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                  <text>WINTER IS HEREI
BUY A 4 WHEEL DRIVE FROM C &amp;0
SO YOU CAN GO IN THE SNOW!
·2121

Ohio Lottery

White Sox
sign Belle
to contract
•

727·7777

Pick 3:
5-5·2
Pick 4:
3-5-5-8
BuckeyeS:
21·24-26-31-33

• Sport&amp; on Page 5 ·

Cloudy tonight, IOWI In
the mid 30s. Thursd•Y 1
cloudy With • ChlnCe Of
rain. Highs In the 40s.

•

..
•

••

•

4

•

92 EAGU TALOIUSi

. 96 SUIAIU IMPlED OUT IMI

AU. WHEEL DRIVE, TURBO, AUTO.,
AIR. SUNROOF. PJWINDOWS.I.OADED

NOW$17,939

WAS$19,1198

WAS$10,800

AU. WHEEL DAM, 5 SPEED, AIR,

NoW$8979'

•

PfNINOOWS, P/I.OCICS,
L.DADEII, DNL'f11 ,000 MILES

• •
;VoL 47, NO. 141
•. , . , 0111o v.t~ory Pvbllllhlng ComPIIIIY

2 Secllone, 16 Pogoe· 35 Ollila •
, A o.nnett Co. He war ' 1r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 20, 1996

·=---~~~~--------~~~--~~~============~

~ Battlefield

preservationists· win
,extensi0n on hearing request

.1•
WAS 121.1100 "

1

.....
96 POIIIIAC SUIRIE COIIVIITI. . ~: ·,

95 HYUIDAI ACCENT

.

.

AUTO., AIR, LOADED, ONLY 8,000 MILE$.
IF YOU EVER WANTED A CONVER11BLE NOW
IS THE TIME TO BUV, NOT IN THE HOT
SUMMER WHEN PRICES ARE HIGH.
CHECK THIS PRICEI

5SPEED,AIR

WASS21 ,500

'

' J,

·~

13y JIM FREEMAN
Sentlntil News Staff
• • People opposing a planned gravel mining operation at the site of a
, 1'-feigs County Civil War battlefield
: were granted 10 additional days to
'·~ lodge requests for a pJJblic bearing on
;t proposed barge fleeting facility
tpere:
~' Today's deadline to respond t~ a
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers public notice was extended to Nov. 30,
according to a spokeswoman for )he
Huntington (W.Va.) District of the
Corps of Enginec,;.
Richards and Sons Inc. of Racine
applied to ·the corps for a pennit to
build a barge loading and fleeting

81 CORm1l.•

OI.ASS TOPS, AIITO., AIR, V-8,

'·

PfNINOOWS, PJt,OCKS. P/SEAT.
LOADED; DNLV'Ji'4,000 MILES

.

'

931UICIIOADIHSIB LIMITED

11

$.

AUTO.• AIR, V-8, PJWINOOWS, P/SEATS,
P/l.OCKS,
ALLOY
WHEELS,
COMPLETELY LOADED
.

