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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Reds blank
Kansas City
with 4 runs

Pick 3:

4-6.()

Pick 4:

5-6-6-8
BuckeyeS:

. Sports on Page 4

8-12-23-24-25

Mostly clear tonight,
near-record Iowa in the
mid and upper 40s .
Thursday, sunny, highs in
the upper 608.

•

entine
W.41,NO.tl

.

2 Soctlono, 16 Pages, 35 centa
' A Gannon Co. Newapeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 3,1997

011187, Ohio v.lley Publllhlng Cllmpeny

'

Commissioners clarify county home policies
1
A c:omnuttee

::! RI~~Ri~ff
ne . I
.

.

.
.

· · ·
.

.

W revtew the operatiOn of the Metgs County Home .wtll he
orgamzed
by
Metgs
Jeffrey Thornton, but wtll have
th "t t mak County
1' Commtsstoner
ha
no au ~n Y o. e .po tcy c nges. .
.
.
Conttnued discussiOn of the operauon of the county home and the orga'zall'
fthe
'ttee
held he the board t M d ' ·
k
on o
comrm
was
w n
me on ay •or 1ts wee ·
1m mcetin
y
g.
.
.
.
Jean ~eser met wtth the board and County Prosecutmg Attorney John
Lentes to. discuss w~t Grueser alleges are v1~lattons ~f the Oh1o Rev.sed
Code whtch relate
the county
operatton.
. . directly
"-~= to
51•5
f the homes
od
'd
h ' I ha h
c e, Sill. s. e te I t I t e county
G~eser, c.tung ,.,..uon , o
horne s s~~;pen~tende'!', and not the county _commtssJOners, has. the auth?'t·
I~ to admit resulcn!' mto the home, and s~d that the code sectiOn also provtdes.the county wtth the authonty to requtre the fo~etture o~personal propcrty, mcludmg real estate, to .offset the cost o~ housmg a reSident.
.
.Lentes noted that supporung caselaw clanfics that the county commts·

sioners are ulti~tely ~sponsible for all mauers relating to the operation of · Grueser is among the members already appointed to that committee
the county hom~. mcludmg the approval of prospectiv.e residents. The home's
As superintendent at the county home, Sharon Bailey is res nsibl~ for ·
supenntendent ts .•n appointee of the com!"issioners.
,
m~ki,ng_ administrative decisions such as purchasing, based u o~he a ro- •
Lentes
· p
pp
· also satd
· that the process of. filtng court actions
. to sell pe~onal
"
.· pnattons made to the county home budget bYthe COmmiSSIOners.
~longmgs of restdents would not be ttme or cost effecttve, and noted that
Food staples and other items are generally purchased at retail cost throu h
m Metgs County the commtsSJoners have always maintained a policy that local businesses a policy designed to s
n1 1
h
· g
·
·'·
'
UP,po oca mere ants, accordmg to
those
real
, holdtng
· stgntficant
·
. . estate or other personal property are not eligi- Commissioner Janet HoWard• who noted sat'd she fee1s that wholesale clubs •·'
b1e tOr restdency. tn the fac1hty.
.
and other alternative buying methods offer little savings.
The commiSstoners last month authonzed a proposed half-mill levy for
At the meeting, which was held yesterday because of the Labor Da hoi- •
the operatt.on and mamtenance of the county home, which hou&amp;es indigents. iday, the commissioners also:
·
y
That levy, tf approved, would generate $110'000 per year. Last year• the coun• Authorized a transfer of f und s wt'thi n the budget of the county engmeer
·
ty spent $84,000 from the county's general fund for county home operation, in the amount of $10,000;
. ·
'
and took entitlement funds or cash payments from residents to offset pay• Referred.a road closing ro salt0 1h
·
.
roll,. supplies and other expenses.
.
,
P ~..
e county engmeer,
,
Meanwhile, Thornton said t~at he was in the process of appointing a sevAnd approved payment ofbtlls m the amount of $74,340.68, with 125
en-member commtttee for the purpose of reviewing administrative procedures entnes.
.
.
at the home, and advtsmg of ways by which costs could be cut.
Also present·was Clerk Glona Kloes.

Congress tackles bills
to continue operations

Back -in
session
Lawmakers
pondering new
plans in school
·finance
debate
PAUL SOUHRADA

'j

t

l

''

By
Associated Preas Writer
COLUMBUS - School is back
in session this week- the legislative
session.
Senate President Richard Finan,
R-Cincinnati, and House Speaker Jo
Ann Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg,
plarl!"d IQ annonoc"LI~hoW the~
will ptoceed with the next go-I'OIIIId
on the school-finance debate.
DavidSon would not give any
hints Tuesday, saying only that lawmakers in both the House and Senate
will try to coordinate their efforts.
"We're trying to figure out what
works best," she said.
· The Sen11te, meanwhile, ended a
four.week break from the.search for
a new way to pay for public schools
wben the Finance Committee opened
hearings on "Pian B."
But the Senate Democrats' answer
to the state's school-funding problem
fared little better with Republicans
than the GOP proposal did among.
Democrats. .
The plan IS the Democrats' proposa! to raise $1.24 billion for
schools by expanding the state sales
taX to some services that are now

•

-

i•.
.\

PRESENTING PLAN B _Ohio Senate Minor·
ity Leader Ben Espy, D-Colurnbue, geatured as
he presented school financing Plan B, to the
exempt, trimming government spending by about $100 million and allowing ,taxes on commercial and industrial property to grow with inflation.
The plan \also would give homeowners a $75 credit against their
property taxes, and repeal the unpop. ular business tax on inventory while
raising the corporate franchise tax.
"We look on Plan Bas an effon
stimulate discussion," Senate
10

•

Senate Finance Committee at the statehouse In
Columbus. (AP)

Minority Leader Ben Espy, DBut Republicans greeted tbe proColum~us, told the ccimminee. . posal with skepticism - particular"Hopef~lly this will be a vehicle we ly the section extending the sales tax
can build upon."
to attorney fees. cable television and
Espy noted that lawmakers in other services, and the elimination of
1993 extended the sales taX to ser- the state subsidy of commercial propvices including health clubs, pest erty taxes.
control and building maintenance,
"When you critically analyzed
and that Gov. George Voinovich Sen. Espy's proposal, it's got some
squeezed $627 million out of state problems in it," said Finance Chairagency spending in 1991.
rna!' Roy Ray, R.Akron.

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Lawmakers began returning from their
summer recess on Tuesday with lead•
ers pledging not to let differences
over spending bills force another
government shutdown. But they also
conceded several thorny issues need
w be resolved this fall.
President Clinton, meanwhile,
might see the coming weeks as a
fresh opportunity to use his line-item
veto power.
'
"I'm not interested in creating
confrontational issues - or avoiding
them," Senate Majority Leader Trent
Lou, R-Miss., told reporters, as he
outlined tbe Senate's agenda for the
coming weeks.
The Senate returned from its
month-.iong recess on Tuesday; the
House is back Wednesday.
Bo(h Loti and House Majority
Leader DickArmey, R-Texas, warned
lhat a priority item of Clinton's - socalled fast-track authorityfor negotiating trade agreements- could be in
jeopardy.
Lou predicted "rough sledding" if
Clinton insists qn tying the authority
to new concessions to labor and en vironmentalists.
And little enthusiasm was voiced
on either side of the Capitol for
another item on the administration's
wish list - camP.ign finance reform.
Lot( said he wants to wait until the
Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, chaired by Sen. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn., finishes its review of
1996 .campaign misdeeds "to sec

•
1

which (existing) laws were broken."
That committee resumes work on
Thursday.
Among the difficult issues Lou
listed for the comin2 months were a
partisan· battle over how the 2000'
' census is conducted, reform of the
Food and Drug Administration, reg-•
ulatory reform and subsidies for:
Amtrak.
'
Topping the list for both chambers
is action on the 13 appropriations.
bills needed to keep the government
functioning after·the stan of the ne\11 ~
fiscaJ, year, Oct. L
•
None has been enacted. The mea-:.
sures are in various stages of com-~
pletion.
"We've got a lot of catchup to do
on the appropriations bills" because:
so much energy went into getting the:
balanced-budget agreement passed,·
Armey said.
;
July's landmark agreement, which
sets spending targets, makes a repeat:
·of the government shutdowns of two·
years ago far less likely.
•
Republicans. took most of the•.
.political heat for those shutdowns,'in·
late 1995 and early 1996, and don't:
want to get stuck wilh the blame·
again.
··•
Clinton now has the linc-it&lt;ilil
veto, which he exercised for the fi~
time in early August.
- ·:
The authority allows him to strike ·
specific programs from spendiof
bills, rather than having to veto entirC
measures·that could result in the shut.!
down of different governmental funl;i. c
tlons.
·
~ 1:

Gallia County Local Schools teachers, staff remain on picket
Teachers and support staff in the Gallia County Local Schools entered the
second day of a strike today as their negotiators and the Gallia County Local
Board of Education renewed bargaining on new contracts.
Negotiating teams met at the Holiday Inn today for the first time since
talks broke off Aug. 26.
No additional meetings between negotiators were scheduled until after the
Labor Day holiday, prompting members of the Galli a County Local Education Association and the Gallia Counly Local Support Staff Association to
press ahead with the planned strike Tuesday.
' Pickets are up outside the two high schools. one middle school and five
elementaries that constitute the Gallia County Locai Schools.
GCLEA President Cathy Greenleaf confirmed a repon that a teacher on
. the picket line at Vinton Elerncntary was struck by the mirror of an admin. istrator's car entering the school parking lot Thesday.

,. · 1

.. ..... -

The teacher, whose back was to the road, was struck but apparently not sion the next day.
::
seriously injured when the car passed, Greenleaf said.
''1lte SERB meeting resulted in a set of standards governing when the ·
"From what we understand, the picketers were doing what they were sup- media will be notified of proposals to be discussed during negotiations," the
posed to and were getting out of the way," she added.
·
associations'·release said.
.
In a press release issued this morning, the associations reported that 98 . ·The associations, whose previous contracts have expired, are striking over
percent of the associations' members "demonstrated their support ... by par- salary, benefits and con"'\cllanguage issues. The board's last contract offer ~·
ticipating in or honoring the work stoppage."
of Aug. 20 to both groups ·was ,rejected, and last week's talks failed to pro- •
The associations also reponed a settlement was achieved Tuesday in a duce a settlement prior to the strike.
~
hearing with the State Employee Relations Board on unfair labor practices
The associations "are united in their effort to gain a fair and equitable con- •
filed by lhe associations against the board.
tract. thai will improve the educational program for the children of Gallia :
The associations alleged that the board conducted "ba~gaining in the County," the release said.
·
'
media" when Board President John Davis told the Gallipolis Daily Tribu.nc
Students are remaining home this week after the board amended t~c school ~
on Aug. 19 .the board would be. making its ·:l~st and final" contract offer to year calendar o~ Aug. 22. Jnservicc for teachers and staff was scheduled by •
the assocta!lons pnor to mformmg lhe bargammg teams at a negotJatmg sp- the board for thts week tf the stnke began.
•

:~--, .~ ~~; .'·7ti::

Jt!O :T

'tUi1iillilii"WMii.'One .
tographer Riln .Davia, hi~ decidld not to Hll
· the publications in rasponH to the dllth of .
Princese Diana. (AP)

'

•
"

'

line ~

Photographers' role at scene of crash
surfaces in investigation of Diana's death ·
PARIS (AP) ~ New details on the
photographers' alleged role in the
crash that killed Princ~ss Diana
emerged today, with a police report
saying paparazzi pushed back the
first officer on the scene as he tried
to reach the victims.
Unlll more police arrived to help
him, all the officer was able to
glimpse of Diana was "a blonde
head," the daily Le Figaro reported,
quoting from the first repons scribbled ' by investigators 20 minutes
after the crash. It did not name the
photographers involved in the scuffle.
Six photographers and a motorcycle driver were named Tues&lt;,lay as
official suspects in the case. A lawyer
for one of the men denounced the
move as ''theater justice."
Investigators are waiting for the
sole survivor of the crash, TrevorRoes Jones, to recover enough to tell
his story. He may have to write down
what happened - hospital sources
told Le Figaro that his jaw was damaged in the crash and that his lips and

tongue were torn away. Jones
remains hospitalited in Paris in crit·
ical condition. ·
. In Londo·n, meanwhile, officials
said the capital's huge squares and
regal boulevards may not be big
enough to hold the throngs of mourn- .
crs expected at Diana's funeral Saturday. The lines of grieving admirers
continued to sweU Tuesday, two days
after Diana died in the automobile
crash in Paris.
Princess Diana's friends want
Elton John to be invited to sing at her
funeral. Buckingham Palace officials
were to say later today if he' II be
asked; the Times of London reported that some in Buckingham Palace
fear it would not set the proper dignified tone.
The Daily Telegraph quoted Italian opera star Luciano Pavarotti,
another of Diana's friends , as- saying
he was·invited to sing but is too upset
and turned down the invitation.
The early police reportS from
Paris lend weight to the claim that
some among the six photographers

'

and one motorcycisl may have not ..
only ·failed to assist the victims, but
impeded those trying to do so. The
seven could be charged with invol- ••
untary homici de , among other !
crimes.

~

"They pushed back and blocked :
the officer from coming to the aid of •
the victims," the"police report said, '
according to Le Figaro.
~
A New York man who was in •
Paris on vacation and had been:
returning to his hotel when his taxi :

happened upon the scene about five :
minutes after the crash said the pho- •
tographers swarmed the wreckage :
1
'as if they were mosq~itQQS ... taking photos from .every conceivable .:

angle."

:

"There was no movement of one :·

.human bci~g trying to help another :
human being in a tragedy," said Jack ·
Firestone, 42, who talked to reporters :
after arriving home Tue&lt;day from
Kennedy Airport with his wife, •.
Robin, and their 12-year-old son, :
Brandon.
•

�Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

·Commentary

Page2
wedneedly,
l

s.~ 3, 1997

OHIO Weather

•

By Jack Anclenon
sands of dollars to Cuba."
what they thought they knew about
and .1M Molltf
ADd he even told some fine tales Castro and his regime. Because of
A Cuban spy who defected to the about DOI chief Luis Barreiro, wbo Castro's wildly successful counter·
United States 10 years agil blew the used the DGI's in~lligenee-gather· espionage effort, it turns out that
111 Court SL, PomtrOy, Ohio
'- .lid of Fidel Castro's long running ing ·satellites to record American every president from Kennedy to
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157
counter-espionage operation against movies, which he then indexed by Reagan was routinely fed fanciful
tbe United States, and also provided title, cassette nurnber
DGI-concocted bunk
American officials with information and theme in the DGI's
about Castro.
that was the impetus for the invasion computers.
Lombard's
of
~
and
the
·
a
rrest
of
dictator
'Iitillating
as
these
debriefing
also made
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Manuel Noriega.
tales were, Lombard
the CIA realize the
The spy, Maj. Florentino Aspilla- also shared some infor.
extent to which
ROBERT L WINGETT
ga
Lomb.
a
rd,
who
now
liyes
in
the
mation
with
CIA
inter·
Panamanian strong·
Publisher
United States under an assumed viewers that was par·
man .Noriega had
name, was a senior official and 25- ticularly painful for the
played the intelli·
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
year
veteran
of
the
Cuban
intelli·
agency
to
swallow.
Moller
and
Anderton
gence
~gency for a
GIMIIII Manager
Controller
gence service, the General DirecLombard alleged, and
fool. During the years
torate of Intelligence (DGI).
the CIA to their embarrassment la~r that CIA officials thought they were
7lN Sendnelar' nMIIftlr1IIO,.. Nil« from r'Ndln: on • r.r.t ,_. al,top.
·
Lombard
was
just
IS
when
he
confirmed,
that the DGI had pene- gening good intelligence on Castrb
l)pool _ _ ,. _ _ .. _ . . _ _ _ _ _ .......,
leo. - - (3(JD/llt"•joined the DGI, and by the time he trated nearly all of the CIA's anti· from his chum Noriega, a CIA-paid
defected at age 40, he'd received 13 Castro operations. And, we were employee, he, too, was "feeding them
medals for his service. He had told recently, Lombard was the first fairy tales. Lombard proved.
"
'
""
L.......
.
-Sentinel,
nt
ec.n
sr..
PMIIIIOJI, Otllo .f51el; or, FAX to 11......,..1&amp;
extensive knowledge of DGI struc· man to tip the CIA off to the fact that '
It got worse, the more Lombard
tore and.operations.
most of their agents in Cuba •• for' told interviewers. He recounted how
At the time of his 1987 defection, more than two decades ·· were actu· Noriega had been pivotal in helping
Lombard was head of the DGI staff ally double agents working for Cas· Cuba export arms to rebels in El Sal·
at
Cuban embassy in Czechosl&lt;&gt;- . tro.
vador, Honduras and Colombia ••
vakia. He simply left his job in an
After several years of reviewing for which Noriega earne(l millions
· embassy car one June 'afternoon and earlier "agent" reports, the CIA had of dollars . Noriega, Lombard
drove across the border to Austria, to re-evaluate and rewrite much of revealed, was also paid by Castro to
By The Asaoclated Press
where he presented himself to
Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio . American diplomats in Vienna.
newspapers:
CIA sources later told our associ·
The Columbus Dispakh, Aug. 29
ate Dale Van Alta that Castro "went
It's difficult to separate fact from fic.tion in the war between the states
bonkers" when he learned of Lorn·
over wind-borne smog, but some facts are indisputable.
bard's defection.
Eight Northeastern states have ·asked the U.S. Environmental Protection
Castro had reason to be angry.
Agency to impose tougher pollution controls on industrial sources in the Lombard was full of unpleasant
Midwest, claiming they contribute to ozone pollution in the Nonheast. Gov.
details about the Cuban leader's per·
George Voinovich is furious, exploring possible appeals.
sonal life and regime, and he will·
The affected states, including the complainers, had agreed to a process
ingly told it ·to CIA ddbriefers in
where nitrogen oxide emissions would be reduced by 2004.
many hours of interviews.
Why, then, did the Nonheastem states ask the EPA to impose tougher
At a time when Cuba was suffer·
·controls immediately on Midwest utilitiesr
·
ing from housing shortages, Lom·
Many of tbe Northeastern states are ... behind Ohio in implementing
bard told CIA interviewers of Cas·
enhanced aul&lt;&gt;-emissions testing, in part because they have been blaming all
tro's expropriation of "hundreds of
' their problems on the Midwest.
·
houses" for use by his security
guards
and aides in Havana.
Akroa Beacon Journal, Aug. 27
He
also said that many senior
· The tobacco industry would rather settle than fight. That was the obvious
Cuban officials ingested "HK-3"
message sent this week 'from Florida where cigarette producers blinked at tablets, which were supposed ·to
the prospect of an embarrassing trial and agreed to pay the state $11.3 bil- make them more virile .. "These
lion.
·
(tablets) are a stimulant for older
As the parties prepared for trial, documents surfaced revealing how
men so that they can be with the
duplicitous the tobacco indi.tstry has been. One internal memo signaled the girls." Lombard told one interview•detennination of cigarette makers to attract younger smokers. It outlined a er. "Since at times they have two or
proposal for flavored cigarettes.
·
three girls, these tablets. cost thou·
Of course, the tobacco industry has long argued that it never intended. to
hook teen-agers on smoking. Then again, its leaders insisted for years that
cigarettes did not cause disease.
• : In a pretrial deiX&gt;sition, Steven Goldstone, the chairman of the company
:ttJlat owns RJ. Reynolds Tobacco Co., testified that he believes cigarettes .
Africa's oppressed black population to repeal South Africa's apartheid
~play a "role in causing lung cancer." Geoffrey Bible, his counterpart at By JoHph Perkin•
ln
the
minds
of
his
fellow
coun·
doubted
de Klerk's sincerity. They laws. First to go was the Separate
:IPhilip Morris. Cos., offered that about 100,000 Americans "might have"
trymen
•.
and
in
the
eyes
of
the
world,
were
unconvinced,
as was much of . Amenities Act, which permitted
~ied in recent decades from smoking-related illnesses.
there
was
nothing
particularly
the
world,
that
he
would
go so far as government officials to reserve pub: ; lbose concessions may not satisfy the most passionate opponents of
momentous
about
F.W.
de
Klerk's
to
dismantle
apartheid
and
to will- lie facilities for whites. Next were
:'moking, but they do suggest an industry ready to strike a deal.
ascent to South Africa's presidency... · ingly cede power to the country's the Land Acts, which restricted
At the time of his election, in 1989. .black maJOnty.
.
black ownership to less than 14 per·
,.The (Fremont) News-Messenger, Aug. 26
But that is precisely, and extraor- cent of South Africa's land.
A state lawmaker's plans to introduce legislation to create House-Sen· hardly anyone imagined there would
he
much
difference
in
hiS
policies
dinarily,
what de Klerk did. ,.---,=-c---,
De Klerk then
~ate committee to study the growth of large-scale agriculture in Ohio deserve
and
those
of
qis
Afrikaner
predeces·
Within
a
year
ofassum·
went
after the Group
~iln honest look in the General Assembly.
·
1
sor
P.W.
Botha.
ing
South
Africa's
presiAreas
Act, which man' : : The idea behind the proposal by Sen. Dick Schafrath, R-Loudonville, is
But as de Klerk · retires from dency, he lifted the ban on
dated residential segrelook at the high-density farming operations and their influence on the
South African politics, which he for· the African National Congat ion. And finally, he
.. ;mall, family farm .· ·
struck down the last pil· ·
l:: The issue has been brqughtto the public's attention by AgriGeneral Co. mally announced last week, he gress and other black politlar of the apartheid
:t..P., which last week was hit with fines totaling more than $1 million by the leaves behind an admirable _!egacy. ical organizations .. weiHe presided over his .country's corned
exiled
South
regime, Jhe Populations
: Occupational Safety &amp; Health·Administration.
· · ·
Registration Act, which ·
~: Neighbors worry about the smell, flies and possibility of ground water peaceful transition from three and a Africans to return home,
classified all South
:contamination. And OSHA inspectors say they found numerous health and half centuries of white minority rule removed restrictions on the
news medi~. lifted the state
Perkins
Africans by race at birth.
:safety violations - some potentially life·threatening - at AgriGeneral's to multiracial democracy.
;croton farm and nearby company-owned housing.
. .
De Klerk wept on his inaugura· of emergency in the black
Of course, not all
~ ....- - - . . . . , . - . . . - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . , - - , tion day, perhaps foreseeing tbe provinces· and freed political prison· of South Africa's 5.4 million whites
great challenge that lay before him. ers.
were sanguine with the rapid p;tce of
"White domination will have to dis,
The most prominent of these change· their country was undergoappear," he declared, shortly after political prisoners, of course, was ing. Sp de Klerk took a decidedly
taking over the government in Preto- Nelson Mandela, who had been soH. bold Step. He scheduled a whitesria. "Otherwise there will never be tarily confmed on South . Africa's only referendum (the last such vote,
peace in South Africa.·" .
Robben Island for the better pan of as it turns out) in which the coun·
. re 1ease, .de Kl
27
This was a revolutionary state·
years. Upon h1s
. erk try's ruling 'minorit~' was asked a
ment for the leader of the National invited Mandela to join with him, simple question:
.
Party, which had ruled South Africa along with representatives of South
" Do you support continuation of
for 40 years and instituted the coun· Africa's major political parties, to the reform proces!, which the state
try's odious system of racial draft a new constitution that would president began on Feb. 2, 1990, and
apartheid.
ultimately result in black-majority • which is aimed at a new constitution
Meanwhile, much of South rule.
through negotiation?"
In the meantime, de Klerk set out
Had a"majority. of whites voted

.2r

- __

"'*"/- ...

--of...

,_- __,. _,_.... ,•••,..'"•-

What they are·saying
elsewhere around Ohio

me

Aa:u~ forecast for

funnel restricted U.S. teehnology
through Plliama to Havana.
" I can't explain adequately in
appropriate language just how
(angry) we felt about this pineapple·
faced thug," recounted one CIA offi·
cial recently.
This official said several CIA
agents were motivated by this sense
of betrayal to begin churning out
reports from Panama about just how
corrupt and evil Noriega was .
"Some of the. information we could·
n't confirm, but so what?" the offi·
cial told us. "We helped create this
guy (Noriega) and we weren't above .
using lies to take him down. In fact,
it seemed a little like poetic justice."
It was these top-secreJ reportS,
reviewed behind closed doors on
Capitol Hill and at the White House,
that wore instrumental in prompting
President George Bush, witb con·
gressional approval, to invade Pana,
ma and overthrow Noriega
Jack Andenon and Jm Moller
are writers for United .Feature
Syndicate, Inc••

. .
a

!·

:to

.-

Barry's World

!'JY Joseph Spear

"I'YI'Ie,-c d1&gt; )Hllt .sl&amp;lOC1 on ~eag.rll rghls?"

