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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

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•

Cincinnati
knocked out
of contention-

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Sdper Lotto:
5-6-16-28·29-41
Kicker:
0-5-6-1-9-7
Pick 3:

9-2-8

sports on Page 4

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

Pick 4:
6-7-9-7

·-

• SUI.l-5
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'
AUTOMATIC, L.S PACKAGE, M
AIR, TILT, CRUISE, ALUM. ,._
WHEELS &amp; MORE
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5 SPEED, AIR, AM/FM CASS.,
ONLY 31 ,000 MILES,

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5 TAHOES
3 EXPLORERS
2 SUBURBANS 16 S-1 0 BLAZERS
54 RUNNERS
3 JIMMYS
6 GRAND
2 TRACKERS
CHEROKEES 1 BRONCO
4 CHEROKEES 1 PASSPORT
2 WRANGLERS 1 AMIGO

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UTIUTY BOXES, AUTO., 'H ENG., READY TO

year from 272,000.
Over the month, most of the improvement happened
in durable-goods manufacturing as workers returned

95

from temporary July layoffs. Employment increased in
government; wholesale trade; fmance, insurance and
real estate; as well as services.

Manuel of Racine, another pulled by exhibits. geared to fall and the holia 1915 Pot Huron steam traction days by several ganlen clubs.
engine brought in by the Big Bend
One building was devoted to huntAntique Fann Equipment Club, and ing trophies, while other activities
ponies from Lone Oak Farm.
included a canine obedience program
So that all children could ride on by Jennifer Krawsczyn, and "test
the "Cyclone" free of charge, Wha· your skills" games using antique
ley's, Quality Print, Baum's Lumber, (factors.
Dave's Small Engine Repair, Meigs
Contests for the largest pumpkin,
County Chiropractic Clinic and corn stalk, ear of com. sunflower. and
Williams Logging chipped in to miscellaneous crop were held. The
sponsor the ride Sunday afternoon.
first place winners were Francis
A popular place for youngsters Benedium of Reedsville, for a pumpwaS the petting zoo, where among the kin. 71 inches in circumference:
animals were 2-year-old m_ioiature Alice Thompson, Pomeroy, for the
horses, Cimba and Nula, owned bv largest stalk of com, 147 inches tall;
Deb and Ron Snyder of Chester.
Jason Massie of Gallipolis, for an ear
Mike Pace pfBethel, wood sculp- of com, .14-314 inches long; Kathy
tor brought in by Ridenour Supply, Dalton. Rutland, l_argest sunflower
created a number of art pieces with a . head, 20 mches m circumference; and
chain saw and then made one for the Charles Goeglein, Pomeroy, for a
Expo committee to auction off as a double ear of com. in the miscellafund-raiser.
neous crop class.
Kiddie tractor pulls were held
•Sunday morning outdoor worship
along with a "just for fun" antique services and a gospel sing-a-long
tractor pull Sunday afternoon. There were held on the fairgrounds . Enterwas a quilt show with 20 new and , IAinment was orovided op the bour
·
and floral
on P,.:e=ge;;..;.~,.,.
RIBBON CUTTING - Expo '97 officially got
underway Saturday momlng with a ribbon cut·
tlng ceremony at the main gate of the .Rock
. Sprlnga Fairgrounds. Addalou Lewis, who was
honored for her volunteer work during the

&amp;-81'E£1),

1

(4.0) percent; Jackson, 5.7 (8.2) percent; Lawrence, 5.9
(5.1) percent; Scioto, 7.7 (7.9) percent; Vmton, 8.2 (8.6)
percent; and, Washington, 4.7 (4.6) percent
Acrpss the state, Madison County reported the lowest
unadjUSied rate of 2.2 percent. JeffeiSOn County, in the
east, bad the highest rate of 10.7 percent. ·
1\velve counties bad unemployment rates below 3
percent in Au::usf. Nine bad rates at or above 1 percent.
Nationally, the unemployment rate was 4.9 percent
for August, compared with 4.8 percent in July.
The national UPS strike affected the economic picture around the country. Ohio businesses were among
those struggling to ship their prOducts. After a two-week
walkout, UPS and Te&amp;~~~sters union officials agreed in
mid-August on a five-year contract.
The number of Ohioans with jobs in July ·and August
was roughly 5.5 million. The number of workers 'unem·
ployed was about 242,000.
Over the year, the number of Ohioans working
increased by 127,000, up from nearly 5.4 million. The
number of unemployed decreased by 29,000 over the

Annual Expo showcases
·talents o~ Meigs co:untians
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Rain showers got the Town· and
Country Expo '97 off to a slow stan
Saturday, but the sunshine of Sunday
and the hundreds who came more
than made up for the smaller fu:st-day
attendance. ·
The Rock_ ~pri_ngt f'*gr9unds
was filled. with things to see and do
at the second annual Expo, geared to
showcase assets of Meigs County.
The commercial buildings featured educational -booths, along with
many exhibits showing the talents of
Meigs countians, ranging from fur-.
niture construction to the floral ans.
Outside there were displays of
new cars and trucks by four dealers,
and classic cars by collectors.
Antique tractors and farm equipment
filled one of the barns, while a petting zoo was held in another.
Popular with those attending were
the Expo rides. There was the
"Cyclone," a monster truck, a
filled with bales cif straw
Belgium horses driven

-

SliP BY
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2 Secllon.,12 P - . 35'*""
A Gonnetl CO. N-per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 22, 1997

Unemployment decreased in more than balf of Sothcastem Ohio counties in August, while the state's unemployment rate remained at the same rate as in July, the
state Bureau of Employment Services said.
"Overall, Ohio'continues to enjoy the fruits of' vital
and growing economy," said Debta Bowland, ODES
administrator.
. In Meigs County, the unemployment rate held steady
•at 8.0 percent between July and August. That figure represents, however, a dedine of 1.6 percent oVer the past
year. The jobless rate in August, 1996 was 9.6 percent.
The ODES estimates 700 of lhe county's 8,500-mem·
her work force as unemployed in August.
Gallia County's rate fell to a.near record low of 5.6
percent inAugust, down 0.6 percent from July's rat~ of
6.2 percent; and down nearly 2 percent from the August
1996 figure of 7.5 percent.
·
ODES figures sbow only 700 of the county's estimat·
ed work force of 13,800 as unemployed in August
Other regional August unemployment rates for
August (July figures in parenthesis) were: Athens, 3.8

95 OilY. S-10 DT. CAliS .

V-8 ENG INE, V HAUL. WALX THRU WINDSHIElD,
OPENBOW,
·
.

entine

Meigs unemployment .
holds.steady in August

• USED TRUCKS .•

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\A)~ • ._, NO. 110
011117, Ohio \IIIIey Publllhlng ComPII"Y

Partly cloudy tonight,
lows In the 50s. Tuesday,
showers likely. Highs In
the mid 701 •

opening ceremony, cut the ribbon. From left
are, front, Hal Kneen and Dallas Weber, cochairmen, and Ken Buckley, Meigs Counly
Commissioner Jeff Thornton, Bill Spaun end
Dale Kautz.
·

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5 SPEED, AJR, CHROME WHEELS,

EXTRA SHARP.

ONLY 21 .000 MILES

WAS .............................-

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P/STEERING~, LONG WlOE Bf.O, SUDINO ReAR

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ROISES IN
- On behalf of
'97 committee, Addalou Lewla was
pre•se~tted a boilquet of 1'01181 In .appreciation
many yeare of volunteer work promo!· .
lng the eounly. Hal Knaen 1 Expo co-chairman,

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made the pntllllltallon during opening e..
monies, noting that besides working with
Expo, she Ia retiring as a Melga Counly Fair
Board mamber after-24-yeara of service_

ENJOYING A RIDE- Many of those attend·
lng Expo '97 got their first ride on a wagon

pulled by a 1915 Port Huron steam traction
engine. (Sentine_lphotos by Charlene Hoeflich)

Fugitive lr~nton tcouple
arrested
in
Oklahoma
after
officers
get
tip
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MUSKOGEE, Okla. (AP)- An extradition hearing is next for an Ohio
couple arrested in the death of their daughter after they were spotted on
"America's Most Wanted" by a co-worker.
A body authorities believe to be of Seleana Gamble, 8, was found Sept.
7 buried in a garbage can in the back yard of the family's home in Ironton.
Ohio.
·
Tulsa television station KOTV reponed Sunday that a man called 911 after
Kelly Barker noticed Jack and Mona Volgares while watching television Sat·
urday evening.
.
.
"My buddy here was watchin~ 'America's Most Wanted,"' the caller said.
"He's employed at Monroe's Children's Home and he satd he seen the peopie ... the couple. He said 'man, that looks like them. I've been working with
them all week."'
Police found the Volgareses and their three children at the Salvation Anny

Center.
·
·
·"We investigated it funher and that led us to both subjec_ts."' said police
spokesman Reggie Cotton. "Really, we don't get a lot of ups hke .thtdor
wanted people out of state. Every now.and then we do but this is the fiTS!
time we received one of this magnitude. "
Authorities said the family had used the shelter for about 10 days.
"You would think of them as a typ1cal tranSient fanuly, _lookmg for work
or down on their luck." Salvation Army L1. Bradley &lt;;aid well told The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch.
.
"From the demeanor of the family. you would not have thought there was .
anything wrong. These people went out and got JObs and used thelf regular
identification."
•
Cotton said Ohio police interviewed the Volgareses on Sunday and an
extradition hearing would be held tod~y. .
.
.
..
Barker told KOTV that as .he and hts fnends watched the show, I started filling theni in on the details like she's been wearing her half back but ~~
looks just like her. They drive a Buick, then they showed the Butck on TV.
The Volgareses, who had been missing since mid-!-ugust, were wanted

on Ohio warrants charging them with aggravated murder m the death of 8year-old Seleana Gamble. A federal warr•nt charged them with fltght to avmd
prosecuuon.
.
The Volgareses were traveling with their children, Tesla, 4, and Jeriml·
ah, 2, as well as Vivian Gamble. II . Mona's daughter from a prev1ous rclationship. Jack Volgares was Seleana's stepfather:
Cotton satd the three chtldren were placed m the custody of the state
Human Services Department
"The kids appeared lobe in good condition and healthy," Cotton said.
" Right now we're happy the kids are OK and healthy."
·
Connie Cornell, who had stayed at the shelter and met the Volgareses, told
th~ Muskogee Phoenix that the family had planned to move on to New Mex·

.

~-

Cornell said Mrs. Volgares apparently had relatives who worked with a
carnival and the family intended io work and travel with the carnival after
getting enough money to 'fix their car.

l

''

},

�.'

Moncley, September 22, 1997

ComnJentary
The Daily Sentinel
'Estufuli'-" 1n 1948 "
1114-992-2156 • Fu 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper .
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

-.....

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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·

Issue -2 commercials
will swarm airwaves
By JOHN McCARTHY

.Usoclat8d Pres• Writer

'

Page2

Aa:u~f-for

By Jack Andef'Mn ·
and Jan Moller
official summary of jts financial
statements, preS.:nted to Congress
annually, begins with a bold declarauon of the agency's " mission ":
"The purpose of the (IRS) is to
collect the proper amount of tax revenue at the least co&lt;t; serve tht public by continually improving the
quaHty of our products and services;
and perform in a manner warranting
the highest degree of public confidence in our integrity, efficiency and
fairness."
Reality at the !a.-collecting
agency is a different story.
The IRS has wasted billions of
taxpayer dollars on a failed modernization effort; its financi~l records
are so jumbled that the agency
couldn't even come close to passing
one of its own audits; taxpayers callt.ng the IRS seeking answers 10 simple questions are often treated rudely by phone operators -- if they can
get through at all~ and the agency
sent out 15 ,000 incorrect "penalty
nottces" last year, often wreaking
havoc on the hves of law-ab iding
Americans.
By any objective &lt;tandard, the
IRS has failed tis "mtssion," and
failed 11 miserably. As we reported
last wee~. Congress is now intent on
bringing drastic change to the bumbling tax-collecting agency. A proposed bill, based on a commission
report released earlier this summer,
is aimed at making the IRS more
like a servtee-oriented corporation
than the htdebound bureaucracy n's
become.
At congressional hearings last
week, advocates of the reform proposal, and of a more mode&lt;t counterproposal endorsed by the Clinton
·administration , made their case to
the tax-wntmg House Ways and
Means Committee. Rep. Bill Archer,
R-Texas, the committee's chairman,
has made IRS restructuring his top
priority this fall.
.
Those testifying before' the com-

mittee·didn't mtnce words. " This is
about making the trains run on time,
making the ~hones work, " said Rep.
Rob Portman, R-Ohio,
co-chair of the bipartisan
IRS Restructuring Commission, whose findings
were made public tn
June .
Portman and the com-

board of directors is needed, Kerrey
told the committee.
"One of the problems is that the
IRS isn't terribly
accountable to (Congress)," Kcrrey said.
" An
independent
(board) makes the
IRS more accountable. The (board)
mission's other co-chair,
would have the indeSen. Bob Kerrey, .0- Moller and Anderson pendence to take
Neb., say the IRS should
actiOn, regardless. of
be run by a seven-person
whether (thai actton is)
board of dmictors, to be culled most- · going to embarrass the presidenl or
ly from the private sector. Though the Congress."
the Treasury secretary would also sit
But Treasury secretary Robert
on the board, his power over IRS Rubin believes that such a board of
operations would be greatly dimin- outsiders poses . " many serious
ished.
risks," and would' " have what
Portman and Kerrey argue tllat lawyers call a 'chilling effect' on
the Treasury secretary has too rnany IRS e!llployees." Rubin acknowlresponsibilities -- setting national edged that some IRS employees
economiC policy, managing the Cus- "behave tmproperly,'' but told lawtoms Service and the Bureau of makers to look at the btg picture.
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms ,
"There is no doubt... that in any
among other things -- to devote suf- large organizatton with sigmfi cant ·
ficient lime to runntng, the IRS . powers there wtll be a number of
That's why a strong, independent mstance5 each year where tndividu-

COLUMBUS -It's an off-year election but by Nov. 4, television viewers may feel like the victims of a full-scale political mugging.
Issue 2, which will detennine whether Ohio 's new workers ' compensation law goes on the books, is one of two statewide .ballot issues in the election.
.
Issue I is a constitutional amendment that would allow a judge to deny
bail to people charged with felonies if the judge determines the defendants
could be a serious threat to others.
But it's Issue 2 that will dominate the airwaves.
The group that collected enough signatures to force the referendum on
the balloi after being signed into law - the first time that's happened since
1989- wants the voters tO say "no." A "yes" vote would put the law into
effect.
Proponents of the new Iaw say 11 is designed to get workers back to work
faster, cut back abuse of the system and speed up claims processin~.
Opponents say the law favors businesses by punishing workers with
legitimate complaints.
Keep Ohioans Working. a business-backed group fanned to persuade
voters to adopt the law, has been running television ads across the state.
The ads -from a first-person perspective - show a man toppling from
a ladder, then drowsily awakening in a hospital bed. He first is comfoned by
doctors, then hounded by slick• looking lawyers armed with what appear to
be settlement papers.
·
1bC narrator asks whether doctors or lawyers should decide what's best
for the patient. The spot ends wtth the worker finding a check from the
Bureau of Workers' Compensation in hiS mailbox.
Roger Geiger, treasurer of Keep Ohioans Working, said Friday that the ad
wll.'l designed to help frame the debate on Issue 2.
"One of the messages is. that the reforms were about streamlining the By Nat Hentoff
subspecialty of finding ways to regprocess, trying to return us to the no-fault system it was designed to be,"
An aftermath of the car cra!;h that ulate the more offensive offshoot&lt; of
Geiger said.
killed Princess Diana, among others, free expression. Pornogra· Geiger would not say ltow much money has been ratsed or spent on has been an urgent call for laws to phy, for one example.
advertising. The group is supported by business groups including the 0hio punish piranha-like photographers.
As for offensive phoCbainber of Commerce, the OHA: the Association for Hospitals and Health In New York state, a coalition -- tographers, there are cxistSystems and the Ohio Farm Bureau Federalion.
. including NOW and domestic vio- mg laws, Sunstein con~
A message seeking comment was left a! the Committee to Stop Corporate lence groups -- is supporting with cedes. that can protect pnAttaeks on Injured Workers, a coalition oflabor and lawyers who oppose the renewed vigor a prevtously mtro- vacy -- statute:\ agamst
new law.
duced anti-stalkmg bill that encom- trespassmg, defamatton
AI Tuchfarber, director ofthe University"of &lt;;:mcinnati 's Institute for Pol- passes photo~raphcrs. ·
and certain sanctions
icy Research, said the media war will be important because the public knows
Cahforma state senator Tom agamst electronic eaves~
little about the issue.
. .
'
Hayden •-- a founder long ago of the dropping or wiretapping
."What that means is these campaigns - both pro and con - have a free-spirited Students for a DemocBut Professor Sunstein
blank slate on which to write. Whoever gets the best arguments out there ... ratic Soctcty .. has introduced legi s- says, " The time has come
wins the day," Tuchfarber said.
lation thai would penalize photogra- for some creati ve think1ng
phers who do not stay '50 to I00 feet ahout other possibilities." Why nol ,
away from celebrttics nottaktng part he says, ··allow people to recover
in public events. But cclcbrtties, JUSt damages tf they have been rcJl!'alcdby
betng, often crcalc public events. ly harasse d· abo ut a personal
Barry's
In an op-ed piece m the New tragedy?"
World
York Times, Cass Sunstem, a law
There IS no furth er dcfimtion of
professor at the University of Chtca- " harass*!."
go, has pressed for new laws to reinHe also suggests thin states
force the walls of privacy. After hi s ·· mtght try specifically forbidding
call for sanctions against the press photographers 10 invade a private
because of the car crash that killed domain through the usc of long-disPrincess Diana, the Paris police, m a tance photographic cqutpmcnt. "
350-page report. said that the Except, of course, for FBI phOiograpaparazZI had not been rcsponstblc phcrs. ·
for the death ol the pnnccss. The
However, wllh regard to longdnvcr, lhey say. was responsible . dtslance piciUre taking. what if an
But there arc still in.sistent accusa- elected official .. who speaks often
tions against the photographers and and ardently of his devotion to famthose who employ !hem.
Il y values -- IS caught m a comproIn any case, Professor Sunstcin mtsmg long-diStance shol wtth a
has not been worrymg only about woman who IS not hi s wife? h that
speeding paparazzi on motorcycles. harassment' Or if It's invasion of
For years ~· has been developing a pnvacy. is it also a matter of public

IToledol64· I

als behave improperly," RubiA said.
"We can and must deal with these
instances -- and do everything possible to prevent them -- but always in
the context of contmued support for
the people and the mission of the
organi~tion as a whole. "
Rubin wants control of the IRS to
remain largely in the hands. of top ·
Treasury officials, aad that a private
sector board should be appomted
merely to "advise " thess,.,oflic tals.
"We're very confident that (an
IRS restructunng btl!) will pass this
fall," the GOP staffer added. "It has
widespread support. This issue will
move forward ."
This week , the Senate holds highprofile hearings on " IRS horror stories." where law-abiding taxpayers
will tell senators how their lives
were turned upside down by the
IRS. The good news for them js that
if Congress gets ns way, the IRS
may soon be turned upside down
itself.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndi&lt;ate, Inc.

I~M-ansfl-eld-,lr-63-.....,.

•leoiumbusl65'

Today in history
By The Auoeiatecl Pre••

·

Today is Monday, Sept. 22nd, the 265th day of 1997. There arc 100 days
left in the year. Au1umn arnvcs at 7:56p.m. Eastern Dayhght Time.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
,
On Sept. 22. 1776, Nathan Hale was hanged as a spy by the British during the Revolutionary War.
.
On this date:
In !789, Congress au1horizcd the oflicc of Postmaster-General.
In 1792. the French Republic was proclaimed .
In !862, President Lincoln issued the preliminary Em~ncipation Prodamation declaring all slaves m rebel states should be free as of Jan . I, 1863.
In 1'927 Gene Tunney successfully defended his heavyweight boxing
title against Jack Dcmpse~ in the famous "long-count" fight in Chicago.
In 1949, the Soviet Umon exploded tts first atomtc bomb.
In 1958. Shennan Adams. assistanl to !&gt;resident Eisenhower, resigned
amid charges of improper!~ using his innuen~.e to help an industrialist. .
In !964, the musical "Ftddler on the Roof opened on Broadway, begmning a run of 3,242 performances.
In J97S, Sara Jane Moore attempted to shoot President Ford outside a San
Francisco hotel, but missed..
In 1980,' the Persian Gulf conUict between Iran and Iraq erupted into full-

~~ 7:9

songwriter Irving Berlin died in.New York City at age 10!,.
Ten ye~ ago: On Wall Street, the stock market surged higher.
1

I

W.VA.

Ice

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

~· g:'JNdPtela~

Autumn debuts tonight
with chilly temperatures
Autumn arrives tonight - and il will feel like it, the NatiOnal Weather
• ·Service said.
· Temperatures tonight will be in the chilly 50s. And scattered showers are
:possible in the northern half of the state.
I
Rain is threatened for the entire state on Tuesday.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sta. lion was 95 degrees in 1895 while the record low was 37 in 1995. Sunset
:. tonight will be at 7:28 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:20 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy. Lows m the mid and upper 50s. Light wind.
Tuesday... Showers likely. Highs in the lower and mtd 70s. Chance of ram
: 60 percent.
Tuesday night...Partly cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows 50 to 55.
Extended fore&lt;ast:
Wednesday...Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 60s.
. Thursday... Partly cloudy with a chance ofrain. Lows in the lower 50s and
· highs in the upper 60s.
· Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 40s and highs in the upper 60s.

