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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
OPEl ·
101.-FIL
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SUI.I-5

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

AUTOMATIC, LS PACKAGE
AIR, nLT, CRUISE, A''*· '
WHEELS &amp; MORE

OYOTA

LEXUS

• l'lllllllnciludll All Pit • I Ito DNIII'

5:
. 12-19-22-32-33

14

•

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ent1ne
3 Seotlons, 24 Pages, :is oenta .

•

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 24, 1997

~~---·

charges from drowning
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A 23-year-old Pomeroy man sen- ·
tenced earlier in the July 7 drowning
of another Pomeroy man was back in
court Tuesday, this time to plead
guilty to different charges.
Jason Hysell originally pleaded
guilty to a charge of murder after the
drowning death of 30-year-old Todd
C. Johnson. a teacher at Harrisonville
Elementary School, in Leading Creek
·
near Langsville.
A day after Johnson's death,
Hysell was sentenced to 15-years-toli fe in the Meigs County Court· of
Common Pleas, what some saw as an
example of quick justice- but pub·
lie defender officials criticized as too
swift.

;$13,399
I

'

USED TRUCKS •

LEATHER, BRICKYARD 400 EDmON, MITD.,
AJR, 350 ENG., LOADED,

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STOP IY AID VIBir
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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
1 PASSPORT
.4 CHEROKEES
.
2 WRANGLERS 1 AMIGO

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$7'999

I

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Nawa Staff
The Meigs Local School District
has made some progress in esiab·
lishing an additional kindergarten
class to relieve overcrowding at
Pomeroy and Salisbury elementaries.
C~rrenily, more than 90 students
are enrolled in two classes at
Pomeroy Ele!Jl~otary and in one
class at Salisbury Elementary. The
additional class will lower the number of studeniS to around 23 per class,
Superintendent Bill Buckley said.
Buckley said the position has
been posted and that he and the trans· .
portation director have gone over the
bus routes.
·
The parents of children who will
attend the new class at Salisbury will
have to get their children ready for
school earlier since Salisbury Elementary starts its school day earlier.
On the other hand, their children
should also get home earlier, he said.
Plan s call to put Salisbury area
children into the new class, he said ..
Parents will ' be notitied soon, he
added.
In addition, board member Randy
Humphreys suggested the board pass
a "resolution strongly encouraging
the University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College to estab-.
li sh a Meigs County branch campus.
The resolution passed unanimously.
ln personnel matters, the board
approved a $5,000-a-year pay raise ·
for Buckley for the next two years.
Th.e board also met with Gene
Wise, fanner freshman boys basket-

Southern Local·committee will
develop plan on cl_
ass locati~ns
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
After three years o f shifting classes around ih.e district, the Southern
Local Board of Education Monday
night resolved io fonn a committee to
consider how to make class local ions
more pennanent.
The question: Where to put the
studeniS?
The district has juggled some
classes among its schools, particularly in the early elementary grades.
due to lack of classroom space fol ·
lowing the closing of Racine Elementary School in 1995 as part of a
spending reduction plan.
Letart Falls Elementary is housmg
students grades one to four, while
Portland Elementary houses fifth and
sixth graders. Syracuse Elementary
· houses studen~~ .grades one to six,
while the kindergarien building. adja~
cent the junior high school, houses
kindergartners and first graders. "
The junior high and high schools
have not been affected in re~.:ent reorganizations.
"We're starting at ground zero;"
said Superintendent Jim Lawrence.
The provisional committee will
have to consider available resources.
classroom size and geography in
making its recommendations, all the
while respecting students with special
needs.
Lawrence said the committee
would likely ·be formed in early
.November and consist of school
board members, principals, special
programs teachers and comm unity
members who would come up with a

Hysell. this time represented by trial of Willie Kau ff. 20. of Pomeroy,
two appointed publ~e del'enders . who i~ abo ~.:harged in the incide nt.
Mike Westfall and Jay Wamsley.
The two men allegedly beat John·
pleaded guilty to charges of involun· son. who fc11 into the creek and was
tary manslaughter and robbery and unable to save him self.
was sentenced by Judge Fred W:
Prosec utin g Attorney John R. ·
Crow III to the maximum prison Lcntcs, who sat with Johnson's parterms of 10 years and eight year..; , : ents. said further investigation of the
~espectively.
incident showed Hysell was intoxi· Crow was reluctant at firSt to with- cated or under the influence of other
draw the previous plea, but conced- drugs at the time and that there was
ed when Johnson's parents. Margaret no evidence Hysell held Johnson
and Maurice Johnso n, indicated it down. but rather Johnson drowned as
was their wish the new plea agree- the result of the beating.
ment be accepted.
In ad~iti o n , the inVestigation
As part of the agreement, Hysell showed that Hyse11 robbed Johnson
met with investigators who video- and used physical force to carry out
.taped an hour-long interview with the robbery, Lcntcs said.
him about Todd Johnson's death.
Westfall said the new agreement
Hysell will also testif1 today in the was the result of a "longer look" at
the events surrounding the drowning.

Meigs Local tackles crowded
classes at Pomeroy, Salisb,ury

Sixth, seventh and eighth
,graders at Meigs Middle
School toured a variety .of dla·
playa at a Teen Health Fair
organized by the Meigs Coun·
ty Health Department' and the
Melga County Family and Children Firat Co11ncll. Last week's
fair was designed to present a
positive focus on life through
healthy choices, and prqvl!fed
students with realistic '8nd
plliCIIcallnformation needed to
lead healthy lifestyles. Nutrition, acne and tanning safety,
drug and alcohol abusa Issues,
sexual abstinence and exercise ware ·among the health
luuaa praaantad at the fair.
Janella Salzer of Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio,
above, spoke to a group of
eighth graders. At right, John
Acree has his blood pressure
checked by Andy Vance, a stu·
dentin the nursing assistance
program at Meigs High SChool.
While health Issues were the
focus at the fair, students
could also explore career and
educational choices, recreation and sports safety Information and emotional health
Issues. (Sentinel photos by
!irian J. Reed)

M Clft. ,.._ 41001414 LT

MI•••414LT
U!ATHEII, AIITO...... P/MNDOW!I, PII.OCK8
PIIEAT11, """'fi';
'

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

'

NEW 97 GEO RACKER 4X4

All, ...,., Co\11., -

Rain likely tonight, lows
near 5{). Thursday, a
chance of rain, then partial
clearing . Highs in the
upper 60s.

.-----·The healthy way-· __, Hysell pleads to new

.. .

LOll

KI&amp;MOREH

B~ckeye

Sports on Page 4

1.1:11. 48, NO. 112
C1 1187, Ohio Vlliiey Publishing Company

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. . $)
~II&amp;

Pick 3:
8-1-6
· Pick 4:
6-9-8-6

.7 27-7777

'

.--..

Cleveland
captures AL
Central title

The provisional committee will have to
consider available
resources, classroom
size and geography
in making its recommendations, all the
while respecting stu. dents with special
needs.
plan bY early February 1998.
This would be the second time a
committee has considered class
placemeni in the district.
In early 1995, in the wake of the
closing of Racine Elementary, a parent-teacher committee recommended
putting the district's sixth graders in
the kindergarten building .at the JUnior
high while having kindergarten at
Syracuse Elementary.
The board also· passed a resolution
asking for emergency fundtng from
the State Department of Education to
make repairs to the high school and
any ·other bui idi ngs, that may be c Ji.
gible . 1
The repairs have to address health
or .safetY needs , including some climate control and du st collection systems or m:cds for handicapped students, said Lawrence.
fn personnel matters , the board
approvk!d John Barcus , K~nncth
Farmer, Lawrence Haley and Pmncla
Vogt as substitute tc~chcrs , and
appmvcd France$ Reiher as a suhsti -

tutc aide for the sehoul year.
Patricia Baer was accepted as a·
reading guide for a sight-impaired
student at the Carleton School and
Patricia Circle· was hired on a onehour-a-day contract as Venture Capital secretary.
The board also approved supple·mental contracts for the district's
lunchroom program: Tummy Lane,
two hours; Romaine Frederick, Jane
Ann Hill, · Patricia Zirkle: Vicki
Northup. Donna Wolfe .. Delores Griffin and Cindy Winebrenner, half
hour.
The board also hired Howie Caldwe II as reserve gtrls basketball coach
and approved a medical leave of
absence for Virginia Cleek, junior
high school cook.
Laren Rifne and Amber Ohlinger
were accepted as volunteer girls basketball coaches.
In other business, the board:
• Adopted the yearly tuition rate of
$1 ,871.62 for ·ihe 1997-98 school
year; .
.
• Signed a contract with Athens
City Schools 10 provide instruction
for a hearing impaired student;
• Approved fleet insurance coverage with Naiionwide Insurance and
building insurance with the Brogan·
Warner Agency.
• Raised the diatrict minimum
wage to $5.15 in accordance to the
recently-enacted minimum wage law.
. Present were Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie Hill, board President Bob
Collins and board members Dave
Kucsma, Mart~ Morarity. C.T. Chapman and Doug Little.

- --

-

-

Withdrawal
may hamper
union's vote
PITTSBURGH (AP)- The resignation of a court-appointed federal
overseer throws a new cloud over the
question of .whether Teamsters PresidCnt Ron Carey is eligible io stand
in a renin election with James P. Hoffa .
Barbara Zack Quindel stepped
down from the case after new evidence implicated a political party to
which she belongs and an associate
of one of her investigators.
Quindel's dec ision , announced
Tuesday, stemmed from her inten:iew
Friday with political consultant Martin Davis, who pleaded guilty to con·
spirm.:y in a fund-raising scheme that
diverted Teamsters treasury money
into Carey's coffers.
HThe latest revelations include
facts that suggest the schemes of the
Carey campaign may have involved
a profes sional associate of one of the
Election Office's invc~tigative staff
and an organizarion· tu which I
belong. the New Party," Quindcl
wrote in a letter to U.S . District Judge
David Edel stein .
"W he th~:r or not these allegations
arc true, the fact that they have been
asserted a1 this point in the investi gation places inc in an untenable
position with respect to the-investi gation and issuance of any j Upple-

-4-

ball coach, who wanted to know why by ACCESS Head Start for the
he was not rehired into the position. remamder of the school year.. Rent ·
He was told by board President from the arrangement will go to the
John Hood and .Buckley that the elementary school.
·• Approved the use of Meigs
board followed the ·recommendation
School for Hunter Safety
High
of new head basketball coach Chris
Instruction
by instructors certified by
Stout iit its decision io hire Jared
the
Ohio
Division
of Wildlife and for
Stewart.
instructors
to
use
firearms (without
The board hired Donna Wolf as a
for
demonstration
purammunition)
teacher at Meigs Middle School on a
'
poses.
·
one-year contract for the current
• Approved donating . a 1984
school year. Board member Randy
Chevrolet
van .to districl employees
Humphreys voted against the hiring . .
John
Hess
and Gary King, since the
Dorset Thomas was hired as a
bidder
did not want the van.
original
substitute bus driver. Also hired was
•
Approved
paying $5,760.85 to
Seal Gheen as head baseball coach
Josten's
Inc
.
for
yearbooks to be paid
and P.J. Woods as reserve baseball
hy
the
High
School
Yearbook Fund.
coach for the 1997-98 school year.
•
Approved
pennanent
appropriaBoard member Roger Abbott
tions
in
the
amou·
m
of
abstained from vOting on the coach$15,745,364.95
for
the
1997-98
tising· positions.
Hired as substitute teachers were cal year and approved· a spending
John Barcus, Tiffany Jones and plan for the fi scal year as submitted
by Treasurer Cindy Rhonemos.
Pamela Yogi.
·
R}Jonemus anticipated a year~cnd
In other business, the board:
• Approved the following grant balance of $ 113 ,685, but said that '
awards: Carl D. Perkins, $96,922.35; may change du~ to recent legislation
Dwight D. Eise nhower, $18.916.64; calling for districts to ~t aside a par~
Title I, $766,904: Title VlB , tion of their funding.
• Approved the minutes of the
$132,200;
Schoo!Net
Plus ,
~27 '1 ,979.09; Drug Free Schools , Sept 9 regular meeting.
• Met in ~'xecutive session with
$)3,473; Goals 2000. $18.500; Title
V(. $20.177; Professional Develop- D3na Glassburn from the state aufl ~
tor's office for a pre-aud it meeting as
ment, $13,529.62.
• Approved the tuition rate for the allowed under Ohio's open meeting
1997-98 school year in the amount of law.
Also present was board member
$99.02 per month for Ohio residents
and $400.32 per month for out-of- Scott Walton.
TI1e next meeting will be held 7
state resident s.
• Approved the use or a classroom p.m., Tuesday. Oct. I ~ at the district's
at Rutland Elementary School for use central office on the second noor of
the Pomeroy Municipal Building.

.......-.,....---

. NO WRONGDOING - Teamsters President Ron Carey, right,
sat beside reporters at a news conference Tuesday where he said
he did nothing wrong in the most recent Teamsters election. (AP)
mental decision on the matter of disqualification." She saiJ she would
leave Sept. 30.
It \\;as not jmmcd iatcly clear
Whether Edelstein would have: to
appoint a new of'fi~.:er to determine
Carey 's eligibility. or whether the
case would he taken up directly by
the courts, whil:h ad mini ster a 198':1
consent decree hetwccn the Justice
Department and the 1.4- mrllion·
mcmhcr un ion.
'

It was Quindcl who on Aug. 22
thre w out Carey'&gt; Deccmher 1996
election vic tory over Hoffa hccausc
of alleged campaign fund -rais ing
ab u~cs .

Carey. in Pittsburgh Tuesday for
the AFL-CIO conve ntion, blamed
un ~crupulou s to nsulta nt s ror the
fund -ra ising illega lities. '· tf there is
a victim here , I certainly am the vk tim.'' he said .

--------

-·r

�VVedneeday,SepbHnber24,1997

Commentary

PegeA2

OHIO Weather

Wednllday, Slptember 24, 1887

lleath ,Notice

Tbunday, Sept. 25
AccuWea1her• forecast for dayt1me cond1t1ons and hagh aemperatures

The Daily Sentinel Laird recognition yields political wisdom
By JACK ANDERSON
and JAN MOLLER

'EstllDflslid in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
11...,.-2156 • Fax: 992·2157

.2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Robert L Wingett
'Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genlnlllla-a-

MARGARET LEHEW

.__
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Sentinel, 1f1 Coutt sr.,

Letters to the ed·itor
To set the record straight
Dear Editor:
As many of you already know, the Delta Queen visited the communities
of Pomeroy and Middleport on Monday, Sept. I, 1997. These communities,
as well as Meigs County, bavc bad a love affair with the Delta Queen for
many years; although it has always been from a distance, it none-the-less has
been a torrid romance.
Considering the fact that the lady was four hours late, the entire day's
activities went off without a hitch. Our entire committee has received nothillg but positive comments. The only negative comment we have heard or
read, came from the much read and beloved "Beat of the Bend" column. The
column stated: "I do resent the merchants selling chances to residents wish·
iDg to board the boat' The column also stated, "A member of the commit·
tee had advised me that they were not going to do that as late as last Thursday.'
Originally, we were infonned by an anonymous source thai the boat
would be open for tours at various times during the day. We were under this
assumption until Thesday before the boa! was to arrive. When we received
word from the Delta Queen headquarters that the tours would be limited to
100 people, I immediately requested tbat Jim Freeman place a notice in the
newspaper advising the poblic tbat tours would be limited to 100 people and
that we would be selling chances for the tours.
That notice appeared in the newspaper on Wednesday evening. At
Wednesday evening's committee meeting, I informed all members that the
Delta Queen's director of operations had advised that tours would be limit·
oed to 100 people and that he suggested the committee sell chances or hold a
llonery to arrive at the 100 participants. It was at that meeting that all memJlers agreed thai a lonery was the proper way to procecd.IJow a committee
IDCmber commented to the contrary on Thursday is very puzzling.
Under the circumstances, I feel the lottery was the proper way to handle
lbe 100 IOIU!I. Out only other option was first come, first served. Wouldn't
that bavc been a zoo with the boat being four hours late! It is my opinion that
a 1o1 more people would bave been angry, had it been handled differently.
I will admit, however, thai I did make miStakes. I should have arranged
for the press to tour the boat and speak to the captain and staff. I didn't even
know that was possible until 30 minutes after the boat arrived. We are sorry
that the press was not afforded tjle opportunity to board the boat, however,
we are not sorry about the lottery. It afforded a fair chance for all persons
who pordlased a ticket and held an air of excitement and suspense to those
800 people who participated. Had the first 100 people been revealed imme·
diatcly, the other 700 people might have left. We will not apologize for that.
We will, bow~er, promise to work Iunder next year and make "Delta Queen
Day' an even bigger success.
·
·
My compliments to the committee, John and Sarah Fisher, and a special
"thank you" to the Farmers Bank for their financial support. Without their
help, this would not have been possible.
Thanks to Charlene for the pbsitive press and thank you, Bob, because
you do keep us smiling!
Johnf.MU81181'
Pomeroy

Urges support for county home levy
Dear Editor:
We would like to encourage the residents of Mc1gs County to vote "yes"
the levy that will be on the November ballot that will enable the Meigs
Counry Home to remain open.
.
Our mother has been a resident there for nearly 20 years and considers it
her home. '11le staff members are exceptionally kind to her and considerate
of her feelings and well-being. She IS always well-dressed and well-fed
whenever we visit. The building is clean and doesn't have the typical nurs·
ing borne odor.
·
Hopefully the; levy will pass and we won't have to worry about where
she'll live for the rest of her life.
Delbert Black
Columbus

oo

Why Made in America' is the best
1

MARSHRELD, W'rs. - Far from Washing·
ton, deep in the rural heartland, some old pols
gathered last week to tell some stories. In the
process, they offered some sage advice to their
successors in the White House and Congress.
The occasion was the dedication of a research
center addition at the nationally renowned Marsh·
field Oinic. The new center is named after the
former Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird,
who was also a pivotal Republican leader in the
House of Representatives for two decades before
he joined President Nixon's Cabinet.
Laird listened as wisdom was dispensed by
several former House and Senate leaders, three
former Cabinet secretanes and a former president
of the United States.
•
But the day belonged to Henry Kissinger, who
came· to pay homage to his most successful
"enemy" in the Nixon Administration
As secretary of defense, Laird regularly
thwarted Nixon and Kissinger by using his con·
tacts in Congress and the media to bring pressure
on the paranoid duo.
Kissinger said he thought of Laird, in retrospect, "with enormous affection, only slightly
tmgcd with exasperation." The man who's often
described as Machiavelhan himself admitted he
was often outmaneuvered by Laird.
When a writer once credited
Kissinger with being the director of
the foreign policy play, Kissinger
responded: "I might be the director
of thts play, but I am an actor in
some other play whose plot (Laird)
hasn't told me yet."
"No one man could handle Mel
Laird," Kissinger said he learned,
not himself and not Richard Nixon.
"So I always had some deputy who
had to do the prelrminary skirmtsh·
ing so tbat I mtght ftnd out at least
where the battlefield was."
The most serious battles between
Laird and Kissin~er occurred over
Vietnam. Laird wanted Ni•on to
stick to his campaign promise that
the United States would e•tricate
itself from that bloody confl•ct. But
Nixon's heart wasn't in it, so he and
Kissinger decided to escalate the
war instead.
So Laird persisted in being the
chief dove in the Nixon administra·
lion - though he was assumed by the
public to be a hawk. Kissinger credited him with successfully with·
drawing 150,000 more troops every
year while serving in the Cabmet.
"Our casualties dropped to only 10
percent of whatt~ey were when we

came in," Kissinger
said, and the draft was
ended once and for all.
"He was the architCCI of
those policies."
What became clear
from the speeches was
the ~y role that political
instincts - and experience - can play in a
time of national crisis.
Academics and bean&lt;Ounters can find textbook
solutions. But sometimes whal's needed is a good
political ear. While Nixon and Kissinger wer~
usually tone-deaf to political reahties, Laird had a
keen sense of which policies bad the best chance
of passing congressional muster and winning
public support.
Similar thoughts were echoed by former President Gerald Ford, who spoke at the dedication
and used Laird as an example of bow politics
could- and should- work.
"Wouldn't 11 be great if our politics today
could also reflCCI has blend of principle and prag·
matrsm?" as~d Ford. "You might not guess it
from watchmg 'The McLaughlin Group,' but at
heart most Americans are pragmatists. We want to
make things work. We value authenticity a1 least
as much as ideology - especially in this age

By MORTON KONORACKE

when so much of what passes for American public life seems unreal if not irrelevant."
Polilics bas become too divisive, too partisan
and dishonored in recent years, Ford declared. On
that basis he offered a subtle but undeniable critique of the poll·dnven politics of Presiden) Clin·
ton.
"To many voters - and even more non-voters
-panics today are suspected of being decidedly
unrepresentative," he said. "At worst, they
appear as little more than conduits for huge
amounts of special interest money.
"But fund-raising abuses arc by no means the
only cancer eating away at our'democracy. Today
we look with horror upon the smok~·filled roo01s
of legend. Over the years, I've sat in more than
my share of smoked filled rooms. So has Mel. I
think it's son of fair to say, both of us - we've
even inhaled from time to time."
"I ask you: Who is more accountable to the
voters? Those in the smoke-filled room, whose
jobs depended o~ keepmg thetr word, and who
gave us Lincoln, both Roosevelts, Truman and
Eisenhower? Or the professional htred guns of
today, wnose services are for sale, whose convic·
lions are located in focus groups, and whose loy·
alty may not outlast Election Day?"
(Jeclr Andenon Mil .lUI lloller are colum·
nlsl8 klr Unlt.d Future Syndicate.)