: ~oday '

,·n hl·s·tory·

That seoundrel Bill Clinton is
impeding the media again.
He has had the audacity to ·go off
to Martha's Vineyard for three
weeks of golfing, partying and read·
ing, and he has thereby left the pha·
lanx of correspondents and camerap-

ersons
follow
him around
with
next to who
nothing
to report.
And I have
to tell you, friends, there are few
•
.
creatures on the planet who look
py The Associated Press
.
more sick and pathetic than reporters
• Today is Wednesday. Sept. 3, the 246th day of 1997. There are 119 oays - with nothing 10 repOfl,.
left in the year.
·
·
· On second thought, perhaps I am
: Today's Highlight in History : .
·
.
being unfair here. Since the Clintons
: .· On Sept. 3, 1783, the Treaty of Paris between the United States and Great departed for the tony island in mid·
Britain officially ended the Revolutionary War.
August, the SO or so journalists who
: On this date:
made the trek with him have actual·
: In 1189, England 's King Richard I was crowned in Westminster.
Iy uncovered, by my count, more
· In 1658, Oliver Cromwell. the Lord Protector of England, died.
than a dozen presidential scandals.
They caught Clinton taking mul·
: In 1939, Britain and France declared war on Germany, two days after the
Nazi invasion of Poland. .
. '
.
ligans off the first tee. He made the
: In 1943, the Bnllsh E1ghth Army !nvad~d Italy d~nng World War D. the mistake, you see, of bragging that he
same day Italy signed a secret armtsUce wtth the Alltes,. ·
·. had broken 80 for the third time in
: In 1967, Nguy~n Van Thieu was elected president of South Vietnam his life. 0~ no he didn't, they report·
under a new conslllutlon.
. .
.
.
ed. They had counted two mulligans.
: In 1967, motonsts tn Sweden began dnvmg on the nght-hand s1de of tbe More than )hat, in the words of the
~oad instead o,fthe.ldt. ·
.
..
., .
,
Washington Times' investigative
. In I967. the ongtnal vers1on of the tel evts1on game show What s My reporter on the scene, "a snooping
t.ine?," hosted by John .Charles Daly, broadcast Its final eptsode after more · photographer" counted six presiden·
than 17 years on CBS.
tial swats on the 13th hole, '•'and his
: In 1970, football coach Vince Lombardi died in Washington, D.C.
panners shaved one stroke from the
: In 1976, the unmanned U.S. spacecraft Viking 2 landed on Mars to. take score."
(he first close-up, color photographs of the planet's surface.
They identified the mysterious
· In 1978, Pope John Paul I was installed as the 264th pontiff of the Roman "Alice," for whom Clinton named a
Catholic Church.
.

•

'·

My guess is, we're looking at a

couple of Pulitzers here.
golf ball one day when ~e hit a bad Clinton chewing on a golf tee. They
slice. " 'Don't go too far right! " he timed the presidential motorcade
yelled. "Sit down, Alice' "
ana reponed it was
0 K, the intrepid press corps
speeding.
They
demanded, who is Alice?
snapped a photo of the
Responded
spokesman
Clintons in swimsuits.
Barry Toiv: "We ' re going
My guess is,
to find Alice. We're going to
we' re looking at a cou·
conduct . a nationwide
pie of Pulitzers here.
· You might get the
search." Soon Toiv was
back with a report: " Sit
impression that the
current White House
down , Alice" was what
Clinion used to say at the
press corps is a unique
bunch of harses' arses,
. Spear
Cabinet table when former
but in fact, this tradition
budget-director Alice Rivlin
of reporting White House Non:
got carried away.
They shot down talk that \he News goes back at least Ill years,
Ointons, who are staying in a cot- when the portly Grover Cleve''l!ld
tage on the estate of a wealthy married his late law partner's daugh·
Boston developer, may be doing ter, who was 28 years his junior. The
domestic work. The " White House newlyweds departed for a honeyclaims that the Clintons did their moon at Deer Park, Md., and the
own cooking,.. reported the fearless press coips tagged along, watching
Ann Compton of ABC. · "And I their cabin through spyglasses and
asked about Mr. Clinton doing the speculating in print whether the 250.
dishes . But there's a lot of White pound president would crush his
House staff here. Support staff. I've new bride. An irate Cleveland
got to think that they aren't slaves to accused the press of "a colossal
impertinence" and never forgave
the kitchen."
The list goes on . They caught them.

. Charles W. Curfman Jr., 68, Rlcine, died on Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1997 at Vet."
·
· He wu born in Belpre on April 29, 1929, son of the late Charles W. and
Ellen Cronin Curfman Sr.
He was a retired truck driver, and a veteran of the U.S. Navy during World
War D. He was a member of American Legion, Feeney-Bennen Postl28 and
Shade River Lodge 4S3, F &amp; AM, Chester.
Surviving are his wife, Norma Withrow Curfman; four sons, Charles Nor·
man Curfman of Portland, 'lim Curfman of Racine, Dwayne Curfman of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., and Kevin Curfman of Virginia Beach, Va.; a slepson, Dana
Aldridge of Tuppers Plains; a stepdaughter, Jena Aldridge of Syracuse; a
brother, John Paul Curfman of Columbus; and eight grandchildren and a great·
grandchild. ·
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, Donald Ray
Curfman.
Graveside services will he II a.m. Thursday in the Greenwood Cemetery
in Racine, with the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating.
·
There will he no calling .hours.
Arrangements arc by the direction or Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine.

erans Memorial Hospital.

IMansfield ler I•

~

IND.

~
• ICOlumbus l1o• I

In varying degrees, Harry Trll·
man had the same problem when he
went to Key West; Ike had to deal
with it when he went to his Gettys· ·
burg farm; 1FK endured it when he
went to Hyannisport.
And Johnson when he visited his
Texas spread, and Nixon when he . ·
· visited San Clemente, and Carter
when he visited Plains, and Reagan
when he went back to his Santa Barbara ranch.
The most adept at handling the
Non-News coverage was probably
Reagan, who rode horses, chopped
wood and cleared brush while the
media seethed in hotel rooms 20
miles away. On one trip to a neigh·
boring ranch, he actually had the
press bolted into a cattle pen.
Spokesman Larry Speakes liked the
arrangement so much that he threatened to take the pen back to Wash·
ington.
·
Good as Reagan was, he wasn't
perfect. Once, he and Nancy spent
three days on Barbados a~d even
though the beach was roped of(, the
press got pictures of Ron romping in
the surf in his boxer trunks. He was
so angry he canceled a photo oppor:·
tunity.
Old Ron knew bow to hurt 'em. :
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
writer for NeW!paper Enteijlrlst
Association.
.

A.Pomeroy woman was cited for unsafe backing after striking a vehicle in the drive-through lane at Farmers Bank.
According to the Pom~roy Police Department, Susan Eason, 24,
Pomeroy, attempted to back out of a lane at the bank and into another and
struck a vehicle behind her, driven by Jeanette Cline, 19, Pomeroy.
Eason was cited.
Slight damage was reponed to Eason's 1993 Buick and Cline's 1996
Chevrolet.
'

Patrol tickets driver following crash
· Carl W. McDade, 18, 938 S. Third Ave. , M(ddleiX&gt;rt. was cited for
assured clear distance by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
following a tw&lt;&gt;-car accident Tuesday on U.S. 33 ncar Darwin.
Troopers said McDade was eastbound at3:45 p.m. when he was unable
to stop in time and· struck the rear of a stopped car driven by Ralph E.'
Steinmetz, 61, 38504 State Route 684, Pomeroy.
Steinmctzwas stopped for a schoolbus ahead that was discharging stu·
dents, according to the report.
Damage to both cars was slight.

Service~ for Gladys F. Taylor, 90, of Keller Street in Tuppers Plains, who
died Sunday, Aug. 31, 1997, will he held on Thursday, Sept. 4, 1997 at II
a.m. in the White Funeral Home in Coolville, instead of at Torch Baptist
Church.
Friends may call at the funeral home today from 2-4 and 6-8 ·p.m.

·Cold front brings promise
Cecil J. Wise
.of near1record lows tonight Rev.
The Rev. Cecil J. Wise, 95, of 56 Bryant St., Rutland, died on Tuesday,
: By The Associated Press

Right of way, Bill Cray to LCco:
The following land transfers were
·· ·
recorded recently in the office of Salem;
· Meigs County",Recorder Emmogene
Right of way, Ron Phillips to
· Hamilton:
LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Thurman and Betty
Right of way, Dorothy M. and
Bailey Poynter to · Le~ing Creek Robert Davis to LCCD, Salem;
Conservancy District, Rutland;
Deed, William and Constance L.
Right of way, Arlis and Lillian Filippi to Mary Elsie Blake, Bedford,
Thornton to LCCD, Salem;
3 114 acres;
Right of way, Helen L. James to
Deed. Samuel E. and Mary E.
LCI::D, Sali~bury;
Curtis to David L. Capehart, Racine;
Right of way, Lindsey R. and Hei· . Right of way, Sandra J. and
di M. Skidmore to LCCD, Salem;
Roscoe Mills to Ohio Power Co., Sut·
Right of way, Gregory and Eliza- ton;
beth Lathey to LCCD. Salem;
- Righi .of way, George F. Jr. and
Right of way, Herma Keys to Mary H. Stewart to OPC, Pomeroy;
LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Bob C. ana Mar·
Right of way, Leonard and Kath· garet Bishop to OPC, Rutland; ·
eryn Quesinberry to LCCD, Colum·
Deed. William B. Stone, Rebecca
L. Trent, Rebecca L. Stone · to
bia;
.
Right of way, James and Labriena Stephen M. and Angela Tracy, Sot·
Goody to LCCD. Salem;
ton;
Right of way, Edward V. and Ruth
Deed, Connie Adkins and Jackie
E. Durst to LCCD, Salisbury;
Wagner to Samuel A. and Gloria J.
Right of way. William L. and Min- Gibbs, Middleport;
nie L. Thornton to LCCD, Salem;
Deed. James ll. and Deborah J.
Right of way, Anthony W. and Watson to Rodney H. and Susan M.
Patricia Eblin to LCCD, Rutland;
Bauenl.ecates, Chester, 43 acres;
Right of way. Thomas P. and
Deed, Karen S. Miyashiro to
J~dith
Gannaway to LCCD, Roblm J. and Norma Fortney, Olive
Salem;
parcels;
Right {)f way, Fairplay Chapel to
Deed, James R. Sr. and Ruth A.
LCCD, Salem;
Priddy to Richard C. Eblin. Salisbury,
Right of way, Marvin K. Gardner .070 I acres;
Deed, William J. and Loraine L.
to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Dennis M. McKin- Lee to Charles D. and Brenda K. Jef·
fers. Middleport lots;
ney to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Tony A. and Lisa A.
Deed, Larry D. and Patricia Circle
1o same, Sutton;
I&lt;;eyser to LCCD, Salem;
.
Right of way, Jack.and Sheila JorDeed, Loretta Higley, Loreua Fern
dan to LCCD. Columbia;
&lt;;ollins and Robert Higley to Jon B.
Right of way. Larry W. and Cheryl and Lisa Ulbrich, Salisbury parcel;
Deed, Bret A. and Kathleen Wyatt
Qable to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Joy R Stewart and to David and Shirley Bumgardner,
Mary Delamerens to LCCD, Rutland: Pomeroy parcels;
· R,ight of way. Jennie Bowles to
Deed, Jackie L. and Ella June
LCCD, Rutland;
.
Stollings to Chester Shade Historical
Association, Chester;
. Deed, Robert L. and Marjorie
Reeves
to Chester Shade Historical
The Daily Senti,nel Association,
Chester.

c.

{USPSUJ....)
P\lblishell ever~ lftemoon, Monday IInaugh
Friday, Ill Cour1 S1., Pomeroy , Ohio, b) the
Ohio Valley Publishina Comp.~ny!GIInncu Co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45169, Ph. 992·21Sti. Second
~~- pos1agt paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Stocks

,.,flDber: The Associlled Preu, 11nd lhe Ohio
pOSTMASTER: Send address corrections 10

1

the Daily Stn1incl, Ill Court SL, Pomeroy,

........: ...

.Bob Evans ...................~ ........ 18\

phK&gt; &lt;S769.

Borg-Warner .............:........... 53j'o
Champion .......................,..... 18~
Charm ShpB ...........................&amp;~.
City Holding ..........................391,4
Federal Mogul .....................35"1.
Gannell ................................... 98
Goodyear ..............................62'.1
Kmart .....................................14'-

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Rockwell ...............................61'RD-Shell ...............................54'1.
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MAILSVBSCRIPTIONS
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I) W«ks ................................................. SZ7.3U

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Stock report• are the 10:30
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of Galllpolla.
.

Rlla Oetdde Mclp CnlfJ'
llW..b ................................................. $29.25
2~ W..b .........., ............. ....... _............... $56.68

Sl W..b ............................................... $1119.72

5.8Am Ele Power ................. 44~
AkZo .................................~ .... 80~
AmrTech ................
63i.
Ashland 011 ...........................51 ~
AT&amp;T ....................................39"J.
Bank One .............................ss•t.
m

l"tW5pllper Associalioo .

"

•

Clf.atlon Issued In Pomeroy accident

'

Gladys F~ Taylor

•Recorder posts land transfers ·

Medi·a fiddle while presidents play

No injuries were reponed after an Eastern Local School bus b&amp;&lt;:ked
into a parbd car Tuesday morning at a Dewitts Run Road residence in
Lebanon Township.
The bus, driven by Garry R. Dill, 63, Long Bottom, was b&amp;&lt;:king into
a driveway to tum around and struck a 1988 Dodge owned by Joetta A.
Morris, causing light damage, according to a Meigs County Sheriff's
Department report.
The report said the driver was backing the bu ~ in a heavy rog arid was
watching a vehicle parked on the other side of the bus when he backed
into the car. None of the 10 passengers were injured ..

Charles W. Curfman Jr.

' Tum off the air-conditioners and open the windows. It should he a great
: pight for sleeping as cool air spreads across Ohio, forecasters said.
Temperatures tonight are expected to drop to near-record levels in the low
· to mid-40s.
·.
.
Unseasonably cool conditions wilJ continue on Thursday, with highs most·
ly in the 60s, the National Weather Service said.
•
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 99 degrees in 1953 while the record low was 43 in 1946. S.unset
tonight will be at 8 p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7:02a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Mostly clear. Near record lows in the mid and upper 40s. North
winds less than I0 mph.
Thursday ... Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 60s.
Thursday night ...Clear. Lows in the mid 40s. ·
Extended foreciiSt:
Friday.. .Mosily clear. Highs in the lower 70s.
Saturday... Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 50s. Highs in the mid 70s.
Sunday.. :Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s. Highs in the upper 70s.

"no," then de Klerk's efforts to br&lt;&gt;ker a peaceful transfer of (lOwer to
South Africa's black majority would
have failed. But an overwhelming
majority of whites backed de Klerk,
giving him the vote of confidence he
needed to continue his efforts to end
apartheid and transform South
Africa into a true democracy.
In 1994, South Africa held its
first multiracial election and Man·
dela, only four years removed from
prison, was elected president. While
the entire world celebrated Man·
dela's ascent to power, hardly any·
one acknowledged his departing
predecessor, wbo made it all possi·
ble.
But surely, F.W. de Klcrk rates as
one the greatest world leaders of the
past half.ccntury. Indeed, had he
chosen to resist change in South
Africa, apartheid might still exist.
The nation's .black ~ajority might
still he disenfranchised. And Man·
dela might still be languishing on
Robben Island.
But de Klerk chose, courageous·
ly, to he an instrument of change.
And South Africa is a better nation
because he did.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
for tbe· San Diego Union-Tribune
and a COID!Dentator for MSNBC.

No Injuries reported In bus accident

-

MICH.

De·Klerk guided South African reform

•·=

-Local News in Brief:-

Thunlay, Sept. 4

'

The Dally Sentinel Most anti-Castro ops were double agents
'EstaDfislid in 1948

'111e Dally Sentinel • Page 3

.

.

.

Virginia man critical after surgery

Sept. 2, 1997 at his residence, following a brief illness. He was a minister
in the Free Methodist Church:
He was born on Jan. 8, 1902 in Pomeroy, son of the late Jacob and Clara
Doddridge Wise.
Surviving arc a son and daughter-in-law, Phil and Shirley Wise of
McConnelsville; a daughter, Rosalee Wise of Rutland; and nine grandchil·
. dre11 and seven great grandchildren. ·
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife; three sons, Cecil
Wise Jr., Clayton Wise and Richard Wise; and two sisters and three broth·
ers.
Services )Nill be 2 p.m. Friday in the Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy,
with the Rev. Roy McCardy and the Rev. Amos 'Iillis officiating. Burial will
follow in the Bedford Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral borne from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Thursday.

. Postal worker kills himself
after shooting wife, friend

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP) -A Virginia man was listed in criti·
cal condition Tuesday following surgery after he was sucked into the propeller of a boat that was pulling him on an inner tube on the Ohio River.
John Thompson, 38, of Staunton, Va., suffered a severe leg injury and
damage to his other foot in the accident Monday night, said Doug Brandt,
a spokesman at Ohio State University Medical Center in Columbus, Ohio,
The boat was being driven by Gle.nn Robinson of Belleville. Thompson and another person were being pulled on two inner-tubes, said Glyde
Armstead, a conservation officer with the WestVirginia Division of Nat·
ural Re5ources.
The accident occurred when the boat made a sharp tum and ran over
the top of both inner-tubes, Armstead said.
.

'.''

Meigs announcements
To play
Junior and Rita White of The
Classics will be playing at the Senior
Citizens Center Thursday evening
following the dinner.

hoi policy will be held tonight
(Wednesday) at 7:30 at the high
school. All parents are urged to
attend.

Dan~e set
&gt;
Clogging and square dancing will
ing the post office. "Dogs were Rabies clinic
barking, people were screaming and
The rabies clinic slated for Sept. be held at the Point Pleasant Senior
running towards me," she said.
13 at tbe Meigs Veterinary Clinic in Center, Saturday, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m
Tamayo and his ex-wife were Pomeroy will he held from noon 1o 3 featuring the Liberty Mountaineers . .
divorced four years ago. The two p.m., not noon to 5 p.m,.
The public is invited to atte~d .
women lived together at an apartment
a few blocks from tbe post office.
Dinner to be sened
"This looks like it's ·domesticThe American Legion Post i!02.
related," police spokesman Bobby Racine, will have a chicken and nO&lt;&gt;- ·
Hernandez said. "As soon as they die dinner Sunday, with serving to
walked in, they s~w him leave begin at II a.m. Public welcome.
through the back. Then he came back Dinners, $5; carryoul available.
in through the front doors and shot
them."
Yard sale set
Tamayo walked into a parking lot
The American Legion Post 602,
· behind the post office, stood next to Racine, will have a yard sale at the
· a tree, looked up into the air and shot post home, Friday and Saturday. To
himself in the face, police and' wit· donate items, call 949-2685.
" !SSes· Sat'd.
Co-worker John Parfumorse said Trustees to
Olive Township trustees will meet
Tamayo got along well with other
Friday, 7:30 p.m. at ihc township
employees.
"I have known him for a long time garage.
and he. hu been nice," said Judy
Rivas, a store worker from across the Auxiliary sets session
The Ladies Auxiliary of VFW
street who was checking her mail
when the shooting began. ''I even · Post 9053, Tuppers Plains, will meet
smiled at him as he walked by me." at 7:30 p.m Thursday at the post
·
The post office is only a few home.
blocks from the oceanside mansion Policy meeliag
A meeting to discuss the new
Units of the Meigs County Emer- where designer Gianni Versace was
Local student
and ale&lt;&gt;gency Medical Service recorded II shotto death in' July.
calls for assistance TUesday. Units
responding included:
CENTRAL I)JSPATCH
4:17a.m., State.Route 7, Pomeroy,
'
motor vehicle accident, Bernie Pons,
treated at the scene;
4:30 a.m., Village Manor Apart·
ments, Middleport, Dallas · Wetherholt, Holzer Medical Center;
8:50 a.m., Maples Apartments,
Pomeroy, Pauline Kennedy, HMC;
I :53 p.m., Pearl Street, Middle·'
port, Tammy Watkins, Pleasant Val·
ley Hospital;
3:18 p.m., SR 143, Pomeroy,
Mabel Oliver. Veterans Memorial
~ewly
Hospital, Pomeroy squad assisted; ·
4:52p.m., Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy,
Arnold Knight, VMH, Pomeroy
squad assisted;
8:32p.m., South Second Avenue,
Middleport, Sherrie Hollen, treated at
the scene.
RACINE
9:22 p.m., Yellowbush Road,
Thelma Jackson, refused treatment.
RUTLAND
11:11 p.m., Rutland Fire Station,
Joann Snowden, HMC.
.The Sports Injury Clinic will be staffed by Dr. Kelly Roush
- · · SYRACUSE . II :28 a.m., Third Street, Syracuse,·
(Chirot~ractic and Sports Injury Physician). Nationally Certified
Charles Currman, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Athletic Trainers, an x-ray technician and suppo'rt staff.
4:32 p.m., Eden Ridge Road and ·
Parental consent is required for evaluations.
"
SR 124, Reedsville, Margaret l'!esselroad, Marietta Memorial Hospital.

By TOM BAYLES
Associated Press Writer
MIAMI BEACH, Aa. -A postal
clerk calmly walked to his car and
returned with a gun to shoot his eKwife and her friend as they stood in
line, police said. He then walked back
outside and killed himselr.
The women were in critical con·
dition at Jackson Memorial Hospital
early today following surgery, but a
hospital spokeswoman said both were
expected to live. Each had been shot
once in the abdomen.
.
Jesus Tamayo, 64, ·a 2 j -year vet·
eran, was. working behind the front
counter until the women walked into
the lobby and got in line with 15 oth·
er people about I p.m. Tuesda~.
'
Tamayo then walked out the rear
doors only lo return through the front
door a few minutes later. Police say
he shot his ex-wife, Manuela Acosta, 62, and her friend, Mirna Men·
doza, 55.
Bystanders who had dropped to
the floor jumped up and ran. Witness
Amy Reed said she saw people flee-

.

meet

Meigs EMS runs

Holzer Clinic
Saturday Morning
Sports Injury Clinic

Sports injuries need prompt attention.

Holzer Clinic's
expanded Sports Medicine Center will be
providing Sports Injury Care beginning Saturday, August 30, 1997
and continuing
. through Saturday, November 1, 1997.
Walk-ins.are welcome beginning at 9:00 am.
The goal is 'to provide a comprehensive program
to return the athlete to the previous level of competition.

Hospital news
Vekrans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Arnold
Knight, Pomeroy.
TUesday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges SepL 2 ~ •Velma
Dugan, Leland Dalton, Sadie Justis,
Leota Edington, Brian Sang, Jeremy
Davis, Lew Frisby.
·Births - Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Johnson, daughter, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Shepherd, son, Oak
Hill.
.
(Published with permilaloa)

(

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Sports Medicine and
Rehabilitation Center
4th and Sycam{lrf:' Streets
Gallipolis, Ohio

(614) 44~5244

, a.iJ Holzer CUolc•••

~ Here for Your HettlUl. Here for Your Lifetime!

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SportS

WedntJday, September 3, 1997

g-et 4-0 win -over Royals

Reds

..•

The Daily Sentinel
Page4

..
Wednaadly, September 3, 1997

'•

· Chang arid Williams move on as .Agassi &amp; Seles exit

'·'·

By BOB GREENE
NEW YORK (AP)- The tennis
at Anhur Ashe Stadium is taking on
lhe look of a Magic Show.
Fan favorites Andre Agassi and
Monica Seles disappeared Tuesday.
And Michael Olang pulled off his
latest escape.
·
Welcome to the 1997 U.S. Open,
where, without mirrors or wires, the
latest sleight of hand tricks were performed by Patrick Rafter, Marcelo
Rios and Irina Spirlea, and the
newest smash hit is Venus Williams.
Today. sixth-seeded Lindsay Davenport attempted to join Williams as
the only Americans in the women's
singles Semifinals. Davenport, the
1996 Olympic gold medalist faced
No. 3 Jana Novotna.
Tonight, top-seeded Martina
Hingis, who is · seeking her third
Grand Slam tournament title of the
year. plays No. I 0 Arantxa Sanchez
Vicario, the 1994 U.S. Open champion, for the last women's berth in .
the semifinals.
The men are looking for the last
berths in the quarterfinals. Two of

Buc·s tally 6-4 win over Tribe

the span's biggest hitters- Britain's when the fifth set finally ended, era- Chris Evert i~ 1971 and HelGreg Rusedski and Richard Knijicek Chang was in the quarterfinals with ga Masthoff in 1973. Williams also
of the Netherlands -face off before . a 6-3, 0..6, 5-7.7-5.6-1 victory over is the first unseeded semifinalist
giant-killer Petr Korda takes on Wimbledon finalist Cedric Pioline of since Mirna Jausovec in 1976.
Agassi, after dropping the first
Sweden'sJon&amp;s Bjorkman in the last France.
two
sets, found the range on his
' "People talk about favorites,"
match of the night
groundstrokes
and rediscovered his
"Belly Crocker was waiting for Chang said. "Every match is tough.
me there," said Agassi. describing You can't come out here and expect return of serve as he began hi s
a cakewalk in any match. If you crowd-pleasing comeback. But just
h~w he was almost cooked after two
sets. Still, he wouldn't quit, and he don't come out here and play your as quickly as his game returned, it
best tennis, you're going to fall left once again. especially his serve.
made it a memorable match.
"He was definitely playing well,
"I had my chances, but I didn ' t short.''
serve well and didn't return well,"
Then came Williams. who made no question," Agassi said of Rafter.
Agassi said after falling to the 13th- her U.S. Open debut in Anhur Ashe "But ~ just felt like ... the match
seeded Rafter 6-3, 7-6 (7-4), 4-6, 6- Stadium when it opened for the first boiled down to one game , and that
3. "I let it slip away. At the end he time I0 days ago. Most felt that was 3-4 in the fourth set. He wasn't
did what he needed to do.
appearance was scheduled because moving. He wasn 't really doing a
"It was a beautiful opportunity." Williams is a talented young black - whole lot and I hit a double-fault,
Rios was the first to cash in on his player who first began to play tennis two unforced errors and made him
play one good point to break me .
·
opportunity, defeating No . 7 Sergi · in the inner city.
"That is just a long way to fight
There
is
no
question
why
she
is
Bruguera 7-5, ·6-2, 6-4. Spirlea. the
back
from just to hand it over. I just
·
playing
on
Stadium
court
now:
She
women's No. II seed from Romania,
wished
I would haye made llim earn
then bounced Seles, seeded No. 2, 6- has earned it. . ·
that
a
little
bit more."
·With a 7-5. 7-5 victory over San7 (7-5), 7-6 ( 10.8), 6-3.
Rafter
wasn't
moving because his
That left the stage for Chang, who drine Testud, Williams became the
whole
body
began
cramping. The
trailed 5-2 in the four!h set, trailing first woman to reach the U.S. Open
cramps
caused
his
right
hand io seize
two sets to one. Somehow, Chang semis in her debut since Pam Shrivup
in
a
gnarled
grip,
and
they also
survived in an escape that would er in 1978. Only two others have
bothered
his
legs,
chest
and
arms.
have made Houdini proud·. And accomplished the feat in the Open

'.

