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Wednud8y, October-9,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
•

PEPSI
PRODUOS

Ohio Lottery

Orioles
robbed
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Pick 3:

297

Pick 4:

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STORE HOURS

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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.

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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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f

.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·

Scatter fro•t poulble•
Low In 30.. Friday-, •unny-,
high In SO..

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Coord I•nator named f or
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�•

Thuraday, October 10, 1996

Commentary
111 Court Sl, P~, Ohio
614-982·2158 • Fu: 9112-2157

Thuricsey, October 10, 1998

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L W1NGETT
u

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Genenll U..ger

Publlaher
MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

'

O
Campaign '96:
Foreign policy
By JOHN OMICINSKI
Gannett New• Service

....

.

'

.

WASHINGTON - With trouble flaring in Iraq and Israel, with U.S.
troops headed for Kuwait and 5,000 more to Bosnia, there is no shortage of
foreign policy to chew'on in tbe 1996 presidential campl\ign.
,
' That said, where's the beefs?
'
Neither President Clinton nor Republican foe Bob Dole seem inclined to
fight out the 1996.campaign on foreign pPiicy ground.
It's probably because both know their political history.
Rarely has foreign policy been a single issue that won a modem presidential election. Yet foreign policy has lost a few. Viz: Jimmy Carter, George
Bush. Lyndon Johnson.
Both ckndidates know that Bush carne out of his Persian Gulf War in 1991
as "Mr. Foreign Policy President," spinning his gilt-edged Rolodex to chat
·with Hosni, Helmut, Boris, Francois and Maggie on a moment's notice:or to have them over for a splash of coffee.
They also know that by 1993, Bush was "Mr. One-Term President."
Dole and Clinton also share the same lack of vision on fareign policy.
, In Clinton's case, it is what Kim ~olmes of the Heritage Foundation calls
'a reactive "9-1-1 strategy;".dealing with the world crisis by crisis.
,,
"Both are tryin'g to straddle the fence between unilateralism and muliilatetalism, with Dole more clearly on the unilateral end of that spectrum and
Clinton more clearly on the multilateral end," said Alan Tonelson of the U.S.
Business and Industrial Council of Washington. "It's not quite splitting hairs,
b~t it's.awfully close."
'
'
This should come as no surprise because public opi'nion polls reflect great
public ambivalence on.foreign policy. Most Americans would like it to just
go away.
·
No more superpower stuff, Americans say. Only 13 percent in a recent
poll by the University of Maryland's Program on l~temational Policy Attitudes embraced the idea the United States should be "the pre-eminent world
leader, in solving inter:national problems." .
· ·
·
A nearly equal 12 percent said hang it all and "withdraw from world
affairs." In the great middle ~ere the 74 percent w~J? saw an America "doing .
its fair share with others."
·
But what is the fair share? That's what the foreign policy debate is all
about, when the candidates actually engage in it.
But discussion is rru:e and spotty.
With Saddarn Hussein's.troops op,tbe loose in northern Iraq and U.S.
cruise missiles raining down on Baghdad's radar sites, Clinton stumped the
country talking about education, school unifo""s, and his idea of.a "bJ:idge
to the future."
Dole scrapped a major speech on Iraq, instead issuing an ·Iraq statement
and campaigning against Clinton's liberalism and for his own 15 percent tax
cut.
,
• Despite theit avoiding the matter, foreign policy would seem important
to both men.
·
.
·
, Like every new president with no foreign affairs sense, Ointon discov·!enid welfare n;form won't gel you on~ forhours~time, but facing down
,8 hooligan in Iraq or Libya will do it every time.
.
' After.old friendMich~l Mandelbaum dis':~,'~ Clinton's stumbling ini'tial forays into fore1gn pohcy as "soctal work, the
te House shifted gears
;and became more engaged. Indeed, Clinton suddenly seemed to enjoy it,
:especially in 1994 and· 1995 when he gotto.viP.il World War II battlefields.
: "I'm really learning a lot," he told reporters !Jfter a briefing,
: "Foreign policy may well he the 'stealth~issue that defuses the charac:ter
_ question forB ill Clinton," wrote Heritage r.oundalion senior fellow Dav1d
•Winston in the Brown Journal of World Aff~rs.
·
: · "The White House has realized that it is · uch easier to .craft a new and
·. ·omproved Bill Clinton by usin. g foreign policy as a back.drop ....(and) it has
,-done a remarkable job ~f usmg the power of the~ pt'es1dency to create the
:relev1'sion images so effeclive in establishing Bi I Clinton as a world leader
:and a de facto domestic leader."
' , , , · ·/
.
: · Dole'searly campaign .gave signals that foreign policy was front and cen•ter. On May 9, in an ho.ur-long speech on Asia, he said Clint!'" had "squanldered the rich foreign policy legacy he inherited by making inconsistenc~,
'•confusion and incoherence the common features of American diplomacy. '
But after that. the foreign policy fire nickered'in the Dole camp.
Henry Kissinger, telling Dole "if you' re IS points behind, you may as
;welllellthe truth," was advising the candidate to get moving.
• The Oct. 6 debate in Hartford, Conn., illustrated foreign policy's mar'gina!· importance in the race, and also its capacity for flares and fizzles. . ·

A focus group monitoring the could be a new Newt."
As a result. Gingri4;h's overall I'll·
recent congressionaltlllevision dobale
produced evidence lhal House Speak- ing from focus group participants
er Newt Gin'grich, R-Ga., could sig- moved from about 4.5 on a 1-IOscale
nificantly improve his dismal public
image if he really tried.
But recent Gingrich confrontations with the press suggest that he to almost 6, while those of Democsimply lacks the self-control that ' ratic Leaders Tom Daschle. S.D., and
enabled President Clinton to reverse Dick Gephardt, Mo., and fellow
his political f9rtunes. The result is Republican Trent Loll, Miss .,
that while Gingrich remains popular remained about 5. according to
with GOP audiences, he also is serv- Luntz.
ing as the Democrats' main foil in
·In 1994, Luntz market-tested Gin1996 campaign ads -- and Democrats grich's "Contract With America"
claim that their ads are working.
and has done work since then for
The focus group, conducted by · con~essional Republicans. But he
Republican p&lt;illster Frank Lunlz, said that he conducted his Williamsindicated that Gingrich gained the burg focus group at his own expense.
most ground among the four conWith one participant declining to.
gressional leaders engaged in the make a choice, the participants split
hour-long debate on PBS.
18-10 in deciding that the Republican
Moreover, coming from behind, teain had beaten the Democrats in the
Gingrich emerged slightly ahead of' debate, he said.
fellow debaters in the esteem of the'
As measured by hand-held dials
29 fQCus group participants, II used by focus group participanl&gt;,
Republicans, nine Democrats, and Luntz said that the high points in Ginnine Independents.
grich's performance carne in his cri"Gingrich needs to bonle this per- tique of public school bureaucracies
formance and unveil iC at every anCI in his declaration that the Unitopportuhity." Lunlz said. "He was ed States' first foreign policy prioricalm, collected, and intelligent. He ty should be to stop drugs coming
played .the educator. ... I think this into the United States.

Gingrich argued that, in Washing- also finds it difficult to control himton, D.C., bureaucracy claims so self when he's around the press,
much"of the school system's $9,000 whose' "bias is unending, " he
per-pupil spending that if it were cut charged at a recent Sperling breakin half, reachers · could be paid fast.
$90,000 per year. According to Luntz,
There's considerable objecti~e
the Democrats'low point came when . evidence ar.ound fh at the med1a do till
Gephardt tried to rebut the point by against Republicans . And lately,
saying, "I think they do get the mon- reporters themselves have been crney to the teachers and the students." ic izing the White House press for
The Democratic high points came, · going easy on Pres1den1 Chnton --'
Luntz said, when Gephardt and notably after be hinted that he might
Daschle talked about their " Families pardon Whitewater scandal particiFirst" agenda of tax breaks for edu- pants.
;
.
.
cation and' health care and pension
But instead of coolly challengmg
reform.
the media to be fair, Gingrich
Daschle also scored when he indulged himself. in vituperation
rebutted Gingrich's claim to have against the media, accusing it of
saved $500,000 a year by canceling "covering up" its own "distortions"
delivery of ice j:mckets to House and claiming that media failure to
offices, pointing ounhatthe Repof). predict the GOP victory in
licans' closing down of ihe federal Louisiana's Senate primary was proof
government Ialit winter cost $1.4 bil- of bias rather than.last-minute spendlion·.
ing by Republicans:
Overall, though, Luntz said that
In a Washington Times interview,
the focus group indicated that "Gin- moreover, Gingrich said of his
grich's vision and substance is supe- Democratic adversaries in the House,
rior. The only question is whether his "They have no new 1deas, they have
style will let people hear his sui). no legislation, they have no concepts.
stance."
W.e pass something, they smear.
Not likely. Gingrich is capable of Someday somebody will write a col·bursts of smiling, sweet reason in umn pointing out, isn't this bizarre?"
·front of television cameriJS, but he . Polls indicate that Gingrich's
behavior continues to play badly
witH.tl)e public. The latest NBC/Wall
Street Journal poll has his approval
rating at 27 percent and disapproval
.at 51.
All over the country, Democratic .
congressional candidates are ·attacking their GOP rivals by citing their
closeness to Gingrich. ·
Focus groups con~ucted in Iowa
by the Democratic Congressional
Campaign Committee indicate that
the ads work, especially with women,
who switch three-to-one against a
Republican candidate when he's
linked to Gingrich.
lt .need not be that way. The Gingnch-led 104th Congress nas accomplished a lot and polls show that the
public appreciates it, but not the
speaker. ,
If Luntz's claim is correct and the
general public determines that Gingrich's vision and substance are better than his Democratic foes ' , then
the only question is whether his
style will allow voters to hear what
he's saying.
So far, the answer ·is no.
(Morton Kondracke is executive
editor of Roll Call, the newsJlllper ,
of Capitol Hill.)

Sandra Durham Hoffman, S1. Evant, Texas, died Thursday, Oct. 9, 1996.
A native of Rand, W.Va., she was the c)aughler of Freda M. Durham of
Middleport and the late Odd E. Durham.
Su..Vivors include two daughters, Rhonda Lynn Gardner, Texas, and Kel·
ly Hillert, Ind.; three grandchildren; three sisters, Daisy ijanson of Texas,
Charlotte lmai of California and Jodee Alkinson of Georgia; two brothers,
Euge~e Durh!Ut! ~f Pen~sylvania and Troy ~urham of Ohio.
Memorial serv1ces Will be held at Memonal Gardens tn Chester on Saturday, II a.m. with the Rev. Glenn McClung officiating. Arrangements ~
, by Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.
Friends will be received by the family at the home of Freda Durham
immediately after the: service.
.
.
·
In lieu of flowers , donations may be made to the Amencan Cancer Society. .

VIS Assodated Preas GraphicsNet

r

'

.

.

.

Virgie Helen Bryson Meier, 91, Akron, died Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1996, at
the Chapel Hill. Retirement Center m Canal ~ulton:
·
Born Nov. 14, 1904, in Bedford Township, Metgs County, daughter of
the late Charles and !-ucy Price Bryson, she attended Pomeroy H1~h School
and Ohio University and taught school at Deal, Hobday and Darwm schools
in Meigs County. She moved to Akron in 1928 where she.grad.u~ted from
Friday ...Mostly sunny. High in Akron University and taught schoolm tlte Akron area unt1l retmng at age
67.
.
be f h
the low 50s.
She
was
a
member
of
the
United
Church
of
Christ,
a
mem
ro Ie
Extended forecast
Retired
Teachers
A~sociation,
local
and
national
American
Association
of
Saturday... Fair. Lows midt!le 30s
Retired Persons, the Akron Association of University Women and traveled
to lower 40s. Highs 60 I~ 6~ .
.
·
Sunday... Fair...Except a chance of · with the AARP travel club for many years.
Sbe
was
preceded
in
death
by
herhusb~d.
George
Me1er;
seven
brothshowers extreme north late in the day.
Lows in the 40s. Highs 60 to 6S north ers and sisters, and one nephew. She 1s surv1ved by 13 n~eces and nephews.
Services will be Saturday, 12:30 p.m . at the Schermesser Funeral Home,
and middle and upper 60s south.
Akron, with Dr. Dale Young officiating. Buri~l will be in the Gru:den of EterMonday... A chance of showers
. p k Akr ·
.
non h. Fair south. Lows upper 30s to nal Hope Mausoleum , Hillsi de Memona1. ar I •th fon.eral
home In heu of
S
rd ay ~ e un
30
2
Friends
may
call
I.J
-1
:
p.m.
atu
·
lower ...40s. Highs in the 50s. · '
flowers, donations should be made to a favonte charity.

-Today.'s weather forecast
By The Aaaoclated Preaa
·Southeastern Ohio
This moming ...Oouding up with
:a chance of showers.
. This aftemoon ...Cioudy with a
~chance of showers. High in the mid
:50s. West wind 10 to IS mph. Chance
of rain 30 percent
.
Tonight ...Decreasing cloudiness
· with some scattered frost possible.
.. Low in the mid 30s. Nonhwest wind
5 to 10 mph.

:Land transfers posted

Louanna Ruth E. Wilcox

The following land transfers were Smith, Rutland;
•recorded recently in the office of
Deed, Glenn Eugene and Lois W.
· Meigs County Recorder Emmogene Thompson to Gina Thomas and
Hamilton.:
Cindy · Baumgardner, Salisbury, .66
Deed, .Robert B.. Robert 0. and acre;
Karen Baker, Sandra and Michael
Deed, Elinor Burke and Charles
·Corbell, Nancy an~ Augie Altadonna · Joe Thomas, Salisbury ;
·to Frank Herald Jr., Orange/Olive . Deed, Gerald 0. and Ada Bibbee
parcels;
to Frank Herald Jr., Oiange/Oiive; ·
Deed, Ritchie A. Coe to Lisa L.
Deed, Woodrow Fortney to Clinton R. and Ester L. Pitzer, Chester;
Coe, Columbia, 1.110 acres;
Deed, Terry Sr. and Barbara J.
Deed, Roland D. MonistoAICena
.Friesnerto David and Barbara Vujak- F. Morris, Salisbury, 1.88 acres;
lija, Ohve parcels;
Deed, Alcena F. Morris to J. Todd
Deed, Shirley Yoder to Donald W. Lisle, Salisbury, 1.88 acres;
Hunnell ahd Shirley Yoder, MiddleDeed, Priscilla and John Schuler
port;
to John W. and Rebecca A. Hess, RutDeed, Larry !,.. and Shirley M. land, 151100 acre;
J!rown to Debra L. Moreland and
, Right of way, Harold D. and Janet
Margaret R~gan , Columbia parcel;
K. Graham to Columbus Southern
. · Deed, Pamela J. Helmick. Pamela Power, Scipio;
J. Buchanan, Steve Hdmick to GreRight of way, Linda C. and James
gory E. Bu~hanan, Ohve;
E Diddle to CSP, Chester;
Deed, Gary and Juanita Griffith 1&lt;&gt;- .- ·Right of way, Scott A., John D.
Cletus L. and Nan J. Harder, Chester, and Janice Lisle to CSP, Sutton;
.31 acre;
Right of way, Bonnie 1. Smith to
Deed. Cletus L. and Nan J. Hard- CSP, Sutton;
.
·
er to Gary and Juanita Griffith, RutRight of way, Donald and Mary
land parcels;
Glover. Wanda and Donald Wyeth,
Deed, Raymond J. and Lydia Robert and Tana Wellman to CSP,
Slflilh to Donald R. and Carmella M. Scipio.

Louanna Ruth Ebersbach Wilcox, 71, formerly of Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1996 at her Unionville, Conn . residence . .
Born Dec. 23, l924 in Pomeroy, she was .the daughter of the late Howard
S. and Ruth (Williams) Ebersbach.
She is,survived by five daughters: Sheihi Lapa of Enfield, Coon ., Kathlee'n Anne Dossot of Unionville, CoQn,, Patricia Labowsky of Cheshrre.
Conn., Deborah Wilcox-Laos of East Hampton, Conn .. and Mary Harroff
of Milford, N.H.; three brothers: HowardS. Ebersbach of Newark, Thomas
A. Ebersbach of Orchard Lake, Mich., and Lawrence S. Ebersbach of Synlcuse; and eight grandchildren.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be held Friday in the Church of St. Ann,
Unionville, Conn., beginning at 10 a.m. A funeral procession "!ill leave (or
the church from the Ahern Funeral Home, Ill Main St., Rt. 4, Unionville,
Conn., at9:40 a.m. Burial will he in White Birch Cemetery, East Hampton,
Conn.
.
Calling hours will he observed Frida~ morning, from 9 a.m. until the ume
of the service, at the funeral home;
The family requests that memorial contributions be made to the St. Francis Hospice 1:/o Development Office, 114 Woodlan&lt;! St., Hartford, Conn.,
06105.

Units of the Meigs Couniy Einergency Medi~al Service recorded seven calls for assistance Wednesday.
Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
4:21 p.m ., Maples Apartments,
Gladys Blessing, Pleasant · Valley
Hospital .
POMEROY
;l; 16 a.m., N. Fifth Avenue, Patri•
cia Hindey, Holzer Medical Center.
RACINE
6:03 a.m., volunteer fire departmeni to Elige Hill Road. hay bale
fire, Bernard Lavalley owner.
_

REEDSVILLE
7:44 p.m., Bigley Ridge Road,
Margaret Nesselroad, St. Joseph's
Hospital.
RUTLAND
5:13 p.m., Meigs Mine 2, David
Hager, HMC.
SYRACUSE
5:01 p.m., motor-vehicle accident
on Main Street, Pomeroy, Jennetta
Hudson, Veterans Memotial Hospital,
Annetta Pierce, JoAnn Williams and
Mick Barr, refused treatment;
7:38 p.m., Waters Edge · Apanments, l'l~an Wi~eman, VMH.

Today's livestock report
·

Summary of Wednesday's .Pro- · Slaughter heifers: choice 64.00ducers Livestock Association auc- 74.00; select57.00-63.00.
lions at GaUipolis and Mt. Vernon:
Cows: s)eady ; all cows 48.00 and
Hogs: steady.
down .
Butcher hogs: 32.00-56.85.
Cattle: steady 10 3.00 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 65.00VETERANS MEMORlAL
Ott.
9
()()
I
65
75 .85; se ect 58 .00- . .
Admissions : None
.• Discharges: None

The, Daily Sentinel

Published ev ~ ry' afternoon. Monday throup
Friday. Ill C()urt St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publi8hina Coft110nyl0a.nnett.Co.:
Pmnrroy. Ohio 4!1769, Ph. 992-2156. SttoM
cln.u po5tap paid 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.

Mtmbtr: The Auocied Preu, aud the Ohio
Newspaper At:IOdllion. l
•
POSTMASTER: Send addrels co~tlons to
The Daily Sentinel, I II Coun S1., Pomeroy,
Obio45769.

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•

--• •

•

Stock t'tlporta are the 1o:
a.m. quotM prvYidecl by AtMat
of GaHipolle.

Kemp had supported such measures .
until he. became Dole's running mate.
Dole supports a California ballot ·
initiative rolling back affirmative
action programs.
"With all due respect, 1 do not
believe Abraham Lincoln would have
adopted Bob Dole's position 10 end
all affirmative action ,'~ Gore said,
playing on Kemp' s frequent references to the GOP as the party of Lin-..
.
1
co ~·Oltntered Kemp: "My life has .
bee~ dedicated. to equality ·or oppor. .,
,.t_unThtly. 1. r 1 hanges came over
e IVe les exc
·
e~onomic policy, as Kemp cham pipropos.a! for anGacross. . oned thedGOP
the-boar 15 percent lax cui. ore, m
turn. trumpe.ted the administration's

Continued from jmge I

tar~eted

proposals for more
cuts . •
Kemp contended h1s and Dole •·
proposed tax· cut would "li~t the
economy" and untap a "N1agara
Palls" of economic activity.
"The problem is that Senator
Dole and Mr. 1\emp would f'UI the
economy..m a barrel and send 11 over
the falls, Gore sa1d to laughter.
Yet for the most part, the debate
was c1v1l, even genteel.
1
Kemp told a post-debate rally:
"It's not a boxing match. It's not a
football ~a.~e. It was,a .c hance t~ go
mto the hvmg rooms of the Amcncan
people and speak to our national (am'I ,.
.
1
y. "Give Jack Kemp credit for keep,·ng .11 on a h'lgh plane," 581·d Leon
p
Cl'
' h' f f I ff
.
aneua, mton s c 1e o s a .

-Obituaries. ObhUerlel are Pllld onnouncementa ll'l'lltged by loetll ,..,... homM ..
. ObhUerlel . . publlahed.. requeottdiOIICCOII\modate-deolrtngmora
Information than It provided In the oooom,...ytng DMih Notlcea. '

Tony Welch

;· '{

. To~y Welch, 29, Langsville, went to be' with his molh.er and the Lord on
Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1996, in University Hosp11al, Columbus.
He was born Jan. 18, 1967, "son" of the. late Fletcher and Anna Welch
of Middleport and Diana Jean Welch Jones of North Carolina. He was
employed by Bobb Lumber, Mason, W.Va., and enjoyed spending time with
his family, riding his horse and taking care of his animals on the farm.
He is survived by his wife, Gwcnne Welch of Pomeroy; a stepdaughter;
Jennifer Husk of Pomeroy; a stepson, Lee Husk of Galion; two sisters and
a brother, Tony a Perez, Stacey Nin .and Mike Jones, all of North Carolina.
. He is ~lso survived by four aunts and an uncle, Bob and Peggy Ellis of
Middleport, Judy Musser of Pomeroy, Lenore Clark of North Carolina,·
Frankie Fae Nelson of West Virginia an&lt;! Fred and ShirleyTackct( of Belpre; and several nieces, nephews and cousins. ·
·
Special friends surviving are Scolt McKinley, Harry Roush. Nick Bush,
James Acree David Hoover and Mark Hammonds.
He was pr;,.cdcd in death by his "father" and "mother" Pletcher and Anna
Welch.
Services will he held Saturday at II a.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport with Lamar O'Bryant officiating. Burial will follow in Hemlock
Grove Cemetery.
•
Friends may call Friday, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
.

·we want to

change the way
·you look at

monuments.

Meigs announcements
Chester Elementary carnival
Chester Elementary Carnival will
be held Saturday, 5:30-8 p.m. in the
school gym with food , games, cake
walk and sub walk.
Homecoming slated
The Carleton Interdenominational Church, Kingsbury Road, wiil
hold homecoming Sunday with Sun-

Oh /0
• R/VeT
• •••
Continued from page 1

istering before Oct. 20 wHI receive an
official tournament T-sh1rt.
. Tourt)amenl participants and the
public are invited to suppon the 1997
U · d F d c
Meigs County nue
un
ampaign by at}"nding l.he Ohio River
====;,====="'"="""i'· _Fall Fishin~ ·Classic, Tournam~nt.
"'
Kickoff Breakfast, Oct, 26 f..-.6-.21
11
·a.m., at McDonald's Restaurant of
Pomeroy.
'
.
'
Am Ele Power .,......................41 '/.
Tickets for this tournament day
Akzo .... :-......................... .'......... 81
"all-you-can-eat" hotcakes and
Ashland 011 ...........................41~
sausage breakfast are $3, and can he
AT&amp;T ..................................... 39~
purchased at The Daily Sentinel
Bank One ..............................4~
offices or from any Meigs County
Bob Evene ........... " ...............12'4·
Borg-Werner ........................... 34 · · United Fund board member. Proceeds
Champion .............................18'1.
from this breakfast wilf benefit the
ChllrmllliJ Shope ....................5\
1997 United Fund Campaign.
City Holding .......................,.23'1.
For more informatipn on tournaFec1erel M~ul ....................... 23\
ment events, contact Jim Freeman at
GMrteH ..................................&amp;~
The Daily Sentinel, 614-992-2155,
Goodyear ..............................44/.t
K·mert ....................................10~
ext. IOZ.
Linda End .............................22i

"O'ck.s.

Gore, Kemp.• ~

Ex-Gallia County DARE officer Richard A. Mudd, 48, faces a sentence of up to 18 months in jail upon entering a guilty plea to a county
of gross sexual imposition last week in the Galli a County Common Pleas
Court.
Mudd, represented by Pomeroy attorney Charles H. Knight, was indicted by a grand jury in March on the gross sexual imposition charge, and
on a count of rape stemming from incidents with two female juveniles
from April 1991 through January· l996.
,
The second count 'was dropped at the recommendation of the victims,
according to Prosecuting Attorney Brent Saunders.
.
11\e court 'ordered that a pre-sentence evaluation be conducted prior
to formal sentencing.
,
'
Mudd was reportedly hired as· an intermittent corrections officer in
November .1990, and was promoted to the position of DARE officer m
November 1991.

Hospital news

' •. l.,.

'

Bernard LaValley, Elige Hill Road, was awaken¢ by the smell of
smoke around 6 a.m. and saw his hay bales on fire. He said the bales
had to have been individually ignited as they were not stored close
together, the report stated.
The Racine Volunteer Fire Depanment responded .
. Anyone with information concerning any of the hay bale fires is
asked to contact the sheriffs department.

Ex-DARE officer enters guilty plea

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls

Cl.lnton P·lays ·a masterful chess ga·.me

maner

morning.

Oct.

