<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8972" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8972?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T19:47:21+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19400">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b1359c29c979e9598fb92ce75bc2bf0a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>5fc6942f7151fbdeeb91b2a16d8a86ff</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28880">
                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Indians
capture
ALcrown

Pick 3:
096
Pick 4:
0311
t Super Lotto:
9-15-17·23-24-39
Kicker:
359223

Sports on Page 5

'

•
'

llol. 48, NO. 121
C11t7, Ohio Yalley

Partly cloudy tonight,
Iowa around 40. Friday,
cloudy, low In the 401.

Publlohlng Company

2 Soctlona, 12 P-u-. 35 c:enla
A Gannett Co. ~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 16, 1997

Lucas announces retirement
.

Walter Scott Lucas, Cheshire, is chief technologist at both the former
retiring as administrator of Pomeroy's Meigs General Hospital in Pomeroy
Vererans Memorial Hospital after a and at Veterans M~morial Hospital,
35-year affiliation with the I~Jbuilt in 1%2, for five years. _In 1969,
institution.
Lucas was named assiStant admmts·
Born in Point Pleasant, .W. Va. a trator to Donald Diener, then serving
as admi~tr~tor at Veterans Memorson of the late Normal and Ru
Lucas, he has spent all but eight years
1-Hmp!tal; lln-9.(_~. he was named
of his life as a resident of Cheshire the hospotal s adminiStrator, the poso·
and has served as mayor of the com· tion he currendy holds.
munil)l for the past 27 years. He
In 1970 L.ucas attended a two-year •
expects to retire from that post in Jan- course m alhed health profesSions at
. uary.
Ohio State Unive~ity .and i~ 1972
A graduate or Gallia Academy . underwent ~ rears tramm~ m perHigh School, Lucas spent three years so~el admtmstrat10n at Wm~nberg
in the U. S. Army serving in the Umvers•tr. .
. .
..
Korean Conflict. In 1958 he com·
In conJunction With his posooon as
pleted his studies. at the school of administrator of yererans Memorial
Radiologic Technology at the Holz· Hospnal, ~ucas IS a member of the
er Medical School He served as Ohto Hospttal ~ssoctatton, the Amer·

ican Hospital Association, the Hos-•.
pita! Association of Central Ohio. is
a past president of the Southern
Ohio Hospital Council, a member of
the Mid-Ohio Valley Emergency
Planning Council, the American Registry of Radiologic Technologists,
and serves on the board of tbe Meigs
Division of the American Hean Association.
Lucas is a member o~asonic
Siloam Lodge 456, F. a A. M.,
Cheshire, the Scottish Rite a
hrine
Aladdin Temple in Columbus, and is
a member of the Gallipolis Shrine
Club. He belongs to Feeney-Bennen
Post 128, American Legion, in Mid·
dlepon and Gallia County Post 4464
of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
He and his wife. Lorene. have four

children who include three sons, Ter·
ry, a respiratory therapist at University Hospital in Tulsa, Okla.; Brian,
employed in operations for AEP at
the Gavin Power Plant; Bobby, R. N.,
employed with tbe emergency depanment at the Holzer Medical Cenrer,
and a daughter, Mrs. Cindy Bailey, a
receptionist at the Holzer Rehabilita·
tion Center in Gallipolis. Mr. and
Mrs. Lucas have five grandchildren.
The public, hospital employees
and volunteers are being invited to a
farewell reception honoring Lucas to
be held from 2 to 4 p.m. on Friday.
Oct. 24, in the cafeteria at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Refreshments
will be served. Lucas' final day on the
job will be Oct. 31.

Pumpkin production, sales on the increase
B BRIAN J REED
s!
tlneiNWa Staff

Dtlr :ID

Ill£. . . .

Fra•

.~s been a good year for pumpkin
growers in Ohio - and in Meigs
County, where the pumpkin is
becoming a popular fall crop.
The two last pumpkin crops were
RETIRING • Genial Scott Lucas Is retiring from Vatarana Memo- only mediocre, according to the'Ohio
rial Hospital In Pomeroy following 1 35-year lffHiatlon with the lneti- Vegetable and Potato Growers Assotutlon. Lucas, who hla ~ ldmlnlatrator of the locll holpltalalnce ciation, but this year, producers are
1975, will be honored at a public I'IC8ptlon .on Friday, Oct. 24, In the
"verr optimistic" about the yield and
hoapltal cafeteria.
qualtl)l of thts year's pumpkin and
squash· harvest.
The quality of this year's pumpkins is due to a relatively dry spri~g,
and the mild summer and fall, which
a!Iowed better development and effi·
ctent harvest. .
.
.
.
Tl)e pumpkin buSIIII'SS ts boommg
for, r.'le!s.s County farmers, as ~II,
accordtng to. Hal ·Kneen, Me.tgs
County Agncultural Extenston
\!tg_ or declining the branch campus ~gent.. Several l"''al .farmers, espe·
By JIM FREEMAN
concept.'
Sentinel News Staff
ctally tn the Reedsvtlle area, have
Dorsey said Tuesday that Dr. Ore· begun to capitalize on th~ growing
The fate of a proposed Meigs
County branch of the University of gory Sojka, university provost, was . poJ!ulanty . of. the pu~pkm. These
Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community · processing the survey results.
growers dostnbute thetr harvest to
"We think it looks very promising, local retatlers and shtp pumpkm~ to
College will presumably be decided
Saturday during a meeting of the we will make a recommendation to o.utlets up to se.veral hundred miles
.the board contingent on a funher away, Kne~n satd.
URG Board of Trustees.
School and community leaders demonstration of interest," he said.
Accordtng to Kneen, local pump·
Dorsey is withholding his recom· kin production has increased signif·
announced in early August that a
Meigs County bra~ch of the school mendation until the Saturday meet· !cantly. in the past fiv~ years, jn keepwas being proposed. The announce- ing, but said "it looks promising."
tng wtth th~ statewt?e trend ..The
If the board accepts the idea Sat· local pumpktn crops tnclude mmta·
ment was followed by a community .
meeting on Sept. 9 in Ppmeroy held urday. the branch campus could be ture ornamental pumpkins to the Ira·
to gauge community· interest in the put 'into operation as early as Jan. 3, ditional Jack O'Lantern type.
1998 ... if a suitable location for
Statewide, 4,000 acres of pumpsuggested venture.
At the meeting, which overnowcd classes can be found.
Dorsey planned to accompany
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center. community interest surveys Paul Harrison. Ray Robcns and
were distributed in an effon to deter- McDade this week to view potential
mine what classes would be of inter- sites in Meigs County, assuming the By Tanya Root
ting the prescriptions, patients would
board decides to move ahead on the Gannett Newa Service
est to Meigs County residents.
have them filled at a pharmacy parThe survey were designed to decision .
f;:HARLESTON, W. Va. • Open· tially owned by Westmoreland's wife,
"We will sec if there is a viable ing arguments were made· and the Kim Westmoreland.
determine what courses Meigs Coun·
silc,"
he said.
tians would be interested in taking,
prosecution's first witness testified · "Why did he do it? He did it for
Dorsey said the school is looking Wednesday in the trial of a Mason money," Smith said. "He directly
preferred meetings days and times
and needed services ranging from for a central location with easy acces· physician accused of'unlawfully dis- made money from the office visits."
parking, child care and linancial aid sibility and 'plenty of parking; a pensing prescription drugs.
In dispute, Charleston attorney
to academic and personal counseling place with room for two or more
. Danny Westmoreland. 42, of Ben Bailey told the jury that Westclassrooms and office space.
and computer labs.
Mason faces 10 counts of unlawful- moreland's prescriptions had a med·
Although the venture would not ly dispensing controlled substances ical basis because most of the patients
At the time, Meigs County Eco·
nomic Development Director Ron mark the first time the school has for no medical purpose. His trial . suffered from chronic pain.
McDade said he hoped to return more held off-campus classes, it will be the began Wednesday in U.S. District
"We wi II prove to you that every
than 500 completed surveys to first time it has had a separate insti· Coun before Judge Joseph R. Good- one of these patients had legitimate
URG/RGCC President Dr. Barry tution identified as a branch. Dorsey win~
medical cases," Bailey said. "These
Dorsey. Earlier this month. McDade : said.
Westmoreland was indicted on 37 are ordinary people who , unfortu-.
The proposed branc)l campus is charges of Medicaid fraud and ille· nately have bad problems. These are
handed over 1.226 surveys to Dorsey, '
one
of many items that will occupy gaily prescribing drugs to create people with pain and they are trying
• with an additional 54 surveys turned ·
the board during its day-long meet· business for his wife's pharmacy, but to figure out what's wrong."
over later.
,,
At the September town meeting, ing, Dorsey said. McDade is sched· prosecutors dropped most of those
Bailey declined to comment about
Dorsey said the survey results will be uled to make a presentation before charges Tuesday.
the case.
Assistant U.S . Attorney Hunter
calculated and presented to the URG . the board in suppon of th'e Meigs
Prosecutors presented New Jersey
Smith told the eight women and five physician William Vilensky as an
board with a recommendation accept· County branch.
men of tbe jury, including one alter· expen in the ftelds of pain and osteo·
nate, that Westmoreland prescribed pathic medicine, in which West·
.pain medicine, tranquilizers and diet moreland practices at his family care
pi I~ to- 10 patients on se"'eral occa- clinic in Mason.
sions because the patients were drug
Smith said another expen witness
addicts.
will testify that Westmoreland pre·
Smith also argued that afier get· scribed the medications without a
CLEVELAND (AP) - Thi: weather in Cleveland was cool, but
for baseball fans it was an Indian summer.
At Pete &amp; Dewey's tavern, a popular hangout in the shadow of
U. S. 35 In Gal/Is blocked several hours
Jacobs Field , hundreds of Indians fans crowded inside to watch game
6 of the AL championship. which staned about 4:15 p.m. The Indi. ans were one win away from advancing to the World Series for only
the fifth time this century.
·
·
' ..
As the game approached extra innings scoreless. fans bogan admit·
U.S.
35 near Holzer Medical Cen· a hospital spokesperson said.
ting their nerves were shot.
:
rer
was
blocked
for a few hours earTroopers said Eads was west·
''Every pitch in this series is like a heanbeat," said Bob Plasman
•
ly
tnday
after
a
car
traveling
in
the
bound
in the eastbound lane and col·
of Cleveland . "We're not sure when the hean could stop."
lided
with
a rig driven by John E.
Moments later. anxiety was replaced by jubilation. Fans pounding · wrons direction collided with two
· tractor-trailen, the Gallia-Meigs Post Rose Jr.. 50. Columbus. The car then
tables chanting "Let's go Tribe!" jumped from their seats screaming,
of the State Highway Patrol reported. collided with another eastbound trac·
embracing friends.
Todd D. Eads, 34, Rudand, driver tor-trailer driven by Lloyd E. Mer·
Jose Mesa struck our Robeno Alomar and the Indians were back
of
the
car, WIS transported to HMC rick, 37, Stewart.
in the Series for the second time in three years with a 1-0 win over
Rose·s rig went off the left side of
from the scene of the 12:05 a.m. accithe Baltimore Orioles. The Indians play the Aorida Marlins on Sat·
the
road and jackknifed, while the car
dent.
He
was
admitted
and
listed
in
urday in Miami in the first game of the World Series.
and
the vehicle driven by Merrick
stable
condition
today
with
fractured
"It's better than '95 because we didn't expect sci much," said Chris
both
slid tosether into the median,
ribs.
a
broken
shoulder
and
abrasions,
Zepp of Westlake. "Florida better look out."
'

Meigs branch of
URG/RGCC may_be
decided Saturday

AS .
lOW

· II ~

.

kins are planted double the amount sider visiting the Circleville Pumpkin kin pie, a parade, and other activities
planted 10 year; ago.
Festival this weekend. Pumpkin are on tap for the event .
·
The reason for the increase in
an •mmense
pumpkin planting is due to a larger
demand. It is estimated that 95 per·
cent. of the pumpkins sold go for decoratmg, rather than eating. Due to the
growing popularity of Halloween
and fall decorating, the demand for
, pumpkins is on tbe rise.
Pumpkin and squash are also
nutritious food -· good sources of
complex carbohydrates, beta keratin
with only 45 calories per serving,
· according to the OVPGA.
.
Growing the in~=~easingly-popular
vegetable has its drawbacks •• pump.kins are prone to disease, and require
strict crop rotation in order to be
grown successl'ully. This rotation
helps alleviate the mildew diseases
which are common, but limit farmers
in land use. Rotation is required on an
annual basis and three to four years
must lapse before the same plot of
land is used again for pumpkin production. Most pumpkins are an 85 to
105-day crop, so planting usually
takes place in early June so that they
· are ready for the buying season.
BIG. DECISION • Tall and skinny or short and plump? Decidwhich begins in earnest on October
ing which pumpkin will make the best Jack O'Lantern Ia a tough
1
. call, aa Holly White, 9, of Middleport discovered at Kroger yes·
· The pumpkin harvest generally
terday. Pumpkin fane like Holly, the daUghter of Shelly White,
begins in September. and most of
have created an Increased demand for the taaty and omamen·
Ohio's crop is already available in
tal vegetable. Production of pumpkins has doubled acro11 the
store&gt;.
atate In the last ten years, and has Increased dramatically in
Pumpkin enthusiasts should conMeigs County, aa well.

Testimony begins in doctor•s federal drug trial

4.1•!.

AS
LOW
AS

R11111:111
.lnllallll

Indian.·.. fans celebrate AL
flag, team goes a fish in'

The I0 patients suffered from
medical reason.
Reviewing each of the patients' various ailments including knee,
files. Vilensky testified that West- head . neck and back pain. nervousmoreland prescribed some narcotic ness. insomnia, headac hes , chest
medicines that would conOict with paints. and dizzy spells.
Under cross-examination, Vilenotber medicines the patienl&lt; were tak.
sky
testified that narcotic treatment is :
ing, which would create a sense of
appropriate
for some cases and that
drug withdrawal.
' Patients• .Vilensky said, would he had not examined any of the •
then feel the need for more of the nar- patients in question for drug abuse.
cotic drugs and subsequently return
to Westmoreland's office for another
Continued on page 3
prescription.

Staffing crunch has EMS dispatchers
scrambling for help in New Lexington
NEW LEXINGTON (AP)- Dis·
patchers at volunteer fire depart·
ments say more rescue calls and few er volunteers are hamperin~ their
effons to help people.
,
"The way the curriculums and
standards have changed lately, there
just aren't enough hours in the day to
pursue l)le training the state wants,"
Chief Raymond Tellier of the Elyria
Township Volunteer Fire Depanment
told The Columbus Dispatch for a
story Wednesday.

The problem is complicated by
more rc~cue calls coming in for auto
accidents, gas leaks and hazardous
matenals spills. More training is
required for crews, which arc already
thinly stretched.
Ashland Division of Fire Chief
Mark Burgess. chairman of a
sta1cwide committee revieWing the
level of emergency care provided by
file departments, said he favors addi tional training despite complaints
from volunteer depanments that new
requirements arcn 't necessary.

.Rutland man charged ~ith DUI following accident

\

•

according to the report.
· ..Dcpanment was on the scene to clear
The patrol said damage was . debris from the road. The highway
severe to the car, the rig driven by was cleared for traffic before the
Rose, owned by Ovemite Trans· workday began, troopers said.
portation Co .• Oklahoma Ci\)', Okla.,
and the vehicle operated by Merrick,
owned by Austin Powder Co., CleveEads has been charged with driving
under the innuence, a seatbelt
land.
The EMS reponedly used the violation and driving the wrong way
"Jaws of Life" extraction device to on a divided highway. troopers said.
remove Eads from the car's wreckage, and the Gallipqlis Volunteer Fire

•

•

�'
(j

.: ~commentS

Page .2

ThurtchiJ, October 18,1997

the

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thuraday,October16,1997

..--Local briefs---.

OHIO Weather
lt'rlday, Oc:t. 17

The Daily Sentinel

..

T.sta!Jfi.slid in 1948 .
•

111 Court Slrttt, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-892·2156 • Fax 992·2157

~
•

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
1 Publllher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
G•ner•l M1n1ger
711o S..Untl ...,.._ ....... Ia IIHI«&lt;IIor

hom-

on'--,..,.,_
puOI/-.

1:100 lfiU)
""'
,.., -MoUld~
"',.,.,. I
,.,. Mt
/Nfl(flrfd
Mid·
.U.,MY
I»-HltN
. .EM:h

I'

~TypH
ldcl ....
...
and dlytlme phQIM nuntNI: $p«lfyl tMt.
lwft:rWICI liD. JH•W'Ieut lffk*
or lollilr. IIMI to: l.o,.,. to fllo Editor. Tile - · 111 ClHII'I St, ...,.,.,.,. Ollltl

ff.,..,. .••

I

•0

451Q· or, FAX to lt.....,..ztn.

