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                  <text>Ohio Lottery ·

Atlanta heads
to series with
NLCS pennant

Pick 3:
3·~

Pick 4:
9-8-6-6
Buckeye 5:
2·16-23-29-32

$porte on Page 4

Cloudy tonight with a
chance of showers. LoIn the mld·30a. Saturday,
cloudy, chance of show·
era. Highs In the mld-801•

•

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. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 18, 1996
.

VoL &lt;17, NO. 111
Copyright 1816

2 Sections, 12 P•UH 35 cenll
A Gannett Co. Newapeper

:u.s. trade gap with China widens to liew high
The administration prefers to focus .on the rise in American exports to .For the first eight months of this year, America's deficit with Japan is down
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
•
record levels, contending it shows that the United States has become increas- 28 percent to the lowest level since 1992.
AP Economa Writer
Tlie administration has sought to take·credit ror·this improvement, con·WASHINGTON- The U.S. trade deficit narrowed slightly to $10.8 bil- ingly competitive on overseas marketS. .
tending
new market-opening trade agreements arc bearing fruit. Private econIn
August,
America's
deficit
with
China
surpassed
the
imbalance
with
. lion in August, still the second-worst showing in five years, as Americ~'s
omists
generally
give more of the·creditlo currency changes that have made
Japan;
the
second
time
this
year
that
has
occurred.
Analysts
believe
it
sigdemand for Chinese toys and Christmas lights pushed the Imbalance with
Americim
goods
more competitive in Japan.
nals
the
start
of
a
new
trend
in
which
a
growing
trade
gap
with
China
will
that Asian nation to an all-time high. •
·
America's
deficit
with Western Europe narrowed in August. After hilling
The Commerce Depanment reported today that the deficit edged down overshadow Japan, the country that traditionally has had the biggest trade
a record $4.2 billion in July. the imbalance shrank to $1.6 billion. M4ch of
6.6 percent from a July deficit of $11.6 billion, which was the biggest imbal- imbalance with the United States.
the improvement came from a drop in American purchases of European cars.
The
Chine.
s
e
deficit
climbed
to
a
record
$4.7
billion,
up
23
percent
from
an&lt;;c since the government began tracking ·monthly goods and ~ervices trade
The U.S. deficit. with Mexico continued to. run at record levels, reflect.
July.
U.S.
e~ports
to
China
were
down
22
percent,
representing
big
declines,
in 1992.
.
·
·
ing
the fact that Mexico's currency crisis has made Mexican imports cheap- ·
in
sales
of
American
p11$senger
jets.
and
fertilizer
while
imports
climbed
14
QOP challenger Bob DOle and Refonn Party candida!• Ross P~rot. have
,percent,
reflecting
a
big
jump
in
U.S.
demand
for
Chinese
toys
and
Christ·
er
in
this country while making U.S. exports !o Me,xico inore expensive. The
sought to make America's worsening trade performance a campatgn tssue,
deficit .with Mexico rose. to $1.5 billion. up 11.2 percent from July.
contending that the ballooning deficits mean th~ loss of millions of Ameri- mas decorations; clothing and telecommunications equipment.
The
U.S.
deficit
with
Japan
fell
in
August
by
11.8
percent
to
$3.8
billion.
can jobs.
·

.PACs, individuals
.line up to donate
.:to 6th District race .

Supply
shortage

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.
..
'

i

· By PAMELA·BROGAN
pared to Strickland's war chest of
Gannett News Service
$338.275 and a $10,790 debt.
WASHINGTON- Marietta resSince 1995, when the eleclion
ident Robert Lane, the president of cycle began, Cremeans has raised
·Lane Welding, is supporting Repub- $1,454,524. Ofthat total, he person' lican Rep. Frank Cremeans for Con- · ally loaned his campaign $425,000,
gress and has contributed $200 to his ·FEC records show, and he has been
·re-election beca11se he says, like Cre- reimbursed by the campaign.
'means, he prefers ·:smaller governStrickland has raised a total of
menl" and is anti-abortion.
$522,520 during the two-year elecCremeans' challenger, fonner lion cycle so far and personally
Rep. Ted Strickland, a Democrat who · loaned his campaign $2,351 1111,d has' narrowly lost his seat to Cremeans in n't been reimbursed yet.
·
-, 1994, also has supporters who are
The FEC requires all candidates to
donating money to his'treasury.
file campaign reports quarterly dur·
Marietta residents Lew and Mar- ing election years.
garet Y~ger, who are retired and on
For the most recent three-month
fixed incomes, shelled out $305 dol- ~ ~riod, ending Sept. 30, Cremeans
Iars to support Strickland's re-elec- collected $194,718 in _campaign
tion bid.
donations. Of that total; he raised
"lllat's the most we've ever con- $82,060 from individuals, $90,536
tributed to anyone," Lew Yaeger said. from political .action committees,
. "We're barely middle,-income, but $22,172 from political parties and
; we feel so passionately abouC Ted's refunded a $50 donation. He spent
·candidacy."
$95,800.
.
Then there's Nonnan Haessly Jr.,
Strickland's most recent caml!3igri
: president of Haessly Lumber, who filing shows he raised $178,605 dur·
.,has contributed to both candidates' ing the same period. Of that total,
:re-election campaigns. Haessly con- Strickland raised $101,026 fro111 inditributed $550 to Cremeans' re-elec- viduals, $16,030 from political parlion and less than $200 to Strickland. tics, and $61,549 from PACs. He
but couldn't recall the ex~t amount. spent $1QII, 114.
; ."I like both candidate.s. and I give
PACs are groups that want to
· them both good marks for working advance a particular political agenda.
: for this district," said Haessly, who Their common tie might be business: hasn't decided which candidate he 'II related or ideological.
: vote for on Nov. ·s.
Cremeans' top PAC donation this
: Like these Marietta re.sidents. hun- quarter was $9,000 from the Monday
~ dreds of voters and political action Morning PAC, a congressional lead; committees are donating money to, ership PAC created by House Speak•campaigns to show their su~rt. '
er Newt Gingrich, R-Ga. Leadership
: Just two weeks before the Nov. 5 PACs are used by congressional lead: election, Cremeans and Strickland ers to enhance their political clout by
~.; both have sizeable and similar contributing to the campaigns of
.·amounts in their campaign chests, lawmakers who have similar political
:Federal Election Commission reports views.
·
:: show. . . .
Some . of Cremeans' other top
Cremeans has a campaign treasucy PAC donors were: the National Fed- .
;or $327,821 and is debt-free, com·
(Continued on Page 3)
·

Sale dates may
vary by store .
OCTOBER SUPER SALE 1996

• 0 1592

8P

17980

'.

_l •I

KING SERIIIGTJIR® HARDWARE
405 North Second Avenue, MIODLEPORT

'.

,

..

•
Annually,
the Meigs County Grange~ make and donate atuffed toys to Veterans Memorial
Hot~pltalto give to chlldnln being treated In the emergency room. About 30 were broug~t in
thla - k and preeent6d to Rhonda Dailey, R.N., director of nllrslng, left, by Opal Dyer of the
. Star and Pomona Grsngea, Mary El!sterday of the Racine Grenge, and BarbanrFry of the Rock
Springe Grange. Some were aleo made by the Hemlock Grange.

Training prepares Meigs' first
~a~-Mat team f.o r emergencies
completed Hazardous Materials will provide quick initial response to
By TOM HUNTER
·Technicians
tmining, creating the any chemical or hazardous materials
Sentinel Newe Staff
county's
first
hazardous response emergency in Meigs County.
Meigs County Emergency Man·
Funding and support for the team
agement authorities won't be left team.
waiting in the event of a chemical . In the past, local emergency offi- · is being made possible by the Meigs
spill ot hazardous materials accident cials were forced to call in a haz- County Local Emergency Planning
any longer, now that a local-based .ardous material team from the Du Committee, which includes the counijazardous Materials technical team Pont-Washington, W.Va. plant in the . ty commissioners, Dyer an~ Sheriff
event of any type of hazardous mate- James Soulsby.
has been fanned . .
"This Haz-Mat team will be a
·Ten members of the Tuppers rials accideJit, according to Bob Byer,
Meigs
County
Emergency
Services
tremendous
asset to the fire departPlains Fire Depanment, two memdirector.
ments
and
the
Emergency Medical
bers of the Coolville Fire DepartThe new Meigs Haz-Mat team, Service in the county. We will have
ment. and one member of the
(Continued on Page 3)
Pomeroy Fire Department recently based out of the TP Fire Dcpanmcnt.

']Informant's tapes basis of federal
::case against Mountaineer Militia
ELKINS, W.Va. (AP)- The gov- charges against me, I would like to
ernment's case against seven men keep·my distance from that opponent
.accused in a plot to blov.t up the $200 as much as possible," Looker told
million FBI complex·near Clarksburg Magistrate David Core.
James R. Regen~, 40, of Jane Lew;
is on 200 tiiJ!l'S recorded by an inforJack A. Phillips, 57, of Fainnont; and
mant, an FB.I agent said.
Terrell
P. Coon, 46, of Waynesburg,
Two of the defendants are from
Pa..
had
hearings before Core in
northeastern Ohio.
Elkins.
They
were ordered held .withThe Mountaineer Militia's intelli. gence and security officer captured out bOnd .
In Huntington, E. Fred Moore, 52,
·· conversations on tape as the FBI built
of
Lavalette,
also was ordered held
:.its case over 16 months, Special
without
boiKI
after a preliminacy
,":Agent J.C. Raffety testified during
hearing before U.S. District Magispreliminary hearing.
.
:. The evidence presented during trate Maurice Taylor. Moore was
ihat and other hearinas on Thunday charged with conspiring to manufacwas enough for maJiauates in two ture explosives.
·cities to · order four more militia • "There has been so much scare·
type publicity. I'm not sure the peomcmben to be detmned.
j!Oing to be able to ge an
The hearing for militia comman- ~le
unpartiaijury
anywhere In the state,"
der Aoyd "Ray" Looker, 56, of
said
Jerald
Jones,
a lawyer repre·
.Stonewood, wd delayed. He said he
did nOt want to be represented by · senting Phillips. "The aovcmmcnt'
attorney David Jividen beuuse Jivi- already tried the case in the.media."
In Cleveland, · an attorney ·uid
den's wife, Betsy, is an Ulillllnt U.S.
'lbunda)'
he hid filed in U.S. District
attorney In northern West VirJinil.
~ividelt Ia a former federal proaecu- · Coun an appeal or the pretrial deten·
't~.
'
.
tion of the two Ohioans charged in
"Considcrina · the nature of the the alleaed plot: James M. Johnson
·'

Supplement lo POMEROY SENTINEL 51114

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a

an:

By ,JON FRANDSEN
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - A group of
senators urged oil industry chiefs on
Thursday to agree quickly on steps to
ward off a cQstly shortage of beating
oil this winter, and hinted at congressional action if.the industry does
.:.not act on its own.
.Energy Secrclaty Hazel O'Leary
thas i~vited 22 industry executives to
!ameeting today to discuss low heating oil· supplies, which could mean
shortages and spikes in prices.ifwin:tcr is especially harsh.
·
Members of. C~ngrcss. led by
Sens. Chris Dodd and Joe Liebcnnan,
both Conneciicut Democrats, and
Rep. Joe Kennedy, 0-Mass .. have
.been pressing O'Leary for a month to
take steps to increase stocks of heat·
ing oil, w~ich are at historically .low
levels for this time of year.
A letter scrit Thursday by ,21 senators from Northeastqm and Midwestern states noted that some of the
30 million-barrel shortfall has bcCh
maae up in the past month. But it
warned that reserves are "still at an
all-time low," 17 · million · barrels
smaller than they were at the same.
time a year ago.
"As a result, our concerns about
the crunch looming for consumers in
the Northeast and Midwest have
only' heightened," the letter said.
The letter praised the executives ·
• for their "sense of corporate citi7.en·
ship" by agreeing to meet with
0' Leary. But it also held out the
threat of federal intervention if rcsuiL'
arc not in the offing.
"Our hope is that your discussion
will lead to an agreement on a series
of tangible steps your industry can
lake to prevent the potential crisis we
for~."the senators wrote. " ... We
feel the best way to avoid any. intrusive actions is for the industry to act
voluntarily."
Even conServative estimates pre:
diqt price increases of IU .percent to
20 percent. If market conditions shift
and the winter iS especially cold or
prolonged, "beating costs could skyrocket," the letter warned. "Even '
worse, there appears to be a possibility that we could experience actual physical supply shortages, which
would leave many consumers literally out in the cold ... .
The letter made little mention of
a complaint voiced loudly two weeks
ago: that heating oil that could be
stockpiled here was being shipped to
Europe, where it was fetching a
higher price. Instead, the senators
blamed much of the shortage on "the
· just-in-time invenlory system"
rccenUy adopted by the industry.

HEARING DELAYED - ~ Mllltlll OM. Floyfl Raymond Loabr, 11ft, WMIICorted by I U.S. marahltllrom fedentl

court In Elkins, W.Va., on l'hursday attw hl1 detention hearing
tn1 rnovtd to a later dat.. (AP)

The senators said they worri~ the
practice was having a "destabilizing
effect on the marketplace. More
specifically, we are concerned that
the pnctice of ~ceping stocks at a
bare minimum exacerbates the
volatility of oil'industry markets and ·
ultimately leaves consumeB vulnerable to dramalic swinas in prices."

•

.,
•

.
and Imam A. Lewis.
.
Johnson. 48, of Maple Heights,
Ohio, and Lewis, 26, of Clevelantl.
arc charged with illegally transport-.
ing explosives across state lihes.
- Greg Poe, a lawyet ls&gt;r Johnson,
said the appeal also asks that the Ohio
men not be sent to West Virginia to
face charges unlit the detention order
has been revised.
... uthorities say the seven suspects
have ties to the militia.
Raffety testified that the informant .
approached the FBI in spring 1995
after Looker had approached ~im
about joining the militia u ·its intelligence and security officer.
Raffety said the FBI did not
launch an investigation until .the
infonnant notified the agency of
possible criminal behavior.
The informant allegedly sat in on
conversations in which militia mcmben identified the FBI &lt;;cnler and two
other federal tMgets "to be neutralized" in the event of.a bltde with the
aovemment, Raffety said. The Qther
targets have not been disclosed.

.Congress wants
industry to .shore
.up low reserves
·of heating oil

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Friday.~11,1118
,... _2 ,

Co,mmentary

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OHIO V/Pathf·t

Frldey, October 18, 111E

Satunlay, Oct. lf

Lucille Braley

r

•

The Daily Sentinel • Is Gephardt's eye on the White House?
'E.sttlbfislrd in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • FIX: 992·2157

c!lr

By

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT l.. WINGETT
Publlaher ·
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Qenerel Uel\llger

UIW'IIO lht «&lt;lfoo'.,. wlcotM. They •hfiHIId t. J.a than 3DO WOI'IU. AH ,.,.,_
Mtd mutr,. algnN •nd include Rdiua end r.Mphone num~
bor. . No UMignod - . Will I» pul&gt;llllltd. '"""" •hauld I» In fOOd Info,
ld 1 8~1\lf/NUH, not,_,.onalltl...
·.

.,. ..,., ro

. By J.ck Anderson
remains enthusiastic about the
and Jan MoHer '
Medicare message, but has had to
WASHINGTON-- As he leads his push others who have tired of it.
pany's charge to recapture control of
"He understands - that members
the House of Representatives, Minority Leader Richard A. Gephardt is
Jack Anderson...
rested, ready-- and bared.
From President Clinton on down ,
and
Democratic candidates this fall have
charged Republicans with trying -- as
Jan Moller
a recent Gephardtfi.ond-raising leiter
phrases it -- "to put· a knife in the
bean of Medicare." This message, as may he tired of continually talking
hyperbolic as it might be, seems to be about the Medicare issue," Nichols
resonating with voters, and Gephardt confessed. She says Gephardt has
hopes it will help make him speaker . told fellow Democrals "that, regardof the House.
less (of how boring it might be), they
But according to House Democ- needed to continue to talk about it."
ratic leadership sources, the constant
The 20-year House veteran may
· repetition of the Medicare rhetoric - be tiring of more than just Medicare .
- which Republicans denounce as Sources say he's increasingly frusdemagoguery -· ·bores the Missouri !rated with thC Democrats' minority
lawmaker.
Standing fn Congr~ss and is concen"Dick said, '(Medicare's) boring. trating more and more on a bid for the
I'm bored, but! keep saying it,"' one presidency in four years.
House Democrat told us. "(Gephardt)
" I think if we don't get back in
admits to the lrO&lt;(P'· 'I want to talk (the majority), he'll (Gcphardt) bail,"
about something ~ else, but this is said a leadership source. "He's not
working.'"
gomg to make a career of being (forGephardt spokeswoman Laura . mer Illinois Rep.) Bob Mic~el ."
Nichols claims the minority leader · Michel, a Republican, toiled for 14

..nrf"'

Lots of talk, but little
action seen on help
for victims of crime

By RICHARD CARELLI
Aa80Ciated Press Writer
. ' ..
WASHINGTON- Sympathizing with crime victims is as easy for pohucians as honoring motherhood and apple pie, but a pr~osalto give· them
added protection in the Constitution may have trouble .in Congress.
Despite bipartisan backing, including the suppon ofPreSJdenl Clmton and
his Republican c Ienger Bob Dole, the proposed co~sutullo~al amendment
to protect crime · ctims' rights never cleared commottee dunng the recently concluded 1041 Congress.
.
rding for what its backers hope woll be the 28th
Finding the .preci
Amendment proved tricky. .
While everyone wants to make the criminal justice system fairer and
friendlier to crime victims, some believe other 'steps will work.better.
.
''The Constitution doesn't need to be meddled with," says Larry Yackle,
a Boston University law professor who testified against the proposal. "Whatever is done to remedy the difficulties victims face ought' to be done by
statute."
·
·
;)
Vinually all the states have laws protecting crime victims, and 21 states
· - most recently Nebraska this year -'- have amended theor own constolutions to provide even greater protection. . .
.
.
.
Congress h~ contributed the federal Vocloms of Cnme Act, Susuc~ Assos- ·
tance Act and a package of victims-rights legi~lation as pan of the Violent
Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994.
Nevertheless, proposals 10 amend the U.S . Constitution were introduced
last April by Rep. Henry Hyde, the Illinois Republican who chairs the House
Judiciary Committee, and two members of the Se.nate Judocoa~ Commo~tcc,
Republican Jon Kyl of Arizona and Democrat Doanne Fcons{eon of California.
.
,
.
.
The most recent draft, a product of numerous fine-tunings. would govc
victims of violent crimes the right to attend any public court proceeding .
involving the crime, even if they plan to testify .as w.itnesses: Potential wit·
nesses are traditionally excluded from court proceedmgs unulthey take the
witness stand. .
The amendment would also give victims the right to testify at bail hearings and 10 object to plea-bargains.
The proposal, ho~ever, doe~ not ap'Jiear.to offer much in _the way of a remedy for those victims who beheve such nghts were demei:l. It says vocloms
may not sue the government or any public official for mo~etary damages.
It takes a two-thirds vote by 'each channber to send a proposed amend- ·
men! to the states, where ratification by-38 legislatures is required. It's a·course
navigaled successfully only 27 times in 205 years. ~
·
·
But of the nearly 200 effons to c~ange the Constitution launched in Congress since !994, the victims' rights amendment appeared early on to have
the best chance of wcccss.
·
..
"This is absolutely an idea whose time has come," says David Beauy of
the National Victim Center, A constitutional amendment, he says, "would
establish a floor for the righls of victims of crimes in much the same way
the Constitution now establishes a floor for the rights of offenders."
Feinstein and Kyl, ·in a recent anicle co-authored for the American Bar
Association's "ABA Journal" magazine, voiced the same sen timent.
'
"Extending basic ri~hts to victims ~ill not take awa~ ~ny ri~hl of th.~
accused. It will merely gove couns the aboloty 10 balance legoumate onterests,
they wrote. "This can only be accomplished by giving victims constitutionally
protected rights equal in weight 10 those of the accused. "
But Elisabeth Semel, a San.Diego attorney and member of the National
Ass&lt;leialion of Criminal Defense Lawyers, .says su~h thinking is wrongheaded.
·'
"We have a constitutional system that is i~tcnded to be out of balanc~-'­
that's what the presumption of innocence is all about," she says. "The proposed amendment would have an ompacl at a stage when someone merely
is accused of a crime, not convicted of one."
Federal judges have asked the Congress to go slowly.
.
Maryanne Trump Barry, a federal trial judge from New Jersey whothaors
the u .S. Judicial Confercncc's.Criminal Law Comminec, responded to an
inquiry by Sen. Joseph Bidcn, D-Dcl., by slating: "Such·sweeping changes
in our·criminal justice system should not be accorded anythmg less than thorough, exhaustive deliberation .':
Tl)al idea seems to he catchmg on.
(Richard Carelli covers lhe Supreme .CQurt and legal aHalrs for
The ~!loclated Press.)
,.
.

·serryls World

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years as minority leader in~ Democratic Congress before reunng on
1994.
Nichols insists Gephardt "is singulurly focused on gelling himself reelected and becoming speaker of the
Ho~se ." His actions, however, tell a
different story.
Gcphardt could be seen planting
seeds for a future presidential run at
this summer's DemocratiC convention. A senior White House official
. who observed Gephardt at close
range during the Chicago convention
told us the minority leader made sure
to visit all 50 stale delegations·· even
though he was reeling from the nu.
"He was holding on to the podium (to hold himself up)," said this
official. •'He had the flu , I think, but
he just kept going. lt .was impressive." The official said Gephardt at
times looked like he was oil the verge
of collapse as he made his rounds.
"He wants (to be president) bad,"
said this official.
Gephardt's office describes a different scene at the convention . "He
lost his voice. he didn't have the nu,"
Nichols told our associate Aaron
Karp. "And we visited 20 dclega-

DOLE:SAT
THE SIDE~~
AND CLINTON$

AT TilE
FRONT DOOJil...

A&amp;11N

Here, . com~
.

.

Despite what the letter suggests.
Gcphardt's plea may have less to do
with taking back the House than taking the White House in 2000. Money raised by the Gephardt in Con.grcss Comniinee can only he used on
Gephardt's personal campaogn ·• or
put toward a presidential campaign in
the future.
·
Gcphardt has outspent Whcelchan
by a .whopping 17 to I margin thus
far •• with the vast majority of the
loot coming . from olotsidc his ·. St.
Louis district. While these fund-rais ing tactics arc by no means. ill~gal,
they clash with Gephardt's lofty
rcfonn rhcforic .
In a recent debate ,broadcast tiy
PB'S, Gcphardt called campaign
finanCe rcfonn "lhc most impor1ant
thing for the operation of our democracy in the future." adding "thlll
you'\•c got 10 limit the amount that
can he raised and spent in ca~paigns." ,
·
When asked if Gcphardt wtis
being hy)iQcritical. Nichnls~ becatl]C
d~fcnsive. "Well. l&lt;•&gt;o~ . you operate
under the rules that. arc in existence.
and we 're not going to just uniiatet. ally disann." she told us. "When":"
get a Democratic majority. we'll
have a; campaign finance refon:n
bill...
. .
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for Uniled Fealulie
Syndicate, Inc.

term -limits again
.

cral ·elections.

·

When the Senate, a century ago.
repeatedly refused demands 10 authorize a convention to amend the Constitution to provide for the direct election of sc~alors. an essentially simi-

lar tactic finally broke their resistance. As will probably happen again
this time, they didn' t insist on fighting the issue out in a conslitutional
·

William A. Rusher
convention -- they just voted to
amend the Constitution as demanded.
Term limits remain enormously
popular with the· voters . .and their
backers expect to win at least twothirds of the initiative contests in the
14 states listed above. But they face
strong opposition in California, Idaho, Nonh Dakota, Washington and
Wyoming, and curiously enough.
most of it is coming from cenain conservative organizations.
The organizations in question arc
the Eagle Forum and the John Birch
Society. They argue that if a constitutional convention is held, as the initiatives instruct members of Congress
and s[atc legislators 10 vote that .il
shall be, the convention could not he
limhcd to amending the Constitution
to provide for term limits. It might,
they warn, become a runaway convention" under liberal control, and
11

proceed to amend the Constitution in
all sorts of hair-mising ways.
I sec no reason . whatever to
assume that a duly elected constitu..
tional convention would ncc'cssarily
be under liberal control -- quite the
contrary. But even if that nightmare
scenario should somehow manage to
occur, opponents of the convention
idea raicly go on to point out that any
amendment to the Constitution adopted by 11\e convention would not take
effect, under ,Article V, until and
unless ratified by the legislatures of ·
three- fourths of the stales-· or by ratifying conventions in the same number of states, if Congress specified
that alternative procedure. And the
likelihood of three-fourths of the
states endorsing some cockeyed liberal amendment approaches absolute
zero.
Much the same arguments. from
the same Conservative organizations.
have thwarted aucmpts hy balanced-.
hudg~t supponcrs to persuade the
legislatures of two.·thirds oft he states
10 call tor a constitutional convention
to adop! an amendm~nl compelling
Congress to balance the federal budgel .

