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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Indians up 3·1 In
ALCS after 8·7
win over Orioles

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Pick 3:

442

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Pick 4:
7337
Super Lotto:

Mild thle evening,
ehowera likely. Lowe In
the SOe. Tueeday, cooler,
eunny. Hlghe near 60.

6-23-2~2~5-36

Sports on Page 4

Kicker:

304475

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~48,N0.125

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2 Sections, 12 hgn, 35 cente;:
A GanMtt Co. New re~· :~

Reno Won't resign, won't stop probe either
WASHINGTON (AP)- Brushing aside Republican d•mands that she
resign, Attorney General Janet Reno says she will continue to follow the let·
ter of the law in investigating White House fund-raising activities.
And, she said Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press," there was nothing so
far in newly revealed videotapes of White House coffee klatches to indicate
that President Clinton has broken any laws.
Republican critics say Reno should either resign or be subject to impeach·
ment for failing to seek a special prosecutor to probe White House fund·
raising practices during the 1996 presidential campaign. House Speaker Newt
Gingrich, R·Ga., said Saturday that she "looks like a fool" in failing to trig·
ger the Independent Counsel Act.
"Name-calling may be an appropriate tactic in politics, but what we arc
trying to do is conduct the best, most thorough investigation we possibly

can," Reno said of Gingrich's comments.
She said she had no intention of resigning. "What people say about me,
what people threaten, just isn't what should be done in this investigation,"
she said.
Reno has until Wednesday to decide whether to continue an investiga·
tion into fund-raising phone calls Clinton may have made from the White
House in violation of an.18831aw banning political solicitations.in federal
office buildings.
Earlier this month, Reno moved to the next step in looking at phone calls
Vice President AI Gore made from the White House. Her action could lead
to appointment of an independent counsel.
·
However, she said, there was no credible evidence of legal wrongdoing
in the White House coffees and sleepovers involving wealthy donors.

school-funding debate resolved

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In a review of videotapes of the coffees, Reno said Sunday, "we do not
have any indication of criminal activity " by people covered under the lnde·
pendent Counsel Act. including the president.
.
But she said "nothing has been closed and nobody has been exonerated" and people should understand that "this is a massive ongoing criminal
investigation that I'm going to see takes us where the evidence is."
Critics argue that an independent counsel should be named because the
Justice Depanment under the Clinton-appointed Reno has done a haphazard job in the investigation. The conclusion, Sen. Arlen Specter. R-Pa .• said
on CBS' "Face the Nation," is "that there really is a lack of sincere interest in getting to the bottom of what's going on."
"She is fighting for the president of ,the United States instead of doing
her job," Rep. Dan Bunon, R-Ind .. chairman of the House committee inves·
ligating campaign fund raising. said on CNN's "Late Edition. "

,___Not-so-scary monsters-- Small, poor school district wants

Alii 1111,

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 13, 1997

C1117, Ohio Vllley Publllhlng Compony

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lawmakers to create a new system $1.1 million a year, they said.
McCONNELSVILLE (AP) Leaders of the·state's poor school dis· that relies less on local real-estate taxThe district needs about $20 mil·
lion to build two new elementary
tricts say they arc getting poorer as es.
Gov. George Voinovich 's attempt schools and close the old ones. '\'oung ,
the debate over school funding drags
r
to
put
a state sales tax increase on the sWd.
into its seventh month.
Although the state is puuing more
At the 107-year-old Malta Grade November ballot collapsed in early
School building in Morgan Co~nty, August. as conservative House money into school repairs and con·
heavy rains ate away at the sandstone Republicans and Democrats balked. struction, Morgan schools are far
Patience among poor school dis- down the list.
foundation and caused it to sink about
At the current pace, it may he sevthree inches during the last five tricts has begun to wear thin.
"I think they're doing everything . en to I0 years before the district qual·
years.
With 400 students jammed into they can 10 circumvent the coun's ifies for state aid to huild new
the building, classes are beld in stor- decision," said Herbert Young. super· schools, Young said.
Based oo state data, Morgan Local
age rooms and kids eat lunch in the intendent of Morgan Local Schools.
Schools
ranks around the middle in
hallway. The boile~as 100-year·old
To make matters worse, current
Ohio
in
property valuation per stu- ,
parts and often breaks down.
state laws are keeping poor districts
"If it W'IL,ll·PfAAOn, ~would ha~e frgm getting l~id they need. local de~t tby avera.ge income of .its :
re
' k 8llfoi!l . . lowlllltJ ' .
1
been condel!ihed i!really;" Prin~ipal blticials safd:w
"They were high on the hog when - '
Jim Williams told The (Toledo) Bl!lde
Even if voters approved a bond
for a story published Saturday. ·
issue, a state law designed to prevent coal was king. bul now coal is dead." , i
The Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp; districts from going inlo too much said John Kcrezy, a coalition · •
·
Adequacy of School Funding toured debt would cap that amount at about spokesman.
two Morgan County sehools Friday.
The group of public school districts
sued the state over school funding .
The lawsuit led the Ohio Supreme
"
Coun to declare the current school·
funding system unconstitutional sev·
en months ago. The coun set a
'
PACIFIC GROVE, Calif. (AP)- .
'
March 24, 1998, deadline for state
John Denver, whose songs "Rocky
Mountain High" and "Take Me
Home, Counlry Roads' : gained
worldwide appeal, was killed inn single-engine plane crash. He was 53.
"I heard from my sister that yes,
Chester Bowhunters Club.
he
was
on the plane . And he has per·
Services will be held Wednesday,
II a.m. at the Racirie United ished," Teri Mancil, whose sister
Methodist Church with the Rev. Annie was Denver's first wife. said
James Satterfield officiating with today. "He loved Oying. He died
burial following in Letan Falls doing something he loved ."
Mancil, her voice breaking, told
Cemetery. Friends may call Tuesday,
6-9 p.m. at the Cremeens Funeral The Associated Press from her home
Home in Racine and one hour prior in Minnesota that she did not wish to
discuss the death at length. " I should
to the funeral at the church.
not he talking to reporters," she said .
.I
The Monterey County coroner
••
had not yet confirmed his death car·
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ly today. The body was recovered ·
Sunday
from
Monterey
Bay.
two weeks on ~roups with ties to Car·
•
JOHN DENVER
•
The plane. which he owned. was
penter McMillan or Mrs. Jones· legal
•
made of libergla» with a single
. fund .
•
ping•·
sound
prior
to
the
crash.
Car·
The fund's former director, Cindy engine and two scat!\. h was consid'
Hays, will ask Judge Wright this ered an "experimental' ' aircraft . said olyn Pearl said the plane "kind of ;
week to protect donor records for fear Pacific Grove police Lt. Carl Miller: went up a little hit and absolutely ;
It took ofT from Monterey Airpon straight down. not spiraling, just
of harassment.
shootly
after 5 p.m. Sunday. with the absolutely straight down .... I thought
.
But Bennett and his partner,
Mitchell Ettinger. say the rund·rais· firs! rcpons uf a crash at 5:27 p.m. it was doing some kind of acrobatic •
•
move, or something, and then real- •
ing documents will lay hare Mrs. Only one person was ahoard.
••
The plane was flying about 500 ized it wasn 't."
Jones' motives. Thci r longstanding
Denver, a licensed pilot, wa.~ in a '•
theory that she is bankrolled by Clin· feet in the air "when. it just sort of
dropped
unexpectedly
into
the
previous phinc. accident in April
ton's political enemies - a charge
she vigorously dispu1cs - seemed to ocean." Miller said. "When it hit the 1989. He walked away uninjured ;
gain some credence Oct. I when The water it broke into numerous parts. " after the 1931 biplane he was pilot- :
One witness told KCBA· TV that ing spun around 'while taxiing at an •
Rutherford Institute. a Virginia con·
she
saw a puff and heard a "pop- airpon in northern Arizona.
'
servative group,' enlisted as her offi·
cial fund-raising arm.
"We believe she is being con·
trolled by people who arc extreme
,right-wing political Clinton-haters,
and that's relevant to issues of motive
and bias," Bennett said.
CINCINNATI (APJ - The num· cd bad times and 16 percent said they
ber of Ohioans who expect conditions though! business conditions wjll 1M;
to be good for U.S. businesses dur· mixed.
The 63 percent figure bested the
ing the next year is at the highest lev·
el since the Ohio Poll started in 1981 . poll's previous high of 61 percent in
Most of those surveyed in an Ohio 1985 and was a marked increase from
sive interplanetary probe ever and, to Poll released Sunday also said ceo· the last poll, taken in April: At that
the horror of anti-nuclear activists, nomic times are good enough to war· !ime, 49 percent said they expected
carries the most plutonium ever. Pro· rant major household purchases and good business conditions to continue.
ject scientists assured the launch was that Ohioans are optimistic about
Seventy-three percent of those
safe. and even brought their children their own families ' financial condi- surveyed said now is a good time lo
and grandchildren to watch it.
buy a large household item, 16 per·
tions.
When it finally is launched, Cassi·
The poll. sponsored by The cent said it i.s a bad time' and II perni will swoop past Venus twice, past !Cincinnati Enquirer and the Univer· cent were neutral.
Earth once - coming within 500 sity of Cincinnati, said 63 percent of
The telephone poll of 865 adult•
miles - and by Jupiter once for grav· those questioned wert confident U.S. thioughout Ohio was conducted Sept. •
ity-assist,cd speed. The. spacecraft businesses will experience good 4-17. The results have a margin pf •
•
•
won't reaeh Saturn until 2004 after times in the coming 12 months. error of plus or minus 3.3- percentage
••
· lt'avelirg 2.2 billion. thiles.
1\venty·one percent said they expect· points.

.

Twtnty·month-old Ryan Brolhere, eon of
Amy Brotherl of Rutland, doten't eeem too
lmpreeeed with thle Halloween display nt up
by hie grandmother, Janet Tillie, It her Main
Stl'Ht, Rutland, realdence. Brothers Aid the

dlepllly, whlchfelturnslx.monltere arrayed In
tha front yard, hae drawn plenty of con:nnente,
adding that people frequently atop their care In
.front of the houH to look.

Singer John Denver, 53, :
killed in airplane crash · :~..·

Syracuse youth killed in ATV accident
A 17-year-old Syracuse youth is
dead following a Saturday morning
all-terrain vehicle wreck near Letan
Falls.
Shaun Paul Harris was one of two
people on a 4-wheeled ATV when it
tumbled over a high wall at a Letan
· Falls area gravel pit. Harris and a passenger, who has not been identified
by authorities, were both knoc,ked

Alr,AM/FM

.....,

unconscious in the accident, according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
When the passenger came to, he
attempled to put Harris on the ATV
before going for help, according to a
sheriffs department repon. Failing
this, he then went for help alone.
After summoning help, the pas·
senger left the scene but met with
deputies Sunday to give a statement.

Soulsby did not have additional in for·
mation concerning the incident as of
press time this morning.
Harris was transponed by helicopter ambulance to St. Mary's Hos·
pital in Huntington, W.Va. where he
died Saturday evening .
He was a senior at Southern High
School and a member of the Mt.
Moriah Church of God and the

Testimony ·h1 Jones•Ciinton c·ase to start this week

4.1•!.

AS
LOW
AS

Financing
lvallallll

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sworn
testimony in the sexual harassment
suit against President Clinton begins
this week with all sides scurrying for
damaging evidence and digging in for
a protracted standoff. Talk of an out·
of-court settlement is dead for now.
Th.. depositions stan off simply
enough, Monday in Little Rock,
Ark.: Paula Jones"mother and sister
will testify to what she told them of
the alleged 1991 hotel-room
encounter. Next week, former co·
worker Pamela Blackard and friend
· Debra Ballentine, both confidantes of
Mrs. Jones ai the time, are to give
depositions.
From there, scheduled testimony
veers from the principals. Subpoenas
berray strategies: his to prove her a .
profit-driven liar, hers to prove him
a chronic adulterer.
It is Clinton's often-ignored code·
fendant who will peer [nto Mrs.

Jones' sexual past - · a defense tbe
president's team was forced to for·
swear months ago after an uproar by
women's groups.
Some l,ialf-dozen wilnesscs to
Mrs. Jones' sexual reputation, includ·
ing past boyfriends and a former
employer, have been subpoenaed by
Bill Bristow, attorney for Arkansas
state trooper l;?anny Ferguson. They
will testify in depositions beginning
Oct. 17.
B&lt;)lh Clinton and Ferguson are
named in the $700,000 suit, which
U.S. District Court Judge Susan
Wright Webber scheduled for trial
next May.·
,
Susan Carpenter McMillan. a Los
Angeles public-relations woman who
acts as Mrs. Jones ' spokeswoman,
accused Bristow of doing the president's diny work.
"It disgusts me, and Mr. Clinton 's
lawyers are letting it happen . These

are the same tired old tactics !hal have
been used against rape victims and
molested children," she said.
Clinton, who was Arkansas governor when he allegedly propositioned the former state employee,
stands accused of sexual harassptent.
Mrs . Jones sued Ferguson for
defamation, fingering 'him as the
source of a published account that
depicted her as eager to be Clinton's
mistress.
Bristow said he is not inOuenccd
by the president's lawyers. "I'm
doing what is best for my client. If
one files a defamation case, one puts
one's personal reputation at issue,"

said the auorncy. who once defend·
cd-one -of Clinton's majw: political
foes in an Arkansas criminal matter.
The president's defense team. led
by Washington powerhouse Raben
Bennett , served subpoenas in the la't

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Poll: Ohioans expect good
conditions for businesses

Cassini launch postponed until Wednesday

OPEl

His comrades were tong gone.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
They
had fled, fearing a launch acci- ·Dangerously strong wind and
dent
would
cause carcinogenic plu·
computer problems forced NASA to
tonium
to
rain
down, despite NASA's
delay the launch today of its Saturn
assurances
that
everything would be
probe, Cassini, powered by 72
safe
even
if
the
rocket blew up.
pounds of highly radioactive pluloIf NASA had launched the mam·
nium.
moth
Tilan 4·B rocket this morning,
NASA said il would try again
and
if
it had exploded at just the right
VVednesday.
•
moment,
the I00 mph wind at alti·
The lone protester. Kevin Marsh,
was thrilled with the poft1&gt;9nemen1. tudes of more !han seven miles
"I love it!" he said. "They call it would have blowri rocket debris
the winds. I call it the hand of God." down the Florida coast, said Air

MOI..fll.t-9
Sltt-6

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Force Capt. Scott Jacobs, a meteo·
rologist.
Chunks of metal also might have
crashed onto occupied buildings at
the Cape Canaveral Air Station and
adjoining Kennedy Space Center.
NASA called off the predawn
launch attempt not only because of
the wind but because of computer
problems thai cropped up at the last
minute with ground equipment 1111d,
to a lesS&lt;;r degree, the Cassini probe.
It is NASA's largest, most expen·

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,CoiJlmentary

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page2

llonclly, Of.1oblr 13, 19t7

Meigs EMS logs 11 calls

OHIO Weather

The Daily Sentinel

Cuban cigars roll into the United States

By JKk Andenon
111d J1n Molter
'£Jta6lislittf in 1948
The JllllWing.trendiness of ciaars
is
making
life even busier than nor111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
IIlii
for
U.S.
Customs officials in
814-992-2156 ·Fax 992·2157
South Florida.
Once concerned mainly with
catching Latin American drug dealers shipping their illicit wares across
4
the Gulf of Mexico, Customs offiA Gannett Co. Newspaper
cials now have to contend with a
growing trade in contraband cigars
ROBERT L WINGETT
from
Cuba.
Publl•her
With its large Cu~an exile community, Miami has long been a center for anti-Castro sentiment. But
CHARLENE HOEFUCti
MARGARET LEHEW
that hasn't stopped many Floridians
Controller
G-rll Mlflllllr
from tri'ing to make a buck off
Cuba's reputation as the producer of
the world's best cigars. Last year,
Customs officials seized more than
•
SI million worth of Cuban cigars, or
•
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four times as many as were seized
just two years earlier.
But Customs officials we spoke
·with say the popularity of Cuban
cigars has also crealed another problem for tobacco-lovers : counterfeit
By The Associated Press
.
Cubans.
Today is Monday. Oct. 13, the 286th day of 1997. There are 79 days left
A box of good Cuban cigars can
in the year.
cost as much as $300 in Cuba.
Today's Highlight in History:
Smugglers must of · course also
On Oet. 13. 1792. the come"tone of the executive mansion. later known worry about bringing their contraas the White House, was laid during a ceremony in the District of Columbia. band into the United States, where
On this date:
In A.D. 54, Roman emperor Claudius I died. after being poisoned by his
wife. Agrippina.
In 1775. the U.S. Navy had its origins as the Continental Congress
ordered the construction of a naval neet.
In 1843, the Jewish organization B' nai B'rith was founded in New York
City.
In 1845. Texas ratified a state constitution.
In 1943, during World War II. Italy declared war on Germany, its onetime Axis partner.
In 1944, American troops entered Aachen, Germany.

~

:Today in history

they
can
charge many
times that
amount for
the premium
smokes.
With
prices
so
high,
it
comes as no
surprise that
some enterprising con artists have begun taking
Jess-expensive ~igars and selling
them as Cubans, simply by putting
on fake labels. Most buyers would
never know the difference -- until
they light up their illicit smoke.
The profit margins ·for sellers is
enormous . Instead of going to the
trouble of bringing in expensive cigars, they enjoy fantastic mark-ups by
peddling cheap imitations at premiurn prices.
·
Cuban cigars -- like all products
from that country -- have been illegal in America since 1963, when
President Joh~ F. Kennedy imposed
an embargo on that Communist
country. But according lo Kennedy
aide Pierre Salinger, the cigar-loving
late president bought about I ,000
Cuban smokes before announcing
the embargo.

And ever since then, the wealthy
or well-connected have still managed to get their hands on Cubans. A
loophole in tlie embargo allows
Americans visiting Cuba to bring
home up to $I 00 worth of the
smokes, which is considered enough
for personal usc. Others get their fix
by bringing them in from other
countries, which don't have any
bans on Cuban products.
Even Customs officials some·
times get into the act. Bill Anthony,
the director of public affairs for the
Customs Service in Washington,
likes a good Cuban cigar as much as
anyone. He recently got the chance
to sample the forbidden fruit when
he attended the wedding of his old
friend and roommate, Rep. Dana
Rohrabacher. R-Calif., in France.
Anthony's indulgence was completely legal, and he says he avoided
any temptation to bring some home
with him. But he did confess to us
that l)tere are pictures of him at the
wedding enjoying one of Fidel Castro's finest exports. He added that he
took the label off before the picture
was snapped, lest anyone get the
wrong idea about Customs' commi!ment to enforcing. the embargo.
Customs offietals also note that
catching cigar smugglers takes . a

/

.-·Letters to the editor
'

:· Upset with trustees
. Dear Editor,
This spring a logging company destroyed portions of Lebanon Township
Road 40 in Meigs County. Before the loggers left the county, I advised the
Lebanon Township Trustees that I he road could not be traveled by automo, ' biles.
After nothing was done concerning this. I requested that the Lebanon
. Township Trustees rebuild the road. They did nothing. When the property
· owner who hired the loggers who destroyed the road requested that the road
· · · be declared "abandoned and vacated" the Lebanon Township Trustees
· ·approved this request, even though the legal requirements of the Ohio
' .. Revised Code were never met. The Lebanon Township Trustees were told
·.that there wi!S a house on this road and I believe they knew this would "land
. · . lock" my 40 acres of mature timber. my house, and other taxpayers' proper.. ties. "Land locking" the properties makes them worthless as there is no legal
access. Why is it that the Lebanon Township Trustees have turned their
• back• on this situation? Don't they work for the tax payers?
Ed Fischer,
.
Dublin

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Get involved

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: - -Dear Editor,
· · · In response to Joan May's questions to the Meigs County Commissioners
on OCt. 6.
·: : You are right, Joan. there arc no guidelines at the Meigs County Home,
::.:a. to who goes there. The fees arc not right , if people can afford to pay more
: :money they should!
: : But whose fault is that?
Our county commissioners, no one else's. .
Joan, these people can not live alone, or I'm sure they would. Too bad we
aren't all able to take care of our self. for what ever reason.
· .
Joan, you mention the coffee for nine months was $444. Believe me the
price was not out of sight and was no luxury with I 1 people drinking it three
times a day, seven days a week: 231 cups and may he even the workers drink• ing coffee also, I don 't know.
:
Check the price of coffee at the stores today. Joan, it is out of sight. I don't drink it. but I do buy it for company.
.
With the company furnishing the coffee and the coffee pot and maintc. n.ance i.ncluded, ask.any coffee drinker. it isn't oul of sight!
.
... As for them buyong there meat :u a Syracuse market, their meat is quali ; : : ~y meat and their prices arc right . You would be surprised how .many people
.go there for the~r meat products, evon other county offices. .
, · All the questions you asked· the commissioners have been asked several
times over with no answers given! Just blank looks. like what did, you ask
that quest&lt;on for.
: Joan. we also ask about the extenstoh office expenses. they come out of
• tlte county home budget. If the levy fails, the commissioners have to furnish
: tlte extension office with a place to go and pay all expenses.
.. Please support our Me1gs County Home! Some of our commissioners ·
. hope it fails.
.
Our Metgs County property can not be replaced 1f sold' But our county
·. commtsstoners can.
Please vote yes Nov. 4.
Sincerely,
•
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Betty Farrar
Pomeroy

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. In what boyan! way of getting her to
turned out school."
to be his
After all, Oxfeld continued. when
farewell
the president traveled to Stanford
column.
with his daughter, they were accomOxfeld
panied by . "the usual phalanx of
noted that aides and a sizable Pfess corps ... if
since
it Stanford wants us all to forget that
was
Chelsea is the daughter of the most
announced powerful man in the world. the
Chelsea
White House must also make an
Clinton
effort to play along."
was com- · Stanford Daily editor Carolyn
Hentoff
ing to Stan- Sleeth saw only insubordination in
ford. "everyone at this university Oxfeld's commentary. "I was very
has gone to great pains assuring the clear about what I wanted from my ·
world that she'll have a typical col- .staff," she said . "The policy remains
lege experience. 'As much as possi- the same. He violated it. He"s not
ble,' goes the offltlial line. crafted going to be working here any
with precisibn by the university 's more."
spokespeople. 'we plan to treat her
.Mr. Oxlctd:s introdu~tion tu this
like any other Stanford student.... sudden change of fortune in journalHowever, Oxfcld went on, " Why ism reminded me of the time I was
are we all expected to hend over fired from my college newspaper.
backward to give Chelsea and her
The Northeastern Ne":s in
family a 'normal' Stanford ex peri- Boston. where I was editor. had a
ence while the first family itself is stalf of muckr:tkers in the spirit t&gt;f
under no similar obligation'? " (Her I. F. Stone. We covered the b&lt;~&gt;ming
presence is not exactly giving the anli-Scmitism in 1hc l' ity. omd tx~~an
rcsl of the students a nnrmal Stom- lo wonder aloud whL•th~r s•Hnc
ford experience.)
memhers uf the b&lt;xtrd ,,f trustees
To secure his point about the lirst knew em•ugh ao&lt;&gt;ut .edu,·ati&lt;&gt;n I&lt;&gt;
parents, the ex-columnist quoted a help run Nurthe:IStcrn linivcrsit~ ··
Stanford Daily alumnus. Philip
At last. word cam,• Juwn tnun
Taubman of the New York Times:
the president that we must either
"If the long-tenn goal .is to dis- conccntmte solely-- and r••&lt;itivcly ·
courage · a preoccupation with · on campus :1ffairs ur ahandun '""
Chelsea Clinton, the White Hou'c newspaper ufl'iccs where we had a
should have considcr~d a less flam- continuous hl;1d;.jad;. ganll.' gnin!!

between deadlines.
All but one member of the staff
refused to stay under those condilions, and he ~ 11'&lt; new editor.
As one of our onfroc~cd joumaiiSts
said as we were leaving, "There's
always a scab." Moreover. for SO~f~C
years, the issues I edited were
removed from the college library.
In time. I wa• grateful for the dismissal. I missed the bylines and the
pursuit of the stories, hut the expericncc gave me a pa.sionate interest in
the freedom of the pres.• and the
First Amendment, even though
Nonhcastem Univc"ity wa.• a privale sch&lt;iol.
I expect that Jcs.•e Oxfcld will not
he diminished in the least by his.
instant removal from the Stanford
Daily. He has left a mark.
of
morse. has the editor. who in a
recent editorial said: "We arc dedicatcd to preserving hoth the.right uf
freedom of speech and the principle
uf individual privacy." -·
But Chelsea Clinton, however
inmluntarily. is a public ligure. and
if a culumnist cannot wrilc abou1 the
cfl~cts of a puhlic tigurc 's presence
una campus -- hitherto known for its
openness -- he will not he the only
nne silenced in what used to he an
upennewspaper.
Nut Hentoff is a nationally
"'no\l'ned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the
Bill of RiRhts.

s,,,

Tamraz incident is eerily .familiar
By Joseph Spear
During a 30-year career as a
Washington joomalist, I've seen a
lot of scandals come and go, and
now I'm seeing them come around
again. I don 't know whether to laugh
because I've got some expertise or
cry because I'm swiftly becoming a
relic.
.
The Roger Tamraz incident is a
case m pomt.
· Surely you ha\/Clt 't forgotten
Tamraz already. He is the 57-yearold Lebanese-American oil financier
who gleefully told the Senate last
month of his efforts to buy his way
into . the White House to lobby the
presodent for help on a business ven ture.
·
'
Tamraz wanted to build a pipeline
that would transport Caspian basin
crude oil across Azerbaijan, Armenia and Turkey to the Mediterranean
Sea. He felt he needed U.S. approval
to pull it off. and he hired an ex-CIA
station chief to help him open doors
m Washington . Tamraz attended
meetings at the State, Energy and
Commerce Departments and conferrcd with a staffer at the National
Security Council. But he had a spot·
ty history of contacts with the CIA.
and he had been charge.d •with
embezzlement from a Beirut bank .

