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P1ae10 • The Deily Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

George
deal ails
through

Lawyer brother charges
Sister
for
legal
advice
·
.
'

Ann
Landers

By ANN LANDERS
Dear ·Ann Landers: My brother,
"Joe," is an attorney. Recently, I had
111 employment problem and needed
a lawyer. Joe listelled to my stQI)' for
one hout and then referred 'me to
another attorney in his finn. That
attorney handled it with two phone
conversations to my employer's .
attorney, and nothing more ever
carne of it.

Joe sent me a bill for $500 for his
semces. The attorney who actually
toolr. care of the case billed me $342.
Joe even charsed me for the initial
phone call when !asked him what I
shoold do. After the other attorney ,
took over, Joe continued to ring up
charges for"consultations."
I found it hard to believe that a
family member would charge for
these t~in~s: l'dy husband, who
makes hts hvmg as a computer con·
sultan!, spent three bours at Joe's
home one night installing computer
software and instructing his family
on how to use it. It never occuned to
him to charge fpr this.
I sent Joe a Jetter telling him how
I felt. I also sent a bill for my hus-

ness p:tting into the ~et. Thai wu
between the two of them. Sendiftl
Joe the bill was completely out of
line. Evon though the relationship is
now in tatters, you should apolo(tze
for that hasty, ill-co~ceived move
and hope the apology will mend the
rift.
Dear Ann Landers: Last mont~ at
my nephew's wedding, an acquain·
tance spilled a glass of red wine all
over my peach linen dress. If was the
second lime I had worn it. The man
apologized profusely.
.I took the dress to two cleaners
and telephoned the Dry Cleaning
Institute. All agreed it was higbly
unlikely that red win.e stains would
come out of pastel linen. They were

band's services in computer installalion and training. I haven't heanl
from Joe, and now I wonder if I did
the ri t thing. What do you think? I
need an nbiased, outside opinion. •
• New Je ·ey Sue
Dell' S : Joe should have told
you before
one-hour phone conversation that
was going to send
you a bill for his advice. I agree'
was tacky and not very "brother! "
I'm sure a great many people wi
not agree with me, but I would pay
the bill anyway.
And now the plot thickens. You
say your husband did not intend to
charge your brother Joe for
i¥stalling the computer. (He sounds
like a sweet guy.) You had no busi·

'

SENIOR SAINTS
Senior Saints of the Rutland
Church of God met recently with
suest speaker Rev.· lllelma Perry,
frorn Florida.
·
Jackie Preece opened the meeting
and read the business report. The
club voted to go on a shopping trip
and have a bean and combrellll din·
ner and yaro sale. All read a poem in
unison.
Rev. Randy Barr lead in prayer
. and Jerry Eads said the blessing
before the potluck lunch was served. .
i{ev. Perry spoke from Psalms 71
and 92 including the verse which
states ''Bring fonh fruit in old age
and trust in the Lord."

Members of the Pomeroy .
Senior Girl Scout Troop 1180 set
up an outdoor cook_ing demonstration and display at the Meigs
County Expo held Sept. 27 at the
Meigs County Fairsrounds.
Girls prepared foods u5ing the
followins . methods: ' chili over a
campfire; banana-nut bread, bis·
cults, and pizza in a box oven and
ban~n~~onut bread in a Dutch oven.
: Senior Scouts participating,
were Bonnie Rutter, Missi Houser,
Misl}l ,Pugh and Andrea Neutzling.
Cadette Girl Scout Sarah Houser
and Junior Girl Scout Rebecca
Houser also assisted.
Other activities planned by the
troop include: participating in the
dress-11odoll project, volunteering
for COS! at the library,- assisting
with the MADD kick-off and doing
various activities once a month
with the residents at Veterans
BOX OVEN COOKING - Pomeroy Girl ScOIIU prepared food
Memorial Hospital Extended Care. using a variety of outdoor cooking methods at the Meigs County
11le troop is also checking into the Expo In September. Here, Ml!lll Houaer and Bonnie Rutter. LookAdopt~ A·Highway program and . lng on Is Misty Pugh and Ed Willis . .
,· ·~,
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will be camping later this month.
'
The troop will also be partici- long scheduled for Oct 25. The service unit for aU,Meigs County
pating in the bonlir&lt;: and sing-a- ev~nt is being . sponsored by the · Girl Scouts and their families.
'

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vice-president; and Jean Wood, sec:
retary/treasurer.
Attending were: John Cotterill
and Lloyd Bolin ?f Athens; Rosemary Neese of Albany; Norman and
Allegra Wood Will, Mary, Leo,
Donna ancl Wilma Davidson, all of
Rutland; Earle, Francis and Eric
Wood, Robyn Hunt, Jean, Norman
and Ronnie Wood, Lee Drake, Vir·

Teaford birth_
.announced
Brian and Christina Karcher
Teaford of Pomeroy ~nnounce the ,
birth of the daughter, .Brianna Kay
Teaford.
,
Bo!11 Sept. 9, the infant weighed
7 pounds, 3 ounces and was '20 1/2
inches lollg. She was welcomed
:home by hor sister Jaderianne.
• Maternal grandparents are Kathy
:Reynolds of Gallipolis and Joseph
: K~rcher of Cleveland. Maternal
,areat·grandparents are Jim and
·Louise Reynolds of Huntington,
BRIANNA TEAFORD
~W.Va. and Albert and Maria Karcher
Joseph .and Myrtle Sisson of
of Forest.
Paternal grandparents are John Pomeroy and the late Glen and Edith
and Carolyn Teaford of Chester. Teaford.
Paternal great-grandparents are

third of my yearly clothing budp:t.
If this man had hacked into my
car in the parlting lot. I'm sure he
woold have taken responsibility for
the damase, but somehow, when
you sit down together in a social set·
ring, the I'Uies change.
·
Please let m~ know what action,
if any, I should take. This man is a
good friend of my nephew's parents,
and we see him at large family gatherings. I don't want to generate any
ill will. Thanks in advance for your
guidance. -B .D. in Old Greenwich,
Conn.
·
Dear B.D.: I'm afraid it's. a bit
late to "take action." You should

i

tiel M bl&gt;w when
thai you were
sendina the ckaning bill to him.
When the dry cleaaer infonned you
.thar the dress was pennanently
stained, you should have then serit •
him a bill for the dress with a note of
verification from the dry cleaner.
I'm printing your Jetter for others
-who may oite day lind dieniselv.es in
a similar situation, When a person
sets spilled on and it is not his or her
fault, the victim should say, 'Tm
·sure you want to make this right. I'm
sending you tbe cleaning bill."
Sendquestloas toADn Lalldf!n,
Cnaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeleo,
Calif. 90045
have Ill the

i~ occurred

.

gil, Deloris King, David, Cyndi,
Elizabeth, Stephen and Philip King,
Hazel Oliver and Betty Jewel, all of
Pomeroy; Dale and Matt Hoffman of
Syracuse; Marlene and Ralph Cole·
man of Columbus; Woody and
Clarice, Margaret Quin~ of
Charleston. W.Va.; Margaret Fulton,
Ruth Haskins and Amanda Cook of
Chillicothe.

Bumpy. road
for districts
seeking
school bus
drivers.·

)

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 9, 1996

'

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feStival princess

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l.!;::::;~·==:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;';'~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~u .~

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MeigsNet to create a county web-site.
availab1e units.
Anyone.with questions ab9ut fair A web·site has already been created•
housing can contact Trussell at the for the Meigs County Tourism Board ,
Meigs County Fair'Housing Office, and received over·900 visits by com·
39350 Union Avenue, Pomeroy, or by puter users worldwide in its first ·
calling the office at 992· 7908.
,month on the Internet, according to
In olhcr mauers:
county tourism director Karin John-:
- Highways Committee chairman son .
Houdashelt stated that similar pro- :
Steve Story updated chamber mem bers on a recent meeting with State jeers making the county available on :
~epresentative John Carey and offi· the World Wid~ Web iue in the •
cials with the Ohio Department of works. The county will he included :
Transportation.
on future web p~ges with Ohio':
.Story said the possibility of mov- . Region II, in conjunction with the :
ing up the engineering studies on the State Office of Appalachia and the ·
Ravenswood Connector project was Ohio 'Department of Development, :
discussed during the meeting. Envi· and also with the llocking Valley '
ronmental studies on the project arc · Regional Development District.
scheduled to be com'pletc by July
. Johnson announced an upcoming :
1997, pending the necessity of a pos· informational seminar for the public :
sible environmental impact state- on starting and operating a restau·
ment which could delay that July rant/food .service business, Nov. 16. ·
completion date up to six mont)Js.
The Tourism Board held a similar :
- Houdashelt updated chamber seminar on starting bed and breakfast
members on efforts.to promote Meigs inns during 1995, which proved to be :
County on the World Wide Web.
very successful in creating some·
The county is currently working new businesses i~ Meigs County. For•
with local Internet service .provider ,
Continued on page 3

suggesting the wall be left as is.
"The best thing is to keep it right
where it is al as near as can be," said
ll~um . ·
. Committee members also said the
specifications presented to contractors were not detailed. enough to
allow contractors to make an accuriue
cost estimate. The board received two
bidS"'on 'the project, ·one· of which
came i~ aftenhe I p.m.' deadline. .
·commission President Fred Hoff·
man agreed, "We need detailed plans
to show how it will be done."
The committee suggested having
an architect make more detailed
specifications and setting aside a date

and time for contractors to inspect the
site.
Aflcr discussion wi1h the commince members. commissioners vpted to reject all bids and rc-advertisc
the project· after more detailed specifieations arc prepared.
Commissioners also met with
grants administrator Jean Trussell
. concerning a proposed Community ·
Development Block , Grant for a
· $30,000 Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water Districi project in Bedford
Township.

would have to submit another project
for consideration.
·
Commissioners agreed to submit
a $38,000 waterline telemetry study,
for the village of Pomeroy as an alter·
na.tivc project.
·
Hoffman said village officials
would. be willing to pay the dilrcn:nce
"in cost between the projects, approx- .
imately $8,000.
.
,
· .·.The board also paid weekly hills ·
of $138,449.50' consisting of 160
entries.

Present were Hoffman, Vice-pres·
idcnt Janet· Howard, Commissioner
Trussell explained that the project Robert Harten bach and Clerk Gloria
was rejeered and said the board · Kloos.

Gore., Kemp debate, set for 9 this evening

.

LOGAN (AP) -A man accused J~ne 21.
of ~illing his wife by pushing the
Brown bas said her d~ath was an
· vehicle she was driving down a accident. He said she backed a 1992
ravine pleaded innocent Tuesday to Jeep Wrangler into a 35-foot ravine
murder and other charges.
and the vehicle caught fire as he tried
· · Bond for Larry Brown. ~9; of the to rescue her.
· Columbus suburb of Hilliard, was·sct
However, authorities said a re-crcat $75,000. He was returned to the ation of the accident showed that
Hocking County jail after his arraign- ~rs. Brown could not have died as
het husband described. And a coro·
· rnent in common pleas court. ·
Brown was indicted on murder, · ncr 's repon said s~e died before the
arson and insurance fraud charges in vehicle caught fire.
• ttie deat!P.of•hii1'Wifc, "J.oyce,,"56~on ~· ·,

While Dole has raised questions
about Cli~ton's character as part of
his campaign, Kemp pledged not to
follow in the footsteps of then -Vice
President Dan Quayle, who in his
1992 debate with Gore struck at per· ,
sonal issues.
"·"·
"I don't have to be an attack dog,"
Kemp asserted. " We're going to car·
ry this out with dignity, civility and
respect."
"You can disagree without being
disagrceable," Gore . dec Ia red.

,•

, WILBERFORCJ:,, Ohio (AP) A state audit of Central State Uni·
versity's' 1995 financial records
.shows that the lack of an internal con·
trol system resulted in a deficit of at
:least Sll .3:million, The (Cleveland)
Plain Dealer reported today.
. The all(lit, done by Coope{S &amp;
Lybrand for Ohio Auditor James
Petro, says former Central State
administrators never had a clear
understanding of the school's.finan·
cial picture, the newsplipeNaJd.
· That~s ·because Central State did
.not have.
internal control struc·
~un:'.' in plade to keep track of spend: ing, contracts, bills paid. checks writ. ten · irtcomins revenu~ or other rou·
Jillii ljnancill operations, acconlina to
~
attached 10 the audit.
· . Tbe ntemo says Centl)ll State
adml,tli81rtllon did not anempt to
reconcile aeeounts in atimely fash·
ion· ~nd ~id not have procedures to

:mm.o

. 'l.~rertte
, ·Inside
, :

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newe Staff
Renovations to the old Chester
Courthouse were temporarily post·
paned' due to action at Monday's
meeting of the Meigs County Board
of Commissioners..
·
The board met with members of
an ad hoc ~ommittee formed to
review re$1oraiio1'1 Of the roore than
170-.year-oldbuilding. Meeting with
the board were Delmar Baum, Brett
Milhoan, Howard Par_!j.er, Mary ·Powell and Dale Colburn. .
Committee members expressed
concerns over how a bowed section
of wall would be repaired with Baum

, Logan man pleads innocent to mur:,der charges .

"an

'·

and very-resourceful to the chamber,''
Houdashelt said.
Tompkins than.~ed chamber mem·
bers for their support of Southern
Ohio Coal, including supporJ during
public hearings for the Gavin_ scrubber project which kept... the mines
open. "Several of you in this room
testified at those hearings. That's
something .that Southern Ohio Coal
will never forget.' ' said Tompkins.
Tompkins resigned from his position with SOCCOin late August, following 19 years-of ser11ice with AEP.
He is now preparing to continue .his
education at Ohio University, Athens.
Jean Trussell of the Meigs Coun·
ty Fair Housinl( Office was the fea~
tured guest speaker during the lunchCon, discussing the functions of her
office and housing laws which arc
frequently overlooked by renters.
Trussell discussed the history of
federal and state fair housing legis·
lation and examples of discriminato·
ry activities related to fair housing
including: refusal to rent , refusal to
negotiate tental, and refusal to show

"We' ve been friends for a long
Kemp gets the first question in the nomics. " We tried it and it didn't
time."
"
prime-time debate, while Gore will work," he sat'd.
Like Dole, Kemp said he planned ·
.And opponents, this year - some- get. the last word with his closing
thing that won't be forsottcn during · statement
on ca.&lt;ting Cli'nton as a liherill hiding
their 90-min~te sparring session
In pre-debate interviews with The · behind conservative election-year
tonight in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Associated Press, hoth candidates promtscs.
·
·
Historically·, vice presidential said they wanted to focus on the
Gore is also dctermincd ·to reindebates don't have any noticeable agenda.• laid out by their bosses.
force Clinton's argument that the
affect on how people vote in presiAs Clinton did on Sunday, Gore GOP ticket's $548 billion tax-cut plan
dential elections, political scientists said he would point to lower uncm· would. require devastating cuts in
say. Given that Gore and Kemp are ploymcnt: a shrinking budget dclicit Medicare and education spending.
considered presidential prospects for and declining crime rates as evidence "All you need is a pencil and paper:
the year 20&lt;lp, \he debate is important the administration descrvc.s four more The numbers do not add up," he said
to their political aspirations and offers years.
Monday.
·
an opportunity to make a good
"I will try ... to present a positive,
impression with fu.turc voters.
comprehensive. vision of what PresIn the past few days, Kemp's been
. Both men dis.miss such talk as a ident Clinton .is proposing Tor the preparing in a complex at Bal Hardistraction .
·
next four years . This race is al! about bour. Fla. , and playing tennis match"In 2000, Bob is going to.be run- the future," Gore said.in an interview cs when he can. He has engaged in
ning for re-election and 1just hope he aired today on NB'C news.
three full "dress rehearsal" 90kecps me on the ticket," Kemp said.
Gore said the biggest difference · minute practice debates against New
Gore shrugs off the question : "I between the two candidates was Hampshire GOP Sen. Judd Gregg,
Kemp 's advocacy of supply-side ceo- playing the role of Gore.
· am focused on 1996."

-~-Fire

seen

:Audit reveals lack of internal
:control system·in CSU's deficit ·

· as low as·

High pressure sales

35-

More plans sought for ·old courthouse renovation

LONGBOAT KEY, Fla. (AP)Ahead of their only one-on-one
debate, Vice President AI Gor~ has
been shooting ,hoops and Jack Kemp
has been whacking tennis balls to
relax'hetween practice sessions.
On stage tonight, the former
House colleagues and friends plan to·
take i:areful political aim - not at
one another, they insist, but at Pres·
ident Clinton and Republican chatIenger Bob .Dole.
'
And they'll be hitting on the same
themes as their bosses: tax policy, the
nation's economy, education, ~clfare
and other social issues, and the U.S :
~~-abroad he~ding into the next cen-

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.
A Portland man was convicted of trial including Greg Kiddon, a~ Ohio
felony drug cultivation Tuesday in Bureau of Criminal Investigation
the Meigs County Common Pleas andfdentificati&lt;inscientist, whocsti·
mated the total weight of the mari·
Court of Judge Fred W. Crow IlL
' Ozzie Blair, 45, Durst Ridge · juana seized at more than 15,000
.Road, was arrested in early A\'gust grams (about 33 pounds).
when deputies spotted marijuana
Defense attorney Pat Story called
growing around his residence. A · no defense witnesses.
more thorough search yielded bags of
Blair will be sentenced Friday and
marijuana inside the house as well.
faces a maximum sentence of five
Assistant Prosecutor Chris 'years in prison. He is being housed in
Tenoglia summoned law enforce- the Meigs County Jail.
\
· ment witnesses during the two day
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Heati1;1g and·Cooling

wife's body was found. in a shallow
grave just west of Belpre. Jenifer
McCrady, 30, had been shot in ~he
head, investigators said.
He was extradited Tuesday.
, McCnuly, pl~ced on admini~tra·
rive .leave by the State Highway
Patrol after his atTest, had 'filed f~
divorce after repor:ting his wife miss·
ingabouttwo weeks aso. He had also
~ougM custody of the couple's young
sons.
.
,
If convicted, he faces life in prison
and a $15,000 fine .

Man convicted of
,
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h
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' u 111Va IOn c arge·
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MARIETTA (AP} - ·A former
·· state trooper of the year. was in jail
Tuesday after he was returned from
West Virginia to face a mu~r charge
in his wife's death.
Bond was set at $500,000 for Jack
McCrady II, 31, of Belpre, during an
appea~ance Tuesday in Marietta
Municipal Coun. He was being held
in the Washington CQ!inty jail.
A preliminary hearing is sched· uled for Monday.
McCrady was arrested Friday in
Parkersburg, W.Va., one d,ay after his

If I w.ere you, I'd enlist the aid of
your family physician~ wlio may tJe
able to negotiate a compromise .. as
I mentioned above .. and, at the
same time, address your husband's
drinking.
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AGinnettCo~ rk••r•l* ·

.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newe Staff
Fonner Southern Ohio Coal Com·
pany president and general manaser
James F. Tompkins was rec1ognized
for his work a~~d support qf the Meigs
County Cham her of Commerce dur·
ing the chamber's monthly luncheon
Tuesday afternoon in Pomeroy.
Meigs County Economic Devol· ·
)iiilment Director Julia Houdasheit
presented Tompkins with a plaque
from the chamber, thanking him for
, his work at Southern Ohio Coal
Company and for providing assis.tance in developing the County
Chamber of Commerce ~ the Meigs
County .Community Improvement
Corporation, and the county Economic Development office.
"Jim was a great help in the twoyear process of developing a strategic plan for the county. Information
from this -strategic plan has already
been put to use on several grant application that the county has submitted.
Jim.and all of the f&lt;)lks at Southern ·
Ohio Coal have been very supportive

:.Bond set at $500,000
for Ohio state trooper

The difficulty you face is proha·
bly compounded by your husband '~
drinking problem. Yes, problem. A
pint of spirits a day is clearly excessive and suggests tl)at, along with
the thrombosis, the alcohol is ma~­
ing him sick -· and, undoubtedly,
. affecting his judgment.

Entel."prise-N agl~

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TOMPKINS
·Former Southern Ohio Coal Company prealdent and general manager James F. Toinpklns (left)
was •recognized with a plaque presentation during Tuesday's
monthly Meigs County Chamber of Commerc• luncheon. Presenting the plaque to Tompkins, In recogriltlon of his pest work
with the Charriber, Is Meigs County Economic Development Dirac&gt;
tor Julia HoudaaheH (right).

GO'IT, M.D. .
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Chamber h·o nors Tompkins .

PETER

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en 1ne
2 Soctlonl, 12

VoL 47, NO. 110
Copyright 11186

DR.GOTT

At

Cloudy tonight, low
40s, chance of ral
Thursday, cloudy, hi~
mid 50s, clutnce of re n.

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Approach to Al)stinence, Contrilcep·
tion, 4fl~je~ail) Health Education"
on Wednesday from 9-4 p.m.
The workshop is part of the
Nationallnitiativo for Contraceptive
Education sponsored by Planned
Parenthood of Greater Northern
New Jersey. Susan .Monfon,
health/sexuality educator, will dis·
cuss strategies for educating ·ani!
counseling young people about postponing, sexual involvement, inaking
responsible decis.ions and resolving
PLANNED PARENTHOOD
interpersonal conflict.
WORKSHOP .
Registration is $35. To register
Planned Parenthood of Southeast call Karen at Pla~ncd' Parenthood at
Ohio will hold a day'long workshop . 1:614,593-3375., .
"All Together No)V: A Positive

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Peny is a mtsstonary to the
Philippines. · \ .
.
At[!:nding wer!: Jackie Preece,
Alice Kitchen , Geraldine Sexton,
Mary Lambert, Nellie' Hatfield,
Mary Romaine, Louise Eads, Geral·
dine Evans, Reva Walker, Kay Barr,
Karen Hatfield, Katherine Weaver,
Rev. Randy Barr, Vester Walker,
Charles Eads. Jo Rhodes, Rev. Thel· ,
rna Perry, Homer Preece, David
.
Rhodes and Jerry Eads. 0

OCTOBERFEST

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Bradbury students visit
Blen·nerhasset Island

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Sports on Page 4

scrapboo~__..;:,
~)_ _

Consequently, yo11r husband is
By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOTT: A month ago certainly at risk for major complicamy husband was told he had a clot in tions if he chooses to ignore the clot
his right leg. He refuses to enler the in his leg. While the thrombosis may
hospital to dissolve it. What will eventually ·dissolve, it's far safer to
qappen if he doesn 'i follow through treat such an affliction with anti.
on thi~? He's 79 and drinks about a coagulant drugs, such as heparin or·
pint "of vodka a day. Is there any· Coumadin.
I'm a little surprised that your
thing ~ wife can do to help?
DEAR READER: Blood clots .husband refuses hospitaliz,ation,
(thrombos~s) can . form in either
inasmuch as this option could well
save his life -~ and limb. I wonder if
arteries or veins.
In arteries, thrombOses are very his doctor would be willing the treat
serious, leading to familiar diseases tbe co~dition at home, using bed
(heart attack and stroke) as well as to rest,. hot compresses and.anti-coagu:
less-common disorders, including lant pills. Althqugb not· an ideal
bloc;kage of major blood vessels, solution, this certainly beats doing
·
nothing.
resulting in possible amputation.
Clots in veins are, as a general
In any case, your husband could
rule, less serious, usually caus-ing certainly be helped by at least some
pain and·swelling in a leg, for exam· medical therapy. I'm doubtful that
pie. Nonetheless, such clots can ' there 'is anything you, his wife, can
break off and be carried to the lungs, do to get him help against his wish·where they can interfere with ~espi· es.
ration and cause death.

