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'OTORS

•

Ohio Lottery

Marlins
capture
NL crown

Pick 3:
585
Pick 4:
6295
Buckeye 5:
4-5-23·25-26

Sports on Page 4

•

'A:&gt;!. 48, NO. 127

Clear tonight, frost
possible. Thursday, partly
cloudy. High in mid 50s .

•
2 Sections, 1BPaget, 35 ceniS
A O.nnen Ca. New opaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 15, 1997

01897, Ohio Vllley Publllhlng Company

McCull·~rfJ:

Pu community back into CommUnity Action

PATRICIA McCULLOUGH

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Putting the community back into
Community Aclion.
Thai's the goal of Palricia 'Trish"
McCullough, executive director of
the Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency.
McCullough, who has served as
·agency director fQi · lbout three
months after replacing retired director Sid Edwards, spoke aboul the
GMCAA mission with lhe Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce during the ,group's monthly luncheon
Tuesday at Carleton School in Syracuse.
The Community Action Agency is
a private, non-profit corporation
funded in pan by the boards of counly commissioners of Gallia and
Meigs counties. The agency oversees ,
the spending of approximately $2

million annually, much of which
slays in !he lwo counlies, she said.
Community Action Agency's
slarted•out in the 1960s as a grassroots movement, she said.
"We wanted people to stan taking
responsibility for themselves," she
said.
Now the organization hopes to
piay a role in the welfare reform
movement through programs li.ke
Welfare To Work, ~he explained.
In addition, lhe CAA features
utility assistance programs, weatherization, provide transportation for
people who need lo see a doctor on
a regular basis (Cheaper than putting
people in a nursing home, according
to McCullough.) and administered a
flood clean-up program funded under
lhe Job Training Partnership Act
Program.

The agency also has summer
youth programs and helps laid-off
workers with job lrai ni ng as well as
working on housing projects in lhe
Tuppers Plains area and in Gallipolis.
"We support local businesses and
banks ... we believe in keeping the
money here in Meigs and Gallia
counties,'' she said.
·
·
Transportation Commiltee Chairman Steve Story reponed lhe Feder·
al Highway Administration has ruled
the Athens-to-Darwin highway project will have no significanl environmental impact.
He said the finding was significant
in that it marks the firsl lime the
'FHWA has given its approval to !he
project.
"This is a highway thai is going to
be used," he said.
·In addition, the environmental

Engler named speaker
for Kennedy .Day dinner
llnr38
tal:. . . .

AS

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·ILIZEI

DAVID ENGLER
Mahoning Counly Commissioner
David Engler, a candidalc for Secretary of State next year, will be Ihe
keynote speaker at the Meigs County Democratic Party's Kcn.nedy Day
dinner on SaiUrday.
Engler, 37, is a nalive of Akron.
and was raised in AuslinloWn. He is
a graduate of Case Western Reserve
Univcrsily, where he also received hiS
law degree. He has served as Assistant City , Law Dircclor for
YoungSiown, and was lhc youngcSI
person to serve as a Commissioner on
1hc Youngstown Civil Service Commission.
•
He .also served as n city counci~­
man in Youngstown and was clcclcd
County Commissioner in 1992. He
won 1hat oflicc with an KO percent
majorily of 1hc voie.

4
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Alr1 AM/fM
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As a local officia!, Engler has
emphasized economic development
and anli-crime measures in his work ..
He helped to forge a partnership with
the Youngstown-Warren ~egional
Chamber of Commerce to promote
the Mahoning Valley, and has been a
leader in developing a six-counly
N:ortheasl Ohip regional developmen! group '\'hieh markets Northeast
Ohio's people and products throughout Ihe world.
Married and the father of lhree
children, Engler is a member of 1he
Llliio Democralic Pany's Execulive
Commiltee, lhe Ohio .Jail Advisory
Board, a member of lhe Board of
Trustees of the Counly Commissioners Associalion •of Ohio and lhe
chairman of lhc Mahoning Counly
Solid Waslc Management Dimict.
"David Engler is a greal friend of
Ihe Democratic Pany, and has proven
himscl f as a leader in Mahoning
Counly," Counly Democratic Chairman Sue Maison said: "His efforts in
economic and community development should be of inlerest, not only
lo Democrats, but to all people inlerested in improving our communily."
"I have known David for several
years, and I am very pleased that he
has decided to run for slale-wide
office. I think he will be an impressive candidale," Maison said.
The dinner will be held al lhe
Meigs Coun1y Multipurpose Senior
Cenlcr nl 6 p.m. A social hour will
begin at 5 p.m. Tickcls for lhc even!
arc $10 per person. with children
under 12 admillcd free of charge.
Tickets may he purchased all he door.

Sludy on lhe U.S. 3311-77 Conneclor
RJad from Five Poinls to the William
Ritchie Jr. Bridge al Ra"f'nswood,
W.Va., has been submiltal lo the
FHWA, he said. A hearing will be
held later wilh lhe dale being determined by the level of study lhc
FHWA requeSIS.
Economic Development director
Ron McDade said the engineers
designing the Tuppers Plains lnduslrial Park are about 90 percent com"
pleted with the result thai lhe Community Improvement Corporation
may soon be able lo advenise for
construction bids.·
Judy Williams, tourism committee
chairwoman, reminded members
about upcoming events includiqg lhe
Middlcpon Hislorical Homes tour set
for Sunday from 1-5 p.m. and lhc
dedication of the Pomeroy Amphitheater which will be held Oct. 25 at

-·
H&gt;:~

WASHINGTON (AP) - . Rclail
in Seplcmber for lhe fourth
Consecutive month as ·increases at
fumilure stores and aulo showrooms
helped offset a slump al dcpaf\menl
and clothing slores.
The 0.3 perccnl increase. to a seasonally adjusted $215.5 billion, fol lowed Slrongcr gains in lune, July
and August. the Commerce Departmen! said loday.
Sales had fallen in March. April
and May as unseasonably chilly
wenlher kept shoppers home. Rclailers said unseasonable warmth. on the
other hand, discouraged customers
from buying new full cl01hing lasl
monlh. And the dea1h and funeral of
Princess Diana had some .walching
lelevision ins tend of shopping.
Receipts at department stores and
o1her general merchandisers fell 0.6
percent. while sales dropped 0.7 pefcenl al clothing and accessory shops .
Both were the sharpest declines in
five mon1hs.
The overall perfonnancc in September was a bil monger 1hao many
economisls expe91ed ~nd lhc tcport
upset inllauon-wary fmancml markets. The Dow Jones average of
induslrial stocks slipped 53 poinls to
8,043 in lhe firsl 30 minules of tradsale~ rose

•

AS

lOW
AS

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·Carleton School/Meigs lndumics
dirct.:lor Steve Beha encouraged

chamber members to support Ihe I .8
mill
Board
of
Mental
Rctardalion/Dcvclopmenl Disabili·tics levy on lhe Nov. 4 ballot. He said
the issue is identical to a measure that
failed in May.

Complaints
against ATV
are common
By JIM FREEMAN

MHS HOMECOMING QUEEN CANDIDATES·
Homecoming queen candldatee at Meigs High
School are from the left, Lauren Anderson, Bll·
II Bentley, Shannon Jenkine, Heidi Leger, and
Meliesa Ramsburg. The queen will be crown In
pre-game ceremonies at the Meigs-Alexander

Pomeroy. A parade will take place on Thursday
night moving through Rutland at 6, Middleport
at 6:45, and Pomeroy at 7:15 p.m. with a bon
fire and rally to take place at 7:45 p.m. There
will be dance at the high school following the
game.

Voinovich promotes school levies

Sentinel News Staff
Slale officials arc conducting their
own' inveSiigalion into a fatal all-terrainuehicle accident -noa ... Letan
Fal!.~y....., ..... -ointto
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby. Meanwhile. Soulsby said hi s
office frequenlly receives complaints
concerning ATV drivers in thai area.
Shaun Paul Harris. 17, Sxracusc,
· died from injuries suslained after the
ATV he was riding apparently lumblcd over a high wall a1 a Richards &amp;
Sons gravel pit in Letart Township,
according to a Meigs County Sheriffs
Department report.
Harris and a passenger. Tim Wickersham, 17, Pomeroy, were both
knocked unconscious in the accident,
according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
When Wickersham regained consciousness, he attempted 10 pul Harris on the ATV before going for help,
Soulsby said. Failing lhis, he then
look the ATV -· which was nol heavily damaged-- and proceeded on his
own for assistance.
Afler summoning help. Wickcr&gt;ham left before ·rescue and law
cnforcemcnl officials arroved. hut
later met with deputies 10 give an
account of the incident.
He said they were panying. oul
there, riding around a~d jumpi"g
ramps and th~n found themselves
"out in space," Soulsby said.
"We could sec later where they
had been jumping Ihe 4-whcclcr," he
said, addong thai alcohol als~ seemed
lobe a factor in the moshap.
Harris, who wa\ a senior at Southern High School. died lalcr thai
evening al St. Mary's Hospilal in
Hunlinglo~ . W Va. Services were
held this morning allhc Racmc United Mclhodist Church .
Soulsby said the Ohio Departmcnl
of Nalural Resources Division of
Mines and Reclamalion is examining
lhc incident and may usc il as an
example to olhcr youngSicrs of whal
can happen when people play around
open pit mines and other similar
areas.

. ·
.
.
. .
qualc education ts sound.
COLUMBUS. (AP)- The slale tngs, Vomov~eh suggeslcd lhal stuAugenblick studied 102 school
districls !hat mel slalc standards for
slands ready to help local school dis- dents .would pcrlonn bcucr. . .
tricts repair or replace their crumbling
Vom~voch also toulcd ho.s faokd proficiency 1es1 scores, attendance.
buildings. But first they must help $1.1 hillton plan lhal would tncrcase graduation and dropout ralcs. The
themselves, Gov. George Voinovich the stale sales tax l&gt;y a penny per dol- total coSI was based on stale spendsaid Tuesday.
lar lO lund changes mandalcd by an ing of$4,269 per student about $600
Voinovich toured soulhem Ohio to Ohoo. Supreme .Court rulong thai more than current spcndong levels.
promolc local levies on the Nov. 4 Ohto s school lundong lormula "
Rep. C.J . Prentiss, said Augen ballot in six districts. A total of 19 dis- unconstotuhonal. .
blick 's numbers were too rigid and
tricts have levies thai must be
Lawm.akcrs ~CJeclcd the plan and did nol take into account &gt;e vcral areas
approved 10 qualify for stale building arc Sludymg thcor ophons at hcarongs thai she said need improvement,
of two spec tal commouccs.
.
such as ali -day kindergarten and
assistance aid.
"The slale school building assis"Hopefully. lhcy woll see thalth~~ lower leachcr-to-pupil ra1i os.'
mg. The price of Ihe benchmark 30''I'm trying 10 figure out how he
ycar Treasury bond fell. pushing tance program is a golden opportu- pr~gra~r w~s a wo~thy one,
nity
thai
they
should
take
advantage
Vomovoch
saod
before
hos
tour
of
lhe
woke
up and became lhc god . ~f
yields up to 6.39 perccnl from 6.35
of,"
Voinovich
said
when
asked
what
dtslrtcts
m
Scioto
and
H1ghlaod
counschool
funding," Ms. Prentiss. Dpcrcenl late Tuesday. ·
lies.
Cleveland. smd aflcr the hearing.
Still, the report didn't contmdict he planned to tell local voters.
·
The
stale
will
spend
about
$550
Meanwhile,
one
oflhe
committees
Bul Rep. Tom Johnson, co-chairanalysts' belief ecorromic growlh is
belwecn
now
and
lhc
beginheard
from
lhc
Denver
school
fund
m·
a
n
of the committee. said Aug~n million
moderaling. The queslion is \Yhclhcr
ning
of
1999,
paying
between
$8
and
ing
consuhanl
who
designed
the
forhlick's
sixth presentation 1o law1hc modcralion is enough 10 persuade
$14
for
every
$1
raised
locally,
mula
!hal
was
at
lhe
ccnler
of
lhc
make"
since
March was prnducltvc.
the Federal Reserve 10 refrain from
governor's plan.
" I think we have a hctler underraising shon-lenn intcrcSI ra1es 10 Voinovich said.
-He
said
!he
program-promised
.John
Augcnblick
lold
the
Joinl
slanding
of the Augcn~lo c k formula.
cool growlh and sguclch any incipihope
for
students
stuck
in
"crappy''
Finance
Subcommittee
thai
his
forIt's
acompli
catcd maltcr.'' -aid John·
Soulshy said his office receives
ent inflation pressures.
numerous cpmplaints from lhc Letan
. "ll's being intcrprcled as among buil_dings. With be tier school build- mula 10 detennine the cosl of an ade- son , R-Ncw Concord .
Falls area concerning people Iresreport. yet il's no1 a strong rcpon.
passing
wilh ATVs on privalc propMany of lhe key categories
cny
or
riding on stale or county
declined, " said cconomisl Bruce
blanket
public
offi
cials
hond
in
the
·
The
board
also
accepled
lhe
resroads .
The Meigs Local Board of EduS1cinberg of Merrill Lynch. · "Seplembcr was on lhe sofl side and whal cation handled mostly personnel mal· ignation of David Deem as ass istant amounl of $414 from the Buckeye
little we know aboul October says lers during its Thesday nighl.f.!eeting boys' varsity basketball coach and Union Insurance Company payable
People riding ATVs arc a common
al the district's central office in approved medical leave of absence to Brogan-\l(arncr Insurance Comthings probably gal a bil sofler."
.pany
of
Pomeroy.
for Debra Shuler.
sight in the Lelart Township area
Re1ail sales represent about a third Pomeroy.
-- Approved lhe creation of text· where, due 10 their rugged conslrucIn other business, the board:
In personnel matters, the board
of the economy's activily and, as
.. Accepted Andrew Philson as a books/instructional matorials ;ubsidy lion and maneuverability. they arc
such, are a key barometer of its hired Jeanie Witherell as a pari-time
tuilion
student at Meigs Middle fund .
heavily utilized by farmers and othkindergarten aide at Salisbury Elemomentum.
-·
Adopted
a
resolulion
of
comSchool
for
lhe
1997-98
school
year.
ers as a primary means of transmentary School for the 1997-98
..
Met
wi1h
Candace
Herr
and
mendation
for
the
Meigs
High
School
ponation.
school
year
effective
Thesday
and
Aulo sales last monlh rose 0.6 percent, the fourth consecutive advane)e hired Lou Hemsley as a substitute bus Kathie V:mMeter conccrmng the "Se. f001ball team. coaching s1aff and
bul no1 nearly as strong as increases driver for the remainder of the school Can Waif' program , an abstinence- administrators for their sportsmanSou Ishy added hi ' &lt;'lloce ha&gt;
in lhe ptevious three months. Fumi- year to be used on an as-needed basis based program aimed a1 reducing ship exhibilcd during lhe Wheeling received numerous comrl amtJ, rrom
teenage pregnancy. Plans call for Central Football Game as reported by 1hc gravel companic&lt; concerntng
ture dealers also reported a 0.6 per- effective immediately.
Pamela Zirkle was hired as a expanding the program to olher the officiating crew. · .
lrespasscr.; oo ATVs.
cent increase in September, the sixth
schools
in
lhe
county.
·· Met in e~ccutivc session to dis·
teacher al Meigs Middle School on a
• month wi1hou1 a decline.
"People shouldn'l he riding on
·; Approved lhe purclml('of a cuss negotiati ons.
, one-year contract.
property like this," he satd

Retail sales are up 0.3 .
percent in Septembf!r

. . . ·.
.· ..

4:30p.m.
· People thai purcha.&lt;ed bricks for
lhe amphitheater are also urged to
attend, she said.
Chamber secretary Bcrncas Brumfield temarked that lhe cruise and
casino night held in conjunclion with
!he recent Big Bend Stern wheel Fcslival raised about $3.100 for the
chamber. The annual dinner/dance
·has been scheduled for March 14,
1998. she said.

Meigs Local Board handles personnel inatters

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t
WtdnMday, October 15,1197

Copntentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Str"t, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax 992·2157

•

•

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publleher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Generll M1neger

MARGARET LEHEW
Control lit

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers.

Tbunday, Oct. 16

By J8Ck Anderson

·

What does the country's largest
1111d most feared lobbying group do
when it stans to lose friends on
Capitol Hill?
It ad~pts.
.
The American Association of
Retired Persons, with 33 million
members. is second onf¥ to the
Catholic Church in sheer numbers.
It's also considered by many to be
l)le most powerful .. and liberal -lobbying groups in Washington.
To retain its tax status, the AARP
maintains an official poli'y of nonpanisanship. The association makes
no political contributions and doesn't endorse candidates.
But that's as far as the nonparti·
sanship goes.
AARP is one of Washington's
.last true believers in big government; in the notion that Uncle Sam
can do a wonderful amount of good

if · only
he
receives
enough
tax
money,
and then
spends it
wisely.
Spending
it Moller and Anderlon
wisely, in
AARP's books, ineans continuing to
pour money into the key entitlement
programs that eat up a lion's share of
the federal budget: Social Security,
Medicare, .Medicaid and retirement
packages for civil servants and military personnel.
· In recent years it's been almost
impossible to find a Republican who
agrees with them on these issues.
But they've been chummy for
decades primarily with Democrats.

There's nothing criminal about this,
of course, even though AARP's staff
lobbyists purport to represent all of
the organization's members •• not
just those who are liberal Democ·
rats.
No
AARP
congressional
"friend" today can measure up to
the rave reviews once lavished on
the late Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fla.,
and retired Sen. David Pryor, D-Ark.
Pepper was the self-described "last
of the New Deal warriors," and
often called "Mr. Aging." Pryor was
once a paitl consultant to the organization. Both carried water for the
AARP without hesitation.
With Pepper dead and Pryor
retired, · no current Democratic
officeholder appears to be a frontrunner for the association's affection.
The trio receiving most consistentlong-tenn praise in their publications, speeches and conventions,

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World

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·.·• '----------=-----=-=-----'

: .: Letters to the editor
.

.

\::. A great day
..,

'' ..·• Dear Editor
.
We·would like to say how much we enjoyed "Back to Rutland." The day
' ...
· ' · was a great one. All the friends and neighbors enjoyed aeuing together. The
.. day was spiritual. happy and we all had good clean fun . The entert01nment
was grut for both the youns and old.
.
· The senior citizens of Rutland were honored. They deserved 11. They art
the new who kept Rutland going through good times and bad times.
"
That is whnt happiness is all about, good fnends, ne1ghbors and all the
'' swell churches in our little community with aood decent leaders. Remember all who worked so hard and all who donated to a great day for everyone. You all know who you are. It was for a good ca,use. How about next
years?
,
· ed
"&gt;Qod Bless all-who helped. Thanks. You are deeply apprectat .

Betty WUII111M,
BaWood,
Charyleae Slt:aaa,
EdDI Slew1rt,

Delila Mulford,

'·

By JoHph Perklna
Maybe the White House water
supply is tainted with an exotic bacteria. Maybe a rare virus is circulating through the Executive · Mansion's air ducts. Or perhaps the
White House cooks. are putting too
much MSG in the food.
There simply has to be a reason
why almost everyone who works at
the White House, from President
Clinton on down , has contracted
mysterious cases of memory loss.
Like forgetting they met certain
people (especially if those individuals happened to be foreigners with
bags of cash). Or forgetting phone
calls they made (especially if lhe
calls were made from their White
House digs). Or fOrgetting documents in their possession (often
when the material is requested by
investigators).
The first tell-talc signs of this
White House memory loss was
observed earlier this year when
rcponers started a'king questions
about John Huang. the Democrat
fund-raiser who brought in more
than $2 million in illegal campaign
contributions (much of il from foreign nationals) for the president's reelection.
White House officials originally
insisted they had never heard of
Huang. Then they remembered that

the prodigious
buckraker had,
in fact, visited
the
White
House
78
times in · little
more than a
year.
The latest example of
this outbreak
White House
of
•
memory loss involves videotapes
from the 44 coffees President Clinton hosted in 1996. It seems that all
the pr~sidcnt's men and women forgot that those tapes existed when
they neglected to turn them over to
Senate investigators.
Fortunately for White House offi.
cials, who ccnainly wanted to comply with the Senate's subpoena last
July of all fund-raising-related mate·
rial. a Time magazine article jogged
their memories about the tapes. So,
lo and behold' the tapes were dis· .
covered la't week.
But, apparently, the memories of
some White House officials were
jogged more than others, For
instance. on the day White House
Counsel Charles Ruff was reminded
of the 44 coffee tapes, he attended a
regularly scheduled meeting at, the
Justice Depanincnt with Attorney
General Janet Reno and one of her

senior deputies.
Which brings us back to White
the
videoRuff forgot to mention
House memory loss. It's kind of
tapes to Reno, though he knew she cur,ious that not one presidential aide
was supposed to make a legal pro- recalled a coffee being held in the
nouncement on the White House Oval Office until the video turned up
coffees the very next day -- whether last . week. Up until then, White ·
they possibly violated campaign House officials had assured us that
fund-raising laws; whether there all the coffees were held in the
was sufficient grounds to appoint an White House map room or some
other residential space in the Execuindependent counsel.
Of course, Ruff was terribly tive Mansion.
Similarly. not one White House
embarrassed for Reno when ihc
underinformcd attorney general official remembered the memo condeclared that the White House, cof- cerning the Oval Office coffee until
fees were .well within the law -- that . it turned up this week. Apparently. it
they were not fund-raisers, per se; simply gol lo~t among the ~undreds
that they were all held in !he White of thousands of memos the White
House residential quarters.
House ha.• stashed away in tile cahiHad Reno watched the videos. ncls.
Nnw there arl! some l!ynil.!s nul
she would have seen that at least one
of the coffees was held in the Oval thcr&lt; .who suggest that White House
Office. the president's official work- officials arc knowingly and willfully
space. And this might have led her to participating ip a cover-up of their
a memorandum that informed the campaign fund·raising aclivitics ~·
president that each of his Oval which. of course, would constitute •
Office guests donated at least criminal obstruction of justice.
$100,000 to sip coffee wilh him.
But I say they arc heing unfair.
When you combine the iape .and I'm sure there's something in the
the memo, you get evidence that the While House . water ~r air or food
White House quite possibly violated that can cxplatn why so many ot the
the federal law that forbids~pd­ president's men and women arc sufraising on oflicial govcmmcn rop- fering such lapses in memory.
crty. Clearly, the Justice Depanment
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
prematurely abandoned its criminal for the San Diego Union-Tribune
investigation of the White House and·a 'commentator ror MSNBC.
coffees.

The Cheerful Worken,
Rudand FnewW Bapdlt Church

---L-~-

WASHINGTON- David Satcher says he wants to give the American people a dose of "plain, oldfashioned straight talk ."
That,'s what the Surgeon Generaldesignate told senators during his
confirmation hearing this week. If
President Clinton's nomination of
him to become the nation's chief
public health advocate is confirmed,
Satcher says he ' II he open and candid with us.
·
He ought to stan JlQW.
Satcher, who currently heads the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, needs to speak frankly and
· openly about a CDC program that
some say is reminiscent of the infamous Tuskegee syphilis study The
federal agency is conducting tests in
Thailand. the Dominican Republic
· and nine African nationt to determine if lower doses of Air can prevent the spread of HIV from pregnant mothers to their babies.
An editorial in last month's New
England Journal of Medicine called
the research unethical because it
withholds from these women most of them poor and illiterate proven treatments that will keep
them from passing on the deadly disease to their children.
CDC \}fficials say the higher-dose
AZT tr&lt;atment is too costly for

---- ---

women
in
Third World
nations. So
they arc trying ' to determine if a diffcrent , lowerdose regime
will produce
a level of protcction that is
better than
doing nothing.
WI khl
But
in
c m
addition
to
giving some of these AIDS-infected
women smaller than normal doses of
the drug, CDC doctors arc giving
others placebos.
In the Tuskegee experiment conducted from 1932 to 1972 Public Health Service doctors let the
syphilis Infections of poor black
men in rural Alabama go untreated
for years to measure how the disease
progressed, even after a cure for it
became available.
·
No one is accusing the CDC of anything quite so sinister. Unlike the
.men in the Tuskegee study who were
kept in the dark, the women 'in these
Third World medical experiments
are told that while some of them are"
being given AZT, others are geltina
dummy pills. It's unclear however if
they are informed that the AZT

doses are lower than that which i•\ understand what a placebo is. They
proven to prevent a mother from \,:~$reed to take pan in the program,
passing HIV on to a child.
most ,of the women said. because of
Alann bells are being sounded by the free medical assistance they
people wlro think an agency of the were promised.
U~itcd States government should
That sounds to me as if they 'think
not conduct medical experiments they're getting help, itot being used
abroad that wouldn't he tolerated as guinea pigs.
here at home. No matter how noble
We need to hear from Satcher on
the purpose, critics say, depriving this matter. Arc the women who take
mothers of a proven level of treat- · part in these foreign tests knowlment to prevent the spread of AIDS cdgcablc enough about what is hapis unconscionable.
pcning to give informed consent'!
Defenders of the tests say any ' Do they know .that while a treatment
treatment is better than no medical already exists to stop them from
assistance- and they point out that transmitting AIDS to their ncwhorn
precious few pregnant women in the children. they arc not getting ii?
Third World can afford the cost of
Arc they aware that while some
. the approved AZT treatment. Giving of them arc heing given low doses of
some people a lower test dosage arid this medicine, others are getting
others placebos is, under the circum- none at all? Can th~ CDC justify this
stances. the best way of finding an research , not only to puhlic health
affordable treatment for them, they officials in fJI•nr Third World counaraue.
.tries. hut also to the American pcoMaybe so, but that depends hcav- pic'!
ily on what women who take part in
This is the kind of straight talk we
these tests are told.
need to hear from David Satcher When a New York Times reporter and we need to hear it before the
talked to some women in the lvory1 Senate votes on his nomination to he
Coast who are taking part in the this country's top doctor.
CDC test, none of them seemed 10

Maybe so, but that depends heavily on
what women who take part in the$e tests are
told.
'

I
·~

'

- ---

""·

·IMansfield ls4' I•
IND.

