"of Rio Grande invite
you to learn more.
·

Tuesday, November 12, 1996 7:00p.m.
. University of Rio Grande
Conference Room C of the Student Center Annex
Featured Speakers:

Bryce Smith
Vice President - Investments, Ad vest, Inc.
Ron Toler
Trust &amp; Estate Planning Specialist
Toler &amp; Toler Insurance
R. S·. V. P. Pam at 614-446-8899 or 800-446-0226

~~·"":::,
!

'

I'll•

\

:sf~ .. ~

_§
~

-

.
'
University of Rio Grande
218 North College Avenue
Rio Grande, OH 45674

I

1'ffiWTON, Mass. (AP)- While plete team at another closed ]iractice.
concerns over point-shaving seem to , Henning acknowledged for the
be passing, several Boston College fii'St time Jttat the growing scandal led
football players have admitted to him to believe that, "We have some
investigators that they violated son of a problem."
Rumors .ofpoint-shaving or gameNCAA rules by gambling on games.
, Those players - as maJ)y as a fixing by BC players surfaced jn
dozen, according to published reports . recent weeks and inteRsified after
- could be suspended as early as Thu'rsday's 20-13loss to Pittsburgh,
today, Coach Dan Henning said Tiles- a game in which the Eagles were
,day he expected an announcement . favored by 11 112 pOints.
~within the next 24 hours.
· , Four.Eagles sopho111ores- Kiernan Speight, Jermaine Monk, Jamal]
~
uLet's not bepaive, gentleman,"
; Henning told another large media Anderson and Brandon King, who
Jcontingent before joining an incom- has not played !his season because of

:winston Cup slate
.~ and
standings posted
.

Advest, lhc.
416 Second Avenue'
Gallipolis, OH 45631.

Advest; Inc. is a.wholly &lt;YWned subsidiary of The Advest Group, Inc.,
Hartford, CT and is independent of University of Rio Grande. ·
. ,- .

Kulti, ranked 71st in the world
goina into the tournament, pined the
only service break of the match in the
fourth game of the second set, passing Edberg at the net to lead 3·1.
Edberg, 30, netted a backhand perhaps his ttademark shot- to give
Kulti a match point at 40-15 and 53. Edberg returned Kulti's next serve,
but Kulti ended !he mall:b wilh a
booming smash out of Edberg's
reach.
After the match, some 30 girls
paraded into the arena in darkness,
each giving Edberg a red rose.
"It was fantastic,but it was also
heartbreaking because there is so
much -emotion involved standing
there with the spOtlight on you~elf,"

a broken foot- were confronted by . attorney's office. The Boston Globe,
Henning and the team's student cap- citing sources it did not identify, said
the DA was interested in one player
tains on Saturday.
Later that day, athletic director i[Dplicated by his teammates for posChet Gladchuk announced that the sible involvement in taking bets.
Several newspapers, citing
school would investigate the rumors
wilh the goal of clearing the pro- sources !hey did not identify, said !hat
gram's name. On Tuesday, even as. between six and 12 players have
Henning acknowledged the problem, admitted placing bets. John McBride,
he held out hope that the fallout an attorney for the four BC sophomores at !he center of the controverwould be limited.
"We're dealing with a situation sy, said qnly two of his clients admit•
here where the NCAA has a rule, 'and ted that they have gambJea.
"They told the authorities at
there are going to be some individuBoston
College lhallhey never bet on
als here that are going to live with
BC
games,"
McBride said in a teleSO"f kind of problem if they have bet
phone
interview.
"But \hey also told
on a game," the embattled coach said.
the authorities that they did bet on
"That's not my major concern .
other
games."
"My major concern is if anybody
McBride
said he expects two of
on our football team has bet on our
his
clients
to
be completely exoner·
game and against us. That's an indeated,
naming
Speight (pronounced
fensible position.''
spayt)
as
one.
The
attorney said his
The school also referred the matter to the Middlesex County district olher two clients were involved only

Oct. 27 -'- Dura Lube 500,
. NEW YORK (AP) -'The 1996
; NASCAR Winston Cup stock car Phoenix. (Bobby Hamilton).
Nov. 10- NAPA 500, Hampton,
• racing schedule, ·wilh winners in
I; parentheses and driver point stan!!- Ga.
.! ings: .
Driver standings
'· Feb. 18 - baytona 500, Day- ,
I.
Terry
Labonte, 4,497.
" tona, Fla., (Dale Jarret!).
2.
Jeff
Gordon,
4,450.
Feb. 25 - Goodwrench 400,
3.
Dale
Jarrett,
4,398.
&gt;, RockinghiJIIl, N.C. (Dale Earnhardt).
4. Dale Earnhardt, 4, 162.
:• Mar. 3 - Pontiac Excitement
late father, Jose, and his high school
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) 5. MS(k Martin, 4,127.
~ 400, Richmond, Va. (Jeff Gordon).
coach;
Joseph Preletz.
Some of this year's Basketball Hall
6. Ricky Rudd, 3,703.
:: March I 0 - Purolator 500.
"It's just too.bad that my dad, who
of Fame nominees did mOre than
. 7. Rusty Wall&amp;l:e, 3,583.
• Hampton~ Ga. (Dale Barnhardt). ·
meant
everything to me, is not alive
their
share
to
put
the
madness
in
•'
8. Ernie ltvan, 3,572.
:: · March 24- TranSeuth Financial
March.
to see it My high school coach, who
9. Sterling Marlin, 3,564.
:· 400, Darlington, S.C. (Jeff Gordon).
They include ·Pete. Carril, John . meant everything to me, is not alive
10. Bobbv Hamilton. 3.4R4
: March 31 -Food City 500, BrisThompson and Jerry Tarkanian.
to sec it. It's jusl·too bad," he said.
~ to], Tenn. (Jeff Gordon). ·
II. Ken Schrader, 3,467.
They are among the largest group
However, he voiced some disi .i\Pril 14 - First Ul)ion _400, ., 12. Bobby Labonte, 3,405.
.of nominees - seven coaches, sev· comfort with all lhe attention,
: N'ortb Wilkesboro, N,C. (Terry
(tie) Michael Waltrip, 3,405.
en players and one contributor answering ~ telephone at !he Kings'
14. Ted Musgrave, 3,396.
: Labonte).
.
ever to go to the Honors Committee arena: "Joe's garage.... We mow
April 21 - Goody's Headache
15. Jeff Bunon, 3,395.
for a vote. The nominees were lawns."
: Powders 500, Martinsville, Va.
16. Jimmy Spencer, 3,355.
announced Tuesday.
"1 never thought it would happen,
17. Geoff Bodine, 3, 133.
: (R~sty Wallace). .
They include:
perind. If I don't make it, it doesn't
..
April 28 - Winston Select 500,
18: Rick Mast. 3,066.
-Former Denver Nuggets star take away from my work. It would. Talladega, Ala. (Sterling Marlin).
19. Morgan Shepherd. 3,054.
Alex English, the NBA's most pro- n't be devastating to me. But if I
: , May 5 - Save Mart Supermar20. Ricky Craven, 3,015.
lific scorer during the 1980s with make, it would he nice. It's an honor
:. kets 300, Sonoma, Calif (Rusty Wal21. Johnny Benson, 2,922 .
19,682 points;
to. be considered with all the great
,: lace).
·
22. Wally Dallenbach Jr., 2,743.
:....sidney Moncrief, a defensive coaches," he said.
·
:· May 26- Coca-Cola 600, Con23. Hut Stricklin, 2,742.
ace for Arkansas and !hen the Mil-.
·24. Lake Speed, 2,723.
: cord, N.C. (Dale Jarrett).
. waukee Bucks;
25. Jeremy Mayfield, 2,721.
:· June 2 - Miller 500, Dover, Del.
-Forward Bobby Jones. who
26. Brett Bodine, 2,709.
1 (Jeff Gordon).
played for Nonh Carolina and then
) June 16-UAW-GMTeamwork
27. Kyle Petty, 2,696. .
professionally with the Nuggets and
j 500, Long Pond, Pa. (Jeff Gordon).
28. Kenny Wallace, 2,694.
Philadelphia;
29. Darrell Waltrip, 2,605.
· !. June23-Miller400, Brooklyn,
-The late Gus Johnson. who
30. John Andretti, 2,530.
" Mich. (Rusty Wallace).
soared and smashed backboards for
1· July 6 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
31. Bill Elliott, '2,524.
the Bullets in the 1960s;
:: Beach, Fla. (Sterling Marlin).
32. Robert Pressley, 2.421.
-Defensive star Dennis Johnson,
: · July 14- Slick SO 300, Loudon,
33. Derrike Cope, 2,374.
who won two NBA titles wilh the
34. Joe Nemechek, 2,330.
. N.H. (Ernie lrvan).
Boston Celtics and one with Seattle;
35. Ward Bunon, 2,279.
:·. July 21 - Miller 500, Long
-UCLA and ' Lakers star Jamaal
36. Dick Trickle, 2,131.
:. Pond, Pa. (Rusty Wallace). .
·
Wjlkes; and
37. Bobby Hillin Jr.. 2,013.
•· July 28 - DieHard 500, TaJ.
-Sharp-shooting guard .lo Jo
~: ·Iadega, Ala. (Jeff Gordon).
38. Dave Marcis, 1,959.
White, who helped boost the Celtics ·
39. Steve Grissom, 1,188.
Aug. 3 - Brickyard 400, lndito two titles after starring at Kansas.
40. Todd Bodine, 924.
1anapolis. (Dale Jarrell).
At the Sacramento Kings' ari:na,
, Aug. II - Bud at the Glen,
41. Mike Wallace, 799.
where Carril is now an NBAassistant
42. Elton Sawyer; 611.
:. "watkins Glen, N.Y. (Geoff Bodine).
coach, hci said he was surprised by his
• Aug. 18 - GM Goodwrench
43. Greg Sacks, 601.
nomination. He thought about the
44. Loy Allen, 551. '
"'Dealers 400, Brooklyn, Mich. (Dale
pleasure it would have brought his
45. Gary Bradberry, 542 .
' 1arrett).
.
. · Aug. 24 - .Goody's Headache
46. Chad !-ittle, 530. .
47. Mike Skinner, 529. ·
Powders 500, Bristol, Tenn. (RuSiy
48. Jeff Purvis, 328.
Wallace).
• : Sept. I - Mountain Dew South·
49. Jeff Green, 247.
·em 500, Darlington, S.C, (Jeff GorSO. Randy MacDonald, 228.
5 I. Jim Sauter, 170. .
don).
Sept. 7 - Millet 400, Rich52. Chuck Down, 168.
mond, Va. (Ernie Irvan). :
53. Dorsey Schroeder, 129.
(SPECIA") -- A drug that is excit. Sept. I 5 - MBNA 500, Dover,.
54. Stacy Compton, 128.
ing researchers in the treatment of
55. Robby Gordon, 123.
Del, (Jeff Gordon).
.
pain
has been formulated into a
' Sept. 22 - Hanes 500, Mar:!J7. Butch Leitzinger, 103.
new product know~ as "Arthur
58. Jack Sprague, 99.
tinsville, Va. (Jeff Gordon).
. Sept. 29 -l)oson Holly Farms
59. Jeffrey Krogh, 98.
ltis," and is being called a "Medi400, Norlh Wilkesboro, N.C. (Jeff
60. Tom Kendall, 84.
cal Miracl,e" by some, in the treat61. Lance Hooper, 64.
Gordon).
mentofdebilitatingconditionssuch
Oct. 6-UAW-GM Quality 500,
62. L8f1Y Gunselman, 55,
as arthritis, bursitis, rheumatism.
Concord, N.C. (Terry Labonte) ·
63. Richard Woodland Jr., 52 .
painful muscle aches., Joint aches.
Oct. 20- AC-Delco 400, Rock(tie) Hermie Sadler, 52.
'
65. Scott Gaylord, 49.
ingham, N.C. (Ricky Rudd).
!iimp lc b~ckac~c,bmiaes.
ti:id mor..::.
66. Ed Berrier, 46.
Although the mechanism of action
isunclear.exjlerimentsindicatethat
Arthur ltis, relieves pain by firy;t
selectively attr&amp;l:ting. and then destroying the messenger chemical
which carries pain sensations lathe
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.,

Edberg said. "So tnany thinas rushed
through my head in a short period of
time. I really felt it tonight.''
Kulti won the first set in a
tiebreaker with a backhand passing
shot. Earlier, Kulti saved a set point
when trailing 5-6 and 30-40 with an
ace, and finally held serve to force the
tiebreaker.
·
· Neither player was broken in the
first set, but Edberg came close in the
second game, when Kulti fell behind
15-40, and in the lOth game, when
Kulti trailed 0-30. His big serve
helped him out of trouble each time.
Seeded sixth in his final tournament, Edberg won the Stockholm
Open in 1986 and 1987 and also
reached !he ) 991 and '92 final, but
lost both to Boris Becker.

Edberg. wbo won a total of 411ingles titles on the Orand Prix andATP
Tours, retires from the game. with
$20.6 million in prize money.
He io expected to play hia final
competitive mlllehes later this month
when Sweden faces France in the
Davis Cup final in Malmo, Sweden.
Edberg was a member of Sweden's
champion teams in 1984, 1985, 1987
and 1994.
"The Davis Cup is still in the back ·
of my mind, so it's not reilly the end
of it," Edberg said. .
' Kulti will play fellow · Swede
Patrik Fredriksson in the second
round. Fredriksson, one of lhree successful Swedish wild-card entries,
beat Guillaume Raou&lt; of France .64,6-4.

.could practice football as long as his
iii office pool-type wagering.
"We're not talking about going to name has been put up like !hat," Hena bookie. We're not talking about ning said. ,','That's unfonunate. But I
point-shaving, we're ·not !alking certainly understand his feelings.
"If they're not named or if they're
about anything that has to do with BC
innocent,
they'll play" Saturday
football games.
"Big deal," he said, "except that against No. 17 Notre Dame, Henning
it's an NCAA.violation."
1 said, noting that he usually does not
NCAA rules forbid athletes from let players participate in gamesjf they
belling on any intercollegiate or pro- don't practice.
The 8,800-student school was at
fessional sporting events. Mc!lride
!he
center of a point-shaving scan~,,.,
also said Thesday he was iold the
matter would he resolved by Wednes-· in 1982 when Rick Kuhn was sed· •!"'
tenced to I0 years in federal prison
day.
"We'll deal wi'lh that when the for his role in fixing six basketball
time comes," he said. "But riitht now, games during tbe 1978-79 season.
it is not somelhing that it was origi· ·
nally thought."
Henning said Speight and another player whom he did not identify
had asked out of practice Monday
and would sit out again on Tuesday.
Speight has denied any gambling.
"He (Speight) doesn't feel like he

Hunters' Choice
Scents for the
Serious Hunter

Carril, Thompson, Tarkanian
nominated to basketball shrine

l

TRUSTS

town to watch the matches in the
Royll Tennis Hall when I started
training with Percy RosberJ in Stockholm," said Edberg, who arew up in
the small ·town of Vutervik, ·about
four hours drive south of the Swedish
capital.
"I have so many nice memories of
the tournament. It was always so fun
and special to play in Stockholm. ·
And 1 played one of my best matches ever here in the 1986 final when I
beat Mats Wilander (6-2, 6-1, 6-1).''
For Kulti, it was his second upset
in his hometown tournament.
Si&lt; yeari ago, when the tournament was played across town in !he
Globe Arena. Kulti upset Andre
Agassi in their opening matc;h.

Suspensions ·maY be coming a't Bos(on _College·

Herd faces toughest test at ETSU
llUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Marshall's 'top-ranked football team
won't have to go on the road in the
Division 1-AA playoffs if it keeps
winning. But to finish the season
unbeaten, the Herd has to get past a
killer road trip this weekend.
A record, sellout crowd of 12,500
is expected at East Tennessee State's
Memorial Center on Saturday as the
auccaneers (8-1, 6-0 Southern) host
!he Herd (9-0, 6-1) in a key league
matchup.
East Tennessee State's last sellout
was for a 1979 conte~t against
. Appalachian State. The 12,479 fans
who attended that game set a mark

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Edberg loses early In final tournament .

Wednesday, November 6, 19M

Bulll96, Grlzdlel 73
CfUCAGO (AP)- Michael Jordan scored 22 points and got plenty
of support from Scottie Pippen and
Dennis Rodman as the Chicago Bulls
defeated the Vancouver Grizzlies 9673 Tuesday night.
Pippen scored I0 of his 14 points
in the second quarter, when the Bulls
broke open the Jilme by outscorin~
Vancouver 32-16. Pippen also had
eight assists and seven rebounds.
Rodman added 19 rebounds• and
13 points for the defending NBA
champions, who are off to a 3-0 stan
for only the sixth time in team history.
.
Greg Anthony scored 13 points for
the winless Grizzlies, wh.o shot 36
percent, commined 20 turnovers and
looked every bit as hapless as they
did dw:ing their league-worst ~67
expanston season.
.Spun 74, Cavallen 68
CLEVELAND - Wilh or wilhoilt
David Robinson, the San Antonio

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

••

•

- '.

eCoon
•Red Fox
•Earth

Carrll, 66, retired from Princeton
in March after his team was elimi·
nated from the NCAA tournament by
Mississippi State. The Tigers upset
defending national champion UCLA
in !he opening round .

•Buck Urine ~

•Doe Estrun

•Doe In Heat

.

Thompson, a fixture, at NCAA
tournaments, led Georgetown to a
· national championship in 1984. Over
the past 24 years, his teams have
appeared in lhree NCAA Final Fours,
14 straight NCAA tournaments, a~d
compileda 553-208 record.
Coach Tarkanian, now of Fresno
State, led UNLV to the 1990 NCAA
championship.