Ben WatfenbeCfl

h •Istory

. The Meigs County Sherilfs Department is investigating a blaze that
destroyed 15 hay bales on Elige Hill Road near Racine Wednesday

In lieu of flowers memorial .contributions for Otha Allen Jarvis, 60,
Pomeroy, who died
8, 1996, may be mailed to the Otha Allen Jarvis
, Fund, 1913 county Road 24. Marengo OH 43334:

First presidential debate had s.o me drama
On balance, it was a good debate. . woman and said "Good day:O• The . Dole's remark has passed into histo- for the elderly. It is a very serious
These things normally degenerate woman in the White House turned to ry as a charge against "Democrat problem when mndern liberalism
into a ping-pong of volleyed factoids. the general and said "I don 't speak to wars." That is not what that quote has been apologizing for out-of-wedBut this one had some drama to it the military." (The gConeral, by the says. In 1988, after George Bw I. at lock birth, criminality, dumbed-down
due, principally, to Sen. ~le's quick
Dole in New Hampshire, Dole 1as politically correct education and quowit, sometimes plain funny, someasked if he had a message for Bush. tas by race, gender and ethniciiy.
times sharp. That kept viewers wait!!!
Dole said, "Tell him to stop lying
Finally, Dole has a problem coming for what was 10 come next, the way, was Barry McCaffrey, the very about my record ," which is just what mon 10 some very smart men. He
!nark of any good story.
same "four-star general"that Clinton Bush' hltd been dping.
assumes that the listener i~ as wellDole heJped himself.·At the least regular!~ brags on because, three
Politics is a contact sport, and if informed as he is. Hence, a number
he put himself in the same league as years later, he appointed him drug Dole is spooked by that silliness, he's of his remarks were later characterPresident Clinton, which, in the pub)
in the wrong business. It's a prbblem ized as "crYptic," and "disjointed"
lie perception, is not where he was c'i:iuring the debate, Jim Lehrer that afflicts the whole Republican with "unexplained references." He
before the debate. American voters asked Sen. Dole what he had in mind Party. Maligned at their 1992 Hous- apparently fell that everyone knows
should now understand that there are when he stated at the Republican ton convention as right-wing zealots that Clinton has demagogued the
two serious men running for presi- convention that " .. . within the Clin- on the issue of family values -- the Medicare issue, but Dole never
dent -- not one, not three .. that the ton administration (there is) a corps GOP has backed off from using the explained how. Dole never quite
two have somewhat different philoso- of the elite WhO never grew up, nev- ~ocial issues. And so, for one exam- explained lh~t Clinton's plan for
phies, and that time is getting short. er d'd
t anyth.mg rca1, never sacn'fi1ced, pll\, we hear nothing aboutf gays in the educational "choice" did not include
That said, Dole didn't do nearly as never suffered ..." Dole lamely said military,h a clear issue ·o substance
private or parochial schools. He nevr
well as he could have. 1sense at least he meant that a 1oto f peopecameto
facing
t
c
c,
&lt;
immander-m-chie
.
·
er
did quite tell us who the twice1
. k
D 1•
d' 'I
1
three ma;or
nroblems, probably re. c- WaJih'tngton wit hout expenence
.
That 10 s to o c s secon '"' • · mentioned Lande! Shakespeare was,
' &lt;
and
tifiable . ,
.
.
were very liberal.
urc. Yes, he attacked Clinton and the . and he asSumed that we all knew that
The first concerns pussy-r~oting
. ·
¥
Why is Dole ,afraid to get tough? Democrats as "liberals." But alas, he Rene Preval is th,e president of Haiti.
Dole is in danger of standing as the He has a reputation of being a harped exclusively on the idea that And so forth.
·
candidate of a renamed GOP -- the meanie, based largely on two state- the problem with liberalism is· high
Dole gets an eight. He'll have to ·
Gutless Ooze Party.
ments. In 1976 Dole was questioned taxes: Too many Republicans think do better and be tougher.
For example: Early in Clinton's about President Gerald FQI'd's pardon everything ha&lt; to do with money and •
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
tenn, the Army's most hig~ly deco- of Richard Nixon. Dole responded: taxes. But that's not the biggest ·at the American Enterprise Insti·
rated active-duty general, a Vietnam "It's not a very good issue, any more ptoblem with modern litj~:ralism. It's tute, is the author of a new book,
hero who almost died from his than the war in Vietnam would be, or not a disaster if freely elected people "Values Matter Most," and is the
wounds, was in the While House on World War 11 or the war in Korea choose to buy certain services col- host or the weekly public television
business. As he left, 'he nodded to a would be. All Democrat wars." lectively,like pensions or health care program, "Think Tank.'r
,

Hay fire investigated

Otha A. Jarvis
Virgie Meier .

·

A 1975 Buick allegedly involved in the Friday evening drive-off
from the Tuppers Plains BP Station was located and impounded Sunday evening, according to Meigs Count~ Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
The car was found parked along state Route 7 near the ~ounty hne.
Late Friday nigh~ the office received a call that the vehicle bad been
on state Route Z48 headed toward the Portland area with a badly leak·
ing radiator.
Charges of petty theft are pending against the driver.

Sandra D. Hoffman

MICH.

Joseph Spear

._

Vehicle impounded '

AccuWeathe~ forecast

;'foreign
Onlyfiveofthe23
.questionsposedbymoderatorJimLehrerdeai1WIIh
P'!licy, consummg
about one-srxth of the debate urn~. Questions con:cemed Cuba. Iraq, committing troops, the Middle East, and Dole's accusa.
,
;lions t!Jal Clinton has a. "photo. op.': foreign policy~
. .
.
.
This is one· of those columns that · the Democratic oppositian•, ~o. Bill1 sounclt like- the,rihgleade•of,a cocain~ • dam.Husseitrli~' 1.990cin&gt;the cit)'!'of~· ., 1
' None 1gmted fires. Indeed, the M1ddle East questoo~~&gt;fiwe.dJnta bllllunen.• ~ ' ht 1 h
,
,
d d
- '
·
b I r1 fl '
d'ffi
1·
· oug
o ave a. per.ora1e e ge · Glinton· hb vanish~d, the Clintom cartel, it :~ound~ tinny, becauS1&gt; so • , Mosu~. neal' where' Saddam haJ i ' '"
1
around it for easy clipping. Because team has raised enough money for many Republican luminaries o~ce . gassed. 5,000 Ku~ds , and promised:
:agreeing thatthe Ara -. sr.., con ICI was very . •cu t. "
, One problem ts the tS$Ues themselves.
-.. 'fB 'Il c1·
1
•
1 ·
· s·mce 1.he co11apse of the Cold War enemy -the Soviet
Union, in 199r ! I
mton o~es , a .e~ sur Yern- two campaigns, Newt Gingrich is the par:took. of drugs. Even Newt G1n- the dictator he would oppose arcy:
, .
·
1cs are gomg to send 11 back m
~ncb lned P,OI once and now pas~s · attempt by Congress to impose sane-:
N
be · h
ff 'tte II
·- foreign pohcy has gotten very fuzzy. So has the rhetorrc.
1
'
·
· · ·
·
· TheN y rkTi
Cl'
'd
ovem rw11 nastys u wn na
11 off as a s1gn that w.~ were ahve lions against Iraq for using poison.
: In a.July for~lgn poh.~y l;,te~le~ WI~ . bed ~w . 0
nes. . .to;::n~~:d over it in red ink.
and
10 graduate schooL It has been
gas? Is there any wonder Dole had lit-:
;his mam .o~~uve was to IRIS 1 un 1015
uslness 0 eavmg
Whatthe heck. Life's too short to most disliked pol in America, and Bill speculated that as many as 80 percent tie to. say when Clinton launched a:
·War be~m · .
.
.
pull punches, so here's the gist of it: Clinton is the supreme centrist.
of those members of Congress who missile attack against Iraq?
That sa f~rly w~de ?pen VIsta.
.
If Bill "Death Wish" 'd inton manI mean, talk about your Slick went to college in the '60s tried marSo is foretgn pohcy rn the 1996 elecuon.
ages not to blow.his huge lead before Willie.
ijuana. My~uess is they are not all
There's much more. How can :
'"r.
Nov. 5, he will be remembered as one
Think of it as a chess match, and Democrats.
you exploit the Hillary issue if you :
-- Crime. Cfinton pushed for are married to Elizabeth? How can ·
I
of the. most supre~ely gifted poli!i- considerallthe ways in wtiich Robert
police
programs and gun-control you argue family values when you :
·
c1ans m modern h1story.
Dole has been checked:
·
By TheAIIoclated Preu
·
.
.
I know, you've heard it before.
•• The economy. Nothing Dole laws and won the endorsement of the are the one with the divorce and your :
Today iiThursday, Oct. 10. the ~84th d!ly of 1996. There .are 82 11!')'5 But! mean REALLY gifted.
says about pock.eil:!ook issues seems Fmtemlll Order of Police. A soft-on- opponent ha.. an ·intact family and is :
left in the year. ,
·
·
It's going to take the perspective to .resonate, and that's because eco- crime label just won'.l stick.
the doting father of a teen-age d.augh- ;
-- l\'lilitary experience. Haven 'I ler?
Toclay's Highlight in History:
.
of time to fullnealizc what the man nomic growth is steady, inflation is
·
On Oct. 10, 1973. Vice President Spiro T, Agnew, 'accused of ac:cepung appears to be accomplishing . Wasn't low, consumer confidenoe is hish. heard much about this 1992 best~
bribes, pleaded no contest to one count of federal income.tax evas1on, .00 it just a :Week or so ago that the And many voters seem to be con- seller, have you? The reason, again,
. Call it stealing Republican ideas.
resigned his office.
, Republicans pulled off a revolution cemed that Bob Dole's vaunted tax is because so many Republican lead- Call it triangulation. Call it dumb
Qn this dale:
and Newt Gingrich was on tbe tube ..:ut would send the deficit into orbit ers arc equally culpable. Yes, Bill luck. Fiact is, Clinton has done it
In ISI3. composer Giusei'P!= Verdi was born in Le R~ole, Italy.
more often than Oprah, pontificating agaim A spo!&lt;esman for a group of Clinton did his damndest to stay out exlrcmely well.
In lS4S. the u.s. Naval ~y ~at ~lis, Md.
one day about the."opportunity soci- businessmen who endorsed Clinton of the military and avoid Vietnam.
. In !886, the wxedo dinner Jlleket llllde tu An!eficaD debut at the autumn • ety," bragging the next about being said there is "linle confusion on Wall But so did millions of young AmeriWill it be a checkmate? If it isn't,
cans-r
including
~wt Gingrich, Phil remember: Your chess columnist
· ball in Tuxedo ••
o...~. N y
·
the
Roosevelt
of
the
right?
Street
that
tax.
cuts
that
are
not
fully
.., · ·
·
• ,
:
In !911 revolutionaries under Sun Yat-sen over1hrcw Olina s Manchu .. · And· :wasn't it just recently that financed will severely compt'omisc Gramm, Lamar Alcunder, Dick wrote this, not Joe. Send the clips to
'
•
1 · Bill Clinton was being dismissed by Ute extraordinary 'recovery and busi- Cheney, Pal· Buchanan and a few of her or him.
d~~l3 tbc wlllal~flheAtlanllc and Pacific oceansCOIIIIIlinJied in the i pundits as a one-term wonder?
nes~environmentthat's been created the GOP's brightest gubernatorial
stars.
Jellepb Speer Itt • tyndlcated ·
Panama~ after u.S'. enJineen blew up the Gam~ Dim.
,:
That was, what, last Tuesday, I over the last three years."
writer
for Newtp~~per Eatesprlte
-- Iraq. I love this one. Have you
1n 193S, &lt;Jeorie Genhwin's opera "PorJY and Beu" opened on Broad- think.
.
-- Drugs. No
how s&amp;rcnuAnd then, next thing you kn.ow, ... ou_sly Dole &amp;trains to, make Clinton . foraotten that Bob Dole visited Sad- "'-!alioD.
; way.

. I•n
0 d ay

--Local briefs-__,

OHIO We&lt;lther

•

Frldlly, Oclll

Morton Kondraclce

.2,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pill 2

The Daily Sentinel Is Gingrich able to change his image?
'EstDbGsfid in l!H8

'

..

day School at9:30 a:m .. worship serv1ce at10:30 a:m., dmner at noon and
afternoon serv1ces at I:30 p.m. Gu~sl
speaker Rev. Mark Morrow. spec1al
singing. Rev. Jeff Sm1th, pastor,
invites all.
Hunting safety class filled
Registration for the Hunter Education Class scheduled for next week
in Pomeroy has been closed. All 30
seats reserved for the class have been
filled.
Middleport hydrant flushing
The Middleport Fire Department
will he testing hydrants on Thursday
from 6-10 p.m. Residents may notice
some ,discoloration in their water.

us create a
memorial just ·
for you.

-NT

MOtroMBNT

1·800-543-4814

Qual~ memorials
· ,.,. ,, Iince 1890

POMEROY•- ,. ,

Near Pomeroy-Meaon Bridge
-2588

VINTON
Gallla County Dlaplay Yard
155 Main St.

HUSH PUPPIES®
We invented casuat.•
'
.

Revival Oct. 10-13
With Betty Balter
&amp; Joyful Sounds
Full Gospel
Lighthouse Church
Hiland Rd., Pomeroy
7:30p.m. Nightly
Public Welcome

How.asual warlu.
Hush Puppies Comfort Curve" soles flex where&gt;""'' feet
fOr relaxed comfort.
It's, one ohho wop • - HIVOhted casual.•

ft.;.;

• SHOE · PLACE

�•
•

'

Sports

.

.

Thul'ldayl October 101 1996

'

T~e Daily Sent~~~

''

In the NL_f;S,

I

OVP Staff Wrtter
Afulr manaaing the Mason County American Legion baseball team
for three years, Brent Clark has
become the new Univenity of Rio
Grinde baseball coach. Arter the
1996 state championsllip tournament ended with Mason County
taking runner-up, Clark was asked
by llhletic director Clyde Evans if he
would be interested in the position.
"It took me two weeks to finally
come to a decision," Clark said. He
is part owner of Valley Brook Con·
crete, Inc., in,Lakin, as well as general mjlnager at Mason County Pf,":J
lie Service District in Point Pleasant.
"It came down ·to a situation
where I had to make a choice; and I
decided to take the opportunity at
Rio Gf811de." Clark will give up his
pdst at the Public Service District
while continuing his work as coowner of Valley Brook, along with
fellow Mason Countian Howard
Bechde.
. 1bough his official duties at Rio
Grande don't start until Januar)', he's
IJict,and worked with the team and

By BEN WALKER

is impressed with what he's seen.
The Redmen made it to the second
round of the NAIA Mid-Ohio Conference tournament last year.
"I'm excited about this group of
guys. It's an excellent group of
young men to be around," Clark said.
Clark grew up on a farm in Lakin
before anending West Point Military
Academy from 1971 W"l975. He
played baseball all four years and
was captain of the team his senior
season before being stationed in
Germany with an air defense artillery
unit .for the next•four ye,us.
BRENT CLARK
After being discharged he was
'
invited to a training camp for the
County
and
became
general
mJ~nag­
Philadelphia Phillies for the upeomer of the Public Service District, and
ing 1980 season. ·
Clark was a non·rosterplayer for in 1990 he and Bechtle stalled up the
·one summer of minor league ball for ·valley Brook Concrete business.
Clark, who now resides in New
an independent team in Rocky
Mountain, North Carolina, before Haven, has also remained in the
becoming an instructor for the Aori- army reserves as a lieutenant ·colonel
da Professional Baseball Schools. on inactive status. · \
He began coaching American
There he worked with Denny Doyle,
whom his father Mel Clark, a scout Legion ball in 1994 and has led the
for the Phillies, had helped sign to a ·. Mason County·team to two winning
seasons and one appearance in 'the
professional contract.
In 1989 Clark returned to Mason state tournament. · .

.

.JORDAN SCORES- After moving In from third baM on a wild
pitch by Atlanta's John Smoltz, the St. Loul• C.nlln1l1' Brian Jordan alleles Into the ·plate to lll:ore ahead of Smollz'e tag In the second Inning of the Nallonel Lelgue Chllmplonthlp Serle• opener
Wednesday nlghlln Atlanta, where the Breve• won 4-2. (AP)
Championship Series opener Wednalldll)'
agalnat the visiting Baltimore Orioles,
5-4. {AP)
·.

HITS 'WINNING SHOT - New York's Bernie
Wllllama (right) .crack8 the game-winning solo
l!omer In the 11th Inning of the Amerlc:lin League

In ALCS 11-inning opener,.

·

.

IOC planning :to tighten rules ·
Yankees get in-the-stands
on ·commercializing of Olympics help -to defeat Orioles 5·4

By STEPHEN WILSON

LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP)
- No more official Olympic 1V
game shows. No more street vendors
turning the games into a giant bazaar.
No more marketing free-for-all.
Alarmed by excesses in Atlanta,
the International Olympic Commit·
tee sa:ys it will tighten its rules to
keep the ,games from being d.~grad·
ed by unchecked COillmereiaJization
and "junk merchandising."
"We consider the Olympic
Games as something of a franchise," IOC vice president Dick
Pound said Wednesday. "We are
going to take a little more active role

in ensurin'g our franchisees don't do nizing committee," Pound said. "It
anything to damage the Olympic never occurred to us that a host city
would d1&gt; something like that."
Games or the franchise."
Cities · bidding to host future
The IOC sells its own offiCial corporate sponsorships and has rules 011 games could be ruled out of conmarketing, merchandising and tention if they refuse to abi~e by the
IOC's marketing rules.
advertising of the games,
" We could say, 'If you want this
. Pound, the lOC's top marketing
offidal, accusec! Atlanta's municipal ··program that much, you' may have to
government of undermining the do without the games,'" Pound said . .
The rule would first be written
summer games by allowing vendors
into
the contract for the 2004 games, .
to turn parts of the city center into a
which
will be awarded next Sepflea market.
· "Based on this recent experience, tember. Conlracts forthe 1998 Winwe will take a look at the host city ter Garnes in Nagano, Japan; 2000
contract to deal with the ability of a Summer Games in Sydney, Aushost city to ambush the local orga- tralia; and 2002 Winter Games in ·
Salt Lake City, Utah, have already
been signed.
. "It was fortunate that .the organizing committees of 1998, 2000 and
2002 were irt Atlanta and saw what
'can go wrong," Pound said. "All
TonJcht's games
three are very enthusiastic about not
Oallll$'01« N.Y. Rangers, 7:30p.m.
gelliQg into that situation."
Los Angelei at Pbiladelphill. 7:30p.m.
Anaheim at Colorado. 9 p.m.
Pound assailed Atlanta Qrganizers
San Jose at Photnb, 9 p.m.
for making licensing deals with "a
Friday's games
. Piruburgh
(See IOC on Page 5)
a1 Ottawa. 7JO p.m.

Scoreboard
Base ball
ALplay~lfs

-

· Baldlllllft .._New York

w.._..,.,KOf't

New York S, Baltimore &lt;4 (II ); New
York leadltcries 1-0
8U:i~

T11f1118 Bay a1 W_ashinJ!on, 7::.!0 p.m.
Calgary a1. Odroit. 7:30p.m.
Colorado lll Olic;lgo. 8: ~ p_m.
Sl. Louis Ill Edmomon, 9:30p.m.

r•r ·

(Wells I H4) 111 New York
(Cone 1·l), 3:07p.m.
~

Friday

New Yod (Key 12-11) at Baltimore
(Muuiu JC).IJ)~~,!·

--

Transactions

New \'ort cRo;;'iS-8) a~. Ballin'IOfe
(Cappinpo 10-6), 1:31 p.m.

Baseball

-y.Od.IJ
New York 1t BMtimote, 4:07p.m., if

A•tritan Ltapt
BOSTON RED SOX: Claimed RHP
Mike Campbell off waiveu from the

...

T-J,Od.l!
Balriftllft m· New York. 8:07p.m.. if
_....y
W-y.OcLI6
Billimorc a1 New Yort. 8:07_p.m., if

Chicaga Culu :md RHP Bob Milack! oft'
wa.iven from the Seanle Marinen.
SEATJ'LE MARINERS: Annou..:ed
thai INF Doua Stnni:e. INF Brian Humet,
and OF Alu Oi;u: have refuted outriaht
assignmenu and chofC! lo becomr free
agents.

__,

NLplayoffs

TEXAS RANGERS: Ass ig~d RHP

Jeff Owvi1 and OF la;k V0111 outriJht 10
Oklahoma Cily Of the American Au&lt;~~:in­
lion . Re~sisntd RHP Clint Duis , I 8
Bubb:l Smith, IJfP lohn O'OoMJhue and
Of Mike Murpt\y ro minor-leaeue con:
tracts.

w......,......

Atlanta vs. SL Louis
Atlutt "'· Sl. Louia 2; Atlanta leads
teritai.O
T.......
5I. Loui1 {510(dcm}R 14-11} 1M AI·
a-a (Maddux IS.. II). 8:11p.m.

s.-r

Meigs Chamber
linkfest slated
.

s......r.Oct. u

Atlanta a1 St. l..nuis, 7:30p.m.
. Mandl!,, Oct. 14
Artaa&amp;a ai St. Louia. 7:09p.m., if n«:·

National Bukelllett AltOdltion

ATLANTA HAWKS: Relt~ F Pat

WtdMMaJ, Od. J6
St. Loui• • Allanct. 4:15p.m.. if nc'ceuory
.

'·

Included iu the cookbook wiU be recipes fr()m Mason,
Meigs &amp; Gilllia Cou"ty residents, at no cltarge. ·

Durh1m.

' n..n~~a,, Oct. 17
St. l..oui1 • Allna. I : II p.m., if net·

.....,.

FootbaU

N....,.. F-1'-"'

BALTIMORE RAVENS: ~~ned RBKR Rmdy Baldwin.
. BUfi:ALO BIUS: Placed S Henry
lonn oo injurtd reserve. Siantd DB Mike
Salmon.
ttEW ENGL!tND PATRIOTS :
Siped CB Otil Smilh. Waived TE Loven

Hockey
· NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE,

·.

Ailoollclli•Iami . -· »: ·~. •:t liL Ill G.&amp;,;,..

· t .\

fl«idl .................2
T""* Bay .......... 1
Newleney .......... l
Pbia.idphia ......... l
J11 Y lslandcn......O
0
WMhiDJtOO .........0

w:v:............ .

0 I
0 0
I 0
I 0
I 2
I l
l 0

S 9

..

1

l
4.
4
6
10
10

4
4

l
1

4
S
7
:'i

l

l
0

Nert•nP'Ofvllieft
H.nlonl ............... ! 0 0 4

8
4 IS
2 s
1 6

.............. ! 0 l
8uffa&amp;o................. l 1 0
Ottawa .................O 0 2

ao-n .................O

I I

I

........... ...........0 l 0

6

0

6

=. ,:. lft r-.
01i&lt;:&gt;a&lt;&gt; ............... 2

51. IAollt ....... ...... l I 0
l)ooro;l ................. I I 0

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~~::::::::! !g ~
v........ ........... 1

2 0

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9
9

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..

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16

.~

AHL

PHILADELPHIA FLYERS: AI•
1-ilncd LW Ryan Sinltr to BaMimote of
dlCAHL
·PHOENIX COYO'IES: Atli&amp;ned C
Juh1 Yloat:ll pd RW Brad ltbilltr 10
Spri•lfield of the Americ•a Hockey

'

Wetlard•y'•.eert~

.

~

22¢
Lb.

-m

- 6........... 3
o.roiC 2,. ff I 0
l, Cllicop 0
Sr. Looil l, c.q.y I
hfrtlo2. VaDCIMII¥11'1

,

·

.

