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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

ED 1996 AS THE #1 TOYOTA 414
TRUCK DEALER IN THE WORLD!
WE:CAN'T IMPROVE ON THAtr·BUT NOW WE HAVE TO
.
STAY THERE. HELP. HELP! HELP!

Gordon wins
top spot in
CMT300

Super Lotto:
1-7-16-25-28-47
Kicker:
5-9-1-0-3-o
Pick 3:
5-6-o
Pick 4:
0-8-4-o

Sports on Page 6

.

NOnCE: C&amp; 0 MOTORS CHEVROLO &amp; OLDSMOIIlE SERVI(I DEPT. HAS DOUILID IN SIZE TO ACCOMMODATE THE HIGH VOLUME SALES DEPT.
NOW TAKING APPOINTMENTS 727-2921. ASK FOR THE.SERVICE DEPARTMENT.

LOVE

LEXUS · LOVE TOYOTA-

en tine

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C1187, Ohio Volley Publllhlng Company

1998
TOYOTA

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Thompson, R·Tenn .. chairman of the
"That was something profession·
Senate Governmental Affairs Com· al fund ·rai.ers estimated," Ickes said.
miuee. said last week.
Ickes said he was morelconcemcd
Based on the defiant tone of lck· about whether "enough money was
es' answers in the first deposilion, ~oming in, hard and soft, to finance
Ickes would not necessarily help the upcoming cash flow " and "did
Republicans build their case that .the the fund·raisets need additional
White House sold access to the preS· events?' '
Ickes said Clinton made only a
ident in return for large donations to
Clinton's re·clcction effort.
few fund· raising calls. Clinton him·
Ickes insisted he didn'l get into the self has left open the possibility he
details of how the Democratic Party called donors but has no sP.,eific rcc·
raised money. "My focus ... was the ollection of telephoning any.
bottom line, as they like to say in the
Sen. John McCain, R·Ariz. told
finance business."
CNN 's "Late Edition" that he ·was
Ickes insisted he knew of no plans disturbed that "Ickes knew that the
tO charge donors for the privilege Of president made phone calls from the
attending White House social events White House."·
with Clinton or to sleep in the Lin·
coin Bedroom.
"The president has denied remem·
"As far as I know. there was no bering that he made thcse ·calls and
direct connection between an amount apparently it was an ongoing opera·
of money 1ha1 you gave and berng lion," said McCain. a co-sponsor of
invited to the White House." Ickes · legislation to reform campaign fund
s.aid tn his deposition .
raising .
·
. "Had 1 known of it. I would have
·
·
~ot only disapproved of it I would ·
hin•c told them to stop doing it." he
Ickes said he learned Clinton had
said.
followed through on his infrequent
Even though his files contained requeSIS to make calls "when I was
DNC projections for amounts of fortunate enough to find out that he
money to be rat~cd at White House had. in fact. made a phone call."
coffee klatches. Ickes &gt;aid: "I did not
" I would ask the president if he
pay that much attention ... to the dol· would make calls. He didn't volun·
teer to make calls," Ickes said.
lar amounts put by cac h event. ..
..... _ .. ·- . ··-, _ • _ ... c _
_

IRONTON (AP) - The man
accused of killing his 8·year·old
daughter and burying her body in the
b'ICk yard had been accused seven
years ago ofthrealening to kill a for·
mer girlfriend and her baby, police
said.
Jack E. Vol gates. 42, and Mona
Volgares, 28, arc the objects of a
nationwide search.
. Records show that in 1990. Renee
l\larie Vincent' said Vulgares·repealedly 1hrea1ened to kill her and her 6·
month-old baby . Vincent. who had
dated Volgares. was granted a
restraining order against him ..
The order was followed by a tern·
porary injunction in February 1990.
forbidding Volgares from hav.tng any
contact with Vincent court records
show.

Aggrava1cd murder warrant~ were
signed last week against .lack and
Mona Vulgares ahcr Mona Volgares'
daughter. Sclcana Gamble was found
Sept. 7: buried in a garbage can in the
back yard of the couple's residence in
Iron !On.
Court and social services records

never included Vincent's allcgmions
againsl Jack Volgares so they were
not a factor in custody decisions

involving Sclcana and her older sis;
ter. Vivian.
·Shortly after Selcana was born.
the girls were placed in the custody
of an aunt and uncle after a state
social worker said Mona Volgarcs'
Tampa. Fla .. home was lilihy. roach·
infested and lillcd with hccr cans.
Despite crirOinat records that
include several arrests and convic·

lions, the Volgareses were granted
legal custody of Selcana and her half
sister, Vivian Gamble, II , in 1995
and allowed to move to Ohio.
Police believe the couple is on the
run with their children Tesla, 4. and
Jerimiah, 2, as well as Vivian. Mona's
daughler from a previous relalion·
ship. '
·
Hillsborough County, Fla., Circuil
Judge Greg Holder, who opened
Scleana's 500·page case file to 1he
media. said it made no mention of the
1990 allegations againsl lack Vol·

FESTIVAL ROYALTY - Jayme Miller was
named the 1997 Racine Fall Festival Queen Sat·
~rday, shown here
crowned
1996

Staff member.; from the South·
for Children (SCC)
recently with U.S. Stxlh Ots·
trict Rep. Ted Stri~kland to discuss
regional chtldrcn s mental health
issues.
·
Discussions centered around
funding for children's menial
~calth treatment in the IO·county
region served by sec. tmprove·
ptents in service delivery, and the
Increase of communrcalton
j&gt;ctween service providers. referral
.
· pgcncies and parents.
The Soulhcm Consort!U!ll for
(:hildren. a regional planning.
~evelopment and coordination
-gcncy for children's mental health
southern Ohio. was developed
the Community Mental Health
from
dam s/La wrcnce/Sc i ot o.
the ns/Hock i ng/Vi nto n.
ballia.IJa&lt;:kscmfll~ci:gs and Wash·
counties
1988 as a :
jes1pons·c to the closure of state·
fperatcd children's psychiatric hositals.
·
Following the meeting. SCC ·
xecutillc Dirccior Steve Troul
oted lhat "wilh Congressman
lrickland's training as a psychol·
pgist. this was a un1que opportunt·
y to talk to a legislator who reaiY understands mental health
~m Consonium

1
IMPORT
DEALER
liTHE

nan
AS
LOW
IS

MOTO
ST. ALBANS

LEXUS
TOYOTA

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jssues."

Trout discussed the SCC's
1he

'

PARADE WINNERS-Winners In the Racine
para~ Saturday morning were
Carroll Teaford; right, with an early American
Indian display; Chestsr Council 323 Daughters
of America, rsprssented by Dolorss Wolle, cen-

Fall Festival

Queen Amy Northup, right. Ashley
left, was named runnerup, while Cynthia
well was recipient of the judges' award.

ter; and Girl Scout troops 1290 and 1115, represented by Anna Norman. Teaford's prize was
donated to a fund to assist Racine resident
Jack Lyons.
·
.

Fellowship, fun highlight annual
Racine Fall Festival on Saturday

Fellowship and fun ... and plenty
of sunshine were on tap for the annu ..
gares.
a) Racine Fall Festival held Salurday
"It just funhcr points out the fact at Star Mill Park.
that. without complete and total
J
M'll d h
fM d
informalion. courts arc unable to
aymc 1 ~r. aug lcr 0 r. an
make a just and .proper decision to · Mrs. James Mtllerof Portland. was
prmect the safety of the children." named 1997 Fall Fcsttval Queen and
Holder said.

Regional children's con~ortiu!!J
briefs congressman on 1s~ues ·

DLEXUS

W.VA.'S LARGEST TOYOTA'
DEALERSHIP IS LOOKING
FQJl GOOD RELIABLE SALES
.PEOPLE. EXPERIENCE NOT
NECESSARY. PLWE APPLY
II
TOYOTA SHOWROOM.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Fonner
presidential aide Harold Ickes will be
called back for more questioning by
Senate investigators about how the
Democratic Parrv used donations
raised by Preside~! Clinton and Vice
President AI 9ore, Sen ale . sources
•say.
: Ickes acknowledged in a June 26·
27 deposition thai he asked Clinton
~o call donors "two, three, maybe
four times."
Ickes is idso expected to be asked
ala second deposition about whether
Gore knew when he telephoned
&lt;lonors from his office that he was
raising the type of COntribution COV ·
ered by a ban on soliciting donations
on government property, said . the
aides, who spoke on condition of
anonymity.
Gore denies any wrongdoing. The
-vice· presidenl's 46 calls arc ·being
reviewed by the Justice Department
to determine if Attorney General
Janet Reno should seck appointment
of an independent counsel.
The Senate panel's plans to call
lhc fonncr deputy White House chief
of staff hack for more closed qucs·
1ioning signals that Ickes will not be
called as a witness at public hearings
unlit early next month.
In fact no final decision has been
·ma~e on wbcther
'
to caIllckcs to pub·
~MJ..a.arjll8 !;r&amp;ides to Sen. Fred

Recor~s reveal suspect in child's
death threatened violence before

ALL

MUST
SEE·

--per

2 Secttona, 12 Pagel, 35 cen11
A Gannett Co.

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, Monday, September 15, 1997

Ex-Clinton aide faces
~ore Senate grilling

TJ~I'S

ALL
HAVE
DUAL
AIR

Mostly clear tonight ,
lows in the mid 50s .
Tuesday, mostly sunny.
Highs near 80.

was crowned by last year's queen ,
Amy Northup.
,
A&gt;hlcy McKinney, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. (Jrcg. McKinney of
Pordand. was named runncrup. and
Cynthia Caldwell. daughter of
Christy Lavender of Syracuse and

Howard Caldwell of Racine , was
recipient of the judges' award.

Other candidates were Alicia Mul·
ford, d~ughtcr of Cathy Thorla of
Racine , and Mike Mulford nf
(Continued on Page 3)

Pedestrian
dies after
being hit
by vehicle
Probe continues
into Gallia man's
death Saturday

~

CROWN CITY -A 95·ycar·old
Crown City man died of injuries suf·
fered in a car·pedcstrian accident Sat·
urday night on State Route 7 just
nonh of Crown City.
The Gallia·Mcigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol said Ernest 0 . Sims,
17 Williams St.. was

FUNDING DISCUSSED - Southern Consortium for Children
Executive Director Steve Trout described the changes In chll·
drsn's mental health funding to U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland as Strickland stsHer Denise Pittenger looked on.
regional clearinghouse for runaway and homeless youth, and
1heir involvcmenl in improving ·
the availability of child·specific
mental health treatment, including
contracting with hospitals, psychi·
atrisls and psychologisls across
the region.
Strickland was also updated on
the consortium's status as one of
only 29 nalionwide pilot sites for
of a

•

Care," designed to work across the
child welfare, juvenile justice and
children's menial health system.
The sec is funded in part by
the Ohio Department of Mental
Health: U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services and the Ohio
Rehabilitalion Services Commis·
sion. For more infonnation on
children's mental health issues in
soulhem Ohio, contact the SCC at
614· 593-8293.

prono~nccd

dead on arrival at St. Mary\ Hospi·
tal after the Gallia County EMS
transponed him to the Huntington.
W.Va .. medical facility from the
scene of the 8:25p.m. accident.
Troopers said Sims was· walking
eastbound across the highway when
he entered the path of a nonhhnund
car driven by Traci L. Brannen, 22.
38 Stephanie St.. Crown City, and
was struck by the car.
Brannen was alsd reported injured
and was taken to Hol zer Medical
· Center by the EMS. where she was
trealed and released, but with no
apparent injury, a ~ospital spokesper·
son said.
The car was severely damaged . .
and troopers said 1he accident
LITTLE BOY/BIG PUMPKIN - Winner of the prize for the
remains under investigation. Sims'
biggest
pumpkin at the Racin~ Fall Festival was 6-m.onth-old Tom
. body was la.ter released to the Hall
Weekly
111,
.s hown here with his father. The prlze-wtnnlng pumpFuneral Home, Proctorville, for
kin
was
a
179-pound
entry.
funeral arrangements.

�:-M::ond:::a_;,y,;,.,Sep....;._tem_be_r1.,.;5.:. ,--199;,;,.;.7_.-------------.....:P~omero:.:,::;,:Y • Middleport, Ohio

Conunentarr_

Page2

Tuesdlty, Sept. 16
Aa:uWeather* forecast for

The Daily Sentinel

EMS units
log 19 calls
on weekend

OHIO Weather

Monday, September 15,1997

White House hopefuls litter the landscape

coodilions and

MICH.

Units of the Metgs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 19
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday. Units responding included:

By JICk AndiBon
lnd Jln Moller

Nineteen n.onths ago Forbes nors.
were in the race. Smith, of course,
threw quite a scare into the more
Perhaps the strangest quasi-can- would instantly become a clear
'Lstabfislid i111948
WASHINGTON -- With 28 conventional candidates,
dtdacy so far comes from favonte to carry his home state.
months left before voters hit the even managing to win
Sen. Bob Smith, R-N.H.,
The prospect of staning off a
111 Court Street, "-roy, Ohio
polls in the first presidential prima- the Arizona primary to
an arch-conservative sec- campaign with a win in New Hamp614-992-2156 • FIX 192-2157
ry, there's no shortage of candtdates the great dtsgust and surond-termer heretofore shire might have gone to Smith's
who think they've got what it takes prise of Texas Sen. Ph1l
known mamly for dema- head. ~ently Sm1th met a relative
to become president.
Gramm,
who
had
gogumg the POW-MIA of a httle g~rl who had retrieved an
About two dozen politicians -- planned on wmning that
issue.
Easter Egg signed by Smith dunng
contenders
and
pretenders
-from
state
before
withdrawing
Smith
seems
to
the annual White House Easter Egg
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
both sides of the atsle have floated from the race.
thmk he's got presidential Hunt. (Every year, each senator trathe idea of running in 2000. In the
Forbes -- fearful that M0 lt.r d Anderwon meltle even though he '-ditionally signs one egg that's
ROBERT L. WINGETT
U.S.
Senate,
ll's
dtfficult
to
find
an
he'll
be seen once again as
on
barely won re-election lasJ included in the hunt).
Publlaher
elected leader who doesn't thmk he a one-issue economtc cand1date ' - 1s year in one of the most conservative
Apparently neither the httle girl
or she has what it takes to be the spending lots of ttme kisstng up' to states m the union. We're told that nor her mother had ever heard of
leader of the free world.
Chnstian conservatives. Missoun unlike in many pohtical households Smith and worned that the egg
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
Part of this electoral gold rush senator John Ashcroft, a former -- where poliucians are often urged might be wonhless. Not to worry,
General M.nager
Controller
can be attnbuted to the well-publi- ~ospel smger, 1&lt; also counmg Chns- by their famthes not to disrupt their said Smith. He told the relat1ve to
ctzed problems of Vice Pres1dent AI uans tn an effon to ra1se his pres•- lives by runnmg a campaign -- Mrs hold on to that egg, because "someGore, wh~e choir-boy reputation dential profile.
Smith is quite open to the idea of day I'm gomg to be in the White
' has been tarntshed by the revelatiOns
Arizona senator John McCain, ' movmg to 1600. Pennsylvanta Ave.
House," and that then "that egg will
that he raised at least $120,000 in former Vice PreSident Dan Quayle · A Smtth candtdacy ,. bemg quiet- be wonh a fonune."
"hard money" from the comfon of anq of course Colin Powell are also ly discouraged by New Hampshire's
· Ja&lt;k Anderson and Jan Moller
hts Whtte House office. R_epubhcans bemg talked about as future candi- political elite who worry that the are writers for United Feature
relish the idea of the DemocratiC dates Not to mention at least a state mtght ndt get as much attention Synditate, Inc.
front-runner becoming the first pres- dozen popular Republican gover- as 11 usually does tf one of their own
tdentialnominee to be under mvesu·
gat1on by an tndependen( counsel.
Meanwhile, Democratic fundraisers
are privately grumbhng that
By JOHN AFFLECK
the campa1gn-finance scandal has
Associated Press Writer
PHYSICAL
CLEVELAND - Thmk your Job's tough? Try swnchmg places with made tt even more d•fficult than
usual for them to raise cash.
Helen K. Smith.
Nevertheless, a parade of
The councilwoman stans workmg at 6 am. these days and doesn 't fin1sh
Democrats
begmnmg wtth House
CONSIDERED
until I a.m. Her task is as daunttng as the hours: trying to raiSe enough
Minonty
Leader
Richard
Gephardt
money to become a serious threat lO Michael R. Whlle m the Cleveland
of Missouri are planmng to enter the
mayor's race.·
Forget the fact that Whtte ts a popular, two-Ume tncumbent whom many race. Other Democrats considering a
run tnclude Sen. Roben Kerrey of
credit as a major force 10 revttalizing the downtown. •
Smith believes her biggest obstacle IS White's $1.3 million campaign Nebraska, and Sen. John Kerry of
Massachusetts, and former Sen . BiII
fund. The challenger doesn't know tf she can raise a stxth of that amount.
That means less money for telev1ston ads, rad1o spots and other tools of Bradley of New Jersey. Jesse Jackson IS also thmkmg about throwmg
the modem campaign
()
"The only thing that stands between myself and winning is the ability for hiS hat mto the nng.
On the Republican side it's hard
a
me to get a message out," Smith said. "It's really hard to get a message out
to
find
an
elected
leader
who
doesn't
when you can't buy a roll of stamps."
Smtih has been a counctlwoman for 18 years and IS one of five cand1dates harbor fantastes of the Oval Office.
who Will run against White, a fellow Democrat, in a nonpartisan primary Even House Speaker Newt Gmgnch
-- he of the 18 percent poll ratings -Sep1. 30. She announced her candidacy less than a month ago.
thinks he'd make an attractive canThe others candidates are Anthony B. Brown, a graduate student in busididate.
Publisher Steve Forbes is
ness management at Cleveland State Umverstty, Gerald C. Henley, a Cleveprobably the farthest along He's
land school board member; Joseph J Marcoguiseppe, an attorney; and
cnsscrossmg the country tirelessly,
Genevieve Mitchell, vice preSident of the school board. The top two voteand
wasung no opponumty to stake
getters move on to the general elecuon !"ov. 4.
.
out
his
dtfferences with pany ·leaders
While Smith IS favored to emerge as White's challenger, Cleveland State
m Washmgton.
University communications professor S1dney Kraus said the councilwoman
is sull not a household name m Cleveland. Her lack of money wtll make tt

BASHANVFD

IMansfield 182' I•

't2:29 p.m Saturday, vehicle f1re
on Bashan Road, Ritchie Auto Sales
owner•. no injuries, Racine ·VFD
assisted.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12;32 a.m. Saturday, State Route
7, Middlepon, Bill Marshall, Veterans Memorial Hosp1tal;
7:54 am. Saturday. Overbrook
Nursing Center, M•ddlepon, Wanda
Swearmgen, Holzer Med1cal Centct;
5:26 p.m. Saturday, Seventh
Avenue, Middlepon, Raben' Davis.
refused treatment. Middlepon squad
asSISted;
10:48 p.m. Saturday, OBNC,
Clara Dav1s, VMH:
12:57 p.m Sunday, OBNC,
Berneda Bony, VMH:
7:03 p m. Sunday, OBNC, Jack
Stivers, VMH.
MIDDLEPORT
10:48 p.m Saturday, OBNC, Lynn
Boston, PVH, ,
12:19 p.m. Sunday, VFD to V10e
Street, automobtle fire , R1ck Chapel

:1

I

I

Money major problem
for Cleveland candidate

AT MVA6E,
ANV

..CTIYITY IS

AN EXmEMi

sPOirr.

•

IOU~~t'~o:~~:~~e~:~:.~as;i~rher,"Kraussaid.
Officials in White's campatgn say they're not concerned about how httle

II

wr1ter
• doesn.'t want a nanny dictionary

-or how much- money Smnh ratses Etther way, they're taking her chal- By Nit Hentoff
lenge swously, said Susan Axelrod, campatgn coordmator.
_ Some years ago, as the Robe"We never thmk about it." Axelrod sa1d. " It's not a factor in our minds spterre-hke "pohllcal correctness"
_ ..JIIllvement was...takini IOOL.in col80 ....--gi...-oad plaR lhe-ra&lt;:e;C..
Axelrod said Whtte 1s voluntanly hmiting his campaign spending to leges across the country, my son,
$675,000. Smith had challenged htm to spend even less.
Tom, was the edt tor of the student
Still, the f~nding gap between the two candidates prom1ses 'I'
w1de. ne~spaper at Wes\~yan. He was
Smith said she'll have to depend on dtrect mathngs and volunleer phone bemg pressured by hts staff to manbanks 10 get her name out.
date that the tenn "freshperson " be
She got a boost Wednesday when-die Cleveland AFL-CIO endorsed her used hencefonh to 1dent1fy all
candidacy. The labor unions should be able to produce some bQdtes to staff incommg students. " Freshman"
. { phones and put up 51 gns.
would be tossed into the dustbin of
But Sm1th has no illusions that the scales have balanced.
sexiSt htstory
"Freshwoman"
ld aIso some how bed tscnmtna"What we've been trymg to do in three weeks IS jump stan a ma;or
maywou
'
an eight-year mcumbent," she satd. " It's kmd of an tory.
oral campa1gn a•amst
•
awesome task "
Tom. even at the risk oC ddcncstrauon, would not be moved, InSisttng that language should not be
pohtlc!Zcd.
ldeological distortions of ianguagc have not. of course. be en I1mned to colleges. 1 have watched us
Dear Ed1tor,
Watching Monday N1ght Football is exciting until there's a scnous mjury tendnls creep mto mamstream
The crowd roars and bone doctors also give the wounded wamor ~ rousmg newspapers and magazmes as well
as the eptphanies of poluicians. But
cheer.
Of course, multipltcd by the numhcr of NFL games thiS season and the ) never expected to sec a gu 1dc to
number of IRJUncs on Monday ntght. there wtll he 100 players sidcltncd. 52 "correct" language as a spec1al secon crutches. 95 requiring thetr legs to be opened with an X-Acto knife. and lion of an othcrwtse repulablc d1eover 5,000,000 fans vomiting from ovcrdrinkmg and catmg sp1cy food . not 11onary
to mention cases of laryngitis -- scrcammg people who over-screamed. sttThe newest edttlon of Random
ting tp a little seal. I beheve they're screaming because they spent a $100 for House Webster's College Dtctlonary
the game. hopmg they have enough gas left in thelf cars to crawl home m boasts more new words than any of
. traffic and watch the same game. recorded on an expensive VCR.
1ts compcttlors. To their cred1t. howOf course II'S un-Amencan to disrespect a game that bnngs m Zliltons of ever, none of ·Its competitors has a
dollars to players and vendors of hq01d and sohd products like beer and chapter like Random House's
.
expensive cars, not to ment1on drugs that grow hair: but the inJUries, oh the "Avoidmg Insensitive and
OO'cn]fain. the pail).
My fnend An1ta suggested I watch the last quaner of the game, and I
wo~ld have seen every play that was executed in the first three quarters plus
the tenefit of seeing the excitmg concluston She's nght You can do somethin, else for three quarters, about two hour's ume.Some people take a cat
By Joseph SJ)!Iar
nap.
.
.
If you follow the conservative
The score, even if you miSS 11 on TV. wtll be m the paper the next day -- gazettes and intellectual JOUrnals.
and of course th~ injury list.
you probably know that the moveTo prevent injuries It would be better •f stad•ums of screammg fans and ment IS crackmg up
NA~ football players touch football or hide and seck
Ac.tually, you don 't have to read
RogerReeb
anythmg
other than the newest and
Radne
liveliest organ on the block, the
Weekly Standard. In recent months,
,.. r
~~
1·
the eduo~s have pummeled thetr
readers wtth prophectes of diSsolution, includmg an a111cle entitled
"Confused ConservatiVes. The
Worldw1de Crack-Up,:. and a sympoSium on the question. "Is There a
Worldwide Conservative crackUp?"
Twenty-etght " wnters, thmkers,
actiVISts and pohllcal professtonals"
answered the summons Most
responses were larded wuh pred1ctable cant and dogma, but some
were downnght persptcac10us.
Writer Noemie Emery, for example,
pointed out that all political movements Which exclude centnsts are
doomed to remain cults "Governments in this country are centerright, or left-center," she wrote. "A
right-nght, or left-left, coaliuon is a
contradiction m terms. Reagan and
Roosevelt knew th1s . They preferred, tn the end, power 10 purity."
But, I digress. The issue: Is conservattsm cracking up?
At first glance it seems so. A
Democrat IS re-elected to the White

'f

Letters to the editor

Let's play hide and seek

stve Language."
" underdeveloped .,
Lest
that used the term "honey." There was
Ung,.aleful, I do not want a nanny descnpuon hun the nat1on 's feel - no sexual meanmg to the word.
dtcllonary earnestly mstrucung me mgs, you have 10 refer 10 tt as a
The young, woman was funous
on how to avmd betog Jnsensttlve "devclopmg" country, even if it and verbally horsewhtpped him for a
andtor offenSive If I 'want to be isn ' t. •
long ume. He kept shaking hiS head
offensive, l know how to do that.
One used to be able to call some- at whal one word had cost him
and I don 't n\'&lt;:d a dictionary dedi- one "elderly" because that's wha! Words certamly can wound, but
cated to ,Jil~ing me feel guilty for he or she was. But the Random qu1ckness to he offended by any iannot meetmg tis standard of
House nanny tells us to ~ay guagc that m1ght he "initppmpnatc''
propnety.
"older person" or "sen1or docs chill the way we live wuh each
Jesse She 1dlower, a senior
clllzcn." Since the nation 's other
cdnor of Random House
pnson population meccasBut
Reference &amp; InformatiOn
mgly conSists of "senior
the language nanmcs Will
" 1
h
II cc&gt;ntmuc to mult1ply Thmlc ol what
Publishing. tells me hts new
Cltlr.cns,
trust
t
cy
wt
be
d ·h
they have done to "ConSider the
progeny "1s nothing hke a
treate wu appropnatc - II 1ies, how they grow, they neither
·speech code.' but rather a
respect by their keepers.
tOI I nor spm ... In the Contemporary
stratght-forward. frank , and
So_ devoted arc Enghsh Vcmon. that B!hhcal pa.'we hope uncontroverSial
Hentoff
these docents of scnsmvuy sage has been made more acccssthlc
cxammatton of types of ianthat they deplore wntmg to us all: " Look how the wlldllowguage that can unintentiOnally "Arab man denies assault charge.. crs grow. nlcy don't work hard to
The proper!•·
offend.''
' moffcnsivc way of make their ··lothc"
•
, ..
. Among the gu•dclincs for gender- puttmg that " "Man dcmcs a."ault
Or "What " man. that thuu art
neutral language. "buSinessman""· charge." Why not "Human hcmg
mmdful of h1m ,.. That Kmg James
of course, prohibited, and the lead- denies assault charge " ' Thereby
mg approved alternative IS "buS!- men as a whole would not he offend- pa ..agc ha' hccomc. m the New
Century vcrswn. " But why arc pen·
ness person " " Busmcsswoman ''

cd.

won 't do
Included is my favoflle neutral
replacement for "c hairman ... To
show "heightened sensmvuy.'' you
arc advised to U sC "c ha1r. " Th en
that on whtch the
What do You ··all
'
"chair" IS silting·&gt;
Mov1ng to ways of not o f•.ending
entire countrIcs, it is no longer sensUIVe to say that a country •s

Also to he avotded tn pubhc
"sweetie dear, deane , honey .. Even
among people who ltkc each other'
Years ago. I was m a room with a
CIVIl nnhts lawyer who had oonc
e
•
through some of the fiercest battles
on the Southern front He had also
represented women m gender diScnmmallon cases. That day. m talkmg to a young woman, a lawyer. he

pic rmportant to you'!''

Or as T.S. Ehot smd -- 1n· a ltne
that could apply to the tamers of language-- "We had'the cxpencncc but
m1sscd the mcanmg ..

Nat Hentoff is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the
Bill of R.ights.

