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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Indians
snow Marlins
10-3, even
series at 2

Pick 3:
698
Pick 4:

2799
Super Lotto:
5-12-28-38-41-43
Kicker

Sports on Page 4

031970

Partly cloudy tonight,
low In mid 40a. Friday,
rain, high In 60..

l
'\obi. 41, NO. 133
Cl1917, Ohio Ylltey Publtllllng_Company

2 Sec:llonto, 11 P-v-, 35 c:enta
A Gannett Co.~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 23, 1997

Campaign reform changes get bipartisan support
COLUMBUS (AP) ~ Republicans stood to lose the most in the
shan run if Ohio's campaign finance
Jaw wasn'tchanged. But the Republifan who wrote the changes is glad
that Democrats went along with the
new rules.
The changes, which the House
passed 91-3 on Wednesday, came in
response to the possibility that Toledo businessman Bruce Douglas will
mo•ney to run_:;.
against

-

Lee Fisher in next year's Democrat- inee, or give it to other candidates.
ic gubernatorial primary.
' But uoder the new rule, written
If Douglas, who is considering primarily by Rep. Jeff Jacobson, Rsuch a campaign, spends $100,000 Dayton, Fisher would have to return
out of his pocket in lhe primary, Fish- the money raised outside the cap to
er will be free of the $2,500 cap on the contributor, or give it to charity.
personal contriQutions. The personal . So the Republicans won 't have to
spending limit for a general election face the possibility of a Democratic
for statewide office is $150,000.
fund-raising edge in next year's elecUnder current law. Fisher could tion. Jacobson was aware that the
carry any surplus over to the general Democrats could have opposed the
election against the Republican nom- changes.
"The · Democrats cenainly could

_ ___

have taken that tack, hut they chose
nouo. I think we were all looking for
a fair and reasonable solution," he
said after the vote.
Rep. Sean Logan, D-Lisbon, said
Democrats saw a bigger issue - a
fair campaign law.
"I thin!&lt; that when we explained
the legitimate . issue of closing a
loophole that it made sense," said
Logan, a member of the House committee that recommended the bill.
But a Democratic strategist hired

hy Douglas immediately attacked
the House vote.
"The truth is, they ought ro he
more afraid of his ideas than his money," James Ruvolo said in a news
release. "But Bruce Douglas will
play by whatever rules Ohio legislators decide to write."
The bill also requires a candidate
who spends his or her own money to
declare an intention to do so no later
than 120 days before the election.
The current deadline is 60 days.

Another change was made regarding contributions that come in after
the final reponing deadline, which is
12 days hefore the election.
Candidates who receive contributions after that date over $2.500, such
as political action committee donations; would he required to rcpon
those to the secretary of state within
two business days.
The bill now goes to the Senate,
which won 't meet for the next two
weeks.

United Fund to kick off campaign
By BRIAN J. REED
Oliver, secretary; Tom Dooley, trea- trip; Meigs County Council on
Sentinel Newa Staff
surer; and members Cathy Crow, Aging, Inc ., for the Yesteryear proThe United Fund for Meigs Coun- Becky Bacr, Brian Reed , Vicki Mor- gram; Community Assault Prevcnty will begin its 1998 campaign on row, Robbie Shields, Greg Smith. tion, for operational expenses : and ·
God's NET, for programming for
Friday morning at 7:30a.m. with a Tom Reed, and Lisa Ritchie.
Agencies funded during 1997 arc teens.
kick-off breakfast for the fund's supponers.
·
the Meigs United Methodist Cooper"The needs of people in our com·
Bruce Fisher of Middlepon will ative Parish, for assistance with il' munity have not changed, and the
serve as chairman of the 1998 cam- food panty and teen programming; United Fund of Meigs County conpaign. The goal for 1998 is $20,000. Riverbend Ans Council, for .opera- tinues to rely on the kindness of our
The United Fund for Meigs Coun- tional expenses; Meigs County His- community," Fisher said. Wednesday.
ty provides . financial assistance torical Society and Museum. to pur- "We will continue t.o count on our
through local donations to 10 agen- chase additional resources for its ·friends to contribute, but we also
cies which provide services to local library; Boy Scout Troop 249 for need others who have never helped to
residents. It is not affiliated with any · assistance in sending scouts to sum- do so."
Every dollar niised through the
national organization and all proceeds mer camp; Serenity House, for operare administered by the fund's local ational expenses; Gallia/Meigs Com- annual campaign is used for comhoard of volunteer directors. Those munity Action Agency, for its emer- munity projects_ Money raised above
directors are Chloris Gaul, president; · gency needs project; Boy Scout the campaign goal is used to fund an ·
Sue Maison, vice president; Susan Troop 299, for a summer historical emergency fund to assist local rcsi-

Separate trial dates set for Ironton couple

8allt~a St:o::; f!:':::':~ than
II bundlld up
on a night more
ballball

from 1M
11 aha wa1ta for the atarl of Game 4 of last night's World Sarles
· II Cleveland'• Jacob Field. Temperature~ 11 game lime were In
the 30a with anow flurrlel. Cleveland won, 1o-3, to even the aerlee
II 2-2. See game detail• on pagt 4. (AP)
'

I

IRONI'ON (AP) - Separate tri- said the Volgareses wil.l go to trial
al dates were scheduled for a couple unless they plead guilty to their curcharged with killing an 8-year-old rent charges. He said pleading to lessgirl whose body was found buried in er charges is nor an option.
"At this point, we're not willing
their back yard.
.
.
1ack Volgares' trial is scheduled to back off," Collier told the Ironton
for Dec. I before Judge W. Richard Tribune Wednesday. "We're not
Walton. Mona Yolgares will be tried going to give them anything."
The Yolgarcses face several
before Judge Frank McCown starting
Dec. 15. The dates were filed charges in the death of Seleana GamW~dnesday with the clerk's office of ble, who was Mrs. Volgares' daughthe Lawrence Coonty Common Pleas ter from a previous relationship.
Investigators suspect it. was Seleana's
Coun_
conceived by LaTourette's office;
County Prosecutor J.B . Collier body that was found buried in a trash

-

Congressmen
support Indians
WASHINGTON (AP) - Oh,
those goofy fans.
Normally dignifi~d men in
respectable business suits who
answer to "congressman" chucked
any lofty pretenses in the name of
team spirit.
Reps: Louis Stokes, Dennis
Kucinich, Steve LaTourette and Sherrod Brown stuffed their pantlegs into
bright red knee-high socks in a display of suppon Wednesday for the
Cleveland Indians hefore Game 4 of
the World Series.
"For me to get il!'this outfit. we'd
bener win tonight," Stokes, the state·
ly dean of the Ohio delegation, said
with a laugh. He got his wish. The
· . Indians beat Florida 10-3, tying the
series at 2-all.
The stocking demonstration was

one staffer there even made an emer-

gency lcgwear ru.n into the Virginia
suburbs when tall red socks or t.he
type worn by the Indians proved difficult to find downtown.
At an earlier World Series photoop, Kucinich threw a curve to a Flori·
da Marlins loyalist, Rep. Ileana RosLehitnen.
,
.The Florida Republican was posing for pictures in her Marlins jersey
with a bowl of oranges she put up in
a series wager with Democrat
Kucinich, who has five pounds of
kielbasa on the line. Kucinich pretended to reach into the howl to pull .
out an orange, but actually had one
hidden in his palm with the slogan
"Tribe rocks" marked in dark black
letters.

Inaugural school
page begins today

OPEl

OPEl
MOIL.fiL9·9
SAt9-6

1011.-n1. t-t
SAT. 9-6

'

(

Today's issue of The Daily Sentinel marks the introduction of a new
· weekly feature, a page dedicated to
- the three local high schools in Meigs
-- - · County.
The school page . featured on page
7, was designed in pan to introduce
students to writing and journalism
and to give readers a glimpse into
area high schools as seen through the
eyes of students.
The page is intended to be both .
informative and entenaining, and
.will include news stories as well as
feature .material of interest to both
students and adults.
The page will be published every
Thursday. Today's issue spotlights
Southern High School. while next
week's issue will feature Eastern
High Scliool. followed by Meigs
High School on Nov. 6. . ·
Students at the three schools will
write stories penaining to student life
and take approPriate photographs for
publication under the guidance of
school personnel and Ohio Valley
Publishing Company news staff.
At Southern High School. the
School Page Club will meet every
other Wednesday with reponcr Jim
Freeman, a 1985 Southern High

•

School graduate, and teacher Don
Dudding to submit stories and review
new story ideas, and to discuss jour·
nalism in general. Plans call to incorporate- student editors and other
assigned jobs into the School Page
Club, which includes students grades
9-12.
Reponer Brian J. Reed, a 1985
graduate of Eastern High School, has
met with junior and senior English
classes at Eastern to discuss the
development of story ideas and to
assist students in re-writing their
material. Teachers who are assisting
at Eastern are Kathy Garrison and
Rita Williams.
Rehecca Cotterill is advisor for the
newspaper staff at Meigs· High
School and will be working with a
group of students on articles for a
monthly page in The Daily Sentinel.
Students on the staff are in both business office education and college
preparatory classes and two have
expressed an interest in journalism as
a career. Charlene Hoeflich, editor of
The Daily Sentinel, will meet occasionally with the advisor and students
to offer story suggestions and assist
with photography.

dents who have emergency needs.
Less than one half of one percent
of the fund's budget goes to operationa! or administrative costs. There
arc no paid staff members, and· the
1997 campaign spent only $216.81
on administration. Last year's cam1
paign raised over $18,000.
Most funds raised for the program
arc collected through payroll dcduclions. but the United Fund also relic~
on other contributions each year in
order to ·mcct il&lt; fundraising goal. It
contacted. the United Fund will send
an invoice for United Fund pledges.
Those who do not have access to
a payroll deduction option may also
send their .:ontributions. which an:
tax-deductible. dir~ctly to the United
Fund for Meigs County. Inc ., P.O.
Box 424. Middleport, Ohio 45760.

can in the Volgar~ses ' back yard in
Jack Volgarcs is charged with
September, but arc waiting for DNA murder, three counts of kidnapping,
evidence to confirm the identifica- live counts of obstructing justice,
tion ..
tampering with evidence, gross abuse
The Yolgarescs were arrested of a corpse and illegal cultivation of
Sept. 19 in Muskogee. Okla., after a marijuana.
nationwide manhunl.
Mrs. Volgares; who pleaded guilty
After her arrest. Mrs. Volgarcs 6ct. 7 to child endangering and
said on the television show "Amcri- gross abuse of a corpse, faces charges
. ca's Most Wanted" that her husband _of involuntary manslaughter, three.
had accidentally injured Sclcana by counts of kidnapping, three counts Of
throwing her after she "mouthed off" obstructing justice, one count of culto him. She said she helped him bury tivating marijuana and one count Of
Scleana's body.
tampering with evidence.

Clinton's global warming fight plan is hit from all sides
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton looked for middle
ground in his. plan to battle global
warming, but got flak from all sides
- business and environmental
groups alike -and will face a formidable selling job in Congress and
in upcoming climate talks in Japan.
From European diplomats to
members of Congress, from environmental leaders to powerful industry groups such as auto makers and
the National Association of Manufacturers, the response to Clinton's
proposal Wednesday was almost universally negative.
'"The plan fights a five-alarm lire
with a garden hose," the Sierra Club
said.

"It leaves the United States as the
only developed nation dragging its
feet," said Phil Clapp. executive
director of the Environmental Infor-

ual. mandatory controls on heat·
trapping greenhouse ga.•cs. both bold
and innovative . .

ronmcnt spokesman for the European
Commission . "This doesn't seem to
be extremely ambitious."

"It's not pic in the sky nor the
doomsday rhetoric." said Kathleen
The Europeans arc expecting
From a different perspective. but McGinty. chairman of the president's much deeper and earlier reductions in
just as harsh, industry lobbyists pre- Council on Environmental Quality. greenhouse gases - mainly carbon
dicted the proposal, if translated into
dioxide from burning fossil fuelsan internationally binding treaty.
Even more troublesome to the to come out of the Kyoto talks.
would be too costly to U.S. business. White House. however. was the hosThey have proposed iodustrial
They vowed to fight it.
tile reaction from many members of countries cut emissions by 15 percent
"It's a blind commitment to a goal Congress and the cool response from below 1990 levels. Clinton said the
that we don't know what we can meet countries that will negotiate a climate United States wouid cap emissions at
without severe economic disrup- treaty in Kyoto, Japan, in December. 1990 levels in the 2008-2012 time
tion," complained Jerry Jasinowski,
"Something much lnorc substan- frame. Even that, said McGinty,
president of the National Associ-ation tial will need to conic out of the would mean actual cuts of nearly 30
of Manufacturers.
White House if the United States is percent from what emissions would
But the president's advisers said to face up to its global responsibili- he expected to he without any addithe initiative, which called for grad- ties, " said Peter Joergcnscn. en vi- tional ·curhs.
mation Center.

Eastern board hires after-school detention monitor ·
The Eastern Local School Board
took action · on several personnel
issues when they met in regular session on Monday.
The board hired Pam Douthitt as
aftet'School-detention-and Saturday
School monitqr. Also hired were Terri Soulsby, part·time assistant payroll

clerk; Debbie Barher, half-time Title
I Math teacher; Christy Taylor, junior
high varsity cheerleading advisor;
Larry Heines as volunteer JV softball
coach; Tony Deem as freshman class
play advisor; Charles-Knopp as se•~
enth grade basketball coach ; and
Suzie Francis as senior class play

Racine-man to answer
charges in court Friday
A 62-year-old Racine man is
scheduled to appear in court Friday
morning to answer to charges of
gross sexual imposition stemming
from the alleged fondling of a ?-yearold ci:Jild.
·
David W. Proffin, 26812 Mile Hill
Road, was indicted on a charge of
gross sexual imposition stemming
from an alleged May 19 incident,
according to Meigs County Common
Pleas Coun documents.
Gross sexual imposition is a
felony of the third degree punishable
by up to five years in prison. Proffitt
is represented by Pomeroy attorney
Charles Knight, according to Meigs
Counry Prosecuting Attorney John R.

Lentes. ·
In an unrelated matter, George W.
Reitmire, age unreponed, 1548 Nyc
Avenue, Pomeroy, is awaiting sentencing on a charge of cultivation of
marijuana, a fifth-degree felony, pun, ishable by up t~ 12 mont~s in prison.
He pleaded gutlty to the charge on
Oct. 16 and sentencing is scheduled
for Dec. I.
In addition, Jason L. Richards, age
unreponed, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
pleaded guilty to a charge of break·
ing and entering into an unoccupied
structure, a fifth-degree felony, in
April. Sentencing has been scheduled
for Dec. I.
l

advisor.
dents who meet criteria satisfying
Relating to the building program, honor roll, attendance and discipline
the board heard an update from Bar- requirements.
ry Ingham of Vargo. Cassady, Ingham
and Gibbs concerning change orders
The l;&gt;oard also:
for construction of·the new- cl001cn ~- - l"inali•cd- thc -purchase-of-a
tary and· high school . The board sound system for the ncwly-rcnovatapprovcd extra orders proposed by ed gymnasium from Creel Sound;
Ingham and approved relocation of
· Approved the purchase of a usod
the water lines due tO construction. tuba and tuba Ca.&lt;C for the conccn
Lamar Lyons, president of the band:
.
Ea.,tcrn High School student council,
·Set the next .regular meeting for
met with the board to discu.-. scmes- November 24 at 6 p.m. in the high
tcr exams and an exemption fur stu- school library.

It's 'fall-back' time Sunday
WASHINGTON (AP) - Dayllght:savlng time coes back to
standard time this weekend.
The shift Sunday at 2 Lm., local time, gives an extra hour of
sleep to most people Saturday night- an extra hour of work to
those who work the overnighL
In other words; 2 a.m. abrupdy becomes 1 a.m. Most people
set their docks back before retlHng for the evening. Those who
don't, need to remember to set them back Sunday.
If they still haven't remembered to do it by Monday mominc,
they could be an hour early for work.
Daylight-saving·time returns on the first Sunday in April.
In addition to d .. nging the docks, public safety experts are
a pin en&lt;:OUI'IJI!:ing another chan1•: Put new batteries in tbe home
smoke detector.

•

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•

_
:
•

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�Co!fJ~entary
The Daily Sentinel

'

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_Th_u_MKM~Y~·-~-----23~;-1~-~-~----~·----------~~~------~p~~~~o~y-·~M~~~d~~~~~O~h~~~------------~----n.~~D=•I~Iy~S~I~nt~I~~.·~P~~~3 ~

Page2 ~.October a, 1117S ;

OHIO

\

•

Put an.end to··bil_ingual education

Meigs announcements

We.Jtl1e1

Doris W. Earich

MICH .•

By JoHPft Perich II
noles, and the
"I think the Unz initiative is !he approach has been

live. Tbey oppose the measure not
But such rears· are unfounded. :
'Estal.t.slilli in 1948
. because it lacks educational merit For whatever might be saui about .
third insiallment in the Republican a failure. Indeed,
but because of politics. · Tbey ~ Propositions 187 and 209, it's hard ·
111 Court StrHt, Pomll'oy, Ohio
trilogy
of
polarizing
initiatives.
We
in
1996,
only
7
convtneed
that Uu's initiative is a for Vill~gosa or anyone else to
614-992-2158 • FIX 992·2157
will light it." So said Antonio Vii- percenl of the stuRepublican ploy to bring racists and make a case that Unz is some kind of
laraigosa, majority leader of the Cal- dents · who spent
xenophobes to the polls ne~t year.
Republican race-baiter or that his .
ifornia Assembly.
the previous year
It's the same attack !hat was Initiative amounts to immigrant
Villaraigosa was referring to a in bilingual edumade in 1994 on Proposilion 187, · bashing.
.
ballot measure, the "English for the cation
had
the "Save Our State" initiative,
Indeed, Unz has won the respect
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Children " initiative, thai would achieved English
which '!'~_undocumented immi- of mtlny influential leaders in Cali· .
ROBERT L WINGETT
repeal the state's mandate that all its fluency.
arants 111~h11ble fo: welfm · and fomia's immigrant-rights communiPublisher
public schools provide bilingual
So Unz would scrap bilingual other StJ!:Ial services, public health ty, not the least because, in recent .
educalion for non-English speaking education in favor of "English care (except in emergencies), and years, he has taken positions on
students.
immersion." Under this approach, aratis educllion in California public immigration issues that actually
The
measure
is
championed
by
California's
non-English-speaking schools. ' ·
·
placed him at odds with most of'his .
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
Ron
Unz,
a
Silicon
Valley
entrepreschoolchildren
would
get
most
of
And
it's
the·
same
attack
made
fellow
Republicans.
·
·
'General Manager
Controner
neur who came out of nowhere three the ir lessons in rudimentary English. last year on froposition 209, the
As to Unz·~ bilingual education .
years ago to mount a slrnng chal- ratherthan Spanish or Vietnamese or "California Civil Rights Initiative," initiative, it has attracted support
, TIN Stntlntl .wkCNIMIIfftwa to b «&lt;lfof from iWderl Oft .• , . , . . rMf1 of fDplca.
lenge to fellow Republican Pete Hmong or some other foreign which prohibited discrimination or actoss the board, not just among
Shot1 ,.,.,. (300of~ ,.,.,.,01/, J}IJiH ~
Wilson in the party's gubernatorial tongue.
preferential treatment in state whites and conservatives and :
- . , . . , . _ M l l l l l - b o - Ellthprimary. His initiative is expected 10
Recent evidence proves the effec- employment, edl.lcation and con- Republicans, but also among
...
&lt;UyiJmo
""'" If~~~-·
· 111 Coutt Sl., PDtilatoy, Ohio
ar ,__
111111,lo:_
ua.,.11&gt; /lfMeiiY.
II»
-~.
come before California voters next tiveness of English immersion. For tracting.
minorities .and liberals and Democ·
June.
inslance . lhe Westminster School
Now Villaraigosa is trying to par- · rats.
- - .. F.uc to f1
-·~··--------------...:11 Unz says that California's non· Dislricl in Orange Coun!y released tray the bilineual education ballot Indeed, it is worth noling that lhc
English-speaking schoolchildren, study this week showing a higher measure as a third installment of the co-sponsor of the English for lhe
who make up roughly 20 percent of rale of non-English-speaking stu- California GOP's supposed jihad Children initiative is a Latina elcthe stale 's K-12 population. arc dents moving to fluency in lhe past against the state's immiarants and mentary school teacher, Oloria :
badly served by bilingual education. year, since the district received a minorities. And even some oquishy Matta Tuchman. who has been
By TERRY KINNEY
which
provides academic instruction special state waiver allowing it to Republicans have wondered aloud if stumping against bilingual educa·
Associated Press Writer
in
their
native language while also provide English-only instruclion.
the state party oughlto refrain from tion for lhe past 12 years.
CINCINNATI ·- The fight over a tax levy to upgrade a police computer
trying to leach !hem·English.
But none of this makes a differ- endorsing the Unz initiative, fearing
Of course. Matta Tuchman's crit·
system is not aboutlhe end result. It's aboul how to get there.
California
has
offered
bilingual
ence
to
Villaraigosa
and
other
foes
alienation
of
the
state's
growing
ics
liken her to Ward Conncrly. the
Hamilton County voters will be asked Nov. 4 to approve a five-year levy
education
for
!he
past
25
years,
Unz
of
Unz's
bilingual
educilliqn
initiaLatino
population.
black
University of California
to finance improvements for the computerized information center.
,-----__:_ _..:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:,_:__ _ _ _ _ _ _......, regent who. was a leading
Backers say the upgrades will allow police to keep pace wilh technology.
spokesman for Proposition 209. The
. Opponents don't disagree but say the money, should come from the tax
less-charilable suggest she is a trai·
money the county already has, nolan additional tax .
tor
to her community. ·
The center provides background information to police and !hen tracks
But
the fact is, most of Matia
cases from the moment of arrest through incarceration Ia trial. sentencing
Tuchman's fellow Latinos agree •
and, eventually, parole. It has a (ull-time staff of 20 and an $8 million annu·
with her on bilingual education. This
al budget.
is
borne out by a· just-released Los •
"There's been no change · in funding for the information center since
Angeles
Times poll showing ihat an · :
1982," said Mariemont Police Chief Richard Pope, lhe point man for the
overwhelming 84 percent of the 1
levy and chainnan of the board that runs lhe center.
state's Latinos support the Unz ini- l
"We need to do some upgrades, but basically we ' re just trying to stay at
tiative.
.
.
~
the same level we've been. If we had just received annual cosl-of-living
This
poll
result
almost
certainly
l
increases. we would have more money than lhe levy raises."
was disconcerting to Viilaraigosa !
The .29-mill levy would produce about $4.2 m.illion a year and cost
and
other foes of the English for the ;
homeowners $8.S3 for each $100,000 in market value, said county Auditor
Children
ballot measure, They'll 1
Dusty Rhodes. There are about 90,000 residential properties in Cim;innali,
have
to
find
another issue d~ma- ,
and another I 80,000 elsewhere in the county.
~
gogue.
Wilhout the levy, the center mighl have to charge user fees, Pope said.
\
Joseph Perkins Is a columnist
Some agencies might not -be able to afford 1ha1, and "lhe a~encies that would
for tbe San Dieao Union· Tribune.
use this systel'(l are s1ill governmenl agencies, so their user fees are tax dol·
!
Iars, loo," Pope said.
Bems concedes that a compuler system upgrade i's needed, along with
new computers for police cars. But he contends the money should come
.I
from general funds "and not hold ·the, safety of the citizens ... hostage to
squeeze more money out of the beleaguered ta~payer:"
The chainnan of tJte Hamilton County Libertarian Party, Bems last year
led a successful fight against a half-cent property tax increase to build a new
Airport -- flying couple of · times a week, always desi&amp;n and tool up for that first new j •
By Ben Wett.n~ .
jail.
.
Bems said special 1axes were more juslitiable in the 1960s and :70s,
time a little ov~r 13 inconvenient. Now il's up to four car, but once the first one comes off ·
TOKYO -· It is better to fly anywhen there were extraordinary expenses to make the transition from paper where nonstop !han lo Akron with a
hours, the whole times a week .. In large pan. that's ·the line, the price gets cheaper as 1hc '
to computerized record keeping. But government has had two decades to slop in Pittsburgh. II ·is better and
deal about 17 hours. because the g&lt;cater Washington, run gets larger. In theory. too, more
build computer expense into regular budgels, he said.
.
What ·a difference' D.C., area has grown in population people spend more time writing
safer to ny anywhere nonstop than
"The ·county, city and municipalities already get enough money to pay 10 Salt Lake Cily with a stop in DenSeventeen hours, from about 3 million in 1970 10 more and hener bOoks because there · ·
for the police compuler system," Bems said. ·'Giving them more money for ver. It is better. with less hassle , to
after all, roughly about 4.5 million today. There arc arc more people and more stores lo
computers just frees up other mone¥ 10 spend nn what !hey. want inslead of fly anywhere nonstop than to Vienna
makes up a normal now enough passengers lo make the buy them and sell them. (In lheory ,
what we need."
. ·
.
wilh a slop in Frankfurt. Get on a Wattenberg waking· day. It's ' night economically worthwhile. So I only; don't get me started on thai
screwy business.) ·
·
He sees a dark side lo police use of sophisticated electronic .gear. such as plane, senle ·in, and •• zoom 1 • • get
true, I awoke at 5 -get to ny nonstop.
portable fingerprint scanning devices !hal could be linked to FBI computers. off at your dcstinalion . If it is a.m. Tokyo tim~ the first morning
Big n~mbers do that kind of
There was a story in the New
"With 1he onslaught of new technology it is reasonable for a citizen to bumpy, take a drink. If you're not a here, .but someumes I get up at 6 lhing. Drug companies 'can spend York Times a~oul people moving
ask wJJen is il too· much and when is il' jusl 100 intrusive to allow, ·• Berns· drinker. take a lranquilizer. If it's a.m. at home.
many billions for research because out beyond tbc suburbs and beyond
said. "While tingerprinl scanning devices arc not ycl available, it is a virtu· very bumpy. take 1wo.
To what do I owe .this blessing'! there.are enough people with a given - the exurbs to get .where ellinic. race
al certainty that they will be available 10 police before the levy expires in
.Technology.
certainly. Hats off to · · malady 10 make its cure or trcalmcnt and crowding aren't But it's unlike·
I have been to Japan twice
2003.
.
1he
folks
who
make and fly the economically profilablc: If you 're ly for that to happen unless a hunch
before. Each time. I have departed
planes.
Affiuence,
cenainly. There is going to have heart disease, it's bet· of people do it, to share the costs of '
from Washinglon, D.C.. and then
enough
money
around
to pay the ter to have it in an era when lots and roads. sewer Iines. and schools ••
changed planes (once in San Francisco, the olher time· in New York). costs of my public television pro- lots of other )icople have it too. It:s and !hat's ·just the beginning nf a ·
Leave home, wail for plane, take gram. I am here with colleagues to greal .for ballplayers. Some of those long list which ultimately includes
VotJ W()N!r 8et.IE~.E
firs! night, get lo second flight (in tape three episodes of "Think Tank" guys wouldn't be making their $5 orthodontists and ophthalmologists.
million a year if there weren 't I do not get weepy when I am told
New York. change airpons), wait for as pan of a PBS television special.
Wt-\,t..T MoRe ~
second flighl , take second flight,
But there.is another force at work enough eyeballs on the 1V screen to that Sleepy Acres used to be a P&lt;:au· clear customs, get to hole I. Door 10 to which we rarely pay homage: big charge the advertisers big bucks to iiful meadow with cows in it I am
MO«~ AMeftiCA.NS
door. it look aboul 24 hours ·· and numbers. These days, the enviros peddle their products. There would- more pro-people than pro-cavy or
for a day or two afler arrival , ycu make the case that less is more. It's n't be Marlins in the World Series if pro-meadow. Gro)\lth is good.
ARE
lt-'C:. 't\o:\ESE.
felt like the inside or .an old galosh. more likely, I say, that more is more. South Florida hadn 't grown. . :
Ben Wattenberg, a Knlor rellow at .
PA~s.
the
Amorlc~n Enterprise Institute, is · ;
hapwning
is
called
What's
Now I am in Tokyo again . This
· There used to be no nonstop
the
IUihor or M Valun Molter M9St ..
"economics
of
scale,"
and
it
runs
IAI~/\1"?
time I flew nonstop from Washing· flights from Washington, D.C., to
and Is the hoot or the weekly public '
through
mosl
every
nook
and
cmnny
ton-Dulles Airpon to Tokyo-Narita Tokyo. Then there were flights a
. of commerce. It costs a bundle to television PI'OII'am "Think Tank."
'
"
H

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IND.

' ' ' ''
•leolumbus!56"

I

W.VA.

.--·IIQINIUfW.
"'.,_-·-··'

a

Levy fight not over end
result but how to get there

In praise of bigger numbers

•.

Clinton knew he was on thin ice .:

~ Letters

to the editor

Aggravation

•

•

I

fund raising the
GOP still outspent
him in the presi·
dential race . He
beat Dole by at
least $20 million
and
probably
more, according
to former Common Cause presi·
dent
Fred .
Wertheimer.
Kondracka
The fact that federal election law
was
willfully - smashed
to
smithereens by both .parties in 1996
should have triggered the appoint·
ment of a special prosecutor.
That's because .it places Attorney
General Janet Reno in an unavoid·
able conflict of interest in deciding
which campaign' s actions should
receive

the

most

investigative

resources, who gets indicted first,
who gets tried fi'rst, etc.
Though the Justice Depanment
promised Common Cause last year
that its findings on both campaigns
" warrant careful consideration ."