WAS 114,!100

WAS$11,900

AUTO..
P/SEAT,

WAI

WASI13,9QO

92 HOlDA PRELUDE

~~~~~~~~=

'951UICKIMIQ

·

NOW

MILES, MUST SEE

94 01.• 98RIGEICY .

LEATHER, AUTO., AIR, PJWINDOWS,
PILOCKS, AJ.UM. WHEELS, LOADED.
CHEAP, CHEAP

HOW$14,860

.

IDADEDr lmiA ~~~P,

m.eoo ,

s--2
999
6J I'

PrNINDOWS. P/LOCKS,
.

:

'.'

NO!'.~

AUTO., AIR, LEATHER. SUNROOF.
P/SEAT. p/WINOOWS, LOADED

WASI12,100

'

,.

'\

'

92 POIITIIC SUIIIID COIVIITIILE

AUTO. &amp; AIR, V-8 ENGINE, LOADED. II' YOU
EVER WANTED A CDNVEATIIII.E, NOW IS THE
TIME TO BUV-NOT IN THE HOT SUMMEA
WHEN PRICES ARE HIGH. CHECK THIS PRICE!

95 CHIYSLa UIAIOII COIIVEITIILE &amp;TC .
AUTO., AIR. lf.l, PfNINOOWS. P/LOCI(S,

NOW

$7200

AMiFM CASS.. LOADED, EXTRA SHARP
WAS $11,100

"NVJf

$11

NOW

AIITO., AIR, V-8.ENGINE, LOADED, LOW MILES.
BUV YOUR CONVERTIBLE NOW-NOT WHEN ·
PAICESAREHpH_INTHESUM
. MER. .
• - ~l
CHeCK THIS ~I
. •
·
:
WAS $12.000
.
,. •
"'NOW

·

97 CAVALIER ·

96 CUTLASS

vioW!
CHECKOUT
THESE
p"VMENTS

·'

...

AS LOW AS

they were not aware of the public she said referring to the extension of
notice until just before the original the notice's expi~ation date.
deadline. In addition. the original
Meanwhile she is asking other
public notice contained a wrong people and organizations with an
phone number for people with ques- inlerest in lhc battlefield to request a
tions concernin~ the notice.
public hearing.
.Letters should be addressed to ·
Margaret Parker, president of the
Meigs county Pioneer and Histori'al .· Michael D. Gheen. chief, regulatory
Society, wrote the corps asking for a branch, U.S. Anny Corps .of Engipublic hearing and that the deadline neers, Huntington ' District , 502
be exlended to allow the group time Eighth St., ATTN: ORHOR-F. Hunt·
· to prepare its objections to the ington, W.Va. 25701-2070, Reference
issuance of the pennit.
No. Public Notice No. 199600843.
"We had asked for an extension to .
"The area that Richards and Sons
get infonnation together and sent out Inc. owns for sand and gravel pura packet concerning the battlefield," poses is localed on known ponions of
she said.
the battlefield," Parker said. "It is also
"This gives us a lillie more time,"
(Continued on Page 3)

Area man sentenced
in .theft .of credit card

.Contractor
..
.
:· tor Chester.
! Courthouse
:renovation
.;Is selected
~.

PLANT LOCATION - Richards and Sons Inc. ol Racine has
appllttd to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for a permit to build
a barge loading facility near the property shown here north of
Portland. The facility will be located between Old Portland Road
and the Ohio River across from Lebanon Township Road 153
(McDade).

'

Keith A. Nibert, 34, of Gallipolis, was cllnvictcd late Tuesday afternoon
of theft of a credit card in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court by a jury
of eight women and foui men.
.
Theft of a credit card is a felon y of the fiflh degree .
. Judge Fred W. Crow Ill presided over the one-day trial, while 'assistant
Prosecuting Attorney Christopher Tenaglia represented the state. Meigs County' public ~efenders Patrick Story and Steven L. Story represented Niben.
A contractor for the Chester Cour· Niben was charged in connection with lhc theft of a purse from the Meigs
. 'thouse renovation project was
County Dcpanment of Human Services offices in Middlepon. The purse
approved Monday afternoon at the
belonged to a DHS' employee, and contained money and credit cords.
; weekly meeting of the Meigs Coun·
The jury was seated at approximately II a.m. and the case proceeded with
ty Board of'Commissioners.
._Qpening statements.and witnesses intp lhc, af\¢moon. At approximately 2 p.m.,
"·• C~"'iosiO~Hfi!"(!Ved ,the._,.,,....
the slate completed its case. The defense rested without calling any witnesses.
· bid ' of $23,200 sul!mitted ' by
'In closing arguments, the defendant argued that all the evidence wa.• cirRoger L. Bissei!'Construction Co. of '
cumstantial and that no one had actually seen Nibert wilh tho purse or any ·
Pomeroy. 1bc bid was accepted pendof its contents.
ing approval by Prosecuting Attorney
The prosecutor countered that Nibert was at the welfare department at the
John R. I...entes.
time the purse disappeared and gave a false name when confronted by DHS
Thc·conttact is for roof repairs.
personnel. Niben had a sum of money in his possess ion at the time of his
county and Oliva Township. From le(t are ComTIMBER ROYALTIES- Meigs County ComThe Chester Counhouse is the oJdarrest
by Middleport Police Officer Lanny Tyree at a bar ncar the Welfare
mission President Fred Hoffman, Dlatrlct
mlsaiOMrs were presented a check by the Ohio
est standing counhouse in Ohio and
depunmcnt building that closely matched the amount of money inJhe purse.
Man•ger Peul Whyte, Commission VIce PresiDepartment of Natunil Reaources Division of
• was built in 1823. The two-story, red
The jury deliberated for about an hour and fony-live minules before reachdent
Janet
Howard
and
Commlsaloner
Robert
Forestry for $4,640.88, representing timber lind
brick building sits on a knoll over·
ing
a verdict . Crow expressed his appreciation and thanks to jurors for their
Hartenbach.
natural gas royaltle• from Shade River State.
. looking the village, and served as
service.
Fo~est. The money will be split betwwn the
· Meigs County's scat of governmeill
Nibert was remanded to the custody 'of SbCriff James M. Soulsby after
until the county seat was moved to
I
he
verdict was announced 'in open coun by Bailiff Paul G~rard at approxiThe board paid weekly bills of .
The board .also met wilh District
In other business, the board ·
- Pomeroy in June, 1841.
mately 4:30a.m. Sentencing was sci for !0 q.m. this -morning.
Attending the meeling were mem- Forester Paul Whyte and Forest M~n- approved .the county investment pol- $304,660.08, consisting of 246 .
At the sentencing, Tenaglia recommended that Nibert receive the maxi·
entries
before
adjourning.
bers of the Chester-Shade Historical 'ager Jim Milliron, who presented a icy submitted by Treasurer Howard
mum
penalty pennitted, a prison·tenn of one year. The prosecutor advised
Present were Hoffman, Vice Pres·
- Association, who reported they had check for $4,640.88 representing Frank. Commission President Fred
Crow
that Nibert had been previously convicted of seven felony offenses.
raised almost $8,700 toward the pro· timber and natural gas royalties from · Hoffman noled the county made ident Janel Howard, Commissioner
The
victim was present and lhrough the prosecutor indicated that she felt
almost $156,000 lasl year through . Roben Harlenbach, Clerk Gloria
ject. The restoration project received the Shade River State Foresl.
Kloes and Commissioner-clecl Jef- · Niberl should receive the maximum sentence.
The money will he split between investments.
'- a $46,000 Appalachian Public FacilCrow determined that Niben had previously been convicted of al least
fre~
L. Thornton.
. ities grant.
the county and Olive.Township.·
seven felony offenses and had been previously sentenced to prison . In addi•
tion, Crow specifically said that Niben should receive the maximum sentence because a shorter tenn would demean the seriousness of the offense
and not adequalcly protect the pubUc. and finally that Niben, by his record,
.
posed a great likelihood that he would re-offend .
secured,
however.
and
wi
II
not
be
include
the
gymnasium
and
class.
will
be
the
next
step
in
makiog
the
;; · LAKIN, W.Va. -Mason County
Crow sentenced ~ibert to one year in prison, th~ maximum permitted for ·
open.
~ may soon be housing all state female rooms presenqy being used by the prison a reality. He added a public
said
there
is
a
serious
shanSkaff
the
panicular offense. .".
.
,
.
• inmates with the conversion of some Mason County B.oard of Education as hearing will he proposed for feedback
Under
Ohio's
new
sentencing
law.
which
became
effective
July I, dcfcn- .
buildings_at Lakin Hospital into. a the alternate school and adult learn- from local citizens, which so far has . age of beds for women in the state
dants no longer receive time off their sentences for good behavior, meaning
prison system.
ing center, an~ the building adjacent been positive. ·
' 200-bed women's prison. · ·
.
the scnlencc will be served in its entirety. In addition, i(a prisoner commits
"There
has
been
a
25
percent
-~
West Virginia Secretary of Public to it, used to house the county school · ·The _prison would consolidate all
new offense while in prison, the original sentence may be ,increased up to
a
·
increase
in
the
number
of
women
in
level~ of female inmateS. both mak: Safety Joseph Skaff announced the system's maintenance division.
50
percent.
·
·
the
past
four
years,"
he
said.
ln addition, the state would con· imum and minimum security. Skaff
:. prqposal to an interim legislative
Skaff said there arc not enough
Nibert indicated. through his attorney, that he wished to appeal the judg· committee Monday. It is pan of $95 struct a building to tic in with lhe two said there has never been a problem
beds
for
these
women
in
the
prison
existing
ones.
with
any
of
the
women
prisoners
in
menl
and sentence of the coun, and Patrick Story was appointed as appcl:·million wonh of prison conslruction
Skaff
said
an
architect
is
deterthe
eight
years
he
has
been
a!Sociatsysleni,
and
!hey
are
backed
up
into
lale counsel upon a finding of indigei)Cy.
: projects being moved ahead by the
the
county
and
regional
jails.
The
mining
the
cost
of
rcnovatiQil
and
ed
with
the
public
safety
division.
He
Nibert was remanded to the custody of the sheriff to be transpono;d to
· state.
construction.
a~d
a
meeting
today
assured
that
the
facility
will
be
(Continued
on
Page3)
: • Skaff sai~ the Lakin project would

·Lakin
Hospital
proposed
as
female
prisoner
site
.

NEW ,CHEVROLET$ AND OLDSM BILES
DUAL .AIR BAGS, ANTI-LOCK ~S. SEDAN, FRONT
WHEEL DRIVE, 4 CYL. FACTORY AIR CDND., INTERIOR I
EXTERIOR, STANDARD TRANS., P/STEERING. P/8RAKES.
TINTED GlASS, .AM/FM, ·'WHEEL COVERS.. SPORT
MIAAOAS, CONSOLE, ~,SEATS

facility along the Ohio River above
the community of Ponland.
Earlier this year, the company
announced plans lo mine gravel from
the prope.ny it owns near Ponland.
The land is associated with the
July 19,1863, Balile of Buffington
Island, during which raiding Con·
federate 'Gen. John 'Hunt Morgan and
about 2,000 cavalrymen met a Onion
force of about 8,000 soldiers.
The resulting clash is considered
Ohio's only Civil War battle. Two
future presidents ofthe United States
were known to be involved in the battle, Rutherford B. Hayes and William
McKinley.
Some battlefield proponents said

~Qod's

AS LOW AS

N.E.T. establishes board

}to oversee youth center efforts

~"
•,
.
.: lily CHARLENE HOEFLICH
one-year lcnns.
1997. Expenses for 1996todate tolal ·
· The Rev. Keith Rader, who i&gt; the $2,399.22, while in 1997 the pro·
:sentinel New. Staff
,.. : A board of directors to oversee the · ccnlcr director. was named an ex-offi· · jected expenses are $6,000. The fig:dperation of God's N.E.T. (Neigh- cio member of lhe board, and two ures do not include rent and utilities,
oorhood E$cape for Teens). was elect- · youth members will be named later. which arc handled thr&lt;;&gt;ygh the Meigs
ed at a meeting held Monday night at
Selected as officers of the board County Cooperative Parish.
werC"Heinz, president; Ayres-Thoren,
Rader also reponed lhat the cloth,lhe West Main Streel Center.
While !he youth center has been vice president; Rose, secretary; and ing facility that now occupies the
open for nearly two years as an ecu; Downie,. treasurer.
front part of the building where the
_menical project, it has not' been operPurpose of the organization is to center is located will be moving nexl
aled underthe jurisdiction of a board · oversee the {lrogra!llming for God's door, and that the youth center will
'of direclors: •
·
N.E.T., and to provide opponunities have use qfthe entire building. It was
, Since expansion of the program is for youth while' enabling them to repon¢d 1~at the parish will continue
;ainticipated ·and more funding and .make a positive difference in them- to pay the rent and utilities.
'l'oluntters are '· expected to be selves and the coml!lunity.
Expenses, according to Rader, arc
involved, it was generally agreed by
A need for getting additional vol· · for celebrations, video games, pool
lhe organizations involved !hal a
unteers into lhe program, as .well table maintenance, popcorn, sup!llore formal administration was
increasing funding, was di51'ussed plies, snacks, postage, office supplies,
needed.
•
and it was decided that each board equipment, cleaning materials and
· Elected to the board of directors
member shQ~Id solicit a volunteer.
lransponation to concerts.
· 'for four-yetrtenns were Bob Buck,
Volunteers, as explained by Rad-.
The $1.500 grant from the .Rural
George Wright and Liz Ayreser, com.e in on·a "l09k-see" basis for Chaplains Ass&lt;l!;iation for a non-vio'IJ!oren; the Rev. Father Walter
a firSt time. and then move io a lent workshop was discussed. The
~einz,-Jim Soulsby and N~a Tor"supervised volunteer" before sctu· .cenlerd,irectorsaid lhatthe "objective
rea, lhree-year tenns; Max me Rose, ally filling out the applicillion fonn to in having the workshop will be to
bed,. Rader 'and Randy Hays, two· come on board as a regul~~r volunteer. . enhance education about violence in
'year tmnl; lltd Moriy Wood, the Rev.
AJ for funding, it wss noted that the home and on the streetS arid pre·
' \Vjlliam Hobac)c and Bill Downie,
costs are ~ted to nearly double in
· (Cpntlnued on P•ve ~)
I!

.'

•.
iS LOW AS
IODWERS

$1714'
.

AU. PRICES INCLUDE

.

. . . -Of

Prlcq do notlnclucle doc.

MO
ST.lLIAIS
727·2921

'

Nee.- r.t..

LEIUS - ,.,
....
.,.,
Aflll CIUICII

••

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,,

OFFICERS ELECTeD - FoHowlngllectlon
of a bollrd of dlrlclors forQod's N.E.T. (Neigh- ·
borhoocl E-pe tor TIM!s), offlclr1 for the
group, which 11 l'ltlponslble for opet 1Uon of the
youth c.ntw, ware n11Md. They 11'1, Silted
,.~

.....!l
•.

from left, Liz Ayl'ltl-Thoren, vice pt'ISident; the
AIY. Felhlr W.ltlr Heinz, prelldlut; Moine
R-, SICI'Itlry; lnd Bill Downie, li'IISUI'II'.
St8ndlng le the Rev. Keith Aacllr, the i:entar
director.
-~-

___ ..,. __ __
•

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�'
Wednll~y, November 20, 1996

-~

•

Commentary

•

. Pege2

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO We&lt;~ther

•
•

Wedne•dlly, November 20, 1191

•

Thundly, Nov. 11
AecuWe~lhe.. forecast for daytime condrtions and htgh

R~formers

By JACK ANDERSON
boa, former secretary of communi;
and JAN MOLLER
catton and transportatron.
111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
MEXICO CITY - Every MexiCurrent PreSide1!t Emesto l,edillo
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992·2157
can knows that their government is has heeo pressured by at least one
nddled wtth corruptton Oddly
enough, however. no htgh-ranking
Jack Anderson
cabtnet official - many of whom
become qutte rt,t:h whtle tn office and
, A Gannett Co. Newspaper
has heen offictally charged wtth corrupuon or any other cnme m decades.
Janllloller
ROBERT L WIN-GETT
Most ofthese corrupt offictals are
Publleher'
too embarrassed to stay tn Mextco
after their tenns have exptred Often federal legislator to investtgate GamCHARLENE HOEFLICH
they 'll flee the country m a self- boa for the source of hi s unexplatned
MARGARET LEHEW
General Manager
tmposed e&lt;tle. For thts reason, cur- wealth. Pubhc accusations agamst the
Controller
rent oftice holders'rarely mvesttgate fonner offictal have repeatedly been
the shady affatrs of thetr predeces- atred tn refonn-minded newspapers
sors.
and magazmes
.'"
Le,.,.. to the edltot .,. -lc~. They •ltould N '-• 11r1n .tOO won~.. A",.,., ··
But
some
here
believe
it's
ttme
to
Knowledgeable
mtelligence
and
,
.,. 8Ub/«l to edltmf •nd mutt N tltntd IIXIInc~ MldtNt and~ nu,...
start
holdmg
crooked
fonner
oftictals
diplomattc sources provided addi!&gt;or. No ,unolftl«j ,.,_ will bo pub/-. L.ottono •hould bo fn good ""''"·
.,.._.,, ......., not ,_..Dn.lltln.
•
I
responstble for thetr unscrupulous tional information to our assOCiate
.
behaviOr m office. Calls are growmg Dale Van Ana Although Gamboa
louder for an mvestlgatton mto sus- would not respond to our requests for
pected lmks to drug cartels by cabr- an intervtew, he has previOusly
net oftictals who served under former dented any suggesttons of tmproprlPreSident Carlos Saltnas. The allega- ety. '
uons agamst Saltnas - who IS htmGamboa's chtef accuser tS Eduarselt m voluntary extle- and hiS cab- do Valle, who was Mexico's chtef
met have centered on Emtho Gam- counter-narcottcs offictal m 199;!-94.
By JOHN CUNNIFF·
r-~!""'------------~....;
NEW YORK- When consumers hegan flexing their market muscles m
the 1960s, the economist at a large bank was sufficrently nonplus~ed to remark
that consumers were totally predictable
· Totally predictable? "Yes, totally," he swd.
Rarse interest rates, pnces or taxes and people wrll buy less. improve
rncomesand they'll buy more, stabrhze the economy and buyers will be more
wrlling to take financial risks, he sard most authontatrvely.
All of which are now m place.
So, you're entitled to ask, why are so many consumer-dependent retarlers wishing and hopmg and praymg for lots of customers dunng the holiday
season, and why are theu adv1sers m such a quandary?
In short, where rs the certarnty you mrght expect from them? Short answer
It JUSI isn't there
_
There mrght he some truth to such chums m the aggregate and over long
penods of trme, but the abrllty to read the mass consumer mmd dur1ng short
penods remams one of the trickrest areas of economtc analySts.
In short, consufllers have minds of thetr own. Whtle they mtght succumb
to the economtc generahties over the period of a year, duhng shorter penods they can he as qutrkily unpredtctable as humans are mother areas of life.
What will conswmers do durmg the holiday shopptng season? Everyone's
asking but nobody really knows, and that response can he documented by
the wtde range of totally contradtctory e.pectations.
,
Moreover, the Signals are mtXed. Leadtng and cotnctdent tndtcators of consumer spendmg all pomt upward. But thtrd-quarterconsumptton barely rose,
and nobody can say with certamty that the trenQ ISn't conttnUtng.
It leaves the Federal Reserve m the posttion of having to monitor closely for any surge &lt;n buymg that mtghtjndtcate economtc overheating and the
need for higher mterest rates. None of thetr data can tell them m advance
Mutual fund compames are concerned about a continued flow of investments that so far thts year has made them rich, and brokers are, worned that
tf the flow dnes up, as tt could, stocks could fall sharply
Retailers, of course, are among the most uncertain these days, a good deal
ofthetr concern artsing from the knowledge that a poor sellmg season could
put them tn the financtal pus for the followmg year
Puzzlement over what the consumer wrll do now hangs heavtly over the
cnttre marketplace, and the answer demands skills that just aren't avatlable
Sam Nunn, D-Ga .. as Secretary of
By MORTON KOND~ACKE
to those who seek to foretell the future Plenty of questiOnS, too few answers.
The Senate undoubtedly wtll con- Defense, although sources say that all
.
Consider this conundrum·
firm former Majonty Leader George names rema1n "1n flux."
Consumers are ncher than ever he fore , and they demonstrated thetr wtll~puty National Securny AdvrsMttchell, D-Mame,! as Secretary of
mgness to spend dur1ng the first half of the year. The IT confidence level, usu- State tf Prcstdent C mton nom mates
ally equated wtth spendmg, IS also rather htgh.
htm, but first he should get a gomgThen wby, wtth thiS and other poStttve factors conunumg toto the thtrd ovcr about htS forctgn pohcy record. Morton Kondraclce
quarter, dtd they pull away from the market, leaving consumption up by only
Over hts 14-year Senate career,
0 4 percent, the weakest quan~rly performance stnce December 1991?
Mttchell backed the nuclear-freeze cr Sandy Berger, who very nearly
There are clues. Consumers make JUdgments on the baSts of thetr own movement of the 1980s, voted became Whttc House chief of staiT, ts
economic tndicator, the pocketbook, and that accessory doesn 't have much agamst the Gull War in 1991 - a expected to become cha1rman of the
hard cash m tt Credit cards, yes. And other lines of crcdtt too
Economic
Co'unctl,
posttron he strll defends - and Nattonal
But the truth IS that consumers, though wealthrcr than before, are very opposed Clinton's own decision to although he sttll could end up as head
ilhquid. Much of thctr wealth IS m houses, ,and retJTement accounts. msur- extend mosl-favorcd-nalJon trade sta- of the Nattonal Sccuruy Counctl.
ance funds , and equuy or debt holdmgs that are earmarked for the future.
tus to Chma Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Tal·
Many households already owe money on these holdmgs. They owe on
He al:-;o never served on the For- bon also wants the NSC JOb ,
credit cards too. Many of them drtve a leased car that requtres stgnrficant ctgn Rclallons, Armed Scf\IICCs or
Rctrrmg Sen. Btll Cohen. Rmonthly payments A large segment of the household sector also has tutu on lntclhgence Committees He has Mamc is sttll m the runnmg for Sec·
payments
wnttcn next to nothmg on mtcrna- rctary of Defense. sources say, but
So. what wtll the consumer do thts holiday season' Who knows' Ccrtamly tronal al fatrs and has held only one Chnton "satd to be hcsrtant (for reanot the experts They won't find out until next year somettmc.
foretgn policy post, that of Presrdcnt sons nn one can cxplam) to appomt
· (John Cunniff Ia a buslnese analyst for The Associated Press.) Clmton\ special envoy for peace 111 too many pohtrctans from Matnc to
Northern Ireland
top jobs
Strll, Mitchell seems almost corOther candtdatcs for Defense
tam to be nominated Recently, he 10cludc Lockheed Mart10 CEO Nonn
VIsited w1th vanous Amcn ciln Jcwtsh Augustmc and CIA drrector John
groups
to get thctr assent desptlc hrs Deutsch.
By The Associated Press
Lebancsc-Amencan background He
Today IS Wednesday, Nov. 20. the 325th day of 1996 There are 41 days
Mrtchcll seems to have emerged
TCCCIVCd II
as Chnton's top chotec for State as a
left tn the year
Presrdcnt Chnton hopes to name a re sult of ht s work playtng Bob Dole
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 20, 1789, New Jersey hecamc the first state torattfy the Btl! of new Secretary of State - and pom- as the prcstdcnt prepared for the two
bly other top lorcrgn and economtc prestdcntral debates Chnton told
Rights.
poltcy officrals - before he leaves assocralt!s that Mrtchcll "eerily"
On this date·
for a tnp to the AsJan -PacJiic summll
forecast how Dole would handle
In 1620, ~eregnne White was born aboard the "Maynower" tn MassaSurpnscs may tndudc Unttcd vanou!'i questiOn'-'
chusetts Bay- the first chtld born of English parents in present-day New
Natt ons Ambassador Madcletnc
One a1dc who was present for
England.
as
Whttc
House
national
Albrtght
mod debates sard that Mitchell
In 1910, revolutton broke out in Mexico, led by Franctsco I Madero
sccurtty advrscr 'and outgmng Sen
" whrppcd" Clinton 10 thctr frtst
In 1925. Robert F. Kennedy was born tn Brookline, Mass
.,
In 1929, the radio program "The RISe of the Goldbergs" debuted on the
NBC Blue Network
In 1945, 24 Nazi leaders went on tnal before an mternational war crimes
tribunal in Nuremberg; Gennany.
In 1947, Brttam's future queen, Princess Ehzabeth, marned Phthp Mountmstructors who hav e the power to
batten, Duke of Edinburgh.
.
•' '
· By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
In 1967, the Census Clock at the Commerce Department ucked past ?.00
Gannett News Service
end thctr mrlrtary careers Some ol
WASHINGTON - To ItS credit. the women say they were threatened
million.
In 1969, the Nixon admmistration announced a halt to restdenttal use of
the Anny has moved qutckly to get wtth physrcal hann and death rf they
the pesttcide DDT as part of a total phaseout
.lO the bottom of us gro~ng sex sean- reported the sexual assaults m.adc on
In 1915, after nearly four decades ~f absolute rule , Spatn's Gen Frandal. To tiS shame. the end of thts con- (hem by htghcr rankuig soldtcrs.
cisco Franco dted, two weeks hefore htS 83rd brrthday
trov~rsy ts no where rn Sight.
When women first tntegrated rnto
Ten years ago: The dm;ctor of the World Health Organization, Dr. Half·
Already, 20 tnstruclors at t~c ord- the Armed Scrvrccs the lear was that
dan Maher, announced the first eoor\lmated global effort to combat the deaqnancc school at Aberdeen Provmg they would face death on the battleGround, Md , have hecn su&lt;pendcd field and sexual abuse at the hands of
ly disease AIDS.
·
Five years ago: Cahforma Democrat Alan Cranston acc~pted • a Senate
from duty Two of them arc charged opposing annies Nobody imagrncd
reprimand for his deahngs wtth fonner savmgs-and-loan cht~f Charles H.
wtth raping young females under their first encounter wrth both would
Keeling Jr.. but then denied he was gutlty of many of the allegattons, prompt- thctr command. Others face lesser come at a U.S Army trarnmg facrli tOg an angry reb.l'ttal by New Harnpshtre Republtcan Warren B Rudman .
ty.
counts of sexual miSconduct
0~ year ago: Federal employees idled dur~ng a government shutdown
If true, the charges agatnst these ·
How could this happen? How
returned to their jObS. Olympic ngure skating champt~n Serget Grinkov dted
men ratse scnous qucsttons about the could Anny mstructors thtnk they
of a heart attaek in Lake Plactd, N.Y. BBC TelevtSton broadcast an tnterArmy 's abrhty · to safely tntegrate could get away with rape, sodomy
view wtth Princess Diana, who admitted betng unfatthful to Prtnce Charles. women mto the ranks of tts combat and sexual harassment five years
Radio stauons began airing a new Beatles recording, "Free As a Bird," which support groups ·- and signals a after the Navy 's Tail hook scandal?
had debuted on ABC-lV the mght before.
wtdcspread breakdown tn discipline
Nothmg as wtdespread as the
Today's Birthdays. Author and TV-personality Alistair Cooke IS 88. Sen. among noncommissioned and com- Anny·s growtng sex scandal can
Robert Byrd; D-W.Va., is 79. Economtst Beryl ~prtnkelts 73 ,Actress-come- mtsstoiled officers
exist without a level of indifference
That's very troubhng.
on the part of sentor commanders.
dian Kaye Ballard is 70. Ac~s Estelle ~ns ts @.TV personaltty Richard
Dawson is 64. Comedtan Dtck Smothers ts 57. Stnger Kim Weston 1s 57.
In Bosnia, the Serbtan army used Where were the checks aaatnst such
Singer Norman Greenbaum is S4. Sen.Joseph Biden, D-~1., is 5~. Actress rape as a weapon of war. The U S. abuses of female u;ainees? Whose job
Veronica Hamel1s 53. Broadcast joumal1st Judy Woodruff IS 50. Smger Joe Army has made tt a peril of military was it tQ make sure nothing likG this
Walsh is 49. Actor Richard Masur is 48. Actre.u 18o Derek is 40. Reggae, tratntng. Young female soldiers• at happened? Who was n:sponstblc for
Aberdeen report heing "hit on',' by ( nsurinJ: th~t young female soldiers
musician Jim Btown (UB40) is 39. Actress Sean Young is 37.

.!lr .,

Consumers possess
minds of their own

By-

.....

Valle, who is currently hv10g in the Mextcan press as an irresisublc stren, :
Untted States, keeps his whereabouts the " Mala Hari of Mexico." Leaked :
secret out of concern for ht' safety transcripts of wtretaps to Reforma, a ;
' But he agreed to stt down wtth us to Mexico City newspaper, reveal that ;
rev 1ew his findings.
the second most powerful man in the '
Poring o•er police and tntellt- Sahnas administration, Chtef of Staff :
gence reports dunng his first days in , Jose Cordoba Montoya, had a fatrly :
office, Valle soon figured out that the interesting relattOnshtp wtth BOden- ;
only way the maJor drug cartels stedt.
.
•
could enJOY their unfettered access to
In the transcnpts, Cordoba M9n- 1
Mextco'sanportsandotherdrugtraf- toya coos to Bodenstedt on .the :
ficktng routes was by gainmg influ- phone. refemng to her as "_my little :
dear," while she calls htm "my ,
enee m the transportation mtntstry
At first, Valle had no dtrect proof. pirate " Pressed about thts compro- :
Then he started exam10mg the wtre- mtSing relationship at a news con- :
taps that federal law enforcement ference, Zedillo refused to speculate •
officials had made of a prominent on drug trafficking implications, call- :
drug cartel headed by Juan Garcia tng tt "a transgression ... that requires :
Abrego That's when he made the hts (Cordoba Montoya's) wife's for-;
connection.
give ness. ··
The connection was Marcela
Valle, however, beheves the tnciBodenstedt, who called Gamboa and dent was more than an extramarital
one of his top aides regularly A for- ' "transgresSion," and is in fact linked
mer televiSion announcer and drug to the drug cartels. As evtdence, he
detective, Bodenstedt was also an cttes calls made by Garcta Abrego's
alleged fixer and money launderer for people to Cordoba Montoya's phone to;
Garcia Abrego, accordmg to Valle m the prestdential palace.
•
and several Mextcan media r.epons.
Cordoba Montoya has dented any -~
She has been portrayed by the connectton to drug cartels. Whtle ' •
servmg as Sahnas' chief of staff. •
though. he was not conSidered a mod- -~
cl of 10tegrity. For instance, he
I
clatmed he had recetved a doctorate ' !
10 economtcs from Stanford Untver- · ,
Stty and htS staff referred to htm as •:
"doctor" - until a prominent Mex- . ~
tcan magazme revealed that the clatm .
was false.
i ,
Gamboa, who has an otherwtse • ,
blameless record, has cmphattcally ;
dented any drug cartel hnks, though · .
he admttted mecllng Bodenstcdt at
least OJtC&lt;&gt; to dtscuss a pamttng she ·
wanted to sell.
' ,,
Mcxtco, current cabinet officials : ,
repeatedly stress, ts not an easy place •;;
to detennmc the truth Htgh-lcvcl ;
corruptron ts a fact of public life. yet· ~
tt ts very dtfficult to prove
,
Certamly there 1II'C many honest
people who work m the government.
here. Yet there arc enough oftictals ~
who look the other way when they •
sec corrupuon- or who acttvcly col- ••
Jude with the cnminals- that JUSttce • ~
may never be served
(Jack Andereon and Jen
Moller are columnists for Unit·
lid Feature Svndlcate.)

.....
••

In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the Wayne Amsbary
Memonal Scholarshtp Fund, in care of the Ftrst Baptist Church of Gallipolis.

f

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didn 't hccome the sexual ohjccts of
their lraincrs ?
Whoever they arc, they far led to
do thctr JOb - and should be held
accountable
A hot lioc that opened two weeks
ago has logged more than 2.000 allegattons of sexual mtsconduct at
Aberdeen and other Anny bases. One
soldrcr has already been court marualed and several others arc awaiting
trtal. The challenge now ts for the
Anny to root oul those who preyed
upon female tratnees and to put in
place the necessary safeguards to
n\ake sure nothing of thts k10d happens again.
Armies survtve on dtsciplinc
Without it, they are httlc more than
marauding hordes of well-armed people. Disctphne ts what causes troops
under fire to rush tnto the face of battle when ordered to charge.lt is what
·keeps soldters from retreatins when
told to hold their srcund
And discipline Wlthtn the ranks is
what was supposed to have kept
female sold1ers at Aberdoen safe

·Typical November weather
forecast in area Thursday
I'IY The A11oclatecl Preh
A mtxture of snow and rain was
forecast for Ohio tonight But no significant atcumulation was expected,
except in the northeast Ohio snowbelt, where I to 3 inches was likely.
Typtcal November weather was
forecast for Thursday, wtth gray
skieS and chilly temperatures. The
National Weather Sef'ftce satd highs
would be tn the ,30s. Lows tontght
were to be in the 20s.
The record-high temperature for
thiS date at the Columbus weather
station was 74 degrees in 1942 while
the record low was II in 1914. Sunset tomght will he at 5:12 p.m. and
sunnse Thprsday at 7:24am.
Weatber forecast:
Tontght.. Mostly cloudy A chance

•

•

I.

STEUBENVILLE (AP).- A man
who held a grocery store cashter at
gunpomt for three hours hefore bemg
shot by a pollee sharpshooter has
been ch'!'Jied, with kidnappmg and
felonro&lt;W Wssa'ult. ~ • ' '
'
Steve 'Burch, 30, of Steubenvtlle,
remamed hospttaltzed Tuesday at
Prcsbytcnan Untverstty Hospital tn
Pittsburgh. Hts family has requestedthat no mformatton be released about
htm.
Pollee Chief Jerry McCartney swd
Tuesday that Burch was m fatr con·
dttion and was rccetvtng psychtatnc
treatment He was shot through the
neck about 4 p m. Monday.
Burch told police dunng the standoff that he wanted them to kill htm,
McCartney said

Syracuse mayor's
Court cases ended
The following cases were settled
Monday night in the Syracuse Mayor 's Court of Mayor George Connolly.
Ftned were Chnstopher Gtlbr~de,
Ractne, speed, S17 plus costs, and
Denzil Hudson, Pomeroy, speed, $15
plus costs, ficticious tags, $250 plus
'
costs.
Forfeitmg bonds were. Traci Casto, Racme, speed, $52; John
~opeland, Petersburg, Va.. speed,
$56; Mtchael Rtxner, Reynoldsburg,
speed, $53; Melbourne Pendley,
Ravenswood, W.Va., speed, $50,
Ernest Midktff, Athens, speed, $53:
Donald Runyon, Athens, speed, $53:
Ira McCoy, Reedsvtlle, speed, $57.

The Daily Sentinel
!USPS 1t3-9fl)

I

'••'
•••

' • I
11
I I

''

from the groping hands knd sexual : • l•
a!lvanccs of the men who commandl
ed lhem. That tt didn't ts more than A :
a shame. al's an indtcation of a far- ,. ·• :
rea&lt;:hmg breakdown in mthtary order.
I
Soldiers who cannot be trusted to
~
follow orders at home, can't be .. -, •
expected to carry them out m the heat ' .- •
of battle. Can those who rape thetr " l
own troops be expected to respect the , · ~
nghts of th~ women they may be sent ·
to protect in Bosnia or Zaire?
;
I don 't thtnk so.
"
The Anny should purge tis ranks ·~
.of those who are found gutlty of sex- , ;..
ually abusmgofcmale trainees But it •
also needs to review the cham of ..
comtynd at Aberdeen and other •~' l
bases to ensure t~at female officers : ·; ;
;play a meaningful role in the training "' :
of female recruits - and as a safe:
guard agaiMt their sexualusault. , .. ~
The Army's rcsponse to its sex • • •
~ is encOUJ'IIina. It his aares- ·~;
sively pursued the culprits and ' -,
pled&amp;ed to clean up the environment : ~
in which female 101dlers WOf'll and , ·~

'

•

Publl•hed every aflernoon, Monday thro.~gh
Friday, II t Coun Sr . "-"'l'· Ohio, by, !be
Oluo Ville)' PubtilhlhJ eo-ny/Oonnen Co,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, l'b. 992-2156 Second
elM• po11qe paid • Pomeroy. Oh1o

"'-ben The Auocaated PleA-. 11nd the Oh10
New p '

Auocitation

JI(J8TMASTBR: Send acklm• c:ontctloii• to

be Dally Senri~~el, 111 Court St .. Pomeroy,

Ollio45169

S!IISCRimON RA'fiS
lyCorritrOt--

ane-..... . .... .....
One Monoh.
OoeY........... -

.

. . .. noo

....-... . $8.10

St04.00

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dolly ...............

...................... 35C&lt; ...

S bJ lbers not dclirin1 to pill)' the '*1'ier may
ttnbla tdvanee dllree110 The Dlllly Sentinel
C. a dille, .. x or 12 month ball Credit will bm
pwoconlaCI!dowoek.

----IIIVIi-.
--"" ....... llijuol-No

=+•

tae •

lpllon

II!' molt pennloed In ....,

1 lpda• ,.tod. S.bleripdon ,..
- - . . , Ire lrtp!S
t "'_,.,. ""
. . . . . o(tM ' lpiiDI,

Chase suspect stopped in Meigs

Charges are bemg considered against a white female in her mid-60s who
allegedly led pohce officers on htgh-speed chase through three southeastern
Ohto counttes Sunday afternoon.
Belpre Pohce Department patrolman Joe Ftelds, Pomeroy, attempted to
of snow north and a chance of ram or
snow central and south. Lows from stop the woman, who officials are not tdenttfymg, for reckless operatton when
ihe mtd 20s northwest to .around 35 she fled , Ftelds said
She reportedly led officers up to speeds of 100 mtles-per-hour on State
south
Route
7, he satd. Officers broke off pursuit in Tuppers Plains
Thursday . Mostly cloudy. A
She was later observed in Middleport and stopped on SR 681 near Tupchance of snow north and a chance of
pers
Plams around 5:10pm. by Meigs County Shenffs Department Deputy
rain central and south. Htghs from the
Scott
Trussell, Shenff James M. Soulsby srud.
mtd 30s northeast to near 45 south.
She
was transported to Woodland Centers tn Pomeroy for an evaluatiOn
Extended forecast:
,
before
bemg
transported back to Washmgton County, Soulsby said
Fnday A chance of snow showers northeast Dry elsewhere Lows Area man's trial postponed
25 to 30 Htghs from the mrd 30s
The tnal of a West Columbra. W.Va, man charged m a Pomeroy assault
northeast to the lower 40s so uth
last summer has been rescheduled unul early 1997, according to Paul GerSaturday... Dry Lows 25 to 30 ard, Metgs County Common Pleas Court admtmstrator.
Htghs from the mtd 30s north to the
John c Albnght, 20. was arrested and charged wtth one count of felo1 19wer 40s south.
mous assault, a felony of the second degree, following an assault that sen\ Sunday .. A chance ,of ram or snow · ously m1ured Terry Ferguson, 38, West Columbta, on July 18 The altere anorth and ram south. Lows'" the 20s. tton took place along the Pomeroy nverfront, m the vicinity ofthc Pomeroy
Htghs from the mtd 30s north to the Munr crpal Parkmg lot.
lower 40s south
Albright was ]arled followmg the mctdcnt, but was released on $10,000
bond Hts tnal was or1gtnally scheduled for Nov 19, but a motion for contmuance filed by Albrtght's attorney, Steve Story of Pomeroy, postponed the
tnal
Albnght Will appear be lore Ju'dge Fred w. Crow m IR Meigs County Common Pleas Court for a final pretrial heanng Ian 13 His JUry trial is scheduled for Feb 5

Grocery store standoff
suspect faces 2 charges

During the Reagan admtntstratron, · ·:
Mitchell voted 1n favorofvanous res- '•
olutions to fryczc nuclear anns, even
though hiStory ha.• shown that the
U.S anns buildup helped force the
Soviet Umon into reform and collapse
l{c voted m favor ol vartous atd
·cutoffs to anti-commumsts in El Sal- ·
vador and the Ntcaraguan contras,
even though both countrtcs arc now .
Oedghng democractes
·
Even m meetings wrth leaders of _the Amcrtcan Israel Pubhc Aflatrs ~-:!
Committee, the Conference of Pres- .';
tdents of MaJor Jcwtsh Organtzatrons "