His
appeals
were thus
coolly ·
received.
Undaunted. Tamraz began
writing
checks to
the
DemocraSpur
tic National
Comminee. Three hundred thousand
dollars later, he was attending White
House coffees and actually got the
chance to speak to the president
abOIJt his pipeline project.
Rewind the tape 13 years. I was
the editor and chief of staff for
investigative reporter Jack Anderson, and one day I got a tip that a
Greek wheeler-dealer named Basil
Tsakos was making the rounds in
Washington to tout an oil pipeline
project.
Tsakos wanted to build his crude
tube across Africa. from Saudi Arabia to Cameroon, and he too thought
he needed American help. He hired a
former spook and friend of CIA
director William Casey and, presto,
he was soon being received in high

places.
I had never heard &lt;If Basil 'l&gt;akus.
so I turned Ill an uld frien&lt;l anJ une
of the most rcsllurccful pcnpk in
Washington, Greek juurnaltst Eli:IS
Demctracopoullls. In 1'167. Elias
had escaped the dutches uf the
colonels who had seized pnwer in
Greece. In 1972. he lmd survived ;t
threat by the Nixon administration tu
kidnap him and deport him hack Ill
Athens. He knew cvcryunc wnnh
knowing in the intcrnatinnal community.
·
"I will sec what I can dn." Eli:IS
said of my Tsakos entreaty. A few
• weeks later. he laid a thick Jile on
my desk. It was the Greek guvcrnmcnt's complete and secret record of
its many investigations of one Basil
Tsakos. He had been an international arms merchant, and was ... "en
then, authorities believed, trying to
sell U.S. attack helicopters to Iraq.
He was also suspected of spying for
Britain in Greece.
The Anderson team quickly went
to _,.,ork, and what we discovered
was nothing short of astonishing.
Tsakos had enlisted the services of a
pa.-.el of American heavyweights,
' including a former Navy secretary, a
former Arms Control and Disarmament Agency director, a former

Leroy Frank Bright, Sr.

MICH.

•

IToledo I 56" I

Republican Nati&lt;&gt;nal Committee
nh..·mht:r anti a fonncr m~sistant sccrt:HH"\' of Sl~tl~.

T;akos had alsn befriended a
f"l\\'erful Unitt'd States senator with
a pristin.i rqiuh1tinn. Republican
Mark Hmlicld nf Oreglln, whtt had
wriltcn u letter in suppnn of the
pipeline pruj&lt;cl. had personally spoken tn the president nf Sudan about
it and had arranged meetings k .
Tsakns . f-urther digging showed tiillf
Tsakns had concurrently puid Hatlicld 's wife $55.tKMI fur some qucstinnahlc real cstntc und ~nn~ulting
s~rvicc ~.

IND.

• IColumbus Iss' l

Shaun Paul Harris
..

'·

Today's weather forecast
. Ohio
Tonight...Showers likely. Ending
around midnight west and central.
Breezy and turning cooler. Lows mid
40s to mid SOs.
Tuesday...Partly 10 mostly sunny
west and central. Variable cloudiness
northeast with a chance of mainly
morning showers. Cooler. Highs in

The following land transfers were
orded recently in the office of
rec
Mei~s County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton·
Deed ·Lowell and Nonna Jean
ld'
d Clyde Clonch
Greer, D rae me. an E .
d Ruth
James :, onnte, rnte _an
Johnson to Teresa K. Eakms, Syracuse parcels;
.
Deed, Ke':fY and ,Bonnie Hershman to Bonnte Hershman, Pomeroy
lots;
Deed, Thomas and Wanda
Dewhurst to DavidA. and Alberta K.
Hysell, Chester;

Ge

•

•

·

Deed, Bruce W. and Dawn R. Reffeu to bck E. and Karen S. Clark,
Columbia'
l\i ht ~f way Deborah McKnight
8
'
·
and Brenda Ran.gel_to Leadmg Creek
Conservancy Dtstrtct, Rutland;
Right of way, Carolleffe~ Snyder
10 LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, Todd Grover to
LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, Mike and Joy Hysell
to LCCD. Rutland;
Deed. Roberta M. and J.B .
O'Bri.en to Peoples Banking and
Trust, Pomeroy lot.

Shaun Paul Harris, 17, I209 College Road. Syracuse, died late Saturday,
Oet. II. 1997, at St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington, W.Va. as a result of a 4wheeler accident earlier that day.
Born May · 13, 1980, in Gallipolis. the son of Paul Eugene "Gene!'
and Sherry R. Gibbs Harris of Syracuse, he was a .senior at Southern
High School, a member of the Mount
Moriah Church of Gad and the
Chester Bowhunters Club.
In additioh to his parents. he is
survived by a sister, Heather Harris,
and a brother, Joshua Harris, both of
Syracuse. He is also survived by his
maternal grandfather and stepgrandmother, Gary and Pat Gibbs of
Racine; paternal grandfather, ·Paul
Harris of Minersville; several aunts
and uncles and two special friends,
Tommy Gheen of Long Bottom and
Brandon floyd Of Pomeroy.
He was preceded in death by
his paternal grandmother, Minnie
Goodnite Harris, and maternal grandmother, Donna Huddleston Gibbs.
Shaun Paul Harris
Services will he held Wednesday. 11 a.m. at the Racine United Methodist Church with the Rev. James Satterfield officiating. Burial will be in Letart Falls Cemetery.
.
Friends may call Tuesday, 6-9 p.m. at the Cremeens Funeral Home 10
Racine and one hour prior to the funeral at the church.

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
Thanks.
To all of you who have gone to the
work and expense of preparing outdoor Halloween scenes at your homes
this year. The,decorations get mo~
extensive each year and more plenuful. it seems. To be sure, your efforts
do lift the spirits of a lot of us as we
drive by. What would we do without
your ambitious ones?
,.

Her car went out of control and
she went into a culvert. She was
injured but was given much assistance by passers-by. One man pulled
wires under the hood of her vehicle
to avena fire while others helped get
her out of the vehicle. She was taken to the hospital by an emergency
squad and incidentally. is still on a
cane as a result of her injuries.
Lorna has always wanted to thank
the gentleman who pulled the wires
of the vehicle to avoid a fire but never knew who he was until last week
when she was in Wendy's. There, a
man approached her and asked it she
were the woman in the car at the ttme
of that March accident.
She
acknowledged that and he turned out
to be the man who pulled the wiring.
It was Richard DilL So Lorna did
fmally get a chanc~-~o thank him.

Again this year, through the efforts
of the Riverbend Arts Council, the
Eastern and Meigs Local School
Districts will be the recipients of arts
in education programs.
The Tuppers Plains Elementary
School, the Meigs Junior High
School and the Middlepot;t Elementary School will have an artist in residence during the new school year.
A few years back, most arts in
education grants went to cities, bill
A reminder that the Tuesday
the Ohio Arts Council, thanks to the
evening
meeting of the Meigs PiaRiverbend Arts Council. has become
betcs
SIJppon
Group to be held at 7
aware ol'thc need forthc programs in
in
the
Veterans
Memorial Hosp.m.
Southern Ohio. If you have any
questions about the upcoming pro- pital cafeteria, is not only open to VIcLettie Leota Connolly McCain. 93, state Route 248, Long Bottom, died
grams. call Jeanette Thomas at 992- tims of the disease but also to their
Sunday evening, Oct. 12, 1997, at her son's residence in Coolville.
relatives and friend s.
5696.
She was born Feb. 19, 1904, in Smithville, W.Va., daughter of the late
You Middleport residents who arc • Remember when the older l)llks
Anderson and Alice Campbell Connolly. She was .a homemaker. a member
used
to seeing Betty Frazier doing her used all of those clever little sayings
of the Keno Christian Church of Christ where she was a Sunday school
to help us with a philosophy of life·•
teacher a longtime member of the Ohio State Grange, a member of the Ohto regular walks, don't look for her again I particularly .remember the one
Farm Bureau and a member of the American Association of Retired Persons. for a while. Betty recently fell m the which advised : "Never put off until
Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law. Norm~n Dale and .Audelle yard at her home and fractured her tomotTow what you can do today" .
right ankle. She's now sporttng a cast
McCain of Reedsville, and Gale Lee and Zetah McCam of Coolvtlle; one
from the toes to her knee. and that's I'm getting more and more away from
brother, Joseph (:onnolly itf ~dsville; one sister, Martha M~ of B~,l­ going
to cut down on her mobility. . thet, justrawl'lillg lite advice. in fact.
pre; four grandchildren; one great-grandchild and four stepgrandchtldren and
Yep--I'm putting off until tomorrow
several nieces and nephews.
·
.
Tis n small world.
.
. what I don't want to do lnday. "Arc
She was preceded in death by her husband, Dana Caldwell McC~m; an
Last March, Lorna Seth of you doing.that, too '? Come on. now.
·infant son, Charles Leonard McCam; one foster son, Harlts E. Frank, three
Pomeroy was in an auto accident on Don't tcU .me I'm alone in this. Do
brothers, Everette, William and Homer Connolly; two ststers. Ellen Wells
Route 7 near the Gavin Power Plant. keep smihng.
·
.
and Ermalene Johnson.
Services will be held Thursday at 2 p.m. at the White Funeral Home tn
Coolville with Pastor David Tysinger officiating. Burial will be tn Sand Hill
Cemetery, Long Bottom.
·
·
Friends may call Wednesday, 1-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Franklin County.
LIMA - Sarah Liggett. I7. of
No injuries or citatiOns were let a passenger out of the car when his accidents on Ohio roads over the Delphos, driver in a , onc -vc~icle
reported after an accident at the vehicle was struck in the front side by weekend, the State Highway Patrol accident on an Allen County ro~d .
and other law enforcement agencies
Kroger parking lot in Pomeroy on Deborah Kennedy, 40, Pomeroy.
The
department
reported
light
said
today.
·
Saturday morning.
The patrol counts fatalities from 6
According to the Pomeroy Police damage to Upton's 1990 Ford, and
Department, Benjamin Upton, 78, moderate damage to Kennedy'~ 1990 p.m. Friday until midnight Sunday.
~PRING UAllEV CINEMA
The dead :
Reedsville, had pulled up to the curb Dod~\! .
446·4524
near the front entrance of the store to
SUNDAY
OS 8 neW
CLEVELAND- Alfred L. HoiHolur Medkal Center
loway II. 21, hometown not available,
Discharges OcL 10 - Brandi motorcyclist that collided with a car
Trent,
Todd Murphy, Eleanor Stew- on a city street.
Am Ele Power ....................... 46~
art, William Cremeans.
SATURDAY
Akzo .....................................92'\'.
AmrTech ...............................67\
Births - Mr. and Mrs. James
MANSFIELD- Kiuhalinc OlmAshland 011 ........................... 53~
Burris, daughter, Vinton; Mr. and stead, 33, of Nova. passenger on a
AT&amp;T .................................... 45'\'.
Mrs. Robert Lambert, son, Oak Hill. motorcycle that collided with anothBank One ..............................57'.1
Discharges Oct. 11 - Michele er vehicle on state Route 545 in RichBob Ev•n• ............................19%
Childers.
Mrs. David Holley and land County.
Borg·Wamer .~ ........... :...........60~
daughter,
M~:
Donald Stamper and FRIDAY NIGHT
Champlon ............................te"'..
Charm Shps ............................5'o
daughter, M~ . 'James Burris and
CHAGRIN FALLS - Nancy
City Holdlng .......................... 40~
daughter.
Pierce, 46, of Chagrin Falls. driver in
Federal Mogul ...................... 41l.
Discharges O.L 12 - Charles a two-vehicle accident on a Gcauga
Gannen ................. ,.................55
Georgi,
Mrs. Robert Lambert and County road .
Goodyear .............................. 70~,
son,
Elias
Hatfield. Mrs. Anthony
COLUMBUS - Brenda Lafusc,
Kmart .................................... 14\'.
Buck
and
son.
38
of Mount Sterling, passenger in
Land• End ............................ 31 \'.
Ltd......................................... 24'7.
(Pl1bllis.Jl~wlth~:;:;ij,.. a t~o-vehicle accident on U.S. 62 in
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 19'-

Lettie L. McCain

Five people killed in Ohio .
weekend traffic accidents.

•

B'Jr~:!}.~~~a:!!~~~:tramc

No one hurt in accident

ANNUAL MEETING TUESBAY • The annual meeting of the
Meigs County Ferm Bul'lllu will be hlld Tulldfly, 7:01p.m. It the
Meigs Senior Citizen• Center. Enterlllnment will be provided by
gospal singer 'Jan end Kathy", Jan Llvlnder and Klthy
McDaniel who have been ptrformlng together for 12 yaars and
have recorded thrw albume. They ars aesoclatld with the Syra·
t:use Nlzar- Church. Trull- and dllegates will bl elected
and memberl will vote on resolutlonl for the state platform. State
trueteea will give reporta. Tlcklte for the dinner are $5.50 for
adultl and $3.50 for children and mey be purchased from any
board member or from tha offlca, 382 E..t S.C:ond St., Pomeroy.
RIMI'VItlonl mey bl made by calling 9920.2403. Ed Holter Ia
Mttlga County Farm Buruu pre1ldent.

Meigs announcement$
Dance to be held
A round and square dance will be
held Tuesay from 7 to 10 p.m. at the
Long Bottom Community Building.
Smoky Mountain Drifters will pro-

The Daily Sentinel
IVSPSII).Htl
Publl•hed r.~ny 110crnoon. Mond•y throujlh
ftidlly, Ill C.ourt St .• Pomeroy, 01\lo. b~ the
Ohio V1llev Publlshint~ ('(lmpMiy!GMnell 01.,
Pomeroy, 0h6n -4$769, Ph. 992-2156. S«ond
dan pot.IIJII: paid II Pomeroy, Ohin.
M•llltr: Tht A.uociRtcd J'ren, 11nd the Ohic\
NtWJpllptt Auoclllioo.

POSTMAS'J'I.R: Send addrtn co rn:c:tiatll to
The D•IIY Senlincl. Ill Ceturt St., Ponwror.
Qtlto 4~1HJI.

SVIISCIIIPI10N ltATES
By C•Mer or Met« Rotlle
On&lt; W..t ........................ ,.................... .$2~:
One Month ............................................ ....$11.
One Year ............................................... II04.1JJ

vide the music.
Conference set
A Sunday School growth conference will be held at the First Southern Baptist Church Monday through
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Dr. Randy Millwood from the New Orleans Baptist
Theological Seminary will be at the
church.
Home&lt;omlng planned
The Carpenter Baptist Church
located on State Route I43, Carpenter, will observe 'its homecoming
Sunday. Dinner will be at noon.
afternoon services I:30 p.m. ·with
special singm. Joe Gwinn of Gallipolis will be the speaker. John
Elswick is pastor.

7

H

0VB .........................................37

One Valley ............................ 36'/oo
Peoplea ..................................45
Prem Flnl............................... 23lo
Rocltwell ........................... ,...57\'.
RD.Shell., ............................. 57'!..
Shoney's ................................5'1.
Star Bank ..............................
'
Wenctv's ...............................231.
worthlngton .........................

.

_._,._

4n.
2m.

PI't I

s

I

CRISPY STRIPS
J_

MEAL

s

• Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy • Cole Slaw
• Biscuit

.

OnI~

StNGU: COPY PRICE

O.ily .................................................... 3S Cc•t•
SuMaibers not dclirina to pay IM c~~r6er IRII)'
remit In 1i1Ydct dired 10 T1le D1ily Sentinel
a• 111trtt, alx or 12 rnon.ih balta. Cmllt will be
Jive" ctn1a cldl Wftk,

No

111blcripdon

by m•il permllled I• aru1

where home carr.,r ~erviw Maw1lllbl~ .

hhlillwf rntl'\'tl tht rl,tlt 10 ltdjltll fllel duf•

lnll U•e ""*rlptlon period. Sut&gt;tcripUon rate

dlilnJCI ·mJy bt ~mpknt~ntfd by cltiiiJinl 1111
dvrllion"" lbe tubteripeioll.

M4 tL&amp;UUCRtmONS
M&lt;1p Coool1
., W..b................. ... .................

1-

·f'·:;
l6 w..b ....... ,......................................... SJ.,.
llw..b ..............................................
....,..,-M&lt;tpc_,
13
stns~

Woeb ............................................... .$ 29·~
26 - .:............................................... $56.72

l l - . ............................................... 11119.

I

the 50s.
Extended ro-IISt
Wednesday... A chance of showe"
northeast. Dry elsewhere. Lows in the
30s and highs in the low to mid 50s.
Thursday...A chance of showers.
Lows near 40. Highs in the .50s.
Frlday.. .A chance of showers.
Lows in the 30s. Highs in the SOs.

Recorder posts land transfers

f

Before the scandal ran its ·cnursc.
the Scnmc ethics 4.:ommiucc and the
Justice Department investigated the ·
Hatfield-T.' akos relationship (hotlt
eventually dropped their pmhcsl.
and the Hattie ids donated $55.000 t&lt;&gt;
a children's hospital . There had hecn
no improprieties. they said, hut there
had hecn an appearance of such and
"an error in judgment."
Roger Tamraz might have heen
new news to some. but he wa.• old
news to vintage newshounds who
have been there, done that.
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated .
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Auoclatlon.

Leroy !"rank Bright, Sr., 90, Dusky Street, Syracuse, died Saturday, Octo' ber II, 1997, at his residence following a lengthy illness.
·He owned and operated service stations for many years at various locaPA. . tions in Columbus, had a trucking company, operate(! several other busi·
nesscs in Columbus and Zanesville 'and was a longtime contract distributor
of newspapers for the former Colum~us Citizen and Citizen -Joum~l . ,
Mr. Bright was born June 7, 1907, mTexas. He was ra1sed 1n a children s
home after his parents were killed in a train accident when he was a young·
ster. He came to Ohio after running away, from the orphanage as a teenager.
He is survived by his wife of S6 years, Elizabeth S. Edwards Bright; two
sons Leroy Frank Bright, Jr., Mandram, Fla.; and Gordon Fredrtck (Kris)
Bright, Slidell, La.; a grandson whom he reared, G. Scott (Connie) Bright,
Columbus; several other grandchildren, great grandchildren and nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be Wednesday at I p.m. at the Pomeroy Chapel of
Fisher Funeral Home with Rev. Chad Emrick officiating. Burial will be in
Gilmore Cemetery at Forest Run. Calling hours at the funeral home will be
W. VA.
from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
·

•

IMansflfld 156' l•

The first daughter and the gag rule

By Nat Hentoff
During my first visit to Stanford
University a few years ago, members of the law faculty and the
administration made a prideful point
of telling me that Stanford h~ --·for
years -- voluntarily abided by the
First Amendment It was important,
they said, to imbue that academic
community with the spirit of the
fount of Americanism, even though
a.• a private school it did not have to.
That lesson, however, has not had
Dear Editor,
•
I have read the·other letters to the editor. I knew that there were Christian much effect on Carolyn Sleeth. ediyouth centers. I did not know that they were opened to any youth. As Chris- · tor of the Stanford Daily. Recently
tians our churches arc qne of the greatest foundations for everything that we she fired columnist and longtime
paid staff member Jesse Oxfeld. Prebelieve in and hold to he true.
viously,
he had been the paper's
That these youth centers allow any youth to usc their acnte" only proves
:·!heir devotion to thC teachings of Jesus Christ. These centers arc the one managing editor for special section~.
· clean and safe place for our young people that they can usc all year around. His offense was mentioning Stan. In response to the gentleman from Portland. yes Meigs County does need ford fresh woman Chelsea Clinton in
.• :' •more jobs and industry. and we must all ask our own questions and seck our a column. thereby breaking the editor's rule that the first daughter
:: : : own answers.
could
not be written about unless
·: · : If every adult in ,Meigs County would write to our congressman and senshe
did
something noteworthy.
: •ator asking them to support Meigs County in funding for jobs, industry and
Neither
(:helsca Clinton nor her
:• : · in everything else, if we all would attend our village coundl meetings, there
· ::: : would be no limit to what we can do. God places no limit upon a person. The parents, it should he noted. had any•• • only limit that we have is the one we place on ourselves. The greatest work thing to do with the termination of
0Kfeld. who is a communications
: : anyone can do is the work that bencfus all.
:: : : The Daily Sentinel has been good and kind enough to print these letters major. Neither did the Stanford
·: : : that I have wrincn to encourage you. the reader. to become involved and take administration.
The sole antagonists arc the
: ~an active role i' our community. For if you arc not willing to do so, then who
columnist
and the editor, and the
.•• ·. :wa'II be'. .---'
'\
issue
is
when,
if ever, a gag rule is
. :· : · Sincerely.
&lt;'--•
.:. :
David Edwards, justified, · particularly in this case
Pomeroy when Chelsea Clinton's privacy wa.•
: : .
...•. .. ..
not invaded. Oxfcld's comment had
nothing to do with the arrangements
for her presence.

.~::Coffee service no luxury

AccuWcathe,a forecut for

back seat to enforcinJ, drug, immignllion and money-laundering laws,
the day-to-day activities that make
South Florida one of the busiest
CuJtoms outposts.
UNDER THE DOME-- The congressional debate over "fast-track"
trade legislation is destined to
become a bellwether issue for any
Democrat who hopes to succeed
President Clinton in the White
House when his term expires in
thre~ years.
Most Democrats hate the fasttrack approach, _whtch s•ves .the
president authonly to negott~le
NAFrA-Iike trad~ agreements .wnh
other countries. But Vtce President
Gore supports it. as do most Republicans in the House and Senate.
One of the top issues for Democrats is auto safety. When NAFrA
was being debated, critics.. complained that Mexico's lax safetY and
environmental standards would soon
become the norm in the United
States. It sounds as if they may have
been right, after all.
According to Department of
Transportation officials, the government has done a lot to . beef up
ins(ll'ctions of Mexican trucks enterong the Umtcd Stat~ . A report by the
General Accounllng Office from
April of this year notes that the DOT
is providing extra fu~ds to the stales
to promote truck safety and to
increase border inspection activities.
But when Rep. ShetTod Brown,
D-Ohio. paid a surprise visit to the
U.S .-Mcxico border crossing in
Laredo, Texas. carlierthis month, he
found one lone U.S. inspector
charged with monitoring the safely
of about 2.500 trucks that cross that
border each day.
According to that same GAO
report. however, about 45 percent of
the Mexican trucks that enter the
United State were "placed out of
service for serious safety violations."
Jack Andmcin and Jan Moller
are writers lor United Feature
Syndl&lt;ate, In&lt;.

