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Vol. 47, NO. 117

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohlo, _Thursday,

caprrl!lht1111!6

99

Following final debate

Dole, Clinton eye California votes ·

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By TOM RAUM
Assoclat.d Pre .. Writer
SAN DIEGO -President Clinton and Bob 'Dole both searched for
votes in Southern California after a
final debate that set the tone for an
aggressive campaign home stretch.
Dole' hoped to gain ground in the key
state, Clinton to keep it.
Dole's combative perfonnance in
.the debate included an assertion that
'"we have the worst economy in a
century,"· a statement immediately
challenged by Clinton as grossly
exaggerated.
After the 90-minute televised face
off. _the rivals were spending today
campaigning in California, a 54-

electoral-vote prize that has seemed
· beyond reach for Dole, but which
strategists now say he will likely contest strongly.
.
" We think the issues are out'll!l-e
for us to win: We think the ground
- game is out here for us to win," said
Dole campaign manager Scott Reed.
Asked today If the debate was
Dole's last chance. running mate Jack
Kemp said today that "there are three
weeks to go and there's plenty of time
for Bob Dole."
"It is highly, doable; it is an
extremely volatile situation/' Kemp
told ABC from Chattanooga, Tenn ..
where he watched the dtbate.
, Dole was campaigning today in

two areas that often vote«epublican
- Riverside, about 50 miles cast of
Los Angeles; and Glendale , in the
San Fernando Valley north of Los
Angeles. _
_.
He was e~pected to call for
stronger action against illegal immi·
gration an~ stress support for a Cal·
ifornia re(erendum to end state affirmative action programs.
Clinton was to attend rallies in
Santa Ana and Tustin, both in the
GOP stronghold of Orange County,
liefore attending an evening fundraiser in the more Democratic west
Los Angeles.
"
Wednesday. night's showdown
was the final of three scheduled

debates, two presidential and one vice
presidential. Still. Dole raised the
prospect of a third debate to focus on
economics. White House aides said it ·
was not in the cards.
"When the two campaigns met to
agree to debate~ that w6' ve now had,
they· agreed .. : these would be the
debates they would participate in and
they wouldn 't pull any last--minute
stunts to- try to call for additional '
debates." White House press secretary Mike McCuiT)' told NBC today.
Clinton 's advisers felt confident
enough that they planned to cam:
paign the remaining 19 days in many
slates that traditionally vote Republican.

l,-lousing
.starts drop .
6 percent

' WASHINGTON (AP)- Housing
6 percent in September to
the lowest level of 1996 and industrial production bar~l y rose last
month, fresh evidence the economy
POINT PLEASANT- Eight mil·
"$8 million·is a healthy surn." said is easing from its sizzling earlier
lion dollars has been awarded by the Wise,. 'Tm now urging the highway pace.
: Pe,~artmenrofTriinsportation to-help · department :n ihe strongest way to
The Northeast posted the , only-, - support replacement of the Shadle move -forward and declare the Shadle increase in ho~sing starts, reaching
Bridge, it was .announced by u.S. Bridge replacement a top priority." tlie highest level in nearly two years.
Senator Robert C. Byrd and U.S. The representative stated this money
The Commerce Department said
Representative Bob Wise, both D· was never ih the bridge calculations today construction of new homes and
W.Va.
~
_ and should move it ahead rapidly.
apartments totaled 1.44 million at a
Wise said the funds are from the
Wise praised the Mason County seasonally adjusted annual rate, down
Federal Discretionary Bridge Fund and area people who hav&lt;&gt; wOrked on from 1.53 million in August, highest
and is eannarlced strictly for the Sha- the bridge project and urged tl,tem to since March 1994.
die Bridge.
_say active. "This is a team effort," he • The figures spurred gains in the
"Federal Highway Administrator said.- Wise also said it should put bond market, where yields on 30-year
Thomas, Syracuse. Absent was Senior candl· • ,
SOUTHERN HOMECOMING ·The following
Rodney Slater called to infonn me . countians' fears to rest over the Sha· Treasury bonds fell to 6.83 percent in
girls have been choliSII for 1996 Southern High
date Melissa Canan, daughter of Mike •nd VJck.
that tlie Highway Administration has die Bridge versus the new bridge at _- early trading today from 6.85 percent
ie Canan, Pomeroy. Underclasa attendlnta are,
School Homecoming Court. Seated are Senior
.
late Wednesday. The yteld moves tn
awarded $8 million to the West Vir- Buffalo.
candldllllte for 1996 SHS Homecoming Queen,
back from left: Freshman attendant Erin Bolin,
ginia Division of Hi_ghways to sup·
"The Shadle Bridge is a key part the opposite direction o_fbond ~ices .
Sophomore attendant Jody Hupp, and Junior
from left: · Keri Caldwell, daughter of Howard
port replacement of the badly djlap· of the transportation infrastructure in' - · 1bc September housmg total~· the
Caldwell, ~cine, and Christy Lavender, Syra·
attendant Eva Glouacka. The 1996 SHS Homeidated Shadle Bridge," Byrd said.
Mason County.. With the upgrading lowest stnce a 1.43 mtlhon rate last
coming Queen will be salactad during halftime
cUM; Amy Northup, daughter of VIckie and
"Earlier lhis year, Representative and expansion of U.S. 35 moving for· December. and the dechne was the
festivities
at the Southern-Miller game Friday
John Northup, Racln•; Vanesn Shuler, daugh·
Wise and I contacted Transportation ward, the bridge needs to continue to steepest smce a 9 percent plunge m
evening
at
Adams Memorial Field. G1ma time ·
tar of Wanda and Steve Shuler, Letart; and
Secretary Federico Pena urging him serve an important link between that January 1995.
7:30
p.m.
&lt;Tom Hunter/Sentlrial photo)
Is
Amber Thomas, daughter of ~ria and James
to help fund a new bridge. 1 also fol -- road State Route 62 and State Route
Analysts had expected a I.5 millowed up in a meeting with, Admin- 2," Wise said. "With the granting of lion rate in Septembe-r. For monihs,
. istrator Slater, again requesting dis- this federal money, it is imperative they have been looking for sta~ to
cretionary funding to replace the 65- that the West Virginia Department of level off as h1gh mortgage rates
year-old bridge. Construction of a · Transportation move forward with . dampen consumer demand for new
new span to"serve the Mason Coun- contract bidding and bridge con- homes.
ty area is a top priority to me," Byrd• struction."
The Federal Reserve said output at
said.
"The Shadle Bridge and Route 35 the nation's factories, mines and utiiWise agreed. "I've' qeen working - are a package. They need to lak~ ities iriched up just 0.2_ t;ercent l~st
WASHINOTON (AP) - lri one
During the' first nine months of the matched this year. ·
.
as aggressively as possible. This place at the s~me time ," he added.
·mo~th after rtstng a rdtsed 0.4 per- · -of Ohio's most competitive coqgres- - y'ear, ihe campaign returned to the
Their available cash on Oct. I was
bridge was 'promised to the people
According to West Virginia Divi· cent 10 August. The August growth siot1al races, more campaign money candidate $451,023 - all the mon- fairly -close. with Cremeans reponing
and is vitall~ necessary," he added. sion of Highways statistics, on aver- wa5 · s~aller than the 0.5 percent ini- · has been used to repay Rep. Frank cy Cremeans put into the campaign a balance of $327,821 and Strickland'
"This should move the Shadle Bridge age, the Shadle Bridge daily carries llal estimate.
·
c~emeans' largest political, creditor in 1996 and the rest of the loans he reporting $338,275 on hand.
•
project forward significantly."
18,000 vehicles on Rt. 2 over the
-1bc report conlained no evidence than for any -other purpose.
extended in 1994.
On the income side:
Wise said the fiscal year began for Kanawha River. It is now incapable ·of inflationary pressures. It said the
That creditor: Cremeans himself.
Democrats arc well aware thatlhc
-Cremeans gm43 percent of his
the federal discretionary bridge fund of handling loads of more than ;nation's industries we~e operating al
New financial .repons showed repayment means those d010p pockets donations from political aclion comjust Oct. I. He added it was a tough 80,000 pounds and requires inspec· 183 •3 percent _of capactty, down from Wednesday that the Republican sue- are refilled and again available for mittces, compared with 38 percent for :
sale to get the $8 million just three · tion every six months in lieu of the · 83 .4 percent tn both July and August. cessfully used .~is -awn _money as a any lasi-days campaign purchases. Strickland.
·
weeks into the new year.
normaliwo-year cycle.
Economists contend that capacity temporary ·bridge. Special interests The Cremeans campaign says only
-Cremeans got 48 percent of his
utilization of 85 percent or-more and well-heeled backers were geiler- that it will spend whal is necessary to donations_ from individual donors,
-threatens production 'bottlenecks that ous enough to reimburse Cremeans - win lhc rematch with fanner Demo- compared with 46 percent for Strick- •
could lead to ~hortages and higher for all of the personal loans he cratic Rep. Ted Sirickland.
·land. ·
'
prices.
extended to the campaign, and still
If not for the reimbursements to
- Cremeans got 8 percent of his :
_ Analysts expect overall econ9m· have enough left over to run:the cam' " Cremeans, t!Jc·6ih•D.stnct candidates&gt;• eamllaign monc}"'from •political -par.i·• • ',.,,
tc gr~wtntorematn. moderate.for the .. paign. ,
would have been~ fairly ., evenly ., ty. Cllmlllitu:es, compared with ' 7,3 •.. '~-"
remwnder'of the year after barrelling
percent for Stritlkland.
-ahead at a 4.7 percent annual rate dur·
ing the ~pril-June quarter.
' If need be, the Federal Reserve is
prepared to raise shon-term. interest
rates to fon:e a slowd.own and prevent
any_escalation in inflation.
• lit a separate repOrt suggesting
slower growth, the Labor Department
said today first-time claims for jol)le!is benefits jumped by 18.000 last
week to 340,000. It was tlie highest
since a 341,000 total durjng the
week ended Sept. 28.
,
Analysts said part of the increasewas due to the spillover effect of a
str.ike against the General Motors
Corp. by Canadian autoworkers.
The indll$trial production report
showed output lS percent higher
'
_than a year qo,
EASTERN HOMECOMING • TheM thrte &amp;stern High School
da11111ge t~fence owned by J.tfrey and SenManufacturing production rose : - TRUCK ACCIDENT • A JacktiCin man
recelvtd
minor
Injuries
In
thla
tractor·treller
dra
Folmer f'gmeroy, and caualng light damMnlors hive been choliSII •s candldltel for 1186 Eaatem High
0.2 percent after edging up 0,1 per·
•ccldent
on
Ohio
SfDI
Rout.
143
llftr
Wolfe
School Homecoming Queen. C111dldlltS1 are, from left: Tr•cy
ega to pro rft~wned by Kevin and Judy
cent a month earlier.
Pen R01d Wtd1111dey morning. According to
Wblte, daughter of Charles and Rebecca White, long Bottom;
K1111pp of Pomaroy:-boga was transported to
OulpUt of durable goods slowed to .t!le Gsllla-lhlgs P01t of the Ohio Sq_te High·
Plnly A.llcir, dliughter of Cindy Aelker, Pomeroy, 1nd Pat Aalk·
Vaterana M•morlal Hos lUll by the Meigs
a barely perceptible 0. I percent gain ·way PMrol, Cerl R.logln, Jr., 31, .lllcbon, waa
County Emet g.IIC Med I s.rv~cea, where he
er, 1\lpper~ Pllllll; .nd Mindy Slmpeon, daughter of Rick •nd 'from
0,.5 pen:ent In llup. The pro- nwllng northbouncton State Rout.143 when
lfi!MIIIIrnplon, Coolvll... 'tN 1111 !HS Homecoming Queen
trMted and
; The ICCldtnt ...mains
duction of motor vehicles fell !lack he W81lt oft the right lkle of the I'OIId, striking
under lnvSitlg~~tlon. (Tom Hunter/Sentinel phowUI be 111acted during hllftlme ftltlvlt* at the E•atern-Trimabout 2 percent for a second straight a-n 1nd r-Olling his 11110 --.ck Truck oirto It's
to)
ble game Friday •venlng at Shlde River Stlldlum. Game time Is
month.
,
·
, ildli. The ttuck 1011 I fulllotd of log•, CIUilng
7:30 p.m. (Tom Hunter/Sentinel photo)
s~ans fell

Personal wealth wild card in ·
Cremeans-Strickland rematch _

29 oz.

$ 89.

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October 17, 1996

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Commentary

OHIO

Thursdlly, October 17, 11M
•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Thursday, October 17, 1996

,... 2

Wc~ther

Frld.y, Oct.,18
AccuWealher• forecast for daytime Cllnditions and

Tbe Daily Sentinel· Good news, bad news and inixed· news
By Ben W.a.rtbera
•• The Crude Birth Rale (CBR) social indicator we have ·• is back be out neKt year. E~pect important
Everyone: Start retiguring ev~ry­ dropped from 15.2 to 14.8 births per down in a ditch, moving toward the changes.
Trends work like billiard bills carthing,
lhe billiard balls are caroming 1,000 population, a 3 '"'percent potentially catastrophic European·
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
oming
into each other. If you'~ a
in
new
ways.
·
style
pattern
rather
than
an
earlier
decrease
from
1994,
down
from
16.7
1114-!182-2156 • Fu: 982-2157
American one. Recall: Birth rates busines,man, the on:so•ng B1rth
There's good news, b~ news and ·
mixed news from tbe Statistics Silo.
soared during the Baby Boo111 from Dearth means that. over the yell'S,
1946 to -1964. The rates plummeted you will likely have fewer addition·
The source is the just-published
"Births and Deaths: United States,
-during the Baby Bust, lasting until the al custl:&gt;mers th81! you thought you'd
1995," prepultd by the National in 1990. an II percent drop, and very late 1980s. There was a relatively have. (The Cust Bust?) Am,erica,
A Gann~ Co. Newspaper
close to the all-time low of 14.6 in small up-tick from 1987-1!!90, the however, will continue to grow modCenter for Health Statistics.
1976,
Baby Blip. Now the Blip has ended. erately beeause we take in moderate
The
coverage
of
lhe
report,
as
ROBEkr L. WINdrrrr
••
'fhe
General
Fertility
Rate
Wiy
up. Way down. Up-tick. Down- numbers of immigrants.
spun by lhe Department of Health
Publleher
(GFR)
is
65.6
births
per
1.000
tick. We are back in Birth Dearth terand Human Services in an election
If ybu 're a cop waiting for 111
women · aged 15 to 44, down from ritory again, below the "replacement increase of teen-aged super·pneda·
year,
concentrated
on
lhe
good
news.
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
There was indeed a (small) decline in 66.7 in 1994, a 2 percent drop, a rate" of 2.1 children per woman that tors, it may indeed come as lhe Blipo.n.r.~ MIIMger
Controller
.
the birth rate for unmarried women, decrease of 7 percent since 1990, and is requill:d to merely keep a popula· sters reach their teen-age years, but
lhe fir.;t such in 20 years (about2.per· very close to -the all-time low of 65 lion level over time, absent immi- should fade away as new sparser
cent, after accounting for method- in 1976. (The 1994-1995 decrease for gration.
.
cohorts come of age.
black women was a stunning 7 per·
ological change).
·
.· ··
Don't think these five-year drops
School officials should know that
· of 6 percent or 3 percent are small. the · current Blipster in nux into
The other' news (some or it bad, I cent, to an historic low. of 7L7.)
•• The 1995 Total Fertility Rate They are highly leveraged over the schools,' causing some crowdint. will
thi 0k, but you will have to decide for
yourself) is that all other measures of (TFR) is . down to 2.02 births per decades. Thus, the swing between a · not likely continue.
birth are also down :• and have been woman per lifetime, a I percent drop 2.2 loqg-term TFR (the current and
Environmentalists may applaud \
going down for five years straight. from 1994's figure of 2.04, and a overstated "middle series" Census wildly (ihe bad news is good news),
That is unmentioned in the HHS ·decrease of 3 percent from 2.08 in assumption) and a 1.9 TFR (the cur- thinking America will be less crowd·
press release, but prominent in the 1990.
rent Social Security,Admfnistration ed, with less strain on · natural
By TOM RAUM
NCHS report.
.
Moreover. early estimates for the "intermediate" assumption, which is resources. (I don't buy that reasoning
AaiOCiated.Preas Writer
first few mon~s of 1996 show a con- much more likely) would mean 21 -· on balance, a declining population
Thus:
.
SAN DIEGO- Bob Dole's end-game decision to go negative could make
·· The number of births in 1995 tinuing general decline.
million fewer Americans by 2030! growth rate would harm.us .. but that
the final presidential debate far more lively TV viewing than the season's
Therefore
what?
was 3.9 million, down from 3.95 mil·
The spread will be even broader if is a separate column.)
first two, mostly polite confronr,ations. But the high-risk strategy could also
lion in 1994, a I percent drop, and a
American fertility -· perhaps the fertility rates continue to tumble.
And if you 'rc in politics, duck.
single most important long-teim New Census Bureau projections will Declining birth rates guarantee that it
bac!cfire on Dole.
..
. .
. ·6 percent decrease from 1990.
Still, Dole probably has little to lose in such ail approach. . given the
. will be harder to fund the entitlement
fact that nothing he has done to date has been abl~ to shake the double digprograms like Social Security and
.
1
iti~ that President Clinton has' maintained since the spring.
Medicare in the future. That alleged .
After agoni~ing publicly, Hamlet-like, for days over whether to be more
"crisis" has been attributc4 to "lhe
aggressive on Clinton's alleged ethics lapses or not to be, Dole took the
aging of the Boomers."· Wrong. The
plunge on Thesday with a piercing assault of Clinton on issues or character
shortfall is principally' driven by the
and ethics.
.
fact that the Boomers didn't have
Furthermore; Dole even weni so far as to suggest that a good percentage
enough babies to support them in
or Americans believe tbe incumbent to be unethical -and plan to vote for
their old age.
him anyway.
The caroming trends can also be
"A president who has betrayed your trust has not won your vote. In my
viewed ideologically. In America,
view, it is that simple," Dole said.
and around the world. it is clear that
Dole recited a litany of alleged administration ethical lapses, from the
"the era of big government is over."
firing of White House travel offiee staffers to lhe collection of hundreds of
Why? Orie main reason is that big
FBI files on individuals by White House official~ to Whitewater dealings to
government can't he easily paid ro(
the use of a Marine helicopter by a Clinton aide for a golf outing. .
when few youn8 people have to pay
Clinton and his aides cried· foul, but Dole made it clear he would con·
for lots of old people. In ideo-speak,
tinue the assault i.n toniaht's concluding debate at the Shiley Theater and tl)e
a cut in the rate .of growth of govUniversity of San Diego.
,
·
ernment is called "conservative."
A lot of his aides, who had urged such an approach on him, were relieved
•'
Ironic: The idea of small families,
•,.
that he finally took the step, even if it was clearly a difficult choice for him.
working women, professional can:ers
It was difficult because Dole had made it clear that he did not want to
.•
-- the original cue ball in the Birth
en'd his 35-ycar career of public service with the "hatchet man" reputation
Dearth combination shot-- was seen
he has worked so liard to overcome.
as feminist and "liberal."
If nothing else, such a bold offensive may a! least serve to energize Dole's
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
conservative base- and make it easier for Republicans to mobilize party
at the American Enterprise lnstl.'
member.; to help hold o~to GOP eontrol of the House and lhe ~enaie.
lute, is the author of a new ·book,
· In fact, the Dole campaign had been under pressure from House and Sen"Values Matter Most," and is the
ate GOP candidates to go negative in hopes that it would tighten their ra"!'s.
hosf or the weekly public televisloll
· But tonight's format is not conducive to ~rmitting Dole to continue such
prognm, "Thlilk Tank."
' a barrage. Questions in lhe first two debates, the Oct. 6 presidential one in .
J
· Hartford, Conn .• and last Wednesday's vice presidential debate in St. Peters. burg, Fla., were asked by a.single moderator. ·
Tonight is a town-hall format in which questions are asked by the audi·
ence. It's a format that Clinton- who gives all indications of following the .
.
.
.
high road and not responding to Dole in kind- enjoys.
In lhe 1992 town-hall debate in Riehmond, Va., then-President Bush was By Morton Kondracki
this official said, "such as the 15 per· · general public.
.
start out as second-tier candidates but ·
poised to deliver a harsh denuncialion of Clinton when the questioner a(imon·
Republican activists are so furious cent ·across-the-board tax cut for
One major GOP organi1.er said, could end up taking the nomination.
ished Bush to "not go negative".in his response.
·
about Jack Kemp's "self-indulgent" everybody and Clinton 's twice veto· "Everybody I've talked to says this
Former Tennessee Gov. Lamar
It threw Bush off stride.
· de~ate performance that in the 2000 ing a balanced budget. Hc's justcon· was the worst performance they've Alc~andcr already ha&lt; held his first
Ye~ if Dole is absolutely determined to oontinue his assault on Clinton's presidential race the Republican Par·
ever seen at this level of politics. Dan 2000 organizing session, and is cam·
Quayle's performance against Lloyd paigning tirelessly for Dole and rais·
· character, there's not much to stop him- exceJit that it might come across ty may at last free itself from its abidas overly harsh to viewers.
ing curse: primogeniture.
- - - - - - - - - Bentsen in 1988 wasn't this bad.''
ing money for GOP H&lt;wse and Sen·
Surveys taken by lhe Commission on ~sidential Debates- the sponThe seemingly iron rule that the . sumed with cutting capital gains ta~"Tbc new parlor game among · ate candidates, ail is Quayle. '
· Republ'icans," this activist weni on,
Alexander spent a day recently in
sor - have suggested lhat viewers get ~ncomfortable when the lone of a GOP nominates its "next . man in es as the answer 10 every ill.".
· debate turns too harsh.
·
.
line" may have .been toppled by
• Other Dole aides complained that "is, 'Which question did Kemp ~low New Hampshire campaigning for
Larry Sabato, a University or Virginia political scientist, suggests Dole's Kemp's high-minded failure tp put Kemp totally undercut Dole's appar- the worst'/' On family leave. he for- Sen. Bob Smith and Rep. Charlie
new hard line will do little to alter the basic dynamics of the race.
the wood to the Clinton administra· • ent strategy of going on the offensive got that there was a perfectly defcn- Bass and is scheduled to visit Iowa on
"There's only three weeks to go. Most people have made up their mind. tion in his recent debate with Vice against Clinton on the "trast" issue siblc Republican substitute. He let Oct. 22. Quayle's office says that
The pool of persuadable voters has beer shrinking day by day," Sabato said. President AI Got:e.
by saying at the outset of the debate Gore get away with a 'health of the between Labor Day and the election,
Dole spokesman Nelson Warfield says the harsh attack is fair game in
With GOP activists calling that any "personal" attacks were mother' cop.out on partial birth ahor- · he will appear at75 cvcnl&lt; on behalf ,
, the effort to draw distinctions between the two candidates, no matter how Kemp's peltormance "a total disas· "beneath Bob Dole."
tions. ·He never mentioned the FBI of (\0 different candidates. ·
• late in lhe campaign.
ter," the GOP race in 2000 is likely
Some Dole campaign officials files issue, special pros~cutors, or
Others thought likely to enter the
"There's a real distinction between discussing an individual's public to be wide open and without an obvi· also saw in Kemp's performance "the pardons .... I'm not saying this is fatal 2000 fray include Steve Forbes, who
record and discussing an individual's private life," Warfield said. "Public ous front-runner. No fewer than 13 pernicious intluence of Jude Wan- to a Kemp candidacy, but l!c certain- previously was e~pected to defer to
record's fair game and the private life is not."
. · other names are being bandied ahout niski," the quirky New Jersey eco- ly brought into sharp relief all the Kemp as the choi&lt;'C or the "economic
After days of ambivalence, Dole has made his move.
as potential candidates.
nomic analyst who has been advising doubts that people in the party had determinist" wing of the party; Bill ·
So far, Clinton's resJK!nse has been low key.
Until the St. Petersburg debate, Kemp to "go soft" on Iraqi dictator about him that led him not to run in . B.ennctt as a· "cultural c.onservativc"
favorite; pro-choice moderates Chris"Senator Dole takes the position where if it's good I had,ilothiog to do . Kemp was widely considered the · Saddam Hussein and blame U.S, pol- the first place .in 1996. ·:
with it; if it's bad, I·must have stayed up' all night planning it. So, that's just ·. leading candidate rorthe presidential icy for Mexico's economic crisis.
"Primogcn
• ,-·tlic oft-repeat· tine Todd Whitman, Bill Weld, and , ...
politics," Clinton said.
.
nomination four years hence, histor·
During the debate, K~mp took up cd GOP tendency t t led the party to Colin Powell; and traditional conser·
He said he'll have a chance 10 respond in the debate.
ically a huge advantage in the GOP. those themes·, at one point saying that choose Ocrald F rd over Ro~ald vatives, such as Sens. Trent Lou
As to whether he can denect Dole's assault, &lt;;&gt;r be rattled by it, stay tuned. He has that status no longer.
in foreign affairs, the United States Reagiiiilifl9
eagan over George , . (Miss.) and Don Nickles (Okla.), and
The Weekly Standard's Bill Kris- should follow "the Golden Rule ... Bush in 1980, Bush over Dole in such conservative governors and rorEDITOR'S NOTE: Tom Raum hal covered praldeatlal el«tJonA for tol tagged Kemp as "self-indulgent," diplomacy first, and don't. bomb 1988, and Dole over other candidates mer governors as Texas's George w. ·
The Anodated P,... since 1976.
·
asserting that he was "so wrapped up before b!'lllkfast. "
this year .• J,'~uld have put Kemp at Bush, Carroll Campbell of South
•
in his own world and pushing his own
Even though Kemp demonstrated the head of thC hnc for 2000.
Carolina, and John Engler or Michi·
pet ideas " that he allowed basic inthedebatethatheispassionately
Now, ifhcruns.somcactivistsfig- gan.
Republicanthemesto be attacked and commi!led to the well-being of Amcr· urc that Quayle will start slightly . Thanks to Kemp's debate pcrfor·
go undefended."
·ica's inner-city poor, every poll tak· ahead of the field --perhaps w1th 25 mance, the 2000 race is likely ~ 1;19
,
By The Auoolated Preaa
,
Even one high-ranking Dole cam- _en after the debate indicated that Go!" percent ?f the vote •• but may not be a donnybrook. That's good f~ribii•-f,;
Today is Thursdlty, Oct. 17,the 291~t day of 1996. There are 75 days-left paign official pronounced Kem11's .was the hands-down wtnner •· m able to nsc above thJtt.
GOP. A real race heats a cor0!111!i~· ·. ,
,.in. the year.
.
performance "a disaste~:· and "the some poll~. by nearly two-to.Onc.
Other candidates likely to enter almost any tinlc. .
· ·-:'&gt;.! ,. ·''
Today's Highlight in History ~ ·
' .
·
.tollapse of Kemp 2000. "
Butthe damage Kemp did to ~irn· , ,, thdrayjnclude-radical, populisl Pal , ,
(Morton Kilndnl:ke lux..t.' ,
r
On Oct. 17, 1.'117, British.f()f£(!5 undar6cn. Jo~n· Burg0,.11C"sUI'RindeA:d&gt; -.,
:·He never bothered.t~aSI,er.th~ : · self IS _dearly .•~err gteatcr among ·Buchanan, with about 15 percent, and · tlve eclltor of ROll CaD, the neww- .
to American troops at Saratoga, N.Y., in a turning point of the Revolution- bas1c Pole campa1gn talkmg po1nts,
Republican actiVIsts than among the Kemp with 15 to 20 percent, plus a paper or Capitol Hill.)
·
· ary War.
bevy or other contenders who might
On this· date:
•
In 1919. the Radio Corporation of America was created.
In 1931 , mobster .AI Capone was convicted of income tax tvrision and
sentenced to II years in prison. (He Wll$ released in 1939.)
·
In 1933. Alben Einstein arrived in the United States as a refugee from
Nazi Germany.
'
.
Taxpaycr-rundcd vouchers arc payers. New York Mayor Rudolph schools. More than anything cl!lc, ..,
By DtWAVNE WICKHAM
In 1941, the U.S. destroyer Kearney Wll$ torpedoed by a German subbeing used in Milwaukee to send Giuliani, who called the Cardinal 's· public schools need parents who
Qannett ,.._ Service
marine off the coast or Iceland. Eleven people djed.
children
to private, non-sectarian offer an "c~ccllcnt proposal,'' is take on interest in lhcir child's cdu·
WASHINGTON
Sometimes
In 1945. Col. Juan Peron staged a coup, becoming absolu(\: ruler of
st!hools.
Two
months ago, public offi· wisely trying to raise tuition for the cation. And they need teachers .who
it's
a
good
idea
to
look
a
girt
horse
Argentina.
.
cials
in
Cleveland
took&lt;this b~ idea students (rom private dono,; to avoid have high e~pcclations or their StU·
'
in
the
mouth.
In 1957,French author Albert Camus was awarded the Nobel Prize in
:
a
.step
fur)her.
They're
spending $5 a court fight ·qvcr using public funds dents.
,
Lastmonth,lheheadofNe,..York
.
·
' liter;llurc.
City's Catholic church offered to help million of taxpayers' money -to send to pay for a religious school educaParents who regularly read to
...
reduce overcrowding in the . Bis 1,700 students to a total of 49 private tion.
their children, check· homework and
If O'Connor is teally-eoncemed attend PTA mcctinp will do f1r more
Apple's public schools by opening up sec4lar and religious schools.
Now Catholic officials in New about improving the lot of New to improve student perlonnanec in
lhe dOon of parochial clusrooms tp .
a thousand of lhe city's worst public York have hatched a scheme to get a York's 'public school students, he'd the classroom than any school vouchpiece of the action. But instead of follow the lead of Catholic school er plan. Likewise, teachers who
school students.
And what does John Cardinal labeling it what it is - a school officials in Chicago. 'They're offering expect a lot from !heir 81udents will
The Southem Jul)ior High nlng 7.0 season.
voucher program - church leaders to help improve lhe management and JCI the most out of them.
O'Connor get in return?
School football team and cheerleadcall
their plan a rescue mission.
The attention given to the!IC
curriculum of the· city's public
A foot in lhe door.
But just as lCIChers must ICl hip.
ers really ~illed the Racine and deservinc team members by the pubDon't believe it
schools - rather than putting forth er stand~rds ror studchts, &amp;Chool
Cardinal O'Connor's offer is lhe
Syracuse EMS, lhe Pomeroy Police lie officials ~ fans wu ·a p-eal latest in along line of privale-~ehool
they're not out to save under· proposals that undermine public administnlon have to raile tho' blr
• and the Metis County Sheriff's · inspiration to win futun: compcli· alternatives ~ the problems of pub- achieving public school students so school education in the Wiridy City. for classroom inatruc:ton. 10aehon
• Dej1artment ror escortinJ otlfbus and tions.
lic eliucalion. It's an idea rooted ' in much II$ I think.they want to fill empThat'• IJood idea.
should be tested periodicall)lto decOr• the.piiWie of fw from Pomeroy to
hl O'BrleD, COIICII, the curious nolion that lhe belt way ty seats in Catholic school clll$srooins
The answer to the probl~ms of mine !heir knowlcdp and llkill lev·
Southem High Schoollut Thunday
Bedt.:t' l)edd(a., ........ to fh lhe nation's poblic education and recruit more youngsters to public education is not a taxpayer- els.
·
niJhl after the lut 1ame of (lllr win·
bdDe
Catholicism
·
~~
the
expense
or
taxsyatem it to aband011 it
funded exodus of students to private
.'

