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•

\
Pomeroy•

Wedn11c18y, October 2, 1M

Ohio

Keeping ·healthy ·as seasons ch·ange
1' &lt;A, • 1 l t ' e fll J, ±'•
IL '• r I !' ' , _. u.da
~,
7 • Ill 7 tor, Melp
Co 7' I R • D I
t's Pre-

. you reach

your five a day gOII.

Cream sugll' and margarine toiedler
thorou..,1y, Add eus and beat until
light
fluffy. Mix together dry
ingredients and stir in10 ega miJCtUre,
beating well, Fold .in chopped
apples. S~ in well greased 9 X 9 ·
inch coke pan and ~e for 4S min·
utes or until top spnngs back when
touched lightly. Cool. Top with pow·
dered sugar or a cream cheese icing.
Optional Cream Cheese Icing:
Blend ingredients until smooth and
spread on coke. 3 ounces of cream
cheese I tablespoon · mqarine, '
teaspoon vanilla 1 cups confection·
ers' sugar
· '
'

oran1e1 and turkeys . . The Food
Guide "'--'d su•....... eating a
vll'iety ·:r"'i~ in-.;;;;,ration to
maintain ~healthy diet.
•
A healtlly diet and physical activ,
ity go hand in hand, Reiular pbysi·
cal activity helps your body to lower
your blood pressure, lower your stu,
cose and increase your cardiovascu,
tar health.
·
Not only does the fall season
bring new foods but it brings us new
ways to maintain our physical health
~long .with making .the old ways a
hule d1fferent. By th1s I mean, walk,
ing can now be done in the afternoon
• sun and lhe path that we ·walk is
changing in color, smells and sights.
Playing touch football is another
favprite fall physical activity for
some. But if that is a little more
active than.ytlU may want to be per·
haps you would like to jump in a pile
of raked leaves: Perhaps you may be
the one raking the .leaves. (l.egard,
less, you 'are getting some pllysical
activity.
Brighten up the flavor of your fall
menus with seasonal fruits and. veggies. Here are some to try.

'When eating one raw medium •-'e
~ilh the skin left on, (be ,;:;0
nnse the opple before eating) you
'
fi Rnldt ~Tninl .....,_,) h!lve met one of the two to!our serv·
'llle wellber ts cooler. The days mgs recommended by lhe Food
- lborter. The kids .ue bllc:k in ~ui~ Pyramid. The apple contains
tchool, ~ Ire all 51~ tha! tell v1~mun ~ and carbohydrales and the
~ thlt fall tl here, and Winter IS on skin prov1des fiber.
Its way.
. ,
Although SOf~!C v~!)es of sweet
Akbouah lhf: weather IS chana· potatoes are av&amp;lable aD,year long,
.iq, lherc are sbll SOllie sunny days sweet potatoes are 1n ~ greatesr
-~ wllen you can be outdoors and s~pply from October through the
OftJoy ~ changmg ~ ~nd Winter. Sweet ~tal~ arc an excelyou. Taking a walk and hstenmg for lent so~ af Vltalnm A and a good
~he CNnc~ of the leaves beneath source of v!tarn!n C and otHer min·
YOW' feet 11 a good way to spen~ erals and Vltanuns as well as fiber
YOW' afternoon. If you have a young and other complex carbohydnues. A
SWEET POTATO-APPLE
pel'SOIIII your house, you may enjoy 2" x s:· sweet potato has liS calories
CASSE~OLE
walkinJ with them ilnd stopping to when bailed in it's skin and peeled
find the many vll'ieties in colors and and 160 when boiled without skin.
I pound can sweet potatoes
'Shapes of the lea~es.
.
Pumpkins sh?~ld be harvested
2 medium ·size tfrt apples
.Whee you arnve back home, why before the first killmg frost.
114 cup margll'ine
not,make a c.ollage of the leaves? By
October is usually the big pump,
1/2 cup firmly packed brown
usin1glue or a little tape, place them kin morith in Ohio, although some
sugar
,01! a colorful Piece of construction are available in September and
112 t~aspoon cinnamon 1
paper and display them as a fall dec· November. Pumpkins .contain vitaI can crushed or tidbit pUieapple
oration in your home. You mightji!SI · mins A and C and some B vitamins.
Slice sweet potatoes in .half,
.want 10 place them on the refrigera, They also have some iron and calci,
lengthwise. Peel and c~ '!!'Pies; cut
tor as a rentintler of your time spent urn. Vitatnin A is needed for growth
into I inch slices. Alternate layers of
IOgether. Whatever you chooSe to do and is imponant for healthy bones
sweet potatoes and apples in a shal- ·
with the leaves, the time spent being and teeth. It is also necessary for
APPLE BRAN CAKE
low baking dish. Melt 111lll'@:arine in
with your children or grandchildren normal vision and especially" night
saucepan on top of. stove. Add
is a time to remember and cherish. . vision. Vitamin C keeps gums and
I cup brown sug!l"
brown sugar, cinnamon and juice
The co~s of fall, also brings blood vessels healthy and he_lps your
1{2 cup margarine
drained from canned pineapple to
new varieties of 'foods for us to body resist infections. Fiber is
2eags
melted margarine. Pour over pota·
enjoy such as apples;. sweet potatoes ' important in preventing constipation
I cups enriched or whole wheat toes and apples, .
,
and pumpkins. Apples ·arc ·available and carbohydrateS supply our bodies flour
" Bake, uncovered at 350 degrees
. all year long, but may bC In a mare · with enerzy and aid in building and
. 2 teaspoons baking soda
F. (moderate oven) for 40 minutes,
1Jientifw supply beginning in late repairing lhe body. ·
J/2 teispoori salt
basting the sweet potato-apple mi•.September to early November. My
Remember these are only a few
I teaspoon cinnamon .
. lure occasionally with the juices in
childh()Od memories of caramel of the foods thai provide vitamin A,
I teaspoon gratednutmeg
the bottom of the.pan. Pllt.pineapple
apples are centered around fall festi, C and fiber and there are other foods
I cup bran flakes
on top, and ' continue baking for an
vats and fall school carnivals.
that come with the .fall season such
4 cups chopped apples
additional 10 minutes:Serves 6.
Apples arc a great way to help as winter squash, pears, cran~rries,
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
I

It

a

Society
scrapbook
FARM BUREAU BANQUET

are still plenty .of ducks
available for "adoptiQn" to go into
the derby scheduled for Saturday
· afternoon on die Ohio River as a pan
of the Big Bend Stem wheel Festival.
' The Pomeroy Merchants Associ'
Ilion is sporJSoring the derby and
have 1 goal of a flotilla of a thousand
ducks.
The derby will be held following
the stemwbeel races; about 4 p.m.
Jane and Larry Banks arc co-chairmen and will be launchins the ducks
in the OVFJ' ICI'OSS from villaga hall.
The parking lot levee is the finish
line.
Ducks can be "adopted" for $S
each and •come with a numbered
"adoption certificate." They are
available at most downiOwn business locations.
Prizes will be SSOO savings bond
for first; $250 savings bond for sees
ond, $50 cash for third, and numers
ous .other prizes donaled by local
merchants. Among the prizes will be
two tickets Farmers Bank trip to lhe
Amish country, and two tickets on a
'FOR 'ADOPTION - Jane Bano dllplaye aome of the numbered
trip to the Festival of Lights at duco which will floiTt down the Ohio In Saturday llflernoon'e derby,
WjJeeling provided by Leo's Cruise Numeroua prtzee will be ·awll'ded.
'
·
and 'Travel, Pomeroy.
·
·)
Proceeds from the ducky derby
will go lniO the Pomeroy Merchants
Association fund for beautiftcation ·
projects in the downtown lli'Ca.
Ducks will remain on S~Jie until
about an hour before the derby.

Juggler Michael
Moschen 'to
perform Oct: 18
.

.

Your

Final plans have been made for
the Meigs County Fann Bureau's
·annual banquet.
Meeting recently . the Fann
Bureau Board set Oct. 22 at 7:10
p.m. ai the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center for the banquet.
Tickets are $5.50 each and may be
purchased from Farm Bureau Board
members or lhe office, located at
382 East . Second St., Pomeroy
'(Hayes Realty Office).
, Police resolutions were devel·
oped to be voted on by the mem~­
ship at the annual ~ling. •
RECUPERATING
Nina Stiles Craddock is recuperating ·at home after undergoing
spinal cord surgery at St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Recent visitors of Craddock and
her parents, Ed and Eloise Stiles,
South Third Ave., Middleport. were
Alan Stiles and .his wife, Nan of
Southern Charleston, ,Ohio;,. ~ill
Stiles ·of Jasper, Ala.; and l:illgar
,Ginther pfWaterford.
They also .visited ·other relatives
in the area and 'did some genealogy
research at.the Meigs County M\J5e·
urn.

~

'

14 month Certificate of ·
Ikposit

'

6e45 % Aooual Percent.age ~ield

.;;..;,...,.'deposit to_open and -In thoAPY w111ch ts
...

Both CDu" outomaUcally """ oll'e,IOqUI18 $1,000
accurate ao of 9127196. A panlll)l ... bo ~lei lilly ~MhCIIIWII .

.'

I

...

.. ..,, • t·

'

Member FDIC

'221 West Sicoad St.
.Polairoy
992·2136

Sports on Page 4

'

State R01ti 1
·Tupp~rs Plains
985·3385

Clearing tonight, low In
· 301. Friday, sunny, high In'
501,

'

•
Oil~

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FIRE BIRD

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cassette.

T·TOPSI

LOW MILES!

.
35centa

VOL 47, NO, 108

A Gannett Co. Newsp-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 3, 1996

2 Sectlona, 12 Pegee

....----....F.estival' . underway~ Success·.of Mideast
'

talks left in qUestion
By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic WrHer
WASHINGTON -As Israeli and
Palestinian leaders shift their talks to
lhe Middle East, their deep differ·
ences unresolved, questions are being
raised whether the two-day Wash·
ington summit hosted by Presid~nt
Clinton was worthwhile.
·
Clinton clearly thinks it was, and
so does Israeli Prime Minister Ben~
jamin Netan~abu . Pleading for.
patience before rendering ajudgll)ent.
the president wrapped up the summit
Wednesday, acknowledging, "We
have not made as much progress as I
wish we had."
•
But like a lawyer making closing
arguments to a skeptical jury, he also
said, "Weare in better shape than we
were two days ago .." If last week's
The
.
Big Ben.d Stemwheel Fe8tlval . lcsi'aoke. Desp~l gloomy ekiee and cool twmviolence on the West Bank and in
'
·
1
,...._wh 1 rrtvats· - ..own
, Gaza had persisted, ,he said, "imag,
.,, .
,.....
,..,. underway In Pomerou• todsy wHh crulae1 · peratures, •ar lJth....
1 " ..."ther pI
•· ine where we would be now.'~.·
on the J-el CHu-atemwheeler, ·C S.Ino Night
here began ~- er ng ,., e ~y ...vee
"-''T
·wedn
d
....
_.lval"""'llcontln•---"gh
Forlheir"•"
•.thePalestinilinssaid
et ..... PometoyFireHouu,end_muelcelenter•• ay, •••••
,.,
-"nuu
..-·
talnment tonight by Paul Doefflnger, and
s.turdly night culminating with ftreworkl,
.
lhe summit was a "setback." Pales,
_____
,..::,_,..:_____..:,.__________________
":"'"_,a tinian leader Vasser Arafat went

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•

1

home without a date for Israel to pull
back its troops in the West B!lRk town
of Hebron or the closing of a newly
opened entrance to a viewing tunnel
near the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.
On those issues and on the transit
·by Palestinian workers to Israel from
Gaza and lhe West Bank1bere was no
· agreement. In fact, Netanyahu may
have : scored a point ~y . putting
Hebron'&amp; future on the agenda for the ·
negotiations that open · Sunday .in
Erez, a burder crossing between
Israel and Gaza.
Netanyahu was seemingly pleased
with the outcome of the talks Tues·
day and Wednesday. .He said Israeli
children could sleep more securely
now that he and Arafat had met here.
And the Israeli leader said the sum,
mit cemented the principle that gricv,
an&lt;:es should be br;ought to the nego'
tiatin• table, not to the streets.
•
. Blondy
riots last week Oti the West
Bank and in Gata took 76lsraeli.
.Palestinian and Egyptian lives.
· As for his touchy' relationship with

.

'

Arafat, Netanyahu said it was a plus
that " we have established a greater
degree of mutual trust."
How Clinton's diplomacy this
week plays with the American elec·
torate remains to be seen. His GOP
rival, Bob Dole, said the Jack of
progress in the talks demons!rated ,
Jhat "the United States.cannot impose
a solution" to bring peace to the Mi~die East.
.
&lt;,
After meeting. for ,IS minutes with
Netan~ahu, Dole also expressed dis,
appointment that Clititon 's summit
wrap-up statement "did not include
an unequivocal condemnation of the
recent violence."
Dole earlier in the week criticized
Clinton for conducting "photo pp foreign policy" with the Mideast summit. On Wednesday, however, he said
he wasn't prepared to characterize
'Clinton's performance.
"
The Palesumans
· · demanded during
·
the summit
an immediate Israeli
·
·,
.
pullback in Hebron, or a cenain date
for toe troops to withdraw from Arab
neighborhoods.
1

C~emeans unafraid ·Annual Buckeye Rural Electric meeting Oct. .5
~rea. ,
Board~onthe
Of Shar•l ng .stage
•In 9riC
·• h.
•lth
Dole
Cent~r
G
W
.

.

.

:.

DARTO
. N
By .PAU'L ""
Gennett New• Service

,

'
• .

.

.
a•o Jli'e bllneing. tO' him:now.'' . : .·,,
c

c

'

1\vo incumbents on the Buckeye . lnaddilion,severalbylawamendRural Electric Cooperative Board of ments will be decided by BREC
Trustee will be challenged during membership. The' busi~ess m~ting
the
tees' election atlhe cooperas begms at 2 p.m., while votmg IS
tiv s annual meeting Satutday at .. s~~~4~1~ for ll.a.m. until2:30 p.m.
uckeye Hills Career &lt;:;enter: ·•· ·-~R~gutp!jQp,be)lllll at.H '"'.,. '· -,
· William"Bill"Aiteiio{lronroilis
Alleiii~~lilirbl!raniiQpCralorof
opposing lhe cuiTent boairl presideoi, Ironton-~ Bill Atle11 Con~truction
Gene Nance, while Johnnie Russell, • and has had 30 years or experience in
, '
730 Russell Road, Bidwell, is chat- the ~usiness.
lenging Roy Sprasue, who currently
He and his wife Blain~ are the parserves as lhe board's secretaty.
ents of two daughters and a son, all

One major won). for Ret111blican
WAsHINGTON- The potential 11nalysts say, .is the possibility that e
oflheCiinton,Doleraceto affecttbe perception Clinton will he an easy
outcome of Tristate congressional ~winne_( will affect turnout.
races remains one of the key unan·
"If Clinton continues 10 show
swered questions about lhe 19% such a suong lead in alllhe)&gt;DII~. this
elections, political analysts say.
may dtscourage some Republicans
· In recent weeks there have been from voting and encourage some
repeated reports of GOP congres- De~ocr.ats," said G:u;- Jacobson,
sional candidates being reluctant to Umvers1ty ofCal1forma at San D1ego
·associate lhemselves with the cam· political 5!=ientist.
,
paign of GOP presidenti~l nominee · '_'Wha\ th~ Republ.icans have
Roller!. Dole due to his continued dec1ded to do IS run theu own .cam- The Meigs County Democratic Par,
trailing of President Clinton in the paigns. Because they are 1101 gom11 to ty opened its party ~eadquarters for
polls by margins of 10 to 20 points. get any help,from the tQp of the lick- the fall campaign season at 222 E.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, et, they better do it, themselves."
Main St., Pomeroy, in the former
· who has become a national political
Local &lt;lOP candidates, however, . Martin's Furniture location.
lightning rod, is another figure that say they .are not worried about the
GOP candidates are reluctant to pres1denual·race affectmg their con·
The party held a brief ribbon-cut,
· embrace.
tests.
.
ling ceremony to officially open lhe
Clinton, meanwhile, ·whose popu,
Rep. John Boehner, R· West heailquarters in conjunction with a
lari.ty wilhin his \!'Wn party was lag- Chest.er, said he expects the turnout party rally attended by Congression,
ging two years ago, is now readily question to 1mpact Democrats as at candidate Ted Strickland and Ohio
embraced by Democratic candidates. well, making them so confident about House candidate Jeff Fowler.
· "I think we are beginning to see the elections that they don't worry
According to party chainnan Sue
signs that ~epublican congressmen ab~~t voting. .
.
Maison, the headquarters will serve
are concerned that if Dole goes
l!'e left w1ll have JUSt as much , two purposes.
down, they could go down with of a tune getung people out to vote
him," said Matthew Kerbel, political'- as we will.'' he said, add in~ t?at .he
"First, the headquarters'will serve
scientist at Villanova University.
is confident of t?e GOil retatnmg tts as a 'command center' for De!Docra·
Kerbel said if current polls ·con- maJonty and p1cking up ·10 .to 30 tic candidates and their volunteers,"
tinue to 'hold, voters should look for .' ad~~tion~l seats nationwide.
Maison said. . "The party's. ph~ne
GOP candidates to say, "You have to
I thmk the two are completely bank and 'Get Out the Vote' program
send me back to Washington to put a u~rel.ated •." Rep. Steve Chabot'. R· will ·operate from this location."
check on Bill Clinton."
Cmcmnau, sa1d about the poss1b1hty

of the Ironton
onAgingAdvisery
"I am running ,to be a represcnta· Galha County Jumor F:aor Board.
tive of ihe members of the coopera~
He served three years ~ pres•dent , · .
l!'e," Allen Said. "Many changes.are of the.Wondland
1\&lt;)ard.
forthco!"ing with, deregul~tion and •. "Bill Allen lind I pe! , , to seek
I"Y biJ. SJness exper1en~e w1ll be bCJI"'.&gt;;" theSe offices to GJ.,.. . . . , rnM '
efi~ial." ''"
' • fellow •pustomers a c 01c. ·~nd a
· Russell, a Universi)y of Rio ~hancc .for chan~c,". Ruksell sa1d.
Grande graduate who is currently
Russell and•his w1fe, Ou'ol. are the
retired, has previously served with ' parents of two daughter~and have a
the 'Woodland Centers Board of small beef cattle operaoon. One of
Trustees, the Galha County Council
Continued on page 3 '

Democrats open
headquarters in
Meigs County . .

HEADOIMRTERS OPENED • The Meigs Prosecutor's repreilenlltlve Connie DodiO!l,
County Deniocretlc Party he,lldquarters was county Democratic Chairman Sue Malsqn,
.opened T~dly ilt 222 E, Main Sl, Pomeroy, Congre•slonal candidate Ted Strickland, Ohio ·
Participating In the ribbon-cutting ceremony . House eandldlte Je~ Fowler, incumbent Counwere, from left: David Sayre,'county commls· ty Comml&amp;~ioner Janet Howard al)d county .
slcm candldlte Jlff Thornton, Meigs County Democratic Tret~surer Brian heed,
'

'

"Second, Democratic Party head· . material and information about the Monday through Saturday from II
quarters will serve as a convenient candidates and issues.'' she added. · ,.. a.m. to 5 p.ni. The phone numbers arc
·
place for people to pic~ up campaign · The headquarters will be open 992-4096 and. 992-4268.

to u.s. factories plunged 1.9 percent 13, eight days after the presidential
in August, the largest decline in 2 112, election.
·
d~ath
' years and fresh evidence of an ecoRecent economic data have been
· d. The 1ndex of Lead'n
r~o.nomic 61owdown.
nuxe
I g .,....
and was found in a shallow grave in
The government said the number nomic Indicators .rose for a seventh
"
'
d
"'
h'
c
of
new· cllll'ms for J.obless benefits straight mohth in August to a record
the wond s, SBI • "as tngton oun:
,
h 'II h
ty. Coroner Kenneth Leopold, who was unchanged . last week at 1 e 1g · ·
· ·
was called 10 the scene Thesday after- hl'ghest level in near!
. y three months,
A national survey of purchasing
. th 1·n
. noon. Leopold said the bndy showed .• another sign of slowing job growth managers ,sugges Ied thaI grow was
racIurmg economy ·
evidence· oF
wounds, but he wo'uld .and a deceleratin•• ec_QIIl)
_ my.
. Ihe manu
1
·
·
s 1 be althoug h· 1't
not be more specific.
~
The. Commerce Department SBid s1owmg
· d1n ep emd r,
, ......,
• ·- body was sent to the ont, today orders ·for both durable and continue to exnan
1 '·;r. ·
h L ho
goliJery County Coroner's Office to nondurable goodstotaled a seasonal·
Many ana ysts expect t c a r
be positively identified and for an Jy ad;us.ted $311.1 billion, down Department repo
. rt. on Scp.tembcr
'
d F d
autopsy to determine a cause of "from a revised $317.3 billion in July emplo&gt;'"!,en~tallsl~s, uc /' ay, 10
death.
when orders had jumped 1.7 pen:ent. provide ourt er evl ence 0 an ceoThe decline, in line with analy$ts' nomic deceleration. .
·
e
xpect.ltions
.• was the steepest sii)Ce ' • Factory orders for , big-ticket
· Friend$ 1111d family told The Mari·
a 2.2 percent drop in January 1~3 . durablt goods fell 3.2 percent, even
etta TllllCS that it was out of charac·
tcr for Ms. McCrady to leave her two
It was broad-based, with all major farther lhan the 3.1 percent initial
children, Bradley, 4 "'UUd Jlll\ie. IS
componeots shll'ing in the loss.
estimate, It was !he larlleSt ·decline
monlhs. Belpre police found her car
Orden arc considered a key gauge since 3.4 percent in April 1995. '
of lhe nation's manufacturing
Nondurable goods such as food
at a park the day after she was report·
stn:ogth. Declines could lead to slow, and fuel also fell, down 0.4 percent
ed missing. lbere was no sign of foul
er production and fewer jobs. ,
for the second decline in three
play, police said 11 the time.
•
Federal
.Rese!"e
policy-makers
)DOntlts.
They had ri~n 1,9 percent in
Jac;k McCndy !Old authorities his
bave'
boen
expecbng
the
economy
to
July.
wife took a Sllitcau, some penooal
moderate on its own, They elected to
belonginp IDd $4,000 in cash, the
hold ialenlt
slelldy last week • Tranaponation orders dec~
ncwtplpK said. He 11110 elaimecl hla
1'
1
17111r
diu
boost
1hem
to force a 7.9 percent, the !bird llraight decline,
wit. left 1111' wI Ui1. riq oa the
kitehen COUI)Ijll', I
•
slowdown 10 laiep inflali0n· under led by fal_ling demand for both ait·
,
· craft and automobiles. Excluding
One week after, he reported his contrOl,
It WM the Federal Open Market ·this categot}·, oolon were down 1.1
wifll! miuinJ, he fd¢ for divon:e,

Sh.erl"ff pr'.olleS .Wl"fe'S.

.

Your Bank~4i.,
(Fs) · Farmers
·Bank .

8-17·20.23-29-40
Kicker:
450135

.:.:

6.00% Annual Percentage Yield

w

Super Lo\to:

:.:-=~=·.::
:~~c:-::·
....
,
!~!!!~~~~!!.~~~?.:
!!.!~~e~!
~~~~~~~
.Trooper suspended while

•

29 month. Certificate of
Deposit

Pick 3:
149
Pick 4:
9357 .

playoff wins

5e99" Available

Some things ·may he falling
this time of year but - not
Farmers Bank's rates.
'

The Performing Arts Series kicks
off the ICJ96,97 season with a per·
fonnance by juggler extraordinaire
Michael Moschen on Friday, Oct.
18, 11 8 p.m. in the TempletonBlackburn Alumni Memorial Audi·
torium.
Moschen combines jUggling with
dance and movement into dazzling
masterpieces filled with wonder and
e~tcitement. Moschen has j:Jerfonncd
Off-Broadway, made numerous television appelfll!lces including 1he
David Letterman Show, and is cred·
ited in movies inchtcling Annie and
Hair, "In Motion with Michael
Moscben" was crealed in 1991 for
PBS,
,
Entenainment Tonight says,
''Nobo4y- else does what Michael
Moscben does...be makes the impossible look easy,".
Tickets for this performance are
$15 for green zone scats, and $I 3 for
white zone. students, and seniors.
The box off'tce in the Templeton·
Blackburn Alumni Memorial Audi·
tbrium on Ohio UniverJity's College
Gm:n, is open Monday lhrough Fri·
day from 12 10 $:30 p.m. To order
tickets usinr Visa or MasterCard,
call $93-1780 durinc box office
houn.

Braves post

;:d

Ducks still
selling for
·Ducky Derby
. There

Ohio Lottery

Orloles,~~anks,

'

BELPRE (AP) -The State High,
. way Patrol has suspended a trooper
because he is a suspect in his wife's
de8th, a patrol spokeswoman said
today. ·
nte body of Jenifer M~ndy, 30,
of Belpre, was found on Tuesday near
Little Hockins, about 10 miles west
of this Ohio River city, the Washing·,
ton County sheriff's office said'.
Jack McCrady fi, a trooper in the
patrol's Marietta post, was pl~!:ed on
adlninistra,ive leave with pay
"because be is atill an uncharsed S\1$pect in the investigation," patrol
spokeswoman Sgt. Brenda Collins
said.
Sheriff Bob Schlicher would not
comment on whether McCJ'IIdy was
allllpeCI He laid someone lipped the
sheriff's office about lhe location 9f
Ms. McCrady's body. He would not
aay wlio pve .hi• offtce lhe informa·
lion,
·
Ms. McCrady - rqJOrted mills
.... SepL 19 aftlr • failed 10 report
10 wort followiaa • aemiRII' that

IIICIIIIIoJ.

.

"The body is very decom~

'*'

...

. May 1993.
.
Other durable goods shared in the
loss: clectropic and other electrical
equipment, down 5.6 pe'rcent; pri"
mary metals, down 2.6 percent; and ·
industrial machinery and equipment, ·
down 0.7 percent.
Orders for nonmilitary capital
gonds excluding aircraft decreased S
percent. nearly erasing the 3.7 percent
'and 2.6 percent jumps the previous
two months.
'
These orders have been a major
source of strength since the end of. the
rec-ession more than five years ago.
. Order~ for military goods shot up
10 pc~·cnt but fat'.led to reee.in th•
"
~
'
40.? percent loss a month earlio;,r.
Excluding defense, orders fell 3.6

per~t. backlog of unfilled orders
·decreased 0 .3 percent, the 'first
decline since April. A shrinking backlog suggests businesses will not have
to increase production facilities and
manpower to meet demand.
Shipments manliged an anemic
0.1 percent increase, compared to the
1.1 percent July advance.
Inventories rose 0.3 petCent fol·
lowing a O.I percent July increase.
In a separate report, the Labor

lions for unemployment' insurance
totaled a seasonally adjusted 340,000,
the same as the previous week and
th.e highest since they totaled 367,000
during the week epd!)d July 13.
Many analysts had expected little
change.
.
M ·1 s h ·
·
ar1 yn 9 aJa; an economiSt at
Donaldson, Lufkin &amp; Jenrette Securities Corp., said a trend of about
340,000 weekly new claims would
·indicate ."significant labor mar'ket
modera&gt;inn "
~- ·
· The department will ptovide the
latest broad view of the economy on
friday when it releases its employrt f
t mbe
ment repo or ep e
r.
·s

Many analysts expect the jobless
rate to rise to 5.3 percent, from 5.1·
percent in August. And, tftey say,
nonfarm payroll growth will total just
'160,000, well below the250,000johs
created the previous month.
The four-week moving avprage of
new· weekly jobless claims rose by
5,750 to 334,500 last week, highest
. since 338,000 during the peripd end,
ed July 27.
Many analysts prefer 10 track lhe
less-volatile four,week average
beca~se it Sl1\00ths out the spikes in
the weekly reports.
·

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Thui'Sday, October 3, 1996

Commentary

--Local briefs-----____,

AccuWe~ forecast for

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'E4tt/Dfisftd in 1!J.f8

. By Beli Wau.nbelll
: ln~OIIII Dicti0111ry (''Apolilkal ·~ liking care of the enviromnent, pro111rCourt St., Pomeroy, Ohio
Bob Dole has been attaclcing Bill philosophy based on the belief of lecting the consumer and eqllll rishts
614-112-2156 • Fax: 992·2157
Clinton for being a "liberal," and .progress ... "), the Encyclopedia for women .-- ideas promoled in
.
. ; worse than th~t. a man who "will do Americana ("A doctrine that holds ·R!Ciinl decades by none other than the
· everything he can to hide his liberal
:dreaded Ls. Voters approve oUeder,'
··agenda."_1,1tem's fighting wOlds in
aJ pensions and health care for the
. - American politics, particularly with
aged, certainly Social Security and
A Gannett Co. New.spaper
·. the presidential debates coming up.
.
Medicare -- liberal programs from the
. During the campaign, Clinton .that constitutions, laws. and political 1930s and the 19601.
. .usually hasn't responded to Dole's proposals should promote individual · Why would Clinton be afraid of
ROBERT L. WINGETT
. critiques. But he jumped in on this libeny ... "), and World Book such a legacy?
Publisher
· · one, in person, from the Oval Office. ("Today, liberals favor active govLiberalism went qverboard. Civil
' CHARLENE HOEFLICH
·
·
Clinton
announced
he
was
not
"a
·ernment
regulation
of
the
economy
in
:rights
yielded preference, propor·
MARGARET LEHEW
O..ral Manager
closet liberal," adding, Clio- the ·public interest. They support 1tionalism and quotas. EnvironmenController
·'
tonesquely, "I don 't have a closet." government programs to provide •talism led to tree-buggers protecting
. Dole's rejoinder was elementary: _economic security and ease human :snail daners. Feminism yielded anti: "He's still a liberal."
.suffering.")
·lmale rhetoric, and doctrines of seltu. . What's wrong wi~ being liberal?
Nod!ing unusually scary there. aJ harassment and political correct,
Always prepare!' to help, the But the encyclopedias and dictionar- Jness that recently llll!ded heavily on
· Associated Press put some lists on the · iies miss the potent political point. a 6-year-old hoy who actually kissed
' - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - ' wjre."'ne off~ words now linked "Liberal" has not become a hot-but- I• 6-year-&lt;&gt;ld girl upon the cheek.
· to the c!readed L-w9rd. The second 1 toit wedge-word because liberalism Consumerism led to wicked trial
p~sented some definitions of liber- aims for progress, security, libeny ·lawyers running m;nolc, suing because
alism. .
.
and less human suffering.
· . 'piping hot coffee was piping hot.
The linked words included: "limLiberalism in its current context Social Security and Medicare are
.ousine liberal," "lcnee-jerlc liberal," has talcen on a very special meaning. good stuff, but will brealc the bank
"Oamiqg liberal;" •"lalce-front liberNot many voters today would dis- 'unless fiscally rationalized, a process
Dear Editor
today to see a person helping anoth- al," "rancid liberal," "reactionary . agree with the landmark worlc of lib- . which liberals portray as grannyIt's been nine months now since I e~ without having in mind some gain· ·liberal," and "uiiialiberal." The AP eralism: the Civil Rights Act of bashing.
wrote a letter to you. We are begin- or profit. If all of us could master this' forgot "bleeding-heart liberal." The '1964, which 'outlawed segregation
There's . lots more that's gone
ning to see a little ~ght. We had to the people of this world wquld sure-! definiti_~ns inclUded Webster'sThird and discrimination. Voters approve of .overboard on the pan side: gays in
have our double-wide raised in order ly enjoy good wjll and happiness. I~
·
to lccep our flood insurance since was this couldorily spread to all commu,l ,
have been flooded four times. They nities through ow: nation, it would,
bad to tear off our· big family room give people a feeling of warmth and·
and front porch in Order to raise i1: We love., We still need all your prayers,
that God will somehow heal my hushad to get a contractor to do this. ·
It's been a long nine months, still band and malce him well again and
tom-up, but we are thanlcful for all Bob we are smiling these days.
Sincerely
the belp. 1 •
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Waldnlfl,
I also wtsh to express our thanlcs
RadDe
to the people who helped us on medical and financial needs. It's. rare

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B

·
e,n Wattenberg

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Letters to the editor

Beginning to see the light

I

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Dole searches for relevant role
in. current Mideast crisis,
ByTOMRAUM

Aseoclated Preas ,W~r .

.
WASHINGTON-' Bob Dole has been a hesitant critic of President Clinton on foreign policy but Clinton's Mideast summit leaves him facing a particularly perplexing dilemma. ·
·
· Sometimes ignoring staff advice to spealc out more forcefully, Dole has
bcte~ struggling to show be's not irrelevant to the process.
. •
h'~bard
task.
.
Pre ·dential races rarely tum. on international-policy issues, but nothing
can m
an incumbent seem more "presidential" than dealing with a cri·
sis close to an election - while his opponent sits on ~sidelines.
With J st five weelcs to Election Day, Clinton -comfortably ahead in
national Us - · has his hands full overseeing '!he peace talks he convened
.. in Wu · , non 'l'uesday.
. .
.
!Jy
t.;tbe Republicati 'nominee had a sparse schedule: just one pub-

~sdar.arallyatasmallcommunitycollegenearCleveland.,'

liceventll!l
He has a 5!tmlarly hght schedule today, a rally at a small college m central
Pennsylvania.
,
after~:;r
·
a bl"photo
Furtheqnore.
&lt;
·
li " · the Cli t,l!l.n
DO'from Ohio
ha ·for conducting
b't f
· · By M.orton Kondracke
op aorelgn
cy w f hisu
. 'thJte1wasli Pri
vmg a M'I o· tea pro
Unless his campat'gn catches fi·· pophoto
B em
· tn
·
""
arrangmahg 8
op 0
s 0~ WI srae
me •ms r. enJanun soon,BobDolecouldendupwinning
Netany u.
-:n.... tw
t meet"'·-·•· aftcm
· Netan ah •5 h 1
he0 no mo'" of the popular vote than
' George Bush d1'd 1'n 1992 -- 38 per,.,,.. med
o were
o
'""""'y
oon
tD
Y
u
Ole
room
w
fro Oh10
· B bee
f the
tallcs the
·
.Pole retu
m
· ut ause 0
peace
•
meetmg was ' cent •• while Bill Clinton goes into a
put off until this evening_ at Netanyahu's request.
nd
. .
. 'd
· Dole does not criticize Clinton's efforts to broker a peace. Rather, he has seco tenn as·a mliJonty pres• cot,
faulted him for indi1:ectly opposing Netanyahu in the Israeli elections earli- well ahead of his 43 percent showing
this
·
·
·
four years ago.
. er_Thai= given the (:li~n adntinJaation lessleYerage with the hartj-line ou;:;:nt po~~\ndica:jus~ ~~~ht an
, Netan~ahu government than a Dole administration might have, atgue Dole . , Wl'tb Sl 'pe--rce t up s "!ths 110 on
, a1 R bl'
.·
·
n • 0 o1e wt 38 per·
and congressI on
epu •cans.
,.
.:ent, and Ros Pe t 1·th 5
It might be a d!s~nction lost_on most A~ericans, espec;ially since Clio- . Even more s;"gni~an~ is ~~;
toe was actually sttbng down With the Israeh leader while Dole was havmg . h ~~- ...... .L. ....
k
85 "'"""'" ...,..ve u~~: 'Klpercent mar
·
bed
r
·
·th
hi
·
·
.
only once in the ast ear 'ust after
a hard bme even sc .~ IRJ. a sessto~ WI , m. . . ·
"Every day. that Clm,,ton. 1s out bemg pre_s1denbal__m the_Rose
. Gard_en rs. ,· the GOP convenllpon. Y • J
' Bob Dol
d Fred ,..__nste10
1 cal
Pri
• a po Ill
a bad d~y ao~
e, sat
""""
screnllst at neeAccording to Democrati'c pollst.er
ton Untv~rs• ty·
. .
,
Peter Hart, the bottom line for Dole
Even 1f Netanyah•u• and ~esllntan lead
_ . er Yasser Arafat don_t 8C,,t peace iis c"-ntly the same as Bush's, ~ut
0
._
the
Cl
t
try
1 &lt;aor hi m, 0 rec,n- lits malceup
--k
trac
talk. s bac.. on
·s d•'"erent.
,.,
m on
ts gomg~o be a pus
1
"'
d
,
stetn Sill :
, •
.
' •
·
Internal breakdowns in the
. The ~tlell!ma 1s mo':" acu~ for Dole ~a~se of his ·Senate recO!d as an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll that
mtemallo. nabst on ~.ore1gn pob_cy - _one w_ho_•n the p_a s t has.tended to sup- Hart runs along w•'th Republ•'can
port p~es1de nts of etthe r ~arty tn deal1ng "!! th 1~temanonal cnses and whose Bob Teetedhow.that Dole is gaining
core v•_ews are not that dtffere,n_t fr_om Cbnton.s...· .
.
more than Clt'nton as· 1992 Perot vo' t•.
the,,onner Senate ~&amp;Jon~ leader has cn1Jc1zed the pres1de nt when ers decide not to suppon
Wht1e,_
the Texan
the occ_as•on has demanded 11, he JU~t as often has pulled back from con- agaiit, but th_at • 1the same time Dole
"
frontallon.
.
.·
,
.
.
is failing to hold the base 1992 Bush
He delayed a maJor pohcy address on As1a for months, only to w1nd up vote
siding with Clint~n on renewing Chin:a's mos.t-favored natio~ status. . · Among those who say they sup1 He rebulced Chnton for '!.S. pobcy m Bosma, buill the same lime vo1&lt;:cd ported PetQt In 1992, according 10
support for U.S. troOps .Chnton seht there as part of a U.N. peacekeepmg Hart, only 26 percent say they will do
force
.
hil
.
d
·
.
,
hand
.
f Saddam H
· , ·
·
·
so agatn, w e 42 percent 1nten to
He's said little on Chnton s
hng o
usse1n s 1ncurs•ons m vote for Dole and 23 percent for ClinIraq, letting others do the tough talking for him, including former B~h Sec- ton.
retary of State James A. Baleer, nl and Sen. ~oh
• n McCai n, R•Ari z.
However• says Hart , only 77 per·
. His reticence has been a source of frustration for some of Dole'~ s_
trate- cent of 1992 Bush voters say they
gt~ts ~ho waul~ hke h1m to sJICII!c out more, ~ut whose advrce.he wtnds.up will vote for Dole, while 14 peri:erit
·re~llDf, S(jlllellmes 111 the last nunute, accordmg.to several senror camprugn say they will support Clinton, 2 per·
,
·
..
·
·
' .
cent will go tlf'Perot, and 7 percent
advtsers.
''The senator continues to talce tbe posrnon that as long as the prest~nt ' are undecided
·
is engaged directly in dealing with other countries, that he will attempt to
.
·
.
be supportive, .. smd James Schlesinger. who held Cabinet posts in the Ford .

Il

1the military, multjculturalism, condoms in schools, prayer not in school.
Modem liberalism went soft on punishment for criminals, on rigor .in
scho!Jis, on responsibility for childbearing. ·
·
And so, the operational definition
of liberalism is now this: ALmER·
AL · IS
SOMEONE WHO
BELIEVEs IN AN EXCESS . OP
Lmf!RALISM.
That's why Clinton duclcs any
·association with modem liberalism.
·It's wby Dole wiQ keep saying - to
a hundred million people oo Sunday
!evening from 9 p.m. to 10:30 p.m.
{EDT)~g the debate- "He's still
a liberal."
· Clinton, and liberals, have gooll
!reason to fear a colicrent assault on
!the modem liberal record. It is the
only thellle wide enough and understandable enough to hold all the oth·
er component parts of the Republican
conservative agenda. Liberal&amp;, after
all, are perceived to be both tax·IRd·
spenders and socially permissive -uniting the powerful Republican
themes of economics and values.
·
It's~ right super-issue for 199~.
the best one for the co~ntry if it can
be resolved. I offer some free advice
. to the two presidential candidates.
for Dole: Ire should malce a seri. ous. speech, backed up by a study
papet that firSt explains ,just how,
when, why and where modem liber: alism went wrong. A secona theme ·
. should explitin how modem conser. vatism has changed for the better
from its earlier incarnation. It should
try to reassure old-fashioned Reagan
Democ~Jts, like me.
For Clinton: He . should·malce a
serious speech, backed up by a study
paper that first eXplains why he is not
.a modem lil&gt;eral and what such lib- .
eralism has done that is wrong. A sec,and theme should explain with sollle
:specificity how he would govern if he
.wins and how he would lceep liberal
(for whom he is now, cam\ DI;m~
patgmng) on a short leash. It _should
;try to reassure old-fashioned Reagan
:Democrats, lilce.me.
, Ben Wattenberg, a senior IeBow
at tbe American Enterprise budtate, loi the author of a new ~
· "Values' Matter Moat," and Is the
·holt ol the weekly public television
.1&gt;roanm. "Think Tank."

·

·

·

·

·

·

,
·
50
·
f
gerung percent o -the ~et-split. gerung
. 26 per-·
ter vote, whi1e DoIe ts
·cent, and Perot 13 percent, with II
percent undcc'ded
1 .
Am ong se If·I'd enll'lied
1 mode rates,
Cl' 1 ·
· · 59
Morton KonArSCkl : rn ?n rs rece1vrng . percent sup- - - - --lolL.--- port m D1Vall's poll thts year, C!)m·
· ·pared with 48 percent in 1992. Dol~
tryipg to occupy the political center, gets 24 percent, compared with
as he did at the Republican conven- 'Bush's 31 perCent, and Perotis down
lion.
ito 8 percent from 21 percent in 1992.
Clinton politiclll advisers think · DiVali's poll also reveals that
'th 0 1 has
· at o e
gone through several Dole is showillg up badly among
phases in a (so far) vain attempt to women; young people, and voters .in
gain traction against the presidert.·
the Nonheast, compared with Bus.h.
"Th fi
'ed 980
ey rrst In a I
striltegy, · · In 1992, male voters split 41 perbased on tax cuts and reducing gov- cent for Clinton, 38 percent for Bush,
emment," said one adviser. "Then and 21 percent for Perot. This year,
j
they shifted to a Nixon 1968 strate- DiVali shows 44 percent for Clinton,
gy, hitting hard on crime and drugs. 38 percent for DOle, II percent for
The last couple of weelcs, they've Perot, and 8 percent undecided. .
been re-running the 1994 Republ1'can
But among women, Cl1'nton now
'
congressional strategy, accusing us of is ·.receiving 54 percent, compared
being tax-and-spend liberals."
with'46 percent in 1992. Do_le gets 30
Lately, there are signs that DOle percent •• a wllopping 24 points
plans to return to the 1980 theme of . behi_'nd Clinton _., compared with 37
tax cuts and reduced government, percent for Bush.
_althou_g_h the White House also is .
Among those in the 18-29 age
,expectmg D_ole to level . sharper poup, Clinton is scoring 59 pef~:CDt
anaclcs on Chnton's character.
now, compared with 44 percent in
Conceivably, such tactics could 1992, while Dole gets 23 percent,
boost Dole_'s support ~ong Repub- compared with Bush's 34 percent.
beans, butlt seems unhkely to attract
If there is hope for Dole to better
· independent ticket-splitters who tend the Bush total -- though it won't
f
d da
to avor can i tes who deal in prob- allow him to catcliClinton --it seems
!em-solving rather than name-cal~ng. to lie in winning over undccideds•
Exil polls in. 1992 showed_ that whomalceupabout6percentofvot·
Independents went 38 percent for ers now.
.
.
Clinton, 32 percent for Bush, and 30
Aceonling 10 former Democratic
. percent for Perot. Tiiis year, accO!d- Plll1); executive 4iret;tor Marie Siegel,
· ing to Republican Linda DiVali's
undecideds- usually split . 2-to-1
America~ Viewpoi~t poll, Clinton is against the'incutnbent, so this could

(/loday in history ·

b, .

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Car totaled in wreck
An Albany woman escaped injury·in a one-car accident on state
Route 684 near Harrisonville Wednesday around 3:30 ~.m .
·
Althea G. Morgan was northbound at an apparent high rate of speed
and lost control of her 1985 Nissan in a curve, according to a Meigs
Cpu~ty Sheriffs Departntent .report. The car slid across :Vance Road
· and struck a stop sign and a tree, sustaining heavy damage, the report ·
said.
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Today's weath~r forecast

Cremeans

not.::

Continued from page 1

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Pomeroy accident reported

Bucke~Rural...

Deputies investigate thefts

T

House, car reported shot :

Today's livestock report
..We want to

Me·gs
· nounce·ments
1
8· n

change the..,w_ay
· _you look at
monuments.

~heC
...... . . . . ..

Meigs EMS logs 7 call's

·can't,
' although he might
'
get 51 or 52,

By Dian Vujovlch · ..,._
, yoil '11 see a. host of different fund is in $CCOnd position, with an averag~ 1form above the median of my P,CCr :
With the stock marlcet still flying types shining brighter thAn gold annual return of 23.09 percent. And group because 1 lcnow over time that .
high, gold funds have J1Crformed best funds.
·
·Seligman's Communication atid. will produce 8 good long-term ;
so far this year. Over the long haul,
for instance, over the last five InfOOI!ationPund,classifiedasasci- record," said Pilgrim, who would .
however, all that glitters has not been years, your basic ntn-&lt;&gt;f-the-mill U.S. ence and tecbnoloay fund by Lipper, .classify !his fund as a small-to mid-. ;
gold.
~ stock fu~ has had an average annu- ~ has returned an averaae of22.40 per· ;C~p _fund, rather than 1 Cllpital appre- :
As the end of the third .quarter al !Otal return of 14.05 percent. The ,cent each year over the last decade. ·cratron fund.
·
·
approaches, the top-three performing · •top-three perfonmng stock ~unds ·The average O.S. stock fund returned · With aliout.IIO stocks in tbe port· : ·
equity · funds have been precit;~us 'onr ~at lime frame haye been tbe 12.96 percent annually over that 'folio, Pilgrim's investment.strategy ia ' :
metals funds. In the No. I slot is the f1dehty Select Elec!JOntCs Pund, a · same time period. ·
.to pick the Veil' best high-growth-rate :
INVESCO 'Strategic Gold Fund, up :technology fund wrth an averase 1 TIJeoneequitylitMthatshowsup .companiesoutofauniverseofl,OOO: •
55.11 percent through Sept. 19, , a~n~ total return of 34.61 percent; when loolcing 11 both the five- and companies. His investing style is :
IICCordiDJ to Lipper Analytical Ser- . iPidehty_Select. Home Pt~ fund, ; 10-year returns is PBHG's Growth .what be calls "a boUolltl-up lnldi- • :
vices, followed by tbe .Monitrend 1 financial servtees fund wttJtan aver- : Pund; Ask Gary Pilgrim. thai"fund's .tional stoclc-piclting proceu com• .
. Gold Fund, up 52.19 percent, then the age annual total, return of 32.43 per- ' ponfolio manaa~ sin&lt;:e its i~on ' hi~. with 10111e rigid quantilalive .
By The AlliDCIIIJ ~ PI Ill
L
.
. . IDS Precious Metals Fund, up 48.29 jcen~; and the ~B.HG 9roWih F~nd, • ·in 1985, why his fund ·bu done so cnteria on lop of iL"
· Today iJ Thunday, Oct. 3, the 277th day of 1996. 'lbele are 89 days left percent.
capttallfllll'l'I'IMJon fulld mamma an · well, and llliiDDJ other thlnp he'll tell
Diu. ~ 11 die •lbor fll , .
·in tbe year.
for those not invcating in metals, averap of 31.44 pen:enL
you lhlt put performance is no indi· "Stralpt 'Jalk Allat Matul
1bday's Highligll in Hiltory:
tbe Dreyfus Premier Growth and . C:0 b~k 10 Y~· and 20th (;:en- cation of futuN multi. With lhll 1r-." ... "Ita W1M Aboat .
One yeat ago, on Oct. 3, 199~. in a dccition thai outraged IODIO and elll· ~Fund il up 47.76I'CJ'OCDI,, !Ury• Oi~ 11 the performance caveatinmilld.Pijp.lm'slnvta!ment fll••t\:s ,_ YCIIII' litis It" ,
ed otherl, the jury in the OJ. Simpson 111urder trill found tbe former fOOl· while the averap growdt l!lld 1ncomc wtnner. Tlliumall-cap fund bMid , wuulmple 0111': 10 b,eat thuv.- .INial f11 wltlda tin Pitt" , ad
1
1
ball - iaiiOCCIIt of the 1994 munlm of his former wife, Nicole Bl'Qwn ,fund - abeld 11.45 percent.
an. average annual to1a1 _retiK· ol . j qes.
, McGnw Rll, s...t 111 lh .. · .
simpiOn. and her friend, Ronald Goldman.
:
But look bilct a little further and• ~.S I J&gt;i'I.Cfi!i!l: J,'BHG's Growth ~~~~
"My long-term objecti"¥C iiiO per- 1.... Ia care Ill~ • .; •••.
·
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Word has been received of the death of former Pomeroy resident Joseph
P. Simon, Sr., 74, at his Columbus residence on Friday, Sept. 27, 1996.
·
Born April II, 1922 in Columbus, he was the son of tbe late George and
Madeline Simon. He was a World ";liar n U.S. Army Combat veteran, and
recipient of many service awards including three Bronze Battle Stars and
the Bronze Star Mcdl!l .
He is survived by his wife of.SO years, Mary Simon; two sons and a daughter-in-law: George and Bernadette Simon, and Joseph Simon, Jr.; four daugh- ·
ters and sons-in-law: Mary Jo and Paul Buckley, Madeline and Edward Oalc·
ley, Paulette and Jim Rector, and Suzanne and Kenny Rogers; four broth- '
ers: Paul Simon of Pomeroy, Pred Simon, Thomas Simon, lllf(f Charles
Simop; 12 grandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren.
He was pr"!'eded in death by ·two brothers, George Simon and Donald
Simoo, and an infant grandson.
Services were held Monday, Sept. 30, at St. Matthew Catholic Church,
Columbus, with Father David Getreu officiating. Burial followed in Resurrection Cemetery, Garden Mausoleum.
In lieu of flowers, the family suggests memorial contributions be made
to Hospice of Mt Carmel, 793 W. State St.. Columbus, ·43222.
·

Deer/car acci.dent reported

ne.

r;nent - given at a news conference at the Dole headquarters - drew an
icy rebuke from, former Reagan UN Amba.ssador Jeane Kirlcpatrick.
Kirtpatricl&lt;. one of those who advocate a more forceful response, turned
to Scble~inger and said: "You thiillc that? 'cause I don't think that.... "
Four years ago, then-President Bulb's heavy focus on foreign policy
wined out to bC a vulnerability that challenger Bill Clinton could easily
exploit. 'fh:is time challenger Dole ill' hAving .a bard time finding an openinJ.
'
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EDITOR'S NOTE: tom Raam hal covered pl'l!lldentlalelectlo• for
'']be AIIOCiated Pt-. since 1976.
· ·
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•ICoJumbu81s9' I

1\vo motorists were cited following a two-car acc:ident in Syracuse
Wednesday around 10:10 a.m. .'
·
Rachael Norman, Syracuse, was eastbound on Third Street and
slowed to ma1ce a left turn onto College Street when ber 1990 Pard
w,as struck from behind by a 1994 Nissan driven by l)olores Wolfe,
Racine, according to a Syracuse Police report.
. The Syracuse Bmergency Medical Services squad responded to the
scene, but no injuries were reponed. Damage to both cars was listed
.as moderate.
Wolfe was cited for failUre to maintain assUred clear distance while
Norman was Cited for no operator's license and no insurance.

joseph P. Simon, Sr.

" PDople will malce their judg- grich.
In a statement friday, Longabaugh
,ments independently on the presidential rtice and the congressional ;called on Chabot to.retum all money. ·
_'received from Gingrich and his polit'
No injuries were reported following a deer/car accident on stat~
race."
Route 124 near ~utland Thursday..
Chabot is in a spirited re-election ical action committee in the wake of
Rodney Wright, Rutland, was eastbound alld struck a deer that ran
fight against Democrat Mark ·new allegations of ethics violations
against the speaker.
· into the path of his 1996 Dodge. Moderate damage was reported.
Longabaugh.
"Chabot needa to decide whether
.By The Associated Prne
the lower 50s.
Both Chabot and Rep. frank CreSoutbeutem Oblo
Extended forecast. ..
·imeans, R-Gallipolis,jaid they would he's in Washington to represent the
No one was cited in a minor two--car accident on East Main Street'
Frost warning tonight..
Saturday... Dry. !-ows in the mid ~
not be shy about appearing on the voters of the Pirst District or the interlate Wednesday morning, according to Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald
est of Newt Gingrich," Longabaugh
Today...Considerable cloudiness ,' 30s to lower40s. Highs from 60 to 65
. same campaign stage with Dole.
Rought.
.
~
and cold. Highs in the lower 50s. north to the upper 60s ~uth.
.
· "I'm trying to get him. I would sMd.
According
to
reports,
the
accident
occuned
at
11
:38
a.m.
when
a
Meanwhile,
~11\tchfarber,
polit~orthwest w.inds 10 to 20 mph. ·
. Sunday...Dry. L~ws 1n the 40s. •·
love. for h.im (Dole) to come into my
parked
1995
Chevy
Corsica,
owned
by
Melvin
Pillow,
Racine,
was
Tonight .. .Ciearing with wide- H1ghs from the . tDid 60s north to
district," said Cremeans, who is run- ical analyst at the University of
struck by a 1988 Ford lruck driven by Charles E. Sayre, 79, Pomeroy. . .. ning for re-election agains\ former Cincinnati, said he expects the ·;
· .spread frost liWIY from large rivers. around 70 south. .
Sayre was attempting to back·into a parldng space along East Main ·
Lows near 30. Light north winds.
. Mo_nday... Dry. Lows 45 to 50 and
crossover effects between 1~ presi~ep. Ted Strickland, D-Lucasville.
Street when he Struck Pillow's vehicle twice, causing light damage to
Friday...Sunny but cold. Highs in highs m the upper 60s to lower 70s.
dential
race and Tristate congres' "J'm not afraid of his issues,"
the~
.
sional races to be minimal.
added Chabol.
No
damage
was
recorded
to
Sayre's
tnick.
No
injuries
were
reportBut voters, he said, may engage in.
Both
Chabot
and
Cremeans
also
1
Continued from page
'
ed in the accident.
said they would not shy away from some "strategic . voting," figuring
'·
Gingrich, although neither currentl_y that if Clinton is going to bt re-elect:their daughters: Missy, is the M'organ
King said that the proposal calls
has p'ans to bring him in before elec- ed, his party should not control Con1\vo theft reports were reponed recently to the Meigs County Sher·
Township cleric.
for trustee elections ballots and pro-gress as well.
·
tion day.
iff's
Department.
. Russell encouraged BREC mem- posed resolutions on such items as
. "If even 2 percent do it in a tight
Chabot said Democratic efforts to
Greg Davis, Minersville, reponed Wednesday that a 12-foot alu:bers to attend the meeting and vote. bylaw changes to be mailed to memassociate Republicans with the con- race, that can tum the election. That
minlitn john boat was stolen from the Ohio River ncar Bowman's Run
. "Even if you bad previously bets 25 days in advance of annual
troversial speaker do not worry him, would definitely help someone like
near Racine.
signed a proxy, your attendance at the meetings~ and be filled out and
Cremeans or Chabot, although I
~ause they know, ''Newt Gingrich
Sftlll Cummins, Racine, reported a~~ of cultivators was stolen from
·meeting allows you to cast your own reiUflled to the coOperative at least 10
don't thirik Chabot is going to need
is not,running in my district."
the Stobart property at Portland. . , · ·
vote," tie said.
,
days before the annual mee,ting.
· Longabough remains aggressive muc!l help," Thchfarber said.
At the same time, another BREC
King said there i's nothing in the
in trying to link Chabot with Ginmember has placed emphasis on · proposi!J to ensure ballot security,
'The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating two shopt·
proposed bylaw amendments to fur- · "inhibiting necessary debate before
ing complaints from Dorcas, according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
.tber open the annual meetitig to voting on issues or candidates."
Judy Bing reported her car was damaged by a bullet and that the ·
1
_ p~embers.
. •
He said he's been working with
Summary of Wednesday's Pro- 75.50; select 58.()().65.00. ·
siding on her house had also been shot, a report stated. Her daughter
"Credit should be given to the pre- other BREC members and "infonnal
Slaughter heifers: choice 64.()().
ducen Livestock Association aucreported hearing a bullet g0 past her head.
sent hoard of trustees with moving groups" reviewing the protl~al and
73.50;
select 57.00-64.00.
tions at Gallipolis and Mt Vernon:
A nearby resideni, Ronald Beegle, found 'a hole had been shot in
forward with one important refonn preparing ''corrective amendments"
Cows: steady to .1.00 higher; all
·Hogs: steady to 1.00 higher.
the roof of his shop. He reported hearing a lot of shooting on Sept.
by proposing . three-year terms and prior to Saturday's meeting. ·
.
_
cows
45.00 and down.
Butcher
hogs:
48.75-56
..
85.
22.
)lllnual elections to replace the current
King said other changes he and
Cattle: 2.00 lower. .
six-year terms and every-other-year members 1U'e proposing are compte·
Slaughter steers: choice 65.()().
elections of board ll)embers ... said tionofthetrusteetennbyl998rather .
Wayne King of Rio Grande, who 1han 2000; provide for advat)ce notice . .
.
'
attempted to introduce a similar mea- of nomination and opponunities tO
,
. located in Texas Community Ol) .
sure at' last year's annual meeting.
submit res~lutjons by members, with Open house slated
Wilclcharn Road, J·ust off Texis Road.
"But provisions in the trustee res- member participation In the process
The Syracuse Fire Department
olution to incorporate advance mail . before the annual meeting; provide will hold an open hou~ and chicken Car wash set
balloting into the bylaws would talce- for member balloting at the next elec- barbecue Sunday at II a..m. with
The Southern Freshman class will ·
away imponant discussion of issues lion on filling vacant sea\5; and des- demonstrations by MedFlight, sponsor a car.wash at Visia Saturday,
, of annual meeting new business, and ignation of trustee seats within dis- DARE, Meigs County Sheriffs 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
a chance to meet and form opinions · tricts to lceep accurate track of the Depanmcnt Canine Unit and the ~ Romecomln~ servic_es ~et.
.
on candidate. trustees at the annual election rotation. ·
Highway Patrol. Door prizes.
Homecol!Ung ~rv1ces wtll be he_ld
ltla ... -.r.....tot
meeting before c;asting ballots," he
BREC officiitl~. said demonstra- Square d-e Saturday
at the Ash Street Freew11l Baplls) ·
· =~~...:r
. added.
·
lions by BREC personnel and other . The Belles and Beaus Western Church, Middleport, Sunday. There ·
~
"!!........ _
King said an advance balloting agencies will be featured during the Square Dance Club will hOld a dance will be potluck dinner at5 p.m. fol- ·
proposal "represents a destructive meeting.
.
Saturday, 8 p.m.. at the Meigs lowed by special singing alld preach- ·
.
0 . . . . . . . . 'tJ. ~·
erosion of the democratic principals
Capital credit checlcs will be avail- Senior/Multipurpose Center, MUI- ing by the Rev. Mark Morrow. Pasin a cooperative that is owned, and able 'forilistirbution !R:members who berry Heights; Caller will be· Ron to~ Les Hayman invites the public. :
ultimately controlled, by members · were on the system iil'1 962-65. A hot Ande~son. The public is invited to Weekend revival
through their annual meeting busi- dog luncheon and ente'rtaimllent wilT attend.
. t
A weekend revival will be held at ·
ness agenda."
· """"'""'"""Klso be available.
e.:.· · ,' ·,
Revival annoUIICed
the Faith Tabernacle Church, Bailey
A weelcend revival will be held at Run Road, Friday and Saturday, 7 ·
the Faith Tabernacle Church with .p.m: Rev. Denver Rollins, pastor of
Rev. Denver Rollins, pastor of the Lighthouse Church, Grove City to
Light House Chlirch of Grove City, spealc.
,
Units of tbe Meigs County EmerRACINE
to spealc. Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m. Speclal service annOUilCed
gency Medical Service logged seven
I: 17 p.m., Elm Stree,l, each evening.
Keith Lashana will spealc at
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units Krista lnhearst, treated at the scene. Barbecue planned
Friday at the Faith Full Go:spi;r..:..
responding included:
RUTLAND
I1
The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Church, Reedaville.
MIDDLEPORT
3:03 a.m., Meigs Mine 2, Department will have a chicken and
1-800.5434814
-4:38 . p.m., Mulberry H
Paul .Barrett,
O'Bleness Memorial rib barbe,cue Sunday at the Pomeroy
al
Quality ...;..__;_,_
COLONY
TH
EATR
E
· Avenue, Karen M,innis, . Veterans
osptt ;
Fire Station. Servin,g starts at II a.m.
TONIGHt
Memorial Hospital.
•
12:56 p.m., Main Street, . . Social set
·· ·
JEAN.CUUDE
VANDAMME IN
' POMERqY
. POMEROY
Bemice Nelson, Holzer Medical CenPood, fellowship and music will
MAXIMUM
RISK
R
N•r Pom-y~Maton Bf'kl9e
· s~t
ter:"YRACUSE
be held at the Brush Arbor Day obser9:32 .a.m., "'
nest Matn
u~ ,
ONE EVENINQ. SHOW 7:~
982\:2&amp;88 .
H
VMH
"\
,
.
vance Saturday at the Mt. Hennon
STARTING FRIDAY
·
.1
10:18 a.m.. volunteer fire United Brethren in Christ Church.
Lisa aggy,
VINTON
AVERY BRADY
Jud(llllent ilsued
department and sq~ad to C?llese Bluegrass gospel musi~ by the .Hart
Ollila County Display Yard
Home National Banlc of Racine 1 Street, mot~r-veh1cle aec1den.t. · Brothers at5 p.m. follow~ by soupSEQUEL PG-13
155 Main St.
was awarded a $27,338.58 foreclo- Rachael and Cterra Norman, Dolons beans and cornbread, sandwiches ,
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
388 8603
sure judgment in the Meigs County Wolf, treated at the scene;
.
and soft drinlcs. Pastor Raben
~
Court of Common Pleas from
.
2:22 p.m., Third Street, Sanders to spealc on the day's meanChristopher and Cristina Yeauger ·of L_uctlle Braley, Pleasant Valley Hos- ing. Activities on the church lawn,
Syracuse.
. p1tal.
weather permitting. The church is

help Dole get up to 42 percent,
assull)ing few undecideds go to Perot
· So, unless something significant
· will find· it difficult to
changes, Dole
h
th the GOP
get muc more an
base
lfvote of 40 pe~nt. Even Barry Goldwater got 38 percent in the 1964landlslide.
•·
election could resemble 1980
,in reverse, wnen Ronald Reagan.
l beatJimmyCarter~l percent41 per!cent, with 7 percent ft;~r John Ander-·
.son. In some respects, Dole more
1resembles Walter Mondale in 1984,:
;who got just the Democratic base:
'vote of "' pe~ent Reagan got 59
·
""
pe•cent
that ..
year . wh1'ch Cl1'nton

_ ..

·(f

W.VA.

,

percent ·
It's conceivable that Dole could.
'
f , . beh' d
come up ast arom
m , but Hart
'says that if it occurs, "you won't
walce up on Nov 6 and
'H d'd
·
,
.
say, ow '"
. .this happen?' It'll take eight solid
days of front·page stones
· on some.
very important new developmen~ not
a conn'nuatt'on of th
t
·
e presen cam'
paign."
.
•
Such things happen rarely. Right
now, the electorate claims that its
mind is made up. 'And; in the Hot:
line •s latest rundown of state polls,
Cl' t · · · 'fi tl abe
m on ts srgn1 rcan y ad in 29.
states with 335 cleetoral votes while'
Dol 1 ads · !3 ·
'th
u 1e eDol 10. L. states w1 87. .
ness
e Calcuos lire soon •• oi
Clinton- crashes- Clinton may beat
his 1992 total of 370 elet!Oral votes.
(Morton Koaclracke 11 exec:u·
dve editor of Roll .C.U, the Dews•
. paper ol Capitol RIB.) '
·

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Two-car accident probed

~

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·

,
Th e probl em of securmg
·
the
Repu bl'1can base ~ate ma~ expIam
.
Dole's shift to hard-line attacks on
Cl'mton •s alleged l'beral'
· ms
· tead of
1
1sm

1lie American Red Cross Bloodmobile will visit the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy Wednesday from 1-6 p.m.
Area blood supplies are still at aitical levels and donors are urgently~ to donate blood, ICC~ 10 officials II the 'J'ri.SIIIC Region,
American Red Cross Blood Services.

~ • """ .
54'

IMansfield Iss~ I•
- ~-

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s
.
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andB~G:.~~=~~~~splitamongDoleadvisers,Schlesinger'sstatem.a •Caps cont1 nue to be performers .:.

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IND.

Q·o-le -Ca_.n'_t t·o· p Bush's 3·8 P.ere~nt m
· ark
·

Bloodmobile visit slated

conditions IJid

MICH.

A definition· of liberalism

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The Dally Sentinel• PIQ8 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO We ath er
Frtdlly, Oct. 4

Thursday, October 3, 1118

Tlie _Daily Sentinel

•

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· liilc:O'i'i99" .....

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The·Daily Sentinel

)

·ATHENS (AP) - A 3-year-old tractor was pulling flipped over on .
'boy died after a tree fell on him while ttrem. The boy was pinned under the
he was riding a tr(\Ctor, the Athens tree and freed by his stepfather. ,
County Sheriff's' Office said.
He was taken to the O'Bleness
, Zachariah R. Mussor of Athens · Memorial Hospital,' where he died
was riding on the ' tractor 1\tesday : 1\tesday night of scvete head injuries.
with· his stepfather when a tree the .

(USPS 213-MOl
Published every afaemoon, Monday throuah
Friday. Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Otllo, by the
0hio Vll.lley PublidUna CornpAnyiOan~ Co..

Pomeroy. Ohio •s769, Ph, m .w~;. Second
clw po!tage paid Ill Pomeroy, Otrio.

'

· M~aat"" The Aoooclated """· """ lbe Ohio
New•popcr All&lt;l&lt;ialion.

w•

('}: QX;«}'):IX.ti:)Cr;P;O:J Q)Q;&lt;QCQQ:&lt;l:j rxp;;O;j"r.rif;JJ:JC'(f1;&lt;l:j~XjX}:!)\X:I];(/J •.t(r,(QI;•(j;

-·"""""''"'to '· '~·lJ

l'OSl'MAS'l'IR• -

lf~

11IE 0100 IUVBR ·B BAil·CQ,

~ ~;~9Sentinol, Ill Coout St, l"''"'""~·

e.

~w..:.~~~~;~~~ . .. -~
~~~;~~=:=~~;~~:::s-i:~ ·~ · · lt"!-:!1
$2.00