PICKENS
HARDWARE
. MASON, W. VA.

- 773·5583
L

�'

•

6 • The Dally Sentinel

_Clemens, Wetteland
file ·for free agency
NEW YORK (AP) - Roger
Clemens, who might have have
pitched his last game for Boston, is
among baseball's newest free agents.
And so is World Series MVP John
Wetteland.
Clemens, who has spent his entire
career with the Red Sox, filed Tuesday, along with Wetteland and seven
others. During the last month of the
season, he alluded several times to
the possibility to leaving Boston.
"I don't know what tbe furore
holds," he said after his final stan.
"AIJ•s it is is a guessing gaine now."
1 Randy Hendricks, who with his
brother. Alan, represents the threetime Cy Young AwJII'd winner, said
, Tuesday it's still too early to predict
where Clemens will wind up. ·
"We intend to consider all of
Roger's options, including Boston,"

Randy Hendricks said. "We don't
plan to do anything substantive until
later this month."
Wetteland, who became the first
pitcher to get four saves in a single
World Series, has until Nov, 19 to
decide whether to exercise a $4.6 million player option for 1997. But be
probably will turn it down and seek
a multiyear contract.
.
"John's filing simply is an expression of protecting his rights," said the
reliever's agent, Tom Reich.
Two other players filed from the
ROGER CLEMENS
World Series champion Yankees:
catcher Joe Girardi and infielder Francisco second baseman Robby
Tony Fernandez.
Thompson.
.
Also filing were Chicago Cubs
A total of 101 players have filed
second baseman Ryne Sandberg, San thus far, and the filing period runs
Diego pitcher Fernando Valenzuela, through Nov.14. Free agents can start
Houston potcher Doug Drabek, Mon- · talking money with new teams on
treal pitcher Mark Leiter and San :Nov. IS.
·

·Baseball labor ·deal
headed for defeat
ROSEMONT, Dl. (AP) - With
baseball's labor deal facing near-certain rejection, management and union
officials are wondering whether lll;t·
ing commissioner Bud Selig will
attempt to resurrect it with additional negotiations.
At least eight teams were thought
to be against the deal completed Ocl.
24 by management negotiator Randy
Levine and union head Donald Fehr.
.With a three-&lt;juarters majority
needed to ratify the agreement, eight
teams could block a deal, and some
lawyers said as many as 12 might
vote against the proposed five-year
contract.
"The people who count heads tell
me the deal will almost certainly be
rejected; and by a significant num-

HaffiCk apparently out ' as UCLA coach
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jim recruit Baron Davis.
Harrick's son, Glenn, had use of
'Harrick apparently is out as UCLA's
basketball coach - 19 months after the vehicle after its purchase in 1990.
guiding the Bruins to their first Glenn Harrick works for Fox Sports
NCAA championship in 20 years and News.
ESPN said it had confirmed the
two weeks before the stan of the
resignation of Harrick. saying the rea1996-97 season.
Several news outlets said late son was because of "recruiting irreg·
Tuesday a news conference would be ularities."
The
T'IIRe~
~eported
the reason
held-on campus today to announce a
was
expense
report
violations
and not
coaching change.
related
to
the
sale
of.
the
car.
The Los Angeles Times repOrted
When reached at his home TuesHarrick was given the option of
resigning or being fired after practice day night, UCLA sports information
director Marc Dellins said he could
Tuesday, and chose to resign.
The Long Beach·Ptess-Telegram neither confirm nor deny the report.
Harrick's wife, Sally. was tearful
and Fox Spans News said essentialwhile
answering a phone call from
ly the same thing.
Harrick, 58, signed a five-year the Press-Telegram at the couple's
contrac~ rePortedly for an annual Westwood home Tuesday night.
She sald her husband wasn't at
salary of $400,000, in the summer of
home.
When asked if he was stepping
1995. He was cleared two weeks ago
by tbe school and Pacific-IOConfer- down as UCLA's coach she sobbed
ence of violations in the sale of a car and said, "You'll have to ask Jjm."
he owned to the older sister of prized

I

AP Sports Writer
Jack Kemp won two AFL championships, and Richard Petty won
200 major stock car races. They were
losers, though, oit -Election Day.
Kemp and Republican running
mate Bob Dole took a Super Bowlsized ·beating in the presidential race,
but Kemp said he had no regrets after
President Clinton was re-elected in a
landslide.
Other than his marriage and (amily, Kemp said running for vice president iilith Dole was "the greatest
t!!tperience of my life."
_

Petty, the biggest winner in stock l10ma. ·
.
car racing history. lost his bid to
Largent, a Hall of F8J!le receiver
become North Carolina's secretary of. with the Seattle Seabawks, defeated
state. The "King" of NASCAR rae- Tulsa writer Randolph Amen.
ing was soundly beaten by Democrat
"I am excited, I'm huinbled and
Elaine Marshall. .
I'm honored by the results," Largent
"lfl had known I wasn't going to said.
wit\,'! Petty $aid, ··r wouldn't have
Watts, who led Oklahoma to two
ruit."
straight Orange Bowl
in the
Former Kansas.City Chiefs quar- late 1970s, beat state representative
terback Bill Kenney lost the Missouri Ed Crocker.
lieutenant governor's race to incum·
"It's time to takeoff the campaign•
bent Roger Wilson, but several other suits and put back on the congres· and get back to work,''
ex-athletes were successful at the sionaI sutts
polls.
· Watts said.
.
Hall of Fame pitcher Jim Bunning,
· Ryun, the former world recordfanner football stars Steve Largent .. holder in the mile, defeated attorney

victorj~s

g -. .

.

I

St. Louis coach Mike Keenan, :
whole ~am outsbot Toronto 32-26, '
didn 'I Jbink his ~am played that badly.
"We outlbot them, and probably
Olllplayed them. We just didn't win."
. 1-...~eague marked by parity so f~

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94

2

DR.OOTT

X-rays, ultrasound and other specw
euminllions. Slqery may be necessary to remove such tumon.
Furtltermore, other &amp;l•ndulw disorders -· notably Addison'• dileaM
(underactive adrenal 11ands) - cu
reduce insulin requirements. These
afflictions are diagnosed by blood
tests.
In addition, kidney failure - a
common complication of diabetes -can decrease insulin requirements.
This is diagnosed by a blood test and
special X-rays.
Therefore, you and your doctor
may have further work to do, in an
attempt to discover why, after 46
years, you no longer need insulin.
You may need to see an endocrinologist.
It may he premature to offer you
congratulations on your seemingly
good fortune, without first making

ceruin that you haven't developed
another disease that requires treatment.
To aive you more information, I
1111 sending you copies of my Health
Reporu "Hypoglycemia" and ··o;a.
beles Mellitus." Other readers who
would like copies should send $2 for
each repon plus a long, selfaddressed, stamped envelope to P.O.
Box 2017, Murray Hill Station, New
Yorlc, NY 10156. Be sure to mention
the title(s). ·
· DEAR DR. GOTT: Our. local
newspaper recently reported that the
American Medical Association published a finding that vitamin C injections reduce arterial · blockage
caused by smoking. It was also stated that the vitamin in pill form had
not been fully tested for this purpose. Our local hospital library hilS
no information, there's nothing on

PETE~

GOTT, M.D.

~=~'t

the Internet, the radio
. help and my doctor is too busy. You
are my last resort to investigate this.
DEAR READER: This is new to
me. I'm as much in the dark as your
other resources. I am not aware that
vitamin C injections have any
proven effect on arteriosc]erotic
plaque that results from smoking. I
might add that no reputable studies
have shown any similar effeci from
oral vitamin C, even in mega~doses .
Copyright 1996 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

97

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tion about bone density can be of

vt's'10n,
· coord'tnau·on, baIanee •
, A_ workshop ."communicating
muscle strength and bOdy build -- Effecbvely: Confltcl Management"
also need to be looked at. From your will be held !fa~ 9 a.m. t? 4 p.m. at
letter, the only one of these risk fac- the South Distnct Extenston Center
tors that I know about is your family in Jacks~n o~ Th_ursday. Nov..21 .
=z~~:.rea~u':"~~~; ~r ':; ·· RegtstraU.on ts at 8:30 a.m. This
workshop wtll help nurses, soctal
· In osteoporosis, bone lo~ is esa-ogen or other preventive therapy workers and other health care pro:."::.r ~ere.~ore"", Prodseunuctinoernaanl dcotben- is warranted, I would need 10 know fessionals discover their conflict
10
•·
••
if you have a frail or sturdy bodY approach· preference and he_lp pretent. niis makes ·them weaker and build • if You can matn
· lain your bal .. pare therm to n:solve team conflict.
'increases tbe risk of a broken hip. It , ~·when doi?,~ "heel-~toe" .walk- lsst~es tQ consider.when working in
also makes spinal and wrist fracture mg. and how . tn shape your mus- 'fJlCCific health care situations will
much more likely.
cles are. Your family physician1Ctlll• ,
·
·
Twenty-five million Americans examine you and take all these mat. suffer from osteoporosis and women · ters into oonsideration,
are afflicted w.ith it eight,times more
Regardless of how physically fit
often than men. The greatest risk for you are, 1 recommend you talk with
'osteoporosis comes from age alone. your doctor about the types of phys.Fi(ty percent of women 50 and older ical activity that would he best for
·have this condition.
you. If you are not in shape, you
There are several things that ·need to get in shape; and if you are
reduce one's risk of fractures frOm in shape, you need to stay in good
·osteoporosis. Consuming 1,000 to condition through sane and sensible
1,500 milligrams of calcium each exercise.
·
·.:day, .as you suggested, is an· imporTh~re arc also general saf~ty
tan! first step .. An eight ounce glass issues such ·as use of throw-rugs,
of skim milk or calcium-fortified lighting, extension cord use, and
orange juice · provides 300 mil- placement of grab rails in the bathligrams, as does eating I 112 cups of room that your doctor will probably
brocooli. Most people, however, ·want to talk to you abou~ 100. Each
prefer taking a calcium supplement of these items also relates directly to •
instead of consuming sufficient your risk of hip fracture. In this case ·
quantities of the!je calcium-rich it's not by strengthening bones but
foods. In addition to ·the calcium, it by significantly reducing your risk
is also important to_take 400 IU of of falling.
vitamin D every day for those of us
·"Family Medicine" Is a weekly
who live where sunlight exposure in column. To submit questions,
very low in tbe winter months.
. write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Oblp
. Taking estrogen, whether by University Colle1e of Osteopathle
mouth or by skin patch, reduces the Medicine,
Gl'Oilvenor
Hall,
risk of osteoporosis related fractures Atbeu, Oblo 45701.
\
by 50 percent for post menopausal •

293 S. 2nd Middleport, Ohio

• ......

•
this season, being over .500 is impor- ~an't take any team in this league
tant, and the Leafs know how hard it lightly," said Craig, who added two
will .he to stay at that level.
. assists-to give him his llrsrthree-point
·
"We have to go out and put on the night for the Leafs.
Meanwhile, Murphy hopes his ·
overalls and work hard because we
message had finally gotten through.

Family
Medicine

..

Another former college basketball r;~~=::;;::::~-===-====::===::--::::==--=~-:--~--~
play~r. Steve Gill, lost to incumbent le7'h11 Gusrantlled Lown~ PriGetl
Bart Gordon in a Tennessee congreswe11 mauh any locallpo"'"'"'" price
eLiftnlmlf Wa..-.nfllftl
sional race. Gill, a Republican, was
on moot part•
a reserve for the .University of Ten- • Th,. Blftlf Name Brand•
• w.. Tum Drum•
nessee in the 1970s.
""the •••• prloeo
~--...1
andarea
~oro~
.
,.
check your
~torC"
v
for av.tll•tlllity
Justin Cross, an offensive lineman eP.s-,.· ~
"-~;..••
for.the Buffalo Bills in the 1980s, lost
he oon't .,.
his bi\1 for a seat in the New York
it, we'll
•.
· State Assembly.
fo• you 1•••
al&lt;e.natoco, control
Voters in Houston, Miami and
·
·
mooul••· oenoo.-.
· Detroit approved me;tSuies that clear
, &amp;ale r&gt;rloe nt,
1..9
.
1.09 &amp;ale •prlee ...t.
tbe way for new downtown sports
"'
\
25•
• • mfr&amp;re~te
facilities.
-60' mfr'e
1
Harris County voters narrowly
approved plans for a $265 million
baseball stadium in Houston. Astros
)'Glur c~t .after

Maple Leafs climb above·.500.mark with win
TORONTO (AP) -After startin~
the season with five losses in six
games, the Toronto Maple Leafs
have found their way back over the
.SOO'mark.
The Leafs (7-6) have won six of
their last seven games after defeating
the St. Louis Blues 6-3 in the NHL's
only game Tuesday night.
Toronto players are finally buying
into coach Mike Murphy's sysiem,
cine modeled after the team-oriented
·Florida Panthers, as six different
players .Cored in Toronto's second
consecutive six-goal outburst. I
·
"We' re starting to play like a
team," Murphy said. "We're starting
to actept reporisibllity for our play.
We weren't great, but we fought our
way through some tough times and
f011nd a way to win."
Toronto's checking line had its
bicpst offensive output of the sealOll, scoring three goals and accumullling seven points. Jamie Baker,
Todd Warriner and Mike Craig all
scoml once as the third line provid.ed some much-needed support to
Toronto's usual scorer$.
"We can't rely on Doug Gilmour
and Mats Sundin, to score all the
tii!IC," Baker said. "Hopefully, this
· ctlll take some pressure off them, and
it's definitely good for our line and
OW' &lt;:anfidence. ~·
Seqei Berezin, Wendel Clark and
Sundin also scored for Toronto, while
Ip Knvcbulc, stepbane Matteau I
ud Hlrry York responded for the I
Blues (6-9), losen of five of six ·

GLAMOUR PHOTOGRAPHY

a

The Deily Sentinel• Page ?

Play it safe with diabetic 'cure'

By ~R H. OOTT, II.D.
DEAR DR. OOTT: I wu a diabetic for 46 years, taking 40 units of
illsulin a day for many years. I gradually be1an cutting down and a few
montha ago my blood suaar began
dropping. My insulin has now been
John C. Wolf, D.O.
cut altogether. I eat anything! want,
Associate Professor
of family Medicine
and my blood ~ugar readinss are in
~~....J..--------- --...1.. the 40s and ;50s. Can a pancreas heal
~- Question: My st'ster has had a hip women. Replar visorous physical itself?
My doctor says be has never
heard f
l'k thi Sbo ld I
fracture. I know .L
•• taking calct'um
..
o
a •case
t ebloods.
u?
uua
acnvtty
and
laraer
body
size
are,
also
'der
·
•. is important in reducing my n'sk of be fi .
&lt;:anll nusmg my
sugar.
• hi fr
b
ne ctal. .
DEAR READER: Your apparent
ut
are
there
other
There are a few medicines that
-' lhings
P acture,
1 sbould do1
"cure" of diabetes is, indeed, a very
An
H' frac
help increase bone strength while unusual phenomenon. Rather than
tures, particu- there are many more that tend to · being a' case of the pancreas healing
. swer: tp
larly tn the elderly, are often associ· contribute to osteoporosis. Your
h "
. ..,.
dactor or pharmacist can talk with itself,
sue· a · cure"
actually
' ated with loss of bone •trength
•
1v
ha
1· umay
·
h
t understand why our bones become you abo ut the benefits and risks
ve onunous tmp tea ons, owev; more fragile as we age, it is neces- posed by any drugs you take.
er.
1
·
sary to understand a lt'ttle bt't about
Someumes
.
.
For
examp
e,
pancreatic
t\lffiors
specific preventtve
prod
d
· w·
how they normally function:
therapy should he started before you may
u~ an · secret~ tns tn.
Our bones - made up of IKith liv- have a fracture. Gathering informa- , This condition can be diagnosed by