m Amcrtca, and the Anti-Defamation
League, Mttchcll defended hts oppo- ; ·,,
sttion to the 1991 GulfWar,saymghc ; •
sui! believes that economiC sancttons :!
should have been given a longer lime
· :'
t work before combat started.
Jewish leaders also vmccd con- t;
.cern that Mitchell's close personal · "; ,
frtcndship with fonner Israeli Prime ',:
Mmtslcr ShtmQn Peres would complicate hts relationship with the pre- :,,
sent Ltkud government
. _j
Asked what he thmks about Mid- ' ::·
die East pea&lt;:c policy, Mitchell said ·';~
he had hecn too busy with Ireland to "
pay close attentiOn. A judictous • ·~
answer, but not one that should sat- ' , !
isfy the Senate
,I
(Morton Kondracke Ia exec- · ..:.
utlve editor of Roll Call, the, : :
newspaper of Capitol Hill.)
' :

onain.

-Local News in Brief:-

f

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Army· must expel harassment from ranks

• IColumbus 142' II

VIces .

'"
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wtll be confirmed, but Republicans
who now control the chamber will
want to put him through htS paces,
both because they have hard questtons to ask about the administratron's
forctgn polrcy and because they want
·to pay Muchell back for what they
sec as extreme partisanship when he
was Senate Ma)Ortty Leader.
Repubh cans also satd 10 mtervrcws that they had little knowledge
of Mrtchcll's foreign pohcy views
because he had not made the subject
hrs spectalty
A Chnton advi ser sard, though,
that "thts ts ludtcrous. As a senator
and ._, leader, ~e was involved tn
every maJor loretgn policy debate of
the last 15 years, tncludlng Bosnta
and Chma pohcy and now Ireland.
Also, he's temperamentally perfect
for the JOb. He's smart, judictous,
cohcJ:cnt, a good ncgouator, and no
cclehrrty-,'Cekcr"
Mttchell's foretgn policy background also rs dovrsh and forceaverse, in keeping with the attttudes
of congressional DcmocralS from
ViQ!nam though the Gulf War

. . . ..

KY.

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"cl~~;·~ ~~~%,~h 1~1~~st1 h~e~t':.~:;

PA

WVA

___________""1'___

encounter at Chautauqua, N.Y., 10
preparation for the Oct. 16-dcbatc in
Hartford.
'
''Alter all these sessrons, Mttchcll
was very helpful m telhng Chnton,
'Why don 't you handle the qucstton
this way?' They clearly bonded."

e

Gladys Eleanor Amsbary, 82, Galllpohs, dted Monday, Nov 18, 1996 in
Holzer Medtcal ~enter.
Born Jan . 17, 1914 10 Rutland, daughter,of the late Alexander and Ella
Kistner Steele. she was a manager for the Allen Grueser Grocery Store in
Rutland in the 1830s.
She was a 50-year member of the First Baptist Church of Galltpolis, and
in charge of the church's kitchen for many years. She was a member of the
Betty Starn Sunday School Class aod the French City Campers Assoctation.
She worked on the Gallia County Board of Elections for more than 30 years.
She was also preceded tn death by her husband, Arthur Wayne Amsbary,
on March 18, 1984; and by two brothers. Arthur Steele and Lawrence Steele.
Survtvtng are three sons, Kenneth Wayne (Joan) Amsbary and Dr. Gordon Kermtt (Brenda) Amsbary, both of Gallipohs, and Dr Harry Lowell
(Myla) Amsbary of Parkersburg, WYa., five grandchtldren and a great-grandson: and a sister, Kathryn Pollock of Gloucester, Va.
Servtces will be 2 p.m. Friday in the FtrSI Bapttst Church of Galhpolis,
with the Rev Archte Conn and the Rev. Alvts Pollard officiatrng Bunal wtll
be 10 Mound Htll Cemeiery. Friends may call at the Wtllis Funeral Home
from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Thursday.
The body will be taken to the church on Fnday one hour pnor to the ser-

IND.

Mitchell's record bears scrutiny by Congress ....

Today in history

Gladys E. Arnsbary

may never see justice served

'Est4Dfis/id in 1948

..
•

MICH. '

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

A sharpshooter ftred from 25
yards when he lowered the gun he
had been holdmg to the head of
Pamela Hinkle, 29, of Toronto
"It was a shame tl had to happen
that way but he was becommg errattc," McCartney satd. "We tned our
damndest but he was gelling worse."
Durmg the standoff, Burch complat ned about the way he was treat·
cd at the Jefferson Behavtoral Health
System, a mental health agency. He
demanded to speak to a caseworker,
who was brought to the store. She
was not the person Burch had expected, so a second caseworker was
summoned, Jefferson County Shenff
Fred Abdalla satd
Agency Dtrector Anthony Sheposh drd not return messages from The
· Assoctatcd Press seckmg comment
Tuesday. However, he told The lntclllgcnccr of Whecltng, W Ya. , that the
agency had trtcd many umes to work
wtth Burch
Sheposh told the newspaper Burch
had an intttal mcctmg wtth the
agency on Sept. 10 and follow-up
was recommended But Burch satd he
was not mtercsted.

•
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•

UNION MEMBERS PICKET- Members of Dlatrict 1199 of the
Service EmployHs International Union conducted an lnfonnatlonal picket at the entrance to Rockapring• RehabilitatiOn Cen·
ter, Pomeroy, Tuesday afternoon. llle members, employees at the
health care facility, protested what they term unfJIIr labor prac·
tlces on behaH of the canter'e parent company, Unlcare Heslth
Facilities Inc. of Milwaukee, Wis. (Tom Hunter/Sentinel photo)

Today's livestock report
Butcher hog s· 45 25-54.25.
COLUMBUS (AP) - lndtanaCattle:
uneven, I 00 lower to I 00
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
htgher.
buymg potnts Wednesday as provtdSlaughter steers: chotec 62 00ed by the U.S Department of Agri78.75;
select 58 00-69.00.
culture Market News
Slaughter
heifers chot ec 65.00Barrows and gtlts: steady to firm,
instances 50 cents htgher, demand 77.75, select 62 50-69 00
Cows. uneven, I 00 lower to 1.00
moderate on moderate offfnngs
htghcr;
all cows 43 00 anldown.
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. country
Bulls
steady to 1.00 higher; all
pmnts 52.00-53 50, few at 51 50 and
bulls
40.00
and down.
54 00; plants 53.00-54.50, few 54. 75.
Veal calves. 7 50 to 10 00 htghcr;
U~3, 230-260 lbs. 45 50chOtec 147 50 and down.
51 00.
Sheep and lambs steady to 5 00
Sows u evenly steady.
htgher;
chotec wools 75 .00-81 75;
US 1-3 300-450 lbs. 43.00choice
cltps
81 75-85 .00, feeder
48 50, 450:500 lbs. 48.00-51.50,
lambs
gg
00
and
down: aged sheep
500-650 lbs 54.00-60 00, few 60 50
37 00 and down.
Boars 39 00-40.00.
Feeder cattle: steady to 1.00 htghEstimated receipts: 36,000.
er.
Summary of Tuesday's ProducYearhngs steers 55.00 and down:
en Livestock Association auctions
at Eaton, Farmerstown, Lancaster, hetfcrs 50.25 and down
Calves. steers 59.00 and down;
Wapakoneta and Caldwell:
51.50 and down.
hetfers
Hogs: 2 00 lower.

Lakin Hospital proposed

(Continued from Paqe 1l
new prison· would also allow the
women to be separated from the men.
Architects have csumated the
Lakin factltty would costS 12- to $15mtllion, "but we hope to. do tt for less
than that," Skaff satd
He added the prison will have no
"hard" cells such as men's facihues
do, but secured rooms instead
CLEVELAND (AP)- There were no tickets sold naming all five numSkaiT satd programs would also be
estabhshcd
at the facihty, such as a
bers selected m Tuesday ntght's Buckeye 5 drawmg , the Ohio Lottery satd
There were 104 Buckeye 5 uckets wtth four of the numbers, and each is pnson tndustncs program that would
worth $250 The 3,624 ttckets showing three of the numbers are each worth allow mmatcs to make unrfonns for
' $10, and the 39,013 trckets showmg two of the numbers are each worth $1. cOrTCcllons officers. or other Items
The Ohw Lottery will pay out $277,857 to wtnners tn Tuesday's Ptck 3 Educational programs would also be
set up, and the prisoners could he
Numbers datly game Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled $1,313,119
In the other datly game, Pick 4 Numbers players wagered $345,626 and used as laborers by local commum,
wtll share $158,800

Buckeye 5 prize unclaimed

Meigs announcements
Board lo meet
The Eastern Local Board of Educatton v;ill meet tomght (Wednesday)
at 6 p m. at the Tuppers Plams Elementary School.

cie Commtsson, wtll meet at 7:30
p.m Monday at the Veterans Servtce
Office, MulberrY Avenue, Pomeroy.

ttes, Skaff added.
Skaff satd the pnson should not
affect the hospttal at all. ·and would
add another 60 to 70 Jobs m the county, tncludmg correcttons officers.
case workers (counselors). kttchcn
employees and admmtslrat!On (scc-

retartes, legal offices).
"We've been worktng hard on
thiS," satd John Musgrave. Mason
County cconomtc dcvclopmcnl dtrector
''The lactltty wtll lmng 60 to 70
good JObs to Mason County, wtth the
potential of an tncrcasc tn JObs for the
future It wtll tn no way allcct the
JObs at Lakm," Musgrave satd. "We
wrll not be tradrng 1obs for JObs "

Battlefield preservationists

(Continued from Page 1)
hrstorically known that Native Amcrrcans mhabtted thts land and arttfacts
arc found penod1cally."
Parker satd the htstoncal society
has recctvcd letters of support from
State Sen. Jan Michael Long, US . .
Rep. Frank Cremeans, State Rep.

John Carey and U.S Secretary of the
Intertor Bruce Babbttt
"Durrng the past seven months,
the Ohio Histone Prcscrvatron Office
has rccetved thousands of letters
'!roll! concerned cttl7.cns supporting
preservation of the battlefield," she
satd

To offer flu shots
The Mergs County Health Department
wtll oiTer flu shots Tuesday, 5
Road closure
.
to
7
p
m
at the regular tmmuntzatton
Road repaJT work wrll force the
evenmg
clinic
The cost tS $1 for
closure of Chester Townshtp Road
112 (Scout Camp) all day Thursday, senror cttrzens and $2 for the genertcr, Rader reported that the average rs
(Continued from Page 1)
accordmg to Chester Townshtp Clerk al public Chtldrcn's tmmuntzattons
wrll
also
be
offered
free
of
charge
about
35 a mght. It was also reportsent altemattves m lifestyle."
Janet Ltlc Area resrdents arc asked
wtth
the
exceptton
of
hepatitis
for
ed
that
there arc 49 volunteers.
Efforts are betng made, tl was
to detouuhat area whrle rcpatrs are
ccrtam
age
groups
and
flu
vacc1ncs.
Plans were announced to begm
reported, to have at the workshop
completed
Chtldren must be accompanied by a someone who has turned his or her monthly btrthday parttes in January
parent and have a current shot record life around after betng mvolved in a as a way of keepmg youth mvolved.
Commission to meet
Meetrngs of the board of dtrectors ·
gang or with drugs, or some other
The Mctgs County Veterans Scrvwtll
be held quarterly with the next
tllcgal actrvity, who can talk to the
krds about life on "both sides of the one scheduled for Feb. I 8, 7 30 p.m
at the center
fence"
Rader sard that lack of stability tn
Untts of the Metgs County Emer- ment to Letart Falls, motor vehicle the home rs often a factor tn young
gency Medtcal Servtce recorded I 0 fire, Paul Hill Jr., owner
people gettmg mvolved in gangs, and
REEDSVILLE
calls for asSistance Tuesday. Unns
the
workshop ts geared to creating
I0:39 a m , Harris Ro~d . Leonard
respondmg rncluded.
tcchntques
to compensate for an
Paugh, VMH.
CHESTERVFD
unstable home life. He said the workRUTI.AND
9 33 p m., Ltckskillet Road, brush
shop
will mvolve both ktds and vol 12:59 a m.. State Route 692,
fire, no inJunes.
unteers
and wtll probably be taped for
Roger Carsey, O'Bieness Memonal
MIDDLEPORT
future
usc.
~
II 55 p m Monday, Overbrook Hospttal;
It
was
also
noted
that
God's
N.E.T.
7:06 a.m., volunteer fire departNursmg Center, Ruth Bennett, Vet·
ment and squad to SR 681, Douglas has purchased an Army tent, 18-byerans Mcmonal Hospttal.
A. Palmer, OBMH. Scipto YFD 52 feet, for usc by youth groups. Dec
POMEROY
Rader tS handling the tent use sched4 27 a m , Hysell Street, ytayne asststed;
12:46 p.m.. Smtih Road, Dale ule.
Jarvts, Holzer Medtcal CenW
Dctarls arc hetng worked out for
Hoffman, HMC;
RACINE
usc
of a $500 grant for a tutoring pro2:09p.m., Beech Street, Mtchaela
10 54 a.m., volunteer ftrc departDavtdson, Pleasant Valley Hospital; gram. wtth Stster Fidehs Bell and the
10·33 p.m., Pamtcr Rtdge Road, Rev. Sharon Hausman to head up that
program.
Linda Nottingham, YMH.
As for attendance at·thc youth eenVeterans Memorial
Tuesday admiSSions - none.
Tuesday dtschargcs - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges No•. 19 - Enna
Funk, Mrs Rtchard Mattox and son,
The Public Utilities Conunission of Ohio has set for public hearing
Patricia Silver, Mary Lanter
Case No. 96-223-GA-GCR, to review the gas cost I,"ecovery rates of
(Published with permission)

God's N.E.T. establishes

Squads respond to 10 calls

Stocks
Am Ele Power .......................42~
Akzo ......................................64'o
Ashland 011 ...........................44'/o
AT'T .....................................37%
Benk One ..............................
Bob Evans ..........,................. 12'1.
Borg-Wamer ......................... 39\
Chemplon .............................22'1.
Charming Shops ................. 4'•
City Holdlng .......................... 21 ~.
·Federel Mogul ....................... 22~

44.,

Gar1nett ................................. 76\
Gooc::ty.r ..............................49~
K-mart ..................................... 11

Lande End ............................ 26'1.
Umlted .................................. 18\
Ohio Valley Bank .................... 35
One Valley............................. 3•~·
Peoples Bancorp, ................... 28
Prem Flnl ............................... 12"
Rockwell ............................... 63\
Royal Dutch/Shell ................ 170
ShO.ney'a ................................. 8~.
Star Bank ..............................90'.&gt;
Wemly'e ................................ 21'!.
Worthlngton .......................... 20'1.

-·-·-

.•

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quOte• provided by Adve1t
of Gallipolis.

Hospital news

p-----------------------------~·
I would like to Thank the voters of

M~gs County for their complimentary

vote in the November 5th Election.
Thank You
Howard Frank
Pllkl !or by candldll.. , Howalll E. Frank 3876Q.Siltnetlrt Rd. Pomeroy

LEGAL NOTICE

Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc., the operation of its Purchased Gas
Adjustinent Clause, and related matters. This hearing is scheduled
to begin at 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday, December 17, 1996, at the
offices of the Commission, 180 East Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio. All interested parties will be given an opportunity to be
h~ard. Further information may be obtained by contacting the
Commission.
,,
THE PUBUC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO

By: o.y E. VIgorito, Secretary

•

�, Page 4 • The Deily Sentinel

As Maynard takes top honors in Division VI,

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Meigs County gets six others on all-district team
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- two Mohammed Roman of Coal Grove
teams that had perfect seasons and Dawson-Bryant.
ranked in~ top five of the final poll
Nate Hieronimus was the top ·
swept the top honors in Division lll defender in Division VI, while his
of the 1996 Associated Press South- coach at Willow Wood Symmes
Dlrillon m
eastern all-district high school foot- Valley, Herb Conley, was also honOffenso - Eodl: ROB WOODWARD. OALball teams announced Wednesday.
ored. The top offensive player was UPOLIS
OAWA ACADEMY, 6-roo(, 180, St.;
Repeating as the offensive play- Racine Southern quarterback Jesse H.E.Smllh, Circleville, 5-11, 190. JJ. Unc:mcn: Josh
Shonridae. Proctorville Fau1Wld. 6-0, 196. Sr.i Cii5Cy
er of the year in the division was · Maynard, who completed 122 of 21 i
Boone, Hillsboro, 6-2. 2:l0. Jr.: Phillip O'Neill, Jack·
third-ranked Hillsboro's · running passes for I ,465 yards, had 23 son, 6-~. 22&lt;1, St.: Rick:Rammcl, Porumoulh, ~- II .
back Keith Ford, who rushed for touchdown passes and 1.0 intercep- 200. Sr.: '-SON ROVSH. POMEROY MEIGS. ~·
II , 200, Jr. QuaniC1back•: Danny Man halt. CirI ,435 yards- averaging II yards a tions.
cleville, 6-3, IJj, Sr.; Cam Williarm. Hillsboro. 5·
carry - while scoring 19 touch- . No awards were selected in Divi- 7, 165. Sr.; ISAAC SAUNDERS. GAU..IPOLIS. 60, 17S, Sr. U.Cb: Keith Ford. Hillsboro. 6-0, 19!t
downs. Teammate T.J. Thmer, a sion I because there are only two St.;
Dlvid Lewi1, South Point, 5·11. 22S. Sr.: Chad
senior linebacker, was selected by a teams in the division in the district.
Culw:r, Thornville Sheridarl, S-10, 220. Jr.; Shane
WoUOrd, Jackson. S--10. 180, Jr. All-purpose: Scon
media panel .as the top defender. The ·
Olino. Fairbld. S-11 . 181, Jr.
coach of the year was Jim Reynolds
Dcrensc- Linemen: Jake Spruell. Hillsboro, 6Here are the 1996 Associated
of fifth-ranked Jackson, which went Press Southeast all-district high 0, 210. Sr.; ShaMOtl Smith, J~~ebon, 6-3, 220, Sr.;
ADAM BARRETT. POMEROY MEIGS. 6.0. 2~,
I 0-0. in regular-season play while school football teams as selected by Sr.; Justin Frame, ThomvilleSheridu. 6-2, 2l.t Sr.:
Waldrop, CirdCville l..oaan Elm. S - 10.2.~9. Sr.
outscoring opponents 442-8.7.
a media panel from the district (by Pat
Uncbackm: T.J.Tumcr. Hillsboro. 6-4. 2~8. Sr.:
Quarterback Shawn Taylor of position, with high school,. height John
Shonk. Thornville Sheridan, j.9, 175, Sr.: Kirk
Thompsen, Portsmouth, 6-], 222. Sr.: John Grnves,
Vincent Warren was tabbed as the and weight):
' Circleville LoJnn Elm. S-11 . I118, Sr. Bxks: Joey
offensive honoree in Division II
BoJP, Jackson, 6-0. 190, Sr.: JnsonSpurlock, Sourh
Division II
after passing for 2,322 yards and 22
Pcim, 6-D, 185, Jr.: Brian Bigo.m, Circlevil~ . ~-II,
Fint tram
IM. Jr.: Mike Claor, M~AnhurVin1onCoun1y, S-11 ,
touchdown.s. with Matt Scott o(
Offense- Ends: Jn.spe:r Seww-d. Olillicothe. .5r7~. Sr : MA1TWILUAMS, POMEROY MEIGS.
10. 160. Jr.; Danny Gm:nwalt. Vi.nccm WIUTen. 6-~nbeaten Washington Coun House
6-1. 170, Jr. Puruer: Joe Esrer. Ponsmou1h, '~·II ,
1, 157, Sr. Linemen: ctiad PaycOn, WD!IhiDJIOn C.H.
lb5, Jr.
Miami Trace taking the d.efensive Miami
Tru~c. 5-9. IS~. Sr.; BRAD KEMPER.
award. The coach of the year was CHESHIRE RIVER VALLEY. 6-0. 210. Sr.: Jeff boro.Otrtnsh·e playeroldw )'tt.r: Keilh FQfd. Hills·
Benne11. Washington C. H. Miami Trnce, 6-1, 270,
Dt&amp;rWn pll.ytr ol tht year: T.J.Turner,
Vincent Warren's Mike Devol.
Sr. Quanr:rbacb: CJ. Banks, ChilliCOJhe, 6-4. 205,
In Division IV, the top offensive Sr.: Shawn Tn.ylor, Vinctnl. Wqrren, 6.2. 170, Sr. Hillsboro.
C..rh ol tht )'tt.r: Jim Reynolds. Jucbon.
player was Piketon's Matt Hannah, Bnclu: Kevin Hicks, Washintton C.H. Miami Trott,
205, ·sr. All-purpose: Brnndon O.urch, Vinctnl
Spedal mendon
who ran for 1,027 yards and scored 6-J,
Warren, S-11, 166, Sr.
Brian Swisshelm and Nenl McKmrie, Hills.
145 points. Greenfield McClain's
Defense - Lineman: Art Adams, Chillicolhe.
boro: Tyler Hull, Akia Brown, Anron MocOonald
238, Sr. Linebxkers: Mike Retves, Wnshing.
Md Healh Glasa, Pon!lmOU!h: Jeremy New10me. Nut
Shane Wellman was the defensive 6-4,
ton C.H. Minmi Trace.•6-4, 225 Sr.; Mau Good~in ,
Salyers .and Jeff Riley, Circle'llille: John Dilbennett,
selection after a 135-tackle season. The Plaint Athens, 5-10, 195, Sr.; Jeremy Thomas, Juscin
fowler and Brad Brooks, Cirolevilli= Logan
Chesapeake's Phil Davis, who turned . Vincent Warft:n, 6-2, 160, Sr.; Matt Scon. Wush· Elm: Brent Ch:~prn;m IUld Jason Green. SoYth
ington C.H. MiDllli Trace, 5·11 . 215, Sr. Backs: Joe
Point; Chris Lee, Proctorvilh: Fairland; John Porter
a 3-7 record into 8-2 this year, was SPUfbnwt'.·
The Pllliftli Athens, 5·1 1,.1110, Sr.; JERE·
and Ryan Wilson, Thorn'I'Uie Sh!lridun; B.J.
MI~H ' TRIPLETI. , CHESHIRE RIVER VAL:LE'I' ,
the coach of the year. .
NICHOLSON, POMEROY MEIGS; DAVE RUCK·
5-8, l!i~ . Jr.
ER. GALLIPOLIS GALi..JA 1\CADEMY: Craig
Wheelersburg grabbed two of the
On'tnslve plllyer ol' thl' yrar: ·Shawn Taylor,
Cusick, Jackson: Todd BrDden and Ryan Dobb,
three awards in Division V, wiih run- Vincent Warren. ·
McAnhur Vinton County.
Dtfrnsiw'l' player of the yur: Man Scon,
ning back Jerod Tilley picked as the , Washington
CH Miami Trace.
Division :VI
offensive honoree and Larry Hall
Coach ollhe yur: Mike DeVol, Vincent Wllr·
Flrsllam
singled out as the top ·coach. The ren.
Offe!UC - End: JI\MIE EVANS. RI\CINE
SOUTHERN. 6-0, 160, Sr. Linemen: Sreve Owcn1.
defensive player of the year v.as

:-: Wedneeday, November 20,1991

Wednesday, Noveml),er 20, 1996,
•
••

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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·

1r
,

•

ByRICKGANO

JAMIE EVANS

•••
"

.

pie like it; some don't. l can't change
CHICAGO (AP) - Can we their perception."
expect a kinder, gentler Albert Belle
Vowing to "continue to be Albert
now that he's switched teams and Belle" could mean emotional outllccome baseball's highest-paid play- bunts froin a player who has been
er?
suspended five times the last six
Hardly.
years.
The newest member of the ChicaBut the White Sox, hoping to
go White Sox, his bank account bal- overtake Belle's fanner team- the
looni~g ev~ntually to SSS million fatCleveland Indians- and boost sagter ~1th a five-year deal, says he'll ging attendance, want the Albert
be h1mself.
.
Belle who has hit 98 homers the last
He's not trying to run from his two seasons:
bad-gu~ image or necessarily
Teaming with two-time MVP
attempung . to change it in a city Frank Thomas, the White Sox now
where two seasons ago he was have one of the most potent lineups
caught using a corked bat and sub- in baseball .
sequently suspended.
''I'm not going to change my per"You mean the bad guy image sonality because someone wants me
you gave me? Right?" B~lle said .to change. My No. ·I priority is to
Tuesday when pressed on tJie issue. produce," Belle said,
'&gt; "I found early on that you can't
"I just want to come over and be
.; . : try to please everyone. My main con- an integral part and continue to put
. : . c;m ~nd the only thing I can control . up big numbers and play defense and
, • • 1s gomg out on the field. Some peo- ' watch Frank Thomas hit more home
·'

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::~ Notre

·

JESSE MAYNARD

·B.J. NICHOioSON

Willow Wood Symmes Volley. 6-2. 240, Sr.; Eric
Pylea, Franklin Furnace O~n . .'i-8. 2~0. Jr,Quar·
t~k•: JESSE MAYNARD, RACINE SOUTHERN, ~-8, 16~. Sr.; Todd Gilliland, Ponsmouth Eallt,
6· 1, 170, Jr. B11cks: Heath Howdyshell, Hcml&lt;x:k
Miller, 6·1. 180. Soph:; AMOS CALLAHAN.
CROWN CITY SOUnt GALLIA. 5-1 0. IM. Jr.;,
Bopby Howard. Portsmouth East. 6- 1. IRO. Jr. Allpurpose: Lulu: Daniels, Portsmoulh None Dame.~8. 160. Sr. '
De(cnse - Uoemen: Bill Fruncis. Reed~'lillc
Eastern. 5-11. 210. Sr.: Man Vt!ner, Pon~mouth
NOfre Dome, 6-0. 170. Sr. Lin~hp~· kt:u : Nmc
Hieromimus. Willow Wood Symmtt Vulley. 6--1.
220. Sr.:' Nick Alti~r. Hemlock Miller. 6-D, 11'1~ . Sr,;

Andy Messer, Portsmoolh E.1~1 . 6-0, 179. Sr.: Anron
Dav i~. Ponsmouth Notr~ Dlm\C, ~-11, 17.'i. Sr.:
JEROM EE CALAWAY, REEDS;VILLE EASTERN.'tl-2. 190. Sr.
Oflt-n~ivt

pluytr uf tht yt-or: JESSE MAY-

NARD. .RACINE SOUTHERN.
DefeNivr playeruf'Chr yr11r: Nat~ Hlcm.nlmus.
Willow Woud Symmc.~; V:illcy.
'
Cuaeh or.he year: Herb CoJlll'y, Willnw Wuotl
Symtn(:~ Valky.
Speci11l mtnlion

Josh Dyer. Franklin l:um:tcu Gn.'l!n: Jnc Dupuy.
Port~mouth Noire D:~nw: Seth K~ll~y nnd Jmmn
ly:~ ll , Willow Wood Symmc:~ Vnllcy.

-~'

MATT WILLIAMS

Cooper to wait until Saturday to unveil .starting quarterbac.k
By ,RUSTY MILLER
back-to-back losses to Purdue (9-3) Saturday- and I assume all of y~ · passed for one.
them will play. Which one of them even ask about who thcfre running ·
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -To . and Penn State (29-17). Secondarc -then you'll know who's going
' On Sunday, Ohio State offensive starts, come to the game Saturday · il,ack's going to be.
,
spite Michigan and the media, Ohio ranked Ohio ·state, which last week t.o. be our quarterback. ·we're not coordinator Joe Hollis said, · "We and find out, OK?"
"It's a big deal who our quarter' •
State coach John Cooper said Tues- clinched its first trip to the Rose going to announce who the starting can't afford to waste series. Each . Cooper, who is 1-6-1 against back's going to he, but it's not a big ,
day he will not reveal his starting Bowl in 12 years, beat Purdue and · quarterback's going to he."
series is very important, because you Mich'igan since coming 'to Ohio deal who they're running back's
quarterback until game time Satur- Penn State by a combined 80-21 .
The Buckeyes are 10-0 with Stan- don't know how many series you're State, was upset that Michigan coach going to be."
.
·But Cooper, whose team is
ley Jackson starting, but he has going to get."·
day.
.
Lloyd Carr haq not said - and the
Michigan spokesman Bruce '
Asked why he would wait to favored by 16 points, talked as if his struggled for most of the second half
media had not asked-· if Clarence Madej laughed when asked about
It was Gennaine Who was on the
announce whether he was going team had to rely on (he element of of the season. Joe Germaine has field in the founh quarter of the· Williams was healthy enough to Williams and said there was no .
with first-stringer Stanley Jackson or surprise to win.
come off the bench to become the Buckeyes' two closest calls, a 17-14 start at tailback for the Wolverines. gamesmanship involved.
In his general comments even star at the position.
backup Joe Germaine, Cooper said,
'Tm surprised you all haven't
victory over Wisconsin on Oct. 12
"We had Chris Howard rush for
"Just to give you guys something to before the first question, Cooper had
Jackson has thrown fewer passes and last week's 27-17 win at Indiana: asked that question," Cooper said, 120 yards and he was our offensive :
think about this week. To give an edge in his voice l&amp;S he said, "I'm each of the last five games, while
Jackson dido 't play in the second hi's voice rising. "Didn't Lloyd tell player of the game," Madej said. "
Michigan something to think about going to answer this question one Gennainc 's attempts have increased half against Indiana. At times he you yesterday at the press conference "Williams got a bruise to his knee
time and please don't ask me any in each of the last four. Gennaine has appeared to be almost disinterested whether he's going to play or not? early in the game. He ran Sunday
.
this week."
No. 21 Michigan (7-3) may have more about it. Our quarterback situ- passed for five touchdowns the last as he stood on the sideline, even You didn't ask him that? Didn't he and he:.s running today. I just talked
enough to think about, coming off ation, if you're coming to the game three games, Jackson hasn't run or though Ohio State trailed I0-7 in the carry twice last week? Don't) have · to our head trainer. Paul Schmidt, ,
•
fourth quarter.
these stats right? How come he was- and he said, 'If he has a.bigger injury '
"We don't ,have a controversy,"
n't asked that? You're asking me · than the bruise, I don't know about
Cooper said emphatically. "Both of about our quarterback and you don't il. "'
'•

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legal woes won't keep him from field

ST. ALBANS, W.Va. (AP) Wide receiver Randy Moss apparently will play for Marshall when the
top-rated Herd opens its quest for a
fifth trip to the NCAA Division 1-AA
championship game in si~ years.
There had. been a question
whether Moss would he suspended
for part of the playoffs after he was ·
arrested Sunday. on a domestic battery charge. ·
While coach Bob Pruett did not
specifically rule out a suspension.

'

'I Bengals add

','' Hundon to roster
.. '
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l
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1

ii
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CINCINNATI (APl - James
Hundon, a receiver on the Cincinnati
Bengals' practice squad all season,
wa&lt; added to the 53-man'rosterTuesday. .
The Bengals released receiver
Kevi,n Jordan to ope 0 the roster spot.
Jordan, a rookie from UCLA, was
claimed off waivers from Arizona on ·
Oct, Iii. He never appeared in a
game.
Hundon, a rookie from Portland
Stale, played in all four Bcngals preseason games, was waived Aug. 28 ·
and signed with the practice squad
the ne~t day.

!I
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Moss-practiced with the team Tuesday.
.
And, "from everything I'm seeing, I don't see anything at this time
that would prohibit him from being
a membc, of our football team. I
think this incident has been blown
out of proportion. I think everybody
agrees on that," Pruett said. ·
Moss and his ex-girlfriend, Eliz- ·
abcth Offutt, 21, of St. Albans, were
charged with misdemeanor domestic
· battery after a scuflle at her home ·
Sunday. Offuu also was charged with
misdemeanor destruction of property.
Police reports indicated thai L:on-

tact in the scuffle was minimal. And,
auomeys for both Moss and Offuu
have said they were inclined to drop

charges, although police said that
.would not he possible.
Moss caught at least one touchdown pass in every game for Marshall ( 11-0), breijking the 1-AA
record of 10 consecutive games with
touchdown receptions, set by San
Fr.anci•co 49ers All-Pro .Jerry Rice
when he played for Mississippi ValIcy State in 1984.
In March 1995, Moss was arrest,
ed for heating a fellow DuPont High
School student. His probation on 1hat
charge wru; revoked in June afier he
smoked marijuana, and he subsequently was kicked off Florida
Slate's football team.
The 1-AA playoffs licgin Nov. 30
at sites around the country.

'

next?
Northwestern candidate Gary
Barnett and Irish defensive coordinator Bob Davie are the early
favorites. Athletic director Mike
Wadswonh said there are fewer than

six candidates for college football's
glamour job.
"We would he looking for a person that has really the allributes of
coach Holtz in 'tenns of coaching
ability and representing the university's ethics .and morals · and commitment," said the Rev. William
Beauchamp, the university's e~ecutive vice president.
· Wadsworth and Beauchamp said
they've already had e~ploratory talks
with the candidates . Those who
express interest in the job will be
interviewed further, and they hope to
have a new coach in place by early
December.

One tierson, W.idsworth would
not say '*'took himself out of the
running (!jJllmily considerations,
Barnell confinned Thesday that
he was contacted by Notre Dame
officials, but said he hadn't decided
yet if he was interested.
"Once I have had time to fully
consider my options, I will let them
know of my decision as to whether
I wjsh to he considered for the job,"
he said in a written statement.
Davie declined comment Tuesday, saying he's more concerned
with helping players deal with
Holtz's announcement, which he
likened to a_n~~~~e.

•

'

'.
•'

By JIMMY GOLEN
. BOSTON .(AP) - By naming
limy Williams manager, the Boston
Red Sox took care of their mos1
urgent - but not necessarily most
important - offseason priority.
Now Williams and general manager Dan Duquette must, among other things:
.- Figure out how to re-sign
Roger Clemens;
- Quell the clubhouse runnoil
that resulted from the firing of mana~;~J Ke.vi~ Kennedy; .and
.
. -Decide how to fu Mo Vaughn, .
Jeff Frye, Wil Cordero, John
Valentin, Nomar Qarciaparra and
Tim Naehring into the infield.
"I've go't a wife and four kids.
You wan\ turmoil?" Williams said
Tuesday after becoming the 41st
manager in Red Sox history.
"You've got to talk. You can't
choose up sides and say, 'Let's see
who wins this battle.'
"'It's not an 'I' game, it's a 'we'
game. Teams that don't win, I
believe, are , in the. ' I' syndrome.
Those that do are in the ·~e· syndrome."
.
Williams said Tuesday that he

didn't think Valentin should be Williams said, flashing the World
moved from shonstop to third ·to Series champjonship ring he earned
make room for Oarciaparra, a phi- ' with the Braves. "I know what it
Josophy that runs counter to the deci- wants: It's called a championship."
sion Duquette made at the end of last
Williams inherits a team that got
season.
off to a franchise worst 2-12 start in
But that was the new manager's 1996, but finished third in the divionly break with the party line on sion with an 85-77 recor4. Kennedy
Tuesday when he was named to compiled a 171-135 record overall,
replace Kennedy, who was fired the including an AL East title in 1995,
day after the regular season ended.
but he was fired aft~r the regular seaWilliams, 53, has not managed in son ended.
more than seven years - since he
Duquette blamed Kennedy for the
was fired by Toronto with a 12-24 team's poor.start and a near-revolt in
record early in the 1989 season . the Red Sox clubhouse when players
Overall, he had a 281-241 record in got angry at the OM's robotic style.
three-plus years with the Blue Jays. Firing· Kennedy only made things
"! don't ihink I'm that far worse .
Jose Canseco demanded to be
removed, .. he said, adding that his
time in Toronto prepared him for a • traded. Vaughn ripped· Duquette in
absentia, refusing to meet with mansecond chance at·managing.
Williams h~ been the 'third-base agement and vowing to play out his
coach for the Braves since 1990. contract in sullen silence. Clemens.
With manager Bobby Co~. who was who ~as since filed for free agency,
Williams' predecessor in Toronto, was also a big fan of Kennedy's.
"I certainly hope we re-sign him
Atlanta has gone to four of the last ·
(Clemens).
I know the organization
five World Series.
The Red So~ have been to four is trying," Williams said . . On
World Series in 51 seasons, and Canscco, he said: ""I would want him
on the club, To me he's probably a
haven't won since 1918.
"This city wants something bad," better hitter now than what he was:" ·

Duquette began his search with
18-20 candidates, but quickly offered
the job to Jim Leyland. After Leyland chose Aorida instead, Duquette
reportedly offered the job to fonner
Cardinals and Royals manager'
Whitey Herzog.
. Herzog balked initially, but when
he had second thoul!hts. the Red So~
reportedly wondered about his commitment and his fit with a developing team and went for Williams.
"Being here and answering questions if I'm a shon-tenn solution or
a second choice, it doesn't bother me
a bit," Williams said. "'I'm happy to
stand here in front of you and say I
am in fact the manager of the Boston
Red Sox."
Under Williams, Toronto finished
founh in the AL East in 1986. second in 1987 and tied . for third in
1988. All three teams fin ished.above
.500, and the last two were each two
games out of first place.
"He's enjoyed success every step
of his career," Duquette said. "We
hope that his hard work and magic
and winning · ways in Atlanta will ·
help hi!" lead the Red Sox to a cham·
pionship."

•

· Federal judge rejects LD swimmer's request

By TARA BURGHART
CH.ICAGO (AP) - A federal
judge rejected a leam'ing-disabled
swimmer's request that lie be
allowed to compete for Michigan
State this season, despite arguments
: that losing a year of competition will
damage his career.
·
Chad Ganden, who will he able to
train with the Michigan State staff
this season, had requested a prelim. • ,nary injunction allowing him to
; :. compete while he proceeds with a

-..

PITTSBURGH (AP) - Jerome
:~ Bettis usually picks up yllrds. This
:• week, he's picking .up the bill.
·:
Bettis, second in the NFL with
::: I, 117 rushing yards, will take the
~ : Steelen'linemen to dinner tonight to
:'· thank them for their blocking.
· Even reserves such as rookie .
:~. Jamain Stephe~s, who hasn't played ~ ·
.r this season, are invited.
·
;~ Bettis expects the bill to equate to
',. at least one dollar for every yard
,: ,gained - and, considering how
.:;linemen can eat, probably much
·)nore.
:• . uHe's alWays done that, said
: (ullback Tim Lester, a fonner Rams'
•leiunmate who will also be among
:)he' dinner party. "He gives credit to
: •his offensive linemen and every-

Deadline:
Monday, Nov. 2$th

5p.m.
7:00p.m. ·

.

Call 675-3398 or 1-80().766-0553

·~ Saw$5.00K~~~~~bd2.1iee

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I·

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I

...•

Holtz, 59, said he has no plans.
He could give no explanation for
why he is leaving, except that ~
thinks it's the ~ightthing tn do. He
said ~c·s glad he won't break Knutc
Rockne's record oU05 victories al
Notre Dame, but said that isn't why
hc's·leaving.
Holtz is 99-29-:i at Notre Dame
and 215~94-7 overall.
'Tve always felt remorse every
time I've left a place. When you left
a place you always had something to
go to and that gave you enthusiasm
and excitement," he said. "I don't·
•know how I'll handle not having
anything to look forward to."

lawsuit against the NCAA in which
he claims it violated the Americans
with Disabilities Act. ·
U.S. District Judge Blanche Manning ruled Thesday that the freshman
swimmer had not proved that he had
a reasonable likelihood of success at
trial.
Primarily, Manning said Oanden
had not proved the NCAA discrimi- .
nated against him by not allowing
him to compel~ this season.

The judge said the disabilities act lar course work but consequently did
"docs not require the NCAA to sim- not take enough of the core courses
ply abandon its eligibility require- the NCAA requires of student-athments, but only to malcc reasonable letes.
modifications to them. The record ·
He won two straight Illinois state
reveals that the NCAA did precise- · titles in the 100-yard . freestyle at
ly that." .
.
Naperville North High School.
Ganden, 18, has a nonnaiiQ but
The NCAA originally said he was·
also a learning disability that makes not academically qualified for an athit hard for him to decipher written letic scholarship, but in August it
words. He took remedial classes in lP.ave him its firsrpartial certification.
high school to supplement his regu-

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'

"For Jerry Reinsdorf. who's been
a proponent of all the things he's
been a proponent of, to walk up to
the podium and bust the market, I
think that says something there. But
they have Alben Belle, and I'm sure
he feels good about it. What this
means to the industry, that's for Jerry to Jive with ."
Belle has a career slugging percentage of .580, which is second
among active players to Thomas'
.
.599. . .

"They just endured a heck of an · , Davie, 42, doesn't have Barnett's
announcement with coach Holtz, head coaching experience, but he's