INO

• IColumbus! 76° I

By The Associated Press

•

-~-

•

Ice

Showers T-storms Ram
Vta

ASSVC/flted Press

Sunny Pr Cloudy Cloudy

GrapftlcsNel

Sunny skies, warmer temps
expected after Thursday
.
A wanning trend begms for Ohto on Thursday wtth h1ghs prcdtcted m the
upper 60s and low 70s. Showers are p'oss•ble, cspcc•ally m the northern third
of the state. forecasters said
Fa1r sktes are forecast on Fnday and through the weekend, with htghs of
70· 75, the NatiOnal Weather Serv1cc sa1d
Tonaght agam will be chally, but not a.cool as Tuesday mght , when 1he
mercury dapped to 38 degrees al Youngstown Temperatures tomghl wtll be
mostly m the 50s
The record-hagh 1emperature for th1s date at the Columbus weather sta·
liOn was 92 degrees in 1961 while the record low was 35m 1983. Sunset
tomght wtll be at 7:25 p m and sunrise Thursday at 7.22 am .
Weather forecast:
Tonight Ra1n hkcly Lows ncar 50 L1ght and vanablc wmd Chance of
rain 60 percent.
Thursday .. A chance of ram m the mormng, then part1al clcnnng m the
afternoon H1ghs m the- upper 60s Chance of ram 30 percent.
Thursday mght Partly cloudy. Lows m the lower 50s.
E•tended forecast:
Fnday .. Partly cloudy Highs 70 tn 75
Saturday .Partly cloudy Lows 10 the lower 50s and haghs 10 the mtd and
upper 70s
Sunday Partly cloudy. Lows 10 the lower 10s and h1ghs 1n ahe mtd and
upper 70s.

I'll\ LOOKIN6 f()l{ A
c~eER C:AANGE"j())oo£.'TI\1Niir Wrrt\

1'11\~E

A 'I'U1'Ufi.E

'TOOT~

~~~~~

·--- .".

...~

:. .':· ~ .
'.

.

.,

State's 'megafarms' may
face stronger regulations
Transportation
Safety
Board
absolved CSX of any wrong(loing.
Some residents did suffer, though,
and won compensatory judgments
against CSX and other defendants.
One woman, four months' pregnant
at the time of the blast, testified she
was knocked from bed and believes
that this caused her son to be born
two months premature.
·
She was awarded $300,000 in
compensatory damages, the highest
award in thai phase of litigation.
Other residents complained of
rashes, allergies, nervousness and
chronic coughs, and won lesser
awards as part of the $2.5 million
compensatory damages phase.
Tort reform proposals usually do
not involve limits on awards for
actual economic or medical costs.
They do limtl "non-economic"
pumtive damage, usually to
$250,000 or some multiple of the
economic damage.
In the CSX case, the plaintiffs'
lawyers ronvinocd the jury that CSX
and other defendants were guilty of
"environmental raci&gt;m" because the
· train track was located near a black
neighborhood, and on Sept 16, the jury
awarded $3.4 billion in punitive dam·
ages, most of rt against the railroad.
The total award is seven times the
amount that Union Carbide ended
up paying the governm'&lt;JI11Jf India
in the 1984 Bhopal · chemical leak
that killed 3,000 people. The largest

lie, the anti-nuclear·
power hysterics man·
aged to slow to a near·
halt the construction of
new nuclear power
plants. Today, America's
I 09 such plants produce
just under 20 percent of
the nation's electricity
- enough to power 65
million homes.
Now, however, the
environmentalists find themselves hoisted . by
their own petard. For, hav•ng persuaded America
to rely increasingly on !he oil· and cpal-burning
plants they once condemned, they are now railing
agamst the vast quantitres of carbon dioxide and
other harmful combustion byproducts that these
plants emit. To produce a million kilowatt hours
of electricity with coal, 240 metric tons of carbon
must be released into the atmosphere. To do the
same thing with oil releases 200 metric tons; with
natural gas, 160 metric tons. Safe nuclear power
releases no carbon at all.
•
These are the very "greenhouse gases" that
form the basis for the nightmare scenarios about
"global warming" with which these selfsame .
environmentalists are so fond of frightening us.
How many ways can they have it?
In addition to drastically reduci,ng the emission
of carbon dioxide and other harmful gases, our

recent damage award, $5 billion,
was ordered in the Exxon Valdez oil
spill, where at least the company
was found to be at fault.
In the CSX case, as in others, it's
likely that the trial judge will reduce
the award. Still, the system needs to
be changed- at least so that defen·
dants pay damages according to the
degree of their hability. At present,
juries can impose the hon 's share of
damages on a defendant simply
because it bas the mpney to pay.
Comprehensive legal reform was
pan of the 1994 Republican "Con·
tract with America" and actually
passed the House in 1995. It died in
the Senate, though, largely because
of the power of the, Association of
Trial Lawyers of America.
Last year,Congress passed a
product liability law, but President
Clinton - whose 1996 campatgn
got $2.5 milli1&gt;n from trial lawyers
-vetoed it because it limited puni·
tive damages and restricted damages
to any one defendant to !he degree of
its liability.
This year, the Senate is negotiat·
ing with the White House on a nar·
row product liability bill The House
is considenng one measure like the
one Clinton vetoed and another that
would ease liability specifically for
biomedical devices. There's also a
chance thai a bill could be passed
limiting malpractice damages for
doctors.

nuclear power industry saved the country 3.2 bil·
lion tons of coal and II trillion cubic feet of nat·
ural gas between 1973 and 1995- not to mention
$68 billion that would otherwrse have had to be
spent buying 2.2 billion barrels of foretgn orl. The
latter saving becomes especially important when
you consider that we are currently spending $40
billion to $60 billion 'a year on oil imports, and
that in a decade we'll be depen~ent on impons for
60 percent of our oil, and we'll be spending more
than $100 billion a year to obtain tl.
At the recent U.N. Earth Summit, Prestdent
Clinton bragged about the "strong American
commitment to realistic and binding limits that
will significantly reduce our emissions of greenhouse gases " Since nuclear-generated electricity
accounled for 90 percen~ of all carbon dioxide
emission reductions b:t American electric utilities
in 199', he mtghl want to have a chat with the
bureaucrats at the EPA.
The Nuclear Energy lnstttule is to be com·
mended for bringing these statistics to public
attention. And recently Sen. Frank H. Murkowski,
R·Alaska, chairman of the Senate Committee on
Energy and Natural Resources, has taken up the
cause of reconsidering the case for nuclear ener·
gy. True friends of the envuonment will want to
do the same.
(William A.. Rullher Ia • DlallngutiiHKI FellOw
of lhl Claremont lnatltute for the Study ot
StaleM!anahlp and Political Phlloaoohv.l

10 have any and roocnl control plan
in place- a rcacllotl to last year's n.,
mfcstauon 10 areas sur'roundmg Agn~
General Co 's LaRue egg tann 1n
northern Ohao The rcyulrcmcnt also
would apply to hcctlcs the company
t&gt;ied to control lly larvae Area reSIdents say the beetles arc now •nfeslmg their homes.
·
Repeat }'lOlators of cnvuonmcntal
or other regulations would not bo
allowed to open or expand a large·
scale fannmg operauon
The ball also would create an adv•·
sory commattec to evaluate and help
enforce the regulations and help
resolve disputes hctwcen the farms
and thcar ncaghbors
The bill would cover about 12
Oh10 fanns
Appeanng at the news conference
w1th G11lmor were rcprcscntauvcs
from the state's hve:o;tock and farm~
rng trade groups. They liked the bill
hccausc 11 would speed up the per·
miltmg process they must go through
to open a new facality

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohw's
farm laws need to adapt to changes
rn the agnculture mdustry, a state
lawmaker saad Tuesday.
•· As agncuhure has conunued to
grow and evolve wath the changmg
ttrnes and technolog1es. so must the
regulatory system that momtors agn·
culture," Sen. Karen Gtllmor, R-Old
Fon. saJd at a news conference
Gallmor plans 10 introduce legiS·
lation to t1gh1cn cn~Wironmcntal and
other regulations on Oh1o's largest
agncuJturc opcrat1ons
For a new category of lanns those with more than 7,000 daary
cows. 10.000 beef cattle. 25.000
hogs or I malhon chackcns- the bdl
would requ1rc srud1cs to ensure that
water tables are not dcplclcd and thai
wells arc not contaminated wnh pes~
t1c1dcs or manure runoff
The proposed tcg~&gt;lauon also
would hccnsc farm w0rkcrs who
spread ammal waste over nea1 by
farm fields much lake pesticide han·
dlcrs arc hccnscd

The farms also would be rcqutrcd

Prosecutor plans to recover funds
ovcn;ompcn~atcd

two employees and
overpaid hfc msurancc prcm1ums
for five others. It also found thai
another employee's mcd1cal and Ide
msurancc benefits had been paad
f•vc monlhs after lhcy should have
cxp1red. ·
The mformatJOn was turned over
10 Prosecutor B1ll B•ddleslone. who
wtll bcgm the recovery prm.:c~~

ATHENS (AP) - The Athens
County prosecutor saad Tuesday he
wtll try to recover $11,000 10 over·
paymcnls and other problems found
dunng the latest state aud•t ot county finances.
The audtt, released to the county
on Tuesday. satd the county last year

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 2ll·f60J

Putlhshtd ~very ;~h e rnuon , Monday through
frldllv, Ill Coll!l St Pomcmr., Olt1D. hy lhr
Oh1o Val lev Puhh~htng Comp11ny1GanncLt Co
P(lmetoy Oh1n 4'i7M Ph 992-21Sfl SccorKl
clan poSIRt;t p;41d Atl"mlll:r&lt;'l). Otnn
Member: Tl'lt Associated

Pr~ss.

'I

Stocks

POSTMASTER: Send nddrl.!ss con~cuon~ to
The Da lly ~n11nel , Ill Cour1 51 Pclmcmv
Ohlo4'\7fl9

~~~~~~
~711

. SIIl40U

SINGLE COP'V PRICE

I

~'\Cents

s~bM:nbers not dcsmng to pay the carrier m~y
1em11 1n adnnce dHtCl to The .Oaaly Sentmel
un ;t tltree, ant or 12 month biUIS. Cr~d1t w1ll be
giY~:n earner cad• w~:ek

No ~ubsmp110n by ma1l perm1111:d '" JHeu
where home earner urv1ce 1s ""'a1lable
Pub!1s1ter resrrves lht nghl 10 adJuSI rates dur·
1ng the subscnptiOA penod Subscnp11on rate
changes may br 1mplemc-n1ed by chang1ng the
durl\tiOn of 1he subscuptmn

MAILSUBSCRIP'TIONS
ln!klt Mela• County
I~Weets
. . $2730
21'1 Weeb
.
. •• .. . $Sl K2
52 Weeb
... , . . Sill$ 56
Rlttl O•tskk Mdp COII•Iy

llWeeb

..... · .. S292S

52 Wreb

.. ...... $10912

21'1 Weeks

.• . . ..$56 ilK

.

Am Ele Power ...................... 46'•
Akzo ......................................82'.1
AmrTeeh ..............................
Ashland 011 ...........................52'•
ATIIoT .................................... 45"1•
Bank One .............................. 54'1,
Bob Evans ............................ 18'1..
Borg-Warner ......................... 56'1,
Champion ............................. 18~
Charm Shps ......................... 6"1»
City Holding .......................... 40'h
Federal Mogul .....................34''!..
Gannett ............................... 106'/•
Goodyear .............................67'1•

66-,.

and lhc Oh1n

NeWIJMflCf Assoc111ton

.

Kmart ....................................14'11.

Lands End ............................. 28l.
ltd........................................... 25

Oak Hill Fin I ..........................19l,
OVB .......................................35~
One Valley .............................35~
Peoples ................................... 3~
Prem Flnl...............................19%

Rockwell ...............................62).
RD·Shatl ..............................54 'l•

Shoney's ...............................4~~.

Star Bank ........................... ..46'1.
Wendy's ................................ 21'•
Worthington ........................20•1.

-·-·-

Local News in Brief:
SR 124 crash leaves four Injured
A two-vehtcle acc•dent 110 State Route 124 at Mmersville Tuesday sent
four people to area hospitals, authont1es saad
Sandra Boling was taken to Cabell Hunt10gton Hospnal, Huntington,
W.Va., by aar ambulance followmg the 9 p.m. crash. while the Metgs EMS
transponed David Boling. Ronald Han and Apnl Hudson to Veterans
Memonal Hosp1tal
Sandra Boling was good cond111on th1 s morning . a Cabell Huntington
spokesperson sa1d, while the others were later treated and released, a VMH
spokesperson sa1d
Ages and addresses on the tnJured were not ava1lable before presstlme
today.
Full dela1ls on. the accident were unavailable from the Gallia·Meigs
Post of the Slate H•ghway Patrol, wh1ch as mvesugatmg I he ace~de nl

Suspect in girl's death
gives interview in jail

WVA

Environmentalists do about-face on fossil fuels

Today in history

Harold Hysell, 67, of Rutland , d1ed Tuesday, Sept. 23, 1997 at his res•·
dence
Born June 24, 1930 in Pomeroy, he was the son of the late Thelma and
Carl Hysell Sr He was self-employed as an autompbile salesman for over
4S years He attended the Rutland Church of the Nazarene
He is survived by his wife. Twila Stewart Hysell; three sons and daugh·
ters-in-law, Donald and Debbre Hysell, David and Penny Hysell, all of Rut·
land, and Gary and Sandy Hysell of Mtddleport, SIX grandchtldren, a broth·
er, Carl Hysell Jr. of Middleport, and an aunt
He was also preceded m death by a brother, Kenneth Hysell
.
Servtces wall be I p.m Fnday m the Rutland Church of the Nazarene, Mam
Street, Rutland. The Rev. Dewey Ktng and the Rev Charlie Swiger will offiCiate Bunal wall be m the Males Cemetery. Rutland Friends may call from
6·9 p m Thursday m the Middleport Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home

By The Associated Press

anap&lt;ilis was pure demagoguery.
But on tort reform, Quayle was
correct. From auto accidents to cof·
fee spills at McDonald's to product
flaws to medical malpractice, trial
lawyers reap exorbitant profits by
trolling for clients and convincing
JUries to sock it to supposedly deeppocketed defendants. Consumers
pay the bill as compames pass on
their massive insurance premiums
through higher prices.
The CSX case stands as a poster
child for this problem - and the
reason that Congress one of these
years should pass a tort reform law.
On Sept. 8, 1987, a tank car
owned by Phillips Petroleum was
moved by the Alabama Great South·
ern Railway into a railyard owned
by CSX located near a lower mid·
die-class, largely Afncan-American
New Orleans neighborhood known
as Gentllly.
The car was filled with butadiene, a petroleum product used to
make the backing on carpets. A
faulty gasket on the car caused
30,000 gallons to leak for seven
hours onto neighborhood lawns and
into the sewer system.
In the middle of the mght, the
chemical blew up, releasmg toxic
smoke, blowing off manhole covers,
and forcing thousands of residents to
tie evacuated for 36 hours.
No one was killed or grievously
inJured, however. The National

Dan Quayle was right about legal
reform as well as parenthood. New
evidence on the former comes most
recently from an outrageous $2.5
billion judgment against the CSX
Railroad in Louisiana.
In August, a state jury awarded
$2.3 million in damages to compen·
sate 20 plaintiffs who suffered actu·
al (though relatively modest)
injuries and trauma from a 1987
tank car explosion on CSX tracks.
Then two weeks ago, the JUry
socked the railroad wrth pumttve dam·
ages 1,000 times larger - even
though a federal probe showed that the
railroad was blameless in the acctdent.
In 1991 and 1992, about the time he
was embroiled in controversy for cnti·
etzing single parenthood, then-Vice
President Quayle proposed a senes of
reforms that would have lim1ted puni·
live damages and lawyers' fees.
A ton of documentation,
reviewed in a 1993 Atlantic Month·
ly cover story headhned "Dan
Quayle Was Right," by Barbara
Dafoe Whitehead, and in an Oct. 10
PBS documentary called "Children
of Divorce," hosted by Fred Barnes,
demonstrates that ch1ldren suffer
grievously from family breakup.
Quayle isn't right about everything, by a long shot Has joining in
nght·wing criticism of the 1997
budget deal at this summer's M•d·
west Republican confab in Jndt·

Harold Hyself

MICH.

Time has proven Quayle right on tort reform

Dear Editor:
A month has already passed since the Meigs County Fair, but I don't feel
It is too late to give praise to all of the cast of "Made in America,'' present·
ed at the grandstand.
Paulette Harrison, as director, put this great evening of entertamment
together, and she and all of the cast deserve recognition and applause for all
their effort.
.
Meigs County bas a lot of talented people, and those who participated
proved themselves well. The show was well attended and well received
since and was clean (family-type) entertainment.
·
1 hope there are others who enjoyed it as much as I.
Thanks, Meigs County Fair Board, for your effons, also.
By WILUAM A. RUSHER
Ann Lambert
Back in the 1960s, when the environmental
Pameroy movement was just getting under way, its spokesmen were in the habit of bringing lawsuits against
the constructton of new o•l·burnmg and coal·
burning power plants on the ground that they
ByTlle~Prell
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 24, the 267th day of 1997. There are 98 days wol!ld pollute the atmosphere. A standard para·
graph in the environmentalists' legal briefs poinl·
left in the year.
·
ed
out that a safe and much cleaner substitute for
On Sept. 24, 1896, author F. Scott Fitzgerald was born in St. Paul, Minn.
such "fossil fuels" was avatlable: nuclear power.
On this date:
It was in this atmosphere that America's
In 1789, Congress passed the First Judiciary Act, which provided for an
nuclear
power industry made its btggest strides.
Attorney General and a Supreme Court.
.
.
.
But
in
the
early 1970s, with nuclear power plants
In 1869 thousands of businessmen were rumed rn a Wall Street panrc
providing
~n ever-increasing share of America's
· after fm~iers Jay Gould and James Fisk attempted to comer the gold mar·
electric power, the environmentalists executed a
~t.
.
.
In 1929, IJ. James H. Doolittle guided a Consolrdated NY2 Btplane over full lBQ.degree tum and began opposing the con·
struction of more such plants. They based thetr
Mhchel Field in New York in the first all-instrument flight.
In 1948, Mildred GiUars, acarscd of being Nazi wartime radio propagan· case not on low-level radiation risks (as a matter
dist "Axis Sally," pleaded innocent in Washington, D.C., to charges of trea· of fact, there is more radtation released into the
atmosphere by !he fly ash emitted by some oilson. (Gillars ended up serving 12 years in prison.)
.
.
ln 1955, President Eisenhower suffered a heart attack while on vacatton and coal-burning plants than by a nuclear one),
bul on the alleged risk of a catastrophic accident
in Denver.
.
In 1957, the Brooklyn Dodgers played their last game at Ebbets Freid, at a nuclear power plant.
Now, in point of fact, in the entire 50-year hisdefeating the Pittsburgh Pirates 2·t&lt;Hl.
.
.
tory
of commercial nuclear power m this country,
In 1960. the USS Enterprise, the fmt nuclear')Klwcred aucraft carr~cr,
there
has never been a catastrophic accident or
was lalliiChed at Newport News, Va.
·
even
so
much as a single radiation-related fatality
In 1976, newspaper heiress Patricia Hears! was sentenced to seven years
-not
even
at Three Mile Island, where the acciin prison for her part in a 1974 bank robbery. (She was released after 22
dental escape of some radioactive steam resulted
111011tbs after receiving clemency from President Carter.)
In 1991, kidnappers in Lebanon freed British hostage Jack Mann after in not a single injury, let alone death.
But playing on the fears of an uninformed pub·
boldillg him captive for more than two years.
-----

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes P.rovtded by Advest
of Galtlpotls.

The Ohio woman arrested m the
death of her 8-year-old daughtertold
"Amcnca's Most Wanted" that her
husband killed the girl and that she
helped htm bury the ch1ld m thear
back yard.
"He saad tl was an acctdent,"
Mona Volgares saad dunng an 1nterVlcw from jaal with the televaston
show "She mouthed off to htm and
it made htm mad, and he p1cked her
up and tossed her, and the end result
Is that she passed away "
Mrs Volgares, 28. and her hus·
band, Jack Volgares, 42, were arrest·
ed m Muskogee. Okla., on Saturday
after a televrsann vaewer rccogmzed
ahem from a segment on the show.
They were sought on Oh10 warrants chargmg them with aggravated
murder m the death of Sclcana Gamble, Mrs Volgares ' child from a pre·
v1ous relat•onsh1p
Thc garl 's body was found Sept 7.

buned behmd the Ironton, Oh1o,
home the couple rented from Vol·
gares' brother. Mrs Volgares told
" Amenca's Most Wanted" she and
her husband buned Scleana's body
Police arrested the couple at the
Muskogee ~alvaliOD Anny Center
where the Volgarcscs and \hear three
other chaldren had been staymg since
Sept 12.
The three children- Tcsla. 4, Jcr·
imiah, 2, and Viv10n Gamble. II were placed an the custody of the
Oklahoma Human Semccs Depart·
ment Relatives plan lo seck custody
of the children.
The Volgarescs agreed Monday
not to light extraditiOn from Muska·
, gee County and will be returned to
Ohio wllhm I0 days.
They also face a federal warrant
charging them with fl1ght to avo1d
prosecution A spectal grand JUry IS
scheduled to meet Fnday to consader additional charges.

Citation issued In Pomeroy accident
Two vehtcles were damaged 1n an accident on Eas1 Main Succi near
the •nterseet1on of Lynn Street 10 Pomeroy Tuesday afternoon
Pomeroy police reported that Eddena Russell . 20, of Middleport. was
stopped an traffic when her 1991 Chevrolet was struck from bchmd by a
1991 Pontiac driven by Tina Molden. 24, of Rutland Both were travel·
mg east on East Ma1n when the accident occurred at 12 49 p.m
There was mO(ieratc damage to the rear of the Russell vehtcle, and
heavy damage to the front ofthe Molden car. Molden was ctted hy pollee
for fallure to mamtam assured clear distance There were no InJUnes .

Middleport police probe bomb threat
A bomb threa1m Middleport was mvesugated on Tuesday mght. accord·
mg to the Middleport Pollee Depanmcnt. ·
·
The threat was made to the Overbrook Center on Page Street
No other details aboul lhc mcident were available at press time.