. 'of flux. In adult life the amount of
new cells and minerals l)tat are
added each day are roughly equal to
that which is taken out. This process
~~~=~n.~ ~s:ti~:~ ~~;~;
that our bones appear unchangt' ng.

owner Drayton McLane Jr. said
new stadium was needed to keep the
team in the city.
Dade County voters approved a
plan for the Miami .Heat to build a
$165 million waterfront arena on
valuable public property after the
team agreed to pay all the construetion costs. Heat owner Micky Arison
threatened to sell or move his team if
the pf9posal was rejected.
· The drive to bqng the Detroit
Lions back to the city passed a major
hurdle when Wayne County residents
approved a tourist tax to help pay for
a new stadium.
.

1

Ohio University
·
College of Osleopethic Medicine

[ing cells and stored minerals (princi-

'

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

w
k h
ff d
·
'
ff
:r:!~~al:~~:::~:~t!j:~~ ~=r::~--~~~h~f::::.;~:t! or s op o ere on communicating e ect1vely

·

Reportedly, Steve Lavin, 3"2, the
Rejection in today's vote probably
chief recruiter on Barrick's staff, wi)l would wipe out interleague play next
be appointed interim head coach.
season and deny free agency for ·
Lavin became the No. ,1 assistant pitcher Alex Fernandez and outfield: er Moises Alou.
on ·Harrick's staff when Lorenzo
Romar left to become head coach at
Some management officials specPepperdine last spring.
ulated that with the proposal lacking
Lavin is about to start his sixth enoug_h votes, ~wners could postpone
season as a member of the UCLA a dectston whtle they ask Fehr for
coaching staff, but just his second as . fu~er concessiOns. . .
"
a full-time assistant. He was promot, I bebeve there ':"'II he a v~~e,
ed to a full-time spot in June 1995 Sebg satd from Mtlwau~~- We
. after spending four years as the shall see._what we shall see.
.
restricted earnings coach on Harrick 's .
Fehr, 10 London on bustness, Satd
staff.
he wouldn't comment unul after the
Lavin replaced Mark Gottfried, vote. ·
who left after seven years on the staff
"It continues to look like it will be
to become head coach at Murray voted down," agent Tom Reich said.
State University.
"Obviously, if tbe deal ~ets voted
Harrick coached at Pepperdine for down, the first big obstacle will be .
nine years before succeeding Walt trying to formulate what owners will
Hazzard as UCLA's head coach in present as a negotiating team. There
April 1988. Barrick's overall record. won't be any chance of a resolution
with the Bruins was 191-63.
for a long time, and that's a pity for
the game."

and J.C. Watts, and track great Jim John Frieden for a congressional
Ryun ran as Republicans and won.
seat in Kansas. It was the first politBu~ning , inducted into the base- ical race for Ryun, who won a silver
ball Hall of· f'ame in August, was medal in the 1,500metersatthe 1968
elected to his sixth term as a U.S. rep- Olympics.
resentative from K~ntucky. He eftsi"I think the people believed my
ly defeated Denny Bowman, tbe message, and I'm really grateful for
mayor of Covington, Ky.
that," said Ryun, a conservative with
"I waited 25 years to stand on that deep religious convictions.
field in Cooperstown and get fhat
Former Kentucky baSketball playplaque," Bunning said of his Hall of er Sootty Baesler was re-elected io
Fame induction. "You might imagine the U.S. House in the llluegrass state.
it felt pretty ga,od. I have that same Baesle~, a Democrat who played for
feeling standing here tonight."
the Wildcats tn the early 1960s.
Lar~ent and Watts were re-elect- .defeated' Ernie Fletcher, a Lexington
ed to congressio~al seats in Old a- phystctan and former state legislator.

malaise. Neither decision moves the
game along or fixes its problems."
Levine disputed Kasten's statement, saying salaries would increase
even more without the deal.
"Stan's calculator is broken and
probably needs new batteries,"
Levine said. "Any projection that
talks about no revenue growth and
just continued payroll growth doesn't recognize what this would accomplish."
The contract calls for a luxury tax
in 1997, 1998 and 1999 designed to
slow the payroll growth of high-revenue teams.

Levine, hired by Selig in Septe;nher 1995, was contemplating whether
to resign later this week. With no consensus among owners for peace and
none for war, it appeared the indus·
try will rontinue to operate under the
agreement that expired in December
1993, which is kept in force by a federal injunction. ·
"It's a horrible dilemma for
teams," Kasten said. " You have two
bad choices and you have to pick one.
If you accept this deal, it's likely to
yield annual losses of $100 million
annually, maybe $200 million. If you
reject, then for some period of time,
you're in the status quo, the current

~~;~~~~~~:=:.president Stan

Kemper, Petty _losers on Election Day
By RICK'WARI\IER

Wednesday, November 6, 1996

• Middleport, Ohllo

ry•

I Fellow Award at Ohio Universibe discussed.
uate
.Two presenters, Melissa Gibson ty. ·
·
Hancox, M.A., and Carolyn KarCarolyn Karmori is conducting
mon, M.A., both Ph.D. candidates, research in the areas of instructional,
and instructors are joined by Christi-- interpersonal and organizational
na Beck, Ph.D.• Assistant Professor. · communication. Dr. Beck ls finishThe presenters are from the Ohio ing her book, Partnersjlip for Health:,
University School of Interpersonal Relational Communication Issues
Communication in Athens.
Implicit to Quality Women's Health
Melissa Hancox specializes in Care.
basic, small' group and organizationRNs ·and LPNs will receive 6.6
al communication. She is the 1996- contact hours of continuing educa1997 -recipiept of the Kantner Grad- tion credit through CHEAO which is

approved as a provider of continuing
·education by the Ohio Nurses Association (OH-049). Social workers
will re~ive 5.2 clock hours.
The program in Jackson is ~pan­
sored by Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine/Area Health
Education Center. The registration
fee of $45 does not include lunch.
Registration deadline is Nov. 15.
Late registration fee is $55 . To regis·
ter, .call AHEC/CHEAO at (614i
· 593-2292.
·

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--Society .sc~apbookTEACHING HONORS
Baptist Church, Middleport annex.
Russ Zwilling of Floyd Knobs,
Sl aggs will speak on the First
~ Ind., son of Troy Zwilling of Syra· Rr~ 1ent West Virginia Volunteer
i •cuse and the late Sylvia Zwilling .lnta..try. It was noted that many
j ' was recently named one of two I9di- Meigs Countians served in the.unit
• ana vocational teachers of the year.
when Ohio units were too full for
! Zwilling, 54, is a welding instruc- · more volunteers. Skaggs will speak
! _Jor .at C.A. Prosser Vocational. at 7:30p.m.
; •School in New Albany, Ind.. and
At the meeting the camp will be
( teaches grades II, . 12 and adult _celebrating Lincoln's Thanksgiving
• classes. He shitres top vOcational Proclamation with a ThankSgiving
t teacher honors with fello)" Prosser potluck dinner. Members are asked
machine tool instructor Mick JIIITCtt. to take a dish. The camp will furnish
SAR MEETING
the turkey for the 6:30p.m. dinner.
1
Kevin Skaggs of Charleston,
The camp will also he holding its
W.Va. will be the speaker for the annualelectionofofficers..'Thepub• Brooks-Grant Camp No. 7; Sons of lie is invited to. attend the program
: · Union Veterans of the Civil War at anll meeting.
: its meeting Monday at the Hope

: ·

!

I
!
j

DOLE

Golden Ripe
' Bananas

·Lbs.
4.47 ule pw
·1.7&amp; mfri• rene.

GREAT CHRISTMAS
GIFT IDEAS

27,g~,.
.twrS..

,

t4

1600 W/ quick set button

-..$14.99

Coo! Int.

Super .
, Sea!eror
I S~o~per
I ·Fiuoh

Te~co

Ar1t1-Freeu

,

..

Te&amp;kr!} or

F'ueh&amp; Fill
~,

1, 11.5·12!5, A5·107

Revlon Travel
Hair Dryer · , $14.99.
Revlon Stylist .

Pre~ tone

PrCf!ttone

.

Pl•etikote Car

Colo,.. Touch Up
Paint or ,4.11

f'urpote Pnn1er

Ladi·es Thigh
High Hose

Gallipolis
209 Upper 'River RoaJ

446-3807
I

SUPER SUNDRY
202 East Main
• Pomeroy, OH
992-6983
.

f I t j ' [ ••

f\ '//!

.

e

Mondll)' • Frld•y. &amp; •m • pm
Satunl•y. &amp; em ·7 pm
.
Sundll)', 9 •m - 5 pm

5.&lt;11o ,..... !100&lt;1"" ln•otock ma"""ndiH only.
pric:et ,rul)l Wiry due to IO(;.•J c:ompm:.tt.~oJ'I.

~sui•

We r1eerw ~· ~ht to limit 1u•rrtltloe.

.'

·•
•

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•

�•

•

,

hge 8 • The o.tly S1ntlnel

• Middleport, Ohio

Wednuday, November 6, 1998

1

t

t

'

•
You are Corrfia1£y Invitetf to a Party at
'

HARTWELL
HOUSE

Just in Time for Christmas

'To Cek6rau Our !first 'ftar!

Check .out.our selection of

Join us ror birthday clke &amp; spiced dder

Sunday Dec. 1st

Brass Giftwear

Register to win a Gift Bas~t!
We now cal'l)' Toland Decorative Aags,
Mats &amp; Rugs • Spirit Bears • camille .
Beckman lotions • Snowmen • Santas •
Candles •Noah's Arks • Potpourri • Wreaths

\ by

Copper Kraft

• Lang Calel)dilrs &amp; cards • Gift Books
• Christmas Music • Celtic Music• Baskets
• Painted Slates • Salsas • Soups
• Savannah Mlzes • Coffee, Tea &amp; Mora ...
December Hours:
M..s.t 1CJ.5 pm
Man nlghla until 7:00

Sun. 1-5

,

Shop Convenient ·
Downtown Pomeroy
and WrapUp
Your Christmas
Shopping Early!
Shop This Week At
Partieipating
Pomeroy
Merehants!

Pomeroy • Mldcllepor"., Ohio

;Aicoh&lt;?lic.points the finger when it comes to confronting nlness
could live wid\111 alcobolic IIIII not
bow it Akobollcl ae DOt llways
Illusive. They can be ex-ly
Landers
charming. They become ....__
t. penon you DCCII Ill' Willi in your life.
Many intelligent, well-educated
people have been fooled.
At lint. you may see them drink
occasionally.
Maybe they' ll " go out
:By ANN LANDERS
.
witb
the
guys"
one liight a week. If
: Dear Ann Landers: I had 1o write
you
stick
around
loog enough. you~ll
'lfrer ~ng the letter from "Calisee
them
drinkin1
seven nights a
·fomia," who finally found. the
week,
and
the
drinking
will stan as
:cOIIJllle to ~ve her abusive, alco·botic husband and lllise her · kids early as nooo.'
The !doobolic is very aood at
:11one. They turned out great, and she
·
convincing
you that YOU ..., the
:couldn't he happier. She was lucky.
problem.
You
begin 10 doubt your·
: Most people see alcoholics as
:derelicts and falling-!lown drunks. self. Spouses of alcoholics often suf·They cannot understand bow anyone fer from a wide variety of pbysicli
ailments such as chronic headaches,

ulcers and Jll1nlinteatinal problems.
Dear !ndjay· Your lcll&lt;r is JW'C
Depmslon and anxiety Mtacks ae 10 opeD a lot of eyes IOday. Thinks
aiJO COIIIDIOil· due 10 tbe COIIItlnt on bcbalf of all of the readers you
sueu. ailldren of llroboUc1 may helped Mncate.
ellhibit behavioral problems and do
Dear Ann Landen: I save birth 10
poorly in school.
·
my fli'St child Jut April. "C!yltal"
I know all this bec:•n•ufter years was 12 weeks premature and
of livins with an alcoholic, I was on ._weighed less than 2 pounds. We
tbe verge of suicide. My children were afraid lhat she would die ·Ill'
kept me liive. After a lot of therapy haok severe handicaps, but we were
and AI·Anon, I finally teamed I was blessed witb good fortune as her
not crazy and I didn't need lllat man only remaining requirement is the
in my life.
.
extra oxygen she receives through a
My licobolic husband left his nasal tube worn 24 hours a day.
first wife for me, and tben he left me
Her doctors told us, "Don't let
for another woman. I hope one day her alter your lifestyle.'' We took
when thai woman statts to feel their advice and take Cl)'stal evel)'crazy, abe will. call me. If no one else where. She's been 1o the mall, five
willlislen 10 her, I will. - Happy lo restaurants, a small boat harjlor and
Be Alive in Indiana
•. ·
the county fair.

:,.,--..... VIC
A office
'

--. -Community calendar· -~

Ann

%
•

off

All Dress .Shoes &amp;
Dress Flats
New F•ll Colors In SIHJde &amp; l.HthM

Black N•vy Browo
Taupe Green Bronze
Layaway Now For Christ.ma.s

.

Sewing ~achines and Cabinets

J-.-

CHRISTMAS SALE

.All Singer Sewing
Machines and
Cabinets ,
Reduced. Save
NOW. Buy local
from one of the
~--:. ;;:::.:::-;;:::.::::::; oldest authrolzed ·
0
Sl.nger dealer In
· the United States·
One Year FREE
Service.

The Fabric Shop

Now for Chrisi.JIIM While &amp;lection is Good

100 E. MAIN ST.

112.a177 ·

POMEROY
'

.

N SHOES
ANDERSON'S
.

Pomeroy, Ohio
LBV-,f\·Wiav

POMEROY - Salisbul)' · Township meeting, 6 p.nl Wed!lesday at
the to"!'iishiP building.

Matt

llaiiNI!IIY, ....!"

THURSDAY
· RACINE -- Racine Post 602,
American Legion, Thursday a1 the0
hall, business meting with dinner to
follow.

dent; AIT'fl/ Yonker, ·treeaurer; ..._,1 Wood, vlcll .,.alclant;
, Katherine a.umler, lllllbauadiir, and Amanda Smith, HC,..
tary.
- . Bottom the Hnlor cltaa orrar. are left, front, JIIMI Spencw,
amblaudor, Cryatal Hollinger, li'elaurer; Cindy liawtdna, HCNIIry; aacond row, Thorn Powell, tmblaalldor; Jar-.d King,
pNaklant;' Arlc Patlaraon, vice ~aldlnt; and beck row, Rick
Smith, !*'lllllllfltarlln, and Don Elklna, reportar• .

NOW and ~AVE

Pomeroy's Quality Shoe .Store

SALE
• Glider Rockeri • Curios
• Gun Cabinets • Desks .
• .Carpet • Recliners
• Dining Sets • Sofas

-~

.ANDERSON'S
POMEROY
992-3871

11 .......... ,.. ••1111 . .
$$$ JIYt IIONIY $$$ ..... ~111 .....
.............,luiiJufCDs,WMI II; . . . IJIII 1,
Y&lt;11; lVs, CD,..,_., ........ MUOIIIOIEIJMt's 1 ;ft

Zft.-............."..,.

..... ,,.,. ,.. ......... YOll

Calif. 90045

.

.....

·(\ICm11IE tlliSD1EDS ~RAIL YOUR NEIDS!

Home Furnishings .

8:30 - 5:00

Send questions to Aaa Laden,
Creators Syndloate, 5777 W. Ce!ttnry 'Blvd., Suite 700, Los An1ele1,

.

top, they aN, left, Jell ,_..,, 1\ljiCh'lr,

~uy

for speaking up about an intentely
personal matter. You have perfanned a valuable service by sharing
your problem with millions of readers today. Many of them will see
themselves and be reminded of your
letter when they see a child who is
14
different. II

vt-

·S INGER

'

Dear Buffalo Mom: Thank yoia

·-

Melga . "lgh Sc:l!ool VICA t1IMIIC!IIal . '"duatrlal Clube rA
""*lea) ·hll¥11 aiM:blcl atllceri' For ... iunior clan,. plctur-.d

•... -

fy a stranger's curiosity. A kind
word would malr.e a world of difference. --Grateful Mom in Bufflio,
N.Y.

POMEROY •• Enterprise United
SUNDAY
Methodist Church "HerilaJe SunMIDDLEPORT ·- Veterans Day day" Observance, 9 to 10:30 a.m.
•11.'1'11 aacl 1J*111 eveals. ~ dinner, Sunday, noon, American Special music by the Retlection
clkar Is IMit d nls.., to pro- ·Leaion annex, Feeney-Bennett Post quanet of the Middlepon Church of
..... . . . 01' f1llld rUen of~~Dy
128.
,Christ. Brunch to follow service.
type. I t - are prlated u apace , •
· Rev. Keith Rader, pastor.
perml1a aacl C&amp;llllGt be paraateed
to nm a apeclftc mmber of days. .
.WEDNESDAY
.
POMEROY - Replar meeting,
Public Notice
Public Notlc:e
Public Notice
.., Public Notice
Pomeroy-Racine ·' Loclie
164,
·fallowa:
F&amp;.AM, Racine. Election of officers.
guarante.. •xpreaud or
NOTICE Of .IALE
. PUBLIC NOTICE
• number
lelng town Iota
Implied.
TRUCK FOR BALE
ty
ot M 0n1er .or
tala · l..u.d out ol tha llv• (II) and alx (I) In
The Ba.rd ot Trua.- ol The Bo.ord ol True- ol
PAGEVILLB -- sCipio Township ·Common
cartaton'a addMion to tha · Cheahlre Town•hlp, Qallla· Che•hlre Townahlp rwii'W
Pl
..
a
Court
ol
Trustees. Wed!iesday, 6:30 p.m. at · lhlll~ ~ Ohio, In lha olllyracuM, Ohio and ' County, Ohio, ollar lor ..Ia tha right to walva .any
being
tha ume 'property ont (I) 1987 Ford pickup lrregularltlea and/or
. Pageville.
~ollhe DIM flallonal conv•yed to Hanoro
lank,
Plaintiff,
va.
lruck, F250, 4x4. s ...lal lnlormallll• Md to reMot
'
C•rt.tqn, numbar of · tha truck Ia any and aH bide.
CHESTER .. Chester Garden ChltiiOpher A. . YM"I•~ et Carillon by upon • ·ar. ::!"~ hllllwlll••·
1FTEF28vtHNA711100. .
By ordlt ol tha Bo.ord ol
Club, Wednesday, 7:30 Chester lal., Defendante,
.,.... .,_.nee: VoluiM Mileage ol tha truck Ia Truataet ol Chaahlra
!Nroln ,.. daracl,
United Methodist Cburcb, will make ,....... c.. No.lf.CV.GI71n 300, Pag• 4111, M•lo• Opprollma!My 18,000.
.TOWMhlp.
bini feeds. Mcmben to take tools lli
Thla pick.., truck will be To ...,_ lha truck prior to
~~:':.!':::-..;..
lOki at public auction to the tha Mle, .....- on. ollha
worlc with. Fcedcn will he taken to ~::~:::~= 2"-GGO''
MCI20-00234
'Courthou11 In Pomeroy,
hlgheat bl-, on SaturdiJ,
.
nursing facilities in the county.
tru-: Property Adcirau: 2113 November 9, 191111, •t 10:00 lollowl"'
illtlp County, Olilo, on the
McCiirty, Kalth HandlaJ or
l'llth
St...t,
Racln•,
Ohio
1311t My of DICimber. 1111.
a.m. at tha Townahlp Ml•canlde.
RUTI.AND -- The Rutland ·1110:00 a.m., the follow! ... 411171
Building In Kyger (Localad
carolyn H.,._, C
E 8 TATE •t · tOO Kyger Cam•tary
RIW.
Township Trustees, Wednesday, . Ianda •nd tenemente, APPRAISI!D
114
s::: er..tc R
A'r. 117,11110.00 Road).
iD Cited at 2213 Flfttl ltrMt,
··
· .
Cheah ,Ohio
. 6:15 p.m. a1 the Rudand Fire Sta- t,ftaoln•,
Ohio 41771. A The rMI •-• cannot lit · . The truck will be oold •u October 17, 2!1, 191111 '
tion.
.. ~. l~~t~al d-rlllllot! -11M' letallian ~~..... Ia" with no wilrrantiH or N.......ber 3, 8; 1...
: ol
re•l ..tala Ia ae l h a = - - · .
TE 1118 OF IALE:'Cuh
MIPDLEPORT , -- Middleport .tala••:
ond•-Jol-.
.
.....- 1n lha Yin-a:.;'
Literary Cub, Wednesday, 2 p.m.
. ':
J - ... Boulaby
County
ol
•
:..,..,uu,
home of Mrs. DaVid Bowen, Syra- :and Stat• ol Ohio •nd
~ olllelp CountY
cuse. Mrs. Bowen 10 review "St. :lloui.Mied •net de.crlbH 81! (11) .. 13, 20; 3TC
Joan of Arc" by Vita Sackville-West.

---

re-Holiday Kickofl
Sale

Because the nasal tube makes her
look different I have received a lot
of UIISOiicitcd and l1ldc comments.
People ask, "What's wrong with
bc:r? Wu she born that way? What's
her problem?" I do no! wish to discuss my daughter's medical condition with strangers, and considering
the handicaps she might have had,
my husband and I feel there's nothing wrong with Crystal at all.
Ann, please alert the boneheads
out there thai if they see a child who
is "different," 10 coo over the baby
the way they would ~ ' 'normal"
child. The . parents already know
their child looks different and they
love the child anyway. The anguish
they have already gone through
doesn't need to be rehashed to satis-

•

. Tbe CoimnultJ Calqder Is
pAll ''II IIi a he Ienke to-praftt P"!''PPI willlq to •"""''~

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The Dally SeaHnel • Page 9

WE'uFouow
...
Research shows that when you get regular
chE~IJ(iS, eat right, anq exercise sensi,

.

bly. your children will mpre than likely
follow your lead. Give us a call for more
information on keeping your kids

li1n Pleasant van~
1111 ~ospit~ . '

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Wednelct.Y, November 8, 19116 .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Deily Sentinel

_Wedt:eeday, November 8, 1998

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Jackson to host MSRA Finals Rodeo
•

Bull riding and boml l'lciag ire
on the agenda, as well as 1e1m roping, s~r wresllinJ and five other
rodeo eveniS that will bring more
than 90 cowboys and cowgirls in the
MidStates Rodeo Association
(MSRA) to Henderson's Arena in ·
Jackson for the 23rd Annual MSRA
Championship Finals Rodeo this
weekend.
The MSRA is a non-profit organization that sanctions rodeos across
the .eastern half of the United States
including Ohio, Indiana, Michigan,
West Virginia, VJrginia and Ken·

tuc~.

'The Finals is the last rodeo of the

1996 MSRA season. Nine event
champions and an all-around cowboy and all-1t011nd cowgirl will be
crowned after the final performance.
Contestants compete year-round to
earn a Top 10 position in their event
and qualify for the-Finals.
ContestaniS will compete for a
total of $2.5,000 in bareback bronc
riding, sreer wrestling, calf roping,
cowgirls breakaway roping •. team
roping. saddle bronc ridilij!. cowgirls goat tying, cowgirls barrel rae-

ing and bull riding. Event champions also receive a trophy b,lckle and
a saddle.
The finals will also feature a
pony giveaway and a saddle giveaway.
Rodeo perfonnances are schell· ·
uled for 8 p.m. Friday and Satlmlay,
an4, 2 p.m. Sunday.

•

Henderson's Arena is located 10
miles west oC.Jackson on State
Route 32 and County Road 23

'

South.

Tickets are $9 for adults and $5
for children ages 4-12. Children
three and under fiR free. Advance
tickets fiR on sale now in Jackson at
·,he Jackson High School Band
Room (from 12 to 4 p.m.), at Detty's
Barber Shop (122 Broadway) and at
Henderson's Tack and Saddle Shop
(5675 S.R. 776)

•

Dains Ia shown ••
COIIIpeted 8U MldStatH Rodeo A11oclatlon rodeo In Will. FIMII for the
Rodeo will be. held In Jaclalon thle -kend.