•

0'
. ,4l.

Dldly .................................................,j.J'C..C.

'

Subsaiben notdesirina to pay 11M Cltrier ma)!
mnil In odYDDCO dl...,t to The Dilly Sonthoel

;a.:.~~~......... Qodl• ..rur..
No auba&lt;riptlon by moll permitted In ...,
where home cMrier
II lvtillbla.

.

_....c:e

MA(J.IIJIIIICIUPI'IONI
-Molll~
13 ................................................$2'7.10
26 'lilelm.................................................$!13.12
SZ .............................................SIO!I-'6
13 -

--Molll~
................................., .. ,............ll9.2S

26 -

............ ,.......................,.......... $lUI

! 1 -...................................... ,....... 1011.72

IOKGO

3-year-oid dies in farm accident

· (h

t

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~

Charms • Watches • Rings
· Earrings • ·Bracelets

Vila, M-.c.td

.

LayllW1ly

1'

8&gt;

~

RE-OPENING!!

8'

3,4&amp;:5 - . Thun, Frl, Sit
Balloons!! Door Prlaeslt R~freshmentsft

· q, ·
~
IMf6. eft nan a 'e.. ~~~ tfle ltlf

1

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.

.9LCQ'll.ISifJ'I09{S .

~

Oct

&lt;(-, ,.,.,;;;;iiJ,i,j . timliod Cdli"k~n hetiro not i""ludad
. !f. r:P.Cc·· r.fi.&lt;rJ 1 r:!X'PJiX:!J:fQ'x:/J.(t) .
• .

...

IL ' ,

Help u8 celebrate our grand
.

'

NIKE·• FILA • GUESS

0"
Middlopnrt,

992-4055.

'

~ A Salesman with his complete line oil OK Gold will be
~ our stt~re on Friday,·Oct. 4th. _Mtlny Other lteins On Sale

~~·

l'

·SALE

•

if

&lt;t

&amp;
~

91 Ml St,.

liiJ

••••part, OW.
~

~

- ~I?('£. J'EWEI./R!Y .
HOURS; Mon.. thru Thurs. &amp;-S

' Fri. 8-8; Sit. N

PARKING
.••• FREE
FREE 90 DAY FINANCING
FREE OIFT WRAPPING

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

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I~

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J

· sports

Th~ Daily Sentiq.e}

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Thul'8dg, Ocfllltober.Mr
_ 3, 11118

-

In the NL playoffs,

Braves beat Dodgers 2~1 · in 10 frames
Smoltz, 29, did just what an ace innings and Javy Lopez homered off !their Jut 27 innings.
·
LOS ANGEl ES (AP) - John .. is supposed to do Wcdaesday, com- Antoni~ Osuna leading off the IQth · Martinez, who struck out six and
'Smoltt has been a pik:ber with woning through with a domin~tting per- to provide the margin of victory.
walked three, said he knew he had to
derful stuff for y~. a pcxential big . fonnance as the Braves beat the Los
Mark Wohlers, who had a club- · be near-perfeCt for the Dodgers to
winner waiting to blossom.
Angeles Dodgers 2-1 in 10 innings record 39 saves, worked around a win.
He came of age this season, mov- to get the jump in -their NL playoff one-out single by Ores Ga1ne in the
"Every time you go out there, you
iDg abead off!lUl-time NL Cy Young series:
botti)m of the IOth to preserve the g? with ~ ~ure thai you can't
· Awerd winner Greg Maddux and
Smaltz. the major league leader in victory for the defending World gtve anything to the other team," he
one-time ,ecipient Tom Glavine as victories and strikeouts, allowed . Series champions.
. ,said. "That's the way !looked at it .
tbe ace of the Atlanta Braves staff
.only four hits in the first ' nine
Maddux ( 15-11 ), whose streak of when I went out there today. Against
four straight Cy Young Awards will the Cy Young Award winner, you
· likely be stopped by Smoltz, will don't expect tO get too many runs."
the AL playoffs,
. pill;h for the NL East champion
Lopez, who had grounded out in
· Braves in Game 2 of the best-of-five: hi~ only previous at-bat against
. series tonight againstlsmael Valdes. Osuna this season, fell behind 0-2.
. .
• lt'sa game just about everyone in He then worked the _count full and
the Dodgers clubhouse said they .fouled 11tf three pitclll:s before hitting
have to win.··
a dri~e far over the fence in right"We don't want,to go to Atlanta center field off a 92-mph fasthall.
By RONALD BUill'
But then, as rain began to fall with them needing only one victo- .
Lopez will be rewarded with a
NEW YORK (AP) - The Yan- " through the Bran~. it turned around. ry," said slumping Dodgers C~~tcher spot on the bench tonight, in favor of
keea were desperately hanging on.
First, Dean Palmer flied out with Mike Piazza, who had a single in Eddie Perez; who frequently catchFor three straight innings, Te~as the bases loaded and twll outs in the four ar-bats after finishing the.seasop es Maddux. -But Lopez said he didluld put on the leadoff runner, threat· 12th. Then, in the bottom half, in a 4-for-23 slide.
n't mind.
ening to take the lead,ll_lreatening to . ,. Palmer threw away Charlie Hayes' .
Smaltz, 24-8 this year, retired his
As far as his homer was conto JWilngtj)n With a 2-0 lead bunt. allowing Derek Jeter to score . final 13 batters:1nt:tttdiPiazza 011. cerited, Lopez said, "When l fell
for a 5-4 victory Wedni:sday night. · :a long fly to right to end the eighth. behind 0-2, the first thing that went
'"If we had lost, we'dhave had to
"I thought l hit it pretty well," lhJough my mind was, 'I'm going to
. go to Texas and win three in a row, Piazza said. "I hoped it would go out get jammed.' So I kept my shoulder
and thai's too tough," Jeter said. "It's for me butlt obviously didn't."
closed. Thai way, if there was a pill;h ·
·still going to be a struggle, but we 1 / S~ltz struck ciut seven, wall!ed away, I .would be able to hit it. So
· like our chances." ·
' · two IJ1d threw stri~ on hi~ Jast 17 · every p1t~h they threw me, I was
SUDJNG CATCH - Cleveland left fielder Albert Belle mekH a
· When the best-of-five series · pitc~ in improvmg his lifetime · ready to hit- or at least make con- alldlng catch of a line drive by Baltimore's Roberto Alomar In thv
resumes Friday night, Jimmy Key j
fifth Inning of Game 2 of their ~marlcan Lllagll8 playoff flrat-round
'
tact"
.
postseason record to 6-1.
.
.
will' pitch for the Yankees against !
·
"The only diirerence 1see in John
Osuna nodded and smtled gnmly eerJea In Baltimore, where the Orioles won.7-4. (AP)
Dai:ren Oliver.
· this year is probably that his control when asked 1f he knew the ball was
"'We came in he"' .to win two, .. has been better than it's ever been," gone.
the AL playoffs,
· .
,
·
Rangers manager Johnny OateS said. Glavine said. "But whether he won
"I was trying to throw the ball
· "We ttied to make all the moves.and- 24 games this year or what, John inside and it tailed on me;" he said.
then we ran out of players. The pitch- Smoltz has still been a great pitcher , "I still feel good about us. I still think
ing was getting thin at the end."
for this organization."
·we can do .it."
In a four-hour, 25-minute
Perhaps so, but Smaltz had nev'the Dodgers scored their run in
marathon, the Yankees .used seven er won more,(han IS.games in a sea- the fifth on a leadoff double by
. pitchers and the Rangers used five. son until this y.,-.
Gagne and a two-out double..,lzy rookMike Henneman came i!lto start
"This'1nlly was· a big game for ie Todd Hollandswonh. Tiie Braves ' By DAVID GINSBURG
' · . special and elite. These guys can
the 12th, gave up a leadoff single to . me," Smaltz said. "I enjoyed being had taken a 1-0 lead in the fourth
·
BALTIMORE
(AP)
·The
'sense that. They can feel it."
Jeter .and then walked Tim Raines. in this situation. 1really felt good all when Marquis Grissom singled, stol~ ·
RUSTY $TiWifif.G
Cleveland
Indians
finally
get
to
uti.
The Indians, on the other hand,
Hayes, who hit a sacrifice fly batting . game. Even in the lOth inning, 1felt second, went to third on a groWJdoue
li~e
the
home-field
advantage
Friday
'
are
starting to feel the pressure of
for Wade Boggs in !he seventh, then 1 could go out (and pi~~;h)."
· and scored on sacrifice tly by Fred in their first-round AL playoff series 1 being pushed to the brink of elimi,
bunted to third. Palmer, who made
Smaltz threw 125 pitches- 85 McGriff.
.against the Baltimore Orioles. · · nation.
the defensive play of the game on
for strikes:
,-~
At this point, though, it might be
"They're getting the big hits. In
Paul O'Neill's grouildcr in the ~es ' As expected, the matchup
too
late
to
benefit
from
it.
•
1 a couple of instances, we haveO.:t,"
opener, then threw the ball some- between the teams with' the top two
The Baltimore Orioles won the :McDowell said. "It's going to be ti
Meigs sophomore Rusty Stewan where near the tarp.
ERAs in baseball was a pitching
first
two games of the best-of-five tough matchup. but hopefully we catl
• was released ftoll)a Collnnbus hos"It was a little bit W'et," Palmer duel. 'There were a total of just nine
:series at Camden Yards, and now bring .our game up a notch."
pita! and retwlied horne Tuesday
said. "Still, it's a routine play."
hits - four by Atlanta.
(Resulls
as
of
Sept.
25)
' they've got their winningest pitcher . . J1te Indians will have to, because
.
· ·ured 10
·
In the early going, Juan Gonzalez
after
be
,"We_
both
have
good
pitchers;"
. eda~e - Early Wednesday poised to apply the clincher.
·they've never held the lead in the
evening
mg IDJ
a homered tw. ice off Andy Pettit~ to
reserve football game Monday
.Dodgers manager Bill Russell said. MI
'l'iiCtlfioles
got
another
home
run
series and have thus far been
night's reserve game with Wellston, give the Rangel'll a 4-1 lead. He , "It will probably be the same way
TUm standings - Captain D's from Brady Anderson and broke a tie .outscored 17-8. '
.
according to Meigs varsity head wrapped a homer just inside the left- tomorrow. Hopef~lly, we'U be one (26-14), No.5 (26-14), Tony's Car-· in a controversial eighth inning to
"It was nice to get two victories
. · coach Mike Chancey.
. . . ..
field foul pole in 'the second and hit 'run better!'
I
ryout (22-18), P.O.E. 217.1 (20-20), beat the Indians 7-~ Wednesday and ,at home," Boriilla said. "We still
Stewan injured his neck late in a three-run drive in the.fourth fol- . Ramon Merii 0ez matched Smaltz· Meigs Oolf.Course (18-22) and No. move within one win of eliminating have some work- io do, but it's a lot.
the third qlllirter. After a delay of 20
,
lowing a double by Kevin Elster and for eight inriings, giving up just three
2 (16-~4). .
·. •
. , the defending AL champions.
, easierto go in there trying to get one'
·
y,
a walk to .Rusty Greer.
Team blgb senes- Captain D s
Cleveland won 99 games. best in win than it is trying to get two. We
11Jinutes Stev.:art wHas t"!'enltob etethr"Tonight was a real charge for hi'ts before being removed after
· . wh'l1 e · th e 0 no
. Ies accomplished
' .
.
ans Memonal osplla Y e us, .. Yankees manager Joe Torre said. throwing 131 pitches, But his reliev- (1907)
TUm high
·
C
. D'
lhe maJors,
a lot by wmning
th'IS
ers
didn't
do
the
job
as
the
Dodgers
game aptam s · grabbed the wild-card henh on thci game, no question about that."
Pomeroy E.M.S.
- ~·This was a better victory than if we
· (683 ),
. He was later ·transfered by _Med- ; would have won it from the first lost their fifth straight game.
second-to-last day of the season. But
It wasn't easy. Anderson's second
They've scored just six runs in
"' hi•h
Menseries_ Chuck
.
fltghlto Grant Hospttal where It was I ' ' beca ·Of how emotional it
lndiridual
Baltimore
got
the
first
two
games
at
homer
in as many games helped Bal-:
-'-•-nnined that·he suffered a contnntng
use
·
·
those five games, and only one- in
•
home, and took full advantage of it. timore take a 4-0 lead after five~
was for us..,
the fifth inning Wednesday - in . Bunon (541) and Clyde Sayre (505)
cuss ion.
"All of a sudden we're in a hole, innings. But Alben Belle hit a two-'
IndiVidual higli game- Burton and we haven't gotten to play at _run homerio spark a comeback that
(225) and Loren Coleman (!90)
home/' said Cleveland's Jack helped Cleveland pull into a 4-4 tie'
' Women
• McDowell (13-9), who will 'oppose in the eighth.
Then Baltimqre bounced back iii
' I~Vidualldgh series- Polly Mike Mussina (19-11) in Gam~ 3
Hysell
(550)
and
'
Margaret
Eynon
Friday
at
Jacobs
Field.
"But
that's
'the
bottom of the inning.
'
bird, bench coadl. have ben offered orhoipod C Cleft&lt; McGui,..
.
Baseba ll
(540)
the way it's set up, and that's what
Bonilla drew a Jeadoff wal~ fronj"
er job. wilbin tile cq.i.adPG.
. FLOIUI&gt;A MARUNS: Nomod Mike
w..~w=~ ~~Al:~
. Individual high aame- Hysell we have to deal with." •
Eric Plunk and Cal Ripken hit· a
Hulllilllton.
·
Runell rpoci~ ~~~~-· """'·
.
(227) and Eynon (198)
, The Orioles went 0-6 in Cleve- ground-rule- double before Eddie
ALplayoffs
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS :
Siped S a . b Mincy.
BMketW
'
: land last season, but this year's MutTay was given an intentional,
Teuovs.NewYork
Nellollll!rl,.._~A~­
·,
LEIPZIG, Germany (AP) _ ; team is poised to do somethihg walk to load the bases.
w......,.,, ..... .
Hadley
ATLANTA HAWKS: Si&amp;ned F
New Yort 5, Teua4 (12); seria lied
z.to ~j, F .... Durtwn; G Mclrin
Fresh off the United States' Federa- that's never been done- advance in
Paul Assenmacher relieved, and·
8oobr
C:lviDONnbil.
I-f
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS:
tion
Cup
victory,
fifth-seeded
Undthe
playoffs
as
a
wild-card
team.'
B.J.
Surhoffhit a tapper back to the'
FridaJ
·.
NE YORK KNICKS: Siane.d F
SiJDN RW Berry Nieekar ro ~"!tear
New York (Key ll·IIJ at Tent
Chris Jeot IDd C Eric Lcckncr.
Contnd Md leQI bim IO l.oRJ'
of
say Davenpon beat Barbara Schell of
"You don't need no pep talk. This mound. Assenmacher threw home
(OtiWJ 14-6~ Ul7 p.m. (NBC)
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES:
thoiHLSeotRWI'nol:lldamiDdLW Austria 6-4, 7-5 in the first round of is what it's all .about," Baltimore's for a forceout, but - with Surhoff·
SiJned G John ShuJI), 0 Melvin New,.Mite Leclerc: 10 Baltimore of lhc AHL
New Yort It TeiiAI, 1:07 p.m.,
born ond F Sbom&gt;a Milk.
11D11 0 Nltolli TtulyJin to Fort Wt)'De ol
.the Leipzig Open.
Bobby Bonilla s!\id. "This is very
(See INDIANS 00 Pale 5)

In

Yanks top Rangers
...
5-4 in 12 innings.·
'

In

!Orioles.hand ·Tribe !
7-4 to take 2-0 lead.