: . Campaign fund-raising ·.
case has both sides mad
By WALTER MEARS

which
By Molton Kondrickl
Before her attorney generalship describes how

on releasing her letter that both the
Democratic and the Republican
turns into a historic embamssment from
July
presidential campaigns violated tbe
or worse, Janet Reno needs to 1995 through
law by channeling illegal money
appoint an independent counsel to the 1996 electhrough their respective national
aggressively prosecute 1996 .viola- tion,
the
committees.
tions of campaign finance law.
White House
She argued that spending money
·· · Reno repeatedly has said that she used TV ads
in excess of federal limits is not
has yet to find .the "specific, credi- paid for with
made legal by the fact that it came
ble evidence" of crime that would soft money to
from corporate and labor "soft
trigger the appointment, but the evi· advance Clin·
money'' contributions to ·panics, nor
dence of massive .violations is so ton's candida- KONDRACKE
by the . fact that the ads did not
obvious and public that most inves· cy.
"expressly advocate" the election of
tigators are simply ignoring it.
"In my opinion," Morris wrote, Clinton or Bob Dole.
While the Justice Depanment .and "the key to Clinton's victory was his
The controlling language in the
various congressional COllll!!ittees early television advenising. There law, she argued, is that money raised
focus on pieces of the puzzle •. never has been anything even and spent "for the purpose of influWhite House phone calls and video- remotely like it in the history or encing" a federal election is hard
tapes of coffee klatches •· they've all presidential elections." In an inter- money subject to federal limits.
but overlooked systematic and will· view, Morris said, "When you run
"Campaign contributions and
ful breakinc of the 1974 Federal ads, you're running those ads to expenditures were raised and spent, ·
Election Campaign Act, possibly by affect a political race."
and fully controlled, by the'Ciinton
1
both panies. .
The evidence strongly sugges1s presidential campaign and the Dole
The law involves an explicit tl;lat Clinton, Vice President AI Gore presidential campaign 'for the purtrade: When a presidential campaign and former White House deputy pose of influencing' a federal elecreceives federal money, it is prohib- chief of staff Harold Ickes-· all cov· tion, namely the presidential clec·
itell from raising private funds to ered by the independent counsel tion," McBride said.
advance its cause.
statute ·· were involved in a conspirMoreover, she said, the ads were
Yet, the Clinton/Gore campaign acy to violate federal campaign not issue-advocacy or pany-building
raised tens or hundreds of millions laws.
ads, but election-influencing ads,
or dollars beyond federal limits and
The best legal analyses of this even though they did not explicitly
the president himself approved and case were made in April by Com- urge a vote for Clinton or Dole.
even edited the television commer- mon Cause in a letter to Reno and by
"'The Supreme Court has never
cials paid for with the money.
former Justice Depanment official . held, and no one seriously argues,
For "specific and credible evi- Terry Eastland in a recent article in that express advocacy, such as 'vote
dence," Reno need look no funher the American Spectator.
for' or 'vote against,' is required in
than Clinton aide · Dick Morris's
Common Cause director Ann order for ads run by candidates to be
book, "Behind the Oval Office," McBride said iit a press conference treated as campaign expenditures

WASHINGTON - So Janet Reno got mad at the White House and
Republicans got madder at her in the lo.ng, angry disput~ over a .special prosecutor to deal with campaogn lund-raosong cases onvolvong Presodent Chnton
and Vice President AI Gore.
for the allomey general, it's a no-win case with no easy way out.
·She said as much herself earlier in the dispute- that she'd be damned
by one side or the other whatever she decided.
·
.
Reno has taken preliminary steps that could lead to the appomtment of an
indeocndenl coun&lt;el. onrl mu&lt;t rlccide hv Wednesday wh~ther there will be
an extended inquiry into what Clinton dod to raose campaogn money.
·
That rankles the White House, where Clinton's people insist that neither
• he nor Gore did anything wrong.
The auomey general isn'tjudging, saying only that so far, she has no evi·
dence that they broke the law. She said nothing has been foreclosed, and
THINK
nobody has been exonerated.
.
IT TAKES
Reno said Sunday she will question anyone who has information about
VIDEOTAPE
the case. including Clinton if needed. For his pan, the president told
reponers Monday he is willing to do whatever is necessary "even if she
wishes to interview me.'\
Clinton also said the "Republican attacks on her have been completely
unwarranted."
" It would be hard to make the case that she was. reluctant to follow the
law," Clinton added. "There are all kinds of procedures set up about how
this law is supposea to operate. And she ought to be left alone to implement
it "
The Republicans say Reno shouldn't be deciding whether the law has
·been broken. They're insisting, as they have all year, that she should move
immediatol:y to a special prosecutor because there's a conflict of interest.
She says not, and points to her prior appointments of outside prosecutors to
deal with administration cases.
" I'm damned iri do and damned iri don't." she said six months aao. "So
the best thing I can do is ignore the politics, ignore the pressure."
.
· It has intensified, with GOP demands that she resign and~ impeachment
threat from· House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
"She looks like a fool," Gingrich said Saturday.
Reno retorted that she doesn't pay much auention to him, and doesn't
.: heed political pressure or aame-calling. ,
"No one can shout loud enough or write a headline big enouah or use
• words shrill enough to keep me from doing what I think is the right thing on
this investigation," she says now. __
. By Dian Vujovlch
·
•
When creating a ponfolio of
Porter Morgan, liberty
· And she insists that the right thing is to continue a Justice Depanment
investigation that has more than 120 agents, auomeys and aides at work on stock funds, dor,'t forget to include
Financial
Companies
the case. To date, she said, there is no evidence of high-level crimes that both small- and large-cap funds.
investment slrtltegist, says
would trigger the independent counsel· law, in which a panel of federal
That's because, like everything
that market cycles typically
judges would appoint an outside prosecutor.
else in life, stock market prices run
wiU last from two to jive
She could turn it all over to an outside prosecutor now, as her Republican in cycles. In the early 1990s, smallJt!.ars. Riaht now·he thinks
critics arc demanding. That would take the political pressure off Reno, but capitalized stocks, a.• m~asured by
"'
the Russell 2000, outperformed 1he
things might be changing •
she won't do it.
Her situation wasn' t cased by the disclosure that there were videotapes of big boys: For the past few years,
• again.
44 White House coffees for Democratic campaign donors. and lhat the Jus- large-capitaliied companies, as
tice Department wasn't told about them immediately.
reflected by the perfonnance of the highs and lows at different times.
"I was mad," she said. But she also said nothing found on the tapes so S&amp;P ~00. have been the latest cycle Just look at the l990s:
far warrants a special prosecutor. 'There are. more to come.
•. 1991 : Large-cap stocks moved
winners. And that may change
Republicans were mad, too, at the White House over the tapes tardily again.
ahead 28 percent, but small-caps
delivered to their congressional investigators, and at Reno because she
So while no one is certain today surged 38 percent.
won 't yield on an outside prosecutor.
.
what sized companies will lead the
1992 , Small-cap stocks
Sen. Orrin Hatch. chairman of the Judiciary Commiuee, renewed his pack a year from now, many pros returned over twice what the large· long-standing demand that she step aside, "given the obvious conflict of say it's more important to be invest· caps did, 16 .3 percent to 7.6 percenl
interest. " The atiomcy general will face that same pressure Wednesday ed in both types of funds rather than respectively.
when she appears before the House Judiciary Comminec.
try to rtgurc out what cycle the mar.• 1993 , The score was small·
She is just as insistent that she is on the legally correct course.
kct is in.
caps up 16.2 percent, large-caps up
Ironically. that is the kind of stubbornness Republicans once applauded ..
"If you can define lhe cycle, then 9 8
,
· be coo king wit h gas. But
· ••percent., By year-end. things had
Reno has had four special prosecutors appointed in administration cases, too you moght
1994
many for the taste or some Clinton allies, whq didn't want her around for his who has been able to do that'! And started to change. Small-caps were
second term.
that's the problem," says Steve ' down 2.7 percent while the largeThey floated suggestions that he'd just as soon have a new auorney gen· Schoepke, senior analyst at Moody's caps moved ahead almost 2 percent.
era!. but if that was a hint, she didn't take it. Reno said she would be hon- Investors Sel'llicc.
·
•• 1995 , The large-caps gained
ored to stay.
Throughout history, both large- over ~2 percent, 8 percent more than
Clinton couldn't have replaced her at that point without stirring a politi- and small-cap funds have had their small stocks.
: cal uproar, given her reputalion for independence.
·. Now she 's in tlie middle, and· points to the record that ha.• made some
:people in the administration un,omfonable in lhe past. "I have prosecuted
:Republicannnd I have prosecuted Democrats," she said.
' " I don't think anybody can look back on these last 4 In years and sug·
:gestthatl haven 't done my duty."
word, don't
BylanShoalea

---

I DON'T

0

-· 1996: Small-caps were up
almost 15 percent, and the largecaps gained more than 21 percent.
While it's still a close race for
1997, one thing is cenain •· the
small caps are picking up steam.
Through Sept. 30, the large-caps had
gained nearly 28 percent, and the
small-caps were up 25 percent.
Porter Morgan, Libeo:ty Financial
Companies investment strategist,
say~ that market cycles typically
will last from two to live years.
Right now he thinks things might he
changing·· again.
"During the last few years, the
large-caps have outperformed. But
lalely we've seen some of the small·
er stocks continue to move upward
significantly," says Morgan. "In the
month of August, there wa.' a huge
performance shift in which the
small-caps outperformed large-cap
sloe ks by more I han 7 percent. "
Like performance numbers, the
best way to read investment cycles
is historically. And the best way to
catch market-cycle trends is to he
invested in both large-cap and smallcap companies. So, you need to

I

--

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist
.for The Associated ..._, has reported on Washinakln and national pol•
'ilkS for more than 30 years.

~ Today

in history

The Promise Keepers have been
perhaps overserutinized in the
media. I don't see what the big deal
is. Bunch of guys go to a stadium
and whoop and holler? So what?
The only thing missing is a football
JIIIIC.

Feminists, predictably. are in a
ti1.2y about this prototypical ma!e
Today is Thursday, Oct. 16, thc 289th day of 1997. There arc 76 days left _ behavoor. Supposed_lt: they. fear, thos
.in the year.
IS some kand Of nght•Wtng front
· • Today's Highlight in History :
group that woll put women back on
: On Ckt. 16, 1962, the Cuban missile crisis began as President Kennedy the refri1erator and off the street.
:was informed that reconnaissance photographs had revealed the presence of
So far. Patricia Ireland and her
missile bases in Cuba.
stern ilk have been stranded high
On this dale:
and dry in'\heir misgivings. CenainIn 1793. during the French Revolution. Queen Marie Antoineue was ly they're represented at any discus·
beheaded.
sion, but their forebodings, so far at
In 18~9. abolitionist John Brown led a group of about 20 men in a raid least, have been received as quibbles
on Harper's Ferry.
.
at besl, hymrical whininl at worst.
1
In 1916 Margaret Sanger npened the first birth control clinic, in New
As for me, I could never join a
York City. '
. .
.
_
group thai makes promise~ in conIn 1946 ten Nazi war cromonals condemned dunng the Nuremberg tnals vcnuon centers. I have a mostrust or
were hang~d.
.
?aths made in public. Yeah,. that
In 1964, China detonated its first atomoc bomb.
onclude1 the Pledae or Allegtance
In 1970 Anwar Sadat was elected president of Egypt, succeeding the late and the Lord's Prayer.
Gamal Abdel Nasser.
·A promise is a promise. Either
In 1978, the College of Cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church 1:hose you JOve your word or; you don'~ ·
Cardinal Karol Wojtyla tci be the new pope; he took the na~ John Paul II
You keep ot, or you don t. It doesn t
In 1991, a deadly shooting rampage took place m Killeen, Tuas, as mauer how many wotnesses you
George Hennard crashed his pickup truck .into a Luby's Cafeteria and have.
.
.
You know what you promised.
opened fire , killing 23 people before taking hos own hfe.
You know when you broke your

By The Associated Preas .

- - - -- - - - - - -

you'! You
know what
shame and
guilt
are,
don't you?
Why do
you need to
stand among
a bunch of
guys
you
don't know
SHOALES
to admit to
crimes you know in your hean you
commiued? Or to swear to a true
course you should have steered in
the first place? You messed up? Eat
your pain. Be a man.
I've broken a promise or two in
my time. I'm not good. But I'm not
the worst that ever lived either.
There must be millions of guys like
me out there, trying to do right, who
don't see how going to a football
game without the football accom·
plisbes any kind of moral goal , Call
me superstitious, but I view preuy
much any organization as an open
invitation to fascism.
What's wrong witli the solitary
road? I've seen enough of the Billy
Grahams, the Billy Sundays, the
Raben Blys, the Million Man
Marches •• and Take Back the Night

rallies, as far as that goes.
I henceforth take as my role
model Jimmy Stewart in his Jiinmy
Stewart westerns, Roben Mitchum
in any movie, the continental op,
Philip Marlowe, Tashiro Mifurtc in
"Yojimbo," the stand-up comic, the
mountainman, the toll taker, the
boxer, the spy, the drifter, the loner,
the man who's run out of options.
I will stand alone, and keep
myselfto myself.
·
I will be the Norwegian bachelor
with his dogs and geese, the bicycle
messenger, the all-night security
guard, the old man on the pof&lt;ih, the
black rider, the troubled mercenary,
the unshaven man who mumbles to
himself at the bus stop, the autistic,
the orphan, the abaAdoned, the child
who plays alone, the reader, the
salesman watching soft-core porn in
his semi-posb hole! room.
I will be the power behind the
throne. the victim, the killer, the
solitary witness, the man without
qualities, the adviser, the runner sent
10 get the cavalry, the interpreter.
I will not break on the rack, or
maybe I will . I will be the hermit. I
will bring the nuggets back to iown,
or return empty-handed. I will reject
the blindfold. I will command the
~ I will say "I do." I will sign

'

IND.

W. VA.

Showers T-sfOnns Rain

the papers. I will love you. I will
betray you. You know who I am.
You don't know me.at all.
I will keep bees. I will comb the
shores. I will build a shack in the
jungles of Hawaii. I will be tortured
by demons. Nothing will speak to
me. Everything will speak to me.
Bob Dylan will speak to me.
It'll be just me and my guitar, me
and my tllumb, the remote, me and
my shadow, me, myself and I. I am
W.C,. Fields. I am not Spock. I will
never join the Federation, never. The
way I vote will always be my busi ness.
Watch for the Single Man March.
It'll be easy to miss ·· just me, walk·
ing down the street. And don't try to
join me, all right'? Find your own
damn parade.
(To receive a complimentary Ian
Shoalcs ncwsleuer, call 1-H00-989DUCK or write Duck's Breath, 408
Broad St .. Nevada City, CA 95959.) :
' lon Shoales Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association ..
(For informatio11 on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact
America Online by calling 1-800·
1
817-6364, exL 8317.)

I

Flurrlss

Vfa AuocJattd Pms GflphlcsNet

·

It's beginning to feel like fall in
Ohio.
Some clouds will linger into
tonight, but it will remain dry. The
. clouds cover will keep temperatures
up a bit with lows from 35 to 40, the
National Weather Service said.
High pressure will provide a mix
·,
of clouds and sun on friday. It will
still be cool with highs 55 10 60.
The record high temperature for
today's dale at the Columbus weather stalion is 88. set in 1897. The
recond low of 30 was set in 1944.
Sunset today will be at 6:50 p.m.
Sunrise on Friday will be at 7:44a.m.
Across the nation
A lingering cold front off the New
England coasl created it line of light
·, showers over the Northeast this
morning. Clouds covered much of the ·
South and Midwest. while skies were
clear over the Plains and West.
Light rain was expected today in
coastal areas from Maryland to
Maine and partly cloudy skies were
predicted for the remainder of the
Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions.
Clouds and scattered showers

Patrol tickets driver in 2-car crash

The Buckeye Farm Market, located at the comer of New Lima Road
and State Route 124 in Rutland will
have its grand opeding Saturday
Daace to be held
1cs
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloud)'
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
A dance will he held at the VFW
There will be free coffee, cider, ·
Post
90S3, Tuppers Plains, hall, Sat·
and donuts served, mini-pumpkins
unday,
8 to II p.m. with Guy Thoma
will be given out, and door prizes will
· and the True Country Band providing
be awarded every hour.
The market features soft serve ice the music.
Friday.• Partly sunny and still cool. cream, a variety of sandwiches and
Highs 55 to 60.
pies, along with fresh fruit and veg- ~pickup scheduled
Extended forecast
Middleport village workers will
etables, apples, Amish products, deli
Saturday... Dry north. A chance of meats and cheeses, and h...Vest dec- pick up leaves Monday starting at the
rain central and south. Lows 35 to 40 orations including pumpkins and village limits near Fruths Pharmacy.
and highs around 60.
gourds.
Sunday and monday .. .A chance of
'
Carnival to be held
rain. Lows in the 40s and highs in the Trick or treat set
A fall carnival will be held at the
50s.
Pomeroy will have Trick or Treat Chester Elementary School Saturday.
Dress will be western theme. The
on October 30 from 6 to 7 p.m.
snack shop will open at 5:30p.m. and
games will slart at 6 p.m. There will
Dnunatobep~ented
games, cake walk, and door prizes.
A presentation titled "Power of
Darkness A Biblical Drama" will be Trustees to meet
The Letan Township Trustees will
were expecled over southern Georgia presented Oct. 25 at 'the First Bap.
met
at 6 p.m Monday at the office
and into northern florida. Isolated tist Church of Jackson, 35 Broadway
building.
thunderstorms were also possible, but St., in Jackson. All youth and adults
no severe weather was expected.
arc invited to auend the program
Nol much in 1he way of precipi- which begins at~ p.m. A pizza party Homecoming to be observed
The St. Paul United Methodist
tation was expected in the Midwest, will follow.
Church in Tuppers Plains will
but light rain was possible across
observe its annual home&lt;:oming SunMissouri, southern Illinois and south· · CCL to meet
.
Middleport Child Conservation day. Worship will he held at 10 a.m.,
ern Indoana.
·
Dry ·and calm weather was fore- League, will meet tonight (Thurs- c..,.Y-in dinner at 12':30 p.m. and the
cast for the Rockies, Oreat Basin and day), 6 p.m. at Rock Springs United afternoon song service at 2 p.m. with
desen Southwest. .~
Methodist Church. A fall festival will Jim Blair and the Southern
Gospelaires from Mariena. The Rev.
A cold front was to approach the be held for the members and their
Sharon Hausman, pastor invites the
PacificNonhwest, wilhskiesbecom- families.
public.
ing mostly cloudy by tonight. Scattered rain was predicted in north- Guest speaker comliiJI
Carleton Church, located off
•
western Washington.
Dry weather was expected for the
remainder of the West.
I
'
High temperatum
10day were
expected to be in the 50s in the
Nonheasl, the 60s in .the Plains and
Northwest, the 70s in the West and
South and the 80s in southern FloriCOLUMBUS (AP) -The newest however, Democrats gave their for·
da.
member
of the Ohio House witnessed mer brother-in-arms a decidedly
The highest temperature in the
a
strange
change of weather during frosty reception.
lower 48 states Wednesday was I04
Most of the Hoose's 39 Democrats
degrees in Oxnard, Calif. The cold- his first walk down the aisle as a rep·
walked
out when Speaker Jo Ann
est spot was Gunnison, Colo., at 18 resentative.
Republicans who occupy the seats Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, introdegrees.
on the north side of the House cham- duced Jolivette. And when she asked
ber warmly welcomed their new col· three Democrats to help escort
league, Gregory Jolivette. 'The fanner Joliveue Ia the House floor, they
refused.
·
points 44.00-45.00; few 43.50 and mayor of Hamilton ~ and former
· Minority Leader Ross Boggs, D·
Democrat- switched panics before
45 .50; plants 45.00-46.50.
Andover,
said his caucus meant no
taking
the
appointment
to
replace
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 41.50disrespect
by spurning the speaker.
Republican Michael Fo~. now a But·
44.00:210-230 lbs. 37.50-41:50.
ler County commissioner.
On tlie soUih side of the House,
Sows: under 500 lbs . mostly
steady; over 500 lbs. steady to mostly 1.00 lower.
Am Ele Power .......................46'1.
Altzo .....................................89.,_
AmrTech ..............................61"1..
Alhland Oll ................. v ........53'.1.
AT&amp;T .....................................45',\
Valley Hospital;
Bank OM ••......••••...•. ,............57\
12:58 p.m., state Route 338,
Bob Evana .......................i ••···18~
Borg·Wemer ......................... 511~•
Racine, motor-vehicle accident. Jason
Champion
................. ,........... 18'1.
Allen, Erin Bolin, Sarah Boles, Mitch
Charm
Shpe
...........................5'1.
Walker, Clayton Shain, treated at the
City Holding .......................... 40'1.
scene. Racine Volunteer fire DepartFederal Mogul ....................... 44'4
ment assisted ;
Gannett .,,,,.........,,,,,,,,,,,.,u,,.55.,.•
4:20 p.m.: Riverside Apanmcnts,
Goodyear.............................70"1.
Kmart ...................................13,_
Middleport, Amber Armstrong,
Linda End ...........................31 "!.
VMH:
Ltd
......................................... 23'4
S:20 p.m., Union .. Avenue ,
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 20
Pomeroy, Dorothy Roberts, treated at
OVB ......................................... 37
the scene. Pomeroy squad assisted.
One Vllley.............................36'1o
MIDDLEPORT
Peoples .................................«~
Prem Flnl •••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••;.•• 23
4:24 p.m .. Meigs Middle School
Rockwell ................................. 58
football field, Daniel Lambert. Holz·
RI)..Shell ................................58\
cr Medical Center.
Sh011ey'e
...............................4"RACINE
Star Bank .............................. 41\
10:05 p.m.. VFD and squad state
Wandy'e .............................. .22.,_
Route 124. motor-vehicle accident.
Worthlngton ..................... "... 2o\
....;t_._
Ty Johnson, VMH.
Stock report• ar• thlt 10:30
RUTLAND
a.m. quot" provldld by Advaat
II :58 p.m., Salem Street. Cassanof Gatllpolle.
.dra Davis. PVH.