·
:

:Athens
-author writes
:mystery.in
set in area

•

.0 of A holds
1friendship
~-m.eeting

I

I

, District 13, Daughters of Ameri·
. ;ca held a friendship meeting at the
:chester lodge hall recently.
. Esther Harden gave the blessing
.before the potluck dinner. Esther ·
Smith, district councilor, presided at.
the meeting when practice was held ·
'for the spring· rally. Those received
' officially were Smith,, past state
councilor-; JoAnn Baum, junior past
'state councilor;' Erma Cleland, state
'judiciary committee members; Janice Zwllling, state law commillee;
Margaret Couerill, national repre·
sentative. '
·
Reports were given by Zwilling,
secrelar)i, and Opal Hollon, treasur·
er. Color hearers escorted Belly
Biggs to the altar where-Smith spoke
briefly complimenting Biggs, dis·
trict deputy for the past five years.
She was presented a gift, Mary K.
Holter also presented her with , a
photo and scrapbook containing ani·
cles and pictures collected over the
past five years.
Baum, now the junior past state
councilor. was esconed to the altar
and Smith complimented her on her
work as state councilor. She ·
responded ·with appreciation ·to
members who assisted. A gift was
presented to her.
Also recognized was Erma Cleland. deputy state couneilor of
· Chester Council 323; . Harden,
deputy state councilor of Guiding
Star Council, 124, and Faye Hose!·.
ton·, deputy state ~ouncilor of Belle
· Prairie, Council 269. They were pre·
ocnted gifts.
Smith read "What's the Value of
One Member." Helen Wolf was
pianist. ·The deputies and past councilors club Christmas dinner and
meeting was announced for Dec. 7
at the Olde Dulch Restaurant in
Logan. There will be a gift
exchange.
Others auending were Doris
Qrueser. Marcia Keller, Ethel Orr,
Scouie Smith, Elizabeth Hayes,
Thelma White, Chester Council; Ivy
shuliS, Belle Prairie Council; John
Orundy and N110tna Grundy. Logan
Council.

"~···

s

8 LB.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE liEf

LB.

. B~neless

Round Steaks

s 51
LB.

•r

FRENCH STY~E
CUT GIEEN lEANS
WHOLE IEINEL,
NIILETS or
CREAII STill CORN
i 1•15.25 OL CAliS
. PEAS
· 12 PACK CASE

•Steaks
•Roasts
•Gro•nd
Ch•ck

MAXWELL

-HOUSE
MASTER BLEND

5 LB. BAG SELF-RISiNG
BREAD OR ALL-PURPOSE

1.00

IUY o•lll'r 0•1 J:

FREE

34.5 oz.
CAN

.

•:

IN WATER OR OIL ·

$

ASST. VARIETIES

Star·Kist ·

COCA·COLA PRODUCt

s

Pillsbury
Grands lise

Chunk Tuna

s 21

.• 31'

Ll.

FAMILY PACK .

.

s

HAlF H

48

.•,•
•
•
•
•

CHEF BOY·AR·DEE

2 CHEESE PIZZAS

oz.

oz.

s

24 OZ. CTN. LOWFAT
SMALL OR URGE CURD ._

Mr.- Bee .
16 oz.

lAG

Cottage Cheese

KING SIZE
FOOD LAND

•

20

•
•

••
•

•

DINNERS

ALL VARIETIES ·6.4-11 oz.

OL
unu DilliE

1UU11•Prtlle

..

PILLSBURY
TOASTER STRUDEL

II.

OFF

Yt UL

FOR

KIN PIE

Chrlstnias Trees &amp;
.Holiday Cakes .

Chocol•t• or

REIBER
FRUIT DRINK
GAL.

ANQU.ET

s
For

71

31.97 oz.

• l

White Bread

1% Milk

'·

16·17.3

6.125

nous•l

I

370Z.

WtAIIIIW..
IOUMitOu
Nov.1.1-·
=~=..:.:=:::::....;.__
hew~~~~n~~~~~-~~·==~~~===~=~=~~~~~~=~~=~~~=:~=~~==~~

~-

10 PACK

WESTERN STYLE
PORK RIBS

SEMI·BONELESS ·

I.

·Pillsbury Flo•r t

FllllCtn
After •IH• llllete •. - ••· - -

UIIITEI.VIWY IELL

FOR

VERNON MANOR

- .--84••

Potato
-Chips

'

12.2

BEEF
CHUCK·

,,

SALE PIICI ..- ......- -.....
USS MAIL·II UIAII
,
AIIILAIU Willi PIODUCT.NON_..,__N.·

ASSORT fLAVORS DlEt ·oa REG.

c

OSCAR MAYE·R
FUN PACKS oz.

OR MORE

COFFEE

GREEN GIANT VEGETABUS

News policy
In 111 effort 10 provide ~ur readerlbip with c..-renl news, the GallipoId Daily Tribune and The Daily Sen·
liBel will not accept weddings after
60 daya from the &lt;life of the event
All club meetings and other news
lltil:les in the society section mus1 .

· Boneles~}
Chicken ·

LB.

Prices Good 11/3 thru 11/9 While Quantities Last

GROUND .
BEEF

TYSOIIIIOLLY filMS

FROZEN GUDE A

'•

.

•

•

•

•·il

••

OPEN 24 HOURS
7 DAYS ·A WEEK!

Athens resident Pat Westfall, an
associate professor of journalism at
Ohio University's E.W. Scripps
School of Journalism, has written a
murder mystery set in Southeastern
·Ohio.
~ Poisoned Pen, a reviewer of mys·
!tery boo~. _ojescribes the book as ''an
· absolutely fascinating book about
: Appalachian culture and history ·set
: in Southern Ohio where · the 'folkways combine with the modem
•technology of computers and cellular phones. Great characters, highly
reconunended."
• "The most fun about writing this
was creating the characters," said
' Westfall. "Since Southe3st Ohio is
such a low population area I figured
· none of my friends would he~ eve
that any resemblance disclaimer. So
I did the opposite, told friends I was
putting everyone in I knew.
• "I got some of my best chanicter
•• ideas from other people's fantastes.
•
It was great fun."
. Westfall is the author of "Painting
: Odyssey", a book of essays, and
"Real Farm", an autobiographical
: account of life on an Iowa farm.
Westfall will give a reading from
• her book at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov.
. 19 at Ohio · Unive~iiy's , Alden ·
Library in the Friends of the Library
Room (Rpom 319). She will sign
, books afterwards.

•••
. With.todays ...

UNLIMITED DOUBLE
COUPONS!
EVERY DAY UP TO SOC

•

Ticket information can he
obtained from Denise Ellenberger at
614-286-5447.

Old Fashioned

407 PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO 45760

J

·'

11.5 oz.

8 II

�•

I

•

r.

'.Page 12 • The Dlilly Sentinel

•

The Dally Sentinel• P.ge13 . .

Wedneedey, November&amp;, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

40

l.llng Halted White F - ~~

PEPSI &amp;MT. ·
DEW
.PRODUCTS

STORE HOURS
MoM.y ..,_ S.llllay
8AM·IO PM
298 SECOND ST. ·
POMEROY, OH.

Froo To Good-· To A Fomiy

II-_,.

Ill'S

I B•OO:RUFJ'('JY

31170 Rt.881
. oil' Rt. 33 .. At. 811

environment
Cover your mosquito Infested drains
with guanmWindllltnlctlble

•

....

WE
THE iiGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU NOVEMBER 9, 1996.
E

WICKS
. ·HAUliNG

2LB.

Touch ..tone Phone

PROCALL

· ....,

1-8CJ0.273-3385

BUCKET BEEF CUBED

·

$229

.

Steak••••••••••• ~••~......... · ·.
'

Racine
· American

BONELESS PORK SIRL()IN

.

.$) 99

.

12 OZ..12 PK CANS

t

.

Roasts ••••••••••••••••••~•••
KY BORDER CHUNK

W

$.

.
·

.

·.

.

·

12oz.

·

.

To every ona who

made donations
to Sleepy Hollow
Hayride, I would
like to tha~k one
and all for your
support!

CHEF
2 CHEESE
..
PIZZAS KIT
.:.:

32.5 OZ .. $2.49 LESS 55¢
COUPON

139

89·(

·' '

~D

.

·

TROPICANA SEASO~S BE~T .

$

Beautiful massive carved 0ak sideboard, nice 2 Pc.
I :=ac:l'~~~. (plenly of drawers), 48" Hoosier 1ype
Earty 6 Un pie safe, Lg. spinning wheel, oak
wall cupboard. 11ger maple poster bed, 3 Pc.
I ~h~=-PI~ B.A. suhe, mahogany table, 6 R6se Back
Ii
round oak table, 4 press back chairs,
I 'J::~1~~=~~~ lriple door bookcase, VIet. walnut ladles
·Jt
f&amp;aft's oak S curved roll-top desk, oak dressers,
cedar chest. Eafly cradle, Selh Thomas •
• Gilbert &amp; other clocks, Lg. selecHon of
American Fostoria, Fenton, pink
Jewell T tea pol, McCoy Mammy cookie
:==~~ Mammy w/cauiHiower cookie )ar sells
Shawnee com casserole, WaH potlefY
apple #16, Lg. Hull pttcher 113·7, Hamltton &amp;
Jug, rocking hofS8, Lg. copper pig, chalk Black
boy &amp; watermelon, weather vane, Coca·
sign, 1950's J.C. Higgins girt's bike, 1950's John
fDeEtre peddle tractor, several lOIS of coins. Very partial
-more coming ln.

z.
640

Ju1ce ............... .
.,.
·
.
'
'
$]19.
•
BISCUI S•••••••••••••••••••••

HAGA~ ASST. FLAVORS .

.lce

'

••••••••••••••••••

c

290Z.

5

(

BATH TISSUE
4 ROLLS

c

(.

2LS.

SLB.
UMIT 4 PLEASE

What's on Your
oHorizon?
our metaphysical
advisors !II

773-5785
Auction Center (304) 773-5447

Call 1-900-562-40110

LUNCH
..
.
MASON, WV
TERMS: CASH or CHECK WITH POSmVE
IQENTIFICATION
.
Not reapoiiSibte for accldente or.loaa of propll'ty.

..
.

ROLL ·

Ext. 2308
$3.99 par min.
Muatbtl 18 yra.
S.rv-IJ. (819) 645 8434

. 30 Announcemen1s

---

....

FABRIC.
SOFTENER
•

84oz.

.
•

ELL lOTI'S
Everyday Low Prices
.

Waahera .......................... $297
Dryers ............................. $267

Dlllhwaahers ................... $297
Rarlgel............................$297
Refrigerators ................... $477

ELLIOTT APPLIANCES
Open Sundays 1 to 5
until Christmas

i

446-8061

Aeration Repair or Replacement

I 0% Discount fo_r.Sept. &amp; Oct,

'

Evening and Weelce1d NO l.(harge
W412mo.

'800-90CJ.3040

'

Authortzed AQA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dre!ijllng • Ornamental_
Steps • Stalra. Railings, Patio Fumlture, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers. Trellises &amp; lots of other stufflt
We will work wHhln your budget

Ph. 773-9173
108 ·Pomeroy strHt

r-------, FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN .
CLUB GUN
SHOOT .
. FRIDAY,
NOV. 8, 6 P.M.

...

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

.
I

All Yard Saltt Muat Be Plild fi'l
Advance. DHdlint: t :OOpm t~
doy bofort fho ld fo 10 run, Sun·
dor &amp; llondor odiHon- 1:OOpm

Ffl\jay.

•

llovfng Slfe. 9:30 IHI ?, Thurodoy,
November 7, Jean SIOut rttl·
'*'!&gt;&amp;·College Rd., Sj'llCUio. Oh.t

eo

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985~22

.

Chester, Ohio

COLLINS

'
Public Sale .

and Auction

AUCTION·Fridar ntghl 7pm. Hor1l
ford &lt;;ommuntty Building. 2 Now .
dealers, Iota of new merchan ~
drlwfngo, onc1 of Hlo drawl
BHo!or 14711.

CONSTRUCTION

Want9d to Buy
Absoture Top Dollar : All u.s. SiP
90

'118r And Gold Coins, ProofHt~j' '

Diamond' Antique .-Joy, Go~
Rings. Pr•t830 U.S. Currency,~
S•llng, E1t. Aequililiono .loMirf.
• M.T.S. Coin Sflop, 151 SOI:ond
- · Qalipofi' 814-441-21842.
Clean lal• Madel Cart Or
Trudlo, 1890 llodofo Or Nowllf, .
Srnilh Buick Ponliot:, 11100 Eall·
tm ,.,.,...., GillipDiis.
'

oR•Idonllll Remodelng
•AddiUona
-New ConltiUctlon
oOver 10 Yrl. Exparleol.owR&lt;FrooEoUm-

•AII Work Gueranlood
614-9112-8810

.. ...

"ASK ABOUT OUII
IIOOF SPECIAL

Buy Ultd Mobile~
814·•48•0175 Orl

, ,

Wanted to Buy :

-

we Buy

Au10'1

_...;;.._,.;,·...;;,
·• ,.;,
' -""1. Any Condition, 814·388·11De2, Or 1

...

FOOL
PROOF
LOVEll! ·

814-448-PIUIT.

EcMPLOYf~ENT

~

I

SE fWICES

110

CALL

1·900-526-5050 .
.

EXT.4500
$2.911 per min.

Muat btl18 yra.
Sorv.U-(619) Ml 8434

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yra.
Serv·U (619) 8434

ANNO UN CEf.1E NTS

LOCAL CRAFTERS featuring can, saw, slate
paintings, oak shelves; quilt racks;
goose outfits; fall decorations.
WATKINS PRODUCTS featuring grape seed oil
(lower In saturated fat than olive oil) ·
TUPPERWARE- Some cash and carry.
Place ordefS!book parties/giftS/fund raisers
I,4Q!1. thru Sat. 1o-6, Sunday 1·5 .

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

IU,..

SERVICE

CALL IOWIII
1·900-476·1515
EXT. 4971

614-446-4530

NO\'Iftlbto I, 11186. 8:DII-3:DO. 40 .
OaWIII Drlvo, Rodnor Side qf
Cora .1118. Clolhn, 01ohn, FurOJ·

DUMP TRUCK

•un•?n

lmALE COUNTRY CUFI$ &amp; GIFTS

Heatlf,

~~ Docolwllono.

. Pomeroy,

R. L. HOLLON
TRU(KING

BEAUTIFUL lADIES, .

FAX 773-5861
Mason, WV

Konoug~.

oRefrlgerators

WANT TO TALK TO

·

Ktroatne

Installation 8t Service
oJnaurad
Phone 614 992·2735

GUYS I

"No Job Too Large or Too Sms/1"

Clothing,

ofurnacee

Fully lnoured

~14-797-4491

November 41h, 51h, 81hi 8·5, 48

' Hubbord Avenue,

I

In

Advonco. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
tht da~ berore tnt ad is to run.
Sundll' odldon • 2'00 ~m. Fr~&lt;~or.
Monda1 edition • 10:00 a .m. Sal·
uodoy.

oHeatPumpe

Ffreple.. a FumCiunlng
Relncepa, ScrMno a Full
Line ot A c - l n. ·
24 Hour Aniw.rtng
.. Service
s.t.ty lnapocdona
Senior Citizen ~count

.

i

Don Smith

Duatl- WOOdatove,

GRAND OPENING .

SLUG MATCH
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAtt ·
2 mHea Nqrth Slll(er Bridge on SR 7
CLUB SUNDAY,
MD.. I Hotle furnaces,
NOV. 10,
fRl. AAir••C•••IID••n
IIIII
11 Heatl'lllps.
12 NOON f:~i€:; 'ON
on flUVIAl

BULLETIN BOAR D DEAD LINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEF ORE PUB LIC ATIO N!

FINAL TOUCH

FAtl. CI.IAN·UP

I

MUGS
REFRIGERATION
HEATING&amp;
COOUNG

Appalachian
Chimney Services ·

. motor blockl.

a Hll2-4025 a ani-a

For all the anewera
talk live to one of

"J I ll f Iff
111 f f If If II f f If Iff If Ill f II f If Iff·····f f Iff f f..f f f ----f II II -L:
..
-- Ill.. f 111---·---······················-·
.....
---

·992·7119

Pick up dl~e~rded
appllan..•, b1Jtterle1,
menynwtell &amp;

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON H6

At. 7

UMIT 1 PLEASE

•

FREE

'

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
OR POWDERED SUGAR OR SELF RISING FLOUR

..._ _ _.;:413;::.11.;,:1mo;,;;·.:;:'"·;,~

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

·TOWEL

r

614-915'4110

..

.·

.

HAVE REFEREIICES

AUcnON CONDUCTED By

SJ79

HALFGAL

.

for,...
.
VERY IWOIAIU

rra.

Muotbtl18
s.rv.u:(619i8.u 1434

•New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
•Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
(614) 992·2753

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE .

,...,.... l.atu1 •ott :;

1

SO DRI WHITE

1

Tulia .... ,... "I of ·.

It

GAllON

.·1
$1 69

FREE ESTIMATES

All v,rd Salll Mull Be Pak:l

JftD. pd.

Call1·900-47&amp;-8585
Ext3313
$3.99 per min.

'• .

WiffcoiiYifft.

Unforgettable
Cbnversatlonsll
Call thla exclusive
24 hr. hotnnell

CUSiom Building &amp; Aornodeing

(No Sunday Calls)

Shine, Uulholand Retldenct,
Corner 01 124 And Roule HlO.

WOMEN TO TAll
WITH YOU ·IJVEIII

SMITH'S
· CONSTaUCTION ·

' 614·992·7643

IIITERIOR·EITIIIOI .

LOCATED ON RT. 33 AT THE AUCTION
CENTER IN MASON, WV.

•

4pk!7.s oz.

PEACHES

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

·LINDA'S
PAINTING

. SAT., NOV. 9, 1"996
10:00 A.M.

'

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U
(619) 645-8434

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Rooftng
Minor Remodeling ·
Residential and
Commercial
FREE ESTIMATES

•

1·900·990-9330
Ext. 1553

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

Over 15 Yean Exp•
Interior and Exterior
Painting
Painting Roora
Wallpaper Hanging

AI,.IQUE
· AUC,.IOI .

SMUCKERS
GRAPE
JELLYOR JAM

Grapefruit ••••••••••••• 4

10CT.

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

3 Family Gorogo SOlo: N...,.bor
Oth, 10th, 8 A.M. To ? Ra in Or

·E.-.&amp;wu•=~~on

DATELINE
. The Girls of
your dreams

742·3212

I

FLORIDA RUBY

CARNATION HOT COCOA · .

Pomeroy, Ohio

•

CLOROX REG.
BLEACH

.ugar ••••••••••••••!~~........

110 Court SL

,•

32 oz.

s._Jl9
.
99(

614-992-4119

&amp; VIcinity

MIKE BING

7/10/lln

Industrial • Automotive .
New Radiators • Re-Cores ·
A/C C_ondenssra/Hose Aaaemblys

. l'reloli~ Cleaning

Bologna
-~··
~·~···········'!'·
HARVEST BACON ENDS &amp;
. $ 49.
· Pieces.......... ..!!'::•••

WSHITE STAR

Sec. VIce
Ru.. Mozlngo
·American Legion 128
Oh.

QUALITY
WINDOW ·
SYSTEMS
'

&amp; Free Estimate
1·800-291·5600

· Call tor Demonstration

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Yard Sale

Gallipolis

949-.J057

~

minor mechanical
repair.
Tune-ups, 011 Change,
Wax,Bumng
Long St., RuUand, Oh.
742·2936, Aak for Kip

Ronnie Jon,...,,,_ Esfimates

' 70

31801 Amberger Ad.
Off Forest Run

Body work, C.;, truck
&amp; truck painting,

Owner:

! loti: woaung Jack RutMII llrrt'f,
Happy HolfoW Rd. vicinity, tHaOk
heanon rlgtwtide, 014-742·1410.1

REPAIR

·GRUESER'S .
GARAGE

Top, Trim, .
Removal &amp;
Stump Grfndlng

of UV. Rays
Offered Exluslvely
by
.

Card or Thanks

SJ 99

'
'89(
••••••••••••••••••••

KY BORDER

Chops •••••••••••••••••••••••·.
. PORK BUn STEAK OR

.

•••••••••••••••••••.••

E~eperillnce

B~~9°!s~o
THE LATEst IN REPLACEMENT WINDOW ·
TECHNCtLOGY
Ev~N~E~~~ay . "HEAT MIRROR" patented system.
;1:~~~~~~
·Highest "R Value"
Blocks 99.5% .

.

LB

s

S..Osldlaoy of fFC

Doors Open

'
R
I
.
]59
n1p oas s•••••••••••~••••• .
u~ CHOia\BONELEss BEEF SIRL~N nr

JONES'
TREE
SERVICE
20 Year•
•

Legion Post 602

$

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF SIRLOIN

Call 614-949·2600
ask for Rick

LOST: Nov 2, tiny, •••ora~
·
male dog, 11 Foodland: 9t 2 ·•
pall. 30•·875·8351 or 30+8
5872 uk for Cheryl.
· ..

AUTO

til

Residential
Commercial
New Home
Remodeling
Custom Design
"We treat your home like
our home•

BINGO.

COCA COLA
PRODUOS
.

Co.

We I&gt;J)ecialize in:

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, FIJI Dirt.

Run Road, Providence
Road, 121 a. Name Plate&amp; On
OogU14~5.
.

BING'S .

,S Construction~

National nra Recycling Center

: 2 F..- Boogie llogo: 0.,.
0no fllocl&lt; &amp; Wh!IO. V~lni,Y'

(619) 645-8434.

~i&gt;O~.I)r~

.614-992-3470

•

Ext. 6218
~.99/mln, 18t
ServU

$2.911/mln. Muot btl 18+

. I

•

1-900-526·5050

1 (900) 378-83881
Ext. 1951

Attorney At Law
(614) 592-5025
Athens, Ohio

wtoi ..... 1001hor for porlo, 304•511-1187.

Are You ~lck And llred
Of Being Single 7 Days
A Week? Romance Is
Just A Heartbeat Away! ·

COUNTRY?

William Safranek

made from the sidewalls of scrap tires,
manufactured In 4 feet lengths"with IDs of 13, 14
:or 15" and an average OD of 22'.
•
(Larger sizes also available.)
Never polluting, EPA approved, impervious to
attacks from saH or other minerals, lasts forever!
$5.00 per linear foot, F,O.B. Pomeroy, Ohio
Contact:

(Urn• Stonel,.aw Rata1)

CRUSH, OR MUG
ROOTBEER

Infonnation Regarding Bankruptcy contact

CULVERT DRAINS

rnaclltno

175--1.

can telievc a debtor of financial

I ~:=~o: and 81T81lgc a fair distribution of assets.
II
in bankruptcy may keep "eJ&lt;emp~' property 1
IS RUSH
their peBODal use. This may include a car, a house,
LIMIAUII
I clothes, and household goods.
·
GOOD FOR THIS

We CM help you, and you CM help. the

DelWin, Ohio .

Accepts Credit Carda

DOU.LE

-. . ---.CIn.._ol Willi No Olftor Ctll, IH·•...-

zwz·E11. 1 TlMin 20, Uoo Plotoj'·

UHII Pwh Alto
&amp; hckRepcir
· Ultllllns:
SS.OO&amp;Up_ ·
llnRepalr&amp;Spil

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

. GlvHWiy

HIDDEN
TREASURES

749 S. Third Ave.,

Middleport
Ceramlca, Woodcraftl,
Ho11111mlldl Dolle &amp;
Baskets.
Allo ChMdren•s
Playroom

Monday 10 anMI pm
Tuet.·Thur. 2 pm·7 pm
Friday 2 pnMI pm

lY-OIOOUAUFfED
THIIPOT !'INANCIHG

oqulpiiiOIII.

'I.AIIOIIINIHTOIIY FOR .

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

p"·fM·TI IHITALLATIONS.

13711RYAN PLACE

MIDDLEI'OAT · .

' 992-ma

.

Guqu

t estn Doors &amp; .
Yt'Wowt
.
l.;l!..!•!!
.•!,!AJ!!!I!!!Iloa!!.,.,;__J,

•

FrM - · ond -

p1g, t1o~-7«11-141D.

'

�I

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weclnesdly, November 6, 198)

Page 14. The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentl_nel• Page 15

NEA Croaliword Puzzle

BlliDOII

pHJI,T,IP
ALDER

ACR088

;~

1.,_1w,.•e.g.
13 I' '

-

oonlll•d
15 Ailplanl

Nonll Cllollna

40flonlal
-~documlltl

a

4f=wlca'

01'11·

,._mare

1s1 Time buyers, E·Z financing 2 1 and 2 bedroom apanmenll, furor 3 bedroom', around $200/mo. nished and unfurnished, securily
free delivery and set-up. 1-800- deJ)ot lt required, nc pets, 614·
251·50711.
992-2218.

All real estate advenillng In
thiane u ra!4fla~to
tl1t FOdtral Fllr Housllig 1 kt

Cond., Very Nice, Phone: 814 · Holzers. $266Jt.to., Plus Utilities,
Oeposll R8(Jllred, 614-oWe-2957.
-14093To6P.M.
2. 2 Acres, public water, cable, 2 bedroom apartment, Racine,
clei&gt;OiiL 614-992-6542,
1-4170 Schultz, 2 bath , central 1250
air, oul building. Homestead
2 Bedroom Apar tment, Water,
Btnd · 304·882·2405.
. Sewer, Garbage Furnlahed , Ref· ·
6 112 Acres With Mobile Home, erences &amp; Deposit, Required,
Excellent Condition, On Raccoon 614-446--0284
Road. 1 Mile From Stale Route 7
With Boat Dock, Will Sell All
'
Divide Into lots, 614-446--6565.
2bdrm. aptt., total elecrrlc, appliances furnished, Jeundry room:
For Sale Or Rent: 1989 Mobrle lac11itlea. close m achool In town.
Home Gateway 3 Bedrooms, 2 ApptlcatiOns available at: VIllage
Baths, All Electric, State R(lule 7 Green Apia. 149 or call 8~4·992 ·
S. Across From Dam , 7110 Acre, 37tt . EOJi.
614-256- 1510 Af1er 3 P.M.
3 Bedrooms, 5 Courr Stree~, GaiiiHUGE 14x70 3 brrn W!lh expando.
Will take care of moving. Call 1·
814-385-9621 and aak lolt.tiKE.
ences. S360'Mo., 614~446-4i2e.

1o ~"any piiJ&amp;iENICe,
limitation or &lt;lac~
baaed on raoe, oolot", Rlilglon.
._ familial si81Ua or ndonal
origin. or any Intention to
rMke any"""" praforence,
llnilatlon or dlscllmlnallon."

or

Thls-wlllnot
l&lt;noWilngly ICOOPt
adve:nlaements for real estate
whiCh Ia In Ylolatlon of ""' law.
our readera are hereby ·
informed lhat al ·d wa•IQI
actvenlled In 1hla newspaper
. (l)pOI1Unlly - ·

: :., "' ~~~~~~~:~~H
311758 Roc:kk;opri"!!•
Clasa alze is
ence papera are ""'"ln!d
plication . Apply