Reno has refused to appoint a spe·
cial. prosecutor and seems (o be
focused on minutiae .• phone calls
and coffees :. instead of big conspiracies.
But Common Cause's argument
seems airtight and was·supported by
the White House videolapes
released last week.
In the !ape of I · WJlite House
gathering Dec. S, 1995, Clinton !ells
contribu1ors that he and his aides

l

I
1

1

J

f

•

The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District has issued a boil advi-'
sory for the following areas in Sutton and Chester townships: Morning Star Road from Pine Grove Road to Rice's greenhouse, Mitchell
Road, Bowman Run's Road. Riefer Road, Salser Road and state Route
124 between Syracuse and Racine; also from the intersection of state
Route 248 and Riebel Road to and including !he communily of Chester.
New Hope Road, Old Route 7 (Sumner Road) from Chesler to state
Route 7, Pooler Road and the east end of Texas Road near state Route

7.

Meigs County Court news
Suits nted
Editor's note: A lawsuit outlines
the grievances of one party against
another, It does not atabllsh guilt
or Innocence.
.
The following suits were tiled
recently in the Meigs County Court
of Common Pleas .
Fanners Bank &amp; Savings Campa- ·
ny, Pomeroy, has filed a suit for foreclosure against The Riverwalk partnership of Pomeroy. panners Judith
A. Williams, Pomeroy, and Anne M.
Chapman, Pomeroy, and John T.
Williams of Syracuse of Paul L.
Chapman of Pomeroy to seek repayment of a $133.116.88 promissory
note, plusintenest .and costs. The bank
seeks to foreclose on property in
Syracuse.
Home National Bank, Racine, has
filed a suit for foreclosure against
Jimmy Hensley. Vinton, Candy Hensley. Long Bottom, and Jessica HensIcy, Columbus, owners of real estate
at Long Bonom. and Beverly J.
Hensley, Columbus. The bank holds
a promissory note on the property for

$14,298.29 signed by Robert D.
l:Je_nsley, .deceased, and seeks foreclosure ·on the property, plus costs
and interests.
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company has filed a suit for foreclosure
against David G. Johnson and Tammy E. Johnson, both o.f Middleport.
The bank seeks Ia foreclose on property located in Middleport to recover $35,977.02 on a delinquenl
promissory note. plus· interest and
costs.
Jud(lment awarded
A decree for judgment, foreclosure and sale was awarded lo Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company versus
James R. Boyer, et al. Property was
ordered sold with proceeds of
$17,845.52 and $18,531 .09to Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company and
$3,015 .21to the Meigs County Treasurer's Office.
·
Case dismissed
A case was dismissed by Farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Company versus
Bobbie E. Roy. Racine, and others.

Gallipolis livestock auction results
_

suddenly "~lized that we could unlimited amounts •· to the DNC, .. 1
run ads , through the Democratic which is allowed to collect "soft u
Parly" and ra.i.sc money in money" for "pany building" bul not
"$20,000, $50,000 and $100,000 for candidate advocacy.
,
blocks" instead of $1,000, and avoid
The DNC transferred the money .
depleting his campaign. lreasury to -Democratic parties in key .presi·
"which is limited by law.''
· dential battleground states. and the ~
. In · the tape of a White House .slate parties lransfcrred alfllost lj
lunch on May 21, 1996, Clinton exactly the same amoonts back to '
thanks donors for givi~g money to Squier, Knapp, Ochs Communica- ' j
his party and says, "Tbe fact that lions and the November Group, pro- ~
we've been able.to finance this lone- ducers of the Clinton/Gore cam- ~
running constant televisioo cam-_ paign's adv.cnising._
~
paign ... where we're always able to
As Clinlon adviser Dick Morris
frame the issues ... has been central wrote in his book. "Behind the Oval .
to the position 1· now enjoy in the Office," lhc ads were personally .
edited by Clinton himself.. They ,
polls."
.
Clinton and his aides have said . praised the presidenl and attacked !'
over and over aJain that they were Dole. jus! as "hard money" Clinton .
assured by their lawyers that using ads did.
·
•
soft-money donalions forJhe DemoAs Common Cause also demon- :
cratic National Committee to tout strated. when the Dole campaign ran :
Clinton's candidacy wa.' legal.
out of federal primary campaign ·_,
But Wcnheimer, who led Com- money in March 1996, the RNC 1
mon Cause's probe of 1996 viola- copied the DNC model and put on .
tions, said, "Having your lawyer tell pro-Dole, anti-Clinton ads lhal were
you somethin1 is legal doesn't ·make identical 10 the Dole campaign's •
it legal." Common Cause maintains own ads except that they ~nded with -~
-- and these tapes indicate -· that the the words, "Call your elected om1
Clinton/Gore campaign broke the cials," an apparent prelense lo satisi
1
fy
the
law.
·.'
law three ways: by spendins more
.' I
!han it was ·allowed, by e~~ablina
Tbe bottom line is, in 1996, both . !I
contributors to e~ceed legal contri· panics broke Ihe law in plain view,
1
bution limits, and by concealing and they're getting ready to do it
;
what it was doing from the Feder'lll asain. So either somebody oughl to · : :
Election Commission.
be prosecuted or the law should be
:
Common Cause traced the fol· changed -- or both.
•
lowina chain: President Clinton and ·
(Mortoll Kondracke Is exeeu- ' : !
V~ee President AI Gore asked donors
dve editor of Roll Call, tbe MWI- · _
.
for money. Tbe money went •• in paper of Capitol HW.)

I

Boil orders issued

I

'

·By Morton Kondracke
Maybe it's not a smoking gun.
Call it a steaming coffeepot. Bul a
newly released White House videotape shows clear evidence !hat President Clinton knew his 1996 fund
raising was skirting federal campaign laws. And another tape shows
he knew that he was campaigning ••
· nol pany building ·- with soft
money.
The tapes are new evidence of a
grand conspiracy by the Climon
campaign and theDemocra!ic Pany
10 raise and spend vastly more
money to re-elect Clinton than the
_ F~ deral Eleclion Campaign Act
allows.
· •·
At last, there are indications that
the Senate Govenimental Affairs
A
Committee is taking seriously the
Dear £dilor.
idea that !here was a Democratic
Have you ever tried Ia open a paper caTion of milk? It says open here,
conspiracy
in ,1996. lf it launches
OK. Push up. OK. Well that's all that ·happens. I must be doing something
hearings
on
the matter, it should do
wrong because it docsn'l open. I end up using a knife to open it. .
lhe
same
into
evidence developed by
Have you went' to your local s1ore and bough! several items? You went
Common Cause !hat OOP candidate
lhrough 1he check-out and they gave you a cash register receipt. If you are
Bob Dole and lhe Republican Party
like me , when you get home you like 10 check it out for no man-made
engaged in a similar, though smaller.
machine is infallible.
.
conspiracy.
Well, I look at it. Squint at it. Put my glasses.on, bu1 it still is too faint to
From mid-1995 lhrough June
read. Surely with the prices ~hey ch~rge they could buy a n_ew bottle of ink 1996, Clinton raised and spent $34
or a new 1ape for their machme.
million more .than the law allows.
Have you ever been walching a 1V p~ram and in the most interesting
Dole spent $14 million extra
pan the background music comes on so bad yo~ can't even hear the dia· between April and July 1996.
Iogue? Now they say !hey have sound engines. well I believe the gentlemen
Both signed letters pledging that
are deaf.
they would abide by fedeml spending limiiS in retum for $100 million
Vl'lil Wilker each in fellcral funds.
bclne
II simply isn't true -- as Clinton
repcaledly claims •• that despite his

--Local briefs----.

A meeting of the State Capital Improyement Program (SCIP) Local
Review Committee will be held Oct. 30, 2:30 .p.m. in the Meigs &lt;':oun•
ty Commissioners' Office in 1he Meigs County Courthouse.
The purpose of the meeting is to select a fifth member for the commillee.

.

I

Saturday...A chance of showers.
Lows around '50 with highs near 60.
Sunday...A chance of showers.
I,.ows 45 to 50 with highs 50 to 55.
Monday ... A chance of showers.
Lows 35 to 40 with highs in the 40s.

SCIP meeting slated

I

N£S111(&amp;,

Ohio
Tonighi...Cioudy. A chance of
showers after midnight north third.
Lows in the upper 30s to mid 40s.
Friday...Occasional rain . Highs in
!he lower lo middle· 50s.
Extended forecast

!

"0

I

Today's weather ·torecast

. TPCWD customers in the above areas are asked to boil their waler
used for cooking and drinking for three minutes before consumption
until the results of a test are announced.

Barry's World

c

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Fair Bolll'd election planned
The Meigs County Agriculture
Society will elect five board members
at an election .to take place on Nov.
3. The deadline for filing with Debbie Watson. secretary, is Monday.

.r

Legion in fund
The Racine American Legion,
Post602, is taking orders for pictures
10 be taken at the hall. Members will
going door 10 door to gel orders.

Revival services set
Revival services will be held Friday through Sunday 7 p.m. at the
Faith Valley Tabernacle. Bailey Run
' Road, Pomeroy. Rev. George Scott of
Huntington. W.Va. will be the speak·
· Ronald Epling, 56, of State Route 124, Reedsville, died Oct. 21, 1997, cr.
'at the Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
Bom on April 24, 1941 in Coolville, he was the son of the late Gerald Dinner planned ,
and Juanita Blue Epling. He was retired from Elkem Metal where he worked
A turkey-ham dinner will be
as a pipe fitter.
served at Southern High School,
He was an Anny National Guard, Parkersburg, a member of the Coolville Nov. 3, II a.m. 10 2 p,m. It will be a
Masonic Lodge 337, F&amp;AM, where he was a 32nd Degree Mason, the Scottish Rile in Cambridge, the Columbus Aladdin Temple Shrine, and tlie Forked
run Sportsman Club, Long Bottom. He graduated in 1959 from Coolville
High School.
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaHe is survived by his wife, Linda Kay Huffman Epling. a son and daughOhio
direct hog prices al selected
ter-in-law. Bobby and Yvelle Epling, Pomeroy; a son, Tim, of the home, and
buying
poinls Thursday as provided
a daughter, Melissa Epling, Gallipolis; his grandfather. Ray Dunfee of
Coolville; two sisters and brothers-in:J~w. Sonja and Robert Jones of Dunkirk by the U.S. Dcpartm~nt of Agriculand Sherry and Daniel Rick hard of Ada, and a special friend, Tom Hayman ture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to firm;
of Long Bottom, several nieces and nephews.
demand
moderate to good wilh modBesides his parents, he was preceded in dealh by a brother, Larry Epling,
erate
movcmcnl.
and an infant brother.
.
·
U.S. 1-2. 230-260 lbs. country
Funeral ~rvices will be held Saturday al I p.m. at the White Funeral
points
44.00-45.00, few 46.00; plants
Home in Cdolville. The Rev. Wendell Stutler will officiate and burial will
45.00-46.50.
be in the Sand Hill Cemetery, Long Bottom . Friends may call atlhe funer·
U.S. 2·3. 230-260 lbs. 41.50al home Friday, 2 lo 4 and 71o 9 p.m. Masonic services will be held Friday
44.00; 210-230 lbs. 37.50-41.50.
at 7:30p.m. by the Coolville Masonic Lodge 337, F&amp;AM .
Sows: under 500 lbs. 50 cents 10
I .00 lower: over 500 lbs. steady.
U.S. 1-3 300-400 lhs. 32.5035.00;
400-500 lbs. 35.00-37.00. few
Mary Ceola "Babe" S\0011 83, formerly of Camden, W.Va .. died Wednesday, Oct. 22, 1997 in the Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown follow- 34.00; 500·600 lbs. 38.00-:40.00. few
over 600 lbs. 41 .00.
ing a brief illness,
Boars: 32.00-B.OO. few 34.00.
She was born Sept. 12, 1914, in Lewis County. a daughter ofthe late Jacob
Estimated
receipts: 31 .000.
R. and Zeffie Keister Straley. She was employed as Webers Nursing Home
Prices from Producers Livcin Weslon, W.Va., for several years and laler worked at the Crestview Manor
slock Associalion :
in Jane Lew, W.Va.. until re1irement. She was·a Methodist by faith.
Hog market !rend for Thursday :
She is survived by six daughters and three sons-in-law, Helen and Densteady.
ver Carder of Waynesburg, Pa .• Betty and Will am Coffman of Hanna, W.Va.,
· Summary of Wednesday\ aucCarol Pizzonia of Chicago, Ill., Linne Tochl of Burk, Va., Kathy Davis of
lions at Gallipolis and MI. Vemon:
Mineral Wells, W.Va.; and Jeanie and George Connolly of Syracuse; two sons,
Hogs: sleady 10 I .00 lower.
James C. Stout of East Liverpool and Ray Stout of Dayton: four sisters and
Butcher hogs : 38.00-52.00.
two brothers'in-law. Joanne Ellis of Miami, Fla.• Lucille aud Paul Groah and
Cattle: 1.00 to 2.00 higher.
Louise Snyder both of Camden, W.Va., and Dollie and Burl Bush of BarSlaughter steers: choh:e 63.50berton; 15 grandchildren; 12 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grand- 67.50; select 58.00-63..50.
child.
Slaughter heifers : choice 63.00She was preceded in death on June 25, 1993 by her husband, Freeman 67.50: select 57.50-63.00.
Orval Stout, to whom she was married on March 6, 1930: a grandchild and
Cows: steady lo lower: all cows
four brolhers, Joseph, Robert, Fred and Francis Straley.
43.00 and down.
Services will be held Salurday, I p.m. at the Boyle Funeral Home in West·
Bulls: steady to lower; all hulls
on with lhe Rev. William J.B. Gum officiating. Burial will follow in Forest
43.50 and down.
Lawn Memorial Gardens. Friend~ may call Friday, 6-9 p.m. at the funeral
home.
.

Ronald Epling

"'*'1-""' - -

1!-. .,. .

Doris Walden Earich, 91 , of Coolville, died Thesday, Oct. 21 , 1997 at her
residence following an extended illqess.
Born Sept. 16, 1906 in Coolville, she was the daughter of the late Wtsley Andrew and Fannie M. Frost Bingman.
·
Mrs. Earich retired in 1971 as a clerk,in Ohio University's building and
~ounds department. She was a ronner member of the Coolville Congregallonal Church.
She is survived by a daughter, Kay Walden of Coolville; thre~ sisters-inlaw, Ann Walden and Dora Lockhart, both of Coolville, and Dawn White .
of Athens; two brothers-in-law, Dean Earich of Westerville and John Earich
of California; a nephew and several nieces.
·.
Besides her parents, sbe was preceded in death by her first husband, John
S. Walden, Jr., in 1950; ber second husband, Norman A. Earich in i961; three
brothers, Donald, Charles and Perry Bingman , two sisters, Emma Russell ·
and Ora Lobdell, and a nephew, Harlan Russell.
Graveside services will be held Friday at I I a.m. at the Coolville Cemetery. The Rev. Helen Kline will officiate .
Friends may call Thursday from 2 to 4 and 6to 8 p.m. at White Funeral Home in Coolville.
·
·

Trick or trat niallt aet
The Scipio Fire Depanment will
sponsor trick or treat night in Harrisonville and Pageville on Oct. 31,
6 to 7 p.m. The siren will sound to
begin and end the observance.

Producers Livestock Market
200-300# St. $68-$79. Hf. $80repon from Gallipolis for sales con- $92, 300-400# St. $75-$87.
ducted on Wednesday, Oct 22.
Hf. $68-$79, 500-65011 St. $67Feeder Cattle -$2 higher.
· $77. Hf. $63-$71: 650-80011 St. $63$70; Hf. $60-$69.
.
(Feeder Cattle sale IS the second
The Daily Sentinel J• Wednesday of each month)
(USPS 113-...,)
Cows -Steady.
I Cull
Well Muscled/Fleshed $33-$38,
P"blilhcd. eve1y afternoon , Monday thrnu11h 1
Medium/Average $32-$34.
Friday, Ill C'.ourt St., Pomeroy, Ohio. by 1he
Ohio Y1llty PublhhinH Company/O•nntu Ca ..
Thin/Light -$27-$30. Bulls $35Ponw:roy. Ohio 4~769 , Ph . 992-2156. Stcond
$43.
cl111 poiiiJt pt~ld 111 Pomeroy, Ohio.
Back To The Farms:
MrMbtr1 1'he Aunci~t~d Pres1, and the Ohto
_
:...
Cow/.Calf
Pairs $4()().$500;--Bred·
New~paper 1\unci.,tton-;-- -Cows $300-$625: Baby Calves $25·
POSTM.45TER: ' Send addreu COJrrctllfu to
$70: Goats $27-$65.
Tlloe DAily Sentinel, Ill Court S1. , Pomeroy,
Upcoming Specials - Special
Ohln -l~769.
graded feeder cattle sale Monday,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Oct 27. 7 p.m.
By Cart~r or Mol or Roule
.For PLCA loan ralcs and currcnl
One 'Wt:tk ....... ............. .'..................... ,..... S2.tiiJ
OM Montll ................................................ $1'1 .711
ralc s. please comacl Doug Evans at
One Year ............................................. .. S1114.flll
1-800-641 -PLCA. For free on-fann
visils. please call 6'14-446·9696.
SINGLE COPY PRICE
~ - --~

Dlily ........... ......................................... -'5 CtrMI
Subtc:ribeu not desiring 10 pay lhe mr~r m1y
remit In adv1nce direcl lo Tht Dally Sentinel
on alhree, sir. or 12 month N111. Ctedil will M

a:iven carrier each week .
No tubKriptkm by mail pcrminrd in arus
where home carrier service fl l vatlable.

Pvbliahu rt~rvu tM: riaht to adj1111 r•les dur·
in1 the ••bscripliOft period. Subscr1plion rate
chanps m•y be iiT)plcmenlcd by "h•n1•nathe
dutalkln of lh;e subscription.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

I_..MellaCowllfy
13 Vtletks .................................................$27.31!
26 .................... """ ........................... SSJ.IIl
l2 W.kl .......................................... SIIIl .l6

.,..,_M..,C..oty

ll w.eu ..:..............................................Sl'l.Zl
26 Weeki ...... ....... ............ .............:.......... Sl6.MI
ll Weokl ............ .................................. .$1 tl9. 72

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Wednesday, (Xt. 22 dlschal'let
• Matthew Fraley, Pamela Shields,
Margaret Ehman, Traci Caldwell,
Dona'ld Caner, Mrs. ess Ewing and
daughter; Pauline N~al , Quentin Stapleton and Shelby Hughes.
Wednesday, OcL 22 birth • Mr.
and Mrs. David Arbogasl,daughter,
Point Pleasant.
Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSION •
Robert Mahr, Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
·None.

•

"

eat-in or catry -out dinner, $4.75 for
aduhs, $3.50 for students,.

•

Chicken DObdle dinner
A chicken noodle dinner will be
held at the Uniled Pentecostal Church
in Middleport Friday, II a.m. to I
p.m. featuring chicken and noodles,
green beans, cole slaw and roll and
choice of pumpkin or apple pie for
$4. Eat-in or delivery available. 9923824.
..

••
•

,

Sole planned
A rummage sale will be held Oct.
31 and Nov. I, 9 am . Ia 4 p.m. at
Grace Episcopal Church, Pomeroy.
Middleport
Services Sunday at I0 a.m. at the
Hobson Chrislian Fellowship with
special speaker and singers. Sunday
7 p.m. the Tabor Family of Columbus
will sing.
Eastern Levy Committee
The Eastern Local Levy Commit·
tee will meel Monday, 6 p.m. in the
high school cafeteri&lt;J Anyone intercsled in helping wilfi the upcoming
levy is welco~c to attend.

•

Today's livestock report

Mary 'Babe' Stout

Sheep and lambs: 1.00 to 2.00
lower; choice wools 81.00.86.00;
choice clips 81.50-86.50; feeder
lambs 90.00 and down; aged sheep
49.50 and down.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................... 47"1.
Akzo ......................................84\
AmrTech .................................68
Ashland 011 ...........................48\
AT&amp;T ....................................48"1.
Bank One .............................52'1.
Bob Evans ............................18'.\
Borg-Wamer ............,..............58
Champion .....................:....... 18'1.
Charm Shps ...........................5'1.
City Holdlng ..........................41'1.
Fldet'lll Mogul ......................461
Gannett .................................54 •
Goodyear.............................66"/w
Kmart ....................................... 13
Landa End ............................31-;.

Limited .................................... 23
Oak Hill Flnl ..........................19'1.
OVB .••.•.•...••••••.••.•••••.•.••.•..•••••:••37
One Valley .............................38'l.
Peoples .................................44"4
Prem Fln1 ..............................23'!.
Rockwell ..............................54'1.
RDIShell ................................ 53'l.
Shoney's ••••~ ........................... A1-

Star Bank .............................!10'1.
Wendy's ...............................22'.&amp;.
WorthlngtonY"''"'"''''"''''"'''''''-'-

-*-*-

Stock reports are the 10:3
a.m. quotaa provided by Adveet ··
of Gofllpolle.
.

Lowell C.. Tope
Lowell C. Tope. 82. of Leesburg. formerly the Wilkesville and Ewington communities, died Thursday, Oct. 23, 1997 a~O.S.U. Hospitals, Columbus.
Born June 12. 1915, in Gallia County, son of the late Claude 0. and Margaret Myrtle 0' Dell Tope, he was a retired heavy equipment operator, high·
way construction. He was a member of the National Operating Engineers
Union, the Knights of Pythias in Wilkesville. He attended the Wilkesville
Uniled Melhodist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Vivian Betz, whom he married June 24,1 939 in
Coalton; a daughter, Linda E. Hamilton of Leesburg; lwo grandchildren,twq
great-grandChildren: and a brother. Wendell V. (Marianna) Tope of Bidwell.
In addition to his parenls, he was preceded in death by a sister, Mary
Christine Pilchford .
Services are I p.m. Saturday at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton, with Rev. Carl Palmer officiating. Burial will be in the Calvary Cemetery, Rio Grande. Friends may call atlhe funeral home on Friday from 5-8
p.m.

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Units of,the Meigs County Emer,
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calls for assislance Wednesday. Units
responding included :
· CENTRAL DISPATCH
S: 14 a.m., [Jq:&gt;ol Street, Rulland,
Ray Searls. Holzer Medical Center,
Rutland squad assisted;
12:30 p.m., Holzer Meigs Clinic,
Pomeroy, Connie Jolley. HMC:

6:07p.m .. state Rou1e 7, Pomeroy,
Juslin Roseberry, Veterans Mcmori·
al Hospilal.
MIDDLEPORT
4:21 p.m., Beech Street, Michael
Lee , VMH.
RUTLAND
7:09 a.m., Old Dexter Church
Road, Edward Hlad, O'Bicncss
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Thur8day, October 23, 1997

Sports

The Dally Sentinel

Fall Classic stands tied at 2·2

' By RONALD BLUM
on the other team. That was huge.
CLEVELAND (AP)- The lndi · That set the tone from the begin·
ans found the best way to escape the ning ."
cold and snow: Send the World
Wright, at 21 the youngest start·
Series- back to Florida.
ing pitcher in the Series since Bret
j Yes, baseball's not supposed to be
Saberhagen in 1985, showed why
~played in weather like this.
Cleveland promoted hini from DouSure shons and shirt sleeves are ble-A to the majors in the last half- ·
preferable to skicaps and scarves.
year. He is 3-0 in the postseason and
So the ,Indians gol their wish with 9'0_th•s ,season when ptlchmg after an
' " : Wednesday night's 10-3 victory over·:.• Indians lpss.
'
the Marlins, which tied the best-of- · " He's everything I heard and
seven Sertcs at2-all . The title will be more." Marlins manager Jim Leyland
decided this weekend in the wamnh satd. "He has all the ingredients for
of Miami's Pro Player Stadium. but being a great one from what I saw."
)lot until tonight 's Game 5 is played
Brian Ande~son followed Sanders
in ClevCiand.
with three mmngs of shutout rehel.
"It was the coldest I' ve pitched allowing just one hit and facing oQc
in " said Jaret Wright. who alluwcd bauer over the minimum . He's been
th;ee runs in six innings to win only an Ind ians' fan all his life, growing up
the sixth Series matchup of rookie in Geneva, Ohio, and now he was
starters.
helping his team move within two
. · It was 38 degrees when the first wins of its first Series title since
pitch was thrown, the coldest for a 1948.
Series game since tbrnpcrature
"Once I got out there, I couldn't
records started in 1975. The wmd tell if I was in Cfevcland or Timbukchill was 18 and snow nurries nut- tu," Anderson said. "I just wanted to
tcred throughout the night. Even the get guys out."
Indians ' mascot wore a Santa cap.
While Cleveland 's rookies shined.
" Let it snow, let it snow," Sandy . Florida's Tony Saunders failed to
Alomar sang in the interview room come through, allowing six runs and
after getting three of Cleveland's 15 seven hits in two-plus innings. Thir~its and driving in three runs.
ty -five of his 68 pitches were called
On Tuesday night, Florida had . balls.
taken a 2-1 lead with a 14-11 win,
"I never gave my team a chance,"
winning a game that most called ugly. Saunders said. "They were very
Clcvelanddidn'tlctthelosssnow- patient hitters. I didn't throw many
' ball, getting ahead in the first on a strikes, and they swung at nothing hut
.two-run homer by Manny Ral'(lirez strikes."
and an RBI double by Alomar. The
florida tried to come buck with
' Indians made it6-0 in the third and, Jim Eisenreich's RBI single in' the
after Florida closed to 6-3, pulled fourth and Moises Alou's two-run
away with a run in the ·sixth, anoth- homer in the sixth, biU Anderson
cr in the seventh and Malt Williams' made sure this lead wouldn't be wast' two-run homer in the eighth.
ed, not like the 7-3 advantage Cleve"Thal was important to get going land squandered in Game 3.
,early in the game," said Williams,
Williams capped the big night
who went 3-for-3 with two walks. with a long homer into the plaza
"That goes back to putting pressure behind the Jeft-lield seats, becoming

World Series notebook

·

Thur!f!ay, October 23, 1997

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The Meigs Marauders will host
the always tough Vinton County
Vikings this Friday evening in a key
Tri-Valley Conferen« Ohio Division
battle at Bob Roberts Field.
The Vikings head into the contest
with a 7-1 mark overall and 2-1 in the
Ohio Division. The only loss of the
season was a 20-12 heanbreaker to
the undefeated Nelsonville-York
Buckeyes. The Vikings are tied for
second place with Wellston.
Vinton County is coming off a 4127 win over the Belpre Golden
Eagles last Saturday evening at Belpre. In that contest the Vikings held .

Johnson, Vizquel,
Williams receive
Gold Glove honors

Tribe tops Marlins
10-3 to send World
Series south again

By BEN WALKER
CLEVELAND (AP) - florida
catcher Charles Johrison and Cleveland shortstop Omar Vizquel and
third baseman Matt Williams. whose
'defense helped their teams reach the
World Series. each won Gold Glove
honors Wednesday.
The awards were released by
Rawlings before the Marlins and
lnd~ans played in Game 4 of the

cisco first baseman J.T. Snow, Houston second baseman Craig Biggio,
San Diego third baseman Ken
Caminiti, Los Angeles outfielder
Raul Mondesi and Colorado outfielder Larry Walker.
Biggio won his rounh award,
while Walker and Caminiti each won
their third. Snow, who won two with
the Angels, won. his first in. the NL.
Mussina and Mondesi each·are twotime whme1rs.
,~i$l~~Oid jOI~~~-

.

.
CATCHES POPUP - Cleveland flrat basemen Jim Thome (left)
almost runs Into third baseman Matt Williams while catching 1 popup by Florida's Bobby Bonilla In the eighth Inning of Game 4 of the
World Serlea In Cleveland Wednesday night. The Indiana' 10.3 victory tied the Fall Classic at 2·2. (AP)

only th~ seventh·player to homer in
the Series for teams in both leagues. ·
Willi~ms , who won his founh Gold
Glove earlier in the day. hit just . 125
in the 1989 Series for San Francisco
and had been 4-for-14 in this Series
without an ex.tra ~ base hit.
· " It 's probably heen the toughest
year I've ever been through- inconsistent professionally, tough personally," said Williams, who went
through a divorce. "It hasn 'l been
good."
Now the focus shifts tonight to
Cleveland's Orel Hershiser and Florida's Livan Hernandez, who will
reprise the match up from Game I ,
won by Florida 7-4 .
_
,
"All the hard work seems to be
paying off so far, " Alomar said.
"We've been down before, and we

·

have come back."
His teammates, in Alomar's view,
are pretty resilient.
"They forget about the losses, the'
bad games," he said. "They come
back the next day and say, 'Forget it. '
"

If Cleveland could get over the
Game 3 loss, ignoring lhe weather
Wednesday night wa.' no problem ut
all.
Notes: Marquis Grissom went 0for-4, stopping his World Series hitting streak at 15 games . ... Devon
White's four strikeouts were one
short of the World Series record , set
by George Pipgras of lhe Yankees in
Game 3 of the 1932 Series . ... White
· also tied a record with five consecutive strikeouts over two games, a
mark last accomplished by pitcher
Danny ~aekson of Kansas City in
1985.