.2r

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MICH.

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Cincinnati 53°

.Showers T-storms Rain

Anent/on appreciated

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·D eath Notices

SIN!ny Pt. Cloudy Cloud):

, Today's weather forecast

James Carnahan

By The Aaaoclated Prell .
Southeastern Ohio
Today ... Partly cloudy. High in the
upper 70s. South wind 5 to 10 mph. ·
Tonight ... Mostly cloudy with a
I ·chance of showers and thunderstorms. Low in the mid 50s. Souih.
: -wind5to.l0mph.Chanceofrain40
· 'percent.
Friday ... Showers and thunder• storms. Cooler and breezy. Temperatures slowly falling into the lower
50s. Chance of rain 90 percent.

,,

TEACHER OF THE YEAR- Karen Walker, left, a teacher at Sal·
lsbury Elementary School, wa• selected as teacher of the year
and presented framed c:ertHicatas at the Meigs SWCD banquet
Tuesday by Janla Carnahan, education coordinator. Walker was.
recognized for her role In conservation and preservation proje~,
and Earth Day activities carried out with her students.

--Local

Extended forecast.
James Carnahan. Racine, died Thursday, Oct. 17, 1996, at his residence .
Saturday... Rain showers likely
Services
will be held Saturday, II a.m., at the Ewing Funeral Home, Mulnorth ... Possibly mixed with snow. A
berry
Avenue,
Pomeroy. Buri.al·will follow in Letart Falls Cemetery.
chanc~ of rain central. Dry sbuth.
Calling
hours
will be observed Friday, from 7-9 p.m., at the funeral home.
· Lows from. around 30 south to the
•
upper 3os ·northeast. Highs from the ·
mid40snortheasttoaround50south.
Sunqay ... Dry. Lowsinthe30sand
highs in the 50s.
Thelma Elizabeth Casto Garrett, '77, Pomeroy died Wednesday, Oct. 16,
Monday... Dry. Lo.ws in the mid
i
996,
at herresidence.
· ·
,
30s to lower 40s and highs in the mid
Born
Aug.
9,
1919
in
South
Charleston.W.Va.,
she
was
the daughter of
50s to lower 60s.
the late Benjamin Gravely and Elizabeth Downie. She was a homemaker.
She is survived by a son, John A. Casto of Pomeroy; a daughter, Mary
Ann Myers of Langsville; and four grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by a husband, Veri ."Jake" Casto: two sisters:
Louise Eden and Virginia Brabbin: and two brothers : Alex and ·Charles
Gravely.
.
. ·
No services or calling 'hours will be held. Burial will be iq Grandview .
·'·'
'
Memorial Cemetery, Dunbar, W.Va.
The family requests that memorial donations be made to the Meigs Senior
By The Associated Presa
c'anc 'Lili moved north-northeast. At
There will be a sharp change in 5 a.m., Lili wa~ ahout ?90 miles Citizens Center, Pomeroy.
Ohio 's weather lonight and Friday, . south-southwest of Havana.
forecasters said.
A Midwestern cold front will
A rapidly moving cold front will extend from Wiseonsin to eastern
bring rain tonight and a plunge in Texas. Rain showers were predicted
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Beal, Holi:er Medical Center:
temperatures on Friday, the National . across Minnesota and Wisconsin to
· gency Medical Services recorded
7:14 p.m ., Stonewood Apart·
Weather Service said.
Michigan ..
The overnight low on Friday_ · Some severe thunderstorms pack- eight calls for assistance Wednesday. ments, Carol Wines, VMH;
. 9:37 p.m., Main Street, Samuel
morning could also be the high for ing high winds and hail could de vel- Units responding included:
POMEROY
·
Williams,
Pleasant Valley HospitaL
the day as cold northerly air sweeps op during the middle of the afternoon
into the region behind the front. Some across Illinois, Missouri, Arkansas,
9:23 a.m .. volunteer' fire depart· RUTtAND
8:05a.m ., Hysell Run Road, Thelthunderstorm activity is possible.
Louisiana, eastern Oklahoma and ment and squad to state Route 143
. and Wolf Pen Road, motor-vehic)e rna Garrett, dead on arrival; '
On Friday; Ohio could sec more Texas, and northern Mississippi.
rain, possibly mixed with snow in the
Across the northern Plains, up to · accident, Carl Logan, Veterans . . 12:14 p.m., South Third Avenue.
'
Beulah Strauss, HMC.
north. It will remain dry . in the 3 in~hes of .snow was possible this Memorial Hospital;
11 ;23 a.m., Baker Road, Barbara TUPPERS PLAINS
cxircmc south. The mercury probably evening in Minnesota and Wisconsin.
4:16 p.m., Kaylor Road, Alice
won't climb out of the 40s. the NWS _ . High pressure will be found across Prat I, VMH ;
3:41p.m.. Landaker Road, Janice Board,- St. Joseph's Hospital.
said. .
the mid-Atlantic region, and calm and
Cool, but dry, conditions arc dry weather will be found from the
c~pected into early next week.
Northeast into northern Georgia.
The record-high temperature for
Across the West, high pressure
this date at &lt;he Columbus weather will dominate, and partly cloudy
Faith Hayman and other local talent,
.
station was 83 degrees in 1968 while skies will be seen across thc ,Rockies. Boil order lifted
on
Friday. Remnant, and on Saturday.
Leading
Creek
Conservancy
The
the record low was 26 in 1977. Sun- Rain was possible in 'the Northwest.
Russell
Spencer and the ()ospcl
District
has lifted the boil advisory
set tonight will be at6:49 p.m. and · Th~ nation 's hig~ temperature
Tones.
· ·
for Dye Road.
sunrise, Friday at 7:46 a,m.
W~dncsday was 96 10 the An~ona
Across the nation
towns of Yuma, Goodyear and lmpeFarm Bureau annual set
. Rain and snow fell across South rial. The low was- II in Sun Valley, CCL to' meet
The Meigs County Farm Bureau
The
Middleport
Child
ConservaDakota and light snow fell in Idaho.
annual meeting will be held Tuesday,
Wyoming this morning. Cloudy con·
Highs today were expected to tion League will have its ,annual Hal·
ditions were reported over much or reach the 80s in the Southwest and lo'ween party for members and their 7:10p.m. at the Meigs Senior Citithe Midwest and misty weather pre- Southeast. the 70s in the Northeast children, 6 p.m. Thursday at the Rock zens Center. Entertainment and d.oor .
prizes.
vailcd in the East.
and the 60s in the Midwest and Springs United Methodist Church.
Showers were c•pected to contin- Northwest.
Annual meeting coming
Leaf pickup scheduled
uc across southern Flqrida as Hurri ·
The anoual meeting of the Meigs
Middleport Village will begin leaf
County
Council on Aging, Inc . will
pickup on Monday. Village crews
he
held
Tuesday, II a.m. at the
will stlirt in the north end of town.
Residents are asked not to put small Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center.
Public invited. Those with pald memThe Meigs High School Marching awards, Meigs· won best overall limbs, brush, or nowers with the berships l"ay . nominate and/or
Band won grand champion band in guard and field COII)mander Erin leafs.
approve membership to the Meigs
competition Saturday at Portsmouth Krawsczyn was chosen best field
.County
Council on Aging's Board of
· Library program set
·
in the Blue and White Marching commander or the day.
A kid's craft program will be held Trustees.·
Saturday evening the Marauders
.Band Competition . .
at the Meigs County Public Library
The·award was one of 10 won by marched again at Portsmouth West on Thesday at 6:30p.m. A fall theme
the band in the contest. The group and pl.aced second in Class A with the will be used in the craft program. Par·
placed first in Class Acorn petition in percussion taking second place hOll· ents arc asked to register their chil·
nag corps. field commander, percus- ors, and the nag corps bringing home dren for the program so that adequate
sion and band. In addition to the class a third place trophy:' The band is supplies can be secured.
under the direction of Toney Dingess
assisted by Dave Deem and Susan
Clark. Meigs will compete this week· . Homecoming announced
D~y
Homecoming will be observed at
·.end at Belpre and can be seen at the
(USPS 113-MO)
the
Carpenter Baptist Church on
state finals competition on Oct. 26 at
•
State Route 1343. There will,he a din·
Publldted every afternoon. Monday th:roLit;h
7:30 p.m. in Columbus.
frid4y. Ill Court St .. Pomer;oy. Ohio, by the
ncr at noon and an afternoon program
· Ohio Val~ Publiflhillj. CoJ111Dt1y/OnnRett Co., ·
_at
1_:30 p.m . with the True ,Gospel
P&lt;lmeroy: Ohio 4S769, Ph. 992·21~6. Second
Sounds
fiom Wheelersburg.
daRR ~ta,c paid a1 Pomeroy. Ohio.

Th eJma
. E•
Garrett

Sharp change expected
in weather ..over weekend
'

'

briefs-~

Pomeroy accident investigated
No injuries were reponed in a two-car accident Wednesday artcrnoon on West Main Street in Pomeroy. according to Pomtroy village
police chief Gerald Rought.
·.
According to reports, t~c acc.idcn(occurrcd ncar Jim's Produce al
4:46p.m. Melanic Qualls, 22, Racine was attempting to pull onto West
Main Street when her 1996 Oldsmobile was struck hy a .1983 Olds
Cutlass, driven by James S. Scrrcl, 39, Racine .
··
·
Damage 1o Qualls vehicle was heavy and disabling to thc·fronl end
and drivcr:s 'side . The car was towed from \he scene, accordi ng 10
rcp;orts .
~~
Qualls was cited for failure .to yield .
'·

Boil advisory issued

The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District has i~sucd a hoi I advi·
sory for the following area in Sutton Townshtp: Irom Greenwood·
Cemetary Road (hut not including! south to State Rou1e 124, then cast
on State Route 124 to, but not including, Apple Grove-Dorcas Road .
according to Donald Poole , TP-C Water District general manager.
This boil advisory is in effect until further notice: Sample of the
water will he taken after the lirtc. in --lhc area is repaired. ,When the
results indicate water in that area is safe to drink, the advisory wi!l
he lifted ,- Poole said:
·
This boil advisory includes the enlirc Tackcrvillc area.

Meigs EMS logs -a calls

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Meigs announce_ments

Morton Kondraclce

Letters to Editor·

leo

Flurries

Via Associai«J Pr6SS GraphiCSNftr

·Debate 'disaster' may haunt Kemp in 2000

Abandoning public schools not the ~nswer -· ..

FOREST STEWARDSHIP AWARD- Doyle Melick, left, wee presented the Foreet Stewardahlp AWIIrd fpr hie lrH con~~~n~atlon
and growth program on hie 53-acre Salem Townehlp farm at Tue•
dlly'a Nelga Soli and Water Con11r¥atlon Dletrict annuaii!Bnquet. .
David Schatz, Ohio Department of Natural Resources service
forester, pre.anted _the award to Mallek.

W. VA.

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• fColumbus l56o

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··n hl•story

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Ethics politics

Today
11

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' IND. '

Ben Wattenberg

.',

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Wednesday's GPLA results
Auction results fro;, Wednesday's
Gallipolis Producers Livestock Association:
·Total head: 269.
H{&gt;GS - 16. Price;. Stcadyto$1
higher higher than t~e Oct. 9 auction.
Butcher. hogs, all weights; boars,
$.52; sows, $41-49; Feeder pigs, $5
and higher; Price per ,hundred weight,
$31-$44.50.
CATTLE~ 250; Steers, N/A .
COWS - Demand and price
trend. steady: $1 • $2 lower: utility,
$22-$26; commercial, $1 0-18; standard, $29-38; bulls, butchers, $30·

$37.
FEEDER CATTLE - 172;
Demand and price trend, steady:
Ycarling,.stccrs, $44-49; heifers. $3K45; calves, sleers. $45-5~: heifers.
'$45-5; huck io the farm hahics, $60:.
Special feeder cattle and brood
cow sale Oct., 19. at I. p.m.

BRUCE WILUB IN

LAST MAN STANDING
ONE EVENING SHOW
STARTING FRIDAY
ROBIN WILLIAMS IN

MittS band wins honors

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The

Stocks

·MrrnbC!r: The AsROCi!utd PtH,,, and the Ohio

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Am Ele Power .........................41

Akzo ......................·............61 112

POSTMASTER: Send addrcu eorrectioa~ to
.The Dt~ily Sentinel. Ill Court St.. Pomtrny.

Ashland Oil .......................42 1/4

Ohio4.5169.

B..,k One ......................:...41 718
Bob Evena ..............~ ...............13
Borg-Werner .....................33 511
Champion ......................... 18 1/4
Charming 'S hope ..............5•31111
C~ldlng ...................... 24 112
F
I Mogul ................... 22 318
.oannett .............................73 112
Qoodyur ..........u•••··•·••••'"'''"'''41

=· :. : : :

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C.rrll'r or Mol« Ro.tt

g:
:::::::::::::::::::::::~ ~
One Year .......... ..................................... f104.00
SINGLE COPY PRICE
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Su~Fribel'li not de~irinJIO -PllY lhe carrier may
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N~· ~ubtcriptjon by mall permltled in
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•here home

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Publloher . . _ lllo ~11&gt;110 IIIJ"" -

...........,. .c-lil'

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door·

t•alhe ,.....,,...... poftlocl. '!!bocrlplloo file
cllaftal•• the
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MAILifi,IICIIrrJONI
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l2 "''i"Pti~j;t"()';;Niiif'M;Ip'c;;;;;;jf$10B6
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JEFF

We want to
change the· way
you look at
monuments.

Sentinel
.

NCWJ;pciptf A~illtion .

Vote

AT&amp;T .................................38 112

·K-mert ............................... 10 112

Landa End ...:••.••••••.•.••.•....•22 112
Ll.mlted .............................. 19 718
Ohio Velley Bank ....................36
OM VIII ley......................... 32 318
P~l ............................. 25 314
Prwn Fln1:......... "...............12 711
RoclcWIIII ...........-...............55 314
RDIIJ.MII •••••••: •••••~ ••••••••••••186111
~..............................1711
ltlr lank ..................................
Wenctv'l ............................ 22 511

Wortl'tlntton......................20 314
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'

Stock raporta 1re the 10:30
~m. ClllotH provldld by Adw
Of Galllpolla.
.
• .

Revival scheduled
Revival service• will be held at the
Carpenter Baptist Church Oct. 24-26,
:J p.m .. with John El~wck, speaker.
Music on Thursday· will be Dan and

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
WednesdaJ, Oct. 16
Admissions: None
Disclta~aes ;
Debby
Bush,
Pomeroy; Albert Smith, Pomeroy.
H~er Medical Center
• Discharges
Wednesday, Oct. 16
Angela McMillin, Jerry Owens,
Christina Sexton, Joshua Norvell,
Mrs. Charles Barrett and daughter;
Mrs. Keishi Semba and tmd daughter;
Mrs. Daniel Riffie and son: Jesse
Cutter, Doris Proffit~ Terry Smith,
and Ashley Perry.
· Blrtbl
WediteldaJ, Oct. 111
.•
Mr. and Mrs. William Armstrbng,

son, Gallipolis.

. ·•"-.... l. ~~,.....~

Let us create a
memorial just
for you.

.

THORNTON
For
Commissioner

WE MUST PLAN fOI

THE IUTURII .
There are several programs that I'm
interested in. The Senior Citizens are near to
my heart. Peopl~ are living longer so w~
must continue to support a big outreach
program. I will continue to . support the
Senior Citizens Building's M~als on Wheels,
and all their programs. I will look for more·
money for tiome health care services and
incorporate youth programs to help the
elderly and citizens living alone. We must all
work together to help each other.....
(To be continued)
Pd. for by lhtl candldote: Joffery L;
. 5th St., Racine, OH Ph.

I

I

I'

\

�•
I

The Daily Sentmel

Sports
In tlie NLCS,

Braves beat .cardinals 3-1 to force
·By BEN WALKER
ATI.ANTA (AP)- For either the
Atlania Braves or St. Louis Cardiiials, tonight will mark' the stan of
something SP""ial.
For either Ouie Smith or AtlantaFulton County Stadium, tonight will
signify the end of an era.
Game 7s always seems to magnify the stakes, don't they?
· Greg Maddux made sure· the NL
Championship series would go the
~mit, pitching the Braves to a 3-1
win Wednesday ·night. He followed
II strong effort by ~ohn Smoltz,leav!ng it up to 1995 World Series r.,vp
fom GJ .. ine.
f
• "With Smoltzie and Mad Dog
(Maddux), we felt like we still had
a chance to get to Game '1," GJ~vine
said. "I sure as heck don't want to
be the 'guy that falters , the weak
link."

· Donovan Osborne, given an extra
day of rest by manager Tony La Russa's decision to pitch rookie Alan
Benes, starts for St. Louis. The CarOinals, ahead 3-1 earlier in the series,
are down to their last chance .to
· 8dvance to the World Series.
"[ ,don't think you could say we
'choked," third baseman Gary Gaetli said. •·~ut isn;t this what everione

Pn his golf course,

Southern spikers_beat
River Valley to take
fifth in statewide poll

hge4
Thursday, October 17, 1996

•

seve~th

game tonight

Bob Davidson made the call as
called out for l~aving third base earond base.
,
wants, the playoffs going to a sevly
on
an
apparent
sacrifict!
fly
by
Lemke
wa&lt; getting high-fives in the
It
sure
looked
that
w_
ay
once
Mad~
Maddux
walked
none~
stru•k
out
enth game?''
dugout.
·
dux
settled
into
a
groove.
The
fourseven
and
d1d
not
perm11
a
runner
Chipper
Jones.
Third
base
umpire
The "'inn_er will stan the World
time
Cy
Young
winner
put
aside
Past
past
first
base
u_
n
t•l
the
seventh.
He
Series on Saturday night on the roaq
.October struggles~ he was the los- threw only 62 p1tches •• the first s1x
against the New York Yankees.
I
If the Braves win, the game will er when the Braves were eliminated innings.
by
Philadelphia
in
the
t99fNLplayComing
off
a
14-0
rout in their
be the final one for the Wizard of Oz.
offsand
improved
his
postseason
last
game,
the
Braves
kept
up their
The 41 -year-old Smith ·has
record
at
6-4.
reputation
for
playoff
rallies.
They
announced he will retire at the end
"I
think
tonight
the
adrenaline
won
the
1991
NLCS
by
pitchi~_g
two
of the season. The St. Louis shortstop is 0-for-8 ' in this series. and was a little bit higher than 1 can ever c~nsecullve shutouts !O ~vercome
could be closing out a big league remember having," he said. "Maybe Pntsburgh, then beat tlie Pnates the
career that began in 1978 and will that came from the crowd. Maybe next year by scoring three runs in the
eventually. land him in the Hall of that came from knowing that if you . bottom of the mnth.
lose, you pack."
The Cardin~ls have never lost an
Fame.
'
Maddux, tagged for a career high- NL playoff senes, wmmng four m.a
If the Cardinals win, it will have
been the last baseball game played at tying eigbt runs in a Game 2 loss, row. But they are the only club m
Atlanta-Fulton , County. The park was in control from the start. He · baseball history to twice.blow 3-1
has served as the Braves' home since ,struck out five through three innings, leads in the postse~n, in the 1968
they moved from Milwaukee for the . needed only four pitches to retire th~ a~.l985 World Senes. .
side in the fourth and did not go to
. We have a g~eat feel~~g about
_1966 season and was the place
a three-ball count until the seventh. bemg m a tough Sltuauon, La Rus- ,
where Hank Aaron broke Babe
Ruth's home run record- next year,
.
"Everything about his pitching sa said.
was a little crisper" LaRussa said.
La Russa gambled by stanmg
the team moves across the street to
Backed by a iouder-than-usual ~kie Alan Benes in order to give
the stadium used for the Olympics.
Tonight's matchup marks base-_ sellout crowd of 52,067 that began hiS ured puc hers a break. Benes gave
cheering before the 'players took the up only three hils m five 1nn1n~s as
hall's first Game 7 since the 1992 NL
field, Maddux gave up six hits in 7 the Braves managed JUSt a sacnfice
playoffs, in which Atlanta beat Piusfly by Ierma•~• Dye 1n the second
~ ~
burgh 3-2 on pinch-hitter Francisco · 2/3 innings.
DID
HE
SCORE?From
all
appearances,
It
would
seem
that
the
Mark Wohlers relieved and threw and an RBI smgle by Mark Lemke
Cabrera's two-out, two-run single in
Atlanta
Braves'
Mark
Lemke
(right)
has
scored
past
St.
Louis
cittch·
the bottom of the nin'th.
wild pitch that scored a run, but iri the fifth.
'
"I think we figured that somehow
retired Ron Gant on a routine fly to
The Bra,ves thought they made 11. er Tom Pagnozzlln the llivantlllnnlng of Wednesday night's Nation- ·
al League Championship Series game against the visHing Cardlnsls:
it would end up like this,,'' LaRussa
strand the possible tying run.at sec- 3-0m the seventh, b~t ~mke was
However, Lemke was later c:alled out for leaving third baea too soon,
.
.
.
negating the run. I~P)
.
.
.
.
said.