By.RUSTY MILLER

· ··- Cooper said he wasn't shocked a part of tile bowl alliance for anothCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) · the Buckeyes made such a run at the er three years - pending approval of ·
a· new. alliance contract - Cooper ·
Despite being ranked second in the Ga~~rs . . .
It am t very &lt;,&gt;ften you go back and the Buckeyes could end up
country, Ohio State coach John
Cooper said Tuesday he believes to back an~ . beat Notre D~e and fighting a similar problem.
there is a bias by national )!9)1 vot- Penn State, Cooper sa1d. To go · · The winner of the Big Ten must
By MATT HARVEY
The Keydets won three league ers against Big Ten teams.
.
into Notre Dame and, win that g~me, play in the Rose Bowl on Jan . I, and
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) games last year and carne within two
"I think sometimes people don 't you m1ght thmk, Boy, that s a the Rose Bowl is not a pan of the
. When he was a reserve quarterback points of upsetting eventual league • give Big Ten football the credit that nuke.' Then to come right back the alliance bowl package.
at Aorida in 1995, Eric Kresser champion Appalachian State. Four of it should be getting," Cooper said at next week and beat Penn State That could be good news - if the
watched as the Gators played great their first five games this season his weekly news conference Tues- there's probably a lot of people_ PAC-I 0 Conference winner is also a
games against good, bad and have been on the road, all against day. "It seems-like we automatical- arou·nd the country that figure, 'Hey, ranked unbeaten such as No. 4 Arimediocre teams.
·
tough teams. And VMIIed Georgia ly assume Aorida, Florida State or the Buckeyes are for real.' "
zona State. The Rose Bowl might
In his first five .games with 1-AA Southern 17-0beforequarterbackAI . Miami or som 0body ought to be
Cooper also credited his. Penn end up being TilE place to play. ·
top-ranked Marshall, Kresser, now a Lester went out with a collarbone ranked No, I, even in pre-season. Or State adversary for the climb in the
. But if the champion of eilher constarter, )Jas seen the Thundering injury. VMI lost the game. . ·
Nebras)&lt;a."
·
polls.
ference drops in the rankings, the
Herd do the same thing in outscorLester is expected back for MarOhio Stale, which hosts Wiscon'·'I think Joe Paterno helped us. I Rose Bowl also drops in prestige and
ing opponents by an 'average of 41 .6- shall. VMI's all-time leading rusher, sin Saturday, was ranked ninth in the think his comments after the game, j:Jrominence - all but eliminatin~
10.
.
Thomas Haskins (4,175 yards)falso pre-season, but vaulted to third with . something like: 'You don' t have to ihe possibility of producing lhe
Staying well-prepared, no matter will play. Haskins won respect rom . victories at home.against Rice (70- be from Aorida to be ranked No. I national champion. That's what hapwhat the circumstance, is a matter of Marshall when he rushed for 118 . 7) and Pittsburgh (72-0) and a win at in the country.' He said that, didn't pened to Penn State, which metlightattitude, Kresser said.
yards in a loss to the Herd last sea- then fifth-ranked Notre Dame (29- · he?" Cooper said. "Joe's been on the ' ly regarded underdog Oregon in
" You just go in after each game, son.
16). The Buckeyes moved past Aori· bandwagon for a couple of years and Pasadena. And it could happen to the
watch tape with (offensive coordi"He runs . hard," said Marshall ' da State in the latest poll coming off I agree with him."
Buckeyes as weU -with the nationn.ator Larry) Kueck , show discipline coach Bob.Pruett. "He has the abil- a 38-7 beating of then fourth-ranked
After watching_the Buckeyes pile al champion decided on Jan. 2 in the
that if we're going to go 15-0, ity to make you miss, he's compact· Penn State while the Seminoles were up 565 yards on his defense, Pater- Sugar Bowl .
we've got to get everything right,"
ed. very hard to bring down. He's whipping Clemson 34-3. ·
no actually said, "I don 't know what .
However, CO\)per said all such
Kresser said. "I think that's what just a good football player."
.
But the poll jump was far more ii takes to get somebody outside. the
conjecture is wildly premature. He
motivates everybody, looking back
Marshall has an edge.on VMI in dramatic than just climbing one state of Aorida to be No. I ."
said he wouldn't campaign for his
at last year, seeing how close We iota! offense (446-255) and total,. spot.
. Paterno, of course, had a po\\:er·
learn. Yet. " · ·
.
were ~o winning i't all."
defense (275.8-426.4).VMI's roster
The 'week before, the Buckeyes house team two years ago, but was
"Not at this stage I won't. \'{e've·
· In 1995, The Herd lost to Mon, also is depleted . from IDJUnes ; at mus&lt;ered just one first-place vote unseated as No. I eight games into ·only. played four games;" he said.
tana in the 1-AAchampionship game wide receiver, for example, the Key- from the 6 7 media members of The the · season by Nebraska. Despite
"But I think everything will work
after winning at top-ranked · dets are withou~ starters Matt Walton Associated Press poll . This week. impressive wins the rest of the way,
itself out. It always does. "
McNeese State in the semifinals. - and Marcus Gnffin who left school. Ohio State was No. I on 24 ballots. the Nittany Lions were never able to
Reminded of what happened to
. "We were so keyed up for
VMI coach Bill Stew!lrt's com- Aorida's lead over the Buckeyes fell
regain the top ranking.
Penn State in 1994, he added, "Well, ·
.McNeese State &lt;hot we sort of just let pliments stop JUSt ~hort of comp~- from 131 points to 34.
Because the Big Ten ~ill not .he ' it usually docs.''
Montana take something from us,"
ing Marshall to Vmce .Lombard1 s
said Marshall cornerback Melvin Green Bay Packers.
Cunningham. "I think in a way we
. , Still, he is clearly excited about
the game in a way that coaches scithought we kind of had wqn it. That
was a great learning tool for us. We dom are when they .expect to get
take it one game at time for real this
ste~mrolled .
So how does a defensive player against Penn Sla&lt;e and most of the .
MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Wis·
year."
·
"It doesn't mauer if we play in a cnnsin defensive end and outside . slay out of Pace's pancake slats'/
time he buried whoever was across
Marshall (5-0 2-0 Sourhen\ Con- corn field. a blacktop parkmg lot or
.
Saleh said the answer is simple: from him.' '
linebacker. Tarek Saleh sa~s he's
ference) plays s 'aturday at Virginia 'Three . Rivers Stadium," Stew~rt 'working on ways to avoid becoming D01i 't go near him.
Pace; a 6-foot-6, 20-year-old
Military Institute (0·5, 0-3).
said. "We just wan&lt; an opportunity
"Just basically stay away," Saleh junior from Sandusky, Ohio, was
the latest "pancake" registered by
. The Keydets look like a punching to play. We've gol an opportumty
given a nickname by Cooper: "the
Ohio State tackle Orlando Pace.
said.
bag for the Mike Tys.on-like Herd. t~is ~eek to p~ay the No. I team •.n
Big Dog."
•
"For
that
split
second
after
he
The No. 2 Buckeyes are keeping
But could there be a Buster Douglas Amenca. That s a golden opportum- track of the times the 330-pound
"He's by far the best offensive
gets his hands on you," Saleh
lurking just behind that bag?
ty thai no I everyone gets."
Pace dumps a defender as nat as a ... explained, " if he gets his legs under- lineman that I've seen," Cooper
neath him, then, he 's going to body- said.
--(you guessed it) pancake.
.
"He's probably 1he best technique
(Continued from Page 4)
slam
you. And, then, you're done."
Going into Saturday's game wuh
:
player
in football," said Notre Dame
'.'Orlando
hru;
the
special
talent
of
the Badgers, Pace has 29 pancakes in
Garcia considered one of the best to keep the ball. Another fan
;
defensive
end Melvin Dansby of
four games, including seven in the· playing his best football in big
umps in the game, had his own view. snatched it away during the scram·
Buckeyes' 38-7 win over Pe~n State .. games," said Ohio Slate coach John . Pace. " He's got great fundamentals
"!thought the ball was going out ble.
.
.
Coooer. "We went his way~a· l,ot • and great fueL"
last Saturday.
of the ballpark," Garcia said. "I saw·
"I wa~Just' trymg to catch the
the fan reach out; he did not reach ba\1," Ma1er, from Old Tappan, N.J.,
down. In my judgment, he did noi said. ''I feel bad for the Baltimore ·
interfere with &lt;he guy auemptmg &lt;o fans. 'But as a Yankee fan, 1f I helped
catch the ball. It pr\)bably was a sit.- the team, I feel pretty good. I think
uation whe~ the ball would hnve hit I had a righl to catch it because I
' the wall .';
thought it was going to go out."
Garcia said that if he had looked .
Yankees fans w1ll get more
at.a replay before the call, he would chances to show off the1r ficld1ng
have ruled ·the pl_ay a double. Taras- sk1lls today when David Cone pllchC&lt;) disagreed.
.·
es for New York m Game 2 a~amst
"To me it was a routine fly ball," Dav1d Wells. The senes then sh1fts to
he said. "Iijust happened to be at the Camden Yard~ st.arting Friday night.
warning track. Obviously, 1 was
Before Mater s mtervenuon. ~olo ISipecital Cream for Arthritis 3 Oz.
&amp;
'
camped underneath it. It wasn't a homers by Brody Anderson an~
$5.95
.
line d•i.ve .. It. wasn·~a blast oul of the,.• Rafael Palme1r0 had:helped:the'.(!)rr;·
•• ONL't
park. It was.just a routine fly.ball. , oles take a 4:2 lead..
·
.
. .
'
"It was like a magic trick.
Anderson s thtrd homer of the·
because the ball just disappeared in : post-season- followmg 50 ,dunng
the ~egular ~cason - t1ed the score
midair."
· Despite his heroics- in the eyes 2-2 tn the th1~. P~lmelfo then led off
Truffle Witch or Chocolate
Recent Releases in Music
of Yankees fans- Maier didn't get the fourth wnh hiS second·homer of
Marshmallow vampire
Reg. $9.99
· · the post-season.

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Deadline for aU recipe•
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'
il October ..Jl~ 1996
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CeramiC, Clay
,Piutlc Pumpkins,
Indian Com, Gourds,
Cus.Jtilw1s, Straw,

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~r

'TrrrsiUROH PEHGUINS• Rao- .
•iallltd C Dommie Plnl•. C Olq kloY _
and D Aluei KriYclleakoY frvln Cineland of tt.. IHL to Lons Bach of the
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N.Y. - l. O..Wol(rio)

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Solid .
Cabbage

EDMONTON OILERS: Recoiled D

Bryan Muir from Hamilta. of r. AHL.
FLORIDA PANTHERS: Sent C
Steve W..tlbum lo Cnlina of the' AHL.
HARTFORD WH~LERS : Trad'd
LW Brendaa Sha111h111 and D Brian
Olyn• to "tlte: Detroit Rd Wins• for C
Kdm Pri,... ad DP111I Cdrey.
· NEW YORK RANOERS: lt.c.lied F
Peter Pcrraru frum Binp.mtOII of the

.

.

Tony LaRussa said.
.
Tony Fossas relieved and retired
Fred McGriff on a popup. After
Jones stole second, pinch-hitter Terry Pendleton was intentionally
walked to load the bases.
•
T.J. Mathews relieved, and
Lopez, who was 3-for· 25 in his
career with the bases loaded, smgled
up the middle on an 0· 2 pitch. When
the play was finished. a bat boy ~ent
to the left side of the plate to retr1eve
a splinter of the bat.

Pollsters give Florida teams
more credit than Big Ten gets

Pain Bust • R11

. B~ yoW" recipe lnlo oUI" of!U:e or •end il to:
HOUdoy Cookbook
e/o The Daily Sentinel
111 CoW"&amp; Street, Powwroy, Ola 45169
PletUe, ~lade your name t;JM .
· phone # uilh r"ef:ipe.

0&lt;1. 6.

4
2
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·Phoeai• ................ l I 0

Hockey
NHL: Suspended Edmonton Oilcn
· LW Louie DeBn11k for rour aarnc• and
fined him $1,000 for Dslalhipa lnckknl
a&amp;•iasl V1ncouver 0 D1na Murlyn on

~;
4 ~
8
l

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titt ~qund .

6

C.OC,..DI_

~
I 0

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS! Sian:::d C
Dry1111' Stollcnbl::rg aDd LB Amolct Ale&gt;.
. Stgned TE W.cmcr H1pp~r 10 !Itt ptai.'li..:•
squad. Waived LB Joe CUmminas. Placed
WR Jimmy Oliver on injured fHCI'Ve.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Siancd
LB Sam Manuel to the practi~e squad .
Released RB Stephcfl Pins from lht proc·

i

WESI'ERN CONFERENCE

· ..Soup1&gt;cwd1Sandwir~S,. r;,,, • .":':;' ., , ~- n:,

"""""·

I

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Celery
Stalk

According to OSU's Cooper,

10

number of products which didn't do we would like to have seen, " Pound
much good for the Olympic image." saitl. "These things appear to be pro- ·
Pound and JOC marketing direc· ceeding at glacial speed." •
tor Michael Payne cited Atlanta's
Salt Lake City oraanjzers'were
"official Olympic game show cate- expected to present details of a
gory"- which went to "Wheel of framework agreement to the execu· ,
Fortune.':•
tive board Thuraday.' The deadline
Payne said other licensed prod· for final agreement is the end of. the
ucts "triviallzed" and "d~value&lt;f' year.
·
the games.
. The deal establish~!~ how· Salt"l'm not sure we had the com- Lake City and the USOC shan revmemorative toilei seat cover - but enues from corporate ~sorships
close to it," he said.
over an eiJ)lt-year period.
. Pound praised the marketing pro"I think they are dancina on the
grams undertaken by Nagano and head of a pin 10- wbo will be king
Sydney cqanizers. But he voiced of the marketina moUntain," Pound
fnlltralion at Salt Lake Cily's delays said.
.
in finalizing ajointllllrltelina
Also WedRO&amp;day, Olympic offi·
mont with the U.S. Olympic Com· cials dismissed French .news reports
mittee.
• that fithe Atllllta .Garnes had incurred ,
"The proJreil is not as much as . a de tc1t.

ONLY$7.99

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ThrQugh Tuesday
October 15th

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401 •in St.

Pleasant,

aaree·

'

" It wasn ·1 your routine bunt back
the pilcher," Cardinals manager

TREAT

The recipes will be ca£egori=ed as folltm•:
• Apped•en/Bevert;~gea • Bret;~d/Crailu
• Cake.JPie• &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Sakid. &amp; Vegetable•

Cal.

a possible World Series.
Like Mark Lemke, appearing in
"I'm glad we were in 0111 borne his fifth stral,ht post-season. He hit
park," said Jones, who went 4-for-4 a two-run' single off Andy Benes for
and had the key bunt. "The fans a 2-llead in the fifth and later drew
at least the ones that showed up .a leadoff walk in the eighth from
saw a hell of a game."
'relicver"Mark Petlc:ovsek that led to
Smaltz kept the game tight, and · the go-ahead run.
Lopez broke an eighth-inning tie
"We're fortunate that we' ve been
with a two-run single that cracked his there enough times that you get those
bat. The defending World Series opportunities. " Lemke said. "I've
champions won their eighth straight always said that you've got to get the
post-season game at home and will opportunities. If you don't, you're
try to euend the streak tonight when ~ not going to get the chance to com~
Greg Maddux. faces Todd Stottle- through.l'
.
myre.
The score was 2-2 when Lemke
Smaltz, who led the majors in walked. Then Jones was asked to
wins and strikeouts this year, bunt for only the second time this
improvedto7-llifetimeinthepost· year.
season. One of those victories came
''I'm surprised I got the signal
during a first-round sweep of Los right," Jones said.
Angeles last week when the Braves
His bunt bounced high · and
held Dodgers \litters to a :147 aver~ Petkovsek slipped backward trying
age.
10' make the play. Petkovsek man"I would say overall this is my aged to make a quick thr.ow, but secatmosphere where I like to turn it up ond baseman Luis Alicea, covering
a little bit," Smaltz said. "I'm corn- on the -play, could not handle it and
fortable in this."
was charged with an error that sent
So arc the rest of the Braves, who Lemke to third.
have made it a habit by now.

ALCS. ••

l10LID(jQ
COOKl)OOK

Basketball

.....,.

•,

TilE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
wiU be publUh~ a ·

FL.ORIDA MARLINS: Narnc:ll Car·
lot•ToM:a manascr of O.wlollc:.

IJ.9), 4:1!ip.m.

.

•

.Wisconsin's Saleh seeking ways to avoid
being ·next entry on Pace's 'pancake list'

Send Us llonr
favorite Recipe

The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce . will sponsor a golf
'scramble on Thursday, Oct..24 althe
Meigs County Golf Course.
1'he tournament will be a four·
player scramble with a A·B·C·D
blind draw. cost of the tournament is ,
$50 and includes dinner and prizes.
The tournament will begin at I p.m.
For more information, call Jim '
Anderson at 992-3671 or the golf
course at 992-6312.

NotlonoiLHI..

Atlanta (Olavine IS-10) at StLouis
(Oibome

urn fearing the worst. The Orioles · deep righl -that Tarasco sce"1ed to
By TOM WITHERS
NEW YORK (AP) - When knew that embattled second baseman settle under at the base of the wall.
you're 12 years old, there are few Roberto Alomar would be a target of As the ball descended, Tarru;co raised
his glove to make the catch when
fa~s ' abuse after spitting at ·an
repercussions.
Maier
stuck his glove in the way,
umpire.
However,
they
never
figurell
You bring. your glove to the
pulling'the
ball over the 9-foot-high
that
a
12-year-old
kid
who
skipped.
game, reach over the ferice .and.beat
wall.
.
'
.
a
half-day
of
school
to
be
at
the
game
the other guy to the ball. No big,deal.
would
steal
a
win
from
them.
·
.
umpire
Rich
Garcia.
Right
tield
Hey, it's New York.
Bernie Williams led off the llth standing only a few feet away on the
You got a -problem with that?
'That's certainly not what 12- with a home iun off Randy Myers to warning track, signaled home run.
year-old Jeff. Maier was thinking snap a 4·.4 tie and give the Yankees Yankee Stadium exp_lodcd in celewhen he single-handedly swung a 1·0 lead in the best-of-seven series. bration and Tarasco went ballistic.
The other Orioles sprinted to the
Game I of the American League But instead of being remembered as
championship series to the Yankees one of the biggest homers in the Yan· right-field corner to join Tarasco in
by sticking his glove above Balti- kees ' storied post-season history, ·his protest ru; Yankees fans j!elted
more right fielder Tony Tarasco's in the shot was an afterthought to them with debris. After a heated
exchange wi,lh Garcia, Orioles manthe eighth inning of -Wednesday's Maier's appearance.
"
Anybody
see
the
replay
of
ager Davey J.ohnson was ejected and
game.
But ·Maier's interference helped Bernie'S homer? That wasn ' t bad, the play sccmed to take all the
either," New York manage~ Joe · momentum out.of Baltimore.
the Yankees to a 5-4 win in II
, "I always say that one play docs· ·
innings, and it proved the Ori&lt;;&gt;les Torre reminded rcpertcn.
No,
Joe,
it
wasn't
bad.
But
the
beat you in a ball game," Johnn'l
were dght a.bout one thing:·Yankees
other
play
was
better.
son
said. "Butlhis is about as close
fans would have an impact on the
With New York trailing 4·3 in the as you can come."
series opener.
(See ALCS on Page 5)
Baltimore came to Yankee Stadi- eighth, Derc~ ·Jeter lifted any ball to

for October 24

ATLANTA (AP) - TheSt.Louis
Cardinals became the latest team to
find out that John Smoltz and the
Atlanta Braves don 't leave much
margin for error, especially 81 thj s
time of year.
The Braves remained unbeaten in
this October, using another strong
pitching performance, a .botched
bunt play and a \&gt;mken-bat hit
Wednesday night to beat St. Louis 42 in .lhe opener of the National
League championship series.
lt was the kind of game the
Braves have come to expect, com·
'plete with key hits from Chipper
Jones and Javy Lopez. Only one
thing was missing - a sellout
crowd.
There were about 3,000 empty
seats in the upper deck, m~king the
first time in their history of 28 postseason ·games at . Atlanta-Fulton
County Stadium that , the Braves
have not filled the place. That could
be because the-fans are waiting for
something bigger - the team
alread~ has sold all of its tickets for

Unbeaten Marshall
to battle winless
VMI Saturday

. .,

.

Braves beat Cardinals 4-2· 1n opener

URG names Clark
as baseball coach
By JON TROYER

The Dally Sentlnel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~~iiiiiiiiiiiii;;;ii;iiiiiiiiiiiii;i;:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~--~~---...;;.._~------.1

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•''

•'

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i

••

�Peal I • The DeHy SantiMI

Thuraclay, October 1~ 1911

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs to host Ne-lsonville-York in division. battle.Friday
..

a 2(}.14 contest to
Por1$mouth West 2(}.14. The Buckeyes then! bounced back to defeat'
Alexander'34-14 and nimble 35-13
before losing to Vinton County last
week 42-6.
In the loss last week to Vinton
(:ounty, the Vikings broke the game
wide open in the second half en route
to the win. Vinton County hel!l a 14~ lead 81 the half, but scored 13
points in the third period and 15
more in the founh to pick up the win.
The Buckeyes feature a couple of
the pn:mier players in the area in
Nathan Stalder and Ben Robey.
Staldera'S-foot-8, 17G-pound senior
tailbaCk is coming off a 1,200-yard
junior season. So far this seuon, the
seniQI' hu picked up 672 yards in
liS carries for an average of 5.8
yards a CarrY. He bas also scOI'ed six
touchdowns on the season.
Robey is a S-foot-11 , 160-pound
sophomore quarterback. Robey is 59
of 117 through the air for 907 yards.
dropped

Ia ,.... Con npandan1
Meip will host Nelsonville- York
in a TVC Ohio Oivisioa showdown
Friday evening at Bob Robcr15 Field
in Pomeroy:
Nelsonville is heading into the
same wid] a 4-2 marie overall and a
0-1 mart in the conference. Meigs is
'4-1 and 1-0 in the TVC.
Meigs will be trying to break a
seven-game losing streak to the
Buckeyes. The last Marauder victory was in 1988, when the Marauders
dcfealed the Buckeyes 28-6. Meigs
&lt;JpCIICd up the long series by ":inning
the first II games dating bac;k to its
Southeutcm Ohio Alhle.tic League
days in' 1967. Nelsonville left the
conference in the life 1960s.
The two teams didn't play until
the Marauders joined the TVC in ·
1983. The all-time series stands in
the Marauders' favor at 11-7.
Nelsonville opel!ed up the season
with wins over Athens 31-9 and
Logan 28-21. The Buckeyes then

start the season has won four career beslina the record of Brad consistl of B. J. Nicholson or Mor~
straight. The Marauders are scorina
Robinson who had 2,595 set in pn Vanlman and Rick Hoover It the
ends, Aaron Hockman and .Adam,
t8.8 points a game and fearure one
1984-85.
of the top defenses in the area, aivWilliams started out slow because Barrett at the tackles and Matt Daiing up only 8.6 points game. Meigs teams were keying on him, but with ley 81 nose tackle. The linebackers
has played one less 111111e1 than
!he play of Roush teams have found are Jason Roush and Ryan Ramseveryone, but only undefeated Jack- out that you have to worry about burg. Hanson and Bentley are at the
son has given up fewer points.
both of the talenled backs. The last corners. Robert Qualls and Matt
Meigs features one of the best two weeks Williams has exploded Ault are the safeties.
"Meigs is a nice football team,'':
running combinations in this area in .for 317 yards in SO carries for 6.3
Buckeye coach Kevin Meade said.
freshman Justin Roush and junior yards a carry.
. Quarterback Brad Davenport has ''They are big and strong on bot!(
Matt Williams. Roush has picked up
749 yards in 82 carries for an aver- also been coming on of late. The. offense and defense, and they have
age of9.1 yards a carry. Williams has junior is IS of 39 in the air for 199 two real nice running backs in Rous~
pic~ed up 503 in 98 carries for an
yords. Classmate Chad·Hanson has 1 and Williams. Last week's game was
average of 5.1 yards a pop.
polled in seven passes for 93 yards. a tough loss, hopefully we can put
Williams is coming off a 30 cor- Sophomore wingback Jer-emiah that game behind us and bounce back
ry, 200-yard performance in last Bentley has caught five for 54 yards. this week."
The kickoff is at 7:30 at" Bob ·
week's 28-7 win over Wellston to
The Marauder defense that is
become tile school's all lime leading • giving up only 8.6 points a game Roberts Field.
'rusher. It wu ,the fourth 200-yard · '
performance of his career. Williams
now has 2,604 yards in his young

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992-3422

1,Jof1Gordon(tl
ChampionShip or not
Putting the heat on teammate
()of1loo wilh Char1011e win
3. Dolo JorNn (3)
Leader or tho blloe ovals
4. Ruaty WotiOco (4)
Otllolsi&gt;Ontracl&lt;s

His heart's back In it
6. lllrk Mo~ln (6)
So dose' but yet so tar
7. Ernie lrvon (7)

1996 FORD WINDSTAR

9. Boblly Hamman t•l
. Likes the Rock

V8, auto, air cond, AM/FM cass., tilt, cruise,

PB, PW, PDL, etc.

r---------,

10. Ricky Rudd (10)
Wants a win badly to keep his s.1reak
alive another .,-ear

.
1
· ,,

- ~4.

ken Schfldtr (20~
Rkllng out lhe lllling

Results, schedule
Date

· 7rh &amp;: Plum Sr.

Feb. 1.1
Feb. 18
Feb. 25
Mar. 3

Busch Glash
Daytona 500
Goodwrench 400
Pon1lac 400
Mar. 10 Purolator 500
Mar. 24 TJanSoUih 400
Mar. 3 t Food City 500
April 14 FkS1 Union 400

ParlceraburK, WV
304-424-5337
R.N ..._. pro/..ti•N• .,..,

1995 FORD F150 414 XLT

va, auto, air cond, ·AMJFM ca••·· tilt, cruise,
PB,PW,PDL

Race

Blllch, Fta.

Aocki~,

N.C.

Benson

DarnngtoAtA$."C.
W. Burton
Bristol, Tam.
Martin
N. Wilkesboro, N.C. T. Labonte
M~insvllle ,

Talladega,..Aia.

Craven

Va.

1995 FORD MUSTANG GT

VI, auto, air concl, AM/FM can, tilt, cr'ul_~.
PB, PW, PDL, etc.

Dover, Del. ·

Long PorKI,fa.
Brooklyn, Mich.

UAW·GM 500

Gordon

Gordon.
R.-Waltace
Mar~n

Martin
Mayfield'

Waltace

Gordon .

Jarrett

Earnt~ardt

G. Bodine

Darlington.$.C.

Richmond, Yf.

J. Burton
Jarren
Martin
R. Waftace
Jamm
Gordon
Martin
lrvan
8 . Labonte Gordon

·Dover, Del. 11•
Martinsville, Va.
Hamitton
N. WUkasboro, f&lt;i .C. Musgrave

Concord, N .C ~
Aock!ngham , N.C.
Phoenix

Gordon

Gordon

Gordon

B. Labonte T Labonte
(Stricklin) (W. Burton)
(Elliott)
(Rudd)

1

3. JeftGreen,2,193..

3. JacKSprllp,3 ,113.

4. Dale Eamharll, 3.892
s. Mant Martin , 3,801 .

41. Todd Bodine, 2,792.
5. Jeff Purvis. '2/~ 6. CiladUt11e, 2,j"D4.

• · Dave Aa::endlit, 2.643.
5. Uike81iu,2,6:16.
6 JoeRuttman , 2,620..

7, Curlla Maltl.hllf!l, 2,668.
8. "''"""'"''· , ... 1.

7. Dave AIZendn, 2.613.
• . , _ - ••oo1 .

6. Rlc«yAI!dd.3.&lt;402.
7. Rully Wallace, 3,398.
~'""· 3.358.
t . Kenny Schrader, 3,315.

9. Ph~ Parwnt,l,On

-A_.._

..... chellttllan

ondwln-oll7
race~t Sulgwtck
mo.dtolha
CnllomonTrucll
·- I n 11111111111
tinii!Hecl M\i•tth In
the point. ei.ndlngodurtnglha
truclca' lnaugurol

.Ted Quinn
Dear Yoor Tum.
Over the past few months. I
ha\'e read severalleuers in this
column from readers holdin&amp; a

negative opinio" of Mr. Do.~
Earnhardt. Sting a big fan of
NASCAR oind Dale, I kRow .
that everyone either Jovt:S him ·
or hales him. I don't mind
those who don',t like Dale slilting their opinion, but I found
the lener from Betty Stein
DI'DWII from Alwnont,lll ..
appallina. Sbe was acuoally
applaudina Mr. Eamhardl's
horrific wn:ck at Talladl:gB.
While tlk:re are cectain driv~ll
that I perwnally disli~. I have
never wished and waill!ld for
any hann to comt: to them, In
closing, I hove only Olle ques·
for their 69-year-old
grandmolher. How'would you
foel if il was one of your Jrand·

-·

wttiiSfiMta
Mola&lt;apOrta,
Sedgwick- .
thlo - t o Donell
Wtdtrlp'•Dielionl
Chom&gt;let,drivlnv
Wlltrlp'o lamlllor
No.l7.

MIWCIIICNW

chill lor Ron
tlornodoyJr.wt.n
Hornodoy won hlo
1111 wtn11on WHI
titlt.

childn:n

...,..,moN .

llloutSedgwick:

• ""'-""'·
'·'" · ·
2.
M•ke Skinner, 3,120.

....... DwnoM.t~ASCAA n. v,!MI&lt;.