(Rigby0.5).

AL standings
.l! L Ea.

Baltin~ ...............l1~

50
57

New "VOfk ...... ..... 71J
Bostoo ................... fl7 72
Toromo ...............05 72
()(troit ....... ... ....... .. !'H 7]

lill

.629
.5KI

.482
.4i.4

61•
20
21

.467

22

Ctntnil Division
CLEVELAND ...... 71 0~
Milwauktc............. 70 67

. 5~

. ~II

2':

Chicago ....... .......... fJJ 6'# .~
Minna::wtl ...............'i7 79 .419
KanwCI!y ........... !ifl

79

p.m.

Thursday's cames
(AL only)

Ellltm Division

lull

IO;J~

San Diego (Menhnrt 1-2) nt Seatth:
(Oiivarr:s 6-9), IO:J~ p.m.

4
I~

1.~' ,

.415

Anaheim (Hill 7-11) at Detroit
1Sall!Jcrs4-12), 7 : 0.~ p.m.
'
Bahimor~ (Kri..,ila 2·01nt NY. Yon·
keel (Weill 14-8), i:3~ p .m

Te11.ow {H~Jiing hi) at Torcnto (Car·
1·6), 7:l"i p.m
Senttle (Cioudt" 1-2) al Minnesotu
(Hawk.iit&amp; ~-9), H :O~ p.m.
Oakh•nd (Hmynes 2 -~) at Konsas City
(Ru~eh 5·9), 8:05p.m
~nter

NL standings
Euttm Diwl5ion

Wflltm OJvllkM\

Scattlc: ................:... 7b 62
Anaheim ................ 74 65
Textu ..................... 6.'i 7~