SENIOR DMSION CHAMPIONS - Thla higher leYel of JOUnv·
kllme c:Mmplona froril the.Melga County K.ai'Ma Club IK*itly won
champlonlhlpalt their tourNtment at CaMion School In SyrKUae.
- Pictured are (L·R) Larry WIHII, flrat place; Eddie Wlllla, MCond; and
Scooter Fryer, third. Fall qUirter cllaa.. are currently In
For more Jnformltlon, ple. .e calllnatnictor Mlck Howell It 992-6839

-•lon·

.

a

Southern's varsity volleyball team
took a few more steps up the victory ladder t(Jis past week by defeating
River Valley in three games Tuesdayand moving up to a fifth-place
ranking in the Ohio High School
Volleyball Coaches Association poll.
Coach Howie Caldwell said, "l~s
truly an honor to be ranked as on~ of
the top five teams in the state of
Ohio. These girls have worked very
hard and have gained a lot of respect
around this area and the state."
. In Tuesday's match with River
Valley, Amber Thomas and Kim
Sayre spearheaded another great
Southern team effort to boost the
Tornadoes ov""River Valley ll -15,
15-12, 15-8.
II was another fine exa'1lple of
another great team ·effort. Thomas
had . nine points, one ace · and 17
assists, while Kim Sayre had three
points and 15 assists.
Leading Southern's serving attack
was Brianne Proffitt with· II points,
four kills and one .block. Proffitt performed a double-whammy on the
Raiders with her fine serving ·and
great front row play.
· K~ri Caldwell had an equally
good night with eight points, one ace
· and two kills. ·Cynthia Caldwell
notched six points, one ace and two

1
way," says the 79-year-old Powell, lot of time," Powell said. "To me,
·
dressed
in his best golf digs ihough it's just very relaxing. I don' t think
· EAST CANTON: Ohio (AP) the
years
have stolen his game.
there 's one thing you can put your
Bill Powell sits in a golf cart on the
·
"And
I
achieved
·in
spite
of
it.
finger on. It's jusl addictive."
rringe of the 16th green, comforted
They call bijm· "Mr. P" at
jly the solitude that a fine course can There were just ,dirty things everywhere
you
went,
'every
step
of
the
Cleiirview
Golf Club in rural East
bring.
way.''.
Canton.
Powell
built a goOd deal of
' He peers dowA the fairway, which
Look
for
a
black
person
who
built
'
it
the
course
with
his own hands; He
:,tretches over green hills and ends in
:a faraway-"place with puffy clou4s. and owns a golf course in America made it a plaCe where people ·His mind aiways working, filled wiili and the search will·b egin- and end white, black or otherwise - could
:W..., troubled by bad memories. His - with Bill Powell. He is an pass an afternoon ·on lush fairways
unknown treasure, a pioneer who
and soft greens.
:Jips tremble as he begins to spea!&lt;.
p'icked
up
a
golf
club
when
he
was
A modest sign amid tall grass on
. "I think the ordinary person
·knows what our society is and knows nine and fell in love with the game. the side of the highway reads,
"On a golf course, you can kill a "Clearview Golf Club. Public Wei:the roadblocks that were put in my

tion. The struggle has made him suscome." He insists ~n making all accepted in the society."
Powell tried to gel a loan to build picious that way, made him dislike .
comers welcome. He knows what
the way things arc in a world he
his own course, but the banks turned
it's like to be excluded.
Powell grew up in Minerva, a I 0- · him away. He borrowed money from doesn't understand.
The 16th fairway, like most on
mile drive froll) the course. His was his brother and joi,ncd two local
the only black family in the small black doc(ors to buy the land. The . Powell's course, is lined with trees
town. He caddied for a local while course opened in 1948 with nine he and his wife Marcella planted.
doctor when he was a boy and want- holes. It took ~!most 30 years to Mrs. Powell, who managed the club
office for years, died this summer.
ed to continue playing the game.
e.xpand to 18.
"We were married 56 ·years,"
- 'But-the'')Vhites who ran golf. until
"You've got io remember, when
the PGA allowed blacks to join in this golf cours'C was built, we had a Powell says. "She was with me' all
1962, reminded him of his color, he lot of segregation and .. . How old arc • the way. Justa beautiful lady."
Marcella stood by her husband
said.
you'!"
through
all the trouble, from the run"I don't like the word forbidPowcH is a man who answers
14
(See POWELL on Page'S) .
den," Powell said. , We weren't every question with ~nothcr qucs~

~!Parcells' desire to get 'thorn' on his side keeps Byars'. career alive
.
.
•: EOXBORO, Mass. (AP)- Kei· the offefiSe, wherever I'm needed. As . ca[ching fullbacks in-the league dur,
)h Byars has always sP.,Iled trouble the weeks go by. my role will be ing his 10-year career with Philadel.for Bill Parcells. That's 'why ihe New even more defined.'-'
phia and Miami, Byars was moved
:England Patriots coach wants him on
The former Ohio State standout to tight end by the Dolphins at the
his team.
will back up starter Sam Gash at full- beginning·of this season after rook. Byars, who turned 33 on Monday, back ·and play in multiple-tight end ie Stanley Pritchard beat him out for
was signed by the Patriots on Tues- - forma_tions; he's expected to add the starting fullback's job. Then, after
ilay, a little more than two weeks punch to a goal-line offense that has Miami acquired veteran tight end
-al'ter he was release&lt;! by the Miami struggled through the first ~1x games Troy Drayton, coach Jimmy Johnson
of the season.
released him on Oct. I. ·
Dolphins.
"He (Parcells) just told me to be
"We're just hoping that he can
Byars' relationship with Johnson
·myself, to be the guy who's always add &lt;omethinglo what we're doing, soured after the player's consecutivebeen a thorn in his side from my days and he giVes us a lntle ~ore veteran game streak of pass receptio~s was
in Philadelphia and Miami," Byars expenence and leadership eventual- snapped at 130 in the third week of
iaid. "I'll play a lot of the second ly," Parcells said.
the season, a win over the New York
light end ot some fullback, all over
" One of the most prod4cti ve pass- Jets.

'

'

"That's pf?bably going to bother
me for a while," Byars said Wednesday. "But il's still 130 games, and of
all the people-who played, there are
still only four people ahead of me.
"That's something to be proud
of," he added. "And to be the only
running back to be up there, that really means a lotto me. As the years r~
by, I'll appreciate that .even ino '
The firnt-round draft choice 01 1 e
Eagles in 1986 from Ohio State had
several offers after beihg released by
Miami, but said not all of them were
attractive .Ones.
"Some
were interest. teamsI that
,

ning haC.ks. He underwent r~on­
structiVc surgery an his right knee

ed in'me I didn't feel gOOd about, and
I didn't necessarily. think it was .a
good fit," Byars said. "One of the
reasons why I Came here was
because I have a lot of respect for
coach Parcells. You know he's a win-

'w·

1994, hut, said he still has the speed
and desire to play the game.
"I don't have to prove anything,"
he said. "I don't feel I can still play
or hope I can'still play, I know I can
play. My work ethic speaks for
itself, so rm n&lt;)l out there to impress
anyon.c. I'm just trying tn do my job
and do it the best I can."
. To make room for Byars on the
roster, thC Patriots placed rookie running back Kantroy Barber on injured
reserve with a shoulder problem.

ncr.

"I'm familiar with all the teams
in the division, and New England has
always bee~ a team that had my
respect," he added. "Although I've
had some success against them, that
success didn't come easy. They've
aiways,bccn hard' fought games."
Byars has 537 career rectptions,
fourth on the career,list of NFL run-

Scoreboard
EASTERN CONFERENCE

Baseball

At..nlk Division

:r.l!! I.
Florida .............. :..:\ 0

NL playoffs
wedae.d.,·• «ore

At lama J, St. Louis I ; ICriet tied J.J
Tompt'allnalt
St. Louil (Osborne 14-9) ut Atlt~nta
(Gia... i,ne 16--11 ), 8; II p.m.

WorldSeri~

Saturday
NLcharnpion at New Yurt. 8:01 p.m.

Sunday, OcL 20

Tampa Bay ...
J I 0
Philadclphia ........ J 4 0

6
6

11
16

13
20

N.Y. Rangm ...... 2 3 2

6 2J

22

New Jersey ......... 2 2 0
N.Y. Islandm ...... l I 2
Washington ......... I ] 0

4 9
4 10
2 14

10
7
16

NorthNII Di.-isklft .
Montreal ............ J I 2
8 26
Boston ............. ,...2 I I
!I J(i

19

H"'f«d ............. 2
Ott~w:... ............... l
Buffalo........ ......... !
Pinsburgh.. .......... l

9'
II
II!
24

Phot:nb ................ :t 2 0

St. Louis .............. ) 2 0
Qli,IIJD................ J J 0
l'letnHI .................. 2 ] 0
Tomnro ................ J J 0

Wednesday, Oct. Z3
Thursday, Oct. 24
Saturday, Pet. 26
NL 111i"kW York. 8:01 p.m.. if IICce•·

.....

-

Sunday, OcL 27

Football
Tooight's game

, Sunday's 1ames
Atlanta a1 Dallal, I p.m
·
Miami .. Philadclptli.:~ , I p.m. .

New EnJIMd a1 lndillnapQin. I ~ . m.'
New Orltant .QI Carolina, I p.m.

'
l

N.Y. Gianlul W~ington, I p.m.
BaJrirnoR • Dcftvcr, 4 p.m
htf'llo • N.Y. .Ids, 4 p.m.
CINCINNATI 11 San Franci1co. 4

P.•J~•iHe a1 St. LoWs. A- p.m.

Pi«&lt;bcH'&amp;h 111 Houst~ . 4 p.m.
Tampa l1y at ArilOII&amp;. 4 p.m.
Opel! daft: Chica,o, Detroit, Orcen

llay.Mi-•
M......y'tpmt
&lt;WJ.t. 51ft Diqo. 9 p....

Hockey

NHL standinp

..

l

16

12 2J
6 16
6 14

J 0

-~

I

0

4 0
J 0

1 2
1 2

e.

4
2

I~

II
II

•

19
7 24
6 - 21
6 14
4 1.1
4 20
4

"

II
12
1J
L1
9
I~

20
16

23

16
I)

24
26

,,

fum

Division II

:rfll.
I·Cin , St . Uuula ( 17117-~ ................. 2.\4
2-Tllllll'IOKigc m 1&amp;-J .......................... ~ 167

Bil

SH.nd It: II ltic-}--Sidtl!.'y l..dmlittl,
CenlerburJ :\I . I J-Luruin Cath. JO . I .J.
Kalida (I) 29. ~ (tic.'._N..,ow Ptliltl. Tusc.
Ccnl. Calli. (1), M.:Cc1mb. S. Chark!imn
SuulhciP11.:rn2M. IK-Oid Fori 24. 1¥-l,l:dn
"City Sh&amp;!lin.-d1 lbristian IY. 20-Hcrlin H• ·
bikl i i.
.

Transactions

II ,

B-ball
M-Jor: LtqH Bdtr.ll

Olvioion Ill

Tonight ;s games

Friday's games ..

,

St Loui, .:11 N.Y. Ransers. 7::\0 p.m. ·
Otwwa al New Jersry. 7:30p.m.
Burralo at WalhingtDn. 7 : ~ p.m.
Philadelphia ar Phocnht, 9 p.m.
S•Jo.carAnaheim. !0:10p.m.

Oh1o H.S. sports
OHSVCApoll
COlUMBUS, Ohio U\P}- The: flflb
of til weekly Ot!io H•Jb Xhool VoUe-y·

ball Coache1 Auociarion polls , with
school, m:ord lnd 101al poims Cf1rtt-pla«
'o'tJid in paremhrse1):

Dhlsloa I
I'll. .

I.Cin, Sciota ( 14) 20-0 ........................101

.=:i

::a."'l::r.;

to a two-yc:ir conuact Annoum:elltlu:
rc~ignm ion uf Jnmk RL'ell, IL~sillmntlmin ­
t:r, dfc..1ivc in Nuvemb.:r
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : F1rcd
Dnug M::~n~ulino . thml bo.~e tllil~h .
Nmned l&gt;tiUJ!: Ruder third ha.'IC ~"tlnch,
Cll:VEl.ANU INDIANS: 1\ssi,ncd
en: ca~..: r C:utda..:l..: IU IJufrulo Ill !be
Amcric:1n Annci:uicm Sent RHP Jcfr
Sexton and RHP James L.:wi~. nuui~ht In
Uullaln. Annuun ~cd INr Gcnminm Pena
rcfu~ed a lljiiiOt lca~uc assiJnmcnt und
ck.'l.·tcd 111 bcct1me ~ ~rec :•1~nt , , ,
'
MILWAUKI:f. 8R : WER .~ : Scm
RHP llyron 8ru&gt;Nnc, RHP Rmuun (ian:b
and RHP Jamie McAndrew. nutri~ht 111
Tu c~nn ur the J&gt;ucilk C&amp;msl l.c:I~UC .

"·

Bosketboll
Nalion11l lllldr.l!.'lhilll A!lliOCiiiUon "
W ASHIN(i'J'ON HULL.:E'l'S : Rc ·
ku .~cd (j l'hri~ KinJ!~hury .

COI.OR/\110 KOt'Ki i;S· Nlml&amp;:il
C'lim Hurlllc hilli~ ruach.
MONTREAl. EXI-'0.~ : AnnnunccrJ
Jue KciTij!iln. pih:hina: coach. will nt\1 rc·
IIHII roc I he I IN7 111.:a~on . /\1\rnlUik:cU C
1..1.-nny Wclt.ltcr 1100 LHP l};we l.ci11Cr rc·

Signed G

llcm;u-d Ulunt.

Football

N•tlon~l 1-'oolhllU IAa~twl­
C/\ROJ.INA !•ANTHERS : W11ivcd
I&gt;T T11mmy k'lcr

-

End 01 Season Sale
.

'

SUNGLASSES

A ........- .......

BAL TJMOM.E ORIOLEI; : Named
R11y Miller pih.-tt.iiJ !,:O;M:h and Ji111ncd him

- RECYCLING . VILLAGE OF UCINE
AND RESIDENU

The Sutton Townehlp Recycling .Trailer will be
parked on Friday of each WMk at the perking lot of
RICI.ne VIllage Water Dept. eo that Recine end area
·Neldente can bring their,recycleblee. The trailer will be
there through the following Monday of each - k .
R~eycle bins ere clearly marked, end ere for Sorted
1
·
RecyclebiM Only.
-sutton Townahlp Tru8teea
•Meigs Co. Recycling &amp; L,ltter Prevention

JUNIOR CHAMPIONS- Thall 15 and tinder, young karate ctiam·
pions
the Melga County l(arata Club recently won champl·
onahlpa .at their toumament It Carleton School In Syracuae. Pic·
tured are·(L·R) Ryan Stobart, Alhton Walla and Jonathan Gibbs. Fall .·
quarter clasaaa are currently In -Jon. For more lnfonnatlon,
pleeae call Instructor Mlck Howetl at !192-68-39

from

In the NHL, ·

N.Y. Rangers drown
Penguins 8-1; Flyers ,
and Canadiens.:. win .
By KEN RAPPOPORT
NEW YORK (AP) - The New
York Rangers had no victories and
two ties in t}leir first five games,
even thoug~ey outshot the oppo- sition by a composite 165-146.
They're still outshooting olher
teams, · only now they're winning
games.
.
"Tonight we scored and played
well defen1ively," said captain M!!!'k
Messier, explaining wh~, the Rangers
beat the Pittsburgh Penguins 8-1
Wednesday night.
And before?
"It wasn'tthat we weren't getting
chances offensively, it was just
defensively it was unacceptable."
The Rangers' victory was their
second in three days following an 0.
3-2 start and was clearly their best
performance of the season. No~ only
did they hold the offenSI\Ie-m•nded
Penguins to one goal, they cashed m
on their opportunities.
. "We played really well," said the
Rangers' Wayne Gretzky. "We created opportunities and, drove to.the
net."
· Coupled with their 5-4 victory
over Calgary on Monday night, the
Rangers have scored 13 goals in two
games - three more than the total
they scored in their first five.
After outshooling Calgary 36-27 ,
they outshot the Penguins 48-30 to
give thef a 249-203 edge on opposing teams so far.
.
Alexei Kovalev had stx of the
shots ' Wednesday night, and put
, three of them in f~ his second career
hat trick.
"Mark Messier and I have talked
about Kovalev," Gretzky said. "The
jhing is, you just have to let him play
~is game and let his talents take

over."

While the Ranger.; seemed to be
~olving their problems, the same
~ouldn 't be said of the Penguins,
who have only a 1-4-0 record to
ihoW for their forst five games.
' "We did not have a cohesive
J(aining catnp and haven 'I played the
way we can," Pittsburgh's Ron Fran·
j:is t•id. "At times we've . been
· uiliy of sfandlng around. At limes
loe've beon trying to do~oo much."
Jl1ano Lemieux uid his team_'•
ftarl '"feell like 1984 all over ag01n
hen we 1110i11o set I;IJown out every
I:;ferripJIO his first year •n
when 1M Pepaums were
f the NHt.'s worst teams.
ovalO•'• socond sc:ore of the
11141 two aoaJs by Niklu Sundr~~hiJhliJh!Cd a ,f our-pi teeond
'"
thai ~e the same open for

np111.

- Phone 892-8310 ,.

fu~ minor lc~g~te a~~ignnll!l'll~ and clcctclllu hd.:ornc lree a~eot~ . Si(IOI!d INI;
Andy Stankiewicz mKI ;L~~igncd him out·
ril,hl 111 OJI,IIWll of the lntcrnutional
I.Cill(UC.
I'O'TSHUNC.H l 11RA'Ih"i: Re- ~igned
OF /\I Mnnin In n twu-ycur cnntmct t!ll·
ten sinn thruu~th 1~99 . Prcunntcll John
Sint:••ann l'wm Jirc~;tnr _ ul lllaJur k:IIJIIC'
tm...clt:.•ll administrntiun to :t~sislant gellt!f111 man:1gl!r 1\s~ ignc•l P lnc Hcw.:vcr, P
I);IVl' Wninhnu~. 10 Rkb 1\udc und JB
l&gt;01lc Svcum In Calgary nf the PU~.:ifi~
l'u:l.-rt ,l.cnt:uc.
'

NlltklntiiiAloljiUt

1'1\MPA BAY · DI:VIL RI\YS ·
Named B:u1 J11hn~on und llill Gcivdtt
lii"Cdlll auilitllnU 111 t!r gcncrul maUiiii.Cf
u11tl Jmrnc Rt.'l.'\1 miDitt league head rrain-

ba.

PittsburJh at Burfalo, 7 :]0 p.m.
.Haitford at N.Y. lsl:mdtu, JJO p.m.
lMmil al O.ical'!o· 8:JO p.m.
Torontu "I Sc. looil. K:JOp.m.
Vi!ocouver at Datl:.s. 8:JO r.m.
Borida 111 Colurado. 'I p.m.
B u~t un a1 Lu1 Angeles. IO:JO p.m.

