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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Cubs blank

Pick 3:

Reds 5-0 on
one-hitter

890
Pick 4:
1795
Buckeye 5:
2·1D-17-21-25

Sports on Page 4

-.

en tine

•

lo'll. -41. NO. 107

1998

:~11117, Ohio v.lley Publllhlng Company

TOYOTA

•

lEW I

HAVE

DUll

AIR, AM/FM UDIO

1915 Port Huron steam traction engine
to be on display this weekend at Expo '97

AS
LOW
AS

NEW 1997 TOYOTA

AIR

$

AS
LOW

BIGS

AS

$
RIDES TO BE OFFERED- Thl8 1~15 Port Huron steam trac. tlon engine owned by Robert Roll of Klngeton will be at Expo '97
. thie -kend. With 19-horse power on the draw bar and 65 on
. the ball, the engine which runa on coel will pull wagonaand offer
rldee around the county garage. It Ia baing brought to Expo by
the Big Bend Farm Antlqun Club.

TOYOTA

NUMBI

199J4X4 EXT. CAB

ONE IN

24-LIUI ~ IDWI ... I'll, UC. ISfN.-r I SIC. Ia
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TOYOTA

HURRY,
HURRY,
HURRY

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WHITE HAWK

co-cHAIRS CONFER - State Rep. Thomas Johneon, A-New
: Concord, left, and Sen. Roy Ray, R·Akron, confar during the lnl• till meeting of the joint finance eubcommltlaa at the Ohio State. houHin Columbue Tuaaday, Johnlion and Ray are co-chairs of
, • the committee. (AP)
·

AS
LOW
AS

LOW

AS

~ Two committees ~tackle funding

•pti(E IIICUIDIS TGIO'IA C0UP01

LOVE TOYOTA·

LEXUS

W.VA.'S LARGEST TOYOTA
DULE
IS LOOKING
FOR GOOD RELIABLE SALES
PEOPLE. EXPERIENCE NOT
. NECESSARY. PLEASE APPLY
IN
TOYOTA SHOWROOM.

problem. anew

OPEN
MON.-FRI. "·"•
SAT. 9-6

AND

The Ohio Supreme Court ruled
March 24 that the funding fonnula is
unconstitutional because it relies too
heavily on local taxes and creates
funding inequities among the district.
The ruling grew out of a 1991
lawsuit filed by most of the Slate's
districts. The court gave lawmakers
one year to replace the fonnula. ·
Specialists from the Ohio Depart"It's a new day on this issue in ment of Taxation and the nonpartisan
Ohio and we must approach this issue Legislative Budget Office spoke
with an open niind." said Sen. Bruce before the ways and means subcom·
·Johnson, R-Columbus and co-chair- mittee.
Deputy Tax Commissioner Carol
.man of the Joint Ways &amp; Means Subcommitlee. which will consider ways Bessie spent much of her testimony
talking about tax rollbacks - the
•to·pay for a funding increase.
· ·Rep. EJ. Thomas, R-Columbus portion of local property taxes that
.and the committee's other co-chair- the state pays for homeowners and
man, promised the panel would work businesses. She said the rollbacks
·in· a "roll-up-your-sleeves type of cost the state more than $800 million_
·atmosphere, a bipartisan atmosphere. in the budget year that ended June 30.
"Ohio has a long history of limitEarlier Wednesday. the Joint
'Finance Subcommittee began its ing property tax growth, · reaching
work to try to detel11)ine how much back. to the 1920s," Ms. Bessie said.
State Solicitor Jeffrey Sutton, who
must be spent on each Ohio student
to satisfy an Ohio Supreme Court rul- unsuccessfully argued the state's case
ing that the state's current fonnula is before the court, outlined the court's
ruling for 'the finance panel's memunconstitutional.
· Lawmakm went back to work bers.
Sutton said the court. was clear in
about six weeks after failing to pass
a pl_an by Voinovich and legislative its opinion of Ohio's current f,unding
leaders that would have included a plan, but less so on how to fix it.
penny-per-dollar increase in the state Lawmakers must develop a consen· sales tall, subject to voter approval. · sus on what the ruling means, he said.
Rep. Vernon Sykes, . D-Akron,
Democrats, who felt left out of the
process, and a group of anti-tax said after the hearing that the needs
Republicans blocked the pian in the of children must not be lost in all the
House after the S~nate had passed it talk about money.
along party lines.
COLUMBUS (AP)- Opponents
of Gov. George Voinovich 's failed
attempt to get a sales tax increase for
schools on the November ballot complained that other options had not
been given due consideration.
-; Republicans who head one of two
g_pecial committees studying the
funding issue said Tuesday they
would welcome any new ideas.

I

IMPORT
DULER
IN THE
STATE

IS ,
LOW

AS

ALL PRICES INCWDE
RE~T£ .TO

MOTORS LEXUS

RtOOMooCO«&lt;LEA"~~~!~'"ON,.,

demonstrations which are timed
events will also be held on Sunday
afternoon by John Ridenour. · .
On Saturday from 2:30 to 4 p.m . .
Jennifer Krawsczyn will conduct a
dog obedience demonstration in the
show arena, and residents are encouraged to bring their dogs and participate.
At I p.m on Saturday a k1ddie
tractor pull will take place. The
, antique tractor pull will begin at 2
p.m. and in the event of rain will be
moved to Sunday at 1 p.m. ·
On both days there will be a petling zoo with some exotic animals, a
quilt show to be handled by Bunny
Kuhl and Alice Thompson to include
old and unusual quilts, a gardening
display by clubs of the county, and a
mounted hunting trophy exhibit in the
Coonhunters building.
Contests to see who has grown the
largest pumpkin, com, or sunflower
will also be held, with ribbons to be
awarded.
·

Cars, both new and antique, will
be on the grounds. Four dealers, two
local, one from Athens, and another
from Gallipolis, will be showing
1998 vehicles on both days . ·
Antique cars are scheduled for
Saturday and race cars, including
drag and oval track race cars are to
be there on Sunday.
,
..
Entertainment will be featured on
both days and will be presented from
the stage located ne~r the senior fair
building. No seating will be provided so those attending are encouraged
to take lawn chairs.
Entertainment will begin at 10
a.m. on Saturday. Scheduled entertainers are l..inda and Matthew King,
Sheila Arnold, Belles and Beaus
Square Dancers, Debbie Powell, Kelley Grueser and Cynthia Cotterill,
and Robin d'Hart.
On Sunday entertainment wi'll
start after an outdoor church service
conducted by the Rev. Eugene
Underwood. Scheduled to ·entertain

are Diane Neese and family, Robin
d'Hart, Big Bend Cloggers, B.ill
Crane and "Dusk", composed of
Paulette Harrison, Debbie Grueser,
Michelle Hupp, and Sally Radford
Ingles. The Trinity Church bell choir
will perform at 3 p.m. and B. J. Smith
at 4 p.m.
'
A wide varieiy of items will be on
display in the commercial buildings,
and a flea market will be held outside.
Among crafters to be there are Dcbfa
Bullington 'of Culpepper Herbs,
Denise Arnold of Fragrant Fields, the
Trolley Station. Pam Massie with
Longaberger baskets, Stouts Country
Crafts. and Rainbow Ceramics.
Numerous other organizati011s and
businesses will be there with information about their products and services, and weaving and other demonstrations will be taking place on both
_days.
Several food bootbs will be in'
operation at Expo. There is no admission charge,
·

I

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

ALL

.UV4

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Slllff
Everything from riding in wagons
pulled by a steam engine to watching
saw sculpturing demonstrations will
be featured at the 1997 Town and
Country, Expo to be held Saturday
and Sunday on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
The latest entry for Expo arrang~
~y the Big Bend Farm Antiques Club
ts a_I91S Port Huron steam traction
engtne owned by Robert Roll of
Kingston. He will be usina the engine
to pull wagons filled with Expo visttors around the county garage.
Other ndes wtll be the monster
truck ' "Cyclone" running over
crushed cars, and pon1es and.horses
fromthe Lone Oak fat?". .
.
M1ke Pace of Cmcmnatt, a Suhl
cham saw sculpturer, ts bemg brought
in by Ridenour's S~pply of C~ester.
~~~.sculptures Wllltnclude an Expo
97 deSign whtch w1ll be aucttoned
off late Sunday afternoon, Hot saw

Ohio's Bicentennial planning committee
officers for M.eigs County are selected

IrS

OOAMO

2 Sec:tlono,1t " - • 3 5 AGannett CO. Nl• F I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 17, 1997

TRUCK'S

ALL

Moetly cloudy tonight,
IOWI In the mid 501.
Thuredey, 11rly log,
eunny. High In the ao..

727-2921 ' OPIN 8 A.M. TO 8 All. DAILY-IATURDAY 8 A.M. TO 6 RM.-5UNDAY 1

TOYOTA

WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 GM DEALER SELLING CHEVROLET AND OLDSMOBILE AND TOYOTA AND LEXUS
TO S RM.

I
I

Seotinel Newe Staff
Officers of a committee named to
. plan Meigs County's observance of
Ohio's Bicentennial were elected at a
meeting held Monday night at the
Meigs Museum.
Named to serve with Margaret
Parker, chairperson appointed by the
Meigs County Commissioners, were
Joyce Davis. secretary; ,Susan Oliv·
er, treasurer; and . Brenda Merritt,
publicist for out-of-county media.
Fund raising to provide matching
monies for state grants was discussed, along with various activities
to commemorate Ohio's Bicentennial.
It w~ announced that ·the !75th
Anniversary of Meigs County Committee has given $500 as "seed money" to help the committee get started
. OFFICERS NAMED • Elected to nrve with
mlltae were Su1an Oliver, treaeurer; (ParUI'),
while fund raising to _finance projects
Mergsrat Parker, eec:011d from left, chairman'tor
Brenda Merrill, out-of-county publlcllt; and
supported by the Bicentennial comMelge County'• obHrvance of the Ohio BicenJoyce Davis, eec:ratery.
. mittce is planned.
tennial, •• offlcara of the local planning comParker reported that Ohio's Hill
Country Heritage Area Program nearness of that time. However, the torical events, poster exhibits por· · markers ' is in the prO&lt;;ess of being
developed by the Ohio Arts Council grants will be offered on a quarterly !raying events, leaders and ideas approved by the Ohio Historical
will have a meeting at thC Nelsonville basis. and the chainnan said that she which contributed to the founding of Society. Those markers are'being pwPublic Library next Monday. That is securing an application for the next Ohio and Meigs County.
chased with a grant from Ohio Travprogram. she explained, wiU provide round.
Other proposals included produc- el and Tourism matched by local
infonnation on non-matching miniSince the August meeting when a ing a mini-page educational feature funds.
grants to organizations involved in Bicentennial commemorative coin for children for the local newspaper.
Committees were named to begin
innovative projects that further the was suggested, Parker reported that doing a historical musical, bringing in planning for specific projects. Patty
goals of the heritage program.
she has been in contact with Steven live theater . for performances, tree Cooke and David Gloeckner will
GranL• of up to $1 .000 can be used . C. George, executive director of the plantings. and recognizing commu- work on a proposal for B.uckcyc tree
for community assistance in celc- Ohio Bicentennial Commission, nities which were in existence at the plantings across the county. The Rev.
brating the Ohio Bicentennial. Park- about a coin and plans which the state time of statehood.
William Middlesworth. Charlene
cr said the money can be used for might have to produce one. She said
Recognizing longtime businesses, Hocnich, and Susan Oliver will wort.
tape recorders to do oral histories, ' she had also inquired a' to whether · special beautification projects, and on guidelines for papers on historical
printing costs~ and for purchasing •March I. 2003 will be set aside as a marking the graves of early settlers events, activities and people.
materials needed .to carry out pro- ·state holiday.
were also proposed as worthy pro,
Commissioner Jeff Thornton,
jects.
It was decided that an emphasis . jccts for the bicentennial observance. Middlcswarih, and Gloeckner will
The deadline for applying for the will be made on promoting educaParker reponed that already two of serve on a committee geared to prolirst grant money is Oct 1.. and Park- tiona! programs in the schools to the 16 markers to mark Morgan's raid ducing an official county nag.
er indicated that the committee would include wriling contests for high across Meigs County have heen
The next planning session wa&lt; set
not make application in view of tloe school students, study un'its on his- ordered and that wording for other for 4:45p.m. on Oct. 13 at the Museum.

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Group warns about rushing into electric deregulation
•

CINCINNATI (AP) - Legislators should be careful before deregulating Ohio's electric industry, a
coalitto_n of energy companies,
unions and businesses said.
A legislative committee is study·
ing deregulation, which would allow
customers to choose their supplier.
But a report released Tuesday by
the Ohio Alliance for Affordable
Power and the Washington-b&amp;Sed
Small Business Survival Committee
warned that deregulation could raise
electric rates for small businesses and

•

•

t

residential customers unless safe· classes." said Doug Prcissc, alliance
guards are in place.
executive director.
The group says that if electric
The report projected that the clcccompanies lose large industrial and tric bill for the average residential or
commercial customers under dereg- small busine.- customers could be as
ulation, they will increase prices to much as $175 a year higher nine
remaining customers unless steps years after deregulaiion - before
are taken beforehand.
eventually falling .
"If and when Ohio moves to alter
Gene Pierce, spokesman for the
our exiSting electric service system, ·coalition for Choice in Electricity, an
policy decisions should be made alliance of residential, commercial
with as much iitfonnation as possible and industrial consumers, disagreed.
and with close consideration of the
"It sounds like pretty typical scare
J!?ICntial impact on all consumer tactics from people who are afraid of

losing their monopoly over Ohio consumers," he said.
. ·
The electric industry for years ha•
been a regulated monopoly. But 22
states have deregulated or are considering it
Under deregulation, companies
that own and maintain the wires to
homes and businesses will be sepa·
rate from the companies that creaae
Ithe power, Customers will be able to
choose the producer that offen the
best· rates, with should spureompetiContlnued on paae 3

Sheppard's son places white daisies on.father's exhumed casket
COLUMBUS,(AP)- Sam Reese
Sheppard watched and waited
p~tie 0 tly today as a backhoe dug into
the grave where his father, Dr. Sam
Sheppard, was buried 27 years ago.
The older Sheppard was convicted, then acquitted of killing his pregnant wife 43 years ago in a sensational case that helped inspire the
television series "The Fugitive." He

said a bushy-haired intruder knocked
him out and killed Marilyn Sheppard
at their suburban Cleveland home . . ·
When Sheppard's casket was
revealed about an hour and a half
after the exhumation began, his son
approached it, cradling 27 white
daisies in his ann.
The 50-year-old Sheppard placed
a hand on tbe steel casket - which

appeared to be intact- tossed a fe"
of t~e flowers into the empty grave
and placed the bouquet atop the coffin.
"Finally it will provide him the
opportunity to gtieve for his parents."
said Sheppard's attorney, Terr)
Gilbert.
The exhumation is part of the civ1
il lawsuit Sam Reese Sheppard has

filed againsi the state to have his '
father declared innocent and wrong- ·
fully imprisoned.
The remains were being driven to
Cleveland, where the casker will be
opened and DNA samples taken to
compare to the genetic makeup of
blood found at the crime scene. 'Then
the remains will be cremated and
Continued on page 3 ·

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,. Cotnmentary

Page 2

Wtdnudty, Seplenllllr 17, 1117

OHIO V'Jc';1tlle1
'l'lnlnday, Sept. 11

' -.
\

Cheshire
woman
hurt in
accident .

Al:cu\\b~ becut for

•

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·r------------------------,
Most
powerful
private
'club'
in
Washington
The Daily Sentinel
By J8Ck Andarson

aJMMaii.-

'EstufisMI in 1948

AVON. Colo. -- All those fringe
folks
who claim that the 'liilateral
111 Cou11 S1net, Pon.oy, Ohio
Commission,
the Council on For114-112-2151• FIX W2·2157
eign Relations or Opus Dei are
secretly running the world may now
•
have a new conspiracy6 theory to
•
chew
over: the Chowder and March•
ing
Club.
A Gannett Co; Newspaper
"
The what?
The Chowder and Marching
R08ERT L WINGETT
Club,
a secretive House Republican
Pullbher
club that haS mel weekly in Washington for 48 years to confab, strategize and make kings . Three presi·
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
dents
have come from its ranks, and
Controller
O•IMIIII-e« ·
the course of a half-century of
American legislative law was
steered
at its Wednesday gatherings.
_ _ _ _ .,._,_,. _ _ otw.r·· '""'
The only surviving founder, former President Gerald Ford, recently
~_.,,N ~
.
gave
our associate Dale Van Alta a
111 Court ... "" • .,. Ohio
-or,MIC ··~17.
peck at its history and doings. The
athlete is aging well. In an exclusive
interview, the octogenarian Ford
was amazingly chipper and fit, possessed of a clear memory about
I
events decades ago.
By The Associated Press
-.
.
·
.
"After the first meeting, we said,
Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and nauonalmterest from Oh1o 'Well , why don't we get together
••
• newspapers:
,
every Wednesday, after the House:
: The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Sept, 9 ·
adjourns, and just talk about the leg;
With a battle brewing last week over his proposal for a national test for islative ·agenda on a broader basis," '
: schoolchildren, President Clinton noted: "If there 's one place politics ought Ford recalled. "So every Wednesday
l to stop in America, it's at the schoolhouse door."
we would have a meeting in one of
••
But his tone warned Repub\ieansto expect quite a partisan skirmish when the members' offices. We'd have
: he gets back to the White House. In America, politics begins at the school- some drinks, sandwiches, hors
d'oeuvres. But we had no president;
: house door. ·
Critics say the exams would waste students' time and taxpayers' money whoever was the host was the pre:
l while funher injecting the federal government into local affairs.
. . siding officer...
;
Supporters argue that a nation that lags so far behind others academicalNo one knows why it was called
: ly simply cannot afford such a haphazard approach.
the Chowder and Marching Club.
•
Clint011 's rhetoric ahout increased standards for all Americans sounds "We never ate chowder, and we
;. good. But good ideas can be perverted in Congress and hijacked by bureau- . never marched!" laughed Ford.
• cracy.
After each election, if somebody
:
The idea of national testing ought to be debated, politics and aiL
left the House, was defeated, or
i
moved over to the "other body" or a
·
...... _ l E""uinr.,
·
"-pt
governorship,
the remaining mern10
a"" ClndiiM11 -,
""
bers would choose another lawmakThe plea deal granted to Gov. George Voinovich's former chief of staff er to till the vacancy.
does nothing to dispel the smell of state contract steering.
.
The chowder men had so much
Paul Mifsud pleaded guilty to covering up a $100,000 home-remodeling fun that their wives fonned an .auxilsweetheart deal perfonned in 1994 by minority contractor Thomas Banks, iary organization and had their own
whose companies reaped $3.7 million in no-bid state contracts.
meetings and celebrations. Chowder
Mifsud got off lightly for profiting from his power to inHuence state con- held lunches, dinners and meetings
,
" tracts. He is expected to serve three days in jail, get probation, do commu' nity service and pay fines. Banks, a Voinovich campaign contributor, pleaded no contest to violating Slate ethic laws.
·
.
Right up to Mifsud's forced resignation. as chief of staff in July 1996, he
"' was accused of collaborating to steer state contracts to campaign contribuBy Joseph Perkins
tor
There 's been a lot of talk lately
about privacy. How the one-tenth of
I percent of us who happen to be
world-renowned celebrities ought to
have some freedom from the invasive lenses of the dread paparazzi .
•1
• n
But for the other ninety-nine and
•.
Dear Editor.nine-tenths of us, who have no prob-&lt;
•;
Meigs County citizens have respon&lt;led extremely well to our plea for an lem with shullerbugs stalking us as
: •• excellent t111110ut It the Chamber of Commeice luncheon meeting on Sept. 9 we peddle our hand-me-downs at
~ • and the community meeting held later that evening at the Senior Citizens Sotheby's, sunbathe on the French
' - Center. We have cleared two major hurdles in fine fashion with one more to Riviera, or enroll at the Belly Ford
:.~:: go· we must encourage every interested individual, regardless of age. to center, priv~y issues are .far more
;~. c.,;.plete a s~rvey fonn ·and return it to any school building in Meigs Coun- mundane.
;., ty or the Me1gs County Chamber of Commerce office at 238 West Mam
Like the mauer of whether hospi~· · Street, Pomeroy. .
.
tals and clinics should be able to dis,
;;
This survey form is not a signed commitmemto enroll. but. it does indi- .close medical records without a
: ~ calC the type of academi~ programs that c111zcns are mterested m along wllh · patient's knowledge or consent.
· the preferred meeting days and times. Fonns have been d1stnbuted throughIndeed. the · White House pro~ : out the county school system plus delivered to many retail and banking posed legislation this week that
:-: establishments. All interested individuals should complete a survey fonn would limit access to patient records
; ' and return it as soon as possible. We are hopeful that a minimum of 500 sur- by employers. insurers, phannaceu':! vcys will be completed and delivered to the chamber office by Tuesday, tical finns, researchers and direct
: Sept. 30.
.
.
.
marketing companies. among oth: • University of Rio Grande offimls have been very favorably 1mprcssed ers. But the same legislation would
: ,• with the strong support that the Meigs County Branch 1dea has rcce1ved thus exempt law-enforcement agencies.
" far from local residents. We cannot, however, drop the ball at th1s pomt 1n
What that means is that it w9uld
: ·~ time. We need to follow through and deliver to President Dorsey's office a be easier for police to gel access to
: convincing quantity of survey forms which will allow him to receive a pos- medical records than to records 'cov~ , ilivc decision from the university board when it meets on Oct. 18. We then ered by federal privacy laws, like
can concentrate on locating a facility within our county and designing a pro- bank transactions. cable television
;; gram that will meet the educational needs of our citizens.
•
·
accounts .. video rental ~ and e-mail
.
~
.
,,.
use .
,...
Ronald G. McDade
Moq:over, police would not be
·•
M~ip Coullty
required to get coun orders or to
Economic Dev~lopment Director

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. ,. -· Tllo-

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What they are saying
--!·elsewhere around Ohio
:

reson locations and celcbrati011s Pee. Meetings include five-minull!
in the White House of every Repub- repons from each of them explainlican adminisuatioa since President ing what is really going on in the
11ommittees, good and bad lcgisla·
Dwight D. aisenhower.
Two of the original 1S ·· Ford lion, and its status.
and Richard Nixon _,. became presiA couple of currently inOuential
dent. George Bush.
members
arc
Bill
another Chowder regular.
Archer. R-Texas, chair·
also made it to the White
man of the House Ways
House. And would-be
and Me&amp;nl Committee,
presidents clunered its
and Trent Lott, the Sen·
ranks·as well, like Pete du
ate majority leader. Lou
Pont of Delaware and
is a fanner member who
Jack Kemp of New York.
moved to the "other
Former Vice President
body" but continues to
Dan Quayle, a likely
visit the group as an
observer to report on the
presidential candidate in
2000, also was a member.
Senate's doings.
The Chowder and
The club represented Moller/Andaraon
networking of the tirsf
Marching Club still meets
order. Most of its success was due to every Wednesday when Congress is
the decision that its limited member- in session. "The club has continued
ship would always include one key to be closely knit but loosely orga·
Republican on every House commit- nized." says a secret history we

11

obtained from a long-time member.
"All recular meetings are in execu·
live. session.
" Regular Wednesday meetings
are rotated alphabetically among the
resident members. At each meeting,
there are reports from all committees represented, and a rather infor·
mal discussion of a \Vide range of
subjects under the heading 'Good of
the Order.' It is acce~ club policy
to. augment House membership near
the beginning of each new Congress
by selection of at least one .freshman."
Leaks have IJIICIY come out of its
meetings, but Ieven non-Chowder
' Clubbers agree that it is lbe most
powerful private "club" in Washington -- even today. nearly a halfcentury after its founding.
:
Jack AnderMR and J1111 MoDer
are writcn for United Fotun
Syndicate, IlK.

.

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By Dian Vujovich
If you are a fan of the "Dogs of
the Dow" strategy. here's a new
stock fund that follows a similar
investment strategy and invests only
in European companies.
A popular Wall Street stock
investment strategy has been to buy
equal numbers of shares of the five
or 10 highest yielding, lowest priced
stocks that tnake up the Dow Jones
Industrial Average, hold the companies for one year, then sell them and
-&lt;tart. fresh the followi!!ll year. It's a
strategy that some say reaps big
rewards and others complain can be
costly because of transaction fees.
In the mutual fund arena, it has
been primarily unit investment trusts
(UITs) where the Dogs of the Dow
have made their mark. (A unit
investment trust is a fixed ponfolio
·of stocks or hoods that comes to
market with an investment beginning and ending date.) Now, one
fund family is putting its own spin
on that investment strategy.
Los Angeles-based money managers Payden &amp; Rygel recently
added the European Growth &amp;
Income Fund, affectionately coined
the "Euro Dogs" fund, to their family offunds.
" What we wanted to give our
inveslors was a low cost entrance
into international stocks, and we

~

&lt;•

•I Columbus !84• I

W.VA.

I'''

notify patients when they seek medical records. And patients would
have no right to challepge disclosure
of their medical files, though those
records could be used to investigate
or prosecute them.
· No less a threat to pri- .----..,
vacy is the increasing
requirement by both public agencies and private
companies lhat anyone·
doing business with them
submit a fingerprint.
Indeed, five states -California,
Colorado,
Georgia. Hawaii . and
Texas -- demand that drivers " volunteer" a thumbor fingerprint as a condition
of receiving a license. And
II states mandalc that welfare applicant be fingerprinted. ·
All told, some 1.000 laws now
authorize fingerprint checks for people holding down all sorts of
employment, according to the Associated Press. These include louery
workers, day-care providers, school
janitors. nursing-home workers,
even tow truck drivers.
And th~ private sector · bas fol lowed the government's lead. Banks
·in 30 states now require thumbprints
for non-account holders who cash
checks. And .even supermarket
chains, like Food Lion, arc starting

picked ._, an international focus the
four largest stock markets in the
world -- the United Kingdom.
France. Gennany and the Netherlands." says Joan Payden. chief
ellecutivc officer of Paydcn &amp;
Rygel.

assembly line worker or a loading
to follow suit.
When customers at Food Lion dock thief qr an unsafe truck driver
complain about being fingerprinted or a sexually haras5in1supervisor or
like common criminals, the cashiers a racially bigoted exe.utive.
are instructed to reply, " It's for your
But a company's leal to identify
own protection .'' Those execs at and weed out problem employees
Food Lion would have can cause innocent workers to be
done George Orwell unfairly victimized. For instance, 80
proud.
percent of companies currently
But when it comes drug-test workers. usually at ranto complete disregard for dom. Bu1 drug tests yield falsc-pqsiprivacy rights and rcckl~ss. lives in a.-.. many a." one ' 1in ·seven
abrogalion of due process · cases. meaning lhat some workers
rights. . the
notion's arc falsely labeled druggics hy their
employers arc way ahead . employers when they arc re~lly
of the game. That's drug-free.
because the federal laws
The threats to privacy in Amcriprotccting privacy do not can si&gt;cicty have become so pcryaapply to private compa- sive thai federal and Slate laws simnies.
ply have not kept up. And it docs litIndeed. a recent survey of the tie good lo pass new narrowly till·
nation's 500 large&gt;! corporations getcd privacy laws -- covering. &gt;]Y·
revealed thai nearly half collect medical records or, pcrh~ps.
infonnalion on their workers with- employment records-- hecausc new
out their knowledge. And more than privacy issues emerge every day.
onc-lhird of the members of the
The best bet is a federal privacy
American Management A."ociation law that applies to bolh the governadmit to eavesdwpping on employ- men! and private sector. II should set
cc phone conversations. videotaping parameters on the kind of infonnathcir work.crs. lislcning to voice tion thai may he legally obtained on
mail. pecking at computer files and an individu;ll, how it may be Ul;Cd
reading e-mail.
and by whom .
•'
Some of this is understandable. A
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
company wants lo he protected for the San Diego Union·Tribune
against employees who can cause and a commentator for MSNB~.
problems -- like a drug-addled
.,

"Nonnally, when you have a Growth &amp; Income Fund's portf~lio
high dividend (U.S.) stock, general- ·include General Electric and Bri4sh
-ly the dividend is higher for a reason Telecom from the United Kingd&lt;tn; '
-- perbaps the stock has been beaten Royal Dutch of the Netherlands; 'l"d
down . So, it's an out-of-favor con- Bayer from Gennany.
trarian value play," Markcse says.
All stocks in this no-load fP1nd
Payden says that when you look will be held for 18 months. Durfng
that time, new companies may obc
added to the ponfolio should tllcy
meet the highest-yiclding-critetia
screening in any of the four marktt~s .
(The 18-month holding period
renecls the change in the tax laws
lhat moved long-tenn capital g4in
tax consequences from 12 to '8
months.)
New 10 the market in July. the
Euro Dogs fund will be managed by
Payden &amp; Rygel's international
at the highest yielding stocks in the ncr, Scollish Widows lnvestmonl
major foreign markets of Europe, . Manafi;emcnt.
;
what you find arc typically large-cap
To be on the safe side, consi&lt;lcr
companies with pretty good growth this fund to be a growlh and income
records . So, investing in high-yield- · fund lhal invests in high-yieldiBg
ing stocks is considered a growth European companies. And one tliat
strategy because · most t;;uropc,an comes with all the risks of intcm)lcompanies have a tendency to tional investing.
increase their dividends more fre Dian Vujovicb is the author ~f
quently than U.S . companies do. "Straight 'Talk About Mutual
That means a rising dividend in a Funds" and "Straight Talk Abotit
European multinational company Investing for Your Retirement,"
could be viewed as a sign of finan - hoth of which an published ~
cial strength rather than one indicat- McGraw Hill. Send questiqns 10
ing ·out-of-favor companies as U.S. her In can of this newspaper, -r:r
Dow Dogs can reflect
via e-mail at MlsMutualaol.cl)lll.
Familiar names in the European

Los A'!J.eles-based money ·managers
Payden (l Rygel recently added the
European Growth &amp; Income . Fund,
affectionately coined the "Euro Dogs"
fund, to their family offunds.

P"!'t-

The reason the finn nicknamed
the fund Euro Dogs is because the
Slocks lhal make up the fund 's portfolio represent the 10 highest yielding stocks in each of those four markels. But that's about as far a.&lt; the
"Dow Dogs" similarity goes.
. John· Markcse, president of the
AAII (American Associati on of
Individual Investors), says thattheie
are a couple of ways to use the Uniled ·States Dogs of the Dow investment strategy. One is to select the
highest yielding and lowest priced
stocks in the Dow. The other is to
select the poorest performing companies.

A Cheshire woman was injured in
accident Tuesday on
State Route 143 near Pomeroy, the
Gallia·Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Sylvia VanMeter, 65, was transported to Holzer Medical Center by
the Meigs EMS following the ll :34
a.m. crash, troopers said. She was
treated and released for a contusion
to the shin and abrasions to the right
forearm. a hospital spokesperson
said.
ROUTE
143
ACCIDENT·
A
Cheshire
woman
the
11
:34
a.m. crash, troojJartl uld. Tha
lowing
The patrol said VanMeter pulled·
was
Injured
In
a
two-vehicle
accident
Tuelday
patrol
uld
VanMatllr
pulled from a prlvllltl drifrom a private driveway onto 143 into
on
State
Route
143
n1111r
Pomaroy,
the
Galli•·
veway
onto
143
lntci
the
path of a southbound
the path of a southbound pickup truck
Meigs
Post
of the State Highway Patrol report·
pickup
truck
driven
by
Gary
Fandarbosch, 48,
driven by Gary Fenderbosch, 49, 4
4 Hillcrest Drive, Gallipolis, and collldad.
ed. Sylvie VanMeter, 65, was transported to
Hillcrest Drive, Gallipolis, and col-_
Holzar Medical Center by the Mala• EMS fol·
lided.
Fendcrhosch swerved left to avoid according to the·repon. Fenderbosch but was QOt treated at the scene.
aged, and VanMeter was cited for
collision but was unable to do so, was slightly injured, troopers said,
Both vehiCles were .severely dam- 'failure to yield.

a

Friday... Fair. Lows in the lower
and mid SOs. Highs in the mid 70s to
around 80.
Saturday... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows from the
mid SOs to 60. Highs in the 70s.
Sunday...A chance of showers and
cooler. L'ows from the upper 40s to
the mid 50s. Highs in the 60s,

rULand transfers posted

.

·
~
When other areas in Meigs County have problems with their sewers, they
• are fixed and fixed as soon as possible, Why is this not true for Pomeroy? I
~ was informed that Pomeroy was seeking money to fix our sewer problems,
": bull have heard no more about it.
.
,
1 even printed up SO papers to start a citizens action committee to work
with the village on this problem and the other problems as they anse. Patsy
• and Jimmy Ward handed out over 40 of them, yet not one was ever returned
·, 10 me. Why? Do my neighbors not care or are they not mterested? .
·
. No. it is not that. f believe that they have lost all 'hope of ever havmg our
; sewer problems fixed. Just how bad are our sewers? After I00 years or more
-~· of i:ontinous use, has anyone from the village been in them to see just how
• bad they ·really are'/ Or is it as I believe, that they are_too dangerous to
• inspect and you cannot risk losing a life in being able to mspectthem'
There arc companies who put new sewer line through the old one and the
only part you dig up arc those places where they have collapsed.
1
Does the village of Pomeroy have the money? If not, tell us so. We can
. write our Congressman and Senators. After all it is our vote that puis them
; in office and it is our tax dollar that pays the11 salary. They have a responsi..
.
. .
bility to us as our elected leadership.
• Pomeroy and Meigs County never rece1ve the fundmg or. the _pubhcny
'that the areas around us do. During the last flood1ng of the ~h10 R1ver I sa~
·every place on local telev_ision except Pomeroy an&lt;! M.e1gs County. Th1s
paper, The Daily Sentinel. IS the only one to take a ~al mterest.
•
The question my neighbors and I want answered IS not1f our sewer prob'lems are ever going to be fixed. but when? Next week. next m~nth, :ovhe~.
when, when? It is almost winter and if we have another hard wmter II Will
' be IOIIICtime in 1998 before digging the ground can be started. .
.
And if the hole beside my garage gets any b1gger, people w1ll be ~kmg
if it is the Grand Canyon. The grill is already too_small and the h~le ~Ill not
fix itself. When are you going to fix the :;ewer line and when will th1s hole
be fixed? When, when, when?
. Signed,
DaYid Edwardl,
Pomeroy

IND.

..

•&gt;

..~ When will sewer problems be fixed? 'Euro Dogs' fund is now in the hunt
- Dear Editor.