Conservatives should get a grip:

Ma,·ga County "OBS haVe IIQUth Center

•

•

•

House A fanatic fringe in Congress
Mcthinks they pan1c
attempts to depose Newt Gingnch.
Most Americans. polls show, are
A handful of diSsidents at a recent very pleased w1th the way the counpowwow in lnd1ana rebuke party try IS g01ng. Do conservatives
leaders for allegedly giVIng up too beheve they had nothmg to do w1th
much m a budget deal With
this refrcshmg optimism?
the Whtte House, leadmg
A preSident who began hiS
Newt to denounce them as
tenure thundcnng about
"opposition Republicans"
the need to "tmest" more
hvmg m a "fantasy world."
money 1n government proEvery k1b1tzer 1n the
grams JUst stgned an
conservauve kingdom, it
agreement to balance the
seems. has some advice on
budget. Why d1d W1iltam
how to play the cards. ForJ. Cltnton shnk to the ccnmer Christian Coaht1on
ter'!
director Ralph Reed tells
At umcs it seems
Republicans to emphas1ze
Spear
as 11 the whole planet has
values and ch1ldren and urges them come around to the conservative
not to "put all your eggs 1n the Cltn- VICW of thtngs. Communtsm Is all
ton scandal basket." Ronald Rea· but dead. Free trade is blossommg
gan's son Michael, now a right-wing Republicans have taken control of
talk show host, commands them to Congress The deficit IS plummetget back to his father 's anti-tax, anti- ing Deregulauon is in the alf. Cnmc
rates
arc

"Governments in this country are
center-r;ght,
Or [e•"t-center,
, she
••
•
'J 1
wrote. "A right-right, or left-/eft,
COalition iS a COntradictiOn in terms.

spending, anti-regulauon agenda.
Upstan pollster Frank Luntz says
they should Jearn how to commumcate.

dcscendmg . Welfare IS bemg
reformed Taxes are liemg cut. Infla11on has been wrestled to the ground
-- is somebody prepared to argue

•

wtth me that Alan Greenspan is ·a
ilhcral"
:'
The atmosphere fa~rly crackl~s
With conservative tracts and trcatiS¢s
flymg here and there. From 1992
through 1994. accordmg to a stuJy
by the National Commlltee f~r
Responsive Philanthropy, the top (2
nght-wmg foundations spent $2 ro
m1lhon on thmk tanks, advocacy
groups and college programs.
:
In a recent newsletter article
headhncd the "Right Wmg Runs
Amuck ," the NatiOnal Education
Assoctat1on wh1ned that the "media
mentions" accorded such conscrvat1ve organizatmns as the Heruagc
Foundat1on. Amencan Entcrpnse
Institute and Cato Institute "dwarfs
the total number of mcd~a mentiOns
of ccntnst and progressiVe groups
such as the Brookmgs lnsmuuon,
Econom1c Policy Jnst1tute and
Council on Forc1gn Rclattons."
Why do conservatives ;cem
pathologically unable to take som,c
cred1t for all th•s'' What they need
mostts a gnp
If they absolutely must have
another mountain to chmb, 1 would
suggest radtcal ta. refonn They
gtvc us a llat tax and old Joe w111
wave their banner 'Ill the trumpeters ·
call.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association .

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

•I Columbusl83• I

Little change in weather
predicted until Thursday

owner:

7:03 p.m. Sunday, OBNC, Jack
Stivers, VMH.
POMEROY
7:54 a.m. Saturday, Beech Street.
Kathryn Kmght, VMH,
12:01 p m. Saturday, VFD to
Coun and Second streets, smoke odor
~~t
•
Conditions w1ll he Slmtlar Tuesday. w1th htghs rangmg from the mtd 70s at Peoples Bank;
9. 15 am . Sunday, VFD to Ma10
10 the nonheast to the low 80s tn the south.
By Wednesday, things will be changmg as a cold front approaches from Street, controlled bum near Foodthe west
land ,
11·55 a.m Sunday. VFD and
ThiS front IS expected to move across much of the state and become stationary over southern Oh10 before startmg to move back to the nonh as a squad to Flatwoods Road, motorwarm front, bnngmg the threat of showers through much of the latter pan vehicle acc1dent, Andt Docz1, Adam
of the week
Docz1 and Paul Searles, VMH. CenMoiSture trapped under the h1gh pressure system had kept some clouds tral DISpatch squad asststed.
across the ~tate overnight Lows ranged from around 50 m the nonheast to
RACINE
around 60 in the southwest. Patchy fog had formed near bod1es of water and
2·46 a.m. Sunday, Carpenter
1n other fog-prone areas.
Road, Ponland, Ehzabeth Carpenter,
The record h1gh temperature for thiS date at the Columbus weather sta- treated at the scene
, lion was 97 degrees 10 1939 The record low temperature was 40 degrees m
RUTLAND
1923, Sunset will be at 7 40 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at 7 13 a.m
7.37 a.m. Saturday, Langsvtlle,
Weather forecast:
Glenna Fetty, PVH,
Tonight .. Mostly clear Lows in the mtd 50s L1ght nonh wmd
1.42 p m Sunday, Leading Creek
Tuesday. Mostly sunny. Htghs ncar 80.
Road, din b1ke acc1dent, Kevm Bush,
Tuesday mghl. Mostly clear. Lows 1n tlic upper 50s.
VMH.
Extended forecast:
SYRACUSE
Wcdnesday ... Mostly clear. H1ghs ncar 80
8:12 a.m. Saturday, Maples
Thursday . Mpstly cloudy wuh a chance of rain . Lows ncar 60 and htghs Apartments, Pomeroy, Mary Lyons,
Jn the m1d 70s
HMC.
Fnday Partly cloudy. Lows 55 10 60 and htghs m the m1d 70s
TUPPERS PLAINS
8.08 p m. Saturday. Pomeroy Pike,
Evelyn Gtlland. refus_cd treatment.
By The Associated Press
The Natior.al Weather Servtce expects 11 to •remam dry across Ohio for
the next couple of days as a h1gh pressure system remams nearly stattonary
A few clouds w11l hnger tonight. with patchy fog formmg Temperatures
w1ll range from the low to m1d 50s m the nonheast to around 60 m the south-

I

Grocery end Eber's Cltga-.
Saturday as sponsors of the annual
Fall
FHtlvsl, From left era Bill Cornell, repr•sent-

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
~lscharges SepL 12 Mrs
Anthony Polcyn and da_ughter, lay
Stone, Mamie Oldkaker, Carolyn
Atkms, Bobby McCoy, Mrs. M1chacl
Hively and son, Mrs. Ivan Stanley
and son, Mrs. Mark Davis and son.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Angel, daughter, Crown City
Discharges SepL 13 - Edward
Starcher, Bett1e McGuire, Richard
Berkley, Mrs Roben Saunders and
son, Patsy Thoma, Peggy Ge•ger,
Summer Folmer
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Barry
Teeters, son, Galltpohs; Mr and Mrs
Jerry Ramsey, daughter, Cheshire:
Mr. and Mrs. Shannon Scholderer.
daughter, Middleport.
Discharges SepL 14 - Gladys
Patton.
(Published with permission)

struck by a vch1cle on a Cuyahoga
County road.
_
SATURDAY
CLEVE,LAND- nmothy Kmg,
age and hometown undetenmncd, in

At least II people have dted 1n
ttaffic accidents on Ohio roads this
weekend, the State Highway Patrol
·sa1d today.
The patrol counts fatahlles from 6
•P m. Fnday until m1dn1ght Sunday.
The dead
'
SUNDAY
WAPAKONETA Mtchacl
Hale, 36, of L1ma, dnver m a one-car
acc1dent on state Route 198 m
\o\uglatze County.
LANCASTER - M•chclle M.
M1llcr, 30, of Bremen, dnvcr 1n a
one-veh1cle ~rash on a Fairfteld
County road .
CLEVELAND
Dav1d M

a one-car accJdcnt on a Cleveland
CJty street

Homecoming
Annual homecommg serv1ces will
be held at the Mount Monah Church
of God, Mile Hill Road. Racine. Sunday, beginning with mom10g semces
at9 45. Dmner on the church grounds
Wtli he at noOn with afternoon SCrVlCCS begmmng 1-1:30 with spectal
s10gmg from Gloryland Behevcrs,
Pomt Pleasant. W.Va. Pastor James
Satterfield welcomes the pubhc.

Sarah Lee laudenntlt Boyles, 64, of Mtddlepon, d1ed Saturday, Sept. 13,
1997 1n Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Dec. 26, 1932, she was the daughter of Alice Oldaker Laudermtlt
of Mason, W.Va .. and the late Homer Andrew Laudenn•lt Sr. She was a
homemaker
Survtvmg m add1110n to her mother arc a daughter, Sarah Luctlle Boyles
Johnson
of M1ddlcpon; a son and his fiancee, Charles Eugene Boyles and
senger in a one-car crash on state '
Gladys
Yates
of Pomeroy: two sisters and brothers-m-law, Wanda Mac and
Route 38 m Umon County
Don
Sprague
of Tuppers Plains, and Dottie and Rohcn Cremeans of RutGALLIPOLIS'' - Ernest 0 . Sims.
land,
three
brothers
and Slstcrs-m-law, Norman and Dee Laudemult of Mason ,
95, of Crown City, pedestnan struck
and
Okcy
Ray
and
Sheryl
Laudcnnilt. and Homer Jr. and Linda Lauderm11t.
by a car on state Route 7 m Galha
all
of
Pomeroy.
three
grandchildren,
and several nieces and nephews.
County.
Preceding
her
m
death
10
addttlon
to
her father wa&lt; her husband. Clarenc-c
LIMA- Ttmothy R Hunt. 20. of
Boyles
Jr.
Columbus Grove. driver in a one-car
Services will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Mtddlepon Chapel of the FIShaccident on a Putnam Co~nty road.
er Funeral Home. Pa&gt;tor Sam Anderson w11l be officiating and bunal will
FRIDAY NIGHT
follow m the Mc1gs Memory Gardens Fncnds may call at the funeral home
MORRISTOWN - Jerry E. on Tuesday from 7-9 p m.
•
Paboucck Jr.• 17, ofMomstown. dnMemonal contnbuuons may he made to the fam1ly and sent to Sarah JohnVcr tn a two-vchJclc accident on slate son, 65 Elm St . M1ddleport. Oh1o 45760.
Route 800 m Belmont County.

Pierce. 26~ of Fnsco Texas, dnvcr 1M

'

Clifford
Icenhower
Cltfford Icenhower. 63. Star Hall Road, Dexter. d1cd Sunday. Sept.' 14,

·No winner in Super Lotto drawing
$8 m1iilon , the Ohio Lottery sa1d

·CLEVELAND (AP)- No tickets
matched all six numbers drawn 10
Saturday mghl 's Super Lotto drawing
worth $4 m•lhon, so the Jackpot for
Wednesday 's &amp;awmg Will mcrease to

Sales in Super Lotte totaled
$2.513.428. K1ckcr sales totaled
$456,502
There were 51 Super Lotto t1ckets
w1th ftvc of the numbers. and each IS
worth $1,355 'rhc 3.094 uckets
showing f~ur of the numbers arc each
worth $70.

The Daily Sentinel
(USpS 113·960)

Pubhshed every aflenoon Monday lhrough

Stocks

fndav, Ill ('ourl S1, Pom~:roy. Oluo h) thc
bh10 Valle\' Puhl1ihln~ Co mpany/GHnncll Co,,
Pomeroy Ohto -t~IM Ph 992-21~11 Second
class posla~e patd ~~ Pt\mt'WV Oh111
1\olrmbtr Thc 1\swc•~lcd Prcu, and lh~ Ohto
Newsp;•rer 1\ssocut•on
po~TMA!!.TER

Send athlrcss cmrcLiklllS In
'The 0:'111\ Scn11 ntl Ill Court St, Pt\mcroy
Oh1n 4&lt;:i7l&gt;9

SURSCRIP'I'ION RATES
By Carrkr or Motor Routt
On&lt;' Week
$~ IHI
One M•Jnth
SM 7U
On( 'eM
$1114 IIU
SINGLE COPY PRICE

Dilth ............................... ............... .

:\~Cents

Sul:lscnhc:rs nol desmn.: to pay lhe earner may
rrmtl m Advance dtrecl to The Dati): Snunrl
on alhtt'e, Silt or 12 monlh hasts Credit Will De

'Jvrn uurrr uc:h wed

No suhscn puon by

m~•l

pcrmllled

tn

areas

PuhltShel reservu the ngh1 to adJUSI ralu durllli!lhc suhscup11on period SubscrtptiOn rate

changes may be tmplemented by changmg lhe
duratiOn of the subSl:nplron

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

Am Ele Power ..................... 45"1•
Akzo ...................................... 79\
AmrTech ...............................64\
Ashland Oil •••••••,.................~52'·

AT&amp;T .....................................43'1.
Bank One .............................53~.
Bob Evans ............................18\
Borg·Warner ........................561(•
Champion ............................. 19'4
Charm Shps ......................... 6"1.
City Holdlng .......................... 43'!.
Federal Mogul ....................... 34'o
Gannett.................................9911•

Goodyear ............................. 63~.

Kmart ..................................... 14\
Landa End ............................. 27'J.
Lld ........................................ 24"!.
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 20:t.

$27 30

26 Wt:elcs
- SS3 K2
fil Weeks
. $105 ~6
Rates 01tlkk Metal Co•IIY
JJ Weeks
. • •• ... .. .. • •

One Valley ...............................34
Peoples ................................. 3~
Prem Flnl ............................... 20\
Rockwell ...............................&amp;0',1,
AD-Shell ...............................53~•
Shoney's .................................s\
Star Bank ............................. 451/•

Wendy's ................................22~

lm;kle Meigs County
t) Weeks

2tl Weeks
~2 Weeks . .

.

·

OYB .........................................37

whrtc OOmr earner scrvtcc IS av3llable

. S29 25
SS6 6H
$1tl9.72

Sarah Laudermilt Boyles

COLUMBUS
Thomas
Wmgate. 37. of Columbus. when hts
motorcycle and a truck coll1ded on a
Columbus c1ty street
MARYSVILLE- RyanS Bernthisel. 26. of Bowling Green. pas-

a two-vchJclc o.ccJdcnt on lntcrsw.tc
71 tn Cuyahoga County
DE GRAFF - M1chael Joseph
Wmncr, 8. of De Graff. pedestrian
·struck hy a veh1clc on state Route 55
•n Champaign County.
CLEVELAND - Evelyn Kcc.
79. homclown unknown . pcdc:-;tnan

Worthlngton .......................... 19'~

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advtlt
of GaiHpolls.
.

Local News in Brief:Middleport man foun.d guilty in court
A man charged with felony counts of grand theft of an automoh1le and
recetving stolen propeny was found gu11ty of a lesser offense of JOY ndIOg m Meigs County Common Pleas Counlast week
Charles Whtttmgton, 34, Mtddlepon, was arrested on May 24' m Galha County by Oh1o State Htghway Patrol Trooper Shawn Cunmngham,
who also testtfied dunng Whitungton's tnal
·
Whittmgton was represented by attorney Steve Story, wh1le the state
was represented by Asststant Prosecutor Chns Tenaglia Sentcncmg was
postponed pendtng a pre-sentence mvesugat10n

Deputies report deer-van collision
No mjuncs were reported follow1ng a deer/vehicle colhswn on State
Route 124 between Racme and Syracuse early thiS mornmg
Jason L. Stcwan, 22, Syracuse, was driVIng a 1990 Chevrolet Astro
van when he colhdcd wnh a deer that entered the roadway, causmg hght
damage to the van, accordmg to a Metgs County Shcnffs Department
reported

Driver escapes injury in vehicle fire
A Long Bottom man escaped injury when the p1ckup truck he was Jn vmg caught ftrc early Saturday afternoon on Bashan Road ncar Cannel
Road in Sutton Township
Harold A. Person. 34 had JUSt turned off of Morningstar Road onto
Bashan Road when he noticed smok~ coming from under the dash ol the
1-985 Dodge truck he was dtlvmg. acco'rdmg to a Me1gs County Shenll's
Department report. Thc)irc destroyed the dash. cab and hood of the truck
wh1ch was owned by R1tch•c's Auto Sales.
'

Announcements

·weekend accidents kill.11
By The Associated PrHS

Hart, who accepted the
lng J.D.
plaque on
of Eber's Cltgo; and 8111
Cross, owner ot Croas' Grocery.

1997 at his residence.
Arrangements w1ll be announced tater by the Cremeens Funeral Home,
Rac10e .

Renie
G. Russell
Rcnie G. Russell, 47. Henderson, W.Va , d1ed Monday, Sept 15, 1997 m
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Born July 20. 1950 10 SouthSide, W Va., daughter of John me Hoschar of
SouthSide, and the late Manha (Fteldcr) Hoschar, she was a former cook for
the P01nt Pleasant Nursmg and Rchabiluation Center.
She was also preceded m death by her first husband , Zcn•e Jumor Myers,
an mfant son. John Robert Russell, and brother, R1chard Ltndsay
SurviVIng m addmon to her father arc her husband. Ruben Kenneth Russell: a daughter, Rcn'e Roush of New Haven, W.Va .; two sons, Rohcn E Russell nd Zcntc Junior Myers Ill, both ofGallipohs Ferry, W.Va.; a stepdaughter,
Angrc Jeffers of Point Pleasant. W. Va . a stepson. Robert Russell Jr of V~r­
gm•a. live grandchildren, five sisters, Altie LewiS Qf R1chmond. lnd , Nellie Hudson of SouthSide. June Stover of Racme, and Ann R1cc and Naom1
Pullins. both of Pomt Pleasaiii, three brothers, Charles Hoschar of R1chmond.
&lt;;alvin Hoschar of SouthSide, and !ohnmc Hoschar of Pomeroy
Scrvtccs wil l be I 30 p m Wednesday 10' the Wilcoxen Funeral Home,
Pomt Pleasant. w1th Pastor Sleven Carter offaiianng. Bunal w1ll be m the
Yauger Cemetery. Leon. W.Va. Friends may call at the funeral home from
•7-9 p m. Tuesday.

Wanda A. Swearingen
Wanda A. Swearingen, 73, Rutland, dted Saturday, Sept. 13, 1997 at Holzer Medical Center.
'
A homemaker, she was born Sept. 24, 1923 10 Manetta, daughter of the
late Henry and Laura Schuman Erbse.
She is survived by daughters, Carol W1lsen of Columbus. and Elizabeth
Partndge of Sterrett, Ala.; a son, Rtchard Adair of Columbus: a daughter-mlaw, Myrna SweannBen of Rutland; e1ght grandchildren and three great-grandchildren; a brother, Henry 'Erbse of Columbus, a sister, Barbara Jean Erb&lt;e
of Columbus: and several meces and nephews ·
She was preceded in death by her husband, Alben Lester Sweanngen; a
Sa,:,ter and a grandson
Services will be 10 a.m. Wednesday m the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home,
Albany, wuh MonSignor Donald Horak officiaung. Burial will follow in the
Athens Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and
7-9 p.m Tuesday.

Bashan and Racmc volunteer lire departments responded to the

s~.;c nc.

accordmg to the report
I

CSX boxcars derail at Hartford
HARTFORD. WVa. - Seven boxcars filled w1th plastic pellets and
wood chips headed for Shell Chcm1cal dcra1led m Hanford early thts mommg. accordmg to Steven Duncan, asmtant chief of New Haven Fife
Department.
Duncan said the mctdcnt, wh1ch occurred around I:30 am. ~tthe Hartford Trailer Park. tore up the r~ilroad track. N_o re~9n_ f.Q!' the dr,ratll))cnt _
has been released.
No evacuauons or tnJurics were caused by the acctdcnt. Duncan satd.
A cleanup crew from CSX IS cuncntly workmg at the sue. Duncan estimated 11 would take several days to completely clean up the derailment
and reset the track
Accordmg to Duncan, members of the New Haven F~rc Department
stayed at the scene until 3 a.m. when the CSX crew arriVed.

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndlanaOhto direct hog pnces at selected
buymg pomts Monday as prov1dcd
hy the U.S. Department of Agriculture Market News.
Ba!Tows and g11ts· 50 ce'*' to I 00

higher: demand moderate to good
With a moderate movement

U.S 1-2, 230-260 lbs country
pomts 49.50-50.00, few ?O 50: plants
49.50-51 .00.

Annual Racine Fall Festival
(Continued from Page 1)
r:hcshtrc, Ranetta Wheeler, daughter
ol Mr and Mrs Randy Wheeler of
East Letart : and Jenmfer Yeaugcr.
granddaughter ol Mr. and Mrs Dav1d
Fox ol East Lctan.
The event was k1ckcd off wllh a
parade wnh pnzcs awarded to. in
order, Carroll Tcafmd wuh an early
Amcncan lndmn diSplay : the Chester
Counci l 323 Daughters of America:
and Gtrl Scout troops 1290and 1115.
Teaf ord's pnzc was donated to a fund
Lo assist Ractnc rcsJdcnt Jack Lyons.
Also rccogmzcd were busmcsscs
that sponsmed the event. J.D
Dnlhng. Cross' Grocery and Ehcr's
Cugo.
Wmncrs ol pumpkm growing conlest were, m order by class seniorTom Weekly II. Tom Weekly and Jenny Weekly :JUnior- Jcnmfer Lar-;on.
Stacy and Bnttncy Black and Mike
and Justin Engle.
Wmncr ol the trophy for largest
pumpktn was Tom Weekly Ill, who
entered a 179-pound pumpkm. Trophies for event were sponsored by the
Wecklyville Pumpkm Fann and Paul
H1ll Greenhouses.
Wmncrs '"the ktdd1c tractor pull,

sponsored by the Fall Fest1val Committee, were, tn order by we1ght class.
35-55 pounds - Emma Hunter.
Stephante Donaldson and Michael
Manuel; and 56-75 pounds - Ryan
Donaldson, Buddy Young and Cody
Patterson.

~PRING

VALLEY CI~EMA

446·4524

' ' . ' ..

7

•••••••••••••••••••••••••
•

- OUR TH/ .KS-

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

To the many fnends, ne1ghl' • and others throughout the •
area who sent flowers, cards anel showed love and concern at •
the loss of our father, Carl S. Hysell, we thank you .
•
. A very difficult t1me was made somewhat eas1er by the •
help and support at the ttme of hts death on Aug. 24, 1997, •
several days following an acctdent at his home.
•
We apprec1ate the qu1ck response to the scene of the •
aCCident by the Me1gs Emergency Service, the Rutland •
squad, and the Middleport Fife Department, the Me1gs County •
Shenff's Department wh•ch assisted at the accident scene •
and wtlh the funeral serv•ces, and F1sher Funeral Home
•
You were all JUSt super'
•
Thanks
•
Sons: Harold E. Hysell
•
Ca~ R Hysell
.•
and Family Members
•

•

•••••••••••••••••••••••••

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
.

Monday,SephHnber)5,1997

Patriots get past Jets 27-24
in OT; Raiders &amp; Pack win

I.

I
I-

lime

"We were m posotoon to won the
game, and I'm dJSappoonled we d•dn't," Parcells saod
George, released by Atlanta a
year ago after a sodehne tantrum, was
booed and heckled throughout the
game But he got the last laugh,
throwmg a 76-yard pass that set up
Cole Ford's llebreakmg field goal
woth 4·24 rema1nmg m the Rmders '
36·31 voctory over the Falcons
After the game, George grabbed
the ball and took a voctory lap, tauntong the Georg•a Dome fans, wavmg
and pumpong hts arms at them
"There were a lot of people m the
stands who have supported me
through ail the tough tome:,," sa1d
George, referrmg to about I00 fam oiy members and fnends aLthe game
"It was JUSt a spur-of-the-moment
thong "
George saod he spoke with Deoon
Sanders. another fanner Falcons
player who made a voctonous return
to the Georgoa Dome and proclaimed
ot to be "my house "
"Tius 1s my house now," smd
George, who exchanged h•gh-fives
With family and fnends whole other
fans pelted them woth empty beer
cups after hos voctory lap "Deoon
saod he would sell1t to me They can
rename 1t lhe George Dome "
"I don't thonk l would have taken
a voctory lap around the tield," saod_

AJianta quarterback Chros Chandler,
who was onJured for the second week
m a row.

George played a monor role for
most of the game Napoleon Kaufman had touchdown runs of 61 and
58 yards for the Raoder.; (1-2), but
Atlanta's second-strong quarterback,
Boily Joe Toihver, threw a s•x-yard
scorong pass to Terance Mathis to ue
ot at 31 with 7.17 remaonong
Cmcmnatl, Tennessee, Jack·
sonvoile and Pottsburgh had open
dates
Parcells returned to New England
after leavmg the team followong the
Super Bowl m a bllter spht With
Patriots owner Robert Kraft
"You leave a lot of yourself
here," Parcells sa1d "There are a lot
of kods on the other drcssmg room I'm
very fond of"
Drew Bledsoe, however, clashed
frequently w1th hos fanner coach
"Boll came hack to town and
brought a good football team on," he
sa1d "We felt we had somethmg to
prove w1th Pete Carroll as coach and
we want to go onward and upward
wllh Pete."
Curtos M'lf1on ran tor a carcer-hogh
199 yards on 40 carroes for the Paln·
ots, who arc 3-0 tor the first tome
sonce 1974
.
In other games Sunday, ot was
Washongton 19, Arozona 11 on over·
tome, Kansas Coty 22 Buttalo 16,
Green Bay 23, Moamo 18, Tampa Bay
28, Monncsota 24, Detroit 32, Chocago 7, Baltimore 24, the New York
Goants 23, Carolma 26. San Docgo 7.
San Fram:1sco 33, New Orleans 7,
Denver 35, St LoUJs 14, and Seattle
31 , lndoanapolos 3
Buccaneers 28, Vikings 14
in a game featurong the only two
teams on the NFC wothout a loss.
Tampa Bay omproved to 3-0 lor the
first ume smce 1979, when ll won us
first hve games en route to the NFC
champoonshop game ,
Horace Copeland caught hos first
touchdown pass smce 1995 and set
up another score woth a 49 yard grab
tor lhe Buccaneers, who are 2·0 away
from home after goong I· 7 on the
road last year
Rookoe Wamck Dunn rushed lor
tOt ynnh nnd sco.-eq on n 52-yanl
run m the fourth quarter forthe Bucs.
~ho were 6-10 last year

Ra•ens Z4, Giants 23
Balt1more, 4-12 last year and 0-8
on the road, won at Gtants Stadoum
on Matt Stover's 37-yard field goal
woth 34 seconds lett
The Ravens (2·1) took advantage
of a mtssed extra poont and two
mossed 41 -yard field-goal attempts by
New York 's Brad Daluoso.
Vonny Testaverde threw two
touchdown passes for the Ravens.
Lions 32, Bears 7
Barry Sanders, held to 53 yards m
the season's fir.;t two games, rushed
for 161 and Scott Mttchell had two
touchdown passes for DetrOit, whoch
JS 2- 1 on the heels of last year's 5-11
showmg that got Wayne Fontes fired
Ch1cago fell to 0-3 for the first
t1me smce 1969 and also lost
Rashaan Salaam, a 1,000-yard rusher m 1995, tor the season wnh a broken nght leg.
Redskins 19
Cardinals 13 (OT)
Mochael Westbrook 's fnilaway,
40-yard touchdown catch 1·36 mto
overt•me gave Washmgton a v1ctory
on the onaugural game at Jack Kent
Cooke Stadoum
Westbrook, who caught only one
pass m the first two games followmg
hiS demotoon from the startmg loneup for bentong up teammate Stephen
DavJS at preseason practoce, also had
a ti ve-yard touchdown catch on the
second quarter
The game-wonner came after Redskms rookoe Kenard Lang stropped
Leeland McElroy of the ball on Anzona s f1rst overtime possess1on
Another rookoe, Derek Smuh. recovered
Packers 23, Dolphim 18
Brett Favre threw two touchdown
passes and Dorsey Levens had a
carecr-hogh 12 1 yards rush•ng as
Green Bay (2-1) bounced back from
a loss at Pholadelphoa by wonnmg at
home
Ryan Longwell, who m1sscd a
ch1p shot m the final seconds that
weuld have ~aten the Eagles, hll all
three of hos field goals lo counter four
Irom Moamo's Olondo Marc
Chiefs 22, Bills 16
Elvos Grhac put Kansas Coty
ahead w1th a one-yard touchdown
pass to Tony R1ehanl•on With 6·55
left, and the Ch1efs stopped ButTalo
on tour plays mSJde the 10m the final

&gt;e, 42 Bc:llc Chll:ago -II Corn &amp;:utile
1!1 New York 40 Gmmb1 O:tklmd \ H
G~\:I•IPOITU Bo~i111n l1 A RndnJUCZ Sc mlc 17
TRIPLES G 1rc up;ma
Bt~uon
10
KnoblaiJI.:h MtMesulu 9 D.mlOn K.ansa~ C11y 7

Wtstfrn D1v1slon
~2

67

:'i~)

S m I r.m~ISl:O ....................... g2
Cnlllradn
71
S m D1~·!!~l
70

b7
72
N

"iSO
:'i 17
470

Los

Cbic:~~o

M1lwauk'--e

~4 2

11 76

490

s In IJh!~U ~

7'
""7'
7
M6 '"'
19
40,
60
"
"'70' 6779 470
"'m 12'
61 89
22
b()

Mmnc10111

411

Color 1do 10 All mla 6
Hous1on "ii L11~ Angdc~ I

DIYI~1on

Sunday's scores

77 72

C!Jior,tdo 4 A1laot.1 0
CINCINNATI6 Phtlai.ldph!;~ -1
Om:ago Cuhlli 1 P.usburl!h 2
NY Mcts I Mo111n:.1l 0
S1 UIU I!&lt; I 0 San DIC!!ll -1
LUii AnJ:,dcs -1 H ou~lon l ( IOJ
Flund 1 "ii S m Fr.mmco 4

407

Saturday's scores
' 8.1l1nnon: 6 NY Ynnk ...~~ I

Ou\;ago Wh1lt Sea 7 CLEVELI\ND b
l(anSlll Cny 1 Armhe1m I ( 111
Oakland 4 rk1r011 2

8o51on 2 ~hlwaukc.-c
T~aas ~ Mm~som l

, Today's games

I

DH N Y M~!S (Bohanon "ii 4 ukl Cr.1w lnrd 2
2) 11 Plnl w.Jl lph11 (Dl•ct:h 4 9 .md W1ns1nn 0-0)

Tl1run1o 6 Sc••uk 1

Sunday's scores
BQIIUn 2. Mdwal}k~ I

CLEVELA.ND H ChJc,•g•, Wh1t~o: Stll l
MmncMnln II Tt:us I
Otlnxl 6 Oaldund ~ '

Anuhcml l K..1n..,ns City 2

Scanlc \ Tomnco 2
NY Yunket'" K Btlllmturc:!
Today's~am ..
DH CLEVELAND IAndc:uon l I I at Ball i·
more (Van I).. I) I 15 p m. CLEVELAND CO~..: 1

6-91 r11 Bt~llmmre ~Kmd.1 +Ol 7 1"i fl m
B('Jsltln (Sabtrhag.en 0· 11111 NY Y.1nhc: ~
(Wells I+ rol 715 p AI
C'lllt.:&lt;lJO Wh1l!! Sox (E)'rt 1 l) .11 Mlhrtoluk~.~
(Eldred 12 Ill "OIIiirtm
Kansll5 Cl1~ (Ruslb ~ 91011 Tcl!as (Hdlm~=. 2 21
81'ipm
M1nn~so1a ( Hawk1ns "ii II) ,,, Anahl:llll
(SpflnJ.I!I' K-9), IOOS p m
DeiWII (Thompsun I '\- I I J .11 Ootkl.mJ {( )qUI ~!
1.~) 10 o~ r m
Tonlflto (Will.ams H-I ll a1 Sc.1U ie tCiuud~ 2 21
10:0~ p m

Tuesday's games
CLEVELAI\ID (Wcnthen J 2) ,,, Bnlumor!o!
(RodrittUCl ().0), 12
1ft • d:r.y
DH Bos1on (Sele 1 -12 and Oleu1 0-0) ut N Y
Yank~ (Pdllfle 17-7 und Banks I 0} 'i O"i r 111
CLEVELAND (Nugy 14-10 n1 B&lt;~kunore (Ke~
l'i-9)60~pmmghl
•
Chlca(IQ While Sox (lkre 4- 1) al M1lwnuke1!'
(Hanu1d1~l) 805pm
KAnms Clf)' (App1er 9-12) .11 Tel!:u (Pavhk l-

O.'if

4)8Hpm
Minncsoca {Rudke lg-9) ;II Anahe1m (H l'il!'(:1lwa
~).IOMpm

NL standings

:ra.
Atbnell
flolida

New York
Mon1re:al
Phi !adelphi II

U.lUIS '\

ou~ngo Cl.lbs .. PlltSbUrjlh I

I 'I

Wtstem

St

CINCINNATI' Ph1latklphM 0
Flomlu H San Fmm.:mu 1
N Y Meu 'I Mon1rcal 6 1I ll

72

Kans:11 CU)I

'

12

Saturday's scores

,.