Lawmakers weigh different
methods of school funding
By JOHN McCARTHY

Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Lawmakers on
Tuesday heard three' dafferent
approaches to findtng the figure thai
represents how much money tt takes
10 provtdc an cfficaent education for
each ch1ld.
Two spec1al House-Senate com·
mtttccs held a second round of hcarmgs on how to dctcnmne what the
per-pupil target wall be. then how to
pay for n
The lawmakers arc trymg to com~
ply with a March 24 rulmg that
OhiO's property ta•·hascd fundmg
fonnula was unconslllullonal bccau!I'C
Hog
market
trend
lor
Wednesday.
COLUMBUS (AP) - lnd1ana·
11
create~ too mu~.:h d1~panty llctwccn
steady
Oh10 darcct hog pnces at selected
wealthy
and poor dtstncts.
Summary
ofThesday's
auctions
buymg pomts Wednesday as provad·
Lasl
summer.
lawmakers failed tn
at
Eaton,
Farmerstown,
Lancaster,
ed by the U.S. Department of Agn·
pass
a
plan
hy
Gov Gentgc
Wapakoneta
and
Caldwell:
cuhurc Market News
Voanov1ch
and
lc~iSiatave
leaders
Hogs·
steady
to
2
00
lower
Barrows and gaits· steady lo weak,
that
would
have
1nduded
n
penny·
Butcher
hogs·
36
50-51
50
instances 50 cents lower; demand
pcr~
dollar
mcreasc
m
the
state
s~lcs
Cattle.
steady
to
I
00
lower
moderate
tax
.
o,;uhJCCI
to
voter
approval.
Slaughter
steers.
ch01cc
60
00US. 1·2. 230-260 lbs. country
The d~rcctor nl the LegiSlatiVe
potnts 48.00.49.50, plants 49 ()(). 67 00; select 57.00-6200.
Oflice
nl Educatmn Overs•ght. NanSlaughter
hetfers
cho1ce
60
()().
50 SO.
cy
ZaJano,
told members ol the Jomt
65
50;
select
55
00-62
00
US. 2-3, 230-260 lbs 45.00Fmance
Suhcommlltce
that the state
.
Cows·
steady
to
I
00
lower.
all
48 SO 210-230 lbs 41 00-45 00
could
u&lt;e
three
dtlfcrcnt
methods Ill
cows
43
50
and
down
Sows steady.
detcrmanc
how
much
education
Bulls
steady
to
2
00
lower.
all
US 1-3 300-400 lbs 36 ()().
should
cnst
But
each
mc1hnd
has piP·
bulls
48
25
and
down
37.00, 400-500 lbs 37 00-40 00,
rail~. ~he smd
Veal
calve~
steady.
chotec
KO
00
500.600 lbs 40 00·42 00. few over
The tir"'t method 1s to make n list
and down.
600 1bs 42.00-43 00
ol
how m.any teacher&lt;. t&gt;uatdings.
Sheep
and
lambs.
2.00
lower
to
Boars 35 00-36 00
hooks.
and othc1 1tcm~ a school dis2
00
higher.
choacc
wonts
79.50Estimated rccetpts 30.000
''
tct
needs,
then add up the ~osl The
Prices from Producers Live· 84 50, chotec clips 82 00 and down;
Ieeder lambs 88 00 and down. aged
stork Association:
sheep 38.50 and down

Today's livestock report

Lottery results

EMS units answer 8 calls
Umts of the Me1gs County Emergency Medtcal Scrv1ce recorded caght
calls for assrstancc Tuesday. Units
responding mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
7 36 am .. State Roulc 681. Alfred.
Jean Hawk, Pleasant Valley Hospnal.
Tuppers Plams squad asSISted;
8.18 am .. TackerVIIIe Road.
Rac1ne. Lazzac Wood. Veterans
Mcmonol Hospnal;
6 35 p m , Me1gs Mane 2.
Clarence Tmkham, O'Blcness Mcmonal Hospital.
MIDDLEPORT
7 01 p m.. Powell Street. Luella
Dnggs. VMH
POMEROY
12 5g p 10 Lynn and Mam strccls.

motor veh1cle acctdcnl. Tina Molden,
Justm H.1nkla Brandon Hankla.
Eddcna Russell. all refused tremmcnt:
7.15 pm South Thlfd Street.
Mtddleport. Rohcr1 S1glcr. O'Bleness
RUTLAND
8:55 p.m . P'unlcr R1dge Road.
Davtd Johnson. Holzer Med~eal Ccn·
lcr
SYRACUSE
9.06 p m . volun1eer life depart ·
mcnt und squ.od In SR t 24. motor
vch1dc a~.:c1dcnt. Sandra Boling.
Calle II Hunttngtnn Hospttal VIa hch·
copter amhulancc, Aprtl Hudson.
Ronald Hurt and 1Juv1d Boling.
VMH . P&lt;imcroy .1nd Ccnlral DIS·
pmch squads assasted

Middleport Mayor's Court
Middleport Mayor Dewey Horton
processed nmc cases 10 Mayor's
Court on Tuesday
F1ncd were . Bally Jack Hart.

Announcements
Homecoming planned
The Syracuse Ftrst Church of
God w1ll hold tis 24th anmvcrsary
homecoming Oct 5 from I0 a.m. to
3 r m The day willmcludc a vanety
ol actrvat•cs, worshtp and sangmg by
Gabnel Quartet m the afternoon.
Luncheon wtll be provaded. •
Winner announced

W•nner of a gun used 111. a fundraiSing proJeCt by the Sout1iern lumor
Hagh Boosters was MelVIn Forester
ot Racane Nc•t booster meetmg will
be on Oct 13 and all parents of
Southern Juntdr Htgh students are
mv1ted to attend

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admassaons - Lazz•e
Wood. Racmc
Tuesday discharges - Gladys
Shields. Racme.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Sept. 23 - Ray·
mond Hauldren, Wanda Roof, Btll
Bellomy, Vtrgmaa Hughes, Rodae
Hatfield, Lmdsay Caldwell , Bobbi
Montgomery.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Alban Cur·
us, son, Pomeroy.
(Published with permission)

Letart. WYo .. $115 and costs, diS Or·
derl~ manner. Thomas M Hurt,
Portsmouth. $18 and costs. speed ,
Tracy L Cundift. Middleport. $25
and costs, runmng a red ligha; Ronald
E. Hawley, Pomeroy, costs only,
contempt ol court~ Larry Grogan,
Middleport, $25 and costs, allowmg
dogs to bark constantly, Dana R.
Wtlhams. Pomeroy. $100 and costs.
possessaon of manJuana. $100 and
costs. disorderly conduct.
Forfeiting bonds were· Kevm M
F•gucro. Parkersburg, W Va . $60,
wrong way on one-way street, Rohcrt
K Chapman. Middleport. $60,
cxp~rcd lags, and James E Hensley.
V1n1on. $150. contempt of court

CLEVELAND (AP) - No Ohao
Lottery player came up wath the nght
fivc-numbercombanauon in Buckeye
5. so no one can clarm the $100,000
pmc. the lottery announced today
Sales 10 Buckeye 5 totaled
$338,298.
The 141 Buckeye 5 game uclcts
with four of the numbers arc each
worth $250. The 3,807 with three ot
the numbers arc each worth $1 0 The
38,064 wnh two of the numbers arc
each wonh $1
The Oh10 Lottery wtlt pay out
$887,379 to wmners an Tuesday's
P1ck 3 Numbers da.ly game. Sales
totaled $1.220.248.
In Prck 4 Numbers. players
wagered $355.565 and wtlt share
$100.300
The Jackpot for lontght's Super
Lotto drawmg ·~ worth $8 m111ion

drawback w1\h ahat melh&lt;xl " genmg
a consensus on what exactly a dtstnct
needs. ZaJano satd.
Annlher approach '' to dec1de
what results. or "outcomes,'' a dtstnct cxpccls from lls students and
~chool,;. then detcnmnc the relauon~
ship hetwcen results and spending
But ZaJann sOld dts\nct offictals. par·
cots and others find ll dalhcult to
agree on what those results should be
The 1hrrd model assumes 1ha1
what a distqej spends as wha1 11
should spend, then detcnnmcs the
average pnce tag nmong all d1stncts
But the h•g drawhock IS the lack of a
lmk between a d1stnct's ..:urrcnt
s'pendmg and what an adequate cdu·
canon costs
Other problems. such as students
movmg mto dt~lrlcts and VIolence
and drug abuse in schools, also arc
left out of the miK, she sa1d
"Mathematical modeling can only
do so much for us. " Zaj~no told the
lawmakers.
Rep. Ron Amstutz. R· Wooster,
sa1d lawmakers arc loukmg al every·
thang up the scale. lrom !he cost ol
home school mg 1&lt;1 the cnSI of a l&lt;ltal
puhhc education. And lawmakers
could hccmnc overwhelmc~ hy the
poss.1htltt1Cs he suggcs.tcd .
"I am starting to come ttl the sense
1hat1f we try to dctcnn1nc the C(\st ol
cdu~.:auon , we ' II JUst cui each other to
shreds:· Amstutl satd. "There 1s no
pcrlcct way"
Rep. Vernon Sykes. D-Akron,
saad lawmakers should he takmg a
look al whal 11 takes lor a thorough
education. not JUst whulthc mmimum
~.:ost

is

Mcanwhalc. the Jomt Ways &amp;
Means Commmcc heard from State
Solicitor Jelfrey Sutton, who tried 1&lt;1
explam the court s rulmg

~PRING

VAllEY CINEMA

446 4524

7

Marriage licenses
Tnc following couples were
1ssucd marnagc lu.:enscs recently 1n
the Mc1gs County Probate Cou(! of
Judgc Robert Buck.
James Lewis Buckley. 22.
Reedsville. and Michelle Lea Mur·
phy, 21 , Reedsville, FranSICO Eugene
Althouse , 19, and Damcllc Marie
Bush, 17, !lOth of Albany , Todd
Matthew Marcmko, 22, and Rebecca
Valenc McGrnnas. 21. both ol
Recdsvalle,
Aaron Lee Eades. 20, and Joda
·M,gucl Johnson, 18, both of Mason.
W Va.. Chnstophcr William Mur·
phy. 25. and Sherry Renee C&lt;Klpcr.
27. both of Columb.a. Steven John
Bass, 25 , and Emaly Ruah Bared, 20.
hoih of M1ddlcport

Blue Luster
Rlase &amp;
Yac
Reatal Rug
Shampooer
Machine
•Shampoo
•Spot Cleaner
•Machines ...

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

. 773·5583

�-

..
.

.

. The Dail!!e!!~~l

Sports

Indians capture"central title; Mariners ·claim West flag
By The Associated Press

eight innings.
An improbable rally put the
The 1995 Indians made a habit of
· Cleveland Indians into the playoffs, these kind of wins, hut this year's
while the Seattle Mariners clinched club, which lost Albert Belle to free
their postseason spot by holding off agency and traded away Kenny
a comeback.
Lofton before the season, had yet to
Cleveland captured its third duplicate that magic.
"What an unbelievable bunch of
straight AL Central title Tuesday
night by overcoming a 9-2 deficit for guys," said starter Charles Nagy, who
a stunning .10-9 win over the New was pounded by the Yankees. "Losing Albi:rt, losing Kenny Lofton, and
York Yankees at Jacobs Field.
Meanwhile, Ken Griffey didn't to come back and do it again is so
homer for the Mariners, but Jay special."
Buhner's 40th homer, a 484-foot.
Buhner's three-run shot helped the
tUI'JI back Anaheim 4-3 in the King- three-run shot in the first, was the
dome, giving Seattle its second AL Mariners' 258th of the season, one
more than Baltimore hit last year.
West crown in three years. .
"I didn't want it to drag out any
Sandy Alomar's RBI single in the
bottom of the ninth capped Cleve- more than it did," Buhner said. "It's
land's dramatic comeback from sev- big to do it now because a lot of us
en iuns down. It was the first time in will get a chance to rest up now.
63 games this season the Indians We've got World Series on our
_catne back to win when trailihg after minds. That's what we have to look

·Eastern spikers get ·
by N-V in three games
E&lt;tstern scored a dramatic comefrom-behind victory over the Nelsonville-York Lady Buckeyes Tuesday night for yet another Tri-Valley
Conferencc .Victory 15-1 , 9-15, 1512.
Eastern is now 13-1 over and Nelsoiwille- York 4-7.
E&lt;tstern had handily defeated the
Buckeyes 15-1 in the first.game of
the match, then switched its s~rving
rotation and line-up in the second
game and lost all momentum. Nelsonville claimed a 15-9 second game
win, as Arnie Adams totally dominated the frontline for the Buckeyes.
Adams' effon was overshadowed
hy the Buckeye's loss , however, her
slatistics were phenomenal. Adams
had three points, 30-31 spikes, 15
· kills and seven blocks.
Despite her eiTort, Eastern did not
·give up. Eastern trailed 11 -8, when
junior Stephanie Evans took over to
serve. Evans regained the momentum
for Eastern, first beginning with an
ace in a string of five straight points
that gave Eastern a 13- 11 advantag~ .
Evans served undefended aces in the

Host Alexander won a Ohio Division Golf match held. Monday
evening at The Elm.
. The Spartans, who won the match
with a 149, wet'c followed by Meigs~
155, Wellston's 166, Vinton County's
179, Belpre's 203 and NelsonvHieYork's 222.
·
Alexander 's Joe Randolph was
match medalist with a even par 35.
For Meigs, Dave Anderson fired a 36.
Other scores were Clay Crow's 38,
Steve McCullough 's 40, 41s by Mick
Barr and Zach Meadows and Jared
Warner's 47.
Atier I 0 matches Meigs still leads

walked.
Slocumb struck out pinch-hitter Jack
It was yet another thrilling Howell to touch off a celebration.
moment for Alomar in this ballpark,
Elsewhere in the AL. it was Minwhere he hit the go-ahead homer in nesota 5. Chicago 3; Baltimore 3.
the All-Star game in July.
Toronto 2; Detroit6, Boston 0: Texas
"I guess I'm always in the right 14, Oakland 6; and Milwaukee and
spot," Alomar said.
Kansas City split a douhleheactcr. The
Before 52,884, the IOth sellout in Brewers won the opener 7-4 and the
the Kingdome this season; Randy Royals took the nightcap 6-2.
Johnson (19-4) allowed eight hits in
Twins S, White Sox 3
eight innings with II strikeouts, but
At Chicago, Brent Brede hit a
gave up three solo homers- two to two-run off Jason Bere (4-2), breakJim Edmonds and one to Gary DiS· ing a 3-3 tie in the fifth .
arcma.
Frank Thomas hit a three-run.
Heathcliff Slocumb finished for homer for the White Sox and kept his
his 27th save. his lOth with Seattle. league-leading averJlge at 352.
The Angels put the tying run on secBob Tewksbury (7- 13) gave up
ond with two ?uls in the ninth before five hilS in six innings. and Rick
Aguilera pitched the ninth for his
25th save.
Orioles 3, Blue Jays 2
At Toronto, Roberto Alomar went
2- for-5, scored a run and drove in one
as Baltimore, seeking its first AL East
ern the upper hand on the front row title in 14 years, lowered its magic
of the much"taller Spartan linc,up. · number to one.
Roger Clemens (2 1-7) gave up
Sophomore Stacy Lyons had five
three
runs and eight hils in eight
. kills and four points. while Kim Ihie
innings,
struck out II and walked two
continued to expand her game with a
as
Toronto
lost for the lith time in 13
10-10 serving night, five points, 13games.
15 spiking with five kills.
Overall Southern thrived with 23
total kills. Jenny Friend added three
points and good floor play along with
Kara King who added one. Dena
ST. LOUIS (AP)- Stuck on 54
Sayre continued her varsity (cv~l play home runs for four games, Mark
with three kills.
McGwirc is getting tired of talking
Melanic Krumme had seven for about long balls.
" It'd he greaJ to have like a couAlexander, Cindy _While had six,
ple
Jays oiT not talk,ing to the
Meghan four, Cusic Larnick three,
media."
McGwire said after the St.
Natalie Bobo, three, and Lisa
Louis
Cardinals'
8-6 loss to the
Kubachke one.
Cincinnati
Reds
on
Tuesday night.
Southern won the reserve game
"It
would
be
awesome.
15-.8 ,0- 15,and 15-13. Laraine Law"There 's other guy!'~ on this lcam.
son and Stacy Wilson led Southern
with eight points each, Amher May- It 's a team sport. Remember that."
McGwirc went 2-for-5 with a
nard had five points, Heather Dailey
five, Sarah Brauer three, and Fallon pair of singles. He had three pntcnlial home-run swings, hut one hall
Roush one.
Becky Arnold and Amy Morray landed wei! loul in the lifth inning
had twelve and ten respectively lor and the other two had too much arc
and were routine outs.
Ale xander.
Reds Clc!SCr Jcrr Shaw got one or

Southern sextets
beat Alexander twice
After suftering through a case of
the mid-season doldrums, the Southern Tornado varsity volleyball team
has posted two consecutive wins over
two of the hetler teams iri ihe Tri-Valley Conference. Tuesday. Southern
defeated Alexander to hand the Spartans their second loss in a row
agai nst a Meigs County club, 15- 13
andl5- ll.
Southern is now 7-6 and Alexander is 9-5.
Ki~D Sayre was sharp in orchestrating the Southern set-ups with a
53-57 night, two kills, eleven points
and two aces . •sayre had two aces in
the Southern victory drive of the second game.
Southern trailed 11-9, then Sayre
rallied her teammates with six
straight, a string that put Alexander
on the ropes and forced two Alex
time outs. Backing up Sayre were
live other gals-, who played great
floor games. including Cynthia Caldwell who notched six points, all in the
first game, was 8-8 serving, 13-17
spiking, and had eight kills . .
Caldwell's eight kills gave South-

string, four fo r the game.
Angi Wolfe came along with three
kills in thegume, while Valerie Karr
and Jess Brannon had booming kills
in the victory drive .
Kim Mayle served' the 14th poi nt
on a Brannon kill, then Brannon
notched game-point for the win.
Evans led with 14 points anJ six
aces in a 18-28 selling night. Brannon had eleven with three aces, 5-11
.spiking, fou·r kills; Karr was 16-33
spiking with' ten k'ills and five blocks;
Michelle Caldwell had four points, 713 spiking, three kills and a 14-16
serving night ; and Juli Hayman had
three poi~ts and two aces, another
important factor in the EHS victory
drive. Hayman was 40-58 setting
with seven sets lor kill ~ and three
dinks. .
.
Juli Bailey had three points and a
kill, while Mayle added three and an
ace . Angie Wolle had a good Ooor
game with 11 -15 spikes and three
kills.
Easlern won the rCserve gomc .
Eastern goes to Federal Thursday.

Alexander golfers edge
Meigs in ·division play

to now."
Griffey, who homered twice Monday night, went 1-for-3 with a broken-bat single in the first, a walk in
the third, a strikeout in the fifth and
a groundout in the seventh.
Following their win, Cleveland
players watched the COIJclusion of
second-place Chicago 's loss at home
to Minnesota.
David Justice hit a solo homer off
Hideki Irabu to key a two-run eighth
as the Indians closed to 9-8, then tied
it with an RBI single off Jeff Nelson
(3-7) in the ninth.
Alomar, who hit a two-run homer
and RBI single earlier,-singled to center to score Matt Williams, who

Tigers 6, Red Sox 0
Bobby Higgin son drove in two
runs and Detroit (79-78) m&lt;&gt;ved over
.500 for the first .time si nce April 16.
1996. The Tigers arc 16-6 in September.
Detroit scored five runs in the fifth
to take a 6-0 lead and chase Jeff Suppan (7-3) at Tiger Stadium. Greg
Keagle (3-4) allowed six hits in 5 1/3
shutout innings. ·
Rangers ·14, Athletics 6
Lee Stc~cns hit two ho~ns
and Juan Gonzalez and Alex Diaz
added three-run shots as Texas end,
ed a four-ga'me losing streak by win ning at Oakland.
Jason Ginmhi hit a three-run
homer off John Burkett (8- 12) in the
fifth to cut Tc.as' lead to 6-4, but
Burkell took advantage of the
· Rangers ' run support to get hi s IOOth
career victory. He allowed four runs
and nine hits in eight innings

Reds beat Cards 8•6
the those hig lly halls for the last out
in the ninth for his league-leading
41st save .

"Every time I get in a save opportunity, it's a hig rush, and facing hiin
added more to it," 'Shaw said. " He 's
had a heck of a year anJ he can end
a game with one swing."
McGwir~ struck out in the lirst,

............... 9.5 62
y-New Y&lt;&gt;&lt;t .............. 91 66
Dr!nwt
. ....... _ ... 19 1s

Bosto• ............................... 76 Rl
TOfonib ....
. ... ,12 &amp;~
Ctnlnl Dbldon
II-CLEVELAND ............. ._ ... 84

71

ChiCWJO ...........
17
Milw:tuket&gt; ............................ 76
Kan\as Cit)' ..........
. .M
Minnesotn ............................ M

79
IKl
91
91

Western Dh•lsiDn
... : ........... 89 ()9
Anaheim
................ 82 1.'i
Texas ................................... 73 -84
l· Se:'llt~ ... ;......

Oakland .............................EJ

9.'i

x-clinched di\'ilion title
y-dinched posiJcuon benh

ru.

O()j
..~110

...
...
$0.\

4S9

Cl

•

16
19

23

~42

.• 87
.417
.417
~6J

.m

"

H'r:

..,

.4M

~~ ~~

.399

26

Te1.as 14. O:lkbnd 6
OH: Milwauktt 7. Kanru Cit)' 4: KansM City
6, Milw:wtet- l
Dtcroit 6, Boston 0
ClEVELAND 10, N.Y. Yankees 9
Balt imote J, Toronto 2
MinntSOf;~ ~ . Chicago White So.or; .l
Se11t1le 4, Anilhcim J

Tonight's games
B~»ton

(Wnktfieltl 11-l.'il at Detroit (Blair 16-

7), 7 :0~ p m.
N.Y Yankee' (Goodell. !k~) at CLEVELAND
(Andenon 4-1), 7:0~ p.m.
Boh imure (Komienlc ,ki 9-6) at Tonmto (Oaal
1-0), 7)~ p.m.

K1nsas Cit)' (Belcher 1.1-12) at Milwaukee
(Mercedes 7-10), 8 : 0~ p.m.
Mlnr.esota (Rodriguez 2-M 111 C hi ~u8o White
Soll (Bnldwift 12-14), 8 :0~ p.m.
Anaheim (Hiii8·12J at ~au le (Moyer 17-4).
IO : :t~p . m.
Tc~;u (Oliver
10 :.\~ pm.

12·12) at Oi1 k1and (Haylll;!s

3-~) .

NL standings
Eastun Division
.11: L

lam.