~~~!sri•

.. Ohio
Tonight ...Scattered evening showers south and east then clearing. Clear
elsewhere. Patchy dense early morn;_ ing fog far south. Lows in the lower
~;._'. to mid 50s with upper 50s far south
:. ·,: and southeast.
Thursday... Mostly sunny. Highs in
;:, · the mid 70s to the lower 80s.
·
· .&lt; Extended foreeut

10 ~NV ~SIAN \U~-00 WWR t:all~T

Intrusions demand a new privacy law

·~ Letters ·t o the editor
... Follow through on URG surveys

IToledolllr I

two-vehi~le

--Local briefs----.

:::Today's weather forecast

The ~lANS wtLL Ju~ M\R 1N '99, em \NrlL no1 \lllLL

...

.

The Deily Sentinel•,.. J

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

.

.

The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
: :Meigs County Recorder Emrnogene
{ Hamilton:
Deed, Dorothy J. Horton to Paul
E. Green, Bedford;
Deed, Maxine Sellers, Debbie and
Umothy.Buechner, Gary Sellers Jr. to
Daisy M. Sayre, Racine;
·
•.
Deed, Roben Stevens to Daisy M.
:.-: sayre, Racine;
~:: Deed, April Roach, Cynthia and
,• Robert Robie, Kelly and Kim Hay·
: man to Daisy M. Sayre, Racine;
'
Deed, AnthoQy Land Company
Ltd. to Oscar D. and Sharon E. Tucker, Salem, 6.788 acres;
Deed, Richard and Dorothy
Hagerty to Kenneth E. and Belinda
K. Sorrell, Salem, 4.343 acres;
,
Deed, Macie DeWeese to Danny
· . J. Terzopplous. Letart, 3.164 acres;
, . Deed, Janet M. Duffy to James B.
and Pauline E. Panerson, Pomeroy
·· ·parcel;

.

Deed. Gregory Paul and Michelle
Garretson to David M. and Marilyn
B. Enterline, Rutland parcels;
Deed, David W. Shamblen to
Pamela J. King, Lebanon;
Deed, Pamela L. Burson to
Pamela L. Burson Trustees, Bedford,
16.37 acres; .
Deed, John and Janet Dunham to
James McNabb: Columbia, 27.36
acres;
.
Deed, James McNabb to Charles
L. and Paula Horan Moseley, Columbia: 2.997 acres;
Deed, Scott Dale and Amy Lou
Wolfe to George Brickles, Suuon pareel;
Deed, Paul Eugene Harris, Paul E.
Harris to Eric A. and Sara Harris,
Letart;
Deed, ·Dorothy M. Greathouse,
Dorothy M. and Dale McGraw to
Gary M. and Monica L. Freeman,

: : Meigs anno~ncements
.· ,

Hy~

noion set
•· · The families of Charles Reed and
. ' Oscar Hysell will be held Sept. 21 at
' · the Rutland Firemen's Park Sunday
'- 'with a dinner at I p.m.

·'

Anyone with questions or concerns
about state government is welcome
to attend.
Support 11roup to meet
Arthritis support group wi II meet
Friday, 10:30-ll :30 a.m . at Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Center in
Pomeroy. Dr. Douglas Hunter will be
the speaker.
Racine.

Hit/skip reported

regory Lee Myers
Gregory Lee Myers, 37, Crown City, died Tuesday, Sept 16, 1997 at the
Grandview Hospital in Dayton.
·
Born March 24, 1960 at the George Air Force Base in Victorville, California, son of Henry Myers and Virginia Owens, he was employed as a welder
and construction worker. He was a 1978 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School.
Surviving in addition to his parents· are a sister, Christine L. (James) Cozza of Gallipolis; a brother. Jonathan K. Cook of Point Pleasant. W.Va.; his
stepmother, Pauline Myers of Patriot; paternal grandmother, Georgianna
Myers of Patriot; and two nephews.
Graveside services will be II a.m. Friday in the Salem Cemetery, with
the Rev. Arland King officiating. Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home Wethemolt Chapel. Gallipolis, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Thursday.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions can be made to the Salem Cemetery Foundation, in care of Bonnie Carter, 103 Mabeline Drive-, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631.

Douglas D. Wickline
Douglas D. Wickline, 81 , of Racine, died late Tvesday, September 16,
1997, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
Funeral arrangements will be announced by Cremeens Funeral Home in
Racine.
·

Meigs EMS has _six calls
Meigs County Emergency Ser- MIDDLEPORT
4:21p.m., Sputh Seventh, Robert
vices units answered six calls for
Holzer.
Davis,
assistance on Tuesday.
RACINE
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:36p.m., Adams Road. Marshall
11:39 a.m., State Route 143,
Adams
, Holzer.
Sylvia Van Meter, Holzer Medical
RUTI.AND
Center;
1:28 p.m.. from station, James
5:.32 p.m., Village Manor, Dallas
Schuler.
Veterans Memorial HospiWehterholt, Holzer;
10:18 p.m., South Second, Vera tal.
Bolinger, treated at scene.

Sheppard's son...

Continued from page 1
placed in ·the crypt Thursday where
State Representative John Carey
Marilyn Sheppard is entombed. .
·· (R-Wellston) will hold an open door
Dr. Mohammad Tahir, a forenSic
' meeting on Sept. 23, II a.m. to noon.
expen from Indianapolis who will
·. :at the Racine Municipal Building.
conduct the DNA testing, said the
results could take two weeks to two
months.
COAiinuedfrompagel
The ·older Sheppard served I0
years
in prison before being acquitactually spend to provide electric ser"-tion and lower electric rates. ·
ted.
But
he couldn 't rebuild his life.
But some fear the small customer vice.
A
second
marriage failed ~nd ShepThose coSIS come from big invest- ·
· "will end up paying for "stranded
pard
began
drinking and became a
coSIS" - the difference between the ments, ~uch as nuclear power plants,
professional
wrestler. .
··· -~ompetitive market price for gener- that utilities made when they
He
died
nearly
penniless in 1970
' ·ating electricity and what utilities assumed they would continue to
of
liver
disease
at
age
46.
' ,'
.
have a monopoly over the market
Lights
on
the
backhoe
and from
Those investments make it difficult to
television
cameras
providing
the only
lower costs to a competitive level
illumination
as
the
exhumation
began
'· · · Deborah Rae Tillis and Donny wllen new companies move in.
about
6:30
a.m.
in
Forest
Lawn
The Public Utilities Commission
·.. thy Tillis were granted a dissolution
Cemelery
on
the
city's
east
side:
recently in the Meigs County Com- of Ohio estimates thai stranded com
·
Sam Reese Sheppard watched
mon Pleas Court of Judge Fred W. in Ohio could range from $5 million
from about 40 feet away, speaking at
to
$12
million.
·
Crow Ill. Mr. Tillis' name was misThe utilities say they shouldn 't be times to people standing around him ,
spelled in an earlier report.
requirco to make their investors pay including anti-death penally advofor decisions made while .they were
The.
Sentinel under the supervision of state regulators.

..c""" open door meeling

:Group warns..•

· Correction

cates. He declined to talk .to reporters.
· " I hope the state of Ohio can
afford me, and the media can afford
me 1he day of mourning I never had,"
Sheppard. of Oakland, Calif., said at
a news conference Tuesday.
.
The younger Sheppard didn 't
allend the funerals of either of his
parents.

Alan Davis, interim minister at
Lakewood Chrislian Church in suburban Cleveland, led a brief service
next to the uneanhed coffin. He also
conducted Sheppard's original burial
service and was a childhood friend .
" ll 's a tough time, bul something
he wants to go 1hrough," Dav is said
of Sheppard's son.
·
Aboul two dozen reporters stood
outside 1hc roped-off site as the
backhoe opened the-grave.
Sheppard \ son could re&lt;;civc
more than $2 million if he wins the
lawsuit.

Pomeroy police are investigating ~ hit and run accident which took
place on Tuesday.
.
Henry A. Thorne, 32, Middleport, told !he department that he came
·out of McDonald's restaurant and· noticed that while he was in the
restaurant, another vehicle had struck his 1988 Ford Tempo, causing
light damage to the .rear.

Candidates file petitions
Three Pomeroy residents have filed as write-in candidates for the
November 4 election.
Maureen Hennessy and Wayne E. Davis are candidates for the
Meigs Local Board of Education, while William E. Kauff, Sr. has tiled
a petition as a candidate for Bedford Township trustee.
Since the three arc write-in candidates, their names will not appear
on the ballot. The deadline for filing a petition as a write-in candidate was Monday, according to Rita Smith, Director of the Meigs_
County Board of Elections.
·
·

Loan program aims
to help family farmers
COLUMBUS (AP) - Family help them achieve their dream, it
farmers in Ohio could be eligible for would also give an economic boost to
fixed-rate, low-interest loans if the Ohio agriculture," Ms. Hollister said.
Under the plan, the Ohio Depart·
Legislature approves a proposal.
ment
of Development would create a
Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister on Tues$5
million
revolving loan fund from
day announced details of the Ohio
Family Farmer Loan Program, which its existing budget. The proposal is
is designed to help individuals start expected to be introduced this fall hy
or expand.farms. The proposal is in Sen. Doug While, R-Manchester,
response to concerns in rural areas and Rep. Joseph E. Haines. R-Xenia.
that farm loans arc difficult to·obtain.
"This proposal would not only

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
DiKharges StpL 16 - Deborah
Reeup, Chase Williams, Betty Perry,
Keith Snyder, Stella Rawlins, James
Robinson, Maude Clarkson, Myrtis
Parker, Mrs. Roger Shoemaker and
daughter, Marlis Jones.
(Published with permission)

.

~PRING

.

VALLEY CINEMA

446-4524

7

It's that
time ag1ln.
Chaintaw
Check-up
nme.

•..•..,...,. .,
.

••• ,.. &amp; •• ,, ••

......,•"'

.,., ··~~~··'·•· •If

,.,

PICKENS
HARDWARE .
MASON,

W.VA.

Daily

cusPS 113-MO)

.Published every afternoon. Mondty 1hro11gh·
frtdly, 1J 1 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by tile
' • Ohio Valley Publillli"' Company!Ganrtrlt Co.•
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992· 21Sfl. Second
dus posl•~ p.id at Pomeroy. Oil to.

.

Stocks

·'

Mtllber. The Auocilled Pren, and the Ohto
Newap~ptr

Association .

POSTMASTER: Scncl addN:U corrections 10
The ~lily Sentinel, Ill Ca11n St., PotnCroy,
Ollio 4~769.

•.

SUISCRimON RATiiS
By Carrier er Mellor Rotttt

~ =~;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::~:~:

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One Year ............................................... SIIl4.tll

SINGLE COPY PRICE
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~ublcriben n01 deairin1to PIJ the carrier ma)l
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1Jvcn nnicr each wHit.
No ••blcription b~ .mill pennilled in •rea•

Where home Clrricr service is •nilllbte.
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hbliahc:r fCICn"U.Ibc: riJ)'Ilto adjult r&amp;ICI dur·
ina the subla'ipliol pertocl. Sublc:rlpliol rate
ch•nJt• 1M) bllmplemenled by da•nainathe
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MAILSUISCRIPI10NS

t-Milllc.. ..,

13 Wotts .............................................. $27.!0
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f

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
.