~ Annual

Expo showcases

(Continued from Page 1)
day morning to officially open the
both days froin the portable stage Expo, special recognition was given
· located on the midway, and numerous by the Expo committee to Addalou
singers and dancers perfonned along LewiS for her community service.
She was presented a bouquet of red
with the Trinity Bell Choir.
.
During the ribbon cutting Satur- foses.

~~~

concern? ·
But Sunstcin tells us that "a
democracy is badly
served when newspapers and televiswn
focus so mtenscly on
the pcrs.onal ;oys and
tragcdtes of famous
people. This kind of
' news' crowds out more

new laws are not passed to control
the press m pnvacy matters; ordi nary people as well as cclchnttes
will soon suffer. But pervasive invaSions of privacy arc primarily by the
government and insurance and credIt companies. All of us' ordinary people leave extenSive paper trails, none
of which ts tracked by photographers.
serious issues."
Wnh regard lo curbing the press.
What if readers there is one form of terminal silence
and viewers want such that ha&lt; nothing to do with lhe law.
pholograrhs and sto- ~(was expressed most pcrtmcnlly hy
ries? ''There 1s a.n A.J. L1cbltng's dtctum that freedom
important difference, "· of the press fundamentally hclongs
says Sunste1n, "between the public to those who own one.
interest and what tntcrcsts- the publllustrallng thai adage. Martm
he"
Peretz, owner of the New Republic,
Who defines "public ml~rcst "? has fired tis edt tor. Mi chael K~lly. a
Certainly not the government, jourywlist of unc ommon tnsight ,
although it mtght well like lo. courage and mlcgrity Mr Kelly had
S~ould there be a board of private
bee~
tnsufflc•cntly rcvercntml
dectsion makers, chaired by Sun· Inward Mr. Peretz's friend AI Gore stein , that would pubhcly admonish - and toward s the Cltntons
the press whenever it placed whal
There 1s some rough JUStice in
interests the public over the public thiS dJsmtSsal of Mr. Kell y. The
interest?
credibility of the New Republic has
Chmcse authonttcs have solved now been so dtminishcd !hat its hon thai problem. Wntmg from BetJmg orary editor could be White House
m the New York Ttmes, Seth Faison aide-- and previous celehrator of the
notes that "editors knew that the Clintons in various .publicati ons,
fliana stciry would be one of the including the New Republic -· Stdmost closely read in the newspapers ncy Blumenthal.
that day But coverage was conNat Heotoff is a nationally
trolled, not because of. what readers renowned authority on the First
want. but because of what it was Amendment and the re;t of the
decided they should want. "
Bill of Rights.
Professor Sunsletn warns that if

Hester V. Houck

EMS units answer 13 calls

Russell
. A. McMillin

7

Hiram Theodore ·Fisher
Hiram Theodore Fisher, 89, of Minersville, died on Friday, September 19,
1997 a1 Pensacola, Aorida.
He was born in Pomeroy on November 8, !907, son of the late William
Fisher and Alice Parker Fisher. He was a retired hnotype operator at the
Athens Messenger.
He attended the Minersville United Methodtst Church.
He is survived by two grandchildren, Jan (Duane) Skavdahl of Villa Hills.
Kentucky, and Mark (Kelly) Fisher of Pensacola, Aorida; five great-grandchildren, Susan, Stephanie and Samantha Skavdahl of Villa Hills, Kentucky,
and Mark and Ted Fisher of Pensacola, Aorida; two brothers, Mason Fisher of Mincrsvtlle, and John Fisher of Akron: a sister-in-law, Mary Grueser
of Pomeroy; a brother-in-law, Joe Gloeckner of Pomeroy; and several nieces
and nephews.
Also surviving are special friends , Helen Maag, and the Danny Brown
family.
He was preceded in death by his wtfe, Grace FISher; and a son and daughter-in-law, Ted and Sue Fisher.
Funeral services are Tuesday, September 23, 1997 at 10:30 a m tn the
Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy. The Rev. Chad Emenck wtll officiate. Burtal will follow at Minersville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday. September 22, 1997
from 6 to 8 P·"'·
'

----Lottery results---CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming all six
numbers selected m Saturday's Super
Lotto drawing so Wednesday's jackpot will be $8 million, the Ohio Lot_ _ _ _ _ _.__ _ _..._.,,
r
'

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113-HO)

a

Donald Collins, 59, Rullaod, died Sunday, Sept. 21, 1997 at his home.
He was born Aug. I8, !938 in Wayland, Ky., son of the late Eunice Taylor and Junior Collins. He was a U.S . Air Force veteran, and employed by
General Motors for over 30 years.
He was a member pf lhe Mason Post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the
Galion Moose Lodge, a life member of AmVets 31 in Ontario, Ohio, was a
past seoutmaster in Crestline and a member ofUAWLocal 549 in Kentucky.
He is survived by his wife, Hilda Roush Collins; sons and daughters-inPatrol issues citation following crash
law, Donald Gene and Cathy Collins of Naples, Aa., Dennis and Penny
The Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State Highway Patrol cited Chester A.
Collins and Doug and Melin"" Collins, all of Shelby, and Danny Collins of
Ross, 29, 34425 New Lima Road, Rutland, for assured clear distance and
Dallas, Texas; a daughter aod son-in-law, Cathy and Tim Ward of Crestline;
no operator's license Sunday following a two-vehtcle accident on Counstepdaughters aod stepsons-in-law, Debra and Jackie Johnson of Letart, W.Va., . tY Road 3 (New Ltma).
'
and Carol and Gerald Young of Mason, Ohio; stepsons and stepdaughtersTroopers said Ross was northbound,
the intersection wnh Rutland
in-law: Stanley Gibbs of Rutland, Harry Gibbs of West Palm Beach, Aa.,
·Township Road 173 (Peterson) at 3:30 p.m. when he swerved to avoid
William and Melinda Gibbs of Rutland; sisters and brothers-in-law, Shirley
.collision with a northbound pickup truck driven by Roger P. Hysell. 41,
and Sam Roberts of Tiro, and Fonda Petrik of Crestline; stepbrothers, Ron
32280 Minersvtlle Road, Racine, but still struck Hysell's car m the left
Taylor and Ty Taylor of Shelby; eight grandchildren; 12 stepgrandchildren
side. ·
and three stepgreat-grandchildren; an uncle ; aunts aod several nieces and
Hysell had slowed for a turn into a privale driveway at the time of the
nephews.
crash, accordmg to the report.
He was preceded in death by his first wtfe, Cynthia Collins, and a stepDamage to Hysell's car was moderate and slight to Ross' ptckup, troopfather, Wallace "Juniqr" Taylor.
·ers sa1d.
A private memorial service will be held for the fantily at the Collins CemeDeputies probe shooting report
tery at Wayland, Aoyd County, Ky., at a later date. Arrangements are by the
A 4-year-old girl was transported 'to Children's Hospttal in Columbus
Ftsher Funeral Home, Middleport.
after
being shot in the head, according to the Athens County Shenffs
In heu o( nowers, the family requests memorial contributions be made
Department.
.
to the American Cancer Society, Meigs County Unit, P.O. Box 8!3. 444 SecTiffany Canter was shot while her father, Rodney Canter, 32, Athens,
ond Ave., Suite 200, Gallipolis, Oh10 45631-1157 .
was target shooting with a .22-caliber rine ncar The Plams, accordmg to
the re~n. He lrans~rted her to a relative's house to call for help.
The mctdent remains under investigation. A report on the girl's condition
was not available this morning.
Hester V. Blackwood Houck, 9!, of Pomeroy, died Sunday, Sept. 21, 1997
at the extended care unit of Veterans Memorial Hospital, following a brief
TP-C District plans service outage
illness. She was a homemaker.
..
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District customers along State Route 248
She was bomApnll7, 1906 in Scipio Township, daughterofthe late John ,
:between
Success Road and Long Bottom, Cunis Hollow Road, Btgley
P. and Ella F. Landaker Douglas. She attended the Church of God 10 GalR1dge,
Angelo
Road, Mount Olive Road, Ptgott Road and Swann Road
lipolis.
in
Olive
Township
will be without water Tuesday between 8 a.m and 3
Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law, Lloyd Everett and Anna
p.m., weather pennining.
Blackwood, and Vernal Eugene (Betty) Blackwood, all of Pomeroy; a daughThe Long Bottom Community B.lilding wtll also be affected.
ter, Ethel Eileen Mees of Pomeroy; two daughters and sons-in-law, Phyllis
Workers will install two 12-inch valves at the Intersection of 248 and
Vergene and John Handley of Dunwoody, Ga., and Marilyn Hester and
Success
Road . A boil order wtll be m effect after water servtce IS restored
Richard Poulin of Middleport; 13 grandchildren ~nd !4 great-grandchildren;
and several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husbands, Virgil
E. Blackwood and John Houck; a brother, Jesse Douglas; three half- sisters
and five half brothers; and a son-in-law, Richard Mees.
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Lucille Hendncks. treated al the
Servtces will be I p m. Wednesday 10 the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy, gency Medical Service recorded 13
scene.
with the Rev. Paul Voss officiating. Burial will follow at the Burhngham calls for assistance Saturday and
POMEROY
Cemetery. Fnends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 2-4 and 7- Sunday. Umts responding included:
7:53 p m. Saturday, Ball Run
9p.m.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Road, Andramada Arnott, VMH.
2:27 a.m. Saturday, Union
RACINE
Avenue, Pomeroy, Janet Nonnan,
!0:30p.m. Sunday, motor vehicle
.
.
refused treatment;
accident on State Roule 124. Terry
7:28 a.m. Saturday, Overbrook · Smith transported 10 Grant Medical
Russell A. McMillin, 100, Mason, W.Va., died Sunday, Sept,21, .1997 in
Nursing Center, Mtddleport, Vina Center via helicopter ambulance.
the Julia Personal Home Care Center, Clifton, W.Va.
Born Sept. 15, 1'897 in Letart, W.Va., daughter of the late Elmer and Ves- Casto, Holzer Medical Center;
REEDSVILLE
11:18 a.m. Saturday, U.S. 33,
9:49 a.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
ta Hart McMillin, he was a retired coal miner, and a former employee of the
Bobby McConana, Veterans Memo- department and squad to SR 681,
Clements Tree Nursery.
structure fire, Thelma Smith properHe was also preceded m death by his wife, Aora·Gibbs McMillin, on July rial Hospttal;
12:52 p.m. Saturday, Railroad ty, no mjuries reported .
23, I99I; two daughters, Grace Anna Lee McMillin, in 1977, and Lena V.
RUTLAND
Ord, m 1995; lwo sisters, Garnet Hesson and Grace Weaver; and three broth- Street, Middleport, Jeanette Miller,
l :55 p.m. Saturday, Lemaster
ers, Raymond McMillin, Floyd McMtllin, and Erban McMtllin, in infancy. HMC, Middleport squad assiSted ;
!0: II a.m. Sunday, Condor Slreet, Road. David Dellavalle, O'B Ieness
Surviving are two daughters and sons-m-law, Etleen F. and Frank BoneLanora
Games, HMC;
cutter of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Luella E. and Donald M. Wood of Letart;
Memorial Hospital.
1·2
1
p.m. Sunday, Kings Hill
a son and daughter-in-law, Glenn R. and Della McMillin of Mason; a son in-law, Dick Ord of New Haven, W.Va. ; and 12 grandchildren, 20 great-grand- Road, Pomeroy, Jennifer McDonald,
O'Bteness Memorial Hospital ;
children and 20 great-great-grandchildren.
~ PRIIIG VlulEY CINEMA
9·10 p.m. Sunday, Salser Road,
Services will be II am. Tuesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home , Mason,
H
6 4514
with Simon and Titus Lehman officiating. Burial will be in the Graham Ceme- Ractne, Clinton Smith, Pleasant Valley Hospttal.
·
tery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Monday.
MIDDLEPORT
8:17 p.m. Saturday, East ·Main
Street, Pomeroy, Robert Pickett,
treated at the scene,
Club to meet
Rev. Nonnan Butler, the Rev. Bryan
6:42p.m., North Second Avenue,
Winding Trail Garden Club will Blair Th~re will be special smgmg.
meet at the home of Gladys Cumings
new~
6:30p.m. (or potluck to be followed Wetkend services
Holzer
Medic:al
Center
by a meeting.
Weekend revival services will be
held at the South Bethel New Testa- . Discharges Sept. 19 - Amanda
ment Church, Friday through Sunday. Roseberry, William Camp, Norma
Square dao•e set
A square dance will be held at the Pastor Lonme Coates wtll be the Devoe, Mrs. Keith Pratt and so~. FreLong Bottom Community Building guest speaker for the revival. Music da Vanlnwagen, Mrs. Ronald
Tuesday, 7 to !0 p.m. Music will be will be pro~ided by "One Way" Fri- Maxwell and daughter; Ida Orsborn.
Birth- Mr. and Mrs. Rick HaiSday, Russ and the Gospel Tones on
by the Smokie Mountam Dnfters.
Saturday, and Laura Guthrie and lop, daughter, Wellston.
Rejoice on Sunday. Servtces will be
Hunter edu&lt;ation
Disoharges Sept. 20- Frances ~~~~~~~~~~~~
A free 10-hour Ohio Hunter Edu- held at 7 each evening. Pastor Rob Grady, Gregory Watts, Mark Gibson, .
cation Class will be held Sept. 29, 30 Barber invites the public. The church Laura Kenney, Irene Osborne, Jocie
and Oct. I from 6-9 p.m. and, Oct. 4 is localed two miles from Route 7 on Caldwell, Christopher Morman, Irene
from 9 a.m. to noon at the Pomeroy Silver Ridge Road , across from East- Freeland, Mrs. Rick Haislop and
daughter, Chfistopher Brumfield·.
Gun Club, wnh the Sept. 30 class to ern High School.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Michael
be held al lhe Meigs High School
Scott, daughter, Jackson.
library. Class size is limited and pre- Pre-entrance txam
Discharges Sept. 21 - Lovell
The pre-entrance examinatton for
registration is required . To regiSter,
call Jim Freeman at The Daily Sen- the Washington State Commumty Hamtlton , Frances Tudor, Roben
tinel at 992-2 155, extension 102. College Practical Nursing Education Blackstock, Sandy Lewis, Mrs.
Completion of the class is necessary Program beginning falll998 is being Mt chael Scott and daughter, Daryl
for first -time hunters wanting to pur- gtven Monday, Sept. 29 at 8 a.m. at Boyer.
Birth - Mr and Mrs. Jeremy
chase an Ohto hunting license.
the Washington State Community
Wyatt,
son, Wellslon.
College. There is a $25 fe e payable
(Published
with permission)
before the examination. To make
Garden club ~ting
The Wildwood Garden Club will arrangements to take the test, reSImeet Wednesday, I p.m. at the home dents may call 374-8716 or stop by
of Betty Snow, Shade.
the Practtcal Nursmg office at the college. ,
.
Auxiliary to meet
Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Webster
• Post, American LegiOn, wtll meet
Tuesday, 2 p.m. at the hall. Pecans
will be available for sale.

near

Ma·ilbag a cornucopia of wisdom
What's buggmg the body politic'
The mailbag knows:
C.M., Hanover, Pa.: Why pick on
Kenneth Starr, who IS only doing his
damndest to PROVE the Clinton
admimstration is the most corrupt in
history. and.by far the most dangerous? Ron Brown died after thrcatcn_ing to spill his guts. Vincent dtd not
die in Marcy Park There arc 39 others around Clinton who met premature tenninatton -- 13 suicides. mnc
murders, seven plane crashes. two
unclas&gt;tfiablc. Even our SUPERLIBERAL mmiSter in Gettysburg is
makmg jokes about offering to rent
the Lincoln Pew for a donalion.
Joe: Thtrty-nine, eh? Gt:ez, I
heard it was 37 Oh well, what's a
liquidation here or there ? Incidental ly, l JUSt LOVED the sticker on your
letter: "U.S. Out of United Nattons
... U.N. World Government Means
Foreign Control of Our Children,
Troops &amp; Taxes." You see any
strange aircraft, you call the Black
Helicopter Hotline, you hear?
·
A.B., Willmgboro, N.J.: All
Republicans should have to read
Haynes Johnson 's book about
Ronald Reagan . "Sleepwalking

All.

'''''

.By The Auoclated Preas

Through HiStory." and !hey would· ington and tell you what an ignorant sin Expose the tmmorahty. Wrong
find thi s administration squeaky molY" you are.
is sttll wrong. It's time to lake a firm
clean.
stand
for pghteousncss. Choose yo~
Joe : What IItke mosl about Rush
this
day
whom xou wtll serve .
Joe: Good idea. I especially rec- freaks ts their grace and luctdity, and
Joc : Sec what I mean'
ommend Chapter 15, whtch is about the aura of screnlly thai sutrounds
them like mist.
the paucity of ethics in the
H.C., Florence, S.C_: You say the
Reagan adminislration, and
P.F., The Wood- Confederate nag is a symbol of hate.
page 445, which tells how
lands, Texas: Thank you It has been mentioned m my social
Ron 's millionatrc pals
for the advice you gave gatherings that slavery was the luck:
bought htm two Californta
to us Southern Baptists icst lhing thai could have happene4
homes, includmg th e $5
Fortunately. I wtll not be to the dcscendanls of those who
mtllton Bel Atr mansiOn
one who has to worry were once enslaved. Othcrwtse the~
where the Reagans now
about the til-adviSed would be ltvmg m that peaceful;
live. Some readers mtghl
boycott of Dtsncy. Boy- prosperous continent of Africa.
•
also bcneftt by reading
cotts by rchgious groups
Joe: l don't think I need to com:
•
"RUSH LIMBAUGH IS A
.arc generally useless menl on your comments.
BIG FAT IDIOT," hy AI
atlempls 10 become
•
D.T., Willis, Texas: Joe, I scn&lt;t
Franken, particularly the
Spear
moral policemen fer the
part about Rush avo1ding the
world . The end result is you these nolcs to help you develop
clearer thmking habits I realize thai
drafl
thai the people you arc trying to
as a youth you were kidnapped by
B.O . Kansas Ct ty, Mo · Let's reach out lo arc alienated. Remem - gang of lcft-wmg cxtrcmJSts.
'
compare Joseph Spear and Rush ber, there arc many of us who arc
Joe: Surprise , !'lu rpnsc . As a
Ltmbaugh. shall we ? Rush Ltm- Southern Baptists who do nol share
youth,
my primary poh llcal hero:
m
thts
fooli
sh
reso
lutton.
Most
of
us
baugh donated $25,000 10 the
was
Barry
Goldwater. I still. regard ·
Leukemia Foundation. Joseph Spear have good se nse.
h1m
as
an
1
con.
:
donated .. ?7? Rush stresses mdividJoe: What a pleasure to hear from
Note: You may wntc to me care:
ualism and volunteerism. Joe stress- a religious person who eschews rotc
es volunteerism through the brutal and thinks for htmself. You made my of the Newspaper Enterprise Assoct -:
ation. 200 Madison Ave, New York,:
coercton of government . Come on day. P.F.
NY !0016.
.
out to the Mtdwest and see how us
•
A.T , Lafayetle, La.: Don't give
lowly people volunteer and help me that business about boycous nol
Joseph Spear is a syndicated;
each other. Come on ou~ then we'll working. Homosexuality is still a writer for Newspaper Enterprjse
Ieick vour dumb ass back to WashAsso&lt;iation.

A Belleville, W:Va., man was in good condition this morning in Grant
Medical Center, Columbus, with injuriC$ suffered in a one-vehicle accident late Sunday on State Route 124 near Racine .
llle Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State Highway Patrol said Terry L. Snlith,
41, was transported to Grant by MedFlight from the scene of the 10:30
p.m. accident.
Troopers said Smith was ell.'ltbound when his pickup truck went off the
right side of the road. The vehicle then struck a bridge; according 10 the
repon.
The ptckup was severely damaged, the patrol reported .

Donald Collins

•

Did the framers have photographers in mind?

By Joseph Spear

Accident victim In good condition

conditions and

MICH.

IRS needs to be turned upside down

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Local News in Brief:

OHIO Weatt1er
'I8eldly, SepL l3

Monday, September 22, 1997

llle Internal Revenue Service's

111 Court Street, P.omeroy, Ohio

OMMflll Manager

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Publillled e\'ery lflernoon, Monday throush
Fnday, II t Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohto, by the
Otllo V.lley Publishin1 Company/t'ilnnell Co ,
Pomeroy, Ohio •5769, Ph. 992-21.56 Second
clau posl.lp: p.~ld at Pomeroy, OhiO.

•

M•llcr. The Assoc:tlled Press, and the Ohto
Newtpaper AUoclatlon. ·

POSTM.4S'I'ER: Send addreu correcllons to
The Daily Sentir.el, Ill Coun St, Pomeroy,
Ohitl 4~769.

SVBSCRimON RATES
.

87 C•rritr or Mo16r Ro•N

One Week .......... ~ ................................. $2.00
One Moo1L............ .. ....... ........... .. ..II&lt; 711
One Year .......... •• ..... .... •• . • •.
• SHW.OO

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily ....................... ................ )5 Cents
SuMcrlbers 101 dcamnJ to pay the cmrer may
remll in ldvaMC direct 10 The Daily Sentntel
oaa tlrcc, lill or I2 monlll basis. Cndil will"'

Jlven carnerexl'l week.
No IUblcrlptlon by mall pcnnined ia areu
wMre llomr cmser service ia anal able
hblb.her rnervea.lhe riJhllo adjull 111r:1 dur·
inJ tk aubKriptioft period. S•blcrlpdon tate
c••np• m•y br: · implcnta~tcd by ciiiiJiftJ the
chlralion of lhc .ublcripl10n.

MAIL SVBSCRimONS
I.... Melp Cot•IJ