Ccont1'1i11 Dhl!ilon
CLEVELAND

An~I'"IC's

Eultm Divilkln

»:

I. £d.

91
86 61
81 67
74 74
59 88

"

6"

m

'"

lOll

401

!ill
4'h
10
17
H'l,

"iO'ipm
CulnruJo (Wn !!lll b I I ) nt Flnnd1 (Fcrnandl'l
17 10) 7 0'ipm
Mmun:.tl {M lr\11~2 17-7) ;11 P111 s hur~h (lo uz.1
10 10) 7 011iipm
S m I rm.:mu (E.~ It s IK -1 ) ll All m1.1(Giavl.,.,
"7) 7-IOpm
CINCINNATI (Mttr~ut 7 Ill 11Cl1 1 ~ 11,!ll Cuh~
(Gonzukz II 7) tl U'i fl m
Los /l.n~ks (V,tkl~~ (). )1 ) ,11 S1 l ouas ( 8~1
lrm I II KO'irtm
sIll lh.:!!ll (Smull 'i '\).II Hnuslnn rH 1Dtptmt
lliJ ) K O'i pm
~ames
~.In l fll\1;1 ~~~~ {AI\,If\!1. l 21 11 Allanl t (Mill
wt)I'IIJ1'\J IICJpm
SIn Dlt:~O (Smnh ~'it 11 H tl U~I hn ((• trll l C1
!il I l~ p m
,
Cttltlradtt !C.I~ IIII tl II II J ;11 ~l ond.l (0jolll I
It ? (J"ii pm
NY . Ml!'ls 1R1'Cd 11 Kl 11 Phtl nklpllll
(Sdulhn)! l"ii- 10) 1 0'\ p m
Momre II cJohn ~tln 2 l a1 P111 ~hurJ!h (Ld~tr 9
I-l l ?OIIiip m
CINCINNArl (Mer~.;l:.cr K 10 ) II ClmtJ!ll
Culn CTaptlm b ll K0~ pIn
ltiS Anf,clc~ (MW"III~t!l 1J--I) 11 S! lttm~ 18u~
h)[).()) Hcv.;pm

fuesday's

AL leaders
SAlTING f llwmus CIUo;UJ!o l'i1 Jclkr
Bo ~ llltl ·H t, !kame Wilham' N~w Yorl..
IH E. M.1r11nez &amp;.IItle ~11 Ju s tl ~t: ('L£\1£
LAND 110 R umrez CLEVELAND U~ Gu:er
TtAIU l19 M V.IUj!.hn Btmon ll9
RUNS G,tru,tpan,, Rnstuu 117 Gnffcy
St:nltll!' Il-l Je1er N~w York 110 Knoblnulh
Mmn.cuua 109 8 L Hunter Dt" trult 10-J F
Thomna Ctu~ugo 101 Tony Clnrk Dl!'tro11 100
RBI Gnffey Se.urle 116 T Manm~z New
York 114, S;~lmon Anoh~1m 118 F Th o ma~
Chn.:ngo 116 Juan Gonullez Tu 1s 114 0 Nt"lll
New York 11 2 Tonyanrk ~1ro1 1 I l l
HITS Gam&lt;~parra Bowm 194 Jeter New
York 176, Greer Tella s 176 John Valenl tn
Bouon 112 F Thomns Chrcnt!.O 171 E MarllntL Sc:arlle 17 1 I Rodnguez Tc:xa' 170 Gnf
fc:y Se:vtle 110
DOUBLES John Valenun Boston 47 Cmllo
sun

PRIMES~tJl·

$9 9°

0 * Installed

week
Panthers 26, Chargers 7
C~rolona welcomed back quarter·
hack Kerry Colhns and wrecked the
home dchut of San D1cgo coach
Kcvon Go Ibrode
Colhns, playong lor the lirst ume
stncc hrcak1ng hJs JaW on Aug ~.
threw two touchdown passes IC) trght

end Wesley Wal ls, and John Kasay
had tour field goals

Gotr
SAINT NOM LA BRETECHE
France (AP) ·Mark O'Meara shot a
2-under-par 69 m the hnal round
Sunday to limsh at 13-undcr 271 and
won the Lancome Trophy by a songle
shot over Sweden 's Janno Sandchn
O'Meara, a mcmher ot Jhc U S
Ryder Cup squad challcngong l!uropc
on Sept 26-21!, mJSscd the fauway
lett on the 17th hole . but came hack
to salvage par Then he chopped ncar
the hole from 80 teet away on the
par 3 18th to claom hos soxth overseas
v1clory and lirst m Europe :sml:C lhc
Lawrence Batley lntcrnatJOnal on
1987 He earned $ 184000 lor the
won

M1lwo

I P~nr1 ~ !2 'il

2 W lshiiiJ:IIIII ( ) I})

!() 161 :S

~ llt~ndt (l ol)

NL leaders
BAITING L W,1lker Coltlt,IIJu lh'J Gwvnn
San D1egu 1M P1aU .1 Lt• ~ All!!dl.'§ l"i7
L(lliOII fltlu11.1 1-'0: Jt1yner ~.111 Dtq.n Hti AI
runzo N~w Yt,rk. 1:!7 M 1rk Gr ~ ~ ~ lhll.IJ!Il

"'

RUNS I Will..-r Cnlnr:.u.lo Ill BIJ!.)!,I\I
112 GollolffoiJ!•l Colttro~dt&gt; Ill Bnmh
'\ m I r.111 ~ 1st:n 107 En~ Ymm~ I tl~ An~clcs IOU
Ba~wdl Hou~tnn lJ~ S I ml~y San D1cgu ~~~
RRI Gah1rr 1~ 1 Cnlor 1do 129 lla~wtV Hmt~
tnn I 2Z L W,1lkl!'r Cnlor.•do I I'\ Bt~ht:u~ Cnl
t lf •Lkl 114 Gwynn San D1ef!o II '\ Sns.1 Chll 1
/-!11 11 2 Kenl S.m Frolli\IS\:11 110 Aluu IINitlol
110
Hlf~ Gwyn n S m D• ~ t!" 20' I. W,,l kt:r
Cttlur.1Uo I% P1.1ua Ltt~ An~l.'lc !&lt;. IK{I UlgJ!II'
HtiU SIOR 179 G~lurr. 1go1 (olur,klt 177 M1lf\lb1
Lu~An ~ck~ 114 Cisll lla Colm.Uu Il l
DUUOLES GruJz1d .md. M nnu ...ll ~0
Gwynn Sm D1e~o -l'i I Wdk\'f ( 11lnr:ult1 +I
L.ms m~ Mnm re 1l ol l ('lupp1:r Jt11~~:" Al l.1111.1 W
M ttlltk ~l I us An~cl ~~ llJ M11r utdtlll Plul hid
flllll lti
TRIPLES ()cShldLI ~ S! LtlUis I]: W (oul.'r
r~o: ro L(l ~ An,.l.'k ~ II Rr~ltil Ptlhhurgh 9 W11111
1d Pm s bur~h 9 N P~rcr. l nltt r,aht K l.r l l
'r' ou ni! LtlS An,.ek:s k D.1u l!un FlunJ.1 K
HOME RUNS I. W.1lktr Cu lM ~tlt l .n
Cas11llt Ctl ltH.tdn l\1 B.t!!well Hm1 , 1tm llJ
C..I.II'CI):ta Culor 11Jo lb P1.1zu Los An):.dcs l'i
Buni.l ~ S,m Fr.lnll~o;D H Sns 1 Cfi1 ~.: lt!O t~
STOLEN BASES D ~ant.kr~ C INCINN A n
~b WomiLk P111sbur~h '\2 DcSh1dtl\ S1 Ltllll ~
47 Ent Yuun~ . Los Angelt:s 42 U!J!J!Io Huu s1on
~9 Q Veras S,m Dn:gn ll Mundc ~ 1 Lm Anj!t:
Its ~1 L Wnlkl!'r Ctllorodo 11 Bonth, S.m Fr.1n
tl5lll 11
PITCHING (17 decisions) Nca,_1.: Atl.mltl 20.
1 tl70 2 61 E~1es San Fr.muM:o IK -1 KIK
\I I G ~bdduiP. Al l:mra IK-.J. KJH 2 22 K1k
Hnuslon I M-6 1~ 2 '\R P J Marti~Z Mom~:-~1
17 7 70~ I Kl Ruetrt S11n FmntoiKO 12-6 667
1 ~0 Park Los Angeles 11-1 6"10 1 411 M
Clark ChlcaJO J 1-7 6~ 184 Gl.av1ne Atl.mr~
1'\-7 MO 111
STRIKEOUTS s~ hdhng Ph1laddph1a 2'J6
PJ Marunez Monln.!~l 214 Smolrz Allanla 2lt.
Nomo Lo1 Angd es 21R K1Ce Hooslun 191 K J
Brown Florida 195, Andy Bcn~:s Sl l..o01s 17~
SAVES Be d ; San Frannst:o 17 Shaw
CINCINNI\TI n. John Franco New Y1nk 16
Todd Worrell Llls Angeles 1"i Edersley S!
H 1l U~I nn

LANE
ACTION

Football
NFL standings

4

ll.'m~•s..'i.! (CJ)

~

20 I WK
20 I ~4'\

llnntlt 1\1 l'l

2 () I 4K1

fl
1

Nt,nhC~rolmilll
Nl:hfoi~J.:.t (2J

~·
Ill

Otvmon

ll! 1 I l!ll. lE I'A

Iwn

:\ 0 () 1 (J()
2 I 0 1-1&gt;7

New Engla!ld
M11nt1
Ruff.1lu
NY Jds
lnt.h tnoiJlllh ~

'I ''
i

(I

1 ~1

fl

() l ' l
0 ()(1(1

14

44

~()()
~)

17

17

I ()()

,,,

11

11

62

Jndi MI II~ I Ik

2

R il!Hllnrc
CINC INN AT I
PU I\hllfJ!h

2 I 0 M7
I I ()
I I ()
I I 0

Wt&lt;~1ern

c;()()

Dm:ouon

1 0

f)

Ill

'" "
"21 ""'

•
0()1()()

Cenlral Dl\'l~lon

T~lllll.~s..&lt;t!

"' ,.
"K7 ""
17

2 I 0 M7
I 2 {) 111

(~

"'

" "7'J71
"

I ' 0 111 14
I 2 () l1 ~

S,111D1q:n

-·-

St. . lll l~

NA'fiONAI. CONFERENCE

J l7\.t

s

.

l2H
1 2l'i

2 ()

J (M)/

~

",,'
'" """'

!0 I lf1S
!0
'' 0
!0
II
20
!0
!0
20
20

II
II
2I
I2
2 11

ll!LI&amp;tl' I'A
2 I 0 M7 10
I I () li ,:() 19
I I () 'i(l() 27
o n1
I
I
0 H1

W t~ lllll!!Ulll
I&gt; lib!~

Phrlat.ld)lht,
Af'l/lllol
NY (u~lll \

!li.JK

24

!Wb

'