ft:J.

~~~'::0.t..~::::::::::::::·~::::::::::::::::::::ji

J-Sunbury
W.11.lnu1 (I) IK-4 .......... 101
4-Tipp City I J ........................... ,...... m
~Norwalk 17-J ..................................... K6
6--Wilmin31on IK-J..... .. ................... 71
7-Ncw Cont.'Otd John Glenn lY-2 .........M
K-Lima Ruth 19·2 ... .
. ................ 57
9-Hubb...-d C2J 21 · 1 ... ,...........................4'1
10-/\shtabulu Harbur (I) 21 - 1............ ....40
SrC'ond 10: 11 -Holland Sprin~lielc.l
H . 12· ATHENS (I) 32. 1.\-Rnv&amp;:nna
Southc:•~l .10. 14-Willlcrt.l T1. 1~-0ydc 26.
llt - /\ ~ htabul11 Ed,:cw11Ud 20, 17- t';moll
Jluhnn Nonllwcar 1~ . IM - ~prin)!Cicld
N1&gt;11bwc~1crn 15. IY..IZittun 1.\ : 20.Ccl• na ,

Iulll

Division IV

I·St . 1-t.:nr)' t24120--l ........................ .. 2fl7
2-New Wru~h. IJuckcyt: (.'ent. m N - 1211
J-Oid Wm1h. lloclcyeTrail 21 ' 1.. :...... 201
4--Btt'ICt,JmHopWcii-Loudon(l) 17-l .. l)(l
!'i·RACINE SOUTHERN IK·2. ............. 6C)
b--Ncw Ureftlc!n 11-4.............................. !'i~
7·Wiflllhwn 111:.. ............................... ....411
~e.:roJ. N,1f'lhood IK--2 . ...... :....;.......... 47

2- Archbold(~)21 - L .......
.. .. 21Y
J-He:tth (4J1l4-J. .................... ,......... 152
4-Adlland Crestview (21 20-0 ............... 99
, ·Miftl."rnl Ridge (2) IK- l.. ....,............... K6
6--Fnulkfon Aden.~~.lS - J ........... ,............6K
New Paris Nat'l Trail 20--L ............ ,....M

C11Jgary 2
N.Y. Ran~• H. Pitt1burgh I
Florida -' · Son Jose J (fie)
Phil;'l(ldphia 4, Anahdm .1

r..

K.ColumbiaDa Cret.rvicw 18--4 .............. :'4
9·Rockrord P::utway ag..L .................. 51
10-W. LurayellcRid&amp;twood IS-~ ,. ........ 40
Suend II: 11-WauseonJR. 12-0AK
HILl'(!, 29. IJ-Welhvillc 2~- 14 Gtl*nviJI.: 14 . U·Huron 22. 16-MIN·
R)RD 'lo. 11-Loudonville 19. Ill-BEl·
PRE 16. 19-Smhhvilte ~~ - 20 (lie)-J:ICk !IOn·Millon, Norwaync IJ.

I · M..-ton El1in (Ill) 17-2 ...... ............ 2fl2

Wednesday's sa&gt;res
M ontrt&lt;~l4.

Se:utle 111 Kimsas City , Kp.m.

.

-

&amp;lmontoo ...... ,.....4.
Cl'llnwln .. : .......... 3
' los AnJC~ ......... J
CaiJIII'.Y .............. J
Vm~~;ouve r ......... 2
· Anaheim . .', ........ I
San JOliet ............... 1

p.m. EST. if

NFL's Week 8 slate

••
•

4 K
4 II
2 6
2 12

PIK'IIk Dt•llion

if~e,.

'*)'

7 : J~

0
2
0
0

Dallas ................... 6 0 U

New York at NL, iH8 p.m.

NL 11-1 New York.

I
I
4
4

.l!! L I fll. lif liA

Iulll

.New York a1 NL. 8 : 1~ p.m.

p.m..

7

Ctntnl Dl\'ision

Tuesday, OcL 22

8 - 1~

II!

WESTERN CONFERENCE

NLDI New YDrk, 7.JOp.m.

..,.

2 • 8

h .....

Adonia \'S. SL Loots

· New Ytlfk at Nl,

I Eli lif liA

2-Eiyria (9) 22.0 ................................. 119
~.Wooster (6) 19-0-:': ............................ 1~~
4-Cin. Princeton 19-2............................97
5-Wnte-n-ilk Soulh 18-J ......................tw
6-Man~rseld Madison 16-!'i ................... JI
1-t.ebnON)IIJ9-J ...., .......... , ............. 66
R.Cm. MotherofMen:y I~ ·C. ................ 4l4
V-QIILLICOlliE IK:J ....................... ,•U
IO.Dayton Carrull17-4........................ 42
SentM 10: It -Rocky Ri\\.'f Mugnltl~011 39. 12-Stow :t:'i. D·Pit~ua ]4. 14·YI't\l.
Au sttmown Fit~h J:t. IS·Milntor )(), 16Tol. St. ~nula ~ - 17-Cin. Unulinc 27.
!~Solon 22. 1 .~- Fremont !toss {I) 21. 2().
Hudson lit

r-_·rklu Suillljltolll deflocted Bru&lt;:e
r'a shOt 2: I6, Dlliiol OoiiNu
frolii
left elide at ·II :03.
ov+-v,. 0111
nd • 11:13

"*'id
,,

kills. Renee Turley•had two points,
four kills and five .blocks to again
anchor the SHS front ·line. Jenny
Friend h~d two points, and Emily
Duhl had one kill .
The Raiders wert led by Grefchen
Cloak's nine and Angie DeGarmo's
eight.
Despite a good fight, River Valley·won the reserve game, 15-5, 1015 and 15-12. Southern was led by
Kim lhle's II, Stacy Lyons' 10 and
Kara King's eight. Carey Campbell
had II for River Valley.
Southern has not been beaten by
a Division IV team this year. Its only
losses were to Division ([Ale under
and Division Ill Betpre, which is
ranked 1'2th in that divsion.
Tournament pairings ·
Southern will play ·in the firnl
round of the Division IV sectional
tournament Saturday at noon at
Ross-Southeastern High School in
Richmond Dale. Southern plays the
winner pf tonight's match between
Franklin Furnace Green (11-6) and
Trimble (4-12) game at Southeastern.
...
The winner of Saturday's noon
game will rneet either Miller or Eastern, which will play at I p.m. The
championship match is slated for 2
p.m.

Powell... (Continued from Page 4)

.Powell's relaxation serves as reward for years of .exclusion
~y KEN BERGER

The Deily Sentinel• PageS

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thurwday, October 17, 1996

ins at the bank to vandals ;.,ho tried
to ruin Powell's dream. When ' the
course opened, a young M~rtin
Luther King Jr. had. just been
ordained a Baptist minister. Jackie
Robinson had only been in baseball
for a year. To this day, golf is a sport
stained by exclusion.
It is possible t&lt;&gt; see the struggle in
'Powell's face; eyes round and ·
streaked with red, chin solid, forehoOd creased with suspicion. He is a ·
warrior whose battles are behind him
-well-fought, mostly won. ,
He . introduced his daughter,
Renee. to golf when she was only
th&lt;ee.
"My dad got me playing golf

before I e~en knew him, I guess,"
she says.
Renee Powell went on to play the
LPGA Tour in the 1960s and '70s,
one of the few blacks who have
made the tour.
,
"You ask me why there aren' t
more black players," Bill Powell
said. "I ask·it like this: How many
owners of golf courses are black?
Who .was throwing their arms out? ,
Who opened up tlltir arms to them?
Think about it .... It's up to our society to get rid of. this color problem."
Powell turns a switch on the console of the golf cart, and its· motor
starts to hum. He gets comfortable,
and presses his foot to the throttle .

liKE NEW, USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS SERVICED
AND PRICED TO SELL

and Sundstrom from in front at
14:52. That gave the Rangers a 6-1
lead, and they scored two more in the
third as Kovalev completed his hat
lrick.Sergei Nemchino~ an&lt;) Christian
Dube scored the other goals for New
York. PetrNedved was the only Penguin to get one by Mike Richter, and
he needed a power play to do 11 .
"We 'did?,'l h,.ve a good ~tan (to
the season), Kovalev sa1d, but we
came back and · won (the, last two
games). We had a really good defensive game tonight, and we have to
keep it simple like we did to~ight."
Elsewhere m the NHL, II was
Montreal4, Calgary 2; Aonda 3, S_an
Jose 3; and Philadelphia 4, Anaheim

1999
18995

3.

Canadiens 4, Flames 2
Scott Thornton, Martin Rucinsky
and Marc Bureau tied a team record
by scoring short-handed goals as
Montreal remained undefeated at
'home.
The three short-,handed goals in
one game tied a Montreal record set
on March 20, .1948 agai~st the
Chicago Blackhawks.
Saku Koivu added an evenstrength goal for Montreal (3-1-2),
which has not lost in five home
games. Dave Gagner and Jonas Hog- ·
land scored in the firnt period for
Calgary (3-4-0), which ended a fourgame road trip.
·

Panthers 3, Sharks 3
San Jose salvaged a tic with visiting Aorida when Jeff Friesen
scored his second goal of the game
after the&gt; Sharks blew a two-goal
lead:
·
Florida scored thtee times in the
third. period to take a 3-2 lead on
• Dave Lowry's first goal of' the season with 7:-30 remaining in regulation. But Friesen came back to score
his second goal of the night a minute
later to even it.
.A or ida goaltender Mark Fi tzpatrick and San Jose's Chris Terreri
preserved the tie through the overtime period .
Flyers 4, Mlshty Ducks 3.
John Druce .and John LeClair
each had a goal and an assist as
Philadelphia · spoiled Anaheim's
home opener.
Philadelphia, down 3-1 · in the
tteC:ond period, rallied with a pair of
third·period aoals by Mi kael RenbefJ lnd Pat Falloon.
Pntce .set up the game-winner
with 7J'3 left when he musc:led into
the crease and Palloon, folloWing on
the play, tapped !he puek past Guy
Hellen for hia second pi of lhe sea10n and 100111 of his career. •
'J1Io Flyers """ wilhoutl!ric Lindrat, llillsidclined by ap'Oin injury.·

lttS •ssUIU'IMI

air, -tilt, cruise, ail-power, factory

~~

1994.CHEY

TON 414

air cond, PS, PB, PW, POL,

�•

Page 6 • The Deity Sentinel

Thu~y.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs to face· Waverly i·n season's last non~leagu~ game
By DAVE HARRIS

Sau..lill CoiTup andant

~ Meip Manllders will put
thear live game winning streak on !he
line on Friday when tbe m11t00n and
gold travel to Waverly to tangle with
a huge Tiger team.
Meigs ·a(ter their opening Joss to
Gallia Academy has run off the live
· wins in raising their record to 5- I.
Waverly will head into the conte~t
with a 4-3 mark against some strong
compellllon.
.
The
Tigers
opened
up
their
season
., ; with back-to-back losses to Coal
prove 20-14 and Jackson 14-12.
Waverly then bounced back to defeat
Athens 42-7 ,. Portsmouth 20-0,

.

PortsmouthWest28-14aodMinford
54-16, before losing last week to
Wheelersburg 28-21.
Waverly is coached by Ed Bolin,
who is now in his 12th year as the
head coach at the Pike County
school. Bolin formerly was the coach
at Trimble.
Waverly's offensive line averages 6-foot-1, 247 pounds from
tackle to tackle. The largest Tiger is
6-foot-3, 278 pounds at left tackle
with the smallest being 5-foot-11 and
218 at right guard.
·
If that isn'tenough, fullback Nick
Daniel is 6-foot-5, and weighs in at
255 pounds. Daniel missed last season with a foot injury, ~ut has
, .

bounced back to pick up 502 yards 160 pounds senior who has caught
in 76 carries for an average of 6.6 16 passes for 265 yards and Daniel
yards a cany.
Kendricks a 6-foot-4, 176-pound '
The Tigers' leading rusher is junior who has pulled in nine passJason Oyer, a 6-foot-1, 195-~und es for 176 yards.
sophomore. He has picked up 768
On defense, the 11gers,are led by
yards iri 127 carries for a 6.1 yard a ·,Daniel and Todd Jackson (6-foot-1,
carry average.
210, jr) at linebacker and defensive
Calling the signals for the Tigers end Josh lson a 6-[oot. I, 171-po~nd
is a two-time all-Southern Ohio sophomore.
Conference selection in Josh BlakeThe Tiger defense must find a
man. This 6-foot-2, 195-pound way to stop the high-powered
seqior threw for more than 1,700 Marauder ground attack that is averyards last season. This year he' has aging 6.3 yards a carry. The maroon
completed 38 of 79 (48%) for 616 and gold attack is led by freshman
yards and three touchdowns.
Justin Roush. Roush has carried 107
Blakeman's favorite receivers times for ~ season for 883 yards
have been Jason Maloy, a 5-foot-9,
(8.3 yards a carry). Roush last week

inthewinoverNelsonville-Yorltcarried 25 times for 134 yards and three
touchdowns. He added a fourth
touchdown on a 79-yard kickoff
return.
Rounding out the Marauder
ground attack is junior Matt
:Williams, who has picked up 634
yards in 114 carrjes for 5.6 yards a
pop. After a slow stan. he has
exploded in the last three games,
picking up 448 )'ards on 66 carries
for an average of 6.8 yards acany.
Also capable of picking up real
estate is sophomore wingback Jeremiah Bentley with 14 carries for 65
yards (4.64 Y"l'ds);·
The quarterback for Meigs is

Military service memorial seeking names·of women

••
•

With your help, An~. we have
now
registered more than I 30,000
Ann
women. But there are well over a
Landers · million from whom we have not yet
heard and we need to reach them.
199,, Los il.nrc:tcs
TIMCI Synd ic~ and C~e­
We are asking once again that you
I&amp;OfS !iyndicaiC.
let woman veterans know abouf
their memorial.
The register of service women
By ANN !,ANDERS
will
be the heart of the memorial's
· Dear Ann Landers: One year
education
center. It will contain each
from today, we will dedicate . the
woman's
personal
recollections and
Women in Military Service Memorphotos.
At
last,
their
stories will
ial at the ceremonial entrance to
Arlington N~ti 0 nal Cemetery. The become a permanent pan of our
memorial, with its educatl6n center, nation's history.
The service women, their relaexhibits, theater and computer registives
or friends can call us at 1-800ter, will be the first national memor4-SALUTE
&lt;1t write to: The
ial honoring all military women,
Women
's
Memorial,
Dept. 560,
past, present and future.
Washington, D.C. ~0042-0560 . In

junior Brad Davenport. He is 17 of
46 (37%) in the airfor214 yards. His
favorite receivers are classmate Chad
Hanson (7-93) and Bentley (7-69).
Meigs is scoring 20.3 points a··
game and giving up 10.3 points. The
Meigs defense is led by junior line-'
backer Jason Roush and senior
'defensive tackle Adam Barrett.
"Waverly is a very good football team," Marauder coach Mike
Chancey said. "They have tremendous size for a high sch09l team.
"We feel their quarterback (Blakeman) is.the best we will see this year,
we are excited about the challenge of
playing a team the caliber of the
Tigers."
Kickoff is 7:30 Friday evening!

t~med

against. the~~! and led to the
pmnacle of Tnmble s success.
After a breakdown mtbe Southern defenstve backfield led to 1160y~d touchdown ..;ore. Southern's
Mtchael Ash first went left, then cut
back a~ross the. grain, through a big
whole m the mtddle of the field and
raced 70-yards for a touchdown. The
two-potnt converston pass fell
mco~plete and Tnmble !ed 14-6 at
thel0.07 mark..lt1ooked hke the Tqr-

nadoes had th~ needed steam, -b~t nard hit C?rey Willi"lJJs on~ 15-yard
.Tnmble responded and again drained touchdown pass play to cut the score
the wmd from Southern's sails.
. to 47-13 as the Joao )(arg kick was
Southern's optimism quickly went good atthe 6:59 mark. Maynard then
down the drain as less than one came back with a briiliant 75-yard
mmute later. On Trimble's second touchdown run to cut the score to 47play from scrimmage, Robbie Coop- 19 as the kick failed at the 2:04 mark
er raced 35 yards · down field for . of the game. A 40-yard Maynard to
another Tomcat score.
' · Matt Riffie pass play set up a MayLate in the game Southern came nard to Riffle 12-yard touchdown
back wtth some score and some good reception with 10 seconds left in the
numbers. Quarte.rback Jesse May- game for a 47-25 tally.

For Southern, Maynard was II19 passing .for 142 yards. He also
rushed 12 times for 60 yands, while
Evans was 10-42, Ash 5-3. Adam
Cumings 6-22 and Josh Davis 2-9.
Evans caught four passes for 31
yards, Riffle 2 for 55, Williams 1-15.·
Writesel 1-6 and Ash 2-7.
Southern will have to watch for
the likes of Anthony Riley as the
Miller quarterback, joined in tbe
·

backfield by backs Oavid Riley,
Heath Howdyshell and Andy Arkley. '
The Miller defense is spearhead-·
ed by the Falcons' returnees from lasr
year-"- Nick Altier. Daniel Jones and ·
Arklcy.
Miller has been consistent defensively, but has not put many points
on the board in 1996, thus leading to
its 1·6 record.
Game ti!lle in Racine is 7:30.

promises not to have so many miscues this week. The bad news is that
Trimble is similar to Federal Hocking, perhaps a little bigger at some
positions, but a little less explosive
in the backfield.
Yet, Trimble has some heavy
equipment in its backfield. Zach
. Miller, Brian Camechis, Brady Trabe
and Robbie Cooper are all big and

fast. In the open field, it's a race to
the goal line. The Tomcats must be
controlled at the line of scrimmage.
Last week, in just eight plays,
Eastern had turned the ball over four
times, feeding the hungry Lancers
like a lion coming off a 2 I -day fast.
In all, Eastern fumbled five times
and lost four, while delving out three
interceptions.

EaStern's Adam McDaniel was
just nine for 18 and Justin Delacruz
was 5-11.
The Trimble Tomcats unloaded
their offensive arsenal to defeated the
Southern Tornadoes 47-25 Friday
night at Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field in Racine.
Trimbleisnow4-3and 1-1 in the
Tri-Valley conference.

Last week against Southern.
Trimble quarterback Zach Miller hit
Brian C.amechis for.two touchdown
aerials totaling 100 yards. The first
was a 40-yard touchdown aerial for
the game's first score. The McClelland kick was good for a 7-0 THS
score at the 0:47 mark in the first
period. .
.
Just two minutes into the second
quaner (10:23) Mlll~r hit Camechis

.

·

Game time is 7:30.

TV and. Web sites lengthen Gordo· n'~ '15 · minute~ of fame'
born in Mission Viejo, Calif., but popularity on cable TV, NASCAR
NEW YORK (AP)- Jeff Gor- raised in Pittsboro, Ind. "llhink it's now has network stations fighting
over its events, especially CBS and
don was on David Letterman's show really turned oil! great
twice, he did "Good Morning Amer"It's kind of a weird thing having ABC, which do nQt show Sunday
·
ica" once, and he and Jay Lena just a TV show done about you. You kind football.
missed connecting after he won the of don' t know how to take it. and it's , "If you start ·looking at the fan
· Brickyiu-d race two yelrs ago. At 25 hard (o watch yourself on TV. You're base we're building now, you're seeand married to a model, he's son of your worst critic. You never talk the ing ~uch a wide variety of ages, ..
· the Luke Peny of the stock-car way you wantto tall\ or look the way · Gord&lt;m said. "You're seeing men
and wome.n, and·boys and girls, and ·
• teenybopper set
·
you want to look."
At Goodie's in Damascus, N.Y.,
Going into the AC-Delco race it's exciting.to be a part ofit because
· whereNASCARknockstheNFLoff Sunday at Rockingham, N.C., Gor- 'its popularity is growing so fast ,
1'\'e seen some huge changes in
the tube every Sunday, Dale Earn- don led Teny Labonte by one point
the
popularity
ofthe span, just in the
.
- in his quest for a second straight
hardt's stilllhe man.
4-5
years
I've
been involved."
"I'm working on that/' Gordon Winston Cup title. He's already won
Understandably, Gordon appears
said.- laughing through a gentle 10 races this year, 19 in liis career.
Imagine that Tiger Woods would to he particularly popular among the
drawl. "I know what you mean. I've
run into those people."
win 8-10 mOte PGA Tour events in younger set
His wife, the former Brooke
Next Tuesday, The Nashville Net- .• the coming year. That's what he
Sealy,
was Miss Winston of 1993
work wilhhow an hour-long special . woul!l have to do to become Gorand
has
worked as .a professional
called "Jeff Gordon- Wide Open." don 's' golrmg ecjuivalent.
The show follows Gordon on the
It couldn't have come at a more model in ad oampaigns for Hanes,
track,athomeandonTV. Thatniight opportune time. NASCAR's popu- Chiquita, Sony and Pepsi. His racing
sway a few of those Earnhardt fans. larity is at an all-time high on tete- crew is known as ~'The Rainbow
" I never really allowed anybody vision and seems to.be attracting fans Warriors:' and he now has two
to follow me !'fOund and . get the from outside its traditional circles. World Wide Web sites devoted just
·
inside stuff before," said Gordon, Already second only to the NFL in to him.
11

Scholasflc sidelight

.

There's his homepage (www.jeffgordon.com) and the newly opened
Jeff Gordon National Fan Club page
(www.jeffgordonfanclub.com).
. "I've got a computer at home, but
I don't have it hooked up to the ·Internet'yet," Gordon said. "!love video
games and computers, but unless
you've got somebody there showing ·
you how to do everything, it takes
hours. ·
"But I get to sec both those pages
when I'm the office.

1

.

..

Whatever . happened to civic . Moore, Mari!Jip Price, Donna Rea,
pride? Is it out of style along with Cherry Scott. Nancy Skinner, Jackie
good manners?
.
Seidcnable, M~ry Smith, Ernestine
Middlepon is having all kinds of Stockton, Ju~y Vaughan, Susie
problems with .vandalism at the Woods, Sharon Wil son, Lola Ziegler
Diles and Hartinger Parks--certainly . and Charlene Zundel. Carolyn Meier
attractive !ljl0 ts ·for a small commu- · was a featured singer both solo and
·nity.
teaming with Charles Swisher to do
'The town, of course, has little "If I Loved You" . Sandra Ingraham
money to maintain and improve the sang "l"m Gonna Wash That Man
parks, but officials and townspeople Right Out of My Hair" and did this
have done a good job with them.
number washing her hair under a
It's disgra~eful that the minority shower ol running water, as I recall . .
which is hell be"t on destruction can Now how about that for special
vandalize the parks and get by with effects on a Pomeroy st~ge th~t long
it. Ccnainly someone sees some of ago' The old sofl. shoe was presentthis destruction and whoever does ed by Sheila Strauss and Bill Young
should be reponing the acts to the and Charlesana 1He.ss and Carolyn
police at once.
Edwards were a tap duo. Bill Ander·
·we call it crime watch and prob- . . son, Jim Lohse, !lind Bill Owens
· ably some examples should be set. . .made up the "All Star Trio".

.

l

HOLIDljll
COO~BO:O~

touchdowns and fullback Steve ny Daniels' 200 yards rushing and
Manahan has 864 yards and 17 four touchdowns. ··
Just when other Division I teams touchdowns for DeGraff Riverside;
thought it was safe to play for a state Bellefontaine's Derek Anderson
championship again ... back comes caught a touchdown pass,.returned a
Cleveland St. Ignatius.
· · kickoff for a score and had three
· The Wildcats, given up for dead rushing touchdowns in a 62-13 vica month ago after losing to Division tory over Springfield N.orthwestern;
Ill No. I Me~or Lake Catholic, have
11m Newell rushed for 233 yards
a pulse once again. Just ask Canton and touchdowns of 70. 70 and 50
McKinley.
yards and kicked all five extra points
As the winner of the last five state in Bryan's 35-34 win over Swanton ;
championship$, St. Ignatius whipped Otsego's John O'Brien rushed for
second-ranked McKinley 47-19 last 220 yards and scored three times in
Satunday. That pushed the Wildcats a 28-25 victory over Elmwood;
to 6-1 on the year and bu'!'pcd them Han:tilton Ross' Nick Wilson, who
from fifth to second with three had .a Greater Cincinnali record
weeks left in the poll, breathing. 2.267 yards and 188 points, has.
down the neck of front-running 1,416 yards and 118 points through
seven game~;
Massillon Washington.
"We were just trying to win,"
Chesapeake's Chris Fizer rushed
Wildcat coach Chuck• Kyle said, for 226 yards, had 23 receiving
"We only have nine games. and this yards, 21 on an interception return
is an important game computer and 83 on 'kickoff returns in a 41-21
point-wise."
victory over Rock Hill; Jerry Poth
·Tile Wildcats have another test broke his week-old school record
Salwday when they take on fourth- with 274 yards on .42 carries and
ranked Lakewood St. Edward. scored three times,'' but it wasn'i ·1
Meanwhile; Massillon !Bkes on sev- .enough 0. New London beat Ash- 1
!
enlh-ranked Cincinnati Moeller. land Crestview 54-40 behind Anlho- . I
Musilloa prepped .for that show1
down by scorina the final 21 points
to bell Naperville, Ill., 21-13.
"It wasn't hand to ICay focused on
dtc JMk ill hand this week." Musillon coech Jack Rose said. "But all of
us knOw everyone Wund town was
lllkiq about the Moeller aarne."
A1111 this week, Verllillet can tie
.dtc..-.reconl wilh iu 49th llrailftt
vidory apilllt winleu Mi1111i EuL
Bl11wberc, Uniontown Lake's
011111 W'IIC hu picked up 1,!34
.
ill Ieven pmes; wiNc:k Josh
Middleport 992-5827
, KJinplbofer hi!_ !,018 yllnls and 18

Other vocal soloists were Arnold
Ev~ns, Carolyn Bell. Myma Maag,
and Robert Green ;,ho was a smash
with his version of Charlie Brown.
Richard Clark did a bit of comedy
with his "football report", thlll Andy
Griffi!h one, as I recall.

It was in March, 1959, and the
students at Pomeroy High School
were staging their annual variety.
shows.
I guess these don't happen in hi gh
sehools much these days and that's a
shame. I'm sure all oi those young
Lee Jacobs was doing magic way
people back in 1959 had a ball getting the show ready and getting·it on back then and featured in his act
entitled "Leonardo and Company"
stage for a two night showing.
The nam~s of the cast · will ring were Vickie Brown, Rose Horak and
. •
.
bells for many •of you and it's diffi- Craig Wehrung.
A lot of water has passed ove.r the
cult to imagine but those high school
students in 1959 are now 37 yearS dalllllftlce that time. I hope all.of the
coist members arc sti"ll arpund and
later aging adults.
There was a · pony chorus line that they've had _great lives. Maybe
kiCking up its heels and members I've even triggered a memory for
included Sheila Strauss, Jean Web· one or two of them. I hope so.
ster, Rose Horak, Ann Baker, Connie . Woodgeard, Marlene Scholl ,
Paula Sayre, and Ruth Ann Brothers. . And I copied the following from
The group made three appearances the back of Country Magazine. I
.in · the produ~tion . Bill Gibbs v;as a thought you might enjoy it. I did.
"Square your shoulders to the
soloist doing "Evening Rain " while
world;
·
the vocal ensemble sang: May You
"Be
not
the
kind
to
quit.
.
Always" as well as several other
"It's not the load that breaks you
numbers.
,
.
Featured in a skit, "Spring Eanta- down~ ·
''lt's_the way ·you carry it."
sy'' were Carolyn Allman, Andrea
Do keep smiling.
Evans, Benneta Clark, Penny

Included i11 the cookbook _wiU be recipe&amp; from Maso11,
_Meig&amp; &amp; GaUia County residents, at no cllarge. ·
The recipes will be categorised cu folltnoa:
• Appetisen/Beverogea • Br.eod/GrGina
• C.altea/Piea &amp;: Cookiea • Pork • Po-,Jtry
• Salada &amp; ~eptables
·
.· •Soup• and Smulwiche•

Our Lineup:

Brfn6your recipe into our oflice or tend il lo:
Holiday Coolcbook
.
.

c/o The Daily Seut.Uiel
111 Court Streett,·Porrutroy, Olt 45169
Plea~e, include your noms ond .
phoM # 111ith recipe.

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Deadline for aU recipes
il Oceober .'3l~ 1996

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----News policy--+-•

...·J.'

In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the 9alljpo- .
lis Daily Tribune and The Daoly S,entinel will not accept weddings after
60 days from the dale of the event
' . AII 'club meelings and other new$
articles in the society section must

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Meter, December. Reports· were the closin'g prayer.
given on the ladies retreat and the . · Others attending were Nancy
church hayride. · ·
.
Morris and Elizabeth Smith.
The Lydia Council Christmas
dinner was set for Otic. 9. An omament exchange will be held along
with a gift exchange among the
secret sisters. At that time names
will be revealell and new ones
drawn.
.
•
Paula Pickens presided at the
meting. Devotions were taken from
John I 5 ·and Ephesians 4 on the
theme "Chosen and Commissioned"
apd were given by Sherry Smith.
Bolin read "Thanksgiving Time"
and "Harvest Magic" from Ideals
magazine. Carolyn Nicholson had
....._

Stylish Taxlllred Plush

he submitted within 30 days

occurrence. Alii birthdays' must be
submitted within 42 days of the
occurrence.
All material submitted for publi·
cation is subject to editing.

.

' Textured Anso Nylol

co,..re ... • 22.50

,Co01pt1re al '25.00.

UU:PIIJCJ:

IAI•PJUCJ:

IAIIPIUCE

No &amp;lrl etr.ue for~
• &amp; /Ntallallon

Beller Quality BerWs
Comptllv "' UB.OO ·

.$. 15!~,•. · sll!~,d.
No Extra Chatf/0 ror paddl[lg
&amp; Installation

$19''

~-,4.

No Eldnl CIYipe ""PMfd/ng
&amp; inJta/illt!On

No EK!r8 Clwpe tor padding
&amp; IMrallation

Mohawk Textured Saxony MDhawk Fo~ Plush
c.,.,...,., a1 '137.00
Compare at u6.oo
'

ur•PIIJCJ:

No.

. , Tupp_ertPiains Fire Pept. .
&amp; the Modem Woodmln

of America Chickn BBQ
Sunday, Oct. 20,
11:00 AM td 2:00 PM

,J41KPJUCJ:

IAIIPIUCJ:

$22!~••.

$23~~y4.

~:.~

&amp;

E
. xtra

..

}_

Lavish Moltawl Texture Elegant Mohawk Xtral.lft
Compau "' 149.00

Compare "' •5il.OO

Ur&amp;PBJCJ:

14'1PJUCJ:

$2899...,.
&amp;lniW/IIIiotl

(

•

own

Co,..re "' •20.00

. SJ4''
... ,•.

"

for $0.50. '
'992-2156· 1"-------~

ar
Stala Resls11111 Pllsh

,...

"Indian Summer" was the theme
of the literary program presenteil
when hemlock Grange -2049 m~t
recently at the hall .
.:
A cookout preceded the meeting
conducted by Master Rosalie Story;
Vada Hazelton read "Indian SuiTJmer; Helen Quivey, "Columbur' ;
Ann Lambert, "The Legend of
Com "; Ziba Midkiff, "Play It Saf~;
Sara Cullums, "True Greatness;
Golda Reed, "Give Us Men"; and
·Nan-cy Wells, "Peace."
•
Midkiff gave the legislati\1)
rcporl which concerned the suite
grange meeting in Columbus, ttie
celebration of the I25th annual Ohio
State Fair, and the State Grange's
request for input to its opposition)o
the hunting of mourning dove. .
Reported ill were Wallace Bradford, Bernice Hawk, and Li.Oa
Schoepner. The b,irthdays of S4ra
Cullums and Ethel Brandt were
noted. ..
·• .
· It was announced that Pom&lt;ina
Grange will meet with Hem~k
Grange on Nov .. I.
.
_
Voting on the joining of Rock
Springs and Hemlock will take place
· at the November meeting."
•
Group singing of "Home on the
Range" and prayer by Vada Hazelton, closed the mcetin~ .
•

News Hotline Tuppers Plains Fire Dept. A
News Hotline Drug Dog Demonstratiolt
12:I 5, Med Flight
News Hotline helicopter
tours at approx.
News Hotline. 12:45, Haz·Mat fHIII
demonstration.:
News Hotline j· Cost $4.50
wltlt pie or clke

No &amp;lrl Clwpe "",-.g

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Several projects 'were discussed ·
atthe recent meeting of the "'radford .
Church of Christ Lydia Council held
at the home of Sherry Smith.
Brenda Bolin was co-hostess for
the meeting where members discussed the pack the pantry items for
October and November to include
toilet tissue, paper towels. shampoo,
soap and deodorant
It was reponed that the welcom-,
ing ministry is progressing under the
leadership of Madeline Painter. Sunshine basket were taken to Phyllis
Morris and Harold Bun. and named
to handle communio~ for the month
were Brenda Bolin, October; Janice
Fetty, November, and Charlotte Van-.
'

by Bob Hoeflich

TilE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
,will be pubU.hing a

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer

. ...

Projects
Circle
- planned by Lydia
-

Beat of the' Bend ...

favorite Recipe

in

ya

.,,..,.,. ·'

Send Us·Qour

St. Ignatius leaps
poll
thre_
e -s pots to second
·I

NASCAR drivers arc fearless.
"Really, he's been great to me.
He's always cracking jokes and ~
stuff," Gordon said. "I heard a lot of ' .
things, like, 'Boy, you don't know :
what to expect, what ~e 's going to say. or what he's going to do.' I heard ~
that he could be good or had, but I've
had nothing but good experiences .'
with him.
~'"
'
"I hope we can win the ,champi- :,
onshif. this ycar so we can go back ";
again."
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Cl~veland

"I get tons of mai I, and now
there's the fan club page on the Internet," Gordon said. "I don't know
how many hits or l~ttcrs we're getting from it, but I ~ow when we
opened Jeff Gordon-dot-com, we
were gettipg IQ,OOO hits a day, and
it's even ·more than that now.''
· Gordon's most recent appearance .
on Letterman, who is part-owner of
Bobby ·Rahal's Indy-car team and a
.longtime race fun, came on Sept. 25,
and he's ready to go back again.

Indian Summer :
Hterary program:
presented at ;.
Grange meeting

a

Because of NASCAR's .still-growing popularity,

By JOHN NELSON ·

1

Boy Scout Troops 249 and 235 with
Sco.utm"aster Donald Frymyer, Sean
Maxey, Mike Frymyer and James
Clifford manned the water station.
Haptonstall said that the year was
exciting with the continuation of red
caps for all survivors of heart disease. "It was ni ce .to. visibly recog~
nizc some of th.e people these funds ,.
have helped,"· she said.
The event was held in honor of
Bill Matla7k, a 'survivor of h~art dis:
ease, and'm memory of Pat Clifford.
ing the .most donations once again Cathy Clifford, widow of Pat Clifgoes to Trinity Church who raised a ford , and Haptonstall cut the ribbons
total of$1,664. They will receive the which sent walkers on their way .
WINNING TEAM - The Trinity Church team again brought In the moat donations to the American
People with questions or packets Heart Association In the annual heart walk. The amount the team members collected was $1,664. On
traveling plaque for another year.
They were followed by the Sacred to tum in can reach Haptonstall at the team ware front, taft to right, Jaeslca Marcum, Marie HauciC, Bill Matlack, and Nlki Roberts, and
Heart Church team who collected 992-6078.
back, Donna Carr, Connie
Marcum, Jack Marcum, Paulina Mayer and. Dabble Haptonatall.
'
$575 with the Meigs County Board
,
Teams· participating .included Meigs Junior .· High School, Meigs the Eason family.
of MRDD Carleton School coming
Meigs County Sheriff lim Soulsby,
in thind raising $433. Top overall American Legion Auxiliary, 'Presby; Senior Citizens, Meigs High School
Meigs County Prosecutor John
participant was P.J. Ervin of the · terian ChUrch, Middleport Garden Faculty, thi: Peopies Bank, Powell's
The corporate sponsor was The Lerites. Meigs County. Treasurer
Trinity Church team who raised Club, Jean's Tax Service, Meigs Super Valu, Crow'.s Restaurant, Fanners Bank and wa_ter station Howard Frank, Meigs County Com$413 . P.J. will receive a travel mug, County Board of MRDD Carleton Pomeroy Police Department, Sacred sponsors included Whaley's Auto missioner Bob Hanenbach and the
School , the Clifford family, the Heart Church, Jeff Thornton, candi- Parts, Dr. Douglas Hunter and Meigs County Democratic P.arty.
t-shirt, tote bag, and sweatshirt.
"We are once again very pleased Gheen family, Meigs County Health date For Commissioner, Trinity , Kroger.
Route segment
with the event,'' comme.nted Hapton- Department, Head Start, Veteran's Church, Xi Gamma.Mu Beta Sigma sponsors were Jeff Thornton and
For more information about the
stall, who said that a tremendous Memorial Hospital, Meigs County Phi, Schmoll Optome!rics, Meigs Judy Williams. Candidates for AHA or for a fee brochure, "\llltlkthanks goes to all the volunteers, Cooperative Extension Office, County Department of Human Ser- Meigs County Commissioner, ing for a Healthy Heart,'' resi!l'ents
walkers and donors who helped Meigs High School DECA, Meigs vices, New Horizon 4-H Club and Meigs County Engineer Bob Eason, may call 1-800-282-0291.
make the event a success, along with Health Services of Holzer Clinic,

again on a 60-yard touchdown pass
play; the kick .was again good and
the score stOod 14-0.
Miller was 5-13 passing for 113
yards and two touchdowns, while
Cooper rusheq 13 times for 183
yards. Camechis was 8-50 and Miller
5-13. Camcchis was 2-100 and two
touchdowns in the receiving department.

more prisons and longer sentences, tection. but they should not be warerather than finding intelligent ways houses for men and women who
to deal with problem people. They could. get on with their lives if given
remind me of the insane man who the opponunity. Surely we have lawcontinues to mop up the water vigor, makers who are competent to find
ously instead of turn ing off the better ways. -- Concerned Citizen in
Wichita
faucet.
There are treatment centers and
juvenile schools around the tbuntry
Dear Wichita: You have wrinen a
that have been successful in prevent- letter that contains some sound and
ing problem people from becoming sensible suggestions. · I hope the
lifetime members of the prison sys- authorities who are able .;lo impletem. More funds delegated to parole ment these changes will [ see yopi
and probation supervisory plans · comments and follow through. ; ;
would make it possible for thousands of prisoRers Who have served
Send questions to Ann Lande(li;
their time to become productive cit-, Creators Syndicate; 5777 W. C~
izens rather than pan of the prison tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angelo(.
industry at taxpayers ' expense.
\ Calir. 90045
•
Prisons are necessary for our pro-

The over 150 walker~ on 20
teams participating in the 1996
Meigs County American Heart Walk
Oct. 5 raised total of $4,781.08.
"This was short of our $6,600
, goal," comment~d Debbie Haptonstal!, eventchainnan. "It was a busy
weekend and several teams " were
unable to walk on event day,.but our
committee feels confident that when
all responses are in we will be very
close to our goal," Haptonstall said.
Top honors for the team collect·

Eastern to .host Trimble in homecoming contest Friday.
. Last week, the Federal Hocking
Lancers (3-4, 2-0) scored early and
often, turning tbe game into a Iaugher in the first quarter en route to a 60.0 bombardment of the Eastern (I -6,
0-2) Eagles Saturday night at Stewart. This week Eastern hosts the
Trimble Tomcats in its homecoming ,
game at East Shade.
The good news is that Easterri

tum, we will send them materials so readers who wrote are under the
impression that prisoners have it too
they can register.
We are so grateful for your assis- easy. I appreciate the opportunity to
tance, and look forward to the dedi- add my two cents --anonymously, of
cation on Oct 18, 1997. Sincerely -- course.
No privileges can replace the loss
Wilma L. Vaught, Brigadier General, USAF (Rel.), president, Women of freedom. Ask any inmate. Who
would be so foolish as to think pris-'
in Military Service Memorial
Dear Brig. Gen. Vauglit: Thank oncrs or ex-convicts have an easy
you for your letter. Readers, if you time under any circumsta11ces? They
or any women you know have have many things to fear and many
served in our country's military, difficult losses to endure. Their children grow up, their p.arents grow
pl~ase take this opportunity to contact the Women 's Memorial to old, spouses may divorce and remarrequest a registration fonn. It:s an ry,their former social skills won't fit
on the outside, and nobody wants a
honor long overdue.
Dt;ar Ann Landers: A while back, convict in the neighborhood.
Lawmakers sometirhcs acl irreyou had a rather spirited discussion
in your column abol!t the prison sit- sponsibly for political reasons ,
uation in this country. A great many catering to the thoughtless cry for

v~terans

Trinity.Church t~arn
raises m.ost funds
for Heart Walk

Southern
to
host
Miller
in
home.
c
oming
c.
o
ntest
Friday
I
.
.
.
Last week~ the Trimble Tomcats
unloaded thetr offensave arsenal to
defeated the Southern Tornadoes (1I, 2-5) 47-25 Fnday mght at Roger