•AilE; 41
•SPOUSE: Kay

Truck driver IIIII Sedgwick otoo to ••lued H a mecllltnlc.
liON: , havan1 had a Rial
hlo DleHeod truclc." '
• CHtLDIIEN: t,laoy, Kendra,
v-'&lt;ln In years. I )us! go to
·Heather, Tyler
• WHAT I DRIVE OFF THE
the race track. I too1c my
TRACK: "I drive 1 1973
.liiUCK: The No. 17 Sears
family to Nt!W Yoll&lt; Cny lor ·
Chevy pickup; It's just like
DieHaod Chevrolet, owned
my race truck. I also have a
two days when we raced In
by Darrell Waltrip.
Flemington. N.J. Thai was
1969 Rally Sport camaro
• HOI!ETOWN: Acton. Calf.
as
cloae to a vacation as
and
a
1967
55
Chewlle,
but
• RECORD: 411 stallS, 0 wins,
we've had. I wOOd Ike to go
my toy Is the 196ol Amphlcar
· 9 kip fives, 21 top lOS,
to Hawaii somaday."
that! just finished reotoring.
$25~,443 eamings. Ha
n·s a litlle car. made In Weet • WHAT I WOULD DO IF I
made 20 ol those starts this
WASN'T INVOlVED IN
Gennany, that goes on land
season, with thnte lop Ss,
and on water, too:
RACING: "I'd Hke 10 WOlle in
eight top lOS and $132,525
a movie stucfio."
• FIRST SPEEDING TICKET:
In ea(Oings. Going inlo laat
·1 haven'l h'ad many tickets,
•WHAT I'D UKE TO
weekend's race, he was
CHANGE ABOUT .
but my firsl one was for vioin 13th place in Buscll Grand
MYSELF: "I'd Uke lo be
lating catHomla Statute
National poir\ts. just 122 0&lt;11
inore patient I'm .always in a
23.109·8, Ellhibition of
Olh top 10.
huny.lll had more patiOnce,
Speed • I was bumlng nb·
• HOW HE'S DOING: Helin·
ber:
there are ""s Of things I
lsl1ed t 7ltl In the Lowe's 250
coukl do better, ,like answt~r
. at Notth Wilkesboro
• WHAT I DO TO RELAJC: 'I
questions !Ilea these."
watcll old bla&lt;k-and-wllite
Speedway.
television shows. My favorite • MY PERSONAL MOTTO
• FAVORITE DRIVER:
is 'The Andy Griffith ShoW. ! k
18: "Be the boat You can be ·
"Oam&gt;ll. WaKilp, becausa he
• WHERE I GO ON VACA·
at everytlling you do In tile."
gave me a great )ob driving
'

.

Who's lilt en tlla cln:1ft

• Drtv.r Rick Mast. He not only ttu
bet1'l doing wolllatllly at thO tracl&lt;. but

hiS-·
has l)ad

-.,.,.,!rom~-

He and
Sharon, became 110 paren11
of twins ond Sarah during Race
Wlllkat.~.

• Pro wreattlng. Thnte can; on lhe
BUicll cin;un cariy wrastiOlg themea. , .