13 Weeil...............................................$27.30
l6 .............. ........., ..................... $53.R2

l2W..ks.................................... SIOlJ6
..... Ollbllll Mtlp

eo.••,

t3 Weeil............................. ....... $29.25
26 - i l........................................$l6.6R
52 Weeil ...................................... $109.72

'
I

tery said .' "
Sales in' Super Lotto totaled
$2,51 0,836.50. Ktcker sales totaled
$455.561.
There were 73 Super Lotto tickets
with five of the numbers, and each is
worth $946. The 3,001 tickets showing four of the numbers are each
worth $72

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...................... 46),
Akzo ...........;............................82
AmrTeeh ............................... 6&amp;'1.
Ashland 011 ...............~ ...........52',;
AT&amp;T .....................................44'4
Bank One............................. 54,-..
Bob Evans ............................18~

Borg..Wamer .........................56,,

Champion ...............................19
Chann Shpa ......................... 6"1.
City Holding ..........................42~
Federal Mogul ......................35~.
Gannett .............................. 104"1.
Good!(Hr .....................:.......&amp;&amp;~.
Kmart ......... ~.........................14,_
Landa End ............................27'1.
Ltd.........................................25\
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 19~.
ova .......................................35'h
One Valley ............................37'1.
Peoples ...................................38

Pram Flnl............................... 20'!.
Aockwell ...............................&amp;21,l,.
RD.Shllll ................................ 54'l.

-Shoney'e ...............................4'Ster Bank ..............................45'•
Wendy's ................................ 22'1.
wonhlngton ......................... 20'!.

-·-·-

Stock repone are the 10:30
8'.m. quotas provided by Aclvelt
of Glllllpolla.

Meigs announcements

Hospital

Services to he held
Spectal services will be held at the
.R~ Brush Church of Christ, Wednesday through Sunday, 7 p.ffi. and Sunday, !0 a.m. Guy Mallory of Winter
Garden, Fla., will be the speaker.
Homecoming
Homecoming wtll be held at the
· Eagle ·Ridge Commumty Church, _
·Racine, Sunday. Sunday school will
be held at 10 am., a carry-in dinner
· at noon, afternoon servtce · at l :30
p.m. featuring Harvest Time, Hayman Trio and others.
Expo to meet
The Expo committee will meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Rock
Springs fairgrounds.
Revival servkes
Revival services will be held at the
long Bottom United Methodist
Church, Friday through Sunday, 7
each evening. Speakers will be the

8th Annual

Stemwheel
Festival
Parade
Call 992·2239 to enter your unit
• Walking • Marching • Vehicles
• Bicycles • Horses
BE CREATIVE AND DECORATE YOUR BICYCLES

Prizes will be awarded
for children rades K-S

�The Daily.Sentin..!:!

Sports

Monday, September 22, 1997

Monday, September 22, 1997

The fantastic finish department at
NFL Films will have a busy week.
Buffalo was the star of Sunday's
show, expanding the legacy of tbe
1992 playoffs when the Bills rallied
from a 35-3 defictt to beat Houston
in overtime.
ThiS fime, they came back from
26-0 down to beat Indianapohs 3735, but only after holdmg off a lastgasp Colts rally. Buffalo had to stop

By BEN WALKER

wrner

STEALS SECOND- The Houstqn Astros' Craig Biggio alleles Into
HCond baM lor the succeaalul slllal as Cincinnati second baseman
Damian JIICkllon divas for the wild throw from catcher Eddie
Tauban- In the fifth Inning of Sunday's Natl01111l Lague game in
Cincinnati, where the Altroa' 6-3 win eliminated the 11M1a from playoff contention. (AP)

Astros beat Reds
·S-3 to drop Cincy
from division race
•

,,

By JOE KAY
number to four headmg into the final
CINCINNATI (AP)- Two more week. Even tf the Pirates wm the rest
teams gone, only one more left for .,f their games, the Astros would
the Houston Astros to hold off.
clinch their first utle since 1986 by
The Astros closed in on an NL merely gmng 4-3
Central tttle Sunday by beating the
"It probably looks a little more
Cmcinnatt Reds 8-3 behmd Rtcky insecure than tt docs to everyone
Gutierrez, who doubled twtce and else," manager Larry Dierker satd.
drove in three runs.
·
"Anything can happen in a week
Cincinnati and St. Louis, the last We're playmg pretty well. We're
two divJSton champions, were ehm- winning enough to keep the Pirates at
inated with thetr losses Sunday, leav- bay, but they're startmg to wm now,
ing only Pittsb~sttll in the chase. too "
The Pirates rem · ed 3 1/2 games
Ptttsburgh has won five of its last
back after beatin
e Cardmals 14- seven to keep the pressure on The
2.
teams finish the season with three
"The one year ( 1995) we lost to games in Houston.
the Red~ and that was the turnmg
"The qutcker we can get thts thmg
point in that season," Craig Btggto done, the better off," Jeff Bagwell
satd. "Last year, the turnmg pomt satd. "We don't want it to come
came against the Cardtnals. Maybe 1~ down to the last three games."
was justice a little btt that the teams
The Reds fell to 28-28 under manthat knocked us out were the first ager Jack McKeon, who kept them m
ones knocked out."
contentton until the second-.last
The Cardmals swept a three-game weekend.
·
series tn early September last season,
"It was preuy obvious that we
starting an 8-17 month that forced the were hangmg by a thread," McKeon
Astros to settle for second The last said. "We're sttll not eliminated
two days have given the Astros a lit- from second or third, but 11 would
tie more confidence that there will be have taken a mtracle to come back
no collapse this time. .
.
and wm it. I'm happy that we battled
The two consecutive wms over back tht&gt; far."
Cincinnati reduced their clinching

AP BaMball
With all the talk about Mark
McGwtre and Ken Griffey Jr hittmg
61, no one has btl bigger home runs
lately than Barry Bonds.
Bonds homered for the fourth time
m five games, an inside-the-park shot
Sunday as the San Franctsco Gtants
beat the San Otego Padres 8-5.
Bonds' 37th homer, along ~itH a
tiebreaking, two-run by Stan Javier in
the mnth mning, helped the Giants
increase thetr lead to two games over
Los Angeles in the NL West.' The
Dodgers lost to Colorado 10-5.
Only one week now stands behmd
the Giants and thetr first dtvtston tttle
since 1989.
"It's JUSta stress-out. We're all too
tired, people losing their votces,
everythmg," Bonds satd.
In other games, Chtcago topped
Philadelphia 11-3, New York stopped
Florida 2-1, Montreal beat Atlanta 71, Houston defeated Cincinnati 8-3,
and Pittsburgh downed St. Louts 142 ..

m 1979 and broke the team record set
by Steve Carlton in 1972. Schtlhng
(I 6-11) has one stan left this season,
next week agamst Florida.
Sandberg, who began playtng for
the Cubs in 1982, htt an RBI double
tn the first inning He singled in the
fifth and left for a pinch-runner to the
cheers of the crowd of 29,922
After TV broadcaster Harry Carny
sang "Take Me Out to the Ball game"
during the seventh-inning stretch, he
said goodbye to Sandberg, who took
another curtain call
Pirates 14, Cardinals 2
Mark McGwire stayed stuck at 54
home runs, going 0-for-3 with a sacrifice fly in St Louis' loss to Pittsburgh.
McGwtre needs seven homers m
the Cardmals' last seven games to
match Roger Mans' record of 61 m
1961.
Jose Gutllen and Turner Ward
homered as the Pirates remamed 3
I12 games beh1nd Houston m the NL
Central. Ptltsburgh plays three games
at the Astrodome next weekend.
Mets 2, Marlins I
Florida lost any chance of chnchmg tis first playoff spot wtth a loss at
home to New York.
The Marhns needed a victol)', then
a loss by San Francisco or Los
Angeles later m the day to ensure a
postseason berth.
(See NL on Page S)

The VISitlng Giants trailed 2-0 10
the fourth when Bonds hit a fly ball
that left fielder Greg Vaughn
appeared to have in range. But'
Vaughn lost 11 m the sun and ball
bounced off his right knee and rolled
into the Padres bullpen.
Bonds did not run at full tilt until
the final 40 feet, and the relay hit him
and bounded away.
"I thought the umpire was gomg
to send me back (to second), then all
of a sudden (Vaughn) took off over
there, so I said, 'Oh, hell, it might
have come back out,"' Bonds said.
Bonds, a three-time MVP. ts batung 289 with 96 RB!s. He also has
drawn 137 walks.
The Padres scored three ttmes in
the etghth, tying tt at 5 as Rod Beck
(7-4) blew his eighth save chance.
But Javier tnpled to put the Giants
ahead and, after Bonds was iqtentlonally walked, Jeff Kent htt an RBI
single for hJS third hit.
Cubs 11, PhUIIes 3
Ryne Sandberg went2-for-3 in hts
final home game at Wrigley Field as
Chtcago beat Phtladelphta.
Curt Schilling tied the NL record
for stnkeouts by a right-hander and
set a Phil hes' record with 313
Schtlhng fanned eight, but left after
giVIng up three home runs 10 the fifth
inning.
Schilhng mau:hed the league mark
for nght-handers set by J.R Richard

a two-point conversion attempt: and

Martin
•

•

WinS

MBNA
400

Twins celebrate Radke's 20th
win; Angels sweep Rangers
ager Tom Kelly. He clutched II with
after he got hts 20th wm .
"I defimtely didn't expect thts, I ts left hand whtle hts nght arm was
didn't set any goals for myself th" bemg teed from hts shoulder to wrist
''I'm sure 11 won't feel good the
year," said Radke, who became Minnext
two months, though," he satd
nesota's first 20-game winner sance
after
after throwing 128 pnches, 96
1991. "It's somethmg that I'll cherfor stnkes.
ISh for a long time."
Radke became the first Twms
Radke earned the milestone win
by pttchmg 10 mnmgs and geuing an pitcher to win 20 games smce Scott
RBI triple m the bottom of the lOth Erickson m 1991 The nght-hander
By TOM WITHERS
that sent the Twins to a2-l wm over allowed one run and six hits with
AP Sports Writer
mnc stnkeouts tn hts fourth complete
It seems that whenever a Mm- the Milwaukee Brewers
.
nesota pitcher goes 10 innings, the . Ten mnmgs was new territory for game.
''Today's game typtfies Brad's
Twins dnnk champagne afterward
the right-hander.
Six years ago, they toasted with
"Not in Lutle League or any- season," Molitor said. "It always
hasn't been easy for htm to got out
Jack Morris after he defeated the thing, .. he said.
,
Atlanta Braves in Game 7 of the
Radke (20-9) got the final swal- there and win wtth thts team."
Radke and Roger Clemens of
World Series. And on Sunday, the low from a champagne boule he
Twms celebrated with Brad Radke shared wllh hts teammate• and man(See AL on Page 5)

American
League
roundup

By DICK BRINSTER
DOVER, Del. (AP) - Wtth the
best Winston Cup dnvers startmg 12-3, a crowd of I 00.000 was ready
tor-a great drama Kyle Pcuy changed
the script.
And wnh JUSt one more caution on
a racing surface called the Monster
Mile, no one would have been asking leadfoot Mark Marttn how he
suddenly became a fuel econom ..t
"We got beat on fuel mileage, not
on the track," Peuy said m assessmg
hiS thtrd-place finish Sunday m the
MBNA 400. "There were JUs! a few
who could make 11. and we weren't
one of them "
Polcsttter Martin was So was
slump-ndden sevcn-ttme W1nston
Cup champton Dale Earnhardt.
For that reason, Martm hogged a
bunch of money when he beat Peuy
by 10 seconds. Earnhardt, giVIng hiS
long-suffenng fans a htnt that there
might he an end in sight to hts 53race losing streak, beat Peuy by a carlength
But both knew who had the car
"Kyle was just too strong," Earnhardt said.
"We had everybody covered on
the race track except for Kyle. And
he was JUS! whippmg us bad," Martin said. "But Jack took care of htm."
That would be Jack Roush, Martin 's car owner, who dtd all the figunng that allowed his driver to go
400 mtles on just three pit stops.
(See MBNA on PageS)

Scoreboard
Los Angeles

Baseball

Colorado
San Otc~o
y-dn!l:hed

AL standings
more

.....,

.n90 6~

e.L

!ill

'~'

•

16 HO
1l K1

4K1

M

York

11

. . .1

BOII'on ..
Ttlnlmo

" .,.,

I

Kl 11
11 1H

•

...
1l

Mdwa&amp;Jk«
K•asC11'

6)

Minnorotn

K7
K2

•

Anuhcim.
Te11.as ,
Ouklnnd

11

berth

HoUSion &lt;4 CINC INNATI I
N y, Mets 7 Aoncb. J
Phtllldtlphti11 On~o;ill!,O Cubs 2
S1111 Dn:£0 I 2. San Franc1s~o 2
Co1ormJo 2. Los An~k!s I
Atl:mm 3. Mon~real I
Piusburp.h 10 S1 Louu I

17

IK'

22

~,9

497
4'10

1H
90

416
-1110

"

Mont~al 7. A1lan1a I
Pnubur(th 14. St louiS 2

..

6'·

1'.

C'tmago Cubs II Ptul,ddph1.1 J
Houston A CINCINNATI]
N Y M ~.:l s 2 t-1unda I
San Frnnt' ls~.:o K San D1c:~o ~
Color.Wo IO,l.mi Angelc:$ ~

20

Wnttm DiYbion
Stallle

posl-~ason

2

&lt;

Sunday's scores

Ctntral DM11kln
Cbi'-11$1)

74 81

!'i18
'H9
474

Saturday's scores

Rastem Dlwllion

f-at
r;.,N&lt;w

84 72
81 75

. . 12
.

6.'

69

SSt!
~26

74
~
9l

462
4&lt;W

"i

I~
:!-l

J•dm~:hcd roli· IC!aiOO benh

Today's games

Hou~lon

(Reynolds H-10) .11 CINCINNATI
H-Ill 12 .l~ p m
St Louts ( Mom ~ II K) ,11 P!ll ~ trurg.h ISthm!d!

! Mer~kcr

9-K) 60~(lm

Saturday's scora

N Y Mt&gt;IJ

(Jone~

14--"11

,\1

Aoriilil (HL'111.tnlkz

70~(lltl

8al11m1.lU 12 lktrutl K

1

N Y Y•.nkttl 4. Torumo l {I I)
Oakland 4 Seattle 1 ( I ,)
Chu:aJ,o While Sl.1x 6, Boston 4
Kanw City~- CLEVElAND 2
MmntwtOI 6.. Mtlw•• uk"-'1! I
1\nahL"lm 7 Te11.as 6

MmMreoll (\I aides ..._-ll ill l\1lnnta (M,kldux 19
-U.7.Wrm
Sa" Fr u n~:ts~o (Rutter I '-6) :n S:~n Du:p.o
iAshby~-11) IOO'ipm.

1-2)

Tuesday's games

Sunday's scores
Bli-'IOn IIi, Oi\:,l{tll Wh1te S1u.: 2
~roll II Balurnore '\
Minm•sora 2, M11w.•ukL.'I! I ( 101
NY Yunkl.'l.&gt;s !i. TllfUnlo 4 t 10)
Kan!lltl C1ty I, CLEVELAND 0
An:.lhc'tm4. TeiUII' I
~ulll¢ 9. Oakland 2

'"r

Tonilbt's gamH

Tomn10 (Hcnt,:en U -9) 111 NY Y.111kn:s (Well~
14-101. 7\~r.mOttmn (M1ld!ler 11-11 J at Onlllnkll't' (Erlt.:bon

16-7}. 7 J:' p m.
Mt\wauk« (0 AmH:o 9-tll at Mtnnesotn (Mtller
0.41. • o&lt; r m
CLEVELAND ii'IIIIIY U - 10) at Kan-.a~ Cit)'
(Roslldo 9-121. ~:05 (l m
Scnllk tFautn&gt; 1~9) at Oakland (Ludwtck.l
3J. IOO~pm

Tuesdoy's'cam••

OH Knns.u Ctly tPhtlllc~ +-M u!lll

94.~, l-7) 011

MIIWol~k«" (l(.,u1 10-1~ and Ad.,m~on "i·:! ) li O'i

p m801110n (SUI'Ifl:ID 7·:!) '"

lklrUII

(Ke-agle 2-·U

7 O~pm

N y Y.mk.._~• (RoJen 6-7) :tl CLEVELAND
(WnJhl ~. \). 7:0, p m.
Balun•~ (Muuma 1~-7) at Turonlll (Oc:n~ns

21-bl. 1 .\~ p.m
Wh
Minntwta (Tewbbury ft.IJ ) a1 ChiCUJO
tic:
5&lt;!1 (Ben: +I), M0~ p Rl
Te-'rnl (8urkn 7- 121 at Ottkland (Telp.tk1n +~) IOO~pm

An.:~bam (Wn~&amp;on

ll- 10) nr Senr1le- (John1on

18-41. 10 O!'i p n\

NL standings

. . . ..

Eallem ~Mvllion

Iua
~

da .....

....

'

.. ......

New Y01k ..
Montra~l ...
Philadelphia

l! L Ed.

!ill

m
m

1

.. 97 l8

90 M
84 12
76 19

...

92

626

490
410

Ce-nlr-' DlviMn

79 76 $10
.. .. 16 BO 437
CINCI NATI .... , .. 71 84 4l8
71 84 ·4.58
St louis ........
66 90 .421
ChiCDJO , . ''"' " • · •
HouJtoo
Pin•bur,t,h • • . .

Wltllf'IIDIYWon
San Fronclseo . ..
. 86 10

Atltmttl (Mtllwood 4 'l at Phtladcll•hta
tM l...clll..-r 10.0 161 7 0, p m
Florrda (Brown 1~-tl-) at Momre~ll (Hema:mson
ll-61 7
m
P1U1burJilh (Cordovc 11 ·8) .11 N Y ML·U (h·
nnp.hau!iCn 2·2 ) 7 .Wpm
CINCINNATI IM,erda:r K- I ll .11 St Lm11 s
tlnY11:02J.KOSpm
au~:I)I.U Cub~ (rrnsdtd "-111.11 HttU)IUII (Kill·
IK-71 I(O!'irm
S.w Fr.III~ISHJ (D.Irw•n 1-2) .at (nlur:ulu
tllmm~on 7·91 9OS (l m
Smtl.hcJ,II tM~'flhru1 2 21 .n Los 1\n~c:lc~ trarl;
ll-HJ IOO"ipnl

lSI

IJ''J

21

11 1~

,.,
8
8

ll ~

AL leaders
Bl\ TTING F Thom.t~ Chtu1r.u ~"2.
Rmmn:z Cll VELA.ND H I hi s ll~o:t' C'LI.i\IE
LAND , Bl E M.1r11ntz Scanlo:. l\1 0\!rnte
Wtllwm ~ New York 12l Greer . Tell .•s U:!
0 Nt!1ll New Yor~ \2::!
RUNS G.•ru,,llarra Bo51un II'J . Gnltey
St'otllk II 'I 1\rwh uu\:h, Mmnc: ~111.1 ll·t Jc1cr
New York I ll , B L Hu111er Ocmut 109, I·
Tllontai , Ouugn, 107 Tuny Cl.d Octruu I~
GI'C\'r, Tc:l:t.". lo.l. E M.1rt111ez Sa=auk ID-l
RBI Gnffry s..-arrh= 141 T Murtu~~:z N.:w
York I111 Si!lnkm 1\nahcJm. 12-1. luun Co!Wllc:z
f.:,;as 122 F ThOOUlS OucaJu. 121 Tony Clurk
0\'lrmt I I~- 0 Ntlll N~ow York I I "i
HITS G:tnmrarra Busloo 201 Greer Tc!l.l\
1146. Jeter New Ynrk 111.&lt;4 G AnJcrsnn Al"l:lhl!lnl
1112. R.murcz CI:.EVEL.AND 179 I Rudnr.uc:l.
Teus 179 F Thtlfl'\as Oricas.u 179
DOUBLES John Valtnrtn. Oo511.)n 47,Cmlkl
M1lwuuk«. 4.1 Belle Ch1cagu. -11 0 Neall, New
York -12, Gnn:t:'(l:lrt:t. Boston 40 A RodnJ!IICZ
Seattlt. 40. On=er. Te-'•'s 40 Cum S~Mrk -10
TRIPLES Guruaram&amp;
Boston II.
Knobllll(h Mlni'ICJOia 10 Dnmnn Kan.ws Ctty fl.
Burmll, M1lw.tuk.ct 8 Jeter. New York 7 8 L
Hunler Dcti'OII 7 Alt«a • .-.ntlhctm. 7, Br:ld~ An·
dtrsol1 Bal11mon:. 7
HOME RUNS Griffey. ~:111 l e, ~ 1 T Mu(llntl, New York, 4\ , "Thome, CLEVELAND .W.
Juan Gonulez. TexUJI. l9, Buh~ter Seanle 19 R
Paln.rtro, BnltuOOfe J6 McGw1~. Oallnnt.l l-1
STOlEN BASES 8 L Hum.:r, Dl!tron ? I,
Knoblauch Mlntao!Q. W. T Goodwm, Tek.'Ul, -17.
Nnon Turonlo. 47 Vazquel, CLEVELAND 4\ ,
Durt111m ChiL:IlJO. J3. A. RN-igun. Scaule 29
PITCHING (18 ded110n11) RantlJ John1on
Sl!aule, 18--4. 118 216 Mn)'f:r Sennle. 17·4.
810, 3 68 Clemens, Toronto, 2.1-6. 778. 2 00. PL1
tute New York , 18·7 720. 2 86. Henblltr,
CLEVELAND, 1-4-6 700. 4 ~2 Erickson. Baln
mort. 16-7, 696. J 80. Blrur. Defron, 16-7 696,

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

197
STRIKEOUTS R.•ndy Johnsun, Se.tble 2'17
Clemen~ Toronto. 27~. Cone New York 22()
Mumnu B&lt;~IUmore 211 App1.:r Kans,, ~ Ctty
191 F~~!ICro ~:mk: IW Radke: Mtnnc!IOI.t. 111
SAVES M Rl\lcra. New Yllfl.:.. 4l RanUy

Mycu Balumure .n Duu)! Junes Mllw;wlu.-e l-1
Ckuo\1 10. W\!Ud.md Tc)l,l~ 10 J'leru \la1 , An.lllc.'lm , 27 R 'Hern:mlkz Oao.:,J~I.l 27

ToJo-.e~

\

NL leaders

BAn lNG Gwynn Sun Drcgn l{,IJ L Wl11kcr. Color.tUo \67 Pt .ll&lt;!.l. Los hiiJ!.Ck~ H7
Lohon, AlliJnla, 3\J Joy ner S.111 Oll'~ u HI
Mark Gr.ll:t' Chllol~n 124 Alrnnm New Yurk

WI

t
RUNS L W.tlker Coh!t,&amp;do, 1 ~0 R IJ: ~IU
Hou510n 1\9, (i,,larr.tg,&amp; Cohw.u.Jn, I Jll, Bnnu~
San Frarn:ts~.:o II~ . Bl1ltwel1 Hous10u IO"i hll
Young Lu~ An~elu 10::! Cl11pp:r Jmk!s Atl.mt.J

100

RBI Gahur.1~a . Culurndll 1 \4 Bas.well
Houslon. JIO, l Wa lt er. Cnhlr.•dcl 1:!7 Su~11
Otl~.:agll , 119 Gwynn San Dtegc1 II II Piau•• I u'
1\ngck~ II~ B•~ht'ue Cul11rnl111 II 'i
HITS Gwynn San Dtt:j!.u ~I\ 1.. W.tl~cr
Ct•lur..do.l 2o.l Pwr~1 Lm An!!ch:~ IIW . Gtll.1rra
,_,, Colorado. IK'i MuOLIClSI l.tiS 1\n)!.t'h:s lli4,
Ut&amp;f.IO Hou~ln"- IK4. Cn.~ull .t, Culuf.!d''· 171,1
DOUBLES• Grullztt!lnnet.....MuniTc.ll 'i4
Gwynn. San O~~:go 49 Lansmp. M1intre ••1 4'i L
Walker, Cuh.lfalio 4". Chl(lpl.'!f J111M:.~ Atl.1n1a 40
Mon~51 Los Anj!des JO Clayton St LOUI ~ l•J
MOf:JIM.IIRI, Phi!addphlol. \l}
TRIPLES IJcShicld'i St Luut~ I'· W Gu~or­
rcro. Los Ang1:les 9. RaBIJ;t. Pmsburgh. 1,1 Wnm.t~k Plll~butgh , 9 N Perez Ct1lur,1du. K Enl
y,,uni! Los Anltcle~ II, L Julmu•n Clu~.11w X
Oauhoc1. AurnJ.1 K
HOM E RUNS L- Walker ColunKiu -IH. ijagwdl H•Justoo -12 C.tslllliL Culorudu. 40 Galarr.l,._,,, C\llurndo -W; Pnazu. Los An~c:lt.-s l7. Bmw~ .
San Fr.tnttsto l7 Sosa. Cht~o:aJto. '6
STOLEN OASES Worrnd Pm~bur~h ~b IJ
S.mdcn CINCINNATI % DeSh1ekb St I.1.1U1s
J9 Em Younl' Los Angeles. 4"i ihg&amp;IU, HtiUslttll.
4&lt;4 Bunch S.tn Frotnct5~:o, \.J, Q Vtras S.m DteJl.'-'

n

PITCHING (Ill dtct~tonl) Nt:atEie All,mt.,
20 4. Kl1, 2 1W G Mat.ldu-', Atlantn 19-4 K2ti
::! 20 EsiL"s, S;~n Fraoli!C:O 11!-:'1 7K1 l1"i K1lc
HouJion IK-7 720 2 ~"i. Rueter, S:-.n Fralll:l!ltt•
11-6. 6tl-l. H2 P } M:t.runcz. Monuenl, 17-li
bKO, 191 Gl.t\llnc:, AI~mla.l4 - 7 667 101
STRIKEOUTS Sc:htlhng. PMntlelphm 111.
PJ MURIRCl, Mon1re,11 2%. S•noltz Adanlil 2:\~
Non-..., U.lll Allj!.d!!~ 217 K1k. Hnu~ton. IIJIJ K J
Rrnwn Flond.u. l97 Afc:m,lflckt. Flontla. IJ'P.
SAVES !\haw CIN.CINNATI. 40, B~k San
-Frart~:~o 37 Hoflm:m, S3n 0tl£o.
John Fran~.:u, New York .16 &amp;.:kenh=~. S1 louts, 16 TOOil
Worrell, Los Angeles, J'i. Nr:o Aonda 14

'fl.

Football
NFL standings
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
IwD.

New EnglamJ
Buff,,\o
Mmm1
NY Jets

lndumnpohs

Eastern Dlvillon
~Lifll.fE rA
400100130 40
220SOO 94 111

220SOO
2 2 0 soo

11

110
040000 S4
Central Divblon

Jacksonville
Balumore
Pmlburgh
CINCINNt\TI
Tc:nnesM!t

11

w

'"

200100 68 40
l I 0 1~ 110 11
I I 0 SOil 21 so
I 20H\
82

"'

41

1)

4 0 0100127
. 1 I 0 7l0 88
2 2 osoo 14

ll

120311
Wtslrrn DivWon

O.•wr
Kanms City
Sctlllk

O.klond
San Diego .,

I
I

-·-

1
1

:wm
1.\.,IJa,
W.t~hm~lun

»:2 LI I0
I
I
I

Phrladdphw
NY Gums
c~ntral

I

th. fE 11!1.
607 KO '2

m
2 00 ""'
2 0 111 41
0 2"i0 10

"

'

Muull''l&gt;1&lt;~

Om:.•ttn
W~tl'rn

S,m fratl\:IS\:11

••

1 2~

.

Sunday's scores
n.• lnnwm: 16 11.-nrt~:~ Ill
~w bt~l.md l l Ollt.:lli!Ul

l'i D1.1ro11 17
Knn~as C'll)i 1"i C.trullll.l 14
Gn.'\!n ll.ty 'H. Muutc~l.tla 12