It is a pity to sec ccmscrvativcs
whn sincerely wish the best ror ,lhis
country blocking such solidly conservative proposals as tcnn limits and
a balanced-budget amendment on the
basis of such remote alleged dangers.
In the case of tcnn limits, this is
an idea whose time has plainly come.
Every time it ha• been tested at the
polls, it has demonstrated strong
suppon. Opposition has come ·(in
addition to that already mentioned)
mostly from professional politician~
who personally have c~erything to
lose by being forced out of the cozy
little baronies they have carved out
for themselves. More than once, hostile secretaries of state have simply
refused to certify valid initiatives, and
have had to be hauled to coun and
compelled to do their duty.
All that remains, now, is for the
·voters in those 14 states to do theirs.
Once the politicians arc convinced
that the American people really mean
it·, they will acquiesce, and even lead
the parade.
· William. A. Rusher is a Dlstin.guished Fellow ·of the .Claremont
Institute for tfte Study of States•
manship and Political Philosophy.

What the Bible says about cleanliness
of the wine, plus the practice of wipworry about people in restaurants and doing ("My hands arc clean").
By G110rge R. Plagenz
Gcrms
were
unknown
in
Bible
ing the cup and turning it to a new :
It is one of the world's best-known at produce counters who handle the
times. Hygienic practices were there- position for each communicant, :
quotations, but nobody ~eems to food we cat.
fore lax. It was more imponanlto be seems to remove any danger of dis- :
There
is
a
wide.
difference
know who first said, "Cleanliness is
clean, following the case being transmitted."
ceremonially
next to godliness."
. Other physicians, however; dis- :
rituals prescribed for worship .in the
Many peopl.c think it comes from . .cG;;. .; ;.e. ; o.;.l'i.tol'9:.;e_;;.;R;.; .;. ;.p. .;t;.;.a;a;gr..;e;.;n;.;.'Z: .
· Old Testament by the ancient pule tbe claim that the wine ( 14.5 per- :
· the Bible ("probably the Book o~cent alcohol in sllcramcntal wine) :
Proverbs"). ll sounds to others like a between what people say and what Hebrews.
.
·
Qur
coiiccm
for
cleanliness
in
rcli·
kills any bacteria.
saying Ben Franklin might have they do when it comes to hand-washgious
practice¥
tndy
is
confined
to
Many religiou's people have no :
coined (li~e "a slitch in time saves ing: ln a phonc·snrvcy, 941Jerccnt of
the
common
®pat
com
mum
on
scrfears
about drinking from a common :
nine").
the people interviewed said . they
vice~.
Medical
doctors
a~d
e~idemicup'
.
They
have faith that no harm can :
! John Wesley, the 18th-century• "alwa~s wash their hanois" after
ologtsts (specoahstson cptdcmocs) are come to them while t~cy are con- ·
~angelist, used the sa~Ln,g in one of using a public re~troom . But conhis wriuen seanons, but he enclosed cealed restroom spoes at an Atlanta not all agreed on the health dan~crs · suming wine that represents .. or. h~ ;.
it in quotations marks, indicating he Braves baseball game found only 46 . posed when many people dnnk Irom been turned into •• the Lord's blood. ~
Some churches, ncvcnheless, urge ;
picked it up from another source. But percent of the . men washed their the same communoon cup. .
Those who say the commq~ ~up people with colds or other commu-, •
what source?
hands before leaving the men's room .
may
serve as a means of transmnuhg nicablo diseases not to drin · · m the :
. There used to be a hand-wasbing
Cleanliness is making front-page
,
disease
admit that the risk is very cup.
news these days, A headline in one rotual on nearly every home before
small
.
.
.
.
.
Georp
Plaaenz
Is
syndlceted:
•
paper reads, "A dirty little . secret: , me4ls. Children would he asked,
A doctor quoted on a Cathohc writer ror Nowspe r Enterprile' ;
People aren't washing theit hands." "Have you washed your hands?" At
,)
brochure
said, "The alco'hol content Assoclatloe.
The story is about research released ou~ house ,&lt;and maybe at yours), we
•i
at 1 recent conference on infectious chddren had 10 hold out our hands.
~
.
diseases.
palms upward, before siuinl down at
. One year ago: Pre~~dcnt.Clinton, facing political fallou or telling finan· ~;
, "Hand-washing has become all the table. I,nvariably, after inspection, coal contnbuwrs that I ra1sed your taxes too much," sai
had no rearets :
but a lost art," said a public health we were told, "Belter wash 'em."
about the tax oncrcasc paekqc he signed into law in 199 .
•
official.
The Bible speaks of clean hands in
Today's . Binhdays: Fonner Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott :
The story even had a "femily vii- ·one well-known passage in Psalm 24: Trudeau i&amp; 77. Singer Anita O'Day is 77. Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., is 7,. :
ues" angle. " Moms aR not Icllina "Who shall ascend into the hill of the . Rock 'n' roll performer Chuck "Berry is 70. Actor George C. Scott is 69. · .;
their kidlto wash their hands." said Lord and who shall stand in his holy Sponsea.•tcr Keith Jackson is 68. Nicaraguan Pnesidcnl Violeta Berrios de ; ·
a doctor attending the- conference. place? He that hath clean hands and Charnorro is 67. Form~ Defense Secrcwy Frank Clll'lucci is 66. Actor Peter :
"Schools aren '1 telling the children . a· pure hean."
Boy'Jc is 63. Ex-footblll c!lach Mike Ditka is S7. Sin1er Laura Nyro is49. · :
about it. We need to he reminded that
But "clean .hands" is also a ActorS~ Monon is 49. Playwri1ht Wendy Wuscrstein is 46, Acii'Cu Pam : ;
this is imporunt." .
·
metaphor for honest and upright
Dawbcr is 4,. Tennis playct Martina Navratllov~ is40. Jazz musician Wyrt- •
It isn't only matter of keeping behavior. We use.the same language
ton M~rs~lis is 3S. Actress Erin Moran is 3~. 'ICnnis player Michael Stich
our own hands clean. We have to tnday !o.e.~css innocence of wrong·"' ism
·
·

a

•

James W. Carnahan

TP HAZ·MAT TEAM - Membera of Melga County's flrfl huJames W. Carnahan, 62, Racine, died Thursday, Oct. 17, 1996 at his ressrdoui materiels reepon11 team, bitted with the TUpper• Plains
idence.
Fire Department, are, front, from left, TP Fire Chief Brian Blstell,
A retired dairy farmer, he was born Feb. 26, 1934 in Racine, son of the
Todd Smith, Haz·Mat lnatructor Harry Barbtr, Greg CaljHilllar,
late Harold and Isabel Wolfe Carnahan. He was a member oftheRacine VolLoweD RI'*'&lt;Jur, JeH Roll and'Bernard Bobo; back, John Alkire,
unteer Fire Department and the Racine Grange.
Larry Welch, Chad GrlHlth, Jtton ~ger, Juon Ridenour eoc:t Jim
He is survived liy his wife.• Nancy Shuler Carnahan; a son and daughter- . Watson.
·•
in-law, Tony and Sandy Carnahan of Racine; a daughter, Janis Carnahan of
, Middlepon; three' grandchildren; a sister, Jeari Alkire of Racine; his moth·
er·in·law, Mildred Shuler of Racine: and several' nieces and nephews.
He was also preceded in death by a liotlier-in-law, Charles Alkire; and
, TP Haz-Mat icam members Brian
·(Continued from. Page 1)
.his father-in-law, Earl Shuler.
somebody
locally
to
help
out
in
the
Bisself.
Bernard Bobo, Greg Car·
Services will be II a.m. Saturday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
penter,
Lowell
Ridenour, I ason Ridewith the Rev. Larry Haley officiating. Burial will follow in the Letan Falls event of a hazardous materials accident, with quicker. response time to nour and Kyle Buchanan responded
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 tonight.
10 the scene, where an eastbound tniC·
. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Meigs County Hean Asso- the accident scene," said Byer.
tor-trailer staned leaking a a chemi·
This
allows
them
to
respond
to
ciation, in care of Nancy Campbell, Rt. I, Tanners Run Road, Racine Ohio
cal
from the rear of the trailer.
·
Haz·Mal
incidents.
Course
content
45771.
Team
members
gained
entry
into
included hazard risk assessment,
\ '
identification and verification of haz- the trailer and found that a flammaWeather forecast:
By The AIIOCiated Prell
ardous materials, implementation of ble irritant similar to WD-40 had
" Cloudy skies and scattered shOwTonight...Showers likely nonhdecontamination procedures; and been leaking:
-ers will linger over Ohio on Saturday east. Partial clearing southwest.
Carl Hoban Rairden, 61, Hanford, W.Va., died Thursday, Octo 17, 1996 control of hazardous l"aterinls spills:
Three 250-gallon containers were
· after a cold front brought an end to Mostly cloudy elsewhere with a
.
.
Prerequisites to the course inc,lud-· fo~nd, with one of them leaking. In
'the mild fall weather. ·
. chance of showers. Lows from the in Ple115!1nl Valley Hospital.
Born April24, 1935 in Hanford, son of the late Daniel A. and Nora J,.an- ed H'az-Mat Awareness, Haz-Mat addition, 20 fi.vc-gallon containers
. . Low. tem.v&lt;'nitures tonight will be mid 30s southwest to the lower 40s
ders·
Rairden, he was also preceded in death by t~o . brothers, Virgil and . Operations, and Incident Command. containing an adhesive 'were also on
mostly in the 30s, the National exii'Cme nonheast.
Rairden; and a sister, Mildred Rairden ·Stewan.
Bernard
Saturday... Showers likely nonhThe 72 hoursoftraining were admin- board. They were not damaged. The
Weather Service said. Highs on SatHe
retired
from Kaiser Aluminum Corp. after 2S yeoils of service. He istered over a nine week period, leak was successf11lly contained, by
. urday wiU remain in the 40s and low east. A mix of clouds and sunshine
according to TP Chief Brian Bissell. the team.
'
southwest. Mostly cloudy elsewhere attended the First Church of God, New Haven, W.Va.
50s.
A
U.S.
Army
veteran
of
the
Korelln
Conflict,
he
was
a
memherofthe
StewThe TP Haz-Matteam is currentAdditional equipment and more
The last of the rain should move with a chance of showers. Highs from
an-Johnson VFW Post9926, Mason, W.Va., and Smith-Capehan American ly trained 10 a certain l'evcl for extensive training arc in future plans
~ 'out of the area on Sunday and tem- the upper 40s nonheast to the mid 50s
Legion P\)st 140, New Haven.
·
for Haz-Mat response units in Meigs
response.
peratures should stan to warm up a south.
Surviving are his wife, Beatrice Snider Rairden; two sons and daughters"At the technician level, they are County, Dyer said.
Exttaded forecasl:
pit, forecasters said.
in-law, Daniel and Tammy R;lirden of Hartford, and Jimmy and Brenda Gra- not cenified to do some things yet.
The Meigs County Emergency
Sunday... Scattered showers north. The record-high temperature for
ham
of
Middlepon;
three
daughters
and
two
sons-in-law,
Linda
Crites
of
east.
Dry
elsewhere.
Lows
in
the
mid
They
arc
not
yet
equipped
to
handle
Managemcnt!Emergency
Services
this date at the Columbus weather
·Pomeroy,
Joyce
and
Lynn
Black
of
New
Haven,
and
Lisa
and
David
Pereira,
extremely hazardous materials. If Agency has scheduled Haz-Mat
station was 83 degrees in 1938 wh!le 30s and highs in the mid to upper 50s.
Monday and Tuesday... Dry. Lows Rock Hill,·S.C.; 13 grandchildll'P and eight great-grandchildren; and sever- we havc·a major· incident, we would Awarcness training for all local fire
the record low .was 25 in 1976. Sun. al nieces and nephews.
.
.
have to bring in outside resources. In chids and interested panics Monday
; \et tonight will be at 6:47 p.m. and · 35 to 40 and highs 55 to 65:
. Services will be 1:30 p.m. Sunday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, any event, this team can provid~ ini- from 6-10 p.in., and Tuesday from 8
sunrise Saturday at 7:47a.m.
•
with the Rev. Dave Fields officiating. Burial will be in the Sunrise· Memor- . tial response ~d can handle and con- a.m.-nqonatthe Meigs County EMS
ial Gardens, Letan, W.Va. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-8 p.m. tain general hazardous spills," said Training Center. .
Saturday.
·
Byer.
An operations class has also hecn
Full military ~rviees will be conducted by the VFW and American LeJ!ion.
The team has already put its train- · scheduled for Oct. 26-27 all~c Syra·
ing-to the test when it provided assis- cuse Fire Dcpanment, with John
tance to the containment of a chem- Peters instructing. Class will be held
'icalleak that shut down U.S. 35 in between 9 a.m.-3 p.m .. both days. For
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medicll Service recorded six calls Jacks0n· County for five ho11rs on more information. contact the Meigs
Oct. 10.
County EMSIEMA at 992-6617.
· for assistance Thursday. Units responding included:
.
POMEROY
. 9:36a.m., State Route 681, Cecil Roseberry, Veictans Memorial Hospital;
L~cille Braley, 82, ofPomeory, died Thursday, October 17, I99~at Pleas.
.
· 7:57 p.m.. P.omeroy Stadium, Hank Hager, VMH.
·, ant Valley Hospital in Point' Pleasant, West Virginia.
·
(Continued from Page 1)
Yaeger said he is puuing his mon.
.
RUTLAND
'
A homemaker, she was 'born April 7, 1914 in Pomeroy, daughter of the·
eration of Independent Business cy bChind Strickland because Cre10:05 a.m., Highland Road, Mildred Arnold, HMC;
:
late Mr. and Mrs. Jannes Canterberry. She was a member of the Pomeroy Bap($8,500); the National Rifle Associ- means voted to reduce spending for
·tist Church. .
_·
3:48 p.m., Salem Po(lal, Larry Deal, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
ation ($3,500.); and Exxon Corp. and Medicare. Yaeger also believes that
SYRACUSE
.. ·Surviving are a daughter, Gloria Qayn_ell Stevenson and family of ColumStrickland is more intelligent than
Proctor &amp; Gamble, both $2,000.
4:01 a.m .. Third Street, ShCrry Ridenour. Pleasant Valley Hospital.
bus; two daughters-in-law, Brenda Braley and Mary Braley, both of Pomeroy;
Strickland's top PAC donors were: Cremeans and sensiiivc to the need.•
TUPPERS PLAINS
.
· six grandchildren, Jack and bteama Braley of Pomeroy, Tim and Kristi Brathe AFL-CIO's Bakery and Confcc- of the 6th Congressional District, the
I0:57 p.m,. Mount Olive Road, Elizabeth Banoe, VMH.
, ley of Cheshire, David and Kclli Balhird of Pomeroy, Kuniss )lraley of
tionary Workers International Union, poorest in the state, with a medium
. Pomeroy, Sean Braley of Pomeroy, and iannes Braley of Pomeroy; and II
the Association of Trial Lawyers of income of less then $22.000 annual·
greal-grandchildren.
·
America, the AFL-CIO's Trans- ly.
She was preceded in death by her first husband, Mel Thomas; her second
"Cremeans ·is just not a very
ponation Political Education League,
.
.
husband, Homer Braley; a son, Jack Braley Sr.; and her parents, Mr, and.Mrs.
Appalachians for Community Action, sman guy," Yaeger said. "He's good
James Canterberry.
the AFL-CIO's American Federation at following .a script, hut he's not a
Pre-election dinner
Middleport CouncU
Memorial services will he held at a later date and memorial contributions
.
of
Teachers,' and the Carpenters Leg- quick thinker oo his feet."
Wilkes ,Grange 2716 will he havMiddlepon Village Council will
· ·can be made to the family.
Lane
said
he
is
backing
Cremeans
islative
Improvement
Committee,
all
ing its annual pre-election steak and m~et ,in special · session Monday, 6
'
.
$5,000 each.
because Strickland is too liberal.
chicken fall dinner at the New Wilton' p.m., at the village hall.
Under
FEC
rules,
·PACs
can
con''I'm dclinitcly not a liberal perCommunity Building, Saturday, 4 to
tribute
up
to
$5.000
for
each
election,
son
and I will not vote for anyhody
6 p.m. Politicians invited to attend Literary Club
including
a
primary,
general
and
spewho
is pro-abonion {Strickland says
The Middlcpon Literary Club will
and speak briefly. Door prizes to he
'
Boars: 40.00-41.00.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indianacial
election
or
runoff.
Individuals
he is pro-choice)," Lane said. "I
meet Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the home
For the week: Barrows and gilts: awarded.
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
can contribute up to S1,000 for each don 'tthink Ted is a bad person, I just
of
Mrs.
Wilson
Carpenter.
Mrs.
buying points Friday as provided by 4.00 to 4.50 lower. Sows: unevenly
line up better with Cremeans."
Dwight Wallace will review "A Sim- election .
Infonnational nl&amp;hl
the U.S. Depanment of Agriculture steady.
The Meigs Junior.High will have ple Path" by Mother Theresa.
Estimated weekend receipts:
Market News:
•
an informational night 7 to 8 p.m.
Barrows and gilts: steady to 1.00 36,000.
Prices from The Producers Monday in the cafeteria at the school
lpwer; demand. light on t~~oderale
for parents and guardians. Agenda
Livestock Association:
efferings.
will
include results of sixth grade proCattle:
higher.
Veterans Memorial
" U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. country
ficiency
test for scvenlh graders,
Slaughter
steers:
choice
68.00· Thursday admissions -Victoria
points 52.00-53.00, few S 1.50; plants
eigh( graders and the ninth grade pro- Tipton, Stout.
76.28; seleci 61.00-68.()().
52.~54.00.
Slaughtet heifers: choice 65.00- ficiency test, with a discussion and
Thursday discharges - none.
, U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 45.00question time.
73.25; select 60.00-65.00.
51.50. '
•
Holzer Medical Center
Cows: 1.00 lower; all cows 44.00
Sows: mostly steady.
Dis&lt;bafles Oct. 17 - David
Leaf pickup
Dotson, Betty Bamhan, Gregory Fra·
U.S. 1·3 300-450 lbs. 42 .00- and down.
Bulls:
steady;
all
bulls
42.75
and
Middlepon
Village
will
begin
its
·
zier., Mrs. Randy Hubbard and daugh46.00; 450-500 lbs. 46.00-SO.OO;
down.
·
annual fall leaf pickup Monday, with ter, Alicia Simpkins.
500-650 lbs: S0.00-56.00, few 57.00.
·
village crews 10 stan in the nonh end
Births - Mf. and .Mrs. Randy
of town. Village residents aR asked Hubbard, daughter, Oak Hill; Mr. and
Daily
.FRI. THRU TtiURS
notto put small' limbs, brush, or lblw· Mrs. David Crusan. son, Jackson; Mr.
ROBIN
WI' IIWS, IN
ers
with the leaves. All leaves must and Mrs. Steven Reeves, daughter, ·
!USPS 213-M)
JACK,..,
be aeatly' piled along village streets, Cheshire.
Publh.hed every aflentoon. Monday throuJb
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:311
and
not in alleyway~.
·(PUblished with pennission)
.Friday. 1.11 ea.n sa •• Pomeroy. Ohio. by ttte
441-01123

Training prepares Meigs'

,

I

By William A. Rusher
All eyes are fixed, and understandably so, on the battles coming
up on Nov. 5 for the presidency and
control of Congress. But thoughtful
observers haven't forgone n that there
are also term limits initiatives on the
ballot in 14 states that day, and that
their success or failure will have a
, formidable impact on the future of
American politics.
The suites are: Alaska. Arkansas,
Color.~do, Idaho, Maine, Missouri,
Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, Nonh
Dakota, Oregon, South ·Dakota,
Washington and Wyoming. Accord·
ing to the fiendishly ingenious provisions of these initiatives, members
of Congress and state legislators
who fail 10 follow their instructions
will have the disagreeable words
"DISREGARDED
VOTER
INSTRUCTION ON TERM LIMITS" placccl next to their names on
the ballot in .future primary and gen-

Lucille Braley. 82, Pomeroy, died Thursday, Oct. I 7, 1996 in Pleasant Valley Hospilal.
·
8Qm April7, 1914 in Pomeroy, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Jemes
Canlcrberry, she was a homemaker and wu a member of the POmeroy Baptist Church.
Surviving are a daughter, Gloril Gaynell Sicvenson and family of Columbus; two daughters·in·l-w, Brenda Braley and )'&gt;1ary Braley, both of Pomeroy;
and six grandchildren and II great-grandchildren.
·
She was' also preceded•in death by her forst husband, Mel Thomas; her
second husband, Homer Braley; IJid a son, Jack Braley Sr.
Memorial services will be held at a later date and memorial contributions
.
can be made to the family.

tions, not 50. We focused on the
states where we had close House
races. I'm not sure where this 50
came from, I've heard it before ."
Gcphardt is also aggressively
building up his financial war chest.
Even though he's a lock to win reelection this year and has more than
$3 million cash on hand (his opponent, political unknown Deborah
Wheelehan, has raised a mere
$1 00.000). he continues to aggres.
sively solicit funds.
In a recent fund-raising lener,
Gephardt pleads with contributors
"to he as generous as you can" to
help Democrats "regain control of
the House of Representatives." He
asks that checks be "made payable 10
the Gephardt in Congress Committee."

· The Dally $entlnel• Page 3

•

:Rain remains possibility
:through ·region ·saturday

I

Carl H•.Rairden

EMS units answer 6 calls

Lucille Braley
• ... •

•

•

.r'

~ ' •

.

PACs, individuals line up

'

·Meigs announcements

;foday's livestock report.

Hospital news

I.

The

Sentinel

Qhio VDIIey Publi1hi111 ComponyiO•nneu Co.•
. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992· 21!16. Second
clil-5~ pollta&amp;t pild at Porna'D)', Ohio. .
Memb.r1 the A~ated Prea,, and the Ohio
NeW1ipaper AttoeieUon.

POSTMAmR: Send Addrel• conec:liona to
The Doily Selllinel. t II c.. n So.. , _ . y,
Ohio4S769.

llrCantor·-SUIIICIIIPIIDN JIATBS

::
=:.:::::::::::::::;.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
one Yt1t.....!...:..........
sto..oo
. st!'«lu &lt;:on ratcl
Daily ............ ,..,, ................................... )5C....
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Sports

I

The ·Daily Sentinel
.........

J

Pomeroy •·Middleport, Ohio

fi

Frldey, Oc1Dber 11, 1 -

Braves beat Cardinals' 15·0 to wi'n ·National League ·title

By C"AIQ HORST
KANSJ\,5 CITY, Mo. (AP) The Seattle Seahawlcs looked at
their game against Kansas City as
one 'that would define their season.
They ,would either challenge the

•

Frank Sinalnl's version' bf "New
Yorlc. New Yorlc, "!he Allanta Bra\'a
.~adY Icnew what wu next.

H I&gt;;
WHAT A SHOT! - The Atlanta Braves' Javy Lopez {lett) Is congralllilltad by taemmata Andruw Jonea attar Lopez's fourth-lnnlf1!!
" - In Game 7 of the National Leegue Championship Series m
Atlantll Thursday nlglll The homer helpecl ·the Braves beet the Sl
Lauls Cerdlnals 15-0 and win the senior circuli crown. (AP)

On to Y1nkCe Sladium for

me

World Series.
The St. Louis Cardinals, meanwhile, could only
lO figure out
what went wrong. .
In one of the most surprising
Game 7s in baseball history - and
the biggest post-season rout ever the Braves embalrassed the Cardinals IS-O Thursday night to complete
a remarkable rally from a 3-1 deficit
in the NL championship series.·
How startling was tile comeback7
Held to 12 runs in ljlc first four
games, the defending champion
Braves erupted to outscore St. Louis
32- 1 in winning the last three.
Atlanta, Icnown for its pitching, permitted that tone rup to score on a
wild. pitch.
"I dop 't think . we ex pee~ to
dominate like this," Tom Glavine
said. "We always seem to get in nail
biters."
Not this night, thanlcs to Glavine.
Glavine, MVPofthe 1995 World
Series, hit a bases-loaded triple 'to
highlight a six-run first inning. He
also pitched seven innings of threehit, shutout balL
."You wouldn't expect this many
runs from any. team," Braves manager Bobby Cox said. ' 'You w.ould
never imagine it. I thought every
game here would be very tigh~ low
;corinj!. A couple of balls fell, and
then it just steamrolled.
" But when we were down 1-3,
we felt like we could reel off three.
You always worry, but there's an.
awful lot of talent on this team," he

ur

said. "We had a lot of confidence.
Not only did we pitch well. We hit

well. too."

.

