<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8970" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/8970?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T04:07:32+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19398">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/1237512ee599519d3d2ba4e7d1666999.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2fd8ca602f9810aee1bb47570188ef0c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28874">
                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Oriol~s

top
·Indians 4-2,
force sixth
tllt~t Baltimore

J
,I

I

I

Pick 3:
622
Pick 4:

4771

••I

I

Buckeye 5:

Sports on Page 4

8-9-16-17-36

Clear tonight, froet
po11lble. Wednaeday,
partly cloudy. High In
upper 50s .

•
..

1111

·JIIr.
. I

.....

f.....
tll

~.41,NO.

128

2 Seellone, 12 Page~, 35 centa ·

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio; Tuesday, October 14, 1997

C1 IW, Ohio V.ll-v Publlllhlng Com pony

AGinnen Co.-.,....

Commis$ioners hear.medical transfer gripes
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Nawe Staff
.
A system for handling medical transfers by personnel of Meigs County
Emergency Services was discussed Monday morning by the Meigs County
Commissioners, EMS personnel and management at Veterans Memonal Hospital.
The commissioners met with Robert Byer, administrator of Meigs EMS,
Hospital Administrator Scott Lucas, VMH Director of Nursing Director
Rhonda Dailey and various EMS volunteers and trustees prior to their regular meeting yesterday morning, to discuss continuing problems with staffing
transfer squads.
·
The meeting was called and conducted by Prosecuting Attorney John
Lentes.
Transfers are often deemed necessary at the hospital when a patient
requir~s more intensive and immediate medical care than the hospital is able
to administer after the patient is stabilized.
With the exception of the EMS central dispatch squad, which is staffed
by paid personnel, emergency squads arc staffed by trained volunteers which
operate in local communities.
.
When a transfer is necessary from the hospital to another hosp1tal, or from
a hospital to a nursing home, state law requires that the EMS department
staff·an ambulance with tw&lt;, licensed medics, who are paid an hourly rate
of $8.10 plus a per diem on-call rate of $15.
·
The central dispatch unit, referred to as "Medic Four," is used to back up
yolunteer squads on emergencies in the field. a~d are not used for transfers,
Byer said.
·
'
The problem facing the hospital, a•:cordi!)!PO Dailey. is that, oft~n, qual·
ilied medics are not available to respond to a transfer call at the hospttal when

needed, lea.ving a patient in need of transfer to another hospital waiting untir
a medic becomes available. or until a commercial transfer service, by land
or by air•. is dispatched to the scene -- usually from Columbus.
Dailey noted one incident in which a patient awaited a transfer from the
VMH emergency room for six hours, before an ambulance from Wood County, W.Va. was dispatched. .
According to Byer, money is a primary concern to the EMS department,
which receives approximately $320,000 in levy funds for emergency and
transfer services. Costs of 1ransferring patients is reimbursed by insurance,
Medicare and Medicaid. although the cost far exceeds the reimbursement.
Dyer said.
"Medic Four operations have already cut into our budget," Byer said. "We
don't feel that we can take aw~y any more from the volunteer departments.
There aren't enough volunteers to run a volunteer system and we JUSt can't
dedicate any more vehicles or people to serve one facility."
Dailey, meanwhile, says that the frequent lack of transfer services from
EMS puts patients at risk, and affects the service provided by the VMH emergency room.
"An emergency is an emergency, whether it's at a medical facility or not.
When someone needs to use our facility, and they can't be transferred out
when necessary, an emergency room ceases to exist."
"Because these patients are forced to wait, sometimes three and four hours,
we're going to be offering a level of care that is not standard," Dailey said.
"We can't be all things to all people," Dailey said in response to some of
the volunteers' criticism of the hospital, "This is the reality of operating a
small, rum! facility. You don't have an orthopedic surgeon waiting for a
patient. You don't have a medical surgeon waiting to do an appendectomy.
We can't represent ourselves to the county as something we're not. In these

cases, our job is to treat, stabilize and transfer the patient to another 'facili ~
ty for treatment."
·
As a solution to the problem , Byer offered funds to the hospital to prnvide an on·call registered nurse to staff a transfer squad at the same rate that
EMS pays its medics, on the condition that the fun~s to make up the· difference in a nurse's wages be paid from another source .
According to Dailey, the starting wage for a registered nurse at VeteransMemorial is $11.75.
Daile)' said that she would begin immediately to assemble a team of R.N.'s
to Staff the squad, although Administrator Lucas said that the hospital wa.'
unable to finance the additional cost of providing 24-hour on call nurses for
the sole purpose nf transferring patients. turning to the commissioners for
some sort of funding solution .
The commissioners plan a meeting with Lucas. Dailey and EMS rcprc:
scntativcs in order to work out arrangements for improved transfer services
later this week.
.
·
At_1hcir regular rnccting yesterday afternoon, the l:ommi!\!'. ioncrs agreed
to appropriate $3 ,000 in their 1998 general fund for the Meigs County Youth
Soccer progr~m . The funds will he used as a local match for a grant application being submitted for the program. The funds will he used for licld
improvement and equipment. according to Maureen HennessY, who requested the funds at last week's mcclin g.
·
The board also created i new budgetary line item for Community Development Block Grant funds in the amount of $70,000, received under the
CDBG imminent threat program for repairs to Roy Jones Road. and approved
payment of bills in the amo~nt of $157,489.65, with 195 entries .
.
Present, in addition to Howard, were Commissioners Jcfl' Thornton and
Fred Hoffman, and Clerk Gloria Klocs.