Nl·w Y ut~ kts 2\ (hkl.md :!2
&amp; Ill rr.lllli!OW 1-' Atlall\11 7
l kn~-.:r lK l INCINNA.II 20
IJull.tlu H lndtan&lt;Ljlllh~ l~
Sl l..m11s P New York G1.m1 s 1
Sl!,lllic .lO S,ull&gt;ic~u 22
l.1111p.t l!.•y" M1.tm1 21
Open ~l.ll&lt;' t\n :wn.1 o,,n,,~ Pltll.•tlciJIIII,I
New

Orle . m~

W.&amp;slllnJ!IIlll

Tonight's galllf!
lllu•bur~h

,,, Jn•:kJonv1lk 9 p m

AP Top 25 college poll
Here •• re lhc: Tup 2"i te-Jm5 In the ASSOliollL'tl
Pre~ ~ ~nllt'~ luo1b:~ll fMJII w11h linl-rlace vurc~ m
ran:nthcsc:5 ~.;uflent nxordli as ul lasl Snturd.•)' to1II JllllniS basal un 2"i rojnl~ fnr a firsl pla~.:c vm~

1hnu1~l1

•llll' [lllllll fnr a 2'ilh place: voll! llnll la~t

Wl-.:k ~ litMI rankm¥

l,a!ol
~

Iwn

£li.Ja:W.

\0 1,6911
I 67S
l Ndm1sk.•l7)
1-0 I Mil
4 Aond.1 S1 II ' ;:· ............... 0
1·0 1 . ~·no
'i Nonh Curulmu (2)
l-0 1.47~
!i Ml~h•c n n
2-0 1,41'2
7 OH 10 ST
1-0 1,2 H7
H Aubum
1-0 I,IKO
lJ TL"nnesM:.:
2 I I.!Sfl
10 W11.~h1n,tnn
2-1 1,14K
II lowu
)-0 1,062
I2 Mu: b1gnn St
:l.O 96H
ROS
ll I.SU
2-1
14 V1rgm1o1 Te~o;h
1·0 7?0
I :'i Washmtton S1
1..() 767
72\
16 Colorado
I I
17 Oem'iOn
2- 1 !'i47
18 Knns;1~ St
2-0 49"i
19 Georgm
l-0 444
20 StllllrOfll
1- 1 40l
21 Alabama ,
•• 2 I 329
290
22 Texas A&amp;M .
20
21 Br1ghurn Young • .
1- 1 m
181
24 UCLA ,
1-2
177
2~ Anzona S1
2-1
I Hund,t (ll )

2 Penn

S1 (211'

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I
7
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6
K

'I

12
4
2
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17
10
IK
19
l'i
16
20

2'
21
II

24
14

Others recelvln&amp; Yoltl. An Force 12Y, N
c.,rohn,, St n_ Soothml Mtn 66. Pilllburgh 26.
Wyom1ng 18 Cahfomtn II . Colorado S1 11. Ore~nn II Knnns 10, TU:ll 9, Oklnhoma S1 K
Arkansus 7. K~ntucky 6, Soulh Cnrolllla 6 M•'m•
!'i Soothf:rn Cal \ TOLEDO 4 Bouon Cnllege I
Gc:orgm Tech I

MAC standings
CQ.

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2 0 0 I 00 2 2 SOO
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Cl!nl Flol'ldil 41 lduho 10
Ch.trlcstun Soulht.:rn 12, Tu ~~.;ulum 1
D:wtdson 42 Sewai)I..'C 14
IJcl,lwurcSI 24 Nurlulk S1 21
Or.1kc 21 Snulh Aondl1 22
Duke 20 Amty 17
florldit11 Tcnnc~5CC 20
Fl1)f1d:1 A&amp;M :W, J.K:kmn .S1 14
Honda S1 l\, Clcm~un 2~
Gcnrp.1.1 4~. NE Luu1s1.ma 1
Gt·orl!lo1 Suurl-....•m 22 Wnffnnl 7
Gcnr~ •·• Tc~h 21(, W11kc fure~t 26
H.1mp1un U 7 N Cnrohna A&amp;T 2
J:lmc~ M::.d1~on 13, Massa~.;h useu~ 10
Lfoul ~ ll\1"1:1 Ted1 ~ - O:nl M1~h1g.m 2K
MARSHAI.L4K W, llhnm~ 7
M~.;N~.~sc St 2-2 N luwa ~
Mmne~n lttlO. Mcmph1s 17
Murel~~::ul St ~6. V. d~WJI!itl 24
Ml'r~ Ul Sl 24, Tc~.1s Southern 17
Mormy Sr 17 SE M1s-.oun 1
N C.~rnl•n·• St 41 N lllm01~ 14
Ntdtn ll ~ Sl 22 I roy .S1 ~0
Nurth Camhna 40. Maryl:111d 14
11cnu St S7 I.. &lt;I UISVt llc 21
H.tchnKind 'i6 VMil
Suuth C.m1l1 n 1 26, f:.- 1~1 Caruhn.1 0
Svu1hcroM1~~ l"i,Ncvm.lallJ
Southern UM. Pr.11fle V1c:w 7
Tcnnc~!l4..-e Tc:~h 14 Snmfortl7
V.mtk.'fhlh-40 Te11..~ Chmtmn lfl
W C.mtlm,l4 ~. Cu.nlcl2'i
W Kcnlucky "i1 Atl~lm P~·•Y 7

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Saturday's scnres

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NCAA Division I scores
Ea&gt;l
l!oMun Cullc~.: ,,, Rut~cn :!: I
IJwwn ~2 . Y.1lc I ~
llu( knl'll 2l l...,f.l)'L'tlc 21
Buller ~K. St Fr.m~ts.l'a 12
Cam~1u~ 10. St P~'ler s 7
Ccm CunDI.!I:II~UI St 1? FrostlltHf. S1 17
Culg.IIL" 21. t-:'mdhuml4
CuniJeltl~o:UI :IS HUhtr.111
CurAL:lll4 Pnn~XIlln 10
D11rtmouth 21. Penn I~
0.1ytun 16 Robert Morn ~ 11
DclliWnrt 211. Wc:\1 Chc..~L'f 1
Dlll.jUI!~IIC lK S~ena 14
FmrfidJ :\4, St Johns. NY 21
Haf\'llrd -4S Columh•a 7
Holy Cross H. Getll"gt.'tnwn DC 21
Lchtgh lfl, Tow11111 14
Mnml 11, lc1na 12
Monmuulh , N .J 42, L.a Salle 20
New H.•mr~hm: 24 W111111m &amp; Mnry 22
Nnnl~~: •• ~ tcm -41 Rhu~k lsl,mt.l 11
Syro~o:US\' 10, Tuhtnc I~
Vllllmnv.• :\4, M.urlt' 1-1
Vtrittn•DT~'!:h 2\ 'kml'k: 11
Wup.tiCt 11 C W Pnsl 12
Yuungscuwn Sl 2H. Au111111 U 7

South
l\lu-D•mun,:h.•m14 Juck5onv1llc:St
Al.lb:irtul A.&amp;.trt 21 Mi~N Viti Icy S1 I(
1\kiH"n St 20 Al11h:tma S1•6
Appnlut:111111 St 27 E. Kcmu ~ ky 21
Ark,m~as 17 Al,•b&lt;~nl.l lti

I()

Midwest
U ow hn~ Gn.-cn 31

1\krnn 2M

two desperation passes m the final
seconds after the Colts recovered an
onside kick.
Green Bay thought it had a divisional game with MmnesoiB wrapped
up with a 3.1-7 halftime lead and a 3822 margin going mto the fourth quarter as Brett Favre ued a team record
wtth five touchdown passes. But

Brad Johnson led a Vikings rally that
made it 38-32 before he was stymted
at midfield wllh less than two mmutes left.
''I'd be lymg to you if! said I wasn't worried," Favre satd " When we
were up 31-7, evel)'one was kind of
coa&lt;tmg We were talking about what
we were gomg to do this week, where
we 're playmg golf."
TI1e New York Jets took a 13game home losing streak- one short
of tying the NFL record - mto thm
game with Oakland. But they won
23-22 as the Ra1ders miSsed an extra
pomts and four field-goal attempts,
one that would have won the game in
the final mtnutes and another that was
' blocked and returned 72 yards for a
to~chdown by Ray Mtckens.
And m Seaule, Steve Broussard
leaped tnto the end zone from one

Harbaugh left the game dunng
yard out with 1·22 10 go to gtve the
Seahawks (2-2) a 26-22 victory It that dn ve when he was hll lute. gavcapped an SO-yard, 10-play dnve that ~ng the Colts 15 extra yards for 1he
penalty on a pass completion
took nearly four minutes
But Kurt SchulL stepped tn trunt
Buffalo's 1992 playoff comeback
was the greatest in NFL history, and or Justtn 's pas~ for Harrtshn on the.
Sunday's game ranks No. 3 behmd a po1nt conversion, prcscrvmg the wm
rally from a 28-pomt defictt by San [or the Btlls II appeared Schul' held
Francisco over New Orleans m 1980 Harnson un the play. bu1 no penalty
"Th1s was a tremendous wm for was called ·
· We created ~o mctlung tn herl'
our team and for our egos," satd
rookie Antowain Smith, who led the today." dcfcnstve end Phd Hansen
rally "Coming back from 26 pomts satd 'We kept pluggmg away and
down was a httle scary. We can't spot had the alllludc th,11 we knew we
teams 26 pomls and expect 10 come could wan It wa~~ very tmponant ··
Elsewhere, It was Balumorc 36.
back like we did "
Tennessee
I0, New En~land 31,
Sm11h rushed for 129 yards and
catches
for
153
yards and James leu
three touchdowns , mcludmg a 54caught
five
passes
for 148 yards.
yarder that made 11 37-29 and
But
Cole
Ford
mtssed
field goals
appeared to seal the vtctory wtth I: 14
of
44,
27
and
47
yards.
botched
an
left.
extra pomt and had the cructal block

by Corwm Brown that Mtckens took
all the way for the gn-ahead pot nts
··tt . was a low snap and a low
k1d " Ratdm coach Joe Bugcl satd
ol the dC~o;I~I\C bltx.:k
Seahawks 26, Chargers 22
Sea11le had only twu yards rushing
at halt111ne. hut Brom,..,ard ran for 72
y.1rds on 11 t',Jrn..:s tn the -.;ccond half.
keying the r.llly lor the Scaha~ks (2]) Jnhn C.uncy ~ld,cd live licld
~1Mb lur San D1cgo ( 1-3)
Rues 31, Dolphins 21
T,m1pa Bay 1111pro,cd to 4-0
re.:Ord fur the fir :,t lime ~lnt:e 1979 as
Ttenl Dtllcr threw for 248 yards and
a carccr-hagh four lOUL·hdowns
agam~t

M latnt

Dtlfcr had a pa1r ol short touchChtca~o l , New Orleans 35. Detrott
17. Kansa&gt; C1t) 35. Carohna 14, Sao
Franctsco ~4. Atlanta 7; St. LouiS 13.

Davis helps propel Broncos past Bengals 38-20
"Terrell was just awesome.' Blake lorccd a tumble, wh1ch former Dovts went 1~61h . had hiS best game
Elway
satd. " He just gets beuer and Bengal Alfred Wtlltams returned 51 as a pro C.1rta r.m 79 yards for a
DENVER (AP) - The Denver
better
wllh each gam&lt;&gt; When the yards for another s~:orc wtth 57 sc~.;­ touchdown earl y 10 the thtrd quarter,
Broncos were chngmg to a 21-20
onds remammg:
producing a 14-141le. and he fintshed
offens1ve
hn~gtves htm some space.
lead early m the final quarter. and
Ctncmnau
(
1·2)
had
leads
of
7-0
wtth 104 yards - the ftrst Cmc10na11
he's
gomg
to
make
thtngs
happen.
I
Cincmnatt quarterback Jeff 'Blake
and
17-14
but
couldn't
withstand
back to gam 100 yards tn 68 games
think he's the best runnmg back mthe
was heating up Who better to entrust
Denver's
multifaceted
offense
Alter Carter 's score, the Bengals
NFL, and people don't reahze the
wtth protecting that lead than Terrell
Ki-Jana
Carter,
the
first
player
marched
lor a go-ahead f1cld goal.
other things he docs such as blockmg
DaviS?
selected
m
the
~arne
dralt
m
wh1ch
I wouldn '!trade htm for anybody. "
DaviS dashed 50 yards for a touchDavts' sconng burst gave the
down, then ran 34 yards to set up a
~&lt;c~o~~~~ro~m~P~:~g::_r~4)~---Broncos (4-0) a 28-20 lead with
field goal. fintshmg wtth a clubI·I· 13 to play On thlrd-and-4 from
record 21 5 yards rushmg on 27 carThe loss dtsapp01nted ,, sc out sa.xth str.u~ht diVISIOn title was stalled
mtdfield, he saw a gap m the sec- crowd of 44, 176, the largest fo 1he when Montreal ended thc1r l'ilx-g~mlc
' 'nes to give the Broncos to a 38-20
ondary, broke Greg Myers' attempt- Marhns at home s10ce July 3. 1 J4 wmnlng streak Hensley Meulcns
victory Sunday
ed tackle JUSt beyond the line of
In the fourth quarter alone, Davts
R1ck Reed (13-9) took a thre -h ll and Davtd Scgut also homered lor the
scrimmage and outran the secondary shutout mto the mnth Darr
Expos, who had lost thr.cc m a row
gained 106 yards on stx carnes as the
"I dtdn 't see any secondary right Daulton htl an RBI double wllh two
Denny Neagle (20-4) gave up lour
Broncos stayed unbeaten.
there," he satd. "I felt tf I could run outs. and Mel RoJas got the last uut home runs 1n a game lor the first ltme
"We couldn '1stop thetr great runup there hard aod break a tackle or
Rookte Jason Hardtke homered as m h1s career. Whtle and Mculcns conner," Bengals coach Bruce Cos let
two,
I
would
be
out
of
the
gate.
[went
the
Mets remamcd one lnss from nected for consecutive shots m the
satd, ''and that was the story m.a nutfifth, and Segu• and While h11 hpck·
m wnh that m mmd and came up with cl!mmatton m the wtld-card race
shell. "
a
50-yard
touchdown"
to-hack dnvcs 10 the &lt;~xth
Expos
7,
Braves
I
DavJS broke his own single-game
DaviS' subsequent 34-yard run
Roc:kies 10, Dodgers 5
Rondell White hlltwo ol MontreV10ny Casttlla's h1gh Jly ball was
set up ~ason Elam's 25-yard held al's four home runs as the Expos pregoal wuh 3:26 left.
(Contmued from Page 4)
vc,nted Atlanta from dmchmg the NL lost tn the twthght hy center ftelder
The Ben gals staged a desperation East at Turner F1eld.
Oils N1xon and bounced tnto the
but
Neil
Smtth'sJarnng
sack
of
drive,
The former AL MVP, who has
Toronto each have won 20 games thiS
Th.e Braves' btd to wrap up theu stands for a ground-rule double to
help Vts1t1ng Colorado sL:orc rtvc runs
season despite thetr teams bemg been crtucal of and crlllclled by
m the s1x.th agatnst Lus Angeles
under .500. The last 11me two AL Boston management dunng contract
(Contmued from Page 4)
The vtcwry was the 19th m 24
pttchers won 20 for sub-.500 clubs m negollallons, has satd he docs not
'
That's
not
easy
games
lor lhc Rock1c s and thc1r thml
race from the 162nd lap until p11t10~
the same year was 1974 when Nolan thmk he wtll be hack Wtlh the team
"I've lost a lot of races hecausc of wllh 20 remammg.
stratght O\'C r lhe Dodgers to rcmam
Ryan (Angels), Gaylord Perry (lndt- next year
ans) and Steve Busby,(Royals) all dtd
He rccetved a standing ovation tt, and I feel bad for Kyle," satd Mar" It was aboul out when we came five games behmd the G1ants The
lo» was the lilth strmgbt and lOth 10
from some - but not all - ol the hn, who;e lina l tank of lucl camcd m." he sa td
It
Desptte hiS Jourth wm ot the year, 13 games tor the Dodgers
Elsewhere m theAL, tt was: Seat- crowd, be lore walkmg and · bemg him the last 104 miles to his 22nd
Los Angeles catcher Mtke Ptawl
tle 9, Oakland 2; Anahetm 4, Texas replaced by pmch-runner Shane career victory and first 10 22 races at Martm made httle progress m hts h1d
Dover.
for the series IItle. Gordon's seve nth· became only the second player to hll
I, Boston 5, Chtcago 2; New York 5, Mack.
Petty go~ the most recent ol .hts place fintsh allowed Marlin to shce a latt:_ b_ll~_~!_!&gt;~_!)odgcr Stadtum.
ltm CorSI (5-2) p11ched two
Toronto 4 10 I 0 mnmgs ; and Detroit
tnmngs for the wm, and Tom Gordon eight career v1ctones at Povcr 1n JUst 34 po10ts from the lead, which
II, Balumore 3.
worked the mnth for hts lOth save. 1995, winning from 37th posmon on ~lands at 105 with SIX races remamMariners 9, Athletics 2
the gnd w1th the help of a masstve mg.
Tom
Fordham (0-1) took the loss
At Oakland, Ken Griffey Jr. had
acctdent
that moved htm up about 20
It was 38-year-old Martm's lith
Yankees
S,
Blue
Jays
4
(10)
two RBis, but went homerless in five
spots
m
the
second
lap.
ThiS
t1mc.
he
top-live
f101sh at Dover. where hts
At
New
York
..
Cectl
Fielder
hn
h1s
plate appearances as Seattle beat the
was
much
hetter,
charg~ng
hy
the
only
prcv10us
vactory was m a Busch
300th
career
homer
and
Ttno
MarAthlettcs to reduce lis magtc number
medtocre
Chevrolets
and
super
Fords
scncs
race
10
years ago lL also was
tmez
hit
a
gamc-wmmng
homer
1n
for chnching the AL West to two
1n
hJS
Ponuac
to
lead
191
laps
the
16th
wm
thts
year lor a Ford dn Griffey had a sacnfice fly m the . the lOth.
But
Petty
couldn't
get
the
extra
pit
The
¥ankees.
who
clinched
then
vcr.
thtrd and a run-scoring smgle in the
The Chevy of Gordon has the othfourth to mcrease hts maJor league- thtrd stratght trip 10 the play{lfls Sat- stop he needed because or a Dover
rarity
a
lack
of
cauuon
llags
er I0 vtclones m 1997
urday, tratlcd 4-3 m the etghth heforc
leading total to 143 RBis.
Martin's payoll lrom a purse of
Jay Buhncr hu hts 38th, and 39th Ftelder became the 76th player to There was just one, for II laps Three
months ago, 10 the M1ller 500, there $1,55 I, 173 mtllton coupled w1th the
homers and Dan Wilson went 4-for- reach 300 homers
honus brought hts carnmgs for 1997
In the lOth, Martine' hn hts 43rd were etght cauttons lor 54 laps.
5 w1th hts 15th homer as Seattle
The vtctory was worth $195,305 IO $1,611,609
.
mamtamed Its live-game lead over homer thiS season. a drive ofl Carlos
The only t:aut10n came out when
Almanzcr, who got a loss m hts lirst to Marlin, who got $114,000 of it hy
Anahetm
wmnmg from the pole. The honus- Mtchael Wultnp crashed on the KKth
Ken Claude (4-2) allowed two maJor league deciSIOn.
Brian Boehringer (3-2) pnched whtch mcreases by $7,600 each time lap. The 389·Iaps of green-nag racruns and live htts Wtlh five walks m
,
one mmng, getting out of a hascs ~ It goes unclaimed - had not heen mg resulted m a Dover record speed
SIX mmngs for Sealllc
t '..·
collcclcd smcc scncs leader Jeff of 132 719 mph
loaded, one-out Jam.
Brad Rtgby ( 1-6) took the loss
Gordon won at Charloue, N C.. 10
The Pon11ac of Bohby Lahonte
Tigers
II,
Orioles
3
Angels 4, Rangers I
May.
wound
up fourth, the on ly ot her car
At
Baltimore.
Damtun
Easley
At Arhngton, Anahctm kept lis
Martm
!iald
another
reason
he
was
on
the
lead
lap. The Ford of Dald.trhomered
twice
and
drove
in
a
careerslim playoff hopes ahve by co~plet­
able
to
win
was
the
approoch
the
rett,
which
started
thtrd hehmd Marhigh
six
runs
Easley's
two-run
tng a three-game sweep.
entire
fiel&lt;1
seemed
to
take.
tm
and
Gordon.
finiShed
a lap down
homer
made
11
S-0
tn
the
th1rd
He
h11
Ttm Salmon's RBI groundout m
.
"The
drivers
did
an
incrcdtble
job
10
tilth
place.
Jarrett
IS
IK4 po10ts
a
three-run
homer,
hts
22nd,
that
the seventh mmn~ broke a ue as the
Angels tmproved to 7-1 against the htghhghted a six-run sixth lor an Il- today," he satd, conced tng that the hchmd Gordon.
lack of cautiOns was the key factor.
R·1cky Rudd, a four-lmtc Dover
l lead
Texas thts year.
''Cautions
cause
cautions.''
wtnncr
whm;c one-car-length VICtory
Before
thts
season,
Easley
had
Pep Harris (5-4) pitched two htlThey
bunch
the
Jicld,
and
ught
over
Martm
10 June ended Gordon's
less tnnings and Troy Percival gnt never h1t more than SIX homers m n
racmg
on
restarts
can
be
calamitous
b1d
lor
a
rer;ord
lourth stratghl tnthree outs lor h1s 27th s41vc Roger season.
umph
on
the
track,
wound up stxth 10
"There
ts
a
hundred
umes
greater
Justm Thompson (IS-It) allowed
Pavlik (3-5) was the loser
chance
of
an
accidcnl
than
when
his Ford
three runs m s1x mnmgs, ~~ tnkmg out
Red Sox S, Whit• Sox 2
everybody gets stretched out. It was
AI Bo&gt;ton, tn what could he h~&gt; seven
ltmmy Key (16-10) lasted JUst4 a very clean rat:c "
final ttme up 1n Fen way Park wllh the
Petty, who satd he was praying lor
Red Sox, Mo Vaughn drew a leadoff 2/3 mnmgs, givmg up live earned
walk to start a three-run ctghth runs •md seven hils He 1s just 1-K 1n a cauuon whtlc leadmg Marlm by as
much as 25 seconds, dommatcd the
hts last II starts at Camden Yards

By JOHN MOSSMAN

AL

record of 194 yards set last Oct 20
agamst Balumore.
An 1111heralded mth-round draft
chotce who rushed for I, 117 and
1,538 yards his first two se:u;ons.
Davts IS headed toward another
I ,000-yard campaign after toppmg
100 yards for the fourth stra1ght
game. In JUst one-fourth of the season, he already has 526 yards.
"Two years ago when I ran for
100 yards, everybody pr81sed me,"
Davts satd "Now when I get 100
yards, tt's hke· Who cares? The standards have defimtely been ratsed.
''It's ntce to get200 yards. That's
something I had tn mmd commg tnto
the season."
John Elway threw three touchdown passes, then put the ball nght
where he wanted 11 in the final quarter- m DaviS' hands

.NL games ...

action ...

MBNA 400. ••

New York Gtants 3; and Tampa Bay
3 l,Mtamt21
Packers 38, Vikings 32
Green Bay (3-1) won Its 21st
snatght ·at Lambeau Fteld as Favre
threw two scormg passes to Antomo
Freeman and one each to Robert
Brooks, Terry Mtckens and Mark
Chmura
That broke Ban Starr's Green Bay
record of 152 m a·span of 16 seasons
'Favre has 156m JUS! five-plus seasons wtth the Packers
Jets 23, Raiders 22
Oakland (1-3) appeared headed
for another vtctory as Jeff George
threw for 374 yards and three touchdowns, beating cornerback OtiS
Smith on each. lim Brown had 10
down passes to Mtke Alstott, a 38yarder to Retdel Anthony and a 58yard screen pass to Warnck Dunn,
whtch was more than enough to keep
the Buccaneers the only unbeaten
team 10 the NFC.
Patriots 31, Bears 3
In Foxboro, Drew Bledsoe threw
two touchdown passes for New England (4-0), and Curtts Manm had a
70-yard touchdown run.
Bledsoe threw for touchdowns of
seven yards to Vmcent Bnsby and 52
yards to Troy Brown, g1vmg htm 12
1n four games

Southern football
recognizes
35th anniversary
ThiS 1997 season marks the 35th
anmversary of Southern Htgh School
football, a traditiOn that hegan m
1962 at the trad1110nally basketball
oriented school m Southern Mctgs
County.
ManypesstmiSts Jclt thatloothall
would never last at Southern. and m
recent years the team came close to
foldtog as Interest and declimng
mtcrcst dcctmated the roster
Today, under the tutelage of Dave
Barr, Southern has one of the top
teams m the reg10n at 3-1 and will
carry Its first wmntng record mto
league play stncc I~78
A reunion of the 1962 game 1s t:urrently bemg planned.
Anyone mterestcd m gamtng more
mformatton about the event, or who
was a team member shOuld contact
Gordon Fisher at the htgh school, or
contact Bev Wickhnc lor lurthcr
tnformallon.

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Bills, Packers, Seahawks, Buccaneers lead victors' parade
By The Associated Presa

Bonds' HR helps Giants beat
Padres 8-5 &amp; inflate West lead

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

RUTLAND, OHIO
1-800-837-8217

SEEKS OPEN SPAC~- Meigs tailback Matt
Williams (30) turns the comer In aearch of open
tarrltory as Tolsla'a Adam Sturgill (71) tries to get
a grip on him during Friday night's game In

Pomeroy. The
VIrginians canie troni behind
to win 23·20 and knock the Marauders from the
unbeaten ranks. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

-·

�.,.. 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, September 22, 1917

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

Teen's Pomeroy grandmother recalls _how it

•

(Edltor'a note: FNdel1ck Celeon ·
Beegle, e Mnlor at T1lomu Wor·
thlngton High School In Worthing- ·
ton, wrote thla etory about the life
end times of hla gn~ndmother,
LorMIIMIIer B11gle, 17, who live!~
on Spring Avenue In Ponwoy. It
-written by Beegle, eon of
Theodore Meier Beegle Md Unde
Crow Beegle, 11 en Englleh cl111
·
pro)lct leet yur.
· In undlng ua the atory, hie ·
mother Aid It remlndld h e r wh8l of ttlli way "Big Fred' (lhlt.te .
Fred Crow), hie grendfllhlr, wrote
about old tim• In Pomeroy and ·
mecte her • little wtatful tcr the old- I'
en deya end for Big Fred's paper ertlcleiiVII')' Sunday, .....- i