Units of the Meigs County Emer- department to Mill Street and Sdllth
gency Medical Service recorded II
Fourth Avenue,
fire_. Randall Cpcalls for ·~sistance Saturday and penter owner, no tn)urtes report~.
Sunday. Units responding included:
POMEROY
•
CENTRAL DISPATCH
•
2:03p.m. Sunday, Hemlock Glbve
12:30 a.m. Saturday, Overbrook Road, Pomeroy, Jeremy and Bar~ara
Nursing Center, Middleport, Mabel
Lawrence, treated at the scene.
Skaggs, Pleasant Valley Hospital, RACINE ,
nd
Middleport squad assisted;
2:10 a.m. Saturday. VFD P
6:53a.m. Saturday, swe Route 33, squad to state R~te 338 at Lo!art
Pomeroy Ellen Jones Holzer Med- Falls, 4-wheeler accident, Shaun lilar'
ris transported to St. Mary's Hos~1tal
1.cal Ccnt~r·
6:55 p,.;., Saturday, Vance Road. via helicopter ambula~ce, Ce~ral
Harrisonville, Linda Eblin, Veterans Dtspatch sqund asststed,
.
ad
Memorial Hospital, Rutland squad
7:18p.m. Sunday, Townshtp Ro
assisted:
100, Velma Winland, treated at_the
12:34 a.m. Sunday, OBNC, scene.
Lawrence Stewart, HMC;
SYRACUSE
1:32 p.m. Sunday, Elm Streei,
7:30 p:m. Saturday, Apple :and
R..acine, Paul Perry Jr., PVH, Racme Water streets, Alice Flanagan, VJttH;
squad assisted.
I :37 a.m. Sunday, Cherry Stteet.
MIDDLEPORT
Gary Withrow, treated at the scene.
.2:5.3_"·!"· Saturday, volunteer fire

car

1\tesday, Oct.14

CrQws Family Restaurant
228 Main St

992-5432

Pomeroy

�:Sports

Mondlly, October 13,1997

the only other players who have at
leas! five rushing touchdowns in a
game. Nevers holds the record with

six.

proud of this Tnhe.
"We play ltke there IS no tomorrow ... Alomar smd
With some hocus pocus at home
plate and another amazing clutch hit,
Alomar has camed the Cleveland
lndtans to wtthin one win of the
World Series
Ftrst, Alomar scored from second
on a wtld ptlch to the fifth on a
btzarre play that nvaled the wacky
12th toning of Game 3. Then, after
the lndtans blew a 7-5 lead. Alomar
htt a game-wtomng stogie off Armando Bentlez in the ninth
"Tiiese games have heen tearing
my hean out," said Jaret Wrtght,
rocked by three homers by Brady
Anderson, Harold Batoes and Rafael
Palmetro to the thtrd toning "I stl on
the hench and go through all kinds of
emotions."

The rest of the lndtans have heen
slow to ptck up on the magic that has
touched Alomar all•season
The Cleveland catcher won MVP
honors wtlh a dectjlve two-run
homer in the All-Star game at Jacobs
Ftcld. He drove in the winnrng run
wnh a mnth-mntng single as the lndi·
ans clinched their third straight AL
Central title by healing the New York
Yankees
Then came the Game 4 homer
agamst New York in the divtston
sencs.

And now lhts.
"We e&lt;pcclto play Game 7 every
day we come to the ballpark," Alamar satd "We don 'I take anythmg
for granted, no mauer who we're
playing.'
Alomar gave the Indians a 2-1
lead with a two-run homer off Scou
Enckson in the second Hts RBI smgle in the fifth led to the strange
parade of runners on Anhur Rhodes'
wild pitch.
"It's heen unhelievable," Alomar
satd. "This team hasn 'I played like

..

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•.

I!! ...;.

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By The Anoclalad Pren
James Stewart and Barry Sanders
made the most of their opponunilies
lo run the ball.
Sanders, who was held to 20
yards on I0 carries in Week 2 by
Tampa Bay, ran for 215 yards on 24
carries Sunday as Detroit heat the
Buccaneers 27-9.
Stewart, filling in for an injured
Natrone Means, became the founh
player lo rush for five touchdowns tn
Jacksonville's 38-21 victorY over
Philadelphia.
"James certainly answered the
call," coach Tom Coughlin said of
Stewart, who ran for 102 yards on IS

'

HITS GAME-WINNER- The Cleveland lndlena' Sandy Alomar Jr.
watches hie ninth-Inning single reach the left center field gap to
allow teammate Manny Ramirez to acore the game-winning run to
end Game 4 of the American League Champlonahlp Sarin Sunday
night In Cleveland. The Indiana own a 3-1 advantage over the Baltimore Orlolea. (AP)
this the whole season. It seems like
in !he postseason, we arc a different

learn."
Balumore pulled within one to the
seventh and Jose Mesa blew the lead
in the ntnlh. He allowed the first two
runners to reach on a walk and a single, and Rafael Palmeiro hit an RBI
smgle off the reliever's glove.
"I was practicing stress management," Indians manager Mike Hargrove said.
Ramirez led off the bollom of the
ninth with a walk - the ftrsl runner
m three-plus innmgs against reliever
Alan Mrlls. Lefty Jesse Orosco came
on and almost ptcked Ramtrez off
first, whtch would have been a replay
of the ntnth in Game 3.
Kevm Seitzer sacnficed Ramirez
to second. And after Williams walked
on a 3-2 ptlch wtth two outs, Alomar
came to the rescue.
"I've been two runs down and
down to my last stnke and won a
ballgame, sodon'ltcll me about tate
taking over," Johnson satd, refemng
to the New York Mets' comeback
against Boston 10 Game 6 ofthe 1986
World Senes. "We have a ways to go
yet."
Rhodes relieved Erickson with

two outs in the fifth and loaded the
bases with a walk to Brian Gilc•.
Rhodes then bounced a 2-2 pllch let
Marquis Grissom, allowing Duvtd
Justice to spnnl home wuh the goahead run.
•
Catcher Lenny Webster, at the
center of the controversial game-ending play Saturday. chased after the
ball this time and nipped tn Rhodes,
who was upended by a hard-&gt;liding
Jusltce. The ball got away, allowing
Alomar lo race home all the way
from second, giving the lndtans u 75 lead.
"From what I understand, Jusltcc
was holding Anhur from getting to
the ball," said Webster, who didn't
chase lhe ball in Game 3, lhinkmg
Omar Vizquel had foul-lipped tl on
his missed squeeze that allowed
Grissom to score the wmning run.
Reliever Brian Anderson, who
grew up on the outskirts of Cleveland, was as stunned as anyhody by
this weekend that has made the Jake
quake.
"Growing up here, the Indians
were never in the postseason or
threatened to he," said Anderwn. a
late addtlion to the playon· roster

:·9 ilers notch 30-7 win over Bengals
••

:.·fY TERESA M. WALKER

very hard in practtce this past week,
espectally when faced with gelling
·:J;i;sher used one of the thousands of out of the AFC Central DIVIsion eel·
: uitsold ltckets as a way to motivate lar.
: hts players Sunday.
"We knew we had a chance at a
7. • It worked, btg time.
turnaround," he said.
• ~- Poor ticket sales meant that onlyThe Oilers (2-4), who came '"
a few thousand fans watched the Ten- with the NFL's worst pass defense,
nessee Otlers and the C10ctnnal1 frustrated Blake. He llirew for only
Bengals on Sunday 10 the Ltherty 130 yards with JUSl one complete
Bowl. So Ftsher showed off one of pass m the second half before heing
lhe unsold ttekels hefore the game.
replaced by Boomer Esiason.
• "This ticket helongs to somehody
"There has to he some son of conlriho's not going to make thts game, lidcnce builder," Estason~&lt;atd . "If we
: )nd that's too bad," he satd ol hts pep can get anythmg from this mess
:: talk.:· Someone out there" go10g..to today, It's mayhe at the end at least
~ mtsstng a good football game
we showed a destrc not to quit. I feel
: Hts Otlers responded wllh thctr bad for Jeff hecausc he's frustrated,
best performance stnce leavmgTc&gt;&lt;as and he's competmg. He's working
hefore thetr worst crowd yet'" Ten- hard. hut he's looking for answers "
. .Dessee.
Cincmnau ( 1·5), now by itself in
They_ s~eked Cmctnnau's Jeff the dtvtston wtlh a five-game losmg
. Bla~e stx Urnes and Steve McNatr sktd, finally got movtog wtlh Estason
: threw for three touchd.-.ns as Ihe 10 hts first appearance this season He
: Otlers downed the Ben gals 30-7 gotlhc Bcngals their first first down
: Sunday, breakmg a four-game losmg of the second half wilh a 65-yard dn' streak he fore JUSl 17.071 fans
ve capped by Corey Dillon's 21-yard
. "Thts learn came back ready to touchdown run.
· work after a tough few weeks, and we
Coach Bruce Cos lei wasn't very
came hack and worked hard." Fish- happy wllh hts Ben gals, who man: cr satd.
.
aged JUSt 55 yards rushtng and 191
, McNatr satd he tell the Otlcr&lt; total yards compared to 391 for the
• would finally cltck after working Oilers

·"'*·

MEMPHIS. Tenn (AP) - Jeff

"We can't run. We can'l pass. We
can't slop the run. We can't slop the
pass. We can 'l kick. Other than thai
... we'reJUSI not a very good football
team rtght now," Coslelt said.
For McNatr, it was his best performance since taktog over as the
Otlers' No. I quanerbaek. He threw
for 171 yards and two touchdowns tn
the first half and fintshed 16-of-30 for
199 yards and three touchdowns, two
to Willie Davis
"Steve did a great JOb checkmg at
the hoe and with some great play
calling atltmcs," Eddte George said.
"He JUS! put the ball where 11 needed to he."
Kt-Jana Caner's fumble in lhe
ftrsl quarter set up McNatr's ftrsl
touchdown pass, a nine-yarder to
Davis.
McNatr then showed ofl his
mobthty m the second quarter when
he rolled out lo hiS nght and tossed
a pass to Frank Wycheck over Ashley Ambrose. Wycheck then JUmped
over a rolhng Bo Orlando and ran in

for the 39-yard touchdown play and
a 14-0 lead.
For lhc Orlers, it was the thtrd
stratghl game tn their temporary
home where the altcnduncc dropped.
The turnout can,c close to malchrng
lhe Otlers' lranchisc low for a home
game, whtch came last year when
15,131 watched !heir fmal game m'
Houslon agamstthc Bengals.
But the sparse crowd made noise
for the Oilers and even did a wave
that looked more like a ripple to the
second quancr.
One fan toted a stgn around the
Lthcny Bowl that said "Change lhe
name, they wtll come." But a group
of fans wcarmg costumes includmg
a buffalo, Santa Claus, a hear. a bunny rabhil and a Twecty btrd dtdn't
care whether Ihe Otlcrs change their
name to make Tennessee fans happy.
They stood hehind a banner that
•cad "We will love our team no mater what their name, color or ma.'\~
.:ot."

Sports briefs;'"7'-::---:::---::----:----:::---:-:-:-:~
College basketball
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Steve Ftsher was tired as Mtchtgan
coach late Fnday, less than a week
before the Wolvcrtoes' tirst basketball pracucc.
The move by new athletic dtrcctor Torri Goss comes eight years after
Ftshcr was named coach on the eve
of the 19K9 NCAA tournament whtch
the Wolvenncs won.
The announcement came two daxs

after a Kansas law linn hired by the
universtly lo tnvcsltgatc the haskct·
ball program tssucd a report thai
called into question Fisher's role m
arranging complimentary tickets for
booster Eddie Manin.
Fisher led Mtchigan to an NCAA
lltlc his first season and an NIT IItie
'" hts last. In hetwccn, he signed the
mosl heralded freshmen class in
NCAA history and led the Wolver·
mes to hack-to-hack title games.

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Cincinnati detentlva

ALONG FOR THE RIDE beck AlhleyAmbroM ftndl hlmwlt along tor the rldtt " Tennet111 running beck
Eddie::.drllga him fOtward during Sundly'a AFC C..tral bit·
tie In tl
TIIVI., whelwlheOIIIfnJOn30-7. Oeoigeledlll ru8h·
.,. with 101 prdl. (At&gt;)

\1CHE~K

The Dally Sentinel• Page:S

Stewart's five TDs help Jags notch 38-21 win over Eagles·

Jndians rally to top
Orioles 8-7; Trib~
~leads 3-1 in ALCS
By KEN BERGER
. CLEVELAND (AP) - Sandy
Alomar hot a two-run homer on the
second innong, and the general reaction was . Isn't he supposed to wall
until the ninth mning to do that''
- Mr Magtc and Team Tnumph did
not disappomt
. This wa.' yet another ntght for
Alomar on a season that defies hehef
It was another :oilop on 1h1s momcn·
tuus JOUrney onto Octoher for the
lndaans. who arc wmmng every
whtch way and crasmg two genera·
ttons of miSery for the If tans
Go ahead Fmd somebody m
Cleveland who has a votce Find
~omconc who tsn'l weanng red lube
S&lt;Kks htkcd to the knee
. Fond somebody who dtdn'tthonk
· Alomar would won Game 4 of the AL
"hampionshtp senes when he stepped
to the plate wnh two outs m the mnth.
A.ller scormg from second on a
wild pttch m the fifth mning, Alomar
drilled the game-winnmg hittnto the
left-center lield gap off Armando
· Benitez in the mnth Manny Ramtrcz
· scored and the lndtans beat the
stunned Baltimore Onoles 8-J Sunday ntght to take a 3-1 lead tn the
best-of-seven sencs
"You never know '" the Jake
what's gomg to happen when we're
down," Ram~rez satd
Orioles manager Davey Johnson
had a dtfferent take on 11 Somehow.
some way, by some bllarre nuke.
Balttmore faces ehmmalton m Game
~ tonight.
"Somebody's messmg with fate,
the way I look attl," Johnson satd
Somebody with red socks and an
lndtans Jersey. · Somebody who
endured decades of baseball that
was so hopeless 11 msplfed a movte
called "MaJor League."
Even Rrcky Vaughn and Jake
Taylor - played by Charlie Sheen
and Tom Berenger - would he

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

THE WANT ADS FIRSV

••

carries.

..
•

l

t

• "'"'"' ...~
' w '..-' '
~

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~

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to be able to take more of an advantage of it, but we couldn't."
Among the olhers knocked out of
contention in the big crash were Stcrltng Marlin, Dale Earnhardt, Joe
Nemechek, Jimmy Spencer, Michael
Waltrip, Dick Trickle, Mike Skinner
and Greg Sacks.
Labonte missed all the aeuon
because he was leading the race when
it happened.
In fact, he led five times for a
race-high lolal of70 laps on the way
•
ot h'IS 19th career VICtory
an d ti1rst
since the race at Charloue Motor
Speedway on Oct. 6, 1996. It was
also his first top-10 finish smcc the
Southern SOO al the beginning of
September.
season was to get the team back on
"WeJ'ust weren't as consistent as
.h
.
..
k
trac , Wit some momentum gotng we needed to be or as compeuuve as
mto next season. This sure helped." we needed to be," Labonte said. "We
For Gordon, it was a particularly got il turned around today, and that
frustraling afternoon as he lost feels real good."
ground to both Mark Martin and Dale
Once the accident was cleaned up.
JIIJTCtt, his closest pursuers in the lhe baule at the front was left to
championship chase.
Labonte, his younger brother Bohby,
' .
Now, wn. h I hree races remammg,
John AndrctU, Ken Schrader and
Gordon's lead over Marlin has pole-wtnner Ernie lrvan, who fin·
shrunk. to IIOpomls, wilhJarrettiSS ished in that order.
behind.
Schrader, looking for his first win
"Th ts ts
· exactIy what we d"d
:.. I99 races, move d past .,.oerry
t n '"
• ..._,;,.
need loday," Gordon said. "You've Labonte to take the lead on lap 181,
got to have all four tires on lhese bringtng Andrelli wrth htm. But
things."
j,abonle held third and made his
On lap 140 of the 188-lap event, move at the stan of lap 187.
f
'
Gordon was near lhe rant m a pace
"I was running out of time," the
of 32 cars traveling ar more than 190 Winner sa1d. "I had some momentum
mph on the 2.66-mile, high-banked there and I though! I'd he able to do
oval when his left rear ttrc suddenly 11 "
deflated
Bobby followed his hrother to the
"I tried to gather it up, but I knew fronl, but he couldn't catch him. hts
right away somethtng was wrong Ponltac fimshmg less than two carwith the lefl rear," the 26-ycur-old lengths hehind lhc winnmg Chevroracer explained. "Thai's lhe last let.
thing you want to have happen to you
Terry Labonte, who won
m lhe middle of a pack like that."
$116,725, averaged 156.603 mph in
The only thing worse ts to he the race slowed by four caution peribehind somebody when it docs.
ods for a total ol only 22 laps. He
Before the melee on the long, fast became only the second Chevrolet
back straightaway was over, half the driver to wm a race this sca.&lt;&lt;ln. Gor42-carfieldbccameinvolved, includ- don ha.&lt; the other 10 Chevy wms,
mg Martin and Jarrett.
while Fords have won I Kumcs.
Alllhrce ol' the lop contenders did
Other than the htg crash, the tnctmanage to gel back int\) the race, hut denls were rclaltvely minor wtth
only enough to gam a few more Billy Srandridge, Wally Dallenhach
points. Jarrell, who had the least dam- Jr. and Breu Bod me each brrngtng
age, wound up 21 sl, Martin 30th and out a caution. All escaped InJUry, us
Gordon, who got back tnto lhc aclton dtd the dnvers tn the 21-car crash.
on the leader's 171sllap, was 351h.
This race, whil:h previously was
"I knew it was going to happen run in July or August. drew a crnwd
sooner or later," Martin said. "I was csltmated at more than 130,000 The
just driving a conservaltvc race and specialors enjoyed a sunny, warm day
waiting tor them to wreck up lront. wtlh low humidity and the high of MS.
We were jusl unlucky to get caught aboutiOdegrecscoolcrthun the usuup tn it."
ul summer weather at Talladega.
"We need 10 prck up a whole lol
more than thai." Jarrell said. "They
Here arc the results of the
had their mtsfonune and we needed DtcHard 500 Win•lon Cup race at

''

' altar tallying
YES!- Florida pitcher Llvan Hernandez celebrates
his game-ending 15th 81rlkeout that helped the Marlins beat the
Atlanta Braves 2·1 In Game 5 of the National League Championship
Series Sunday night In Miami. The decision gave the Marlins a 3-2
lead In the best-ot-aevan aerll!ll. (AP)

Florida leads NL title series 3·2

Hernandez's 15Ks
push Marlins to 2-1
win over Braves
By BEN WALKER
set Saturday by Baltimore's Mtkc
MIAMI (AP)- Their rotalion is Mussina at Cleveland.
depleted by injury and illness, they're
"During the game, you can'llhtnk
hilling only .177 and they're facing about that," Hernandez said lhrough
a team famihar with October come- an interpreter. "After the game, penbacks.
pic can lcll you whattlts you did."
All thai, and still the Flonda MarThe last out prompted a big cclclins are jus1 one win away from lhc brat ion irl the middle of tho diamond,
World Senes. ·
with Florida players rushmg from the
Livan Hernandez, a 22-ycar-old hcnch and bullpen lo jom in. Ftrcrookic pitching solely because man- works exploded overhead, mascot
ager Jtm Leyland had no one else, flUI Billy the Marlin was on the mound
them tn posilton Sunday by beaung waving a banner and the crowd ol
Greg Maddux and the Atlanla Braves 51 ,982 went crazy.
2-1 wtlh one of the most remarkable
Jeff Con me, Ihe lone stancr lcll
performances tn postseason history. from Flonda's tirst game in 1993, hit
Hernandez set an NL champi- 1 go-ahead single in the seventh
onship series record wtlh 15 slnkc- inning thai moved the 5-S.a•on-old
outs, pitching a three-hitter ft!al g~ · Marlins Wtlhm one win of becoming
the Marltns.a 3-21ead to take back~~ the fastest team lo reach the World
Allanta.
y, \ Scnes.
"I'd like to say I expected this," ) The loss lcll the two-tnne NL
Leyland said. "But I don't lhlnk~ champton Braves in familiar tcrnln·
!here's a person rn this room, rn the ry. Atlanta ralltcd to win the linal
stands or m the world that expected t~rcc games of the 1996 NLCS
this."
.
tncluding the last two at home, ~~
Hernandez had never ptlched a overtake St. Louis in seven games.
complclc game tn 57 pro stans and
"Thts team never gives up."
had never struck out more than eight Atlanla's Ryan Klcsko said. "Even it
in the majors. He was.hel~d by plate we were down 3-0, we wouldn'Uivc
umptre Ertc Greggs wtdc slnke up. They still have to beat us nne
zone, as wa.• MadduK, but helped more ltmc."
In fact, a few days ago Klesko
htmsclf even more with his p&lt;nse,
focus and command
.
reiterated that many Braves thought
It was not unul a called smke the Cardrnals cclel&gt;ratcd too much
three to Fred· McGnrr - lhc pitch last Octohcr after taking a 3-1 lead.
appeared high and wtde -that Her- Atlanta came hack to wm the ftnal
nandez let loose wllh any Cll)otton. In three games hy a &lt;.:om hi nod score nl
his first stan since Sept. 27, he won 32-1.
for lhe second lime in the series.
Leyland is well aware of Atlant.l's
Pnching hccause of Alex Fcrnan- playnlt come hacks. The Braves nvcrdcz's torn rotator cuff and Kcvm came a 3-2 dclicH to heat Lcyl.md's
Brown's vtral mlecuon, Hernandez PHLshurgh team m the 1991 NLCS,
hrokc lhc NLCS record of 14 smkc- and heat Leyland's Pir,tlcs '"Gnmc
ours shared by Mike Swu and John 7 of the 1992 NLCS.
Candclarta. and ued the LCS mark
(See NLCS on pageS)

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NLCS. •• (Conhnued from Pugc 4)

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I

,·

Game 6 wtll he Thcsday mght at
Thrncr Ftcld as Tom Glavinc oppns~
es Brown.
Hernandez. who saw acllon in
Game 3 on Fnday ntght with I 2-3
innings of scoreless relief, retired _17
of lhe last 18 baners. He walked two.
Maddux, who lost for lhe second
time in the senes. struck out nine in
seven mntngs. He gave up four hrls.
The 25 strikeouts by both learns
was a record for a league chnmptonship series game. Of the 25, eight
were called by Gregg.
· "My strike zone has hecn conststenl on bolh sides for 20 years,"
Gregg said.
Chipper Jones, however. later
questioned a lot of what he saw. He
struck out twice agatnst Hernandez.
"I know I swung at a couple of
pttches lhat were at least a foot outside," he said. "I turned around and
asked if they were strikes and Gregg
said, 'Yes 'I couldn't help bur chuckle.l'm so mad right now, I can'l see

straight."

BT
, . , . , , _, _

11

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By MIKE HARRIS
TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) Throughoul most of the 1997 season,
Jeff Gordon has done most every·
thing right and Terry Labonte has
been frustrated by a series of on-traclt
troubles.
That changed dramatically in Sun~
day's DieHard 500 with Gordon's cut
tire igniting a 21-car crash that
helped Labonte, the defend10g Winstan Cup champion, to his first victory in more lhan a year.
"Than k good ness. "Labo nte saa d
of the win at Talladega Superspeed'way. "I didn'l wantlo be the defending champron and go all season
withoul winning a race'.
"Our main goal at the end of the

.'