The Braves have reached·four of
' the last five. World Series. When
· John Smohz starts Game I on Saturday night in th~ Bronx, it will be
a homecoming of sons for Cox -he
'1!ade his major league debut with
Yankees and coached first base on
!heir !977 championship team.
"My roots; • he said. "It will be
great to get to me old house before
they tear it down."
·
The Yankees have been idle since
Sunday. wben they finished off Baltimore il) the AL play'!ffs. Since then,
though, New York has been keeping
its eye on the .l:lraves.
Yankees scout Gene Michael, the
· team's former field n\anager and
general manager, sat in the front row
behind the backstop !alOng notes. .He
was one of abput a half-dor.en scouts
watching Atlanta. ·
I
Surely, it's been a scary site, as
the Cardinals found out first-hand .
" It just wouldn't stop," outfielder Brian Jordan said. "It was hit after
hit after hit."
Javy Lopez •.MVP of the series,
Fred McGriff and Andruw Jones
added two-run homers. Jones, at. 19,
became the.youngest player to connect·in a post-season game.
.The sellout c,rowd of 52,067 spent
the whole game-cheering, .chopping
and chanting. The fans sang "New ·
York, New York" in the.late innings
and reprised it during tbe on-field
celebration.

me

In the New York Yankees' clubhouse,

The crowd also. save a standing
ovation when Ozzie Smith carne to
bat for the last time in his career.
Glavine.stepped offthe mound to let
Smith soak in tbe applause, and the
future Hall of Farner waved his helmet.
Smith, pinch-hitting the sixth,
fouled out. The41-year-old shortstop
had previously announced his retirement, and was hugged by his teammates in the dugout after batting.
"It would have been great to win
another ring, but I'll get up tomorrow
and get on with my life," Smith said.
Though Marquis Grissom began
the rout · by singling on Donovan
Osborne's first pitch, the Braves'
playoff comeback clearly started
before then.
It nray have begun back at Busch
Stadium when Dennis Eckersley
pumped his fist forcefully in tbe air
after closing out a Game 4 wiil that
gave St. Louis . the 3-1 lead. That
prompted me Cardinals to ·put 20
cases of champagne on ice in anticipation of a clincher that never came,
and seemed to anger Atlanta.
"'They've proved it to us;" Eckersley said. "They· didn't have to
beat the hell out of us to lli"OVe it to
us, that's for sure.':
·
Tile Cardinals had been the bnly
team to twice blow a 3-1 lead in
post-season play; having done it in
the 1968 and 1985 World Seriesthey lost 11-0 in Game 7 to Kansas
City in that 1985 series.
,
St. Louis had never lost an NL
playoff seties, going 4-0 until run-

~

,

ning into Adanta.
.
The Braves became the eilhth
team out o( 48 to overcome a 3-1
deficit, and the first ever lO ilo it in
the NLCS. They aiso ad~ to their
legacy of playoff COl'lebaclcs they won tbe last two games of the ·
1991 NLCS to beat Pittiburp, then
came back the next year to defellrili
Pirates in Game 7 wben Francisco
Cabrera's two-out, two-run single
~apped a three-run 'rally in tile bottom of the ninth innins.
.
Cabrera was on hand this time to
throw out a first ball, and the Braves
hitters took it from there.
Grissom singled on ,tbe first pitch
from Game 3 winner Osborne and
Mark Lemke doubled on the next
one. Later, Jennaine ()yt and rellow
rookie Jones hit RBI singles and Jeff
Blauser was hit by,. a pitch that
loaded the base$.
Glavine, who led all pitchers
with a .289 batting average this season, sliced a fly ball to ten fielil. Ron
Gant came up inches short on a head·
long dive. and briefly stayed on me
ground as he watched the ball and
the Cardinals' season roll away.
"It happe'ned too fast for me,"
Osllomc said. "'The first batter gets
a hit up me middle and !lere we go."
Ne~tes: This was tbe Cardi.nals'
worst shutout loss since ... 19-0
defeat on· Aug. 3, 1961, against
Pittsburgh . ... Blauser left the game
as a precaution after being hit in the
leg by a pitch. The injury wasn't'considcred serious and he will be available Saturday niRhl.

..

established~amsintheAFCWestor

fall again into the division cellar.
The cellar won out again.
The Saahawks were penalized
118 Y"'4s.M4.had two players ejected whi)~)oAins to the Chiefs 34-16
Thursday, nig~t. .
. .&lt;
"Wow," defensive end Michael
Sinclair ~d about four times. " 118
yards7 You can't even beat a Little
League team playing like that. "
Seattle helped Kans!IS City keep
a drive alive in the first half with
three offsides penalties, then committed tl)r~c.. pe~ona\ fpul,peQa,lties
in the s~onJI ,hal,f.t&lt;? )cad to another
Chiefs touchdown.
"lt's ,''inexo'us~bte, " Seahawlcs
coach Denn~ . Erickson, said. "You
expect tq be 9ffsides once or twice.
But you can't do it tiiJie and ag~in
against a team like that team in that
stadium ." " "'
. ,'
Ejec~ , in' t~e sepond half after
person~! J.o\11 )li'Qaltj,~s .wer;e lin~~c~e~ ,Vfjns!on Mos~ and Dean
e s..
··
. ·~It's frustrating because you
watch the;film and you know they
are going)!l ~~t you, you know they
are going tQ !&gt;loc)&lt; yo.u low," Sinclair
said. "It's .frustrating to me person:
ally. Ii'~ ilbthing bad, yo~jusdi:now
!hey ar~~goi.fll tp dp i.t. W~ kn~~ that
1f we co~l# ?Pff'l'. m 1 ~el.e an~ :w:•n the

might mean to play the Braves in the do yet," Torre.soiid. "That's honest." : able ·to use a designated hitter in keep Rogers around if he can;t help .
World Series.
Pettine, a left-bander, won 21 Games 3, 4 and 5. Torre $aid if his the club.
.
·
.
"They're the world champions," games during the regular season and roster has tt· pitchers, Rogers would
"Kenny, in my mind is still going
Torre said. "I .think it's a hell of a was brilliant in the Yankees' AL be one of them.
'
to have to be able to pitch," Torre
·feather in your cap if you can beat championship. clincher over Balli·
"You don't have me luxury of the ·said. "I'm not just going to carry him
the wor-ld champs."
.
more with a three-hitter for eight designated hitter," Torre said. so he's eligible. He has to he useful
Well , the Yankees will now get innings. He made two starts against "Eleven pitchers will give us the . too."
the chance to dethrone the Braves.
the Orioles, and Torre would Jove to opponunity, if we do that, to go malce
Strawberry presents Torre with
Torre gave the Yankees their sec- • use him three times in a World Series a change without worrying about yet another dilemma.
ond off-day this week Thur~y in matchup with the-Braves. who have pinch-hitting. It just' gives us some
The outfielder-designated hitter
preparatiOn of New York s first more power·from the ten side.
more bullets in' an
wbere we fouled a ball of his foot in Game 5
World Senes appearance 10 15 years.
If Torre decides to go with three have to be strOng." .
last weekend at 'Camden Yards. PrcTorre, though,, went. to woik.
starters, Rogers, blasted in hoth his
Rogers, bothered by shoulder dis- limi·nary-X-rays were negative, but
Torre hasn t dec1ded on a Game post-season sllirts, might be dropped comfort most of the season, threw when the rain didn't s~bside, StrawI starter. although for the ~c.ond , from the World Series roster or used batting, practice to Y11nkee pitchers l;&gt;eJ;J"y had a CAT scan, which
stra~ght day he hmted he's favo~ng
in relief. Torre has also said he may oil Wednesday. -Torre questioned revealed a hairline fracture.
Pettttte ove~ Cone. He also re~amed use Brian Boehringer or Ramiro · Rogers' ,health following his 4 start
The toe isn't affecting Strawbernon-committal .on whethe~ he II use Mendoza as possible No. 4 starters. at Baltinlore and said he wouldn't . ry's hitting, but be hasn't been able
~ t~~~- or four-man rot~non. .
Torre might carry 11 pitchers
I m not sure what I m gomg to because of concerns about not being

area:

.

By RUSTY MILLER

to run. ·An immobi.le ·strawberry
limits Torre to two options: use .
Strawberry as a designated hitter at ·
home and as a pinch-hitter in the NL
city.
·
"Unless he can runaround in the
outfield, he can't do us very much
good," Torre.said. "He's still a pretty good threat off the bench,
though."
Strawberry received more treatments .pn th~ toe 1bursday and
worked out by himself at Yankee Stadium. He also made it clear he was
ready to play.
·.
. "Yo~· d have to break my lc$ at
th1s pomt to keep me on the sideline." he said.

Thursday's score

NLplayoffs

Kansas City 34, Seaule 16

nursday's score
Atblu. 1.11:, St. l.oui1 0; Allama wln1

.

Rrin~.l

World Series
Saturday
Arlanla (S'llaltz 24-8) at New York
(Pmiue 21-8 or Cone 7-2), 8:01 p.m.

SUDday
Allanta (Neagle 16--9) ;11 New Yor k
(Pft1iue 21-8 or Cone 7·2), 7:30p.m.

Tuesday

Sunday's games
Atlanta at Dallas. I p.m.
. Miami at PhiiQiphia. I p.m.
.
New England at Indianapolis, I l).m,
New Orltans at Carolina. I p.m.
New York Giants at Washinglon, I
p.m.
Bahimore as Drnver, 4 p.m.
Buffalo a1 New Yort Jets. 4 p.m .
CINCINNATI ai San Frn!k:i:K.v. 4 p1m.
Jadt.soov1lk at Sr. Lwi1, -4 p.m.
Piusburgh 31 HouSlon, 4 p.m.
Tampa Bny ar Arirona, 4 p.m:
Ope~ dare: Chicago, Otnoit , Green
Bay ..M1nn:escxa
•

New Y..wt at Atlantl. 8;1II p.m.

Thursday, Oct. 24

New York a1 Atlanta, 8:1~ p.m., if

''''''"'Y

Saturday, Oct. 26
.

...,.....,.

Arlama at New York , 8:01 p.m.. if

Sunday, Oct. 27

Atlan!:a 1M Nrw Yort. 7 : 3~ p.m. EST.
if tlei.'Cita}

Football

NFL standings .

·-Ill-·

r»: J. I &amp; a u
lndianapolil .........~ I 0 .833 · liS 1:17

2 0 .667 19 9~
2 o .667 140· st
J o .sou 147 n t
1 0 :~ 92 1i11

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HouJJOn ............... 4
J~eboaviUc ......... 3
Bakimcft ............. 2

I 0 .BJl Ill
2

80

o .661 -m no

4 0 .429 137 D6
4 OJ .l' 125 1~6
CINCINNATI ..... I S 0 .167 101 132
WatrmDI...._

Denver .............. _. !'! • 0 .133 144

9~

KMsasCi1y ......... ~ 2 0 .714 lSI 1o8
San DieJI.1... ......... 4 2 0 .667 145 144

Oakland ...............~ 4 0 .429

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Sellllo .......... ........ 2 5 0 .286 109 187
·~

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·Philldelphla .........4 l 0 .61J7 125 121

Dolt.................... 3 3 0 j()() 104 1')
""-o................2 4 0 J )l 85 148
68 II&amp;

tflnnon ..._....... ~ 2 0 .714 17:1 116
Ol:nit. .................. 3 0 .571 162 124
5 0 · .2J6 104 1$2

T - Boy ......... .1 5 0 .167 69 139

w...... ~- ............... 4 2

0 .167 J45

MINNESOTA TWINS: Exercited
their 1997 up1iun on C &lt;ftJ Mym.
SEArrLE MARINERS: Rc·aiaacd
28 Joey Cera. N:tmed Natdi Conrreru
fMtchi "I coach.

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TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Namrd
Er•ic Whiu rovii'IJ t;:ah:hina inttnu:tor.
Named Ganh lora minaacr, S~:ott Bmdon pilchina coach, and Willie Wilson
coach of Syracu~e of the Jaacrnational
Wf"'· Horned Lloyd M-,. cOO&lt;h ood
Bill Munbouqiactrc pirdtiiiJ COk:h of Sr.
Calh&lt;wincs oflhe Nrw Ycd-Pcnn Leaaue.
Namrd Paul Elliott co.:h of Knoxville or
the So.dlem Lcaaut:. Nomed ·Brite Wal· .
ton pilcbi•J coach of Haatntown of the

10
10
19
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South Atlantic Lcal!uc.:Named Hector

Tom•

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Oall:a ......:........... J• J . 0 12 24
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Ch~ ...............4 3 0

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12
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Toronto ................ ! 4 0

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St . Louis 6. Toronco I
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of Duaedin or the 'florida S111e

..........._
CHICAGO CVIS: Aarced

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17
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.........

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• WESTERN CONFERENCE

with CF Brian Mt:Rac on
COMrllel,

-

l.ooA-4.-2

11

to tams

rhree-ynr

,

• · FLORIDA NARLII&lt;S:...Il"""' Lou
Drd'loti dirmot of Jl'OUP Md xaon tick·
et talc:tlnd John Ptau Ienior rn.rqer or
~tlc:ketsala.

·

IIIONTREAL EXPOS: N - 8otllly
C•Harpilcbi"ICIIIIdi ....... MocUoiA
thkd bw c:o.:h aAd inflcW Dlnlc:lar.

YORK NETS: N"""' Willoo filii ..... _.,_ l t M I I ) NEW

a"lltlnl pircllliaa coach •• b111lpca
co~ell, Bruce le.Uc:t C8ldlttl c:OIA,

RoJoo-....,. ....., '""r...
~~'ifaOij ~TIIII It.u_.
INPTony
lUll',_-· I.HP
Tom Bolton, L P M4U lrowa. RHP
c..w
Rofoel

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a..-.

. COO~l)OOK

'

' I

.

ncluded ·in the cookbook will be recipe• from Ma1on
.
'
Meigs &amp; Gallia Countr re•ident1,
no charge. ·
The recipe• will be categorised afo~:

at

..

..•

• Appedsen/Bevem6e• • Bread/GraiN
• Calt.../Pie1
&amp;: Cookie• • _
P.orlc • Poultry
.
• Sala4a &amp; Yegeta,~k•
·.•Soup• and S~iehe•

·'

.

•

Toaipt'opmeo

Sc. Wui11t N.Y. a...n.7:30p.m.
OttawaarNewJ«teyt 7:10p.m.
Buffalo 111 W•hi 1 w 7:30p.m.
Philldc:lphia • Pllomi-. 9 p.m.
S. Jotc ~ AMhei&amp; IO::JD p.tn.

·/Jrlng yow re~ipe into o,. olfice or .t end it lot .

•'
'I

•

Holiday Cookbook
e/o The D.Uy Seatiael

.
111 Corm Streee.fPomeroy, Ola 45169

'.

•I

.. ,

Pktue, ilaclude your~ and
plaolUI I Utilla. recipe. " ·
Deadline for ail recipes
.u October - .31~ 1996

I·

Satunley'o..Ncw I"'"Y II H""«d,7p.IO.
Wllhinpon'· • Pi~. 7;:.0 ll'm.

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dtm ror Optrltiou. Sia•d C 011¥e\'
Mitllrto I ~«&lt;ltt''et.
OOLDEI&lt; STATE WARRIORS :
W"""O Kowloa.-. F Hoory-

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Lll5 AIIGI!U!I aJPIII!IIS:
e CorY R"' ln•ICl.P Molioo. •

&lt;*LANDO MAOIC: Wli... 0 Loll-

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i'E'NsiCc;AeS:

have A Solid Shol" At MAC Cham· Ll,uisiana Tech before closing with
pionship."
five straight conference contests';'! '
But no more than four and as few three at home and then two on the
8S two may be ten by Saturday night.
road.
\Vhen Ball State (3-3 oy.erall, 2Despite what Lynch said, Toledo
I in the MAC) travels' to Bowling . is the only team that truly controls its
Green(4-2, 3-l),tbelosermostlike- ' own destiny- win . out and the ·
ly will drop out of contentio~. In oth- Rockets return to the Las Vegas
er MAC games, Miami of Ohio (4- Bowl . It's as simple as that.
'3, 4-1) plays at Aleron (1-6, 1-4)
Both Ball State and Bowling
while trying not to look ahead to .next Green, because of losses to Miami
week's game with front,running and Toledo, respectively, may not be
Toledo. Ohio (3-3, 2-1) can enhance able to afford the luxury of another
. or taint what has already been a defeat.
remarlcable season when it Jravels to
Only three times in the MAC 's 49 ·
. Kent (2-4. 1·2).
years has a team with two losses won
Eastern Michigan (1-6, 1-3) plays the title, all during the seven-season
at Central .Michigan (3-4, 2-2) in the span from 198().86. No one·wilh two
other conference game. To!~do (4-1. · setbacks has finished first since Mia3-0) goes out .of the league lo·play at . mi in 1986. ,-

saturd~y·s Kanawha Valley Dl'a~~ ~ .' filii shed third.
. · ·
way races-were exciting as promised.
In the Modified Division, Savage
as the traCk wrapped up the points took first in his 1970 Nova. Brandecompetition for the 1996 season. berry got second in his 1973 Du~ter.
Local nreers took sevcraltop spots as Fowler and Jeff Johnson of
well .as many team spots for th"' 20- Rc.edsvillc were semifinalists. ,
In the Street Division, William
member kanawha Valley Bracket
finals team
. ·
Hartigan of Scott Depot, W.Va. took
Greg F,owler of Point Pleasant, the win in Tim 1985 Camaro. BrenW. V.a., wbJL the Modified Points da Venoy took second in her 1972
Championsl!ip and went on to win Nova. Jim Crace Sr. of Gallipolis an&lt;l
the trackch~i)! . Ciji Casto of Bob Potter of Huntington, W.Va •
Mason, w.Va Will the Junior Drag- were semifinalists.
ster cham)l!oJI, KevJn ·Ro6inson o( ., In the Junior Dragster Division,
Winfield, ~}(a,,was, Pro CharnJiion. Ciji Ga.&lt;to of Mason, W.Va. took
Jim Saun~ Qf~!eanor, W.ya:, lbe' first~ Charley Betts of Huntington,
1994 Strecl.t-~on, won ,lhe,ill~·· W.Va.' finished second. Oavey Math,..~ .;·1,
~ ·· · • ·· eny of Ravenswood , W.Va. finished
again,
• Locatif,;~,mlking the'.team are third ...
Max Hill, '~Hill and;L:t~;F.Jpyd ' ·• In a special Sunday ruce, Rick
of Racine; ~ Weber ~f;Mi.;ldle- Willidmson t~f South Point took the
port; Jaso.l'ffiR.'a~ G~~ J~yage of Brucket I win in his 1967 Corvette.
Pomeroy ; \1Wyno Adkins of Syra- Point Pleasant'S Chuck Sanders took
CUI~; KeV)II, V~no)' and. 8renda second in ·his 19B2Camaro. Ray LivVenoy ofi."Illlt' fottilm,l~n Colley, ia'gston of Point Pleasant took third
Jane Collq.Md J'.J~ SnodJrass of , II\ Don &amp; Gloria Ours' 1989 Cutlasa.
Gallipolis;-JI»ti Mafallln of Vjntonr ·
ln Bracket 2, Pennis Collin1 of
Dave Branili:betfy ot Rlo Grande;· Branchland, W.Va. took first with
Rick Randolj)h of Bidwell; Chlrlie" Mark Jahltij!Cn of Hurricane finish&gt;
Brown ·ofWJikaviUe; Marlc.Adkins ' ill&amp; second. Jeff Hesch! of Eleanor,
.ofCrownCIIy.nct~IIISnPd~ W.Va. and Rich Dod~ill ~f St.
or l'llrlot.
AlbanJ, W.Vi. were semtfinahsts.
"" 1 .
~~
;...___In the reJUiar l'llllllg, Piul
rn the Junior Draaster clash, Chad
hera of St.
·vi 4iiOii the $mith of St. Albans, W.Va. took the
win in the -.fll.fi
,-.B~ :w;..,, wilh .. Davey Matheny of
ina of Alhland, Ky: nished aecond. Ravenswood, W.Va: finishifll secSteve Mayurd of Kenova. W.Ve. ond.

'

said. New England's troubles hav.e
"Our season pretty much is going
mi-Philadelphia games are prelimibeen where Parcells teams usually
to
be
detennined
the
next
month."
naries of a sort to next week, when
excel
- on defense.
New
England
coach
·Bill
Parcells
Dallas goes to Miami to face Jimmy
Johnson and the Dolphins. That will
be Johnson's first game agai]lsl Jerry Jones, Barry Switr.er and the team
he coached to two Super Bowl victories.
Still, Sunday's game is critical for
both the Eagles and Dolphins . Both
are 4-2 and a game out of first place
in their divisions , the NFC East and
AFC East.
Philadelphia has been carried by
its defense, which scored its only
touchdown in a 19-10 win over the
New York Giants last week.
"We have to get a drive going and
sustain it," says Ty Detmer, who
replaced Rodney Peete at quanerback when Peete was lost for the sea·
·son with a knee injury. "11be corners
play son and they take away some of
the deep throws and the play-action
stuff."
Miami beat Buffalo 21 -7 last
week, its first win in three games
since Dan Marino broke his ankle
against Indianapolis. Marino will be
in unifonn Sunday. but is being
primed for the Dallas game.
For New England (3-3), the visit
to Indianapolis (5-I) is the pivotal
game of tbeir season.
·
If the Patriots win, they're only a
game behind the Colts in what's
shaping up as a fqur-way race with
Kanaaa City tllillback Marcus Allen (32) steps
the Dolphins and Bills in the AFC
over the plla of humanity on the goelllne to score his setond touchEast. If they IO$e, they'll be looking
down of the night during Thursday night's AFC West battle against
up at all three.
the visiting seattle 5eaha)Yks, who lost 34-16 In part becau.- of this,
his 109th career rushing· touchdown. (AP) ·

'Casto, Hills and' Venoys.·. get
bertJls on KVD ·b racket team

•

o..r.
c M.
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- · ll&lt;l'lloles_.RHP St:ort
1M IHP Dave:

w.--...

flonda2.~1

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PiUiburJ.h ........ :... l !II

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- -........ 2 l 0 .2J6. 114 161

..

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relaliOftS dircqor.

'

I'

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0... Boy .......... 6 I 0 .857 227 92

Clllcoto ...............2

:~~:

Hanford ............... 3
Bosron ............. .'....2
Buffalo .................2
Ottawa ............ .... ,1

C. .... DivW.,..

..

publi~:

Atlanlk DivWoft

.... .4
Tampa Bay ..........3
PhiiMiphia .........J
N.Y. R.anJ.CU .......l
Nc:w Jrrsey .... ......2
N.Y. blanden .... ,. l
Walhingron ......... .l

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

N.Y. Ot.ls ..........l -4 0 .3B

JNF Tim Hllrkridct rrum the 60-day ditabled list IUld ac111 him outriabc 10 Van·
coover or the PCL.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : An·
nau11ccd the ruignatian of.,Daui Abel,

'·

fiOLIDljli

tio.. and ·~·ed rree qoenq. Reiutllled

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Monu-~al

AMERIC4N CONFERENCE
Buffalo .................4
MilunL ...............4
New F.azland,...... 3
N.Y. Jet! ........ :.....0

"-·--

CALIFORNIA ANGELS : An·
oounced LHP Ky!e Abbon, RHP Bryan
H""f· R"P M"" rue-. RHP Jaoon
Grim~1cy, RHP Sieve Ohlivems and INF
Oitk S~;hofield ~ave . cxerciscd their op-

NHL standings
rum
Florida ......

ravorite Recipe

&amp;a.IWI

Hockey

•

THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will be pubU.hin6 a

Transactions

OaklouMI Ill Sa. Dieau. 9 p.m.

.

7 : ~0

Edmonton at Calpy. 8 p.m.
,~ Boslon 011 An*im. S p.m
florida at Phomilt. IOp.m.

Monday's pme

New Yott. a1 Arlan&amp;a, 8 : 1~ p.m.

Wednesday

Sunday's gemes·
· Los AnJela a1 Chit;aJ;o, l p.m.
San Jute 111 Sl. Louis, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Ranaer~ Ill TampQ Bay.
p.m.

.

'

I

Meigs reserves get
26-20 win over N-Y

Co_qper'. .I1_
Qpes B~ckeyes have learned
lesson~ ·from Wisconsin experiel)ce ·

end Us Qo·ur

Ml*lre:al at Onawa. 7:30p.m.
N.Y. Isl:tnden a1 Dei{Oit, 7:30p.m.
Tororllo at Dall:u. 7:30p.m. .
Vancouver ar Cokw~. 10:30 p.m.

.