clelty with the •carry on• et the end '
of the story.) ,

By FREDERICK CARSON BEEGLE;

The oldest living member of my :
family is my grandmother, Loretta
Meier Beegle, who was born Feb. 17,
1909 in Pomeroy, Ohio.
;
Pomeroy is located halfway i
between Pittsburgh and Cincinnati on .
the Ohio River in southeastern Ohio
: in Meigs County. Pomeroy was orig- '
inally a German settlement located on
the Ohio River because the river and
hills reminded the first seulers of ·
their homes on the Rhine River in
Germany that they had left in the
1840s.
Grandma Beegle was born at
home in Naylor's Run in Pomeroy.
She was the last of nine children born
to Philip Meier and Sophia G111ber
Meier. G111ndma was so 'small at two ,

I

and one half pounds when she was Almost 87 years later ~he. still
born tl,at she was not expected to live laughed at that memory.
~o her parents wrapped her in blanGrandma remembered that when
kets and placed her in a box in a chest people would get sick in the old days
of drawers. The blankets in the dra~&gt;­ thai the sick people were taken on rop
er had been warmed by bricks placed of a high hill to a building called the
'near the ftreplace, much like a prim- Pest House. They went to the Pest
itive incubator, so that Grandma House to remove themselves from the
. Beegle would stay warm.
· community so they wouldn't spread
My grandmother's grandfather, germs to others who wen. well.
George Meier, was born in Darm· When people went up to the Pest
stadt, Germany, in I 842 and came to House they 111rely retWlled to town.
America with his parents in 1845 There were no hospitals -then, of
when be was three years old. He course. Sometimes the sick people
resided in Pomeroy and married had smallpox because there were no
·Mary Stnluss, daughter of Johann vaccinations then against smallpox.
Stratiss, whq was from Baden, Ger- Today, smallpox is erailicated and
small children are no ·longer vaccilmany.
Great great grandfather, George nated against it. In the old days, peoMeier, had a successful meat business ple sick with smallpox went io the
on Front Street in Pomeroy. George Pest House in Pomeroy to die.
1and Mary Meier had seven children:
Another vivid memory of my
Grandmother
Beegle was the ' 1913
Eli. George, Barbara, Peter, Philip,
'John , and Mary.
flood in Pomeroy. She was four
Philip Meier (1865-1927), my years old when the devastating flood
great-grandfather, married Sophia, came up into the second floors of the
Graber, whose parents were Anthony; bomes and businesses. She rememand Philomena Schlj!er G111her from · bered having to move up into the
Bavaria, Germany. Philip was well: attic, even though theit home was
known in Pomeroy at the tum of the located in a hollow called Naylor's
century becauSe be had a horse- Run, a quarter mile from the Ohio
drawn meat wagon from which be River. Grandma 'refused to leave her
sold meat door' to-door.
biddies, which were baby chickens,
My parents, Theodore Meier and and her parents allowed her to take
Linda Crow Beegle, still have a tiny - them with her. She remembered cry:white tin, abo~t the size ~f !'baseball, 1 ing when her piano was ruined and
_deco!llted m jngs that ongmally beldt floated away, and she loved her
lard and was given as a gift by Philipi piano and was even able to descri~
to his customers at Christmas lime at. it 87 years later as _we ate Christmas
the tum of the century. ·
. , : dinner together. She also remembered'
Philip and Sophia had nine chil_i Ithe skipjacks, which were some sort
dren: Frances, Catherine, Joseph, Iof water bugs, diving onto the water.
_Anthony, Lillian, Elizabeth, Philip,
Grandma staned school when she
Willard, and Loretta. My grand- was almost nine years old because
mother, Lorena, said that she learned she had had rheumatic fever, which
German as a first language through- today can be prevented by penicillin.
-out her childhood. In fact, her older She stated that sl)e behaved in school
sisters were even taught in German, but she used to !pugh at the boys who
not English, by the German nuns at would get heat by the nuns when they
Sacred Hean School in Pomeroy.
misbehaved. If the boys were
Grandma's first memory was extremely badly behaved, they would
going with her father on the Hocking . be sent to the priest for discipline. In
Valley train from Pomeroy to Vinton, 1918 Grandma walked to school
Ohio, to buy 35 head of ciutle that three miles every day through the
they drove home in a cattle drive to woods and over hills rather than walk
go to the slaughter house. Later, she · an extra two miles down by the rivused to be allowed to tWll the crank er. Sacred Heart School had two
that ground up the beef to put into the ·rooms with four grades in each room.
casings. She also ~roembered · that Later, my father and two aunts went
when they were driving the caule to to the same two room school in 1945.
the slaughter house that three cows The school is closed now.
ran through the front door and out the
During high school Grandma went
back door of a neighbor's house! to the picture show, which we call

-

-

us_~d

•movies today, for five cents. There anbourtokeepuswortinglongeron
·was no sound in the picture shows, so busy days. I was lucky to have a job
Margaret Adams used to play the so I didn' say anything."
piano for sound, playing faster and
After high school she worked at
louder for the exciting scenes and :aoessle~s Jewelry Store. While she
slower and softer for the calm scenes. l worked there, she met her husband,
Margaret Adanis, who died last \Theodore Beegle. My grandmother
November, was the mother of my actually set him up on a date with a
godmOther, Sharlee Whittle Clark, of friend of hers. Someone told my .
Scottsdale, Ariz.
grandmother that she was c!liZy to fix
The teenagers also &gt;¥ould go to the him up with her friend because
Syracuse Beach, where they swam in lbeodore (my grandfather) wanted to
the Ohio River. Even the girls would date her (my grandmother). My
get to the beach by thumbing, which grandmother rep!~. "He has a
meant one would stand next to the mouth and he should ask me like a
road with her arm and thumb extend- man!" Even at 87, my grandmothed as_cars approached. Si~ce every- er was still feisty upon retelling this
body knew everyone in that small ·story. They were mairied in 1934 and
community, a car would stop and had no honeymoon since they had no
pick 'up t.he !humber and take her to money.
the beach. My grandmother still had
For entenainment they went ona picture of herself in her bathing- hayrides, took rides in cars, and
suit from the _1920's leaning against went to the picture show. She said
· a car on Sy111cuse Beach. The beach that she can still bear Helen Lyons at
·disappeared after a dam was built in lhe picture show· in her nasal voice
Gallipolis, Ohio, in the 1930s since saying, "Out the back door, please.
the 'dam raised the water level30 feet Out the back door." She also
or so. During the winter my grand- described the car in which she drove
mother would ice skate on the Ohio_ around as a tin lizzie with a rumble
River which would freeze over. Lat- .seat, which is a folding seat in the
er, in the 1940s after WWll she back of an automobile, not covered
would even drive her car across the! by the top.
frozen river into West Virginia during·
She described trer husband as a
the winters.
. , regular run-of-the-mill kind of guy
Grandma was a teenager dunng: who was not romantic but who was
Prohibition, and she remembered always very good to her. He was a ,
that everyone simply brewed his· civil engineer. In 1935 her daughter,
own beer, wine, and . whiskey then ShirleyAnn, was born in the upstairs
_and said it was brewed for "religious ·back bedroom at their home at 300
reasons." She said that consumption Spring Avenue in Pomeroy. Dr. Boice
never really declined very much at came to the house to deliver her for
all. People simply moved the stills $25.00. She asked Grandma if it were
and speakeasies up into the hills. She painful, and her response was one of
. said, "A law man shut down the town her u$ual simple answers that was
tavern, and moonshiners later killed right to the point, ."Hell, yes."
a deputy and placed him in a well
In 1938 my Aunt Rita was born,
which shut up the law."
followed by my fatber Theodore
Her father died in 1927, and her Meier Beegle's birth in 1940. When
uncle took over the meat business. I asked her about her memories of
When the Depression l:ame, most · raising her three children, she said
people lost everything, and many· ·that every day she gave them breakpeople had no work, but her uncle fast, lunch, and dinner.
always gave her fami'ly food so they
She said, "Your just raised kids
considered themselves extremely then. Times were simpler. You didn't
lucky. She had to 'get a job on the - do it like they do today. Kids did what
weekends while she ·was in high they were told to do': They were seen
school, and she worked at Elberfeld's, and not heard. They never ever talked
which was a local department store. back."
She worked from 7:30 in the momShe had many memories of cooking until 10:30 ,at night for $2.50 in ing and remembered that neighbororder to buy stockings to wear to hood children could smell cookies a
schooi..She said, "It was rumored that mile away and would come to snack.
someope used to turn the clock back There were almost no restaurants and

.

By The Bend

to be

telephone number is 1-800:269-0271.
The address is Social Security
Administration, Office.ol' Inspector

Page7

Monday, September 22, 1997

Rules kids won't learn in school tell the real story
ward language is sure to appeal to
my younger readers. Here it is with
my thanks: Ten Rules Kids _Won't
Learn in School
"''· "'''""'"
"•"
I . Life is not fair. Get used to it.
Syllll•c•u:
..U Cro:oamrs
'""'""
The average teenager uses the
phrase "It's not fair " 86 times a day .
2. The real world won' t care as
Dear · Ann
The much about your self-esteem as your
enclosed article appeared in the bul- school does. This may come as a
letin of our church, SS. Peter arid shock.
.
Paul Roman Catholic Church on
3. Sorry, you won't make
Detroit's West Side. I gave a copy to $40,000 a year right out of high
each of my children because I felt it school . And you won't be a vice
contained an excellent message. president or have a car phone, either.
Please pass it on to your readers. -- You may even have to .wear a uni ·
W.R.S.
form that doesn' t have a designer
Dear W.R.S.: The straightfor- labeL

Ann
Lan derS

Loretta Beegle
'even in the 1950's in Pomeroy there
were no listings in the yellow pages
for restaurants.
Today, my grandmother takes
·great pride in cooking noodles ,
Ikuchen, pickled tongue, Sunny Silver
' pie, mashed potatoes and gravy, and
! green beans for her family whenev:
Ier we visit her.
In her later years, my grandmoth·
1ergot to see her son (mY father) grad. uate from Ohio University l"nd...)
Ibecome a professional civil engineer.
1She had nine grandchildren, three of
: whom were my brothers and I:
Theodore (Toby) Meier Beegle, Jr.;
Nathaniel Karr Beegle: and-Frederick
Carson Beegle.
. In 1990 she' flew on her first airplane while going to California where
:my brother, Toby, played football in
, college in the California Bowl. In her
:usual , understated way, when asked
Iif she enjoyed her first plane ride at
,age 81, she replied, "It was nice."
My grandmother has· already
'made her funeral arrangements. She
:wants-to be buried in the old German
!Catholic Cemetery high on a hill in
Pomeroy where many of her family.
and friends, her parents' friends, and
.her grandp11fents' friend• are buried.
She has chosen several old songs
be sung at her funeral : How Great
ou An, pn This Day Oh Beautiful
other, Two Blessed Virgins, and ·
Mother Dear, Oh Pray For Me.
In keeping with today's times, ·
however, she has asked to he buried
in a modern day pants suit.
Thanks for the memories, Grandma, and carry on ...
;

&gt;

~

By MARY FULLER
Gennett Suburban Newspa·
pers
A look at new products on the
market for travelers:

eight hours, and you don't get a new
Dear Ann Landers: Plea&gt;e pas.
life every 10 weeks.
thi s lip alon g to your readers con9. ·Smoking does not make you ceming a treatment for headac hes· look cooL Watch an 11 -year-old even a migraine.
with a bull in his mouth. That's what
Peel a banana. take half the
you look like to anyone over 20.
banana peel and place it on the fo re10. Your school may be "out- head with the inside_of the peel next
come-based," but life isn ' t. In some to the skin . Secure this with a headschools, you ' re gi,ven as many times bahd or some strip of cloth . Take the
as you want to get the answer right other half, place it on the back of the
Standards arc set low enough so neck and secure it also . Be sure 1he
everyone can meet them. This, of banana peels arc secured very snugcourse, bears not the slightest resem- ly and the white mushy stuff on the
blance to anything in real life --as inside of the peel is next to the skin .
you will find out.
E1ghty-tive percent of the people

Frymire, a graduate of the University of Louisville School of Medicine ·
in 1867, started using the banana
peel treatment in the 1890s. Thousands have wrillen me to say it
works. -- Dick Frymire. doctor of
barnyard science; Irvington, Ky.
Dear Dick Frymire: Happily, I
rarely get headaches, but those who
do may be willing to try this Please.
dear readers , if you are headacheprone. let me know if this works.

ters. And you don ' t'get summers off.
Not even spring break. You arc

Good luck . You aTe going to need
i1 -- and the harder you work, the

Bl vd., Suite 700, Los Ange les, Calif.

expected to show up every day for

luckier you will get.

who have tried thi s say the y get
relief within 30 minutes.

My great- grandfather, Dr. J.B .

Send questions to Ann Landers, ereators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
90045

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Williams, who was-involved in six marketing schemes. ·
Canadian-based companies, placed
"This scam proves that crime
newspaper advertisements asking knows no boundaries," .Montgomery
people to dial a toll-free number. said.
They were then offered line-of-credIn one case cited by Mont. it loans if they paid an advance fee of gomery's office, a 35-year-old dis·several hundred dollars.
abled Canton man paid $230 for a
In most cases, the loans never $2,500 loan that was never deposit·
materialized.
ed.
Canadian officials asked Montgomery's office to assist with the
People who think they have been
investigation because many of the bilked by scams can call the allorney
scam victims were Ohioans and general's toll-free hot line at 800-282because the attorney gene1111's office 0515.
has prosecuted seve111l other tele-

4. If you think your teacher is
tough , wait until you get a boss.
5. Flipping burgers is not beneath
your dignity. Your grandparents had
a different word for burger flipping .
They called it oppcrtunity.
6. It's not your parents' fault if
you mess up. You ' re responsible.
This is the flip side of "It's my life"
and " You 're not my boss. "
7. Before you were born, your
parents weren't boring. They got
that way paying your bills and listening to you.
8. Life is not divided into semes-

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I

Telemarketer arrested in alleged scam
By The A..oclatecl p,...
An Ontario telemarketer and 19
others have been arrested in a scam
investigated by Ohio Attorney General Betty Montgomery .and Canadian authorities.
At least 30 of the 163 victims of
the scam were Ohioans, officials
said.
Michael Syndedo Williams and 19
of his employees were arrested by the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police and
Toronto police. They were charged
with running an illegal advance-fee
loan scam.

_

•

Incidence of fraud heightens as Social Security tightel}s regulations
Recent · convictions of persons
A Social Security disability bene- supervised 'release and five months Security fraud hotline which was
accused of defrauding the Social ficiary pleaded guilty in the Eastern hpme detention after pleading guilty opened late last year to encourage the
Security Administnltion underscores District of New York to working to one count of making a false state- public to repott fraud. The hotline
the serious nature of the effort to pro- under another name and S!icial Secu- ment or misrepresentation for use in
tect the public from exploitation and rity number since 1981. The amount determining rights to payment. The
abuse, said Ed Peterson, Social Secll" -of the fraud was approximately attorney performed legal work out of
rity manager in the Athens office.
$92,989. The beneficiary was sen- · his home while receiving disability ·
These cases are typical of what is tenced to four years probation, six benefits. He was ordered to make coming before Social Security inves- months home confinement and restitution to Social Security in the
tigators today and represent the tip of ordered to apply five percent of his amount of $120,000.
the iceberg, said Peterson. gross income toward restitution dur· Fraud and abuse of Social SecuriMore than $11.5 million in fines, ing the period of probation.
ty programs, Peterson pointed out,
judgments, and restitutions was
A woman was sentenced in the generally involve filing false claims,
recovered during the first six months U.S. District Court, Middle District making false statements or concealof fiscal year 1997 by the Social of Florida, to three years probation ing faciQrs affecting initial or con'
Security's Inspector General's Office. for providing false information on tinuing entitlement to benefits. In
They involved 788 investigations forms filed with SSA in an effort to addition, the ln,spector General's
and 397 convictions as a result of obtain widow's benefits. She was also office handles allegations of frauduinvestigations. More than 2,307 new ordered to make restitution in the · lent advertising, cases in which an ad
cases were ~;~pened during the same amount of $51,048 through monthly ' gives the false impression that it was
period.
withholdings.
authorized by the Social Security
Peterson cited several cases of
An attorney was sentenced to five - Administration.
fraud as follows:
months incarceration, two year's
He noted that there is a Social

The Daily Sentinel

GOOD ONLY 9·23·97
NOT GOOD ON SALE ITEMS! SEE STORE
FOR DETAILS . ONLY GOOD ON ONE VISIT

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•

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�•

Mond8y, September 22, 1997
Page a• The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, September 22, 1997

Albany sailor promotes\international goodwill
~HUKET, TIIAILAND - An Albany soldier was libeny time a precious commodity on a deployment oine of inore than 40 U.S. sailors and marines who in helping with the community relations proJect.
stormed the beaches of Phuket, Thailand.
"I volunteered my services for this project because I
Their mission wasn't to take over the small town in believe in the 'challenge of caring' idea for those less
southern Thailand. Instead, their goal was to bring fortunate," ~d Werline, a 16-year Navy veteran.
smiles to the faces of more than 800 elementary
Werline, a legal assistant,
school students.
"/ llf&gt;llliiU6r6d "'J renric•• assists Navy lawyers in offering
AffilCd with cans of pain~ brushes, rollers and
I
. legal counsel to Navy personnel
lots of elbow grease, this assault team took on the
. on the Boxer.
children's weather-beaten school building aod made for this project b«aure I
Werline and other sailors and
it look like new.
·
marines worked under a blazing
One of the volunteers was Peny Officer lst Class
, .
Thailand sun throughout the day.
Thomas M. Werline, the 41-year-old son-in-law o b.linelll tlu 'chD/knge of dusting, sanding and laying down
Dorochy Hall of Albany.
fresh coats of paint in four class"During the community ~elations project in
. ,.
rooms.
Phuket, my role was issuing supplies and blending canng idea /f!f' thor• hu
Many had their own reasons
paint to renovate the elementary school," said Werfor giving up their liberty to
line. who's mamed to Hall's daughter Kimberly. .._ _ ,
work, but it was the U.S. military
Werline and the other volunteers are smtione&lt;l 1 '
•,
as a whole ·that benefitted the
. aboard the. amphibious assault ship USS Boxer. The most from their acts. .
40,000-ton ship made.a brief port visit to Phuket while
"I think ~e should get involved because 'we lead the
en route to the Middle East for a six-month deployment. way in charity and suppon fdr those that require it,"