Lee_Adams Memorial Field in
Racme. Thts week the Tornadoes
(ace a less potent team in ~illerfor
the Homecommg bonanza tn Racme.
Missed opponunities early in the
game left Southern without a score
and fe&lt;! the nature of the tomcat
beast. Then, the Tornadoes' mtstakes

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thuraday, october 11, 1996

October 17, 1996 .

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Save 20°/o To 40o/o On :
Over 1800 Styles &amp;Colors
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hue 8 • The O.lly. Seallnel

Thursday, October17,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohl.o

.

When Joey Green began writing
"Polish Your Furniture With Panty
Hose" (Hyperion; "57.95), he
thought he was "the only one on the
planet': interested in offbeat uses for
name brand products,.
WRONG!
"People came out of the woodwork," ·Green says about last year's
publishing phenom, which went
back on the presses five times ~nd
has sold 85.000 copies. "Everyone
loves to share these tips. It's a testimony to American inventiveness ·

and ingenuity."
Green follows up the household
tips book with "Paint Yolir House
With Powdered Milk" (Hyperiorf;
$7.95), hundreds of additional uses
for products baby boomers srew up
with, supermarket items that were

(

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"It fermented in my mind,"

GaNipolls
&amp; VIcinity

"The 1997 fund drive of the Unit-

J

10n's Greenhouse~ 2nd ~u, ,
8:30 A.M. -5:00, 17th, 18th, t9th,
Batga,n&amp; Gllloret

~~----~~--~--~--~~~--~~:

S.lurda)',.Oclober 18ftl, i·-4. Ot"Will Driw Off 01 Cora M1tl . Mer'IJ
Women&amp; /Children&amp; Clothil'l g,

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If gum can hold your hem together, what else can it do?

Green says about the notion of finding whacky ways to misuse familiar
d. Eliminate paint odors
4. Vanilla Extract
By LISA FAYE KAPLAN
brands. Som,c of his favorites:
e. Make bubblebath
5. Wrigley's Speannint Gum
Gannett News Service
- Tabasco sauce can keep cats
r. Kill slugs
Innovative ' consumers have
6. Clorox Bleac~
from scratching furniture;
g. Fertilize plants
always found new way&amp; to use old
7. Tabasco Sauce
- Miller Beer kills slugs and
h. Paint your house
produ'cts,
says
Joey
Green.
author
8.
Gold
Medal
F.lour
makes a handy hair spray;
i. Deodorize feet
of
"Paint
Your
House
With
Pow9.
Masterl:ard
-Coca Cola cleans toilets;
j. Relieve a toothache
dered Milk" (Hypcrion; $7.95),
. 10. Pal" No-Stick Cooking
' - Listerine cures dandruff.
k. Repel ants
which lists hundreds of offbeat Spray
"I really got a kick out of th~ fact
I. Lure crabs
II.
Lipton
Tea
Bags
uses
for
brand-name
products.
that you can paint your house with
m. Prolong the life of fresh
Green has devised a quiz. Lhat
12. Turtle Wax
powdered m:Q" says Green, · who
flowers
tests
your
imagination
and
innova13:
Scotch
Tape
now ~ives 'n
s Angeles. "'The
n. Clean soap-scum
14. Wesson Com Oil
tion. Can you match the product
great thing bou powdered milk is
o.
Remove gum from hair .
with its alternative use below?
15. Spray ' n Wa•h
you can mi · ally thick. You can
Answers:
I. H; 2. G; 3. F; 4. D;
PRODUCf
ALTERNATIVE USE
add pigment and make it any color
5.
L;
6.
M;
7.
J; 8. K; 9. A; 10. N;
I. Carnation Nonfat Dry Milk
a. Play guitar
Y9U want. American Colonists used
I 1.1; 12. C; 13. B; 14. E; 15 0 .
2: Maxwell House Coffee
b. Trim bangs
to boil blueberries and add that."
. c. Shine shoes · ·
3.
Miller
High
Life
These brand name sidelines are
making Green famous.
"I've become known as the sity graduate, who demonstrated ties on "The .Tonight Show," and is "Wash Your Hair with Whipped
Cream.··
Sparn guy," says the Cornell Univer-· Spam 's furniture polishing proper- working on a third tips book -

GRAND OPENING

HIDDEH .

TREASURES
749 S. Third An.,
Mldcllepoi't
.c-mlcs, Woodcrdlt,
Homem• Dolls a

Baeketa.

.

DISCUSSES UNITED FUND Suun Oliver, a member of the
Middleport-Pomeroy
Rot.ry
Club, spoke on behaH of the
United Fund for Melga County at
Monday night's Rotary meeting.
•
_
ed Fund for Meigs County Inc. is off
to a good stan." ,
. That was the comment of Susan
Oliver, secretary of the organization,
· at Monday night's meeting of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club at
the Heath Methodist Church in Middleport.
The United Fund f9r Me'igs
County was incorporated in 1993
wnen a group of county leaders realized that many Meigs Countians
were contributing to similar funds
which were going outside the county, Oliver, explained. .
.
The county group is unique in

Local and area officials
announced Wednesday ·the introduction of a new drug activity tip
line.
The .Southeastern Counties of ·
Ohio (SECO) Narcotics Task Force
in conjunction with the . Meigs
County Sherirrs Department and
Prosecuting Attorney's Office have
implemented the . tip line which
uses a state-of-the-art ccomputer
system ~llowing tipsters to leave
anonymous informatio.n about
illicit drug activity taking place.
SECO Narcotics Task Force
director Scott King of Athens
explained how the system .works.
By means of a toll free number,
the public can get involved with
helping the SECO Narcotics Task
Force fight the war on illicit drug
activity in the region, King said.
·By calling 1-800-TIP-US-OFF
'(1-800-847-8763) and entering
extension number 800 you can can
leave your totally anonymous message for the SECO Narcotics Task
Force. This service then sets of the
pager of an agent on duty in order
to follow ·up immediately on the
complaint, 'he explained.
"This is part of our on-going
effort to get the community more
directly involved in combating
drug abuse problems in our area,"
according to Prosecuting Attorney
John R. Lentes and Sheriff James
M. Soulsby.
The Meigs County' Prosecuting
Attorney's Office and Sheriffs
Deplirtment is providing funding
for the service with funds obtained
from fine~ assessed against convicted drug traffickers.

Friday 2 p!H pm

"We hope co,ncemed citizens in
our area will call the tip line," satd
King. :we are providing a. great
service and hope that the public
will take advantage of it."

A combinatioq appreciation and Rutland; Bridget Council, Carl Wilbirthday dinner was held recently at son, Mr. and Mrs. lames A. Schuler,
the Rutland Park to honor Vivian Mr. and Mrs. Everett Schuler, LindVtctoria Coy and Herman Grate.
sey Schuler, all of Middleport; Mr.
The observance was hosted by and Mrs. Charles Young, Mrs. Ross
· Mr. and Mrs. James A. ~chuler Shuler, Mr. and Mrs. J?anlly .Bi~
Christine Cleland. and Priscilla and family, all of Langsvilll
.
Bruce and Jennifer Conde, Alex
Schuler.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. 'and. Regan Shuler, Gail Ohlinger,
John D. Schuler, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Mr. and Mrs ..Roben Klein and famCleland and family, Mr. and Mrs. ily, Mr. and Mrs. Van Johnson and .
Giles Smith, Alicia Council, all of son, all of Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.

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Tony Hutton, Jessie and Cain McKinney, Langsville; Missy Riggs and
sons, Middleport; , ~r. and Mrs.
Marty Hutton and IM. J, Rutland;
Mindy Riggs, Harri.!onville; Mr. and
Mrs. Mickey Hutton• Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Smith and son, Mr. and Mrs.
James McD'Inald and family. Rutland.
1
Tony Hutton, Rutland; Mrs. Paul
Schuler and daughters. Langsville,
Mr. and Mrs. Rusty Coy and family.

Belpre, Maxwell and Diane Coy,
· Yawkey, W.Va.; Mr. an M,rs. Randy
Coy and daughter, Sumuco, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hutton, Yawkey.
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Halej;/
Glen Dale, W.Va.'; Mrs . . Melba
Abbott, Point Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs.
John Grate and family, Lctan. w:va.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Schuler and
family, Columbus, Mrs. Donna .Coy
Lewis, Columbus; Mrs. Beatrice .
Coy Ste.wait, Williamsport; Mrs.

Carlene Coy Penwell, Columbus;
Mrs. Patty Coy Clark, Columbus;
Bruce Barton, Canal Win~hester;
Adarin Barton, Columbus; Mrs.
Reah Coy Lee, Williamsport; Pnm
Fenwick, Robert Swingle, ~ackson;
Gary and Barbara Schuler and family. Albany; Guy. Wayne Schuler and
Mary Kay, Amy and Neil ·Picfcr and
Natlian, · Mi&lt;. Jerry Lamhcrt and
family, ~ilkesville.

----Community calendar---The Community CalendJir Is Church, through Sunday, 7:30 p.m.
published ail a free servke to non~ nightly. Evangelist, Rev. Bennie
prollt croups wlshln1to announce Stevens of Point Pleasant; special
IIHdlng and •r-llol ~vents. The singing each night. Rev. Roben
caieOO.r Is not desJaned to pro-- Sanders, pastor, of church located in
mote
or fund l'llisen ol any Texas Community on Wickham
type. Items are printed as space Road, just off Texas Road.
· ~Ill and Clln.not be guaranteed
to run a ..,eclflc number or days. · FRIDAV .
RACINE •• Weekend meeting at
THURSDAY ·
SYRACUSE --The Meigs Coun- the Fellowship Church in Racine.
ty '
Board
of
Mental -David
Retardalion/Developniental Disabi l- ·' Crowell, ~peaker, Friday, ·saturday
and Sunday evening, 7 p.m.
ilies. Thursday, 7:30 p.m. .

wes

day, 6:30p.m., dinner to follow.

I

RACINE-- Homecoming, Morning Star' United Methodist Church,
'

992-2156

1

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,.'

'

To offer stoty suggestions,
report late-breaking news IUid
offer news lips

-.

,..,..

.

l

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning •
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

' '

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~\

l

ANDERSON'S·
POIIEIOY

•

949-2168
1111fltlrt

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! :STORAGE SPACE
at
Meigs County Fairgrounds. lhSide
apace $3/llneal foot or space In
open lace buildings Stnineal fool.
For winter season, October-April.
C811992'·7BIIO
Modem Woodmen of America
Matching Funds Dinner
Chicken Bar-8-0ue
Sunda~~.20. 1996
11 :00 Ill Sold Out
$4.50, ~ Chicken, Cole Slaw,
.Baked Beans, Ron
SponsOred by Tuppel'll Plalna
Volunteer Fife

•

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•••
•

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•
•

•

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•
•
•
•

992-8260- 448-2842
MIDDLEPORT a CJAWPOU&amp;, oli.

'"

acrou

hom Ebe t' s

m Racine:

eam-Spm. LoiS tlf misc. &amp;
ino. Cheap prices.

Rummage sate Fri·Sal. 8·4, L80f1
Baden oil At 87 . Wttterm, nin·

tendol, books, Handa 750 motor·
cycle, ,llorm doors, clo thln.g,
Qlaasware. Home In ter ior, Tup perware.

80

For ell the·e.n awere
talk live to one of
our metaphysical
advleoraill · ·
Call 1·9011-!562-4000
.Ext. 2308 '
$3.99 per min.
Mutt 111118 yra.
Serv-U· (619) &amp;45 am

MEEINEW
PEOPLE THE
FUNWAY ·
TODAY

Public Sale
and Auction'

773·5785 Or 30(4-773·5-147.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar : Al l U . S.. SH .ver And 9old toins, Proolsets,.

Rjngs, Pre· t930 U.S. Currency.

811-

Sterling, Etc. AcQUISitions Jewelty .

30 Announcements

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

a truck palnUng, ·

minor mechlnlcsl
,
repair.
Tun•ups, 011 Cliange,
Will, BuHing
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
'742-2835, Alk for Kip

2.9WMJn. 18+ Serv·U
(619) 645 8434
1111/1-.pd.

7110/lfn

Mlddloport, Ohio 45780

Denny I' ~gy lrlqklti

614-742·2193

NOTM;E TQ TAXPAYERS
R.,..,ee: 5715.17 Ohio

1111:11M11M.

'

'com~ .

have

tho vel~ottono completed
end are opan lor public
lnlpectlon In the olftce of
the Melge County Auditor,
Seoond Floor, Courthou1e,

Call

Second StrMt, Pomeroy,
Ohlo45768.
Compleinto · ogelnet the
valuatlone, ee oltabtlahad ·
!Or. tax .Ytar 1996, mual .b e
made In eccordonee with
Sectton 5715.19 of tha Ohio
Beuy &amp;KUh
Revlaed Code. Theoe
complelnte mull be lllld en
forme which will be
lurnl1hed by lhe County
Public Notice •
Auditor end muot 1111 flied In
tht County Audltor'l Office 5715. I 9 of tha Ohio ReviHCI
en or 1111fore tha 3111 cloy of Codt.
Moroh, 1817. All compllinta
Nancy Porker Cempbetl
lllod with tha County Metge County Auditor
Auditor will 1111 !Ieard by tha (10) 7, .... 10,11,13, 14, 15,
eurd of Revl1lon In the 16,17
10 TC
menner provided by Sactlon
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry WriRht

1-900-626-5050

Ext. 4500

50?

$3.99 per min.
Muel be 18 yre.
Serv·U· (8t9) 645-8434

•

EMII&amp;W...... "-•

mo. pd.

•v ~-----'

LINDA'S
PAINTING

...........0

614--949-3117

,.,,...

,.l•tl... let •• II• It

n•

. PICk up dl-rdld
lppbnCH, battarltl•,

11111ny 111111811 I
motor bloclta.
IIIII-I

• 110

Begale Pup 4 Month Old Female

Tri Colored. Sl)ayed, Has Chain.
Color And Box 614-367-5028
Found: 10f11196, lemale doQ, SR
6A11 Albany vicinity, wound on
·thigh, call eount)'. pou~: 614 .w2-

3779.

Fout 6 Wee:k Old Yellow Tiger

t&lt;lnens, Mother Cat, Good Homel
614·3137·7209, 614·367·7999.
Full 'Blooded German Shephard,
female, does not like small dogs.•

' 3ll4-675· 7183.

Klnens &amp; cat food !"b give away.
304·895-3013,
Long. Haired Himalayan. Mother
Cal With Black &amp; White Male Kitlen Both Must Go To Good Home
On Farm. 61 4-.446·8 t 11 .
Male and female Sharpe i mix to
900d home, well trarrled, 614·992·

2522.

Help Wanted

,.

·'ATTN : Poinl Pleasan t' Postal

Able Avon Representat ives
needed . Earn money for Chris~·
mas b ills at horne/at work. 1-800·
99 2.fi:'JSB or 30 4·882-26 45, Ind .
R
ep.
Accept ing App l1oa 1ion s H1rough
Oct 18th for regis!ered long 1erm
care nursmg nsS1stant tr aln•ng

Puppies 112 Kersh Hound 112?

LOST: Gray Husky In the vlclnl1y
ol Rt. 8?, leon Baldtn Rd . Red

S37 IRYAN PLACE
· MIOOLEPORT

LOST: Rotlwtllflr, answers to
name crt "Jake". Llll seen Oct .
;tn at lht tnd of Jer1cho Rd .
Spikt collar, m1lt, If seen or
louod plaM caH -67$-130~

Ya~

Sale

Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity
Salol lluat Bo Poid In

Allvan&lt;~ . OEAOliNE: 2:00 p.m.
the day befott the ad il lcr run.

S.ndoV ~lion • 2:00 p.m. Fn&lt;tov.

register' ffld any oHice machines '
h&amp;lpful.. S~mGfay and eveni ng
hours. 3!1,·C.P hrstweek . Send re.
sume wit~ pfevlou s work expen·
Ol)ca and three

references: Daily

sentinel, PO. Box 729·35-, PomerOH •5769.

ov.

Computer Users Needed . Work
348-7186 ll 1508. '

Earn ·

up lO 130/hr, showing parents the
educanonar \l a lu e ol our tor s.
books &amp; computer sol tw are. Ca ll
now lor mor e Cl etaJ i s. 30 4· 675·
'

1

Nar"h'!"est Ohio Based Truckload·

C•irler Looking For Ellpenenced
Prolessionals. We Provide":
• Starting Pay 28 .5¢ I Mile Solo
.31¢1MiteTeem

• Annual Raises
• Paid Vacat1on
• 4CH(K1 With Employer Match
• 2500 .:Ill)() Miles Per Week
' SCheduted Home·Time
• Regional Pos11ion s II You L1Ve

ln ·!Near Otrio
COL -A With Hazma t And 1 Year
E•Piflenet Requirtd.

Chllttngor

Open 7 Daya.

1·800·777· 0585 ·
~

Dr ivers • Bt Home MDII Wee - !
kendl And Av.,aot
·60K P.r 1
Ytar Plu1 Btntlfi:s. Must Bt At 1
l,.tlll 23, 1 Vtar OTR Experl·

s.

Mondor .Oillon . 10:00 a.m. Sit· *"ct. Clau A COL Witt!
utdoy,
' .'
cau 1·900·827·0300.

,,

.

meroy area .· Knowledge of cash '

Drivers

All Yord

oM...

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CIBf"k wanted lor reta~ store in PtJ •.d

Lost: matt PYg, cff 31/Stiveriville
Rd., answers to "Pop.e ye" . $100
reward, no questions asked, 614·

70

..........

1110 Ja'c kson Pike, Bidwell.

•5614 EOE. MlfrH.

5761 also, booking pa!'t•es.

992-2772

W'J ••• ,

Nonprallt Organ ization Looking
Fer Bookkeel)er Wilh Two Years
Ac(uBI EKpe rienc;e. Working '
Knowledge Of AIR. AlP, General ·
ledger, Payroll, Taxes, lolu9 ~-2·
3 And Windows. Send Resume '
By October 23, 1996, To : FACTS •

eoMar &amp; chain. 304-tgs-l:Mo.

843-5135:

n

Bookkeeper

O I S~;overy Toys Need You.

60, Lost and Found

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATI'N

Bartenders F'VII·Time, Pati· T•me,
Applv At Carl's Tavern, 856 Sec·
ond AvMJe, G~Uipolls.

own hours. $~k to $501Vyr 1-800·

614·367· 7745.

-s...

\

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

::'--:--:'-_;_;_:.:.:=--

=:::wns
o..n,
.4

Wanted To Buy : Junk Au los Wiih
Or Without Motors . Call larnr,
Lively. 814-388·9303.
:

old. 304-e75-6494.
1
8 Adull Cats, Female&amp; Are Barid Seeking Ba ss Player Only
Spayed, All ColOrs, 614 • 367 . Serious Inquire , 614 · 367 · 7890,
5028.
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614 ·,445·2659
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1:00 Lm.-3:30 p.m.

'

.,

:;;der;;,;"':;;";;,;WV=
. - - - . . . . , - - - - Salmon. Construction. Canneries,
40
Giveaway
Oil Fields, Moro! 1 Days 4b7-875- .
::-::---:--;--...,..:..--, 2022 E•t 0526A42.
7 Puppies, to good home. 6 :-AV:::O~N::-::Ch:-,:-,s-tm_a_
s -. ::-$8-·:-$-15:-1:--Hr.
ma1e11, 1 terilale. molher ill pafl No Door To Door. No Min. Order,
German Shephard &amp; ? &amp; Weeks l ·.BOO·S27·46 4o lndtslslrep

-. ....

4(3111 1'1'10. pc:l .

304 -675·5965.

30 A

LUCKY J. TOWIIG
&amp;GAUGE

lillY IWOIIAIU
· HAYI IIPIIIICIS

IIITIIIOI•EmiiOI
FREE ESTIMATES
r.utl!e,.l• Mtof

Homes. Ca ll : 6 14 · 446 ·0175 Or:

mas· a·

Racine
American
Legion Post 602
Doors open
4:30p.m.
Bingo 6:30
Every Sunday
UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT.
PUBJ::JO·WELCOME

SL Rt. 124,
Recine, Ohio
Minor Repairs
24 Hr.
Towing/Rollback
Service
AAA • All Steta
Motor Club

Wa01 ed To Buy Useq Mob11e

7:'~-:'-----'--- !class. Marjor•e Elliou, RN , Class
1l'ls!ruc1or. Po.nt Pleasam Nu r s in~
nnouncement S
&amp; Rehab&gt;
l&gt;tatooo Cen1e• . ,State Ret·'
We process deer, make hickory ute 62. Route 1, Box 326 , Pomt '
smoked hams, 1rail bologna, pep- Pleasant, WI/ 25550 . A Glcn peroni, jerk~, summer sausag&amp;. mark· Multicare Company. EOE .
Cooler kept, clean, sanitary. Hunt· 304-6?5·3005.
ing supplies, license &amp; game :-A:-la~sk:-a-:J-:ob-s;-!~E=-a-rn-:U:-p-::rTo
chec:k statiOn. CRAWFORD'S Hen· $30,000 lf1 Three Months Fishing '

1,..,

949:2057
•

Top dollar. an1iq~es, .lurn1ture •.
glass, china, clo clc.s, gold, si\Yer, •
coins, watches, eSil\leS, old stone '
jars, old blue &amp; whlto' di st~os, old ·
wood boKes. milk bollles . Meigs .
County Ad'vertls&amp;rne n t. Osb~ ·
Marlin, 614-992· 7441
•.

. looking For Relatives Of Peleg
Rachel Pettit Ru.mfield.·Anu Into
'
Obit, Call Or Wrire: Judi Proctor,
5595, Ganges Road, Shelby, OH
44875, o\19-896·27.86. Also, Any
Info Taylors Wm Samuel -Jacob·
John W. Fonzo. Grueser'S ·Bar·
retl's · Wilcox's Rupa's ·Tho ·

912-8215

31601 Amberger Rd.
Off ForeSI Run

'.

COmpeationareAdopllon
call : (708)906 -2350Ext .3670:• .
Loving, childless couple lOng to _aa_m_·Bpm-'--.- - - - - adopt infant. L&amp;gaiJConfidential. AVON I All Ar eas I Shirle¥ ·
We can help! Please -call Janna Spears, 304·675-1429.
r ..
&amp; SleYe. 1-800-845-5715.

BINGO

MIKE BING

1238.

005
I _ _ e•am.
-===='-::90-:'n_a=s

Pomeroy, Ohio

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR

T. V.'s,

- : ' - - - : - - - - - - Positions. Permanent lull time ft;V r'
clerk/ Sort ers . F_I;JII Bene lll s, FOr
Pe
application and salarr 1nto··

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER .SERVICE
•Room Addltlone
•NewGerogn
&gt;Eiectrlcol a Plumbing
&gt;Roofing
~nterlor a Exterior
Pilntlng
Aleo Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

FOOL
PROOF
LOVE!!!

Gosh
Bob Pooler
Is It That
Hard Being

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Color

VCR' s1 AlsCJ Junk Cars, 61 4-256·

... ' .

INSURANCE
Any Car
Any Driver
DUI &amp; SR-22
&gt; Discounts &lt;
Computer Quotes
(614) 992-6677
Pomeroy

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Public Notice •

Air Conditioners,
2/121V2/lfft

.

Easy Pay Auto

,ortilbfe
,,,,,,. Mill

6 P.M.

Junk Cars &amp; Truck VfHIOUS Run·
nino VehiCle! &amp; Ca r Parts : 61.11 · '.
446· 4539 .

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
614-985·3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culvert- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D- pert·. - solid pipe
. 4" &amp;6" flex pipe
4" &amp;6" Sch 35 pipe
'/," &amp; '1." C.P.V.C. pipe
1'/."thru .4" Sch 40 pipe
·'
'/." &amp;1" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' rolls thru 1,000' rolls)
'1." U.L approved Condun
8" Graveless Leach pipe
G~s pipe 1" thru 2" ·fittings· Regulators- Risers
Full assortmllnt of P.V.C. &amp;Flex fittings &amp;Water fittings
Full tine of Cistern, SeptiC &amp;Water storage tanks ·

ALL OHIO

H&amp;H
SAWMILL

FRIDAY

&amp; D's Auto Pa(1S. 8tJ ytng sal · '
vage vell Fcles . Selling parts. 304 77:J.5033.

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

'

CLUB
GUN SHOOT

J

St. Rt. 7

Body work, car, truck

1-900-656·5050
Ext.3998

Clean late Model Car S Or ' ,
.Trucks: 1990 Model s Or Newer.'
Ismith Bu ick Pontia~. 1900 East ·•
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

Non-Wo rk1ng Washers , Dryen,
Stoves, Refrigerators, Freezers, :

(No Sunday Calls)
.

Second ·

Avenue. ~tllpolis . 614 -446· 2842.

614·992·7643

GRUESER'S
GARAGE .

....

·

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
l ull time auctionee ~ . comp l et~
auction
serv ice .
Licensed
166,0hio &amp; Wes t Virgm la. 30h·

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIA!- and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

LOCAL CRAFTERS featuring can, saw, slate ·
paintings, oak shelves; quill racks;
goose oulfits; fall decorations.
WATKINS PRODUCTS featuring grape seed oil
(lower in Saturated fat,than oHve oil)
TUPPERWARE - Some cash and carry.
Place orderstbook partieslgiflslfund raisers
Mon. thru sat: 1t&gt;-6, Sunday 1·5
2 miles Nortil SllverBridge on SA 7

'

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

614-446·4530

cloth ~

Diamonds. Anlique •Jewtlry. Gold

742·3212

IVYDALE COUNTRY .CRAFTS &amp; GIFTS

7122/tfn

1 •

Yard sale· last of the seuon·

Thursday &amp; Friday. SR 124

~ t.4 .T.S. Coin Shol). 151

985-4473

,,

Friday.

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

October 31, .1

l

day before the ad ls to run, Sun~

day &amp; Monday &amp;dillon - t :OOpm

QUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS.

OWner:

microwave, much rmre.

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid ~
.Advance. Deadline: t :OOpm the

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

and asked to make
the recipe.
Deadline:

l

~'~eater,

Oflered Exluslvely
by
.

Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

F:inallsta wUI be chosen

'

2Q.9 South Fourth, MiUdleport,
9am-Spm. Beds: wheel chairs, oil

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

·· Time Is Running Out!
Submil Your Recipe(s)
Now for The
Daily Sentinel 1996
Holiday Cookbook.

't
•

~19{'£ JE!WE£lR.X

--

. &amp; VIcinity

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

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

Rovt.ed Code

,

Call for Oemonatratlon &amp; Free Estimate
.614-992-4119
1-JI00-.291·5600
110 Court SL
Pomeroy, Ohio

Meigs County Fann
Bureau Annual Meeting
Tues., Oct. 22, ~:10 PM
AI Meigs Senior C~izen
Center, MulberrY Heights
Adults $5.50, Child $3.50
EnttBrtalnment. Door Prizes

•
•

.9lCQrzliSI'II09{S

i.
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•
•

.••

.

-----

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••
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Mtlge County Board
Revlal'!n· ha'a
---- oflteTht
work of equeUutton.
tax ratuma lor tax y..r
--- .The
1996
t.en ,.vlled lnd
-

--------------::;::
---

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Equal Housing Opportunity

:J
t tt Itt
tttI-···.
II tt1······-·-··········
tII t ItI It III t Ill It I-----------------.--1It t t It IIt 1It 1IIt t IIIII--lll
IL:
-·-······
-·

•.,.

· Open Mondays 9:30-6:00
Tueaday, Wednesday; Thursday &amp; Saturday 9:30-5:00
Fridays 9:30-e;OO
Vlaa
Financing Available
Dltco'nr
90 Daya Same Aa c-.h
. MIC

•

Apartments ·
for Rent

WATERS EDGE APARTME~TS

.'

.C..,•

What's on Your
Horizon?

MEIGS GARDEN CLUBS
Suzy Carpenter, county contact .:
.chairman for the Meigs County Gar- :
den Clubs Association. has •
announced 'a meeting for the group •
to be held Monday at 7 p.m. at the
soeial rodm .of the Pomeroy Public
Library.
The Middleport Amateur Garden
Club will have refreshments during
the pre-meeting social time at 6:30. :
The program will focus on the
schedule for the annual Christmas .
flower show with demonstrations of ;
some designs types to he presented
by the group's accredited judges,
Betty Dean, Janet Bolin, Sheila Cur·
tis, and Carpenter.
, The holiday show is planned for
Nov. 23 and 24, at Carleton School.
The public is invited to attend all of ;·
these events and participM the . ;
show competition. The schedule and ·
rules will be animuoccd later.
·

Cre41t Savi..,s!
Outsta,..fq Qualft~

&lt;••&lt;'f'"e-"1:

Unforgettable
Conversational!
Call this exclusive
24 hr. hotllnell
C8111·!100-47s.;asas
Ext. 3313
$3.99 per min.
MUll 111118 yra,
Serv-U- 619 645•8134
Howard L Wrltesel

''

IEAT PUMPS

·

ROllO IISSEiL
C011nRUaiON

WOMEN TO TALK

oflnldentlal Remodeling
•Additions
oNaw Con1truct1on
oOver I 0 Yra. l!'xperlenee
ol.ow Retae
of'" Eatlmalle ,
·•All Work Guoronteed
614-992·9910

0

--'11!

'\AII(IE INVINTQRV FOR
tHSTALLAnoNB.

oqulpmtnl. '

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepo" •

Highest "R Value"
Blocks 99.5%
.of UV Rays

....
- " ' QUAUI'ti!D
IIIIYEIII1

inlllllod wtlh low
IIIOIIIIIty JliYIMIIII

-·

WITH YOU LIVElli

440

-

· We will work within your budget.
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
108 ~omero· StNII
M110n, WV

CONSTRUCIIOI

10.1,..., ....

.

"No JotJ Too Lsrge or Too SIMI/"

614-992-6419 TOO 1-800-750-0750

HUGE SELECTION Of·.
•SOLitAIRES
•CLUSTERS
•DINNER RINGs·

*Desk Sale
* Gun Cabinet Sale
* Recliner Sale
* Dlning Roo• Sale •
* Glider Rocker Sale ·
*Sofa Sale

Ewe•l•t 11lt1 WHice1d It I

syracuse, Ohio
Now available FmHA One BR epta.
Senior, Dlaabl8d, Handicapped,
Baalc monthly REnt $286.00 · , t··
·· Resident pays electric only Range,
Refrl~erator, AJC on-aite lauodry,
Community Room, Management,
Maintenance provided
SEE MANAGER FOR RENT UP SPECIAL

$$$

•(

·POMEROY·· Rock Springs Bettel' Health Oub, Thwsday, 1 p.rri.'

The Sentinel News Hotline

'

10% Dhcou1t for Sept. &amp; Oct.

WICKS
HAULING

"ASK ABOIJT OUR
ROOF SPECIAL

'

WII'Fift~•

'ON THE IPOTI'1N.UIC1NO

'I'RD EmiiAttl on

Aeration Repair or Replac. .nt

HOMECOMING
The St. Paul United Methodist ·
Church in Tuppers Plains will . •
observe . their aimual homecoming '
Sunday!
·
Sunday school will be held at 9 ,
a.m., the worship service at 10 a.m. ,
and a carry-in dinner in the church ·
basement at 12:30 p.m. An .after· :
noon song service will begin at 2 :
p.m. with Jim Blair and the Southern
Gospelaircs from Marietta.

Shop Acquisitions Before
.Buying A Diam~nd. ·
We WiU Save You!

Anderson's Octo~er Sale

SYRACUSE -- Revival services,
POMEROY -- Meigs County
',yracuse Nazarene Church through · Family and Children First Council.
Sl!lurday, 7 p.m. and Sunday, 10:30 planning meeting Friday, 9 a.m. at
a.m. to 6 p.m. ·Speaker, Rev. Bob the Meigs County Public Library, ·
Stewart. Special singing.
Pomeroy.
·
SATURDAY
~·
LONG BOTIOM , -- Red; Brusll
Church of Christ, Long Bottom, ser- .
PAGEVU..LE ·c Scipio Township · vices Saturday, 7 p.m.; Sunday, 10
TrulteeS, special mcctinJ, Thursday. a.m. and 6 p.m.
6:30p.m. Paseville town hall.
Sl:JNDAY
RACINE
American l::;egion
POMEROY -- Revival, Mt. Hermon United Brethren in Christ Post 602. business meeting Thurs-

Sunday, 10 a.m. Sunday school; II
a.m. worship service; 12:30 p.m.
carry-in dinner; 1:30 p.m.. afternoon .
program. Kenny Baker, pastor.

pA r,r, cr,EAN·UP

BCHIOLOGY
•HEAT MIRROR" patlllfecl syst•.

I ·

T0111 •

1'11 LIIIR II UPUCIMIIT WillOW

AJr CJRII'I I S . .
AU • lt.t I'IIRps.

.,....,...'*'"

992·7119

Authorized AGA Dtstributor
• Weldi119 Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum!Stalr]less• Tool Dteulng • Ornamental
Steps·• Stairs, Railings, Pallo Furniture, Fireplace
hems, Planter Hangars, Trelliles &amp; Iota of other stuHII

COLLINS

•

Appr~ciation, birthpay dinner ~eld to honor Coy, Grate

'

#te~~ !feta~

614-992-3470

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

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE

(Ume Stone-LowRitee)

Umeston.e,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

PAST COUNCILORS CLUB
The Past Councilors Club of
Chester Council 323, Daughter of
America, met recently at the lodge
hall. Opal Hollon, Ethel Orr and
Cora Beegle were hosiesses. ·
Deloris Wolfe presided at the ·
meeting and road the IOOth Psalm.
The ' LC\rd's J&gt;raycr and pledge were
given and members gave comments
on Halloween in response to roll
call.
Reports were given by ln1.y
Newell, secretary, and Thelma
White, treasurer. Margaret Amhcrg.er thanked the council for gifts.
cards and visits. Lora Damewood
thanked the club for her going-away
gift and for the cards she received.
Games were conducted by Laura
Mae Nice, Delores Wolfe and Opal
Eicbinger.
Door prizes were won by Marcia ·
Keller, Margaret Amberger, Mary Jo
Barringer, and Mary K. Holter.
Others present besides those
mentioned were Goldie Frederick,
Elizabeth Hayes, Erma Cleland,
,Charlotte Grant. Visitors were
Shirley Beegle and Sandra White.

NEW DRUG HOTLINE • Local and araa euthorltlaa are kicking
off a new drug activity tip line, 1-8110-TIP-US-OFF. The new tip
line Is a cooperative effort lletwHn the Southeastern Counties
of Ohio (SECO) Narcotics Teak Force in conjunction with the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department and Prosecuting Attorney's
Office. Hare, from left, SECO Narcotics Task Force director Scott
King, Meigs ·County Prosecuting· Attorney John R. Lantee and
Meigs County Shariff James M. Soulsby, examine a filar promotIng the new anonymous tip line.

Alto Chllchn's
Playroom

Moridly .t Dani-s pm
n-.-Thur. 2 pm-7 pm

Society
·Officials kick off new drug tip line
scrapbook

that it is not affiliated with any other.
state or national group and stands
alone, she said. Another unique feature is that administrative costs are
less than one percent because it is
operated · entirely by volunteers.
Most similar funds have administrative ~osts of 20 percent or higher,
she explained.
Another special feature of the
Meigs County fund is that all elf the
money goes to suppon only non..
profit agencies operating in and for
Meigs County people, according to
Mrs. Oliver. s·ince 1993, over
$35,000 has been raised and spent
for Meigs County residents.
The· agencies funded in 1996
included the Meigs County United
Methodi.st .cooperative Parish,
Riverbend Arts Council, · Meigs ..
. County ' His1orical Society and
· Muse~m. Boy Scout troops '249 and
299, Meigs County Council on
Aging and the !=ommunity Assault
Prevention Program.
The board · of directors of the
United Fund for Meigs County
include:. Chloris Gaul, president;
Sue Maison, vice-president; Susan
Oliver, secretary, and Tom Dooley,
treasurer. Members of the board are
Cathy Crow, .Debbie Haptonstall,
Tom lfunter, · Roger Hysell, Vicki
Morrow, Cindy Oliveri, John Riebel,
Robbie Shields and the Rev. Dawn
Spalding.
Rotary members were invited to
participate in tl)e Fail Fishing Classic at the Pomeroy Riverfront on
- Oct. ~6 and also the all-you-can-eat
breakfast at McDonald's the moming of Oct. 26. People seeking more
infonnation about any of the events
can call Jim Freeman or Tom Hunter
at The Daily Sentinel at 992-2155.
Rotary President Hal Kneen pre~nted a donation to the United Fund
on behalf of the Rotary Club.

(Joh~·

• Church Rummago Sato ·

I

'•

United Fund topic
of Rotary rreetihg .

==The= Dally Se.ntlnel • Page 9

l

'

"ingrained in ow collective consciousness,'' he says..
'There's Maxwell House Coffee,
which makes an inexpensive brown
fabric dye; Gold Medal flour, which
makes a good dough for play and
cleans kid gloves; and Lipton tea
bags, which"add golden highlights to
red or brown hair and polishes
wood.
Of course, these are not the original' uses for these products. But,
Green says, consumers through the
years discovered additional ways to
get more bang for their grocery
buck, shared insightS with the com·
panics, which kept them on file and
sent them to Green.
Green, a 38-year-old former
advertising copywriter, got the idea
for the books 10 years ago when he
was asked to dream up alternative
uses for Nestea iced tea.

'.

1914

Cover your hair with tea bags, relax, and .read how to -paint ~ith milk
ly USA FAYE KAPLAN
CW.-.tt News Service

..

.-

•

..

f

'l

Halma!.
·

"

�Porf.leroy "M~ Ohio

Oei:UIIer 17, 1116
0

11

Ohio

0

. .IDOl:

•

NEA Croaword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

MAuld ..... -

=.;, •

1 Con p
5

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

An

llfltlk*
f.~~·)

tonlll I -·

to-.
·~t21M11ealilllw 41-nul

t3w.....t 1
I

42Pulo1Aift
41

I

320 Mobile Home•
Earn

nooo w..kly Stumng En-

¥1lopet AI Home. Start Now. No
bperi~e. Free Supplies lr:'tfo.

No Oblivotion. Sand LSASE To:
ACE, Dept 1351, Box 5137, DlaIT'Ond Bor, CA 91185

0

,_'

Earn 1 000'1 w"kty
i
Y-'Opet 11 home. Be your
Srart now. No experience.
aupptie1 info, no oblloaion. Stnd
S.A.S.E. 10 Hugger Unit 3$4•8,
10151 University 81\'d. Orflndo

FL321111

Experienced pari-time ca.hler

needed_agarrr'• loc:~er, letart
'No/. :104 ~5 30!03.
General office, light lyping, must
bt 55 or oldtr and meel income
CfldO. linea. 304-675·0857. Con-

rioBocl!olt

~

G~ow!no company accepting ap.
phcauons lor Data Entry Gen8fal
Cltrlc;al. Good mental Bnd visual

concanlfalion. Accuracy,· ability

"' work lndrrpondanHy, and daoire
10 be a team plaver. CompeJetiv.
""'VO and benoliiS. Send Resume
., Bole CW·12 CIO Point Pleasant

for
Ha" You Ever Sold Cook'llrare,
lootr.ing For Menilgers In This
Area, Part-Time Call 304 -8l51181.

$82.000 Voty Good Pl&gt;rtndal Mo- Pikt, Good Flat lond, Pricod To
101 N- Somo Repair, 81•·Soiii81Hot8o0822.

I-19~8:-:9,-S~c-h-ul_ll:_:,.::2:.br-.-:c2-l-ul-l-ba-t-hs,

eeo,.

We pay $2.00 lor wery ltf'N8tope fireplace, appliaOCfl. rem or sale.
you 11.1ft at homa. Send a aetr-ad- 304·773-5245.
dressed stamped envelope to ___.....;:...::.___________
R.W.J. Enter'prlses, P.O. Bo• .oe. 1992 14•52' mob•le home, new

Temple Hlllo, MD 201•8 (Pay- :c'a::':::i&gt;O::I,~C:ai:,:l8:.:1:_4·;;_14::2:;·3:.:1.:;1•::_·-----

"'-

230

!ltd

""

IMIIJFriday)

Professional

Services

per.ienct, reasonable rate•. 304-

local Buslneti: ~eeds pari-time
ulea clerk. Send re111me 10: 906

25550.
Need COL drinr with tanker endoraamenl. Work located outside
Columbus area . call 61-4 -992-

3220.

Outstandlnp. opporrunily for a
hlthly -mauva1ed individual to
OlrKtor of

All real estate advertisklg In
this newspaper Is subifCt to
the FaderaJ Fair Hoo~ng Act
of 1968 which makes Rlllegol
1&lt;&gt; odvorllse "ann' prelerenoe,
.limitation or dlscrlmklaii:WI
based on race, -..~
sex famlllal·statuS or national
orlgkl, or any lnloniiOn to

mtkeonyiUCI&gt;.......,.,.,

Hmllallon or -lnalion."
This ne 1PBP8' wtll rot
l&lt;no1rtlngly a&lt;cept
aMrtlsemeniSior reale&amp;Uite
wlrlchla In violallon ol the law.
OUr re8doro ara trorei&gt;Y
inlonr&lt;!d thet afl ~
· advertlaed In thts newapapar
are avallabie on an equal
opf)OIItrnH)' baSis.

310 Homes for Sf!le

mote years or nui'UII 3 Bedroom House, New Haven,
axperlenu, a proven Irick Electtlc HHt, Central Air, Bue-

reoan:l tn gttielric: nurling admlnialration and a valid W.Va. nurt·
lng llcltflll reQuirltd. Knawl~e
ot amte, federal rttulations and
OBRA guldellnet 1 must U you
NY• lhe geriatric badq;ound requltod lot lhlo challonging and roWIIrdlng position, pleaae contact
Poinl PIHIInt Nursing and Re·
habllllltlon Center, Slate Route
'12, Rou.. I,

Box 3211, I'Oini -Piooa·

ent; WV 25550,· a Glenrnark-Mul·

llcare Faclllly, J;OE. 30•·8753QDII.
to work d,uring deer aea·
aon. No experience neceaaary.
Apply at Crawfo'&gt;crs. Henderson
~pi•

wv. 304-675-SoiOol.

Clorll
Trpino and some computer usa.
APJMy in perton 10 Don Tala Mo..,,, -.y, Ohio. Ask lor Rover Jetlie or Ken Mills. No phone
cd&amp;pleaoa.

'i'.

·

·

on-call. Minifllllm one· year h.ome
heelth e11per~ce required. Must
'hiYi current OhiO license, 'CPR,
TB, and phjslcal, valid Ohio driver~ licarae. and proof of in·
1urance. Background in'&lt;ltStiga·
tlon· required. Mar become full·
lime in re• future. Send re1ume
and cover lener 10 blind box The
q.ily sentinel, 1'0. Box 729-33,
RMUiiOj, Dh. •5789.

Sookint OTR Dri'"" Good MVR
Wirh Hazmat Or Will Get &amp;raMI.

Minfmum 1 Year Flatbed E11tra

Good Pay, &amp; Benefill. Brakel In·
woy l!tlkol, 8..·3114-5555.

Su,port Staff· provide In-home
.upport 10 peopJe Wilh dlsebllities
ltvlng in Maig1 Caun~. Call Independent Opporrunlt1e1 at 513·
171 - 1150 to.schedule an• inter-

--

Truck Drwef -RunNng Exlta Man

Job Opening Galhf)ohs Area. Ap·

pro~etmatelr $30 ,000 -S35,000

Year. Musl Have: 1 Year Ellperi1 onca(-1

COL

--·M.VR.

vart Lo~ $32Mio., Oopo~r S250,
Re~"· 814-446-4314.
•18 814e.

.!:.-::;•. ~~-~~.:~·~r~=;.

1 112 mllet from Pl. Pleasant
304-895-3571 E\181'11001.Two bedroom mobile home oul·
llidaoli'Dmtfoy, 01.-892-503(1.

Apartments
fO r Ren t

1997 Doublewide, 3 bedroom, 2
bath, $1 ,49Sidown, S210tmo, free
air, with approved credit 1-800691-6777.
1VIil7·2 &amp; 3 Bedroom, $995 doWn,
1195/mo. Free delivery &amp; sti-IJp,
only at Oak Wood Homtl, Nitro
WV. 304·755-58S:i.

1St Tifne Buyers E·Z Financing

2

Or 3 Bedtoomil, .$201).1Mo., 1·800-

251-5070.

5+ acres with 12x10 mobile, new
furnace. h.w. ·tank, plumbing. pole
barn . 1001 shed . roo t ctllfH,
tencet:l, may 1rade, 614-992-5042.
Factory Goaled Sa~t~e Tnousands,
1-800-251 -5070.
Buyersaround
: E-z Financing
Firs•
2 or 3Time
Bedroom.
S200/mo.

1-800-251-5070.

~

•..vu
Merc•-141. .

'-"'

100 W 10

B M

l!tlnd And
500 Ml1ed
Sports Cards, Bllketbd, Foptbd
And B..abalt Including Frank
Thomat lillad AI $20, 2 8811
OTflef's By November 1'11, MoNS

Olher:~t!:. 7ba~

Need to s.ett iri1mediately. Nice
1985 two batf1 14• 70. Call Mike a1

614-385·9621.

New homt&amp; ttarting at SHO pef
month with only $770 down. Can
Russ at1-800-837-3238.

Older Schultz home, owner occupied, 2 bedroom. excelltnt tor
young 9r retired couple, PfiCed on
inspection. '3J4-875-539oll.

!..-4:00pm. ;lOoll-87~1518.

740