Oakland ................. ~ .1

- ~~~
. ~J2

2'-,

.471
85 ,. 384

II
2~

Tuesday's scores
(AL vs. NL)

·r

Pfliladclphia !i. N.Y. Yanktcs 0
Pinsburah 6, a..£VELAND 4
Atl11n1a \ Dc:troic 0
Mont~al 6, Boato11 5
CINCINNATI4. KMs:rs City 0
Chicago Cubs 9, Minnesota ·'
N."V . M'ets 8, Tcwonlo 5
flwida ~. Bttltimore 2 (10)
St. Louis 6, Chir.:ago White So• I
Milwaukee 4. Houston 2
Tew 13. LotAnFie•l2
CoJOilJdtJ 7. Anaheim 2
Derroit (Blair 14.6) Ill Atlanta (Smolcz
ll·IO), I: IOp.m.
Minnesota (RodriJun: 2·5) at Oaicago

Cuba (Gotoulc• 1~}. 2:20p.m.
N.Y. Y11nkee1 (Oooden 7-4) al
Phillldelpllia (Green J-3), 7~ p.m.
Baltimon: (K!llllieniecU 9-S) m Florida
ft.cilct 9-9), 7:0S p.m.
ClEVELAND (Hcnbiler 12-S) at

11·10}. 7;35 p.m.

Atloolil ...................l«&lt;
Florida .....,............. l'l2
New York ............. 7.'i
Monrreal. .. .. :.........69
Philaddphi-. .......... n

52 .623

~s

62
61'1
82

.m

541

lill
1 '~

t0 1 ·~

.~

16 1 ~

Jtu~

.12

Crnlnl Di•Won
Houston ............... 70 68 .:WI
,Pittsburtth ...... .... 69 70 .496
St. Louis ............... 64 74 .464
CINCINNATI ...... 60 76 .441
&lt;;hicago ............ :.... S6 l:!J .40J
Wclitm Division
L.osAngele1 ......... 7H 61 .561
Son Frun&lt;ioco ....... )6 62 .m
ColomOO ................ iO 70 ..~
SIIJI Dieso .............. 65 74 .468

I ~~

6
9
IS ~

I~

8~

1.3

·Thursday's games

(NL only)

Today'• cameo

PirtJburah· (l..oAiza 10-9). 7:05p.m.
Botcon (Sri!! 12-11) 11.1 Monweal

.l! L &amp;1.

lam

Philadelphia {Beech l-8) ae Montm~l
{MiV'Iinez 16-6). 7 : ~S p.m.
PinlburJb (l.iebn 9-12) ac CINCINNATI (Morgllfl S-11).7:::\5 p.n1.
Se. Louis (Painu!r 0·0) 11 Colorado
(Wriaht6· 10&gt;. 9:0S p.m.
Allrulli(Millwood ~-l) at Smn Diego

tsmilh l ·l). 10;11:'1 p.m.

HOUIIOn (Hilmpton 11-9) Ill San Fran·
12-7). IO:OS p.m.

d~eo (Gnnlnrr

(Pe~.z

Kansu CMy {Bones ·)-4) 111 CINON·
NATI (Tomko 9·5). 7:3S p.m.
Toronto (Person .S-10) 111 N.Y. Meet
tMikki 11-10}, NO p.m.
Cbicaao White So• (Eyre 2-2&gt; at St.
Lo.i1 {O.bome 3-6). 8:05p.m.
Milwaukee {Karl 10- 10) at Houtlon

(Gotdal·l), B:Ol p.m
Los Anaetct (Valdcl9- 10) al Te"•

(Win 11 -9), l :ll p.m
San Frane:itco (Dirwin o-l}at Oakland

Transactions
BasebaD
Amtrlam lape

BALTIMORE ORIOLES ; Sent RHP
Marl Se1ver to•the Oakland Athletic• 10
::1!:..~ June V trade for OF Geroni-

. DETROIT Tl(iERS; Rect;~lled LHP

Glenn OishmaR. LHP Robtrlo Duran.
RHP Eddir Gaillard and OF Kin.:ra Bar·
te~ from Tol•llo of the International
lea~ue . Purchaied the t:ontrar.: U uf C
Murcus Jcn~n ;mJ INF Frank Cmal:uto.llltl
from Tok:dl.1. Recalkll OF Jut~n Enc11na·
don from Jucbun~ille of ehe Somtw:rn
l..eUf!UC.
K:ANSAS CfTY ROYAlS: Recallet.l
SS Felix Martinez. RHP Brian Bevil atlll
RHP Jim Pituley fmrn Omaha uf the
Ankerican Association.
MilWAUKEE BREWERS: Si~nct.l
RHP Paul Wagner. Acli~ated OF Matt
Miesk C Kelly Seinncn nntl RHP Jeff
o· Arnicu ·rwm che 15-Jny ilisabled lillt .
Ro:ullnl OF TOOt! Dunn l"mm TocRJn M
lht PCL.
MINNESOTA TWINS: Re c;1lleU
LHP Dan &amp;'l"ulini. 18 Duvid 01'1iz and JB
Tudd Wnlker fmm Sah t:.alte uf eht: rei..
OAKLAND .ATHlETICS : Recalled
C lzzy Molinil from EUmuntun nl· the
PCL. Purchuscd Ilk! cnnlmcl nf OF Ben
Gnevc fmm Edrnootoo
· TORONTO BLUE JAYS: P\m.:h~
lhe ~o:uncrw.:t1 ufOF Rkh Butler. RHP Ken
Robenson, RHP Carlos Almanzar from
Syracu~ of rile lnecrnataooul l.zaJuc. Re·
called C ~ndy Martinez. JB Tom Evan5.
INF-OF Feli~ Cresro and lHP Omou
Ouul from Syracuse.

,CIWillo. INF Shawn Gil~n and OF Carloti Mendolal rrom Nnrfulk nf tltc lntt.'l"nalional J.cU{!ue. Purch;tst\1 lite CUI!It;k:t 111"
18 Rob&lt;:rtu Pc1111!irlC rrum Nnrfulk Rcl.:llllcd INF Ja.~m H:udllic rrnm Biu~ham·
ton of I he E:alilt.'fR lt:a}!ut'. Desi~ll:ltt.'tl C
Charlir: Greene lilf aui~nmcnt .
PHilADELPHIA PHILL:IES : At: livuted OF Grcg11 Jcl"fer1e~ ;mil P Garrell
Stephcmsun frumtl~ 15-day di ~ableJ li ~ l.
Recllllal C Balbhy E~l~tldht .ilrlc.l SS l.)c~i
Relnfort.l rrum Scrumun-Wilkes-Barrt! Ill"
the lntcrnntioMJ Lc.:a~~M: .
P11TSBURGH PIRATES: Rll'.::~llcJ
UF 1\driun Brown. INF Lou Collier. LHI'
Chria Peters anLI RHP JriKC Silva l"rllm
Cal~ry of ehe PCL. R.:calkii!NF Frc:dily
Garda. from C!!rolina of the South.trn
Lca&amp;ltC. Named Vic Gregovits vice pn:si·
dent of lflildetinl! aOO broadcaslin~ . P~
moled ~nis Oepta from din:ccor of ttper.aeion5 to vice presillt:nl 11f op...'nllioos.
ST. lOUIS CARDINALS:' Rr:cnllcd
C Eli Marreru rrom Louisvflle of ehc
American J\ur":iulion
SAN DIEGO PADRES : Re~· alled
RHP Marc Kroon. INF Derek I...tc:. INF
·. Jur~e Velnndi q, OF Trey Beumon, OF
Ruben Riveru a_nd (: M&lt;lnc.ly Rllffi(nJ rr\IIU
LUI \/~Jill of the PCl. Purchusc.'d chc cnntnlt:l ol INF Gc:()(J.t: Amu frum La,, Vc·
gas

N1Uoal Lc•P-!
1
ATLANTA BRAVES; '"fecalled INF
Ed Giavanoll•, INF Mike ·Mordeclli ami
RHP Chris Brod. from Richmond of the
lnternruionlll Lcagua:. Pun.:hllscd the ~:on­
tract of OF Tommy Greu Crom Rkh·
mond, Wllivcd OF Wonderful Munlb.
CINCINNAn REDS: Activaecd LHP
Pete Schourck 11nd LHP Kenl Mercker
from lbe 15-day disab)ed list
LOS ANGELES DODGERS; Rc culled C Henry ~l111co, INF Adwn Rius.
28 Wilton Guerfl!ro, OF Wj{jae kirb) .
RHP Mike Harkey and L P Ounia
Rejel from Albuqvmple of the PCL. Pur·
d\ued the contrads of OF Eric Anrhon)',.
I8 Eddie Murray aod INF Plwl konerko
from .-.Jbuquerque. Moved INF Tripp
Cromer from the IS-day to 1be60-Uy de•·
abled liar. ~nt INF Cbad Forwillc to lhe
Ctricaao White So~~. to ~Ieee an Aua .
27tnldt for OF Damn Lewu.
MONTREAL EXPOS; Recoiled tNF
Orlando Cabrera, C Raul Cbavez. RHP
Rid; DeHor1, RHP Mik~ Thunrwn from
Onawa of the lnlernalioul Leque. Pur·
chUCid 1he contract~ ol INF Brad Fullmer
lind INF H~lty Mevten1 from OtiiiWIL ·
Tran1ferred 38 Shane And:rew1 ~ OF
Shmnln Obando llom the 15-day to the
60-day diublcd: list
NliW YORK METS: Siancd SS C.w Crespo. Recalled LHP Takalhi Kahi·
wada, LHP Joe Crawford. C Alberto
. .

NEW .YORK RANGERS: Agn.'\.'1..1 tu
wuh F Ken Gcrnumkt and f Syl·
v:1in RhJUirl
PJTrSOURGH PENGUINS : Signed
ternr~

(.' RnlJI:'r!

SAN JOSE SHARKS: Si~rM.'I.I G Kuy

Whitmun: anc.l C Mike ~auelm:m .

lnterleague action...

·I

PICKENS
HARDWARE

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•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

N8tkmlrlllaskdhlll As:t4Kiltiun
PHOENIX SUNS: Signed F Georae
McCJout.lto a one-year ~o.:unlr~t~:t .

Football
N8tkmll Foolblll LHpr
CAROLINA PANTHEf\S: Re-sianed
LB Carlton Bailey. Waived TE Kri&amp;
Man1um.

I

••

Skyline Speedway to set 'Harvest 40' for September 27
With less than three weeks
remaining in the countdown, many
drivers from across the Midwest
hqve inquired about entries for the
upcoming Saturday. Sept. 27 "Harvest 40" for Sprint Cars at Skyline
Speedway.
The event, the final of the CocaCola Classic series. will pay $4,000
to win with an $12,()(J()..plus purse
for the Winged Outlaw 410 Super
Sprints.
·

•.

Cardiology
Stress Tests
Echo Cardiography
Diabetic Management
Cholesterol Counseling
Blood Pressure
Thyroid Disorders
Critical Care

Mer,...

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Wai..,ed
L8 Michael Hlllnlllo11. Sianed lR J~~mrs
BurteiJili'KI O.T Ruhod Swinger.

Hockey
Na&lt;lonoiH'*keT_'-,..
BUFFALO SABRES: Named Mike
Oilbert 1enior director of comnwnica·
tiOftl.
DAlLAS STARS: A1reed to 1erm1
with Rw Jere Let1tinen on a three-year
coo!Tacl.

•

675-7700

- - ·-

---

I

area fans a bargain price for a ·great
night of racing.
Skyline will also race each Saturday pnor to the event, begmnmg
on Saturday, Sept. 13 and continuing
on Saturda~, Sept. 20..
.
There will he no Fnday noght racing at Skyline Friday as originally
scheduled. The season championships have been rescheduled for
Sept. 13.

•

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Dotted Line Box

l

weekday
Want t~ show your appreciation? Fair
exhibitors "Thank You" ads are available at
these sizes and prices. Ads must be paid In
·advance by mall or delivered to:

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For ad$1onal ad sizes and prices, please call

Medical Office Building, Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV

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992·2156

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Healt
Third Annual Health Information Fair!
Sponsored by:
THE MEIGS. MULTI~URPOSE CENTER

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and The Retired ,;..,.Senior
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Rutland Tire Sales
King Hardware
Valley Lumber Company
Brogan Warner Insurance.
G &amp; M Fuel Company
mu•..• also to the the numerous .area

Jr)n1si1~esses who donated door pnzes

PARTICIPANTS
ACCESS, American Cancer Society, Area
Agency on Aging, French City Foot Clinic,
G-J-M Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction &amp;
Mental Health Services, Health Recovery
. Services, Inc., Healthr Steps Wellness
Center, Holzer Medical Center, Holzer
Home Care of VMH, Karr Audiology,
Kroger Pharmacy, Meigs County
Chiropractic Clinic, Meigs County ,Health
Departtnent, Meigs County TB Clinic,
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, OSU
Extension Office, OU-COM Arthritis
Program, OU-COM Community Service
Programs, Overbrook Center, Prescription
Oxygen, Rx 02, Inc., Racine Dental Clinic1
Rocksprings Rehab Center, Veterans •
Memorial Hospital, VMH Behavioral Health
Unit, VMH Day Treatment Program
Woodland Centers, Inc.. Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, Schmoll Optometrist

Located 11: Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, OH ·
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$50
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JAGUARS &lt;

reKAe .
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES; Sisn&lt;d
DE Richard Dent and LB Jeff Herrod to
one-year controcts. Waived LB DcShnw•
Folie and CB Oeaunte Brown. Siped RB
Dc:lllnd McCullouah to rhe praaice squ:.r:l.
Releaaed RB James AHen 11nd CB Tim

Todd Kane has won the first three
events in the series. paying $3,000 to
win each, however, Kane's fir.&lt;t non1
Coke race did not result in a win .
The previous races in the series·
have brought in drivers from lndiana •. Kentucky; Iowa and Pennsylvania in addition to an all-star cast of
Ohio-West Virginia drivers. Tmcks
closing across the country, plus the
huge purse money will bring in a
nice field of quality ~ars, offering

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Fair "Thank You" Ads

Sianed QB Jim Miller to a one-year eontrDCt. P_laccd RB 01ri1 Parker on iajuretl

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MD

Board Certified Internal &amp; General Adult Medicine

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
longtime manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers, Tommy Lasorda,
explains the major difference
between winners and losers.
, "Two people are in the same line
of business adjacent to each other,"
Lasorda said. "One makes money,
the other doesn't. Why is this'' It's
because or1e wants to succeed more
than the other doe;. The winner is the
one who wants it 'most. This also
applies to sports, including baseball."
·

Thursday, September
Noon to 4:00 pm

Check Out
Our Bargains
on Pipe
Fittings and
Pipe.

RandaDE

Wllllt to win

.'

MASON, W. VA.
773·5583

TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING : R.c1-' Brent Pcll.·rwra
VANCOUVER CANUCKS: Namtd
Ste\'c ·rombl'llini senior vi~ president uf
hudu:y op.:mlion ~. Mike Penny auisttdll
~encrnl R)Unagcr am.l hack Birch dim.:tur
ul" umuteur k;.Outin .
s i~tiCtl

Basketball

JACKSONVILLE

Lim~

against him. the fatigued Frenchman
sent a forehand long.
"I was too tired," Piol ine said
after his second consecutive five-setter. "That's why he's No . 2 in the
world. and I'm not No. 2. I was
cramping. and I think he saw f was
tired and he tried to make me run."

time can be spent prepping the track Crabtree faded Jim Nier turned up of time .
By SCOn WOLFE
RobertS.
Street stocks
Bond, of Coolville, claimed the
for the rescheduled Saturday. Sep- · the wick for fanning third. while
Heals went to Sain and Long.
Sentinel Correapondent
Heat: Donnie Kinnison, Andy
• Another great field of sprint cars tember 13 Season Championships. Crabtree, Mike Bowling, Stevens, win followed by Kinnison, Adkins,
Again , note that Skyline Speed·
Bond, Bradley White, Jim Ashcraft
provided another night of fast and At that time track champions will be Eric Hysong. Wayne McPeek, Jim- White, Tony Roush, Jeremy Blake, way will be idle next Friday with
Heat: ·Ralph Withem, Grumpy
IllY Stinson and Rick Holley in the Jim Ashcraft, Holley and Withem. regular racing continuing on Satur- . Adkins, Frank Roush, Tony Roush
furious action Friday night at Skyline crowned.
Heats went to Kinnison and Withem. days, beginning Saturday, September
Twll-time feature winner Keith Mossbarger 95.
Speedway, where newcomer John
Feature: Bond, Kinnison, Adkins,
wins
went
to
Ducan
and
Heat
Lyle Swain worked hard to main- 13.
Ivy of Fremont overcame a huge Crabtree of West Jefferson was hack
Bradley White, Tony Roush, Jeremy
tain a lead, but his efforts literally· Summary
Blake, Jim Ashcraft. Holley, Withdeficit and outran Keith Crabtree and in high'gear after overcoming two Bowling.
When you have Aody Bond, went up in smoke as the early
Rodney Duncan to the finish in the devastating crashes and engine probem.
- Super Sprints
lems the past several weeks. The fly- Donnie Kinnison, Grumpy Adkins leader's Mustang belched a griuly
Four Cylinders
30-lap Super Sprint main.
Heat: Rodney Duncan, Ed
An 'equally tough Street Stock ing body man looked ininvincible as and Ralph Withem in the lineup, you trail of !!JllOke from under the hood
Heat: Mike Long, Earl Reeves,
Neumeister, Brian Benson, Todd
race saw.three cars battle for the top he maintained a strong lead for .the · know you're going to see a race. Fri- with just two laps remaining. Swain
. Dana Nichols. Butch Mulholland
Kane
'
day night was no exception ..
•
led the first 131aps, but sixth place
spa(, however. hometown hero Andy first 22 laps.
Heat: Lyle Swain, Shawn Rhodes.
Heal: Mike Bowling, Wayne
Donnie Kinnison jum~ into the starter Dave Summers led the most
Dicing it up in the pack were
Bond came home the winner. Dave
Dave Summers, Benny Hickel
McPeck, Eric Hysong, Jim Nier
Feature: Summers; Rhodes,
Summers claimed the Four Cylinder eventual winner Ivy, Duncan, Jim early lead in the patented 7-UP car, important ones, the last two.
Feature: Johnlvy, Rodney DunSummers claimed the win over
Long. Reeves, Nichols. Hickel. Mulmain after early lead Lyle Swain Nier and Jonathan Stevens, the 14- but Adkins, Bond and Withem were
year old wild child from Chillicothe. all right there knocking at the door. Rhndes, Mike Long, Earl Reeves, can, Jim Nier, Crabtree, Mike Bowl- holland, Roberts, John Green.
blew an engine.
Bond drove the wheels off the Mike Baker Dana Nichols, Ben ing, Jonathan Stevens, Eric Hysong,
Only one caution marred the
Skyline SPeedway was again in
Wayne ·McPeek, Jimmy Stinson ,
excellent shape, providing a great high-speed chase. Ivy's mount Raymond Adkins A-I and soared Hickel. Butch Mulholland arid Steve
.
Rick Holley
racing surface for the drivers, many became increasingly faster as the · into the lead like a bolt of greased
of which were preparing for the race progressed. The former 360 lightening, while the rest of the pack
--~-___;
$4,000 to win "Harvest 40", Satur- champion and visitor to Skyline la't was left to fight for the runner-up
since joining the Cubs on Aug. II in
ter on Mathe~s· first pitch. The Marl
day, September 27 . Owner/Promot- season with the Sprint Bandits, was spot. Withem, a ·multi-time winner .
(Continued
fr~m Page 4)
from
Athens
was
involved
in
a
tan'
.
a six-player deal with the Mets.
lins
have
won
five
straight,
all
gelling
a
good·
bite
anywhere
on
the
er Lou Hubbard announced that ·
gle
and
sent
to
the
tail,
coming
back
Brewers 4, Astros 2
against
AL
teams,
and
are
11-3
in
there would be no racing next Fr:iday, track, finally overcoming Crabtree
Marlins ·3, Orioles 2
from
19th
to
I
Oth
before
running
out
At
Houston,
Gerald Williams
with Duncan on his coat tails. As
intcrlcaguc games.
as originally scheduled,
AI Miami, Edgar Renteria singled
drove in the go-ahead run with a sacCubs
9,
Twins
3
home the winning run with two oUis
rifice fly in the ninth a.' Milwaukee
At Chicago, Sammy Sosa hit a
in the lOth as Florida handed Baltimoved within 2 112 games of forsttwo-run homer and Tyler Houston
more its fourth straight loss. Charles
drove in three runs for the Cubs. place Cleveland in the AL Central.
Johnson opened the lOth with a sinSosa hit his 32nd homer in the sixth. The Astros dropped their sixth
gle against Terry Mathews (3-4) and
Houston hit an RBI single in the sec- straight and saw their lead in the NL
pinch-runner Gregg Zaun advanced
ond, another in the third and a run- Central shrink to I 1/2 games over
on a sacrifice. Jeff Conine walked,
scoring RBI double in the fourth . seco.nd-place Pittsburgh.
and after both runners moved up on
Mark Clark (II-7) improved to 3-0
a groundout, Renteria singled to cen-

We Rave
All of Your
Plumllinrr
Needs.

Baseball

"I wouldn 't have liked to go to a
fifth set," said Rafter, who began
cramping early in the fourth set. "I
think (the cramps) actually helped
me a little bit because they helped
me relax . lllat worked wonders for
my serve."
Pioline, Chang's opponent, also
began cramping.
"When you are out there, you try
not to think ... about anything that
has to do with the physical aspect of
the game," Chang said. "l fell like I
had a lillie bit more today ·than
Cedric. He was gening tired, and a
f~w more errors were starting to
creep into his game. He was starting
to shorten up the points. I could see
he was cramping up, shaking his
leg."
·
The unseeded Pioline served for
the match at 5-3 in the fourth set, and
Chang didn't give him a chance to
put it away. At the end of a long rally on the first point, Chang drilled a
winning forehand. He then worked
his way to two break points before
Pioline struggled back to deuce.
Then. ·with another break point

·Ivy, puncan and Bond stand among latest Skyline winners

Meigs reserve
golf team
defeats Eastern

Scoreboard

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

U.S•.Open continues

By TERRY KINNEY
Rosadodidn'tallowarunnerpast game from owner Marge Schon's
CINCINNATI (AP)- Dave Bur- second base after that. He gave up private box.
Jeff Shaw pitched lhe firial two
ba went six weeks without pitching seven hits, struck out five and
walked
three
in
six
innings.
innings
for his 29th save.
five innings in lhe same game. He
"
Other
than
the
first
inning,
he
Cincinnati
is 8-6 in inlerleague
spent 20 days on the disabled list
pitched
well.
He
got
into
a
rhythm,"
play,
the
Royals
6-8. Despite a halfwith back spasms. and in three
appearances had pitched a total of 3 said Kansas City manager Tony price ticket promotion, the crowd of
113 innings.
Muser. "That first inning, he was try- 15,288 was the smallest of the seaBut Burba (7-10) lasted through ing to find himself. The more he son in Cinergy Field.
Notes: The Reds activated lefi·
five scoreless innings Tuesday night pitched, the better he got."
and the Reds ' bullpen finished the
Burba got his first win s,ince July banders Pete Schourek and Kent
shutout as Cincinnati beat the Kansas 16, allowing six hits in five innings. Mercker from the disabled list on
City Royals 4-0.
He had made two relief appearances 1\lesday. Mercker (8-9) went on lhe
Reggie Sanders doubled in two since his last start on July 27, when Db on Aug. 17 with a bad back.
runs in the first, and Willie Greene he had to leave the game afler 28 Schourek (~- 7) was disabled July 31
hit a two-run homer off Jamie Walk- pitches because of tightness in his with recurring elbow problems ....
er in the eighth, his 21st of.the sea- back. He pitched one. inning in relief The Royals recalled shortstop Felix
son, as the Reds ended a three-game Aug . 6 and went on the DL the next Martinez and pitchers Brian Bevil
losing streak.
day
and Jim Pittsley from Triple-A Oma"I wanted to go back out for the
He was activated last Wednesday, ha. Omaha manager Mike Jirschele
sixth, but 92 pitches in five innings when he pitched I 1-3 innings at and trainer Mark Farnsworth also
after a month off is a lot of stress on Colorado.
joined the Royals in Cincinnati. ...
the body," ~d Burba, .who is 2-0
"He had a lot of life in his fast- Barry Larkin was honored as the
against Kansas City. ·
ball. He just needs to build up his Cincinnati Reds' True Value RoberI GOT YOUI - Cincinnati catcher Joe Oliver major J8ague game
He last beat the Royals on Sept. strength," said Reds manager Jack · to Clemente Man of the Year prior to
QUia the tag on the Kanua City Royala' Jay Bell won 4-0. Bell was trying to score on Dean
19, 1991, when he was with the Seat- McKeon. "He ran .out of gas. With · Tuesday night's game. Larkin will
It the plata In the flrat Inning of Tueaday night's Palmer's hit..(AP)
·
tle Mariners.
that exercise program he was on, he represent the Reds in competition
"I was winded throughout the wasn 'I able to· do that much run- among the 28 franchise winners 'for
· game," Burba said. "When I went ning."
the national humanitarian award,
out there for the first inning, it felt
Pete Rose Jr. pinch hit for Burba which Larkin won in 1993 . ... A fan
•.
like my first time out there. I went in the fifth and struck out on four . who fell about I 5 feet from the right
the way he can play it," Pirates man- it hurt a lot."
By ALAN ROBINSON
out there Hoping they would hit the pitches, but the hometown fans field seats after reaching for Eddie
Silva then walked Dave Justice,
. PfiTSBURGH (AP) - Sbawon ager Gene Lamont said.
ball .... You throw 92 pitches in five applauded warmly anyway.
Taubensee's home run ball in·Mon. The Pirates had won only twice but Sandy Alomar grounded into a
Dunston had the magic touch. Unforinnings. thai's not what you want to
"I said, 'I need to use a left-hand- day's game was treated for multiple
tunately for the Cleveland Indians, since sweeping three from the Giants force out as the Indians failed to
do."
ed hiller. It might as well be Pete,'" fractures. Curtis Staker, 44, of Loveon Aug. 22-24. And they might not score despite loading the bases twice.
Omar Vizquel didn 'I.
After Kansas City:s Jose Rosado McKeon said. "The fans lik~d it. . land, Obio, had surgery for a broken
The Pirales found everything they have won had Villjucl not run Cleve"It took a lot of momentum out
(9-11) gave up a double to Mike Kel- That was our biggest cheer of the elbow, and also was being treated for
wanted in a shortstop and more in land out of a promising first inning. of us," Hargrove said.
ly and a walk to Eduardo Perez in the night."
frac1ures of the ribs, spine and hand,
The Indians, who scored four runs
Dunston, who led them·pasl Clevefirst, Sanders drove in both runners
Pete Sr.. who also attended his the Reds said. He was listed ln fair
land 6-4 Tuesday with two home in the first inning Monday before
with a double to right-center.
son's debut on Monday, watched the condition at Good Samaritan Hospiruns and ·four RBis in his first night. winning 7-5, loaded the bases with
tal.
no outs in ihe first on singles by
in a Pittsburgh uniform.
Vizquel
and Kevin Seitzer and ManVizquel couldn't even find the
ny
Ramirez's
walk. Pirates rookie
plate.
Jose
Silva
allowed
eight runs in the
It was truly a lost night for the
The Meigs Marauder reserve golf
first
inning
of
his
previous two team defeated Eastern in a dual
Indians. Not only did Villjuel lose
his way around home, costing them starts, and seemed destined 19 give
match 'Ja.•t week at the Meigs Couna potentially big first inning, Mil- up more.
ty Golf Course. Meigs carded a team
Mall Williams lifted a hy ball to score of 160, while Eastern had a
waukee beat Houston 4-2 to cut
'
By The Aasociated Press
nomenal. I've never seen anything 0-3 in interleague play, was trying to Cleveland's lead to 2 112 games in medium-range left field, and Vizqucl
197.
easily beat AI Martin's throw standthe AL Central.
Mark McGwire hit another tape.- like that."
Meigs is now 3-0 on the year.
tie l,he Toronto record for victories
"We left a lot of guys on base. We ing up. But when umpire Wally Bell
measure homer and Denny Neagle
Neagle pitched a four-hiller for set by Jac~ Morris in 1992.
Josh Price. for the third consecujust dil[n't get the hits and that's been did not make a call, catcher Keith
pitched another great game. No sur- his 19th win and hit his third career
tive match was match medalist a.&lt; he
Cardinals 6, While Sox I
a big problem all year, leaving men · Osik ran nearly to the backstop to tag fired a 38 to lead Meigs. Othet;
homer, leading Atlanta over Detroit
prises there.
At St. Louis, Andy Benes pitched
on base," Vizquel said after the Indi- out Villjuel, whose foot had landed
What was surprising was Roger 5-0.
Meigs scOres were Jason 'Freckcr's
seven strong innings for the Cardi· ans stranded II and were I·for-17 near the top of the plate.
Clemens'poorpitchingperform~nce
"No. 19 is special," said Neagle
39,
J.R. Scarberry's 40, Mick Detnals. BeneHI0-7), who allowed one with runners in scoring posilil)n.
"We had the bases loaded,
against the New York Mets.
( 19-3). "I go deep, go 2-for-3 (at the
twiller's
41. Tommy Roush's.43, and
run and 'silt hits, won his second
Pittsburgh, despite losing five of nobody out and Omardidn't step on
Clemens, starting at Shea Stadi- plate), get a shutout. No complaints
Thad
Bumgardner's
47.
.
straighi start after winning only one
urn for the first time since the Bill from me."
·
its previous six, closed within I 112 the plate. He said he did and I have
Other
Meigs
scores
included
of his previous live outings. Jaime
games of the NL Central lead as the to .helieve him, but he's got to he
Buckner game in the 1986 World
Elsewhere in interleague play, it
Andy Davis • 48, 52s by Carson MidNavarro (9- I 3) lasted only two
Astros lost their sixth straight. The more sure than that." Indians manSeries, gave up a season-high seven was Philadelphia 5, New York Vankiff and Jason Cundiff and 54s from
innings, giving up five runs on sevPirates haven't been this close since ager Mike Hargrove said. "That hurt,
runs in Toronto's 8-5 loss to the Mets kees 0; Montreal 6, Boston 5; ChicaChad
Folmer and Josh Lynch.
en hits.
July 21.
on Thesday night.
·
go Cubs 9, Minnesota 3; Florida 3,
For
Eastern, Mall King led the
PbUiies S, Yaakees 0
They might not be b~ck in con- Clemens (2&amp;.5), who leads the Baltimore 2 in 10 innings; Milwauway
with
a 45 . Other scores were
Sports briefs-At Philadelphia, Mike Grace
tention if they wailed a few more
majors in victories, got on base all kee 4, Houston 2; Texas 13, Los
Justin
Brewer's
47. Brie Smith's 48, ··
Baseball
pitched a three-hitter- and faced the
days. But, desperate for a shortstop
three times he batted by doubling, Angeles 12; and Colorado 7, AnaAaron
Will's
57
and Chad Nelson's
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - New
minimum 27 bailers. Grace (2-0),
after losing two (Kevin Elster and York Yankees ace David Cone felt 62.
wa)king and reaching on an error. heim 2.
who got his first major-league win in
Kevin · Polcovich) to injury, they pain during a simulated game and
Bul he lasted only six innings on a
Braves S, Tigers 0
15 months last week, walked none
deal~ a marginal minor-league
hum1d, 82-degree evenmg, and hos _ _ At Atlanta, Javy Lopez and Keiwas sent back to New York to
and recorded his oQiy strikeout by
prospect to the Cubs for Dunston.
AL-Ieadlng ERAchmbed from 1.73 th Lockhart homered as the Braves fanning Tim Raines for the final out.
receive a cortisone shoi in his sore
Dunston was in the final year of shoulder.
til 1.92.
won for the I Oth time in .)3 games. Gregg Jefferies went 4-for-4 and·
his Cubs contract and wasn'tlikely
"I'd much rather have a beuer The Braves built a 5-0 lead through drove in the lirst run as Philadelphia
· Cone had hoped to stan Sunday
to return. They have already given against Baltimore, but was unable to
day on the mound than at the plate," four innings and cruised behind
won for the seventh time in nine
the shortstop's job to Manny Alexan- finish his three-inning workout. ·
Clemens sa1d. .
Neagle the NL's winningest pitcher. games. New York has lost Jive of six.
der, even though Dunston was 8-for- Manager Joe Torre said he hopes the ·
McGwire hit his fourth 500-foot The B~ves ended a seven.- game
Expos 6, Red Sox S
20 his final four games for them.
home run of the year as St. Louos home losing streak against AL teams,
shot will alleviate the pain Cone is
At Montreal, Henry Rodriguez's
. Dunston hit a tying solo homer feeling from tendinitis in the shoulbeat the Ch1ca~o While Sox 6-1.
dating back to their World Series- second home run of the game, a solo
off Indians rookie starter Jaret der. Cone probably won't throw
McGwire hit a 504-foot, two-run clinching victory over the Cleveland shot in the eighth, snapped a tic as
Wright (5-3) in the second inning. another simulated game for about I0
shot otT the scoreboard in left-center Indians in 1995.
the Expos improved to I 1-3 in interHe followed with a go-ahead threein the first inning. His 44th homer of
Mets 8, Blue Jays S
days.
Olympics
league play. Rodriguez. who missed
run shot in the sixth after Joe Randa
the season was the longest at Busch
At New York, Rcy Ordonez hit . the previous I9 games with a
LAUSAN_NE.
Switzerland (AP)
kept the inning going by beating the
· Stadium since. the Cardinals began his first homer of tlie season and strained rib muscle, and rookie Brad
Stockholm
and
Cape Town were
throw to first on a potential doubleestimating distances in 1988.
drove in three runs as .the Mets won Fullmer each hit two-run homers in
warned
by
the
International
Olympic
play grounder.
"I've hit some long·ones before. their fourth straight. Jose Cruz Jr. the fourth inning off Brei SaberhaCommittee
for
possible
bid
viola"We don't expect him to hit
but I've never hit any. like Mark homered twice and drove in three gen. Fullmer's pinch-hit shot came in
tions
in
thei&lt;
a11empts
to
entice
home runs- what docs he have, II'!.
has," said Ron Ganl, who homered runs for Toronto which has lost five his first m~jnr league at-bat.
-but
we want him to play shortstop members who will vote for the site
twice for St. Lou_is. "That's just phe- ·in a row. Cleme~s. who dropped to (See INTERLEAGUE on Page 5)
of the 2004 Olympics.

Mets shell Clemens in getting
8-5 victory over Blue Jays

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

••

•

~":·

t"! '

~ .

�p.ge &amp; • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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

'

~-

VVednttday,SipbNnber3,1997

NASCAR officials walt for medical test results of 'Intimidator'

Earnhardt may sit O\lt Saturday after crash in Southern 500
body for stock car ncing's premier
series plan5 to use the information to
detennine whether Earnhardt is tit to
return to the track in time for Saturday night's event at Richmond International Raceway.
"We're kind of playing a waiting
game," NASCAR spokesman Kevin
Triplett said. "We're not'doctors, so
we kind of have to go on what we're
told by doctors."
But one of the driver's closest
aides. said a clean bill of health - not ·

MOORESVll..LE, N.C. (AP) Dale Eamhatdt has undergone more