Cool, cloudy wea.t her
in store for Ohioans
By The Asaoclated Prill

Barbara E. VanMeter, Rutland, was northbound on state Route 7.
in Salisbury Township Wednesday when she struck and killed a dee( ,
that ran into the path of her 1990 Pontiac, causing moderate damage.:
according t&lt;l a Meigs County Sherifrs Depanment report.

Peach Ford Road on County Road 19,
will have the Rev. Tad Cuckler of
Athens as its speaker Sunday at the
10:30 a.m. service.

Today's weather forecast
Oblo
Today... Some morning sunshine ... Mainly east half...Otherwise
mostly cloudy. Cool with highs from
the lower 50s north to the upper 50s
extreme south.
Tonight. ..Variably cloudy. Lows
from 35 to 40 nonh to 40 to 45 along
the lake erie shoreline and south.

Deer-car collision reported

Meigs announcements
.Grand openlag set

I

I'll be what I am: A solitary malt

Agnes H. Stevens, 77, Middleport, died Wednesday, Oct. 15, 1997, at her
residence. She was born JuneS, 1920, in Langsville, daughter of the late
Selmer A. and Mary Alice Williams Ward.
She atteaded the Middleport Pentecostal Church and was a homemaker.
She'is survived by nieces Evelyn Hobbs of Dexter, Ruth Priddy ofMid,dleport, Kay Shultz of~acine and Tammy fry of Middleport; nephews Donald Ward of Florida, Albert Ward of New Holland and Wilbur Ward of
Langsville; sisters-in-law, Annabelle Ward of Mi!!Pieport and Lillian Baker of Detriot, Mich.; a cousin and several great-nieces and great-nephews.
She was preceded in &lt;Ieath by her hitsband, Clarence J. Stevens in 1991,;
brothers Holland and Ernest Ward and a sister, Charlotte Ward.
Services will be held Saturday, II a.m. at the Middlepon Chape.l ofFish·
er Funeral Home with the Rev. Clark Baker officiating. Burial will follow
in Miles Cemetery, Rutland.
Friends may call Friday, 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

'

l

know what sized companies your
funds invest t.;.ir assets in.
YOUNG INVESTORS: If your
kids arc in grades 5, 6 or 7 Ibis year.
here's a chance for them to write
about money and inayhe even win
$5,000 in the Stein Roe Young
Investor fund shares.
This is the second nationwide ·
essay contest that Stein Roe Mutual
funds has sponsored. ,This year's
topic: "Who in your life has hecn
mosrinfluential in helping you learn
ahout money and investing, and
what have you learned'/"
The contest is open to all students. The deadline for essay entries
is Dec. 31, 1997, and entry forms
can be obtained by calling (8(10)
586-5437 or by visiting Stein Roe's
wch site at www.slcinroc.com.
Good luck!
Dian Vujovich Is the author of
"Straight Talk About 1\'futual
Funds" and "Straicht Talk About
Investing for Your Retirement,;"
both of which are published by
Mt:Graw Hill. Send questions to
her Ia care of this newspaper, or
via e-mail at MisMutualaol.eom.

No injuries were reponed in a three-vehicle accident on stale Route '
338 near Manuel Road in Letart Township around 12:53 p.m. Wednes·'
day.
David T. Hoback, 16, Racine, was southbound when the 1989 GMC
pickup he was driving was struck in the rear by a following 1989
Chevrolet Cavalier driven by Jason T. Allen, 17, ofSyracuse. Allen's
car was then struck in th~ar by a 1991 Ford pickup driven by
Mitchell Walker, 16. Raci~. according to a Meigs County ~herifrs :
Depanment repon.
.
:
Walker and Hoback's vehicles sustained light damage while Allen's·
car received heavy damage. The Meigs County Emergency Medica!:
Service responded to the scene. No citations were reported.

Agnes H. Stevens

subject to federal law," she said .
According to Eastland, Reno has
never responded to the arguments
posed by Common Cause. "Everyone has taken bits and pieces or this,
the attorney general in particular,
without focusing on the whole thing,
the 'conspiracy,' if you will," Eastland said in an interview.
Reno should appoint an independent counsel not only because there
is "specific and credible" evidence ·,
of a conspiracy by persons covered
by the independent counsel statute,
but also because she is involved in
real conflicts of interest.
.So far as is known, the Justice
Department is investigating only
1996 campaign wrongdoing by the
Clinton campaign. There is evidence
that the Dole campaign also did
what Clinton did and deserves
investigation. for lhe auorney general of one pany to decide whether
to investigate the opposition as well
as her own side is a conflict.
j
Reno also ought to appoint an
independent counsel because, a.• the
Washington Post made plain in a
brilliant piece of reponing last week,
the Justice Department has botched
its investigation. Instead of aggressively investigating whether top
While House oflicials violated the
law, as the FBI urged, the Post
reported that Ju.oicc's prosecutors
I
collected newspaper clips and "re·
reported" the facts to sec whether
evidence developed against higherups.
Even though Justice began its
probe early this year, it was not until
late September that Ickes rtnally was
interviewed, despite the fact that he
was the top manager 'of Clinton's
campaign.
Reno also has a conflict of inter·
est because she is now so defensive
about and protective of the Justice
Department's jurisdiction over this :
case t~at she is sacrificing the inter·
ests of even-handed justice.
The 1996 presidential election
was conducted with money that
surely skirred and seems to have
broken the 1974 law. Since Reno
can't see the conspiracy, sbe needs
to app&lt;!int an independent investigator who can.
(Morton Kondracke is execu·
live editor of Roll C.l, the news·
paper of Capitol Hill.)

A mixed portfolio. smooths the bumps

Three-vehicle accident probed

conditions and

AcctiWeather• forecast for

Reno must name special prosecutor

Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Weather ~hanges
in House ·c hamber

The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol cited Donald W.
Shaffer, 21, Racin~ assured clear distance following a two-car acCi·
dent Wednesday on State Route 338.
:
Troopers said Shaffer was nonhbound, I04 feet north of Letart Township Road 98 (Manuel) at noon when he was unable to slow in time and
struck the rear of a car driven by Jill A. Lemley, 17, 33094 New Lima
Road, Rutland.
Lemley had slowed for traffic at the time of the crash, according 10
the repon.
Damage to both cars was slight.

Testimony underway...
Continued from page 1
"I w115 trying to show this could be be used at trial.
a sign or a drug-seeking person," he
Witnesses said ragents raided
testified ~bout· a woman who asked Westmoreland's offi&amp;'e with guns
Westmoreland for a second prescrip- drawn and ordered 15 lo 20 patients •
tion after her purse was allegedly to stand against a wall. Agents also
stolen with her medication inside.
pointed guns at Weslmoreland's
Defense attorneys also questioned
housekeeper and his 9-year-old pajathe use or evidence collected in the
June 23, 1995, search of Westmore- ma-clad son.
Agents said they drew their guns
land's o(fice and connecting home.
because of reports Westmoreland's
Goodwin last month' ruled that the
teen-age son had a gun.
evidence collected in the search can

New statistics repleased
on Ohio business activities
. WASHINGTON (AP) - Won- nesses in Ohio in 1995, up from
dering whether that new office park 260,775 the year before.
Almost every county had a onesignalled a local business boom? Did
that new multiple. make up for the year gain.
theaters that closed a few miles
away? A new Census Bureau report
.We want to
might be able to tell you.
change the way
Doing what it does best, the
bureau counted up Ohio businesses,
you look at
put them in calegories and today
monuments
released, a half-inch-thick compendium showing all the tallies for all the
counties in the state. ·
Not counting self-employed people, the bureau found 263,739 busi·

Let us create a
memorial just
for you.

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Thursday as provided
by the U.S. Dcpanment of Agricul·
ture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: unevenly
steady; demand moderate with mod craie movement.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country

Quality memorials since 1890

POMEROY
Near Pomaroy-Maaon Bridge

Meigs EMS logs 8 calls

,,

.

Stocks

.

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded eight
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units
responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I:25 a.m .. Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy, George Genheimer, Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
7:56 a.m., Union Avenue,
Pomeroy, Dorothy Roberts. Pleasant
. . ...'

The Daily Sentinel
CUSPS liJ•960)

Publisht"d cvuy ~rlernoon, Monday lhrough
Friday. Ill C'ourl St .. Pomeroy, Ohi~l, hy lhc

Ohio VaiiL:y Pul:tlishing C'OOlpany/ G~tnm:u C'o..
Pnmeroy. Ohio 457119, Ph. IJ'I2·2 Uil. S~C\1mJ
class polllage p;~id "' Pomcn1}1, Ohio.

Mrm~r: The 1\nuciatcd¥-o:u, and the Ohtn
Nt.w&amp;paper...\1110\: ialiun.

POSTMA!!IIER: Send addrus tMrcctKlnS to
The Daily Sl!'ntlnd , I II ftlUTI St ., PnmcrCiy,
SVBSCRIPTION MATES
By C1rritr or Molor Ro•lt
One Week .................................................. S2.Ut
One Month ................................................ $.H.111
One Year ............................................... S1114 .111

Gallla County Dlaplay Yard
155Maln St

TouRS Or

. . . . . . . . . .=;;;;;=

Ohio H7fl9.

992·2588
VINTON

RIC HOMES!
. •. 1?97 • Middleport. Ohio

· of 7 historic homes and
··'1:00 pm to 5:00 pm.
Sales:

SINCLil COPY PRICE
DAily .................................... ................ :l~ rents
S..bscribert not dctirinj tn pay the urricr may
remit in a&lt;tva1ce direct to The Daily Sentinel
on o~Jhr«, ••x or 12 month basts. Ctedit wilt liE
Jh•en ca"ln each week.
No 1ubscripl10n by mail permiued itt areas
where horne Cllrrier .e~ic~ isawailable .
Publi1hcr rcf&lt;rvcl the Tllhl to adj"U rates dur·
tng the subKription pe:nod. Subscnplion tate
chancu may be implcme:nttd by chan&amp;•nltlle

Council. P.O. Box 27.
415760

I
'

J

duration Of tltc subscrlptton.
MAILSVISCRIPTIONS

l•lde Melal CoUtJ
IJ Weeki ............................................... t 27.3tt
26 Weeb ................................................. $SJ.tt2
~2 Wec.ks .................................... ,.......... SIII!i .~
.. Ratn O•tlldr Metp Co••tJ

13 Week&amp;.............. ,......................... ;.. , .... 129.2.5
26 Weelts ................................. ................SS6.61'!
52 Wt.tlt&amp;
.......... SIU9.72

I

�'

.

·sports
.,I

The Daily Sentinel
Thuraday, October 1&amp; 1997

'

Mi-ller to take on Southern Friday
quarters and a half the game was results will be .~ same. .
much closer than the final score. But
Barr ~ad, Turnovers killed us.
then the flood doors collapsed and a We are ntll youn~ and have to learn
deluge of plane-breaking touchdown to play t~ these bag games. W,e ~f!ade
runs began.
some mastakes and they capttahzed
Trimble's Robbie Cooper ran for on them."
164 yards against. the Southern
Southern dropped at least five
defense, most of whtch came 10 the passes that would have ~n btg
s~ond half. AlthoughCooper was as plays and would have ~tven the
shck as stlk and dommated the sec- game a dtfferent complexton before
and half. the game itself was sloppy II got completcly out of h~. One
as the te~ms combmed for 12 such play went toto S~uthem s ~nds
turnovers-stx for each team.
fr~e and, clear then sltpped out tn~o a
Southern mu~t play four quaners Tnmble defender for an mtereeptaon.
of defense agatnst Mtller or the

Meigs to host Alexander
for homecoming Friday
By DAVE HARRIS

Rolston has completed 24 of 95
Sentinel Correspondent
passes tor 395 yards and three touchMeigs will try and break out of a downs. His favorite receivers is Jason
mid-season slump when the Maraud- Hawk with 10 receptions for 220
ers host the Alexander Spartans in the yards and all three touchdowns.
Marauders 1997 Homecoming FriThe Spartan running attack is led
day evening at Bob Roherts Field.
by Dan Metts. Metts is a 5-9, 175Thc Spartans under first year pound junior and has rushed for 659
Head Coach Kris Kostival are 2-5 on yards in 123 carries and six touchthi. season and 0-2 in the Ohio Divi- downs.
sion of the TV C. This is the first year
The Marauders won their first
the Spartans have played in the "Big three games, but then have dropped
School" Ohio Division. Alexander four straight games. The first three
finished the season last year with a 7- losses all came by less than a touch3 mark overall and a perfect 5-0 in down. two of those came to state
the Hocking Division. But with the ranked teams in West Virginia. In
addition of Waterford to the Hocking 'those four losses the combined record
Division, Alexander moved up to the of the four teams is 23-4 with Tolsia
Ohio Division .
and Nelsonville-York both sporting
Among the losses the Spanans perfect 7-0 marks.
have the season w.as a loss to
Last week, Meigs couldn't get
Portsmouth Notre Dame. The Titians things untracked from the start and
are coached this year by former lost a 30-0 contest at NelsonvilleMeigs Marauder standout and York. The Buckeyes are 7-0 on the
Marauder assistant coach Bob Ash- · year and are ranked seventh in Diviley. Last week the Spartans lost 63- sion III in Ohio.
12 to Vmton County.
Meigs features a balanced offense
The Spartans welcome back I 0 · led by the one-two running back tanstarters and 10 letter winners from dem of Justin Roush and Matt
last year's Hocking Division cham- Williams. Roush a sophomore full·
pionship team. Leading the returnees ,back has picked yp 592 yards in I 05
is Lance Rolston. Rolston is a 6-foot, carries, Williams a senior tailback has
I SO-pound senior and is a three year chipped in with 501 yards in 124 carstarter at quarterback for Alexander. ries.

. Brad Davenport has completed 56
of 98 passes for 57% and 820 yards.
Jeremiah Bentley has caught 23 pass·
es for 291 yards, Chad Hanson I4 for
197 yards, John Davidson nine for
206 yards and J. T. Humphreys seven for 59.
Offensively the Marauders has
scored 150 points and are averaging
21.4 points a game, Alexander has
scored 90 points and are averaging
12.9 a contest. On defense Meigs has
given up 127 points ( 18.1 points a
game) and Alexander 179 (25 .6
points a game).
"Alexander has one of the •more
talented athletes in the league in quarterback Lance Rolston,' Marauder
coach Mike Chancey said of this
week's opponent. "They have a very
good running back in Metts and are
big and strong up front. We are going
to have to be ready to play football
and cut down on our mistakes to b e
successful on Friday.
It will be homecoming for the
Marauders. The 1m homecoming
queen will be crowned in pregame
ceremonies that will get underway
around 7 p.m. Queen candidates
include Lauren Anderson, Billi Bentley, Shannon Jenkins, Heidi Lcgar
and Melissa Ramsburg. Kickoff for
the football game will be 7:30.