~~~~5~~r~=~

Very clean apartment in Pun•OJ',
:S-r.~nd relerances~ call 814·

$47,000. 30&lt;·875-1120.

.t Bedrooma, 2 Baths, Tri -level.

Unbelievable, New 14.X70, no

3bedfoom, 2balh, forced air lur·
nace. central air, storm wihdows.
vlr:-yl Siding, 1car garage,

30•-875-3000.

$130,000 814·U6·8706 After 4

.P.M.

deUver.y I

5070.

~.,_,

450

Furnished
Rooms
set-up. 1-B00-251· Roomt ldr rent • w..k or monlh.

580

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment

HEMLOCK lor tandtcaping.
Balled &amp; burlapped, 3 112' 10 r
Compul, tightly aheared. 130
and up. Santa's Forest. 304·A7So4138.

JET

Starting at S1201mo. Gall!a Hotel.

:Jbedroom, bath , llvmg room w1
hardwOOd floors, kitchen &amp; dimng
area together, new root, garage,
on R1 2. 3Q4-675·4139 or 30.4 -

675-1328 aher 8:30.

Log Home 3-4 bedroom, 2 baths,
heal pump, 2 car garage, 3.1 acrel, 3· 112 mile~ from town . 304-

67!&gt;6889..

Nice 4br home, located at 23
Wan,~ick, 2 balh, k, jr, clr. fr. in
gro.und pool, call 304·675·€1515

,alle&lt;5pm.
Ranch Style House, completely
remodeled on inside, 3bdrm, 2
blltn, run basemern, , car oaraoe.
fenced in back yard, 1,2500sq. It
located. in great neighborf:lood,
Lyont A&lt;klition, Mason. Call 304·
773-g163 cr ~-674 · 4652.

Building, Total Electric 2 House
Trailers On Adjacent Lot, Good
Income Properl)!, 4 Ren~ lt Total.
614·446-9755.

Hpnuars wish to ..... 200+ acres
for dHr Ieaton, up 10 $500, de·
pending acreage. 304-875-6780.

:,50 Lots &amp; Acreage

490

1 Acre, Wafer. Sewer, Footen,
Garage, On Pouum Trot Road,
$18,0001 814-388-lllil78.

20 Acres of pas1ure W11111a11
horu barn . New 1,500 square
fHt, 3 bedroom, S5001mo. on ap·
pro• . 3 acrtl olland . 304· 758·
1331 .

5 Acres Off Stale Route 11SO, On
Kerf Road, Close To F{teway
And Hospilal e14-446-01 16.
Parcell on Rayburn Rd. Water,
paved road, reasonable rellrictions. 304-675· 5253. ~no tinglewide ~ires please) •

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

For Lease

MERCHANDISE

510

Household

Murray 22· Mower 135: Handmade Compressor S25; CraftsWeeduter Gal $40: WeeE,lect. $10; Sears Tiller 5
HP $125: Sral')d Fan $20 ; 301

I'd'"'"'

Appliances;
Rtcond llloned
Walhet'S, Dtyef'l, Raf\Oiil, Refri ·
gratorti, 90 Day Guarantael
French Citr Maylag, 814 -448 7195

994· 18 Ft. Byson Cattle Trailet
Mine Condilion, 1~96 300 EX 4
wnee~&amp;r. 6 14·2•5-5002.

2 ·4400 JO Comines; W045 AC

3 I'Dinl, P.S.: 930 Cast Will&gt; Cab.

Engine Overhauled, Excellenl
Condition, Graviry Wagolls; Othet'
Mfac . Farm Equipmenl, 614·8695101 E~t~enlngs .
Lowett prices on all wood cuner
tupplies. Bars &amp; chains. oil &amp;
files. Sider's Equipment Co. 30467§..7421.
MF235 1175 Hrs; JO _.020 : Ford
4000 ; While 2·55 4 WO; JO:J01
4SHP Ancl loader; White 21 HP 4
WD Wirh &amp;o· Mower ; Granly
20G With 80" Deck; J01020 Gas;
New And u,ed Round Baler s,
Rakes, Hay~inek: 2 ' JD8200
Drills: JO 12 Ft. Disk: JO 8Ft
Disk; Foret 8 Ft 01Sk (like New} :
MF4 · 14 Plows: J034 ManUre
Spreader; NI3S 1 Manu1e Spreader: NH355 Grindet (Nice) : Nl 324
2 -Row Picker: 7.9% Financing On
NtW~~ JO Tractors, 8.9'% Financing
on Used Tractors With JO Credit
Appronl. Carmichatt·s Fafm
And Lawn, 614-446-2412.

620 Wanted to Buy
Standing Umber, pulp wood or

Carb. GM s2o. S..: 1~1g Chell· lind with limber. call evenings al'"' epm: 814-319-2909.
nut Strtet. 614o446·45~.
Nintendo With Games And Super
New Wllh Loll Or Acce11ories,
And Game, 814-387-()3211.