--Work begins---- Reedsville man among local Promise Keepers
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Nawa Staff
.
Meigs County sent
its own representatives to the Promise
Keepers assembly in Washington,
D.C. on October 4.
Buses carrying men from
throl!ghout Meigs County depatUd
early Saturday moming for .,,he
assembly, which is being called the
largest single ·gathering in the history of this country,
Promise Keepers is a semiannual gathering of men who pledge
spiritual unity and moral purity for
the benefit of their families and communities. The nationwide gathering
on the Mall in Washington, D.C. .
called "Stand in the Gap," resulted in
a gathering of several hundred thousand men of all Christian denominations for a day-long presentation of
speakers.
The movement was foundcd by Bill McCartney, a former
coach who experienced problems
within his own family.
Mark Smith of Reedsville,
who attends thi!Scventh Street United Methodist Church in Parkersburg. W.Va .. traveled to the gathering

·alliER

'
, ..,,.
..........
,.

group does not oppose women in any
way."
'
Those promises. according
to material distributed at the event,
arc:
- a commitment to honor

Jesus Christ through worship, prayer
and obedience lo God's Word, in the
~· of lb!&gt;.W.~$pio;jlt - - A commitment to pursue
vital relationships with a few other
men, understanding that a man needs
brothers to help him keep his pr,omis-

cs;
- A commitment tn practice
spiritual. moral, ethical and sexual
purity:
·
- A commitment to build
strong marriages ami families
through love. protection and hihl ical
values:
- A commitment to support
MARK SMITH
, the mission of the local church hy inOucnce his world, being obedient to ·
llonoring and praying for the pastor the Great Commandment and the
and by activelY . giving time and Great Commission.
"There is nothing wrong
resources;
- A commitment to reach with the idea that men need to stand
beyond racial and denominational up and be responsible." Smith said.
barriers to demonstrate the power of "We need to take care of our families
biblical unity:
·
and our communities, and that's whal
- and a commitment to Promise KeeperS is all about"

Bridges
Senators take up CiJUSe topic of
that took Ohio to c'purt · Middleport
as
Council

l'al:llallllllar,

•lllll...llllal

AS

lOW
AS

WA,SHINGTON (AP) - Ohio's
beef about government meat-inspection rules is getting attention1on Capitol Hill, where more sciilllllrs have
taken up the cause.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, has
introduced legislation lifting the federal ban on interstate shipment of
state-inspected meat. ·
"The ban ... has clearly outlived
its purpose," said Hatch. "Instead of
protecting the health of our citizens,
it only stiOcs competition in the meatpacking industry and impounds the
available market to state-inspected
plimts."
•
Under current law. .people in the
~cat busincli.s can choose between

having their facilities inspected by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture or by

I

their slate, using slate inspection
pmgrams certified
being at least
equal to federal standards. ·
Plants must limit' distribution to
within their state's borders if they
choose state inspct:tion.
, Federal regulators have been re-

examining the inspection law to
determine whether changes in USDA
ru Jcs are necessary.
Hatch's bill. introduced last week,
was the latest attempt to alter the law.
Ohio has filed n lawsuit contending its industry has been fouled by a
bias against plants that choose cheaper state inspcctaons.
Twenty-six states do their own
meat inspections, examining the
products of about 3.000 establishments
'

State development director
Jakeway takes Toledo post
COLUMBUS (AP) - The director of the Ohio Department of Development intends to resign to take over
as president of the. Toledo area's main
economic development agency.
Donald Jakeway, development
director since 1990, was chosen as
president an~ chief executive of the
Toledo Regional Growth Partnership on Monday, Gov. George
Voinovich's office announced Monday.
Jakewa~ will be replaced by
Joseph Robertson, assistant director
for
economic
dev'el'opment .
Voinovich 'spokesman Mike Dawson
said he believed the transition would
take place in December.
"I wish Don only the best in his

J

with over 800 Parkersburg-area men,
and found the experience to be
rewarding.
''It was amazing," Smith
said. "Just seeing that many people in
one place for the same purpose, all
getting along, was really impressive."
In . the past, Smith has
ane.nde6'1'other .Pwmise .,_K-eeper•
events for three years, including a
large gathering in Cincinnati last
spring.
· In addition to Smith, at least
one bus carrying other men from
. Meigs County churches traveled to
the capital for the event.
The gathering received its
share of ·criticism from women's
rights organizations, including allegations that the movemenl promotes
male doll)inance in family relation·
ships.
This, according to Smith, is
a false accusation.
"There is noihing in the
Promise Keepers set of promises that
takes away from the importance of
women," Smith, a husband and father
of two, said. "Anyone who reads the
seven promises of the Promise Keepers organization can see that the

new position," Voinovich said in a
news release. " He has .. . spearheaded Ohio's successful economic development efforts. I know he will bring
the same energy 'and drive to his new
position in Toledo."
Voinovich said Robertson was
picked to head the department
because of his expertise in economic development projects . Robertson
·was responsible for the daily opera·
tions of the department 's economic
development, technological innovation, international trade, and travel
and tourism operations.
Jakeway will succeed Rick Wed·
die, who left this summer for a sim·
ilar position in Phoenix.