NEW SHOWROOM AT 114 W. 2ND ST.

game. "He worked hard on his speed
and his 1181ance. He was running
exlremely hard out there."
Lions 1.7, Buccaneers 9
At Tampa, Sanders' 215 yards sent
Tampa Bay to its second stratghtloss
after a franchtse·best ~-0 stan.
"There wtll be people who will
now jump off the bandwagon
because we dropped a couple of
games," Sues coach Tony Dungy
satd. "But we feel like we're still a
pretty good team."
The Bucs (5-2) fellrnlo a threeway tie for tirs1 place rn the NFC
Central with Minnesota and Green
Bay, one game ahead of Detroit (43).

Patriols 33, BHis 6
At Fo~boro, Mass., Drew Bledsoe
threw two touchdown passes and
Curtis Martm ran for 99 yards as
New England rebounded from tls loss
to Dcn~er to mainlatn tiS hold on the
AFC East lead.
"You can't Sit there and hnger and
lick your wounds all week and pout
ahoul tl," runnmg back Kctlh Byars
said.
The Patrtots (5·1) mterccpted four
P'sscs from Buffalo backups Btlly
Joe Hohcrt and Ale~ Van Pelt, who
replaced Todd Collins after the starter

Terry Labonte ·gets win In DieHard 500

,,

•t "

JIM YOUNG, OWNER

.

Stewart scored on runs of seven,
eight and two yards in the first quarter as the Jaguars (5·1) took a 21-0
lead, then added two one-yard scores
in the second half.
Stewart is the first player 10 rush
for five touchdowns since Buffalo's
Cookte Gilchrist on Dec. 8. 1963.
against the New York leis.
Ernie Nevers and Jim Brown are
•

Stewart gave the hall from hrs
fifth louchdown to Means. The extenl
of Means' injury was not immediately clear.
'
"You hate to see your partner go
down," Stewart said. "He's been
!here for me, and I've been there for
him."
Sanders, the lhree-time NFL rush·
ing champron, scored on runs of 80
and 82 yards - the longest touchdown bursts of his career- and also
caught a seven-yard touchdown pass
from Scott Mitchell.
It was the tiflh conscculive 100yard-plus game for Sanders sin•-.:
being held to a combined 53 yards
rushing tn hts first two games in the
two-back offense coach Bobby Ross
brought to Detroit this season.
"Barry showed a lot of I"'P·"
Mtlehell said. "It's been a whtlc smce
we've seen lhe acceleration ltkc
thai. n
Elsewhere, New England bounced
back from ils first loss of the season
by bearing up on Buffalo 33·6 and
Green Bay escaped wilh a 24-23 win
in Chicago as the Bears failed 10 con-

vena two-poinl conversion with I :54
remaining.
In other games, Atlanla won tis
firs! game of the season, beaung New
Orleans 23-17, Miami beat the New
York Jets 31-20, Tennessee beat
Cincinnati 30-7, San Franctsco beat
St. Louis 30-10, M'innesota beat Carolina 21-14, the New York Giants
beat Artzona 27- 13, and Pittsburgh
beat Indianapolis 24-22.
Dallas (3·2) and Washington (3·2)
play tonight in a banle for first place
tn the NFC East.
Balltmore, Denver, Kansas Ctly,
Oakland, San Diego and Seaule were
all idle Sunday
Jaguars 38, Eailes 21
Slewun shed the criticism of hts
lirst two ycurs, leading Jacksonville
ln tls lOth straight home win.
As a rookte, Stewart was h&lt;iocd
fm nul producmg I 00-yard rushing
, gmucs un an expansion team with a
patchwork olfcnstve line. He was
blamed fur last year's 20-6 loss lo
New England m the AFC ch:unpt·
unship game when his fumhlc w.ts
returned for a louchdnwn.
"'It was hard tm James, hut James
doesn't take 11 off the lidd," said !ell
tackle Tony Bosclli. who cleared gaprng holes for Stcwan throughout the

'

Maddux, the victim of five
unearned runs tn the opener. lost
agam because of a ball that -..:as not
caught, albeil it rnvolved a dtfficult

play.
Bobby Bnnilla opened the seventh
with a drive to deep right that snnwconcd in Michael Tucker's glove us
he crashed mlo the wall. The ball
popped loose, as did one of Tucker's
contact lenses, and Bonrllu wound up
with a double for hts lhird hit.
There was an eight-minute delay
while Tucker and others looked ltlr
the clustve lens. Thckcr eventually
left the game and, when it resumed.
Conine singled up the middle on
Maddux's first pitch, slopprng an ().
for·l3 shde in the senes.
"I've heen here since Day 1,"
Conine said. "This was really something today."
Hernandez worked around a leadoff triple by Kenny Lofton in the forst,
and the Marlins scored tn the bonom
half on Bonilla's single.
Tucker tied it at I when he homered to dead cenler off Hernandez to
sian the second.
Notes: Maddu~ ts 8· 7 in 17 career
postseason starts.... Jones was hit in
the head by a fly ball tn balling practic;e .... Hernandez was ruled out by
Gregg for striding out of the bauer's
.box \Vhile fouling a pitch in the fifth.

Talladega Superspeedway wilh staning posrtion in parentheses, drrvcr,
hometown, make ol car. laps completed, reason oultf any, and money
won.
I t6) T~rr,. Labunt~. Corpus Chrum 'lb.t~.

Ch.evroltt. IMR $11672:1
2 m Bobby La~mlt, (1&gt;f1lU5 Chnsll Tt:~oiN,
Pun~ox. "'· S76 67D
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19. (I~) Johnny Btnson. Gmoo Rup.!b M•d•
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26

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27 CIll Robcn Prculcy. Alilte\llle, N C. fonJ,
17l'l $::!2.40
2H (27) Mtdtael Wnltnp. Ow~nsboro , Ky
l'nnl 172 $12.170
29 (12J ll&lt;lk Eamhanlt Kun•t.~puhs. NC ,
Cbcvmh..'l 167 $4ft~
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sumo

·

1 I ( 11 J Joe Ncmt:d~k. l&lt;lkcl,mr.l Ru • Chl:vro.
kt 16-ii $2H40
12 (22JS!cvcGn"llffi G,ld&lt;;tlcn Ala . Cbcvrolct 161 $2M K70
n clfiJ Mtkc Skmner. Sus;~nvtlle. Cahr
Chcvrnl~ I:iiiJ $21,790
14 f-11 I Rdy Rur.ld, Chel;,lfiCllk Vu . FOI"r.l
1"1. $11'174-ii
1"i (KI kiT Gordon 1'11\sbl.ll'\l lnd , Chevrokl
l"i1 , Sl~91'i

16 {20) l.,tke SJ!L'Cr.l, JadunR. Mlllll Fnrd l"i1

left with a bruised lefl shoulder suf·
fcred on the second possession for
Buffalo (3-3).
Packers 24, Bears 23
AI Chicago, Brett Favre passed for
three touchdowns and Green Bay (52) took advantage of Chicago's
unsuccessful gamble to move rnto a
lie for first.
The Bears pulled within a poml
with 1:54to go on Erik Kramer's 22yard touchdown pass to Chns Penn.
Coach Dave Wannstedl went for the
lead, but Kramer 's shon pass satled
over Raymonl Harris.
"It was a no-brainer,' ' Wann~ledl
said. "We told the team when we got
the ball, 'If we go down and score,
we're gomg for lhe win "'
Chicago (0-7) has matched the
worst start in its 78-year hiStory. The
Bears also lost their lirsl seven games
in 1969, when they fimshed 1- 13
Vikings 21, Panthers 14
AI Mrnncapolis, Brad Johnson
lht;ew two touchdown passes - one
to himself - a.s Mmnesota (5-2)
gamed a share of the NFC Central
lead
Johnson's pass and catch came at
the end of a 17-play, 91-yard dnve.
Hts throw was batted down by Greg
Kragen, but it bounced nght back to
Johnson, who dodged Michael Barrow in the backfield and scrambled 3
yards for the ~ore.
The Panlhers (2-4), who henchcd
Kerry Collins after commtlling nmc
turnovers tn the last two games. lost
!hetr lhird consecuttvc game.
F,alcons 23, Sainls 17
At New Orleans, Chuck Smith
had five sacks and Marlen Andersen
booted three field goals to lead
Atlanla lo its tirsl wm under coach
Dan Reeves.
Atlanta (1-5) set a team record
with 10 sacks
Andersen, a former Satnl, ha.&lt;n 't
mrssed a tield goal m Ihe Superdomc
against New Orleans (2-5) tn eight
tries On Sunc!ay, he connected from

25, 32 and 5S yards.
Dolphins 31, Jets lO
AI East Rutherford, N.J, Dan
Marino threw for 372 yards and two
touchdowns to snap New Yor'ts
three-game wtnnin~ streak. Manno
hit 27 of 38 passes for his most
yardage agamstthe Jets since 198'9.
He ha.&lt; thrown for more yards and
touchdown passes agamst New York
than any other opponent.
Mtamt (4-2) had five sacks of Neil
O'Donnell and shut out the Jets (43) in the second half unltl 1·()3
remained
49ers 30, Rams 10
At San Francisco. Steve Yotlng
threw three touchdown passos and
San Francisco forced three fumbles
and blocked a punt m wmnrng its
, tiflh straight game
The 49ers (5-1) scored 20 p&lt;mits
oil the mtscues en route to their 15th
conseculcvc wm agamslthc Rams (2-

4), who haven 't heatcn San Francisco smcc 1990
Young, who was 19-of-30 for
223 yards. completed his first j 0
throws. mcludmg touchdown passes
of 5 yards to Terrell Owens and 10
yards to Greg Clark. His lith auempt
was mtcrccpted by Ryan McNeil and
returned 75 yards lor a touchdown,
the only time tbe Rams ,found the end
zone.
Gianls 27, Cardinals 13
At Tempe, Anz., Danny Kanell
gol a htg asstsl I rom Tyrone WheatIcy. who ran for 103 yards and
scored a touchdown for New York.
The last tunc u Gtanls,runner had
100 yards was Dec. 17, 1995, when
Rodney Hampton ran lor 187 against
Dull us
K;mcll, st.trtmg has lin&lt;il game in
place of the InJUred Dave Brown. fin tshcd 13-ol-28 for 198 yards and a
touchdown. and lhc Gtants (4·3)
romped to their lhird stratght wm
under Jim Passel. who was oiTcnsi•c
ctmdmator last year lor Amana (i5).

S21 670
17 (1lJDIUTCIIWaltnl• Franklin Tcnn ,Chc'iroo
let 147 &gt;;1':\~h $2M fi(J(I
lK {]0} Stcrhn~ rvt:.rlm Columbm, Tenn
Otcvrulet, 119 cr:nh $11.~
• '9 (2HJ Greg Sacb Mu!utul;k N Y Chevrolet,
119 l;I'Mh. S2H.~
.W (161 Chad Unk Spokunc W;uh , Pllnltac,
I 19 nush, U 1,52"i
41 (241 Wully [}wlh:nb:\l;h, BIU.'lll, Culo,
01cvmk'l. Y9 "Mh, $2 I ~~
42 (26) Billy Stafklnr.l~. Shi:I"Y· N C, FORI , ~I
1.Ta~h $21 , ~10
Tint~: ur fik:C 1 houn. II ffiiRUICS, J6 IIC\:III)Iil
M.trgm or Vtl,:\01)1 , 0 146-!1!.'\.'tH\\b (llbout I In
~ar-lengths)

lif"."!d I~ 601 mph
4 fur 22 \,If"'
U.:OIIJ .:han1n '\2 :thll'na Ito tlm.en

Wmncn

11'4'tl'~f.C

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l..1p Uudeu.· lrVIID I·K. r LilhtlDh! 9.20:
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R Wall.u,:c 77 Earnhardt7"·71J R Wnllac.:c !10, Jar.

1'\.'tl "I ·Kb. S.t~.:b K7 ,J,Iff\:11 ti"·V~.Iiurnhardl 94-'11~,
lrv.1n %-IJK, All\ln1t1 W S(ll!n~\"1' 100.107. Marlm
IClH-120 S(ll:n..:cr 121-12\, 1 Llll!nnte 114-140,
G Bodm1: 141·142 I Labonte 14 ~·1140. S~,:hmd!.'f
1Kl-ltl6, TLilb!,nll! IH7-IHH .
Unoffi~1al ~~Ull st,md!IIJ:S. Gunkm 4, ~21. Martm -1 ,211. J.IITett 4.1 fJ6 J Bur1ml 4 041. n ... honle
\ ,796, £.1rnh.udt '71}4, 8 ~HIIC .~. 6H7 11JhnCI
\,~16 MusJ!mvc 1J22 R Wul~ll:c :\ 242. Schr.lller
l24U OenscKl ;\ ~ \~. Mnylidd l ~17. lrvltn .1.214.

Rulld \ IKO

Ky.

Bird's role as coach
hints at more hustle
from Indiana Pacers
By NANCY ARMOUR
FORT WAYNE. Ind. (APJ Larry Btrd has hts ftrsl victory as n
coach- and his tirsrloss. Sltttng on
the hench is fine. but wcanng a sutt
coat to a game is sltll a htllc wctrd.
And the statewide adoratton for
the Indiana Pacers' new coach'! Well,
!hal's gotng to lake some gelling used
lo.
"As a coach, I haven't done anylhmg yet," Btrd said. "So they're
wasting their time."
The fans don't thtnk so, grectmg
him wllh standmg ovaltons when he
was mtroduccd at the Pa~ers' e•hibitton games Fnday and Saturday
night. People 10 the crowd wore his
old Cchics jersey. When he left the
locker room after the Pacers' 104-100
victory over Toronto on Saturdayhis Indiana debut- 1\undrcds of fans
were wailing. .
Btrd gave a quir.:k wave, signed a
lew aulographs, then made his way
to the team bus.
"There arc a lot of expectations on
this team, and hopefully we can ful·
till them," satd Reggie Miller, lndtana's fan lavontc hefore Btrd arrived.
"We have the talent to do-that. So ll
ought to he interesting."
After 13 years with the Boston
Cehtcs, three NBA titles and three
league MVPtrophies, Btrd swears he
doesn't miss being out on the noor
He doesn't look at his players and
think he could do it belter.
He ts exactly where he wants to
be: on the bench, coachtng his home
team.
"Them days are over," he satd of
playing. "I had all the opponun11tes
I wanted 10 do that. This is somelhtng
I wanted to do. I could have coached
other places, but lhts is the place I
wanllo be.
"Now I just want to gel a wmn10g
team out there."
But !here are some parts of the JOO
that don't com~ easily to Bird, like
figuring out what to do with himself
now that he's on lhe hench. In his

playmg days. the only time he wa.&lt; on
the hench was at the end of the ·game
And he was tn shons. hke a player ts
supposed to he in the gym.
Now, though, he's on the sidelines
lor the entire game. And he's wearmg a suit coal and ltc. During Fnday's 105-98 loss lo Cleveland and
Saturday's vtclory, it looked like tl
was 1akmg every effort to •lay tn hts
scat.

He squirmed around, nockmg hack
and forlh one minulc, leaning forward with his hands on knee.&lt; the
next He finally got up at the end of
the first quarter Saturday, took a shan
stroll to lhe end of the hench, then
qutckly returned lo his seal.
"I've always felt weird slanding
in a SUil Coat," he Satd. "I've been
around gymnastums and coliseums
my whole hfc. Thts lime I'm nol
shooting, I'm sitting."
But lhc coachmg pan rs commg
along just line. Disappointed wtth hts
team's sloppy defense on Friday
night, he was constantly reminding
hts players to be aggress1vc Saturday.
When Mtller and Dale Davts •
hacked Toronto's Dou~ Christie into
a comer and forced htrn to throw
away the ball, Bird clapped his
hands. nodded hts head and yelled,
"Good JOb!"
"It's hcen great Everyone lnvcs

playing for him," satd Chris Mullin.
who lef~ Golden Slate alter 13 years
IQ play wtth Btrd, hts 1992 Olymptc
teammate. "We're workmg hard, hut
we feel like we're geUmg where we
wanl to go, so lthmk tl 's heen great. "
So does Bird Hts Pacers struggled
before finally beating Toronto on Saturday, but he lefl lhe noor wtth a
smile on hrs face . His team is start·
mg to look like lhc one Larry Legend
envisions.
"The defense was greal, ball
movement, guys wen: setting good
picks - I thought they JUSI placed
excellent," he said. "I have no com.plaints. ' 1

IT'S ABOUT TJMEI- Terry Labonte of Corpus Christi, Texas leta
the champagne flow after winning Sunday'a DieHard soo at Tl!l·
ladega, Ale. The victory was Labonte's first of the year. (AP)
.

Duck Derby Winners of 1997
J.
2·
34S·
61·

S2SO Saving! Bond
SIOO Cash
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S20.00 Cash
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Condie
Coin Sel
8- Miniature Cottage
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IS- Rollup tape Meolule
16· Case of Soda
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lB· 3FREE Movie Rentoh
19· 3FREE Movie Renloh
20· Gift Ctnilkote

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39- Gilt &lt;ertili&lt;ote
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41·1 fnt tD.
42· Case of Soda
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Peoples Bank and 111111
hm«oy Merdtanls
llownio-Otids-liu&lt;sar Ins.
Banks Const.
Twin Ooks
Oorks Jewelry Slore
Farmers Bank
I&amp;( Jewelry Slore
Davis Quidellns.
OoYis Quidcellns.
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I rogers
Krogers
O'Dell Lumber Co.
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Krogers
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Hartwell House
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Ollke Servile &amp;SttttP~Y
(row's Steak House
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Chapman Shoes
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Wendy's
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Pizza Hut
!'ina Hut
The hltrK Shop
Thehltri!Shop

SwiiiMr &amp;Lahse
Andenon's fltmiture
Andenon's flrnlhn

YGur llotghltwhootl Lende!
Krogen
!Ia's Uuisl.d Trml
!Ia's Cruise_. Trml

Richard Peyton
OeeCuMiff
Tom !key

Nancyfitz
Gea!ge Sayre
GoryWolht
John Tillis
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Bl CDmflll
IO!CDI Mils

Phil Fallrod
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Susan Asll

Lindo Moyer
BiH Thotla
Shawn Amolt
Shtmctn Slmn
DonStewo~

Chris Pldtans
~ George Sayre
Belly Mullins
Tmor Depoy
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Dove Harris

d Hapenstal
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Betb Morgaa
Pill Woods
lauren Adkitl
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EMnla Edwards
Kn,Utt

RotW.Oowis
•

J

�•

•!•
I

••

(

'\-.

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, October 13, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
'

.

Thanks to the running of Curtis
Enis. Penn State coach Joe Paterno
gave his team passing grades.
Enis had the second best day of
his career - 23 canies for 211 yards,
including a game-clinching 26-yard
touchdown run with 10:31 left- as
the Nittany Lions beat No. II Ohio
State 31-27 and regained the No. I
ranking.
"We're prelly good, obviously,"
Paterno said after Saturday's game,
played in front of a Beaver Stadium
record crowd of97,282. "But we've
got a long way to go. It was a good
game for them to measure themselves."

Later Saturday night, No. 8 LSU
stunned Florida 28-21, knocking the
Gators from No. I to No. 7 in this
week's AP poll .
"The team's probably not quite
near as good as everybody thought a
No. I team should be," Gators coach
Steve Spurrier said.
Penn Stale was the preseason No.
I pick and held the ranking until

Sept 21, when the Gators slipped North Carolina 30, Wake Forest 12,
The Lions, who led 17-13 at the
ahead after a 33-20 win over then· No. S Michigan 23, Nonhwestem 6; half, fell behind 27·17 before Aaron
No. 4 Tennessee.
No. 6Aubum 49,LouisianaTech 13; Harris ran S 1 yards for a touchdown
The Lions (5-0) extended the No. 9 Tennessee 38, No. 19 Georgia and Enis followed five minutes later
longest current winning streak among ·13; No. 10 Washington 30, Califor- with his game-winning score.
major colleges to 10 games by beat· nia 3; No. 12 Michigan State 38,
Ohio State's Joe Germaine com·
ing the Buckeyes (5-1) for just the Indiana 6; No. 14 Texas A&amp;M 56, pleted 29 of 43 passes for 378 yards,
. second lime in the last five meetings. Iowa State 17; No. 16 Oklahoma two touchdowns and tlvew two interIn beating Florida for the first time State 33, Colorado 29; No. 17 UCLA ceptions. The teams combined for
in 10 years, LSU (5-1) ended the ~9, Oregon 31; No. 18 Air Force 10, 1,010 total yards, 565 by Ohio State
Gators' 25-game SEC winning strea~ Navy 7; No. 20 Kansas State 41, Mis· (5-1).
No. 2 Nebraska 49
- two shy of the league record souri !!; No. 21 Georgia Tech 27,
Baylor ll
and also halted the Gators' 19-game North Carolina State 17; No. 22 VirAt
Waco,
TeKas, Ahman Green
road winning streak.
ginia Tech 17, Boston Co!hige 7; and
Life doesn't get easier for the Arizona 28, No. 25 Stanford 22.
scored four touchdowns and rushed
Gators, who arc at No.6 Auburn and
No. 13 Washington State and No. for 158 yards as Nebraska (S-O) won
play No. 19 Georgia in Jai:ksonville · 15 Iowa did not play.
in the rain. Green scored on runs of
the next two weeks.
three, 58, two and 30 yards for the
No. 1 Penn State 31
Penn State, meanwhile, passed its
nation's top-ranked offense.
.
No. 11 Ohio State 27
first major test in its quest for a Big
"They're the real deal," Bears
At State Co!!ege, Pa., the Lions
Ten title, Rose Bowl berth and avenged last year's 38-7 loss to the coach Dave Roberts said. "They'll
national championship. The Lions Buckeyes - · Penn State's worst either be first or second in the counplay Minnesota and Northwestern in defeat in 12 years.
. try when the year is over."
their next two games before Test No.
No.3 Florida State Sl,.Ouke 27
"Last year I was embarrassed,"
2- against No. 5 Michigan at Hap- said Enis, an Ohioan who spumed the
At Durham, N.C., Thad Busby ran
py Valley. The Lions end the season Buckeyes f{)r Penn State and was for two touchdowns and threw for a
held to 34 yards in the '96 game. score, and Florida State (5-0) took
at No. 12 Michigan State.
Elsewhere in the Top 25, it was: "We came out this time and did what advantage of second-half turnovers
No. 2Nebraska49, Baylor21; No.3 we had to do. We knew it was going by the Blue Devils.
No. 4 North Carolina 30
Florida State 51, Duke 27; No. 4 lo be a war."

WwFonstll
At Chapel Hill. N.C., the Tar
Heels (6-0) converted a fumble and
blocked punt into two quick third·
quarter score!oas they improved to 30 in the ACC for the first time since
1983.
No. 5 Mkblpn 23
Northwestern 6
At Ann Arbor, Mich., Brian Griese
threw two touchdown passes to Jcr·
arne Tuman and the Wolverines (5-0)
held an opponent without a touch·
down for the fourth time.
No.6 Auburn 49
Louisiana Tecb 13
At Auburn, Ala., Dameyune Crllig
tied a school record with four touchdown passes for the Tigers (6-0).
Craig, who threw for 355 yards,
became the first Auburn quarterback
to pass for more than 300 yards in
four straight games.
No. 8 LSU :ZS, No. 7 Florida 21
At Baton Rouge. La., Cedric Don·
aldson returned an inten:eption 31
yards for a touchdown and Herb
Tyler scored on an 11-yard run during a 93-second span in the fourth
quarter as LSU broke away from a

14·14tie.
Thousands of fans streamed onto
the field and tore down the goal posts
to celebrate LSU's first win over a
top-ranked team.
Doug Johnson was 32 of 57 for
346 yards with four intereeptions and
no touchdown passes, ending Flori·
da's NCAA-record streak of 62
straight regular-season games with at
least one scoring pass.
No. 9 Tennessee 38
No. 19 GeoJ'Iia 13
At Knox ville, Tenn., freshman
Jamal Lewis gained 232 yards and
Peyton Manning threw for 343 yards
and four touchdowns to lead the Vols
(4-1 ) over the Bulldogs (4- I). The
teams combined for I,069 total yards,
with the Vols gaining 628.
No. 10 Washington 30
California 3
At Berkeley,'Calif., Rashaan Shebee ran for 123 yards and two,scores
for the Huskies. Brock Huard threw
two touchdown passes as the Huskies
(4-1) heat Cal (2·3) for the 15th
straight time.