tests to try to pinpoint wby he fell
asleep at the wheel at the Southern
SOO, and there is a chance he might
not rejoin his team for this week's
Winston Cup race.
Officials with NASCAR were
awaiting results of tests conducted at
an undisclosed hospital Tuesday to
· determine why he nodded off while
driving Sunday. The sanctioning

a ~peedy return to ncing ..:... is the
pnmary goal for the 46-year-old
Earnhardt
. "U we're in question, if there's
any question at all about his ability
or the clarity of his decisions, we're
not going to put him at risk," said
Don Hawk, president of Dale Earnhardt Inc. "Dale's got nothing to
prove. He's got nothing to prove at
all with the fans. If he has'to miss a
race this week, we've 1101 nothing to
lose. We can afford to do that."

Hawk said Tllesday that Earnhard! twice nodded off It the wheel
before Sunday's event II Darlington
Rlceway. His Chevrolet Monte Car·
lo slammed off the concrete retaining wall in both the first IIlii second
turns on the opening lap, and after he
failed to respond immediately to
radio calls from car owner Richard
Childress, Earnhardt also had difficulty finding the entnlli&lt;:C to pit road.
It wis a troubling sequence of
even!$ for a driver who has won a ·

'Shoeless
Joe' signature to remain _in vault
.

.
The charities sued the county and case in front of the Supreme Coun.
. The ruling preserves the integriProbate Judge C. Diane Smock in,
1993to substitute a certified copy for ty of the state Archive$ and History
the ,' original will. A Circuit Court Department, Woodington sajd.
judge ruled i.n August 1995 tbat tbe
"If they had ruled the other way,
original will was government prop- historical reconds would be vinualerty.
,
ly destroyed as collectors and fami"We are disappointed because ly members come .and strip the
now no one will receive any benefit vaults for their ancestors' stuff," he
from the will's existence," said Leo said.
Hill, the charities' lawyer.
Hill argued that keeping the will
"That's like saying England's in state vaults could leave it exposed
crown jewels have no value because 19 rot and insects. But Smock said
they'll never be sold," said Ken Greenville County has kept the will
,Woodington, the senior assistant safe since 1959 and can keep it safe
attorney general who argued the until it is transferred to the archives
department.

.

ByJESSEJ.HOLLAND ·
COLUMBIA. S.C. (AP)- Shoeless Joe Jackson's ran: signature will
stay in a vault rather than be auctioned off by two charities that want
to make money for medical research.
Joseph Jefferson "Shoeless Joe",
Jackson died in 1951 in Greenville,
still fighting allegations that he and
seven Chicago White Sox teammates
threw the 1919 World Series.
The illiterate player with the
career .356 batting average rarely
signed anything, and as a result his
signed will has been estimated to be
worth more than $100,000.

The American Cancer Society
and tile American Hean Association
claimed the document because Jack. son's wife, Katie, who died in 1959,
· named them as h_er beneficiaries.
However, the five-member South
Carolina Supreme Coun ruled unanimously Tuesday that .she never
owned !he will, and it will stay in a
Greenville County vault.
The coun ruled in 1990 that orig•
ina! wills must be kept for 75 years
after they are tiled. Records released
by county Probate Couns must go to
the state Archives and History
Department.

record-tying seven Winston Cup
poinl$ titles IIlii cultivttted a cool,
tou&amp;h--auy persona, earning him the ·
nickname of "The Intimidator."
That demeanor was the reason no
one in his pit became -concerned
when Earnhardt ftrSt nodded off
while siaing in his car waiting fOr the
race to start.
"It's not unusual for Dale to doze
off before a nee or under red-flag
conditions," said Haw~. who runs
the Mooresville racing and market·
ing company owned by Earnhardt.
Team members became · suspiciQUS, though, when Earnhardt fell
asleep a second time. But by then the
drivers were being ordered to stan
their engines. So Earnhardt tired up
the car and drove away with the rest ,
of the field . .
After Earnhardt wrecked, Childress repeatedly called him on the
radio, trying to find out what hap. pened and telling him to bring the car
into the pits. Earnhardt didn't
respond, said·Hawk, who was standin~ near Childress and monitoring

the radio fRquency with his own
headset.
When Earnhardt finally got on the
radio, ii was not encour.ging .
"Dale said, 'I'm sorry, I saw two
racetracks,"' Hawk said.
Earnhardt was pulled from the car
and carried like a rag doll to the
infield care center, then transfen-ed to
McLeod Regional Medical Center in
Florence, S.C. He spent almost 24
hours at McLeod undergoin_g tests,
aU of which came back negabve, and
he re\Urned to his Mooresville home
Monday.
Hawk said Tllesday :S tests were
more extensive and were designed to
target up to 200 possible problems.

Page7:

Wednesday, September 3, 199~

.

~ase, gives the appearance of bias
and is in and of itself cause (or this
indictment tp be dismissed," Black
wrote in his request
.The motion also; asks that if the
case goes to trial
scbeduled on
Sept. 22,that the jury not be allowed
to consider consensual sodomy
between Alben and his accuser as a
crime.
Alben is charged with forcible
sodomy in an alleged attack on a
female acquaintance in an Arlington
hotel room Feb. 12.
Sodomy in any form is a crime in
Virginia. Defense lawyers want the
trial judge to allow the jury to con-

ARLINGTON, Va. (AP)- Marv
Albert's lawyers asked Tuesday that
the sexual assault case against the
sportscaster be dismissed because a
; gntnd jury member once worked for
~ the case prosecutor.
Defense attorney Roy Black con• tended that Amy Levine, one of the
: six gntnd jurors who indicted Albert
'· in May, was campaign manager for
: Arlington County Commonwealth
: Attorney Richard Trodden in 1994
: · and 1995.
;
"Such a close relationship by an
'• advocate of the ·very prosecutor pre., senting the indiciment clearly taints
the makeup of the grand jury in this

sider only the forcible sodomy
charge and deny jurors the option of
convicting him of a lesser, consensual charge.
.
One of Black's arguments is that
prosecuiors who claim Alben forced
the ~oman to perform oral sex on
him should not also be allowed to
also argue that the sex was consensual, but a crime nonetheless.
· "Because consent is not a
requited element of forcible sodomy,
the offense of consensual sodomy
cannot be a lesser included offense."
the motion argued.
.
Funher;· if the state concedes that
the sodomy is consensual, it must

as

!

I

.. Meigs cross country boys' squad
gets second in Early .Bird Meet
•
Here are the results from Satur:: day's Early Bird Meet at River Val· .ley High School, according to a
; repon submitted Tuesday.
·
:
All runners will be identified by
i i;chool {i-Jackson, L-Logan, M·
! : Meigs, R-River Valley, VC-Vinton
:: county and W-Wellston)
Vlll'llty boys' rate
'
Team scores: Logan 41, Meigs
i :45, River Valley 64, Vinton County
; · 78 .
i: Runners: Jarvis (W) 14:;35.1;
! :Smith(L) 15:19; Stanley (M) 15:41;
: ·Jensen (L) 15:42.2; Reynolds (VC)
:: 15:47.4; Beha (M) 15:55.2; Fast (L)
, : 16:10.1; Ross (J) 16:18; Taylor (R)
: ' 16:19.1; ·

Roush (M) 16:21.6: Smiddie (M) Mace (L) 18:37; Imhoff (L) 18:40.3;
. 16:23.1; Holcomb (R) 16:30; Thomas (M) 18:55; Moitg(L) 19: 13;
Thomas (M) 16:32.6; Well (M) •; Godwin (R) 19:26.4; Hayward (L)
16:52.2; Coker (VC) 16:52:3; Pat-. 19:34; Frye (J) 19:42; Simmons
terson (VC) 16:55; Downing (J) (VC) 20:06; Ellinger (L) 20:12.1;
1'7:03.1; McMunn (L) 17:06; Welch
Henry (W) 21:31.4; Murdoch
(L) 17:06.1; Newberry (R) 17: 12;
(VC) 22: 10.6; Hook (L) 22:28.1;
Bowers (L) 17:12; Jackson (WJ Shelly P. (L) 22:40.1; Sowers (VC)
J 7:31; Stout (R) 17:32.2; John~on 23:45.1; Montgomery (VC)23:57.8;
(M) [7:36; Fowble (R) 17:50; R1ce Robson (VC)24:14.1; Manm (R)
(R) 18: 16.2; Crane (M) 18:25.1; 25:04.3; Boggs (J) 25:40. I; Yates (J)
Nice (VC) 18:28.3; McCall (M) 27:31;
18:32; Speary (W) 19:06; ChampiArrowood (R) 28:36; Bundette
on (VC) 22:44
(M) 28:53.6
Vanity Kirts' race
Team scores: Logan 15, Vinton
Junior bi&amp;h boys' rac:e
County 50
Team scores: none
Runners: Enderle (L) 18:23;
Runners: Tucker (L) 7:34.3; Deck
(W) 7:58; White (M) 8:58; Gilmore
(M) 9:12

~: Jaguars acquires Miller

insurance quarterback
.
.

; · JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP) : : With the signing of Jim Miller. the
: : Jacksonville Jaguars are getting long
i : on quarterbacks with shon experi-

··

: : The Jaguars signed the former
• · Pittsburgh Stcelers' backup to a one; year contract Tuesday, after backup
· Rob Johnson sprained his left ankle
' in Sunday's 28-27 win over Balli- .
more
Starter Mark Brunell was already :
out with a knee injury suffered in the·
preseason.
The Steelers released Miller on
Aug. 24, deciding that Kardell Stew- ';
an would be 'their starting quarter- I

back.
'
Even with the sprained ankle, ·
Johnson completed a remarkable ·
first start Sunday. He was 20-of-24
for 294 yards and two touchl!owns,
including the go-ahead score on a
28-yard touchdown to Jimmy Smith.
Johnson's status won 'I be known
until later today. He had 'attempted
only seven passes in one regular sea: ·
: son game during his two years as a :
·. backup.
. His backup, Steve Matthews,
· signed with the Jaguars only two ·
. : weeks ago and took his first NFL
: snaps on Sunday.
· · Brunell is not expected to return
:·until sometime in October.
. Miller made his first and only
; start for Pittsburgh against Jack: sonville last year. He was largely
· ineffective, going 9-of-17 for 83
: yll!lis before being replaced in the
· Steelers' 24-9 loss to the Jaguars on
opening day.
. .
. Miller, 26, has seen act10n 10 five
· NFL games, completing 45 of 81
passes fc)r 520 yards and two touch·
downs.
.
At Michigan State, Miller established school reconds with 46 7 pass
completions and a 62.9 percent com· .
pletion rare. In his senior year, he
completed 21S of 336 passes for
2 269 yuds IIlii nine touchdowns.
' To make room for Miller on the

roster, !he Jaguars placed third-string
running back Chris Parker on injured
reserve. Parker injured his knee in
the game.

also admit that its witness lied by
saying she was fotced, Black wrote.
"The commonwealth seeks to
bring such a prosecution even though
it would mean that the alleged vic- .
tim of consensual sex is both a perjurer for testifying falsely about
force, and a sexual criminal for
engaging in consensual sex."
Black alleged that the woman
may have agreed to oral sex out of
her own concern that she not become
pregnant. He also took aim at Virginia's anti-sodomy or "crime
against nature" law as vague and
unconstitutional.
..
"The commonwealth should be
precluded from pursuing a prosecution based on the private acts of con'
·senting adults," the motion said.
Police allege the incident
occurred when Alben returned to his
hotel after broadcasting a Washington Bullets basketball game. The
indictment alleges Alben.lhrew the
woman on the bed, bit her on the
back repeatedly. and forced her to
perform oral.sex. The woman sustained deep bite wounds and required
hospital treatment.
He is charged with sexual assault
for the alleged biting as well as
. forcible sodomy, and could be sentenced to life in prison if convicted
of all charges.
A spokeswoman for 1Todden said
he would not comment on Black's
accusatio.ns before a hearing Thursday when Circuit Judge Benjamin
Kendrick will consider the defense
requests.

two months!

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Phones starting at $15. Pagers starting at $39.

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dtfa/11.

the many years of happiness you
have given me. As I have often told
you, I deeply appreciated your beauty, both inside and out. You have
been the perfect wife who has stood
by my side through these many
years, which have passed too quickly. You have been my comfoner in
trying times. 1just wish that I could
have been a greater help to you and
fulfilled your every wish in life. 1am
thankful for what 1could provide for
you, but you, sweethean, deserved
much more. Thank you for your
sweet smiles, loving understanding,
kindness, tender care, faithful love,
great sense of humor, comfoning
words and forg•' veness. Ym
u have
v
been the .perfect compan 1·00· 1·n my
journey through life .

for your forgiveness of my shancomings. As you know, the final
arrangements have been made and
are simple . In death, there is little of
value to leave behind. except kind
words and deeds. This ptwase sums
it up: One kmd ·word said to the living is worth more than a million
tears shed over the grave. I ask that
you strengthen your faith and rest
assured thai we shall all come
together again in eternity.
My love to all of you. -- Dad

women s . and mens clothes, puzzles, and l~fa_nts' clothes. And you' ll
find that It 1s posstble to be well
dressed but not to go broke!
Yet, perhaps, best of all, when
you purch~ these items, you '!'ill
be contnbUtmgto the wonhy act1v1ties .of the Me1gs County Humane
Soctety.
Can you honestly think of a better place to spend your hard-earned
money?
The Meigs County Humane Sodely Thrift Shop has been in operalion for twenty years and has grown
out of its original, cramped quarters
across from the Pomeroy post office.

The shop, wh•ch 1s staffed by vol- Spay/Neuter program.
unteers, has become ~ mainstay of
Open from nine to four. the spathe town of M1ddlepon.
cious shop even has new . items
. The shop has als9 been :- and arrive daily and the selection is quite
still IS -tl)e maJor source of mconie · diverse-from small appliances to
for the Meigs County Humane S~i- prom ~resses!
.
ety. wh1ch operates Without any c1ty
In addtt1on, to bemg able to
or state fundmg .
·
browse in the store and possibly
The proceeds from the shop are return home with some brand-name
channeled into the society 's items, you will have the opponunity

to speak to volunteers about the
society's activities.
The posters and wide array of
ph&lt;fos of volunteers ' and visitors'
companion animals - wonderful
cats and dogs- alone -are wonh the
tnp.
.
The Meigs County Humane Soe~ ,
ely welcomes new members and
invites you to join them .

If you are interested in obtaining
more infof]Tlation about lhe society.
auending its meetings. or making a·
donation - of money or thrift shop ·
items - leave yo•r name with
someone at the shop or call the trcasurer, Rita Lewis. in the evenings. at
992-5834.

'Send questions to Ann Landers. Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif
90045

BY ED PETERSON
. wilbin two years after the month in
Social Security manager
which the worker filed an applicaAthens Office
tion, for a period of disability, or the
A parent's worst fear is the death date of the worker's death. You are
of a child. And, what if the deceased not entitled to retirement insurance
child was an adult who was support' benefits which are equal to or higher
ing his/her parent? What will the than the parent's benefit.
parent do then? For some parents,
-To be considered a parent of
Social Security is the answer.
· !he worker, you must be the natural
If you are age 62 or older and parent of the worker, or the stepparyour deceased child worked and ent of the worker by a marriage
supported you, , and you are not entered into before the worker
receiving Social Security benefits, attained age 16, or an adopting paryou may be able to get Social Secu- ent who legally adopted the worker
rity survivors benefits as the depen- before worker attained age 16.
dent parent of the deceased child.
This information is not intended
Here's a list of requirements you to cover all provisions of the law
need to know for entitlement to governing parents' benefits. For
rent's benefits:
JliOre specific information about sur-You must be age 62 or older.
vi.vors and parents benefits, contact
-You, the parent, must prove a Social Security office by calling 1that you were receiving at least one- 800-772-1213, and ask for our book:
half of your support from the lets, "Survivors Benefits," and
deceased worker.
"Understanding The Benefits." To
-You do not remarry after your access Social Security information
child's death.
on
the
Internet,
type
-You must file proof of support http://www.ssa.gov.

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(admittedly, not hard · enough at then, higher education does not
times), many of my faults stayed always guarantee anything except,
with me. In my later years, I hope perhaps, a smoother road in life. In
that my lack of patience wasn't as any case, I urge you all to add up
glaring as in earlier times. And per- your many blessings and thank the
haps my discipline was too harsh. Lord.
My intention was only for your wei:
Perhaps my greatest disappointfare. For my other shoncomings, ment was t~at you all took the fourt\1
some of which only. you were aware, commandment so lightly. While
please forgive me.
your dad was admittedly not the
Each of you children brought greatest in the world, your mother
your mother and me many joys, cenainly was a most extraordinary
moments of pride and happiness. woman. I regret that you did not let
This was especially true in your het know that she was one in a milyounger ·years. Your mother and I lion. Please let her know now how
tried our best to guide and encour- much she is appreciated. Show her
age you along each step of the way. your love, and encourage your chi!We are pleased that at least one of dren to do so also.
·
you took our words to bean and conAnd it is to my faithful , wondertinued your schooling. Perhaps we ful wife that I address this para-

Native artist's work
Diet Pepsi or
goes on display

free for one rear.

Olhr .ndt ~ JO, 19'11. Ctdolll rMidloM opptr, Naw h of llltYII;:.t, 12 fiiiOIIIh commitNnl and c*it

.
By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Society
Lookmg for hard-to-find 100 ~rcent colton pants? Or hats? ChJ!dren's clothes? Costumes~ What
,about c~l dresses and sh.ns for
summer. .
.
. .
You m1ght consider drivmg to
Middleport to VISit a source for all
these 1tems, and more - the Meigs
County Humane Society Thrift
Shop.
Located at Second and Walnut, at
the first light, the thrift shop offers
clean,
inexpensively
priced
sweaters, belts, knick-knacks,

I

$1gn up fw our residential lonlf"dlstance
· service, and get J60 long-distance minutes

Oflfii'O'"'OI ~- en..,...;, S2.t.95 ralll pl.:.. indue!. 75 bta1 """'*'· h-o,...,.... S39.951nd.d. J.SO 1ocot 111111.-.

Dear AIID Landen: Nine years
ago, when 1 had severe health prob!ems, 1 wrote the following letter 10
my wife and children, !O be opened
upon my death. This year, my
youngest so~ was brutal! y murdeted.
He never got to read my leuer.
We never know what tomonow
mi.ght bring. My hope is that your
readers will "do it now." Here is the
.
for my remam.
IeI ter-I have wntten
·mg ch'ld
N N
.
1 reo. -- o arne m Punta

Dear Friend: I am sure your letter will move my millions of readers
as it moved me. Tbank you for sending it on. Here it is:
Lovtd Ones: It is my sincere
hope that it will be many years
before you read this letter, but none
of us knows how much lime God has
allotted us. Whatever length that
may be, I would like to have one last
chat with you. Should it be God's
will that your mother and I enter
.eternity
he 'II together, I'tham cenain
M that
s WI agree WI me. ost of
what is contained herein we have
talked about many times. ·
To all of you, I ask your forgiveness.
. Though your mother and I
tned
· 1 to do what we felt was best, it
ts who often failed, sometimes

What every parent should
know about Social Security

Plus, choose belLveen a
FREE TeleTAC'.. or
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Oalllpolla 1502 Eastern Avenue 614/441-0547
""-a l1 00 East Stole Street 6 t4/594-4800
Jocbon 384 Main s-t 614/286-6073

·-

1997. la AllJdl:l ,..,_

!JMicJIII! ud Creaton

•

idols.

Pomeroy 204 Wos1.2nd Slreel614/992-7070

Ann
Landers

I

Golf date
PONTE VEDRA, Aa. (AP) One of the major events of the international golf world, the W9rld Cup
Junior high girts'.race
of
Golf, will be played this year,
Team scores: Logan 15
.
Nov.
20-23, at the Ocean Course in
Runners: Scheer (L) 9: 16.7; BurKiawa~
Island, S.C.
dette (M) 9:29.3; Hawk (L) 9:40.1;
·
Originally
it was announced as
Ramey (L) 9:47.7; Bateman (L)
being
scheduled
for Nov. 12-15 but
9:52.8; Kline (L) 10:08.9
the PGA issued a formal conection.

Teen

It is never too late to tell someone you love therri

" When the tests are completed,
two of the finest medical institutions
in America will take a look at the
results," he said.
Hawk said Earnhardt was upbeat
Tuesday.

,. Aibert.'s lawyers pu$h for dismissal of case

: · ence.

-

The Daily. Sentmei

I

By JOE IIACENKA

~:.. as

.

By The Bend

1051 East State Street, Athens, OH (614) 592-4911

Sculpture. painting and poetry by Nazarene -- which DeLay attended
a formerMiddleport resident wi II be as a child, Middleport Church of
on display in local churches this Christ, First Presbyterian Church in
month in conjunction with the con- Middlepon, Middlepon First Baptist
tinuing celebration of Middlepon's Church, Heath United ·Methodist
bicentennial.
· Church; St. Paul Lutheran Church in
The display by noted sculptor Pomeroy, Sacred Heart Catholic
Raben
Church,
Grace
DeLay will
Church an\1 Trinity
culminate
Church.
in a lecture
A large sculptor of
and slide
DeLay's will also be
show
on
on display at the
September
Arts Center located
27' at the
in downtown MidRiverbend
dlepori, along with a ·
Arts Center.
collection
· of
DeLay is
DeLay's
poetry.
the presiSeveral of the
dent of the
poems featured in
Liturgical
the exhibit feature
Art Guild a
Middlepon and the
national '
sunounding dver
organizacountry as their sublion which
"'
ject..
suppons art
i'
'·
This is the first
· for worship
,.
""'..
time that the anist's
spaces
works have been
through
exhibited locally,
education,
according to Janette
consulting,
Thomas of Middleexhibitions,
pon, who is coordisymponating the exhibit.
siums and
"Combining his
workshops.
poetry with the
DeLay
'•·
sculpture di~play_ at
also is a
the In conjuncuon
painter, and
LOCAL ARTIST· Robert DeLay, with the display will
creat~d the a 1957 graduate of .Middleport High offer a rare v1ew of
first portrait Sc:hool, will present a lecture and the creatiVIty of the
displayed in slide .show at the Riverband Arts anist," Mrs. Thomas
Washington, Council later this month.
sasd.
D.C. of John
.
Tile poetry exhibit
L. Lewis, the first president of the will also include the recently pubUnited Mine Workers.
·
lished "Winged Warrior," acconding
Because so many of DeLay's to Mrs. Thomas.
works are in churches, the River-·
DeLay's lecture and slide presenbend Arts Council has coordinated • uition at the Riverbend Arts Center
the placement of his an in nine in Middleport will be~in _at 7 p.m. on
churches in Middleport and September 27, and wtll tnclude diSPomeroy. ·
cussion of the processes of "Lost
: The churches displaying the an Wax" bronze casting, stone carving
aie the Middlepon Church of the and resin casting.

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�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Wednesday, September 3, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

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

Racine Fall Festival promises fun for all ages

'The annual Racine Fall Festival
Individuals wanting to reserve a 2 p.m. with trophies awarded to win,..ill be held Sept. L3. 1~8 p.m. at craft space at the park should con- ners in two weight groups.
Star Mill Park. Emcee for the day tact Krista Smith at Home National
Entertainment on the stage will
will be Dan Smith.
Bank at949-2210. Spaces should be start at 10 a.m. with the Clark Fami'The event will kick off with ~ reserved by Sept. 10 and the lee is ly which will also perform at 2 p.m.
parade which leaves the fire dcpan- $10 for a l~foot space and $15 for
The Big Bend Cloggers will perment anne• at 10 a.m. with line-up a 2S)-foot space. Set up time is from form at II a.m. with Mike Hemmelat 9:30 a.m. Monetary awards will 8-IO.a.m.
garn starting at noon after the festibe $50, $30 and $20 with winners
·
Pumpkins for the pumpkin grow- val queen is crowned.
announced at noon. Anyone wanting ing contest will be a~cepted from 10
Mike Hemmelgarn of Dayton is a
to panicipate should contact Mari- ·. a.m. to noon with winners being "clean-cut entertainer" who blends
lyn Powell at 949-2656.
announced at I p.m. There will lie comedy ventriloquism, creative jug• The Fall Festival Queen, who trophies awarded to the top three gling, magic, balloons and audience
will he selected from a group of winners in two age groups: 18 and involvement.
Also entenaining are: the Larkin
Southern Higli School seniors, will under, 19 and over.
be crowned at noon.
The kiddie tractor pull will be at Family of Churchill, Tenn., at I and

1997 RANGER XLT
AIR CONDITION, CAST ALUM WHEELS,
AM/FM CASS, SAW, LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$15 230·00
I

, ,

112011
CONVERSION
VANS
IN STOCK
REBATES UP TO
$4,.000

$10,988·00

1997 CROWN VIC LX

'.

.

'·

FULL POWER EQUIPMENT, KEYLESS
ENTRY, CLIMATE CONTROL,·LOADED,
. · .
PKG 113A
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
. $25,955·00

Meigs
·c ommunity
Calendar

1997 RANGER 4 X4
AIR CONDITION, CAST ALUM WHEELS,
AMIFM STEREO,
V6 ENGINE, FOG LIGHTS
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$18,035·00

1.9%APR
FOR

~48. MONTH

. $18,988·

AIR CONDITION, REAR DEFROST,
FLOOR MATS, CD CHANGER,
REMOTE ENTRY, AUTOMATIC
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS ·
. . $14,685·00

•.

•-•

~

'

AUTO, AIR, V8,CRUISE
CONTROL,ILLUMINATED ENTRY,
WELL EQUIPPED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$24,040 00

$19,988·00

... '

.,

CHESTER -- The family of John
~effers and Viola Jeffers will have
their _reunion Sunday at the Meigs
County lkes Farm, Chester, at I p.llJ.
POMEROY -- The Pomeroy
Church of Christ will observe
Friends Day, Sunday, with services
io begin at 9:30 a.m. followed by a
luncheon at noon and an afternoon
se,rvice. There · wili be special
singing. Damon Soilone, pasiOr,
invites old and new friends .
· MIDDLEPORT -- Chapter 53, ·
DAV, annual picnic, Monday, 28051
State Route 7, below Middlepon,
· 6:30 p.m.'Members and guests, take
covered dish.

1997 TAURUS GL WAGON
AUTO,AIR,POWER EQUIP.,V6,
THIRD SEAT,KEYLESS,LOADED
. MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$22,880·00

1997 TAURUS SEDAN
AUTOMATIC,AIR CONDITION,4 DR,AMI
FM CASS,FLOOR MATS AND MORE
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$18,775·00

$15,988·00

Blickenstaff to
present music
· workshop·at OU
The Ohio Music Teachers Association, Southeast District, will
sponsor a workshop given by noted
recitalist and lecturer, Marvin Blickenstaff on Friday, Sept. 12, from
9:30 -12:30, at the Ohio University.
School of Music.
Registration begins at 9 a.m. The
workshop is open to all music teachers and students throughout the
region. The registration fee is $15 or
$5 for students. For more information, call (614) 593-7438.
The topics will be "The Case of
the Potential Piano Drop-Out: What
Do You Do When the Magic Stops?"
and "Beethoven's Bagatelles, Opus ·
33, Experimenting With Humor."
Blickenstaff, a graduate With performing · and academic honors from
Oberlin Conservatory and Indiana
University, is Professor of Music at
Goshen College, .Indiana, where he
teaches piano and lectures in piano
pedagogy and music literature..
Music Pathways, a 36-book
series for beginning piano students;
was co-authored by Blickenstaff,
· Louise Bianchi, and Lynn Freeman
Olson.
He has recently co-authored the
Celebration Series: A Handbook for
Teachers. Blickenstaff.has served on
the editorial board of the American
Music Teacher and is an Associate
Editor of Keyboard Companion.
The Ohio Music Teachers Association Southeast District, . is an
affiliat~ of Music Teachers National
Association (MTNA). Founded in
1876, MTNA, the oldest professional nonprofit music organization in
the country, represents more , than
25,000 independent and collegiate
music professionals.

Guard Atalnst HIJh Prices
Use Tht Closslfled Stctlon .

MIKE HEMMELGARN

EASTMAN'S .

FOODLAND
ONE STOP CONVENIENCE

We Stll Money Orders
We Wire Money ·
Postage Stamps
Film Developing
Pr•pald Phone Cards
Foodland Gift Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rentals
Columbia Gas Payments ,
Lottery Tickets

OVER $200,000.00 IN PRIZES
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GREAT NEW SELECTION
OF BRAND NEW
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SAVE THOUSANDS ON THESE
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RUTLAND -- "Come Home to
Rutland" homeconiing beginning
noon at the Rutland Civic Center.
Contests, games and entertainment. ·
All welcome.

1997 ESCORT LX

$12,388·

OF PRE- OWNED
AND FACTORY
REPURCHASED
VEHICLES

RUTLAND -- Rutland Township
.Board of Trustees regular meeting .
Thursday, 6 p.m. at the Rutland Fire
Station.

SATURDAY

00

00

1997 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS

POMEROY - JEWELL home
school support group meeting
. Thursday, 7 p.m at the home of
Brian and Kim Hupp. Plans will be
made for school year activities.
Those interested may contaCt the
.Hupps at 992-0045.

SYRACUSE -- Republican Central Commiuee meeting Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at Carleton School. All
.Republicans welcome.

~LARGE SELECTION~
AIR,CRUISE,TILT,FULL POWER,ALUM
.
WHEELS,LOADED
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$23,545·00

THURSDAY

$14,988·00

' $2Q,988~00

1997 F150 4X4 XLT

· The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
.and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific numrber of days.

5 p.m., the Sheppard Brothers of
Parkersburg, W Va., at 3 and 6 p.m.,
and Stoney Creek of Williamstown.
W.Va., at4.and 7 p.m.
Parking will be inside the walking track with ·entry from Vine
Street. Signs will be posted.
In the event of rain , all activities
will be held at Southern High
School.
,
For more information, contact
Larry Wolfe at949-2836, Ann Zirkle
at949-2031 , or Kathryn Hart at9492656. '

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111'11.-:s:l
1 .. ~ .417

I!UIQCIOD

11o11,W
liiZO,'IB

'1n

13....00

1 ..... .,.

liii.....OO

••n

, .. 4,1!7

lloUOI

...... ..... ,...,... "......... ......
....,., ··-.•••...
~

urr

Ca111pbell's

Pork &amp; Beans·

Homemade Brand

Ice Cream

. .~3~
=----'----~____;;;

11 Ql:. Cln

_ __, O'Sage

Peaches
29oz. can

Pe~si

BIG BEND

Cola24 Packs

lbru Saturday Sept. 6, 1997. USDA Food Stamps &amp; WIC Cciupone accepted. Not reaponllble for typographical or pictorial errors.

... -,.

•

�P•ge 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Septem!MW 3, 1997

Wedn•day, September 3, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

•

Record enrollment has schools
scrambling to meet student needs

PEPSI &amp;
T.-DEW
PRODUCTS

STOlE HOURS

'

. 24 PI CUBE

Molldaythn~

Sunday
I 111·10 PM
291 SECORD ST.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD-THRU SEPT. 6, 1997.

PEPSI &amp;
MTDEW
PRODUCTS

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC-COUPONS

2UTER

BONELESS SKIN~ESS CHICKEN

Breast F1llets ••••

SJ99
LB.

- .

QUARTER PORK LOIN

$) _69
LB.