'
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newt Staff
Two bridges, the Hobson Bridge
and Pomeroy-Mason Bridge were
among ' the subjects discussed at
Monday night's meeting of Middleport Village Council.
Mayor Dewey "Mac~" Horton
presented council with n letter from
the Meigs County Board of Com·
missioners concerning the county's
contracting with the cn ~incering lirm
of Korda/Nemeth Engineering. Inc.
of Columbus for $7t. .432 to study
replacement of the t obson Bridge
over Leading Crock.
The replacement prpjcct is being
Tundi:d with federal rroney administered through the Hcigs County
Highway Department.
Replacement of the bridge will
take at least three years, or sometime
, . around the year 2000, according to
' County Engineer Rober1 Eason.
"That's the way federal money
flows ," Eason said.
The aging span was a subject of
some oebate in the past between village and county oflicials with each
group maintaining the other was
responsible for replacement.
In addition, council discussed the
planned replacement or the PomeroyMason Bridge which connects the
communities of Pomeroy, Mason,
W.Va., and Middleport .
Council members said they have
seen surveyors workins in the Kerrs
Run area of Pomeroy and expressed
concern that the state may be con-

•

BRIDGE DISCUSSION ·The Hobson Bridge
and P«H:Mroy·Maeon Bridge ware among the
llama dlecuued at Mondlty's maatlng of Middleport VIllage Council. Hera, Mayor Dewey
• Meek' Horton shows paperwork from the
Melge County Board of Commlllloners con·
sidering that location for the bridge.
Pomeroy and Middleport officials
earlier indicated the replacement
bridge should be built at or near the
existing bridge site,
Ohio Department of Transportation spoke~woman Nancy Pedigo
said this morning that surveyors have
been examining the Kerrs Run area,
but added the workers will also
examine the existing bridge site and
that no decision has been made as to
where the new bridge will be placed.
A brief, but heated discussipn
O\'er what 1ype of decals should be
used to identify village vehicles ..

cemlng thtl
of an engineer to study
replacement of the Hobson Bridge. Show are,
from left: Council members Rae Gwlazdow1ky,
Steve Houchins and John Neville, Horton and
Clerklfreasurer Bryan Swann.

adhesive or magnetic .. preceded the a request hy coun, iiLO mark the vehicle a.&lt; a village \'chicle, purchased a
paying of bills. ·
Council members Eric Chambers. sci of mngnctic decals. Browning said
Steve Houchins and Sandy Iannan:!· he purchased the magnetic decals
li voted that only adhesive decals because he is planning to rotate th~
should be used, as opposed to mag - car out of village inventory and uid
netic decals which can be peeled or not want to buy additional adhesive
blown off. Council members Rae decals which can not he reu&gt;ed.
Stivers said she disagreed with the
Gwiazdowsky. John Neville and Beth
.,Stivers voted against the measure. way Chambers removed the bill for
Horton .broke the tie with a 'no' vole the decals from t~e village garage
meaning mai\P"tic markings arc also where he had found it.
During open disc ussion, Chamacceptable.
Discussion focused on a village bers said he was asked why the vilcar driven by Village Administrator lage did not shut off water service to
Bill Browning. Browning, acting on
Continued on pawe 3

�The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, October 14,1997
\

'CO!f1m6ntary

OHIO Weather

Page2

'