WARNER
111 w. ~...-..~OH41M
• 0111. .: IN·I471 '
1.aoG-742~

Fex: ,,..._.....,,

~~~~~~~~J

l

1

*7995 SJ81":.

•

My opinion i:.o lhlit Dal~.": ·
Bamhlllc.lt, John Amlretti and
Goorr Bodine should join sornc
other kind Df racing. I think
tht:y would do well in thAI sort
or racing. I think lcuing 1hcm
nu;e in NASCAR Winston Cup
is unfair ID guys who do well
without having to rae:~ dirty.
such as Jell Gordon ..TciT)'
Labuntc, Kenny Sl:hradcr,

Martin

:1. Oale JarretL
1r Mlllllltlll
4. Sterling Marlin
NASCAR Tills Week
5. Ricky CravBrl
CONCORD- full dela.ih
6. Dale Earnhardt
were announced Sunday for the
7. Ward Burton
a.
Rusty Wallace
so-called Rick Hendrick "satel Charlone Motor
9; Mictlaet Wallitp
lite team." to bt!' owned by 1hnx:
Speedway.
10.
em
Elliolt
businessmen
AtMJ headqUartered
Labonte's wln and a
THE BIG SLI'PRISE:
in Moorcs~ille.
cracked cylinder head
Ricky Craven ktoked Mke
The t~n. ~'11 by Jay
hOme 31st bt'ought
he'd t~lready gotten In a
Frye with Ryan Pembenon as
that left Gorcbn limping
Labonte w!thln one Point
Hendrick car, going to the
crew chief, will field a No. ~6
of Gordon's lead.
lrontand IOOtdng: me
Pontiac Grand Prix for dri'1'cr
Mofe ~nont; It·
:
:
:
:
~
orC""
"'":!'
:"~rrik~ ~~· who announced • •~"
gave Labonte some
.. Labonte
1 .,.~..,..~
rriuth-needed mOmen•·
·. . ,.
· ht5dc::ctston1o leave the under~....
TH E ala DUD -~·~n .
tum after 4!1 lew unspeaacular raCes.
runtJed Bobby Allison MotorHis 3JW-secood victory over Mark
fttE IIIG HEADACHE: Ern~
sports. C_ope has had more than
lrvan, for the second week in a row.
Martin wa• a domlnallng: per1or·
He got in a bad wreck wilh-John
hill shiVC.Df mdvenity since win·
mance. And, llard as Il ls to believe
Andratti aiu:l Robby Gordon after
ning two ruces- including
for ona ollhe top drivers .l:lfn the c:lr·
' losing control In turn 2.
the Daytona ~00- wilh Bob
cult, 11 was tlls first win at c~s.

614-992-G759
Ray &amp; Pam • Owners

~z.=Jl

'97 Pontiac
""V

Grand P.rix GT
· See It-Today At ..

SMITH
Bulck.Pontiac
1900 Eastsm Galfitlolls

Super otto
&amp;All Lottery
Games
Five Points
Express
Drive-Thru
Carry Out .
Pomeroy, Ohio

at

Five Points
'

Cerro Gordo, N.C.

H you've got • quntlon Of'
comment aboul: your
IIYorilll d - or eny o 1

G.-, P.O. Bo• 1538,
Gootonlo, N.C. 28053. The
Your Turn column 1110 may

Boats New &amp; Used
"Professional
~rvice

Guaranteed"

Marine Service
2131 Karr St.
Syracuse, OH
614-992-6520

be 111ochod vlolhe lntamtt

by Hnalling amunay
Ogoot._no.com. ·

• \

it's difficult t~c tho.&lt;ie
thing~. Bul there wa~ nu qucs- .
lion in my mind lhill wa:ia move
I wa10 going to n;wkc. I knew il
lhc fin~ttimc I sat in the boanlroom with them.
"You haVe In really have a
t..'Omfon Level wilh the pcopl~
~ the' organi1.ation and Ihe.
rcsoun.'Cs behind it. You have to
have ttuuthcse day5. Thot'5
somCihing I ho.YCD't ho.d."
TIE 1118.1
Robby. Oordon n:lwned-froqMhe. wl~~
...... - Wn"I'C
...
open spw.:es a IN
. cv.....w
he compcred in an off-road truck
rocc on Saturday -to driv~ in
the UAW-OM Quality SUO.
11 was his fil'llt Cup mce sint..'C

au•.

'

014-992-7988

Tum, cJo The Gallon

love •• Sponoors would love ~- Only hat this (ummata, Te,rry Lll&gt;onte. wllh a ciiiW
c:IHI, Gary DeHIII, and a loom that Is Intent
on grallblng thlo tilto lor-· And they WORI
- a t Cha11oll8 Motor Speedway as they
shaved 110 poinls oil Goldon~ tit-point lead.

Whitcomb in 1999.
Sk.itllc!i, a division of the Man ·
Inc. t..-andy company, will'bc the
primary sponsor. The new team's
car~ IUld ensines will be pi'O\Iided by Hendrick., Who is alongtime friend ofChauanooga,
Tenn., auto dealer Nelson
•
Bower.;, one of lhc new team's
owners. The other ~ncl'5 are
Tom Beanl, an Atlanta
inv...-stment b110kcr, and Rt.-ad
M.on~ om A~~~~)':&gt; :r'\
'OIJVIoudy, a&amp; was dtfficuh .
Ieavtng
' All',lson, ......
,.ocope. 16
:t:uu
. .
"I had a good 1\:lo.tionship with
Bobby and lhc pcuple over there.
ll's always very difficult When
you build rclalion~jps like that,

Archery, Clothinp,
Taxidermy, Deer
Processing, Bait &amp;
Tackle
249 West Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Open 7 a.m./9 p.m.
7 Oays a week

bt.'Causc he can'1 race.
Lloo Pridgen

NASCAR Thlo Wlllk Your

• E¥11)'1Nng IMrns petfectly Ill up IOf onoth"Jeff Gordon clltmiplol11111ip. NASCAR would

Bowhunters
Paradise

Rusty Wallace, Mark Martin
and Kyle Pt:fly. I will 00 glad
when Dale Earnhardt retires

Cope leaves Allison for Hendrick Pontiac

~-

·r

dpor, auto. air, AM/FM cassette,

Dl::w- YOJ.Jr Tum.

~o~.~Uibon..
Mark

onships.
Thill's because teammate Terry
Labonlt broke 1hrough
whtl a win Sunday in the
UAW·GM Quality 500 at

JEFF

bc:in&amp; hit by several cars travel·
in&amp; at 200 mph? TheSt: drivers
risk their Jives on thest ~up:r­
spt:OOways . Every li~ a driv.er
wrecks, we 5hould be coocemed aboul his well-being,
regardless or our personal feel ·
ings for them. ·
Slav• Slom-ky
Elsie, Mich.

roclng !Ofllc:, write:

Crnaftllawttk

9. Rick Carel~. 2.518.

in that tumblina: Car

Around the pr~~ae

back·to-back Winston CUI) champi-

C:.n.&amp;Traelul

CI'OOIIIvllle, Ohio

Th; "J:S;'ti~ o::'., •.-. '·"'·

AU ot a sudden, II'S no1 suet\ a
sure thing that Jeff Gordon will win

21

RUCit

""""'""'·''"'·
2.· David
Green, 3,3i2

. 10. '"'"'"'"· 3,,.,

auto, air, AM/FM ater·eo,

Marlin

Wlflace
M. Wattrlp
Jarrett

2. Tell)' Labonle, 41.162 .

1----------' • ""'"'

I"·' DOS II 1101

Gordon'
T. labol"'te
Wallac8

Long Po~ 'Pa.

aUSCH

.....
Gomon.•·163·
3. 0a1eJarrett, 4,071 .

St ' At • 248
Chester 985-3308

VI, auto, air cond, AM/FM cass, tilt, cruise,
PB, PW, PDL, Pwr seat.

Eamhardl
Gordon

lrvan

:ranadega, Ala.

In answer to Betty Stein
Brown's letter, she should
remember her own words when
wishing somebody pain and
bad luck.

Eamhardl
Gordon

Daytona a,tech. Fla. Gordon
-Graven

Loudon, N.H.

WINITON CUP

1

1991 CA.. ILLAC ELDORADO .

Gordon
Hamilton

Jarrett
Jarrett

1996 points standings

Supply

1"1 DODIII1111PII

Gordon
Gordon

Win,_.

Hampton, Ga.
(0. Wattrlp} (Earnhardl)
• Names in parentheses Indicate 1995 Pote.end race winners.

.Ridenour

1H41DIII ...n .
door, auto, air, all-power, 1-owner

• T, Labonte
GOfdOil

Brickyard 400
Indianapolis
Bud at the Glen ·Watkins Glen ..N.Y.
GM Good. 400 Brooklyn , ~Goody's 500 · Bris~ol, Tennl~

Oct 20 AC·Delco 400
Oct. 27 Dura Lube 500
Nov. 10 NAPASOO

See us for Your
I
Stihl·
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

lrvan

·

May 5 Save Mart 300 · Sonoma~ C811f.
May t8 Winston Se*ect Concord, N.C.
May 26 coca-cola 600 Concord, N.C.

~

Eamhardl
T~ Labonte
T. labonte

AlchmonJ;,a.
Hampton 19P.

Apf'il21 Goody's 500

A,ug. 3
Aug. 11
Aug, 18
Aug. 24
Sept. 1

151 ::
$9495 11794':.

Oaytol"'a

AprD-28 Winston 500

June 2 Miller 500
June 16 U~!J·GM 500
June 23 Miller 4QO
..._,..,. 6 Pepsi 400
July 14 SliCk 50 300
July 21 Miller 500
Juty 28 DieHard 500

.

Site
._
poe.•
DaYlot"'a Beach, Fla. Mast

...

lltllgwlck "' •""
uedbothfafhlo
1blltue1 aa 1 driver
' ond mochonlc. He

Dool'l}ed by engine failure after What 25. Robby Gorcfon (UnranUd)
looked like a super week
· . ~ey, he made things exciting

I"' CIIIYY ....,

IY93, when hi: drove uno.: race
for Robert Yates at Talladega

af'lcr Davey Allison' s.dcath in ll
helicc~r accident.
The 27-ycar-old Californian
drove impressively until bc4.:oming involved in Ernie lrvan's catacly'smic wreck Ullap 209. After
lrvan app;arcntly lost control.
Gordon lrit..-d to avoid lrvan·~ .
spinning ft,wd by going 10 the ·
bubiidc a.-.lrvnn t-.mblr:d down
the 1u111~2 banking. lr.vlmr.~~ c,:ar,
inexplicably,, turfl':d ~k tu t,ho• ·~
. hI.
ng
~
.
'"This stiniCs," said Gonion.
"We WCJ\: just ridins along. I
wnntcd to finish . That Wll.~ 1~
go;l,"

Distributed By
Trl.stlte Water Syateme, Inc.
the water treatment cOi-npany
cordially lnvii.H you to paJtleipale
in a free, no oblgation,
COtnPfehensive water llf\fllysll.
We wll test 10f lhe folowing:
TOS, Mineral Hafdneu·•. lfD~~,PH

PleNe call RainSoft at 61,.·9924472 Middleport or 814 666 ·1ee

PrOdoiVilt to Mt up your free
waler analysis.

!..'··

1tt4-M(I¥1C
door, 5 apd, aJr, AM/FM cauette, t-

A'ITENTION.
ADVERTISERS!!
.

.
1990 LINCOLN TOWN C:AR
va, auto, air cond, AMJFM can, tin, cruise,

.

'

DENBIGII Gi\RRE'IT INC.
Ripley, WV 26271
Bus. Phone (304) 372-3673
1-600-964-FORD

..

Advertise·on this age .

PB, PW, PDL, pwr seat.

.

-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!:.~

polls.
.
" We have not discussed it and
.-No other tOp team is unbeBien. . we're going to have a meeting next 1
-The Rose Bowl is willinsto let weekwiththeBii'ThnandPac-10," 1 .• ~._
French said. "II'• not on the IJCnda. :
the Bis Ten champion play in the
Whether it will come up or not, I :
Suaar Bowl. ~
don't know." .
Aldwugh the Rose Bowl and
· ~fore 111y chapaa would be ·
ABC, which· will televilc the Role
1118de, Florida (5.0) and Ohio S181e ·
on JID. I aDjl the Sup' the next day,
slid !heR have been no discunioaa ' · (4-0) hav~ to win the rest of their
about IUCh a pme, there are JeiSOIII

Gets In a lo1 ol wrecks

lt4!3. Kyle Petty t11)

12. Bobby Labonte (11)

414
air, 5 apd, re11r slider,

...........

1

Bill $edgwick

Allllelute IA'!Wes•
Prlee8-NI88AD

Dent Your Tum,

Altlrl-

19. Ricky C,_ (Unronkod)
Where did he come lrom?
'20. Mlchltl-rip (21)
Ninth place beats ooll*lg
21. Word Bu- (Unro-)
Won at ROCkingham last year
22. John A-(11)

Anotherbadday

11.Jenaurtont11)
L.ooks a lot like teammate Martin

Oct. 6

lo

•IJ18. Bill Elliott (24)
--l&amp;lowly cMmbing badl: up

Swervln' a blt too much
8. Stooling Modln (t)
Welcome back to the lop 5

, auto, V6, air, lilt, cruise, aH-

to believe it cou)d happen.
.
"There's absolutely nothing
that rumor," ABC spokesman Mark
Mandel said Wednesday. "'That kind
of scenario is what precipitated the
new alliance."
·Jack French, CEO of the Tourna- 1
ment of Roses Association, said it's
too early to discuss what-ifs.
"I l'emeinber the issue came up
when Ohio State was No. 2 last season," French said. "That was just
wishful thinking." ·
But this year is different. The
Rose Bowl' has agreed to become
part or the alliance, albeit in 1998. ·
. And there may be a feeling that if
there'saclear 1-2matl:hupnow, why

,$1111 unde&lt;ac111eving even lh&lt;lt91
·he·s dolf'!g better

5. Dole Eomllordt (5)

Southern 500
Sept. 7 Miller 400
Sept. 15 MBNA 500
Sept. 22 Hanes 500
Sept. 29 Holly Fai"(Yls 400

to me.et. in.Sugar: BowL.,,

13.Rick-(13)
Hanging In there
14. Goal! -no (13)
Has that one magic vlclary
115. Johnny 11en1on Jr. (04)
May be hea&lt;d from yet
16. Jimmy s - (II)
,.~ays lhe bettler
'47. Tod ll,.grow (t7)

2. Toroy Labonte (2)

IH2 NIIRAC 1UIISNIIII

.ABC wants No. ·2 Ohio
State and Flori.da

mil&amp; ... r7-t210
a..-_,.. w111 tnOdll ,_.,

.

Call 992·21 5 ·

Dave Harris EXt. 104 or Bob Atwood Ext. 105
For More·Information

......,.

GOING GOING GONE
TO OUR NEW LOCATION!!
'

At. 21 at the Ripley-Fairplain Exit #132
Corne See Us For All Your Parts and
Service Needs

.

•
' .::

•

{ji.Oittt

·

4t1 SOUTH THtRO

lcoo:•11

1H1 OI.IIMDIIU CHU COUll
V6, .all-power, tilt,cruiae,

preparation on mental toughness
during this past week. Both should
make the Bagles a better club as it
enters the· league's second game in
quest to defend its TVC title.
Last week, overshadowed by
Southern's success was Easterner
Adam McDaniel's third JOO.yard
gaine of the year; a 21 for 142 yard
effort that yielded one touchdown.
Statistically, Evans and McDaniel
had quite a !\ICC far the game's top
rushing honors throughout the contest. McDaniel is now 87 for SSS
yards on the year in rushing. Daniel
Otto had a sack and Nathan Radford
had .several key EHS tackles.
Eastern had 246 total yards; 165 ·
on the ground and 81 in the air.
Quanerback Steve Durst, constantlY
under intense pressure from the
Southern defense, hit 8 of 20 passes
for 81 yards. Jeremy Calaway caught
four· passes for 54 yards and Pat
Aeiker was l-IS with a touchdown.

notmalr.eith~n?

See Steve Meadows

Weekly rantr.lngs by NASCAR l1l6s Wet!( writer Monte Dutton. LN1
week's ranklnjJ Is in parentheses.

Federal Ho~king
to host Eastern ·

undcfeaced. ·
-The tdmS remain 1-2 in the

,('"t\ .- Count~b.

992-2196 ·

Service
See Bob Hayes • \.

Profile

Last week, the Southern Torna- be 4-2 at this point, losing its first
does scored the game's first touch- two·games by a total of four points,
down and never looked back en one in overtime.
route to a dazzling 31-20ni-Valley
. Southern amassed 334 total yards · ·1Driver
Conference Hocking Division win net offense, gaining 222 on the.
over the Eastern Bagles Saturday ground and 112 in the air. Several
night at Bast. Shade Stadium. This sacks for negalive yl!fllage was the
week the To"'adoes play nimble for only thing that kept SHS from
the lead in the ni·'valley Conference · approaching the 400-yard mark.
Hocking Division race.
Southern had 191i"t downs to BastTrimble started out the season em"s nine.
with a great record and was ranked
Freshman Adam Cumings, who
in the state, but since that time has rushed eight times for 45 yards, and
taken its blows. Southern hopes to Michael Ash, who ran five times for
. "blow" the Tomcats out of the top 3S yards. J.ason Writesel caught
spot.
three passes for 3I yards and two
Last week. outstanding individual touchdowns. Initially, Southern shot
perfonnances highlighted the game, out of the gate with a no-huddle
as Southern seniors Jamie.Evans and . offense and ripped off 54 yards,
Jesse Mayniord poSied ·career num- before the Eastern defense held the
bers.· Evans rushed 26 times for 177 Tornadoes on downs at the 23 yard
yards and a touchdown, while catch- line. Evans had 31 yards in the dri- ·
ing five passes for 65 yards, and,reg- ve. which stalled in pwt on a Southistering nearly 275 all-purpose yards. ern fumble recovered by Southerner
Maynard compleled 13 of 18 passes Willie Collins.
for 112 yirds, two touchdowns, and
Writesel, Maynard, and ErviQ
no interceptions, while also scoring had interceptions for Southern. Cala touchdown on a quatterback keep- away had 14 tackles for Bastern.
er. Maynard bolstered his passing Maynard is ~ow 71 for 128 this year
· staiS which ali of Friday, ranked third . in pusing for 711 .. yards. Jamie
in the area.
Evans is now 49-347 yards rushing
Southern has combined an and 8th in the area in receiving with
improving oline with a host of great 22 for 253 yards. Cumings is now 45
backs in attaining its SUccesS. As ear- cames for 220 yards. '
lier stated, Southern could very well
.1H2 OI.IIMD•U CIIWS
4 door. V6, auto, air, all-power,

NEW YORK (AP) - Last year,
the bowl alliance came up with a true
national title game when NQ. I
Nebrallka played No. 2 Florida in the
Fiesta Bowl.
This year, it might not work out
.that way, so there's been talk about
ABC Sports considering a cbntingency plan that would match No. 1
Flarida against No.. 2 Ohio State in .
the ·Sugar Bowl on Jan. 2.
RiJht now, it's out of the question, but !bAt could Ghange under a
· complicated set of circumstanceS
involving ABC and the Rose Bowl.
A possible scenario:
-The O~QI'S and Buckeyes so

sHoP

688 Pinecreet Drive
Gallipolis
Acroea from Gallia Auto Sales on Old Ate. 35 West
New Summer Houls·Mon. ·Fri. 8-5; 811, 8-3

Southern to take ·
on Tri~ble Friday

Last week, the Southern Tornadoes scored the game's first touchdown and never looked back "en ·
route to a dazzling 31-20 Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division )l'in
over the Eastern Bag1cs Saturday
night. at Bast Shade Stadium. EaStern
hopes to gel back on the winning
track this week with a win at Federal Hocking.'.
Eastern will have to look out for
star running back Richard S81chkar,
who hilS been tearing up non-league
foes with his great running ability.
Over the reign of coach Gilders, Federal Hock,ing has steadily improved
from a non-factor to a league contender..
Federal is a legitimaled threat and
with the talents of the Federal backfield, EHS Coach Casey Coffey has
made some defensive adjustments.
Eastern will not abandon its 4-4 .
defense, but will have other align- ·
ments on tap to surprise the Lancon..
Additionally, Bastern got some

992-2196 MUFFLER
Parts

Carmlchaei'S Farm &amp; Lawn

l

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Mlddlepprt, Ohio

NO'lliiNG RUNS . . .
UKEA DEERE~-

•'

. .

8y DAY! HARRIS

.
Last ye.- against Meigs Robey completed II of 19 in the air for 209
yards and two touchdowns in leading the Buckeyes to a 22-20 win.
Eric Mitchell (6-foot-4, 175, sr.)
and Parker Elliott(6-0, 160,jr.) have
been on the receiving end of most of
Robey's passes . Mitchell has pulled
. in t8 for 269. Elliott has caught 14
for 183 yards. ·
,.
Nelsonville is scoring 25 points a
game, while giving up 19.8 on
defen ...
"Nelsonville is a real good foot·
ball team," Marauder .coach Mike
Chancey said. ''They do a great job
at both running the football and piiSS·
ing the ball. As a team, we are looking forward to playing a team of their
caliber, it should be a good four quarters of football."
Meigs, after dropping the I 6-13
heanbreaker to Gallia Academy to

Thursday, October 10, 1996

'·

,;.

~

.

•

•

�•

.

Pllgri 8 • The Dtllly Sentinel

•lhui'MI~y. October 10, ·1 • -'

Thul'ldey, October 10, 1991

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

•

•

Thl Dallv Sentinel• P • 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, O~lo

Pomeroy,

Making signs will help your
child learn to communicate
.

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

.

We're hurling through October, it
seems. I don't know where the time
goes do yQU?
At any rate, I do want to mention
that the Syracuse Fue Department
and its-Auxiliary will &amp;pin be serving Thanksgiving dinner. Of course,
yPUr help is needed.
It's a pretty bill project. Lasryear
89 people were served at the fire station and 300 dinners were taken to
shut-ins and qthers who couldn't gei
· to the station.
. The ~up needs not only people
to work--and it is a big sacrifice to
give up that Thanksgiving holiday-but donations are being sought as
· well as a list of people who will need
dinnets.
The people to call on any of the
matters at hand
Mary Pickens,
992-7181 or Edna Hunnell, 949: 2338. .
.
.
The planners this year hope to be
.able to serve both turkey and hlfm

are

dinners "with all the

1

trim~ins"' .

'

I guess it's final for Cosmetologist Elizabeth Vaughan of Pomeroy.
She has closed her shop, "The Fashion Beauty Shop" after only 50 years
· cif serving the community. Yep, 50
years. She is mis'sed.
· ·
I recently told you about Myron
and June Duffield returning to
-Meigs Comity, particularly Middleport, to make their home after many
years "out there",
Myron has the caliope housed in
that large circus wagon, a variety of
large musical instruments and odds
and ends that need to lle put into
storage. Undoubtedly, he'll need .a
'onsidetable amount of space. If you
have something available why don:t
you give him a call at 992-4197?
Leave it to me and Beaver.
I received a number of repOrts
that, indeed, the caliope on the Mis-

sissippi Queen did burst forth with
some music as the boat passed by
P0meray Monday afternoon. Just
my luck to he out of town and miss
it after all that complaining.
' right along for
Plans are moving

the fall musical of the Big Bend
Minstrel Association.
Sandy lanerelli of the Meigs
Division of
American Heart
Association, one of the sponsoring
organizations for •the musical, has
met with David ·Gaul, Meigs Junior
High School Principal, to work out
details of the show being staged in
that location.
The entire cast will meet at the
junior high auditorium on Wednesday, Nov. 22, for a dress rehearsal
with the show to be staged two
nishts this year as it was in 1994.
The presentation will be on the
evenings of Nov. 29 and 30 with
Jennie Sheets serving as show
accompanist.
Meantime, soloists for this year's
musical will begin rehearsals on
Thursday, Oct. 17, and Tuesday,
Oct. 24, frorn 7 to 9 p.m., at the law
offices of Little, Sheets and Warner. ·

ma

----.----

Middleport's Jean Craig jokes
that on a recent weekend, she had
little else to do so she had a heart
attack. However, I'm sure at the time
it wasn't a jokihg maner.
Jean was taken from Veterans
Memorial Hospital to Athens by the
Meigs Emergency Service and then
was flown out of Athens to Riverside Hospital in Columbus, She's
been returned home and ahhough
under medication is doing well.

...
I notice a lot of homes around are
well decorated for Halloween. I certainly thank those who have gone to
the expense and effort involved to
give us a seasonal "lift.': It's enough
to help me to keep smiling.

Dugan ·birth announced
· '' Kevin and Donette Dugan of
r\.eedsville announce the birth of
their daughter, Monique Taylor.
Born Aug. 29 at Camden-Clark
Memorial Ho.P,tal in Parkersburg,
W.Va., she weighed 7 pounds, 12
ounces and was 19 1/2 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Barbara and Paul Roush of ReedsYille
an! the late Daniel Talbott Sr. of
~~Wintersville. Maternal great-grandparents are Lauretta Magee an~ the
late Richard Magee of Phoenax,
·Ariz., and Henry Johnson and the
late Grace Johnson of Wintersville.
Patern~l grandparents are Shirley
Dugan and the late Darrell Dugan of ·
Racine. Paternal great-grandparents
arc Inez Hill and the late Julian Hill
of Racine and the late Joseph and
Grace Dugan of Rutland.

Mlddllport
I VIcinity
Yard 1ale· Oc:lober 10-1 :t Ru ·

lind L.oglon ~

:r-~·~~~~--~~--------------------.

Ill l.nJIIIDd
COIIIIUC'riDI

'

By LYNN EVANS
Montgomery Advertlur
Because most children aren't
able to communicate we.ll with
words until they are 2 or older, they
often seek other ways to make their
needs and desires understood .
Many come up with their own gestures or facial expressions based OQ
pictures they've seen in books or
on 'IV, or picked up from their parents, to make communication easi-

Rubber

Shingles - Minor Repairs
Guttara and Downepoute
Complete Remodeling
_Decks
K_Itchene -Siding
N

N

N

•rooms -

~ 14t 992·5041

Signing suggestions
By LYNN EVANS
Montgomery Advartlser
.
Here are some suggestions on how to get your baby to sign,
from " Baby Signs - How to Talk with Your Baby Before Your
Baby Can Talk," by Linda Acredolo and Susan Goodwyn (Contemporary Books; $12.95).
-Airplane (or bird): Hold artns out stiffly or·use one hand in a
sweeping motion.
~
- ·Cat: Stroke the hack of the hand with the palm of the other
, hand.
-Scared: Tap chest repe~tcdly.
- Sleepy: Lean cheek on hands folded at side of face.
-Read to me: Open and close hands like pages i~r a book.
Continued on page 12
MONIQUE DUGAN

the process of learning to "bye-bye," for example. The vocal
talk.
·
word shoul~ always be used with a
The researchers found that baby baby sign so that the child becomes
signers are accustomed to
better
at communicate,x.prcssing
ing 1n that
manner, they
themselves
and better at says.
·understand"It's a very
ing what is simple idea,"
said to them . says Goodthan other wyn, adding
.. I w8nt,
·children. On · that sigris for "Look at that"
something"
·average, tl)ey animals arc
had a larser popular among babifs. "You've
vocabulary for 2-ycar-olds - 350 just got to incorporate it in your
words as CO!IlJlared to 300 for non- daily routine.''
·
signing
Kelly Betts of Montgomery,
babies.
Ala., says her
"While
13-monthwe thought it old daughter.
was a won- Abby,
is
derful thing. "very
we
didn't expressive
feel comfort- . and good at
able ·recom- mimicking
"Be quiet" . ' mending , it things · she ·
until we had sees in boo~s.
"I want to
hard evidence there were no ncga- ·
"She's able change clothes"
tive consequences," Goodwyn lo point out
says.
what she wants to cat, and tells-me
She said learning baby signs is a when she wants to cat or that she
simple process that the parent and · wants inore 10 cat by making a
child can develop together. Books clucking sound with her tongue."
offer good visual images that can
While it's a challenge in many
be adapted, as do hand sisns that ways, Betts says it's still fun watchare commonly used with nursery ing her daughter learn to communirhymes or children's songs.
. cate as she grows.
"It's like having a window into
"Learn to use whatever is functheir baby's mind instead of all the tional and whatever is fun ." Good. guesswork," Goodwyn says. "You wyn says. "This is not one of those
no longer have to figure out what 'better baby' gimmicks. It actually
they want, need or .are interested enriches the parent-child bond. We
in."
advise people to incorporate signThe authors suggest· parents . ing into the baby's life and have fun
begin with some basics - "hot" or with it."
delay ~

Wood and Vincent Mos'srnan. Plans · Ruof, Columbus; Tod, Connie Ward, Lori Graham, Lisa and Bridgett,
were made for the Christmas party Daniel and Joshua Thornton, Cross Lanes, W.Va.; Dallas. Dorothy
Set for Dec. 8 and next year's Delaware; Diana and Randy Bing, Janey and Jessica, Langsville; Tom,
reunion was set for Sept. 28. Time Ralph .and Madeline Painter, Mid· Mary Crisp and Heather, Bethany
for both will be 12:30 p.m. with the · dleport; Bill. Becky, Bethany and · and Stephen, Ca\lettsburg, Ky.; Paul
location to be decided.
Ryan Amberger,. Racine; Dennis and Angela Janey, Langsville; Mike
Guy and Rulzy Hysell and family Hysell and Tammy Laudcrmilt, Janey, poca, W.Va.;- Valerie Maywere out · of town and unable to Buckeye Lake.
nard, Nikki and Jessie, Columbus;
JANEY
attend.
Ernest and Rose Wright, Inglis, Fla.;
Eighty-six descendants of Jacob Larry
Attending were.: Gary. Bonnie,
and
Wanda Wright,
Jason and Andrea Warner. Rodney and . Bertha • Janey. Langsville·, Langsville; .Ed and Pat Hutton and
Wood, Keith, Chelsey and Jordan attended a reunion Sept. 14 at Dylan, Yawkey, W.Va.;
Earling and Pauline ·Lambert,
Wood. Ivan apd Evelyn Wood, all of Krodel Park, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Edward ·Withrow gave the blessChester; Roger and Jane Hysell,
Janelle and Cody Hysell, Bill ing. ·
Attending were: Edwand and
Hysell, Gary and Tammy Hysell and
· Public Notice
Heather, Vincent. Susan and Nicole Kathryn Withrow, Nitro, W.Va. ;
Mossman, all&gt;of, Pomeroy; Mark,. Char.lie.·and,Leu Jan~ Grllt!~&gt; Bank,,," .,_ • NOTIC&amp; TOTAliPAVI!RSJ . "·
R-enee; 571&amp;.tl0hlo . .
Tammy; Sarah; Luke and Stephanie W.Va.;·Alice Kyle and Chuck, Nitro;.

Charit~ble ·gifts up, but ·from fewer
By BETH ASHLEY
USA TODAY
Americans who gave to charity
last year gave 10 percent more than
they did in J993, but more households gave nothing, a survey shows.
The average household gave
$1,017 in 1995, up $89, the first rise
following a- gradual slide from the
1989 high of $1,201 (adjusted for
inflation). The increase came from
donon wiiOIC Rll income also rose.
Sixty-nine percent of 2,617
households surveyed !»' the Gallup
organizatioo said !hey gave to charity -down from the 73 penlent who
gave in 1993 and the lowest rate 10
eight years.
. ,
The main reason people didn t
Jive iJ because they weren't asked:
When liked, even by mail, 85 per·
CCIII pvc; ·wbetl not liked. 44 per·
CCIII did.
vqini&amp; Hcxtpiftlon of lndcpe'!·
dent Sector. a coU!ion of 800 donor

programs that spansored the survey,
says data indicate that fund·raisers
are targeting wealthier households
and ignoring the less affluent, who
- if asked - give at almost the
same rate.

"If we want an inclusive society," she says, "this must change.''
Charitable
giv_ing
represents
involvement, and "those who are
not invvlved also don't vote."
But another finding was that people expressed growing mistrust over
how charities use their money. :rhirty-one percent in 1995 di~reed .
with the statement "most charitable
organizations are hjlnest and ethical ;
in their use of funds." That's up (
from 20 percent in 1990.
Other findinss:
- Fewer low-income house- .
holds gave last year, but those who
did gave proflortionately more than
the affluent: Cpntributon with pre·
ta~ incomes un\ler $I 0,000 gave an

average of 4.3 percent; those with
incomes -over $100,000 gave 3.4
percent.
·
- Those most likely to give are
college grads, married and
employed, and retirees.
- Voluntecrism is up. The survey found 49 percent volunteered in
.1995, up I percent over 1993.
The poll has a sampling error· of
plus or minus
-·
. . 3 percentage points.
.

RevludCode
Tho Molgo County Boord
of Rovl..on hu complotecl
111 work of equollutlon. .
. The lila rwturna for llx , _
11196 "-been revlud lnd
tho voluatlona eornpl11ed
ond 1re open for public
lnlpecllon In tho oflloo of
tho llelp County Auditor,
hcond Floor, CourthOull,
Second Str•t, Pomoroy,
Ohio 457119.
Complolnll og11n11 tho
YIIUIIIona, II Hlablllhld
for llx r•r 1. ., muotbe
made In aocordenao with
loatlon 1715,11 of tho Ohio
RIY,Ied . Codo.
Th•l
oompiJhM mwt be fllld on
fotmo whlah will be
. furnlohed by tho County
Auditor 8lld be fllod In
tho County A\ldflor'o Ollloe
on or .....,.tho 3111-, of
lllroh, 1117. AI oomplllnll
l.llod with tho County
Auditor' wll ... hoefd by thO
Board of Rovlelon In the
nww• PI Midi d by II Ilion
m1.11 of tho 0111o llooind

Hohenwald, Tcnn:; Don, Cheryl
Lambert and Kelly, Camden, Tenn.;
Rick, Sharon Lamben, Christopher
and. , Jennifer, Camden; Bob
Edwards, Reedsville; Bob, Peg
Edwards, Justin and Matt. Coolville;
Teresa Evans, Rebecca and
Stephine, Reedsville; Pati Hayma~.
Juli, Jennifer and Katie, Reedsville;
Carl · and Jean Kennedy, Rutland;
Glen, Brenda Kennedy, Courtney
and Clinton, Harrisonville; Randy
and Debbie Kennedy, Medford.•

.WICKS

Job Too f.srge or Too Small"

We will wor1&lt; wnhin your budget.
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
108 Pomeroy Street
M180n,WV

COSTSI

::;:~
......,::::··
n,

motorblocb.

Happy Ad

FRIDAY, Oa. ·
.11, Al6 P.M.
Public Notice

(10) 7,

1a,14, 15.

1' 17 . · 10TC

Wise.
Steve, Sue Noll and Lindsay,
Columbus;· Dan Kennedy, Racine;
. Bill and· Bcv Edwards, Loomis,
Calif.; Judi Edwards, Roseville,
Calif.; Mike Edwards, . Katie and
Scott, Loomis; Sharon Bolshakova,
San Francisco; Carol · Milcoff, Henderson, Nev.; Karen Maylee Moore,
Las Vegas; Bryan Gregory, Las . ·
Vegas; Chester and Larry Edwards, ·;
Nitro; and Ray and Clal)l Wood, :;
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
·

Happy
40th

,

•

PUBLIC NOnCE
NOTICE II hereby given
that on Soturdoy, October
12, 1H6, II 10:00 a.m., I
public 1111 will be held at
40418 Lourel Cliff Rood,
Pomeroy, Ohio, to 1111 lor
cash 1hl following
collolerll;
.
tll7 PONTIAC SUNBIRD
102JI1tK8K71147034

•
•

1117 PLYMOUTH REUANT

•··

•

malt, fivelemal&amp;l, 614-247-•231.

Free Beagle Puppies. c;all ,a.tter
3:00 PtittC811814_.41 ~11 .
lab mhc puppies to gi'llea.way,
614·048·3403.

MORNINGSTAR

Mixed breed hurnlng dog, 814·

- ~PRESS

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

.ERRAND SERVIa .
CAll TODAYI

614-992-3470

BONDED

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

&amp;-

949·2445

614446·4530

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

LOCAL CRAFTERS featuring ·can, saw, slate
paintings,: oak shelves; quilt racks;
goose outfits; fall decOrations.
WATKINS PRODUCTS fealuring 911i1Pe se~ oil
(lower in saturated fat than olive oil)
· TUPPERWARE - Some cash and carry.
Place orders/book parties/gifts/fund raisers
Mon. thru Sal. 10-6, Sunday 1-5
2 miles North Sliver Bridge on SR 7

742·3212
CARPENTIR SERVICE

Painting

1817 FORD BRONCO
1FMIU14T8HUB111112.
The Fermoro Benk ond
ilnlngl . Com pony,
tlom~roy, Ohio, re11rv01
the right to bid ot thla aoto,
and to wlthdrow tho above
coltatoral prior to 1alo.
·Further, The .Farmore Bonk
and Sovlngo Company 30
reoorv01 lho rght to ro(eet
ony or ·~ bkl1 1ubmllled.

SMALL

Furth•r,

the

abov•

cont1et Jorry 111112·7430 or
1112-8411. .
(10)1, 10, 11; 3TC

.t:
'

.••
'' '
j

•

f4.CQV.ISITI09\[S

•

.

service.

licensed

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolule Top Dollar : All U.S. Silver And Gold Coins, Proolaetl,
Jewelr~.

Diamonds, Ant!que

Gold

Rings, Pre -1 930 U.S. Currency,
Slerliog, Etc. Acquisition• Jewelry

Trucks, 1990 Mo~els or ·Newer,
Smith Bulc:k Pontiac:, 1900 Eastern Awrue, Gallipolis.

J a D's Auto Parra. Bv)ling sal-

~aoe v&amp;htc!es. Selling parts. 304.-

773-!5033.

LOST: White short haired car. Je.
m!Jie, lui grown, 22(!0 block of Jef.
feraon (vicinily), fri endly. Oaya
304·675-6774.

.

Whoever Too~ The Chair Out Ol
My Truck Thursday Return To
Odd lola Parking lot, No Questions Asked, 814·2•5·9670, ·

70

Yard 5ale

.

Junk Cars r; Truck Various RunninG Vel'!iclea &amp; Car Parra, ClH'·

446·453111.
Non-Work ing Washers, Oryen,

Stov.es, Rtfr1gera1ors, Freezers,
Air Conditioners, Color T.V.'s,
VCR's, Also Junk Cars, 614·256~
t238.
Top dollar- antiques, furninue,
glass, china, clocks. gold, sil\ler,
co1ns, watchet, estates, old ston6
jare, old blue &amp; wt'litt dishe,, old
wood b01111, milk bottles, Melgil
Gounty Advert isement. Osby
Martin, 614-992· 7441 .

•

·

Wanted To Buy Used Mobile
Homes. Call: 614-446-0175 Or
~4 -6 75-5965 .

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos With
Or Without Motors. Cell Larry
Uvely.OI4-388-11303.
,

Wanted To Buy: Utde Tykea Cuidoor Play tiOUat, 614·245-5887.

EMPLOYMENT

SERVICES
110

Help Wanted

...,==,.;..___,.,----::-"'.,.,....,.,...$200-SSOO weekly. Assemble
producm 8.t Mme. ea1yl No sellIng! You're paid dlrecl. Fully guar.
~Jnleed . No experience necessary Call7 days. 407-87521)22

ext 059BH38.
•ATTN : Point Pleaaain- Postal
Posi lions. Permanent full time for
clerk/sorters. Full Beneli11. For
exam, applicalion and 111ary inla
call : {708)90B-2350~JI.3870 .
Bam-Bpm.
AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spears,·XI4·6 7S..1429.

Abl _
e , ~von AepruitntaUvu
needed. Elilrn money tor cnrisr·
mas bills at nomellt work, 1·800992-6358 or 3D&lt;-BB2-28&lt;5. lnd.-

Gallipolis
Rep.
&amp; VIcinity
10/10, Thru t0114, From A To z. Acceplino

Applicationa throuoh
Ocr 18th lor regiltered long term
car, nursing auistant tralninQ
class. Marjorie Elliott, AN , Class
ALL Yard Sales Must Ba Paid In Instructor. Point Ptaasant NursinQ
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00
&amp; RenabiliUttion Center, Slate Rothe day before lht ad is to
ute 62, Floute 1, Box 328, Point
Sunday edition . 2:09p.m. Friday. Pleasant, WV 25550. A GlenMonday edition • 10:00 a.m. Sal- mark-Multicare Company, EOE .
304·675-3005.
urday. •

Produce, Flowera. 1 Mile West
Rodney, 10 A.M.

Wlldows
•R0011 Additions

" truck pilntlng,
minor mechlnlcel
repair.
Tune-upe, 011 Cliangt,
WIX, Buffing
lOng St., Rutland, Oh.
742-2S35r Alk tor Kip
7/10/lln

'

205 Nortll S.Conct Street,"• ,. · •· •· ,:
Mlddlaport, Ohio 45780

•

H&amp;H

OPEN HOUSE

,.,,.,,.

SAWMILL

l••d••w Mill

121 South Locust St., Cheshire
1&lt;Y10 lhru 10/12 9 o'clock
Lolld Levl'ai&amp;W, clolhell of all

32124tlepflll Hollow Rd.

Mlddtoport, Ohio 41710
Donny I Piggy lrlclclu

alzea. Dryer, loll

614-742·2183
11/1Wtotio.

GARAGE SALE
FRIDAY, OCT. 11
6th St., Syraeuse, Oh.

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

MovinQ ·salt Inside: Large /Small
111m1, Futniture, Corner Of Un·
coin Pike /Routt 141. Q To s, Fri·
diy /Siturday, October 11th,
12
th.
'
Thurlclay. Friday, saturday, Pas·
slblt Into Nt11t Week, 8 Miles
South Rou11 7.

SYRACUSE
•Hardy Mums
•Fall Pensya
•Fancy Gourds
•Dwarf &amp; Large
Pumpkins
•Winter Squaah
•Hanging Basketa

Pomeroy,
Middleport
l VIcinity
All Vara Sale• Muat Be. Peid In
Advance . Oeadllne : 1:DOpm the
day before the ad is to run, Sun·
1day &amp; MondiiY tdillon· 1:OOpm

,Open Mondey-Seturdey
. · 1-1; Cloeed &amp;undoy

9/11111 mo .

iF:;r=ldi::!Y:.· ._ _:_I_....:_·_ __

COLLINS

CONSIRUCnON

McCoy &amp;Chapman

· •RIIIdentlal Remodeling
. •AdditionS
Construction' •

. ·N-·

brick home that baa
2 atorlea, an atllc, 4-5 bedrooma, lamily room, dining . oOwr 10 Vno. exp.rience
: ool.ow~
room, newar Clblnell In kllchen, 1 112 bathl,
•F... E811matw
balerMnt, 3 really pretty flrepleces, front and
. •All Work Gutnnteed
pon:ttw, pal1ly liiiiCed yard and much more. Muat - 814-eta-111110

·-

WA!

NOW

"ASIC ABOI!I' OUII
11001 Sl'llt:IAi"

••
'•

I

•

auction

•Ei6,0hio &amp; West VIrginia, 30•·
773-5785 Or 304· n3-S.&lt;7.

Body work, c1r, truck

.

'

.Rick ·P&amp;arson Auc1lon Comparly,
full rime auctioneer, complere .

'

91 Mill St.,

•

come. Auctioneers : Col. John
McCoii!Jm ,1 189 &amp; Col. Jearl
Barnette 11000. Flea Markel s&amp;e·
ond week-end ot wery month. R&amp;serVed Spaces must be paid one
week In Acvance, 304-•58-1875
or 304:675-5287.

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

~- South 2nd Av. Atan

• 1'1111 f'AI!ICING
•1'111110 DAY FININCING

Lost: Small Black &amp; White Male
Dog, Answers To Mi'ckey, Appro:c
4 Years Old, Vicinity: Bulaviii·'J
Pike IBioaaer School Road, 614·
387· 7638, 81 (.2.f5·9883.

...a.JGnges
•SI1111Deors&amp;

1a.t .......

Rtlal-!stata Generel

446·4332.

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
1112-2772
8:00 e.m.-3:30 p.m. .
eR..race.tltW'J..OWS

614-9112-9910

Membe"' and uest Invited

Last: Purple Gemstone Bracele!
In GaiUpol;s v;c;n;~. Reward I .,..

mo. pd.

2

North! Jericho Road lnlerse ~I!O n ,
Point Pleasant, WV. Auction everv Monda'/ r"'lght, 6:00 P,M. New &amp;
Uttd Mdse. Consignments Wtl·

Last: male German Shepherd
puppy, black and sliver, . Mulberry
Avenue VICinity, reward, 814·992·
4501
or 814·985-4..05.
.
.

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSUUTION-

. "A$K ABOI!I' OUR
ROOF SPI:ClAL

:

!flt}(J, J'FfWE£1{9'

fil]

4/3111

ool.owR-

Pomeroy EaRles Club

E.... &amp;WoKooollllon

614-915-4110

ofreel!sllm•All Work Guaranteed

Sat 9;30 • 1:30

For further lnfQrmetlon,

Haired Cat, 614-4415-3479.

palllt.... Lat •• tlo It
for yeo.
JEIYiWOUIU
HAVE IEFEIEHCES

ooflllldenllal Remodeling

Appearing
Fr. 8:011-tl:OO .

MIKE BING

FREE E$TIMATES

•Adclllone
oN- Conotructlon
ooOvor 10 Yre. E-rlence

CROSSOVER

collllorel will bo eotd In tho
condition It lo In, with no
uprue or Implied
warrentleo glvon.

Llr'lt: Jay Drive Spring Valley
Grey, Creme, &amp; White tong

lalro tH ,.Ia HI of

.COIISTRUCTIOII

Announcements

87557.0.

IITEIIOI·IITERICil

COLLINS

ABIG PUNCH!

lOST: Boxer, male wlblue collar.
brindle I fawn, Burdette Addition
area.. 304 -875- 1270 work, 30•-

LINDA'S
PAINTING

111111 mo. pd.

PACK

At 2, medium lire black dog. 30i895·3900.

mo. pd.

2.9!1/Min. 18+ Sorv-U
(619) 645-8434

WANT ADS

call814-092-7877to 10.
FOUND : nea; Tomlinson Run on

1/lt'lfn

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

Owner: Ronnie Jones
367-0266 -1-800·950.3359
Free Estimates
Public Notice

'

Pomeroy, Ohio

.'

,Found : child'S preleription ~1811es, durinG Sternwheel Festival,

949·2057

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C:. YOUNG Ill
1112-1215

Lost and Found

814 -887-35-45.

31801 An)berger Rd.
Off Forest Run

Public Sele
and Auction
AUCTION HOUSE. Rouoe.

Cle.an Late Model Car~ · Qr

Found : Blue Utrle Auwalian
Sl'lephtrd, 'lemale, '1·2 years old,

REPAIR

80

AY,nue, Gallipolis, 014·440·2842.

Found· da11 ring, first name and
Initials on ring, call The Daily Sen.
tlnel office to 10, &amp;U-992-2155,
txtenlion 100 or 103.

AUTO

•Room Addition•
•NIW O.nogu
•EIICirlcal I Plumbing
•Roofing
·Interior I Extortor

Yard Sa le- Fndar &amp; Saturday.
Glassware, furMurt. nice winter
I
apt ••z• gu range,
and mlsc . 2220 Jeffenon

Pekingent Bu11doQ ml:. puppies
10 giVeaway, 1514·18.2·~40 .

60

BING'S

YOUNG'S

bed, clothes, glassware, western
books, ku, of antiques.

• M.T.S. Coin Shop, .151 Secofld

Wood Cratet, Make E KceUenl
Kindle Wood , Pick Up At River·
lfont Honda, Upp&amp;r Route 7, Gallipotis.
•

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

IVYDAlE COUNIRY CUFIS &amp; GIFTS

Fri -Sat-Sun 8 Miles norltl on Rr 2
storm doors ~ windows, maple

_985-442Q.

Tiger Striped Male Kitt8n To
Good Homo, B14·367-7t23 . .

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Corea
A/C Condenaera/Hose Asiemblys

HUGE GARAGE SALE

....--'

1

Eight week old BlaNn pupt, one

Sulllay, OciGkr 13, 1996 • 2 , ... to 5, ...

'
•••
I••
.

0 Small HouH Pu~es, 614·446·

7/22JIIn

ttll PORD ESCORD GT
tPAPP23J7JT123553

'

.

8· 8 Week Old Beagle Mhi:, Call
Aller 5 P.M. 81&lt;-256-8870.
.

Brindle pll tM.IIIf boxer mix, all
shots, very ~~· and IOYtl kids.
very obedent. 814·992·5025.

SW 1 P3BP31KIHF177107

..

Choose from
• Nike • Fila
'
• Guess · • Calvin Klein
• Winnie the Pooh. .• Tigger

1 year old CatlieiCho~ mix, female, spayed, gendt &amp; energetic,
8t4·992-e193. .

985 4473

HAULING

.

Giveaway .

0770.

•

New Delivery of
tOK Gold Charms &amp; Earrings

HOURI: lion thru 1'11111*. N
Frt.N;BILN

~emodellng

Top, Trim, Removal
· &amp; StllmP Grinding
20 Years Experience • Insured

FORKED-RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB GUN
SHOOT

40

"LARRE INY£IITORY FOR
IMMEDIATE

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES .

JONES' TREE SERVICE

manymotale&amp;

dersonWV.

IUVERI

an

• now oqutpmont.

Alao Concrete Work

· Pick up dltiC8rded
appllenctll, balttrfos,

Coaler kepi, clean, aaniiBry. Hunt·
lno 1uppli11, license &amp; game
ch.ek ltatiOil. SRftF9BQ'I Hen·

'ON THE SPOT FiNANCING
OVOIII!IIo to QUAIJFlED

portO

GROCERY
SHOPPING/DELMRY

GUARANTEED TO

Just Received . ~

Code. ·

'

peranl, jerk_., tummer aausage.

ott

•Complete

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

Authorized AGA Distributor
• W~lding Supplies •Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
qervices • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps • Stairs, Railings, Pallo Furniture, Fireplace ·
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of olher stuftll

We ptoceaa deer, make hickory
homo, Ulil bologna. -

omokod

Ito. fnaos,
IBf. M••••
Air (oa.llamt..J
Atltl Heal p_,._

•Garag11

614-949-3117

AlieMir #etalt

30 Amouncements

Unlimited Ac:ceu- No Set·U ""

•NawHomaa

Racine, Ohio
Minor Repalre
24Hr.
Towklng/Rollbeck
' ., Service ·
AAA &amp; All State
Motor Club

(UmtStontLow Rites)

'~No

'

•

St. Rt. 124,

&amp; Stlve. 1-IOQ-145-5715.

$19.95 /Month

ROIERIIISSEU
CONSIRUCIION

&amp;,&amp;lUGE

Tllppers Plains, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 614-667--6484
Plastic Culvert • Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 3Er
4' S&amp;D -pert. • solid pipe
4' &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4j &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
'/." &amp; '1.' C.P.V.C, pipe
t J/.' thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
.' It &amp; 1" 200 R.s.i. water pjpe (100' rolls thru 1,000' rolls)
'It U.L: approved Conduh
8" Graveless Leach pipe
·
·
·
Gas pipe 1' thru 2"- fillings - Regulaton~ · Risers
.Full assortment ol P.V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water fittings
Full line of Clstem, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks

graph or even on someone's clothing.
·
Obviously. sniffing was her
baby sign for flower.
After a couple of other similar
instances, when Kate made up
signs for such things as fish and
spiders, her mother became curious. When she began to. observe
Kate more closely, Acredolo discovered tqat her daughter knew
how to express herself.in about_29
ways.
Did other babies pick up on
signing as fast as Kate? Would
signing prevent children from
developing proper speaking s~lis,
or would it help?
During the next 14 years, the~e
were questions that Acredolo and
Goodwyn pursued in their research.
They observed more than I00 baby
signers between 7-and 30-monthsold and discovered that not only did
babies and their parents experience
less frustration because the children
could make themselves understood,
this sOrt of sign language does not

We cart help! Please call Jorna.

.

lUCKY J. IOWIII&amp;

Sl Rt. 7

BABY SIGN • Becaure most children aren't able to communlcata wall with words until thay are 2
or older, they often ~eek other wa~a to make their needs and dellrea_understood. Ma11y !lave their
own gestures or facial expressions baaed on pictures they've a~n In books or on TV, or picked up
from their parents, to make communication eaaler.
' ·
1

Loving, ctlildl"a couple long to

adol)11nfant Legai/Conndenrial.

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

Community Sale-Gurwllle Ridge
Oct lO..lllh 5 11Z miln of •In,
18 h0uu1, 3e famlli... From·Pt

Ple•unt, Rt 2 N. toRr 87, go e
miiH. lollow tignt, U .

CO"'f''..... aiO Adoption

1·100..11!:!!! I ..__ _~(N_o_s_u_nday Calls)

G&amp;W PUSTICS AND SUPPLY

ANNOUIKEr.tENTS

005

614-992•7643

35YNIW~

------'------'--------Family reunio.ns _ _ _ _ _ _ ____.:____ _____:_
HYSELL
.
The seventh ·annual family
reunion of the late Denver and
Frances Hysell family was held
Sept. 22 .at Star Mill Park in Racine.
The 40 people present had ·a
potluck dinner and a business meet- .
ing was held with officers remaining
the same for 1997. Officers are Gary
Hysell, president; Tammy Hysell,
vice-president; Madeline Painter,
secretary/treasurer.
New additions to the family are
Sandra Michelle Painter, born Dec.
18,' 1995, and Lindsey Wolfe, born ·
June 14. The marriage of Tod Ward
and Conni" Thornton was. noted.. .
.•. · Gifts and- prizes' were awarded
with door prize$ J!Oin~ I\) Jordftll

New Homes • Vlnyt Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Rooting
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

N

Rooting

THE INTERNET

BISSELL BUILDERS, IIIC.

Realdentl.. Commercial

er.

Not only does this foster a closer parent-child relationship, it also
can benefit the child's verbal development, according to a new book
Iiy two child develoiJlllent experts.
''Baby Signs _: IHow to Talk
with Your Baby Before Your Baby
Can Talk" (Contemporary Books;
12.95), is based on the experiences
and research of. Linda Acredolo, a
professor of psychology at the University of California at Davis, and
Susan Goodwyn, an associate professor of psychology at California
State University, Stanislaus.
"This is the first book we know
of. (concerning babies) that documents gesturing as something that
represents a particular ojlject,
where symbols · are used just like
words," says Goodwyn. ·
Common ba~y . signs include
flapping arms to -symbolize airplane, moving hands in a steering
motion to symbolize car, patting
head to symbolize hat, and lifting a
closed hand to mouth (with thumb
upward, if desired) to symbolize
desire for a drink, Goodwyn
explained during a telephone interview. However, she and the book's
co-author encourage parent~ to
come up with their own signs.
"The · goal is to take abstract
nonverbal -behavior out of routine
use and rnake it stand for early
words," Goodwyn says. "It's fairly
easy for children to acquire such
signs and use_ them just like
words."
The concept of baby signing,
and eventually the book, actually
grew out of Apredolo's experiences
with her own daughter, Kate. When
Kate was a little over a year old, the
two were in a garden and the child
pointed to a flower and sniffed
repeatedly. After that, she would
sniff whenever she saw a flower,
whether it was real .or in ·a photo-

Pt. Pienant
&amp; VIcinity

(

,,

Garage tilt, moving· Oc1ober
10·11, 49053 RigQt Crea1, Rtedt·
ville. Vacuum clu.ntf', doll&amp;. milt.

Howard L. Wrlteael

.ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR .

1Porch sale· Ocl. 11, 8:30·8 :00,
·110 Maple Str .. t, Mlddraport,
\Hallow,.tn cos tum... fo(mlll, Jr
boys clothing, lampe, toys, rl·
•klgera... (1011
ll&lt;no. mloc.

.a

Gutters

Chlld •Car'e Provider• Nledtd • •
Are you a stay. •J home Parent or
currtnny doing child care In your
homo? CCANIChlld Core Ro·
source Netwo"rk Ia a lrae service :
to help you get started. We are
ttekln~ lovinQ Individuals 10
watch mlanu through ~ehool .
ages. ·Call 1·800·577~ 2278 lor
rnore Into.
c·

=::.::.::..____

Commiaalon A~tnr Oulsldt Par.

oon Growing Pnntor Hooloh Bono-

lilt French City Pr111 423 S.c.''
ond Avenue, Gallipolis OH
45&amp;11 ,

'

OitcOvery Toya Nted You. Elf'n \;
up 10 .130/!lr. &amp;howing porontt lho '.
educational valut of our 1oya,
boot.• &amp; cornpu11r software. Call
now for mDre·detlill. 30•·115· ·
571111110, llooklng Plrtlooo.
Domlna'a· Pizza of Pomeroy now
hirlngclriYit' Bt4-llll2-2t24.

i*"'

Don Tate Molor&amp; 11 now acctpl·
ing oppo~ationo fol lho polltlon or
Porch U.Ht· October 10.11, Cha· Sate• Consultant. Apply-!n I*·
rl11 Mclain residence, SR 124, oon. no phono Olio......._ EOE

Downspouts
Gutter Claiming
Painting
-FREE ESTIMATES

Racine, Ohio. Qlauware, pic ·
tu,.•• Horne Interior, tight tixNrea,
accordion, clotnn, mite.

949-2168

Yard 1111, friday &amp; Salurday,
(Oc:t. 11 &amp; 12) 1 aam·3P,m, Tyree

Ill Min

I!IYd.. Radno.

·'··

Eotn St,OOO W011ldy lllllttl"' En•olopoo At Ho.... Start Now. No
Experience. Froi Sulft)lloo, tnlo.
No Obllgedon. Sond ~SASE To·
ACE. DOpt : 135t, Box 5t37
mond Bar. C.t. 81 786.
'

01o:

'

'

�•

.._

•

Pomeroy. Wddleport, Ohio

Sentinel•

11

.[

.'

NEA CrOIIWOrd Puzzle

8IIIDOK
PHILLIP

ALDER

,_,
...
M.-raecY-

ACROSS
1llillof8

Ing-

·-In

. 31Haloa

........, , b-

31 P 1

5 Typeol .......

, . , . .. Ptaw'a

w.......,

ohroom

10MOII_..,.. 41=0Ny
12Holy ......

Campultr Uttrl N..uct. WorM
""" $.!01&lt;., '!!OIIIrr 1.8DQ.

C!'!&gt;!U Vinyl 111 10.00 Yd
Molohlr: Clrpeta, 1514-44e-7444.

:Ma-711h ISO&amp;

Earn 100()'s weekly aturftng env..opea II horM. Be your 'boll,
Slart now. No exper .. nca. FrH
oupplioo Info, no obllgo11on. Send

s :A.S.E.

IO NuDOtl Unll 3114•1,
10151 UniYer~ity 8111d. Orlando

FL321117

s•s.ooo

Col 1-8XI-513-4343 El1.8-83111.

Ladr To Uvo In Wllh Eldorlr
ltclr. 814--13.
Outarancllna opporrunlrv for a
highl)' moti'llalad individual to
serye 11 Auittant Director of

Nunong. Tho quaMrotcl ..,_,.
wll join I prugi-ouiye hlellh C1r1

·telm providing ~enolce1 in the

goriari&lt;, high oeu11r IMI onct·ro-

habili.,tion areas a.f haalltl care.
TIND or more yee.rs of nurtlng ...
Plftwlee, a ptOftf1 track record In
geriatric nursing administration

lnd

Coumr~

autJ11ct

111-FolrHoutlng M.

.

I'

-

-10

r • orcllcrimlnetion
........ -...religion,

-~-.ornatlonal

origin, Of ITrf
malce ITrf 1IUCh . . -.. ,.._
llmlldOn or cllcrimtl•dol•.•
TNt,.....·~

....

not

"""''ow""""'
whlchli -lion ollhe law.

odve-forraolIn
Our-.,.
ho&lt;eby ..

~ tfOrrMd ht all .... IQI

adYtnlild In 11'111 newtpet'lr
are IY8Iable on an equal

_,.,ay-.

5x10 Pofch,
Nlw·1 997 14 Wide- 3 bedroom. 1
bath. $799/down, $125/mo, with
appro'lled credit. Call 1-800·891 ·
6777.
1997 18•80 3 blldroom, 2 bath,
$1 . ~5/down, $191/mo, tree air,
with approw.d credit. 1·800-691 ·
8777.
1~97

Doubltwide, 3 bedroom, 2

beth, $1,495/down, S21Clitno, free
air, with approved credit. 1-800-

11111-flm..

1997-2 &amp; 3 Bed....,, $995 down,

$195/mo. FrH deti'llery &amp; III·Up,
onlr al Oak WGod Homes, Nitro

wv.-755-5885.

310 Homes for Sate

Fftnc:h Proven1ion11 Sofa While
,En:allent Condition , eu ..ue.

2-..mo,

., ;dwi ... "any ......... .

181 Time Buyers E-Z Fir.n.;ing 2
Or 3 Bedrooms, $2001Mo., 1-800-

251·5010.

2 bedroom mobile t'lome in '
Rldne, no pets, 614-802·5858.

5574.

:2 Bedroom Trailer In Porltf Area,
Deposit &amp; Rer.renees; You Paw-

G.E. Wuher S95 ; G .E. Wuher
Nice 1175: Whirlpool Wather
S205 1 Year Warrantr ; Whirlpool
Dryer, Harvest Gold, $95: Electric
Range Wu $150 Cui To SU5;
Frigidaire Rerrigarator Frost Free,

All Ullltito, 114-3111-a 182.

2 Bedroom Trailer State Routt
211, 1250/Mo., Includes Water,
$100 Depo1it, 81.C-256·133?,

614·256-87811.

2 88drooms, Green Schools, Pri·
\late Lot, S3251Mo., O~alt S250.
Flefarences Required, 8,4-441·
4314.

G.E. Washer, Was S95 Cut S75:

$125: Whlr~l

Ro~igora10r

FroSI

F111 1150, Skaggs Appliances,
76 Vine Street, Gallipolis,

eu.

448-7398, 1-800-499·3499.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES

448-884~.

Washera, dryers, retriga'ratort,
ranges. Skaggs Applianets, 76
~!:a!~~~~~~ ~ 814·446· 7398,

Two 2 Bedrogm Mt~bile Homaa
For Rent Or Sale On Land Contract, Refarencet., 814-41&lt;46-1810.

Home Comfort Wood Cook Stove
$1,000 Fresh Sorghum 6778lin·
coin PiM.

Two bedroom mobit. home aut·
aide Pomeroy, &amp;14-992·5031if.

or
440 Apartr.nents

Uaed Furniture 130 Bulav~le Pilte,
Desks, Collectables, Beds, Ta·
bitS. Washers, Couc~es, Chairs,
Dinettes, Lowrey _Otgan, 614 · 4-48·
4782

1 and 2 bedroom aparunentt, fur·

Washer, .Dryer, Rafrigeralor,
Stove, Mtcrowave, $50 Each,

2 Bedrooms, In Galhpolia, 814·

for Rent ·

mahed and unlllrniahtcl, securitY
deposit requ1red, no pets, 814·
992·2218. .
. -

1. bedr0or" furnished apartment in
Middleport. call 614-4o46-3091 or
814-992-2171 or 814·992·5304.

1 Room And Balh $175rMo. All
Utilities Paid, 513-574-2539.

2 Bedroom, furnished apt for rent,
deposit required. 304-!75-e512.
Of • tw. apt Jor lease In down·
ti7Nfl Gallpolis, 81-4-888·7174.

2, 3

2bdrm. apt's. , total electric, appliances furnished, laundry room
facilities. dose to school In 1own.
Applications avatlable at Village
Green Ap11. •49 ar call 814-092·
371t . EOH.

3 aparlmenll bi' rent 1 BR, 2 BR
.&amp; a111Qarocy. 814-3111-1108.

3 Room From Aparlm*nta, Large
Fronl Yard, Truh Pick-Up Paid,
No Pats, Parter Area, 614·388t
1100.
661 Third AVfH!\1&amp;, Carpon, Refrigerator !StoVe, Outside Storage,
2 Bedrooms, S2751Uo., Month's

614·256·1238

520

Spo~"tlng

Goods
1 Winchester Model 94 3030
Good Con&lt;11tion, $17Ct. 614·44 1·
1824.
H4R Mod 922 FIE
410
Winchester .370 S&amp;W Mod 68
Ruger Redhawk, SP101 , Government Target, 614-446-9635.
Aine, 30·06 Remington, w/319x40
S1mmons scope, all same as new
$480. 304-675·, 731.

530

Antiques

Buy or sell . River1ne Antiques,
1124 E. Mam Street, on At 124,
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W.
a.m. to 6'00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
6 :00 p . fl1 . 6 1.4· 992· 2526, Russ
Moore owner.

540 Miscellaneous ·

Merchandise
1 Chest Of Drawers, 1 N1ght
Stand, 1 Dresser With Mirtor,
$125, 614-446·8021 .

4539
19~

port

From 1232-$355 . Call 614·

2 Bedroom Suites, Queen, Full,
Other Bads Couches, Tables,
Chairs. Entettatnment Centers,
TV.'s. Washers. Dryers, StO'IIeS,
Etc. 614-446·4039, 614·446·1004
~time.

420 gallon water haul1ng tan'k,
$100, 614·74,2-J945.

15 acres. Qas well , 1992 Scl1u11z
16x80, 3BR, 2 bath, 8078 Bulaville
Pk. 614·367·7199 or 614·367·
5043.,

Nice one bedroom apartment m
Uiddleporl, no pets, deposit re ·
quired, 61&lt;1-992·5833.

3 Acres ol land. out back ol H8fl·
derson. Also used tra iler. 3Do4 ·

Nice two bedroom apanmam In
Potnef~tt, 814·1192·5858.

875·5956.

One bedroom apartment in Pt. 1:-;.::.:::---:------P*sanl. 814·e92·5858.
1:
7x16 Garage Door. like New. Call
One bedroom lurnlstled apart· Early Morning Or Late E\lenmg,
menr in Mid&lt;hporr, call814-44£· E-::•..:
·4::46:.·:60::26:;:·:.:30:::_4·_::6:._75::_:·:;534:::_:g:_
·_
3091 81 982 178
81 992
•
""
or
"'·
· 8Ft . Utlltty
Bed, Full Size

WIH do fabYslning·Oependable.
Snecks/ Meala. rourt or mine
home. 114-4.tO...g32 in Gallipolil

~·:::•=.....,·-,-,-.,-· ,--.,..--·1

Bl.ta,reiUing In My Home, sr,ring
~ Ak Cerlilied CPA. rain·
tno Experienced, Relerencea,

----1

!8~14-~t1~8~11340~:·_ _:_
·
GHrv.t Portable, Sawmill, don'l
tw.ul row toas ro lha mil jutt calf
~-875-1157.

$127.500. 614·256-8287.

3bedroom, bath, livirig rOom w;
or ~ning. CtH h d-·• 11
. . , . _ if no .,....,, -.w mas., """"' oora. ~ 1tehen &amp; dining

. _ , ollie t,

304-07S«l28

~

area together. new roof, garage,