Stewart released
trom hospital
.. after neck injury

a

M"ason· 8 ow mg .
League resu Its

i

L
·
ex

Scoreboard

,

_,

--.,'-'

(ESPN,. ESPN2)

.

s.....,, Ott.'.

New York at Tcus. 4:01p.m., if nee·
a.y(ESPNi

Cleveland vs. Baltimore
WldnadaJ'•~

_,
_,

BaltiiTIOR' 7. Cleveland 4; Blltifll()ft:
lcada lelia l-0
Balrimore (Muuiba 19-11) ar CleveIMII(Mdlo.,.lll3-9), 4jl7 p.m. (ESPN)
'

BdilnOfC at Clemad. I;07 p.m.. if
"""""l' (ESPN or ESPN2)
SouocloJ, O&lt;t. '
Baltimore 11 Clevdaed, 7:30 p.m.• lf
"""""l'(R&gt;X)

' PHOENIX SUNS: Sipod G-F Brian
Oreea to a '*-JW wana.
SEATil.£ SUPERSONICS: Si&amp;ned

lhoiHL

F!leni&lt;kA......

DETROIT RED WINGS: Silned F
Philippo Audet 10 • -yao-IIICI,
LOS ANGELES KINGS: A11ip«&lt;
RW Paul DiPietro, c Nama LaFayette .

VANCOUVER PR172LIES: Si&amp;oe4
C Rich MaallinJ. C'• J.:k Locbi-.. aDd Ci
Chuck)' Alkint.

Football

-F-'DAu.AS COWBOYS: Releued TB

Derek Ware.

DENVER BRONCOS: Siped Chill

O'ta:le)' to the practice ~q~~.a. Releued
TE Mic:bael Tilley from lhc prac:Uc:i

""':l·
RE£N BAY PACKERS: Pllud C
Mite Arth,., oa I•Jured reserve. Re·

. TodoJ
Son Diqo (s...t... 9-5) .. St. Loub
(AIIdy Bcon 111-10), 4m p.m. (ESPN)

=.

51 . Louh
13-9) at San
Diep (lullby 9·5), 7:37p.m. (NBC)

•

s.au,,O&lt;t.6 . '
Sr. Louis at.San DieJo, 11:07 p.m., if.
"""""l'(ESI'N)
MMdaJ,Od. 7
St. Luuir 11 San Dieao. 4:07p.m . if

.......,(ESPNI

_j

Atlaata VL Loo Aoples
Wec~Detd~J 1 1Ken

_,

Atlula 2, Lo&amp; Anaelel 1 (10): At._. kedlll!rieii.O
AIIM&amp;I

leo(Voldes

(M~il Ys-11) 11 Lot Anae-

15-7).1:11 p.m. (fOX)

l.c» Aaaekif (Nome 16-rll) • Arlanr.
4:15p.m. (R&gt;X)

....,,on.,

(Gio&gt;ineiS.IO~

lAI AapJa. Ala... 1:07
~(llSPN)

.

'
p.m.. ,,

'

,....,,Oct.7

1M Anpleo tt Alloola; 1:11 p.m. if
IIIC:eMIIY (POX)
.J

Trilnsilclions

I

,

I

Fedyk IO Michipn oflhc lifL

MONTREAL CANADIENS : AI·
tiaacd D Brad Bro.wn, D Francoh
a....... P er.;, eoaro1• F p;..,. sm.
pyoodF-.,II«deieoutol'lodft·
ICion of lhe AHL. Pllced RW Owi1 Mur·
·

N!i.W YORK RANGEAS: Sianed C
Owi-lloloo.

NOIICIIO
.
At&amp;T 011.0 CUSIOMIB
..mil' Communialtions of Ohio, Inc. iterell)r pes notice thai k ~ the

following tariff o;hanges with the,Public Ulitities Commillllyn ~~Ohio.
Elfedive OCtober I, 1996, Jma" increased the price for Diredoly
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inchtded in this ftling Is an expanllion of the $0.80-Ni!liSubllcriber
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'

---Meet the Marauder$s-·....:.·........._-

playing them, inc! we are also look- Williams. Roush, a 5-fooc-8, 180
ina forward to retumin1 home and pound freshman, has carried 70
:: Coach Mike ChanceY's Meigs ' playing in are houJe.''
times for 634 yards and is averaging
· :Marauders will put their dlree·game
Meigs, unlike tbe rest of the area 9:06-yards a pop. He is coming off .
: ;winnins streak on the liAC Friday . teams, is playing its fourth contest, a 20!1-yard performance at Alexan. ; •evening 'when the Wellstoo Golden : while the rest have played five. The der last week.
~.Rockets invade Bob Roberts Field Marauders dropped their ftrst contest
Williams has struggled a bit iu the
. :for the Tri- Valley Conference Ohio of the year to Gallia Academy, but- early going because of teams keying
: Division opener for both teams.
have rebounded to defeat Marietta on him, but with Roush's emergence,
: :. . Wellston is coached•by first year (7-6), River Valley (18-0) and it has .opened some dayUght for the •
coach Larry Blackstone who : Alexander(~S-14) .
junior. Last week Matt show the
' !returns to the area coaching ranks •
Meigs is led by the one-two run- form that has made him. one of t!!e
; ·after a three year absence. He is tile ning attack of Justin Roush and Matt
(See MARAUDERS on Pap 6)
::former coach of the Jackson Iron- ·
· :men. Wellston finished the season 0- .
: ;I 0 last year and dropped the first two
·: •games this year before winning their ·
JOHN-HILL-WB
JUSTIN ROUSH-FB
•'ldst three.
'
.
6-foot-5,
110'pound
rr.hmen
.
.
5-foot-10,
5-foOI-8,
180·pound rr.hmen
·· The Golden Roc!';ets opened the
·season to losses to Jackson (5P-0) ·
· and ·Athens (16~13). But Wellston .
defeated Unioto 51-24, OakHil134- ·
1' Coach Howie CaldweU's 'south- league loss (Il-l) came to 'Belprc, rankings: Pivision tv-1 : St. Heniy
· 28 and slipped past Federal Hocking
,em Tornadoes cracked the top 10 in which· broke into the top 20 in the (241pts./21 first place votes); 2.
., last week by a 9-~orc.
'the Division IV Ohio High School state Division Ill standings.
'B,uckeyeCentral (16111); 3. Buckeye
Leading the Rocket attack is sixVolleyball
Coaches'
Association
poll
.St.
Henry
again
dominated
the
Trail (119/0); 4. HopeweU-Loudon
foot, 180 pound senior fullback
this
~k.
gaining
one
ftrst
place
standings
with
241
points
and
21
100(0); 5. New Bremen (5410); 6.
· Bryan Murdock. Murdock is one of
vote
for
top
10
in
the
state.
first
place
votes,
to
top
second-place
Lorain
Catholic (5Ml); 7. Windham
the leading rushers in the league with
The
Thmadoes
(14-1)
are
unde',·
BuckeyeCentralwith
161
points
and
(43/0);
8. Anna (41/0); 9. Antwerp
623 yards in 104 carries for an averfeated within the Tri-Valley Confer- ene first p)ace v~.
(38/0); 10. Racine-Southein (3211).
"ttge of 6.0 yards a carry.
.
ence
Hocking
Diviaioo.
1beir
only
Below
is'
the
Division
rv
state
• Also doing damage for the Rock.
ets on the ground is 5-foot-10, ISO
pound senior wingback Beau Fortner
witlt nin~carries for 121 yards (13.4 .
yards) and Nalin Arthur 34 carries
. .After claiming the ftrsl gtimc of of the iime, bUt Alex got 99% of the ' Brannon was 7-8 with five points;
for 171 yards (3.3 'yards).
· .the triatch, Eastern lost its !!old on bt'Caks. We have 10 learn how to han• • Martie Holter 7-9 witli four points,
Brian Shaw, a 6-foot-1, 160
· second place in the.Tri-Valley Con- . die the pressure in our minds.•
Valerie Karr 6-9 for five P,Oints,
pound senior, call the signals for
ference with iwo consecutive losses,
Michelle Caldwell was 19-19 in Mindy Sampson 6-8 with two P.,ints, ·
Wellston. He has thrown eight times
i4-16 and 12-15,to host Alexander serving with I~ points, Patsy Aeik- and Stephanie Evans 2-~ with one
on the year with two completions
in girls' high school volleyball ·er was 14-17 with II points, Jessica point.
and one interceptions for 38 yards.
action.
His favorite receive~;. is Ryan ·
Stevens.
6 inEastemisnow8-6overalland6the league.
,
.
Wellston is scoring 21.4 points a
Coach Don Jackson said, "We
·
To offer story suggesti11ns,
game, while giving up 25.2 points.
had a chance for sole posses~ion of
'992-~156 report late-b.reaking news an4
The offensive and defensive lines for
second place and didn't hold up
the Golden Rockets average about
underprcssure.We~pla~yed~w:e~ll~m~~~t~~======:=t::::::::::::::o:ffi:e:tn:e:w:s:b:p:s::~::::~~
six-foot, and 220 pounds.
"Wellston is a impro,ved team.
Their 3-2 · record proves that,"
BENTLEY 'SCORES - Melga sophomore wingback Jeremiah .• '·:
Chancey said. "They do a nice job of
Bentley
bnlaks down the side line completing a 25 yard scoring paaa
running ·the football. Are kids arc
play
froin
Brad Davenport In laal week's 28-14 win over
looking forward to the ·challenge of Alexander.quarterback
(Sentinel photo by Dave Harris) ·.
.

::head

.Southern makes OHSVCA.'s top 10 list

1996 NISSAN 412

1996 NISSAN 414

Driver's side alf bag, 5 apd, lull bench seat, 1400 lb.
payload, all 88880n radials, a yr. 36,000
Olivet's · side air bag, 5 spd, full bench seat, 1400 ,lb.
bUmper, plus &amp; yr. 60,000 power train
payload, all season radials, 3 yr. 36,000 llumper to bUmper, plus 5 year 60';000 power train warranty.
·
IM.:LI,I~~I 1,661.95

11,99

.

-

·E astern varsity spikers lose to Alexander

The Trl"bune News Hotline
l.itJ

Mei_
g s JVs beat Alexander .42-30

! .

By DAVE HARRIS
· .
·s€&lt;ired two straight. touchdowns. . period.
/
_
Sentinel Cornepondent
Matt Katterhenrich scorejl from sevBut Alex~nder exploded for two .
. Meigs outscored Alexilnder 42-30 en yards out. Gabriel threw to Joe . touchdowns m the first ~.30 of the of
in reserve footb!lll action Monday Tulodzieski for the extra pmltts With
~ fo~nh .!'~nod I~ ~e th; ~::::·
evening at Bob Roberts Field in· 5:35 remaining to make it a 16-8 ·
Iter -~~nfic sc ore fthom 6. Y tbes
1
00
·
·
·
·
t
'
outopu.,
pomeroy. A senous tn)Ury to con1es ;
.
· 1rstpayo
ood , th' epen ,· ts ·
Marauder Rusty Siewart in the third .
Gabri61-scored from II yards out
run was no g
.or e extra JXI10 •
Period marred the Marauder victory . with 2:21 left in the half. KatterhenB~~ M~1gs f~mbled on ~~ ki~off
(see stoiy on Page 4).
rich added the extra points to tie the
w1 A. exan e( _recovenng. =
· Me1gs
· JUI!lpe
·
d ou11o an 8-01 ead . game atl6 · .
· plays
Gabnel
from th13
ard later
. D
· ·1 J scored
II dded.
0
on the last play of the first period _ But Meigs scored ju11 two plays
Y s ~1. ame, ewe a . . e .
when quarterback Grant Abbott later when Abbott hooked up with
extr~ potnts to lie the game With 7.28
scored from a yard out. Abbott then Davidson from 70 yards out the extra
leftm the C?nlest.
.
· hooked up with John Davidson for points were no good but Meigs held
. But Dav~dson took the ensumg
the extra points. . . .
1, the 22-16lead at th.e half..
.
k1ckoff at h1s 23 and we~t 77 yards
. Three plays later Davidson '
Meigs opened up the th1rdpenod
for .the score to make II a 36-30
Meigs lead.
th
h.
Picked off a Eric Gabriel pass and with a eight play 58 yard .dnve for
·
•
th
·
he
F
R
d
Alexander
·was
one
e
marc
1t
returned 54 yards oor e score. . the s1x, w n ranco omuno score
. dri .
th' M . ·
.
Abbott threw to A.J. Vaughan for the from three yards out. Once agam
on~e ~gam · vmg to e. ~1gs 45
e.iltra points giving the Little , Abbott hit J)avldson for the extra ~~dJtne, ~~ Kenn_y Dav~ ~~bled
Matauders a 16-0 lead.
point~ giving Meigs the 30-16
an teve qnon scoope e oose
Alexander stormed back and advantage heading into the final
bfiall up11nhdd went_50 yarthd~Mfor lhde ·

Indians. lose...

"

ma1touc

own gl\'mg

e

arau

..

....
'

I

~

ers the 42-30 win.
(Continued from Page 4)
Vaughan led Meigs with eight
carries
for 56 yards. Abbott was four ·
First base umpire Tim Tschida
running on the wrong side of the
of
six
in
the air ,for 125 yards and a
baseline - the throw from catcher said, "The fac1 that the baserunner is
touchdown. Davidson caught two
Sandy Alomar bounced off the glove inside the line doesn't in and of itself
·
passes for 93 yards.
constitute interference. His being
of first baseman Jeff Kent.
Gabriel was three of seven in the
"He definitely blocked my inside the line has to prevent whoair
for 56 yards he also &lt;:arried the
view,'' Alomar said. ' 1 was trying to ever is covering the bag from catchball five times for 32 yards. Kauerlim the ball but couldn't see Jeff ing the ball. In our judgment, it wru:
henrick
had nine carries for 90
clearly. Bither (Surhofl) was ruitning simply an etTant throw."
yards.
~lose to the grass or inside the
· Once'play resumed, Anderson hit
'IJOO.
'
Meigs
travel to South Gallia
·
a
sacrifice fly and Robeno Alomar
•
1
·
Saturday
\O
play
the Rebel varsity.
• The wild throw allowed Ripken added an RBI single. ·
score for a 5-4 lead, and brought
Robeno Alomar, who has-been
Indians manager Mike Hargrove out shrmided in a controversy since he
of the dugout to discuss the play with spit in the face of an umpire last Friplate umpire Greg Kosc.
day, expressed words of sympathy
"Obviously Sandy did not make toward his brother Sandy, who had
a 'good throw, bUt our contention was • a rough day Wednesday.
he had to alter his throw because
"It's tough that he was the one to
Surhoff was running inside the line,"
throw the ball, but tha.t's the way
Hargrove said. "In the umpire's · baseball is," Roberto said. "Everyjudgment. they said that it didn't one makes errors. He has to keep his
have anythi~g to do with the way the head ~p."
play turned out." · .
.• So dOc:s the rest of the team, or
Replays cleared showed Surhoff the Indians will be watching this
to the left side of the baseline as 6e year's World Series Oh television.
appfO!IChed thp bag.

•

)

I

"

\

1

io

Phoali~.

iajlnd I'CIICf'\'e.

.

-Meigs to host WellsJ.on
~~" homecoming conte$t

II

Md 0 Jamie Storr 10 lbe Pbuellia of the
IHL. Recalled LW Brent Orltvc from

NLplayotTs
San Dieao vs. SL LouU

i

DAUAS STARS: Alllped F Bre111

1'1)' on

\:

The Dilly Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~: By DAVE HARRIS
: ·Seulll.t Corn aplll'ldent

By JOHN NADEL

'

~y, October 3, 1111
·-

•

\

·'

will

,.

'

'

9ranl {)peninr Oletralion ·~

V?l

. .J~mkr 2J,.J_tJcft~kr. 5th. 199~ .
.

.

'

'

~gister fotdozens 'of D~or P;izes.duting our ";

i~week celebration. Local gift certificates, Jewelry,

'Furniture, Goceries, Electronics and more!
.
• Open to everyone '
.
• Drawing at 12 noon, Saturday, Octpber 5, 1996
• 'Need not be present to win
&lt;

.

\

~ailable

.
for a limited time·only. ·stop in at these
local offices for spedal rates on Checking accounts,
Hom~ Equity loans, Real Estate loans•.and Visa.
;,

•

ADA COOII'Ol.W. omas IS (~t-t)

Mlddlepon Pomeroy Rutland
446-0902 992-6661 992-2133 742-2888
Galiipobs

•

..

• •

''

�~ I• ]!he Dlllly Senti,..

Thursday, Ockltler 3. 1 -

:pO'l*'OY • Middleport, Ohio

q

Pom11oy•lllddleport,

Eastern to host archriv~l Souther.n Sat~rday . nigh·t
.

•

series.
By SCOTT WOl.FI!
,
Behind three J11011 Sheets touchII 6ii111Ccw1 lfDUMiot
The IIIICient rivalry between two downs and lhrce third pqiod scramMeip County Scbools c:oatinues as bles, the Eastern Eagles broke open
Soulbem visill &amp;stem in lbe battle a close 12.{) halftime score and
of Meip COUDty ll But Shade Sla· blitzed to a 32-6 '1\i· Valley Conferdium s.tuniay ll 7:30p.m.
ence win. ·
Like last year, bolb clubs ~R virLast year, senior J11011 Sheets got
tually ia lbe Sllllll boat and !heir a pick-me-up 11arne, rushin112.2 times
CDUI'Sel have led lbem to 1-3 overall
for 190 yards and three touChdowns. ·
llJirks.
Brian Bowen, !he BHS sii!Dal caller,
Both teams take a similar scrambled six times for 26 yards.
approlch to this week's game. Bolh Senior Micah Otto ran 12 times for
coachca agree lhal mistakes or lack 73 yards, Travis Cunis was 1-7, and
of mi]Ukes will figure in the games Mike Smith was 2-12.
OUicOme. Bolh learns an; coming off
Bowen was 'successful on II of
bigiOIIIC$. Both clubs an: 1-3. Bolh 23 passes and no in)erceptions fdJ
enter the'l\i-Valley Confem~ce at 0,. 204 yards, while St"'e Durst threw
O: It's a whole new ball game and one one (to Bowen) for 30 yards. Travis
fans won1 want to miss.
· Cunis was the primary l8f11Ct with 6
Qne thing is .for certain, one catches for ~6 yards, Dur'st 2-29, .
team will willk away a winner and Sheets 2-43, and Smith 1-20. Micah
the other will chalk up anolher loss. ·Otto caught another.
Last year, in Eastern's tint TVC
Jamie Evans led Soulhem with 37
championship season, Eastern won yards on nine carries. Mike Ash.was
32-6.
6-g, Brian Pagell-7, and Jay McK·. F9r one quar)er it looked like the elvey 1-4.
battle of lhe century, however, the
Jesse Maynard was 3-11 passing
IWO mi~terms revealed yet anolher
fnr S4 yards as Eastern's derense lim- ·
impressive victory in the Eastern- ited lhe Tornadoes to just 104 net
dominated Eastern-Southefl! grid yards.
•

•

.

1

problem ia the fact that lbe ~fenae pne.
lpCnda much of iu time tiriq on the
A&amp;ainat " - · Mayan was
field.
.
17-32for 225 yards. Two weeb ...,,
In the filii two SHS giUIICI, frosh lhe Soulhem Tornadoes rille lo the
Adam Cumines bad two big lll1ICS, occasion to defeat lbanan 27-1,
but&amp;incelhenopponen15havefoumd which was tjle tim win oflhe year
gaps in lhe SHS line and running for lhe Tornadoes.
game.
Last week, Southern bowed 54Cumings had 101 yards rushing 14, but twice made a game of it in
in his debut on 19 carrieS, while the first half, pulliDI!Ib within two
Jamie Evans added 57 011 four car- scores ofWahama(l0-7 and 211-14).
ries. Since the second game, Evans
Soulhem gained 244 yanfs overhas become the SHS workhorse, all, gaining I 58 in the air. Maynard
earning his yardage on great second , was lS-30 despite lbe wet turf.
effon.
. •
.
·Receivers were Evans (10,.81),Josh
Besides llood individual effons, . Davis \2-20), Michael Ash. (1-25),
Southern's running game has been Matt Riffle (1-19) and Cum_ones (1vinually non·existent. Last week, 13). Southern had one sustaoned f&gt;7. WHS keyed in on Evans and took yard drive.
away any chance for much running ,
Cumings, Maynard ~d Evans
success.
were vital parts of lbe dnvc, wh1ch
· On lhe other hand, its p~sing culminated on a six-yard Ma~nard ·
game has been dazzling. Success on run. Joao Kafg added the EP kick.
lhe rush equid make Soulhern tough
Ash almost broke lhe kick-off
throughout the divi,sion schedule.
· retum ..tinally pulled down at t~ 34Against Ross Southeastern, May- yard hne. Evans then hauled 1n a
nard 1!015 7-1 S for 49 yards passing, Maynard pass for lhe t~cbdown, a
but gave up two interceptions. That 14-yard recept1on. Cum10gs was 6was Maynard's lowest offensive out- 28 and Maynard was _13-33 ..
put of the year. Since then he has
Tunc 10 to Tht DOtly Stnl!ntl fo~
always gone over 100 yards per comm~nts from the coaches 10 a lat•
_er ed1!100.

COLUMBUS, ' Ohio (AP) the Sept. 13, 1997, game since last
Ohio Slate associate athletic director · week.
Archie Griffin announced toda)!,that
"Adding BoWling Green to our .
Bowling Orcen will fill the open date 1997 schedule keeps with our phion the Buckeyes· 1997 football losophy of wantipg to play more
schedule.
1
games against Ohio schools," Grif- .
Oriffin also an11ou11Ced lhal Ohio fin said in a statement. "We are glad
University will visit Ohio Stadium . to add Bowling Green and Ohio to
our future schedules."
on Sept. 18, 1999. .
Officials from Bowli11g Green
Orcgo11 oriainally was scheduled
to
play
in the season-opener at Ohio
and Ol)io State 11!*1 been diseussing

Dolphins' getting
Drayton sets stage
for Syars' release
By STEVEN WINE
DAVIE, Fla. (AP)- Keith Byars
hasn't decided whelherto retire, bUt
he won't play for Jimmy Johnson
again.
Byars burned that bridge Wednesday.
A bitter Byars complained about
being released by lhe Miami Dolphins. saying he deserved better
treatment lis an 11-year veteran.
Byars compared Johnson to a dicta·
tor lind expressed skepticism ai)out'
the coach's chances of winning a
Super Bowl with Miami.
~'His program 'l"d hi$ system, if
you look at his irack rceord, it's firecrackers instead -of bombs," Byars
said. "It's shon bursts. He doesn't
have any longevity in' any program.
"If he doesn't gel it done quick~
Jimmy won'l be there. Because of
the way he is, he doesn't have the
endurance to go lhe.long haul. He's
good in small c,loses."
Byars, 32, staned lhe first four
games this season at tight end, but
was Clll Tuesday when Johnson
acquircd tight end Troy Drayton in
a trade with lhe StoLouis Rams. .
''When they told me. I was

In a rambling 20-minute conference call with reporters, Byars said:
- "Jimmy wants a lot of followers. I've never been a follower in
anything I've done. I'm a leader.
Maybe Jimmy was somewhat intimidated by my leadership skills."
- "You play as long as I do,
you're due a cenain degree of
respect. He didn't necessarily do
that, but he's lhe head coach."
- "Just because a person is lhe
biggest and the loudest and has the
mosl authority, that doesn't make
him right all·lbe time."
' - "I can play any position. I can
play fullback; I can play tight end.
The only position I'm not too good
at js obscurity. That's what the Dolphins had me playing, and I can'l .
play that too well." . •
' In response, ' Johnson merely
shrugged his shOulders.
"Obviously Keith is disappointed about being released," Johnson
said. "I'm sorry he's disappointed. I
wish him the best of luck."
Byars »I ned a gro,wing list ofveterans who failed to survive the Don
Shula-to-JJ transition. Of the 53
p!ayers on the roster. 24 an; newreleased.,. Byars &amp;aid, I ulhe first cpmcrs.
" .
.
· thing that cami to my mind was lhe
Not surprisingly. the holdovers
, Manin Luther Xing speech, 'free at from last season were ·reluctanl to
last, free at last, lhank God almighty, agree with Byan' criticisms. ·
. I'm free at last.' I feel so much bet- ·
Byars started every game at fulller that I'm not under that strain and back last season for Shula. bul lost
mental anguish."
· his job in training camp this year

Marauders..•&lt;Continued from Page_5)
, . premier backs in the area picking up
117 yards in 20 carries. For the season. he has gained 303 !n 68 carries
for 4.5 yards a carty.
Also capable of doing damage for
Meigs on the JIOUnd is 59Phomore
winaiNM:k Jeremiah Bentley with 44
yards in II carries.
'
Also coming on of late is junior
quarteriJIIclc Bflld Davenpon. Davenport has completed 12of31 in the
lir for 133 yards with a touchdown
and two intercep(ions. Junior Chad
Hanson has pulled in five puaes for
51 yards. Benlley has four caJChca .
for 35 yards aacla touchdown.
On defense, the M8rauden have
played 0\.otscandinl as llelimlivinc
up leu than 10 points a aame. The
defense for Mei11 includes BJ.

Nicholson or Morgan Vanaman with
Rick Hoover at lhe ends, Allton
Hockman and .Adam Barrett at the·
tackles and Man Dailey at nose tackle, The linebiiC~e11 arc Jason Rouslt
and Ryan Rarr!Jburg with Hansc1
and Bentley at lhe comers, Robert
· Qualls and Matt Ault are safeties.
"Meigs has two really good ·
backs," Blackstone said. "We are
soing to have 'to stop lhe run. We
have made IIOfiiC progress in sloppinl a 16 aame l01i11g steak. but we
haven't defeated a lelim ~ caliber·o'
Meigs.,"
The kickoff for the TVC ilpener
is 7:30. but pi there elrly, ai it islhe
Marauden' homecomin1. with fes- ·
tivities p:ttina under way lbout 1
p.m.

.

.

Stadium, but canceled two years ago.
Ohio State officials didn't find Oregoo's letter canceling the game until
late this summer.
Bowli~g Orcen had been scheduled to host Central Florida on Sept.
13. The Orlando Sentinel reported
last week that Nebraska has asked
Central Florida if it would rather go .
to Lincoln, Neb., that day.
Bowling Green is now scheduled

North Wilkesboro, ·N.C.. '(Terry ·
Labonte).