Chops ••••••••••••• •

-COCA
COLA
PRODUCTS
- 12 PKS

Ham ••••••••••••••••!•
CYPRESS BREAKFAST .

USDA CHOICE BONELESS
BUCKET BEEF CUBED

Steaks .............~.

$219

W1eners-••••••••••••
-

SUPERIOR MOUNTAIN lUND , .

na~·

STOKELY'S
VEGGIES
14.25-15.25 oz.

29

LB~ )59

.

Ch nk Bo

J 149

Bacon •••••••••••••••

NY Strip Steak
U~N'S

.

4

UMIT 12 ADDT PURCH 39C

MAXWELL
HOUSE
COFFEE
oz.

9C

33-39

VAN CAMP'S
PORK&amp; ··

BEANS

FRESH-TOSSED

16 oz.

Salad ••••••••••••••i

8
•

SJ79
Sl1ces •••••••••••••:::. · ·
KU:T AMERICAN SING~E .

99 C
JUICe ••••••••••••J,l&amp;•J . 9
C
79
C
9
Sauce •••••••••~·.c::~... __ _
·
BOR~EN OUNGE
DAIRY LANE

KUFT BARBEQUE

KEEBLE~ ZESTA .

.

. ·

.

$-) ·39

Salt1nes ••••••••~~-~~:L·

.

lee Cream ••••••t:•~ ·

2/$1 00

BLUE BONNET

Ma arne ••~·~~~:~··

•

BOUNTY

CHARMIN WHITE

KINGS PANTRY

PAPER TOWELS

BATH TISSUE

PEACH HALVES

SINGLE ·

ROLL

.69

4
4IOLLP1

79

4

29oz.

LAY'S
POTATO .

: By BRUCE MEYERSON
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Wall Street shook off the summenime blues in a hurry.
The Dow Jones industrial average, the stock market's best-known mea. sure; surged a record 257 points Tuesday as investors and traders reu~rned
from Labor Day to find signs of moderate economic growth that cooled mfla·
tion jitters.
The rise put the Dow al7-,879.78 points, wiping out most of last week's
265-point slide and easily topping the previous one-day record gain of 186.84
points, which was settwo days after the Black Monday crash of October 1987While not close to a record in tenns of percentage growth, the 3.4 percent rise was the biggest in almost seven years for the roster of 30 blue-chip
stocks such as General Electric and Coca-Cola. · ·
'
Rattled by a recent series' of repoltS suggespng the economy might be
accelerating too fast, inflation-wary investors were heartened to learn man' .ufacturing growth slowed in August in the first major reading of last month's
· economic activity.
·
The results, from a survey of factory executives by the National Associ: ation of Purchasing Managers, mean the Federal Reserve will be less likely
: to boost interest rates io slow economic growth and 'deter inflation.
.
;- In addition to the Dow, the news also blllstcred broader stock-market indi.: cators and the bond market.
·
.:: The rally halted what some expected would become the Dow's firs_t 10
:: percent slide since early in the decade. The Dow now sns about -380 pomts.
:· or 4.6 percent, below Aug. 6's record high of 8,259.3 I. .
-:
"Once again we've been challenged by a host ofpotent1al threats that are
:: now near-misses," said Joe Battipaglia, chief investment strategist at Grun: t~l &amp; Co. "Investment managers, who are now coming back to work, are
· looking a.t what the market has to offer and see better prices than a few weeks
. ·. a~o. "
· ·.
·
. .
:
The market fell from its record highs last month as suspiCions mounted
:- that the Fed would raise interest rates. Higher rates would ease innationary
:: pressures by slowing borrowing, but that might also hurt company profits.
.;
"I think to a great extent (the) Nauonal Purchasm~ Management report
;. was a very substantial relief,:' said Hugh Johnson, ch1ef mvestment str.ate·
: gist at First Albany Corp.
·

. : Unabomber trial judge rejects
: request for jury selection revision
.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) list of registered. voters.
The defense had asked tha{ lists of
: The judge in the .trial of Unabomber
: s~spect Theodore Kaczynski rejected licensed drivers, as well as lists of
. a series of defense requests for revi- registered voters , be used to broaden
: slons in jury selection, saying lawyers the pool of potential jurors. arguing
. : didn't prove the changes were need- that pervasive per~trial news coverage
would make it extremely difficult to
. ejl for a fair trial.
In an order filed late'Friday after- seat an impartial jury.
Burrell said the request had to be
. : noon and distributed by' a court doc: ument service today, U.S. District rejected because the defense had
· JIJ(lge Garland Burrell Jr. said defense failed to show that using the voter
: l~wyers Quin Denvir and Judy Clarke rolls would not result in an accurate
; h~d failed to prove the necessity of cross-section of the community.
: e~panding the jury pool beyond the

.,

CHIPS
$ 09

ASST. VARIETY 9 OZ

Win A

BANKROLL
This Week
Powell's Super
Value

c ----

;::
,_.,_

-.

.....

ft-

st•

$600
Free Cash!
. Stop In The Store
For Petalls
. I

ing a rice bar that offered three types
of flavored rice along with meat and
vegetable toppings.
She said the district was adapting
to new food trends as well as a small
but growing number of Indian ana
Vietnamese students.
Ambience counts too, said Melinda Turner, president of the American
School Food Service Association
and director of food service for
Owsley County ' schools 1n
llooneville, Ky.
That's why many kids will be having their pizza. chicken nuggets and
other fare in "theme cafeterias" that
follow the lead of restaurants that try
t() look lilce 1950s diners or sports
bars. Owsley Elementary, for example, has decorated its cafeteria as a
Jungle Cafe, with exposed pipes
turned into palm trees and painte!l
wooden cutouts of jungle animals.
Sounds of the rain forest are piped in.
"Schools are basically doing what
is working so well for the restaurant
industry," Turner said,
·
Tougher discipline and character
education were ihe rule in some
states. In Georgia and South Dakota,
new laws requires instruction in basic
virtues. A new Texas law allows students to be expelled for misdemeanor
drug or alcohol offenses at schoOl
activities.

Wholesale cigarette prices going up 7 cents
I ,000 cigarettes effective on orders

Strikes, followed su1t.
.
Philip MOrris spokesman Brend.i.j
cigarettes to a pack.
McConnick declined to say what
Rivals R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, caused the increase. Reynol4~
maker of Winston and Camels, and spokeswoman Maura Ellis cited "oui
Brown &amp; Williamson Tobacco, increased costs of doing business~~
which sells Kool, Carlton and Lucky but declined to elaborate.
'

Dow Jones shrugs
-off summer slump

SJ19

WH~LE SUPERIORS TAVERN

HEADING UPWARD- Tradera worked on the floor of the New
York Stock Exchange TUeaday. Tile Dow roee 257.36 to 7 ,879.78,
· wiping out most of laat weak'a 265-polnt slide. It was the biggest
· one-day gain ever for the Dow, beetlng a nearly 10.year-old record
of 186.84 polnta that came two daya after the Black Monday crash
·
of October 1987. (AP)

By·ROBERT GREENE
issue there.
teens have an especially difficult time
AP Eduoatlon Writer
The city school bood said that for waking up in the morning.
Florida youngsters crammed into the first time in ·seven years overStudents said the extra time will
portable classrooms that devoured crowding was down.
- allow for longer nights.
playground space, while MinneapoThe United Federation of Teach"If you're out longer, you still end
lis teen-agers got some extra winlu ers could not recall any classes lleld up being sleepy in class," said junior
when schools reopened fbr most of in a functional bathroom. Converted Nicole Williams.
the nation's school children.
bathrooms were not unusual, the
Varsity football player Chris JenAnd all around the coilntry Tues· group said.
.
nings says the extra hour allows him
day, school cafeterias were looking
Manhattan Borough President to get in two miles of running before
more lilce theme restaurants as school Ruth Messinger, the lilcely Democ- school.
·
food service managers searched for ratic challenger in this year's mayoral
"I think it's great," he said.
ways to make that lunch break a lit· race, produced two 1996 photos of
Not everybody went back to
tie more appetizing.
students studying in Brooklyn lava- school Tuesday. Strikes have delayed·
In Florida. where a population tories.
openings in a handful of districts.
boom has Sf'ained school capacity,
High schools were particularly And in the nation 's capital, problems
some children were h~ving lunch as hard hit by enrollment surges; said meeting the fire code delayed sehoot
early as 10:40 a.m. so everyone Gary Marx of the American Associ- openings until later this month.
·
could get a meal.
ali on of School Administrators, who
More than 250 District of Colum'
,, mean our brunch," said Car- recaII ed overcrowded e1ementary bia high school students
showed up
' "vou
olyn Spooner, a first-grade teacher at schools just a few years ago. "This instead on Capitol Hill, where law'
ISpringwood Elementary School in Baby Boom echo is working its way makers offered internships for stuTallahassee. ·The 10-year-old school through the system," he said of the dents until classes resume Sept. 22.
was built· for 764 students but now offspring of the huge generation born
There was no internship for
has 1.000, with the overflow housed .. between 1946 and 1964.
Fairouz Foty, 7, who protested outin 12 poriable classrooms set on playIn Minneapolis, school officials side school headquarters, uttering a
ground space .
. had mercy on adolescents and their statement kids elsewhere might find
No wonder it's crowded. A record sleeping habits. In a st:ate built by the hard to believe: "I want to go back."
52 million students were going to hard labor of early rising farmers, the
School cafeterias were still strugpublic and private schools this yellf, largest district is letting high school gling with federal requirements to cut
the Education Department estimates. students start at 8:40 a.m. Middle the fat and add more fruits and vegAithough schools started in August in schoolers can start at 9:40 a.m .
etables. Brownies and other desserts
some places, most students returned
Birch Jones, principal at North inay be made with applesauce or
to classes the day after Labor Day.
High, said it could be three to four · prune puree in place of cooking oil .
New York City alone accounted years before anyone would be able to
Ann Lopez, director of foQ!I ser·
for a million of the school returnees, gauge the success of the experiment, vices for South Windsor, Conn., outwith overcrowding a sharp political which is based on evidence that side Hartford, said she was introduc-

the day after Labor Day. There are 20

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Marriage licenses
The following couples were
issued marriage licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck:
Harold Robert Williams, 38. and
. Belinda Randolph, 24, · both of
Reedsville; Michael Patrick Wolfe II,
28, Pomeroy, and. Stephanie Renee
Reynolds, 26, New Haven, W.Va.;
Carl Edward Klaiber, 57, Long Bottom, and Vickie Kay Harris, 47,
Po.meroy; Robert Jason Hall, n.
Pomeroy, and Crystal Lee Norvell,
19, Mason, W.Va.;
Rief Grayson Hennan, 27, Middleport, and Vonda Sue Reynolds, 21 .
Bidwell; Leonard Guy Hill, 25, and
Cora Lynn See, 21, both of Pomeroy ;
Bert Garrett Mash, 20, Cecil Field,
Fla., and Rachel Denise Nonnan. 19,
Pomeroy.

The_Daily Sentinel
has a supply of the
commemorative edition
for Middleport's _
Bicentennial for sale.
Price is $1.50 and can
be picked up at
The Daily.Sentinel
•
&amp;om
8am·5pm
Monday· Friday.

,·

!

AT. 7 PIZZA
EXPRESS
. 992-9200
NEW FALL HOURS
Effective 8-27-97
Sun.-Thur. 4 p.m.-10 p.m.
Fri. &amp; Sat. 4 p.m.-11 p.m.

18" ONE ITEM PIZZA

$9.99
(:ard of Thanks
I would like to take thlt opportunity to
tay Thank You for the actions and prayers
after my daughter, Michelle's, recant bicycle
accident•
I would aapeclally like to thank Michelle's
cousin, Brittany Cremaana, for her quick
thln,klqg and fast legs to get help. Also to ,her
mo~ and dad, Tammy and John, for trans·
porting h!lr to the hospital.
At the scene, I'd like to thank Peggy
Laudermllt, Carol Fox and Kim Wilt for
taking lima to atop and help a scared 'little
girl. ·
I'd like to commend Dr. Howard Newmark
and Matt Riffle, RN, at Veterans Memorial
Hoepltal for their thorough aaae11ment and
steblll:llng her for transport.
Also, to the Meigs EMS Tranafer Squad,
Joe Stru.b le, Peggy Lewis and Ryan Hill, for
their professional and compassionate care
durJng our ride to Cabeii·Huntlngton
Hospital.
._
Finally, Thank You to my family, friends,
atrangars and local churchee for their
prayers, phone calla, support and for thou
who stopped or called to aee about Michelle.
In the accident she had a hairline fracture of
har skull along with facial and body acrapea
and brulsaa. She haa made a full recovery.
She is truly an angel. May God continue to
ble81 her and all of you.
Patty Weaver

MEGA DEAL
Any size pizza with
6 items.

Only

$8-.99

Hand tossed only

DOMINO'S
PIZZA
POMEROY &amp; RIPLEY ONLY

614·992·2124
GARAGE SALE
121 South Locust St.,
Cheshire, Sept. 4, 5, 6
Women's , children's, infanrs·
&lt;•:,
clothes, shoes, coats, &amp; variety of
Come see. 367-7350.

5 FAMILY YARD SALE
Clothing for all &amp; lots of
misc. #6 south Third St.,
Ma5on, Thurs. &amp; Fri. 9-?

' &gt;

�'

~age12 •

The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, September 3,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedneeday, September 3, 1997

The Dilly Sentinel• Page 13

...

Remodeling

19tll Martin Street

JoeWIIion
(614 992-4277

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•DECKS
•ROOFING
• SIDING

POMEROY, OH.

'

(614) 446-4759
~ Top • Trim • Removal

10 LB. PKG.

• .• Stump Grinding
20 Yro. Exp. ·Ina. 0.....

Alc:lc """'-

Free Eilinusle•

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

BONELESS

HOT DOGS

'

.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
. Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCI.AL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

s
oz.

ITALIAN
BREAD

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

"FACfORY
omEl:T
PRil:ES"
Quality Window Systems

16
LOAVES

110 Court St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

882-4119

.
.•

WVII023477

1-800-291-5600

CHOPPED
SIRLOIN PATTIES

10 LB. PKG.

10 LB. PKG.

PORK STEAK

.-SJ

$

.

WESTERN
RIBS

.

.

LARGE

ANT, QUE
AUCTION

9010LB.
PKG.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1997
10:00A.M.
.
Lllc8tiCI at the Auction Center on Rl 33 ln Mason,

w. Va.

10 LB. PKG.
'

3 Fomlly: Klda Ctothll, Toya,
Hounwart UiK, F~l. Sept Sth,
Sat Stpt .... Opana (IIAJI. 91181
IMivllo Plk&amp;

..

LB.(HUCKWAGON
BACON
.
.

OR

5

UNTAINEER SAUSAGE

s

99 ·

WHITE
POTATOES

RAINBOW
ICE CREAM
Yz GILLON

407 PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
45760
UNLIMITED
DOUBLE COUPONS
EVERY DAY UP TO 50 C

OPEH 14 HOORS
7 DAYS fl WEEKI
•

10 POUND ·

ALLFUYORS

c

Old Fashioned

SE VICE VALUES...

I

With Today's

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

C\~····

I

(Ume Stone·
Low Rates)

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

WICKS
HAULING

•Room Additions
•New G1ragea
•Eiectrleel &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•lnte~or &amp; Exterior
Pllntlng
Aleo Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

rour nome
AU1;tlc'n Ccpnductad by
Alok flla1son ~ctlon Co. 166
. ason, W.VA.
A

1'«11

•

,_.

dence: 304-773-5785

qe,... 3()4.773-5447

: ~~Check w/ID
For Af:idenls or Loss of Property

2.dAnnuol

~"

1~/
!9!:1

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A-Division on· Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone:~614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-n3·5861

',~_1...

'~i,

EXPO '97
. i/
~

I

Meigs County Fairgrounds

\ \
- ~\

Intersection of US 33 &amp; SA 7 (Northwest Corner)
September 20th &amp; 21St
Saturday t0·5 p.m. &amp; Sunday 10·5 p.m.
For MDI'e Information Call: 992·6696 992·5293 742·3020

INtMRflll.

New Homes, Additions,
Roofing, Siding,
· Pole Barns,
Decka, Painting

Gutters
DownspoutS
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
ll/1f/lln

SAYRE
TRUCKING

R. L. HOLLON

1-900-329-0611
Ext. 1881

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umestone A Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
RHsonable Rates

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel

TRUCKING
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

Joe N. Sayre
614-742·2138

Brakes • Shocks

Musl be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (614) 645-8434

C~lhtl.

Yard Salt Sopl 4·1-lth Flrll
hoUII on Blaine Llilt llallpollf
Rny.
24' E111nllonwMCI
-·
-·
cl11 equipment,
Hter
I

mower, Urea, clolhlng, towa. Iota

.. , _

•

•

&gt;

Htndtraon · St~
Filday 815111. AI DIYI Rooi11110 1 Yard s,lt-301
WV. · FriiSit August
IIIIo South Bidwell Elementary, HendtfiDA
·30th. Tuti/Wtd 5apl. zno.
Baby Girl 0·11 llaa•• Womena 211lh
3RI. 10a,..pm dally. Cllaa-ro;
Of-.. Utnl Drill. U.iiiC• •
dlshea, clothing, collectibles,
G&amp;!IQI Sale: II Crown Lin•, wringer washer. Slnoer HWing
CIOWI1 City, Thurtdor, •Ill: Friday machl111, lfon baby bed, lola of
614-4411-'11411
OH

5lh. ~ .... 8:30-

Oiraga Solo: Clolhtl. Toya,
Homo lniorior, Etc., Sapl .... 6th,

FREE
Plc:k up dlaearded
appllenetl, batlerl11,
many metals &amp;
motor bloeka.
6t4-992-402S a am-a m

ANtJOUN CEf.1EtJT S

005

Personals

1.2-

GIIOQt Salt: Sap1111 Tlttu 5111.
Dill Roull 218.

G110ge Solo: Thuro 81•lh. Fri II

mloc-

Yard Solt-GaliiPolll Forty. One:
...,-ofiyl Sol. StpL 1111. 1.1)0am, •
5:oopm. Cro11 tdtolld tracb at :
llallt Scllool. 2nd- .. right ..

8Q

Auction'
and Flea llanet

5th. Satllllill. ltdltt IMQt Szt

Flrl1-.

Clothing And Oddl 1En4o. 131
Glllpolla. Ohio.
Inside Sale: . 4 Room• Full

--

Clothes, Gl111ware, SwHpera. Rick Patraon Allctlon ~.
Loti llloc. 10:00 Till 4 P.M. filii tJm• awcdonHr, complale
Thuroday, Frldar. llllllcCor· audon urvlct. Ucenucl
nt,OhiD &amp; WMl Vlflllnla, 304•
773-5715 Or 304-773-5olol7.

.

537 9RYAN PLACE

MIDDLEPORT

Service

71

mo. .

s:oo a.m.-3:30p.m.

aBuiW Garages

742·2792
8/7/97 pd.

EXCAVATING

·

Openlng9·1·97

L&amp;J
SWAP·SHOP

•Stonn Doars &amp;
W'utdows
•Room Additions

We Buy, S•ll
and Trade
New and
Used Items

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

&amp; TRUCKING
992-3838
House &amp; Trailer
Sites
Driveways, utilities,
land clearing,
· septic systems.
Hauling Umeatone

202 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete

614-992·9086

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11127/W 1 mo. pd.

Remodeling .
Compare . ·
FREE
· ESTIMATEES

Stop &amp;

Free Est/mates

custolll.

~

985-4473

.
.

$2,000 REWARD!!

TIN farnu,

I l l - Ctliroh.

614-949-3060

•Replacement W'mdows

LEWIS TIRE

Alwa,sln
Our Hearts.

some Fumltu.._ c -

tAII Slzn1 Mloc. ltoma, Baby

7 Uaplt St. In Meson, WV.

Clothing and votloUa olhtr 1 -.
Hot doOI and bakod QOOdL Stp1.
4, 5 &amp; 1 beginning at SI;OGam.
Sponsored by tho Cllllon United

CORPORAL ELEaRIC

992·2m

Struts • Tune-ups

11121'!2 mo.

$2.99 per min.

John William•, Owner
Llcen..d Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Fr11 Elllmltta
PrQviding Quality
Reeidentlel Service.
24 Hr. EIJIWflertCY

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

•Exhaust•

CHURCH WIDE ClARAGE SALE .

-~~~Fore_.,

lot_,_,

Dally Rd., Racine

10/2519111110

CUSTOM

ll•lh. 815111, 118111, 8 A.M. -81'.11.
174 Kon Road, 011 Rowll 110,

3314Gootgoa~-

949-2168

Rainer's garage ..... Sept 4th,

5111. TociUirvlllo Rd .. Racine, drill

BIQ l'atd Salt Stpl 4, 5 &amp; edt. 111 Htnderaon SL Rain cancels:
Somtlhlng

On FiahL

on aP~ed CJedit}

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WJ
1-800-172-61167 · 1391 sanord School

FREE ESTIMATES

614-742·3090
614·742·3324
614·742·3076

•s. SR 124~

•lh. 6111, 1111. 8·? Mile. ltamo. 31
Smithln A¥lni&amp;

Friday StpL 5111 On~ 8 -4, I IIIIa
Out Charry Ridge (In Ric Cloandaj

Furnaces '2~00 amonth ·

SPORTS!
SCORES!
SPREADS!

Call Us For A Free ESIIIT&gt;Bie

Moving in sal• I garage ule;
Thura. &amp; Fri., Sept

&amp; VIcinity

- Easy Bank Financing Heat Pumps Installed '38 a month

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

(acrosa from ·Imperial EIKtrk:).

Loto otclo111L

Slh,ll-5.

lht..., ....... lht ..
Ia 1o run.IUodiJ
-·UOp.lll.
Ftlday.........,tclllon
·10:00 ..... Satunltr·

00

Ohio

LIIQt rtrd salt- Saturday, StpL
lth, lam·5pm. 383 Aah SUHl

lien-·

e.Poldln-.
Qf''M"f• 2:00 , ....

MobUa Home Furaacas
and Baat Pumps

Fret EsUmates

Middleport, Ohio 45769

unlforma. Wagner pat.

• Famllr l'atd Salt: Thuro, Ftl, 5 ' " - 10' 10blo - . jolniOI, Mar·
Ylltl From The Corner Turn tag - · drl"f, gullll. ohoiQUn.
Righi On ss•. To Eno Turn loh lurnltute, lnlquta. mile.
On lloroan Ctnlll Road, Go To
Flr11 Rood On Righi. Firat HouH RDUand· hoult at corner an
Grovo Rd. (dayo h donn't
On RiohL Mill &amp; Children Clotl- lng Pop Up VIking Camper, t!IOO: rain), Tueaday through week,
HotiZOil Runa Good 1-4(10, Com- comtorror~oproada, pillowa;
..-..~IIICiffilc.
PI'* $35, Mary
.a Hubbard Avonut, llnlo Tlka
Toys. lllanlt llollltl, Kida SChool
Clothes, HG'mt lnctrlor, Other
Pt..Pleasant
ltomo, Thuradly, Friday, 814111, 81

.61J.Ynloloe-

Howard L Wrlteeel

~

L WP
• f

.

Beautiful fancy rope twist top &amp; bottom oak
sideboard, original finish ll stack oak bookcase
w/hidden drawer, oak 54" roll top desk w/18 drawers,
fancy oak secretary beautiful top wntons heads must
·seal Very unusual walnut stepback cupboard, 56'
double kHchen cabinet, new Travis Court Mahogany
curved glass comer cabinet, mahogany chinese Chip
&amp; Dale corner cabinet, fancy oak knock down
wardrobe, oak pump organ, walnut viet. marble Insert
dres&amp;er, dress81 &amp;matching ward1obe, Hoosier style
cabinet, 1930's 3 pc. walnut poster BR suite, miii$10n
oak china cabinet, ea1ly prlmHiva walnut poster bed
acorn tops, 4 stock bookcase, oak washstands, oak
dressers, Chip &amp; Dale claw &amp; ball feet sofa
w/matching wing back chair, lg. claw &amp; ball .feet lamp
table brass bed, round Ollk table, bucket bench, Iron
, &amp; brus bed, mahogany tables, early walnut cradle, B
Victorian walnut chairs, 4 press beck chairs &amp; others,.
ea~y meal bend in old green pain, 60 dr.awer Oak
· card file, oak stacking card file &amp; cabinet comb., viet
table early pine blanket chest dove tailed old paint,
fancY Kimball phonograph, rqpe twist sq. oak tabla,
. lg. spinning wheal, 4 drawer mahogany sewng
cabinet w/lift up top, mission oak desk w/folding
racks trunks, quarter solid oak economy rottary
. shutt!&amp; tredle sewing machine. oak tredle sewing
· machine fancy Morris chair w/lg claw &amp; ball feat,
oak press back rockers &amp; others, child's plano
· Lodeon by J. Cheln &amp; Co., early cast Jron tabl~
· w/dragons &amp;claw feet, Mahogany Highboy w/mlrror,
: 8 It oak showcase original finish &amp;others, new 9x12
· oriental rugs &amp; more.
·
GLASSWARE
: Fostoria chintz pattern, Sherberts, cake plate, salad
: plates. 3 way divided relish tray, cups, saucers,
· sandwich plates &amp; mora, McCoy cookie jars, tepee,
· globe, wicker baSket w/pine cones on lid, owl. clown,
shoe cow jumped ove1 the moon, cat on behtve,
greai northern DUtch boy, Vilglnla rose china, blue
willow china, pope gosser (Florence), Flo blue, ruby
pitcher &amp; tumblers, pressed glass, child's tea set
Japan, FTO Heisey tumblers, Fostoria coin dot (red),
Fostoria American stem tumblers, low FTD tumblers,
FTD bowls pear yard holder, whiskey decantors,
Ezra Brooks &amp; otherS, Hummels, figurines, oil lamps,
white hOuse vinegar jug, stoneware pitcher, stone
'jars &amp; crocks &amp; more.
·
COLLECTIBLES
Good plctur11 frames, ·railroad lantern, old cast iron
. money bank--pig-horse &amp; bank, early cast Iron match
ttolders several ciOcks·sesslon-lngraham-graln
: painted' regt.tlator school house clock· ingraham
: figure 8 clock flosawood case &amp; others, brass
jluoket, bro~ze ~le bookends old man reading a
!lOOk tlgne~ K W, pewter small salt &amp; pepper
ehakere, CliC8 Cola carrier, childs mannequin,
pachlllo llot rn8fhine not old but nlca, com sheller,
rut cutter, "J.R. spilt hammer, blow torch, enamel
ue l wh-t~lwirli plus much more.
UCTJONE [R JfOTE; A great selection of good
puatlty turni 1re. glasS~Ware &amp; collectibles ready for
or sh~p. Don~ f1ll88 thiS onell

Clothoa, Toya, Iliac. Opona
'O:OOA.M.

~ . ~~'.6.'; ._IAD::ONI

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine. &amp;Welding Shop

Home Improvements

t~a.

hlllllug. BIW compuror maniiDr,

• Famllloa: Sopt '5111, 1111, 137• lonl Bonom. Oh -llolhodilt
Neighborhood Road Adut~ Kldo Chun:h, llom-5pm.

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

Complete Machitll' Shop Service FabrkatiGa
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday·Friday • 8:00 a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday • 8:00 a.m. • 12 noon

KINGS'

-

TV,

1110, 3 Mitt Pu1 Coow 4'ridar I

(614) 949-2804

3351 Happy Hollow Road

99

$

••

Public Sale &amp; Auction

120 Baatlanl, TU11, Wtd1 Cl· 3,

Sal.lrday 5lh, 1111.

based

•

Latta 10 IIIIIIIJ· Wtdntadlf
and Thurldar, behind U11onlc
lodgt In Roclno. Clolhlng, ml·

C.tlllno, Etc. 11100 Slltt Rou.O Cordioglidt. loll of mloc. Rain ar

State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohlo

614-992-3470

_c........._ Mud!llilc.

2 Couches, Furniture, Clothes,
Houllhold Furn .• hwn Wow.ra

Briggs &amp; Straltow: Mastll' Strvke Teclllld. .
Ou!M Poww lquipiHal Assedilial: &lt;ertlfled 2 Cydt

P~meroy,

814-t11Uo101 .

Boya 20" Chromo Billa, 175: 2
dog cage, hydraulic
s ....... Need Wort!., Clo.... . crowave,
pumpa. hy&lt;hullc Iiiii. t.t¥ lltmo.

·Mowera •Chain S-• •Weedelters •Authorized
Dealer For:
•Briggs &amp; SITitton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
. •Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Ge1r
ANDOTHERSI

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

ltldo
dlahtl. ttc. All'l qu11U0n1 call

"lugtiiOOtlng Silo" 112 Milt on , .. Road. FIYt Pvlnta ..... Sop- .
1110 On N - Rood, 111WilkaaviUt &amp; Ewinglon Buck -5-f.
Wood Stove 1 Ptlltt Stave Olfage aal• turn at Uemorr
tllonr ltomo) 5op1. •111, 6th. o-s. ' o.doo) on sn 7, c. R. 112. II".,.
11m loll. iltllllouH II - ·
103 011llold AVOI1llo, 8 ••, S.PI- mit,
nctlon, Thufldat and Frida,,
51h, 8th, Toya, Clothes. Houtt· I:IXIIn&gt;S:GOpm. Rain"' lhill.
A....

Parts ·and Servlce/1

.

Gallipolis

warea, Jara, Furnllurt. Toole,

614-992·5479

992·5535

WoK Ptn Ad. Furniture, ....., I

OotaQt ..... rain or 11111no, Wlp- •

" WARNER INSUUNCE
.JEFF
113 W. 2ND Sl ·

and----

Foiii~S . . . GUISRIQII '

Yard sate
&amp; VIcinity

360° Communications

"Stop putting off those much needed
home improvements. " CaU Today!

992·2753

10

RICIII MOWER CLIIIIC

ORLAND

&amp;

-

SIRH'S CONSTRUCTION .CELLULAR PHONES
•NEW HOMES
•ADDmONS
•REMODEUNG
•GARAGES

"Build Your Dnam"

10 LB.
PKG.

loot: pair ol lovtblrda. Union
Moor llulavlllo Plkt, 114-448·

M&amp;J

CHUCK · l.LB. PKG.
STEAK

Porneroy,

wldnitr. 814-182-1. .
Mloilna: ~ Cot lMgt In Size

Cuttom Home•

CHICKEN
LEG
QUARTERS

110 Loat IIIII Found

For Information
leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property line
-fence at:
1927 cro.. st.,
Racine, Oh.
I.D. Callll'l

Contact:
Ron L Miller
992-4025

Novelties
Special Designs·
Wearable Advertising
P.O. Box 215
330118 SA 33, Pomoray; OH
(814) 1182-12'19

50% OFF

Killena to gl~••war. 814-DD2- Yard Sale:1072 Second AM.• ·

~7211;;.5;..-~~--::-:-:-::-I Wtd., ThUro., Ffl.. SWivtl Aoc1111
Killona to giYOawoy. 30•·773· Chair, Hill Troo, Hand &amp;Garden
Toolt, Flohlng Equipment, liar·

5480·

bl11, Winter Clothea, J•elry,

Kllltnl, liltM Box Trllntd, Moth- =Lo:::lO:.:;OI:.:;II:;:Iac:;;.•::::::'•=---tr: .. e1H5oH3tl.
Isuit/til•
Pomeroy,
Malo h&lt;ldga hog, • . , good poL
Middleport
3Qoi-175-38Q2.

All C.-pel-Upholstery
Cleanllg

CHEVALIER'S
STEAM CLEANING
Carpet-Upholstery

614·992·0077
•ltltlleport, 01
I

I

I
I

I

�,--

•

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page14 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, September 3, 1997

Wednesdly, Ssptember 3, 1997 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 15 ·

BIUDGJ: .

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

1 T..r.
5 Sleahtd, In I

way

&amp; LIVES fOC K
Modern 2 Bedroom Aparlmtftl.
... 448 03QO

lbr ap&lt;. $210/mO. • dopooll

-

30H75-31 00 or 304·175-51501

'.~~~ =afllr=5pm.=------

Clnilrlfw ........ llniflg • - " "
Praliltrna? Notd 'lllnld? Col ._
. . Dr. l1t ttl 4121

Hou• For - : 1877 Chol'roftl
lllut&lt; Fa&lt; - : tNJ Town Car
ConMIIOftlaii1..U·7UO, -

_,,·

IBM Con1pu1or - 1 0 . . llonltor I Kerbotrd Included,
175 OII0114-IiH410

'lllur Chid Loorn To Rood:
Hoolled On Pllonlca Stilt
1215.85: or lllne auo. 114Help

HAYES REAl. mATE

-on

114-tGHII

••

lltp- Plalna: Bttutiful 2 BR.
homo
I IIIII wlfl

Wi:"ciii~~~;~a.;~ti,;.

_..

l'y.

Ktnma&lt;t Wuhtr liDO, Glba9n
Orrt&lt; 1100: Both Working: 275
Gallon Full 011 Tonk ISS: 11437H730. AFIIA I P.M.
Kllohon Cortot 18.!10 Solo on d
room olle carpt1t, Mollohan Ctr-

,.,.,.•.

Cueto.d, Conducive To Your

.

lltllrlilllr'l Glvo . . I

pot1(114l4*-7444

Buslntss.

210

POIII110H

Opportunity

YocaUonal: Prictic:al Nuralng
lniiiUCIO&lt; (E•porltnced 8.5-N.)
For • Qalfemic: And Clinic Tuc:h• lng (Hqotlly Paalilon).

:II

u.o.

D11dllhii:MSII1.

-

· for

AI

Equ'"'""" Sl Ill. 33.

Sill

guorontoo. !Gyro on job ••pori·

-.wv
_.,....,

1'011&lt;

1110t.306-ll'5-2145.

·-

1TIIEONLYI

&amp;l.-0-~TI

. . Down ... -

olnglt-

*"'ION Down on-mufti.
-..a.aor4Bodroom,....
•Miiii*.OIIr ca'HonM

Rou• Salta: Snack FOOd ...,.,_
laoturor Ntadt Honl Working
C-oalonod Saln Rotlr...,..
laM To Coli On I Eldllllng
--.et..-.at511.

·!he Fodorll Fair Housing N;t
ol1088 which makes HllltQal

IALESPOeiAYAUBU!

to adllettlae "any pntf&amp;tince,

Due To , Our Growlh. We Are

llmilallon or dlsa1ml.....,
baSed on rac:a. color, religion,

For

laolrlng
Carttr
~-tatlvea.
To-Support- Tho

1e11 familial statUI or national

Notion'• •t Ratod Olrlco llachlnta, Locallr. II You Hovo
Baltt E•parltnct And Want A
Peota11ia 11111 Canter Whh:

ortgm, or 1111' 1 -to

--o.r--. I-

niue any such peeftNenc:e,

, Nmi1a11onordllalminollon ~

This ll8WSP'P'"' will not

oE-

knowingly ICXl8lll

efWislll

_,llomonto lor raal-111

•Muww•••

which Is in violation ollhe
law. Our- ... hor8by

~Tralrq

YanDvU,Inc.
11011 ae ma

.

OriOI-327-

that all-ngs
advertised in this neAl ~!ape!
are avdabkt on an equal
basis.

_,unity

REAL ESTATE
'

310 Homes for Salt

10111 Modular 211r, 2 111!11, large
Boo- Ohio Ar11: '111111 Wort, don, clost • IOWn, txtroa. nlct
And Gtnlllllltlnttnonct Full, loti48,0DD.306-171H522.
Pori·TirM, Min. Wogo, 304-8331J1

2 Story. I

-~~~ USA Hiring Fa&lt; Con-

-nAnd Aoor Guatd. lluot
Ill 1• Or Older, Clotn, Noal,
Gtwt Public Rlppor, Toorn 1'111or, Pick Up AppiiOIIIIOn At Rink
U·f t1 :OD Ta S;OO Must Have

,._.don.

s.r-nt tD holt&gt; ptlnllloU- In
PI Ploount. lllnlmum wogo.
~1042.

WANTED IIIIIEDIATELY,
CtrUfted nuralng aaalotanto lor
tU llld lnltrmodllto facility.
ConiiCI Stndrt Rollrnlro, RN,
DON. Lakin Hoopllal. Lakin. wv.
104-175-0180 tiL 124 ll on- F' 1
l:oDam-4:00pnl. Dtodlne lor ap....._ Stptomblr 1807. La.,,.. 11EEO.....,...
klnlt.,
·
WANTED: PorlfUmt lPN'a lot

s.

ln&amp;lnnadltw care fadll..

ly. SalarY commOnaurato with
- · - Co~ Sondra Roll-

rnirt, RH, DON, Laldn Hoopltal,
Llllln, wv. 304-875-0180 oxt.
124 llon·Frl I :OOom-4:00prn.
Datdllnt lor applying It so_.
barS. 1007. La1t1n Ia an EEO..,. ·

room lloull a n -

lot In Btllamtadt. Full alzt
~~~- k11y carpoiod, , _ vlnrt oldng.306-175-153ol
Homo For Stto IFormor War•
hlmol Baoullful, Ita Tho Trpo Of