and they don't need another distr~- built an excellent reputation as both
lion. And .Bob Davie is not going to a coach and recruiter. His "Wreck-.
he that distraction," he said.
ing Crew" defenses at Texas A&amp;M
Others mentioned are LSU coach were highly regarded, with the
and former Irish piliyerGetT)I DiNar- · Aggies leading the nation in total
do; fonner UCLA coach Terry Oon- defense in 1991, and ranking third iri
lihue ll!il! Wisconsin coach Barry 1993. ·
Alvare~'tl former Notre Dame assisWhile Notre Dame searches for a
tant.
new coach. Holtz. a native of East
Barnett's advantage is that he's Liverpool, Ohio, and a former Ohio
proven he can coach in the most dif- State assistant, will he looking for a
ficult of situations. After years as the new job. Despite rumors that he
Big Ten's doonnat, Barnett took the resigned so he could coach in the
Wildcats to the Rose Bowl last year NFL - specifically the Minnesota
-their first appearance since 1947. · Vikings if Dennis Green leaves -

:.; Bettis takes
:: linemen to dinner

Sleds
Plastic &amp;
Metal
Runner or
Wagons

~··

tLBERT BELLE

.

'

Christmas
Layaway

MASON, W.VA.

,.
'
'.
'
. •
::.

Your Business Listed
In The Sentinel's
H o(iday Gift . Guide
Wed~es.day, Nov. 27th

he told me, and I said, 'Yes,"'
Reinsdorf said,
Reinsdorf, a leading critic of
baseball's current labor system, voted against the proposed labor deal
last month. If the new deal had been
in effect, adding Belle would have
forced the White Sox to pay a luxury ta~ next year.
"It is perfectly fiscally responsible for us to give him this money,"
Reinsdorf said. "We have to com- ·
pete under the system that e~ists . We
have an obligation to our fans to try
to win. It doesn't mean I have to like
the system. This is not about money;
this is about winning."
Cleveland general manager John
Hart had a different perspective,
"In this case, it dido 't make
sense for us. !fin fact Albert received
$10 million, it's not that we coul~­
n't have stepped up and played, it's
just that there are better ways for us
to spend our money," Hart said ..

.. Boston Red Sox hire Williams as manager

'·&lt;

~~

.PICKENS
HARDWARE

won the AL Central in 1996, when
Bell hit 48 homers with a leagueleading 148 RBJs, but wen: knocked
out in the fmt round by Baltimore.
Reinsdorf said the signing of
Belle shows the White Sox's commitment to get to the World Series
after a fan survey revealed that their
biggest disappointment was the cancellation of the Series in 1994 when
the Sox were leading their division.
After consulting with Thomas,
Reinsdorf began negotiations with
Belle's agent, Am Tellem, who also
·repr~nted some members of the
Chicago Bulls. Reinsdorf is chairmao of both the Sox and the Bulls
and. now has the highest-paid player
in two spons.
Michael Jordan's $30.14 million,
one-year deal with the Bulls is the
highest average salary in team sports.
"It was very similar to the intensive negotiations I had with Michael
Jordan. I asked Am what he wanted,

Dame AD says fewer than .six seeking head coach's job

By NANCY ARMOUR
;
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)- By
• the time Lou Holtz took the stage,
what he was about to say was old
news. By the time he left, he was pan
of Notre Dame's history, and everybody was already looking toward the
' · future.
With Holtz's decision to leave
Notre Dame after his lith season ·
·"i official, the question now is: Who's

In Ohio State's football camp,

.'

runs. I get to see it first-hand now." ·
Thomas was asked by Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf whom he would
like to see the team pursue in the offseason, Barry Bonds or Belle, It was
a no-brainer for Thomas: Belle.
The White Sox then outbid the
Indians and the Aorida Marlins with
a huge package deal.
''It's not about the most money,"
Belle !laid. "I'm sure I could have
shopped around and got more money. You got to look at the personnel;
you got to look at the organization
and the direction it's heading.".
Belle's package v;as thought to
eclipse both Bonds' $43.75 million,
six-year contract with San Francisco
and Ken Griffey Jr.'s- $8.5 million
average salary under his $34 million,
four-year deal with Seattle.
Belle led the Indians to their first
AL pennant in 41 years in 1995
when he hit 50 homers and 50 doubles in the same season. They also

In the wake of Holtz's resignation,

1

'

JEROMEE CALAWAY

·ADAM BARRETT

·Belle signs five-year, $55M deal with White Sox .

•

,.,._

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

·: The rewards won't end with a
:)teak dinner. Bettis, who once
: tK&gt;ught big-screen lVs for his St.
:Louis linemen, also will give each
; lineman a Christmas present.
•: "It is nice, it really is," said All; J'l:l) center Dermontti Daw10n, who
; will be ~Rated to dinne~ by a runnina ·
• ~k for the ftnt time in ,bis nine
1e110111. "You don't expect il
!He appret:ialcl us. we appreciate

Sweet
Solid
$139
Tangerines
Cabbage
Doz

$11,988

Octal Spray

en.llerrfts
12 Oz.llkil• .

SJ79

:f'IFL

·~m." ..

..

'

�•
(

P8ge 8 • The Dally Sentinel

P~

• Middleport, Ohio

.

Wedneeday, November 20, 11M

In the NBA,

.

CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP BM'~ 11111111 Wrtt.r

Olajuwon also had anemia at the end of the .199495 championship season and was hospitalized with a
blood clot in his left leg before the 1990-91 season.
"It appears to be what he had a couple of years ago,"
Rockets coach Rudy Tomjanovich said of the latest
affliction. "It could be one day or it could be a Jot
longer. We're going to be very careful since it involves
the hean." .
Charles Barkley led Houston with 22 points and 17
rebounds as the Rockets improved to 9· 1. They have
games later this week against Phoenix on Thursday, at
Ciolden State on Saturday and at the Los Angeles Laicern on Sunday.
Olajuwon's status forthose games won't be known .
until he gets out of the hospital.
Kevin Garnett tied a season-high with 20 points to
lead the limberwolves, who allowed 100 points for the
first time this season.
In other NBA games, the Los Angeles !.akers edged
Golden State 112-109, Ponland nipped Phoenix 92-90
in ovenime, New York held off Orlando 92·88, Mil·
waukee beat DaJlas tQ0.97, Cleveland defeated Atlanta
73-63', Seattle downed Toronto 106-98 and Miami beat
Denver 104-86.
Laken 112, Warriors 109 _Nick Van Exel broke
out of a prolonged slump with 27 poin!S on 11 -of-16
shooting and ShaquilJe O'Neal had 26 points, 12
rebounds, seven assists and three bloclcs.

In Houston, they know all about the "Heart of a
Champion." It was the Rockels' trademarlc phrase two
summers ago when they won their ~ond straight
clwnpionship.
·
.
They also lcnow about the heart of Halceem Olajuwon.
It has acted up before, and it did it again Tuesday
night.
Olajuwon experienced an irregular heanbeat during
halftime of Houston's 122-93 victory over the Minnesota Tomberwolves, a similar problem to one he had
five years ago. ·
"He had a glass of water at halftime and as soon as
he had it, he felt his bean beating irregularly," Rockets spokesman Tom Frank said of Olajuwon. "We
brought the doctors in."
Frank said Olajuwoo's condition is called atrial fibrillation . He left the arena under his own power, under. went an electrocardiognm ·(EKG) at Methodist Hospita! and stayed overnight for more tests.
.
"It still hasn't returned to normai,"'Frank said. "It
has to be treated medicalJy and when it returns to normal, he'llbe back ori the coun."
Olajuwon experienced an irregular heanbeat during
the 1991-92 season, but it returned to normal after med·
ication.

The game at the Forum was tied until Elden Campbell dunked and O'Neal added a three-point play- hit·
ling his fmt foul shot of the night after five straight
misses- for a 102-97 lead with 5:13 left.
The Warriors twice got within two points, but could
get no closer.
1"rau Blazen 91, Kings 90 (OT) -At Portland.
Arvydas Sabonis sent the game into ovenime and then
scored the winning points on a shon hook shot with 20
seconds left.
Sabonis' clutch shots and apair of crucial misses by
Mitch Richmond overshadowed a season-high 31 -point
performance by Kings guard Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf.
Kniclca 91, Magic 88- New York nearly blew a
25-point, second-half lead before clinching it with 4·
for-4 shooting.from the foul line in the final 70 sec!'nds
and a key block by Patrick Ewing - one of his seven
in the game at Orlando. ·
.
Ewing had 24 _points and 16 rebounds and surpassed
20,000 points for his career- the 23rd NBA player
to do so.
"I'm trying to get away from judging wins. I think
you judge performance," said New York coach Jeff Van
Gundy, w,hose team improved to 8-2, but has been crit·
icized for sloppy play. "You talk about what you have
to do. We wilJ enjoy the win; move on and hopefully
improve."
. Buclca 100, Maverlclca 97- At Milwaukee, John·

In the NHL,

·'·'

season-high 27 points to go with his 13 re~nds ..
For Dallas, Jason Kidd had se~n-highs 10 potn_u
(25) and rebounds ( 13) and tied his season:hlgh on
assists (8). Jamal Mashburn missed a three-poonter for
the Mavericks right before the final buzzer sounded. ·
Cavallen 73, Hawlca 63 -At Cleveland, the lowscoring game almost produ&lt;:ed an NBA record. .
The Cavs and Atlanta combined for JUSt 60 points
in the second half, two more than the mark set by Fon
Wayne and Syracuse in 1955.
"It was not a pretty game," Hawks coach Lenny
Wilkens said. ·
SuperSonics 106, Rapton !18- Shawn Itemp had
. 26 points and 18 rebounds and Gary Payt~n SCOred 24
as Seattle began a six-game Eastern swong wtth .'IS
eighth straight win. The Sonics nearly blew a 25-poonl
halftime lead.
Doug Christie, who filled in for starting point guard
Damon Stoudamire (foot callous). led the comeback
with 20 of his 31 points in the third quaner.
Heat 104, Nuggets 86- Alonzd Mourning scored
23 points to lead six Miami players in double figures
at Denver.
The Heat never trailed after the first six minutes and
shot 54 percent from the field , including 9-~f-14 from
three-point range, to end their thn:e-game losmg streak.

i

'

I,

'.
•·.

....

.

By KEN RAPPOPORT

··'

APHockeyWrlter .
· Talk about a busy and profitable
day. 'The Pittsburgh Pengu1ns pulled
off two tt:ades in the afternoon, then
beat the St. Louis Blues at night.
"For a disruptive day, it turned
out very well," PeOguins coach
Eddie Johnston said after Tuesday
night's 4-2 victory over the Blues.
"It was a positive day with our trades
and that was very positive out there .
tonight."

Tuesday's trades made it three
deals in 48 hours for the Penguins, ·
who hope to snap out of an early sea. son funic. The Penguins acquired six
. players In the trades, and two of them
contributed immediately as Darius
Kaspanlitis and Andreas Johannson
each made tbe'scoresheet in 'Tuesday
night's victory.
Kasparaitis also made his pres· ·
ence felt in other ways with a hit
from behind on Blues ·center Pierre
Turgeon that infuriated St. Louis
coach Mike Keenan.
"I don't Jcnow why that wasn't a
five-minute major," Keenan said of
Kasparaitis, who was given a minor .
penalty for boarding. "It was a
. vici0111lllit ltfld.~uld have been a
major.lfc sh&lt;luld have been thrown
out of tlle' ~_. •.

Scoreboard
New Muico S. ~11. Tow~11ille. Ausulllin 7~
Pittsburzh 88, Geelong AIJ - S~:IH S6
Syr.w:usc69. Yugoslavia. N:nional41
Wrighr St. 79, BC l&gt;.utanc Honved 7.5

Basketball
NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
A.t._kDivW.

r.!!:
Hew York ................H

'" fl:l.

2
0.1........ ................. . 2
~iami ··············· ......0 4
Ph.iladclphia .............4 ~
Washinaton ...........,.4 5
Bostoil ..•.................. 2 6
New.Jmey ..............l
~

.SOD
.067
.600

lill.

4oM

2

Non·oonference adion

2
J~

Cuinb.:rlaml. Ky . K7. c~alar\lillc :iY ·
Mount Vernon N.u:arcnc IO:t. Ohio
V;allcy fiJ

.444

J~

. l.~

~

.161

~

Cmlrot Dhlslon

c::tllcoJ• ................ I0

0 1.00

Detroit ..................... 8

MUwMikee ..... .......... 6
At-.. ................. :... ~
c;urtOltt: ........ ..........:\

~

. 37~

TorG01D .................... 3
tlldiano ..•.............•... 2

6
6

.333
.2.'10

-·-

6

6 '~

1

.

'"I .&amp;1.
9(),)

Denver .....................4

2 .714
~
.444
7 J64

VIII\ ............. .'.. ... , ~
Mi~o ................4

Daillo .................. ..... l
S• AMonio .............2

1

Yaa:ou.,.er ............... l

lO

"

Hockey

AtlanliC" DMsion

r.dfk Oi\'ision
Sealtle ......................9
L.A. l...akm .............. 8
Ponllftd ................... ?

L.A. Oippen ......., .. ~

Sacnwellfo ........ ,.......
Gok1tn Sta~e ............ 3

Pbornia ....................O

2

.RIS

3

.727
..SH3

~

4 - ~~6
7 .:'64
7 .JOO
9 .000

I

2'-:J
:i

:'i'~
II

Taaday's S(Oft:S
Seltllc 106. Toro•&amp;o 98
a..BVELANO 13, Allanfa 6;\
New Yort: 92, Orlando 88

Milw.1ut.ce 100, Dallas 97
Hootton 122, Minneior.1 93
Miami 104. Denver 86
Portland 92, Sacrame111o 90 lOT)
L.A. labn 112. Ookkn Slate 109

Tonipt'spm..
Delroilat BolloD. 7 p.m.

ladianaat Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Scttllt at WathinJIOII. HO p.m.
New Yortat ctwloc1e. 8 p.m.
L.A. Clippers 11 San Antonio, 8:)0

p.m.

~

Miunl'• Vancouver, !Op.m.
U111a ML.A, lAm, IOJO p.m.
Oit~~G• Pltol=niA. I0;30p.m.

Thanday'spmos
Q.EVELAND at TorolliO, 7 p.m.
Mi...etOfall Orloodo, 7:30p.m.

N8W Jcney .. Dettoic, 7:l0 p.m.
awtoote 11 lndillftl, 7:JO p.m.
,.....,• ., Milwaub:t. 1:30 p.m.
L.A. Ctlppen at DaU•, 8:30p.m.
PbodilM ~. 8:]9 p.m.
0::.0C. II OooWI. 9 P·R\Ool&lt;llll- 11 Vtall. 9 p.m.

:NCAA Division I
. ·men's scores
&amp;DIIoldaoilldloa

~1&lt;. 17. VASOAAII·Sianll6

C

~.

t t 18. halo Rico N1rioM1

• CPftr• Alt Stall 92. FalrleiJh

. Dl

~-:I'

..

13. Mown 10

,.,...,.v_M

=

. . . 11.17. """"""At~ 79

•,.. .

102.
,, .........
Cllk:IF Qal"
....

. . lftt'•JI, VAJDAB111el2

•

.!!: L I ElL Gl G&amp;

Florida ............... II 3 .Ci
NewJrrsey ........ ll 6 I
Washinlton ........ IO 9 I

PhiiOidclphia ....... IO 10 I

27 61
23 46
21 ~7'

40
4J
~tl

21

~6

:'iH

N.Y. RanJI!n ....... 7 II 4 · IH

71

67

16 59
14 45

60

T.lmpa8ay ........·.. 7 9 · 2
N.Y. lllandtn ......o4 li 6

Northull Division

Hanford ............... 9 :'i _,
8o"on .................. 7 7 4

21
IH

BufTalu .................S
Montreal .............. 7
Ottawa ................. 6
Piltsb~UJh ............ 6

17 ~
17 74
17 ~2
l.l ~~

10
10
8
12

I
3
:'i

-·-

I

5.5

.B

49

.~ .1

S9
!Ul
79
:'i7
1J

.!!: J. I ElL Gl G&amp;
I
"

J
0
0

.1

27 60
2.~ 51
B ~K

49.
41

22 67
IM 61
1.1\ 43

64
67

• h&lt;llkDIYloion
,Colorado ............p ~ 4 JO 82

· Lo•Ant:eltl ,........ 9 ~ 8 .l
Yancouwr IO ..... JI 0 20
Cal&amp;n')l ................ 9 9 2
Edmomon ............911 J
S:anJote ............. :.7 10 4
A.hiaheim ............. .4 0 :t

21
:'i-&amp;

!i~

!i~

20 .\4
19 71
IK .~7
II ~4

~~

...
(12
4K
70
M'

77

Nt'o\1 Jeney 2. OnaWa 1

8oaon l. WuhhtiJon 2 (tie)

Tompa tky 3, Loo AoJdeo 0
Toron~o4, s.rr• 3
V""*',wa l.l&gt;allll 0
Oli&lt;fiO 4, - . , . &lt;Ul&lt;l

TODiah~'•p.­
- 1 1 Hortf,.,, 1 p.m.
LotAatele.• florida. 7130p.m.

Ph0eni1. • Coloado, 9 p..fn.

Dolt... c~-- 9:JO p.m.

N.Y. blan"den at Auht'im. 10:30

p.m.

Thu,...y'op.Bo$a. 7:10 p.•t

TOfODtolt S..Kalo, 7:30p.m.

Pi..-..p lll'lllloildobi• 7:30p.m.
......,., • 51. l.oull, a:lQ p.m.

IU. a..,.OII'Amooi011,9:JOp.m.
Cbica&amp;oiiVaacouver, JOp,m.

"

listed him.
He is seeking unspecified damages from the NBA.
The lawsuit says the league and
'the Bulls were · embarrassed by
Hodges during the team's visit.to the
White House after winning its first
title in 1991. Hodges wore African
garments and handed then-President
Bush a Jetter ••calling for an end to
injustice toward the African-Ameri·
can community," the lawsuit says.
Hodges' lawyer: David Odom.
said Hodges is an outspoken advocate of living his life as close us pos·
sible to the culture of his African
ancestors.

'·

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The lawsuit says that as a relatively young player who twice led
.the NBA in 3-point field goal per·
centage, teams would have been
interested in !-lodges i[ the· league
had not wanted him out.
NBA spokesman Brian Mcintyre
said ·the league would reserve comment until it had seen the lawsuit.
Bulls officials did npt return calls for
comment Tuesday.
Hodges is now the basketball
coach at Chicago State University,
·and he -signed as a free agent this
year with the Rockford Lightning of
.the Continental Ba.&lt;ketball Association.

· -

NUGGET~

Thanksgiving is approaching and
plans are moving ahead in Syracuse
for the preparation of dinners for
shut-ins and others who need a dinner on the holiday.
The Syracuse Fire Department ·
and its Auxiliary prepare and serve
the dinner.
·
Help is needed in a number of
directions to ·again successfully
carry out the project. Donations of
food, volunteer help to deliver din·
ners to shut-ins, and monetary contributions arc still needed. If you can
heip in any direction please call
Mary Pickens at 992-7181 or Edna
Hunnell at 992-2338.

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flmd 0

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Ricky Pic:n.'C on the injuf'N Jill. Wli\'td ('

Zan Tllbak on the lnjwal Hu. AcdYDtcd C
Melvin R.obiftiOft from the injlnd Jill .

_,_._
Football

CINCINNATI BENGALS: Added
WR James Hundon 10 rhe tOller. llclnlcd
WR Kn'in Jorda.

· OREEN BAY PACKt!llS: ctllimcd
WR. A.ndrc ltltoll orr Wlh•er• frOID tM
J1ek1011ville Jqu1n.
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Actlvooed OE

Jeff Crou fi"Dm Injured rttetw. Pt.ced 0

Cllril GnJ _,...., ...... - ....
CCai.DiRO&amp; ..._.DE~ JC~M~.
. NEW oaLEANS llltl'm: , _ 0

JiM tlronabrowlki 011 i ..... ,....,
NEW YORK .JETS: Wai....O Cl

KwMit Etlfa, Sl.... Cl LMG S....a.
Wai'""TJl .... O..hm .. _
•.- · SI&amp;...O OL Tror 5wt ., .. o&gt;n&lt;·
lUX toller .

I

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jumJ 1111.
·
TORONTO U.PTORS : PlACed C

HAVE

YouR

BABY

YouR

Having a baby
is a very personal experience.
That's why we've designed our binhlng
.
.
center so you woald have the option of choosing the way you feel most comfortable
'having your baby. From standard delivBfY rooms to spacious .suites,
.. whatever
you choose. you get the same experi- ,
enced compassionate care. We"re ol,d
hands at having newborns.

. rnn Pleasant Valley
If&amp;I Hospital

_._..._...., tLWI-·11011-.

shoe box of gifts to be taken to Good
Works ·in Athens.
·
To open the meeting membern
gave the UMW purpose in unison.
Mary Lisle presided and read "There
is No Special Time for Prayer." The
Lord's Prayer was given in uni son
and Ann Sauvage gave devotions.
Psalm 100 was read: Twenty-six
sick calls were reported and officers'

Ke~ping Hope Alive ." Readers were . ;
Laverne Neville, Helen Teaford, .,
Hope Moore, Mary Lisle, Elma '
Louks, Ann Sauvage and Marie ,
Houdashelt. Offerings were taken to . : ·
the focus table. Stout had the prayer, · ·
and Moore presented a closing reading from · t. Cor., Chapter 13. Also
attending was Irene Parker.

reports weie given by Elma Louks,
secretary, ani::J Ann Sauvage, treasurer.
The birthday of Rose Ann Jenk·
ins was noted .

Jean Stout had the World Thank
service wi'th the program carrying
out the theme "Transforming Love.

U.S. GRADE A (1D-16-l..B. AVG.) FROZEN ·

Wampler/Longacre ..
f! · Hen Turkeys · ·. · .
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.

Speakin' of food ar.d cookiil' and
that stuff, Barbara Pierce phoned in
a cooking tip she wanted passed
.
along to you.
' Too often apple pies develop and
air bobble in the ccnier and Barhara
says you· bakers can avoid that by
wrapping the pic in foil when you
talce it out of the oven. I haven't tried
it, bti.t Barbara says it works for her
so you might want to give it a shot.
Fred Baloy and Jared Shc'ets were
apparently the only two Meigs
Countians ·running in the .recent
Columbus marathon. It was 26 miles
and held .a week ago \Sunday on a
cold,' snowy day. Now that would
take fonitude .
Mrs. Dorothy Rollers c~presses
big thanks to all of you for the flowers, cards and phone calls on her
recent 93rd birthday.
Her children, Marty and Richard
Gress, Nancy Calc and Richard and
Loretta Roller arrived at Dorothy's
home with a delicious dinner on the
occasion. porothy's son and dough-

t

ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. James
Roller of Waldorf, Md., were unable
to be on hand but they had spent a
week here the month before so that
made it okay. Dorothy says she's
survived a lot of up~ and downs and
is grateful for her family and to the
Lord who has helped her over some
·tough spots.

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In an effort !O provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily.Tribune and The Datly Sen·
tinel will not accept weddings after
60 days from the date of the event.

•
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U.S. GRAIJE A WAMPI.ER

CAFFEINE I'I?EE DIET COKE, SPIIITE, DIET rrurHlli'

Boneless/Skinless·
Chicken Breast ·

coca cola
Classic
2-L/ter

PK~ET ONE PKC.

·,

OF Equal or Lesser value

'
·')

BUY ONE

I=REEI
·..
PflF.MfUM
Kroger ·
Gold Medal
Supreme CoHee · · Flour
,.

.A$SOilrED.VARIEhE$

OR

And, the Women's Auxiliary will
be staging a bake.p;alc of homemade
items beginning ~~ 9 a:m. next Tues·
day, Nov. 26. in the lobby at Y~ler­
ans Memorial HospitaL

5-11&gt;. Bag

~6-~!J.OZ.

Do we really need to know if
there's life r.n Mars'!, I frankly doubt
if it's any place we'd want to go for
the weekend. On the other
hand ...... ... do keep smiling.

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•••
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·M ountain Top
· Pumpkin Pie

anicles in the society section must
be submitted within 30 days of.
occurrence. All binhdays must be
submitted within 42 days of the

·

ASt;ORrED VAREJV:'S

Green Giant
Vegetables
11·15.25-oz.

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•

occurren~e.

I

All dla)erial submitted for publi·

~itina.

.,.,.

l

f:IMHN

cation is subject 10

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Many of you will remember Tom
Brown, son of Mrs. Nellie Brown
and the late Virgil Brown.
Tom is now mayor of Pon Clin·
ton, Ohio, and he has announce!! a
new way in which Port Clinton will
welcome in the new year. This year
the city wiU bring in 1997 with a
play on its status as the "Walleye
Capital of the World:.
"We are at the hean ·of Lake
· Erie's Western Basin and the Westem Basin is home to more walleye
than anywhere else in the world",
Mayor Brown comments.
So--a fabricated walleye sculp. lure will descend from fi pole on
downtown's Madison Street at the
stroke of midnight. The walleye is
being created by Andre Cuihcl, a
contemporary anist. from Berea. A
program and band music will start
the celebration at II :30 p.m. on New
Year's Eve.

All club meetinas and other news

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_ _:.._--News polic'y - - - -

WAY ·

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Chril Child• lilt illjoled lilt Placed
F Chris Jtnt Ofl the injand lilt
ORLANDO MAGIC: """4 0 An·
fa-npe Hardaway oa 11M! i~ liM. Acti·
vo1ed F-C Amal MeCalkill from rbe I•

ioi place of the calcium blockers. ..
Your doctor can advise you and , if
need be, prescribe another type of
medication.
To give you more information, I
am sending you a copy of my Health
Repon ••Osteoporosis. " Other readers who would like a copy should
send $2 plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to P.O . Box 2017,
Murray Hill Station. New York, NY
10156. Be sure to mention the title.
Copyright 1996 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

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GO'IT, M.D.

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Rkh KinJ.
· NEW YORK KJ'IICKS: Activlled G

PETER

by Bob Hoeflich

N11klnell....... A.-elation

• · DfiNVER

•

DR.OOTT

Beat of the Bend ...

llllsketbtlll

j()

'
Tuesd•y's
scores
Pin•bur&amp;h 4, St. l.oui• 2

Montrea~•

.,

FLORIDA MARLINS: Numc:d Julio
C. Sannknto auitlant' llim:lor pf baseball
information 4Pd publicity and Sandt'~ van
Mttlt baseball infoon:mon nnd publicily
IWiJtnnl .
•.
HOUSTON ASTROS: Nomed Sieve
Swi1her manoaer or New Orteans of the
American Auociillion. Jimmy Wynn hit·
li"l ro&lt;Na:h. afMI Craig McMurtry pltchinc
coa.:h.
NEW YORK METS; A.:tivalcd LHP
Bill Pub)phcr from the 60·day dis11bleU
lis1. ~I'll RHP ~an &amp;Jmonw.,,.. outriJhl ·
to Norfolk I)_( 1he ltuernolional l..c!IIJUt.
Sent RHP John C:mer a•d OF Terrell
[..()wrry outrigtu to BinsJNamton of 1hc
Eas1rm l.eagur.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES: Addetl
RHP Ry:m Nye 01nd RHP Jason Boyd 111
the 40-rmm rotlcr.

CcPiral Dhlsion

Dallas ................. IJ 6
Dttroit... ............. ll 7
Chicato ............ 10 9
St. LouiL ......... .Il 10
Tmnnllo ................ 9 II
Phoent" ................6 9

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Nollonol Leol"'

WESTERN CONFERENCE

r-

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...

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NEW YORK YANKEES : An ·
th:ll RHP John Wclleland Uc dincd In cll.cn.:i~c hi1 1997 tJPlinn.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS : NameU
Greg Hauck minor league 11n:n(t.lh anU
cnndirioliinj! ~ ooch-mcdical Cl)t.-.rdinGtor.
Siglk'd RHP Cllri~ Nich1ing. RHP Mike
Otjulst. RHP O.uck Ricci and LHP M.111
Ounhar :md assigned them In Edmonmn
nf the Pacific Coas1leque. Named Mike
Quade manuacr of Hunuville uf lhc
S0t;11hcrn l.e:ljue.
.
TEXAS RANGERS: Placed INF Lvi'
Ortiz and OF Dwayne: Ho5ey on i!TCYOI.::I•
ble waiver1IOr lhe purpose of giving them
rheir unconditional release . Senl LHP
Danny Smith outrig.hl 10 Oklahama City
of the Americ:1n Associa~:ion .

Exhibition action

Ita

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11oun~cd

EASTERN CONFERENCE

.091

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~tlntrlll.' l .

NUL standings

.222

..•"

CHICAGO WHITE SOX: Agr«d to
tcnns with OF Albert Belle on n tiv~·)'I!&lt;U'

lill

7 .221

..

BOSTON REO SOX: Named Jimy

· Slnvak Republic IW. Akron 6.1

Mlllwftl OivW.

,.

Willl:t.nl~ manat~-cr.

Gcncv11IUI. Mnlunc b6
Waist, 7.\. Noire IJa~. Ohio 51

..

games. After winning four of five; Chicago's Ethan Moreau exchanged
Schwab entered the game 1·6· 1 in third-period goals before 01lers
his last eight.stans.
rookie Mike Grier gave his team a 4Dayt)lond L0ngkow, John Cullen 3 lead.
and Rob Zamuner scored· for Tampa
The Oilers had the best chance in
. ovenime, but Dean McAmmond's
Bay.
Maple Leafs 4, Sabres 3
brealcaway and rebound were both
In :roronto, Wendel Clark and stopped by Belfour.
Kirk Muller helped the Maple Leafs
Canuclca 2, Stan 0
end a four-game losing streak. .
Corey Hirsch made 36 saves and
Clark scored twice and Muller added an assist as Vancouver beat
had two assists, and the Maple Leafs visiting Dallas.
got solid goaltending from Felix
Hirsch's best stop came two min·
Potvin, who made 20 saves.
utes into the second period when he
Michal Grosek, Jason Dawe and made a diving stick save off Jamie
Donald Audette scored for the Langenbrunncr in close.
.
Trevor Linden and Markus
Sabres.
Oilers 4, Blackhawlca 4
Naslund scored for the Canucks;
In Edmonton, Tony Amante's · with Hirsch assisting on the seco~d
'
second goal of the game with Jess goal.
· The . loss snapped a four-game
than two minutes left in regulation
gave the Blackhawks a tie with the unbeaten streak for the Starn, who
lead the Central Division with a 13·
Oilers.
Edmonton's Jason Arnott and 6-1 record.

Mih:hin.

Non·('onrerence action

4

WESTERN CONFERENCE

r.!!:
Houlton ..... ,.............9

.
Anttrlran Leap
BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Siined
LHP J~:s~ OrOR:o 10 a one-year conlr:wl.
Added OF W~ady Almon!~:, OF D:mny
Clyburn, RHP Julio. Mon::no and RHP
FraR~:i~co S~t1u1. to the 40: rnan rosk'r .
Sent OF Mark Smith and LHP Anron
L..anc outri~hl tu Rod.esler of the American 1\UIH!i:nion. Rde:11ed lHP Mike

Ohio women's
college scores

J
~~; •

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Hodges sues NBA for alleged blacklisting

1',

1 .889
J .700
4 .600
6 . 4S~

C1£VELAND .....•..7

Ohio men's
college scores

rebound with 39 seconds left in reg·
ulation, and Jim Carey stopped a
penalty shot as Waspington salvaged
a tle with visiting Boston:
Peter Bondra set up ~oth goals ·
and Carey had 21 saves for the Capitals. who extended their unbeaten
streak to four games (3-0-1 ). Adam
Oates and Clayton Beddoes scored
for the Bruins, who also are on a 30-1 streak:
"Any time you're leading with a
minute to go in the game, you want
to'win that hockey game and feel you
should," Boston coach Steve Kasper
game-winner.
· said. "We were a little shaky."
Sergei Brylin had the other DevLightning 3, Kines o
ils ·goal. Bruce Gardiner scored for
In Tampa, rookie Corey Schwab
Ottawa.
made 31 saves for his second career
· ··1 don't think we played well the
shutout. leading the Lightning over
first two periods. All night on both
Los Angeles.
sides, passes were not completed.
With No. I goalie Daren Puppa
sidelined by injury, Schwab has
There were a lot of turnovers,"
Devils coach Jacques Lemaire said.. stancd 15 of Tampa Bay's last 17
"But what's great is we controlled
the third period. We took over."
· Elsewhere in the NHL, it was
New Jersey 2, Ottawa I ; Boston 2,
CHICAGO (AP) -Activism on
Washington 2; Tampa Bay 3, Los the pan of African Americans end·
Angeles 0; Toronto 4, Buffalo 3; ed former Chicago Bulls player
Vancouver 2, DaJlas 0; and Chicago Craig Hodges' career in the NBA, he
4, Edmonton 4..
,
contends In a federal lawsuit.
Hodges, 36, played 3 1/2 seasons
Bruins 2, Capitals 2 ·.
Mark Tinordi banged in a for the Bulls, including their first two
championship seasons of 1990-91 .
and 1991·92. Hampered by ankle
and knee injuries, he missed 26
games in.his final season and aver·
aged a career-low 4.3 points.
In a lawsuit filed Monday in U.S . .
District Coun, Hodges claims no
Transactions
other team would give him a tryout
after his contract with the Bulls
Bueball
expired because the league black-

you are fonunate to have obtained hean disorders and hypertension . As
relief. Although the treatment you a general rule , they are reliable and
describe is safe and inexpensive, it safe, albeit somewhat expensive ..
should not be used in the presence of
I gather from your question that
Jcidney damage, which may cause a you ·· and many other readers who
dangerous increase in potassium have written me •• are concerned
levels.
about whether their medicines inter·
· Mimy RLS sufferers (ni cknamed fere with calcium metabolism and
"Night Walkers") have been helped could worsen osteoporos is, a com·
by the prescription drug Sineinet, mon medical problem in the elderly.
which is ordinarily used to treat . I am happy 10 repon that calci urn
Parlcinson's disease. Interested read· channel blockers affect only certain
ers should aslc.their physicians about reactions -· notably in the cells of
this option, but can obtain full infor- specific lllUScles; the drugs have not
mation about RLS by writing the been shown to cause osteoporosis or
RI,.S Foundation , 304 Glenwood other bone di sorders.
Ave .. Raleigh. NC 27603 . Teleor course, you may have some
phone: (9!9) 834-0821.
other objection 'to calcium channel
DE_AR DR. GOIT: I'm 91 and blockers; for in stan ce, they can
can't ·risk taking calcium channel cause severe constipation. Thereblockers because I have osteoporo- fore, you should share your concern s
sis. To what extent do they deplete with your family physician. Fortu·
calcium levels?
nately, there are other classes o(
DEAR READER: Calcium chan· drugs .. such as bcta-blockern and
nel blockers are drug s used to treat . ACE inhibitors ·· lhat could be used
"

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Syra9use Asbury UMW plans holiday dinner

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tree a little bit," Johnston said. "We
weren't getting the effoit from some .
people. We were getting complacent." .
Devils 2, Senaton I
Defenseman Lyle Odelein's first
goal of the season broke a third-period.tie and gave New Jetsey a victory at Ottawa.
The Devils defenseman scored on
the power play with 8:20 left in the
game. Right wing Bill Guerin pas·sed
from the left faceoff circle across the
ice to Odelein, who blasted a hard
shot just below the crossbar for the

Medicine

.1

Penguins make deals before getting 4-2 win over Blues
Petr Nedved scored twice in the
first six minutes as the new-look
Penguins ended the Blues' fivegame winning streak. Kasparaitis
and Johansson, acquired the day
before from the New York Islanders,
had a goal and an assist, respectively.
The Penguins improved their
home record to 6-2-0, but are 6-12·
I overaJI and in last place in the
NHL's Eastern Conference.
The Blues hadn't lost since dropping a 6-3 decision in Toronto on
Nov. 5. Grant .Fuhr had been in ·)Zoal
for all five of the wins.
Before the game, the Penguins
acquired center · Stu Barnes and
defenseman Jason Woolley from
Florida for center Chris Wells, then ·
got defenseman Fredrik Olausson
and forward Alex Hicks from Ana·
heim · for defensemaoi Dmitri
Mironov and left wing Sha}vn. AntosJci.
The Penguins' previous home
game, an 8-3 loss to the New York
Rangers, prompted the nurry of
trades. After that one, Howard Bald·
win, the chainnan of the ownership
group, met for nearly an hour with
general ma~ager Craig Patrick and
Johnston.
"What Craig did was shalce the

DEAR DR. GOTI: After suffer·
ing from restless leg syndrot:ne for
about 20 years, t happened to bring
up the subject with my younger
brother. He told me 10 try taking
John C. Wolf, D.O.
potassium (550 mg), a mineral
Assocille Profeuor
required for nonnal nerve impu\se
of Fttmily Medicine
transmission. This compound is
~""''-..1..~--------------.J. · nontoxic and in my case gave me
immediate relief from those annoyQuestion : I'm 29 years old, and tion causes tenderness that varies ing spasms.
DEAR READER: Restless legs
for the · Jast six months I've had a with the menstrual cycle; the worst
painful spot in one of my breasts that discomfort being prior to the onset syndrome affects many thousands ·•
doesn't change with my menstrual of the period. For ·some women, perhaps millions ·· of healthy adults.
cycle. Neither my doctor or I can however, the discomfon is present Marked by nighttime "crawling"
sensations, which can only be
feel a Jump in the area where il all the time.
huns. I've had an ultrasoUnd that
lit this condition there is often 'a relieved by getting up and wallci~g. ·
didn't show anything. What.could be panicularly tender, soft, rounded, RLS can literally be a nightmare.
JD(&gt;vable lump or multiple lumps, The cause is unlcnown.
causing my pain?
Many antidotes have been recomAnswer: Breast pain, a condition bitt ibis isn't always so. Infection in
we doctors call mastodynia or a brel\51 gland or collecting duct can mended. These include calcium,
mastalgia, can have many causes, prOduce breast pain as can irritation quinine, and·· as you'ye discovered
including the one that strilces fear in of the nerve that provides sensation •. potassi)lm. In the main, such ther·
everyone's mind .• cancer. And the from the breast. Hormonal imbal· apy is ineffective for true RLS,. so
first thing your physician did was to ance can also create mastodynia, but
'
investigate if cancer was the cause in this case, both breasts are typical·
of your pain.
ly involved. Complex, isn't it?
In making this determination, he
Your doctor ordered an ultra·
or she staned with what is probably sound examination of the breast to
the most important. test to determine try to clarify the cause of your dis.
Plans for a Christm"l&gt; .dinner at
whether your Jump is a cancer •. he comfort. This test is particularly the church on Dec. 10 were made
or she took the history of your dis· helpful in differentiating between . when the Syracuse Asbury United
comfon: when it staned, where it solid tumor-like lumps and fluid· Methodist Women met recently at
. huns; how severely it huns, what filled cysts . Mammography is ·also the church.
makes it better or worse, and very helpful in identifying breast
The dinner will be potluck and
whether it changes with yoitr men· abnormalities, panicularly cancer, · those attending are to take a toy to
strual periods are all imponant ques- . but its effectiveness is reduced in be sent to the Methodist Home for
tions.
·
young women, like yourself, who Children at Wilmington : Those
Next, your doctor probably asked still have very glandular breasts. It is attending arc also asked to take a
about the history of breast cancer in much more . effective after
your blood relatives. Together, all menopause when the breast glands
this information made it possible to. have shrunk.
Your history and physical examicategorize your risJc. of breast cancer
as "high," "medium" or "low." This nation and ultrasound failed to find a
risk assessment helps determine cancer. Hurrah! You probably are
what other steps will be necessary to suffering from fibrocystic breast disdiagnose and treat your condition.
ease. There are several treatments
Fonunately for"you, breast cancer fot this condition, arrd you should
is predominately ;. condition affiict- talk with your gynecologist or fami·
ing,women after ~enopause, so your Jy doctor about them. Many women
age alone suggests ·a .non-cancerous with annoying rather than disabling
cause of the mastodynia. Another symptoms choose to live with lhe
helpful sign is the absence of a deft· problem. Talk with your physicipn
nite Jump, since cancer typically and decide what is best for you.
forms an irregularly shaped, fixed,
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
firm lump instead of a soft, movable coluonn. To submit questions,
one.
. write to John C. Wolf, D 0., Ohio
The most common cause of mas· Unlvmlty College of Osteopathic
todynia, panicularly · in women in Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall,
their 30s and 40s, is fibrocystic Athens, Ohio.
breast disease. Typically this condi· •.

••'
••

.

By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.

Family

~'

•

Is there any relief for restless leg syndrome?

Ohio Univenity
Olllege of Osteopathic Medicine

•'

ny Newman scored a season-high 27 points, including
10 in the fourth quaner, and Armon Gilliam added a

.