By BETH ASHLEY ..
USA TODAY
· Signing bonuses for school bus
drivers? You bet. Faced with a
severe driver shortage, School Bus
Services in San Rafael, Calif.,
offered $1,000 this fall to· anyone
who would enlist.
TWo people took the bait.
"I need s'ix more~" says operator
Eileen
Irving.
·
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All over the country, says the
newspaper of die National School
Boards Association, school bus ser·
vices are scrounging for'drivers, due
to a rising employment rate and the
high stress of driving.
Students from Bradbury Elemen· available to transpon visitors over
"Teachers have problems han~
wy SChool experienced a piece of the five niile long island whicf&gt; is ' dling 60 kid~ face to face; bus dri·
American history when they visited home. to various species of the area's vers do it with the kids behind their
back," says Michael Griffus, northBlennerhasset Island. State Park in wildlife.
The highlight of the day's activi· ~st manager •for Laidlaw Transit
Parkersburg, W.Va recently.
Approximately 148 . students ties' was a ·tour by students of the Inc.
made the excursion to the island via beautiful Blennerhasset m~nsi?n.
Laidlaw offered bonuses up l!l
a ltalf4h 'r boat ride aboard Ruble's Completed m 1988, the mansron ts a $1 500 in Portland Ore. and San
Stemw letw from• B~!pre. liifth . · niplica.Q,t thc. origin~I , Biennemasse\4.., Jo~ Calif:,· 10, q~aiified. drivGfs:
anide.. Xlh. grade,, and kindergarten .• home.:whrob,was.destroyed by,Jir~, '" - "We- made- donalion&amp; to Boy. ScoutS&lt;
. .
to go door to door'; seeking drivers.
studen were led to varrous loca· the 1800s. .
Tour gu1des mforme&lt;! the stu··
.In the Northeast, where ihe short·
tour gu1des where crafts·
II)Cn
wome~ were busy making dents ofthe culture and lifestyle pre· fall has been felt for several years.
1nd demonstrat~ng crafts such as sent du&lt;tng ~he Blennerh~set era as Ryder Student Transit. Services has
b
t ~e~vrng, JeWelry makrng, well as of the hardsh1ps of t~e arranged to Jet bus-driver moms
s te patnttng, pottery makms and Blennerhasset p10neer hfe. The. tnp bring their kids on their routes, says
acksmtth~ng.
w~ very mformattve and very edu· vice president John Elliott.
In addtUon to the crafts people, cauonal for the students and teach· - Ati unexpected jump in enroll·
mule-drawn carnage ndes were ers attendrng .
ments makes the shortage more
acute this year, Elliott says, as dis·
tricts added extra routes at the last
minute.
Finding drivers has never been
J
easy, officials say, because the job
April · Marie · Cash
of
usually involves:
Ravenswood, W.Va., daughter of
- Part-time work and a split
.WiUiam and Sheila Cash of
shift.
Ravenswood, and the granddaughter
- Strinp:nt licensing and trainof Oai'ence Cash of Athens and
ing requirements, including a first·
ROI• and Be!tY Toney of Chester,
aid cenificate in California and a
was named a princess at the 1996
commen:ial driver's license in Soulh
WV Mountain Slate Forest Festival
Carolina.
by West Vi11iaia Depanment of
- A criminal background check
A,ric:ullln Commiuioner Gus R.
and annual drug teslina.
J&gt;oullas.
Also: "Drive{~ have alwaya been
Calli, 22, is a senior at the West
underpaid," aays Ste~e Sclvoedcr of
VirJIDia University School of Medi·
the Mari~ County, Calif., Pupil
cine. majorina in ~xacise physioJo.
Tranlportalion Aa~ncy, which pays
IY 1!1111 plan$ 10 obtain a muter's
APRIL CASH
dqlee ia ttqUIIic: dlmpy.
·
$10
10 SISpreeiout
an hour.carao."
"They transport!
our mOll

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Clot needs immediate attention

--------Family reunion--·--"--WOOD
'
·
'The Wood reunion was held Se~.
8 8l the hom~ of Virgil and Deloris
King. David King save the prayer
and Happy Grandparents Day was
wished to all of 'the grandparents
present. A picnic hinc~ was held and
past reunions were discussed. ,
Officers elected . were David
'King, jlresident; Wilma Davidson,

The dress is ruined. Unfonu-

tutlllly; thai dress represents one- the

--· Society

Pomeroy Girl. Scouts outline activities
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Pick 3:
369
Pick 4:
7879
Buc.keye 5:
5-19-28-31·35

make sure transactions were record·
ed, the newspaper said .
The audit shows that the deficit
reached about $11.3 million by June
30, 1995, and is likc.ly to increase
when 1996 records are examined,
according to the newspaper.
Central State, Ohio's only state·
supporte~. historically black univer·
sity, owes millions for such things as
telephone, water and cafeteria ser·
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VICe.
.
The · audit was i:ompleied last'
month and is scheduled for release on.
Thursday, the newspaper said,
There was no answer to calls elf·
ly today to Petro's office in Columbus. His home telephone number was
not immediately'available. Directory
assistance had no horne telephone
listing for him in Columbus.
·
Central State's financial system
began to collapse in 199,, though the

school had been un~~ increasing
pressure by the Ohio Board of
Regents since 1992 to get its fin;IIICes
in order.
The university's trustees 'fired
_longtime president, Arthur Thomas,
in 1995. The trustees soon resigned
under pressure· from Gov, George .
Voinovicb, who replaced them. The
new ·board fired Thomas' successor.
Hennan Smith.
Frederick Ransier, chairrnaa of the
new board of trustees, told the news·
paper that the board had hired a new
chief financial officer. He said- tho
trustees had also hired ·a new admin·
istrator to revamp student services.
"A number of these areas we had
already Identified -as problems and
had already beaun to address them in
the context of creating systems. This
(audit) is some dep of confinna.
· lion U.t we are op the right track "
' Ra~ier said.
'

No ln)urln were reported following thle
blulln POIIIIfOY •rly Tunday evening. Flreflghlilre nilpelndlng to 1111'328 Lincoln Heights
I'Midenoe of ltlllla Bing utlngullhed thl flrl
which began In 11Mng room chilr on thl blck
pOrch 1nd 6l~Witd~d !nto a Wlft,
rooms and .
...
according to
Chief Din-

ny
ThoH- were heltVIty
while the _ . , . . . of 1he .home
smob and _.., darrrage. Pomeroy
eel with three trucka, 1 aqnad and 22
era while Middleport riiPIMidld wllh- truc1c
lnd five flr.tlg"-· Flrellgh"'s WIN on
~Cene for lbout en hour llld • hiH.

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111 Court St., ·p~oy, Ohio
814-tl2·211141• FIX: 912-2157

. .!lr

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
· ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlllher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

o.o...-Me~

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nr.y-be--1011-AII-

-~--..---....---.-.....-1
"p'roooo,.,..
._,. M&gt; sr·'g..., ...,_ ""' .,. po •rofNd. I» In flOOd I .,

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Letters to the editor

WASHINGTON .. Mexicq's most
courqeous former counter-narcotics
official, Eduanlo Valle, believes the
unprecedented assassination of a
Mextcan presidential candidate was a
drug-related hit.
Valle was a special adviser to two
sttecessive Mexican attorneys gener.. a! from 1993-94, heading up an elite
31 -man counter-narcotics team. Frustrated by government protection of
certain drug traffickers, Valle
resigned in May 1994, firing off a letter that was released to the press.
Previously, Valle had been a leader
of a famous 1968 student revolution,
· for which he was imprisoned for
· three years. Although he was a leftist, he has never been a liar -- so
Valle's charges against !he government he serVed were widely report·
· ed.
"When will we have the valor and
·pqlitical maiuriiy to tell the Mexican
people that we are the victims of a
kind of norco-democracy?" he wrote.
He concluded with the following
statement, made even more chilling

Girl ·Scouts appreciate support ·
Dear Editor,

butions were greatly appreciated and
Our Girl Scout Troop recently par- were used to belp cover the cost of
ticipated in the Expo '96 with an out- supplies used for the day.
door cooking. demonstration. We
Once again we want to say 'thank..
enjoyed the activity and look forward y!iu' and that we are looking forward
to retwning and participating in Expo . to a great year of helping our com'97. .
... . munity and participating in Expo '97.
We would like to than all thoSe
Brenda N~ulzllng, leader
who came by our site and inquired
Pomeroy Senior Troop
ahout what we were doing.,We would
1180,
also like to thank all those that gave
Pomeroy
donations to the troop. Your contri-

First I want to thank Rutland firemen for burning down the old house
on Main Stttetlt was an eye sore and
· wasn't safe to live in. It will look dif' ferent when we get thj: blocks;·etc·.
hauled away and p~l in some fill din.
Again fellows a job well done. Thank
you one and all. ·
Now a word about my friend for
a lot of years: Bob Gilmore. Sure hated to see Bob leave council, but your
health and business should be fust. I
never asked Bob to help me with
something that he either did it or
uied. When he had the Lazy Day I

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AP.. Spec..( Correepondent
.
WASHINaiON -After a predictable presidentiaf debate, the understudies take their tum Wednesday night- supporting players primed to echo
the themes President Clinton and Bob Dole sci, almost certainly to the same
inconclusive outcome.
That's to the advantage of the Democratic ticket, given Clinton's wide
lead in ,the national and state-by-state polls. In ·surveys after the Hartford
debate, tbe edge was Clint~n's, although Dole was deemed to have exceeded expectations with his performance.
·
Vice Prusident AI (lore said he expects some overlap between debate
issues when he and Republican Jack Kemp meet for 90 nationally-televised
minutes in St. Petersburg, l'la.
There will be a lot. It is the role of running mates to reOectand promote
the ideas and issues of the presidential contenders.
•
Vice presidential debates -this will be !he fifth- have produced mcmorable lines and putdowns, but with little. if any, real impact on the cam• paigns.
·
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Ironically, one possible exception was the first debate between vice pres'· idential candidates, 20years ago, when Dole as the Republican nominee came
away with the harsh, tough-guy image that dogged him. through that con&gt; test and into the ones that followed.
·
:that long-ago lesson was evid.ent in his tootics against Clinton Sunday
night. His aggressive lines were .tcmpcrcd with needling humor. He was
' polite, cautious, saying at one point that he personally likes Clinton and
respect's the presidency. He went indirectly at the trust and character que~tions some R~publicans had wanted him to hammer.
"I'm not discussing Whitewater now," Dole said as he edged into the subject, saying that Clinton made a mistake by responding to an interview question about possible pardons for people conv1cted on charges related to that
• Arkansas land deal, in which the president and his wife once -..:ere investors.
It is an awkward topic for the president, given his past tics to ·figures
accused or convicted of wrongdoing. Climon said. as he has before. that there
has been no consideration of pardons and that he will strictly adhere to the
law.
·
·
·
.. , .
Even that might be sending a signal, Dole said. He said Cli~too 's answer

~. f·~n~~:a:.~~t~u~.;~·~~;:~:~~~:;::~i!;!~~.,:u,Prcsidc~~F~rd's
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pardon of.Richard Nixon when he said in his 1976 vice presidential debate
that the American connicts of the 20th Century were "all Democrat wars.:'
Hatchet man. his Democratic rival retorted, and the label stuck.
In their leadoff debate, Clinton and Dole botl1 used practiced lines from

the past, now part of their standard campaign speeches.
"We are beuer off than we were four years ago," Clinton 'said, as he does
·regularly. Ronald Reagan put that as a question, and answered " Yes." in his
~lection campaign debate.
Dole repeatedly called Clinton a liberal, recalling George Bush's C"?"·
paign and debate tactic against Democrat Mich~el Dt!kaki~ in 1988. Chnton said the Republicans always drag that out, ·son of thetr golden oldte.
you know." He said it won 't work this time because it doesn't fit his·record.
In the 1992 vice presidential debate,'the lasting line came from Ross Per~·s running mate. "Whp am 17 Why am I,here?" James Stockdale. asked.
He said it was bc:cause he knew how government worl\s and what It takes
le8d. but the rhetorical question cot all the attention.
'' 10 ·lt
won't be asked this time. Perot and his ticket were excluded from these
'• de~
consignina him to pos!Kript complaints abouttwo party dominance.
• And between the two, Clinton 'slead is hold iii I• Dole said after the dehlte
thll he'd bepn tuminJ !hit .-ound in Hartford. His tampaign IIWI.,a' called
il 1 steppinJ stone.
·
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" It's not one niahl thai decides i~" another advisor, Charles Black, Slid.
"lt's a ~act .play." •
.
.
.
.
Bul presodenbal campatgn ~bale&amp; 1eldom ~h':er surpnse endinp.In ••r· ,
tually cvery·serics, the ~ •n the polls aomg m has held the 1 after.
want, and has won the ele&lt;:lton. .
.
~de~ tcne as 1Urnmal1on&amp; on the J~. When ~re ha. been
;. llllJ)I'ISC m~ts, lbey have aem_
med from mJsstepl or .
comments. Bodt Clmton and Dole av~ any such problems t Hartford.

•

hese people,' I warned. And he
r--'~----------::::===::=----------;-----------; 'tbegan
taking steps Ill free himself

from !he narcos and narco-politician~
.around him, but they caught up witlj
i him and killed him."
:.
· Valle is convinced of this, and he
has an impr~ssive record for good
instinctS. After the 1985 assas~inatiml
of Mexican investigative joumalisi
Manuel Buendia, Valle fingered a for1
mer director of national security i~
the Miguel de Ia Madrid administra~
tion. "People didn't believe me
then," he said. "They said, 'He'S
crazy; he's sick; he's ,obsessed." ~
Four years later, however, that mari
was arrested in connection with thq
Buendia murder and sentenced to 30
years in prison .
,
A similar shift in the Colosio
assassination investigation has
already occurred'sioce Erncsto Zcdil ~
lo succeeded Salina• as president. A
new special prosecutor dumped th~
lone-gunman theory almost immcdi-:
atcly, believing_others were involved,

· LATELY? .

Write Jack Anderson and Jan
Moller, United Fealum, zoo·Parli
Ave., 10166
:

Joe Bowland
Middleport

By WALTER R•. MEARS

MICH .

Moller

READ
ANYTHING 600D
(I( THE INTERNET

Why blacks don'- vote ·Republican

'

I've conducted:an informal survey black "vote. Arid, in,1994, blacks cast ciall)'_ imponan!i But it is extremely and the Democrats insist that any tax:
of my black friends, most of whom 12 percent of their !\allots for Repub- important to biJlck business people . cuts will be a sop to the wealthiest:
are either Democrats or independents, Iicon c'ongressional candidates. In like Abdur:Rohim Hameed, exccu- Americans. And this cioss-warfarc:
but all of whom are mtlderate to con: 1996, Bob Dole and the Republican tivc director of the Black Contractors rhetoric has . resonance among the:
servative in their political views.
Association of San Diego.
black electorate, though ihcrc· arc'
They appear to me to be potential
h Perkin
Hameed is panicularly concerned nearly a quarter-million black house. recruits for the pany of Dole, yet not
OSep
S
that he and other blacK contractors holds throughout the country bring-:
one plans ·tO vote Republican for Congress will be lucky to do half as will be driven out of business by the ing in more than $100,000 a year. :
president. And only one (of more well.
'
rash of "construction-defect" law·
But Democrats oppose tax cuts, no:
than 10) plans to vote Repu,blican for
I refuse to believe that the reason suits, which arc filed by contin· m ncr what form they take and even.
Congress.
Dole and the Republicans are doing gency·fee trial lawyers to shake · wh blacks stand to be the biggest:
"ll's not ncccssiuily that the so badly among my black friends ·· down construction fir:ms for million..~s~be'::Y'"ficiarics. Indeed, earlier this
Dcmocr~ts represent· m;• ·point of and 'among 'the black electorate as a of dollars.
year, Gingrich proposed a 15 percent;
view on all issues," says my pal Alex- whole -- is personality. That Bill Clin- . The only way for Hameed and ht
federal Oat tax for the predominant- : ·
· is Dixon. a mediator. "But they . ton and AI Gore are 97 per'cent .morc fellow black contractors to avoid ly black residents of Was~ington ...
speak a language that suggests that palatable to black Americans than .being bankrupted by litigation is for D.C.
.
.
they will 'promote my interests."
Bob Dole and Jack Kemp. That Tom lawmakers to enact legal reforms. But
. The idea was to encourage more•
:'I'm not a Democrat," says my Daschle and Dick Gcphardt ~rc 93 that will never happen with Dcmoc- hi'gh·earning people to live within the:
buddy Ken Mc(J1usky, a securities . percent preferable to Trent Lou and rats in power, since they receive mil- city~ predominantly,
broker. "And many of my positions Newt Gingrich,
lions in campaign !:ontributions from w~ite, affluent, D.e suburbs), there-:·
are conservative. But there 's someI think the real problem for the the trial lawyers. So the black con- by enlarging the financially strapped:
thing --.1can't put my finger on it-- party of Dole and Kemp and Loll and tractors' best chance is with the city's tax base and allowing its govthat doesn't make me comfortable Gingrich is message. It is not enough Republicans.
.
cmmcntto provide more services to'
with the Republicans."
for Rcpublicim candidates to visit the
Same goes for education reform. residents.
,
Dixon and McClusky are right in occasional black churcti or do photo Democrats arc in bed with the powBut Clinton and the Democrats
line with the majority .of black voters. ops at inner-city schools.
erful teachers' unions, who want quashed Gingrich's .tax-cut proposal:
In fact. in a recent New York
They have to show black voters poor, black children to remain slaves for Washington, D.C. So the city's
Ti111es/CBS News poll, only 3 percent .why pulling Republicans in charge at to the public schools. no matter how predominantly black residents con:
of blacks indicated that they would the White House and on Capitol Hill violence-ridden those schools may tinue to labor under one of the high-:
vote for the Dole-Kemp ticket, and is hcttcr for them and their children. he, no maucr how inferior the cdu- est tax burdens in the country.
,
only 7 percent said they would vote
Most blacks share the sentiments ·cation those black youngsters receive.
It may not have occurred to a lot ·
for the epublican House candidate of my friend Alexis, who perceives
Republicans are breaking the pub- of black voters that they have a .rcal•
in thcit district.
that the party of Clinton and Gore and lie-school monopoly on bfack edu- interest in such issues as ton reform:
at this tneans is that the "par- Daschlc and Gephardt will promote cation in ·cities like Cleveland and education rcfom and tax reform .
ty f inclusion"-- as .the Republicans black interests. But on a number of Milwaukcc.nicy arc providing poor Otherwise, Republicans could surely;
aspire to be -- is not only failing to imponant public-policy issues. blacks black parents with vouchers -- or look forward to more !han a piuance .
make inroads af11ong the black clcc- may be surprised to learn that Repub- "scholarships," if you will -- so that of the black vote in next month's
torate, it is actually losing the limit- licans are their real friends, while the they can shop around for the best election.
cd support it enjoyed among the Democrats arc working against their school$ for their children -- private,
Josel\h Perkins is a columnist
nation's largest minority.
best interests.
patochial or public -- just like for the San DleJIO Union•Tribune
Indeed, in 1992. George Bush
Take tort reform , for instance. wealthy Democrats do.
and the authorof"RIIht Uke Me"
managed to snare I I perc~nt of the Many blaclos don't consider it cspcThen there's tax reform. Clinton (Union-Tribupe PublishlaC).

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61..

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AccuWeat ..... forecut for

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was commissioned from Rutland but
worked a lot in Middleport. Bob
always had us a free cup of coffee.
When the hot rolls carne in about 4
a.m. it seems we were all in there.
Hot rolls, jelly and buller, coffee.
Then some . ·mornings lhe chicken
would come out and we always had
a piece with rolls. Bob.• we .missed
you and yours when you left the Lazy ·
Day and we are going to miss you
again. Gotld luck to you and yours.

If the next debate
sounds familiar,
that's because it is

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Thunday, Oct. 10

•

. because of his hiJh·level view of the Cry lib a baby? Thil is a very impor- a gun. He soon_confessed, and .lias
Mexic111 government: "Nobody can tant issue for my country; it's not for since been conVIcted of the shoouQI.
But !hi: lone-gunman theory put foroutline a political project in which the babies."
Valle
is
not
part
of
the
U.~.
Wit.
ward by the Sali~ admi~istra~on
heads of drug trafficking and their
ness Protection Program, nor has he lrQilbled m~y Mex1cans, mcluding
offers of protection from .Valle. ·
.
•·
Jack Anderson accepled
federal law enforcement officials. "I
Valle told us be had brou~ht Coloonly have my car. my gun and my sio scnsitive counter-.narcottcs J~tel­
and
sensibility." he told us.
ligence weeks before the assasSiri~­
Valle
turns
less
combative
when
lion,
warning him that two top meiJl·
Jan
speaking of his llle friend , Luis bers fir his security force and other
finiJiciers are not included, because Donaldo Colosio. Colosio had been campaign advisers were hnlced to
if you do it, you die."
selected by former Mexican President drug traffickers. Others were brotal
Valle became so highly visible as Carlos Salinas to be his successor.
ex-cops with questionable backa crusader, naming names, releasing . · Colosio was campaigning for grounds.
·
docume.Jits, that be thought it wise to president in 1994. He wanted a clean
As if that were not enough, Vall4
relocate to the Uni!ed States. As pub- · election, so.be was earnest about his warned him, tbe guest list for an
lic enemy No. I of the Mexican druJ campaign appearances, pressing !hi: upcoming fund-raising dinne~
cartels, Valle W!lS described by tbe flesh. Friends were concerned about arran*ed for him in Monterrey,
U.S. intelligence source who con- his security, particularly since be had included the brother of a notoriou~
nected us with him as the man "mosl become ou(fpoken about fiahting drug trafficker.
.
. likely to be killed in the next ·six drug traffick¢rs.
·
Colosio was furious about being ·
months ."
They were right to be concerned. compromised in such · a way. "I
Our associate Dale VanAtta flew On March 23, 1994, while cam- warned Colosio about him," Vallcl
to ·the American Southwest to meet paigning in Tijuana. Colosio was n:called, "and he ordered them to dis!
invite that bastard. 1. named tho5!1
with Valle, who 5eemed unafraid at assassinated.
Mario Abuno, a young fact~ untrustworthy infiltrators in his cam~
the prospect of losing his life: "I am
not a crazy man. But what can I do? worker, was captured on the spot wtth paign whom he should remove. 'Lui•
Donalda. you should be careful with

Jobs well done
Dear Editor,

OHIO Wc(lthcr

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Assassination
of
candidate
drug-related
The Dally Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

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Wedneedly, October I,

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·':::·Today's weather forecast
of showers. High in !he upper 50s.
Soullleastem Ohio
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Today...Showers likely. High 55 to Chance of rain 30 percent.
60. West wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance Extended forecast
Fiiday... Fair. Low 35 to 40. High
of rain 70 percent.
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Tonight...Cioudy. A chance of in the mid 50s.
Saturday... Fair. Low around 40.
. · showers until midnight. Low in the
High
60 to 65. .
.
' · , · upper 40s, \Ve~t wind 5 to 10 mph.
Sunday.. .Fair, Low in the mid 40s.
.. . , Chance ofrain 50 percent.
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Thursday ...Cioudy with a chance High around 60. ,,

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Weekend weather should be fair

oration. The New York Times' dcciAMES, Iowa- This is an essay sion to withh&lt;ild advance knowledge
on journalism: It might explain why of the Bay of Pigs is emblematic of
some of ttlday's newspapers arc soft the thinking.
'
around the edges, worri~more about .
The civil rights movement probeing loved than l!eins respected, not duced a generation of journalists
vigilant in reporting what's going on who became convinced that dcmocarou~d town.
racy can correct the wrongs of soci·
Fo'urevents have sh~djournal- cty. but only if the government ists in the past
years: World wai and. again. the journalists themselves
11, the civil "rights movement, the - forced the issue. This led to an era
Vietnam War, and Watergate. Each of great reporting on social issues,
provided . the passion a journalist ,reporting that explained and exposed
needs.
and, sometimes, espoused.
World War 11. produced a generaBy chance, sOme youn1 reporters
tion of journalists who became who covered civil rishts went on to
unswervina patriots, me111- and a become editors. This led to a time of
few women _ W.ho reported from I ~reat re~ional newspapers. Claude
battlefields ~WashinJ!on and deter- Sitton·in Raleigh, John Seigenthaler
mined this naJiOII was destined to in Nashville, Eugene Pattenon in
• lead. They were convinced goven.- Atlanta and St. Petersburg, Gene
ment leaders - in concert, some- Roberts in Philadelphia and now
times, with the journalists them- New York, Bill Kovach in Washina· selves - knew what's best and ion and Atlanta, and Ed Cony 11 The
shouldn't be questioned. Some Wall Slreel Journal all brou&amp;ht to the
viewed themselves as advisers .to 1editor's chair a fervor for expelling
aovemment. The Alsop brothers and ' social wron~ and a belief thai read·
Walter Lippmann personify this JCn· , en· would r •lht thtm. None wu
.
.

so

••

DAR meeting
. ,
. Members of"the Return Jonathan.
M~igs Chapter Da,ughters of the
American Revolution will meet Saturday. 10 a.m., at the Meigs County
Public Library in Pomeroy. After a
business meeting and brunch, members will mark graves . of former
members Nan Moore, Rose
Reynolds, Mary Skinner, Maria Foster and Lucille Smith.

'f ]i . .

·t. . .
:If ' • ·· ·.' '

~:

· · ~,

~·

; :'.
;·.
;...
;~
;::.,

;-,~

:·,

UnitsoftheMeig~CountyEmer-

gency Medical ServiCe logged two
calls fo~ as~istance Tuesday. Units
respondmg tncluded:
POMEROY
6:14 p.m., volu~teer fin: depart•
men! and squad, 10 L!ncoln !'1 111 • structure fiie at Shella Brng residence, no
injuries.

sontlnued rrom P~Ke I
· Fail Fishing Classic, to be held Saturday: Oct. 26, at 7:30 a.m. on the
Pomeroy Riverfront. Registration for
two-person
teams
in; this
walleye/sauger tournament is $50.
Cash prizes and awards will be presented to the top four teams, and to
the largest non-target fish .
Registration' forms and information is available at The Daily Sentinel
offices and Farmers Bank in
Pomeroy.
Oliver also announced. plans for
the Ohio River Fall Fishing Classic·
Tournament Breakfast, Oct. 26, from
6-9 a.m. at McDonald's of Pomeroy.
Tickets for this "all you can eat" hot. cakes and sausage breakfast are $3,
and available from any United Fund
board members or at the Daily Sentinel offices.
A portion of the proceeds from ·
each of these events will benefit the
1997 l.lnitcd Fund Campaign. ·

Meig~ ~nnouncements

J' ,f.·

EMS logs 2 calls

Chamber honors•.

more .iQfonnation on the seminar.
·contact Johnson at992-5005.
Johnson also · presented a new
county tourism brochure to chamber
members . The full-color brochure is
being created and printed with
monies lhe county received in the
State Fair/County Booth contest,
Tony Welch, 29, Langsville, died Tuesday. Oct. 8, 1996. in University according to Johnson.
· Houdashelt thanked everyone
Hospital, Columbus.
·.
involved
in making the 1996 StemHe was born Jan. 18, 1967, son of Diana .Jean Jones of North Carolina,
wheel
Casino
Night a terrific success.
and was employed by Bobb Lumber, ~ason, W.Va. .
He is survived by his wife, Gwenne Welch of Langsville; a daughter, Jen- She also announced that the C~am'
her will hold its annual American Red
nifer Husk of Pomeroy; a son, Lee Husk of Galion; two brothers and a SIS·
Cross
Halloween BloOd Drive Oct.
ter, Tony Perez, Stacy Nin and Mike Jones, all of North Caro.lina; four aunts;
25
at
Trinity
Church.
an uncle and several nieces, nephews and cousins.
·Susan
Oli~er of the Meigs Counfie was preceded in death by his grandmother, Anna Welch. .
. ···
· Services will be held Saturday, II a.m. at Fisher Funeral Home m Mid- ty United Fund invited chamber
. dlepOrt with Lamar O'Bryant officiating. Burial will follow in Hemlock members ·to the 1997 United Fund
Campaign Kickoff Breakfast Friday,
Grove Cemetery.
·
.
7:30 a.m ., at the Meigs County
Friends may call Friday, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Senior/Multipurpose 'Center.
Oliver announced plans for the
Big Bend United Fund Ohio River

i
...J'!!i

!.

SOME
sweet
was
grown by Karolyn
9! Tuppers
The 7 pound, 8.3
ounce vegetable was grown In a flower garden, according to
Welsh, who added that nine planll yield~ a total of 150 pounds
of sweet potatoes. Plans call to eat thablg sweet potato. .