~~~p~~:~~::

ween succeufully
10am &amp; 3pm ~.
that
TCE class will be
· ploymont. ADIIOIU!ely
O c:allo. EOE

OverbrooK Center, a 100 bed
long ~m care facility, In lhe Ohio
River Village of Middleport, Ohio
Ia accepling appil cations for a
OONIADON caliber regratered
nurse. T,he candidate must have
two years experience In a long
lerm care management aelting
wittl e1perience in MDS+ and
quality Improvement programs.
Overbrook c;enrer has an acrive
rehtbililttion
1
physical.
i
i
t.
candidate must be licensed 10
practice BJJslng in Ohio and have
txcellenl comtTlJricatlon skilts,

7"::-=-·.-- ~

..

310

Condo for tale, 2 bedroom, 2
baths, ground lent, with ac·
ce11 to pool and club houee,
Port Ch.rlotle, Florida, 814·
1115-3987.

8

Chri!lly'o Fomlly Living

In RU11and: a 4 bedroom house,
recently renovated. CIA. new carport, doors, new siding, outbtJikting. $28,000 080, 614-992·4514.

350

Lots

&amp; Acreage

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homes
For Pennies On $1 Delinquenl
Tu , Aepo's, REO's Your Area. 3-S Acre Tracts Lel1 $500 Down
Toll Free (1) 800·898·9778 Ext. S1501Uo., County Water On.. Slate
ti-2814 fof-Curren1 listings.
Route 160 North, 614-669-3462.

POSTAL JOBS
S1ar1 $12,08 JHr For Eaam And
Application Into Call 21g· 76D8301 Ext OH561, 9 A.M. ·9 P.M.

011 SA 160,
Kerr
RIVER FRONT PROPERTY,
To Freeway, Hospi·
WITH HOUSE, 727 FIRST AVE- ~~~~~6~
1 ·~-·~·!:··~0tt_:1~6.___
SUn -Fri.
NUE, GALLIPOLIS, S&amp;I,500.
Acres(+ ·I 5 Miles trom Oak
114-441-7112.
Hill. Oh10. 143,000 30-1 -6 75WLDLIFEICONSERVATION
Three bedroom houae in Syra - 4970.
JOBS
cuse, 814-092-8315.
Parcel s on Rayburn Rd Water,
Now hlrcng Game Wardens, ,Sepaved road, reasonablt reSirlc·
cur~ly, MaintenancE!, Par k Rang-, 320 Mobile Homes
lions 304-675·5253. (no smgle·
aft. No experlenc\t necessary
for Sale ·
wide 1nquires pl&amp;ase)
For apphca t•on and Info call 1407·338-6100, ext WV135c. Sam· '7•, two bedroom, freshly parnted Three lots on Spnng Avenue, Po9pm, 1days.
outlide, asking S54ao negoliable, meroy, S2500 negotiable, 814 814·992-7136 aller6pm.
742- 1343
WLDLIFEICONSERVATION
JOBS
12ae0 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bad\ ExcelRENTALS
Now Hiring Game W.r&lt;eno, St·
lent Condition, $3,500. 304-736curity, Uain18na0Ce, Park Rang7295.
ers. No Exp. Necessary. For Ap$28,000
plication And Info CaU 407-33814x70 Mobile Home 16'K18'
8100,-Ext OH316C; Bam -9pm, 7
Room, Addition !Basement 1
doyo.
Acre, Fruit Trees, Fenced In
Yard, Outbuildings, Consider
180 Wanted To Do
Land Contract With Moderare
Babysitting My Home All Hours Down Payment, 614·379·2284
Cheshire Area. 614-367-7849.
A -.