M9

"
"'"
"
"'"
21

4'!0

"'
1'14

Ct'nlnd OlvlsMJn
1 [) II I Ill hi
2 I 0 M? 77
2 I () 667 711

2 I () 061
II I () ()()()

lllllol~ll

C.11ulm1
~~~~ 1r.lllll~~u

Wrslrrn IJI\'ISion
2 I () M7

S! I !lUI ~
111 ~

17

"
"
"" "
'f7

4"i

l/

2 I 0 M7

~4

1

tw

12
1-1
7l
91

n

111

(I

u ()()()

()

0 OIJ() 17

~"

Sunday's st.·ores

17

112

21

'"

127

NCAA Division I scores
Saturday's achon
b.~l

Army -II I 111)~ 11 1.' 14
llu•lun &lt;.uJiq.'l: II Wt:~l Vir)!llll l N
liu11.1lu -'!J DcllWollc Sf 1()
(t\11111.'\.ltutt 11':

Co.ll\tlll\1 ~7 l.ut l ~ lll ' 'J
f t mt~elli\Ul llt (IJ M1n~tl'

Hul,ln :!K SW lex ,, S1 24
Mlllll "'' M ~~~ll.hiiiCI!~(I

Navy l/1 K u!~ .. r~ 1
l\'1m ~ ~ '\:! l ~e mpk: 10
Hllt~tk hi 111U ~~ lo;w H.uup ~lu r, ~I
lnw\1111 27 Huly ~~~~~s 7
VJI IoiiiiiV I l'i DdiiWollt: 2'i
Wi!.'llt.t \\ lontO
Suuttl
1\uhnrn )IJ Mt~• '~ ' fl)ll 'J

Tonight'!i's game
Plul.lllc lphm 11 Dallu~ IJ p m

AP Top 25 college poll
Here .1rc the Top 2~ !earn~ 1n !he A s~Ol 11ll~
Press ~.:ollegc foolball poU w11h firs! place votes m
parc:n!hc5es ~urrc:nl rec:ords as uf lasl SalurtJay to·
1.11 pomts bnscd on 25 pomls for a fir~l plalc: vute
lhmt~gh one: penni lur a 2:S!h flllt:c vole .md Jut
week s lmal nmkmg

llt.tllllllllt~,l 1 \ M1t.lt.l!e f~1111 24
t:11nlcl )() Smtih I lund 1?
l l c m ~nn I'J N C 1ruhtt.1 S1 17
IJ Ylthttll ~I M Myvt llt: lcnn 2'\
l .. t~ l C truh11.1 2"i, W 1k1.' l 11 rc~1 "24
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H IOIJIIIIII 49 Hnw m.1 21
Ja c k~ o n St ll Tenncsst..'l! S1 2K
Jame~ M.tduon ]2 [ Tcnncs~l'\: S! 27
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l1bcny 11 W CarClltna JO
Lou 1~1.1na Te~:h 17 NE Lntt~sun.1l li
Loutnrll~ 26 llhnuu 14
Morgnn St 1R Bethunc-Cuokm.1n I 'i
NW l.ot!ISiana 42 Hentkrson Sl 1
Nor!h C:aro l1na 2K St mford 17
Prcsbyu:nan 16, Charlcslnn Southern 1
R 1~-e 10, Tul.me 24
S Carol ma S! 11 Furman ti
Samlord 21 Ausun Pe•y 11
Sou1hern Mclh ll Arkansas 9
Southern 16 Ark -Pme Bluff 11 (1 OT)
Tro~ 20 Alab11ma Sl I~
Vnf!lnl:l 26, R1chmund 7
V1rgmm Teth 1) S)'rm;usl!' 1

LIVING ROOM SUITES
STARTING IT

$59 9

Sn Store for Details

Moon was 24 -lor-38. set up ,,
lorst·quartcr touchdown run hy
Lun.1r Snuth .md even ran lm one
lOw..: hdown hunscll , hili hrst ru!-ihang
to u~hdown 10 lour yc,us

Sandchn shot 67 to move up onto
second at 272 Greg Nonnan played
the b.1ck none m 2-over par and card·
cd a 72 to limsh t1cd fdr thud w1th
fellow Australoan Peter O'Malley at
273.

llhlllliN\I AllOfll St 17
W KcniUlky 17, E Ktolllu ~ ky 21
Wilh1m&amp;.Mtry41 VMII2

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
The New York Yankees can't stop
the Balllmore Onoles from getting
onto the playoffs Instead, they jUSt
macle sure they weren't around to sec

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II

The Yankees prevented BaltJmone
fro111 becomong the fir.;t team on the
ma~ors to ch nch a postseason spot,
wo~nmg 8-2 Sunday noght to wrap up
a ~uccessful weekend at Camden
Yards.
The Orooles' magoc number for
ensurong at least a wtid-card spot
remained at one and their AL East
lead over the Yankees were cut to 6
112 games New York's magoc number for playoff spot os seven
Jlcrnoc Wolloams had three hots and
drove on three runs as the Yankees left
Balt1more w1th three wons m the tourgame scroes New York lost Its lirst
seven games agaonst the Oroolcs thos
season, but has soncc won tour of
five, outseonng the Onofes 45-12 1n
that span
"They got us when we weren't
hot and we weren't playong well We
know we can play woth them and they
know they can beat us," saod Paul
O'NcJII, who scored twoce for the
Yankees "Hopefully we'll he back on
Octoher."
Tmu Martmez drove 10 three runs
and Chad Curtos hot a home run for
the Yankees
Dwoght Gooden (8-4) got on trou-

Southwrst
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onnongs for hos soxth consecutive voctory He os 5-0 on seven starts sonce
beong traded by the Mets.
Rocardo Roncon (4-8) took the
loss
Mets I, Expos 0
At New York, a nonth-onmng coihsoon at home plate that led to three
Montreal ejectoons overshadowed
Dave Mhcko's potchong performance
and capped a wold four-game seroes
Luos Lopez homered for the first
lime on more than a year and Mhcko
(8- t I) potched 8 I/3 shutout onmngs
In the Expos' mnth, Dav1d Seguo
songled w1th one out and Damn
Fletcher doubled onto the left-field
corner.
Seguo, attempting to score on the
play, crashed onto catcher Todd Pratt
as shortstop Rey Ordonez's relay
throw arnved Seguo was called out
by plate umpore Larry Vanover
although tclevosoon replays showed
that Pratt ~ropped the ball and Segut
had touched the plate.
Moke Lansong, Montreal manager
1 Felipe Alou and traoner Lance
McLean were all tossed followmg
several heated exchanges w1th the
umpmng crew
Carlos Perez ( 12-tl) was the loser
The clubs played cxtra-onnong
games Fnday and Saturday
Cardinals 10, Padres 4
At St. Louts, Mark McGwue h1t
hos 51st homer and St Louts scored
seven runs on the eoghth onnong
McGwore, the tir.;t player woth
consecutive 50-homer seasons sonce
Babe Ruth on 1927-28, connected off
Joey Hamdton (11-6\ on the soxth
onnmg, movong one short ot ht s
career hogh, set last season. McGworc
has 17 homers on 37 games soncc St
Louts acquorcd h•m from Oakland on
July 3 I, and has 14 games remaonmg
to chase Roger Mans' season record
of 61
After McGwore's ho111er pulled St
Louos to 4-3, the Cardonals ralloed on
the eoghth off Mark Kroon (0-1)

ble on the first onmng, walking Cal
Ropken w1th the bases loaded and two
outs But Gooden struck out Harold
Baones to end the threat. and shut
down the Onoles whole the Yankees
ralhed
_The Orooies woil have plenty of
chances to chnch a playoff spot in the
next couple of days. They play daymght dqubieheaders agaonst Cleveland today and Tuesday
"We're tryong to get through some
tough umes," manager Davey Johnson saod. "We're a httle banged up
and l thonk everyone's been dreadong
thos stretch We've got a couple of
more days to get by, then everybody
will probably breathe a sogh of
rchd ••
In other games, Seattle beat
Toronto 3-2, Anaheim defeated
Kansas Coty 3-2, Boston beat Mol·
waukee 2-1, Monncsota topped Texas
11 - 1, and Detroot defeated Oakland 6-

Belcher's no-h1t b1d m the seventh
1nmng and h1l a.1ac.break.ing sacrafice

fly on the eoghth that led Anahe1m
over VISJllng Kansas Coty
Belcher, who had never taken a
no-hotter onto the seventh on hts II ·
year career, lost II when Anderson hot
a leadoff double Jack Howell tol·
lowed woth a home run that made 11
2-ail.
Red So• 2, Brewers 1
Nomar Garcoaparra hot hos thord
home run of the three-game scnes
and hos 29th overall as Boston won
at County Stadoum The Brewers
have lost five m a row and seven ol
coght
The game was scoreless unul
Garcmparra's two-run homer m the
filth mnong The Red Sox have won
four straoght
Twins II, Rangers I
Todd Walker hot a three-run homer
that capped a sox-run hrst mnmg as
Monncsota
stopped Texas· tour-game
5.
wonmng
streak.
Marinen 3, Blue Jays 2
Rook1c Davod OrtiZ hot hos forst
Jay Buhner hot a two-run homer on
cancer
homer, Pat Meares matched a
the e•ghth onnong at the Kmgdome
carecr-hogh
with four hots and Marty
and Seattle held Its 5 1/2-game lead
Cordova
had
three ot the Twons' 21
on the AL West. The Manners
hots
reduced thcor magoc number over
Bohhy Wott (11-11) rc t~redjust
Anaheom to eoght
one
hatter, matchmg hos shortest out·
Buhncr's 36th homer gave hom
ong
on
a career spanmng 336 starts
100 RB!s for the thord straoght seaHe
allowed
sox runs and sox hils
son He connected off Boil Roslcy (0Tigers 6, Athletics 5
1), makong hos first maJOr league
Bob Hamclon and Tony Clark
appearance sonce undergomg shouleach homered and Detroit heat Oakder surgery last Novemher
Carlos Delgado and Fehpc Crespo land at the Coloseum
Scott Sanders (6-12) won consec
homered on consecutive pnchcs tor
utove starts lor the lorst llmc thos seaToronto on the fifth.
Ken Gnffey Jr., w1th JUSt four son- son Tr,odcd Irom Seatilc to the Tigers
gles on 27 at-bats sonce h1ttmg hos on July I~ he was comong ofl a one ·
50th home run last Sunday. had an hotter agaonst Texas on hos last game
Rookoc Ben Groevc homered tor
RBI songie for Seattle
the
Athlctocs
Angels 3, Royals 2
Garret Anderson stopped Tom

Tiger Woods' father discovers
tragic fate of son's namesake _

Ohio H.S. scores
Saturday 's actinn
1\kwnl 14 Co~ni~J u rnnk~n 12
hkru n S1 V ~ ~ M 21 Akrun H1•b,m 11
/I.I!IM.tll.t (Po~ J 11 Cm MucJI~r 7
.1\sht,lbula 14 l'unc~vllk H.ltVt:)' 20
.1\~ ht.ibula Etlgewuutl4K Cnnncaul 6
D~ll.ur~ S! Jol1n s lK ru~~ 1r.1wm Ce 111 C.uh l2
llm.l~topurt 29 Salmcv1l k ~ut!lh!;m o
( .11111111 C'1lh 20 Warren Kcnnt:Uy 9
Cha~n n r.dh 27 w Gc IUg.l 2ft (OT)
Clc Un•vcn11y -16, (}rlln~c 1K
f; Cunlun 12 Mai111'Jlt 21
GarficlliHi s Tnnll y2 1 CJl: VAI\J ll
Ckncvo1 1~ JdfcBun Are 1 21
Gmll'li 27 Em !Pa ) Mer~yhurst ()
H,1wkcn 4H Gr lmuur 10
Lakl!'woot! ll ParmaHt•lyN,unt:l4
Ltkc:wuuLISI I:Jwaul 17 PtrmtPu.lu~ 111
Middlcfidtl L.II'LIIII iJ 'iO LcUg~ITlunl 20
MmlnrJ 4~ Pnmmtllllh Nolle O.lltiC I-'
Ncw.trk C11llt 10 l...t.tnl:H IIIl: Roscu.m1 It)
Nurw,tlk. S1 !'rut 41) Clmw01xl 14
Rutky R1 ~cr Lulherun W 12 Fmr1Hirl Harhor 2fl

"The way we're piayong nght
now, we feel real good, especoaiiy
sonce we beat those three p1tchersNeagle, Smaltz and Maddux," Gaiarraga satd "Those are three good
p1tchers."
Elsewhere 10 the NL, ot was.
Aonda 5, San Francosco 4, Los
Angeles 4, Houston 3 in 10 10mngs;
Chocago 3, Pottsburgh 2; New York I,
Montreal 0, and St. Louts 10, San
Doego 4
Marlins 5, Giants 4
At Moamo, Kun Abbott broke all
eoghth-onnong toe with an swongong
bunt that rolled 10 feet for an RBI
songle. Pooch-hitter Jom Eisenreoch
followed wtth a sacrofice Hy
San Franc1sco scored once on the
n1nth and had runner.; at second and
thord with two outs. Thord baseman
Bobby Bomlla then made a gameendong catch of Barry Bonds' pop
foul wh•lc tumbling onto the first ro'\"
of stands.
Jay Powell (6·2) was the wonner
and Robb !'len got hos 33rd save
Roberto Hernandez (3-2) took the
loss
Dodgen 4, Astros 3 (10)
At Houston, Mdce P1azza songled
home the wonnong on the I Oth as Los
Angeles stopped a five-game losong
streak
Bolly Wagner (7-8) struck out
three of hos first four batters, then
walked Oils Noxon and Eric Young
woth one out 10 the lOth. Poazza then
songled to center off Jose Lorna
Scott Radon sky (5- I) got the won
and Todd Worrell got three outs for
hos 35th save Jeff Bagwell hot a tworun homer, hos 39th, for the Astros
Cubs 3, Pirates 2
At Pittsburgh, the Porates conllnued a September shde that m•ght
soon drop them out of contentoon 1n
the NL Central as Mark Clark ( 13· 7)
remaoned unbeaten w1th Chocago
The Pirates have lost five of SIX
and 14 of 19 and traol fim-piace
Houston by 4 1/2 games.
Clark gave up SIX hils on e1ght

Yankees beat O's 8-2 to delay
hosts' getting playoff berth

Bo•ing
LAS VEGAS (APl - Oscar De
La Hoya dctc.ltcd Hector Camacho
on unan1mous dccJsmn Saturday to
retaon the WBC wcl terwcoght champJOnsh•p ACompuBox punch analysts crcdoted De La Hoya w1th landmg
373 punches to 124 lor Camacho De,
L'\ Hoy a WitS also credned woth
power punches, compared to JUSt
for Camacho.

Nul11u:il~tun26

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I I Alolhallll
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20 I (&gt;41

to: M 1d 11~tll

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Seahawks 31, Colts 3
At lndoanapohs, Warren Moon. at
40 the oldest player on the NFL,
passed lor 270 yards and one touch·
down on Seattle's lirst voctory of the

Sports briefs,----....;..

40 0

Je ter N~w York 1 B L Humer IA:1m11 1 Bur·
m1z Milwauka: 1 Alll;l!'ll Anahe~m. 1 Brady An
dt.uon BahlmOf\" 7
HOM E RUNS Gnrtcy S~:ulllc 50 I M.1r·
trnez N~w Vorl:. 41 Tholl)C CL[V I LAND .JO
Junn Gonz.nk'Z TI!'IUIS \7 Buhnt:r S..:.111k lb R
Palmcm1 Ballmtorc ~ M1.-Gwnc Oakland '-'
S [OLEN BASES B L Hunter Dc1ru11 bK
Knubl.llllh Mmne~om "i!! N1xon Tommo -11 f
Goodwm lexa~ .JS V11.qud CLEVELAND 40
Durh.11n Cht~.tf!ll 11 A RndngUl"l St- nile 21l
PITCHING ( 17 tl c~Js1uns) Rundy Johnmn
Settlle 11-4 KIO 2 2'i Mn)er .Sun lc 10· -1
XOO 1 71 Clemens fomnto 2! b 17H 202 lr
ILblln B.tllmwm~ 11'.-6 721 i !'II P~nme New
Ynrk J 7 7 70K 2 Kt) Rl tm Dclrtlll 16 7 ft%
4 0 I C hnky A11aht'l nt 11- ti 6K4 .J 2l Ht.&gt;r
sluscr CLEVELI\NU I 1 r, bX-1 4 M
STRIKF:Ol,JTS Randy John£tm Sc 111lc 272
Cltml!'ns Toronltl 261 Con~ Nc:-w York 21 'i
Mus~1na Baltimore 206 F.1sscm Sc.1tt lc 11'i
ApfM..:r K . m~as C11y J1'i Ra~ke Mmfll!l\ul.l I ~K
SAVES M R1 w r1 N~w Ynrk "I k111Uy
Mytrs B dumnn: .JI Duu,_ Junes Ml lw.1uln \2
Todd Jolk!s ~ 1m11 19 W.:udanU Tcxus 2lJ R
Ho;'fRIOLk:Z C'lll~l!!ll 21 1\.'l t:lv tl /l.nllll..'llll ]:~

By TOM WrJHERS
AP Sporq Writer
The Los Angeles Dodger.; and San
Francosco Giants moght have more to
worry about on the NL West than JUSt
each other.
The dovisoon has become a threeteam raoe woth the Colorado Rockoes
chmbing back onto the playoff pocture
followmg a three-game sweep m
Atlanta- of ail places.
"We got a chance," Colorado fir.;t
baseman Andres Galarraga srud "We
just got to keep playmg the way we
are."
The Rockies won for the 15th tome
in 17 games Sunday, compietong a
three-game sweep of the Braves with
a 4-0 VICtory on a combined four-li•t
shutout by Pedro Aslal;oo and Jerry
Dopoto
Colorado moved withon five
games of San Francosco and Los
Angeles, and 1f the Rockoes can slay
'close they. can help themselves down
lhe stretch They'll fimsh theor season
woth three games at Los Angeles, four
at home woth the G•ants, and then
close w1th four more at home agamst
the Dodgers.
Before gettong swept, the Braves
had won 40 of 56 from Colorado,
oncludong 20 of 25 at home
In Atlanta, Andres Galarraga's
e1ghth-mmng hot broke up a scoreless
duel hetween John Smoltz ( 14-12)
and AstacJO ( 11 -9), who set a Rockoes record with I2 strikeouts
Pooch-hitter John VanderWal had
a three-run homer on the mnth off
Smaltz, h1s first sonce last Sept I6
In sweepmg the senes. Colorado
defeated Atlanta starter.; Greg Maddux, Denny Neagle and Smoltz

BREAKS UP PASS - Green Bay cornerback ter of Sunday's NFL contest in Green Bay, Wis.,
TYron Williams (37) breaks up a pa1111intended for where the Packers won 23-18. (AP)
Miami receiver Charles Jordan In the fourth quar·
seconds
.
The Bolls drove from the1r 33 to a
fim down at the Choefs 7 w1th 27 seconds left But Todd Coihns' pass on
fourth down was mtcrcepted by Mark
McMolloan on the end zone,
49ers 33, Saints 7
Steve Young, sodeloned last week
due to h1s th1rd concussiOn m h1s lasl
I0 regular-season games, threw three
touchdown passes, and Rod Woodson
mtcrcepted three passes and recovered a fumhle m San FrancJ!-i~.:o's rout
The vtsotong Samts (0·3 ) turned
the ball over eoght umcs, and coach
M1kc Dnka tonally put m Danny
Wucrllcl '" place of Heath Shuler,
who has coght ontcrccpt10ns and no
touchdown passes tho s season
Broncos 35, Rams 14
John Elway moved onto SJxth
place '" career NFL touchdown passes wllh 257 by throwmg tour m Den
vcr's ro111p of Vls1tmg St Lou1s
Two of the touchdown passes
were to Rod Smoth for 72 and 3~
yards, and Darnen Gordon returned
a punt 94 yards tor another score.
Terrell Davos had hiS thud straoght
tOO-yard ru•hmg game, garnong-103
yards on 21 carnes as the Broncos
won 35-14 lor the second straoght

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

West gets three in title chase
after Rockies .s weep ~raves

Page4

NFL nearly completes Week 3

By The Associated PI'Ha
Bill Parcells went back to Foxboro
Stadoum as coach of the New York
Jets and found out h•s team os nearly
on the same class New England Jeff
· George went back to Atlanta as quarterback of the Oakland Raiders and
left the Falcons and the•r fans wondenng bow much class he has
Adam Vmatoen k1cked a 34-yard
field goal 10 overt1me Sunday mght,
goving the Patnots a 27-24 v1ctory
over the Jets on Parcells' first game
agamst hos fanner team sonce takmg
ot to the Super Bowl last January.
It was a narrow "ctory for New
England, whoch led 24-17 before Nell
O'Donnell's 24-yard touchdown,pass
to Keyshawn Johnson toed ot witi131
seconds left in regulatoon Then Der·
nck Cuilors fumbled the kockoff, govong the Jets a chance to win, but the
Pats' Moke Jones blocked John Hail 's
field-goal attempt, foreong the over-

I

Monday, September 15, 1997

.'

.,

By RON SIRAK
Tom Callahan feogned an mtenest
NE\Y YORK (AP) - Ttger m the growth of golf on Voetnam to
Woods was a pillar of support for hos gain access to the country and then
dostrnught father after Earl Woods defied government censors on trackfound out the Voetnamese sold1er he mg Phong HJS story appears on the
named hos son for doed on a political October ossue of Golf D1gest
re-educaloon camp on I976, accord"Earl saod he cried for a couple of
mg'to the reporter who unraveled the days after he learned that Phong had
mystery
doed, " Callalian saod. "Earl satd ot
Earl Woods, a fonner Green Beret was hke losong a rciatovc and that
with two tour.; of duty on Voetnam, Tiger was hts shoulder to cry on It
had long told people that his son kills hom that Phong starved "
Eidrock was named for Col. Tiger
Callahan also found that Phong's
Phong, who was called Tiger by Earl wodow, Lythi Boch Van, has hved in
because of his bravery in battle
Tacoma, Wash., smce 1994, that she
Woods, who lost contact woth barely spoke English and that she had
Phong after the fall of South Vietnam, never heard of Tiger Woods
satd he hoped that Phong would hear
Earl Woods, hos wtfe Kuiuda and
ofTiger Woods, figure out that it was Tiger Woods met w1th Lytht Boch
Earl Woods' son and get m touch Van, now 61, and two of her choldren
wnh him.
"" in an emotional reunion Sept I I at

the Woods home m Cypress, Calof
"It ,was very sweet," Callahan
saod "They JUSt sat on the couch and
talked for hours T1ger was very
much onto 11 "
Phong, a battlefield fncnd ofTiger
Woods' father, hved barely a year
after the fall of Smgon, dymg Sept
9, 1976, in the squalor of a CommuniSt camp, the magazone says Woods
was born Dec. 30, 1975
•
Determoned to track down the
man for whom Toger Woods was
named, Callahan was thwarted by
faulty memones, uncooperative government officoals and mcompiete
officoal records.
•
After travehng from Ho Cho Mtnh
C11y to Hanoo, appeartng on TV and
takmg out newspaper ads ustng an
(See TIGER on Page 6)

'"'

~~1'1'

r"'\,}~.., ~

~ P %~ il::"'tfr't

NUNNALLY SCORES- The Cincinnati Redli'

Jon Nonnally dlvesacroas the plate to score paal
Philadelphia backstop Mike Llaberthal to score

hla team's final run in the eighth Inning of Sun·
day's National League game in Philadelphia,
where the Reds won 6-4. (AP)

Reds get 6-4 win over Phils
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Brett
Tomko had a busy noght
The Conconnato potcher allowed
three runs on 7 1/3 mmngs - two
earned- dropped a pop fly, drove on
a run, and smashed onto a runner Sunday on the Reds' 6-4 v1ctory over the
Ph•ladclph1a Ph1lhes
The Phtlloes scored 1twtce on the
fourth onmng, aoded by Tomko's
error on Tony Barron's pop up along
the first base hne. Tomko then colhded wnh Barron, who was award·
ed forst base
"It kmd of snapped my neck back
a hule," saod Tomkom who omproved
to I 1-6. "But I should have caught
the ball It wasn't enough to make me
come out of the game, though "
He allowed sox hns, and had three
strtkeouts and four walks
"I struggled a httle bot early wnh
my command," Tomko saod "But

then I settled down It was nocc to get
runs suppon. that always helps ··
The VICtory hfted the Reds to 2524, the first t1me they have heen over
500 smce manager Jack McKeon
took over on July 25
"That was a mcc way to gel over
500," McKeon saod "It was a n•ce
won Hopefully. 11 wtii be a steppong
stone for us "

The Reds scored four runs 1n the
fourth off Tyler Green (4-4) Doubles
by Jon Nunnally, Chros Stynes and
Wolloc Greene produced two runs,
Reggoe Sanders smgled on another.
and Tomko's had an RBI fielder's
chooce
Cmcmnat1 scored another run m
the seventh on an RBI smglc hy
Stynes, and added ns final run on the
moth when Nunnally stole home as
part of a double-steal woth Eduardo
Perez

The Ph1lloes scored a run on the
coghth on an RBI songle by M1ckey
Morandono and complered the scormg
on the nonth when M1dre Cummongs
doubled on Kevon Stocker
The final run came off Jeff Shaw.
who collected hos 37th save, 12th on
hiS last 12 appearances
"The kod (Tomko) IS really
omprcssovc," Phollocs manager Terry
Francona sa1d "I thmk he moght
already be a real good pitcher '
The loss was the Pholhes tifth 1n
thcor last sox games
"We haven't done much lately,"
Francona smd "We need to get hack
on track "
Notes: Kevon Jordan's songlc m
the coghlh onnmg was hos first hot of
hos last seven that was not for extra
ba'cs The Pholadclphoa thtrd baseman had five doubles and a home run
proor to the songlc

Irwin wins Boone Valley Classic
AUGUSTA, Mo (AP) - Hale
irwm made the most of hos home·
town tournament, breakong the Scnoor
PGA Tour earnongs record and rnakmg up for h1s most dJsappoontong loss
on the 50-and-over corcull
lrwm, a playoff loser last year m
the onaugural Boone Valley Ciass1c,
shot a 7-under-par 65 on Sunday for
a two-stroke voctory over Gtl Mor·
gan The threc-t1me U.S. Open wmner had a tournament-record 16under 200 total.
"Certainly I'm playmg some of
the hest golf of my career," saod
lrwm , who has seven vaclorrcs th1s
year and lion 14 months on the tour.

"Granted, ot's agaonst fellow old
guys. but we can play "
The first prozc of $195,000
mcreascd has season carmngs to
$1,706,989, pasSJng the $1,627,890
Jtm Colbert won last year Wnh cogltt
evenls left, lrwm 1s lwo vtctones
behmd Peter Thomson's record SCtJn
1985
"Don't get me wrong l love the
money," lrwm saod "But I don't
want tbat to drove my lofc "
The won also was a good 29th
weddmg-annovcrsary present for wofc
Sally
"I really had an extra surge of
dcsore to do well," saod lrwon, the first

scvcn~t1me

w1nncr s1nce Lee TrcVJO(l
on 1990 "For all the stuff Sally has
to put up woth and ali the support
she's goven me, thiS hopefully Will be
good enough "
Morgan, who also shot a 65, took
home $114,400 to rcmam second to
lrwon on the money lost
" I shot about as well as l could
shoot," Morgan saod "When some·
one shoots a b5 there 's not much you
can do I couldn't catch up "
John Bland's 68 hhcd htm to a
thord-piacc finosh at 11-undcr D-dvJd
Graham, who carded a 71 Sunday
and led hy one shot With I0 holes to
play. finoshed fourth at 10-undcr

ofzef' ttirie O.l(rillofzef' ;llerliea.fe~l(tef'
co,..~al~ ,;y~,ie, tie- cOIKIK«..ft~ to atturtl

,../JJM eattiirj- ee~""t-IKMI~ fo,.. tie- lfe«&lt;

1/ol'ze~

;lte-tp ttJ;,,e
&amp;!J Ea~t ;lfe-"'"""'al!J,..til-e-, Po"'ei"'Otf
Olf tie- eiJ.IK;a~ of 1/etel"alf~ ;Ifuro,..talllo9ital
hc-trf~ .ftfJ'te-IKbel"' 1~ 1997

fro"' 9:00 a.IK. tolloolf
Plea~e-;:otir a.~ fo~"" toq~ IJ.If;j

~""efe.rk-Kt-lf~ t#r"'ediate-~ foll'owtirj-

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Gordon
wins

ByRICKGANO
CHICAGO (AP) - Cleveland
· manager Mike ~rove descnbed it
as "wacky." Indians first baseman
lim Thome called it "weird." Chicago third baseman Robin Ventura said
By MIKE HARRIS
11 was pretty much incomparable.
LOUDON, N.H: (AP) - Ray
The eighth inning of the Indians'
Evemham doesn ' t ask for miracles
8-3 victory over the White SoK on
from Jeff Gordon. He expects them.
Sunday also was very surprising Gaztng happily at Gordon folespecially to one of the pantcipants.
lowing Sunday's vtctory in the CMT
The Indians score4 seven runs and
300 on the treacherous New Hampthe SoK used five pitchers, including
JEFF GORDON
shi re lntcrnauonal Speedway oval.
Keith Foulke, who dtdn'teven warm
the Hendrick Motorsports crew chtef
up before Chicago manager Terry
said, "I know my httle buddy here had a good race car, too. Years ago, Bevington summoned him into the
has got a ton of talent and we can lean I would have probably raced htm like game.
on that someumes."
that and roughed him up. But, nght
"For the Sox, it was the inning
That's what he did late m the 300- now, I'm gomg to race htm just like from hell," Hargrove said after his
lap race when Evemham sent Gordon he raced me."
team increased Jts·AL Central lead to
back onto the track after his fin~l pit
After JUSt two caution flags in the 7 1/2 over both the Whtte SoK and the
stop wtth enough gas to finish and the first 200 laps, there were six more Brewers.
same ttres he rode tn Wtlh.
before the race was over, and three of
"I didn't know what was going
The 26-year-old driver managed them came '" the final 35 laps. On on. I was as clueless as everybody
to hold off Ernie lrvan the rest of the each of those late res1ans. lrvan had else," satd Foulke, the fourth pitchway to earn his lOth vtctory of the an opportunity to overtake Gordon er of the mning. It's a sucky situation
season and the 29th of his Winston and was unable to get the job done
and let 's leave it at that. .. I was surCup career.
"Every ume we "arted to pull pmed He told me he wanted me to
"There's a lot of magic between away from Ernie a little bu. the cau- walk one guy and I satd, 'OK I can
htm and me," Gordon said, smiling lion came out and bunched us back do that."'
back at Evernham, who has been hJS up," satd Gordon. whose Dupont
Chtcago led 2-0 headtng tnlo the
mentor since his days in the Busch Chevrolet fintshed 0.209 seconds
Grand National series.
ahead of lrvan's Ford. "It certatnly
All of the leaders made their final makes it tnlense for a dnver But II\
pttstops on lap 228, dunng one of the fun for the crowd "
, eight caution pertods in the race.
Gordon, who averaged 100.376
lrvan, who had been Jeadtng mph, earned $188,625 from the purse By CRAIG HORST
MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) helore Hut Stnck.lin htt the wall m of more than $2 I milhon
Btll
Snyder suddenly has lots of worturn two, took on righl-stdc tires and
Bobby Hamilton was thtrd, folcame out fifth. Gordon, running sec- lowed by Steve Grissom. who ries and the only silver lintng he can
ond before the caution, drove back matched his career best fimsh. local find is that he has two weeks to mull
1
onto the track wtth a lead he never favonte Rteky Craven. Dale Jarrett. things over.
Snyder's
20th-ranked
.
Kansas
relinquished.
Jimmy Spencer and Dale Earnhardt.
" Ray is great on seeing the whole
Mark Martm, who t~sccond tn the State team turned in a horrible perptcturc," Gordon said. "He made the season standmgs, wound up mnth and formance m all facets of the game
call for two ltres for our first wtn here fell 139 potnts hehtnd Gordon Jarrett Saturday and it was only by hook or
by crook that the Wildcats held on for
at New Hampshire (in 1995)
is 188 back tn third
a
23-20 win over Ohio.
"If we had taken tires this time.
Jeff Burton, who won the July
Not the least of Snyder's worries
we definitely wouldn 't have gotten race at Loudon. rematned fourth tn
IS
at
quarterback.
outllrst and 11 mtght have been a dtf· the points despite needtng relief Irom
Mtchael
BIShop was bnlhant in
fcrent story My car handled the best Todd Bodine because of an inner car
his
first
game.
terrible in his second.
out front. It was definitely a great problem. Burton started the race and
Beasley,
whom Snyder had
Jonathan
call."
drove unttl the first caul ton flag on
considered
rcd-shtrttng,
was so bad as
"I felt ltke the only way we could lap 69. Bodine then took over and
Btshop's
replacement
late
in !he first
beat Ernie was 1r we got track post- went on to finish 14th.
half
that
Snyder
had
to
replace
him
There were numerous crashes and
tion and hope we could snooker them
with
B
JSh?P
in
the
fourth
quarter.
somehow," Evernham explatned.
spms on the shck mile oval, but no
"I don't thmk there IS a controGordon, needmg three vtclortes in tnjurtes were reported
but there is no guarantee, ..
vcr.y.
the last seven races to match Richard
The early part of the race was a
Snyder
said "We'll start in two
Petty 's modern NASCAR record of battle between Hamilton and Craven.
13 10 a season, was able 10 fight off Those two swapped the lead several weeks."
That 's when the Wildcats finiSh
lrvan and wtn by less than two car- ltmcs tn the early gotng before Gorout
the Mid-America Conference
lcngths.
don: who started 13th. worked his
portion
of their schedule by playtng
"On the restarts, Ernie really did- way to the front for the ftrst time on
Bowltng Green.
n't have a chance because there was lap 149.
no boll om groove, " Gordon satd. "It
lrvan set the stage tor the late
was too slt ppery down there to get 'shootout when he moved into second
nny grtp and 1 was able 10 stay up in on lap 151. Most of the rematning·
the second groove."
laps were a bdltle 1\ctween those two,
lrvan, who came from last 1n the although Craven did stay with them
43-car field and drove the whole race for a whtlc.
.
despite fcelmg til, said he could easIrvan took the lead from _Gordon By RICHARD
ily have wrecked Gordon or both or.., JUSt four laps before the ltnal pt! ROSENBLATT
AP Football Writer
them in the ftnal laps 1f he had tned stop! s. k
h
k
At Texas, it might take another
rvan epll e pressurc.on, qutc 100 hard.
105
years before they forget about
"He knew if he got 10 the high ly movtng to thtrd, JUst hchmd
th1s
loss.
side. 1 couldn't pass him on the low Craven, then takmg second place on
Notre Dame, Colorado, Mtami
side wtthout wreckmg htm,'' lrvan a restart on lap 265. He tned '" vatn
&gt;atd "We had a great race car, but he to catch Gordon the rest of the way, and'Southcm Cahfomia lost on Saturday, too, but no result was as jawnever qutlc catchmg the leader.

etghth, followtng a strong 6 113
innings of two-hil pitching from
Jaime Navarro •. whom Bevington
yanked in the seventh.
In the eighth, the Indians .loaded
the bases with one out on singles by
Omar Vizquel, Richie SeKson, who
was making his major league debut,
and Manny Ramirez.
Thome, facing Tom Fordham,
Chicago's third reliever of the innirrg,
hit a check-swing bouncer to thC hole
at short for an RBI infield hit, and the
Indians tied tl on David Justice's sacrifice fly.
Then it was Foulke's tum and he
did his job - walking Man Williams
intentionally to load the bases before betng replaced by Matt Karch-

ner.

Grissom and a two-run double to
Omar Vizquel.
"As soon as they called Foulke,
they told me to stan getting ready,"
said Karchner, usually the closer
"(Walking Williams) . was his
(Bevington's) only way out of the
jam," added Hargrove.
"I looked at the bullpen and there
was nobody up. He motioned to the
bullpen and then you got to bring
somebody in," Wtlhams satd.
Sox shortstop Ozzie Guillen didn't see anybody in the bullpen, either,
but he was told . by second base
umptre Dan Mornson that the Sox
had to change pitchers after Bevington made the motion.
Ventura said he had never seen an