Tony Welch

By

the Forked Run &amp;portllmln'a.Aaeoclatlon, third
place. In the Individual judging, Mitch end Lisa
.Maadowa captured first placjl. Second place
was clelmad by the "Dead Heads" team con·
slating of Beth Cremeans, VIcki' Ct~nan, and
Bridget Ritchie, while third place honors went
to Margaret Eskew and Crystal Richmond. (Sen·
tlnel photo by Tom Hunlar)
·

" Today's livestock report
.

Syracuse court

meet Sunday, 2-4 p.m'. in the French ·
500 room at Hol~cr Medical Center,
Gallipolis . Speaker will he Dr.
Edward Sheridan. For more information, call 446-5246.

Campaign kicked olf
The ·Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services, Gallipolis, announced the
theme for the 1996 National DisabilIty Awareness Campaign is 'hire ability.' OBES encourages employers to
SOS meeling
hire persons with disabilities for their
SOS (Southern Ohio Support) 'open johs.
group for visually impaired . adults
and children will have a skating party Saturday, 4-6 p.m. at the Wellston Middleport hydrant Oushing
The Middleport Fire Department
Skating Rink. For more information ..
will
be testing hydrants on Thursday
call Chris Millcr at 286-1819 or Ann
from
6-10 p.m. Residents may notice
Boyd at 245-5053. Any adults orchilsome
discoloration in their walcr.
dren wilh visual impainncnls and
their families and friends arc invited
to aucnd.
Garden club potluck
The Meigs County Garden Club
will hoid a board meeting at Chester
Uni!cd Methodist Church Saturday at
noon with a potluck lunch to precede
the mc.cting.

,
The following cases . were
COLUMBUS(AP) _ IndianaSows: firm ·to 1.00 higher.
resolved Monday night i~ the coun
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
U.S. 1-3 300-450 lbs. · 43.00- of Syracuse Mayor George Connol- Diabetic support group
The Diabetic Suppon Group will
buying points Wednesday as provid- 48.50; 450-500 lbs. 48.50-53.00; ly.
ed by tile U.S. Department of Agri- · 500-650 lbs.' 53.00-55.50, few 56.00.
Fined were: Rachel Norman,
culture Market News:
Boars : '40.00-42.00. '
Syracuse, no operator's license, $85
Barrows and gilts: steady 10 firm;
Estimated receipts: 36,000.
plus costs ; no insurance, $65 plus
VETERANS MEMORIAL
demand moderate on moderate offerSummary of Tuesday's Procluc· costs: Michelle Ward, Pomeroy,
TUESDAY
RUTLAND
ings.
ers Livestock Association auctions speed, $10 plus costs; Kevin Roush.
Admissions : None
· 2:53p.m .. Meigs Mine 2. Thomas
U.S. 1•2, 22 0..260 lbs. country at Eaton, Famrentown, Lancaster, Middleport, old fine, $72.
Discharges: Ruth Morris. Rut I and ·
White, treated at the scene.
points 55.00-56.50, few 54.50 and Wapakoneta and Caldwell:
Forfeiting h9nds Were: Tara J.
I
57 .00; plants 56.00-57.50.
Hogs: steady to 50 cents 1ower.
Whitmore,-Jacksonville, Aa., speed;
["New Yorker Lance Henrlklen !Mil·
Butcher hogs: 43.00-58.25· ·
Jeffrey Jenkins. Dublin. failure to
U.S. 2-3, · 230-260 lbs. 48 .0054.50.
Cattle: steady to 50 cents low ~- control; Reginald Gross, Wellston, · J.lrunjum) soiled the world on a Swed·
Daily
·
,. STaughter. steers:· choicll' . '....r speed; Clarence Shockley, Ripl ey," , ·1ish.fotiJhter. then &gt;taiTCd in U..,.
l_!l' Nell'f ThtW 1'/u)ufth.S••· ·
- W.VII., speed;. Laurel Ransom,
73.00; select 56.()().65.00. ·
: Slaughter· heifers: choice• 60:0CP ~ Athens, speed; Lawrence Bowen, St.
Publi~bed evtty ahemooa. Monday lhrouah
71.25 ; select 54.00-64.50. ,
· Albans, W.Va., speed; Wil.liam HarFriday, Ill Court St., Pomero)'. Ohio, by the
Ohio VAlle)' PubU~hina.,.Co1T194ny!Qannet1 Co.,
Am Ele Powe'r .......................41'1.
Cows:
steady
to
1.00
h1gher;
all
,ion, Ravenswood; W.Va., speed;
Pomeroy. Ohio ·U769. Ph. 992-2Jj6. Second
- ~0 ................................ .......61'.1.
cows 47.25 and down.
Pavanne Elmore. South Charleston,
cl111s poatap paid Dt Pomeroy, Ohio.
Aehland 011 ...........................40~
Bulls: steady to 1.00 higher; all · W.V,a.. speed; Dolores Wolfe,
ATIT •••••. .-..............................38'M.........The Auocilled l'ltu, aad llle CHilo
bulls 43.00 and down . - .
Racine, assured clear distance; Aaron
Newsp~per Auacialton.
Bink One ............."...............40;.
!Laudermih,
Pomeroy, speed.
Bob Evena ..........................:...13
PQS'I'MAS'I'I&amp;r Send addm• comdion• &amp;o
Borg-Warner
........................
.34'1.
Tbe l&gt;aily Stminel, lll Court St., Pomeroy,
Chlmpl011 .............................11%
Ohio 45.169.
Chennlng Shope ................... 5'1.
SUI8CIIIPTION lATlS
City Holdlng ••••••••• ~.: ........... ~ •.23'!.
Federal Mogul ••••... i . ..............24~
Cotrltl' .. - - 51.!1::
0... - ay..............................................
Gennett
.................................&amp;&amp;\
One folondi ................................................ S8.
Qooctye.r oouuuo oooooooooooooooouo oo44'"
One t ................................................. SI04.1l0

•The

··on)'·J·O,U.rnaJ· i·Sm ".-.·~LI;'~\. . :. ,,~ ·. ·.

By MICHAEL GARTNER .

Wilma Jean Westfall, 68, Ravenswotld, W.Va., died Monday, Oct. 7, 1996,
at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, w,Va.
Born March 10, 1928, in Swandale, W.Va .. daughter of the late Roy Flem
and Elsie M. Tinney Johnson, she was a member of the First Baptist Church
of Ravenswotld, a deputy county clerk and circuit clerk in Summersville,
W.Va., and a secretary at Ravenswotld High 'School and Ravenswotld Aluminum.
She is survived by her husband, Ayward "Abe" Westfall of Ravenswood ;
two daughters, Kathy Kay Hudson of Ravenswood and Karen Beth West
of Raliegh, N.C.; two grandchildren, ~nd two brothers. Darrell Johnson of
Ravenswotld and Johnny Johnson of Summersville.
She was preceded in death by a brother, Farrell Johnson of Summersville.
Services. will be held Thursday, 2 p.m. at ,the First Baptist Church of
Ravenswood with the ·Revs. Kenneth Miller·, Bill West and Darrell Johnson
officiating. ' ,
· .
·
Ftiends may call Wednesday, 2-4 .and 7.-9 p.m. at the Roush Funeral Home
in Ravenswood.

The Aeeoclated Pre•• ·
ly to bring more record-setting heat
· ';
A fast-moving cold front will was expected in the-West. In Cali•· sweep across Ohio on Thursday, pro-· fornia Tuesday; San Francisco set a
• ·, · ducing little rain but ushering in cool- record highof94, breaking the 1928
er weather, forecasters said. Highs on high of 87; San Jose reathect 97,
' ' Thursday and Friday will be in the breaking .a 1951 record of 93; and
50s.
· Santa Rosa hit 101, breaking the
Fair conditions will prevail 1965 record of · 98. In Utah, St.
· :~ through the weekend with. highs 'in George .reached 97, eclipsing the 95~
the 60s and lo.ws around 40, the degree mark reach~ in 1980, and
Weather Service said.
Medford, Ore., reached 94, beating a
. ' National
The record-hi'gh temperature for 1936 record by one degree.
.
'
~ this date at the Columbus weather
The nation's high temperature
station was 77 degrees in 1913 'while Tuesday was Ill at Palm Springs,
' the record low was 29 in 1989. Sun- Calif., while the coldest reading was
. · ' set tonight will be at 6:59 p.m.·and 25 at Alamosa, Colo.
• sunrise Thursday at 7:36a.m.
I
. I
, • . . • :.. t '* ~__...
Across the nation
•
The remnants of Tropical Storm .
Josephine raced up the East Coast
today, bringing windy, rainy weath.- er from New York to Maine.
1:
,,,;
New. Yorl&lt; City,got hit with 1.35
'~
. , ' inches.ofrain overnight, with .winds ·
, whtppmg up to 29 mph.
.
.~ !f.' . . i
.
Light showers fell in the Midwest
/ir j,/
and dear to partly cloudy sktes dom-- • -!ftf
. l
'
inated in tile mid-Atlantic and South·
. .. east regions. Fog blanketed Cali for~ .· ·
.
",
nia, while the rest of the West had
'
... partly cloudy skies.
•
Rain was expected to dominate
~· the Northeast until afternoon. A low
, ;. pressure system from the South was
,;; also expected to bring showers to
_. . Pennsylvania and Maryland, while.an
., upper-level system could bring light
• rain to lndiana,.Ohio, West Virginia
• and Keiuucky.
' ,'"
A cold front across the mid; 1 Atlan.tic and Southeastern regions
BEST CHILl BOOTH • The Pomeroy-Middl•
·;. should bring some rain to North Carport
Rollry Club captured •moat original elta"
:' olina and Virginia. Minor Oooding
honore (above) during judging at the annual
:; was possible, especially_ in areas
Ch111 Cookotf Saturday Ill the Big Bend Sllrn·
' already soaked by Josephmc.
whael Featlval. The Rollry entry, "Rolllry Road~
A high-pressure system was likekill Chill", elao flnlahed first in the corpon~te
cia.. competition. Othar corporete hon11rs
went to Dottle Turner Realty, sacond place, and

.

y.

·OthaAIIen Jarvis, 60, Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1996, at Overbrook
Nursing Genter in Middleport.
·
Formerly of Milwaukee, Wise .• he was horn Jan. 36, 1936, in Quick,
W.Va., to the late Otha A. and I.enith Merie Lowe Jarvy. He was retired
from Midwest Diecast of Milwaukee and was a member of the lntemationai"Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.
He is survived by 'three daughters and two sons-in-law, Mary and Jeff
Collins of Jamestown, Brenda and Frank Apollo of Brookfield, Wise., and
Ellen Horner of Bangor. Maine; a son, Albert Jarvis of Hernando, l'la.; si~­
ters ana brothers-in-law, Mildred Miller of Columbus, WillaDene and Charles
Morris of Marengo, Dolly and Tony Svobtlda of Mauston. Wise. , Louise
Miller of Cedarburg. Wise .. June and Roger Mowery of Pomeroy; brothers
and sisters-in-law, Leeroy and Bonni~Jarvis of Columbus, Darrell and Susie
Jarvis of Saukville, Wise., Sherman and Ada Jarvis of Bucyrus. Frank and
Joyce Jarvis of Harts, W.Va.. ind Arthur Ollie and Sharo~ Jarvis of Pomeroy ;
four grandchildren and one stepgrandson; several meces, nephews and
cousms.
.
He was preceded in death by a granddaughter.
.
.
Graveside services will be held Friday, II a.m. at Wells Cemetery w1th
the Rev. James Keesee officiating. Arrangements are by Fisher Funeral
Home, Middleport.

Hospital news

63

Sentinel

Stocks

Iwidely beloved; all were widely 'nalists ttlday- reporters and editors
·respected.
-an: operating mOl]: on theory from
The Vietnam War produced a gcn- the classroom than on adrenaline
oration of journalists who were lied from the field . This has led to -text- ,
to by the government and became • book .and pollster and experimental
tynical of power. They wenl on to journalism, to bland an.fl copycill ::;
inOucncc ~ younger generation who newspapc~ dabbling in goofy fall$ ..
grew to distrust government and .like "civic journalism" and avoiding ~
business.
stories that unsettle readers.
Watergate produced a generation
of journalists who reali7.ed strong , There arc always exceptions to
reponing could lead to personal rich- 600-word generalities. Great news'
'es -'to television jobs or book con· papers still exist.. And while Sitton"
'tracts that enrich balance sheets .and and' Seigcnthaler and Pilttenon and·'
egos. Many abandoned newspapers. Kovach and Cony arc retired from
Some of their successors had the newspapcri ng. Roberts belps lead:
same drive but not the same talent, the mosl prestigious newspaper of all; •
· producina thin works aimed more at makin1 The New York Times beuer
than ever.
enrichinathan informinJ. ·
The common thread is passion pusion thll took journalism in difG..,_r, editor of the
ferina directions and that showed up · (Iowa) Deily TriiKoae, II , _,
in print and in meelinp when it is !~~~iter of Tile Loalnllle Courle~~o ,
decided what to cover and whll to loa ..... _. 1lte DwM..... Ilea•·
' lder ad fo.....- pn~ldeat oiNBC. :
.ianore.
t1
But II has been nearly 25 years NnL WrltetGIIiln C81'11olG
Nftl
Senlce,
1000
WU..
8Ift.,
si~ Wlllettlle, .and there has been
"~
no passion-producing event. So jour-· AriJatton, V.. Zlm. .l.
'•
,.'"'

DOMINO~S

'.

SUNDAY·· THURSDAY
.9 P.M. UNTIL CLOSING

K-rn•rt ..............................:••••10\
Lllndt· End.~ ..........t "'!'''''''""'' ... 21

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Subo&lt;llbOll ilOideslrina 10 Jill' die carrier may
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onai-·Ctt)-llooiLCredJiwillbe

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MADNESS SAI.E

1

Ohio val•y Benk.....'.............an
One Vellef...............:.,...........41lio
Pteopl• ..noorp. ................24~
Prem Pln1............................... 12~
Rootwll ..•..•••..•••~-·-··········•••11
RDI8tlltl ......................112\
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....,.............. __.............,..,.

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eanar ··.·····-··-·...r............M\
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Worthlrtgton •••••• ~ ••••'..-........20\

---

FISH &amp; CHIPS

$179 ·

LARGE PEPPERONI

$6''

PLUS TO

Offer Good At Pomeroy Location Only

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POMEROY

�•

Sports

Wednelclay, October 8, 1996 -

he-Daily Sentinel

No deal with Seahawks may push Falcons

Braves to host Cardinals tonighf.'i n NLCS opener

Page 4
Wednesday, October 9,1996

ill

.

•

waive Geor'ge

•

By BEN WALKER
A11..ANTA(AP)-The last time
the St Louis Cardinals won the
World Series, it was 1982 and carne
afler a three-game sweep of Atlanta
in the NL playoffs.
To the Braves, that's ancient history. Phtl Niekro was the ace of the
pitching slaff in those days and
Dale Mmphy and Bob Homer were
the best hitters.
To the Cardinals, though, that's
not so long ago. After all, Ozzie
Smith and Willie McGee were key
members,then, just as they are now.
For Smith, 41, and McGee, 37,

c

By PAUL NEWBERRY
ATLANTA (AP) -The Atlanla
Falcons traded tw&lt;rfirst-round picks
to acquire Jeff George. They made
him the cornerstone of the franchise.
Now, it looks like they'lllet him go
- and get nothing in return.
The Falcons, desperate to unload
the suspended quarterback, saw a
proposed deal with Seattle fall
through Tuesday - the NFL trading
deadline - )Nhen George couldn't
agree on a long-term contract with
the Seahawks.
., Since IJle Falcons have no intention of reconciling with George, it
looks like their only alternative is to
waive the quarterback who set a
team passing record last season with

4,143 yards.
"From what I undel:!&lt;tand and
hear from the Falcons,! gu~ss I'll be
released," George said Tuesday.
"After that, I don't know. I've not
gone beyond that."
· . For now, George remaons a member of thF Falcons. His suspension
lasts for another two weeks.
"We still have a couple of weeks
to decide what to do with Jeff,"
coach June Jones said. "But our
options are limited, obviously."
The coach did rule out George
rejoomng the Falcons . .
"I don't thinkJetfis interested in
that arid 1 don '!think we could have
him back," Jones said.
George and agent Leigh Stemberg

had been lalking with the Seahawks
about a reponed six-year, $30 million contract. ·The Falcons were prepared to trade George straight up for
Rick Mirer, Seaule's former startong
quarterl&gt;ack.
However, George felt he was
being rushed into a deal and decided not to sign.
"I wanted to be able to put my
heart and soul into this decision, and
I wasn '1 able to do that because 11
happened so fast," George said.
"Maybe now I can take a step back
and make ot nght. I've made some
mistakes in my career and I didn't
want to make anotber one."
George was suspended 'by the
Falcons after a sideline confrontation

with Jones during a Sept. 22 loss to
Philadelphia. With Mirer struggling,
the Seahawks showed interest, but
no trade could be arranged.
George signed a one-year, $3.64
mollion contract with the Falcons in
traming camp. with the provision
that he COL!ld become an unrestncted free agent at the end of the y~ar.
No team was Willing to trnde for hom
unless he agreed to a longer deal. ·
The seven-year veteran insosted
that money wasn't a factor on his
decision to sever negotiations with

Seattle.
"So many numbers were being
thrown around, I really didn't get
onto that," George said. "I just wanted to make sure that no mauer where

s ·o uth Qallia han~s Meigs JVs 31-12 loss
South Gallia's football team
scored 16 second-quarter points
while holding the host Meogs junior
varsi!)' team scoreless in the first half
en route to a 31-12 victory Saturday
night in Pomeroy.
After a scoreless first quarter, the
Rebels (3-2 overall &amp; 2-1 on JV
games) got on the hoard when quarterback Rufu~ Stanley found Kent
Butler for an 11-yard touchdown
pass with II: 13 left in the second
quarter. Stanley's two-point conversion pass to Justin Bowers put the
Rebels ahead 8-0.
,
WilliS: 19left in the second quarter, Amos Callahan's 51-yard fumble
recovery return for a touchdown and
Stanley's two-point conversion pass

to Bowers gave South Gallia a 16-0
lead.
•
·
In the third quarter, Meigs slashed
th~ Rebels' lead to a four-point margin on two scoring plays·- Shuler's
one-yard run (9:43) and Grant
Abbott's pass to Davidson (I :59).
·Both two-point conversion auempts
fell shon.
.
While holding the Marauders
scoreless in prime time, South Galloa rang up ots final I 5 points in the
closing act. Callahan, working out of
the backfield, had a three-yard touchdOwn run imd a twq-point coriversion•ruri (2:39). Then J.R. Boothe
pocked up a fumble and ran 27yards
for the last touchdown with 2:13 left.
Jason Baisden's extra-point kick

Quarter~

Meigs turned in a 46-carry, 140yard elfon en route to gettong 256
total yards.

South Gall ia
Meigs

0-16-0-15=31
0-0-12-0= I 2

pull the trigger."
In Seaule, coach Dennis Erickson
said he was slightly disappointed that'
the trade fell through, but he was
loo~ing forward to the future with
John Friesz, who took over as the
starting quarterback last week.
"Alii know is I'm going to get
ready to kick butt woth John," Erickson said. "I'm happy with that"
The Falcons suspended George
for one game after he complained
vehemently about being benched
,during the third quaner of the 33-18
lo•no Philadelphia.

way as some close points competi-

. .

this is likely their last season. their
last opponunity to win another ring.
Though Cardinals leliever Dennis
Eckenley doesn't have lillY plans to
retire, this could be his final shot at
October glory.
"Hey, I'm 42 years old. This
might be it for me," Eckersley said.
"This is great for the young guys
because tbey haven't won bef&lt;\re.
And it's great for the old guys
because you don't know if you'll
ever get back."
·
Look around the tfeld tonight during Game ·! of the NL playoffs and

it's clear many of these people have cull and Mike Gallego with Oakland tbeir talents in first-round playoff team, being the No. I slarter is no
been here before.
·
in 1989 and Todd Stottlemyre with sweeps. Atlanta, as usual, won with more than a number." .
pitching in knocking out Los AngeA number all tile Atlanta players
The Braves are trying to become Toronto in I992-93,
the first NL team to repeat as World
les in three games while La Russa · know is .five, which is bow many
"The Cardinals have a lot of guys
Series champions since the Big Red who've played the game a long needed to make ~ore moves in guid- consecutove appearances the Braves
Machine in 1975-76. They have tune," Glavine said. "They can beat ing St. Louis past San Diego.
have m~e on the post-season. Yet
''Their potching has been so great they reahze addmg another champoTom Glavine, MVP of last year's you in a number of dofferent ways."
Series, former playoff MVl's John
Particularly under the guidance of for the last four or five years," Smoth ons.~ip ~ill not be easy ..
Smaltz and Steve Avery, and fo.Jr- , Tony La Russa, trying to become just said. "We know they're going to be
I thmk contonuatoon os more of
·
a challenge than getting there,"
lime 'Cy Young winner Greg Mad- the sixth manager to win pennanl,'i in tough to beat."
dux.
Smoltz starts tonight against Braves gene_ral .. manager John
both leagues.
"f._
Seven St. Louis players own
, "Unless'fOU play on October," La Andy Bene~ . Glavine and Maddux Schuerholz saod . . There have been
World Series championship rings Russa said,/"most spons fans don' t will follow for the BrllVes with Den· a number of.clubs m tbe last I 0 years
Smith and McGee with the Cardinals know how 'good you are."
ny Neagle possibly pilchi~g Game 4. built to champion~hip status, even
in I 982, Gary Gaeui with Minneso"I don't consider myself the ace world champoonship status. B.ut 10
The Braves and Cardinals sbowed
ta in 1987, Eckersley, Rick Honeyof the staff " said Smoltz who led the years thereafter, there os a dimm '
the majors' in wins and ~trikeouts . ishment in their productivity and
"That is a term loosely used. On our success. ~
1

In the latest MCKA races,
'

last week was John Turley of Humcane in hos 1967 Camara, followed
by Rick Randolph of Bidwell in his
1969 Camaro, and scmo-finalist Glen
Watterson Jr. of Point Pleasant, in his
1974 Duster.
Rick McCormock of Alum Creek,.
W.Va. drove hos 1995 Corveuc'to a
forst-place linish in the street dovision. lorn Saunders of Eleanor, W.Va.
took runner-up in his 1968 OTIC
The semifinalists wer~ Brenda
Vcnoy of Long Bottom m her I972
Nova, anil Mason's Ray McCoy in
his 1980 Ford.
,
In. the Junior dragstcr divisoon,
Chad Smith of St. Albans beat out
Aaron Carper of Spencer lor the win.
CiJi' Ca.~to of Mason, W.Va. and
Jgnathan Clay ol West Hamhn were

tions come to an end for the I 996
season.
The modilied and pro division
champions will be decided, and they
will then take on street dovosion wonner Jim Saunders to delermme the
track champoon. Local racers will
also be hop10g to secure their team
spots for the World Bracket Finals in
Darlington, S.C. later this fall.
In last week's achon Tom BFII of
South Charleston drove hos 1992
Berettq to a pro divosoon win ov~r
Wmfield's Kevon Rob10son 10 a
· 1977 Monza. The pro division semifinalist was Qarbo'Anis of Grayson,
Ky.
The modified division winner the sctmtinahsls

. The Meigs Competitipn Kartmg winner with ·2,426 points, followed
In the Stock Medmum Feature, Mark French took the early lead with
Association presented its champioos by Marvin Day, 2,334; Michael Chuck ·ctark, making his racing Todd Brumfield right behind. MOrk
with trophies recently clunng an Smith, 2;233; Mark Walker, 1.411; debut, took the pole, the lead nd the Steedman took th11d. The top three
awards ceremony at the Meigs Coun- and Waylon Collins, 1,340
win, never giving up his posotion would finish as U~ted. Will Phillips
ty Fairgrounds in Rock Springs.
Jerry Spradling was the Stock once. Dale Humphreys jumped out took an earlly founh, but lost it to
Series champions were Mark Heavy winner woth 2,654·paints, fol- onto second and ran a good race woth Chris Casto on lap 6 pulling Philhps
Stedluim, Ethan Smith, Larry McCo- lowed by Bob Robinette, 2,430; Clark but didn't get around in time in the (ifth spot.'
mas, Josh Long, Jerry Spradling, Dale Humphrey, 2,344; Lloyd Akers, · and finished m second.
On lap 9, Jason Ball passed
Don Casto, Jason Shain and Claude 2,331; and Micky Alexander.
Don Casto was on third from flag Philhps to take over the fifth spot
Cornelius.
. In the Tecumseh engines class to flag. Dana Hartlly, started 6, where he would finish.
This year proved to be one of the Do~ Casto took first. with I ,450 m,oved up the field, through lapped
In the Rookie racing action, Tyler
best ever for the association which points over Dustin Lamar. In the traffic and finished in the fourth spot. . French took the lead when the green
continues to grow each and every open four-cycle qlass, Jason Shain as · The Medium class was composed of flag fell the twin brothers racing
year. More than I00 different com- ' the winner with 956 points ov.er J.C. eight karts.
'
team, Cacy and Cody Faulk took the·
'" .,
petitiors compet~d throughout the, McGraw.
In the Junior Feature, Tiffany third spot and Cacy took the fourth
.
t
year.
Hickle took the pole 'in front of Josh spot.
Com~lius. of Cheshire, took first
In the stock light class, Mark in the two-cycle open class with . Lo~g and Waylon Colhns. Hickle , In the Junior feature race. Trent
Sted~m was the overall winner
2,372 points, over Steve Molhoan, held the position all the way anl and Tolliver was the domonant one finwith 2,51 I points. He was followed 1,805; Phillip LaComb, 1,105; Mtke went on 10 claim the feature win. os~mg lirsl in front of a fi,eld of sevby Marc French, 2,036; Dean McCo- Connolly, 794; and Mike Hayman, Long .claimed second place. Collins en karts. Josh Long took second and
mas, 1,885; Gklen Roush, 1,881; and 569.
clauned third.
was able to hold his spot from the
PaPaw Smith, 1,152. Twenty-two
In the Stock Heavy Feature, challengong Marvin Day who fincars competed in the division.
'•
In the latest racing action, Chns Spradling was the pole position, oshed a very good thiRd.
Ethan
Smith
won
the
Rookie
Michael Smith finished founh,
" Division championship with 2,588 Casto in the stock li!liJ! division entore race J,eader and winner. Don
1
jumped out in front and led from flag Casto held on the the second posttion where he started, in founh. He was
'points, followed by Dennis Adkins, to flag over Glen Roush and Mark fot the race and finished there. In followed by Waylon Collins, T.J.
1.745; Cacy Faulk, 1,625; Cody StedhallJI Ethan Smith took the lead . . third was Chris McGrath and fourth Escue and Tiffany Hickle.
' Faulk,
1,135; and Cliff Crank, 589. · Taking second on the start was Cody was ill Martin.
•
In the Junior points standing,
'• Nine cars competed i,n the division. Faulk. In third was Kaci Seitz and
Sonce there was no Open feature, 2,069 gives Josh Long the first spot,
The stock mCjlium championship . fourrth was Cacy Faulk. ,
i
second~heat action saw ,Phtllip .followed by Michael Smith's 1,950.
went
to Larry McComas woth 3002
'
After mapy cautions and restarts LaComb jumlp out in front on the ',, Marvin Day's 1,742 puts him in
points, followed by Buck Mulford; the checkered finally waved over the stan but Steve Milhoan was behind third .
:• 2405: Chris McGrath, 2165; Bill field with Ethan Smith on top, Cody and took o,ver the lead and finished
In·the stock Heavy feature, Micky
• Mw:tin, 1892;· and Ron ZCrkle ,with on second, Kaci in third and Ca~:y in · there. LaComb flnished in second.
Alexander was the first spot ~nner
: 1670.
In other Stock Light racing 'action, all the way to the end.
founl&gt;.
·! . . Josh Long was the junior class
~