I

H~74 Fl&amp;chtr 12X60, 2 bedroom,
'118fY good ~ondition . S5,000. 304,---l-87_5-_48_89_._ _ _ _ __

Will Clre lor the •lderly in th•ir
homl,l14-247-29e1 .

FINANCIAL

1976 2bedroom , mobile home,
new carpet, new 52gal water
heater, new weupaper, gi-eat
cond SA.975. 304-675-5708.

Beautifu l country blue pla id,
shape, living room auita, like
new, seta , lave seat &amp; cha ir.
$500 lifm. 304-675-1843.!
Country Furniture. 30-4·675-6820.
Rt 2 N, tlmiles, Pt Pleaunt. WV.
Tu"-Sat0-8, Sun 11·5.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washera, drytrl, refrlgtrarorl.
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 78
.Vme S1ree1, Call 814·4•8·7398,
1·800-499-3:499.
Layaway now tar CttriS!mu.
Polly's New and Ualld Furniture
2101 Jefferson Ave., Pt Pleasant

~~~~N~3;~~A:v•~~~~roo~m~.
I ences.

_api Deposit &amp; refer:ll4-882-2566.
New Haven, 1bedroom furnished · ~2.
apt. Depos1t &amp; references . 304~ . Alpine Sider Excerciset', ExceUenl
Condition, SSO, 81........a-2828.
882·2566.

New Upsrairs etllciency with prlvate en1rance, .compfetely fur, quiet surroundings. tl'wee
1
from the Ravenswood
RitcttMt Bndge In Ohio. II )'0'1 are
looking, irs a JYIISt .... Ira $390
per month, utihbes are Included. A
$300 deposil i1 required. for
more information cr an appoint~
ment, call 614-843-5343 and

~ave met~.

Nice. 2 Bedroom Fu,niahed
Apartment, Ga1l1polia. Laundry
Room, A1r, No Pets, $385/Ua.,
Plus Deposlt, 614-446-2800.

550

. Building
Supplies

Block. brtck, sewer pipes, wcndowa, lintels, ate. Claude Winters,
R1o Grande, OH Call 614 -2455,21.

560

1

Pets for Sale

~~~~~.!!H~o~g~•--614_,·-38_8_·
4 pm
A. Groom Shop ·Pet Groommg.
Featuring Hydro Bath . Don
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd .
614-446·0231 .
A.I:(C Registered Beagle Pups, 7
Weeks, Shots, Ask1ng $60 Each
Steve Srapleron Work 614· 446·
4172. Homeet4-256·J6 19.
AKC Registered Mal&amp; Cocker
Spamels, Both Adults, 1 Black· &amp;
White, 1 Buff &amp; While, With
Champion Bloodline, 614-3792728.

Ott&lt;&gt;. .

For rent small barn &amp; pasture,
suitable lor horse&amp;, 614-742-3132
Of 614-75:9· 7959.

wtwoodgram, loaded, new ures,

TRANSPORTATION

71 o

Autos lor Sate

' exterior, blue
Arizona car, white
inUNior, auto, PS, PB, radio, nice
driver, $8,500, 614-949-2217.
1974 Dodge Challenger, V-8, air
cond , new 11Jes, top I ~eals,
50,000 Otlginal milea, never
wrecked. $6,000. 614 -441 -0135
alter 5·aopm.
1982 BW Camper 83.000 M11es:
1992 Ford Tempo GL 29,000
M1\es, 614-388-1708.
1986 Otds Cutlass Clerra 4 Cylinder, Au~ PS, PB. Crulso. Tilt. AC.
E)ctra Clean, IMide And Out
$1,400,614-379-2845.

1985 Olds 98 Regency PW. POL,
PS, 901&lt; Miles, 614-245-5887.

1

•J 10 4

OL' BULLET II DID YOU
BOUNCE THAT BALL OFF'N
POOCHY'S HEAD?

•'

::

1 1 "'-

Cc=::&gt;).::~/

f I

.

NEXT TIME PICK ON
SOMEBODY YORE OWN

~...,...""'""" SIZE II

and wuhlng
31 Capital of

'(ES, MA'AM .. I
WALKED TO SCHOOL
- IN THE RAIN ..

I

THIS ISM'( REPORT
ON THE RAIN FORESTS
OF SRAZIL ..

'fES, MAAM .. I
I-lAVE M'( REPORT
READ't' ..

JUST A

,

COINCIDEN«;:E,MAAM

PIZZA TO GO

8

1993 Cougar 45,000 Miles, 1
Owner, Garage Kept, AN Power,
$9 ,500, OBO 614·446·8026, Or
3CH75·5349 Evenings.
1993 Ford Uus1ang LX, nearty au
options, 4 cylinder, ver~
good if1 snow, 30,000 mile&amp;, very
good concliuon, $6500 OBO, 614992·4111 .
fa~ tory

Purebred Cocker Spaniel pup•
p1es, tails done, niCe blontle male
left, hou sebroke, loves children,
$110,61,4-992-5144.

New 3bedroom, 1 112bathl, in
counuy S•SOtmo 304-875-2884
attar 5pm

Purebred Stberlan Husky !lUi:&gt;·
pies, white, blacks, grayl, blue
eyea, f)fetty mask, wormed, $125,
610·992·5144.

Two bedroom hOme rn Pomero~
tor ren1 with optiOn 10 buy on contract, no mslde pe ts, deposil reQUJttO. 6t4-69&amp;-7244,

50 i-tonda.Excellenr Cond•tlon, ;
$800, 614·361f0632.
:

......:

THE BORN LOSER
'

~

"

~ - ~

0\ t'&gt; YOO VOTE. IN TilE. EUC.TI().I'?'

!
•

~ '(()J QUE.!i'TOOIN6

1-\Y pt..,~\OTI~tl\?

ru. w

r'f.l. M(g£
PI'.'OOOTlC 11-1»1 YOO

'

New gas tanks, 1 ton truck wheels &amp; radiators D &amp; R Au1o '
Ripley, WV. 304·372-3933 or 1:
800-213-9329
j

!

Circle Motel ,
Newly Flemcdeled, Eltlclency
Roo!Tll, HBC, Clnomax, SIDw!lme,
Weekly, Monthly RatH, 814-4482501, 810-3&amp;7·0812.

AERATION MOTORS

Rtpolted, New.&amp; Rtbul~ Ins-.
Coil Ron Evoro, 1-537-9521.

580

FruHs &amp;
Vegetables

1998 Ford. Ranger XLT, 11 .200
m1le1, lang bed , auto, air.
$12.800. 304-875· 7889.

South

West Nortlt

1•
3•

I•
Pasa

Obi.
t•

Farm. .

1!. liVE STOCK

i51f

- Did you ever notice that at
class reunions the people your

~

I

16 I I I I'

L--.1--.J.--.1---L-....1.--..1

O Complete
the , chuckle quoted
by J•lli"Q in the mining words

you davelop from step No. 3 below.

1993 Pop-Up Coleman Camper ..

A.C, Furnace, Excellent Conditior( ,
13,200,614-388-8293

' .'

I

1
'

Home
Improvements

. bors NEW CARl"

IWEONESDAY

,\

--~~~~~~~{

BASEMENT
•
WATERPROOFING
,'
U-nCOndiJiOnal lilelime QU&amp;rantte-' :
local references furnished . Es -~~
tablished 1975. Call (814} 446~ '
0870 Or 1·800~ 287-0578. Roger,.,..t
Warerproofing.

f,
.
'
All;:}
:!

ASTR6·0RAPB

DRYWALl
J
Hang, fin11h, repair.,
Ceilings texlured, DIUttr repair.
Cell ~om 30i-675·41'81. 20 )'Hra
81pltllef'Ce,

I

more difficult assignments oul of the way
raveals which signa 'aie romantically per- as early as possible IOC!ay. Your persisfect for you . Mall $2.75 1o Malchmaker, tence has a limit and yoj.ILresolve could
c/o lhls. newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, fade quickly.
Munay HiM Station, New Yortc, NY 10158. GEMINI (May 21.June 20) You will be In
BERNICE
'SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Have ·a !Jfeganous mood today, bu1 ~ you have
BEDEOSOL fun and enjoy yourself today, but don't to go somewhere with someone you dis·
overindUlge or stay loo late at lhe per1y. like, you might wilhdraw into a protective
You wiN have a bener time ii you moder· corner. ,
ate your behavior.
CANCER (June 21..July 22) Relaliws or
"CAPRICORN (Oec. 22..Jali. It) Try to in·lall(s musl not be pennlned to inlerfere
avoid a competitive alluatlon loday Wthe . in your family aHairs today. Their input
odds favor your opponent 'Do not burden 'could create additional problems:
yourseW by stilling Dllln second place. .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Do not discuss
· AQUARIUS (Jan. ~ab .. 11) Uaually, an exclling projecl with an auocialt Who
you are opllmlatlc; but today you might · has lirnlled &lt;;omprehension. His negative
Thuno2ay,Nov. 7,1996
become ao concerned wllh the Mgatilre thoughll. could cause you to doub1 your
rn the year ahead, the projectl you man· upacts of a allualion lha1 you will fllil1o ability lo sucoaed.
agelttdo!*~ wtll hatre a MIMIIOUt -the benellft.
'
VIRGO (Aug, 23-lepl. 22) This is nof the
o1tanc1 of """'sa. Contrennly, you may PI8CE8 (M. 20 llll!roll 20) In order to right lime to a1auma new long-range
nothiW good luck wHit panners.
gel proper mHoage from lha lunda you financial obliga11ons, especially if old
ICOIIPIO (OCt. 24-flov. :12) Your lncU· will hatre at your lfilpOMI IO&lt;IIy, count anew have not been ,....id. Cleaf up peal
trioutntlt will coun1 for lillie loday II . 81181)1 penny you lf*'d.
clebla first
ARIEl (llaroll 21·Aprll 11) ·Do n~t LIIIIA (8ejll. 23-0CI. 23) Even1hough II
you•ri'ftal mtlllodlcal .. - "· Plan procedure well In advance.
not do aaaume lhl r11ponalbllll)l of making a mlghl be dlflioull, make an ollort 10 under~ out of aequence. Know whafll to • major declllon willlout conaultlng your
aland your malt'&amp; poln1 of view lo&lt;lay,
~
romai1Cit and· you'M lind H. The mall and galling his or her IIPPfOVel.
~My In regard to an emottona1 aubA•••o·Graph Mllchmaker lnll~nlly TAURUS (ApriiiMaJ 10) Gil your jlct.

Do

lOr

lirGraullc Oil 112.50- 59&amp;1 pall.
Side's ~qulpmtnl , Henderson,

wv.~-615-1~1.

'•

ANSWERS

Orator- Decay- Meny - Wl!iten • NEW CAR

::-:----- !
810 ·

SCRAM-lETS

"I know of only one thing more disturbing than a neighbal •..1oisy car," my husband sighed, •and that's a neigh-

..'

SERVICES

MERCHAND ISE

'

....

S I RHA
~~e-~~~m to be much older- •
0
1-Tr-r...,.--,r---T'I'"-1 .., .
.

zon Wittl' Awning 24 Ft. 1975 1
Mallard With Awn1ng 27Ft. 1691) :
McC(Irm1ck Road, Galllpolla, Ohict-.1
614-446-1511 . .

Mobile Home Slttl for rent
1-800-«17-3238.

Yd

aound
44 Govt. farm
agency
45 Revue part
•47 No man - '
leland
48 Vogran1a
49 On the
lhll1erecl
aide
·so Radladon

p Hy A

~~~~--~~~~-~
1973 Fleetwing 17 Fr. 1976 Bla· i

REAL ESTATE

Carpet ' VInyl In SIDCk ...00
Mollohan C.rpoq, 814-448-7444.

...rl-+-t- +-1 ·

Which subject does everyone discuss? Right - the weather. Kin
Hubbard said, "Don't knock the weath· .
er; nine-tenths of the people couldn't
start a corwersalion if it didn1 ~hange
once in a while." But I think the number is closer to ten-tenlhs.
.
meaaurea
When defending at the bridge table,
52
A:dom'o
. you sometimes keep plugging away at
1
mall
one suit. Other times, you get a trick ,.__._..__._._..._
_.._..1.-1-.._..1..-1 · 154 Flah eggs
in one suit and then try your luck elsewhere. The hard part, of coune, is
judging which Is the better approach
CELEBRITY CIPHER
on any given deal.
by Luis Campos
How should West plan the defense
CNtlrity Cipt\tr CI'/PIOQrMIS •r• Cfll&amp;led from quotaltMS by 1amoua. people, p111t and present
Er.c:h letter.,.. the cipher stands lor anolt.r Tod.y's cluoll: I equal• G
against four hearts on this deal?
North made a negative double,
. showing the values to bid and lour
W ·O E W U 0 • Z
BSO
MZ
'T E F
hearts. !North might have jive hearta,
but only if too weak to bid two hearts.!
a so
I
YKAIJOTB
L· U N L X Z B F K 0 :
True, if you and I were bidding, we
would reach three no-trump, which
IFEZZUX
l z
J LX
OFF
LZ
JEZB
wUI come home with an overtrick. But
the 4-4 heart fit is dillicult to avoid.
AFXAOT.
VEST
BSO
D 0 N. '
West can defeat four hearts in two
ways. Yet in both cases he must slick
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I truly wish there were some sort of badg" of
to his original plan; he must not
dlahonor that a non-voter would have to wear· - India Ec:lwards.
switeb. He can lead cluba three times
or play spades four timea.
WOlD
In both cases, if declarer plugs away
at trumps, the last play, the third club
__..;_,____;.__.;; l~llool ~J CLAT I. POlLAN
or the fourth spade, prvmotes Ea8t's
Reonange lentro al tlte
heart jad as the defense's fourth
lour ocrambled _,do b.
trick.
low 10 1om lour -cb
· Note that, on a club lead. if declarer
thl'DWS aU his spades on dummy's .dial 1.1 N E l S
mondS, the defenders set four trump
tric~a: two diamond ruffs, one club
nil! and the heart jack.
If you are foUowing a promising 'defense, don't aUow younetf to 6e blown
N 0 GH T
off course. If you are right, you will
oee a sunny llllile on partner's face at
the end of the deal.

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

840 · Electrical end
Refrigeration

r/\Rr.1 SUPPLIES

aufflx
28- I'll&amp;
29 Slan1
30 Eye pan
31 - Oomlnl
37 Male or
lert111le
· 38 Shout of
amusement
41 lnaul1o
42 Angers
. 43 Barnyard

Eaat
Pus
AU paaa

~~-7~----~-- ·

Ron~a-TV Sefvice, apeclallzihg In
Zenith' also aervicing mo11 othe,..
brands. House calla, 1·800·7070011;, WV 3QH711·2381.

Apples- aoulh ol Carperner on SR
143, Saturda~ cnly, ftflt(l Fruit

9 Raw minerals
10 Stupid one
11 Small sword

bo1tlt

~. eu~;ia:.l

:-7~-:::---:---:------ •&lt;
1993 Lmcoln Continentel, loaded . Apphanca Parts And Strvtce:
with goodies, nan-smoKer, etways Name Brands Over 25 Years 1c-. 1t
garaged, excellent condition, 45K parience All Work Guaranteed ;
Fren.ch City Maytag, 614-,u ei ,
miles, $13,200, 614-592-2761.
7795.
\i •
1993 Rtd 'RS Cilovy Cavalier, 4 ~~~---:--:--:------:-~.· ·
Cylinder, Auto, All 33,000 Ullea, ·C&amp;C General Home MaJn.': ~
tentnc&amp;· Painting , vlnyl ·llding, l ~
18,000 Firm. 81 ..448·7127.
carpenlfy, doors, windows balht,t r
1993 Saturn GL2 Sunrool LH!h· mobile hom&amp; repair lnd mOre. For{ '
er. Loaded, St2,500; 1&amp;98 Mus- . free estimate call Chet 614·G92. ' 1
'
tang Air, Auto, Spa1l1r ~1K Miles 6323.
$16 , 500, 614 -448· 4584 Leave
Collins ~onstruction- building end
remodeling, over 10 years ellperience. Free Bllimlttl, 814·8112· •
9910.
~

JET

8 Shade

12 Olapatch
19 Poetic
prepoalllon
21 Attock
22 Small knob
23 German Mr.
24 COm lily
25 Medicine

0

~

e

House For Ren1· 3 Bedroom
Hou18, In Gallipol11, $400 ,Oeposlr, 3 References, Nc Ptll, 814·
448-Q737, Leave Message.

4 BaMball
111ow
5 WWIIat'lla
&amp; &amp;awlllca pan

(2 wda.)

.,-"''ll'...,ll"""m'I""Tn'""'ll"!""1 . 26 Olmlnutlve

-,

1993 Chevy Canller 4 Doors,
N•ce Car, Air, Auloml!c, ABS.
~~~ ~.te&lt;eo, $4,995, pee 814-

7 Boolon 1eam

~~:t.~' S@\\.G{llA-l&amp;t.tr~·

1991 Polaris 250 $1,800 080 1,

790

2 Foot pari
3 Non-profit org.

By Phillip Alder

614-258-1795.

Budget · Pnce TransmiSSions,
Used /Rebuilt, All Types, Over
10,000 TranSmissions, Clutctlea
Flywtleels, Overhual Kits, 6U·
~45-SBn

.~~bi!Ofllnlll

1 lnva.tlon
llllet'll

Keep on truckin'

1

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

.IQ 8

EaN•-

Opening lead: • A

Handicapped 1979 Chevy Van In :
Fair Conchtion, 614·367· 7734.
'

760

-

32
33 SCotUoh clllld
34 Cowboy'•

DOWN

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

l

MQtorcycles

21~

sa

tK

1993 Ford E-150 Van, Starcrafi, j
Conversion, Sharp, loaded, •
11.000 Miles. $16.000 614·367,j
0157.
- . r
1993 Wrangler Jeep, red w11an f
lop, 41,000 miles. Take over :
$12,000. Call 304-.458-1554 after ,.
4:00pm or leave message. Serious Inquires Only.
:

740

r.;\"'matter

•A K Q 8 2

lI

vety nice cond. $8,000. 614· 441 ·
0135-S:OOpm.