Volunteers used materials donated by Project Hand- Werline said.
clasp to paint the two-story building. All gave up their
The' Navy's Project Handclasp was established in

1962 to promote mutual undersianding, respect and
goodwill through direct person-to-person contact
between Americans aod citizens of other lands.'
The project·coordinates transponation and delivery
of humanitarian, educational and goodwill materials
donated by private citizens throughout the .United
State~ for distribution to needy recipients in foreign
countries.
"We began planning this project months ago," said
Cmdr. Cesar Buenaventura, a Navy chaplain on the
Boxer. "We put a lot of work into the project, and I was.
pleased with the turnout."
For Werline. seeing the smiles on the faces of the
children at the Phiboon Sawadee School is proof
enough the project works.
"I felt like I contributed to someone's health and
happiness, and that it is pan of my calling in life to do
so," Werline said.

CU$m Homes

Remodeling

Mil
..

"Build Your Dr•am"
1988 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

JoeWilaon
(614 992-42n

...

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

· Social SecurHy Manager In
A~s
.
If you're thinking· about retiring
next year, you should contact Social
Security now to discuss your pla0 s.
In some cases, your choice of retirement month could mean additional
benefits for you and your family.
Because the compumtion varies ·
based on your earnings for the year
and the month in which you file, it"s
a good idea to check with a Social
Security represenmtive before making your decision.
Social Security rules permit people to work 'and receive retirement
benefits at the same time, so it could
be to your advanmge to have your
benefitS begin in January even if you
don't plan to retire until later in the

year.

I

I'

I

SCHOOL SPRUCED UP - Rrst Class Thclllllll
M. Werline of Albany was one of 40 soldiers
marines who volunteered their lime to Improve
old school building while stationed In Thailand.

older, your benefits will not be you're eligible for a reduced lum. Does 'Social Security have any
reduced no mailer how· much you . widow 's benefit. at age 60. If you free material7
earn.
wait ·until you are 65, you will be eli· A. Social Security produces a
For additional information or to gible for a full benefit. You should Teacher~ Kit, called "Social Securimake an appointment . to discuss also know that you can switch to· ty &amp; You" which explains the Soc'ial
your retirement plans, call Social your own retirement benefit (assum- · Security system. It consists of five
Security's toll-free number, 1-800- · ing you're· eligible and your retire- . lessons plus an overview. lesson. To
772-1213, any business day between ment. rate is higher than your suppon the lessons, a videotape, 'fact
7 a.m. and 7 p.m.
widow 's rate) as early as age 62. In sheets. student handouts and quizzes
Our lines .are busiest early in the many cases, a widow(er) can begin are included.
week and early in the month, so if receiving one benefit at a reduced
The kit is free to teachers and
your business can wait, it's best to rate and then switch to the other ben- may be ordered by writing to: Social
call at other times.
. efit at an unreduced rate at age 65. . Security Teac!.er's Kit, P.O. Box
The rules are complicated and 17743, 'Baltimore. Maryland 21235.
SOCIAL SECURITY QUES· vary depending on your situation, so Orders may be · faxed to 410-965TIONS AND ANSWERS FROM you should talk to a Social Security 0696. The kit also is available on the
ED PETERSON
representative ahout the options Internet at http://www.ssa.go\l.
I'm 60 years old and my hlisba11.d available to you. The number to call
Q. Is it true that the retirement
recently passed away. Am I eligible is 1-800-772-1213.
age is going up?
for any. Social·Security benefits?
· Q. I teach a high school civics
A. Yes. Because of longer life
A. · If your husband died fully class. I'd like to cover information expectancies, the full retirement age
insured for Social Security benefits, about Soci·al Security in my curricu- will be increased i~ 11radual steps

womendotoowritecode.
. computer whozzes are guys. Nerdy
"I want to find 011t .what marks guys.
women are making out there an~ . _The fact that generally isn't true
what possible marks I can make,
IS 1mmatenal.
.
said Michele Titcombe, ~ho is pur'."In a young g1rl's eye, (computer
suing a doctoi:ate 1D apphed mathe- .SCience) may not be what she wants
matics at the University of British to pursue," Borg satd Sunday. ,
Columbia.
. It may not matterlhat more_an~
Many at the cbnference agreed more computers a_re 10 the nation .s
that women iil computer science . class~ooms. Valene G~en, who .1s
i:njoymorecareeropponunitiesthan working on._her masters de&amp;n:• 1ft
they used to.
. .
computer sc1ence at Brown UnrverBy and large, women say, they're sity, sajd the machmes are popular
ueated as men are treated .:_ once with boys, largely because the
· they're in the field.
majority of game software appeals
But they worry about a dropoff in more to thein than gnls.

(No Sunday Calls)

Meigs Community Calendar
CHESTER - Meigs County
I.K.E.S. to meet Monday, club
lished as a free service to non-profit house. Trap shoot at 6. p.m.; meeting
·
groups wishing to announce meeting. at7 p.m.
and special events. The ~alendar is
· RACINE - Southern Local
not designed to promote sales or
fund nlisers of any ~!Jt - Items are School Board meeting Monday at
printed as space ~its and cannot the high school.
be guaranteed to run a spec1fic numTUESDAY
.
ber of days.
RACINE - RACO, Tuesday,
6:36-p.m. Smr Mill Park, new niem- :
bers welcome.
MONDAY

The Community Calendar is pub-

211........,

CLASSIFIEDS!

SERVICE
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Oxy - Accetl Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder
Stick • ng • Aluminum Welding

985-4422

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

HERMAN® by Jim Unger

Cheiter, Ohio

992·5583

1()(2S/981t!n

-.

.

·

c~~

1

~-~'//~---.;..;&lt;'
_
. --vo.

~.

~

NEW SFIOWROOM AT

360° Communications

' WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF

"SERVING OHIO SINCE 1953"

JIM YOUNG, OWNER

985-3561

~

:

**

The only factory
authorized service
agent in the area for
all major brands. We
are the "House of
Experts• on appliance
repair, sales &amp; service.
-Name Brand
ProductsFrigidaire- Gallery

Custom Kitchens. Best
warranty in the

*

business- hands
down!
,

·

.

,
.•

-:
;,.
:
-;
::
..

.

~

***:: ;
•
-~

~:;

* :::

'-, *:::

*~:
••
*

r--;....;·---~---,

POMEROY, OH.

An estimated 4 million
Americans are afflicted with
Alzheimer's Disease
· TRUE!
This number is ~xpected to klh&gt;'""
rise to 14 MILLION people
by the middle of the next
·
century.
For more information on
Alzheimer's Disease call
SCENIC HILLS NURSING
CENTER'S Specialized
Alzheimer's Unit
446-7150

Bob's

Appliance Repair
Service

1

•

Refri-ators

•••. '-L-

Ranges • WIDiran

50% OFF

fEJBr
,

*

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

DIIVERS NEEDED
Short Tltm Hauls • EASY MON.
Ell long Term Employment Op·
portunitfes Available With Fast

005

Growing Company. E.:cellent Pay
&amp; Benefill. Sae Homier Sales

Managtr @

NATIONAL GUARD
ARMORY, ROUTE ea NORTH,
POINT PLEASANT, 8 Ul., 91251 ·
91. No PhoN C~ls.

-ALso·-

HI()0-291·5600

Howard L. Wrltesel

914/tln

Toll Froe 1· 800 -487-5588 Ext
A Beautiful 1 Ynt Old Cat. Neu-

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

lllld. Decll.wad, Ulttr Trained,

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168
511f/tln

milo, lllllrnlnod, 11~

All Equipment
614-~

.

12170.

.

Go••
With Him,
.

frH kllttna to 1 good home,
FrH Klttenl, I Weeki Old,
._1811.
Inside

· prefefl
5472.

llebUe Heme Furnaces
and Beat Pumps."""·~

Furnaces *2800 a month

sasoo

a month
Heat Pumps Installed
Free Estimates

BElliS I CDOLIIB
Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
,1-80(1.872-5967

STEAM CLEANING

cllapotacl of.

Any ptraan lnltrlflld
may file .written exctptlant
to nld aecountt or to
mattoro pertaining to the
execution at the truor. not
!til thtn flvo dtyo prior to
- the doll 111 tor hoarlng.
Rablrt E. Buck
. Judge

· Common Ptno Court,
Prabato Dtvtalon
Molge County, Ohio
(9)22

:carpet-Upholetery

614·992·0077
Middleport, OH
CORPORAL ELEORIC
Dally Rd., Racine

614-949-3060
John Williams, Owner
Ucenaed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates
Providing Quality
Realdentlal Service.
24 Hr. Em•rg•ncy
Ss~, .......

PRIMESi til'

Sentinel
Classified•

992-2156

614-446-9416

I ,OH

1391

EXCAVATING
&amp; TRUCKING

(LimeStoneLow Rates)

WICKS

992-3838
Houae &amp; Trailer
Sites
Driveways, utilities,
land clearing,
septic eyatema.
Hauling Umestone
FrtHI E.rlmatss
.
_.

HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

..........

614·992-3470

SAYRE

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSYRUCYION

TRUCKING

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling ·
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Syslema
Trailer &amp; House -Sites
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre ·
614-742-2138

7/2211fn

C"EVALIER'S

Righi now gel PRIMESTAR ,nslolled for iusl 99 I
&amp;I you be~er mOYe foso Offer ends Ocl 31 , 1997.

liEATUPWJTHHOTCASHRDATESII·~/ ·

See back of rebate form or salesperson for details

TRUE or FALSE?

3/27/TFN

of Accounto, P - Court,
• Dryers • Dkhwashers
Mtlgl COUnty, Ohio
Acoounto and vauchtro
Honest Reliable
of tho following named
Quality Service
flducltry hat !IBn flied In
) 3-E440
tht Prabato Court, Mtlgo
(614 84 ~
County. Ohto lor appravtl
All Major Brands
•":s~l':~"::.- :19630-. Flrot L_R_e_aso
__n..a_bl_e_R_a_t_es__,
Account at Edword W.
Dural, .Guardian of the
etlllo "of llelly Baronlck, tn
lncompeitnl perean.
Unltlt excoptlone are
tttod thtrato, nld account• All Carpet·Upholstery
will bo tar hoarlng before
utd Court an tht 111 day at
· Cleaning
oetablr, 11197, 11 which timo
tho account wilt b•
eonaldertd. and cantlnuod
· tram day to day ~ntlt flnolly

The best value in satellite
TV just got better. 1 •

..,;:_;;

FRIGI~ 1 TAPPAIIWif PllliiiiiRa ..
OHer tootl S.pt. .lttr 1· lon•lttr 30, 1997

StiU-

..

•·
**:=

...._c..,uo,_too,_llt-.r_ _ _ _ _.....

COURT, PROBATe DMSIOH
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In tht M - a! tht

·.

'************
~~
"FREE ZONE"

11~ W. 2ND ST.

CDL CUSS ATRUCK

{Payments based on approved credll)

IN THE COMMON PLEAS

~~'J ,

tion Trainees. Film Studio, fi 14523-D254 .

·- Easy Bank Financing -

Fax; 304-773-5861

Public Notice

5j

C11dng - Movie Exvas, Produc-

Pomeroy, Ohio
WV1102ll477

RADIATOR REPAIR

614-992-5479

II 5,

· 110 Court St
992-4119

DUMP TRUCK

113 W. 2ND ST;

1

(18yos.)

Quality Window Systems

Agricultural • Industrial • _A utomotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators

your hour Is up'I"

·~·1
·

742~TJ8.

omEt::T
PRil:ES"

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

. "II aaya: 'Come In, Number 10,

~

ANNOUN CE r.tEtJTS

WOrkplace-llllrily- loiend&amp;. Flexe
ble houl"ll No irwenklryii1-800-

"FA(;TORY

.SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

CELLULAR PHONES

J..

Pick up dlecardld
appllanc", batterto.,
many metal•&amp;
motor blocka.

.11/etago $8-S20hlr. benofi"'t

Euy Workl Excellent Pay I AI·

...... 19111

•FREE Dtllvtry •FREE Set Up
•FREE Rtmovot of old un~o
•FREE 2nd YNr Wom1nty
•FREE monoylrom Frigidaire on
Glllt!y modtto - monay bock to

304 - 67~ · 1324 .

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

1

,

or call

25550

semble Products AI Home. Call

Phone: 614; 992-2406

KEN s
** .
NfW S, •LI!J &amp; SI!IVICf
** 1· 'n-...-··'---" "
** ;- : _. ,.I . -·I:'. _
* ".,\
o·l
** .* "tr * * * * *
*
'*
**•

LUMP AND STOKER COAL
H.E.I.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILABLE

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

250 Condor Street ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789 ·
A Division on- NichOls Metal, INc.

·
.
.
:
.•
.

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 mllee eaat of Route 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO
· 614-384 6212

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine. &amp;Welding Shop

*******************'***'*'~~I&gt;*
.
f

to : Action Youth Care, 217 6th
Street, Point Pleasant, WV

AVON SELlS ITSELF!

(614) 949-2804

Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrkatioo
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday- 8;00 a.m.-4:30p.m.
Saturday - 8:00 tLm. - 12 noon

By CATALIN~ ORTIZ
the number of women preparing
AP Bainea Writer
it.
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)- Blame
Anim Borg, an engineer at ·
it on violent software, the stereotype ml Equipment Corp., Cited a study
of men as the only true computer by CorpTech of,Woburn, Mass., that
Members ot the Meigs High School VICA Club recently collacted more than 1eo PQunda of aluminum pop can tabs to benefit the
nerds or whatever fits- ••pens say found the number of women earning
.
·
fewer women are studying computer compqter science degrees fell from Ronald ~cDonald House of Columbus.
Studenta In auto mechanics, cosmetology, electronics, nursing, occupational work experience and welding collected lhe tabs In
science.
37 percent of the total in 1984 to 28
. cooperation with the remainder of the MHS student body and cooperating pualnesses, according to VICA edvlaor Ken Eblin.
Hundreds of women •gathered percent in 1995.
Shown here· presenting the tabs to Pomeroy McDonald's owner Roscoe Milia are, from left: kneeling at front • James Chapman
here over the weekend to discuss
No one's sure. why that has hapand
Amanda
Haya; standing • Eblin, Seve Cline, Philip Edmiston, Nan_cy Whaley, Branda!) Larkins and Mills.
potential solutions to· the Pl'!lblem .pened. But many blame the percepand ways to convince everyone that tion commo~ to both sexes that

selor, or Psychologist el igible to
be llctnaed. AI 1aaa1 one year
elperlance In Individual and
lamily therap'J'. Pleaae re~;pond

E.O.E.

Houra:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00 p.m. Morichly thru Friday
7:00 am to Noon Saturda

614-992-7643 .

Q. How much would niy spouse
and our two small children receive
from Social Security each month if I
died?
A. The exact amount they would
receive would depend on your aver. age annual earnings over your work- '
ing life. The average monthly payment for a family consisting of a
widow(er) with two children is
about $1.478 per month.

Women·in computer science want
.to bring more females into field

.

BRIMII MINING

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

let, ''Retirement."

Eblin, Mamie Stephenson, Daniel
Whittekind, Jerry aod Barb Colmer,
Jimmie Snider, Steve, Shari, Arica,
Aja. and Destinee Blackwell; Billy,
Seth, and Keifer Colmer; Bonnie
and Debra· Krauter; Jeff, Angie
_DeLong, Holly and Heidi Griffin,
Jutuiim Little. all of Pomeroy.
. Sam and Vera Eblen,Tony, Pany
and Lisa Eblin. Tammy, Jeremy,
Scott and Megan Johnson; Hillia
Eblin, all of Middlepon, Nancy
Whittekind, Leah Whittekind, Huntington, W.Va. ll.andy and Jan Snider
Cheshire; Ken and . Donna Eblin,
Doris Murray, _Rutland; l..awarence
8lld Barb Eblin, Jacob Sman,
Chester; Vanessa Bell, James Eblin
of Columbus; Artie and Hope Eblin
of Syracuse.
Guests were Jimmy Yaeuger, Pat
Martin, Jennifer Walker, Angela
Searles, and Kay Clark.

....,...,.. ......
Ph.985-4198

rnr,_.lllfll...,.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

until it reaches age 67. This change
starts in the year 2000 and affects
people horn in 1938 and later. No
matter what your "full" reti'rement
age is, you may start receiving a
reduced retirement benefit as early
as age 62.
.
If you'd like more information about
retirement, call Social Security ·ar 1800-772-1213 and ask for the book-

Tk.,.plat lor lht )laaon County
aru. Applicant must be a Masten level Social worker, Coun-

t/17!f11 mo. pd.

•Mowers •Chain Sawa •Weedaaiera •Authorized
Dealer For:
,
•Brlgga &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murtay •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
AND OTJiERSI
.
Briggs &amp; SlratttHt: Master Stnkt Ttd!ttkbl
Outtlear Power Eqttlp~t~~nt Assedtdlal: Certillltl 2 Cycle
State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohlo

Ebl'in . family .holds
reunion in Racine ·
· The 30th reunion of the Samuel
Allen Eblin family Wl\5 held Aug.
23.• at the smr Mill Park, Racine.
Greg Eblin, president, opened
. ·the meeting with a welcome. New
officers for two-year· terms were
elected as follows: Sam Eblen, Sam.
Eblen, · president; Ken Eblin, vice
president; . and Donna Eblin, secretary-ueasu1er. ..
Committee members named were
Hyllia Eblin and Doris Murray. Gifts
of money we~e given to James
Eblin, .Pa!ly Eblin. An Eblen, and
Jimmie!' Snider: Table grace was
given by Donna Eblin, and a potluck
dinner .wa5 enjoyed by those attend, ing. The evening ·was spent by looking at old family pictures,' visiting,
singing, and playing music.
Those in attendance were Sharon
· Price. and Pat Morna Findley, An
and Sue Eblen, Wanda and Becky
Eblin, Greg, Janet, Ashley, and Juley

(614) 592-5025

ACTION lOU11I CARE, INC,
11 neklng 1 Cl'\ild and Family

34718 St. At. 7

Athens, Ohio

Parts and Service!!

Contact Social Security now for 1998 .retirement plans
This would allow you to apply
earnings in excess of the annual
limit to those months and still
receive some benefits for the year. If
you are retiring at age 62, your benefit amount will be adjusted at age
65 for months you did not receive a
full benefit.
For your application to be effec- ·
·live in 1anuary 1998, you should file
for benefits any time before January
31, 1998.
.
In I 997, beneficiaries under 65
can earn up to $8,640 with no reduction in Social Security benefits; and
beneficiaries aged 6569, can earn up
to SI 3,500 with no reduction ·in
Social Security benefits.
The amount a person can earn
and still receive benefits increases
e;ih year with increases in average
wages. Of course, if you are 70 or ·

Ptojeds
Swllp, II• dies,
Tallies, Misc. Items

Attorney At Law

RICIII IIOWIR CLIIIC

.

BY ED PETERSON

H••at~fle4 WtM .

Attorney William Safranek

--------Social Security
Column--:---.
.I

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of financial
obligations and arrange a fair dlatribullon of
ISsaiS. Debtors In bankruptcy may keep
"exempf' property for lhelr pe~ use. This
may include a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact

,. ·:

Opening 9·1·97

Laurie's tusttm
Cakes

L&amp;J

SWAP~SHOP
We Buy, Sell
and Trade
New and
Used Items
202 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
614,992-9086
8127/97 1 mo. pd.

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

~

992·6194
Reopening for full
time.business
~

Specializing in
wedding, anniversary
and birthday cakes.
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addition•
•New Garagea
•Eiectrtcat &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill,
982-e215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Non·Worklng Washer,

Dr~era,

Stoves, AefrigMatora. Fteeztra.
Air Condiliontrl, Color T.V. '1,
VCR'o, AIIO Juri! Cara, 614·258·
1238.

Sllndlng lmbtr or pulp - d lor
clear cut. contact Greg at ,81&lt;4·
84W015.

Western Medical Services. JCA·
To Buy Uud Mobile HO Accredited Whh Convnenda-

want~

Homo. Col 81~175 or 304- _oo_"===~==:::--

175-stiiiS

SHEETMETAL FOREMAN

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

Send Ruuma Today To:
FOREMAN .

AVON I All Areu
SpMoo. 904-875-14211.

Shloloy

P.O. Box tiOCl

· Jacl&lt;son, OH 458&lt;0

�,.

'·

Plge 10. The Dally Sentinel

Monday, September 22, 1997

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Mlcki!!POft, Ohio

I

ALLEY OOP
BIUDGII:

s-

Pooldon Open: Gymn11tlc1

Brown.: 2 s..., On

COtch IPati·Time, Evenings •

1 Full Both, 2 Holl Bollia, Full

saturdoy, lluot Hav.o Tumlllng
Elporlonco, Elq&gt;O!ioo oco Cooc:hlng
Children Proforrod, Will Power
- . . . 8tU4t·t5711.

1V811 Lin&lt;:OIII TOIIIIIt C11, 71 000

Aaoo 11u1t In 11114, 3 Bldroorno,

81.11"*'t, 2 Cuttom Wood

Flooro Throughout Cuotom
Wood Won Throughout Tho
Homo, F.. Fnn l'oooh. Dod&lt;. '-·
chltoct Dellgn, Appolntmonto

,

__
-T--..-.

FOR SALE IV OWNER:
111 Vlnllln Cotlr~ In GalllpoNt, I

OteltVIIue,E,...pe-

I

Floor Plan,

180 WlnteciTo Do

ANY 11011 JIIIS: E - pol,_

lng, ahruba &amp; weeds trimmed,

landacaplng, aldawalka edged,
town coro. 110. Coif Btl so.t-115-

.I

.,

7112.

CAT-Dozor-'&lt;. 1104-8- .
Dozer,

•.

Back

Hoe.

Dump

Truck,Exporloncod DrivtrL Frot