Scoreboard
Rice 4, N. Carolina Sl. 2.

Baseball
American League
Championship Series

Wis~-onsin

Michigan ...
Mkhi~tnn Sr

S•lurday's Kort
Cle"Ytland 2. 8ahimorr I ( 12)
S...Uy'IICDf't

Future games
Tonl&amp;l&gt;l

.

(Kamlenied.l 10-6) at Clevelaml
tOgea R-9), 8: II p.m.

Wtdflftlby
Cle"Yeland 1:11 Bnhii'I'IOI'e, 4: l.ci p.m.. if IIC\!Cil~aty
Thndly
Clevehmd at BahinlOn', 8:15p.m.. ifDN:nary

National League
Championship Series

1.£&lt;!. .1! I. £&lt;!.
5
5

I .H57
0 1.00
() 1.00
(] 1.00

4

1 .KOO

5

1 .~m
I .l«ll

0 1.00
0 1.00

6
~

Purdue ........ ..
OHIO ST...
low11 .
Minnesota ...

.... 2
.. 1

.. .. I
.. .... 0
Ntlfthwn~ern ............. 0
........0
Indiana ... ..
Illinois ....... .
.0
~

0 I 00
I . ~00
I . ~00
2 .000

J 000
J 000
J 000

4

2 ..

J~ .'

4 .JJ.l
."i .167
6 .OOJ

2
I
0

Saturday's S&lt;OrH
Perm Slate 31. OHIO STATE 27
Michi,ao 2.3, Northwestem 6
MichiJDn Stnlt :uJ. lndi;ma 6
Wisconsin .~I. lllioois 7
Purdue ,9, Minnesota 4J

Sr. 52, Buffnlo 17

Southwest
Ark.·Plnc Bluff .~6. Te~tu Snwhem 16
Nebraska 49. Baylor 21
Okl:lhoma St. JJ. Colorado 29
RILe 27. Brigham Youngl4
Stcjlhl.'n F. Austin 41, Jaduonvillt St 15
Tcxa~ 27. Oklahoma 2-1
_
Tcll.a:s A&amp;.M .'16, Iowa St . 17
T~1wsTc.:h 17.Karu;u;7
Tcxns-El Pnso JJ. Tulsa HI

I

W~cming

Hockey

Far West

.'\rizonn 2M. S!anftwd 22
Arizona St. J~. Sourht:rn Cal7
Boise St. 52. New MeJiil.'() St 10
CS Northridge JO. Wl.'bl:r St. 20
Ca.l Poly-SLO :'12. Simon Fraser 12

34, ~vadil )()

Atlantk: Division

.1! I. I &amp;

lola

WuJhingtun
....~
Philad!:lrhi:l ..................4
NewJcrn:y ..........
. .. J
N.Y. RanJ.:n .................... I
Tampa Bay ,........................ 2
N.Y. bhuttl..•rL ........... ....... I
Aoridu ...
.......... 1

I
2
2
0
2

0
0
0
4
I
2 I
20

10
K
6
6
~

liE 1iA
2.1
19

1.\
IJ

I~

12

14

II

12

II

J
2

\1

1.1

Y

II

h

14

11

~

II

9
17
JK

Nenhnul Dlw..._

............................. 2
Mo,..n!ul ............................ 2
BuiTJic ............................. 2
Pittsbur~h ......................... 2
Bo11.on ............................. 2
Camlinn.....
.. ......... I
OU;~wu

' -·-

2 l
I I
J I
.~ I
J 0
.a 1

5 I~
5 I~
4 14
J

19
19

JJ

WESTERN CONFERENCE

NHL standings

.1! I. I lla. liE !iA

1wD

EASTERN CONFERENCE

f.lt.&gt;1ruit ..
........... -1
Sl.l.•llttis .......
.. ....... 4
Ualloa.... !.......
.. ........ 2
Pln:nt11 ......
.. ........... 2
Tt'lfiiDtn .......
.. ........ 1
Ok:tt!-n .......................... 0

0 I
I II
2 I
2 I
J I

9 21
1'1 • IK
~
15
5 15
6

12

0

5

2tl

.. ........ol 0 2 IU IK
.. .......... 2 2 I ~ 12
.. ..... 1 2 .~
5 22
San )(1!14: .. ' •
.. ..... ... .. 2 J 0
4 n
An~lhL-im ............................. l I I
~
6
Vmli.'OIIWcr. ......................... l 2 I J 10
Calp.ovy ...............................o J 2 2 K

10

PHilk Dh•bion
C11lor.tdu .......
Edn"mtnn .......
U.a Antell."~ .

liaturday's 5COrts
Pi(td!urgh -1. Cilf'Oiina I
Wa.~in!!ton J. N.Y. l~lnntlt.~ I
Phllnddl"hla 6. Momr'-•ul 2
NL'W JI.!B~JY .\. numdn 2

SalurdaJ·Bia Tto
Mtchlpo State ut N'K1hw'-"ittm
Indian.-. at OHIO STATE
IOWIIIII Michigan
Wiscon!in nt Purdllt.'
Minnesota at Penn Smtl!'

Saturday's stan
"tl;mcu4. Aorida 0

·

FlorrdJ 2. Atlanta I, Aorid:llellds senes .\ .2

MAC standings

FuturegamH
T-y
Flonda (Brown 16-8) at Atlanta !Giavine 147), 8:07p.m.

Wtdnetday
Florid:! (Saundert 4-6) at Atlanta (Smoltz. 15·
12). 8:07p.m., if neceuary

Football

n.. n
IJ .a:n 176

.1! 1. I

u110

New En~land ............. ... -- ~ I
MinmL
................... 4 2 0 .667 119 l IL

N.Y. J~~ .............................&amp; J 0 .571 177 JJ7
Buffalu .............................. J ~ 0 .500 122 159
lndial\aflUib ........................O 6 0 .000 88 155

c......

Jaclr:sonvill~ ........................ 5

I 0 . 113~ lb9 119

Pituburgh .......................... .4 2 0 .067 145 160
BaltimUR".......
.............. ~ ~ 0 .SOD 161 I~
Ttnneuec...
............ 2 4 0 JJJ 114 IJJ
CINCINNATI ..... ......... ...... ! 5 0 .167 lllt 164
Wtll
Dcn\lft" ........ ,.........
.6
Kwas~ Ci1y
.............. 4
Soo Dh!'f.O.
......... J
Stnul.:.
............... J
Oakh•nd ............. ..... . ....... 2

-·-·

190
122
102
107
151

. II~

110

q6
134
I~

Eutem DivbiOn
~I.I&amp;fii!A
.................... 3 2 0 .bOO 124 75

2 0 .600
J 0 .571
4 0 . JJ~
5 0.167

90 73
Ill l.l \
Ill 117
109 IJI

Crnlnl
Bny ....................... 5
Minnt:Mlla ........................... 5
T:unp;~ Bay .........
...... ~
lktroir ..
.4

2 0 .714 16M
2 0 .714 176
2 0 .714 140
J o .:m 160
.. ......... .0 1 0 .fXXl 101

G~n

Chl..:a~n ..

w...

Sun Fmn..:i~~o .
. .... 5
Carolina ...
.. ... 1
St. Utui~ ..
.. .. ............1
Nr...-w Orkans ...... .. ............ 2
Atlanta .............. .. ............. !
Sunday~s

I 0 .KJ.I 152

149
ISS
12-1
t29
19'.1
70

.a 0 .U J 114 127

4 0 JJ3 104 1-12
5 0 . ~ liM 162
5 0 .167 lOS 15.\

Kores

AIL·mra 2.l. N.:w Orle:uu 17
Nl."w EnJhtrkl JJ. Ruffalu fl
Tenllt"s~ JO. CINCINNATI7
O..'lnlit 27. Tamp&gt;t B:•y 9
Gn.-.:n 8:1y 24, O•i~a.-:u 2J
Mi:1mi )I. ~w Yurlr.kts 20
J ;~..: b~mvtllt- Jll. Phil~lphia 21
Mirr.lli!'Sntn21. Carolina 14
N&amp;!-w Yurk Giant• 27. Mwna I~
San l:r.md~«.-.1 30, St. Louis 10
Piluh.lr!!h 2-1. lndi:lltlfiOii• 22
0P"n dat~ : B:~llinmrl'. Den\'.:r.
O:lkl11ntl. Snn Di~~u. Si!~ttlc

Kansa~

City.

111 Wnhtn,:t,ln, 9 p.m.

AP Top 25 college poll

5

I .HO
J .2~
·J .2~

I
I

4 .42'J
~ .167
."i .167

0 1.00

~

0

I W.Michigan ............... J 2 .600
E. Mi~:hican ... ,........... 2 ~ .40Q
C. Mh.:hi&amp;~~n ................. l J .2~
BaiiSt ..........................O 4 .OOJ
N. IllinOIS..,
....0 .1 .OOl

4

J __,71
4 JJJ

L.~t

~

lla..w..ll

I PtnnSt (s;l) ..
.. .... s;-0
2. N.:lxas.ka(I~) .......................... ~-Q
.l Fk•idt St (.l) ......
.. ........ 5..0
-I . N(lnhC:ttoli~U~{l)
.. 6-0
~ - M•dU~iiR .
.. ..·,5-0
6. Auburn .
. 6..0
7 Flnridn
. :'1-1

1.~21

.~

) .-1')()
1..\66
I. :!SO

6
M

M. LSU , ......

1.199

I
1-1

1,126
1.121
I.JIJ

\1
10
1

.. ..~.0 I.OlM
.:'1-0 9~11
..5-0 tl27

II
12
15

, 5-I
lJ. Tl!'lli'ICI~ ...... ,...................... ol-1
10. Wa~hinttum ........ ..:.............. 4-1
II OHJOST ............ J...............~-1

12 . .. idoii...SI .......
D Wnsilington S1. ...
14 Texas A&amp;M ... .....

1~ . Iowa ......................

.. .............l

J

2
2

~

.MJ)
.103

I .1.10

.286

I

6 .1-IJ

0

6 .000

Saturday's stores
MAC
E. Mil:hipn JK. Ball S1. J2 •
W. Mithlf.UR .'4. Bowhng On:cn 21
Miami 61. Ktnt 26
MARSHALL ~2 . Akmn 17
Tokdo41 . C.:rw. MiL'higan 10

GUARANTEED BEST BUY IN AMERICA

Non-anh-rrnc~

Vtmdcrhilll7. N. lllinui~ 7

Sal:urday-MA.C
Akron at E Michi(l.:tn
Ctnt . Michigan 111 Ball St.
Buwling Green nt OHIO
Kent at W. Michij!lln
MARSHALL at Minmi
N. lllinof's til TokUo

..4-1

16. Ok"""""' So......
6-0
17. UCLA ..
.. .............. ol-2
Ill. Atr Foret .............
.7--0
19 Gc:orf:ill ............... ..................4-1
20 K.:nu:tSSt ............................4-1
21 . GeorjiaTCl:h ............
.. ..+!
22. VirtiniaTecb.....
.. ......... ~-I
llWat'flraJnia ..................... ~-1
24. Wisconsin ........
.. ..........6-1,
H . StanfOI'd ............
............ 4-2

1.?2-1
1.66M
I .6CJJ

2
.l
-1

703

11

OM

10
IK
19
IJ
22
2.1
23

6 .~7
~lb

4-1-6
.11111
2111
274
IK2
LW
119

16

Olhm ~·inl rota: Ariwlll St. 69. New
·Mexico .fl . TOL£00 46, Purdltt Jll, Wyomi!'J 2~.

Virsmia 20, Alabama 1~. CoiOQdo 1~. BrtJham
Yovna 14 Miami (Ohia) I I. OHIO 9. Clei'Oion ~.
MARSHALL 8, Soufhem.Misa. 5. Colorado Sr.-4.

1997 ASPIRE

1997TAU~US

Stock N!l7839

GL

1997 EXPLORER
SPORT
Stock 197566

NCAA Division I scores
Saturday's action
Air

Fnr~'C'

F.all

N:~ vy

7
Y:1k N
Calhnh..: U fll. L1 Salk 21
C~m . Cunnn:ticul St 25. S1
Cui(I.Ottl! -4-1, Lnf;•yeut b
0;.-unoulh ·' L Funlham 10
10,

8u..:kntll2~.

Ochlwar~ ~4.
O~llfll."

Fraud~ .

Pa. nc

Rkhmund 7

2K. F:1irftdd 2.l

&lt;k'OI'J!Ctuwn. D.C. 24. 01ni~ius 10
H;n:wd J-1. l'urncll 9
H~~~·~tm J,\, N~·w H:tntjlshil\' 14
Huly CmSs 45. Columhia 16
Lchit!h 2.a. Penn 7
M:linc 49. Connccti.:m 47 COTJ
Notn: O.nnc 4.'1 , Pkt!'but}.'.h 21
Pl.."DnSt. .l l.Ohi1tSt. 27
Prinl.'l.'ll\n JO. 8n1wn 1.\
R~ lsl.:t.rul 20. Hosrnn U 1J
Sicnn 50. hma 7
Yillomuv;t -19. Ma~~;t~.·hu~ls 27
WaJ!I(r -12. St. Peter · ~ I-I
Alc,pm St. 24. Prairi~ Y1tw 'I
Au&amp;um -I'J. L.ouisi:~n~t Tech IJ
C~:ot . Aoridu 52. Spmfonl7
l1~llatkXl~ 27. VMI24
CttUI 2.'. E. Tennt'll!i4..&gt;e S1. 20{UTI
E. Kt:ntu~· ky -1'1, T~nAI:~M:C St. 7
Elun -II. Sourb FluriJ.t IJ
f'ltwtJa St . 51. Duke 27
Fumlim 24. Apptla.:hinu St 22
Gt..-orgm Suutlll!'rn .m. W. Carnlina 7
Gl"tlf'P,Ilt Tc~h 27. N. C'm1Jiimt St. J1
Gmmhlln,: St. 20. Miu. Vall.:y St JJ
Ham(llon .l~. Lih.."My 27 {O~t
Howarll I-4. lktbullt!-C()ntman 7
UW

H.:tt: nr~ ~~ TnJI 2:'1 tl.'am~ in tht Antldat.:d
Pren ""''It!~ foottJall poll. W.ith fim-,,lacl.' vmn in
r:uenthcst:s. ~o:um:nt m:onb iY uf I;L'I Sollunlty, ,,,..
tal poinrs b:~ on 2~ points for a fir~• pi;M.~ vt_llt
thr~Jh onr point for a 2~th pl:k:t Yo4t. anJ la~t
w~ttk' • fin.al r.:mkm~ :

1om

.Wl

I
I

South

Toniaht's game
Dallll~

~

0 1.00
I .150

This week's slale
0 0 1.00
2 0 .r:.67
.) 0 . ~
J o .~
4 0 J~~

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
WMhinJttnn ......... ,............. )
N.Y. Glarus. .................. .4
Phtla*lrfflia.......... .............. 2
AnztlfiOI .............................. I

Onrall

~ ~ ~· ~

WtllttmOl.WO..

Eutft"n Oi.i!lioft

[}.til:.- ..

MARSHALL ............. J
OHIO ,........................ J
Miami .......................... J
BowliRJ On:lcn ........... J
Ktnt ............................. l

Toledo........

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

lola

.1!

lola

Alr.ron .... .:..., ................. l

NFL standings
lola

Eastern DhoisJon
Cont.

~ I(

SJ39Jmo s

379/mo

8

60mos@5.9%
20% Down*

M
II
9
1ft

)

4 0

This week's slate

Atlanta vs. Florida
Suqciay's KOR

O.trall

...... 2
...... 2. 0 1.00
.. .2 0 1.00

Penn S1.. .... ..

Ckvdand 8, Baltimore 7; Oeveland leads se.'\-1

B~:tlttmore

~

lam

Jl, Illinois 7

Young~town

Coni.

Baltimore vs. Cleveland

ne~

Wi~consin

Big Ten standings

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ATHENS·- The 1997 Ohio Universny Homecoming celebration
wt!! reflect on the strong ties
between the university and communuy as Athens celebrates its bicentcnnial this ycat.
The weekend of activities, titled
"Athens- 200 Years: A Look Back,"
runs from Friday through Sunday on
the Athens campus.
For the fourth year in a row,
Homecoming wi!J be kicked off Friday night with a fireworks display at
about 10:30 p.m. The fireworks can
best be viewed from the Ping Center
parking lot area, said Dexter Bailey,
assistant director of the Office of
Alumni Relations.
Earlier in the day, Ohio Universi·
ty President Robert Glidden wm
deliver his annual State of the University address, titled "A Sharper
Focus," at4 p.m. in 194 Irvine Audi·
torium. The hour-long address will
be broadcast live on WOUB-AM
and made available to the five

regional campuses via the campus'
new compressed video system.
At the Alumni Association's
annual awards banquet and receplion on Friday night in Nelson Commons, seven distinguished individuals will be honored for their contributions to Ohio University. They
include 1997 Alumnus of the Year
John M. Jones; Honorary Alumni
Award winners F.rancine ,Childs and
William Y. Smith; and Medal of
Merit Award winners Carolyn Hlad
Balogh, Rayman B. Fogg Sr.,
Richard Budd Werner and Thomas
E. Wheeler.
Satunlay's actiyjtjes wm belin at

10 a.m. with the Homecoming
parade, which starts at the comer of
Morris and East State streets, travels
past the review stand at Baker Center, and ends near the Visitors Center
at Richland Avenue and Shafer
Street. The Visitors Center wi!!
sponsor an open house from 9 a:m.
to 4 p.m. Saturday in honor of its
lOth anniversary.
This · year's Homecoming parade
marshals are Jones, a 1949 Ohio
University graduate, and his wife,
Verda, who chairs the Athens Bicentennial Committee.
Following the parade, the fun and
cplertajn!!H\nt continue at the Ri9

Top Extravaganza along the riverfront, which runs from 11 a.m to
1:30 p.m. Saturday. Besides an array
of activities for alumni, families and
students, several academic colleges
will have tables set up with informalion and displays. The Big Top also
will feature live performances by the
Marching 110, Alumni Band, cheerleaders, clowns and jugglers, and a
food court featuring local vendors.
The Marching 110 will lead the
crowd from the Big Top area to
Peden Stadium for the start of the
OhioBowling Green football contest. Game time is at 2
The Bobcats. off to

since 1976 with a 5-1 overa!! record,
hope to beat tbe Falcons at Homecoming for the second consecutive
year.
After the football game, Homecoming revelers can enjoy the annual Saturday night concert, which will
feature a two-part performance by
legendary blues guitarists Leon Redbone and John Hammond. Hammond, hailed as a "blues troubadour," will take the stage first. Then
Redbone, best known for his oldtime blues tunes, ragtime and country songs, will play.
Sponsored by the campus' Per- .
forming Art Series. the concert will

be at 8 p.m. at Grover Center. Tick· •
ets cost $13 for resular adplission,:
$9 for seniors and $S for studentJ:
with an ID. 1ickets are aiailable II:
the Haning Hall box office or by;
calling 593-1780 between noon and •
5:30p.m. weekdays.
;
The weekend of events are spon- C
sored in part by the Ohio University:
Alumni Association, campus col-=
leges, First USA, Follett's Universi·;
ty Bookstore, Peoples Bank, the •
Amerihost Inn, Significant Impact;
Awards, Athens McDonald' 1 :
Restaurant, an(! the Ohio Universily !
Employees' Credit Union.
l
'

Hazards
for pets
By Alden Waitt, Prealdent

Culori!Uo Sl . 5~. San JoR &amp;:. 20
E. W~~Shinaton .\0. Sacramento St 17
Hawnii 28. Fresno St 16
Idaho 44. UC Dnvis 14
Montana 48. Idaho Sc. 0
N. Arizuoal-4, Mont11na St. I.~
No:w Mc:11ico )6, San DicJO St. 21
Orcgun St. 24. Utah Sl. 16
Portland Sc. 3."i. St. M~~ry·,. UJ. 21
San Diego 24, Butler 14
Southern Mtth. 20. Utah \9
UCLA :\9.0rttwn ]J
UNLV 21, Tcx.usOiriitian 19
W.15hington JO. Cnhfomi.:t. ~

W. lllinots 29, N. Iowa 22 (2 OT)
W. Mithipn )4, Bowling0reeo '21

•
The Dally Sentinel • Page 7 :

Ohio University's Homecoming Celebrates-Athens bicentennia~

.

Penn State's win over OSU puts Nittany Lions at No. 1
By RICHARD
ROSENBLATT
AP Football Writer

Monday, October 13, 1997

60 mos@4.9%

114
21
IJ
b
l.l
1-1

Melga County Humane Society
A general maintenance check on
the family car could kill the family
pet. How? Conventional antifreeze,
which tastes sweet to cats and dogs,
can poison your family pet. Accord·
ing to a recent study conducted ,
among veterinarians for the Ameri·
can Society for the Prevention of
Cruelly to Animals and Safe Brands
Corporation, nearly 120,000 pets are
poisoned by antifreeze each year. Of
these more than 90,000 of the animals died. Dogs may tell you that
they
sick but, more likely than
not, the house cat will simply crawl
into a safe space somewhere,
become sicker and perish.
Conventional antifreeze, which
contains ethylene glycol, js highly
toxic and causes these needless
deaths. Less than· two ounces can
kill the average dog and one tea·
spoon can kill a cat. As little as two
tablespoons can be harmful to a
small child, although · few of us
allow small children to crawl around
near cars when we are working on
them.
What do you do? Make sure all
petS are safely out of the way when
you work on your vehicles. Make
sure that even the smal)est "'"ount
of antifreeze is not a!!owed "to puddle in your driveway or freeze there.
Check the label on the antifreeze
you buy and look for alternatives to
conventional antifreeze, such as
Sierra Antifreeze coolant and Prestone Low-Tox, which contain
propyiene glycol and are less toxic
and safer for pets, kids, and the envi. ronment. If the local dealer does not
carry the safer product, then demand
il.
Other hazards in tbe basement
and garage? Any kind of poison
should be stored in an airtight container than cannpt be pried open by
an animal. Watch out for oil collected in vats, as this is murder on cat
paws and fur. Rat poison still does in
hundreds of dogs and cats each year;
and fishing line, bait, and even
sinkers have been removed from the
mouths of curious animals on countless occasions.
If you know when the road outside in front of your house will be
blacktopped or sprayed with oil,
keep all the animals away. Tar can
be removed by gently rubbing with
another form of oil, such as veg·
etable oil, but this takes a lot of time
and no animal likes it, so it makes
.sense to simply avoid that situation.

with a

are

and
•

•••

•
•
•
•••

•

Cellular, paging, long distance, right down the street."'