•I Columbuslse• I

W.VA.

Obituary

Bessie M. Ingels

Ice

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

Today's weather forecast
Ohio
Frost warning nonhwest tonight. ..
Frost advisory tonight south...Central and remainder of north except
nearshore .. .
Today... Panly to mostly sunny
and cool. High mid 50s to around W.
Tonight...Mostly clear and cool.

Frost likely nonhwest with scauered
frost elsewhere. Lows in. the 30s.
Thursday .. .Increasing high cloudness. Highs in the mid and upper 50s.
Extended forecast
Friday through sunday ... Fair.
Lows in the 30s. Highs in the 50s.

·F rost advisory issued
for southeastern Ohio
By The Associated Press

W.hY the,White House memory lapses?'

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett News Service

•• •

·•

however, include House Minority
Leader Richard Gephardt of Missouri, and Sens. Jay Rockefeller of
West Virginia and Edward Kennedy
of Massachuseus.
Because AARP can't really count
on any lawmaker. like they used to
count on Pepper and Pryor, their top
lobbyist, John Rother, has found. it
expedient for AARP to join coali- ·
tions with others.
For example, whenever the Balanced Budget Amendment has come
.up, AARP has joined Olher opponents of the amendment.
More often than not. the coalitions in which AARP panicipates
are .liberal or at least pro-Democratic Pany, and often include labor
unions.
"We've worked together on a·lot
of issues. including pension and
health ·care issues," con finned
Richard Trumka. a leading force of
the AFL-CIO and president· of the
United Mine Workers of America:
"They characteristically have been
supportive of workers."
Another example was Rother's
prominence in two hcallh care
reform coalitions f0 rmed by Sc11,
Rockefeller which were aimed at
supported Clinton's plan or similar
Democratic ones.
That kind of track record has se~i­
ously wounded the association's
relationship with !he Republican
majority in Congress. So AARP has
quietly tried to change its image on
Capitol Hill without changing its
positions.
·
One of the "declarations" of this
change came in 1995 -- timed to
coincide with the arrival of the new,
Republican-controlled Congress.
The internal AARP memo, obtained
by our associate Dale Van Ana. wa&lt;
signed by Executive Director
'Horace Deets but distributed by
Rother to key AARP staffers and
volunteer leaders.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers ror United Feature
Syndicate, lne.

Units of the Meigs County Emer- pon, Lola Kovalchik, VMH;
gency Medical Service recorded 12
6:06 p.m., Carpenter Hill Road,
calls for usistance. Units responding Rutland. Michael Haendiges, VMH.
Rutland sguad assisted;
incl:fded:
6:16 p.m., Race Street, Midd~CENTRAL DISPATCH
RobCrt M. Betz Jr., 58, Longview Heights, Athens, died Tuesday, Oct. 14.
2 a.m., Fisher Street, Pomeroy, pon, Nellie Zirkle, VMH;
•
1997 in Riven;ide M~thodist Hospital, CoiU!nbus.
10: II p.m., Rocksprings RehabilWilliam Stivers, Veterans Memorial
Born Sept. 24, 1939 in Gallipolis, son of the late Judge Raben M. Betz Hospital;
itation Center, Pomeroy, Faye Forelllld Sara Field Betz, he retired in 1979 as a counselor manager at Vocation5:52 a.m ., Meigs Mine 31, man, O'Bieness Memorial Hospitil.
al Rehabilitation of Athens.
·
Edward Neece, Holzer Medical Cen- POMEROY
A 1958 graduate of Gallia Academy High School. he attended Ohio Uni- ter. Rutland squad assisted;
6:31 p.m., Beacon Gus Station,
'"'
versity and the University of Rio Grande. He was a case worker at Gallipo8:24 a.m., s(ate Route 143. Sarah Dill, treated at the scene . :
lis Developmental Center from 1960 until 1964.
·
•
Pomeroy, Hazel Stanley,. dead on RUTLAND
He was a member of the Albany Lodge 723 of the Free and Accepted· arrival, Rutland squad assisted;
9:24am .. Meigs Mine )I. Pall&lt;Masons of Ohio, the Scottish Rite Valley of Columbus, the Aladdin Temple
9:56 a.m.. Meigs Mine 31. er Run Portal, Greg O'Dell , H~ .
of Columbus, the Athens County Shrine Club, the Gallipolis Shrine Club, Danville Ponal, Roger Boles. HMC; Central Dispatch squad assisted; :
Hillbilly Clan 7 of Southern Ohio, the Rush Lodge of the Traders and Con6 :21 p.m .. Salem Street. Bjll
II :39 a.m ., Sycamore Street, Midfidence Degree , and the Kentucky Colonels.
Deem,
HMC.
dlepon , David Grant, VMH;
Surviving are his wife of 38 years. Patricia Bradbury Betz; two sons,
5:06p.m., Powell Slreet, MiddleRobert M. Betz Ill of Athens. and Nathan (Dee Dee) Betz of Dublin; and
three grandchildren.
Services will he 10:30 a.m. Friday in St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Gallipolis, with Father James Bernacki officiating. Burial will be in the Gravel , ..\ . 1' •
Hill Cemetery, Cheshi~. Friends may call at the Jagers &amp; Sons Funeral Home.
Oblttltllk 11{1 ,..., announc•m•nll arrengiCI IIY local funeral homt(e.
24 Morris Ave .. Athens, from 7-9 p.m. Thursday.
~-.. ~!t!hltl U ~UIIIId to ICeOIMIOdlle thoU tleeJrlng mQJ•
Memorial services will be conducted in the funeral home at 6:30 p.m. ~thin
' Ja proyldld In the IIC_,..,ylng DHih Not*a.
•
. Thursday bY. Albany Lodge 723. F &amp; AM.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Athens County Shrine Club,
P.O. Box 161. Athens, Ohio 45701; the Gallipolis Shrine Club, P.O. Box 82,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631; or the Athens County Public Library, 30 Home St.,
Bessie M-lngels. 75, of Mason, W Va., died Tuesday, October 14, 1997,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
at Pleasant Valley Hospital. Point Pleasant. W.Va.
Born December 7, 1921 in Clifton, W Va .. she was a daughter of the late
Thurman and Florence Young. She was a foster grandmother, member of
Bessie M. Ingels, 75, Mason. W.Va., died Tuesday, Oct. 14, 1997 in Pleas- the Mason Historical Society serving as past president, Mason County Homemakers Club serving as past president, assisted with the organization of the
ant Valley Hospital.
Mason
Volunteer Fire Depanment. Ladies Auxiliary and Mason Library
Born Dec. 7, 1921 in Clifion, W.Va., daughter of the late Thurman and
Assoc1at1on.
.
Florence Young, she was a foster grandmother.
In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in death by her husband .
She was a member of the Mason Historical Society, serving as its past
Earl
Ingels Sr. on January 13, 1982; and a sister, Katherine Johnson .
president, the Mason County Homemakers Club, serving as its past presiSurvivors
include a son, Earl F. Ingels of Cincinnati; a grandson and
.dent, and assisted in ~he organization of the Mason Volunteer Fire Depangr~nddaughter-tn-law,
Bryan Lee and Slephina Ingels of Cincinnati; three
ment Ladles Auxiliary and the Mason Library Association.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Earl Ingels Sr., on Jan. great-grandchildren, Jesse. Sarah and Brian Ingels, all of Cincinnati; sisters.
Frances Johnson of Mason, W. Va : Belva Roush of Clifton. Margaret Nunn
13, 1982; and by a sister, Katherine Johnson.
of Middlepon. and several nieces and nephews.
Surviving are a son, Earl F. Ingels of Cincinnati: a grandson. and three
Service will be I :30 p.m . Friday, October 17, 1997. at the Foglesong
great-grandchildren; three sisters, Frances Johnson of Mason, Belva Roush
Funeral
Home w1th Rev. Damon Rhodes offic iating. Burial will follow in
of Clifton, and Margaret Nunn of Middlepon: and several nieces and
Kirkland
Memorial Gardens.
1
nephews.
Friend may call at the funeral home Thursday. October 16. 1997. from
Services will be I :30 p.m. Friday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
2to 9 p.m.
with the Rev. Damon Rhodes officiating. Burial will be in the Kirkland
Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-9 p.m. Thursday .

Robert M. Betz Jr.

MICH.

.i

The National Weather Service has
. · issued a frost warning for tonight in
nonhwest Ohio and a frost advisory
for the central, south and inland
'· nonheast regions.
A high pressure system will bring
·. chilly temperatures as Ca~adian ,air
remains in place. Lows will dip into
the 30s across most of the state with
scattered frost developing.
An upper air disturbance will
cause some clouds to move across
Ohio on Thursd.ay, but it will remain
dry. Temperatures will again he cool
with highs around 60 in the far south
in the 50s elsewhere.
The high brought matnly clear
skies overnight. Some clouds were in
.. 1 nonhern Ohio, especially near Lake
" Erie. Early morning temperatures
were in the mid to upper 30s, with
some readings in the 40s near the
Lake Erie shore in the northeast.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station ·was 90 degrees in 1897. The
record low was 24 degrees. in 1939..
Sunset will be at 6:52 p.m. Sunrise
will be at 7:43 a.m. Wednesday.

Across tbe 'natlon
Rain and thunderstorms moved
into the Deep South on Tuesday,
bringing heavy rain to Alabama.
High winds swept through Souther_n
California, and the western mountains had snow showers.
A weakening cold front brought
nearly I 1/2 inches ofrain to southem Alabama. A few thundershowers
developed from the Plorida Panhandie into the Carolinas.
To the nonh, light showers were
reported from the middle Appalachians into wcstem New York. Rainfall ·
totals were generally less than a quarter inch.
Dry weather dominated much of
the rest of the country.
•
But a weak disturbance moving
through the Great Lakes region
brought' scattered rain and snow
showers to Michigan, and a disturbance moving across the northern
.RQCkies brought rain showers and
mountain snow showers fiom eastern
Washington into nonhwestern Mon·
ta.na.

Today's livestock report

..

COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- 45.50; plants 45.00-46.50.
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 41.50buying points Wednesday as provid- 44.00; 210-230 lbs. 37.50-41.50.
ed by the U.s: Department of AgriSows : under 500 lbs. steady; over
culture Market News:
500 lbs. steady to mostly 1.00 lower.
Barrows and gilts: 50 cents to 1.00
U.S. 1-3 300-400 lbs. 34.00lower; demand light to moderate on 36.00; 400-500 lbs. 36.00-38 .00:
a moderate run.
· 500-600 lbs . 38.00-40.00, few over
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs . country 600 lbs. 41 .00.
points 44.00-45.00; few 43.50 and
Boars: 34.00-36.00.

Meigs announcements
invited.
Homecoming set
The Morning Star · United
Ladies N igbt rescheduled
Methodist Church's annual homeLadies Night Out sponsored by
coming wili be hcfd Sunday. Church the Shade River Masonic Lodge has
will be at 9:50, Sunday school at II toeen rescheduled for Saturday at 6
a.m. and a basket dinner at 12:30 p.m. p.m . at the Point of View Restaurant.
The afternoon program will start at Reservations can be made by calling
1:30 p.m. with special singing. Pas- 9ti5-3537 or 985-3374 by Thursday.
tor is De wayne Stutler. The pubhc IS
Parades planned
Meigs High School Homcooming
Parades will he held in Middlcpon,
Rutland and P&lt;Jmcroy. The parade in
Rutland will hegin at 6 p.m. at Pco!USPS J13·960)
1 pies Banking and Trust Company and
Publi1hcd every afternoon. Monday through
go to Depot Street. In Middleport. the
Friday. Ill Court St. Pt,mc:roy, O~io, hy the
parade will hcgin at the Family DolOhio V~tllcy Putlli1hint1 Company/O~nncn Co.,
Pomeroy. Ohto 457h9, Ph. 99~-:U:'If'l. Secoftd
lar Store at6:45 p.m. and continue to
clns post•~C pt•d at Pomeroy. Ohio.
Fmth's Pharmacy. and in Pomeroy at
Me.;.btn The AUOCIIIIt'd Prm, and the Ollin I 7:15 p.m. at Farmers Bank and Sav~
Nfwsp~~~AsMx;iation.
ings Company, continuing to a bonfire al the football field. Meigs will
POn'MASTER: SeiKI addrts.s c::orrec•lonsto
Tile Daily Scnlincl, Ill &lt;i'outt St ., Pom!roy,
play Alexander for its homecoming ·
Otlio 4"69.
game on Friday.

Surgeon general nominee must address AZT tests

·=

.

AccuWeather• forecast for

AARP has tried to cozy up to the GOP

The Cincinnati Enquirer, Oct. 11
The timing alone defies credibility: On Oct. 3, Attorney General Janet
Reno. under legal deadline. ruled that cvtdencc was lacking to appo.mt a special prosecutorto investigate Bill Clinton's fund-ra•s~ng role. at Wlute House
"coffees ." The very next day. the White House released v1deotapes of the
president schmoozing with wealthy donors at 44 "coffees."
.
Reno says she is "mad." But she won't change her closed mtnd and
investigate. That should make voters mad enough to demand an attorney
general who is not humiliated by the president and embarrassed by newspaper repons that are miles ahead of her gumshoes.
. .
.
· If such "smoking-gun" evidence does not persuade Reno to tnvesugate.
she will never persuade us that she has the credibility and integrity to
enforce the law.

.
. · . .
Sprin&amp;field News-Sun, Oct. 9 . ,
It's no accident that Pueno R1co s red, whue and blue flag IS so stmllar to
the U.S. flag. After all, th~ island has been under this nation '~ntrol for
almost I 00 years.
Given that much shared history. isn't it time to seriously consider adding
the single star on Puerto Rico's flag to the 50 now gracing Old Glory''
It's a question Congress is wrestling. ~ith.
..
.
"The United States-Pucno R1co Pohttcal Status Act would allow a vote
in Pucno Rico on the island's status.

Meigs EMS logs 12 calls

OHIO Wea ther

W.ctneact.y, October 15 , 1H7

By The Associated Press
.
.. .
.
Excerpts of recent editorials of statew1de and nauonalmterest from Ohto
newspapers:

The Columbus Dispatch, Oct. 9
President Clinton took a step in the right direction when he used the new
presidential line-item veto power to trim Congress' spending on the milita~.
Lawmakers, mostly with an eye to spreadmg the money around theor
home turf. added nearly$) billion to 'the amount the Pentagon had requested for construction projects.
Clinton cut 38 item's wonh $287 million in 24 states but still left more
than $500 million of extras that Congress tacked onto the administration's
pia~ for $8.4 million in spending.
Although annual budget deficits have shrunk a bit, the national debt cer·
tainly hasn't. And Congress continues to indulge in excess defense spending
for such flawed programs as the building of the Stealth bomber. .
. When Republicans occupied the White House. a Congress dornmated by
Democrats several times approved budgets that were smaller than the
administration drew up.
"
Can it be possible that the Republicans, fond of labeling themselves conservatives, can't manage to do the salne when the tables are turned?
Congress has eight of 13 spending bills remaining on its agenda. Lawmakers should learn a lesson from the vetoes of portions of the military-con·
struction bill: Subtract; don't add.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Page 2

and Jan Molltr

'E.Jtaflfislid in 1948

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Hazel Stanley

Pomeroy Court news
Pomeroy Mayor Frank 'Vaughan
processed 17 cases in Pomeroy May or's Coun on Tuesday evening.
Fined were: Paul Steinmetz, Rutland, assured clear distance. $43 and
costs, DUI, $375 and costSi Paul
Pullins. Middlepon. expired tags ,
$63 and costs, DUI, $375 and costs;
LaDonna Mintz, Gallipolis. failure to
comply, $63 and costs; Ronnie Lambert. Pomeroy, failure to comply, $63
and costs; and Angela Hickman, Belpre, expired tags, $63 and costs, scat
belt, $25 and costs .
Forfeiting bonds were Sandra
Scott, Cheshire, speed. $49 ; Greg
Nease, Racine , speed. $47; Juanita

Stocks
'

Am Ele Power ..................... .46,_
Akzo ..................................... 90~
AmrTech ............................... &amp;al.
Aehland 011 ........................... 52~.
ATIT .................................... .45'1.
Bank Ona ............................. 56"!.
Bob Evans ...... :1.... ............... 19~
Borg·WaFner ........................60)•
Champion ............................. 19%
Charm.Shps ........ ,...................s%
City Holding .............. ,...... :...... 40
Federal Mogul .....................41 ').
Gannett .................................55'J.
Goodyear .............................70).
Kmart ...................................13 "1.
Landa End ...........................31 ').
Ltd ........................................... 24

Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 2Q
OVB ..................... ..................35[.
OM Valley ............................. 361o
Peoplee ................................. 45':.
Prem Flnl ...........:................... 22~
Rockwell ............................... 57~•
RD·Shell ................................ 56':1
Shoney's ...... ........................... 5~
Star Bank .............................. 48'.4
Wendy'e ...............................22i"
Worthlngton ................., ....... 201.

-·-·-

One ~til ............................................ ... SM.lll
One Year ............................................... 1104 .11~

No IUbatrlptlOR by mall peunilttd in arcu
where homt carrlel Hrvict Is aval~fble .

Publlalttr 11'NI"fct lhf dj_tll t(ltdjUII ttltl dur·
Instill 111bM:rlpt1on period. S11bJCrlptloa rate
ch•lll'• may t. implemented by elunalnJ the
d\lralion or lhl lubscrlption.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lllkle M•ll• Co11111
13 WctU ................................................. S27.3U
l6
t.!l .Hl
ll W..U .................................... I......... SIOI.S•
a.m o.tlktt Mtlp co..t)'
11 Wuka ................................................. $29.~
26 Wetks ................................................. S!I6.6H

'

Stock report• are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Adveat
q,f G_aiUpolla.
..

One Wt:ck .......................................:••..••.... $2.1111

Subleribln •ot desiring to pay the ctrrier m•y
rfMil hi tdvance dittct to The Dally Stntmel
on alluet. al• or 12 month bnl1. Credit wilt be
1i¥tn cwlu etch week.

.

Hazel Stanley. 77. Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Oct. 14, 1997, at her residence
on state Route 143.
Born April 30, 1920, in Carpenter, daughter of the late Gath and Nada
Graham Townsend, she was a housewife. a member of the Zion Church of
Christ, Harrisonville Senior Citizens and the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
She is survived by her husband of 52 years, Duane F. Stanley; a son and
daughter-in-law, Steven and Julie Stanley of Zanesville; two grandchildren;
a sister, Lorene Scott of Nelsonville; a brother and sister-in-law, Franklin
and Dorothy Townsend of Westerville; several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by an infant sister, Evelyn Louise Townsend,
and by a brother-in-law, William Scott..
Services will be held Friday, I :30 p.m. at the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home
in Albany. Burial will follow in Wells Cemetery.
Frie~s may call Thursday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

SUBSCRIP110N RATES

,..

This ad could save you unnecessary
loss and expense
Bring your jewelry in for a FREE
inspection. Most repairs are done on
premises. Prompt Service

Bryant. Pomeroy. failure to display
tags. $63;. Tara Michael . Pomeroy,
speed, $44; Gwendolyn Bush, Parkersburg, W.Va., assured clear distance. $43: Gretchen Heiskell.
Charleston, W.Fa., failure to display,
$63; Earl Good, Middlepon, expired
tags, $63: Brenda Venoy. Long Bottom, assured clear distance. $43;
Angela Manley. Pomeroy. expired
tags. $63. seat toelt, $23; Josephina
Myers. Reedsville. speed, $43; Donna J. Clinc, .Pomeroy. disorderly after
warning, $63: and Leland Mitch.cll.
Poqusan, Va .. speed. $50 and costs.

Teenage drivers may have to
spend more time behind the wheel

COLUMBUS (AP)- Some lawmakers think that if teen-agers spend
more time behind the wheel, accident
rates among young people will drop
dramatically.
A bill pending in the Legislature
would require would-be drivers to
complete 50 hours of driving time
with an adult, including 10 hours of
night driving.
Currently. there are no require·
ments forthe amount of driving time
needed to get a license.
"1 think this will help save the
lives of young people," said Sen.
Bruce Johnson, R-Columbu•.
\ The Senate likely will vote on the
teen driving hill next week. A vote
was expected Tuesday. hut Rep. Dcn.nis Staplel\m let\ heforc he could sign
off on the compromiSe bill reached
by the Senate and House.
Johnson. the bill's sponsor. said
. the proposal has enough support in
both chambers. An earlier version of
the bill passed by the Senate was
changed by House lawmakers. Both
sides then worked out a compromise
plan. which was approved Tuesday.
"It goes a long way in teaching
young people how to . drive ... said
Stapleton. R-Washington Court
House. "We arc allowing them to
'
..
be come hcucr' dnvcrs.

·

The legislation was designed to
require mllrc supervised road cxpericncc for the state's youngest drivers
toecause statisti cs show they arc more
likely to be involved in accidents .
The Ohio Department of Public
Safety found thai drivers 16 to 20
make up 7 percent of·all drivers. yet
they are involved in 16 percent of all
crashes. and make up 15 percent of
all drivers in fatal crashes.
" It's all about experience and
safe ty," said Rep. James Carnes, RSt. Clairsville. He thinks the bill
would stop young drivers frail) cruising around with their friends.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Yehna
Windland. Racine; Lola Kovalchik.
Middlepon .
Tuesday discharges - none .
Holzer Medical Center
· Discharges Oct. 14 - Tina Scar-

COLUMBUS (AP) ~The House
has passed a bill that \I'Ould require
foster parents to be notified if a new
foster child has had previous troubles
with the law.
·
Lawmakefs on Tuesday also
accepted the resignation of Rep .
Michael Fox. 'rhc Hamilton Republican is leaving to ~ecome a Butler
County commissioner.

The foster child hill was written
after a Toledo woman was killed by
her 15-ycar-old foster son, Johnnie
Jordan. He was convicted of beating

Mrs. Randy Masters and daughter.
~ Brandy Ohlinger. Caleb Meaigc .
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. William
Stanley, daughter, McConnelsville.
(Published
with permio;sion)
,,

Jeanette Johnson, 62. witlya hatchet,
dousing her with kerosene and selling
her on fire in her kitchen in January
1996.
Jordan had been living with Mrs.
Johnson and her hushand. Charles.
for two months. His hi&gt;tory of violence forced officials to move him

into and out of 19 homes and foster
operations since age M. He was ahoul
10 be moved again -

this lime lo a

grqup home for teen-age sexual
offenders.