Meanwhile, Ball State must win
three
straight gdmes on the road AP Sport~ +'llrlter " •
at
Bowling
Green, Central and East- By DAVE HARRIS
'Ball State'i Bill l!.ynchknows that
ern
to
make
season-ending home Sentlnal Correspondent
.a coacb can't put too much empha·
games
with
Kent
and Toledo mean- .J Meigs spotted Nclsonv i.lle a 20-6
sis on BI)Y, g~me i~ or out of the,Midingful.
·
' halftime lead before storming back
American Conference..
.
In the Falcons. Ball State draws a to post a 26-2d victory in reserve
· "As a cOach
you dm •,·'i build
theI
,_ •
.
•
'
team that needs a victory just as bad- football action Monday evening at
entne season oil one game," Lynch
ly.
said. "There are other big games
Nelsonville.
·
"We're both at the same point: we
left."
The Marauders scorcd .20 points
know a lot about our teams," Lynch in the final 5:27 to post the win.
But even Lynd1' concedes that
said. "'Those first three or four Grant Abbott was the star for the
Saturday'~ game ai 'Bowlfn~· Green is
weeks, . you're finding out about Marauders with two touchd own
·importani; i( hd\ 'dowritig~t crucial.
your players.
passes, and two inlcrccptions on con"It's a blg footb;lll'.gaine for both
"We're
pretty
similar
to
BG
in
secutive plays,plus he came up with
teams because we have gotten to this
that we are both teams that seem to .another big play defensive play forcpoint with a·shot at it," he said. "'It's
find ways to win without star play- ing a fumble to stop a possible Buck- .
big for us because if we win, we still
ers
wl)o pile up big statistics. We're eye touchdown dri.ve.
control our own destiny a.little with
pretty good teams wjt~out any bigToledo in front of us." ·
The ,Buckeyes look a 12-0 lead
name
guysc"
The headline_on the weekly MAC
into the second period . Lester Parker made it a 12-6 Buckeye advunlagc
news release s.ays, "Five Teains Still
with a live yard run with 6:23 leli in
I he half.
·
In Ohio. State's football camp,
.
.
But the Buckeyes came huck and
. took a"2Q.61cad allhe half on a 40
yard touchdown pass li·om Chris
Glass to' Michael Dawley with 2:01
left.
The Buckeyes were driving for a
louchdown late in the third rcriod,
,1
but Abboll camc ,up with his lirst big
Statistically,there's no comparing our confidence. We still believe in
By HANK'· LOWENKRON
"You don't want them to have the defensive play for Meigs. Abbott
ourselves and we still think we can . ball a long time, because if lhey do. stripped Dawley of the ball after
. WEST LAFAYETTE, -lnd, (AP) the two teams.
Purdue is averaging nearly 18 shut out teams," said cornerback
-Coach John Coopet hopes his secthey're :going to make a ·tot of Dawley caught u pass on a fourlh points," he said.
ond-ranked: O~io State team learned ,. points. ttie Buckeyes are third in the Shawn Springs, who is starting for
and- 10 situation. The Buckeyes were
nation
'
with
an
average
of
45.2
the
Buckeyes
for
the
third
&amp;traight
.
Purdue
will
Cooper
anticipates.
something fb?Pt· ~nd~rdogs;from its ·
able to recover the loose hail , bul
points. Defensively, the Bollennak- year.
depend heavily on its ground game. they were short of the first down.
last game. •· .
•
'
"Purdue doesn 'I do a lot offen·
The higfilyfavo.ill suol(e~es had , '"'' have surrendered 31 points per
The Marauders put together a 14·
Quarterback Stanley Jackson
sively. They're gQing to light up and play. 96-yard drive to pull In within
to clear t!J~it first rOui't~-quarter game, while Ohio State has yielded believes the scare can be beneficial.
run the ball until you stop them," he 20-14. Abbou hooked up wilh John
deficit of tJle seasqn t.o h'old·offWis· only 8.8 per outing - the founh"We now know if we get down in
said.
consin 17~ 14last week.
Davidson on a ll·yard scoring toss
lowest mark in the nation .
the fourth quaner, we can win a big
Fullback Edwin Watson leads the with 5:27 lc ft in lhe game. Abboll
Ohio State (5-0, :1-o Big Ten) visThe advantage also goes to the football game. That's something
its Purdue (2-4, t-2) on Saturday, Buckeyes, by a significant margin that's beenmissing the last couple of ground game Collette hopes can then hit Darnell Blanks for the exira
seeking iis :,sixt\1, 'straight triumph . when one looks at yards rushing, years arou~d here," Jackson said . slow the Buckeyes. The junior has points.
"'*
498
yards
this
season
and
has
moved
The
Marauders
went for 1hc
"When we got down, seems like we
over the ~oitl'"!)akers .
yards passing and fiFSt downs.
"Hopaful)y"))ooc learned a lesson
. Cooper's players remain confi- could nev~ylight ourselves back. We into Purdue's top 20 rushing list with onside kick. Shawn Workman recov·
crcd for Meigs at lhc Buckeye 39.
last wee!(-,;.thai~hethcr it's Wiscon- dertt1hey are on a road to the Rose did thati'lraturday, in a big game, in 1,323 yards.
The Buckeyes have been going' But · Nelsonville held the Little
sin or whttl~"fll 's Purdue or somcw/' Bowl and a •possible national ~ham- the founh qparter against a. really
with two quanerbacks, giving sopho- Marauders.on downs and took over
body elst! ,,W
e play down the road, ' pionship despite tht scare against the good football team."
Joe Gcnnaine playing time at its own 34.
·morc
. you'd betlJ;r be. ready to pl~y. "
Badgers.
'
Meanwhile, Purdue coach Jirri
Bui on third down. Abbott came
Cooper silid .. · , •
•
"It's not going' to do anything to Collette is looking for a fonnula \hat behind Jackson .
Jackson
has
completed
51
of
80
up
with anol,llcr big defensive play
· "'
, . .
..
.,
•.
· . can produce the first winning season
passes for 833 yards and seven picking oiT a Buckeye pass and
by the Boilennakers since 1984. He
hopes to do that by avoiding touchdowns this season. with only returning it 2H yards to the Buckeye
two interceptions.
28. Two plays later Abbott hit Da,.vid·
~~~o;;~~."F!t~~:~taining posses-

·

St. Louis .............. ! S 0 .167 88 171
AIIMIHI. ................O 6 0 .000 95 17:'i

game, we could tum tbe comer. But quarter to give Seattle hope, but the
we didn 't do it."
Chiefs answered with drives ending
Corey Harris earlier was given a with scores by Allen and by Sean
personal foul penalty for shoving LaChapelle on a pass from Steve
Marcus Allen while Allen was out of Bono to make it 34-10 with 6:40
bounds in the second quarter.
remaining.
A)len. who almost lost the cool
J'!CY Galloway caught a 16-yard
that he always maintains. scored pass from John Friesz with less than
twice to move within one rushing lWO minutes to go for Seattle's final
touchdown of Walter Payton's career score.
NFL mark of 110.
The Seahawlcs 'had won two of
There were many scuffles in the three an,d were coming off a victory
game, and the officials seemed to at Miami.
talce a harder view ofthings after the
But the Chiefs shut down Warren
incident between Harris and Allen.
in the first half, although he finished
The Chiefs, who lost two in a row with 81 yards on 14 carries, and the
after winning their first four, now Kansas City offense featuring slant
must go to Denver a week from Sun- routes by the wide receivers began to
day in an unusual schedule that saw work.
them play on Monday night, go
Bono was 17-of-26 for 1'14 vards
through their bye week and tben play ·and a touchdown. Allen had 39
yards on 14 carries, and Anders .
on Thursday night.
"We really went back to basics," gained 38 yards on four carries for a
Allen said. "We went back to fun - still-stumbling Chiefs rushing attack
damentals. A lot of us felt like we that nonetheless finished with a total
were ·in training camp the past cou- of 146 yards.
pte of days. But I think it paid off. I
In games Sunday, Atlanta is at
still think this offense has a lot of
room for improvement." ·
Dallas; Miami at Philadelphia; New
1
Kansas City· led 17-0 with less England at Indianapolis; New
than four minutes ten in me first half Orleans at Carolina; the New York
after Pete Stoyanovich kicked a 45- Giants at Washington; Baltimore at
yard field goal, Kimble Anders Denver; Buffalo at the New York
scored on a 15-yard run and Allen Jets; Cincinnati at San Francisco;
Jacksonville at St. Louis and Tampa
scored a one-yard touchdown .
·
J
Todd Peterson kicked a 24-yard Bay at Arizona.
Oakland is at San Diego on Monfield goal for Seattle ~ith 26 seconds
tefi in tile half, but Stoyanovich's 43· day night.
Chicago, Octroi~ Green Bay and
yarder as time expired made it20·3.
Minnesota
are off.
• , Chris Warren broke a SO-yard run
Both the Atlanta-Dallas and Miafor me Seahawlcs early in tbe third

.

defeat Seahawks 34-16

Ball State to face ·BGSU in pivotal bout

Scoreboard
Baseball

Ch~fs

MAC football forecast

Torre keeps scribes guessing on starter for World Series opener
By TOM WITHERS
,NEW YORK (AP) - The
Allanta Braves might belp Joe Torre
solve at leasta few of his problems.
TheNewYorkmanagerwentinto
Thunday night wavering over severa! issues: Who would start Game
I of the World Series, Andy Pettine
or David Cone? Would Kenny ,
Rogers be on the roster? Can Darryl
Strawberry play on a fractured right
big toe7
Torre said some of the answers to
those questions would become evi·dent once the Atlanta Braves piPyed
the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 7 of ·
the NLCS. .
.
Fmal ;;core. Allan~ I5, St. Lo~1s
0. Anythmg else, Joe .
More than 12 hours before that
outcome, Torre was asked what 11

Allen's touchdowns help

.

••
The ~ Sentinel • Page '5

•

I

son with a 21 -yard scoring strike .
The extra·point attempt was no
good·. but Meigs had tied the game
at 20 with I:56 left.
..
Abbou \hen picked oiT his sewn~
straight pa.~ s . ~is 29-yurd return guvc
Meig' the ball al the Nelsonvilfc 34.
Five plays later, Caleb Shuler bulled
over from 17 yards out gi ving Meigs
a 26-20 lead with I:03 left in the
contest.
"
· The drive was kept alive by
another outstanding play by Abbou.
With Mc1gs facing a lhird- und-10 situation at its own 34, Ahboll scrambled out of pressure breaking Ions~
of a Buckeye sack al the 50.. Finally
lie was 'uhlc "to hit D&lt;H,idson with a
22'--yard strike, giving Mei gs a firsl
down al 1hc 12 yard line. Two plays
la1cr Shuler scored lhe w,inning
points.
The Buckeyes drove to the Meigs
47, hul Davidso n intercepted a pass
to seal the Meigs 26-20 win withjusL
six seconds left.
Shuler. led Meigs on the ground
with 91 yards on 15 carries, with K5
of 1hosc coming alter the half. Parker added 18 carries lor 6H yards .
Ahbolt wa.&lt; seven of 19 in the air for
115 yards and two touchdowns .
Davidson caught five for K3 yards.
Bl(\nks caught one for 24, and J.T.
Humphreys added one f{&gt;r eight.
Nelsonville stats were unavailable
bc~.::lusc ol"playcrs wearing dillcrcnt
numhcrs from their roster.

t

I

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•.

�•

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Frid8y,Ckrtobet18,18tf

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

/

Volunteers specially trained to
hold, comfort babies in hospitals

Acts of kindness make Olympics special.for disabled woman :
Ann
Landers
1m.

~a

Mfdtt

11-.e.S~IIIIIC...

*"" S)'ftdlall.

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I allended the
· Olympic games in Atlanta this past
summer. Because I needed to use
crutches and a wheelchair, I had
conside~Siaying home and not
going
gh all the trouble of trying to ge around. My family said,
"If YOU don't gol'WE don'tgd." II
turned out that the Olympics ·were
enjoyable and surprisingly easy to

anend beciU5C of coundess acts of

dads who quickly pulled their chitltindness.
dren out of my way so I wouldn't
I hope you will give me. tl)e trip over them, and those who saw
chance to extend my heartfelt thanks " me coming and picked up napkins,
to the volunteers who sought me out paper towels and other debris from
and gave me an excellent place to' the f!oor and out of the way of my
view the competitions when I could- crutches, so my passage coul~ be as
n't climb the steps. the man with the smooth as possible.
broad shoulders who walked in front
I don't want to forget the workers
of me to clear a path through the who showed me a faster route, a
crowd so I could move forwand, and shorter line or a closer ddor. and the
the many folks who stopped to ask, crowds of people on the mass transit
"Do you need to go anywhere? I'll system and on the ·elevators who
stepped aside and let me enter, even
take you." I want to gratefully acknowledge though !took up a lot of space. Nor
the IS smiling women who told me do I want to miss thanking all those
to go ahead of them in the ladies' who smiled and said, "That's OK,"
room line where there were only 12 when my husband nipped their tired
stalls (I counted), all the moms and ankles with my chair.

And finally. I want to thank all me.solve some of my problems.
he died. Whenever I read your colthe volunteers who asked if I
Over the years. whenever my umn, I thi~k about h?w much you
enjoyed the event and really wanted /husband (who was not a great com· helped us an our mamage. My. huf,
to know the answer. lbese acts of municator) behaved in a way that band really respected your JYdf'
kindness were frequent and auto· bothered me, I would write a teller men!. Thank you for sellhng some
malic. They helped me look forward to Ann Landers and leave it on the controversies. you never even kne~
to traveling again, and I really fell in dining room table. My husband, of about. -- Manlyn '" Bumpass, Va. •
love with Atlanta. -- Olympic Win- cours&lt;!, would read it, which is what
Dear·Manlyn: It sounds as If yop
ner from Minnesota
I· intended him to do. When he saw had a very good mama~~· Som~
Dear Winner: Yours is my my feelings down on paper. he could men are incapable ~f admatung they :
favorite kind of teller. These days, understand how his behavior affect- are wrong. How nace for you tha,t :
when we read so much about crime, ed me.
your .husband wasn't one of them,.:
violence and man's inhumanity to
Invariably, after he read one of Thank y()u for telling me know I
man, it's heartwanning to know how my tellers, he would rethink the con- helped. That's the acmg on the cake
well you were treated by strangers in sequences of his behavior and get for me.
Atlanta. Thanks for reaffirming the back on track. We never discussed it,
Send questions to Ann Landen,.
goodness in people.
but I WI'S very pleased that he was · Croaton Syndicate, 5717 W. Cen·
Dear Ann Landers: I want to tell able to make a turnabout.
tury Blvd., Suite 700, LosAngeles,_
your readers how you have helped
We were married 30 years before Calif. 90045

By MELINDA VOSS

Del! Molnea Reglater

Time out for tips on how to s_mooth out sibling rivalries in the family
By BECKY BAER :
. new baby. This way the child will
Melga County Extenalon A9'nt not feel like the haby kicked him out
Family end Community · Sci- of his room.
ence81Communlty Develop- .,
When an infant comes into the
ment
. household, let the older child have
Sibling rivalry is a natural occut- . some responsibilities in the care of
renee between brothers and sisters. the baby. The older child will feel
This jealousy is common because helpful and useful. This will help
eoeh child wants to be the center of strengthen the relationship between
his or her parent's auention. How the siblings.
can rivalry between siblings be kept
Parents must be sure that they
at a minimum? What can parents'do spend some time alone with each
to prevent it · from gelling out of individual child. This time might
hand?
Here are some · consist of talking, reading a book, or
suggestions..
.
playing a game. Research suggests
If an older child is going to he that if a parent spends Just ten min- ·
moved from ·the nursery to another utes a day with each child, there will :
bedroom when a baby is bam, inove be less rivalry. This small intervlll
the child into the new room months reinforces·that the child is special to
ahead of time. Put the crib away for the parent.
Be consistent in your rules. Of
a time before bringing it out for the .

course· ·expected . behavaor will · sisters resolve their disagreements.
change as children grow older, but This allows them to understand the
rules should stay consistent for each give-and-take that goes on in the
age.
world.
·
Since the fami ly environment
Parents should closely supervise
provides an excellent opportunity young siblings. They need to recogfor children to learn how to gel nize when a child has come near to
along in the outside world, siblings his or her limits on gelling along
will learn to .share, love, provide with a sibling. his lime then to sepemotional support and companion- orate the children and allow them to
ship to each other. Many times chit- play independently of each other.
dren will even negotiate in . or~r to
Parents need to realize that sibseule their differences. As long as ling rivalry is more intense in chitthere is no fighting, let brothers and dren who are between one-and-a•

POMEROY, OHIO
614·992·6614
1·800·837·1094

ANTIQUITY -- Antiquity Baptist
Church homecoming, Sunday, II
a.m. service with special singing and
dinner at 12:30 p.m.
RACINE - RACO, Tuesday, Star
Mill Park, Potlui:k dinner at 6:30
p.m. New members welcome.
CARPENTER -- Homecoming.
Sunday, Carpenter Baptist Church,
Route 143. Dinner at noon , afternoon program at I :30 p.n\. with the
True Gospel Sounds, Wheelersburg.

RACINE-- Homecoming, Morning Slar United. Methodist Church.
Sunday. 10 a.m. Sunday school; II .
a.m. worship service; 12:30 p.m.
carry-in dinner; I :30 p.m., afternoon
program. Kenny'Baker, 'pastor.
SATURDAY
.
LONG BOTIOM -- Red Brush . TUESDAY
Church of Christ, Long Bouom, ser- - - POMEROY -- Kid's craft pro- ·
vices Saturday, 7 p.m.; Sunday, 10 gram, Meigs County Public Library,
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Fall theme. Para.m. and 6 p.m.
ents to register their children.
SUNDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County'
POMEROY -- Revival, Mt. Hermon United , Brethren in Christ Farm Bureau annual meeting TuesChurch. through Sunday, 7:30 p.m. day, 7:10 p.m. at the Meigs ·Senior
nightly. ·Evangelist, Rev. Bennie Citizens Center. Entertainment and
Stevens of Point Pleasant; special door pnzes.
singing each nigh,!. Rev. Robert
POMEROY -- Annual meeting,
Sanders, pastor, of church located in
Meigs
County Council on Aging,
Texas Community on Wickham
Inc.,
Tuesday,
11 a.m. Meigs MultiRoad, just off Texas Road.
purpose Senior Center. P,ublic invitRACINE -- American Legion ed. Those wiih paid memberships
Post 602. business meeting Thurs- may nominate and/or approve membership to the Meigs County Cound3y, 6:30p.m., dinner 10 follow.
cil on Aging's Board of Trustees.
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Family and Children First Council,
planning meeting Friday, 9 a.m. at
the Meigs County Public Library.
Pomeroy.

.Reedsville Methodist
women elect new officers
,,

New officers were elected when Christmas visit to the county home
the Reedsville ,United Methodist on Dec. 10. The meeting time for the
' Women met recently at the home of winter months has been changed to .
7 p.m. Pecans will be for sale the
Mrs. Dolores Frank.
Elected were Susie Mash, presi- first week of November, Grace
dent; Vice-resident, Nina Bosion, Weber, chairman, reported.
Refreshments were served to
vice president; Diane Jones, Secretary ; Regina· Reed, treasurer, and those named and. to Nancy Buckley, :
Rosemary Young, Ros.e Niday, ·
Lillian Pickens, publicity.
Boston gave several readings, Frances Reed, Pearl Osborne, Ann
"October Party," "What Prayer Can Lacomb, Debbie Weber. Emma
Durst who won the door prize.
Do," and "Couched In Prayer. •
Nine shut-in calls were made and
The next nleeting will be in the
cards were signed for several
church
basement with Mrs. Durst as
friends. Church projects were discussed and plans were made for a .. hostess.

..

Visually impaired visit Bob Evans

.,i
I

The S.O.S. (Southern Ohio Sup- ·each other in a comfortable selling,
port) group for visually impaired so that information can be shared as
adults and children met recently at each family and individual faces difthe Bob Evans Fanns for an after- ferent challenges.
The group enjoyed another out·
noon picnic and &amp;BDJ"S.
The afternoon consisted of a ing Saturday at the Wellston Skating
wagon ride. a potluck picnic, pelting Rink.
..;_,.
On Nov. 9, an orientation and
horses. listening to honeybees and a
variety of yard games and contests,
mobility workshop will be offeJ;'ed at
The S.O.S. group has been · in the Rio Grande Elementary School.
existence ·since 1990 and has the &lt;\ny adult · or child with visual
goal of assisting families of adults impairments and their families and
and children with visual i"'pair- friends are invited to attend the out·
ments with information that can aid ings and workshops.
theni in educational areas, daily livFor funher information on the
ing areas. and financial assistance.
program residents may call Chris
The social get·togethers are · Miller (614)286-1819 or Ann Boyd
designed to introduce families to (614)245-5053.

The Sentinel News Hotline

992-2156

To offer story sua~tions,
report late·brealcing news and
offer news tips

become friends wuh each other and
actually enjoy each other's company.
Parents should not. expect chtl· .
dren to share all of thear ,Possessaons
with each other. Even m a shared
bedroom it is important. that they
have control . over certam bel?ngings. Each child needs some pnvate •
space.
•
Brothers and sisters should have
time to work together on dafferc~l ­
things that they enJoy. These expenenccs will help budd strong relauonships between them.

D0 N;TIT E MO'TO RS

-Community calendarThe Community Calendar is
published liS a free service to non·.
profit groups wlshlnl to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not ' designed til pro·
mote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items aft printed· as space
permits and cinaot be gua~tecd
to run a specific number of days.
FRIDAY
RACINE -- Weekend meeting at
the Fellowship Church in Racine.
David
Crowell, speaker, Friday, Saturday
and Sunday evening, 7 p.m.

half to three yearS difference in age.
Middle ·school
children cXJ!Crience strong competilive fe~lings, so it is important not to
compare siblings at this age. Parents
may want to encourage each child to
become involved in their own spe·
cial hobbies and· interests. They
should help the child realize anll
accept his or her own talents.
.
Usually by the lime the children
are in their teens, the rivalry has
lessened. In fact during the adolcs-·
cent years, many brothers and sisters

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. Barb Bostwick, a nurse in the
intensive care nursery at Mercy
Hospital Medical Center in Des
Moines, Iowa, cannot stand to hear
babies cry.
But too often, attending the
complex medical needs of critically
ill babies keeps her too busy to provide the vital individual comforting
the child needs.
Critical care nurses must monitor the babies' vital signs, check
equipment. administer medications,
feed, bathe and diaper; coordinate
.. their care with doctors and specialists, and record in detail everything
they do.
· , ,
"Sometimes if the babies cry a
lot and we don't have time to ho,ld
them, we'll put them in a swing,"
Bostwick says. "We're doing a lot
of things to appease these babies,
but they're not getting the human
contact they need."
Now things are different. Cuddlers have arrived.
They ' are trained volunteers
whose sole function is to hold, rock
and comfort infants when parental.
contact is not possible. So far, 21
women and one man are working in
two-hour shifts. More volunteers
., are being sought. ,
.Ideally. cuddlers would be in the
24-hed nursery day and night, but
so far volunteers arc only filling
daytime hours, says Patsy Shors,
Mercy's volunteer coordinator.
The new Tender Loving Cu.ddlers program - started al Bosl·
wick's urging - is ·modeled after
other neonatal intensive care units
, around the country. Given the mod·
( em intensive · care nurs,ery, such
programs make sense.
·
Of~cn, parents cannot stay with
sick babies. -They. may liv~ too far
·' . away to make daily visits, or they
have to work or take care of others
children.
Yet the need for being held and
touched is indisputable. Studies
show healthy babies can fail to
thrive without sufficient human
· contact. And critically ill babies,
· whether connected to a ventilator
· or in an open crib, stand to benefit
even more. Researchers have found
touch may stimulate the brain to
- produce endorphins, a natural
p~nkiller.
.·
· Als~. if human cont,act Is pro'
vidcd, premature babies gain

The Dally Sentinel•.Page 7

eta 1gma hi
holds fall rush party
''Reflections or Love" was the Tea will be held at the home of Darla
theme of the fall rush party of Xi Staats, and on NoV!' 19 the group will
Gamma Epsilon Chapter of Beta have a progressive dinner. The
Sigma Phi Sorority held at the Christmas party was announced for
Pomeroy Methodist Church ann&lt;x. . Dec. II. President Patti Pickens
Nancy Campbell and Angie announcetJ that , the favors for
Rou sh, new pledges. were inlro- Founder's Day have hecn received.
duccd . Also introduced were Sabra
To raise money for the sorority
scholarship the group will take
'Ash. the group's n~w sponsor.
Members enjoyed a dinner pre- orders for Partylitc candles in Octopared hy the rush commitlcc.
bcr and in January take orders for
During the business meeting Longaherger baskets.
plans were made 10 sponsor a family
Aucnding were Paui Pickens,
for Thanksgiving and Christmas. It Judy Williams, Julia Houdasheh.
was noted that Saturday is the Cir- Darla Staats, Rhonda Ketchum.
cleville Pumpkin Show and a visit • Eleanor McKelvey. Susan .Well,
there will serve as the second meet· Geri Walton . Patsy Ogdin , and
ing in October.
Jenny. Smith, members. the new
On November 7 the Pa :t'ercntial sponsor and pledges .

Missionary society .
.·plans upcoming.projects
Project plan s wcr~ discu ssed at devotions using John 15 scripture.
the recent meetin g of the Bertha M. with a theme of love, cine for anothSayre Mi ssionary Society of Racine er. lhe value or true friends, and givheld al the home of Lillian' Hayman. ing appreciation for friends .
II was noted that overland white
The program was presented by
cross items for Murrow Baptist Nondus Hendricks using I John, 7Children's Home will be purchased 16. "Love is of God." She read an
by Lillian Hayman and sent hcforc article pertaining to God's L9vc and
Christmas .
·
dosed with prayer.
It was v01cd to send money for a
Refreshments were served hy the
personalized bmk for the . new hostess to Mary . Cuqis. Mary 'K.
courtyard for Palmer Student Center Yost. Barbara Gheen. Linda Grimm ,
at · Bacon Coll ege. The Baptist Marge Grimm, Marth.a Luu Beegle,
Women's Day of 'Prayer was Emma. Adams. Dorothy Bad~lcy .
11nnounccd for Nov. 4.
,
Florence Adams. Nondus Hendricks
Mary K. Yost. t.:hairman. gave and Naomi Stohart.

Fewer students earning
degrees in four years

BABY ROCKING • Barb Bostwick, a nurse In the intensive c1re nursery at Mercy Hospital MedIcal Center in Des Moines, Iowa, doesn't like to hear •babies cry. The hospitel trained volunteers
whose sole function Is to hold, rock and comfort Infants wh!ln perentl\ contact is not possible.
weight faster. sleep bcucr and go in "positive touch" methods, Bost- hel~ the baby· fall asleep.
home sooner. That is partly because wick said. This is especially imporBigger babies not so critically ill
By TAMARA HENRY
they spend less time in an agitated tant for critically ill babies because \Y1~1 he held and rocked for 30 min·
USA TODAY .
state, which burns calories and so much of what they experience is utcs to an hour. whatever it lakes to
More people arc going to college.
inhibits weight gain; , .
" negative touch" - nurse~ 'adjust- 'induce slccp ,Q{ calm.
hut fewer earn bachelor's degrees ·
Sheryl Bakkie, dirc~tor of ing tubes or perfonning uneomfort· The cuddlers have been taught
a11d
sOme take as ·lon g' us nine years
Mercy 's intcn'sivc care nursery; said able procedures.
to decipher the babies' nonverbal
to
graduate,
said a new UCLA study.
the cuddlers will be especially
"We have to teach these babies communication cues, Bakkic said.
Ahout two in five students com_.
helpful to the long-termers 'positive touch,' so when they go
"Babies talk to you nonverhally
plcted a bachelor's degree within
babies who stay longer than the 12· home they'll be able IO deal with from the minute they 're born. They
four years after entering college.
day average. A few babies stay as ·people picking them up and touch- communicate by how they look al
said the sludy of national degree
long as nine months.
ing them all the time," Bostwick you and don't look at you. Some of
completion rates. The 39.9 percent
them hold up their little hands and
Under prpgram· guidelines, no said.
baby will be touched by a cuddlcr
Babies connected to a ventilator, splay their fingers if they want you . represents a 'net decline of nearly 7
pCrccntagc points from 20 years ago.
unless parents give pennission. The a machine that breathes for them , to stop &lt;\oing something . Other
Checking on how many earn thai
program is set up so as not to add will not be picked up, however. babies become placid." she said.
degree within six years. \he numher
health risks - volunteers . have Some of them weigh less than two . Whatever the cuddle\&lt; do, it is
rises by 5 points to 44.9 percent.
been instructed io stay away if they . pounds. Instead, the cuddlers will not complicated work, Bakkie
A'loYJing up to nine years hrings th~.:
have a scratchy throat or ruony place a hand on the infant's .head added - "Their job is just to love
·number
up less than I point more 10
.'.nose.
.. •
. •
and hold the leg! gently in th'c fetal 'em.''
•'
:
45.7
percent.
The cuddlcrs have been trained position for about 15 .minutes to
Alexander W. Astin, education

professor at the University of California at Los Angeles, said the
decline in degree-earning sludcnts is
mainly because more students commule to school and work off campus.
"Staying home detracts from
your ability tn .finish," said Astin,
the principal author. "You get less
cummittcd. ·It's less of u change
from your high school years." There
is l!.!sS p'ccrprcssurc to stay in school
than the-re is among stude nts who
iivc on camp us. he said.

Also. Astin said finances play a
key role. He explains that more stu· ,
~cnts ;.Jrc hnrrowing to u1tcnd colh:gi.'. eomrarc(l with 20 ·years ·ugo
when more federal and state grants
were av&lt;.~ilah/c.
·

'Mighty Ducks' threequel is no char:m
One·and·a-Half Stars
(Poor-to·Fair)
Byo.JACK GARNER
Gannett News Service
As I restlessly sat through yet
another predictable fonn~la episode
of "The·Mighty Ducks", I imagined
a more appropriaic selling ror these
tired characters:. I'd like to sec them
plucked and basted. hanging from
hooks in a Chinatown restaurant.
Okay, enough with the duck
jokes. It is, indeed. time to assess the
value of "03: The Mighty Ducks."
the third film about a rowdy juvenile
hockey team. In a word, it's minimal.
The first film. which became a
big hit with kids in 1992. told of a
lawyer and former hockey star
.IEmi!io Estevez) who is sentenced
to.community service after a drunkdriving conviction. He must nsscmblc a hockey team from an odd
a.ssortmcnt ·of ragtag city children.
including a couple J!irls and. of
course, a fat kid. In 1994's "02,"
those same kids· go on to win the
Junior Goodwill Games. in even
more predictable fashion.
• Between the two films, in one of
the Disney Studios most bizarre
examples of commercial synergy.
they formed a real ·pro team in Anaheim · and named them . . . you
guessed it...
. ' "Now we have "D3." in whic-l;! the
young Ducks are offered a group
scholarship to a prestigious prep
school where they will become. en
masse, the school's freshmen team.
As the film's contrived adversaries.
the school offers the elitist alumni

and the cocky blue-blood varsity
Lei me leave you with thi s scary
team. The new kids clearly arc thought: Unless " OJ" tanks at the
unwelcome in the prep school world box office. we might have at least
- and arc even morc .upsec because. five more .. Mighty Ducks" films to
they have a new coach.
look forward to over the next 20
Yes, it's true, Emilio Estevez was "yc~rs. We'll sec them as the varsity
able to wrangle top billing out of team at the prep school, then as a
Disney for .what · a.anounts 10 only college team, then as a new Ameri- .
,. about' 10 minutes M "recn time. can ~key League franchise, then .
(Actually, Estevez smartly used his filling he uni[orms of the aforcmen·
third appearance as head Duck for · tionc Anaheim Mighty Ducks in
leverage so Disney would penni! the. NHL. and, finally, in an allhim to produce and direct a far supe· i~ortant Old-Timers game ...
rior but less commercial adult
And every film will be just as
drama. :.The War at Home," due for ·,i d and predictable as this bland
release this fall.) The Ducks' new pcrcisc in commercialism from
coach is Orion (Jclfrey Nordling) pi rector Robert Licbcnnan, and ere. who they initially view as a narrow- ator and executive producer Steven
minded drill sergeant. Eventually Brill.
. they )earn. of course, that he's a
If, your kids arc in . a "fowl"
good guy. Heck. he even gave lip a . nio\;)d. take 'em. instead. to sec the
promising pro career to be ncarJJis . g~dsc in fhc [ar-supcrior'ramily rilm.
handicapped daughter.
j 'Fiy Away Home."
.
Watchin'g him roll her around the
Rated PG with moderate profanicc in a wheelchair is just the most ity and hoc~y violence.
base manipulation jn a movie
·
jammed with se ntimental cliches
03: THE MIGHTY DUCK (PG)
and obvious . calculations. The sec- ' One-and-a-Half Stars (Poor-to-Fair)
ond prize for sappincss goes t&lt;1 the The third contrived formula film
timely death ofHans(lossAckland). · about a youth hockey team. This