. Ordonez, both of whom re!~~~~
show up on highlight films I
of their acrobatic plays, were among
five first-time winners.
Baltimore first baseman Rafael
Palmeiro, Minnesota second baseman Chuck Knoblauch and New
York Yankees outfielder Bernie
Williams also won for the first lime.
Seattle outfielder Ken Griffey Jr.
and Atlanta pitcher Greg Maddux
wo.n their eighth straight Gold
Gloves. San Francisco outlielder
Barry B'onds won his seventh overall, and Texas catcher Ivan Rodriguez
won his sixth straight.
Johnson carried his third consecutive Gold Glove. Vizquel won his
fifth overall and Matt Williams, who
won three while playing for San
Francisco, got another in his first year
in the AL. 1
Baltimore pitcher Mike Mussina
completed the AL list.
Other NL winners were San Fmn-

~~Y R!!~!~~nS ~e~~ag~n~~~-~rke~:~~n~.~~~~~!!~e,.

'

I'

stew, seafood, black beans and rice
and Cuban coffee.
"Thut's gomg to give them a lot
of energy, " Emilio Estefan said.
Gloria Estefan opened the second
game of the series by singing the
national anthem, wearing Alex Fernandcz's 32 to honor the · injured
pitcher.

This 'n that: Marquis Grissom
went 0-for-4, stopping his World
Series hilling streak at 15 games . ...
Matt Williams became only the seventh player to hit World Series
homers for teams in each league. The
others were Enos Slaughter, Moose
Skowron, Roger Maris, Frank Robinson, Reggie Smith and Kirk Gibson ."
... William~ also tied the World
Series record by reaching safely in all
five plate appcamnces, a record last
accomplished by Cincinnati's Billy
Hatcher in Game 2 of the 1990
Series ... . Game 4 marked only the
sixth time both starters in a World
Series game were rookies. Jarel
Wright is 9-0 in 13 starts following ·
Cleveland lo.sses during the regular
season and postseason. ... Devon
White's four strikeouts were one
short of the World Series record, set
by George Pipgras of the Yankees in
Game 3 of the 1932 Series .... White
ulso tied a record with live consecu tive strikcou1s, over two games, a
mark last uccomplishc.1 by pitcher
Danny Jackson of Kansas City in
1985. While became the sixth player to ·accomplish that one ... Frank
Robinson will throw out the ceremonial lirsl pitch before Game 5.
Bruce Hornsby !nd Branford
Marsalis .will perfo m- the- national .anthem.

tiCII·....

This week the Southern Tornadoes
will face the cellar dwelling Waterford Wildcats in the Tornadoes' last
home game at Roger Lee Adams
Memorial field in Racine. Southern is
. coming off two hard-fought, physical
losses.
Last week, although the game was
close at the half at 12-0, and was
close until the end of the third quarter, Miller's Heath Howdyshell
ntshed for 224 yards in leading the
Miller Falcons to a 32-6 triumph over
the Southern Tornadoes friday night
in Miller Stadium . Southern is 4-4
overall and 1-2 in the,Tri-Valley Conference's Hocking Division.

and Dwight
Evans for second-most ever among
AL outfielders, trailing only AI
Kaline's 10.
Managers and coaches vote on the
awards for lielding excellence in their
leagues, and can11ol pick players
from their own teams_
Johnson, who has not made an
error in 171 straight regular-season
games, threw out 45 percent of
would-be basestcalcrs this year.. He
has gone 5-for-8 in throwing out runners in the postseason, though he
made two throwing errors in the NL
championship series against Atlanta.
"I think Charlie Johnson is the
best throwing catcher that I've seen,"
All-Star catcher Sandy Alomar of
Cleveland said. ''I'm impressed with
him because he's a tall guy and he·
can get off the ground so quick and
still make accurate throws."
Of the I 8 Gold Glove winners this
year, 12 played in the postseason.

Tonight: Florida (Hernandez 12-J) at Cleveland (Hershiser 14·7), 8:20p.m.
·Saturday: Cleyeland aJ Florida, 8 p.m.

Chargers put Seau

Honor Our
Heroes
****

Ml\ior
Earl Jones
_
1969 1971
Ar.my
VietNam
Love, Your Family

I.By MIKE NADEL

DEERFIELD, Ill. (AP) - Dennis
' )todman 's coach says the Chicago
;,Bulls need him. Tbe Wonn 's team: p.aussay they can win another NBA
' itle with or wilhout him.
By the end of today, everyone is
1 uppotec~ to know whether Rodman
!\u111yin1 or luving.
, "1 don' 1 c~~re, " teammate Ron
·M-t uid after Wednesday night's
:pS-i? exhibition lou to the Philadel: ~a. 76era.. "Hey, whaaever Dennis
'.
Dennis do. If Dennis don't want
'play buketball, go home. Point
(
bllllk."
Rodman, who lw led the lugue

in rebounding -. and suspensions the last six seasons, said he would
announce Jod,ay if he was going to
return lo the team he helped win the
last two championships.
" If it's going to be, let's do it. If
it's 1101 going to be, move on ," he said
Thesday in his last public statement.
"Tbere's always a chance I won't be
here. If it doesn 't happen, we go on
with our lives."
Rodman initially said he was dissatisfied with the one-year contract
he agreed upon but didn't sign two
weeks ago. But coach Phil Jackson
and Rodman 's agent, Dwight Manley, said the 36-year-old forward sim-

ply was trying 19 decide if he wanted to return or retire.
"I think Dennis put the onus on
himself as to whether he needs or
wants to play," Jackson said. "I don't
think Dennis has to play financially.
."It's all come down to the fact that
negotiations and contract and everything else are OK. It's just now
whether it's in his heart to play or
not.''

Jackson told management during
the offseason that the Bulls needed to
keep either Rodman or Brian
Williams, another power forward
from last year's championship team.

1

VETERAN SALUTE

1

I

C/0 The Dally Sentinel
P.O. Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769

1

1

I

lin Honor Of (name and rank)

1

I
I

1-------------------1
Conflict/War

In Honor Of

Corporal
Bob Johnson
1991-1992
Marines
Desert Storm
Love, Your Family

more reps as well, and see how well Wednesday to back up the ,strong
he's taking advaqtage of that oppor- side.
lunity."
Bush filled in for both Gouveia
1
Gilbride admitted Wednesday that and Seau when they were hurt in preit's a big concern making three season, and staned the season-openchanges.
er in Seau 's spot.
Now he's on the move again.
"We're still kind of feeling our
way on this decision, but we wanted
, "I was just starting to have a litto at least experiment with hath," he tle fun, too," Bush said. "Tbe team
said.
.
needs it. In order for us to be sucThe three-way move would take ·· cessful, we've got to be able to make
away the element of surprise with this a smooth transition.
Seau, who has blitzed from all over
''What we 'rc going to miss is the
and leads the learn with four sacks.
physical
play Kurt gave us. We've
"They're going lo know that I'm
going to be in the middle," Seau said. been a unit now working two years
"l'·m sure we'll be a little creative together. He was a rock out there."
and do things we. haven't done with
Quanerback Stan Humphries, who
the (middle) linebacker. If the blitz is sustained a mild concussion in Thursworking, I'm going to blitz a lot. If day's embarrassing loss, practiced
it's not working, it's not going to go," Wednesday. Backup quanerback Jim
The Chargers signed free agenl Everett, who hurt his right elbow,
linebacker · Bobby Houston on mllde only light tosses.

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his leadership skills that he can most
easily fulfill the role that K'un would
normally take," coach Kevin Gilbride
said of Seau.
The Chargers also will see how
rookie middle linellacker Toran
James does in practice this week.
l'here's a, chance he could start at
Gouveia's spot, Gilbride ·said, which
would mean Seau and Bush would
remain at their original positions.
Gilbride said the decision will
come down to how easily Bush han- .
dies the weakside and how Seau handles making !he defensive calls,
· which was Gouveia's job. Scitu, however, made the calls in passing situat ions.
"We expect it to go pretty well, ·
but it'll come down to probably a gul
feeling on Saturday which is the best
way to gQ, how well is Toran doing,"
Gilbride said. "He 's going to get a lot

middle linebacker

HIGH SCHOOL JACKETS

AD DEADLINE: Wednesday, Nov. 5th, 5:00 pm.
Trubutes must be prepaid.
Photos may be piCked up after Nov. 11

I

~t

Cavs beat Timberwolves 95·89 ·

Branch of Service

Love, (name relationship to veteran)

Photo of
Your Veteran

,

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Fisher said he was impressed other candidates, whether he would
Fisher said he regretted not being
Fired Michigan basketball coach when he ·left the school but said he takethcjobifitwereofferedtohim," able to take the job. ·
Steve Fisher says he has turned needed time to think over his deci- · said Ron Rosenberger, assistant to
"The comfon level from the peodown an offer to become coac.h at sion, The Detroit Nrws reported · school president Frederick Whid: . ple we met and the genuine warmth
South Alabama. ·
Wednesday. The coach said he called don. "He responded that he wa.~n't. and hospitality were greatly appreciSouth Alabama pursued Fisher the school Tuesday evening to turn Things should move forward Very ated by Angie and I," he said. "They
aggressively. Fisher and his wife, down the offer. but school oflicials quickly from here."
really made you feel wanted."
Angie, flew to tHe school Sunday on · maintained they had never Jnade an
Fisher's decision left a list of six
Fisher, who was fired Oct.· I0 as
candidates, including fanner Mem- Michigan's coach, said he definitely
the school's private jet for an inter- official offer.
.. He was asked, as were all tbe phis coach Larry · Finch, for South wants to coach again. But it won't be
view.
Alabama to choose from . School offi- at South Alabama, which began ils
cials said they planned .to hire a new hunt when Bill Musselman suddenly
coach by the end of the week.
quit Oct. 7.
· MINOT, N.D. (AP) - Rookie und Shawn Kemp had II.
Cleveland shot just well enough lo
Derek Anderson scored 21 points in
leading the Cleveland Cavaliers to a survive 20 turnovers. The Cavaliers
95-89 victory over the Minnesota hit 44 percent from the field to 38
percent by the Timberwolves.
Timberwolves Wednesday night.
Wesley Person scored his I 0
Anderson hit 8-of- 10 shots as the
Cavs won for the fifth time in six points in the first quaner and the Cavaliers led 58-43 at halftime.
exhibition starts.
,
Cleveland turned the ball over I 0
Vilaly Potapenko added 15 points,
limes in the third quarter, but . the
TimbCrwolvcs failed to capitalize
Eastern spll&lt;ers - and stilltruiled by eight entering the
draw Waterford
final quarter. Minnesota got no closIn district tourney
er than six the rest of the way.
Chris Carr led Minnesota with 23
Eastern will play Waterford (20-3) points.
Saturday in the Division IV District
Minnesota's Kevio Garnell
Volleyball tournament Saturday ~t returned after missing two games
Lucasville Valley High School. with a bruised thigh. He finished with
Game time is 3 p.m. Eastern ( 19-3- 18 points, nine rebounds and six
) has already won Tri-Valley Con- blocked shots in 38 minutes.
fel'cnce Hocking .Division and secThe game was played a day after
tional crowns:
the NBA levied fines and suspensions
against five players on both learns for
fighting during an Oct. 12 exhibition.
Southern-Eastern ·
Christmas Season Cut Off For Dcllvery Will Be

I

I~----~-------------Dates of Active Duty

(shown actual size)

By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) - The San
Diego Chargers are going to make a
3-for-1 move to replace injured middle linebacker Kun Gouveia.
Gouveia, a key part of the Cha'llers' third-ranked ntn defense, has a
ruptured disc in his neck. that will
require su'llery ·today and sideline
him the rest of the season. The 12year veteran, who played on two
Super Bowl championship teams
wilh Washington, was hurt in Thursday night's 31-3Joss at Kansas City.
The Cha'llers (3-4) have two scenarios for Sunday 's home game
against the Indianapolis Colts (0-7). ·
In the ' 3-for-1 deal, Junior Seau
would move from his weakside spot
to replace Gouveia, Lew Bush would
move from lhe strong side to Seau's
spot and backup Patrick Sapp would
step into Bush's spot.
"We feel with his experience and

now stands al 6-2.
Last week, Eastern's Josh Hager
led the Eagles with a 15-53 night and
Adam Sanders was 10-42. Steve
Durst completed 4-15 passes for 56
yards and Sanders was 1-4 for 12
yards. WC$ Sanders caught two passes for 32 yards to lead Eastern
receivers.
,
Eastern's lone score last week
came when Shaun Long broke the
shut-out bid with a one-yard run and
reponedly Steve Durst added the kick

Fisher turns down offer to coach at South Alabama

1--------------~---­

Ad Wilh Photo- $12.00

l~Rodman plans to give Chicagio
;.Bulls 'stay or go' answer today

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228 yards rushing. .
Millet's Heath Howdyshell rushed
J'or 224 yards, exactly 50 yards more
than Southern's net team yardage, in
leading the Miller Falcons to a 32-6
triumph over the Tornadoes last friday night in Millet. Stadium.
The Tri-Valley Conference victory give Miller a league mark of 3-0
in the Hocking Division title race and
insures the Falcons of their first winning season in 17 years. In 1980
Miller was 6-4. The Falcons' record

San Diego loses Gouveia for season

Sunday, Oct. 26: Cleveland at Florida, 7:35p.m., if necessary

In Honor Of

II marked the second consecutive · · with a neck injury."
took at least five turnovers away from
game that Southern's defense alloWed
Barr continued, "We're going the other team.ln the games we lost,
a ·runner to rush for more than 150 without contact this week lo get some we turned the ball over that many
yards. Southern must cut down on its healing done . We are working on the times. We've got to eliminate mismistakes and play four hard quarters mental aspect of the game and getting takes. n
of quality football as Friday's game mentally tough for a ' strong finish . .
Last week, Southern's offense
could decide if Southern is in till: · Mat.t Rifne is still fighting tendinitis spuUered to I07 yards rushing and 67
upper or lower half of the Tri-Vallcy in his ankle and Michael Ash has a via Ia pass. Miller crunched out a
·Conference final st~ndings.
tender knee. We just want to get one-sided 19-5 offset in first downs
Southern coach Dave Barr healthy."
and a 444-174 advantage in yardage.
laments, "We're preuy beat up ri$hl
Barr added, "You can't take Miller
Tbe game stood scoreless until the
,) now.. Trimble and fv!iller were very. lig~tly..They have some fine athletes. :028 mark of the first period. Heath
phystcal games. We ve got a lot ol We ve JUSt got to execute our game Howdyshell had a four-yard run, the
bumps and bruise~ han~ing o~ right pla.n-create two or t!u'ee turnovers on PAT run failed, and the score stood 6now, plus Mau Dtll (InJured m the defense and take care of the ball and 0. Moments later, David Riley added
Trimble game two weeks ago) is OU\ eliminate turnovers on offense. You a three yard run, the PAT pass failed,
for the second consecutive week look at the four games we won, we with the score 12-0 at the 10:17 mark.

This week the Eastern Eagles will cute, then we can win. If we make
face another tough roe in Miller as mistakes, Miller will take advantage
lhc Eagles take on the leasue leading of you. We k~ow how to stop them,
Falcons in Miller Stadium. Although now we just have to go out and do it."
showing improvement throughout
Last week, Trimble opened up a
lhe year, Eastern is still winless al 0- 33-0 halftime lelld 10 claim a 46-7
8 and 0-3 in the league.
victory over tl)e Eastern Eagles in an
,An optimistic coach Casey Coffey imponant Tri-Valley Conference high
dismisses the thought of Eastern school football contest in Glouster
· being stonewalled again litis week, Stadium.
saying, "On any given night, anyone
Robbie Cooper of Trimble eruptcan bring home a win. We know ed for 147 yards on just nine carries,
Miller is a strong running team und collecting ne~ly all of Trimble's
we have to stop lhe run. If we exe-

World Series schedule

On November 11, our natwn wiU pawe to pay tribute to the
thousands of men and women who have proudly served their
cou/Jtry during times ofcrises and peace.
This Veterans Day, the Daily Sentinel wiU publish a very special
tribute honoring area veterans. you can join in our salute by
including the veteran in your life, living or deceased, who have
served or is currently serving in any branch of the U.S. Armed

one period and exploded for 34
points in the second period to open
up a 49-8 advantage. Tbe Marauder
starters sat out the entire second half
and the second and third teams finished lhe contest.
Meigs has a balanced offensive
attack led by a pair of outstanding
running backs. Sophomore fullback
Justin Roush leads the Marauders
with ~ yards in 115 carries and
senior tailback Matt Williams hus
added 646 yards in 136 carries.
Senior quarterback Brad Davenport is sixth in the area in passing, he
has completed 58 of I02 passes for
877 yards and seven touchdowns. His
.569 completilion percentage leads
all 18 area quanerbaeks.

Davenpon's favorite receivers are
Jeremiah Bentley with 2S.catches fOI'
348 yards· and five touchdowns,
Chad Hanson ha.• pulled in 14 fOI' 197
yards, John Davidson has caught nine
for 206 yards. J.T. Humphreys who
has seven receptions for 59 yards.
Meigs is .coring 26.6 points a
contest, while on defense the maroon
and gold .is giving up 17.6 points 11
contest.
"Vinton County is a very good
footballtellm," Marauder coach Mike
Chancey said. "Our coache.&lt; and
players are excited about the chal:
lenge of playing them."
Kickoff from Bob Roberts Field in
Pomeroy is 7:30.

That score stood to the half and well
into the third quaner, when Southern
finally let down its guard.
·
As Michael Ash goes, so do the
Tornadoes. Ash's early season success
spurned opponents to double-up on
the neet-footed star. Despite being
picked on, and fighting a knee injury
as well. Ash came close to another
100-yard game with six carries for 72
yards, while Ad11m Cumings added a
I0-30 night.
The Southern line. with pro.bable
starters, Josh Ervin-Center, Jamie
Baker-Guard, Derek Smith or Willie
Collins-Guard, Jesse Liule-Ta"kle,
and Jeremiah Johnson-Tackle. is

greatly improved over last year.
Adam Cumings wi II be at fullback . while Michael Ash and Josh
Davis will play slot hacks.
Josh Davis will get some time at
slot back, while Jason Writesel, and
Ryan Hill are probable shareholders
at split end .
At quancrhack will be freshman
Jonathan Evans. a 5- 11 , 170 pounder
who is well on his way to a great

career.
Southern's Evans was 5-14 pass·
ing for 37 yards and Cuming's was 12 for 30 yards. Anthony Riley was 59 for 98 yards for Miller.
Game time is 7:30 in Racine.

Winless Eastern to take on division leader Miller Friday

'

(shown actual size)

as lim 14-7 halftime lead, but explod- 173 times for 964 yards, while J.D. to two state ranked teams in West Vired for 21 third period points to post Ousley a 5-foot-1 0, 171-pound senior ginia (Tolsia and Wheeling Central)
the win.
halfback has carried 70 times.for478 and Nelsonville- York who is rankCjl
Ryan Caudill was one of the stars yards and three touchdowns.
sixth in Ohio. Both Tolsia and Nelfor Vinton. Caudill a 6-foot-2, 175Pulling the u1g~r at quarterback sonville-York are 7-0. 'Last week
pound junior end is .one or the top is 6-fool-1, 145-pound senior Matt Coach Mike Chancey's Marauders
athletes in the area. Caudill returned Hatem. Hatem is 26 of 83 in the air exploded for a 56-14 win over Ohio
the second half kickoff 90 yards for · . (31%) for 603 yards and nine touch- Division foe Alexander.
a score, and pulled down two passes downs.
The win over the Spartans could
for 98 yards including a 67 yard
On offense the Vikinss are scar- · have been worse, Meigs hlld the ball
touchdown. On the season Caudill ing 28.1 points a game, while on the atlhe Spartan one yard line with two
has caught 20 passes for 419 yards defensive side of the ball Vjnton minutes left in the game. But in u
and four louclldowns.
County is giving up 16.6.
show of sponsritanship the MaraudThe Vikings, un~r fourth year
The Marauders' will head into the ers-look three straight delay of game
helld coach Matt Queen, run out of contest with a 4-4 mark and 1-1 in the penalties, and after eac~ penally
the wishbone. Leading the ground Ohio Division. Meigs won their first downed the ball so they wouldn't
attack is Todd Braden, a 6-foot-2, three contest, but then lost four in a invade Alexander's end zone rot a
199-pound senior. Braden has carried row. Three of those losses has come ninth time.
Meigs opened up a 15-0 Jei.d after

Southern .to ~nd home portion of schedule w'th Waterford

);JJiontague recalls father's stories;
:• • ·CLEVELAND (AP)
Sand!' - the plate Saturday 1n Game I. And,
:-llo,nar Jr., M01ses Alou, Jarel he adds, he grew up in the Bay Area
;:Wri'ght and Robb Nen are not the rootingfortheGiants, not his father's
::Only people in this World Series Indians .
if;hose fathers are fanner major
; 3tague players.
Bip sick: Cleveland left fielder
' .~ Add umpire Ed Montague to the Bip Robens played six innings after
: .list.
battling the stomach·nu all day.
;,: Ed Montague was an infielder J'or
Robens struck out in his first two
;:O.C Cleveland Indians in a career that at-bats and grounded to first in the
-::began in 1928 and lasted .through fifth. He was replaced by Brian
:;1932. He was a .262 hteumc hiller Giles, who had an RBI 'single in the
::tith two home runs and 69 RBis in seventh.
P182 games at shonstop and 33 at
Marquis Grissom, who played
' '11lird base.
Game I of the ALCS against Balli; :: "One of my dad 's greatest mem- more with the nu, said Roberts wantl :O..ics was the time he was taken out ed lo play at all costs.
::by Babe Ruth at second base," Mon"Bip played well," Grissom said.
[Iague said this week . " My dad was "I don 't know how sick he was, but
•·bun and taken off the field. After the this is the World Series. He wanted
;:.arne, he was on the trainer's table to play."
:··and Babe Ruth came overto see him.
:·lie said , ' How ya doin ', kid'!'"
Leyland's mom: Jim Leyland's
' : But it was during his 40 years as 85-year-old mother stayed hol]le Lo
·a seoul for the Giants- first in New watch Game 4 on television.
. York, ihen in San Francisco - that
Veronica Leyland allended Game·
·Montague Sr. made his biggest 3 and was able to endure all 4 hours,
Impact in baseball.
12 minutes partly hccause neathy
·• As the younger Montague recalls. fans gave her Indians blankets.
his' father went to Birmtngham. Ala ..
"I'll take them," she said, "but
io check out a player named Alonw don't let Jim sec them."
,:,Perry. While watching Perry. howHome cooking: Tbe Florida Mar!ievcr, a teen-aged outfielder caught
i'his eye.
Iins will get a t'*lc of home.
;· "'My dad went over to his aunt 's
After pitcher Livan Hernandez
pause for di.nner and talked to the complained he missed the Cuban
}'Oting man 's family," Montague satd. food from Miami, Gloria and Emilio
J'That's how he ended up signing Estefan decided to send up a home
. Willie Mays for theGianl!l."
cooked meal from their restaurant in
: Montague said his father, who Disney World - Bong0 s Cuban
:"died in 1988 at age 82, talked fond - Cafe.
·
: ly of his playing days and his friend The Estefans will tly their staff to
: ship with stars Joe Croom and Earl Cleveland prior to Thursday night's
• Averill.
Game 5 of the World Series to serve_
' • ' 'Hi: was real pro-un-orme wtml" I up the-meaf to thC playe r.,c oaches
made it to the majors," he said.
and their families.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Meigs to host Vinton County in Ohio Division bout Friday

Plge,4

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I
I
I
I
I

L-------------------~

The Daily Sentinel

P.O. Box729
111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone (614) 992· 2155

'

alumni football
game scheduled

--Sports briefs-

The annual Eastern-Southern
alumni game will be Saturday, Nov.
8 al 7:30p.m.
Anyone wishing to participale in
this .eamc should contact Doug Miller
(Eastern) at 992-6423 or Dave Barr
(Southern) at 985-9858.

SAN PEDRO DE MACORIS,
Dominican Republic (AP) - Ajudge
ordered fanner San Francisco Giants
seoul Luis Rosa to stand trial on
cha'lles he sexually molested young
players at his Dominican trainina
camp.

a-ban

Saturday, November lStbl Can Onler Any School In
Area.
~ LAYAWAYS WELCOMED~.

I

with 5:19 left in the game.
Like mapy area learns, Eastern is
ailing. Malt Bissell is out for the rest
of the season with a broken jaw suffered in the Federal Hocking gl\llle.
Reponedly he had his jaw wired, hut
actually didn't. Still, he niay miss
most of basketball season us well.
Jeremy Kehl suffered a mild concussion this week and has not seen
any contact, but should be able to
play Friday. He is Eastern's leading
receiver. Joey Dillon is out for the
season with a torn ACL in his knee.
Cotfey has been impressed with
his young players lately, namely the
play of Bradley Willford, Wes Crow,
Andrew Reed, Travis Adams and

David Rankin .
Crow comes from a .grcal family
line of football heroes, falling in the
footsteps of his father Jim and uncle
Bohl&gt;y. He is also the grandson Of
The Daily Sentinel columnist Katie
Crow.
Colley 'said that . Adam• nnd
Rankin will sec a lot of special team
time this week. Addito~olly, Mike .
O'Nail. a senior playing for the ftrst
lime made seven tucklos la.&lt;t we-ek
and has improved greatly throughout
the yeur.
Coffey concluded, "We've gut lu
gel ready for a physical game. It's no
secret. We have to stop the run ."
Game time is 7:30 at Miller.

�•

Pllge 6 • The O.lly Sentinel

'Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·Thurwdly, OCtobtr 23, 1817

Penguins beat Sharks 5-2 to stretch win streak to $ix games
VIC~?ry ?I Sa~ J~e.
.
We re shll kind of learmns the
sysre.m (new. coach) ~~v1.n (Conslanhne) pul tniO effect, Pittsbutgh
ce~ter Stu Barnes said. ""The bis pan
of 111s hard w~,and conlmue lo play
w11hm yourself.
.
The Pengums. despne the Joss of
Lcm1eux and the absence of contra~!
holdout Petr Nedved, are 5-0-1 rn
their last six game_ s. Their early_ -seah
ed he p
(6
son surge ~cam 1 eng~ms . 3-2) mlo a vmualthree-way ue With
Boston and Onawa for first place m
the Northeast DIVISIOn.
.
Edd1e Olczyk scored the go-ahead
goal with 13:02 remaining and

, By KEN RAIPPC)PClAT
AP Hockey Writer
The Pittsburgh Penguins are proving thai there is life after Mario
Lemieux .
Despite the retirement of one of
hockey's greatest players, the Penguins have suddenly become on.e of
the NHL's holiest teams. They
stretched their unbeaten streak to six
games Wednesday night with a 5:2

Andreas Johansson added an empty·
net srore wuh 46 seconds left for the
Pengums:
The v1c1ory gave former Sharks
coach Constantine a win in his tirst
~p lo San Jose si~ce taking over as
Piusbu!Jh c.oach tn June. Cons tanune, an asSistant w11h Calgary last
~ear. led the Sharks into the playoffs
rn 1994 and 1995 before being fired
when San. Jose began the 1995-96
season wrth an 3-18-4 mark. .
The Sharks ktlled all seven Pittsburgh powe~ plays, but again h!!d
trouble sconng. Averaging just 2.5
goals per game, San Jose Josl for the
sixth time in seven games. The

The Daily Sentinel @
Southern High School

Sharks were 0-2 on the power play • Wade Belak scored his firs! NHL
It wu tilt tirstloss of the seuon
and extended their scoreless drought ~oaf with 72 seconds remainins. liltfor
Kolzig (6-I), who led the NHL
with the man advanlqe to a team · rng Colorad.o over: visitino Wuhinswith a .932. saves percenlqe while
record 0-39.
•
subbins
for ~njured Bill Ranford.
'"When you come on the road, you lonlbe IOOth consecutive sellout
Peter
Bondra, Michal Pivonka
look to set yourself up for the third crowd of 16,061 at McNichols Arf!·
and
Adam
Oates scored JoelS u
period," Penguins left wing Alex na erupted when Adam Deadmarsh
Hicks said. "We know we'll get our slid the puck from the left side of the Washington took I..as of 1-0 after
goals. It's a matter of keeping the ice 10 lhe opposite post, where Belak one period and 3-1 after two. Colorado tied the score on goals by
garoe close"
~ h ff
Elsewhe~, il was Colorado 4, oug 10 a defend!'!" long enouah to Valeri Kamensld at 37 seconds and
beat goaltender Olaf Kolzig from Joe Saldc at 2:41.
Washington 3; Buffalo 4, Calgary 1;
· 1 bl k
· ·
Carolina 4, St. Louis 3; Montreal 3, rp·o·'"---·~n_r_an_g_e_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;;..._
Florida 0; Onawa 6, Toronto 2;
Chicago I,NewYorkO; andDetroit
4 Anaheim 1
' Aval...;he ~. Capl~ 3

Pitc~hurgh ~ Ed~n1on,IJ p.m.

Ium

Ohio H.S. sports

NHL standings

\
EASTERN CONFERENCE

~-Nonhwood (I) 18·3 ..................................... 166

.II! I. I bl. li£ liA.