Po~~~r1s 2 ~00 • ~~.J~~v~1~:~a~~

(Rusty Wallace).
April 28- Winston Select 500,
Talladega, Ala. (Sterling M~lin).
May 5- Save Man·supermarketsJOO,Sonoma.Calif(RustyWallace).
May 26- Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C. (Dale Jarrett).
June 2 ~ Miller 500, Dover. Del.
·
(Jeff Oordon).
June 16 - UAW-dMTeamwork
SOO, Long Pond, Pa. (Jeff Oordori).
June 23- Miller 400, Brooklyn,
Mich. (Rusty Wallace).
July 6 ..,... Pepsi 4.00. Daytona
Beach. Fla. (Sterling Marlin).
. July 14-.Slick50300,Loudon.
N.H. (Ernie levan). ·
• July 21 - Miller 500, Long
Pond, Pa. (Rusly Wallace).
July 28 - DieHard 500, TalJadega; Ala. (Jell Gordon).
Aug. 3·...:::. Brickyard 400, Indianapolis.' (Dale Jarrett).
A~~g . II - Bud at the .dlen,
Watkins Glen, N.Y. (~off Bodine).
Aug. '18 - GM Ooodwrench
Dealers 400, Brooklyn, Mich. (Dale
· Jarrett).
,
'A g. 24 - Goody's Headaehe
Powder$ 500, Bri~l. Tenn. (Rusty
Walloce). ·
Sept. I - Mountain Dew Southem 500. Darlington, S.C. (Jeff Gordon).
Sept. 7 - Miller 400, Richmond, Va. (Ernie Irvan).
Sept. 15 - MBNA 500, Dover,
DeL (Jeff Oonlon).
Sept. 22 - Hanes 500, Martinsville, Va. (J~ff Gordon).
Sept. 29 - 'fYson Holly Farms
400, North Wilka-boro, N.C. (Jeff
Oordon)..
·
OcL 6- UAW..OM Quality .500

9. Ernie lrvan, 3,209.
10. Sterling Marlin, 3,198.
II. Bobby Hamilton, 3,119.
12. Bobby Labonte, 3,059.
13. Jeff Burton, 3,030.
14. Michael Waltrip, 3,026.
15. Ted Musgrave, 3,010.
16. Jimmy Spencer, 2,987.
17. Rick Mast, 2,850. ·
18. Morgan Shepherd," 2. 772.
19. Geoff Bodine, 2,757.
20. Ricky Craven, 2,697.
21. Johnny Benson, 2,691.
22. Jeremy Mayfield, 2,595.
23. Wally Dallenbach Jr., 2,506.
24. Kyle Petty, 2,492.
25. Lake Speed, 2.459.

Concord, N.C.
Oct. 20- AC-Delco 400, Rockingham, N.C.
Oct. 27 - Dura Lube 500,
Phoenix
Nov. 10-NAPASOO,Hampton, '
Ga.
Driver standings
I . Jell Goro;lon. 4,088.
2. Terry Labonte: 3,977.
3. Dale Jarrett, 3·.906.
4. Dale Earnhard~ 3,737.
5. Mark Manin. 3,626.
6. Ricky Rudd, 3,278.
7. Rusty Wallace, 3,256.
8. Ken Schrader. 3,239.

·

The Fall
·

.

.., IOIITH THtiiO

,,., ,.,.,.a,...
~
-,_

Jon-·

NAIIC(!R
_ Weol&lt;lytonldngl
.. ronlllng loinby
ptiwol

1.

Season~

Ttna q,.10. 6n a row

2..Tooty~ 121
'lbp-51 . . rol """"'t&gt;

.1 4.--(111

3.Doto-(3)
1'r*tiltt'l to lhlnlllt WWihltfi i OatbOcnroo
4.Ruoty-(41
J)ilmOI (tor l*n) 1Olh on llhof15. D o l o - (I) ·
AI- h 1011 Dolo ~!&gt;lei&lt; bohlnd

15. Jollnny- ..... (14)
Clealnll- Ill tho limO
16. ~imfi!J ..,,,_ (11)

•

wlnlooi-""-e._..,_,,,,
I·

(12)
Best In Roueh c1-.s

71h &amp;: Plrun Sr.
Pt~rlcel'lburg,

.WV

.......,....,........,..,.,
304-424-5337

,,, l

-~-

-l!lln I

'

26. Kenny .Wallace, 2,458.
'27. Hut Stricklin. 2,451.
28. Brett Bodine, 2.430.
29. Darrell Waltrip, 2,334.
30. John Andrelli, 2,288.
31. ~oben Pressley, 2,247.
32. Bill Elliot~ 2,273.
33. Derrike Cope, 2,180.
34. Joe Net)ICchek,.2,15l.
35. Ward Bunon, 1,924.
36. Dick Trickle, 1,900.
37. Bobby Hillin Jr., 1;848.
38. Dave Marcis, 1,795.
39. Steve Grissom.• 1,188.
40. Mike Wallace. 799.
41. Elton Sawyer, 611.
42. Todd Bodine, 5.91.

.uy 21

............_

SIIHI:
---~

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auiOif
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t. B1JW1 AIIMI, 2.317.
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•

in the broadcast~~·-~M•sr·~~":;n

......-.__
__

Greenwood, S.C.

.....
llllllllotlln.
. -

climb&amp; in lhosc cars
andnCcs almost every Week at .
spee&lt;li of 18().plus. They lake
peat risks.l:ul they do il all
o:n of love for lhe spon and the

twiiiFIIrgrouncll Sf I tw...
John ~AAn. w.lk

-,IIMhlllw~----·anttoe-..oi~RlciiiRihlly..

1........... 1,_ · No.43blckln~luw.

1w-

Thal'1 three In a row now tor Jel

c...ao::.·
Call:

•

TOP1D

'"*'

2. Oalo Eomhaftlt
3. Dale Jal'nlll
• · Jeff Burton ·
~. TOllY Labonll

yet anoct:o&lt;
1101&gt; to a :ta&lt;ionct Wlnlll&gt;n Cup
Championolllp by winning hla third

Gor:to:: -

--·
_,_.,.
-.....- .......·- JEFF

WARNER

Tho l:to1- Cup
date at &amp;."' North ,

-lbqro.turned

8. -

Speedway

Into 8

-bollle-

1-7Q-3111

-lull-. In

o-p1..-aw. lie

Haoolllon'o - - ...,...

- - ,_..,. 1w the

toto cauntry onc1 : 11•m
elngor"- Mlny ~na.

o_ol_'
Wlilkl, Eamhnt clmt
A....

~

bf&lt;l&lt; Wl1h I OlrOnglill
and was pr6babtv lhe

moat arioUI chanengar

• 111 ti0:11on.

~· llnlat:od

-10

flnloh

Oordon'•nowwon.oltt.· ..

•
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101h"'" olh ·

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8 WHERE I GO ON VACA·
nON: 'Moat drivel&amp; don't
have vacations ln.the aense
!hat odler people do. Driving
for STP- GlW me a
chance 1o travoland meet

bulget1ing c:toolr).
•
8 I'AVORITE DIIIVI!II: 'Isn't
· Richard Potty eveiYb&lt;XIY's

people, and there's aome
lelsu"' time asso::lated with

faYOtle? Settouoty, the"' an:
10 many gocd tl:lngo o:bout

IAOE: 39
I SPOUSE: Otbblo ,
S CHILOIIEN: Bobby Jr.
I CAR: Tho,_ ll:n:oLB ooo
In NASCAR: Tho No. 43

I WHAT.YOU OONT KNOW
AloUr MY CAIIEI!II: ,

.

.

II you'vo got 1 q-on or
1 eommen~ -:!lASCAR

Thla WHk Your Turn, &lt;hJ
The Guton Gazette, P.O.

Box 1538, Gootonl1, N.C.

28063. Your Tum aleo may ·
be Nochoc! by o-moiUng
omurroyOgut·

Five Points
Express
, Drive-Thru
Carry Out
Pomeroy, Ohio

at
Five Points

~-·-· ·

- r In 'Doyo of Thunder."

In IIC!, Homllon q\111111 d
IIIII: at Phoenix In a movie
car in 11189, look tho lead
Md ran In the top.10bolore
llo wu forood by NASCAR

· STP P - GIWid Prix
by Rlc:hatd Petty

·~'-·
·

Boats New &amp; Used
~- ,1 "Professional

8 WHAT I'D LIKE TO
CHANGE ABOUT
MYSELF: 'I'd got aDgl)lless
easily l{ld not let thlt)gl
worry me."
8 MYPERIIONALMOTTO
18: 'Do the-you can.
, ond never glw up.'

dtowt ~cat~ aa a 11Un1

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2131 Karr St.
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Around the pn~a•

Rival ·c rew chief: Title Gordon's to lose
••cu,IOMiiu:a:ily

............
NASCAR This Week
Jeff Hammond io an lnleresl&lt;d

::ow,il'somou.rofwhether
he'll Win....,. 1111:esln.• single
than anyone else has

observer in lhe Winston Cup
poinl nu:e and hils enough experience-lo smell a probable

won. It's IOUJh on lhe others. •
too. beco:uo all of them (Teny

s~rNnning.

l..obonte. Dale l::rn:ft, Dale

l)son Holly F::nns 400s- ·
we,. held 01 Nonh Wilkesboro

lhree Winston Cup mCe.s have
ever been compleled wilh every

-on

Two of lhem -lhe last twO ·

winner.

Sricedwoy. In Sitlidoy's mce, otl
37 starters wue still circling
lhe .625-mik lniCk when Jeff
GORioa toolt lhe cl:eckored flog.
. The only Olhcr sudl incidenl
o:::urred II the NIIShville Fair-·
grou(Mb in o. 'I 9SOs face I hat. hod
only 12.scamrs.
Nashville held its .final Win-

siOn C.p liiCC in

19~.

Nonh

Willccsboro's final race was
Sunday.

.

180 ...TI: A lone prolesler
wandered abool among the crush
of people in ll:e Nonh Wilkes·
boro pnigc on Sunday morning.
He carried a large sign which
read: "To hell wilh Texas and
California. Save racing at North
Wilkesboro."

Rumors were rife that some · ·
sort of uprioing would h:q:pen

•ftc•
the """'· wilh fans 10aring
~wn lhe rcnces to stream into

Oiof:ibulo:i lly
Woter Syotoma, tnc.

T~.st::to

We will,.., ... :no~:
TDS. Mlnlrai'Hardnesa, Iron, PH
Pleaae 1l811 AalnSoft M 614-812·
4472 Mld&lt;lltpof1 or 814 1!181 1118
P10LIUI .,_to 811 up your1J..
, water analylll. -· ··

the inr:ew ofter the 50&lt;ye~&gt;r-old
rmck complCted its final Winsloo
Cupmce .
Aulhorilies rq&gt;oned only
minor.incidents, At 1easa one fan
was arrcslcd in lhc infield hours
Brter the race ended.

.

.

Ripley, WV 26271

I

~

Bus. Phone (304) 372-3673
1:110().964-FORD

TO OUR NEW LOCATION!!
At. 21 at the Ripley-Fairplain Exit #132
Come See Us For All Your Parts and
Service Needs

.

Fa~ More .I ntorrnation

0,

.

'

!_~

GOING GOING GONE

\

.

'

com.,..,

the Wllhtr trealmenl
-Iaiiy lrMtn you to pil&lt;l;clpale
In a free, no obliGation, ;
eomprel'lenllve water analyaia.

DENBIGB Gi\BREIT IN€:.

·Dave Harris Ext.
10:4 or Bob.Atwood
Ext. 105
.
.
'

~.Bourn

Arden, N.C.

&amp;TON CUP CAR: Tm Cllflfi·
dent that I'd have something
to do with racing."

the mon.'

'

.I'IVOEnl1m
CONVINIINT~~~=ol
2.aG
Ave., (AciOit from
Gllipoll, OH • 448-1711

Super totto
&amp; All Lottery
Games

coming.

!hal'

dolhlngl tho! say 1 ~ 800ut

Call 992·21 5

Store To See

1900 Eastem GaiHpolis

that mon that l'w come to
I WHAT I WOULD DO IF I
ftom driving for Nm, II·
COULDNT IIAtVE AwtN-

- · • mant lllmHton:

.Advertise on this age/

•

Our Large
Selection of

'

AITENTION ADVERTISERS!!

'stop by Bob's
Gallipolis

WI/

II tho Tyoon-Holly Fllllllll
400 ot Nol1h Wlttotoboro but
oig11111..
8 FIRITI: Stilt (Nov. 5,
. 19119, at -be); pale ·
(J1018 23, 1986, at Mich-.
lgon); ond win (otill waiting

in

·~-.-.-..­
IN:d
thlid.
alow

I'm sure waa soon after I
got my
I WHAT I DO TO IIELIAX:
'yt/Ofk on .my 1&lt;!11'1 race car."

• Eamtwdt) hllve had aeasons
Hanunond. a ve10ron of Jeverol wonhy or bei"' the cl::unpion
THI8ICI aURPRIII.: tt \
dowft..the-stretch point battles, is 11 any Olhet time.
bO-IOIIOp
--OIRICI&lt;
1 '""' way away &amp;om lhl.t one.
'"lbi.l wQI a bi1 tes1 fO&lt; him
·
good-. He
He is mw d:ief of Danell
(Gordon) and he wilh"ood It
. - 28111.and Wound
Waltrip'• .in:ggling oulfit
They ollloolt a prelty good shot
upll:nh.
"The only way lhey can beat
at him ::nd "!! didn'le:act. This,
·THI !ltQ DUO: Toil
Gonion is if Ihey (Gonion's
whe,. d:e "'"'of them hilve 11111
.......... ""' pole-::ltter,
team)
beat
tl:emselv&amp;~"
said
bellO! the pa511han he had and
waa alactor for llboul Nil lip.
Hammond.
"He
(Gonion)
he
beat them in their backyards. ·
THI Dl HEAIIAC. .: Eme
· doeln't wony.abouunylhln8
so toJpeilk.ll's not over, by any
lrVan. rur:nlng -lho - · got
!hal's behind him, i:nly ::bout
means,l:ullie ..,. Coolt a big
Olllo:iglod In a crul: with Bollby
_ , ::nd Kjlt Polyon·lep 11.,
what's in f:oot of him. RiJhl
llep IOWIRl punina an end to it"
10.Rully-

-::ndb:tto

Pu:II....Z-1

t&gt;laot

7.-,Rud:t
8.Bollby9. Molk-

N.C ..

11aw. .. ....,,._.OH.,.

-

y. Jollllor:lon

n
license.:

I LAIT RACE: Stai11dlhlrd

- roatde o1 tho YMf In
11181, IIIII
1114, h l l l l o l - comlnt ta l'elty EnlorprtHo,
llo lw Follx . _
' AI wtlh _ , ~ 11o
-. _ 1 .-a -llr·

Taoo.

At..

Buick-Pontiac

fans. And a little vote of c01di·
deDce for my all·time favorite,
Mark Martin; your time is

to pall&lt; tho car.
I FIR8T SPEEDING nCKEr..i
'I don1 """'"right now, but •

potu, no wino, obi~.
27 top.10o.

The last time out

·

''

IIII!COIID: l&amp;lototll, two

II ~lei.
-1110 10 1113,
~-on 1111

-

See It

rnets and

u"

WlnetOol.cu,. -

Grand Prix GT

guys who straps on those hel·

......,
-·on

·::::"no~O::.In

I '97Pontlac

I'm ~ling witJ1 a compli·
meftl to eVery one of tbose

"Sup I lbw Showhll honll

........ m..

..

Dear Your Tum,

u.n.ll Wollolp.

July 28 _DieHoi11 !500
Mayftold
Aug.3 Bilcl&lt;ylli11400
I~
· Gor&lt;ton
.Aug. 11 Bud at U. Glen Walldro Glon, N. V. E - G. Bodlno
Aug. 18 GMClood. ,400 llrooklyn,Mlch. ·
J.llu1on .Aug, 24 Goodj'1 500
8tll1ol. TIM. •
•
R. Woloco
Sept. 1 Southem scxr
o~ . s.c.
Jo:rott
Gor&lt;ton
Sept. 7 MUCor 400
Richmond, VI. ,
Martin •
1Sepl. t 5 MBNA 500
Oowr. Del.
B. L::borito Gonion
Sept. 22 Hanes 500
Martinlvll... va.
Hamilton
Gordon
~ept. 29 Holly Farms 400 N. Wllkellboro, N.C. Musgrave
Gonion
Oct. 6 UAW·GM 500 Cor:cc&lt;d. N.C.
(Rudd)
(Morfin)
Oct. 20 AC-Oolco 400 Roctdngllilm, N.C. ( - ) tw. e..ton)
Oct. 27 Dura Lube !500 Phoenix
(Elliott)
(Rud:IJ
Nov.10 NAPA500
Qo, ·
(D.Wo""') (Eor::l:o:Qt)
• ~~ tn ~IN lndk:ata 11J115 pollt .00 race wlnnera.
. ....,.... CUt
t . .tel Gonbl, •.ou.
2. Ttny L.lbonM, 3,877.
3. Dale Jt.l'fltl, 3,801.
4.
Eamtwdl, 3,737.

In '

..... l l o -

Polo'
Milt
Jonwlt
E::mhardl Jonw1t
T. l.aWlll Eornhaldt
T. Lobonll Gonion
Bon::on
EoW. Bur1Dn Gonion
Martin
·Gonion
T.~ T..__,..
Crovon
IMin
Molin
T. Labonta w.lllce
Gonion
M. ~

Gonion

and always will be. That's why
his name' is mentioned so mucli

--ln1tlll,

'

B:aoldyn, Mk:h.
Doytono lloach. Fla.
Loudon, N.H. ·
•
~ Pond, Pa.
'll:lidoao. Ail.

IIIIo

lenfllll~
Homllan'oblg

614-092·7986
614-992-6758
Ray &amp; Pam - Owners

Eamhanlt . Eon:hanlrs the besl

........bol..
clol'•tldu-ol

25. ttutalcllln(UI••I
. Allio1lao.&lt;»..,idot ·

"
Silo
Dolo . Fob. 11 Busctl Clool:
Ooytono Beocl:. Fla.
Fob. 18 Deytono50Q
'DoytonoBeocl:, Flo.
Fob. 25 Gooilwlencl: 400 Ro::idngham, N.C.
Mor. 3 Ponlloc 400
Rlchmon:l. Yl.
Mar. 10 Purato... IIOO
-....,, Qo,
Mar. 24 TranSouth 400 Da:tlnglof:, S.c.
Mer. 31 Food Clly 500 ." Bdotol, TOM. .
Apfl14 Fr11Unlon400 N. - . N . C .
Apfl21 Goodj'o500 ,
Talladega, Ail.
Apfl2l Wlnlton !500
May 5 ·$ave MM 300 ~rna, b.aif.
May 18 Winston 8eild Cor:cc&lt;d, N.C.

never

-=-R--

No ridl "" .... yilt

23. Kenny- (22)

l'

and the &amp;realest driver tllal ever
lived, or what? Eamhardl
cries or blames everybody else
lhc way Rusly Wallace does
and as far as his fa1her helping
him get sraned. wh11 racer
doesn't bave'help? I think Mr.
Draa:on aceds to &amp;et a life and
&amp;et over his jeaiDUsy of Dale

oltlloolghl

22.Motpn a.;.,..-1211

••

May 28 Co::a-Cda 1100
.rune 2 Miler 500
Juno 16 UAW· GM !500
.ru, 23 Mlllot400 •
July 6 Pll&gt;li 400
JUv 14 Sick 50 300

AREA'S BEST SELECTION

Rlbbonl&amp;
.Dried Flowetll

1111 top 10 In -

--.-Yo.

FOR .FALL ·WITH ....

InclUding .

--to~

.R. .ulti1 sch!ii!Uie

"flant Pansies Now For Beautiful Spring Beds"
.I Fall Flower Bulbs from Holland
BOB'S CAN HELP YOU DECORATE

I
CrSfts ...

2 1 . - Wollt1p 1211

-.lnlloWICupoootoo.Tiolo
-lloftnlollocltn

.

Archery. Clothing,
Taxidermy. Deer
Processing, Ba~ &amp;
·
Tackle
·
. 249 West Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Open 7 a.m./9 p.m.
7 Days a week

:IIEamt:oro• is such a fine man

mlor--dt1-

_lllpchlld,

-'

~·.

....ttton..--

Coltt.yeoro-

eon draws nearer

COME ON OVER TO BOB'S ·F OR•••
1 t= . ,,, (")
•· ·
"
ra. .1 ranS/85
•

Oecoratin
SuP.plies

mlnldr.w
n,
le ono olllll-

Paradise

Dear Your Tum, ,
In reference to lhe leiter from
James Dr::gon abouiEan:twdl.
$0 sick o~ hearing.JfOWn
whine. Is il jealousy thai ·

cam,aUII........

Maldng gnodual- .
24.llltlllu0a (24)

11 •

their Conference USA schedule and·
because Ohio State refused to play in
Cincinnati.
·
Ohio State has loaded up cin
Mid-American Conference schools
in itS fulure schedules. The Buckeyes
play Toledo on Sept 1~. 1998; Miami of Ohio qn Sepl.: ~. ~QOO; and
Akron on Sept. 8. 2001 - all at
Ohio Stadium.
'
' ·

·

·

12._..,~(11)
· -.g lt1tity 111ho ondof t t . -

•

OrMng like a new man

20. Ken IDIIrl dl r (11)

Could- OIQp-5 finllt1
10. Rielly Rudd ('I
. OOWng- obouthli win-

.loll-

Polly'oPonlllc

Bowhunters

FraMIIII,Ky.

-~~-­

Pole., w-o ~ l!lm • .
muct&gt;- booll,

-

e. .,.... ...~ln(t)
ulho--down

17. Toclliluogmo1211

Stll-.g"" 1997 plono

Hllrd ID JUt.the .nort

Bl'llldi&gt;n C1udltl

1.... bul.wlll:ln
Bobbr Hamllton'

18.K... Pollr(tl)

,... mony IOngloo In lho -iv lopo

r--------.,.

__,

18. Jolin A- (17)
.

cute lt'J give a pair of glasse~lo
Ernie lrvan . That was nol ·
funny. Ernie may not have
meam to hit Sterling.

lo~-­
lllcllord Polly'e
...

will.-.

(anA....,uclul

· "COld-blooded" is all t con
IIY aboul Slerlin1 Modin. I
....., he lhoughl il would be

llle'-tMdos••No.43
oi"-Dy El1101pt I

lh&lt;ludy-at-.......o

Clood &lt;pi

Prlee~~-NI==•

OW Your Tum.

liloonellle_,

'Thrwln • row, lour to. go

7.1--n(T)
S1lll

'

~- LMI

..........

Ala8oluCe l.owMt

Bobby Hamilton

13.lllolo -(11)

lho-'

So•••

·

Tlllo---

(11

6.--(1)

(

"

You've Got OuiiiiDIII, We'Ve Got Al•wara.

S....Ut:np...ReJNIIr
St. RL 7•1'omecoy, Oh

~~------------------------~~~~~----~~~~~----. .
·

~

6!f#d

DAVE'S

'

to play at Louisiana Tech on Aug. 30, ning Big Ten Conference play.
then host MiBII!i of Ohio on Sept. 6 · In 1999, Ohio Stale will host
before comin'g...to Ohio State for the . UCLA on Sept. 11 and Ohio on Sept.
second tiine in five years. The Buck- · 18. Griffin is .still tryi11g to find an '
eyes beat the Falcons 17-6 in 1992 opponent to open the season.
in the first game between Ohio Slate
The University of Pncinnati and
and another Ohio college sinoe 1932. Ohio State had discussed a game at
The Falcons will he Ohio S)ate's Ohio Stadium on Sept. 4, 1999. But
opener next season, followed by Ari- UC Athletics Director Gerald O'Dell
.zona at home on Sept. 20 and a Sept. -said the ·Bearcats were no longer
27 game at Missouri before be11in- interested because of conflicts with

It~~

tt-t

\-Count

Guaranteed Service

Winston Cup slate and standings posted
NEW YORK (AP) - The 1996
NASCAR Winston Cup stoc~ car
racing schedule. with winners in
parentheSes and driver point stand·
ings:
. Feb. 18 - ·Daytona 500,· Daytona, Fla., (Dale Jarrett).·
Feb. 25 - Goodwrench 400;
' Rockingham, N.C. (Dale Earnhardt).
Mar. 3 - Pontiac Excitement
400, Richmond, Va. (Jeff Gordon).
March 10 - Purolator 500,
Hampton, Ga. (Dale Earnhardt).
March 24 - TranSouth Financial
400, Darlington, S.C. (Jeff Gordon).
March 31 -Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn. (Jeff Gordon).
April 14 - First Union 400,

SeeJelfCiark

MujJler &amp; Tail Pipe
• Startinti at 1 79.95

'

..

' a free house, vacation trips. League. He has known Dombrows.
salary,
performance incentives and stock ki and Huizenga for years, and they
assured him the Marlins will aggresoptions in the Walt Disney.Co.
,
sively
pursue free agents.
•· .
Because he does not h~ye an
"We'I'C looking to ~king the .
age111. Leyland plans to have his
_accountant analyze lhe offers before club better," Dombrowski said. :'We
wouldn't be pursuing Jim unless that
he makes a decision.
'
"This isn't about money. I would Was the case."
nie White Sox, who are said to
have stayed in Pittsburgh if this were
aboi.tt money," Leyland said. "BJJtl be unhappy with manager Terry
never got past high school, and I Bevington, offer arguably the best
want somebody· smaner than me talent of the four and an organizati'\)n
looking at these. There are real out- familiar to Leyland.
The Red Sox, who fired Kevin
standing offers .." •
Although friends have advised Kennedy on Monday, also offer talhim to try managing in both leagues. ent, a large, loyal fan base and a
before his career ends, Ley land commitment to improve their minorwould prefer to silly in the National league system.

OSU announces· Bowling Green and
Ohio as future football foes
.
.

SeeSteveMBS~Jtl

The Deily Seutlnel• Pege 7

Ohio

·I

Boston Red·Sox enter bidding war to gefLeyland_ a~manager
pocket." •
free h~me and incentives. The total
to three teams."·
By ALAN ROBINSON
"We knew there would be a lot of value would have approached $2
PfiTSBUROH (AP)- Jim Ley- .
The Marlins assured him in a
land,warned he woul(!n't get entiCed face-t&lt;l'-face meeting they won't be . interest," Marlins general · manager million a year.
After that proposal,became pubinto a , biddiDI! war. The Florida outbid. A Red Sox dele11ation led by Dawe Dombrowski said, "We didn't
know
what
the
numbers
would
be.
lie,
Marlins president Don Smiley·
Marlins, Chicago White Sox, Boston chief• executive officer John HarRed Sox arid . California Angels nngton met with Leyland on We're sti.ll llopeful and optimistic ·and·Dombrowski tlew to Pittsburgh
.
to persuade Leyland they will comapparently didn't listen.
· Wednesday night before returning to that he'lljoin us."
. The Marlins have been the fron- pete aggressively with any offer.
The former Pittsburgh manager Boston to interview other candidates.
"Wayne Huizenga is not going to
talked with lhe Marlins and Red Sox
No matter where Leyland goes, trunner since Leyland announced
on Wednesday and will likely choose his next contract will likely be wonh Sept. 17 he would leave lhe Pirates. be outbid on something he really
his next team by the end of the week. as much or more than St. Louis man- An aide to team owner H. Wayne · wants, by (Chicago Wliite Sox ownThe Angels dropped out of the race ager Tony LaRussa's $1.5 million- Huizenga said Monday that Ley- er) Jetty Reinsdorf or anyone else,"
Wednesday.
said a source close to Huizenga.
a-year deal, currently the richest land's hiring was a "done deal."
. · "California and I have decided .among managers. Leyland made
That was before the White Sox
The offers, Leyland said, are
that we don't have a match," Ley- nearly $1 million with Pittsburgh.
pitched a deal worth at least $1.4 "overwhelming. !can't imagine get,.
land told lhe The Palm Beach Post
Not bad money for a man who million annually. The Angels had · ting any better offers. "
in Florida'. "We co~ldn't ·reach an once said, "I was happy when I had topped that with an offer that inchJdThe Angels • bo~us-laden package .
agrcemeq~ sci we're bOth moving in
a pack of cigarettes and a buck in my ed Walt Disney Co. stock options. a ,, _included $1.2 million annually in
different directions now. I am down

992·21~_!1UFFL£R sHo~2198

~Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

w

Followina last year's pmo. the point )(_itks.
Eastern continpt ran11 Soulhem's
In thelkatl'alo.loU, quarterback
rusty victory bell. Thatswck hard in Steve Durst, who has come off lbe
the crawls of the Southern suppon- injured reserve list quite nicely.
ers, who hope to turn lhe tables in managed 74 yards on six carries and
this year's bout.
"!as 6-15 passing. D,\'fSt passed for
The non-teacue season ended last one touchdown and ran for anolher
week. This week the battle for the in a, good effon. Eastern amassed
TVC crow bel!ins. Last week, the 227 yards overall. Eastern's Jeremy .
Buffalo-Putnam .Bi!ons were not Calaway had lhrce catches for 60
about to be putout to pasture as lhey yards.
tore down the ll8leS and posted a 46Fresh off the disabled list, Durst
13 stampede over the Eastern Eagles. rewmed in a big way against Win by
Adam McDaniel has 'been the completing 4'9 passes for 114 yards
Eastern workhorse. The senior run- and two touchdown passes. Durst
ning back is noted for his pounding also tough-nosed several big gainers
running style and great second and off the scramble to keep a coUple
third effon. No one stops McDaniel eventual scoring !!rives alive.
on lhe ftrst hit. No one.
Meanwhile The Bisons weren't
Last Friday, McDaniel again had just out to graze; they migrated for
a good offensive night, running for 334 yards and were led by Hanshaw
Ill yanfs.oo 18 carries. Two weeks with an 11-153 night and tailbal:k
ago, he led the charge with 18 car- Parsbns' 11-160 yard night. Haikal
rie,5 for 170 yards and a touchdown. had one. catch for 33 yards. This
McDaniel's effort was highlighted by illustrates Eastern's u:n~ency to yield
good Eastern,blocking up. front and far too many yards, especially in crugreat second and third effons that .cial situations.
added to his accumulati·ve effort.
Additioitally. McDaniel was also a
Defensively, Southern holds. the
defensive standout with two quar- same sieve,•giving up way too much
terback sacks and added two extra in the trenches. Compounding the

•

.