Adam Cummings caught thnee
passes for S5 yards, Matt Dill was 46, and Juan Writesel 2-23;
Miller crushed Waterford last
week 42-12.
Miller plays a stunting 4-3 defense
and
-I offense.' 'They lost eight
startt offensive players from last
year d 10 starting defensive players, but actually are mut:h better than
last year's club at 4-3.
Miller's backfield is loaded with
three talented tailbacks, two talented
quarterbacks, and two talented fuii backs. Heath Howdyshell, an all-district performer last season returns at
tailback, and Tony Riley is back at
quarterback. Dave Riley and Andy
Arkley share time at tailback.
Miller and Southern both fell to
Southeastern, and both defeated
South Gallia, the lone common opponents. Southern can climb back into
the Tri- Valley Conference race with
a big win Friday.
Although Miller has won big in
several of its contests, the scores are
deceiving. Those games were against
less than worthy opponents,. including a 42- 12 win over Federal Hock~
ing a couple weeks ago.
Game time is 7:30 at Miller.

Division front-runner Trimble
to
take on winless Eastern
.

'

Qy-SCOTT WOLFE
just 25 net yards rushing, 65 yards
seirtlnel Correspondent
gross .
: This week, the winless Eastern
Jeremy Kehl had another good
Eagles face Trimble on the road. receiving night with two catches for
:ffiey hope to cut down on mistakQ 57 yards, and Wes Sanders caught a
)1&amp;1 play the upbeat, control type - big-catch for 25 yards. Eastern's Nate
PJPe they played two weeks ago Radford, Steve Durst, Abe Rach,
llJ!IIinst Southern. Last week. Eastern Chris Buchanan and .Adam Sanders
l'en: 13·6 to Federal Hocking in an each had fumble recoveries.
emOtionless game that saw many
Last year Trimble finished the sea·
mistakes.
son at 6-4 overall and 3-2 in the Tri: : Eastern scored the first points of Valley Conference's Hocking Divi~ game, a match that turned into a sian, a third place finish.
"PIImblcfest" before the final buzzer.
The Tomcats .lost 13 players from
iJOcJ, teams began shooting naming last year's club, six offense and sev~ws into their own moccasins. en defense, but has a strong nucleus
&amp;stem took advantage of the first with nine overall starters returning.
miscue when Federal fumbled on the
Coach Phil Faires is in his fourth
~QS 37 yard line. Five plays lateral season at the school with a 17-13
)hi 1:44 mark in the first frame, record and was part of the TVC co:,4.(1am Sanders blitzed into the end championship in 1995.
1Jml: with a seven yard run for a 6-0
Trimble runs out of an !-formation
~em lead. The two-point conver- and runs a standard 5-2 defense:
9ioll pass fell incomplete.
Trimble losses included three-year
: Eastern's Josh Hager led the East- starter at quarterback Zach Miller,
rushing with 6 carries for 25 wide-receiver Eric Reynolds, Tim
:Vlii-ds, Shaun Long was 4-12. and Osborne, an ace runner, and Chris
:,4.0am Sande,!.'!,_was 8- 17 with a Sh~fer.. Additionally. Trimble lost its
~hd6Wif.Sacks limited Eastern to enttre mtenor offenstve and de fen-

em

r-.
&amp; Cavs In
. k $107M pact
~mp
..-

8Y CHRIS SHERIDAN

sive line. At one point, Trimble has ·
·had seven freshmen on the field .
With the exception of Miller's
loss, the backfield remains intact with
Anthony Collura and Robbie Cooper returning at tailback. Brady Trace
moved from fullback to quarterback.
Trace has proven to be a good passer with targets Josh Limo, Rick Nott
and Robbie Cooper: Carl Fouts had
joined Cooper and Trace in the backfield at times and is a capable runner.
Trimble's inexperience has shown
in big losses to Symmes Valley and
Chesapeake (56-20).
Trimble running hack Robbie
Cooper had four touchdowns and 164
yards in leading the Tomcats to a 346 triumph over Southern last Friday
night at Glouster Stadium . Trimble
took the upper hand in the Hocking
Division race, tying with Miller for
the top spot at 2-0. Overall Trimble
is 3-4. Southern is third in the league
at 1-1, 4-3 overall.
Southern had held Cooper to just
. 23 yards the first half in a great
defensive ert'on. but Clxlf'Cr ran wild
in the second half for 141 yards.

Cavs spokesman Bob Price said
: :Shawn Kemp of the Cleveland the team would have no comment
&lt;:palicrs is soon to be the newest until an agreement is finali1.cd.
member of the $100 million club.
Cleveland had about $9.5 million
·: : K.emp and the Cavaliers have of salary cap room when it acquired
a~ to a seyen·year contract rcne- Kemp from the SuperSonics in a
gl!Ciation that will be worth about three-way trade that sent Terrell
$347 million. Several details remain Brandon, Tyrone Hill and a first·
tl)l!e worked out, but the monetary round draft piok tu Milwaukee and
fiflllre is not among them, according Vin Baker to Seattle .
to::p source close to the Cavs .
Since then, the Cavs have signed
·--ft will make Kemp the fifth NBA free agent Henry James and n~adc a
~iaier in the S100 million club and trade with Phocni• h&gt;r.Wcslcy Person
wiU end the salary saga of the ex- and Tony Dumas, shrinking thcir&lt;ap
SCaille All-Star whose anger with his room to about $5 million.
ofii :J:ontract played a big pan in driWhen the agreement is finalized,
viia him away from the SuperSonics. that $5 million will he ad&lt;lcd un tu
: ·we' re close, but 1 won't com- Kemp's current $3.3 million cap
ment further than that," said Tony slot. With the 20 pel'llcnt humps each P:liq, Kemp's agent.
year, it adds up to ahout $107 milli&lt;m .

Brady Trace added l2-7K.
Trimble's Josh Limo. the urea's
leading receiver with twer 71XI yards,
caught two passes for )&lt;) yards.
Trimble quarterback Brady Trace,
well un his way to a I,IXMI-yard jl'tssing year, exited in lhc sccnnd hall'
with a pnssihlc ..:oncussiun sull'=rcd
in the first half.

Indians get by Orioles 1-0 in 11 innings to win ALCS

•
•
••••••••
•••
THE
• ••
COOL SPOT

By DAVID GINSBURG
BALTIMORE (AP) - The
Cleve I.and lndtans are convinced that
t~ts lrtp to the World Series will be
dtffe~nt.
Gtven _wh~t they've ~omplished
thus far, tt maght he wtse to beheve
them .
.
The lndaans are back in the World
Series for the second lime in 'three
years, using an II th-inning homer
from last-minute starter Tony Ferpandez to be,at the Baltimore Orio.les
1-0 Wedne~ay ~nd win the AL
Champtonshap Senes 4-2.
V
Cleveland seeks to cement its
first World Series championship.
smce 1948, hegtnning Saturday night
on the road against the Florida Marhns.
.
The Indians went 86-75 during the
regular season, struggling at times
before winning their third straight AL
Central title. Then came the playoll's,
and thmgs started getting a little magical.
First, the Tribe rallied from a 2-1
deficit to eliminate the defending
champion New York Yankees in the
best-of-five division series. Then
Cleveland ousted the team with the
best record in the league, beating the
Orioles with four one-run victories.
Baltimore won 12 more regularseason games than the Indians.
" If people really loo~ed at the
character of this ballcl~b. if they
looked at the reasons why we were
sputtering ail year long, they'd understand injuries have had a lot to do
with our regular season," manager
Mike Hargrove said.
"It's no coincidence that our team
straightened out and started playing
belter baseball in September. We've
got a good bunch of guys who have
a lot of heart, a lot of character and
a lot of talent."

~\~tl\SARY CELEBJt4~lo

·1·

'1

~

Saturday, Oct. 18th

~,,

I

~~"R•IfllnFor
$100 Gas

ru

Certificate
$50 Gas
Certificate
26" Huffy
......,IIIOUintailn Bike

LIVE REMOTE 1 TO 4 Will

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

••

• ' 11

Rt. 7, Coolville Exit

•

Open 24/7

•

•

•

DON ·,.A'rE MO'rORS,
310 E. MAIN ST.

(614) 992-6614 • (800) 837·1094P

POMEROY, OHIO 45769

OtE\IRDLET

Baseball

Fr11nk Kyle, uainer, from Withha of 1be Tc1u11
Leoaue lo Onmbo. of lhe American Auocialion.
Named John Mizerm::lr. manaaer, Mike Mason
pik'hinJ coach und John finley trainer for Wi~hita.

American League
Championship Series

World Series slate
Saturday's game
Cleveland (TBA) at Floridn (Hcrnnndet
8 : 0~

p.m.

Oevdand at AoridD. 1 :3 ~ p.m.

c:cwati'Ods of Carlos Alfonao. Gene Clinn.

N---A-ton

MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVE.\: Wlli'fll."d G
Jimmy KinJ Md G Vil.:cor Paf.e.
SEATTLE SUPERSONICS: Wlived C Ed

Thunday, 0.:1. 23
Aorida at Ck'teland. 8:20p.m.• if nc&lt;.·eunry

~hokfi .

Saturday, Oct.15

FootbaU

Cle'fl el:md at Florida.. 8 p.m., if neceswy

Sunday, Oct. 16
Cleveland
•"Y

'

at

Florida. 7:)!i p.m. EST. if ntces-

Hockey

N.tionai'U.ke, Ltea•
NHL: Suspendrt.l Edmonton Oilm D Kevin
~for lhn!e games :uw.l final him $1 ,001 for 11
high-llickinc incident in 110 Oct. 13 same a,:sin~l

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Adanlic I:Nwl.._

:lr I. I lis. !if !iA
I 0 12 21 I ~

Wasbington ....... ..............6
Philildt:lphia. ..................... :;
NewJmey ...................... J
N.Y. Rnngers ................. I
Florida ... ............................ 2

2 I
2 0

II 2-1
6 D

2 4
2 I

b

I~

Tnmpa Bay ........................ 2 ,:\ I

~

D

N.Y. lslamk"''li .. ......... ........ .! 2 l

4 II

Northtast Dlvls6on

_, 1.1

~- 0

H 22

J 2 2
...................... J ,:\ 2

l4 19
11 11
6 12

. .4

Pin~bur~h

MunJrl!nl ................ ........ 2 I 2
Buffatu ................... ........... 2 ~ 2
Can•lirm .................... ......... 1 :'i 2

: •:

6

IH

4 17

ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS: Sc111 LW JerePlY S!ev~nson to CincinMi Q( the AHL.
EDMONTON OILERS : Acqui~d F Jasun
Dnwcn from 1ht: PhiiDtklrfliu Flyen for F 8r&amp;uttt
17
Myhn:s.
14
I.OS ANGELES KINGS: Assiencd 0 Jan
I~
VC'If\1tlu Utah or It'll: IHL.
I~
MONTREAL CANADI!;NS: Sent I&gt; Frm11.1.tis
- Groleuu ID J=n.•tk.•riclun or lh!.: AHL.
. - - - - - - - ; , . , ; ; . ; ; ; ; , ._ _ _..,1
22
Ill
19
10
20
Football
2~

:lr I. I lis. !if !iA

I I
.......... .!i I 0

St. Louts
Daii:L~ ...
PhocniK
Turolll(l..

27
21

.. .........\ 2 I
..... ..\ 2 1
. ............ 2 -1 I

II
141
7
1
:;

.. .......... 0 () 0

0

b

PlK'inc Diwl!llun
.. ........ 5 0 2

V;m~,;~lU¥1.'1'. ....

Edn-oontt10 ....

.. ....... 2 2

I

.. ....... 2 -1 I

LnJ An}!~ll' ~ ...............r .... 1 J .l

un Jtl!:l' .. .. ........ ...... ......... 2 4 0
11:1hcim .......................... . ! 2 2
;~l~ar y .............................0 4 2

20
11

12

12 24
~ 1J
;li · 14
5 25

J-1
12
I]

17
111
2-1

·ALAMEDA. Calif. (AP) - Larry Brown, the 1996 Super Bowl
MVP for Dall"" but a bust with Oakland the past two seasons, was suspended indefinitely by tbc Raiders for
"conduct detrimental to the team."
The Raiders signed the free-agent
defensive back to a five-year, $12.5
million contract hcfore last season.

4

15

16

K

II
19

Wednosday's scores

.,

219 N. SECOND

992-5627

MIDDLEPORT

U

27
26

BUCKEYE fA'RM MARKfT
'RUTLANV,
OHIO
..

Bufraltt J. Carnlioo .\ (ti~tl
ouawiJ 5. N.Y R:tag~tn I
Pi tt~burgh I. Monr~nll Hie )
Flnridu 2. Tnmpa Buy I
Tnwmu 4. Detroit J
W:1shinj!.IU II 2, Chu,:ap.n 0
Colorao.ltl 6. &amp;.lmon!on 2

992·5829

KEEP IT
THAT WAY.

v--

12

-&amp;

2 12

A DANCE.

-Sports briefs--

c~nt .... ~vl!du

O....'frnil ........... .............. 5

THE TWIST IS

'Yafti."'UYCr.

17
12

WESTERN CONFEI' ENCE
Iwn

NalkiMI , ...... Lnw•
BALTIMORE RAVENS: Signed DE Kellh
Wnshlng1ot1 tn a two-yrar Cnntmct. W::ai '"cd LB
T)ftll PetBS.
BUFFALO BILLS : Waived QB Rilly Jne
Hoben.
OAKLAND RAIDERS :. Sianct.l LB Anrnn
Wnllno:.~ to a one-ye:!V contract. '

Hockey

NHL standings
Iom

l..ollet aRd Ran Ptrmi'IOIIki.

llukotbltll

Wednesday, O.:t. 22

614-711-2·7405

OoJhlll ~ - U.1~ An~~ k-.J

Philaddphi:11. Anahd m l
Toni~:ht's

(lit:)

games

FllH'tJa nl O..lla.'. ll:J() p.m.

Terlyakl iuna
Lemon Dill Cod

17
17 Caribbean Mahl
17 Marinated Grilled
Terlyakl Salmon

992·5829

N.Y. h lanJt•rs al San J• lSC. 10:.1Q p.m1

Friday's games

TIRED Of BURGERS?
•
TRY THE HEAlTHY
ALTERNATIVE

Montreal m Buffa lo. 7 .10 p.nt
New Jer!il:)' at Drtawa. 7:.'0 p.m.
Pillsburgh at T:tlllp;l h~y. 7JO 11.111.
St. Louis at Chi.:ngn. Hp.m
ColomJu at C:1lpu-y. 9 p.m.
Boslf.IIJ .:11 Vu"'"ou.,t:r, 10 fl.m.
Philadelphiu a1 Los An~k s. IO:JO p.m.
Edmoftlon a1 Anaheim, 10:30 p.m.

*ASI FOR FREE SAMPLES*

Transactions

JOIN US IN CELE8RA TING OUR

G'RANV OPENING
SA7U'RVA.Y,· OCTOBE'R 18
9:00A.M TO 6:00P.M.

PR££ C()Hft, CI'DFR., 'DONUTS, MINI PUMPKINS
OOOR PRIZES ~y tiOU'R

Baseball

ST.

American Ltque
ANAHEIM ... NOELS: Announced RHP Shad
Williams refused In out'right auianmtnr 10 V.a ncou'fler of the PCL to btcomt a frte agent. As•ilned RHP Faulfo Macey Wid C BreN HemptUII
ootri&amp;htlo Va.ncouver.
'
80S TON RED SO)C : A11i1ncd 01\ C•uil
Pride, LHP RafD.I!I Orcll11110 and RHP C~rlo1
Vakil!! outright 10 Puwlucktl or the lntetnat1onlll
Leaaue. Recaltcd OF Pal Bryonl from Paw1ucket.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS : Prnmo1cd Ron
John10n, tnMIIFf, Gary Lllnet, pirchln1 &amp;:Oith, 1nd

7 NORTH

SOFT SERVE IC£ CRfA~
HCMEU4VE CHIU
HOTOOGS
VEU MNDki!CffES

FRESH FRUIT ANV \ifGUASLES
SEYeiML VA1t1EiltS Cf APPLES
AMISH PRODUCTS
VEU MMTS AND CHeESES

Pl£

HO~P£ APPL£ 8U1Tf'R

HARYEST VECORA noNs

PUJ..ip)(J/IIS AND &lt;iCUROS

•
-,

..

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

...

,._

League Champi!Jnship Series Wednesday night
In Baltimore, where the Indians won 1·0 to win
the AL pennant Vizquel hurdled Anderson and
threw out Roberto Alomar at first to complete the
double play. (AP) .

Millcr. a host for the cable net-'
Baseball
work
's "Basehall Tonight," pleaded
CLEVELAND (AP) - ESPN
broadcaster Gary Miller denied in innoce nt in Cleveland MuniciJiaJ:
~court that he urinated onto off-duty Court to charges of public indcceg-;:;
police officers from a dance club's cy. aggravated disorderly conduct
and resisting arrest..
._
second-story window.

Diet Pole, pih:hhiJ coact.. Named Rnn Perranoski pitctlins coach.

Florida ::~1 Ck-..eland. 8:20p.m.

....

-...........-.::-- ---, ------Sports briefs----,-----

Jonbn outright 10 Norfolk.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES: Rctea.:d INF Ed-

Fi~

Flonda nt Ck'flehmd, 8:20p.m.

Chk a~;n ...

992·5829

CAN'T BREAK IT UP - Baltimore's Brady
Anderson slides under Cleveland shortstop
Omar Vlzquel in a vain attempt.t o break up a dou·
ble play after being thrown out at second base
in the first Inning of Game 6 of the American

CHICAGO CUBS: Claimtd 28 Juon Hardrb:
offwai\'etl from the New Yortc Mcrs.
HOUSTON ASTROS: Announced 1hat Bill
Virdon, bench ~;oach. wiU not RtUm. NamN Mall
Galo.ntt be8dl coach.
·
NEW YORK METS: AniJned LHP Ri~ardo

Sonny Jacboa. Juan

Notes: Washmgtun Post co l um~
nist Shirley Pavich , 92, collap;cd In
the stadium hcfore reachtn g his ;cut.
He· was rushed to a hospital and w~'
in stable condition late Wednesday... ;,
Palmeiro came to the plate in the:
postseason with 14 runners in :-.t,;ur-·
ing position. He stranded 13 of them ..