W•FI(•rio.l:t. ......................91 66
Nc:w Ynrk ..... ................. .H~ B

.. ......... 99 SR

seventh and flied out to medium c.:cn- ·

Montreal ..... ...................... 76 til
Philatklphm..
. ............... 64 9J

tcr in the ninth. With five games len,
he remained seven ~omcrs behind
Roger Maris' record of 61 in I 961
and imc behind Ken Griffey Jr., the
major league leader, who also failed
to homer Tuesday.

Houston .
l'inshurph .....
CINCINNATI
St Louis ...
Chkn{;u

In
.tDI

!ill

-~KO

K

.:'Jtl

14

1
:

AIW

~J .

..W~

l~

Ctnlral Divl~ioo
...........MI

76

. ~16

.. .. 7M 110

494

.r :

.........72 R~
......71 116
... 06 91

A~q

~

.452
.420

10
1.1

Wtsttrn Divbion
Sun Fr:ux:isco ·.........: ........... H/ 71 .551
12

. ~-II

. ~22
.46K

1'.-

4

1
:

l.l

Aorlilil b. Montre;~l .I
Pimhurgh ~. NY . Mcts 4
Houston 5. C..'hkago CuM J
CINCINNATI 1!1, St. louis 6
ColomOO 1, San Frands~o 6
Los A n ge~s 6, San Diego 2

Tnday's games
San Fra!lCisco. (Rapp :'i-~) :11 Colo.r:lllo 1B:uky 910). .1.0.~ p.m
Atlanta (OyrJ 4-.l ) al PhllaUdpht:L (SICilhcrlson
7-b). 7:051Ull.
.
Florkln (~iter 10-\ll :11 M untrc:~l \('crcl. 12-1!),

0

55-county local calling area
&amp;
33

Pitut-.lwgh (Cu..lkc 1.1-l~l at N:Y . M~.-'1~ (M ild!
K- l 11. 7:40p.m:
CINCINNATI !Burba !0-! 0) at St. LnUL~ \Ay·
bin 2-4). ~Ul:' p.m
Chi~n~o Cuhs tCI:.rk IJ-7) ;d H..1ustun \HtJit M
-

lam

l -Wooster(7)9-0 .... •. ....

COLUMBUS. Ohm (API · Thr first of se11t'n
weekly football C()mputt'r rankLnts as r~ l u sed
Tttefday by the Oluo High School AthlctM.: 1\ntk'i·
a~ ion. by di11h1on anJ region w!lh :wd'agc bt - lc~d
po.inli per pin( (top four team) in C"&lt;Lh re~iun adIIMCe 10 rt'Jional ~mtfinal~l:
'

Division I

Regton I I..Cit. St . lgn&lt;ttiuR IO.Y4-10. 2-L:•l.:cwood St. Edwurd 10.6660 . 3-Eudid V.2WO . 4·
Su()ng1ville 8.7910. ~-Solon M.6~~0 . 6-P:11m11
IU~70.
R~!ion 2: 1-Brunswil.'k 10 11-t.\ 0. 2-Fr\!nmnt
Russ 10 . ~200 . ~- Mcdtna 9.H IO. 4-N . CitnttJn
Hoovff R.Mf!O_ ~Akron FirtiiOnt' lt.5410. ~-Cnn­
, fOfl Me Kinky 8.2700.

Resion l 1-UPJW Artin!ton 11.7600 2-\\'.,,r.
thill!IDn Kilbnurn~ IJ . II~40 . :\-Gahanna l.tn,:()ln
9.H90. 4- Hilliard Davi(hnn II ."i4 10 "i -Trny
!1.6970. b-Piqu:&amp; 7.6150.
Rettion 4 1-Humilttm I([ tt-no 2-Cin ~~
Xavier 10.0720. '3-Cin EJOt'r IOJXJ20. +H :LI'n~on
8.74]0. ~ - K.:=nenn~ Fa11L1mn1 K."i 1ntl 6-Ciu
Mollt'r H.OOO.

Division II ·
ReilU\n ~ : 1-C ilitrdon IO JI:W . 2-/\ krnu ·
SprinJiield K9790. '·Uniumuw n Lake 11.2tt011 4.
Rn11enna 7 . ~930 . ~-AIIiaJh.:e 6.70KU. 6-Mml•~~~n
6.4210.
Resi oli'6: 1-Bro:Ltlvil:'w Ht s. Brcd.. ~vll l ..:
8.1140. 2·0&lt;Lrfidd His. 7.72\10..l-WC"stliil.:.e 6.1J ib0
4-Defi:tncl! ti.K020. ~-Tiffin Columh1:1n 6 ~b:'O. 6·
Wndswonh 6.]H0.
Re[tlon 7: 1-l.:tnesllille '1.7600. 2-Cnl W:tllt'r·
son 9J~40 J-Wmnaw Rh·cr Vtc~~o· 1U4~0 . 4·
Mondie1d M ndi~o n 7.1K70. ~ - VINCENT WAR REN .6 .1040. b-Citl. 8roolttmve-nU410.
Region ll: 1-Lehanon 9 . 7~10 . 2-Luvel:lnd
11.6040. 3-Cin. Sl. lkrnani-Roger Bacon K..l150 . -1CelilllJ ~ 0200. 'i·OJ.ford Talaw;md17.'il00. h-Ma- ·
Sllll 6.8tl'iV.

Region IJ . !•Shelby 7 . ~M~O . 2·MC"nlor lake
Cath . 6. B90. 3-Hunlin@ V:al. Umv. Schi"ll 6.-B?n
4-Woostcr Triway ()I 1-W. ~-Cuy . Fi1lls W01hh 1L··
suit 5.9860. 6- HubbunJ .U4-JO.
·
Rc&amp;inn 10: I·Bdldunt;une HKJ .\ 0 2-Cnl lA··
Sales 7 . ~100 . J-8d i ~11Ue 6.Y6HO . -1-V:m W!!rt
6.7700. S· Avol) l..1kt' tUIJ:\0. 6-Cul. Bel"r h..:rnft
6J~40.
'
'
Rc,iu n I I: I·Btluil W. Drundt K ~tOll ~ ­
M,AR-rli UR. VINTON COUNTY !U..\90..l -WIIItcnvl llc lndi~n (l'(ck H.21KO. 4-Stnnhcrs K 1 ~1 U ­
'i·THORNV ILLE SHF.RIIJAN M.ono. 6-Hdmm
L.ak.cwooJ 7.9.\71) .
,
RC"gitln 12 : 1-Ci n. M cN it:ho l:l ~ K . K~40 2Kin~tlo Mills Kint:s K.2.WO. J-Ci n. Puh;cll Mariml
1. 0 K.\0 ~ 4-FrnnkiLn 6.1Ml0. 5-Sprinp: ShttWtiCt'
6.2 1!10 0-Da·y Chaminudl"-Juli~Mc 6. ~0HO

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Monday thru
Sunday

t 2~

117

b-Stow 1()..(1

7-Mentorm 10-1 ..
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H-Cift. Ursulinr: 9-0........... . ...... ...
.. 'i!t
9-Eiymii0-2 ....... ..................
~410-Ce-nterlli!l~ I l-l ..
.. ............... .... , .a~
Second 10: II ·St1lnn JJ. 12-Ynu. Au .\lint~!Wu
Fil,•h (J' .'\0 '-'• Hudson 22 1 4-Vandall~ Butlt!r 21
I ~ -Oii lltcutht 19 )fl. Knwlmg Green 11'1 I 7 Itiel·
l'nl Sl ur,ll~l. \\'e\ICrvil~ South u 19-Pu.JUa I ~
20-D:Ly . Omm1nadc Juht:nllr.! I I.

Division II

Rcg1on 13: J-Wkkliffe 6.69?0 2·Akrmt St.
VincciM ·S!. M:~ry 6.b250 :l-Zo:lfvilk Tus~tLr :L Wil~
Vil llty 5.9060. 4-Haoove-nun UnitcJ 5.l'l25U 5·
Coshocton ."i.~620. 6- You. liberty _
q.no.
Rc,:ion 14: I · Bu~.:yru ~ 7.1'220. 2.(.llil¥rm E1lh
72700 ..\ .C:m!~ Jia Mar{!ar~tua ·1 2600 4-F.!yria
Cillll. 7. 1040. ~-Wc llin , ton 7.0YHO. 6-Umi ll c

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100

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'-J·W:1rs.1w R1\"Cr Vit=w K·l

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Vnllt:y 6 41M. (, .Mil~~i lllm T"~l;tw 'i 4hHO
· ki!~ion IK· I·M:LI'i (ln Pleasant7 ..H~ . ! -Lth.:rty Cenlcr 6 '16KO. J- BIIl" )'rU~ Wynl"md 6 uno .j..
G11$mlhu r~ t-.. 1:!~0. ~-Culun1hus Gro11~ ~ 91flll. flHamiC'r r atnd. H.:nry 5.6660
R.:~Lnn ltJ: I-HANNIBAL RIVEk K 1.1 111 2A.momJii·Clo.:ar ~.· r~d.: 1 2:!1JO. ]- I. UCASV ILLI ~
VALLEY 7JXW. -'·CHESAPtAKE 6 2\lll(). :'\ .
11mnhmll!e- l':unt Valley ~ - 'H fl() fl-(\:ntL·rhul):
· 5J9'i0

20: l ·Ctlldwoth:r 7.4&amp;1!() ~-Cnlumhu .~·
6.7i.J IO..l-.Sprin1!-lidJ C:11h. n ..'fl.W. -1-WL'!-&gt;t
Jl.' ffcnu n 6- . 32~ 0 . ~-Co l Ready fl . ~~()() , (I•V..:r'ai lll'5 b.ono.
R~gttm

l:tli'L!I!)'

Division VI
R o:~h111 11 ,

••
••
•

$ 99
LIMIT 1 PLEASE
ADD PURCH $5.99

PEPSI &amp;
MTDEW
PRODUCTS
24 PK CUBE

$ 79

11} ,

Division III
&amp;

1-MarwnElp.iu(/) 7·1 .....

. ... JMO
167
. 1 ~4

~-l\rdlbn iJ (4JK · 0 ..

.l - l&lt;n~ kforJPart.w:~y(~t1 - 1 ..

-l -WHEELERSHURG Ill 10-2 ...
:'l·i'A•:trvilk TU'&gt;l'. V:~lll:'y !2) ~-0 _
(!.._Heath 7-1..... .... .... ..
1-Mt ll bndLiltd Rivad:dt.• 4-1
H-Hurnn K-2 .. .... . . . ....
c.;.('ul S.:luMll for G1rl~ I\ ·1

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MUG ROOT BEER

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1 2 - Ca:~taii:L Mar):a r\'11:1 ( I) .12 13-C hill lcnt he
Umo1u 2~ 14-Cti!U mhu•na CrC"\IVII.'w 2:! ]~ .
Gr:m\'lllc 1(1. !b·P!!mhl.&gt;r..,llli.! E:l~twoutll t 17-l'rc ~• un Nmwayne 1-J. l!ol (IH!I· W la L 1y~l.'r: R1Jgc ~· •"111. SmilhVL IIe IJ. 20-A~ hl :t n d Crcswicw 12.

2 LITERS

c

Division IV

fil.

Iwu

Hcnry! l.~l l l-1 .. ...
~- D n.~..:nm HtiiiWd l-titUdllll HJ

1-St.

11· 1 .

'·K:t l ld~

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N~.-'Yr· ur~n~~.· n

.. .. 191i
.. .Jf15
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Kulrun c~·n tra l

l" h ri~tiH II

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&lt;H
. ~ .1

M-Il

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QUARTER PORK LOIN

.
$159
hops......
•••••••• ·
Lb.

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St'cllnd Ill: 11-S O t:lrl!!,tl\11 S E -1-1 12-NL'W
W:t~h II Lid•l')'~' ('cntrni4J IJ-Franklmt 1\t.kna I'J

14· MIIII.'ntl R1d gl" Ill I .~· M l"Cu mh l'i
Ct'nt C;nh II 17-CenterhurJ! 10.

lfl.Tu~r

Transactions

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

Baseball
National Ln•u"
NEW VOI{K METS Nmlll!tl Onlilf MtLM~' i t :Ls·
~i~ t:tiLI p.cn..:ralll!afl:LI!Cr.
. ST. LOUI S CARUIN/\ l S S1~ neJ. Wiill Jod;·
~:tty. lJ.C~ra lm:ULilj!l'T . to a 'l1re..:-yc:1t I.'Lmtr;u:l c~­

6 PK CANS

$109

ll'll.~UIII .

Division V

Gr&lt;~nJ

4·6 PK CANS

70

Iwu

Basketball

R~)!l!ln IJ : 1-Sulli\':Ln Black 'Ri wr 7 . 1~10 2-

AJlplc Cn..'Ck W:~yr~edak 1 II .WI. J.Ja..-k~tllt- Milttnl
6.9270. 4-W :url!n Kcnn ~i.ly 6 . fl·t~U . ~ - Orw...-11

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

10-Can:tl Fult nn N(lrihWt'~ l fl-1
, .. .1~
Srcond HI: II ·Oims tcJ F&lt;Lih 2&lt;&gt; l2·MC"ui['ll'
L:1l..t: (':,t h 2fl. 1.\-G;tlitm 2'i . 14-Ravc nnlt Soulh·
~·a)t 21 15· WillomJ 19. 16-Cul. DeSulcs 16 17·
1-k•\·.:r I ~ IK-CI~1Jc 10. 191tic!-l'm. RU}I.Cr B;~~:,m .

6 . K9~0.

Rc}liun IS I·Bc ll nirc H.2.lYO 2PORTSMOUTH !tOlK .l ..l-NELSONVILI. EYORK 7.5100. 4-Manms f-erry 7..1120. 5·'
Gmnvillc 6.9060. 6-Z.11WSVJIIC M:1yn-i111! S . KH~O.
Re}l i(l n 16: 1-l&gt;n y. NurthriJgc 7.0200. ~­
Sr rinp. . Kcntun Rid!!-C 6.9470 ..1-Dc!h~:l-lall.'
6.291 0. 4-0U:LWit·Gianu,,rr fl.2&lt;»10. 5-Gl·nn;~n ln"N n
V:1llcy V1cw ."i.n2.'i0. 6-Cul. Fim~y111wtt.. ~ . !1720 .

8 AM·10 PM
298 SECOND ST.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTIII~S
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 27, 1997

fil.

Iam

Naliunal lluskt"thllll Assudatiun

POH.li.J\NO TRAIL 11 1.1\ZE RS : S!l!lll'd l'
L lll l'l~·yl.':tl 'llllli:K1 s,,_!ICll G Johu

l&lt;.o:h·ILI Caltl lu :1
l'tPII)

.

Fool hall

POST FRUITY
OR COCOA
PEBBLES

Naliooal Fuulho!ll_Ll"aaut
C HICAGO nEARS : Pl;~~:o:J Rll R ;L~ ILL:m
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fin111 !111.· [lr: LC II ~~ MjU:Ill

~1 l11u m

JA(~SONVILL E JAGUARS Pl:1 ~· ..-o
J url..ti\" L~ un LIIIUfl·J rnC"fl"t' Rt.'lc :t'l''-'

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•

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second only to lung cancer as their leading cause of death . Being aware of your
risk factors and understanding the importance of oarly'detection is critical to your
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cancer than any other major disease!
When diagnosed early, breast cancer
survival rates are above 90% and early
diagnosis starts with regular self breast
exams. The best source to learn how to
a self-exam is your physician hut re mher, self-examination is not a substitut
fqr regularly scheduled examinations
your doctor.

•

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• Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding conversation is invited to •
have a FREE hearing lest to see if tnis problem can be ~dlped. Bring tnis •
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· A•uhall C. ur lull a,
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-c.nc 1r t:aMnl111
• MontNy self breast exam

• Prolessional physical exam
every 3 years

~ yrs.

• Monltjy self-breast exam

volunteer training in Meigs County.
Five sessions are scheduled on the
following consecutive Saturdays:

50)'1. +

• MontNyMII-breastexam
• Plolessional physical exam
every year

• Mllnmc9lm every year

uO Holzer

!(!/Clinic

Cellular, paging and long distance, right down the street.sM

October 2, 9, 16, 23, and 30 from 7 • 9 PM

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Here for Your Lifrtime.

IO!h East State'street, Athen~ OH (614) 594-7735
Authorized 360' C&lt;&gt;mmunications Dealers

in the .JJo/zel' _)JoJpice office
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_.1&gt;

For Long Distance,

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HO mlnlltti mutt bll IIUd In tt. ftnt ttw. mMttK. PnlrnodorlellltiPJMs ntMtift9 .nd long.diJbnct ch.I1'9M.
A.ln:ltfte billet'" 10 1 econci~Mr't!MntJ. 5CMM ,.,.kdoflt ...., frN long dit,.•CII minutes.,.._. JG miflutts • month for 1Z months. Offw eapim
1997.

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every year
• Mamnogram every 2 years

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mammograms are being scheduled
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cancer. Call today to schedule an
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The tests w11 be glvlli by a licensed Hearing Aid Specialist · •

For mo" inf011114tion cai1992·304J

STORE HOURS

I'H.

2-Rody Rivtr M a~ntlicat t I J 9-J .
3-Ctn. Sctnn un 6- 2..........
4-M :uuf~eld Madison 7-0 ....
:\·Cin. Mother nfMcr~)' (4-l 1\-0 ..

! -Cm. St

POWELL'S

·o

wll N give• In Melgs/Gallla Counties lty

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

rJ&gt;.

IJ.('unltilld M:lj!iL'Wou.I 11-U ...

Division IV

1-(.'uy;Lill•_!:.a !-It ~ 7.95KO !· IUdl' ·
pcndcnn· 7 5HlO. l-Mnurm:v illc 75 .111\ -' ·Nnr•
w:1lk St P:~ ul fiA!'il'!U. 5·1J:Litnn fl.mno (l· Ktrtl;nltl
5 21110.
I I). K : O~pm .
.
I&lt;L'J.!IIIIt 2~ : I · Ddl!lk•~ St . l••hn ·., (J I~ Ill 2-1"·Sun lJiC~I l (Hanu ltnn IU-71 at Lo ~ An~ck s \t lt:nu;c Ayl'rnjlll" -~ 117~11 J-Fn•mn 111 .S t 111'••11h
(Candiutd 10-b). ll :05 p m
· -l '!.110. 4-Cury-RII14'$uU ~ f1?1ll .~·,\ni\Wil' -1 .1.\JO
h - Crt·~ tlu~t.· 4 .U:!O
.
Thursday's 1111mes
Rl'):IHil :l.l : I ·TLitllll ll17 . 1~fl(} 2-CL\h/ hii.IIO.
.l- Ocllairc St. Julm .\.4:!.70. 4-fk.tllwilk Ukl20 -~ ­
/Uiantn (GiaviJk.• 14-71 :11 Phii;Ltldphm !Gran·
Murwl RiUf!.•'.tJalc 4·. ono 11-Ril"HMONil D,\J.E
J-21. 7:05p.m.
S( lUT HEA ~" Il·:RN .t 7~1'.
Flnritla (Fernandez 11- 12) :11 Muntrcal (MarRl.'):tlll124 . l· LMa H:LI'd m Nun!11.'1'n h . HUll ! tin.:J 17-Kl. 7:.\:'i p.m.·
N. LcwL ~hur~ Triad t'lflKtl J.fni:Lr\lilk ''i.MH:J -'·
CINCINNATI tTumko I 1-71 at SL Lou ts !Bcl-.
Ctn CiJUIItry !Jay .~ . 11 .1 IH. ~ - SL H.·nr~ ~ - (1~(1() , fl.
tr;Ln 1-21. 1..0.~ p m.
Amnum 'i lt.\~1
Chltaflll Cu b ~ (Gonzalez II-H) :II HmL.~ t un
(Hampton I 4--10). H:05 p.m.
·

Free activation, 360 free minutes
and a free TeleTACTMor Tote phone

17
13
0

Division I

computer rankings

1:U1un

e

47
40

COLUMBUS. Oh1o (AP)- The second ot si•
Wftlly Oh10 Htp! School Volleyball Co.lC~ A' ·
iOCtation pnlb, wuh Khoul. rtcord ~nd tot.ll f'M'Lnt'
(first·pln wotes in plU'entMstSI :

Division Ul

Thursday's games
Boston (Sde B- 12) nl Detroit (Sanden 6-IJ),
"' 1:05pm
Knnsas O!y (Rusch .~·9)-Qt Milwaukl-c (Eid~
IJ -14), 2·05 p 111.
N.Y. Yankees {Cone 12-6J :11 CLEVELAND
( H e~h i ser 14-6). 7:0:' p .m
I:Jultunnre (Mussinu 15-7) nl Toronto (Carpenter
2-7). 7J~ p.m.
Minnesota (Hawkins 6-lll at Chi cug('l While
S.:1J. (Dmbd. 11- 11 l •.M : O.~ p m
Tell:u (Witt 11 -12 ) a1 Anaheim IDu.:kson l:l-KJ,
IO:M p.m.

x·At lanla.......

OHSVCA poll

OHSAA football

19;
19 ,

Tuesday's Kores

fourth. singled lo right-center in the
fifth , llicd out to medium lei\ in the

Cellular service made easy as

FREE HEARING TESTS

~

.11: L

singled on a L:hcckcd swing in the

(10-match totals)

AID CENTER
•• ~-·HEARING
Friday, Septe•ber 26, 1997
•
A. Jackson Bailes' OfJice
••• In Dr.
224 East Main, Pomeroy
9:00·Noon
•: Cal To8 Fret 1-100·634-5265
for an Immediate appolnftnetlt.

:r..
J·Baltirnoft!

L..ol Anseln CNomo IJ· I2J at Colora&amp;&gt; (As..,
.

do 12·9). Q-(B p m.

Ohio H.S. sport s

f.aatmOi¥bMMI

Atlant;L 6. Phii:1Jclphiu 0

"Ohio Division
d"
Stan JngS
Meigs
Alexander
Wellston
Belpre
Vinton County
Nelsonville-York

AL standings

Tuesday's scores

the Ohio Division by seven points
over Alexander, Mei-gs is 47-3 in the
TVC.

Twn

.

Baseball

Lo~ AR!l~!il.!s ........................ H~

J

Pomeroy • Middleport, Obio .

Scoreboard

Ctlkli'OifO ............................. H2 15
S11n Oi~:so .... ,..........
.. .. 74 IW
w"'lind~~.:\.1 wild 'anl
1.-dinchcd di11i1ion till ~!