mning quite like 11.
"I can't think of another one, none
pops to mind," Ventura said. "I usually can't see the bullpen. I dtdn 't see
anyone and I didn 'I know what was
going on."
Tony Castillo staned the eighth for
the Sox and was followed by Jeff
Darwin (0-1 ), who allowed Ramirez'
single, Fordham, Fou_lkc and Karch-

"We wanted to buy time for
Karchner by having Foulke walk
Williams Karchner needed a little
time to get loose," said Bevington,
who tied a major league record by
using nine pitchers in the nine-inning
game "I wouldn't say anybody did
a poor JOb."
But Karchner still wasn't ready.
He gave up a twcrrun smgle to Sandy ner.
Alomar, an RBI single to Marquts

AI Levine, pitcher No. 9, gave up
Thome's 401h homer in the ninth.
Notes: The last time an American
League team used nine pitchers in a
nine-inning game was in 1949 by St.
Louis against Chicago in the first
game of a doubleheader.... Carlton
Fisk became the eighth White Sox
player to have hts number rettred by
the team. Fisk wore No. 72 for
Chicago. Also on the list are Nellie
Fox, Harold Baines, Luke Appling,
Minnie Minoso, Luts Apancio, Ted
Lyons. Billy Pierce .... The Indians
won the season series 7-5 .... Cleveland second baseman Btp Roberts 1
had to leave the game in the sixth
inning after strai nmg his left hamstring whtle gomg for a ground ball
but said after the game he was ftne,
just dehydroted . .. Thome homered
in three of four games in the sertes.
.. Frank Thomas got hts IOOth walk
of the Season in the fourth inntng.
Thomas, hilling .353. is about to
become the first player m major
league history to record a .300 average with at least 20 homers, 100
RB!s. I00 runs and I00 walks for
seven straight seasons

A

By The Bend

Indians record 8-3 win over White Sox

CMT 300

(J

Monday, September 15, 1197

The Daily Sentinel
Page7
Monday, September 15, 1997

Smoking debate continues within families
Ann
Landers
I\IY1 UL~ AnMcle!l Ti®.·~

Syruiii'Y I ~
Sy~~~:~

~ n!.l C r c~h &gt;r)

Dear Ann Landers: I have read
so much about smokers and what
horrible deaths they suffer. This letter will he a little dtfferent.
My sister, "Alice," and I lived
together all our lives, and she
smoked like a chimney. !tried it for
:r while when I was a teenager, and
when my daw said, "Your breath
stinks," I qun After that, I couldn't

.

stand it when Altcc smoked in the you smoke and how much you
house .
inhale. And of course there are a
I told her, "I wtll give you $1 ,000 , few, like your sister, ,'.ho beat the
tf you quu smoking." Her reply was odds. Buttl's a very dangerous gam" 1 will gtve you $1 ,000 tf you keep ble, and the loser pays dearly Keep
your mouth shut abouttl " I took the rcadmg, and you'll se~ what 1 mean
$1.000 and was sorry soon after
Dear Ann: Thts i~ for the angry
because I had to keep my mouth shut smoker who wanted to conltnue to
when she blew smoke tn my face .
smoke so he could~' ic happy "
Altce was never SICk a day m her
You want to die appy? OK. You
ltfe S~~ ltved to be 94 and dropl"'d wtll tf you enJOY fi hting for every
dead wtlh a smtle on her lace. Guess breath and being o exhausted to
who:s SICk frol_ll her smoke? Me. -- dnve a c"ar or bathe and dress yourAnme m llhn?ts
.
self. And thtnk of the fun of being
Dear Anme: Can tl the luck of tethered to an oxyge~ condenser
the draw. Some people can smoke wuh a tube fastened in your nose
for years and suffer no til effects, but and worrytng every ume it storms
the odds are heavtly agatnsltt. Much that the electnctty wtll go off and the
depends on how many ctgarettes condenser won 't work

And what a JOY 11 ts to drag a
portable oxygen tank whenever you
leave the house , and endure the
stares of strangers as a famtly member pushes you in your wheelchatr
Smoke and dte happy? Don' t ktd
yourself. Through tl all, you will be
sad, knowing tf you had stopped
smoking long before, you would
have had a totally dtfferent hfe .
My hushand was dtagnosed wuh
smoking-related emphysema . tn
1981. He had qull smoking some
ltme before, but tl wasn ' t soon
enough. He struggled for II years
before he died . It is no exaggeration
to say smoking robbed him of many
years of a good ltfe, and no, he dtd
not dte happy. __ South Holland, Ill

we ' ve got two weeks to iron this out

A few mtstakes made ll look like a
tragedy and obviOusly it was. But
we're still2-tl so we have an opportunity to be what we want to be."
Bishop said a bad week of practice
translated into a bad game.
"We had poor practices all week
and it showed," said Bishop, who
completed three of 14 passes for 93
yards and had minus-18 net yards
rushtng
" We had a couple of players who
didn't take Ohio seriously. I didn•t
show the leadershtp I should have. If
I wasn't gettmg the JOb done, try
somebody else. ·•
That somebody else was Beasley,
who completed one of three passes
for nine yards while scrambling out
of the way of pressure. Beasley
gained 10 yards on seven carries.
Meanwhile, the Bobcats (2-1)
were baffiing the Wildcats wtth thetr
option. Ohio ended up with 430 yards
total offense to just 191 for Kansas
State

"It was a little disappointing,"
said Ohio guard Cooper Jones. "We
thought we could come m and play
and win In the second half, we
played hard and played hke we ltke
to play."
Ohio quarterback Karcem Wilson
rushed for 78 yards and John Cosgrove had 70 yards.
Wilson completed passes of 68
yards to Drew Dwyer and 51 yarcts to
Damion Maxwell. Punter Jon Beier
got into the act. throwmg a 23-yard
pass to Andre Jackson on a fake punt.
All thiS from a team that had
passed a combmcd six times tn Its
past two games.
"It frustrotcs you prepanng for the
optton." Wtldcats hnebackcr Travts
Ochs said. "I really dtdn't think they
would pass that much. You don 't
think they' re going to pass because
they run so much "
Lamar Chapman set a Kansas
State record wtth a 94-yard punt
return, and Marttn Gramauca ktckcd
field goals of 52 and 37 yards to give
the Wildcats a 13-0 lead m the first
quaner.

College football roundup

The previous long returns w~rc 93
yards by Very I Switzer against Drake
tn 1953 and Joel Searles agamst Kentucky in 1961.
Eric Hickson scored on a threeyard run in the second quarter after
BIShop heaved a Hatl Mary pass that
wound up m the arms of Gavtn
Perics.
Gramattca added a 55-yard field
goal - the longest of hts career for the 23-0 lead at the half.
Then Ohto went to work.
Cosgrove scored on a 16-yard run
wtth 7:4lto play m the third quarter.
and Steve Hookfm scored on a oneyard run to end a drive that included
the 51 -yard pass from Wtlson to
,
Maxwell.
After an 18-yard punt by Kansas
State's James Garcia, Wilson broke
loose for a 37-yard gain, and then
scored on a one-yard run to make it
23-20 wtlh 2:04 rcmaintng.
But the Wildcats recovered the
onstde kick. and the offense had
enough to run out the final two mmutcs.

"We can't SUrVIVC ltkc that tn lhf
Big 12 conference." Snyder satd.

UCL-A--sadd1es Long~rns with 66-3 lo-ss .

CHILDREN'S GOLF TOURNAMENT- The following are working on the Eighth Annual Chll·
dren's Golf Tournament sponaored by UMWA
Local's1857 and 1886. Pictured In the front row
from left to right are Ed Shriver of Mine 31 and
Local t857, Orley Yore of UMWA District Six,
Dave Coon and Smoke Barrett of MI~ 2 and

UMWA Local 1886 and Steve Grubb of Mine 31
and Local1957. Second row: Bob Green of Riverside Golf Course, Jack Stollings of Mine 31 Local
1857, Jerry Turner of Mine 2 Local1886, Lee Powell of Powell's Super Value, and Max Whitlatch of
Mine 31 Local1857.
'

droppmg as this,: UCLA 66, Texas 3. 2 Washington 36, San Diego State 3;
"What do you say to friends and No. 5 Florida State 50, Maryland 7;
family who see thiS score?" Texas No. 6 North Carolina 28, No. 21
coach John Mackovic asked.
Stanford 17; No. 7 Nebra5ka 38, CenEntenng the game, the Longhorns tral Florida 24; No. 8 Michigan 27,
were ranked II th and had high hopes No. 15 Colorado 3: No. 9 Ohio State
of a national title run. The Bruins 44, Bowling Green 13: No. 10 LSU
were 0-2, with close calls against 24, Misstssippt State 9.
Washington St~te and Tennessee.
Also, No 12 Auburn 19, MISsisWhen it was over. Cade MeN own sippi 9; No. 13 Iowa 54, Tulsa 16:
set a school record wllh five touch- No. 14 Arizona S!lltc 23, No. 22 Mtadown passes- all tn the first half- mt 12; No. 16 Clemson 19, North
and Sktp Htcks scored three ttmes as Carolina State 17; No 17 Mtchtgan
UCLA handed Texas Its worst loss in State, 51, Memphts 21; No 18 Vir9 3 years and second worst in I 05 sea- ginia Tech 31, Syracuse 3: No. 20
sons of Longhorns football.
Kansas State 23, Ohto 20; No. 23
On Sunday, Texas ( 1-1 ), along Colorado State 35, Utah Staw 24; and
with the Fighung Irish and TroJans. No. 25 Georgia 31. South Carolina
found themselves out of the Top 25. 15.
And the Brutns were in at No. 24,
On Thursday mght, No. II Alahaalong wtth No. 19 Washmgton State, ma beat Vandcrbi It 20-0
which beat USC 28-21.
Purdue l8, Notre Dame 17
Some Texas players didn 't even
.At West Lafayette, Ind., Purdue
want to leave the locker room.
( 1-1) dominated the lnsh ( 1-1) as Bil"My famtly ts out there watltng," ly Dtcken threw for 352 yards and
Texas center Ryan Fiebiger satd. "[ Edwin Watson ran for two touch~
know it sounds horrible, but! don't downs in a 2R-17 upset that ended
want to look them '" the eye."
wtth thousands ol Boilermakers fans
Stay tuned. While teams try to · strcamtng on1&lt;1thc field
' rebound from unexpected losses, thts
"I told the team after the game
weekend could be even wacktcr, how we react to this ts what's going
starling at the top with No. 4 Ten - to be important." new lnsh coach
nessee at No. 3 Flonda, and No. 7 Bob Davie satd. Notre Dame 's next
Nebraska at No. 2 Washmgton
three games arc against No. 17
There's a top-notch undcrcard. Michigan State, Nn. HMtchtgan and
too, with No . 5 Flonda State at No. No. 21 Stanford
16 Clemson. and No. 12 Auburn at
No. I Penn State 52
No. 10 LSU.
Temple 10
In Top 25 games Saturday. it was:
At State College. Pa., Temple (I No I Penn State 52, Temple 10; No 2) took a 7-0 lead 43 seconds into the
game before the Nittany Ltons (2-0)
scored the next 35 points

UAW to sponsor linkfest slated for September 28
The United Mmc Workers Union
Local 1857 and 1886 is sponsortng
its eighth a11nual Children's Goll
Tournament on Sunday, Sept. 28 at
the Riverside Golf Club in Mason.

Gold squad beats
Maroons In reserve
in-team scrimmage
The Gold team defeated the
Maroon team in a Mctgs reserve golf
team tntrasquad scrtmmagc at the
Mctgs County . Golf Course last
Thursday by a score of 176-178.
. Jason Frecke( of the gold team
was match medahst with a score of
42. Other Gold scores included 44s
from Nick Deuwiller and Thad Bumgardner. Tommy Roush'a 46, Carson
Mtdkiff's48 and Josh Lynch's 59.
For the Maroon team Zach Meadows led the way with a 43. He was
followed by 45s from J.R. Scarberry,
Andy Davis and Chad Folmer, JasOTI&gt;
CundtiT's 50 and Jeremy Oaurell'sa
54.

Tho tournament will be a fourThere wtll he many other pmes
men scramble. Each team must have such as l~1n gcst dnvc and longest put
a team handicap of at least40 strokes The closest to the ptn on # 14 wms a
wtth only one player with a handicap _ 1998 mcmhcrship at Riverside Golf
·of five or less. Handicaps of all play- dub: ·
ers of all team will be checked hy the
Proceeds for I he tournament wtll
tournament commtttec pnor to tccmg
oiL
Entry fee ts $200 per team the fcc
,..,
includes green fees, ridtng carts,
food, refreshments and pnzcs. Only
s1x more opening rem am m the lournament.

There will be a play off for first
place only. All other ttes wtll be
decided by using score cards and
backtng up on handicap holes
There will be a $100 cash pot with
each team having the oplton of playing in the cash pot. First place team
will wtn $800 and SO% of the cash
pol sphl, second place team will win
$400 wtth 25% of ihe cash pot split
and third place will win $300 club
house credit and I.S% of cash pot
' split. The 13th place team will
receive 10% of the cash pol.

gn toward foster kids tn Athens, GalIta. Jackson, Mason, Meigs and Yintun Counties at Christmas time.
For more infornnauon, contact
Rtvcrstdc Golf Course at 304-7739521.

Chafic Fields turned two reverses
mto touchdown runs of 43 and 47
yards and Mike McQueary wa.• 10 of
19 for IS8 yards and two touchdowns
in three quarters
No. 2 Washington 36
San Diego State 3
. At Seattle, Brock Huard completed 16 of 26 passes for 313 yards and
lour touchdowns, tncludmg scormg
stnkes of 12 and 53 yards to Jerome
Pathon. who had ctght catches for
182 yards.
No. S Florida State SO
Maryland 7
At Tallahassee, Fla., Thad Bushy,
playing only the first half. was 26 of
34 for 308 yards and two touchdowns
and ~he Semmoles (2-0) held the Tcrrapms (0-2) to 105 yards and ntnc
first downs.
Backup Dan Kendra had two
touchdown passes m the sc.ond half
'and thtrd-stnngcr Chns Wctnkc
:added a touchdown pa..s tn the fourth
quarter.

Original
'T"1ger' •..
(Continued lrom Page 51
Lytht Btch V,m lollnwcd her hu\;band from camplo L:amp hut never
caught up with hun . His lcucrs came
home lor a year, slowly over urnc
hccnmmg locusmg on lu:\ l.tvontc
foods . The family read the lcllcrs and
wept.
Ollipal records satd Phon~ dtcd
of a heart auack. He w;is 47 years old
and it was 10 years later hclnrc hts
famtly was told of his death .

both tgnore the' JSsue? I'd like to
know h"w to haQdle thts before the
next ""' at Chn stmas. -- Perplexed·

years, that dear woman anJ her h u~·
band have VISite d once or twtce a

tn llhn ot~

year They stay at my husband 's ex-

mothcr-m-law has a long -es tab~

Wife 's home, 3 mtles away.

lt shed relauonshtp with your husband 's cx-wtfe and is very fond of
her You mtght tell your mother-m-

I realtze that hts mother has
known "June" for 25 years and conSiders her a lnend , but my husband
is her on ly son, and It hurts lum
Whether she constders me her
daughtcr-m-law ts not my concern

She is hurttng-my husband. I feel she
can v.tsil the cx-w1fe as often as she
hkes, but she should stay at ou r
home.
Should I say somethtng to her. or
should my husband ? Or should we

Dear Illinois: Apparently, yo ur

law that she

~~

very welcome to stay

wuh you so she cou ld spend more
t1mc wtth her son, but you would
hoth undcr~ta n d tf she preferred not
10.

Send qucsllons to Ann Landers ,

Creators Syndtcate, 5777 W. Centu ry Blvd , Sut te 700. Los Angeles.
Caltl 90045

Mrs. Dorothy Karr honored for
her support of Eastern activities

Kansas State gets by OU Bobcats 23-20
" I'm not gomg to panic," Snyder
satd. "I've been here before. I know

Dear Ann: I need advtce on what
to do about my sweet 70-year-old
mother- tn -law For the past four

Mrs Dorothy Karr was honored
Fnday night for her long-time support of Eastern Htgh School athleucs.
m apprec1atwn for a contnbution
made by her and her hushand .
Earherlast week, Mrs. Karr, and
her husband, Horace, made a $40,000
donation toward new ltghts at the
Eastern football field, and those
ltghts were dedtcated to Mrs. Karr by
her husband and famtly at Frtday
ntght's football game between the
Eagles and Wahama.
The Karrs' four chtldren are all
graduates of Eastern Htgh School ,
and as her grandson Brandon Buckley told the crowd Frtday ntght, now

.
SUPPORT RECOGNIZED • New lighting at
the Eastern High School football field has been
dedicated to Mrs. Dorothy Karr, who along with
her huaband, Horace, made a $40,000 donation

!

and would get htt by a car We suggesled that she cross the street and get
it and brmg lito us so we couirl tak•
II to the Ripley, W.Va shelter. We dtd
not hear from her agatn
Thursday Ftve pupptes were
dumped in an alley across from
Syracuse swimmmg pool The person
we pay to occaSionally ptck up animals for the Meigs County Humane
Society was contacted. He takes all
animals to Ripley. By the ume he got
there, the county dog warden had
already ptcked them up
Fridav: The Health Dcpanment
called and asked us to keep a cat in
quarantine fptten days We told them
that we dtd not have proper facthltes
to keep a cat in quarantme. (The good
news here ts that a person who loves
animals did have proper cagmg and
is now keepmg it.)
A young girl called to say her fam ily had taken our advtce and adopted
a dog from the dog pound She has
already made an appomtment with
the vet for a checkup and shots.
Saturday: Lots of shoppers and
several calls "Do you board dogs'"
(No.) "Are cats requtred to have
rabtcs shots?" (No, not at thts t1me,

but they should have them.) "Wtll

BY ED PETERSON
Social Security
Manager In Athens
If you're ltke most people, you
thmk only of retuement when thmk
of Soctal Securny. But retirement
checks are just one the Social Secunty benefits people can get.
, Part of the taxes you pay goes
toward survivors msurance. In fact,
the value of the surV!'vors msurance
you have under Social Security JS
probably more than the face value of
your commerctal hfe msuram:e.
Below arc some of the most frequently asked questions about Soc tal

you take my dog? She's about to have
(Th«hks, loads; but what
wtll we do wtth her, an·d them?)
Kittens dumped at the Watenng
Hole, State Route 7, were pte ked up
and taken to Ripley Animal Shelter.
What can these people who dump
animals be thinking?
Monday : Today's calls included Secunty as ltte msurance.
If I dte, who can get survtvors benone by a young man who said a dog
had been hll m Pomeroy We offered efits on my work record'
When you die , Soctal Security
to go wuh htm to ptck it up as he satd
he wanted to take it to the vet. He surv1vors benefits can be patd to your
called hack to say hts fnend would go wtdow or widower as early as age 60,
or age 50 tf disabled, or at any age if
with htm. We hope thts has a happy
'endtng. Another call, this one about she or he takes care ot your chtld
under 16 or diSabled who gets benenoglect We referred the caller to the
fits ;·unmarned children under 18 (or
dog warden
up to age 19 tf they are anendt ng eleTuesday: A mother cat and four
mentary or secondary school full
small kmens were dropped on Laurel Cltff Road tn Pomeroy A man lime): or dtsabled before age 22 and
rcmatns dtsablcd, grandchtldten,
called and wants them ptcked up .
under certam Circumstances; depc,nWednesday: Two female cats and
five ktllens dropped on South Second dent parents at age 62 or older.
Street, Mtddleporl They wtll be
ptcked up Fnday or this coming
Wednesday and taken to a nearby
shelter .
Thursday Rece ived another
request to board a dog. The caller was
The Community Calendar is
told we have no facility and referred published as a free service to nonto the Athens Boardtng Kennel.
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special event•. 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 number of days.
·puppies~"

on tp compete at Amenca's Junior

Mtss in June in Mohile. Ala. She will
stay with a host famtly in the Mobile
area, be the guest of Mq~nlc ctvtc
groups and tour the htStonc Mobtle
area.
Ohm's Juntor Mtss for 1997 ts
Natalie Martinez from Columhus
located m Franklin county Repre-

se nting Bcechcroft Htgh School as a
sen ior, she will be a mcmhcr ur the
frcshm,m c.:lass atlcndmg Ohcrhn
College tn Ohcrltn.
Last year over $2 I,000 tn cash
schoiM~ htps were prc!oocntcd lhrough

FtJundallon , while :n
colleges and uni versities throughout
the natmn rrov1dcd an addtllnn.d $lX
null ton m guara nteed award"' Oh1o.
our Schohu~htp

tn addllton, has availahlc through 11 s

programs $58 ll.!lhon m scholar· represents 25% of the JUdging. Othships.
er JUdgmg ts based on fitness , presThe Ohio Jumor Mtss Scholarshtp ence and composure. both IS o/c and
Progr,1m wtll be held qn Feb. 20 and crcallvc and performtng arts. 25'1&lt; .
21 tn Mount Vernon Dunng the pro- Scholasttc achtevemenl is judged by
gram week. heginntng Fch.l4. the a panel of educators from Ohto colpa1 ttetpants stay w1th host famthes in
leges llte panel evaluation ts an tndtthe local area and arc guests of van· . vtdual scss1on w1th each Juntor M1ss
ous

CIVic

and service clubs lor dmly

eval uator who ts lookmg tor a sense

luncheons and dtnners.

or yalucs. percepllon. d.mty ol

An at·Largc program for g1rls
frnm .t coun ty w1ih no local ptogram

cxp1csstnn and concern fm and ahil ·
11y Ill llUIIldn Jclatl ons

"The program ~ceks to focu'
.lttcntum on the constructi\'C ad1 tcvc·
mcnts ol .til youth and cncouracc
"We want to empha!\JZC this IS a cxcd lcncc ,mJ a scn'c ol dcdtcatt~n
scholarshtp program". satd Conntc 111 the luturc ". J.mnot sauJ
Any gn l cntcllng her scmor year
Jannot, state d1amnan . "Tite Oh10
Jumor M1ss ts m no way connct·tcd m h1 gh 'dwol Ill Ohw and mtc1 cst·
to a heauty pagdnt." ThiS" the 41st cd 11111101~ inlonnatum ahout the pro·
year for the program to he presented g: J.II ll ~ ho uld Wille 10 Ohw Jun1or
in Ohto and the 25th year Mount Ver- Mtsi·. Box .106. Mount Vernon , Ohto
non has ho~tcd Obin's stale progmm . ~.105Jl . m call
the Mount
· Scholasllc achtevcmc nt is 20')( ol Vcnwn/Knox County Cham hcr ol
thcjudgmg f{JJ the ~clecll on ofOiun's Commcn.: c. (!) ~. ),1.1111
Jumor M1'"' .md the pand cv,tluatttm

wtll he held at Mount Vernon Mtddlc
School on October 19 and October
26
.

New Yorkers pay respects at Princess Diana memorial
NEW YORK (AP) - Carne Lee
came to a Central Park mcmonal sCI ·

v1cc for Pnnccss Dmna expecting to
up some sun . no1 to he moHtl
to tears .
But when opera tlrvo.t Jcssyc Nor·
man sang Henry l&gt;urcc/1 \ .. Du.Jo ·s
~ oak

Lament (When i atn L:uJ tn Earth)."

Smnc 14.000 people g.tthcted

c~Ju g h\/ the 27·yl'M·O IJ
Hohokcn. N J . IC"i l~cn t hy ' u1p11sC .·
· Her !&lt;illl!!lttg. the musll'. lhc kcl lllg . 11 was ull so hcauulul. " Lee ~~ud

?und.ty tn rl'mcmhcr D1an.ttn a .:tty
rahc tc she mad~ hcndlin~' lor her

"But then . rcmcmhcnng why we arc

tnhutc to John ~-cnnon . the sl.un cx-

,111 hal'. 11 ' ' so sad ··

Bcatlc.

ClllOtl Oil

sc hool board th1s summer

Featuring new steelltght poles and
new Wiring, the system was manulactured by the Musco Company, and
accord1ng to D1stnct Supcnntendcnt
Delyl Well, are permanent
The $48.000 pnce tag tncludcd

lights. new wmng and the msta l1at1on

of the new poles and lt ghts
The K.rrs' gcnerosuy wtll make
other Improvements at the schuul

possible. Well satd, mcludmg a new.
sound system m the htgh school gymnasium, whll'h w11J rece1ve extensive
renovatiOn as a part of the d1stncl's

mulu -mtllton do ll ar butldtn• program

In pan, a plaque presented to Mrs.
Karr reads, ' m apprcctatJOn of your
fanhful and conunuou s support of
Eastern Local School DJstm.:l. Hs students and the commumty. we want to
say 'thank you ."'

If my husband dted and he was benefits ,r ) Ou became dtsabled
recetvmg a beneftl check. would I ' before age 22 and rema med dtsablcd
continue to recetve the payment"
You may be eltgtble to receive

wtdows beneftts Full benehts are
payable at age 65 or older or reduced
benefits as early as 60. However. a
disabled wtdow or wtdower can get
benefits at age 50-60.
My wtfe died and we were not hving together. I am not old enough to
recetvc wtdower's benefits Am I enti-

tled to the lump sum death payment '
No. The soectal one -time payment
of $2~5 ts payable only to the spouse
ltving m the same househo ld or the
person who IS currently receJvtng
benefits on the deceased's record

My, husband died . How old do I
have to be to qualify for widow's benefits?

If you are age 60 or older, vou
may be eligtble to receive reduced
widow's benefits. Full beneftts arc
payable at age 65 older In addttton.
tf you arc disabled. you can get benefits age 50-60.
My parents arc deceased I am disabled and have nevei worked Can I
get anythtng on enher of their
records'1
You may be chgibl e to recc1vc

I am gcttm g, beneflls on my mother's and father's carnmg;; records I
have no medtcal coverage Am I eltglble for Mcd1care ?
1r you are a dtsabled adult chtld .
you may be eli gible for Medt care .
usuall y aftet a 24-month quahfymg
penod
How much wl\11 get as a w1dow"
The ~m o unt of vour benefn IS
based on the earmn gs of the person
who dtcd The more he or she patd
Into Soc tal Sccunl) . the htgher your
bcncltt wtll be The amount you wtll
get ts a percentage of the deceased's
baste Soctal Securny bcnefu The
percentage depends on you 1 age and
the type of bene lit you arc elt gtb le
for.
For more infonnall on, you may
call Soctal S ec unty'~ toll-ltee num•
bcr. 1-800-772- 1.2 11 24 hours a day
You can speak to a represe ntative
between the hours of 7 a.m. and 7
p m on bus mess days Whene\'cr you
call. please .have your Soc tal Seounty number handy People who are
deaf or hard of heanng may call out
toll free "TTY' numhet, 1-800-3250778, betwee n 7 am and 7 p m on
bus mess days

Community ·calendar-

Seniors invited to participate
in 1998 Jul')ior Miss program
: The Ohto Junior Miss Scholarship
Program is seeking high school
sen1or gnls to compete for more than
$21 ,000 in cash scholarshtps to be
offered in thts state program.
The winner at the state level goes

belore the new sc hool year began. at

a pnce of $4R,OOO Th&lt;:' old light s
wore deemed a safety hazard by the

demoltllon and tcmoval ol th'e old

Here's most frequently asked questions
about Social Security as life insurance .

toward the new lights. Making a prl!senll!tion
to Mrs. Karr at Friday night's Eastern/Wahtrma
football game are, 1-r, Board VIce President
Greg Bailey, Mr. and Mre. Karr, and Board President John Rice.

Animal loverls diary reveals a typical ·day
at the Meigs Humane Society Thrift Shop
By Alden Waitt,
Pl'ftldent-- "
Meigs County
Humane Society·
What follows are several dtary
entries re~orded to give you an tdea
of a few typ1cal days at the Meigs
County Humane Soctety Thnft Shop
in Middleport.
As you can tell, no day is quite
hke another. However, nearly all
days include a range of emotions
experienced by our longttme volunteers--gratitude toward and warmth
for the many people who help our
cause and who show thetr love for the
county's animals. and frustration and
exasperallon occas10ned by the
expectatiOns and poor behaviOr of
people, who really ought to know
better
Monday· A man found a Stck killen on his doorstep. He wanted tl
removed, as he dtdn't want It to die
there By ltme I got someone to hts
house to pick 11 up. the ktllcn had diSappeared.
Wednesday . A loca l buSt ness
woman called and satd a ktllen was
under a car across the street. She
feared it mtght try to cross the road

she watches her grandchildren pl ~y
sport' and play tn the band at Eastern .
Mrs. Karr was recogn1zcd for bcr
ranhful support and attendance at
Eastern ex tra-c urnc(Jlar Iunctions
The ne" hghts were tn stalled JUSI

chanty wmk and her style The lust
.,w:h mcmult.tl 1n the park wa~ a I'JHO

I

MONDAY
LETART FALLS -- Letart Town ship Board of Trustees· regular mcet-

tng Monday. 6 p.m at the offtee
butldmg.
RACINE . ,Ractne Vtlbge Cou nnl TllCCIIng Jn ICCCSSCd SCSS IOn MOll·
Li,ty. 7 p.i11 althc mtml ~ lplll bulldmg

TUESDAY
POMEROy -- Ft a let nal Order or
Eagle s Auxiliary mccung TucS'day.
7 30 p.m

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Metgs Count)
Bo.11 d o! ElcctH11l!-&gt; ..;pl'c tal mccun e
\Vcdn('sLlay. 9 am at 1hc Bo.ud of·
E h.:~o:tJons utf1cc

***********************************

*
:Important
Health Care Notice! *

*
Holzer Clinic of Meigs County
*
*
· and
*
:
Meigs Health Services
:
*
are undergoing a major change.
:
:
The facilities will be
*
*
closed Friday, September 19.
*
*
We will
*
*
re-open on Monday, Septem~er 22
*
:
in our new location,
:
*
Holzer Meigs Clinic
*
:
at 88 East Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio
:
*: Health issues should
Next to Veterans Memorial Hospital
*
be referred to Holzer Clinic Urgent Care ~ter *
*
90 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis- 446-5287
:
·* or Veterans Memorial Hospital Emergency Department. *
************************~**********

I

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

15, 1987

~y,SephKnber1~1917

Thi Dally Sentinel •

9

Page

New Miss America has platform of AIDS awareness
By JOHN CURRAN
teen-agers.
Associated Pren Writer
"We need to recognize that and
ATI.ANTIC CITY. N.J. - Now not to try to convince ourselves that
that Kate Shindle has been crowned we can talk kids out of having sex.
Miss America 1998, the tough part but rather meet them where they are
begins.
and talk to them about the best ways
Shindle won the competition on a they can make their hhavior safer,"
platfonn of AIDS awareness promo- she said.
Six months ago, the Nonhwestern
tion, and she said she wants to focus
University
theater major was working
on prevention and education during
as
a
janitor
at Gus Giordano's Dance
a yearlong reign that began Sunday.
Center
in
Evanston,
Dl., in exchange
She favors giving out condoms in
for
free
dance
lessons.
high schools but opposes p{Oviding
"It's a liule bit overwhelming,"
needles to addicts to stem the spread
of the disease. And while .Shindle said she said. "J~st a short while ago I
abstinence is the only foolproof was just another college student."
Shindle, 20, captured the title in
method of prevention, she acknowledged that ii may not be realistic for Saturday night's pageant which fea-

KATE SHINDLE

EmmyAwards
I

tured two-piece suits for the first time
since 1947.
The suits were more popular with
the judges than they were with the
contestants: Only 13 of the 51 contestants chose to wear them, but five
made the top I~ and three were in the
top five.
Shindle, a 5-foot-11 brunette,
wore a black two-piece trimmed in
red and sang "Don't Rain On ·My
Parade" from the movie "Funny
Girl ~ for her talent offering.
A New Jersey native and fanner
Toledo, Ohio, tesident whose parents
live in nearby Moorestown, Shindle
went to high school with Miss New
Jersey Kathy Nejat. She moved to
Illinois to g!J to college and compel-

.ed in the Miss Chicago Pageant
three times .- losing each time before winning Mi .. Lake-Coolc and
then Miss Illinois.
"I can 't (ever) remember not
wanting to be Miss America, since I
was very young, " she said.
Shindle said she lost 10 to 12
pounds after winning the local
pageant and shed five inore after winning the state crqwn, dropping to 145.
"The way I lost weight was very
slowly, over a long period of time and
with a lot of hard work. I did not
starve myself." she said.
In winning the pageant, she earned
a $40,000 college scholarship and the.
prospect of more than $100.000 in
appearance fees.

'

The national telecast, whic6
moved to ABC this year after 30
years at NBC, featured changes bi@
and small - and a few glitches. In
addition to two-piece suits, the
pageant brought in new hosts,
scrapped its unsuccessful viewer call•
ins and hired TV journalist Nancy
Glass to interview the finalists.
·