'
'

•

1997
AEROSTAR

1997
RANGER

1998
·WINDSTAR
STOCK# 98148

t-lond:t 21

M:!l'llh:•ll ~2. Alr:t~lll 17
MeN~~

St .'\ll. NW l.f~t~i~iana?
.lM . ArkatL\:1~ St. 9
M11ldl.: T~nn . ,11. T~nn .- Ma,in 24
Miu• ~M PJ'II St . 2-1. Nt-: Louisinna 10
Mutdlt'aJ St .l7. WnHr•rJ J~
Murray St. ~I . Au~tin Pc:~y 0
N C';~rnlnt:J A&amp;T -10. F'loridlt A&amp;M 37 (2 on
N.:wbcny ""· Ch~leston Sour~n I-I
Ntdkl!l~ St . 211, SW Teka~ St 2H
Nnnh Alabama -ttl. SW Loulstaoo -12 . .JOT
Nlll1h Carulin:~ JO. Wnk~ Fon:st 12
S. Curnlioa St. 2K. Norfolk Sr. 2.~
Suuth (amlin,, JK . Kl!'ntui:ky 2-1
Suulltrrn Mlu. 2J. Eltst Can&gt;h11111.l
Tcnnc~kr .~K. GeofJ:ia IJ
Tffly St l.l .'\.1m Hou.stcn St. 10 JOTI
Tulane 64. l..ouil'lilll.' JJ
Virp;in1a 21. Ch:rn~on7
Virf.inla T«h 17. llolion.COikJI.' 1
. w~~.~hingtnn &amp; l« .'2. Da•idwn 22
We~~ Virgmia .~ I, Marylud 14
Willimn &amp;. Mnry .\8. Jttme. MalltAon 2.'i
~mpbi~

MJdWHt
Cilk:tmaau JJ, Ala · Birmln1twn 2(,1
DJyton I 4. Drake I J
E. MkhiJ.'\n JK. 8~11 St. n
Kansas St . 41 . Missouri J J
~ Mi01mi. Ohio 62. Ke!W 26
Mkh1Fn 23 , Northwcnem fl
MichiJIIn St . .1f.. hliano~ 6
Purdue 59. Minl'll.'sota 4J
S. lllilkM1 .l I, Illinois St 29
SW Miuouri St.'22. 1ndinnaSt. 7
Te~W~nllll! Tech 17, SE Missouri 14
ToMdo&lt;tJ. Cenf. MicbtpaiO'
Yalp.wai.o 12. Evansville 10.
Ve.Mtt1)jlf 17, N. Ulinoh 1

Bradley Robinson
Bradley Jordan Robinson cele·
brated his seventh birthday on
Aug. 17 at the home of his grand·
parents, Grover and Elsie White,
Long Bottom.
A dinosaur theme ·was carried
out and guests enjoyed a pizza
party, riding bikes and swimming.
Attending were his mother. Serena ·Robinson and brother,
Cameron. Mr. and Mrs: White.
Sonia, Jeff, Jeffrey Tyler and
Christa Circle. Seth Carleton,
Sheila, Dan, Kin, Danielle and
1iffany Spencer, Jamie. Cody and
Cailin Rockhold;. Woodrow Fort·
ney and Tiu!lma Walton.

(

1051 East State Street, Athens

(614} '592-4911

·,

Copyrlljlht o 1997

~

Comrnunotion5 c~

�A

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

~How

(Utne .....
Low Rilla)

safe is your Social Security number?

BY ED PETEI:ISON
.Social Security Manager,
Athena
Social Security has a new factsheet titled When Someone Misuses
Your Social Security Number. The
· factsheet contains information you
should know if you suspect, or
:. know, that someone is using you"-.
Social Security number.
. The facrsheet notes that, if you
think someone is using your Social
Security number, check your Social
• Security earnings record. If you find
an error, repon it to Social Security
_ and we'll help you correct your

-.

record.
To check your earnings record,
call our toll-free number, 1-8007721213. for a Personal Earnings and
Benefit
Estimate
Statement
(PEBES). You can also download a
PEDES application from the In.ternet
at hup.: l/www.ssa.g~v or vtstt the
Athens Soctal Secunty .office.
When so~eone mtsuses yo~r
Soctal Secunty number to obtatn
credit, Social Security cannot fix
your credit record.
The factsheet suggesrs steps you
can take to resolve credtt problems
and lists the names and phone num-

hers of major credit·reporting agencies.
To prevent misuse, protect your
Social Security card and your number by keeping your Social Security .
card in a safe place.
When you stan a new job, you
should show your card to your
employer so your name and earnings
can be reported properly. The factsheet should be useful to people who
want io insure the security of their
Social Security number. To get a
copy of the new factsheet, call 1800-772-1213 and ask that one be
sent to you. You can also get a copy

:Community Calendar
The Community Cale.ndar is published as a free service to non-profit
. groups wishing to announce meeting
-and special events. The calendar is
· ·: not designed to promote sales or
.fund raisers of any type.~tems are
_printed as space permiiS and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific numller of days.
· MONDAY
:. CHESHIRE - Disabled Ameri. can Veterans, Chapter 53, Monday, 7
:. · p.m. at the hall, located on Stale
Route 7. Speaker on deregulation
: \Uid compensation issues. Dinner at
- 6:30; meeti.ng at 7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Big Bend Fann
Antiques Club, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
' in Meigs High School Library.
POMEROY - Meigs County
·.~ l.loard of Elections, regular meeting,
:. Monday, 9 a.m. at the offtce.
RACINE -

Monday, October 13, 1997

Board of Education special meeting
Monday, 7:30 p.m. in the high
school cafeteria to discuss personnel
matters.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Chapter. Right to Life, , 7:30 p.m.
Monday at the Pomeroy Library.
EAST MEIGS - Levy commit·
tee for Eastern Local School District, 6 p.m. Monday, in the cafeteria.

SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce Luncheon
noon at Carleton School. Speaker
will be Trish McCullough, executive
director of the Gallia-Meigs Com·
munity Action Agency/JTPA.
MIDDLEPORT - Representative of the Ohio Tuition Trust Fund
will be speaking at 7 p.m. Tuesday at
the Middleport PTO meeting to be
held at the elementary school.

. WEDNESDAY
CHESTER ·- Chester Volunteer
RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, Monday, 7 p.m at the Fire Department work detail
municipal building.
Wednesday, 6 p.m. followed by spe- .
cia! meeting at 7 p.m. at the fire station. All members urged to attend.
TUESDAY
SYRACUSE- Syracuse PTO, 7
p.m. Tuesday at the elementary
REEDSVILLE - The regular
monthly meeting of the Eastern Athschool.
letic Boosters will be conducted in
POMEROY - Bedford Town- the high school cafeteria Wednesship Trustees, Tuesday. 7 p.m. at the day. 7:30 p.m. All coaches and partown hall.
ents of athletes are. urged to attend.

of the factsheet by visiting the
Athens' Social Security office.
Elderly Urged to Get Flu Shots
Because statistics show that older
people are twice as likely as younger
people to get pneumonia or nu, the
Public Health Service ·recommends
an annual flu, shot for people over
age 65, even if they are generally
healthy.
The cost of both pneumonia vaccinations and flu shots is covered by
Medicare Pan B (medical insurance).
·
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
The Melg• County
EngiOHr and U.lga County ·
Auditor will hold public
mntlng1 on October 18,
1997, and Octobtr 23, 1997,
II 2:00 p'.m. In tiM Mllgl
County Court Courtroom,
s..oncl Floor, Mllgt County
Courthou...
TIM" 1MIIIIng1 ar• h•ld
In accordance with ORC
3111.203, In order to adopt
ttandarda governing lh•
conveyanc11 ol r.. t
property In M.tg• county.
A copy of thl propollcl
lllltndlrdt ahatt be available
for public lnapectlon during
normal buatne11 houra at
the offiCII of tha county
auditor and county
tnglnlor.
(10) 13, 20 2 tc

Typically, shots are given i~ the the vaccine is provided at a doctor's
fall or winter. The best time to get a office or by a hospital, skilled nursflu shot is mid-October to mid- ing facility, home health agency,
November. Medicare beneficiaries rural health clinic, federally qualrdo not need a doctor's prescription fied health center, outpatient physior supervision to have this vaccina- · cal therapy provider, a compreben·
tion covered by Medicare Part B. sive outpatient rehabilitation faciJic
And, beneficiaries do not pay a ty, or health maintenance organiza.
tion (HMO).
.
deductible or coinsurance amount.
Medicare Part B pays for pneu. Medicare Part B pays the reasonable approved amount for either monia and hepatitis B vaecinatio1111
shot. If the cost exceeds the and flu shots when the beneficiary is
approved amount, the beneficiary is In the hospital. even though the hosresponsible for the difference.
pital stay is covered under Part A
Generally, the cost will be paid if (hospital insurance).

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Remodeling

II
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45718

Qu8.1ity Window Systems

JoeWIIaon

110 Court St.
1112-4111

LUMP AND SIOIER COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
D.ELIVERY AVAILABLE
Houra:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00 p.m. Monday thru Frldly
7:00 am to Noon S.turdl

1/4/lfn

50% OFF I. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
AI c.,.t·Uphelst•y
a. .....
DUMP TRUCK
CHEVALIER'S

SERVICE

CARPET QEANING
Carpet-Upholatery

Umeatone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

614-992-G077

986 4422

.
Nancy Zimpher, Dean of Ohio
"State University's College of Education, spoke on changes at Ohio State
·: university at a recent gathering of
members of the Ohio State Universi. (y Alumni Club of Meigs County
·. and guests held at Carleton School

in Syracuse.
Noting that Ohio State University
·~is ranked as one of the top 25 public
universities in the nation. she saitt
emphasis in attracting National
Merit Scholars has paid off.
New athletic facilities for base·
ball, basketball, football and intramural spans are being built. noted
Zimphcr, who also commented on
the ground breaking ceremonies for
a new Alumni House off Olcntangy
River Road•held in the spring.
Revitalizing and restoring the
housing and ·business district just
cast of main campus has begun. the
speaker said.
Jennifer Sheet• introduced the
speaker and later presented to her on
behalf of the Meigs County Alumni
Club a Meigs County Historical
.Society's lap robe depicting the
Meigs County sites involved in
Morgan's raid.
· "Picnic With Your OSU Friends"
· was the theme of the gathering of
members and friends who arrived at
Carleton School to tbe taped strains
of music of the Ohio State University Marching Band.
· · Finger food was prepared by
: Alumnus Jeannie Withcrall, whil~
~ ootbe picnic meal featured barbecued
ribs prepared by Sweet Greetings&gt;
. Bake Shop owner, Tom Glaze. ·
Master of Ceremonies Bernardi
:. Eultz kept the evening program on•
- schedule. Alumni officers were·
introduced including Harold Kneen.
president; Karen Griffith. vice pres. .ident; and Sheets, trca.&lt;urcr.
• ·: Fultz initiotcd the raising of S180
. ·to help pay for the club's commit• ment to . assist in · building a new
.. Alumni House on campus.
Several alumni were asked to
- comment on their osu mcmcinos
·which were on display. Martha
Hoover explained how she "picked
;up" football coach Woody Hayes
when he had a flat tire when he first
" arrived at Ohio State University.
Suzy Cal)lCnter displayed a picture of her eldest son who was l&gt;orn
• while she was enrolled-at OSU.
• Karen Griffith brought along her
band unifonn and newspaper clip·
. pings depicting her selection as the
· first woman in the OSU Marching
Band.
• · Hal Kneen showed a leather
coaster his grandfather, J.V. Crago
. ''2 1 purchased in '1922 commemorating the ~h year of the founding of
,Phio State University in 1872.
Chuck Yost displayed his 1974

year book from ATI (Agricultural
Technical Institute), a pan of Ohio
State University.
Special recognition was given to
the most senior alumnus in atten-

Lawrence, Karen Griffith, Maxine
Griffith, John and Patricia Cook,
Rick Crow, Alan and Kay Holter,
Roy and Pat Holter, Martha Greenaway, Wilma and Jessica Mansfield, ·

·-

Cheater, Ohio

dance,

Jeannie Witherell, and Hal Kneen .

Martha

Brown

HuSted

Greenaway from the Class of 1935
and the youngest alumnus, Patricia
Parker Cook Class of 1982.
Alumni and guests in attendance
- wer~ : Harold and Elizabeth Lohse,
Manha and Wendell Hoover, Douglas Hunter, Roben Buck. John and
Joan Anderson, Nita and Chuck,.
Yost. Suzy Cal)lCnter. Tom Hysell.
Bernard Fultz. Jim and Jennifer
Sheets. Thereon and Mary Lew
Johnson. Jim and
Barbara

__________________. ,

c c·u-cc'K
~]&lt;-"*

Ohio State University Alumni or
friends of OSU who would like to be
involved in assisting the local club
helping local students learn about
Ohio State University, arc invited to
contact Hal Kneen at 992-6696 or
992-6435. Prospective students
should talk to their guidance counselor or call our student recruitment
chairperson. Karen Griffith at 9925782.

LLL

~

JI.TTADS r,
-cz·nsn
·
.ll.'
:

"~"''H''C lVJ'.t
.1. J L W.llJ' ·

·-

Owners

Telephone .

614-992-7508

•

Insurance Agency
113 W. 2nd Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
0111c\,: 992·!5479
1-BOQ-742-3868

800~795-1110

Tracy Hupp

,_.~.._

Rt. 7
992-9200
Large 16", 31tem ·$9.99
Subs, Salads, Lasagna,
Spaghetti, Bread Sticks, w;,~, ,
Hot Wings or
Cheese Sticks.
WE DELIVER!!- -

I
I·

949-2817

Rutland Bottle

Gas

992-5829

MEIGS COUNTY FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL
MEETING
Tues .• Oct. 14, 7:00 PM at
Meigs Senior Citizen Center.
Adults $5.50, Child $3.50
Entertainment •Jan &amp; Kathy",

100 lb Gas Cylinder
Cheapest In The
Tri· Co. Area

742-2211

Door Prizes

Dr. Margie Lawson
Dr. Nick Roblnaon
Dr. Jack Ballet
Dr. Jamea Witherell, M.D.
Dr; David Faro
Dr. Keith Sheeta
Dr. Jeff McAdoo, M.D.
Dr. Harry Amabury
Dr. Barbara Haggy
Anwar Cataract Center
Retired Senior Volunteer
Program
Melga County Council on
Aging
Holzer Home Heahh NurHe
Veteran• Memorial Home
Health Nuraea
Buckeye Home Health
Nuraea
Woodland Center
Dllea Hearing Center
In-Hearing
The Dally Sentinel
Melga County Extenalon
Office
Ohio Unlveralty'a College of
Olteopathlc Mec:llclnt

Melga High School Nuralng
Asalatant Studenta
PleaHnt Valley Hoapltal'a
Medical Explorara
Dr. Larry Kennedy
Dr. Jamal Schmoll
Dr. Douglaa Huntltr, M.D.
Dr. Wilma Manaflald,' M.D.
Dr. Michael Wooton
Dra. Tom and Suaan Quinn
Dr. Chrlatopher SWnwlcli;
Dr. Tan Enrico
Janice Haynea, B.A., LM. T.
VetltllriS Memorial Hoapltal
Holzer Medical Canter
Hoi:ur Clinic,
Melga Branch
Holzer Extra Care Nuree1
Continuity of Ca ·e
Sunrlll HealthCltra, ~nc.
Ohio Departmen·: of Health
Karr Audiology
O'BieneH Memorial
Ho1p1tal
Melga Cooperative Pariah
Melga Co. Tubarcutoela
Clinic
Mergle Bt.lkl, R.N.

YMr lavoh••••• ••II C•trlbutlo•• Aro
GrHtly ApproclatttiiJ llot OIIJ
Scrooal•t Spo1sors aiHI Staff l•t also BJ
230 •••• Co••ty losldoats Who Participated
11 Tltls c..proho•slvo HHith Scroonl•t·
THAlli YOUIII
.
Cowt••J C. Mldlclft, I.S.C.
M•ltlphaslc IIMith Scroo•l•t Coordl11tor
•

Rutland
Department

Store
Oct. 13·18

RE·LOCATION SALE
Middleport

We seNice all
brands!

SUPER SAVINGS

MONTH.

since the 1950's
Ask about our extended
warranty ·
Jim Young

Owner

992•5335

GrilledM~

Ohto457H.

.
.lt.k oboul Chri!ilmM Loyowoy!
Tuppers Plains
667-7388
Across from Farmers Bank

Complalntt agatnll the
vllulllonl, 11 eat1bHihed

TOMACELLI'S '
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER

tor tax ye1r 1H7, mual be

mada In accordance with
Sectton 5715.18 of the Ohio
RtVIIId Codo. Tholl
comptatnta mutt 1111 fllld on
'form• which will bt
fllrnlthed by the County
)ludltor and muat 1111 ftledln
the County Auditor'• Office
·on or bllore the 3111 cfly of ·
'Mtrch, 1998. AH oomplalnta
flltd with tht County
Auditor will be heard by the
loard of Revltlon In the
intnnw provided by SectiOn
511 S.tt o1 ,.._ Ohio Rtvllld

Uve Musk, DJs, Vlcleo

Gcnnes, BHilards and ask
about our party space
· • All ages
992-4514

EBERS CITGO
Gas- GroceriesHunling and Fishing
Gear!
"Ohio Lotto"
Play your numbers
at Ebers.

llllolutiOn 11/1 till IOinJ 11/1

r-t1111 Tru-• ol the
Ttiwnehlp of llutlalld,

Sl. Rt. 124 Racine 949·9200

... IliAd, Ohio, p1111d on

... iN .., 11/1 ...... 11t7
..,. ....... l~lld 10.
.... ol till (IICIIIM ol tlld
IUUtuiiiOII II I ca-l
ILICJION 10 belllltlllll Ill
....... of Rulllnd, Ofllo,
II the retufll Jll- of
wttlll _...,., on till 4th
.., or Now....... 1817, lht
111 1Can of lft(•'l • tu, tn
tXalle of the ltn mUI
IR R 111111, ,., lhl blntllt 11/1
.-uaanc1 TOWIIIIIIII for thl
(111111011 ot Maln181nll'l inC\

The Da·ily Sentinel
ltemlnds you to support ~our locAl buslnessall
cro Prom~te IJour ljuslnas
fin 'fhe Smpll Business Dlr«to'fl·
CAll DAve Harris or Don l'llffla Cit 992-2155

'
I

•

,,

'

operating__,..,
Said tu · b•lng:' An
.-to!IIIIIX of 1.0 mllll
at I 1111 not IXCMding
2.0 mlllllor Neh 0111 dolllr
olvllulllon, which amounta
to 1111 ($0. 101 for MCh
one hundred dollara of
Vllfulllon, for ft¥1 (I) yeare.
Tht PoUt for eold
Election will optln II 8:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
ofllkl cfly.
Br orc11r of the Board of
· Ettctlone,
of Melgl County, Ohio.
Henry L. Hunter
Cheii!IMin
Rita D. Smith
Director

Dattd hpt1111btr 12, 11187
(10) 8, 13, 20,27 tiC
Public Notlea

Notice of Ellc:tlon on Tax
IAvy In Exceu of the Ten
IIIII Umllatlon
NOTICE l1 hweby given
lhat In puttuance of 1
RIIIOiutton ol the Board of
Commlltlonere ol tho
COUnty of M.tgt, PotMroy,
Ohio, pllled on ,the 2111
toefl.
Noncy Parkw C.mpball cfly ol July, 1WT thlra will
Melga County Auditor 1111 oubmlttlcl to 1 vot• of
(10) 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 11, 17, the ptoplo of tatd
•ubdlvlllon 1t 1 Oonerol
11, 20, 21, tote
ELECTION to 1111 hlld In 1111
of lklgt, Ohio, II
Public Notice
piiiCNol-ng
on
liM 4th day of
Notlol o1 Eteotlon on 'hx
• th•
....., In Excltl 11/1 thll'ln
IIV}Itng I ,.,., In
Mill Ut••llllon
· NOTICE It hatlby glvln
thll In purtuano• of 1

Non-Alcohol
Middleport

. Quality Furniture
Plus

Famlly~ed

Check out our New

992-51n

992·2644

KENS APPLIANCE

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Rolera,...: 5115.17
Ohio RIVIMd Cocfl
. Tho Melg• County Botnl
of 111v1110n hat compltlld
lt• work ofeqUIIItutton. TIM
tax Ntuma for tax per.1997
htve be•n r•vtllcl .nd the
veluatlont completed and
are open for public In·
lfiiiCtlon In tho office of lhi
Molgo · County Auditor,
Second Floor, Courthou11,
Second Street, Pomtroy,

· St. Rt. 7

Francis
Florist
.Our new line of
Bean Pals are in
stock!

Sept. 28 at

1:00pm
12 gauge modified

Umlted .
637 BliCk Bore
680 Front

Public Notice
Notice ol Eltetlon on Tax

. Public Notice

'The Healthy" Alternative

Visit our new location next
to Acquisitions.

Sense Lawn &amp; Leaf Bags
Reg. $2.49 Now $2.25
Hrs. M-Sat 8-6
7 42-2100

&amp;top in and see our
new Christmas items

Arthur
Treachers

Buttons &amp;
Bows

. Starts Sunday

Public Notice
· By ortl•r ofthe-rd of
Eleetlona,
ofU.Iga County, Dhlo.
Honry L. Hunttr
, Chairman
Rill D. Smith
Dlreetor
Dated Sip~ 1997
1101 e. t 3, 20, 21 4 tc

_

The Meigs County Health Department Would
like to Thank the Following Agencies and
Healthcare Providers for Donating Their
nme, Service or Supplies for Our Recent
Multiphasic Health Screening:

RACINE GUN
CLUB
Gun Shoots

PIZZA EXPRESS ·

I

1be best Deals on
'
Gasoline tn the areal

202 W. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

T- ..,_ ...... ....

Salon

TWIN OAK
PENNZOIL

-.....c:
·

fJ'rave{
614-992-4233

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

ACut

~
Leo's Cruzse &amp;
.

Ph. 985-4198 ·

&amp;Tanning

I

(

~ Condor Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A DivisiOn on Nic:l&gt;ols Metal, INc.

Pttone: '614: 992-2406

Fax: 304-n:l-5861

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

Free

E1tinwte•

requires

old puppt11, motht~ Old
Engllth ShHp dog, lalhor
Shtphord, 111 tholl l _,...., ·

Bwk

Swllp, IIIIChes, .
Tables, Misc. hems
34718 St. Rt. 7·

WARNER

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine. &amp;Welding Shop

(No Sunday Calls)

Pnftcts

Jon &amp; Carolyn Jacobs

Monday-Friday • 8:00 a.m.- 4:30 p.m.
Saturday· 8:00 a.m. - 12 noon

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
614-992-7643

llaldcrafted Wootl

JEFF

Complete Machine Shop Senke Fabrication
Sled Sales, WelcliDJ Supplies, lndtutrlal Gas
Radlttor Repair &amp;: Replaceaient

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

MY PLACE

Above

AWlOUrKH.1l rl TS

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-100-211-MOO

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 mllea ealt of RDuta 32. ,
WELLSTON, OHIO .
614-384 6212

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
992·5513
.

wv 11023477

BRAMBI MIIIIG

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy • Accetl Regulator Repair
I
State Certified Welder
•
'
•
Stick • ng • Aluminum Welding

111-3oe71ma.
-~····"·
ott....