•

. Tapanl tosses one-hitter

,·cm·ubs
.beat
NADEL . . .• By

.I

OIICAGO (AP)- Kevin Tap1111i
didn't even need his best pitch. to
record the best perfonnance of his
career.
Though robbed of his split-fin·
gered fastball by a hand injury that
sidelined him for 3 112 months,
Tapani forced the Cincinnati Reds to
ground out 13 times Thesday night.
1be result: his first career one-hitter, his first NL shutout and a 5-0 victory for the Chicago Cubs.
"He's got that sinker and every·
body wants to swing at the first
pitch." Reds manager Jack McKeon
said. "He threw it down low and
everybody grounded out. He's the
perfect guy to pitch in this ballpark."
1be wind was blowing out to left
field at14 mph ..... usuall.r an invita·
tion for 12-11 games at Wrigley
Field.
"The way •he pitched was impres·
sive, given the ·conditions," said
Ryne Sandberg, who broke open the
game with a three-run, eighth-inning
' double.· "It was fun to watch Kevin
hit the catcher's glove. He worked
fast and it kept us on our toes in the
field."
The game lasted only I hour, 57
minutes, with Tapani needing just%
pitches.
"That was the best game I've ever
pitched- by far," said Tapani (7-3),

Reds·~

s-o ··

who has· won live ~ghi ·Starts.
"The game was crisp, the guys·m• ·
·.some good plays behind'ffie,.J kept
the ball low in the strike zone. That's
euctly the way I'd like to pitch every
game. And, of course, that's the result ·
I'd like."
Tapani signed a three-year, $11
million contract as a free agent but
could only watch helplessly as the
Cubs fell out of contention early. He
needed surgery to repair the ligament
that extends along his right inde&gt;i finger.
"I didn't try any splitters tonight
because I tried a few ·the last four or
five games and had some pain,"
Tapani said. "I was still able to sink
my fastball and throw the slider, and
those pitches worked welL"
He had a no-hitter going until Bret
Boone led off the sixth with a solid
single.
Kent Mercker (8·11) matched
Tapani's shutout until the sixth, when
he gave up Mark Grace's one-out single followed by Sammy Sosa's home
run to center field on a 3·0 pitch.
1 GOT HIMI - Cinclnnatleecond ucker Bret Boone (right) rals·
"That's my favorite situation to ea his glove after tagging out the Chicago CUbe' Sammy Sosa after
hit, 3-0, '\ said Sosa, who has 34 a fourth-Inning steel attampt In Tueeday night's National League
homers and 115 RBis. "The pitcher's game In Wrigley Field, where the Cube .won 5-0. (AP)
got to come in with a fastball, and I
can go for it"
From then on, it was all Tapani, · for Minnesota in 1992 . Tapani, who
The Reds fell seven games behind
who struck out five and walked two has only 22 career NL stans. hadn't NL Central-leading Houston with 12
in besting the two-hitter he pitched thrown a shutout since '95.
to play.

and Lopez lined it to center, ending Olerud's liner to end the game.
sion title.
Schilling's bid at perfection.
·Schilling finished with nine strikeIn the sixth, Wilson Alvarez (3-3)
"I just didn't make a·good pitch," outs, bringing his season total to 305, walked Danny Bautista intentionally
said Schilling, who hung his head and dido 't allow a walk.
to get to Perez, who hit his fir.;t career
dejectedly in the dugout after the
He said he thought he had a grand slam.
inning was completed. "I was a lit· chance at a perfect game in the
Kevin Millwood (4-3) gave up
tie disappointed."
eighth.
three hits in six innings for San FranSchilling recorded his 300th
"It stung, but it was awesome to cisco, which dropped two games
strikeout by fanning Edgardo Alfon- . get it that far," he said.
behind Los Angeles in the NL West.
By TOM WITHERS
zo in the founh, Schilling is the first
Mike Liebenhal hit a two-run
A victory over the Mets tonight
AP Sparta Writer
to reach the 300-plateau since Seat- homer off Rick .Reed ( 12-9) in the would clinch a playoff spot for the
Curt Schilling's historic night was tie's Randy Johnson in 1993 and the second, and Midre Cummings added .rixth straight year for the Braves.
nearly perfect, too.
· first in the NLsince Houston's Mike an RBI single in the fifth,
Dodgers 7, Cardinals 6
Elsewhere in the NL, it was
Schilling became the 13th pitcher Scott in 1986,
Al St. Louis, Mark McGwire hit
to record 300 strikeouts in a season
"The way he was pitching, I did- Atlanta 6, San Francisco 4; Florida 9, his 52nd home run hours after signand took a perfect game into the n't think we'd get a chance to getthe Colorado 6; Houston 15, San Diego ing a three-year contract the Cardieighth before seltling for a three-hit· ' tying run on," Mets manager Bobby 3; Pittsburgh 8, Montreal 2; and Los nals, but closer Dennis Eckersley
teras the Philadelphia Phillies defeat- Valentine said. "That's as good as Angeles 7, St. Louis 6,
blew the lead in the ninth inning
ed the New York Mets 3-2.
we've seen this year."
against Los Angeles.
Braves 6, Giants 4
"This is something special, someAfter Lopez's single, Carlos BaerAt Atlanta, Eddie Perez's grand
'•
McGwire 's 517-foot first·mning
thing.J'II never forget," he said.
· ga hit an RBI double with two outs · slam in the sixth inning broke a tie, blast, the longest ever measured at
Neither will many of the 16,585 in on a ball center fielder Midre cum· and the Braves tied a major-league Busch Stadium. tied him Jor the
Vetenms Stadium who weRO nearly mings nearly grabbed with a diving record with II slams this season.
major league home run lead with
treated to a double dose of history.
catch. ·cummings had the ball in his
Atlanta, which tied the mark for Seattle's Ken Griffey Jr. His 52
Schilling ( 16-10) powered glove: but lost it as he hit the ground. slams in a season set by Seattle and · homers matches his career high, set
through the first 22 Mets he faced
. Bnan McRae hit h1s lOth hom~r . Baltimore last year, remained 5 112 last year.
·
before pinch-hitter Luis Lopez came- -w1th.one. out on .the mnth to mak~ 11 games ahead of second-place FloriEekersley (1-5) gave up RBI sin· ' to the plate with one out in the eighth. 3·2. Phtlhes ftrst. baseman R1co da in the NL East in its bid for an gles to Raul Mondesi and Todd
The right.hander grooved a fastball lfrogna made a d1vmg stop of John unprecedented sixth consccut)ve divi·
(See NL ~n Page 5)

Scoreboard
Baseball
F...mniNwW. '

r-

wL ·ra.

)I·Baltimon: ..........................92
New York ...................: ......... IC7

51l
6)

Del:roit ............................ ····"' 76
Bo•ton .................................. 1.\ 7K
T(mmlo ...
............. 71 79

c.....t Dhlolon

Cl.EVELAND .. ...................110
Milwaukcr ...... ...................... 7.1
Cbit:IIJO ..............._. .......... :.....7.1
KamuCity ..........................61

611
. 7S
11
87
Mi11ne10ta .............................61 118

CntniiNvidon
7"
Pillsbu r~ ............................ 7~ 711
ONCINNATI ..................... 69 Kl
Sl. Louis ......
.. ............ 69 Ill
Chi~ago ................................ 6--1 87

.410
.460
..U.O
.·U"

Wnttm Divilien
l..ol Anp;drs ......................... K-4 67
SM Frac~:i~~:o ....................... 142 69

.~:'i6
.~.l

Houuon .............................. 76

ALstandinp
.61)

-~

~

.493
.#J
.oi7J

IK
IY' ,
21

. ~1

1

.493
...7
.412

k

19

.&lt;09

IY':

•

.~

C[llor..OO .............................. 7tl 7~ .:'i 17
SMDiegn ............................. 71 KO .470

~· 1

1
7
12':

2
6
IJ

Atlanta 6. San Frnrk:iKn 4
Houscon 15. 5311 Dit~to J
.,.iladdpbia .l N.Y. Mrt' 2
Pinsbor~ II., Monrre:d 2

Flurida IJ, Colurndu 6
!1. CINCINNATI 0
1..01 AnJelcs 7. St L.xlittl

Chi~:apo Cub•

Tonlgbt's ~·mes

l.l
2.1

SL Lou1s {·Morris 10· 11) at Chi~aJn Cubs
(Bat iSla 6-4). 2:20 r .m
." DH: Phibklpbia (Sk!(ftnson 6--6 aad M. U:il('l'
10.1$) nl Floril.la (1-k.Tnandtz Il- l aOO S:1un«n J.

DH: CLEVELAND 4, Balli~ 2; 8:1llimort!
7, CLEVElAND 2
• DH: N.Y. Y~mkceJ. 2. Bos1nn 0: N.Y. Yrie..~
4. 8011on 3
.
Tclu 4. KaMU Cll)' 2
Cbi~o White Sox ill Milwauk~. ppd.. r.Un
MinrtciOfa 9. Anuhcim 3

6J.:'i:O:'ir.m.
.
Hotu.lun {Reynolds 7-10) ttl Piusbur~h tSchmidt
9·1). 7:3:'i p.m.
Muo1real (Voddl"!! ~~ ar CINCINNATI IRtm·
lin~l'f HI ), 7:JS fl.m.
N.Y. Mers (J(lnt.'~ 14-K) m A11:1n1a !Maddux
Ul-4). 7:40p.m.
'
Cul1li".Kio (Thomson 7-11) (II S:m Ok.-po (A~hh)'
H- 11), IO:J~ p.m.
ln1 Angel«!! (Park D· 7) ;u San Fran~:i~co
(Rucl~r 12·6). 10:3!\ fl.m.

y-cli~K:t.ed JIOIIIC'UOft benll

Tuesday'sii&lt;OI'H

Tonl&amp;ht'spmes
Tunmlu (Htnll{et'l

7:05p.m.

Oruuit (Meehl«

dor.a6-6),7:3~

1~9)nl

Ba'ICin {StlrPM 7· 21.

11~10) a1

N.Y. YMita:a &lt;Mcn-

p.m.

MllwlttM (D 'Amko K-6) a1 Balrimon: (Erid.·

JOfl

16-61. 7 : 3~ p.m.

CLJ;YEL!,ND (Wti~hl 7-~) at Minnrso1a

tMIIIcr O.ll. 8:tr.l p.m.

Chil!llf!O Wtlile Sox (Bnktwin 11·14) at Ka~~W~

City (Roudo 9·12). 8:Q'i p.m.
~~ (Faaero 15-9) a1 Te•u, (BW"kru 7-12t
t'· J~r. m.

· Oakland (Ludwick 1-21

11-10).

.

w

Anuht:1m ( aiJon

r.m.
'n.unday'•pmes

10: 1~

Ollkland

11· 71 ••

111

.

·

,o, p.m.

w k&lt;fi

ld

(Ttwklbllry 6-12).11:0~ p.m.
Chicq:o Wbl&amp;e Sol (Dnbd: 10-11) at Ku1nw
Cily (Phr•ley4-7). l :()!li p.m.
Seank (,Jollaon 11-'4) ar Teus (Ofim- 12-11).
8:.\.5p.m.

-DI-

NLstandinp
Ira·

Thursday's Jlllmes

Sr. Louis (l...nwc 0. I) at ChiCHf:O Cubs (Truch·

~17~11

). 2:20p.m.
l..m Ansclo tCnndiou:i 10-6) 111 S~n Fr:mcbco

ll-IJJ, .\J!i r.m.
PhiL'llklphia (Gr.acc J. I 1:11 Aoridu (Drown 14K).·U:'ijl.m. .
.
Cl,loow.IJ IB:lill!'y 9·9) 011 S;Wl l&gt;ieJU (Hitc~ock
IO·IJ). 5:&lt;ri p.m.
Houston !Kilt! 111-6) at Pinsburr:h (Cordo-wa
1().8). 7:cr.'i p.m.
Montreal (Hermanton R-5) at CJNCIN)IATI
(~hou~k ~-K). 1 : 3~ p.m
N.Y. Mets UsrinJhauxn 2·1) ut Allillllil (Nc.l•
a!lc 20..~). 7:40p.m.

l! L

,\lllnla ........................•.........93

S'7

FloridA ..................................1!1 62
New Yort .............................l2 69
Mooneat ............................... 74 76

Phlladelpllia ............ :·:······:···61 119

l·Ta llnuJ~ I.' I b·O .. ......
2·Cin St. Ur.~ulil (17) M·O..

Ohio H.S. sports
OHSVCApoll
COLUMBUS. Ohio tAP) - Tin~ lirst or si~
wtetly Ohio High Sehoul Volltyball Cond-.:s As-socillliOO flllll•. with s..:bool. l't\:'fJI'd 11nd 1ocal roint.\

&amp;

........

fi·ATHENS (I) 4·0..
. .. ......... .4 .~
7-Tipp Cit)' 5..0. . ........................... .. .. ..41
11-Lima Bnlh .~-I ..... . .. ............
. .lH
9-MemuJ U.1kc C:uholic fi.J .
.J .l
l tJ..War.~1w River View 11·0 ...
!H
Slr't'UIId 10: 1!-Cal\:ll Fulton Nnrrllwe ~l .'I. 12
(lii!)· R:•vennll Southca51. Olmslcd Falls 211 I,..
Dresden Tri. Valley 23. l:'i -Avnn Luk~· 22. lt.Otwl!r 20. J7-\l(ill&lt;~rd 19 Ill-Clyde 15 . JIJ !lie\.

G;~ litln.

C.1l. Ot!Snlc~ 14.

Division lll

IwD

&amp;

1-Milrillll Elt:IP {.1) b-1 .. .

.. ..... lJ/1

:!·Archbolill-11.'i-0 .. .'...
.1-Rui:kfnnl P:lrlo:way (-I) 7-1 .
-1-Hcath ( ll J.o .

%

.. 7.1
l'lH
.. ........ :'iK
,.-I
. ,..JI

5·l..i.JUI.lnnvilk 6-:! ... .....
fi-Ashlnnd Crc.o;mcw .l .J..
7-Humrt4·1 .. ,.
. ...
11- N~w Puris N1w'l Troul .q .
n
Zu:uvillcTuSI: V:dk&gt;y ~.() ...
) .1
I tJ..Cul. School for Girl ~ .~ - 1
JIJ
·SHond 16: 11-Granvillt: 4!1. 11-Ptmbcrvil/c
Ea~lwnod 24 l.l-W. l....ai:I)'CIIc Rilli!l'Wuod 2.1 . 1-1Columbiann Crc~l~~i~w (2) 21. 15. (1ie)· MI. lllan·
·l·hard Ri11crllnlc. WHEELERSBURG IK . 17-Chi l.
Unitllu (I) 17. UI-Smilhville 16. 1 9·C:~~tali:l Mar·
l.llfCtta 1-1. 20-C~~I'on Norwa)'lk' l l

Division IV
IwD

I· SI. Hcnr)' {10) 7- 1.............
2·8&lt;~suun Hnpwe!I·LmHIIIn OJ ~.o
J·Ni!w wa..~h . Buckc)'C Ccntr.lliJJ fl·-1 ...
4-Sidney l.c:hll'l:ln b-1 ..... ......

&amp;

... IHll
. l:!fl
. .. }Ill
.. LJ1
:'i-'
. ......... ~~

~·KillilbR..()

6-S. Charles1on SE 1I 111-2 ..
7-New Bremen9-0 ..
..............4J
K- Anru~9 - 0 ............................................ ,..'..... JII
Y·Amwerp :'1-0 ................. ....................... 211
_ 10-C:Qrtland M:lfl~Wood (I) 8·0 ........... ,............. 2fi
Stcond 10: II (tie)-Cc!'nl?rburg. . McCo n1tl.
Nonhwood 2S. 14·Marion Locnl 21. l!i·Minerlll
Ridge 20. 16-Windllilm 17. 17 (tic)·Frankfort Alk·
Ba.. Arcadia '16.

Transactions

(linl·plact lltltn in p:nnthe!t~) :

Baseball

Amrrian Lea11M"
Di&gt;ision I
ANAHEIM ANGELS: Si J~ .' 8 Troy Gluus
lo
none-year
..:ontroct.
·
1'&lt;a
&amp; .
1-Cin. ~an ,(8L4-2............................... ........... 159
NEW YORK YANKEES: Ac11vated DH Ct:eil
2-WooaiC'r ("'I~ ............................................. 109
F~eldtr from tht 15-day disabltd li!l. Added RHP
~-On. N011her of Ntrty (6) S-0 .........................94
Joe Borowski 10 tht roSfer.
4-Roc:ky River Ma,rificar6- I ........................... Rl
TEXAS RANGERS : Recalled C Kevin Brown
Man.dield MDdison ·c..o .......................................H2
from Oklllhoma Ciry of the Americnn Asaocin1ion.
~Cin . Unt~li..e +! ........................................... 60
N•tion•l Loa• .
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS : Signed IIJ Mark
9-~or I · I ...... ,............................................... .JK
McGw1re to a lhrte-)'car coniJOCI. .

t~;:~~~i{::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::

10-Cemervil!_e.................................................. 2J

PRIMESi~·

s99oo·

Installed

LANE
ACTION

Owners put more
realignment ideas
on table· at meeting

By DAVID GINSBURG
BALTIMORE (AP) - They
played four games in less than 32
houn, and wben it was all over, the
Cleveland Indians and Baltimore
Orioles had nothing to show for it but
two more wins and two more losses,
No was complaining though,
because, as Orioles manager Davey
Johnson so aptly put it. "Thank God

•
- Atlanta, Cincinnati, the New
By RONALD BLUM
ATI.ANTA (AP)- Proponents of York Mets and Pittsburgh would use
realignment, stili unable to come up their veto power to block radical
with a plan. that can muster the realignment, and the Chicago Cubs,
required suppon, are unlikely to call San Diego and San Francisco also
for a vote at this week's baseball would vote against it;
- Tampa Bay would like to be in ·
owners meeting.
the
same league with Florida, but
After an executive council session
preferably
not in the same division; ,
Tuesday stretched past midnight,
Baltimore
would vote against
owners said ,more ideas were preany
plan
that
potentially
would allow
sented and that the number of possible plans had increased, not a Northern Virginia team in its
league;
decreased.
- San Francisco ·would sue to
"We need to air everything out
because what we're doing is going to block Oakland from joining the NL,.
be done for a long time," acting com- and most plans have the Athletics
missioner Bud Selig said after the joining the NL along with Anaheim
·
five·hQUr meeting, another indication and Seattle;
- Arizona would usc its veto
that a vote will be put off.
A council member, speaking on power against any plan shifting )Ito
the condition he not be identified •. the AL.
"I understand the trepidation and
said it's highly unlikely a plan could
be formulated that w9uld win concerns teams have," Selig said.
Owners arriving at the meetings
approval in the next two days. Two
other couilcil members said they weaved their way through celebrities
weren't even sure what proposals such as heavyweight champion Evanwould develop from the latest dis- der Holyfield, who was attending the
cussions.
opening of Atlanta's All-Star Cafe,
"Every day my fax is busy, clubs which is just down the block from the
sending different plans," Selig said, hotel baseball is using. Tiger Woods,
going on to say there was no one Andre . Agassi, Sugar Ray Leonard
plan:
and Wayne Gretzky also were on
Owners have been unabie to issue hand.
a f998 schedule becausillhey can't
When they made their way
figure out where to put the two through the crowd, they made clear
expansion teams, Arizona and Tam- that consensus is. n ways off.
pa Bay.·
· .
"I'm sure people will say things
Teams suppon cenain plans, bur in the hca[ of the moment. hut, hopenot others:
fully. rationality will take over," said
- Houston would like to play Texas Rangers president Tom Schiagainst Texas, but doesn't want to . effcr, an advocate of radical realign·
move to the AL and prefers the mcnt.
Rangers shift to the NL;
The executive council planned to
-Phi ladelphia would shift to the meet again with the realignment
AL. but only as pan of the radical committee today, then hricf teams
geographic realignment in which 15 during separate league mcclings.
teams would change leagues;
Both leagues meet jointly Thursday.

we survived."
·
Jimmy Key won his first game at
home since May 7, allowing two
unearned runs in 7 2/3 innings to lead
the Orioles to a 7-2 victory in the second game of Tuesday's day-night
doubleheader.
In the opener, Charles Nagy
pitched five-hit ball into the seventh
inning and Matt Williams drove in
two runs to leail the Indians lo a 4-2
victory,
The teams also split Monday's
day-night doubleheader. The successive doublehe&amp;\lers were scheduled
· after the teams endured two straight
rainouts earlier in the season.
"These are some tired people,"
', ,Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove
said, motioning to the Indians' club-

American
League
roundup

DURHAM. N.C. (AP) ·- A
woman given a tryout that could have
made her the first female to play
Division I football has filed a feder·
al sex-discrimination lawsuit against
Duke and coach Fred Goldsmith.
Heather Sue Mercer filed a lawsuit Tuesday maintaining she wasn't
given a fair chance to compete for the
place-kicking position in 199~ . her
attorneys said in a news release.
Mercer, freshman walk-on from
Yorktown Heights, N.Y., kicked the
winning 28-yard field goal in the
team's spring scrimmage in 1995 but
' was left off the team once Goldsmith
pared his roster that summer.
The lawsuit hinges on Goldsmith's comments after Duke's
spring scrimmage. As Mercer was
carried off the field pn the shoulders
of her teammates, Goldsmith said
that she had made the team.
"I shouldn't have said it," Gold·
smith said after changing his mind
during summer preseason training. "I '
was carried away at the time,"
A third-team all-state kicker in
high school, Mercer was allowed to
practice with Duke's other five k1ckers. Only one place-kicker made
Duke's 1995 team. Mercer said then
' she was neither the best nor the

&amp;

Me~s

Basketball
National BMir.dbiD ASIIOCiation
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS: Nnl1k'tl Bob
Stnak :\uutMI ~oach .

If~,

Nallonal FootbaiiiAa~ue
CAROliNA PANTHERS : R~ ·S' I ~ned WR
Mnrk Cnrricr. Wam:il OB Shi!.~ Mani'A!wi
KANSAS CIT'I' CHIEFS: Wai\·etl OT Trczclk

J.:nkin~ .

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS: W:1ivcd WR
Hunll'f !lnd WR Anthuny Lottkl.

Uri~c

Hockty
Nallonal HI.ICby Ln~~:ur

ANAHF:IM MIGHT'I' DUCKS .

R~: -~i twcJ

Scl.ln PmnJ!cr ltiii!'IC ·yc ;~rnmlmcl .
LOS ANGELES KINGS . A ssi~ncJ

('

0 M;1rk
Vishcuu , D J;lll Ncmcl·ck :tnd RW N:llh:lll
L..ufuycuc Ill Frcdcrichlll of th.: AHL..: I&gt; Ru~ l ;\11
U:u)'nohin :md RW Andr1•w D:~ k.&gt; 111 Sprin}:lkld ul
Ibe AHt; and C 01ri ~ l\1ylm Ill Ulilh nf Ilk' IHl
Rcmrnetl 0 Pcr~'l' Hu~:m . C S ~o'lltt Ramey. l' M1111
l'..tlllck and IJ Scm1 BlimdLal\l h1ltk'1r Jllllmr ll'iUIJ.\

I'
I

!t
~~
I~

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
This

l

35
25
24
13
8

.0

fl.~

.

I-:.. ~1' 1 1 1 1''1'1''~1·r

a

'I
I

f!

SUN. ·SAT. 10:00AM. 10:00 PM. 992-2556

,I,!
I

'I' P '1' r~
1...£:&gt;--------------------;;...1
1

I

***********************************
* .
.
*

I'

: Important Health Care Notice! :
:

Holzer Clinic of Meigs County

***********************************
LIVING ROOM SUITES
SIIRTIHG IT

$59 9

See Store for Datalla

..

:

*:
and
*
Meigs Health Services
:
*
are undergoing a major change.
*
*
The facilities will be
*
*
closed Friday, September 19.
*
*
*
Wewill
·:
· re-open on Monday, September 22
:
*
in our new location,
*
:
Hol:zer Meigs Clinic
:
*
at 88 East Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio
*
**
Next to Veterans Memorial Hospital
**
: Health issues should be referred to Holzer Clinic Urgent Care Center :
** or Veterans90 Memorial
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis- 446-5287
*
Hospital Emergency Department.
*

Pettitte (18-7) allowed only five
hits and walked none in the opener,
while Banks (2.Q) overcame a shakr
stan in the second game and limited
the Red Sox to two runs and five hits
in 6 2/3 innings.
. B31ll&lt;s missed the entire 1996 season· because of nerve damage in his

•'

,

I

NL games...