WedtM!MIJy, ()d. 15

TutiUy, October 14, 1997

condtllons and

AccuWeather• fom:ut for

Joseph H. Sisson

MICH

Reno's performance seems puzzling

The Dally ~entinel

By TONY SNOW

CI'MtOI'I Syndlcllte

'Esta6fisMtf Ill 1948

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

•

Spats between U.S. and
Canada are getting louder
WASHINGTON (AP)- The nc1ghborly spats between the Umtcd States
and Canada arc gcumg louder But despuc the· 1rntan1s and d1fferences" as Sccrelal)' of State Madcleme Albnght calls them - offic1als pronounce
the rela1tonsh1p sound
Prestdcnt Clinton 1s threatemng sw11t relallauon tf the Cannd1ans cannot
control thCif West' Coast salmon fishermen Canad1an diplomats are makmg
hclhcose slatcments ahout a new U S tmm•gralton law they say will create
17-hour long backups at busy border·crossmg pomts
The Canad1ans were not happy when the Umted States sought an exemp·
11on 10 an mlcmauonaltrealy banmng an11personnelland mmes Canada had
taken the lead m pushmg the treaty
Also. !here are d1sputes mvolvmg wheat. m1lk, eggs and magazmes.
11 s like commg back from vacation and there's a stack of knotty tssues
you d1d not expect to have to deal wuh,' satd Charles Doran. a Canada spe·
cmhsl and professor of mtematlonal relations at Johns Hopkms UmvefSity
"If they are not resolved they need to he addressed so thmgs don't fester"
Canad1an Ambassador Raymond Chretien agreed 11 has been a rough
summer, but he has seen worse
" In 1994. we were fightmg over trade and lumber and u got very nasty
for a while. " Chret1en recalled "Good sense prevailed then and we'll get
these problems resolved, too, because relations are generally good."
After meetmg w1th Canadian Fore1gn Affatrs Mm1ster Lloyd Axwonhy
1"\1 month, Secretary of State Madclcmc Albnght sa1d, "There are Irritants
and d1fferences, but those can he managed."
Despne the differences. Axwonhy sa1d. "there are so many fronts where
thmgs are gomg well "
Two members of Congress who come from border states are working to
· reverse the effects of a new law that requtres Canad1ans to fill out tmmtgralton documents or have a registered "sman card" every time they cross the
border
Sen Spencer Abraham, R-Mtch .. wants Canadtans exempted from the
1rnm•gratwn law It was des•gned to crack down on foretgners who come to
the United States legally as tourists and stay tile gaily past then 90-day hmtl
,
"The bill has some unmtcnded consequences I ""\confident we can over• come and the sooner the better," satd Rep. John Lafalce. 0-N.Y.. who rep... resents the Buffalo-Ntagara Falls area "One dtfficuhy we have IS that most
Americans and most members of Congress have no expenence hvmg on the
border or crossmg u. I must have crossed it a lhousand umes or more."
To those who say the Umted States should treat all countnes. mcludmg
southern netghbor Me~1co, equallY, I:;aFalce sa1d "There's a world of dtfference between the Umtcd States and Canada and the United States and
other countnes .. It may be hard for a congressman from Tei&lt;.as to understand that."
In 1966, there were 116 m1lhon md1v1dual border crossmg&gt; between
Canada and the Unned States Of those about 76 mtlhon were by Canadians, some res1dmg 10 the Unned States In addmon. more than $1 b111ion m
goods and serv1ccs cross the border each day. creaung an cnonnous now of
traffic
·.t1
Tempers m the two countncs llarcd dunng lhe summer when Canad1an
. fishcnncn blocked an Alaskan ferry lull nltounst&gt;
•

Barry's World
•

•

WASHINGTON •• The recent
behavior or Attorney General Janet
Reno confinns what many in the
nat1on 's capital have suspected all
along: The ch1ef, and perhaps sole,
occupat1on of people in Camp Clinton is the production, distribution
and sale of excuses for the Pres1dent
of the Umted States.
Republicans have challenged
Reno many limes to appoint an mdependent counsel to explore the glonous malfeasances of the 1996 Clinton-Gore campatgn, but she has
rebuffed them at every tum. She has
offered a welter of JUStificatiOns •.
many of them contradictory and specious ·• but now she has co~ved a
legal theory that seems ce in to
grant the pres1dent safe ha r no
matter what
She ha.' told prosecutors they
may not probe allcgat1ons of Wh1tc
House wrongdomg unless they have
solid proof of gu11t She has ordered
FBI agents to aven thelf eyes from
While House coffees, Chmese infiltrauons. the apparent sale of access
to an tnternauonal fugutve and several documented schemes for evadIng campa.gn spendmg hmlls
TranslatiOn Sec no cv1l
Reno has augmented th1s oider
wuh another bu of lcgcrdemam. Sbe
mcthodtcally has blocked off posii-