Home You Will Love: Uuat SaU

AI I Can Not Do Julllct To Cor·
lng For It Duo To Orlvlna lniO A
Latgt SlrHt Pol Nolo llppro•lmotoiJ 11" Dup, OYtr 1 Ft.
Wldo. It Wto Sold It Waa Tho
Hordoat Rlln 01 Tho Hlotory 01
Galipoila, Out Tho Solid.
"-* Fly Alh h Wta Soft I
FlUffy ThO Day Btloro Tho W1'/ao lluddy l No R,oaaon To Ba-wo Wt&lt;t
Sucll A llrOt Holt E -.
Jullliovln~niO Tho
Rool- lltolor Got Unpack
Duo To lnjur.. a Which Bacomo
PrOGttiiiVtly Wor11. (No Witnln~ Slgno 01 Dtntorl Wo Art
HoP'ne To Move To Arfzona For

!!,'! :r.tu~--~ :...~.

... Taitt-~
NU
WIM
Ollora With
Rlflhl o
RoJtCt
114-4414li8.

For.,,,._

• Bod1110111 Spill L- Wlfl 11400
..,
Sq. Fl. lndudlng Full Bllllllltnl
'
Wllh 2 Car Gttlgt, Goa H... 2
180 Wanted To Do
IIU.. From Clalllpolla On Pilot. On 1 112 Fill LA~ CfW
24 Hour Cart, Per Elderly Or Schoolt. 1111.000 Or -on.;,
Handicapped Porion. In llr ~~1!!1~4!44~1~0380~:...__:.__ __
IWM.It-l-oDDO.
POIIIALIIYOWNIR:
ANY ODO .1081: E - pllll~ 11 Court. In Gollpolit, 1
lng. lllruba l wttda trlmmtd. ~~~!oPIILn,llledroorlla. I Car
londooaplng, ald.,..lill odaod, ~
Lot-· Ctll14-310s.n .,., ec. Cd 811 30tt.t7S. · 1
A,pel•l•a•t O.lJ At-

7112.

•

Hou11 in Rutland." reference a
dopool~
out ol - 11111.

no,..,..

... 814-742-2881.

Nice 2blclroam, no peta. Refer·

tral &amp; dtpoaiL 306-175-51$2.

Nlco F u - . For Conarucdon
Wotbro Or ShO&lt;t Torm Rontora,
By Tho,- . 814-4411-2515.
lbr · 1410 l.owll814St..
1250/mo.
• StDOidopoalt.
448-11130.

TWo Btdroom, U!llltr n. 7, 1350
Nioo.WV. -7M-5115.
Month,
Dt110ih Required
1018 folrmont Enoaro El. 14Xl0, (814)24!MI024, (114)245-5151
3bldroom.
IIOYI. rtlrlflerator, lkining, porch•, gaocl 420 Mobile Homts
ooncl., .12.500. 306-17'5-38!1i Of
for Rent
306-l?s-42111.
t Trailer, 1 Apartment, At Blue
11118 Clayron 14170, 3br, tba, Fountain Mottl; PIMII Coil Baiheat pump. · 811 Q front porch, M«13UII-f,IU Ul O'W.
good cond., •12,100. 304·875·
't4x70 thrN bldroom, , .3 00 per
3DIID lrom &amp;6.
montl\114-742-2714.
1883. Ctnturr Bravo 14170, a
- . . _ 2 Ful 1111... c-.1 Air, 2 I 3 bedroom mobile taomea
Fully Fumlthlll. Now Furnlturo, 1280·$300, ,...,.,, water and
---816-802-2187.
-Sol (114)241H311
1007 Fltotwood. 14X52. 2 BR. BN.utiful River VIIW an Kareug~,
2 Bldrooma, Unfurnilhtd, Air
(814)-412·5428
Conditioned, No Pota. Depolil,
111 Tone Buytra E·Z Frr.nolrla 2 References, Fotter"s Mobile
Or 3 Bod1001!11 Around 1200 Per Homo Port&lt;, 814-441~181 .
llo.,IIOD-251-1070. .

2111.,..

All1881 tdvtr1lalng In
. ttQ ii8W fepel' Is subted to

==-----·
~

• K7 6 2
• 8 5
• K 10

Soulb
I

1815 ·Toyota 4wd pick-up. 4&lt;rl i
a-n 1001 lor talt, 11 .00 doz. Sopd, 31" Urta, whlto apollo ·
306-175-4182.
wheela, no ruat.. IJC. coM.
13.DDD. 304 11115 3237.
-hood Vtcolnotion,
Bobr Hollon,somo
Somo.Cafl.
Olhtr 1004 Grand Caravan. Fuly load-~
c.t. (614)2&lt;5 5484
od, Caplalnt Chllro, Llllhtr In&lt;
larlor, Now Trantmllolon, 17,oot
lllloo, lt3.11DD (114)418 rDI"
Ect., IIUOD (814)«8-7D7J
Evoring1, (11414*3045 Day.
t

'

1884 Honda V85 Sabre 1100o&lt;i
120 HP. Water Cooled, ShaH
Dtlvo. 13,750 Ulloa. Like Now
S2,5DD, 81~1-0«3.
'

....,

Min~

-

114 315 4387.

.THE BORN I .O~RR

1011 All 125 din blkt..nowly,.
llult. 11100
814-742-2313.

oao.

llobllt Home Spool Sblto Rou•
t4t a Rou• n&amp;·Ana. Grwl LD-

coiSdloal Dlarlcl, 81~

*IV*.!,

1185 Kawaoakl 300 Bayou 4M4.,

114-802·2110.

.

101111 Yahama Wolverine ••• :

Water Treatment Fllt11r1, LiQhl
Flatur... 11 4-441·2887 After 7

Appllancta:

Racandltlanad

waohora. D&lt;yor~o Rlngn. Rtlrlgratars, 80 Dar Guarantnl
French Cl.lf Maytag, 114.. 448~
71115. .

llllttuoom fl•turn. 2-doora 22'0
x31"W x31"H. !Vanity &amp; oink, 1-

toilet w/valvea I ae1t cover.
Good- 306-875-5711.

1gs7 Ford Tempo DL, 5 IJ&gt;IItd,

air, new dre' sharp. high miles.
but runa oreal, -1800, 814·01!1~
WatOtllno Spacial: 314 20D PSI 431!11.
I2U5 Por IDO: 1" 200 PSI

137.00 Pt&lt; IDD; All 81111 Comp!WIIIon F1t11nao In Stock
RON EVAN)' ENTERPRISES
- . ONo. 1-IDD-537-8521 .
Wood burner wlflrepraof pad.
1125 000.306-175-7430.

550

Building

$Jpplles
Block, brlclt, _., plpu. wind·
GOOD USED APPLIANCES · owa,
llnllllo tiC. Claude Wlntora.
Waahlfa, ~rrera. refrlgeralOrt, Rio Gtando, OH Coli 114·245rangu. Skaggs Appliancll, 71
Ylno Stroot Call14-441-7388, 5121:
1~dQ3W

ND11CE

Pro-Owned Wuhtra l Dryara.
8D Daya Fuii-!J
Frtnch City llaylag
1704 Eollorn-...
~

560 Pete for Silt

1887 llonto Carlo SS 88,000
OriglrwJ MiiH, Excellent Condi·

Hon, Orglnal Car 15,800, Cook
llotoro, 114-4441.0103.
1888 Chrysler Naw Yorker, load·

ed. 3.0 lhro va. loll of - r-11.
high mlloaga. no ruol 814-44113814.
1198 Grand Piix, New Tir11,

127,000 llilo1, S2,8DD, Coli Ahor
5 P.ll614-o446-1638.
1111 Dodge Converilon Van,
Condition. Orlgln~l Mile&amp;,

Yamaha PW5D Good Shapa;
llOD, 114-245-111161 A1111 1 P.M. ,

750 11o1t1 &amp; Motors
for Sale
14' aluminum V-boaom boot wid!
1rt1111, G.5 Evlnrudt ..-. 1000.

=-lc:

. BIG NATE

814-1115 421111

14' john boot and

nUt&lt;- u :

IIOrl,

I8DD. 81":

C.Oi'IE HERE.
SloiEETIE-PtE!

THE.Rr:s 501"1E60DY

PUMKIN, THIS 15
TEDDY! --rtooy·s
OME OF 11'1' eEST

I WANT YOU TO

11 FL Aatroglaaa Flblrglaai
Ba11 Boat /Trailer No Mo10r
11.000. 111 ue 38Dt Alylmo.

FRIEN~t

t1EET!

1N7 1111. Stllmp. IIOhp lltfcrulatr wnralltf, 2 Nlo jlcktla. 4
.......... 114-4411-3114.

1188 Rtngor 373V tr 12 ·24V
Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evlnrudo·
au-..r.ae.eoo. 114-11112·2770.

.2 Sprlngor Spaniol Dooa. Blat:k I

Wlllll, I ....... 01d, Jnor.-: 2

Igloo Bo•n. 1 lltll, Homo...
1100 For Bofl, llulll 1111 Sold To.

760

golhart 114-441-0487.

Plaw.ll4-448-7185.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

PEANUTS
'fOUR OLD TEACI-IER MOVED
AWA'I' .. TIM 'fEAR 'fOU'LL
I-lAVE A HEW TEACI-IER ..

Uatd IRtbulfl, All Trpaa, 0Ytr :

to,ooo Tr•namilllona. Accen ,.

Romooolaollrad Main Shthl For •

Standard

Tranarill811on

All •

T - &amp;14-245-!illn

Polly'•- &amp; U_, Fum~u"'
2101 JtllononAwo.
Open g:31). 5:00 lion-Sol
306-175-SOFA (7032)

odor

movement

32 Disturbing
thing
34 Brewed drink . ·
38 Rower'a tool •
40 Labor
organizer
Chavez
42 Body

43 Relinquish
4'1 Stralford'e
river
45 Philosopher . :
Immanuel -'

46 NC~Urlshed
47 JekyH'a
oppoalte
48 Days of51 VIctory sign
53 Sleeat
stage

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~Cipher cryp!Ograms are cteated from q\JOialions by tamoua peopta , pasland p1esen1

Eacttlflrtar, fie

' U IN

UTHG
DRUOF

SG

.
S. ACool Cor And Ch«l Our rhf
· So.i"f' In rhf ClosSI(ltd S.Ctlorl.

!WEDNESDAY

Campers •
Motor Homttl

c-. -. :..

Air, 85,500 Milot, U,350 080, "Roal Llahr Trut:k
816-25&amp;-«14D, 114-2S&amp;a4117.
OVen, ~urnace, Shower, Com·
1001 PonUac SUnl&gt;lrd Stindtrd modo, Wit• Htttor, Tapo Pltytr,
Aiello. E•colltnt condldon. 114Tranomlalion S2,4DD, 114·«8· 251-8038.
3437,814-441-1837.

•

•
•

1802 Ford Tampa, 80,000 111111,
VII. Automttic. Amlfm Callllta.
EYOrJI1Ing, TH~ Runt Wid
looko Groatl Aoklng 14,5DD. Call
11114)25&amp;-i153

1803 Goand-Am uo. Conti. rod 'Ill
grar Interior. Will take par off

S7,1DD. :JD4.1175-11107.

1Q77 Ford Wo-or Home, 24 Ft~ •

1883 llozda 626LX 5 Spood, Fully Soil Conlllnod, Nlco Shopo.
Chompogno Color, 4 Crllndor, All $S.SDD. oeo. 814-441~584.
- · 8B.ODO Killin. J.lu11 Sol~
Got Company Cor. $8,300, 114SERVICES

ASTRO·GRAPH

ue e304

810

OTHG

FOTF

'

E I B G 8

NGLGDYGE.'XTDGB . D . 1 ' YTEERG .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: I'm lhe Rodney Dange~ield of baseball. I'm well liked
bul not respected."- (O~IIie!derl Ken Griffey Jr.

'
WOlD
GAM I

. ~_ ,;~ :;_; .EI. ;R.:.,I.: .~. ;DI;. .-1~~

One tl1ing I learned early
·in life was that people who
. - - - - - - - - -... won't take advice will never
WI M E L D
take- - - --- -! . --'·-.L---'.1.-.L---1. .,

L.

I

I

.1--,.;16;;_,;.1..:.:.,.;1:..:;.1..::."17~ Q

Complete the cl'luckle quoted

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llfoUmo ouaran110.
local references furnished. Ealablllhod 1875. Coli (114) 4410870 Of 1-8D0-287-G578. Roetra~'

~re to look for romance and you'll lind
il. The Aolro-Graph Matchmaker i~slantly
reveals wll.leh signs are romantically perloci lor you. Mall $2.751o Matchmaker,
c/o lhls newspaper, .P.O . Bo• 1758,
Muriay Hll Slalion, New Vorl&lt;, NY 10156.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) Today, you
may have. to operate in cla$e proximity
.-..... mak
f 1 ill t
llh
" 1 person "'N
eo you ee
a

WotorrwoolnJ

-~
ThuiNI&amp;y, Sept. 4, 1997

A dynamic friend might bring lortultooa
'"-lances lnlo your life once again In
year ahead. This lima your pal may
even be luckier for you lhan he or eht
waaln tho pe!l.
VIIIOO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Tasks with
which you have lo contend could be
ralher ve.rng loday. FOCU8 on.your anlk:ipeled rewards and let the poslllve
••l'ecla lighten your burdens . Know

1"-

ease. However. you wHI have the upper
hand lhia lime. •
SCORPIO (oCt. 24-Nov. 22) A negaflve
condliion thai has settled upon your
household recently Could have some convorio aspecla, bul its power Is diminishlng, Keep smiling:

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You
have ample 1r1enc11 upon whom you can
draw.loday ..Seleclamlcable companions
and Ignore acquaintances who tend to
make waves.
CAPRICORN (Die. 22-.lan. It) Wyou've
made a major purchase and today discover you could've bough! It cheaper
elsewhere, don'l hesitsle lo demand an
~frOm your supplier.
AQUARIUS (...n. 20-Feb. It) You and
your male might not agree where minor
lssuea are conr=-mod lodey, bulln slgnillcant INI"~ vnu1 M nn thA .iilame wave--

lenglh.
PISCES (Feb. 26-March 201 You mighl
suffer some Inconvenience loda.y es a
resun ol anolher's ploblem. You should
nbl mind, because he or sl a would do
lhe same lor you.
ARIES (Marci121 -Aprll 19) " oday, auoid
lnvolv8ments with a clique tnat includes

an abrasive person who makes you ·
uncomfortable . Associale wilh lriends
who let you bo yourseW.
. TAURUS (April 20-Mey .20) Commit
yoursen lo seeing a project lhrough lo
complellon loday. Gratifying results can
bo achieved it your lonacily equals lho
·Q
uslgnmenl's.
EMIHI (lloy 21.June 20) Someone you
encounter socially today might arouse
your Ire. lei your boHer judgmenl pre\lall
and Ignore tho agtilllor.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) Occasion·
ally· one musl spend a lillie money In
order 10 make money. Oo not be afraid to
prime lhe pump loday If your lnsilncls
dlrecl you 10 do so.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Suppr!l88 lncllnalions loday to negatively preludge lhe
oulcome ol events. Lei nature run 111
course; you might be rooch luckier then
you realize.

•

-.

.
.
.
.
•
.
by fdling in the m1ssing Words
L-...l.-1-...J..-1-...J.......J you develop hom step No. 3 below.

f9 PRINT
NUMBERED tEnERS
IN THESE SQUARES

.,

.·

Professor of History lo class : "The past can be .
changed, just read the biography of a WELL KNOWN
person I"

'

PorUng Out tUBS FO&lt;d Rlngtr &gt;1,
Drivl. 114 ... CICI52.

790

DG. DIERGB

WB

Kennel - Prowl- Novel- Walnur- WELL KNOWN

New gas tanka, 1 ton truck. •
whtola l radiators. D 'I R Aulrl, •
Ripley, WV. 304-372-31133 or 1- ;
IIOD-2J'3.83211.
•

100 t Plymouth Sundance 4
Doora. Rear Spolllf. Automatic,

c~ s!andsiOf anolhef Today's clue: N «~Uals D

SCRAM-lETS . ANSWERS

Ught tnombly. O.ygon and too- •
tylono filod .... tiCNngorl. :
814-742-21112.
'.

-

50 Chemical
1
·
suffix

6 GET
UNSCRAM8LE lETTERS TO I
ANSWER

•

,

28 Barblo·a beau.
29 Shriner's hll 30 Finger
·

Full line of auto bod·r, panels, :
palntt and IUppllta, .a 10 allll, •

u.-

23 This (Sp.) 25 Maple genUI

offenslve

. - - - - - - - - - ,·'. co l"'u&lt;:inn&lt;:l

Budget Price Transmlaaions,

Coler T.V., Wuhlr, Dryer, Roftrl.
gorator, Fr-tr. Air CompraaiOI',
814-2511-1231.

t•

22 Boundary

East
Allpass

Bennell opened' with a very light
one spade. Mr. H·o ffman overcalled
two diamonds. Mrs. Bennett went
straight to game.
Hoffman led the diamond ace,
lhen switched to the club jack. Bennett won with his king and played off
the two top trumps . Now he couldn't
make it. To succeed, he had to guc.s
the trumps and pick up the clubs.
Assuming West wasn't playing a
deep game, his trick-two switch
marked Easl with the club queen ,
· Dummy 's eight and nine of clubs
could have combined lo ruff out
East's queen .
The Bennells argued for some
minutes before John leaned across the
table, grabbed his wife's arm, and
slapped her several times. She wenl
into her molher's bedroom, brought
out lhe family 's gun, and shot her
husband dead.
Mynle was tried for murder but
acquitted. You may draw your own

now Big Fool WhHI I Urt kR, .
~~xc. cond. t4,000. :
Applltnota For Sola, All Good
Condition: Dlahwthor, Double
Ovon, Rango Top. Ringo Hood.

Nol1b

13 Force (Lit.)
17 And 10 on
, (abbr.)

of ·
.....-.,....,..,.r-t . 2627 Measure
land
Having an

one.

axcelant condition, Jeu than s,
lloura riding dmt, tailing l4100c

f.1ER CHANDISE

·'

21 Center of
shield

heroine

o.,_

20 Aclor Gulsgtr,

~,.....,..

Dr. Samuel Johnson wrole.
"Combinations of wickedness would
overwhelm the world did not those
who have long practiced pedidy
grow failhless to each other.': I suppose an example of this was Hitler
and Stalin. If the fonner had honore(l
his peace treary with rhe latter. what
nightmares would have befallen the
rest of the world? ·
·
This is the 58th anniversary of the
outbreak of World War II. Although
it bears little comparison, blood was
shed over this bridge deal.
The scene was an apanmenl in
Kansas City in 1931. Sitting South
was John S . Bennell, pannering his
wife, Mynle, against Mr. apd Mrs.
Hoffman. The Benne1ts, not in the
most affectionate of moods, had been
constantly criticizing each other. This
was the fiqal deal. in more ways t~an

FRANK &amp;: EARNEST

1805 4x4LT Blazer (40rJ 28,1)01(
Yllea, Loaded, Leather Seat~.