Lo!f!tllf(e tr~UJi'd.l(ee ~~~l(t /}ol( ;ffat'felf l.r ·
Rett~tirf dl( h.t~

Oetobefl' 17.
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The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Pege4

VVedneaday,October15,1997

Hargrove leads Tribe
built in hi~ image

Florida tops Braves 7-4 to end NLCS

Marlins-surpass
N.Y. Mets' record
in reaching Series
By BEN WALKER
ATI.ANTA (AP) - Jtm Leyland
had j\ISl fimshed watchmg ht&lt; Aon
da Marhns wm the NL pennant when
he t5sued a warnmg
'I hope nobody cheapens thts ' he
satd Tuesday ntght ' beca~se we beat
the Atlanta Braves etght umes dunng
the regular season and we beat them
fatr and square thts ltme '
ThtSmuchtssure Noonewtllsay
anythtng tS cheap about the Marlms
Boosted by a spendmg spree of
nearly $100 mtlhon m the offseason
the five vear old Marhns became
the youngest expanston team to reach
the World Scncs defeaung the
Braves 7 4 to wm the NL Champt
onshtp Senes 4 2
Not even 10 existence when
Atlanta began Its record run of SIX
straoght post season appearances m
1991 the wtld card Marhns won the
cltncher bchmd Kcvm Brown s com
plete game and Bohby Bomlla s
threl&gt; RB!s
'They talk about the money we
spent that we bought a champt
onshtp satd Brown who threw
140 puchcs m hiS first appearance
smt:c m1ssmg a start with a v1ral
mfct:Uon
The money 1s not what
won thts senes The heart the deler
mmatwn the pursuit olthe nght goal
got us there
Brown backed by a four run ltrst
mmng agamsl Tom Glavmc won for
the second umc tn the senes He
retired 14 stratghl bailers m the late

last five World Senes buttheor wm
m 1995 remams thetr only champ1

onsh1p
We vc had a great year Braves
manager Bobby Cox smd ' These
th 1ngs are crapshoots You hope you
get hot •
For Leyland 11 wtll mark hts first
tnp 10 the World Senes m a pro career
spanmng 34 seasons Hts first year as
manager of the Marlins has been
been a rousmg success and hiS left
hom on hnc to be thts October s ver
sJOn ol Joe Torre
Leyland's teams m Pittsburgh lost
Game 7 of the NLCS to the Braves
m !991 and 1992, but there was no
need to worry thts ttme because ol
Bomlla s httttng and Brown s second
wm of the senes
I felt allolong we were gomg to
wm thts senes • Leyland satd ThiS
1sn't ahoul me I mJUSt glad I got the
opportumty to come here
The Marhns wm came five years
ago to the day Ihat the Braves rallted
wtth three runs m the nmth mnmg to
stun Lc) land and hts Ptmlcs on
Franmco Cohrcra s smglc m Game
7
Flonda hecame the firsl w1ld c.lfd
team to make the World Senes and
surpassed the etght years the expan
smn New York Mcts needed to get
there m 1969
L1v:.m Hernandez became the llrsl
rookoc to won the MVP award tn any
league champtonshtp senes He
struck nut an NLCS record 15 m
Flond.1 s 2 I w1n 1n G.tmc 5 llnd ulsu
won Gam~.: 1m rchcl
The Marlms overcame Alex Fer
nandez s torn rotator cull and
Browns Illness to take Lhl: pennant
Flond 1proved lls 8-4 record .1gatnst
Atlanta thiS season was no llukc
wonnmg dcspue hlltmg JUSt 19'J m

mm ngs and aftt:r the Braves scored

onct m the mnth got Chopper l&lt;&gt;ncs
on a grounder wllh two on to end 11
Now, 11 s back to Pro Player Sla
dtum m Moamolor the World Scnes
Wllh Game I on Saturday mght
agamst etther Cleveland or Balli
more The hasehall season. wh1ch
tradouonally starts m the wann do
mate orAonda'" the spnng Will sec
tis llrsl Fall Classtc
For the Braves 11 was yet anoth·
cr dtsappotnUng end The two tome
NL champoons had been to rour ol the

WE DID ITI- The Florida Mltrllns' Kavln Brown (right) gets a hug
from catcher Charles Johnson lifter Brown pitched a complete g11me
and led the Marlins to • 7-4 victory ovar the Atlanta Braves Tuaaday night In Atlanta. The decision gave the Marlins the National
League pennant •nd their first trip to the World Serl•s. (AP)
unt1l owner Wayne Hut7.£nga went on
a spendt ng spree
Thts ts for you South Flortda
smd HuiZenga who announced cur
her m the season the team was lor
sale Thts IS lor all or Flonda EnJOY
the moment
Atlanla led the maJors Wtth 101
vtctortes and won the NL East hy
ntne gomes over Flortda But agatn
llt.:amc up shorl
The best team dtd not won and
I II never change my mtnd on that
Braves center helder Kenny Lolton
smd
Bomlla, stgned to a $23 3 molhon
lour year contract last Novemher h1t
a two run stnglc that keyed the first·
mntng burst He had an RBI smgle m
a three run stxl~ that made tl 7 3
We JUst dtd a lot of thmg, rtght
There s a great deal ol cmounn
now Bomllu satd It took a long
tune lor me to gel to the World Scncs
- 12 years 10 the maJOrs I m glad
n's wnh lorn Leyl.md
Brown scratched !rom starts Sut
unlay and Sunday gave up three runs
m the tirstt wo mnmgs and hnlc atier

the scncs

The Marhns commg oil a rirst
round sweep ol San FranciSco IS 72 tn the postseason Flonda h,ts
Improved lls record m c,tch ot •ts l1ve
years hut never hmshcd over SOO

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You can avotd Jhe Fall rush by havong your heat•ng equopment checked
now belore cold weather hots It Jakes 1ust a phone call to your local heatong
dealer and as !title as lhtrty monutes to make sure your system •s operatong
safely and at peak money savong efllc oency And by calltng early you also
have the tome to shop fo r a new furnace s ho uld your old untt ne ed replac•ng
A furnace checkup ts JUSt one ol many ways to save energy You can also
add onsulaloon lo your altoc crawl space ancl waler heater as we ll as weather
stnppong and caulkong around doors and w1ndows Makong your home as
efftctenl as posstble woll keep your famoly more comfortable whtle your heatong
btlls stay low So please don I waot Call your heattng dealer for a lurnace
checkup now You II be glad you dod all wonler long

~
COLUMBIA GAS
The Natural Cho1ce

NY ld tilden m San J o~t 10:30 p m

Transactions

By GREG BEACHAM
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) When the Utah Jazz were told that
John Stockton would be out of the
hneup for 2·3 months after knee
surgery most of them dtdn 1 believe

"'i t

' It was a shock because he's nev
cr InJUred, 'satd Howard E1sley who
w1ll take over as the starter at pmnt
guard
' Wtth Stock, I was JUst d';mkmg
'Come on tee tl down and get back
out there satd Karl Malone Stockton s Utah teammate smce 198S and
a fellow tw&lt;Htme Olymptan But
John won'tcvcrtell you 1fhe's hun"
Stockton who has mtssed only
lour games dunng hts entire NBA
career, had arthroscoptc surgery
Monday noght to remove loose cartolagc from h1s left knee He woll he
Sidelined ror the three remammg
weeks of the preseason and atleast6
8 weeks or the regular season
John asked me of that recovery
pcnod was the worst case scenano '
satd team onhoped1c surgeon Dr
Lyle Mason, who perfonmed the procedure I told h1m that was the only
sccnano '
Mason satd thts pantcular InJUry
docs not heal easoly
It's possoble he could return to
100 percent ellecttveness but he
could also have some pentlancnt hm
otauons,' Mason saod We JUSt have
'

to watt and see '•
Stopj&lt;ton mtssed four games durmg theM 989-90 season, two because
of flu and two woth a spramed ankle
Smce then, he has played on 609 con
secuttve games, the thtrd-longest
aCtiVe streak In the
Mason sa1d that St ton began
rehabbmg Tuesday wtth wtmmong
but he will not be allo
to run for
at least e1ght weeks
We should know tn e1ght weeks
whether (the Injury) has healed"
Mason sa1d
'I ve
seen
orgamzatmns
destroyed over stluattons ltke thiS but
that won 't happen to us " Utah coach
Jenry Sloan satd "We re not goong to
change anythong because we have
confidence on Howard and Jacque
Vaughn "
Utah s next preseason game ts Fn·
day on Ind1anapolts agaonst the Indt·
ana Pacers
The Jazz rc stgned E1Siey dunng
the oil season to a three year, $4 mtl
hon deal Etsley has played on 147
consecunve games lor Utah and woll
start m Stockton's place
It's unlortunalc, but we must
move on ' Etsley satd I su II h.wc
a lot ollearmng to do durong the pre
season
The Jazz also draltcd Vaughn and
had mtended to keep three pmnt
guards on thclf roster
· Thts ts a lemblc thmg, but at the

.

Eastern varsity sextet
defeats South Gallia
The Eastern volleyball team continued to roll as they deleated South
Galha Wednesday ntght at Eastern
Htgh School, boosting lls seasonal
mark to 18·2 overall Eastern clmmed
I~ 4 IS 5 wons
Eastern s Mtchelle Caldwell agam
carrted a hot hand hy s.;onng 17
potnls wllh four aces Stcphante
Evans had lour pomts and an ace,
Valenc Karr and Juh Hayman each
had three Ktm Mayle had two and
Jcss1ca Brannon had one
Robm Hamson had lour lor South
Galha Kart Clark and Sabnna
Mooney had two each and Manssa
Snodgrass had one
Mostly powered by the ace scrvmg ol Caldwell and the dec}stve net
play ofValenc Karr Eastern rolled to
early leads and never looked back

The Rtver Valley varsny and
reserve volleyball teams deleatcd
lhc Southern Tornadoes 10 Ral:mc
Tuesday mght
Rtver Valley s varsny whtch won
15 6 15 9 w,os led by Angela
PhoeniX wllh 10 scrvtce pomts
Megan Mulford's nmc Angte
DcGanno s SIX Vanessa Shorts lour
and three pomt ellorls I rom Hetdt
Shaw and Jcnmlcr Cornelius
Active at the net lor the Ratdcrs
were Cornehus (8 9 &amp; SIX kills)
DcGanno (9 10 &amp; lour ktlls) Mul
lord (8 8 &amp; three ktlls) ~nd Short ( 12
&gt;' 13 &amp; nne ktll)
Southern w.IS led by Ktm S.lyre s
e1ght servmg pomls E1ght ol those
nmc came tn the sc&lt;.:ond gamt.: len
ny Fncnd h.1d three Knn lhlc h.1d
two ,md Cynthta C.1ldwell .md St,o
cy l yons h.1d one c.~Ch
S,1yrc set success! ully 52 ol 56
limes wtth ,, hlock md two ktlls
CynthtaCaldwell w.1s 19 22 spoktng

http /Jwww columbiaenergy com

JOHN STOCKTON
same ume tl's an opportunoty ror
me, Vaughn satd ' I JUst want htm
on the bench to yell at me "
Stockton a mne·llme All-Star ts
begmnmg hts 14th year m the NBA
He lirst noticed soreness m hiS knee
when the Jazz Qpened trammg camp
Oct 3 m Boose Idaho
Stockton hnd llutd dramed from
hts knee Sunday mght m El Paso
Texas, before Utah's game agatnst
the Dallas Mavencks Stockton dtd
n t play mthat game, and Mason suod
he dectded to do an MRI exam on
Utah on Monday as a precaunon
'John was reluctant to do 11
-because he dtdn 't feel any real pmn '
Mason sa1d The examtnauon lound
damage to the knee s lateral cantlage
and they decoded to rcpu1r tl omme
dmtely
Th1s wasn t gmng to get hcucr
by nsclf 'Mason satd
Stockton was Utah s hrsl round
dralt pock m i 984 He JOined Malone
on the gold medal wmnmg Olymptc
teams m 1992 and 1996 and was
selected m 1996 as one of the NBA s
SO greatest players
' He told me last ntght I II sec
you m two weeks ' Malone suod I
told htm [0 JUS( Sll down ror a
whtle'

Caldwell scored I0 ol Eastern s 15
pomts m the second game lor yet
another mtpresstvc mall'h
Caldwell was 21-21 se&lt;Vtng and
also had a koll Karr had four kolls a
hlock two donks and a 7-9 sptkong
mght Hayman was 22·26 scltong
wllh lour for ktlls Evans was 8 II
sellmg wtth a dtnk Jult Batley had
three kolls Ango Wolre had three ktlls,
Jcsstca Brannon went 7-11 sp1kmg
wnh two l&lt;tlls Angte Taylor had a
kill
Eastern goes to Rover Valley lor a
tough non league In-match Thursday
ARLINGTON Va (AP) - The
agaonst Rtvcr Valley and Fatrland
prosecutor m Murv Alberts assault
The Eagles wtll play Saturday at and sodomy lrtal smd he ts prepared
4 p m tn the Dtv1s10n IV secnonal to offer unflaucrmg detatls or the lor·
1oumamcnt at Alc•andeF where they mer NBC sp11rtseastcr's sex h re at
woll meet the wmncr ol the South Alhert s sentencmg later thts month
Galha Ironton St Joseph game
• Albert brought an abrupt halt to
the tnal last month by pleudmg
gutlty to assault and baucry m an
auack on a V~rgmm woman He could
face up to a year 10 Jail and ,1 $2 ~00
line when he IS sentenced Oct 24
Prosecutors could call witnesses
to testily about prtor had acts by
wnh stx ktlls and a perlcct 4-4 serv- Alben Arlmgton County common
mg Ktm lhle was 16-22 sp1kmg wnh wealth 's attorney Rtchanl Trodden
four kolls Lyons had lour kolls and satd Tuesday But Trodden satd he
three blocks and Dena Sayre and Will dll so only ,, Alherl s dclense
Kane Cummms each h.td blocks
J,IYqers Ioree hts hand
In the reserve game, Rover Valley
II s nol our Jcs1rc to brmg m wll
ended tls season by wtnomg IS-6 IS ncsscs merely to tlttllatc tl]t publtc
9 Jodtc Stout s II pomts Ntckte but tl they want to come m and put
Hollanb.1ugh s 10 lour each lmm a halo on th1s man we want to he
C.tsec Just tee and Chelsea DcG,mno ahlc to rchut 11 Tmddcn s,nd
and one Irom AnMnd.1 D.IVIS led the
At a hve mmute hcartng Tuesday
R.uders ( 12 4)
the JUdge who wtll sentence Alhert
Slluthcm w,l, led by Hc.tthcr D.u- ordered hoth sodcs to he prcp.tred lor
lcy s lour pomts and Amber M 1y such witnesses, but warned Tmdden
nards lwn Dcn.t Sayre Ftllon not to usc them unless 11 rs ncc.:css.try
Roush and L.1raonc L.twson h.1d one
Alhert appeared at the hcanng hut
c.u.:h
sa1d nnthtng Hts lawyer, Peter
In the lrcshm.m m.nch Rover V11 Grccnspun tried to bar reporters
Icy won I S-6 16 14 Bethany Bry mt lrom the proccedmg
h.1d I~ pmnls lor the R.udcrs who
Grccnspun d.wncd lurthcr rcvc
ended thetr season woth .m H·6uwk l.tlHms t.:ould unl.urly d,\magc h1s
Rtver Valley s v,lrstty (15 ~) woll cltcnt
end n.:gul~u season pl.ty Thur~LI1y
At hts lour d.1y tnal m September
w11h a hnme tn n~o~tch w11h E.IStern Alhcrt s 1ccuscr Vmcssa Pl:rh.ll:h 11t
md F.url.md
V1cnn.1 V.t and .1 second woman
descnhcd the lnrmcr NBC sports
c.:a-.tcr !-; kmky sex.uill 1ppe111es m
lund det.lll

Prosecutor
to offer details
about Albert's
private acts
at sentencing

RVHS sextets defeat
Tornadoes three times

Ryan Horrocks scored lrcllll two .ur lor ~8 y.1rds A.mm V,1nlnw.1gcn
yards out wtth 9 ~7 rcm.unmg to govc pulled tn one lor40 yards Rndngue~
Nelsonville· York .1 12 X wm over caught one lor 18 yards
Metgs tnJUOI~If v.1rs1ty lootb.lll.u:tu&gt;n
Mond,ly evenmg
The Buckeyes took ,m c,orly 6 (J
lead when they took the opcnmg
ktckofl and went 66 yards tn sox pl.1ys
Early Wednesday
lor the score Malt Kattcrhennch
M1xed
Bowlmg League
went the hnal 36 y.1rds lor the score
(As
of Oct. 8)
wnh 7 06 lclt on the ltrsl pcnnd
Record
Mc1gs took the lead w.llh 2 ~67 Iwn
Thunder
Alley
Lanes
l4 22
lclt m the hrst hall wl~n Justm
~4 22
Tony s C.trryout
Gthnorc honked up woth Angelo
32 24
Ltle On Mars
Rodnguez lwm IH y 1rds nut
FOE 2171
25 ~I
Gthnore passed to B J Kennedy lor
25 31
the eXtr.l pomls to g1vc Me 1p .1 N 6 Mcogs Co Gnll Course
24-]2
No 6
lead at Ihe h.lll
The Bu~.:keyes WII'!Oing st.:ort.: w 1s
Team h1gh ser1es. Metgs Co
set up when J 1Sper Bateman po.ked
Goll Course ( 19~0)
oil a Gtlmorc pass at the Marauder 24
Team h1gh game· Tony s Carry
yard hnc Four plays J.uer Horrocks
out (M I)
went lhe I mal two yards lor the s.orc
Mcogs then drove to the Buckeye
Men
21 yard hoc wuh a first and 10 But
H1gh series: Chuck Bunon (S30)
aher a two yard gam the Marauders
Bub Stovers (515)
lost a yard and had two strmght pass
H1gh game. Bur10n (21 0) Stovers
cs lull mcomplete to end the threat
( 191)
Nclsonvtlle York then run out the
dock to preserve the wm
Women
Alex Shuler led the Marauders on
H1gh series: • Margaret Eynon
the ground wtlh 18 cames lor 79 (5 37) Beuy Sm11h (491)
yanls John Hill added 33 yards on 12
High game Eynon ( 194) Debllte
camcs Gilmore was {wo lor 10 m the
Sayre ( 179)

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5.;

NFL owners want regular
season to start in September

a

N-Y football reserves
'
get 12-8 win over Meigs

(

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Knee surgery to keep
Utah's Stockton out
until at least January

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NFL's Week 8 slate

2

R1wr Lutht•r U1 Wt:st KllKl"i
R~l!ltUt. IK
I Murtun Plcnunt 1" 14'K ~
H 111tl~r P lind. Henry I' MHl.»t l Columtm~ (,m\~
II 21J::!K 4 Bu~.:yru~ Wynh nl 141 Jl,t2H. 'I ( ttl s u
h ri!Y 7 1Q., f.(~rhn1J'I07 1
Rcj!tun 19 I HANNIHI\L RIVER lfl KO~I 1
1\ nmi.la C1..: tr~rc~k 1-l '174'i \I UlAS\1'1111
V/\1 LEY 12 H~ +CRCXlKS'VILU 1:! ~'PII 'I
lOALGRUVI DAWSON BRYANl IIM-l~ ft
J dmst wn M mr ~~.: 1£11'&lt;;7
Rcpnn,U l(nl Htrtkylfll,.14 "( ldw
k r l 2 (t~~7 \Sit.ltl\:yl.~.:httani 1 1"'K"i -'Silnllt:

lh '\'II II fll

Football

r:! ~7Kli

Dl;~~;k Rl'~d

(he lao led) so he could face Justice
then wtth Atlanta the next mmng
JUStiCe homered ror !he Only run ol
the dectdtng game as the Braves won
the senes
"I thmk the perception natmnally
1s that Mtkc has omproved dunpg thts
post-season," Han sa1d "I thonk
what we have seen from M1ke Har·
grove ts a man who k~s what
moves he wants to make and .nakcs
them M1kc ts gomg to get hts due
That's good "
Still, Hargrove remams unappre
ctatcd When the lndtans chorgcd past
the dcfcndtng World Senes champt
on New York Yankees and took a 3
games to 2 lead agamst Balumore
there was talk ol late, lonune and
superslltoous socks
Hargrove d1dn l huy any of u
"If you get m the mtddlc olthe
post sca.~rmn 1t's nol tunc to worry
about how thongs h.1ppcn' he s,ud
'ThiS team puts Itself 1n posllton to
take advantage of breaks That's tust
good post-season baseball II people
thmk 11 s desuny tl people thmk ot s
luck, that s line Its my cxpencncc
that you make your own luck '
II tht&lt; ts the case then the lndo.ms
must huvo heen makmg some pretty
poor luck lor themselves only a lew
months ago The tc.1m hll buttum
wnh an cmbarrassmg 4-10 homes
hmd m late July th.ll prnmpted H,on
tn la.\h out .11 the only nhtnagcr he s
had wnh the lndo.ms
I though! the club w.IS n~ookmg
tno many mistakes H.1rl s ud I
satd so -to Mtke In the pl.1ycrs .md
the mcdm Mtkc dtdn"t dtsagrcc
Reports hegan swtrl mg th.ll H or
gmvc hm:d at the All St.tr hre.tk m
I91JI I&lt;&gt; replace hts lncnd Jnhn
McNamara was on the w.ty nul
llinally had to come out m puh
he and say Watt a no mute Gn&gt;vcr
1sn t go1ng anywhere ' H~trl s~uU I
just stgncd hom tn .1 three yc.tr dc.ol
and he's the only manager I ve ever
had I or God "s sake
Hargruvc ducsn t ~llw.1ys pl.ty 1t
by the hunk Harl says he s hccnm&lt;
.t hcucr t.,t.:tlt.:~l m.magcr
One more wm .md lhcy ~.:an I,!O to
the Wnrld Scncs together lur the sel:
ond ll me m three years

OIVIsum VI

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AL Ml:ttvtl.la 71~ p m

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41

COLUMOlJS Ohtll tAPl - H..:r..:
ul

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Ohio H.S. football
computer ratings

I w~~trld Series slate
rm

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50 716 14 1
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Arrlc Ctcd' Wuyn~t.l"h: P 16-'., ~ w trr\:n
Kcnn~:dy II Y714 4 N ltma Suulh R 1np..,
11 b':KXI 'I Orwd1 Gra,nJ 'V dl~y IJ tnfo4 6 Rud;y

that The only player on the licld
weanng shan sleeves on a chilly
mght the lonmer Georgm Tech star
allowed II h1ts and added another
wtn to hts Game I vtctory
It appeared he would be done alter
SIX mmngs, but Brown and Leyland
got mto an ammated dts.;usston The
pttcher prevailed and Brown retired
the Side m order the next two mntngs
' I su1d, Let me go one hiller at ,,
tome, Brown smd
Wtth two outs m the mnth, Kctlh
Lockhan s fourth smglc olthc game
made 11 7-4 and brought Chtppcr
Jones to the plate as the potent~o~l
tymg run Pttchmg coach Larry Rolh
schtld Vlstled the mound aad Brown
rematned m rellnng Jones on a
Ioree play
Glavme, strong m Game 2, looked
nothmg hke the pllchcr who blanked
St Louts m Game 7 of the NLCS last
year complctmg Atlanta s cmncb.1ck
from a 3 I defictl He walked a sea
&gt;&lt;on htgh seven gave up 10 hns and
lclt after 5 2/3 mnmgs lrathng 7-'l

By KEN BERGER
BALTIMORE (AP)- Mtkc Har
grove clasps hiS hands and tnes to
explam how the Cleveland Indians
got wtlhm one won of the World
Senes
One thong IS almost cenam No
one Will say It s because or Hargrove
The plaque 1n h1s office thattden
ltfies hom as the manager could eas
tly say, Cntocs and doubters fonn
hne here"
"In 95, I dtdn 1 know what to
expect, because 11 was the hrstllme. '
satd Hargrove, whose team must wm
e1ther Game 6 today or Game 7
Thursday agamstthe Balumore On·
ales to chnch Us second AL pennant
smcc 1954 "Last year, there were so
many expectations that 11 scared me
gotng mto the post season I was
afratd 11 wasn't goong to work and 11
dtdn 1
"I thmk I apprecoatc thts post-season more than m the past '
Th1s year, Hargrove " blessed
woth a team that seems butlt m hts
Image - a stark depanure rrom the
pnckly bunch that won Cleveland s
first AL pennant smcc 1954 two
Octobers ago Mmus the head cases
Hargrove only needs to worry only
about managtng
I have had zero dtstractoons woth
thts club,' general manager John
Hart smd, echotng the senumcnts nr
hts manager Not one tnctdent that
has been non-baseball related
Hart and Hargrove both mmcc
words when speakmg ol the 1995
lndoans The team wtll always hold a
spec1al place m thetr heons hec.ousc
the lndtans hadn I won anythmg fur
so long But led by Albert Belle on
and olr the licld those lndmns had
thctr share of dtsrupuons
"Thts learn ts self-LESS Han
satd wtth emphasos oblltnusly tmply·
mg th9 opposite about the old lndt
ans
Even as he struggled to cnnt.lln
the vola11lc pcrsonaht1cs H,trgrovc
saw hiS stratcgtc abohty a.&lt;&gt;mlcd
Many thought Atlanta s Bobby
Cox gave Hargrove the cquovalcnl nl
a woodshed wh1ppmg m the 9S
World Scrtcs They pomtto hts dect
stun to let left handed rchcvcr Jtm
Pnolc attempt In sm::n hcc m G,1mc 6

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~ednesday,~ober15,1997

By JOSEPH WtiiTE
WASHINGTON (AP) - NFL
owners want no more regular-season
games m August or pres~mes
m July
In fact the enure season- except
for the Super Bowl - would be
pushed back one week under a pro·
posal diSCUSsed Tuesday
Exhtbtllon games would stan on
August The regular season would
begon m September - 11 began on
Aug 31 thts year- and end between
Chrtstmas and New Year s Day The
open week ltetween the conference
champtonsh1p games and the Super
Bowl would be ehmtnatcd
OlmmtssiOner Paul Taghabue
saod tbe move would ease stadtum
conlltcts With baseball help avmd
hot-weather games early m the sea·
son and - wtth an eye on the all
Important television contract negot1
auons- 1mprove ratings
TV v1ewmg grows later m the
fall and wmler" Taghabue saod
The owners are also thonkmg
about cutting one exh1bmon game or
havmg the league rather than the
teams, schedule some exhtbttton
games to make the matchups more
competouvc financtally
Such changes wouldn't be
approved until the next maJor own
crs' mceung tn March, but co_!jkl tak~
crtcct a~ early as next season
In fact no major deciStons were
expected I rom the current set of
mecungs whtch conclude today If
anythmg the move to brmg pro fool

ball back to Los Angeles appeared to
take a step backward
For the second tune thts year Los
Angeles Kings owner Edward Roskt
Jr and e11y councilman Mark RidleyThomas co.-chatnnen of the New
Cohseum Panners, champtoned thetr
SSOO mtlhon plan to purchase a
team and overhaul the Los Angeles
Cohseum tn ltme to stan play m the
2001 season
After the prcscntatoon Rosk1 satd
he felt biS group made progress but
thti owners' reaction was hardly over
whelmmg
'We've seen that LA prcscll!illton
on and off.' Denver Broncos owner
Pat Bowlen satd "I don t k
there s a great deal of s on wuh
m the league tor the
Cohseum as
betng the Site fo new stadtum but
that could change They're out there
campatgnmg I don t know or they rc
getting a lrn of allenuon
The league has heen talkmg wtth
Roskt s group stnce May about
returmng to the nallen s secondlargest televtswn market But woth
some owners wary about the unsa
vory reputation or the neighborhood
surroundmg the Cohscum Tughabue
satd tl moght he lime to louk lor oth
cr su1tors
'We dtscussed whether that s
somclhmg we should look at on an
cxclus1ve b.asts or whether we should
look at alternatives "Taghabue satd
The Los Angeles area has hccn
wothout an NFL team smce Ihe Ana
hetm based Rams and the Cohseum

--•

::~

based Raoders both moved followura ;~
the 1994 sca.wn
\1 •
The owners also talked about the
attendance problem 1n Memphi5, ••
where only 17,000 people ha~•· :
showed up for the past two Otlcrs •
games That problem ts expected '"
fix usc If on two year. when a new stu· •
dlum IS.COmpleted at the team s per •
manent home, Nashvtllc
'I don t thmk the other owners~ •
m a lot of dtstress over what s gmng
on " Bowlen satd Ir they wer&amp;
movmg mlo Ihe nfw sladtum 11&gt;
Nashvtlle and they were gellmgthc
kmd of problems they arc then we d
all be a httle dtstrcsscd
Otlers owner Bud Ad.1ms who
moved the team !rom Houston J;i.,, •
year satd he was commoucd to pl.oy•
ong two seasons at Memphts Lober.
ty Bowl He even prc'dtctcd a sellout..
• We II hlltt up Adams saod H
we gettnto that last (regular seaS&lt;&gt;~)
game and we re fighung Pmsburgh
for the diVIston,ull he full.
Adams also defended hts dcc1sonn
not to change hts teams mcknamc,
much to the chagnn ol some Ten.
nesseans
• There have heen no NFL tca111s
that have moved that have changed
thc1rnames Adams satc.J lmgcnmg
about the Cleveland Browns Ball•
more Ruvens 'I m duuig sume l&lt;l\lUS
s1ud1es some polls I w.ml to hc.1r
what they say ,\bc&gt;UI 11
" _
II they can shuw ,, gmd rc.ISun
I'll cnnstdertl It docsn lmc.m I II &lt;ju
II