Refrigerators,

Sio~t~et,

Wast'tera
And Oryera, All Reconditioned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up,
Will Deliver. 614.009-6441 .
Side by side Kenmore refrigerator: elecuic dryer ; deacon't
bencn: 614-742-1800.

Goods

630

Livestock

10 year old Egyp!ian Arabian
mare, 14 hands. anyone can ,r iM,
great for 4-H or trail, 814 ·g92-

7295·

..,.., 114·307·7010.
11
N
S h 00 1
Sun v• •r
\.lfttry
~
·
ChildcltO M-F.6am·5:30pm Aqto
2-K, Young School Age Ouru'lg
Summer. ~ Oayt per w..~ Mini,
, 11'4M11e14.,. 16·3657.
W¥1 babysit yqur cl'lilcl or eldtriV
lOVed one In my hOme or rours,
_. Of night. Yeats of experMt
Mll ....... aa.et•7•2·1358. '

12x60 Vandale 2 Bedrooms, Ap plianctl, Plus Stackable Washer,
Orver, Front Porch.. $5,000. 614·
'
446-Q963, 614 -448 -7371 After S
P.M.
1875 Holly Park 12K«S0. has to be
moved. 15,000. 304-675-2oll95 af-·
.., e:oopm.
111178 28158 Double Wiele 3 a.d·rooms, lR, FR, Heat Pump,
Woodburntr. Wastwr. Oryet', At·

~lOO&lt;IID&lt;.

Fl tlANCIAL

Rongt W/MkrowiYt, 8

Ft. Pool Ttble Reduced U ,OOO
Mull811Mcwd814-«&amp;-7020.
~

210

BUstneU

187.'0 Wlndaor 1""1C70 new carpet
&amp;· yinyl. winrt· tiding, txtraa.

Opportunity

~. .,. 10

INOtK:EI

appr.a,re. 30oll-773·

OHIO VAIJ.£Y PiJIII.ISHING CO.
•-IIIIMIIII• Jttal you da buoi· 1en Scnur11 ••x70 Wiih Exi&gt;fn·
..... ..., polllllo,... " ' -· ond
3 8tdroomo. 2 Balhl, CA,
lfCJf 11- ._lhtovl)h lho
Pump, Dedi, Lorge'Awning,
.. ~ro• hrlvel-ltfllltd I;:~~B~,u~lid~in~g~Dn~Rt••:n•:ed~Lol
Allor•~ltl.
·.

,., un•

.
I

Nict, Clean, 3 Bedroom, References &amp; [)flpOtil. No Pet&amp;. 304·

675·5182.

, PI

Ploosan~

11·5.

6:00pm.

Thr" bedroom hoUH, StoYt and
r81rigeralor, WlihM tnd dr 1er. no
inside pelt. 8tf.H2·3090.

Two ~droom house. ttove and
retngtratOf, no 1nside pelt, 81 4·
992·3090-

420 Mobile Homes
- for Rent
UK60 Ttallor For Ron~ Eloc1tlc
Wilh Air, Furnitltod WID 1300/
lilo., Retotencoa, et._10.U.

2 Bedroom Furnlthod Tr•lltr
1928 112 Choornu1, Oallipolla,
S22SIIilo.. litO

3870.

,

Dopooi~

8u... 8-

.

$2700, 61•-992-55... .

I

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1889 Mercury Topaz GS. 1OOK
miles, ate, amltm c:useue, rear
bumper damage, S 1,000, 814949-2311 days, 61.t-949-2644

......,;ngs.

r.si-~-iP_L_IIfl_1_1t....., '-

1989 Pontiac FOfmula, 3SOHO, I·
lop~•· cd player, everything pow -

. Sfllt:TLY .

dllion, V-6. High Miles, Si .•oo. 760 Auto Parts &amp;
81 ...46 -e838'
'lcc&amp;ssorles
1991 Cadillac
Sed.;•;nit0:"'30&lt;i-il'iow~S.- I ;;-~~~~.,..--:--:-mileage.
$1!1,()90"
Budge! Pricv. :Transmissions,
3&amp;42.

·

19D?' Satum Sl2, ,C Door, 5 Speed,

80Y, Tt4fY
A,tN'T .

&amp;N~EJ)

1990 Oodga Caravan Good Con-

~lf&gt;I&gt;IN61

~t\a ~ . .:.-1~~'
..&amp;:..,

1

Used /Rebuilt, All Types, Ovef
O,OOQ Transm1 5510ns, Clurche
F'l)'whaels. Ovorhual Kits. 814 •

Air, Sunroof, PS, PW, AMIFM 2&lt;5·5&amp;17

Cauette, Cruise, 86,00'0 Miles. ::------------ - - - - - '
Good Condilion, $€1,500, Call 614 - New gas tanks. I ton truck
245-043i.
wheels &amp; rad 1ator s. D &amp; R Au to, ;
Rtpley, WV. 304-372-3933 or t · ,
1993 Cl)evy 'Ca'&lt;lalier 4 Doors, Air 800-273-9329.
Automtlc , Antilock Brakes, Rear
'
Dehaster, N~ Banery, 63,000 O~t~er 100 Late Model Low Mile- :
Mites, E•cetn Condition, $5,100. age MotOI!i Ou1 01 Insurance ,
Salvaged Autos, Trucks. Foreign, c
614-379·2967.
Domestic, New Windshielcll, Ra· 1
1993 Ford Escort ~X .· 4 door, diators, Auto, Truck Sheel Metal. 1
aula. 47K miles, a/c, am/lm cas- 0\ler 500 Cars, Trucl(s For Parts. 1
sette, pa!J:a side' damage, $3,000, Free Delivery ; Ma jor Patti
cloora included in this price, 614- Gallipolis, Po1n1 Pleasant Area .:; ·
048-2311 .dayt, 614 -949-2644 PoWetline Auto Systems , Kitl s I
ewnings.
Hi!l , Ohio t -80'0-482·6280 U.S. !
Toll Free, 614-532·0139.
1903 Ford Mustang LX. automatic, PS, PB. air, amtlm ltareo cas- 790
Campers &amp;
aelle, 30,800 miles, varr good
Motor Homes
condition, $8700 090, 614 -992-

THE BORN LOSER

eruwoow.I'!'LE.
MY lti61\l- t\1&gt;-ND
AAN'

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

4111.

1994 Salurn, 4dr, 5tpd, au1o,
aunroot, loaded, e•c. concl., great
gas mileage. 511 ,000 . 304-4 581775.
CARS FOR $1001 TrUcks, boats,
4.·wtltt~rs, motor homes , lurniture, elec:lronict, compulert etc.
by Fbi, IRS, DEA. Available your
area now. Call 1·800-513·4343

Cttdil Problomo? E·Z Bank Financing. For Uood Vehicle• No

Billy Pigmy Goal 3 Years Old
Black 110.114-387-0206.

7881 .

1993 Pop-Up Coleman Camper
AC , Furnace, 'E•cellent Condition
53,200, 614-388--8293.
., '':- :
.
'
1994 Sunrrse 24 Fl Travel Trailer •
1
Loaded , E•cellent Condition
Used Very Little Asking $9,eoo: ;
Must Sell614-387-0328.
_...
~

304-837·2011.

TI1Ar l SPORTfl TIOIJ

710 Autos fOr lite
'MC....,~--.2.5

~ .... ,.,,. - ·· floG. coM Cllltl
114·--·

Pass
Pass

2+

2a

Pw

East
Pua
Pua
Pua
Pua

2fl Golla
27Fr:ealo
28 CUI ofmnl
29 Tennla playw

John-

33 A Stooge

35Emuiafft
UemNeuon '

311 P-v loot .
37 s-mllned
:Ill Rowers'

40 Concerning
(2 wde.)

41 Military cap
42 a.tw..n·
Mln. 1ndGa.'

21117.

.

'94 fofcl Ranger, low miles, excel·
lent condition, beSt off9r, 614·992·

=~
·'-'"
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule campoe

__

...""'-

c.,...."""ogoo""
..---~~y-.&amp;ct1 tiottei in tw...
dpNr ~tend~ tor anofhrtr. T~ W.: V fqta 8

.

'Z

CLJNRNGNZB

INRP,

ZB

ND

z

TZB

IPL

'
.
HSHA , .-. CA 'LVJHT

ZCCALZGPHD

TL~jR P.' ~ ~ZDJZN.·

LCHB

··~

DRHSHBDLB.

J

PREVIOUS. SOLUTION: "Like mosl nallve New Yorkers 1 was born out of
IOwn, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 10 be specific." - Harry Herahllekl.

...,

'=~~:~' e~\\.~lA-J&amp;i.~s·
loy
1-

WOlD

ClAY L ·POlLAN _;;,.._ _ __

Roarran;. lolloto of tho
0 foor
acrotnblod wordi .._
low

· ·

~

10

fotm f011r

0

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~mpio Word~

"'

-rls,_,HT-1A:.:.,.l..:-!A:;-.;1M-TI....-l, .

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YRRED

3 I ~,. :;.. . -!1 ·
1---TI-::-T-

1

W 0 R M E .,_~:~,

I
I1-:5,. . .,. .__..,16,. ;',.,.

'I

One of my Grandmothers
· I" I I_ I
favorite samplers·read: "Prob~-:::-:;:~-::;;:~·~-::;~., lems Are Opportunities With
I Ny T 0 F
~- •• -- • On Them.'

•

=

1

quoltd

by filling In tho mlttllnv wordo
you dovolop from IIOp No. 3 belOw.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN

TlifSE SQUARES

I' I' I" 1•· I'

rI

•

t
I

I'

'

1111111

Formal· Truly~ Weave- Unless • LOST ALL

Ill

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
. ¥;ATERPROOfiNG

43Nooe

1._.._....~,_1.....1-­

SCRAM LETS ANSWERS .

Granny says a man's wealth is measured by what he'
is worth if he LOST All his money.
•

:"
,

•

1

!THURSDAY

Uncondrllanal hfe!ime guarantee · 1
local references lurnished
·1
tablished 1975. Call (814) '.c4e:

e.:

0670 Or 1;800·287-o57e. Rovwo\
Wat&amp;rproofmg.

"' QIQII'fllAA!lE ~ NIT-PICKING
M'I'I.K:,_1\0W ~ W!nl ~UQJS

· ~Qoll: 'II&gt;~~ IIllO 1&amp;1lo'QIT.

'll0'1WIQI,\1UIII,IE 'oW
EtitN 'I'DURmf. ~
l'LCS$Eil" ~f~"

lJ

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

liverr IVIIIIble. Morgan Farm

Pw

Nonb

Pw

... UNSCRAMII.E ABOVE lEITERS
V
TO GET ANSWI:R

\

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allloon, 1210 Socond Avt· 640 Hay I Grain
nut. Gellipolia, Ohio 814· 446·
AIJalll Hay Rola·SIOIIIIO and da·
•338.

Weot

'1;1'

0

BuiiCIIng

24LA1ther
. ia:1orin
2501- Loula-

A

.,

550

18Heevy-

~~:: .

~··

BIG NATE

ABTR6.• 0RAPH

4411-.mz.

Sporting
Goods

I 0 Pol..,.,..

L-1.-.J.I.-.J.L.....I."--..L.--l

roll bor, too llgltts. Call ohtr 8Pm
3!Mo075-3221l.

Chtll, Btdt, Coucl\eo, End ToDioo, W..I·NoiO Gill Shop. 814-

~

12
17Su-

1--.1--.·1~ • Co~ple.. lho chuck!~

1986 Fo;d Ranger, auto, air, tilt,
33" lira WIAmerlcan racing rima,

Uood Fumion 1110 Buiav!IW'Piko

520

z-:-.;;••,.. .

9 Suflbt lor
11101'111 or viOlin

against France.

•

Sola Bod. Fan Colors. 110 Eloc•~
Dryer, Leather Sew1ng Machine, Black White Face Bred Cow And 1&amp;79 Jeep truck 4wd, 4apd. 1968
Malne Cross Sreet CaJt, 81-i:oll48· 3J4ton truck, .upd, 1986 CheB1U.Hl825l.... llessago_
0516.
wne. 304-675-•459.

.'

•.

11~

8 Holidlly aullbl

32W-plpa
33 Join

::Ext=.S-.::9388::::,---'.._---J :::-:---:":"'===:::::=
810
720 1\'ucks for Sale

Mlrrora, Ta~~t... Chalra, Ctdaf

81··-1231. .

111

31 Athltllc-ehoe

e

. A lol or · go~d play ~juring the
. European Schools &lt;under 20)
· Championship showe !hat bridge is
alive and thriving on the other side of
- the Allanlic. Here is a gain for the emphatic winner. Gerinany, in its match

·rot.J ·

4 CalVes 3 Oulrter Anclut 1
Quarter Kl)' Will Make E•cetleru
Club Calvol, 814-&lt;MI-3ol13.

wv.

Dryer, Refrigerator,
olov•, Microwave. tso Each.

--

30Pw

21 Recorded

At both tablea, the contract was
thf!!e no-trump, North using a transfer sequence to show fivo hearts and
four spades. And the play began similarly with a club to East's ace, a club
to West's queen and a club to declarer's king. Now came a heart to dum,
my's Iring (West in~erling the 101, a diamond to declarer's jack and the
diamond ace. · . ·
,
When Julius Linde wlis IIi~ deClarer
for Gei'many, nothing untoward hap·
pened. So South tried his diamond
king, and when the queen dropped in
such friendly fashion, Linde took nine
tricks: one spade. two hearts, five diamonds and one club.
However, when France declared,
!he German East, Matthias Felmy,
smoothly dropped the diamond queen
under the ace. Believing this card, declarer thought he had only four diallljlnd tricks ~oming . So, instead of
carefully - and suspiciously - double-checking by cashing one 111ore dia- '
mood, South immediately played 11-·
second heart.,This lime West, Mathia's
Schueller, calmly played the queen,
To South, it .now looked as"though
West had begun with 2·2·5-4 shape. So,
playing East for the spade ace, declaro
er continued with dummy's heart
• nine. However, West won with the jack
and had two winners to cash, the last
club and the spede ace, for one down.
If you hold a worthless honor, con&amp;ider playing it earlier than neceSSII')'.

I

ronvoa. Sltaggo Appllancoo, 76
Vine s.,_ C1n 814·448·73111

~esher,

•..l·lARD

·.}

Wathers, dryera, rehlgtralora,

1.at813t•

Pomeroy- two bedroom. kitchen
remodeled, slave IUld r•lrigttrfltor
furnl1hH, washer/ dryllt' hoakup,
call 81 4·002-688t!J between 5:30·

742-2375.

.Turn Downs. Call Rulh 814-446-

3 .Bedroom houu. cenual air, . G. E. Dryer "15; Whirlpool O.yor
Washer 1 Dryer
$325J.mo • utilities, refere.,cea &amp; $GS: Wttlrii!ol
, Whirlpool WaohS250 atc~rlly depolit required• Stt $150
., s;s; G. .
nd Re~lgoralor
.:..:.:::.--------:--'---I $411 DOWN Buys Any S&gt;ngle 30&lt;·71'3-5898.
$150, Cold St&gt;oi.Co®or- Slda
AUica -Garages &amp; Oulbuilding l, Wide Home. Only At Oak Wood
cleaning and disposal, for infor· Homes Of Barboursville. 304-736- 4 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, 2 Car Ga- By SidO 1185: Frigldolro Re~lg ­
rage, 2.5 Miles On 218, 614 -258- oraror $125: G.E. Waol\er 1 Dfy.
morlon coii-3M-895-3036.
3409.. •
er Sel 1205 Each, 1 Year War1368, After 6 P.M.
r~nlr, Skagga Appliances, 78
a.orges Portable sawmill, don't Stl9 DOWN BLty t Anr Double
Mill your loOt 10 lhe miN just call Wida Onl1 At Oak Wood Home&amp; La rge Counttr Home For Ren1 1n Vrne StrHI, GallipoliS. e t.t-4i48·
Palr'iol. 3 Bedrooms, 2 Ba1h1, ·Ga· T.SI, 1·100 411"3 II.
;!OU~IJ57.
01 Barbourovilo, 304-738-3ol09_
raga &amp; Barn On ,!55 Acret, S550!
GOOD . USED APPliANCES
ProtessJonal Tr•
12JC60 2 Btc)-'oo-ns, 1 Bath, Ercei- Uo., Plus U1~i1in, 814·258-1367.

aurance. ~WWelt,

:

Suzuki RM 80, $800 080, 8i•-

t988 Camaio, good condition,

189•.

Furniture. 304-875-8820.

len I Condllion, $3,500, 30-l· 736-

c'MON, CIIUCIC ..
IT'S NOT
RAININ6 TIIAT...

Stanley Bostitch Nail Gun with
lnuwnatlanal hrmall, 658 gat. 3 1884 IH 1600 Diesel Gooseneck
carrying case. New, nt'ter
Carl&gt;fl I Vinyl In SIOdl 18.00 Yd metal uted,
Hileh In Bed Good Condllion ,
froro, 114-IMV·21oll.
61•·192·4205 ifltf 1&gt;1:Mollohan Carpolt, 81H48-744•.
SI,OOQ. 1972 IH One Ton 414
$2,000 614-3'111-2801.

2 Becfroom in New Haven. 30.C·
062-2876.
'

Aamoval , Fr•e

PEANUTS

"'·~id- 304-875-8180_

. . AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Ret&gt;uih In Slti~
Used trailer. 12x80 In good conNowly Remodeled $25,000 614- dillon. 304-895-3584.
Sleeping rooms with cooking. Call Ron Eva111, 1·800-537·9528.
250-1270.
Also trailer apace on ri'&lt;ler. All
340 Business and
hook-ups. Call alltr 2:00 p.m.,
Moving Sale: 16 Fl. Extension
Brand New Crown Cily - Miller
304·71'3-5851.
Maeon WY.
Buildings
Ladder $20; Aluminum Step Lad·
Ohio. Route 7, 3 Bedrooms. 2
dar $15; Murray 20~ Mo~er S_€10;
Balht, Central Heal &amp; Air. Oh10 By Owner : Oupltll Apartmenl 470 Wanted to Rent

River View, 112 Acte . Fairland
$127,500, 614 -256-6287.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Apples- south of Carpen&amp;er on' SR
143, Saturdays onty, Fetter's Fruit
F•m.

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; rep1irs.
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
piano Or. 614-446-4525

==-

Opening lead: • 4

r
Kawaski Bajou 220 4· Whteleq r
new drive shaH. new tires. good- :
cond. $2'.250. 304-675-Q4?7.
•

!188 Btrolla GT, loadod, 5spd,
\3.550. 30.,815·7812 0' I&amp;JVO
.. 304-675-5854.

814·446-9580.

5 Room A:nd Bath In Crown City,.

3NT

-"------------~--~·
300 EX 4-Wheeler, $3,5CO. 304- j
675-&lt;1194 Ask lot David.
,

Franlttin Woodburner Plut Blower
GoodCondlion, 81•""*76;7.

• Q85
a A62

-llna

tool I

1995 Harler Ul tra. 7,420 milest"'
tender &amp; 'fa iring damage, first'
S10 ,000 cash, 614 -949-2311:
days, 61o4·5J49-2644 evenings.
1

Firowood.. 3lH16-2•55

• 7 2

. 2li IJIIrl.

By Phillip Alder

Motorcycles

882 -3399.

Firewood·aplll a delivered, full
aizolood. 30•-882-3399.

DOWN

Young and capable

":
~,9:::8:;:9-;Ho;::-nd::a:-:C~R;::-::2-f-5.-:$-:1.-:000:-::-.-:30:-:-4.. :

lerlal814-048-47112

. 20c.n.tn

r

Soli, 814-387-()32R

ue aooe

Small Schultz Trailer, Wilh 2 Ad·
ded Rooms, On 112 Acre, Garage,
Many E•ua•l e1.t·388·8505.

kns. 304-&amp;75-4575.

VENTRILt.Y
OUISTU

1996 Forfil
\.oadH, 7.ODD - .Mil1t1. Goat~
$38 ,000, AskinQ S29, 500 Must

$295. A Month. No "-111 Dopoail
Requied. lor Aj&gt;plicollon call: 814·

Tw~n Rivera Tower, now accapdng
applications for 1br. HUO tubsld·
ized apt. for tlderlr and hindi·
capped. EOH 304·875o0el9.

2•

Sierra Camper Van,-.'

35 West Apt. Town Houea...

Ont bedroom apartmenl in Pt.
Pleasant, 614·992-5858.

!NT

OL' BULLET'S A

,,

3 Room .Frant Af'l'rlme~, lerge
Fronl Yard, Trash Plck· Up Paid,
No PelS, Por1ar Area, 614-381·
1100..

Nice two bedroom apartment In
Po~. no pt11. 814-892·5858 . .

Soulb

=~-:----1995 Che'&lt;ly S-10, 5spd, alr, am- 1
fm cas~ene, LS package, call al· ~

$:!801111o .. 614--21.

Schult 12x&amp;5, iair cond., 2br, w/
large utllhy room, refrigerator,
sta\le &amp; '2 Window 1c, $2,500 firm.

JBJicho Rd. 12.54 ACfes. 2 extra

72 ..000 Miles. S•.ooo. OBO can

1992 DOdge Grand Cara'&lt;lan LE , '
Excelle'nt Condition, Call Alter 7 ~
P.M. 814...48--9284.

FaU SpeCial: New Septic Tank
Aeralors Motarl Compete $399
plut ••· tnstallatlon $35 plus ma•

49 Degrade
41
011- •
50 Clock aound

Vulnerable: Nortb-5outh
Dealer: North

~~9~·~·~~~1p~m~---~~----- :

apartments a1 Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments In ~idcll•
port From $232-$355 . Call 614·
902-SCNI.t. Equai ·Houalng Opporruriliaa.
·

.

' 24:u..

'P53
+ A K J 10
a K ,J ~

Be seen At Gallipolis Oailr .Trib- ,
une, 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolit t
Chic.
~

StrN~

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartmenl,
6 14·4413.0390.

• Q J 10 4

19QO GUC pickup, 4••- loaded . !
Very good condiuon . 22,00() 1
mites . $14,500 OBO. 614-446·

1.::=---------------

304-755-5885.

•

a A

==•on
....... .

11 COnatructlon

:.-'.c.,
c-.

1890 Dodge Ram Van B-250,

·
8Ft. Utility Truck Bid, Full Size
Cab Over Topper, Wllh Tool ~01, 18 Ftladdtf Rock, 814-38S·
1100. .
·
.

Gallpolis, Kilelltn Wlllt Stovo, Relrigerator, Na P-ets, Deposit. Refer·

.,46-6515or614

Weol

t9BB Ford Econonne Corwerllon 1
Van, 4 capt1ins 'H itS. blck fold- ,
ing bed, 302 V-8, garage kepi; ~

3711 . EOH.

tnell,

•

IOjOr, 323 VaugM Road. Bid·

wtll, OH81H•ll'5173.
•~ "' -~'-• oil hoo·-.....
"""'
w-~
........
much
mort. 20V~·South
r-uur•1, ''II S put, Olln-Spn.

2bdrm. apta.• total electric, ·~
pliancts lurnilhed, laundry raom
lacilitiea. dose to Khool in t~n.
Applicllti_qns avaUable at· Village
Green Apls. 14G or call el4-102-

3 Beclroomo, 5 Court

•z

• 10 • 3
EM&amp;
• J 10 8 4 3

South
a K85

~~~~~~~~~~~In 1+3117·7~.
1 Room And Bath $175/Uo., .llll
UllltlesPald, 513-574-2531.

•

• Q 7 54

30•2.'

Of

EEK4:MEEK

N
10.17-H
aQ112 .
'PAK9fl

•· 9 7 4 3

992·2218.

Beech St. Middleport, 2br, furnlshed, -ufllilles paid, deposh &amp;
rtletences.
Middleport, 2br. lufnlshed. also, 2
room etfteiency Wlulilities paid, deposit &amp; references.
New Haven, nice 2br, furnished,
deposil 4 referencet. 30•-8822566.

NEWt Bank Rtpo's, only 3 ltrt,
pllancu, Secluded, 4 Minutes to . ·still 1.1~er warrantr. tree dtfliverv
&amp;set-up. J04-755-7191 . , ,
Holztt. 614-446-4l999

Central Air, 32.51 Acret, 614·256·
0678.

•

5
clinera lnclud.ed, Makealnto A
'IRed $400; Royal Typewfiter 120.

no petl, '

MUST SELL 1981 14x70 w(th
lireplace, Need to sell fast . Call
Rag ina at 81 4-38S-243oll.

3 Bedroom. 2 Bath, AC, Jenn Air,
2.8 Acrea, Custom Kitchen, ~P­

3 lltclroomo, Uving Room, Dining
Room. 21311aeemtnt Front PDr&lt;h:

firm , ISU -9a2-6206 slier

88,000 miles, 16,000, 8ti· 247-1

•

18
11

I

-1.-8~3-F~o-rd~F-15-o--••-.-~--r-pa_r__
t~

.

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES: 52 WillWOOd .Orive
from .$244 to 1315. Wllk lO shop
&amp; movies. Call 81 ..·448·2588.
E~ual Hoolin(l Opporblnliy.

'

,

~~~~~;~~g-1 ~Pc.~SOclioflal Round Sofa 2 Rt-

Limited Offer! Hl97 douDiewicle,
S1798 down, 1279'1
month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Onl¥ at Oi\wood Homes. Nitro

ment, City Water &amp; Sewage. ·

3 Bedroom house. unanached
tingle car garage· 1 a~e on Rt.33
New Hl'&lt;ltn·$37,500. 304·882·
21199.

Very Good Condllion, 01oii·3BI•

11&lt;1,4. '

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

3br, 2bath,

14 ..... . , 11 Vlflllnllt wlllaw 47

Pari~

S4Q M.•·-tta~•s

2 Bltdrooma, In Gallipolis, e1 4·

·

REGISTERED. NURSE· Part·timt On 2.7 Acrea In Green SChool paymenll after 4 years. only
lot local Home Hoelth A110ncy. B· Area. Garage Apar~ment &amp; Pool. · make 2 paymenll eo r'nCIYe m, kee
10 hour• ol visits plus weekend

I

aavo.

1110 Jtep CJS Mllll' New

,,g.

•••.ooo 30•·882-3772. Or 614· New Ux8Q Only malee 2 pay ments &amp; move-in, no payment at992-51141 .
ter 4 years, free set-up &amp; delivery. Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom

3 Bdrm, 2 1ui1 balhl, 2 miles OUI

Roooptlonloi/CIIhlo&lt;IWarran1y

•

WV. 30&lt;-755·5885.

REAL ES TATE

Must be 1
hiiWt twa «

1SID2,Sunshint
2
1.

19g7 16k80 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
$1 ,3251clown , $1911mo, rree 11r,
with appro'&lt;ledocredit. 1·800-691·
8171.

3rd St Pt Plee118111 'No/. 2555ll
Milkman for 1DO cow herd. Send
r•ume to wilh relerencaa to Box
CW-15, %Pt Plaasan1 Regisler,
200 Main St. , Pt Pleasant WV

228

e1n.