~~~~]~~~~- ~~~~~~on
AI~Body
I ·

Or Part·

&amp; Reier·

eu ue 0078.

~...,..Tree Serv~. SWmp

Aerncwal. Free Elllmatesl In·
eufai"'C44, ~II. Ohio. 6l ..·388·
...._. 61 •-38?-?0tO., , ,_

su,.
Valley Nuraery SChool.
ChHdeltt M-F e.m-5:30pm Agn
z.fC, Young School Age Durin~
-

875-7328 aher 6.:kl.
304 ·675 ·4139 or 304 ·
Houu Al"l Lot For Sala&gt;:
2 8adro'oms. One Bath, S600
Down, W.A.C. Easy T,rms, 1·800·
448--88011, Ask Far David.

In New Haven·M•r-Lu·Waa Bi·
lwei Home, large corner lot wilh
print• back yard, .4br, 2 full
baths, larg8o family. room wlbr'iclt
fireplace, lr, dr, kit, kill of e•trat
Including hot IUb. 2,225SQ II.

- 3 Doyo per WHk Minr· 180,000. 304·882·33611.

-~~~31157.

Looklno lor peace &amp; quiet thit
3br, 1 bath. ranch hal il. plus new
roof &amp; large deck. $58,000 30~ ·

F rr JANCIAL

6 75-8352.

Bullnell .

210

Nice 4br nome, located 11 23
Warw1ck, 2 bath, k, lr. dr, fr, in
ground pool, call 304·875-6515

Opportunity
,

ltOI'ICEI

OHIO VAI.I.EV

~BliSHING

afltr Spm,

CO..

reconwnends rhar you do busi " " ' wfth ~e rou know, and

Palm Harbour sectional. 3br,
2bath, sun room w/tleat pump.

Con be~- 304-773-5303.

HOT Ill atnd monty lhroupto ""
maW until you • e inve&amp;tiQated RIVER FRONT PROPERTY,
,.olllrl~.

H•¥8 You Ever Sold Cookware,
laakint Fot Manaoera In This
Ar••· Plrt- Time ·Call 304·175·

1111.

230

WITH HOUSE, 721 FIRST AVE·
NUE,, GALLIPOLIS, 181,500,
.........,.12.

w-

Three lMdroom hom&amp; in i::atinlry,

Whil" HoM Rd., Rudand, one belh,

Plofulllonll
Slrvlctl

ln-~OI!nd pool.

614-1192-5067.

homo· Florida

thrn bedroom, two bath, tlmily
room. Iaroe liv1ng room. kitchen,
dining room, 1911,100, 61.C-912·

HARTS MAIIONARY • Block,
a .... - . :10 reoro ••·
....-. - - ro1ft, 304· 31101.
--~ - I;OOpm. no lob 10 320 Mobile HOmea
•11111 W¥021311

--or

for Sale

992~506... Equal Housing Oppor·

ruritias.

3.64 Acres Located On Graham
School Road, Water And Electric
4vallable814·448·1778.
5 Acre Tracts 3 Miles South Or
Willcesvlile On S.R 160 S500
Oown, $150/Mo"., $9,900 Counly
Water 1 73• Acres $42,DOO 52,000
Down $500JMo., 614·669·3462.
S·Acres on Stale ~oute 180. On
Kerr Road, Close To Freeway
And Hbspital614·•46-0116.

5 Pc, Sect1onat Round Sola 2 Re·
cllners Included , Makes Into A
Bed $600; Royal TYpewriter $20,

614-367-7230.

l

530o4:
'
Cab Over Topper, W1th Tool Bo•·
One Room ·and Bam all Uulltlet es, 18 F\. ll~dder Rack, 614-388·
Paid S18S. Two Room and Bath all 1100.
Utilities Paid $200,· One Bedroom
. BPI fill Utllllles Paid S325, 513· AdYertln Your Business New
3'•6' Sunllower Signs Yellow
574-2539
Background 300 -8· Wack Lettert
Twin Rivers Tower,
$295. 81-4·4•6·4782.
applications for 1br.
i .
ized apl. for elderly and handi- Baby bed. car aeat, ·play· pen,
walker, straiter, swing. 304· 875·
capped. EOH 304-875-6670.

__...;._;;__.;..;...;;;;___ 1
Parcels on Rayburn Rd . Water,
pa..,ed road, rHaonabl'e reatric·
tions. 304·875-52S3~ ~no alngle-

Wido ;,qu;,. ,.....)

Rainbow sweeper wlall anach·
manta. 304-675·1726.
Relrigeratora. Stoves, Washers
And Dryers, All Reconditioned
And Gauran1eedl $100 And Up,
Will Deli'ller. 814·669-8441 .
Sega Saturn 2 Controllers 2
Games, $320, 61!1·446· 7912 Aftet
4 P,M
'
.
SOlid Maple dming room suile, 4
chairs $100. Other furn.irure, QuiJe
a btl. House &amp; land. S65,000 ~ 304-

m -5407.

450

RENTALS

Furnished
Rooms

4548

Solofltx $250, Glass Hutch Fruitwood $250, 614-388-9032.

""'-"~'·

Tandem SHage Wagon 3 Beater
Root Good Condition 814· 2"'5·

1980 Jeap CJ5 Uafty New Par11,
Very Good Condition, 614· 388·
8144.

oAQ

51i:!.

620 wanted to Buy

cellant Condition, 14,500 080,

,_ doubl&lt;i -

Truck, Some New Parts. Asking
$3.800, 1989 S-10 Good Work
630
Livestock
' Truck, High Mileage, $3.500, 61•·
1 Ponr Very Gentle 814.'2.4 5· 446.0744
5087L
1987 Ford Bromo, &lt;~ · whee! d•i~e.
Monlh Old SIVd Coli, Rt&lt;Nnir1g au1o tran&amp;, complete eingme re build, front suspens1on rebuilt,
Chair, 614-4148-4410.
new pant. new wheela &amp; bres, exc
AOHA Colt Palamino With Whitt eond. $5.800. 304-895-3874,
Mane And Tail And Star And
1987 Ford Econohne Van, priced
Strip 614-25&amp;·6085.
to sell 30•·675-l343 or 304·675·

640

Hay &amp; Grain

AN' 601N'

BACK HOM&amp;,

$

By

1988 Bronco XlT 4 WD.6t4 -448·

3563.

Hay For Sate: $1.50 Auger Ttpe
Bunk Feeder $150, 814 · 448 -

Featuring Hydro 8'ath.
Sheets. Clll 614-446.0231.

HE'(. MARCIE .. I
DID TI-I05E SIX
PROSLE/115 ON
PAGE SEVEN ..

I

American bull·
dog, 8 week old female, hke
"Chance" m mo'llie Homeward

Bound, $300 OBO. 814·592-1825.

5UPPOSED TO
DOTI-IE SEVEN
PROBLEMS ON
PAGE SIX ..

flOW ABOUT
'IESTERPA'I'? I
DID ALL FOUR
PROBLEMS ON
PAGE FIVE ..

1986 Chrysler laser, Turbo XE ,
Runs Good, Good Shape,,Sun1987 Do~ge .ShadOw ~.2 Motor,
Automadc, Runs &amp; Drives Gree.t,

740

5:00P.M.
Festiva, 4 spe8d.

379·2477 A~&amp;r

1988
high
m11es, runs, looks good, $875:
1989 Grand Am, loaded, $4200:
614·992-6510.

DID ALL FIVE:
PROBLEMS ON
PA6E FOUR ..

UP NOW, MARCIE .. I'M
601N6 OUTSIDE. ANP
STANP IN TI-lE RAIN ..

1992 Oldsmobile Toronado Torleo, loaded, e•cellent condition

$13.500, 61H49·2217.
19113 Chtvr Lumina

Z3~ ,

.

black,

Poodles- teacups, to1s. AKC
Regittered, shots and wormed ,
614-667-3404.

1984 Vahama Venture Royale
1200cc, tull dress. $2,000. For

info call 304-875-4518.

1994 CR125 Hqnda, exc . eond:,
never raced, ' $2,300 . 304 -773 ·

490

i

.•

&amp; Motors

tor Sate

THE BORN LOSER

12 F1. Boat W1ih Tra1ler, Motor·
guide Trolling Uotpr, 2 Seats, 3
Storage Hatches $750, 304·675·
1741.

,.

,.