~~~~~~~··~d~•!f~,No~v~•~m~b~NW~20~,~1!811~----~----------~----------2P~onww~~oy~·:M~Id~d~~~po~rt~,O~hl~o~--------------------~The~~D~a~I~~Se~n~ti~n~e~I:•Pa~ge~7 ·

.......

Olajuwon's heart concerns overshadow Rockets' victory
By

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,11!
•
••
••••
••

••

•

,·l

�•
W~nesday, November 20,1996

P • 8 • ~Deily Sentinel .

Pomeroy • Middleport; Ohio

CommurJity calendar -Five generation.s--.
The Conunualty Calelldar is
published • a free eenlee te - profit aroupa wilbbl&amp; to • ouace
meeting and spedal _.._ The
caleadar Is 110t d d...-1 IAI promote sales or fund railers Ill. any
type. Items are prlmled as space
permits 1111d ~be pafllllteed
to rum a specific Dwaber ol ~yw.
THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Meetinz of the
Meigs County Public Library Board
of Directors will meet Thursday, at '1
p.m. at the PomerQy library.

POMEROY •• Middleport Child
Conservation League, 7 p.m. Thursday at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church. Program on
Alzheimers Disease to be presented
by Lenora l.,eifheit, R.N.

SATURDAY
SYRACUSE -- Annual Christmas flower show, Saturday and Sunday, 1 to 4 p.m. sponsored by the
Meigs County Association of Garden Clubs, to be held in the Carleton
Scl!ool auditorium. Syracuse. Public
POMEROY 1-- Rock Springs Bet- . invited to exhibit and view displays.
ter Health Club, Thursday, I p.m. at Exhibits to be in place by noon Sat·
the home of Barbara Fry. lbose llrday.
attending are to take a IChristmas
ornament.
SUNDAY
LONG BOITOM
NortheaSt
POMEROY -- Meigs, Local Cluster Community Thanksgiving
School
District
Title
I Service, Long Bouom United
parent/teacher nieeting, Thursday, Methodist Church, Sunday, 7 p.m.,
6:30 p.m. Salisbury Elementary. Sharon Hausman, pastor.
Information on Title 1 program,
state standards for schools, and Title· TUESDAY
I students.
POMEROY •• Meigs County
Ministerial Association community
'
. REEDSVILLE-Riverview Qar- Thanksgiving service, Tuesday,
;den Club, Thursday, Reedsville Sacred Heart Church, 7:30 p.m.
·Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m. Christ- Tuesday. Rev. Peter Tremblay of
.mas workshop. Take gifts for Health ·Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
Center patients.
to speak.

A limited number of Morgan
RaidiBuffington Island coverlets are
still available for Christmas giving
and may he ordered at the Meigs
County Historical Society.
Margaret Parker, president,
advised that the payment of $50
·must be made when the order is
placed and said purchasers will be
notified when the coverlets are
received.
The 50x67 fringed cotton heir·
loom in cranberry and crealn is
being made by TyMawr Classics,
the same company which created the
·I75th anniversary of Meigs County
coverlet last year.
' The coverlet center . features a
.'battle scene portrayal in aD oval surrounded by buildings and artifacts
sjanificantto Meigs County's role in
'the Civil War.
.
' Buildings featured on the c!lverlet include: ·
·
• · --The mill at Langsville where
'Union soldiers were involved 'iii the
pursuit of Morgan as he made his
way· through that ,area: From there ·
'Morgan's m011 'l"ent iniO the Bradbury area where they shot two local
residents, the.. only private citizens of
n;cord as having ~n killed by
Morgan's Raiders.
--The Meigs County Courthouse
at Pomeroy, copied from an actual
photograph of the era) as it would
'have-looked in 1863.
,
· -·The log cabin, now owned by
, the Meigs County Agricultural Soci·
cty and located on the Meigs Coun• ty fairgrounds.
• --The Chester mill and bridge as
· it was after being rebuilt after being
· burned when Morgan's raiders went
•.through the village. No photographs
··of the original mill build about 1804
· by Levi Stedman nor the bridge
• could be located.
·
.,A picture of Meigs County's
' first courthouse, built in .1823, at
Chester.
~,The
William Middles wart
house where Morgan upon· arriving
•in Portland set up his headquarters.
"·The James Williamson house

l!ly ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH..CUMMINGS

..PICTURE YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE •••

DEAR ANNE AND NAN: We
have two cats and sometimes one of
~. two decides to urinate on things
\n~ide the house. At some point, one
~tinated on my daughter's dance
&amp;ag. I washed it in the washer with
the usual detergent, but it still has an
awful odor. Do you know what
m,1ght take it out? -· FURIOUS
WITH MY CATS, Southbridge,
Mass.
.
DEAR FURIOUS: Eleanor King
of Hacienda Heights, Calif., recently
sent us a clipping from Chemical
~nd Engineering News. The headline of the clipping reads, "Lab
Method Deodorizes a SkunkAfflicted Pet.'.'
,
' Apparently a chemist invented -out of necessity -- a fol'rOula for

.

....:.,

.

cannot be provided.
·
Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nash-Cummings are co-authors of
"Ask Anne &amp; Nan " (Whetstone}
and "Dear Anne and Nan : 'IWo Prize
Problem-Solvers Share Their
Secrets" (Bantam}.

in
Brandon !:.awls who was bom on Oct. 3 rnalcaa five gaMI'·
allons .In the Lottie P,auley family. Plctu.red h9ldlng Brandon
Is his mother, Heather Pauley Lewis, sealed beside hla gr111t- .
great grandmother, Lottie Pauley of Cedar Grove, W.Va. Back
Ia the grandfather of the ln!ant, John Pauley of Baarwallow
Ridgll and his great-grandmother, Betty Pauley of Maaon,
W.Va.

on Route 124 which was used as a
filed hospital for the wounded. ·
Finishing out the portrayal of the
raid and battle are a gunboat, cannon, sword, gun, bugle, drum both
Confederate and Union flags, and
the cavalry battle scene.
Funds raised through the sale of
coverlets will go into the Meigs
County Historical Society fund to
help finance the annual reenactments which take pldce in Portland. ·
A Portland pictorial history book
will ... glv•n fn llelg1/Gallla (olntln ., '
is also being prepared by the Port·
.-»_AI.
land Historical and Preservation
ZJJSJ4Jiif"
n
Committee and the Meigs County •
•
Historical Society. Publication is . •
schedule4 for the summer, 1997.
•
I
The b\&gt;ok will include pho· •
14»ft
tographs with brief descriptive cap- •
tions of floods,
buildings, n
9 00 N
•
scenic/historical sports, agricul:
• oon
•
turc/farm life, early industries, and : Cal Tol Fflt·l-8110-634·5265 for an l11illtlate ¥Fillllllelll. •
Civil War baule sites, · aiong with
.,.,_
wll .. ;
L
1k --.1 H
...;..r.. 11.1 5 ....
n
thosedcpictinglifeasirusedtobe·in •
••liSts
VHaya • ••urst
Portland, its scbools and churches. • Anyone wtjo has trouble hearing or understanding convarsallon Is Invited to n
Pictures for the book are being • have a FREE haartng teat.to see,illlris problem can be helped. Bring this n
accepted at the Museum where they • coupon wllh you for your FREE HEARING TEST, a.$75.00 value.
•
are copied and q:turned' to, the own- •
AR:.Cs~~::~C:ER·~
.. •
er:'. ~~~ on the sale. of the boo~s n
WALK-INS WELCOME
n
wtllPortland/Lebanon
go mto preservation
the
area.efforts rn . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • t

•••••••••••••
COUPON

FREE HEARING TESTS·

HEARING AID CENTER

Friday, November 22, 1996
1n Dr. A• Jac k BaIIes OHIce .
224 East Main, Pomeroy · .

The Dally Sentinel
PAMELA NEECE

_Neece to
·cam·pete
ih teen .
pageant

Per PieturePrepaicl
Please enclole self-adell lllfd.
stamped envelope to return your
photo.

•
•
•

-·"1-

Official
Entry
Form

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PRIZES! .

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IF: You could have all the
pure water you could drink, a
system which would provide
sparkling clean dishes, softer,
smoother skin, whiter and brighter
r.lnt'he!O: that last longer, and no soap
scum on shower doors or bathroom
for about the same, amount of
money you are already spending!

STILL CURIOUS?

lnatatlllllon

Total

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IAIIIIlD 1Y m-sraJI WGIISTS1111S, IIC.
ISS llri ~ .... WI '11111, Oltlt 4S761
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Mall or bring the eritry form:

The Daily Sent~el
111 Court It

Pomeroy, Ohio -~
(

0

Friday, Dec. 16 at 3 p&amp; f
.,

J

Pamela Neece, a junior at Meigs
High School, has been selected 'to ·
plirlicipate in the 1997 Miss Ohio
Teen USA Pageant, a Carvern Pro·
duction, to be held this weekend at
the Radisson Airport Hotel in
Columbus .
This year's Ohio representative '
for the televised Miss Teen USA
Papant:will be selected 'at the state
. ' •'
evel\t. .,
Neece was selected as an entrantat-large and will be competing with
girls from all over the Buckeye State
for the title of Miss Ohio Teen USA.
Pamela is the ·daughter of Roy
and Donna Neece of Middleport. At
Meigs she has been a 'member of the
choir and served on the yearbook
·Staff for the past three years, Bl!~~s
in the higli school office, and' is a
member of the Junior 'Executive
BOE Club.
For the past eight years she has
been a member of the New Horizons ·
4-H Club. She is in her fourth year
on th~ Meigs County 4-H Fashion
Board, has worked on the nutrition
can)p for two years in elementary
schools in Meigs, Vinton and Jackson Counties, and as a camp counselor at Canters Cave for two years,
In addition, Pamela has been on
the Meigs County Library Teen
Board for three years, on the Meigs
County Junior Fair Board for two
years, and has been taking music
lessons from Sharon Hawley for the
past four years. She is also a past
member of the Ohio State Fair Youth
Choir. ·
She (ijiS tx:en active in performance locally.'participating in festivals and special program as well as
holiday activities at the Senior Citi·
zens Center.
In comtminity activities Pamela
has modeled in the Pomeroy Mer·
· cliants Association spring style show
for five years. She is currently a par·
ticipant in the Big Bend Minstrel ·
Association's Thanksgiving weekerid show.
• Pamela is a member the Evangelical Christian Youth of the
Church of Christ in Christian Union.
She has several local businesses
who arc sp&lt;)nsoring her in .the state
contest for Miss Ohio Teen.

of

I:!

CARPET

,,

ASK AJIINJ: • NAN

Monday, December 23rd

YOU.ARE THROWING YOUR
MONEY AWAYI CURIOUS?

' : Scou anp Suzette Hicks of
· Pomeroy announce the birth of their
$econd child. a daughter. Bailey
Anne.
She was' born at Cabell Hunting•ton Jlospital on Oct. II and weighed
eight pounds, eight ounces. Mr. and
Mrs. Hicks have another daughter,
Chelsea.
· Ma.ternal 1randparents are Jack
and Emma Jane Pausft of Letart.
w. Va. Maternal Jf'UI·Jrlllldmothers
are Beatrice Weaver of Mason,
W.Va., and Ida 1'1114h of Middlepo~­
. Paternal grandparents are Bill
and Kathy Hicks of Buckhannon.
W.Va., and the paremal pat·grand1-'cnu are AI~ and Kay Hawes of
Belvidere, N. 1., and Betty Lu Hicks
of Buckhannon, W.Va.

DEAR ANNE AND NAN: My
son has a stuffed bear that is almost
as old as he is (8 years!). The bear
really needs a bath; Any suggestions
on how to wash it? -- SUE
MARKIS, Portage, Ind.
DEAR SUE: We called the Vermont Teddy Bear Co. to ask their
expert opinion. The advice: Put the
bear in a pillowcase, put in washer
and wash as usual. Hang it by its
ears to dry.
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
Questions of general interest will
appear in the column, Due to the
volume of mail, personal replies

Will be published

I you buy bottled water or rent a
drinking water system of any kind
and spend $20 to $40 a month on ·
cleaning products · to keep you
family and home spotlsss-

.:announce

1990s rather than the 1890s, the
glass knife that cuts lelluc.,.. and
leaves no brown leaves behind has
turned into ·- you guessed it! -- a
pla$1ic knife that does precisely the
same thing.
You can order your Lettuce Knife
(item 65081) from The Good Idea
catalog, P.O. Box 95, Vail, CO
81658 (1-800:538·6690). The price
is $7.95, plus $4.95 shipping and
handling.
.
·
Incidentally, we recently bought
one of these knives in our local
supermarket-- same price but (obviously) no shipping and handling
charges involved;

(16 years of age or younger)

=-=
..c

.:Hicks
birth
..

skunk-smell removal based on that
114 cup baking soda
used for "scrubbing '' hydrogen sulI teaspoon liquid soap
fide from waste-gas .streams in the
Rinse well with warm tap water.
lab. And it worked like magic.
And, in the case of the dance bag:
We see no reason why the same run through the wash cycle in your
"formula" wouldn't work on your machine.
daughter's dance bag: cat urine conDEAR ANNE AND NAN: A
tains the same chemicals, called thi- friend who is 81 years old has a
ols, that skunk spray does -- and if it glass knife that belonged to her
doesn't work, it won 't hurt!
mother. So you know it is old . She
Wet the darce bag with water and uses it to cut lettuce, and the part of
work the following mixture into the the lettuce that is left over doesn't
fabric.
' get brown. I would . like to know
SKUNK-~ELL
where I can get one of them. · •
DEODQRlZER
EILEEN RIZZO, Hacienda Heights,
. I quart 3 percelll hydrogen per- Calif.
·
oxide (available at your pharmacy)
DEAR EILEEN: As this is the

Our specialpage(s)
"For C.h ildren Only"

"0

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

_Power-out cat smells w-lth 'formula' for skunk-smell removal

· -~

\

.Commemorative coverlet
orders being accepted

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

t;xpo drawing
Winners
announced

•,

.,

.

10 lbs. &amp; Up
All Natural

·lb.
Turkey Coupon

I
I
I
I
I

I I

1
1$
I I

or Big.Bear Plus cashier.

10 Up To 1~ lbs. Size

TOP FROST FROZEN

This special offer Is valid through Thursday,
8836
I Nov. 28,
1996 at All Big Bear and Big Bear Plus Stores

-- ---

18 lbs. and Up

TOP FROST FROZEN

I I
WHOLE TURKEY
I I
This special offer Is valid through Thursday,
8835
J Nov. 28, 1996 at All Big Bear and Big Bear Plus Stores .

WHOLE TURKEY

L!Limlt One Coupon Per

Present this coupon to your Big Bear or Big Bear Plus cashier. You'll receive

----------------

L!Limit One Coupon Per Turkey With Additional $10 Purchase

With Additional $10 Purchase

Cockta.i l .Shrimp Ruffles Potato Chi
From Our

Shop

Cooked Sweet ·&amp; Tender

14 oz. Bag - Prert&gt;ric:ed

lb •

Pumpkin
- 37 oz. Size

Winners of the Meigs Industries
Inc., Syracuse, drawings held at tbe
Meigs County Town · and Country
Expo have been announced. They
are Ohio • River Bear Company
Bears •• Kay· Wheeler, Albany, and
Debbie Brown, Rutland; wood stor·
age crates produced by Meigs IndustOes Inc .•• Mrs. Raymond Cole of
Pomeroy, Brenda Merritt of Mason,
'PYa., Agnes Dixon of Pomeroy
and Mike Elliott of Chesh1re.

PI~

·

BUY ONE GET ONE

Ea.
'

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Page 1.0 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedne~day,

...
November 20, 1911&amp;.::

The late Cardinal Bernardin taught les.sons in life, death
know I'm a night owl. I was a1 my
typewriter, in my standard work
Ann
attire, a nightgown 'Under my wool
bathrobe. My favorite beat-up bedlanders
room
slippers were somewhere
199S. l.- III.IIJ~
under
·
the
desk. I recognized the
. T~~~~ea s~ aM &lt;=re·
.-an. S)'llllicatt.
voice at once. It was JV:vin Dowdle.
a good friend of Monsignor Ken
Veto. Both men live in the cardinal's
By ANN LANDERS
residence. "Ken asked me to call
Dear Readers: Because you are you," D,owdle said. "Your friend
· my friends, over the last 40 years, I Joe is sinking fast. If you want to
have shared many private moments come over;· we will send a car for
of my life with you. Today, with a you."
heavy heart, I am writing about the
" I'll be downstairs in the lobby
loss of a very special friend. I called in five minutes," I said. And I was.
him Joe. 11le world knew him as
11le cardinal's residence is about
Joseph Cardinal Bernardin.
seven minutes from ·mine. and
On Thursday, Nov. 14, the phone because of the hour, there was virturang just past midnight. This was not ally no traffic. As we approached the
unusual since family and friends

~veteran

residence. I could sec media trucks
parked on both sides of the street.
11le reporters, however, had the
good grace to stay away until there
was some " news." Huddl"'l in front
of the residence were six or seven
sad, middle-aged faithfuls, ,some
holding lighted candles, others with
small bouquets of flowers. They had
come tq express their devotion to
their priest, and as one woman said,
uwe jusl wanted .to be near him.''
Monsignor Velo, a much-loved
Chicagoan, was like a son to the cardinal. He met us at the door and
escorted me to the second floor,
where I was greeted by the cardinal 's sister, Elaine Addison, and the
cardinal·~ personal physician, Ellen
Gayn2r of Loyola University's Med-

ical Center. He then led me to the
cardinal's bedroom, where I was
offered a chair beside the bed. I sat
there for a long while, in prayer -·
mostly thanking God for the gift of
this extraordinary man. 11lerc were
no signs of anxiety or discomfort.
He looked totally peaceCuL I
thought , ''If anyone deserves a pain-·
Jess exit, this man surely does."
When I finally left the cardinal's
residence and arrived home, I tried
to work on the column, but it was
impossible to concentrate, so I
turned on the TV. '11le first words I
heard were "Joseph Cardin·al
Bernardin died at I :33 this morning.
Joe was an intellectual giant. He
was also a man of tremendous
It

'

courage. He spoke out against injustice wherever he found it, and he
was responsible for ''11le Challenge
of Peace," a pastoral letter against
nuclear war which was approved by
the Na1ionai Conference of Catholic
Bishops. When he spoke, people lis·
tened.
Joe thought of himself as a priest,,·
and he performed the everyday,
unglamorous tasks that he .signed on
for at the beginning. He visited the
sick, quietly, anonymo~siy, and
showed up unannounced and unexpected at the bedside of cancer victims.- He spoke of death as a friend
and somehow made us all less afraid
to die.
11le cardinal visited his mother in
her nursing home near his residence

a•••

every day without fail until he
became bedridden. She would
always ask him, " What are YOII. •
doing now, Joseph?" and be would
reply, "I'm working for the clwrch4 .
Mother." Sbe would say, "Thai is. ,
lovely. Keep it up." He never tol&lt;l ·
her he was a cardinal. She had no
idea.
Joe taught us how to live, and be.
taught us how to die. Dear God,
please .take good care of this remark-.
able man. 11le likes of him will not .
soon pass this way again.

Laad...;

Send questloas to Ami
Cre&amp;IOI'f Syndicate, 5777 W. Ceo·
tury Blvd., Suitt 700, Los Aapea,:, ·
Calif. 90045
·'

honored-....
New labe.ls will clarify milk's fat content · ·
•
By NANCI HELLMICH
USATODAY .
Watch your milk carton. .
.
The Food and Drug Administration will· issue final regulations Wednesday on how milk is to be labeled according to .its fat content, and you may
need ihis road map to keep them straight:
- 2 percent milk will be labeled reduced fat mille instead of low-fat: its.
current tag.
· -Skim milk can be called skim, or it can be labeled fat free, nonfat, free
of fat , no fat, zero fat, with9ut fat, negligible source of fat or dietarily
insignificant source 'of fat.
·
..
.
.
. - Got ail that?
The new labels are"'c·onsumcr friendly," says Linwood Tipton. president
of the· Milk Industry Foundation, which pr9posed the new rules along with
the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI).
"11le message we want to get across is that 2 percent milk is not low in
fat," says Bruce Silverglade ofCSPI, "and if consumers want to reduce their

fat intake. they should drink I percent milk or skim."
.
. .. · . ;
The proposed regulations were announce&lt;J a year ago, after crntcs ,
charged that 2 percent milk is not Jow-fot as defined by the FDA's food :
labeling Jaws. Some dairy products, which had their own standards of ideo· 1
tity, were exempt from the initial labeling laws.
The final rules will apply to milk but not to yogurt.
.
,,
Studies show consumers can cut the fat in their diets significantly simply ;
by switching to lower fat dairy products.
·
.•
Calories and fat in I cup of several types _o f milk:
- Whole milk, 150 calories, 8 grams of fat, 5 grams of saturated fat.

-2 percent ii.ilk, 120 calories, 5 grams of fat, 3 grams of saturated fat . .
.

'

.

.

~

I

'

'

·'

- I percent milk. I00 calories, 2.5 grams of fat, 1.5 grams of saturated, ·
fat.
-Skim , 80 calories, 0 fat .
Roto~
at m"'t etoree;. Check your 5tore for

eWe rum Orum5 and

efhtt Guaranteed Lowe5t Price5
we'll match ar~y locafly advert.is~d price

a11al!a~ility.

eThtt fk~t Name 8rand5
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e Free Te5tlng

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l:tat terie5, !&gt;tar:ter!l, .lilltcrrn~t(.lr&amp;,

If we don t nave it, we II

Civil War Medal of Honor recipient Private Joaeph Van M,atril
was recognized Nov. 10 with a ceramonl( dedicating a new
headstone at Middleport Hill Ce,metery. Shown here ere .,erberl
J. Pa'r kinson who researched Van Malre'e service record and
distant relative, Norm VanMeter, who attand8d the ceremony.
Among those making comrnenta at lhe ·ceremony were Stale
Senator and Middleport native Ja11, Michael Long (O.Circleville).

..

eet i, t for you fa5t

cOOtrol module5, eensore

1.19 6aie price 'lt.

~ Ministerial

association plans
:Thanksgiving
services·
·
,
·
The annual Meigs Ministerial Association community Thanksgiving ser• vice will be held Tuesday at 7:30p.m, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
• Rev Peter Tremb!ay, pastor of the Laurel Cliff Fr~ Methodist Church,
: will give the sennon.
·
The service is one of several community-wide events that the Meigs Ministerial Association sponsors throughout the year. Other activities include a
&lt;series of Thursday night services during Lent. and a hymn sing at the Meigs
County Fair.
'

.