Baseball realignment talks continue

Owners narrow AL castoff
list to Kansas City, Milwaukee
By RONALD BLUM
BALTIMORE (AP) - Kansas
Cny has lirsl chotec to JOin the
Nauonal League next season after
baseball owners ltnally take thctr
realignment \Ole
The Mol waukee Brewers plan to
switch leagues 11 the Royals dcdmc
baseball owners and offictals satd
Tuesday
Detroit would move I rom the
Amcncun Le.1gue East to the AL
Central and the expanston Tampa
Bay Devol Rays would take the
Ttgers place m the East under the
plan scheduled lor a vote today dur
mg a telephone conlcrence call ThiS
would create u I(&gt;-team NL .md a 14
team AL next season
Whale the resolution also would
~llow the posstbthly ol a move by the
Mmnesola Twms the owners and
olli&lt;.:1als dcsc.:r1hcd this as only a
remote possab1hty
The Royals who have heen m the
AL smee they )Otned tl\c maJor
leagues m 1969 wtll have unul
aboul the end of the month tu det.:u.lc
11 they want to mo"Vc to the Nl Cen
tral The Brewers have satd they
would move to the NL Ccntraltl the
Royals dechnc the owners ·IOd nllt
&lt;.:mls smd all on the ~.:nnd1tum they
not he adcntlltcd
Th~;rc has been some scntm1ent
on the b&lt;Mrd In move to the Natmn
.11 Lc.1guc hut tt s not dear t.:UI smd
Joe McGull one olthc Roy.1ls sev
en d1rc~.:tors
K.msas Caly has always been an
AL cuy wuh the Athletics movmg
there I rum Phtladclphta hclnrc the
19:"i5 season .md staymg until thc1r
move to Oakl.md lollowmg the 1967
sCLlsOn
MIIW.lUkcc w41s un NL town Irom
19~"l tht.: ltrst sc.tson allcr lh~.: Braves
moved there !rom Boston unull96'\
the last yc.lf he lore th&lt;!' lr.mchtse
moved on to Atl,mt 1
.t
The Brewers moved to flllwau
kcc helore the 1970 sc.ISnn havmg
started thCir eXIStCn\.:e the preVIOUS
yc.tr as the Sc.llllc Ptlots Bud Schg
hascball's .IeUng cnmmtsstoncr led a

group that purchased the Ptlnts m
b.mkruptcy court and IS still the
Brewers' prcstdent
We satd all ulong that we II do
what s m the besl ontcrcsts ol base
b.111 ' Sehg s.ud ol the Brewers
Owners say these moves ,trc only
the llfst step and that .lddutonal
realignment may occur m 1999 .md
he yond However dtlltcult tssucs 10
ba.,ehall have a tendency ol draggmg
on for years so thts set ol moves may
dctcrmmc baseball s setup lor the
lore&lt;ecablc future
Under the rlan set to he approved
the AL woll m.untmn ,1 balanced
schedule next sc.ls&lt;&gt;n wuh teams
playmg each opponent m thctr dtVI
smn 12llmes amltc.uns 10 other d1vt
stons of tis Jc,1guc II limes
In the NL teams woll pl.1y 12
games .tgmnst d1VIs1on.11 opponents
.md mnc ~ames tg.unst t~;am!-1 m lhc
other dtv1sums
The remammg gam&lt;&gt; wtll he
ag.unst mtcrlcaguc opponents wllh
the mtcrleaguc st.:hedulc rcm.unmg
the same .1s th1s yc~tr AL E~lst vs NL
East ALCentr,tl vs NLCcnlr.tl ,md
AL West vs NL West
We II sec wh.tt h.oppens Scltg
s~11d There arc so nMny l:hou;cs to
walk through We JUSt h tve to nwv~..:
ahead
Schg ongtn.olly b.lck«l .1 radtc.ll
r~ahgnmcnt pl.m 10 whll:h I 'i 1~..:.1ms
would have swuched le ogucs md oil
d1v1s1ons would h~l\c he~.:n rc~.:rc~ncd
un ~• geogr.1ph11.: h~1s 1s
Th.tl pl.m st,1lled hcc.ru&gt;e the New
York Mcts mdChtc .lpoCubs rduscd
to play m tht.: s nne lc ~1~uc~o~ ts the1r
L:rosslown nv~ab th~: Y.mkees .md
Whttc Sox
Sdag

~md n.:~tllgmnt.:m l:omnutt~o:e

hc,td John Harnngton then I tvotct.l.t
seven team rc.thgnmcnt m wh1L:h the
AL s Wcsl Co.1s11c~1ms- An.lhenn
O.lkl.md ,md Sculc - wuuld h tvc
swuched In the NL
Bul S.m Fr.m~.:l s4o;O G1.m1s owncr
Peter M.tgow,m thrt.:~JiencU LO sue to
block th.ll propcrs.ol ,md the pl1ycrs
assot:latum .... uJ 1t would light the

plan ton lc.onng the AL would he
rclcg;ued lu second class st.uus wlllo·
nut nat1on~ll c~pnsure
Re.1hgnmcnt )V.IS needed hcc,tuS&lt;"i!l'
T1mpa Bay and the An tun 1 Dta
mondhacks .ore JOtmng the tll.tJor
lc.tgucs oc~~;l ~.1sun Ant:un.t w 1s
a.'stgned to the NL Westl.tst J.muary
hut there w.IS no n.uuralrl.lcc lor the
Dc\111 Rays alter the Rny.tl s rcluseu
tn move !rom th&lt; AL Centr.1l tu the
AL West
Owners then asstgncd l'nnpa B.1y
t&lt;&gt;theALwllhoutdcsogn.umg.tdiVI
sum and created the rc.11t~nmcn[•"~
di11\mtllcc Mana¥clllcnt &lt;&gt;lltctal.t.~,
drew up 11 prcovtstoRal ..;licdulc th~~had the Dcvtl Rays m th&lt; AL West;:
,, solutmn th.u almost no unc liked ~ :!
Owners also rcaltzed tlloll wtlh two - IS team lc.ogues they wuuld need In·
1ntcrlcag:uc g.tmc nc.trly t.:vcry d.1y tu •
keep teams lro111 h.t"Vmg oltll.tys on
weekend!\, Te.uns prclcrrcO tn lc.JVc
the tntcrlcague schedule the w.1y tt
was m 1997 the hrst yc,tr ol mtcr
lu.tgue play w1th thus~.: g.1m~s
hun~,;hcd IOgethcr 1n three scgllll:Rts
•

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-Sports briefs-Football

PHOENIX (AP) - The Anznn.1
C.trdonals wmvcd ktckcr Kcvm But
lcr two duys alter he tmssed an cxtrJ
pnml .tttempt dunng •• 27 "' lnss ro
the Gtanls
Last season Butler set a trcm&lt;.:hrsc
rccunllm tlt.:~,;:uraL:y mLtktng 14 ol 17
ltdd g&lt;Mis
To replace Butler th&lt; Canlmals
stgned Joe Ncdncy who made JUst
I X nl 29 ltcld goals last year

•

College basketball
BERKELEY Caltl CAP)
Rcmovmg h1mscll lrom consu..lcru
tlon lor Mtcht~an s head wachmi
Jnh, Cahlornta coach Ben Brau••; &lt;
s1gncd an c1ght year cnntr.tct c.:tcllh.-.::"
smn
Braun smd he hccn ctmtaddl•
cthoul rcphu.:1ng Steve F1 ~ hcr who
was fired Fnd.1y ~•s L:O.IL:h nl tht.:
Wolvcnncs hut satd he dtdn t thmk
11 was latr to continue talks

. ...

Mason Bowling
Lanes results

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Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,. Scholastic sidelight

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Wectn•day, October 15, 1997

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By The Bend

~

f.Joneses, nine TDs
spell
w1ns
for
TCC
&amp;
Newark
Catholic
.
tion for a season in which it has
dropped four games by a combined
14 points - three of them to teams
ranked among the lop six in the state
in their divisions.
Elsewhere, Jesse Kline carried an
Upper Arlington-record 34 times for
283 yards and scored four times in· a
57-0 win over Thomas Wonhington;
in New Concord John Glenn 's 37-34
victory over Zanesville Maysville,
J.D. Emerson carried 27 times for
275 yards and scored four times for
John Glenn, while Maysville's Bryan
Wolfe had 19 tries for 259 yards and
three.scores; Pandora Gilboa's Mike
Kiene gained 267 yards on 13 carries
and scored on runs of 26, one and 63
yards in a 36-6 win over LibcrtyB•nton; Jeremy Rucker has picked
up 547 yards and eight touchdowns ·
in Tinora's last two games;
Dan Anderson picked up 232

By RUSTY MILLER
·,. AP Sporta Writer
It's hard keeping up with the Jone-

..

~,-ses .

j_
Scott Jones of Tuscarawas Cewal
1- Catholic scored six times in a 40-7
' •·win over Jewett-Scio, rushing 14
times for 247 yards and touchdown
runs of four, 15 and 23 yards. He also
went 38 yards on a hbok-and-!adr'er
· pass play and returned interceptions
· 28 and 25. yards for scores.
Before you ask, the state record is
· · · nine touchdowns in a game.
"
Ryan Jones caught seven passes
for 200 yards and touchdowns of 25,
. · · 45 and 66 yards as Newark Catholic
' upset previously unbeaten Columbus
' Ready 31-12. Jones also intercepted
·a pass and recovered a fumble. Mike
Klockner went 13-for-17 for 281
yards and three touchdowns to Jones.
The Green Wave gained rcdcmp-

yards but Fairpon Harbor Hll'ding
lost to Columbus Academy 35-28;
Joe Kalish rushed for 231 yards in
Painesville Riverside's 43-18 victory over Ashtabula Edgewood; Tiffin
Columbian's Nick Newland rushed
for 228 yards on 24 carries and
scored a schoel-recond six touchdowns in a 46-3 .win over Norwalk
-giving him 1.709 yards this year
for another school record; . Nick ·
Rogers scored five times and collected 217 yards on 23 carries in Garrettsville's 41-21 win over Streetsboro;
Justin Creamer rushed for 212
yards and three touchdowns in
Columbus Grove's 37-6 victory over
Ada; Thai Saenthavisouk, Chad
Mitsch and lzaak Walton each rushed
for more than lq&lt;l yards in Carey's
41-6 win over North Baltimore;
Ralph Childs had 142 yards and three

IRS commissioner pteads case for understan~ing
just one interaction with the IRS .a
y~ar -- filing a tax return and receiving a refund. .
However. to enforce the tax laws
I'Nl (.,-.. ,\11)11.'1+.•• T!Ak'&gt;
as enacted by Congress, we also
s~ ~ ~~~~~a~.· ~ ~~~~ rr.·•""'
S\1odlo:....have tn perform audits of returns
and take the necessary collection
aetinns when taxpayers do not vollltnr ,\nn Lai.dcn: Ar. acting untarily pay the tax they owe.
~.· ~•nunissi,,n~,.•r uf th~.~ lnl('ntal Rc\·-·
We have very •trict policies to
~.·nu.: S.:n· i.,.·~.·. I wuuld likl.· tu
prntc-.;t ruxpaycrs' rights, and our
r~,.':\l'''lhl hl y,n1r L
·,•lumn ;1hnu1 the · Cnde of Conduct requires all IRS
II{S in whidt ynu ~ritucd a letter ~mployecs to work with taxpayers in
fntm kff Joh:~'~'~Y nf tlu: Bmaun a courteous and professional man&lt;..il\th~,.· . Bul lm,n.· imp.trl:mt. I would
ncr. And they almost always do. As I
lik~.· hl a~.ldn:ss some nf the concerns
told the senators, I deeply apologize
lh;\t hoiVL' rc,.:~nlly otril'icn in Scnat~ to the taxpayers who were not well
h(' ari n~s.
treated by the IRS. I promised, and
i\nn. the nrst majllfity ,,f the 120 am \Uking. immediate actions to -premillion individual
hl\VC

Ann

Landers

• ..
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• ;·
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Pittsburgh's new defensive strate- minute span in the third period when • Steve Sullivan and Tie Domi is out, another guy steps up and plays and the Flames seemed headed for
gy found the team taki,ng only one Toronto had a two-man advantage scored for Toronto, which outshot a huge role."
their first victory of the season after
and Detroit was clinging to a 3-2 Detroit 32-24.
Stars 5, flames 4 (OT)
shot on goal in the third period.
a 0-3-2 start.
lead.
"They·~ in a rebuilding process
At Dallas, Pat Verbeek broke out
"W~ outplayed them, we outshot
But Hatcher scored from the slot
The Maple Leafs peppered Hod- them . . . but their goaltender beat of his slump Tuesday night, getting to push the game into overtime·, then
and they're trying to get two points,"
Rangers coach Colin Campbell said. son with so many shots during the us," Maple leafs coach Mike Mur- two goals and two assists as the Stars Reid knocked in his own rebound for
beat the Calgary Flames 5-4 in over- his first goal of the season.
"So you can't blame them for putting power play that he became exhaust- phy said.
ed. But he didn't let anything get by
a system in.,,
Lidstrom scored a power-play lime.
"It bounced right to me and I
"I
need
to
bottle
that
and
take
it
The game was the first of an eight- him.
scored on' the second whack at it,"
goal at I :49 of the first period, but
~~1 was jus~ lrying to survive," he Sullivan tied it at 17:04 on a breakinto the next game," Verbeek said. "I said Reid, a penalt~-killer and check-game marathon that will take the .
wasn't getting a lot of good scoring cr. "We battled back a long way to
Penguins from coast to coast before said.' "I felt like I had one too many away.
the team returns home to the Igloo on pizzas lately."
,
The Red Wings took a 3-1 lead in chances early, but I was really in the win this ."
Toronto's Mats Sundin agreed tbe second period on a pair of goals flow tonight."
Nov. I. Their longest previous trips
Verheek seemed to raise his enerthat was the key stretch in the game. by Gilchrist.
Dave Reid scored the game-win- gy level following a t1rst-period
were si~ games.
"That 5-on-3, we got the puck to
"We're going to be on rhe &lt;oad for
shoving match with Calgary's Sandy
On his second goal, Gilchrist ner with 3:43 Jell in overtime.
"We got scared in the third peri- McCanhy.
eight games," Francis said. "We the goal line two or three times," deflected a long shot hy Lidstrom up
have to be ready for the challenge. Sundin said. "We outplayed them, and under the cross bar. The goal od, and when we did that, good
"Sometimes it takes a punch in
things
staned
to
happen,"
Stars
coach
but
we
lost
it
right
there."
Tonieht we eot off to a ~ stait."
the head," Verbeek said. "I guess I
wasn't confirmed until two minutes
Barrasso improved his re~ord to 3The Maple Leafs ( 1-4-1) contin- later, when a whistle finally stopped Ken Hitchcock said: "And Pat Ver- have to gel madder than I had been
to ...
Barrasso stopped 22 shots in the 2-1 for the season and 20-15-41ife- ued to struggle on the power play, play and a video replayed was beek was the best player on the ice, .getting. The adrenalin was flowing
period ."
going 0-for-6 against Detroit. They ordered .
well."
second period alone on the way to his time against the Rangers.
Rangers
center
Brian
Skrudland
Dcrian
Hatcher,
playing
his
first
are
now
1-for-42
with
the
man
The Flames staned the season 124th career shutout. Seven of the
Domi scored 47 seconds into the
third period. Hodson stopped Todd game of the season after signing a for-30 on the power play, but they
shots were taken by Rangers captain suffered a broken index finger in the adv~ntage this season.
"What's frustrating is that we're Warriner's wraparound and Domi, two-year contract last week, scored turned that around in the first period,
Brian Leetch and three each by Pat second period and will be sidelined
for
three
weeks.
playing
well," Sundin said. "The crowding the crease, shoved in the the tying goal for Dallas with I: 14 taking a 3-2 lead on man-advantage
LaFontaine arid Kevin Stevens.
Elsewhere
in
the
NHL,
Detroit
remaining in regulation .
power
play
let us down. It's cenain- rebound.
goals from Zarley Zalapski, Derek
Leetch had nine shots overall.
downed
Toronto
3-2
and
Dallas
beat
Theoren Fleury put Calgary in Morris and Cory Stillman. ·
ly an issue we' II have to address right
"We've got good -balance," cen"There are nights when you find
away."
ter Kris Draper said. "When one guy front 4-3 late in the second period,
(the puck) in traffic," Barrasso said. Calgary 5-4 in ovenime . .
Red Wings 3, Maple Leafs 2
"Sometimes you look the other way
At Toronto, the Detroit Red
and you don't see it. I was fortunate
Wings.
'playing without left wing
in that fl'gard."
Brendan
Shanahan, defenseman SlaIt was the first time the Rangers
lost 1-0 at Madison Square Garden va Fetisov and goalie Chris Osgood,
since Montreal's Michel Larocque the Red Wings improved to ~-0-1
shut them down on March 25, 1979. Tuesday night with a 3-2 win over the
" We had opportunities and Toronto Maple leafs.
Brent Gilchrist scored twice,
chances and Barrasso mad" some big
Niklas
Lidstroilt' had a goal and an
saves," New York star Wayne Gretassist
and
Kevin Hodson - making
zky said afrer the team's five-game
his
llrh
career
stan- made 30 saves
unbeaten streak ( 1-0-4) was snapped.
"We had 22 shots in ane period and in his first stan of the season. It is the ~
kept peppering him. He was making best stan for the defending Sranley
Cup champions since they went 6-0
key saveS.
Francis scored the only goal of the to &lt;&gt;pen the 1972-73 campaign.
"Sometimes it wo_rks to your
game ar 17:56 of the second period.
Francis redirected Kevin Hatcher's advantage when other teams don't
shot from the right point past goalie · know what kind of goalie you are,"
Mike Richter for the forward's third Hodson said. "They're shooting tile
puck at you instead of going for your
goal of the season.
.
..
"I was trying to get to the front of weaknesses.··
Shanahan did not play because of
the net," Francis said. "Hatcher took
back
spasm.s, and . Fet.isov and
the shot and I was able to tip it down
Osgood
:-vere rested for tonight's
between Richter's legs."
rematch
at
Joe Louis Arena.
The Rangers pressed the play in
Detroit ha.' also gone all scaso)l
the third period, but the Penguins (3without
gifted center Sergei Fedorov,
3-1) went into a defensive shell and
a
restricted
free agent embroiled in a
Barrasso was up to rhc ta.&lt;k. making
with the team. His
contract
dispute
key saves on Grctzky, Alex Kovalev
absence
has
gone
largely unnoticed in
and Adam Graves.
"We shut them down with the the wake of the club's excellent
''
goaltender," Penguins coach Kevin play.
''I'm
not
sure
this
team's
depth
is
Constllntine said. "We're trying to be
a good two-way team. New York had better than la.'l year's, hut we had a
plenty of good chances and our lot of young guys do a good job fur
goalie really won the game lor us. us tonight," Gilchrisr said.
Hodson came through for the Red
Tommy is playing great hockey for
You don't need to be a genius to add up the benefits.
Wings,
especially during a twous."

Cellular service made easy as

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55-county local calling area

e
Free activatiort 360 free minutes

.

and a free TeleTACTM or Tote. phone

•

Simplified roaming

British plan to resume
land speed chase today
By ToM GARDNER
GERLACH. Nev. (AP) - The
British Thrust SSC team hopes a cool
morning. calm winds and a re-tuned
car will give it a supersonic land
speed record.
The jet-powered car broke the
sound barrier twice on Monday. hut
missed the record by being about 50
seconds slow getting back on course.
The team considered makmg the
big run on Tuesday, the 50th anniversary of Chuck Yeager's rip through
the sound harrier in a rocket-powered
plane, but opted fo~ the more hiVorahle conditions of early mornmg
today ·in -the desert 125 miles north of
Reno.
Project boss Richard Noble said
Thrust's engines are more cfficrent
and the speed of sound is lower when
temperatures are cooler and the
humidity is higher.
. ,
"lt'l a very complex equatton,
Noble said. "The speed of sound
comes down relative to the ground
speed. )ly runnins early in the morning, ,..~ get more power. from our
_ ,engine•-. The car doesn 't have to go
so fast.'
MIMlh 1 varies between 750 mph
and 765 mph, depending on the
weather.
The car, Pfopelled by two jet
engine•. stteaked across the Black
Rock Desert at 764.168 mph on
Monday tllen made a return trip at
760.12i mph. accompanied both

HONG KONG (AP) - Swede
Mikael Tillstrom upset top-seeded
'Marcelo Rios of Chile 4-6, 6-2.*3 .
in a Silver Group preliminary match
-of the $725,000 Hong Kong championships.
Sccond-""edcd Brazilian Gustavo
Kuenen struggled to a 7-6 (7-4), 7-6
( 10-8) victory over Sweden 's
Thomas Johansson in the Blue
Group. In, a Gold Group match,
Italy 's Renzo Furlan defeated
Jonathan Stark 7-5, 6-2.

•

Question: My 'mother was
rccently .rushed to the hospital with
' pneumonia. Her temperature was
over I04, her pulse rate was 180, her
blood pressure was very low, and
her magnesium level was almo&amp;l
zero. In addition to the pneumonia,
she was diagnosed with
blood
infection. This all came on very suddenly. Is it common for 'pneumonia
to be an emergency condition like
this - almost like a heart attack?
Answer: As you probably know,
' · pneumonia is an infection that
~ involves the lungs. There are at least
'i. 4 million iqdividuals with what we
~ doctors call "community-acquired
;~ pneult!onia" every year.
·,
This cumbersome name is used to
~ idenrify infections contracted out'\ side the hospital (i.e., in "tbe com~ munity") from those that are
~ acquired during hospitalization for
~ another illness. This distinction is
;:. imponant because hospital acquired
•' infections tend \O be more serious.
•'
I don't intend to i111ply that com~ munitY.·acquircd pneumonia isn't
,• · serious: Of the 4 million who come
•'
•' down with this disca."' each year,
~! about 800,000 - representing all age
;. groups- need hospitali7.ation as your
•' mother did.
.•
Those who arc in their first y~ar
,.
;• of life or those over 65 arc at great·
•' est risk from the infection, however.
:: Members ol' these age groups who
·~ arc hospiiali1.cd have a IJ to25 per·
;. cent risk of death from pneumonia.
~:
Those who have undcrlyin~ heart
.: problems, lung conditions. kidney
:., failure. diahc1es or o1hcr serious
,:•
• • conditions have even greater risks .
; • This is a scrioul' illness!
•
Your mother's illness cumc on
;.
suddenly.
as often occurs in pneu.,
•.. monia. Fever. shonncss 6( hrca~h. a
;.., fast breathing rate, gcnel'alfihbdy
.•..• aches. and couJ;!h arc often present.
Unfonunatcly. these symptoms
·~
•·~, may h.! very mild nr even ah!(cnt in
... the elderly. particularly when the
pneumonia occurs suddenly. Often
•'• the person only complains of being
•' weak.
•
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··-

r:~

The Community Calendar is pub; • lished as a free service to non -profit
~: groups wishing to announce meet in~
~ and special events. The calendar is
~: ·not designed to promote sales or
:. fund raisers of any type. Items arc
~ printed as space permits and cannot
"! be guaranteed to run a specific num •,&gt; ber of days.

~ WEDNESDAY

r,

CHESTER - Chester Volunteer

-:!· Fire Department work detail

' Wednesday.
.
i:
6 p.m. followed by spe;, cia! meeting at 7 p.m. at the tire stai: tion. All members urged to attend.

..

;,
~·

REEDSVILLE - The regular
monthly meeting of the Eastern Ath letic Boosters will be conducted in
:; the high school cafeteria Wcdncs:• day. 7:30 p.m. All c©chcs and par•: cnts of athletes arc urJled to attend.
•.•,
:• THURSDAY
:: . POMEROY - Rock Springs
~ Better 1-fealth Club. I p.m. Thursday
~ at the hOme of Barbara Fry.

••' •
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'·

Cellular, paging and long distance, right down the st~et. su
\051 East State Street, Athens. OH (614) 594-7735

Authorized 360• Communications Dealers

.
Revival, Thursday
"

...'

BUSINESS CUSTOMERS: C.ll your ..... rtproMnlltlve fOr 111 lppolntment.