e.. Cot (114)-245-6325
Furnltute Npoir, rallnlllt and r•
-tlon, olio cullom ordoro. Ohio
Volloy Rtllnlohlng Shop, larry
PNipa. 814-11112-t5ll.
·
· GocrtH Portalllo SawmiM. don~
haul JUU' laue tD 1ho mil lull coli
1104-876-1157.

s lodroomo,

1 Cor

Gortgo, Lot 80180, Colll14-378- Own o ,_ homo 11,000/down,

2720 For App llibtwnt Ontr Af~ no ":l:nto aflor 7 ,..,.. so.tllriPJI.
.
116•

Homo In oouncry wtlll Sl ..,.., Portt llodol T..U. To U¥o In Elonly 7 111ra old, wid&gt; two bad· ra Nlco, Juot 11ovo In Tho Furnf.
li'lll1g room. l d - bdl. tu,. Goo• With ft And 1 'Obu IJko
ulllty room, -.go bulclng. wllh To Sot .ft. lly Pllono Nurnaor h

cellar, one car garage. Localtd
on ~ Run Rood,

~1 .

384-3117.

. . . nica. I WDI.IId lka tl Mil

Iii-.,

In Gallipolil: 3 Bodrooma, 1 112

Dfl I

lind ........ 304-273811.

men11.

I mav111. Call 1!114-441· 2588.
Equal Hauling Opporllnlty.

11811 Dodgo Shldow ES. 2 Doors,

Auto, 4oklng II, 100, 814·448·
111:!2.

message!

Br•nd Now Apottmonto 2 Bed·
IOomt, Vory Roomy A.~ Qo,
rago, N11r Rodnoy, Dopoolt I
Roltronc11 Required, 11~·441-

ee315aharlpm.

1ND Fard Taurus. 110,000 mlktl,
front bu- clomago, vory chon

For Salt Or Trade Small 4
Whealar, 1G87 Bronco 4 WO, 4

2101.

-~land2-

- - · 01 Vlloge IIOI'IOf and
-·ldl
1nporL FromA:;.r
304 . Col 114IIQ2-1!084. Equal Hauling Oppor·

---ge~
In CflfiOn. 304-T/S.!040.

Balha, large lal. BeiWWn

Schooto, Fonctd, Hoattd Inground Pool, Calf 814-441.a800
Fot UM lnbnllllan.

Bra11 twin lilt Hd, complott
with dofu11 Sooly monrHo and 610 Farm Equipment
bo• opringo, Hke ,_, 1175; dl· Buah Hog Parts &amp; Equipment

•

Bartl»" Used, MoYing And Mutt

Small furnished apL Utllltl..

M41.114-3117·7010.
Wll C... For An EldoriJ Por10n

paid, e.:cept electric. 120.0/mo.

Ro,.roneoo I dopolll. 304-e761385.

In ..... Homo, EJporioiiCtd Homo

Hoollh Cuo Aide, Would Proflr
~$1il,114-441-

Tara Townhouse Apartmenta,
Very Spacloua, 2 Bedroom•. 2

WII
r..l
Junk
or truh - · 1351
pldlup
lotd.
3Q4.4!J'S.!1035.

Flaora. CA. 1 112 Both. Fully Cll·
I'Otod, Adult Pool I Boby Pool,
Patio, Store $350/llo. No Poto,
ltooo Pluo Security Depollt flo.
qulrtd. 814-4411-3411, 81~-44110101.

W1l trim and ..,, . . .n trooolllld

do Interior anij lllllrior painting,
114-815-38711.

fiNANCIAL

I

-:-Snar-o-:Or:-u-m-Sot:--:-lncl-:-udH:-:-:-II:-u711c
BOTTLED WILL POWERI LOSE Sooncl. I Cuo,ll-7345.
Up To SO lbo., 30 Doy llo..,
B1ck Guaranlul Natural, Or.
FARM SUPPLIES
Rocommondl&lt;f. •~ 4-441-1 ga2.
&amp; LIVESTOCK
FnooS&amp;mpfla.

Soiii20Q, IIU41·1053.

RentaYII. frM EatJmalell lnIU,.,_, lldwlll, OI'Mo. 814-311-

21 o

c.Jo. Gil- 5424.

Buck SIOVO ftrlpiiCI lnooi1. 304Skid Stltr Loador. 814·
773-5341 boloro 5pm. 304·773- CaN
444H7107:00P.M.
5&amp;12-!pm.
0.4 D Cot Dozer w!Winch ropoo,
Citation 12.8 Cubic Fttt O.ep power lhlh rrans, e:cc. undtw' car·
Frotzlf. Chill Typo, Like Now, riago. $17,500. 304-e75-SDII.

Plolo I Ill Troo Sonrice, Stump

II

~ PriOoo N. -

lipollo.

nette 111 for amall area, twa Rotary Cuna11 • Raar Bladea monfll o1c1, 1100; 111 or- Cla- Loadtrl • Sackholl, ElC. Carmond Grid rvnntnv boordo for full mldluro Farm &amp;lawn 114-44&amp;. . . trudc; 81~35115.
241 2, 1.8Q0.5114.1111.

814-441~0rii4-«H151.

I

8oot1 Br Aedwlng, Chippewa,
Roc:.k1, Ton1 Lama. GulrantHd

Clliianor K Coml*ll A-330 CH, 10
Ft I 13 Ft G.H. 5-7 Shank Chll·
Concftltl &amp; Plaatk:: Septic Tanka. Ill, 4Bootom Plow,114-258-8011 .
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evant En=111. Jackoon, OH Huaqvarna &amp; .Green Machine
1.aot).537·
trimmere a. brush cunara on aala

Sk:WI Equipment 304-e75Sale Or Jl8do: Ono loadbay now.
Trallo&lt; Willi
Dull Al&lt;lot, 7~21 .
Llghto And Brakos. 114·441- JD 2755, JD 2555, JD 4020,

Du-.

lllll.

3020, Kubota 70 HP 4 WO,

IIF285, Ford BOO. NH 250 Skid

Slear 250 Hra., Yanmar 22 HP 4

Grvll'l Plano· tuning I rtpolrs. W0 'Mth lioohr, Rhino 10 FL Off.
Probloml? Notd Tuntd? Call lllo set Rotary .Cutter ,2 yra. ()jd,
plano Or. 814-448-4525
Wooda to Ft. Cutter VG ~ond ..
New Round Bale Tranaportl

' -' '!10·'"" NHUsed
716 Sllago Wagon
loader, Used

Business

Opportunity .

12115, 814-

carl Light bfuo/ctork bfuo Interior,
om/1m ...... 1850, 814-8. .2311
diYU14-114f1.2144-.
118&amp; Ford Timpo, two door, 1100
owners, full alzad spara, bod»"
good, strong engine, prlcad to

ooll- 11000, wfth CD ployor,
11200. 114-14f.SI)gl ioaYI muoage or collhlr 5:30pm.
·1
- G10ncl Am, 4dr, air, pe. pb.
304-e75-15CII.

1881J Olda Cutlaas Supreme

Milko GOod School Car, Elocoflont

PW, AuiO, 58K Mlleo: 1113 Star·
Conclilion. 61--6844.

.

t990 Dodgo Daytono ES Auto,
PS, PB. 11 ,ISO Plio no: 6 1&lt;·25&lt;!1380.

1910 llltlublohl Procio 5 ·~· ale,
runa ver1 good, 3D MPG, new
lirOI, g71(, 11800, 1141181i 135.

t980 Volkawagon·Jena Auro, •
Ooota. At; C11111tte, After 5 P.M.

814-245-51148.

1881 Buick R•o•l Custom V-8,
Goad Condhlon, Fronr Wheel
Oriva, Air. AMIFM Tilt &amp; Cruin,
Aqua Tread Tires, GU·4•6-

4580.

-AT HOllE

'FAIILY DAEAII HOUSE"
ge 4br, 2 homo, flaturlng
· e.. s-"' 11.~11 PIT. $1,!105 ...
To $3,332 Frr. Paid Vacation, all ,....._ 1hrQ.Ugh fireplace.
BonuuL Call For ftH lntorma- IIIII of lilt lr1 ....rlt)' ayottm.
$2,405/down. 134&amp;64 .... month.
lonBOoltlll.1-204-1'041.
Only It
ANDLOVEm

PI otesslonal
Calf For FrH !lops + OWner Fl·
nanclno lnlo. Talco 1011 Oil UoiOd

prooflng, all boHIIIInt ropalro

-Onc..h-1

done. frH eadmataa. lifetime

..,.,.ntll. 10yro on job.oxporl·

RENTALS

-~16.

Bodroomo, 2 Bothl, Hoot Pump,
G.E. Appllancoo, Llko - · Alttr
8,11~.

........., _-~"'
thll
_..
to
IUbjod

tho F - Fair Housing Ad

. - 1 1 8 8 - - llllogal
to a..rt11e •any palsfb:ILM,

*"h••owllglon,
iiltiUI
-on,_,-·
lmltltkJn or

-

tamlllllll1atUI ar -

ar1Q1n1 ar 1111' ~ 10

mako.., IIUCh ptel8llinol,

lim-or-.'

-forrall-·tn-oltho
Thll••• r•per ._.not

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

tow. 0...- .... .,.,..,.,
lntDirNd lhll all dwellh 11(11
ldVIttlled lri this nawspliPif

o r e - on an oqual
.

MERCHANDI SE

81~118,

-·

1 Central Air, 1 Owner, 114·245·

1881 18110 Sunlhlno 3 Bod·

rooma, 2 8a1h1, Taral Electric,

Pomeroy· four bedracm, atove
and refrigerator, wlwnher and
dryer hookup, HUD approved,
$475/mo., references, 814·aG2·
8888.

hou•.

510

Hou•hokl
Goods

Appliances:

RacondiU.aned

2133.

3:00 814-31'8-

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

742·2313.
Hl84 Yahama Venture 12004::4::,

luldrall.l1,800.304-e75-4518.
I 888 .Suzuki Kotona 600, black/
purple, eoo milts, 13800 OBO,
814-g4&amp;·2311 dayo, 814-&amp;4&amp;-

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1965 18' Starcratt Witt11965 100
HP Mercury, Rune Goad Graa1
Fishing Boat. 11,300 Will Nego.
1iate, 614-446-4412.

.,_

1987 18ft. Sea Imp .. 16Clhp Mer·
cruiser wllrailer, 2 life jacke11, {

--

bumpers. 614-446-3814.
1977 15' Glastron With 1876 115·
HP Marc:ury All New Interior, ·
Very Fast, 11 ,6ilD Will Negotiate, ·
614-\.46-4412.

THE BORN LOSER

~

COOTI1lW!'ION~

toon Boat, 100hp. kitchen 1 u~
per sun deck, tracker llallar,
priced to sell. AII·Stl,SOD . 30•·

TO ll't.·

675-51111.

,

1995 Sea-dao Space SPX jot •~.
80 11&gt;.. 14500. 614-11112-81~.

~

BIG NATF.

WV, Financing

HeAL ESTATE

.-

~-

:1 D1:1Joom Hou ... 1 Bd1.l.Mng

-

l&lt;lll:hln, Sunroom, largo

Barn. 7 Acrea, U.nd Contract,

Set Ar 201e Jefferson In Pt.

Tom IIIII- Jr.,ll~2110,

1981 F-150 Ford 414, Comt Soo,
llaloa An Oflor, 814-245-8751.

814·742-

1888 Chewy 8·10 low mllea,
C::..d cond. 304·773·11~5 attar

520

Marlin Rilla StalnloA Sttll llod·
ol 883 SS w/Lamlnatod Stock, : A Groom Shop ·Pot Grooming.
CAL 2211AG IWStopo. 11g5.
·; Ftalurlnt tg!~ Bath. Don
goo Cr11k Rd.
Remington Rlno Modal 700 BDLJ SltMIL 373
114 Ill OZII.
Cll308 WIScopo. 141 s:
.. _._, . 1
BA-2, 12 Gougo. 2·3 1/2"
bar. 11 110. 304-el'S-1731.

WATERPROOFJNQ

18M Toyota Corolla For Perla,

1250. OliO 81U41185:l

1982 Pontloc 600, 4dr 1500. 304815-2117 or 304-875-4332

I

Ruger Red Hawk Stainless 44

11a1. 7 112 Inch Barrel, •400; ,
Smith I Woooon llodol 57, 41
llag, 8 Inch Barrel 1300, Call
814-258-ellll.

530

Antlquea

Buy or nil. Rlvorlno AntlquOI,
112• E.llaln Strol~ on At 124;
Pomeroy. Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 .
I Bo:toono, lie, qulol topl. In nlco Lm. 10 6:00 p.m., Sunday I :00 10
noiuhllorhood. 112!01mo. 31M-117'5- e:oo p.m. 814·gg2·2526, Ru11
1580.
.

--·

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

1&amp;89. Ford pick-up, sttndard, Unconditional lifetime puarantee
140,000
mlloo, booh @I LOcal rel&amp;renc:es lurn•ahad. es:
Runa Gaod, Asking 1700, 114·
141,
000.
Aoklng
$25,000. 304· tabllshed 1975. Call (8141 ~•8·
·
a Wllk Ofd Elltlmo SpHi. Sholl. 2~1a
0870 Or I-800·28Nl578. Ragora
875-256:l.
Wormed, No Poporo, 1175, 8141'/atarpiOQfii'G. .
1181
Dodgo
Dlplomot
1500
080;
388 9:!11

Sporting
Goods

Shatgun Ooublt Barrel

Home
Improvements
• BASEMENT

2 AKC Roglotored Pomoianlono Plouant
Small, Hou1abroken, B1•·2SI1181 ChiVy llallbu 4 Dooro, V-8,
fll32.

114--1.

ASTRO-GRAPH

SERV ICE S

810

19&amp;2 Rongor 5 Spaocl, NC, Runs
Good; Good Condition, 88,000
llilel, $4,300, 814-3811-9:l08.

no• Ford F 350 Turbo diesel,
crew cab dually, XLT, air, cruisa,
stereo, standard tran~m lnlon ,
two-tana paint, simulators. Gull
wing teal box, running boards,
R111e hilch, dark tinted gtau,

se.ooo miteo, 111.750, 81H4&amp;·
2311 ""'"' 814-1141-2844-

ca'c General Home Maintenance- Painting~ vinyl sidlna,
carpentJ1, doors, Windows, baths
mobile home repair and mora.
lree e&amp;~lmata call Chet, 614-a92·

fo;

6323.

Electrical and
Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wiring
new Mf\1/ct or repairs. Maslar
censed electrician. Rid,naur

u:

EIBtlrltal, WV000300, 304-675t788.

&amp;. AU&gt;ol Cot And Ched Duo the
loonr in the O.uifit&lt;l l«&lt;ion.

IMONDAY

Ready To Go I $1,500, Will Taka
Small " Wheeler Trade, 61,....416282.

4051.

ENVARI

I

Cloudy· Gruff· timid· Office • DIFFICULT

Very Clean, very GOOd Condition,

'95 F150 XLT 2WD, 814·192·

country

38 Aug. hours
40 Contarpieco

SCRAM-LETS ANSWJRS

WEAR SE!iRt[)OIJ.}
SLIPPERS?

S~la~li~o~n,~~ag~re~e;m~e;;n~IS;,;;.:~tyou

Black, brick. _., plpoo, wind- 1g12 llonto Cilia \'flth 350 2
OWl, llmolo, 111:. Ciludo Winton, 84,000 111101 On Motor Loti Of
Rio Grondo, OH Call 814·245· Now Front End Porta, Wlndohlold
Dual E.t1aust With Turbo II Mu·
5121.
flora, Depondlble, Call Henry ~~­
tor 8:00P.M. 304-675 · 1~33 Or
560 Pets for Sale

view, located ar swracu1e. Oh
155.000 OliO, 304-275-1102. .

Pass

'fOUR CLUB5

Building

SUpplies

Pass

Saarinen

28 Ropotlllon
29 Sklrtloalure
31 Important
time periods
32 Drains
35 Eaau'a

SIR, WH'(
DO SOME OF

814·742·2792.

2 Bedroom Houoo On Second
Strol~ Point Ploasan~ WV. 814-

550

Pass

...-+-+-1

Pass

.
_
_
_
_
_ V _by filling in the missmg words
L-....1.-l--...L-l--...L--' you develop from step No. 3 ~low..

310 Homes for Sale

3 bedroom hDuu plu• •• acr-.
big flYing room with llroplaco, nlco
dining room &amp; kltchln. nlco rluor

Dbl.

.

720 Trucks tor Sale

o148-ll221.

chargee

25 Pootfc time
26 Sacred mualc
27 Archlloct

I

Full llna .or auto· body panels,
paints and supplies, also glau,
lighl usembly. Oxygen and ac•
tylano tlnki l1!1od lnd exchlngtd,

oao.

9 Ice pollal

1--~~~:.-~"TI--rl-'-r:;l7rl Ct. Ccmplere lhe chu~kle quoled .

11l88 Palimino POp Up Camper

Caro At. 82·3 MIIBI

I NT

Easl
1 'I

Types, 814-245-5877

4000.

.304-875-SOFA (7632)

OfiPOIIunlly lUll.

Wesl !north
Pus
•

Used /Rebuilt, All Types, Ovar ·
10,000 Tranaminlana. Accaaa '
RemarAAiacturad ·Maln Shafts For ·
Standard Tiansmluion
All

asking $1200

sf.:. ololp

r.

- ~1-__,E;:....;SrN
I" 15 . 1. 1 ..

1D76 Pruwlor, 18', good COndilion,

2101-M.
Opon 1:30 • 5:00 lion-Sat

41

&amp;Marry

10 Feudal serf
11 Unculllvatod
l8nt
t7 mmecllately
following
19 -and Ink
23 Membership

IIII

"J

Fumlon

1

1 Oxllko animal·
2 -Jacket
3 Zola heroine

5 Aclor Brynnor
6 Verne hero
7 Antelope

0

89 Maxim Boat Cuddl
ablnet
Inboard. Mercrulsar urias In·

6169.
Hoot Pumps Only Slight)' Hlghlr. Polrlot.
New gas lanka, 1 ton · 1ruck
Call Uo Today. 1&amp;&amp;7 It Tho
86 Trans Am: 85 Cadliac Seville;
Twenty Seventh Year In The NICI hllttr·b&lt;Oko 4-H Club calf 811 Cl'lavralel S·ID pick-up truck. wheels &amp; radiato11. 0 1 R Au10,
Ripley, WV. 30~ · 372·3933 or I·
H.ting ' Cooing Bulinlul 814- for 11iUII8 matket llttr 1how. 81~·843-5238.
1100-2739329.
4411«l08, 1-2JI-oo88.
PlaCid In
10 ot 1111on CounMercury Marqull. excellent Tunnel Rim !Ba&amp;a Ancl Top) And
Folr.
SOOibo. 1400.
STORAGE
condition,. whh cellular phone, 4 Accel Cull Point Distribulor For
Uprlgh~ Ran
door, good tire1, call attar
Smal Block ChBYrlcot ltOO, 614Jad&lt;lon, Olio.
Hofllofn Holftr CIIVH 185 &amp; Up. 614·992·2741 ,
«1·1053.
Anguo Croll Caluoo, 185 1 Up.
SunOuoot Wolll Syotom tanning 814-245-5484.
bod. $1500, 814-112-4044.
=:..:.:.;;.;;..;_...:..:.::..;.;..;__ _.1 Stille horoo- 75:00 ...... puGJro
Tow Dol~ For Haulng A Cll. Uloo 1 -riding. 814-742-2D!i0.
Now, B1U41-403&amp;.

we ,_,_Amr/ Surpluolll

K7

4 Knickknack

DOWN

'::~:t:~' S©\\c{tlA-l&amp;£~s· ••••

.

1-800 4DI911Q

Polly'o- •

I 37 TVhoroo
39 ~~~~ dlah

10 4 3

lnatrument

66 Nautical rope

Harvard won Ibis year's College
43 Chemist's
Team Championship, defeating Stan-+-t--1 · burner
ford 43-1 in lhe l().board final. Inler- . ' ....,+~r.-+45 Roman 56
. estingly, one of the Harvard team ,
47 Wall - Dark
49 WHk, as an
Joel Singer, was on Slanford's winexcuse
ning team in 1995. The other cham50 Compoaer
pions were Jenni Hansman, Barry;
.,.--t--t--1 . Strtvlnaky
Piafsky (who also won for Harvard in
--.-+--t---1 52 Sfnowy
"'
54 sae
1994) and Shawn Samuel. (Sirange.-+-1--~
55" Slippery
..
ly, a team needed 10 field only two
56 Actress
Marthastudents from lhe college.}
-...l......t-.1 . 58 Mao- -lung
Who paid all !he airfares and hotel · I L...J.-""-..1...59 Postal creed.
bills? No one! The matches were
word
played over lhe Internet on
OKbridge.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Harvard gained on this deal. Both
by Luis Campos
Soulhs were in two spades. And both
Celebnty Cipher ctyplogr1lm:i are oealed from quotfll:bns by famous people, pa$1 aod l)feseol
Ead'lletter 1n the t:rpher stands lor anolher. Todlly"s cluB: Y equal.!i K .
WesiS led the heart six.
For Harvard. Hansman won with
W Z V· '
F V W
MUNVX
GMD
'w z v
dummy's ace, drew trumps, and .
played a diamond to her king . Afler
PWXIIOFVX
wzv CLON F V W P R 0 N
winning wilh lheace, West switched
10 the club five . Easllook two club
HRTV.'GilD X
RUCRGP
LO
L W' P
tricks, then erred by returning his last
club wilhout cashing lhe diamond
BRTY OLTYURDP.
v-~EV&amp;, TI\f.Y'LL ~y "'l queen, Declarer ruffed in the dummy; PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ·rm the only actor who ever killed John Wayne in a
then she led a diamond to East's
picture. so producers have .pegged me f~r a villain . ~- Bruce Oern.
mii!:.E.
FRet-\
queen. With only beans remaining,
\HE
t-IC:&gt;lEAA I East had 10 concede a trick 10 dummy's queen, which was Hansman's
eighlh.
.
·
.lAM I
At the other computer, South
- - - - - - hlllo~ ~y CLAY I. PIIILAN ......;·. ;__ _ __
played dummy's heart nine at trick
Rearrange ~ers of the
one. East, Samuel. won wilh lhe jack
four oc:romblod words be·
and .imaginatively switched to lhe
low ro form four simple words
diamond four: king, ace, 1wo. Back
carne a diamond to Easl's queen.
Now the defense look two ruffs: a
heart ruff by Wes~ Piafsky, and a diamond ruffed with East's spade 10,
South discarding his lasl hearl.
c.ETTINC,
S AS I 0
tOol TCUCH
Declarer ruffed the next heart high,
WITH
drew trumps, ruffed a diamond 10
'(0011.
FE11tNINE
reiUrn lo hand, and tried a club to the
51t&gt;E. ~
king. However, ·he lost two tricks in
that suit, finishing lwo down.
..,;E;;...;,.H-11:..:,'
"The only people who can
change !heir minds," an over':~-~~·:;:·~-~:::-, confidenl chap said, "are the
r
one's who---· ·- -!'

'88 Rll 125 dirt bike; '87 230
OUadsport lour whooler, tall 814-

19Q1 Thundef'bird, air, sunroal, •
naw Michelin tiraa, excellenr

loaei• Free Eatlma1111 Add-On 2808 Patriot Road, 1 IIIIo Wilt

Throo l&gt;tdoom
1 112·bath, Wawra, Dryortt, Ringel, Ralrllarge yord. cutoldl p111 pernitttd. gratafl, eo Day Gueranllel
lliddltporu RuUand area, $375 French Cily Maylag, 114·441·
11112 Clayton Norllrldge 14x7U 3 per month ptuo dopotl~ 61~·843- 7l115.
Bodroomo, 2 FuU Bolllo, Jocuz~ 5556.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Tub In lllistor Both, 10112 Sollcl
Wood Outllulldlng, IOxiO Dock, Two bedroom house wllh slava Waahar•. drwera. relrlgtratora.
Excofilnt C«dllorl, 111.500. ll4- lll1d rtfrlge,.IOr, deposit ,.qulred, range1. Skagg1 Appllanc... 78
no Ollldl pe11, 814-112-:1190.
Vlno StrH~ Col 814-4411·7318,
245-t812, Nw 5:30 P.ll.
117,000, Call -

Motorcycles

/

14110 Oalaoaod lloblil Homa, 2

France

33 ·s1111
34 TofTV
36 Wr118r Ephron

By Phillip Alder

I 8D1 Hyundl Excel, Autamadc, 2Doar J!atchbad&lt; 11800 Call aft.,. Outbolrd, $8,800, 614-119.2·2770..
4~ (6141 44H761
11811 28ft Tratl&lt;ar Potty Hat f'on.

Solo !Ront: Slllrway Eievo!Of, Uft 8 Ralllatored BliCk Anguo Built 1D85 Saturn SC2, Au10matic, Air,
lfalo, 814-:laa-1823 After 8
Cllaira, Eioctrlc - I r a , And For
Cruise, AMIFM Cassetta, Trunk
SCootoro, Whlllchllr Llftl, Boo· P.ll
Releoaa, 112,000 C11 Ah8r 5 P.M.
e Holstein Springer Htlfert (Serious Inquiries Onlyl) 614·
matlo - · 81U48-7283.
WARII UP: Hiuh Elllcilrq Nltu- Walghlng 1150 Pd~. Apprl&gt;~mo• 448-4015.
,ral And L:P Gu furnacn, Llle- tr•5.500. For 1.111~
1996 Dodge Neon 2 Doors, Aut:o,
tirno Warrttrny On HHt Exchang- I Year Old Tennauee Walker 4C. ~M/FM Caualta, 27,000
er. 'If You Don't Caii•UI Wo Bolli Good For Trait Ridng, Abo t.liler, Ulloa, $8,850, OBO, BU·258·

21 Guldod
chore
22 Conclusion
63 Foxy ·
24 Loggero' toola 64 sao aaglo
26 Atroctoua
65 Anctom
30 Hoods, In
olrlngod

Opening lead: • 6

WI-\E.N [ i&lt;:ETIR£,\.JILL[ GET P...
&amp;Cl.D Wlo.TCJ\ 11&lt;1
N'Nff.I~IOO cr fA.'(

~--

1g71 \::tikwood 12x80 $2,300,
Or.814-388-1747.
1187 14x70 ·3 Sodroolro, 2 BBihl,

&amp;LOOB
&amp;LOBLE
tiOOP

V-6 angina. air, tilt, aujse, amlfm ~ Ext. Condlto . (814)-245lilt Foi ~to To Uso In Trans· Largo Slloction Of JD Compocl stereo casatlte, aulomatlc, •
parting Cart Ideal For HandiTrat1Drl And Alllchmon• 20 -30 door, new tirn, uua dean in and
capped. like Now; Aloo, C·Pop Horoopowor
Boat &amp; RV Storage Available
2 Yr. Womont)' 7.11% ou~ 14995.814-992-8824.
llatlllnl, lolly Bo Soon At llldo- Financing With
Largo 2 Year Old Storage Buldlng
JD
Credit
Approcal Shop, JackiOn Plkl, 814-448- val Cormlchatl's Farm &amp; lawn, 1993 Chavrclet Cavalier, 2 door Located In WUksviUa Arao, 814220$, 814-44&amp;013f.
sedan, low milea, ahowraom 431·20311 E"""no~
81-2412, I -tOO 511 1111.
clean, mint condition, one OWnat',
Queen Size Walerbed Eacellenl NN HoNond llodaf 782 Sllngo 814-802·*'103 or can ·biiMf'to 38 for Sale Or Trade: 1989 Raven
ConcliiiOn, 614-38Hl440.
Cuddy Cab Boat 4.3 llttr V-8, V
Chopper With A Two Row Vorl' Hudoon St, lllcldlapor~ Oh
o.
New Tops, Naw Cover, Mual
obfo
Width
·Corn
Hlld,
&amp;
Two
R'SFumfto,.
1994
Dodge
Shoctaw: 11110 Ponti-· Soli Good. Condlllon, And Cloon,
liar
Heads,
814-3118-187&amp;.
Buy,Sai,Ttado
ac Bonneville; Hl8e Plymouth Blue, Whitt, Goad Trailer $8,800,
Uotd &amp; Antiquoo
VQyager, Call 814·••&amp;-2155, Of 814-444Hlll2.
630
Livestock
Furrilln.
814·245-SSn.
·
304-773-5341.
760 ·Auto Parts &amp;
5 raar Dkl ba1 Tenneaaaa walk·
199• Ford Excort LX 1.1 Auto,
AcceSS!II'Ies
Roofing Shlngioa Tlml&gt;or Uno 40 tng horoo, gof&lt;flftg, 14" 1111, troll Air, «,000 lltl11, Now Th&gt;l, Now
.Year 12 squarea coat new $750 rklo, rood tall, wll work luggy, Paint. Very Clean, 16,000, 814$1,200, 814-742-2050.
Budget ·Price Transmi1slons, .
oolling for 1450 (61·~ 1-1785

... olllrlng.

UwlngaiDn'a NMmanl Willi·

BJ\RNEY

Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evinruda.

JD 3020 0.. 85 HP 12: Oloc, 12' 185-3504.
1992 ChiVy Lumina, 3.1 lluldpon
$10,000 Flrm, 814-25U7IIil.

Services

Soulb

1988 Ringer 373V 18' 12 ·24V

Cotamulcher, 314 Plowadrag

at time•
60 Cry of

Dealer: West

11.300, 61---6282.

For Sale Or .Trade For Sala : •
Wheeler, 1986 Kawaski KXBJ)
New Tires. And Brakes. I&amp;Od,
814-445-6282.

57 Llkt a waohlng

Vulnerable: East-West

Inch Lilt Now Shocks, 38" Rodili

740

51 CompoS. pl.

53 Kitchin gadget

16 Garnet
affirmation
18 Not aultablo
61 Cow aounda
20 BulHlghl chllr 62 Do a laundry

• 8 3 2

Swampars Fun Toy, Lost TitJa,

1990 Camara; New Paint. T·Topa,

crah Pop-Up, SIHPI 8, Furnace,
Ratriglfator, Slnk, Stova, Good

•
t

·(abbr.)
49 lllumlnetod

machine

14 Comfort

15 - voyage

Soulb
898752

FOf' mora lmlbnaUon CaM ~