·' .,

Na_t._,..

coochirt~

Tuesday, O.:t. Z1

IUD AFRESH STAITI
Wnplty • Slo~ CMt
•Ill eM!. Wt., ..
.W.IIWpl
Ask lor .. Ins .

Eastern's Matt Kiog. a junior at
ljastern High School, was named to
second team aii-Tri-Valley Conference recently.
His 42. I average helped the
Eagles to their best finish in school
history.
t{e is the son of Curtis and Linda
King of Chester.

John Ericb OUiriaht to Clllpy 9f thcl PCL.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS : Renewed the

· Sunday, O.:t. 19

lose."

-~·-

die Williams. Sen1 LHP Man Ruebel aniJ RHP

Bt&gt;stun ...
Ottawo1.

9-4

9-~ ) .

of those three to fai l to win the World
Series .
" I don't think we have nnything to
he -disappointed about. We got t ~ the
ALCS for the 2nd year in J mw. We
j ust didn't get it done," Balt1mote
outfielder Eric .Davi s said. "Our
pitchers pitched their tail&lt; uff. their
pitchers pitched their tails off. It's JUSt
a situation that someone hud

.--•

\

King gets
TVC honors

OAKLAND ATHLETICS : Claimed LHP

WtdnndiJ'I tc'Oft
ClcvclanJ I , Bahirt'IOI't 0 (II); Cleveland wins
senes 4-2

1991 CHEVY K1500 PICKUP 4X4 air, ps, pb, cruise, stereo, liL .......................$9,769
1995 CHEV K1500 PICKUP vs, 5 speed, 4X4 .................................. 'T' ............. $14,900
1996 CHEVY S·10 BLAZER auto., ys, stereo,air, loaded .................................... $18,650
1995 TOYOTA TACOMA 4X4 5speed, ps, pb .................................................... $13,850
1994 GMC SIERRA PICKUP VB, auto., air, tiH, cruise .........................................
$13,820
i!
1995
CHEVY C1500 PICKUP Ext. Cab, va,liH, cruise ................................ :....... $15,850
.
'
1996 CHEVY 5-10 PICKUP ps, pb, stereo,-airto................ ...................................$9,950
1996 CHEVY TAHOE va, auto., all power, 4X4, 22,000 miles ................................$26,900
1990 GMC SAFARI VAN vs, auto., stereo, tiH, cruise ........................:.................... $7,995
1992 CHEVY ASTRO VAN Conversion, VS, loaded ................................................ $9,700
1994 MAZDA 84000 PICKUP 4X4, V-6, stereo, more .........................................$11,500
1994 CHEVY S-10 EXT. CAB auto., ps, pb, stereo.~ ............................................$10,975
1997 PONTIAC TRANSPORT vs, ps, pb, air, tiH, cruise ..................................... $19,950
1995 FORD RANGER PICKUP stereo, 5speed, more .......................................... $7,595

time, retiring 20 of the fi rst 21 bat' happen all year," Orioles manager
ters while all owing only a leadoff Davey Johnson said.
double by David Justice in the fifth.
Brian Anderson got the win, pitchHe left after allowing only one hit, ing a scoreless I Oth inning, and Jose
two walks and striking o~t 10.
Mesa got !free outs for the save.
. Mussina's l~ne for the ALCS: 15
The Orio les won a league-best 98 ·
tnnmgs, four htts, no earned runs, 25 games dunng the regular season and
strikeouts and two no-decisions. He were the third AL team to stay in fi rst,
set records filr strikeouts in anALCS place from wire-to-wi re.
(25) ahd in one postseason (41 ).0
They'll be remembered as the first
Btiltimore stranded 14 runners \ilr
and went 0-for- 12 with runners in
scoring position. Rafael Palmeiro
was the worst offender, going 0-for3 and stranding five.
Cleveland managed only three
hits and won the game anyway.
The Indians finally broke the
scoreless battle in the lith, when Fernandez launched a 2-0 pitch from
Armando Benitez over the 25-foot
scoreboard in right field to stun the
crowd of 49,075. Roherts was
removed from the lineup after taking
a line drive below his left thumb.
"I knew something special was
going to happen tonight,obutl couldn't tell you I was going to hit a home
run," Fernandez said. " It worked out
·for the hest. I'm glad I was able to
contribute in a positive way."
Benitez al so gave up the gamewinning hit in Game 2, a three-run
shot bt' MVP Marquis Grissom, and
the decisive RBI single to Sandy Alamar in Game 4.
" Unfortunately, he 's a young
pitcher and when you get behind in
the count you can't afford to throw a
pitch up in the strike zone. It didn' t

Vnughn Eahelman off wai'ltn from the Botton Red
Sua.

Baltimoro Ys. Cl..elond

Cok•r:l\lo....

1;7'

This team differs rrom the 1995
squad, which lost the World Series to
Atlanta, in a variety of ways. 'The
Indians no longer have Albert Belle,
but they have a keen grasp or the fundamentals and the desire 10 incorporate teamwork into the formula for
winning.
.
Example: With the game scoreless
and the Orioles threatening with run·
ners on first and second with no outs
in the seventh, third baseman Matt
_V,:illiamli scooped up . a bunt by
Roberto Alomar and wheeled to
throw out the lead runner. Geronimo
Berroa then hit into a double play.
Pour innings later, Fernandez,
replacing late scratch Bip Roberts at
second base, hit his first homer in 133
career playoff at-bats to send the lndians to victory.
Cleveland was the underdog in
both pla)'off series, another dcpanure
from f995.
"This is a totally different feeling.
We're. in a position where we weren 't
·supposed to be," Cleveland starter
Charles Nagy said. "In '95 we were
picked to go to the Series and win it
all. From top to bottom, everybody's
doing the little things we have to do
to win."
Nagy did his part in Game 6,
matching zeroes with Mike Mussina
into the eighth inning.
The Indians managed only one hit
in eight innings off Mussina, who
turned in his second straight' sensationa! performance in a losing cause.
Mussina left afier having thrown 108
pitches in his second su&lt;cessivc start
with three days ' rest.
Mussina set an ALCS record with
15 strikeouts in Game 3, but the Orioles failed to score during his seven
innings and lost 2-1 in the 12th. The
right-hander was even sharper this

Scoreboard

Mon.-Fri.
9-8
Saturday

The Dally Sentinel• Page.S

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Fernandez hits prime-time homer

Page4

'

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
This week, the Southern Tomadoes are again on the rqad, travel ing
the swne route they took to Trimble
last week, up State Route 13. The trek
takes them a few miles further north,
but the Tornadoes hope to bring b•.:k
a different result than last week'&lt;\.,buttkicking loss to Trimble, 34-6.
In last week's loss, Michael Ash
had a 35 _yartl interception run to start
the second half, scoring at the 8: 13
IJlark and cutting the score to 8-6.
Tbe kick failed. Actually, for two

Thu~y,Ckrtober16,1997

------

.

�Thursday,October16,1997

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7;

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

National Adult Immunization Awareness Week being _qbserve~

•

or

1me
BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
f::amlly and Conaumer Sci·
encea/Communlty Develop·

ment
Does it
seem like
there is
always
more
monlh left
than
money?
Does

money
::.._:....:::-&lt;J just seem
to slip through your fingers? What
can you do to plug those spending
leaks?
First you need to recognize the
"triggers" that tempt you to spend.
Do you have to stop at every yard
sale that you drive by • Do you get
, the urge to spend money when you
arc depressed? Do you tend to spend
more when you and your best friend
arc together?
To avoid over-spending, stay

away from things that tempt you to
spend. Make a list aod sick to it •
buy the items on the list, then leave.
Don't shop when you are depressed,
tired, or hungry you may buy things
to make yourself feel better. Before
purchasing an item, ask yourself if
this is the best way to reach your
financial goals.
Make good decisions. Compare
quality and price before buying,
especially on expensive merchandisc. Think of all the consequences
of each possible alternative when
making a financial decision. Could
you get by without buying at this
lime• Can you borrow someone
else's item instead? What about sub·
stituting something less expensive?
Once you make a decision, act on it,
then evaluate it after the purchase.
Learn to say, "No." Don't be
pressured into buying by a sales
pitch or marketing gimmick. You
should not feel obligated to buy
from friends and family member
who arc selling lhings. Try to refrain
from purchasing items that are too
expensive or do not rank high on
your priority list.

1997 FORD

Another trick to avoid overConserve resoWl:es so money lit·
spending is to sleep on yourdecision erally doesn't "go down the drain."
• it may not seem like such a bargain Maintain and repair purchases proptomorrow.
erly to extend their usefulness. You
Evaluate your spending habits to may decide to save money by
see where changes can be made. hivesting your own time and energy
Write down everything you buy for into making the item or performins
several weeks. This allows you to the service yourself.
identify those spending leaks. Are
Expens say that it takes three
you wasting a dollar each day on a weeks to change a habit, so give
candy bar and a can of pop? That's yourself time in plugging those
thirty dollars a monlh! Are there bet- spending leaks. Work on one panicter ways to spend that money?
ular problem until it has changed,
Set some spending limits and use before modifying the next. For
a budget to avoid unneeded purchas· instance, you may begin by always
es. You may even want to use ineen- having a list and sticking to it to
lives to help. the family follow the _avoid impulse buying. After that has
budget. Dinner out after brown-bag- been mastered, practice making your
ging lunch all week may become financial decisions based upon reliyour treat, but don't ruin your bud- able and accurate infonnation1on lhe
get by over-spending on your various products available. Then
reward.
work on reducing your credit purBe careful with credit. It normal- chases.
ly adds to the cost of the item . you
The idea behind plugging up
could be spending that money in those spending-leaks, is for you to
more beneficial ways.
get the most for your money.'By set·
Buy from reputable dealers. Keep ting realistic goals and deadlines
receipts, warranties, and guarantees. you can achieve control over your
Take appropriate action when 1here money.
is a cdmplainl.

ommunity CalendaFSATURDAY
The Community Calendar is pubSALEM CENTER Star
lished as a free service to non-profit Grange 778, and Star Junior Grange
groups wishing to announce meeting 878, annual Halloween pany and
and special events. The calendar is potluck super on Saturday. Potluck
not designed to promote sales or at 6:30 p.m. followed by costume
fund raisers of any type. Items are judging and games at 7:30 p.m.
printed as space permits and cannot Event to be held at the Salem Center
be guaranteed to run a specific num- Fire Station.
ber of days.
CHESTER - Ladies Night Out
THURSDAY
sponsored by Shade River Masonic
POMEROY - Rock Springs Lodge, 6 p.m Saturday, Point of
Better Health Club, I p.m. Thursday View Restaurant.
at lhe home of Barbara Fry.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Middlepon Child
CARPENTER- Carpenter Bap·
Conservation League, 6 p.m.. fall tist Church, located on SR 143, Carfestival for families, Rock Springs penter. homecoming Sunday. Dinner
United Methodist Church.
at noon; afternoon program, I :30
p.m. with special singers, and Joe
ALBANY - Revival, Thursday Gwinn of Gallipolis, speaker.
10 Sunday, 7 p.m. a1 Corner Stone
Gospel Church, Chase Road. EvanRACINE - Homtcomina at
gelists Rev. Herman and Audrey Morning Star United Meth ist
Tranter and ·Rev. RQnnte Traner. ·Church, Sunday. Church, 9:50a.m.;
Homecoming Sunday, 10 a.m. with_ Sunday school. II a.m.; basket dincarry-in dinner. I p.m.
ner, 12:30 p.m.; afternoon program,
1:30 p.m. with special siaging. PasPOMEROY- Meigs Genealogy tor, Dewayne Stutler.
Society, 5: 15 p.m. Thursday at the
Meigs Museum.
POMEROY - Revival services,
Enterprise
United
Methodist

i.

·Third birthday observed

Church,.Sunday through Tuesday, 7
p.m. each evening. R~v. Mel
Franklin, guest speaker.
EAST MEIGS - Homecoming,
South Bethel New Testament

NEW RELEASES IN MUSIC

*'·"
OILY '7.99
•

,.
I

ORLANDO, Aa. (AP) - The
city most favored by honeymooners
doesn't hav~ an Eiffel Tower or
allow romariric walks by the Seine,
but spans Cinderella's castle and
sells hats wi!h Mickey Mouse ears.
Orlando was chosen the top city
for honeymooners in a poll conducted by Bride's magazine. The poll
. surveyed 1,000 readers who had
recently returned from their honey·
moons.
"A lot of people look at their
weddings as being fairy tale experiences. There is a lot of Cinderella,
Prince Charming imaJes buried in
the back of their minds from childhood." said Sally Kilbridge, managing editor of Bride's.
Warm weather and easy access
II so made Orlando a top choice. Ms.
Kilbridge said. Orl111do was followed in the favorite cities category
by Las Vegas, Paris, Chprleston,
S.C., and Sill Francisco.
Orlando also scored well in a sep·
arale catesory - favorite . overall
destination. Orlando came 1n thud
place, behind Hawaii and Jamaica. ·

$22,949

$22,949

351, V-8, auto.,

•

1997 TOYOTA AVAloN
1995
f

.,

FORD
MUSTANG GT
V-8, auto., 1ir cond.,

AMIFM ~•• CD, all
power equip.
locll trade.

MERCURY
COUGAR
V-8, auto., air cond.,
AM/FMcaae.,
tilt, crul•,
equipment

$12,949

14 949
·1995

1995

MITSUBISHI
ECLIPSE

LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

~

MORE.

0 949

By BARBARA RUSSI SAR·
NATARO
Tuceon Citizen
Cecilia Maitz used to lie on the
floor ·every morning to soothe the
pain in her back. As she would pull
h~rself back up,- she would beg God
to let her die.
·•
Pat Desmond used to drive to
work and shake his fist at drivers
who cut him off, didn't signal or·
refused to let him merge.
Then the two Arizonans discovered St. John's wort, a traditional
herbal treatment for depression.
Maitz has suffered from depres·
sion for more than 20 years, after a
motorcycle accident left her in
chronic pain from head and spine
injuries. She cannot take pharmaceutical anti-depressants because of
side effects and a liver condition,
and has been taking St. John's wort
for three months. She says she is a
different pt;rson .
"It's wonderful," she said. "It
evens you out. You don 'I have mood

V-8, auto., air cond.,
AMJFM ~ •• tilt, crul•,
pa, pb, pw, pdl.
LOADED.

20 949

5

MIN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

30·%,0FF
Buy 1

Greeting Car•,
Get 1 FREE

swings."

OILY37

30%0FF

DUIUHG WHITE
IUACHIIG IlL &amp;
TOOIHPASIIIH ONE
4 WEEKS SUPPLY

$9.49 OILY $6 39 Ill• $1.99

FORD
EXPLORER Ill

OILY

*1

PRICES GOOD THROUGH

19

4 Dr, V-8, AWD, IUto.,
air cond., AM/FM e111,
CD, all power,
leather.

LOW MILES
1995
Konneth McCullough, R. Ph.

Chflllel lllln., R. Pll.
R - Heming, R. Ph.
Mon. lhnl 1111.1:00 Lm. to 11:00 p.m.
Sunclly 10:00 a.m. to
p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. IIZ-2NB
E. Main
s.Mce Pomero,, Oh.

•:oo

FORD
WINDSTAR
V-8, auto., air cond.,
Clll., tilt, CNile,

.,., pb, more
TWO IN STOCK.

_.MER
• Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy • Cole Slaw
• Biscuit

8

PerMo.

Was .
$23,924

1996
CHEV. 5·10

BLAZER LT

1998 PARK AVENUE
Financing From

0.9%!
1998 BUICK CENTURY

1997 BUICK LESABRE

$21 ~500
Loaded,

$18,988

Rebate to Dealer
seat, atearlng

VERY WELL EQUIPPED!

·'

1uto., llr cond.,
CIA., tilt, crul..,
more•
TWO IN STOCK.

$

1993

MERCURY
COUGAR XR7
SPECIAL EDmON
auto., air cond.,
Clll., tilt, CNI. .,
loadld

,_,. ~~,~ $8 949

l
I

I

INSTALLED • The Rev. Robert J. Coen has been Installed as new
pastor of the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene.
· ·
The ceremony was conducted by the Rev. Herb Zuercher who Is
the Central Ohio District representative for the Church of the
Nazarene headquarters. Scripture passages wree read by the Rev.
Zuercher as well as church secretary. Kathy McDaniel. The church
congregation also responded In agreement during the Installation
ceremony.
Rev. Coen and his wife, Connie, have two children, Katie and
Lindsey. The minister comes to Syracuse from PotterviUe, Mich.
Rav. Coen may be contacted at the church, 992·2514, or the parsonage, 992·3517.

• 15 Patterns in stock
·12ft. wide
Sale
Sq. Yd.

Rtintlo8 Season: -'
Special

949

NDW

Sale

PULSAR &amp; SEIKO

LUMINA
EURO

Gun

WATCHES

4 Dr., V-6, auto., air
AM/FM c:aaa.,
tilt, c:ruiH,
·much more.

$6,949

RGAIH

y

' J."' •.••

.

/

Cabinets
• Huge selection of
styles &amp; wood finishes

25%oFF

• White or Almond Bed
• 4" Foam Mattress
• 2 King Size Pillows

Berbers, Saxony Carpet,
Sculptures, Trackless and
commercial Styles
1

gg
1

Free Quotes, Free .
Removal of old carpet

Glider Boeker
Sale ·
• Oak &amp; Maple Finishes
• Assorted Fabrics
·Lifetime
Starting

Mattress
Sale

.- ~:::: Se's
For0nl)l

at onl'

•Iii •aaa

It's not too early to do your Christmas Shopping!

'

..

Crows Family Restaurant
228 Main St

992·5432

Pomeroy

Sale

Daybed Special

No c:oupon nee e1•IIY
't' ~ ....._

'

~overing

•

1992 CHEV.

,.,~~,,.

'

Vinyl Floor .