The minister reported that in recent months requests for help have heen
unusually high. For this rca.,on, duPianticr said, available funds arc e&gt;trcmely~
.
• "Donations to this fund, which helps hundreds of persons on need each
years, arc always welco~~· but would be especiaii;Y helpful at this critical
time," commented the mm1s1cr. ·
·
He asked that contributions be sent to the Meigs Ministerial Association ,
~/o The Cooperative Pari,'h, Box I71, Pomeroy. 45769.

Cigar~ttes

'76~

4

your c;:oe-t lritt:r
re\late per q,t.

your c:oet after

. rebate per plu8

Autollte
Resistor
Spark Plugs

'

.

limit 12

Winter

,.,.G

@j

:329

&amp;Om

·~,~,_
4497
. .,,,
.
.
..·.·.
.

Son of a Gun
Tire Care

..
#S T-6925

@!

Umit4

'

for cars ·

199

Super Delu&gt;&lt;e
Snow Brush

11951:3

Shur Grip Z
for truckf!

Accessories

AMSCO 1tlPiece Driver
Set

PluaTax

..
Cobbs
Tenyc;lo~h

'

Steering
Wheel5

Shocks

.Gallipolie ·
Monroe
GaeSC
Shocke

446-3807

Monroe

Shocke

202 E8at Main

J

•

fo r t.ruGk" , 36000 teries

4397

High

·Performance

Air Shock
.·. J:.lte

,

2988

10 mof1t.M

•

'

am·. pm
Sunol~, 10 am • !I pm
~Ia Prtcet fOOd on ln·stoct merch•ndiee 0r1ly.
~eul•r pricet m~ v•ry due to toc•l Cflmpatltlon.

We r~Hrve th., ridh'" t.o 'limit q,u,ntmee.
_.,...,. '/D; 18H.

Batterlee
· l'ri~ .. eood

&gt;Atll
axch•n8tl

209 Upper 1tiver Roa.d

Gae~T

SUPER SUNDRY

blue or trt.ct

Batteri es

..'

'•

Steering
Wheel
Covol'!&gt;

Grsnt

GTStyling
Headlight
Covor&amp;

Auta
Ventshade
Yentvi50rf5

.

Ohi() Briefs:
ATHENS (AP) - .Thirteen envi- ·
ronmentalists protesting ·
in 1
the Wayne National Forest
plead¢ innocent to trespassing "'J~"'I,, I
Athens district offiCe of the U.S.
est Service. .
The 21 protes1ers were arr&lt;:stedl
last Wednesday when they refused
leave the forest service office at
itlg time.
The group met with forest super-!
visor Eurial E. Turner to protest
for logging about a third of the trees
from 442 of the forest's 227,000
acres, said forest spokeswoman
Karen Hughes. .
They were members of Ohio University's Campus Greens.
Twelve members were arraigned
in Athens Municipal Court Tuesday
apd one appeared Monday. The rest
will be in court today.'
LOGAN (AP) - A Cincinnati
woman has filed a lawsuit against
Hocking County officials for falsely
arresting her because her brother was
a suspect in the death of his wife
whose body was found in a burned
Jeep at the bottom of a ravine .
Elaine Wain of Cincinnati filed
suit in Hocking County Common
Ple;~S Court against several agencies
and individuals including Sheriff Jim
Jones and Prosecuting Attorney
Charles Gerken .
Wain was arrested in October for
obstructing justice in protecting the
whereabouts of her brother, Larry
Brown, 59.
Brown has been charged with
murder in the June 21 death of his ~
wife. He has pleaded innocent and
posted $75,000 .bond.
•
Wain alleges she was deprived of
federal civil right and liberties by
being 'falsely arrested and impris.

54~~~
IDT-700 or DT-660

ins in M1. Simpt011'1 911 call tQ police.
.
,
Kaelin tefli(ICd that on June II , I994, he and Simpson were watchrns a
movie - "11le World According to Garp"- when Simpson comp:u-ed a
scene involvin' oral IU to a night in 1992 when, looking through a wondow
of her house. he wllehed his u -wife have sex with a boyfnend on her sofa.
On Oct. 25, 1993, Simpson argued with his ex-wife about what h~ saw •
thrQu&amp;h the window, rcJUiting in the 911 call that brought several pohce to •
Ms. Simpson's home.
.
•. .
Jurors ea.i:lierTuesday heard the sec retly recorded tape of the pohce mterviewing Simpson and his eK-wife.
·
·
"He gets this animalistic look to him ," Ms. Simpson said on the tape. "I
get scared when he looks like that. "
.
Kaelin, meanwhile. repeated his account of the three thumps on hos guesthouse wall the night Of the killings. 1
He said the thumps came between 10:40 p.m. and 10:50 p.m. ·

•'

(

t_ _,.~

.

·

' '

t•

.'

EASTMAN'S

.

33·39 Oz •

'

Maxwell.House
'

'

COFFEE

Nature's Best.
Limit one with .
additional
purchase

LB.

Asst. Flavors

Superiors Whol~
Boneless

Tyson Holly Farms
Jumbo ~ack

Chicken Leg
Quarters

Pepsi.
Cola

Tavern Hams
LB.

Bob Evans

1#roll

farm Sausage

.$ 249

Apple 40 Oz. or
Sara lee Pumpkin Pies 37 Oz

Del Monte
Vegetables

FOR$

SLB.BAG
ALL PURPOSE OR SELF·RISING

88

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR
Buy One Get One FREE

Umit one free witll thll

1/2 gal

2FOR$
"'*"' ¥oloy .. WloWtol (r-1/2 p11179&lt;

Herr's ·
Potato Chips

I

I
I
I
I

!

150z.Bag

$

99

Good only at Foodland.J

---------

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON #160

12 PACK

18-tU OZ.

BOX ASSORTED VARtETES

· BEm CROCKER CAKE MIX

·fi' · '"sh

«Jelery

59

Fresh United Valley
Orange Juice .

89(

FOR

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON #1 59
EFFECTIVE 1t 17 TO 11 23 96

-Rc and Seven Up Products

$

2

2 Liter

Lenders
Bagels

Heiners Dinner
·Rolls 12 et.

BUY ONE OET ONE

FREE

1/2 Gal

UmK ono 11M wlttllhta coupon.

MANUFACTURER 'SCOUPO NEFF ECTIVE 11 •7T011:

4

32 Oz. Jar Regular or Ught

Kraft Miracle Whip

--

HOLIDAY DINNEQ~
TURKEY SPEOAL
1G-12L T~rlteyer
5-7 L Tlllkey Breast
2 r.s. Drasllg • Rols
2 r.s Y•s er Mn1ret1
Pttllots
2 ...........
PllltofGmy

Yf1'1

~·

9'

'·'

'

A\\ Sizes
10 lbs and Up
Grade 1 If Self-Basting
with Pop-Up timer

She says she was defamed when
Jones made statements on Columbos
television and to area newspaper,~ that
she had helped Brown escape from Jaw enforcement.
Wain seeks more than $25,000 in
damages. including attorney's fees.
Brown has said the death of his
wife, Joyce, 56, was an accident. He
said she backed the Jeep into a 35foot ravine and the vehicle caught fire
as be tried to rescue her.
· Howe'ver, aUthoriries said a re-crc·
ation of the- Jtccident showed that ·
Mrs. Brown could not have died as
· her husband described. A coroner's
report said she died before the vehicle caught fire.

COLUMBUS (AP)- Four police
sergeants reassigned during tbc investigation of Chief James Jackson have
asked an appeals court to give them
·access to investiga~ion records and a
list of those subpoenaed.
Jackson, seven police officers and ,
fackson·~ secretary have _been re_
as;igncd smcc Oct. 10 on con~ect10~
1"ith a mayoral investigation. The
probe is focusing on how the division
handled certain prostitution ahd gam. hling cases. as well as possible
l'avorilism.
•
Attorney Fred Gines, representing
lists. Utomas Glover. Jeffrey Blackweii ..Chqrles Martin a~d Neil Mason.
illed the lawsuit Monday in the IOth
Ohiq District Court of Appeals.
· f.Jiovcr. Blackwell and Mason
1 yor~ed in internal affairs before they
ivere ttansfcrred; Martin was an aide
to 1a~kson.
Gittes filed a similar la:"suit Oct..
111 aqcusing the ctty of ~1shandhng
IJil clients' rights. He ciarms the cuy
iJ att\liing on his request for records
IJlld other irifofiTiation related to tbc
ihve'IIIJation.
•
· 11\e suit alleses that inadequate
1~ord-keeping i1 "c~usjng unlawful
~la~• and denl•l•" relafed to access
lhf ~Korda ~y tlte pt~blicQ\~ con!Qnds lha?Eyor Ores
lfl'hlllka's &amp;~~lhority
iasue sub~iotntB is lin~ to that of the City
(founcil · ·
'

BIG BEND

SUPERMARKETS

'

MARIETTA (i\P) -A man died
Monday after he was hit by a car
while checking on a deer his car had
just hit, the State Highway l;'atrol
said.
.
Gary Dennis, 48. of Vincent, was
a passenger in a car that stnick a deer
1
on State Route 339.
. , · He had gotten out to check on the
condition .of the deer and was hit by
anothct car. troopers said.
The driver of the second car.
Marjorie Miller. 55. of Vincent, said
she saw the deer and hit the brakes
but couldn't stop the car in time.
No charges were filed.

~

to stand to plague O.J. once more

SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) - Meet the new Kato Kaelin: calmer, son's rages. The jury also saw more pictQres of a bruised and scratched Ms.
c)eaner cut, ele~rer headed- and even more trouble for OJ. Simpson.
Simpson -photos postliumously taken from her safety deposit box.
Simpson was once again missing from court, apparently in Orange col.n• Gone was the addle-minded, open-collared, longhaired flake who
ty attending the custody trial over his two younger children.
brought comedic relief to the criminal trial but failed to impress jurors.
The relatives of Ms. Simpson and Goldman are suing Simpson, claiming
' Testifying Tuesday in the wrongful death trial, the new Kaelin - hair cut
shorter, dressed in a jacket and tie- gave a confident, streamlined account he was responsible for the June 12, 1994, killings. Simpson was acquitted
ofd the days Slii!DIInding the killings of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald of murder last year.
·
.
oldman.
The trial resumes today with testimony fro111limousine driver Allan Park
· · Kaelin, Simpson's former house guest, said Simpson brooded over his ex- and FBI shoe print expert William Bodziak. Simpson is to testify Friday.
On Tuesday, Kaelin spent most of the day on the stand, providing deta!ls
wife's sex life and complained of her grip on their.two children - all·before
the slayings.
·
.
.
plaintiffs say point to JIIOtive.
,.
.
Kael in testified ~ for instance, that Simpson complained that Ms. SimpKaelin also survived a long, detailed cross-examination, ·never wavering
from the plaintiffs' most important points: Simpson had time to kill and that son was "playing hardball" with him about seeing his daughter at a dance
the famed wall thumps came from an area where a bloody giQve was found. recital hours before the killings.
Also, Kaelin said, the day before the siayings Simpson was thinking about
Kaelin's testimony came on the heels of more domestic violence evidence. ·
an
event
that had, a year earlier, sent him into a profanity-laced rage, resultJurors beard an audio tape of Ms .. Simpson saying she was afraid of Simp-

'---

Hoppy 22"

1'1

·69(

•

•

Shur Grip Z
Pre&amp;tane
Antifreeze

Kato Kaelin returns

on~.

ttl./{}

s1.3·5

-Flidter Christmas ·Bulbs
(7 Replacement Bulbs
.

,,

Valvoline 10W30, ·
10W40 or 5W30
Motor Oil

BASIC
Cigarettes

.

''

Um lr. 12

Tire Care

The Association is an organization of Christian .churches of several
denominations in the county with the pastors meeting JIIOnthly for prayer,
; fellowship. education ·and to address issues of importance to area church
,· members.
·
·
It also functions as a source for limited financial assistance for those who
. have urgent needs, explains Fr. David duPiantier, pastor, Grace Episcopal
• Church.
'. . He said that by combining contributions from participating churches with
, the offerings received althc various annual services, the association tfcasurcr functions as a central local source for pastors to refer those requesting
help.

MARLBORO

per ~t.

Pennzoii10W30,
10W40or
5W30. Motor Oil

'

'

69

yo ur G05t after
re~ate

$1.09 11ale price 'lt.
·33' mfr'e rebate

99" 5ale price
-30' mfr'e rel7ate

·42' mfr'e re17ate

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedneeday. November 20, 1996

Ellecllve Thru

'\

·$·

HAM SPECIAL
s....... Hair
n. YIIIIIS .
2.Gr... ltal!s
12DiuerRils

�Wednesday, November 20,

Poi'MI'CIY • Middleport, Ohio

•

The Dally Sentine l •

1990

40
I

L'S

POW E

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
BAM· 10 PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
Accepte. Credit Carda

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
DOUBLE COUPONS
STORE FOR DETAILS
I

$ 49 -

1111vlronment.

•

· sca ndalinl994.
''This arrcsr comes as a result of
the new cooperation that J ordered
betwee n the CIA and the FBI." Clin. ton said. "I'm glad that it happened

1--------1
Pepsi
Products

.,

Book Week. Laura Guthrie of Chester, laft,
assists her 3-year-old son, Seth, while his
cousin, &amp;·year-old Dyana Hawthorne, at right,
works on hsr own project. .
·

'i --:P...,u-:-b-::llc--:-:N:-ot::-lc:-8-NOTICE OF SALE

Br virtue ot on Order ol
Solo Joouod out ol tho
common Plooo Court ol
llolge County; Ohio, In 1111
Cllll ot thO llom• NotloMI
Bank, Pltlntlll, va.
ChrtotophorA. Yllugot, ot
ol., Dolondanlo, upon 1
d 1 llhWIIn rwnc11 eel

.=

~ No• ..oc:voc;;;

uld court. I will olllr lor

..,. lllhllrant door of 1111

Courthouoe In Pomeroy,
Me1p County, Ohio, on tho
13111 daiol Dacambor, 1. .,
ot10:00e.m.,lllllolowlng

Turkeys .........~!~~~·... 79

Ohio 45771. A and to wllhdrow Jho above
' aoRipllll logil diOICI'Iptlon collateral prior to oalo.
of ,... ,.., 11loto Ia u Furthor, The Formoro. Bank
end

Sevlnga

Compeny

lllualld In tho YIJioll of r-rvoo tho right to reject
swro•111•. County of llelga any or all bide oubmlttod.
and 11811 of Olllo and
Further, tho abov•
JM,UIIdod lind dltcrlbod ao cotlalorol will be oold tn 1111
condition II It In, with no
11110 ..,
,, ...nt town loll nwnbor oxprau or Implied
fiYI (I) end olx (e) In worrontleo gtwn.
r1 111 1'I addition to tho
For furth1r lnformatl.on,
c:ro
' Ofllo _ _. - - · - Jerry ot - -7430.
I7FII - ,
.,N - · - •
n&lt;
'' -1111ngeftho
111111 proper!J (11) 20, 21, 22; 3TC
' oonv.,od. to Ho.nor•l------~-car".ollln .., liMO c.wton.
Public Notice

•
·
',
•

u.. - ....
n::-

Jlland~

In Loving Memory
Of

'

WALTER (Boney)
LEE JR
• - ••
on hla birthday,
11/23196.
Happy Birthday

···=----··

.... lollo

L

. _ _ . . . . ._

Prwortf _,.reoo: .,._ Milk/Dairy Produelo, FIHI
' 1'11111 ..,.... ' ' " "181• Ollltl lneuranc•, Gaaollne, lnd
~
I I TAft
bldo lhall be rocolwd
: Al'l'ftAIID All •17,1110.00 In, ond bill apoclflcallono
Tho ,.., ...... OMnot Ill may bo obtained lrom,
lllldfOI .... thaniWG U*dl F18CAL OfFICE, 112 Eaot
II..,.
1¥11111.
...,Mj
..., •: CUh Olf417H,onorbof01'e1:00
Momllt'loI Drtva, Pomoroy,
..,__ .... _. - ;•wol....
""--'-· 14
•' • al
~ M.IIIIA••r fi~i' frtd

_,, .....,.......,, .,

.

.....,ollloiiiCDtlntr
Tho llolgo County
(111 1:t, . . 17; .C
. Council on Aging, Inc.

Used r.ts Alto

,.

&amp;hdtRepai'

.....

•

Libby's Fruit

'·

.."

Ocean Spray : j

GRADEA

Large Eggs ... ~:=~~ ...79
'

of 41 ,..,., ltclde;
II'- dlughllr, Sue;

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

Sl1t.ra, Btullllow,
Nltcel, tllpM~a
811 our fltltlda.

(619) 645-8434.

985-4473

Rents are computed according to your Income.
Lovely . aP-!If'ltnents featuring wall-tO-waH carpet·
lng, all appliances.

..

STAY WARM This Winter!
ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID

'

48oz.

181.8.5 oz.

'

'

l..:I

'

E~=~~~g

. Bounty
roll

'•
'

'•

Kraft Velveeta

•

Shells &amp; Cheese

•~

•.

' It

Maxwell House ·
Coffee

Birth Announcement

39oz.

$599
Blue Bonnet

lb.
quarters

'I

29 oz.

Ma~garine

::-

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
~ 2:00 PM OAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

.. -.,'
..,

Libbys
Pumpkin

WANTED : EMERGENCY RELIEF
WORKERS . (Substitutes) needed to
teach community and personal skills to
adults with learning limitations in their
own home in Gallia and Meigs Counties.
Hours: As scheduled/as needed; must
be able to work evenings, weekends and
overnights. High school degree, valid
driver's license, three years licensed
driving experience, good driving record
and adequate automobile insurance
coverage required. Salary: $5.25/hr, to
start. Training provided. Send resume to:
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640;
ATTN: Cecilia. Deadline for applicants:
11/~5/96. Equal Opportl:!nity Employer•.
•
:JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
~
- ··· -- ----·················-------·-···-·-·-

."
....
---

.

, ,.

''
...,'.,
.,

This Friday, Nov. 22nd
PAJAMA PARTY '96
wtOJ JennlferT. e pm-12 mid.
THE WATERING HOLE
Prizes For Baal PJ's
614-992·9901

:.
'

3/$100

REWARD
Anyone having Information
conoemlng stolen pocketbook
from Blue Tartan Parking Lot,
piBBM ooniiCI Middleport

Pollee

'.

I

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yn.
Serv-U (619) 8434

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION
HEATING&amp;
COOUNG

992-8424.

7iwttn

Pomeroy, Ohio

4

SLUG MATCH
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB SUNDAY,
NOV. 24
12 NOON

FRIDAY, NOV.
22,6 P.M.

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

The family of Daborah
Bush wishes to thank
Dr. Wilma Mansfield
and her staff, our
parish family of
Sacred Hean Church,
Meigs Coum, E.M.S.,
Pomeroy Emergency
Squad, all her f!lllow
"mergency &amp;quads
and fire department's
staff at V.M.H., Holzer
Hosplca, Meigs Home
He1lth Services,
Flehers Funeral
Home, the stslf,
faculty and students
of the Meigs Junior
and $anlor High
· Schools. A special
111anks to Flllher
Walter Heinz and
Slater Fidelia Bell, the
Joaeph and Roxie .
.Marcinko family,
Michaal and Teresa
Marcinko family,
Winnie Marcinko,
Merle Jolln.On and all
our frienda lOr their
Idndnees, canfS,
flowers and ~epaclaliy
the continued auppon
and prayaq during
the . - 1 llln. . and
delllh of my pi'Kioua
wife and our mother.
TiiankYou1
P1ul Buah and
Children.

..

$10 &amp; Up

1 (900) 3711-83881

4

BINGI$

949-•057

·

'W'

·

MIKE BING ·
E.-,' Wool!.. llowa
mo pd ,

· ·

R. Lo HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt •Sand

985-4422

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy
All Yard Sale&amp; Mual Be Paid In
Advance. Oaac:lllne: 1:00pm \he
day before tnt ad is to run, Sun·
da~ &amp;· Monday edi!lon- 1:OOpm

friday,
80

I

773-5785 Or 304·713-5447.
90 Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sii·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Oililmonds', Antique Jewelry, Galo
Rings; Pre -1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Je'ftlfy
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenu&amp;, Gallipolis, 614·,.46-2842.
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Tru cks, ti90 Modele Or Newer,
Smllh Buick Pontiac, 1900 Easl-.
ern AYenue, Gallipolis.

J &amp; D's Auto Pans . Bu~ing sal·
77J.5033.
Newsweek Or

21,...,.,

24 Ho~~~ng

1-900·990·93a0
Ext. 1553
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv~U

(S19) ~5-8434

7f'M_

Top dollar- antiques, furniture,
glass, china, ctockt, gold, silver,
coins, watches. estate1, old atone
jars, old blue &amp; white dishes, old
w:ood bozes, milk bottles, Ueiga ..
Counly Adver ti sti'QGI)I, ()s by
Marlin, Q14·992·7&lt;W1 .
'
Wanted To Bu,. Used Mobile

Homes . Call : 614 ·446 ·0175 Or

304-875-5965.

I

Sentinel

992 2156
l...iiiiiiil.lliililiii-rJ

wan 1ed To e ~ v , Llnte Tyke•
Ki!Chen Set, Workshop. Ptav·
nouse, Possible Any Other litdt
Tyke Toys. Please can 614-245·
:::588::7~·- - - - - - Wanted To Buy: We Buy Aulo'o
An~ Condition, 81-4-388-9062, Or
61U&lt;Ol-Jv.RI'..
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

005
Personals
:-:-,...,..-,.....,_,__,_l11 0

6-1 9--~,...-~~1-~::-i~14 - ..._u_·~-Be-18-1 ~~i:i~~~t:";m;~,rn~;~:~l\~F~;
-~-L_:r'=·
A 1o · A
and salary Info
e~~:am, application

eo Psychics
ueanons,1·900·464·1020
eat Answers, call: (630)906·2J5DExi.JB70..
Real
Exl 687a. u .911 Min . ...... Be 18 eam-Bpm.
5 8434
::SorY~u::a1,. ~ -114
~
_ ,..·, .---- ~~,?N ' All A&lt;eas ' Shirley
REDUCE : Burn otf ~t IBSI, Take ~ars, 304-675·1429.

o~ 111tllo11 an&lt;! E·VAP Oiurttic
A¥1-llftuthPhormoc:y.
30 AMOUOctment S
NO T•espas~ng, Huming or Fish·
rng . lAy land is not your land.
STAY OFFI Co. Rd. 14 oil Sand·
hill Rd . Violators will be prose -

Able Avon Representalives
naedad. Earn money lor Chrill·
mas bills at h9me1a1 work. 1-ool).
992-6356 or 30•·662·2645, Ind.
Reo.
AVON . $8 ·$15 /Hr. No Doo• To
D

='

-=="".:.·-,...-----

Babysitl8r needed in m~ home

ing twpplies, license &amp; game
Check llllion. soawmsn H&amp;n·

seven mon th old. Mual be re·
sponsible, reliable non-smoker

derson WV.

'

wuh Ch•lstian values. Send loner

Giveaway
~\.~~~·J.~~~:0[;: oa~~'~,l~~~
2 l.tl..d malo -pupa, emos old, :~Th ird Avt, Gallipollo, Ohio
1

40

blac:klwhile markings, to good

homu:IOH7e-C036.
Babyslner needed 11ar1rng Jan
e weok old kluen, 6 monlh old 111. 2 or 3 days • weal\, must be
ldnen, both males. 304-fJ75-~S1.
a ~on- smoker, rerereni:a~ ,..
quood. COII30H75-81146.
6 Yea• Old Siamese Female Cat, Compute• Uura Nted~ . Woo• .

Had Shots, Oeclawed, Ltust Stay

Booutilul while Anvora C:a~ neuto•od, doclowod, ohota, 10 homo
wflhout other pelll, 81 ..9112-3161
-or014·•z.-.
·CoUch And Clllil. 014:-148-0952.

992·1378.

Mllon, WV

1

un &amp; Eaiy 1· ·

Cool.. kept, clean, IONiaty. Hunt- Saturdays Only, 7 am 10 6 pm for

Authorized AQA Distributor
• Welding Suppllae •Industrial Gues • Machine Shop
Services • Steal Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum/Stalnleu • Tool Drevlng • Ornamental
Steps • Stalna, Railings, Pallo Fumlturs, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangalll, Trelilsas &amp; lots ol other Sluflll

101 Pomero Street

f

peronl, jerky. aummer sausage.

!Vt6u~ !!eta~

FAX 77'3-S881

B

oor. • anuses·
600 627
01

'

I

cu10&lt;1. Signed. Ret&gt;ec:ca 1aecky) 1; :::...·"".:.'.:..:.ndiSI=::::SIRe=p·_ _
Bat&gt;ysln.,
ne&amp;ded 5kudays
a week
:::
can
614-367·0241
more
inforWa
proceu
deer,
make
hiCkory
ma~on
&amp;rnoked hlmt, trail bologna, pep·

·one
a..a.
ftmllt pup. tan .ind white,
blue lnd one brown _
.

We wHI work within your budget

Help_w~nted

Someone
Special From "ATTN : Poir'lt Pleas.nt" Postal
, Meet
Your OWn
Area. 1·900·856-5050

.,
"
own .hGura. $20k to S50kJ~r 1-

lndOOrt.. 814·387-7123.

"No Job Too urge or Too Smell"

u.S. Newt 1935 To

1948 Issues, 814·«8·38.41.41 After

Claasifieds

Athens, Ohio

.Fnpa.c.'
Furnace
Cloonlng

Ph. 773-9173

Public Sale
and Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Compan~.
lull time auct1one'er , complete
auction !lervice. licenaed
,86,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304-

ANNOUNCEMENTS

D.a,
"'TE.LJNE
The Girls of
your d reamS

1100-900-3040

Residential
Commercial
New Home
Remodeling
Cuslom Design
'We treat your home lik~
our home"
Call 614-949·2600
ask for Rick

Over IS Years Er.,.
Interior and Ext.:rlor
Painting
·
PainUng Roors
Wallpaper Hanglnc
Pressure Cleaning
RooOIIJl
Minor RemodeUIIJl
'Resldentlalalid
Commercial
FREE ESTIMATES

r':=;:::::;:::;;:=:::;;--;;:::======~~

Senior Cltiun Dllcount
Fulty lrwured
814-787-4411

f.ll

We specialize in:

vage vehicles. Selling pam. 30C·

(No Sunday Calls)

o.•~
lllfety lntt'II4P1Ctcctlotllonno

Co.

Rummaoo Sale: Inside Thursday,
Frida~. 9·5, LO[S Of Nice Clolhel
And Dishes, + Glassware, 112 Offl
Lois 01 Ever~ tl"'i ngl 1699 McCOr·
mic:k Road.

IEMIUHDT PAINTING
AND DKORAnNG

614-992•7643

""L==!~ull

the day before the ad 11 1D run.
Surlctay ed,llion • 2:00 p.m. Frict.y.
Uonda~ edition - 10:00 a. m ~ Sat·
urday.

8:00 l.m.-3:30 p.m.

Garages • Replacem...t Windows
r•
Room Additions • Roofing
C
S E TIAL
COMMER IAL and RE ID N
FREE ESTIMATES

Dultl... Woodltovt,

ALL Yard Sales Mull Bt Paid In
Advanct ..OEAOLINE: 2:00 p.m.

S Constructio~
""'

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

oteplacellltlll Wladows
•Bulld~s
·
•510111 Doors &amp;
Windows
•R-AMtlou

'
New Hames • VI nyI Sldl ng New

Chi-If Servk.IS

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

Min ing Sm~ll Black Peek·a·poo
Doa Black Collar, lost Ne-ar 715
And 141 , Please Call 814-448·
021 9 We Misl Him, Reward Of·
lefed, Aaron &amp; Brandon.

m-2112

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

. Appalachian

AUTO
RE r,B_AIR

Greer Rd. viciniry. 304-875-1'911 .

MIDDLEPORT

:================~

7-•"·2979
On' Ssle
Nov 28th

=::::::::::::~~~-

omoa old, blonde, bob· laUed,

637 BRYAN PLACE

IVYDALE

(614) 592-5025

Homegrown- can;!'!_0Y
Sheared Scotch&amp; wnlte
Pine 4' &amp; up wilh a grut
selecUon ortarxer trees.
Call742·2143 or

. LOST : Female Moun'taln Curr,

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

Attorney At Law

RUTLAND, OH

-.rdt61 4-446-Q223.

------ .-.

William Safranek

WEIER'S
CHRISTMAS
TREES

Lost: 4 Mon 1h Old Walktr Coon
Hound Pup, Bla ck &amp; Wtllte,
Georgaa Cr Bunce Road Atea .

Subsldlaty ot IFC

BANKRUPTCY can relieye a debtor of financial
obligations and arrange a fair distribution of assets.
.
Debtors in bankruptcy may keep "exempt:' propeny
for their personal use. This may include a car, a house,
clothes, and household goods.
For Infotination Regarding Bankruptcy con.tact:

J'

head, rema le, Long Hollow Rd.,
Pomeroy 11icirity, 814·992-5000.

~~0~/)1:

4

ANGELS
LIGHTED BASKETS, WREATHS, SWAGS,
YARD ORNAMENTS, QUILT RACKS, PAINTED
CANS AND SAWS, DOG HOUSES, SHELVES.
GIFT BASKETS FEATURING WATKINS AND
TUPPERWARE PRODUCTS.
LIVE TREES, WREATHS, CROSSES AND ,
POINSETTIAS BEGINNING NOVEMBER 2g
2 M)lll North of Sliver Bridge on Slj 7
to-&amp; M.f; 1-5 Sunday
P~ne 446-4530

Serv-U, 1119 645 8434

~

. 614-992-3470

Must be 18 yro.