Wnshtngton

. 7
Phil&gt;~~lph•a ................. 6
New Jersey ......
.. .. 4
N.Y. lslanders .
.. ...... 3
N.Y Rangm ............. 2
Flonda
2
Tampa Bay ...
.. ........ 2

2 0 14- JJ
1 r 1' 32
J 0 8 20
~ 2
8 2J
4 4 8 22
!i I ~ 14
6 . 1 !i I~

Northtast Division
J
0 14 29
0UIIW:l
6 2 2
12
Pin~burgh .......
.. ....... 6 1 2 14 10
Montreal ...... ...... ""'"'" .4 2 2 10 22
Buffalo ..
.. ... ... J 5 2
8 2l
O~rohna ...
..2 7 2 6 2.~

..

Boston

.

-·-

OHSVCA final poll

4-Bascom Hopwell-loudon (I) 20-2 ................ 147

COLUMBUS, Otuo (AP) - The sixth wvJ fl .
weekly Oh1o High School 'Volleyball Coaches
Auodlltton polls. With !I.Chool, rrcord nnd totnl
poinl3 (first -place vmes 1n ~nthe!n)'

b-FrankfOfl Alkno (2) 20..2 ............................ 143
~Conla/l\1 Maplewood 20-2 ...
. ...............97

Klllida(l)18-l ...... ................

!6

20
2S
2.'i

2]
2)

21
14

Jl

16

.II! I. I !'II. li£ 1iA.

, ............ 7 I J
. ......... 7 2 I

16 .1K
J:'i .l4

...5 4 1 11

20
22

Jl

2,Cj

1

9

2~

Toronto .......................... 2 6 I
Chi C3JO
........... 2 7 Q

~

4

18
12

24
29

Onllns

,....

Phoeni• ..

.. ... 4 J

hl:ific Diviskm
Colorndo
............... r. I J
Los Angdes
1 4
Vnncou11t:r ..
.... ] J l
....... ~~ _ ... 1 4 2
Anaheim
Edmunton .......
......... ] 6 I
S:JD lose ..... ,......... ............. 2 J 0
Cnlanry ... ................. .. ..... I 6 2
"'""

·'

Division I
Iwo

~9

Ctnlral Division

Ium

nt~.l

19
2J

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Delrou . ...
St. loUIS...

lla.

J-Woost~r

(16) 21-J .......................................240
2-Cin Stton (4) 20-L ....
.. ....... 1M2
J-Cin. Ursuli~ (II 17-4 .... ... ....... :............ J4S

River Magnific:u 17-5
... ... IJ9
5-Mansfield Mndison 19-J .....
... ,.... 124
6--Stow 19-J ..................................................... 109
7-Younil -Austintown Fitch (f) 22·0 .. ,........... ..... 68
8-Soloo 19-J ..................................................... 61
· 9-Frrmont Ros5 20.2... ...... ............................... 5~
I 0-Cin. M01her of Mercy Ili-5 ........................ 1 ..~2
Othrn whh U or morr points: It-Mentor
45 . 12-A mhent Steele n . 1 .~ - Dny . Cht~min.Gde­
Juhennc: n. 14-Col. Wanerson (2) 29. 1~ - Tol. S1.
Ursula26. 16-V andaliu Butlcr20. 17-Eiyri.119. IR·
Chillicothe: 16 19- Bowling Green (I) 14. 20·
Hlll111rd Davill~nn J.l

2K

Division II
I&lt;am

4
4

J7
J5

25

22

.12
20

17

24

19
22
19

JJ
Jl
Jl

Wednesday's scores
Buffulo 4. Calgnry I
Carolinu 4. Sr. Louis J
Montrenl J, Aorida 0
ChiCO\MO I, N.Y Rangen 0
Ol!itw:t 6, TOronco 2
Colorado 4, Washington 3

bl.

..266
.. ....... 25J
.l -Hubbard 2J -1 ............... ..
. 194
4-Norwlllk 17-7...... ........
.. ........ .-., ........ 124
~-Oifnsted Falls 19-J...... ....
.......................99
6·Do11er 20-2 ......................................................89
7- Wanaw Rro~u V1ew 20-2 ................................ 84
8-0I'Il\'5den Tri- Vallt:~ 20-4 . .
.. ................... 57
9-Willllfd 17-4 ....... ....... .... ...
......... ....48
10-Ravcnna Southenst20..4 ...................... ............ 46
Othns with U or mort point!~ 11-Cuy:t
Fulls Walsh Jesutt J7. 12-Gotlion J~. IJ (lie)·Wilminglon, ATHEN~ 29. l:'i-Eu!on 2:'i. l~unbur~ Big
Wnlnut 22. 17-Hilhnrd Darby 21 . IM·Ci11. Roaer
Bncon 18. 19-Pntnskala Wntkin! Memoriall7.

.... .
2-CirtSI.Unuln(IJ)19-1

Division Ill

Pinaburgh S, San Jose 2
Detruit4, AllOlhc:im I

Iwo

lla.

!·Archbold' {I I) 20-2 ........ ...... ................. .. .... 237
2- MIIIion Elgin 0) IIJ..J ................'............... ..204
:\-Columbiana Crestvit:w (5) 21-0 ................... 197
4-Rockrord Pnrkw.ny (6) 20.2 ...............
... lK7
~- Old Wosh. Buckt:yr Trail (2) 20-J.... ........ 122'
!-WHEELERSBURG (I) 20.2 ...................... 110
Castalia M&lt;UJnrelta (I) 17-J ....... ,.................. 110
~-Zoarville Tusc. Vnlley 19-4 ............................96
9-Mt. Bl::tnchard Rivudtlle 18·3 .........................69
IO..Cres1on Norwn~ne (I) 11-2 ............................M
Olhtrs with ll or more paints: 11-Col.
School for Cirb 63. 12-Hca&amp;h 41. 13-Huron 30. 14
(tle)-Morral Ridtewood, Col. lt'ady 19. 16-W.
Milton Milmn-Un1on 18.
.

· Tonight's games
tampa Bay llt B&lt;Hton, 7:JO p.m
Aorida ar Ottnwn, 7:30 p,m

MontrEal at New Jersey. 7::\0 p.m..
Cala•Y .u Philadelphia. 7:30p.m.
'Vaacouvu at St. Louis, 8:JO p.m.
Wasllington at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
Detroil atl.os An~tles . 10:30 p.m.

Friday's pma

TantpQ ~Jay Ill N.Y, R.~mpn. HO p.m.
Dallas. af Oaicqo, 8 p.m.
Ouolino ar CoJomdo, 9 P:m.

. . 147

9-~~B~b2,s~'i":::::::::::::::.:::::.:: ................ :·:::~~

10-REEDSVJLL..E EASTERN 17-2 ..................... ~7
Olhen wllh 12 or mor~ p•inli : I I (ric)AOiwerp, S. ONirle!lon S.E. 35 _ 1.1-New Bremen
29. 14-Centetbura 27. 1~ -Galion Northmor 2Cj 16Kidron Cent. Chri11ian 19, 17 (rie)-Lorain Cnth
WATERFORD D . 18-Fon Rttovery 12.
'

4-Rod:~

I ·Ta!lmadg~ll4)22· 1

ll
9
8
R
J

lla.

I·SI. Henry (20) 21 -1 ........ ............................. 247
2-Sidneylthnan 2:1-1 ....................
....... 180

.4tlantic Dlvilion

Ium

Division IV

sw'I s·her &amp; L0 hse

Transactions
Baseball
Nation1l Laaue
SAN DIEGO PADRF.S: Nunled Dave Smith
pitching cuach for Las VegAU or 1~ PCL.

..NEW ORLEANS SAIN'rS, Signed S Cory
G1lhnrd to the practice squAd.
. PITTSBURGH STEELERS: Placed WR.
M1 chael Adams on injured ret~rve. Slaned WR
Cunl.• Marsh. Signed DB Deauntte Brow11 tu the
prncuee squad
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS' Sianed LB Bobby
Houston to a Dnl!·yent oontmet
. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS : Sianed Ci Rod
Mtlsread. Sisned T More Lamb to the pncticc
squad.

Hockey

Nai-l Hoeko, t.._

ANAH~IM MIOHTY DUCiS: Recalled 0
Ruslun Snlet from CintiMati of the AHL

to do thai slie and the council
By CHnton Hlleher
.
Otganizing new activities and proptoting school would like to plan·more pep ral·
pride -are the goals of this year's members of Southern lies and dances".
Jody Hupp was elected vice
High School Student Council.
·
Senior Cynthia Caldwell is the president ofthis years presidenl of the student council.
One of her goals while in office
ciluncil.
"I nave been on lhc student council my freshman, will he to motivate the student
sophomore, and junior years and we never really did a body 10 participate in more
Jot of activities. I wanted to run for president so I could school-relaled activities.
Jody has been a ·part of the
organize things for lhe studenl body to do, • she said,
referring to her motivalion for running for council pres- student council since she was a L - - - - : ~.,....,.,.
f~man, and bas been disapident. .
Caldwellhas recently Jed council through its first and pointed with il.
"This year I'm a junior and I only have two years of
primary piojecl: 6rganizing activities for spirit week and
school
left. I was hoping for a change, I wanted lo do
the Southern Homecoming Dance.
..
something
in high school that I can . remember yem
She thought these were very successful and would
like to have more activilies during lunch like !hose the from ·now, and I fell I could help make this change," she
said of her reuon for running for council office.
council planned duriqg spirit week.
· ·
She says the council has already noticed a difference
She says the council's main goal this year, is to
increase the spirit and participation by the students, and by the Sllidenl participation during Homecoming week:

EVERYDAY!
,JYt" ·Doubles
4" Doubles
$ 99 $ 99

DALLAS MAVERICKS : Sit;ned G Reggie

Frrcman nnd G Jm~mr Allen. Wru~d F Mulcolm
Mocke,,
NEW YORK KNICKS: Ttr.l&amp;d F Waltc=r Me·

Carty, F Oont&lt;~e ' Jones. F John Thom~s :~nd G
Scott Brooh to tbe. Boston Celtics for F Chri5
Mills and two stoond-roulld drv.ft ptcks.

Football
National Footb.ll Lea1•
DALLAS COWBOYS: Signed RB Emor)l
Smtih 10 the practice squad.
GREEN BAY PACKERS: Waived DE Shah~
non CIAYtlle. Signed OL Oernld' William! .
JACKSONVILLE JAGlJARS · Signed RB
Steve l..ee IQ lhe pr4Ctice squOO. Relc~d WR Donnell Buker from tht: pruclice aouad.

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

**
*

**
*

*

On November 4th

*
**

Any

Exp.

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"Read a newspaper
every day because
you need more ..
than television .
to get you through
· the world"
,

I know that you need more than television
to get you through the world.

...-

I make a habit of reading a newspaper

....... . . . .

..

·-"
~

newspaper daily with your children. After

l, ... .

'

things I've learned as a reporter is that
what you don:t know can hurt you, and a

'

lot ofwh.at,xou don'tknow is in the paper.
So read

e o~"'-d 6'~

it. because if your head is full of

worthwhile information, no one can tell
-Tab~haSoren.lVJoumalist

you what to think.
...

.

Halloween safety tips
I

The Daily Sentinel
THIS MESSAGE. IS BROUGHTTO YOU BYTHIS NEWSPAP~R AND
·.
THE NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA•
•

'

R&amp;G

ARTHUR
TREACHERS

Feed Supply

all, knowledge is power: One of the

\

Southern's '98 Seniors: What are their plans? :

COOLS POT

every day. I encourage you to read a

, ~··
_._,.:..,....

...

Football fever contagious at Southern

I make,a living from TV But as a Journalist,

~

She said she is very enthusias- ~­
President Alicia Mulford, Secretary(freasurer Jayme .
tic about working with CaldMiller, and Reporter Jennifer Yeauger. Junior officers •
well and is very supportive of
are President Ashli Davis, Vice President Jody Hupp, ~ :
her ideas and hard work: for lhe
Secretaryffreasurer Kara King, and Reporter Julia ··.~
council.
Hensler. Sophomore officers include President Laraine ;..,.
Other members of the counLawson, Vice President Sarah Brauer, Secretaryffrea- ._,
cil are Secretary Autumn Hill
surer Heather Dailey, and Reporter Autumn Hill. Fresh-.-;.
and Treasurer Janey Hill.
man officers are President Brenna Sisson, Vice President ~:
· Senior homeroom represenMichael Bali, Secreiary(freasurer Macyn Ervin, and .
tatives are Erica Amon, Crystal
Reporter Chris Yeauger.
Coleman, Corey Williams, and
Aceording to Mr. Don Dudding, teacher advisor of "~\
Travi~ Ransom. J~nior repre- CYNTHIA CALDWELL Southern's Student Council, the main goal of a student
sentallves are Jenm Howerton,
council is "To provide the students with an opportunity' ,
Sarah Roels, and Julia Hensler. Sophomore repreSenta- lo govern themselves."
lives are Carly Crow, Laraine Lawson, Stacy Lyons, and
He said he plans to stand by thiJ; goal. As a 10 year ·: ·
Lena Yoacham. Freshman representatives are Macyn advisor to l~e school's council, he said council's officers
Ervin, Tony Hupp, Emily Stivers, and Kayla Pullins.
should decide on what projects and fund raisers they
Class officers have also been named at S~uthem wantlo participate in.
High.
.
.
Dudding said he would really like this years council
Senior class officers are President Evan Struble, Vice lo dedicate themselves 10 building school pride.

Cheerleading program going ,through ch~nges

*

Rood&amp;.421112 Sl. AI. 7• •
Pd for byu candldale
Tupperw Plaint. Ohio 45763

•!

t.========:...o

Elect
*
JOHN A. RANKIN*
Orange TWp. Trustee
Tlu! OM who will make a
difference on Oronse 7\o&gt;p.

-

By Slaanne Evana
·cotal of 30 colleges of interest. We ing on campus."
Here are some of the latest movie releases that are worthwhile to
influence, family influence, personal
wateh. AJJ of these movies may be picked up al your local video store.
. Soon the Class of 1998 will have ranked the choices.
·
The senior.~ listed a range of lalenl, and demand.
IO face a whole new phase in. their
Here are the top fiv1&gt;. Number about 20 careers they are consider10. Pooh's Grand Adventure (PG} -- ~-------.,..-.,
When those surveyed were asked .
An excellent Winnie the Pooh movie.
Jives. A phase filled with endless tive is Capitol University. Number ing.
if they planned 10 stay in Meigs , .
Pooh and his friends go on a search to
opportunities. They will have lo face four is a tie between Ohio Stale UniSeveral are considering a career County, 29 percent said they were ··
lind their friend, Christopher Robin,
immensely· importanl decisions versity and Washington Stale Com- in business or accounting. Quite a planning on making a life in Meigs .
who is,.according to Owl, allhe elusive
about their futures. Choices !hat may munily College. Number three is few are leaning toward careers in the County. Fifty-three percent said they
"skull".
fill their Jives with happiness, or Ohio University. Number two is the medical tield. Several are consider- were planning 'to move out of the. ·.
9. McHale's Navy (PG} - Based on
make lhcm wish they had taken a University of Rio Grande. .Number ing becoming the educators of surrounding area.
:: :
the television series, this movie stars the
different path into tomorrow.
one is Hocking College.
. tomorrow. ·
Eighteen percent arc undecided.
original naval commander, Ernest BorgWe wanted to know just exactly
The seniors are basing their colThose senior.~ thinking of pursuThe 29 percent's main reason for ,
nine. · McHale (Botgnine) comes out
what they were planning, so we con- lege choices on a .variety. of quafi-· ing a career in business or account- staying is family. The 53 percent are
retirement in order to save his island
dueled a survey of Southern High ties. A major factor in their choices ing have been influenced by taking leaving because they do not feel
School's
class of nine~een ninely- . seems to he curriculum. Learning the G.O.C. classes offered at South- ·rhere are valuable jobs in the county,
base.
.
.
8. Selena (PG) - This movie retells how Tejano singer Selena almost
eight. Thirty-eight of tbe seniors environment and size are also hav- em High School.
and the ones there are would nor
rose to fame; with her life cui short by the president of her fan club just
filled out surveys. They told us their ing a big influence on the seniors.
Those wanting· a ,career in the accommodate them financially.
as she was about to make it big.
reasons for their college and career Whether they plan to go away to col- medical field arc influenced by their One student wrote, :•1 just don't feel
7. Ghosts of Mississippi~PG-13} --The true story of how civil rights
choices. They also told us w~ether lege, or plan to stay al home, Joca- Jove of helping others. Tomorrow's like I'd gel far in Meigs County."
leader Medgar Evers was shot in his own driveway and how his wife, . or not lhey plan lo make a life in tion IS also having a considerable educators are influenced by their
Now we know whallhe Southern
M11rfie, sought justice for the assassin.
.
Meigs County.
·
impact. One student wrote, "I can interest in kids. Influences for some High School class of 1998 is plan-.
6. National Lampoon's Vegas Vacation (PG) --The Griswolds decide
The-38 seniors surVeyed listed a· drive back and forth instead ofstay- other career choices are: · school ning.
to take a family vacation to Las Vegas. Instead of the family spending
time together, they do e.veryrhing else but achieve their goal of (amily
togetherness.
, ·
' 5. Molher (PG-13} -- This is the story o! how a twice-div~. rna~,
By Sarah Bell
w.ho is hopeless in the Jove department, dectdes to move ~ack m w11h hrs
Cheerleading season is here again and there
fllOiher in an effort to solve his relationship _prob)elns wrth women and
have been many changes 10 lhis year's Southern
also solve his conflicts with his niother.
'
cheerleading
squad.
4. Beautician and the Beast (PG) •• This movie ~tatS Fran Dresch~r
In
addition
lo having a new advisor, lhe squad
WhO plays a beautician who gets hired by a foreign dictator tO tutor hiS
is
going
to
gymnastics
every Monday and also has
lhree children. She thinks he wants her to be his beautician.
many
firsl-year
members.
Southern Tornadoes are
3. Liar, Uar (PG-13} -- Jim.Carrey plays a lawyer wlio liesall the lime.
on
a
winning
streak,
and
that
makes cheering that
until one day, as a birthday wish, his son wishes that he has to tell the
much heuer.
truth for one day.
- .
Southern has II cheerleaders this year under .
2. Fools Rush"ln (PG-13) -- Mauhew Perrf plays a man who, after a
the
leadership of Jessica Smith, an experienced
one-night stand, ends up gelling a gir_l pregn~nl. He then has lo fate l~e
member
of the squad . .
girl's family, cry to under.~tand lhe g1rl's hentage, and try to make th1s
Qther experienced cheerleader.~ include Jenni
seemingly hopeless relationship work.
.
:
.
Howerton,
Laraine Lawson, Macyn Ervin, Sarah
1. Absolute Power (R) -- Clint Eastwood plays an expert Jewel th1ef
Ball
and
Jessica
Nance.
who can crack any security system. While ip the process ofslealing some
Newcomers
include
Fallon Roush, Brandi
priceless coins, he witnesses the Ptesident k:ill someone and is faced with
Codner,
Jessica
Janey,
Kacy
Ervin and Andrea
the dilemma of whallo due after witnesSing the brutal murder.
Neutzling, who.are catching on quickly.
Along wilh new cheerleaders, the squad also
has a new advisor: Julie Randolph has taken the
By Derek Smith
responsibility this year.
·.
"Southern Football •• Catch the Fever" reads the sign at O&amp;M Pizza and
She is an experienced cheerleader and knows
Subs, w·here most of the Southern's football team meets every Wednesday bow to plan special events sucb as pep rallies and
for the team outing.
fund raising,
The team is in high spirits after its homecoming vi~;tory against the HanSince the cheerleaders do nol do much tumnan Wildcats and a vic;tory over the Eastern Eagles in the "Battle of Meigs bling in their routines, Randolph thought it would
he in their best interest 10 go to a gymnastics proCounty". making its record· 4-2.
Since then, the learn has dropped two victories making its record 4-4.
gram.
Many of the players have admitted that the game is alot more fun with a
So every Monday the squad attends Will
SOUTHERN CHEERLEADERS- The South· lion of a new advisor, Julie Randolph. The
Power Thmbling in Gallipolis. Cheerleaders say ern High School Clleei:IINidara, shown here in team consists of 11 members including newwinning record.
·
1
hf
h
h
Along with the winningJecord comes bigger cro~ds, nrote and.~ore a_nd they have improved very muc rom I e. lee - action during the football game against Han- comers Fallon Roush, Brandi Codner, Jessica
people have taken an interest in Southern Football srnce th~ exc11rng wms niques they have been taught and thai it has been nan, W.va., High School, are under the dirac- Jan~. Kacy Ervin and Andrea Neutzling.
in a row earlier in the season. Southern now hopes for a Tn-V~1Jey Confer- a fun experience.
The group also plans on ·conducting fund raisence championship, and from the looks of things tbey have a good chance.
Southern cheerleaders started practice in on their tirsl or second practice and as of early
October
has
still
n,;ll
received
all
of
its
equiping
activilies soon for basketball season and other
"I try to do a couple of canwheels every time we gel a touchdown 10 show August at Randolph's house.
·
expenses.
ment
·
how much 1 support tbe team," said Herb Ervin, the leader of Southern's · The group ordered oultils for football season
'Chain Gang'.
·
The Soulhern Tornadota
· While the other fans may gel excited, Ervin is the only one doing cartwheels. "I hope il helps get other fans enthusiastic and supportive also," he
volleyball team will pl'y In the
dllltrlct tournament Thursday
Sllid.
·
evening at 5:30 Ill LucaavtJJ•
CONVENIENCE STORE
After a tough Joss to Wahama, the Tornadoes faced and defeated longValley
High School In 1
lime rival Eastern.
LuCIIVille.
Fye!-Grocerles-Dell
Tired of Burgers and
Another thing that comes with a winning record is fans traveling farther
If Southern advancea, the
Family Restaurant
10 see the games: Family members from as far away as Parkersburg, W.Va.,
HCOnd game will be pl•yed
Fries
"Stuff"
for
have been spoiled in the stands wearing purple and gold.
that night at 8 p.m. Sovthern,
· Coolville Exit off Rt. 7
1ty our Healthy
Southern 1996 graduate Nick: Smith said he could not rem~mber being . now 14-7, waa ranked nrly In
Pets • Farm Animals
667·6100 Store
more excited for a Southern team, even during the four yeais thai he played.
tha-n and ttnlahad strong
Alternative Grilled Menu,
Head coach Dave Barr, now in his second season, has appareqtl)' rumtd
to post 1 IICIIonal Ch1"=in667-6101 Restaurant
'
Stable
· . Call in your order
the team around and done a good job in the coaching department. Barr and
shipS::",:;'" SymiMI lley
Joe
Evans
Owner: Bryan White
992·5829
- -the-other members of the coaching-staff- predict a prosperous-future for _ '-;:la:a:t:.:;:u:.:;:::·::;::;:: :::::::~
Southern's football program.
1
Wheel Horse
Meanwhile, students hope to see many new. faces al games •• people
KENS APPUANCE
TRACTORS and
wearing purple and gold and catching the fever of Southern Football.
RIDING MOWERS
Southern plays its tinal horn~ game of the seasop Friday against WaterSales &amp; Service
ford.

itfrtll eri1il•l tiO er US C-41 preeeu rells.

Your Photolinishl

October 23, 1997 .. :;
Page 1 '· :
:'~
-.·&lt;

SHS names stu.d ent council members

2nd Set Free

Any

~:::

.,

Photo Center
Hockey

Thursday

•

By Shauna Manuel
·
Halloween is a very fun holiday,. but if
you do not follow certain safety rules it can
he cxlremely not-fun.
Some rules to follow an::
I. Do not trick-or-treat alone. Some of
the people you might consider trick-or.
treating with are: a grandparent, a parent, a
babfiuer, or a responsible sibling.
. Do not lrick:Or-treat in a strange neighborhood; always go to the
homes of people you knt ""· If you go to a stranger's door there's ·no telling
"'"• what mlghl happen.
·
3. Alwl)'l wear bright colored clothing while trick-or-trealing so !hat
JICOPic can see you. If your costume is dark colored, then you could wear
fliiOINCCot Slickers. Some places supply them for free.
4, When it is time for the fun to end, wait 10 s11rt gulping down candy.
Pint, you should have a' parent sort through your eandy. If there are any
~ looking or unwrapped pieces, do nol eat them.
·
If Ill of the above rules are followed, then your HaUoween should be a
little lifer. Oh, watch out for all the ghosts and goblins! Happy Hallo~ecn!

- 333 Page Straet
Middleport, Ohio
45760

(614) 992-6472
Lloyd Middleton
Dolls
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Belpre, Ohio
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Pomeroy, Oh St. Rt. 7

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Rutland

742~2211
•

�.•
•
•'

,_I •
,· 01,1

The Dally Sentinel

"

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

•

The Daily Sent~el

ByTbeBend

.

he worked on lhe river. He was born
Dec.27,1907inJacksonCounty, W.
Va., and later his parents, the late
Howard and Gertie Skinner Carpenter, moved to a fann near Apple
Grove in Meigs County.
Following his graduation from a
local
high school he attended the
by Bob Hoeflit.h
Mann Business College in Columbus. He realized that he wasn't right
for
the business world so came to
•
Apple Grove and worked on ihe
•.. .
family fann until he hired on as a
.!don't want you to be late for any Assistant Doris !hie on their retirecoal passer on the Leona in 1930.
of ¥011i' Sunday outings so I wanted ment will be held from 2 to 4 p.m., · He worked on various towboats for
m remind you lhat the switchover to this Friday, Oct. 24, in lhe hospital
lhe next 42 years, the last 32 years of
Daylight Savings Time will take cafeteria. The event will be lhe offihis employment being in the capaciplace this Sunday. October 26.
cial farewell to the two long-time
ty of pilot and master. After his
• So you will want to move your hospital administrative employees.
retirement, Capt. Carpenter donned
(Jocks and watches ahead one hour Mrs. Linda Jones, a long-time
his captain's hat and conducted eduand this is supposed to happen at 2 administrative secretary at the hoscational programs about the musei.m. Sunday morning. · However, pital. has been named to lhe admin:
um towboat, the S. P. Snyder, Jr.. at
whG's gonna know if you make the istrative assist'V!l post.
the Ohio River Museum in Marietta.
time change before you hit the sack
All of the Carpenters took to the
011 Saturday night? You know, of
Recent editions of The Reflector,
river in time and among them was
course, that the time change will a publicati~n of the SoM and
the late Wilson Carpenter who lived
l)ring us darkness earlier every Daughters of Pioneer Rivermen.
in
Pomeroy. Capt. Carpenter died
day-guess we'll just have to seek have hit heavily upon the work
on July 7 and since then The Reflecexperiences of the late Capt. E.
~~\be bright lights. huh?·
tor has printed memoirs of his days
• 'And another reminder. The pub- Clare Carpenter, a former Meigs
on the river. Quite interesting matelic open house honoring Veterans County resident.
Memorial Hospital Administrator
Carpenter had been a resident of rial.
Scott Lucas and Administrative Belpre for a number of years while
And another generous gesture on

Beat of the Bend ...

•

Mrs. Mary Francis Smith of Fairfax Station, Va., spent a few days
wilh her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Bise. They also visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Hetzer of Belle, W.Va.
Visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Lyle
Balderson recently were Mr. and
Mrs. Jay McClusky of Longboat
Key, Fla.. and Mike McClusky of
Columbus. They also visited with.
Mrs. Lillian Pickens and Kathryn

Pietz.

•

Thur.ctay, October 23, 1917 .

·

Mr. and Mrs . .Jack Clark of
Scottsdale, Ariz., visited recently
wilh her sister and family Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Buckley and Mr. and
Mrs. Phil Lacomb and daughter,

·.
..

-..

A committee was established for
the basketball ·season under the
direction or Brenda Hill and Sandi
Hawley.
Room count was won by lhe second grade. Next meeting was set for
Nov. Jl.
Racine .Gra111e seeks. art and
photo entries
·
Racine Grange is seeking out
Meigs Countians who wish to participate in the annual Nationai
Grange Art and Photography Contest.

lute.

ReedsviUe UMW
Plans for the annual holiday trip
to t.he Meigs County Home were
discussed when the Reedsville Unit·
ed Methodist Women met with Mrs.
Nina Boston for its October meeting. Diane Jones will check on a
time for the annual observance.
· The UMW Purpose was given by
Mrs. Boston to open the meeting.
Mrs. Frances Reed read "When the
Frost is on lhe Pumpkin" and "Happiness Cake" was read by Mrs.
Boston.

ews

Seventy shut-in calls were reported. Pecans will be on sale this month
by the members, it was reported.
A craft sale was held and a game
was played with prizes awarded.
Jones gave the closing prayer.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Emma Durst,
Mrs. Pearl Osborne, Mrs. Ann
Lacomb, Julia Lacomb, Mrs. Rose
Niday. Mrs. Delores Frank, Mrs.
. Grace Weber, Mrs. Nancy Buckley,
Mrs. Lillian Pickens, and ~ guest,
Bernadine Snyder.
Mrs. Buckley was awarded the
door prize. The next meeting will be
held with Mro. Gladys Thomas..

Keith D. Ashley who heads up
the committee, advises that there is
an adult category for ihose 14 and up
and a youth category for those five
to 14.
The subject categories are landscapelseascape, still life portraits
and abstracts. Any eligible entry
must be an original work and completed after Sept. 30. 1997. All
entries must be framed or have a
firm backing for display. No glass
covering is allowed, but plexiglass is
accepted. Sculpture is not accepted

What I didn't want to hear
About his joy and love
Sent to earth to reunite us
With our Heavenly Father above.

rm·so glad you told me
What! didn't want to hear
About our blessed Savior
And how He lingers near.'