Scoreboard
•

The
1h1rd weekly football compLIIIX r.mkmgs
as released by the Oh1o H1gh School Ath·
leuc AssoclisiiOR, b:t dmston nnd region,
w1th average b1-level ponw per g:mw (top
rOur tealft."' 1n each reg1on adva~ to ~­
gJonalaemlfinalsl
COLUMBUS, Otno (AP) -

Baseball

AL playoffs
Baldmore vs. New York
Tuesi.Jay's IUtion
Baltimore Ill New York, ppd, ram .
Toni&amp;ht
Bo.lnmore (Er1d:son 11-12} 111 ~ew
Yort (Pelfille 21-8), 4.07 p.m
&lt;l

Division I
Regmn J· I Oe S1 lgnam11 214166
2-Lnkcwood St Edward 2~ J~J.l. .l-Hud5on 18 ~8J.l 4-Strongsv•lle I 4 1666 .~ ­
Ellc hd ll JJH 6-Shnker Hu I J 5000
Region 2· 1-Tol St John'' 21 :'i.111
2-Troy 22 2500 1-Lima Senior 20 9166
,4-Manon Hw"d1ng 18 0833 5-Sprn~gfldd
Soulh 16 1666 6·Kettering Fa~rmont

Thunca.y

Balrimon: (Wells 11·14)0! New York
(Cone 7-2), '07 p m
"
Friday
New York (Key 12-ll)atBaltnnore
(Mussma 19·10, 8 01 p m
Satunlay
New York (Rogers 12-8) 111 Balmnore

I~

Reg1on 1 1-Mawllon Washmgton
2S m&gt; 2-Crove Cily 24 2500 .l-Canton
McKtnley 18 0000 4-Upper Arlington
179166 ~- ~buillonJ.ockson 152500 6Gahanna Uncoln 15 0000
' Reg1on 4 !-Middletown 206666 2Cm Elder 20 'i8U .l-C1n . MQeller
20 51 SO, 4-0n Anderson 110000 5-Cm
Sycamore 15 ~&amp;33, 6-Harmon l5 J 100

(Cuppmp ID-6). 7:;\7 p.m
s-loy,Od.IJ.
New York at Balt•more. 4 07 p m., •f

_.wy

•

'

Tundoy, Oct. 15 ·

BiUUfl'llWC at New York, 8 fJ7 p m, if

·

lleCeflill')'

'

.......,

'

Wednoidaf, Oct. 16
Ball:illllR &lt;II New York, 8 07 p m, 1f

DlvisionU

Reg~on !I J Col. Willterson 20 760~
2-F..oslon;:a 19 IOSO 3-Bowhng Gr~cn
\6 '..! 166 4-Deflance I :\ 0000 ' 5-0ubhn
S~:1010 12 9166 6-C0I SL. Charles

NL playoffs

II

St. Louis vs. Adanta
Sa Loui1 CA!kly Benes /8-10) al At·

llltlla (Smohz24·8), 8.07 p m
Thurtday

Sr. LoUis 1Sroutemyre 14-11) 0.1 Atlaara (Maddmt 15-11 ). 8: II p m.
Saturday
Atla.ma (Giavu\le 1~·10) al St Lou1s
(Otbome 11-9), 4· IS p m.

SundaJ, Od. 13

Atlama :11 St Louis. 7 ~0 p m
Monday. Od. 14
St Louts, 7·09 fl m , 1f n«·

e~tlama nt

Wtdntld•y, Oct 16
Sl Louis ru At1anlll, 4 l ~p .m . 1f Rl.'\:"""Y

I

R~gion 9 !-Olmsted falls 22 166:6
2-Mt.:nlur Lake Cath 20 6666 1-Cunlantl
L1kevrew 16 9166. 4·Cie BciiCI.iiJ.:IItiC
16 4000 5-Cuy Fall~ W~lsh Jesuit
14 Xl)l 6-:fw1n~burg Ch01mbcrh n

.

Hockey

'.

"6666
Re~im1

10 I·Bclh:vuc 1-' IJ I66 2·
Spnngfio:I,J Sh:awno:c 1-' 2500 "1- IJcl,lw&lt;~rc
Olcnumgy ll.'it\1 1 4-LIIIl3 Bath I 1 Otn 1
5-St, Marym McmorHll 12 0000 6Delaw~ Bud:eye Vall~y 10 "iMH
, Kel1on 11. 1-Wintcnvdle lmh.~n
Creek 170K3l 2-You Chaney lf:o6666
l -Belou Wcs1 Branch 16 .:moo -'·

NHL standings.
'

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allantk lN"ilion

lit L' I &amp; !if !lA

IDol

AoruJa ........... 2 0 I

~

•9

Tampa Bay . .

I 0 0

2

4

New Jtne:y ...

I I 0

2

4

Ptul....-klphill
NY Rang~'l's ..
NYbl,wk'fJ
Washington . ..

,I I 0
0 I 2
0 I I

2
2
I

4
7
2

U 2 0

0

~.

Northcui Dh-isktn
HIWiford . . . , ,200
4

Piotsburt&lt;h ....

..0 2 0

0

6'

Regwn 12

1

2 0 0

Oullas ... , j ..... "2

Q,

0

4

4

Phoent;\ .~M"""''" . 1 ~

IJ

to .l l11
Reruon 14 I, T0,n1o~any

SI, Lout;
TOfVfi&amp;U
~1011

San Jose! .
U,Anr,eles ..
Ctllpry ...
.
VliDCOUvcr.-, ....

I I I
I I 0
I I 0
I I 0

Colooaolo ........ I 2 0
luwlheim ,
0 I I

'

:;,.
5

.,

CA!\Yitt.E· Vl\ttEY ll'14&amp;'\' 4-IIUJNJ
TON ROCK HILL 12 4LH 5-PtkA!tnn

12 0000

_l

9

1

1

4

'\

~

,1

2

9
1

'

14

'

Division V

10

Reston 17 I ·N, LtmD S- Ran~te
l:n~oo. 2-0rwdl Qrand Valley 12 7500
1-Qales Mills H11wken 12 '\JJ 4-Avon

Tuesday's scores
PiltsburJh J
,
NY, Ranpn: I, Florida I (t1e)
Edmonlon 4, TOfonlo 2 ·

114166 !i-Sulhvan Black R1vtr 109166
6-Lor.un Ck'.uvlt'w 10 ·U66
Reltl(ln ltl. 1-Milnon Plewsunt
6666 2-Harnkr Pnlrllk Henry
JSOOOO ~ - Frt:mon• 81 JoSc:(lb J&lt;4:j{)()O
4-EifllOil' Wuodmorc 1'2 0000 !i-Bu~;yrus
Wynford 11 ,4 166 6-Ltbcrty Center
10 JlOO
ReJion 19 !·COAL GROVE OAW·
SON-BRYANT 19 9000, 2-Amaod3Ckl!U\:reek IU666 1-Woodsfield Monroe Ccnnal J 4 08H &lt;t - ~.hrttns Fcri'y
1l5ti.1J. S·CROOKSV ILLE JD.lJJ. 6Bo.ll Uberty Un1on II 1:03:\
Rcaion 20· I·Ctn. Maruemon!
18.6891. 2-Col Ready 160000, l·Verabillcl 14 7500 4-Spencerville 13 0000
S-ColdwaleT 12.7500 6-Wes1 Jefferson
109106

I,

Dallas II, Wuhtngton :1
Colorado 6, San Jose 0

Toai&amp;bt's&amp;ames

N,Y, lalandena« Oni'wa. 1 .\0 p m
1.01 AnceJes a1 r.4QIIfreQ.I. 1 JO p m
Edmonton at Detroit. 7·l0p m
AAahetm • OIICilJO. 8:JO pip
St. Loui•• Calpry. 9 )() p m.

Buff•• V81MX11Uver. 10 p.m

Thunday's co-

DoltaoarN.Y. Ronam. ?·JOp m.
Lo• AP,tle• ;:{r Phtladtlphta, 7·30
AMheitn II Coltwado. 9 p m.

'

San JCM • Phoenix, 9 p m

Ohio H.S. s po rts

\

\

Divloion VI
Re1ion 21 I·MOI....,. IJ.9106. 2Howlfd E Knot ll :n rt :t-Daltot~ t..oeaJ
10 4166. 4-Ca4iz 9 5000. 5-McDon.ald

7Jl33. 6 (lici·N

08SAA f'ootb&amp;ll

computer

ratings

Tusc

9 5000

H~nronl7.

p.m.

6-ZnarYtlll~

V;llley.
I Q9 1 ~
,
.
Rel!itm 16 ! -Germantown Valley
V1c'N 15 2"\00 2-Cm WyuminJ 111JI(!6,
1-Wdl.unsporl Wclil-all 11 ~16rJ 4Jnn-.estt.Wo'n Grl.,..Rev1ew 12 b666 '\.0.1y
Nurlhrul!!e 9 9166 6-Cin lndi:u1 Hill

~

2
2
2

I

OHSVCApoll
COLUMBUS. Oh1o (APJ -The
tourth or SIX weekly"Oh10 H1'h S~:hool
Volleyball Coaches Auocl&lt;ttlon polls
wub school , rec(ll'd an9 tolal po1n1s (lintplace vole5 m pnn:mheses)

Division I

1'1&gt;.

Tum

; 1-Cm Seton(B) 18-0 . .
2-tlyna (H) 20-0.. . ... . .
'-Wooster{S) 16.(1 , .

. 167

.ISO
129
MB

4-Cin. Princeton 16-1 .
'i-MDn&amp;field Madison 11-4
6M
6-We~tervlllt! South I '·2 .
.. , , SIS
7-Cin Mother of Mercy 1~ ·4 ,..
.54
R-Leb.mon 17-l ,
52
9-Rocky R1-wa Magnificat IJ-6
, 42
10-0aymn Carroll 16 · ~ . , ..
41
Sewnd 10: 11-Tol. Sl. Unul.1 ~7 12dn. Ursuhne A~.1t1 36 I).Oullll.OChe :W
14-Mentor '0 l!i-Stow 2!1 16-Hilhard
24 17-Vaftdaha Buller 2~ . IH Solon 2!2
19-Pi"JU•I 21 20: You Aus1intown - F1t~h

''

.
Division' II

Ium

•

I-C1p St Ursulafl1) 16-J
2-TodlmtX1gc(4) 14-;\ ...
.:\-SunbufY B1g Walnutl6· 1
4-T•ppCuy(IJI7-2
'i-Wdming1on 17-2
6-Norwulk 1~ - 1
,, .

fli.

, , , . 227
, .... ,. l!iK
.
96

- ~~/

,

..

60
~~

..

'ti-L1ma Balh llH .

51

.. .. ' . .

.. 47

9·Holland Springfield (I) 14-!i .
IO-Huhb1H'dl9-1
'· ,

.. 4:\
42

S•C'Oftd 10: I l-Ash Harbor 36 12·
A~h EtJgewoud 12 1~-ATHENS (2) Jl ,
14 Ule)·R~~nna Soul~ast, Clyde 2" 16WJIIard H 17-Canal Fullon Northwes!
22 lli-Be,;lcy 16 19-Col OeSales 1J
20-K~:n~IOLI 12.
· 1

Ium
I

M~nnn

1'1&gt;.

E!{!m fl9) 14-1

, 2KO
IIJ6

2-Arcltt"Kllti(5J16· 1 .
l-Hcnlh (2) 14-2

.

,

1-'~

4-A~hl.mtl

Cre,tv1ew (4) 14-0
"i-Columb1ana Cre~!VIcw {I) 14· 2

J~a~:bon

ton, todlpendencc 7 08J3.

JIICtJOn.Mil-

Rta•on 22 !·Norwalk S1 Paul
13 9166. 2·findhay Liberty·Bcnlq•

K4
71J
6K

6-Frunl:.fon Adeft:ll~- 2
,
7·Miner.d Rldgc:(2) I ~-J ,
., !12
t1-R01:kf0rd P,lfkway 14-2
,, 49
9-New Pam Nnt'ITrad 16-2
. 46
10-W Lufaycu~: Ridgewood 17-2
31
Se!Oond It: II -OAK HILL OJ f6
12-Granvllle 2'i 1J-Cre11on Norwayne
22 14-N Jackson Jackson-Mthon (!) 21
U-Huron {I) 20 16-Wellsvtlle I H. 11·
MINFORD I~ HI-Wuuseon 14, 19 (IIC}·
Elyria Calh ., LuOr:mge ·Keys!One ,

Blue Luster
Rinse &amp;
'

.

Vac

.Rental Rug
S~a•pooer

Mcichine

•Sha111poo
•Spot. Cleaner

NEW YORK YANKEES AnMikt: A!tJr~lc will ,rcRIVCr:l 1111 lhc phlytllf
ru slo.: r
'

/

noun~;etl INF-OF
l'la~~ or Rub.:n

Division IV
Ium

1'1&gt;.

I St Henry {l6l 19-1
,
,.. 210
2-New Wu~h Bud.eye ~nt {1) 1~-02 14
1-Q idWa.~h BucktlyeTrallJR-l
IHIJ
4-Bnscom Hopweii-Louden 16 J
129
"i-New Bremt!n 16-l .
, 61
6-l.l.lr&lt;Lm Cathoh~ 14-1
,
"i9
7-RACINESOUHIERN 11· 1
~fl
8-Wmdham 14-2
"40
9- Antw~rp 12-4
3K
10--Ann.t IJ-] .
17

Src:ond 10: II ~Tol Nor1hwmul 16
1 2-Ccml!l'b ur~ 3'i H-KuhUa (I) l4 14-S
Charlestun sOutheastern ll 1.'\·Tu~~
G;nt C.uh ( I) ]2 16--M~;Comb lO 1"1·
"Su.lney Lchnmn 29 IH-014 l:on 29 ' IIJSpnng C.tlh Cent 1:'; 20-Phun Ctty
Shekm;th Chnsnan II ·

Transactions

Nallonal L:cagul!
FLORIDA MARLINS' N.lllll'l.l Larry

t;tladl, RKh Olmudly
lhlrd b.1sc ctw.:h Mth M.ty hilling mstnlclpr Tnnuny SanJ1 lirst b,L\1! ~o.Lt h, Jerry
M.uJUcl bt:nch ~ u.1~:h , Bru~c K111un
buiiJ'ICII ~;O.I~h ,m;J Tony 1\:rc:.t: spc~;lal ......
Ro1h$~htltiJH1dung

~at.ml loth~ ~cncr.tl 111.\lliiJ:\Cf

LOS ANGELES LlOOC.J'RS • All·

the ttlSI!lllaltOII ill Jay Lu\:a.~. dl·
ret:l\lr 111 pubhc11y. th bccu mc tl1rc~:lor of
pubh~; rci. IIIUn ~ lur Jlcn.~kc Motur StMJrt~
.mli !hi: C.lhlurm.l Sp..-ctlway Nanll.'l.II.Jcr·
nck Halllhi'Cctur 111 pu~h~:il)'
PITTSBURGH PIR/\1 ES Nllmlltl
R1ck Rcmck tlurd tl.1sc ~u.u; h and JtlC
Jm11:s hcn~b ~u;M;h Na1111.:d l)ltk hl.'Cill.m
dud tlfiCTo\1101!, nllt~Cr ,lfi!J O.:XCO.:IIfl\lC VII:C
.,.-csnlcnl
'
IILIUIICCli

Bask.tb¥11
NaUw111l 811skcthall A:t~A'Illllun
LOS ANGELES Cl.ll'l'l HS SuSf'CilJt:ll C Stanley Htlh..'rts ukldimtdyl ur

Baseball
American t,.eagut

FIMotball
Nallenal t"ouiiK&amp;IIlAugue
ATLANTA I AI.CONS Agree•lln
' h:rm~ wllh IJT Jell Z~nmnn Wnlved 1&gt;'1',
Shtllk' Drnt..:tl
CAROLINA PANTHI~KS A~;IIV,th::d
I)'J' Tim'Cohliln from tho.: pr.M:\1"-c StJU:IJ
W.ttvctJ TE Paul Burke
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS Sr~ncd
LB-OE Sl.'dtlc Glurk 1U the p"r-.1~;tM! ~1.\..ad
NI!W YORK JI:TS

Slgu~d WR

P.tlmk Riley "" the 11racucc ~quvU
Wm~ctl DL Brent Wtlhnms. OT Jumes
P,trrl~h mu.l K IJ&lt;m Sllvcstn .

i(

• NoUon11l H«kty Lea,:ur
NHL Suspcntlc1l New Yurk R.m,.cn
, C M.trk M~ ~s 1cr :md Edmuntun 01h:rs
' LW Lmlil.! Dc:Brusk fur two g.urb e;~~:h
lur !ll.'JlUfllll! mcn.lcnts 1 ,1~1 week
CHICAGO BLACKHhWKS· A~n,-cll
tn t crm:o~ wdh C Atlnm CrctPtnn,
COLORADO AVALANCHE Sltcncd
1: Ad;ml ()eadmur...b ltl ,1 luur•yc.tr ~un-

l

By CRAIG HORST
.
'KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Right at the bottom of the ·long list
of goals Billie Winsen-Fietcher
1\oped to aclloeve when she entered
the {,l'niversity of N~braska was .to
won a national championship.
She did that, and more. WinsettPletcher was chosen as NCAA
Woman of the Year on Sunday for

the combination of academic excellence, commumty servoce and fine
play as an outsode hiuer for the 1995
Nebraska women's c~ampoo n volleyballteam.
"The final thing was to win the
national championship," · WinsenFletc~er said before she was honored
along with nine other finahsts at an
NCAA dinner. "I had the GPA I

Tropical _s torm's fringe
element forces ALCS · - ~·'·.
delay until later today
,,

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M ...,

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By TOM WITHERS

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u October - 3l~i 1996

•Machi•••

.,
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· PICKENS .
HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.
773-5513

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Whalers.and Stars get y.tin.s
onds left in the ·second period on a
hard wrist shot over goalie Tom Barrasso's blocker. He scored again
modway through the final penod on
a 2-on-1. O'Neill scored in the first
alfd thord periods for the first multigoal game of his career. Bnan Glynn,
Kevin Din~en and Brendan Shanahan also scored for Hartford.
Stan S, Capitals 3
AI Dallas, Mike Modano had two
· goals and two assists, and Jere Lehtonen adde\1 a goal and two assists for
the Stars Dallas took a 3-2lead into
the third perl&amp;l, then Modano gave'
the Stars same breathing room with
a power-play rebound at 3:33..Greg
Ad~ms added his third goal of· lhe
season 2: II later as the Stars won
their setond straight. Dallas' Andy
Moog stopped 23 shots .for his 327th
career voctory, tops among actiye
goaltenders. Phil Housley hlld a goal
and an assist for the Caps, who fell
to 0-2.
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Holiday Co;,kbook
• -elo The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pt!meroy,· Oh 45169
Please~ include
...our name ond '
(
phone # with recipe. . .
Deadline for f.IU recipes ,

•

'"

··NcAA honors Nebraska's'Winsett-Fietcher
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Included i1~ the cookbook wiU be recipes from Mason,
Meigs &amp; GaUia County reshlents, at no clta;ge.
The recipes wiU be categorised cu follttWs:

• Appetizen/Beverage• • Bread/Grains
• Cake.!Pie• &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• S.alatb &amp; Vegetabies
_,·
· •Soup• and Sandwiches
Brintf tyOfU! recipe into' OfU! olfit;&amp; or--aen4 it to:;

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Meigs varsity spikers lose
to Belpre and beat,Trimble
The Meigs Maraucjer volleyball
team recently split two matches to
run ots record to I 0-4 overall and 82 in the TVC.
Meigs dropped a three-game
match to Belpre by r:ores of 9-15,
15-5 and 14-16.
Emily Fackler led Meigs with 14
of 15 servong with one kill and 12
assists. Stephanie Stewart was 15 of
16 serving with sox kills and three
assists. Sophoe Bahrs was 10 for 12
servong. Jessica McElroy was i 3 for
15 with 10 assosts Valene Cundolr
was six of seven. CanssaAsh was 10 ,
for I 0 with seven kills, Tanya Miller
was one for one woth seven kolls and
Tracey Coffey added two kolls and
one block.

In the reserve game Meigs won
by scores of !5-4 and 17-15. Bridgett
Johnson scored eight for Meigs.
Melissa Werry added seven Tangy
Laudermolt had 11ve. Megan Drummer and Ginger Darst had four each
Mcogs defeated Trimble in a paor
of contest 15-5 and 15-10. Fackler
was three for four ~erving with sax
assists. Stewart wa.~ live lor live woth
two kills. Bnhrs WitS 18 lor 18 serving. Cundiff was eight for nine.
McElroy was five lor five ,wit~ one
assists. Ash was four for four . wuh
two kills. Miller added four kills
·. The resctve team dropped a 1015, 15- I2 and 5-15 contest. No other onformalion was available.

Southern varsity sextet
tallies victory over Trimble.
· Southern's varsity volleyball team
dusted the Trimble Tomcats to ta~e
a stronghold on the Hocking Divi- ,
sion of the Tro-Valley Conference
race. Southern, seventh in the latest
slate volleyball poll, claimed dramatic 15-1 and 15-1 I wins.
Senoor Amber Th~mas led the 141 Tornadoes with 14 points, whole
Keri Caldwell added eight, Kim
Sayre five and one each from Renee
Thrley, Emoly Duhl and Cynthia
Caldwell.
Trimble was led, by Sara

Guinther's lour poonts, two each J:&gt;y
Kristen Hardy and Kandi King apd
one each from Joy ·Petit, Bol:lbi
Lent, Mandy CoO'man and Mility
Lent. Southern was never Scnou~ly
challenged.
. ·'
[
Southern won the rcscryc ga'1'clon
thrccsets, J5-12,8-15and 15-JJ ,
Kara King lcd , So~thern with~ I
poonts, Ava Goluwsku~ had. nine,
' ..
whole Amber Maynard had seven
and Kim lhlchad six.
,
&lt;;:hrissy Richards had ·I 0 for
Trimble

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THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will be pub_lishi.ng a

COOKI)OO~,

the NHL,

: ~y The Aeaoclated ~resa
Peter Forsberg had a goal and two New York played without caplaon
• , The Colorado AvJilanche finally. assists for Colorado.
Mark Mesiierr sllspended for two
•"Obviously, the Avalanche got games for hitllng Florida's Mike
: played like Stanley Cup fhampions.
;
After-losing their firstiy.oo games · charged up with the crowd and the Hough from behind on Saturday's
~ on lhe road, the Avalanche returned
presentation of the Stanley Cup ban, loss to the Panthers. Glenn Healy
loome Tuesday night, raised theit ner," Sharks coach AI Sims saod . made 31 saves for the Rangers.
Slanley Cup banner and got their first - ''We )Vere a httle flat and did not
~ OUers 4, Maple Leafs 2
victory of the season.
· ,
respond."
'
At Toronto, ~an Smyih scored
Patrick Roy made 24 saves for his ,
Elsewhere in .the NHL; Hart(ord • three goals, including the go-ahead
' 31st career shutout on a 6-0 win over beat Pittsburgh 1-3, the New York score with 2:14 left and an emptySan Jose.
Rangers tied Florida 1- I. Edmonton netter woth eight seconds remain on g.
"We were ready tonight,': said downed Toronto 4"2 and · Dallas The Oilers' 3-0 stan is their best
Roy. who has the most shutouts defeated Wash10gton 5-3.
since '!985-86, when they opened
among active goalies. "Even during
Rangers 1, Panthers J.
With five consecutive wins. Jaso~
the prese~tation and all the testiv(At Miami; Adam Graves scored Arnott also scored •for Edmonton. •
ties, we kept our focus."
with 32 seconds. left in regulation as Mtke Craig and Mats Sundin scored
Col.orado, which opened the sea- New York salvaged a tte in Florida's for 1he Leafs in the third per10o as
~on with losses at St. Louis and Dalhome opener. Graves' backhanded they rallied from a 2-0 deficit to toe
las, built a 5-0 lead over San Jose in score came after a controversial the game.
Whalers 7, Penguins 3
the first period and Roy did the rest. icing call on the Panthers that forced
At Hanford, Geoff Sanderson
"Patrick was extremely sharp," a faceoff in the Florida zone with 45
coach Marc Crawford, said. "You seconds left. The Panthers argued and Jeff 0 1Neill each scored two
could see he was really focused in on that icing should not have been goals as the Whalers improved to 2the puck: When he is sharp like that, called because the Rangers could 0 and Pottsburgh fell to 0-2. Sanderhe exudes confidence, and I think the have.stopped the puck at ceQter occ. son's first goal came with 15.3 secrest of the team follows suit."
'

O.:KIO.:IISlllll

HOLIDCfll

In

~' Avalanche,
.
.