~

ALBANY ·-: to Sunday. 7 p.m. at Comer Stone
•' Gospel Church, Chase Road . Evan·
~- gelists Rev. Herman and Audrey

fMI'Ithl, P'nN'nOtlOft ududtl ~ lfMI lollf dl ..... ~
AJrtirM . . . In 10 MCO.Id lnoacme lb. SorM l... ktioUI ........ FNt'loftt41S...I'ICIII'ft!Nn6...,... 10 MinwtM alftOMh fer U: Mllftlht. Ott.f' ...... Oc,tober ,U, 1"J,
lf'lfH

I

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Elevated fever, pulse rate, breathing rate and low blood pressure are
signs of a very serious in(cction.
Prompt hospitalization to receive
intravenous antibiotics, oxygen perhaps utilizing a· ventilator to assist
breathing - and other medications is
necessary, and in your mother's
·case, saved her life.
.
The "infectiOn in the blood" you
reported is not unusual in this type
of overwhelming pneumonia. The
organism in the blood is the same
one causing the pneumonia, and its
presence in the blood is a consequence of the overwhelming nature
of the infection.
Magnesium is a salt in the blood
that must be present and in balance
with sodium, calcium and others.
·Your mother's low magnesium level
nccurred as part of the complex biochemical response to the over·
whelming infection and ensuing cardio~ascular system collapse. .
This abnormality is a sign that
her. illness was quite serious. Obvi-ously. _she received prompt, high
quality care because she recovered
from this illness.
·
There arc many types of bacterial
and viral infections t~at cause pncu'monia. Pneumococcal pneumonia is
one type that often strikes rapidly
and may become fatal wirhout
prompt treatment.
Fonunatcly, there is an immunization that provides protection
against the most 'common strains of
this diseuse. If you arc over 65 or
have a chronic condition such as
diahetes. heart disease. kidney discase. or lung problems. he sure to
sec your doctor for this immuniza·

SIGN IN PLACE· Campers at Forked Run4ilate Park now have dlractlons to several churches in the Long Bottom and Reecllvllle communities. Local churches shared the cost of Installing tills sign at the entrance to the park. Pictured with the new sign are, 1-r,_Gary Reed
of the Eden United Brethren Church near Reedsville, Eloise and Joe Connolly of the Long Bottom United Methodist Church, Dale Smith
of the Reedsville Church of Chrlat, Pastor Lawranca Buah of Mt. Olive Community Church In Long Bottom, and Pastor Steve Reed of the
Faith Full Goapal Church In Long Bottom. Also participating In the project were the Reedavllle United Methodist Church and the Fellow·
ship Church of the Nazarana.
·

ANTICIPATION.
We're aboot to
.give birth to a brand
new p~rinatal unit

Recently, we made a big decision.
We're going ahead with an all
new maternity unit at 0' Bleness
Memorial Hospital. We see it as
an investment for the future, an
investment in our area's families
and families-to-be.
The rooms will be state-of"
the-art. a real showcase environment for you and your baby. Best
of all, it's a place where we can
practice the very latest birthing

techniques and our own very special brand of traditional warmth
and caring from afirst-class,
committed group of nurses and
physicians.
In all, undertaking this
renovation project is our way of
saying thai quality maternity care
and ihe future of Athens and
Athens CoQnty families ha,, never
looked brighter.

· lion.

"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolr, D,O., Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medldne.
Grosvenor
Hall,
Athens, Ohio 4570 I.

-.

Community
Calendar

•,.

1M of Mn'kt lftd i:OIItr«t ,..,....... CNcftt l'tfttkt6ofK _,.ty, JIO lftlnut .. MUtt bt tdllllft the flnt

Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate. 5777 W. Century ,
Blvd .. Suite 700, Los Angeles. Calif.

Pneumonia can strike elderly
·.quickly and without warning

•••'•

New

Please remind your readers that
children should never be put in a
position that makes them the gobetween or mediator of a broken
family. It's very unfair. -- Victimi1.cd
in Norfolk, Va.
Dear Va.: Children can best protect themselves from being "victimi~ed" in . this way by flatly refusing
to carry messages or become
i'nvolved- in their divorced parents' '
squabbles. Sample sentence: "This
is l;letwecn you two. I don ' t want to
hear about i't."

Associ1te Professor

'

-SportJ ·briefs--

middle of their non-stop fighting.
Both my mom and dad ask me to
deliver messages (mostly hostile) to
one another, which I hate doing.
It all staned when my mother
asked -if she could come bar-hopping
one-night with me and a group of my
friends. She then began dating one
of the guys who had moved into my
apanment.
This outra~ed my father. who
said I had betrayed him by letting
her hang out with me and get chummy with my friends.
·
Now, two years later. I am
engaged, and my father barely
speaks to me. Although I love my
parents equally, I resent heing put in
the middle by both of them.

Family
Medicine
·.
John C. Wolf, D.O.

:..
..I:
:..

"

I want to assure your readers that .
we at the IRS take our responsibility
very seriously. We are listening to
the concerns that have been raised,
and I pledge that we will act upon
what we learn to ensure the American public gets the kind of quality
service it deserves.
Thanks for the podium, Ann. -Michael P. Dolan, acting commissioner, Internal Revenue Service
Dear Michael Dolan: Thanks for
a fine letter. If you should lire of
being commissioner, I suggest you
consider public relations.
Dear Ann Landers: I am the 24year-old daughter .of divorced parents who separated two years ago.
Since that day, I have been in the

College of Osteopathic Medicine

;:.
.,...

times by a soft sonic boom mufncd
by the porous hardpan.
But a drag parachute tailed to
deploy on the first run and the car
overshot the end of the 13-mile
course by I 112 miles. It took 61 min,
utcs to tum the car around and position it for the second sprint.
The rules require two runs' in
opposite dircetillns within one hour.
Noble, 51, set the speed record
here on Oct. 4, 1983, at 633.46 mph.
His . ultimate goal this lime is
Mach I plus I0 percent.
He has turned over the wheel to
Royal. Air Force pilot Andy Green, ~
35, who topped his boss on Sept. 25
with a two-way average speed of
714.144 mph that he set within the
one-hour limit.
His fastest run on Monday was
764.168 mph. That was calculated at
I .007 times the speed of sound.

vent this from happening in the
future .
' Ann, you can· help us get the
word out about how people with
problems can get them s.ol~ed . Our
Problem Resolution Program has
offices in every state, where IRS
employees focus only on helping .
taxpayers resolve special problems.
They just have to call 1-800-8291040 and ask for Problem Rtsolution. In addition, taxpayers who prefer can write to the Taxpayer Advo·
cate in Washington. who will make
sure the problem receives the proper
attention. The address is: Internal
Revenue Service. !Ill Constitution
Ave., .N.W.. Washington, D.C.
20224, Attn. :Taxpayer Advocate .

~--------------~
Ohio University

NEW YORK (AP)- Even without Mario Lemieux, the Pittsburgh
·' . , Penguins were able lo do somcthmg
_ ~ they failed to achieve last season .
Pittsburgh- 0-4 against the New
•
York Rangers last season - needed
· :=,::.an of goalie Tom Barrasso's 36 saves
·- in Tuesday night's 1-0 won m the
:; : teams' first matchup in the post,-.
. era.
...... .... Lem1eux
~ •'
The Penguins are well aware that
: :; without Lemieux. goals are going to
!.:! be a precious commodity.
~
"We're a totally different hockey
:::.. club," new captain Ron Francis said.
;;: "Without Mario we're going to have
~: ! to win games 1-0, 2-1, 3-2 because
- - we don't have the firepower we used
,.

VVednesday,Ckrtoblw15,1997

•

touchdowns and AI Rubosky 138 year Hamilton Badin coach ierry crpool's Robert Jackson inte~cepted .
yards and ;'uee more in Orwell Malone is at323 victories ami hold- a pass at his own 15 with nottme left
Orand Valley's 54-12 win over Con- ing- tying him with retired Ci~inand returned it for the win in a 34-28
neaut; and Kyle Obendorf hu piled nati Princeton coach Pat Mancuso as
'ctory over Edison.
'·
up 1,368 yards on 166 carries (8.2 the winningest coach ever in Ohio·
per) as Wadsworth has won six of after a 42-14 loss to Cincinnati Roger
seven.
The biggest game of !he season,
Bacon; and Johnstown·Monroe
TEAM STUFF: After going 0-1 0 clinched its first league title since so far at least, was No. 2 Canton
last year and startin1 0-2 this year 1979 with a40-0 win over Johnstown McKinley's 35-32 victory at hpme
Paulding -losers of 16-of·l7 game~ Northridge.
against No. I Cleveland St. Ignatius
- has won five in a row· Fremont
HEROICS: Fairfield's Derek Saturday. Ben McDaniels, McKinRoss is unbeaten and hasn:l allowed Longshore caught four touchdown ley's quanerback and the son of
a point in 0~1 '-:akcs league play, passes in a 49-17 win over _Lakota coach Thorn McDaniels, passed for
whtle cornplennuust three passes in West; Amanda-Ciea&lt;·creek's Scott 266 yards and two touchdowns while
seven games; Akron Manchester has Affolter ran 12 times for 184 yards Demario Rozier ran for three scores.
outscored seven victims 315-19; and two touchdowns, · hit 7-of- II
Logan Elm set a school record with passes for 198 yards and another
Finally. there are 53 unbeatens
477 yards rushing in a 49-12 victory . score and kicked a field goal and four
left.
That includes as many as 12 in
over Bloom-Carroll;
extra points in a 37-0 win over Divisidh V anp as few as five in DiviSalem won its first road game Teays Valley; Scott McMullen of sion III.
'
-·
since 1994 when it beat Warren Granville completed 16-of-25 passes
Howland 42-15; at7-0, Hamilton is for 379 yards and three scores in a
off to its best start since 1950; 40- 24-13 win over Heath; and East Liv-

Penguins _b lank Rangers 1-0; Red Wings &amp; Stars also win

r

The Daily Senti'!-;1.

'

Tranrl!r · ~md Rev. Runnic Trancr.
Homccnmin~ SunJay. 10 a.m. wi'th

curry-in dinner. I p.m.
POMEROY- Meigs Gcneulogy
Sodcty. ~:I~ p.m. Thursday at the
Meigs Museum.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER
Star
Grange 778. and Star Junior Grange
K78 . annuul Halloween pany and
potluck super on Saturday. Potluck
al 6:30 p.m. followed by costume
judging and games at 7:30 p.m.
Event to he held at the Salem Center
Fire Station.
SUNDAY
CARPENTER- Carpenter Baptist Church. located on SR 143, Carpenter, homecoming Sunday. Dinner
at noon: afternoon program, I :30
p.m. with special singers, and Joe
Gwinn of Gallipolis, speaker.
RACINE - Homecoming at the
Morning Star United Methodist
Church, Sunday. Church, 9:50 a.m.;
Sunday school; II a.m. ; basket dinner. 12!30 p.m.; afternoon program,
1:30 p.m. with special singing . Pastor, Dewayne Stutler.

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Page

a•The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Rutland

Gard~n

received, and one =~ived the outstanding of the day at the Ohio State
Fair. Cheryl Jewell was recognized
as the. outstanding 4-H youth at the
fair.
A meeting of the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Association to be held
at the Pomeroy Library was ·
announced for 7 p.m, as was the district meting 10 be held Octc. 25 al
Gallipolis. It was noted that Atkins
had anended an arranging workshop
at Wilkesville.
Woodard gave . devotions using
. scripture and a poem . .:·1Pick More

Community activities were
reviewed when the Rulland Garden
Club met recently at the home of
Oorochy Woodard.
It was reported thad! Donna Jenkiris, on behldf of hte club, made a
donation to the Rutlkand Elemetnary School beautification program.
A thank yoku ·note was received
fcom the school and read adt the
meeting by Pauline Atkins.
The community flower beds were
weeded by Atkins ~nd Marjorie Rice
and are still attractive, it was noted.
Taking flowe~ to churches ·were,
Clotine Blackwood, Ann Webster.
Betty Lowery, and Atkins.
A report on the accomplishments
of the 4-H Club at the fair was given
by Atkins who noted that 12 members exhibited with 18 grand and
IWO reserve grand champions wer\!

------- -

the flower heads can be dried and
crumbles and then planted in a shallow futTOw in the vegetable garden.
She described zinnias as a companion plant for vegetables since
they deter Japanese beatles fropm
the plans. She said the seed gerrni'
nate tn a few days and the seedlings
are easily transferred lok a flower
bed.
They draw buucrflies, are sturdy,
have lush leaves, and produce
blooms that are bold and varied.
When summer heat and dry spells
take tbeir toll on other flowers, the

zimiu thrive, .she said.
Woodard talked on yucci or
Adam's needle, noting that ii is a distinctive and often misunderstood
plant. Sbe said the plants grows
konc to three fool leaves which are
thick, upright sword shaped, and
have a lip with sharp spines.
At one lime, she said, they wete
harvested by Native American tribes
to make rope.
She said 11ie plant has a flower in
mid-summer as high as 10 feet tall,
bell shpaed with a waxy texture.
Despite its desen look, the plant

snow.

The October traveling prize will
he furnished by Stella ·Aikins. Next
meeting will be Oct. 17 al the home
of Joy Combs.

details.

nower.

ONE STOP CONVENIENCE

We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Money
Postage Stamps
Film Developing
Pre-paid Phone Carda
Foodtand Gift Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rentals
Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets

STORE HOURS

yearly. The woman's health care professional may recommend more frequent mammogram screenings
depending on the health history.
In addition to regularly scheduled
screening mammograms,
the
woman needs to have a yearly clinical breast examination completed by·
her health care professional and
monthly self breast exams beginning
at age 20.
Breast cancer cases often are
related to three high-risks groups of
women: those who have no children,
those with a moderate to high
income level, and those who have a
mother or sister with breast cancer.
.Each woman's breast is ,different so
she· needs to get lo know her breasts
through the process of self examinalions. ·
Torres advised thai if the won;an
detects any of the following, she
should see her doctor right away :
I. Nipple dimpling, bleeding,
sores, discharge, or changes in
shape,
2. Breast shape
and size changes,
3. Skin changes such as bulges,
dimpling, puckered skin, moles that
have "grown larger or darkened, and
lumps.
"If it has been at least II months
sitice .your last mammogram," said
Torres, "it's time for another screenin g." Meigs Countians can schedul~
an appointment by calling 992-6626
anytime Monday through Friday, 8
a.m . to 4 p.m.

Monday thru
Sunday
8 AM·10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
WI RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, OCT. 18, 1997

ASSORTED PORK

Saw. up to
11.70

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United Premium Ultimate

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Ice Cream

MSWCD banquet set for next week
Lim~

one with additional purchase

and Waler Conservation Districl's

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10 lb. Bag US # Wisconsin

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Valley Bell

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United Valley
Orange
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Sour Cream or
French Onion
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CHOICE

Pepsi Products

Two local students were among .
1.900 receiving degrees from the
Ohio Stale University during summer quarter commencement Cxcrciscs at St. John's Arena on Au~ . 29.
Receiving degrees were: Dawn
Renee Demko. Dexter. B.S. Chemical Engineering. and Christopher
AUa~ Myers. Pomeroy, master of

Asst. Colors ~'

Fall Mums ,

GOOD ONLH T FOOOLANO

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12.98 ...

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Bath Tissue

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Two supervisors will be elected
lo serve three year term. The candidates arc Joe Bolin, Marco Jeffers
and Ray Midkiff.

OHIO VALLEY, TWIN RIVERS

9
9
C
e Ju1ce...
.,_____......
69c

16-16.5

oz

for the annual Christmas flower.
show. Terrariums are lo be made by
the club along with an ornament of
wild material. The county meeting
was announced for Monday al the
Meigs County Public Library, 7 lo 9
p.m.
.
A potluck dinner . preceded the
meeting which op;ened with a poem

by the hostess "God Knows Best" by
Helen Steiner Rice. For ro.ll call
members gave gardening lips.
The regional meeting to be held
in Gallipolis at Grace United
Methodist Church was announced
for Oct. 25. Cumings presented each
member with a flowering cabbage
plant.

CARNATION
EVAPORATED MILK

,,

aftemoon.li was sci fo/ Nov. 23 at 2
p.m. in the afternoo,9.
Also planned was the annual
Christmas open house for merchants
and a community candle lighting
service.
The Middleport Ministerial Asso-

in Ohio and school reform.
Hemlock will be serving Pomona
Grange in November, it was noted ..
Margaret Haning, used the theme
"What October Brings" for the program. A game "Pocketbook Count"
was won by Barbara Fry. Reading ·

· Julia Stevenson and Barbara
Stedman of Fairfax. Va., were recent
, visitors of Stella Atkins .•
Frances Alkire visited Minnie
McGrath of The Plains Monday
afternoon.
A surprise fonicth anniversary

REG. OR ULTRA
12PK

$ 79
LIMIT 2 PLEASE

FINAL TOUCH
FABRIC
SOFTNER

SNOW FLOSS .

TOMATO JUICE
•• o,

"Apple Pie" was Story. The "Things
to do in October" Contest was won
by Opal Grucser and the "Key
Count" Contest was won by Jim Fry.
Readings by all members concluded the program and a cook out
preceded the meeting . .

69c

STOKELY
VEGETABLES

dinner was held Sunday for Mr. and Golda Hart of McArthur.
Mrs. Doug Bishop at their home.
Other callers were Mr. and Mrs.
Attending were Mr. and f11rs, Gene Haning and Mr. and Mrs . Clin· Glen Kennedy and family, Mr. nnd ton Gilkey.
They also received scverul conMrs. Kenton Davis and son, Tim
Bishop, Sue Tcra and friend Ron gratulating telephone calls during
Slwt of Kentuc~y . Mr .. and Mrs. the day.
Frank Cartwright of Langsvtllc, and

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ciation will be contacted and invited.
to participate in the program. with
the time lo be announced later.
All interested business owners or
members of the community are
invited lo the next meeting, Nov. 4,
at 8:30p.m. at Peoples Bank.

Hemlock Grange announces new contests
New contests were announced by
Helen Quivey, women's activity
chairman, when Hemlock Grange
met recently with Master Rosalie
Story prcsidi •tg.
The legislative report hy Roy
Grueser concerned the poverty level

2/$1 •LIMIT4

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1..2 1al.

DUNCAN HINES
CAKE MIXES

--Harrisonville happenings--

.l..;· !W.:!R:•:u:rw:~lhe~R:Igll!!:t!to~f=Im:lt::~=:.,;;·Pr::lc:•~•=ll~lct=fw::,!Th:ru:·~Situ=~!Wy~~ac\{~~1t~,~~":!;7·!U=SD~A!F!o:od!:::!:~WIC~!;:=::.=:::.!":ot~==::.~for~ty~'J)-:!111~fl:ph=Ical::or:·!plct=IO~rial::errora::·:;.·j

White of Middleport and . Robyn
Ann Stout of Syracuse.
.,

Holiday activities were planned
al a recent meeting of the Middleport Community/Business Associa-

BIO BEND, BUCKEYE, GAWPOUS,

1.2 OZ CANS ASST. VAIIETIES

Awards will be presented lo the
Outstanding Cooperator, Goodyear
Farmer, Affiliate Members, Soil
Judging Team winners. Education
Teachers of the Year, and Hay Show

Middleport holiday plans announced
In a change from previous years,
the annual Christmas parade in Middleport will be held on a Sunday

•

Named to the OSU summer quarter honor roU were: James David

A demonstration on a creative
design arrangement using a figurine
accessory was given by Alice
Thompson at a recent meeting of the
Winding Trail Garden Club held al
the home of Gladys Cumings.
lltompson also did an angular
design and Peggy Crane a reflective
arrangement. Plans were discussed

tion.

12 roll plcg

YO~~·

I
I

LIMIT ONE FREE WITlHHIS COUPON.

from staff members Blair Windon.
Janis Carnahan, Opal Dyer and
Mike Duhl. Tickets may also be pur. chased from the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District Office,
3310 I Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
Speaker for the evening w.ill be
Rob~n Heft, designer of the current
50-star American Flag. Heft is originally from Lancaster.

BORDEN

Flower arranging featured at meeting
:

BUY ONE, GET ONE:I
16 oz.

annual meeting and banquet to be
held on October 21 at Meigs High
School al 7:15p.m.
Tickets are $7.50 each and arc
available from Supervisors Joe
Bolin, Charles Yost, Marco Jeffers,
John Rice and Thomas l11eiss and

rOODLAND SPECIAl COUPON 1111H

FREE

I/2GAL

Wednesday is the linal day for
purchasing ti ckets for the Meigs Soil

10.750Z

BUY ONE OET ONE

aucnd the

OSU news

•

c

Chuck Steaks

Western Style Bone-in

HOW DOES A. LUMP FEEL? -- Many braut cancera are flr1t discovered by women themselvea durIng self examination•. Hera Norma Torres, R. N., nursing director at the Meigs County Health Department, uses a soft breast model to teach a client the proper technique of self-axainlnatlon.

arlow fat

Armour
Treet

Dinners

"South Pacinc" at Springsbora.,
.
Imogene and Lester Kcolon
attended thl' Walnut Fest ivai at
Spencer. W.Va.. and visited relatives
and friends in the orca.
lltc I"uppcrs Plains Veterans of
Foreign Wars hosted a meal following the funeral of Charles Corr

PANTRY

PEACH HALVES

' U.S.D.A. CHOICE

The Alfred United Methodist
Church and the cnmmunity extended sympothy to the families of lost
loved ones: Eloise Archer. Elzo
"Cricket" Pullins. ·Carl Dorst.
Charles "Red" Carr. Evelyn Calaway and Georgia Barnett. Archer's
funeral was held al the church on
Scp1. 25 with the church and community hosting a meal afterwards.
They also hosted !be meal following
Pullins' funeral on Sept. 30.
Joe Poole received word of the
death of his unc~e. Tony LaCase. in
Te~as . .
Marguerite and Dclhcn Steams
visited their daughter. April Neely
and grandson. Jeff Noble. at Fair~
horn.
Suzanne Gricg and Barbara .
Thomas were Sunday supper guests
of the Poole-Parker family.
Sarah Caldwell and Nina Robin-

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Officer reports were given.
Dorothyg{fers will prepare the .d uh
booklets.
Fry will be hostess for the Oct'.!:
ber meeting. The program will be •
given by Leitllcil and the contest
conducted by Nuncy Grueser.
Leifheit served rcfresbments to ,the
mel)lhcrs and a guest. Joey Blacksum.

sc1ence.

3 EXCITING WAYS TO WIN!

FOOD LAND

Project (BCCP).
Free mammograms are available
on a monthly basis 10 women who
meet the age and income requiremenls for this comprehensive education and screelling program through. out Ohio, accordi~g to the nursing
director.
The cost for women who choose
to pay or have insurance is $60 with
the James C. Arthur Cancer Institute
(Ohio Stale University) Mobile Van
and $75 for the Grant-Riverside
Mobile Van.
Torres explained that the most
effective way lo detect breast lumps
is through mammography. Breast
lumps thal!lfe loo Stl)alllo be felt or
seen can be picked up during a
mammogram which can reveal a
malignant (cancerous) tumor or cancer two years before symptoms
appear.
"Mammography is very safe and
consists of two low-dose X-rays,"
said Torres. Radiation exposu~ is
minimal when screenings ore performed by a radiology technologist
that is exr.erienced. One X-ray is
taken from the side of the breast and
the other from the top, she
explained.
·
The American Cancer Society
(ACS) recommends a baseline
mammogram should begin by age
40. These should continue every one
to two years between the ages of 40
to 49. After the . age of 50, the
woman should have a mammogram

BY CHARLENe HOEFLICH
Sentlnel Newl Staff
Tomorrow is Ohio Breast Cancer
Awareness Day and women in
Meigs County are encouraged to be
alen to the danger of .the second
lea~ing cause of cancer death in
women.
This year breast cancer is e~pccled to kill more women between the
' ages of 40 and 49 than any other
cancer, but detected early it has a
high cure rate.
It is the most frequently diagnosed cancer in women , with about
180,000 'new cases being fpund each
year.
·
"The key to finding breast cancer
is early detection, and the key to
early detection is screening," said
Nonna Torres, R. N., nursing director of the Meigs County Health
Department, an agency with an
emphasis of preventive health care.
In view of cancer statistics, Torres is stressing the importance of
mammography and the availability
&lt;Jf that service through a low-cost
program at the Health Department.
For the past seven years the
department has brought in mobile
vans lo its parking lot 10 provide
low-cost or free mammograms to
the women of our area.
For the lasllwo years, the department has had an active partnership
with the Ohio Department ofHealth's Breast and Cervical Cancer

Club makes
plans to
to
residents of the Meigs Coonty In fir' mary this fall were made when the
Rock Springs Better Health Club
met recently at Rock Springs United
Methodist Church.
Susie Mash and Agnes Dixon
will take the treats in October. and
Helen Blackston will take them in
November.
The list of sick and shutins to be
remembered at Christmas will be
updated at next month's meeting it
was decided.
The program was presented by
Phyllis Skinner and included Barbara Fry. "Good news for Coffee
Lovers"; Dixon. "A New Reason to
Work Out"; Dorothy Jeffers. "For
ln!!tant Relief of Leg Cramps";
Frances Goegleih , "Stop a
Toothache with two Cloves"; Leno:
· ra Lciflleit, "Clear a Urinal Tract
Infection with Cranberry Juice";
Nancy Morris. "Heal a Wound with
Sugar"; and Helen Blackston, "Stop
Food Poisoning with a Slice of Plain
Bread."
Barbara Fry presided at the meting which opened with the Lord's
prayer and Pledge to the nag. Helen
Blackston had devotions titled
"Leave the Autumn Scene" and
"Scarlet Slippers." For toll call
members named tbeir ·favorite fall

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

•'

requires good soil and water
drainage, and tkes two years 10
develop.
As the hint for the month, members were reminded 10 keep fallen
leaves raked from the lawn 10 prevenllruf injury, to continue mowing
so that the grass won't mat und.er the

See store for

~~;..!sr~t~tt~ts.