j

By Sara Eckel
backmg from the Promtse Keepers h'as been that
"The first thtng you do IS sll
the hkes of men have lost their way and that
down wtth your wtfe and say someJerry Falwell, they must work hard 10 be better
thmg hke th1s 'Honey, I made a terPat Robenson husbands and fathers.
nble mtstake I've gtven you my
of the Chnst·
Being a man. say the group's
role. I gave up leadmg th1s family.'
1an Coalition, leaders, is not aboul mnkmg a lot of
I'm not suggestmg you ask for your
and
James money or logging in masSive hours
role back, I'm urgmg you to take 11
of at work. It is about hctng anenttve to
Dobson
back. There can he no compromises
Focus on the your famtly.
here. If you are gmng 10 lead, you
Fam1ly
Thts ts unarguably a good thmg • •
must lend Be scnsmvc Ltsten Treat
And it IS · and probably the reason that many·
Eckel
that lady gently and lovmgly. But
tmportant
to women have urged then lwsbands to
lead "··Ton~ Evans m "The Seven
know that thetr attend Prom1sc Keepers rallies.
Prom1ses of a Prom1se Keeper"
leader. Bill McCartoey. has sa1d
I also thmk thai 1t's heancnmg to
It 1s statements like thiS that have lhtngs hke lhts "We're rmsmg our sec men taktng some respon&gt;1bihty
caused lemmtst orgamzat10ns great ch1ldren m an effeminate soctcty. lor some of society's ills -· rather
concern over the nse of the PromiSe It's not a proper chmatc "
than potnting the finger somewhere
Keepers, the rapodly growmg evan·
However, I do not share NOW's else.
gelical Chns11an men 's group that alann over the PromiSe Keepers
And I'm glad to sec men trymg .to
recently met m Washmgton
Because as much a.• I thmk the orga- redefmc the 1dca of mascuhm\y.
Groups hkc the Nauonal Organi- nllallon should be v1ewed w1th a Women's lives have undergone
zatiOn for Women have provtdcd a wary eye. I don't thtnk we should tremendous change durmg the pa•l
valuable servtcc by vmcmg some condemn them JUst yet
30 years. and thts has necessarily
skeptiCism about an orgam1.at1on
The Promtse Keepers have 10ncd had a strong 1mpact on men. So I
that has rcce1ved largely favorable down the master-of-the-household • thmk an attempt by men to deal wnh
aucnuon by the mamstrcam press
rhclonc of late, though whether 11 thiS can be a poSitive thmg
Because 11 IS tmponant to ~now was out of poh11cal savvy or a gcnAnd anyway, 1f the Prom1sc
that although Promtsc Keepers umc reVISIOn of their ph1losophy IS Keepers' miSston IS to turn back the
cla1ms to be a nonpohucal organ11a- sull unclear.
clock, they wtlllatl.
11on, they have received fmanctal AI any rate. the stated message of Women arcn 't gmng back lo a sub-

•
•

.....
•

..

.. Today
'
in
his
tory
f
4

By The Associated Prell
_
Today·~ Tuesday, Oct 14. the 287th day of 1997 There are 78 Jays left
10 the year.
Today's H1ghhght'" H1s10ry
Ftfty years ago. on Oct 14, 1947. A~r Force test pilot Charles E "Chuck..
Yeager became the first person to break the sound barner as he new the
expenmental Bell X-I rocket plane over Edwards Atr Force Base in Califorma
On th 1s dale '
In 1066. Normans under W1lham the Conqueror defealed !he Enghsh at
the Banle of Hastmgs
In 1890, Dw1ght D. Etsenhower. 34th prcstdcnl of the United States. was
born m Den1&lt;on, Texas
ln 1912. Theodore Roosevelt, campa1gnmg for the prestdency, was shot
in the chest '" Milwaukee Despite the wound, he went ahead wuh a schedulcd speech
'
In 1933. Nazt Germany announced n was wlthdrawmg from the League
of Nat1ons
In 1944 German Fteld Marshal Erwm Rommel committed su•c•de rather
lhan face e~ecution for alfegedly consp~nng againsl Adolf Hnler
In 1960, the 1dea of a Peace Corps was first suggested by DemocratiC
pre!ldenual candidate John F Kennedy to an aud1ence of students at the
Untversuy of M•chtgan
In 1964. ciVIl nghts leader M8l1m Luther Kmg Jr was named wmner of
the Nobel Peace Prize

'

boss. F1111hennore. she knows th&amp;l
some people linked closely to the
president broke the 1aw •• an01her
condtlion that triggers appotnung a
spectal prosecutor.
Second, the Federal Elecuon
Campaign Act says a prestdcnual
candtdate who accepts taxpayer
funds cannot supplement h1s war
chest wtth pnvate donattons in
excess of those penmued by the
statute. CongressiOnal commntees
have memorandums, stgned and
checked by the prestdent. that not
only urge htm to break the law, but
descnbe spectfically how he would
do so.
Amencans may not care about
the fine legal tssucs of th1s scandal,
but they're begmmhg 10 gel riled up
by what they cons1der clear breaches of good ta&lt;te. Th1s president has
invned into his mncr sanctum a
swarm of lowlifes and mountebanks
·· hatchet men, cromes. private
dicks and a felon or two
As for Reno, people have liltl!i,.
patience for blockheads who ret us"
to acknowledge what everybody
else platnly sees. House Judic1ary
Commlltee Chairman Henry Hyde
plans to put her on the sptl dunng a
hcarmg thts Wednesday and ask
Why docs she mvcst1gate Rcpubli·
cans but not Democrats'&gt; Why hasn't
her staff completed even prehmtnary tnterv1ews wtth posstble suspects'? And why can't she get mov·
mg agamsl obvious v10lnt10ns of the
law 1
This w1ll make for good drama -the nuorney foldtng herself up like a
praying manus. chafmg at all
assaults on her mtcgnty; Hyde mix.
mg affabtlity and rage·· butn won't
accomphsh anythmg new. When the
final gavel bangs. Reno wtll shuffic
out of the hearmg room, tunhcr
dimmtshcd by the procecdmgs And
the president wtll bless hts good fortunc. knowmg that she had jomed
the long hst of characters who sacnficed the If reputations for h1s sms

' 1 !