The on-screen graphics identifying the ~ontestants as they introduced
themselves on stage did not work and
were eliminated almost immediately.
The narrator also identified Miss Arizona Siacey Momeyer as Miss Oregon Tamara Ann Finch and vice versa. The hosts· corrected the mistake
'after a commercial break and said the
judges had been told.

'L.aw &amp; Order' top drama; Helen Hunt best comedy actress
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) "ER" was dead on arrival.
The nation's most popular television series was shut out Sunday at the
49th Annual Prirnetime Emrny
Awards, losing top awards to "Law
&amp; Order" an4 "NYPD Blue."
"Law &amp; Order," the police-andprosecutor show with scripts that J&gt;arallel cases in the· national headlines,
was named besrdrama series after six
straight winless nominations in the
category.
''Frasier'' was honored as best

comedy series, the only show ever to
win the award in its first four years.
It also ties "Cheers," "All in the
Family" and "The Dick Van Dyke
Show" for most comedy series
Eminys.
"On my way up here I heard
somebody say, 'Oh God' Not them
again!' Believe me. we know how
lucky we are." said David Angel. a
"Frasier" producer.
"ER'' likely suffered from votesplitting. In the dramatic actress race.

Sherry Stringfield (Dr. Susan Lewis)
and Julianna Margulies (Nurse Carol Hathaway) competed against each
other, but Gillian Anderson from
"The X-Files" won. And three "ER"
directors were up for best dramatic
directing, but the award went to
"NYPD Blue."
For the third time. Dennis Franz
was named best dramatk actor for his
role as snarly Detective Andy Sipowicz on " NYPD Blue." The drama's
four Emmys (the others were dramatic writing.and supponing actress)
were the most for any show Sunday
night.
"This is way !&lt;;10 much. It's impossible to be up ·here without mv pal.
my buddy, my backbone Jimmy
Smits,:· Franz said of his co-star.
John Lithgow. the space alien
posing as a college professor on "3rd
Rock from the Sun," won for best
coniedy actor. Helen Hunt, half of the
neurotic yuppie couple on "Mad
About You," won for best comedy
actress.

Television academy voters chose
Hunt, whose character ended the season by having a baby, over Ellen
DeGeneres, whose character came
out as a. lesbian last season after
mo~ths of hinting.
"I was so blown away by Ellen
DeGeneres' work in that episode,"
Hunt said. · "I just want to say I'm
proud to be on. the same list."
"Ellen" won for outstanding writing for a comedy series for the coming-out episode. The actress dedicated the award to gay and lesbian teenagers, telling them: "There 's nothing
wrong with you . Don' t ever let any·
body make you feel ashamed of who
you are." ,
Altogether. when craft prizes
awarded in a ceremony last week are
included. "3rd Rock From the Sun"
and "Miss Evers' Boys" tied for the
most Emmy wins with five each.
This season, "Law &amp; Order''
poked fun at Hollywood producers
and show business ethics. In the
three-pan installment. the show's

New York investigators traveled. to
Michael Richards, the manic
Southern California to probe a mur- neighbor Kramer on 'Seinfeld," won
der by a frustrated film director. The best supponing actpr in a comedy
episodes ridiculed everything from series for the third time. Kristen JohnAcademy Award electioneering to ston of "3rd Rock From the Sun"
won supponing actress in a comedy
guards·protecting studio gates.
"This is an amazing surprise in series, her 'first nomination.
Awards for supponing actor and
the seventh year of a show," said one
actress
in a drama series went lo Kim
of the show's producers. Dick Wolf.
Delaney
of "NYPD Blue" and Hec"We are unbelievably grateful. ...
This is it folks . ThiS is as good as it tor Elizondo of "Chicago Hope."
The trophy for best variety, music
gets."
"Miss Evers' Boys," an HBO film· or comedy series went to ''Tracey
based on the true story of notorious Takes On .... " which star&lt; Tracey
syphilis experiments on unsuspecting Ullman in pffheat skits. She defeatblack men, won three ' prestigious ed Jay Leno, David Letterman, Bill
awards. The show was named best Maher and Dennis Miller in the catmade-for-television movie, received . egory.
"As the Spice Girls would say:
the President's Award for socially
Girl
Power! ~heat the boys." Ullman
and
cap·
wonhwhile programming
tured an acting award for Alfrc ·declared.
News personality Bryant Gumbel
Woodard.
Actor Laurence Fishburne, the made his debut with a smooth, nomovie's executive producer, saluted nonsense approach as host of the
the survivors and. President Clinton, internationally broadcast ceremony.
"I am very pleased to be here and,
"who had the decency to make a
moral apology" for the experiments. frankly. I am surprised as anyone to

HELEN HUNT

"
he your host this evening," Gumbel
said when he came on stage. He
brought the show in just 19 seconds
past its planned three-hour running
time .
NBC and HBO tied with nine
awards each Sunday but NBC
emerged as the overall winner,
including awards from the previous
ceremony for a total of 24 to HBO's
19. CBS had 12 awards.followed by
ABC with I0. PBS with six and Fox
with five.

Custom Homes

•••

Remodeling

"Build Your Dream"
l

By FRAZIER MOORE ·
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK - As host of this
year's Emrnycast, Bryant Gumbel did
what few others would be capable of
and certainly none has done in memory: Give the televised handout of
statuettes some stature.
In Gumbel's charge, the 49th
Annual Prime-Time Emmy Awards,
which CBS aired live Sunday from
the Pasadena CivicAudiiorium. wa~
a display of dignified high spirits.

AnAP
EntiJitJJ/nment Review
' Handsomely staged in front of a
huge trophy set against a blazing sunset, it was a broadcast reflecting pride
in - even love for - the TV mediurn, rather than the more.typical marinadc of self-centered excess.
Could Gumbel's participation
have played that powerful an influence'? Who cares'? Like him, the show
wa&lt; pOlished. precise and a pleasure
to watch. Then it came to an end: "A'
promised.'' said Gumbel, "three
' hours."
·
In one respect. picking Gumbel as
emcee was a no-brainer. The Em mycast served as his CBS coming-out
pany after his long hitch at NBC's
"Today" show ended in January"And
the timing was dandy. His CBS
News magazine series. "Public Eye."
launches next month.
But beyond that practical consid-

one else must be left off," Seinfeld
went on. Then, noting that he plays
himself on his hit sitcom, he sighed:
" I guess last year you people didn't
quite buy me as me."
,
Earlier, as a presenter himself, the
diminutive Fox was pan of the broadcast's most delightful sight. Sharing .
the stage with Amazonian lovely
Kiisten Johnston, the Best Supporting Actress· in a Comedy Series for
herrole in "3rd Rock From the Sun,"
Fo• barely cleared her shoulder.

- - There were other moments, as
fleeting as they were memorable.
Accepting his award for Best Oramatic Series Director, Mark linker of
"NYPD Blue" parked his chewing
gum on a wingtip of his trophy.
Not once, but twice, Gillian
Anderson almost bit the dust. Exiting
the stage with her after their turn as
joint presenters, David Dochovny of
"The X-Files" stepped on the hem of
his co-star's gown, almost tripping
her. Later, Anderson almost brought
herself down, stumbling on her dress
en route back to accept her award for
Best Lead Actress in a Dramatic
Series.

While Gumbel at one point quoted the author Thomas Mann. the
evening's wisest words came from
Hector Elizondo of "Chicago Hope."
Winning as Best Supponing Actor in
cralion'?
The very idea of signing someone · a Dramatic Series. he recalled his parwhose fonc is neither telling jokes, ents "who taught me that having bad
dancing. singing or acting was raised , . manners is muCh worse than being
in an amusing pre-taped piece during poor. and never leave food on my
which Gumbel sought counsel on · plate."
hosting .f.rom more obvious candidates like Bill Cosby, Jerry Seinfcld.
Jay Leno and "Mad About You" star
Andrew James Stanley celebrated
Paul Reiser.
his founh binhday on Aug. 30 at his
"The key," Reiser told him, "is home with a backyard cookout.
enjoy it and rcla&gt;, because next year,
A Lion King theme was carried
nobody will remember who was host out in the cake, balloons and other
this year. 'Who was host? We think decorations. Attending were his parit wa11 Arte Johnson."'
· ents. Steve and Julie Stanley. his sisNo, actually, we think last year it ter, Emily Christine, his grandparents,
was Paul Reiser. But next year, we ' II Duane and Hazel Stanley and David
know this year it was Gumbel.
and Lena Napper. Becky Foster.
The evening's first presenter was Roberta Young. Bev Napper. and
Ellen DeGenercs, who drolly dis- Dun Hunnel.
&amp;losed that in the new season her
Sending gifts were great-grandABC sitcom would spring another mother, Margaret Hysell. Bonnie and
"coming out" episode. This time, the Bobby Arnold. Darin Young., and
title character'will come out as a nud- Bobby Foster. Jr.
ist ("Don't you think if I had a
CHOICE. I'd wear clothing'?").
But in accepting the Best Comedy Writing award for last season's
episode where her character declares
herself a lesbian. DeGenercs wasn't
kidding around.
"There's nothing wrong with
you." she told gay viewers. "Don ' t
ever let anybody make you feel
ashamed of who you are."
Perhaps• the evening's cleverest
piece of business had presenter Semfeld moun1ing a sly protest over having been droppep from his. accustomed benh as a nominee for Best
• Lead Actor in a Comedy Series.
Seinfeld began by congratulating
Michael]. Fox, who was nominated
~gat
for his freshman year on "Spin
City.''
.
"But sadly ... tragically! ... some-

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - If
you've ever baked a pie, molded a
gelatin salad, stuffed a turkey or even
used cream of tomato soup. chances
are . "The Joy of Cooking" lent a
hand.
Since 1931, when Irma Rombauer put together her first compilation of "reliable recipes with a casual culinary chat," the book has taught'
generations how to stew and simmer,
boil and braise.
Sixty-six years later, ihe bible of
cookbooks is still cooking. On Nov.
5, the sixth edition of The Joy, as it
is lovingly calleil, will hit bookstore '
shelves.
The first revision in more than 20
years isn't exactly The . Joy your
grandmother would~membcr.
Th.erc arc no can ed tomato soup
.recipes. no frozen ve ics and far, far
less about gelatin: Instead. there's
Eth1opian chicken, Thai beef salad,
Szechuan spiced tofu, low-fat cheesecake ·and lots about garlic.
And there is a chapter devoted
entirely to pasta. Sixty years ago,
when Rombauer was cooking in her
mostly German community in St.
Louis. noodles were something to
serve in a casserole or.butlered. with
pot roast.
"If 2~ years ago somebody had
told you that past~ would be the most
cooked meal in Amcrica; would you
have believed itT' said Ethan Beck·
cr. Rombauer's grandson.
. Don 't worry. This is still the book
for hcany basics. like brownies, pan-

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Help wanted

1 ~'!··. EXPO '97 "'\...L,
~~
C2
\~
~ Meigs County Fairgrounds
September 20th &amp; 21et

IACIIIIIOWU CLIIIC .
Parts and Servlcett
•Mo-ra •Chain S.W. •Wetcleltera •AuthOrized
Dealer For:
··Briggs &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
•EchO •Ryobl •Roper •Reily •Hydro Gear
ANDOTHEASI

· Briggs &amp; StrattGtt: Master Service T~
o.ttloor Powtr t,ulp•ent AsiOdattotl: ~ 2 Cycle
Stele Routt 338 • At Vine • Racine, Ohio

TUESDAY NIGHT
FAMILY NIGHT
·Buy One, Get One

FREE
4 P.M. to Closing

DOMINO'S
.PIZZA
Pomeroy Location OnlyStarting Oct. 1
· New Store Hours

11

A.M.

FOR SALE
MUMS (Assorted Colors)
.
$2.00 each
PAUL HILL GREENHOUSES
SA 338, Letart Falls, Oh.

FALL/WINTER
CAR CARE
SPECIAL EDITION

614-247-2012
ALZHEIMER'S
WARNING SIGN #3:
Misplacing things- A person
with Alzheimer's may put
things in inappropriate places
like an iron in the freezer or a
watch in the sugar bowl. That
person not only forgets the car
keys, but forgets they even
have a car.
For more information on ·
Alzheimer's Disease call

cakes. luna casserole and macaroni

and cheese.
The new version, which will retail
at $30, boasts 4,500 recipes,_many of
them new and most tweaked if not
completely revised. The first printing

SCENIC HILLS
NURSING CENTER's
Specialized Alzheimer's

.BRIIIBI MINING

Miss Marjorie ~errits

LUMP AND STOKER CO~L
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILULE

missionary for the
Church of the
·Nazarene in Papua
New Guinea, will be

speaking
at the
Chester Nazarene Church this Wednesday
7:00pm.
Ever,o,.e Welcome

Pt.Pieuant
&amp; VIcinity
4 Family Yard Sate 4DI 2nd St
lloaon, wv. Sept 15·11·11 0-?

; Glauwart, clothing, taya &amp;

ROOFING
NEW•REPAIR

' more.

Crawtord'a Fta llarlle~ Hender·
' aon. wv. Everyday 0-1. Crafla,
aroJquoo, ndlng carda. furniture.

Gutters
Downspouts

Houra:

*'11, vW!y. ~75--.

949·2168

7:00 a.in. thru 4:00p.m. Monday thru Friday

Ricll Ptaroon Aucoon Company,
full limo auctlonHr, complete
auc1ion oorvtce. Llcenoed
188,0hlo 1 Woll VIrginia, 30477.1-5785 Or 30+7n5ol47.

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine. &amp;Welding Shop

DlllECI'
PRI(;ES""
·
Quality Window Systems

SPORTS!
SCORES!
SPREADS!
1-900-329-0611
Ext. 1881
$2.99 per min.
Must ·be 18 yrs . .
Scrv-U (614) 645-8434

~FAl:TORY

· .

L&amp;J

SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Rosonable Rate•

985-4422

School on October 21, 1"7
11 7:15p.m. ,.

ecceptld from tho floor 11
tho tlmo of eiJtCtlon. .Tlloupervloort ara to 111
lllcted. You mey VOII lithe
annuli mHIIng or on an
ebHntH bllliot which may
be . eecured from the
con-on clltrtcl office.
(1)2, 152TC

Using the Cl11ssi{ieds
Is liS EllS!filS •••

CELLULAR PHONES
POMEROY, OH.

·

614-949-3060

•Re-cores • New Radiators

Oxy -

John Williams, Owner
Ucensed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates ·
Providing Quality
RaaldenUal Service.

Accetl Regulator Repair

.

24 Hr. Emergency

.

.

t/4/tfn

FREE
EXCAVATING
&amp; TRUCKING

Pick up dlacardld
appliances, bllttertae,
· many motalt &amp;
motor blocke.
814-992-4025 a am-11 m

WICKS

992-3838

HAULING

Houae &amp; Trailer
Sites
Drlv-ays, utiiHies,
lend clearing,
septic aylltema.
Hauling Umestone

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

FrH Estimates
.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addition•
•New Garage•
•Electrical a. Plumbing
·~ooflng
'
•Interior &amp; Exterior
PalnUng
AIIO Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIIIIIATl'SI
V.C. YOUNG Ill
912-8215
Pomeroy, Ohlo

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Share Your Thoughla With Girls

Lonoly7 Unhappy? You can

tlntl
your apKial eom10ne nowlll 1·
000·280-1077 IXL 2407. $2.0111
min. Must M 18yr1. S.rv~u ..

•

10wk

old,

112

Shepl\lrd. 112 COllie

a clog when he'a listening:•

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV

Babyahtlng In My House, Any

SNit. Roo1101r1o1Jto RaiH. 614-4464005.
Babyslnlng aervice needed, call
814·D02-5QQ5 between D:OOam·
5:otlpm.

BUCKEYE

COIIIIUNITV

SERVICES Hu E•panded Ita
Servlcea In Melga County And

H.. The Fallowing Poailiona

(I) 40 Hri/Wk: 4 P.ll.
lion Thru 8 A. II. Sol; SleepAllaitablo:

Over Required; Daytime

Hour~

011: Compoalfve Fringe Beneflll:

(2) 32 HriiWk: e A.ll. sat Thn1 a
A.ll. lion; Sloop -Ovor Required:
(3) 20 Hr1 /Wk: 7 -8 A.M. I 4 •7

Relardatlon In An Informal Set·

. tlng; Requirementa: High :,ichoal
Driving Experience Good Driving
Record And Adequate Automobile Insurance Covnga. Starting
Salary; $5.50 JHcur. Training Pro-

--211811.

Aultrlliln

Opportunill Em-

Computer Users Na9ded. Work
own houri. $20k 10 SSOklyr 1·

B00-348-71flfl 1_
1508.

Earn $200 In one day and not

leave home. Invite your friends
Olltr for a professional Glamour
2 Puppl11, 'lwka old, Garman

Photography pany. Call 1· 800·
487-5787 or t-800-&lt;26-8363.

oloJr 8prn

HOllE HEALTH AGENCY HIR·
INQ CNA'o • HHA'o, Full I Pan

Shaphardlhtixod. ta good homo.
814-448-3302 or 114·4&lt;1·8077

Time PoaUionl Available, Great
Houtll Excellent Sa&amp;ary Plua Benttltl, Agency Well Trained, But
'Muat Have High School Diploma,
GEO. Or Somo Exporlenco Coring

Ruume
To: CLA 421 Clo Galtlpoh Oallj

For The Elderly, Send

Tribune, 825 Thlrd Avenue, Galli·
poll OH 45831. EOE.

LEGAL SECRETARY, compu1or

akiUa required, good communi·
cation akJIIa, trping eowpm, ref·

To good ho. . only· one -old
- -... 81 ..0112-2113.
60 Losl end Found

' to Bo• CW·11, %PI Pleasant

Found: men•a bltocal eyqla1111

Caah paid weekly, need amall
car &amp; know araa wall. Call 0
:atM-875-5187.

of Sjr-

erencea required. Send reaume

ReglaiOr, 200 llatn St, PI Pteuanl WI 25550.
LIGHT OELtvERY

.Opportunillll
.._..nt Abound At llnle

Caeaartl All Levels Of Exp.

114-446-8416

Salford School Rd..

Avon Chrllllmll ttl -118 IHr, No
Door -To -Door, CUI&lt;k Cooh, Fun
IRolaxl"tJ, t-800·738-0188 lndl

pioyor. .

pup, - .

wtlh coao. on SR 124 acu-.
lt&lt;-840-2487.

BilliG 8 COOLIIG
1.aol).872_..7

1·

Oft Ultl7. Equal

Heat Pumps Installed '3S00 a month

•t ..sti you wouldn't Ill!' about buying

·aonu~es•

IIJO.I2r.-lr&lt;ll11111rap.

Cecilia Deadline For Applicants;

Giveaway

8'1111.

(P&amp;IIffi"'~' based on approved crednJ

AVON - II -$t81Hr. No Door To
Door. Quick Cathl

40

Kllttnl to givtiWif, e 14-812·

FrH .Estimates

Allill:lnl Farm Manager nHdlcl

on a larQII grain firm In Ua&amp;on .&amp;
Pulnpm countl11. Sail motiva·
dOll, dopendabltlty, mochontcat

(e1Q)I45 lt34. '

" ' - . 114-843-5:!81.

- Easy Bank Financing -:
00
Furnaces '28 a monih

Ntc. Coli llepL T298 II 24
44' 1811).
AVON I All Arooo t Shlrtoy
S4*n. 3114475-1428.
llouri~Doj t~

vided. Send Resume Jo: P.O. Box
88&lt;, Jackson, OH 450!40; ATTN:

Free 10 good home only· long
l'alrld blacl1 and wlli• llillano, il-

0

Utrc:handlaers Natded. Must
[M Within I5 Milot Of GallipoliL
Work Your Own Daytime Hours,

I On I .Llirotlt 1·000-255-0700 Diploma IGED Valid Driver's LiEx.t 21183 $3.111111111, Ill+, Sent.U, cense, Three Vears licensed

Female cat to giYeaway, cal 814·
i82· 7513oi 814-fi2·5275.

INfMHl

•pART TIME• Department Store

P.ll .. 11-F: (41 ID Hri/Wk: 5 Hrs
005
Personals
Each On Sot &amp; Sun (Fioxlbio);
Don't Jull Talk, Find ADalol I· ~bililloo Include Teaching
1100-2115-11035, $2.1111/llln., tl + CDmmunlty And Peraonal Skills
Soov-U (810) 1451434.
To Two Teenaae11 Wllh Mental

2443.

MobUe lome Furnaces
and Heat

Help Wanted

AVON SELLS ITSELf!

WELDING.

992·5583

(Ume StoneLow Rates)

110

-.18-UQ.lw. bontfilll
~ llmlj- frtonda. ftuj.
1&gt;1a 11ou111 No IMntDrytti-«JJ.
742-4731. (lttrl-1

Tlg • Aluminum Welding

TONY'~PORTABLE

Aloo Ju'* Cars, 814·258-

ololrlp.

State Certified Welder
Stick •

aat·

ablily, I Q l - farm~·
roqurod. 304-11117-3435.

,Agricultural•lndustrlal• Automotive

Dally Rd., Recine

Parta. Bu1tno

Elp.

RADIATOR REPAIR

CORPORAL

~uta

-;;r=-· Solltno para. 304·

No WHktndl. Car Needed, No

360° Communications

614-992-5479

Specializing in
wedding, anniversary
and ~lrthday ca~es. .

J 1 D'a

Golilpoh

2/12o02/lfn

111/2"""""

1/21'12 mo.

1m-....

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

(No Sunday Calls)

Chester, Ohio

time business

(J

Run Moore .owner, S14•te2252B.

614-992·7643

113 W. 2ND ST.

· Reopening for full

'·

lne Antlqu... Pomero1, Ohio.

-no. lt'-3111-0081.

" WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF

IJurie's Custom
Cakes

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® hy Larry Wright

- . 114-11112-7441.
Anaquoa. IDp prlca• potd, Rt,.,.

Wanted To Buy: Good Used

FREE ESTIMATES

lttHI45-8434.

992-2156

coin•. tora. lamps, guns, toola.
earatea; alao apprllaalt, Oaby

YCR'o,
12311.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

'

Clossifieds

Antlquei, futnlturt, glan. cNna.

Non-Working Washer, Oryara.
S10YII, Reltigetalora. FrHZif&amp;,
Air Conditioner•. Color T.V.'s,

Room Additions • Roofing

· Nomtn•• ero: Jtll Bolin,

Marco J.,.,., lily Mldltltf.
Nomination• will Ill

-ry.

Clean La1e Modal Cara Or

Garages • Replacement Windows

We Buy, Sell
and Trade
New and
Used Items
202 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
614-992-9086
81271971 mo. pd.

DUMP TRUCK

ELECTION LEGAL NOTICI!
The Ohio Soli Mid W81er
ConHrvetlon Commlellon
will ceu11 en oiJtCtlon of
eupervloore of tho llelge
Soli
and
W81er
ConHrvatlon Dlllrlct to Ill
held In ICCOrdtnCI With
Chl1pter 1515 of the Ohio
ReviHd Code II Molgo High

98!;-4473

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

SWAP·SHOP

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Ut!lflatone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites

Public Notice

Top Dollar: All U.S. Sit·

ver And Gold Colna, Proofuta,
Dio{nOfldt, Antiquo
Gold
Rlnga, Prt-1830 U.S. Currencr.
Slorli"'J, E10. A&lt;qulallionl .IMWV
• II.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 se-d
Alllrlll. Gollpotlo,ll.....'

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

R. L. HOLLON
·TRUCKING

N. Sayre
614-742-2138

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

Pomeroy, Ohio

Opening 9·1·97

.

wanted to Buy

.1GQO llodeta Or Nawor,
wv 10234:T7==~1~-800-=~2t:1~-5100:::.:======7/22/lln=~ Trucka,
Smllh Buick Ponllac, I GOO Eut•

912-4119

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Joe

CONSTRUCTION

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

110 Court St.

90

:========:::I
~booluta
ROBERT BISSELL

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

250 Condor s\reet
Pomeroy, OhiO 45769
A DiviSion on·NichOls Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992-2406
· Fax: 304-n3-5861

Auction
end Fila ll.-ket

80

otyr old Eikhound...to. 304-875·

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Call For Details:
Dave Harris (Ext. I 04) or Don Riffle (Ext. I 05)
992·2155

Sunday I llondll' edlttoo•
1 :OOpn l'fldrt

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
...ES
FREE ESTIM"'

Reserve Your Advertising.Space Toiay!
ADVERTISING
DEADLINE IS TUESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 16, 1997

Ad•-· D•dlloe: 1 :COp• 1111

511emn

CHECK THE WANT ADS FIRST!

ANDREW STANLEY

day Hlore tile 14 lt to r••·

Howard L Wrltesel

STATE ROUTE 124
Approxlmettly 1.4 mllea east of Route 32.
WEUSTON, OHIO
614-384 6212

992-6194

: IlERMAN® by Jim Unger

STEAM CLEANING
Middleport, OH

Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sala, Weldlag Supplies, Industrial GIIS
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday - 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday - 8:00 a.m. - 12 noon

Sentinel

All Ylr&lt;l laiN lluol Be Pold lo

614·992~0077

(814) 949-2804

In Loving Memory of
CORNEUABUNCH
Who passed away
Nine Years ago
September 14, 1988
Take up your cross and
follow god And He will ·
lead the way.
To bring you hope and
inner strength
to face each new born
'day.
Take up your cross and
follow God
And cast aside your fear.
For when you need a
helping hind
He always will be near.
Take up your cross and
cast aside
Your gloom and dark
despair,
For He will help to ease
the pain
That in your heart you
bear.
Take up your cross, be
not afraid
However dark your
plight,
For God will see you
through' the storm
And be ·your guilding
light.
Sadly Missed and
Deeply Loved by Your
Girls and Grandkids

CHEVAliER'S
Carpet·l,tpholstery

.

"""

.

Pomeroy,
lllddltport
&amp; VICinity

o..·...

lntarsectlort of US 33 &amp; SA 7 (Northwaet Corner)

In Memory

Open

AI C.,.t.Upholstery

''-".#-.

For Mora Information ,Call: 992-6696 992-5293 742-3020

BUCKEYE COMMUNilY SERVICES has expanded its services in Meigs County and has
the following positions available:
(1) 40 hrS/Wk: 4 pm Mon. thru Bam Sat; sleepover required; daytime hours off; competitive
fringe benefits;
(2) 32 hrs/wk: 8 am Sat. thru 8 am Mon.; sleepover required;
(3) 20 hrs/wk: 7-8 am &amp; 4-7 pm, M-F;
(4) 10 hrs/wk: 5 hrs each on Sat. &amp;. Sun .
(flexible);
Re~ponsiibilities include teaching community
and personal skills to two teenager wtth mental
retardation in an informal setting. Requirements:
:High school diploma/GED, valid driver's license,
·three years licensed driving experience, good
driving record 'ilnd adequate automobile
insurance c0verage. Starting salary: $5.50/hour.
Training provided. Send resume to: P. 0. Box
604, Jackson, OH 45640; ATTN: Cecilia. Dead·
line for applicants: 9/19/97. Equal Opportunity
Employer.
·

run is 500,000 copies, an extraordi· the kind of meals she liked to eat. Her taken so seriously. She pioneered a
nary number for a cookbook.
daughter. Marion Rombauer Becker, style in which directions were writWhy notJ The Joy has sold more joined her mother with the 1951 edi· ten in fairly orthodox sentences.
than 14 million copies, and even the tion .
instead of "rccipese." Ingredients
"What Irma did was say 'Oh were scattered in bold face throughoutdated 1975 hardback edition sells
I00,000 copies a year without pro- phooey on the old fogies.' Anyone out the instructions rather than listed
· can cook." said Anne Mendelson, a at the beginning.
motion.
Rombauer was getting over the New Jersey food writer and author of
suicide ofber husband in 1930 when "Stand Facing the Stove," a biograAfter Ms. Becker's death in 1976,
she began her first cookbook project. phy of Rombauer and Ms. Becker.
The
Joy tradition passed to her son,
She wasn't professionally trained, but "They were more accessible and
she was a fine cook and fast, known more relaxed in their whole Ethan, now 52. who has spent the last
20 years retesting recipes and writing
for . whipping up supper for unex- approach."
new ones in his boyhood horne of
Rombauer
brought
humor
into
pected guests.
Her first self-published volume. the kitchen. telling readers - and Newton, Ohio. His ~arne joins those .
which was professionally printed most of her early readers were of his mother and grandmother on the
and revised in 1936. was filled with women -that cooking needn't be -jacket cover of the new book.

''

2ndAnnwol

Saturday 10-5 p.m. &amp; Sunday 10-5 p.m.

Bryant Gumbel does Beloved cookbook
revised for first time in ?O years
.
the Emmycast proud
'

C\~/

·

1998 Martin Street

110

l.....n:.... t/·~'-. ..::.,..

'

OH

Loat: amlll hOYiedOg. BHch
Grave Ad., blacl&lt; wtlh tan mark-

Ina' blue cottar, "TTID', 11+742·
31)4, 11+74MIIIQ.

Nooded. Gr•t Growlh Patonlial.
FltJ Schadulta, Bonus Plan
oiOtK, Etot Send Ro1001e To: P.O.

Bo1110, Blrllouavlto, wv 25ii04.

�Page 10. The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

;

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mondlly, September' 15, 1997

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

ACROSS
1 Aetor o..._
4 - - jail
a
planta
12 1ttt1ge
- u,....

. laltllne)
13 VP'o auparlot

40 Emullled Tom
Crutaa
41 eompUH
" 1t1c1ge expllt
45 ,.,
Party
·
ahoot

41 LhMa - (dog

14 "-""&lt;Me

-lor

11 U1141-

51 WOfk hard
53 1.agacy
85 T. . .rd the
centar

poatty

Block, brick, aewer pipe&amp;. windOWl. linttll, tic:. Clludt Wintera.

2 &amp; 3 bedfoom mobllt homes

U71 Kirkwood 12x80 U ,300, 12110·1300, oawtr, wattr and
81~111, Or814-31141747.
-lnoludoll, ....11112-2187.
All

relerencea required. lend ,..
IUn'W ID Box GM· 11, '4Pt PIMI--

ant Rtglotor, 200 llaln SL , Pt
-tW¥25650. .

This newspaperwtl•not

PARALEGAL. oxperltnct pr..
lerred,

good communication
aldlla, computer ·lkllls ttqulred,

Postal Joba 3 PD1it1ana Avail·

able, No E•parlanca Nec:Hury,

For lnlormallan, Call 818· 717·
!16110, ElL 81!10.

al:44i4io!'AA;PII;~b~i;ill;n;;t;I~-

reol..,.te ~ ..

this MWSp&amp;fer IS SubjeCt IO
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1888 which makes It illegal
10 •any pre~e~o,..,
Hmltation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
sex tanillal status or national
origin, or anv Intention to
...... any OUCh
Umltdon or discrimination. •

I

pre-.

k~ngly

accept

adverttsemetts tor real estate i
whiCh Is in violation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
Informed thai an dwellings .
advertised In this newspaper

Southltn ONo Corrtedonll Fac:ll-

are ava»able on an equal
opport~ily basis.

IIJ II Seeking Ta COR1fiC:1 An

Con-I~~~~~~~~~~~

tract Period
II 10101.ti7
To B/301
Ohio
Licensed
Physlcllft.
II, Subject To YutuaJ Agrt•

=~:c=~B~~

310 HomelforSIIt

May Col The lnotillllon

3 Bedroom BHevel In VInton,
Not In Flood Araa, Foneod Yard,
81 ..~ 814 318 111118

tended For (2) Two Additional
V..ra. OualiReA:t Meclcat Docto11
Bu~naoo

Ofb Al 814·25i-SS.U Extonolon
327• To ReceiW Btd Forma And
lnslfuc~oni Before 12:00 Noon,

fridor, SOj

, . , ,g, 111117.

Trsvellng Patient Servlcaa Aa·

oiollfll For Family Planning $orv·
ICII Band In Jackoon. CH. 30
Hour WHk l'lllillon With Bon•
fill. lltdlcal Ctftco Exporltnct
Required. Fttxlbla Schodulo To
lnclud• S.t"rd1y .Morning And
Evonlna Hoora. Aaoponllble ,.,.
eon Wflo Ia Senaldva To Birth
Contnlt And RaproducM Haalltl

N..da Of CUentl. Mull Bt Or-

flniJad, Accurate With Figures
And Documentation. Muat Bl

s bedroom houl8 plua I• act81,
living room with I!Opiaoo, nict
dining room &amp; kitchen, nk:e river
view, located at Syraeu11, Oh
$55,1100 080, 304-275-1102.
big

3 Bodrl101!1 Ho\111, 1 Baltl, Uving
Room, Kl tc~en. Sunroom, Large
Barn, 1 Acres. Land Contract,
Tom MIII!Hd Jr.. 814-448-2810,
81..245-5541.
4 lltdroom Spill Lwei With 5400
Sq. Fl Including Full Baaement
With 2 Car Gantgo, Gao Hea~ 2
llilto From Galipollo On Butavllo
Pike, On 1 112 Ar.ro flat Lo~ City
Schoolt, 11111.000.814 448 oso

Wllllna To Work Ao Part Of A
THm And Handlt A Varying
Work Schtdulo. Travol Rtlm· 8 Rooma, 2 112 Baths, lnground
b u r - Included With llonlhty Salary. Send Reaume And Pool. On 1.12 Aa.a. ptua much
ThrN Employment Referenc11 more; over looking the RJver. For
To Plamtd Par.,llllod or Soulh- Appoinrr.nt 1814)-258-11103
••• Cillo. 388 Richland Aotnut,
IUY HOMEI AI LOW. AI
ANno. CH 45101. ECEIESP.
14,000 1 -5 Bdnn., '-1·Gow't I
180 WlntedTO Do
Bank Ropo'o Coli 1·800·522·
2730, X1l'08.
ANY COD JOBS: en-lor pointIng, ahruba &amp; 'wttdl trimmed, By Cwnor: 2 SIDry On 3' WOOded
landataplng, oidawalkl edged,
Built In 111114, 3 Bodroomo,
lawn ..,., tiC. Call Bill 304-075Bath, 2 Half Batho, Full
2 Cuatom Wood
7112.

I

Artlal Will Paint Charactera Or

tt,EIC.61~Zl7.

.CAT.Qozlf -'&lt;. 304-875-3G38.

Fnd1y,

Oc~~;asional

1gn Clay'"" Mobile Homo,
Btdnloma. 1 112 11t1111. s1e.aoo:
125 BTU Ofl Furnaot 1100: 185
Gallon 0 11 Tank, 150. 814•2455150.
1883, Centur r Bravo Ur70, 3
Btdroomo, 2 Full Bathe, Control
:!~0" Only, 117,800 .81 ..

114·..8-3138, Eaotorn Avonua,
Galllpolia.

r

t
1·1:-and--:-::2-::--:-..,~m~-~~-:-=

1ST TillE BUYERS I E·Z Fl·
NANCING. 2 or 3 btdroorno, or·
ound · - 1.8CIIJ.251-!070.