The Daily Sentinel ••Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Breast Cancer Awareness
Day Is Thursday, October 16

-------

EASTMAN'S

••

VYednesday,Ckrtober15,1997

Club·meets at Woodard home

Daisies." For roll call members displayed and named a colored leaf.
The traveling prize furinshed by the
hostess was won by marcia Dennison.
For tbe prognun, Clotine Blackwood used "Let's Hw It for the Zinnias." She suggested that we forget
the roses for now and give more
respect to zinnia. ·
She said !hal roses have been a
noral symbol of love, beauty, femininity and romance, but that nothing
has been wrillen about the zinnia.
As for the zinia, Blackwood said

----~

~ednesday,Ckrtober15,1997

29c

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This Week
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Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
'

Satanic cult leader plotted' high school
killings with suspect, investigator says

Saturn bound: Cassini
begins seven-year, 2
billion-mile journey

Eklund slud the group's goals
BR.,-\NDON, Miss. (AP) - A
were
, money, power and influence
teen-ager who led a secret satanic cult
and
its
motto was "We cannot move
that sought the obliteration of its enemies plotted a killing spree at a high forward until all of our enemies are
1
school with a follower charged in the gone .' •
Boyette'~
fascination
with
·slaying of his mother and two stusatanism
dates
back
to
1993
when
dents, an investigator said Tuesday.
Oranl Boyelle, 18, sat hunched friends said he became obsessed
over a counroom desk 115 prosecutors with philosophy and tlie writings of
offered the first glimpse of evidence Adolph Hitler, Eklund said. Boyette .
in Boyette's murder conspiracy case. also bragged about having access to
He is one of six teens suspected of assault weapons, he said.
On cross examination, defense
plotting to kill students at Pearl High
lawyer
John Emfinger got Eklund to
SchooL
admit
that
much of his information
They were arrested Oct. 7, nearly
a week after another student, Luke came from some of the five other
Woodham, was accused of stabbing · teens charged as co-conspirators in
his mother to death in their home, the deaths of the 1wo high scbool stuthen going to school and gunning dents."He's ·given nothing bul hearsay
down two students - including his
ex-girlfriend- and wounding seven. , testimony," Emfinger said.
But Judge Kent McDaniel ruled
Investigator Greg Eklund portrayed Boyette as the undisputed there was-sufficient evidence to preleader of a group named "Kroth" sent Boyette's case to a grand jury.
after a satanic verse that plotted l!l kill Th~ judge also revoked Boyette's
bond, which had been sel at $2 m•lstudents over a 10-month peritlll.
Boyclle, who called himself lion for the two counts of conspiracy
"father," urged Woodham to kill his to commit murder.
Boyette's former Sunday school
ex-girlfriend and encouraged another, Donald Brooks, to poison his teacher testified at the hearing that
Boyette was a follower not a leader.
father, Eklund said.
"He was the one who called the But neighbor Rick 11rown satd
shots; no one bucked Mr. Boy~ lie," Boyeue changed in recent years and
Eklund said ara preliminary hearing. had admitted praying to Satan.

spacecraft reaches Saturn in 2004.
The route to get there is circuitous to
say the least: The first stop. so to
speak. is Venus in )998 and again in
1999 for gravity-assisted speed.
The spacecraft .also will sweep
within 500 miles of Earth in 1999 ter protests.
"It's beautiful. It's beautiful," . which has Cassini opponents more
munnured Charles Kohlhase. Cassi- terrified than did the launch - and
ni 's science and mission design man- by Jupiter in 2000. Cook said there is
ager. "We've been waiting a long a less than one-in- I million chance
that the probe would re-enter Eanh 's
time for this."
The mammoth Titan 4-B rocket atmosphere in 1999 and spread plucarrying Cassini blasted throu gh tonium.
"If there is a problem, I still
clouds into a moonlit sky well before
dawn. Saturn appeared as a yellow- believe it's very safe." she said this
.
ish speck above the ri~arly full moon: morning .
If all goes well, the two-story
Venus and Jupiter also were visihle.
Scientists and engineers cheered robotic explorer will !lethe first probe
and embraced when Cassim shot out to orbit Saturn, doihg so 74 times
of Eanh orbit 40 mmutcs after liftoff from 2004 through 2008. Previously,
and streaked at nearly 25,000 mph three spacecraft - Pioneer II and
toward Venus and. ultimately. Saturn. Voyagers I and 2- flew past Saturn
Everything went perfectly nn this in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
second launch attempt high wind and
Cassmi also will sweep 45 times
computer problems sc uttled Mon- past Titan, Saturn's largest moon and
day 's effort.
the second-largest moon in the solar
· " Thts is a historic nwmcnl system. Perhaps most spectacularly,
hecausc it is the link that connects Cassini will release a European-built
this millennium to the ne&lt;t millcnni.- probe to land on the frigid Titan. Sci,
um," said Giancarlo Sctti. chairman enlists say its cold, preserved state
of the luiliari Space Agency's scien- could provide clues as lo how life
tific committee.
evolved on Earth.
With 72 pounds of plutonium
"The scale of this project kind of
aboard Cassini - the most ever matches the majesty of the place
,-:flnwn in spm.:c - nnli nuclcar -.W.h.~.£ it's going,'' said Wesley
activists feared a radioactive shower Huntress Jr.. NASA's space science
in the event of a rocket explosion. chief. "This is the second-largest
'
NASA insisted all along. however. planet in the solar system and you put
that the launch would be safe hecause the rings around it and it's the
of the numerous precautions taken biggest. It's also the most spectacu.~~ " with rhc poisonous substance. shieldlar. It has a huge retinue of moons and
ed several times over.
this stran11e and enigmatic place
"We're all very excited. We knew called Titan that we don't know very
~ ~ there wouldn't be a prohlem," said much about."
"'
the Energy 'Department's Beverly
• Cassini. named after the 17th-cen'cook. who's in charge of Cassini's tury Italian astronomer who discov-.
nuclear load. "But we were prepared ercd the largest gap in Saturn's rings,
· ' - it's desig~ for accidents. I'd hate is the last of NASA's big-ticket inter-: to have lost this mission. but there planetary spacecraft. Development
wasn't going to be a safety problem." began in 1989. well before the space
~', ·
The plutonium is needed to pow- agency was forced to shrink its work
.....
er Cassini. I he largest. most expen- force and budget.
sive interplanetary probe ever asscmFuture probes will be a mere 10
.,..~ . bled by NASA. Saturn is so far from percent to 15 percent the size and cost
£~ the sun that traditional solar panels of Cassini. Huntress said. As a result,
~.. - ' would be useless unless they were the they will need far less plutonium for
size of a couple of tennis courts. and power. he said.
then they would be too big to launch.
Antl-nuclcai activists promised
Cassini's $3.4 hillion mission to continue their fight.
won't begin. scicnlilically. until the
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (AP)
NASA' s plutonium-powered
Cassini spacecraft safely rocketed
away today, beginning a s.-en-year,
2 billion-mile journey to the ringed
planet Saturn following weeks of bit-

•

Pomeroy • Mlddl p . rt, Ohio

·, · Wednesday, October 15, 1997

Wednesday, October 15, 1997

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

I

Boyette "apparently lives two
completely different lives ... (and)
must have engaged in extreme deception," McDaniel said.
Woodham was being held without
bail on three counts of murder.
Eklund testified that Boyette, a
Hinds Community College student,
and Woodham, 16, were close confidants in the planning of the school
shooting spree.
In meetings at Woodham's house,
they discussed possible targets and
means of killing, the investigator
said.
·
After the attack, Eklund said the
group planned to flee to Louisiana,
then to Mexico. Ultimately "they·
were going to hire a boat to go to
Cuba," he said.
Eklund said Boyette had urged the
I 7-year-old Brooks to kill· his father
when the group clashed with the elder
Brooks over using his credit card to
buy a computer. The group talked
about concocting a fat soluble poison
and coating it on door knobs in the
Brooks' home, but they never did.
Woodham and the live other teens
face preliminary hearings on Oct. 21.
Brooks, Delben Shaw, 18, and
Wesley Brownell. 17, have been
released from jail. Justin James
Sledge and Daniel Thompson, 'bo!h
16, are being held in a juvenile facility.

••
LEADS PATROL • U. S. soldier PFC Robert
Morea, from Hutchinson, Kansas, leads a
petrol In the village of Mahala, 20 miles each
of Tuzla, on Wednesday. Army patrols In this
area are conducted on daily a dally basis to

show presence and to secure sale retum of
Bosnian Muslim refugees to this village at former front lines and for safe reconstruction of
their homes. (AP)

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BLAST OFF· Titan IV/Centaur rocket blasts oft from the Cape
Canaveral Air Station carrying the Casalnl apacecraft Wadnes,

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day morning. the spacecraft begins its Hven year journey to Satum •.(AP) .
.

:.'Study finds care may depend on where you live
WASHINGTON (AP) - How·
much medical care you receive in
your dying days may depend a lot on
- where you live.
in Sun City, Ariz., take
.... • partRetirees
...,
in health education programs that
': " teach ev.crything from the horrors of
• ; • . Alzheimer's disease to how to prepare a "Do Not Resuscitate" order.
They're prepared more for a qui· ct death, not one full of heroic medical attempts, says one doctor. And a
!~.~: new study bears him out: Sun City
':~: .retirees spend just half a day in intensivc care on average before they die
·- while old people in Miami aver• age almost live days in ICU.
With such a gap, which city is
treating the dying properly'! The
' ,._ , .Dartmouth Atla.' of Hcal.th. which
'!
Tound v~~t geographic disparilics in
,,';' end-of-hie care arnund the wuntry.
could not say.
.
~::":' ·. "In order tod1c. dn I need 111 "-'
: m a hns~llal w11h a_,cathc~;r. the IV
. . nn and lully tubed . Nn. sa•d Dr.
.;. . -:Waller N1cn ol the Sun Health-St.

=·-

.... ......

Josoph's Geriatric Fellowship Program .
"The tru(h is prohabiy in the middie." said Dr. Beth Virnig of the University of Miami.
But other doctors said the report
should force communities to compare
themselves In their ncighhors- and
decide whether they need to adjust
treatment standards.
"Take a minute to think about
(whether) you're practicing the same
as cvcryhody or different from everybody:· said Georgetown Univer&gt;ity's
Dr. Kcv.in Schulman. "We need to
look at these differences ... which arc
in favor of patient care and which arc
huning patients ...
Dartmouth Medical School epidcmiologist Dr. John Wennberg. who
first uncovered regional variations in
medicine in the 1980s. mapped the
distribution of health care resources
in 1994-95-thclatcstdataavailable
_ and how people in 306 hospital
" referral regions" used them.

·The study. being released today,
confinns earlier surgical disparities
- that, for example, patients in
some states get heart bypass surgery
or mastectomies for breast cancer
morC Oflcn than less-invasive alternatives.
Wennberg now has discovered
stark differences in one of medicine's
most difficult areas:' how to care for
the dyin~ .
Numerous other surveys have
documented the elderly saying they
don't want to die in hospitals or intensive-care units. But the atlas found
that
-Chances that a Medicare patient
will he treated in intensive care during the Ill' ! six months of life range
from less than 9 percent in Sun City
1&lt;&gt; more than 47 percent in Miami and
St. Petcr&gt;hurg. Fla .. and Munster. Ind.
-The actual time spent in !CU.
ranged from half a day in Sun City
and a day in Portland. Ore .. and Salt
Lake -City tn almost five days in St.
Pctcrshurg. Munster and Miami.

- Dying Medicare paticnb were

hospitalized longest in Newark. N.J ..
22.9 days. and New York City's Manhall an. 22 days. The longest hospital
stays were in the Nonhcast and Deep
South. while the West had the shortest, including 4.4 days in Ogden.
Utah. and 5.3 days in Salt Lake City.
-The percent of deaths among
Medicare patients that occurred in a
hospital ranged from 22 percent in
Portland. Ore .. to 51 percent in
Newark.
· What's happening·• Compare Arizona and Florida. They have similar
retirement communities with similar
death rates, despite the hospitalization disparities.
TI1c Dartmouth Atlas says a larg~
number of hospital beds in places
such as Miami raises by four times
the chances of hospitali7.ation at

if they dnn 't. someone else will," she
said.
But, she cautio~s. "it's t&lt;KI Cll&lt;Y to
say ICU care in the elderly. is h.Jd"
because doctnrs just dnn't know for
sure who they can save.
Patients play a hig role. too,
Virnig arld Nicri said.

Sun City runs education programs
ahout CtJffimim ·discuses unt.l just how

Revolutionary warrior
DUXBURY. Mass. (APJ - Pclcg
Wadsworth. hum here in 174K.taught
st:hool am.l graduated from Harvard
hcfore hccmning u Revolutionary

Denver was flying on
suspended license;
.·divers recover engine

Al7.hcimer's patients thut kcer them
out of the hospital hut under a spct:ialisfs t:arc.

Many doctors hclicvc thut "if
patients realized what (care) they
were gcui ng antJ what their chances
nf success were. lhcy would never
agree to it'" Miami's Virnig agreed.
work ."

Wa . . hi ngton at thl.! Battle ul' Long
Island . After hemg made adjutant
general in 177K and in 177'1 hrigadie.r
general of the Massachuscus militia.
he was given t:ommand 'of the cast-

War soldier. In 1774. he commanded ern department. Later Wadsworth
death. Miami also has more doctors
a
company of minutemen und latpr . was elected as representative in Con per capita than much of the country.
laid
nut the defenses nf Rnxhury and gress from 1793 to I ~07. He died in
said Virnig.
·
"Physicians talk about the cnor- · Dorchester Heights. In 1776. IH2lJ~ Poet Henry Wadswnrth WmJsworth fought under George LongJellnw was his grandson.'
mous pressure to treat peopl.e because.

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The individuals spoke only on dcnt.wasshown saying at a July 1996
condition they nut be named.
hotel fund-raiser.
The majority of the tapes. the indiIn another aired hy "Nightline,"
viduals said. were from events Clin- Clinton could he seen in June 1996
ton attended in traditional hotel ball- giving a tour of the White House
room settings away ·from the exccu- Blue Room to a group or donors that ·
tive mansion.
included Martin Davis. the political
But one thing they ~hawed was consultant convicted in the Teamsters
that Clinton wasted lillie time in election «mtrovcrsy.
using the White House to aid DcmocDavis and two other men conrats. One of the ftrst events listed on _ vic ted with him implicated AFL-CIO
the roster of newly surrendered tapes and Democratic National Committee
was a March IS, 1993. breakfast for offictals. _The AFL-CIO and DNC
Democrats in the state dining room at have dcmcd any mvolvement. and
the White Hou..:. the sources said.
Carey hlll&lt; not been d!fcctly •mphThe tapes included dozens of catcd.
.
.
.
hours of footage certain to keep
I~ a thtrd ptece ot footage,
investigators busy for days.
obta1ned by the AP. a Democratic
. But within hours of their release, Party leader could be seen thanking
the tapes provided early political donors as Clinton sat by al another
ammunition. ABC-TV's "Nightline" event. "Your personal and political
program· obtained and aired footage suppon is imponant,'' the official
showing Clinton praising John said,
Huang. the fund-raiser responsible
.Before the latest release of tapes,
for about half the $3 million in dona- Clmton told reporters in Latin Amertions the Democratic Pany has ica he did not expect them to cont.ain
returned be"tause of suspicions about any dan!lging evidence.
its origins.
"I think it is the same old stuff,"
"I have known John Huang for a Clinton said at a news conference in
very long time. :.. And when he told Brasilia. Brazil.
me that this was going to come off, I - - - - - - - - - - - - doubted him. But I should have
Cognac ca~ age in wood foi many
known , he has never told me any- yew's. but it begins to deteriorate after
thing that didn 't happen." the presi- 50 years.

pl~mc in 40 feet of watcl' and turned

8-lb.Bag

he tiKlk otT in his privately built Lnng it over In NTSB investigators.
EZ uircraft Sunday ·:md crashed 1n1&lt;1
"Piece hy piece. we'll put the airMonterey Bay.
plane ~1ck together. We're very hap··From all indications thott we've · py with the condition of the engine ...
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
been ahlc to find- from talking to Pcttcrsnn said. "The suit water has ·
people who played gol r with him. not taken its toll on the engine us
• who
saw him at the airport. lo the much as we had feared.'"
who dealt with him taking the • [nvcstigntors arc asscmhling the
'' person
plane outtn get ready to fly - he was wreckage in a hangar at Monterey
not drinking ... Hicks said.
Peninsula Airport. Peuerson said they
Denver. who achieved t:1mc in the . had not seen any obvious prohlcms
'- 1970s with songs including "Rocky . with the plane's fuselage.
Mountain High:: and "Suns,hinc On_ The 150-horsc power. 200-pound
My Shoulders. dted mstantly . o( engine is a key piece of evidence as
hlunt traum:1 m the crash. accord1ng 10 why Denver's plane apparently
' to the coroner.
nosc~ivcd Sunday• into the waters .
Toxicology
reports
which
would
100 yards off Lovers Point on Man•
show
any
evidence
of
drug
or
alcotcrcy
Bay. Witnesses reported a
••
hnl usc arc expected in IOto 12 days. "popping" sound before the crash .
In Washington. FAA officials
Van Snow, a veterinarian who sold
refused to say why Denver's medical the plane to Denver for $56,000. said
certificate was revoked. citing priva- he had tlown the plane for 700 hours
cy concerns.
without incident. The repainted plane
However. another federal regula- was delivered only Saturda:,; to Den. .!-ROO P«C. SCOTTOWfiS OR
ALL PtJRPOSE
IUIOGER
wr. spcakin~ on condition of vcr.
41l011«1Hnu
Clrlclten Noollle fHII.IIIJit fiOtatHS
anonymity. cited Denver's driving
"My feelings were somewhere
record.
·
between absolute sickness and dis11r
SIIUII
10.5-10.75-0l.
belief." Snow said. "He's such a
The singer had two drun~cn dri·
great pilot and that was such a great
ving arrests in 1993 and 1994 in Col:
plane - it's hard for me to underorado. He pleaded guilty to a lesser
stand."
charge of driving while impaired in
He said he did not ask Denver for
the 1993 case and was scheduled to
his license during the sale .
. be tried in January for the 1994 acci Also Tuesday, Scaled Composites
: · dent. in which he smashed his Inc .. founded by Long EZ de signer
Porsche into a cluster of trees .
Bun Rutan , flew a replica of Den•
Denver 's attorney, Walter Gerash,
said the singer may have lost his ver 's plane into tbe airport from its )~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!'!!~~~
Mojave headquarters to help investipilot's license briefly in 1993 or 1994
• when he was charged with drunken gators.
Associated Press writer Rieha.-d
. driving. But Gerash added that as far .
: · as he knows Denver had a vahd Cole in San Francisco contributed
' pilot's license at the time of the crash. to this report.

Boneless
steak

..

• Tree Decorations • Collectibles • Ornaments
• Lights • Trimming • Wreaths • Dolls • Gifts
• Artificial Trees • Candles • Much More!

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......
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or OlllonS
,,,,.,

.,.,nwto

I

Register for DOOR PRIZES to be given
. a
October 19 at 5:00 m.

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And

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oranges ~fi/lf:ff

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53-year-old Denver was sohcr when

Jlorilla

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"The FAA has diflcrcnt standnrds ... he said. "I don't know what
their position was in 1994. They
. could have suspended it for a month
or two. but as far as I'm l:nnccmcd he
had his license. He told me he had
it. ..
On t~c day of his death. Denver.
parked his Porschc at the Mnntcrey
Pcninsuht Ai'l'on. Hicks said authorities found a·handgun in the cnr. hut
did not yet know if he had a permit
to c-arry the WC~\pon .
•
M~unwhile. diver&gt; on Tuesday
rd:ovcrcd the engine of Denver's

.'

::::videotapes
of donor events
.
....
_.
·-.....,...,.
. ,...... .

PACIFIC GROVE. Calif. (AP)John Denver tlcw to his .death with a
pilot's license invalidated because he
had twice hcen arrested on drunken
driving l:hargcs, a federal invcstig:ator told The;, Associated Press on
Tuesday.
The Federal Aviation Administration pulled Denver's mcdicul ccrtificatc- which is required \O lly with
a pilot's license- on June 13. 1996.
said National Transpnrtnti&lt;&gt;n Safety
Board spokcsnum George Petterson.
But Sheriff Nonnan Hicks cmpha~izcd .that the evidence indicates the

"FIRST OF THI:: !X:A)()IV .

Rlng...... 24d

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1 99

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~':·;White House turns over more
WASHINGTON (AP)- The latest round of Whi.tc House fund-raising tapes shows President Clinton
thanking a controversial Democratic
moneyman and provides a glimpse
into another event that investigators
allege involved foreign money .
The White House late Tuesday
... turned over to House and Senate
investigators the video and aud!o
tapes for more than 100 fund-raising
,. .. . • events, including some of the most
~.':; ' controversial of Clinton's first term.
More were expected to be released
today.
Individuals familiar with the list of
-'..: .tapes told The Associated Press they
·included:
• -A Fcbruacy 1996 Asian-AmcrC. • • ican dinner at a hotel that Clinton
~ ~ • allcndedandwhich netted$! million.
Republican investigators believe foreign money was used to ill~gally
reimburse donors at Ihat evcn1 .
1.. ~- A June 1996 luncheon with a
campaign consultant now convicted
.._.- in a · conspi.racy 10 illegally diven
: Teamsters union money in1o the re; clcctiop campaign ofTeamsters President Ron Carey.
· '
- A 1994 event inside the White
House involving a controversial Thai
business consultant whose' donations
have been returned.

sr•

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,,

much or the cmmtry. Nicri said.
There arc even special programs fnr

much doctors trulv can niTer at dif- . "Take CPR in the elderly: Nn matter'
ferent stages. Residents also have a what you sec on 'ER.' it just doesn't
larger choice of hospices . lon~ -tcnn
care and hmnc- hC~lhh pmgrams than

~MeLayer
Fudge cake.........

PRELIMINARY HEARING - Grant Boyette, 18, Ia eacorted by
Rankin County Sheriff's deputies to the Rankin County Courthouae In Brandon, Miss., Tuesday for a preliminary hearing In
his murder conspiracy caae. the case stems from the Oct. 1 Pearl
High School shooting rampage In Pearl, Mlas., which clalmad two
students and wounded seven. (AP) ·
·

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�flage 12 e The Dally Sentinel

••

Pomeroy e

•

Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, October 15, 1997

Wednelday, October 15, 1997.

The

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

P.age 1a

Dally Sentinel e

005

Ptrsonlla
--o::.::.:-,
.;;..;. __
'IIOUII

liiATCH

1--1241, Ellllllt ....

.........

IIIIo., Mull le II YtL iMY·U

3D AMoUI'ICirlllnt
· ATTIIITION HAIIIITYLIIT Ott
your Ohio
hourt ,.,., Jo.
Arlno't Kut &amp; Kutt......., Oct
27. ltt7 $10.00
cell

LONG-TIME MEMBERS • The Meigs County Farm Bureau
Association honored these members at their annual dinner on
Tuesday for long-time membership. Pictured 1-r, are Carson Yost,
representing Mary Kay Yost, 56 year member; Sylvia Midkiff, 59
years: Mildred Gaul, 59 years; Grace Holter, 62 years; Nellie Parker, 61 years; Daisy Blakeslee, 59 years; Grace Furbee, 58 years;

Mary Davidson, 52 years; Mary Lou Johnson, 58 years; Loudell
Davidson, 52 years; and Wilma Parker, 55 yaera: Back, 1-r, ara Zlbll
Midkiff, 59 yeara; J.M. Gaul, 59 yaera; Harry Holtar, 62 yeara; Don
Mora, 61 yaera; Charlea Blakaalae, 59 yaera; Raymond Furbee,
58 yaara; and .Dee Jeffers, repraaentlng Peoples Banking and
Trust Company, 61 yeer1.

Ford earns
$1.1 billion
in quarter,
up 64
percent
DEARBORN, Mich.· (AP)
Ford Motor Co. said today its thirdquarter earnings climbed 64 percent
from a year ago as strong car and
truck sales in the United States
helped it beat Wall Street e.pectations.
·
The nation's second biggest
automaker earned $1 .12 billion. or 93
cents a share, in the July-September
period. up from $686 million, or 57
cents •· share, a year ago.
Sales for the quarter were $36.1
billion. compared with $34 billion a
year ago.
The earnings were a record for the
quarter and were above analysts'
expectations. The average ·estimate of
17 analysts surveyed by First Call
was 83 cents a share.
Ford said its focus on fundamen tals ~ontinues to contribute gains in
quality. lower total costs and speed of
new product offerings . .
"Each of the past si&lt; quarters has
shown solid · improvement," Ford
Chairman Alex Trotman said . "But

..
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MEMBERS HONORED • These membllra of
:: the Malge County Farm Buraeu - • honored
for 35 years of n.nbershlp or more. They are,
~~ 1-r, Sarah Caldwell, Catherine Shenafleld, and
Mrs. Harold Roulh, all 45-year membllra; and
Joanne Williams, 'repre1811ting Farmers Bank

1111d Savings Co., all 45-year members. Back, I·
r, Dl1111a Carsey Kinder, 40 yaer1; Rex Shan•
field, 45 years; Harold Roush, 45 year1; and 1.
Carson Crow, representing Crow and Crow Law
Offices, 35 years.

· • SALEM, Ore. (AP) - The U.S.
~preme Court's decision not to hear
.., challenge to an Oregon law allow• ... jng terminally ill palients to get a doctor's help in killing themselves is
IU&lt;ely to have linle effect in the bat. " ile over assisted suicide.
• Although the court 's decision
; r
c;leared the way for the law to take
within a week or SO, VOters will
have the opportunity to repeal the
')ileasure hefore people have an y
&lt;;bance under the law to kill thcm~ lves . Ballots to repeal the law
were tlo he mailed out beginning
• " tooay and tallied on Nov. 4.
. _ The 1994 measure allows doctors
to prescribe lethal drugs to ierminal"b ill patients deemed to have less
than si&lt; months to live. It had been
stalled by legal challenges,
" Tuesday's action by the nation's
h\ghest court left intact a fed eral

effect

-

appeals court ruling that said two
doctors ani:! a terminall y ill woman
who challenged the law lac ked the
proper legal standing to sue.
Lawyers on both sides of the
assisted-suicide struggle said they
doubt there will he enough time for
anyone to use the law to commit sui ~
cide. There is a 15-day waiting period for a patient to obtain a lethal prescripti on and opponents likely could
obthin a coun injunction blocking the
law hj:forc the period c&lt;pires.
But bac kers of ass isted suicide
said the coun 's action knocks down
npponenis 's " hypothetical " arguments against the law.
'The Supreme Court doesn' t
think people have suffered any
injury " because of a&lt;sistcd suicide,
said Barbara Coombs Lee, one of the
states leading backers of assisted
suicide.