By ANNE GEARAN
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP)- Marv
Alben's lawyer says the sex case
against the sportscaster should be dismissed because ihe indictment does
not specifically claim he penetrated
his accuser.
Alben is accused of biting the

Zeile, and left after walking !Eddie
Murray to load the bases, The
Dodgers tied it when shortstop Roy~c·
Clayton bobbled Wayne Ktrhy s
grounder, and Eric Young's sacrifice
fly off John Frascatorc gave them the
lead.
Rick Gorecki (1-0) worked r:Z/3
scoreless innings, and Scott Radinsky
struck out the side in the ninth for his
third save.
Mike Piazia hit a two-run homer
for the Dodgers, and Ray Lankford
homered for the Cardinals.
Marlins 9, Rockies 6
At Miami, Bobby Bonilla fouled
off six two-strike pitches before h1tting a grand slam with two outs in the
ninth inning.
,
Bonilla's clutch homer extended
Florida's lead in the NL wild-carq
race to six games over New York.
(:olorado lost for just the third time
in 19 games.
..
· With the Marlins trarlmg 6·5,
~raig Counsell singled off Jerr~
Oipoto (5·3), and John Cangelosi
111 alked. Kurt Abbott sacrificed before
~ounsell was thrown out at the plate.
Gary Sheffield walked to load the
bases for Bonilla, who h1t hiS e1ghth
~areer grand slam and 17th homer
this season.
, Jay Powell (7·2) pitched two hitless innings,
: , Larry Walker, Andres Galarraga

in the eighth inning at Texas.
Twins 9, Angels 3
Brad Radke scattered six hits in -7
2/3 innings for his 19th victory, and
Many Cordova hit a pair of two-run
homers as Min!lesota beat the fading
Angels at Anaheim.
.
The Angels lost for the lOth t1me

in 14 games and feU six games
behmd AL West-leadmg Seattle,
which had the day off.
Radk~ (19·9), who won 12 con·
secuuve starts carher thos season,
allowed one run, · walked two and
struck out four before bemg reheved
by Dan Naulty

s~x

case

The May 19 indictment cliarges
back of awoman with whom he had crime of sodomy, defense attorney
·
Roy
Black
argued
in
the
motion
filed
that
Alben "did by force, threat or
a 10-year sexual relationship and
Tuesday.
·
intimidation
engage in an act of
forcing her to perform oral sex on
"The
indictment
completely
fails
sodomy,
to
wit
fellatio" with his ·
him. His trial on forcible sodomy and
to
.
a
llege
the
essential
element
of
pen·
accuser.
assault and battery chalges is sel to
Sodomy, either forcible or conbegin Monday, and he could be sen- etration. This defect is fatal to the
indictment
and
requires
dismissal,"
sensual;
is a crime in Virginia.
tenced to life in prison if convicted.
Black
wrote.
Penetration is a key pan of the
'

\

Cellular service made easy as

strongest kicker but still deserved ·a
spot on the team.
The lawsuit seeking compensato·
i'Y - and· punitive damages alleges
Duke violated Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which ·
prohibits discrimination on the basis
of gender in educational programs
that receive federal funding. She
also filed claims for breach of contrac~ negligent misrepresentation and
constructive fraud.
Mercer said that unlike every
male walk-on, she was not allowed to
dress in a football uniform or to sit on
the sidelines "during 1995 home
games. She alleged Goldsmith told
her she should "sit in the stands with
(her) boyfriend."
Mercer was barred from trying out
in 1996 or before this season, the
·lawsuit said. Any money Mercer
would be awarded because or ~cr
lawsuit would be used to establish a
college scholarship fund for female
place-kickers, her attomeynaid ...
"The best of these gtrls deserve
the opportuntty to play at the next
level,' Mer~er said in. a prepared
statement. Duke demed me that
opponumty.•~Y chance 1s over, but
thetrs 1s not

(Continued from Page 4)

right shoulder. He went 14-5 at ..
Triple-A Columbus this year, and
won in relief at Fen way Park last
week in his lone big league outing
this season,
,Rangers 4, Royals 2
Rusty Greer homered twice,
including a tiebreaking two-run shot

Albert's lawyer asks for dismissal in

Mercer files lawsuit vs. Duke
. after being cut from team

Ohio Division
standings
Alexander
Wellston
&amp;lpre
Vinton County
Nelsonville-York

house. "Nobody was looking for- kees and Cleveland.
ward to this. Once you get in the mid"Everything's out of whack ,''
dle o~ it(YOU realize it's not as tough Johnson said. " I don't know what
as yoiVflought. But once it's over, division I'm in or what league I'm in.
you're glad it's over."
It's been screwy."
Both teams benefited from the
In the finale, Key (16-9) gave up
split of the four-game series. The Ori· four hits and three walks to earn his
oles clinched a playoff spot with their first win in eight decisions at home
win Monday, and Tuesday's victory after a 5.() stan.
.
moved them closer to their first AL
"I pitched some real good games
East title since 1983.
here and lost.. That's the.way it goes
"We had three guys pitching who sometimes," Key said. "Tonight we
· had been in (Triple-A) Rochester for scored a lot of runs early, which helps
much of the year," said Johnson, you relax."
referring to staners Rick Krivda..NerBrady Anderson and Rafael
io Rodriguez and Esteban Yan.
Palmeiro homered for the Orioles,
The Indians, meanwhile, had no . who led 7-0 after five innings and
complaints about getting a couple of coasted. RobenQ, Alomar had three ·
road wins against the team with the hits and three RB!s and Eric Davis
best record in basebaiJ.
made his second appearance since
11
1be worst-case scenario would returning from colon cancer surgery.
have been coming in there and losing He went 0-for-2 after entering as a
four," said Richie Sexson, who had pinch-hitter in the fifth.
YOU'RE OUT, MIKEl - Cleveland c;atcher
night'• doubleh•deF In BaltimOre, Where the Orl·
two hits in the nightcap, "But we did.
In the opener. Nagy (15-10) Sandy Alomer (right) geta Into poaltlon to tag out
olea c:lalmed a 7·2 victory attar loalng the open·
take two, and that's not too bad. And allowed two runs and two walks in 6 the Baltimore OrToles' Mike Bordlck at the plata
er 4-2. (AP)
we're happy to be moving on."
In the second Inning of the "!lght.;ap of Tueaday
2/3 innings. The only runs against the
The two straight doubleheaders right-hander came in the second
finished a sttetch in which the Orioles · inning.following a pair of walks.
like Key, Nagy made the early advan- his 15th save.
clinch its third straight AL Central
played II games in nine days against . The Indians scored three runs in tage stand up.
Cleveland's magic number to tiile is down to eight.
the Florida Marlins, New York Yan- the first against Rodriguez ([). I) and,
Jose Mesa worked. the ninth for

Andy Pettiue struck out a careerhigh 12 in eight innings as the Yankees defeated the Red Sox 2·0 in the
opener. New York completed the
sweep with a 4-3 victQry behind the
solid pitching of Willie Banks, wh.o
was ·makinjl his first stan in nearly
two yea.s.
.
The Orioles. meanwhile, split a
doubleheader with Cleveland for the
By The ASiociated Pr..1
The New York Yankees probably second straight day.
The Indians' magic number to
won't win the AL East However, the
defending world champions are clinch the AL Central is eight. They
almost certainly heading back to the hold a seven-game lead over the the
Milwaukee Brewers, whose game
playoffs.
The Yankees swept a doublehead· against the Chicago White Sox was
er from Boston on Tuesday, and a rained out
Elsewhere in the AL, Texas beat
· loss by AnahCim cut their magic
number for clinching a playoff benh Kansas City 4-i and Minnesota
, -defeated Anaheim 9-3.
to three .
Yankees 2, Red Sox 0
New York trails Baltimore by five
Yankees 4, Red Sox 3
games in the East with 12 games ·
Boston, which began the day lead" remaining for each team. But the
Yankees have a nearly insurmount· · ing the majors in batting at .293, was
able lead in the wild-card race, lead- held to 12 hits in the doubleheader at
Yankee Stadium.
ing Anaheim by 9 112 games,

· Meadows carded a 42, Jared Warner
added a 45 and Josh Price had a 4H.

fum

The Dlllly Sentinel • Page 5

Yankees.sweep Red Sox in DH; Rangers and Twins a.lso win

Meigs golfers retain perfect
record with two-stroke win
The Meigs golf team kept its perfect record intact with a two stroke
victory in a match at Fairgreens.
Meigs holds a 47.0 record.
·Meigs won the match with a 162.
Wellston came in second with a
164.Behind them were Alexander
( 166 ), Belpre ( 180), Vinton County
( 189) and Nelsonville-York (205).
Corey Smith of }'~ellston was
match medalist with a one over par
37. Clay Crow, Dave Anderson and
Mick .Barr led Meigs with 40s. Zach

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Indians &amp; Orioles -get wins in
second DH in as many days

•

1 = 1
Football

.. .... I%
.. .. IHfl
3-Huhbo•rd(l)ft.Q ................................ IH
4-Norwall.:: 1I) 1·.1 ..
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5-Sunhul)' Bip Wollnut c.-1
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tGanJ~et

(Tel~ J.~) at Anahrim ([)id.setn

· Toronro (Clemen• 21-6) at BoMon ( a 1e
11·1&lt;1. 7~p. m.
·
R
Dctroil (Kcql~ 2-4) at N.Y. Yank«• ( op:rs
6--7). 'U!\ p.m.
.
u
.
Milwoukee (Kurl l~ll) 111 Balurncwe (..,.unln:r.
14--7). 7:3!1 p.m.
u •
CLEVELAND (Henhlttr 1.1-6) at mmnesota

S«oncc 10: 11 -Chillil:ol he 2l 12-Wem~rlli l lt!
Sou1h 22. lJ-Ci'n. McAuley 21. l.J..Piquil 19. 15
(tic)-Cin. Prim:~t(lfl ; Hud~1m IM 17-Ci ... Oak Hill
16. Ill (tie.._Tot. Sr. U~ula . Aml)l!~t Slff.h:. Bowl·
ine,Green I H.

IwD

P41Qt4
17 1197

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Division II

Tuesday's srores

WalrmDi'illln

Se:MIIe .•...... - .•.•.................... JW · 61 . ~~
1\~m .............................. 71 73
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OaklaDd ..... - .........................61 90 .40&lt;

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and Vinny Castilla homered for Cuiorado, whrch set an NL record w1th
223 homers th1s year.
Astros IS, Padres 3 .
At Houston. Sean Berry hll a
three-run double and Jeff Bagwell h1t
his 40th homer as the Astros blew the
game open early. .
The Astros remained 3 112 games
ahead of second-place P1ttsburgh 10
the NL Central gomg ·mto a twogame series starting tonight. The
Padres,last year's NL West .chamns.
fell 10 71-80 and were eltmmated
from post-season play.
..
The Astros gave Ramon Garctn
(7·8) a 7-0 lead. agmnst ~terlmg
Hitchcock ( 10-10) after the ftrst two ·
innings.
.
Pirates 8, Expos 2
. At Pittsburgh, AI Martin, Kevin
Young and Shawon Dunston homered in a four-run founh inning .
The Pirates swept the two-game
series - their first back·to-back
wins since Aug. 23-24 - to remain
on Houston's taiL
Before the sweep, the Pirates had
lost five of six and eight of 10.
Manin matched a career high
with four ·RB!s to back the six-hit
pitching of Jon Lieber (1[).14), who
lasted 7 2/3 innings.
Michael Johnson (2-4) took the
loss.

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�Page 6 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • lllddltport, Ohio

USA Track &amp; Field
By STEVE HERMAN
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Mary
Slaney, embittered by .a year of
delays and uncertainty, bas been
cleared of charges she used a banned
substance before the 1996 Olympic .
trials.
A USA Track &amp; .Field bearing
board exonerated Slaney, America's
most prominent woman distance runner, on Tuesday.
.
"We knew that a year and three
months ago," Slaney's husband,
Richard Slaney, said of her inn&lt;&gt;cence. "Obviously, it's been very difficult. We're very tired. We want to
digest this for a few days. It's been a
long struggle.
.
"We appteeiate the support we-'ve
received locally, and we· appreciate

Cooper chat

boar~_ ~lears "Slaney -of

the work the panel did. We're slad about USA Track &amp; Field, I would
this part of it is over," he said from say I hope it bums ill bell."
Eugene, Ore.
The -rulina by the USATF, the
Mary Slaney allegedly tested pos- sport's soverning body in the United
itive for high levels of testosterone at States, came at a meeting last weekthe U.S. Olympic trials in June 1996. end in Chicago.
She was suspended by the Interna"Muy Slaney has been one of our
tional Amateur Athletic Federation, outstanding athletes, and I am lookthe world governing body, and was ing forward to seeing her compete
not allowed to compete this summer once again," USA1F chief executive
in the U.S. outdoor championships in officer Craig Masback said. "I am
Indianapolis or the world char(lpi- also pleased that our process worked
onships in Greece, where she had to afford her a fair bearing."
planned to run the l,SOO meters.
Slaney's lawyer said the IAAF
Sbe said in June that the situation suspension stemmed from the
left her "numb."
USA1F refusal to act on the case for
"I feel like this whole thing is lso long.
going to taint everything I've ever
"Everybody is very pleased and
done athletically," she said then. "If relieved," Sl8J1Cy's lawyer, Jim Colesomeone were to ask me how Heel man, said from Durtlam. N.C. "I

_

using ·banned _drugs

think we convinced the panel Muy
was illnocellt."
'
He said the action over the weekend meant Slaney was "unsuspended," but the IAAF, headquartefe9 in
- Monaco, was 110t immediately avaiiable to say if that WIS indeed the case.
''To win means she must have
.been innocent." Coleman said of the
bearing. "It's a very difficult process.
I think there'll be chanJeS that come
out of this because the investigation
USA1F did was abysmal."
He did ·not know whether further
legal action would be taken.
"This just happened today," he
said. "Nobody has thought about
that."
The tests look for elevated levels
of testosterone by measuring it

against epitestosterone, another nat- . USATF said Slaney was eligible to
urally .occurring substan~e. 'The so- compete bee"'"' she had llot been
calledT-E ~tio.normally is 1-t&lt;&gt;-l.lf suspended. 'Then, based on the pub. an athlete s unne sample show• a lished reports. Slaney was suspendratio of 6-1 or higher, that triggers , ed by the IAAF. Following the
further tests and reviews that can lead IAAF's lead, USA1F said she was
to ba~i~hment from the sport.
suspended and ineligible for the
Cnucs argue that the current tests championships.
dori'l take into account changes in
Later, USATF said she actually
body chemistry that can occur was suspended earlier in the year,
because of menstruation, or taking while Renoy successfully pleaded his
l~gal su~tances such as birth-conuol suspension to an arbitrator and was
pills or JUSt a couple-glasses of wane , allowed to compete in the chatnpior beer.
onships.
Just before the U.S. outdoor cham"The real t!llgedy is she v.:,as
pionships in June, Slaney and bufd!er denied an opportunity to run in the
Sandra Fanner-Patnck, along wtth world championships because
hurdler Stephon Aenoy, were sus- USATF ' and IAAF delayed it so
pended by the IAAF.
long," Coleman said.
Just before the championships,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mexico making progress on drug poUcy
'"

.'
"·

_

Wiley's exploits won't put him before Pearson on depth chart
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio · (AP) Michael Wiley has rushed for more
yards, scored more touchdowns and
excited more fans than Pepe Pearson
so far this year for ninth-ranked
Ohio State.
· But that doesn't mean the soph&lt;&gt;more will start anytime soon ahead of
Pearson - and panicularly not Sat'
urday when the Bucl&lt;eyes play Ari-

!I

zona.
Wiley is averaging 9.6 yards per
carry and has scored three touchdowns, including a 100-yard kickoff
return last week.
"This guy's a rocket. This guy can
hit the home run," Cooper said of

.

'

Spurri~r

Wiley at his weekly news conference gained I ,500 yards last year and averTuesday.
aged over 5 yards a carry," Cooper
· As reporters pointed out that Pear- said. "So we know what Pepe can do
son has yet to score and ha5 rushed over the course of the season. Leadfor 39 fewer yards than Wiley despite ership, chemistry and knowing who
nine more carries, Cooper jumped to to block, carrying out your fakes the senior tailback's defense.
all the linle things we take into con"You guys are geuing down on sideration that you could probably
Pepe more than we are. I can tell that care less about - all of that enters
right now by the tone of your ques- into our decision."
tions," Cooper chided . "Maybe
Arizona ( 1-1) is limiting opposing
Wiley has had more opportunities, runners to 1.8 yards per carry and 57
maybe we've put him in more open- yards · a game, eighth- best in the
field situations."
nation.
Cooper said Pearson is superior in
But Cooper said the Buckeyes
many other aspects that don't grab have an important weapon.
headlines.
·
·
"I think we have a speed advan"Pepe's a good running back. He tage over anybody we play," he said.

ly _overrated." right tackle Mo Collins
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP)
saad ofthe Vols' quarterback, regard, Touchdown passes are not Rorida 's ed by almost everyone else as the best
only area' of expertise. When it comes college_quarterback in the country.
to playing Tennessee, the Gators can
Colhns also took a shot at Leonard
. run as well as anyone.
Little, the Vols' defensive _star. _
Run off at the mouth, that is.
"I promised to show h•m a couple
Four days before the third-ranked of SEC championship rings after this
Oators go for their fifth straight win one, .~o he_can see what they look
over Tennessee, a couple of players Joke, Colhns sa1d.
gave.the Vol'unteers even more incenIf that wasn't enough smack from
tive Tuesday to end a streak that has the Swamp, tailback Fred Taylor
made them perennial als&lt;&gt;-rans.
chimed in. Asked whether No: 4 Ten"I think Peyton Manning is high- nessee w1ll be able to end ns Jrnx

agl!inst the Gators, Taylor gave a . Spurrier was no_t far behind, makdefimtave reply.
mg sure Taylor revased his statement,
· "They can't beat us," he said. espe_cially to the Tennessee reporters.
"They know they can't tx;at us.''.
_''F~, did you tell them what you
By the end ofTuesday s practice, sa•d' IN M~ OPINION, I thank
Collins had both arms outstretched as we 'II winT:' Spurrier said..
he tned to explam h1s conversation
It was the second straight year
with coach Steve Spurrier.
Aorida players have fired derogat&lt;&gt;. And Ta~lor, who als? had _a chat ry volleys toward Manning and the
wath Spumer, was runmng w1th h1s Volunteers.
tail between his legs toward a group
A year ago on the way to the
of reporters.
national championship, defensive end
"I forgot the 'think' part," he said. Tim Beauchamp said Manning gets
easily rattled in the pocket, and linebacker · Jbhnny Rutledge said he
noticed some errors- a lot of errors
- while watching film of the Vols.
"lt seems like every time we play
these guys, you have to wony about
every litde thing somebody says,"
Spurrier said. "We certainly don't
option after making $8 million in two like for any of our players to say, 'We
years. The team has an option on will win the game.' They might say,
Todd Stottlemyre and will attempt 'ln our .opinion, we have a pretty·
him as well.
good chance.'
"'There may be some changes in
"We dang sure don't know who's
going
to win the game."
the offseason that would have been
.made anyhow whether Mark was
· Manning, meanwhile, took Florihere or not," Jocketty said. "We' re da's propensity to stir the pot in
not going to have to move guys stride.
"Well for one thing, Florida has
because we signed him."
McOwire's also giving a lot of it
back, donating $1 million a year to
establish a charitable foundation to
benefit sexually arid physically
abused children. McOwire had trou·
ble keeping his composure describing
the foundation, pausing for a half·
minute at one point.
Later, he said -he has dose friends
who were physically and sexually
abused.
"Granted, the're 's a lot of money
out there and you don't know how
long your career is going to last,"
McOwire said. "I think the first and
foremost thing is you have to be hap- ·
py with yourself.
"I'm the first one to tell you I'm
very happy."
It didn't hurt St. Louis' chances
that -McOwire is pl!lying for his
longtime Oakland manager, Tony La
Russa. LaRussa has an option for the
next two seasons, and it's all but certain he'll be back.
lJ8
"I'm not speaking .for him, but I
don't think I would have signed if he
wasn't coming back," McGwiie said.
Then _he turned to LaRussa and sai&lt;!.
"All right'!"

Cardinals and McGwire ink
three-year, $28.5M contract
By R.B. FALLSTROM
ST. LOUIS (AP)- Mark MeGwire came to St. Louis as a Rent·&amp;·
Player. Six weeks later, he'~
unpacked for good.
McOwire signed a thfCe-year,
$28.5 million contract with the Cardinals on Tuesday, and has an option
for a fourth year that would push the
package to nearly $40 million. He has
no regrets about deciding not to see
what other teams would be willing to
,.
pay for the only player besides Babe
Ruth with consecutive 50-homer seasons.
"When I first got here, sure, I was
definitely going to try the free-agent
market," McGwire said. "But I don't
think it was too hard to fall in love
with the city of St. Louis. .
"I tell you what, it makes me float
every time I come to the ballpark, to
' . play in this stadium and play in front
~
'
of these fans."
Float. MeOw ire, 33, used that
word again after Tuesday night's
•
against Los Angeles to describe
•• game
his feelings about the ra~cous recep"
or' tion he received.
Fans were on th&lt;iir feet for every
at-bat. 11lcy gave him an ovation for
striking out in the third inning. They
gtlfped at his warning-track drive to
ccpter in the fifth. They booed when
;:: m, [lodgers walked him intentional• · ly ·in the seventh just before Ray
;; : ' Ll!nkford's three-run homer. and they
gBfped again when he lined out to
•'
cepter in his fifth at-bat
They were beside themselves
when he punctuated the deal with a

....

,.,.'

..

.,.... .

.,. ""
'

I'

.....

..

,,.

......

517-foot ·home run, the longest at
Busch Stadium since the team began
estimating distances in 1988, off
_Ramon Martinez's 3-1 fastball .in the
firsr.
"On 2-0 I backed oul 'and looked,
and the fans were on their feet,"
McOwire said. "It was like I was
flo~ting. It was probably the best feeling I've ever had in the game."
The faet Cardinals closer Dennis
Eckersley let. a three-run, -IIi nthinning lead slip away didn't destroy
the warm, fuzzy feeling at the stadi·
urn. The Cardinals are all but eliminated from postseason contention,
but next s~ason McOwire said they'll
be back. ·
"Everybody gets in this game to
win, and we're definitely going to
win here," McOwire said. ''That was
a big, big thing for me."
The Cardinals probably couldn't
contend without McGwire 's help. He
wan!ed to stay _so much he not only
signed for less than market value, he
agreed to defer about 25 percent of
the money until he retires so the team
won't have to rid itself of some of its
other high-priced talent.
One of his agents.. Bob Cohen,
said the slugger could have commanded at least another million per
season on the open market. His deal
pales in comparison to Greg Muddux'stive-year,$61 million contract
with the Braves.
Next on the list for general manager Walt Jocketty is re-signing pitcher Andy Benes, who has a player

Indianapolis Motor Speedway head
$hows interest in Formula One -

a,

,.'

,.
'

.......

I

'

'•
'•

'·

.

'·

.

•,

For the first time in mori: than a
year, he has three quality quarter.
backs in the mix- Stanley Jackson,
Joe Germaine and Mark Garcia. Oarcia m'ssed all of last year after a knee .
injury.
Cooper doesn't want to lose one
now because of a lineman's mistake,
"We've got to make sure we
know how to protect our quarterback
and give ourselves time to move the
ball down the field," Cooper said.
Another concern is the fumbleitis
that has plagued the Buckeyes. They
fumbled three times in the opening
24-10 victory over Wyoming, then
lost four fumbles in the first half
against Bowling Green.
.

What makes Cooper even more
nervous is that Arizona is known for
forcing fumbles.
"I worry about us not securing the
football when 'we're in the open field
more than I do anything else:" he
said. "And Arizona defensively will
do' probably a better job of punching
the ball out ·from behind than anybody else we play. You can see on
tapes where their defensive player
will take his fist and be's really not
trying to 'make the tackle, he's trying
to punch the ball loose."
Ohio State is favored by 17 112
points- in the regionally televised
game.