~~~~~=~~-==

=:.

-

Now Bank Rtpo'al Only 3 loh,
owner financing available. 30•-

755-7191.

.

Oakwood 28x58 3 bedroom, 2
balh, lllrllng at $11iD per mo.
Call1.aoo.tl81-417n.

ow, 1 new home S1,0o0fdown,

Twin Rlvota T-, now a-ling
appllcallona lot 1bt. HUO tublldlztd apt. tor tldtrly and handl·

no payments aher 1 y11rs. 30•-

c:apptd. EOH 311H75-118111.

Ropoo · Save Big $SSt Call Crad11 LN600-251·5070.

Two bedroom apartment In Ykl·
dltport,
81..atl2·5151.

REPCS. SAVE BIG ISS CALL
CREDIT LINE 1-4100·251·5070. .

Untunl.,td Apttll!lont lor ronL
No Petl. 81 ..258-1803, From 8
A.ll. .g P.M.

no-

450

Furnllhed
Rooms

SIHping rooma with cooking.
Also trailer apace on river. All
hook-upa. Call afttr 2:00 p.m.,

dact&lt;t, vlnVI oldlitg, aclcf.&lt;ln llllcfl.
tkma. cabinet re&amp;cing or nawty
rebuilt Relertncii·Frtt Ead ·
_
.... Shll3114&lt;1'15-1272.

304-77Ue51,11ttonWV.

460 Space lor Rent
Mobile home sill available wt.w•n Athena and Pomeroy, call

Fumltu,. rapalr, noflnloll and r...

...lion. alto .............. Olllo

llobllo homo 1pt01 In llicldlopor1,
cal81 ..11112-2885.

Oao&lt;gaa Sawmll, clon1
t.u1 ,..., logo 10 Ill mil Jull call
IIIJ4.4~1857.
.
.

Nice lot In Middleport lull·
obla lor any oizt, ony hoollupo,
cloll 10 1111100 ond IChoolt, nlco

Pralttalonill Tr• Sotvlco, Slll111&gt;
Removal. Frn Estimatlll In·
. .- . - · Cfllo, 81 ..381814-317·1010 . •

~814-11112-231g,

MERCHANDISE

510

llll Wator Hauling Satvlc;ot,
'Whate Purltr It Cyr Paooion•
Give Ua A Cal Tocia1: 304.0751711.
lltlor

ms.

~o

Wll haul Junlt or noh - · 135/
ploiO.tp-- 304-e7$-1035.

Opportunity
IIIOTICEI
OHIO VALLEV·PIIIILISHING CO.

rou do buei·
neoa with poopla JOU know, and

recommends lh•t

NOI'
10 - rou- have lrwtttfgattd
tlwouah ""
mal until

... .-v.

IARN f45K nus TEAR I HRS
WK ·NO tELLING trw Rtq 8QO.

--·241h

Ome Monument Buslne11 And
EQulprMnt For SOlo. Call lion •
Fil, Hrt. 1O·• For An Appoint·
......1._..J112.
VENDING: Lur llan'o Dream.
Feo • lilt ... Prlctd Rgll.
Fraalhai1.1100-12H7S2.
· WOII(ATHDIIE

AHIILOII&amp;m ·

EMI ..... To 11,41111 M . f1,505
To 11,132 FIT. Paid Vacation,
BonuiH. Coli For Frao lnfolmt·
1-100-204-7048.

lion230

Profllllonsl
Servleel

LIVII'IIIIDn'l baNment wttttptooflnt. •II b11ement repain
dont, free esdmatll, llftlim•
guarani•. 10!'rt on job llPI'i·

-

30W75-214&amp;.

Household
GoodI

Appliances:
Rtc:ondltloned
Walhara, J)ryora, Aang11. Rt~l·
, rators. 10 D11 Guaranltel
ronch Cltr llartag, 814· 4"·

Kindorgll1ln t i l - 8

Buslnen

1972 llonto Carlo Will ji50 2 bill
14,000 Mllea On Wotar LOll 01
New Front End Parll, Wind-

Dual E•hautl Wlth Turbo II Uu·
liars, Doptndoblt, Call Hwr AI·
tar 8:oo P.W. 304-875·1~ Or
SH AI 2011 Jetleteon In Pt.

-

1871 Pirmouth otadonwagon !Dr
peril, 81 ..1192·2183.

Color Floral LoYMnt Wu f400
Rtdu&lt;td To $100. Excellent Con-

Mobile Home•
for Slit

ditlori, Antlqut1temt, Rocking

Chair, 81...-17.
GOOD

'71 Rebel, 12JI85,·1WD Hdn:tom,
excellent care, central air, tS.XtO
1/2' lifetime awning, 814·378·

8214.

•FAIII.Y DREAM HCUSEHUOO .4br. 2 both homo. faalllli"41
all new aae through fireplace,
state or the art aec:uriry ayalem.
$2.4g5/_,, $348.54 per monltl.
Only at

USED APPLIANCES

Waahlll'l, d!yart, refrlgaralort,
rangtL Skagaa Appllancea, 71
Vlne Street. Callet4-.u8·73DI.
1«XXIIHJ 3t81.

Color T.V., Waohar, Dryer, Roltrlgerator, ffetzlf", Air Compr8IIGI,
81 ..256-123&amp;
Traitor loll. Counlly Lane llobllo
Homo Park. GallipoNo ftrry, WV.
:10«75-5421.

RENTALS

Potly'a • Uotcl Ftlmlturo
We- Atrl'fl SUrpiullll
2101 Jofftroon,.,.
0ptn 8:30 • 5:00 folon.SaL
:J04.875-SCFA 17832)

310 HoiiiH tor Selt
2 Sooty. 1 _ , lloutt on doullll
lot In lalltmHda. Full olzo
-r¥ ..... atJ.H7S.153ol.
llilr carpttod. - •1-

• to 4

•K

•AKQ6~ 4

111110 FD&lt;d XLT Lalro1 f150, 11/C;

e

Pti

West

M4

11r11. 111 cyllndtt automatic.
31Mo075-501M atw 5f&gt;m.

• 9 6

1881 Toroll 2wd pick-up, run!
-~ bod clomagad. 11,700. ..,.,
67$-7112.
. .

. 742·!1020.

1883 ChiYJ 1/2 ton, V-8, 5
apHd, 1500 S.rlet, with racllv,
allding re• window, bedliner, ·enl
gino all cooler, hlldl, top.
per, tl01Mtn1 oondhlon. 81 ..11112·
7285.

BARNEY
15 LOWEEZ:Y
HOME,
SNUFFY?

)·

11178 Chevrolet Scoladaie Plck 4

SHE'S TRYIN'

TO PUT TATER
TO SLEIPII

Deak ISO. T1nd1 computer wl
printer 1150. Antiq"a vanity
$150. Dining room 11111 (I c:llalr'

590 .

For sale
or Trade

tlblt, &amp; china catllntt) 1450.
Couch I chair f4(10. Call Bnld al 1986 Plymouth station wagOn,
po. pb, IUD, 4eyl, $700. 304-578304-1175-7814"' 304-1175-1130.

21167.

Dlnlna r o o m - · 5

like _ , alto, "'"'' ..,.,q
814-11112-3401.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment

Price or us Each, 814-367·7o408,
18 Foot Tandem Dove Tail Trail·
111 Houot On Little KYGO&lt;•• Rampo lnc~dtd, faciOry Built,
Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repaitl. Uotd Cru. $1,4(10, Call61.....
Problemo? Need Tuntd? Ca~ tho 11637 •.
plano Dr. 61 .......4525
Bush Hog Patla &amp; Equipment Rotary Cunera • Resr Bladea JET
Loadera • Backhoes, Etc. CarAERATION MOTORS
Aaptirad, New &amp; Rtbuit In Stock. michael's Farm ll_... 1514-4482412, 1.8CIIJ.!i94.1111.
Col Ron EYinl, 1.8CIIJ.537-8521.
He1110n Forage Harvealtr

tor

Kenmore Waaher I tOO, Gibaon alt. good ahape, 11000, 614·
Dryar 1100: Both Worklno; 275 11112·2623.

Gallon Fuel OU Tank $65; 81"
378-2720, AFTER 8 P.ll.

Husqvarna &amp; Green Machine
trimmer• 1 brush c:unera on sale

Kllcben COtHt $8.50 Sale on all now. Sideft Equipment 304·875room IIZI carpets. Mollohan Car· 7421 .
pliO 1814,..._,....
JD 2755, JD 2555,
Large GE microwave with turn 3020, Kubotl 70

c---,.,:u

table, 8 rrDnlhl old, ptld $300 will
toke $150 080; Graco pack &amp;
pll)', uotd twlco.. $40; Joy Ride
car . .t with cano~. 110; Greco

babr owing, $1 0; lluffed Mario
chair lor a toddler, $5, 814·742·
1018. .
.

Llfl For Auto To Uoe In Tranoldtal Fat Handi·
capptd, LIU New; Al10, C·Pap
Machine, llty Ba Satn Allltdl·
cat Shop,......., Pika, 81.._.
C.n.
po nirv~
"•

221111, 8 1 ~1311.

LIYing Room Sulto, Countrr Blue;
1 LlvlnA:!om Suite Green 1
llauvo
~ 1100 Exch, 11..
256-H35.
LIYing Room, 01,;~
... Room, Eltdrooma, Kitchen, Utility All New
Condition
24&amp;8388. I·82,000 Far Ali, 814·
Nlct Oa~ Hutch: 3 Year Old
While Kitchen Electric Stave 30
Inch, Nice Kitchen Tabla .t

Chalro, 614-3711-2720, AFTER 8

MF285, Ford BOO,
Stlir 250 Hra.• Yanmar 22

WD Wiltl M""'"· Rhino 10 Ft Off·
aet Rotary Cuuer 2 yta. Old,
Wooda 10 Ft. Cutter VG Cand..
New Round Bale Transpona
11 ,850.00 NH 716 Silage wagon
VG Cond., Used Loader. Uud
Orils, Planters, Round Balers, Ei&lt;.
We Make Parker H~druallc HOI·
81, Carmichatl'l Farm &amp; Lawn
814-446-2412• 1·600-594- 1114 ·
Largo Selocdon 01 JD Compoot
Tractoro And Anachmonll 20 ·30
Horoe-r 2 Yr. Warranl)' 7.~
Financing With JD Crtdll Appro·
val Carmlehael'a Farm &amp; Lawn.
2 2.
~·
81~ .t1 1.S)Q...-1111.

Shenniu Tractor Fgr Salt, 614·
Sale 1Ren1: Stairway Ekwltor, Uft +M0-3964.
Chaira, Eltetrlc Whlelchllira, And Uaed 3210 Oitch Wltoh Trencher
SCooltrl, Wheek:halr Llhl, Bow· + Case Maxi Sneaker Plow, 614man'l Homtclnt, IS1 • ....f.46.7283.
694·7&amp;.42.

WARM UP: HIGh Elftcltnq Nalu·
ral And LP. Qaa Furnac:ea, Li'-·
t1ma Warranty On HHl EllChang·

" · ,, You Oon'1 CaM Uo W. Both

Loaet• FrH Eallmatt~l Add-On
HMI Pumpo Only SUghiJ Hlghat.
Call Uo Todar. 1897 lo Tho
Twenly SIYenth Year In The
Haaling 1 COOing Buolnaools1..
4441 8308, 1-ll00·28 1-ooll8.

1D88 Ford Ta1.1rua atallonwagon,
maroon, cruise, litt. arrvtm aweo
caasene, &amp;harP. excelltn1 condition inside and our. 12985, 114·

Up. Short Wheti·Baot, 4X4. El•

740

IT StiOOTS

I

nAri(&gt;UIL-IZt~

PA~T S'··IT'S
PA,T Of T~e

::x·

PAG~AGE.

,.

1888 Honda GoldWing Aopon·

NfLt&gt; E.'O:&lt;
€DC£ lllt'(

1895 Sea-doo Space SPX Jet

80 ~ ... 500, Bl ..ll9NI130.

UD6 Marc1.1ry .Tracer; 28,000
miles. I7,9D.5. 8,000 miles llh on
13

s

CARS FOR 1oo1 Trucks, boatJ,
.t-wheelera, motor homes, lurniture, electronics, c:gmputera elC.
by FBI, IRS, DEA. Available your
erea now. Call 1-800-513·4343

Trpeo, 81 .. 24s.SBn

25~

3 ..

Pass

49
4NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

27 .0 ,...po1s

Pass

Iabbr.)

2tHoHado.-?
30NIVII-.

32C-belore ·

DON'T COUNT
ON IT. MARCIE!

A
V

8r A Cool Col And Ch«k 01.&lt; tho

I MONDAY

ROBOTMAN

C""*, 25Ft lof1ll, New Awniflt,~

Self-Contained, Air Conditioned,:
Excellent Condi~an, Ver~ Clean ,

1!

Aaoldontial or oommerc:1e1 Wirlno ...

cenaad t lec:trlclan. RidenoUr '

Electrical, WV000308 304-•7•· "
1788.
'
"V .,...

I

I
~

I

IQ

~

_

.

.

•

PRINT NUMII:IED lETTERS IN
THfSE SQUAIES ·
UNSCil.Mill AIOVE linERS
TO GET ANSWER ·

I IIIII

Bolero - Inlet - Unwed - Unsafe - AROUNU
It's a fact of life that a w1se man willleam more from a
fool than the other way AROUND.

. ""'""' lrl ""' '"""'IOd SocrJoro.

Campers &amp;
:..~'
Motor Homes
•
~~~~~~~~~~l
i972 Travel Mate Fifth Whteh

new llfVict ar repairs. Maaler U:.

I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

790

640 El~loal and
Refrigeration

47 Singer Honia
45 Brlallo
50 Vicious
52 - AngeiH
54 Wrllh

1=+-!--+--

•

'

more. Foi

.. ln)unHiwhll
horn•

Complete 1he chuckle quoiOd
by filling in the miu ing words
L......L-.1-...J-..L.-'-...J yov .develop from step No, 3 bela:".

New OBI tanka, 1 tgn truc:k :
wheels &amp; radia1or1, 0 &amp; R AulD. 1
Ripley, WV. 304·372·3D33 or 1 -~

~~dmate can Ci&gt;O~ 814·8g~.:

1-

41 Typool42 Actor Pa143 Typo olD

I

light uotmblr. Oxygen and a.,.,
... ...... ianko nuod 1011 axr:lwngtd. •
814-742·m2..
. ' "!

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenance- Painting, vinyl aid ing,"
carpentry, doon, window, bethl ,,
rrabllit home rapolr tnc1

33Hig1Hc34 Annex
37 ~ Paulo
39 Llglll - -

answer lo this question from Thomas 1.-"-..1.-1-o.
Carlyle: "So here hath been dawning ·
another blue day: Think. wilt'thou let
it slip useless away?"
CELEBRITY CIPHER
After Ieday's deal, declarer felt
by Lula Campos
.
blue, having made a slip that would
Cetlbrity Cipher ctyp4ograms are CI'N1ecl from ""'*'iOnl by lamous ~ . pa$1 and preseri:
normally pass unnoticed, except that
Eadl '-!twin the~ alanda lor another. Todql Clul: 0 equalS C
~
il cost the contract with this·unfriend·
NV
DSFZX
DKN
R T Z
'DEZTZ
ly distribution.
North and South were English
MPXD
ERLZ
·o E R D
ONROEZX.
expe!'\S who favor very light open·
ings. North's four no-trump wasn't
DEZH . DEAD RTZ
RIB
VYTZB
WZ Z I
Blackwood'; it described a five -and·
a-half-club bid. Even so, it is amazWPH
w z . VYTZB.'
ON
ANY I A
ing North didn't go on to the excel·
lent slam. (I suppose one shouldn't
FEYJJYFX .
criticize because, as the cards lay, six
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ' A bore is a man who, when y.ou ask him how he is,
clubs is destined to fail.)
lolls yoo.· - Ben i.eston Taylor.
After winning the first trick with
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The stage is where I live; the audieilc:e is mr family .
the heart ace , East switched to a low
Whaleve(s printed about yoo is unimponant." - Liza Mlnnelli.
spade, which South won with his ace.
• At this point, the contract is
WOlD
ensured by the following line: ruff a
IAMI
heart in the dummy, play a trump to
- - - - - - l.tlt..t ~y CLAY I . POlLAN
hand, ruff the last heart with dum) Rearrange leHara of the
my 's club ace, draw trumps, and
• tour scrambled words be-claim.
low to form four simple words.
However, South thought il could·
n't hurt IO cash the club king first. Not
MOBtWN
true!
,
I
When declarer saw the bad trump
break, he ruffed a heart in the dummy and called for the spade I 0. Now
F AQFU
Eas~ Andreas Holowski from Ger·
many, found a lethal defense: He won
with the king and switched to the diamond jack. This blocked the diamond
suit, leaving declarer unable hoth to
1--,.:.C...;UroT+H.;.;.H;--11.:.,.!,
Dad never would say that he
13
.J
was wrong. Mom says that if
take another ruff in the dummy and
10 draw West's trumps.
L·~-~~·=~·~-=~.,you face up to your faults yDu
.have one less fault to • • - · ·.

Full l!ne of auto body pantll,\
pain11 and suppli11, also gla ... \

$2,800, 81+448-1635.

1er.c:c~a
29 Genetic
moterial

Accessories

En S.D368

11 Hoalary

1"

'

Budger Price Transmisaiona, •
Used IR&amp;bLIIIt, All T~pea, Over :
10,000 Transmlasiona, Ac:ceaa ,
Remanufactured Main Shlfla For '
Standard Tran smlsaion AI~ '

Sumac
8 Baa duck
10 Peck 1lghdy

D I ML y L
~~~..-T-~...;,r.l5-r"l"-1-1-t

;

JI00.273-9328.

8 Rip

Noi'WIY

8 En141t1&amp;1-

23 Footllka port

II

aki,

Auto Parts &amp;

....... root.

Eaat

TX17 112 Ball Tracker 70 HPi
Mercury SO Power Thrash Trail· I
lng Menor, 61•·2•5-92:27.
.

760

Cot nun•
4Mall-

lmiWion

&gt;:

plf. $125. 3:14-773-5825.

6 lrla with

3

II

I

~15.

Pass

7 Cepllal ol

2 Chlklfan'a

'::!:~:~' S©ttcil~- !A £trs·

CHECK·
MATE.

Voyager, Call 614·448·2155, Or · Jon boat Bantam · 3J:, New 1ro11-:'
814-245-SBn.
log motor. $300. Small truck igp- •

14

TEJ&gt;.(J.IU5

'BIG NATE

et--:

l-

~!».:~!&gt;,

006E:T!

17 FL, 1D85 Cilation, Mercruillf,
4 CyNndtr, 3 Ul8r.I.Q., With fit
Trailer,_Hu Rec:ent !Jinyl On 2
Fold Down Full" Swivel Stall,
1991 Chev1 Lumina, 3. 1 Euto Padded Saw I Stern Seats• .2
nmet, """ door coupe. air, aultt, Storn Plallormo &amp; Rope Hooill. &amp;
amtlm u.a~ette, automatiC, blue, Mlac:. Acceaaorlaa, Could Sll~ ·
73,000 mlleo, $5250 080, 814· Mile. Repalro, Thlo II A GoQ.'di
114-21144.
Looking Boat, Readr To sa111
11,750, CBC, Or Trade E.V.,
11191 Mazda MDL 828, 4dr, Slpd, 388-g181 Anytime, No Sundl)'1
ale. etc, am1tm caaHat. I5,4G5.
ilatlo.
304-1171H15Q7.
1887 18h. Sat Imp, 180hp 11or2
11192 Chevy
3.1 ll~liport crui~« wltraikn, 2 Hit jac:kett. ·..;
v.e engine, aJr, tilt, cru111, IIWfm bumpn.l14-446-3814,
.r. AII
stereo ca•••tte, autom1Uc, 4
door, now lroo, un daan In and 1DBI ~11 Tracker 18 11211.; II·~
OU~$&lt;1H5,614-882berglet' 150hp Johnoon GT, 12-.
2• voh trolling motor, exc. ~
1993 Cornaro 1 - bociJ lll'la) v~·I
e, ..fld, auto, loaded with powat $8,1!00• 304-87!).1171.
options. 38,411 rNIIa, ••c. cond. 1888 Rangor 373V 18' 12 ·24\1
NADA $13,100-S.Illor $11,000 Trolling Motor, 150 )(P Evirw.Udtll
Cu-d, $8,800, 614-992-2770.'
firm. 304-875-30117.

STORAGE TANKS 3,QOO Gallon
Uprigh~ Ron Evano Enltrprlo"
Jad&lt;oon, Ohio. 1.8CIIJ.537-e28.
j-'!!2..!!!!::!!~~~!!!;
o4058.
.
TaU T.V. Stand, Wilh Shelves On ,.._
D77
ChtVJ
one
ton, 350 4
Boll Sldtt, $1110: CO&lt;rch &amp;·Colfot ~ny For Sola: ... brokt 10 ride, _1__.
Table $60; CoffH Tabla 1 2 End gtnllo with lddo. 1375, 304-875- ..,....., wlltlolHI lla~ oowrtd lOp,
Tablea With Ooora, Paid ,,, 000 6353.
no rust, run1 and looks good,
Sol: $500
, '614448 3437.1
::"'~,..-------·1 $;!)0(1, 814-247-42112.
Rea. Pinro mare 1 1~ra. old na
A-. Ttnntt· 197D Ford Dump F-700 New
t rampo II ne, b rand new, I 150 · uaed tor pennlftll,
··• -•
Clutch, KlniePino. Now floor In
-·
·~ ••n
IN Walkat' mart ~ra old.
·- ·
Texea Longhorn
304
D""P Btd, ,500 Firm, 814·44(1.
7428.
Roglotertd Slmmarnal black buN, 1983 Ford f150, 300 oil crllncler,
3 ye111 old: purtbred SlmrneniiJ automatlc, alt, gaad cab, ru't on
holloro: purebred Slmrntnlal bttd oull/do bod, looks lnd "'"' good,
CXM'UN1I .
$QOO, 814-247-4292.

c;;W..

~tfO,IIrf

OOI£T!