the wise old Scandinavian skate- time, they go to prep school and
sharpener who dispenses advice to become .the freshmen team. Their
'coaches and kids alike . He departs adversaries'? The cocky, blue-blood
for the great hockey rink in the' sky varsity snobs. Emilio Estevez is
.· on the eve of The Big Game, just in again top-billed, but only appears
time for them 10 dedicate it for him. for about 10 minutes. The Ducks
Of course, they NEEtl that sort have a new coach, played by Jeffrey
of inspiration. 'because The Big Nordling. Films arc seldom as prcd·
Game pits the f~cshmcn against the icable and bland as this. If your kids
lar~c . talented and oh-so-arro~ant
arc in a ''fowl" mood, take 'em,
varsity team. If you can't predict instead, to sec the geese in "Fly
who finally wins that game. you Away Home." Disney. 104 mins.
goua get o~t more.

----News policy---''-In an effort to provide our reader- he submitted within 30 days of
s~ip with current news, the Gallipooccurrence. All birthdays must he
lis D~ily Tribune and The Daily Sen- submiucd within 42 days of the
tine I. will not accept weddings after occurrence.
60 days from the date of the even!. '
All materhil submiucd for p~bliAif club meetings and other ne'l's cation is subject to ·editing.
articles in the society section musi /"
'

.

ftla laws Hcatllna
992-2156
.

........ -...~·····
Sentinel
Classlffeds
, I
~

Tuppers Plains Fire Dep't.
&amp; the Moden Woodmen

of America Chicken BIQ
Sunday, Oct. 20, . · .
11 :00 AM td 2:00 PM

Teppers Pklils Flrt Dtft. A
0rut Dog DIIIHStratloa
12:1 S, Met! Fllgkt
helicopter tours at appr11•
. 12:45, Haz-Mat t. .
d11110111trallaL

,~

To• plice
•• Ill, caU1
'
992•2156·-

Cost $4.50 wit1i p11 or c.U
for $0.SO.
•

t01fer only for purchase of IBM personal computer systems made on the RadioS hack Credit Card issued b~ Hufley Slate Bank . SUbject to credit approval.
Finance ChargH will accrue during the defetred period Irom the date of purchase, but to avoid having these lin&lt;1nce charges added 10 your account you must
{i) make the minimum payment required on your purchase each month t)eginmng with the billing statement that you receive in January 1997, (ii) make all other
required payments on your account. and (i1r) pay the full amount ot your purchase by the end ot the deferred penod. 8egtnning in january 1997, the required
monthly payment.on your purchase will be 1148th of the.balance that you owe. plus the monthly premium for' any cred it insurance, if you have purchased SlKh
coverage. tf the prifT)e interest rate disclosed In the wall Streetlournal on the last bus1ne$s day of each month exceed~ 8.25%, th e requ1red monthly pavment o.1
your purchase will be 1f45th of the balance that you owe, plus cred1t m~urance. If the prime rate eueeds 11%, the monthly paymen t on ~our purchase will be
1140th of the balance thpt you owe, plu~ credit insuran~e. A.5 of SeptemPet 9, 1996, Best Rate APR: 22.65%, Standard Rate APR: 24.65% {rates may vary).
Minimum Finance Charge 50(, except PR. Oller expires January 1, 1997. Pay!!lent may vary depending on account balance See store lor complete details.

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�.~rlday,

.·
Page 8 • The O.lly Sentinel

October 18, 1881

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

Pomeroy • MlddleDOrt, Ohio

·. Friday, October 18, 1eti.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

90

Absolull Top Dollar: All U.S. $11.'

...

ver And Gold Co ins,· Proolteta:

••

R1ngs. p,.,.,g30 U.S. Cufftncy,
Sler !ing, Etc:. M:quJaittont Jewtlrr
• M.T,S. Com Shop1 , 51 Second
Avenue, Glilipolls. 814·44&amp;-2&amp;42.

.-

Dlamondo. Anltque J -lry, Gold

.••
.·
••

........,,. w- a

Apostolic

"'arCI!rlsl

_ , Sd!ool lQ-.JO Lni.

Wonbtp • !Oo.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneadly Scnlklca. 7 p.m.

Durilo-Oon:lt

31057 S1a1c Rou1c 325. Lonpvlle
PUIOr: J.D. Youna
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship· 10:35 a.m. &amp;. 7 p.m.

Pulor: AI H11rt10n
Youlh Minilter: Bill Frazier

Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wotsllip- 8:15, 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sc"'icea • 7 p.m.

Qildren's chwch • 10:.)5 a.m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service. 7 p.m.

x... OIU'dl or 0r1o1

Colvary P1Jp1m Cupel

.

Ill and 3nt Suodoy

Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Fm WIU BoptlJI c•IU'dl
Alb Slleel, Middleport

Putor: Lea HaYman
Sunday Sc"'lcc • 7:30p.m.
Su,...r. School- 10..m.
Wednesday Sc"'i«-7:30 p.m. .

,,

btlud nnt Boplltl Oordo
Su,...y School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
.._..,. Flnt .......
Pulor: Paul Stinson
Eul Main St.
Su....y School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
F1nt S..U..ra BoP.~Iot
41872 Pomeroy Ptke
Putor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
. Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m., 7:00 p:m.
Wednesday Sc"'iccs.• 7:00 p.m.
Flnt Bopl1ot Cllorcb ·
Pulor: Mark Morrow
6ch and Polmcr St., Middleport
Sunday .Schocl • 9: IS o.m.
Wonhip -IO:IS a.m., 7:00p.m.

Wednetdoy Scnlicc- 7:00p.m.
Rae! .. Flnt Bopllsl
PIIIOr: Rev. Lawrence T. Haley
Youth PIStor:. Aaron Youn&amp;
Suodoy School- 9:30 o.m.
Worship- 10:40 o.m., 7:00 p,m.
Wednaday Scl"tccs · HID p.m.

sa.... R•a Bo,P!JII
Pator: Bill !-Jule
SUaday Schooi-IOo.m.
, ~).·lla.m., 7:30p.m.
·W
ay Se"'i«s- 7:30p.m.
. ML Uolorl Bopllol
Pastor :'Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Evcnin&amp;· 6:30p.m. ·
Wedneldoy Scrvi«s- 6:30p.m.
llelb- Bopllll
Racine, Otl

llatnroQow llldp Oordo of Orlol
P1110r: Jadt Colepove
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 o.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sc"'lcea ·6:30p.m.

Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Wednesday Service• •'1 p.m.

Tapptn Plalo Cblll'dl of Orltl
lnslnamental
PaslOf:- Stol Browa .
w-.hip Service • 9 a.m.
btmmunion - I0 a.m.
su~y S.:hool- tO: 15 o.m.

Wonhip • 10:,30 o.m.
Roll11d (;bordo of Cbrltl
Poslor: EUJene E. Underwood
Worship· 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Brodlonl Cllordo of Orltl
Comer of St: Rt. 124 oft Brodbury Rd.
Evllll"lisl: Keilh Cooper
Suodoy School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 8:00 o.m., 10:30 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdocsdoy Scrvicea ·7:00p.m.

l.up•lle Cbrlotl.oo Chreto
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scnlicc 7:30 p.m.
Hearlock Gnwe Cll•rdo
Putor: Gene ZoDP
Sundaf school· 10::10 o.m.
Wonh1p. 9:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

Pas&amp;or : Daniel Berdine'

Worship- 9:30 o.m. SundOy
Bible Study-7:00p.m. Wednesday
Old llotllel Fm Wll la.c.~:,.c;.-orcb
2111i111 St Rl.7, M'
. Suadoy School- 10 a.m.
Evcnina-7:30 p.m.
· Thulldoy Sc""icea · 7:30
·
'
lllloldt ilop11s1 Cll•rc•
St Rt 143 jll5i off Rt 7
Pulor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Worshtp·llo.m.,6p.m.
Wednaday Scl"icea •7 p.m.

.

VIctory ........ IIICirpeolfrtol
Sl! N. 2nd St. Middleport
P•or: James E. K&lt;csee
Worship· !Oo.m.• 1 p.m.
· Wednesday Scrvi«o. 7 p.m.

llarttorcl oorc• of 0r111 1a
0-Uiklrl
llortlord, W.Va.
· Putor: Rev. David Mc:Manis
Sunday $dlool • II -.m.
Wonhip • 9-.JO a.m., 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicea • 7:30p.m.

FomtR•IopiiR '
p_,Ari111H..t
SUnday School· lOo.m.
Worship - II o.m.
ML Moriah Bopllot
.FCMirth I&lt; Main St., Middleport
'"""" Rev. Gilbert Craia. Jr.
Suodoy School· 9:3(h.m.
Worship - U"4S o.m.
AJollqiiiJ Bopllol
SUadoy School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip • 10:45 o.m.
Thunulsy Services· 7:30p.m.

Rollud.fnt Will Bopllst
Solem Sl.
.
Pill«: Rev. Pwl Taylor
SUadaySchool· lOo.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wcdnadly Scnlittt - 7 p.m.

Catholic
. ..,.

•

Worship • 9a.m.
Tuesday Sci"' ices· 7 p.m.

·y;;~hii~
9:306o.m.
~
- 10:30 -a.m.,
p.m.

··Middleport Cbarcb ollk NaMDt
Putor: Oiegory A. Cundiff

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.,6:30 p.m.
Wednesday S.:rvlc:a. 7 p.m.

Lm.

Sundly School • 9:30
Wonhip-10:30o.m.
~

P-: Rev. RoWxl WiSunday ochooland wonhlp 10:2!

PIIIOt': Rev. Clwlea Muh
Worship- 9:30 o.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 o.m.
UMYF Sundly 6:30p.m.
Fint Sundly ol Mondl· 7:30p.m. se"'ltt

EpiSCOpitl

l'oppen PloiM Sl. Paol

,,

CllordoollloeNoant~C

'

Pulor: Mart A. Dupler
Sunday Schdltl· 9:30 o.m.
Worship· 10:4S o.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdftesdoy Scnllc:a -1 p.m.

.......,

SUnday School • 9 o.m.
Worship· 10 o.m.
Tuesday Scrvi«o • 7:30 p.m.

Paa!Or:

Service~

7 p.m.

(Um• Stont-

Caturr Bible Cburdo
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship 10:30 o.m.•.7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

ReJaldac Ule Cb•rcb
500 1'1 . 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrentt Foreman.
Sundoy School· 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servtces- 1 p.m.
Qurcli of JHU Cbriol,
•
·
Apoatolk Fallb
·•
1/4 mile past Fort Meip on New Lima Rd. ·
Putor: William Van Meier
•
Sunday· 7:00p.m.
Wedncadoy-7:00 p.m.
Fridoy-7:00p.m.

CONSTIUmOI

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

•Low R11e1
•All Work Gueran614r992-ll910
~ASK

.4BOVT OUR
ROOF SPECIAL

,.,

N&lt;W Ule Vklary c.. ter
•
3773 Geclrges Creek !toad. Gollipotis. OH :
Paslor: B1ll Staten ·
,
Sunday Services- 10 a.m.&amp;. 7 p.m.
Wc:dncldly • 7 p.m. A Youth 7 p.m.

... ,.,

New· Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTL\L
FREE ESTIMATES

Converutlorian
Call thla exclusive
24 hr. hotllnell

Peatte011bl 4.11 ..Uy

St Rt 124, Roclne
Pastor: .William Hobaek

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

.

Call1·900-476-8586
Ext. ~13

Middleport Penlealslal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Ouk Baker
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sctviccs ·7:00p.m.

.•

Rev. Ktiuna Robinson
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wol'!hip - II a.m .

Pa.~tor:

•.•

Sunday ~hoot- 9:4S a.m.

Middleport J'mbyterln

Sunday School- 9 o.m.
Worship· 10 o.m ..

.--

Seventh-Day Adventist
Scveo.-.DoJAdm!llot
Mulbc:uy Hb. Rd., Pomeroy
Pauor: Roy Lttwlnslty
Soturday Scnllcct:
Sobbolh School ' 2 p.m.
Worsl!ip • 3 p.m.

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1

.'i

-

•

Ia Clli'lol Oorcb
TexM Comm101ity off CR 82
Po-: Robert Sanders
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonllip • 10:JO a.m.• 7:JO p.m.
Wednesday Scrvi«s. 7;~ p.m.

..

I

----

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
STORAGE SPAcE avail&amp;ble at

Edro Uohed BnlbrcllD Clu1sl
e
2 l/2 milet north ol Rcedoville
· on Stale Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Mortley
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
.•
Sundoy Wonhip • 10:00 o.m. I&lt; 7:00p.m. • :
Wednesday Services • 7:30p.m.

For winler season, October-April.
Call 992·7880

. Wednesday You1b Sc"'ice ·7:30p.m.

-

\

MQden't Woodmen.ol America
Matching Funds Dinner
Chlckeh Bar~B~Oue .
Sunda~~-20, 1996
11 :00 .til Sold Out
$4.50, Yo Chicken, Cole Slaw,
. ' · Bilked Beans. Roli
Spo~recf bp Tuppers Plains

=
=

•

=
=
=
=

VOIU11teer Fire

-

•. '

Meigs County Farm
Bur~au Annual Meeting
lues., Oct. ~2. 7:10PM
At Meigs Senior Citizen
Center, Mulbeny Heights

Klnpbury 'Rood
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wotslllp Scrvi« 10:30 o.m.
· No Sunday or Wednesday.
NlcJo! Scrvic:co
.
.
.

AdultB $5.50, Child $3.50
E~e1rt~~lll, Doot Prizes

f)

~

•••

NOncE
A complain! hao been
filed In lhe Co~rt of
Common Pleat· of Molgo
Co~nty. Ohio, Cate No. 96- ·
CV-811, by tho MtiiJII County
&lt;;pmmlatlonare, Melg1

=

••t•t• •re required to
onawor thla complaint
within
28 doye ol
publication of lhlo notice.

In Me"'ory

Nowfo~The

Daily Sentinel1996
Holiday Cookbook. .
Finalists will be chosen..
make .
. askec:!'to
the recipe. • 1.
' '
'
.....ell...
~·· . ·'
,, .....
QIIID',
October 31, 1996

204 Condor Sl

~

Pomeroy,~

FORKED
RUN
'
SPORTSMAN

.CLUB
SUI SHOOT
FRIDAY

992·2976

,,...

•

\

6

.

'

•

• h

••
•

Ext. 4500

(

Any Car
Any Driver
DUI &amp; SR-22
' D;scounts &lt;
Compuler Quotes
(614) 992-6677
Pomeroy

BING'S

BINGO

614-:167·7745.

AUTO

~merlcan

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC WELCOME

St. Rt. 124,

Racine, Ohio
Minor Rep1lr1
24 Hr.
Towing/Rollback
Service
AAA &amp; All Stllte

RIYIWOUI... .
IAR llfiiiiCII
614-911-4110

yeer119o,

Motor Club .
614-949-3117

W2111mo.

413'11 1 mo. pd.

na

Ad~ance . Deadline: I :OOpm the Grow•ng company acc:eptrng IP·
day before lhe ad is to run, Sun . plfcalions fOr Data Enlry General
day &amp; Monday edition- l :OOpm Clerical. Good mental and 11rsual
Friday.
·
.,
ccnc:entrat ion. Accuracy, ability
Pt. Pleasant
to work independently, and desire
10 be a team play&amp;f. Compe1e1ive
&amp; VICinity
wage and benei•IS. Send Resume
to Box CW- 12 clo Point Pteuant
.. flummage sale Fri ·Sit. 8·&lt;4 , leop Register 200 Marn Sl. Pl. Pleas, Baden orr At 87 . Westerns, nln- ont WV 25550.
tendos, bookt, Honda 750 motorcycle, ltorm doors , clott'lin~, HOME TYPIST. PC uaen need ·
glaa1ware, Home InTerior, Tup- ed. $45,000 income potential.
perware.
Call t-800·513·4343 E~t. B- ~8.
, Immediate Opening For Two Full·
Time ros illontl Wilt'l local Em·
ploytr: 01'\e Job Is For A Custo·
dian !Housekeeper And ltle Other
Chr~11mu Auction· Sunday Ocr. Is For A Courier. Equal Oppor·
201h Mt . ,AitD Aucllan Rt2·33
tunit)' Employer. Stnd Resi)On••
"Cro11roada". M•jor Oepartmenl
To : CLA' 395, cto Gallipolis Daily
IIOrt &amp; CIIIIOQ mtrCI'IIndrse
Trtbune·, 825 Th ird Avenue. Galli·
"gua,f'lnleect, quaiJlY rrems·. Elec·
·rronrca, toys, dolla , •~•n CD polis, OH 45631
players , Stga a Geniuses. Ed tmmedial&amp; Openmgs A.vaUabl•
Frazier 1830, Brenda Fl'lltitl' tA· For Cert•lied Nurse Aides, Com·
106.
petilive Wages, Olfferenl•al W1lh
E•ptrience . Srgn On Bonus
Rl~ Paarton Auction Company
full time aucuonaar, comple1e Available. Equal Opportunity Em-auction
••r~iee.
llctnlld ~loytr . Cpntacl Plntcrtll Care
tllii,Ohlo &amp; Wosr Vl•ginlo, 304· Center, 170 Pinecrest Dtivrt, Gal·
' lipolis,
45831~ 514-44&amp;-71 12.
773-5'18!5 Or 304- 77~·!!447. .

80

114 112 4P IIIII-I

RIIILTUtl

MVIRS

them.

wv. 3114-1!95·3603.

•_tt______

motor IJICickl.

forgottlro,

E-perienced pari -lime cashier
need&amp;d , Larry'S locker, letart

All Yard Sai&amp;s Must Be Pa id In ::~-•llecl&lt;
__

. J&amp;L SIDING·&amp;
INSULATION

Pick up dlecllfded
lpplllfiCII, blttterllt,
' 111111\111111111 • •

Discovery Toya' Need You . Earn
up to $~Jhr, showing parents the
e"ucatlonal ~Ja l ue of our 1oys,
books &amp; compu ter software. can
now lor more details. 304·675·
5761 also, booking parries.

209 · South Foufth, Mldcllep~rt, . G&amp;neral ollice, llghtlyping, must
9am·Spm. Beds, wheel chairs, oil be 55 or older and meet income
heater, micrOWIIYt, much more.·
guide lines . 30.11 -875-0857 . Con-

&amp;GAU@_/

..,,....

You'd nev.r know bV
the tH111 thlt now.
For mlellng you 11ch
Pilling dey
Your emile, your
touch, your IJIICIII
WIY
You , will not bl

.

Lost and Found

Pomefoy,
lddleport
&amp; VIcinity

LUCKY J; TOWifG"

pillet.... Lit es •• It
AlttiOUtlh 11'1

Knowledge 01 AIR, AlP, GeneJal

Dr Nets
Northwest Ohio Based Truckload
Camer look1ng For Ex~t 1 enced
Pro!ess10nals. We Pr0111de:'.
' Star trng Pay 26 .5e tM1Ie So lo
LOST: Rottweiler, answer~ to .J1c: !'M ile Team
name ol "Jake". last seen Oc1. • Annual Raises
9th at the end ol Jericho Rd . • Paid Vacation
Splice collar, male , il geen or ' 40l(K) Wilh EmpiO)'er Match
found please ca!l364·675-1305.
• 2500 ·~00 Miles Per Week
• Scheduled Home Time
70
Yard Sale
' Regional Positions If Vou live
1n tNear Ohio
CDL· A With Hazmat And 1 Y~ar
Gallipolis
E•pEmen~e Requlfed.
&amp; VIcinity
Challanger. 1·800-777-0585
Open 7 D1ys.
A.ll Yard Si11&amp;s Must Be .Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2•00 p,m. Drivers Reg1ona1 Flatbed . Horru~
tht day before the ad is to tun, Weekends And Through The
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. Fnday. We &amp;k. Fam il ~ Medical f0en1al ..
Monday edition · 10:00 a.m. Sat· Home Holidays. 401K. $34,000 +
urday.
Annua ll y. One Year OTA Ae·
qu~red . FlatDed E11per ience Not
Church Rummage Sale: (John- Re~uired . Wabash Val\ey t ·8DO·
son's Greenhouse) 2nd Avenue, 246·6305.
8:30A.M. ·5:00, 17th, 181h, 19th.
Bargains Galorel
Earn 1 doo·s 'weekly stullinG en·
Yelopes at home. Be your Doss.
Saturday, October .1 91h, 9·.11 , De· Star t now. No experrence . Free
Win Drill&amp; 011 Of Cora Mill. Mer'ls supplres 1nfo , no oDII ga110n. Send
Womans /Chrldrens Clolh ,ng;- S.A. .S.E. to Nugget Un it 364 ·6,
Toy~
10151. Un tvers1tw Blvd Ortanoo
FL, 32817 '

Legion Post 602
Doors Open
4:30p.m.
Bingo 6:30
Every Sunday

mo. pd.

•

LOST: Gray Husky In the viclnirv
ol Rt 87, leon Baiden Rd. Red
collar &amp; chain. 304,-895-~0 .

Racine

....,...... """

Bookkeeper

'1770 - Jackson Pike, Bidwell, OH
.
GOrman Shephard, black masked. 45614 EOE. M..t=At
lace, e monlhs old, black/black .
10 good home only. 304 -675, Clerk 'Nanled lor reta~ 110re in Pb·
meroy area. Knowledge- ol cash
4850.
regrster and rany ollice machines
long Haired Himalayan Mother helpful. Sunday and evening
Cat With Black &amp; White Male Kit· hours, 33-40 hrstweek . Send re·
ten 8oth Must Go To GoDd Home sume with provioua work axperi·
ence and 1hree relerenc:es: Daily
On Farm, 614-446-8111 .
Sem"nel, PO. Box 729-35. PamarMala and female Sharpei mix to oy, OH 45769.
good t.Jme, well trained. 6t4-992·
2522.
COmpu1er Us.ers Needed . Work
own hours. $20k 10 $50ktyr 1·
Puppies 112 Keish Hound 112 ? 000-348-7186 x1508.

Easy Pay Auto
INSURANCE

1/2111n

MilE BING

In Memory Of
MARSHA CLARK
AMNAH

ond Allenue, Gallipolis.

ALL OHIO

IJ92-6215

949='057

Barlenders Fuii·Time, Pafi·Time,
Apply AI Carl's Tavern, 856 Sec·

Full Blooded German Shephard , ledger, Payroll, Ta•es, Lotus 1·2·
female, doei nor like small dogs. ·3 And Windows . Send Resume
By Ootober 23, 199e, To: FACTS,
304·675·7183.

258-6832 Any1ime.

Pomeroy, Ohio .

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

Band Seeking Ball Player Only
Serious Inquire, 614·367· 7890.
6~ 4-446-2e59.

Ser¥~(619)645"8434

V.C. YOUNG Ill

REPAIR

IHf.

No Door To Door, No Min . Order,
1-800-827 -46~ lndlslsirep.

Nonprolil Organilalion Looking
Free Puppies: In Need" Of Good For Bookkeeper Wilh Two Yeart
Home, Sil11 To Choose From 614 - Actual Experience . Working

Alto Concrete Wor1t
(FREE ESTIMATES) .

Your ll!lla.tiOther,

Public Sale
lnd Auction

ono

,,

'

••
)

•

Ffee Kittens.' litter Trained; 2
Male Cocker Spaniels, Papers.
To Good Homes,-614-446·8252.

PiJintlng

$3.99 per min.
Muslbe18yra,
. Serv·U· (619) 645-8434

In Memory

You pllnted m1ny
111d1, In helrtl, In
mlnde, 1nd In your
llftla-.. .
1 fill 10 •peol•l to
h•v• bttn one of

Found: 10/1 1196, female dog, SR
6811 Albany vicinily, wound on
thigh, Call county pound. 614,9923779.
.

•Roofing
•Interior 6 Exterior

...... ,.lelllll.t

'

Ooghoust to gi11eaway. 6t4 -9927443,

•Room Additions
•Newo.tagee
•Electrical 6 Pl~mblng

LINDA'S.
PAINtiNG

30 Annou'!.~?tminis ·

304-675-3819.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

1·90Qr526-5050

304-675-3J05.

1.:.:;_.;.:.:...:.=------

Color And Box 614-367·5028.
2022 Ext. 0526A&lt;2 ·
.
Black Walnuts to give ~way . AVO'N Chrrstmas · S8 ·S'\"5

13.99 per min.
M~lll be 18 yrs.

Call

Accepting Applications through
Oct 18th for registered long t&amp;rm
care: nursing assistant training
class . Marjorie Elliott, RN, Clan
instructor. Point Pleasant Nursing
&amp; Rehabilitation Center, State Ao·
ute 82, Route 1, Box 328, Point
Pleasant, W\1 255SO. A Glen·
mark -M.u ltic:are Company. EOE .

Spayed, All Colors , 614 -387 .5028.
• Alaska JobS I Earn Up To
$30 ,000 In Three Mon1hs Fishing
Begale Pup 4 Month Old Female Salmon. Consuucllon , Canneries.
TriColored, Sp,ayed, Has.· Cha in, Oil Fields, More! 1 Days .1107 ·8?5·

Ext. 2308

FOOL
PROOF
LOVE!!!

Malga County
Commlnlonero

FREE ESTIMATES

'Sadly mleaed by
wife, Ellen, and
•on, Fred.

..

Public Notice ·

a~ay

Submit Your Recipe(s)

8 Adult Cats , Females Are

60

IIITIIIO..IDIIIOR

.'

1 Puppies, to good home , 6
males, 1 lemala, mother is part
German Shephard &amp; '? e Weeks
old. 3&gt;4-875-6494.

C8111-ll00-562-4000

'/." &amp; 1" 200 p.s.l. water pipe (I DO' rolls thru 1,000' rolls)
'/." U.L. approved Condurt
8' Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe I' thru 2" • linings • ·Regulalors - Risers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water fittings
FulHine of Cistem, Septic &amp; Waler sJorage 1anks

In Memory of
WILLIAM FRED
SONETH SR.
who passed

Oct. 19', 1991.

875-4506.

For all the answers
talk live to one of
our metaphysical
advieorsll!

Plastic Culvert • Dual wall and Regular U' lhru 36'
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
'/." &amp; '!." C.P.V.C. pipe

~nknown...lhalra of Sara H.
Gloria K1011, Clark
Dabray, ~,;lsro 0. Dabrey,
(10)4,11,18,
25, (11)1, 8
Samuel W. Dabrey, Roxie L.
&amp;tc
·
Dabray, Mory O.A. Dsbrey,
Froncea D. Oliver and
GtoriJII
T. Oliver, with no
lutknown-....
. The object olthe •~Ills a
complaint tteklng a
dei:larotory ludgmont and
. q~ltl lllle ·to I 25 4/5 ICrtl
parcel ollend deeded 1o IIIII
Melga .
County
Commlaolopers on May 6,
1882.
.
The commlulonero
demand a declaration lhtl H
owno the oublect rulootalt
In lae almple and that the
Defendtntt have no
lnwnt, c~rranl or lulura, in
aaldrMI-.
Any helrt to thlo real

10 She~hard, Lab &amp; Beagle
mixed, all colors, born g121 . 304 .

What's on Your
Horizon? ·

4" S&amp;D- pert. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 6' Sch 35 pipe
1'/,' thru 4" Sch 40 pipe

Bam-Bpm.

4o

5111/11n

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
614·985-3813 or 614-667-6484

call : j708)906·2350E&lt;1.3670.

1.:.:_:.=---'--=---

949-2168

711CJIIIn

'ATTN: Point Pleasant• Paatal

We process dear, make hlcltory
tmokad hams, traU bologna, pep. AVON I All Areas ! St1irley
peronl , jerky, summer sausage. Spears. 304-675-1429.
CDOter kept,• ctean, unillry. Hunt- Atlle Allon Aepresenlatives
lng supplla1. license &amp; game ·
E
ct'leck station. cuwmeo·s Hen- need.ed . arn_money for Cl'lristdtriOnWV.
rna&amp; bills at home/at work, 1·800·
992·6356 or 304·882: 2645. ,Ind .
Giveaway
Rep.

FREE ESTIMATES

G&amp;W ,LASTICS AND SUPPLY

Caurthouse,c
Pomwoy, OHio, veraua the

;nme Is Running Outl

..

(619)845 8434 .
ti11N mo. peL

County

• •

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.# .

Public Notice

2.991Min.18+ S.V.U

Help Wanted

Positiani. Parmanen1 lull lima for
clerktsorters. Full Benellta. For
exam, applica1ion and salary inio

30 Announcements

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

'

1·900·656·5050
Ext. 3998

St .Rt. 7

adopt infant LegaltContiden!ial.
We can heip! Please call Jonn&amp;
&amp; SIINe. 1-800-845-5715.

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Body work, cer, truck
&amp; truck Pllntlng,
minor mechanical
"
repair.
Tune-upe, 011 Change,
Wu, Butting
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742-2935, Alk tor Kip

110

loving, childless couple long 10 I:-:-:;;::-;;~"-;:~-::-;:-.-:-;

Howard L. Wrltesel

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

s:

Meigs County Fairgrounds. Inside
space $3/llneal foot or space in
open face buildings $1Aineal foot

•

Full Gospeli.J&amp;Itl33045 Ullond Rood, Pomeroy
'
P1110r: Roy Hunter
Sundly S.:hool· 10 o.m.
Evenina7:30 p.m.
1\tesdoy ..t Thursdoy • 7,30 p.m.

-----------

-

-------.-

•''

Un;ted Brethren
ML He,_ U-llntllrotl

Public No,lce·

Public Notice .

oppoelie 'ihe name to bt Dlr.ctor cit the Society by
! · PUBUC NOTICE
filing with the Socrallry,
The annual election of the counted. The cootlng ol Debbie Watoon, 42455
Board of Director• lor 1h't votoo for dlrectora by
Rd., Coolville, OH
Melgo County Agricultural proxlte It not lo bo Woodo
411723;
a
petition llgned by
.
Society will be held 81 tilt permlttad.
10
or
moro
memblra of the
Only
raoldonte
ol
Molga
eecrotary office at the lllr
-lely
who
era reeldenll ol
hOlding
grounda, on llondey, Nov. CoLnty
Molga County, et loaot 7
-berahlp
cortlllcettt,
tor
· 4!· 1886.·'Tht •polle wlll ·bo '
doyo bofore the annual
open rrom 5:00 p.m. to 8 1 111et 15 dayt before the
d81e olelacllon, may volt. · olectlon of dlrectore II held.
p~m. on election dey.
Mombera of tho oocltly Only ro~ulorly nomlnoled
The election thlll be by
tholr candidate• who have mtl
llallot. Bollo\1 mutt be mull • dt&lt;:ltre
condldoncy
lor
the
office
of the ftllng ~ulremont• will
markid wllh en "X"
be tllgl_bla lor eleollon aa
- -·
'
dl,...tor.
:JIIIIJJJJIIIIIIIIJIIJIIJIJIIIIII
I
I
I
l
lllllllliiiJ
IJIIIIIIIIIIJU.:
- ···-··- .
.
. . . ··-··--·············· (10) 4, 11, 18: 3TC

Presbyterian

llarrilllft .. lle ~oa Cbarcb
Wo"hip ·• 9 a.m.

(No Sunday Calls)

Public Notice

s, ....,. Flnl u.u..l Presbyterial

MEET NEW
PEOPLE 1HE
FUN WAY
TODAY

614-992-7643

$3.99 per min.
1!'~•1 be 18 yro.
' Serv-IJ· 618 645 8434

.. and

CLASSIFIED ADS
a supermarket
· for everything

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding
WI-

Compo lanlloAclopUon

7122/ttn

. 614-446·4530 . .

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Personals

005

985-4473

Ronnie Jol18J~

30&lt; · 675 · 596~.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

FREE
ESTIMATEES

Owner:

·BISSELL BUILDERS, JNCe

WOMEN TO TALK
.WITH YOU LIVElli
1 Unforgettable

Pentecostal

Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

Wan ted To Buy Uatd Mobile
Home&amp; . Call : 61.4--44«1 ·0175 0'

Or Witi'IOul Uotora. Call larry
Lrvely. 614-;388·Q303.

•Garage&amp;
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

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

.

44f!·4539.

Wanted To Buy : Junk Autos With

ROIIRT BISSELL
CONnRUOIOH

.IVYDALE COUNTRY CRAFTS &amp; GIFTS

742·3212

Junk Cart &amp; Truck Var~oua Run·
1'1 ing Vehrcles &amp; Car Parla, 614·

C.llfor Demonstration &amp; Free Estimate
614-992-4119
1·800-291-5600
110 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
.

713·5033.

QUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

•New Homes

COLLINS

vage vthicles Stlling parts. 3()4t.

by

FAX 773-588f
~n, WV

108 Pomeroy Stnel

•• t

• •

'12?'%tATa tNIT~.

will wo~ within your budget.

Ph. 773,9173

•Free Eatirriatea

. Oirtoo, W.Va.

~

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Bold Knob, .. Co. Rd. 31

.

,__~,011

':No Job Toq Large or Too Small"
.

J &amp; D'a Awjo Parra. Buying ul-

r-..Jflghest "R Value"
......,...... ~ Blocks 99.5%
of uv Rays
Offered .Exluslvely

to QUALIIB
-ON THIIPOT IIWJtCiiMI
I

Services • Steel.Sales &amp; .Fabrication • Repair Welding
~Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dresalng • Omaniental
Slepa • Stalt;s. Railings, Pallo Fumlture, Fireplace ·
Items, Planler 'Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff!!

ofletldentlal R...,odellng
•Addlllono
•New Con1tructlon
oOver 10 Yra: Experlanoe

..

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, Oh.
804W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy

WICIS

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop

614·992·3470

F......._ Gospel_
Thomll

#tc,tq~ !fetal.r

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fl.ll Dirt

Sllien•llle Word of Fold!
PaslOr : David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evenins- 7 p.m.

'

L.owRitll)

HAULING

carlot. 1••.......;........... Olll'&lt;ll

S J - Cblll'dl olllte N . •
PosiOI: Bill Stires
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
· Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
We4neadoy :!fe'"!l!"' • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Sharon HaUNnan

Fallb F•llowsltlp ~for Orlol
Putor: Rev. Franklin Dkkent
Service: Fridly, 1 p.m.

Soul• llotloel New Tnla-1
Silver Rid8e
Plllor: Robc:n llorbcr
Suodoy School· 9a.m.
Wonbip • 10a.m., 7 P·"'·
Wedncadoy Scrvi« • 7 p.m.

R-lllefe...,.lp

....

•

Conun••••r Clll•rd1

·Wedne!lday

Wednesday Scnliceo • 7 p.m.

.....,...._ _

llyH•Ille c ........u,. Oorcb
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

UaHed ··old! Cbordo
, Rt 7 on Pomeroy By-Pus
Paslor: Rev. Robert E. Smilh. Sr.
Sunday School • 9,30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 o.m., 1 p.m.

Rooe

~ndolph

Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Lawrence Buah
Sunday School - 9::10 a.m.
Evening ~ 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service · 7 p.m.

WorShip- II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Pastor:
· Worship-9:30a.m.
Sundoy School • 10:30 o.m.

Fahb Ttibcr110cle Cbordo
lltiley Run Rood
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sunday School· 10:00 o.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Servlte - 'J p.m.

MI. Olin

Torch Cbur&lt;b
Co. Rd. 63
School-9:30a.m.
~~'..:.10:30 o.m .

.
Cbuler
Pas1or: Sharon Hausman
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
SundaySchoci-IO•.m.
Thursdoy Scniic:eo • 7 p.m,

Pastor: Sam Andc110n

Follb Gospel Cbarc•
Long Bottom
Sunday S.:hool· 9:30 o.ni.
Worship • I0:_.5 a.m.1 7:JO p.m.
Wednesday 7::10 p.m.

llll'ld•JIPOrt Cburcb
Grind S11ee1
·Sundoy School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II o.m.
Wednesday Seriices • 8 p.m.

.Pasior: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.

S7S Pcorl St, Mlddlepon

Morse Cupcl Cborcb
S.....,y ochool· 10 o.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
Wednesday Sc"'icc • 7 p.m.

Heibel Oarcb
TownShip Rd., 468C
Sundly School· 9 o.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Scnlices • 10 o.m.

AJiftd

OHler Cbarc• ol God
S. R. "248 &amp; Riebel Road, Chesler
Pastor: Rev. Willilm D. Hindi
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship· 6 P.·m.; ·
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Fomtly Trolnina Hour

-:Rev. D. A. dul'lanller
Holy Eucharill ....

Main I&lt; Fifth St
Su.nday School · 10 a.m.

Nort-IClu-

(

::f I I CIWclt
. 3:16 E. oln a. F'omao!

ts:'!«_JI•IIk Cllardll

Mrlt:s Couprntl..-e hrl..

Worship -.11 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Gt.o

Cooi•Ille Ualled Melbndlol 1'11~tor: Helen KJine

R,c\'. Ralph Spires

Mkldltport Commu•IIJ Cburc•

JlaiOI CoiMUIDlly Cb•rcb
orr Rt. 124
Pos10r: Edsel Hon
Sundoy School- 9:30 o.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Servicu- 7 p.m.

Sunday S.:hool • 10 a,m.

Congregational
TrlaiiJ Clllltda
Second It Lynn. Pornoroy

.
lbclnr
Pastor: Brian Harkness

MI. Olive Unlled Mrl.odlst
orr 124 behind Wilkesville

Pastor: P.J. Ch.IPfl'l•n

'

· Wednesday -7 p.m.

.

'

Syncusr Milskta
1411 Bridgeman St., .Syracuse
Sunday Sc.hool - 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

~ Sunday Sth0ol·10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

·Graha.. Ualttd MeiiiCNibt
Worship· 9:30a.m. (lilA 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)
Wednesday
Service- 7:30p.m.
..

Church ol God of Prvpll«y
O.J. While Rd. orr St. Rt. 160
.• ·

Eul Lelart
Pastor: Brian Harknes.s

United Methodist

Syra&lt;ue Flnl Cll•r&lt;b of God
Apple.ond ~Sis.
Pastor: Rev. O.vid Russell
.Sunday S&lt;hoolond Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services· 7:30p.m.
Wedntsday Sef'\lice~ ·7:30p.m.

..

Worship· 10:45 o.m. (Ill oft 3rd Sun)

51. Pool Llrllaenrr Cbordo
Comer Sycamore oft Second St., Pomeroy
PaSior: Down Spoldin&amp;
Sunday Schocl • 9:45 o.m.
Worship· II a.m.

Sunday worship· 10 o.in.
Wednesday lav!cc ~ 6:39p. m.

Sunday School 10 o.m. ··
Evening-7:30p.m.
, Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Sullon
Pastor: Kennelh Baker

Worship- II a.m.

P~lor :

".

MomlacStor
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School • 9:45a.m.
Worship· IO:lo o.m.
Thursday Services - 7:30p.m.

Sundoy School· 10:00 a.m.

Rallaod Cburc• of God
Pastor: Randy Barr
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
W~- II o.m., 6 p.m.
Wed
y Service• -7 p.m.

Endllm&lt;IIMte oiPnyer

P•slor: Kenne1h Baker
·su,day School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 41h Sun)

Sunday Schooi·IJ:JO a.m.

.

(al Burlingham chur~ off Route 33)
. P~t~r: Roben Vance

Comet

Walnuland Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lntrim pastors: Oeorge C. Weinck

Putor: Rev. James Satterlield
Sunday School· 9:4' o.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wed~y Scrvicea. 7 p.m.

W~y-7p.m.

lltdlaoy,
Pulor: Kennelh Baker
Sunday School · 10 .l.m.
Won~hip- .9 a.m.
Wedm:sday Services· 10 a.m.

Our Saviour Lulbt~ Church ' ·

Rocine

Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

t1 •

St. Joh• Lutbtna Charch
Pine Grove
·
Pastor: Dawn Spaldin&amp;
Worship· 9:00a.m.
~u?day School • 10:00 a.m:

"ML M-b Cb..... of God

Falb Bopllsl Oarc•
Railrood St, M11011
5uada1 Scllo9l- 10 o.m.
Worshtp- II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednada' Sc.rvi«s. 7 p.m.

ll•rrllol.. lle c-mnlly Cll•n:b
PUIOr: Theron Durhom

Saow•llle
Sunday S.:hool • 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

"HEAT MIRR~jd,"*lrt4 syst•.

Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

Tbe lellevcn'·fetlowmlp Mlolstrr

Scrvi«o: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Sunday School· 9:15 o.m.
Worship· 10:15 o.m.

ern ,..,..,• • Glllipo~t.

TICIIOLOIY ,.....

on•• M t

Cl ..n lilt Modt l Cart Or
Trucks, 1~00 a.todelt Or Newer,
Smith Bu icll Pontiac, 1900 Eall·

II IIPUCI.IT WIIDOW

10% DlscH•I for Sept. &amp; Oct.
E.......... w..~re... u x-&lt;••rp

~

Sundoy S&lt;hool · 10:30 a.m.

1~-

Aeratl• lepalr or Replac•ent

Monday 10 1111-1 pm
TUIIti.•Thur. 2 pm-7 pm
Frfdly 2 pm.e pm

Worship- 9:30a.m.• 7:00p.m.

Sunday SchOol· 10 a.m.
. Worship - 7 p.m. ·
Thundoy Service • 7 p.m.

PUior: Rev. Marpn::t J. Robinaon

Ho11181111Jde Doh •
B••Uia.
Also Chlklrln'l

Pastor: Rankin Roach