''·

..

q,·

tor Leo Mebl were out of the toun- pursuing it at this time," the source
STEVE ~RMAN
.
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The try last weekend, possibly looking _.said.
he's
doing,
I don't
_"Whatever
~ld's most famous race ~k mi~t into Formula One, a Speedway
think
anylhing
would
lie
imminent.
soon add Fo111¥Jia One rncang to 1ts soun:e who asked not to be identified would say this is a process that would'I
told The Associated Press.
liftl'up. .
Neither George, president of the take a while .... If there's something
Thny Geor,e, president of the
brewing, they've got to build a track,
Indianapolis Motor Speedway, . and Speedway, nor Mehl returned teledo
a lot of things. It wouldn't be
. !~t.J!~ing l.Qague execuuve d•rec- phone calls Tuesday. Mai Lindsuom,
Speedway director of public rela- something next year. The earliest, I'd
RfNlding to forfeit
tions, would not comment, although say, would be in 1999, more likely in
she said she had heard similar 2000."
two foott»all ~in.s
The only race at the Speedway
rumors.
was
the Indianapolis 500 until ·l994,
Last week, George - who four
CINCINNATI (AP) - Read_in~ '
whe~
the Brickyard 400 became the
years ago brought NASCAR to th!:·
Hifh School sll,)'s it used a~ mehgarichest
stock car race in the Winston
speedway- said, "It's no secret I''IIC
ble player in two games th1s season
Cup
s~ries.
A Fonnula One f&amp;CC
and will forfeit victories over Lock- been interested in a Fonnula One . could use parts of !he existing 2 112race. I would not be opposed to Jtavland and New Miami.
milc 11•al and likely would require
ing
a raee here in the future."
Coach Ken Minor said Tuesday
construction
of a new track for a road
Another Speedway offaci!ll who
that a first-ycl!f player, a secondcourse in the infield.
suina wide receiver, was enrolled for spoke on condition of anonymity said
Last , week, ' when · George
his ninth semester .at the suburban that George "has been very open" announced a change in the_lnd)r SOO
abou't his desire to bring the internasc~l. A student's sports eligibility
schedule to cut practice by oile week
tional
race series to Indianapolis.
en4S after eight semesters:
and
qualifications from four days to
·"So I don't think you're barking
Readirig had beaten Lockland 31two
days,
he admittcc! it was difftcult
up the wrong tree to say he woulcl be
14 and New Mjami 41-6.
10 break uadition.

the platform to talk r{ght now," he
said. "They're the champs, they can
talk all they want. We don't have the
rpom to talk back. Until we change
the trend around here. all we can do
is take it."
Most of the talk this week has concerned Manning, which is not
uncoll)mon. He is Tennessee's career
leadang passer, has a 30-4 record as
a starter and gave the Vols new hope
when he decided to return for his
senior season.
He also happens to be the Heis·
man Trophy favorite and likely No.
I pick in the NFL draft next year.
That apparently isn't enough for
Collins.
"Peyton Manning ... he's a good
player, but I don't know if he
deserves al_lthe exposure he's getting," Collins said. "I just want to
know ·what the big thing is."
Collins and Taylor weren't the
only Gators who had an opinion of
Manning and Tennessee.
"They've got a great defense, and
they don't ever talk about the
defense," Aorida linebacker Mike
Peterson said. "All you hear is MaQning, Manning, .Manning. He's a ·

WEEKLY AUDIENCE -Pope Paul II errlvelln St. Pelllr'e Square
at the Vlltlcln for hll weekly genet11l eudlen.:. Weclnesdly. The
Pontiff will leave on Oct. 2 tor 1 flve-dlly official vlllt to Brazil.
(AP)

· Versace's niece,
·-. Allegra, to inherit
.; -bulk of wealth

WASHINGTON (AP)- Mexico drug-abusing Americans."
"People shot down in restauranis in
is making advances in anti-drug
He spoke while releasing a report Ciudad Juarez, who happened to be
efforts, but it has a long fight ahead sought by senators who harshly crit· there when somebody else gets hit.''
as it takes on traffickers who supply icized Mexico's anti-drug efforts last
He conceded that Mexican law
the majority of illegal drugs con- spring. Controversy over U.S.-Mex- enforcement is not always reliable,
sumed by Americans, the Clinton ico drug cooperation erupted after sa~ing , "The corruption issue is a
adminisuation's drug policy director Army Gen. Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo serious one."
says.
was arrested in February, I 0 weeks
He blamed U.S. drug consumers
Barry McCaffrey also touted eight after becoming Mexico's top anti- for financing it, saying some 60 perX-ray machines the United States is drug officiaL He was accused of ;eent of the estimated $49 billion of
deploying on the U.S.-Mexico bor- being in cahoots with a major drug illegal drugs used in America comes
der, saying their ability to spot drugs trafficker.
across the Mexican border or the
. in trucks will push traffickers el~e­
Thanks to Mexican government nearby Pacific Ocean and Caribbean
where - to sea or air shipments ,
reforms, McCaffrey said in the report, Sea.
and reduce border violence.
"We are seeing an end to impunity
Mexico Is now creating special
But law enforcement crackdowns and the .best opportunity yet for the " vetted " law enforcement units,
. in foreign counuies and careful bor- destruction of major (drug) uaffick- whose members are screened by
der searches won't cure America's ing organizations:"
officials who conduct " polygraphs,
drug ills or the violence the illicit
But he said: " Reform has been drug tests, financial disclosure, visit
uade spawns here and abroad, he and will continue to be painful, dan- the person's mama," McCaffrey said.
said . .
gerous and time consuming."
The hope is !hat these police will not
"Our principal contribution. with·
Perversely, Mexico's disruption of be vulnerable to corruption.
out any question, will be to focus on two of the country's five major drug
The senators who ·· prompted
68 million American children, . trafficking organizations has led to McCaffrey's report
Paul
between the ages of 10 and about 19. increased violence. McCaffrey told Coverdell, R-(Ja., and Dianne Feinand try and get them to not smoke reporters.·
stein, D-Calif. - agreed that Mexipot, abuse alcohol' or smoke ciga:
'Two members of the organized co is making improvements but still
. reues," McCaffrey told reporters crime unit in Mexico City kidnapped, ,has a lot of work to do.
·Tuesday. If youngsters can grow up . brutally tortured for weeks and then
"Their task is not an easy one,"
without doing those things, "they murdered," he cited as an example_._ Coverdell said. "The resources of the
Won 'I create the next. generation of

good player, so I'm not going to
knock him. But he's just another
playerto me."
Peterson also took issue with
Manning, saying he did not return to
Tennessee solely as a last chance to
beat Aorida and win at least a Southeastern Conference title._
"Of course. he wants to beat us,"
Peterson said. "He hasn't beaten us
yet. "
~anning threw for 492 yatds in a
35-29 loss _10 the Oators last year in
Knoxville, although his interceptions.
- four in the first half _ helped _
stake Florida to a 35-0 lead.
Two years ago, Manning was 13of-16 for 216 yards in leading the
Vols to.a 30-141ead against Florida,
only to watch Danny Wuerffel1ead
the Oators to seven straight touchdowns in a 62-37 victory.
"Peyton is not the only guy playing out there," Rutledge said. "We
were already fired up. whether Pcyton wa&lt; staying or whether Peyton
had left.
"Now. we're even more hyped up
forthis game," he said. "It is Peyton
Manning, and we don ' t want him to
win this game."

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cartels ... are very high. Sometimes I
think our requests of them are almost
beyond what they can do initially."
Feinstein said, "I think there's
been progress ... but there's a long
way to go."
Mexico 's drug seizures have
grown over the past three years while
U.S. Southwest border seizures have
shrunk, McCaffrey said.
To aid drug interdiction, _the United States is installing eight huge X·
ray units - at over S3 million per
unit - at Southwest border entries.
The equipment. initially created to
find Soviet missiles, can probe seven trucks per hour for drugs, he said.
Two California pons of entry -'Otay Mesa and Calexico - already
have them. McCaffrey said he
believed they prompted traffickers to
move heroin and cocaine shipments
away.
Through March 1999, X-ray units
will be installed at five Texas border
crossings- two in El Paso and one
each at Pharr. Laredo and a new Los
Tomales entry in Brownsville. Anoth·
cr will be at Nogales. Ariz. Two
mobile units also will be deployed, he
said.
·

Canada warns of border chaos unless U.S. law changed

TORONTO (AP)- Usually low·
key in their dealings with Washing·
ton, Canadian diplomats are turning
bellicose in their campaign against a
new U.S. immigration. law they say
will. create
severe backlogs at border
.
crossmgs.
.
ROME (AP) -'- Gianni Versace, . minors, were not immediately availCanadians
would
be
forced
to
wait
the Italian designer who was slain in able.
ANSA said Versace . left some hours at the border whether they were
Miami in July, designated his niece ,_:
Allegra as principal heir to his mul- $30,000 to companion Antonio embarking on a Aorida vacation or a
timillion-dollar fortune, according to D' Adamo as well as the right to live quick shopping trip to Buffalo, Canain any of the·designer's residences. dian officials contended Tuesday.
Italian news reports Tuesday.
The U.S. law, passed by Congress
The report theorized that nothing
Allegra is the daughter of Verlast
year, would require all foreigners
sace's sister and business partner, was left to the two children of Ver·
sace' s brother, Santo, because he to fill out visa fonns upon entering
Donatella Versace.
.
Versace's will, dated in SeP!ember holds a larger share- 35 percent- die United States, starting in Sep·
1996 and read in July, gave Allegra of the family-run company than does tember 1998. Currently, Canadians
are exempt from visa requirements
most of the estate, accordi!ig to the Donatella, with 20 percent
ANSA news agency and tile private
Estimates have put the co.mpany's and most simply answer a few verbal
questions before crossing the border.
TV network Canale Cinq~e . Versace value at $500 million.
was fond of calling Allegra "my htWith Versace's death. Donatella
tie princess," ANSA noted.
assumed his mantle as the creative
'
To Donatella's other child, Daniel, force in the-company. Sant,o is the
Versace left his art colloction, which company's business manager.
BEIJING (AP) - Delegates to a
includes works by Picasso, ANSA
Italian news-reports said the com- major Chinese Communist Pany conreported.
·
. pany had scheduled a special strate- gress are uniting behind crucial ecoThe report valued Versace's gy meeting for Tuesday afternoon of nomic reforms and ideological
wealth at $60 million but did not csti· top officials, but Versace spokespe&lt;&gt;- changes underpinning the policies, an
mate Allegra's share.
ple this week declined to comment on official report said today.
Calls to cOnlinn the repon went the report.
· .&gt;
The communist faithful life
unanswered Tuesday night at the
A pending public stock offering enthused by proposed capitalist-style
company's press office in Milan. The has been valaled at $350 million .
cures for sluggish state indusuies and
ages of the two children, who arc
plans to enshrine economic pragma-tism _as party doctrine, the official
Xinhua News Agency said.
"Their consensus has constituted
.

chides Florida·Gators for rema-rks about Tennessee

By DOUG FERGUSON

'

"At least at certain positions."
Cooper said it was necessary to
stamp out the mistakes that have held
Ohio State back in two easy victories
-'-and could cost them in the future.
"We need to have a real good
week of practice to correct the number of mistakes we're making, mental mistakes on both sides of the
ball," he said. "The offensive line's
got to know who to block and make
sure that we don' t tum people loose
on our quarterback.
"That's_ the thing I fear this
week."
Arizona's hyperactive and ultraaggressive defense is central to all of
CoopjOr's fears.

The Deily Sentinel • Page 7

Attempts to exempt Canadians
from the new law have failed, and
Canadian officials this week abandoned quiet diplomacy.
"Frankly we are alanned, disap·
pointed and just a !inle f"!strated ,"
Doug Waddell, deputy head of mission at the Canadian Embassy in
.Washington, said in aspeech to. U.S.
businessmen.
Canadian officials say the law
runs counter tu numerous initiatives
aimed at streamlining border.fonnal·
ities between the world's two largest
trading partners.
Under the legislation, each visit to
the United States by Canada's 29 million resideniS would require filling
out a visa form. Canadian officials
foresee huge traffic backups at such

busy crossings as the .Detroit· Wind.
sor tunnel and the Rainbow Bridge at
Niagara Falls.
"Imagine for a moment the lrneups,'.' Waddell said. "Lineups which
·- include both Canadians and Amcri·
cans. Lineups that extend perhaps
miles at already busy border crossing
points."
foreign Minister Lloyd Ax worthy
said the controls would be "a major
sort of barrier to the almost millions
of transactions that take place across
the Canada-U.S. border." Canadians .
annually make 76 million visits to the
United States, according to the latest
statistics.
"It's something the United States
better look at very carefully," Ax worthy said. ·

Canadian Ambassador Raymond
Chretien said he had been assured by
some members· of Congress that
Canada would not he subject to 1he
law. But the U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service has thus far
balked at allowing exceptions and
plans to launch a test project sOQn at
the Thousand Island bridge that links
upstate New York to Ontario. ·
Waddell said there is no need for
test
"A herd of sheep headed north·

bound in the southhound lanes and
south in the northbound lanes of
Interstate 81 would produce the same
result. Do we really need a pilot pro-ject' Can't we anticipate the &gt;haos it
will create?" he said.

China's Communists unite behind party meeting's reforms
.

.

. . . llaly fights U.S. plan to
reform Security. Council Mlr's sysJem
The U.S. plan unveiled in July
would
have developing countries of
has enlisted the help ofltalian-American organizations to fight a U.S. pr&lt;&gt;- Africa. Asia and Latin America
posal that would give Germany, choose three new permanent memJapan and three developing countries bers.
Washington supports giving perpermanent seats on the U.N. Securimanent scats to Oennany and Japan
ty Council.
The Italians, the fifth-largest con- because of their economic power. But
' tributors to the U.N. budget, feel that.would leave Italy the only major
slighted by the plan to reform the European _country without permanent
,: United Nations' most powerful body. slat us.
France and Britain already are per·'
The U.S. proposal "snubs one of
manent
members, along with the
America's most valued allies, Italy, .
United
States.
China and Russia " and in the process, ltalian - Ameri~
which
all
have
veto power on the
cans," Martin Picillo, president of the
councii:
Ten
other
seats rotate under
Conference of Presidents of Major
•, Italian-American Organi1.ations, said tw&lt;&gt;-year tenns.
The Italians have submitted their
• Tuesday.
i
Developing countries - the own reform plan.-calling for increas~ J1lnjority of the U.N. General Asscm· ing the number of ·non-permanent
; · bly - have been increasing the seals.
In Rome, Italian Foreign Minister
:: pressure to expand the Security
Lamberto Dini called the U.S. pr&lt;&gt;~ Council to reOcct changes in the
~ -world since the end of World War 11.
posal "unfair" and "undemocratic.."
~
~
.
UNriCD NATIONS (AP) -Italy

, Interest rate hikes likely
J

to keep inflation down

;
HONG KONG (AP) - The
: fan:es that have tamed U.S. inflation
are probably temporary. and interest
r~te rises _
are likely, the International
Monetary Fund says.
·
Forecasting 3.75 percent growth
this year and 2.5 percent in 1998 for
. tile world's biggest economy, the
·. IMF teport released today lauds the
seventh straight year of U.S. economic expansion.
·
It says "prudent" macroeconom·
ic~ have combined well with "an
e~ceptionally dynamic private s~ctor
and a responsive labor market."
· 'The report warns that "the con-·
tinued surge in the stock market and
the strength of consumer and bus!·
ness confidence suggest that the rrsk
of overheating is still present."
IMF research director Michael
, Mussa indicated that any interest rate
: hike by the U.S. Federal Reserve .
·· would be too small to have a "b1g ' shock effect" on markets,
:
"Some further firming of a mod. : cst.amount over the next six months
: or so" might be necessary, he told a
• news conference, adding: "There's
· no reason to believe 1he Fed has a
long way to go."
·
; . The projected slowing of growth,
based on expectations of tighter mon·
etary policy, means inflation should
change little, says the IMF report .
It notes that fiscal tightening

I

.

should balance the U.S. budget by
2002. but that a bigger effort will be
needed to raise national savings and
reduce the external deficit.
The IMF urges the United States
to spur higher income for those
whose living standards have stagnated in the past two decades. Invest·
ment in education and training should
be increased, it says.
The seiJii-annual report was issued
ahead of next week's IMF-World
Bank meeting in Hong Kong.

the most important achievement of
the congress," the news agency said.
Xinhua's account of unanimity
comes the day before the weeklong
congress ends. The delegates more than 2,000 senior leaders. revolutionary elders, provincial power·
brokers and a few model workers arc expected Thursday to approve
General-Secretary Jiang Zcmin's
platfonn and choose a ntw policy·
setting Central Committee,
The presidium. 217 of the con·

grcss· most innucntial members,

· crship with allies from Shanghai, his
were .scheduled to meet again later power base.
today. Xinhua said in a separate
Jiang's performance at the conreport. It did not divulge the meet· gress is seen as a gauge of his powing's agenda. But since the presidium er. Titc meeting. held every five
already has approved the platform, yearS, is his first without his mcntor
the power.-brokcrs arc likely to focus Deng Xiaoping.the senior leader and
.on thorny leadership changes.
pioneer of China's market reforms
Pany sources, diplomats and who died in February.
Hong Kong media have said·diffcrTrying to claim Deng's mantle,
cm:cs remain among key groups over Jiang has. proposed inserting the
dividing up crucial posts. Jiang is elder's pragmatic approach
under fire for trying to pack the lead1

back on-line
MOSCOW (AP)- Mir's orien·
tation system was back on-line today.
keeping the space station pointed
toward the sun and recharging solar
batteries that were drained during the
most recent computer breakdown.
Lights were switched back on in
most of the station. The crew had
been using only limited light for more
than two days .in order to save energy while assembling a replacement
computer.
_
. The crew was expected to recon·
nect · the electricity supply to the
Priroda module, which had been cut
off from power since a space collision
in June, the ITAR-Tass news agency
reported, citing Mission Control officials.
The collision with a cargo ship
badly damaged the Mir's Spektr
module, which has been sealed off,
and caused energy problems for the
Priroda module. The Mir station is
made up of six modules.
The computer crash Sunday -the
fourth in two months -'- posed no
danger for the crew of two Russians
and one American, who were able to
keep essential functions operating.
But the breakdown added to the
doubts aboutthe 11 -year-old station's
safety.
Critics say the station, which had
been designed to last only five years,
has become unsafe and should be
abandoned. But Russian officials,
insisting that the problems are well
under control, want to keep Mir oper·
ating at leas! until the international
space st~tion is put in orbit. a mission
set -to start next year.

Miss Marjorie Merrits ·
missionary for the
Church of the
Nazarene in Papua
"Encourage your children to read every day. ·
New Guinea, will be
One day they may take the world by storm:'
speaking
at the
Chester Nazarene Church this Wednesday
evening at 7:00 pm.
i
Evei,rone Wekome
ITHIS LIT~AACY 1'1ESSAGE IS lkOUGHT TO YOU 8Y THIS NEWSPA.PEA AND THE NEWSPAPU AHOCI,t.TION OF ~MEAICA '

The Daily Sentinel

�&lt;

'

I

..
..... I • The Dally 81 1UMI

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ABC ends NBC's winning streak in television ratings
helping the network on a night it works were close behind. NBC fin· followed by the WB 's 2.4 rating and ly Hills 90210" and "Melrose
IJ DAVID BAUDER
AP Tile;
Wrtler
Place."
ished second with an 8.2 rating and 4 share.
usually has few viewm.
The Emmy Awards show, with
As is the custom at Fox, it
NEW YORK (AP)- Maybe tha1
It !'~so was a good week for ABC 14 share, CBS had a 7.8 rating and
"TV is Good" lldvertisina campaign newsmap2ines: a Wednesday edi- 13 share and Fox had a 7.I rating Bryant Gumbel as the host, was jumped the gun on the new televibroadcast Sunday night on CBS and sion seasm, which officially begins
is sllltina to pay dividends foe ABC. tion of "PrimeTtme Live" featuring and 12 share.
A rating point represents 980,000 finished third for the week with a Sept. 22. CBS is showing many of
The network ended NBC's IS- the investigation into the JonBenet
I

I

week. Nielsen Media Rese~rth winDina ~ in the prime-time rank-

inp.
The four t&lt;ljl broldcast nctwocb
were e~tremely competitive, though,
sctiing the stage for an interesting
fall season.
.
ABC's telecast of the Miss America pageant Saturday finished seventh for the wetk. in the ratings,

~y

killing finished second in
the ratings; Barbara Walters'
"20120" interview with Michael ·
Jackson was lith and the new
Thursday "20/20" won its first
head-to-head · competil)on with
CBS' "48 Hours."
ABC had an 8.6 rating and 15
share, Nielsen said. The other net-

its premieres this week.
13.5 rating and 21 share.
NBC's "Nightly News," with an
Fox had a strong w~k, with its
repeat of the movie "True Lies" · 8.1 rating and 18 share, beat ABC's
rated I 5th for the week in competi· "World News Tonight" for the lith
straight week. ABC had. a 7.6 rating
tion with the Emmys.
The network scored a 36th-place and 17 share, wilh the "CBS
showing for the premiere of "Ally Evening News" scoring 6 .8 rating
McBeal" and had top-30 showings and IS share.
For the week of Sept. 8-14, the
for the season premieres of "Bever-

households, or I percent of the
nation's estimated 98 million TV
homes.
Share is the percentage of those
televisions in use that are tuned to a
given show during a specified time
period.
Among the emerging networks.
UPN had a 3.4 rating and 6 share,

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antibiotics to two("thirds of bronchitis sufferers who visited them in
their offices and half of commoncold sufferers and patients with
oth~r upper respiratory infections,
the researchers found.
That amounted to 12 million prescriptions, or one in every five

help..
"Every time we use an antibiotic,
we run the risk of promDling a ntibiotic resisfuncc, or drug · resistance,

tions in a single year for colds, bron·
chitis and other respiratory infec·
)ions against which the drugs are
almost always useless, ·a study
found.
Such indiscriminate use of antibiotics has contributed to the .emerg~nce of drug-resistant bacteria, a
growing problem in the United
States, the researchers said. · ·
More than 90 percent of upper
respiratory infections, including
bronchitis and colds, are caused by a
yirus and are therefore impervious
to antibiotics, researchers noted, in._
~ednesday's Journal of the Americao Medical Association.
Doctors usually know this, but
&amp;tudies have suggested they may
yield to pressure from patients - or
whal they perceive to be the
patients' expectations - to pre scribe a drug, even if it is unlikely to

by bacteria.'' said the lead author,
Dr. Ralph Gonzales of the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center in Denver.

'\

antibiotic prescriptions written for

In the past 10 to 15 years, doctors
have seen an epidemic of Strepto-

adults that year, the researchers said.
The 1992 figures were tbe latest
available for the study, but the 1995
numbers have since become avail~
abhi and are similar, Gonzales said.
Doctors have heen prescribing
antibiotics for upper respiratory
infections because until recently
they thought that it wouldn't hun,
and that a very small chance existed
that it might help, Gonzales said. ·
In an accompanying editorial, Dr.
Benjamin Schwanz of. the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
said "an immediate, and aggressive
response" is needed to combat inappropriate prescribing of antibiotics.
"We en~ourage all physicians to

coccus pneumoniae that iS resistant
to penjcillin and · penicillin derivatives, Gonzales said. The strain of
bacteria is a leading cause of ear and
sinus infections, meningitis and
other common and potentially seri·

ous illnesses.
Drug resistance has been blamed
on overuse of antibiotics and the
failure of some patients to take their
medicine properly. Some patients
stop taking their medication once
they feel hetter but hefore the infection has heen knocked out, enabling
the hardiest germs )o survive and
multiply.
In 1992, doctors prescribed

Meat Hot Dogs
I

BU~
I

Erika Arnott, 17 of Syracuse,
recently returned from a cruise to the
Bahamas, '1. part of the gift package
she receiv~ w"hen ·she won the
National America's Miss Divisional
Supreme Queen for Gingerbread
Productions.
The national pageant was held in
Dallas, Texa&lt; a1 the Harvey Hotel.
She won her way to the National
by winning Supreme Queen, age 7
and up for the State of Kentucky.
The state pageant paid her fees to
the National competition and pre·
sented her with a crown, satin jacket
and banner, along with a $500 bond.
At the National she competed
against girls from all over the United Stales and Canada. Erica won the

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examine their own practices and
identify where they can decrease
unnecessary antimicrobial use," he
said.
Patients can take the pressure off
their doctors by putting up with the
coughs that follow upperrespiratory
infections and can last for three
weeks, Gonzales said.
"Give your body's own immune
system enough time to clear the
infection," he said. Also, any patient
prescribed an antibiotic should consider asking the doctor: "Do you
really think I need this•"
In the study, rural doctors were
about twice as likely as urban ones
to prescribe an antibiotic for a cold,
bronchiti~ or other upper 'l'spiratory
infection, all other factors being
.
equal.
Gonzales speculated thai because
people in rural areas often travel far
to see doctors, the physicians may
be trying t.o head off bacterial com. plications that. could occur when the
patients are back home.

Syracuse teenager
winner in competition

Armour

bles

CHAISTY DANELLE

Attendinl were Ruth Ours, Virgi I
· and belorse Ours, Teresa, Bill, Ben
and Katelyn Lawver, Ginny and Bill
Huffman, Isabel, Tom and K1m
Edwards, Waid Hayman, Cheryle
Hayman, Ruby, Beryl, Rhonda, Jen·
nifer, Lewie, Li&amp;&amp;a, Jerrod and •
Jonathon Wolfe, Kindra, Gus and ,
Kirsten Moore, Marae and Bill
Packman, Dave Carpenter, How~
Bomberier, Gladys, Gary· and Bnan
Richlrdson, Dan, Donna, Danny,
Delta, Bryce, Debbie, Bethany,
BriM and Angela Sayre and Mor· .
••· Dan and Faith Hayman, April,
Erin and Mallory Roach, Roberta
Thaxton and &lt;lara May S&amp;IJCnl.