Listen God's children
And you will hear
The Good News of God's Kingdom
Which is drawing near.

What I dido 't want to hear
Hallelujah! Praise Jesus
Even now He is so near.

What I didn't want to hear
About His lo,ving kindness
And lhat we need not fear.

I'm so glad you told me
What I didn't want to hear
About Jesus Christ the Savior up on
hiJh.
How He was crucified and how
He was tortured and submitted
Himself to die.

.
I'm so j[lad you told me

Listen! ~·· Children

r m so glad you told me

I'm so glad you told. me

I'm glad you told me
Whatl.didn't·wantto hear
About our precious Savior
Who carne for me and you
To accept His Salvation
And let us know what to do
How to live, love, and learn of Him
To receive victory over sin and win.

Barbara James
Pomeroy

1997 FORD
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Listen God's children and you will
see
His wonders and His glory.
God's word is plain and gracious
intricate simplicity...
Listen God's children and you will
know
·
About God's chosen prophets of
long ago
The message they came to bring
For this wretched world; a powerful
King.

Listen God's children you will feel
When believin~ His word
You'll begin to heal
He's the same yesterday as today
All' we must do is trust and obey.
Listen God's children and you can
say
To believe in Jesus is the only way.
For a ransom H~ died on Calvary
To save all sinners
Tl)at we may be free
tm the threat of Hell
at is down below
To liberate our souls
So to Heaven we'll go.
Barbara James
Pomeroy

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•

Dear Ann Landers: Here's
another one for your unusual-occurrences file. I didn't believe it when I
read it in lhe paper, so I checked, and

While we're in the hospital, let's
straw in the .monkey's moulh and
worked feverishly to restore breath· hear from a nurse who has written a
ing. Unfortunately, the effort failed . provocative letter:
Dear Ann Landers: I'd like to
"I simply coul4n't turn her away
and not try to help the animal," said comment on the letter from "South·
the nurse. The administrator, howev- · ern Florida," who said she couldn't
er, was not very sympathetic. "Any tell the nurses from the cleaning
reasonable person would have used crew at her local hospital.
What goes on in most hospitals
· better judgment," he sai~.
·
What do you think about lhis, renects reality. The caps we once
Ann Landers? -- Ambivalent in wore have been abandoned because
Florida
·'
they proved cumbersome around
. Dea·r Florida: The monkey hanging N bottles and tubing.
Many of us fin9 it practical to
should have been taken to a veterinarian, but people . are emotional wear hospital-provided scrub suits.
rather than reasonable when their We wear white running shoes rather
pets are in crises. I admire the than the traditional nursing footwear
nurse's compassion. however, and of the past because that is what we
hope she wasn 'I reprimanded too do all day -- run for 12 hours, often
with no breaks.
harshly. .

The fact that a pati)lnt cannot
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
make out the status of a caregiver by enjoying your columns on how coulooking atlhe name tag is intention- ples met because they speak to my
al.
generation. My husband and I met at '
Recently, nqrses in Northern. college. At first, we were just good
California filed a lawsuit against friends. Then, we developed a deepiheir hospital because lhe institution ening respect and finally love.
would not allow lhem to identify
We sele&lt;:ted the church and invitthemselves as registered nurses on ed the guests. But when we applied
their name tags. It seems the hospi- for the license. we discovered that ·
tal did not want patients to notice if o~;~r stale required permission from a
the person taking care of them was a parent or guardian for minors under
registered nurse or a nursing assis- 21.
tant. Interesting? ··A Professional in
We were only 20. My mother was
California
happy to sign for me, but Earl's
Dear Professional: You ·have · mother was dead and his father was
made a fairly strong case against the listed among the missing from the
hospital administration in Northern war. Fortunately, one of my girlCalifornia. Does anyone out there friends was the daughter of a judge.
want to comment?
He had the solutio)l. He drew up

1992 FORD
MUSTANG LX
· auto, air
AMIFM .caa, tilt,
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Hit

LOW MILES!

ber reviewing this section said. It
"Getting to know the DAR" was maintains no lobby at national, state
the theme of the program presented or local 'levels, co'ntributes to no
at a recent meeting of Return political party, nor to candidates in
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters ·-·--'llny way; initiates no legislation and
of the American Revolution held at does not have a legislative chairman.
the Meigs.County Public Library.
The DAR, said Atkins, is interested
Regent Pauline Atkins reviewed in preserving and maintaining the
tbe DAR book by that title in which Constitutional Republic and urges
the organization is described as a its members, as good American citi·
service organization made up of zens, to be informed and to vote.
approximately .200.000 members in
Membership. it was pointed out,
over 3,000 chapters located in all 50 gives prospective members an
states, the District of Columbia, opportunity for service in many
Australia, Canada, France, Mexico areas. It offers an opportunity to
and the United Kingdom.
work with the youth through the
The DAR was officially orga- educational programs offered by the
nized on Oct. II, 1890, by 18 NSDAR. It offers encouragement to
women with an emphasis on his· become active in the comf\lunity, to
toric, educational and patriotic pur- assist in historic preservation, to
poses and it is now in its second cen- help preserve important documents
tury of service to the nation, said and records of the past to name a
Atkins.
few. In addition, membership in
Over 760,000 members wilh a DAR offers an incentive to become
wide spectrum of vocations have involved in conservation of our natbeen admitted to membership since ural resources and to make a d!ffer1890.
ence by doing so.
Its National Headquarters occuThe f)rst resolution adopted by
pies an entire city block near the the first NSDAR Continental ConWhite House and is the largest group gress in 1893 was to honor and
of buildings in the world owned and · respect the Flag of the United States
maintained exclusively bY women, Lf, America. Today, Regent Atkins
she added. The Continental Hall was said, .the National Society Daughters
the first private building of ~ational of the American Revolution honors
scope to rise in the vicinity of the this resolution and encourages memWhite House and faces 17th street. It hers to tly the American Flag at their
houses the DAR Genealogical homes.
Library and State Rooms which repIn closing, she said that the Soci. resent particular historic periods or ety encourages everyone .to pursue
regions, including an 181h.century their heritage and give of their valtavern, a mid-19th century kitchen unteer service to make this a better
and an attic filled . with children's world for all.
toys.
Those wanting to become a memThe Administration Building ber of the Return Jonathan Meigs
contains the offices of the National Chapter rriay contact.Regent Pauline
Society, the Seimes Microfilm Cen- Atkins for furlher information, and
ter and the Americana Collection assistance in completing ancestor
which houses a repository of over forms.
5,000 documents focusing on early
Mrs. John Rose presented a
America.
National Defense Report entitled,
Regent Atkins said that Constitu- "Will The U.S. Lose the Next War?''
. tion Hall was build in 1929 to house Her presentation included a quote
the annual meeting of the DAR Con- "in part" from the National Resolutinental Congress. Following the tlons passed at the I 06th Continental
Continental Congress, the Society Congress, April 1997 which stated
publishes the Annual Proceedings that:
which contains the reports of the
I) In the last four years nine out
work accomplished during the year. of ten federal jobs were military perA copy of the Annual Proceedings is sonnel, and the former Navy tleet of
submitted to the Secretary of the nearly 600 ships will soon be down
Smithsoniarn Institution ~s required to 346, the lowest numbe'l since
by the provisions of the Act oflncor- 1938, so tha1 the military strength
poration of the National Society which made the United States the
Daughter.; of the American R¢volu- number one military power and
tion.
enabled the country to win the Gulf
Each member present continued War so quickly no longer exists.
tHe review of the DAR book by 2) The United States does not now
reading aloud a section. The have a missile defense although the
NSDAR is non-political, the mem- untrustworthy regimes of Russia and

China both have intercontinental
ballistic missiles capable of traveling 4000 miles in 112 hour and many
other nations are developing or
acquiring missiles, so that lh·e United States no longer has the lead time
it has had in all previous wars.
Therefore, it is the view of the
National Society Daughters of the
American Revolution that only the
immediate funding and deployment
of an anti-missile system, the cessation of transfers of high-technology
systems with military application to
other countries of dollbtful friendliness, and the rebuilding pf military
forces will give this country the ability to deter aggression and/or to prevail in any future conflict.
Prayer by Mary Powell, chaplain,
closed the meeting which was fol·
lowed by breakfast served by the
hostess committee.
. Next meeting of the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter will be held
on Nov. 8 at lhe Meigs County Public Library. Weather permitting, the
graves of Margaret Weber, Clara
Conroy, Frances Roberts and Cary I
Cook will be marked.

ANDERSON'S

(;arpet Sale
Vinyl Floor
(;overing
• 15 Patterns in stock
·12ft. wide
Sale
Sq. Yd.

POMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Boosters meeting 7:30 p.m. Thursday at.McigsEigh School.

-- Sale

Gun

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Long Bottom United Methodist Church. Friday through Sunday, 7 p.m.; Evangelist Ernie Perkin~. Special singing.

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, 9 a.m. Thursday, leave
Patnida parking lot for historical
tour of Marietta.

POMEROY - Revival services,
Friday through Sunday. 7 p.m. at the
State Valley Tabernacle, Bailey Run
Road, Pomeroy. Rev. George Scott,
Huntington. W. Va .. speaker.

Cabinets
- Huge selection of
styles &amp; wood finishes

Daybed Special
. - White or Almond Bed
- 4" Foam MaHress
• 2 King Size Pillows
- Coverlet SetS

Berbers, Saxony Carpet,
Scul~tures, Trackless and
commercial Styles

Free Quotes, ·Free

:;: 181

Removal of old carpet

Glider Rocker .
Sale
• Oak &amp; Maple Finishes
·• Assorted Fabrics··
·Lifetime

Mattress
Sale ·

Startine
atonl,

•iii ' 238

TUPPERS PLAIN - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053 Thursday.
7:30p.m. Names to be drawn.
DEXTER Meigs County
Churches of Christ Women's Fellowship, Thursday, 7 p.m. De.ter SATURDAY
DANVILLE - Services will be
Church of Christ. Bradford Church
to have devotions; Program, -Janet held at the Danville Church of
Bolin. speaker. Sherry Shamblin to · Christ, Saturday, 7 p.m. and Sunday,
!0:30a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hil,l of
have woman of the Bible.
Foster, W. Va. will be the speaker.
POMEROY - Alzheimers Dis-

90045

REVIEWER - OAR Regent Pauline Atkin&amp;, left, reviewed "Getting to Know the DAR" at a rectrit
breakfaat meeting of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter. Hosting the breakfast were Ma~ Ron; Betty
Milhoan, and Peggy Moore, left to right.

ease and. Related Disorders Support
Group Thursday, Oct. 23, I to 2:30
p.m. Shawnee Lewis will speak.

THURSDAY
.
.
POMEROY - AA meeting, 7
p.m. Thursday at Sac~ed Heart
Catholic Church, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.
·

•

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

rev1ewe

Community Calendar
The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetin.g
and special events. The calendar ts
not designed ·to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type .. Items are
printed as..space~permits .an&lt;LcannoL
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.

adoption papers so that my mothM
became Earl's legal mother, and she
gave permission for him to marry
me. So-- I married my molher's son-.
The honeymoon never ended. Ct
went on for 38 years, and then. EaC
suffered a fatal stroke. I still miss
him. -- Jackie' in Mexico, Mo.
•
Dear Jadde: Your girlfriend '5
falher. lhe judge. sounds like a very
innovative man . His ingenuity.reall:
saved the day. Thank you for a moot
unusual story.
-

•

actives o

Rear heat &amp;

----..

Syndlc1.e.

A nurse at a hospital in Memphis
was disciplined because she tried to
resuscitate a monkey. The monkey
was brought in by its distraught
owner, who pleaded for help. The
nurse decided she had to do whatev·
er possible to save the pet. She. put a

PW, PDL

'399

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1997, Los Anrcle:l 11111e1
Syndlcale and CreMIOI'I

it's true.

JI~IIO,

"Lane" Buy One Get
_FR~EE Sale

Ann
Landers

1997 FORD
TAURUS

due to shipping problems. A contestant may enter each subject category.
The photography contest cate·
gories are based on lhemes. They are
"America the Beautiful:", "Grangers
in Action", "Family Stars", Memories ..... Memories" and "Celebrat·
ing."
For more infonnation on interpreting the themes or olher information, residents may contact Emma
Ashley. Grange lecturer, at 9927874.

_ _ _______....,Poet's Corner---I'm Glad You Told Me

•

If you have good health. you
have it all. Enjoy and do keep smiling . .

ociety Scrapbook

PTO voles to support(eyy
The Syracuse PTO at a recent
meeting at lhe schpol voted to support lhe renewal levy for lhe South·
ern Local School District which will
be on the November ballot.
District Supt. James Lawrencediscussed the renewal levy at the
meting.
The fall carnival was announced
for Nov. 8 and there was a lengthy
di~~sion on lhe ~ames and other
acll vme.s to . be. mcluded tn the
evenmg s entertamment.

Nurse sounds off on changes in professionl

1996 LINCOLN MARK VIII

SVI e

Julia. The Clarks were also here to
attend the wedding of James Buckley and Michelle Murphy.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
have returned home following a visit
with lheir daughter, Jean Frydman
or Glen Ridge, N.J.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Westfall went
on a vacation trip to Pigeon Forge,
Tenn., and also visited with James
and Edna Welch at Hubert, N.C.
Sarah Frydman of Pittsburgh,
Pa., spent a few days wilh her grandparents, Maxine and Ernest Whitehead. The Whiteheads returned her
by car to Pittsburgh where she is a
second year student at lhe art insti·

the part oflhe Women's Auxiliary at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Meeting Tuesday, the group
voted to purchase a new stove and
food processor for the hospital's ·
nutrition department to the tune of
about $3710. Frequently, the volun·
teer group purchases items ·needed
in one of anolher department of the
hospital and lheir purchases do help
out. Abbie Stratton is currently
president of the organization.
At Tuesday's session, the group
heard a most positive talk by lhe
Rev. Roland Wildman, pastor of lhe
Trinity Church in P~meroy, all about
Meigs County. Rev. Wildman who
came here from lhe East some eight
years ago is certainly sold on Meigs
County.
Betty Sayre, active Auxiliary
member, displayed a new honor
plaque which will be placed in lhe
hospital lobby in honor of deceased
members of the organization.
Would· you believe lhat one such
plaque, also in the lobby, is now
filled?
·

Page9 •
Thursday, OCtober 23, 1997

Monday
thru
Saturday
9:3o-5:00

ANDERS.ON~S
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POMEROY
992-3671

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P•ge 10 • The O.lly S•ntlnel

Thursday,~ober23,1997

Thu...ay, October 23, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1996 memo said political .
events would be recorde·d

County Court.cases resolved·
The following cases were molved year probation; Violet G. Bailey, ing, c&lt;.SL•, 30 days jail suspended to
last week in the Meigs County Court Rutland. left of center, $20 plus five days concurrent;
of Judge Palrick H. O'Brien.
Tnny Jacks, Dexter. criminal tres·
costs; Thomas F. Steiner, Crcst&lt;on, .
Fined were: Dorta J. Hill, Point seat belt, $2!5 plus COSI.&lt;; Jamc.&lt; M.
S50 plus cost&lt;, 10 days iail suJPleasant, W.Va., speed, $SO plus Smith, Racine, speed, $30 plus ""'1.&lt;; pcndcd, nne year probation, restrain·
costs; Lori Phillips, Albany, seat
Adam W. Riffie, Pomcroy, DUI, ing nrder issued; theft, SSO plus
·belt, $25 plus costs; Seth Carleton, $850 pl'\5 costs, JO days jail SUS· c&lt;&gt;sl&lt;, 10 days jail suspended, one
Coolville, speed, $30 plus costs; Ray pended to three days. 90-day OL sus· ycllf probation; Vincent Laudermilt,
L. Pierce, Racine, no operator's pension, one year probation, jail and Pomeroy, pa-.ing bad checks, $25
license, $200pluscosts. five days jail $550 suspended upon completion of plus costs, restitution; Nancy A. Cas·
and $100 suspended if valid opera· residentiallmlbnent program; failure to, Ripley, w. v~ .. DUI, 5850 plus
tor's license presented :within 90 to control, $30 plus costs; Jeffrey W. . costs, 90-day OL suspension, 30
days; failure to yield, $30 plus costs; Karr Jr., Middleport, DUI, $850 plus days jail suspended 10 I0 days, three
seat beK $25 plus costs; Harold A. costs, I0 days jail suspended to three days j:il 811d $5SO suspended upon
Person, Long Bonom, stop sign, $20 days, 90-day OL suspension, one compleiion of residential treatment
plus costs; Carl L Smith, Reedsville; year probation, jail and SSSO sus· program; driving under suspension,
seat belt. S25 plus costs; Jeanette M: pended upon completion of residen· S100 plus costs, 30 days jail susSmith, Reedsville. seat belt, $15 plus tialtm~tment prolflm: no tailliahts, pended to 10 days concurrent, one
costs; Johnny C. Eblen, Rutland, costs only; Thomas D. Adkins, Port· year probation; neeing. costs, one
speed, S25 suspended to $15 plus land, criminal trespass, $100 plus year probation, 30 days jail suspendcosts; Kimberly D. Cross, Middle· costs, one year probation, 30 days jail ed to I0 days concurrent; resisting
port, no OL, $150 plus costs, three suspended to three days; contributing airest, costs, 30 days jail suspended ·
days jail and $75 suspended if v.alid to the deliquency of a minor, $100 to I0 days concurrent, one year proOL presented within 90 days; speed, fine concurrent, costs, one year pr&lt;&gt;- · bation;
·
$22 plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus· bation, 30 days jail suspended to
Troy R. Qualls, Middleport, DUI,
costs;
$850 plus cos.ts, 10 days jail sus·
three days concunent;
·
Pamela King, Pomeroy, disorderAnthony C. Roush , Syracuse, pended to,three days, 90-day OL sus·
ly condu,ct, $100 suspended, costs, DUI, $850 plus costs, one year OL pension, one year probation, jail and
one year probatio~, restraining order sllspen~ion, five years probation, 30 $5SO suspended upon completion of
issued ; RQy L Jenkins, Minersville, days jail suspended to 10 days; dri· residential treatment program; dri·
failure to yield, costs only; Tony L. ving under suspension, c&lt;ists, six ving under suspension, $tOO concur·
Barringer, Reedsville, driving under months jail concurrent, five years rent, costs, one year probation, I0
the innuenct, $850 plus costs, 10 . probation; unsafe vehicle, costs only; days jail suspended to three days condays jail suspended to three days, 9(). reckless operation. $50 plus costs; cuntnt; James K. Hensley, Vinton,
day OL suspension, one year proba· underage consumption, costs, six reckless operation, $100 plus costs,
tion, jail and $550 suspended upon months jail, , five years 'probation; . $100 forfeiture; Noble Payne,
completion of residential treatmenl' contri~utinll. costs, 30 days jail con- . Pomeroy, open container, $50 plus
program; littering, $50 plus costs, one current, live years probation; crimi· costs; Stanley A. Bartkowiak,
year probation, . three days jail sus· nal trespass, costs, live years proba· McArthur, DUI, $850 plus costs, I0
pended upon cleanup of litter; illegal tion, 30 days jail concurrent; resist· days jail suspended to three days, 90·
possession of deer pans, costs only; ing arrest, costs, 90 days jail concur· day OL suspension, one year proba·
Billy Moore, Hamden, criminal Ires· rent, five years probation; Angela M. lion, jail and $550 suspended upon
pass, $50 plus costs, 10 daysjailsus· Adkins, Racine, underage consul)lp- · completion of residential treatment
pended, one year probation, restrain· ' tion, costs, 80 hours community ser· program; driving under suspension,
ing order issued; theft, $50 plus vice, 30 days jail suspended to five SISO plus costs, 10 days jail su~­
costs, 10 days jail· suspended, one days, one year probation; contribut· pended to three.concunent, one year
probation . .

flll"·

AFFILIATE MEMBERS • RecogniZed for their
support to the conservation program In Melga .
County were left to right, ldted, Ray Midkiff of ·
Montgomery Trailer SaiH; Dave Fox, Home
National Bank; Ed Dural, Farmers Bank;

standing, Rex Shenefield, 3R lnduetrlea;
George HayH, Athena Landmark; Brent Bolin,
L11dlng CrHk Conservancy District; James
Birchfield, Birchfield Funeral Horne.

Parents
charged
with abuse
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)- Raben
and Rachael Aitcheson's only
announcement that their month-old
daughter had died was a nier to
friends and relatives.
"God took her bact( to be with
Him," it read. "We are so thankful
for the little time we snared with our
precious-daughter.': ·
They never notified authorities
and cremated Alexus' body before
authorities could determine a cau~ of
death.
On Wednesday, tbe couple sur·
rendered to authorities who have
charged them with child abuse and
abuse of a dead body, both felonies.
They and five others, inclUding the
baby's aunt and uncle, also were
charged with failure to report a death,
a misdemeanor.

gro~!' w~~ct~~o~: a~a;~~~~·:~

WASHINGTON (AP)- Clinton videotaping office, was to testify
administration staffers were told in an today before the Senate Qovernmen·
April1996 memo, drafted by a high- tal Affairs Committee about record·
ranking While House lawyer, that ing political events. Steven Smith's
government crews W'lf'ld be record· testimo~y was inten~pted Wednes·
day when the panel had to adjourn
ing presidential ·political events.
abruptly
because of a politital dispute
Despite the memo, the White
·House counsel's office- where the that stopped all Senate committee
hearings during the afternoon.
lawyer is now second in command denied knowing until several weeks
The administration defended the
ago that President Clinton's meetings author ofthe memo, Cheryl D. Mills,
with Democratic donors were on saying her purpose in writing it was
videotape.
to be certain the White House Com·
The admission came a half-year , munic~tions .Agency and other
after the Senate subpoenaed the staffers did not use official resources
White House for videotapes and all for campaign evenL&lt;. Mills then was
other documents related tu Clintnn a"ociate White House counsel and is
administration fund raising. Rcpuh· now the deputy counsel, tbe No. 2
THOMPSON TALKS - Senate Government Affaire Committee
licans contend the delay was intcn· ,-.osition.
Chairmen Fred Thompaon (R·Tenn.) speaka on Capitol Hill · tiona!. The While House denies that.
White House special counsel Lan·
Wedneaday during the ·committee's hearing on campelgll
The operations chief of the While ny Davis acknowledged that Mills
flnancea. (AP)
House Communications Agency. the had a general discussion with Smith

IRS overhaul ·gets

'

HAY
WINNER_ a.n Holter, right, wea the winner tn one .
class and hla grandfather, Roy Holter, In two clee11s of the hay
show staged et the Meigs County Fair by the MSWCD. Hera Ban
accepts plaques on behalf of the Holter family from Supervlaor
Marco Jeffere, left.

Me1"gs prop._erty transfers

Tabernacle, an evangelical church in
Melbourne.
The following land transfers were
The group believes the Bible con· recorded recently in the office of
rains the only laws they should fol· Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
low. ·Members believe doctors are · Hamilton:
practitioners of the occult and the
Deed, Sarah K. Dill to Todd Dill,
government has no place in people's Salisbury parcel;
personal lives.
Deed, William O'Donnell, James
The Aitchcwns, who do not have R. Sheets to Gary and Charlotte
a telephone listing, couldn't . be H~rpet, Pomeroy parcel;
reached for comment.11teir anorney,
Deed, George Michael and Bren·
Jim Kontos, also was unavailable for da Louise Shuler to Esiher Lynn
comment, although he has said the Wright, Salisbury;
couple was being punished for their
Deed, Esther Lynn Wright, Esther
religious beliefs.
- 1.ynrr Shuler, Mike.Wright to Esther
" It's not a case of religious pros· Lynn and Mike Wrigh~ Salisbury
ecution," responded Jeff Kraynik, a parcel;
Palm Bay Police detective. "It's a
Deed, J. Frederick and June A.
case of a child 'not being reported to Stanley to Larry K. McGrath, Bed·
authorities upon its. death ."
ford ;
.
"
Right of way, Raymond E. and ·
Alexus' birth in September 1996 Ada L. Evans to Tuppers flains·
was never registered with the Brevard Chester Water District, Chester,
County bureau of vitalstatisiics. She 19.765 acres;
was cremated in her uncle's back· · Right of way, Margaret E. Burri to
yard.
·
TPCWD, Letart, 14 acres;
Police IC8flled of the death after
Right of way, Ernest E. and Con· .
the couple distributed the niers. A
homicide investiption enaucd, but
police were .unable to determine the
cause of death without a body.
The following actions to end mar·
The couple told police that the
riage
were filed recently in the office
baby choked to death on regurgitat·
ed milk Oct. 16. 1996, while she lay of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Lar·
on her back. Robert Aitcheson, 24, ry Spencer.
Dissolutions asked .. Kimberly
told authorities he tried to resuscitate
Lee
. Roush, Pomeroy, and Brian
the baby for seven hours and called
members of their religious group to Anthony Roush, Letan, W.Va., Oct.
15; Terry L. Powell Jr,. Middleport, ·
pray for the infant.
and
Heather L. Powell, Powell, Oct.
State law requires unattended
IS;
Charles
L. Ritchie Jr., Pomeroy,
·deaths to be reported immediately.
and
Kristy
L.
Ritchie, Syracuse, Oct.
"Mr. Aitcheson indicated that the
governmental authorities arc not 'of 14: Todd Dill, Pomeroy, and Sarah K.
God.' Mr. Aitcheson did not want Dill; Pomeroy, Oct. 13.
Divorces asked .. Sheridan R.
anyone 'cutting her' so he,had Alexus
Russell
IV, Rutland, from Christy A.
cremated." according to a search warRussell,
New Haven, W.Va., Oct. 15;
rant issued last year for the couple's
Roben·E Taggart, Middleport, from
home in Palm Bay.

nie S. Halley to TPCWD, Chester,
1.60 I acres;
Right of way, Chester and Nancy
Buckley to TPCWD, Olive, 27 acres;
Deed, Glen T. Crisp to Gary W
and Emily J. Gilmore, Denver E. and
Lillian I. Dotson, Salem parcels;
Deed, David C. and Barbara F.
Pratt to John and Teresa Poner, Bed·
ford, I acre;
Right of way, Michael G. and Vic· .
ki L. Blake to Ishmael Gary and
Mary Elsie Blake;
Right of way, Ishmael Gary and
Marie Elsie Blake to Michael G. and
Vicki L. Blake;
Deed, Carl Nichols Jr., deceased,
and Giles Smith to· Margaret
Edwards, Middleport;
Deed, T. H. Assocfates to Roscoe
and Sandra J. Mills, Chester tracts;
· Deed, Carlos M. McKni~ht to
Carlos S. McKnigh~ Rutland Township, 2.199 acres;
Deed, Judith M. Flowers to Betty
and Michael Meldau, Letan parcel.

ill's deputy say it is unlikely that
Alben will do time for the misdc·
meanor. But the sentence could be
affected. by the words and deeds of
Alben ·and his accuser, Vanessa Per·
hac h.

(&amp;14)111N41f4. (IDO) 137~1014
&lt;

~ . ~JTP

(!)

'!

Divorces and dissolutions
Gwyndolyn M. Taggart, Bidwell;
Oct. 10; Kay Hemsley, Racine, from
Rollie Hemsley, Racine, Oct. 8.
Dissolutions granted .. Debbie
Lynn Jarrell and Joey Lee Jarrell, Oct.
6; Roben Scott Taylor and Joyce Lee
Taylor, Oct. 7; John R. Jeffers and
Crystal Lynn Jeffers, Oct. 10; Robert
L. Bailey and Belinda M. Bailey, Oct.

1996 CADILUC SEDU DDILLE

V6, auto, air, caSs, loaded

VB, leather, loaded.

"'-Low .A.
'
'

Divorces granted .. Paul Lemas·
ter and Belly June Lemaster, Oct. 6;
Kewana D. Seaquist from John S.
Seaquist, Oct. 8; Melissa A. Mullin•
and Terry W. Mullins, Oct. 8;
Dorothy Lynn Crow from Robert
Lamar Crow, Oct. 10.

• Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy • Cole Slaw
• BI$Cult

8

..

'

I

'·

1995 CHEV K1500 PICKUP V6, 5speed, 4X4 ...........:.....................$14,900
1996 CHEVY S·10 BLAZER auto, V6, stereo, air, loaded .........:...... $18,650
1995 TOYOTA TACOMA 4X4 5 speed, PS, PB .......:....................... $13,850
1994 GMC SIERRA PICKUP va, auto, air, tilt, cruise ...................... $13,820
1995 CHEVY C1500 'PICKUP Ext. cab, VB, tilt, cruiSe .................... $15,850.
1996 CHEVY S.10 PICKUP Ext. Cab~ va, tih, cruise~ ...................:...$15,850
1996 CHEVY TAHOEva, auto, allpawer, 4x4, 22,000 miles~ ............$26,900
1990 GMC SAFARI VAN V6, auto, stereo, tih, cruise .......................... $7,995
1992 CHEVY ASTRO VAN Conversion, V6, loaded............................$9,700
1994 MAZDA 84000 PICKUP 4x4, V6, stereo, more....................... $11,500
1994 CHEVY S·10 EXT. CAB auto,PS, PB, stereo .......................... $10,975
1997 PONTIAC TRANSPORT V6, PS, PB, air, tih, cruise ............... $19,950
1995 FORD RANGER PICKUP stereo, s&amp;peed, more ..................... $7,595
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MON·FAI.