,.,~~\'\.21'9 49
GRAND
CARAVAN

Rebate
to

Power asal, CD

~arpet

4 Dr., V-8, suto., 1lr
cond., AMIFM caas, CD,
leather, tilt, cruiA,

1993 DODGE

$191 995.

mile lease. $250.00

36

CD, pa, pb, pw,

$15 9.49

(;RJSPY STRIPS

$249°

0

1997 CHEV. 1500 414
1996"''

DANI • ONE COAl
NAIL EIIMEL

1997 IUNSPORI

1998 GUND AM.G.T. COUPE

DlflH
auto., air cond., am/fm caaa.
tilt, c:ruiH. MORE '

-

.,

4

HOSE

63 C

Onl~ '

.

and rubella (MMR) make adult
immunizations not only safe but cost
effective.
"Our focus on vaccine pre·
ventable diseases has shown that
every dollar spent on immunizations
saves approximately $9 in health
care expenses, while protecting your
hcallh and well-being." concluded
Torres.

1 ''"'"'''

decades, St. John's wort is the lead·
ing anti-depressant, outselling
Prozac 4-to-1. according to repon in
The New York Times.
Desmond's health care provider,
chiropractor Sheldon Deal, said he
has been prescribing St. John's wort
for depression for 10 years.
Unlike pharmaceuti'cal anti·
depressants such as Prozac, Paxil
and Zoloft, St. John's wort is sold
over the counter at major drugstore
chains, health food stores and herbal
and vitamin stores. Some store managers say the product is flying off
lhe shelves.
Dr. Tracy Gaudet, medical director of the University of Arizona
medical college's program in integrative medicine, warns the public
to use caution when self-medicating,

"IIPIIIS

RUSSELL SIOYII ASSOmD
CIOCOLAII HILLOWIEI
101 CAIDY, 1.6 oz.
OILY

fi

Desmond has found that after six
weeks on St. John's wort, he is less
aggressive on the road and less
stressed in his job as a freight train
conductor for Union Pacific Railroad.
"My girlfriend said I was like a
New York cabbie," he said. "Now, I
can't remember what r' was stressing
about, to tell you the truth. It's just
gone."
An aromatic perennial, also
known as Hypericum perforatum,
St. John's wort grows wild in
Europe and the Western United
States.
The plant's bright yellow flow. ers, which produce its active ingredient, hypericin, are most abundant
around June 24 - St. John the Baptist's Day. Wort is an old English
word for plant.
Used for centuries in Europe to
!)cal wounds and tre.lll..depllO,Ssion,
' the herb is becoming j18pulli11':tll the
United States.
In Germany, where studies have
been conducted for
two

IlESE'S CIOCOUR
COVERED PUIUlllml

II

seventh grade should receive a second dose. She said that just recently
the Ohio Department of Health
approved second dose MM R to be
administered upon preparing to
enter kinderganen.
Torres said that studies have
shown that illness and death from
the flu, pneumonia, tetanusldiphthe·
ria, hepatitis B, and measles, mumps

Many with nagging ailments
swear by herb St. John's wort

1995 '

AMITY BILLFOLDS

TIMEX
.

their tetanus shots updated, said Tor·
res, because during a recent live·
year period, over 90 percent of the
reported cases of tetanus occurred in
persons over 20 years of age, most
of whom were inadequately immu·
nized.
As for the MMR vaccine the
nursing director advised that all ado·
lescents who are about to enter the

at the Senior Citizen's Center.
Those senior citizens enrolled in
Medicare Pan B will receive a free
vaccination. For those oot enrolled
in Medicare Pan B, but 55 years old
or older, or disabled, the cost of the'
vaccine will be $1.
· Adults who are under 55 years of
age, can receive their flu vaccine on
Monday, Nov. 3, from 9 a.m. to II
a.m. or I p.m. to 3 p.m. or on Tuet·
day, Nov. 4, from 9 a.m. to II a.m.
for only a $2.00 .fee. No appoint·
ments are necessary._
As for other dise~es including
Hepatitis B, tetanu!, and measles,
mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccines
are also available at the Meigs
County Health Department.
There is a charge for adults to
receive the Hepatitis B vaccine at
the health department, but Torres
explained it is more reasonable !han
if obtained through other health care
providers. She also said that for children upder 13 years of age, there is
no charge.
The seriousness of the disease,
said the nursing director, is shown
by the numher of cases - annually
200,000 to 300,000 cases with
approximately 5,000 related deaths.
Tetanus shots at the health
department are free, and boosters are
needed every I 0 years.
It is important that adults keep

'

:'l-'

,.,~~\~$1

•

Orlando is top
honeymoon site

FORD
BRONCO
air cond., CD,
leather, all power equip~
"EDDIE BAUER"

AM/FM~,

C.D. '1 Reg. $11.H

1996

2 Dr., V-6, auto., 1lr
cond., AMJFM ~•• tilt,
crvl•, .,., pb, etc.
LAII than 1,00Q miiH

4 cyl., 5 lpd.,
1ir cond., .,., pb, tilt,

COLD POP

C.uettes Reg.

.... 19C

Tanisha McKinney of Middleport
celebrated her third birtbday Sept
30 at her home with family and
friends in attendance . She is the
daughter of John and Sheila McKinney. A Barney and Baby Bop theme
was carried out.
Attending were maternal grandparents, Pete and Diane Hendricks,
Travis Hendricks, Amber Blackwell,
Darlene, Rory, Ashley and Andrea
Banrum, Cindy, Meghan and Clinton Lamben~ Chris, Jared and-Trcay
M~Kinney, Angie Myers, Tyler Fry,
Lisa, Jesse and Jackson Meadows.
Sending gifts were Bessie Darst,
maternal great-grandparents Bud
and Trudie Stewart, Steve Kelly and
Stephanie Stewan, paternal grandparents Bill and Carla McKinney, Jo
Beth and Katie Rodehaver, Seth
White, Miranda Thompson and
Jenna Thompson.

Church, Sunday, Silver Ridge. Sunday school, 9 a.m.; worship service,
10:10 a.m., carry-in dinner at noon;
afternoon services, I :30 p.m. Music
by Russ and the Gospel Tones,
Rejoice, and Joseph Richie.

EXPLORER
SPORT

and approximately 90% of those
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
deaths occurred in adults aged 65 or
Sentinel News Staff
older.
'
Based on that information, the
''Many adults mistakenly believe nursing staff of the Meigs County
that only children need immuniza- Health Department recommends
tions, and !hat's just not true," says that anyone 65 or older, or anyone
Norma Torres, R. N. Meigs County two years old to 6,4 years old who
Health Department nursing director. has chronic illness louch as heart disShe was talking about National ease, high blood pressure, lung disAdult Immuni'Otion Awareness ease, diabetes, alcoholism, or chronWeek being observed this week and ic liver disease. or those who have
the importance of adults receiving no spleen or a malfunctioning
adequate immunity against influen- spleen, reside in a nursing ,home or
za, pneumonia, hepatitis B, other long-term facility, or anyone
tetanus/diphtheria
(Td),
and with a p9or immune system, get
measles , mumps , and rubella immunized.
(MMR).
"The cost is high to ~are for those
This being the flu season, Torres who neglect getting vaccines," said
stressed the need for getting a flu Torres.
Influenza, pneumoni~ and other
shot within the next few weeks. She
said that the viruses change every vaccine preventable di$j~fS
.' " ~s now
year necessitating repeating the cost Americans an esti~ted $10
billion each year.
· $"' ,
immunization annually.
Ninety percent of th~ costs are
"Individuals who are 65 years old
or older are at special risk of devel· due to hospitalizatioit\'' 'related
oping dangerous and costly health expenses for the treatment of infecproblems if they get influenza," the tions caused by pneumonia, she
nurse said, going on to point out that explained, urging residents in' the
"no one can catch the flu from high risk categories to g~ltheir flu
!jfl ·
receiving the flu vaccine because the shots soon.
Flu vaccine will be a4lninistered
vaccine is not comprised of live
by the nursing staff of the Meigs
viruses."
In 1993, pneumonia and influen- County Health Department to senior
za ranked 6th among the I0 leading citizens on Friday, Oct. 31 from 9
causes of death in the United States a.m. to U a.m. and I p.m. to 3 p.m.

Monday
thru
Saturday

9:30-5:00

ANDERSON'S
FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCE
992·3671
POMEROY

Reg.

1m Ill!

Fulloo. 1M

sm 133! o- ..t
sm sm lint 1o1

Reg . Sale
S369 1199
1699 1449

1m

~9

~~MI

�Thursday, October 16,

Page 8 • The D•lly Sentinel

&gt;

II

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

~ttl'\.- \-'~

SII'VtcN

-~·..,...

See Stfte llllllaWI

Muffler &amp; Tail Pipe

~

Pinecreit Drive
Gallipolis
Aaoss from Gallia Auto Sllea on okl Rta. 35 West
New Summer Hours Mon.-Fri. 8-5: Sat. 8-3
(614) 446-2412 or Toll Free 1·800-594-111

c0 u...... t
h

.lllaelt

~-

.,

IO_DLEPORT • o\'\

Starting at $79.95

ill

Guaranteed Service

G ~~~­

.

4;""'"'~•-•••

.

Custom Homes

&amp;.J

106 North Second Avt. • Middleport, OH

QIC

992-2825

Remodeling

CELLULAR PHONES

HE WINSTON CUP CIRCUI

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

•o:••••
••

' WARNER INSURANCE
JEFF

Ul': Oct. II, Ciolb::io: 200.
WIIIIIL C'4lo ::io: Spoo$;~

Fol•w.CMt.

MOUT nti'IIIAI:K: Flogor ...,_..
,_ I.Ckllllo - I n Sod1llll ~·

a-..1'hiiN • men hln eo - - 1 0

W....c.p_ .... _ _

WIIK

---Wid
pcWt -IIane¥
J.aJaie Olllliln1r ohould be ........

-~IDIIil...,hloeot

•

II ICY

., . -"-a-.. .-

.....

,..,_

. . . . . . . . . . . . uriO . . .. . . .

_,,Wid~~~~-

TIIIIU WHO CCIUUIIIA 7 il
................. _ . . d ...
Don, ...... out .... Mcl.al9tlln ..

~ l¥lnll. II an . . . spwduui'J'I.

.........-..ct • whk:h n

ioOingo.

JQ97 POINT\ I WIDING\

For Homeovmers

__
- --------...
-llonnlo-"""""'
-· __--_
_.,

...... .....
:...-.....,uoo

In surance

?.Jt/lt .... s.m

. . ... Cftl,a,w

FROM LA\1 \'/[[ II
Lll&gt;onlt, 1te doloudiug 1'1111-

Ice
ln1 _(llaiWIOid).
___

slcn c.p chompion, -vee~
' from I '"'O"Hong lklmp

a

·~

Cantoc:uiNe-

.--.--. . . . . . --...... L-----..
---·"""""'..._
.........__
___
,....ra.u_
....,.
___ _

l.l!mlt ..... (II

1.-rulbJIN.._.'a__.

•r ... ,.,...,... .....

TOP I 0

e.c..w-.,a

~llllkilgolly
NASCN!Tllia - - - ~- .....
weelc'trriJnQ
illnpw$1411111
1. Tony I

a.--·
--

5 Ill (II
Finllly, ~Chevy
7.11obbjr Ll~ onll (I)

LI1Je by lillie

4. -

(3)

•

......,

............ .,1.

A pole and a fifth
t. IIIII E11act (7)
Lost In 1te -

ll&lt;lrlon (41

Fairly ln1act

s. Dale Elrr;iwdt (7J

..e.t ............... ll'.

l:t

10. ~.,. , (Uiw
Pulling K1ogoll•

Plana come up 0111p1y

ON THE ICHEDULE

-

·
--- --.__

w .-

. .. .__..I

(11.-

F!UD OF TH£ WEEK

, ._
~
...
._..,

··~~~,

·-22
a-....-

• -tTAlUI: 8lnglo

_..,Clary_.

• HOW IOWN; Emporia.~­
· - B O N:• 1 - 3
-

•• polio.

. • I.UTIIACI:I .... MitAI
. Pro~IOIU!l*JIOO

oto.n..

• -DIIIT HILJ!YOU FOil,
YOUII..O IHIN to I'RI·
eslvout"l-lom;o-

Lole--

_.__.._._,...,,I
WHYIUII-

. ..,
DI .._
fr111111-or'_ .., ..

hllp!U ..... ""' .., hill . TlloyolowNo. l(

Cinclonoti, 01\M&gt;

THE IHOIIT7IIACIIITHAT ·
-YOU-YOU
--~·....:~.-.....-:;'("
.. to .. - N.·

Ailr&lt;sconoloolythe _ _ ,.,..,..

0.. NASCAR- .,._

1-.
..

quite • )'OU"'
~ he
ITIOIII his raa,. bul when.
.. ...,.....t lhc 1111 ofbis26- ...
Wll only ~ijhll) ~ 30. llooo;,.

bil.loc)doy, " " - dnM: !he -Moody Fan!, --the linl
ofllllll]'-.. linl-lo No. 28.

·

con,.,.,.,_OOinliout-"''

-Dow.

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

nlllrHiylo, ... oncl-

'MIO-·--.7

. ,,

liP FUR'oliplrll Moolooliog

W110'11101\

992-6611

lf,OU"ft10UC1111 UG\01'1
WihiiM ... wrtlt: N·~R Tt*
_ , . , 0/0

iiiiiAlad 11om IOIIIID
13111. - t o hill

··-~:1.'1

flnllh.

IMIMIIff

A&lt;OUIW T&gt;ll ( AR•\U

1'111-

a , ., N.C.IIOIM

. . . . . . . . . J;:lllllillo:IIJ

Advertise on this pag~

1

'

Pii:0,. -•:30
·':30
.... Lifo ·7:00
,_ltUI . . . . . 4:00
0...0

I

• .:.~ .c:..ason .do..~

: "~~
~~·¥!
I (;lliJ1
~ Vft'' .... •••••••• .,.. ••• ••••••••

=

==
·----------------------: ~· jtP' 1A

FAST FAMILY FUN II

-

Call992·2155
Dave Harns Ext. 104 or Don Antle·Ext. 105
For More Information
I

'

' New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
'Garages • Replacement Windows
•.
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614•992•7643

~5 4~22

(No Sunday Calls)

Chester, Ohio
10125198Jtfn

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching _
Umastone &amp; Gf'IVel
Septic System•
I•Tr&gt;lllar &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rar..
Joe N. Sayre

Machine; ~ Welding Shop
250' Condor Sinlel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
ADiviiiOn on·N!chola Metal, 'Nc.
Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-n3-5861

•

"!'- 5

RACINE GuN

CLUB
Gun Shoots

Starta S un day

Sept. 28 at
1 :00 pm
12 gauge modified
l:lmltecl
637 Back Bore
680 Front

Relatives here have learned that
fonner resident, Gerald Beach, is
confined to the Daylon Burn Center
for treatment of bums over 40 percent of his body.
Gerald received lhc bums last Saturday when his apartment caught
fire. He escaped from the apartment
without any problem bul lhen went
back inside to rescue his dog.
A son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Beach of 77 S. College St.. Sabina.
45169, Gerald was reared here. He
, has a number of relatives living in
Meigs Counly among them being an
aunt, Mrs. Mildred Ja cobs of
Pomeroy who advised us of Gerald's
misfortune.

DEIOUGB G.-\BaETT INt.
. Ripley, WV 26271

Bus. Phone (304) 372·3873
1-80().984-FORO

At 21 lit tht Rlpley·F•rplaln Exit 1132

Come See Us For All Your
Parts and

Service Needs

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

I
I

J1121a/tfn .

Pomeroy, Ohio
WV 1023477

HI00·291-!5800

liNGS' ·
HomelmproY8111ntS
3351 Happy Hollow Road
Mlddlaport, Ohio 457ft

om,.,

New H

Addltlone,

Roofing, Siding,
Pole Barna,
Deck•, Painting
C811 Us For A Free EstimaiB
614-742-3090
814-742-3324
814-742-3078

It's been a number of years since
a home tour has been held in Meigs
County. As I recall. the lasl was one
in Pomeroy some years ago.
As a part of !he Middlepon bicenlennial celebration, 1he Rivcrbend
Arts Council will host a lour of hi s-

50% OFF

AI (_... ,........_
- ,...•....,.....•••• ,

O.lllllng

CHEVALIER,'$
CARPO CLEANING

ca....
t·Upholatery
• .-614-992..0077
Ml•ltporl, OH

1o-H7 1 ..,,

Public Notice
wllhdraw lhe abovo
ro ••••con•t•r••
Fult!Mr, Th1prior
l'armoro
a.nk
roJICI .
roHrvH
the rtghllo
ond
sevlnge
eompeny
any or oil blda aubmllled. .
Further, lhe obova
oollalorol will be oold In lhe
condlllon
In, wllhworno
axpro.. orH lelmpllod
ronllaa given.
For turthor lnlonnallon,
conlact
81112·213•.
(10) 15, 15, 17. 3lc

ca·•-

l

A couple of readers remembered
Dr. Lewis Thomas whose furnishings
were sold in the 1970's at a public
sale held at the Pickaway Counly
Fairgrounds.
Dr. Thomas, I'm told. practiced
out of his home which was on Fiflh
St. in Middleport. Mildred Beason
also menTioned in the sale ad was his
daughter and also lived in Middleport
for a number of years and the late
Griff Thoma.&lt; of Middleport was a
!on.

torical Middleport homes and other
structures this Sunday from I lo 5
p.m.
Included in the Jour will be the
homes of Helen Bodimcr. 175 S. Second; Paul and Lauric Reed. 211 S.
Third: Ray and Megan Andrews. 272
S. Third; Lewis and Anna Mac Ellis.
241 Lincoln St.; Jim and Chris
While, 528 S. Second, as well as the
Captain's House Inn , 244 N. Second,
fonnerly the Burford residence ; the
Fisher Funeral Home, 264 S. Second,
The down to earth music of John
and the First Presbylerian Church on Denver pleased many of us over the
-Nonh Fourth .
years and was ccnainly a direct conThere is no dislinct order in which trast to the beat stuff Ilia! has preyou are to vi sit an y of the homes and vailed. Certainly, Denver's lyrics
buildings included in the lour were simple and easy to underslandalthough 'the murs will be starting . ·nostalgic . He was a definite bright
from thccouncil's cenler. You iust ~o spot on lhe American scene.
10 them in any order, ticket in hand,
and move freely from one location to
If you won the $35 million in
another.
Ohio's lottery last night, do remain
There is a $10 charge per person humble for live more minu1es and let
for the tour if you wait until Sunday ,me know. It would really please me
10 get your ticket a1 1he River bend to know someone with THAT much
money. Do keep smiling.