~T~rn~ 5~&gt;--'6,'!

f:E;l.l\l'IC~I p

l

fll&gt;.,TE. • Hf'..TE

I

(IT'( (.1\ICJ{t: fl ~

Over 100 Late Model low Mileage Molors Out Of Insurance
Salvaged Autos, Trucks. Foreign,
Domestic, New Windshields Ra·
diators. Auto, Truck Sheer Metal.
Over ~ qprs, Trucks For Parts.
FrEHJ Delivery : Major Parts To
Gallipolis, floint Preasant Araa .
Powefline Auto Systems Kitts
H1!1, Ohio· , -800 ·482·6260 U.S.
Toll FrH, 614·532.0.139.

790

CARS FOR $1001 Trucks, boat&amp;,
&lt;~·whee l ers , motor homes, lurnilure, electronics, computers etc.
by FBI, IRS, DEA. Avallabte your
area now. C•ll 1'·800·513·4343

Reg iarered Bo•er pupp1ts, l'lld
shots, warmed, dectawed &amp; tails

Ens-11388
Credit Problems? E·Z Bank Fi ·
nancing. For Uaec:t Vehicles No
turn Down a. Ctll Rutn 14·4&lt;48·

e

28117.

1979
Door,

810

' ,

I 5U&lt;&gt;C",E.Si WE
LOCK YOU IN A
PADDED CELL..

FAilM SUPPLIES
&amp; I IVf STOCK

MERCHAN DISE

'

Unconditional lifetime guarJntH.
loc~t relerences furnlstle&lt;l . Es"
J&amp;bhstled 1975. Call (614) 446·
0870 Or 1·800-287 -0576. Rogers

.
,'ll"

I

ASTR6-0RAPH

ioclay by mailing s2 ai.d SASE 10 AStro·

Graph , c/o lhla newspaper, P.O. Box
1758, Murray Hill S1a1ion, New Yo.rJ&lt;, NY
10156. Make sure to state your zodiac

sign.

DRYWALL

, 9 73 Ctlevy 1 lon Wedge Back
Wrtcktf, V·l, Automatic , $1,$()0
814-4.e-4539.
.

lruek. UOOO.

1~83

Ford F-150

rUni

302 v8, -4 spd. , no rust,
Gflat t2500. 15 mlnu1es fram

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Ran:s TV Service, speeilliZing In
. Zenith a lao tet'Yicing moat ather bn~nda. Houte calls, 1-800· 797·

0015, wv 304-576-2398 . .

840 Eltc:trk:at and ·

. Refrigeration

_,_ 114-3111-2801

Thr*' bedroom hOuse,
an SA 338, A_pple Grove,

'If our next door Reighbor
was a real friend." my husband
sighed, 'he wouldn't moW his
lawn ~ - .. - - -!"

UNSCRAI(.Wltf AIOVE lfTT(RS
10 G T AHSWft
.... -••

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG

.

1177 Ford F-150,
81UIOmtt·
ic, no .rust, new 11rea, very nlta

510

•

.

PIINT
RfD lETTEIS 1N
THfSf SQUARES

J

be ' seen ar 1
Gaitipotts,

875-5182.

814·1182-8818 beiWHn 5:3oI:OOpm.

~

!