.,
I

�-

111e Dally Sentinel• 119.9

Pomel'or • Middleport, 'Ohio

Thurechr, Ocll!lbet'S, 1•

40

POmi!Vy,

GIYNWIY

lllddlepOI1 .
I VIcinity I

Children• Ctolhal And Shott

114-2415-5215.
Eitlhl mll1od lnod puppltt, _ , Four llmlly- 0&lt;- a a •· Fltll
... - . .. -.114- 1111 In I yoor~ . So01a1111~ _for
•esss·

-

•••,......
· CDII I IOCftDI

RealdentJal ·~ Commercial
Roofing.- Rubber- Shlngtaa- Minor Repairs

Gultlrl lncl Downtpouta
Conipiete Remocllllng
Decks - BIU 1100111e - Kitchens - Siding
35 y..,. Expwlwrce

C614) 992·5041

1·100.119·3941

HUBIARDS
GREENHOUSE
SVfbi\CUSE
•Hardy Mums
•Fall Pansys
•Fancy Gourds
•Dwarf &amp; 141rge
Pumpkin•
•Winter Squash
•Hanging Baskets
Open Molldey.Sotunloy
N; Cloaeci Sulldoy
1111211 mo.

• I

EV.ERY VE'HICLE ON THE LOT HAS ·
BEEN: SPECIALLY PRICED
FOR THIS SPECIAL EVENT.

$3.011 per min.

ltHIIII

MIL: ·id..Speiiii'IG-'10
WilL:
5.- Otb111s '5 Off
'llllrs.: First GriiiiiiiJ
......Prbs-.1
Grllmlll y, Price
( ... ,., . . . . I,.C'-11

614-"'"6244

614-915-4110

NEW WINDSTAR OL

· ly ... I I 111 lilly

41311 1 mo. pd.

"LOADED"
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-

BING'S

WAS$24,600

· AUTO

COLLINS
CO·SI·ICTIOI

of!Nidlnllal Remodeling

.REPAIR

NOW~8.995

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

949•2057

•Addlllona
C-truc11on
oOv1r 10 Yre. "-lence·

ot.ow-

ofrw~tt-

•All Work~raniHd

MIIE ·BING

614-9112-91110

•LOADED•

WAS s20,485.

·s-ws.
WAS S17,135

.

"No Job Too Large or Too Smafl" .
We will work w~hin your budget.
Ph, n3-9173
.
FAX 773-5861
108 Pomeroy Str.et
Maaon, WV

Aeration Repair or Replactment
(UmeStone-

Lowflllee)

10% Discount for Sept. &amp; Oct.

WICKS

Evening and WMklnd !!! I·Char1•
110/2 mo.

HAULING

St. Rt 7

POMEROY V.F.D.

CHI¢KEN &amp; RIB BARBECUE
SUN., OCT. 6
AT FIRE. STATION
SERVING STARTS AT 11 AM

EiHC

Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8' lhru 36"
:
4' &amp; 6" Fie~ pipe
4' S&amp;D- pert.• solid pipe
4" &amp; s· Sch 35 pipe
'It &amp; •t: C.P. v.c . pipe
1'lt'thru 4" Sch 40 pipe ·
'/." &amp; 1' 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' rolls thru 1,000' r9lls)
'1." U.L approved Conduij
·
8' Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1" lhru·2" - fittings - Regulators - Risers
·
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex tittings &amp; Water fmin~s
F,ulllina of Cistern, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa
-Room AddiUona
-NewGnga
·Eiectrtcal.l P.lumblng

Po•norc&gt;ir. Ohio, r•..rvoo
to bid 111hll .....
withdrew tho obovo
collo1orol prior 1o 1111.
Further, Tho Form1ro Bonk
Sovlngo Compony
r111rveo 1ho right to rejoct
ony or eH bldo l~bmlt1od.
ebove

ilEA TilE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

TODAY
1·900·656·5050
Ext.3998

na

Pick up dlicarded
appliance•, balterleo,
.many-leA
motor blocka.

COLLINS

CONSTRUCTION
•Acdtkma·
·New~

Fri. 8:00.12:00
Sat. 9:30-1 :30

·• -Over 10 Y11. Experience
. oi.Dwfl-.

· Pomeroy Ea~ Club

.of- Eltlo1 1B I
•All Wotli Ouat•llead

Invited

114-112-8110

. .,
'

•

Garage'Sale-1918 N. Main Sl.

·
i

: Thura, Frl, John

·
WOOd craho.o1C.
lana :20::5:.4:::1h:::S::.t.::N::.ow-,.,Ha-.-.n-.=rh_u_ra-:&amp;

1522 Slate Route 141.
5 Family: 115 M i le~; 141, 1015, 9·6.

19' Trailer. Air Hockey Table,
Sponing Equi~ Mor.el
'

5 Family : Salurday, 1 112 Miles

·Fri. Oct 3&amp;4th. Loll of baby
,clothes &amp; IT'()ra.

Yard Sale-Friday, Oct 4th. tOam2pm 8th St . New Haven, blue
1
·house betllnd post olflce.

Below Eureka, Route 7, Rain Can-

Yard · Sale-Gianw8re, clothe'"l;

eels.

piciUres, teddY bears, Rt.2 PIHS·

All Yard Salts Mutt Be Paid In -~~- RK:tge Rd: 112 mile on lett Frf.

Advance. DEADLINE : i:DD p.m.
lhe day before lht ad II 10 run.
Sunday edilion · 2:00p.m. Friday.
Monday edilion · -1D:OD a.m. Sal·

.

:

f=::________

YARD SALE -Hantord Union Hall
Friday, ~1. 4th 9·? Baby clothea,

r::0.3::,:I:,:,Io:::;l&gt;:,:o::.;fm;::ise:::,_
. _..;..___

Bidwell Unl~ed Ml1hodio1 Cl\ot&lt;:h, 80
Public Sale·
Chon:h s-1 Oeioi&gt;o&lt; •m. sm. a
and Auction
_:To:.:5:.:
. Ra.::._in~Or-51;'--:-:noc-.,.--::--:--:- . f2 Hour Christmas Audion-Sat-

Bfg Yard Sale: Wed. Thurt, Fri, urday Ocl. 5ti112:DOpm · 1~:00am
Sal. Antiques, Furnilure, Electri- · MI. Allo Aucllon Rl2·33 &lt;?ross.
cal Clothing , Tools, New IIams . roads~ I~ Full Hours of Christmas
Dally, Firtt Salt This Ytarl 1 1!'1 B~ys. 8~11 f:A~ore , to start . Ron
MiNI Off 7 On Teens RUn Road.
. Puce, w1U lm1sh. wtothers In between . Ed Fraz1er a30 . Br~nda
Five Family Garaoe Sale: 1127 ,F'"=':.:"",.:A·1:.:.05::.·-,--,---:--Stale Reule Ul , Baby Hems, -::-.
Name Brand Clolhlno : Muc.h Rick Peanon Auclion Company,
Morel
.lull time auctioneer, complete
auction
service. Licensed
Friday. 9:00·5:00 2 1/2 Mll~l Out 166,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304218, Up Hill On Right Ma,...- Child- 773-5785 Or 304·773·5447. •
ran's ' Clothes' And Toys, B&amp;!by

Wanted to Buy

. 614-11112-4025 8 em-8

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

"AM AIOiiT OUII
ROOFSf.CUL"
L-;;;.;;.~;;;;........

Friday, Saturday, 9-5, 2218 Eastern Avenue. Lot 22, Teens
Clothlis, Home lntlfior. Etc.
· ·
Garage $ ale: Frlday,· M11chell
Road Watch For Signs.
Garao8 Sale : Saturday 4132 Ad·
dison Pike, Larry Shaetl Rtt. ~";
Gioanlic Vard S•le: Thursday
And Fifday, 112 Mile Off 218, 6-5.

Personals

Cornp
'onlleldoplion
Lewing, chlldleaa couple. long to
1dopt lnflnt. LIQaiiConlidanlial.
. Wt ca~ helpt Please call Jonna

1 s-. 1·801HI4S.S715.

30 Announcements
'Art you liCk ll'ld lirtd ol being
sil::k and lired1 Help youratiJ 10
blner Meith with all ,..tural herbal Yitemlna, Wtlghl lau plan,
hlrbll •••· bulk and mu~ pro· .,am. For tnbrmation call Wendy,

814-1182-7302.

~:::.:=::....,--_--:-- 1

304-875-1051.
We ptocen!lear, mako,hlckory
omol!od hlml, nil bologna, pop.

·lng suppllea, llctn11 &amp; game

cl1tck ••11on. sywgP't Hen.

-wv.

Giveaway ·

, 4 Kin- 10 !Pwo · 1·CIIico I
TiQ11 Slrlppld. 'Slime... Red

.Po1n1. I Watk'l Old. 304·112·
3557.

S1er1lng, Eo:.

Acqol~dont

• M.T.S. Cain Shop, 151

-'-rr
S.C:Ond

Aven..le, GallipoliS. e.tt,~-2842.

Ctun late Madel Cars or
Truc:ka, 1890 Models Or Newer,
Smith Butck Pontiac:, t90D Eastern Avenue. Gallipolll.
,

Laroe Ettate Sale: Appliances, 'J &amp; O'a Auto Parts. Buying IllFurniture, Clothing. And Lots 01 vage vehicltt. Selling pllrll. ~·
Miacellaneoua Item&amp;. All Good f:T/3~·50::::33:_.- - - - - -

~~u: ri':~;·; ~\ii i~~·m 7~~ ~N~

Early Birds Before 8 A.M.

Junk Cars &amp; Truck Varloua Running Vahiclta &amp; Car Parta, 6144&lt;8·45311.

I

·Brin&lt;l1o ''1 boUt boxor mix, 111

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Octclber 3rd, 4ttl, .Q-5, 3 Family,
Jewelry, Coa11, All Sizes Clothat,
Decor &amp; M01'e, Signs Sidwen Rodney Pike, 850 Hill &amp; Neal.

Sa1Urday, 10151h. Old 35. A1 Rod·
nay Former
Shoppo. 9... '

D~~tl l lle'l

·

110

Hl!lp Wented

Malt h;.:::~=~~~~~

Thura, Fri , 8·5, On tloute 180
ViniOn, Home Number: 15432.
Two Familits: Friday, Saturday, 9

$20().$~

-kly. A"""'ble

Pf'oduc:llll home, easy! No sel!-

lngiYou',.paiddirattFuHyguaranteed. No e11perienc:e nect&amp;·
aty. Cal 1 days, .a7-B75-2022
..1. 0598H38.

To 5. 1711 Che11nut Slr"t. Gllli- 1:-:=-:-:=~==:-=----:
polls OhiO.
, • ATTN: Point Pleasant' Posral
.
,
Poiilions, Per'manen1 hJU time lor
Wadnesclay 2nd, Thuraday 3rd . cleriVIOrltn. Full Benafitt. For
280 FoLtrth Avenue G·1 We- ••am, appticillon and aalary info
ltrbtd, Chaatdrawert, WeU1er, call: 1708)901·2350Ex1.3170.
. Lorge Si,.Ciolhll, L011'1.foro1
8am-8pn\ .

. Pomeroy,

Plono L-no tor boglnnera. CaM

40

Ab~al'lne Top Oolar: All U.S. SiJ.
var And Gold Colna, Praolsetl,
Diamonds. Afltlqua Jewelry, Gotd
'Ringa, Pra·1930 U.S. Cur,..ncy,

=:.:::::::.:=.:.:._____

peroni, jerky, su.mmer tiUIID*,

Apptarlng

,

GIInl, Unilorma, GIIIIWirt,

MovinQ Sate : Rain !Shine, 3rd, l-'-:....:.:=----.,.--4rh, 5th, 9·'1, .2 Miles Out ~ison ·Top dollar- antlquet, lurniiUre,
Pika. 87 Grand Am. Gtrls Bik&amp;, Olall, china, c:locka, gotd, IIM!r,
Bow Muth Morel
coln1. watetwt. Htatea, old IIOt'lt
.Jarfi, old blue &amp; white dishes, old
October 3rd, &amp; 4th, 8:00, L111 01 wood bo•H, milk· boUle•. Melgt
The Season. Gla11war~, Wimer County Adverlltement , Osby
Clothes, Firtplace Blower !Insert ::;M"':.:.,.,
. ;:;·1:;1:.
4·992:;::.·:.7•::•.::1·-.,.-~
Po11, Pans, Lots Of GOOdies, Dog ·
House. Band Instrument, N.ew Wanltd To Buy: Junk Auto• With
Typewriter, tU -367·1•01, Turn Or Wltt\out Molora. Call ,llrry
Out Rou11 554, At Traffic LiQhl In Lively. e1• 31!18 8303
Cheshire .

Cooler klp1, ~.....!lry. HIKI1·

, CROSSOVER

Members and

(

FUN WAY

•Reeldentlal Remodeling

(304)
37·2·3673
Dealer Retains Rebates.
f

MEET NEW
PEOPLE THE .

ttt'fl11n0. • •

~

.

,~.

" 2.MIMin. 1a.-s.~,;..u
(818) 845 ..,. •

4:30 ~ubllc Welcome'.
Under new 111111llg&amp;lment

• I

1112.f215
P.amaroy, Ohio

oollllorel will bo oold In 1ho ·
condition It 11 In, with no. ·
oxpr ..o ·or lmpllod
wornnt111 given.
Far further lnformotlan,
contoct Jorry.lllll2-7430 or
111:1-&amp;111.
·(10) 2. 3, 4; 3TC

Racine Ohio American Legion
Post 602 wtn start Bingo on
Oct. 6, 1996. Doors open

I

•Roofing
•Interior I Exterior
Painting
AIIO Concrete Worfl
(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill ,

Farmer• B•nk and
•
c·ompany,

BINGO

••1N STOCK"

. . · Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
614-985-381'3 or 614-667-6484

Pl~stlc

30 Announcements

th1

Friday Oct. ·Hh, 9am- ? On At 87
at Sybil Campbell Residence. A
little bit o1 ev&amp;rylhing.

11ems. Household 11e11ia, aooka, 90

G&amp;W PUSTICS AND SUPPLY

614-992·3470

Furttter,

5 Family Garage Sai•S~alfh0Ue8 ·
Rd. near Muon Co. Fairgrounds.
Thurs-Fri·Sat Oct. 3·5 Rain Can- ·
celt! Lots of Avon , clotnea &amp;
Home Interior.

Misc.

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top SOli, Fill Dirt

, PI/BUC NOTIC.E·
. NOTICE lo horoby glv•n
thll on Soturdoy, October 5,
11111. 1110:001.111., 1 public
1111 will be hold 11 1100 E111
Main 111rwt, Pomeroy; Ohio,
to 1111 for cooh tho
tonowlng oollo~&lt;~tot:
1t74 • Trovol -Mote
CPZ373v.lo2o54

•-'8"

day. 9·5. 338 LoGrOilda BNG.
i1emi, car par1s; s1ereo, 1oya,
3 Faml~ .,,. 5ale: 10/4 Friday B- .,.;ng
clres. set
co'mputer, prom dreuea,
5 P.M..10/5 SaNrday 8·12 Noon. =:=..:::::_____,.-l---,.,..___.,,-

...,..

FAL'·CUAN·VP

f'ubllc Notice .

3 Famuv: October· 4th, sm. 8:304:00. 163 Lariat Drive, Rain f
Shine, Bikes, Sma11 Motorcycte, •

Roid.

Authorized AG.A Distributor
• Welding Supplies • .Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Wl[llding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps·• Stalni, Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangeni, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuHII

992·7119

,FORKED.RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
FRIDAY,
OCTOBER 4
. AT 6 P.M.

·&amp;VIcinity

1

Woman• Clothes, 588 While ,Friday Oct. 4th Clottl~s all t itet,

Ext. 4300

&amp; truck painting,
minor.mechaniCIII
rapalr.
Tune-upa, 011 Ch~~~ge,
Wax, Butlfng
• ·• '"""' SL, Rutland; Ott.
742-21135, Aak for Kip

Off 218, Childrtne ClothSofa. Tablea, Oi~eue
Morel

~-900-476-3131

Body work, Cllr, truck

.ON ALL THE NEW
ON THE LOT FROM THE NEW' KID ON THE .,LOCK,
WHEN WE.OPEN THE DOQRS OF OUR BEAUTIFUL SHOWROOM THIS WEEKEND!
I·77 FAIRPLAIN EXIT 132
1

.

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE

SAWMILL

AVB.,

October 5th Only, 139D Orchard

742•3212
~================""=-~

Beautiful Glrlsll
Exciting!!
Passionate II
Talk to .'em
·live!!

INSULATION

Pt. Pleasant

Misc.
Garage SS:Ie-110 Main St. New
Stl Ck/MIG AI UmInum Weldl ng. ~ · .Wheeler,
Family ...rd Sole: friday. Sa!ur-. ·Ha•en, Oc1ober 3 &amp; ' · 9-? Baby

..

. BE OUR GUEST. •••.
YOU'RE CORDIALLY INVITED TO

E•t.'Tools. -Misc. Clothes.

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

, ,

WAS 5-J!,

,
C~RS

..,..,..,,

ROOFSPECUL

'14,

· •LOADED•

lndu.strlal • Automotive ..
New Radiators • Re-Cores
A/C Conden88rt/Hoae Aasemblys

BONDED

-·

4 Drawer Chest ClOthing, Flowers, ,.,...,.,,.,...,.::,~~~~=
Curtalnt, Storm Door, Pipet For 'ltlrd Sa,._ue El'iglilh Rd. OclobWoodbum"!' Muct1 MOfel
er 3-.ti·S, Thur·Ffi·Sat1
Steel
belted radial lire• I whQels, n~t~
10141h, 10/Sth, 1D-4, 10 Hlldl Dr. c:orlWCIOf' &amp; lteld mill.

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

949•2445

.

GAUGE

614-742·2193

'
C:ILLTODA"

ERRAND SEIVIC£

LOCAL CRAFTERS featuring can, saw, slate
paintings, oak shelves; quitt racks;
goose outfits; fall deeorations. •
WATKINS PRODUCTS featuring grape seed oil
(lower in saturated fat lhan olive oil)
TUPPERWARE- Some cash and carry.
Place orders/book parties/gilts/lund raisers
Mon. thru Sat. 1(}6, Sunday 1-5
2 millis North Silver Bridge on SR 7

H&amp;H
3212A Happy Hollow Rd.
Mkkt141pott,Ohfo 45710
Dtonny I Peggy lrlddoo

SHOPPING/DEUVEIY .

614-446-4530

J&amp;L SIDING&amp;

•..,...,"'"·

•LOADED~

1013 ·Sih; 9-s. 1•2 t .... Garftekl.

IVYDALE COUNTRY CUFTS &amp; GIFTS.

GRUESER~S

Porlable

GRoan

.'\45K ABOVT OUR

lv... ' WoohM Noon
mo. pd.

THUNDERBIRD

ltul~ll ll"clll

Saturday, October 5, iam·3pm.
Dave Spencer rtslclanct, Main
Slreel, Racine. Men'1, women's
and girl's clolhes, household
ilams, loll mlac.

MORNINGSTAR
EXPRESS.

Muata18 yra.
Serv-U (8111) 645 1434

PAMPERED PAWS

HAYIIIFERIICII

NEW MUSTANG

Ext.1~

1/llllln

YEIY IUIOWU ·

WAS '$25,5=10
..
NOW .S19,995 .

1•800 484 1020

949-2168

tor,...

"lOADED"

Queatlona

Painting
, ..FREE l:STJMATES'

Let •• tlo1t

o.:-

10% Off el! quollfylng blda
LICifllld, ~,8ond1d

.

. ,.,..,.,

..

, ........I..
1·100-470.2559

Gutter Cleaning

'•"',

To A Good Home, 0.,1 81•-388- Moving Ull· tofa &amp; IDYIIIIt ,
8.»4, Afleit 5:00 11+:0.8 0088.
furn iture, cur•inl &amp; bedtPraads,
clolhlng ol all si zes, mlscellaneLab mix puppl" lo glveawayo, av t 111m1, Roger Spaun rl~ l·
114·11411-3403.
dtnct, Vint SUHI. RaciM, OhiO,
3Al. 4th, 7 Slh.

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

NEW·REPAIR

FREE ESTIMATES

.

•3-4 . ~prn .

(No Sunday Calls)

About Ufe?

INTIIIOI·EmiiOI -

Getm•n Shephtrd e Monlhl Old

Un11od .,_1t1 Chutth, s-.d
SlrNL Thurldty I frldly, Oolll&gt;

614-992·7643

Rellltlonshlpal
Career! Moneyl
~vel Talk to
Psyhlca Uvel

,.a•tl...

NEW CROWN VICTORIA LX

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COt.tMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESnMATES

ROOFING

LINDA'S
PAINTING

.THE INTERNET

814-7.C2·~

IMI!IIIIIIItlns

Downapouts

1·77 FAIRPLAIN, EXIT 132
-RI.PLEY, WV .

BISSELL BUILDERS, IIC.

Gion1lnllclo )11rd • • Po...,.y

Flit dirt, JC)_~ t\lul, eaay accua.

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

.Guttera

DO NOT MISS THIS

old: 1!04..7W7111.

Rd..-

T•mera
Construdiqn Inc.

Howard L Wrlteaal
. '

_ , _ , Countl 2, Brill IIICigO

FIDtlla·tabbyiWhlte cal, 10mo1

Middleport.
- &amp;Vlqlnlty

AVON l AO Areai I Shirley

sp.,., 30&lt;-17§.,.29.

Able Avon Aepruentallvas
needed. Earn money for Chrill·
All Yard Salta Must Be Pa id In mas billa a1 hom&amp;'at work. 1-800·
Advance, Oe1dline: 1:o~pm the 002·8356 or 304·882· 264~, tnd.
day belo,. the ld 11 to run, Sun- Rep.
day a Mo.nday •dhion- 1:OOpm I.;;:=:,-:---:--:--:--:-.,-

friday.

·AVON Saito. $8 ·115 IHr. No

Door To Door, 0.. Minimum Order.
careon saie, Octoblr-$-4, SR 7, eonu1u t -800-827-•ua lndl
girls , inlan11 to size 8 clolhtl, '511/Rep.
.
;
women' a and mtn's clot~l ng,
Babysitter Needed l_
n My Home,
· -· d'"- mloc. flom.Spm.
Btlort Schoof &amp; Soma Eveninoa.
aalt-Qc:l. -4th, 11·1, Tyree Can OH--Mt-0124 Met 5 P.W.
, crahs &amp; m~ttrialt,
ttggc:talt mlllresa, Conlml11ion ~enf Outside Perton Growing Pnnter Health Benefill French City Prtu 423 SecChurch blltmtnt 111• Tuppera · ond Avenue, Gallipolis, OH

Plolnt,&lt; Oc1obor 4·5, llom·4pm. r,.•::513::.:1;.,
. -:--:-~:-'-:-:-=
,C1otingondmloc:.l11m1.
·lcompulor Uoaro Ntodod. Work
. Ctc1o1 Plon11, lnalda I ou,_. 'chut&lt;:h )11rd tol•· cio,Obtir 3·4: own hourt.l20tlll SSOkrtr 1-8111).
,304-e~.
5&lt;3 81-• s-. Mlddeport 3-48-?181 x1508.
'
·lholt, ..., .......... ;_,.ct
:ln,I1,...1-1Da

ldclo,

•

..

�'

Otllo

1188

•

PIDLLlP
ALDER

•

,-CA088

.,_ ID 1011

1 DIO.t It I
' 1 UU.~
I ts Paii:P4 aue
11M
11 Sooolt -

a~=:.
P%¢11 r

• 1thlnll. ...._

1

u•-

lin-•"~Wellf. .. . 111111 - ••
-?

·1 4A......... 11 WOOdy,....,. 50 Pt"'io1181Y
_ . . (2 wde.l
monlloned
3 Blldraom, 2 ..... N;, Jenn Alt,
2.1 Acroo, CuoiDm Kltc:hon, Ap·

Olacover~ Toys NeaiiYou. Earn
YP 1D 130hv, showing parents h
eduutional value qf our toya,
bDokt &amp; eompurer aotr.vere. Call

I

I don't

="'

Socludod, 4 MlnuiH ID

. 114 441 IUS:

• Q

trill just_ i:aH

II48.1S1+3a7·7010.

4

Wllapea at home. Be your boas.
Swt now. No txP.,ienct. Fr..
llllltllltl into, no obliQollan. &amp;end

Childclitt 114·441 015-4
And Up Certified, Doily

10151 Univertitr Blvd. Orlando

Will Clean Oul G1r1oes, Build~

4

• J.

for, Sale

• 11 1

s.t~~'
•AK17S2
• 75
t A Q 7 S
.. Q
!:Y

lngo. Etc. S30 Load Burlne UnAIIIOO. 014 446 31108.
HOllE TYPIST, PC uNro nood· -

eel. ••s.ooo Income poltnllal.

Coll-«10-513-1343 E1&lt;1. 8-QII.

20 worar.·

FINANCIAL

Lady To live .In With Elderly
l.ldy. 114- U13.

511 ~. on
, 111* 1111. .
57 Fling

1 · CO Dp II'IIIW
. 22 lltlno'l -

Glw--"'*' 51-Uu

' 23
24.._out

•111111

320 Mobile

S:A.S.E. to NU880t Unll 384·1,
FL32117 .

l.