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Crows Family Restaurant
228 Main St

992·5432

,

Pomeroy

H
SATURDAY
. 9-4
SUNDAY1-5

.,

NEED AFRESHSTAm
Wruptty • Slow Crllll
• No Credit. We may btl
aiiie to help!
Alit fur Mr.lortus

.,

WASHINGTON (AP)- Despite
"We had no choice but to accept
assurances of quick action, the Agri· the government's offer," the couple
culture Department has amassed a said in a written statement. "We were
backlog of almost I,000 complaints faced with failing health, the loss of
by black farmers that the USDA dis- our farm and our home and further
ridicule in oilr hometown."
criminated against them.
The number of unresolved com·
plaints, most involving government
11te inspector general's report said
loans. and foredosures, grew from the increased backlog of administra·
530 in January to 984 as of August, tive complaints within the department
an increase of 86 percent, USDA occuned because many were kept at
Inspector General R,oger Viadero state and county USDA offices and
wrote in a memo.
were only recently discovered by the
During those eight months, his department's Office of Civil Rights.
audit showed department officials
Glickman had set a target 'date of
dealt with only 69 discrimination
June 6to resolve the bulk of the out·
complaints.
standing complaints. The deadline
"We believe additional efforts are was missed after the Office of Civil
needed immediately to significantly Rights found complaint records in
reduce the backlog," Viadero's audi· disarray because· the department's
tprs told Agriculture Se~:rctary Dan · civil rights enforcement unit had
Glickman earlier this month.
been disbanded in the mid-1980s.
Glickman, scheduled to testify
The agency is trying to hire new
today about civil rights before the investigators and is contractiOg with
House Agriculture Comm•ttcc, smd outside firms to get a handle on the
in a letter following the inspector complaint backlog and examine them
general's audit that its conclusions case by case.
should be "promptly addressed " by
Viadcro's -audit concluded that
the agency 's Oflicc of Civil Rights . there is ·not now any .. systemic disYet hundreds of fanners have crimination" at USDA but there have
never even been tolg the .status of been individual cases in which
their complaints, some datmg to the depai1menl employees and practices
early 1980s. 11te inspector general adversely affected minorities. Of the
recommended in a previous rcpon 69 cases resolved this year. discrim·
that letters be sent to all complainants ination was found in only four.
assuring them that action was being
The inspector general was also
taken.
critical of the county committee sys·
"This has not been done," the tern, in which local farmers are elect·
auditors said.
ed by their peers to administer some
Separately, four black farm fami· USDA programs.
lies recently settled federal dtscnml·
nation lawsuits against USDA. One
Only 37 blacks are among the
family, Roben and Laverne Williams 8 148 members of USDA county
·of Roscoe, Texas, settled for half the . c~mmittees nationwide, according
, $1.4 million they expected because to dFpartment statistics. the nation
the case had dragged on for seven has about 18,000 active black farm·
years.
ers.

before writing the memo, but said
there was no specific talk about cof·
fees or videotapes. Sbe ''did not
know ... which events" were taped by
the communications agency, Davis
said .
The AprilS, 1996, memo was just
turned over this week to Senate
investigators. It 'said the communi·
cations agency would provide "lim·
ited support for the president during
political events on the road and at the
White House .''

It then listed seven functions for
the agency at such events, including
"recording presidential remarks for
the archives .:·
Smith, the communications
agency official, told Senate investigators on Oct. 10 that Mills came to
· him before the memo to discu ss the
agency's role in political events.

approval

· Portman said. "But I commend the
administration for taking another
look at it and bemg w1lhng to work
on a bipartisan basis with Congress
to fix a troubled agency.'' .
Rubin said the rev1sed b1ll goes a
long way to satisfy the administra·
tion's concerns that .the ~nvatc board
would lack accountablhty to the
Treasury Department.
..
Rubin saitl he seeks add111onal
changes on a provision that would
shift to the IRS the burden of proving a taxpayer was wrong when a
case goes to court.
. Other elements in the wide-rang· .
~ng bdlmclude grant~ t? cx~and lowmcome taxpayer chn1cs, 1mproved
coordination of congressional over·
s1ght, and mcent1vesto expand elec·
Ironic filing of taxes. It also would
prote~t "innocent spouses"- usu·
ally divorced women - from IRS
punishment for miStakes made on
joint returns by their fonner spouses.
The administration had pursued liS
own IRS overhaul, ch1efly by haltmg
and revamping a failed computer
modern1zat1on effort. Followmg last
IRS OVERHAUL • Jack Faria, left, praaldent
month's Senate hearings into alleged
of tha National Federation of lndependeltt BusJ.
IRS abuses, Clinton announced sev·
nessea and Houee Speaker Newt Gingrich of
eral changes al tbe tax agenc.y, mclud·
Georlge hold a Capitol Hill niWII conference
ing 24-hour telephone semce.
Wednesday to talk about abolishing the IRS
,......_ __;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......_ __;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

7

Smith agreed that he and Mills
didn't specifically discuss coffees or
videotapes, but recalled telling the
coun~el: "There's some stuff that we
do ... if if's political or official, that ··
we still have to do. Like, a good
example would be the archiving of
the presidency." The agency's
"archiving" role means making
audio and visual recordings of the
president for the National Archives.
Smith told the1investigators that
the counsel's office was "trying 10
put together a policy-type document
that would make sure everybody
knew" the communications agencv's
role at political events . .
The White House said the Senate
sulipoena, a year after the memo, did
not trigger a response by Mills to
check the audio-visual agency
because she wasn 't on the team
responding to the document request. -

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It's our monl~.
\ot

Tttt·&gt;1: - ~
f ' '
l

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code. The Clinton administration Is embracing
111 IRS overhaul ,bill It once bitterly oppolld
after sponsors dropped a provision that would
have eliminated the president's power to
appoint the IRS commissioner. {API
_-:----....,.-----------,

..

'

. current
customers:

I for Cl vert
CoI
ffer
special o I
fro11'1 t-tBO

USDA not reducing backlog
of complaints ~y black farmers

"

2t:

CRISPY SmiPS _
MEAL
OnI,

,,

1997 CHM MONTE CARLO

Cl~nton's

WASHINGTON (AP) - The protectingtheb~reaucraticturfofthe
Clinton administration is embracing .Treasury Department at the expense
an IRS .overbaul bill it once bitterly oftaitpayerrights.
opposed after sponsors dropped a
"The system, as run by the Trea·
provision that would have eliminat· sury; is broken and it desperately
·ed the president's power to appoint needs 10 be fixed" Archer said.
the IRS commissioner.
The most visible evidence of the
"We support tbe bill in its current shifting political tides came when
form , but we also believe there are Hou~e Minority Leader Dick
changes that can be made and should Gephardt, D-Mo., came out in favor
be made, and we will wo~ towards of the bill. That could have led to a
making those changes," Treasury veto-proof majority in the House.
Secretary Robert Rubin told reporters
"This bill strikes a proper comTuesday.
promise," Gephardt'said. "II makes
Rubin's endorsement .of the bill the IRS more accountable."
originally. drafted by Sen. Bob Ker·
Daschle also threw"in his support,
rey, 0-Neb., and Rep. Rob Portman, saying bipartisan negotiations have
R-Ohio, came as the House Ways and "made it a better bill.''
Means Committee prepared 10
Rubin said ·key changes 'in the
approve the measure today.
measure, negotiated last week during
The bill is -expected to go 10 the telephone conference calls, resolved
House noor next month. Priorto the many of the administration's con·
Clinton administration's endorse· cerns. He objeded especially to the
· ment, Senate action wasn't expected original bill's proposal to create a
this year. Senate Minority Leader ·new oversight board of private&gt; citi·
Tom Daschle questioned that z~ns with the power to hire and fire
assull\ption today.
the IRS commissioner.
'·The bottom line is that we 're
That proposal was criticized by
now in a position to move this legis· some authorities as violating the
lation, and 1 would hope that we president's constitutional authority to
could move it this year," Daschle, D· . make appointments. The new ver·
sian, introduced Tuesday by Archer,
S.D., told repone rs.
He said the bill "should be on the would preserve the president's pow·
short list for Senate passage this year. er to hire and fire the commissioner.
.. . It would seem to me an easy bill
The bill )llio contains 28. provi·
to pass."
sions aimed at strengthening tax payOne leading Republican strategist, er rights, such as shifting the burden
Grover Norquist of Americans .for of proof in court proceedings from
Ta&gt;. Refonn, agreed,
· the taxpayer to the IR,S. This change
"With the opposition collapsing, would apply so long as the taxpayer
I think it makes it easier" for Senate cooperates with IRS document
reqitests- .anq ·other administrative
passage this year, Norquist said.
The legislation is aimed at maUers. ·
.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich led
strengthening taxpayers' rights in
disputes with the IRS. One provision a chorus of Republicans who quick·
would make it easier for taxpayers to )y · seized on lite administration's
reversal. "I commend the president
prove their case in court.
The administration lined up for being nexible enough to admit he
behind the amended bill after some made a mistake," the Georgia Repubtey Democrats endorsed the mea· lican said in a statement.
Some members of Congress who
sure, which had been a mostly
Republican initiative.
·
have followed the bill were surprised
Rep. Bill Archer, R-Texas, chair· by the administration's reversal. ,
man of the Ways and Means Com·
"It is ap amning development
mittee, accused President Clinton of given tbe changes of the last week,"

Albert
unlikely .to face jail time
.

ARLINGTON, Va. (AP)- Marv defense lawyers said.
The former NBC sportscaster
Albert couldn't keep his job or his
dignity after his sexual assault trial could be locked away for as long as
bared seamy details of his sex life, a year when he is sentenced Friday.
but he might keep himself out of jail He pleaded guilty to one count of
by apologizing to the woman he assault and battery.
Defense lawyers and even a shcr·
attacked and seeking counseling,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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You II'M! calli.; October 11 and mentitlo litis ad Ill ~ this speml oll!r.

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�P-ae 12 • The Dally Sentinel
NOniiNG RUNS

UKEADEERE"

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. October 23, 1897

c

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

II

MUFFLER SHOP · 882-2198

882·2188

.

s..St!:~

nlct•aell's Farm &amp; Lawn

MUiffle

668 Pinecrest DriVe
Gallipolis
Across from Gallia Auto Sales on old Rte. 35 West
New Summer Hours Mon ..fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-3

POmlr'Oy,

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

s..~ ttt\- OUllt;..
.,., ·.l p' ~
.
t¥-e#tt
r &amp; .l ar. r.pe ·
411 SOUTH lMIRD

......lolL Baby ....... __..
111111 mon'o clotl!lng, jrlcturH.
' " - oonilor 1110. ploy pon. -

PHONE 912·2186

Comp1efe Machine Shop Senke F•brlcadoa
Steel s.Jes, We!c!!ng Supplies,~ C.

992-2825

•

250 conctor slreei

AUICI5T HOMl CODIIIIti
The happening epot "" W1noton

Cup cole- en Rocldnghem

NCMS " allghu••

.,

"'"'- 0-lhopod -·juoiOYtr
I mile. Oolo Jarrell

THIS
WEEK

dcminlled "" 11111

IYint UW.Ihll--

Chester
985-3301

untlllho tinalllpo.
only to, bo paiMd by
Jotl Gordon, Whooomlng all hll ftrllt

1011

On TV All Times Eallorn

.st. Rt. 248

Dey~Dne

'lOBO

500 Yletaly.
DEFENDING CHAMPION: Gorden.
AMONG THE FAVORITES: Jarrell will
•11o locldng tc """'" "" rever 1111 tine.
Mark Mll1ln hal clcmlna1ed lluoc:h

• WlniiDn Cup AC'-DIIC 0 4MIO O.Nfytng

4:00p.m.•FIIIIay · • 8uloh Gtlnd NIH . . i\CaDIICO 200
2:00

p.m. • sa.u.y • TNN

• WlnRon a.., •c D lit aa
12:30 p.m. • SIJndoy • TNN &amp; ESPN:I .
Al-and--byTVEWOI&gt; olto.
TJnoeo ""'ed to chongo.
Hmgo.

Far Homeowner s
Insurance

0 ......

a.......,

4. Jffl BY1Dn.

I . ~LAJM. 4,1011

1..... ~. 3.s:M

s.a...Pm,3,803

2. Rich~ 3,.513 '
3. Joe Alalwl, UM

z. Todd Bor;tN, :s.uoe

2.MIIt ...... U11
4,, .

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".1M'

•.Mike-.

. . . . . ~. 3,371

S. Tq Ubcll'*, J,7Q8
l Dill EWI'IIMII, 3,J'N
1• ...., ......... 3,1187
. . . EIIOI. 3,5.111
lltd .......... 3,322
1o. RIMy w.leol. 3.242

s_ Ellolt s.tw, 3133r
e. Pt'M P....., 3.320

prtmed ID put

In Yk:lc!y lone lor lho ... _ .

TltREE WHO COULD IUIIPRIII:
Ward Burton - "" only Wonolon CUp
race In lhlo ,_In 111115. Bill Elloll hoi
~·IJII- record It Rocklt'Cihlm ..
'

..

..

IUICH IIIWID NA1ICIIW.: Oet 25,
AC-Dolcc 200, ~
NOTABLE: Rnly ~'-II but

~.

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~~~1!11! -~
Dear NASCAR This Week,
I would lb ., llko thii opponunity t o - myoelf lllid .. roll you
W mudr I enjoy your U&gt;IIIIM door
-In olrr ~oro~_.
been
.,avidNASCARfan forufJrboctM
I can ~tma111ba.
Thai is the point of this tet1er. It
"""' wu good ..... 'the ori&amp;inll
Teuco-Havoliae colon 1ha1 were
niade fllllOUI by the la1&lt; Dovey
· Allilon dilpll)'cd in the Coco-Coli
600 (and DieHard SOO). I am submining a poem-song thai I have

3.322

7. 8uc:hhct .ton., 3,234

t . lb F..._., 3.1!58
IQ. H1rmM1 s.t.r, S.OI7

FROM lAS I WEEK
tU . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

Olllco:-

·-~

Fax:e11ta.11

BUSCH SERIES: S1arting
well bocilln 1he pack, TOdd
Bodine stretched the fuel suppfy in his Team 34 Pot.'ltiac to
win nil filii NASCAR Busch

Grand National race m me

poinl$ off the lead of 110aaon
leoder Randy Lajoie, who fin·

ttno 1ifra! IIWI-. Mike
- "'""" hoqla tte ...... of
1he No Foot ~•.lho
CaMiomla Speedway. Bodine
fooMih
1it1o of lho Team ASE
tOOk rN&amp;r tne lead after Bobby
bacl&lt;atrOICh ollop141 . Sieve

Park ftnlshed Second. The win
was Bodine's first aince June
1996. Bodine knocl&lt;od 46

FORI-··-·
pole,---

Slw1lng
frcm tte
l h o - ftold, ieodtng 113 oot
o1100 iapo oolho - 1nlek.

Jaollbbo,rlglt,

wonJ~.=~!:~.~ ::::E~ ~~~~~=
Joo-

TOP I 0
WOoldy rontdngs by NA8CAR Thil W... . wttk'l rrilng li in paleni1"M.

1.Jei!Oonlon (1)
Stiil-oolid lead
. 2. Dolo- (2)
S~ong otlho Rock

Pcntlac: -

got""_.. itcono, a tur11 ·
of Ul.::ud go., DM ~

HollotfamolnCinton, Ohio.
tuvorl&lt;*t-~tollo
But- btiO&lt;O he 1111111111111111
dNg-. W. rid ..,.lilgli ·
cooclilno. GiblilourchmdaWin--100.-gotln
ston Cup stock e~r tam, All mat·
ICUIII, bLI: QOI_,.,., a taw
tor o1 fiCI, In oo~ hil second ,... - .·
..... , car ownor, hi won the Ooy- .WHAT D O - - PRO
1ona 500 wt1h 01~ Jl11111 11 lilt
I'OOTI.W. _.. • ar~er. Bobby Ubonlo hu won tour
_ , -n.y..- ·
races since succeedlnt Jane« In
llr'Md. Thlre'l no '"t wound
1995.
lhlt. Thoi'IO- Y l l y G~bs aiso owns aouctosslui
mg. You'ro not going., win In
Nt11onal Hot Rod Am&lt;ia11on drag
.., - . - Mlybocty kind
raclno '""'·
otfi1o-. Our171010troom
Next l'l'!lhl Giblill1ock ,.,
io-like- IIOml.
operation will get even larger. One
~'ve got the P1b lhopj it't
ol rhe COUntl)''s more promising
a1mo11 Mile Olftnlt. And you
young drlvor1, Tony SUIWt~. will
can ' - t h o - - ·
compete In 1 Glbb&amp;·owned P011tilc
Sornetitnellhe motor room.
~Iii"""'""" 001. 'Hoy, k
in lheii&lt;JS&lt;h Grand NatiOIIII """·
If ewrytrtlng goes accord/no to
·wah offenle'a f-. we r:1cr11
. plan, Slewan will pilot 1 second
1C0t1 aoday.' Yoi.l'lllincl JW1IIIf
Gibbs Wlnst0j1 Cup car In 1999 a
flghllng Iii I'll lime Mllleh
the operalion c:onunues Its exp1nttinOI thlt you find in foolbll.•
lion.
• WHAT. YOUR FOMII..U
• RICOIIO AS ACAR OWNER:
FOR IIICCEI8? , juol pick
180
8~-andlryto
lllria,
'I - ·
put them In tho " ' j : t - I
11 IOp-10 ' -· """1hln
. gel in tho W11j... they UIUIIy
S7 mllion In pttze money.
do belt• wilhout me.•
• HOW DtO YOU BECOII£
INTERESTED IN RACING?
• WHY Oil YOU MMI! THI
MOVE FROIO CHIMIOUT

A winner again
7. BoOby~ (7)

.. Jell lurlon (41
No_.
a. Dolo l!omhontt (5)
Wonherein'98

--

coacn o1 the WiShlngton Rods~ns
and Is a member of the Pro Football

Monte Ounon. Lilt

5. Terry L*lnta (8)

3.--(3)
WIU.-glveup

Ridenour

Supply

'

'

a win

8. Emlo lrvon (I)
Wanta one more
8. Bill Elliott (8')
Desperate u Dale
10. Kenny SChl'ldtr (10)

Maklngprogreos

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

ON THE SCHEDULE

a. .-..

w.......

(B. latlolte)

jB. '*"'-1

FEUD Of THE WEEK

WHO'S HOT ... WHO'S NOT
WHO'S HO'Tl Bobby
Labonte has finished
second in the last two

races.

Will'

11 " " " -

. , ., One 1e11r w1 bl drMn

-"'

\

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

ADVERnSEON
THIS PAGE
Call992-2156
Dave liarrla
Ext. 104 or
Don Riffle

•N

NASC.IR 1lils - . y tt.tta:

r:lo Till- a-_ 2500l
-~~vi!. Gu1ani1, N.C.
21t1t14
....... ,;... wlnrier KMI Plfflr

111

UM

o1 E - Ci1y, I\\ lor Why lUll
Randy lJJola.
TO POIITlAC TH11 VIAll? "I
decided ror our whole I'80e - . .
lhlllhl bell CftlnCt 10 win a

110

· Kyou ooocr-ot..
jOIMigot-~

who . . _

"'""Orilt - . ctt;or).

-lind

You-·--who

two ~Jell

Tony~.

Thoyve- gotproay-.
till CIMII, n Nre'l eevn

For More
Information

mord,

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lhoo¢ • will bosli:lliy .., """""
..... bb:t, ............... r:{llo

..... SlS,[lll, ond ... Ho aaitl
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cy-.....
lnJn wtw: we hlvt ....meet with Mr

runber ~.. "'
Slid. "~ auffi::r mort in the klrqUC

'1'be current cnaint 'I I S-depu:IJ18lc intake ~• l vo. il drutitally dlffcrcm from the SB-2'• 12-degrec

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power""""
AUinber.
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in the

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Ford.
"Our"""*"' ion'l........n!y""
haiiltpOWet

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curve il • bi&amp; fac:eor in the u:deuwioi•

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Tablea, Mtac. Htma
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Ph. 985-4198

TRUCKING

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Middleport

992-6611

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3. _ _ . . 1111-10

"""'--'
.•

1 " ' - · 'PIIIIdolls

...a.aw 'C

..... 1M 01 t W•\ IliON .. 'IUIPOI w»&gt;)

of the car. That 'I when: WCW~ rAlly
pin i11e..., wK1&gt; ih&lt; SB-2 ........
. . r:{lllo ...... Wili&lt;qJiiloal,

.... 1

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a

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un, can It be

" I. . . . .

this yoUng lad

.UiLIIM
' I 1•r 7
-.
ilodtlt.... , .......,.
P Z I1F I . l l

tarntcl401

s .;......:..

FLASHBACK
Appearing Friday 8:00-12:00

RACING ON THE WEI

POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB

IOIACIIIIIIIOII NGl

'

and Guestlnviled

Oaftsmon Trudo Series dfor1, hoodina
up 1 Cbevroicl~e~m for Jly s...tcr.

BEll Oil TilE 8tO 'I'MCKS:

PVH Big Kids &amp; Babies
Monday, Oct 27
6:30p.m.
Administrative
Conference Room

- · Ubonlt'l -j&gt;lacc finish
'loltUd Mllhe rew pw.u Jlld.
II Tallldep in lhe DieHud 500 Will
CIEWCIE'IliiW!riH:Brld
Pomilc'• bc:sl-cver finW!In a tcll:l'ic·
-....--bihollam
IOr-pble race. It w•abo Llbonce's
Sobo:&gt; No. 46a....lol b 18-"" ltCOftd oomcculive ICOOrld-pl.:c fin ,..-~~...;p.d
iltl, and in Ute lut four riCCI, the
jua before"" llioHanl ~.
IOp-fuiJiij"' Glllld Pri.t hu piNoft'linpr, 37, wllrted t&gt; resume
lhinl.- and a drhlina career in the United Stilts third,
'"All day thew
preny JOOd...
Auto Cub '1 Silver Crown JCria.
Kid l.abonlc. "We 10( CIU&amp;hlln lhe
acx:ordifla lO Saba) release. Nolbd 1 couple of limes, but thlt's
linpr drove in the Winston Cup
)101 """ ol drwfti"'" Taiiadep.
Serlct for Mike Ctnbe in 1988. ·
Even the pys w_ho hive been gornt:llnw"" 19!16- N Jlliwa· .fit berc • lona time Jtl t~u&amp;bt in
U.aamc lhi,.. ..
- - c:hldlnr Sobo:&gt;~ linlilod

w•

ATTENTIONADVERTISERS!!
Advertise on this page

Free PVH Speech &amp;
Language Screenings
Thursday,
October 30,1997
3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
'

' "

.

DEMIIGB GOIIE'JT IN£.
Ripley, WV 26271

Dave Harris Ext. 104 or Don Riffle Ext. 105 ·
For More Information

Bus. Phone (304) 372-3673
1-800-964-FORD
Rl 21 lit the Alptey-Falrplaln Exit 1132

Come See Us For All Your
Parts and
Service Needs

For Children Ages 2 and Up
''
Children's Clinic
(2801 Jackson Ave.)
Call (304) 675-5250 for an
Appoinlment.
Walk-Ins Welcome

. )!~==!:=======;::~·
1).&lt;· .

Call992·2155

Anliquea. lOP priC.I paid, Rivet·:

na iltm 10o taril or 100

ntatea, appraisal-

cullOm orderl, 814.:

mo. pd.
CaJS Or ·

I Or Newer, :

1;00 Eaot·

Pick up dl•cardad
appllanceo, betterto•,
many motala &amp;
motor blocki..
&amp;14-992-4025 a •m-6

,.

Non-Working Waaher; Oryera..
510\IH RelrlgetiiOII, ffHietl.

Air Condltlontro, Colo• T. v:o.
YCR'O. Alao Junk Cora, 814-25e·

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

Do You Hro.. 1tord ChDIPH? Lot
A Pa,cNc Holp. Jult Cal l.t003211-10.S, Ell.1017, $1.88 lllln.,

llull

~o

18 Yra . S.v·U,

Er.1PLOYr.1ENT

118·

SERVICES

845 8114

RACINE GUN

-

~

---

--

680 Front

Chapter 7

·

..•

----~---

CLUB
Gun Shoots
Starts Sunday
Sept. 28 at
· 1:00pm
12 gauge modified
Limited
637 Back Bore

•

int Antlqu .., Pometo~. Ohio, ...
Ruae Moore owner, G14-QSt2- •
2521.
'

raa

'~'"""'"

(No Sunday Calls)

Chapter 13

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

William Safranek,
Attorney At Law
614-592-5025

Athens, Ohio

HEIRLOOM CONNECTION
Heirloom Quality Cu1tom Furniture

,

\

..'•

•'

'

PVH Open House
The Grand Opening of t·.:!",,:.o
the Office of
Robert Tayengco, M,D.
(Old Post Office) ·
11 North Second Street
Mason, 'IN
Saturday, October 25
· 1 p.m.t o 4 p.m.
Public is Invited

HOWARD
EICAYAIING &amp;.
IRUCIING

Umestone H1ullng
HouR
&amp; Tretler Shtl
HaPPY Birthday
Lind Cl11rtng &amp;
Grading
Septic Syllema
PubLic Notice
&amp;Utiii1Le1
Eatlmatea
LEGAL NOTICE
Tho Rutland TOWIIIIhlp
992-3838
Truo1ooo oro ooeklng bldo !.::=====~
lor 1ho conotructlon ol • ·.,
ltQo lon.coofbo1woon
tho
proportl01
Robert FoHy
oncl Agnoo Stovono Eolato, .
bolng 1100 linear loot;
lrollod end metal pooto end
a etrencl
12''•
u•ut• berbod DUMP TRUCK
wlro;
rough
torroln.

(10) 23, 30 21c ·

CELLULAR PHONES

• Dryers • Dishwashers
Littlt things
art Worth Alol
in
tht Clmifitd Stclion'

Honest Reliable
Quality Service
(114) 843 5q40

All Major Brands
Reasonable Rates

Sentinel
Cla11ifiede
992-2156

-

Old.

2

245-SieS.

Gr.,.

1

lllircli.

11

4-

TWo year aid lemale Hknl.l-ran,

" WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF

apoyocl. dtc:lallltd, hoa oil lhota.

814-742·1018.

60

POMEROY, OH.

Lost

and Found

Faund: ald•r Be.agle mil dDf,
Rocksprings Rd. viclniry, 11-4~
e82-2184.
.

614-992·5479

··-

MobUe lome Furnaces
and Bat Pumps.~:=.

Found: On VIne s,..._ and
Whlto IIIII Kitten With Whi1t

lenged. E1cellenr Training p,..

Flu Color (I 141 3711--2303 Cali
Aha-7pm

Atl14-288-4187.

lll11lng llnct 1111 -

· blonde
male bobllilld Cl.l, If ...n tall

614-742-2328.

70

Heat Pumps lnatalled 13800 a month
FrH Eltlmates

Yard Sale

Gaiiipoits
&amp; VIcinity

(Payments INISod on - " " t:rod•l

.ILI.Yird-IIUII
BaPolrlln-

tho-

QfAN M : 2:00 ....

111111 I CDDLIIB

boloro the Oil

........ Suntlar

tdlllon·I:OOp.lll.

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
114-446-11418
1-tQO.I72-ae7
1391 Safford School Rd .,
I , OH

Frlilll'llondor· 10:00 ..... lolurrlll'

RADIATOR BEPAIR

Sou. Or:t 25111, Sol Nov Ia~ 111
Garlitld Ave .. in Brick Btoidt
Filii Cll/reh Of God, 11:00 l l 5:00

IIOvtna Slit: Sonmlly Ocr. 1111\

..

All SMklng An lntolllgant, C8-·
rttr -Orltnltd ~rton Who I) • .
Cluigotng And llkeo To 8t Cia
gram. Bonoflta. And Advond!'
mont Plnon11ol Col Otar. Bun~~ · ·

•

.

•

last: 40+ b1l11 of hlr between
3:30·4:30 SUnday lllOiatt HilL H Genalll Nu•lion ca-. II crenlly Looking For Enlhuei ..tlc
t&gt;und c:tll-2=115.

Furnaces 12800 a month

'

agemen1 ll'llnlno Program. We..

2275.

- Easy Bank Financing -

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

chenqlng And R-rctlna ca.;
- Avlililblt Through Ourlion-.

FOUND: PVir ol - ·a oyo glul.._ ..... Hlrdord llrldga -

,.,,.. ' ~

' Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy • Accetl Regulator Repair
State Certlflltd Wel~er
Stick • ng • Aluminum Welding

manor ....

E11n ootrl
CIYIAMo.. ·
... Awn. Cllll .,,. 818 1001,

llinlaturo Collie 4 Old, To
Good ..... Only, 814-448-412Qo.