Home
Improvements

Wai"'P"''fi"9

Nice, Clean, 3 Bedroom, Rer.renees I Deposit. No Petl. 304·

coil

~~~~~1~=.x~~ ~~ ~

BIG NATE

fin18h, repa1r.
telnurld, plaster repair.
.
_30..·675·4186. 20 years
e•penence.

Pomeroy· two tMdroom, kitchtf1
re~ed. IIO'Vf and relrigerator
lurnithtd, Wllt'ltrl dryer I'IODkup,

44~n

-;;:.r
I

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

21 Fr. Prowler Seii·ContaMled. Ex·
cellent Hunters Campet Asking
$1,000 614·446-17&lt;il3 Days '614·
'
1995 Buick SkYlark, loaded, low · 446-6861 E'Jtlniflgs.
m1!eage, exc co.nd, 2dr $500 &amp;
take over payments . 304 ·875 ·
SERVICES
7395

580

3111·21121.

Phillip Alder

I 1·, I I I I

N:..TUN.LY. 1\3
lW-tV"IIC.I'\l'I:I'L I ~UK£ "

COOK£D ~:nl!~JJ:

Snara' drum, new, nher been
used, with cast, stand, sticks and
praclice pad. Paid $480, selt'for
$265, 614·7•2·314.C.

For Lease

43 Aftlrm111vo '

.

-% '.

5996

1993 ' Geo Metro, 5spd, ac,
49mpg, 61 1000 rilites. t3,BOO. 304·
675-6924.

Purebred Siberian Husky pup·
pies- white, btacks, grays, blue
eyes, prally mask, StSO. 614-992·
5144 .

!'t9us1cat
Instruments

fur
:.
In regard Ia .

Nato- · .:
Foal part
Au1hor
"
Emlte42 Aa1ranau1'1 '

600·273-9329.

1993 Ford Mustang LX, automat·
ic, PS, PB. air, anvlm stereo Casae1te, 30,600 miles, very good
condition, $6700 080, 614·992·
4111.

Purebred Cocker Spaniel p.up·
pies· •lails done, two nice males
lert, black, blonde, S 11·0 each,
61&lt;4·992·5144.

37
36
40
41

New gas lanks, 1 1on truck
whaels 3 radiators . 0 &amp; R Auto,
Ripley, WV. 304 -372 -3QG3 or 1·

ercellent condiUon, call Tom Andef1on, 614·992·3348 alter Spm.

0-421.

tMPPY, BUT NOT
· . / A~ tfAPPY AS
/
A &lt;:.L.AM OUtitiT
TO BE!

Motorcycles ·

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Pets Plus, Silver Bridge Plaza .
11011. 011 E010rr m"9, Every Day!)
614-441 -0770 .

Puppy Palace tcennets, Boarding,
St\ld Strvict Puppies, Grooming,
Buy, Soli &amp; Trade, All Breeds.
Payments Welcome. 6,4·388·

lngredllnl '
35 Red wine ·'
36 llyld rabbit ::

~

FOR.
CITY 0\ICI(£}.1!
YUCK- 1 l ~f-T£

.

Flea Stoppers Carper Powder 1
Vear 100% Guaranteed, Sate For
Humans. Pets, E
1
Sale, 61~: 24S.5747.

Pass
Pass
Pass

..

'88 Suzuki RM80 , many new
parts, $700, 814·992-8&lt;456.

1987 Ford Escort Less ThaR
38,000 Miles, $3,500 Firm, 614·

10gat tank set up specials. Fish
Tank &amp; Pet Stlop, 2413 Jackson
Ave . Point Pleasant, 304-875·

.

33= .;:

East

..

I HAVE TO HANG

'(ESTERPA'I' WE

014, SU!tf l.'M

1986 Chevette, 57,000 Miles ,
Ve~y Good Condition, $1 ,495
090; 1986 Dodge BOD, $750
090, Good Condition. 814·388·

r

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-llov. 22) In order 10
make your listener hang on ybur every

word today, you mlghl ba lempled 10
,embellish 1he facta. Unlor1una1ely, lhil
won'1 produce 1he deelred en-.
~-...;...-----·· SAGmAAIUI (Nov. 2S.Dec. ~ - )This
could be a good day lor you, provided
you apprecla1e your preaan1 circum·
s1-. Hyou begin lo envy wha1 o1t-.ers
have, Mwoo't bi14&gt;roducllve.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11) Take
F-y, Ooi.JI, lpe&amp;
·.
care not 10 get drawn Into your own tiap
,,....
1o.-y. FO&lt; ..ampte,
defend a poai·
~ "Of!! deelre you've ~ '"'a long t1on you kl1oW II wrong.
11!nt ljrlll btl fulllliftd 1ocjoy. '11111 will be a AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 11) You
~d 1111'1 10 111englhl" your roaolve. llhould not1ell while Met 1odrly. n you fib,
~ 11111 ~ W011c.
rornemb« what you aay oncl mlloe 11ft
~~f
..,.. a-oct. 2~) Gonerally you con repeal b vaMIIm 1hl 1lme
.,..
~· o ll~bl~ paroon and - ·
~
I fiiK1il!'l
end , PilCH (M. 20 lloroh 211) Do nol111ut
111'1· 1&lt;fW ¥Ill In
lodly. Get a 'flnoncfal rtilcl with el1hlr your -..y or
11!1"P P.!' ~ t~y• ~nclt
ng tht lnflu- lunda you manage tor oomaona alee
~nota 11111 lll"'r." you In
~ allelld. today. Yoo will not have good 1uck In
·~fill lOt'
.,.lri!"Cifl'1' prodlcllona allhl!lllul110n.

don,

HUD acc.,oo4,
372--.814-2.7-2120.

1300/mO.,

F!rt- for ur.. 304-175-11137
.. 30'4-875-5053.
.
-·1&lt;·3118-8179.

Franklin Air Tillh1 C111 Iron
Woodburntr, Sl75, 814-311·

YfiU=

v.u

11145.

'
'•

'(OlJ WERE

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

AKC.R.glatered Y•Uow Lab
pupa,lhots, wormed, dew
dawa ,.moved, haanh c.litl·
clltt, 81.t·941·2481 after 4pm
or ltl'le mauage.

2063.

23 Shlclowbol l "
24 Cow.-dly
25 Splrlte·
ze 1ridll..,..,, , ..
2728 Engr""'
211 Marine
.•

,,.

Don

Rat~istered

ABA

17Compele
•
19Poace- ·'

When you are the declarer, you
ar11cll
'
41 Hearing
, ·:
have freedom in choosing your cards
0~
and your partner's Uhe dummy'sl.j
However, you should still bear in mind L.....I.-.1..:...1.-Lthe view of Zechariah Chafee Jr., who
claimed that "freedom is not safety,
"
but opportunity." Your contract isn't
safe just because you have freedom of
CELEBRITY CIPHER
.
choice. You must still make the cor·
by Lull Campos
'
reel choices.
Cellbrit) Ciphtr crwtoarama .,. ~from~~ f..ncH4 S*)Pil,!*l and PfH8"'
'·,
Each
hittfi
In
h
ciJNr
stlrldl
tor
al'lOCh«.
Todlly's
cAM:
G
ltCJUI!,_
S
.
)
How woald you · play in four spades
after West leads a club?
Even if you lose a trump trick be·
BHNF'K'BHYY
A K
APZYRKD
·· A ' I
cause you don't guess how to play the
:
"'
suit, you still seem to have 10 tricks:
z
K H.J
R'l
four spades, four diamonds and two
R'l, · .Y RFP,
clubs !given the lead into your ace ETRY
queen tenacel. So, are you free to play
CPAKD.
T W 1Z K
LRAP
the trumps in the accepted way, by
.
cashing the ace and king?
G E P N-J H 8 .
No! If West has the heart ace, when
East wins a trick with th~ spade
PREVIOUS SOLU'nON : "I'm nol very keen on Ho11y.Yood . I'd ra1her have • '
queen, he pushes a high heart
nice cup ol cocoa really."- Noel Coward..
·'
through your king. You may lose four
I •
tricks before you can cash 10.
After winning the first trick with the
cl~ ace over East's king, you should
play a spade to dummy's ace and follow with a spade to your jack.
If the finesse loses, your heart king
is safe from attack. and you can safely
cash those 10 tricks. Here, when the
· finesse wins, you draw the last trump,
.run the diamonds, discarding a heart
.from hand, and· unsuccessfully try a
·heart to your king for a second over·
'trick.
. The key point, thoug~. is that with
.this-layout you go down if·you play off
YLSYH
the two top trumps. East ruffs the
. [."' .
· third diamond and switches to the
heart queen .

PEANIITS .

TRANSPORTATION

9032.

. 304-875-2074. .

Pass
P8ss

"

lerry

Building
Supplies

2 AKC Reg Female Adull Boxers,

18

It
z•
Pass

llnel

12~

21 'ManMn """"
22 nemott ca.-..
lral button ,e

Freedom
of choice

304-675-1400.

560 . Pets for Sate

10 CeiiH
11 Stanza ot eight

eeANte\t

5847.

Alfalfa Hay Rolla -Storage and de·
livtry available. Morgan FariT)
304·937·2018.

~~.

Opening lead: • 5

White Oaneu Bedroom Suile,

5121 .

North

·48

WHEN WOULD
I eveR WeAR
THAT THIN&amp;?

I'M PACKIN' UP

SOfa &amp; 2 Chalra. 304-875-6898 Or

Block. brick, seVfer pipes, wmd·
ows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 814· 245·

West

Ant1que upnghl ptano &amp; bench,

Depooil RarHred- 513-574-2531.

142111.

'

South

1~84 Che\ly Full Size Good Work

$200. 304-675-3383 Oller 6pm

Fourlh Avenue, Galllpolia, 3 Bed·
rOom HouH For Rem. t3751Uo.,

~- . -.. Depooil' Rol·
erenc11, Call Aller 4 P.M. 114·

10·10

614·256·1065.

Standihg timber, pulp wood or
land wlth timber. c:all 8Y8nlngs alltr 6pm. 614·37H9011.

...

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer! l'jorth

1982 Ford F-150 4 WO, V-8, Ex·

&amp;14-886-,7311

5'70

wonclowt. 814-1102-m..

Nice 2 Bedroom• Furnla,ed.
Near,Cortl Mill, Ref11enct1, D•
poair, No Pets, t3001WO.. eu.

• K 54
• Q 7 6

WATER WELLS DRILLED
FAST REASONABLE SERVICE

For rent Or lilt· two ,bedroom

home,

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

Super XL cham saw, $175: Wondercoal wood stove, $275 ; MW
sewing machtne. 575; waterbed
frame, $20;614·992·2063

550

•• 3
K 10 7 4

a

675-7421.

Upright, Ra.n Evans Enterpnses,
Jackson, Oh10, 1-1:00·537·9528

814-643·2288.

I'_:;.;.;;__ _ _ _ _ _ __

• A 10 2

STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallon

AKC Registered Labrador Pup·
pies Born 8110196, Champion
Bloodline,. All Shott &amp; wormed,

2 badrOGm houn in Pameror tor
rent with option' 10 buy on contraer, no' per&amp;. depotil, 814-et•
72-f4&gt;

89 Ford Ranger XLT, •H&lt; mile1.
~ cap , long bed , 11r, 15,000, 614 ·

, •9542 '
·o .Js&amp;s2

357•.

docktd. -675-3888.

410 Houses for Rent

. • 4

South
a K J 10 9 2

At&lt;C ChoW pupl)les, 2 m, 2 f, all
blue, 1st shots &amp; wormed , S200
each. 614·992·5347.

1996 5x8 enclosed alum1num utll·
11y trailer, $1500. 614-992·5983
alter 7pm.

Any odd jobs, peiruina. guttera
cl•ened, lhtub trimming, home
. . .lttMiZIIion, leav.. raked,
wu;la11 liMn care,
30o4~75-

3038.

Soh Side, $300.614-448-6970.

East
• Q8 7
• QJ 9 8

' West

Undo&lt;
35K, AMIFM Cassette, Excetlenr
Condition, 814·245--9179.

~ 843· 5216 .

Furmthed 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Across From Park, AC, No Pels,
Reterencet, Deposit, $350/Mo.,
614-446-8235, 614-446..0577.

.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

.,.... cal :111 -

Queen Size Waterbed Complete,

• 83

Lowell prices on all wood eunar
suppliet . Bart &amp; chains, oil &amp;
m.,s. Sider's Equipment Co. 304·

,$1,300080, 614-256·6002.

180 Wanted To D9 .

c1Mnlng ond diii)OIII. lor inlor·

.

7421 .

A G,room St,op -Pet Grooming. ·

Gracious IMng. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartmentt It Village Manor arid
Ri..,ereida Apartments In Middle·

Anice-Gara11•• &amp; Outbuildings,

Ohio Valley Gardens, 2 Lots
$2,500, 3 Year Old Halter Cow,
Black Face Sheep, 614· 367-

H~draullc Hoset, Uade To Order.
Sldtr'l Equipment Co. 304-875-

rool, S1, 100 080 614·256-11111l5.

448·3844 Afltr 7 P.M.

5 Rooms, Bath, Cny, Forced Air
Furna", Central Air. Carpeted
Floors, Storm Windows, Doors,
Vinyl S1d1r'IQ, lot 68xl50, Priced
At ~.900, 61&lt;~·446·•579.
Block house. aluminum root, 2o41
Ru11and Street, Middleport. Six
rooms, 1 1/2 baths, hlill base·
ment. ShOwn by appointment
61 '""2· 31 70 ·
Brand New Crown Clly . 'hiler
Ot'lio, Routt' 7, 3 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, Central Heat &amp;. Air, Ohio
River View, 112 Acre , Fairland

Movmg · must sell , 1995 Mont·
gomery Ward r1d111g mower, 12 11
2 hp, e•cellenr shape, $850 OBO,
614.(167·6667.

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Furnished Apartment, Share Bath
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Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis: 814 ·

*·

Maple twin bed, Includes mar·
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hilt club chair, $40 : small couch/
ottoman, S80: 814·985·3595.

•

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start, soma eqtJ ipment, runt but

color ponable T\1, $75 . 12hp
nding mower $200. 1976 251t No·
Beech: St. Middleport, 2bf, fur- mad camper Sl .000 304 -675·
niatled, utilities pa1d, deposit &amp; 431,2.
1986 Fard ltD Station Wagon v.
Middleport,. 2br, furniihed. also, 2 6, Good Condition, $800: Fuel Oil
room efficiency wiUtilitles patd, de- Heattng Stove, Good Conc:t11ion,
pg~it &amp; r•ences.
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2568.
Excellent Condition,

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a A 6 53
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Rl 2 N, emu... P1 P1ttoan1,

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HOME TYPIST, PC usefa need·
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income potentia).

CO&lt;n Pldo·
er $475: 2 Gavlty Btdl, Farm.IBM Computer Witt! Color Moni- h&amp;n&lt;l Corn Grln4tr. Shtllor,
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13-41111i1 .....
14 Cerholn .....- 47 lmallliole
15 Row mlnwollo 41 S.Hy
. 16 Donald
-~
Trump's ••
50 Carryon
18 For aoch
19 K111 (2 wdo., a1.)
DOWN
20 Fall flaw.~
· 24 11106 ..ndldate 1 Alflcoln - n
225 Organization
26 Pulr.y
3 Hll~r1ondl
4· Em
29 Muolca1
5 Po
11M leg
· campoa111on
I Dlc:-'&lt;ma
30 Commencement
31 Marlin - King
g TJ:i~n 1aw
32 Cu1ta

Vf' .

".!

-'RIES (March-:if.Aprll 11, An opinion
you will deland vehemen11y migl&gt;l no1 be,
as popular with your colleagues today.

Go not lry 10 impose yo111_viewS or positions on ethers.

TAURUS (April ~y 20) If yoo've lett
·sluggish lalely. ·a lack of exercise mlghl
be lhe culprit. Oo some1hlng physical
.1odaY lo clrcula1a energy 1hroughoul your
system.

GEMIN1IMIY 21-.luna 20) GLI&amp;rd a~inst
·1ha incNnation 1o bil exceeelve 1oda)'. This '
·:includes ea11ng, drinking and participaUng
·in s1renuous actlvlliea.
·CANCER (June 21-July 221 When you
·are involved wi1h o1hero 1oday, do not
· aurprise1hem wllh unuoual oi1ua11ona.
. You mlgh1 jam !he pipeline. which will
crea1e problema for .-yone.
LEO (July 21·Aug. 22) Telling others
w11a11o do and hoW 10 do Kwill

feel,..,.

: ol for yoU todrlY· - · you wl ment
MH-~~~ elM 1rie8 10 lll1abillh your
,ogondo.
.
YJIIQO (Aug. ~ 22) Thlo may nol
o good day to go 10 1hl ~happing mall.
·You will not have much .wlllpowor and ·
jY"" mlgh1 purch- .1hlnga you'll never ·

·-·
.

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; :.

· '.
::;
.1

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Thursday, October 10, 1818

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

An-n's .column does~ more than give advice - it saves lives
rtnt
•

Ann

.~

Landers

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By ANN LANDERS
De.- Ann Landers: If it weren't
for one of your recent columns, I
might be either dead or paralyzed. I
owe you a Iuse debt of gratitude.
For about a week, I bad been
experiencing temporary numbness ·
in my left arm and hand. 1loe numbness was sometimes IICcompanied
by periodic paralysis of my left

hand. My
thou&amp;hts were that I for the perfect !imina of that col·
citbcr hit my c:ruy bone or had per· . umn... Alive and Well in Springlllpl been using my computer too field, Mass.
much.
Dear Alive and Well: Letters such
As I read your column describing as yours make my day. Every now
the symptoms of a stroke, I immedi- and then, I hear from readers telling
ately recognized that my numbness me I should stop pncticing medimatched the early warning signs you cine without a license. Describing
had mentioned. I dropped the news- symptoms, in my opinion, is a far
paper and went directly to the emer- cry from practicing medicine. Rest
gency room. The CAT scan revealed assured I intend to continue 10 edu: ·
a lusc mass of blood in the crevice cate my readers until my typewriter
falls apart.
between my brain and my skull.
·Dear Ann Landers: A year ago, I
fortunately, the operation to
separated
from my husband. After
drain the fluid was a complete sucthree
months,
'I left the state with
cess and the d&lt;flors say there should
be no lasting effecls. far this, I am "Jake." We have been living togeth·
ex~mcly thankful. Please 1tnow I er, along with my three young chilam enormously grateful ~you, Ann, dren and Jake's 14-year-old son,

"Jeremy." 1loe boy decided he
wanted to live with us rather than his
mother.
Ann, Jeremy isn't a typical 14ycar-old. Sometimes he acts like
he's 4. He plays with my 3'-ycar-old
as if they were the same age. Other
times, he demands that he be treated
as &amp;!I adult and reminds us thafhe is
a teen-ager now.
Jake and I are e.pecting a baby in
a few .months and are living in a
small, two-bedroom bungalow. We
agreed that we couldn't alford to
have Jeremy live with us, . and I
thought it was settled, but without
consulting me, Jake invited Jeremy
to stay. The boy now complains that
he is tired of sleeping on the couch

By DEB RIECHMANN
Arabic studies.
AP Education Writer
"Also, many Arabs that came to
WASHINGTON (AP) - Chi- the U.S. one or two generations ago
nese and Arabic ·are the fastest· want to come back to their roots and
growing foreign languages on col- learn the language," Consalvo says.
lege campuses, while more students
Interest in Chinese plunged after
are saying "nyet," "nein" and the 1989 crackdown on pro-democ- . ·
"non" to Russian, German and racy protesters in Beijing's Tianan·
French, a study says.
men Square, said Wendy Larson,
Chinese enrollment rose by 36 · chairman of the University of Orepercent, to 26.471 students, andAra· gon's Department of East Asian
·
bic by 28 percent, to 4,444, between Languages and Literature.
1990 and 1995, according to a surSince then, Chinese has reassenvey bv the Modem Language Asso- ed itself, partly because students
ciation of America being released seeking jobs know Chinese is spaWednesday.
ken not only in China, but Taiwan,
Spanish, with 606,286 students Hong Kong and Singapore - some
enrolled, remains the No. 1 studied · of the fastest-growing economic

Pick 3:

711
Pick 4:

9863

BuckeyeS:

•
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· Sead questions 10 ADD Landen,
Crealon Syndkate; 5777 W. Cea·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Loa An1eles,
eaur. 90045

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Vol. 47,'NO. 113

Baby signing ...

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· . . - . -- - - - : -

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -·
State development officials say recent
setbacks for a proposed $1.1 billion
pulp mill in' Mason County are dis•
couraging to businesses wanting to
locate in West Virginia.
"I think any delay is negative,'~
said Tom Bums, director Qf the West
Virginia Development Office. "Obviously, we would prefer to move forwaid more quickly."
But Bums and other state officials

say they don't believe the develojler to de~ermine how much dio~in
of the mill, Parsons &amp; Whittemore of a]ready exists in the Ohio River.
Rye Brook, N.Y., will give upon the
The federal Environmental Proproject despite a judge's ruling that tection Agency has linked dioxin, a
· threw out the company's water pol· · carcipogenic byproduct of the paper
lution permit.
rbleaching process proposed for Apple
Kanawha County Circuit Judge IGrove, to human reproductive and
Tod Kaufman ruled Wednesday the . 1immune system problems.
water pollution permit issued .for the
Parsons &amp; Whittemore Vice Pres'Parsons &lt;fl: Whittemore projel1t was ident Ken Goddard did not immedi·
invalid because the state Drvision of ~tely return a telephone message
E~vironmental Prote~tion had failed

WASHINGTON (AP)- Inflation
at the wholesale level rose just 0.2
percent in September as both food
and energy cosls showed moderation
while retail sales turned in a better:
than-expected performance.
The Labor Department reponed
today that the increase in its Producer Price Index, which measures inflationary pressures before they reach
. the cons~mer, carne after a 0.3 per·
cent August advance.
The ~ommerce Department said
retail sales rose 0.7 percent in Sep. tembcr, the best 'showing in four
months. Sales had fallen 0.2 percent
in August. The rebound was led by
strong demand for new cars.
financial markets rallied after the
· reporls were released: Heavy demand
for Treasury's benchmark 30-year
· ·bond pushed the yield down to' 6.84
percent, compared to 6.88 percent
t late-Thursday:"·.
·-~
· . Private economists said· that the
two repons showed that the economy

KELSEY SAUTERS
he submitted within 30 days . '!f
occurrence. All binhdays must lie
submitted within 42 days of the
occurrence.
All material submitted for publi·
cation is subject to editing.

!'

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Down ~yment
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High pressure sales

Honest and Dependable

Ask Your Friends anil Neighbors ·

on 21 ,157 men, those who smoked
at least 20 cigarettes a day had 2.5
times greaier risk of macullf degen·

9.9%

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1.7 percent last month.
This beuer-than•expected performance raised hopes among retailers
that they will have a better Christmas
sale.• season. The question the Federa! Reserve must answer is whether
growth is too strong for this stage of
the economic expansion.
·
The fed so far has deferred raising interest rates, heli~ving that the
econpmy will slow on its own without the need for the central bank to
nudge sht&gt;rt·tenn interest rates higher.
.
.Private economists are split on
what .will happen wqen the Fed next
meets on Nov. 13. Some argue that
the central bank will continue to stay
on the sidelines, pointing 10 signs of
a slowdow~ such as September's
. slight rise in tbe unemployment rate
to 5.2 percent .
. Other economists believe the fed
will finally begin raising rates, especially if inflation shows signs of
creeping higher.

...... -.

"Every time I went out or I went
shopping and these people were so
nice to me, and I wanted to stay angry
and I couldn't because the people
were ,a wonderful," Clinton quoted
Milosevic as saying. ,
In his speech, Clinton gave a
thumbs-up to Vice President AI Gore
for his performance in Wednesday
night's debate with Jack Kemp, Bob
Dole's Republican running mate.
"lac~ Kemp learned what I
learned a long time ago," Clinton
said. "You don't want to get on the
wrong side of an argument with AI
Gore.''
Clinton then launched into the
accomplishments of his aqmin,istration.
He said that in the past four years,
10.5 million new jobs have been created; 434,000 of them in Ohio. There
have been increases in h9mc owner~
ship and the minimum wage, taxes
have been cut for . the "hardest~ressed families" and the crime rate
has gone .down, he said.
Clinton said more toxic "'Waste
dumps have been cleaned' up in the
past four years than the previous 12,

. but that there are still 10 million U.S.
children living within four miles of
dumps.
. "I want to clean up 500 niore so
that we can say otir kids are growing
up nextto par!&lt;s, not poison," he said.
·

Karen Sitzman, 48. of Dayton,
said she was pleased with Clinton's
cffons to create· new jobs.
"I work for a bank. and a lot of
our jobs are going out of Dayton."
she said. "It's imponantto hear that
we've got jobs coming back ."
But Eric Parks, spokesman for the
Dole-Kemp campaign in Ohio. called .
Clinton's speech "the usual
rhetoric." ·
"He brags about what he's done
for the schools and drug program, yet
the use of drugs by teen-agers has
gone up 141 percent That doesn't
sound like success to me," Parks said.

"He brags about the economy and ·
:yet real speadable dollars in real
.tenns arc the lowest they have been
. in 40 years. Ten million new jobs
doesn't count if I've got less cash in ·
my pocket. " ·
·

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weeks.
'They still haven't told me i.t is an
·
an1ma1bone," .,•aylorsaid, "But I am
going te.ta.ll them.aridltellthcm&gt;whatl,
the anthropologists said."
More than three dozen bones were
found under the resident's porch dur·
ing a remodeling project. Taylor
resea,rched th• history of the house
•
and checked missing persons records.
"ln the past few weeks I've
learned more about that house than

h ·
·
ot er m town," he said. "It's',
been interesting. but it's been a waste·
of time. I'm embarrassed by this, but'
Ii \TI'nat-alll experll in,boncsll''• '
·.,
., I
,.
•ay or noted that the case has ·
raised his interest in bone idcntifica-'
tion. and that ·he intends 10 stan•
studying biology and skeletons. The:
knowledge will be mostly for his own ·
curiosity, he.said, though it would he
f 1· h
ff
d.
. use u '" I e ev~nt o uture l&lt;eov· enes.
.r1
~ny

R'BCJne
• ' counCil mu
' J
. ..
. s personne'
building renovatio.
n

cration.

Both studies were adjusted to '
eliminate from the calculllions other
known risks for macular. deeenera·
lion, such as poor diet,, presence of
Callnll:ls and obesity.
I
Ophtlialmology professor Ronald
Klein of the Univenity of Wisconsin
said smoking) damage to vision
· may result from hardened eye blood
veasels or from inauaed oxidation
damage 10 eye tisaue.

..

Officials say bones belonged to animals

Payments' ., _... as low as."• ·
'

,

Dole focuses on trust
during ·Ohio bus tour

~uy aij.eat Pump or Furnace from Enterprise-Nagle Heating and Cooling
m the Month of October and get !lie following:
. •·
lJ&gt;

\

. is slowing from its first-half paee bu.t energy sectors, the so-cailed core rate
, not threatening to go in1o a recession. of inflation climbed 0.3 percent ·in
"These are numbers the federal September, a big upturn froni a 0.1
Reserve will like to see," said Roben percent drop in August.
Dederick, chief economic consultant
Even with the September increase,
at Northern Trust Co. in Chicago. the core inflation rate was still rising
uThe expansion is not dying and we · at an annual rate of just 0.8 percent
are not getting any excessive increaSe so far this year, down sharply from a
in prices."
.
2.4 percent increase for the same
The 0.2 percent overall increase in period in 1995.
the PPI left wholesale prices rising at .
The worsening of the core inOaan annual rate of 2.2 percent so far tion rate for September was blamed
this year, compared with a 2,3 percent in pan on a 1.2 percent rise in new·car
prices, the biggest one-month rise
.increase for all of 1995.
For September, food prices edged since a 1.3 percent rise in November
up a modest 0.2 percent, a much 1993. Passenger car prices had fall ,
smaller advance than the I percent en the two previous months.
spun r~corded in August. The . Prices in September also increased
improvement reflected a turnaround . for prescription drugs, light trucks,
· in pork prices, which fell 7.5 percent, books and women's clothing. all catthe biggest one-month decline in egories that had shown price declines
nearly nine years.
in August.
·
Beef prices were up 1.1 percent
The 0.7 percent rise in retail sales
during the- month, following a much . followed a 0.2 peroent decline in
larger 4.9 pef\'Cnl surie in August. , August and was propelled by a big
Outside the volatile food and jump in auto sales, which climbed by

By JAMES HAN~H
she was thrilled with Clinton's visit.
Auoclated Preu Writer
"I think he's the best thing forthis
DAYTON -In an auemptto win country right nqw." Beam said. "I'm
the hearls of Ohio voters, President · sure Dole would be a good president.
Clinton said he's accomplished a lot But I think we need someone
while living in the White House but younger."
Area reBident Janet lbalas (sealed) enJoys al1ealthy mll888ge,
needs more time to finish the job.
The president, who stopped in
administered by therapist Jan Haynes (above) of Mlddleport'a Big
Clinton
addressed
thousands
of
Ohio
between visits to Knoxville,
Bend HeaHh and Fitness Center, during the Second Annual Meigs
supporters
Thursday
at
a
campaign
.,
Tenn
..
anp. Louisville, Ky., thanked
Health Information Fair Thursday afternoon at the Meigs Counrally on Courthouse Square in the · Dayton for ils role in the Bosnia
ty Senlor/Multlpurpote Center. Nearly 300 people attended the
heart of downtown. The president peace talks. The talks were held last
avent, sponaored by the Meigs County Council on Aging Retired
said
he offers voters a bridge to the year at nearby Wright-Patterson Air
and Senior Volunteer Progrem and the Meigs County Senior Cenfuture
- "a bridge where we walk Force Base and resulted in what carne
ter, which te1tured Interactive displays and health screenings.
across hand-in-hand, not divided,. to be known as the Dayton peace
(Tom Hunter/Sentinel
but united.
accord.
The crowd was sprinkled with
"What was accomplished bere
parents and their flag-waving chi I- turned Bosnia from war to peace,"
dren, teens in school-letter jackets said ,Clinton, .a Democrat. "Every
and office workers who took the doy person from this community should
off to see the president. Metal detec- be proud of the role you 'played in
tors' ·and police marksmtn on the those accords." ·
:By JOHN SEEWER
before 5.000 people at Cincinnati's roofs of surrounding skyscrapers tesClinton told the Dayton Daily
tified
to
th~
tight
,security.
.
News
that the goodwill shown by
:Aaaoclated Press Wrher
· Fountain Squllre. .
"
,
· The state's top Republicans joined
"The other stde trusts govern- · ' The sun played hide-and-seek atea residents helped the warring par'Bob Dole on the first day of his Ohio ment," he said. :·we trust the people behind the clouds, and a sharp wind ties reach an agreement. He said Serbrought a chill to the event. But Qian President Slobodan Milosev'ic
bus tour, which focused. on the who are here today."
singer
Bruce Hornsby wanned up the told him it was impossible to stay
themes of character and truth.
Dole also used his platform to
crowd,
·which erupted into cheers mad at the other parties in negotiation
The GOP's presidential candidate push his planned 15 percent tax cut
campaigned at five stops in heavily, ~nd his message of downsizing. But when Clintori climbed onto the stage. because everyone in Dayton was so
Heidi Beam, 34, of Dayton, said nice to him.
Republican areas of southern and at every stop the word was trust.
central Ohio on Th)lrsday. He is
"Who do you trust with agricul- .
scheduled to make foil'r more appear- ture, who do you trust with fann proances today in the western half of the grams?" Dole asked supRoners at a
,
h~e farm just ou~ide of Bloomstate.
"The bottom line is who do •you ingburg in central Ohio.
GLOUSTER '(AP) _ The mys- . anthropolog1•sts from Columbus after
?"Dol
'd · ,. ·
dt
G G
" i ·h
h
trust .
e sal .pom mg outwar · 0
ov. eorge • 0 novlc spent! e tery of the. Glouster. bones, has been Athens County Coroner Roben Butts
a rain. soaked.
day on the campaign trail and, introc solved.
sat'd he bell·cved J.
,..
.crowd
L at the Fairfield
H h
uu: bones we,_
county rair In ancaster. e I en duced•Dole al scycral o£ tha ralli~ '
Anihropologists hav..toid po!rel&gt; human·anohhou!25 lo 40 years old.,
emphasized the day's message by
"I worked with him for many Ch . f R
1: I
ht
. . ThefindingmeansanendtoTayasking again, eight times, "Who do years," Voinovich told the .several
le
oger ay or 1 a remams
yuu trust? Who do you trust?" .
, thousand people in Lancaster. .. 1 found beneath a resident's porch on lor's homicide investigation in this
The. bus trip started in CinCinnati know he'll kee~his word.,
Sept. 19 were not human, and instead village about 60 miles southeast of
.h
h
.
d
d
·
S
M'k
rl
belonged to a cow and a young pig. Columbus. although he said there is
wll a ra11 Y I at me 1u e runnmg
en. I e Wine, R-Ohio. anT
Offi · 1 had
ed h
still the matter of a leg bone found
mate Jack . Kemp and retired Gen. several other congressional and state
· tcta s
suspect 1 ey were
Colin Powell. The Dole caravan then politiCiansJ·oined Dole at his various lite :bones of an adult and a child, and with saw marks. The bone has been·
Taylor had staned a niurder investi· at the Ohio Bureau ofCriminalldensnaked through small tlowns in souhth- stop$. De Wine said skepticism that galt'on He sought the advl·ce of tificati.on and, Investi.gation for a few
west Ohio and trave ed more 1 an .surrounds all politicians is the main
.·
200 miles.
reason why Dole's tax cut message
"I
//
Alongtbeway,familiesaitdwell- isn'tworkingwiththepeople.
wishers came running from their
"I don't think they're heat ••11 it,"
Racine Village Council met in reg- . construction Of a handicapped ramp·
homes and ·stopped their cars to
DeWine sajd. Most polls over the last ular session Monday at Star Mill .at the building, making it comply
catch a,glimpse of Dole's bus.
·
with laws concerning · access for
During the trip, Dole decided to two months have shown Dole trailing Park.
Clinton
by
about
10
per·
In
personnel
matters,
council
handicapped
people.
President
make an unscheduled stop when he
approved the second ·reading of an
The village will send a letter of
spotted a homemade sign in down- centage points in Ohio.
Dole's campaign swing coincided ordinance making the c(erkl~asur' ·appreciation to the Letart Township
town Circleville that read "Donuts
For Dole." After the tO-minute break, with the release of .two new GOP 1er's position int~ a filii-time job and Board of Trustees for its assistance in
he told the crowd of 50 people commercials that f01:us on chll(acter, 1gave first readmg to an ordinance helping the village with chip and seal
"thanks for the pies and doughnuts." inoluding one featuring the candi- authorizing Christll)as bonuses to work in alleys.
Elirlier in the day, he had a choco- date's wife.
,
village employees in funds are availIt wa~ noted that the village paid
"Bob Dole doesn't make promis- · ·able.
·for material and reimbursed the town·
late milkshakc at the Village Ice
es he can't keep," Elizabeth Dole
CQUncil also approved getting ship for its employee's tiine and
Cream P.-Jor in Lebanon.
But tbrouahout' the ·trip the talk says in the ad.
estimates for scraping, priming and ~equipment.
•
Jim Lynch, a spokesman. for , painting the windows at the old . The county highway depanment
wasn't so sugary. ·
,
Dole questioned Clinton's char- Dole's Ohio campaign, laid the Ids Racin~ Elementary building which was willing 10 do the work, it was
explained, but could not because of
aCter and his commitment to the will receive heavy air time in the ,will be used for village offices.
American people' during the rally state.
·
In addition, council discusaed the . bad weather.
·
11

992-4485

LOW

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to ,continue."
.
.
The state Environmental Quality
Board, which hears appeals of actions
taken by the state Division of Environmental· Protettion, could appeal
the judge's ruling to the state
Supreme Coun.
Alternatively, Parsons &amp; Whittemore could apply for a new permit. ·
"You can't meet timetables when
there are delays like this." Phillips
said. "It's beyn a frustrating activity."

Clinton touts record, asks .voters for another term

Heating and Cooling.

Smoking found to increase risk to sight
more than twice as common among
long-tenn, heavy smokers.
Macular degeneration is the
·breakdown of the central portion of
the retina, vital to clear, central
visi011 that allows someone to recoc·
nize faccit or signs.
In one study, bued on 31,843
women followed for 12 yean, those
who smoked 2' or more cigarettes
per day had 2.4 times greater risk of
macullf degeneration than nonsmokers. The inereued risk persists
evea IS years after quittinc.
In the IIOCOIId IIUdy, led by .,.._
vard's William Olristen and buod

'

'

spoke with officials of Parsons &amp;
Whittemore after the judge's ruling.
The company's lawyer for this region.
David Flannery, has saiif he cannot
comment on the ruling until he sees
the judge's written order. The order
had not been filed.
"We still feel confident that we
can move 'the project forward,"
Phillips. said. "The company obviously after examination of the court
order needs to decide which direction

lnf~ation up Oa2 percent ·in' September

Healthy relaxing

OCTOBERFEST

'

Thursday.
The company, from Rye Brook,
N.Y.. first sought a permit in 1989,
then withdrew its application. A per·
· mit was issued in Augustl994, but it
has been subject to numerous appeals
and legal objections from environ· mentalists and Jabot organizations.
Rolland Phillips, who leads the
·Apple Grove Pulp &amp; Paper projecfat
the state Development Office, said he

At the wholesale level

----News policy----

.

.

·- - -~

Pulp Mill prGject still alive, officials say -

- NoiH: Put index finger to ear.
- Give me a· drink: Put thumb or - Telephone: Put fist to ear.
closed hand to mouth in drinking -Food: Make a chewing motion or . ,
certain sound made with mouth.
motion.
,
,
Flower: Sniff or wrinkle the
..:.. Sad: Rub eyes with fists, as if
nose.
.
wiping away tears.
Anlm.its,
Insects
or
cbara&lt;:ten:
- Doa: Put tongue out and pant.
- Flab: Open and close rounded Make signs according to characteri.stics. for example, a symbol fo•
·lips in a fish motion.
bunny could be putting . fingers
- Hat: Tap top of head.
- Moon: Make a heAd high; palm behind ears and wiggling them, or
hands clapping like jaws could mean
up, circling motion.
crocodile.
'
- Stan: Hold hands up, fingers
spread and wiggling.

Continued from page 8

. . .. . .

SUNDAY
POMEROY .. Carleton lnterde·
nominational Church, Kingsbury
Road, homecoming Sunday with
Sunday School at9:30 a.m .. worship
service at 10:30 a.m., dinner at noon
''and afternoon services at I :30 p.m.
REEDSVILLE -- South Bethel Guest speaker Rev. Mark Morrow,
New Testament Church on Silver . special singing.
Ridge revival friday and Saturday ,at
THURSDAY
7 p.m. nightly. Special singing and
RACINE .. Training Education children's ministry for both services.
GALLIPOLIS .. Diabetic Supand Christian · Home (TEACH) ,
pon Group meeting Sunday; 2-4
group will meet Thursday, 7 p.m. at
p.m. in the French SOO room ' at
LETART FALLS .. Parent Advi- Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
the Racine Nazarene Church. Pa$tor
Scott Rose will speak on bUilding sory Commiuee meeting at Letan Speaker Dr. Edward Sheridan.
Godly character in children. for falls Elementary Friday, 9 a.m. All
more information call Kim Hupp at room mothers needed to attend.
MIDDLEPOIIT- Children's day
949-3119.
at Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church,
LONG BOTTOM •• Special Middleptin, will he held Sunday
singing
friday, 7 p.m. at Faith full with children's service .at 10 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT .. Fire hydrants
Gospel
Church.
Pastor .Steve Reed Rev. John Neville welcomes all. ·
will be tested Thursday, 6-10 p.m.
invites the public.
Reside~ts may notice some discoloration.
'Ru1LAND .. Rutland Church of
SATURDAY
Christ homecoming Sunday with
TUPPERS PLAINS .. Tuppers
POMER.OY .. Return Jonathan ~unday School at9:30 a.m., worship ·
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars Meig• Chapter Daughters of the and communion at 10:30 a.m., dinPost90S3 re!ularmceting-llnirsday,· • Americatr Revolurion meeting Sat- ner at noon. Afternoon service will
7:30.p.m. with refreshments at 6:JP · urday, JO.a.mt 111-t~· t.Jeig'H:ounl)"l "be 1111 ~' p.mrDaver Lucas{ speaker;
p.m.
Public Library in Pomeroy. Group 'Special singing.
will mark graves of former members.
JACKSON .. Preceptor Beta
REEDSVILLE
South Bethel
Beta meeting Thursday morning for
New Testament Church on Silver ·
CHESTER ·· Meigs County Gar· Ridge homecoming Sunday with
a group outing in JackSon at the
Carol McCullough residence. The . den Club board meetinJ at Chester .Sunday School at .9 AJn. and worgroup will depart the McCullough's United Methodist Church Saturday ship at 10 a.m. Carry-in dinner at
at 9 a.m. All members are invited to at noon with a potluck lunch to pre- noon. Special singing at I :30 p.m.
cede. the meetinJ.
All welcome.
lltend.

2 Sec11ono, 12 PogH 35 centa.
A Gannett Co. New-per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, FridaY, October 11, 1996

Coprrlgbt 1986

:{~~~:·::•:· : ~·':t?':::::.t.~·· •:j ,. :·'.'~~!~~:I'F?l:': :.:::'''~~!~' '"'": '''~:~~·:!;:'~'2'

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT .. Widows Fellowship meeting friday at Church of
Christ, Middlepon, with potluck
dinner at noon.

Clear and cold tonight,
scattered frost. Low In
30a. Saturday sunny, high
In 60a.

3-~2-21·25-33

Sports on Pages 4-5

Saute.rs birthday obser:ved

_ __:__Community calendar--

By oouG LEVY
USA TODAY
1\vo lqe studies strongly SUJ·
Jell that smoking m&lt;Jre than doubles
the rial&lt; of one of tbe most common
cauiCI of vision loss amonr older
people.
.
"If you warit 10 11ve your sight.
don't smoke," ·uys Dr. Jolwlna
Seddon of Harvard Medical School,
who led one study in Wednesday's
Journal of the American Medic.al
Au«iation. .
Tho repcru show that•.macular
de,_nlion. which alf~ lbcM;'t
one in 14 people 7S and older, 11

ily counselor. Your rel8tionsbip is ll
stake. JerePiy needs counselina. 100.
He should be told to ICCepl counseting or he will be shipped back to his
mother.
Let him know that couDSCiing is
not punis~ment but rather an opportunity to upress his feelings, which
will make him feel better about him·
self and the people around him. Ao
outside party could tum this mess
into a, real positive. I'm glad you
wrote. Good luck.
·

Kelsey Mark Sauters recently
celebrated his sixth birthday at his .
home. A picnic-style cook out was
12,995
13,127
+1.0
served along wjth cake and ice
cream.
Coast, Chi·
Attending were his parents,
nese-Americ.an kids are hitting the
Jap&amp;MM
45,717
44,723 .... ,..,. ... , ·2.2
Charles and DifRna Sauters; sister,
universities and their families are
·· ~~· ·· .... ··· .... ·
Britnee; grandparents, Leroy and
28,178
25,897
-8.1
encouraging them to take it,'' she
Joyce Sauters; great-aunt, Theresa
said.
, Shaffer; cousin, Tracy ShafTer all of
Overall, 1.138 million students
Pomeroy.
were registered in foreign language
Sending gifts were: gran~parentS,
courses in the fall of 199S - down
533,944
606,286
Del ben and Lore'tha Vandevander of
ne~rly 4 percent from the 1.184 mil?!iifPN''!!C'I\:Y''11;~~~;'~"" l!Fc·;;:"ii~i&amp;''f'P''i':·F~ii;ifli.:'!~
Whitmer, W.Va.; June, Jackie, Alilion in 1990.
·······:'·"•....., ..~......".......................................................................................... ..........,........ ...... .
son and Ashlee Vandevander of
The number of students in for- · . Ti:l~L
1,184,100
1,138,772 .... ..... ::.U
Volga, W.Va.; Randy, . Delores,
e.ign language class also has not kept · "'lle 1995 iotsl comptisess.~~,.tions in Biblical /lebmv and 7,479 in Modem
Randy Jr., Johnathan Bender and
pace with college enrollment
- . Tlt.,qu/tlalllnl WIJlJtaslor 1990.,,.5,72&gt;4/lfld 7, 271.
Aaron Bradford of Buchannan,
increases. About eight of every I 00 '=;;;;:~,~o;;;;;~;;;;g;:A;;;t.;~----------:--Ap;;;;yii;;;;;~ W.Va.; Paul a~d Karen Milner of
college students took a foreign Jan- Sooreo: Modem
Minersville; Clark, Bonnie, Seth and
guage in 1995, down from 14 in
Enrollment fell 45 percent in enrollment in the late 1980s in the Andrew Baker ~ Middleport.
1968.
Russian as the Cold War .has eased, years bCfore the fall of the ~rlin
"Students are becoming more franklin said. It fell 28 percent in Wall in 1989, said Frank Trommler,
cosmopolitan in their choice of Jan- both Germ~n and· french.
chainnan of the German Department
In an elTon to provide our readerguages," said Phyllis franklin, exec- .- •·
at the University of Pennsylvania;
ship
with current news, the Gallipo'
utive director of the association, a
·Elaine Marks, professor of OerEnrollment will rise again,
lis
Daily
Tribune and The Daily Sengroupof31,000college scholars and man and. women's studies at the although maybe, not dramatically,
tinel
will
not accept weddings after .
teae~ers that fosters foreign lan- University of Wisconsin-Madison, because Germany is a dominant
60
days
from
1he date or'the event.
guage study.
'
worries that college administrators player in the world economy and
All club meetings and other news
"Now, you're seeing a greater . looking for ways 10 cut coats will see communications, he said.
articles in the society section must
distribution in the number of differ- the declines in french enrollment
ent languages that students are aad trim funding or abolish French
choosing to study. The European departments.
languages have seen dfops before
and they recover."
German ex~rienced a surge in

~~u:l~e~e~~~?~.::;.~!o: ~,t"~n!e,;o~~st

Tile Ciiblmllllity Calel\dar Ia
pulllilbed as a free Mrvke to _..
profit llWPII....w.inc to aiUIOunce
-waa ud special eveall. Tloe
~r Ia not delllned to pro.
mote sales or fiiDd raloen of any
type. lte1111 are priated • space
peraniuaacl cannot be auannteed
to nn a speeifk number of day&amp;

Orioles,
Cards post
series wins

J '

Chinese, Arabic enrollment up; French,
German, Russian enrollment down

association's
survey.
French
(205,3SI) and German (96,263) kept
their secood- and third-place rankings. Japanese (44,723) eclipsed
Italian (43,760) for fourth place.
Russian, in lith place, had 24,729
students.
Overall enrollment in foreign Jan.
guages dropped n...-Jy 4 percent
during the perioo.
•
·
DOuglas Black, 24, a GeO!Jelown
University student from Bingham·
ton, N.Y., says heightened interest in
the Middle East is luring more stu·
dents to Arabic.
"We do two hours of Arabic
every morning Monday through friday," says Black, who is studying
fot a master's degree in Arabic stud·
. ies and wants to be a policy•maker.
"You have 10 u.nderstand the Jan·
guage because the thought process is
embedded in the language. Translation can only do so much." ,
Kaowing Arabic also can be an
important tool for finding a job, saysPierfrancesco Consalvo, 31. a
Georgetown student from Italy who
also is getting a master's ~gree in

and keeps asking his elM 10 buy him
lhinas we can't alford. He is rude
and disrespectful and talks back to
me and his falber. Meanwhile, my
kids are pickina up some of Jere·
my's bad habils and using streetlan·
guage, which I never heard from
them before.
.
Jake seems to think a lot of our
problems are MY fault. I'v~ asked
him to send Jeremy back to hts
mother, but he refuses. This doesn't
fee) like my house anymore. I don't
know how 10 handle this. Should I
just shut up an'd take it or what? .•
Losing It in Wisconsin
Dear Wisconsin: You need the
support of an unbiased outsider.
Insist that Jake go with you to a farn-

Ohio Lottery

.

~

I, •

.......

_. -. ... ·- - ··L - """'

•

··.'

I

Street Commissioner Glenn Rizer
-- Approved the purchase of three
informed council. that all village new Christmas decorations for
equipment has heeJl winterized and entrances into the village;
the brakes repaired on the dump
.. Noted the park'board's Christ- ·
truck. He added the sidewalk project mas in the Park has been set for Dec. ·
will be completed soon.
19;·
•
In other business, council:
. .. Adjourned until Nov. 4 at7 p.m. ·
.. Approved the minutes of its last
Present were Mayor Jeff Thornmeeting and paid bills;
ton; Clerk Karen Lyons; council •
.. Adopted a resolution authoriz- members Robert Beegle, Duke ;
ing transfers to pay for a new copie~&lt;; Bemz, Dale Hart, Scott Hill iln'd Lar.. Endorsed the county tuberculo- ry Wolfe; Fire Chief John •ftolman · :
sis renewal levy;
Deputy Marshal Brent .Rose; and :
•• Set trick or treat for Oct. 31 board of public affairs members •
from ft. 7 p.m. and instructed partici- • Bobby Roy and l-ee Layne.
•
paling residents to tum on their front .
Absent was councilman Henry :
porch lights;,
'
Lyons .
-'

•

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