Opening For Two Full-

;

2 Bedroams, Green Schools, Pri·

1992 Mo~io Home 1•x7&amp; 311ad- 440
rooms, ~ Baths. $19,000 01-.A•e-

,815-36111
after 8:0Cpm,
no job 10 bath,
N&amp;W-1917
14i Wide 1125/mo,
- 3 badtaam,
.mall or»~.
WV:Q21208
S799fdown,
with1
apprfJved credit Call 1-800-691 ·

Cal HI00·513·&lt;343 Extll-!l388.

·potia.OH•5631.

2 bedroom moblla hoMe In
Racine, no pets. 81of.902-5858.

'89 Chfrster LeB,ron, new peint
j ob, till, cruise, air, 11res good
Si:taP1f, lsklng 13;000, 61 4·885·
1f no answer,. leave met·

B~roomt, 2 1 and
HARTS MASONARY • Block, Balho, Conlfll, Air s 1e,soo 814 • "shed
brk* &amp; IIane work, 3o years ax- 38811342EuM~nga
daposit

HOllE TYPIST, PC usera need-

r:, .

2 Balhl, On 8 Acre1, Country
Selting1 N,.ar Cheshlra, 14 -.ue8789.

"'ppro11. 2 Acret In MH~r OH On roomt, Bath &amp; 112, Total Eltcrlt,
Rl 7, Reduced from $H,900 To And Five ,Acrtl On Addit on

. ad. $45,000 income potertial.
~mediate

1984 14•70 Sky6rte, 2 Bedrooms,

~ouoo And B Room Mottl, On 1Q8P MoDIIo Homo 14X70 3 Bed-

Rtalater 20o Main St. Pt. Pleas·
....'NV 25560.

Time Positions Wi!h Local Employer. One Job Is For A Custodian IHaus.ekeepet And rl'le Other
Is For A -Couritr. E,qual Oppor ·
tunuy Emplorer. Send Btsponst
To: CLA 3~5. CIO Gallipolil Daily.
Tribune, 826 Third Avenue, Galli-

Site

your Astro-Graph prediclions today by ARIES (MIItch 21·April 18) In an impor·
maHir)g $2 and SASE lo Aalro-Graph. c/o lanl meeling loday, try )Q..keep oulside
lllis nowapaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray parties o,..tN! periphery. it wiH be wiser lo
HIH Slation, New Yorio, NY 10158. Make go il alOne ralner tltln 10 depend on lukewarm support.
sura lo stale your zodiac aign.
1
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) UsuaRy you TAURUS (April :ZO.IIey 20) Your daywil
are an easygoing peraon, btrl loday you not ba prodticllve II yriur melhods and
migl1l step out of chl!racter and find fault procedures aran'l organized propet1y. Do
hoi let I)OOOSSonlial 'acti'iilies lake piiorltY.
with evtryllllng and eve.yone. .
.
GEMINI
(May 21-Juna 20) You musl be
IAGnTARIU8 (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Make
as
prudent
as pouible in regard 10
an eff!&gt;rt to be prudenl when managing
inves,tmenta
loday. Do noi lake foolish
your reeourcee today . .~ you lad&lt; financial
gambles
based
on sketchy inlormalion
dltelptine, your purae mighl become a ·
provided by people you do no1 know well. ·
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22...111. 11) People CANCER (Junti 21-July 22) today, 'do
who cr111c1n you 1requenUy will pey c1ooe 1'101 fon:e your mate lo meel wilh people
aMnlion to your bellllvlor todlly. Do no1 who makll him or her uncomfonabie. II
do anytlllng OUI-ol·tlle-ordlnery.
• you do, nil ona willleel a1
AQUAIIIUII 1"""- »M. It),_ negallvo LEO (Julr 21-AIIIII. 22) YOUJ mind'wil be
........ could ~ lll~lwtllrg lodoy. otrarp IOday, and thil can be an 81181 d •
1, _ Ill focullng on II the l9llonl why you UM lhil gill CONINclr..ly. Try not 10
CllticiZe Olhera.
·
• 10111111111rg cam be done. find 1 "ICII (fell. IO.Marah 21) Cloae VIRGO (Aug. 21-1ept. U) A piHMm
lrtendl will iove you' for wllo you ere luncneon or dinner patty ooukl fill llat
· _IOdly, _,IIII1'IQIIINI mighl be hln:llor llldly " !he Jl'!IIOII wllh wllom, you'l9 din10 pick up ~ qr her pot110n of
you 10 ICOifll. You don1 haft 10 ~ lhelr ing lhet.b.
euppon wllh IIvoti.
'
. :.

• .
e
-·
.

'

I[Ct"P ·

'
,
1 1 r t h c 1 1 J ¥ Q

Friday, Oct 18, 11186
You may ,..... lo c1t4nge 1111 way you
opnla In lhe yw.r lhN!d. ~
· hllbilllllauld be ,raplacld by 1 de8lre 10
... -lrlilualrloulllnd ambllioUI.
- LI8RA (s.,t. JJ.Ool, D) A clomelllc:
iiCIIIIbllla e111 be
10111y • you c1o
not 1n1111 11111 evaryona iii the 11mUy
. , . . . 10 tiNI beal of your drum. Lll
U,...'illnOIIO 111e1t llltlllc.' oeta jump on
·lie .... urldlt II Mfil'" the influenc:ell 11111
- . you In ...
alleld- Sand for

•-"*
v':ar

...e. .

.OCTOBER 171'

I

�I

.•

•
'I

\

J

•I

P~roy •

NCmiiNG

RUNS.

Thu,.tay, October 17, 1~

Middleport, Ohl9

~-21~!1UFFLER SH0~~2196 . ~t\-COUllt

UKEADEERE•

1eve

'

See

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

See Bob Hayes

Meadows

New !lunun« Hoin Mon. ·Fri. 8-5; Sat 8-3

Muffler &amp; Tail Pipe
Stitrtingat '79.95

(614) 446-2412 or Toll Free 1-800-594-1111

Guaranteed Service

eeaPto-·~
Gllli!JIIIII
Ah;teraQI8aa from Gillie IWio S.... on old Rte. 35 West

-~

·.) .

'"

SOUTHTHIRO

4110

You've Oot OuHtlonl, We've Got Anew Ira.

PHONEiS2-2 196

0LEPORT . o\'\

liiJ •

•
,.

"8ton· Cup· ~~~~-

lrHII'i1~~~e-c•aqo"" .,·.

Titan 620

-.....·'" . ._ .

;~~~jriJ·i.t .. WIUPI"{!!I'.IIIAJON: Mole con)JO'&lt; vo•,Y/tlgillil'~ ea.m.rdt. wtio

.· ~~~r~_,thewollon
lllo -!0 !lil1'ring. $orne ......outrl{jed

-~.fib

.·•E!II'n.'llitl i¥at licit pthllllitd_forlhe
ltllliiEornhordt.
Mailfn, 811

-

•.3.7 oi (60cc) Oas Engine

l..lbonl8

• VellicoiCylinder
. • Pro-Style Anti-Vilntion
System
• Han! Chromo Plated

Cylinder
• Gear Driven Adjustable~

Auto Chain Oiler
• BUcking Spike ·

.
Other McCullalh aaws
starting al '199"

DAVE'S

SmaU Eapo Repair
St. At. 7• Pomeroy, Oh

L___;992~~-:;:34~22~--J

Wookly

-·by

.

13. Riel&lt;- (UI
Also Rockingl1om lr*d)'
1 4 . - - !141

2. Tony Llllonto 121

c:us-"

Fow high- tl1it 18uon-

moiOr·

lhanlhoGien
15. Jollouor - - J r . (i&amp;l

3. DoloJornt1(S)
Needs two wrong mDves
4. Romy Wall- (41
Fonr1 biggest wlmer
5. Dolo E n - (5)
N.tdlll8ver81 mifKiea
8. -

A'tiRing I'OOide of the year

18. Jimmy'- (11)
· Can't fault his effort

7. E - 1nran (1)

KI"'IWW how ttl win agak1

Tuning a.., !Of Hendrick ride

-

2Q..-Wollllp(20)

·Being fit1td for new unlfofm

BolON toecomlng
.U.Ica'a-.Mowntruck
Sldnnor hid through 1wo dacodoo of rae·
lng compotiUon, flralln hlo
nlllve C.lltomlt tnd then In
C.""lna end Vlrglnio,
wlthou1- winning 1
chanlplonllllp of 1ny kind.
nt.Mrt.namewaa
''

25. Hlllllrlcldln (Unranlladl

chln!l'd to Cnftlmln Truck

..)

sWno otficiat wi'l

21. Wood lllf1on (21 I
Defending champ at f'oddngham

A-

22. Jolin
(:ZZ)
Seems to nave magnet In bumper ·
23. Kyla Petty (23)
Used 10 be 1118 man at Aoo~ngham

10. Rielly Rudd (10)
Qbck tictdng on his streak of se•

'""'a

ION
win
11. Joll8tlrlon (11)
Ht'l tne driver most likely IO getl'lis
flrat win
12. L-nto (12)
Slaning to stir at season's end

24. KH 8ch,..., (24J
Still winllll aftef aN tnese yeal'l

Results, schedule

ParlcenbUI'fJ, WY
304-424-5337..

Hamlllon

-

1198 point. •IMdlnrl•

JiiiHJ:
......
..............
~

See us for Your
Stihl"
Power Toqls &amp;

Accessories

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308 ·

_, ...... .

,,............. .......,.., .,...
1-742·-

2. T. labonle. • .162.

3.DIItJ_,.4,071 .
4. 0. EarnhMI. 3.192.
5.
3,1101.

Mal\,.,..,

e. Ricky Rudel. 3,402.
1. R. Wlllege, 3.308.
II. S. MIIW'I, 3,358.
K. SchrlldeJ. 3.315.

e.

10. Ernitlwan, 3.261.

1. A. LaJoie. 3.442.
2 . David Green . 3,3112.
3. Jeff GrMn, 2,793.

... Todd Bodine, 2,712.
s. Jeff Purvlt, 2.7:».
8 . a,.d Ullt, 2 ,7CM.

7. c. Mllkhlm. 2.&amp;88.

II. Juon Keller. 2.811 .
9 . PtliiP•f'ICI'\1, 2,651 .

10. Md.IU{tllin, 2,611 .

There w.. no Wlnllon cUp rac4J

'""""'no"''

last-·

In reference to Dawn
Strawhom'lllencr. Rusty
Walla1.~ is not a Cl}haby. Ten
years ogo, yeah, moybc, bu1
now. I doo't think so. Aftur all
Rusly'!i bad hack this year, alii
h~ him say il4 "'We have a
g(](xJ car. and we'll 00 n:ady
nl.lxt week." As far a."
t&lt;::Urnharf.k,l'~c hcanl hitn
whine :already, and the puiniS
will show you. he 's n04 lhc No.
I driver. Sn in Ihe fumrc,
l&gt;awn, pay ultcntion lo the pre·
sent and quitlill'ing in the ra!it!

S.llllhllyur, bof1 Slllnnor
contlnlllld to win.

Wlnnar"

......

Jamolt

Jarrett
.Eamhanlt
Gordon
Eamtwdt
Gordon

Gordon
;T. Labonle
WIIIIICe
Marlin

to hla poomotlon to 1fto big

•AGE: 39

Jarra•

• HEIGH~. 6 leet
.WI!IGHT: 190
• SPOUSE: Beth
• CHILDREN: Jamie, Jualin
• HOMETOWN: Susanville:
Calff.
• LAST RACE: Won the Ford
Dealers 300

lrvan
Wlllace
GordOn
JaoTett
G. Bodlou
Jarran
R. Wallace
Go!don
lrvan
Gordon
Gordon

-

2. M. ~. 3,465.
1 JKk Sprague. 3,4111.
4. Jot Rlltlman. 2.945.

s. MiN Blila. 2.942.

e. Otve RIII.Mtas, 2:B21.

.....,.., ...............:
7. 8IAd1 Miler, 2,878.

9. Rick C•reli. 2.717.

: hun .

l&gt;alt.: Earnhardt is slillthc Nu.
I driver. tty the way, I am a64·
ycar-uhl lady.
Nancrcanon
Hickory, N.C.
I:Jcar Your Tum .
I wmch every race. f.amhardt
will liikc un cighlh Lilampionship hl.:fim.: h~: n.:tin.:s. Jeff
Gurdon might he ~tx»d. hut not
ll.'i ~ntwJ as 1-/...afPhank or
Ri..:hunl Petty. Evt,":ry lime hi:
lo!iCs he whines.

• FAVORITE DRIVER: "I have
a few, each for a different
reason. Darrell Waltrip,
bealuse he's first·daas, on
and off the lrack. Dale
Eamhan:tt, because he is
• just who he Is. And the late

rom Richmond, becauH I

DO YOU DRIV! OFF THE
TRACK: 'AZ·71 Chevrolel

'

pickup."

• FIRST SPEEDING TICKET:

'Wh4rn I was 16 years old.·
~T I DO TO RELAX:
"Play (101(, ride horses and
spend time with my lamily. •
• WHERE GO 01&gt;1 VACA·

•

· Archery, Clothing, ''
Taxidermy, Deer
'
Processing, Bait &amp;
Tackle
·;
249 West Main Street ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 :
Open 7 a.m./9 p.m.
7 Days a week
814-M-7986
1114-M-6759
Ray &amp; Pam - Owners

•

-· .··
'97 Ponti&amp;~

In

.

Grand Prix GT

See It Today At..

Buick-Pontiac
1900 Eastern Galipolis , , .

....

Super lotto
&amp;All Lottery ·
Games

Hardware Lumber

Five Points
· Express
Orive-Thru
· Carry Out

Pomeroy, Ohio
at · ·
Five Points

Mantachie, Miss.
........ CIMIIINASC"R llB WHk

Mike Skinner will Join the Wlneton Cup circuli next

H you've (101 1 comment
aboUt your lavorhe driver,
wrfto: NASCAR Thla WMk
Yo~r Tum, c/o Tho Gooton
G-llo, P.O. Boi 1511,
G1otonll, N.C. 21053. Th4r

Hllon wlllltht RICherd Chlldrell te1m.
TION: "Just ooaylng home Is
a great vacation. •

• WHAT 1'0 LlltE TO

CHANGE ABOUT
MYSELF: •My age. I would
be youngo~r and )&lt;now whall

• WHAT I WOUI.O DO IF I
COULDN'T DRIVE A WINTON CUP CAR: "I'd proba·
bly be the owner of my own
business."

Meet one of the
SERVISTAR Good
Neighbors from an
across the country.
Ernie JoinS with an
4,000 locally-owned
stores to give you

·-hid

Your 1\tm column alSo may
bo
~oiling llnUr•

know now."
• MY PERSONAL MOTTO •
IS: 'Win, crash or blow.'

noy Ogoot'91Ml'lt.com. ·

10. Brylll Aalnet, 2,714.

Around the a•raae

~~dds

.TOP10

t • Mllcl Skinner
2. Ron Hornadoy Jr.
3. Jo. Auittman

S. Jacldlt¥e. Bulell Milar
1. Doug &lt;le&lt;!rge

8.Riclllllcldo
9. Wabf' Evane
10. Dave Rezendlt
WINITON CUP NEWS' Tlla big
llpl of lha race.
1-ioiQovorlho-waollo
He won • to...--way duet tor the
1~ lrom Oowr Oownl
Roo - Y Jr. witll. only two lapl l n _ l _ a y "'"'""' ol
thtt trek'• two recu w6l be lhort·
remaining.
.
enad 1oom 500 10 400 m....
lho polo-Siotorlur 1118
race, came away wi1tla vtctory ol' ., ... ' Most obMJWfl belieYe thllhorttr
race wll be c:ktHr Mel men eiiCjltorte as weft.
'
•
lng. noiiO mention leU gruallng for
· Ho llnlshod second 10 - I n on
.Oiled-..
1118 polnll championship.
Tloay polnl 10 a ~mNor c:hanga at
Hornaday- only 10 .....go
a ninth-plaCe finitl'l over t11e final two ~.. Spoedway'"
race&amp; to clinch the title, regarcltn of Roclolngllam, N.C.
what Skinner does .

-Y·

works will · owned by L.:uJa..:ksun ~xt )'Car.
Pt:tl'l:4.:, who won two Win.'itun
combine to

. ., ..... llllhl

4 . Mike Bill

-·----

Talladega telecast to series

NASCAR Ttis Week
ESPN hilS Cllended its agn.-emenl with International Sp:c;:dWOly Corpor.uion for coverage of
five Winston Cup events,
including, for the fiDt tin-..:, the
DicH:tr~ ~00 a1 Tallllllo:ga Super- .

honcsl. I ncvcr .thnughtl 'd he
able lo work with a driver of his
caliber dds quick!)'. I wj\h we
wcre hca~d 10 Ilayuma ncKt

Cup champion.'ihirs a." J..'tcw
chief with Dale Earnhardt at
Richard Childress RoL'ing, think.~ week."
'
series
the signing nf Ken Schrader a.o;
Pcln.oc, JK, wurkcd with
cvcnt.'i,
including
hi~·k:am's new driver will pul
Jackson a." ci\:W chiCf l'r11111 II.JK2
In 1'1112, a pcriud in which Gant
Ilk: 21M~h in his No. ]~ Skoal Bandit team
,
'
won 10 r.t,cs. He lhcn nt,uvt.:d In
ESPN hlslo- back al lhc front of the pack
s~dwoy.
. ' for the lirst tiloo sin'-'C Harry '
Childress' learn fn•m l'ltH lu
ry. The lal·
The long-tCnn asrccm.:nt
' 1 .:!1tag~.
Oant rcaircd in 199•t
IIJ')~ hcfurc returning as pan
bcgiRN in 1998 ~ cu~crs II
"AIIIhc ptccc.~ uflhc pu1.7.lc
owner this .'ICasun.
fal::uli, ilk:luding four Bu.\Ch ·
. rm."'ll
hl.I.'Ve fimdly ,:omc togclt!cr." said
·"When I ~l.:idcc.llu n:tirc,l
Series events, an A.RCA 1'3CC arxf ' includes r:K%s at Darlington,
Pctnx. "Ha'Vin&amp;.:a l:dcnll.:d driver · wanlu\J .~ullll..'ttnc whu ~.:ares In
one lrom NASCAR '; Bu"'h ·
Tallallo:ga an~ Walkins Glon.
likl.: Ken Schrader join uur uq;a- take ovr.:r this opcruliun," MAili
Nonh Scric$. '
ESPN ha.'i lclc;viS~:d Winston
ni1.ation really rnakc.~ roc pruud. Jackson. " Andy l'clrw ha~ ·a lot
ESPNIABC Spons will contln- , Cup rudng since 19K I.
, "Being owner uf the teum unli
of hluud, sweat and !cars
we Wllhe leading nctwurk tclcIIIII OI . .'DEit Andy
invested In thi.'i team, and 1 want
,ca."iters of Win.~too Cup racing. · · Pcrn..-c officially becomes nwncr wnrkinl,! with a driver like
Kenny i.~ a lifetime dre1.11n . Tu he · himw SUCCl:cd."
In 1996. the two 1alig.ncd netnf !he Chevmlct lcatn fnrn'k.'fly
pn:N&lt;nl 18

oflhdl

- -·AITENTION ADVERTISERS!!
Fu:l1•ttaett1

,

Ju111n Hughoa

think h4r would have really
(10110 far.
• WHAT KIID OF VEHICLE

BOWhunters
Paradise

ll..:ar Your Tum,
I can't hclicvc a 6lJ-y'car-old
irandmothcr could be ~o
inunal.urc. A 6-ycar·old would
hav~ moru sense lhan lo want
anyune 1u gee hun . tletlY Slcin
Rruwn said she had hlocn.waiting for the day Uule P.amhardt
would I.!'-~ his just rcwtml llllll
an l"..amhurdl fan hull dun'l
wanl "-ny oft hi: drivers to gel

Sldnnot:

Gordon
Gordon
R. Walla&lt;o
Martin

..

Ephrata, Pa.

- - b y Lowo'allome
lm'p rovemon!Worollou-.
HIN'ImONibout

WIIIIKe
M. WoiOip

1. A. Homtday, 3.351 .

Aa,_ ZJmrnerm~n

In 1117, Clo- wlllldd
i o - Wlntloot Cupar,
ond Bldnnor will bo tho pilot
of 1 Cotto thll will bo

The last time out
over tha Weekend, but ihefe wae
pOinty oloctlon K1 lho NASCAR
Crlftlman Truck Serlel.
Mi&lt;e Skinnlr - - Nt elghlll
_ . , ....... 18U0nlnlho - ·
w1n 10ta1 kom
in lhe Ford Dealers 300 111 .....,
Marin Raceway in Bakersfield, Cawt.
Stdnnef ..... fowth and ntYef
really challenged "'"" . . final 25

Dtar Your Tum.

cfri-.

P-• .

-CUP

Cup Chovy'a f!lr 1 t.l·

tow.- Elmhardl

Musgrave Go!it&gt;n
B.Labonlo T. ~le
(Sirlcklln)
f:N. Burton)
jEIIIOII)
(Rudd)
(0. Waltrl&gt;} (Earnl\anlt)
• Names In PIIJitltl,...l , . _ 1895 ~and race winners.

1. Jell Gordon, 4, 183.

run with itN Bic ·Oogs. lhcn
stay on the porch."
lam Henry
Lockwood, Pa.

N9w h4r II _ . n g -

Dala IMo
Poto•
Fob. 11 llulcll C....
OayiOna Beach, Fla. Mall
Fob. 11 OayiOna 500
OayiOna Beach. Fla. Eomhllldt
Feb. 25 Goodwroncll 400 Racl&lt;ingllam, N.C. T. ~
Mar. 3 - 4 0 0
Rldunond, Va.
T. ~
Mar. 1D Purolat&gt;r 500
HaqJton, Ga.
Benton
Mar. 24 T~ 400 Dlf1inglon, S.C.
W. Burton
M4r. 31 Fooc1Cily500
llriiiOI, Tann.
Mir1in
Aptl14 Firll Union 400 · N. Wlloelt!Oro, N.C. T. Labonle
Apltl2t Goody's SOD
.......,.viHe, Va.
Cn~yen
April28 Wlnllon 500
Ta 1 edega. Ala.
lrvan
May 5 Save Mart 300 Sonoma, CaUl.
T. L.abonla
Mily .18 WlnsiOn s.led Conconl, N.C.
Gordon
May 26 .Co&lt;a-Coi&amp;.IIOO Conconl, N.C.
Gordon
Juno2 Miller 500
Dowr, Del.
Gordon
Juno 1.6 UAW·GM 500 Long Pond, Po.
Gordon
Juno 23 lilllor 400 .
llroaldyn, Mich.
Hamillon
July 6 Pepol 400
Daytona Beach, Fla. Gordon
July 14 Skt( 50 300
loudon, N.H.
Craven
July 21 500
Long Pond, Po.
Martin
July 28 DIIIHard 500
Tallodaga. Ala.
Mayfiold
Aug. 3 Brid&lt;yard 400
,_.,.,.,..
Gordon
Aug. 11 Bud allhe Glen Wilkins Glen, N.Y. Earnhardt
Aug. 16 GM Good. 400 Brooklyn, Micll.
J . Burton
Aug. 24 Goody's 500
BniiOI, Tann.
Martin
Sept. 1 So\ltiBn 500
Darlington, S.C.
Jamolt
Sept. 1 Miller 400
Richmond, Va.
Martin
Sept. 15 MJlNA 500
Oowlr, Del.
B. Labonlo
Sept. 22 Hanes 500
ManiniYIIIe, va.
Sept. 29 Holly Forma 400 N. W~. N.C.
Oct.&amp; UAW-GM500 Conc:oni,N.C.
Oct. 20 AC-,Dolco 400 -ngllom, N.C.
Oct. 27 O..-o L1A&gt;0 500 ,
Nov. 10 NAPA 500
" - • Ga.

Mr. E.o.mh:lrdt "If you can't

Skinner drovti Chovrolll
1nlt:kl ownod by tho tl1111u.hed m••• Df Wlnelon
Cup chlmplonlhlpa,
Rlchord Chi-., who alao

18. IINEIIIott (111

Ended llump at Chartotle
9. 11a11DJ Ham'""" (I)
Pontilca low The Rock

711a &amp; Pbun St.

., of NASCAR'I Suporl'ruck
-~ by Craft1mon.

Getting act bade IOgeth8f
19. Rielly Cra_, (111

8........ -

I am a Rusly Wallace fan
who renlly di!;likes tht No. J ·
I.."'lf and the driv.:r. Elunhardt. I
oun sick and tired of hearing
~llw good llf a mcc I.."'lf dri'Ver
Dal~ Earnlwtlt is. He ha.o; not
won a. rat."C $1nce the beginning
of March. I am only I!'i y.:D.hi
old and I have a message for

MI... Slllnnot mllde llacll

17. Ted M"'''"'" (17)

-(II

Dear Your Tum.

..- roclng hlllory In 1911
h4r -.lme the ftra1
. , champion of w1111 wao th4rn
known by tho unwieldy 11tlo

Seuon't No. 1 flop

OMper•• tor a w

«:an .a. 'n-•ella

Mike Skinner

NASCAR Tllll W..Ok- Monle OUIIon. Last

_.-.,.n~c~ng~s;opo,.-... .
1. Jill- (11
Ho'o got a fiWII"" his hinds
Ho'olho"'""'

r\INHtlate Lowett
Pri--NI-•

Profile

~~-~.

~~::

See bad covet' for .
your nelgh)lorltood
SERVISTAR store.

01111i0ulod By
Tri-S1ate -Syotema;lnc.
lhe water tre......,. comi*IV

conllaly lrMI:es you 10 ~·
In • free, no obligld:IOn,
•
compratlenlive 'MIIet anetpil.
We wil tetl fOI the folowtng:
TOS, Mineral Hltdness, Iron, PH
Please call AainSoft M 614-992·
4472 MiddtepOn 01614·886·oM88
Proelol•ill to • up yOUf tree

----

••

SSMDrM.

Clallon
Windshield
. . . . . Fluid
All-season formula. ·
OSI1Mir/21363

. . 21W'DI•'• ............. OcleDM1'

~I-V.a.MMtN. C.)GuiM•Dtltiii .... .,~,_I,..._..(

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'

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32-Gal.
Refuse

244 South Church St.
Ripley, WI/ 26271

Conbliner

0$11311.105190 '12897

Bus. Phone (304) 372-3673

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Advertise on this ·age

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DENBIGII G.o\RRE'iT 1~«::.

1·800·964-FORD

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Stop in and say "HELLO'· to Mike Bing and ·
11m Hill who welcome all their past
~ustomers. and ~ook forward to Serving tl)elr
new one's with genuine Ford parts and
Service. Bring in this ad and receive a 10%
discount on Parts &amp; Service.

·~·

Call 992·21 5

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

KAVTEE 20-Lb.

Wild Bird F~
High-quality, all·season
seed attracls lhe best of
birdS. OSI1 Q/1/48358 t12914

~Fat King"
Direction..
10' x 25'
'ftlpl1 Expanding 3-MU. Platlc
Hole Flier
Sheeting
030

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0Slt412&lt;10&amp;480 ,...,

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Clear or black.

08117,811149980,1 tPt02513,8

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