Hockey

111~~;1

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NEW YORK (AP)- Braced for ·
Robeno Alomar's arrival, .Yankees
fans got Josephine instead.
;
Heavy wind-whipped rains forced
the first postponement in 25 years of
an AL ' playoff game as Thesday
night's Game 1of the championship
!ieties b6tweeri the New York Yankees . ancl Bllltimore Orioles was
washed out by the remnants of Tropical Storm Josephine.
Wilh a gloomy forecast, the
league office called off the game al
3:30p.m: EDT· 4112 hours before
the first pitch was scheduled. It was :
the riilht call.
. .
By 8 p:m., ·Wind gusts of nearly
60 mph brou1ht the rain down horizonlally, rendel'lna an umbrella useless. Thankfully, the more than
· $6,000,flnl expected for "'" series :
opener dido 't "-ve to bailie the hur- ;
rioane-like oonditiona.
•
"Nice weather; huh?," Yankees

•
wanted to have. I had the outsode goO&lt;j.' That is something everyone
actiyotoes I wanted to have.
on our team did, and that is some"Wonning, the national champi- tiling that I woll always take wnh
onship was the last thing I gave it me."
everything, I po~sobly could every
Wonsett-Fictcher, a , native of
day. I became the best volleyball Boonville, Ind., who has used up her
player 1 possibly could be ..Tbere is NCAA eligibility, carries a 3.833
a peace of feehng knowing that I grnde point average on,to her final
accomplished that
'
year toward a degree in secondary
' "It really does~'t matter what education. She is an active member
a_wards you win You go out and !lo of the Fellowship of Christian Ath·
the best you can and help make the letes. and has focused on working
others around you be better. There is with children,
a peacefulness, a ,proudness. when"• She· speaks;' at1 many., school
you know that yeu' have dono that&gt; •., "assemblies, and•is•the keyn'Ote'speak&gt;
We had a volunteer coach when we cr at NebraSka's annual "School is
were preparing for the Fonal Four Cool" Jam. which attracts about
who said 'Concentrate on makong 14,000 middle-school students.
someone else on your team look
'

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coach Don Zimmer said before braving the elements. ·
· "This is Mother Nature saying
she don 't want u:&gt;to pl{l¥.'' said Yankee first baseman Ceci~ielder.
Fonunately,the miserable conditions were expected to ease by,early
this morning, meaning the best-ofseven series should begin today at 4 · •
p.m . .with New York's Andy Pettitt' •

:C;:Y~~::l~~(ie?n:~rc;~

:·

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

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FREE HEARING TESTS

will N glvea I• Melp;•• C..•tle• fir

~·HEARING AID

CENTER

Friday, Oclolter II, 1996 . ·
,In Dr. A. Jack•• lallts' OHict
224 E•JI ...., POIItrOJ ·'
9a00-11oon '

the series shifts to Baltimore begin: ' •
ning Friday.
.
"I think they' made the nght · •
decision to call the game," said New .• Cal Jo1 ffll f-800-634-5265 fer •I l . .tiJPp*l•lf. •
York second baseman Mariano 'Duncan. "It's hard sometimes wben you • , Tilt tab wlbe glvtll bj I U.n. Hul I A1t1 Sfld.lt
•
come to the ball park prepued to • Anyone who has trouble haaring or underelandlng oonvaoutlon Ia invited to •
play, thep sit here 1111 ni1ht. thea • ~va a F;REE hellring 181110 - I thla prdlllm Clll be hllpld. Bring thla •
finally play two inniiJp l11d thea • coupon with you for your FREE HEARINQ Tl:ST. a SJII.OO valua.
•
they cancel the IIIIIIC. Now .we can •
ARIICO, UAW,ANDAU.ontiR
•
come
back
tomonow
with
the
Nme'
INIURANCI!
PRCWIDIRI
'
1
ani tude."
'
•
WAI K'INS WI!LCOIII!
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.M.cComas &amp; Shain 'stand with victors

KVD's latest races see
locals make it to semifinals
The coming 'weeken&lt;j,promises to
be exciting at Kanawha Valley Drag-

Franco Romuno 'an 16 times for
created the final score•
Team statistics sliow South Gal- 55 yards to lead his club.
lia geuing nine ijrst downs to the
For the Marauders (some lirst
names
weren't "reported in some
Marauders' 14. Of the Rebels' 209 ·
total yards, they gained I I 8 rushing instances), Abbou completed six of
14 passes for I I~ yards. Catchong hos
yards on 29 carries.
Callahan led all rushers with 88 passes were Davidson (4-94) and
yards on 21 carries. Stanley got his Parker (2-22).
On defense, the Rebels also saw
all rushing yardage on a 15-yard run.
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1
Callahan
get two fumble recovenes,
Also rushmg were Travis Mooney
(6-9) and Bowers (1-6) . .
while Butler had one.
,
This week's agenda woll have the
Stanley completed eoght of I 9
passes for 91 yards Catchong his Rebels hostmg Alexander's junior
passes were Bowers (5-47),, Greg varsity team Saturday in theor fonal
M~Jnlgomery (2-33) and Butler (Ihome game of the season
ll).

ot was, it was the last place I went to.
I said all along that this thing isn't
about money. I wanted a clear
mood."
The Falcons were downcast about
the prospect of getting nothing in
return for a quarlerb'lck who &lt;:oSt
them two first-round picks in a 1994
trade with Indianapolis.
"Sure, I'm disappointed in it,"
said Falcons vice president or player personnel Ken Herock. "We've
been able to pull off trades in the
past. but this trnde was unusual on the .
facti hat I wasn 'tthe one who could
'pull the trigger and Seaule couldn't

The Dally SentiMI • Ptge 5

PARTICIPANTS
Michelle Gills, Assistant Pharmacist, Kroger
ACCESS to Human Resool'l:1' Development
Sarah McGrew, Arthritis Progr'a.m, OU
Lisa Koch, Au.,iologlst, Inhearing
Veteran's Meinorial Hospital Home Health,
Judy.Jenkinson, Community Service Program, OU
College of Osteopathic Medici11e
Meigs County Health Department
Woodland Centers, Inc.
Meigs County TB Ofrlce and Health Clinic
Continuity of C1re
Margie Lawson, DDS, Racine Dental Clinic
'
Allee Hawthorne, LSW, O'Bieaess Memorial Hospital
Molly Varner, Southeastern Ohio Breast and
'
'
··
Cervical Cancer Project
Dr. Da\'ld Faro, DPM, French 'City Foot Clinic
'
'
Cheryl Sprinkle, Lifeline of Ohio, Organ and Tissue

...

Donation
'

. '"'"' "' ' " Rocksprin~;Rellllb;CentilZ&lt;' r' »' &gt;'n'Xl:
'
·•
Anwar Eye Center
' Dr. Robinson &amp; Dr. Klme, D.C~ Meip County
C"lropractic Oink
,
Meigs County CouncU on Aging, Inc..
Holzer Medical CenterNeteran's Memorial Hospital
Mick ~ven1;10rt, Big Bend Heallh &amp; Fitness Center
Pat Pletcher, Gallla ·Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol,
· DMIJI Addletion &amp;. Mentai Health Services

.

Thlink you to the
businesses for your •uppgn
making the health fair sudl a
success this year.
'
I. G&amp;.M Fuel Company
2. King's Hardware
J. Office Service &amp;: Supply
·4. B10wn Food Service ·..
S. Brogon-Warner lnsuiance
6. Middlepon Trophies &amp;: Tees
7. Swisher &amp;: Lohse Ph11111!1Cy
8. Hobin Sale! I; Service
9. R.D. Wjllon-Sonlll: Co.
10, Slm'a Club

Holzer Hosptlal and Veteran's
Memorial Hospital will do
blood typing and hemoglobin
tests free Of charge. Check out
your stress level by taking a
stress test, . then let the
massage therapist relax your
'
neck' .and shoulders with
a
massage,

Comt and 1ry !he up-110-dare :

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Page e •The Dally Sentinel

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Marvel tries t,o ·put old spin back into Spider-Man ~

By MIKE SNIDER
USA TODAY
Later this month, Bob Kunz
hopes he can return to one of his
favorite hobbies - collecting Spider-Man comics.
The first comic book the 21-yearJohn C. Wolf, D.O.
old Duke University student bought
Associate Professor
as a teen starred Spider-Man. But his
of Fam.ily Medicine
collection hasn't grown lately.
He and some other longtime f~ns
didn 't buy the plot twists since May
Question: Over the yean I've had
Other investigators have found 1995. It was revealed the webslinger
many reactions and sensitivities to that those with asthma and other was a clone of Peter Parker,. not the
chemicals, including medicines. I've allergic conditions are at greater risk original nerdy teen-ager bitten by a
had rashes, not felt well, confusion, of developing multiple chemical radioactive spider in the first Spider:
and even one anaphylactic reaction. sensitivity. While this appears to be Man comics 30 years ago.
Currently I'm taking an antibiotic. It true, there are also many people who
Parker retired to family life.
is helping, but it causes cramping, have multiple cliemical sensitivity Some blond named Ben Reilly took
multiple stools, acid reflux and a but do not show the kinds of over. Fans howled.
burning mouth. Do you have any immune system changes that are
So now, in the comic \\'Orld's versuggestions that would help me with characteristic of allergy and asthma. sion of New Coke or Bobby's death
my multiple sensitivities olher than In other words, we don't understand on "Dallas,'-' Marvel P!"mises that
looking for a natur" antibiotic?
the actual physiologic changes that events in the four Spider-Man titles
Answer: I think I can best answer result in multiple Chemical sensitivi- on sale this month will reSolve all
.
.
your q~estion by addressing the ty.
questions lind bring Parker back as
issues you raise one at a time. First,
Your initial reaction to your con- ·. the one true Spider-Man.
antibiotics are "natural." There is a dition has been correct. You need to
Marvel had devised the clone line
mista~en belief among some groups
limit your exposure to man-made · to renew intere"st in Spide~-Man.
that medicine purchased from the chemicals as well as "natural" chem- Once Marvel's top draw, Spiderdrug store is not as good as "natural" icals to which you are scnsitiv&lt;. Man's sales had fallen . Audiences
products from the health food store. Most people with your· condition migrated to hipper characters such
Actually, most antibiotics. are experience symptoms from chemi- as Marvel's own X-Men and Spawn,
relined products from molds, so they cals released into the air from carpet, a creation of competitor Image (a
are "natural."·This doc;sn't imply that · plywood. paint, and other industrial company formed .by artists from DC
they are without side effects, howev- chemicals, but some, like you, also and Marvel, among them revered
er. The frequent stools and abdomi- have more classic allergic reactions ex-Spidey artist Todd McFarlane,)
nal cramps you are experiencing are to things they consume. Colorants
But the plan backfired. Fans fired
' common complaints associated with and preservatives are frequently the off scathing-letters to Marvel's edi.antibiotic use. They are not an aller- culprits rather than the active ingre- . tors. Wizard, a magazine that covotrs
,gy 0r sensitivily to tl\e drug. Instead, · dient in food and drink, while the comics, was flooded with letters and
they are an anticipated but unpleas- active ingredient is often the probant consequence •• a side effect. · lem in medicine.
Second, the "multiple chemical
If you have a reaction to a medi -sensitivity" condition you describe cine, be sure to describe all of your
can be very· frustrating. lndiv.iduals . symptoms to your doctor. This helps
with this problem have:_ reactions to you and your doctor figure out if you
substances - usually manmade are actually allergic to the drug or if
chemicals, present in the workplace you are •just experienc.illg an
or home -- at concentrations that are unpleasant side effect. If it's just an
safe for most people. The most com- unpleasant side effect, like with your
mon symptoms are those related to antibiotic, your doctor will probably
the nervous system, such as recommend that you continue taking
headaches, dizziness, confusion and it until the infection is cleared up. If
blurred vision. Other symptoms are you are having an allergic reaction,
'however, your doctor will want to
also possible.
Some have su2eested that moot finrl a substitute drue.
"Family Medi&lt;ine" is a weekly
individuals reporting multiple chemcolumn.
To submit questions,
ical sensitivity are actually just
showing different manifestation of write to Jolm C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio ·
an emotional condition such as Ualvenlty College of Osteopathic
Grosvenor
Hall, '
depression or a phobia. Careful sci- Medkine,
entific studies have shown this isn't Athens, Ohio 45701.
so.

Family
Medicine

'

. Wedn11Js;, October t,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Universily
ColleF of Osteopathic Medicine

'

•

.,
e-mail at its World Wide Web site
(http:(slash )(slash)www. wizardpress.com), says editor Brian Cunningham: "It was one of the most
denounced storylines ! can ever
recall ."
USA TODAY
Long-time fan Kunz quit buying
Soap operas have nothing on Spider-Man.
Spider-Man comics, and led an
Haven't followed the Webhead lately? You've got some catching up
Internet revolt, forming a "Spidertodo.
.
Man Expatriates" group now num·
Last June, it was revealed that shutterbug Peter Parker, Spiderbering 310 members. The group
Man's alter ego, )VIIS a clone. Another character, blond Ben Reilly, was
urges others to not buy Marvel
the real Spider-Man.
.
comics until the clone storyline ends
This twist arises from a battle about20 yeirs ago (in realtime; five
and Pa.rker gets his job back.
years, Spidey time) between $pider-Man and the Jackal. who created a
"It was a gross mischaracteriza,
Spider·Cione. Both supposedly died in .that battle.
tion of Spidey and an insult to long-Not. The supposed clone, who has Spider-Man's abilities and memtime readers," says ~unz, who in
ories, too, began a nomadic existence but returned to New York when
February also created an Expatriates . Parker's Aunt May became ill. The Jackal reappeared - as did yet
Web
site
another Peter Parker clone- and tests revealed Parker was.a clone and
(http:(slash)(slash)www.duke.edu(sl
Reilly, the real Parker,
as)!)( ti Ide)rck(slash) xpat.html ).
Since, Reilly took up the webslingingduties; the clone, who kept the
By January, Marvel realized its
name Peter Parker. has cared for his wife, who's piegnolnt.
mistake. New editor-in-chief Bob
Harras huddled with Spider-Man
Harras, thinks the writers have Parker again becomes Spider-Mah.
writers and artists, including Ralph
Macchio; a respected senior e.ditor found a way to explain away the "I have missed Spider-Man. As &lt;!le
just na!lled overseer of all things clone saga. About the resolution, get closer and close~ to OcL 16, I gl:t
. Harras. will only say, "Peter Parker lnore and more anxious to pick IJP
Spidey.
·
' "We decided we needed to go will be Spider-Man." For the fate of the books again. It is goirig to be fan
•
back t() the basics" Harras says. Spi- Ben Reilly, "you'll have to read" following his adventures."
'
der-Man's "about an •average guy Spider-Man 75, .a double-size issue
out
Oct.
16.1t's
the
founh
chapter
of
who just one day happened to get bit
by a radioactive spider. But he's the story "Revelations." Parts I and .
more than that. The stories are really 2, in Spectacular Spider-Man 240
about this cast of characters he lives and Sensational Spider-Man II, are
with and worries about, an extended out now. Part 3; in Amazing Spiderfamily of ordinary people ."put in . Man 418 is out Wednesday, Oct. 9.
circumstanc~s
extraordinary
That Halloween-flavored story is
because they know Spider-Man . ...
a treat for fans lik~. Kunz, who vows
We forgonhat."
'',.
to disband the group !&gt;nee Peter
•.
'

A little background: the story
that irked Spider-Man fans

fALL

HARVEST SALE

Lb.

rAFFBNE 1m DIET PEP9, MOUNTAIN DEw,

Diet Pepsi or

-Stokely's Vegetables
UplollMihll

Pepsi CDia.,... . . . . at. .
Four 2-Liters per customer

.COilN, PEAS OR MIXED VEGETABLES

2-uter

.