~~~;;
1 - ..

JIAI,l, CI,IAN•vP

Ceramlca, Woaclcsaile,

Ill

AlrC1 Jlh 1 . .
AU•IIIII .......

992-7119

749 s. Third Ave.,
Mlddlep tJit

L.clart, W.Va. Rt I

CIIRoil Tabenude Cb•rrb

New Ume Rd., Rllllond

TREASURES

Fairview Bible Cbun:b
. •

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE

. HIDDEN

WbHe'a Cllapel WHieJU
Coclville Rood
PosiOf: Rev. Phillip Ridc110111
Sunday 's.:hoot • 9:30 o.m.
Worship • l 0:30 a.m.
Wedne~ay Service -7 p.m.

Wonhlp. 9:30 o.m. and 7 p.m:
.Wedne~- 7 p.m.
Fridoy • lellowshtp oervi« 7 p.m.
·

ORAND OFEI.tQ

PuiOr: Rev. R.... WIIIfonl
Sundly School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonblp- 7 p.m.

' Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

Pastor: Ron Fir:~c:c

Lutheran

Churcl1 of God

Fallb Fill Golpel Cburdi
Lona Bollom
Pwor': Steve Reed

Sundoy School · 9:15a.m.
Worship· 10 o.m.
.
. Yo~lh ~~llowshtp, :Wndoy- 6 p.m.
1
Ralllad ·
Sunday School'· 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursdoy Services· 1 p.m.
Sale• Ctattr

Tbt' c•un:b ar Jnus
Cbriol of Lall&lt;r-Day SaiD II
St. Rt. 160, -Y6-6247 or 446-7486
Sundoy SchoollO:W.l 1 a.m.
Reliel Sot:icly/Priesthood II :OS-12:00 noon
Sacrament Scrvic:c 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemakina meeling, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Reeds• Ilk Cbn:b o1 Oriol
Paslor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30 o.m.
Worship Sc"'i&lt;!': 10:30 o.m.
Bible Study, Wednesdoy, 6:30p.m.

Christian Unton

RoekSIH.iDP

Pastor: Ke1th Rader

P&amp;Sior: Janice Danner
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 o.m.
Wedladay Services -7:30p.m.

'

lloboorl OrltlluFe-.JIIpOircb
Rev. Oyde Hendenon
Sunday oervi«. 10:00 o.m .• 7:30p.m.
Youlh Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m. ·
Wednesday oervlcc, 7:30p.m.

Pulor: Robert E. Robinson ·
Sunday School ·9:15a.m.
Worship· to-.30 o.m.
Bible Sludy Tuesday · 10 o.m.

Reorp.- Oorcb of JHU Cbrlol
of Latler 0., S.ltlb
Ponland-Rac:ine Rd.

· Dcxler .
Pastor: Woody C.ll

Solem St., Rudond
· . Poslor: 'Robert E. Musser
Sunday School • lOo.m.
WOQhjp ~ ll :IS a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednosday Service • 1 p.m .

........,

Sunday school - 9:30a.m.

Latter-Day Satnts

Ubtrty Cbriitlla Cbardl

~rltlluF-Ipctoier

. PnrtCUpel
Su,...y School· 9 o.m.
Worship • 10 o.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

llletcory IIIIIs Chum ol Cbrlot
E-lisl Joseph B. Hookita
Suodoy School • 9 o.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicea • 7 p.m.

TburidayiCI'Yice, 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 9 o.m.
Worship • 10 o.m.

R•llud C-ully CblrCb
Poslor: Rev. Roy McCorty
Sandoy S.:hocl - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Evenina· 7 p.m. ·

YIMIIh Mini11C1: Midlael TOqallien

Sundoy Evenin&amp;, 6:30p.m.
Thursdoy Scrvi«- 6:30p.m.

Mlaemllle

;-fastor: Charles Neville

.Launl CllfFJft Melbodlst Cbun:b
Putor: Peter Tremblay
Sunday S.:hool · 9:30 o.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. ond. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.

Sund1y SchQol· 9:30a.m.

Cllapet 0.. ..... QIU'dl
923 s. Third li1., Middleport
Pu!Of Mi&lt;hoel Ponalo
Sunday ~Cn~icc, 10 o.m.

-

W,orship . 10:30 a.m. .

n,..a RID II.U.. Cbordo
Pu!Of: Robert Monley
Sunday S.:hool- 9:30a.m:
Worship ' 10:45 o.m., 7 p.m.
Thursdoy Service - 7:30 p.m, ·

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Other Churclws

Sunday School - 9130 1.m.