1887 YZBD YomahiiSOD,
FW._ (614)387-nSS

Weal
2t

10 Editor'• order

12 Hardy's

By Phillip Alclt!r

11115 Chivy Slut&lt; KS Silverado
4M4 V·8, Au!Omttlc:, PW, Pl., 1&amp;,
AIIIFII Caaoeuo. Towing Pack'.
ago, Now nrn &amp; W11to11, Eicof.
font Condition, Call After 8, 114:1117·7871.

Mobile holM lit• avallatU beJ.

llralglllforward
131nlrlnge on
52 Chy official
14 Colton 1obrlc 54 Gave
15 Sinful
55 Conductor
15 Sounda
Provln
18 Burrowing
. 56 Chlct&lt;en Kiev,
animal
t.g.
19 Iowa hra.
57 Swarm
· 20 Aclor'e algnal
221111DOWN
24 Slrane
26 Atlronoula' all ·I ' Roman 90S
2 VIti period of
rlah1
''
lime
29 Cfenchod
3 Vlvachy ;
hondo
4 C~ment
·
31 .Wort apace
Ingredient
33 lntarnollonol
unclortllndlng 5 Actresa Novak
35StnolorHelch 8 - ,de plume
7 --Lucy
36 uat ..n.,
37 Prefix lor plane 8 Gambling
39
color
40 IRS t&lt;nploytt, 9 ~others
. perhtpa
(2 wdl.)

Cards have
blunt edges

245-5484.

woon A!hona end Pomtroy, coli

46 Foomy

Opening lead: t A

Angua Brown Swl11, JerHf I 1884 Ranger 4 Whool Orlvo, S·
Holatlln Calvtlllooll)' Hlilora, 2 Spotd, $2,250: 1g114 4 Whtlltr :
Angol'll Goats 175 Both, 11•· :rlD XT 12.250.114-256-1050.
•.

Motorcycles ·

o

HOW ABOUT A GAME
OF GAROS, TATER? ·

vane

740

know

43 Dtaaert choice

ll/ulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

'

I

• 4
•A9842
E..I
ol! 4

• Q 9 4
" AJ 3
t A Q 10 9 2
tKJ ' 763
• J 6
• Q 7 53
Soulb
•KJ985

IIDoH75-21115.
~
Campar Troller lot for Ron~
-304-~rn: Goorgoa Crook Rd; 1877 Fori
Trucll 80,000 Actual lllitlo llilll•
Stt To Approclato Call·
7 J101 old gtldfnil, aound l gen. (814)148 ,.
do. moluo a .,., 4-11 projoc~ lor
,_.,., ....,6-802 1113
730
r. 4-WDs

460 Space lor Rent

P.ll.

Houoolor rona noor Pomoror, no
,..,.. cti814-IIIIZ·7888.

• Q 7 2

.

RENTALS

2!6-1151.

· Wetl

1804 Ford ~ 4cyt. 5opd. ... .
new topper, d,OOO mUaa. IIC:. •

4te MM, 1-801).281-00QI.

I

doni, frH eaclmat•, Uledme

And 'lllu Havo Good Wotl HaltIta. COtnmullloltion Sklllo Balle
11--.1 SIIIH1o WortU,.pot•liod And Tho lltllte To
Ill A Leodtr, Thtn Call For, A
Conldtniol rn-ftW. Four Yttr
llatkollng Or Buolnooo Dogrtt
......... llotl Not Roqulrod.

ar-

Rtlrigorator S Yurt Old, Worlla
TRANSPORTATION
Good 1125. 114-a10-281111. .
SUIIIIiR IAli: Control Air
Condltlontra: Fun 5 Yoor w.....,. 71 0 Autos for Slit
ty. "I 'lllu Diin'l Call Uo Wo Both
Loool" Froo Eatlmattol Add·On 1883 Chtvy Truck. 1868 Ford
Ht11 Pumpo Onlr Sllahty Hlohlr. Truck, IIHIU Chivy llallllll, 1872
Call Ua Today. 18}'7 Ia lhe Chevy Truck. Call lnfotmation
Twenty Stvonth Yoar It\ Tho (814)245-0084
Hooting I Cooling Bu~NUI 814-

ona-101. lolloll 311\LR 410 HouSII for Rent
nt-ln llllelltn, lllth. -monL
Now only aoklng 191,000· but

Now Hovon W.VA., 114·111"fAIILYDAEAIIHOUIE"
2813.
HUgo 411r, 2 lllth """'"· ~
l
all now ... through n.., .....
230 Proltlllonl
atato of lllo 111 otCuri!J oya-.
- StrvlceS
12,48-- ••.54 ptr monlh.
Qnlyo,t
·LMngllan'a ·bllaemenl nlet:·
proofing, 111 b111m1nt repalra

w

a.,-..,. ••

lng 148.000. 3rd homo It localld

Convonloneo Storo For loaao,

1:!111

Ooll TabiO Will I Chalrl, MatchIng Chino Hutch RoM Top Doalt

.-.PO...r-Aa·

=~3.=------------1320 MObHtHORMS

for

Huaqvarna a .OrHn Machine excellent condldan, et.t-112·
- · I brulh
on- 71M2.
,_ Sldlr't Equljlmonl. 306-1757ol21.

s-.

IIECRU.110H PROOIWI

0111

bit lrtdo lor oldtf bike; tltc~lc
, _ •• 128;11t14113221

INOIICEI
OHIO VAU.EY PUBLISHING CO. oiorrw-"lllkoan,
rtcommtndo IIIII you do but~ RuUand: Laahtf Rood- 82 ..,..
ntll with ptOplt you llnow, ilnd ~nd, c:orn g"-und, M&gt;Odl
fi()T 10
monty tllrouah lllo
nlng) ......,., nfct blm. 2 bedroom In l'llmoroy, 1250 per
have lnvtolfgalad
d road. Aoklng only month; 114-11112-8542.
2 or 3 bedroom In New Haven.
~~~--------1·~
For Ronr. 1000
.
·
ca. gatagt, llloanitnt. U351mo.
Sq. Fl For
Or
$L Rt.
Ol8oo localld • 312 E. -.r
IU lllill 4108.
33, Now H-, W.VA., 816-t~HShal. l'omoluy, 0No.
:1113.
JodiW.Ctraoy.-.
3br In Rio Grandt - . l4251mo.
• cltpooit (ltlllOl, roltreiiCOt r•
C............ Building For Solo Or 1'MI bodnlorn. IIIII. W •
r•lt qulrad. 306-175-22811.
Lnn; 4000 SQ. Fl., $1. Rt 33, ...
~,
,,:,:-.: s,-o •. Olio,
Now Haven, WVA. 114·8811• ~ '
COUnll)' Hol"'''lt: 2 Bedrooms, 0.
poalt Roqulrtd, $276/llo., 114- ·
31

CoMoot: Galllt .Jaolcton -VIn10n
JYSD At 814-245-5334, ExL 208
For A~Jpkalion It'D nwlcn.

1104r.- II

- .. ...., _...,, 145: pooof.

wl.,

~~TE·-•to

.

Loveuat, new condition, 171:

Growth And DtvtlopmonL Join
Our Stall At They Dtllvtr Tht
Fineat Cllont Ctro Through
TM-k And A lllahiJ Skilled
Know .. dOt 8111. l'lta11 Call
304-523-1114 Or Sond Rtoumo
To: De alcp •••• Thlfapw Cenllr, Inc., P.O. llol Mli7, Hunllng16.00111 -..-.. oldar-trPO homo
Will Do BaiJrollting In lly Homo .......
_
Wldjllot! ....
: ::.;:WV:,:.:25::l01:::;.·- - - - - I Grttn
School lllolrlc~ llaYt RoflOb
an
lropla011.
5 BR. 9 llltho.
Orfvors wonted, apply In penon, Ctilet.-.e741.
LR. DR. baoomtnt, addiUonal
32415 Wagner Lane, Pameroy,
alklng
haul junk or nth - · S3SI bulldng. 3 acroa mil. -.no.~•:::a=•.::'"=k=------l WW
piciWp
food. 306-1)'5.5035.
only S5oi.ODDI
Homo Buolnooo S.A.S.E. $1.00
11.0. OniJ, S.P.F. lnf. P.O. BOll Will Haul Pfcll,Up Loada, TrH Syraou11: 3 homea~ uc:h one
:14 7358, Son Fronclaco. CA Trimming, l Removal, lntorlor I dilltfontl Brld&lt; homo looatod with
041:14.
Exterior, Pointing,
landscaping,
;;.;,;.:.;;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ J Profeulonal
Upholstery I 125' ri""rfrontJ;e on 1 112 ..,.,
nvl. 3 8R. 2 bath. LR. FR. DR,
Hooded Blbrolnor For Friday Ortpory Cltlr«&lt;g. Car Dtiling 1 llilchan, patio.
venf 1 TUIIIondly llomlngo, Houaoclnnlng, Lawn011ro And
·
~· For 7 l Varloua Olher Pt&lt;lormtncoa Not 2nd homo Ia located on llh
I Old. lorsnceo Roqulrod, lltnMoned, Roflrancta Avtllablo, Streit hll lNtln rema11111d
lt4-25S-1025.
eu ue ''??
-nreta.c:arpol...r---eome MW wlndDwl. 2 BR,
Ptlttini_IO_..,.
10 I ~om......,., col 814-802·
lA
Dpluo
R .dol
- ..
lllth.
garagf
hod·
gttagt
FltJMJClAL
ilnd
addlllonll
llllkflnt.
Cloll
10
- -5-lllpm.

~

no

10' pull brulll hog, 1 112 ytora
Trucks
Slit
r_, ~ wl1h IIUII'4l jun\pw,
1811 Doclge one ton !ruck, like ;
114-0112-13112.
tlroo, bOdJ good. 111111. 114- &lt;
Ill. Kina CUIIt, llnQ-TypoiiNih I8U52II.
c:.-$325 (114)4411-1161
'
1815 Chol'roltt plciWp. full alzo, ·
old,

AERRlCIIIIOlllRS
Ropoirod,
_ , _ .. Col Ron£-., _ __

, , , .....~- .... Frat
Gaal Price recandrledt.tcH to
185.000.

rm-onlltlnDorwn.W•
babialt any ahlfl Rea10nablt
rattl and rtltrtncll. Call and ...,_, 1400 ....... loot homO
on 1141&lt;ro. 3 BR.. LA. OA. 1&lt;11011--0111-2023.
tn, lllstmont, city uUIIIIos. Goa
Prolnolo..r Trao - . . Stump FA htat, lnoulated. Aalllng
Aamaval, Frta i;lllmarul ln- $25.000. IItke uo an olltir.
Bldwoil, Ohio. 114·388- CGzy IIIIo CD!IIIgl .., Rl33. 2 IIR.
bath. kllehon, LR. I acroa mil.
11841, 81 4·3117-lOID.
S&amp;Y Water Hauling Servlctl, Nowly lnour.ted. Sopdc IJI!em.
Asking 148,000. Rd. oR·
"Whtrt Purity 11 Our Pualon• 111
ooontry Uvlng W/38 acrH IIIII
Glvo Ua A Call Today: 304-1175tnd Goa Homo ... 4 BR. 1
3718
112 llltho, LR, largo ullilty .,.m,
. .
endoud parch with
- · · CNid eire In 11y Homo, mudroom,
24 Hour Sorvlct, AI Agn. 114- llo!IIIL -onlyaiNng IOI,IDO.
441-ot64.
Racine: Price juat reduced

vlronmtnt With A Dl-tlfled

.

t

., 10 8 5

&amp;1 o Farm Equipment

JET

~--r..r~.~;::

-

,.

No h
09-03·97
• A 10 6 3

Aalor-~

49 Hoi

11 Worth

FARI.1 SUPPLIES

41

ACROSS

SEPTEMBER 3 I

·,.

�Ohio Lottery

Indians,
Reds post
triumphs

OPEl
JJOII..fll.
511.9-6

Pl'ck 3:

235

Pick 4:
...11
· Super Lotto:

2-4-28-31-39-41

Sporta on Page 5

Claar tonight, low In
the mld·40a. Friday,
aunny, hlgha In the mid·

Kicker:

352212

701.

•

J

llbl. 41. NO. 98'
C111t7, Ohio Vallty Publllhlng Company

1998
TRUCK'S
All

,

1

.

All, .AM/FM RADIO

AIR .

:. $ '

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio, Thursday, September 4, 1997

AGlnnen Co. NewtJIIper

authorizes loan ·for
pu·m p replacement
.

TOYOTA

HAVE
DUAL

.

2 Sectlona, 12 Pllgft, 35 ctnta

,-------On the ·ob-----____;,_---. Pomeroy ·council -

TOYOTA

NEJI
1998 TOYOTA
.

entine
By BRIAN J ..REED
Sentinel News Staff

IS
LOW .
IS...

BAGS

:1.9971114 ED. CAB

ONE IN

1rs
cws

A large front window frames conatructlon worker• it the site
of the new Eastern Elementary School on State Route 7. The men

are working on ail area of lha buldlng which will eventually house

a achool library and brench of the county publk: llbrery.

Proposed URG branch campus .discussion set Tuesday
By Jill! FREEMAN
•I

..

TOYOTAUV4·
'

\

'

.'

. '

IS

IS ·

LOW

LOW

IS

is

LOVE TOYOTA
.

•·•t

MON.-FRI.
SAT.9-6

CAIRY

D·LEXUS

W.VA.'S LARGEST TOYOTA
DEALERSHIP
IS LOOKING
.
FOR GOOD· RELIABLE SALES
PEOPLE. EXPERIENCE·. ROT
NECESS~RY. PLWE APPLY
IN.THE TOYOTA SHOWROOM.
OPEN.

·HAWK

TOYOTA

.'

AND

NUMBER
1

IMPORT
DULEI
liTHE
STATE

Sentinel News Staff
"Standing room only" is what
local business and education leaders .
are hoping for at a community meeting Tuesday night to discuss a proposed branch campus of the University of Rio Grande.
·
.
The meeting will help URG officials gauge interest in a branch campus, and seeing the idea become 'reality pepends greatly on just how
much interest is shown. according to
Meigs County Economic Development Director Ron McDade.
·Dr. Barry Dorsey, president of
both URG and 'Rio Grande Commu·
nity College, along with members of
the Meigs County Chamber of Com, merce, the Meigs County Economic
. 'Development Board of Directors and
URG officials are considering locating a branch campus in Meigs County, possibly begi11ning with the
upcoming winfer quaner.
The meeting will be at 7 p.m. at
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy to discuss plans
aod to answer questions regarding
academic courses and programs that
might lie offered as well as other
details related to this activity, said
McDade, who strongly encourages

all members of the community to
auend the meeting.
At noon Tuesday, Dr. Dorsey will
also be the guest speaker at the chamber's regular September luncheon at
Carleton School on Syracuse. All
chamber members and guests are
invited to attend. . .
.
Dunng each acuvoty, he woll par·
ticipate in a discussion on plans for
the pro~sed branch campus,
McDade satd.
.
A large turnout IS encouraged at
both functions in o~der to show s~pport for thos educatoonal opportumty
for Meigs County and surrounding
area residents, he added.
During the evening meeting, following open remarks, a panel discussion may be held to discuss the
proposed branch campus, he said.
'"I1tis is an excellent opportunity
to bring some college opportunities
closer to home," sai\1 John R. Riebel
Sr., superintendent of the Meigs
County Educational Service Center.
Meigs residents wanting to allend
college must now either move away
or commute out-of-county to communities such as Athens, Rio Grande
or Nelsonville, he said.
"It's not often that we have an
opportunity to work with a universi-

. ty willing to teach classes here in .
. Meigs County. We see a lot of things
go out·of Meigs County... !his is an
opponumty to see thmgs come onto
Me,!g~ County," he said. . " .
. It~ a great opportumty, Riebel
saJd. It depends on what ktnd of
.response the ~mversoty s~~s from the
people of Meogs County.
.
. Roebel, "':ho has . been meeung
woth umversoty offic1als concemmg
the proposed venture, swd the kind of
classes taught woll depend on the
wh~t ~~le are mterested on.
. ThiS I~ not JUSt !or hogh school
graduates, he saod. llus os a .~real
opport~noty for a lot of people.
Meogs County Department of
Human Servoces Dorector Mo~hael L.
~w1she~,saod Thesday evenmg s meetmg IS one of the more tmponant
meeungs resodents have . had the
oppo~untty to attend for a long try."
People could take courses they
ume.
have
long held a desire to take but
He agreed that many people lack
rehable transportat.oon .or cannot couldn't afford to take. he said. ·
Swisher encoumged people to
afford the cost and t~.memvolved on
attend
the meeting: "There are a lot
a lengthy commute: ThiS bnngs the
of
pieces
of the puzzle COlOing
opportumty ~ lot closer to the resttogether;
this
is the first step on a long
dents of Metg~ Cou?,tY and ~.oul_d
journey
leading
to a tremendous
~educe students costs, he s"!d. This
asset
(or
Meigs
County."
IS a poslllve step ... and enhances tbe
county's ability to attract future indus- 1

Lawmakers say

School financing ·debate _to start from .scratch

1$ .

LOW

IS

MOTORS .LEXUS
ST. ALBANS '

j:

~

.

' .

(TOYOTA

Middleport for body repairs to one
car, and engine repairs to two others.
The body repairs are estimated ao
$895, while the engine repairs are ·
estimated at $1,600, depending upon
extent of damage.
Webster said the two cars requiring engine repairs are using excessive
oil, and require repairs to the engine's
heads.
Crestlyn Hill and Sheila Deems
met with council to discuss ongoing
· vandalism to a house they own on
Nye Avenue.
·
Mrs. Hill said thar they had spent
' $ 10,000 to make window and other
repairs to the former Hicks residence,
which has been vacant for two years:

-Repair to a village fire truck, esli·
inated to cost $30,000, ""as approved
when Pomeroy Village Council met
in regular session on Wednesday. The
meeting lime had been changed due
to the Labor Day weekend.
Fire ChiefOanny Zirkle was at the
meeting and recommended that the
war,erpumponthedepartmcnt's 1987
pumper be replaced, rather · than
repaired, because FMC, which built
the pumper. has gone out of business,
and parts would eventually be impos·
sible to find.
Zirkle said that most of the parts
needed to repair the pump co'uld be
.purchased for an estimated $7,500,
ActingC~iefWebstersaidthalthe
but if those parts were to malfunction, vandalism happened at various times,
they would likely be irreplaceable. . and that an individual had been quesThe truck will be out of commis- tioned twice at the police depanment.
sion for over six months while the
Patrolman Mark Norman, also at
repairs" are underway. Zirkle ;aid it the meeting, said that be had been
would take six months for the pump monitoring the property on a regular
to arrive, and another six weeks for . basis.
the pump to be replaced.
Upon the recommendation of
The pump on the truck pumps Webster, Nonnan was promotell
1,500 gallons of water per minute at within the police department, from
various pressures, Zirkle said. The Patrolman to Sargent. James Stacy
estimated life of the .the ftre truck was promoted to Assistant Chief.
itself is at least 20 years.
According to · Webster, Stacy had
C6uncil, upon the motion of coun- resigned that position at council's last
cil member Geri 'Walton, authorized meeting as a courtesy to the inc.omCierk Kathy Hysell to pursue !inane- ing chief.
ing for the P.ump replacement.
Other busin~
_
.... bJi~l!rt~ . "I· .
.
qonald· ancJ••~elly Maurer di•·
Councol alsQ au honzed repaors to cussed a grave stte at Beech Grove
three village police cruisers. Acting Cemetery · that had been damaged
police chief James Webster present·
··
ed estimates from 1h-County Ford in
Continued on JIIIIC 3

IS

TOYOTA COROLLA

.

COLUMBUS (AP) ::..._It's back to
the basics for lawmakers trying to figure out how to rework the state's
method of paying for public schools.
"We 're dropping way back to tbe .
fundamental basis of the issue,"
. House SpeakerJo Ann Davidson told
reporters Wednesday.
Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, and
Senate President Richard Finan. RCincinnati,- announced the creation of
two 12-member committees, each
with members from the House and Senate, that will begin meeting next
week to study the main elements of
the school financing debate.
The Joint Subcommittee of
Finance will try to figure out the cost
of an adequate education. The Joint
Subcommittee of Ways &amp; Means will
evaluate the future role of property
· levies ·and other taxes in funding

schools.
· rr;;;;-i·n early August.
The adequacy issue and the
Democrats, who said. they were
reliance of schools on propeny taxes left out of the discussion the firsllime
were factors in the Ohio Supreme around, said they hoped for better
Court's ruling in March that the treatment this time.
state's method of paying for public
"It's probab.ly a good way to go,"
schools is unconstitutional.
said Senate Minority Leader Ben
' The court gave lawmakers one Espy, D-Columbus.
year to come up with an alternative..
"I just hope it works in a biparti·
Davidson said the committees were san fashion."
wo~~ing under no set.deadlines.
Espy said Voinovich put together
Last ttme, ~e ~ 01 ~ccused of an education task force that included
movmg too fast, .srud Fo,nan mref- members from both parties as.soon as
erence 10 the Legtslature 5 prevtous .the Supreme Court issued its ruling.
effort . to develop a new school- But Democmts said the task force
financmg plan.
.
. simply endorsed Voinovich 's proThat all~mpt w!" based on Gov. posal with little Democratic input.
George V?movoch s proposal to ask
Espy said he doubted Voinovich's
voters to oncrease the state sales tax . proposed increase in the state sales
by a penny J?Cf dollar. It was not sup- tal( would emerge again.
port¢ by conservative House Repub"The sales tax is definitely out in
licans and Dem01:rats and was woth- tenns of the I cent-hike unless you

see some belt-tightening by state government ... unless you see business
pay a greater share," he said.
The new committee structure
received a lukewarm response from
the leader of a coalition that successfully challenged tho state's school
financing system.
·
"We still need to figure out what
we' re buying," said William Phillis,
executive director of The Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy of
School Funding.
Phillis recommended a third commince that would detennine the need
for and the cost of items such as aliday kinderganen, smaller class sizes
and more teacher training.
·

,l

_Negotiators ·resume
bargaining.today in
Ga/1/a ~schoo/ strike
By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Editor

and negotiations on Aug. 26 failed io

produce a settlement before the strike

Negotiators seeking a resolution to ~line.
Piclcel lines remained up at the
the three-day-old strike in the Oallia
district's
eight school buildings today
Coun1y Local School District
until
an
agreement is reached
resumed bargaining this morning
between·
the
associations and ·the
after reponing progress atthe'end ~f
board.
an eight-hour session Wednesday.
. The GCLEA, which represents
Fmnces Montaomery, president of
tbe ·Gallia County Local Support Gallia County Local's teachers, have
Staff Association, said the talks pro- been without a conll'aCt.since Sunday. ·
duced more discussion between the The Support Staff Association, rep.
association and the Gallia County resenting bus drivers, cooks, custoLocal Board of Education in finding dians. aides, maintenance and secrea solution to oulllanding issues on a tariCs. has niJt had an agreement since
J..C30.
"ew contract.
. Picketers are wearing T-shirts
Gallia County Local Education
Association President Cathy Green: Jtading "It's not just about$," a refleaf echoed the sentiment_,notjng that erence to the associations' stance that
the GCLEA's negotiating team was · the impasse on new contracts that's
existed since mid-summer is not just
encouraged by the discussions.
"We're making progress, working over monetary issues, but on contract .
our way through the·contract and tak· language the associations Said the
ing it one thing at a time," shqaid.· board has previously declined to disNegotiators for both sides were cuss in negotiations.
The board's last offer of a 3 per~
tight-lipped on specifics, as per an
•'l:nl
pay increase, continued pard
agreement n&lt;~t to discuss the issues
benefits
and a rollover of ·previous
· publicly "in the best interest of
contracts
was rejected panly because
resolving tbe situation," said William
of
the
language
issues, and in the
M. Detets II, the board's attorney.
board's
request
for
one-year con"I think we're making progress,
slowly but surely," Deters added. tracts.
The board has asked for single'"There is a 1enuine interest in resolvyear agreements with the associations
ing the problems." ,
Deters confirmed that the board is in the hopes its financial situation
discussing at length contract issues as . may improve. The board is awaiting
a new state funding formula for ·
requested !ly the associations.
"They expressed a qesire for us to schools ordered by the state Supreme
, do that, and we're here to do what- Court, and the outcome of its case
before the Ohio· Board of Tax
ever .it takes," he said.
Appeals
asking for an upward adjust·
The associations went on strike
ment
of
the district's voted inside
Tuesday after rejecting the last con-tract offer from tbe board on Aug. 22 millage . .

Atkinson is expected to
complete OMEGA project
· Work on tl!e Belleville Hydroelectric Plant will continue with the
same contractor; acconlinJ to the
power comp111y which will operate
the plant. ·
•
.
American Municipal Power •
Ohio said yesterday that the Guy F.
Atkinson ConstruCtion Co., and its
bonding company, First FidClity and
Deposit, notified AMP • Ohio that
Atkinson. would remobilize to con-

tinue its work at the Belleville, W.Va.
site.
Atkinson, which is the general ·. ·
contractor for the powerhouse portion
of Ohio Municipal Electric Genemtion Agency Joint Venture 5, had disco,.linued work on the project on
August IS, citing difficulties brought
about by its Chapter II bankruptcy
filing.
-continued on page 3

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