Ann

Keep reading: '
class education. I ·had no idea who I
Dear Ann Landers: I am writing was or what I could do until! joined
in response to that person who said the Navy. If I had not joined up, I
the 19-year-old loser had no place in probably would be in jail ordeact.by
the military. That letter had special now. Just sign me --Red, White and
significance for nie because I was Blue in Pen~acola, Fla.
once a 19-year-old loser. I had very
Dear Red: What a greattestimolittle motivation, low self-esteem, no nial. Thanks for the drum roll, and
role models, no job, no direction and here's a 21-gun salute to you for givno future. The United States Navy ing the Navy those well-deserved
took me in, and I have been here for kudos.
17 years.
Dear Ann Lande"': I live in a
The Navy saved me . I have very nice neighborhood. All the
learned self-control, leadership, dis- homes and lawns are well kept
cipline and the· value of self-esteem. except for one. The unkempt lawn is
I am now married to a wonderful directly across the street from ours,
woman and have four great kids so that is our "view."
I've been around the world several
In order to .keep our "view" and
times and have been given a first- the neighborhood looking decent, I

120ZPKG

Bi-Rite

Hayman
•
reun1on

vice and is pretty darned choosy
ahout who gets in. Frankly, I would
not want these kids fighting for me.
Most of them are low-IQ, unmotivated losers looking for a free ride.
At least if they are college dropouts,
their parents will pay the tab and not
stick the taxpayers.
I don 't want some guy who can't
pull his own weight endangering the
life of my son in the Navy. They
depend on each other. Evide ntly,
you have forgotten how special our
military people are. -- Mom in Arizona
Pear.Arizona Mom: Thank you
for your comments. I'm sure many
readers -will agree with you. There
. is, however, another point of view.

wrote 12 million antibiotic prescrip-

2 .... 1

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·ooes tf1e mllitary help you mature? Readers voice views

. By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
· AP Medical Writer
CHICAGO (AP) Doctors

8

nna

Wednesday, September 17, 1987

: Dear Ana Lande"': You need a
reality check. You had no business
sayipg that the anned services could
1!11 a great job with that 19-year-old,
fnossed-up kid. Adding insult to stu·
pidity, you said if the kid didn 't
m.a)&lt;e it, no sweal .. a lot of kids
on' I make it through college either.
;
The military does not want
an~ will not accept these problem
children. It is not a baby-sitting ser-

1

The Daily Sentinel
Paget
am more than willing 10 push my
lawnmower over their lawn a few
times a month . I do this on the days
[ mow ours, so it is not much trouble
on my pan.
The first time I did it, our neighbors were quite pleased and said so.
I even spread some weed killer on
their lawn. I would like to do it on a
regular basis. but my wife says I am
heing a darned fool. I say I should
do it for the sake of neighborhood
upkeep. home resale value, safety
for the neighborhood children and
weed , vermin and fir.e control.
·What do you say. Ann? Am I a
sucker•.I will follow your advice.-Keeping the Joneses Up With Us in
Oxnard , Calif.

Dear Ox: You sound like a generous guy with great instincts. By all

means, continue to do whatever you
can to keep the neighborhood IQOicing good. It enhances the value of
your property; and it also might
motivate your shlocky neighbors to
shape up.
I don't want to start a family,
fight. but il's your wife who is the
darned' fool for notappreciating the
decency and generous spirit of a guy
like you.
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century BIvd.. Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

Doctors are overprescribing antibiotics

Fresh
Glazed Donuts

Tracy Collins graduated Sept. S
from Hocking College School of
Nursing where she · completed
reqtlirements to become a licensed
poetical nurse. She, is the dauihter
of
Collins Johnson and the late .
Robert E. Collins.

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Trina Lee of Pomeroy announces
the birth of a . daughter, Chaisty
Danielle Abbott, born Aug. 24 at the
Holzer Medical Center, born on
Aug. '24 at the Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed seven
pounds, eiaht ounces. Maternal
grandparents are Sid and Carol Hayman of Rutland.
·

~·degree

top 10 shows, their netwocb and
ratinas, were:
· "Seinfeld," NBC, 16.0; "PrimeTime Uve," ABC, 13.9; "Emmy
Awards," CBS, 13.5; "3rd Rock
From the Sun," NBC, 13 .~; "NFL
Monday Niaht FOO(ball: Kansas
City at Oakland," ABC, 13.4;
"Frasier,"NBC, 13.0; "77thAnnuaL
Miss America Pageant," ABC, 12.S; ~
"Friends," NBC, 12.3; "Dateline ·
NBC" (Tuesday), NBC, 12.1 ; .
"ER, II NBC, 12.0.
•

By'The Bend

s

BUCKEYE, BIG BEND, GALUPOUS,
OHIO VALLEY, TWIN RIVERS

talent title in the compet1t10n. In
addition to the cruise, she won adiamond ring, pink ice bucket ~row~
satin national jacket, and banner
·
along with a $1000 bond .
ln the Bahamas she visited Port
Lucaya and Nassau.
On the return trip from Texas,
she and her sister, Tara, enjoyed Sii.
Flags over Texas Amusement Park.
They visited former Meigs
County music star, Sheila DeLayne
in Nashville, Tenn., and appeared on
television on the Country Music
Show, Wild Horse Saloon, where
they were interviewed by Host Katy
Haas and given an autographed picture.

Abbott reunion held
ERIKA ARNOTT

Local chapter top
money raiser for
Cancer Society

Beat of the .Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich ·

I never knew hefore that there
was a local connection with the pop·
ular Gravely garden tractor, did you?
Middleport's Bruce Fisher sent
along a detailed account of the
development of the Gravely tractor
by Benjamin Franklin Gravely.
According to the excellent
accol!nt written by John L. Marra,
Gravely was a resident of South
Charleston, W.Va., when he invented the motorized garden plow way
back in 1916.
Gravely was known, for inventing
things and secured 65 U. S. patents
in his lifetime but the best known of
his creations was the Gravely garden
tractor.
He.opened a photography studio
in Huntington, W. Va., around 1900
and it was during this time that he
hecame acquainted with a young
lady from Pomeroy, Eljzaheth Susan
Downie. They were married at
Pomeroy in 1902.
The photo studio was moved to
Charleston, W.Va., and--thrived for
60 years before closing in 1963.
In South Charleston, Gravely
started his work on th~ Gravely tractor. Gravely bought a farm in Point
Pleasant, W. Va. , and the family
eventually moved there.
This allowed frequent visits
between Mrs. Gravely and her many
Pomeroy rela1ives. Incidentally,
according to Marra, three of the
early tractors can he seen at the
Mason County State Farm Museum
· in Mason County.
Some reports say that Gravely
was attempting to invent a post hole
digger when he stumbled on to the
, cultivator idea by accident.
It's told that the post hole .digger
got away from him, during i1s initial
trial run and plowed a long furrow

thus developing the idea into the
garden tractor.
The new invention soon became
a pan ofthe agricultural community.
As the popularity of the new
equipment grew, Gravely would
have blueprints of speci(ic parts
drawn to scale with the pattern then
being made and taken to the West
Virginia Malleable Iron Co., in Point
Pleasant for casting. · ·
Marra states that Gravely spent
five years in designing and redesigning his motorized plow until he
patented the sig~ificant invention.on
Dec. 8, 1916.
In 1922, he started his own business, the Gravely Motor Plower and.
· Cultivator Co., in Dunbar and begM'
manufacturing the first motor plows
in 1922.
·
Within a few years, the company
had sales outlets in the major agri·
culture producing areas of Florida
and California and sales representatives were established in several .foreign countries.
Then came the great dcpressioul
and in the early 1930's businesa
declined dramatically and in 1937
Gravely retired from lhe day-today management of the company. D.
Ray Hall took over the company and
turned it into a financial giant.
The company was purchased by
the Studebaker Corporation in 1960
for a reported $12.5 million.
Gravely died in January, 1953, at
the age of 76, four months after the
death of his wife, Elizabeth Downie.
And, of course, the Gravely nilme
still lives with us across the nation
and the Downie name ·is still with us
in Pomeroy.
So, indeed , I guess it is a small
world. Do keep smiling.

Larry Abbott, Sr. gave the blessThe families of the late Sterl and
ing
before the potluck dinner.
Edith Abbott held a reunion recently
at Star Milll'ark in Racine.
Those attending from out of town
were Larry and Betty Abhott, Sr.,
and Larry and Sami Abhott, Jr., Casa
Grande, Ariz.; Harold and Billie
Abbott, Dick and Doris Abbott,
Reedsville.
Joe and Bobbie Abbott and Monika Carpenter, Coolville. Danny
Wears, Tom, Nancy, Tommy and
Angie Fields; Jessi Hodge, Crystal
Richards, Cecil, Joan, Curtis, and
Sabrina Lyons, Carol and Jackie
Scarberry., Dixie, Trevor, Deidra
and Bunni Peters; Leslie, Chris,
Matthew and Daniello Thomas and
two guests, all of West Virginia.
Local family members and guests
attending were Virginia Abbott
Wears, Bud and Trudie Abbott Stewan, Jay, Debbie, J. T. and Jorden
.
. ..
.
Evans, Christy and Amber Blackston, Tim Faulk, Michael Wyatt,
Fred and Ann Werry.
Richard, Kim, Bryce and Caleb
Davis, Rusty. Tammi, Adam and ·
Dylan Lavender,.Doug, Tracy,
Cheyenne and Shandi Beaver,
Benny and Jan Eblin, Doug, Cindy,
•
Charlie and Nathan Eblin, Don,
The Sports Injury Clinic will be staffed by Dr. Kelly Roush
Vivian and I)onnie May, Roger and
Marlene Swartz and granddaugh·
(Chiropractic and Sports Injury Physician~ Nationally Certified
te[s, Ashleigh and Kaitlyn Graham.
Athletic Trainers, an x-ray technician and support staff.
Dave, Terri and Scott Carsey and
a friend, Matt and ¥andy Combs,
Parental consent is required for evaluations.
Dennis and Pam Wolfe, Jerry, Nan.
Tory and Toby Swartz, Cindy Steward. Billie Jo Dye, John, Reta and
.
Alicia Ord.
(
. Entertainment was provided by
the Big Ben&lt;) Cloggers under the
direction of Vivian May.
GifiS were presented to those
Sycamor~
who traveled the farthest, Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Abbot, Sr. and Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Abbott, Jr., CasaGrande,
'Ariz.
~5244
Also reoognized were the oldest
family member there. Harold
Abbott, and the youngest, Kaitlyn
Graham.

Holzer Clinic
Saturday Morning
Sports Injury Clinic

.

A total of $1,152 was raised by Parade, in Pomeroy on Oct. 4. Car. Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter. Bet.• olyn Grueser Will serve as chmrman.
VICe-preSident Carol. McCulSigma Phi Sorority, for the Amencan Cancer Society's Relay for L1fe Iough preSided at the meetmg held at
walk, Carol Adams. service commit- the parish hall at Grace EpiScopal
tee chairman. reported at a recent Church m Pomeroy. . . .
A· letter With apphcat1on forms
meeting held at Grace . Episcopal
Parish House, Pomeroy.
for legacy, scholarsh1p, .envoy, and
: Adams thanked members for tl}f sponsored member prowams from
tremendous support given the Can- Beta Sigma Ph1 International Office
cer Society; noting that the chapter was explamed.
.
F~rther .International correspon·
wi.i the largest money contributor.
)'\.dams reminded memhers about dence pertamed to life membership
. serving the bloodmobile on Oct. 15 status for Velma Rue and Clance
and the need fpr several volunteers. Krauttcr, and Jean PoweH and
She noted that there is a critical Dorothy· Sayre who are eltg1ble for
.
blood shortage.
exemp lar degrees.
The service committee will ,
. The family of the late sorortty
again. be collecting items for Seren· siSter Ruby Baer sent a thank-.you to
ity House on the evening of the . Preceptor Beta Beta for the yellow
c~apter's holiday dinner.
rose ~nd the support g1ven by the
Memhers were asked to stock a soronty dunng her tllness and deat~ ,
bag for Serenity House with personJane Walton gave the treasurers
al' hygiene items, children's toys. report. Charlotte Elberfeld reported
socks and other necessities such as for the ways and means commttlee. ,
have been given in the past.
Carolyn Grueser. Jean Powell. ,
In new business, Clarice Krautter and Carol McCullough served
d the American Heart relres hmcnts to those attendmg,
· th Y Say re , Carol
announce
Association's walkathon would he Janc wa1ton, Doro
held soon and inquired whether the Adams. Joan Corder, Vera Crow,
Charlotte Elberfeld, Clance . Kraut·
sorority wished to participate.
Due to other commitmenls, it ter, Velma R_uc, Rq..'\C Sisson, ~-e~a
d cided not to join the walk but · Vaughan, Shtrley!Beegle, and \ISJI·
~a~a~e a cash donation .
ing Florida chapter memher Ma•·
In ·other business chapter mem - garc l Stewart.
.·
.
berS agreed 10 enter a Hoator march·
The next meetmg wJII be at the
ing unit in the Stemwheel Festival church on Sept. 25.

Sports injuries need prompt attention.

Holzer Clinic's newly expa~ded Sports Medicine Center will be
providing Sports Injury Care beginning Saturday, August 30, 1997
and continuing
. through Saturday, November l, 1997.
Walk-ins are welcome beginning at 9:00am.
The goal is to provide a comprehensive program
to return the athlete to the previo~s level ofcompetition.

Holzer Occupational Health,
Sports Medicine and
Rehabilitation Center
4th and
Streets
Gallipolis, Ohio

(614)

urJ Hol~er Clinic...

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Wedn11day, September 17, 1817

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: Pllge10 •The Dilly Sentinel
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

IJ JAN CIENSKI

APB ul
Writer
RICHMOND, Va. (AP)- For SO
years, Reynolds Wrap has sealed
! Sllldwicbes, preserved leftovers and
~ -twisted around antennas- even
: improved television reception.
:
The Smithsonian Institution

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today was to m:ognize lhe alu- harried wife to find a tutkcy pan she
minum foil's golden annivcnary by could use to roast Thanksgiving dinincluding an original box of it in its ner.
Domestic Life collection.
· Figuring he had little chance of
The idea for Reynolds Wrap was finding a pan on a holiday, the .execconceived just before World War U utive pulled from his brie(casc some
when Reynolds Metals executive Sllllple foil the company was planClarence Manning was asked by his ning to market to commercial
kitchens.
Mrs. Manning cooked the turkey
.
.
.
to perfection, and Riclilllond-bascd
Reynollls Metals began exploring
foil's suitability as a household
product.
Reynolds Wrap was launched on
Sept. 16, 1947, with an 'elaborate
campaign to explain 1he thin. shiny

and housewives.
" Back in 1947 there weren't
many supermarkets, so we had to go
out into mom-and-pop stores," said
Charles M. Mapes, 84, who was
Reynolds' first foil salesman. "The
· reaction was wonderment. Cooking
food with a wrapping material was a
. brand new idea."
Early boxes of foil came with a
pamphlet containing instructions
and recipes so homemakers would
know what to do with it.
The loyal sales force made the
brand one of the strongest in America. .John Lowrie, vice presillent and
general manager ·of ~nolds' con-

:•HundnaII fa mI. Iy .
.enjoys re un' I•0 n ·
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!~jgtl~'!E ~~~?..];:=.;
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•- nail Jr. and Connie Phelps of Albany. Dale Hudnall, Steve Russell, R1ck
~- Games were pii\Yed and . prizes Wahlenmace, Brian Phelps, Mindy
~ won including a quilt 111ade by Taylor, Linda Douglas, Jennif King
C Lenora Hudnall won by Randy Hud- Lauderinilt, Amber Laudermilt,
: naiL Katherine Wright won the doll Jamie Jeffers, JoAnna Jeffers, Joan
; handmade by Addie Hudnall and a King, J.ulic King, Shawn Reeves,
; jar of candy was won by Diana · Dave Reeve_f, Gloria King, Larry
: Couts.
King, Joe Christy, Mary Christy,
•
Traveling the farthest was Delbert McBride, ftuth Steffel,
. ; Katherine Wright of Akron and the Linda Harrelson, Jerry Phelps, Tim
'-oldest attending was Lillie Ran- Hollonear, Jimmie Hollonear, Addie
• dolph. Youngest was Cheyanna Hudnall, Howard Hudnall, Kenny
: Douglas, 9-months-old.
Hudnall. Amy Hudnall, Rachel Hud:
Two deaths were recorded this . nail, April, Betty and Lisa Blanken~ year: Dorothy Woodruff, fonnerly of ship,
" Albany, and Pamela King Priddy,
Darrell Lee, Bonnie Douglas,
: formerly of Rutland. One binh was George Douglas, Paul Douglas,
recorded, Cheyanna Douglas.
. Cheyanna Douglas, Ronnie Crum,
Attending were Lenora McNutt Mary ·Bailey, David, Stephanie,
Hudnall, Randy Hudnall, Glenna Stacy, Tracy and Tiffany Bailey, Jim
: Wade, Bi_li Wade Jr., Katherine Hudnall, Charlotte Hudnall, Steve
: Wright, Diana Couts, . Stacey Suey, Butch Han. Joe Han. Lillie
: Thomas, Zachery Thomas, Jim Hud- Randolph, Jared King, Jeff King.
• nail Jr., Chad Hudnall, Tiffany Holt, Tony Reeves, Lloyd Hudnall, Penny
: Jimmy Han, Bill Hudnall, Jenny Hudnall, Lloyd Hudnall Jr., Richard
: Han, H110ld Han, Jr. McDonald, Hudnall, Eric Hudnall, Charley
: Doug Parsons, Miss Addie Hudnall, Hudnall, Bernie Sharpe, June
: Tonya Hudnall, Rob King, Tony Sharpe, BJ. Sharpe, Christine
: King, Edna King, Bob Hudnall. Sharpe, Tom Lee.
·
;. Howie Hudnall, Howie Hudnall Jr..
Music was played by Doug Par: Kay Ia Hudnall, Kathy Hudnall, sons, Harold Han, Joe Christy, Jared
a , Melinda Douglas, Jason Stll'l'her, King, Ronnie Crum and. Jr. MeDonConnie Phelps, David Hudnall Jr., ald. Next year's reunion will be held
: Andrea Coen, David Boring, Mike the first Sunday in August.
~ -Hudnall, Becky Hudnall, Alfred
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Weclneeday, Seplember 17, 1997

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but people quickly found-. more
imaginative uses for the sheets of
foil.
People living far from 1V transminers fashioned elahorale anachrnents out of foil to catch distant sig~
nals.
Drivers with a need for speed
stuffed foil into the hubcaps of their
cars in the futile hope that it would
·foil police radar.
.
"There arc a lot of cute ideas out
there, but the unique ideas are not
going to sell a lot of aluminum foil,"
Lowrie said.
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arrangements.
Arnold showed slides of her gardens and explained the plants and
their uses. She told of several methods of P,rtserving flowers: freeze
drying, food dehydrator, microwave
oven, silica gel and hang drying.
Lambs ear, tari-agoh and bee
balm are good dried in the food
dehydrator. Pick lavender when bees
are on .it. Plant mul-dragons head to
draw bees to your garden. Bees are
essential for pollinating.
Arnold had a display of soaps she
makes and scents with various herbs
and flowers. She also had picked

·fresh flowers and passed them
around and told what they were and
their uses. Arnold raised the plants
iri her greenhouse and sells plants in
the spring. Pick plants to hang dry,
tie with rubber bands, which keeps
them tight while drying. Wreaths,
swags, flower arrangements in baskets are her specialty to sell. Some
unusual things were lion's tail, Hopi
dye amaranth and Parker's gold
achilla. Case Western University has
1he largest herb garden in the world,
it was noted.
Arnold and her guest, Mildred
Shumway, are graduates of the mas-

ter gardening program offered last
winter at Athens.
'
Plans call to hold the six-week
course in Meigs County this winter.
For more information call Hal
Kneen · a1 1hc Coun1y Extension
Office.
Af1er the mee1ing, a buffet was
served by hostess Betty Dean. Door
prizes were given by members.
Two meetings have been held at
· the home of Eleanor Knight 10 work
on 1997-98 yearbooks. The next
meeting will be a tour ' of Lui a
Toban's gardens.

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IIIRpGER 2%, ..1.%, 3:25%, FAT FREE SKIM PLUS,
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8UTTERMILK OR CHCJCOIATE

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HEALTH
.BEAU It-CARE

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·Gallon·

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il . Holiday

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The Community Calendar is pubt"'Jished as a flee service to non-profit
f groups wishing to announce.meeting
.and special events. The calendar IS
!I not designed to promote sales or
iii fund raisers of any type. Items arc
: printed as space permits and cann01
• be 1uaranteed to run a specific num~ ·her of days.

I

= WEDNESDAY
·= HAII.RISONVILLE

- Meigs
; County Fire Association meeting,
: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m at lhe Scipio
• Township Fire Department..

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U.S.D.A. CHOICE

8oneless

Kroger
Dl~

~Get One

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Town and Country Expo.

SATURDAY
.
LONG BOTI'OM- Special services, . Mt. Olive Community
Church, Long Bllltom, Wednesday
through Saturday, 7 p.m. Elder
Charles:Bush to speak.

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MIDDL,EPORT- Songfest, Old
Bethel Free Will Baptist Churc~. 7
p.m. with Eanhen Vessels and Leslie
Allen. Revival stans Sunday and ·
continues through Sept. 27. 7 p.m.
each evening. Dave Johnson, speaker; special singing. . .

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POMEROY - Salisbuty flood
•·
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program Wel!ne.sday, 6

SUNDAY
RACINE - Homecoming lerI
p,.m. at the Senior Citizens Center.
vices to be held ai the Mt. Moriah
.
Church of God, Mile Hill Road,
:
POMEROY - Meigs Athletic . Racine. Sunday, .with morning ser;
:... Boosters. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at vices at 9:45 un. . Dinner on 1he .
: Meigs High School.
grounds at noon. special singing by
1hc Glory land . Believers, Poin! .
THURSDAY
· Pleasant, ( to I :30p;m.
Middleport .
• POMEROY
Child Conservation League will .
.:_ Reunion of fami- ·
• - t Thursday at 1. p.m. at t~ Rock liesRUll.AND
of Charles Reed and Oscar ·
Springs United Methodist Church.
Hysell, Sunday, Rutland Firemen's
.Park, dinner at l .p.m.
~
POMEROY '"7' Rock ~prings
Better Health CluJ&gt;. Th.ursday,ul ~-md.
-lfomecoming
at·the .. ,.----~--·------·--·--·--·~..,
: at the Rock Spnngs · . Me. Mt. RACINE
MOriah Church
of God SundaY.
1 Methodist Church. Lenora Le•then with morning se~ces at 9:45. Din' : : . ..~~~~
II · will be hostess . . · ·
·
ner at noon with: afternoon services
Q:'!lllfi'OIJ.
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beginning
l-f:30.
·special
singing.:
Will
lftlfft,: ...,
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POMEROY ""':' Meigs .County Pastor James Satterfield welcomes ·
: BOard of 1he American Cane~ Soc_•- . the public.
.1
: · ety, Tl)ursday, S p.m. at V~ter;ms
·RACINE ..:..; Annual' homecomMemorial Hospital conference
·ing,
M~rse · Chapel
Church,
; room.
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~ Lay·A·Ways

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Monday - Friday 9:30-6:00
Saturday 9-3

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at 10 . a.nt.,
diimer
at nQ&lt;on,
.: FRIDAY
. . . ·vices
i{oad,
Sunday,
ser·
'Racine/Portland
POMEROY .;..,: . Garden Clubs afternoon service, I to 4 p.m. with '
asked to have rc~sentative tt Roek ]ocal singers.
Spnngs Fairgrounds Friday from 5
to 9 P:m. to help setup booths for
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Community
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hosted

- The 73nl annual Hayes-Young Paul Hayes; oldest female, Grace
School Reunion was. held Ri£hardson; youngest, Mitchell
: • on Aug. 10 in Shade at the Old Hoi- Metts; traveled farthest, Paul Hayes.
'. iday School grounds witb 75 in
Silent prayer. was offered for
-attendance.
·
those who had_ passed away dunng
•.
The afternoon program was the year, · wh1ch were: Kathleen
opened by President Craig .Dougan - Gilkey Ellis, Raymond Chaney and
" .arid the prayer for the basket lunch. B1ll Young. .
..
:- was gi~en by Charles Sauters.
. Fam1ly p1ctures were taken,
! . After lunch, memories from the games were played and prizes
~ past were read by Dougan, Hollie awarded to the youngsters.
~ Hayes and Paul Hayes. Songs were
. The afternoon program c~ded
sung by Tami Warmke. Dougan and wnh group song•ng. of ~recoous
• Colleen .Brickles. Melons were Memones. Next years rcunoon will
: awarded to Kandicc Dougan, Brit- be held Aug. 9, 1998, on the school
; nee Sauters and Charity Still. Gift~. grounds.
were awarded to the oldest male .