this l]l1ce please.
, . . . , . lifO IQMf Olr

Red DelicioUs
. Apples

..,

ASSORT£0 VARIETIES

~~~~~!::'! ~- Kroger Applesauce..
PIIMIUM QUALitY

·Tamarack farms

Apple Cider ...Ganon
.'

D;il Famly Size · $

,Naurene.

Pumpkin Pie ..... .1.ac11

CURTIS JONES

.

Anendina his araduation were
Sieve, Janice, Jeremy, and Veronica
Orimm; his p-andparent, RaymO!"'

and Lydia Smith ...d Rev. Uoyd

Cynthia Sandy and Denise Schencfield ..
SPECIAL DEPLOYMENa'
U.S. Army Sgt: Curtis D. Jones,
stationed with HHC 1-S CAV at Fort
Hood, Texas, is currently preparing
for special deployment to Kuwait.
This will be Jones second re-deploy- :
ment to the area since returning ..
f~om
•a . Operation
()esert ..
Shield/Desc:n Storm.
Lettcn to Jones can be m"lliled to : ·
the followina address: HHC i-S · ·
CAVITF 3rd BCT, TF lntrlnsic ·
Action 96-3, APO AE 09889.

WIIOU~IUlT

Pork Shoulder

Roast ........'......... J'oun4

..,... ,,,
Drlllfll JuiCe. ...... c.lltln

-·aac
Ze~~e.,,fo,:r:l·

'"5
11!!!11

: . ................»«

m;;.w.

COfFee .........,._ .,-~---

Grimm; Bob aad Timmy Oril!lfll,

•

..
•

1

;

• :&gt; I

cannot tell you how many peo- : .
pie we turned to for help with this .
problem. Finally, two kind, under.standing school counselors told us :
;there was nothing we could ·do. ·
What good would it have done to put'
us in jail? The boyfriend's mother '
had the same problem. Her son

.Are laundry
:disks all
.~ashed up?

'

was in college, my wife used to say,
"When he comes home, it's impos·
sible io keep the refrigerator full or
the hamper empty."
•
I thought your college parents ·
might enjoy it as a Gem of the Day. --Jerome in Cedar Grove, N.J.
Dear Cedar Grove: You don't
have to be college parents to enjoy ;
that Gem. High school kids are just :
•
as bad.
• Send queslioDI to Ann Landen, :
Crealon Syndicate, 5717 W. Cen· : .
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, :
Calif. 9004S ·

STORE HOURS
OHIO VILUY • OPEN 24 lOUIS •
CLOSE MID. SIT.·SUI. 1·10
IUCKEYE • MOI.·$AT. 7-11i SUN. 1·10;
IIG lEND • MON.·SAT. 1·10
TWIN RIYEU • OPEN 24 HOUIS.
.CLOSE MID. SAT.; SUI. 1·10;
GAWPOLIS • MON.·SIT. 7-1 1;
SUN. 1·10

v

USPl

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GOLDEN RiPE

HEW .YOR~

Chiqu_ita

1

NANCY NASH·CUMMINOS
!
: . DEAR ANNE AND NAN: Do [
you know anything about the new ·
''laundry disks" that are appearing
_in various catalogs? They are suppo$ed to clean your clothes without
'···
detergent or bleach. You just throw
:one in your machine, add water, and
·the clothes cilme out clean. They are
'I
. pretty expensive: about $50 for three
of them, although each disk is supposed to last from 500 to 700 wash- .
es (depending on the ad you read). •
- LF., Prescott, Ariz.
· DEAR L.F:: We 've been surpri~ed to see tjlese disks offered by
otherwise very reputable catalogs. It
leads us to wonder if the catalog
product testers have tried the disks
on wash that is I. greasy or oily, 2.
smelly, 3. badly stained or 4. washed
-in hard water.
It is claimed tliat metallic ele'
ments within the ceramic disk produce ionized oxy,J.eo~. whi~hl,Jl~!.P'i~ , • . ~ .· , ,
.
edly bre'a'lis down&lt;J~rt ii'iid .
'
~
cles, while the "activated ceramic"
releases an
"electromagnetic
.,..,
wave," which acts to decrease water
BONEU~S

STRIPS
Decorative
Pumpkins

77

·~·~

ASK ANNE • NAN

•

4

PKG.

Northern
.

ssue

Ll.

~.,

... ·-

.

ROL~

Bath

·

CHICKEN
BREAST

tension. thereby making .the · water
wetter and increasing its penetrating
power_
Well, all of this may in fact be
true, but just plain water, no matter
how broken down and rearranged
molecularly, is not going to do the
job on the laundry problems mentioned above.
Consumer Reports in mci &lt;Febru-[
ary 1995 edition has this to say: .
"We don't think the disks are
worth it. If-they unleashed an 'elec-tromagnetic wave' ·in the wash, ·we
sure couldn't tell from the results.
The disks peiformcd np better than
plain water in our tests for stain ,
rcmo~al and brightening, not even
when we added a bit of detergent, as
(some) instructions advise."
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I am
inquiring about a magazine my
· father had a ~ubscription to•years
ago, but which I haven't been able to
find since. It is called Lefthander
Magazine and is geared to· the lefthander, as the title indicates. You
· ~~read' the magazine froitl bacll' to'
front and from rigJu hand· column to·
left. It also · has products you .can
purchase $eared for the lcfthan~er, I
work in a dental office of four
employees, all of whom are lcftharided. I thought it would be_an
interesting magazine tb put out for
the patients (and for us)... RENEE
ROHM, Hopwood, Pa.
DEAR RENEE: LeFthander ·
Magazine is still being published.
For subscription information, write
to Lefthander Magazine, P.O. Box ,
8249, Topeka, KS 66608·0249 (913· .
•234-2177).
.
· · ' We found this inform~ti&lt;m in an
i_ndispensable (to us, at any rate) reference volume called Bacon's Mag· ·
azinc Directory of Magazines and
Newsletters. It lists the names,
addresses and phone numhers, plus
other pertinent information. of e ery .
magazine: and newsletter cu ntly
being published in the United a,tes.
com·
· Bacon's also p lishes
panion volume ca
aeon's
NewlfiiPCr Directory of Daily ~nd
'1'\!Dekly Newspapers, News Services
1111d Syndicates.

Bananas
.

BONE LESS LB.
·•lou DSlEAII

1/G\\'\

BASIC TRAINING
Private fsracl , Scott Orimm has
completed basic training in the U.S.
Army with honors in marksmanship
at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri .
Grimm is a 1996 graduate of
Meiss Hi1h School, where he was a
membel' of the f001ball and track
teams, Science club, and French
'club. He is also a member of the
Point Pleasant Church of the

·stare.

....

CUSTOMER
'APPRECIATION
SALEI

FI'AUQR.ITE FROZEN
SKINLESS

~\5
+.5 .

--Military news,--

ve~c~;C::an~~ awrew~=:~

tion spot expressing those views.
and immature. I believe ending a
The day I returned home, I found relationship should be done face to
a message from her on my answer- face or, at the very least, in a coning machine. It said, "Hope you had versation on the phone -- or am I
a safe trip. Thanks for the Jetter overly sensitive? I'd appreciate your
while you wer:e away. Please don't opinion.-- Morristown, N.J.
call me anymore."
Dear N.J.: Obviously, the relaIn my opinion, to end a relation- tionship meant a lot more to you
ship that way shows II* maturily of than it meant to her, but I agree it
a 12-year-old. One would expect was insensitive to leave the farewell
more from a 36-year-old woman. I · message on your machine.
was denied.tbe opportilnit)' to end it
Give her·credit, however, for not
properly, which was not only unfair stringing you along. And maybe yoU:
but painful. Using an answering ought to slow down a bit. Too fast
machine to avoid discussing some- doesn' t last.
thing so personal seems cowardly
Dear Ann Landers: While our son

USDA CHOICE

is :

ISRAEL GRIMM

would have liked nothln"g better than .
Dear X's: Thank you for a leuer
to see her locked up because of his thai is sure to make many parents
trualley.
f~ better. It is a fact lhil some chilThis happened some years ago, dren do not respond to threats or
and it was a nightmare. We received punishment, so let's not be !00 quick
'"'· Lot Aftlclta
1illea S)'lldil:w. Md Cte• •
110n$y..O.Cw.
excellent counseling and succeeded tQ blame the parents when their chi!·
in putting those bad times behind us. dre~ go wrong. It's nOt always their
It's easy to blame the parents, but we fault.
· Ikar Ann Landers: The letter wer:e doing our best in an impossible
1
'from "Wisconsin Reader" said if a situation. I urge "Wisconsin Read.mother can be jailed wheP her child er" and others like him to think and became .interested in a closer
doesn't go to school, she had better twice before p_assing judgment. relationship. I told her how I felt
'make darn sure the child goes. I Some things are simply beyond the ·before l"left on a two-week vacation
'1jfould like to expand on that pro- parents' control.· Please put us in because I wanted her to think about
nouncement.
Georgia although we don't live the p&lt;issibility of a future together. I
also sent her a letter from my vaca- .
: It may seem unbelievable, Ann, there. -- The X's
bunome children simply cannot be·
controlled. We had a daughter whom
we sent off to school in the morning,
but she never got there. Instead, she
joined her boyfriend. When we
found"out what she was doing, we
pleaded with her to think of· h~
:.future. The response was a blank

Ann
Landers

LB.
...

Com·munity calendar

The Dally $entlnel• P~~ge 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Sometimes;parents just can't contr.Ql their chil9ren:

.By ANNE B. ADAMS and

a

The· Community Calendar
Plains Veterans of Fo,reign Wars
,pPblieW • alrft service to non· Post9053 regular meeting Thursday,
profit 1rou,. wishing to 8JU10Unce 7:30p.m. with refreshments at 6:36
me lla&amp; aad special events. The p.m.
caleadar is not deslpled to pro' mote 1111e1 or fuad raisen of any - . JACKSON -- Preceptor Beta
type. Ilftls are prlnled as space Beta meeting Thursday morning for
permits and canuot be guaranteed a group outing in Jackson at the
to run !I specific number of days.
Carol 'McCullough residence. The
WEDNESDAY
group will depart the McCullough's
LONG BOTI'OM -- Revival at at 9 a.m.
Mt. Olive Community Church" · FRIDAY
.
through Sun&lt;lay, 7 p.m. nightly with
MIDDLEPORT -- Widows FeiEvangelist Paul Goodwin, Pastor lowship meeting Friday at Church of
. Lawrence Bush invites 011 .
CHrist, Middleport, with potluck
dinner at noon.
. THURSDAY
•
REEDSVILLE -- South Bethel
RACINE -- Training Education
and Christian Home (TEACH) New Testament Church on Silver
group will meet Thui"Sday. 7 p.m. at Ridge revival Friday and Saturday at
the Racine Nazarene Church. Pastor 7 p.m. nightly. Special si nging and
Scott Rose will speak on building children's ministry for both services.
Godly character in children. For
more information call Kim Hupp. at· SATURDAY
POMEROY -- Return Jonathan
949-3119.
Meigs Chapter Daugh!ers of the
MIDDL~PORT-- . Fire hydrants
American Revolution meeting Sat- .
will be tested Thursday, 6-10 p.m. urday, 10 a.m. at the Meigs County
Residents may notice some discol- Public Library in Pomei'Qy. Group
oration.
will mark graves of for:mer members.
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers

Wednllday, October 8, 1888

· ,.•,

'

'

48 oz.

·crisco
Shortening

LB.

LIMIT

WITH ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

-ASST. FLAVORS

FOOD LAND

MR. BEE
.HEALTHY CHOICE ·conAGE
POTATO CHIPS
DIIINERS
CHEESE

r

601.

FRESH UNITED

APPLE
CIDER
~ '
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19

Win One Of 57 MICROWAVES
(One Winner Per Store)

•

'

· GAUOII'"

~

&lt;4

9-U
OI.

·,

. Win FREE GROCERIES
FOR ONE YEAR!
.· (One. Focidland Cuatomer Will. Win Up To.$5200.QO).
FOODLAND EN1RY BlANK

PEPSI PRODUCTS
!

c

240L

�..
P~ge 8 • The O.lly

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

Santlnel

·The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

'

Wldnaaday, Octcblr t, 1...

.

.

Polllill oy,
Mlddtepon

Rotary discusses historical march of Confederate Gen. John Morgan l·;
A book detailing and e:wninint
the infamous Civil Ww m.n:b of
Confederate General John Hunt
Morgan through Kentuclty, Indiana
and Ohio in July 1863 wu file topic
of discussion at tbe Monday night
meeting of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club.
Morgan's Raid was for tbe purpose of relieving PRSSUIC on the
Confederate forces in eastern '1\:nnessee, according to a review of the
book "Morgan's Raid" by Rotary
member Charles Blakeslee.
11Je raid partially ended with lhe
capture of 700 Confederate forces at
the battle of Buffington Island on
July 19, I 863.
Acconling to Blak~slee, Morgan
started out with 2,460 cavalry troops
and had Jess than 2,000 men wben
be crossed the Ohio River at Brandenberg, Kentucky. Wben be finally

surrendered in Columbiua County,
Ohio a week after the blltle, he had
only llbout 400 mea remainins.
Durina this raid he set a world
record of moving caVIIry uoops by
traveling around Cincinnati without
stoppin1 for 9S miles in 35 hours,
Blakeslee said.
Meigs County had more than the
blltle interest in the raid, as the
Meigs County militia put up the
fiercest opposition Morgan's Raiders
.had met durins their march. A bridge
at Langsville was the first burned
bridge Morgan had encountered on
his march, Blakeslee said.
A wedding breakfast on Thomas
Fork was interrupted by the raiders
during their march, as they all sat
down at the breakfast tables and
enjoyed the meal. During the raid,
around 14,000 regular army and
over I00,000 militia w~re involved

in the defense of towns and the pursuit

According to Blalceslee, it is quite
[106sible that a Meigs County family
was lhe lead [.Jar! of lhe pursuit Col.
August Kautz headed up an elite
cavalry, spearheading the pursuit as
it neared Buffington Island. He arid
his troop wen: under the command
of General Hobson.
RoiAry members raised the questiop, wondeting if that is how the·
Hobson are~ near Middlepon got its
name.
The book reviewed also had
Meigs County connections. 1bc
author, the late Allan Keller of Connectcut, was the husband of the late
Ima Elberfeld. He was the brotherin-law of Mrs. William B. Downie
(Rachel· Elberfeld) and Robert
Elberfeld.'
'
In the book's foreword, he gave

credit to Auntie Watermao, then I02
years old, wbo lived two doors from
his wife's childhood home. Keller
wrote that Watennan inspired him to
write the story of the raid. He also
credited local people with helping
him including: Mn. Mrs. William

Downie. Miss Lenore Giles, Edison
Hobstetter, Mn. Helen Neue, ud
Mrs. Pal 'l'boren. ·
A guest at the meeting was Morris Haskins of Gallipolis. Julia
Houdashelt presented the Rowy
Club Chili t:;ookolf team with the

I VICinity

trophy for the "Most OriJinal ~11"

at the Bi1 Bend Stemwhell ~VII
Chili Cooltolf.·Houdubelt IIIIo~
sented the COrporate Divisioll First
Pl.ce uophy, also won in the conte.lt
held on Saturday.
"'.,

•

Public Notice

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Adclltlons • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

RMidentlel ~ Commercial
Roofing - Rubber ... Shlngltt - Minor Rtpalrt
Guttlni-.ICI DOwnepoutt
Complete RllnOCMIIng ·
Deck• - hthroom1 ~ Kltchtnt - Siding

614-992-7643

(614) H2·5"1

1·100-1.19·3941

• .Sl Rt. 7

LICIY I. 10•1
&amp;lilliE

Tuppers PI..Irw, Ohio 45783

St ·At. 124;
Raclnt, Ohio

814-985-3813 or 814-667.e484

. Plastic Cutvart • Quat watt and Regular 11' thru 36'
.4" S&amp;O -pert. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 11' Flax pipe
• 4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
'/," &amp; '/." C.P.V.C. pipe
1'/o" thru 4" Sch 40ptpe
.
• W &amp; 1" 200p.e.t. water pipe (100' rolls thru t ,000' rolls)
· 'It U.L approved Conduit
·
. 11' Graveteoa Leac~ pipe
Gas pipe t• thru 2" - fltllnga - RegutatOJS • Rteera
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex Htttngs &amp; Water fillings
Full line of Clstem, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks

•'

l'

Minor Rtptlll'l
· 24 Hr.
Towklng/Rollback '
Service

AAA I All State
Motor Club
114849-3117

..llroMinlfetalr

{Lirnl S1ontLow Rllel)

Authorized AQA Oiatribulor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sates &amp; Fabrlc$tlon • Repair Welding
· . • Aluminum/Stainless • ToOl Dressing • Ornamental
Steps • Stairs, Railings, Pallo Fum~iml. Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Toelllses &amp; lots of other stuflll

WICKS
Ume.tooe, :
Gravel, Saod,

We will work within your budget.
, Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
' , 108 Pomeroy Street
Mn on, WV

Top Soli, FIJI Dirt
614-992-3470

.,

~

.'

Is salmonella a real risk?
DR.OOTT

not function effectively. As is often
tbe case with otlier bodily functions,
this is frequently the result of aging.
PETER '
In any event, indigestion, heartburn
and gas result.
GO'IT, M.D~
Ordinarily, these symptoms can
be controlled with antacids or with
prescri'ption drugs, such as Prilosec,
that prevent the fonnation of excess
~--- - sastri~ acid.
;;,r.;.;;.. F
On rare occasions, when mediDEAR DR:
or years cine doesor't do the job ot wheri the
I've ~n readtng that ra.w eggs can , amount of renux is severe, surgery
cause salmonella po!Somng. Well, to "tighten" the muscular ring must
restaurants serve eggs over easy aM.. be considered. Without going into
those. eggs are not fully CO?ked, unnecessary detail, this is precisely
e.spectally th~ yolks. Am I takmg a the operation you had. Now that the
nsk by ordenng them?
.
lower esophagus isn't irritated by
.
DEAR READ!'l~: Salmonella are stomach acid, you should be syml"
dangero~s bactena that can enter the tom free; the add should stay in the
devclopmg egg before th~ sh~ll has. . stomach where it belongs. 'l1le Nisbeen fully formed .. Once m the.eg~, · sen procedure is standard and, in the
the bactena remam ~ormant un,ttl vast majority of cases curative.
the uncooked product " eaten by an
Because acid 'renu~ is often (but
un~ary c=su7er.
prod
not
always) a-complication of hiatal
en t . sa mone 11 are . uc~ 10 hernia, I am sending you a copy of
cause . a vtolent fonn . of mtestnjaJ my Health Report "Hiatal Hernia.'' ·
mfectoon, marked by ~oarrhea, &lt;lehy- Other readers who would like a copy
dratton and ·• 50?"'11 mes -~ death. should send S2 ·plus a long. selfShort of perfonmng
addressed, stamped ·enve tope to no
h
. bactenal cuifi
r. .
tures on eggs, .• ere 15 .no sure- ore Box 2017 Murray Hill Station, New
way of detennmtng whtch ones are York, N'r . 0156. Be sure to mention
mfccted.
the title.
Conscq~ent~y, because salmonelCopYifgbt 11196 NEW~ER
hi arc ':"addy kolled by healing, mo.st ENTERPRISE ASSN.
authonues urge consumers ,to avotd
eating raw eggs. The procedure of
·cooking eggs -- even minimally-- ' . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
appears to deactivate the bacteria.
Therefore, I doubt that you are risking salmonella poisoning by eating
commercially prepared eggs, even

f

I

I .

I

I

, '

.

.I
.

•

those .that are served "over-easy";

once the egg whites have congealed ·
from heat, there is"liule danger. The·
.. primary form to watch out for is
eggnog.
·
DEAR DR. GO'J'T: For··.several
yew's I've suffered from acid renu""
The only relief c'ame from Prilosec.
Last November my doctor performed a Nissen fundoplication,
during which she wrapped my stomach around my esophagus. I've not
b!:Cn able to find any information
about this operation. Can you provide some?
DEAR READER: Stomach acid
is stopped lrom backwashin~ into
the delicate esophagus by a nng of
muscular tissue that contracts to prevent acid renux. However, for
unknown reisons, this "valve" may

......

..

'

'.

.

cd©~p
'
\.

•NtwHOmtl
-Ge111gee
•Cotr~plete ..
Remodeling
Sfop &amp; Compere
. FREE ,
ESTIMATEES
985 4473
7/t2/Un

GROCERY
SHOPPING/DELIVERY
.
&amp; .

ERRAND SERVICE

CALL TODAYI

949·2445
BONDED

.
'

(SPECIAL)·· A qrug that is exdtinA researchers in the. treatment ol
pain has been fomtulated into a :
new product known as "Arthur
Itil," and is being called ti "Medi·
·leal Miracle" by some, in the IRatmentofdebilitatingconditionssuch
as arthritis. bursitis, rheumatism.
painful muscle aches. joint aches.
simplebackache.bruises.andmore.
Although the mechanism of action
is unclear, experiments indicate that
Artltar Ills, relieves pain by first
selectively attractin~. and then destroying the messenger chemical
which carries pain sensations to the
brain, thus eliminatina pain In the
~ffected area; Arti.•r ltll, is an
l&gt;dorless. greaseless. ilon-staiJ•ina
cream and is available immediately
without al,'f'CSC'iption and is auar·
lanteed' to work.

FRunt PIWIMCAY

'

711 NORTH 2ND AVE.
'

P•tntl~
·Alao Concrete Worll

MEET NEW
·PEOPLE THE
FUN WAY
TODAY
1·900-656·5050
Ext. 3998

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

AUC·TION

CLUB GUN

Christmas items and mise.
October 11 7:00pm

SHOOT
.FRIDAY, oa.

HARTFORD COM,MUNITY
BUILDING

11, AT 6 P~M. ·

Auctioneer - Howard Beasley

2.99/llln.111+ Serv·U

est a&gt; i45-8434

·majorettl strutting
frer

in

Reviled Code

of

Ohlo45789.

Complalnta agalnll the
vatuetlona, u eatabllahed
lor lex yur 1916, muat be
me~ In oecordance whh
8ectlon 57t5.19 of .the Ohio
Reviled Code. Theae. 11112...11.
oomptalnta muat be filed on (10) 8, t0,11; 3TC
forme which will be
furnlahed by the ·County
'
Auditor and muat be filed In
Liftlt thillg$
the County Aucltor'l Office
11rt Worth A Iat
on or belora the 3tlt dly of
Mlroh, 11111. All comptalnll
in
filed with the · County
Auditor will bii!Urd by the the Cltmi/itd Sttlionl
Board of Revlelon In the
provtclid by Section
5715.18 of the Ohio Revlaed

WEDNESDAY 9-1
COURT STREET GRILL
POMEROY, NOCOVERIII

MeoroiMnhlp Not Reqt~ljred

HUGE GARAGE SALE
121 south locust St., Cheshire .
. 1()110 thru 1011.2 9 o'cfociL.
Lotsd Levi's jeans, clolhes onill
sizes. Dryer, loiS misp.

REJOICING LIFE
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
ANNUAL CRAFT FAiR
. FRIDAY, NOV. 1
9 A.M.-5 P.M.

"

There are still tables
available for cniftars.
$7.50 per table. Call to
apace 992·8249

BISSELL-SECKMAN
CHILl-SOUP SUPPER
SATURDAY, OCT. 12

ll HooPtUII Drive, Athens.OH 4l701 ·l:loll
(614) 593·5551

6:30P.M.

COLLINS .
.CONSTRUCTION ·
•Addition•
.,._ Con1tructlon
oOvor 10 Yro. Experience
oLow Rlllel
&lt;FreeE1tlmotes
•All Work Gu-ranlled
614-992-9910
"ASK ABOIIT OVR
ROOFSPECUL
1...1 MO.p&lt;t. ,

GRUESER'S ·
GAUGE
Body work, car, truck

6 truck painting, ,
. minor mechanical
repair.
Tur1e-upe, 011 Change,
wax, Bu1flng

Long 51., Rlitland, Oh.
742-2935, Aak for Kip"
7/10/lln

Cadi.
.

Nanoy Parker Campbell
.
Mill' County Auditor
(10) 7, I, 9, 10, t1,t3, M, 15,
11,17
10TC
'
PubUc No1lc:e
PUIUCRonce

H&amp;H

SAWMILL.
'
Portable
land111111 IIIII

32124 lt.ppy ~Act.
Mlcldllport, OhiO 45780

NOTICE Ia heraby given
tltet on laturdey, Octobor
12, 1111, et 10:00 e.m., 1
.publto Nil will be held et
e0411 Laurel ·Cliff Road,
'-roy, Ohio, to 1111 for
o.. h the following

Damy I Peggy lrlcfdet

tM7 PONTIAC IUNIIRD
IIJI,II11K11&lt;71470M

CONSTRUCftON

1M7 PLYMOUTH RILIAHT

•Reald.,tlai Remodeling
•Additions

I

•New Construction

· OOfltel:

.

.1

IW 1~F1771117

I.U I'ORD IICORD OT
1MI'Pa.t7JhaaJ

•

1117 PORD IRONCO
11'111UI41'1HU1111R
Tile Permera lanlr •nct
Ievina•
Company,
P-~ Ohio,
tlterlgltt 11 llld It t11111111e,

......

614-742-2113

,,

COLLINS

-o- 10 VI$. experience
•LDwRat81

4'ree Elllmatea .
•All Work Guaranteed

114-8112-8t1 0
"ASK ABOIIT OVR
ROOF SPECIAL" .

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BING'S
.
AUTO .

REPAIR

60 · Lost and Found

~1801

Amberger Rd.
Off For~! Run

Found: child's prescriplion glassea. during Srarnwheel Fes1ival,
eaU6,4-992-787710 10.

949·2057

fOUND : near Tomlinson Run on
Rt 2. medium size black dog. 304-

MIKE BING

895-3900.

mo. pd.

Lon male German Shepherd
pupp~. bl9.ck and silver, ·Mulb8fry
A'ienu&amp; lllclnlly, reward,. 614-9924501 Of 614-985-4405.

I.IERIOR•EmRIOR

Lost Small Black &amp; While Male
DaQ , Answers To Mickey, Appro~
4 Years Old, Vicin11y : Bulavitle
~ke 191osser School Road , 614·
367-7636, 61 .. 245-9883.

FREE ESTIMATES

Toke ... ,.....,.,
,.lotllll• let •• llo It
for

r••·

4131/ 1 11\0. pd.

J.L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

LOST: White shorr haired eat. fa.
male, luH ~own. 2200 block of Jel·
'

lerso'n (VIcinitr-t. fri.endly. Days
304-6 7!HI774.

. . .111!1111 Wlldows

•a.ild Garaps

10

Easy Pay

Auto

INSURANCE
Any Car
Any Driver
DU I &amp; SR-22
·' Di scounts &lt;
Compu ter Quotes
(6 14) 992-6677
Pomeroy

110

Help wanted

$200-$500 . . - ,. Assemble
products at home, easy f No sell·
ing! Vou'ra pa1d direct Funy guar{
anteed. No experience necessary. Call 7 days, 407·875-2022
ext 0598H38,

Yard Sale

.Pavs S7.001HR. No

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHY

"ATTN : Point Pleasant• Postal
Positions. Permanent lull lime lor

10110, Thru 10114, From A To .Z,
, Produce, Flowers, 1 Mite West

Ro&lt;lney, 10 A.M.

ALL Yard Sale&amp; Must Bt Paid In

urdar.

ALL OHIO

SERVICES

$7 .00 HR. Temporary laborers··

Advance. DEADLINE: 2 :00 p.m.
the day before the ad is to run.
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m. Fnday.
Monday edition · 10:00 a.m.. Sal·

•Siantt Dotrs &amp;
Willows
•RODII Addiliatts

EMPLOYME NT

WhD8Ver Took The Chair Ou1 Of Need 4 people 10 unload trucks @
My Truck ·Thursday Relurn To Chuck Homier's truck load sale .
Qdd Lots Parking Lot, No Ques- See Homie.r Sales Manager@
tions Asked, 61 4·245-91170. .
I Gullrd Armory1 Route 82
Point Pleasant 8am,.

~

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
lli2·2772
8:00 ..m.-3:30 p.m.

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos With

brindle &amp; fawn, Burdene Addition
area . 304-675-12&lt;7.0 work. 304- Wanted To Buy ; Linle lykes Out675-5740.
'
door Play Houst, 614-24.5-5887.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

614-915-4110

l l~~~~:~6~14~··~•:6·~0~17~5~0:r

:::.:..::.:..:.:::__ _ _-'-~ Or Wilhoul Motors. Call larry
lOST: Bo•ar, mate wlblue collar, Lively. 614-388-9303.

. ~&amp;W...... Hoon

VERY RWONAILE
HAVE IEfEIENCES

Wanted To Buy Used Mobile

Crown City, Friday, Saturday.
Warm Morning Stove. Bags 01
Clothes, FurnitUre, Sheets. Alol
Morel 614·258-6304.
OeDbie Orive Chapel Rumniage
Sale (Johnson's Greenhouse)
2nd Avenue. 10th , nth, 12th,

8:30A.M. ·5:30
Garage Sale: Rain Or Shine, Oc·
rober 111h , &amp; 12rh, 3 Family :
Clothes, Plus Sizes. A.ll Sizes
Furniture, Drapes, Spreads, Toys,
A little 01 Everythinot 1~ Birch
Lane, Behind Hutton Car Wash
OH Aoute7.

clerktsorters. Full Benefits . For
exam,' application and salary inlo
call : (·708)906 · 2350Ext.3670 .

&amp;am·Bpm.
AVON l All Areas
Spears, ~4 ·675- 1 429 .
Abte

I

Sh trley
-.

Avon flepresentati.,es
Earn monev tor Chnu

r~eeded .

mas bills at hometat work. 1-800·
992· 6356 or 30H82-2S•S. Ind.
Rep.
I Care PrQvldtr'a N..ded.
Ate yo~ a stay at home parent or .
cUrrently doing C:t1ild &lt;:are in.. your
home? CCRNfChild Care Re·
source Netw&lt;Hk is a tree se ~vice
to help you get started. We are
seeki ng loving individuals to
watch' intan11 through school
ages. Call 1· 600 · 577 -2276 for
more-tnlo.
Commission· Agent Outs•de Per.
son Growing Prinrer Heallh Bene·
tits French Clly Press &lt;~ 23 Sec·
ond Avenue, Ga lli PO lis , OH
58 31

Uaving Sale Inside: Large /Small ' ~·=:.:.·- - - - - - lltml, Furniture, Corner 01 Lin · Computer Users Needed. Work
coin Pike 1Rou1e 141 , 9 To 5, Frl · DW'n hours. S20k to $50•toi'tl',':.11!Xl·
/Saturday, Oclober 1 1ttl , 1

dav

.34=8·.:. 11:.:8:6..:':.:.'506=·--4-.:.::;;"-

• 12ttl.

lilA•-

rt••rv••

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Public Notice
end to withdrew the ebove
collatarat prior to eate.
Fur1her, Tho Farmtra Bank'
end Savfnga Company
reeervee tho rght to relact
any or all blda eubmltted.
Further, th• above
collateral will be aold In lhe
condition II 11 In, with no
upriu or ltnptled
warrantl•a given.
For further Information,
eont.ct Jerry atlltl2-7430 or

.

mo. pel.

ofleafdentlal Remodallng ·

H011CE TO ·TAXPAYERS
llefwence: 5715.17 Ohio
The llelga County..Board
Revlalon hu completed
Ita work of equallutlon.
The tu returna for tax y1 • ha.. bHn ravlud and
thl VIIUatlone completed
and are open lor public
lnlfMOIIon In the office of
the lletge County Auditor,
Sloond· Floor, Courthouoe, ·
S•OOnd Street, Pomeroy,

tntft

·. Ifyou see tfUs

Public Notice

t
•

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•Room·Addition•
•New OatiiQII .
•Eiectrlclll • Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exl•rtor

'"""'

30 Announcements .

1821411
'

CARrl3~~G;:RVICE

(FREE ESTIMATl:S)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
8112-4215
Pomeroy, bhto

114-112-40211 8 am-8

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TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
742·3212

•'I

lab mu Pk'PPIBS lo giveaway,

e14·949·3'03.

many'I'INMI• •
motor btocb.

Memorial ijospita).

AVAILABLE AT:

Industrial • Automotive
.New Radiators • Re-Cores
.A/C Condensers/Hose Assemblys

LOCAL CRAFTERS featuring can, saw, slate
paintings, oak shelves; quilt racks;
goose outfits; fall decora,ions.
WATKINS PRODUCTS feahlring grape seed oil
(lower in saturated fat than olive oil)
TUPPERWARE ~ Some cash and carry.
Place orders/book parties/gifts/fund raisers
Mon. thru Sat. 10·6, Sunday 1-5 .
· 2 miles North Silver Bridge on SR 7

apptlencft, bllllerlea,

O'BLENESS

.·

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

•

,..

u....,._

0770.

614-446-4530

Pick up dl1carded

f you're 60 years of age or
·older, we've got an excit. ing new program for you.
It's called SeniorBEAT (Be
Educated and Active Together).
It's free! And it offers you a .
variety of health services, dis~
,.
'
counts, educational classes and
"
social events' designed to help
you be active, enjoy life and get
together with people who·want
to do the same.
As a member, you'll-receive
.- .'
newsletters and announcements.
You 'II be invited to special
. ana lifestyle seminars~
,even enjoy a 20% discount at
the hospital gift shop and a 25%
.'
discount in the cafeteria on
. certain days. You'll get special
help in filling out insurance and
hospital forms and speciaJ.infor.
mation and referral services.
So sign up today. It won't
cost you.a dime-, and&gt; it· oouJdt...,, ' .,.
make a real diff!;rence in helP'" • · · · · · ·
ing you stay active and educate~. We can't promise that
SeniorBEAT will add more ·
years to your life, but chances
.'
are we can add more life ~o
your years.
•

A1ck Pearson Auc: non. Company,
lu ll ti me auc:uoneer, complete
6-8 Week Otd Beagle Mil, Call auciian
str~ice .
License&lt;!
Aher 5 P.M. 614-25&amp;-1&amp;870.
t66,0hia &amp; West 'llrgin1a, 304· ·
g Small House Puppi&amp;lt. 814-446- 773-5785 0&lt; 30&lt;· 713·5447.

tllo.tM1 ...

raa

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101111 IISSELL
CONnRUCIION

Public S.le A AuctiQll ·

••••

je ........................

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Pat·n may be
elt.mi·nated
10r mi IODS
~

..

It's about ·Being
Educated and
Active Together.

Unlimited AccMI- No Set·U FM

IVYDALE COUNTRY CUFTS &amp; GIFTS

· ENERGY EFFIOENT SYSTEM GUARANliED TO
REDUa HElnNG &amp; COOUNG COSTS!

Personals

$19.95 /Month

MORNINGSTAR ·
EXPRESS

HAULING ·

"No Job Too L.srge or Too Small"

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·

r.1ENTS

New World Net- It's Waiting
·1 888 goNWNET

I

(No Sunday Calls)

G&amp;W PWnCS AND SUPPLY

ANN OUNC~

005

FREE ESTIMATES

31YNI'I~

I

THE INTERNET

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

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HU.iARDS
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE
•Hardy Mums
•Fall Pansys
•Fancy Gourds
•Owart &amp; Large
Pumpkins
•Winter Squash
•Hanging Baskets
Open Monday-Saturday

N; Cloaed Sunday
. 911211 mo •

How~ L. Wrhlltl

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
· Gutters
Downepouts
Gutter CIHnlng

Pelntlng
FREE EB1:1MATES

949-2188
l/lf/1111

·-Otscovt.t)' Toys, Neect
.
1
Thursday, Friday, SatUrda~~ Po'i· up 10 $301hr, showing parenls
aibte Into Next Week, 6 Mfles educational value of our· toy s,
South Route 7.
·
books &amp; computer soflware. Call

.'Pomeroy,

now for more deta!ls. 304 • 675 ~
5761 also, ~ki ng parties.

Middleport
' &amp; VIcinity

Dom ino's Pma or Pomeroy now
hlnng dnveJS, 614-992·2124.
'

All Yard Salae Must Be Pa1d In
Advance. Deadline : 1;OOpm the
clay balore the ad IS 10 run , Sunday &amp; Monday edirion· 1:OOpm
Fridrj.

Don Tate Motor s 11 now accept-

Ing applicatiOni tor the po&amp;ttion ol
Sales Con Sultant. Apply in per·
son, no phone caPs please. EOE
QrivefS

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Wedneedly, October 9, 1996

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ALLE'YOOP

.•

••

The Dalty Sentinel• Peoe 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
•

NEA Croaaword Pu ..le

•••
•

PWIP
ALDER

-.
.•..

1 Potion

......,

• eo..lln

•

IAIII',81 ..3811'8813.
3CM~7S. 11M3.

-..no

11111001In
11111·II oulljocllo
ll1o F - Felr 1-.g AI:!
&lt;i 18e8 - - Rllegll

"'-""""~·
"'&lt;locllr-.

-MX-IllluOornallonol
........ - · Rlllgloil,
oo1gln, 0&lt; any Intention 10
mike lllrf lOCh poef&amp;t•A.
-11onO&lt;~..

lhlo_ ... not
~ICCepl

advertlleliWitl tor real81tate
It In vtolallon ol tho law.

G.E. Washer. Waa $85 Cui 175; Concre11 &amp; Plastic Septic: Tanks,
G.E. Washer 195; G.E . Wather 300 Thru 2,000 Gallon• Ron
Otposil &amp; References. You Pay
Ulihties, 814·388-8102.
Nice SHS; Whirlpool Washer E\'lnt Emtrprites, Jackson, OH
1205 1 Year Warranty; Whirlpool 1·800-537..e528,
2 Bedroom&amp;, Green ~hooll, Prl·
Dryer, HaMil Goki. $95; Electric 1 - - - - - - - - - - vate l.Dt, $325/Mo., Deposit $260,
Range Wasl150 Cut To $t2S: Dlaney World area,~ hotel nights.
Refar&amp;ncea Required, 8t4-4C8- . Frigidaire Rllrlgerator .Ftott FrM, can uM anyll,.._ Value 1320, self
4314.
$125: Whirlpool Retrioerator Frost tor 1100. can 304-347..,.508.
$150, Skaggs Appliances.
2 Bedrooms, In Gallipo~ a. 614· ~ree
76 Vine Street, Gallipo\11, 814·
4..sQ4g,
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1D95 Clayton 14170 2 Bedrooms,
2 Bath&amp;, Heat Pump, 5•1 0 Porch,
8110 Buikting. 814-441.0179.

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New-10$117 1C Wlde- 3 bedroom, 1
balll, S7a91d0wn, $125/mo, wllll
approved creclir. Call 1· 800·tl91·

0777.

Two 2 Bedroom Mobile Homea
For Rent Or Salt On land Conrram. References, 814-448-1810.

1987 18x80 3 bedroom, 2 bath,

Two 2 Bedroomt, Stave, Refrigerator, Water, Trash Furnished,
N&amp;ar N.G.H.S. $200 ·$250 + De·
posit. 6t+388-9686.

$t,3251down, IUI11mo, lrea air,
with apptoved credit. 1·800-801 ·

om.

(ljlpOriUnltybuil.

TRANSPORTATION

Apartments
for Rent

440
t997-:!! &amp; 3 Bedroom, 1~5 ~wn,
$195Jn'D. Free delivery &amp; set-up,
only ar Oak Wood Homes, Nitro
IW. 300-755-5885.
Itt Time Buyers

1 and 2 bedroom apartment&amp;, fur·
nished and unfurnished, ncurlty
deposit required, no pall, 814992-2218.

E·Z Financ:lni 2
S200111o.. 1-800-

Used Furniture 130 BulavHia Pilui,
·Dilks, Collllt!'tablas, Beds, Ta ·
blet, Washer&amp;, Couchea, Chairs,
Oinenes. Lowrey Organ, 614 -4484782.
'

~.000 G~llon

1880 · Pontiac Trans ·Am Au·

Upright. Ron EYans Enrerprises.
Ja.ckson, Ohio, HKI0-537-9528.

tomallc, 2 Door1, Sunroof 455,
Good Shape, I Plrll Cat, S1,500
304-1!75-4841 AFTER a P.l,l.

Washer and Drrar, goDd concH·
lion cau 61 4-388·05£$

614.aa&amp;.7311

1tl84 9uiclt Regal Runs Good,
$1,500. 814-446-1859

Whitt Blllttl Bed!oom Suite.
SOfa I 2 Chairs. 304·875-6898 or
30'-675-1&lt;100.

1985 Buick Somerset 2dr, •c:rl,
auto, new rebuilt engine, good
conct 12,500. 304·875-8930 afler,

TANKS

WATER WEllS DRlllEO
FAST REASONABLE SERVICE

Washer, Dryer. Refrigerator,
S!OiiB, Microwalil· S5'D Eactl ,
614·256·1238.

Sporting
Goods

Block, brick, sewer pipes, windows , lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 614·245·
5121 .

· Antiques

560

Buy

A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming .
Featuring

540 Mlscellaneous ·
Merchandise

Unbelievable, New 14X70. no
paym8nta after 4 years, only
make 2 payments 10 movt in, free
dtlivery &amp; aet ·up. 1·800-2515070.

Micfdleport, 2br, furnished . also, 2
room efficient~ wMili~es paid, de·
pos1t &amp; references.

1----------New

Ha~en,

nice 2br, furnished,
1 &amp; ,references . 30~·882·

330 Farms for Sale
Furnished 2 Bedroom Aparll'nent,
.!15 Aere farm olf Bud Chanin Ad.
Across From Park, AC, No Pets,
7 5 Acre tillable ground. has
References;
Deposit, I3SOrMo.,
1,0001b tobacco base, 2 smal l
814·446-82;l5.614-448.0577.
'
ponds. house has new roof &amp; VI·
nyl siding $85.000 . Call 304-675- Furniahed Apartment, Share Bath
2203 if no answer leave message.
1225/Mo.• Utilitl8s Paid, 701
Fourth Avenue, ~allipolls. 814·
340· Business and
446·3844 Ahar 1 P.M.

Buildings

living. 1 and 2 bedroom
aRIJrtmenll at Vmage Manor and
Riverside Apanmen11 in Middle·
port From $232·$355 . Call 614·
992·5064 . Equal Housing Oppor -

turiles.

Any odd jobs, painting, guners
cluned, ahrub trimming, homa

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Nice two bedroom apartment in
Pomeroy,,no pell, 614·992·5856

15 acres, gas well, 1992 Schultz
16x80, 38R. 2 bath, 6078 Buta~llle
Pit . 614 ·367 · 1199 or 5t4 ·367 ·

One be-droom apartment in Pt.
Plolllnl, 614.a!l2·5858.

!il43.

wntherlntion, leave$ ralted,
com. .lli ilwn care, ale. 30.4-67§...

.

One bedroom furnithad apart ·
ment in Middleport, call 614 -4463091, 614-992·2178 or 6,4-992-

3 Acres ol land, out back ,ol Hen·
derson . Also used uailer. 304 ·

7112.

530;1.

675-5956

One Room and Bath au Uttlit1es
Paid S185; Two Room and Bath an
Ulilitie5 Paid $200, One Bedroom
apr all Utilities Pa1d 1325, 5t3·
S74·2S3g
'

364 Acres Located On Graham
~hool Road, Water And Electric
Available 814-446 -1178.
5 Acr8: T(aCIS 3 Miles South Of
Willcesville On S .A. 160 $500
Down. $150tJ.to., $9,900 County
Water: 73 Acres $42,000 $2,000
Oo.vn S5001Mo,, S14·669·3462.
5 Acres OH State Route 1f!O, On
t&lt;err Road , Close To ·Freeway
And Hospital614·446.0116

Tara Townhouse Apanminrs.
Verr Spac1ous, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Floor., CA, 1 112 Bath, Fully Carpeted, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Slart $340/Mo. No Pets,
lease Plus Seeurily Deposit Required, 614·367· 7850. ,

Parcels on Rarburn Ad . Water,
oaYed road. reasonable reslric ·
tions . 304 ·615-5253 (n,p .single·
wide irtqt.Jires please)'

Twin Riii&amp;rl Tower, now accepti~
applications for 1br. HUD subsidIZed apt. for elderly and handl cepped. EOH 304-675-6679

4m

Rooms for
· .week or month.
Starring. at It 20fmo Gall11 Ho!el.
614·446·9580.

4t0 Houses for Rent
ProtetlioNII Tree Service. Stump
Remon!, Fret Estimate&amp;! lnautance, Bidwell, Ohio. 614-388Nice 4br home, located at 23
DIAI. 114-387· 7010.
Warw ick , 2 bath, k, lr, dr, fr, in
Sun Valier Nursery School. ground pool, call 304 -tH5·5515
Childc:oio 11-F 6am-5·30pm Ageo ah"' Spm.
2•K, Young School Age During
Summer. 3 Oeya per Week Mm1 · Palm Harbour Sectional, 3br.
2balh, sun room wfheat pump.
tf1Hftl14-446-3657.
Cif'l be moved. 304 ..773-5303.

FINANCIAL

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2 bedroom house m Pomeroy lor
rent w i th option to buy on con ·
tract, no pet!, deposit, 614 ·698/244

Sleeping rooms wilh cooking .
Also trailer space on river . All
hook-upa. Call after 2 :00 p.m.,
30j.-7735651, llaoonwv.

For rent or sale- two bedroom
double pane

or IIIVI mnsag•.
CHRISTY'S PETS
271 N. second Aveoue

'-·tlddleporl, 0H
614·992·4514.
Manday-Saturday 10am-6pm
Grooming, kennel, pets, supplies.
Do the fleas got your doggy
down'? We dip &amp; shampoo &amp; con dition Wilh !his ad get $5 off your
grooming appo1mrnent.
Thank you, Christy
Flea Stoppers Carpet Powder 1
Veer 100% Guaranteed, Safe For
Humans, Peta, Environmentally
Safe, S14·245-5747.
f ::---=:--:-~--=--:-:--:::-I
8rtdge Plaza,.
ThinQ, Every Dar!)

Registered Bo~~:er puppiet, had
shots, wormed, declawed &amp; tails
docked. 30'"675-3068.

A.KC Registet&amp;d labrador P~ap ·
1' Truck topper, we8d eau~r. table ' pies Born 8f10f96, Champion
saw, garage door, storm t:loor, Bloodline, All Sholl &amp; Wormed,
'
1
w1ndows, wheel barrOY'f, small 814·643-221111.
wag!)n-utiliry. 304-.6 75·5522.

570

7x16 Garage Door, Like New, Call
e,.rly Mornmg Or Late Evemng.
614·446·lKI26, 304-675.5349.

Musical
Instruments

Am 1que upright piano &amp; bench .

8 Ft. Utility Truck Bed, Full SIZe
Cab Over Topper, With Tool Bo~~:es, 18Ft. ladder Rack, 614·388·
1100.
Advert 1se Your Business New

$200 304·675·3383 Slier 6pm.
Snare drum, new. never been
used, w.th case, stand, sd~s and
practice pact Paid 1480, sell for
$28,5, 614·742-3144.

3'x6' Sunllower S•gns Yellow
eackgrouna 300 -e· Slatk leiters
S29s. 614-446-4782,

580

Fruits ·&amp;
Vegetables

Baby bed. caf seat,
AppleS- soulh of Carpenler on SR
walker, stroller, swing . 30•1 -6:15· ·1143. Salurdaya only, Fener'5 Fru1t
F~rm.

4548.

Brand New Walker N'ever Used.
$50; 614·379·2728 Or 304.g37.

',

'

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
I

Tra11er Space for Rent adulll
orly. Call 61 4·44&amp;-1052

tot

DOWN Buys Any · Single
Wide Home. Only At Oalt Wood
Home&amp; Of Barboursville. 30•· 736·

HUll [;)TATE

--

Ohio.
tggo GMC pickup, 4x4 , Loaded.
Very good c:ondicion . 22,000
miles. $15 ,000 OBO { 614 -446 2394 alief 1pm,
1993 Ford Aerosrar Xll. e•tend·

ed van, 52 1QOO m"es, exc. cond.
$8,800 304·675 2118 .

' ttJ-·

1996 Ford E•plorer Sport, loaded,
s spd, low miles, must sell
$19,900. 304·675-4066.

1991 Ford lTD Crown Victoria 4
Door, 351 Engine, AC, PW, PS,
PB. Tih. New Battery. Starter,
Tires. Exhaust Systems, Always
Kept In E•ceUent Condition, Ex ecutives State Hiohway PatrOl
Car, $3.500, 014-446·7127.

FRANK4~EST

Vahama 4~~:4 4· wheel drtve, Big
Bear 350 electric start, reverse,
new 11res·. new front &amp; bearmgl,
exc cond . $3,600 304·895·3874.

7&lt;W

1992 Cavalier 2 Doors. AC, 5
Speed, $2.995: 1991 Z24 AC ,
Auto, S4,895; Trade -Ins Wet ~
comet Cook Motors, 614 -446·
0103.

1 !il84 Yahama Venture Rorale
1200cc, lull dress . $2,000. For
info call :nf-675-4518,

1992 Oldatnobile TQronado Torleo, loaded, ellcellent condition,

1994 CR125 Honda. exc. cand.,
ne\ler raced, $2.300. 304· 773·

$13,500, 61.!1·949·2217.

• '

·',

L:LJ....

Lumina Z34, blac'k·,
•xcellent condition, call Tom An ·
derson, 614·992·3348 aft&amp;r Spm.

750 Boats &amp; Moto.rs
for Sal.e

1993 Ford Mustang lX, automat·
IC, PS. PB. a1r, anVfm stereo cas·
salle, 30,600 miles . veri good
con&lt;htion, 16700 080, 6t4·9924111 .

12 Fl. Boat With Trail8r, Motor·
gu1de Trolling Motor, 2 Seats, 3
Storage HatChes $750, 304 -6751741.
' "

1993 While Ford Probe, 40,0d0
miles. loaded. 304· 773-5974 alter ·

760

IT APP~.A~S YOU, tiO~N
Of P~~NTY ttAf
SOVNf&gt;tl&gt; AN

"'t

Off·J:~Y

NOTf.

'

.

..

••

THE BORN LOSER

•
'

-1)1JEJOUNOO ~.f!iJU.JIOO:&gt;,
mE:. ~ ~T 5f.!'\IN~
TO TN'£ PlN:£ ~ ~
TOOI\Y I!&gt; ~-lOT ~~iOit:&lt;...

ATT£1-lTION,

N..L
EJf\PtDY€£S·!

1988 Baja -Force 215• Cuddy Ci·
bin; 305 V·8, low hours, Tandem
Eagle trailer, e~~:cellent condition,
well equipped. Bought larger boat, .
$9500, 614-592-2761 .

1993 Geo Metro, 5spd , ac,
49mpg, 6.'1,000 miles. $3,800. 304·
675·5924.

'

MGMT·

SQ96.

19931Chevy

'

-foNDf ·

Fu~NCIA~

f@fl

Motorcycles

........

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

iI

"'

...
~

·24f:..\-·
215 Ctltlln

llc1lonlllDaaoWt.p.nt ..
33-clooF34 Emtreldlllt

~

n

3111abaau~

37Dolaom311 Pllnt ftalurtl

3Yirglnllwtllow
4 o.oplll

.-

DOWN

5Woodllllad

-.bonlar

1 Olau
contaiMrl

""'""'

2 T11f1111a PfO

(-.)
7 CllocclleM !I'll

Arthur-

41 , .....

Pas~

5.

4NT

Pus ·

Blat
PB$8

Pus
Pua

Pass
Pass

Pua
10

..

•
·•

In today's deal, ignore the quixotic
bidding and concentrate "" the clever
declarer-play. I have had to give you
the actual auction for a reason that
will become apparent.
Some pairs use relay systems.
When having at least game -forting
values. one player makes meaningless
one-step bids that ask partner to de·
scribe his hand . And as long as the
hand that has ·done the asking be· .
comes the declarer. it.is very difficult
for the delenders because they know
nothing about the unseen hand.
Ken Barbour, from Scottsdile, Ariz .•
used' this advantage to full eflect here.
Each or South's bids except his last
was ,asking for more information. In
order, North showed a balanced t2-15.
no four-card major, exactly 3-3-3-4
shape, two aces and a· king, and the
· club king but no spade ace or king)
After West led the club tO, six diamonds looked destined to lose a trick
in each black suit However, in tempo.
Barbour ducked the first trick completely!
.
When West continued with a second
club, ·Barbour won in hand with the
ace, drew trumps and ran the .clubs,
discarding his spade jack. After the
. heart jack obligingly appeared on the
second round, Barbour claimed 12
tricks. Nothing to it, really! '
East was unhappy, but West asked
why he hadn't overtaken with the club
jack at trick one.

r_,..

o :·o

P X I

RIICH

K X' E E H A X X 0 •

X J

POZM

Z NV

PXIIE

Z X A F C

o· ..

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Never take e reference lram a clergyman. They
always wanllo give someone a second chance." -Lady Selborna . .
IAMI
':~~:t:~' S©~4\llA-~£!rS"
CLAY I. POLLAN _..;..._ _ _ __
.'the
0 1eromblfd
be·

WOII

1410.4

~y

low

lett•rs of
worda
to lorm lour words ..

r. I' I I 1 I _
..,..M,ll_N,s.._....o::-I....--~_, .
2

~~
Dr. to f~iend: ·1 Haven't
0
L--'--'---'-I.....J ~ trained my patient's to get sick
r --:S,....-:-A-:V,...,-H"'I,....,..,N--:....,,just during,office ·- ••• -.•

•
YOU'RE MISSING THE
POINT, FM.NCI$\ r

•

WANT TO TE$T 11'1·
,SELf! I WANT TO
SEE
TOUCilol

Q Co~plelt lh~

you develop lrom 11ep

1 rl'tl'l
111111
1

UNSCIIAMilE AIOVE lETTfiS
10 GET ANSWER

I WEDNESDAY

SERVICES

OCTOBER9

Home
Improvements

f

~=-~~~A;s~ll~o~-G:.:ra~p~h~~~~~~r

if you gel irwolveu.
ARIES (M1rch 21-Aprll1t) Usually you
lecl for you. Mllll $2.75 10 Malchmaker, stnve to think posilively, ~ul IOday you1
c/o lhil n1w1paper, P.O. Bo• 1758, .negative expeclqtlons. ~uld influence
Murray Hill Station, Now YOitc, NY 10158. your judgmenl and prevenl you from
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Ncw. 2:1) n you give being productive.
BERNICE
In to an lmpuile, you might have to do TAURUS l.l.prllzt!-Miy 20) An annoying
BEDEOSOL things the hllnl way. Strive to ~e more responsibilily might be lihed from your
, imaginallve 1nd - k lhe path of leasl shoulders lerriporarlly loday. However.
. reslaWice.
you will have lo deal wi1h il again In !he
IAGmARIUli (Nov. 2NIIc. 21) Do no! · fuluoe.
.
let your dtaino to inglge In pieUur8bie GEMINI (Moly 21-June 20) Your values
actlvl1lea 1alle up your 1lli1e and ..,lion mlghl nol ~· as sound aa UltJal today.
. today. T1ke oare ol your l'8lpollll&gt;itltlas This could be be.!;,lusa ybu Ia have 1 ten·
fits!.
,
dency 10 wanl iillngs lhat are· lnsignill·
CAPRICORN (0.0. H..Jan. It) Evalu- oant.
. · otlng I llilulllon 11om I Milito Vitwpoinl CANCER (June 21-iuly 22) n you menThurldly, ()d. 10, 11106
will generata
- e a age your personal affaire llklllfully. you
Dllln'ninlltOn 11111 - pi~ will be - - lodloy. Mike ., tlloll to iecounlze lhalr oan gain several advantages. However,
. - y 1n 111e v-r lhMd H you want 1o poeillona u - · .
you wiH not handle complex ~
conflnue 10 receive rawardl, A IICOnd AQUARIUI (Jan. 211-Fab. 11) Think · as well.
'
111o1t mlghl be required In of your before you -'&lt; lodooy. Ollleo •1M. you · LEO (July 23-AIIQ. 22) E-lhough you
e1g1
vlcbill.
might unlnlentloMIIy .....,. I":Pullliva might feel 11 though you hove a lot ol
LI.IIA (..pl. 21-0cL 21) If you oopomolltltllllt . . olllnd your- ,.,. lntaraatlng thlnga to 11y today, give
1111Gb 11M ~IIIli lT IIft ~.den~ rllllll lnd be dllllcul to retoaal.
lliondl I ohlnOIIo ~ llllirldlll.
fiiiCHin. Conlrcnllllon miOht cre1t1 NCR f'tb. a lotaill!., Try ID iVold .. VIIICIO (AUf. n · lapl 12) Hyou ill your
llddlllonli pollllml. IIUI I gtn1ltr- llllng drewn Into an LftUIINII cNollop- IIIICIIICIIII gcM1111 your - I n ftn1ry1111
Ql'llCIUid rwai11W
IOdlly. Yoq did not- ... pro~)- IIIMa todlly, you might bolcllln impar·
'•li!IOII tat · - • and ~Undll: Tl!l 11m. ~you Will ~ reapciolllbllllr 1ar • - ~ c1111. Try to be 1og1ca1 and"......

..

i
land wllh . -. caH _ , , . al·

"'epm.Bl•-3n-;!00fl.
830
Llveltock

tnces Needtd. 1235/Mo., 814·

2!1-'287.

I

5 PurtbrHd ChtiOII Heifers

.S0-500 lba. vacclnlltd and

- -· f11100. 114-2,5-111111 AI·
!or5p.m.

\

NO. 3 below.

'·

,.

,.

Fickle - Droll - Quota - lnwaro· KIORK to DO
,
A loafer at .work was ove~ telling a colleague;.
that you can't enjoy being idle unless you have lots of·
WORK to 00.
.
,.

Household
Goods .

12»00 E•ua Cloon 2 lloclroomo. 5
Mirw.nu From Glllipolia. 2 Reter -

chudtle q""led

by filling In ...., milling -do

PaiNT NUMIERED LETTERS IN
THESE S9!JAlfS

·-

SCRAM UTS -ANSWIU

I

·-.

Sta ndlng limber 1 pulp wood or

' .

Rearrange
four

l. I I I _
l I I I I .1

BIG NATE

ASTRu•ORAPJ,: ·

-.Mobile Homes
for Rent

CMFEEH.

ZXZXF

5

...

KFRM

CFIKMC·

D. ' 0

;

XP

UMMP

L.-.1.---'--..l-'--'-·....;J..__,_ · •

CARS. FOR $1001 TtUeMs, DC)ati,
4-wl'leelers, motor homes. lurm· 790
Campers &amp;1
ture, electromcs, camputers etc.
Motor Homes
by FBI, IRS, OEA. Available your · :::"':':"':':""-:"-::,-,.::""-....,,.-,area now Call 1-.S00-513-4343 21Ft. Prowler Seii-COmamed, e.&amp;.~
E~et. S-9368
cellent Hunters Camper Asking
$1 ,000 614·4.!16-1743 Days, P1,.·
Credll Probteme? E- Z Bank Fi· 446 -6861 Even1ngs.
nancmg For Used Vehichts No
Turn Downl!l, Call Ruth 614· 446·

2897.,

by Luis Campoe

Celtbrity~~.,_ . . ~ fTQm q.IO!Itku• by lwnowP'QPie, put ..cl PNMf(t '
Each"""'~~'~ lhll cipMr llandl for 8fi0Cher.
Dlw: N .._. U

.,'.