614-992·3470

PRI&lt;:ES~'

RADIATOR REPAIR

•xpo" ,..,

Call:

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

"Baa.t roar DNana"

IIC,.. -

28001 State Route #7
Cheshire, Ohio 45620

Pl r! d.it '.'
r,f ;,·, ,(_[ '•

Umestone,

"FACI'ORY
DIRECI'

Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
.
SHERIFF'S SALE
man pertlcularly deecrlbld to the pi- of beginning,
REAl. ESTATE
11 lollowa: being In IHIIon contllnlng 20.88
CASE NUMBER 117CV075 no. 2, town S, range 14 of or 1111, Rbjtel to all legal
EMC MORTGAGE
the Ohio Comp 1 ny• 1 euemente tnd I••••• of
CORPORATION
.purchltte and beginning II ...:ord.
PLAINTIFF
an Iron pin lltuatedln tiM Prior
tn1trum•nt
VS.
o1nter of Townthlp roed ~1f1rtnc1e: Volume 311,
TOOD B. OROVER,IIItl
17!1, and point being 110 l!;'.•g• 85. Proptlrty eddrne:
DEFENDANTS
fftt !IO!ith of Ill• north IIIII "'7235 Townahlp Roed 175
COURT OF COMMON
of Mellon no 2 along the lddleport, Ohio 45710
P~
1111 boundary lin• of real
pnlllcl 11$35,000.00.
MEIOS COUNTY, OHIO
..ttl• owned by Carol erma of ult: Cuh Jamea
In pureutnce of tn Ordtr Jlffere; thtnce !lOUth 1238 &amp;:.::. Soulaby Sheriff, Melga
of Sell to me dtr..ted from fHI along 11kl boundtry 1'-"unty
tlld Court In the above line to an Iron pin; thence
Htrry W. C.ppel
entHIICI action, I will
lollowtng a line Jence LAmer, S.mpeon &amp;Rothluu
to aale 11 public auction at tnd blljng tong thl north
120 E. Fourtll Stlftl,
till Courthou" on Oct. 31, boundary 11111 of rell ntate
8th Floor
1997 It 10:00 a.m. of uld ow nod by Jam•• L. tnd
Clnclnnllll, Ohlo 45202
day, th• following cllacrlbld Nortnt c. Ntah, 100 fill to
(513) 241-3100
rHIIIIIIII•:
·8n Iron pin; th•nce north
OhSUpCtiCIOM513
Sltueted In tho townahtp eoo 1111 to an Iron pin. (9) 29, (tO) S, 13,3 tc ·
of Rulland, county of Malga lltutt.d In the center of
tnd 1111111 of Ohio, and being townahlp road 175, 800 IIIII

C&amp;[J Cfumllure

'.~

WICKS
HAULING

Southern Local

:·Alumni ·Club holds
·meeting recently

i

Levy In Pmn1 Df U. Ten

Mill Umllllllon
NOTICE II her•by glvan

that In

pur~uance

of a

Rltolutlon ol thl Botrd of
Townthlp Truate11 ol the
Townahlp of Columbia,
Alblll)l, Ohio, p • - on tho
111 doy of Augulll, 1997
lhlrl will be aubmtned to •
vote of tht PIIDP!• ol uld
•ubdtvlllon at t Gtneral
ELECTION to 1111 hlld In thl
Townthlp of Cotumblt,
Ohio, Ill tiM llfiUIIr piiCII
of voting thoreln, on thl 4th
day of Nowmblr, 1997, thl
qu.llllon olllvytng 1 tax, In
•••••• of tho ten mill
limitation, for thl banalll of
Columbia townthlp for lht
purpoo of Mtlntalnlng 1nd
opel'ltlng cemetorte• Sold
tax belng:2 An additional
IIX Of 112 mill II I rete not
IXCtldlng 112 milia lor•
11oh one dollar of
Yllutllon, wllloh amount1to
flvt otnll ($0.05) for aoch
one hundr•d dol1111 of
valulllon, for s (flva y•ro).
The PoUt lor 11ld
El10llon will o,.n II 8:30
o'clock A.M. ond romoln
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
ofuldday.
By order of thl Boer!! ol_
EIICIIont,
ot U.lfla eounty, Ohio.
Henry L. Hunter
Chllrmon
Rill D. Smith
Dlreetor
Dllld Sept. a, 1997
(10) a. 13, 20, 27 4 tc
Public Notice
NOTICtl Of ELECTION
Notlol II hlraby glvfl
.... JIUIIUIIII "' • ..-tu111111 ldaplld by lhl 11otn1

ot

ltluoallon

of

lhl

tlouthlrn Looll lohD DI
DIIWIIIt, c-,otllllga,

Ohio, on the ileth dlv 11/1
July, 1117, there wllf be
lullntltlld "' Ill quallllld

llwctot 1 of 8lkt 111111101 dlltrtct .. lhl 111011... to be
hlld on tile 4th day ot

NobiiMI:r. 1117, 8t tM ,.... ·
.... , _ rl/lwtlng ..... .

In,"':

ID lri/IIWI!ng I

- · - till

)

OUI8kll of lhl

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addltlono
•New Gtragea
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roonng
•Interior &amp; Exterior

Painting
.
Alto Concrlll Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
1112-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

CELLULAR PHONES

....

or related f;eld.

~2~.

Fote Kl-• lllod&lt; l Whlll Unu&amp;ull Y•rkings Liner Trained,
U111t Box l S.pptlta lnduded, eu ue 8504.

360° Communications

Free orphaned kiuena to good
homt,1-11U,1py ........

' WARNER INSURANCE
JEFF

havt bten bonlt Jed,- are ••·
'trtmllr lovable, tioar n-. op""'""'""" , _ Gld, 8144115- ·-·· •••

113 W. 2ND ST.

Ktnont to aood home, llnor

4212.

POMEROY, OH.

trllntd, 114-KJ.satL

614-992-5479

HOWAlD
IICAVATIIG I
TIUCKIIG
Urnntone H1ullng
HouM &amp; T,.ller SltM
LlndCIII11ng&amp;
Grading
Septic 9yltema
I Utllltlel
Eltlmat•
992-3838

nn

P.lck up dltcordlcl
appllance1, batterte1,
many lllllllll I
· motor blocka.
814-!192-41125 8 am-a m
Card of Thank•
The fa'mily of
Douglas D. Wickline
would like to express
their thanks and
appreciation to the
Nurses (4th floor west)
at Holzer Medical
Center,
Cremeens
Funeral Home Staff,
Rev. Morris Wolfe, all
the family and friends
for their love and
support. It's people like
you who rna ke the
difference in this world
and though you may not
hear it often, you are
appreciated very much.
Your kindness will
never be forgotten.
Wife, daughter, sons
and grandchildren
Public Notice
'""""'Ill conlllltutlonat llmtt111on for 1111 bllnellt of the
- for 1111LDcll
So11001 dt•
trtct
PII'JICIM of pro-

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of financial
obligations and arrange a fair distribution of
assels. Debtors In bankruptcy may keep
"exempt" property for their personal use. This
ma11 includ,e • · car, a • ·houle, clot/tel, and
household goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

*'·

u•: a... Dtntl Lilli nil. , _
malt doa, Wolla PoN Klngtbury
Rd. vlclnlty. ~ to "'ld Yilt·

or•. Plaoao call 814·882-1472

dip CWI14-IIIIH273 MlingL

Athens, Ohio

70

iM/171 mo. pd.

• Refrigaralon

• R111ges e Washers

949-2168
. 1/ll/tln

NEW MY MCIIHIE

BoPoldtn-.
Pf 4 1ll -~ 2:0D p.m.
tho dar ........... Ill
It to
--ll:atlfLIIL

lltNOlES Elm Up To

dar

Nlo~•

GUN SHOOT

992-6194

FRIDAY,

Reopening for full
· time business
.

·Sponsored by
Forked Rua
Sportsman Club
·- .

SAYRE

•NewHomBa
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop 1r Compare
FREE ·
ESTIMATEES
985-4473

Hauling, Excavating
' .1 Trenching.
Uineslone I Gravel
~ Septic Sylltema
Trailer &amp; Houae Slte1
R111onable Rate•

J oe N•.sayre

-on- .

••• ad tl to rvn,
llaldiJ aditio•·

'PialtShorfno
.n..-,._
Proglwn

NOCOUNOPIIOIIFJI?,

__.don... Eorn Up To
IIUIII'Itlltr

-~-.a.1ttm.W7 Md Ean .
'Rlp 'MiatL Clau Slzwo In

UtoliodSO DONT DEI.AVI

trn High Sc:hool to tho RaoiMPomeror lodgt llulldng, tuon toll.
-

... tlgnt In lho ptd.

80

Auction
and Flea Market

for

-lnlo

E"""""' Today!
VICTORY
, _EXPIIESS,IIC.
_1033

-

Crowlaod't Fltt llorllat, H..--

.

vldlng lunda biL ourrent
~:::,61.:;4-;:;;.:.74;;:2:.,·.:,2.;.;138:::.::._.
71221tfn
operotlng . axpen..., II 1 1:-, .
•
rille of lour (4.11) mllll lor· •-----....;..;..._ _ _ _ _.;.._ _ _ _.,.
IIICh one dollar (S1.CIO) of
tax
VIIUIIIon, wlllch
amount• to forty ..ma
(S.to) tor tte11 one ltundrlcl
dolllll (1100.00) of tax ..~
ulllon, lor 1 (3) )'lllr
period, commencing with
tax ,.., 11187, cotttetton
.-r1•.
1'111 polle will be open
from $:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
- Easy Bank Financing ontlldcllet.
IV ORDIR Of THE
Funue.••
1 moulh
IIOMD Of ELICTIDNS Of
THI COUNTY Of 111101,
Pumpt lnlfllied
I month
OHIO
Rlllo D.lmlth, "'Dil.,.wc""tooFIN&amp;,.,..,_,
(10) 1,_13, 20, 27 4TC

anllql.lta. toola. a~U.ncea, fur·
Ntwre, 10ya, wr•rr- 30•·•75·
5404.

Rlc:li

Pt1110n Auction Company,

luN time -auclioneer. complete
auctiDrl
urvlct. Lictnaed

HI,Ohlo &amp; Wott Virginia,
773-57115 Or 304·1'13-5447.

304·

90 Wlnted to Buy
Aboolu11 Top Dollor: All U.S. Sil·

v.,
And Gokl Colna. Proolaats.
Dlamondo, Antlqlll Jewelly, Gold
Ringa. Pt.-1830 U.S. Currtnq,

s...ling, Eo:. Ao:quiolliono _ ,

. II.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Soc:ond
- · Gllipalo, •• .__.21102.
AndqUII, top

P&lt;l... (Mid, Ri-·

lne Antiquea. Po~Mt'o,. Ohio,
Run Moore owner, 114·1D2·
25211.

MobUa lome Furnaces

,,.,.. •

andB•I

Cl11n Lilt llodtl Cart Or
Ttuokt, 1180 llodtlo Or Newer,
~lh Buldi Ponllao, 111111 Eatt-

...,...,,a,o':,

J l O"t Auto Ptrtt. Buying Ml·

-773-50113.
- ·· Stillno ....... - -

'2SOO

I3SOO

-

Ctdf

111111 I CDDLIII

Sef'llnO Sout~Matern OH ·&amp;WV
1 - . - 7.

13el Sllllord School

Md An

Ajlpkalcln Ctlt- Fuue

aon, wv. Ev11rdar a-a. Coalto,

ROBERT BISSELL·
CONSTRUCTION

'TRUCKING

WE aLIO OfFER:
•••• 500 SinD
• Pold Heal...1lonotl ' Uta

Vard ule- Wonder I TuaMar.
October 13·1'. 8:00-'? Roger
Routh ..- . . 110 pili Soulll-

7 P.M.

Specializing In
wedding, anniversary
and birthday cakes.

1EA118 Eorn Up To

!Ill ·If.! c.. ""' IIIIo

I :atlpoo FtldoJ.

EVERY

on...

38 •If.! c.. ""' Milo

Pomeroy,

lu•d•r a

laurie's Custom
fakes

Ellptrielad

Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy
All Van! Salte !kill a. Pold Ia
A d - 01141ll01: 1:IIOpM tile

(614) 843 5440
All Major Brands
Reasonable Rates

EXPIIB!I, INC.'

&amp;VIclnHy ·

frill.,......,_
·10:GOun.8otiiOit¥.

e Dryen e Dishwashers
Honest Reliable
Quality Service

FREE ESnMATES

~ICTORI

ALL--run......,

Appliance Repair
Service

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

YIRI Sell

GIIHpolfs

Bob's

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

-·

60 Lost llld Found

Attorney At Law

Howard L Wrlteael

~--

,.¥1""1111"'

ohlndltt &amp; . . - Pt.
Pltaaant, WV 25550. :100-175-

Poollft,

Attorney William Safranek
(614) 592-5025

Hippy Adl

50.

a

dtgrll In ~nnjlltl.
d,..lopment, publlo

114-445-1411
, OH

'

11/F

�..
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohkt

~y.Octobet13,1997

Monday, October 13, 11M17

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGI:
ACROSS

PHILLIP

-~

ALDER

R-ruw

7 Ill-In•

oMVlow
17U-..-cl
home
51 Wulornropo
53 Certain lravaler
SSin good
worlllngordor
56 Demand
alrongly
57 Troaaurar
58 Proportr

13~1uncl1

RliJTAI ',
WIOptl At

Home. Slalt NDW. No

lana TownhouM ApatiiMnis,
Voor Spau:iouo, 2 Bedlooma, 2
Floofl. CA, I 1111! llalil. fullr CorpoiOd, Aduk Pool &amp; llabr Pool.
Pallo, Stan •3SOIMo. No Pall.
l•N Ph11 SocuriiJ Dopolil ~
qulnad. 814-441·34111, lt4-«80IOI.

.EaPiflenee. FrH SUppUes, Info.
. No Obligallon. Send LSASE To :
• ,\I:E, 'Dopl: 1351 Box 5137, Olo,
; iftond Bor, CA D1715.

,,

: Exp. D~blo DieHl llechan·
· k: W/ Own Toolo; llonolill Provided. Sond Roou. . To: IIECHAtf.
IC. P.O. Box IOD, Jackson, OH .

Twin AttiMI Tow., now ·",SNina
opplk:odono lor lbr. HUD tublicj:
lor3114-1
hindi·
EOtt
711.

45140.

=:,1L

Ho1p- RL 7 PfUI ~
-'holp apply "parion."" pl1ontI Neod Holpl Ovorwhelmod. Eam

no-~~-450
Fumllhld .
Rooms

dloport

2 To 5I( llon1ha, Tolal Trtlri"'l &amp;

eon ""'"· 2 Min. .... _ 1-&amp;00mo~.

are

IE~ HEALTH AGENCY
We Ara Pleased ID AnncH.I~ To
Tho Galllpoio Area. Tho G1011 01
Our Aaoncr- Wt Ani laoking Far
A Dedk:otld. Qullitled Ponan To
Help PromoiO Tho Quallrt C111
We Are Knawn For Throughout
ThoAroo.

FIELD COORDINATOR: Dogrll

In Marktdng Or Prior Mectical
11artoo1ng Expoiooa

• AblliiJ To Coo- Our Homo
Care Sorvlcol Wllh Tho Noedo
01 Tho- car. Conrnurlly.
• e...a1an1 Comnllnictton &amp; Or·
gll1iZallon&amp;l N~

.CONTRACT OCCUPATIONAL
THERAPIST
• We1t VIrginia, Ohio Licenses
Roquwed.
\

Plt'ISICAL THERAPIST:
• West Virginia, Ohio Licenses
Rtqulrtc1

Conatructian Worke,. Wekom1

Orubb"a Pia... luning ' nopolra.
1'1-? -1\ined? Cell the
pilr10 Dr. 814 Ul 1521

• 4
• J 8 3
• Q 10 7 2
E88t
aJH J IJ
• 10 9 8
• Q 10 2
• A 3

EEK&amp;:MEEK

Htovy DuiJ Uft Cllllr, Uucl Very
Ullle, Nice U1HJrt' Son TrMCI-

mlll Uud AlloUI S Houra. Fully
Eltcttlc Hoopllallled. Now llal·
VOfY
114·
3811 8080

Rill-.

_._AI

•

fa

baaement wattrproollng, all baatment repalfl
dOne. tru aslimalet. lifetime
guarantee. 10yra on job expert·
once. 304-(IJS.21ol5.
li'llin~tlon't

1

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper is subject to
t1'1e Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it ii&amp;Etgal
to advefltSe ·any preterence,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
seK ram11ial status or natiOnal

..

loa Sprlnga, Salld

O&amp;k Huleh, 114-371-2720 Af·
TERIPJI.

ongin, or any intenuon to
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimina1ion."

This newspaper will not

know;noly accepl
acl\lertisernenls ror real estate
whiCh is in "iokllion or the
law. Our readers are hereby
informed that all dWellings

advertised in lhis newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

-·

Jadt-O·Lantern Pumpkins. 304815-42211. Crook Rd. Jim &amp;
Notal.owit.

••

AND SPOIL

TRAtJSPORTATIQrJ

MY RIPPY-

_ . . . , n1c:o 2 bod,_houlllnPott•OJI,t35Dpar
monlh pluo dtpoal~ no poll, c:oi
114-M-7244.

l14-2~~ !]~~~~~a&lt;~2~o~po~·~~-:~:hou~ll,~
I depoail roqu Ired,

111 Tlmt Surer• E•Z Fi,,.
() 3 Bedrouma Around $200
lolo.,I00-251-5070.
Dlocounlllobllt Homo Parll l
Accoaaorleo, Vinyl Sklrllng
$2DU5, Anchora $5.00, Mn·
ind
PI b1
inQI, DoOrl, W OWl. um ng
SUppiiH, W.10&lt; HOIIIJI, FurJIIICII, fiberglau Stepa, Call114-448-D411 Bennell'o Supplr. 13111
Soflord School Rd. Calllpolla,

510

Household
GOodS

Appliances:

"Aecal')dilionad

TATION?I

like Now W.lerbld Wl1h Buill In
Oleum Name Your Prlcell14·
44U710.

Loculi Pooll Fat Sole p Each,

•.-.-

fixtures I door, rwo yean old,
SfS. 81 4-ii2-DIS.
RISF,..,MUfO
- · wv
Buy, Sel, Trade

1D81 Dadgo Dlplonwt Slan1 Six
Uator, Run• Fair. Body Good,

t.tOOOBO.eu u11 8853

~~

--lito
=-----

aratora,
DO D•rna._
GuaraniHI
Walhoro; DJ)'IJio
Relri·

....
UlltdF..........
..
:IIM-773-5341.

French Cltr Morra•, 114·440·
7785.
•

CMa~pw - · lyr aid, $200.
51122
:30
:.4:..:,.;;:.::
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wllhefl, dryerl, refrlgeralorl,
rangoo. Sllagga Appllancn, 71
Small Nice 2 Blldroom Hoult VIne Street. Call114&lt;-448-7388.
HIOO..-IIII.
- r GaNipola, No Palo, RalorOitio.
""""- Dopoal~ $425111o .. 114·
Polly'a- • Uaod Fumlbn
141 2100.
Wt--ArJnrSUrpllolll
Ooublewlde re-po never li¥4td In, Two bedraom houat and OM
2101 .:JtnnonAve.
mull ljlll, no reasonobla offor ,. bodtuom _ . , _ In --~
Open 8:30 • 5:00 lion-Sot
fllltld.S04-75S.71111.
• · I14-SIDHI18.
30«7S.SCFA(7832}
Free air, flee lklrt. 14X10 3 bed- Two NdrGom houu with atova
room,_$1,055/down, 1181/ma. and rolrlgnlor, dtpoall roquifod,
Coii-I00-69HI777.
poll, 814-iiUOIIO.

Pomeroy- four bedroom, II0¥1
and nafrlgorator, wiWIIIhor and
dryer hookup, HUD apprOYed,
.471/mo., releranOH, 114·DD2·

eaae.

Slrlar 1.0 1.111p.
lrlldmlll, 3::-oold. ulld &amp;boll!
~;:'ld
wUI take tsoo.
OZZOD.
Roebuck gal •rer,
G
BTU, hOi oodlcaplng
,...hlne,
114-0112:

•so:

COI..UMSUS,

¥1t'lt~

T~E wo~t.l&gt;

___

IN TltOUJL.E ·-

15 NOT FLAT!

J

::,:.::::::::..:.::

REAL ESTATE

310

u . . - for
""''"'"

Sale

no-

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

IDDI Flroblrd V-1 11, pw, pdt,
SQ,OOO mlltl, new tktl, txc.
condillon .lnaldo • out. S0.5aa.

2 &amp; I bedroom mobile hamel
•211)..1300, . . .r. . .,,, •nd
-lncludld.II...Z.2117.

304-1115-3773.

2-oom I I - H.,..,-~
AvaUablo IOJelh, Hud Wol.....,,
1200 Dopoolt Refor....._ t14·
..,.,17&amp;

or 4 Hdroom.
doiiYory. I·IOD·

~=:~~~~--~~~4~11~H~I~
Only 3 loll, ' Nobill Far Ran~ 114·441·
available. 304· :-'m::.:;·.:'"'=•:.;.:RL:.7~:-::-~--:- Whirlpool wa- •es; Whltlpool
2

per mo.

ANY 000 JOBS: EXIIJior

poin~

lng, thrubl &amp; weeda lrlmmed,

landacaplng, aldawalka edged,
w.n car' etc. Call Bill 304-8757112.

Child C11o Br Tho Hour Oar Or
WHk. Laving Environment, Aga
Appropriata Ac11vitlas, Eas11rn
-

Fumihlre repair, refinllh and res·
10ralion, also QliiOm orders. Ohio

Valley Reflniahino Shop, larry
Phllpa, 814-!1112-tSll.
Georges Porta.ble Sawmill, don't

haul """ logo ID lho mil jut1 call
· 304-87S.1DS7.

Rob\'n'o Homo Cltonlng: WH~.

Collllnr- 814-4411-2315 ff No
AnMtt lMw ""••ae
Will Care For Elctorlr 114-245-

o.

Will haullunk or IJUh - · $351
plclwp lood. 304-87S.5036.

Booll Br Rod.,lng, Chlppowo,
Rocky, Tony lama. GuaraniHd
FOR RENT: .&lt;l Room Upolalra lowlll Prlcll AI Shoo Call. GalA~runont • Newly Remodeled lipoll.
·~n. Now Carpwl And PalK l~~
·~ Concrlll I Plulfo Soolk: Tanka,
U - Paid Except 011 Hool, 300 Thru 2.000 Galiono Ron
Largo Bocltoom, CioM To Down- Evani EnllrJWIHI, Jlckoon, OH
Dopooll And Raf. I·I00-537-ft2&amp;
'
oroncao Required, Can Soo At
1403 Eaotarn Avo.. Gallipollo, Dondruo ·s....· 8110 cardo for
114 441 4514.
oalo, Sludio llalltr S1rokla
lx1 D'o and rogullr ~ZI c:ordo for
Olacloua lvlng. 1 and 2 bod,_ oalo. 1 hava lho to-ng llltlnlt
apori1JIInll 11 VMiogo llanor and Beblll lof lila: Pllll- f30: Quak.
Riv1&lt;- Apor-.11 In llldcll• .,.. 25: Happy- $30; Spol·
prrot From rsequal~•i....~ Sly· ,20; Blac:klo· t25; Palnut·
::-·
•-.. .....,.... $45. Clllllof lnkrrmallon, 114-1411-

FnJANCIJ\1

Business

OWN

PAYPHONEI

IS

Avail. Call Nowl 1·100-800-3470
24 Hra.
1

tMY -IIOIITQ
o40 1.A1c11 Hi-Tntfllc&gt; Sl..

I eaooo w..wr- Ao111
I·GH24-173D EJt 111111

.........

EAIIN t70111'1fll YIAR I Hra I
Wll .... Raq l-ID0-212-4HZ ·24

Hra

s

14l70 3 Bedroom1, 2 Fuj18altlt.
Tollll Eloc:l, All Now ~ Vinyl
~rl. Cortnl Alt. Dec1&lt;. Rill Nlct.
.........111108. 81-7717.
14x70 O.kwoaci llabllo Homo, 2
Badraoms, 2 Bltht, Heat Pump,
G.E. Applloncoo, Like Now,

IIIOnCI!I

NOT Dlil1d tl1onoy .,.,..,_, the
.., unlif rou ._ 1-llgollfl

-t300111a..

ITIIIE ONlVI
B-l-0-W-01.1-TI
. . Down oll-llinglolion. $11811 Down on llloct muliaettionL 2-3 014 Bedroom modIll a....a.ble.OIInt~ood Hon'ltl
Nitro. wv.304-75!;-51186,

OHKl YAU.EY PUBLISHIHO CO. · S13,500AIW8,114-251
1D71 Kirkwood 12x10 $2,300,
reao,..,.ndl.lhlt rou do bull· 114-3111-elll, () 814.-e747. •

noea wilft_,a. rou ltnoW, and

ID Cubic fool aldo 11f oldo whkl
Inial frN rolrig-ilrNzar. 17~,
3114-e71H13l0.

()pporaJ""'

11085.