(614)-258·1787. If not in laave

2844.

lent condition. 14500 060, Bt 4-

rocommondo that you do bull·
noes wlth pooplo you know. and
NOT 10 lind II10ftll' throudl tho
mal undl rou have lnvesrfp18d

•Q9654

114

Condition, 81 .. 2ol5-54&amp;3.

1992 Chevy Corsica . V-e
tomatlc, white, tilt, cr~o~lse, excel-

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

I

ou~

conclion, pw; 304-875-55118.

INCTICEI

230

ion lnoldlond

nephew•

•KJ8752
• Q4
.. A J 7

• 6
t A J tO 8 5

1&amp;IB F250XL 4X4 Dille! Truck,

cauatt... Brand
aaaembly. req_ulred. Ratall
Otmeinhardt flu•. In good c:ondl·
8300. liking 1150. Cafl81.,1g2-l 1101\ ... 304-7~5707.

Gemelnhardl ttu1e, purchased
new hom Burcardl's, u..d 3
monlhs, asking 1250. 30,.-875·

• 43

21,000 lli•o. 814-256-7.

tapes or

HauaaciMnlng Very RMIOnlble.
ll~ldy Clll

i

Instruments

Baby bed, high choir, ollollor,

1D88 Fard Taurus atatlonwagon,
maroon, cru.... 1111. anvtm ••rea
c:asaene, sharp. excelern c:ond!.

48 Energy unh

Easl
• J 10

$9,500, 814 886 G163.

1112-81124.

Rt111, Wookly Or

I

Musical

Ed.8 Exctallllllon of
refill
12 Alrtino Info
13 Ono ol Oonzold
Duck'a

I

K 10

clancor~

q Aleutian laland

09-22·97

West

44 Uktaomo

4 Comedian

• 96 32
•

1g13 Dodga Rom 4x~ V-t, Shorr
Wheof Ba11, PS, PI!, Td~ Crulll,

oofng .... ~
Arlly Cilti1ol And Slrlll
Booudful -.nnllh m u - 10 Clatlont Both In Graot Condl·
ohoff, holdo 110 COo; a1oo Yicroo tlon, 814-448-0707.

llnlltL

loft. Prlctd oU70,000, coQ 814- Pork modof trailer with lurnlturo,

570

1 ._tom typo

.... Q 9

oruloo, cllroml whlofo, V-8, OUio,·

42 Noouoglan

.

•AKQ&amp;

1185 Toyott E•L Cab, air cond,,

ChoYJ. [);1111, Turbo, 85, 4X4 ,:
Standlrll, eo,ooo mlloo. Latdtd.
Payoff Laad: ar lake ov.r Pay·

_,_

IICUIEII CIIR!W.

1187 SunbOd GT Goad Condition.
11;400, 814-44-2228.

ALDER

Nortb

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

&lt;131111.

ACROSS

1885 Ford Ranger vuck, auto, •

5011.114.106.304-815-5111 I,
Toyoto Long Bed, 1gae, Verr
114-444H2112.
Good Candltlan, Earata Slilt, .
11187 Ford T - DL, 5 opoed, 12,300, 81~- ~
air, now tlroo. ohlrp, high mlilo,
lot rvno grea~ 11100. 814·185-

Clnlw. 114 441310J

PHILLIP

------·

40,000 milea. amllm call., air, ·
14500 1om, alum..
whMia. whitalgta)' ln...W, :
.. 750 080.1111112 513f
••

Now 1118 14170 thrM llod!:oom,
lncludlo 8 monlho FREE lot ront
By Owner: 11-L..tl on 1 acro, Only 1181.88 por month wllll
II~.
3bedrooma, 3 blithe, cowred 11050 doon. Call H00-837Ap&amp;rtmenta For Rent On Fltat
.
dod&lt;. wolk-out ba._nt many 3231.
...........,. t4el221.
WE'll. IE READY
tltrll,
sandhill
Ad
or
Unian
IIOON QALIJPOUII
S or 4 bedr~om .
Clmi&gt;Qround to saqafrat Rd.
Aportmont For Ront, Socond
dollvory. 1·100· Avonuo, Noo1y Romodofed ond
Join Our T•m And Bo A Port Of Appolntmonto Ont,l 304·882·
ClllltiOI. Clll (8141 3117-«S::
Tho fullll Groofng c:.._., In 3522.
The Nadon. WI Provide .A ProNtw
lonk
Rtpo'of
Only
3
tel~
CIIUNTR'f HillE
BHc:h 51., Mlddlap D\ 2bldraom .
ONIM:IIU,
owner financing available. 304·
fttllanel
Aanoljlhtre - · Wo
furnllhocf &amp; unfvrnllhocf, utlfl1ln
Btlleve In Our Pvople. Thata
755-7111 .
8COI IOWN.OHIO.
pold. Dopooh • .......... SfU.
HowW.Do-Wollo.· .
' 1 lllloo From ProciOvlllo, 3,400
1112-251111.
Sq. FL Living ArM, 2 Story, 3 Oakwood 28x58 3 bedroom, 2
Apply Now .At Thl Rio Grande lltdroomo. 2 112 Botho, Flnllhocf Nth, alerting at 116 per mo. BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Job sarvtco. Hiring Cooke • a.-~ Flroploco, LIU Now. 4 Ctjl1...,..1-em.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
5arYora, Food PrapaiUon. Utility Y11ro Old 1175,000, 814·843·
ESTATES, 52 W01twood Drive
212~. Or 81....:1-25:12.
hom 1210 10 1334. Wolk 10 ohop
Someone With Machinery To
Hlrvetl Hay On Shlroi Or Pay

mlloo, garage kop~
814·-2453.
1181 Trans Am S05, V-8, Auto,
Now Tlrll, Alum. Whllls. ilany
Para, Wilt llolntalntd, Very
CINn, Blue, Sl~lf Trim, 14,200,
111111 Sal WI•, Conlldlr Trade'~.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

. I
Thesday, Sepl. 23, 1997
.
In the year ahead, lwo secret asptrations you've been nurturing could
be fulfilled. The resuhs might exceed
your expeclations. Do ·not depart
from your masler plan.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) Be
cognizant of lhe odds loday if you're
drawn ·inlo a developmenl where you
are oulrna!Ched. You could kid yourself into believing you have more
clout 1ha.n you possess. Trying 10
pa!Ch up a · broken romance? The
Astra-Graph Matchmaker can · help
you · understand what to do lo make
lhe relationship work. Mrul $2.75 to
Maichmaker. c/o this newspaper.

P.O. Box 1758. Murray Hill
New York. NY 10156.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Fail·
ing lo meet your responsibililies
today could generate new complications . What you sweep under the rug
now mi~ht become a dusl devil later.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Try ro budget yourself auhis time
where your entenainment needs are
concerned. You could be ex1ravagan1
if you fail 10 limil your spending.
CAPRICORN (Dec·. 22-Jan. 19)
Plans yo~ find appealing might be
· rejected by a close companion today.
Instead of fueling the issue, try to
·
work oul a compromise.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
You are a thoughtful P!'rson who likes
to qelp others, but be careful loday
you don'l volunteer for something
you won'l know how to render.
PISCEs (Feb. 20-Mai:ch 20) Fel·
low participants will be angered
today if you 1ry 10 readjust some
complicated arrangements to better
your position but not theirs.
. ARIES (March 21-April 19) Dis-

and your
male will be resolved ralher quickly
today, unless you butt heads regard·
ing somelhing lhat really counts.
· TAURUS (April 20-May 20) lk
e&gt;:tremcly tactful today- in the man·
• agemenl of subordinales. If you slart
throwing your weight around, you'll
be inviling trouble.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) II is
besl to sideslep risky endeavors today
that require a cash outlay by you. If
you slart lo lose, you mighl be tempt· ·
ed to u!) the anle.
.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You
will be a delightful person to be
around today, unless opposition rears
its ugly head and your less desirable
trails 1ry to resolve mauers.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You might
be lelnpted 10 manipulale others
tQday in a manner lhat will make
them feel indebled 10 you. This isn'l
a smart move on your behalf.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Trying
10 be a good friend might put lhe rela·
lionship in jeopardy today. Think
twice before lending money to a pal
who has trouble repaying debts.

Two kids were discussing their moms. "I think." one
:ommented, "I've reached lhe age where my parents
become more DIFFICULT '

SEPTEMBER 22

I

�Ohio Lottet:y

4 WHEELERS, JET SKIES, MOTOR.CYCLES,
HORSE TRAILERS
WE WILL TRADE FOR YOUR TOYS OR
ANnHING ELSE YOU WANT TO GET RID OF.

•

21

LOVE

LEXUS

LOVE

TOYOTA

IOI..fll.f.f
Sltt-6
IFill CHUIQI
SUL 1-5

Jaguars
defeat
Steelers

Pick 3:

8-6-8
Pick 4:
7-8-4-9
Buckeye 5:
6·11-15-23-35

Sports on Page 4

7.2 7-7777

Cloudy with a chance of
showers tonight , lows in
the 50s. Wednesc;tay, rain
likely. Highs in the upper
60s.

•

ent1ne
l!ol. 48, NO. 111
C&gt;111f7, Ohlo V.lley Publllhlng company

AUTOMAnc, LS PACKAGE, AS
AIR, TILT, CRUISE, ALUM.
ww
WHEElS &amp; MORE

2 Sections, 12 Page s, 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 23,1997

County insurance plan
will need more money

AS

Rubadue.said that the pl an "is so
By BRIAN J. REED
much better than it was la~'t year at
Sentinel New• Steff
The condition of 'the county's this time ."
Rubadue recommended to the
health insurance program is improv·
ing. but the plan still needs an infu- board a total premium increase of 18
percent to offset inflation and to
- sion of cash.
That's the· assessment of David strengthen the county 's claims pool.
Rubadue of Employee Benefit SpeThe commissioners established
cialists, Inc., a Columbus finn hired the self·insurance program in 1988
each year by the county to evaluate due to high premium increases in a
ils self-insurance health plan .
fully-insured health insurance plan .
Rubadue met wilh the Meigs Since thattinie, the conditi on of the
County Commissioners at their reg- self·insurance plan, administered hy
. ular meeting on Monday to present an outside firm , has ·nuctuatcd
· · his findings about the plan.
depending on claims activity.
· Las! year, Rubadue told the comThe commissioners approved a
missioners that !hey should recon· service contract between the Meigs
. sider the feasibility of continuing . County Child Support Enforcement
their insurance plan. Under · a self- Agency and the Juvenile Coun for
insurance plan, employee premiums Title IV-D cases, which relate most·
and the county's employer contribu- ly to paternity and child support matlions arc placed in a fund used to pay ters.
claims. On at lea.&lt;l one &lt;X:casion, the
The contract provides $29.51 as.
commissioners have paid into the filing and processing fees for each
pool from the county's general fund case filed in the coun. for a total
because of a large number of claims. amount fat one year of $3,836.

USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS •

ri ghts on Shade River State Forest
property was presented to the commissioners by James Milliron , forest
manager for the Gifford. Shade R1v·
er and Sunfish state forests ,
Stale law requires that the state
forestry division half of all 'net funds
received by the state for timber felled
in state forests and for mineral rights
sold. Half of the county's share is then
given to the townships in which the
state forest is maintained .

The commissioners and Olive

Township received $1.997.61 each
for the year.
Milliron told the commissioners
that he anticipates that more timber·
ing will soon be allowed in Shade
River Stale Forest as the division
attempts to revert from pine trees to

native hardwoods in the area.
County Commissioner Jeffrey
Thornton' suggested that the commissioners have sandblasting work

FUNDS RECEIVED - Meigs County Commlslsoners and the Olive Township Trustees
will each receive $1,997.61. from the state
forestry division, representing Umber profits
and mineral rights Clllled from Shade River

performed on the stonework on the
counhouse, as well as !he veterans
monument

on · the

courthouse

.

LEATHER, BRICKYARD 400 EDITlON. AUTO.,
AIR, 3!10 ENG.• LOADED,
'

'13,970 =:~".'':~:~- '29,387

I

· .students; adults
lend talents to
beautify Rutland
school grounds

VISIT
UTiliTY lOT

STOP IY

I

5 TAHOES
2 SUBURBANS
54 RUNNERS
6 GRAND
CHEROKEES
4 CHEROKEES ·
2 WRANGLERS

3
16
3
2
1
1
1

EXPLORERS
S-1 0 BLAZERS
JIMMYS
TRACKERS
BRONCO
PASSPORT
AMIGO

. . . . . ..

tsTMTA .__SIS
\I.e, AIR, P/WtNDOWS, P/LOCKS,

~=~

'21,440

92ISIZIIMIIO 4114

5-SPEED. AIR, NM'M CMSETTE,

:'."t=':'.............. ::- '9999

MCIR.I-10

UTlUTV BOXES; AUTO .. IJ.S ENG., READY TO

. ...

::~=.~·-~ ~·-~~ --'8850

JULWIIIIO

.

.

AUTO., AIR, ¥-8 ENG., RALLY WHEELS, REAl

::'~~~~~~ ~~-~--·4000

By BRIAN J. ~EED
Sentinel News Staff
When a community pulls
together for a common purpose, a
job gets done.
Students at Rutland Elementary
School, working with local garden
clubs, township officials and area
~usincsscs , proved thai on Friday
when they set out to improve the
school grounds.
Cosh contrihuti ons
were
received for lhe heautification project from Peoples Banking &amp; Trust
Co., Eli Dennison Post of Amcri·
can Legion. and the Rutland Gar·
den Club. Materials. including soil
and poncd mums. were donated hy
other businesses. and lahar for the ·
project came sole ly from students
and adult volunteers. '
Rutland Village and township
officials also lent a hand hy donal·
ing lime and equipment. and
helped to install poles l'or new has·
kethall hoops . which will he put
il)to place later.
Members of the school's PTO.
led hy Lori Paucrson. and th" Rut·
land Friendly Gardeners. under
the direction of Janet·Bolin. supervised the student hody in planting
;hrubbery. mums and nlhcr nowm. and painting playground
:quipment, and these students pro,
vided !he lion's share of the lahar
on the project
Principal Rusty Bookman csti·
mates that 30 adults helped with
the project. along with the school's
167 students.
"I was really pleased with the
effort," Bookman said. "Basically.
the whole community pitched in w
make the school ·grounds more
beautiful."
According to Bookman, involv·
ing the students in Ihe work served
dual purpose - it was acadcmi·
cally sound and il taught the boys
and girls at the school a practical
lesson in civic pride.
"Through the panicipation of
!he studenls. we tried to instill a

State Forest.Jim Milliron, manager of the state
. forest, presented the . comissloners' check to
commissioners· Fred Hoffman, ·left, and Jeff
Thornton.

grounds, .to cctmplcment the revitalization work of local merchants.
Thornton commended the com-

suggested that the counhousc dome
(Continued on Page 3)

HARD ·AT WORK- The schoolyard at Rut·
land Elementary School was buzzing with
action last week for a beautification project.
Playground equipment was (l&amp;inted and flow-

'Through the
participation of
the students,
we tried to
instill a sense
of pride... '
-Principal Rusty
·
Bookman
sense of pride . and to estahlish
ownership in the project on tbe pan
of the students," Bookman said.
"By gelling them invol ved in the
work. we feel lhal they will he
more con~.:crncd ahout maintaining:

the project. "
Bookman said that teachers in

the building. which houses kinder·
garten through fifth grade. incorporated acadcmi \.:s into the project
in the procCs!&gt;i nf getti ng the work
:June.
Students were taught about con.;ervation and plan.t litC . among oth .:r things . and each clas~ was tak en outside to work for nn hour as
prat tit:ul reinforcement. ·
Cooperation was und o ub~cdly

an impon'antlcsson learned Friday.

as

studcnt,"i~ tca~.:hcrs.

parents and
ncighhors took sp.ove ls a~d paint hrushc_s in hand :ildc by s1dc.
·
"It's ni ce when every one works
togethor." Bookman said. "It real-

ly helps. and it's amazmg how
much you can accomplish when
everyone pulls logether."

ers were planted. Members of the school PTO,
above, painted while In the background, town·
ship and village personnel lent a hand with
tl)elr equipment.
· '
·

r-----------------~

the project. hut the courth ouse work
By BRIAN J . REED
h~s hcc n delayed du ~· hl i1 matcri:JI~
Sentinel News Staff
The statu s · of strce l repair on .shortage. Spe ncer suid .
Funds from FEMA have hccn
Legion Terrace was di sc ussed when
Pomeroy Village Council m~ l in reg· receivctJ hy the vilhlgc . and Vilhlg:c
Administrator John Andcr~un told
ular session Monday.
Councilman Larry Wchrung ~ouncil at 1ts Sept. ~ meeting that a
inquired about repairs to the llood- contract with krfas ExcaviJting w~h
rclated slip on Legion Terrace, which to he sig ned the follow ing day .
The status nr the co mrm:t was not
arc to be completed us ing money
from the Federal Emergency Man- known at iast ni ght's meetin g. und
Andersnn was said Lo h~.: out of town
agement Agency.
The slip occurred after heavy on- village husincss.
In other husiness. l'ouncil voted to
rains and llonding in March.
The work. whic'h will mvolvc approve free parkirlg. in the do wnpourin g concrete footers and huikling lown husiness district on Oct. 2-4 for
a retaining wall ncar the American the Big Bend Sternwhccl Fe&lt;tival.
Legion Hall. wa s originally- to have over the ohjcctfon of Mayor Frank
been colltplcted at the sctmc tim e as Vaughan. who cited linanc ial cona similar project at the Me igs Coun- cerns.
ty Courthouse. acconJ1ng to David
In the same mot'i&lt;m. counci l
Spcm:er of the coun ty highwuy approved free parking from Nov. 2H
dcpa11 men I.
through Jan . I. 199H for Chri stmas
D.V. Wchcr Co nstrUl:lion Co .. shoppers.
(Continued on Page 3)
Reedsvi lle. was awan.h!d the hid for

Middleport looks to lure
Rio branch into village
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Selling Middlcpon asthe site of a
proposed branc h campu s oft he University of Rio Grande/Rio Granuc
Community Colk ge wa~ one nhJCCtive discus!-icLI durin ~ Monday ni ght\
meeting nf Middlcpor1 Vi!lag~ Council.
Mayor Dewey Horton is auempting to lure URG/RGCC. whi ch is
considering a Meig s Coumy h ro.~m: h .
in'to· the now -vacant Hol zer Clinic
buildin g on Mill Stre et. The clinic's
oni ccs Wl' rC movcLI last wed to the
new Holzer Mc1gs Clmic in Pnmcrny.
· "I c.:un'l thlllk of a huilding anywhere in the county that would he a
hcllcr place." Horto n said. "It would
he good ror the county. woul£1 he
good for the vi llJge o l.· Middleport.
would he good fur (the UniVCr~ity or
·Rio Gn.Jndc) . It would he a win -win
situati on r,,r all invo lved."
He :-.L I!d the. tw o-story huilding
would · he ideal ·~ im:c rnany ol the
cxistin ~ f iiOlll rartlti ons have hccn
added 111 recent vcars and ~.:an he
TEAMWORK - ·Adults and Rutland Elementary School sturemovct! to muke iargcr morn .. withdents worked together last week to beautify the school grounds.
out
destroying the in tegnt y of the
Janet Bolin and Judy Snowden of the Rutland Friendly Garden·
building's strut:t urc.
ers assisted studente In planting flowers around the building.
He remarked that the hui lding has.
been occupied· un til recently. not
cxpericricin g the deterioration th~t
unoccupied building&lt;usually ex pen·
encc.
Horton also passed out cdu,a-.
when !he girl stuck her head up from the passenger side and inlo the line of
1ional
needs surveys to the coun cil
fire .
.
. .
.
Tiffany Canter was ~ansponed to Doctors Hospital '"Nel~onv1lle and was members·and enc ouraged them to fill
later taken to Children s Hosp1tal. She was removed from hfe suppon early them out and relum them to the
chamber of commerce. The surveys
Monday even1ng and.pronounced dead.
.
.
. .·
The events surroundtng the sho~lmg _remam under tnVeSIJgauonby the are being used by the .&gt;chool to help
shenffs depanment, ':"h1ch 1s refusmg to release other d~ta1ls pendmg the detennine Meigs County's secondary
education wants.
result of ns tnvesnganon .
No charges have been filed.

Athens girl dies Monday from head wound
· A 4·year·old Alhens girl shol in !he head Sunday afternoon died early Mon·
day evening at.Children's Hospilai in Columbus.
.
Tiffany Canter was shol by her father, Rodney Canter: 32, 20 I Hope Dn·
ve. Athens. while he was large! shooling with a .22-cahber nne at a localion near The Plains, according to an Athens County Shentfs Depanmenl
~ n.
·
.
•
P.The repon said Tiffany Canler moved into the line of fire when she shot,
but according to an account in Monday's Alh~ns Messenger, lhe older Can·
ter was standing a1 the driver's side of a vehicle. shootmg across the roof,

-.

munity for the work done so far, and

O
Pomeroy Council wants
update on repair of slip

Pulling
together

.. Clft .,._ 4 MOl 4114 LT
WAit11,00,L................... -

A check representing funds
received for timbering and mineral

••

---'---L

l

Councilm:.m Eric Cham hcrs
announced that he is working on

revised joh descriptions for village
employees. includ ing council members and the mayor.
Instead of simply sum marit.ing
work tasks. Chamber.. ...aid he i:-. pr ioritizing those johs hy orda of thc1r

importance , includi ng the pen.: cntagc
of time that workers shou ld spend
do ing those task~ .
This should assist with tunc man ·

agement prohlcms. he '"id,
"The hulk or the time &gt;houlu he
spent doing top p r ion ti c~ and every·
one should know ~ hut th ey urc ." he
said .
"Tno often you dn the mo..,t or

what is leas t impunant." he

udd ~d .

· Cou nci lman John Nevil le ' aid he
was "g lad to s~c ~·ornc onc on cound l
heading it up and startin g ,·m (t hc Jnh
Jc scri ptions )."
Ch amhcr~ wa~ told tlwt cnuncll
rnemhers . working with 'upcrvi~ ur . . .
llavc hcen making Jllh Jcs~.:ri p ti on .., .
Chamhers ~ui Ll he wtnlled lu '-CC
tllo!-.C . untl mee t wnh superv isor... w'
rm orltit.c lh c la~ k~ ;md :kiLl the
amount ol ti me that ~ hou i U he Llc:LI I;;ated to each task .
He also s ugge~ted that mainte-

nance schedules he developed for
taking care of vill age equipme nt and

a'kcd for copies of the schedule s
when told they already cx i' L
In a sim ilar discus~i()n , Counc il man Steve Hout.:hin s said he wanted
rhorc information on hills and other
ilcms approved by coun c1i hcfore
voting on them. Bills arc reviewed by

the linance commillcc before heing
paid , but the entire council must
(Continued on Page 3)

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