•••••••••••••
COUPON

•

Nerio Rodriguez (2-1) gave up .
two runs and two hits in 5 1/3
innings. Arthur Rhodes and Armando Benitez combined for 2 2/3 scoreless innings, and Randy Myers completed the three-hitter for his 44th
save in 45 tries.

Wednesday, September 24, 1997

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

24,

•

1~7

Wednesday, September 24, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

I
CELEBRATE THE SAVINGS
DURING
OUR

friends with a convicted killer. The nurse in a maximum security men ·~
father
is equally stupid. He is using prison for II years, and I about
Ann
prison visits as an incentive to get dropped my teeth when I read the
Landers
the girls' grades up. They all need letter from HUn sure West Coasters.''
1!197. lAI AnJelet Time~
family
counseling. --Texas Teacher These idiot parents are encouraging
5)'nchtllle and CN:illln
S)'ndkMC.
Dear Texas Teacher: Thank you their young teenage daughters to
for your hard-boiled. down-to-earth develop a relationship with a young
comments. You are right on. and l . man serving a 33-year sentence for
Dear Ann Landen: I had . applaud your candor. l hope the parmurder.
to write when I read the Jener from
ents 'take your comments seriously
It makes no sense to encourage a
the mother who is encouraging her
and put an end to those jail visits. relationship with a 17-year-old who
teenage daughters to visit that Read on:
was packing a weapon and was so
"poor" teenage boy in prison. The
Dear Ann Landen: I've been a drunk he didn't know what he was
mother ha.i obviously fallen for the.
typical "not my fault" line that

u

«i•f

q

·{/

•· HOT DOGS*
l,POP*
*
R PR~S
· ~BALLOO ' *

•

Cl
.,(l

j,

~

convict
to gettosympathy.
Ievery
wouldn't
be pulls
surprised
find out
that the I ~-year- old. daughter has
already developed a major crush on
the "nice young fellow who got
drunk and killed a man." . That, of
course, is the line he is feeding her.
Do l know what I'm talking
about? You bet I do. I've been teaching junior high school for 23 years,
and most of my kids have graduated
and become worthwhile contributors

Q

former students in prison, and I
don't visit Chern.
One boy was only 14 when he
shot a 9-year-old gi~l while she was
watching TV in her home. Why?
Because mr brother wouldn't join
his gang. Now, he is 21 and is being
released. His younger brother sees
how much altention the older one is

(l:v
SPECIAL PRICES ON ALL HOMES

that West Coast mo ther to li sten to

her husband when he tells her not to
take their daughters to visit men in
prison .
·
Recently. a teenage girl in Cleveland who was a good student and

WIN THESE PRODUCTS OR
CASH INSTANTLY!

Bradford Church
.of ·Christ Lydia
Council holds
meeting recently

ENTER DRAWINGS TO WIN

.)

$1 0,000 CASH onci A FREE HOME
•

·'

.

YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO BUY
UNTIL ·YOU STOP HERE!

Revival services. to be lleld Oct.
5-8 with Vernon Elridge as speaker
were announced when the Bradford
Church of Christ Lydia Council met
recently at the home of Paula Pickens. Charlotte Van Meter was cohostess.
Pickens opened the meeting with
prayer requests and Sherry Shamblin had prayer. Officers reports

Devotions

AMiaiCAN®
I&amp;ICJRIC
POWIR·

were

given

and

new home.

.......

Se nd questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate. 5777 W. Centu:

ry Blvd .. Suite 700. Los Angeles, -

'

raJif. 90045

1. IIITAIIT-VM: Genlly scratch.Olllllreesllver spots
with edge of cOin. Milch all 'tltree prizes to win.

Large
Hearty.Fall

WIN Groceries, $5.00,
$20.00 or $50.00 Instantly!

MUMS

Fo
R

2. COUECT·T0-1111: Scratclt
Olllllver clrdes on boUom of
IIebi. Deltlcb 1111111 on
)llllonllans. Mall:tt numbell
on lluba lu printed number
on colllclor loltler. Malch all

S

4squllllln any row 1u win.

WIN Free Turkeys or

..

Cash up to $500.00

Rey_nold.J Wrop

Large Pumpkins

'· '

a. ....,_w:EI'OIIEEPIIUD: llllllle bacb ol

;if&amp;
·--------..-

Now Afailahle

IGIIWlnnlng gallllllcltalllo 1nltlr lha Swaapllaltes.
Rll aut 1111 dlpaallln your lloreawaepstakn display.

--.......------

.... :•. .• .i .... :.:.. .•:..:;.. •• _,, .. ,

WIN One of Two Ford
Ranger Pick-ups in the

• .l

Second-Chance
Sweepstakes
... ,.,

4·7 LB. AVG FROZEN

Turkey ·Breast

t

c

........

Lb.

-00
. . . 00
"'00

......
·- - ....... -- -,_
q

•

,~

"'" ..
.,_.

&gt;8

()Mol'.-11

fl4 ,DOO.QO
. . ..011
Jli,OOIIIIII

' In t7.1"

I .. ~ .41?

llniii.Ml

'"' ~ .1 !1

' "'UOI!

··-· .. .......
...1500.111

-~~

l"'t.m

.......

I 01 11.111
I .,10,7211

I 01 1 Nil

··~
··~

.
*·----.. . . . . .--..--,.. pomOdl.-=:.::.

Tyson • Holly Farms

~

MOO

"'

M .~

TUlAL5

Split Chicke.n
Breast

10.0211\

··~

~

N .IIOIItll
110.MI.tll

lf&gt;I,HI

S•lllo.~HIII

1 01 11

'

1 rd3

I"'''
· · .,
~

1 .. t 1

1n30

•

,.....-r:.=-

. . - . ; - _ _ .. " - ' - " CNo, ~ ..... -Vqfto ..,_.....

...

· - ·. 1117.-8""'" ....... _ _ _ "' ..
lloo ..,.._ OilS. .. _...

=r::1. - -....

~~-:;. ~..:.:....:-: .4__. :=~

15 oz. can

Asst. Flavors

Asst. Varieties

Pepsi Cola
Products

s Beans

,.,.,_(11 . . . . .

.

• Fudg1
•llutly Bar •
Star Crunch • Fudge louncls •
Oat-1 Pie

Little Debbie
Cakes

F~·

Lb.

Refreshments were

United Valley Bell

Maxwell House

.Orange Juice

Master Blend Coffee

Asst.

Sun· Delight
64oz.
btl.

Velvet

Seven Up

Ice Cream

Supreme

12 Packs

Sandwiches

Sandwiches

39

s 99

s

Huggies
.Cooken Ham Puii·Ups ·
SIS!~ or Diapers

34.5 oz.

Deli Sliced

41..b. bag

Birthday celebrated
Edgar Hartung. Avon Lake.
Cleveland. and Kenneth Hartung,
Louisvill~. Ky. were here recently
for a visit with their mother, Laura
Mae Hartung Nice, on her birthday.

is charged with her murder.
Tell that mother and father NO .
again. I pray' they li sten. -- R.B ..".
Akron, Ohi o

EXCITING

FOOD LAND

included "Happy Home Recipe" by
Charlotte Van Meter, and poems,
"Kindness and Friendship" "A. Garden of Friends" and "Fnendship" by
Pickens.
.
The group toured the Pickens'
served to Sherry Shamblin, Sherry
and Elizabeth Smith, Brenda and
Brook Boles, Kathy and Megan
Dyer. Gerry Lightfoot, Tina
McGuire. Carolyn Nicholson, Charlotte Hanning. Nancy Morris, and
the hostesses, Van .Meter and Pickens.
The October meeti ng will be
hosted by Madeline Painter and
Becky Amberger.

in pri son. Whe n he was re leased, he
went lo her home to sec her. Now. he

-{\)~.:tJ:"cl(,

were given and the new mission

selected was Janet Spencer who is a
student at the Kentucky Christian
College .
Sunshine baskets this month will
go to Becky Amberger and Everett
.. Lightfoot. A thank you and donation
· was · received from Evelyn Wood.
Cards were signed for several who
are in diStress.
The pack-the-pantry project was
discussed and it was noted that soap
prOducts are needed for September.
and toilet tissue for October. Kitchen
supplies needed are napkins for September, and furniture polish for
October.
For the welcoming. ministry,
Gerry Lightfoot will have charge of
the second service.
,
New carpet for the stairs and a
new sweeper has been purchased for
the church. The shepherding program is still in the developing stage,
with Sherry Shamblin to have
charge of the program.
.
The church's annual hayride will
be held at 6 p.m. Saturday at the
home of Carolyn Nicholson.

involved in church youth work star1 ed writing to a young man who was

WAYSTOWIN .

r-JT

AVAILABLE IN YOUR CO~NTY"

''FREE DELIVERY"
··.150..MILE RADIUS

EASTMAN'S

boozled the mother is. She insists
her son was framed, even though his
fingerprints were on the sawed-off
shotgun. The mother is sure her son
will be a wonderful person now that
he is out of jail. I hope she is right,
but l wouldn't bet on it. His gang is
still around, and they look up to him
now because he has "done time."
The mother who wrote to you is
out of her mind. She is encouraging
her teenage daughters to make

OVER 25 HOMES ON DISPLAY

''WE HAVE HOME
. SITES..

.

can tell you stories of sexual abuse
and drug trafficking that go on during those "supervi sed visits" that
would curl your toe s. "West Coasters" have mush where their brains
should be. --Another West Coaster
Dear Ann Landers: Please tell

lr==========:::::=::===;i";:::::::::::::::;~=::;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::=i'l

getting, nm to mention how bam-

NOW AVAILABLE WITH
TOTAL DRYWALL
SPECIAL ·FINANCING
FANTASTIC SAVINGS

.

doing. Can you imagine what a
wholesome influen ce he would be ?
His case is under appeal'' Big deal.
Every felon has an excuse and an
appeal pending .. A' tragedy? The
tragedy is that a man js dead and this .
punk is responsible.
The mother thinks it would he
OK to visit because the visiting
room is " supervised." Visits last 50
minutes, and each prisoner can have
two or three visitors, all supervised
by one or two correctional officers . I

to society. I do, however, have a few

&lt;I
THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 25th, 26th &amp; 27th
OPEN 9 A.M. 'TIL 9 P.M.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

/

Teenage girl should avoid contact with prisoner

....
~

&amp;

s 39

1/2 gal

EASTMAN'S

9-36

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

ct.

�Page 8 • The Dally SenUnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedneeday, September 24, 1997

If simple -measures don~t cure bad breath, see ,doctor
causing "bad breath."
In the same fashion, foods and
drugs may have volatile components
that are released in the digeslive
tracl and !hen carried by lhe blood to
lhe lungs, where they are exhaled.
G:~rlic is a good example of 1his.

By John C. WoK, D.O.
AIIOC!Me Prol-or of F11mlly
Mlidlclne
Ohio Unlver•lty College of
OlteopdK Medicine
Question: What causes bad
breath, and what can. be done for it
besides using mouthwash?
Answer: From time to time, t!ilch
of us has experienced thi s problem.
Bad b~eath, sometimes known by
the fancy term halitosis, is not a dis,
ease itself but merely a symptom. It
can be a symptom of a specific disease or more frequently of dietary

One delightful Italian meal will.take
at least 24 hours to clear the garlic
aroma from the breath. A$ one eats
m'ore garlic. the strength and, to
some extent, the duration of the bad
brealh increases. Brushing the teelh,
using a breath mim, or using a

mouthwash only
temporarily
changes the odor in these situations.
So look at your diet .and oral
hygiene habits. You may discover
the cause and cure for you bad
breath. If you don'l, see your family
doctor.

Wedneeday, September 24, 1997

Pomeroy • Mlddleoon. Ohio

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

Don, .lull Tollr, Flncl AOllol 1·

100-215-11035. sue 111111.. 11 •

tlotMJ lt1111t4114il4

30 Announcements
E11n eaua Income wllh • home

"Family Medk:lae" is a weekly .
column. To submit questions, .
wri~· to John C. Wolf, D.O~ Ohio
Unlnrslty College of Osteopathk
Medklne,
Grosvenor . Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

baNd 1n1Hflfll

Custom Homes

I'

- ~~

L

r

1998 Martin Street

Joe Wilton

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK

Bob's

Appliance Repair
Service
• Relriget:ators

•lunges • Washlrs

SERVICE

• Dryers·· DishwoShen ·

Limestone • Gravel
I
Dirt • Sand

Honest Reliable
Quality Service
(814) 843-5440

985-4422
Cheater, Ohio
101251'16lt1n

All Major Brands
Reasonable Rates

(614) 446-4759
• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
20 Yrs. Exp. - Ins. Owner. Rick Jonnson

WEDNESDAY
. SHADE - Wildwood Garden
Club, Wednesday, I p.m. at the
home of Deny Snow, Shade.

•

BASHAN - Special services,
Red Brush Church of Chris!,
Wednesday through Sunday, 7 p.m.
and Sunday morning, I0 a.m. Guy
Malory, Winler Garden, Aa., speakcr.

RU'Il.AND - Rulland Village
Council will meet in special session
Thursday, 7 p.m. in touncil chambers to consider hiring a grant
adminisuator for a nood mitigation
grant.

!111 fiom:st, stro11g ,
hordrvorfiing man.
~ dcpmdablr, broi.IC,

RliTLAND - Rose of Sharon
Holiness Church. revival services,
Friday through Oct. 5. 7 p.m. each
evening. Evangelist, Arthic Alwell. ·
Pastor Dewey King invites public.

POMEROY - Weekend revival
·services, South Bethel New Tcslament Church. Friday 1brough Sunday, 7 p.m. Lonme Coates, s,pcakcr:
music . by "One Way" on Friday.
Russ and the Gospel Tones on·SaiUrday, and Laura Guthne and ReJOICe
on Sunday. Church located on Silver Ridge Road. ncar Eastern High
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Expo cnmmince. School.
7:30 p.m.. Thursday at the Rock ·
SATURDAY
Spring~ fairgrounds .
CHESTER - National Hunting
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers and Fishing Day. Sa1urday. 8:30-3
Plains VFW PoM 9053. 7:30 p.m. p.m. at the Meigs Cuumy IKES
Thursday. Planning for 1998 pro- Farm on Seoul Camp Road ncar
Chesler: Hands-on in&gt;truclion and
gram.
dcmnnslrations for youngsters 6-16
· RUTI.AND - Rutland Village in hunlcr safely and elhics. archery,
Council, Thursday. 7 p.m. in council canoeing and other subjccls.
chambers lo consider hiring a grant
adminiSiraiOr for nnod miligation
SUNDAY
grant.
RACINE - Homecoming at the
POMEROY
Preceptor ·Beta Eagle Ridge Cummumly Church.
Beta Chapter. Bela Sigma Phi, . Racine. Sunday school. 10 a.m..
Thursday. 6:30 p.m. Episeogal carry-in dinner at noon. af1crnoon
program. I:30 p.m. featuring HarP8fish J-!ousc.
vest Time. Hayman Trio apd others.
'
REEDSVILLE Riverview
Garden Club, Thursday, 7:30p.m. a1
ATHENS - Graham Chapel
the home of Betty Boggs. Grace Church's annual homecoming, Sunday. Potluck dinner 31 non. Guesl
Wether to have the program.
speaker. Rev. Tad Cuckler, 2 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Coun- Music by Chuck and Shirley Dailey
ty trhurches of Christ Womeo 's Fel- of Athens. The church is located on
lo~tship. Thursday. 7 p.m. at the Graham Chapel Road off of
B!jldford Church of Christ. Brad- Coolville Ridge Road. Alhcns.
biJ!iY Church to have devotions.
POMEROY - A rccep1ion honLirloo Bates will give a program on
oring
Deputy Grand Ma1ron
a ~~ oman of thf Bible and there will
Kathryn Windon will be held at the
be '~ speaker r..,m Right to Life.
Royal Oak Park banqucl room, SunPOMEROY '- Ewings Chapter, ~ay. 2 p.m. All mcmhcrs of Easlcrn
s011s of Jhe American Revolution. Slar.and friends arc invited.
~rsday, at Jhe Meigs Museum,
6:~1&gt; p.m. Spe*er, Rosa Cummings,

Anti4epressant effective
iri treating severe PMS
Amcric?n Medical Association.
Prcvtous research has fo~nd o1her
antidepressants - Anaframl, Pro~ac
and Paxd - effccttve m Lreaung
severe menstrual symploms, the
researchers noted.
.
.
The Zoloft group_ 1m proved . 10
psychological and soc tal funct10nmg
in a way Sl!tular to patteniS wuh
m?Jor . depressiOn. the researchers
sa1d.
Premenstrual complainiS are
common among women of chtldbearing age, rangm~ from b~ast
tendef!ICSS and bloaltng 10 anx1~ty
and mOOd swtngs. researchers satd.

caring .

/IIIJ/1 .

!A failfiful friwd and a ID1&lt;119

fiuJband.
'lVt mi.H you vrry mucfr!
lOur ll'ifo. 9rac~· 6-:

FRIDAY
LONG BOITOM - Revival
services, Long Bottom United
Methodist Church, Friday through
Sunday, 7 p.m. Speaker, Rev. Norman Butler and Rev. Bryan Blair.
Special singing.

EAST MEIGS - 'J'hC Easteru..
Local
School .
District.
parent/teacher conferences, Wednesday, 4'1o 7 p.m. districl wide. Parents·
should callfllspective school buildings starting Mon~ay lo schedule
appointments.

By BRENDA(:. COLEMAN
CHICAGO' . (AP) Some
wqmen with a severe form of pre~ns1rual sy 11 ~romc that cripples
lhctm emotionally can be helped by
th~ antidepre~~anl Zolofl. a new
study showed. ·
The drug's maker. Pfizer Inc..
· ful)ded the stu!b' of 200 su~crers at
a &lt;fozen medictJ centers nauonw1de.
About 62 ~rcent of the women
gi't'l'n Zoloft s-owed "much Or very
mlfh improvement" compared with
34 percent of '!(Omen given a placebo, the rese 1 ~chers reported in
tocpy's issue qf The Journal of the

I11 .C.01A119 ;\(emory oj
•
Jft11ry "'Bill" 'Dursl
'Slgood man died 5 years ago.

slale president of lhe Children of the
American Revolution.

·daugfiler, .Xilt)'

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE II hereby given
thet
on
Saturday,
September 17, 1997 at
10:00 a.m.,• public 1111 wUI
be hold 11211 Second
StrMI, Po...,oy, Ohio, to
Mil lor eaoh tho following
coUIIoral:
111119 CHEVROLET 8-14
PICKUP
10CBS14EK2105230

lb.

I

614-949-3060
JOhn William•, Owner
Ucen1ed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free Eatlmates
Providing Quality
Re1ldtntlat Service.
24 Hr. Emergtmcy
Service

Attorney At Law
Athens, Ohio

(6t 4) 592-5025

·

For'ked Run
Sports01an

Club

GUN
SHOOT
Friday, ·

nEE

BRAMBI MINING

RACINE MOWER CLINIC
Parts and Service!!
•Mowers ··Chain Saws ·Weedeatera •Authorized
Dealer For:
•Briggs &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
ANDOTHERSI
Briggs &amp; Stratton: Master Strvke Tedwlidal
Outdoor Power Equipment Assodatlorr. Ct!llfltcl2 Crde
State Route 338 • At VIne • Raclne1 Ohio

r

MY PLACE

Houri:
· . 7:00 a:m. thru 4:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

992-4119

....,...
.......
,..... ......
, ......

y - . , _ ...... ....

.
·
wv to234n

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-291-5600

RADIATOR REPAIR

HEliNG I CODLING
Serving Southeaslern OH &amp; WV
1·1100-872-5967
1391 Safford School

Ph. 985-4198

PRJ(;ES''
Quality Window Systems
110 Court St.

614-44&amp;-9416
OH

The Behavioral Health Unit ot Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy, Ohio has. the

time benefits. Excellent wages ond differential.

_F_u_rthe..:..:r,==tlle=~.bO=v,=co_n_
11-.·IMust be licensed or eligible for license to

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy • Acceti Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
. 992•5583

Haackrafted Wood
Projttts
Swings, Benches,
Tallies, Misc. Items
34718 St. Rt. 7

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

INtf!ffJIIIIM.

· motor bloc!f;.
10&amp;:1:4-:99:2:-4:02:$:8:•:m:-8=:.

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

"Ft\.t::'Q)RY
DIRECT-

- Easy Bank Financing I F~1maces 52800 a month
Heat Pumps Installed '3800 a month .
Free Est/mares

Pick up dlaearded
appllancoe, batterlo1,
many met.lo &amp;

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

(614) 949-2804

Sept. ~6
following positions open:
I
•
RN· part time and prn. Twelve hours shifts
1 01
th
'===~===:I available for Soturdoy and Sunday wi . part
Public Notice

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

1(17117 1 mo. pd.

MobUe Home Fumacas
and Heat Pumps.==,

Free E.timate•

Dally Rd., Recine

Attorney William Safranek

"BaRd Your ~am" ·

"indiscretion ,.. a 1 lapse in oral

p1••
'1 .oo 10 PO a..
en... Lanot, wv 2S3111.

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of financial
obligations and arrange a fair distribution
assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may keep
·exempt" property for their personal use. This
may include a car, a house, clothes, and
I ho,tiselhold goods.
.r--1...1 For InformatiOn Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

MBJ

9!4/1tn

-BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

(LimeStoneLow Rates)

WICKS

614-992-3470

.---A-v=
S ,1 1-E-----,

TRUCKING

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Slte1
Re,.onablfl Rates
Joe N. Sayre

l:==============~
. Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine. &amp; Welding Shop

CELLULAR PHONES

JEFF WARNER'INSURANCE liurie's Cuswm
Cakes

Buy One Get On
- ;~

:;1

/llount:atn Top
Pllll!!fe!!!Pies
Duy One Get

- ;;- ::1

On~!

.

A
.

Buy One Get One
.~

:::1 -

liy One Get One

- ..~ :;1

--

-

Wishbone

Die.-

Buv Onc Get 0

- . -~ :;1 -

2 Coello&lt; Spenl411a. 1 mole, 1 lemal•, outaldt dogs. 304-1755378 .

2 Klttena. Litter Trained, I
Wormed, &amp;14 448 0028.

2. ~ttono, blad&lt; l ""'111 malo, yel·
low lomllo. lltto&lt; n lned, 814-11112·
18117.
2 Rabbits t lemale, 1 male (81-tl
2-IQO
Abandoned 't/ery

•

BOARD .