~~~~;r:~:~~~
or 1 •

Over, 100 Late Modei'Low MIIB·
BQe Motor! Out 01 Insurance
Salvaged Autos, Trucks. Foreign,
DomestiC, New Windshields, Rad1ators. Auto. Truck Sheet Metal.
Over 500 Cars, Trucks For Pans.
Free De!iv&amp;ry : Major Parts To
Gallipolis; Point Pleasant Ar&amp;a.
Powerline Auto Systems, Kitll
Hill , Ol'lio 1-800·482·6260 U.S.
Toll Free, 614·532.()139.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

t---.::-K_v,_L-ro_E~~ :

tanks. 1 ton truck
radiators . 0 a, A Auto , '

I

'-

14Wrtllr~

II ApproxilnoMiy
(2 welt.)
II Wholly

For Lease

IS pc . living room auite, woDdan
with custion&amp;, 1W0 year1 old, Used
lillie, 1175; Maytag wa•her,
drrer,
dryer,
four

houae, 11ove and
in11de pell, 614·

S2Zoll53 OOdlillove

Not knowing
.makes it harder

1990 Dodge Ram Van 8 · 250,
72,000 Miles, $4,000, OBO Can
98 Seen At: Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825 Th1rd A~enue, GaUipohl

MERCHANDISE

~

s.

Pass

304-675-~562.

$250/mo. :ICM-756-1331.

,

Mecl.lchiln

61 RCIIIIIII102

· By Phillip Alder

For !tall or sale-1974 Mobile
home, 12.000 cash or lease lor

510

eo Actor

PEANUTS

e• of land.

,.commenda lhal you do busiMII with people you
and
NOT 10 Mnd money
the
maH unlil you have ·

Pass
Pass

•

20 Acres_ of pa11ure 'W11 1 stall
horse'barn. ·.
New 1,500 aquarlt te81. 3 bed·
room, $500fmo. on approx. 3 acr·

· INOTICEI
OHIO VAllEY PUBliSHING

ae ,._
--

Uncondmonal lifehme iuarentee.
Local references furnished . Es·
tabtished 1975 Catt (6141 446 ·
0870 Or 1·800 -287 -0576 Rogers
Waterproohng

875-69~

Opportunfty -

Pass

OL' IULLIT'S
SHOitl CAN II

Norllo
!NT
2NT

Opening lead: •

am-lm, ac. auto, blu&amp;, runs great.
bodr in good shape $7.200 OBO.

1990 Ford Tauru9 GL Sporl
Wagon, loaded, Excellent Condi·
'
lion. 1 ONner, 614·446-649t

1~95 Bu1ck Skylark, loaded, low
m•leage, e•c r:ond, 2dr. $500 &amp;
take over payments. 304·675·
7395.
85 Olds Cutlass Supiene 97 K.
•
v
l
d
,uto, 6 ' oede · 8 est 0 ller.
61 .!1· 44 S-Q59p .