54 Nobody
&amp;6 Driii..IIC
conflict

18 Poeitlve vow
18 -Tift lin

Kt 5
•K1843
Elllt
• Q 43
t

53 ... -

huablncl

• J 8

.

now lor more details. 304·1 75- Pn&gt;lolllonal Troo .Sttvlco. Stump
Rtmovat, Free Ettimlltlf In·
51'11 ..... - . . Pll1itl.
''"once. Bklwoll. Ohio. 814·SU.
Earn 10QO't weekly stuffing . ,.

t7 Jecldt'l 2nd

a.

ft~ln

DOWN
1 llldlcal plcl-

=~

5 Plllnl pNI

2 BlloolglngiO

34 ,.,. ol dog

8""•... .

""'

·-·-pege

7~wl

3 Ac1rMI
llllgnanl
: 37 ....., o• • !&gt;IIIII· 4 ll;llgllg81n a
wlnMr lport
311

BOnewhoL
(a alooy)
t --llrslyou

• Zllcll

'"-led· -

~.

Vulaetable: Eut-Weet
~er:South

.
.

. LPN patt time position availabte

for f:agrelltive Rehlbllllltlon/

Weot

Skiled ICF tullhy. Experience
preterrlid but will Consider 11'11
' rlgl\t ... lluSI be willintiiD
wof1( 11 a ttam member with an
tllcefltntataff of 'lheraplttt and
· nuraas that have a hlttorr of 5
_ . llillhout . , AlgUiototy """"
ptillnc:a i11uls. Excetlent benefit

Pau
Pau
Pau

WHIN WOULD

lEVER WEAR
THAT THINe?

Opening lead: • A

PldoiQe. Ro11dng thifts roq~~lrod.
Call 814-992 -5105 or send resume to Rockspring1 Rehabili•tiOn Center, 38759 Rocktprings

The women's
knockout

Ad,, """-· 011.4571!8 EOE.

By Pkllllp Aider

llature reaponal~e perao., for

...

ouolodlol dutloo. Send applloa·
. tlont rHume tD: Box 113, SyraOUN, 0H 45178 or Clll81 ..882·

-

lOOt-• ....I!Jttl~ flamblo

- . , .,., 31J4.8'/!J.UI43.
N&amp;DIED-IATELY:
--Fori,.,.
claa Oporq Ai Local Bollinoll.
[-io!IOO A Ptut, Bot Not ~
- r . Fot ,...low, Pltloo Cal

oltaln.
·.
Jim Rootly't Auelloll ~leo
&lt;0065 SR 124.
·
Raoino. Ohio

HARTS IIASONARV - Block,
briCk &amp; stone WOfk, 30 y~ar• a1·
perltnce, ruaonable rates .. 304·
885·3591 aher e:oopm, no job to

1111111 or 1D BIG. ·WV.021206

11ii-441-1P15.

814·e48·21i2

1981 Fairmont 14X54 Gas cook

stove &amp; furnace, all appliances
ineludod, C/11 Uri~ rica. 18,500.
1978 Park Estate 14X70 Wftaroa
tiving room &amp; dining room. txpan.
do, 211t, 2 beth. lrorn porch, largo
deck included, e/1 unit. $1~ , 500

Warm Morning Gas Heater
'85,000 BTU 8 t4·38We19.

I

AI real- ad&gt;ortialng In

tn11 newtJltiPI' II subject to
tho F - Fillr Houolng Act
Dl1ii8B which mol!8o H.lllogll

10-or'lnr '"""""ICO·
lmilalb•

dllcrflr•llllllon

biNII on '"""· COlo&lt;, rollgldn.
--1-ornallonal
• otlglii, or any - I D
make llf1 ouc:1t plfotoriCO,

-llonor-i••-··

___......,_
:This new 11111• wtl not

kl-91' IICCepl

mum) COL, Good MVR, No
DWI'o, Poll DOT Phytical &amp;

Drug Screen, Send Reaume To:
P.O. lax 788, Galllpolit, dH

411131 .
Po1111 Jobs 3 Positions Avail·
able, No Experience Neceuary,

For 1-Uon. Calll-818·784·
1011 ElL 31111.

•

- · In lllolalfan of tho law.
Our-. ON hafeby

. .·-on

tntormeclthlt .. ell •• 9
rdvertiMd In this "" I"P8r
an equal

for Rent

550

,

..excellent shape, 11klng $1400,

61 ..74l!-1503.

. SUPPOSED TO BE
PITCHIN6 ..

I CAN'T PITCH'
KHOWIH6 THAT LUC'I'
IS IN RI6HT I=IELD!

1~ 70x14 Cerltury 3 Be4aou-.
2 Bllha, Heal Pump. _,.,. One
Owner. $22,500, 5 1 -.

1tl3 Flemming, 14x70, 'two btd-

· Pets

'!?Of'\DNbalh.-litl'S1UOO. 304·213·3214 or 304·

1885 Schultz 2 llodroornt, 2 Ful

. FRANK a: EARNEST .

fOr Sale

A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.
Featuri ng Hydro Bath . Don

Batht,' Beautiful Inside And Out
Many EJttast Oratttcallr Ae·
duced, Prlco Can'! Ill Bood 11 ..

Sheets. CaH 814-448.0231.

3117·8820.

.,.

A.KC Doberman Pups, 1st Shots,
Excellent Tempet menr, 61C -379·
2128.

Ntw·1897 14 Wfde.. 3 badroom,
1 beth, · -·
$1~-llilth
approved
crodiL
Call
1-100-181·

Miscellaneous

em.

Merchandise

AKC Pomeranian Puppy; AKC
Varkie Puppy ; AI(C German
Shephard; ·UKC American Eskimo
Spitz 814·441..0786.
·

AKC ReGistered 1.0 moiuh old
mate Mintatufe Pincher, $200, call
'8t4·882-72ell.
'AKC Registered Cocker Spaniel
:Puppies, Has All Shots, Asking

3111 Homes for·sa1e

1'50· 61-3275.
I$150,814-446-8253.Pomeflnian

2 Bedroom house in country, 1

aete. Betllot Rd. Sff Sandhill Rd. Pt

AKC Regiiilered

Pteaunl S35,01l0 new aiding &amp;
before

•

Pup

AKC Rlllllslorod Yallow Lab
pupa, firS1 shOtS, Wormed, dew
craws removed, health certifi·
cateS. 814-949·2481 afler 4pm or

2 Houses in Pt. Pleasant 304·.

~~sage.

Beagle pul)l, AKC· Reg, 8 weeks
old, hunting bloodline, wormed,

1St lholl, $75118. 304-8~440.

10gal tank set Up specials. Fish
Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2413_Jackson
Ave. Point PleUJOI, 304·875·

2063.

..

1981 OtdS Della 88, 350 diesel, 1996 Pateris o~~wd · • -wheete~ .. .,
new li res, 2 new 1000 CCA bat- $4,600.304-713-6166.
.
·
SSOO ; 78 Nova, 2 door,
miles, lmnr dl!,...ge, $ 250. 750 Boats &amp; Motors : ~

-. ;'!

for Sale

614·9•9·2877

1984 Pontiac Sunbl rd. ~ • Door,

304·773-6166.

... ..,

·z1·
•. l
'

Automati~. Air, 7S,DOO Miles, s' 0 -· A
Pa t &amp;
u .eoo oliO. t 990 Dodge Shad· 7
uto
r s
ow. 2 Door, Automat~. Air, n.ooo
Accessories
Mila~ $1 ,600 OB0,614-25e·1366
Ask· For Rancor AJtet 6 P.M.

.

'DIE BORN LOSER

·"rr~ t-10T wOI::Kit-~&lt;o. e.wro~

IRtbuilt, "'I I Types, Over

1985 Cavalier Engine locked Up, 10,000 Transmissions, ,Clutches

Flywheels, Overt1ual Kils, 814·

1985 Chevy Cetebrily Excellen1
Condition, New Tires $800 OBO
·614-446·6989, 614·357·7754.

New ·· gas tanks, 1 ton truck ,
wheels &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; R Auto.
Ripley, WV. 304 -372 -3933 or 1· !
800 ·2'13-9329.
~

·1986 Mercury Sable PW, Pl, PS,
Cus.e ue, Cruise, Goat:~
1AMI~M
1 Conditlo~. 69,000 614·446·2808.

1

CO/II£ ON 00\.JN !

New Tires. Body Fair $200, Call
After 7 P.M. 814-448·2530.

245-5677

I
' ..

I!J

Over 100 LB1e f.todel Low Mile·
age Mo.Jpra Out ot Insurance •
Salvaged .Autoa1 Trucks. Foreign, ·:
·1986 Pontiac 6000 SJE. 6cy.l, Oome,tlc, New Wlr,dthieldS. ·R•·
fsunrool, am-tm cassetle, ac, load- diators, Auto, 'Truck Sheet Metal. •
ed, 59,000 mites, S950 OBO.' 304· · .Over 500 Cars, Tr.ucks For Pari&amp;.
ti7S.7712.
Ftree
Parll

vw Golr 5 Speed, 4 c..,cte;

I

.

Fuet Injected, 614·258·68'70 Aller
5 ~M.

.$750, 16 fr. Traile( $850, 614·
388·9906.

1987 Dodge Shadow 2.2 Motor,
1Automatlc, Runs &amp; Drives Great,

.S1 .:m OBO, 6t4·256·6002.

;

•'.

l.tlnt Condition, 14.500

'Finn, 814-388-8425.

790

oriWVZS61o.

·

. ,.r ......
.,...u...

WOII Virefnio Cold O&lt;awn hat a
jab DPI'*'O "" .......,.~ poll.... Jab ,..._,..,At loatt 2
( U - ) in 1101&gt;
n1oo1 tc11ool. PLC programming.
.....,onlcal, Wll,cllne

·

anct eiHtric.r experiencl Pf•·
fltW'td, MandeiOr)' dr"g telling.
, . . . . JUbmil rHurne and appll·

6183.

Nlllll
.........ge " ~o~~.,.. ci ....
lour tcriltnbled ...to be-·
low to f0t111 .lour llmple wordrl.

•

ERSUOA

ClAN A

I' I I

I

I

A N Y 0 R ,..
·
~
4

We
those who .keep us so busy ~sf
f
~- lening to their troubles that we
::.-------4--=!....a hayen't time to dwell on ·--

I

I

•

•

•

le-~p~;. ~·

chuekl• ·q-d
by filling in the mllll"ll -ds
y6u develop from SlOp No.. 3 below.

~ANSWRS

,.

___

""'

SERVIC:ES

':"-;....__........:;;...;_

..'

·• '
I t

'·:

BASBENT

'

WATERPAOOFNG

.1 •

Waterproofing.

.

:: !
1

t

Roeort; ,
,. ,

• '

II, ~~;;;F;;;;A~~;;;:::A~
Parts And S.rvk:e: An:
7795.

~·

•:

e.., "

I Work Guaranteed, ... a
May tag!
.•

eu. ue .. V:

C&amp;C· Generil

'Home

Main·

;

162 Otds Cutla&amp;s Ciera ·• Door, .tenence· Painting, vinyl aid,lng,
v..a, Loaded. &amp;9,000 Mi•s. ED::el· carpentry, doors, Window•. balha.
. lent Condilion, $&amp;,895, e t 4·37~· mobil a holnt repair and nDre. for

.. . .

tree ellmlte call Chit,. 814-it2·

115323.

~

•

1t82 Oldsmobile Toronado Tor·
reo. loadtd. txctlltnt condition,

113,500, &amp;1 4-9411·2217.

Twin

lztd apt. for tldtrly 1nff handi·

capped. EOH 304-ll'!J.II'IU.

Fumlshld
llopms.·

· calion 10 8urHu of Emptoymen1
~~~- 225 s;,., St Pt Pion- .

110 Wlnttd To Do

..
'!!:~!':~: ...
.,
~·

.... ,,
•

~

-

-

-

110116 tOday by mailing $2 and SASE to · ing with close friends loday, don't see
Aslro-Graph, clo lhla newspaper. P.O. yourwll as superior or Interior. Lot yi&gt;lir
· Bo• 17511, Murray HNI Stalion, New Yor1&lt;, -inalinc:IS lw!lp you maintain yo&lt;Jr balance
NY 101511. Make sure 1o a1111o yo&lt;Jr zodi· on this dollca1o·Hne.
,
ac algn.
TAURUS (April 20-llly 201 Even as a
BERNICE
ICOIIPIO (Oct. a~. 112) TOday you laet res011, don't requut a favor lrom a
BEDE OSOL might IHI aa H you can't have a .good· . manlpulettve person tOday. He may help
lima without spending a lot of money. . you, tx\t thoro will be strings atlached.
Unfortunately, you may realize 100 fait ' GEMINI (MI\I 21..June 20) H yo~ have
a;;;--~....-..;.;
.. . lhel JOil are wrong.
.
spaCial plans for this evening, do not
IAG11TAIIIUI (Nov. za.DIC. 21) Other&amp; Include a friend who eeomi roluclanl lo
: 'l'illl~ yuu by your outward !lf)pear· go· along ,with lhem . He could put
. 81191 loday, 10 diwa. lnd demeanor wiN dernperoneve.yon.•atun .
be
mcnltnpotlwlllhen UIUill.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Do not
CAPIIICORN(Dio, 22-.IM. II) UN cau· . plal;eyourburdetll on olhet81oday. They
.lion IOday Wyou iNt hlfllllled 10 play lila might agree 10 halp you 1o gat you oil
• Fl'll*y, Oct. 4, 19118 1
,' rnte o1 1 ... .,.rtiiOI .. Willi lflie !hair bllc:b, but 11\eY _,, oomit through
~ lnduiWfoUe llmlllhan IIIUII C0U1c1 1\&amp;tt I
llloiiiiDi• to ~ rnigh! be otfen. tOr you In tho long run.
be In -tor J9U In lila ,_, ahald. lhll liNe to __,. lfle. .
LEO (July 23-AIII- 221 SomaQno you
will !Ia poaiiiW Wyou bolll\c:e yow IUo· AQUARIUI (JIIft. 10-....,, 18) Do nol in a oodal ollulllon todlly mlghl not
Willi ICOIIil IICIMIIN .. Will. .
~ ullllc to MY no 10' friend Wha 11111 1Q !Ia .. lhll ha ~tppM~a 10 be on lila lUI'·
IJIIIA·(alpl. • lhll II) lfou miQfll a1ap cnw ~ 1n1o an~..., people w11o ' -· T• C.. not 10 g. caug111 up 1n out af line IDdly and try ...... cndlt lor tllllce you feaiiMIOOiltluillll*t.
11111..-"1 cilllnn .
._~~mg lhel wu made poulble by 'IICII ('ell. IO·It•roh 101 When
YlllClO (Aug. 21·1ept. •221 Even II
• • • liM. Do n01.-..1n 10 your ego. IIOd'llzlng wllh •n lnflu•nll•l' contlct ' iiiDDIMIUillot _IDdly. mike lure 10 ·
Ott 1 jump on . .
IOcll!y; don't make lhll pMon feel u M keep lila promloll you've tllllde to tom11y
lnftut11011t 11111- you In !he yeer JQU!I"IUiinghlmortoarloufl\101.
ll*nbera. l will only·leld to .pnibillna I

a

e

n;'Wt/211560.

e..n

by,......,,..,

.-~-"'
.-...,.......
't
. , . . Sind tor your Allro-Onlph RIWdiO- ! . - . ,,... ...., . . . 111 Whlln
. dill- • you dan. .•

.

'

.

fU,fiAI&amp;Y

•

'

1G01 Cavalier 1 Owner 2 Doors,
Auto, AC, AMIFM Cassette, 614·

.

...•

'
. PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "Fo~r be lhe lhinga I'd been bettor withoul.: I Lov'o,
· curiooily, lracldes, and doubt" - Dorothy Parker.

~~: I wlo Ll u ,r"' A,:

.

-oritn&gt;oel\il Over 25 Years

•

,.

NVGLNCYGE

.

Used -One Time. Coli •'

1618.

450

NO

IPERNUXC •

3,800 New, $9,500. 814·446·

3btdroom, bath, livinG room w/

-o T-. ,_ ocoopting
appllcaU.o lor 1bt. HUO. aubllid·

( J 'T 0 A T I G E I

Equal Value, 814-441;0743.

Automatic, Air, Caesette, S2,300
080, 814·256 · 1252, 814 · 256-

RtiJTMS

X..

Do.

0870 Or 1·600-267-0571.

2067.

CTII

N

t 972
IIOIDr Hont&lt;t Sloopo.
8, $2,500, Or Trade For Truck

lion. 1 Ownor, 614·446-649L

·

JKT · AX~XIS,

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Uncondilional lifetime ouarantH. _....,
Local reference• furnfshed. Et}'
llbtiahed 1975. Call j614) 448~

245-$~78.

N.

TCJO

IJEXNL!XCXIS : '

I

191KJ Beretta tridy 500 Pace Car
153,000 Mites $4,000 61' · 446·
G783.
1990 Ford Taurus G!,. Sport
Wagon, Loaded, Exceltem Concli·

19GO Model Ford Tempo 4 Door,

oc

u.s."

304-157·1013.
Yltafnia. Cold 0,.,.., hal job· hardwood ftooro; kitchen .&amp; dnlne
DPI'*'O lor motorial handloro and area together. new roof, gal'lge:
cold drawn mill OP«aiOr. Job ,... on Rl 2. .~04·875'4138 or 30~·
•
qutremonlo: High ochool dogroo 875-1331•1!0&lt; 8:30.
or GED, pre-assessment tests,
end mendetory dn.tg testing. Ranch Strle 3 Btdroomo; 2 Cor
, . ... submit retume and appli- Gtfogo, Porlial BINmor\1, A..,..
Ground Poot, 8uil4iag, Approx. t
cation 10 Bureau of EmPIO~nt
Acre 5 Minul81 From Holzer,
225 SIXIII St Pt
I · 81 .....1218,

· s:K

Kills

1919 E-la
Promlar ES Excallonl 810
Home ;
-•
ConditiOn. ss,ooo. 61 •·24S.Q44g,
lyovements

-

.

..

II N I

1995 23Ft. Salem Camper Per- ':

'1987 Ptymouth Reliance P$," PB,
AC, Great' Condllion, Asking
$1 ,3'}0, 614·367· 7480.

ion~ Bodr

Propetly Or Starler Home. Call

·x

f

.
"
Slide-in truck camper, QOOcf Ul· ~
1988 Chelfy Caprice Classic V8, able condition , 1500, eu ~002 i.._
Flea Stoppers Carpet Pqwder 1 · !auto, air, $3500 614·44E'·4782
6915.
•.....
Year 1cmt. Gu•ranleed, Safe Far
Humans, Pets, Envlronf11entally ·1G88 lroc Z-28 '350 Runs Excel·

For Sale Br OWnor: 2 ·3 Bodroom
House In Galllpoll' Good R&lt;tntol

,.,.

,

.K

~

Aru ' .

Thank IOU. Chllotr .

Sale, 81.,24!1-5747..

· L....L.....io-

to .

1986

-----::-:::-=:=---1
lac Cimaron $1 ,050, 1983 Toytna
CHRISTY'S PETS
·Cre91ida 1850; 1978 Ford Pic&gt;.up
Advertise Your Business New
3' x6' Sunflower Signs Yellow Grooming, kennel, pall. supplies.
Blactt Letters ·oo the fleas got your· doQgy
down? We dip &amp; shampoo &amp; can·
eldon with this .ad aet $5 off your
crGOminQ appoimmenl.

..

~ercCruiser, S14,0oa;;~

gine 305

41
1987 &amp;iabtrity $800 : 1985 Cadit·

271 N. Second Averw.~e
..-por~ DH
814;Gi2-4514.
Monday·Salufday 10am-Bpm

;;;:

=,.,.....,~:.,.:::.:.:::...,--~
Mirada 21 ft. open bow, eno•Si
19~2 Grana Pm: witt'lslereo sys- -1995
4
4

"'m, $1,00o. X1 -67S:. 647.

' 6+-+· b+-+-

in·lllw and Janice ia Rill's daughter.
The winners galned otO.pointa on
this deal from the last quarter of the
·final.
In lhe other room. Freillch went one
· : down iri three no-tnunp. Here, Wadas
(North) lind Coben reacbed the more
· nonna~ but pushy, lour spades.
West began with her tha:ee winners ·
before exiting with a lhinl heart.
Declarer, Cohen, won with dummy's
queen and called for the spade jack.
Surprisingly, East played low. When
tb.e jack won, Cohen drew tnunpa and ·
claimed. .
Starting with the spade.jack is the
correct play in lhe suit. Of courso;, as
· West had already produced 11 points,
yet badn't lded over one spade (I ad-·
mit that, like Quinn at lhe.oll)er tllble,
I would have made a takeout double),
it was unlikely abe had ' the .s pade
queen too. East, also drawing this
conclusion, should b8ve covered dum·
., ,..
.
... my's jack with her queen. Then de·
HE:- (;()TTII1fD Oi"
f\E.'5 TF:'{It-1&amp; TO St\N&lt;t ll10\iiU• . , clarer has a guess to make. If West
· ' ·
• f..r..; •T ,.,.,,,.,. 1
. started with to-x of spades, llhe must
'AAI'I~ TO~'lll£ ~ I.'VNN '" '-'"""- ·
· continue with herother.topbonor. But
l.£AV€":&gt; ~COOR.E
I
if East began with Q·lD-x in spades.
OF [».'6...
·
' declarer must go to the dummyWhwi~ ah
·
dil!mond and finesse her nine.
tc
1 1
.1 ,.
is·the better pen:entaie pia,)'?
I&lt;,)
Neither- they are identical.

Urllitleo Pold
S255tl.to., 8

7T.J.!il57.

l:mr+-t-

· G)YozdzinA~ and Suaan WexkL~
to 94. Freilich is Rita Seamon's sister·
-

Building
Supplies ·

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind ·
ows, lirH.IS, etc. Claude Winlers,
Rio -~rande, OH Call 814 72455121 .
·..
I .

REAL ESTATE

304 - ~75· 7946

COME ON, CI-IARUE
~OWN ..THE 6AME IS
STARTIH6 .. HOU'RE

•g I Ford FtiiiYI GL, run1 good,

moire, IIDOd cond. $200. 304-5711249,4.

Apartments

1984 14&gt;70 3 Bodtoom. all oloc·
trlc , on 50x100 101, pan Fenced.
clooe to P,P.H.S. 304·525-3241

~-·

shingles.
9pm.

710 Autos tor Sale

Whit&amp; canopy bed, chesl &amp; ar·

895 3183.

b apptleave message.

TRAtJSPORfATIOtJ

WATER WELLS ORLL£D
FAST REASONABLE SERVICE
61 ..8U-731)

loca~ 1 rriloo out Slncllill Ad on
tfeht. Both mull be mcNod. 304·

Pan-Time Truck Drhter, Job
Opening Glllipolla Area ~uusl
Hev.: 1 Year Experien~t (Mini·

Starting simultaneously with the
Spingold at the Summer Natlonale
was tbe Women's Knockout Teams.
After five dlya of play, the final wali
won by Pam Wilt'es, Shawn Quinn,
Stash a Cohen, Judy Wadas, Cheri
Bjerkan and Sue Weinatein. 1'l!eY beat
Edith Freilich, June DeutsCh, Rita
Seamon, Janice Seamon, Margie

Wantotlto boy· siMI folding '

'

..

-·

_.. . . •.

I

·.••

"

Willow · Ulter ·Forum • Dollar· TOMORROW
. One cutie to another, "A budget keeps you from~- .
ing a necessity t~ so you can by a luxury TOMORROW.'
· .·

:

�-·
Page 12 •'The Daly Sentinel

'

'

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Rotarians discuss· Pomeroy. Elementary youth
B·~ ''Strriclllfotyoudl-thetoPicdiscussedbyAibertDettwiller
• IIIII ......., llip·m tina oflhe Middleport-Pomeroy R.owy Club.
~~~- a C riDa to lbe aew playJI'OIIIId equipment ias•elled !his yar at
lbiP.
Of Eli watay School. lllsleld of just 011e set of swings, a l;luketbill - . allopeeotch cow:t pel bl.:k top there is aow a pellly explllded
"J-tle IYJII", two heskdlJell courts and -· when the lwl&amp;cn urive -- two
MCI of lwillp. '
.
Debbie ibptollltlll, principii, says this project 1111 been in the l;ll.IRIIlng
ltap fortwo or three years, but the ~suits we~ first appiR!lt this YC111'· Both
Hiptonstlll and Dettwiller reponed this was a community effort and many
peopluad apncies were involved. The community is invited to slOp by and

~«thecoip""k'f~eility.
•
•
DeuwiiJel' indicaled lbe plus were drawn by the GaUia County Vocationalscbool. Holes wae dug by the Ohio Power Company. Treated timbers
were provided by FICemyer Lumber Co. Bob Thompson wured_the ttealed
timber pel provided cOIISttUCtion service$ for the ereclioo. Pel gravel Wls
provided by lbe county. Maoy volunteers worked on the construction and
Cll'l)lin&amp; out of lbc project The Pomeroy Elementary School Parent· Teacher
Organization, Kathy Reed, current president, has been working on the prqject for at least three years.
";,
Totll cost of the project was $1,850-accorcijng to Oettwiller. Funding
came from many sources, .PTO. school and many individual and groups.

·pr&lt;;&gt;l~cf-

BWI)'body pelqencies involved- !heem! for dlllir I ·..._, ...S
coopetllion.
.
·
The structure iocludes llidol, tine types of .~I'.OIIIal bin, a fluible
wllkway, slide pole and lllcpl: AU ~ ~ WIIbiD a low walled ~
filled widt pe~,pvel for softer Iandin&amp; !ban the bllctlgp ~ ~·
One bil feiNre islbere is room 10 expaod lbc playpound facilily IICCOI'd·
ing 10 DeUwiller.
.
.
· • .
a-u of the club wen: J.:k Buxton and Bdl Knipt of the Poitit.Plell-

Qhio Lottery

Southern
splkers top
Eastern

•

Pick 3:
200
Pick 4:
7033
BuckeyeS:
4-10-14-21-26

Sports on Page 4

ant Rotary Rill'UY. Buxt?n has 43 ~ears of perfect auep~ and ~IIU 23
years. Hal Kn!fn• prestdent was m charse of 1bc mcebnJ. Ladie~ of the
chufllh served I!IC meal:'
,.