360° Communications

•Re~

• Ranges • Washers

Oomlno'a PiZZI Now Accepting
Appllcorlono At: Galllpolio &amp; Pv-.

ewkl old. l'lltor tralnod. block/
wlrlrt, brawMiihl10, !Igor auiptd, · mtiiVJ. AWY In PW-.
1 oil grar. 1·5' monrli old 0111.
Domino"• Plzzo-Now hlrl"ll Ill!
:IM-882-3557.
poaillons. Pt Pleasant 1r-.. .
Full lilaodlcl rr.1o Catlo: II• 314 mu11 bo 1ByrL old. 304-175- ·
llinlatrHe Colllt, - . _ dotan"t 5858.
... :
like Chlldrln: _,_, l1ornlo. ....
Eorn $1,000 WHIIIY Slullng En-' :
742-IOIG.
'
ftlapee AI Home. Stan Now. No ·
......., m1
..... Exporlonce. FrM Supplin. lnlrL, '
Gormon Sho,.._. 1 pu..,..... No Obllgl1ion. Send LSASE TO&gt;
114-.742-1010.
liCE. Dopt : 1351 8a&amp; 5137, DloKitttno:To Good Homo Only, 2 mont1Bir.CA817eli.
•

Free Estimates
Still Takln Orders for Christmas

113 W. 2ND ST.

Old 2 Wf;IO, 1

114388 8SI6

4 Klttona. ~ mol11. 2 r.moloa,

614-992-4106

TRUCKING ·

Bob's

~

Hsndcrsfted Using Meigs Co. Hardwood

R. L. HOLLON

For morolnlorm011on, and
to oubmb bldo mellto: Opal
SERVICE
Dyer, Rutlond Townohlp
Limestone • Gravel
Cltrk., P.O. Box 321, .
Ru11end, Ohio 45T7s end
Dirt • Sand
mork tho outolda ol lho
22
onvolop "'Fonco Bid" or , ·
985-44
"Fence Bid lnlormollon
Chisler, Ohio
Roquoo1"'.
can aloo -;;L:::::;:~=='~:-~=i
roquoot
bidYou
opoclftcallano.
. - . .. - - ·
· -----.
by phoning at•-7•2-2805 ·
(ovonlngo). Bldo will be
oponod ot 8:1 5 p.m. on '
AppUance Repair
Novombor 5, 1997 11 lho
Rutlncl Flro Sletlon.
·
Service

3 Klan a -

• Co•plete Kltehens
* Kltehen C.blnet Refaelng
~ Antlq..e Reprodaetlons

5/1..,.,

)&amp; , , ,. . . . . . . . . .-

.,..if, n

10/21/171

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

949·2168

•

7

Riek PVaroon Aucdon Company.
lull time auctioneer. complete
auction
aervlce.
Llcenud .
188,0hlo &amp; Wtl1 Virginia, 304- :

Optn During The low
&amp;Regular
Deer Stann
742·2076

Richard's Lawn &amp;r Garden
Gravely Dealer
Spencer, W.Va.
1-800-827-4551

614-992·7643

'

~.

0,. Now &amp; Wille

Joe N. Sayre

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

............. lillllllf
....... ?
l•llfll',

I

day, Roy on Saturdar. AU nl'f', •

guaranlMd merchandi... Lola of ,
Christmas Speclala. Ed Frazier •

S.A. 325,
Langavlll• OH

Buy, Sell &amp; Trade·

••

"*'I- rlrMng

Fri. 1 Sot 7pm. Ill Alto Aucdon •
Rr2-33 ( Crouroada) Rick !Ill Fri- :

OILER'S
DEER SHOP

Same Day Repair Service

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

•

773-57850r-773-6«7.

(Free Discount parts list)

HauLing, Excavating
&amp; Trenching .
Um11tone &amp; Gravel
·septic Syatema
Trailer &amp; House Sites
RNeoneble Rlte8

.11130.

1111'1W71-.,..

OILER'S DEER SHOP
S. R. 325, Langsville OH
Open Now &amp; Will Be Open
During The Bow &amp; Regular
Deer Season

uthHI ar •

7

man 10011 l J)Of'Ctlaln dollt. E•

-

A11o Concreto Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
8112-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy, OhiD
.1-1100-291·5800

.

! ·.

Rl2-33 (Cro-) Ron Big lood of qullity , _ - -dill for ChrltlmiL Even Craft~-..

Pllntlng

GRAVELY Rln'ORI
PARTS &amp; REPAIRS

ROOFING .
NEW·REPAIR

2.------- . _..............
·. . .

CARPENnR SERVKE
•Room Addition•
•NewGar~g..
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Ex1orlor

PRICES''
Quality Window Systems

614-742·2138

..__

Chrill--

luridly OCt- 2111h. lprn. .•

Howard L Wrlteaet

101•"
aomwrtlo: NAICMTIIII-

--c..p. . ___ ...__

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli,.Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

E..rrdoy. Crowlarrf"1 Floo llorkot, Htndoroon. WV. 304-t75-"

YOUNG'S

DIRECT

wv lf1234T7

Spoct l5.00 Ou1tloiw t:l-00 Op&amp;

5004.

"FA£TORY

110 Court St.
182-41111

ATTENTION VENDORS: lndoo(

614·992.0077
Mkldleport, OH

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

HAULING

MY PLACE

•New Homes
•Garage•·
•Complete
Remodeling
StQp &amp;r Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

- i l l , N.C._

Builder: New Chevy SB·2 'should level playing field'
""""aaiti"' ..... _JlM_
.... eq,. will&lt;tivc i119ll!, will;..,.
.,,__,...,.ll......,_

WICKS

BISSELL
'\/cHECK THE WANT ADS ROBERt
CONSTRUCtiON

Yow Tlrm. 0/0

. T.iVJA

3351 Hoppy Hollow RCNICI
Middleport, Ohio 4578t
New Home1, Addhlona,
Roofing, Siding,
Pole Barna,
Dackl, Painting

10/2211 mo.

Tho- · 2100,. -tin-··

cno.yteant•

(UmtStoneLow Ratea)

Honse l:aproveLHnts

B.C. s., with over 50 locations in Southeastern Ohio.
currently has 3 part-time openings in two of. our
programs in Gallia and Meigs Counlies. The pos~1ons
are:
1) Meigs: 8 am- 8 pm Sal/Sun;
2) Meigs: 8 pm-8 am, Sal/Sun;
.
)
Gallia:
pm8:30am.
Thurs;
10:30
pm-8:30
11
3
am, Fri; 8:30 pm- 9 am, Sat;
we are searching for compassionate professionals
with a team vision and a desire to teach personal and
community skills to Individuals with . mental
retardation/developmental disabilities. The work
environment is Informal and rewardtng. The
requirements are: high school diploma/GED, ~~lid
Ohio driver's license and three years good dnv1ng
eKperlence. B.C.S. offers comprehensive !raining In
the field of MR/00. Interested applicants need .to
specify position of Interest and send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Box 604 Jackson, OH 45640 '
All applications must be postmarked by 10/29/97/
Equal Opportunity Employ11r

Ext.105

liNGS'

Dear NASCA11 Race Fan,
Thanks for the aubnoission, and
best of 111&lt;1&lt;.
If you'¥1

"""" yYing ., bo tho """'

Free Eltimate•

Cor! A. Sbuap
Cumberland. Md,

... ~

. . Will\ tlalell

10

20 Yrs. E•P· - Ins. Owner: R~k Johnson

HllpWinted

And longins ,., • romm11 face

AROUND THE GARAGE

d1qo iho&lt;llovmlel WI t.. ,_
teen," said Pwyea, wOO Wit lam mlft.

why

• one ot lhl top~ WI a

.....,. Pill ' I

the S&amp;.-2 enhl.u the combuition
proceu, thereby incrc.uina the abit·
ity to produce power."

'*
Uoink or rimea'nlrllona 180
Wor1derinJ irlw be

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

Auction

and Flea Martlet

Carpet-Uphotatery

Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

(614) 446-4759

1

7

standings. This year
he's 27th.

Ron Pury.:u, engjne builder a1
Batwi ~being. rom~dy tviiUIIed tht
new SB-2, the new enpne Ocner~l
Maklrs !elms will delxlt in 1998.
"h&gt; ~y "" ...... ..,.,

..,...

llr:and~,..­

- Oil IIIII n.n on Montlly In
.
. frrlof 1111111"1

.

angle. The maRIICr in which the
pons and chambers are laid out in

lWmty-ejpiiiJOI- '"""""""
It's runnina fll'61 u il wu before
But in your hean lin an empty

""''lpioi•"&gt;pla., hid I Pon-

1.
ollho
-~dooor--ol--11?

WHO'S NOll At
this point a year ago,
Sterling Merlin elghlh in the point '
...... .

., 111111111111

CHORUS
Davey's gone altp aloead
Tluo'a ' - the lip wu reid
Life is coo short and tometimb
You live eiCii day fur and hard
Fate'a doclt Uomwa you a card
Taking your ru~m in line
Now Dovey"s aone a lap ahead

.. _oHASC:AAll*
w...tt hiL lind ya~..-y 1D!

Your DNatn"

1998 Martin Street

Gallipolis, Ohio 45831

Hourt: .
7:00 a.m. 'thN 4:00p.m. Monday 1hru Frlclly
7:oci am to Noon Seturda

Roben Yates' Havolinc Ford ·
'!Wenty-eip woold really 1011
Drams d vicbywoultl """' ., life
~lltlep was his favorilc tr1Ck
Apoiot in time we W1i111i1 tum beet
'IWo kids alone and a wife

-~ ... -

~Builll

80

CARPET CLEANING

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 mlle11 eaat of Route 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO
814-384--8212

St. Rt. 248

keep everybody Informed on lhe .
no:ing world.

----.limll'------flrlllllr~
"Actuolj, , _ .. , _ . .
---

..~............

All C.,.t·Upliolstery
Cleaning

CHEVALIER'S

MINIII

Accessories

ana

C11AFB1W1 TliUCK
SERIES: Na tlrial*1g OOCOI'&gt;II

1997 season at the Kenwood
Home and Gar Audio 300 at

Labonte ran out of gas on 1he

Power Tools &amp;

writtea lbout Davey and the 28 c:ar.
II wculd be Ill honor and I privileae
10 see yoor aalf do 1 tribute 1o Uois
great driver
include this poem·
song in it.
. In clooing I would like to thank
you for your time 11 I iuJow It is
valuable. I would like 1o thank you
fur wri1ina NASCA&amp; This Week 10

ished 10th.

. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

ltollllld loll.-1

50% OFF

Stih,.

.•"""'

' 6. Ron Hornldly, 3,211
81. ,.,~. 3.1 111
tl. Jlrrlmv Hnlty, 3,1111
• . Alcll c... 3.15el
t . Ch.IDk &amp;own, 3.012
10. ......... 2.172

t. aon~.uzs

See us for Your

~up"" -IIINiltlt .......

Tho BGN 1oom1 wl bo earning all a
giUOIIng reco on lhe "1!1 oolle lido al
lho ccumry In f'onUr1a. Colli. ... Todd
Bodine, delplle a IWnQ poinl performance, Ia IIIIIIOoldng lor lholvldory.... Vco.l1g - . Slovo Pori&lt; and
Ellol1 Sedlor -*llllco 10 0 fcul1h
vldory l h i l - ... LaJoie and Mark
Mor1ln leadlho . . . wlll1 1M v1c1ortoo

Joe Gibbs

-

1997 POINTS STANDINGS
U-IOWOUit

Grind_,..- II NCMS.IIabby
1.11bcn1eo Pontiac

'

~-lnlho~-

PROFilf

a-,...""'

I.Jell CbODn, •.»1

race weet&lt;end II lilt loblleer 1m
In Sculhom Pineo,the gollrt1011
town located lbool30 mlleo
north of North Carolina Motor
!lpeadway. Many of the toama
are lcdgad In 1'1101011 In the
Southern Plnoo-Pinlhuret areo.

·

A DivisiOn ori· NichOls Me18l, INc.
. Phone: 614: 992-2406
Fax: 304-na-sea1

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

llabbr HornJion - - "'" In . .
-al18115.
KEY lO THE Ma:·MIIildan
Clloli011111i-.l, 3ilo ""'"al ~
'*'bo_W.....,..drtYOr_ . .

Remodeling

81

Big Btnd Fabrication,
Machine: &amp;Welding Shop

'•

TIE WINITON CUP CIRCUIT
COMIIII UP: Oct 28, AC-Delco 4oo.
WHI!RE: Nctth c.oh ..., SpeedWP.&gt;f. Rol;ldiiQIIIIII, N.C. '
AIIOUT TIE 11IACK:

Cuatom Homes

Radiator Repair &amp;Replacemellt
Mondly-Frid8y - 8:00 a.m.· 4:30p.m.
. Salu!day • 8:00a.m. • 12 ~

108 North second Ave. • Mlddl6port, 0H

Ole

ill

Guaranteed Service

=r-

GariOt&amp;
Oc-.
24-21,FtldoJ'
loclltlon:
hill 011 SR 2&gt;1f, thlnl hou

10p o1

You'WI Gal Ou1111cw, We've Got Ani•WL

-"10DLEPORT j o\'\

,Starting .at $79.95

(614)-446-2412 or Toll Free 1-800-594-111

LUMBER

• The Dally Sentinel• Page 13

P.ll.

Pomeroy,
Midclllport

&amp; VICinity
&amp;II YIN laiN MIIOI . . 1'1114 Itt
ArlwiMI, DoHIIno: 1 :00p.r tile

1

41J

btlo11 1h od lo to ,..,
SundiJ &amp; Monday odlllto•

I:OOpmFridtJ.
Corporl lilt· FrldiJ· saturdor.
24-25. 3ee•o Rocko~ri:': ~ ~-11,
Oid33,CR20. HII..

And E•p«ltncod lndlvltlulll For
A New S1o11 In The Glillpollo -

Artl (Ohio Vailiay Pilau~ Ploo•
Cal HIBS-297-(1338 (Ell. &gt;106).

Hrordymon T""k.ng Solldng Drtv-Wi1h Clti11 A COL Hu·llal &amp;
Traitor Endo- ~ ~
ply At Burfiit Oil co,._, II.,._
&lt;11:1 TlYu Frldov, I A.ll. 10 5 P.M.
tr

IIEDt-IIOIIE HEAl.TH AGENCY
Wt Are PMiaaed to Announce To

Tht Golllpoiio Arto, The Q-1h
Of Our Agonoy. Wt Ala looking
For A Dedicated, Oualilled PWJ.
10n To Hllp Promo II Tilt Oulll~
Cart Wt Art Known Far
Thtoult&gt;O&lt;II Tho ......
PEDS.NUR!Ie
• Muat HIWI FadL Etperilnce

• Wtet Virg inia, Ohio llctna•Riquirocl.

•WilngToSooAdt&lt;l-

.•

CONTRACT OCCUPAnONAL-

ntEIIAPIST
• Wtot Virglnlo, Oh io Ucona•

Rlqulrod.

•

PHYSICAL THEIIAPIST:
•.
e Woot Vlrglnlo. Ohio UconoM
Rlquirtd.

-Col 1.8f0.4t--.· .

'

�Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel• Page 15

. ·-

f§

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

1 ..

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

5 P1oco Living Room Suitt,
114-441•1348.

Ale 'lbu A SI&lt;Jiod 0.. Sooi Slllllod
Equlpmotu Opolatat Willi
Exptrlence In Ulning Or Con·
ttn~e:tion? Wt Are An Ettabollohed Com~anr That Offoro A
~PI)' And Goodlll-llfl,ln&lt;:lud01g o40t (k~
HM'I)'

Yo" Can Let Ua Know About

HARTS MASONARY - Block,
Employor. All Oualiliod Appliconll bridl. &amp; srone 'Mirk. 30 rear• 11Will receive Conalder~~tlon For parlenct, reuonabtt ratea. 30•·
Employment Without regard To 88S.35it aftor 8:00pm, no Job to
Rice. Colot, Rol~. Na- ()r.. IINII or 1D BIG. W\L0212DI
Livlnwaton't ba•emant waterlgln. Ancoltrj Or
praot ng, all baMmtnl rtpalra
Help Wltll Eidony Lady, 114-44&amp;- done,
lrtt eallmatea, uretlme
:1943.
.
guaraniH. 1Oyra on job experl·
HonHI, Reliable, and Pr-blo 4M"'Ce. 3)4.175-2145.
I'Oroon To Help lAy CarpaL II Jn.
ltttlled Pltaso Calli (814) 38881MI2
We Are An Equal Opportunity

s...

llason Co l'llblic Schoola
Nur~e

(RN)- Ful-lhnl

IURII 1&gt;: Carol Milltf', Dlrec:IOr of
Spacial Progtams. 307 8111 SL, Pt

Pleuant WV 25550. 304·175·
4540 OIL 211 Ill io&amp; 304-1175-72211.
NHdtd: STNA'I (Stata Tooted
Hurling Aaala•nta) For Deman·
Ill UniL One Of A Kind, Special
P~rammfng, unique Core For
lhcM Wllh AlztMtinw'l
Full T1m1 PDIItionl ,....HetM Call
•~+.u&amp;-7150 And Alii For Mary

All real estate advertising in
thiS newspaper is subjeCt to
the Federal Fair Housing Acl
or 1968 wtlleh makes it ilegal

ott••

sex familial status or national
origin, or any intention to
make any such preference.
Umhallon or discrimination . ~

MUST SELl. My lo11, your gain.
3bedroom ,&amp; 2 bath, clo11 to
1own. A.ak lor Frank 30•·1557191.
.

Atrowood Or Pl.m Jones. Scenic
Hills Nur= ~{'ltr, '311 Buck·
ridge Ad..
OH

This newspaper will r"lot
knowingly aCcept
advert1sements lor real estate
whicn is In vkllation of the

Now accepting lppllcatlone for
emplorment •t Cltgo · ··uute
SIGDnd AMnua. ~

law. Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
actver11sec1 in tttls newspaper
are a11aUable on an equal

I'VI·Tlmo Float Po- (• P.ll. •
t P.ll.) For A SIOII TOIIIII Hurt1n0 Alliotont M- At Sconfc
Hlflo Nulling Contar. Exdlfno Opportunity In Sub-Acuta, Skllled,
And inllrmtdloll Cora. Apply In
AIScoric Hllt, 311 Bud&lt;·
tldii"Rd..-.OH45814.

opportunity basis.

~--~~---·~
REAL ESTATE

I'VI-- HoUIOitooplnall.aundry
olldo - · ~dt!Vo ulary.
API&gt;IY In poroon at Poinl Plou· I~~~,!!:..__ _ _ __
ant Nurolno a Rohobllltatlon I·
Contar, Slltl Routt 82, Point
Acrea wl~tedonal nome,
l'lalllnt,WV.EOE.
Rd. Cal Somerville Rully
30&gt;H75-3431.
Pt+ lc' n AacnRinwll
1QQ4 28x70 Fox Wood llodulor
Pllyolclan s.rvrc.o NMMcf For . _ on 314 ..,. rot In Daipollo
WuiU.Ctnter Planning Agency. Ferry. 3 Bedroom 3 bath, central
Cant,.ct PotiEIGn Of Appro•· air, wuhlf/dryer, aH kilehen IPImotoly 3 ·10 Houro Per WHk. pllancoo, built Wltl' outside wall'
flay And Evontno Houra Avail· lhotmol ouard orindowo, tltoploce.
obit For Gyn Eumo And Bl1th Caii30&gt;H7S.:I0211.
Conool SonrlcM. STI Exomo For
8o1lt IIIIa And Elltodowbtook Dr.. Sbtd·
Opportunity For Added Income. ltocomo. 2balhl, living toom, din·
Medical Dog••• With TralnfnO I toom. lomlly toom, 2cat ga·
And E-lence In G,_ology, rage, loncod In blc:ll yanf, 1,700
Llconoed To Practlco In Ohio. oq. h. 304-e7!&gt;3QZI.
Sen1Wve 'TD WoNn'a 11....1.
Practice Undt&lt; Planned ht· 3 ·411odtQGmo, Opllonal Family
·ontllood F-tlon Of Amorlca Room, CA, 2 Bothl, In-Ground
Standards And QuldtfiMo, Pool. Ntar Hoopltal a Gallipollo,
OSHA And CLIA Roqulr-nto. 173,000,114-441-4173.
Under S•P""'Itlon Ot Aooncr 4 llocfroom .... ltl.ovol Wltll 5400
AndRHumo
Cfllaf Opor·
.... Full Butment
a•onr-.
land
And
Ft Including
~..
R ~2 Cor Ga-. Gao HH~ 2
nw.. Emplo,menl e....encet Mllet From Galipolil On BulaviNe
To: Planned peronlhOO&lt;I 01
Soutfllaot Cillo, 301 Richland PIM, on 1 112 Al;re Flat Lo~ City
"""· Allton&amp;, DH 45701. EOE I 11114,000 • 814-448-(13110
•E::SI!::,...-:---::-----:-:~ 477 LoGtando Blvd., Newly
~
..
modeled Ranch Home, Green
Real E1ta1e Correapan.,ance scnoolt, Must Stet et•·44&amp;Coyrn. Compfota WV requlr• 2o42 1 Cal•-"-.
·
ment •• your pact. Can Be CDm...., .....
, _ In ONE IIDNTHI Comrri• BUY HOliES AS LOW· AS
alan Oflflroved. Jon Kollt(l M,OOO 1 ·5 Bdnn., .Local GM, &amp;
Nlot,_.tam CGflego of Roo! fl. Bank Rtpo'o Call 1·800·522·
aai·IOII-'111~77.
27.10, X11011.
TElAI 1 REFINERY CORP. :.:.:=_,C_,OU:;,N::ITR':-Y-HOM--'"'E-Naedl M•ture P•raon Now In
ON t ·~REs
GALLIPOLII ArM. Rogardltll
aco~ otiro.
Of Ttalni,., Wrltt B. C. Hopfdnl, 9 Mlloo From Ptoctovllle, 3,400
Dept 5-15131, Boa 711, F~ Sq. Ft. Living Area, 2 Stoty, 3
·worfl. TlC 711101-41711.
llatltoomo, 2 112 Bolito, Flnlohod
a.-. Flroflil&lt;:t. Llkt Now, 4
Ytoro Old 1175,000, 114·843·
2824, Or 814-11543-2522.

WANTED: Calhler,

wy.3Dt

ex~Nrl•nce

•s 3803

WHII!.end b•nd Htkl wocallat
and blnl1t, rnu11 h•v• eaperl-

-andbt_.-.ot\111 IOCII¥'• Chrl•
... 70'1 -

For Sa.. $35,000, Two Bedroom
Ho1,.111, New Wlndowa, New Sid·
lng, All New Kitchen Wlll Take
Tradlln Or Http With Down Pay·
mtnl, 814-38NI403, ~lng No:
HI00·385-2337• 1571·
Home In counuw wllh 38 acrea.

'
'

t•

I

I

t
I

•
r•'

Naw 1098 14x70 thrM bedroom,
lndudet 6 mornha FREE lot rent
Includes tklrtlno. deluxe atept

and oolup. Only $187.08 r•r

monlh with $1075 down. Cal 1·

fl00.837 .3238,

NEW 1g98 HOMES 2 l 3 BEDROOMS. S~IIS down, $195/mo.
FREE DELIVERY &amp; SETUP. 304755-5885.
New 28.1180 3 or 4 bedroom.
$39,Q95. Froio delivery. 1-800·
8g1-11m.
Oakwood 2h58 3 bedroom, 2
bath, arartlng at $19a per mo.
Coli HIOO·IIUI.fl7n.
Ropoa . Saw

Big $$$$

11 Line 800-251-5070.

utU(ty r!Kml, storage tl.illding, wilh
cellar, one c:ar garage. loeattd

" Pr ictd II s70,000, call 814·
ltn.
384-20V7or814-li411-2B38.

·~·
lor Rant

440

nf-

""""*'II. lilt·
unfolmlthod, MCurltt

1 and 2 bodt_,
and

depoall required, no Pill, 114·
DD2·2211.

W/mo...,......,hUntttgraona

Rug., Roclhawk ••moo. 7 11r
barrol e•oo. Rom. 11-t712gll.
auto, hlgft Qloll ••50 .. IIIII
llonta Corio S.S. 454 onglne,
•xc running condlllon. 14,100.
Calafltr lipm. 304-e71-63M.

'

2M8111

I NEED SOME

Antiques

1 Bedroom Gn:au"d Floor, Near
Cinoma, Econonical Gao Hool. 01
W Hook.Up, lOr, 1 - . . + Ull1101, Deposit &amp; Ltllt Rtq. No
Fell, 114-441-21157.

1 bedroom. ""lurnr-. doll to
holflllll 304475--1078.
2 bodroom-- ulillllw fur·
nllhtd. excepl tl&amp;eDhone, 200 S.
4th, lli&lt;fdlopor~ Oh, Polly 114·
;:.DD2;.;;..:·&amp;04::..;;:2.:__ _ _ _ __
2 Bedroom In Qalllpollo, 50 112
Qrapo Strut, 1260/llo., Only

••

-F~I1..W.1'101.

['to\~~ I

NEw5!

')J"----1

340 Buslnns and
Buildings

Slleelln Pomeroy, call Cl1.-841·

32011 or 81.._Zl81.
Lola For 581•: I Adjofnln~ loti,
Numboro 1 Thru I On .lfiiJiey Or.
Planrz Subldlvlon. Arll Ia 1 31•
Aerea. Ideal For Homes IAPIIrt~

mont8uiklngl.l14o4411-4874.

,.

Wanlld " buy· ocroego In llolgo
Counly, prelarabJy Ualga local
School Dl'"ic~ I14-G92·5053 If·
tar 8pm.

RENTALS
Budgel Price Tran1ml .. ion1.

4 0 H

1 R
ouses Of ent

1
IBR.. Duplex Localed on '5th ""'·
No Petal 1275. Piuo Utility and
Deposit (814) 44&amp;-NIXI

1ale, Sandhill Rd.

lot 1201121

.
3 bedroom. $400/mo.

3f:M-8 75-4CI78..,.

,.,__ ..

,.

~.
• -~~;"··=
•
Cotpot.
3:pm.

AKC Fuii·Bioodtd Roglotored
Blchon BoauUiul, Loving, lntofll·
gent, inolda "-~ 1·11" Hlgll, All
Whllt Wilh Touch Of Bull Or

Modern 1 Bedroom Aparlmtnl,
114 448MM.

NNr Porttr 2 a.droome, hSO
llonth, Roforoncoo and Dopoolt
Cal (114) 44&amp;-21101

Nlee 2br. reference• &amp; deposit, Dondtull "Studio' lxiO cardo lot
aale, Studio U11ttr Saroktl
.. poll. 304-1175-5182.
8x1 D's 1nd r.gular lizI card• far
Tara Townhouse Apartments, oslo, 1 hiVI 11to loflowlno Boonlo
Very Spacloua, 2 Bedrooms, 2 Babill lot ""'' Pabl· 130: Ouak·
Fioort, CA, 1 1/2 Both, ·fully Cor· ora· $25; Happy· $30; Spot· 150:
peltd, Adult Pool I Bolly Pool, Sir· 120: Blacklt· $25: Peanut·
Patio, Start l350111o. No "-to, ••5. Call lor lnlormoilon. 114-840Lta11 Plus Security Dtpoail Re-- 3098.
qUired,

8~• ·••e ·3411,

Apricot Double Silky Coat, No
Shedding, Hypo·noli·AIIorgotlc,
Sotllng For 112 01 I'll Shop Prlcal
114-370-i001.

Uud IRibullt, All Typoo, Ovot
10,000 Tranami11iona, Aeeea1
Rtmanuflcturld Uain Shall1 For
Standard Tranamlulon All
1'W&gt;n. .114-245-5877

1980 Ford T - . two door, two
owntrl, Jull alzed apare. bodJ
good, alro"' engine, priced Ia
oolt· etooo, with CD player,
$1200, 114-840-3081 leave .....
New gal tanka, 1 lon truck
- .orcal-5:30pnl.
whMio &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; R AuiO.
1110 otda Cutl•a• · Supreme, Ripley, WV. :104·372-3Q33 or I·
Loodtd, - . . .
_ , 800-273-83211.
CO, IlK, Elc:ellent Condlllon

111.100, su us •m

IIQ!&gt;3381.

114· «8·

,. -

0101.

, _ ltYio). lolldtd.
3t,..00miltl,

IUtD, red, tJCitl't,

.10,500. 30&gt;H75-3087.

father

3 Actress Dahl

2 Lumpy
(like fabric)

discovery

4 Gun gip.
5 Act of

6 -Got

secret

West

Norlb
2•
3 NT
6t

. ,.

a

o 'I

.. ,•

! /, '

,.

East

13 Trip

18 Mao - -tung

Pass
Pass

21 Chemical

"'.

•·

,,.

"' ·~
' -~

lerm

Pass
All pass

22 Fervent
25 Liaten

......

furtively
27 Free time
31 -counter

both Australian Bridge and Ney,;.
Zealand Bridge magazines.) Here, he•
was pannering another rabbi, Richard
Margolis, from Melbourne, Fla .. in
the Life Master Pairs. They finisheil
a highly credilable 32'nd from an initial field of 450.
The key bid was Rabbi Margolis'
four diamonds. As parrncr's twoheart response was game-forcing, he
was interested in a slain and so ~as
bidding out his shape. Now able ro.
"sec" lhe singlclon or. void in hearts.
opposite, Rabbi Helman raised to six
diamonds.
How would you plan I he pl~y aflc1
a spad~ lead to dummy's ace1
There arc only II lop rricks: three
spades, four diamonds and four clubs.
Rather than rely on a 3-3 trump
break. Rabbi Margolis played for a
hcarr ruff in hand . But rhat created a
.communicalion problem:
. At Irick two, dummy's heart 10
lost lo ~~ 's jack. Back came a trump
to Soulh's jack. Now declarer made
a wonderful and necessary play: He
led the club five and finessed dum·
my's nine' (Yes, West missed his
chance to be the hero by putting in his
10. which kills rhe extra entry.)
Declarer ruffed a hean in his hand,
cashed his lasi trump. played a club
10 dummy's ace, drew lhe remaining
trumps while lhrowing spade losers
from hand, and claimed as his hand
was higlj .
Bidding and making six diamonds
was a cold· top. ·

,..,,

.,.