1;18 Dodge Motor Home, 318 Engine, AIT, PIS, 33,000 Actual
11180 ·111110 C... For $100111
f.tiles, 614-367-7n3.
3 and .t yra old
Bulls,
Selzad And Sold
Cowo and Bull
1814)·
Loc:alyTWollonth
SERVICES
258-8402 or 1814)-448·1158
. Trud&lt;o, 414'' Ek:.
1.tl(IIJ.522-2730, X31101 .
8 Holstein Springer Helflra Dodge DJ'nattJ In Real Good
Home
Weighing 950 Pda.. . Apptoximat• Condldon: For Salt: 1 a~ord 810
~ $~500. For All81 ..-53.
Improvements
Eocon, Rurw Good. Loohl od:
Bantams for aale, Red Pyle, Old Z24 Cavalier. 5 Spttdy POwer
BASEIIENT
Englloh, While Plrmouth Rook, Steering, ABS Brakel, Pllwor
WATERPIICOFINO
call 614-D4D· 3028 leave mea· Windows, Till. Ver'l Law Uilea~e.
- ·
37,202 lllltl, V·8: Lewn Chrof Unconditional lllelime guarantee.
Riding Lawn llowor, 350 Engine, LOCB;I rtlerenc:ea furnished. E.,.,
Club calf lar 18ge market tteer BtancfNew. Buih Upla Run, et• tlbllohtd 1875. Call (814) 44~~
0870 Or 1·800·287.0578. Rogoro
ollow. Pi act In top 10 at Ilea on 258-8544.
Walarproofing.
County Fair. Apprllx 500ibo.
,,
, ..
_7S._304-8
__7S._8353
__._ _ __
Upton Ustd Cars Rt. 62·3 Milts
,·
Soul~ of Leon, WV. Financing ~~--=~------~ r
!Appliance Parra And Service: Al~ ,
Goall For Sale: 4 W•lhoro 3 112 """Uablo. -1088.
.Name Brlnda Over 25 Years Ex·
llonlho 140 A Piece, 814 · 258·
perlenc:t All Wark Guaranlted,.•
1125.
720 ll'ucks for SIJt
1-.::;:;-- ------8-rl-dl-t, '95 F150 XLT 2WD, 814·gD2· ~~.ch Clly Ma~tag ·, e t4 · 446"t ,

630
Livestock
!.,.-,.--...,.,..,.,.-.,--.,...,.-

NEvi TAY.·

cada E•celltnt Condition, Low
Mileage, Loaded With E.1tras,

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor sate

1995 S1.1.1rn SC2, Automatic, Air,
Ctuiae, AUIFU Caaaeue, Trunk
Rlltett, 112,1100 Col AllOr 5 P.ll.
(Serious Inquiries OniJI) 814-

Pass
Pass

i Saankaa

rr&lt;f-t-+--t . 20 o-.·"''I·

.By Phillip Alder
I hope you will all cry " No 1" in .

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

11i83 Honda 13,000 frilea, dre•
ou~ uc ohlpo. 31Mo07S.7304.
,

1DSD Ford Tempo, two door, two
owner1, lull sized spare, body
good, strong engine, priced to
aell- $1000, wlth CD player,
$121lQ, 8 1~84jl.30g8 leave mOtoago or cal alter 5:30pm. .

19i4 Dod;&amp; Shadow; 1980 Ponti-

••
4.

7

DOWN

Affirmatively
answer no!

Motorcycles

814-4&lt;8-.

ae Bonneville; 1988 Plymouth

.j •

Pass

Pass
29

-y .
-·
-

27 Ugli-ekl arg.
29 One ol a kind
31 Bye-bye
35 Eona

Opening lead: 9 4

meoaagel

1192-111124.

Wltlari1IIB ~256&lt;111 '
88 Mtrcurr. Monterey, 17,000
· 1n1 1 m1ea, 1nter 1or 11 new,
ortg
natdo right kont fonder, drhl-.
f1,200 080; 80 Bulct&lt; Elc. 225,
runo II'•~ htnclloo graa~ 1 1,200
080; n CiiiYJ ...._ 1 lOn, '-1
dulJ, n..do motor, 1300: 814·
742-~. 114-742·2134.
·
g2 Pontlac' Firebltd,. V-1, T-topa,
... bl 1ti D2050 30 HP. 4 C 11
autamadc.,. 18111, powtt·tvttylhiog,
•'"u
'
J 15
"' 65,000 miles, txoell..l condition,
def, Diesel Tracaor, 660 Houra.
Minluas Fr.gm Gallipolis, Asking $K300, 614-247-3901 after 5:00.
...
·- -·
..,, 500 • 61 4 ~•r-l.
Codillac, 1882 F19etwood Y·8,
AulD, Clean Body, Interior, Goad
New H0II 8nd M0d el 782 5 1.1eage · RubOer,
Nteds Ulnot' Uachlnic:al
Chopper With A Two Row Vari· Repair, Drive AW:le 1,50, 080,
1
able Width Corn Head,
Two · May Trade, &amp;1•·
181, Any·
HaJ Heads, 61 ..388-9875.
limO. No SUnday Doalo.
.

P.M.

Special Fall Feeder Call Sale;
September 18th, At 7 P.M. 70
Head Ot Yearling Slttrs &amp; Heifer
Conolgnmonll For Thlo Sole, Cal·
llo Will Be Ae&lt;opted Sl8rdng Al 4
P.M, Wodneoday, &amp; All Day
Thurada~. All Consignment•
Welcome, Hauling A11ailabla,
Alhono LIYOI!ock Saleo,. 814·
5112·2322, 81..-.3531.

3238.

North

cellent Condition., Proftlaionall
Paint Job, New .350. VI Engine.:

1g95 Chwr Cmller, 5 opotd, 1t88 Chevy Aatro 11an, A-one
Pl. pb, pw, pi, bocty good. engine condilic;m, mu t l aell, et•·B4~
:
good, would make a good work !5268.
Cfll,$500 080. 81 .. 742-1018.
990 Aetoatar Van Custornizeredt
1885 Cldo 88 2dr, Roral , Good Condition. 80, ooo mlltL 1
Brougham, clean, garage kept. (614)-258-1121 Leave Yllllgtl :
304-87HODS.
1H2 CIIOYy Full Size Co-"'&gt;n•
'
1D88 Chevy Camero 350 Cubic Von,l12,800.81 .....7523.
Inch Auto, T·Topa, Aaking -11111-'-3-F_;or_d_AM;,._o_otl_r_X_l_I_,
$3.500, 61...-5.
pa. pb, p/Windowa. air, crulat.l
J
1888 Reliant K, nlct car. l l l l t l m - 304-875-28115.
41,000ml. on engine. 30•·175-- 11115 Jttp Wrangler Saft Top.
·48113or304-e7W018.
low Ullea. Excellent Condldon,t
!
11187 Looaion 4 Ooon, Vory 0. Mu11Sell81.t-~100..
pendablt Car, 11,500, 81.t-25a.. ChtYy. llielol. ·Turbo. 85. 4X4 .:
.8632.
Standard, 80,aoo mllao, Lotdad.•
1888 Dodga Shadow. 4 .,...,, Payoff Load: or taka OYer Pay-'
aulllrr8lil:, 11100 CliO. 814-742· menta. fOf more lmfofWion Cal~
1114)·258· 178. . II not In leave
2367.
1gaa Ford Escott EXP Slpd. ac:.
aunroat, sporty, real aood cond.
89,ooo mu, •. $1 ,7g5: 30 ...882·

,.

West

se

-dad.-;

Bundy Clarinet For Sale, tU·
Computer 13311HZ, 3211EG 116 21142.
RAil, Scanntr. 15" llor;tor, Mo- Dunn Trumptl Bra11, E.lctllent
dem &amp; Much, Much Morel Condllon, $250, '81 ..258-IOIU.
U.SOO. 814 Ul 3437.
Fend., Srratacasmr .eectrlc gul·
Concrete &amp; Plastic: Septic Tanka, tat,
3yra old, exc. cond. 304-e75300 Thru 2,000 Gaflona Ron 75115.
Evans Enterpri1e1, Jackson, OH
1.8CIIJ.537.e528:
.
Truinl)etSIOO, 81~7.

South

56 Roman road
57 h'a In the baal

38 uttdhem
38 Changu1o

• . 10 .9

e K Q J 10
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

l
,
. o
-a

gng,

• J 832

• A 7 2
" ~ 3 2

$250, CBC 81.._111153.

Compltte Super Slngl• Wallfbtd

...

3

18P1'aaa
21 Pouhry
product

22 Altcrlll p8lla 51 A - marka
24 Travel cltarget 59 Put on - d
. 2t U..the
80 Saablrtl

• K 9 8 6
9AJI076

South

1g55 CheVy Biller K5 Si~
••• V-8, Automalic, PW, PL,
AMJFU Caaaette, Towing PI
age, New Tires l Wheels, Ex 1
1981 Dodge Dlpio. .t 1500 CliO:
lent Condition, Coil AllOt 8, 8 \4·i
1Dee Toyota Corolla For Parte, 387-7871.
... .

Excellent Condition. 814· 245·

s

"1g2 Ranger, gr~t ahape, high
rnllao, $44115 CBO, days 814-1192;
~. ~Wnlnga 1 w.kenda eu.

730 V8n1 &amp; 4-WDI

A 842
East

• Q J s3
9 Q9 8 4
• 7
•

much mora. Garage kapt, ttaa
than 30,000 mlleo . ...800 . Caq

1881 Ch8Yy Malibu Allna Fair,
$250, Soo At: 174 Ktrr Ro~d,
Korr, ON4

___ ,

IlEAl ESTAH:

cor. $2000 Fin•.

tD81 CIIOYy 11a1111u 4 Dooro, v.e,
Runo Good, Aoklng 1700, 814· $5,500.00 814· 448· 7171, 814.
2&lt;15-51113.
-7375 .

81~7 .

_ , -ohlng ~ l.an'y
.

~ l14-882.e&amp;11.

210

71 0 Autos for SaJa

New Dona, A Whole Room 01
Dolia, Must Still Unbtllt¥able

e
- ..ptntry """,....
iiallng. lnoida and outolda,

FINMKIAL

TRAN SPORTATION

Dalla, Oolll And Uata Dollal
Al&amp;~~ndera, .Gro--Haira, Otd Dolls,

8738.

Round ..... "'~ 110 l.oquod
-tor'l1.50, 81...-1300.
~AhorSP.II.

Modern t Bedroom Apartment,

Ntw 111117 lloblle Honw On Rant- 81&lt; 448 03110.
ad Lot Coleman Gaa Furnace,
Ntw CA, Garden Tub, 1514-UI· Single 11"dlo efflclencr apanman~ good location. DtPo~t ,..
qulrtd. 3114-875-ZIIOO.
New 28x80 3 or 4 ·bedroom.
$3U85. Frot dollvorr. 1·800·
ea1.em.

North

Ali',

Dodgo Spirit, - . AuiO,

AIHII. GrNl
1814)-&lt;48-2861

pb, oUdlng rNr window, now

Cutti"41 Alllllt SQuaro Balao, 81 ..

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT,
illotd. 304-755-71a1.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON;
ESTATES, 52 Wootwood Drl~a
lftt air, frH oidn, 141711 8 bod- tom 1280 1D 1331. Walk 10 thop
room, S1 .055Jdgwn, 1181/mo. &amp; movita. Cali 114·448·2588.
.;,Cal;;;l..;,1.aoo.ti8=..;;;,;1..;.0,;.m..;,·; __ _ _ . Equal HouolnQ ()pportunily.
1
Fr.. air, lrH akirt, UlxBO 3 or 4 Brand New Aptrtmtnll 2 Bed·
bedroom I1,350Jdawn, S21mlma. rooma. very Roo"" Auachld GaCall1-8fl0.81il1-Cim.
raoe, Near Radney, Oapaalt &amp;
Raferancaa Required, 11 ....... ...
Glenwood Rd. Aahton area· 81.
tc:hool bus gotl by front door. 3
bedroom, 2 bath, very nlct. mo· ComrtnieniiO PVH, 2btdfoom,
bile hgme. 1 acre land, c:lly WI• khc:hen. ba.1h, LR. No pell. 13001
llf. Atc:fll&gt;l HUD. $400/mo. 304· ITII.$300 dtpooit. 31Mo0~5710.
5e2-5840 or 304-578-2718.
Furnlthtd tfliclenct, water I. caLar~ Hlection of uaed home. 2 bit included. $185/mo. plus
or 3 -..mo. Sl8rti"41al 13495. olecric. 304-e'IS-2815.
Oulc:k delivery. Call 1·800-837·
3238.
Grac:louo living. 1 and 2 boclnlom
apartn"Mtntl at Village Manor and
NIW' 19D8 Ux70 three bedroom, Atvertide Aplrtmtntaln Mldd'-lnd!Jdeo 8 monlho FREE lot rent port From 1238-$304 . Call 81 ..
Onlr $181.88 por month with 1192·5084. Equal Housing Cppor·
$1050 down. Call 1-800·837· tunitiaL
3238. .

,_

har $1:)1bato. 304- btd liner, llbtrglaaa 1opper,

Wheat And Wheat Straw 3rd

IINt:h SL,IIiddaporl. 21Jtdooom
turnlllhtd &amp; unfurnlohtd. udllliol
ptld. Oopoolt' rtfortnceo. 304882·251111.

Chrlatian lady will do hOUit
deaning, rtferencaa u~on 11quHt, frH latiiMtll. 304-875-

tnctudH: Mathtnlallco, Raadtng,
Englloll, t.anouaga, Arll. Soolol
8tudloo, Scfonca, Hlotory. Aok
fDr Challt. CAI30~ - 3044

875-1385.

AKC RtQiatlrad Pometanlana
Houatbrgken , 11.t-251S-

-mo.

TAKE DELIVERY IN SEPT. NO
304.-875-l PAYMENT UNTIL DEC. 1987. 1·
110().251-5070.

W1tkend1,

Petl for Slle

1o R Ill

.

Field, E1. HOrN Hay, 114-5582252.

lergt btfaa of

nlllhtd and unfllrnllllad, oacurlty
~poall requited, no pet1, 11411112 1
1._ ·_22__8_.- - - - - - 1 Bedroom Near Holzer Extra
Nice, Central Air~ 1288/llo.. +
111115 Clar1Dn 15180 3
UtllilltO, Dopoolt &gt;&lt;oq. No Pelt,
CA. Ulllll)' Buldlng. Uudtrplmfng, 81....,..2K7•
61 .. 245-1108.
Futnlllhtd Eflcltncr Shale Batll,
111 T1mt 11uyer1 E·Z l'lnOncing 2 1185/llo., Ullllloo Paid, 807 Sac·
Ot 3 lltdtoomt Alolllld 1200 Ptr ond A.....,o, Gatllpollo, 81......,_
..... 8CIIJ.251·50l0.
38U, Aile&lt; 7 P.ll.

75S-551;8.

Se-t Of Your Choice On Walil.
Great For Children's Beclrooma,
Nu,..,ln, Sunday School Claa•

Chllctcaro In lly Home 2 Open·
In~• For Any Age. Monday Ttuu

Rio Grandt, CH Call 814·245·
5121 .

Alfalfa Mlalld H•r. Uoroan Co .•
Ohio Sq1.1are Ba 11 12 OUt Of

11 Sancfllzartl
18 Urga

09-15·97

~

4t ParadlM

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Sept. 'l6. 1997 ·
Develop associations in the year
ahead with people who can help fur·
thj:r your ambitions. Do this in a manqcr so that you are not using them,
bui are able to offer value m rerum.
. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today
y6u might have ID associate with propit who make you feel uncomfort·
able. Be tactful and diplomatic, and
uSc: congeniality as your common ,.
ground. Trying to patch up a broken ·
romance? The Astra-Graph. Match·
maker can help you understand what
to:do to make the relationship work.
Miil $2.75 10 Matchmaker, c/o this
ne)Nspaper. P.O. Box 1758, Murray

.,

·"

SEPTEMBER15I

�.

.

Ohio Lottery

Dallas·edges
Eagles 21-20
in NFC action

WE FINISHED 1996 AS THE #l ·TOYOTA 414
TRUCK DEALER IN THE WORLD!·
WE CAN'T IMPROVE ON THA\ BUT NOW WE HAVE TO
· .
STAY
HELP! HELP! HELP!
· ·

Pick 3:
4-5-6
Pick 4:
6-6·6·9
Buckeye 5:
4·5-6·11-18

Sports on Page 4

'

NOTICiz C&amp;0 MOTORS CHEVROLET &amp;OLDSMOIIU SIIVICI DIPr. HAS IOUIUD 1111 SID TO ACCOMMDDA111HI HIGH VOlUME SAliS DEPT.
NOW TAKING APPOIITMEm 727-2921, ASK FOI1HI SDVICI DEPAIIMEIIT.

~LOVE

LEXUS

•

LOVE TOYOTA-

en
tiDe
..
VOl. 48, NO. 106
C1H7, Ohio Valley 1'\Jblllhlng Company

1998
TOYOTA
TRIKI'S

IS
LOW
IS

By BRIAN J. REED
Line Co. of Streetsboro submitted had been experiencing problems traffic control at County Road 79, · overseen by Treasurer Howard Frank, ·cost the office an additional 50 cents
Sentinel News Staff
one in the amount of $27.058.59. . obtaining steel and· other materials near the entrance of Veterans Memo- ac'cording to Hoffman.
per transaction processed.
The Meigs County Commission·
The bids were ta.bled, pending needed to complete the project.
rial Hospital. Hoffman noted that
The commissione-rs authorized the
Two contracts between the couners opened bids for road work when review by County Engineer Robert
The retaining wall will repair traffic would increase when the new installation of a new cash control sys- ty and the engineering firm of
they met in regular session on Man· Eason, who was presenl at the meel~ damage caused by a flood-related slip Holzer Clinic opened.
tern in the office of the county i Burgess &amp; Niple Lid. wer~ approved
day afternoon.
which occurred in March.
in g.
· In other business, the board appro- recorder.
.
for studies involving (he county's
Eason noted that C9un1y Road 29 priated an additional $30,000 into the
Two companies submitted bids for
David Spencer of the county highThe system will supplement the abandoned landfill ncar Pomeroy.
paint striping on approximately 50 way department reported that w.ork . (Bowman's Run) has been closed commission~rs' contract services computer system now in place in the
The studies will probe leachate
miles of county roadways.
on a retaining wall behind the coun· temporarily for bridge repair. The account and $20,000 into their con- office. and was recommended by the problems which are believed to be
The bids were submitted in two ty jail should begin later this month. repair work has been delayed due 10 tingency fund .
slate auditor's office. Funds for the- contaminating soil around the abanSpencer said that he had been in problems gelling concrete needed to
parts ...:.. for center striping .and for
The additional funds , certified by pur(:hasc will come from the doned site.
edging. Chemtrol Chemical Co. ol contact with David Weber of the D. V complete the work.
the county budget commission. rep- recorder's equipment fund , whic.h
Earlier thi s summer. a rcprcscntaGibsonburg submitted a combined Weber Construction Co., the con·
Commissioner Fred Hoffman resent "unanticipotcd income" which involves funds collected from record- tive of the Ohio Environmental Pro. bid of $27,347.17, while the Neal tractor on the project, and thai Weber asked Eason to consider improving . resulted from county investments ing and other fees . The system will
(Continued on Page 3)
.
.

1997TOYOTA

HAVE
DUAL

Ill, AM/FM RADIO .

AIR
BA&amp;S·

$

.\

Area Boy Scouts stage camporee Tax cut accord
Forked Run State
for deregulation
Park plays host
to five troops
slowed by costs

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' An estimated 45 boy scoutf'and
20 cub scouts. along with their
leaders, attended the camporee,
which started on Friday evening
and ended on Sunday. The 'camp
was scl up .in Ihe 'group campingarea of the park. located just inside
the main entrance.
A full slote of cducotional and
recreational events were planned
THE SCOUTING WAY TO DO IT- Scoutmaster Terra Lea Darling helped demonstrate cook·
for the boys. including several
ing sk111s to area Boy Scouts who gat~ered over the weekend at Forked Run State Pari! near
demonstrations by the West Vir·
Reedsville for the annual camporee of area scout troops. (OVP photo by Catharine Braley)
ginia Army National Guard.
The guardsmen offered the scouts
pose-vehicle.
courses on rifle and pistol target
scouts. Troops competed in seoul
scnted with · souvenir walking
Camp cooking and other activshooting and a compass course.
skills events,
slicks. donated by the 0 . Ames Co. .
ities were also conducted by
and gave .rides in a Humvcc all purThe hoys attending were pre·
of Parkersburg, W.Va.

Girl was dead when dad asked about visitation
IRONTON (AP) - Investigators
believe 8-ycar-old Seleana Gamble .
was already dead when her mother
participated in a hearing lo delermine
when the girl would be able to visit
her father.
Arrest warrants on charges of
aggravated murder have hccn issued
for Sclcana's mother. Mona Volgarcs, and her stepfather. Jack Volgcyrcs, in the death. She was found
buried in the family's back yard last
week.
·
During the hearing on July 28.Muna Volgarcs said Sclcana would .
not be able to visit her father because
school was about to resume . She
agreed to postpone the visitation

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Boy Scouts and leaders ·from
throughout Gallia, Meigs and
Mason counties converged on
Forked Run State . Park ncar
Reedsville last weekend for their
annual Camporee .
. Five troops from the M-G·M .
District Troop 235 from
Chester, 299 from Hemlock Grove,
249 from Pomeroy, 259 from Point
Ple~ant. W.Va. and 20 I from Gallipolis - were represented at the
event. For the Gallipolis troop, this
weekend's cvenl was th•:ir first:

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 16, 1997 ·

NUMBER
1

IMPORT

untillmc De~emhcr.
Authorities say the girl was dead
when Mrs. Volg;ues. 28. was making
the arrangements.
·
Lawrence County Prosecutor J.B .
Collier Jr. said Monday that neighhor~ last reported seeing Sclcana in
carl~ June. The Volgarcscs said the
girl ;.as in Tampa. Fla .. visitiog her
rather. Randy Brown, Collier said.
But Brown s.aid he hadn 't seen the
girl all summer and was having trou·
hie coordinating a visit when he
asked Hillsborough County (Fia.)Circuit Ci&gt;un Judge Greg Holder to
help.
.
Holder arranged a (clcphonc hearing during wh1ch he asked Mrs. Volp:mcs " is there any reason why we

can "t have that visitation right away
with this little girl'!"
" Yes. Number one, school is starting in two weeks, and at thi~ point,
she is going to summer extracurricular programs with her scheoling."
Mrs. Volgares responded. ·
· Mrs. Volgarcs and Brown agreed
IO move the visit and the hearing con·
eluded with the parents making preliminary arrangements.
.
.
" Law enforcement is now saymg
in all probability Scleana was probably murdered when the hearing was
held," Holder said Monday.
Collier ~aid investigators arc
almost certain the body is Selcana's.
hut arc waiting for DNA test results
from Brown and the girl to confirm

the identity. He said the results should
be available iii two weeks.
Collier said the Volgares~s left in
the middle of the night on Aug. 17
. after family members became suspi_·Cious. He said they have been seen in
Michigan and Kentucky.
Police say the Voigarcses are on
the run with their children, Tesla. 4,
and Jcrimiah. 2. as well as Vivian
Gamble. II. Mona's daughtcrfrom a
prcvioul'i relationship.
·'We're concerned. Obviously the
safety of those three children is paramount. .. Holder said.
The FBI is assisting in the search
for the Volgarcscs and has issued a
federal chaf!!C of flight to avoid
prosecution.

Clinton slaps health care
providers with moratorium

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By JENNIFER BATOG
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Calling Medicare ripoffs "a fraud tax on all the taxpayers of the country," President Clinton said Monday he is cracking down
on abuse of the system. starting with an unprecedented stx-month morato·
rium oli home health care providers.
·
In a speech before the Service Employees International Union, the president detailed efforts to put "fly-by-night providers" of home-health care out
of Medicare. Medicare is enrolling nearly 100 new home health care agencies per month, the fastest growing part of the system.
. .
"First, we' re going to keep scam and ripoff artrsls from gcttmg mlo'the
' Medicare system in the first place," Clinton said. "These kind of praciJccs
amount to a fraud tax on all the taxpayers of the country. For those of you
who work in health care, they cost public confidence in the work that you
do."
·
During the moratorium, Medicare will enlist no new home-health care
providers. Clinton said. Federal regulators w1ll develop toughc1 rules dcs1gned
to weed out dishonest provtdcrs. such as requmng that they post surety bonds
of at least $50,000, have a minimum number of pauents before enr@lhng
Medicare patients and submit detailed information on all of the busmesses
they own.
·
.
·
"Medicare is. for us, a way to honor our parents and strengthen our families," Clinton said. "We can't maintain it ... if we tolerate unacceptable levels of fraud and abuse."
.
This is the first time Medicare has halted new home health care prov1ders.
The program spends $18 billion a year on home health care, up from $2.5 r
billion just a few ~ears ago.
·

•

COLUMBUS (AP) -A legislative committee and utilities negotiators
arc close to agreement on reducing taxes on ~lcctric utilities as part of the
state's plan lo deregulate the industry.
But the issue of "stranded costs" and whether customers should help pay
for them has not been resolved. Stranded costs include utility investments
in nuclear pi'ants and other equipment. and costly long-term fuel contracts .
Sen. Bruce E. Johnson. R-Columbus, co-chairman of the Joint Select Committee on Electric Utility Deregulation, said the committee is close to agree·
mcnl on replacing electric utililics'tax:cs with an cxcisC or user tax on cus- ·
tamers' electric hills.
But the 12-mcmher committee won't meet the Oct. I deadline to draft a
competition plan for lcgislatiyc review.
" If we had complete agreement today. and started writing immediotcly,
Oct. I would be ambitious." Johnson said. " It's a long legislative process."
The committee wa&gt; established in January by Senate President Richard
Finan. R-C incinnati. and House Speaker JoAnn Dav1dson, R-Rcynoldshurg.
h held a series of meetings in the spring, when the committee heard from
dozens of speakers: and rnllccted thousands of pages of tcstim(my.
Johnson and Rep. Priscilla Mead. R-Uppcr Arlington, co-chairwoman of
the committee. recently began private meetings with utility representatives.
state regulators. the Ohio Consumers' C(1unscl. hig indu!-itrial customers and
others.
A study ·o ~ the 1mpact (If stranded coSis was released hy Ohio Partners
for Affordable Energy. a conlili&lt;ln of cr-mmunity action groups. mclropolilan housing authorities. rural elcrtrir cooperatives and energy brokers. The
study, done by MSB Energy Associates of Middleton, Wise .. showed that
some American Elet:tric Power residential customc;;rs would sec a dcl:rcase
of more than 10 percent If utilities·did not pass on any stranded costs.
' It also showed aSJgnilkant decrease if utilities passed on half the costs.'
H the utilities passed on all stranded costs, the hills would remain about the
~arne, and would incrca:-.c in northern Ohio. it showed.

Educational Service Center
approves personnel items
The Governing Board of the Meigs County Educational Service Ccn·
ter settled a handful of personnel matters pi its regular meeting last Thursday
The hoard approved as school bus drivers Carolyn Gillilan. Joseph Masters and Rhelt Milhoan. Eastern Local; Carla Milhoan, Frederick Thomas
and Benjamin Upton, Meigs Local; and Kathy Barringer, Southern Local.
The board also hired Donna Myers as a speech and language palhol,.
agist for the 1997-98 school year and approved a leave of absence for San. dra Sayre Howard.
Angela Swiger was hired as a substitute spe.cch and language pathologist and as ~i"uh sti tutc teacher. and Lorri Barnes ns a suhstitutc teacher
for the 1997-98 school year.
In other business. the hoard:
I
• Adopted salary schedules for the 1997-98 school year and approved
a permanent hudgct "" liscal year 1998.
• Approved a revised list of employees h~ving access to student records.
• Approved the mmutcs of the Aug . 14 meeting and the paying of bills.
The hoard also appmvcd a marketing course of study and adopted mar- .
keting tc"hooks.
·
Present were Superintendent John D. Riche! Sr. ; Treasurer Carole
Gilkey; Board President Jeff Harris. Vice President Robert Barton; and
board members Howard Caldwell. 1.0. McCoy and Jeanette Thomas.

Consumer prices rose
0.2 percent in August ·

mingled with the
Service Employees International Union Monday In Waehlngton
after speaking to the group, calling Medicare ripoffs "a fraud tax
on (Ill the taxpayers In the country.'' The president said he Is
cracking down on abuae of the system. (AP)

.•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Con- utilities were operating at K3.9 persumer prices edged-up a moderate 0.2 cent of capacity in August, the highpercent last month despite the fact csl operating rate m two years.
The comhination of low inllation
that gasoline price:-. soared by the .
higgcst amount since the Persian Gulf and solid growth proved a tonic for
crisis in 1990. Meanwhile. output at · hoth bond and stock markets. The
the nati on\ fac toric~ rchoundcd Dow Jones industrial average jumped
sharply.
n points in the opening minute.s of
The Labor Department reported trading wday.
that the August increase in its ConAnalysts said the U.S . economy
sumcr Price Index matched a si milar continues to enjoy ncar-perfect con0.2 percent rise in July as the biggest ditions even though the expansion,
drop in clothing costs in eight years Row m its seventh year. ha!oi long
helped to offsci, the hi gher energy passed the point where tigh,t labor
prrccs.
markets normally begin triggering
· . The Federal Reserve said that rising price pressures.
industrial production shot up 0.7
"II has been a remarkable
percent in August as outrmt in man- stretch.'' said Oscar Gnnzale1 of
ufacturing rose by the biggest amount John Hancock in Boston . ." Economin 16 months.
ic historians may be able to explain
The increase in production meant this period some day. hut right now
that America's factories, mines and we can only guess and enjoy the
ride."

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