·RACO to sponsor..
·christmas eve-nts

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

1\ven!Y members of the R.acine Arel Community Organization auended
the group's Sept 24 meeting at Sw Mill Park with Rev. Aaron Young giving the blessin&amp; before the 6:30p.m. meal.
President Kathl'yn Hart presided over the business meeting and the sec~
letary's report, read by Lillian Weese, and !he .treasurer's report.\ read by
Tonja Hunter, were approv~.
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. It was noted that children's games and the food booth at the Fell Festival
proved' successful. Special recognition was given to Scott. HiU and Jack
Lyons Jr. for placing the fall banners throughout the town before the festival.
The fall' yard sale will be held at Sw Mill Park Friday and Saturday
beginning at 9 a.m. Those wishing to donate may contact Delores Cleland at .
949-207l,Joy Young at 949-2545 or David Zirkle at 949-2031. Donations
are appreciated and pick up is available. Proceeds from the sale go toward /
the scholarships fqr Southern High School seniors.
1\vo new businesses in Racine, The Hat Man and Country Furniture Creations, were presented plaque$ by Libby Fisher on behalf of the organization. ·
The group voted,10 sponSor the Founh Annual RACO Holiday Home
Decor~ting Contest. with prizes of $50, $30 and $20 and to donate $100 to
the park board for treats to be distributed by Santa Claus at Cbrisbnas in the
Park::
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OOPS. .
comer of Plum and Condor Sts., in
rm sorry but I pointed you to the Pomeroy; the rolling mill coal mine
incorrect .daY . on which you can .tipple which crossed Condor St, .
attend the open house being held at between Plum and Cherry· Sts.; 'the
the R.acine Locks and Dam and the Central· Grade School when it w..S a ·
R.acine Hydro Plant.
three story building befo~ a fue
The open house .will be from II which took away the third story; the
a:m. to S p.m., this Sunday, Oct. 6, ice pien on the Ohio River.above
and not on Satunlay as 1advised you the Pomeroy business district
earlier.
around. 1900, and the Long Hollow
Grade School around 1900.
A very special eve11t will be held
If you can. help Corlis, his mailthis Sunday, Oct. 6, at the Carmel- ing ad~s is 1037 Vine St., MidSutton U.M. Church. '
dlepon, and his phone .number is
In conjunction with its annual 992-2963.
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homecomina the churi:h will be
Gf011nd IJrokln recently for the nevi Ai.h Street FrHWIII
·holding "Senior Sajnts Day" honorrve had some inquiries abOut Dri
Baptlet
Church
In Mlddlepot'J. Expected to be completed In the
ing those ·or the church who are 80 David,'Faro of Gallia County asking
eprlng, the new church will - t 200. Here Rlet Herman turn•
and 90 years of age. , ' · .
if he is conlinuinll to practice in
the flrat ahOVfltul of dirt aa Andy Kitchen, left, Sherry Kitchen,
At 12:30 p.m., a polluck dinner Pomeroy. ,
David Zirkle ICd !he Pledge of Allegiance to adjourn the meetinJ. A pot
.Paetor Lea Hayman and Chllrlla Kitchen look on.
will be held at the church with meat
Ye$, Dr. Faro, a podiatrist, conluck din~~Cr will be he\! Oct. 22, 6:30 p.m. at SW Mill Park. New members
and oosen beinfprovided. The spe- tinues his practice in Meigs County
are welcome.
.
.
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cial service will begin at 1:30 r.m., eacb Thesday. He's located in the
during which time famili~ o the Meigs Medical Building adjacent to
"saints" being honored wiD pay trib- Veterans Memorial Hospitll and is
ute to each '.'saint" with a special sharing office quaners with the hossong. poem. readina, skit and so pital:S newest physician, Dr. SatyThe Community Calendar is Vinton Solid Waste Manaaement Norman Butler, s~r. music by Sunday school, 10:30 a.m.' potluck
wan Chhabria.
·
forth.
.dinner, 12:30 p.m.; homecoming
published • a free Hrviee to DOD• District, 4 p.m. Thursday at the dis- l)isciples in Song.- ..1
Those being honored will include
:
celebration,
2 p.m.
profit groups wisbiD&amp; to aDDOUnce trict office.
'
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Alta Ballard. Douglas Circle, FloWhat a pleasant experience.
. Wll.KESVll.l.E - Wilton CiVic
~eetlag mel ~llil events. The ·
~nce Circle, Lula Circle, Bertha
I visited tlie Office Service and . Clllendar Is DOl desiJbed to pro- · FRIDAY .
Association dedication of new
DANVILLE -, Danville Church
Johnson, Robert Lee, f!tllel .orr, · Supply ~tore on West Main in mole sales or fund ·raisers of any
REEDSVILLE
Olive Town- Wilkesville Community Center, of Christ, special services, 7 p.m.. at ·
1
,. Faye Kirkart, 'osephine Smith and Pomeroy this week in an attempt to type. Items are prillled • space ship Trustees, Friday, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, 2 p.m. Donors and suppon- the Danville Church of Christ; SunMary Roush.
pick.up Some paper for outdated permits mel caJIIIOt be paranteed .township building.
ipg sponsors to be . recoanized. day, 10:30 am. and 6 p.m. Denver ·
You'~ invited to. attend. and the
printer.
to run a spedllc ilumber of days.
Refresliments.
'i ·
Hill, Foster, W.Va., speaker.
·
church· is located on Cannel Road.
Not only did the store have what THURSDAY
RUTLAND -· Rose of Sharon
' '
four miles north of R.acine off Coun- I wanted but an air of hospitality
. RUTLAND .-- The Rutland Holiness Church, Depot Street, RutRACINE - Descendants of VicSYRACUSE -- Syracuse Fire
ty Road 28.
prevailed.. The store's staff offered . Township Trustees, regular session, land, Friday through Oct. 13, 7 p.m. tor and Elizabeth Graber Neutzling, Department open house Sunday
me a balloon tied up to resemble an Thursday, 6:.1 S p.m. at Rutland Fire each evening. Larry Warren, evan- reunion, Star Mill P.~~:k, R.acine, starting II a.m. with demonstrations
And it's again lime for the Meigs ~- Tben they offe~ me some Station.
·
·
gelist; special singing.
Sunday, noon. Video of German rel- by MedFlight, DARE, Meip Coli!lSupport Group of the American Dia- free post-it pads. I kiddingly comatives will be shown. Take covered ty Sheriff's Department Canine 'Unit · ..
betes Association to meet.
mented that I didn't want either I
POMEROY -- Business:arter- SUNDAY
.dish. · .
and the Highway Patrol. DOO.. ·
Those with dilbetes as well as ~ly preferred chocolate candy. So ·hou.rs . program, · Peopl~s Bank,
prizes.
·
LONG BO'ITOM -- Hornecom-.
their families and friends are invited · they prOduced a candy bar.
.
HEMLOCK
GltOVE
-Homeing;
Long
Bottom
United
Meth.
o
dist
· Thursday, S to. 6:30 p.m. at the
. MONDAY
to the meeting which will be held at
I turned that down too, but what Pomeroy bank: Raben E. Evans, · Church, ·sunday, 9:30 .a.m. Sunday coming wiil be 'observed at the
SY~CUSE ,-- Sutton Township
7 p.m., next Thesday, Oc:L 8, in the an experience to have such an effort president and CEO of bl!lk to be the school, 9:30a.m. 1\ibtship; dinner at Hemlock Grove Christian Church Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m., Syra1
cafeteria at Veterans Memorial Hos- put forth. Most of the lime in some speaker.
12:15; program at 1:30 p.m. Rev. . Sunday. Morning worship, 9:30a.m. cuse Municipal Buildin~: .
•
pitll.
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locations I get a nonchalant "hi" and
Marge Lang, R.D., will be con- .:. &lt;;Jl!or myself lucky ro get even that.
dueling the program on "Holi~y
rm· pleased to have experienced 9053
Auxiliary,
Thursday,
6:30 .i· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , ; . .. . .
TUPPERS
PLAINS-VFWPost
Cookina." appropriate since like .it such a positive, plt;asant attitude. potluck; meeting at 7:30 p.m.
·
or not. we will soon move into the Tha~· attitude is so ·important in
holiday seaSon. Lang is teacher at maintaining and ,even bringing in
POMEROY
PERIIPERS
HOc:king Colfege.
new custoniers. I'll sure go back to Group, noon luncheon. Thursday, .
that store. Senior Citizens Center. Make reserCurtis Jenkinson of Middleport is
vations before 9 a.m. 992-2161.
looking for photos of spots basically
So campus area .in Columbus ·
,,
in the .Pomeroy ~ he ~members · experiences riots ·and ail over winRACINE -- American Legion
from childhOod.
·
, ning· a football game. That doesn't Post . 602,. busineSs meeting, 6:30
If you have any photos, he would really seem like "just cause" to me, p.m. with dinner to follow.
really appreciate getting copies but it was an opponunity to be ·
made from them. His list includes: destructive. And · some people are
WELLSTON -- Board of Direc.
I
St John Evaoaelical Clwrch at tjJe hell-bent on that. You ~ smiling. tors of the Gallia, Jll\'kson, Meigs
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------'Community ca_
lendar___:___ _______

Vol. 47, NO. 107
2Sictlo111,12Pogee

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At

' Enterprise-:- Na.gle

--~Military
Robert E. Sinnelt

Marine Pfc. Rohen E. Sinnett,
son of Sandra Sinnett of Albany,
recently reponed for duty with Station Operations and Maintenance
Squadron, Marine Corps Air, Yuma,
Ariz.

Plans for servin&amp; the canteen at
;the Oc:L 9 visit of the American Red
Cross bloodmobile were made wlten
Preceptor B~ta Beta Chapter of Beta
1
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Sigma Phi SOO&gt;nty met recent Y at
the home of Charlotte Elberfeld.
The bloodmobile will be at t1ie
Mei11 Ceunty Senior Citizens .Cen- .

·aer.

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• Sinnett' is a 1995 graduate of 'IiiCounty Joint · Vocational High
School, Jllelsonville.
•
Paul A. Huabee
Na\-y Hospitllman Recruit Paul
A. Huahes, son of Edward L. and
Georgia A. Hughes of Cheshire.
recently graduated from the Basic
Hospi.tal Corps School at Naval

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Hospital Corps School, Great Lakes,
lll.
Hughes.. is a 199~ graduate of
River Valley High School, Che$hire.
He joined the Navy in October 1995.
Michael B. R.obinson
Navy Seaman Michael B. Robin.son, formerly of Coolville, is currently halfway through a six-month
deployment · to the Mediterranean,
Adriatic, and Red seas aboard the
aircraft carrier USS Enterprise.
The 1994 graduate of Federal
Hoelting High School, Stewan,
joined the Navy in September 1996.

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Buy aHeat Pump or FuJ:Dace from Enterprise-Nagle Heating ;md Cooling
in the Month of October and get' the-following:
. ·
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Carolyn Grueser, president. introduced a first copy of the Let's Party
B~ta Siama Phi l~temational Cookbook fur this.year, noting !hat .lane
Walton received an honorable menlli?n f~ ber published frozen peach j .
p1e rec:1pe..
...
·. I
Members voted to ·endorse the'f
five year onc-bilf mill levy for the 1
Mei&amp;• County Thberculosis and 1
Health Clinic to he voted on in the '
Noveniber eleCtion.
An outing to the mall Ra in
.. Jackson was planned for Oct. 10 to
galbcr ideas and materiels.f?r crafts
beiJI&amp; ~~~~ for a fund-fiiSing project. Those plannins to make the trip
are to be at . the home of Carol
. Mc:Cullou&amp;h by 9 a.m.
The Oct. 24 meetin&amp; was
changed to Oct. 31 widl'l/le meeting
to be beld at 6:30p.m. at the Episco·
I*IChun:h. .
.Refreshments were IICtved prior
. to worting on crafb. Be$ides those
named others attendin8 were
Dorochy Sa)'!C, Joan Powell, Cirol j
AdamJ, Don'M Byer, Joan
Vera Crow,_Nanna Cull«, ct.ice
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Heating and Cooling
992-44~5

news.·- - -

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Programll)il.ble thennostat

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Gold Pl.in all parts and Labor warranty on Heat Pumps

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Estit;riate

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Clean and check for the nex~ 12 months

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Financing Rate ' 9.9% .

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LOW'

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Payments .

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•' Blots lor Men, Lllllies &amp;'children ·
• Hilts
• IIBits
• IIIIICf Westn Slllrts
.

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FREE

May threaten .existing county agencies

State.trooper ch~rged
·with murder of his wife
MAIUE'ITA (AP) - An Ohio stale trooper cbart~ed wltb the
murder ofbls wife was arrested early this mornin1in Parkersburg,
·W.Va., the'W•hinpoa County sherill''s office said.
Jack McCrady 11 of the patrol's Marietta post was taken Into
custody at tbe home of bls parents In Parkersburtl and was being
held In the Wood County, W.Va., jaU pending extradition proceedlnp', sheriff's Capt. C. E. Forshey said.
McCrady Is charged with the murder of Jenifer McCrady, 30,
whose body wao found oq Thesday buried in a shallow arave near
Littl~ Hockin&amp;, about 10 miles west of Belpre, wbere the couple
lived.
.
McCrady had been on administrative leave willt pay as an
uncharged suspect prior t!l the mlng of charges early today.
In an aftldavlt rued In support of an arrest warrant, sheriff's
Det. D. C. Garvey said a search orthe McCrady home bad.found
a aun believed to have been the murder weapon 1111d the pune mel
other personal effects that 'McCrady bad said his wife bad with
.her when be ftported her missing oa Sept. 19.
The Montgomery County coroner positively ldenlifled the body
as tbat of Mrs. McCrady on Thunday. The autopsy determined
she had been shot once in the head.
McCrady told authorities bls wife took a suitcase, some personal
belonglnp and $4,000 in cash. He also claimed his wife left her
· wedclln&amp; ring on lbe kitchen counter. · '
One week after be reported his wife missing, he filed for divorce.

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as low as

NO
NO

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High pressure

·Honest and, Dependable
A~k

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100% Saliefaction Guaranteed

Your Friends and Neighbors •

We'll put it in writing

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• Girls Dresus • Westeri Fragr1111ces

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The Electric Heat Pump H~ats

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Tbe Place For Work &amp; Western

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Saves
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Conl_er,j·

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Krautter, Ann
Rupe, •Jean Werry andj
M11Jan=l
SteWII'I.
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·Keating· wins temporary
release from Arizona prison

AIP.~1
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290 ... ....
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1_.2:!!.!!:2~~-------~~!!~-Ji
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In July, the Meigs County Board
of Commissioners voted to sell property in P.omeroy to Consolidated
Health Systems·1nc. of Gallipolis for
a $1.5 million medical ans building
to complement Veterans Memorial

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·Cost·of water
meters $yracuse
Cour:~cil .t opic·

Hospital.
How.Jlver, a check of the 1882
d.eed which originally transferred the
property to the board of commis-.
sioner&amp; found it limits use of the land
to a county children's home. . .
The problem is that several build- .
ings including Veierans Mem~al

Hospital, the Meigs County Multipurpose Building, 1he County Home,
M~ples Apanments and the Emergency Medical Services Building
have since been built on the property-- .contrary to tlle terms of the deed.
Numerous agencies occupy the
Continued on page 3

~

By KATHRYN CROW
sfllte4 that firefighters had attempted
Sentinel.Corraepondent
to clean out the ditches. ·
, Will the installation of water . Council also discussed parking at
meters in·the village ofSyracuse be Syracuse Elementary and weight Urnfinancially feasible?
its·On stieets and alleys in the village.
That was the issue discussed by
Meeting with council was Jean
Syracuse Village Council during its Bowen regarding the one:half mill
regular monthly meeting Thursday tuberculosis levy on the N,ov. 5 batnight.
'
lot. Council endorsed the measure.
Last month, council voted 3-3 on
Council also voteil to purchase a
the installation of water meters with tape rei:order to record its meetings
Mayor George Connolly breaking the in accorda!lce with new state require. tie vote • by voting ·lo install ·the ments.
meters.
Trick or treat will be held Oct. 31
t\1 Thursd~ty night's meeting, from 6-:7p.m. with a siren to mark the
.............._
COIJ!Icil, along.with Board of Public ~'~glhlllllg and end of the annual
L-;;;;.;:;;;:;;;·-;;·;;-~:;;~;,::;:::;:;~
Affaici Presidonf-·LI!rry
. Ebersl!ach
· . · will·· hold ·an .open • "
·. discussed
at length the cost
of such a · event.
Also,. firemen
READY· !lumeroul aC1tlvtth~:1~~~~~~~~~
'venture.
house Sunday beginning at II a.m. . Big Bend Sternwheel reatlval, Here,
·
Haning, employees at the Meiga County
prepare a dining shelter for the senior citizen'• bean •upper In
Connolly stated he would like an with a chkken barbecue and displays
estimated cost on borrowing the by DARE, MedFlight, tile sheriff's
The Daily Sentinel m
. inl-park on Court S"Ht.
· ·
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money and how to pay it back with- department's canine unit and the
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out raising water rates.
highway .patrol.
Councilman Eber Pickens Jr. sugCouncilman Larry Lavender
gested that an engineering company thanked council for the flowers it sent
1
be contacied to evaluate the present after the death of his brother. : ·
water system. The motion was sc;cCouncil is taking applications for
onded by Donna Peterson with ill~ temporary employment, it was
This weekend's Big Bend StemPeople wanting the special canmembers concurring.
reponed.
wheel Festival i$ being commemo- cellation can bring their envelopes to
Connolly and Ebersbach will conEbersbach also reponed the water rated by me United States Postal ~er- Jhe Stem wheel Station at the festival,
suit With the Meigs County Board of department .needs a new motor for vice with,a speci.~l cancellation stamp or can purchase pre-canceled
Commissioners td locate a firm to one of the pumps that has burned out. . available to festival goers and area . envelopes from .the postal service.
' help with the evaluation.
Police Chief Tim Gillilan report- residents.
• Special U.S. l'ostal Service ·com- .
Pickens also reponed the new con- ed 22 citations and investigated..three
The cancellation, featuring an memorative stamps featuring river· cession stand had heen inspected and complaints including the ·theft of a authentic sternwheeler with the date boats are also available at the Stemnamed a list of changes that need to · bicycle which was recovered the and 1own postmark, was coinmis- · wheel S1ation.
be made.'
next day. Gillilan also installed a low- s.ioned by local postal officials and
The annual Stemwheel Festiv~l
Connolly reported the downriver band radio in police car and pur- designed by the U.S. Poslal Service.
concludes
Sat~rday night at 10 p.m.
end of Lee Circle on Rustic Hills will · chased an antenna for the radio.
It will be av.ailable at the U.S. Postal
be ~losed until funher notice as
Clerk/treasurer Janice Zwilling s'ervice "Stemwheel Station" on the with a fireworks display. Several othcouncil is waiting for grant money to reponed the following balances: gen- Pomeroy Parking lot during the fes- er events are featured during the
repair a slip caused by erosion .
era! fund; $3,876.79; street construe, tival, according to Jim Sundquist, weekend. including stem wheel races,
a parade, queen's C\)nlest, chili
Councilman Bill Roush reponed · liOn,
$24,7.11 .94; . · h1ghway, Middleport postmaster.
that ditching has been completed $9,419.65; fire , $6,992.19; water,
cookoff, and various entertainment
except along Carleton Cemetery $8,180.86; pool, $246.42; guaranty
on the festival's main stage.
Road.
meter, $3,504. 14; cemetery, $95.65;
Once the festival concludes, the
·. Also, Pickens reported that a cui- total, $57,027.64.
·
special Stemwbeel Festival postmark
vert needs ditching along Crook
Also aliending were counc.il memwill remain available for a limited
Streefand state Route 124, along with hers Mony Wood and Kathryn Crow.
time at the I'O!lleroy Post Office, Second Street, Pomeroy.
a culven at Karr and Third streets. He

.Special postal cancellation
commemorates 96 festival

food service are continually remind- TB and that I .had breathed the TB explained that TB is spread though
ed of.the need to renew their skin test germ into my body.
the air from one person to another.
or chest x-ray cards.
"A million thoughts raced through When a person with active TB of the
· · The .Meigs County Board of my brain as I became more and more lungs or throat coughs, sneezes,
Health requires residents who are apprehensive, a sense of genuine fear sings, or laughs, people . near may
(ood handlers to obtain proof yearly overwhelmed me---'who me, TB?' I breath ,in these TB bacteria . and
that they are negative for the disease' did not feel sick, so how could I have become infected according to the
of (TB) Thberculosis.
TB? Had I given .TB to my wife, my RUts!;. •:In most people wbo breatb
For the convenience of residents, children or friends? What would· in TB bacteria and bec(lme infected,
· evening clinics are held in the coun- people think if they knew l.had TB? the body is able to fight off· the bac. ty townships throughout the year: Would I Jose my job? Th~n the ulti- teri~. Thil TB bacteria are inactive,
Many residents utilize the evening male fear of death · consumed my but they·remain alive in the body and
clinics, especially those who work thoughts. I really did not know a lot can become active later. This is
about this disease. Why had I always called TB infection .
. during the daytime hours. ·
Karschnik wrote the story heiQw .taken that TB skin test so lightly?
"I was informed that people with
entitled "Who Me . TB" to emphasize
"'The staff at the TB Clinic began TB infection usually have no sy mpthe importance of tuberculosis testing immediately to answer my questions toms, do· not feel sick, and cannot
and treatment as offered free through . and to provide reassurance that my . spread TB to others. However, they
the Meigs County Thberculosis Clin- situation could be managed. A med· can develop active TB later in life.
ical history was obtained. The disease Many people who have TB infection,
· ic.
"Today 1 was given a tuberculosis of ~B was explained to,.me .in det:'il · never develop active TB. In these
· (TB) skin test. This test is just some- , and.hterature was provided to rem- peop)e, the TB bacteria remain inacthing my boss said I have to do for force what I had learned.
.
tive for a lifetime without causing •
work. Why I have to keep taking this
"After reviewing the symptoms of . active TB. But in other people, espetest is a puzzle .to me. My last TB skin TB, I was found to have no physical . cially those with weak immune sys' test was just fine five years ago. That symptoms of the disease. These terns, tht hiCteria he!;omes active and
nurse in the TB office asked me to symptoms included a chronic cough, causes active TB.'\!,•'
come back in 48-72 hours so my skin spitting up blood, weight loss, loss of
The story you have just ~ad has
'test could he checked. What a waSte appetite, fever, night sweats and been a ~lily for hundreds of Meigs
Jof lime.
.
extreme fatigue .
•
Co. residents, says the TB nurse. She
" "T~ay· I visited the TB offis:e to
"A chest .x-fly .w~ ordered that emphasized, however, tllat medica[have my skin test evaluated. I was day to see 1f my lungs had been lions are available for the treatment
!Old by the nurse that the test was pos- affectoo by the TB germ. Luckily, my of auberculosis and that the clink
itive. The nurse explained 1hat spme- chest x-ray revealed a normal chest staff is available to assist in the pretime within the past five years I was with no · active TB. The nurse !vention and control oftbe disease.
:exposed to :, person who had active·
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By JIM FREEM~N
Sentinel Newe Staff
What started oui as an almost-routine propeny transfer could instead ·
.. prove troublesome to numerous
county agencies.

' PHOENIX (Ae) .,...l:(;harles Keat- that the family is very happy," soning Jr., the most notorious figure of in-law Bill Hubbard said. ·
the 1980s savings and loan scandal,
Keating. 72, a former Cincinnati
won a temporary release from prison businessman, has heen serving a 10as he awaits a bearing to decide if he year state prison sentence and a 12should be granted a new federa1 tri- year, seven-month ,fedel)ll sentence
al.
concurrently. He has been in prison
, Keatirig'.s release Thursday out- for more than 4112 years.
raged sorne of the 23,000 inve~tors
He was released after U.S. District
who lost.a combined $288 million in Judge Mariana Pfaelzer of Los Angethe debacle that led to state and fed- . les gave him I~ days to post
era! convictions for the former Lin- $300,000 bond. .. ·
·
coin Savings &amp; Loan boss.
Pfaelzer's order came after
"It makes me boi). Here is a man la.;yers on both sides questioned
that was convicted by a jury of, his jurors who cqnvicted Keating of
peers and has never paid one penny racketeering, fraud and conspiracy in
ofreslitution," said Sam Epstein, an the federal trial. Keating's lawyers BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
84-year-old retiree from Nonh Hoi- say some federal jurors knew about Sentinel Newa Staff
A call to work together to fight
.lywood, Calif., who lost .$65,000. • his earlier state conviction and
tuberculosis has heen issued by ronFamily -members swept Keating improperlY, discussed it.
into a vail following his release from
A hearing on whether he will get nie Karschnik, R.N., Meigs County
a federal prison in Tucson and drove a retrial is set for Nov. ·25.
TB nu~e, as the agency gears up to
to his daughter's home in an exclu- _ Keating;s release upset 74-year- ., pro~ote passage of the five-year .50
sive Phoenix suburb. His grsndchil- old Evangeline Ivy, of Glendale, m1ll levy to be voted on t.n the
dren shouted "Papa's home!''
. Calif. Ivy says sh~ and her 'husband .~ov~mber general elec!IOn.
.
. "The only comment we'll make is lost their life savings
. The .cu~ntl~vy wh1ch.funds the
0
chmc expires th1s year. Smce 1952
theagencyhasoperatedonproceeds
,g~a half-mill levy.
·.
· Six vacancies on the Meigs CounHolding a valid membership tick-· · ,' "Ojien dlJOrs of tlicf-elinic are a
ty Agricultural Society Board R to et is necessary to either be a candi- protection for every home in Meigs
County," says Karschnik, who advisbe filled in the Nov. 4 elecllon.
date or vote in the election.
Those tickets may be purchased es that walk-ins for skin testing are
· To become a candidate for a' seat
on the, board, petition.s mlllit be filed . for $13 from ariy board member or at always welcome.
The office is open Monday
with the board, Debbie Watson, sec- the Sugar Run Mill in Pomeroy.
·
through
Wednesday and Friday, 1!
retar), at least two weeks before the Terms on the board are for three
a.m.
to
noon
and I to 4 p.m. for TB
election. Petitions are available from years.
skin
testing,
but
Karschnik suggests
any hoard member.
that anyone traveling a diStaQcil'call
ahead
to be sure she is in the oftke
Reynolds buys . Broughton Foods Co.
and not out working in the county.
. PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)- commercial printer, b~ss form
· Karschnik says that the clinic
A Huntington investor has bought the manufacturer and .•uppher ·o~ office works closely with Veterans MemoMlrietta, Ohio, based 'Broughton 11rod~~ts and furniture sold m West ; rial Hospital. Laboratory procedures
FOod Co., a company official said.
Virgm1~ and e1ght.other states.
i and chest x-rays are coordinated
. ClcorJe Broughton, the company's
J)ctwls of the sale have not·been [through the hospital, located in close
chiefe,xeculive officer, (old the P•k· released.
,
'
~ proximity and convenient for tubermbur&amp; News Sentinel on Thursday - · Brought~n. F~ founder, Carl L. culosis clinic patients.
the company was sold to Marshall B~ghton, d1ed m May. The News
A ~I emphasis of die 11'8,office
Reynolds for an undiscloled pri~e.
Senunel ~port~ ~at . Brouahton is on seeina that food lwtdlers are
Reynolds is chlinnan of Hunt- 'foods had $7S m1lhon 1n sales lut free of the disuse. Groups, busiiltaton·baled Champion.Industries, a year.
nesses and oraanizations who Work in

Fai.r board elec.·tion Nov. 4

.'

• Skirts
• J11111s
• Bold Ties .
• BIIHolds
• Btlft Straps &amp; Tlpr ·

'BIG WHEELS KEEP TURNING'· The paddle&amp; on
of
the Jewel City roll along, 111 the boat chums up river
an
afternoon crulu Thursday In Pomeroy. The aternwheiller, 11
passenger excuralon boat piloted by Capt. Harry Batten of Kenova, W.Va., Ia offering regularly sched1,1led crul- during this
WHkend'e Big Bend Sternwheel F.estlval. The $350,000 boat, bulh
In 1994 by R &amp; D Aisoclatas of Ca~letsburg, Ky,. •Ia powered by
a 170-hornpower John Deere Marine Dleael and took nearly 2
112 yeare to build. Batten.and lt!e bolt are making their second
. trip to the featival, wl:llch concludes Saturday night. (To'll
.
.
· Huntar/Sentlnlil photo)

Quirk in deed si0\1\1$ hospita·l
prClperty tranSfer.to CHS Inc.

·Meigs Countians ~rged to work together to fight TB ·

'

\

35AGannett Co. N-pepar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 4, 1996

an

OCTOBERFEST

•

•

r

.

a

Cteer tonight, low In
mid lO upper 30a.
Saturday, eunny, high In

upper eo..

'

~Groundbreaki

·S_orority ·to
volunteer at
bloodmobile
.canteen

'

•

'

..

•

..u..... ,..,_~.. -

I' .
~

.

';

.

"

.

-

....,.

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