!l

tj

I

INO.

growmg trade '"contraband Cigars
large Cuban
communuy, M1am• has long been a ceotcr for anu-Casti'O' '1Cntllncnt. But
that hasn't stopped many Aond1ans
from trymg to make a buck off
Cuba"&lt; rcputauon as the producer of
the world's best ctgars.
.
Last year, Customs olf1c1als
se1zed more than $1 m1Ihon worth of
Cuban ctgars, or four umes as many
as were se1zed JUSt two years carhcr.
But Customs offic1als we spoke
with say the popularity of Cuban
ctgars has also created another probtern for tobacco-lovers counterfeit
Cubans
A box of good Cuban cigars can
cost as much as $300 1n Cuba
Smugglers must of course also
woOl)' about bnngmg 1hc1r contraband mto the Unlled States, where'
they can .charge many umes that
amount for the premmm smokes
Wnh pnces so htgh. n comes as
no surpnse that some enterpnsmg

fro~~hu~~

e~•lc

con
artists
have
begun
takmg
lessc~penSive ctg·
ars and selhng
them
as
Cubans. SliD·
ply by putung
on lake labels 1nc1 A - . n
'Most
buyers
would never know the dtfference •·
until they hght up thelf ilhcit smoke.
The profit margins for sellers IS
cnonnous Instead of gmng to the
trouble of bnngtng In expenSIVe Clg·
ars, they enJOY fantaslic mark-ups by
peddhng cheap tmitauons at premt·
urn pnccs.
Cuban ctgars .. hke all products
from !hat country .• have been 1Uegal 1n Amenca stnce 1963, when
Prcstdent John F. Kennedy Imposed
an embargo on !hat Communtst
country. But accordmg lo Kennedy
atde Pterre Salinger, the Clgar-Iov•ng
late prestdent bought about 1.000
Cuban smokes before announcmg
the embargo.
And ever smce then, the wealthy
or well-connected have still man·
aged to get then hands on Cubans A
loophole m the embargo allows
Amertcans VISitmg Cuba to bnng
home up to SI 00 worth of the
smokes. whtch ts conf1dered enough 1
for personal use Others gel their fi ~
by bnngmg !hem m from other
counlnes, wh1ch don't have any
bans on Cuban products
J

Even Customs offic1als somettmcs gel mto the act B11l Anthony,
the director of public affn1rs for the
Customs Scrvtce m Washington,
likes a good Cuban ctgar as much as
anyone He recently got the chance
to sample the forbtdden frutt when
he attended the wedding of h1s old
fnend and roommate, Rep Dana
Rohrabachcr, R~Calif.. tn France.
Anthony's mdulgence was com·
plctely legal. and he says he avmded
any temptatton lo bring some home
w1th h1m But he dtd confess 10 us
that there arc piCtures Of htm Ol the
weddmg enjoymg one of F1dcl Castro's finest expons He added that he
look the label off before the picture
was snapped, lest anyone get the
wrong tdca about Customs' commument to enforcmg the embargo.
Customs offic1als also note that
catching e~gar smugglers takes a
back sear to enforcing drug. tmml·
grauon and money-laundcnng laws,
the day -to-day actiVIties that make
South Florida one of the busiest
Customs outposts
UNDER THE DOME ·- The congress1onal debate over "last-track"
trade legislauon IS deshned to
become a bellwether 1ssuc for any
Democ:ral who hopes to succeed
Pres1dent Chnton m the Wh1te
House when h•s tenn ex piles m
three years
Most Dem(l!:rats hate the fasttrack approach, whtch gtves ihe
prestdent Juthorny to nejloUate

1

-

·---

Greenspan Issues warning against
controls over global investmer1ts

W VA.

{)
Showell T-110nn!l Rain

Flumes Snow

lefl

Sunny Pt Clou&lt;ly Clo::iy

Via Associated Pre5S GrlphicsNtlt

Today's weather forecast
areas Lows tn the 30s.
Wedne~day.. Panty to mostly sunOhio
Frost warning tomght. Except ny and cool H1gh 1n the 50s
Extended forecast
frost advtsory near the lake
Thursday A chance of showers.
Today Becommg partly to mostLows
m the 30s. Htghs in the 50s
ly sunny west A chance of a mornFrtday. Fatr Lows 10 the 30s
mg shower nonheast ... Bccommg
H1ghs
m the 50s
panly sunny thts afternoon. Cooler.
Saturday
Fair Lows m the mtd
H1ghs m the 50s to lower 60s.
Jo,
to
lower
40s
H•ghs 55 to 60
Tomght Clear to p8llly cloudy
and qune cool with frost likely mo"
By The AIIOCIIIed Preas

Cold front moves across Ohio;
frost warning issued for tonight
~

By The A1socleted Prell

'