Worship. 10:30 o.m., 7&lt;30 p.m.
Wednesday Scnli« ·7:30 p.m:

Bnoclhtrrr Cbur&lt;• of Orltl
Poslol: Rick Snyder

l'ortlud flnl CHrdo ollk Nann•
r-. Muk M111011
Wonbip • JO,lll p.m.
SUaday Sehool· 6 p.m.
Wednaday Sc"'i«s • 7 p.m .

...... (Midd ........l

WHieyaalllble u-. Ourcb
75 Peorl St., Middlepon.
PISior: Rev. John Neville
.

R11laod Cb.,..bof ... Nau ....
Pastor: Samuel Buye
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m. ·
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesdoy Scnllcct • 7 p.m.

PIMor: Vemapye Sullivan

PIH Gra.. Bible lloliMu Cbor&lt;b
1/2 mile oil Rl. 325
·
Pastor: Rn. O'Dell Manley
Sunday S.:ho&lt;il -9:30 o.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Pu1or: Roger Warson

Suadoy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp. II o.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdncodly Scnllceo • 7 p.m.

Forni Ria
PasiOf: Charles Neville
Sundoy School - !Oo.m.
Warship· 9 a.m.
Thu...Joy Scrvicco - ~, 30 p.m.
'
.

R- oiSI!oraallollroeu,O.,...
Lcodina Creek Rd., Rulland
, Puaor: Rev. Dew~y Kina
Suttdoy ldlool·-9.30 o.m.
Sunday worship·7p.m ..
Wednesday prayer me&lt;lln&amp;· 7 p.m.

ZloD Cburdo ofOrlll
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)

CM~kra..dlel
... "o' " ••
, _ , Rev. Hetbcrt

Flalwoodtt
P-. Kellh Roder
Sunday School· JQ o.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

w:;:,:&amp;-

'a)' Scnllcct- 1 p.m.

-

Wo~:~hip- 9 a.m.

P1stor: Rev. Victor Routh
Suodoy School9:30 o.m.
II a.m., 7:30p.m.
We
y Scnllcc ·7:30p.m.

Paslor-Jerfrcy WaiiiClC

W~-10:30..,..oad6p.10.

.Sunday
r,..~'K.'ti:oder
School· 10 a.m.

Harrisonville RoMI

Worship • 9:30 o.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

- y School · 9:30a.m.

A-,.(Sy-)
, _: O..IeoNcville
Sunday Sd!ool • 9:45 o.m.
Worship • II o.til.
Wcdnuday Scnllc:a. 7:30p.m.

Hol1r1css

Ml.tllpot.10...... ofCbrlol
Slh ond Moil

PUior: Richard
S10 Oranl St., Middlepon
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Worship· II a.m. and 7 p.m.

c..tn~c.n­

Collee -lol.......

33:126 Cllildrn"a ltd.
Suadof School· I 1 LOI.

W111ted to Buy

·'

' .....

�The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle
one
42 Speak

ACIIOSS

PHILLIP '

1 Excepl

'

,_

46

outllx

10an.r.
12A-- -

Ettn $1 ,000 W-y Sluftl"9 En·
"*lopes At Home. S•rt Now. NO
E•p:.riMCt. FrM SUpplltl, tnta.
No Obllgadon. Soncl LSASE To :
ACE, Dopt 1351, Box 5137 Oio·

rrond Bot, CA 117115.

Hl92 Sunahine 2. Bedraoma, 2
Batha, Central Air $16,&amp;D0 814388-0342 Ewninga.

Nortb

41&lt;, V-1,

New- 1997 14 WI&lt;:»- 3 bedroom.~ 1

'

a

bath, $799/doWn, $12S/mo, w.'lh
approved cr.clit Call 1·800·811 ~

All . ., _ , . -rllslng In
LO&lt;ll lluliMU: - • porl-dr,.ll thtl ne "'Iiff II~ to
ciOrtl Sond rnumo 10:
1hl F-.1 Fair HouUlg ld.
3od st Pl. -....wv. 25560.
ol1968- , _ KIllegal
Milkm1n lor 100 cow. herd.
'anyproleranco,
resume 10 wtth ,.llftnces to
Cli8crlmi1auOn
CW· 15, ..PI PIHunt RtgisJer
bued on raoe, COlor, religion.
200 Mein St.. Pt Pleasant wV
uxlamlliallltaluB or na.donal
25550.
041Qin, or any tntenllonoo
make
ony ouch pnolorouce,
NMd COL drlvor
lirnlldon or diBcri'nlnaUon;
doiWIMnt. Work
Calumbua area,
3220.
TNs nenpaper will not
l&lt;rlOwllngly accept
Neodtld
advertisements tor real81tate
wlllch Is In vlolatloo ollhe law.
Our reoder1 arehef1by
lnlonnod lhalall ~ ·
llltitrtiHclln 11118

to-or

a

aKa

bath, $1.•9~down, $210/mo, tree
air, with approved cradiL 1·800·
SSH-em.

•

.. ·'

; I

•'"

.'

1.000-25t·5070.

J'

North

CofTir'N)dore compu1er, Wlt}1tling
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT included. ••ctllent condition, .
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON -llao, S300, 81&lt;-992·5295.
ESTATES. 52 We11wood Drive
from $244 to $315. Walk to shop Concrete &amp; Plattlc Sepllc Tanks.
&amp; moviet . Call 814-448-2588. 300 Thru 2,000 Gallona Ron
Equal H.outlng ()pporllnior.
Enna ~nterprittl, Jacttaon, OH

1.aD0·5S7·1528.

.

580

Indians

APJ»&gt;I!'s- south of Carpenrer on SR
U3, S.turda~a oriy, Fatllf's Fruit

'

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

P.M. 614·446-9284.

11032.

.infm cassette, LS package, call ar..

080, Good Condfdon, 814-388·

Vegetable~
Fa;m.

ooo: 1tae Doda• eoo, $750

·

.

Sill, 61 ..3117

.

I

·•

30 Esau'a
country

East

34

Pass

lluot

258·1270,

Auto Parts &amp;

Accessories
Budget Price Transmiuiontl

Usoci/Rtt&gt;ullt, All T,pta, Ovlj

10,000 Transmlsliona, -CiuiCM•
Flywheel&amp;, Overhual Kilt, 81•"'

.,

I·

/0 ·It'

',f?

"

,.

' . , ~...,...-.

" f&lt;OTf{lt-10 UKe:··
: W.lf'PI fiG T\\f.. ..
•U6f{T '

· 001 .'(OUU Til£
()l£ 1-.ifP ~N-IU:.O
P.. rotAAI-ITIC

).

OF f»NC.IN0

lime

39 Southaaal

wlr\d
Anguloh
41 Church
arwa
43 Singling
ayllable
·44 Skinny

fishes
45 Jnvlhlllon
48

Philips

50 ChJneie
pagQ~~a

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipnar Ctyplograml &amp;Ill c11tat.Pirom qyotalions by! lltmOUI ptOpll, pt.ll and preseni
· Eaen lener In !;M cipher a~ for another. Today't" dw: "X equm C

'J

.

v

LAM' D·

NAG

UCCM

DR

SGJIEN

wtth art open mouth . - Adlat Stevenson . .

'~~:~:~' 'O@~~)A~lG~~~·

WOlD
tlMI
.,----~_;; 141tt4 ~r CLAY l. POlLAN _ ; __ _ __
Rearrange leHers · of
0 four
scrambled words

the
be·

low to form four sl"'pl&amp; words .

I

T

uJ

L

ys

II III

I

I

I

VERRI
2

1

.~~

I

~~
0 L M0 B

I

~

3

21 0

8 0510

Opportunity

___.:..:,

~_;,--·I

Dcuole

w;c~e 3 Sed·

rooms, LR. FR. Htal

_

8

:,BIG NATE .

W!Uic:rowat.~e

Fr. Pool Table Reduced S6,00o

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
r~mmtndt

lhlr you do buti·
Mil with people you know, and
NOT 10 und money throufi the
lnllil until JOU have invest1gattd

. . -ng.

Must Be MOWtd 614·.C46-1029.

.

197&amp; Windsor 14x70 new ·carpet
I vinyl, vinyl aiding, euras.
Must see to appreciate. 304-773-

sa.o.

Have You Eva~ Sold Cookwere
Looking For Manager1 In Tnii

t983 Schu11z t4x70 Witl'l Expan ·

112.000 ~~try Good Polorltlal llo-

Sellmg, Near Cheshire, 64·448·
6769 .

do 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, CA ,
Pump,: Deck, Large Awning,
Area. Plrt· Time Call 304·675· Heat
Storage Bu1ld1ng On Rented lot
llt1.
.
6U·245-59Be Aller 4 P.M.
House And I Room Motel, On 19~ t4x70 Skyline, 2 Bedrooms.
AI&gt;Ptu. 2 AcrH In UHio&lt; OH On
. AI 7, Aoduced Frum $1111,1100 To 2 B~tha . On 8 Acres. Country

.. -

-

la)1~·

"-polr,
·'

614·88&amp;-

1989 Mobile Home

1&lt;~x70

3 Bed-

rooms. Batn &amp; 112. Tolll EleC1ric,

w.

Pllt' 'u .oo tar .,...,. envelope On Five Acres, On ~dditon . Pike
you IlLII at home. Send a letf·ad- Good Flat Land, Priced To s.ni
drttlad sramplid envelope 10 814-446-8822.
R.\V.J. EntorpriMI, ~0, Bo• 406,
T0f111110 HIHt, UD 20.748 (Par·

--&lt;Nor'~ Friday)

t08SI Schultz, 2br, 2

run

baths

fireplace, applia~s. rtnl or ure:
304·773·52&lt;5.
1990 Sunshine, Ux70, 2 bed room. 2 baths. cennat air, Iaroe
covered patiO, Storage bulld ll'lg.
available now, clean, €114 ·99? ·
7860.

1992 14x52' mob1le home. new
carpet, call 614-U2-3114.
I if

M F STATE

1802 Mobile HorJM ·Ux76 3 Bed·

rooms, 2 Bllfls. 119,000

310 HornH for Slit

r.u -..,Now Klli:hen, Now
- . - - Pumpo. """' MJ

"""' 11-Uia Subrll·
vtt6on
CaH French City Homes,
1rlc. 114•441·1340 Ot 304'1175-

111&amp;

·t IM,..m HouH, New Haven.
~ .... ~ c_.. Air, ea..
- . Cloy Waler a Santo.
e«.aao J04-tl2·1772, Or eu-

- 1.

6

Tl-tEP.E t OONE !
NOW I CAN
1)0 SOMETHING

FUN!

2281 .

'

.

4 BedroOnia, ' Bath, 2 Car Garage, 2.5 Miles On 218, 614~256·

Baths, And Family Room,'l2 Car
Garage, $550tMo., Plus Oeposil;
6 Room House. 4 Bedrooms. 1 H2
Balht, t Car Garage, $550/Mo ..
Plus Depo•t 304-875-7873.
Laroe Country Home For Rent In
Patriot, 3 ~rooms, 2 Baths, Ga·
rage &amp; Barn On 65 Acres, t550t

IFRIDAY

'

for Rent In Point Pleaunt Area:
6 Room House, 3 Bedrooms, 2 112
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahtrt, drrtrs, refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Applianc.s, 71

Vine

SIIH~

Can et 4· 44l-73jl8

1-IIJD.4119-341111.

'

UIOII FUrnllllfe 130 l l u - Pike
· Mlrrara. Tlbttl, Chllra, Ctda~ ·
Ch.,l, Bedt. Couchea, End T•·
Nice, Clean, 3 Badro~rn. Refer- IIIH, Wlwt·Noll GIR Shop. 814ences &amp; Oepoalt No Pe11. 304- 4&lt;8-4712.

Mo.. Ptua Utilities, tl14-256-6387. •
875-5182.

Pomeroy· .two btdroom, kitchen
remodel&amp;d, stove and ·rtlrieerator
furnished, washer/ dryer hookup,
talll14•092 ·8886 between 5:30S:OOpm.
.

Small Unfurnished 2 Bedroom
House, Nor'th Of Addison, 12001
Mo., Plut Oepotit, Ulililitt, No
Pet~ 81&lt;·3117.0158. '

Waaher, Ory11, Refrloer:ator,
Stove, Microw.ve, $50 Each,
814-2511-1231.

520

Sporting
Goods

3·30.06 Remington automatic ri·
fill. 1·30.30 Marlin. 30•~175·
1132.

.

•·

'

Two be~room houat, 1tove and
refrigerator, no inside pelt, 814·
99_2,3090:

420 Mobile Home•
for Rent

wv.304-755-5885.

2 bedroom mobllo llamo · ln

--

Rocino,no-el..---

2 Btdroo(nl, tn OaJUpollt. •• _.,

11185 IWO bolh I&lt;J 70. Call UU at
3 Bedroom. dithwasher, C~ct;;'
014·-tll21.
tub, prage, _,.adl •P dr
.
1 112 mlltt from ~t. Pltaunt
30&lt;HII5-3571 E.......

11amt OUI·

..... """- 814-ll2.f11311.

I

.

~._,

•

ASTR6-0RAPH

Three bedroom houM, atove and
relrigeraiOf, washer and Cltyer no
insidl Ptll 614-et2·3090.
'

Two borlroom -

.

•

,

lhe chuckle quolod
1O Complete
by filling in the miSSif'Q words
you develop from ·step No. ,3 below~

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCR!.MBLE Al!OVE LETTERS

TO GET ANSWER

•

.

Need 10 tell fmmtdilttlf'. Nice

•

'Problems Are Opportun tties W ith THORNS On Them."

Limited Offer! 1987 doublawlde
3br, 2bath, $1199 down. S279i
month. Free delivery &amp; telup.
Only at Oekwood Homes, Nilro

. Rovtnaat 114-385-2&lt;34.

1

having. a great time when
you're o~ly sp:nding ~ · - - •..

Asthma . Dryer. Mower· Notify· THORNS
One of my Grandmothers favorite samplers read:

814- 446~

IIUST SELL IQ81 1&lt;r70 with
rifl~llce. NHd tO tell flit Cllt

N N

0

Imagination:.you think you're

SCitAM-LETS ANSWERS

SERVICES

1388, Aher &amp;I'M.

Woodlxlrnar, Washer, Dryer,

frigerator, Range

E T

14 . I IS I I

2 Bedroom in New Haven. 304·

~-:--:--:--e..:ss---1197&amp; 2&amp;•58

',

PRE-.:IOUS SOLUTI~N : "A politician Is a man who approaches every problem

/

RENTALS

ZKPCM'D

ocP.::woAM .

. , I ·.

Parcels on Rayburn Rd. Water,
paved road, reasonable resttiC·
tions. 30-4·'675· 5253. (no single·
wide inquires please)

N II ,G

zcss

I

$8,900 Or 5 Acres $8,500.

Call Fot Maps &amp; Owner Financ·
ing Info. .10% Down "' We
Finance ·Batance. 10'4 Off calh
Purchawa!

UCSJCPC

R. P C W,

Yw'ccvc· o

Meigs Co. Remota 1D Acrea

882-26111.

leHera
Prefix lor

48 Com~dlan

I 1
I I :;:~-~-~::~~·
~~-;:;~·

410 Houses for Rent

-avlo

37 Ore. summer

ppd

William Butler Yeats, the Irish poet
and dramatist, wrote, "Hands, do what
you're bid." Not that Yeats had bridge
· in mind; but occasionally - not all the
time - it would be helpful if the cards
told,us the best bid!
At the European Sehools Championship, Daniela Kehl, playing for the victorious German team, won the prize
for the best bid during the tournament.
The deal occurred in the match
against Italy. At the oiher table, after
. the German West had opened one dia·
mond, the other three players opted to
pass when at least two of them might
bave acted. North might have over·called one no-trump and East might
· have responded one spade.
The play isn 'I recorded, but the contract finished three down: minus 300.
At the other table, West opened one
dub. He was playing a five-card-major
system in which he needed four cards
to open one diamond . After North
overcalled one no-trump and East
passed, what should South.do?
Kehl might have bid two clubs,
Stayman, to try to uncover a 4·4 heart
fit. And she might have jumped to
three no-trump. But that contract
would have failed if East had led
. fourth-highest from his longest and
strongest. Instead, she possibly made
a unique bid in bridge history, jumping
to five clubs despite West's opening.
As you can see, this contract made
easily with the favorable lies in both
minors for plus 600. &lt;Even six clubs is
makable.)
Finally, note that if North had led a
low trump against one diamond, that
contract would have gone siz down fot
a flat board!

And Bath In Crown City.

2&lt;5-Yn

·'

32 Palatial

Pass

By Phillip Al~er

Newly RemDdel&amp;d S25,000 61-4-

760

purchaM

Freshwater ·
porpoise
29 Small valley l

A time to bid,
a time to win

1888 Cutlll~ Suptemt Sharp 10r4:110pm.3).o-675-1516.
I
09,00~ 1111&lt;11, $3,000, 114·371·
~,'.·,\'
1998' Ford Sierra Camper Vi.nj,
loaded, 7,000 Milea, Coal:
A~ S2~.50o

,
22 Keen Insight
23 Obey
24 Cry of pain
25 Singer '
Clapton
26 Lingerie
....

1i95 Chevy 5-10, 5tpd, air,

sss,ooo,

whirl

20 Merge

40

2588.

FINANCIAL

9 Faully
11 Unit olllghl
13 Dry-eyed
18 Give--

Opening lead: .,·2

18U ChttVetle, 57,000 Milea, 1112 Dodge Grand cara..n Le,
Very Good Condition, 11,415 ExFifl&amp;nl Condition, Call Afllf 1

Fruits a.

!NT ,
Pass

56!

11190 GUC pickup. 4a4. Loadtd.
Very good condiltan. 22,000
mllaa. $14,500 OBO. eu-ue;.
2384 aftlr 1pm. .

Older ~chultz home, ownet occu-· Steen St. Middleport, 2br, fur·
pled, 2 bedroom, excellent lor nish~. ~~~~~iet paid, deposit &amp;
young or retired couple; prictcl on reJerences, .
Inspection. 304-G75-531j4.
Middleport, 2br, furnished. alto, 2
Schull12xB5, lair cand., .2br, w1 room efficiency 'M'utlliliea paid, de.
.
large utility roam, refrigerator. posit &amp; refetancet.
New
Haven,
nice
2br,
fUrnish~.
siDYI &amp; 2 window ac, 12,500 firm.
deposil &amp; references. 304·882·
304-675-3000.

Room

38 r.::ed
40 Nen~rellgloua

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

HDNEYPDT II

Factory Goofed Savt Tt1ou sands,

5

Mean dog
Gls' club
Bullllghters
Takeo care of
lhe bills
8 Southwealern

4
5
6
7

·28

WELCOME' HOME!

NEWI Bank Repo'a, only 3 lell,
&amp;till under warranl)', free delivery
&amp; set-up. 304-755-7t91 .

3 Fictional story

A 9 7 3

· South

t

1 Heal unit
. (abbr.)
2 Egg on

WoHIJke animal
27 Claoh
31 Emerald Isle
32 Taxed
33 Sayings
35 Fodder tower
38 State
37 Religious

aQJt0975

•.

..

~· ' '

!

·'·I

3 Bedrooms, $200/Mo., 1·800·

5-t a~r&amp;&amp; with 121110 mobile, new
lurnaca, h.w. taok, plumbing, pol&amp;
barn , tool shed , root cellar,
lenced,
vade, tl14-982·so.2.

31 0 Homes for Sale

o·owN

.• J 2

25t-!i070

opportlrily llalla.

56 Vacation sp~t

.. 6 .

3 Bedroom. S99S down,

1St Time Buyers E·Z Financing 2

,._r
are avalllbta on an equal

.. 8 3

South

$195/mo. Free deliverw a ser-up,
only 11 O.k Wood Hom&amp;s, Nitro
wv. 30&lt;-755.5885.
0~

aQt08754
.. Q 4
• 986

. • K 10 52
+ K 10 3

1ii7 Ooublewide, 3 bedroom, 2

~

Ea~l

. aK932

Edison
54 Chemical suffix
55 - Angelto

23

A 4 2

Welt

51 Shlnd up
52 Un"ol maao
53 Thomas-

worker

oAQ754

199716x80 3 bedroom , 2 bath,
St.325fdown, St91fmo, free air,
with approved credit. 1-800·69t ·
6111.

111117·2

I0.\1·116

9 J B6

u7n.

41 Relax

13 Bye-bye
14 Unalahlly
15 Toddler
16 Looked at
17 Scary
19 Compile .
21 Wall Slraet

A J

ncould bt red!

u Compalollve

4 Panhandler
1 Ta-n

ALDER

2 LOll In Ohio Vallo, Uomory
-1800.
.
.
114-~18

'""
I

.

''
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

' '
make 1he relationship wOfk. Mpil $2.75 to

MatChmaker, c/o this neWsifaper, P .O .

Bo• .1758, Murray Hill Slatiorfi\New' York,

(March 21•Aprll II) You will sue·
tOday if you use vo-ur imagination.

~RIES

ceed

You will have to be creative if you want to

NY 10156. '
.. lind mar1&lt;e1s lor your new ideas.
SCOIIPIO (OCI. 24-Nov. 22) f'luolness TAUIIUS (April 20·May 20) Conducl ·
'
ka11S8ctlons conducled along convention· your serious business affairs as early in
al lines Should wor1t out ad\lantage&lt;&gt;)~Sly the d&amp;y as possible. Lalor you might 'be
lor Y1JP ldday. Speculative ventures might too tired to do a good lob.
GEMINI (May 21·Juno 20) Avoid
nol w&lt;lfk oulaa well.
arrangemen1s
today with Individuals
..• SAQITT~UI (Nov. 23-DIC. 21) II you'
whose
reputations
could reflect poorly on
·,. .. leei.!IJslless or diaconlenlocl lodly, aller
your
image.
Find
friends
who ha.., similar
· yqur usual routines and do -..met~ing
standard§.
"
·
,.;. • ._,.
-1 ., 1,
·'· spontaneous and fun.
CANCEl! (June 21-JUiy 22) II yoo pro·
,
SaiUrdiYi 'Ocl. lll, tll98 ,
CAI'IIICOAN (Dec. 22-.Jen, 11)jt'ou will
•
,
, , !,.
· ,
.bt more mollvated today N you lOCus on crastinale today, you might hoi have
Your chart ntdlc:llle• .lhll.t• i!a~rc,n.noe making a profit lor uaoetatet u well aa goqd luck when you need il tomortow.
Try to s11ck 10 your schedule todly.
Ia probable In till YM! . -. You may lor youraall.
r8Celve·an,ohr from eomeone l!r110 Ia .AQI"IIUI(Jitn. 20-Feb.ll) Todly you LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) TherA could be
well _ , . ot your ~· '
·
might hear eome good newa lllat might . improvements In lwo c:ondHions thai have
~ (llpl. ri-ool. 211 v"'!·ean'llnd a require time 1o sink ln. Keep your thought lrri1atad you recently. Remain alert,
_ , 10 a pt_,today Wyou dllt&gt;.lu .•lo, y9ursaH until you daclphor the true because 1he llral change might be llOtice-loday.
.
yow~~---· IIDh...lr, don1 . IMMing.
VIRGO
(Aug.
23
lap!.
22)
When
dealing
forget who prll~fqt.l!' yo~ ' wll.~ youJ ·, .~··· ~· i!NIIrcll 20) If you~ ·
anawer•. TIYfng Ill, PJiiCh liP a .broken *iy major~ todly, oepodany lOt wlthlrlendo loday, keep everything light.
- ? The Aalro·Gr.ph Mall:lllnlker your holM: durability and qudly onouf&lt;f Do not la.l olllera become Jm'rlleraed In
your material affairs or vice versa. ·
~n help you understand what to do to
p1'8C8dellce Over prlc:l . .

rk•

~

I
(

OCTOBER1BI

�........ _...

- ....

t •

·~

'·

.

•

'

Pege 12 • The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, October 18,

.BOW HUNTERS
PARADISE

'

'[!!1 ·

THE HARMON FORECAST
Sat., Oct. 18 • MoJor Colllgu- DIY. 1·A
•
•
•
•
•

14!' W. MaiD St.
Pomeroy,OQ
614-m-7916

·614-m-6759

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Colorado

- 992-2121

j

Dignity and se...vlce
Always

,,

OFFERING PRE-NEED
COUNSEUNG ANO ·..
ARRANGEMENTS

23
21
2t

• South Carolina
• Southern Mississippi
Southwestern Louisiana
StanfOrd
• Utah
• Virginia
• Washington
,
• Washington State
West Virvinla
• Wisconstn
• :"'~~mlng

555 PARK ST.
·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
''
I

}

.,\,

• Alcorn Stata
Appalachian Stille
A.rtanaaa·Pine BluH

• Brown

• Cal Poly S.I..O.
• Cal State Nar1hriage

Canisius

·

' Connecticut

• Cotn-'1

"""'"

• Drake

• Duquesne

742-2511
"fAIIII.Y OWIIID" ~7-4092
1-IQH3H217
,_.2U1 - . 1...._312-5657
Seven Locations To Seroe You Better!