32 Dawn
goddess

·•·

DOW~ IN

ALL RI614T,
SA'(
VO~J'RE OUT IN TloiE
GARAGE PLA'f'IN6
'I'OVR PIANO..

TloiE SA5EMENT

PLAI(IN6 '(OUR PIANO ...

--1--4-~ 39 Greek
llland

."

-""~

40 Makes

~,.~ ..

simpler
45 Aclresa

·· · ~
,, • , .

48 Fuss

f

.1·r '

••

CELEBRI"(Y CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celllbnly CIPher o;:ryp(ogrlm5 are crealed Irom &lt;.lwf&amp;l.OOI by lamoo s people pa sl and pre'.i8111
Each l&amp;ner 11'111\11 cipher stands lor anotner Tooay s clue T eaua~ I&lt;

DJGN
RD

L D V

A- I L

ANRRKN

H PI R

LDV'UN

EDU

ANGDJW .:

RD

PIOONJA

L D V

....

. . '.

••

X J

l .

..

.1&gt;./1

.,

....
,::~;~~~' S@i-~1A-J£t.tfS8

_.....:.,::..;__ _;,:._;: .ldltod

~y CLAY, R. 'OLLAN

WOlD
GAM I

••
,, ...

.r.:
..

.

letter1 of the
0 Rearrange
lour scromb1ed words be·
low to torm four timple words

1-1-rR:....;ur.-::-J,..:E:....;MT-'-P~~ ·

. I II I I I .

••

'

.f I I ll I ..
~_,:.:N:....;E~C...:U:....;0:;...-..-,1 ·

r------.,1
I 1• I I I

.. '..J

,,il

"r '

'·--

'., ..

l A V I N . ON~ ,

..

A tnen'd of mine doesn't make
very sound decisions. I think
L.-L.-L..-I.L.J.Lthe best sense man can use IS
,......;_ _ _ _ _ _...., _- --- -sense.

·-

M

• ~-,:;,;:....:;O,~O:.,I.::.~-·.::;CI_:..:. ,MI-l1 0
A

I'

CompleJo the &lt;huck le ouo1ed

PRINT NUM8UEO lErTERS IN

lHESE SQUARES

.I I• I. I•

.,. UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
V
10 GET ANSWER
•

•••

One dummy lo another, "I want an alarm l:IOck that
will ring once and then GIVES UP.!"

S. A COol C.t Md Ch«A Out Ill&lt;
s...,. .,!he Clotsi(...1 S.C....,

I THURSDAY

•

ASTRO·ORAPH

UncondiUonallllotlfmeLocal toforoncea furnlohtd. E•
tabllohod 1g75. Call (11~ ~~~
0870 0.. 1-287-41571. 0 I

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Wotltptoofl~

Appflanco "-•to And Sorvfco: Aft

Name fltando 0... 25 Yooro Eo·
porlonco Aft Work Guorontud,
French City lloy1og, 114·441·
77115.

m

RCHAtiDISE

- lltillld
hOmo 'call
- "Clio~
'"" mora.
For
tM
114-182·

11323.

510

Houllhold
GoodI

-Ira or - lrnptMmontt, call B.D. ConotrucUon,
814.ell2-211711.
Rog11 11 Plumbing StfYict, &amp;x·
perlenced, FrH Eltirnalet. C•ll
_ , 114-441-85111.

For ti'IJ

FAf!r,l ~;UI'f'lll C&gt;
&amp; LIVESTOCK

I I V I -'IIIIIOLIIALE
., ..2111. .

Cttdit Probl-? Wo Can .Http.
Eur, Bonk Financing For Uood
Voh clOt, No Turn Down&amp;, Cali
Vlckla, 114441 21117.

840 Electrlcallnd
Rafrlgll'ltlon

Tokl Om Paymonto, 1987 Ooo
Metro LSI Auto, AC, 11,000 Raritlirlllll Of GDINniR:Ial wtrllw,
- - . , r............ IJ.
11111.; Ful Warranlj' Pluo Exttncf. conoid
Rldono•r
tel 3411PG, Ph: 114-441-3257, 0.. Etoc:tllcal,•ltcttlclan.
WV000301, 104-171114-44&amp;-7.107.
1788.

'L

·'
_.,

Friday, Oct. 24, 1997
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) If
you have a situation that is financially
mcaningful for you , don'r dilly-dally wirh it This is a great da~ ro uti lize all your opp 0 rrunities. Get a jump
on life by understanding the innuences that govern you in rhc year
• ahead. Send for your Aslro-Graph
predictions by moiling $2 lo AstroGraph, clo lhis newspaper, P.O. Box
1.758, Murray Hill Sration, New
York, NY 10156. Be sure to slate
your zodiac sign.
SAOI1TARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Your optimisttc, cniltusiasrtc dis-

... .

.

position will-make-you a duminont
force among yo~r peers todoy. Pals
will graviralc towards you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Your annlyticltl faculfics could be
cxccprionally keen roday. If you're
working on any investigarivc project,
you should do qui1c well .
AQUARIUS (Jan .. 20-Fcll. 19)
This is a good day ro invigorate relationships !hot have been a bir nat lale·
'ly. The rcsulfs of your cfforrs could
make everyone feel a llir closer.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Once
you scr your mind on a definire objective today, your odds or achieving it
· arc excellent Derchnination and
·optimism will make ir possible.
ARIES (March 21-April19) You
will have a sincere appreciation for
others today, regardless of their station in life. This will make you a big
hit with yo~r peers ..
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) An
arrangemtn1 thai affects your fam~y
may be finalized to eve!)' one's satisfaction roday. even rhough rhe result
w1ll nol be oplim um for any one per·
•

son .

-

OCTOBER23I

--·~

GEMINI (May-21-June 20) Your
greatest asset today may be your abilily to bring out the beuer qualities in
pe!lple.Drhers will like Y211 jusf for
making them look good.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Aim
for objectives rhat are meaningful and
a bil bigger than your~ uSfomary targets. This productivity could pay
largcr.dividends than usual loday.·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Although
you may nol sfalt out with the intention of managing events today, what
occurs could for&lt;;e you into a leadership role. You will do. well .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your
probabililies fol"succcss in a competitive environment look very good
today. You will be endowed with
stronger Slaying power than your
opposition.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Today,
you may be more restless than usual, with physical and inrellecrual
energy 10 expeod. You won't feel
comforrable
around stodgy rom pan.

.

lOllS .

.

.

.....
.... ..

Homl

Otntral Homt U1in·
ttnente· hlnllng, vln,l aiding,
cartiontrJ, door&amp;, w~.-., batflo,

...,.
.

lmpravemenll

C&amp;C

...

Escape ·Rigid· Savor- Number - GIVES UP

SERVIC E S

BASEIIENI'

.

f·1 ..
•;

Truclli Extended C1b, Cam,.,

WATEIIPIIOCIFNI

•

RP ·IR ' A

KXEN.' .,B D P J
E.
TNJJNWL .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ·swans s tng before they die : ·twere no bad lhtng 1
Should certain persons die before lhey sing.M- Coleridge
.

ca 111 Utt c~ E - ~
dillon, Alto 11fl 3/• Ton Ford

810

•

.,

y o x· J v •

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS

campers &amp; ·

790

•

.; ' •

lupino
,,
46 Bridge expert • n
Culbertson
"'' ·•

W

~--

•

34 Gloomy
' n
35 Actress Davis 36 Senior
"'"
38 Gone
" ',f

~quip~ All For e12,000: ECIIIIDment 1,.lltr Wllh Tandtm A•l•
tliOO 114.117·7132 AllOr 4 P.ll.

31M.f171o1857.

uniH you haw lrwatfgated

1 Jacob's

Long, Fully Equipped, Paid
llg2 Pontiac ~lrtbltd v-a 305 $t5,000, A1k1no $11,500, Cd For
onQfno, 12.000 mlfH. CD ptayer, lloro lnlotmadon, 114·379-2571,
IIIII_. $5,300. :1104-173-1 Ill.
114-381-9681,.

.... your roo• .....

...-.

LEr' SAl( '(OV AND l ARE
MARRIED, SEE, AND 't'OL&gt;'RE

AKC Ger.man Shepherd pup-plta,1 mtle, 1 femtlt, 11Wkl
Motor Ho11181
old, 111 shall &amp; wormed. 12001 1112 Chry., LoBoron Corwtrt•
Rod, V.fl, Auto. Cloocl Cancl·
. . ~75-88311.
tlon, $5,200. 080: 1193 Z24 ~
AI&lt;C Reg G-n Rnlovar pupa, •orllbtt Whitt, V-1, Auto, Good
&amp;wka old, ahots I wormed. Condition, 11,750, 080114-2511887 Durchmon 22 FL Tag-A·
malt1·1200, -111 $225. 304- 17311.114-251-1252.

Qoorgoo ........ s...,;i, ....~
mill juot ...

NOT •

tnd26 Grease
28 Stripling

7 Aclor Sparks
8 Supple
9 Direction
reversal
10 Rh"'hm
12 Abominable
Snowman

~

~ 114-llll2-15.71,

-

suffix

24 Critics Slokel

_
.
by hllrng m the mtnrng word~
L.-.1....-L-.L...-L-..__, you develop lrom s1ep No ,3 below

-alloaoo"'"ordon. Ohlo

'*""'
you "'-· and
monay lhrouah lito

POOl.~

For tale~ t •ere on Osborne

Vollay Roflnlohlno Shop, Latry

wltfl

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ptlald ...... 304-773-51174.

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recommenda that JOU do bull·

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bu)' tarm on· land contr1ct. lmall
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landocaplng, oldowolkl ed9td,
laWn cart, ""'· Call Bll 304-1175-

Opportunity

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THE BORN LOSER
fiEU..O,

330 Farms for Salt

3 llodtoom doublowldo lor ''"' or

..

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C.OT600D

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...

The deal from the fifth daily bul·
letin in Albuquerque was made more
inleresting for me in tjlat one of the
players was "my" rabbi, Leonard
Helman, from Santa Fe . (Regular
readers may remember he was lasr
year's Top Bidder of the South Pacif·

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

WANTED ftmlly to move Into
3badroom 2bath mobile home.
Cal304-75&amp;5581.

poall &amp; reference• required, no
pets, $250/mo. 30H82·2018 II·

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bid and play

Stvoralllf-. 114-31181000.

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2 bedroom house in Hartb'd, deo

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15 Monofony
16 President
47 PlciUre
Lincoln
holders
17- -, Brule
49 Piercing tool
19 Conlemporary 50 At of now
painter
12 wdo.)
20 Scornful
51 ~legant attire
· · outlook
52 Rodo
1 22 - Domini
23 Superlative
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Opening lead: • J

70 lbo. Solo Cam· Bow 3 Powor
Telucopo Sigh~ Roioodlng Oulflt

5070.

614-448-7130.

new

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ANY ODO .10111: Extarior point-

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couch and matching chair, biYt

10·23 ·97

• ·A

CARS FOR .1001 1&lt;uclto, booto,
4·-lora. motor homn, lutnf·
turt, tioctronlca, oomputlrl ale.
by FBI, IRS, DEA. - y o u r
1111 now. Coli 1·100·113·4:143
Ens-

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North

Cal Cred-

btd· liJrl&lt;ed~·~"~llli~L~304-~7~n.!iD~7~4~.~~

rooms.7 living
kiU:hen
only
yeats room,
old, with
two balh,

~==-.;&amp;..Cd 114-117· on 8111'1 Run Road, 8th nou• on
Wl••ow lftltllltr RHtletl· IX·
pwlat- Nquirod. Reply II IMIIJ.:"dow l)'lteml. 110 Caurl
" " " - 01llo . . -

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French Cltr Waytag, IU-• ....

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55e8.

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IIQ3 Mobile Wllh Porchoo, 2 oUU ,_, wilt ucrtfloo e11110..304Becilooma. Sctnk: V4lw On Ric- · 873-721Sallor""'
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814-44fi.Q38D.
.
Acce&amp;&amp;orlll, VIA)' I Skirting Allor I.
'210.85, Anehors ,15.00, Awn·
1f1G.&amp;, Doont, Wlndowo, Plumbing 2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homae GOOD USED APPLIANCES
SUpplle' Water HMtera, Furnac- 1280·$300, nwor, watar and Wuhera, drrtra. rtftlgeratDtl,
range1. Skagga Appllancta, 71
valhlncludtd,II4-G92-2187.
11• trberata .. Steps, Call 81 _. .
Vlno s"trte~ Call 11•·441·7308,
44e-8418 Bonnttt'l SUpply. 13QI
Saftord School Rd. Gallipolis, 2 Btdrbm Mobile Hom• Fur- 1-801).4QQ 340G.
·
niehed, Raccoon Creek, N..r
Ohio.
Cora USO/Mo., Plua Depoall, Refrigerator, Wither, Dryer.
FrMZir, VCR,II4-l!58-1238.
Free air, free skirt, Ux70 3 bed- 814-379-211211.
room, $~.055/down, $10&amp;1mo.
2 bedroom Tailor, Roltronco R•
Call 1-800.alH17n.
qulrad, No - . SZI6 Rlnt, W.tar
Ulld Furnltuto Stato, 130 Billa·
Free air, free akirt. 16x80 3 or 4 included, $200 do;•h ova liable villa Pike, Compltta Good Bodo
388
NtMCal
(114)
12
bedroom $1,350/dawn, $2G9fmo.
1160; Bolly flodl $45; Youth Bod
Call1.-IIUI.fl7n.
Rent llfGOtlablt In .AP!&gt;It Qrov. $20; Ploypono $16; Stroller 118:
Milk Cono $5; Bleydoo •10· EitoKIIWOOCI 12x48. 2 BodtOOmt, N~o an finn. -&amp;78-211611.
trlc Range 17&amp;: Auto Wuhor
Condition, $4,000, 814-245-8~.
ThrH bedrao(n mobile home, no $75; Couchoo, Tobloo, Antiquo
Ortlletl, Morel1114·4•1·•7&amp;2,
Largo oeleclion or ulld homoo 2 014-G92-5851.
M-F Hro. 10-4.
or 3 bedtoomL Smrling a( $2Q95.
LN
Quick delivery. Call 81•·385- 1Wo bodroom - o n Rd., calli .. 7&lt;12·281Doftarlljlm.
520
111121.
.
Sporting

to adllenisa ~any prefet'ence,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,

.ttie'"·

14170 Wl1h Expando 3 Bod·
rooms. Located 3 Milll Oul Bula·
ville Pike, Galipotl' Allor 5, 014-

Appliances:

AAIF11111au..
llooon,WV
Buy, Sol. TUIId&amp;........,_
Furnla.a.

plum, with ollie trim, exc. conct .•

"Equ_lpma_nt OJM!rator: P.O. Bo1
&amp;50, OIOo 451134.

Reglatered

w.-..

441-114

VourMJI By Submlnlno Your 11-.
tume With Your Work History
And Equipment Experience To

(n the Mason -Wanama area.
Mull be licensed in the State of
WV, app[OVtd llodlcaid PtOYI·
dtt. Exp8flence in Trachaoalomy and oatamy care, c:antraeiH
NJVicea. Plene send or lu r•

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

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computar
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the fringe on
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CARll FOR e1001 Trudll, 1111111,
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homn, "''"''
turt, Ncttonlca,
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by FBI. IRS DEA. Aoalflblo your
orea now. Coli 1·800·513·4343

ACROSS

11 Shadt~ d Grey
1Vrll~m 51tdlner

1

�Ohio Lottery

••..s

YOU KNOW?
C &amp; 0 MOTORS AND LOVE TOYOTAILEXUS·
SERVICE AND PARTS DEPARTMENTS ARE BOTH
OPEN ON SATURDAYS.
WHY WOULD YOU EVER Get ANY PUCE EUI?

__ vE

Ma~llns

take
3·2 edge In
World Series

Pick 3:

464

Pick 4:
3540
BuckeyeS:
1-8·11·15·37

Sports on Page 4

•

YOTA

LE

3 Sectlona, 20 Pogea, 3 5 -

~.48,N0.1:M

LS ~. ~R. ALUM.
MIEELS. MORE

Advertisin·g costi.ng $3.5 million for Issue 2 foes

•'

.ll3,855
'

A Gannett Co. New1pap1r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 24, 1997

C19e7, Ohio Vlolley Publlehlng c:omp.ny

NEW9851 EXTENDED CAB·

Rain until midnight.
Lowe In SOa. Saturday,
cloudy, h!llh In upper 60a.

file legitimate claims.
Contributions collected between Oct. 15 and the election are not required
to"" reported until Dec. 12. CootribUtors to issue campaigns are not bound·
by the limits imposed on !loners to.candidates.
Both sides expect to step up the pace in the campaian 's fmal days, but
neither side said exactly what it would spend.
"I think your going to see them cap out around $10 million," said Todd
Paglia,' spokesman for the Committee to Stop Corporate Anacks. "I suspect
we may be able to.raise some more money. But this is somethinR that's dayby-day for us."
· Roger Geiger, spokesman for Keep Ohio Working, said he expects unions
and lawyers to pour more money into the opponents' campaign.
·
"Obviously, you're going to see that in the final reports, which unfortunately don't get filed' until after the election," Geiger said. ·
·
The largest single contribution to Keep Ohio Working was $500,000 from
the Ohio Manufacturers Association, while the Ohio Chamber of Commerce
donated $455,000.
·
Other large donors were the Ohio Contractors Association, $250,000, and

By JOHN McCARTHY

'

Aaaoclated Pre•• Writer

USED TRU.C KS • USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS •

COLUMBUS- The two sides in the battle over changes in Ohio's workers' compensation law have almost two weekS to go before the Nov. 4 election, but already they've s~nt more than $3.5 million on campaign advertising.
Keep Ohio Working, which wants voters to approve Issue 2, spent $2.49
million on advertising through Oct. 15, most of it raised from large corporations and trade groups, according to reports filed Thursday with Secretary of
State Bob Taft's office.
The Committee to Stop Corporaie Attacks on Injured Workers, which
wants voters to reject the changes, reported spending $1.1 million, most of
it collected from unions and lawyers.
The issue's backers reported raising $4.75 million; the opponents raised
$2.14 million.
A "yes" vote on Issue 2 approves the changes that backers say will cut
abuses of the system and speed up claims processing. A "no" vote rejects
the changes, which opponents say favor busines~ and punish workers who

OM North · America and Honda. $200,000 e~h. Those contributing
$100,000 included the Ford Motor Co., The Limited, The Timken Co.,
Chrysler Corp. and Nationwide Insurance Co.
The opponents collected more than $770,000 from Jhe Ohio AFL-CIO
and more than $210,000 from the United Auto Workers. The Ohio Association of Trial Lawyers kicked in more than $200,000.
Two public employee unions , the Service Empwyees International Union
and the Ohio .Civil Service Employees Association, contributed a total of
$60,000.
No reports were filed Thursday concerning state Issue I, which will allow
judges to withhold bail for certain defendants in non-capital cases. No cam·
paign committees have been formed on either side of the issue, said Shelly
Hoffman, a spokeswoman for Taft.

The state Democratic and Republican parties also filed reports. Republi' cans reported a total of $255,295, while the Democrats had a total of
$285,358.

Ohio School Bus Safety Week ends today

SAFETY RRST • Students and drlvara share ths raaponalbll·

tty for eateiChoot bu1 travel,lfld itll8

-~~·fl

-k'• ......,._ oC au.

Today marks the end of Ohio
School Bus Safety W~k. and parents
should be reassured that their children
are safe on·area school buses. In fact,
there has ·not been an on-bus fatality
in Ohio for over 20 years.
According to Arch Rose, Trans. portation Din:ctor in the Eastern
Local School District, school bus drivers are among the best trained professionals on the road.
"Each applicant must go through
very rigorous training," Rose said.
"All new drivers must pass a medical
exam, hearing test, drug and alcohol ·
test, 18 hours of classroom work, four
to six hours of road skills, a written
Commercial Driver's License exam,

a criminal background check, and a
two-hour driving skills test."
In the Eastern district, 20 hours of
probationary driving with a regular
driver are required before he or she
is considered for employment, Rose
said. Beginning next year, drivers
will begin a cycle of recertification,
renewable every six years.
Bus Safety Week is a good time
for drivers to test their knowledge of
school bus safety, and students should
review the rules for good bus bchavior.
For eltamplc, must a driver stop
for the school bus when yellow lights
are flashi.01? No. The lights arc a
warning that a stop i1l upcoming. Dri-

ven should slow down and cautiously drive through. Bus driver.~ are
trained not to discharge or pick up
children until traffic \Ids stopped.
. Running through red bus lights. how•
ever, can cost $1 ,000 in fines and the
suspension of driving privileges.
State code requires children to
wait at the ~urb on the residence side
of the road. Bus drivers will stop and
wait for children if they are ahead of
schedule. but children should always
be at the bus stop before the bus
arrives.
- Children should never run to or
from the bus.
- Children should always stand a
safe distance from the curb.

-Passenger.~ should never push or
shove, either at the stop. or on the
bus.
- Children should always stay in

their assigned seals when lhc bus is,

moving and should never yell or
shout. Food and drink should never
been consumed on the bus .
- Children should always obey
their bus driver. and wait for his sig-.
nal before crossing the road. Children
should always leave or hoard the bus
at their assigned locations.
• -Children should always cross at
least I0 feel in front of the hus.
-Aisles ~nd exits should always he
kept clear.

c:Jeaialllf to relnfOfOe the N~, ftid&amp;IM- ,

it Synic!u" I!Iemsnilr{ achoot

line up to bofnrfhelr bul on

Thuraday attamoon.

Newspaper-asks Ohio
Supreme Court to open
fireworks fire records

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

. HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)A West Virginia newspaper has asked
the Ohio Supreme Court to allow
access to records of an investigation
into a fireworks store fire that killed
nine people.
The·Herald·Dispatch of Huntington, wants the Lawrence County
prosecutor's office to release witness
statements, in•entory sheets, photographs and the results of polygraph
tests in the investigation of the July
3, 1996, fire near Scottown.
Todd Hall, 25, of Proctorville, was
accused of starting the fire hut was
ruled incompetent to stand trial. He
suffered a head injury i~ a t 987
skateboarding accident.
The 4th Ohio District Court of
Appeals ruled against the newspaper
in September. The court said such
information was exempt from public
records laws because invcstitnators
believed Hall could be restored to
competency.

The newspaper filed its appeal to
the Supreme Court on Oct. 16.
The Herald-Dispatch said Thurs- day thai the appeals court did not
examine the newspaper's arguments
before ruling . against opening' the
records.
"Important matters of law and
public trust ar""'l'take," said Robert
C. Garbordi, cxcfUtivc editor. "The
public dcsc.rves better justice than
this."
· Prosecutor J.B. Collier Jr. had said
he would not release the records
while prosecution of Hall remained .
possible.
.
Hall last month again was ruled
incompetent, and the charges were
dropped. However, Collier said that
berore releasing the information, he
must review it to exclude parts that
by law must be protected, such as
grand jury testimony and identities of
juveniles.

BENEFACTOR HONORED • Mayor Frank Vaughan, accompa·
nied by Pomsroy VIllage Council Prealdsn~ John Muaur and
Clerk/l'reaaurer Kathy Rpsll, from left, Thureday proclaimed that
Saturday will be Donald Kronenberger Day In the village to rec·
ognlze the Marlsttll, Ga.,lttornay who donated $100,000 toward
the Pomeroy Riverfront Amphlthaatsr •• a memorial to hl1 par·
ants.

INSTALLING PLAQUE • Pomeroy Councilmen George Wright,
lett, and council Prealdsnt John Muaasr are ahown hare
inlltlllllllg a plaque at the amphitheater readlng'bedicated to the
memory of Donald and Naomi. Johnson Kronenberger. •

Saturday will he Donald Kronen- Donald and Naomi Johnson Kronenberger Day in the Village of Pomeroy. berger, who died of accidental carbon Pomeroy Councilman George Wright
Guest speaker for the event will he
Mayor Frank Vaughan, accompa- monoxide poisoning on June 13, · and Musser hearing the inscription Ohio Lieutenant Governor Nancy
nied by Pomeroy Village Council 1992. in Akron.
"Dedicated to the memory of Donald Hollister while other srcaken; will he
President John Musser and
The late Mrs. Kronenberger was a · and Naomi Johnson Kronenberger." Ron McDade, Meigs County EcoClerkffreasurer Kathy Hysell, Thurs- former Pomeroy resident and is surA dedication and· rihh&lt;m-culling nomic Development director; ptnjcct
day proclaimed Donald Kronenberg- vivcd locally by her brother. Theron cerertmny will he held at the consultant Mike Stroth; and Kroncner Day to recognire,the Marietta, Ga.. Johnson of Letart Township. The late amphitheater Saturday. 4:30 p.m. berger. Speakers will be introduced
attorney who donated S 100.000 Mr. Kronenberger was a retired vice- with a dinner following at Trinity by Musser.
toward the Pomeroy Riverfront president and treasurer of Goodyear Chun:h in Pomeroy.
The invocation will be by Rev.
Amphitheater.
Tire and Rubber Co. of Akron.
In case of rain. the cercmnny'will Roland Wildman of the Trinity
would trample on states' rights.
. Kronenberger made the donation
A plaque was installed at the he held at Pomeroy Elementary Church with special music by Sue
The American Beverage Institute as a memorial to his parents, the late amphitheater Thursday al'ternonn School on Mulberry Avenue.
Mai.on and. a welcome by Mayor
said some SlateS have rejected the
lower limit because it doesn't work
Vaughan.
andwouldpunishresponsiblesocial '· l s s u e
onponents
drinkers.
f",
" When people sec the facts, they- -COl:UMBUS (AP)-Opponents lJ.S:-DistriCt Court Tn Columbus- by the outcome uf h-suc 2, a l'roposcd- -"Conrad appointed himSC&gt;If as-the
will operate as most ·state lc~islaturcs of ls.•ue 2 ha~e gone to court to try the Committee to Stop Corporate overhaul of Ohio's workers' com- supposed truth police on Issue 2, hut
have operated, and they will reJect to keep Ohio Bureau of Workers' Attacks oo Injured Workers seeks a pensation system. The issue will he has only targeted the ads of the
'Vote No' on Issue 2 coalition," said
0.08 as mcanin~lcss," said Rick - £ompensation adnHIIistrator James · court order to keep Conrad from fur- appear on the hall ot Nov. 4.
Warren
Davis. director of the United
Berman . . general counsel for the Conrad out of the campaign on the ·ther involvement in the campaign.
Auto
Workers
Region 2.
The
case
was
assigned
to
Judge
organtzauon that represents reslau- proposal to change Ohio's workers'
The lawsuit accuses Conrad of
A
spokesman
for Conrad calls the
George
Smith.
No
hearing
date
has
rant operators. , ·
compensation system.
violating the U.S. Constitution ·and
lawsuit
,rldiculous.
been
set.
Under the b1lt all .states would
A lawsuit filed
in Ohio law
to influence
have to adopt the 0.08 pci'Centlimit
by 2000 or risk losing a portion of
their federal highway dollars.
. The change would mean the dif- ·
'ference between five drinks- such
WASHINGTON (AP)- It is time for another American family ..u...
as 12-ounce beers or 5-ounce glassal, setting the clocks back•
es of wine- and four drinks in one
hour for a 170-pound man with an
The official hour of change is 2 a.m. Sunday, local time, though most
empty stomach. A 137-pound woman
folks make the change before hitting the sack, gaining an extra hour
would reach 0.08 percent after three
drinks in an hour, sponsors said.
sleep. Of course, some will use the time more productively.
,
"Nothing in this bill asks people
Daylight-saving time returns the first Sunday in April.
to stop drinking. It tells drunks to slop
driving," said Sen. Frank Laute~berg,
In addition to changing the clocks, public safety experts are ilq;a.u•
D-N.J., a prime sponsor.
encouragibg another change: replacing the batteries in home smokE
Last year, more than 17,100 peepie died in alcohol-related vehicle .
detectors.
crashes nationwide, about 41 percent
of all traffic deaths. officials estimate.

Administration backs ·push for a
national blood~alcohol standard

I

1

I

tS CIIIY. 414 J/4 nil

SILVE~~ AIJ.!2:.~..~· 310 ENCl.,
P/WIN~..~UWa, P~ ,

Al.IJM. WHEELS,

WO:J~....................-

.. .

'20,440

WASHINGTON (AP)- Brenda
and Randy Frillier know that drivers
with leSS than the legal limit Of alechoi in their bloodstreams can be dangerous.
..._Thc.i.l9-ye!lf-old daugh!er, As_hlcy,
was struck and killed by just such a
driver three days before Christmas
1995 as she w.aitcd for a bus ride to
school.
The Westminster, Md .. couple is
now lobbying for legislation that
would force two-thirds olthe states
to toughen their blood·alcohol content laws or risk losing federal highway money.
The Clinton administration
endorsed the bill Thursday.
"The president is ready today to
sign this legislation," said Transportation Secretary Rodney Slater.
The bill would require states to
define drunkcn driving using a bloodalcohol level of0.08 percent, instead
of the more common level of 0.10
percent. Seventeen states already use
the lower limit.
"Please believe me, and believe
the experts. 0.08 is a lot of alcohol
and a lot of impairment," a tearful
Mrs. frazier said at a news conference.
Some opponents contend the bill

2

sue workers' compensation administrator

Fall back Ame.rica, standard time is coming

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