WASHJNGTON (AP) - Step- and IndoneSia, underscored the finanptng mto a debate Qver the best way Cial problems that can qutckly stoke
to handle future currency cnses, Fed- when sentiment suddenly changes
eral Reserve Chainnaft Alan and mvestors stampede to remove
Greenspan warned today that it thetr money from a pantcular counwould be a mtstake to impose con- try
MalaySian
Pnme Mtmster
trols on the billions of dollars of
Mahathtr
Mohammad
last month
mvestments made dady by traders
threatened to clamp controls on foraround the world.
Greenspan's comments, prepared e•gn currency tradmg and blamed h1s
for a semmar on globalmvestments, country's !roubles on currency specrepresented his most e~tens1ve ulators such as George Soros
review of the financtal tunnotl that
Whtle he did not mention
has engulfed several Astan countnes Mahathtr by name, Greenspan sa1d
thiS year.
any effons to tmpose restncuons or
Greenspan conceded that the controls on financtal flows would
speed at whtch investors can send likely have "adverse, umntended
money in ,and out of a country has consequences "
been accelerated by computers and
He sa1d the b1ggest danger would
global communications networks, be that mvestors woul~ be les$ hke·
but he satd 11 would be imposSible 10 ly to put up the money developmg
reven to a simpler ume.
nattons need to produce JObs
"We cannot tum back the dock on
Rather, Greenspan urged that techteellnology and we should not try to nology be used to contam the new
do so." he sa1d 10 rema&lt;ks to a day- messes on financtal market by
long semmar at the Cato lnsmutc. a enhanc1ng the ab11ity of a country\s
Washmgton think-tank.
banks kl detect bad loans and
Greenspan satd the mcreased flow tmprove the quahty of stat1st1cs govof mvestmcnt from one country to ernment agcnc1es release
another has worked to the benefit of .
Greenspan satd thatm the case •of
developtng natiOns, provtdmg them both Me&lt;~co and Thmland, not
w1th needed money to bUild roads, enough accurate economtc informaports and other infrastructure and tion was released m a umely manner
ra1se the standard of lmng lor thctr to head off a financtal cnsts
"Such disclosure would help to
cmzens
Greenspan sa1d the 1994-95 peso avotd sudden and sharp reversals in
cnsiS '" Mexico and more recently the mvcslmcnt posit tons of Investors
the severe currency turmmlthat has once they become aware of the true
struck several Southeast Astan status of a country's and a bankmg
nations. mcludmgThatland, MalaySia system's financml health. " he smd

LouiSiana
•
The Nauonal Weather Servtce has ,JI) Today's ratn was expected to he
1ssued a frost-warnmg for tomght for more scattered m the Nonheast and
must ot Ohio A frost adv1sory wtll be m•d·Atlanuc states
m effect for areas near Lake Enc.
H1gh pressure neatOk!ahoma and
A h1gh pressure system wtll com- along the Utah- W,yomtng border
bme w1th clear sk1es to make the cold brought fatr and dry weather to much
alf felt across the state Lows w11l he of the central Umted States and the
between 30 and 35 wtth wtdespread West Fatr and cool weather was on
frost hkely Rcadmgs wtll stay tn the tap throughout the Ohio Valley and
upper 30s wnh scattered frost near lower MisSISSippi Valley
Lake Ene
A trough of low pressure was
Units of the Metgs County EmerSunshme will return Wednesday, e~pected 10 swmg through the Great
gency Medtcal Servtce recorded I 0
butt! Will rcmnm cool wtth htghs 1n Lakes durmg the day. producmg
calls for asststance Monday. Umts
the 50s
scattered snow showers, mamly over
L1ghtto moderate ram fell across upper Mtchtgan. No Slgmficant accu- respondmg mcluded.
thc slate overn1ght. Ramfall amounts mulatmns were e1pected s1ncc CENTRAL DISPATCH
7 22 a.m , Overbrook Nursmg
were acnerally from one-quaner to ground
. temperatures are well above Center, M1ddlepon, Lawrence Stewone-half mch
frecztng.
Some hght rain hngcred m the cast
H•ghs were forecast in the 60s and art, Holzer Med•cal Center, Middlewh1le colder ntr was ftltertng m from 70s ahead of the cold front 10 the poll squad asSISted;
9 36 am . Manuel Road, Lc1an
•' the west Temperatures fell mto the Nonhcast and mid-Atlantic, nsmg to
40s but were still m the 50s tn pans lhc. 70s and 80s m the Southeasl As Falls, Eva Lawson, refused treatment,
ol 1n the west whtlc some 50s were the froni passed thr(lugh, wmds were • Racme squad aSSisted,
I I 0 I a m.. Vme Street, Racme,
st1llthc cast
expected to shtft and bnlll) much
Ronald
Han, Veterans Memonal
The record h1gh temperature for cooler ntr by mghUlme
Racme squad assisted,
Hospnal,
thts dale ut the Columbus weather
In the M1dwcst, htghs were
3:43 p m., South Thtrd Avenue,
stat1on was 86 degrees tn 1897 The expected frolh the upper 30s in
Middleport.
Bobby Burnhtmer.
record low was 28 degrees 10 198R M1ch1gan to the 40s and 50s in the
HMC.
Mtddleport
squad asSISted.
, Sunset w1ll he at 6 54 p m Sunnsc Oh10 Valley. and rcachtng tnto the
60s and low 70s 10 the lower MISsts1 wtll he at 7·42 am Wednesday
A.cross the nation
Sippi Valley
A cold front movmg cast today
H•ghs were forecast rangmg from
1
brought scattered showers and a few 1he 50s .md 60s 10 the nonhcrn Platns Homecoming/revival
Revtval
wtll
he
held
Thursday
to
thunderstorms trom Ma10c to .md Northwcstlo the 70s 1n the south·
Lnu1S1ana. wh1lc the day dawned lalf ern Plums and the 90s m the•South- Sunday, 7 p m. ntgbtly at Corner
Stone Gospel Church on Chase Road,
o\'cr mo" ol the rest olthc country. west
Heavy ram was lorecasl along the
The h1ghest rcadmg Monday 10 Albany, with Evangelists Rev. Hersouthern end of the cold fronl lrom the Lower 4M slates was 91 ot Long man and Audrey Tranter and Rev
Georg1a tn Louts lana. That end olthe Beach and Santee, Cahf. and St. Ronntc Tranter. Homecommg wtll he
front was also the most act1ve Mon, Petersburg. Fla. Alamosa, Colo.. had Sunday. 10 am With a carry-m dmday forcmg I 112 to 2 mches of ram a mommg low of 13. while Glend1vc, ncr at I p m Pubhc ts welcome
on locauons from MemphiS Tcnn .I&lt;&gt; Mont. had a wmdch1ll ofmmus-16.
Racine Trick or Treat
Tnck or Treat m the VIllage of