• Eaat1rn llit10is
Eaatem 1&lt;8fltuc;;ky
FldriDa A&amp;M
• Fur~n
Harvard
Holslfa

.......,

· • tndt.an1 Stale
Jackton Still
~ Ja&lt;:ktonville State
James Mad1son
· l.alll)tette
' M111s1
' Marahall
' Musachusells

Mercyhu111

· Monrrouth

~~ J )
Montana
New Hampsh1re
' Newberry
• N"onn Carolina A&amp; T
' N~lt'llttn AriZOIII

• Northern Iowa

• Norti'Mestarn Slate (La 1
• Pennsylvania
Prlncecon
'San01~

• South Carolina State
St•l)hen F. Austin
• Tenmt~ue State

Tennessee Tech

' Tennessee-Chananooga

' Troy Slate

• Villanow
Weber St1111

Waaern 111r'lci1s
• Western K,entucl&lt;r• VO\IngltOW!'I State

Nmlrican ln1ematWI

21

••

10
1
16
15
16
1

9

• Ithaca

15

12
13
14
12
14

16
6
10
13

20

1
14
10
7
19
8

17

13

10
10
17

8

Fordham
Southern Ulah

8

·~

,"
17

,""

2~

' Columbia
Sl. John's (N .Y.t
Western Carol1na

25
27

• Eastern wash•ngtM

22

19

,"

38

22

,"

27

,"'",,
,
22

27

26
20
20

22

35

7

10
13

12
10
6

14

20

• Ma1ne
Wottord
•
Morgan State
' Cat Stare Sat:ramer\lo

State

Sam Houston State
L11hlgh
·Bucknell
Evansville
• Nicholls State
Tennessee·Marlln
• Austrn Peay
.Virginia M1litary ,
Soulhwtst Te•ou State
W1Miam &amp; Mary'
• Porlland Stale

• Southern lllinort
liberty
Ashland

"•
'
",.10 .

Lane
Towgon

Bethune·Coolcman

1.3

20

Buffalo U.

Southwest MIS&amp;oun

• Northwt!1

Missoutl

"1712

"•

13
7

24
25
2.t

• Southwest Bapt111.
• MISSOUri IJallay
' Mk:hil)lln Tech

Sra1e

• Anderson

20
2t
21

• Nebrallca WBt.I!Y•n
• W•~• State (Mieh 1

24

23
· 25
32

Dakota

37
17

South-stem Oklahoma

· 28
20
35
22

• Truman State
Waba~h

42
21

1627 Murdoch Ave. ·
485-8541 or 1-800.433-7964

••
••
10

FLEXSTEEL

17
7

•

FINE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE
Quality to Ln.•t " l,ifetime

"
"

ANDERSON'S

13
7

• Eltth.t (Kan.)

21

6
9

William Jewell

7

St. Xav,.r

7
21

Mount Un1on
• East Central O•lahoma

13

7

• Ntbruka-Omaha
Grand Valley Stale

State

·

7

Bridgewater (IJa.)
CarsOI"'·Newman
Catawba

Tabor

St. FI'Jir.ciS (II.)

.?...

Ueico\KY&gt; .

·centra Missouri State
• tt~noi1 Benedicrne
' MiSSO\jri·Aolla
• Millikin
• 01'\10 We~leyan

Cenrre

•
' Johnson :;&gt;m1th
Ne• Haven
• Noffolk Stale
' Norlh Alabama
Rhodos
· Savannah Slate

'Mars H1ll

2•

• Gan:IMr·Webb

·2!1

·

27
28

41

36
20
19

Shepherd

42

Southern A.runsas
Taus A&amp;M.Commerce
• Te11as A&amp;M·Kmgsv111e
Yaldo!la Stale
' V1rg•n.a State
W11tl.1betly Slate
West Vng1r11a Wesleyan

22
3t
25

23

24
t5

h.H.lflf!bS..,Anut~

26

· W ingate

24

Gester; Olio 915-4222

· Maryville (Tann )
. Presbytanan
RandoJph·Macon
Alabama A&amp;M ·
' · Wasi11ngton &amp; Lee
Cenlfal Arkansaa
Fa.,.etleVitla Stall
, • Elizab&lt;tlh Cilv State

•

V~rgin18 Union
Delta State

'I

· Sewanee

Clark Atlanta
• West V~tgin1a Tech
• Ch.lachtta Baptist
• West Te•as A&amp;M
Camral Oklahon'la

• Well Alabama

lanou -Rnyna

1C

• Aaa,.,s Slate
• Azu!:.B Pat::ilic
• Cal Lutheran
• Cai·DaiiiS

"

·Chapman
• Ctare~t · M·S
~
College

1;
7

34
28

Humboldl State

17

""•3

25

Kansu We11tyan

20
.17

Lfw,s&amp; Clark
• Western Oregon

24

, • Western State

16

Western Washington

31

Fisher Funeral' Home

8

Occ!defltat
Western New tvt.•ico
Sonoma State

14

cato,.

12

13

Colorado Mines
Redlands

33
29

27

Whinier

17

Bruce Fisher • Director
. MIDDLEPORT

..
7

1

12
10

14
13

• Cat State ChiCo
Puget Sound
Eastern Or~
Fort 'Haya SillS
• Southlrn 01~

,.

CHESTER, OHIO
985-3301 or 985-3330

Peoples
Bank

7

I

It's not just our name,
it's our p~ilosophy.
Mason • Point Pleasant • New Haven
Member FDIC

' ,.., local

STMl:
Deal•
.

•

"\1

•

•

__......
POMEROY

992-5432
-----

JU$TDOIT.
•

"

S\1

•
••
••
•
•

'

'-...(''
l
J

MIDDLEPORT ,

Chester, Ohio

'

QUALITY PRINT
SHOP
255 Mill St. Middleport

Supporters of ladder
truck levy arglle
.passage will bring.
greater fire safety

.

.

WAVERLY 7 One of the most .I
· exciting wins in Meigs football his· r
tory turned to crucial. moments of
concern for all
·
area football fans
after .the collapse
of Meigs. senior .
defepsive back
Matt Ault following the Maraud· ·
er's 21-20 win
over Waverly Fri·
,
day night.
· . A post same
celebration of
t
fans and ~layers rollowed, ~ntil Ault
suddenly collapsed 'outside of the
Meigs locker room.
Ault, 17, Pomeroy was treated by
the Pike County Emergency Med·
ical Services, and transponed to a
Waverly atea hospital. He was then
.transferred by Med Hight helicopter
to The Ohio State University Hospi·
tal with what was reponedly the rupture of a brain aneurism.
· Ault was listed in critical condi'
tion in the surgical intensive care
unit of The Ohio State University
Hospital Saturday morning with a
head injury, according to hospital
spokesman Bob Fitzsimmons.
Ault had reponedly been suffer·
ing headaches for two to three days
leading up to Friday's game. At this
time, the head injury is not believed
to be rootball related.
Officials with the' Meigs football
program or family members were
not available for comment at press

Meigs County Bconomic DevelopBy KEVIN KELLY
ment Director Julia Houdashelt has been named Meigs
Time..S.ntlnel
Stefl
County's 1996 "Person of the Year" by the Meigs
.
GALLIPOLI&amp;
- Gallipolis volunteer firefighters
County Chamber of Commerce and the Southeastern
are
arguing
for
improved
safety not only for them·
Ohio Regiol)al Council, Meigs County Chamber Presselves
but
for
the
areas
they
service in their efftitts to
ident Horace Karr announced Friday.
.
get
a
1-milllevy
approved
in
the Nov. 5 election.
Houdashell will be recognized with the award .at
Sup~~Dners of the ballot issue are expected to go
the Southell$tem Ohio Regional Council (SEORC)
door-to-door
in the citY,'S nine vo.ting precinc,ts within
awards banq~et at the Ohio University Inn, Athens on
.
,
the
neKt
two
weeks t&lt;&gt;&gt;llring their case directly to the
Oct. 31.
public,
',
Houdashelt was namctj M~igs County Economic
The levy, to last five years if approved;'&lt;.\iill raise
Development .Director in January, 1994. Shortly after
.
revenue to pay for the replacement of the GVFD's 36assUf11ing that position, she was instrumental in effons to convince
ycar-old ladder truck, described as ''worn out" by Fire
nati'l~al retail chain Pamida to locate in the fanner Fisher's Big Wheel
Chief
Silas Hamilton.
.
.
.
builaing outside of Pomeroy. This moye to attract Pamida kept 4S jobs
_Tile
truck,
an
International
purchased
with
funds
and thousands of dollars in sales tax revenlfeS .in Meigs County.
raised
from
a
long-expired
levy,
has
.been
maintained
Under Hoodashclt's direction, .Meigs,County was completely classi·
continuously, but its usage has increased over the years
fied as a Rural Enterprise Zone. This zone sets up a Jystem for allocatbecause fire departments are now required to have lading tax abatements to aurae! business and 'help existing companies
der
vehicles on site at all calls, resident firefighter Tim
e&lt;pand:
Mills explained.
Houdasheltled the two-year compilation of a strategic plan for Meigs
The truck was refurbished in 1985, but only with a.
Department
County, which organized available sites, demographics, and information
new
paint job and tir~s. Mills said.
reljdenl firefighter· Tim Mills adjusts valve• on
. on availability of wate~. sewer and gas lines and prospective businesses.
The vehicle has seen a~tion in major blazes over the canisters mountecllo the ·GVFD'a 36-year-old lad·
H.oudashelt worked closely on lobbying effons for passage of House
past
three decades in Gallipolis and the four townshipS der truck, which the departmenl hopea lo replace
Billll552 (Jobs Bill III); which creates a Rural Industrial Park Loan pro·
the
GVFD
serves, including several C,ourt Street fires If s 1·mlll levy le approved Nov. 5.
gl-am for the purpose of assisting eligible applicants in financing devel·
' that damaged a number of buildings and caused the
opment or and improvements to industrial park sites.
'
"Usually, if they have to make major pans, that takes
demolition ·of others since 1994.
The bill, sponsored by state representative John Carey (R· Wellston),
two to three weeks."
But
despite
its
continued
use,
the
truck
is
not
in
allows assistance to be provided in the fonn of loans and loan guaran·
Firefighters have been looking at various new mod·
compliance
with
most
safety
standards,
according
to
tees for land acquisition, construction of industrial park buildings. and
cis and have discovered that a no-frills vehicle will
promotional
literature
on
the
levy
.
infrastructure improvements.
"There's so much required on this kind of vehicle probably cost around $600,000.
Houdashelt has recently completed a $500.000 grant application
The department is looking toward a contained oper·
now that we don't have," Hamilton said.
through the new Jobs Billlll program, with Meigs County ·being the first
ating
platform with a capacity of 1,000 pounds, HamilHe
noted
thattlie
truck's
age
is
also
making
maintecounty to take advantage of the new program.
ton
said.
nance
more
costly
and
time-consumi'ng.
She was a leader i the efron to formally reorganize .the Meigs Coun· ·
The emphasis will be on increasing firefighter safe·
"If it breaks down and we send it to the garage, we
ty Community Improvement Corporation, which took a giant step
ty.
Mills added.
·
can't buy parts because they don't make them anymore,
toward bringing industrial development aild jobs to Meigs County this .
Continued on page A2
and they have to make .them for us." Hamilton said. ,
spring with the finalizing of an a~recment to purchase the county's top
time.
•
development site at Tuppers Plains.
·
The 60 acre site west of Tuppers Plain.s, fonnerly the site of The Ohio
Valley Manufacturing Company, will' now be developed by the Meigs
County C.I.C, as a county industrial park. .
Houdashelt has also worked actively )n seeking ·improvement for
By TOM HUNTER
agriculture industries in Meigs County, including obtaining grants for
nme1-SentiMI Slaff
extension and improvement of water lines in the Letan area to service
POMEROY- The final touches are
farmers exporting vegetables all ove~ the eastern United States.
being
put on the $12.3 million, 2.25 mile
Houdashelt has alsl&gt; been active in development of the Great Bend
·,
first
phase
of the I·17/US 33 Connector
Industrial Site, with the tecent commitment by the Great Bend lndustri·
project at Five Points, as general contraca1 Center Corporation to construct a manuract.uring facility on the sire•
tor Kokosing Construction, Fredrick·
A Meigs County native, Houdashelt is a graduate of Southern High
town, winds down completion of the
School. She graduated from Ohio University with cum laude honors in
two-year highway project.
1989, earning a Bachelors Degree in Ans and Science i~ Political SciWork on the I· 77/US 33 Connector
ence: She formerly worked as a 'marke~ng and sales: consultant for
interchange at Five Points is completed,
Kinko's in Columbus and Athens.
.
including reopening or the section of,for·
Pt. Pleasant towing firm fined for river dumping mer State Route 7 in the. area or the
. CINCINNATI (AP) -A West ,Virginia towboat company has boien
"Goeglein slip" just south or Five P(&gt;ints.
fined $100,000 and given two years probation after pleading guilty to
During its first week of use since the
federal charges that it illegally dumped oil, solvents and sewage into the
reopening, the section of fonner State
Ohio and Kanawha rivers.
Route 7 has been visibly handling a
.U.S. District JudgeS. Arthur Spiegel imposed the punishment Friday
.hea"JJ load of traffic ~ween the downon Kanawha Rive.r Towing Inc. of Point Pleasant, W. Va The dumping
town Pomeroy buslnes~ district and
occurred from 19,91 to 1995, federal investigators said.
.
points nonh.
· One week earlier, the judge sentenced Ronald G. Mayes, S3, p0n cap·
The westbound ramp tic-in with State
·
tain of the c~pany, to two
Route 7 at Five Points and the cast juncyears or probation and a $1 ,000
tion and orr ramp at State Route 1 and
fine ror Mayes' guilty plea to a
Chester Road (fonner SR 7~ have also
·
similar felony charJe. M~yes
been completed and in use for nearly two · THIS SECTION of f9rmer Stile Route 7 In the lrH of "Ooegleln lllp" lull lOuth of Five Polnla has
weeks .
· .reopened, following reconatructlon work and new conatNCIIOII on the 1-77/uS 33 Conneclor Project. The
.and the. company entered their
Co~struction crews have been c~m- aect.lon of hlghwliy waa cloleclln May due to wll we61ller whlqh cauHd • 11111jo~ lllp. 1!1 the I'OIIdWay. The
pleas on May 28.
·
· .
.
. 1011d, now known aa Cha1ter Road, hal been turned over to tiMt Melge County HIQhWIY Department and
Today•• Ca..~ nlbwl
Kanawha ~iver Towing
pleung. ••~ P1acemcnt, pav~ment mark- pi'OYidtl a direct link be'-n Five Point• end the Pomt~ray buelnell dletrtet. · •
. 16 SeclioDI· 1 l'qa
has spent more than $200,000
mg. w1demng and resurfac1ng prepara·
.
.
to satisfy a condition of its protion .work on the Five Points end of the project, manager, has been finishing up the preliminary officials by July 1997," Durin said.
bation· that it improve its effon
. which will conclude major work on the proj~ct.
dtaft·environmental document on the remaining
Stat~ highway officials
trying to finislrup
to comply with environmental
A fonnal dedication date for the new section of sections of the 'project. "It is ready to go in for its the envtronmental document, as well as begin the
Iowa, prosecu~ Slid .
hiahway will be announced at a later date, accord- review at ODOT Central office in' Columbus. The preliminazy work for consultant selection and
1be company ond Mayes
ing to ODOT District 10 public information offi- draft environmental assessm~i\1 will then be pre- design of the various pieces.
said ill U.S. Dialrict Coun that
cer Nancy Pedigo.
pared for federal approval," said Tom Dunn,
"We have already completed aerial pbotogra·
they knew about the dumpina
In other news related to future construction on . ODOT District 10 planning engineer.
phy wprlt necessary for the project planning. We
.of the poUullnta lion! the com·
the TCmainder of the 1:77/US 33 ConneeiOr pro-,
Dunn noted that this is the first time that stale iJoing as much work on the Jll'!lject as we can right
p111y 'stowbolb, allonp tank . ject, environmental dbcumenlltion is nearina highway officials have had a complete ·environ- now. We expect movement and plannins on the ·
pn land ' ud ..... dial tho
.completion on the,projectsoctlons between Five mental document for review. "Pre~vidcd that the project to mo¥e along greatly upori federal
..umpe~~y Wl4 clelillnJ.
document is an environmental assessment, we approval of the enVironmental documentation,"
Points and Ravenswood, W.Va.
Columbus based URS ConsultaniS, project ·hope to have it cleared through federal highway Duim said.
,

Final touches put ·on Meigs connector project

'

are

CldTII

915~~~07

icL---~--------------~--~----------------~~

,.
I

Playerls
collapse
overshadows
Meigs·victory

Good Morning

tv &amp; APPLIANCE GAS.SEmCE

'

.

Comes
See Us For Your'1997
Graduation Announcements. '

RIDENOUR'S

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

'

•

.

. SALES • SERVICE • PARTS

•

228 WEST MAIN

•

1'"-..~~~~

'

985·3308

James A. Acree Jr. Director
992·5141

Crow's Fam1
Restaurant

21

(Thursday)
**KANSAS CITY.34
SEATfLE.............. l3
.
The Chiefs' Steve Bono threw three TD passes in the first half against the Seahawks last month and K.C. went
on to win 35-17. The Chiefs will win their lllh~ftheir lastl2 games with Seaule.
(Sunday)
••ARIZONA............. 21
TAMPA BAV ...........9
With both their offense and defense ranked in the top half of the NFL, the Cardinals have come a long way
~ince last season. The Buccaneers, however, haven't. These teams haven't met since 1992.
BUFFALO .................Jl
~·N.Y. JETS .......... ll
Led first by Thurman Thomas and then by Jim Kelly, the ,J3ills bea.t the Jets twice in '95, 29-10 and 28-26.
N.Y.'s only bright spot is its passing game, but it'll go dark against this secondary.
•• CAKOLINA .........lO
NEW ORLEANS .. lO
Another offering in our Guess Which ONe Is the Expansion Team category· if the Padthers play the way they're
supposed to. In Week Two Carolina needed fjve field gols to get by theSaints 22-20.
00 DALLAS ............... 3S
ATLANTA ............. l4
Let's see: After a week off to nurse their wounds and get the spring back in their step, the Cowboys hosted
Arizo~, and now they're at home again? We'll be glad we're not Falcons this SundaY,
.
·
•• DENVER..~ ...........l2
BALTIMORE ....... l8
Against the Broncos, who are· uncharacteristically doing much beuer on the ground than 1hrough the air, the
Ravens and their pass-oriented defem;e won't pull off an upset, but should stay close.
. ••INDIANAPOLIS .. 28
NEW ENGLAND.20
The Colts' defense shut the Patriots down in Indy's two wins over N.E.Iast year, 24~10 at Foxboro and 10-7 at
home. J)oth teams will come out throwing .to exploit each other's defeMive weakness.
.
JACKSONVILLE .... 23
**ST. LOUIS......... tO
.
If the Jaguars ai-e going to prove they're for real, tliis is their time, facing the Rams inthe middle of five games
against weaker teams. Jacksonville's passing game should take St. Louis apan.
. ·.
MIAMI ...................... 24
••PHILADELPHIA 17
Things just haven't been the same in Miami and Philly recently with Dan Marino and Rodney Peete out
action, but at least Marino is coming back. In this one the Dolphin defense may be the key.
PITI'SBIIRGH ......... 27
••HOUSTON ........ 23
Amid cheap shots and fistfights last month, the Steelers took a 20-0 lead-over the Oilers and won ~y a TKO, 3016. Pillsburgh should win its six1h straight in this series, but it won't be easy.
·
.
'
· **SAN FRANCISCO 36
CINCINNATI........ll
This isn't one of the week's best matchups. The Bengals' only area of promise is run defense, and their offense
won't get much breathing room against the 49ers' D. They last met three years ago.
••WASHING-TON ....28
N.Y. GIANTS ........ 14
With Terry Allen rushing for 146 yards and the Redskins dc:fense picking off rour, Dave ijrown pas.ses, 1
Washington beat up on the Giants five .wee~ ago, 3HO.The 'Skins look even)leuer now.
!':
·
(Monday)
.
*'SAN DIEGO ....... l9
OAKL.AND ........... l6
' ·
Led by Stan Humphries' four TD passes, the Chargers raced to a 21-0 lead over Oakland in Week ~our and held
on to win 40-34.The Raiders have no trouble moving the ball· except when they need to.
'
(Open Date: Chicago, Detroit, Green Bay, M~ta)

Baum
Lumber

'

RAWUNGHOATS

Other Games - Far West

12
14

Weathertron®
Heat Pump XL 1200
Super Efficiency

W.nston·Salam
'Concord
• Wea11J~r~n1a Stale

··Houdashelt named SEORC
'Person of the Year·' for Meigs ·
POMEROY~

Arkansas Tech

38
17
16
2t
17
t4

• Elon

• Emory and Henry ,
• Foil Valley_State
HampdenS~dncy
Hendm~on Stale

' Guillord

.,

985-4222

Aoguslana (S.D.)
• Soulheaslern Olllahoma

t•

·:·thePOMEROYWhile
the latest
audit
of :;
;•· ~~· ',!~~~~~~!!~~~:!~~~~~~~:::::~~~~:::;:~~~~!;!:~~~~~~~~~~~!:~! findings.
village of Pomeroy
includes
several
cita·
Some of the suggestions would be·difficult
:nons and findings , along' with numerous
traffic offenses.
the Meigs C9untt Indigent Drivers Alcohol Treatment
for the village to carry out including the
:suggestions, villagq clerk Kathy Hysell said it is one of
"A lot of them have been taken care of," she said.
Fund. State law requires $25 of any fine imposed for an rotation of job functions to help counter errors or irreg·
·the best audits the village has undergone.
·
For instance, council and mayor Frank Vaughan, who · ·alcohol or drug related driving offense to be deposited . ularities.
: 1be audit, by the office of State Auditor Jim Petro, took office after the period audited,' are taking steps to into the courity's indigent drivers alcohol treatment fund.
Numerous water meters, which were not in working
:covered the period between Jan. I, 1993, and Dec. 31, correcr some of the citations - including ronning a
• $678 in favor of the .Treasurer of State because fines condition, were in use in ihe village for which minimum
· 1994.
.
records commission.
collected for seat belt violations were not forwarded to rates are being charged. the audit stated. This could
· Auditors noted. several instances where the village
Also corrected were three findings for recovery total· the Treasurer of State.
result in loss of revenue to the village.
:did ·noi receive prior certification of expenditures and ing $1,341.38, according to the a4dit.
Hysell said findings have since been repaid and the
Tl)e problem: the village can not afrord to replace the
;pointed•out several funds having expenditures exceeding
The following fin\lings were issued: .
,
situation that resulted in .the findings corrected. .
,old meters with ()nes in proper working condition.
;appropriations. including the street construction fund;
• $263.38 against Village Administrator John AnderConcerning the fir~t finding, Hysell said she and
The audit also found no violations of applicable com. :;maintenance and 'repair fund, fire levy fund, fire truck sqn and the C&amp;A Insurance Company to the water rev- other village officials do not know what happened. peiitive bidding requirements.
·
;fund, cemetery fund and law enforcement trust fund.
enue and sanitary sewer furid for discrepancies in Ander· Coupcil President John Musser called it "strictly a com·
"These transactions were subjected to a detailed auilit
.: The general fund and fire truck fund were fQund to son's residential 'water usage and' the amount billed puler. glitch" 'and indicated there was no intention of of compliance with such requirements," the repon stated.
'. have appropriations in excess of the amount ccnified by between June, 1994, and January. 1996. ·
wrong-doing.
· ·Overall, Hysell was satisfied with the audit.
,: the county budget commission and the mayor's coun
• $400 against the village's ·general fund in favot of
Numerous deficiencies were also pointed out by the
"I feel great. We've had a really great audit," she said,
:was found to be co)lecting stale costs for non-moving
explaining prior audits have generally been worse. ·

Ohio

Hooting aDtl Cooli..,., 1.....
St. Rt. 7 Chester, Ohio

lodian.polis
·Missouri Sout:hllfn State

• Abilene cnnstian

·,

audit that resulted only in 'suggesti~S' for·
improVing operations, not in citations or

WARNER

13
19

North.. stBm OkllhOma

29

oro

ArllanNs·Mont ~teiiO

Vol. 31, No. 37

.

• 10

Manll•o State
Soolh Dakota 51•'Miaaour1 Wastarn

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • October 20, 1996

·.SUNDAY
...------------------,
Notebook

992-3671

21

Ohio NortMm

Other Games - South • Southwest
Angelo State

:ey JIM FREEMAN
.Timea-Senllnel Stefl

5 sp, air, cass.

10

17

pageA2

Pomeroy clerk: 'We've had a really great audit'

r

. :~ Parkersburg
:! •
SENTRA XE

7

21

23
20
38

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

6

. Monmouth (Ill,)
• Gfinntll

27

W1t1enberg

7

· • Richmorld

' St. Frantl's (Pa )
Dav•dson

North Oe.kota
• North Dakota State
Northem Colorado

BANK

J• ..................................

21

28
t7
20

Whea1011

10

' l;'oston U.
• Morehouse
Hlmois Sune
• Southern·Baton Rouge
. Samford

,.

"22

liuJgston

FARMERS

.•
.· · .

10

Pa~

at Purdue . Page 81

.t mes·

13
7

Culver·Stodllon
Otterbein
• Mici·America NNII'file
Sterling '
·
Lab F"ore~t

OS~

•

18

35

25
23

Washburn

"•
10

• Middle T111nllEI&amp;688 Stale
Citadel
• Holy Cross

Hillsdale
' Iowa Wesley•"

North

Details on

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,. $11,995

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Georgetown
Murray State

· Delaware State

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Fems State
Frankhn
Fnends
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• Northerr1 Michiljan

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Arsenic and

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Miami (Ohio)
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ESTABLISHED IN 1913

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Arizona State
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