Media executives say journalists will
need to keep up education, training
and creative thinking, top U.S. media
executives say.
. .
• "The view is commg mto focus
that this is important now,". Joyc:e
Wise Dodd, director or the Vlfgm•a
'Commonwealth University's School

of Mass Col!'municalions, said
Wednesday as the s~rvey was pre·
sen ted on the openmg day of_the
Associaled ,Pres~ Managmg Edttors •
assocJatton s nattonal conference.

CONSYRUCTION

~ Easy Bank Financing-

'2S00 a month
*"GelD
IHaat Pumps lnltllltd -.JV-- a month
rurRIIC81

GallipoliS
&amp; VICinity

au.tont--

::r.:-=
"'::'\:"~.=,~~~
tc~lllon·2:00p.m.

985-4473

7/2211fn

'

~===~~~
e.;:

YOUNG'S

Flldoy.
Mondor·IO:OOLIL--·
Drive
ChapelGtHRhouM,
Rummage
John10n"1
l.s••••oid A••••ol, •em. ~h.

CARPENTER sERVIa
•Room Additions
•Ntw Garagaa
•Eitctrlcal a Plumbing
•Roofing .
Painting
Aloo Concrele Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C, YOUNG Ill
9112-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Free &amp;fiiTIIIIH

BIIIMI I CIILIII
Servlna Southaaslem OH &amp; WV
811 416 9418
[J;;~;r:;,!!_;~~:!!:~2i~~~
1391 Safford School Rd.,

v '(

All Yonl ..... II... lo Pold'lll
- o. Deedll,.: 1:D0p110;o
diV' before the 1d le lo riiNI,

Sundoy • Monday odhlft·
1:00pin Fotdal'-

•

II· 11
IIIIo II

(UmeSton•
Low Rat•)

(Payments baled on lflllOIMid ad)

.

Yald

70

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

·•11Wotor a Exl1trlor

IIII:IIIIKIIII
IIJai11IEliiR.

. .

C'R'EC'K 'T'U'£
.1. .1. _,,

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,

WANT ADS FIRS11

Saaurday· 3 ramlly oar•o•
• ... SlrW. Rac:iiW, 911!1-oOpm.

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli,

Fill

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VICinity

Dirt

614-992·3470

Friday

101171117- 188 North
......

Orlvo, Pr. -

ao
Howard L. Wrlteael

ROOFING
NEW·REPIIR

Arts Council Cenlcr on North Second Ave., or you can purchase
advance lickets at $8 each lhe a1 Ohio
River Bear Co.. lhc Middleport
Department Store or a1 the Hartwell
House, the latter localion being in
Pomeroy.

I

ATI.ANTA (AP) - JouiT]alists
entering the 21s1 cenlury must keep
their educations up to date and journalism schools should offer integraled courses that stress basics but also
stale-of-the-an technology training

Q

beval"f olflu Calic&lt;l
on Mulbltrry

- · :..

Athens, Ohio

MobUe BDDII FUrnaces
ud Beat Pampsr ""'~

loot light Brown Small D)og
White Tip on Tall, Malo, NIJ'ilo:
~· Vlclnl1y: Neighborhood
11.....a-1851.

Loot lghl colored
ca~
!=====~==~
ROBERT BISSELL 't ~~~~::Sbrown ""collar, e1•-

Att
Willi
S f
k
orney
am 8 rane

8il7/f1t tnO. pd.

Loot· I wk. olcl, Shoploordllab
puppy ~om 120 Union lwo., 1014·i7, netda mtdicadanl 11•·
8112-57111 AS,oiP.

&amp;

F~nformatlon ~egarding
1614) 592•5025

To good home only, lomall Woim&amp;ta'*. •wora okt, apayed, oreal
WJkidl, hOUH broken. 304-773-

Grading ·
Septic Syllema
&amp; Utllllllt
Eatlmetea
992·3838

BANKRUPTCY can re leli a debtor of financial
obligations and arrange a fair distribution of
assets. Debtors In bankruptcy may keep
"exempt" property for their personal use. This
may include a car, a house, c&lt;othes, and
h
hold good
Bankruptcy contact:

.
At law
AnOmey

114-812-3884.

Hou"
&amp; Trailer Sltta
Lanil Clearing

''FA£TORY
DIREl:T
PRICES''
Quality Window Systems
112-4119

ThrH , .. r ald. SCottiltl terrier.

Umeetone Hauling

15 YEARS IN BUSINESS

110 Court St.

Pupplao Half Collie, Hall Shoo·
pard, Sholl, I WHkl Old
(01.)31111-4157 Cll Allar. pm

HOWIID
EICIYITIIG &amp;
IIUCIIIG

SOLID VINYL

!=::::==;:=~ ~=::::;;:;;;;;==:fi~;;~~~~~ L--~------------~

by Bob Hoeflich

AITENTIONADVERTISERS!!
.•

II.SSELL BUILDERS1 INC•

Beat of the Bend.:.

......

-•
•-nl : '

----------------~--------------·
NASCAR W - . . . . . . . . . ....,-,IIIP'!

..-

Free Estimates
Still Takln Orders for Christmas

--11t1110 'll

• -..y Moylldd

•

•

Public Notice
NoTicE TO TAXPAYERS
llliloranco: 5715.17
Ohio RtviMd Coda
Tho lhlgo County Boord
of Rovlofan hao complolod
Ha wort&lt; of equall2allon. Tha
laX mums lor lax yell' 19a7
hovo bHn rovlood end lha
Public Notice
Public Notice
voluollono complalad ond on or bolorolhe 31s1 day of
PUBUC NOTICE
art. opon lor public In· March, 1988. All complolnlo
NOTICE Jo hereby given
opecllon In lho olllce ollho flied with lhe Counly thai on Salurday Oclobor
lloiga Counly Audlll&gt;r, Audl1or will be hoard by lho 18, 19a7, al 10:DO
• a.m., a
rlh
d
Fl
C
Sacan
oor, ou oueo, Boord of Revision In .lhe public oala will be hold at
Second Stroot, Pomoroy, mannor provided by Sacllon 211 woar Second Slraol,
Ohio
45761. egelnal lho 5715.19 of lhe Ohio Revlaad pomoroy, Ohl.o. Io oeII 1·or
Complainlo
voluoliono, oo oalobllohod Code.
cooh lhe following
Nancy Porker Campbell collolorol:
1
7
lor lax year · " • mual bo
Melgo Counly Audl1or
11112 CHEVY CAMARO
modo In occo!dalnthaco Ohwl11h (10) 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 1&amp;, 17,
1G1FP23EINL142378 ·
=::J71 ~!d:. Thee: 19, 20, 21,101c
Tho Fermer• Bonk end
complainlo mual bo tiled on 1 - - - - - - ' - - - - i Sovlnga Company, Pomelorma which will be
be flooring on Q cloud
roy, Ohio, rHervoslho rlghl
turnlahed by the Counly
1M buys fou'll find In 1M
to bid al lhlo aole, ond lo
Audhor and muol be flied In
c1as (i'-~
lho Counly Audhor'a Ofllce
si o:us.

-·~~~-

2. - -......

1411111 111!, with I

555 Park St.
Middleport

' 814-112-4025 B em-8 m

OW NASCAR Rice F111,
Only .......y. . NASCAR ..........
m:civc copies of lhl: nile boob for the
variola touri .. acrir:s. For MOtt inf«·
Mliion, """"' NASCAR, P.O. Box
2875, DlyoonoDeado, Flo. 321:Z0.7o!I7S.

-

SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand '

Fill

---L---.
....
.., __....,.
-c:o..,-_,_
---...............
3.-----·'Popo"l -..........
..,._
..
........ ...
............
.......
...................
·--·z --------......
TriVIA

e1. ... .,...,

11 II Qfloblll fourth.
ploottnllll.

'

Honest Reliable
Quality Service
(1114) 843 5440

Pick up dllclrdad
sppllencu, batlerlaa,
meny metllla &amp;
motor blocks.
I

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK

All Major Brands
Reasonable Rates

· Valley
Lumber &amp;
Supply Co.

R• L• HOLLON

•Ranges•Washln

• DrytB • Dishwashers

.......... o..

lio _., """ ...... 11ft

20 'lra. Exp. • Ina. Owner: Rick Johnson

• RafrigeraiOIS

Dawldi.WIO

..... bologna blolll!lllld •
llltnl-*1

- ~,dowdl,too.•
10 IIIU'IIIy, I
__

......

H•ndcratted Using Meigs Co. Hardwood
614-992-4106

Appliance Repair
· Service

llouNASCAR-How an I JC1 1 ClOpy oh rule book
for t h e - CupSaioo'l

-.......__ ---.-.a
- .. I

1- 1.,

Gonion-QOt

hal,
fll9lod In
tho ouinmor, Hlluglll me ._
.,bl,_ln-01
rrryoell.'
.DOYOII-THIIHOIIT
7IIACIII? "Waal, I a.1llnly
- - .,.,....... -

IIIlo _.. 1o ll!!!lo
Kloi;JIIblun; .. kilgiiG!O HoliJI;b,
Ind., IDrW!Ir I LllotiiJn:lyLLI::ll.

~-~
..,..
..odi..,,m

-~--.. . . the
NASC\Il'a Clc*B.Boy.
Lite .

Gordon, l..omolzn """ ., NASCAR
from tk Midwat. l...orm:zm wa fiOin

-and

"*""'

-"~llneololot

--

711111 ....

Hlluglll
IN f\ll 01'1
lftCI Plow
.. l l a y - - l g o t

IIA&amp;CARIIII::-., 1Lllot:
IIOlllt--.I!!GIIt
-liM!.. - - N.C.

. WIIO'I HCrn

..... 'p I

Y-.

South-· wo,., 20o-1op -Ill.
-IIVOfY
.... lBmml ....
to
*-tnl·
vwon
ol

• WHAT Dll YOU LIAFH ON

Cll had

-,

llalnliii . .

"""""""'""""'?

_IIIII
f1l WiiW WI..,. 1
,_,.._..._

WHO'S HOT - WHO'S NOT
• Kin lichida: -

•

1&gt;0--..
lllncl-

COIIoo,

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

Bob's

""tellio!Jmcthol-..

-..rem,. ..,

- - - ono : . .

• CAR: No. a Pllllpo •

-.__
. --

-

- · ..... L,____:-::::::.._ ___;ooli
at

(614) 446-4759

Free Estimates

• drivel NASCAR by ...,. the
11100 way Jeff Gonion ha.Tllil penon
aid lhll k .... clurloo the · - - Do
)'00 ...... """ tllio ,...... aJUicl -

~

t:omplete Kltehens
* Kltehen t::altlnet RefaelniJ
: * ~ntlque Reproduetlen•

•

Dooo NASCAR 1bia Wock,

. . . . . . . . . . . . 11

...... -

For More
Information

--..-.-·""'

....

~ lniD fifth plaoo In
.... point -.go.

. Stagyaiog homo ogaln?
2- I I I I I - (21
. -her homo

~~

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

Joh1110n'1 victoty wu OYCI1umcd.
flllll!, by the way, 1110 I
praae in Conatcc, S.C., nctr
OrmaYilJc,

1 1 - - i n l...

.......1

TRUCKING

I

.Big Bend Fabrication,

Heirloom Quality Custom Furniture

n,..

............. 1111 . . . .

-l*dogo Ylcloty lnd
111111 of hlo - Tho Ylcloty
Nm 10 lllip pall Dolo

1, Joll Qonlan (f)

:

1'1111-ln . . . . _

take

,. -- n·- .__,..,

.. «:..... .. 'Jr.

:

. . hall ce.....,..,.., •
......80111011.U,Putllllll
........
u' I _
. . lnlf
II.Ho _
.. _11 .,.,.

to wtn 1te OltHonl !500 11
T""dogo SUpnpoedwey.
Lobonhl modo hlo
.... lll'lh ol188 llpo, Cllllg-

Plln-~

77 ....... ,.. .........

lllo . . . . , . . . . . _

-ION CUP: Teny

"""'Johnto

... t&amp;eLew-

Houra:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00p.m.

Complete Mac:biae ShOp Servlee Fabrication
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, IDdultrlal Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replace-..t
Monday.Frklay • 8:00a.m.- 4:30 p.m.
Saturday • 8:00 a.m. • 12 noon·

HEIRLOOM CONNEOION

!lou NASCAR lloco Flft,
Ooo of the Wliqlle- of the-em 500 is tllltlbeace .._seldom been
won by drivers wbo 1r1 DOIImOilllhe
.....~ di:., ""' .. fl'ia'J Nlc ...... il
an n:z: ' , ..tl..tny Fnnlt'l Labor
Illy vicloly Ia 196Z is- of_,."'
I'ICiftc'• artateat u,.eb. Tbe mo11
IIOIIblc aspect to thil , . Wll lhll
F - did .... ~~~;e the ebocbnd
of the avwtl left llodllltccwly lhll day thlnkina Junior
hod won !he nee: A -"11

......""'*"""' - -'

._on

..............
-.::·
......-

'

Ext.104or
Don Riffle
Ext.105

LI~arn~, S.C.

d1Hiap14 ~-.,._

I . O.....: ...... IMT

lng pall
end Kenny Scho-

992·5583

--

....

l . fllllri......,, I,1D

.. ..,.......,,3,1ot

·-7-

Call 992-2156

Dear NASCAR Thio Wock,
I om 1 lon of NAS!=AR,
._lilly the bllll!ly. Could you
nploin t h e - 11111&lt;10!1di..
the vic:tooy by Lony Fnnli ill the
Souther. 500 It Darllqton In 19627

4: . . . . . 1.142

Fa:._,. • ..,,

LUMP AND STOKER COAL
H•E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DEUVERY AVAIWLE

State Certified Welder
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

~-~11!8~.

NASCAA Tills-

L lllflliclli, 1,1111

-:~

1.

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 mllea east of Ro.u tt 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO
614384 6212

Accetl Regulator.Repair

ADVERTISE ON
THIS PAGE

~-

PROfilE

Elliott Sadler

.,

............... w.

tt............ .._._ . . . . .

olo milo

Oxy -

St. Rt. 248
CheSter 985-3308

Mll1n- .. ..., ollort••101.. - ~ ... Yogoo
Wi' "d Ho:1
I d (Fla.) n lie IWIIIIn-

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators

Supply

.....

BUMBI MIIIIG

Dave Harris

All- ... - - Oy lVE Wob .....

'

·Ridenour

Call.
NOrMLa: 1Wo .......... • Son POint- . . 8upo(i'ruclal'

-?o'"-Anlllooif!Tllo ..... . .

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

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

RADIATOR RIPAIR

Accessories

11, Clllforna st•'wWJ, Fontlna,

enoe ol OOITIJ I Iii -lhlo ,..- al

In lie po1n1o. A - CUp- . .
Joe,..,_ could ....... - ' "

.CI fts::••"JNcbfii,_.Q "I ttl
3:30p.m. • SlbxOty • ESPN
• e.cta Chnd PI 11 . . C If ••100
•tOO p.m. ·.....,. • '1'NN

~niUCKIEIIIQ:Oot.

• d ., ... ...-_ - · · bdlcxutioiii--Soo·-

. . , . . _ CIUIIFION: Nona
WCIIIG ntl MIOIIID: F1w limo

On TV All n - E8lmn

St. Rt. 248 Chnter
985-3301

on .bloat

-·-·

StihiPower Tools &amp;

'*"'""

Sill lb ... v..tto ........... ~

1 1 faq. Jell Gotdon

01"

Shopnor!;Jgpro•. 1

See us for Your

- ~Wid---rive
. . ION
I c:hence 10 poa on

._
--. ... ....
.........____ ... .....-.............

THIS
IAUMLUMIEI ·

........
-.....,dSc
wan ...

,.. ., • -ono "'"""' • ••coupiOot--otc.mo

34718 St. Rt. 7
Ph. 985-4118
r-rP'-1111111...,.

'

113 W. 2ND ST.

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

Ilk*,._,
. DYTO ntiiiACI: Tho--~~
dlllgiiMllor -18Cing. "'model . .

....cnfllllw.M
Preleds
Swlllgs, Benclm,
Talala, Mlsc.ltlniS

360° Communications

•
"Ballll Tour Drecam"

ntl .uiCH GIIAIID NA'IIOIW.

..,

ThursdaY, October 16, 1997

1

MUFFLER SHOP M-2118

•-a118

NO'IHING
RUNS
UKEA[)EE$"

aPomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

0

The Dally Sentinel• P . I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1997

Gutters
oownspouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE E~TIMATES

949-2168

, AT. 7
PIZZA EXPRESS
992-9200
Large 16", 3 Item $9.99
Subs, Salads, Lasagna,
Spaghetti, Bread Sticks,
Hot Wings or
Cheese Sticks . .

WE DELIVER!!
FLASHBACK
Appearing Friday

Members and Guest Invited
'. ' .
REJOICING LIFE
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
ANNUAL CRAFT FAIR
FRIDAY, OCT. 17,
9A.M.·4 P.M.
HELD AT REJOICING
LIFE CHURCH,
MIDDLEPOAT
(Refreshment proceeds go to 1\i.~;c,~
Retoicii'IQ Life School)

ss.oo ou-

~
$3.llG Coon
Ever~daw. Crawtorcfa FIN Mar·
ket. Henderton. WV. 304·87!$·

5404.

Auction Compeny,
auctioneer. campi••
service. Llcen11~
l West Virginia. JO•

Or30&lt;-773-llol&lt;7.