Lo~t~eable

maleK~ 81,j.~1-o58B.
ln.~dl CICIUI

hou'T

075-2535.

Fe·

planll. 304·

Twin rnattreu; 8,000 or 10,000
BTU 011 heating lll&gt;YI: call Iron
bathtub; 01•· 886-4227 leave

~~stand Found
Found- rr.Je Rottwfliltr mi11, male
mini Dol&gt;ermon Plnchor mix, C.R.
35 Pordand Rd ·~lnlly, e 14-0411- .

2813.
Found: Small Female Yellow lab
Mia Neighborhood Road Area ,

814-448-1139.
Lost· 2 male Beagles, Side Hill

Rd. I loop Rd. new Rudand, 614-

742-2728.

70

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity
Q/27th 9· 5, 520 Ball Run Road,
Bk:lwell, Movecl From Tens. Furriture, Dishwasher, Lots Of Mite,

l1emsF&lt;lfSalel

·

AIJ. Yard SIIH IIUII
ao Paid In AdYII1co.

QfAQ11ff : 2:00 p.m.
1M day llolr!191~01d
t. to run. hnd.y

oriNioft •'2:1111 p.m.

frldll)'.lllondly odlllon
• 10:00 Lm. Slturday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Vud Solo• lluot Bo Paid In
Advance. DHdtlno: 1:OOpm lho

day before the 1cl 11 to run,

~;,::;_rF~•Y~ond•r

edUion·

aalt-' Thun. Sept.
25lh, on l!one Hallow Rd. on Rt. 7

Prt ~ movlng

bypass acron from LeadiQg

Crtell Rd., cloghoult. girnol rinO.
C[Wil, por&gt;o-ctl~ loll ol niK.' :

Rt ,.3. Fri.· &amp; Sat., 8·4, lot• of
glalt • dllheo.

80

Auction

and Flea Market
Crawlord's Flea Marlutt, Hender·
son, WV. Evar1day D-6. Cralls,
antiques, 10011, appliances, furniture, toys, variety. 304·675·
5404,
Rick Pear10n Auction Company,

tun time auctioneer, complete
auction
service. licensed
eei,Ohla &amp; West Virginia, 304·
773-6785 0&lt; 304-773-5447.

90

Wanted to Buy
Aboalulo Top Doilar: All U.S. Silver And Gold Coins, Proctaets,
Dllmondo, Anllquo JIMoky, Gold

Ringl, Pre-1030 U.S. Currency,
.,S11flflg, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
- · Galipolil, 814-448-211-42.
Antiques, furniture, glaSs, china,
coins, toys, lamps, ~uns, tools,
lltataa: also appratsala, Oaby
llonln, 814~2-7~1.
Antiques, top prlcea pa!d, River·
lnt Antiquel. Pomeroy, Ohio,
Run Moore owner, 114-QD2·

25l'll.
Clean Lite Model Cat1 Or

Truckle 1080 Modell Ot Nowar,
Smhh tsulck Pontiac, 1900 Eut·
am Aotnuo. Galipolil.

J I 0'1 Au1o Patll . 8Ujlng 111vage va~clas . Selling parts. 30C·

773-51X13.

.

•

Standing timber or pulp wood for
clear c:ut, c:or~tacl Greg at ,814·

1149-3015.
Uud unllorms {scrubs) any color, medium length, slzt 10· 12.

• 304-5'1&amp;-~ Callollor 12:30pm
·wanted To Buy Used Mobile
. Home. Cal 114-448-0175 or 304·

875-51185 .
Wanted : Dog Shocking Collar,

814-448--2515•.

EMP LOYMENT

SERVICES

SWAP·SHOP

Actions to end
marriages filed

1021.

1 Siberian Husky, elso mixed
puppiol, 114-QD2~.

L&amp;J

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

1

For

Giveaway

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

EIClVAIING
tRUCKING

614-992-5479

40

HAULING

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New .
_, wUI bt eold In the con· pradice os 0 RN in Ohio. Prefer psychiatric
dHion It 11 In, with no
'd'
Garages • Replacement Windows
expre11 or Implied war· experience, Job requires prov1 tng group
614-742-2138
rantiM given.
therapy,
treatment pion development and case
Room
Additions
•
Roofing
Por further lnlormlllon,
f th
com.ct Tim IILIIIW289.
monogement under the supervision o
e Unit
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
24
28
3
25
(I) • •
TC
Administrator.
FREE ESTIMATES
&amp;
Public Notice
Please submit applicotion to Suson Elliott, RN
614-992·7643.
992-3838
PUBUC NOTICE
BSN Unit Administrotor. Deadline ~ receive
NOTICE-te -hereby gtven
(No Sunday Calls)
~ 1 .House &amp; Trailer
UMMI KAWASAKI JET SKI
thot on
Siturday, applications is October 3, 1997.
KAW43450H51Ml
September
27, 1997,
at 1~~;;;;==~~=~~~~~~~~~~~ r
10:00 a.m., 1 public
oelo wlll
.. Drlvaway•,
t998 LELAND SINGLE
Site•utilities,
AXLE TRAILER .
bt hold ot 21t waot second
. Public Notice
Public Notice
Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication
land clearing,
. 1LESD08SST1003098
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio, to
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
aeptlt; ayatema.
Tho Formero Bank end 1111 lor cuh the following to withdraw tho above collateral will bt told In the
Sovlnge ·
· Company, collateral:
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Hauling Limestone
· collateral prior to ulo. condition It le In, with no
Pomeroy, Ohio, reMrvea
1990 PON'TlAC
Further, The Farmer• Bank upru1 or .Implied
Monday-Friday· 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
FrH Eat/mates
tho right to bld ol thle ule,
BONNEVILLE
and saving a company warrantlea given.
Saturday
.
a:oo
a.m.
12
noon
.,..,.,..,
end to wlthdrow the above
. lG2H54CSL1270490
reaervoa tho right to rafael
For further Information,
, collatorol prior to ule.
1990 FORD F150 4x4
any or all bide oubmiHecl. . contact Ttm at LIIIW289.
Further, The Farmers Bank
lFTEFt4YOLNB43824
Further, tho above (9) 24, 25, 28, 31c
ROBERT BISSELL
end Savlngo Company
The Farmers Bank and
roHIVOa tho right to re)IICI Savlnge
Company,
CONSTRUCTION
Pomeroy, Ohio, reserveetha
any of all bldo aubmltml •.
right to bld 11 thli sale, and
•New Homes
250 ·condor Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on· Nichols Metal, INc.
•Garages
Phone: 614: 992-2406
Fax: 304-n3-5861
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
Both U.S. and Russ ian officials
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (AP) along 1he way: whether to replace
985-4473
.,.... NASA came under mounting John Glenn on NASA's first orbilal and some astronauts have said thai if
360°
Communications
7/22/tfn
·political and public pressu~ T11esday flight in 1962 because of the per- the Unilcd States pulls out, its parlnot to put another American aboard ceived psychological loll of his nership with Russia could be jeopar'-...
the broken-down Mir. a debate that 's numerous launch delays, ~he thcr to dized along wilh Jhe enlire internabecome one of the most agonizing in send astronauts 10 1hc damaged Sky- tional space station projecl. NASA
lab station in 1973, and whether in has also argued that putting Ameri the history of the space program.
113 W. 2ND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
·The final decision rests Wllh 198 1 to risk astronauts on a space cans aboard Mir gives the . Uniled
Stales
much-needed
dpericncc
for
shultlc
protected
from
the
fiery
re·
JIIASAAd minislrator Daniel Goldin,
the f uturc space station and other
• 3121fJFN
992-6194
who has been warned by key J1lC·J1l· · entry only by fragi le QUlcr Iiles.
long
missions,
such
as
tlighiS
some·
In
every
case
except
for
C
h
~l­
hers of Congress thai he proc~cd s at
Reopening for full
his own ris k if he sends astronaut lcngcr. NASA was confident of its day 10 Mars.
Opening
9·1·97
Howard L. Wrltesel
time business
Wolf would become the sixth
Dav id Wolf to Ihe RusSian space sta- technical know-how and won .
American
to
live
on
Mir.
an
II
1/2This
time
.
though.
NASA
is
tion for a.four-monlh slay.
Specializing in
: Goldin is expected to make up his forced to rel y on another co'untry's ycar~o ld ~pace station that ~as
wedding, anniversary
mind Wednesday or possibly Thurs- expertise . And that cou ntry\ space designed to last just five years and
We Buy, Sell
and birtHday cakes,
s1a1ion is breaking down more and ·has been hil by a lire. a collision and
~ay. the day space shuttle Atlantis is
Gutters
string
of
malfunctions
in
the
past
sevmore.
and Trade
scheduled to lifl off with Wolf.
Downspouts
. NASA's inspcc1or genera l. Roher- en months.
...;_ ''The time has come to say we 've
New and
Gutter Cleaning
learned a lot from it. bul we're nol la Gross. noted in a recent lencr lo the
YOUNG'S
Used Items
going to fisk any more Americans· H ow~c Sdcm:c &lt;;ommittcc that Mir's ·
Painting ·
·CARPENTER SERVICE
202 E. Main St.
aboard,'' Rep. F. James Senscnhren- pruhlcms "arc occ urring at a time
•Room Additions
FREE ESTIMATES
Pomeroy,
Oh.
ncr Jr.. chainnan of the House Scl- when the Russian gove rnment may
' •New Garageo
614-992-9086
949·2168
n01 be in a positio n 10 provide adc,
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
~ ncc Commillcc, said on NBC's
8/27197
1
mo.
pd.
The following actiuns .to end mar5!11S/tfn
•Roofing
'' Today" show. The congressman quatc finam:ial ami technical support riage were filed recently in the office
•Interior &amp; Exterior
said il is not worth pulling another to enable the aging space stat10 n to of'Meigs County Clerk of£ourts LarPainting
l\merican on Mir merely "lo spend operate safel y...
ry Spencer:
.·
Also Concrete Work
Leaders of the scie nce commiLLcc
Get Your _...tag• Across
months being an assislanl Mr. Fix· Dissolutions asked - Paul J.
(FREE
ESTIMATES)
1
' · -( ·
oppose sending-any more Americans
Ii .."
'Statlaal
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Jones,
Pomeroy,
·
and
June
Martha
to live on Mir but have left the final
~ "The whole country was behind
992-6215
decision
up to Goldin. The White · Jones, Middleport, Sept. 19: Bruce E.
~ s in Apollo." said Chris1opher Kraft.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Conde, Pomeroy, and Jennifer L.
retired direclor of the Johnson Space ·House also is leaving it up to Goldin. Conde, Pomeroy, Sept. 19; Larry G.
mt.i~iqiliJplnch wee~days
Goldin wants.to rc\licw two more
Center and a key figure in Ihe dcvelGrogan,
Middleporl,
and
Mary
J.
&lt;ipment of the Apollo and shuttle pro- . safely reports by independenl experts ·Grogan, Parkersburg, W.Va., Sept.
grams. "Today we live in this world · and mcel wilh those experts before 17; Robert L. Bailey, Reedsville, and
ANNOUN CEt.1 FtJT S
of 'what have you done for me late- giv ing 1he go-ahead.
' Belinda M. Bailey. Reedsville , Sept.
If Goldin decides it is 100 risky to
{)'' business. Thai makes; il very
005
P81'8onals
18.
pul Wolf aboard, NASA will proba1ough, particularly for NASA." .
Di vorce asked · Rebecca
LIVE PSYCHICS 1 ON 1, 1·1100·
· NASA insiders were.dtvtded nght bly still send Atlantis lo Mir as sched- Coll ins, Gallipolis, from Jan Evan
320·1045 Ext 4821. 13.81 Per
before th~ 1986 Challenger accident uled to bring American Michael Collins, Crown City, Sept. 15 ..
Min . Mull Bt 18 Yn. Serv- U,
81 8-&amp;41&gt;&amp;134.
on whether to launch that morning, Foale home after a 4 1/2-month stay
YOUR
MESSAGE
Dissolution granted - Phyllis
and to deliver urgently ncede&lt;;l s~p­ Howerton anll Virgil Howerton, Sept.
~ulthal debale didn 't become public
NO BLIND OATES E111 1111ch
CAN BE SEEN HERE
Hnlil after the ugly fact. One of the plies for the space slation, ineludin? 15.
Making Roadr Now, 1-900·338·
8182 Ext 1878, $2.88 Por Mln,
~iggest ·disputes before lhat came a replacement computer and repair
FOR A TOTAL OF
Divorces granted - Walter A.
1&amp;. Sorv~. 818 845 8434
gear.
.
.
:
~efore 1he triumphanl Apollo 8 night
Ellis from Thelma J. Ellis, Sept. 19;·
$7.00 PER DAY.
There are other faclors to constd- Mildred Ann Krider from John
Ltlllly? UlhejlpJ7 You - ftnd
ro the moon during Christma.~ 1968,
raor ........ _ .. -1111er
besides
safety:
namely,
foreign
when SOille argued that the Saturn 5
900-288·1077 ext 24t7. U .ttl
William Krider, Sept. 19: Hazel Milpolicy and the future of the interna- am from Orvel Milam, Sept. 22.
min. Mull bt 18yra. Sarv·U·
r'ocket needed more testing.
(t18!114i 8434.
tional
space
station.
There have been other .debates

-Mounting Mir fears prompt pressure
to stop American from joining crew

m~chlne.

_ . lnlotmdon- I s.A.S.E.

Remodeling

I

hygiene, or just getting up in the
morning. Regardless of its cause, it.
always has some associated soci al
consequences.
Most "morning breath" odor,
whi&lt;:h makers of mouthwashes and
breath mints make us all acutely
aware of, originates from the growth
and metabolism of bacteria thai live
in the mouth. And as the advertising
suggests, brushing one's teeth' 'or
using a mouthwash will quickly
improve this cause of halitosis. I
suspect you know lhis and, therefore, .are wriling because of ·a more
persistent problem.
More persistent halitosis · can
originales from severe dental decay
(cavities) or chronic infection of the
gums (gingivitis). In these conditions, the bacteria have established

The CommunitY Calendar is publis~ as a free service 10 non-profil
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any lype. Items are
prin1ed as space permits and canno1
be guaranteed to run a: specific number of days.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

110

Help wanted

•Part-Time· sa,fltary Needed,
Nights. And Salvrdays, bperl·
ence NeceiUtJ. Re11.1me &amp; Rei·

.,..,... Required, 814-441-1570.
$$$DANCERS$$$

2 Jloncero.Soulhlork 1M
PlPieasant
· Callollor Bpm WoO-Sal
304-875-51155.
AVON
Spew~

I All Areas I Shirl ey

304-875-14211.

ACTION YOUTH CARE, INC.

11 aeeklng ·a Child and Famllt
Therapltl tor the Mason Counrv
area. Applicant must be a Mas ~
ttrl ltvel Social worker, Coun lllor, or Psychologist eligible to
be llcen11d. At lent one year
experience In individual and
family therapy. Please respond
lo : Acllon Youth Car~, 217 81h
· S11ett, Point Pleasant, WV

25550 or call 304 -675· 1324 .

E.O.E.

Are You Energetic, Moti11ated,
And Caring? Scenic Hills Nursing

Cenler 11 Looking For Men And

Womtn With Tha-.e Qualities
Who Are Currently State Tasted
Nu,.ing Assis tan ts To Work In

Our Comprehensive Cara Facility.
Openings A\lailable In Our Specially Securld Alzhelmt(l Unit,
Skllll And Long•TIIm Cart
Units. Come By In Par10n To 31 1
BuduldfiO Ad .. Bidwell, OH.

C11Ung · Mo.l llt Extra1. ProdUC·
tlon Trainees . Film Studio, 814-

523-9254.

�Wedneiday, September-24, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP .

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

BRIDOI:

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHD..LIP
ALDER

Sm-

lllllpllw notdod, ow homo, lor
2 112 yMr old boy, hours vary,
uriaus call only, Chliater area.
1148. :M:I-4,
COL CUSS A TRICK
DRIVERS NEEDED

Short Torm Haulo . wy 1!011:

W Long Term Emplo,....t Op-

porlunltfea Available With Ful

Growing Company. Excollonl Ploy

l Benelltl . See Homier Saltt

,·

::*..:.~·F~.::.~=-: =tKxJ.S.:1~F Clll CJod.
::;;:::-~~II· Yoaro Old 1175,000, 114·14:1- REPQS. SAVE · BIG 1$. CALL

21124, Or 814-613-2522.
Dozer, Back . Hoe, Dump
FOR IALIBY OWIIEII:
Truck,E1porloncocl Dtlvoro. Free 111 VInton COur~ In Golllpolla. 1
Ell. COI: (I14~24!1-5325
Floor Pion, s llodroamo, 1 Cu
-. Lor 8011110, Col 114-S
. 7f.
FumtltHO ropolr, and roo- "
- 7"......
toralion, allo cuoiDm O!dn. Ohlp 2 20 For Appoll!l- o.r, No
VIII'? Rollnlohlng Shop, Larry lorlP.Il
·
Phllpa 114-811H5ll.
GOV'T FORECLOSED Homoo
From Ponnioo On 11 Delinquent
Prolallioi'W Tr• Service. s..,.. Tu. Ropo'o, REO'o. Your ~roo.
Removal, Froo EoUmatool In· Toll Froo (111100·218-llOOO Ext
ouranco, tlkt41111, Ohio. 81 ..318- • 81-7·7010.
H-21114 forCUrroroll.lollngo.
:-:::::.:::=.:.:.::.;~~7""In Galllpollo: 3 llodroorno, 1 112
WiU caro For An EldoriY.f'orson Borha, Largo Lor. Borwun
In Homo. E~oncod Mon-.
Health Care Aide, Would Prefer ground
Pool, Call 81Heated
..4oOII·IBOO
Schools,

o

Opportunity

Computer Uaers Needed. Wor,k

-7111h15011.
Eooy Workl Excolltnl Payl Ao-

aemblt Producll At Home. Call

Toll Frto 1·1100·C87·5588 E1L
12110.

IIICJilCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

maU until you have lnvestlpted

0"""'.

--of-

-~-and-Ot!'floy·

or rlloo•- by Oc1Dbll' 2. 111117

.. Plannod
• 0011
Olio, 31111 Richland ..........

A'- OHo 05701. EO&amp;UP

ESniiATOR WANTED • Mull
Ill Exportancorl In All Phuft Of
R••tdonllal R.modollng. Refer-

81..049-llOOC.

ance1 And ReNablt Transporta·
lion RaqWod. Drop 01 Roounw Or
Stop In At Chrl1dan'1 Construellon To Fil Out App. 1403 eo-n

Income proleaalon• rapid ad·

en..-.-- .

Grill cook ""nled· apply In par·
1101\
Nteded: Experienced TlmHr

Cunor. I ExporlonM&lt;I TruCk Drl¥•· 11-74511.
Ohio Bawd Trucking Company
Looking Fo&lt; OTR Drlvoro. Slnglo
On THill Drlvorl. Mull Ill OYot
25 Yoaro Old Wllh 2 Yoaro E•·
@orilnco And Good MVR. All
Equipment 11 Lara Uodtl Con·
ventlonal Tractora With Reeler.
Weakly Pay, Health Insurance
-1-7-8184.

Position

Dpon:

Tumllllrv. 81~1·1570.

Position Openlno· Bossard Llbfoty. Pari Tlmo (SUbiiiMO) CUItomtr Service Paalllans Avail·
alllo: Library Circulation And

Boakmobllo SorYJcoo. Two Yeara

01 Cologo AIMI A - m 01 Six
Month• Work EKperience, Or

Four VIlli Comprthonlivo Cuo.,..., S.rvlco Worl&lt; Experience
Quollfiod Applicant Uull Ill An
Enllluolulic Loarnor And Avid
Roodor. Salary Groat ·Clark I.
Slll'dng Solary: 111.117 Hr. Salary
Adjuatment _ Af1er Succa..ful

COmplollon Of A 3 Month Probojonory Porlod. Bouard Memorial
~~ 7 Spruce SIIHI. GalllpoPoolll Jobl No Exporlonco.Ntc·
,oanry, For Application I lnlor·
motion con Sunday Thru Friday
At1-800402·- En4041.
RN'I And LPN'ol Sc.,lc Hlllo
Nurttlna Cantor Ia Now onorlng
SHin DifFERENTIAL COn In
To SM ow 8llff D• ta,n•ll ~
10010; BotwHfl a A.M. And 11
A,U. To uau An Appli-n For
EIJIIIioYJIIO!It In OUr Compo_.,.
olvi Caro Faclllly. Pooltlono In
5ldllod. Unt~-Torm, M i l .... Cora, an tiUclvtdgo Ad., ~
woi.OHNo"'-CaWo- .

RockiPrinGI
Conlor
II
-.,g a lui
limo11-7 RN
wllll
prolorrocl oxporltnco In longtorm
11\d tehtbllhatlon nursing. Wa
rocognlzo your car- goolo whit

compotlllvo nllry and bonofll
pocllago. Apply at Rock•~•
- - Centor alii
.
11101.
IHIITIIEJAL FORE~·N

fll'llllhld
Rooms

.

510

Household
Good a

_...:;::;:.::.::.:::..:;:.:=:.....-1
$075/mo., relerencoo. 8t .. g&amp;2·
14170 O.kwaod Mobile Homo, 2 8881.

All "-' estare advertlsing in
this I •wlpapet' tl
the Federal Fair HOltSinCI Act
of 1988 which mak•I«M:,!,"~~
1o
•any poe-""·
Hmitation or dlscrimll"lltion

I

blludOArace, color. ··~""'-':

1

-lao

· M)( famillal stafus or

1881 11x80 sunohlno a Bod·
rooma, 2 Batho, Total Eloctrlc,
111.ooo, CoP Al1lf 3:oo 114-3712133.

-$COO.304-875-8353.

Roo llolgian llaro, ohoilld bo fool

720 1tucks for Sale

Slablt horH· 75.00 mo., PISWrl
• oxcoiltrtrldlng.ll'-742·2050.

OVen, ,-urnace, Shower, Com·
modo, Wotor Hoo!or. Topo Player, ·

Hay 1o

Grain

'·

AS~ ...