Wreaths- Swags &amp;
Grave Blankets

at

Unforgettable.
Conversations!! ·
Call this exclusive
24 hr. hotnnell
Caii1·900-476-S585
Ext. 3313
$3.99 por min.
Muot be f 8 yre.

.

Serv.IJ· (619) 645-8434

CHRISTMAS in the COUNTRY

WOMEN TO TALK
WITH YOU ·LIYEHI

Foun&lt;~; hound, black with brown

70

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, FIJI Dirt

SPEAK UP
AMIIICAI

· Ext. 1951
$2.99/mln. Muat be 111+
Touch•tono Phone
PROCALLCO.
. 602 954-7420

one with collar, 61 4-Q02-2075.

Lost: While Cow W1th Large Calf
Approx. 400 lbs. Gone 2 To 3
Weeks Near Richard Brothers
Orchard &amp; Jim lackey Raad Call
Coll ec l , 814-286· 230., Reward
Olteted l

Ext.2308
. $3.99 per min.

St Rt. 7
Tuppere Plains, Ohio
814-985-3813 or 814-667-6484
Plastic Culvert · Dual wall and Regular 8" Jhru 36"
4" S&amp;D · pe~ . · solid pipe
4" &amp;6" Flex pipe
4" &amp;6" Sch 35 pipe
'/." &amp; '/." C.P.V.C. pipe
1'/."thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
'1." &amp; 1' 200 p.s.l. water pipe (100' rolls thru 1,000' rolls)
•1: U.L. approved Conduit
.f
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1"1hru 2" -llrtlngs- Regulators· Risers
Full assortment ol P.V.C. &amp; Flex flnlngs &amp;Water linings
Full line of Cistern, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks

IS RUSH
LIMBAUGH
GOOD FOR THIS
COUIIUY?

ley's Grocery, 2 lomale Boagl01,

Limestone,

· G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

Computer Ouolcs
(61 4) 992-6677
Pomeroy

Found- Darwin vicir'ty ntQr Whi.-

WICKS
HAULING

For all the anawers
telk·llve to one of
our metaphysical
advlsorslll
Call1·1100-562-4000

OPEN NOV. 23·10TO 9;00

&gt; Dt~counts &lt;

Cline, 614·667·Jlll9.

(UmeStoneLowRatH)

Rt. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742·3051

Any CJr
Any Driver
DUI &amp; SR-22

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB GUN

What's on Your
Horizon?

I

male Bluetic:k no.u.nd, Coolvill•
Ridge Rd., Athen1 CDunty, R.W.

~

BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

Easy Pay Auto
INSURANCE

Chester, Ohio

•••

Pick up dlecardecl
eppllancae, battertee;
manyi'Mialaa
. motor blocks.
614-812-4025 I 1m-8 m

CHRISTMAS TREES

·oanSmHh
oH1atPumps
•Fumacea
•Refrigerators
Installation l Service
oJnaured
Phone !614)992·2735

card of Thanks

Help wanted

--------------

..

IL

1•614•992•7022

---

12 oz.

110 Court St. '

Custom Building &amp; R...-nng
•New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
(614) 992·2753

,1-900-476-1515
Ell. 4971

SHOOT

FOR FURTHER DOAILS CALL TODAY

11 o

Towel

$149

79¢

'

~ Must be 62 years of age or hantlcapped.

.

Duncan Hines
Cake Mixes

'

Ext. 6218
$2.99/min, 18+
ServU

THE MAPLES

..

¢

Crisco
Oil

wv.
8Jidly mlued by wife

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

CONSIDER:

Cranberry Sauce ·
16 oz.

BEAUTIFUL LADIES,
!"LIVE•??? .
CALL IOWII

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Are You Sick And Tired
Of Being Single 7 Days
A Week? Romance Is
Just AHeartbeat Awayl

WILL YOUR
UTILITIES Pllf YOU
IN THE POOR
HOUSE THIS
WINTER?

&lt;

1-BG0-291·5600

SMITH'S
COISTRUCTION

ALL OHIO

...••,
..••.

Umlt 1 with $1 0..l'_urchase

PaJemal grandparenu
are Cindy and nm
Irwin and Foster
Lewis, ·Glouster, and
Katherine Giflott and
Joann Lewis, both of
Jacksonville, OH.

DATE LINE

.

•

Brandon Lewis, son
of Heather and Cory
Lewis, Glouster, was
born Oct. ·3;- 1996. l:le
weighed 7 lbs. 7 ozs.
Maternal grandparents are John and
Bobbie Pauley, Bear·wallow Rdg. Grandgrandparents are James
(Hap) and Elnora
Ingels, Middlepon and
Betty Pauley, Mason,
WV and great-greatgrandmother, Lottie
Pauley, Cedar Grove,

CALL
1-900-526-5050
EXT. 4500
$2.99 per min.
lluat be 18 yro.
S.rv-U-(619) 645-8434

1-900-526-5050

Used Tins:
. $5.00 &amp; Up
lin Repai' &amp; Spll

•

In Memory

~c==-·
1-__;~=..;.;;:==-.,..
• Wolllllll
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
:tto. 'ae• 411, llolga
Tho Melgo County
· ~Delli llo ' ..._
Council ori Agtng, Inc.
, · Audilor'l ,.... Nulllbl,. wlehlo 10 rocolvo bldo for
t

Darwin, Ohio

'•

II·':::~:. :• II

..

• IOD

$ 49

¢

39110 Rt 681
off Rt. 33 at R1. 681

30oz..

lyNOIItlo

.. fad uua:

TRE'SGAUGE

GUYSI
WANT TO TALX TO

. FOOL
PROOF
LOVE!!!
.

Lost and Found
S100 REWARD- IOSI 10122196,
60

FRD

814-992-4119
.

Cocktail

Public Notice
rooervoe tho right to roloct
ony ond 111 blda, and tho· 30 Announcements
oubmlttlng of ony bid oholl
tmpooo no liability or
obllgallon upon tho aald
Council.
Att onvolopll mual bo
CLEARLY
MARKED
occardlng to the typo or bid.
Scollll. Dillon
Flocel Ofllcor
llotgaCountyCouncllon
&amp;
Alling, Inc.
11117 PONTIAC SUNBIRD
112 Eoot llomllt'lel Drive,
102JD11K4H7518053
. P.O. Box 722
Tho Farmoro Bonk and
Pomeroy, OH 487ft
Savlngo
Company, (11)20,27;(12)4;3TC

11nd1 · end tenem~nte, PomefOY, Ohio,, re1arvea
Jooetad ll22t3 I'Hih ll1rMI. . tho right to Uld 11 thle 'aalo,

11111M1

While long halrtd albino GYinH
pig with c;age, 814-e82-5121.

. __ _ _ _ _;7,:,11;:1Wn:.;;::,r

Call for Demonstration &amp; Free Estimate

Owner;
Ronnie Jon.,..,.~

614 696-.1 407

1

Public Notice
. PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE lo hojoby gtvon
thll on Sat11_rdoy, November
23, 11M, 11 10:00 o.m., o
public Hie will be hold at
404t I uurol Cliff Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio, to 1111 for
cuh tho following
collotorel:
11117 PLYMOUTH
VOYAGER
. 2P4FH51GtltR1113810

QUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

JONES'
TREE SERVICE
20 Yean E%perience •

'.

9
9

1
I,
,

'

12 pk.

BUTTERBALL

"UIRGE INVENTORY FOR
-DIATE INSTALLATIONS.

P.l.t.

Reg11UHed Mountain PhiiE wtpaI*S- maiO. 304·576-2450.

BOdy work, car, truck
&amp; truck painting,
· minor mechanical
repair:
Tuna-ups, 011 Change,
wax. Buffl,ng
Long St, Rutland, Oh.
742"2935• Aak for Kip '

Highest "R Value"
. Blocks 99.5%
ofUV Rays
Offered Exluslvely
by

Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

I
I

I·

new equipment.

,.·..

·

' nal that we're going to continue to do
.
1
1
• this.''
I
This Wee ~ Special: ··
I
'
The Chechhen e6-lementColflhc FBI's. 1
1
.
1
case against t e yea&lt;
veteran II,.,
PIZZABURGER
, began on March 17 when the official
liaison officer of the Russian foreign
intelligence service, or SVRR, con· I
•
I
· tactcd the FBI seeking information on
Chec hen terrorism. "The SVRR liai·
son offi cer added that his request was
•
' I
part of a global tasking by SV RR I
SUN.· SAT. 10:00 AM · 10:00 PM • 992-2556
I
headq uarters to gather infom1ation I,··~
- 1lfJI~IfJI nll;t-*
, ;,j,}'r lJilr lJilr .;r..••ut~, I
about
Chechnya,"
according
to
an
••
~
I ~-~
~ affidav i t by.FBI.Agent ~ic hael Lon-..; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~.~
_ _ _ _ ••
;....~

$1 74

1-800-273·3385

7UP
Products

The 23rd. Ainendmerit granting
residents of the District of Columbia
the right to vote in presidential elections was approved in J961.

ADOLPH'S

'FREE ESTIMATES on

'ON THE SPOT 1'1NAHciNG
n I' tie to QUAUFlED
BUY~S
.

. made from the sidewalls of scrap llras,
manufactured in 4 !eel 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 lrom salt or other minei'als, lasts forever!
$5.00 p!lr linear loot, F.O.B. Pomeroy, Ohio
·
I
Contact:
·National Tire Recycling Center

·'

rr---------------------il
1 = 1
I
I'

warranty.

CULVERT DRAINS

'

ordered afler the Aldrich Ames spy

*FREE s.y..r pert•

Cover your mosquito infested drains
wffllglllll'llnte•d-lndfttructlble

.,.

Aug. II , they found, among data they
believe Nicholson gave the Russians, "a near verbatim copy .o f an
actual 'secret' CIA report regarding
Chechnya," the affidavit said.
"I believe Nicholson gathered the
Chechnyan information found on his
computer in response to clandestine
tasking from the SVRR, consistent
with the SVRR's global tasking for
. such information" that its liaison officer had described to the FBI, Lonergan wrote.
Perhaps the Russians doubted the
public promises by the CIA and FBI '
to improve counterintelligence work
fqllowing the arrest of Ames; the
most damaging turncoat in agency
. history.
"When they asked officially for
· Chechnyan inf0 imation, they would
have had no reason to believe we
would have been aware of Nicholson," said one a~ent who worked on
the case, speakmg on condition of
anonymity. But Nicholson had fallen
under suspicion in 1995, after polygraph tests found him deceptive
about contacts with fOreign spies.

»Cnlth•

We ,_n help you, •nd you cen help the

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

1'111 L111R II IEPI.ICEMEIT WIIDOW
TECHOlOIY
"'lrAT MIRROR" patnted system.

rs_.
Add01H"' .......

..... tt.IFWIIIIII,

'•

·'

By MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN
ergan .
r: Associated Press Writer
"Those kinds of « changes did
WASHINGTON - Thanks to a not occur" during the Cold War, said
thaw 'in the Cold War, Russian Intel- Ray Mislock, natio nal security chief
•· ligence officers inadvertently gave in the FBI"s Washington field office.
the FBI- a key piece of evidence "There was ·no official liaison
implicating CIA officer Harold between the Soviet KGB and the FBI
Nicholson as a double agent.
until· the fall of 1991 just before the
Earlier this year, in a move that Soviet Union ceased to c.ist." ·
could not have happened during the
More amazing events followed the
Cold War, the Russians told the FBI official request for help. according to
that their agents were looking for Lonergan's affidavit.
information on the Chechnya region,
.On April26, Nicholson asked sevwhere Russia was waging a debili- eral CIA headquarters employees for
.. , tating war against separatist rebels.
background i~formation on ChechSoon thereafter, Nicholson began nya. He claimed to need it for his job
'. seeking such data even though he instructing CIA recruits, but no traindidn 't need it for his CIA work, the ing exercises 'involving Cliechnyqn
FBI says.
matters were conducted or .planned
The apparent slip by Russia's by Nicholson.
' ·; ·spies suggests they have not fully
In July, a CIA computer audit
adjusted to the up-and-down friend- revealed that Nicholson was using his
, ship that has emerged between their -computer to search GIAdatabases for
nation and the U'nited States since the information using the keywords
•
fall of the Soviet Union in 1991.
"Ru ssia(n)" and. "Chechnya." CIA
· At the very least, they underesti- officials said Nicholson had no need
mated the U.S. counter spies who put for such documents in his work.
the disparate clues together.
He even tried twice to get into
,,
On Monday, the former station Central Eurasian Pi vision databases
~r chief became the highest-ranking he w.as not cleared to see, leading
CIA officer charged .with espionage. CIA security officers to list him as·a
·•
President Clinton, speakin'g with "surfer," Lonergan wrote.
" reporters in Auwatia, said NicholWhen · FBI agents searched
'· son's arrest was the outcome of "a Nicholson 's portable computer on
· ti'g htening of the system" 'that he __

$14-015-98lll.

"' I

·'..

24 pk.12 oz. cans

RuAsian eslpionage slip gave FBI
·help in exposing suspected spy

.,. . -

Re gitte red Chocolate LID. e·
Y• • ra Female, Spayed, Sholl.
Hou1.oroken, 814-.t•U -0238 Af-

.2 liter

MAKING WREATHS - About two dozen
youngsters and their parents made Christmas
wreaths at the Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy Monday night as part of Children's

,..t10c....- -old,
-mod.

Pan Block l.lfD l
totnolo.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU NOVEMBER 23, 1996. .

,'

Giveaway

PI'.

•.

Royal Crown
Cola Products

P213

·•··

Crulst Ship Jobst Earn t300 1

114

Female Poodte To Giveaway,
el&lt;-4411-1378. •

Froo KH10n1 To Gocid
448·111011 Allor o P.M.

f!00.348-71Be Xl508.
$1100 Willy. Year

Roun&lt;l Potltion

Hiring Both Men /Women.

Frti

Room And lloool. Will Train. Call
7 Doyo •07·875-2022 EX!. 0528

C.S.

Driver• to transport Clrs

to and

from aucdon, &lt;lit $14·9112·2101

--.of Sj&gt;n&gt;lpm.

Ea•n 1000'• -ktr 11ulflnQ en-

wklpe• al home. Be )"Dur boll.
Homo, 014· .Start now. No lkperlonce. F -

ouppllll Info, . no obiiGidon .
Sond ~.A.S .E. to Nuooot Unti:
l.tountoln Curr Dog. 30•·875· 13&amp;1-e, 10151 Unl'ltnlty Blvd. Or·

:-:--~:....;,;;..:.._ _. . . _

71111 .

·

1

tandoFL32817·

- ~----------·-~~------•

�\

Page14~T_he

O.lly SenUnel

•

Wednesday, November 20, , .

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

••

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel e Page 15 :

~~~==~--~~--~~======~========~==
=
BRIDGE
NEA Crossword Puzzle
:
__________ ,.. ___ _
•
::::~~~~~------------------------ :

PHILLIP
ALDER

,_

JIJijft¢'""11' ID Pia' d

•••

Puzlll:

a31 .DU:IIrt
"'*". 1ftl11

.-

I

••

...

'

37 Scotttell ....
31 En...-.ner

.,_..

110

41 AlrtcananlrMI

Gentrtl o1f1ce, hght typing, muat
be 55 or okler and meat income
utde hnes and must hve-ln WV
ontact WV Job Service 30~675-085 7.
HOME COMPUTER USERS
NEEDED. $45.000 Income PO·
ttndal. 1·800· 513-4343 Ext. B11368 Cal For DelliiL

42Pursa
43 LMI altractlve

HARTS MA.SONARY • Block,

New Ux80 Only make 2 pay ments &amp; move·m, no payment after 4
• lree se1-up &amp; dettvery

l:br:lc;~k~&amp;~9~stpna
work, 30rates
years304exreasonable

l

aher 6 OOpm, no JOb to
small or 10 BIG WV-0212C6

2 Bedroom Apartment AI 50
Grape Street In Gallipolis $280J
Ma ' Cotl 614-368-l 708

New 1997 14 Wtdes, 2 bedroom.
$15,225, free daltv8fy and set-up.
No payment unlll February
19Q7 1.8Q0.251·5070.

CeR 1-600- 51~4343 E•t S.9368
Lono Term Care Nursing Fac•llty
Seeking Enthualaltk: Ohio Sta1e
Tesled Nurae Alde1. Excellent
Benefit Pae:k191 lncludlno Vac:adon, Chrlstmu Club. .01 K Plan,
Insurance, And More. Sign On
Bonus Ju&amp;l In Time For Ctmstmat. Contacl Pinecrest Care
Center • IU-4~8-7112 - ltsa
Lee, Adon.

All real estate adverllslng In
this n e - r lalllbjed 10
the Ftdorol Fall Houalng A&lt;1
of 1968 whiCh makas It Illegal
10 advenlae "any preference,
limitation or discrimination
bose&lt;! on race. COlor, religion.
sax familial status or nadonal
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or Clscrlmlnatlon.•

People to work during deer seaeo" No exPerience necessary.
Apply at Crawford' s, ~enderson
wv 304-e75-~4.

New 1997 14170 three bedroom,
Includes 8 months FREE lol rent
On~ $165 57 per rrcnlfl with $9Q5
down ca" I .$0Q.837·323e.

~accept

We1ght
I
Da11 Per
W..k • Could Be Evemn9s Call
814.s53-2475

advertisements tor real esta1e
whiCh 18 lrii'IOiatton of lfle law
Our raadars are hereby
lnfanned that all dwefllngs
advemaect t1 ttia newspaper
are available on an equal

POSTAL JOBS
Stan t12.681Hr, Plus Bentftts.
For Applicaton And Exafl'l lniD,
CaM 1-600·21111-2470, E&lt;t OH5Q6,
6 AM. ·9 P.M. 1 Days.

Ol'f)Ottunltybeola

POSTAL JOBS

Start $12..88/hr, plus benef1ts For
application and exam info, Call
1-800-200-2470, axt-WV127,
&amp;~m-9pm 7 dayo

• •

REAL ESTATE

firm 304-675-3000

Furnl~d E"•ecktncy 920 Fourth

Sectional Home 60x24 3 BR 2
Ba1h 2 LA's, On Rented Lot,
PhOne 614·446·3547

Avenue, Gallipolis, $200/Mo , Ulll·
lUes Patd, 614·446-3844 After 7
P.M

122 Htghland Ave 3Bedroom, 2
baltl, breed air gas furnace, can-, Very nrce 1 ~ 85 14•70 wnh 2
baths Large tsland kitchen With
tral air, full basement $45,500
pallo door Call 614·385·9621 ask
304-675-1120
for M•ke

Aptments for rent 1BR &amp; 2 BR, In
Town l;)epoSII Requted Call614·
446 1423 Ah9t' 7p m

31 0 Homes for Sale

POSTAL JOBS

Start $12 08 1Hr For Exam And
Appltcat•on Into Call219·7696301 EKl OH561. 9 A M ·9 P.M

SUn ·Fn

Rockspnngs Rehabthtahon Center

73 5 acres secluded homo sire
excellent hun11~g . Green School
D•stnc:l614 24S..S463

Seelung Persons Wilh Pos•t•va
i~a Ability To Apply Service
Tach,niques, Telephone Sk!lla &amp;
Computer SklUs, To Wo~k Well
Wtth Clients 1 On 1 And Com·
ptete Mutu Tasks W1th Attenuon
To Derail. Complele Beneftts Pro·
gram. Send Response Jo CLA
396, eta Galhpoha Daily Tnbune,
825 Third Avenue, Galhpohs, OH

House,

WANTED: EMERGENCY RE·
LIEF WOR~ERS (Sub!lltuteo)

Coundes Hours As Scheduled

410 Houses lor Rent

1

As Needed; L4ust Ba Able To
Work Eveninqa.
And
Overmghts
HIQh Weekends
School Degree,
Valtd Or~ver'l Ltcense, Three
Years ltcensed Onv1ng Expenen~. Good Onvmg Record And
Adequate Automobile Insurance
Coverage Rfqt.ured. Salary $5.25
iHr, To Start Traintng Provided
Send Rasume To. P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, OH 45640, AnN. Ce-

::'98

Equal Opporluncly
EmployClltia Oeadln1e
For Applicants
111

2 Bedroom Furmshed House No
InSide Pels, County Water Fur
nlshad $4SOrMo, Oepos1t &amp; Ref
erences Requ.red Off Smte Route
850 , 614,-446·41 11 Even1ngs,
614 245-0380
'

I!~~~~~~~~~~­

11;~~~~~~~~=-==

Now h•ring Game Wardens, SeCUfll1. Ua.ntenance, Park Rang·
ers. No ew:per1ence necessary
For application and ,nfo call 1407·338·6100, e•t WV135c, 8am9pm. 7day!

614 448..0974
~~~~~~~~~~§~ 14erence
RoomReqUJrM
House, Near
Slores. Rei
Beaut•lul new log Home rural pnvate selling, spaciOus 2 bedroom,
1 balh, 1 year lease, references
(&amp;qu1red, $425 month plus dePOS·
1l614 446-2801

' WILDI.~SERV.ITION
"
JOBS
Now Hiring Gamo Wardens, SecuriiY, MaintenanCe, Park Rang-

.-.No Exp Necessary FOt' A~
plicaoon And Info caN 800-29924'111, EKL OH316C. 6am ·llpm, 7
doyL

180 Wanted To Do
Chnltain Home Prov•dtng Ch1ld
Care For 1 112· 5 Vr Olds, 7.30
A M.-5:30 P:M CPR /First Aid
C.rlified. Near Holzer Hospital,
e1..-.a113.
Gtofoe~ Porllbte sawmill, don't
teul ,... laga to tho "''just call
304-17S.1857.
IF YOUR HAYING A HARD
TfME GETTING READY FOR
THE HOLIDA'f'S?
lat ul help you shop or wrap
1our g~tt1. Call Michelle at61~245-0701 01Cindy 81o4-245-04t2
emerior and Exterior finishes carpentry, f~teplace reftntlhlng. ad·
ditiont, porches, decks. have

Three bedrooms, one and 112
baths. nan.Hal gas, new roof, new
septic, 36x50 three bar ga~a9e
and workshop, 1 5 lev~ acres on
State Route 7, Chester, OH 614
985-3355.
Two bedroom home, 5 acres, all
SA 124, Rac1ne. two car 98·
Wlth apartment, well, alectnc
, olher bUIIdmgs Call Home
NatKJnal Bank, Rac1ne, Oh1o 614
949--2210

12x80 2 BedrOoms, 1 Balh, Excellent Condllton, $3,500, 304 736·
7295

1~~~~~~~=-~:-:~
W11h 7'a21'
1Eapando.
2 Baths
Heat Pump lola
E1Uasl
Eactllent Cond,t&lt;&gt;n. 114.900 No&lt;,)
4;:.5-.:.
61;..4..:2;..
59:.:86
:.
.:.;..._ _ _ _ __
1966 HollyPark 14x76. 3br. 2ba.
wood porch &amp; central air .net
$12,000 304-675 - 1213 Leave
message

I=::!::.----'---'New-1997 1~ W•d&amp;-1 balh $7991
down, $1501mo, wtth approved
crediL Call1 BOO 691-&amp;m

$1,325Jdown, $2161mo, lree a11,
wuh approved credn 1-80Q-691·
6777
'
:;:.:.;__ _ _ _ _ _-,-1997 Doublew•de. 3 bedroom, 2
1ME CLEANIHO DOCTORS
bath, St,4451down. S221lmo, free
Relidenlial &amp; Commerc1a.l Clean· atr, wtlh approved cred11 1 800
lng. Wtlf Covet Surroundlfly Af - 891 -6777
.. ._ Call Toll Free For Esttmates ~...:.;__;___ _ _ _ _ __
1. 818·110·0700, Or 81 ..· 2-45- 1997·2 &amp; 3 Bedroom, $995 d0w1'1,
O.t12. Call lor our Holiday Spa - $195Jmo Free delivery &amp; se1-up,
caalt..
on11 11 Oak Wood Ho.,-.es, Netto
wv 304-755-5665
'
Winl To becorlt# But Oon'l
Have The Tlme? ln11de &amp; Out- 1ST TIME BUYERS E·Z Fllldl [)ecorattngl Sanaa's Helpets, HANCING 2 Or 3 Bedrooms,
81~·-.&amp;511
$200 Par Uon1h Free Delivery &amp;
Set-Up, No Payments Unt1! Febru
Will da add j91Jo. taytng block &amp; ary 1997. 1-800 251 5070

210

Business

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

ux6s Brooksture 2Ded
total etectttc, neat pump

:N~-~-~~~~~~~·~~~~~~o~~~a;__~-- ·1 ==~==~~~~~--1997 16180 3 bedroGm 2, balh,

FI~~ANCIAL

Gallipolis House For Ren1 4 BR,
1 112 Bath Br1ck Ranch Fam
Room, New Furnace Air Cn~
Schools, $575/Mo, Call 614 446 ·
2055 "''er 6'00

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

:
ProfessiOnal Tree Service, Stump
Removal, Free Estimates! Insurance, Bidwell, Ohio 614·388
llfloi&amp;.SI4-3S7·7010

hlf1lllniJ ctyM!l304-87s.:!IIH.

Burkhart Lane 2 Bedrooms, Wllh
Garage, S340 Oepos11 Referenc
es 513 574 2539
Christy's Family Living
In Rulland 4 bedrooms, CIA,
carpel, outOOild1nQ, $400Jmo. plus
$400 depoSit, HUD accep1ed, one
year lease. vacant now
Call 814·992 4514 Bam 11pm

t&amp;t Tune bUyers, E·Z 1.nanc1ng 2
or 3 bedroom, around $200/mo.
free delt'l8f1, and set-up No pay
ment unttl February 1997 1 800·
251 -5070

OppoMUnlt~

··-~

1400 mob1le t'lome on 1 t i 4 acre
101 lor rent 3 bedroom eacellent
condltl()n 6 14 992-6660
2 &amp; 3 Dedroom mobile homes
starnng a1 $260 $300, se~o~~er, wa
ter and tra sh Included 614-992
21 67
2 &amp; 3 Bedroom Tra11er 614-4460722 614 446 7788
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Mercervllle Area, No Pets , Relerences, 614 4t~&amp; 1158
2 Bedroom Mob•le Horne Close
To Galli poll a, $275/Mo , Includes
Water, S200 Depos1t References
61 • 44• ·~s
.,..

Y"Q&lt;N

Two 2 Bedroom Mobile Hames
On McCormtck Road, Total Electnc. 614-446-9669
2 Bedroom tratler, turnlahad,
washer &amp; dryer, ale, $250/mo •
deposit &amp; relerences 30 .. ·675·
4974
2 Bedroom tra1ler, you pay utelt·
11os, $1()() deposil, no pers 304
675-2535
2 Bedroom&amp; S2501Ma .• 614·44&lt;3·
69511.
2 Bedrooms, A&lt;khaon Pike, 12201
Mo. Waler Patd. 614·446-:A37 "
For Rent Or Salo. 1987 1~1&amp;0 2
Bedrooms, No Pets, Very Cloan,
61~·258-8089
Green Terrace $26SJMo • No
Pets. 3 Rtrerencu, 614 · -t~B·
0737

·•=~-----Mob1le Hom.e and lot for Rani

614·~46-1279

Mobile hOme lor rent tn Pometoy,
$250/mo. S100 deposil ~ no 1111dt
pets, 614·667-3083 alter Sprri.