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106 North Second Ave:
Middleport, Ohio 45760

(614) 992·2635
1·800..426-5581

FURNITURE 6 JEWIRY, INC.

Rain Chec:k: Que 10 conditions beyond our Control, we may run out ot an advertised special during 0\lf sale. If this should happen to your purchase, ask 101' a Rail Check 1hal guarantees you
the aa1e price when the item be&lt;:omes available.

fiiiiii~~~~~~~

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During our Grand Re-opening sale

·,

Denise Arnold of Fragrant Fields
was the guest speaker a' the recent
open meeting of the Chester Garden
Club held at the Chesler United
Methodist Church.
Devotions were by Lula Tohan
on "Womens Hair" and "Suitcases".
Thanks for Sunshine remembrances were read from Ralph Parker, Elizabeth Hayes and David
Koblentz. Kathryn Mora is to do
sunshine projects this month for
Debbie Miller.
Four-foot yards1icks were given
as · favors for the meeting to each
member to use when making flower

•

me see our new look and save

.

iHayes-Young

~• reunion

•

can be found in 70 percent to 80 percenu of America's kitchens.
Reynolds has donated one of
those first rolls to the Smithsonian,
which accepted it as pan of its
record on the lives of women in the
mid-20th century, said Rodris Roth,
a curator in the Smithsonian's Division of Social History.
"One facet of this woman was
her place in the kitchen, and what
people had on their kitchen.counters
and shelves," Roth said.
No exhibii including ·the roll is
currently planned.
Reynolds' Wrap may have been
used mainly for wrappins baked

·cetallic hsbeetseto
baffised rt.taielers .rumerprodGuctsdiavision.rsaiddthefme··
_potnatoes andclining rolasuting pbans.

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The Dilly Sentinel • Page 11

Reynolds Wrap turns 50 - is inducted into Smithsonian

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Pomeroy • MlddleP,Ort, Ohio

�Pllge 12. The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

Florida millionaire seeks
court ruling barring eviction
JERUSALEM (AP) -A F\orida Netanylhu; urged the settlers to take
millionaire today asked the Supn:me the compromise. "I am very afraid
Court to bar police from upelling that if then: is no agn:ement over this,
Jewish settlers from two homes he there will be a forcible evacuation,"
has rented to them in an Arab neigh- · Peled told The Associated Press.
borhood of Jerusalem, Israel radio
Peled said several members of
said.
Netanyahu's Cabinet wen: demandThe appeal signaled that Prirr.: ing·that the settlers he forced out of
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's the two buildings.
efforts to negotiate a compromise
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat
with the settlers and their landl{lrd said allowing any senlers to n:main
and patron, Irving Moskowitz, ~ere would be a violation of the peace
not successful.
I
agreements. " We hope it will be
Netanyahu has been trying to solved very quickly. Otherwise there
defuse the latest Mideast crisis by will he a negative reaction," Arafat
getting the senlers to leave the Arab said in Gaza City.
neighborhood of,Ras al-Amud in east
In a sign that the Palestinians ll(ere
Jerusalem, the · sector of the city abandoning their initial restraint, the
claimed by the Palestinians as a PLO headquarters in Jerusalem
future capital.
announced that a protest in Ras a)Under a proposed compromise, Amud was planned for this afternoon.
the II settlers would temporarily
The Settlers remained inside their
leave the two homes in Ras ai-Amud new walled compound this morning,
and he replaced by 10 Jewish semi- which they have secured with surnary students who would renovate the veillance cameras and floodlights to
buildings. Netanyahu would recog- spot possible .infiltrators at night.
nize the settlers' right to settle in the Three burly private security guards
neighborhood.
were posted outside the iron gates.
Earlier today, the settlers rejected Stickers on the gate read "Jerusalem
the deal, and Moskowitz said through IS ours."
a spokesman that he would not interOutside the gates, Israeli and
fere in the settlers' decision. ·
Palestinian peace activists were
At midday, an attorney for camped in two protest tents. PalesMoskowitz filed an appeal with the tinian Amal Nashashibi, whose tamSupreme Coun, asking for a ruling ily can trace back its roots in
that bar police from evicting the set- Jerusalem for hundreds of years, got
tiers by force, Israel radio said.
.into a yelling match with right-wing
The appeal said that the govern- Jewish activists from the group
menl has not presented any evidence Women in Green, many of whom'are
that the presence of the settlers foreign-born .
endangered national security, the
"Where did you come from?"
radio said.
·
·. Mrs. Nashashibi shouted at the
Israel's deputy education minister, · women. "Go back to Brooklyn! This.
Moshe Peled, who had tried to medi- is our land."
ate betWeen Moskowitz and
"Take your businessman." she

added,- referring to Moskowitz. "He
is disrupting our liVes. We want to
live here in peace."
Since moving,in Sunday nigh~ the
. settlers have brought in beds and mattresses, and received a stream of supporters, including legislators from
Netanyahu 's ruling coalition who
have said they would topple the government if the settlers were forced
out.

In response to 'the crisis,
Netanyahu postponed a trip to east- ·
em Europe that was supposed to have
begun tonight. He is now expected to
leave Friday.

p w ELL'S
IAM-10PM

...

PubUc Notice
. PIJIIIUC ,.neE
NPTJCE le iltpbY giVen
on 20 S11tUrd1y,
btr
1H7, II

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t m ncl
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smnp Compltny
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oxp..... or tmpllld w1r-

,.ntfel ........

For further Information,

- l l l n d y 11112-2131.

(1}17, 18, 11 3 TC

Card of Thanks

"Thanks"
'l}Tone Brinager
1: Sons
Eastern Band
Boosters
Meigs County
Fair1997

BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES has expanded ~s services in Meigs County· and has
the following positions available:
(1) 40 hrs/Wk: 4 pm Mon. thru 8 am 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-B.am &amp;4-7 pm, M-F;
(4) 10 hrs/wk: 5 hrs each on Sat. &amp; Sun.
(flexible); .
Rasponsiibllitles include teaching community
and personal skills to two teenager with mental
retardation in an informal setting. Requirements:
High school diploma/GED, valid driver's license,
three years licensed driving experience, good
driving record and adequate automobile
insurance coverage. Starting salary: $5.50/hour.
Training provided .. Send resume to: P.O. Box
604, Jackson, OH 45640; ATTN: Cecilia. Deadline for applicants: 9/19/97. Equal Opportunity
Employer.
·

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Custom Hom..
R·amodellng BANKRUPTCY can relieve a .debtor of flnailclai

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·

"Bu.,. Tour DNam"
1118 Martlt:l StrHI

l~t. ~~- . ,~.,.,
, C\~~
21WlAnnuol
,'f#,
-:..~·
EXPO 197 ~i,

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Meigs County Fairgrounds
lntertection of US 33 &amp;SR 7 (Northwest Comer)

Seolember 20th. 21at

Saturday 10-5 p.m. &amp; Sooday 10-5 p.m:
For Morelnformltlon Call: 992-6696 992-5293 742-3020

. RC COLA
PRODUCTS

(ORPOill ElKTIIC

.

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12 PK 12 OZ CAN

Jolin WIUlamt, OWntr
Ucenaecl EIICtrlclsn
Work Gu.rlntead

F,...Eatlmatea
Providing Qu1llty
Rnldentl1l Service.
2·H1'-~

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UMIT ONE PLEASE

STOKELY'S
VEGETABLES
14.~

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29

LIMIT 12 PLEASE .
ADD. PURCHASE 39e

CAMPBELL'S TOMATO OR
CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP
16.750Z

2 $1

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. 4PK

99

"

•Chain sawe •Witdeate,. •AuthOriZ8d
Dealer For:
•Brlggt &amp; Stnltton •MTD •Murray •McColloUgh
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper -R811y •Hydro Gear
AND OTHERS!

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 miles east of Route 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO
614-384 6212

1r1ggt ' Stratt011: Mas11r Slnkt Ttcltlklll
· OittiDir Powll' E; l;a1itl Alsodtttiol: Certified 2(yde
Stela Route 338 • At VIne • Racine·, Ohio

LUMP IND STOKER COIL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY IYIILIILE
Hou,.:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00

Monday thru Friday

614) 949-2804

II"Z1/971 mo.·pd.

SHOP THE

CLASSIFIEDS!

In Memory

Your

BUill I CODLING
Senling Southeas1ern OH &amp; WV
1391

114 4411411
I
OH

MISS ME-- BUT LET ME GO:
When 1come to 111o end of the rolld
And the 1un hill At for me.
I wn no rn.. In •gloom filled room.
Why cry for IIOUIHt free?
MI.. me • llltle- but not too long
And not with yow held bowtd tow.
Rtmember the fOVI that Wll once 1hartd
MIN me - but 1at me go.
For thla 11 •loumey we mlllt 111 take
' And uch mlllt go 11one.
It 11 1111 p1rt of the MHttr'l plan;
A atep on the rOIId to hOme.
When you are 101111)&lt; and tick of heart
Go to frt.nda WI know
And bury your aorrowt In doing good deedl.
Mill me - but let me 110-

360° Communications

&amp;1.---

'-

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
Henry E. Cleland Jr .•992-2259
Shmi L

113 W. 2ND ST.

BePUIIo""'-•
Rf,NIM: Z:OOttA
1hedor-.alheod

POMEROY, OH.

lo1onro-8undor
-·Z:OOp.oa
FJidor,llondly-

614-992·5479

- 10:00 ..... Bollll'lloy.

Hart~ .......... 742-2357

Kathleen M. Oeland 992-6191

Office ••••••...•_.....• ~ •••••• 992-2.259

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

TONY'S· PORTABLE WELDING
•
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L_____

992•5583

.....;~::.;:;.;:;.;;,;:;...

tl4/lfn
_____
_,

CltfiCI&lt;I Salt: 1041 Stcond Avenue, Thlirt, Fri, i-4, Exerc111
Equlpmen~ Clolhl"'t, Vatllly 01

- '

Sizes. Including Plu.. Olher

Salllrliar 11120111. a-? 1os2 Sec·
onci A..,.o, Bora 11-10, Pt~te'a,

314&amp;!iiii,LDIIOIIIiacl

Pomeroy,

~~:=:
AIIYanl BelNIIuot Be Paldlo

Advance. Deadline: t:oopm tha

doy ulore
od 11edition·
to run,
Sund.ly
6 the
Mond•r

I :01ipfto FJidor,

•
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OZ. -

VIVA
PAPER
TOWELS

TUESDAY NIGHT
FAMILY NIGHT

SINGLE ROLL

WICKS

. FREE .

HAULING

.,

4 P.M. to Closing

'

DOMINO'S
PIZZA

Un'lestone,
Gravel • Sand •
""op
Soli, Fill Dirt
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Pomeroy Location Only
Starting Oct. 1
New Store Hours
Open 11 A.M.

Win A Bankroll_.
This Week
Value

Stop In The Store
For Details · · .

614-992·3470

/

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Wanted to Buy

Aboolu!o Top DoNw: All U.S. Silver And Gold Coins. Proofuta,
Dlamonda, Antique JNOiry, Gold
Rl"'ll, Plt-1030 U.S. Currency,
S10&lt;1ina, EIC. Acquloillona JIMiry
- II.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
-....GIIIipolll,etw.a.21142.
AnUquoa, IIM'nlluoe, glau, chino,
colna, 10ya, lompa, ouna, toola,
eo1111oa: oloo eppralaala, Oaby
Morin,81_2-7... 1. '

An~quoa,

ll&gt;p prlcoo pald,

RiYOf-

Antlq1.1e1, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Run Moore owner, 01•·&amp;G2·

laurie's Uustom
Cakes
Reopening for full
time business ·
Specializing in
wtKidlng, anniversary
. and birthday cskss.

na

25a.
Clton leto llodol Cara Or
Tnocka, 11110 IIOdoia 0. Nowor.
Sml1h Bul&lt;k Pontiac, 11100 Elllttn ......... GefpDIL

Pick up dlecerdod
lpplllrtCH, bllterill,
menymllele &amp; ·
J &amp; D'l Au10 Ptrta. Buying ul·
motor blocke.
, ~cltl. SlUing parll, 304814-992-4025 a em-8 pm , ,-'-~,--,-----­
Non-Working Walhtr, Orytra,

SPORTS!
SCORES!
SPREADS!

327 Main St., Pl. Pleasant, WI/
Wide variety of maternity

1-900-329-0611

clothes, new baby beds,

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (614) 645-8434

comJ~ with all accessories.

90

L..;.._ _ _ _ _..... .Ina

992·6194
FOR SALE
MUMS .(Assorted Colors)
$2.00 each
PAUL HILL GREENHOUSES
SR
Letart Falls, Oh.

ROCK ABYE BABY

Free Cash,

(Ume StoneLow Rates)

Buy One, Get One

'

Powell's Super

KLEENEX COTTONELLE
WHITE BATH TISSUE
4

·M-

Parts and Service/!

on ,., birthday, Sept. 17

.,

$ 59

~onnle Jones

IAI:III .MOWEB CLIIIC

RHODA SMITH DUCKWORTH

'

HUDSON CREAM
FLOUR

Ins. Owner:

In Loving Memory of our aliter

',

RAGU
SPAGHETTI
SAUCE
28-300Z

20 Yra. Exp. •

1117,., 1 mo.JMI.

Pomeroy, Oh.

l

$8''

Athens, Ohio

AtHJOIHIO 1.1Uil S

New and
Uted Items.
202 E. Main St

4

oz.

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

........ 111111 ....

and Trade

Send response to:
Dally Sentinel
P.O. Box 729-51 ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

36-39

Ph.985-4198

We Buy: Sell

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FOLGERS
COFFEE

34718 St. Rt. 7

SWAP·SHOP

Single-Ply and Shingles
Local Work

89

Tallies, Mlsc.lt-

Joe N. Sayre
614-742-2138

ROOFERS

j

29 oz:.

Swflgs, laldlet,

o,....... 9·1·97

EDALE
SLICED
PEACHES

.
.

Attorney At Law
(614) 592-5025
•

R•1ol18ble R•t••

Pnj1d1 , .

614-992-9086

Setvlt»

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H••ll'lftttl Wood

Hauling, Excavlllng
&amp; Trenching
UrlltltOM a GriMI
Septic Systems
Tl'lller a HouH Sitts

L&amp;J

Dilly Rd., Racine
614-949-3060

•'

obligations and arrange a fair dlelrlbutlon of
assets. Debtors In bankruptCy may keep
•exempt" property. for their pet'SOillll use. This
may Include a car. a house, clothes, and
·
·
household goods. •
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

Attorney ~llllam Safranek

Joe Wllaon
(114 892-4277

P-.,y, Olllo 45789

PEPSI &amp;
MTDEW
PRODUCTS
2 LITER

At the 'start of the last Jerusalem
crisis- the opening of a tourist tunnel along Muslim holy sites a year
ago- Netanyahu had left for abroad
and was later criticized for making a
serious error in judgment. The tunnel opening triggered Palestinian riots ~
that climaxed with three days of gun
battles between Israeli troops and
Palestinian security forces and
Claimed 80 .Jives.
The settlers' action came at a time
when Israel and the Palestinians were
taking tentative steps to rebuild trust ·_
and end a particularly tense seven
months.
Israel released some of the millions of dollars in t1IX refunds it owed
the Palestinians and eased its closure
of the West Bank . and Gaza. Israel
had withheld the funds and imposed
the closure in response to two suicide-bombings by Islamic militants in
Jerusalem on July 30 and Sept. 4.
The Palestinians, in tum, have taken some action against Islamic militants but not as tough as hrud-liners
have sought.

compromises.
The United States· had sought
several exceptions, including a nineyear delay in implement in~ the treaty
that related to the 'tensions on the
Korean peninsula and allowing countries to withdraw from the treaty if
they come under attack.
The Oslo · negotiations build on
talkS that started with just a few countries in Canada orily II months ago.
The United · States reluctantly
signed on to the talks last month,
demanding exceptions that activists
say are contrary ·to the spirit of the
talks . They said the idea is to ban the
mines for humanitarian rea~ons, with
no e)l•eptions.

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291 SECOND ST.
'
WI USim. THI RIGHT TO WilT QUANTitiES
PRICES GOOD THIU SITUIDIY, s•PT. 20, 1997 ·

coming days, he should become self- served in the Middle East and Northsufficient," he said in a statement.
·em Ireland before leaving the army
Rees-Jones has been taken off an in 1992.
artificial respirator and his lung infecHe is investigators' best hope for
tion is "under control," the' statement answering major questions in the
said. The hospital gave no public inquiry. including the role of phc:iindication that Rees-Jones had yet tographers trailing Diana. the speed
been .questioned:
the car was traveling and the condiIt was unclear ·how long Rees- lion of driver Paul.
Jones,anemployecofthe Fayed fam- c Nine photographers and a motorily nicknamed "Dndi 's shadow." cycle courier are under formal inveswill need to stay in the hospital.
ligation for manslaughter and failure
Except for doctors, only Rees- to help people in danger, an obliga· Jones' ex-wife and parents have been tion under French law. They have not
allowed at his bedside, and a phalanx been formally charged.
of police are guarding his door.
French television reported ruesEarlier reports of the bodyguard's day that investigators arc considering
condition had been much less san- the possibility that another car was
guine. His parents had said. he was involved in the crash. The report on
drifting in ·and out of consciousness France 2 said red shards of glass,
-afte~ undergoing extensive surgery to apparently from brake lights, were
repair a smashed jaw. He also suf- found at the crash scene - but that
fered chest injuries.
the Mercedes' brake lights were still
Coria! did not say whether Rees- intact
Jones had spoken about the crash yet.
Investigators long have said there
It is not clear whether ' he even was a p&lt;issibihty that a car carrying
remembers it, or knows that the oth- paparazzi may have blocked the
er thre~ passepgers died.
.
Mercedes· path, but they have
Pohce reportedly are concerned appeared to discount that scenario as
that the shock of the accident and the investigation progresses.
large doses of anesthesia during
Speed. is critical issue in the
su·rgery could hinder Rees-Jones' inquiry, as the Mercedes has been
abilit~ to recall the crash.
estimated to have reached speeds of
Bnush news reports have quoted up.to nearly 120 mph.
his mother, Jill Rees-Joncs, as saying
Blood tests have shown Paul had
he hasn't been well enough yet to be a blood-alcohol level more than three
told altoutthe deaths.
times thc'legallimit. and also had takRees-Joncs. of Whittington. Eng- en Prozac and another drug used to
land. is a &lt;;me-time paratrooper who ·combat the effects of alcoholism.

That leaves Washington with the
dilemma of either signing on to a
treaty it had. vigorously opposed or of
risking international reproach for not
signing. The move to ban land mines
·has pnx:eeded with ·unusual speed
and pressure to conclude a treaty
grew after . the death of Britain's
Princess Diana. who had •ampaigned
for a ban.
The 30-minute session tnday was
a quick defeat for the United States.
which has heen at odds with other
nations throughout the talks. On
Tuesday. Newsom won a 24-hour
delay in the talks while Washington
intensively lobbied other governments to accept the U.S.-pushed

TRUCKING

,

$ 79

s.....,

More than 10.0 nations approve
ba,n of anti-personnel mines
OSLO. Norway (AP) - Over
U.S. objections, more than 100
nations approved by acclamation
' today a draft treaty calling for an
immediate and total ban on anti-personnel mines.
The United States had unsuccessfully sought to ·win compromises to
the proposed land mine treaty.
The talks then adjourned for the
· day .and are to reconvene Thursday
for a formal vote on adopting the
drafi. The treaty itself is expected to
he signed in December.
The Clinton administration will
announce its position on the draft
treaty hy the .end of the week, U.S.
dclc¥atinn head Eric Newsom said.

SAYRE

24 PI CUll

STOlE HOURS
Molllltlythr•

The Dally sentinel• Page 13

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

,,

PEPSI COU,
MTe DEW,
PRODUCTS

Doctor: Diana's bodyguard able to talk
PARIS (AP)- The man who may
hold the key to the mystery of why
Princess Diana's Mercedes crashed in
a Paris tunn~l - bodyguard Trevor
Reea-Jones- is conscious and able
to communicate, doctors said Tuesday.
The news raised hopes that investigators could soon question the 29. year-old British former paratrooper
and sole survivor of the high-speed
crash last month.
The accident in the early-morning
hours ·of Aug. 31 killed Diana, her
companion, Dodi Fayed, and driver
· Henri Paul.
·
Investigator.; have been focusing
on Paul, who was legally drunk and
on Prozac at the time of the crash. But
they also_ are lookmg at the .role of
paparazzi who ~ere pursu~n.g tlwMercedes once 11 left Pans Rttz
Hotel. .
. lnves!tgators had not yet quesuoned Rees-Jones on Tuesday ~!g~t.
but were expected to do so wuh1n
days. However. ABC. news on Tuesday .quoted a hospual source ~ say!ng that Rees-Jones remembers noth1ng of the evcnL~ after leavmg hoteL
"The cond1110n of Mr. Trevor
Rees-Jone_~ . h~s
noticeably
improved. sa1d Pierre Conal. ch1ef
of anestheSiqlogy at the P111eSalpetnerc ho~p1tal.
.
"He ts peifcctly consc1ous and
can commumcate well. though he
tires qu1ckly. In the course of the

Wednllday, S.ptembw 17,1187

VVedneaday,SephKnber1~1997

Stovn, Relrlgeratora. frHztra.
Air Condllloner, Color T.V. '1,
VCR'a, Aloo JuNI Cus, 814-25111231.
' Slllldng · - Of pulp - d lot
CiNf CUI. contact Greg II ,114·

·-15.

Er.lPLOYMENT
SERV ICES

Ext. 1881
110

HtlpWanttd

AVON I Ail Artaa I Shlllty
Spon. -76-1&lt;120. '

�I

· Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

..,

! ~W~ed;:ne~a;da;y~,~~~~!bM~-~1!7r~1~H!7~--------------------------p~~~m~~~ro~y~·~M~Idd~~~po~~~O~h~~~------------------_!~~D~a~ll~y~Se~nti~ne~I~•P~~~~15
NEA
PHILLIP

ALDER

814BtiDI

All """""""
~.,
thtl
I .... I Pill* iii\AJftd to
tho F - Fair HoulirGAcl
of 1868 wntc11 makoo k 111ogo1
to &amp;IMMtil8 "any PIMiia, .
tmltation or dllall• Iii .-an
baed
color,lellgion,

---Olri-on-·

...

origin, or
to
make any iiUCh PIBfenonco.
NmltMIOn or dle:rtmi'\ation.•

This ne
-

460 Spice tar Rent

Ina~~ Conllr l Chool
Of Oft"" Wllh I Or1Wr1 Undornoatl&gt;, $300, 114·3711- 2720

_...................... .
-

'""' fllmlture.

l i n d - ~7.1-3301 .

Delivery In Sept flo Pay·
Undl Dec. 1887 100-251 ·

paps- doot

~fo&lt; rulaalllll

510

• AJ 2

...