• 43 2

UpiOn Und COro Rl, 12·3 UIIOI ·
South ol Loon, WV. Financing :
---1111111.

to lleg. Belgian Stallion, you
have right to aonagrl m bator•
putchalo if you poy oot.' 30H7542211 Jim LIWII.

640

~SAME

~.

"Rtoll..lohl' Tnocll

2. I 3 badroom mobile homea
S21D-S3DO, oower, water and 'Salt On All Carpot&amp; VInyl, Uol·
._,Included. 814-182-2187.
lohan Carpell, Route 7 North,
8l..-7o!44.

lnform&lt;Ki thai an dwellings

this newspaper
are awaiab&amp;e on an equal

oon

1ST TIME BUVERSI E·Z Fl·
NANCING. 2 or 3 boclroomo. lr·
ound UOOim&gt;. t-8110-251·5070.
Ooublewldo r•po nover llvocll!\

2 Bedroom Houle On Second must sell, no reaaonable ollaf r•
Stroo~

body conditioning by looklntdc 710 Aulas for Salt
rollotanco, llko now. 1500. 30•· '81 VW Rabbi~ good condition
882-S&lt;o01.

hiQh mha. .$800 080, 114-112·

tin.

·as Trans Am, nRir rebulll 305,

robullt tranomtnlon, runa groo~
12200. 11-7-G32ll.
'811 ChoYy S..... ..._... air,

crul••· ·electric window• and

locka, htgh muoo,

uaoo OBO,

814-D82-8511.
'Ill Oldo DoiiiSII, ol ,_.,, aood
clean car, 3800 engine, ,3100,

r-:~1~ ~ 11 '

-l

w-

AKC Roglllerod Cockor Sponltl
anti -mad,

Ytar Warranty: Skaggo Ap· AKC Rtglotarocl Mini Dochlhund
pliancea, 711 Vino Stroot, Golllpo- Plop.l14-38&amp;-9104.
lio, 814·448·7308, 1·888-818-

BARNEY
ALL I GOT FER MY

222 0'111

WIICOpl

FrH tir, frH uun. 11d0 3 or 4

0181 .
bedroom $1.350/down, $21111/mo.
3 ·4 Bodfoamo. Opdonal Family C&amp;l1.aoo.tlllt.am.

$55.000 080. 30oC-27S.1tQ2.
a llodroam, 211oth, Formal Din·
n1ng. Largo Living Room, Family
Roam. Wllargo Lo~ 1800 Jadcoon
Plce(8t4,..77CO
3 Or • n-•roomo. 2 bllll, tlardwood"tlooro.
F,A.G. lurnactJcon·
nllir, nlco cornor loL 38 Wind·
oorCourt304-47S.7285.
4 llodtoom Spill Lovtl Wllh 5CQO

Sq. Ft. Including Full BaMment

or 3 bldroamL Sllrdng 11 $3o4G5.
Quick delivery. Ca11 I· 800 . 837.
:.:32311:::.:·------ -.....,
llka Now, 1GIC Deluxe 14x72L0:
cal~ Eloclric HOII Pump, flo.
trlgerator, Range &amp; 10X12 Otdl.

•
61C·4CS·8891 Daya; 8 .......
:38::53:.:;E':.:":.:,;,:;:'II::L_____
lii.d"Loci1111Vi8 14x70 three bedroom,
8 monlhl FREE lot rent

ApartmentS
1 ---,"!!"!'_:.fOI':;_;_R:,:III_,;.I--.-:t·
I anti 2 bldroom lfllriJJIOJIII,
nllhld end unklrnlahlcl, MCUriiJ'

11aond Avenue, Oalllp.olle,

mn.am.

Ave., Pomttoy, .100 deposll,

2bodroom In Golllpollo Forry.
3Qoi.87S.2541.

tapes or caaseuaa. Brand new,
anemblr required. Rtlall price
1300. alkinQ 1150. Call 81 .. 982·

:.:::::;:.:::=.---~­

=::::::::::::.--.,.,-~~

Apartment• For Renf Qn Flfll

-..., ., ..448-8221.

Now Book Ropo'al 0~ 3 lei~ Aparrmtnl For Ront, Socond
Avenue, Newly Remodeled 1nd
755-7101 .
Carpolld. Col(514) a7..-

I :.::.:;.;.;;;.;;_______

Oakwood 28x5e 3 bedroom, 2 llolch St, Ulddltpon. - . r t
turnllhod &amp; unlurnl-. u~ldol
poltl. Dopolit &amp; relortncu -

Dining Room, LA, Eat-In KMcb· bath, atartlng 11 1188 per mo.
en, Utllllr Roo.,, small •••• Caii1-8CJO.el1,.777.
menl, 1 Car Garage, 114·44f.

Beautitul wood·flnlall multimedia

ohoM, holdl 880 CDI! 1110 Yldoo

owner financing avalla • · 30.t·

882-25811.

0111.

Buy or sell. Riverine Anliques,
1124 E. Mlin StrH~ on Rl. 2C.
Pomeror. HOufl: M.T.W.

S1GO
por :month. call ahlf Spm
IIC-116?4011'1.

81 .88 per monlh with Fumlahed Efficiency Share Bllh.
down. Call 1·1100·837· IIGWiolo., UUifllol Paid, 107 Stc-

1311,895. Free dellverr. 1·800-

Boogie Pup, Pllronfl Good
black powclor Cat Uale
llon~ Dog, Bof1 Ani On Pl..,..
1225. 3114-875-1731.
Ill. $40, 81 ..3811-85211.
Anllques
570
MusiCal

a.m. 10 8:00 p.m., SUnday 1:00 10
dopooll roqulrocl, no poto, ., 4• 8!00
p.m. 814·882·2526. Run
GG2·2ZII.
lolooroOWIWf.
1=~:.:.::.-...,-----­
1 Boclroom Noar Holzer Extro 540 Miscellaneous
Nice, Control
Air,Roq.
1289/Uo.,
Utllldoo,
Dopooll
No Pllto,+
Merchandise .
, 1..__2057.
::.:.::=:;::::::.;.___..,.._ 8oby bod, high chair. llrollor,
2 bodroam aportmont $prlng Mlng I cor -L 3Qoi.875-45CS.

.Whh 2 Car Gorago, Goo Hoo~ 2
Miltl From Gallpoijo On Bullvllo, ==-------~- J ond Aoenuo, Galllpollo. ,,,....._
Pllco, On 1 112 Acre Flat Lo~ Chy Now 28x80 3 or • bedroom. 3&amp;14, - 7 P.M.
Schoolo. to~~,ooo , 514 ..a 03110
4 bocltoom hou•, localld In Tupporo Plalnl. no roaoonablo onor
roluood, 114·887-11422, loavo
me age
4 Lor•• Bodroomo, 1 Both,

--·pm.
Black 1Uvar plata trumpet, carne!. • biqclea 3Qoi.87S.2278.

180 Wlntedlb Do

opDLHDUIJ 'PIGJALi,.!~~

a.rmn

Two llodtoom Houoo, Clooo to
t . . . 21R:sir...,..
Gllllpoll. now oltllng. Now Wind· Slrotm .f'roat Ftoo Rolor
- AI Now Klll:hon, Wll TIM or ·Eioo. Range ·Frto Dol Mil Sot
Trado In 135,000. Phone: 814· I1S,t100. Fronch Cltr Homol. lno.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1885 f 'ard Ranger ri'uck, auto, '.

40,troo mlloo. ai!VIm ca11.. air, .
alum. wllttls. whitelgrawo interior, ·
$8150 OB0,'8t..IIII2·5C311.
·
To~ta Long Bed, 15188. Very

1s wtte,e

. MY PIVO!lG.e
PAPE!l$.

3117-IM03

~OHIU

Ul83o40.

Wrst

Nonh

East

~

Po.~ ss

Pass

Pass

•

.........
@) ·.

~'

.

scant defense against an opponent's

'

r'VE:

,

F~TTENf\DW

IAM

IGER WOODS!

contract, I agree with Roth that fo ur
hearts is 1he bi d of choice .
South could see 10 tri cks: one
;pade, seven hearts and two dia·
munds. Unfonunately. !hough. the
&gt;pening lead had dislodged dumm y's
:ntry to the diamond king. South's
first tHought was to win Irick one and
return the spade four: Yet even the
sleepiest of opponents would switch ·
10 a trump, 'which would kill the contract.
Then South saw how to maintain
control. He played low from 1be dum·
my al trick one . Now West (or East ,
if he oliertook with the king) had no
riposte. If he played another spade tu
d ummy 's ace, decl arer would lead .a
diamo nd to his ace, ruff a spade in the
dummy, discard a club on the diamond king, and claim an overtrick.
(Yes, the opponents can save the
overtrick by taking their club iricks
before playing the second spade.)
Allernalively. if the opponents
switch to a 1rump to stop the spadr
ruff, the spade ace is still in the dum·
my, resuscitating the diamond king.

new f1om Bun:ardl'a, u1ed 3

monthl. asking $250. 304·875·
5C24.
FruHs&amp;
580

~E

PR06A5L.'( NEVER

LICKS THE BOTTOM
OF THE DISH ..

cooo. .

.,,. Crook Ad. 30C-875-42211 Jlno

1=4=·~-------

&amp; LIVESTOCK

BOTTLE~ WILL POWERI LOSE
Up To 3D lbo., 30 Day Mono1

Back Guarantee! Natu1al, Or.

Recommended. 514·441-1982,
Frat Samploa.

Btall awln alze bed, complete

MOiorHomea

1D01 Buick Regal Custom V-8,
Go_od Condition, Fronl WhHI

FARM SUPPLIES

"' e""&lt;~i

~res,

newlJ remodellnt!)H'ior, call

"'

tll&amp;O Mltiubishf Pntc:lo 5 op., ole,
runo nry good, 30 MPG, now olflr4pm.lol00. 814·11112·274t .
1875 PIOWior, 18', good COndition. . '
tlr-, G7K. $1800. 81 ..11115 43118.
aoklng 11200 OBO, 814 ·742· · :

'r, 't, ...

®

Drive, Air, AMiFM Till I CNI•, Boat a RV S1arage Available
Aqua Tread Tlroo, 11C·445- Largo 2 'lear Old Storage BuikMng ,
580

1001 Hyundl Excel, Automallc. 2·
Door Halehblck 11800 Call ollor
C:00(814)446-97111

1882 Chovy Corolca. V·S lu·
tomalic, white, tltt, cruiae, ••ce..

Localad In Wilks ville Area. 6 t •C31-2lXI8 E,.,;nga.

ASTRO·ORAPB

SERVICES

810

Ho"""'

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

.. ..

lent condition, ICSOO OBO, 814·
lmprov&amp;meniS
610 Farm Equipment "" 1185-~.
1---~~~~~-IIASEMENT'
Hu1qvarna I Grten ~achlne 1993 Chevrolt! Cavollor, 2 door
WATERPROOFING
lllmmera I brush cutters en salt

n5w. Sldtr'l Equipment 30H7S.

7421.

630

Livestock

11 Htnl, 1 roosler, sam• feed.
S20 lor all30f.578-27S3.

15 Uonlh Old Reglstofed Hollltln
Bt.il COl !104-815-1131:1

sedan, low mlle1, showroom
clean, mi'll condition, one owner,
814-llg2-f103 01 con bo...,. 38
Hudson St. lllddltpo~ Dl
111115 Ayrnoufl Noon Rod 4 llooro

u• lall, rrtU

8 Roglllored Blocil Anguo Bulla

For Solo, a 14·381·8823 Alter I

P.M.

I HOIIIOin Sprlngor Htlloro
WolghJng 150 Pdi., Approxrn..
ly 15.500. FQ' Alltl...-53.

WollrptOOIIng.

Appllonco Plrll And Sotwlco: All
Nama Brands pyar 25 Year• Ex-

245-QZ!D.

perltnc' All Work Guaranteed,

11185 Saaorn sc 2•

2 Roglllotod Quarllf Horooo, 11 Crulae, AM6Y Cuaaue,

lng horae, Ql ding,

tellllohod 1875. Call (814) ..e.
087Q Dt 1·800·287-0571. Rogoro .

eu-387-5055, Evening•: su-

Yoo11 Old. Sottli Uort, $1 .200: 4 - H. 112.000 COl Allor
Yoor Old Chlltnul Mort 1800. Or (Sorlouo lnqulrloo Only II
f'llir For 11,1100,114-256-1317.
:...
::...:.co:.•:.:s.;____~--l
5 year aid bar. Tenn"•" walk· 1011 Oodgo Noon 2 Dooto, Auto,

ride, road ..le, will work buggy,
$1,200, 81 ..7C2-2050.
.

Unconditional lifetime ou~~a~~tH.
Loc:sl ref~rencea furnished. E1-

Spot~

With 30,000 Uileo, In Ex·
colllt11 Conrttlon, 110,000, Doyo:

Fronch City Maytag, 814·C48·
7715.

C&amp;C Gonorol Homo Main·
rononco- Painting, vlroyl aiding,
carponlry, dooro, wlndowo, bolllo,
moble home repair and more. For
AC, AUiFM Cauotta; 27,000 lroo ootlmall call Che~ 814-1192·
Ulloa, $6,850, 080, IU·258· 5323 ·
8188.
840 Electrical and
89 uorcury Marqufo, •~&lt;tllont
Refrigeration
condition, wllh otllular phono, 4
do01, aood llroo, call ahor C!llfl, RHiclonllol Of commorclol wiring. ·
814-912·27•1.
now llf'lk:o., ropalra. Mlotor U. :
tensed eltc::ltlcian. Rld.nour

lluckot ~uck &amp; dlggor derrick lor Electrical, wvoooooe, 304-875lllt, 114-3711-8210.

IWEDNESDAY

Campers&amp;

klnt, all one petiCn can cttrY oUt
of patch without containers
12.00. oloo, blled hay lor doco·

radon l4.00tL Locattd off Pot·

"' Vo~i\".Pie

....,1163.

'""""~~"·

Vegetables.
Yellow Jack·O·Lantorn pump-

B. ACm/ Cor And Check Our lhr
larings in lhr ClouifO&lt;d S.Ctm.

.

1872 Dodgo Cttamplon, 24', new

1781.

by Luis Campos
Celebnty Crpher c~ t ograll\5 are c reated Irom q'fO(atoons by lamous p&amp;ople. past and presoot
Ead'lll:ltter rr.~ the cipher Slill\05 tor another Toctay's clue R equals B

· a , ZBFV
0

vw.

B

ovw
Z B FV

RVCEGV

U H

ucvo

Z B F V

TUMHWD

E W J

NCBZJ. BTC . ' - . YMEWNHBTV
TE. DEW .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "They say hard work never hun ~ nybOdy,. but I ligure
why take the chance."- Ronald Reagan.

.:''

T~~:~~y S©tt4\llA-~r..trs·
::::
ClAY I . POllAN _:._..;__ __
O four
A:eorrange letters cf the
tcromblad words bel~lr.d ~.

low 1o .form fol.!r simp'- words

CRUVYS

.t

.l. 12

I

PI

PALLE

I 1· I
·1

I1

U T.M A

5

0

I

I

Have you ever noticed that
. 1 I I 1 . •. economy size means extra
. - - - - - - - - - , large in detergenl boxes but .
L.T E EN
meansextni- -· --in ----?
6

7

:':',
. ,:

I
: . . .;~ ~;. .:. .rl:....:~,,,.:.:.rl-l

S

C) .Comp·l ~ rti

the chuckio quolod

by f1l ling in ~he miss1ng words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Rlpfoy, WV. 304·372·3833 or 1·

$4,500. 304·075·H45 or loavo

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I ·I I I· I I1NI I I I I

Uaed /RobUIII, All Tjptl, Over
10.000 Tranomloslono, Accoso
R..anulacturod Mlln Shoho Fo&lt;
Standard Transmlulon All
T- 8t4-245-51177

790

Kan.

47 Addict
· 50 I think, lhete·
fore - ·51 Soul (Fr.)

L-J..-l..-l.._J..-1..-l.

1111111 Hyundal Excoi, goad c:ondJ. Now gao tankl. I ron truck
..,. lnllda anti our, no Nil, Sllll5, whotlo I radlororo. ~ &amp; R Auto,

ac, naw tires, window lint, fed w/
red Interior, excellent condition.

standing

37 Hospital
wortc.ers
38 Inquiry tor
loot ~oods
39 Fidel s
capital
41 Numbers
(abbr.)
43 Yank's toe
46 Neighbor of

1--,-rl

11188 Ford Tauruo, 80.000 mllto. Boat I RV Storage Available
Largo 2 - Old Storage Building
carl Light bluolduk bluo l....,lor, Locotod In Wllkoville Aroo. 814·
OIIVIrn CIIL, t1150, 814-841-2311 431·2038 E,.,;ngL
"""'814-8411·21144760 Auto Parts &amp;
1988 Ford Tempo. rwo door, two
Accessories
owners, lull sized 1p1re, bod~

Gemeinhardt flute, purchlled

3.. More
streamlined
35 Fools
36 International

I

PEANUTS

2G51

19Go'Ford Probe GT Sopd, cold

purcha&amp;e
30 - over heels

O pening four hearts works best
unless your side can make a slam .
which wo n' l be often . As you have

rtte E&gt;H•t.est

em

11..--o103.
88 Muim Boar, Cuddly Cabinet
1111111 Oodgo 5pirk llOK. Auto, Air, Inboard. Wercruls•r Curies In·
AM·FM. $1800 Firm. (81C)·o048- ~ E~« . .condllon.1814)-2.aS.

08081 ..... 1.05&amp;1.

9 LIHed

10 smoother
11 saucily
17 Set of tools

a Bri tish magazine.

TOU~IT!

11189 Pontiac ~lilt LoodiCI, I y;;;;;;;;;;Rom;;;;-iii
~And;;d •
1 aa.;n;;;AIMI~TtTo;;;po)
Duol Point
Dlllributor For :
$1,250; .1887 Chevy Aotro Van,
Loodocl. $2,200, Both Aro Nlco
Block CI&gt;OYrlotl SIOO, ..
81

5 Not r:er1aln

a choir
7 - of March
8 Ocean

19 Slbtlng of sis
22 Small ox
23 Dry, as wine
25 2,001 , e.g.
26 Bookstore

control. How would yo u play in four
hearts aft er West has led the spade
·queen? What do you think of South's
opening bid?
Thi s deal was g iven by Danny
Rolh in the Jul y· issue of Bridge Plus,

r~1s
~
~tfP COP ItS OF

70:!9·

Gomoinrdt nuo.. In P,d condi·
lion. cal 30.. 77:1-5707.

2 Mualcal

· cum stances are often. under ·your

- -

Roaoo hitch, dark tlnlocl gla11:
3t,OOO mNoo, $19,750, 814·GCG·
2311 day, 81C·0411-284:t 01001.

10 Clarlent Both In Groot Condl·
lion. ...~707.

6 Participate In

through
flllrallon

29 E1troc1

H&lt;o~rew

By Phillip Alder
W illiam James, an American psy·
chologisl and philosopher, pointed
out " II is nice to make heroic dec i·
s ions and to be prevenled by 'cir·
cumstanccs beyond your contro l'
from ever tryi ng 10 execute them."
At the bridge lable, lhough, oir·

1994 Ford F 350 Turbo dlootl,

crew cab duaJiy, XLT, air, etuiae,
111reo. standard transmillion,
two·tona paint, almulator1, Gull
wing tool box, running bOards,

1100-27:1-113211.

term

1

Keeping control

31)4.

81 ..11112-ti82C.

hatlonallam

3 One who
eupporta
4 Male Iiiio

'TYpe ottlah

- under·

-·

-.,col

DOWN

32 Ball -

BROKE TOE II .

111111 SUzuki Kalarli 1100, black/
purplo, 1100 mlloo, 13800 080,
814·848·2311 dayo, 814·9C9·

ooll· 11000, with CD player,
11200. 8 14-041-3088 lttnoo mooallor 5~
1111111 Grand Am, 4dr, tllr, po, pb.
3Qoi.87S.1508.

tesael family
51 Similar
52 Poetic limo.
53 Actor Baldwin
sc Come together
55 Madrid Mro.
56 Mindy's trland
57 lrl• f&gt;.Goollc

· Op.c ning lead : • Q

700'

Arllty Clarinet And Solmer Serloto

Rocky, Tony Lama. Guatanated
Lowest Prien AI Shoe Cafe, Gal·
lipotia.

Buck Stowo firapla&lt;» lnoort 304·
New large Apartmtflll 2 Bed· na-5341 boloro 5pm. 304-773roamo, With W&amp;ahor, Dryer 5114.'1 lhll'li(lm.
Hook·Up, Attachod Oaroge,
Lease, Referancea 8SHI.ro., Cltadon 12.8 Cubic Foot Deop
114-4411-21101.
Froozor, Chool ~po. Uloo Now.
lloroly Uood, Uovlng And Mull
Brooklido Aptl. Are Now Ao· Soli $2110, 11~1 ·1053.
copung Appllcatlono For Ono
Bedroom Apta. W.aher I Orrer Concrato &amp; Pltodc Sopdc Tanka,
=-CIII11....._111111 For 300 Thru 2,000 Gallono Ron
Evano Entorprilol, Jacf&lt;oon, 011
1-7-115211.
'OR RENT: 'I Largo Boclroom
Upotolra ApL Gu Hoa~ Romo- Elton John lic:kall lor •lt. varf.
prtcoo. ... Cltrlo WOIIo. .,...
=~,fllro.,:s.: ...
-15-ll(lm.
. . - RoQulrod, Con Ill
AI
14103.112
1111., Glllfl alii Grubb'l Pltno- lininG &amp; rapolra.
D&lt; Call114·44tl-4114 Dt 114- Problema? Natd Tunocl? Call tho
plonoDr. 8t~525
....3703.

e••..,.

Instruments

Booto B1 Redwlng, Chlppewo . INomaLawiL

dolu,_ Sooly ~~~'" and
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT with
bOx oprlneo. llka now, 1175; dl·
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON netta Mt for email a11a, two
ESTATES, · 52 WooiWood Drlvo rnonlh!t old, 1100: Ill ol - llJa..
hom 1:11110 10 1334. Will 10 ...... monel Drld runrVni1 boardl tor fuM
1 movloo. Call eU·4CI·251S. IIJolftlc:ll; 11C-815-3Sl5.

llpolo. Ofjo . , 4 401 ~:MO.