I TAKE RINTA POOCH
BACK,BEANIE !! I HEARD
OL' BULLET GROWL
AT HIM!! '

1988 Custom Bronco 4-wld, V·8,

1987 Dodge Shadow 2.2 Motor.
Runs &amp; Drives Great,
$1 ,300 080, 6 14-256-&amp;002.

loaded,
With
Leather.
AC, Amilock Brakes
, Dual
Air Bags,
AI ·
loys, Spoiler, Sunroof, Power E¥e·
rythi'ng, Full Factor~ Warrantv.
$16,000, 614·992·4511 .

West
Pass

3563.

Automati~;,

1995 Acura lnteqra Spec1al Edc·
tion, ·Mint Condllion, 5 Speed,

17-L~

1988 Bronco, XLT 4 WO 614-.t46-

1987 Celebtrlty $800: 1985 Cadil·
l~c Cimaron 11,050, ,983 Toyota
Cr&amp;n/da $850; 1978 ·Ford Pickup
$750, 16' Ft. Trailer $850, 614·
388·9906.

5:Q0prn,

53""-

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

thing readr to move inro. 304·

49Cl

Injected, 61&lt;t-256-6870 Aher

810

33113.

M~ile home lot for rent. Every

$09,500,

Fuet

South

1987 Ford Brocco, 4-wheel dnve,
auto trans. complete engine re ·
build, lronr ~uspension rebuilt,
new patnt, new wheels &amp; 11res, exc
cond. $5,600. 304-895· ~874.

5 P.ll.

1988 Festt~a. 4 speed, high
miles ; runs, looks good, $875;
Grand Am . loaded, $4200; '
614-992-6510 . •

Poodles· teacups, toys, AKC
5 Pc . Secbonal Round Sola 2 Re· Regisltred, tho1s and wormed,
cliner&amp; Included, Makes Into A· 614·667·3404.
Bed $800; Royal Typewriter $20.
PUPP'f Palace Kennels, Board1ng,
614-367-7230.
Stud Service Puppies, Grooming,
5 · 36~e;l5, 2·60K36 Alumin'um Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, AU Breeds.
ltorm &amp; regular windows . AU for Payments Welcome, 614-388·
0429
$50. 304-675-4030.

Boots By Redwmg,' Chippewa,
Tony lama . Guaranteed lo¥,~est
Prices At Sroo Cafe. Gallipolis.

• A tO 9 6 2
• J 2
• tO 8 s
• QJ 2

.

411=1-

18 City In Ttxu
17 llp01I
11 Doet an
.
Ulhlr'tlab
. 20 IIIDdol
ZIWIIch

Soulb
• J
• K Q 10 6 1
+KQ7$4
• A 7s

1985 Blazer 4 Wheel Drive, Ex·
ceUent Condition. 14.500. 614 ·
256·1747,

1988 VW Golf 5 Speed, 4 Cycl,e,

--

•"

Vulnerable: East·West
Dealer: West

198C CheYy Full Size Good Worlt
Truck, Some New Partl, Asking
13,800, 1989 S -10 Good Work
Tru.ck, High Uila8g&amp;. 13.500, 614·
448-0744,

080; 1980 Dodge 800, S750
080, Good Condllion. 814-3089032. .

AI&lt;C Chow puppies, 2m, 2 I, all
~ue , 1sl shots &amp; wormed, $200
each, 614 .gg2.5347

catts,814·9~9·2481 all•r4pm

1993 Pop-Up Coleman Camper
AC, Furnace, Excellent Condition,
$3.200,614-388-8293.

S•5 Fl. Green Refrigerator $50
Firm. Good Condition, GretH EllttB
For Garage For PoP.'? 614 · 446 ·
1!21.

• K I 54
· ·9 7 4 s
• 9.

,. tO 9 4

1962 Ford F-150 • WO, V-8, Ex·
cellent Condition, $4,500 080,
6, 4·256-1063.

1088 Chevetla, 57,000 Milas,
Very Good Condition. $1,49S

1987 Ford Escort Less Than
38,000 UUes, $3,500 Firm, 614·
379·24n Aher 5:00 I'll.

AKCR.,ttteredYtllowLab
. pl.lpt;,llltqls,wormtd,dew
claws remov•d, h•allh eartili·

1986 FOrd l•D Sta1ion Wagcn V·
6, Good Conditicn, $800; fuel Oil
Heating Stove, Goad Condition,
65,0Q0 BTU $150, 614_.256-6316,

2 Bedroom Suites, Queen, Full,
Other Beds Couches. Tables,
Chair&amp;, Eruen~lnmeru .Centers,
T,V: s, Washers, Dryers, Sto~es,
Etc. 614·446·4039, 614·446· 1004
Anvtime

Eat

1980 Jeep CJ5 Many New Pans.
Very Good Condilion , 614-388·
8144

Spm.

dog, 8 weelt old tamale, like
-chance· 1n movie Homeward
$300 080. 614 ·592- 1625

460 Space for Rent

PROPERTY,
FIRST AVE·

211t ' Buetness

Furnished
Rooms·

450

RENTALS

1&amp;.Ft. Ucility Trailer Hauls Any·
thlf\0, $500: t983 Chevy Camaro,
V·8, AutomatiC, looks Grtat ,
Runs ~rtat, $1,200, 614 ~ .!146 ·,
4539.
19" color pOrtable TW. 175. 12 hp
riding mower S200. 1976 25ft No·
mad camper 11 :000 . 304 -675·
4312

1996 5~~:8 enclosed arum1num util·
ily !railer, S1500. 614·992·5983
alter 7pr'n.

Ba th. Don

ABA Regtstered Amertcan bull -

3111-9088

references.

Hydro

Sheets, Call e14·448·0231 .

10lt12 Kennel, large Deep
Freeze, 4 Jliece Bed Suite, Days
814·388-8304, Evenings: 614·

Beech Sl. Middlepotl, 2br, fur·
nished, utilities paid, deposit &amp;

Pets for Sale

2 AKC R&amp;Q Female, Atlutt Boxers,
S200ea. 4 AKC Boxer Pups,
shol$ &amp; w~rmed, heal!h ~:;heck .
$250aa. 304-675-2074.

ar sell . Rlii9rine Antiques ,
1124 E. Main Street, on Rt. 124 ,
Pomeroy Hours : Lt T. W 10 :00
a.m. to 6 :00pm., Sundar 1:00 to
6:00p .m 6U· 992·2526, Russ
Uoor.e owner

Schult 12x65, ,lair cond., 2br, wf
large utllity 'room , refrigerator,
sto'JS &amp; 2 window ac, $2,500 finn.
3)4-675-3000
•

Build lng
Supplies

550

Rlfte, 30.(16 Remington, wl3x9k40
Simmons scope, aU same aa new
$480. 304·675-1731.

530

'

Weal

1979 Jeep CJ•7 360cu in. Engine,
4spd trans, $2,500 . 1984 Jeep
CJ.7 Body. $500. 304-576-2044

ooln Pike.

520

. .,

730 vans &amp; 4-WDs

Home Comfort Wood Cook Stove
11.000 Frelh Sorihum 6778 Un-

I 0-0i-96

a

'

Two· bedrooin mobile home out·

side ol Pomeroy, 6 1H92-50311.

lhallll dbuellt.,s

are avalabla on.., equal

EEK4MEEK

.... 1398. 1.S00-4.34119.

Our- ore hel8by

ap.-1n lllit 110WIPIP''

Norllo
• Q7 s
• AI 5
• A J
• K 8 I 5

2 Bedroom Trailer In Portotr Area,

1982 Broo~shire , 2br, eteclrlc
heat pump. all blocks &amp; skirting,
$7,000. :ICM-576-2048.

... ....._

14Wcorbrl' ......
15 Oltrlclo'l

Lad~ To Live In With Elderly

.. bobfli1. lloldblo

.~

1a~:=J-:...

720 lhJ«*I for Sllle

-

44 ICIIDiwo

,~c..=,.

-

1876 2 Bedroom, new carpet,
good concl 304-6'75-5708.

.....,._
a_,.,.
...........,

ACII088

.I

lnstan11y

_.which llignlare romantlcaAy per-

·a
~~

........,..ham

lll••

111111•-· Know""*' -....

•

,I

(

•

E

�•
Wednud8y, October-9,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
•

PEPSI
PRODUOS

Ohio Lottery

Orioles
robbed
In New York

Pick 3:

297

Pick 4:

5030
Super Lotto:
11-12-13-19-32-33
Kicker:
857414

STORE HOURS

....., tin s.••.,
IAM-10 PM

Sports on Page 4

· 298 SECOND ST.
POMERO'(. OH.

•

Accepts Credit Cards

WE
THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THIU OCT.OIER 12, 1996.

COCA COLA
PRODUOS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

l

Vol. 47, NO. 112
eop,rJvht 11198

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 10, 1996

. By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL

Aaaoclatecl Pre. . Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va. · Opponents of a proposed Mason County
pulp mill declared victory Wednesday
when a circuit' judge threw out the
mill's water polluti.on permit.
The permit was questioned in
Kanawha County Circuit Court after
state environmental officials said it
was issued before current levels of
dioxin in the Ohio River were determined.
The Division of Environmental
Protection wanted to pull back only
part of the permit for reconsideration.

7-UP

$

19
\h
k
;
.
1
c
uc ..............~......... .. .
·FAMILY PAK ASSORTED
.
.
.
·
k
Ch·
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But Judge Tod Kaufman said the per. mit must be dealt with as a whole.
"The entire permit is vacated as a
matter of law when any part of it is
vacated," 1\aufman said.
Opponents ofthe $ U billion mill
said the company that wants to build
it, Parsons &amp; Whittemore of Rye
Brook. N.Y. will have to start over
with a new permit application for
Apple Grove Pulp &amp; Paper.
"This just demonstrates ·how
important it is for unions and the general public to take an active role in
their community," said John Skaggs,
a Charleston lawyer representing the

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. Kemp befor. the start of the vice presidential debate at the Mahaffey Theater In St. Peter•burg, Fla. Wednesday night. (AP)

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.Point Pleasant Battle Days celebration

und~rway

.
\
·The Third Annual Colonial Ball
Friday's highlight will be the and carnival.
•
tioli will be held at 7 p.m. at the
will highlight events at this year's Lantern Tour of Battle Monument
At II a.m., an ox roast and bean library. Tickets for this event arc
Point Pleasant Battle Days celebra- State Park. or Tu-Endte-Wet Park, .a dinner will be held in the parking lot required and cost $8 per person. The
tion, set for Oct. I0 through 13. as new addtllon to the fesllvtlles thts of the Senior Citizens Center,
tickets may be purchased at Bank
well as a return visit by "The Old ye~. St.vting at7 p.m.: the publk is
Karen Vurance will portray Mary . One, The Peoples Bank, or the inforGuard." ·
mvtted to pantctpate an a walktng Draper Ingles, who was captured by• mation booth.during Battle Days.
The celebration commemorates tour of the park. The group tours will thc.Shawnce Indians in 1757, at both
Following th·e reception at9 p.m.
COLUMBUS (AP) - If there ers to approv~ spending about $5 bil- the Batde of Point Pleasant, First Bat- be led by guides dressed in·Colonial II a.m. and noon, at the batde mon- will be the Colonial Ball. This.will be
. was one thing. that state budget writ- lion in the budget year beginning next tie of the American Revolution. This costumes and carrying old woqden ument park. At Gunn Park, Faire held at the American Legion and will
ers could count on, it was the State July J, and'about $5.5 billion the fat- year marks the 222nd anniversary of lanterns of the period. .
_
Wynds will perform at11 :30a.m. and feature music by the "Anonymous
Board of Education proposing a bud- lowing fiscal year. This year's b~dget the battle, in which colonial troops
Other events set for Fnday tnclude 2:30p.m., with a barbershop chorus Strings" of Medina, Ohio. Tickets arc
get with no realistic hope of getting contained about $4.7 billion for under the ·command of Colonel crafts ~~ Ftfth and Matrt streets, singing at the park at noon.
$12.50 per person and may be pur- ·
it approved. :
. schools.
Andrew Lewis defeated the British encampment at the park, and craft
At 12:30.p.m., a parade willtrav- chased at Bank One, The Peoples
N,ot anymore.
"Undoubtedly, some will say this sponsored Indians, led by Chief demonstrations at the park from 10 el down Main Street featuring tele- Bank lll!d the information booth.
State Budget Director Greg package is unrealistic, and others will Cornstalk.
·
a.m. to 6 p.m.; as well as the art show vision news reporter San!lra Coles as Colonial dress is encouraged.
Browning on Wednesday praised the say we haven :1 asked for enough,", ·
.The celebration began today, with from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. A carnival will grand parade marshal.
"'
board for taking political and eco- Goff said in a news release detailing an Art Show at Fourth and Main be set up in the Silver Memorial
In the afternoon, the Big Bend
Sunday takes on a more serious
nomic reality into consideration when the request.
Bridge parking lot across from the Cloggcrs will perform at Gunn Park note·as the memorial service is held
streets from noon to 8 p.m.
putting together its recommenda"But I believe this package is a · · The art show will feature profe~- courthouse on Main Stree~ with sev- at I:30 p.m. A "Meet ihe -Author," at2 p.m. at the battle mon~ment park.
tions for the next two-year budget.
responsible request that balances the sional and·amateur artists from West era! rides. The carnival will be open Kanawha Valley native William D. The service will honor those colonists
"Historically, state boards have needs 'of education with the fiscal Virginia,' Ohio, and possibly Ken- from 10 a.m. to l!l o.m.
Wintz, will be held at the Mason who fought and died at .the Point on
sent over budget fl'Commendations realities we face."
tucky. The ..yorks will be judged by
Saturday will·be filled with activ- CountyLib&lt;ary between 2 and 4 p.m. Oct. 1o, 1774.
that had no consideration of the
Goff said most of the increases a professional anist from St. Albans, ities, beginning with the Heritage "The Clld Guard" will be at the Bat- .
Also slated for Sunday are a colo:· state's ability to fund them," Brown- ·· were aimed at namiwing the 'gap. and awards will be p~sented in each Queen contest at 10 a.m., pt Gunn · tie Monument Park at 2 p.m., foling s.aid. "I think this is a realistic between the state's richest and poor- class and division. There will also be . Park on Fourth Street Also beginning lowed by the 249th Army Band Of nial church sei'Vice at the battle monument park at 10 a.m., and the art
starting point for discussion~ ."
est school districts, and at helping'dis- a "Best of Show" and "People's at 10 a.m. are the crafts, encamp- Morgantown at3 p.m.
.
show
and carnival from I to 4 p.m.
·
ments, craft demonstrations. art show
The Colonial Governor's RcccpTile board plans to vote next tricts deal with the problem of inad- Choice" awards given.
. week on a budget proposal that equate or poorly maintained buildrequests $792 million more spending mgs.
United Fund csmpaign benefit
targeted toward "meat-and-potato''.
Ohio's system of financing eduissues, state schools Superintendent cation is the subject of a lawsuit filed
John Goff said.
by .most of the state's 611 school disThe proposal would ask lawmak- tri,ts.
By- TOM HUNTER
anglers, including an additional guarCorporate sponsors for this event for anglers' vehicles and boat trailers.
S.e ntlnel Newa Staff
anteed prize of $100 for the angler include Fanners B~nk and Savings 'All I)Qats will register and launch
·
.
Time is dwindling for anglers to catching the single largest walleye or Company of Pomeroy and Tuppers from the Pomeroy levee, with rcgisentertheinauguraiOhioRiverWall- sauger. Other prizes will be Plains, Fisher Funeral HomcofMid- IMition to open at7:15· a.m. and all . ,,
~"':'
'
eye/.Sauger Fall Fishing Classic, tO·be announced and awarded, the: clay . of .... dieport, the Stewart-Johnso.t Post' boat~ to' lcav&lt;&gt; the ·teveC' at !I mm'.
.,.,
,
held Oct 26 on the Ohio River at the event.
,·
.
9926 ·Veterans- of Foreign War-&amp; of, . . Boats will be req•ired tO'chcck-in• ·
Tournament anglers will cover Mason, W.Va., and Don Tate Motors and' be prcsent ,ai the Pomeroy river'
Mrs. Susan Elliott, RN, has been City Home Health Department, and Pomeroy.
Anglers in the tournament will the Obi~ River. between the "Racine of Pomeroy.
front levee no later than 4 p.m ., with
named coordinator of the new Day Pinecrest Care Center. She has
taught
some
in
the
nursing
programs
cover
the
Ohio
River,
between
the
Locks
and
Dam
and
the
coonuence
The
Daily
Sentinel
and
Ohio
Val·
weigh-in
and awards presentations to
Treatment Program scheduled to go
at
both
Hocking
College
in
NelRacine
Locks
and
Dam
and
the
conof
the
Ohio
and
Kanawha
Rivers
at
ley
Publishing
arc
presenting
this
follow.
·
into operation at Veterans Memorial
sonville
and
the
Buckeye
Hills
fluence
of
the
Ohto
a~d
Kanawha.
Point
Pleasant,
W.Va.
-areas
legal
inaugural
event,
with
proceeds
to
Registration
forms
and
detailed
Hospital
in
- Rtvers at Pomt Pleasant •. w_.ya. -- for both Wes! Virginia and Ohio benefit the 1997 Meigs County Unit- contest rules arc available at The DaiPomeroy on Nov. Career Center in Gallia County.
ly Sentinel offices, Farmers Bank and
Mrs. Elliott is scheduled to areas legal for both West Vtrgtma al!d . anglers. Fishing by tournament par- ed Fund campaign.
I.
receive
her
bache
torUs
degree
in
Ohio
anglers.
.
.
.
,
·
ticipants
will
be
permitted
from
boats
The
lower
end
o[
the
Pomeroy
Savings
Company in Pomeroy, or by
A panial
nursing
from
Marshall
University,
.
More
than
$750
m
pnze
money
meeting
all
Coast
Guard
regulations,
municipal
parking
lot
will
be
closed
calling
(614)
992-2155. Anglers reghospitalization ·
Huntington,
w.
Va.,
next
May.
She
wdl
be
awarded
among
the
top
four
or
from
the
shore.·
throughout
the
day,
to
provide
space
Continued
on page 3 ·
program dedicated (o providing
specialized quali- and her husband Russ, employed by
'.
ty services for
Elliott
adults with spe- Gallia Academy, and Jill, II. a sixth
WASHINGTON (AP) - First- claims totaled 317,000 during lhe the labor (orce lost40,000 jobs dur- the weekly reports.
cial · needs, the new operation is ga:ader at the Washington ElemenDuring the week ended Sept 28,
time claiins for jobless benefits fell week ended Aug. 31. The decline was ing September, when the jobless rate
designed to assist residents in deal- tary School, reside in Gallipolis.
edged
up
to
5.2
percent.
There
were
30
.
states and territories had decreasing with adjustments to life Us many
The new program at Veterans by 22,000 last week to the lowest lev- , the !argest since Claims fell by 27,000
240,000
payroll
additions
in
August
es in claims and 23 reported increaschanges.
Memorial Hospital is voluntary and el in five ·weeks, panly due to .the dunng the week ended July 27.
when
the
jobless
rate
was
5.1
percent
es.
The state data is reponed a week
A daughter of Willard and Betty addresses the emotional and physi: return of workers laid ofT by late sumTIIC
four-week
moving
average
of
later
than national totals.
A&gt;·
department
~pokeswoman
Copley of Rio Grande, Mrs, Elliott cal changes .one may encounter in mer hurricanes.
~w
claims
dropped
by
2,500
to
' ·States with the largest declines
New applications for unemploy- auributed much of the decline. to
is a 1975 giaduate of the Holzer every . day, living and works with
Medical Center School of Nursing. them through a structured medically ment insurance totaled a seasonally workers re1uming from temporary 332,250 last week from 334,750 a ·were North Carolina, 4,591 : Pueno
adjusted .319,000, down from a layoffs caused by the tropical storms. week earlier.' It was the lowest.since · Rico, 3,574: Georgia. I,S50: Florida,
Besides workina at the center since supervised program.
Many analysts had expected 328.750 durina the period ended · t.205, and S~th Carolina, 1,098.
her ,graduation, Mrs. Elliott 'has had.
Residents havina any questions · revised 341,000 durin&amp; the week endclainu
to remain unchanged from the Sept.21.
The biggest gains were in Tena wide field of nursing experience alxJut the program or who wiah to ed Sept. 28, the t..bor Department
Ml!ny analysts prefer to traek the nessee, 1,381 ; Michigan, 883: Oklawith Buckeye Home Health, make application for participation said today. The- latter total was llnt previous week, noting signs thatjob ·
creation had slowed in recent weeks. less-volatile four-week average homa, 747, and ntinois and Iowa, 697
Prestera Mental Health Center, may contact Mrs. Elliott at 992- . reponed to be 340,000. ·
11te deportment reported last week hecause,it smooths out the spikes in ·each.
Pleuant Valley Hospital, Galliplllis 2104, Extension 212 .
' II was the smallest number since
,

••

Ohio River .Fall Fishing,, Classic set Oct. 26

·Sl.ices ••••••••••••••••!!~: IJ_

BOU
·TOWELS

or chlorine dioxide bleaching
process, when dioxin levels in the riv-·
er already excee~ the limits,"
McDapiel said.
However, the Environmental
Quality Board, which considers
appeals of Division of Environmental Protection permits, can appeal
Kaufman's ruling to the state
Supreme Court, McDaniel said.
Becky Charles, lawyer for the
board, said she did not know if that '
will happen.
.
., "I don' t care to discuss it," said
Charles Jenkins. chairman of the
Environmental Quality Board. ·

Furthermore, national polls on Wednesday in San Diego .
Abortion and affinnativc action released Wednesday found Dole got
two
issues that never surfaced in last
no lift from the first presidential
debate, leaving him far behind Clin- Sunday's opening presidential showton less than four weeks before Elec- ilown- were big items of contention
in the vice presidential debate. .
tion Day.
.
'
Although he supports a constituDole campaign manager Scott
tional
amendment outlawing abor- ·
Reed said the vice presi'dential .debate
lion,
as
docs Dole, Kemp called such
"continues to allow us to move the'
ball down the field."
, a course unrealistic. ,
"There is no consensus," Kemp
Dole watched the debate from
suburban Chicago. "I'm very proud said. · "A constitutional amendment
of him," the GOP nominee said. DOle would not pass. We must use perspoke with Kemp by phone shortly ' suasion, not intimidation ."
The remark seemed bound to
after the debate: Clinton and Gore
annoy Christian conservatives who
also talked long distance.
Clinton, walking 'toward his heli- have urged the ticket to draw sharpcopter on the White House grounds er contrasts with Clinton.
On affirmative action - pro- ·
. today before departing for Tennessee,
grams
that give preferences to
said, " He was great" when asked
minorities. in ,!lirinll,, cdu~ation and
how Gore did in the dc~te . ,
The campaign 's third and final , housing- 09re noted pomtcdly that ,
debate is between Clinton and Dole
Con1iliued on page 3

r

.--

IIi.

amounis too small to' measure.
In addition to being identified as
· a cancer--causing agent. dioxin also is
now believed to interfere with human
immune and reproductive systems.
Perry McDaniel, a lawyer representing the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, said he believed the
judge's meaning was clew.
"It's over as far as . we're concerned," he said. "The fulks at Apple
Grove ... don't have a permit and they
can't build a mill.
"They can file for a new permit if
they want, but I don't see how any
plant can have any kin&lt;! of chlorine

$792 million more sought "
for State Board of Education

6.5 - 9.25 oz.

$ 199

man said.
"Dioxin ... is one ofthe most con-.
troversial . issues out there today,"
Kaufman said. "The whole permitting pt occss is set up to protect the
community."
Dioxin, a known carcinogen, is a
toxic by-product of numerous man·
ufacturing processes lll!d it is known
that dioxin residue can be found in
the tissue of fish taken from the Ohio
River.
However, establishing dioxin levels is a problem for the Division of
Environmental Protection because it
is believed to be highly toxic even in

."In my opinion it is beneath Bob
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)Vice President AI Gore and GOP Dole to go after anyone personally,"
challenger Jack Kemp are joining Kemp said.
Kemp did go after Clinton admin·
their bosses on the campaign trail
after a mannerly debate over taxes, istration policies, calling Clinton's
affinnative action, abortion and oth- · proposal for targeted tax cuts "socia,l
engineering" and denouncing his
er policy differences.
Gore was linking ·up with Presi- foreign poiicy as ."ambivalent,' condent Clinton today for a rally in fusing (and) sending strong signals to.
Knoxville, Tenn., while Kemp the wrong people."
Gore fought back, deriding the
planned to join forces with Bob Dole
and retired Gen. Colin Powell in Dole-Kemp proposal for a IS percent ·
Cincinnati at the start of a two-day tax cut as a "risky $550 billion tax
sc::heme."
Ohio bus tour.
GO{e was declared a clear winner
Gore and Kemp, in their 90minute nationally televised debate by seven high school and college
Wednesday night, avoided the slash- debate coaches who judged the
ing attacks that have marked some debate for The Associated Press. In
quick polls conducted by ABC, CBS
previous vice presidential debates.
Kemp set the tone from the outset. and CNN, Gore came out the victor
. pa~sing up l\P op.J&gt;Ortunity to d@~ , ~~II: al!out half of those surv.e)ll'4
what moderator Jim Lehre1 called said he . wo~. compared to less than a
third for I&lt;emp.
"personal and etl)ical differences."

FOLGERS .
COFFEE

USDA ClfOICE BONELESS BEEF Cff.~~K $139

US-#1 IDAHO

Affiliated Construction Trades Foundation, a labor organization opposing
the mill.
' "Had no appeal been pursued by
any party. that mill likely would be
operating today," he said.
David Flannery, a Charleston
lawyer representing Pmons &amp; Whit.temoa-e, said he could not be certain
· what the ruling means for his client
until he sees the judge's written
. order. That is expected to be com,pleted Thursday or Friday.
Measuring background. di.oxin in
the river is an important step, Kauf•

Gore, Kemp veep debate called mannerly-

5.199

-BONELESS CHICKEN

2s.cttons,12Poge&amp; 35ceru
A Gatlne)l Co. N.,.opoper

Pulp mill's water pollution permit tossed out

(

Round Steak ••••••••••••t·

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