AFTI!RI P.IL

HouiiiiOid
Goodl

• 7 6 3
I A 52

Easl

Weal

Mold Droh leo 1500. ICJ.
nedc Yo Peel, new 18 mile•
.....
111111-:100
-·
2 I HI
drive. U,IOO.4304-BOS.
3871 .

~~1.

Part -

a A J S2

• 10

• 76 4 3
t K Q 10 9
IJ9863

9 8 7

• 5

• J 8 54
• K Q 10 7
Soalll

ApJIIIancoo:
Rocondldonod
Wuhtro, Dl)'lfl. ~1r111on, 80 Dar Guatan1MI
Fronch Cllr Marmo. 114-«41·
7JK.

IKQ643
• K Q 10 9 8
·• A 2
.

Wo--,.,

llollr'o - • ._ , _
Surpliolll
2101-0pant21·5GO:~04-~J~.SCfA 111111111

Rolrlfarator, Waahor, Dry01,
FrtazOf, VCR. Fllh Aqyariam,
814-251-1231.

Llvlltock
Nl.. Dak Hutch; 3 Ytar Old 630
Whitt ICJICI1on EIOCIIIc S1Dvo 30 1&amp;04 Modo! 12Ft Stock TreMor
Inch. Nice ICitchtn T1blo 4 'Good Condian. 114-:14WQ17.
Chalrl, II 4-378-2720, AFTIR I
PJI.
5 rur old bay TtMOIIH walk·
lng horoo, golcll~, 14" tall, ttaH
Ook Tablo 1 Cholra, llall:h- ride, road 18fe, w.U work buggy, '05 F150 XLT 2WD. 814-002·
,_Ohlno..,1Chll4 4411 M10.
4058. '
...
11.200. 114-742-2050.
108111lodgo Daloota 4 Crlindor, 5
Speed Tranamillian. ftun1 Erl»&gt;lntl$t,3DD, ett

ue asea'

1005 T'3!.-:.!'L Call, air cond. .
-

.. V.f, auta,

50k.I14,DK 304-e75-!!1111.

FRANK a: EARNEST

Truck Toppor Fill Sm.all Trudl
1!0, 114-2o15-5118&lt;.
Rogilllfod Slmmorilollilack bull, ·
S
old: purobrod Slmmonlal
hoiltrs; purebred Simmonlll broil
-a:8t4-114D-2822.
Stablo horn· 75.00 mo., puturw
&amp;-rldilg.Biol-742-21150.

y...-•

730 VIlli I A_WD

..I
111110 Aonloltl Von Cuotornlzi&lt;Od
, Good ConditiOn. 80, 000 tnlleo.
!" 1 4~251-1021 .._M_I
111i3 Dodgo Convan SE Sport
640 """ 1 Grain
Wagon, V·l, 4 cap1aln chalro,
I. -=~:-...,',....;;-~,..........-,........,.. luJIOIIgo rack, pw, pi, aluminum
. Gocd quality largo oquart bllel whoolo, droa. huntor 11'olhoySZ.-·21181.
color, oxc. cond. 10,000. 304-

WAIIII UP: High Ellclonq Noturei And LP Gao Furnacoo, Litewarranty on Holt Exc:hangor. 11 You Don't Cal Uo Wo Both
lonl" FrN Esdmotoal Add-On
Hoa1 Pumpo Only Sllghty Hlglw.
Call Uo Today. 1007 lo Tho lorgo ol hoy l13111a11. 304Twenty Seventh Ytlr In The 875-1385..
HoaLftg
Ccclng Buil-l II 4- Whoat And Whoat Strow 3rd
441131le,l 1-100-2111-0CIIII.
Cutting Allallll Souoro lloloa, 114STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Golion 44W432 Allor 5 P.M.
Upright, Ron Evano Entar,.lloa,
- ..Oio. t-I00-53NI528.
Tall T.V. Stand. Will&gt; Sholvoo On
Boll\ Sldoa, IIOO: Couch &amp; Colloo 710 Aut
t Sale
T- 810: ColiN Table l 2 End
01 Of'
Tlblto wnh Dooro, Paid ., ,ooo
1931 llodot A Ford VIcky ConSti:ISOO,II4 Uti 3437·
vertible Corvette 350, TH400,
Trlcycllo, E•rcloo llic)'clo, Cur- -rod 304-e75-5403.
ulna, Or-Ita, Vllancoo. High 1872 Carlo Willi 350 2 bbl.
Choif, Tablo l.ompo, Child School 14,000 111111 On Motor loll 01
"DAY CARE" Equlpmon1 &amp; 'pro· Dook. Clllilt, 114 Ul 3375.
Now Ftonl End Par-. gram
-.mlng nHCiod
Tu1 ~...!!.,MA!u:
to atatL 11,100 Olio..ICM..7&amp;- Wwrllno Spoclal: 314 200 PSI ~ ~~!!thCol'
·-·•
121.'115 Par 100; I' 200 PSI --. .....---.
3m.
137.00 Por 100; AI Brau Com- tar 8:00P.M. 304-875·1433 Or
...-At~reoln8oo Ar 20111 Jofftraon In Pt
RON liVANS ENTERPRI8EI - . Oio, 1-100-537-iSl!l
11181 Chivy Malibu 4 Doora, V-8,
Runo Good, Aoktng 1700, 114Woddlng Drooo Paid $1,500 Aok· Z45-alt•
'"" 1:100 Slzo • Whl• Will&gt; lang
~
Train Call at•·441·02t8, 114·

mo-.

...,.15~ .

·

550

'•,

"

1112-31311. ·

IIID&amp; Joop Wrangler Solt Top
Low Mllel. E•cellent CondiUon,
St1
:::::.::::.:11:.;1.:.4-=250::..:1::014.:;:.
__

s-. eo.ooo-.

84 Chivy. Diolll, Tutlio. IS. 4X4 ,
~
Payolf Load: or mko Parmont&amp; For moro lmbrtodon Call:
(1114)·251-1717. II not In leave
lrtllllgol

750

I Mo
........
10 Saletors
a .......

r

mE BORN LOSER
't'f'\~(:U..C1'6, [ .lllTCAA'r'
l..fA'E. VJ()(Z¥. WL.Y TO (:JJ TO
~~~5000..~1!

12" V aluminum boa~ --.
lrOMor, 5 hp. Soort motor, uta
and jackota, t750: 111" Duwoo
-11( I1Cil;ll14-802-3tll0.
18115 Ia" Starcro.a Wlfl 1815 100
HP U..curr, Runo Good Groat
FIIIIIIIQ Boa~ ti,300 Wilt Nego·
..._ll4-441-44l2.
11117 I IlL ... Imp, 180hp 1111crulaor WllrONtr, 2 Ulo )ackttt. 4
..,_11+441-3114.
1077 1 5 ' - - With 1871 115

HP Mtrcvry All New lnlerlar.
\lory Fill. ti,BOO WiM Nogotlato,
114-441-4412.

IIIII Baoo Tracker 18 112h., fl·
blrglua, I!Ohp .Jolinoon GT. 12·
24 volt Wllng motor, oxc. ohopo,
M.IOO. 304-075-1 1711.
lOla Ranger 373V 18' 12 ·24V
TroiiiiiQ MoiOr, 150 XP Evlnrudo
I8,800,114-DDH710.

Ou-.

11105 Soo-doo Sf*» SPX jot 111i,
11187 Sunbid .OTGood c..-, 10hp.,$ol500,114-802-8130.
Boola By Rodwlng, Chlpp-. AICC Gorman Shophlrd puppioa, t1,400, II14-441-Z!21.
Rocky, Tony Lima. Guarantied 1256'oa.~75-ee311. . '
loMa Prlcoa At Shoo Cole, Galipolla.
AKC Rl!lillored Cock• Spaniol
puppllo, ilx moloa, two lomoloo,
IIOTTLED WILL POWERI LOSE S200 Old\ ai4-D02-737t.
Up To 30 lbo., 30 Dar Manor
Baek Guarantee! Natural,. Or. Block &amp; White Englloh Springer
Rocommondod. B,.·441·1D82, Spaniel Pupa AKC Rtglattred,
$100,114-3117.05511.

Weal

II
4NT

Pass, 3 NT
Pass 51
Pass Pass

Nortll

TXI 7 1/2 Ban Trackor 70 HP
Mercury 50 - r Thraoh Troll·
lng - · 114-:M5-D227.

"""*

814-ell2-81124.

FARr.1 SUP PLIE S
1'. LI VES rOCK

810

Home
Improvements

IIASEIIENT
WATEIIPROOFINcl

Un~ndidonal

610 Farm Equipment
Focltry

tabllohtd 1875. Coli (1114)' 441:~·287.0571. Aogora

lull.

Ulod Onca, t1,400, Coil 114-441111137.
For tale· couch I chair, good
cordian, col814-1112o370B.

Clrubb'o Pllno- 111n1na 1 ropolra.
P.-.? Nood Tunocl? Call tho
p~~nc» Ct. au ue •sa
... OUrT..., Mil II A FWt Of

1Wo bllllloln IPII'IIMnt In lllddlopon,no-114-8112.-.

450

Fumllhld
Rooml

-· 8-

Laroe GE mlcrowavt with IYrn

old, pold- . .
REPOS. SAVE BIG IU CAll King~ Motol Lowoat Rotoo In taka 1150 080: Graco pack &amp;
play,
ulod
twice.
140: Jflt Rldo
Town. Newlr Aemad1l1d. HIO.
CIEliT LINE 1-100-251·&amp;:110.
Clnom11, lhoWIImt I Dlonor. ..,_, with ......,, $10: ~
TAKE DELIVE.RY IN SEPT. NO Woolllf Alllo. Or llonf1lr Ra... baby awing, $10: otulted Mario
W.YMENT UNTR. DEC. 1887. I· Conalrucdlri WCNklfo Wtlcomo clla/r lilt I toddler, $5, 114-742·
1018.
.
IIJ0.25HID70.
114-441--. ·-1~te7.

'
••

llletlme guaramH

local reference• lurnllhed. e.~

II Foot T111dom DoM'1foH Trail·

or, . . . lnolldod,

GOV7 FORECLOSED Homoo
From Panniol On I I Dallnquont
Tax, Ropo'l, REO'a. 'ltlur Atta.
Tal Frta (I) 100.211-11000 ElL
H-211. for cu-.l.loiiiiQI.

ahkotd

animal
37 s.allllball

3Jug

10 - Jime
23Shemol
25 Actor Brynnar

4 Certain ftglltw

0

'--+-+-+-t
'

_.

Pass
Pass

27 Jim CerNy, In
I I llt7 111m
211 Oymnaat
KorbUI
2tPoncodio31 Chalky '
32 Blblai

The 'new'
forcing raise
By Phillip Alder

.r=::..
...... .

... eon

38 Age·

eo
ay, wayol
43 A rpot1 poner
44Gym411VIII-I

49 l&gt;reao

SODramaUc
conflict

52 lnotancl
M Foray
55 A 56 Prelllll
58 Compn• pt
5!1 Wriggly-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
CMbrity CipMr

by Lui• C..mpOB
afPk9••• arw cr.-.ttrum ~ b¥ llmowl PIIOPfl, pal and ptesent

e.ch11Urlnlhe~.a.ndlb '8ntlhr

'y G P

'P A G X:

BXKES . '

'V G P

xw

BGIISXZ

xw

II

...-o.
II

BVOYO .

GXCMYOX

UXOAP
YGP

OE

Todly'l;cM:S

,CPWFPAVOXE

voccxc . ·

EiiYOIIEOPF

GIIZVOXCEP.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Miracles sometimes occur, but one has.to work
teiribly hard lor them.• - Chaim Welzi)'1ann .

....

IAMI .
'::~:.~' s~tt~1A-l£f..~s·
141104 ~. CIAT R. POII.AN -~---Rearrange letters cf the
0 four
scrambled WOJdt below to form four

~mpl_e

words.

I IN II DIA L1sI
2

I

K. LACH

I Is I' I I

I

I. PPYMET
I I' I .~ '--._· ·
L U R N y U ..

I am a student of human
nature. I've learned that if you
become entangled in a traffic

~f~ ~~~·~1 ~~~a cross section

1 I ·1 I I , IB 1 G Complet• the chuckle quoted
I -L._l.._l.._J... ....:..J..
• ....J
by filling in the missing wotds
L
you develop· trom step No. 3

'(E5 '{OUR HONOR. 1111515 M'i
CliENT, ALICE. TilE INJURED
PART'(. WHO FE.LL DOWN
TilE RASSIT-IIOLE ..

below.

e ~:~~JR~~~a:~~~RES I' I' r 1 15 I' I' I' I
-~~~~:RM&amp;lEFOR I II II II II

WE INTEND TO PROVE
NE6U6ENCE ON THE PART
OF THE PROPERT'I' OWNER FOR
FAIUN6 TO POST A WAANIN6
SI6N 8'1' TilE RASSIHIOLE ..

4

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS
Wllaler -Entry. Rough. Either . There to HEAR
To be on the wrong stde of an argument is better than
being on the right side with no one THERE to HEAR

IWEDNESDAY
~I"!;· POll&amp;

~AL\.. ~1!16·~
~~LL ... C"A'&gt;E

ftll,·fOI'I(,

~LL.. . W.lA ...

.......""!!!ii....

'

..._-"""'*'
,.......... ...,. .......Utlllr

10BaNnaport
11 Sm811
wh111po01
17 Ear (comb.
form)

1 Compuol2 Cenltr ola

331ollh38T-garna

~~~~~~~~·~·~n~~~~-~~~~E:-:·~-~·~~

lariP.II.

DOWN

' 36 Soull1

Suppose you have decided 10 lake
. up lhe limit major-sui\ raise. (If you
jump-raise panner's opening bid of
one of a major to wee of that major,
you show some 10-12 points game-inviJational strength - with at
least four-card support.) What do you
do with a game-forcing raise?
YOU $~11&gt; YOU ~NEvi Tt't
Then: are two sensible sugges, r~·r·G'$, OF fmiiiNtil
tions. The Jacoby Forcing Raise is lhe
better but more complicated one, the .
response being two no-trump.
The simpler solution is to respond
three no-trump. (fo use the 1hree-notrump response to show a balanced
16-18 points is shortsighted. When
your partner opens and you have 1618 points, what's your first thought?
Right - you hope you can make a
" slam. So why bum up all that space
by making your ftrst bid three no~
~
trump? You should be economical
~
tx:JN"r wN-~T f\11"\
with a two-over-one response.)
. How does opener rebid opposile
10 KOOW ~Tij.l_.l::~:-'
three no-trump?·As he would oppo·
site an old-fashioned forcing raise.
With a minimum, he bids game in his
suit. (He cannot pass three no-trump.)
With slam interest, he either cue-bids
or uses Blackwood.
In this illusttative deal·, things look
too easy. Yet declarer must con.ider
how to handle a 4-0 lrump break (the
only problem). He should cash tile
spade king (or queen) from hand.
When lhe bad break shows up, he
crosses 10 lhe club ace,:ruffs a club,
returns to the spade jack, trumps the
las I club, cashes lhe spade queen (or
king), goes 10 dummy with a heart,
draws trumps, and claims.
Finally, note that a bean opening
lead kills the contract, and starting
with a top trump from dummy is
fatal.

.,.......-.

J•• ..,.leo. Hlrlna Coollo •

35--·
.
.
-n
....,..
34 KM-. a.g.

·

Pass

. .........

Jock Ruuol torrlor pupa, I 1 ~.-·
I Will IHII any Elltoa
.or naw Die· old. tollo dockod. 111 ohoto, 1225,
mond KIIIQo. H '"' hoYI cordi It 114-8118-11165.
Mil, le1 mt know. Call 114-1411Poodlo pupJIIao, 11111o IOyl, AKC, 111111 Grand Am. 4dr, air, pa, ,...
31111&amp;
blacks, 1110 whites: 1110 304-e75-ISOI.
Caoo Tronchor Modal 25+4 &amp; Schnauzers: ahata, wormGd and
Caoo Mini SnNkor C - Plow. groomed, champion bloodline. 1OBD Oido Cudau .Suptomo
uau Good Sd1aol C.: E· '1nt
114-887-3404.
~814-2~
.
Full line of euto bod)' p1nel1,
Citation 12.8 Cubic Fut Dtap 570
paints and 1uppliea, alto gl111,
Musical
101111 C...,o: Pain~ T·T- lighl UMmbly, Oxygen end ·~
Froozor, Choot T~Pa. llkt Now,
PW, Aut~&gt;, 511C Mlloo: 1073 Star· 1llont
Instruments
Barely Uoed, Moving And Mull
anko illod and oxchangocl. .
craft Pop-Up. S l - 8, Furrace.
Stl"21111.814-441·105.'1.
Bundy Clarlnot For Sale, 814· Raklgorator, Sink, 5 -. Good 114-742·27112.
~IUUIIBU
Cornplllo colloctlon Happy Hoi~ ... 2842.
New 111 tanU, 1 ton truck
day Borblao 10111-IDDB. Extol·
..
do IIDl · - ·~ 5lpd, whoolo &amp; rodlotorL D &amp; R Auto,
E
..
II
I
IIIII,
lenl cond., take hlgheat olfer.
aJc, cJc, """"" coaaono. t5,4115. IIOC).
•
304-e75-74115 .... 3:3llpm.
RIJIIor,
2J'3.1132t.
wv. 304-372·3833
or ,_
304-e7H!07.
I
~::..::~=~----..;_
Computor !3311HZ, 32MEG Fondlf Sbatacalltr -trlc gu~
Tunnel Ram (Saoo And Top) r\nd
RAM, Scannor, 15" Monitor, Mo- ~;..:lyra old, OlC. cond. 3Dol-t7\l- IIIII I Thllndlflllfll, •~. IYIWOO~ 4 Accol Dual Point DiotJibutor For
dem &amp; Much, Muc:h Morel ·-~
::,:.:,c:;:'M:t".:~•llont s - Block Chovrloot $tOO, 11412,500, 1114 441 ~37.
Snaro Drum Sot. 1nc1-= lluolc 1.::.:::.::=:::.::::.:.:::.:..:.::.;:;__ 441·1053.
.
Sllnd. &amp; Colo. 114-44t-1345.
1M2 Chovy lumina, :1. I Multipart
SERV IC ES
_
V-8 onglno, air, tl~ auloo, li
• 1....,, t14 ttt lt37.
aterto canette. automat~. ot
tlroa, ..... In and

Floor Plan, S Bedrooma, 1 Car
Bingo. Lot IOdO, Cal 814-3~
/il1911 Now AI,Tho Rio Cllail4e 2720 For Ap............. Only At-

5701re.-a
' 16 Not -..ratad 10 Ro_..,,..
18 Aclruo Day
61 BIHalng
· 20 set oltoola
82 Sul1...
21 Ulloa lox
_,.,
22 Mit. grp.
83·se...,.,. 24 IICIII, e.g.
154 Prtncou 211 With much
85 Soccer alar
I · gore
66 Coloring ·
• 30 Once - 1 lime

Ealll

-~

llowW.Do-W.Do.

Wlnlroy

nickname

211- Raton,

11188 2tiiL Trookor Party Hat f'lln..
toon Boat, IOOhp. kitchen &amp; upper aun deck. uacker trailer.
priced to ooll. Alt·$1,500. 304·
875-!!1111 .

Now lonk Ropo'ol Only 3 loll.
FOR 8AU IY CMNIII:
ownor llnonclng avallablo. 304·
111 Vtn10n Co&amp;wt. In Od'pd1, 1 7~7181 .
·

malt
45 ~
51 S.
buy
53 Ttlk
hoot

Opening lead: o K

175-7112.
cruloo,

South

71

tAII1 To;ota 2wd pick-up. rune
great. bed d.-rlagad St,lOO. 3Q4.

I i i - In Ollr Poopll. Tllara

III'Oduclna -

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Homes tot Sale

......,..~•a•,heriWhlreW.

AMwtr to Paiwla • Pua11

43 " - • 45 Dlvtn!i bird
47 Jacldo'o 2nd

15 Llncaln'a

.'

Puzzle

42 Roaln-

I 4 Had blla

llk1a Slzo Wototbod Wllh Match-

llobllt homo oilt -bit loot·
Parti-Troilo&lt;To U..ln Eli· Alhtno and l'ooiiWOJ, ~~
Ira N1w, .lull In 11-. Fur,._ . , . . t317.
turo Oooo Wlfl It And I 'l'tiu Litle
To-It, llyPhoneNumblfll
r.IE R Clll\t IDISE

wtiei\ISOIViOiatlonoftho
law. 0 . . - . . norabY
lnlormod that .. dwellings
advertised In tNs new peper
are available on an equal
IJ!liiOI\UiiiY basil.

ThoGIWina c - In
Tho Nldln. Wo Pr0¥1do .A p,._

1 Con. poov.
4 HI or ...,.
• Bt ...-y
12 UrodilitiiOUnd

rnonetOfy unit
ol Bo-na

09-1 7-ti

t:- .

41 Tlltile aupport

13Formor

IIMplna ,.,..,;,, w1111 iooki!IG: Monmoro Wa- 1100, Glbaon
- IIW
· 011I:IICI
- p.WI.,
· All Dry1&lt; $100; Bolh Worklna: 275
-AI• ·trallat
YPI- Call
O.Hon Fuot Oil Tank laS; 114·
304-mtlll,lilllaftft
llS-2720, AFtER I P.ll.

5680, Eln.l1110.

~. CdFor~t

3V

-..a· art·

Postal Jobs 3 Pos ition• Avail·
lbla, No E1p.,lenc• NKHUry.
For Information, Call 811· 781-

RN'o START Ill lmmtclloto
Hoed Fuu Or Part Tlmo. Pnvoto
Duty Or Focllty Slllllna. ~
I Yow lllrimum v..t 0. HoljliiOI

ACROSS

CrOIIWOrd

maker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
1758, Murray Hill Station. New
ASTilO·ORAPB
York, NY 10156.
I:.IBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Your
mate mighl nol sha,re your enthusiBERNICE
asm for projec1s you want to do
BEDEOSOL around the house at this time. Be prepared to tackle them unaided.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-No~. 22)
Lighter inlerests might command the
beuer ponion of your time and attention today. You will find ways 10
ralionalize around your.duties.
Thursday, Sept. 18, 1997
SAOIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
The year ahead could be a very
21)
If you acl upon yo.ttr opportuniImpressive one for you where perties
al this time, you 'll have good
~~al achievc;JIIClniS are concerned.
~
may be i)ne of your effortS thll chances for personal acquisition; if
i bead and shjlulders above the oth· you're indecisive; it's another story.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
lji'S·
.
In
older
to advance your self-interests
VIRGO (1\ug. 23-Sept. 22) Be
'today, !here mus1 be something in il
c~scriminatin. today so thai you
1 n't waste 100 much emotion and 1 for your associates. Everyone musl
c rgy on matterS that don 'I warrant j hav«r a slake.
AQUARIUS (lan. 20-Feb. 19)
i~Use your viral forecs with discreHandling
important ma1ters as early
t n. Know where to look for·
in
the
dey
as possible enhances your
r mance and you' ll lind it. The
J~tro-Graph Matchmaker. instandy probabilities for success. Delays tend
r~veals which sisns are rom~lically to. diminish prospects.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201
~frfec1 for you. Mail $2.75 to Match·
'

Guard against urges today to buy
merchandise for which you'll have no
real need, even though you might feel
they are great bargains.
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9) Spurofothe•momenl decisions.OOuld help
you achieve your goals today, but if
you waste too much time deliberating, you're not likely to take aclion.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Make an extra effon today to be as
forthrighl as possible with all people
involved in your dealings. If you
a1temp1 to scheme, il could misfire.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your
expect.alions are likely to be gmtified
today, provided you are single-minded about your objectives. Do not drift
off on tangents.
.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Tnday, an associate might try to back
out of an impulsive promise he or she
made to you earlier. Give this person
ample space to save face.
LEO (J11Iy 23-Aug. 22) You are an
effective worker today, but you might
not be as detail-conscious as you ·
should be. Be alert for small imped-.1
imcnts thai could cause problems. ·

SEPTEMBER17l

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