Malll&lt;l Homoo For Sole Big Vnr
End Solo In Progr111 · Sove
$1.500 On Arry New 1996 Stngle
Section And S1,000 On A"f New
18i7 Smgle Secuon In Srock
Savt ThOusands On Rematnmg
Secltonal Homtl In Stock. Ft·
nancmg Available , French Ctty
Homes· Galhpoha, OH 6U -4o48·

i340.
MUST SEU fi61 14X70 wtlfl fireplaoo NMd to Hll fall. Gall RE·
GINA II I14·38S.2434

Nu::e 2 Bedrooma, S2251Uo • 8
M1klt Down 218, Nice, RefafenC·
es, Oepoalt Required, 814 ~46·
8172,814-256-6251 .
Ttai)ar for Rent Beau11ful R1ver
Vtew. Kanauga Foller'• Mabile
Home Park. 814-44HI181

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bed100tn aportmenll. fur·
ntshed arid unfutnithed, sac:u"ty
deposit requ~ted, no pets, 814·
992-2218

Sporting
GoOds

Deer Rttles &amp; Scopes 304·675-

Building
Supplies

Block, br1ck, sewer Ptpes, wtnd ·
ows, lintels, etc: Claude Wenters,
R•o Grande, QH Call 614 -245 5121

61 32
.:.
:==--~------1560

Pets for Sale

l

lafayene Mall 2 Room And Bath,
All Ut1hlles Included $185/Mc,
513-574-2539
New upstatra efflctency with prt•
vate entrance, completely furn11hed, qiJtel surroundings, lhr'ee
from !he Ravenswood
Bndge 1n Oh10 It you are
=~~~~~'t''s a must tee. h'IJ $390
utilities are enduded A
depottt IS requ~red For
more InformatiOn or an appo101ment, call 614·843-5343 and
leavemessage
N•ce 2 Bedroom Furntshed
Apartment, Galhpolts laundry
Room, A1r, No Pets, $350/Uo,
Plu&amp; Oepos•t. 614--446-2800
N1ce lwD bedroom apartment in
Pomerf, no pets, 814-002-51156
One and two bedroom apartments , ajso an efhetency apartment,614-992·2886
'
One bedroom apartment ln Pt.
Pleasant, 614·992-5858
One bedroom furmshed apartment m Middleport, call 614-4.t63091 614 992·2178 or 614·9925.'104 Of: 814-992·5231

I

1985 Crown V1c1ortan $1 600
e.11c cond 60 OOOtb Press 4
Wooden chatrs &amp; table $40 304
:.67:.:5..:734.:..6;___ _ _ _ _ __
1989 Holiday Barb•e. Stove $75
1
China C&amp;bJnet Besl Olfer, 614
.073
446
7

2 ltvtng room suns, ltke new. 1

TV floor model, 1 console stereo

floor modal, 1 ant1que d1nmg
room sune. Xl4-458-1984
Ashley wood stove wtblower
$100 OBO ~H75-2569
Boots By Redwmg Chtppewa
Rocky, Tony lama Guaranteed
lowest Pr~ees AI Shoe Cale Gal
II poliS.
Concre1e &amp; Plasttc Septic Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Entet"pnses, Jackson, OH
1-80().537-9528
Double Mauresa, Bux Spnnos.
Bad Frame, Exceltent Condlnon,
$50. 614-446·4474
OP Exercise btke. AB tratner,
614·742·1347
Earn Chustt'nas. Host a Tupper ware demonstrauon Extra gilts
Call1 800-484-1782SC 2779

Twen RIVers Tower, now accephng
appllcanons for lbr HUO tubs•d·
•zed apt tor elderly and handt· Electric typewmer, 2 ltttle Tyke
swmos. 2 wood burner stoves,
capped EOH 304~75-6879.
Two bedroom apartment m Po- ambulator1 chair 304·882·3339
aher 5pm
meroy, S1901mo .• $100 depos11,
no pets, 614-667-30&amp;1 after 5prn
FALL SPECIAL
ground floor apartmenl 92% Htgh Efhctency Furnac&amp;;
60.ooo BTU -$785. ao,ooo BTU •
I
SUrroundtng&amp; IOCIIed
9
$SS5 100.000 TU ·$995 Th&amp;
three miles rrom the Ravenswood Above Pr~ces Are For ftJrnace
Retchie Bridge"' Ohto. Completely Onlr Free Eshmate To Install
furmshed Wllh washer, dryer, d•sh- Furnace, Duct Wor~. Etc 5 Year
wasner and large kHchen wtth all
Wartanty All Parts Ltleteme War
apfthances Nice batH wnh larQe rantr On Heat Exchanger 614·
shower, large mas1er bedroom
4o4&amp;-630S 1. 800. 291 0098
w1th a workmg fireplace L1v1ng 1 .~~~;:.~~~~~;-F;;ij
area has lots ol room At $490'
1
U11ed Hardwood Full
per rTlQnth Wtlh ubltDeS I'N:Iudld A Cord (3 Stacks 1s• Average, 4'
deposit of $400 Is requtred For H1gh 8 long) S1 00, 614-396·
more Hllormat~on call 814 · 8~3- 8879
5343 and leave message.
Ftrewood For Sate, S40 A Load,
450
Furnished
614·256·1631, 61..:156·1540

1=---,---------Rooms

for rent.-..weel(. or month
S!arbng at S1201mo. GaU1a Hotel
814-446 9580
'

1----------Steep1no rooma wnh eooklng
P,lso tra•ler $PAce on r~ver AU
hook-upa Call atter z ·oo P m.,
3tW-773·5651,MasonWV

Ftrewood lor sale .$35 load, split,
cut. delrve(ed 304-895·3292.
Ftrewood For Sale Oak S35, Pic:k·
Upload. 614·256·1602
Franklin F 1 ~eplace W•th Heal
Sheel~ Good Condilton, All Ac·
cetsones, S2SO. &amp;14-448·3437

460 Space tor Rent

Goll Cans For Sale 30o4 ,•7S·
5162.
•

Mobilt hOme sltet for rent, call 1800·837·3238.

Grubb'• Plano- tuning &amp; repalrt
Problam11 Need Tuned? Call the
puma Dr 614-.to4tl·.t525

Mobtle home •paces for rent, up
to 16.1180'1, $85 per month, water,
sewer and rruh includtd, 814992·2167

510

Household
GOOdS

Cauno1 Furniture 304-G7H620.
R1 2 N, &amp;mllu Pt Plttoan~ wv.
T-Saii-G. Sun 11·5.
Fraa.zer, Waaher, Dryer, VCR,
PoliCe Scanner, M1erowave. 814·
2!;5 -1 238.

Af&lt;C Registered Chmese Sharpe~
pups, lots ot wrmkles, first Shots
and WDfmed, 61 4·949-2126

TRANSPORTATION

----71 D Autos lor Sllle

Trantm•s.s1on.
Engtnt, Body Work,
1 • ••••••• Or Best Ollar, 61-4-258-

~'zlnea1publilhed

I

FRANK ,&amp;: EARNEST

j

1985 Olds 98 Regency PW, POL,
PS, 90K Actu;~l Mtles, $2 ,800,
614-245-5887
.
1986 Ford Thunderbtrd, Fatr
Shape, Good Runnmg Condtlton,
$1,200 Be1ore 8 00 Call 614·4461052, Alter B 00 Cal! 614·446·
1421.
1987 Ce\1ca GT S Speed, A1r, PS,
PB. T1l1, Crutse, AMiFM Cassette,
Sunroof $1400,614 379-2645
1968 Cougar, e~Ccellent conc:h11Cm,
call614·992·3244
1988 Olds De lta 88 614 992·
6660

1989 Chrysler New Yorker Srh,
318 motor, loaded, 70,000 m1les

•I
•I'

1989 Ford 150 4x.t V·8, 302,
Auto, Air Cond•bontng, Htgh t.hleage. $5.800. 61 4-66H2S7

•'

.
'
". .
...,,,
'

•

-...__

'

THE BORN LOSER

'

'y· \ _, \
.'

1988 H!Uiey
1
Sporl&amp;ter, candy brandywme &amp;
black, only 10K m1les, loaded VII
chrome, excellent cond111on,
17.900, 61.t-992-5174

81g Foo1 brand new $600 614·
388·9192
•

1983 Same as above, 38,000
miles. SS,SOO . Cars 1n perfect

..
-,'
I'

~l

••"I
1' '

-1

'

25 lllll*y«&lt; golf

l\oiM

32 Objector
35 Force unft

39 Prohllh
40ExH

44---

in the South Pacific.

48 Llon'l din
47Fanny-1

"Z X K

p

ZXPCD

YKFK

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R P M..P Z M
UPU

X P. M

KCBHGKU

L FHS

XKFVKFZ

Y' XPZK

XHEMK

Olour

GKIFM.

.....:

l(INo'Io

IWEDNESDAY

•

. 1 1~ I I .
~:=:F::H~E=T:::T~,:~

I

One not so smart fellow to
l-....,.l_:_:;:l5:--ilr.6 _;..,l~ :: his buddy. "The only thing
L--1..__J.._.....J.L.-J.
. .....J ~ wrong wHh do1ng nothing IS that
~------'----.., you don't know when you're
•

A
V

_

-~RINT

•

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_

A'S TRO·ORAP.H
. .

at)d SAGE
paper,

:.,____....;......_~ , siltlon. NeW

..
:
'

•

•

BERNIGE
BEDEOSOL

c/o fhla newsNV

Murray

Hill

101511. Make aura

ttl alate your zodlanlgit, ,
8AGITTARIU81Nov. ·23-Dic. 21) In a

pay-your-own-way tunch tqday make
. ture the, • ..,.._ are dlvlditi!'aqually. 11
you
liot careful, you mlghl get ttuck

21l8-4564

I Cite. 22-.lan. t I) Indo·

_Ia ,~mlrable, bu! don"l go to
lxtre~ !""'V· K you 1111tke your com·

1984 S- 10 Good Sl'lal)e. Runs
Good. $975. 614·387·0287

Thu11day. Nov 21, 11118

..

, ..

o.ll,lll

1990 Chevy Sllverada E&lt;t Cal!,
2 Wid w/paolliva ~•etlan, tlnttd
g1111, 350 cl. u,u.,. PICkiQt,
taadod. 304-&amp;7S.2&lt;!&amp;1.
'
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\

~~~
~

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1"01(

'

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by fLIImg '" the miSSing words
yo11 develop from step No 3 belOw.

.

NUMBERED

LETTERS IN SQUARES

t,INSCR~BLE FOR
ANSWE~

.''"

NOVEMBER'20I

I
\

'

!

0 ~::~~~: ,h.' chuc~l• ~uotod

1 8
1....--!
.,

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.

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..:.:R.-:u..:.:H~I. .
3

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I .)U5TTf.l0~6f.ITiD COME
INfolD 11\T~~C~ M'I'SELF .,

..,
...
·~
•••

' '

'

'

~ 11 ~

'

letter• of tho

tcromblod words be-

' Hybrid· Swirl- Doubl· Mortal. WITH IT
'
A barga1n can always be found but after you bnng tt
home ~ou must know whal'to do WITH IT!

..'

RICHARDS BROTHERS FRUIT
FARM ·· APPLES' APPLES! AP
Pt.ESI large Crol) Wilh Many
Vat~et1es To Choose From We
Are Fealurmg Rod Deltctous As
Our SPECIAL For November
Come Cheek Our Prlcee And
Compere Located 24 Mt. North 01
Gallipolis On Route 35 Extt Rtght
On Coui'!IY Road 48 Phone 614·

...

SCitAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

~ .

Apples south ol Carpenter 011 SA
143, Saturdays onlv, Feuer's Fru11
Farm

' '

\' ;

1----------- ,.••

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

fie

low to fortn four words

A

l:

CARS FOR $100' Trucks, boa1s,
4·wheelert, motor homes, fum•
ture, elec:tron•cs, compurers etc
by FBI. IRS, DEA Ava1lable your
area now Call 1-600 513 4343
E11t S 9368

XHHRKF,

I

'I

''

Reorrahge

V

.i

OEVAPW

lAIII

.

•

I
•

....

r7~1...:B;...,:..Iu

. •'

I

PREVIOUS SOLUTION. "'Thts 1s a frne·countty Folks have a nght to send me
letters, and I have a right not to read them.•- W"ltam Faulknet

7124

•

SHMZ

WXPAUFKC.

YIC Z

CHZ

HLLPWK."

••

1--_.;;;_:!:.:_:_

; '

41 - · 81'8811
~.
42 Two-foolld
11111mal
43 Old map abbr. -

•

Home
lmproveml!nls

,•

30 FruM pe81ty

•

Auto loana Au to Dealer W•ll Ar
range Fmanc1ng Even If You
Have Been Turned Down Before
loans Antlable For No Cred11,
Bad Cred11 And Bankruptcy Buyers, Cal Dam 614-446·8172.

.I

29 Ololrctaft

..:.:NI,_N..:.:I;s..:,

Kramer electnc guitar &amp; amp.
plus two pedals, less than 1 yr
old, same as new condition, $350
OBO. 614-742-2373

_wv_30_4_~..;75-·7_42.:..1--,---- · ~

27 --!Ide

Pass

South waa Peter Reynolds from
Perth. LOok at hia biddln1. Firat, he
opened a nine-count &lt;thou1h admit·
tedly it is a 1ood nine-count). West
• made a bizarre weak jump overcall.
North produced .a negative double
promlslnl four hearts. (Afterward, he
said be had a spade in his hearte!J
Eut rBlsed to three spades. Reynolds
wu there with four heartl. Finally, af.
( ter North corrected to five clubs,
Reynolds raised to six! That nine·
point hand just got stronger and
stronger!
Now to .the 'play. Alter Reynolds
ruffed the spade ace, it waa the work
of a moment for blm to draw trumps,
play a diamond to dummy!&amp;' ace, and
cfUn the diamond jack through East.
Declarer continued with a heart to his
queen, cashed the diamond king, dis·
carding ope of dummy's remaining
heartl, and conceded a heart trick for
plus 1370. No sweat!
What mad~a even funnier - if
that 1s the w)&gt;rd I want -- is that at
two of the other three ll!bles in play,
, the deal was P!lsied out!
To subscribe for one year, send a
check for ~4 to The Bridge World, 39
West 94th Street, New York. NY !0025-

,."••

Musical
Instruments

Hydraul ic 0&lt;1 Sl2 .50·5gal pall
S1der1 Equ1pment, Hende11on ,

I \-20

Motorcycles

Spancel pupp1es, 2 blac ki
white males $50ea 304 - 773
5076

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

ti;S

1992 To~ota P1ck Up 4 Wt'leel
5 Speed AC, Bedllner 1
Sunrool, Batman Amer~can ~c­
mg Wheels E•cellent Condmon,
75,000 Mtles $10,900, 614-446·
17

$6.500

Indoor Sale 2 Fllh Tankl, Saga
Super,NW'IIendo, Ore&amp;MI, Sweeper, Full Size Bed With Matreaa
And Box Springs, Blkea, Bed·
spreadl Wtlh Shams And Cur·
talna, Home Interior, Nice Cloth·
814 48 138
-4 •
S
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aepa1red1 New ~ Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ran Evan&amp;. 1·800-S37·g528
Ltk Chltrl. ElectrtC Wheelchair~
Stltr Liftl, V1n Llltl, Scooterl,
New !Used, Bowman'• Homecare,
61.--7283.

••

Drtve ~

As Is $4,500 1996 Honda Fourtrax 4x4, loaded and many oxuas Call alter 6 00 Ask lor Ray
3o4 675· 1756 or 304 675 4474

*'" ,

illsue.

1991 Dodge Caravan LE, loaded,
very mce cond1t1on, 1'11gh m1les
Askm9 $7,800 (Below book value• 614-441 ·0135Aftor5:00pm,
1992 lsuzu Rodeo LS. loaded,
4WO, 109,000 IT1tles, excellent
condttron. $9,700 OBO, 614-992·
2001

Pass

.

' You receive' six large issues per an·
oound
num, which are aimed primarily at
48 Wild ohHp
.
49 Amount~ " ,
club players but have something for, '
52 Comedlen
; ~
evei')'One. I think the editor, Stephen L...;L.-i.-..0..PhHipe
Lester, does a good job.
Was tbe expression that it's better
to be lucky than good the invention of
CELEBRITY CIPH~R
a loser? Well, one wonders if Eut or
West mentioned it after thl• deal,
by Lula Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryp~ograrn~ are cread from quolatiolw; by I•II'IOUI ~. • .00 preun1
which wu reported in the April 1996
Each lcttler In lht dpMr 1!1.nda for •nother, Today'l dtMt A . , _ L

••
••
l

1965 , Cad•llac
Fleetwood
Brougham E11ce11ent CondliiOn,
Power Wmdows, Power Door
Locks 1 AMIFM Cassella, Tilt,
CrtJISe, Alf, Power Seals S1,800
614·441-1975 Dartlme, 614·245·
0464 Evenengs
"

Pass

'

21 SIIP!*Y
24 LNve·l• lOb)
,
25 Cellallal
21 Dutch chilli ...

Fl~, let'• look at Austrllian Bridge.

t

1984 Chevy Chevene 89,000
M1les, New Pamr Looks &amp; Runt
Great! $750, 614-446-3746

Eu&amp;
3•

oultlx .

There a\-e two good bridle maga-

!

Coc~er

580

18 Su..ertotJve

B)' P~lllp 'Alder,

!'

AKC Cocker Pups, White, B11fl
Spots, Sho1s, Wormed, Ta1ls
Docked, 2 Females, 3 Males,
R~adyt1!18196 $150 , 614 446·
8100

570

~

'

CFA Regtstered Pers1nan Ktnens,
$200 W1th Breedmg Rtghts &amp;
Pedtgroo Phone 614 256 6107

Puppy Palace Kennels, Board 1ng
Srud Serv1ce PUPflll\S Groom1ng
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade. All Bteeds
Payments Welcome 614 388
0429

of lime
10 Mamllltclure
11 Trudge

Down under~ page

~

I

AKC Shellte pups- blue merle, 1
male, 1 female, 1 sable and white
male, heavr white factored, $3501
ea, 614 ·69~1085 Athens.

Poodle' pupp1es 1eacups while,
toys, black, also mtnlature
Schnauzers AKC , shots and
wormed, champ1on ~oodbne . 614
667 3404

kidding

I Wood llympll
• v.tpeilod

5 llonell

Opening lead: • A

4 Wheel Onve,

AKC Aeg•stered Male Cocke r
Span1els, Both Adulls, 1 Bla,ck &amp;
Wt:ute, 1 Sufi &amp; White. With
Champton Bloodline 614 -379
2728

Pets Plus, Stiver Bndge Plaza
(10'% Off Every Theng, Every Opyl~
614·441·0770

chOIII'-4 POliS

2 Dlatlnctlve elr

II

6 D"HIN Into
7 Gocld-nltiUNd '-

3 Chicken

DOWN

1 WWIIevent

Obi.

s.

Pus
Paa6

STORAGE TANKS 3 OOD"Gallon
Upftght, Ron Evans Enterpnses,
Ja&lt;*son Oh•o, 1..ft00-537·9528.

550

North

West

2•

ao-

540

2 Bedroom House, Unlurmshed
Gas Heat WID Hook-Up, No
Pets, 614-446·4491

WLDLIFE!CONSERV.A.TION
JOBS

er '

t

58 Short play

• Q 5 42
•J2

• Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

Slab W/Jod Cut To Prelerred
Length $35 Truck Load Oeflv . ,
ed 614 2'"1602

Downtown One Bedroom, Carpit- IWMa'n,lc,,hue''I'····
IB•,,.M.,,o,d;u•' r70, 7 MM 9 Week Regtstered Beagle Pups,
Gd, Complete Kitchen, All Electnc,
Scope, Never
614·446-o139.
I 614-446 0090 Shots, Wormed, Takmg Reason·
able Offers, Steve S1apl&amp;ton, 614446-4172. 614·256·1619
Furn.shed 2 Bedroom Apartment.
Across From Park, AC, No Pets,
A Grcom Shop Pet Groommg
References, Depoalt, $350!Mo.,
Buy or sell Rtvarme Anllquos, Featur1ng Hvdro Bath Don
614-446-8235,814-446..0577
1124 E Matn Slteet, on At 124, Sheets 373 Goorges Creek Ad
Furn•shed Eff1c1ency All Uttllllta Pomeroy. Hours· M T W 10 oo 61 4·446·0231
Patd, Share Balh $1451Mo, 919 am to s·oo pm, Sunday 1 oo to AKC Boxers, fawn, black mask
Second Avenue, Gallipolis 614· 6 .00 p m 814-992·2526. Russ wtwhl1&amp; markmgs. $200. 614·886Moore OW'nar
4.46-31145.
51&lt;16.
Grac1ous l.vtf!9 1 and 2 bedloom
Miscellaneous
AKC Cocker' Spantel pups, buff
apartments at Vtllage Uanor and
color, S100ea. 304 675-1792.
Merchandise
R!Verstde Apartments in Middle.
port From $232-$355 Call 61 ~- 17 CtJ , Ft Uprtght Coldspot AKC Reg German Shephard pup
992-5084 Equal Housing Oppor. Freezer, Frosr Free. 614·256
pies, 7 weeks cld, hrs1 shots &amp;
tur....
wormed 3)4-675-4286
6225

RENTALS

l!~~~~~ri~~~~~·

520

446.9565

'

Needed •To Teach Commun•tr

Washer end Dryer, Ltke New
$250 call614-446·1992 •

Don't lei Th1s One Sltp By II Small
One Bedroom Wtth lots Of Ex
tras Washer, Dryer, Slave, Fdg
Included We Pay Water And
Garbage
Very Clean
No
Smokers, No Pels $300 Deposit,
$350fMo , 614·446·2205, 614

Parcels on Ra~burn Ad Water,
paved (Oad, reasonable restrlc uons 304 675-5253 (no stng!e
1
wide 1nqu~res please) •

45&amp;31

With
The•r
And LearntflliJ
PersonalL•mttatiOns
Sk•lls To InAdults
Own ttome, fn Galha And Me•gs

furnished ape, utllftles paid Deposit &amp; references 304-6822566,

Development- Rtverbend Estates, scemc lots, underground
utrllt•es, 2 m.les from Ravenswood,
304 213-9773 or 304-273 3052.

Sell yo ur lOy's to the Pomeroy
Ttv1fl: ShOp so Santa can atrord to
vls1t more Children, 220 E Matrt
Street, Pomeroy, 01'1 614·992·
3725
SIGNS AND LETTERS Large
Ponable Changeable lener
Stgns $289 349 Free Delivery
and Leners Plasnc leners $55
(Second Box Free) AAA S•ons 1·
800-533-3453 anyttme

Polly's New and Used Furniture
2101 Jefferson Ave. Pt Pleas- Surplus Army Camouflage Clothc•..,nt--=:::-'-:c-,-,.-----I'"Q. (Insulated covera lls brown
-::
duck bibs $35~ Sam Somer Sanyo Ofl•ce Refngeralor 1 2 Cu VIII&amp; s by Sandyv1Ue Post Olftce
Ft $40; Walnut Fimsh, 614 -446· Fnday-Sunday Noon-S OOpm
~364;__4_A_he..or_7_P._M;___ _ _ _ _ _ Other days call 304-273 5655
1
Used Furn•rure 130 Bulavllle Pike, v 1
Automai&lt;C Washe·r ent ess gas healers, kerosene
Oll•ce C&amp;.-"'·
'f&lt;ll
hearers &amp; wood stoves 1n stock
$50, EleclrtC Range $75 Desk Siders EqU1pmenf304·675·7421
$50 M1crowave $60, Good Cab1
net Model Color T.V $125 Good Washer &amp; dryer, $300 for bolh
C04Chea, Beds, Mattressea, ·61.t- 304-882·2219
4&lt;16·4762

Beech St Mtddleport, 2 bedroom,

Land'-ApprOII 300 acres Local·
ed 1n Muon Co Millstone Ad
90's, eau D•ana Bartram 304-743·
1706 Owner F1n Avail

Atlitude &amp; Excellent Worth Eth·

,M ....,

57Scwce

58 Pole

t K 10 3
• ' A109543

~"---------1 :.:66.:.:"';;.._--~---

GOOD U~ED APPLIANCES
Wastien, dryers, refngerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances , 76
V1ne Street, Call61.t-448·7398,
1.-.99-34119.
;.
l.:a_::...:.:.:,_..:.;.:lor:;_C_hf_ls_tma_s-.--'-•1

58 Allront

•• Q 9 7 5

And Gauranteedl S100 And Up,
ChrlltrnaS G1rtsl For 111 your Tup- Will Del!ver. 614-669-6441
perware needs, Including re·
placement of damaged products, R1dng lawn mower, 2 yrs. old. miPiease call Cathy 1·614-364· crowave. washer/dryer 4 yrs old,
e~Sl,
ell:cellenl cond111on 61• 992

30 Inch Elec:tr1c Range, S95 40
Inch Kenmore E'actnc Range
Was $ 125 Cut To $95, 17 cu Ft
Chest Freezer 1125, Hot Point
Relng8rator Was $175 Cut To
$150, G E Slde By Side Refng·
eralor $195; G. E. AutomatiC
Wastier $95: WhWipool Washer
$125. Kenmore Dryer $95; G.E
Dryer $150. Skaggs Appltances.
76 VIne Street, Galltpolis. 614·
~46- 7398, 1-800-499·3499

55 Uncle

South

St4-25S-t013
carpel &amp; VInyl In Stockise.oo Yd Relrlgerarors, Stoves, Washera
Uallohln Carpal~. 8l4-44&amp;-7444
And Dryers, All Reconditioned

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Dnve
from S244 to $()15 Walk to shop
&amp; movtes Call 614 446 2568
Equal Houstng Opportunity

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Is a&amp;ekHlg a part lime Accounts
RKeivable ASSIStant, apply al or
ma•l resume to 38759 Rockspnngs Rd , Pomefoy', Oh. 4S769

• e a1 a
•Q

Bland new portatMe Oithwatt'ler
never uted S200. Wood Burner
S100, Wood Oropleat Table $40

3 · 4 Beclrooma, 2 Batha, Central
Gas Heat. And A!r Col1dltloned,
Washer /Dryer Hook-Ups, Otshwasher, Drsposal, Fans In Every
NEW AEPO'S ONLV 2 LEFT '
Room, Ntce Khchen, Plenty Of
N~ver Lived In, Free Delivery
And Set-Up, No ~ymen1s Until Cablne! Space, 61•·886-7174
February, 1997 Call 1·800·251· 3 Bedrooms. 5 Court Streel. Galli5070
polis, Kitchen With Stove, RefrigNew RepOs, only 2 left, never erator No PelS, Depos•t. Refer·
ences. $360/Mo, 614·446-492f3
hved tn, free delivery and aet-up
'
No payment unlll February 1997
3 Room &amp; Bath Ev8fythmg New
1-800-251 5070
Stove, Refngerator, All Utlltt1es
Patd $300/Mo , Deposit, Refer NEW! Bank Repo's, only 3 left,
ences, No Pels, 614 -446 8026 ,
Still under warran1y, free delivery
614
446-7153 Evenmgs.
&amp; set-up Xl4·755-7191
3 Room 1 Bedroom Apar1men1,
Schull 121165 la1r cond , 2br, wl
large utili tY. room, roln9erator, Wuh Stove &amp; Refrtgera1or Furneshed, 614-446--2583.
IIOVe &amp; 2 WlndClW ac , 52,800

This - p e r will not

• K 8 76
East
•AQJ88
·• K 10 5 2
• J 43
'1' A 10 2

L.... u.... oe

New hamel starting 11 $165 per
month wllh only $995 down. Call
RUSS at 614-385il698

Sa'"

Wn&amp;

er : Green high back chair; 21'
Calor TV with atand; 111 World
Book Encyclopedia Rainbow; Vacuum Cletner Call614·448· 1304

2bdrm apts , total electfiC, apphat'ICes furnished , laundry room
faCIII!Ies, close 10 school tn town
Appllcauons avatlable at V1llage
GrHn Apts t49 or call 61 ~ -Q92·
3711 . EOH

&amp;O Anna 1111d the
King ol-51
ogl.
531relllnd
54 UkAia model

•9743

tleapar; Dark brown awrvel rock·

2 or 3 Bedroom, 1 bath upstalrl
ap~ Vand St Catl304175-5054

48 Raid

11·20-96

, '1' K 8 6
t A J

Beige Sec11onal Couch w1th

2 Bedrooms. No Pall, $3a51Mo.,
Utlhtiel Paid, $100 DepoSit, 61 ....
448-3437
'

HOME TYPIST, PC u1ers needed. $45,000 income potential

North

Appliances·
R.condl11oned
Washers, Or1er1, Ranges, Refrlgratorl, ao Day Guararueel
Fftnch City Maytag, eu-ue77115.

1 Bedroom, E1tra N1ce, Near
Hcllzers, 1286/Mo , Plus Utllttiel,
DeposotRequOtd, 014-445-2957.

Pillion• feel unwfnltd, they may glva
you a daM d your OWl) medlolne.
AGtiAMIS 1.-......... II) You m~
pau
an tau lnfonnallon today iUit
beuUM ~~ 80Undl lnteralll~. Do not
• ..._In ... ...,_
illllltltWI
,
1111 1
....

"' """

..

•

1111 y.r altai, )'QUI 11100111 rete wfl "ICa tJrw. • •• lr. . 101 - wfthln
[)f blgh. Howe..r, you mull llrat bUild your .,_IO!IIIIi, 111 ICI.., I you have
IOiklloundllllonl ~.•rona 1- · Tllf :rtNII'kAid a IIIMCiflc arnaurtl of money

In

to e.piiiCI your nth oil!•·
·
, p!Naurablt IOIMIIM, lxtrav~g~~~ee
BCOIIPIO JPGI• ~4-NII¥. ll) Ailylhlng , ~1111d 10 )'OUUIIjO)'IIIII-.
~ )IOU put 1n wrlll1lD IOdly ltiiOilld ARlit lltiiNIIIt-Aprl 11) vow IIMI-

rely on yourself more than you rely on
otners today Your chart tndlcales that
people you"ve counted an In the past
mlg~t no1 be available to !1elp you.
GEMINI IMay 21.June 20) Rather tnan
attempting to make others t118emble your
Image today, aller your peraonalhy so
that you will be more compatible.
CANCER (June 2l.July 22) Today , tl
you don1 contribute to a jolnl endeavor,
don'l e•pect to be rewarded jus! for being
there. Tho payolfa will be reserved lor
actu~l partlapanll. &gt;
LED (Jullf 23-Aug. 221 Whefl1er or rtOt
your Idea will tucceed 0r I~ will
d
d
dell 1
apan or your
rm riA n.
not
Mtlfe for IICOrtd bait, be«'atae you don't
have to be a runner-up.
·
1i111oo (Alii- •I apt. 8) Try to be 18
reallallc ~ poulble today"'*' ucer·
' Ialnlng your flntlllcial poaltiOII Do not
tnler lunda In lht profll column II you
have not maMid lltein yet
LIIRA llept. ll-94!t
ally

U) u

_ . conecllnt~ lhan :,::. ,:::
1111
1
" * a big ane, • OOUid OOttljlilcilll your ~today you'Nttao apitllilllllld. · mantra whlch all~ your family. Thla
aflllrl. aa,IPIOI nat~ to a blrllt. EY11t )IOU lltlnk your-.
may not b .. tht cut today, and you
be doullla-chtotctd lor errore, If you lng In tht er•• of yotir' ptall will

:J:': :~llhNtf~ll;~~

••IJI•rfllr

~~=-~~aof.;C:.,'IItould
I

miQht neglaciiOinwtNug Important

.,

•

..

' ,,

"

•J

t

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I

�OPEl

--

SAtt~

Holiday live poinsettias
Check out our large sel,ctiDn of ltve
poinsettias in red, white or pink
varieties. Perfect.for the holidays I

�</text>
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