28

OOOd, lltOng engine, priced Ia 8udg•l Price. Tranamlnlona,

room, $t,0561down, 1198/mo.
Clll HIOCHIIII-tm.

16 Slier
18 Short oleep
1~ Implores
20 Doet n't IIIII
21 To aomo Ollent
(2 wdo.)
23 Stalnleu 24 Court·
reporter'a ·
machlno
27 Ramovo
moiature from

Snuth

SIFT-WRAPPED If

BIRFDAY WAS A

front bUmper dornago, . . , olean

~~;;:-;;:;;;&amp;;M.;;;;;;;:"i2jjjj

15 Aroma

·review
46 Baby boa,.
48 Chemical suffix
49 Herb of the

Vulnerable: North,-South
llca lcr: South

BIG NATE

AKC Dobormon Pupploa, 814·
448·9988 Day or 114·258·8883
Altor5 pn and on
AKC Gorman Shophord pupploo,

14 Map abbr.

... !J 4

25H038.

--

• Q B 652
·• A 3 2

Radio, ExctHonl COndition, SIC·

:8;:1..::-:::211:::.77:.;.._ _ _ _ _ _,1Good Condition, E11a11 Stla. ·
. '·
104 Eaoto Tolon ES, Whitt with $2.300, 81 ..2!8-6031.
Rod lntorlor, PW, Son Rool, 730 Yans &amp; 4-WDS
72.000 MIIOI, E - t ~
$t.000080.(114Aii-.Q311
1878 CJ5 Joop. 4 WD, Needs
1012- c.1o Wlfl 350 2 bbl. Work, Accop! 8111 Oiler, 814·
ac,ooo Mlleo on Motor Loto 01 268--8221!, Ntor 5 P.M.
Bullclng. Bu~Con Ill Now Front End I'MII. Wlndlhltld 1193 Dodgo Ram 41C V-1, sl&gt;on
Dual Exhouot With Turbo II M~· Whool Boso, PS. PS, Tdt. Cruloo.
Depo-. Col Horry AI· t11.500. 110 . . 8483.
u:i1~i~v=·,..: 1f~ 11tr1.
P.O. Box 3CS, Golllpollo. OH tor 8!00 P.U. 304-1175·1433 Or
45ea1 No Law Thin 8th OciDbot Sao AI· 2011 Jolleroon In Pt. 18U GMC SOlari XT mlni·VIn;
tully loadocl, $10,800. 304·17511187.

s-ao
g:'

Agt.

• A

1H1 Toyota 2wd pk:k· up. run•

Trlm11 Firneu machine wlpulu
master. timer coach. 4iornplell

• 8 7

• AKQJt096

-An

FrM air, free aklrl, 14x70 3 bed·

Room, CA, 2 Baths, ln·Ground Glenwood Rd. Ashton area·
Pool, N_, Hoopll.ll In Galllpl&gt;lia. ochool bUI goOI by ln&gt;nt - · 3
S13.000, lloHol6-4173.
bedroom, 2 both, very nice, mo3 bMroom houM plua 8+ acr"' bile horrw. 1 acre Iand • c Ity wabig living- -ltaplaco, rico tot. Accept HUD. ScOOirno. 304·
dining room &amp; ldtchon. n1co river 582-SICO ..- 30C-576-2718.
view, lacated at Syrac::uae, Oh Large selection of uud home. 2

K 5

s-.

Allalta hay rolla hom Sl!i-Morgan '85 Ft50 XLT2WO. V.SauiO. .&gt;
lc -Ilion, 81c-GI~58.
Fsrm
Rt35. :114-937·2011.
WARM UP: High Elklorq ,._
ral A1M1 LP Gu Furnac01. Lit. llonty Chlckono I Squaro 111101 11111 F·1So Ford cxc, como Sto,
Otllt, ., ..24W7!18. .
limo WlrrantW On-~ E1~ OI.Hoy, Allalla I Gr111 Mllod,
or. 'If You Do11'1 Col Uo Wo Both ., ..2.5-5822.
1889
Ford
plck·up, llondard,
L.aur Froo Eall. .totl Add·On
100,000 mitfl. boOkl 0 14,100.
Hat Pu,..o Only Sllah!v Hlahll'.
Call Ua Today. 18t7 Ia 'Tho Ear Corn: Eaoy L-., Locotot Alklnt $2.500.304-175-2563.
Twenty Sovonlh Yoar In Tho In COntonary, Prlco Nogoualtlo 18110 Fonl Super cab, 351, 8 3/C
-ling I
Buol-181 .. • 14-441-1010.
bid, XLT Lariol, oult, air, cruloo,
448 93M, 1
2814:51.
Haw: Round • Squarw Boloo, 114 ..,...,no poln~ bod •-· vllor,
otoroo, 100,000 mlloo. 15250,
STO
TANKS 3,000 Gollon 381-7271.
'
814·9•1·2311. dayo, 814·948·
Upllgh~
n Evano EntorpriiOI.
Jodcoon. OHo. 1-8110-537-8521.
THMJSPOill A IIOIJ

Point Ploooan~ WV, 81" lultd. 3p4-755-7191.

468221.
2 Houooo. 2 Tralloro 1 Loll, &amp; 2
Loll, Good For Ronlllo, Cholliro
Area. L•• U.llagt, 814 ~ 7-

•

-·-.11~1213.

Hotpoint Cheal FrNJer, $1 75; pt!lploo, 1:1110. Holpolnt Washer Nrce, $2QS, 1 IIC-8112-7371.

opportunlly;.;bal.~•. - ·
31D Homes for Sale

_lg.,_,Ftoll Froo Sr50:

lfl !I 3

• 9 6 3

uled Furniture Slart, 130 Bull· 8wka old, 111 shot• &amp; watmld.
viii Plio, Good OullltW U - . 1200/oa. 311H7S.18311.
1818 Ford LTD 4dr, V·8, runo
dllt And Colloctollloo, eu...e.
750 Boats &amp; Molors
GQod. 11.000. 304-882-2008.
C182, IH Hr1.11H.
AKC Golden Rotrlovor Pupo, Vol
for sale
Uood kltchon cablnofl Wlltaln· Chockad, And Flrot Sholl, Por· 1087 lolloron 4 Doaro, 'lory Dopendoblt $800 Firm, 814-258· 1887 18ft. Sea Imp, 180hp Me1~
loll IIIII oink, toblotop I 5h. onraOn Plomiuo, 814-371-211311.
1832.
snack bar, good cond, birch flricruiMr '111/lrlller, 2 Ula jackets, 4
AKC Rog)lltrod Alrtdolo PUP·
bulfii*U1.-.381C.
•
ple1 Shots IWo,med, EueUenl 1g57 SS Uonto Carlo 11.000
1111. 1700. - - - ·
Mll11,
Excellent
Condltkln;
1tl0
Watch
Dog,
Good
With
Chltdron,
Waohor l Pryor SGS Each, GO
1881 Ranger 373V 18' 12 ··24V
$-10 110,000 Mill. Sporll Sulp- TroNing Motor, 1SO XP Evlnrudt
Day Warrlnty: 'Elecldc Ral'lgt 11f.38tl.86112.
lng
Nloy
WhHII,,
Cook
Uatoll,
185; G. E. Rolrlgoraror SG5: Gib·
Oulbolrtl. $1.100, 81 ..1l92-2770.

advertised In

•

South

for Rent

Thi&gt; n o - r wll~n&lt;ll
knowingly .
advertlsentents for real estate
whictlls In violallon or lhEI
taw. CM roaders are hereby

!ipm.

.

Nlco haltor·broko "" Club call

fo·r 1888 market ateer lhow.
Plal»d In top 10 at Ua10n Coun1)' Fair IHdor call lhow. Appro•

Solzocl Cora Fr!llfl 1175. Porachoo, Cadlllaco, Chovyo, BUW'o, •
COrvottoo. AIIO Joopo, 4 WO'I. •
Your Arn. Toll Froo 1·1100.218· :
tooo En A·21U For Current ,
Ll!tllngo.

42D Mobile Homes

origin, or any Intention to
make lll'ly such pretereoca.
limitation or discrimination.•

OPIN HOUSE IPECJAL; Now
141100 2 8R -2 Batho -Lux Uulor
Both, Dlx. Carpot.frao Dell Sol
117,111111. Frtnch Cllr H&lt;ln1ll. 011-

311M7S-11115?.

:17f-.21182

• 5
o KJ 7 4
• QJI0876 /'
West
East
A QJf087
• K 52

Two bedroom houae With stove
1071 Kirkwood 12x80 $2,300, anti ralrlgoftllot, dopolll roquiroll;
11..-..1ee. Or 814-3BIHI7C7.
no lnllfdo Pill. 81+W2-3090.

Trl·leVot 4bf, 2 F balllo, LR, DR
llmlly
room.
Wlholl - · In
11&gt;32
pool whit now liner,
T-.ptrono- l'loplo Nooclod, -nd
located
In
10wn-pricod
.10 ool ot
Ro(lld AdYancomont Into Uon·
$811,000. Col 30ol-1175-8515........ Calli! ClllttOE

- . . . . . . . - ....... don't

w_,

Angua Club Calvoo CaM (814)

agcy.

phnAntl

09·24·97

llodroomo. 2 llolllo. Heat Pump.
G.E. Appflanceo. Like Now, Allor Small 2 lloclroorn Houn In Eur•
8,11.. 25&amp;-68110.
kl Security Depooll. Roloroncoo
Roqulrod $275 per monlh call
1g87 Ncw Uoon Mobilo Homo, (814138C-2580

Equol HoullnQ Oppcnonftr.

. , ""' lrlal10 ..... )uol ...

Chalro, Elot:lric W-lro, AIMI
Scoatoro.
u111. - .

-

I Yoor Old T - - WaiQr
Good Fo&lt; TraM - . . , Abo Mlor,
21101 Palrlol RDICI, 1 Mile Wtll

8141388 8560.

GymnaoliC!

Children Preferred, Will Power

'ivln Alvita Tower, now~=--

Pomeroy· tour bedroom, 1tovt
and refrlgeraror, w/washer tnd
drrer hookup, HUD approved,

proofmg, all ba11emtnl repairs

Coach /Pitt· Time, Evenings &amp;
Saturday Mual Have Tumbling

E-ioncl. Exporianco Coaching

qulred,

0101 .

Sale /Ront: Stoit.y E -, Uk

King• Motel Lowaal Ratti In Watarlino Spoclal: 314 200 PSI
Town, NaWIJ Rotn0doled, HBO, 121.05 Per 100: 1" 200 PSI
Clnemu, Shotwtime I Oianer. 137.00 "-f"'I OO: All Brall ComWotllly Rolli. Dt Uonl'ly Rolli. -"'"" Allngoln 5tDc:ll
3 Bodroomo. ' Bon -~ Room. Conalructlon Wartf.era Welcome RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jadcoon, QNo. 1-8110-537-85211
Full Bosornon~ Largo 2 Car Oa· 81~1-581111, 81~1-1187.
rage, 1 112 Mileo our1c1. 814·
WHilE'S IIETAL DETECTORS
Sleepino rooma with cooking.
..
AIID trailer 1pace on rl'llf. AU Ron Allloon. 1210 Soc:ond Avo·
3 llodroomo, 2 Bolh Houoe Fo&lt; hook-upa. Call after 2:00 p.m •• nut. Galllpollo, Ohio 814·448·
43311.
Rani Noa( Plllrlo~ Ill COuntry No 304-772-5161, MaoonWV.
Ptll.llol-371-2138.
550
Building
4 llodroam1. 2 1111111; hliOIUo., 460 Space for Rem
Suppllea
hOG Dopoolt; 2soo aq. Ft, 81 .. Uobllo homo alto available bot·
aNI2fi4.
Alhonl and Pomor~~t. can Block, brick, 1-r PIPII. wind81+388 1317.
OWl, Hnctlo. otc. Claudo Wlntoro,
AvaUablt 10an, nlct 3br. rt1tr·
Rio Granda. OH Call114·245·
encH &amp; deposlr, na pets. 30.r.1ER CHMJDI SE
5121.
875-5162.
For Salo By Soalod Bid: 10112
GllnwoodiAII11Dn aroa, 1300/mo.

3114-578-2527.

baaemant water·

Ql.ASS CEIJNOt

vencement potenllal. anti ltll·
•UIIIcllolllltlplng -HOL for
your lui job lnrorvlow, caM John
-ot114olla2·74CD.

5

pel'd·.~~t~a:r.~~:~~

450

plus light farm work. Depoait.

Services·

Avo.. GoPipollo, OH,
0514.
French Turor, For COli... Lovtl,
11-7-l'llltl.
FRUSTRATED? NO REAL AD•
VANCEMENT POTENTIAL?

111~0rouD.Tiiolla~

__-.wv...

Professional

•
81C""C8·~~onc-o..;j30Ciij-81jiS.i;;M.•S.illililiiilll!i!i

wyou .,, ~od and fool rou
.,. In a no aain oiiUIIIon. you h 10 you110ll10 conoldor JoininG

forSall
•FAUI.Y DREAM HOUSE"
Hugo 4br, 2 bolh homo, loa.,rlng
all new no through tlroploco,
otall of tho art HCUrlty oyotem.

S2.o1851dow" sscasc par lflOo1lh.

21

-773-SSC1.

Pad
~

'

320 Mobile Homes

dono. troo ootimatoo, lllollmo
guarantH. 10'-~fl on job experl-

'UoOd
' An!lquoo
Funian.

Dopoo11Roquirotl.81.._..15111.

inslclt, 814·7•2·1345, 814-Gg2.

BonuM&amp;. Cd For fl'lt ln~ma­
llon Boakll~ l-8110-20oi-70C8.

Llvln~•ton•a

UNBELIEVABLE 21171 c Bod·
roomo, 2 Bolho, f49,195, ~ AI
OAKWOOD HOMES 01 BAR=RIVILLI, WV, 304·731-~~~~i:~t:~;
:;:::;..~----=-~- Tara
330 FilmS for Sale
~:.',..

gethtr, 1. pool, garage, trailer Two bedroom apartment In Midapace rented, all for 117,500. 411port. no pe11. ~14-QQ2-515&amp;
S.rloUI lnqulrn Onlyl 304--57125C t.
Upotalro Apartmonl S Roomo &amp;
8ol\ Cloton. No 1'111. Rallo"'"' I

ANDLI7tEm
e.. 1488 To S1,COG Pfl. $1,505 Only It ·a b aad Holnle
To U,332 FIT. Pllld Vacatlon,

230

:::;70.~===~~=-:­

garage and 110rage building In·
eluded , prlvacr tenet in back,
1plil rail ln fronr, two' porchel,

N-Ro!&gt;ay,

-lifHOME

RIIP...,Ibn
Buy, SOl. Trado

appllcadono 1or 11&gt;r. HUD l!ibtld'
1 -• 1 to1 tldo
' 1 and hindi
lrlgonotor, dIll waohtr, and gar- LOOK I Final Price Cut-1 .1300 •~ ap ·
rY
•
bt!go dltpo11l, cen•ol olr, two cor aero' 2·12xl5 trallorollollocl 10- coppoct.EOH30C-a75.all71. ·

.f.~~=r~

Frl, Hro. 10·• For An Appoint·
mont, 81 ........712

114olla2·317G.

35D LOis &amp; Acreage

ORANTSI

-loplnt colloborotivt oftorto
ttorouQhout tight coundOL Travol
-lrod. Wwy dopoudor• on •·
porlenco. EvonlnQ and wookond
houra loqlirtd. Sand I t • of ln-

living "'"'" oullo- aoll wlfl 2 ,..
ell-• bUit·ln, cupholdoro, with
1111tchlng rocker rocllnor, SCOO,

combo ..., -""a lp, ulilitW room.
comes equlr,ped with •tove, re·

FREE
CASH

Grave t.lanument Bu1lnHI And
Equipm.,t For Bale. Call Man •

TAKE DELIVERY IN SEPT. NO
PAYMENT UNTIL DEC. 1117. 1·
:100~25:;1:;:·511::70:::..
. ----Take Dolhrory In Sapt No Ptor·
mont Until Doc. 1997 100·251·

=-'

6111.

COIToiFrti
1-800-218-1000 EJd. G- 21114.

Jol Waitt 304-175-&lt;1618.

511

Fenced, In-

I prouure rank.
.

CREDtr LJIE 1-100·251-51170.

o10 Aero Farm, Uobllo Homo. AdFor -lnbrmalion.
diCI Roomo, Wllh Drllocl Wol, ToMuon· Modular home on 100/ bacco Bait, Standing Timber,
100 lot. lhreo bodroom. two lull
Rlghll I!52,000 11 " 258bi.lhs, large lrldr combo, klllfr

recommends that rou do .bull - Three bodroom houoo In Syra·
no0o with pooplo you lonow. and CUll, basement, Qarage, ntW
NOT to lind monoy ttwauW. tho win-.. dock and aU --..r
tho

angagementt,

e-o.

Child caro provldod In my homo,

Manaeor 0 NAnONAL GUARD
ARIIORT, ROUTE 12 NORTH,
. . ~ 1 a u •~•
POINT PLra
~~,,
~.. ••w
0l. No"'- CIIL
-AL.SO'IUIPORAif( LA80REIIIII
-Wll Slill, 11~1-tl822.
CASHIERS
• ~ To UniDICI Trucko Will ttaul jUnk or truh - · saw
AIMI 2 CUhlora 0 Chuck Hom~ pickup lood. 304-el'6-!l035.
or'l Truc:ldood SM Horrier Saleo
Uanoger 0 NATIONAL GUARD
FINAN CIA L
ARMORY, ROUTE 12 NORTH,
POINT PLEASANT, I A.M. 81251
17. P91 17.00 /Hr. No Phone
21
Business
CIIL
own houri. $2011 to S50kJyr 1·

J£r
AERATION UOTORS
Rocalrod. - I - I n ~Ron
1-8110-537-tUI.

37 - doaree
40 F- fiormone
ltrado name)
42 Arrow poloon
44 Gnawing
animal
45 Enlhutllltlc .

12 Crooe
lnocrlpllon
13 NHt ol

320 lloblle Homn

land~nping, aktewalks edged,
ICOI ICJWN. OHIO.
no PIYIMnll after 7 years. 304ltwn cart, ~ COli BiU1104-175- I Mlloo Frorn ProciOVIIIt, MOO ..
755-:.:5=5·~--....,..,-....,..,.~~
7112.
· Sq. Ft. Living Aroa, 2 Srory, 3 -

330kltlaYo

1
5 Information

t

~~~~~~-I .:..:...:....;.;.:...;.:.:..;.....l........:- - 1
for Sala
ANY ODD JOBS: E - polnlo
C0U1m1Ylng, lllrubo I WOOdl ~lmmod,
ONUCRIS,
0om a,_ horM .1,000i-,

31 In. plio .

ACROSS

I

Thursday, Sept. 25, 1997
Give full expression to your ere·
alive talents in the year ahead. Your
'bright ideas will have merit . and
could enhance your present posrtron
or open something entirely new for
you.
LmRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Partie·
ipating in a social event isn't a friv·
olous pursuit for you today. Contacts
established in a convivial environ·
ment will prove helpful later. Know
wheR to look for romance and you'll
find it. The Astra-Graph Matchmak·
er instantly reveals which signs are
romantically perfect for you. Mail
$2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o this news·

._,

""

... ..... v.,c).l(

tl...,..'i,e.tl

you cannot remedy on your own
Stallion, New York, ,NY
today can be solved with qualified
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You
assistants. Do not hcsitatt to ask
might be luckier in financial and
knowledgeable associates for help.
career matters today than you will be
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In
tomorrow. Take advantage of the now
yo11r co.mmerciaf dealing!_ today, be
and do something constructive.
.explicit and dc1ermined regarding
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . your terms. You are m a good posi2 1) Developments you direcl have
tion to negottate.
cxccllenl chances for success today.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) Your
Do not Jet someone who is Jess effec· judgment regarding critic al issues is
live than you serve as your surrogate. on the mark today.' Do not fear if you .
C APRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) .have to make some qui ck decisions
. Watch for unusual opportunities on major developments.
today. because your prospects for
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) The
acquisition and gain from other Jhan pieces should all be· coming together
your customary channels are promis·
no w regarding a mauer you ' ve been
ing.
•
·
hoping would produce personal gain.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) If Get all the loose ends finalized!
a trusted, successful friend wants to
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today,
talk to you today about a new endeav· your leadership qualities are more
or, give him or her your !'"ll attenti~n . pronounced than usual. Do not play
It may be worth explonng.
a subordinate role in a situation that
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You needs a capable manager.
are in 8 good achievement cycle, so
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A
be sun: to establish meaningful objec· friend !flay do some manipulating
lives. Strive for things you were . behind the scenes today to help you
afraid of attempting in the past.
resolve a complex arrangement thai
ARIES (March 21 ·April19) Prob- you can't handle on your own.

•

Astray - Pulse · Realm - Dorsal · STEAMED
A cooling off period may only give people time enough
to get really STEAMED up!

SEPTEMBER 24 I

�4 WHEELERS, JET SKIES, MOTOR CYCLES1
HORSE.TRAILERS
WE WILL TRADE FOR YOUR TOYS OR
ANYTHING ELSE YOU WANT TO GO RID OF.

OPEl
101.-FIL
SAtt-6
AF1II

SUI.I-5
4

727-

21

'

AUTOMATIC, LS PACIWE, •
~R. 1'1l.t CRUISE, ALUM.
loW
WHEELS l MORE
• ,

LOVE

$

LEXUS

LOVE

TOYOTA

1-5

727-7777

-&amp;lflWI-.-.
.-.~\14,­

fOWBiiiWS 181..-tl

. •'

USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS • USED·TRUCKS

·-·

t7 . . . . . . aiAVM •

.. DOOR. AUTO., AIR,

P/lOCICB, I.OADED

\ ....... _

VISIT
UTILITY lOT
I

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

tlaJ~.-cu
HPEED. AIR, AII/FM CASSETTE.
ALUM
WHEEUI
WAI 111.100
............................. .

'9999

.

MCIR.S·II .

tmUTY BOXES , AUTO., 'lot ENG ., READY TO

=~=.~~ ~'~-·-·--·'8850

t51MCWIIII

1 PASSENGER, AUTO., AIR, Pr'WINDOWS,
P/LOCKS. RALLY WHEELS, LOADED,

SHARP

OPEII
101.-FILt·t
SAtt-6

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