3 2
t9 7 5 • 2

.. 8 7 4

,

1991 Dodge Caravan LE, white

u

1995 Dutchman Royal WlfWin slid
·out clean bed, corner 1ub, atereo, •
1990 T-Bud Super Coupe. white, sleeps 6, many accessories .- -;
loaded, su nroo f. au1omatic, lois $15,000. 304-675-2464.
,. ;
ol power $6,000. 304·773·5381 .
•
32' 1984 Skylark with screened In
19U1 Geo Metro, a1andard, aacri- porch and utiUty 00\fding, on lot lrt ,
flce $1300, needs lransmtsllon 1 beautifu! trailer court, Arcadia, FL{ ~
80,228 miles, 28 High St. Hartford, 614·949·2253.
. •
WV.
_,

lmmed~to&lt;y.

Homee
for Rent

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

AKC Siberian. Pups Rare Colors
Blue Eyes Vety lntelhgent Pel
P11ce,: $150 To $175, 614 -446 · · 1988 l'bntiac 0.000 STE E&gt;ceilorw
Condilion, $3.200, 1514-245-5752.
Boors By Redwing, ChiJ,pewa, 6627
Reeky, Tony Lama. Guaranteed
1987 Chevy Conversion Van,
CHRISTY'S PETS
LOwell Prk:es AI Shoe Cafe, Gal·
1988 Ford Tempo, 1973 Plymoulh
271 N. Second Avenue
lipolia.
Ouster, 614-446 -7282 Altar 5
Mlddltpon, OH .
P.M.
Coal or wood 111oYe, SSO. Kawa 114•982-4514.
saki 3 wheeler 250, $500. 1984'
1968 lroc Z·2B. 305 TPI. 5spd.
Monday·Saturday 12am-8pm
Plymouth Voyager $2,000 080. Grooming, kennel, pelS, supplies. 4.1o pos1 , ale, polished alumi·
AKC reglslerec;l dogs, puppiaa, num wheels, Unt, great shapel
c304:;:·5~78;;;·27~53"P•;"";,;;r4pm.~;p,;i;.;;, reptiles,
spiders, fistl, mice, Asking $6,900. 304-675·533~
&amp; PlastiC Septic Tanks,
aquariums $9.99, 25 lbs. cat liner,
Gallons Ron
1988 Plymouth Sundance High
Jackton, OH $2. 19. Will honor scllooJ dis· Mileage, Very Dependable, $800,
counts . 10% discount with S25
614·245-9239.
order.
Muse Sell: 1989 Hyundai, 4 Door,
Gl. Sunrool, AMIFM Cassette,
Automatic Trans., Red With Grey
fnterlcr, Good Shape With 71,000
Miles, Lots Of New Pans, A Great
Deal Below Book Price S, ,400,
614-446·8795.

For Ren t. Four Bedroom Older
House. GallipOliS, $300 Deposct,
$350 Per Month, References Required, 614-446-7538 Evenings ;
814 -446-1875 Days, Ava ila ble

Mobile

•A 9 5 3 2

Soalll .
•K 8 &amp;

!

Chrl!lly'o Family Living

420

Eut

•e 7 s

•

In Aulland: a" bedroom house,"
recently renovated, CIA, new carpet. doors, new akl!r!Q, outbu~d ­
ing. $400 ~us dopoot. poll &amp;
·children are welcome, available
November 1.
In Pomeroy: 121112 turn!shed
room, access to appliance&amp;,
kilehen, barh . l aundr~ &amp; all utilities. weekly or monthly rates,
modern &amp; roach free. call61 4992-4514 eam-11pm.

Two ~droom house, stove end
refrigerator, no insh1e pets, 814992-3090.

Well
•A K
tiO 8 3

47 COnalrUctlon
blam (2 wda.)
. . ,....nd
51 Toole chanceo
17 !lmtfl piece of 53 Aclt'llll
Andrea•
18
115 Salad II'""
20F,_,'a
Wondlflld
57 Bonnie Blair,
•·II·
Spelling
58F-

23a-'homM
27Camm-·

•J 54

v-{

Babybed, swing. high-chair, car
&amp;eat, llroller I walker. 304-8754548.

I

H.QJe

~-------------------:

Wolle tanntng bed, new bulbs &amp;
starlet's. S1,000 304-882-2066

IHHS

• ·Q 7
•Q 10 6 5

•

Uotd Furniture 130 BulaYIIIe Pike,
661 Third AV ue, Carpel, Refrig· Galllpolla. Ma1tre11 Seta, Full
erator !Stove, uts1de Storage. 2 Wllt.erbed Uart•a. Full Bedroom
Bedrocms, t 75/Mo ., Monlh"l· Sulle Matlr1a1es, Bed, Chest,
DepoSit, 614-2 9585.
Vaniry. Bench, $250, 814~ 446 ·
4711 2
2bedroom apartments in Pt 1-___
· ----------------Pieasanr. perlac:l for construction Ultd Fumiture;130 Bulavlllt Pike,
worker. 304-675-2174 cr 614·446· Bunk Beds IMattressea, 1150.00.
2200, !Wenlngs.
Couchl High Back Chairs/ Olio man $150.00. Table~. Gifts,· Mi~~~N~~~~~~~\MJ~~1~~ crowm Cart, Bodo. 61•· 446 ·
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive 4782·
!rom S2A4 to $315. Walk to ohop 520
, Sporting
&amp; movies. Call 614 ·446·2568 .
GoOdS
EQUal Hous!ng Opportunity.

2V Gallon Aquarium wlstand &amp; au
ICCIIIOr!es. ,' $100 . 304· 273·

j'lo

•i

-lhot

4 Room ~use + Ulillty Room On
Shoestring Ridge, 4.6 2 Acres,
Newly Redecorated, New Vinyl
Siding &amp; Carpeting, $28,000, 614·
446-1758.

Par Diem RN'S and LPN·s needed for Pleasant Valley Hospilai.
Ccntact Pefsonnel Oepartmenl at
{304)875-4340. MIEOE

3 Room 1 ·Bedroom Apaflmen1,
Wilh Stove &amp; Relngeralor Furni shed, 814 .... 48-2583.

7795.

Beech St. M1ddleporl, 2 bedroom,· Compund Bow &amp; Sighta $80. 814·
furmshed apt, ulihtiea paid. De- 448-~.
poll t &amp; references. 304~82 - ·
Remlng1cn Modet 700-AOL Sin.
2566.
ethic bolt acllon, cen1er tar rl Ia,
Duplex 646 Second Avenue, Gat. ! 24. blrrel, 7mm Rem . Mag 4·
1hot, new, lttll in box, never
New homes starting a1 $170 per ltpcll1, 3 Bedrooms, L.A.. D.R ..
304-675-2475.
$345/Mo.,
One
Year
Lease.
Ref·
month with only $770 Down. Call
erences
Required,
$345
Oepo'sit.
RUSS at 1-61&amp;-365-0698
Antiques
Key Available, Tope's Furniture, 530
10-5. 614-446-0332.
Buy or sell Rtverme Antiques,
Furnished Apt 1 Bedroom 807 1124 E. Main Street, on Rt 124,
Second Ave. Gallipolia, $295, Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10 ·00
. a.m. 10 8:00 p,m., Sunday 1:00 to
NEW REPO'S ONLY 2 LEFT Uhlities Pd. 614·3844 after 7 pm,
6:00 p.m. 614·992·2526, RuiS
Never lived In, Free Delivery·
Furmshed efficiency, Qll Utilities Moore owner.
And Stt·Up. Call1-600·251·5070.
paid Depostt requued 304-675540 Miscellaneous
New Aepos, only 2 left, never 7783.
lived In, froe -dehvery .and set-up.
Merchandise
t -800-251-5070.
Furmstled Elfit~ency All Utililies ·
Pa1d, Share Balh $145/Mo., 919 tiKI• 12tlp riding Gravely tractor.
NEW ! Bank Repo's, only 3 left, Second Avenue, Ga111pohs 61• - 304-675-6787.
stlll under warran1~. tree delivery 446-3945.
2 Bteekfl.ll Sets $80 Each: What
&amp; set-up. 304-75S.7191
·
Graaous llvmg. 1 and 2 bEtdrcom . No1 Srand $15; Enter1ainmen1
Tra1ler wifh add-on rooms, 2 bath, apartments at Village Manor and ' Cenler $40; New Coveralls S1ze
a/c, thre&amp; lots located in Ocala Riverside Aparlmenta in Middla- 1 42R $15: New 40 Channel Mobile
40 miles East port From S232-S355 . CaU 614- · CB Radio $35, Side By Side Rei~c:~~:;~;;i~~~ ~inqu1res only 992-5064. Equal Housing Oppor- frig&amp;f81Dr Freezer, $200, Call 814 _
a
Call early run~t1 es .
448-0924-

.

A-Frame 3 -4 Bedrooms. 2 Full
BStht, laundry Room, Large 2
Car Garage, $49,900 Gallipolis
A,.., 614-256-6928.

POSTAl. JOBS
Start S12.5&amp;'hr, plua benefits. For
application and exam info, Call
1·800-299-24 70. ext -WV12 7,
lltm-91&gt;017 days

2 BED·
Dehvery

Nice 1 112 S1cry House, With
Bulld1ng, 32 .9 Acres, Location
State Rouce 7 South 614·25G·

People lo work dunng dHr sea·
aon. No e•per!ence necessary.
Apply at Crawrord's! HendtrSOI'\
304-675-5404.

Start $12.88 IHr, Plus Benefits.
For Applic aton And E•am Info,
Call 1-800-299-2470, Eat OHS08,
8 A.M . •g P.M. 7 Days

New 14x80 Only make 2 parmenll &amp; move-m, no payment arl&amp;r 4 ~~~. lree sat-up &amp;-detivery.
30Hia-5885.

7438 (EW!nlnll")-

6 Room, garage, large lot. 304675-3)30 or 304-675-3431.

POSTAl. JOBS

Need 1o sell Immediately. Nice
198S·rwo bath 14x70. Call Mike at
614·385·9621 .

3 Bedroom Rench With full
Bosoment VInyl Siding. 2720 Sq.
ft. Attached Garage. Air Conditioning, Gas Heat. 2 Fireplace•
(Wirtl Wood Burner). In-Ground
Pool; Larg6 Lor: Nice locarlcn,
OUIIHlo Ganlpoll~ Routo 588, City
School Dillrirt $89,500. 8t4-446·

Overbrook Center offers a cam~
petitive salary and a benefit pac:k·
~ge 11 available. Resumes with
salary history should be .submitled to David Snyder, Administramr, Overbrook Cenler, 333 Page
St. Middsport. Ohio, 451!10. EOE

wv.

MUST SELL 1981 14170 wtth
fireplace. Need to aell last. Call
Regina &amp;1814-385-2434.

- ~- - - ....

Homes for Sale

8878.

1--------------------

=~~~:Pe:.lt~e~~:rt. ~:~~:

are llvaltabkt on an equal
wiMbe

Appli.,nces :
Recondidantd
Wul'lers, Dryers,
Refrl·
orator~, 90 Day
Frencl'l City Uaytag, 61-'·448·.1

2 Bedrooms, New Carpet, Air 1 Bedroom, E.xlra Nice, Near

ol1988--" llegal

INSPECTORS: Male/Female
Inspect re1idenlial properties I
rour area. Phoms. diag~tms,
perimeter measurement&amp;. Must
1\ave a ear and a 35MM camera.
Send resume to : Properly lnapections, P.O. Boz 370, Dunbar,
W. V. 25064 An; Jemilar Wilaorl.

4 Pe. Living Room Suite Wood
Wnh Cushklnt Ukl New $235.00,
814-2511·1332.

NEW EQUIPMENT: ·zetor, long Mull Sell: 1982 BMW 3201, Rt·.:
KX • P2$24 Panasonic 24 PiQ Dot &amp; Kroll Tractors, Wadera, Back- built Motor, New Paint. AM IF~
Matrix Printer, Ltke New, 814-446- hoes. v... _ r &amp; Lely ,Hay Equlj)- Canene, Sunrool, Sport Wheelr,ment. A Complete line Of Bale Has Goc:~d Start On Complete
7490.
.
Wrtpping, l-landling &amp; Feeding Restoration, Runa Grear, Will
lih Chairs, Electric Wheelchairs, Access, Feed Bu nks, Calf Sae rafl ce At $1 ,1 00 614-44&amp;•·
\ :
Stair lilts, Van Lifls, Seocters, Creeps, Gales, Coral Panals, 8795.
Headgates, Groom1ng Chutes,
I
New /Used, Bowman's 1-tomecare. Post Augers, Plows, T1UerS: Wood Muat Sell : 1983 Jeguar 82,0 ;
814 .... &lt;18 -7283.
Chippers, Bush Hogs, Blades, Mw... New Pain~ (Com-) N
Boom Polea, Subsoilers, Rock Interior, N1ce Car, Alot Invest
'Aelr lgeratora, Stoves, Wuhers Rake, ,. T
. ruckbed s, Trailer(, Toro Will StCt11nco $8,900 Wil Conoid·\
I
And Dryers, All Recondi!Joned Wheel Hont lawn &amp; Garden «Trade. 814-4'6-8795.
I
Ancl Gauranteedi 110D And Up, Tractors, H1.1sqvarna Chain SIWI,
200 car amp, Sound ·r
Will Dellve&lt;. 614-66&amp;-844 1.
Weedeatert Etc . A Complele Punch
stream SPL 12-inc:h apeakat'l In ,
Une Of live81ock Clipper Blades,
Reminglon model ?OOAS 243 cal- Grooming &amp; Show Suppllea We a bo.a, l400ea, 1750 toaether.:
iber boll action 11fle, new, 1390; A.lac Have A Vartely Of Used 304·875-3862.
Refnmgton Browning (ype AS 12 Equipment lndud•ilO 5 Round Bal· SEIZED CARS From $175. •
gauge automatic deer gJn with ers, Grinder Mil&amp;f', fraciDI'S Etc.
Porsehet, Cad1llaca, Chev~a. •
11ght, very good, $275. Bar nen See Us Fer A Complete Line Of BMW'a, Coryenee, Alao Jeeps,
Commando croiSbow, excellent, Parts &amp; Service.
WO'a, Your Area . Toll Free 1• ~$170 ; Wham -o crossbow, new,· Campa ra The Quality, Pflce &amp; 800·898:9778 Ext. A· 2814 Fo q
$75; 614 - 742 - 11~.
Timely Matter 1n Wh1ch We Do Current Llabnga.
*"
Our Repair Work On Any Brand
Sega· system, Sega CD system, 7
Of Equipment &amp; See If You Aren't Wanted 10 buy- 87 or newer C•
diUerent Seg• games, 3 differenl
price ClaStic, musr be 4 door, VFully Stnsfiodt
StgaCD game~ 61 ..742·201111,
8. loaded, Brougham or LS. 61 4'£,
W• ApprwclaleYour Business!
114-446-1875
7"2-3802.
"
Same Electric Hosp!tal Bed, n4Jlt~ld•n"l Ftrm Equlpmenl
387-7734.
3137 lngtlll Rd.
SUv.rtone BanJO, new strings w1
Golllpollt, OH 45631
720 Thlcks for Sale
:·
taN. $100.
Truck Iepper, shari bed. Sso. 3041985 Chevy S-10, ps, pb, air,
675-3662.
6. $2.500. 304·875-5379.
,,
620 Wanted to Buy
I
Sohd OaK Dining Table 4 Chatrs,
1990 Chevy Silverado Ex!. Cab,.,
Paid $1 ,800, UaQ Offer , 112 Car- Standing timber, pulp wood or 2 wid wfposili'lle traclion, llntech·
at Pear $hape Oiamond Paid land with timbef''l call !Mtnlngs af- glass, 350 ci . tf&amp;lll' package!!
S1,100 Asking $600: 3 Rolls 6 F1 ter 8pm. 614·379-29011.
loaded. 304-675-2:18f.
I'
.,
Chain length Fence Appro•. 150
630
Livestock
Ft $150 614 -245·5006 Leave
730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
MHIBgt.
9 Year old Btandard bred mare, I' "·8"7"N"'i_as_a_n.-4"'wo""'."'r"'•bu""'lt"---:-ln-e-!ai
...,.
STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallon very genUe. 3o4-S78-2494.
parts, silver. wllh topper, SSOOq.!
Upright, Ron Evans Enterpmes, Bre(l Cow Sale, Jackaon Co. &amp;14-992-5248.
Jackson, Ohio, 1-800-537-9528.
- 9-=c'"h--"-:s:LiveSiock Ua.rkel. Mon. Nov, ··,8
ev, -1o:-::B,-Ia-,-.r--4-:.
, ;;&gt;- :V::-:r•
- ""~
Studio Couch &amp; Cha1r, Girt·s 10 11 !h.
good condidon, 614-992-3902
• 1
Speed Bike, -55 Gallon, Fish Tank
Fifteen bfed Holstein heilerl, very '9l Chivy Sub.uban 4x4, 350 au·
Wilh Hood 614-446-4944.
nice, 614-992-2623.
tomati.c, au, stereo, tligh miles, t
Tandy 1,000 TX Computer Wilh 640
Hay &amp; Grain
'"'I' nice. $9800, 614·992-4111 .
:
Pr~nter, 614·446-1573
Alfalfa Hay Rolls-Storage and de- 1990 Dodge Ram Van B-25()-; :
Ventless gas hea ter s, kerosene livery available. Morgan Farm 72,000 Miles. $4,000, 090 Can '
heaters &amp; wood s1oves m stock
304 -937-2018.
Be Seen At. GallipoliS Dally Trib· t
Sidet's Equipmenl304-875-742 I
une, 825 Third A\lenue, Galhpolls ;

'11 ctlv.