The justices ruled inJun~ that terminally ill Americans have no constitutional right to doctor-assisted
suicide. But those decisions, upholding bans on assisted suicide in New
York and Washington state, did not
bar states from letting doctors 'prescribe deadly drugs for mentally
competent but terminally ill patients
who wani to die, as the Oregon law
does.
. Opponents said the high court rulmg has little significance and that
they will continue to try to persuade
voters the law is too flawed to
implement.
" Jt is important that they not take
this decision as an endor.;Cmcnt of the
law," said Trish Conrad, manager of
the campaign seeking to repeal assisted suicide.

/

I

:rresident Clinton should di sclose
Jllhether he had se&lt; with women other than his wife when he was
Arkansas's governor and whether he
liad sex with a woman he appoonted
to a judgeship, lawyers for Paula
-Jones suggested.
• Papers filed in-federal court Tuesday in preparation for Mrs. Jones'
"Sexual harassment civil suit asked
that Clinton give written answers to
72 questions. including whether he
asked a state trooper to summon Mrs.
Jones to a hotel room in May 1991
• 1111d if he used troopers to arrange
liaisons with other women.
· Auomey Wes Holmes of Dallas,
who represents Mrs. Jon~ s . said the
legal team sought to establish a pattern of conduct. Mn. Jones's history
was not relevant because she was not
io a positiQn of power, he said.

"We ahsulutcly. posi tively are not
engaging in any practi ce for the pur·
pose of harassment." Hohnus said
Tuesday. " Every piece of dis~overy
we. se nd out. we either think pertains
to ISsues that arc relevant to the case
or arc reasonably calculated to lead
to the discovery of admi ssible cvi ·
dence."
A separate filing posed similar
questions to state trooper Danny Ferguson, a former Clinton bodyguard
named as a co-defendant.
Both filings request answen by
Nov. I0, but the trial was set to begin
in May.
Ciinton 's attorney, Bob Bennett,
could ask a judge to quash the ·
request. He was not in his Washington office and did not return a telephone message.
Anorneys for Clinton and Fergu-

HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.
773-5513

son took statements this week from
Mrs. Jones ' sister, Lydia Cathey, and
Mrs. Jones's mother, Delmer Lee
Corbin, both of Cabot, Ark .
Mrs. Jones's filing asks Clinton to
admit or deny that Ferguson summoned her to a hotel room May 8,
1991. It also wants him to admit or
deny whether the meeting took place
and whether Clinton asked Mrs.
Jones for sex that day or any other
day.
The tiling also ask~ th~ president
to answer whether he "had sexual
relations with at least one woman
(other than Hillary Rodham Clinton)" who were past or present state
employees at the time and whether
state troopers helped arranae, facili tate or conceal the encounters.
Another question asked Clinton if
he had sex with a woman he appointed to an Arkansas judgeship.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

All Carpet·Upllolstery

Garages • Replacement Windows

Cleaning

Room Additions • Roofing

CHEVALIER'S

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

CARPET CLEANING

614-992-7643

614·992.0077
Middlepert, OH

Carpet-Upholstery

1

Second
Street, Pomeroy, I·~=::=::::=====~:-=====1111::711::7::1!:mo::.pd::.: !
Ohlo45781.

Comptalnlt ogalnat tho
valuatlona, •• tatabllahtd
lor tax y..r 1197, mutt be
modo tn oecordonco with
Section 5715.19 ollho Ohio
Rovlood Coot. Tho at
complalnto muot bo flilld on
forma which 'wm be
lumtahed by the County
Auditor ond mutt bl flltd In
the County Auditor'• Olllco
on or before tho 31al day or •
Morch, 1-. All complolnll
llltd with tho County
AudHor will bl hoard by the
Boord of Revlalon In the
monnar provided by Socii on
5715.19 olthe Ohio Aovlald ·
CodeNoncy Porllor C:.mpbltt
· lirotga county Auditor
) 10 12 13 t4 15 16 17
(10 • • • • • • •
19, 20•21 • 101"
Public: Notice
Notice ol Election on Tax
Levy In Excooa ol tht Ton
Mill Umi!Aitlon
Revlold Codt, Soctlon
3501.11(g), 5705.19,
5705-25

Public: Notice
lly Ofdlr ol IN Boord ol
Electlono, of Molgo County,
Ohio.
Hanry L. Huntar, Chalrtlllln
Alto D. Smtih, Dt!DotocfS.pt. 8, 1187
(101 8, 15, 22. 21 4TC

360° Commu.n icatlons

--=-=====---1

Nottce ol ElectiOn on TIX
LevylnEiiCftOotlheTen
Mill Umllltlon
· RIVlaocl Codt, Soc:tlon
3S01.11 (II), 5705.18,
5705.211
Nollcetohtrebyglvonlhtll
In purouonco of •
R-tuUOn ol IN Boord o1
Education of tho Eu!Aim
Loco! Scboot Dlatrlct,
RHCiavlllo, Ohio, peuocl on
the 30th dey o1 July, 1197
there will bl aubmllhldto a
vote of thi poo~ ol Aid
oubdlvtolon at o General
Election to bl hold In the
Eoattrn Local School
Dlltrlct, Ohio, llthi regular
pteceo o1 voting therein, on
the 4111 day ol November,
1187, the quntlon ol levy·
lng o tax, tn axeuo of lht
Mn mill limitation, lor the
benoflt of Eootern Local
School Dlltrlct lor lha purpoll o1 ptovlding !undo lor
current operating oxpenMI
and lor tho acqultlllon, con·
atrucUon, enlo'llement, rtnovotton ond llnonclng ol
permonont. improvemento.
Sold IAix bllng:' tr1 add~
lionel IAix ol 4.7 milia at •
rote not oxcotdlng4.7 mlllo
lor HCh ono dollar of voluotlon, which omounta to
lorty·-•n conta ($0.4fllor
uch ono hundred dollore ol
voluotton, for two (2) ye0rt,
Tho Polio lor uld Election
will opon ot 8:30 o'clock
a.m. ond remain open undl
7:30 o'clock p.m. on tho
uld day.
By ordor of tho Boord of
Eloc:tlona, ol Mtlga County,
Ohio.
Hanry L. Hun!Air, Chlllrmon
Rita D. Smith, Director
Ootid Sept. 8, 1997
(10) 8, 15, 22, 29 4TC

499
5
Reg. $1,039 Maytag 24 cu. ft. Refrigerator ............... 899
5319
..
.
Reg. $439 Whilpool Dryer.........................................
$369 Whirlpool Dryer.........................................5299
Reg. $959 Maytag Refrigerator ................................. S729
Reg. $879 Maytag Refrigerator ................................. 5649

Reg. $659 Maytag Built-in Dishwasher...............- ....5

61J,Yinl--

........

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

3/'l1/fFN

. ..........

HEIRLOOM CONNECTION
Heirloom Quality Custom Furniture
* Complete Kltehens
• Kitchen Cabinet Befaelng
• Andque Reproductions
Hsndcrsfted Using Meigs Co. Hardwood
.
614-992-4106
Free Estimates

L....:!!!!~~~~O~rd~e~r~sfor Christmas

PUIIUC NOTICE
NOTICE te hereby glvln
that on Seturdoy, October
18, 18117, •I 10:00 a.m., o
pulillc oale will b• held et
211 Wool Second Strttt,
Pomaroy, Ohio, to oell lor
oaah the following
cottatorol:
,
·
111112 CHEVY CAMARO
101FP23E8NL142378 .
The F•rmero Bonk end
Sovlngo· Compony, Pomoroy, Ohio, re..rvoo tho right
to bid 11 thlo oala, and to
wlthdrow tho ebovo
cotteter•l prior to ule.
Furthtr, Tho Farmtro Bonk
ond S.vlngt Compony
rtoervee tho rlghtto ro(oct
any or all bid a oubmlttld.
Further, the obove
colla!Airol will bo aold In tho
condition It lo tn, with no
oxproao or Implied warronlloo glvon.
For further Information,
con!Aict O.olrn 11192-2136.
(10) 15, 15, 17, 31c

RT. 7
PIZZA EXPRESS
992-9200
Large 16", 3 Item $9.99

.
. . !,/

Subs, Salads, Lasagna,
Spaghetti, Bread Sticks,
Hot Wings or
Cheese Sticks.

Thanks to the people that
helped at lhe Meigs Co.
Hunling

&amp; Fishing Days.
Meigs Co. IKES

REJOICING LIFE
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
ANNUAL CRAFT FAIR
"'
FRIDAY, OCT. 17,
9 A.M .-4 P.M.
'·
HELD AT REJOICING
LIFE CHURCH,
MIDDLEPORT
(Relreshment proceeds go to
Life School)

..

.1.

HERMAN® t y Jim Unger

I
I

, Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching .
Umeetone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
RflliBOnBble RBIH

Joe

N. Sayre

.. 614-742·2138

11, ..,.5pm, Smi., rMldenc.,
!,.,-,---::'JI,etl lincoln Haightl. Bedding.
toyt. childr.an'a clothing, coM. blta, puzztta. eurciae equjp-

ROIERT BISS.Ll
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

•Room Addlllono
•New Gor~gt~o
•Eiactrlcol &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Pointing
Alao Concrete Wont
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
M2-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Howard L Wrlt-1

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning·
Painting ,
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
li/111\!n

........

~

......

Bob's

• Ranges • WasheB .l
• Dryen • Dishwashers

''My 'aecrett of life' ere now 8YIIIIble
on CD for only $26.115."

'

I

I

..
•

~in~«.

(Ume StoneLow Ratee)

CUf11int.~ciDding&amp;rnoc.

Pt. Plelllnt
'Vlclnlty

Limestone,

...

Gravel, Sand,

Fill

80

Auction
and Flea Maillet
ATTEHnON VENDORS: Indoor

s - ss.oo ou- saoo a..n

Everyday. Crawford'• FIM t.t•r·
kel, Hendtnon. WV. 304·875·

5404.
Rlcll

Poar10n Auction Compeor.

lull lime Juctian.. r, compiJte
Jucrlan
Mrvlce... llctnJt(d
Ill, Ohio &amp; Wnt Vi.glnle, 3047n.51150r304-173-~7.
'

Wanted to Buy •,

90

Abtolult Top DoNor: All U.S. Iii·
vtr And Gold Coln1, ProofaJta,
llllmond' Arlllque JMetty, Gold
RI~Pr•1130

Sllr .

- M.T.

U.S. Currency,

El&lt;. kquililio,. - ,
Coin Shop, 151 Seccol\d

...._,Gar; ' ,11........_at2.
Antlqutt, top prl... (llld. Rlvtr·

lnt Antique•. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Ru11 Moore ownltf, 114·112·
25211.
Anllquet- no -

OiO 111(11 or too

••tatu, apprai...._

relinilhinj, cuttom ordefe, 01..._
to2-7441 .

tm,........

WICKS
HAULING
Top Soli,

G-al Har·

,..:

Ctoan lttt Modi! Cart Or
Truckt, 11110 Modtlt Or
Smith Sulek Pontiac. 1

Dirt

614-992·3470

Ge'lpnk .

J I D'o Au .. Patt . Buying AI·
..hideo. Stllina pefll. 3Q4·
&gt;n-5033.
Non·War_.no Wtahlr. Dry.,.,
SlOV.I, RttriQtJitOr&amp;. frteZM,
Air Conditioner&amp;, Color T.V. '1 ,
VCR'' Aioo Junk C111, 114-2!1112311.

Swodi"!!
· - 0&lt; pulp- lor
ciNr c:wt, con•ct Greg Jt ,114·
D4!1.3015.
Wanted To Buy Uaed Mobile

Homo. Cai814-44H175"' 304175-5885

na

Chipped Woad, 114-S88-i1~,

Pick up dloeordld
appllancaa, batteries,
meny met•l• &amp;
motor blocka.
614-992-40258am.- m

Er.!PLOY!.!UJT
SERVICES

W1nt1d: Stllndlng Tlmbef Or

Or814-388-8747.

11 o Help Wanted ·
AVON I All Artll I S11irlty

Sptn, 30&lt;-t 75-1421.

r.... .-.~~~~~~ ....
....... Uiftl'l .......

lito, e&amp;S

&amp;mill. Al10

..... ..,.

Umeatona Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Slte8
Land Claarlng &amp;
Grading
SeptiC Systame
&amp; Utilities ,.
Estllllllll
992·3838

,...._.....,MiddlttJitl, 1Ith. 17dl.

Garl(ll

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

985-4473

HOWAlD
EXCAVATING &amp;
TRUCKING

____
·~

nwnL Oon'l miallll

~

• Rtlrigt(Otors ,

•
-·..

Garage·I·Pllooza It· II you

miiMCI ll1e ltrll OM, lhlt II your
taat chancel Saturdly, October

· Free Estimates

Appliance Repair
Service

r.dl)

992·3671

IFut·nac,es '2800 a month
Pumps Installed '3800 a month

34718 St. At. 7
Ph. 985-4198

FREE DELIVERY • FREE SET UP •
. FREE REMOVAL OF OLD APPLIANCES

&amp;

- Easy Bank Financing -

. MY PLACE
Handcrafted WIMIII
Proftds
Swings, BeiKhes,
Tallies, Misc. lt..s

. Special pricing on All Appliances In stock!
Limited Ouantltles..... nurry for Best Selection.

9:30-5:00

fNtMJIIRM. Mi ' IL

7/22111n

s
s

·10:0011,111._.,.

MobDe Home Furnaces
·and Heat Pumps.~~

SAYRE
TRUCKING

WE DELIVER!!

A

-ar

Ftltl.,_llondor-

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
814-441-11411
1-800-172-5987
t391 Safford School Rd.,
OH

399
Reg. $369 Roper Gas R111ge.......................................5299 ·

ANFURNITURE
DE RSAPPLIANCE
0N'·S. _

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

llto .....

edltlon·2:00p.tO.

111118 8 CDDLIIG

Ret. $479 Maytag Dishwasher .................................. 5

Monday-Saturday

tile a, -nllte Ill

"Buil4 Your Dream"

171h,

Reg. $1,729 Whirlpool Side/Si~ Deluxe Refrig. •••• S129~

~.MAYfAG

DfADI
2:00p.m.
.. """PE:
tn ·

Public: Notice

--------1
Public Notice

. Nott .. Ia hereby glvon the!
In purauanco of 1
R•oolutlon of lht Boord ol
commloolonoro of the
County of Metgo, Pomeroy,
Ohio, pa•HCI on the 18th
day ol Auguot, 11187 lhore
will bl oubmlllld to 1 volt
ol tho paopl~ of oold oubdl·
vlalon at o General Election
to bl hold tn tht County of
Motgo, Ohio, at tho regular
piiCOI of voting therein, on
tho 4th doy ol November,
19117, the quottlon of levy·
lng 1 tax, In exooa• of the
ten inlll ttmttaUOn, tor the
blneiH o1 county ol Melga
lor tho purpoH ol molntononce and operation of 1
County Homo.
Said !Aix bltng:• an odd!·
ttonol tax ol 112 mlllot o rllo
not excotdlng 1/2 mlllolor
uch one dollar ol vatuo·
· tton, which amounto to live
. centa ($0.05) lor each one
-hundred dottora of vetuetton, lor live (5) yeort,
. Tho Polio lor uld Election
will open at 8:30 o'clock
·•.m. and ramaln open until
7:30 o'clock p.m. on tht
:aotd doy.
. KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrif(ht

Reg. $1,069 Whirlpool Side/Side Refrigerator .._...... 5899

•t ..

50% OFF

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of financial
obligations and arrange a falr distribution of
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Rtlerence: 5715.17
assets. Debtors In bankruptcy may keep
OhiO Reviled Code
Tho Molgo County Boord. "exempr proP!Irty for their personal use. This
ol Aevlolon hM compltl~d may include a car, a . house, clothes, and
·Ito work ol equollzotton. Tho household goods.
t•• relumo for !Ala yeor 1tt7
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:
have been revlalld and lhl
v.lultlono eomplotad and
Attorney William Safranek
ore open lor public In·
opectlon In tho olllce oltho
Attorney At Law
Molga · County Auditor,
(614) 592·5025
Athens, Ohio
Second Floor, Courthouao,

90* Days Same As Cash

.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Public: Notice

This is your opportunity to
Save Big as we make room for
new Models%

"·Jones lawyers seek to explore
- ~linton's sex life as governor
~: LITil.E ROCK. Ark. (AP) -

PICKENS

I

i

:::::::::::::~=~~=-~::::::1~::W::1:m:~~

ECL

on assisted-suicide battle

· I wUI ftOI be Nlp.,lltlle IDr ...,
- ••• m d by .., """ cMft.
............. -..10.11 .. 7.
!pwd All¥ A. tcJrbt'ry:

( No Sunday Calls)

ANDERSON'S

~uling probably won't .have much

· ~ affect
,..

anyone who thinks that we're letting
up is very mistaken ."
"
Ford said earnings also benefited
from strong car and truck sales in the
United States, a smaller loss in
Europe and a return to profitability in
South America.
The 1996 results included a one·
time charge of $39 million for early
retirements of some salaried employees in the United States, and a $76
million gain for the sale of Ford's
USL Capital subsidiary. That netted
a gain of $37 million, or 3 cenll; a
share.
Nine-month earnings were also a
company record.

Hunters' Choice
Scents for the
Serious Hunter
•Coon
•Red Fox
•Earth
•Buck Urine
•Doe Estrun
•Doe In Heat

par,..,_

JoAtlno 114·441.f4N or 114·

CLUB
Gun Shoots
Starts Sunday
Sept. 28 at
1:00pm
12 gauge modified
Umlted
837 Back Bore
680 Front

NEW MEMBERS·.Thase are
the newest member• of the
Malga County Farm Bureau
AaiiOCiatlon. Plcturad, 1-r, and
Mark and Jeannie Bureon,
David and Susie Bidlack, and
Tim and Paula Dillon. The
organization honored milestone mambershlps at Ita
annual dinner at the Meigs
Muhlpurpoaa Senior Canter
teat night.

S••

_.._

RACINE GUN

ANNOUNCEr.!ENTS

u..t an.on.-ont1 Cal -1 1100-I!SS 11800 Elt1212 P,A IW
-Mull Be II Vro. ....-u ·11 ..

..,..,.

A'IOI\ t8 .,,, IHr, No Door -Til' Door, Quick Caoh, Fun &amp; - ..
lng. 14110-:111-CM. .

.AYDN - l8 -$20 lllr. No Door To
Door. Ollicil Cathi "Ba"'tot' 1·
100-2118-0131.

MHI Your CompaNon 1-800211 ·1245 En 1251, u .ea Par
Mtn. Mutt Be 11 Yoora, SaN·U
111 14111'14.

Honest Reliable
Quality Service
(614) 843-5440
All Major Brands
Reasonable R~tes
.,

I
•

�P~ge

14 •The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Wednesday, October 15,1987•

W
~~ed~n•:•;d•~y:,Od~~o~bM~-21~~~1!M~7~--------------------------~P~o~m~e~ro~y:•:M:Id:d:le:port::·:O:h:lo::::~:::::::::::::::n.:::o:•:ly:~::::ne:I:·:P~;D:•::15

f -ALLEY OOP

NEA

BRIDOI:
PHILLIP
ALDER

•,

m- one'a

38 Etlaa
38 llalitncholy

.....

s Sob

. , . . _...
8BIIIdtolbtue
--

12--.
13 F..nch yet
14 Der• a1 llho poat)

N

...

• K J

10-15-91
tO 8 7 4 2

• 6

•AQI062

Duplex lA&gt;c:otocl on 51! IWo.
No Patol $275. Plua Utllltr and
Dopoolt (814) 444-71103
2 Bedroom Hou11, 15 Uta

JI!R,.

South On Route 7, Dopool\

.....

South

. BARNEY

2•

STOP REAOIN' MY
DADBURN FAN MAIL II

FINANCIAL

210

Business

Two bedroom hou11 and one
bedroom -tmtnt In Middleport,

Opportunity

814·882·2178.

""''PHONE ROUTE$
40~111-'lialllt:SI ..

$2,000
WtMiy-10811
-·
1-800-72+17:10Ext.
INOTICII
OHIO VAU.EY PUIII.ISHIIIG CD.
reooiMitnda tltl.t rou do bualnon wl., people rou u-, tnd
NOT to lind """'"''

thrauoh tho

mol until rou htvol.,..otfgotod
1w ollarlng.
·

NQfNitQN 15CIAUIT; FT
And PT Pa&amp;ltiona Available In

· Mtlga And Vintan Countill.
Varioblo Hours And Dora Baaod
On Schoduled Programa. l.ookirv
Fot lndiviclial Wllh Ex~ In
Public Spooking And Prevendon
~· BA Prtlorred.

FREE

CASH
CIRANTII
COiog&amp; Sc:haiaral'ipa.
a....__lotodlcal8ilo.
N - Ropoy,
CdTol Froio
1-800-2ta.goQO Ext.G- 2114.

PERSON WANTED To Own And
Operate Retail Candwo Shop In
GALLIPOLIS Aroa. low lnvO&amp;t·

m11111. For Information Call Ura.
Bun!o ~ Gou
C•""" C

n.

"""' ·-• ompo-

ny, Fort Warth, TX 117-332-81112.

220 Money 10 Loan
HEED A LOAN? Alltllr Tho Eur
HQY,IE~ER•

PT PotldDnl
Avalla It In he Womtn'a RtJt·

danllol Pfo~ral!l RHpon~blo Jn.
di'llldual W1lh H..S. Diplom• Or
Equlnlont. lluat Sa Able To
Wor~

Way -By PhDne. friendly Loan,

ti+~38B~"~u~;;kKi;j-;230
PIOfesSional
Servlces

ihdopondontlr And Follow
Dlroctlano. Experltnat Helpful Bot HARTS IIASOHARY • Block,
Not Uses "IJ'

brk:k &amp; atone work, 3D ,..,. ••·
plr'-nce, rMIOnabfe rates. 304·

I l_..ted In kfr 01 ThHt ""' 1115-358t olt« O:OOpm, no Job to
eitlont, Please Sind A Rtlumt -or to BIG. WV-O:!t:IOI
Wilh Covt&lt; lttttr Te nancy Do&gt;
bllstment water·
- Human Rtsourco lltnagt&lt;, Llvlnpaton••
P.O. 1o1 724, Athena, Ohio prooltng, aN battmtnt repaira
done, ''" estimate&amp;, lifetime
4117111. EEO.
I-

Htlpl

o..-.

Eom

Two bedroom hou• with ttove
ond refrigerator, depooil required,

1871 Klr~wood 12al0 12,300,
114-3S-11111. Dr 114-31H747.
1875 12a70 Fltttwciad 3 Bad·
raoma, t 112 llttha, Untltrpir1rq
ts,OOO, 814-446-2011.
1875 llldwor Dou- 20'X61'

311tdooomo, 1 lldl, Good Cond-

tion. Phont: 814-260-1541.

1187 Schultz 14x70, 3br, tolal

Mec:trlc, bac:k-up lP gal healer.

new corpo~ oood cond.

&amp; Utll"ra

Aa~lno

... --·1-2-30i0.

420 Mobile Homes

tor Rent

2 &amp; 3 btdroom mobilt homoo
$280·1300, tower, wotor and
truhr-.114-11112-2117.
2 Badroom In Galllpolia, Ctrpot111. ~- Rtltrenct ' Dapolit RtCJ~Ir111 Ho Pata, 814 448 01113.

dllh.

$11.200.

304-173-5178.

2 Badroam Uoblle Home, Putot.

e--.

help Olhlra, •• may h8M • Job
tor ,.... ...... rollidtnt.

illcome poaalbllldn ond Homo

•IPffl--

Cllr Ronoy It -71H018, 0t

lo attvertlse ·any pre1erence.

tonality and bt wnnno ,. _ ,

. . public. No
lltJ. for mort lntorndon. call
mall retumt 10 2-413 Jeckeon

II&amp;,PI-WV25610.

.DIIIOIIE HUUII AIIIIICY

Wt_,oPitoatdto......,_To
Tho
Gtllpolla
· Aro
Tho..-.,.
01 Oolr
Agt&lt;lcy.Wt
F0t A Dodlci!H, OolaliRtll Po&lt;-CortTtl Holp
Wt -Art KnownDuality
For

,.,.......Tho_ Tho

P.LD COORDIIIATCIII: Df9rH
In Mtrltednt Or Prior lottdlcll
....... Eipe ....

• _......To coo- OUr Homo
Cort ltfVIcto Willi Tho Notllo

. Ollht-CIIIt~

•,_ Commu-'

pd 1 . . . .

.-t

limitation or discnmlnalton
based on race, colof, religion,
sex famlHal SlatU5 or national
origin, or any ~tention to
make any such preference,
limitatiOn or discrimination:

This newapaper will no1

,,_ngly accopl
tdvertisemenls tor realostaO!I largo wltction ol UoH hcmt. 2
which iS In 'o'iOiation of the
or 3 - - Storing at $3415.
law. Ow readers are hereby
Ouic~ dalivorr. Call t-800-137Informed that all dwellings
323&amp;
advertised in 1his newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity bUll.

Or-

REAL ESTAlE

CONTRACT OCCUPATM)HAL

1IIIIIANT

n

Vlrginllt, Ohio llctn-

__ ,..,_

tapee or C81NtiH. Brand new,

oaatmltiJ.:;"uirtll. llt!til price
S:IOO. a
alti!O. C..lt4-1112·

New 1iM 14170 thrH bedroom.
lncludta I """"'' FREE lot ront.
Only t111.11 por month wltll

Boola Br Rfdwlng, Chi-a,
Roc:kr. Tony Lama. Guaranlud
. . _ - , . - Cott. (lol.

$1050 down. Call 1-800-137·

llpaiiL

323&amp;

Chock out our 0. Vanlad Hoot-

310 Homes fOr Stlt

' " ' * A I . -:
WMI Vl&lt;flnit, Ohio L - 3 Badrooma. 1 112 Dolha. Finlahtd Wai~·Out Btaomont, At·
Ptrtorl
Itched Dock, Carport, City
School'
To GAIIIpoUa
-Dktctor,
· - To: HuOMn
A.- 1Hoopltal.C...-t
l14-441-4tl0 Altot e
-lltcii·Hamt
.....,.....,., P.O.a.l,lotor• P.M.