•

'

90 Wanted to Buy :
Alleolule Tap Dollar: All U.S. Sli-

5/ll/lln

ver And Gold Coina, Proof...,
Diamondo. Antiquo ~- &lt;lo"

ANNOUNCEr.1ENTS

- . Gaf!ipale, .......:.!142. .

RinGo. Pr•1i30 U.S. CurronC)\
Sllrling. EIO. Acqulliliano Jaooiolrj
- M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Soun&lt;f

Anliquoo. r&gt;p polcea paid, Ri"'005
Ptnonala
lno Antlquoo, Po""''"'· Ohio,
Run Moore owner• .G14·0f2·
Do You Have Honl Choicoo? lll 25211.
•
A Porclllc Help. Ju&amp;t Cal 1-80CI-

:12t-IO•s. Enl01?, $3.111 .tlin.,
Mutl 81 18 Vra. S.r¥"-U, 1'10·
84&amp; 8434.

Uv.l OM-Ono-Onol Call Nowl 1·

AntiquN· no 111m 111011rgo "'-.,.
small. Alao ea1atea, appralula,
rtfinlahing, C:UIIOm Ordefl, 814·
IIG2-6578.

:.:..:..:..:...:;..._ _ _ __

1100-255-01100 Exll282 S3.111i Per Clean. lllO 1.\0dlt Caro Or
Min. Muat Be 11 Yra. SetY·U 111- Trutk1, 1880 Model l Or Newer.
G45-843o6.
Smith Buick Pon~ac, 1100 Ellt·
Metl Your Companion 1-SIOO·

••~n~~~o.~Gu~~~~~~~-­

-

280-1245 Ext. 0258, $2.00 Per J &amp; D's Auto P.rti. Buying ••I·
Min . Must Be 18 Ytara. Serv-U vage vehu:141a. Selling pans. 30ole111-&amp;l!f-843&lt;.
773-5033.
IEET

'ICUR

8:00·12:00
~-&gt;!.•''' I POMEROY EAGLES CLUB

Auction
and Flea Malket
ATTENTION VENDORS: tncloor

MAI'at
Ertll7'111, $2.1111

S:onding i - or pulj) wood

clMr cut. conmc1

tar

Otto 11 ,814·

IMII-3015.

1-i00-~118- 12•5.

/M in.. Mull 81 18 Vr1. Seni'· U
118~5

8&lt;34.

EMPLOYI.1ENl
SERVICES

Sophlollcotad Exacudw lady,
Vouthlul 50'1 With llnuty
And Bralno SHkl Pralooolanal
Gondeman 50'1 + Honeol, Sin- 110 Help Wanted
..,. For Fd.,.hip ~
lllip. Reply Ta: CLA o121, rio Gal- AVON I All Aroao I Shlolt7
llpollo 01111 Tribuna, 825 Third Spoon, 30U7S-1&lt;211.
A-Ga~poii'OH•5e3• .
Avon $8 -$18/Hr, No Ooar -To , ·
30 Announc:tl'lllfl11
Door, OUick Cooll, Fun I Rotu- .

1---------

·Po~ta.

.... 1-800-311-4&lt;11.
.
AnENTION HAIABTYLIST Gil
your Ohio Stale houil IIIII Jo. AVON · H ·S20 /Ht. No Daar To
Annt'l KU1 l Kurt, Yondar Oc:L Door. Quick Caahl ·aor~~Ma• 1·
27, 1gg1.10.0V por poroon cal 100281 Ot:lt.
=~.._
••e·UIII or 114AVOHSEI.Lirrtii.FI

....

1will nat be Noponllblo·lor any
debCJ - - br 11'4' ono IIIII_ _. -10.11-17.

..... ...-.

SIQned ~A. Sea •••.

_.,.. .. . ___

1 01

' :

1'0\
....,_tlondl.flll:l.
1:11-No-yll742-4138. (1.,..)

�..
•

. . . 10. The Dally Sentinel

..
Thunlday,~ber18,1997

The Daily Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

.... .

BRIDOI:

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

1 TVu-~·
4 _.ul
9 Enemy ·
12 Wide &amp;hoe olze
13 He hoclo

.ALDER

320 Mobile Homll
fOr Sill

golden touch

-llfiiSdd
t.-11 Tlilllonlh.

• H :1
• !J 5

T...... .q~o,EIC.

1·8Q0.52N1'30, X1801.

tAKliKU

EEK&amp;MEEK

Crtdil P10bltm1? Wt Cen Help.
E11y Blnk Financing For Uud
Vehicles, No Turn Downs, Call
V1ck1o, 111 HI .7.

.. 1\.1111:1

tt:u,.l

Wt·l'&gt;l
6 . Ill

1

A 6 4 2

•

.. A ·I~ •I I .I

• 1/ .l 111711

Ill I 2
.. !' :. t

• 7 :;

t

.. 7 fi
Suelth

1118o SUI. . Dolu• 14172 ~
To .,... lrno At Local Pork, Reo
lrig4tra!Dr, Rlftgt, Eltclllc Hett
Pump, 10112 lltck, Clll Allor I

.

\· ,,l,u · •·~•hh!: ~:Usl

-·

S.huh

Wrsl

I •

l'a . . s
2 '¥

o- Par•••

llhl

Pw·•s

4•

Po1!-.s

1887 11110 FINtwOod 3 llldroomo, 2 Bathl, G1rd111 Tub,
Flroplaco. Stovo, Raftlgolllor,
Dllhw11htr, HNt Pump, Tako
114-24HSII.
111 limo ~ E.Z F1rWidna 2
Or 3 Bt*oomt Alound aoet Pw

En1&gt;iortrli'FIDIV
Smol&lt;o Froio And Drug ,_
EnWonmont

llhl.

IC, P.O. Bar 10Q, J1ckson, OH

45140.
Experltnct'd detailtr In Pt.
~- ..... Cll 814-423-6581
Aok lor Eric.

EJiparienced Hair Drenar, with
CHen~• Wantad For BuiJ' New

Solan (II•) 441-1880

General Nutrition Centfll II Currently looking For Enthuslaslic
And Exportancod Individual• For
A New Store In The Gallipolla

"'" (Ohio Yalloy Plazl). Ploatt
Col HI88-211NI338 (Ell. &lt;105).
I Nood Hillpl Ovorwholmtd, Earn
2 To 5K Uontha, Toral Training a
Support From Home, Not MUI.
~I Now. 21.11n. lltlllgt 1-800-

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

All real estate advertising In

this newspa~r Is sub)ect to
the FBderal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 whtefl makes it Illegal
to actvenlse •any preference,
llm~ation Of discrimination
based on race, COlor, religion,
&amp;eJ:

A'e
StiAMPOO .

famiUal status or national

Ofigin, or any IntentiOn to
make any such preference,

'OMPANY

limitation or discrimination.·

This newspaper wlU not
knoW!~ accepl
adver1tsements tot real estate
whiCh Is In violation of the

••

law. Our readers are hereby
informed that all dweiUngs
advertised ln lhls newspaper
are avaHable on an equal

'' .

EMP&amp;-onesJ
f

.

C.&amp;.O'k IN. wOJIC.
~OMf.
trEP~AT.

60

____

.._

••

THE BORN LOSER
...
~,FnlT~?'DOYOJ ._. ,..'15, 134'!E~TI~ ~E:D~

opportunity basis.

322-61110 En1115i.'

~Vf. ~161 it-1 T]{e. ~

1"-.11\.'10 IOI'JI\. ...1-.WLC&gt;'IOO U~ TO

I J'OU want to make mon~. are
willing 1D WOlle hard, and l•ke to
~p othera. .. mar ,..,•• job
lor I""· LOCII - n L ExIncome poaalbllltJ.. and Home

~T~T?

me~

01lc:a
lrlinlng
• -per•
td. Must
havelora pluslna

oonallt! and ba willing.10 moot
lie f"lbllc. No uporltnCt....,..
ury. For more Information, call
Clor. Roney at 31U·875-5011, or
maif r11ume to 24f3 Jachon

lot., 1'1-WV 215!10.
Notd 8 lt~oo To Soil Avon CIU
114 441

/S'chOCio.

1 WAK
2 Gas tor algna
3 In apple-pie

1 112 B~lhl, Fin·
BattmtnL At·
Carpor~ City
To Gllllpali1
. 114·441·4180 Ahor 8

3351 .'

00"(0\.1

"'"~&gt;'-?

I'M TRYINC'&gt; TO
DO 11'(

HOME·

lriOitl&lt;.!

HEC.K,NO,

r

OON'T
1'\IND!

8UT LET'S

ruMP Ul'
TI-lE
ENf.RC'o'( A
TAl), OK?

---;r-

;~

•

North
It

4 Rasentment
5 Sesame plant

(heat)
16laat mo.
20 Two-family,' :

Pass

Puss

l':..ss

.:1 •
I'~Ns

quarrel
22 Woocl-cuiUrlg
tool
23 Farocy
24 Nlol1e
25 Penny
21 Actor Bridges

..:o!'ll
I•

l'usJoi

Pass
Pass

By Phillip Alder
Many nations compete in the
European Championships (this year,
35 in 1he open series, and 24 in .the
women's), so 10 teams are permitted
to move on to the world champi·
onships in Tunisia, five each for the
Bermuda Bowl and Venice Cup. In
· the former, the qualifiers (in finishing
order) were Italy, Poland, Norway,
Denmark and France: in the latter,
Great Britain, France, Israel, Ger·
many and the Netherlands.
Here is a thoughtful play by Liz
McGowan, a Scot on the British
team, in the match against Israel.
What is your line in four spades
arter West starts with two top hearts?
In the other room, where East dido 1 realize her hand · was worth an
overcall, the Israeli Nonh-South pair
~
.... cruised into the besl contract of five
NO, -m~. L ~'T t-\I'IVE. TI\1\T
clubs.
South's two doubles were for
l,CW, I
takeout. Perhaps South was hoping
her partner would have enough in
hearts to .. pass and collect a juicy
penalty. However, I think rebidding
three clubs on the second round is
more sensible. Also, West's bidding
drives me crazy. If she is willing to
·go to lhree hearts (hardly unreasonable), why not bid II immediately? ·
If McGowan had ruffed the sec·
ond heart, she would have failed. East
would have ducked the first round of
trumps, won the second, and forced
declarer again in hearts. Out of control, the contract would have finished
two down.
However, McGowan calmly discarded a club at trick two. Then,
when West played a third heart,
declarer ruffed in the dummy. Now
came a spade to the jack, followed by
the spade king to East's ace.
McGowan ruffed the founh heart,
drew trumps. and claimed.

27 Skirt felluro

30 Pollllcian
Jack- . •
31 Adam's

grandson . ·

32 Editor's word
37~11·
39 Prior
4S Tori's dad ..

46 OtlenH

brother Spike.

HOIIU AI lOW AS
I .. Bdrm., ~ Gov't '
Rtpo'o can 1·800-522·

46 Conceited- •
49 Entity
51 Honk
52 Thia (Sp.l

53 Futuro attya.'
exam

56 Eggs
~
57 Stringed . .
inatrument ,

58 Roman 1,05t

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryplogramt are created !rom qUOialions by IAmous people , pall and ptesenl
Each letlltf lfl!N c!pher t!•Ms for another Todlly's ~ · G ~Is W

'IDAJZD
GBPM

E

SJVHJRO

zJ y0

l

DZEM
.

s.m,..

SERVICES

Home

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

B-'SEMENT .

WATERPROoFINCI

Unconditional lifetime guaranlee.
loc•l reference• lurnfahed. Es·
tabliahtd 1975. Call (8"1 .. ,.
0870 Or 1-800·287-&lt;1576. Rogora

\

Woilrpnloling.

j,
• - • · . . . . , - - 101s 12110 FltttwOOd a Bad·
- 1.14-441-2111.
112Be... Undlrplmftg.
15.000.

-~-·-...--.
_ _..,,.._

.

4
(

K EV D

RDNDZBP
VXRDPA.'

Friday, Oct. 17, 1997
LIBRA(Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Befog·
ical where your self-interests are
concerned today. If you let your heart
rule your head, a conniving individ·
ual might take advantage of you. Gel
a jump on life by understandtng the
influences that govern you in the year
ahead. Send for your Astro-Graph
predictions today by mailing $2 and
'SASE to Astra-Graph. c/o this newsP.O. Box 1758, MurrAy Hill
New York. NY 10156. Be
zodiac sisn.
sure
(Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be
that your cash outlays.
careful

do not
intake. You will
be better
salt away your
surpluses
· of waste them.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Even if friends lreal you in a generous fashion today. it's best not lo
request belp from tbem for things you
can manage better by you~&gt;elf.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) H
your goals are not clearly focused
1oday, i1 could lessen your incentive
and cause you to lay back when you
should be proceeding full speed
ahead.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
Your chart shows you might read
men into a situation than was intend·
ed today if a member of the opposite
gender is extra friendly to;&gt;ward you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Take
care of your responsibilities first
today before devoting aUention to
frivolous invqlvemenls. Catching up·
will be hard if you fall behind .
ARIES (March 21·April 19)
Today, y011r decisions IR likely to be·
brilliantly evaluated and have constructive potential, but they won't

count for much if you do nothing
about them.
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Usually when you undenake an endeav·
or~ yQu have the tenacity to sec it
through to conclusion, titif today you
may be tempted to settle for the semi·
completed.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) When
dealing with y011ngsters today, you're
not likely to gel your message across
if it's too sugar-coated. Be gentle and
kind, but finn .
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Today you might be inclined to add
more frills to your handiwork than is
necessary; Do not let your artistic zeal
e~cced your good taste.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Specula·
tive enterprises could be more
appealing than usual today. Do not
dilute your self-discipline to the
degree that you take an unsound risk.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Make
the most of your opponunities today.
even the relatively small ones.
Remember it was the little acorn that
sired the migh1y oak 1rce.

....

E.

R...

... .'

.

RBKED .

PREVIOUS SOlUTION: 'The longue. the Chinese say . / is like a sharp knne:·/.
it kills I without drawing blood ." -

'::~:t;~'

Anne Sexton .

.

S@ltgijlJ-L&amp;t.tfs·

- - - - - - l~iled lty CLAY I. I'OUAN

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled words

•,

....

.

.

'

WOlD

...
...

t~t

be-

IO'ft' ro fo~rn four simple words.

..

'

.

...

.,.

My .sister concluded that
the people who are nosy
usually have no business of

~ •;O~P:O~·. Ih::,,

I

kl.e Quoted

bv lllhno it'l ,.,~ "uu
you develop /rom step No.

words
l(eiow.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

lie ACml C41 Alt4 Cited. Oullho
illho Gmifi&lt;d l«tlan.

Improvements

IX

BSSJVHBOEDL

HEDSD,

an experienced guide

X17W.

810

EK .

B

.,._ PR INT NUMBERED
~ !ETTERS IN SQUARES

to show them ~he way.

. ,

· 47 W. Coaat ooll.

_V

again to find their

•

10 1t72 willie :
movie
11 Give off

Wt!td

And so, Andy and This time, however,
Olaf set off one~ I provided them with

RN'o START S11 lmmt&lt;llale
Notd Ful Or Part limo. PriWitt
Duty Or Faciltv Slllll'ong. Roqulrw
1 Vnr Minimum Vent Or Holllital

114 118 8381

pllll

order

PEANUTS

E-'"'- Cal For APPolnontnt

B Oppotlll o(,

. --.. ·-------l
·Five European
teams .times two

Ballard School Rd, Gililpollo,
Ill*&gt;.

Erp. Dtptndable DioMI lltchtn·

DOWN

•'l•t.:,IUI~ lead: •A •

ChaH11111ino And Rewarding C•
,.., loollablo Throuoh our llonbaaament nler·
agemenl Training Program. Wt
baoomont ropo~o LU...:;;.:.:-.::..:217.-H-:7.-010.~--:--­
Alo Sttklng An lnltlllgom, Co·
ottlmattl, lllttimt t D'-untl.lobllt HOnt&amp; Ptrll a
retr -Orltnted Person Who It guatantH. t0yrl
AGCIIIOfitl, VI~·I SklrtiOUtgoing And Ulcol To Ill Cha~ anot. 301-175-2145.on job IXpetl· ••••
·~
--.os.
Ancfloro s.oo, Aaft.
long-.!. Exctllont Training Pro·
lngo, Dooro. Wtndowo, Plumbing
gram, Benefits, And AdvanceSUppHoo,- H•.... F ment Patentlal. Call OW. Burnt
11, llbarglaoo Stopa, Call 114·
All1 ..~117.
441-0411-ll's SatiDir. 1301

1c WI own Toolo; Bentllto Provided. Send Retume To: MECHAN-

·

instruments
33 long tish
34 like a !)eMilie
film

llo ·.ol•·t" W&lt;•st

P.l.l. 114·441-385S l-•1.1••

Equal OpporiWli~

so Seed
Airline Into
Picnic post
lowest point
Caroll

61
62
63
64

result
36 "typo or polish
38 Blackthorn

t

Edloon

43 Oro. lime
44 At1orntya

card&amp; In a
Roman deck?

, 35 Fender·bender

•K&lt;~.J!'!i

• 2 ...
tljJ:f
.. K II H

29luau

42 Thomlo -

55 Spaclouaneos
59 Number of

IB Go lnolde
19 Muslcol key
21 Commuter's
expense
25 Murp~ .
Brown 1
networll
: 28 Young lady
i

41 Dan.. cos1u.,.

47 Palate part
50 Malign In 1 way
54 Metal contelner

14 Upper limb
15 Barricade
17 Here, In Parll

1-·111110 Clll For 110011

8uUitss
Opportunity

Eorn o11ra money lor Chri&amp;anll,
Ill'-'. cdi14.Q.Ii.IIOOII.

.fruit

40 A Stooge

Burlap • Chalk • Threw· Stooge · KEEP in TOUCH
1 caugh( my husband eati~g cake. Shyly he said,
"People who want to stay away from temptation usually
want to KEEP in TOUCH ."

•

•

..
..

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="405">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9790">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28882">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28881">
              <text>October 16, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="613">
      <name>stevens</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