•

NOVEMBER 5I

�Pllge11 • The O.lly Santlnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

BC suspends ·
13 athletes In
gambling flap

Precinct-by-precinct results of national,
state, .local campaigns in Meigs County

~on

Super Lotto:

3-6-22-28-39-45
Kicker:
4-4-2·1-9-3
Pick 3:
&amp;-W
Pick 4:

PageS

Rainy tonight, Iowa near
50. Friday, cloudy with a
chance of rain. Hlgba In
tha mid 50s•

7-2-9-3

•

•

•

•

.

Ohjo Lottery

.

.a 1·

.

.. "•
•'

.

I

' Vol. 47, N0. 132
019116, Ohio v.lleJ !'Ubllnii!IJ Comptony

2 Sections,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 7, 1996

.

po~sible
Missing Pomeroy
man's car found
by Indiana police

'

·But overwhelming majority ~acks TB levy passage

'

I'
•.

35 centa

·Big ·break

.·Issue 1.fails to find
favor.in
Meigs County
.

..

t2 PII!Jes

A Gannen Co. Newspaper

·
· By JIM FREEMAN
By TOM· HUNTER
The· emergency renewal l~vy over five years for current expenses
!Sentinel Newa Staff
Sentinel Newa Staff
would have raised $154,689 yearly passed by a 166-74 margifl.
·Local law enforcement offic ials
· 'Meigs County voters acknowl· for day-to·day operations in the
Voters also approved renewal
may have gonen a big break Tue~day
.edged the need for continUed operat- · sch\)01 dislrict, and meant no new lax levies for cemetery upkeep in three
in their nine-week search for a miss- .
ing support and service funding increase for residents in the dislrict Meigs · townships. · Cemeteries,
ing.22-year-old Pomeroy .man.·
· throughout the county Tuesday, while who were currently paying the oper· throughout most of the county are
Officers of the.Fort Wayne, Ind .,
· going along witb the majority·of the ating levy. ~
.' kept up by local 'government, which.
· Police Deparuncnt found a car earlistato; electorate in defeating the state's · "It's disappointing that it didn't usual!~ seeks fundmg for upkeep ·
er this week belonging to Jay Allen
pass. I feel the fact thf,we passed the through ~ levies. .
.
· ~olsinger, wh'! was •teported missing
. riveflx,at g41!1ing issue.
State Issue I, concerning a state new building borid iS\ile last spring
· Rutland ' Townshtp
voters
_
. ln Aug. 24 after he failed to·arrive for
constitutiomil amendment to allow was a factor. I think the district resi· approved
a
.3-null,
five-year
replacek at 84 Lurn be r 1n
· Jac kson.
1 ~
k b
&gt; orAccording
the operation of selected riverboat dents just didn't wan! any more tax- ment evy or.~emetery up eep .Y ,a
.,
police
reports,
10
casino gambling facilities in Cincin· es even though it was a renewal and 557-247 margm. Letart Townships
~ 1·
1 1
th
·
nati, Youngstow~. Cleveland and it 'did not increase taxes. From my one· mill, five-year renewal levy for
· be~!~~~·~~sa~~ ~~:;. at mornmg
Lorain, was defeAted by Meigs vw viewpoint, I hate to have·a new build- c~meteries passed by a 2!3· 79 mar·
, Since then there had been no sign
. ers by a total of §1070 againstto 2,848 i111: and·no monies to operate it. We'll . gm. Sutton Townshtp voters
of ~olsinger until Fort Wayne police
supporting the issue.
.
just have to regroup and go on,'' said · approved a .4-mill, five-year renewREACTS TO DEFEAT- Yea on Issue 1 Committee
reported its find to the Pomeroy
Voters overwhelmingly approved Eastern "Local' Superintenclent Deryl aJ levy for cemetery upkeep by a 802tor tan James raacted, In Colul!lbul to the ~t
Police Deplirtmentaround 1O:e8 a.m.
., renewal of the Meigs County TUber- Well .
·· 345 margin.
,
111118,
which
would
have legalized riverboat
Tu d
,
.
, ·
, es ay.
, culosis Clini~s· .5-mill, five-year ·
Four of the county's five villages . '!n other townshtp laX t.ss~es,
.J
"H 1 · · · ·· Ch" 11
. operating levy by a 6, 195·3,003 mar· asked for renewals of current expense Chester Township voters .defeated a
l~"p
'
truck ~~~;g~~~ had~-:••~ ~~rea~o~
gin. to allow operations of the clinic levieo.
·
one mill, five year levy for dust con.
,
, some ume when the owner of t~e
to continue. The qlinic has been oper·
Mid!fleport's renewal levy of three . trol on township roads by a IWO·IO' .
truck stop complai_ned to the ,P&lt;?Jii:c
ated in Meigs County since 1952 mill over five · years for current. one margin, 700 against to 317 supdepartme nt,'' satd PomerQp~lice
from proceeds of the half· mill levy, expenses passed by a 464-452 mar- paning the issue.·
·
, 'I
, Chief Gerald Rou\lllC" :"'; ~&lt;!"
, .
.·.according to Connie Karschnik, RN:, gin. Racine voters passed a two-mill
Fire prevention issues passed in
,
,.
,
· There was n sign of Holsinger.
.Meigs County TB Nurse.
over five years renewal levy for cur- both Salem Township and Syracuse By JOHN SEEWER
we'll go from here." he said. ," We
A Fort wa 10 officer ran a check 1
In the only school issve on the. _rent expenses by a 251-100 margin. ViUag~. Syracuse voters approved a Aelqciated Presa Writer
might take another ~hot at it. " 1
, of the car a d found it was bemg
counttballot, residents in the Eastern . :Syracuse voters approved a two one ~Ill, five year levy by a 263-1.55
. COl-UMBUS - .The c verOn his latest ttcmpt. Spitzer sought 10 ttl ~f[ort to locate the miss. Local School Dislrict voted against, · null levy over qve years for _current margm. Salem Township voters also. whelming defeat of Issue 1 has em· · orgaqized a gro
of weahhy /.ng man. , ,~~. """' ·
"'""
· . the renewal of a 4.7-mill,. two-year· expe.nses by a .305-143 margm. Rut-. · approved a one ~Ill, five year levy by . p_orar
. il~ sto~pe
. d effort~ to . ring iR"Ieslors w~o)wan,, to&lt; open ~ight ·. . Rought 'Sc
t~f ~~- !Zounty
emergency levy by .a 1,120 to 958 . laJI(I s two-mtll replacement levy a 2()6..113 margm.
n~at casmos to Oh1o. An ther overl)oat ca;nnos. ~ staJewt~ j!~ ProsccuttJ!'" , t
JoJlil RcLcptes,
margin;
~. ,.
··
proJ!9sa:lts on the honzon; how ~~ ~ '''"('~ca~~·lfl~.lSf" t who told' flo
e t famtl y of the .
Leadersoftwoseparateproposal•
voters tuesday.
. a sytrong
' · find.On·.TueS&lt;jay1~ftcrnoon , The Daily
to' legalize
casino gambling in Ohio by Spitzer
said he thought
1·
said Wednesday that they ~eed t.ci . ~conomy led vo,tcrs to believe that Sentinel agreed tq a request by Lcntcs
look closely al whether Ohioans will . jObs generated by the casinos weren't to hold publication of the story for 24
~.
ever want riverboat casinos.
.
need~d. Casino ba~kers said t~eir , hours to allow officials and famil y
Buekeye .Extravaganza, a north· plan would mere~ JObs and provtde members time to watch the car in an
• east Ohio company. decided against money for scho?ls.
· effort to find Holsinger. .
· when he lried lo exploit. the tragedy suppor:t was ilnP9rtai11 to him in putting their proposal pn thi~ year's
"!he only thtng I c'!!' put my fin-,
Officials hoped that Holsinger
By PAMELA BROGAN
Gannett News Service
o(the Lucasville prison riots. Repul&gt;- . t.erms ot political action committee ballot.
.
ger on tsthe economy, he satd.
himself ,would show up t.o get the
· WAS~INGTON - ·Democrat lican Governor (George) Voinovich conlributions and local unio,n support.
Rick· Lertzman, one of the men
An ext! poll of voters showed that ··vehicle.
.
,
.
Ted Slrickland regained his House· and then· Lieutenant Governor Mike
But he 'said he didn 'tknow to what. behind Buckeye Exiravaganza, said .the casino issue waS turned down by
It is not uncommon for truck driseatTuesday against GOP Rep. Frank · DeWine praised me for my words extent .the a!lvertising campaign the vo~ totals·may make the compa: 'men and women of all ages, income .w rs to keep car parked at one locaCremeans by 5,337 votes in another and work during the riots anil people l¥:1ped him. •.
,
ny rethink whether to test its propos- · levels and rehg10ns.
•
· tion for a long period of time, Lentes
down·t.o-the wire matchup for the jusi didn't believe Frank'.-" · . . .
"There was no collusion between aJ next year. ·
·
The few segments who did favor said. ~olsiriger was a fanner truck
two pQiitical· foes.
·
Strickhind also said Cremeans' · the AFL-CIO and my campaign,"
"We're not going to do it until the .· the proposal included people age 18· driver, he added.
,
··
· In 1994, Cremeans unseated ' decision not to debate him publicly . Strickland said. "I didn't know when timing is right" he said. "~aybe in 29 and voters who did not align them·
"What we want to do obviously is
Slrickland by 3,000 votes. , .
hurt him with some voters.
the ads would run Or411ylhtng about a year people will realize that more selves with a religion .
see if.he is alive." Lcntd said TucsThis time, Strickland $aid. the race
Cremeans congratulated Strick• them. There was nothing in the last (gambling) dollars are going· out of
Gov. George Voinovich took some day. "W~ would like to have a day 10
for Ohio's 6th Congressional District la~d on Wed!'CsdaY in a prepared months of the c~mpaign_ when Frank state.''
. of the credit for stopping the pro· try and find him .".
turned ~is way llecause a broad spet· stalemenl and promised to do "all 1.• Was runnmg his negattve ad camBuckeye Extravaganza has posed state constitutional amend·
Fort Wayne officeii said initially_
trum of voters viewed him as the c~ toprovl11e a smooth transition in p~ig~ in .. the . ~olumbus and the already gathered about 500,000 sig- ment. He traveled across the state t.o they thought the car had been there
most trustworthy and likable calidi~ the upcoming months."
Cmcmnau area.
.
.
natures and needs another 100.000. . speak out against gambling and since Aug. 6, Lentes ·saiQ . Since
date.
·
' ·
''While lam disappointed, I am
Late Wednesday, Cre~ans dts· Its proposal would be similar to the enlisted businesses and .churches in ~olsinger did not disappear until .
"Every t.ime we did our polling al~ deeply. honored to hav~ had the puled some of the final v_otmg figures one that failed Tuesday- three Ohio the fight.
.
Aug. 24, Lentes said they must have
the results were always the same. opp&lt;lflunily to go to Washmgto~ ... ·In Ath~.~s County ~d ~d there were ~iver casinos in Hamilton County
He said it was "the finest grass· meant Sept. 6 _ 14 days after the
,Frllnk had a higli negative rating, and • .and wor~ for the common,§ense some .•mprop_nettes.
and five sites in northeastern Ohio. roots campaign to defeat a statewide event.
·
people just seem to trust and like re(orms which the people of the 6th
Patt1 Candtll, a spokesm~n for ·
BufLertzman said the message io issue in my memory."
,
Meanwhile, officials have ·conme," said a tired Strickland on District sent me to Washington to Oh10's Secretary of S~t~te, satd ·her win votes would be different.
Voinovich also warned otliers who ,dueled a search of.the local area for
Wednesday after staying up all'night. . enact,"·Cremeans said.
office was aware of Cremeans' con:
"We want to sh_ow how this will ·· might be:thinking of anothe_r attempt · the car, including a sonar search of
"I felt from tile beginning of this
Cremeans blamed his defeat pn cems and would look mto them."_ ·
. lower taxes," he satd. "Our message at gambhng.
the Ohio Rive~ in the assut:np(ion ol
race thai Frank's (Cremeans) strate- the televi.sion advertising campaign
In tile new IOSth Congress, Smck· , has always been lower taxes and
"I hope today's resounding defeat ·. ·foul play.
·
. ,
gy was to attack me personally and I by the AFL·CIO to oust the GOP land a~d the DetQocrats will"" in the more johs."
· of Issue I will. at last convwce those · A psychic was even contacted in
think that backfired for him," Slric~- majority in Congress.
mmonty. When SIJ:tckland was first
Alan Spitzer, a northeast Ohio people who have been promoting it oeffort to find Holsinger _ 10 no avaii.
land said. "Frank tried to poo/9-y me
"I was unable to withstand their elected in 1992, the Democrats t&lt;m· developer and backer of Issue 1.' ovc~ the years that the people of Ohto
"It is now our feeling that he is ·
as anti-Christian (Strickland is a for· attack and counter their distortions ,of trolledCong~ss .
wouldn '!rule out another attempt at don t want casmo gambhng, not yes· alive," Lentes said.
·
mer adviser at a Methodist Children's my record," Cremeans said.
Slrickland saicl serving as a miJlor- legalizing casinos.
terday, . not . today, n~t ever,"
· But since it is .not illegal for an
Home) and a trespasser, silly things
Cremeans did not return tele- ity member " might be easier."
"I don't have any idea on where Votnovtch satd 'Tuesday mght.
on
31
like that.·
phone calls Wednesday.
"The ·minority can' t do much
"I think Frank really paid the price
Strickland said the AFL-CIO's .
(Continued on Ptlge 3)

Gam b1.1 ng s
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By LAWRENCE L KNUTSON
A1aoclatad Praea Writer
WASHINGTON - Preparing for
a second· tenn, President Clinton's
administration is rapidly .changing,
beginning with the departur~ of two
of its pillars: Secretary of. State Warren Christopher and Defense Secretary William Perry.
One senior administration official
said Christopher was expected to go
to the White ~ouse today to
announce he will leave the nation's
top diplomatic post by Jan. 20, lnauguration Day.
.
Clinton's object is to pump new
vigor into hi~ administration as it
begins a second and final four yen .
And u the breadth oflhe posstble
changes became clear Wednesday,
the rumor mill and the news leaks
were operating full time.
Commerce Secrewy Mickey.
~ wu ~ed u ready 10
reaisn but was said~ be available for
anot!lir top.lcve~ job, perhaps the

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CHnton's.second term to begin
with ' repl~cement of key posts .

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attorney general's post if Ja~et Reno
could .be persuaded to Step astde, no
matter how reluctantly.
Energy secrewy Hazel O' Leary.
but of favor at the White ~ouse, also
was said to he leaving . .
· Transpo~tion Secretary Federico
Pena, criticized for mishandling the
ValuJet airliner crash, and ~ousing
Secretary Henry Cisneros, the foclls .
of investif!ation·involving payments
he rn8de to a fanner mistress, also
were likely to ·J o, administration
officials said.
·
Chicago Mayor Richatd Daley 's
brother, Bill, is a possible successor
to Pena. 1
Clint.on returned in lriumph from
the campaign trail Wednesday aflcr·
. noon. telliiiJ his uaembled Cabinet,
agency h!=ads and hundreds or. other
political appointees that their effOrtS
had made the dlfferi:nce between vk:·
toryand~·
. ·
·~You have accomplished a phenomenal amount in the last four

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years," Clinton told his loyalists',
spreading out by the hundreds on the
.So~th Lawn.
._
•· Chief of Staff Leon Panetta told
the president the crowd contained not
only those who had made · victory
possible but "the designers, the engineers who will build your bridge \o
the future."
' But even Panetta is expected to
leave soon, perhaps to run for governor of California, his native state:
The remodclinsjoh had many reasons.
SHAKEUP PENOING- 81etetary of State
·on foriliir Senate Democratic leader
Some stalf members, like presiwarren
Ohrlltophlr
hu
tntD11111d
Pr-.ldent
'Giclrgll
Mlb:htH; Anttlony Lake, thl president's
dential senior adviser George
Clinton
he
wlllrealgn,
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ofllclel
national
MCurlty aaalstant; and Madeleine
Stephenopoulos, malte no secret of
.
saki
Wadneadly.
Ali
announcement
Ia
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Albright,
the U.~. amb!lsaador to the Un lted
the fact that they ete simply worn out
Nation._
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Sp!culation
on
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Christopher, ·71, lind Perry, 69,
both higllly reprded, have said much seen as a team player. White House '
On the other hand, Labor Secre· 'er over Cabinet replacements .
the same thing.
.
officials are underscoring their desire tary Robert Reich, a Rhodes seholar
The possibility exists that Clinton,
Kantor, who neaotiated hundreds to see her leave by. noting her strug· with,Clinton at Oxford University, is in a bipartisan appeal •,o the re-elect·
of trade qreements ova- four yeara gle with Parkinson's disease. But her welcome to stay but appears im:lined :ed GOP Congres~. might place
before moving on to the Cabinet, ·is doctors say her mild case of the dis- to leave, officials said. ·
Republicans in some high adrrlinissaid to be reatleA at Commerce.
ease should not bar her from an active
Republicans, their grip on the 'lr!ltiOII positions.
Perso~~ally poputlr, Reno is not t:.l/IH~..
. S~nate strengthened, have veto pow-

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