..,.,.OH-.

..,

w-,L

t895 Chevy 1ruo~. oxt cob, 112

BORN LOSER .

liner, 1opper, am·fm canene,

~ ..:tAAT ~en».~

ton. 414 loaded. bruttl) gUMl, bod

grtat cond, II,DDO
$15,500. 304-173-51M.

miles.
'

18111 Dodgo Rom 1500 ... l..oH-

td, 21,000 Mlol, 614-3711-41384. ' ...

740

MotorcyCleS

1888 Plrmouth Horizon, oood 11181 4 W - Ktwosakl Bayau
condition, $t515, calil14·247· S2,400.1t4.-7404
'

laok Rtpt'al Only 3 1t1t,
-tlntn&lt;ing avaHobla. ao+ Gnlc:iM lvtng. 1 Mel 2 bedcoum
755-7181.
opor- II Vllaoo IIIII
Rtvoraldt AporM!tf1to In llkld!•
Dt~woo- 28•18 3 btdrOOII), 2 pott From tz31-SZ4 . Col 11+
bttll, a!trdna 11 ttH por mo. 082·5004. Ecpaillooalng ~­

Ctl1-14777.

Houat tnd prOPtfly, opprox. 41- Own t - homo $1,01101-.
HoM I .__To lol - . Clll croo. ldttl ttattor homo. Btteh no
olltf 7 ,..,.. 311+
eu ••nr
St, ~ OH. 304-1112-3!77.
755•

';'/:'nil

turiiM.

'

Lorot 7 room -mon~

II uiiiUtt pold, In Pl&gt;moro,, 14011 Ptf
mortll,ltUI51251.

I

. . . . . ""'-~ Slarlng

It S114.11L Wt ......... lklcli
--oiO.n.ntRrepltce. Plua Hordwart :104·

3

DOWN
1
2

ar;n-

4 Cerleln
wrlllnga
51-HIDve
Dtncecl All

Touohad

Ht.-·o

3•
4 NT
6 NT

West

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

North
I •

2•
4•

5•
Pass

Easl
'J&gt;ass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • 4

The two United States teams.in the
Venice Cup (women' s competition)
will start as favorites, along with the
strong European teams from France,
Gennany and Great Britain.
The No. I team is Jill Meyers,
Randi Montin, Tobi Sokolow, MilAnfAF.f TtiAT YOU~
dred Breed, Marinesa Letizia and
Lisa Berkowitz. The second learn is
AGAINST
· Kathie Wei-Sender, Juanita ChamlfoiFI.-ATIOfol"
bers, Lynn Deas, Beth Palmer, Kerri
Sanborn and Irina Levitina.
This was the most dramatic deal
1.-ITTLt
from the trials . Where would you like
0Vfl1·
to play?
· Seven spades is laydown, but
PF.U foiE l&gt;.
' lucky. The trump suil will play with: out loss just less than o~e-lhird oflhe
· time.
· Seven hearts is better, and unbeah
able with this layout If West leads a
.heart, declarer draws trumps, cashes
the spade ace, overtakes the club king
with dummy 's ace, and claims when
the spade queen drops under dummy's kin~. And if West leads from a
side suit, i:leclarer can ruff a diamond
in the dummy, coming to two spades,
six hearts, IWO diamonds, two clubs
. and lhe ruff.
Seven no-trump is the best grand
slam, butlhe opening lead is critical.
Breed and Deutsch did bid to sev.
en no-trump and made it when West
led a diamond.
In the other room, the contracl was
~EAH. WITH
six no-trump after the given auction.
ROOKIE
FACULTY,
Montin..feund the devastating club
'I'OU'VE COOT
lead,
tolally disrupting declarer's
1
A&amp;ou'T A
communications. The best line -- I
t10t&gt;ITH- LONE.
WINDOW OF
think! .. is to lake the club king,
OPPORTUNITY.
spade ace and six hean tricks before
1 exiting with the ace·and another diamond. Yet, with this layout, every. thing fails. So, the winners gained 20
· international malchpoints.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CMbnty Cipher cr\'plogfMit ar.e created from QIJOCalions by farnoYS J*)pll, pu1 Mel presenl
.
Each lilflin the Cipher stands to.. ~ - Todly's t:Jw: u fqt1.t1s C

WHRCIIB ,

'W S B

J T G,

I

LW

I

Y L F B

FLVVJ

I

AND4(! OLAF! WMAT ARE
'(OU DOIN6 )4ERE ?

ACTUALL'( WIIAT

WE COULDN'T
FIND TI-lE

C 1997 by NEA. Inc.

'::~:~!~'

DESERT.•

FRLXB : ·
ZITDLRC

15

sec: \\.cl\ ~- lt t- ~s·

Weill
tAM I

1411o4 ~r CUY I. I'OLLAN

I.H•rs of
0 Rearrange
four sc:rombled words

the

be·
low 10 form four tlmPf• worCII.

I

'•
•

RUPBAL

f I I I f

I
I I~

II

I

~

I 16 I

LACHK

3

....

--.W;;....;R;..;.;.H..,.E:-;T~~

I caugh: my husband eating
cake. SHyly he said, "People
.
.
.
.
who want lo slay away from
t..~-'--S•T--IE'-O...J - , ~~~~-~~~ ~sually wanl to-.·.

l

I

~

:o':''

60

~ tfrTERS

TI-lE WRON6

DESERT..

JSTIE

T

AYNNZ.'TRRB
JBHWNR .
PREVIOUS SOhtTION: 'lzigiJ"d when I should've zagged.' - Heavyweighl
boxer Jack Roper, aHer champ1on Joe louis knocked him out.

oft PRINr NUMBERED

WE FOONDWAS

USLRBJB

DLWSNMW

L-1..._J.._-.1..-.1.._.L_--1

iPEANUTS

WSB

L-J

I-.,-1:;;7-TI-:8,1.:....;-I....:.'TI':'9-t

Q

Complete the chuckle

QU&lt;lled
by filling in the . missing words
you deve)op from step No. 3 below.

I'
I I I IIN I I I I I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWEIS
1882 Lumina, 3.1 muill·por~ v-e
automatic. air, till, crulu, am'fm
atereo C:llllltl, nice, 13115,

114-882-8824.

llo A CDOI Cor W Chd Out tlot

So...,.

:.:•~::•.:.:u~eo=ZI:.::'·~~~-AKC Cocker Spaniol pupa,
~~:~03";gndolwhi1o.

Itt .... Cloulflrd S..:liln

Formal- Pilot - Juice - Rebuke - BEFORE
A fellow writes ads Ia make people think they've
longed tor something all their life thai they have never
heard of BEFORE!

OCTOBER15l

!WEDNESDAY

AKC Co- Sponiola 2 Aduha 2
PuppiH, Champion Slrod $tOO
Eadt, $250 All. 014-2"..0 81104.
AKC Golden R811iever Pups, Vet

C-od, Firat Shots, Parenta On
1083 Jayco
It bunk hoU11,
PfomiMa, lltt.a $200, Fomot.a 1885 Yon• Corio loaded. ltolttr price lncludH
at Do~ Resort
&amp;250, 81+37D-283e.
ln•riOt, gold packt8t, rtor apoil· llembtrahlp. $8,500. 304·773·
AK&lt;; Roo Rottwalior pupploa, 4 ar, under warrant)', exc. cand. 58&lt;8.
ltll, tails docked, cleclaws rt· $14,500. 30+815-2342.
For Sat.: t887 Dutclmln Pop-Up
movtd, lhOII current. S200ea. 1995 SolUm SC2, Automadc, Air, Camper, Sleeps 8, Furnace With
304-882-2531 ~ mHIIgt.
Cruise, Al.tiFM Caaatttt, Trun~ ThlfmostaL Inside IOutslda G11
5 P.M. Stove, Etec &amp; Gas Refrigerator, 2
Baautllul AKC Reglsrered Rot· Release, $t2.000 Coli Dining tables, Custom Awning,
twtlltr pui;lpl11, ewks old, taila (Sorlout lnqulrioa Onlyl) 614· like Haw, Used 4 Tlmea. Paid
docked, declawa removed, -4015.
,4,1100, Will Son For S3,soo. Call
wormed. e femalea S250ea. 3 t996 Dodo• Hto, 21.0110 Mnoa, 2 e 14·448·6808 Alter 5 Or luve
""IDII200H. 304-876-4074.
Door Coupe, 5 Spood, $7,500, Ma-oo.
Beautiful Ral terrier pupa, $200 .:.81~4-..:256-:.:.:..~15311:.:.:..·_ _ _ __
SERVICES
female, $150 melt, vet Ghecked, 1880 Mazda 628 XL 34,000
lt4-QU2-61131.
milea. $14,000. Coli 304-175·
Engliah Shephard UKC Rt811· ~100~1~--------------1810
ltrtd Great Stock Dog•. Also 111117 .loop Wrangltr Sport 12,000
Moltea Good Pet Or wau:h Dog, mllea.
4.Ql ale:, au.:&gt;, 10und bar,
S250, 114·251-1 uo, loova c:loth lop.
,17,500 ••c. cond.
IIASiiMENT
WATERPRCQftiiQ
3114-11~77.
Konnol roduc~on- AKC Roola· CARS FOR StOOl Trucko, boata, Unconclldonol Ultomo guor,nr,a,
local r•letlnctl lurnishfd. Et·
ttrt4 Dalmotlon pupplta and
motor homes, furnl · labllahtd 1875. Coli 1114) 441·
adula, Ill brtrl lor ttmporarntnt. 4•Whetlef'l,
or 1-aoo-2er-os,.. Rogtt'l
chlmplon u.-... prlcld to 111. 8t+ tura, electronics, computers etc. 0110
•
•
Ill' FB~ IRS, DEA. Anlloble rour Watorprooflng.
748-3342.
area now. Call 1·800·513-4343
Eat S«&lt;IO
Musical
570
Appliance Parll And Sorvlco: All
t1180 ·1IIGO Cora Fot StOOIII
lnltruments
Name Branda Over 25 Yeara Ea·
Solzod And Sold
p1rlem:e All Work Guar~n'tttd, ·
Kimball plana wlbanch, exc.
1.-'YTiia Month.
French City Mayllg, 814·441·
Trvdoa, 414'' Etc.
304-811+474.
17K.

'===~===~=~~=·
- Staiion. New York, NY 10156.
.AI'I'RO·ORAPB
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You

.........

1-eti0-522-2730. X380t.

C&amp;C General Home Maln Crtdlt Pfoblt&lt;na? Wt Can Help. llntnce- Painting, vinyl 1/dlng,
Ell)' Bank f inancing For Used Clrpt!Wy, door, .. botha,
Vthlcltl. No Turn Downs, Call mobio , _ . ropolr tnd mora. Fot
Vlcltlt,
814
4
~
211117.
176-4014.
- oad. .to ctH Cltt~ 11+11112·
II3?J.
Seized Ca11 From t 175. Porath·
Cono- &amp; Plaatlc Septic Tanka, 610 Farm Equipment
11, Ctdlllaca, Chovra. DIIW'a,
300 Thtu 21DGO Gallana Ran
Evana E-prltea, Jtcl&lt;oon, OH Badg« IIIMOt wagon. good con- CofVIUII. Also Jeeps, 4 WD'a. 840 Electrical and
Your Arto. Toll Frot 1-100-211Refrigeration
dillon,- ..... 114-etl4-241!7.
1~7-8000 Ext. A-2114 For Current
R - I l l orcornmordol wiring,
Covch a matchlne choir, brown Hydraulic oll-lawest pric:e In llatlngt.
'
n.w ~«vice or rer*ra. ..._,.., l].
plaid, wood 111m, good cond. town. Von! ~- 1111 hot.,., pro$t25. 304-175-3000 or 304-els- pone l Mtural oaa, on at. now. Upton Uatd Cora At. 12·3 Milia cen1H elec:trlclan. Ribenour
South of loon, WV. ~lnanclng Elac•lcal, WV000301, 30+1753120.
Slcltr'a Equlpmarc 3114-1175-7421.
•hta 304 4611 • .
1181.
-

I hill

t

Hay- Round btlta UO. 2nd aat· aura, 4X4, 4dr, new llrta &amp; bat·
tory, oil power, hitch. 304·875·
dnt aquano bola .U.I!O -71&gt;- 5ol28.
.
1848 ..- 304-571-2014. CoM alt«
llpm.
1814 Red Jeep Ranger, 414
Jt3,100, 814·446·1@$0, Ailor 5

trlc Aanga 175; ~10 Waaher
t75; Couchel, T1bl11, Antique

Merchandlse
18 Cubic loot lido by oldo white
~olt hot rolriglralotArHztr. 175.
30+17!HI310.
2 Tlclwte Ta Tracy lawrence &amp;
Trace Adklna Concor~ Oct t 71h,
$t5 Each. 11+256-150~
:10 GtltiOn Plutlc Druma S3 Eadt,
lt+387-7102.
30 Peaplt Wontorllo LOSE UP
TO :10 POUNDS In Tho Noll 30
Oay1, All Natural, Dr. Aec:om·
mended, Guaranteed, Call Tracy
At 114-441-11182, Fr.. Sall'4'itL
6' Sottlllla dlah, can buy prooramo, e monlha old, 1300; now
Nordic Trac lkitr, tl50, 81+182·
1321.
8 Ft U~llty Trailer $500: 2 Window Air Condldanert Borh 8,000
BTU $150 For Bolh: S&lt;t1ra Fuol
Oil Furraco $450, lt+388-11845.
8' Flbttglau Trudo Topper $1011;
Sump Pump And TIM $75: Bltdo
Stttton Hot Paid $150 Soli S75:
Col 014-441-4l872 Altar 4 P.M.
Btoudlul -.nniah ..,,_,
ohtll, holda 810 CDa: oiao Yldto

guart~ntH. t Oyra Dn job 11pt1ri·
...... ~~1&amp;

All real estate adver1ising In
this newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes~ iUegal

114 448 01157,1t4 Ul 0862.
1D84 Jeep. Cherokn country,

South, c.... City
Cli*l 11-5, Sot&amp; Sun
Sot. On All Corpot &amp; VInyl, Mol·
lohon Corpo!t, Routt 7 North,
814-4411-7,;,_-~.,..;.;-.,.--...;_...,...,...
UoH Furnitura Stott, 130 BollvUlt Piu, Compt.to Good Bada
$150:11111111 Bada S45: 'lbull Bad
$20: Ploypona t15: Strollor 18:
IIMk Cona S&amp;: Blqdta tto; Eitc-

540 Miscellaneous

322-e1111 Ell 7858. L
1 JOU - t 111 mau monoy, .,.
llllilng to wort hatd, 1r111 Nu 111

ptl·

Hay &amp; Grain

'*

Call How. 2 Min. Meoy 1·800-

lot--

640

!1112-e&amp;24.

--·

33 Cover
34 Bleck bird
35 Hotvy ahoe

60T A

.ice Recorda Since Purchased,

1111.

_$2,0110, 11+742-27K 1
4:30,1M1
I
1188 Ford Taurua, c:rulat, till, air, 750 Boats &amp; Motors
amlfm aterto c..aene, maroon,
for Stle
uceuont condldon, 12415, 114·

Aniabla 1Ollth, Hucl W-me.
$2011 Dapoal~ Rtltranc:H, 814• OrHIIrl, Uorel 114·"•4712,
M.f No. 1o-4.
heal pump. llovt &amp;. new refrla· 441-1778. '
orator, oood cond.• 12,500 nao.
3 Bedroom Troller 3 Mlt.o From Whirlpool WI- 185; Whifii&gt;OOI
CIIII3G&amp;..t75-3000.
Galllpolla, On 518, S300II.to., Dryt&lt; SIS: EltcVic Range $8&amp;:
Frlgidllre Rtlrip-otor $75: Frigl$150
Dapoal~ Rtloroncoa, 114·
All Electric 3 BR. 14X70. 2
dalr Rtfrigarator Froat Froo $150:
bath' Good Cand. 2 Lo I'Orchlll. 441-3810.
Hotpalnt Chtll Type Freezer
Undorptnding. $10,000. Evo.
(1141 258-1814 or (114) 811- Moaon. 3 -.om trallt&lt;. 12151 .115; G.E. Htnr Duty Waahtr &amp;
mo. Rtllroncoa and dtpollt ,. Dryer Set, '205 Each, 1 Year
8231
warranty; Siloogo AppUancoa, 78
quifod. 304-4175-77R
t893, Conturr Bravo 1070, 3 ThrH bid oom mabh horne, nD Ylno Slroot, GaiH.,Oir, e14-446·
t2xt2 doO ltenntl, $100, naeda
7388. 1-eaa-et&amp;-0128.
Bedroorna, 2 full Baths, Central P~Ct.I14112'M'
... daM\ 11+812-5102.
Air Wth HMt
ParPayment,
Off Only,
Antiques
530
I17,7DO,
Of ~
A11ume
2yr old Minillture Pincher, male,
440
Apartments
·Avoillblolmmodltlflr. 814-245Buy or aell. Riverine Antlquta, c:hocolatl brown, ~KC Regia·
fOr Rent
8301
1124 E. lotoln Strtt~ on Rt. 1~. tarod, .150. 304-1)5-7121tltar
1 Md 2 hid OOhi . , . . . _ ... b"• Pomeroy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 !pm.
nlohtcl and unllmllhtd, _.rity a.m. 10 8:110 p.m.. SUndar 1:110 to A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.
dopoalt requirtll, no pota, 114· 8:00 p.m. 814-88'2·2520. Ruu Featuring
Hydro Barh. Don
082·221&amp;
.
Shotts. 379 Goorato Crot~ Rd.

rlg1tt

32 Hartlord'o ol.

" tiEl&gt;Gf

1888 Clayton t4x70 3br, 1 both,

2 To IlK llontha, Totll Training &amp;
Supparl From Homo, Not IlLII.

Ollloo
nlnlng
td. Mull
htvo I piHIInt

IT

RIQIIItfed Angua Bul, EIOIII«&lt;t tNI GMC Solari Cuatol!l 14.$50
::=~oooonaltly Prlcod, !'~14!:4~48~4222
~----Soo!!td 40 Inch llort 8rttd And t 9e1 &amp;Iazor 4x4 Taho Package
Kid Broh; 10 Month Old Rut· Rod IBioc~. Sharpl Excoptiontly
oadtll Arobltn Colt, 114·440· Waii·Malntalntd, Hove All Strv·

1881 Honda XR80, llkt No!w.
1187 Cougar, good candlllon, $1500,. C&amp;il (114) 441H1881 Mor

-1

24 Covered With 56 Olroctor Kazan
velvety growth 571Woeome
27 AFL'a pertner 58 Molt cantor
28Actrtll
obbr.
Chlrlue
5t Actor
31 Aotroneu'-' 111
Johnny-

By Phillip Alder

2202.

Bonk 8lda COtnp.•225; Sola '
C11t1r ~ 4 Clouory.flnt T-.
Btnch 6 3 Chlirt U36: 7 Pc.
Ceilar BR S108: DU Curio Cob.
S150: l'l&gt;t111Y, lltllcln Bltnuta,
lndMa.Etc.

Picnic

ss - do plume

female favorites

.,. • •317.

114-21111.

know?

53 Actor Robart
Dt 54 Author ol

The U.S.

lotobilo homellll available btl·
woon Atllent lnd Pomeroy, coli

••te

tQ9752

• 7 5

4243 ln. jot
46 Dnrtume
110 Bt In
oommand
51 Howwao - -

--Vulnerable: Both
_Dealer: North

460 Space for Rtnt

w.,

• 10 8 3

•J9843

lllllflll\111 -

-wv. .

encoa. mwo.. 81+44t·t8t .
~ Spioe, IISMio, Roc:klard Fo1gate Punch 200
2 ~~Naoma, 2 Bolt Homo. Slllill- 114-3117-7102.
Amp. &amp; 3
Box With 15' Sub.
td On 20 Acres On Sowarda
$425, Fot All 080614-+41-2858.
Ridge, 814-2!&amp;--15!18.
r.1lcRCHMJDISE
Sam Somerville's Armr Camou·
3 bedroom. $4001mo. Dtpoalt.
llloo by Sondr.vlllo Poll Dlllca.
304-875-48781Dtvt rntiiiOf.
Noon-5pm. Fr -Sun. Smolilndl·
510
Holilthold
vidual oqulpmara 304-273-5115~
3 Bedroama, 2 balh haust In
Goods
counlrr, call fur .s.tails, 11•-3n.
Sura Salt llle Stylar 8.0 1.51\p.
28311.
APDIIoncoo:
Rtcofldldontll lreadmlll, 3yra. old, u,aed about
'FAIILY DREAIIIIOUSE'
w.:-. Oryora, Rtntta. Rtlrl- 2r11. Paid $580 will taka $300.
Huoo 4br, 2 btlll homo, loollring GienwoodiAihton or-. $300/mo. aralara. 00 Day Guarantttl 304-882-2220.
all new Nt through fireplace, plut light llrm -~ lor rlductlon French City Mtyllo. 114·440·
Sola, E......... COritor &amp; Cot7785.
or the art NCurlty """"· In -lltpoaiL 304-511-2527.
$2.485/down. S348.54 por month.
lee Tobia, Plua 1 ~JIO. 814·
GOOD USED APPLIANCES ~Je.
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roftroncos a dopotl! roqulrad. W11hera, "drJI'fl, retrlgieralort:.
114-QU2-&amp;alll.
rangea. stlagga Appllancea, 71 WARM UP: Hioh El-.cy NatuVlno Strat~ Cal et 4·440-7388, ral And LP Gas Furnec:ea, llle·
Rtmadalod 3 8t4room Houao 1a .ooatee
dmt warranty On Heat E•c:hangWilli Btaomont In Countrr. City
"· 'II You Don1 Call Ua Wt Both
1TIME DNLYI
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Lo111• Fre• E1drftateal Add.. Qn
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11-1..().~-TI
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Wt , _ - " " " SUip!ualll
2101-lwt.
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$488 Down o n - ttlngllSmtl 2 Btdtoom Houtt 1n Eu,.
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modHMdng &amp; Cooling lklainoaal 11+
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etoavaialilo.OokwoodUO 8308, 1-800-281-CIOIItl.
HiOo, wv. 304-755-5885.
Small Nlct 2 Btllroom Houao Rtlrlgarator, Waaher, Drror, STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Ntar Qalllpolla, No Petl, Raitt'
UprlghL Ron Evana Enterprlat~
enc:es. Depoalt, 1425/Mo., 114· - · VCR,114-2!1-1Z!8.
Jac:kaon, Olio. 1-800-537-8528.
448--2800.
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410 Houses for Rant

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RENTALS

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Flbtrolau true~ toppor ftll
Dodge Dlilola long bod, allding
11111 window, ••c. cond. Co11
1800 .. .., &amp;250. 30+182-323&amp;
Franklin Flraplact WI., Accoa·
aorlto, Ulte Now, S250, Ltrgt
Bookcoat Wi1lt Shtlvta &amp; Doors
On BottomS tOO. 114 Ul 3437.
Grullb'a Plono- tuning &amp; _.,..
Problema? Nood Tuntd? Coil tho
plano,Dr. 81.._,.525
Nlco Solat, Complora King Slzt
Wo!trbtdt, Full Size Bada With
Motutll &amp; Box Sprlnga, Solid
Oak Hutoh, 11~·37e-2720 AF·
TER 8P.II.

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FARf.1 SUPPLIES
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I .

careful in dealings with friends today
if money is an issue. A misundercould disrupllhc tranquillity in your slanding could arise over something
office today if you make changes thai rather strange.
BERNICE
affect others without discussing your - TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Where your career is · concerned
BEDEOSOL moves with lhcni first
'SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc. today, don'l give any associates rea21) Be careful that you don 'l gel . sons to suspect you are erratic or
invol vcd in trying to promote some- flighty. It could tarnish your image.
thing lhc world neither wants nor ·
GEMINI (May 21-Jime 20) Have
• • • • • • • • • . needs. Learn what appeases the mass- someone serve as a backstop today
and recheck any mental work. If not,
Thursday, Ocl. l(i, 1997
.
es. CAPRICORNCDec 22-Jon 19)11 ·
a peculiar mistake might-slip through
you mtght
·
·
I n . the Year ahead
.
'
.
won 't take much to arouse your : that won't surface until later.
become deeply mvolved m some
. . .
'. .
d
th
.11 have . extravagant mchnauons
today. Keep •
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Do
u~tque en ea~ors.
ey wt re re- , this in mind if you go out shopping, . not lei someone who owes you olf the
good probab1htces and could P_ 1 and leave the credil cards at home.
hook today just because you' re 100
sent a change of dm:clton •n your hfe.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
embarrassed to broach the subject
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. B) Wish· Family affairs might not run like a
You don 't want to be manipulated.
ful thinking_mustn't be alfo~e:!e~~ well-oiled clock today. Be prepared
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today you
replace_reahly today. Do no n as to deal wilh the une.pected, and you might be saddled with an ally who
someth•~g ~hal ts yet to h~ppe
won 't gel rauled if a mishap occurs. did not produce as promised in a prethough II ts fatt accomph. Kno,w
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Your
vious arrangement. Do not bank 100
11
where to look for romance and l,ou
hunches might be misleading today, heavily on this person.
fin~ tl. The Astra-Graph Ma~ mak- so guard against impulsiveness. Take
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22) Strive
er mslanlly reveals whtch srgns ~ ample time to reason through impor- to be methodical and orderly in your
romanucally perfect for you. Matl
1
work habits today. If your procedures
.
llanl moves.
$2.7StoMatchmak er, clath tsnews·
ARIES (March 2 1. A ril19) Be
lack
focus, the end results might not
paper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Htll •
P
he too nifty.

INIICC)

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