"

2bdrm. apll., lolel oloclrlc, app~~a,.., .,mlahod. laundry....,
focllllloa, d - 11 oc11ooiln laWn.
Appllcallona ovallablo at: Village
Graen •M• 14., r:aU 114-11112·
3711. EM

Merchandise

:-Be:.:a:;c:h~S::L-,::ll~ldd-::1-,p-o-:-~."""::-:-";rao-:-:-m-J

111--Jr. Excouenl Relorencool

1110K Y•rly fgfJ. Great SU11

540 MisCellaneous

ond AuiJIUI, Olbipolla, $2D51Mo., Doro, All !olatural, Dr. RocomUlllllel Plld. 814-«1-0573, Altor mondld. GuaroniHd, Coli Traer
7 P.ll.
AI114-441-IDII2. Freo SarnpiiL
.. FlberQia&amp;a Truck,Topper *100;
furnlahod ap~ udlllloo pold. O• Sump Pump And Tonk 171: - k
110111 1 roforencoa. 304·182· SloiiOn Hat Paid f1SO Soli •71;
25111
Co1114o44HM172 AIW4 P.ll.
'
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Boenlt lleblea, C&amp;llllelofo 2:00
BUDGET PRICES. ,_T JACKSON P.II.Aflot8:00pml14-258-1731.
ESTATES, 12 WtiiWOOd DriYo
lui --~ lnlah
l"~la·
tram $280 10 t334. Walk 10 lhap BHuU wvuv·
mu •u&amp; movlao. Call 81.4·441·2588. aholl, hllldo- CDa: aloo vldoo
tlpll or caaunta. Brt~nd new,
EquoiHoulllng
·
a11omblr roqukod. Ra1aN price
1300. uklng Sllill. Caii114-IIIZ.
. AI· 113UIIOrlpm.

Profellional Tret &amp;eMu, Stump
RlfiMI\fal, Free Elllmateal In·
surance, BidweU, Ohio. 114-318-.114-317-7010.

Opportunity

2 bedroom, furnlahed, ganago
·-~
U50imo. pluo diPO•·
k :IIM-773-5040.

::P.=II·~--,-~---:::-:--)30
PIOplt Wanlld ·To LD!IE UP
Furnlahed Apartmenl, 13D Sac- TO 30 POUNDIIn The Nut 30

LS.. Cltanln; Servlc11: Lighl
HouttkupiftG, Weekly, Blweakly,
TruiiWOfUly, Thorough, Refiabltl,
R o - Coli Lat.11, 114-317·
7!16&amp;.

210
.
'

:::
Dryer fgS; EloctriG Range $D5:
Two bldroom lnObllt homo, IWD Frlgldoko RofrlgoraiOr $75; Frlglmilia on Uma Rd.. 114-742- dair Rtlrlgorator Froll, Frll S1SO;
Hotpaint Chatt Type Freezer!
$175: G.E. HMYJ DuiJ W.oltar &amp;
Apartments
Drrar Set, $205 Each, 1 Year
Wornanl)': Slcagga AI&gt;OIIancH, 71
for Rant
Vinl SIJII~ Gollptih. 114·441·
1 and 2·bodtoom..,.,.,..,.. fur- 73118, 1-S11Hl121.
nilhtd and unfumilhecl, ucurlty
Antiques
deposit required, no pels, 1 .14· 530
m-22111.
Bur or ull. Rlverl~t Anllquoo.
1 Beclraom Ground Floar, Near 1124 E. MoJn SUIIL on Rt124,
CNmo. EOOIIC&gt;rlical Gu Heal, 01 Pomeroy. Houro: II.T.W. 10:00
W --Up. IJr, 1218111o.. + Ulll- a.m. to 8:00 p.m., SUndar 1:00 to
lioo, Dopooll &amp; L1011 Roq. No 8:00 p.m. 814-D92-2528. Run
Poll, 114-441-:11157.
Moort owner.

2 Scfa'a, 3 Cholra, 2 Glan Top
Dlnollo Soli, 2 lampa, 1 Nlco
SloriO, Col All« 5 P.M. 114-441Furnlohed EfflcloJIC)I Shiro Badt. 4072.
Paid, 814-441S07 Soc- 2 Tlckoll To Traer Lawrence &amp;
$180/llo.,
Udltin
and Auonuo,
Clllipolio,
Tnaco Aclklno Concar~ OcL 17111,
0573, Allor 7 P.ll.
,., 5 Each, I14-:14S.I5115.
'·
FurnithM EfficiencY D20 Fourth
Auonuo,.Gallpoia, $1D51Mo., Udl- 30 Gallon PlatRIG Doumo PEach.
ldH Paid. 814-441·0573, AhM 7 814-317-7802.

Ml,11..__.,,31.

1115 12170 Floo1woo- 3 Beef·
, 112' llllho, UndorpiWing.
...000.114-4411-21111.

~:~~~~~~~~~

18DI Thu,..,.rbl&lt;d, red, aurvool, 4
new Michelin tirea, 3.8 VI . 304875-5588.

3 - o m Trallar a lllloo From
Galllpollo. On 51&amp;, 1300/llo., Uoed Furnllure Stora, 130 BuiaI1SO Dopollll, -oncoo, 114· - Pllta,- Oullii!J llan:t1on441-3170.
dlao And Collocllbloa, 114-441-

•so:

550

Building

I

PEANUTS
lo4ERE,'I'OU

Pets for Sale

2 AKC Reg BoJet puppl11,
malt~, fawn w/black maak I
whlll morklngo on body, S250oa
:IIM-IH-3117.

2rr old llinlaluna Plnchar, malo,
chacolato ~rown, AKC Roglo·
llred, $ISO. 304-1711-7&amp;l!llahar
6pn.

5 Dacltohund Pupplta, I Woako
Old 2 "·I
1 $ISO
F
• - I I . 3 oma eo,
•
~~:!~· 114 ·UI-0202 • 114•
A Groom
-PatBalh
Grooming.
F
1 Shop
H•dro
Don
aa 1ur ng
'
·
Shooll. 373 Goorgoo Crltlt Rd.
11 4-441-G231. ·
AKC Cocker Spaniol pupo,
blackiWhlto, bull. blondaiwhlll.
$1-304-IG7·2733.
AKC Golden Retriever Pups, Vet
Choclted, Firat Sholl, Par- On
Promlooa, llaloo tzoO. Fomaloa
•250. 814-3711-21311.
AKC Miniature Plnchers, lwllil
aid, 2 ..._In I250M. 304-57112~ aflor 5pm.
AKC Rogiatored Shllz.zu Puppy,
- r PuPPr Only, long Holred,
S100,814o441-134D.
Beaullful AKC Reglatered Rattwoll., pupploa, 8wka old, tallo
docked, declaws removed.
wormed. 1 fomaloo S250oa. 3
m11 ~ - · • 7• --7•
•-~ •·
Boaullful Ral 11tr11J pupa, •zoo
lomalo,
malo, VII chlcltod,
ll4-i1112-G38.

••so

I:.:::,::.:::==---:---CFA Himalayan kitten, VII
chKkod, wormed, Un~~go available, I14-H2-3887·
Englloh Sbophord UKC Regiatorod Groat S1ock Dogo, Aloo
llakoo Good Pol Or WalCh Doq.
UIO, 114 •251 -11140, Leave
~~:-

JVS.T- _

t&gt;IDM'T

Ianv33 Patron of

Indians

4 Rowol atoblea
5 Oppoa"e of

1':~1e Eoalorn

6

appoorance
35 Poamby .
Homor
31 11 prtMnt at

2t Relll*lablo

9 Cupid
10 Mloaourl"s

2258-

r.=:prel.)

neighbor

nlllon
7 Set or four
8 Bon-

23
21 Defeat over·
whelmlngly
25 Stap--f
211 Holding

11 Went quickly
12 T of TV ·
19 Yale oludent

Pass

d~&lt;lling lead:

21- of lhe
vel ley
29 Freshwater

EBB! .

30=.

2•

Pass

31 Opera role

• 10

37 Houae
cleaner, at

Four U.S. ·teams
head for Tunisia

tlmea

..,-+--+-+--+-1

SPIKE ..

AND'f' AND OLAF?
I TM006UT THE'I'
WERE COMING

te85 Sltum SC2, Auldnlic, Air,
Cruloe, AII/FII Caosatto, Trunk
- . . , •12.000 Call Allot 5 P.M. I~=..,--=--,_,...,..

=~: lnqulrltl Onlrll 814·11[:::b~~;~~~~~ri.l~

181111ladgo Nea, 21,000 Miloa, 2
Daor Coupe, 5 Spoad, $7,500,
J,:.81:..:4-;;2511-::..1;::538.:::.______
CARS FOR $1001 Trucks, boats.
4·whoolero, 'molor homoo, ·rurnlluro, aloc:lranloo, •omputoro otc.
by FBI, IRS. DEA. Available your
arH now. Call 1·800·513-4343
Ert S-11368
-~19:-:80:---,-=-:~-.-:::~-:•• ,-00-1-11- -• ~ •
Seized And Sokl
Local(lltllllonlh.
TNd!it. ,..~,Ell:.
HI00·522·2730,X31101 .

l~-"'--------1811. iully oall-conlalnod.
over P&amp;)'ments. No dawn,
304~JS.5522.

Credll Problema? Wo Can Hllp.
Eur, Bank Financing For Uood
Voh cln, No Turn Oowno, Call
114-441-28117.

SERVICES

v-.

Up!On Uoed Cata RL 12·3 IIIIH
Soum of loon, WV. Flnonclng
Avalloblt 304--4511-1DU
'
.

720 ll'ucks·fot Sale

1D7• Ford !ruck, batbod, 3110 ongino, 70.00Dmlln. 114-4411-1711
=or.:30.:.4:..:-t::..JS.:.III::.:.711.=-._ _ __

-

l----------

4opd,,;77115.;;~~ ~~~~
lloln-

f1,11110.304-t7HID7oll0r&amp;pn.
ID87 OhiYy S-10, 4&lt;yl ,
,
D
U81 Dodge &amp;kola V-8, AuIDmallc, AC, Aoctlong Bod With
Llnor, Chromo Whoola. U,OOO,
814·2511-1424.

5

I llicllng,
bolito,
...,._ ~
~
114-182--

IDD4 Chltr. S-10 PU AuiO; lgDI
Dodge Dakota 94 PU; lUI
Chov S·ID Blaztf 4 Door, 414i
UUI GIIC Jimmy h4, 4 Door,
IUD ChOY. S·IO PU Air Cond,
el,700; 1DI2 ChiY. Conv. Von ~~~~:~~~~:
Badger~ wagon. good..,. e1.200; BID Aulo Soloo 51. Rt 11
dillon,- ..... 11-24&amp;7.
110 N. 814-441-5.

j

'

'

I

l

Group of

actora
48 Frashwaler
flah
19 Waistcoat
50Artdaco
IUuatr1tor

52 --cane
54 Cricket

poal11ona

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeboly Cll)her cryptograms ;we creatvd !rom Cluolihons by lai'TlOI.I$ people . past and pfeie!ll
Eactllelle• lfl the ClptleJ 5lands lor anolhe1 . TOday&amp;: clue J eQual!&gt; G

LDEPSZTFTFE

DCC

H F T

'K U T W
K U H K

KUDYN

MUTY

KUTW

K U T F T

YSKUDYJ

ETT

BFHYPDE

E T H.'

ys

DE

CHYL
'

I 0 K

I H P S Y .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'll give you a defin"e maybe." - Sam Goldwyn.
not d~nying anything I did not say."- Brian Mulroney.

~I'm

-'::~:t;~' S©\\~~-~r..trs· ::::

--~-~-=-~'"":'""~~~

141....

~,

of

the

0 four rscrcmbled
Reorronge

low

10

leHers

CLAY R. 'OUAN

words beform four simple wordt

-

I lCRAVI
I
1 I 1·
1

~.~

=S=1F=T=I
I l

:::1

5

1•

_

.

6

_"'

:=,'

_

_

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

• Store manager to shopper,
won 't· cash checks because
a,ll too often the check comes
~~~~n~~d the • • - • ••..
"(

SLEEPT

~-r~~!;:,,,..:.,:1=-T,...!..T,s::-11O
1

Complete the

cta.~ckle

quoted

•
•
_ _ _
bv f,fl,ng in the m•ss•ng words
L....L-.1-..L-J......L___.J yoi.J develop !rom step No. 3 below .
PRINT NUMBERED

SOME

__

finalize siruations advantageously.
Do nm fool around with small stun:
lo.:us your cffons on primary concerns.
BERNICE
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.,
2
(
1
You ~ould be in for a plcasanl surBEDEOSOL
pyise today where your social imcrcsls arc concerned. Your cxpcctatiuns
. could llc realized .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) .
Maacrial accumulation will he a
slrong 1rcnd for you 1oday, so be sure
to 1rca1 lhis wilh ahe anemion i1
Thesday, Qcl. (4. 1997
deserves.
AQUARIUS (!an: 20-Feb. 19)
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) You may receive some· good news
Dynamic aspects of your personahly from awo unrelated sources simultawill be highlighted today, makmg you neously today. Return all phone calls
an interesting person 1o be around. and read all c:ommunicalions.
All will benefit from your involvePISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Fruitmenls. Trying 10 patch ilp a broken ful seeds yo.u sowed in the past fell
romance? 1lte Astra-Graph Match- upon fertile soiL Soon you may be
maker can help you understand what entitled to reap the harvest that
to do to make the relationship work. should be forthcoming.
Mail 52.7~ to, Matchmaker. clo this
ARIES ' (March 21 -April 19) Do
newspaper. P.O. Box 1758, Murray
not tum down any social inviaations
Hill Station, New York, NY 10156.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov, 22) loday. as . they might develop inlo
Ta(lay you'll have the wherewithallo something extraordinary. You are in

ASTRO·GBAPH

spare!

47

'C'ESTERDA'I'.AND

. ------=--

-go.

card

43 Actreoa Pitta
44 Reain·produclng tree
15 Tl1ey'ra ohan

A

8o A Cool C.. Attd C/1ed Out lh&lt;
Scr.ql-ln·lh&lt; CJtml(l&lt;ll-.

Fa&lt; Silo: 111117 Oulc:h-.n Pop.Up
Campor, Slaepo 8, Furnace Wi1h
T
I I
hermoslal, ns doiOullido Gu
SIOVO, Elec &amp; Gas Reklgeralor, 2
Dining lobloo, CuS1om Awning
Like New, Used 4 Time•. Paid
$4,100, Will Soli For $3,500, Coli
8U-4.t8-86G8 Alter s Or Leave

.

31 Seult ~ Mario
AI uneannay
42 Figura on a .

'I:J lETTERS IN SQUARES

OUT HERE .. "

1D78 GIIC Pick- Up • Tran~.
Brlklo Tiro~ Bodv &amp; Beef In Far Appllo
Aoglllorod, vol &lt;hocked end Condllion. 250 Engine. Runo Name ':..!:'lN~~~:E~!
rNdy for a go~d homo. -IN Good, $700, Caiii14-448-45U, porlonco All Work GuananiNd
t300 and malao '400, 114.- 81
:.:..:4.:4 18.:.:3~703
::;______ French Clly llarllg, 114.448:

1D73 John D-o Dour 4508
Wllh I WaJ Blade; 1..1 Forcl
1 0 0 - Trudt 4 S0Nc1. Wfth 1
, _ Riot End, &amp; Tnalllt, 114$.1274.

60T A

1DD4 Ply. Acclaim $&amp;,415; 1eg3
l'onl. Glan Prix ~1115; 1003 FOld
Tauruo ,4,500; 1DD311oro. Tracor; liDS PonL Bon-lllo; 1DDS
Chor C&amp;Yallar 12,100: 111110 Goo
Silrm $2.200; 111110 Pont Surbird
$2,350; 1H3 Hyundol Spt. Cpo.
$2,000: 111112 Ply. Du110r $2,500:
1DD4 Chi¥ CIYIIior $3.500: 18111
lanko, 1 ton uuck
.
S.W.
SI,OOO;
1888Salao,
Ply.,j~~&amp;~na~d~la:IO~JI~,
~D:&amp;~R~Au~to~,
1885:
B&amp;D Aulo
WV. 304·372·31133
or 1StR.1180N.814-44«1 6115.

For u1o- Amorlc:on bUidoa pupo,

111 DFarm EqUipment

North
Pa~

r-~:::;;--

'M'f FRIEND. MICKE'(
''DEAR SNOOP'r'..
WIIAT IIAPfENED TO · MOUSE. CAME 9'1'

LETTERFIWM
'(OUR &amp;«OTHER

Iiiio Chanco 111 Homoward l!Ound.

One bldtHm &amp;JIVImlnlln PI Rocklord Fo&amp;galo Punch 200
Plaaoant Fuml-. Vory cloon Amp. &amp; 3 Wtir Box Wlfl Ill' SUb.
I nloi.Nofllll.li114-171-13111.
1425.F,..,U080114-4411-2858.

.

I

ltEAL11Et&gt;

Sltlll Bulldlngl Now, Engl--.d
40xSOI12 Waa $15,SOO Balaneo
SU40. 501100111 wao 121.200
Balance ,17,831, 10x200x11
Woo ..2.500 Balance 138.872 1·
11110-408-51211.

8708.

ldoollof Som So_..IDo'o Almy CamouI poroon, no poll, no omokoro ftogo b)' Sandyylllo Poll Office.
•2D5Jmo • oloclllc. 304·17&amp;: Noan-5pm. Fri-Sun. Smalllndl~2115.....;1·------------f.-- I vlduolaqulpmonl304-273-58SS:

I'll$$ CLAAI&lt;E,

Bloclc, brick, oowor plpoa, windowl, llnlllo. tiC. Claude Wlnllfl,
Rio Gnando, OH Call 114·2465121.

lMgo 7 room--~~~ u•ll· 30D8.
Eloclrlc Water Hollar, EIKIJIC
dta pold. In Pomeroy, ..oo
CooUiava.I14-44HJ410.
.....,_ .,.__-.
Fronklln Flrocco With ACCII·
Largo unlurnlohed 3 bldroom
u•- ow. ••250• •~-rgo
aorlol,
IPI,.,..,l wifl -go. t275 pltto Boolaoo -Wlll1-...
&amp; Doora
-.rllr. 114-11112·'53:11.
0n eo- .,DO, au 4• 3437.

h i lurnltthocllbr ap~

1DD1 TOJiOII IIR 2, rfl&lt;ll block In·
tarlor, 55K miles, automatic, air,
amlfm caa~tne, first '5000 080,
reconred lhefE, nice car, 1514·
DD2·54311aflof 4pm.

SUpplies

560

3 South.,.atorn

3201aG-

dalllce

The world championships for lhe
prestigious Bennuda Bowl (open
series) and Venice Cup (women's
compelition) sian Sarurday in Hammarne!, Tunisia.
The favoriles in the Bermuda
Bow I will be the two teams from the
United States. 1lte trials were won by
Seymon Deutsch, Zia Mahmood (a
Pakistani by binh), Michael Rosenberg (born in Scotland), Chip Marlel
and Lew Stansby. Pau( Soloway has
been added as the sixth player. The
second team is Ni~ Nickell, Dick
Freeman. Bob Hamman, Bobby
Wolff, Jeff Meckstroth and Eric Rodwe( I.
In lhe !rials match between these
teams. Deutsch won, 259~180. This
deal helped. In both rooms, South
was in· four hearts. (Nonh couldn '1
double one spade for penally.) Both
Wests led the diamond I0: jac~.
queen, ace.
Hoping to gel inlo dummy lo discard his diamonds on the lop spades.
Stansby continued with lhc club king
(which Nickell, West, correctly
ducked) and another club. Now Nickell switched to the ·ace and another
heart. which allowed declarer to
draw trumps and concede one trick in
each 'suit exccpl spades.
"]n the other room, -after an idcnti . ..
cal start, Rosenberg (West) exited
with a low club at trick four. Zia ruff.
ing dummy 's 10 with his heart queen.
IAfter overrurting with the king.
. Meckstroth (Soulh) continued wilh
the heart nine. If declarer had the
heart I0 and Eastlwo diamond tricks,
Rosenberg had to win this trick and
exit with his last trump. But trusting
that Zia would have ruffed low, not
high, if this were the position, Rosenberg played low. Zia won.with the 10 ·
and cashed the diamond king. In a
moment lhe heart ace meant one
down.

lllnk Coal, 3/4 lenglh, Autumn
~ ·~- ,. '~.- .... ~·

,.... 11

1 Exam

2 Garda-·a tool

27 Wo&lt;thlp

By Phillip Alder

::11~4.:3::;111:.:D:.;431=:,~-~~:-:

Ono p1ooo IUb and -

DOWN

13-Acro••

-~·

w..1
f'.t~~

~2577.-

Garli8n 1oo1
17 Hardv'a
hll'ofne
11 Comp.oratlva
luflll
20 llarqula do 21-Lima
23TnaeFOUP

'.' ulr..::rable: Both
flealer: South

:IIM-773-SIISI,IIuon WV.

460 Space for Rent
111114 SUI1an Doluxo 14172 Rllldr
To Novo Into At Lac:ol Pari&lt;, Ro- S bldroom. $400/mo. Dopooll llobllo homo 1111 aYiiloblo bll·
lrlgeraiOr, Range, Eloclfic HHI :J04-e75.4171-~.
woon Alhona 111d Po-or. coil
Pump, 10x12 Dock, Call Aftor 5
P.M. 114·.,.1-3153 Leawt Mea· 3 Bedroom•. 2 bath houN In 114-385-&lt;1117.
coun4J)', coil lot dtalla, 114-3l'e- fllvrllrom Campar Spoco, 150/llo.
211311.
814·317-71112.
3 bedrooma,
~~~~i!A.;;;~;-"13!iih;;;:
air,
vinyl aiding,2 I'
2 decko, barn

15 LonG pin

34 FaiN

wKJ98765
t A 9 75

AiiO tr11ler space on river. All
hook-upa. Call altar 2:00 p.m••

18x8o FleoiWaad 3 Bod2 811111. Garden Tub,
SIOYo, Rtlrlgonalor,
Heat PuiT'!p, Take

tKQ542
• 96

South

Sloeplnq roomo wllh cooking.

!!:~~~~~~~~.,-

ll!

• · AJij.lJ

N~o Scfao. CombiOie King Slza
WolltllodO. Ful Slzo Bodo Wllh
Mattt111

111-13-87

•AKQ72

114-441-511111.114-441-6117.

Send Retume To : Human Reaource Oirecrar, Uedi-Home
Hoollh Agency, P.O. Box D, llarlina ~ OH 431135.
Neod 6 Ladl11 To Soli Avon Call
114 448 '13511

North

• K4

Klnga llolel lo""ll Ra111 In
Town, - l r Ramodlled, HBO,
Clnemax. ShoWiimo &amp; Dlanoy.
w..~, Ralaa, Or llonlhlr RaiH.

32Hillfl Ert 78511.

11 yOu want tD make

-,!l,:t

Two bid oom •PII•••ntln Ulcf..

Support From Hame, Nat UUt

willing 10 work han~. and hkl to
help otheta; we may ha"e a job
k&gt;r you. Local relidenl E•ceUent
income ponlbllltitt and Home,
Offlco ...,ing tor parsona Mlocled. Mull ha'lle a pleasing pertonality and be willing Ia meet
1111 public. No tllporionca ......,.
aary. For mort Information, call
Clay Roney at 304-175-ecue. or
mall rtt\lme to 2.t13 Jackaon
' - , P I - WV 25550.

14r:..•
11

conllnent

Eatn $1,000 WMk11 Sluffing En·

Antww to ,...... .. Puzzle

&amp;0-pupll
42 Former

1 Tl1e Donllld
ond lcln

a nifty cycle for meeting new people.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
There could be a shift in conditions
penaining to a project of yours today.
It might open a brief window of
opjlonunity if you're fasr on your
feet.
·
GEM~! (May 21-June 20)
Today,
u mighl re-encounter a
friend yo haven 'I seen for a long
time. This valuable relationship will
pick up right where it left off.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your
chan indicales you could be luckier
through associaaes today than you'll
be when (eft to your own devices. Lei
punners call the shots.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your pals
could have enonnous influence on
your attitude today. If the relationships are construeaive, something
mutually beneficial will result .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Material llfpecfs look encouraging today,
but you must act promptly where
opponunities are concerned. They
could be complicaled and of a tleeling nalure.
·

·.
\

IMONDAY

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Attune - Crock· Wiper· Lavish • CATCH UP
"When you are intoo much of a rush." the genttokl
his new colleague, •you will pass more than you CATCH
~with "

OCTOBER 131_

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