Meigs EMS logs 10 calls

.

mtss•ve role. no matter how much
some men w1sh we would,
The Promtsc Keepers may well
be a'wolf in sheep's clolhmg .. the
stgns arc dcfimtcly there Ncvenheless. they have a r1ght to gather
peacefully and thrash out thctr
ISsues. And 1f the1r conclusum IS that
they want to he fauhful to thetr
WIVeS and attenllVC lO thCif Children,
then I don •t th1nk many American
women really have a pmblcm wuh
that
'
Fnmnote . Arc ' you a PromiSe
Keeper 1 Let me know your v1cws on
this ISSUC
Is 11 your contcntmn that men
should he the heud of the household'' Or arc Just you JUst lrymg to
he a better husband and father?
Wruc to me at Newspaper Enter·
pnsc Assocmlum , 200 Mndtson
Ave .. New York, NY 10016, or send
c-ma1l to saracumaol cnm
Sara Eckel is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
Send comments to the author In
ca.-e or this newspaper or send her
e-maU at saraeumaol.com.

NAFTA·hkc trade agreements with
other countries But V1ce Prcs1dep!
Gore suppons 11, as do most Rcpu!J..
licans m the House and Senate
One of the top 1ssucs for Democrats ts auto safety When NAFTA
was hcmg debated, criucs com·
plained that MeXIco's lax safety and
environmental standards would soon
become the norm m the Unllcd
States. It sounds as 1f they may have
been nght, after all
Accordmg lo Depanmcnt of
Transpona11on officials, the governmen! has done a lot to heel up
mspecttons ol Mextcan trucks cnicr·
mg the Unttcd States A report by the
General Accounl,~g Office from
April of thts year notes that the DOT
is provtdtng extra funds 10 the states
to promote truck safety and to
increase border mspecuon acuv111es
But when Rep Sherrod Brown,
D-Oh1o, patd a surpnsc viSit lu the
U.S -Me.,co border crossmg 10
Laredo, Texas, carhcr thiS month. he
found one lone U S mspcctor
charged Wllh monuonng the safely
of about 2,500 trucks that cross thai
border each day
According lo that same GAO
report, however, about 45 percent of
the Mextcan trucks that enter the
Umted State were "placed out of
servtcc for senous safety violations ••
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are wrlt,rs for United Feature
Syndicate, r...,.

• IColumbusI56' f-

•

9·08 p m . Un10n Avenue.
Pomeroy, Dorothy Roberts, HMC.
POMEROY
4:20 p.m . Pomeroy Ptke, Evelyn
Gtlhand. VMH,
8 58 p m . Mulberry Avenue. Joe
S1&lt;son, dead on am val.
RACINE
8 19 a m , Elmwood Terrace
Apanments. Opal Cummtns, treated
at 1hc scene
RUTLAND
8 07 am Htll Street. Marsha
Denntson. HMC
SYRACUSE
7.09 p m , Forest Run Road LISa
Crawley. VMH

Meigs announcements

Hospital news

Correction

Holzer Medical Center
Dana R Wtlhams, Jr.. not Dana R
Dlscbarxes OcL 13 - Walter
Davis, Lmdsay Caldwell, LouiSe W1ll1ams Sr nl 32310 Hysell Run
Road, Pomeroy, wa.• fmed m MldHankcy,lonatllan Waugh
Births - Mr and Mr&gt; Kcvm dlcrort Mayors Court recently
Bonecutter, son, Pomeroy: Mr AAnd ' Dana R W1lhams, Jt. was fined
Mrs Randy Masters. dau~ll\tcr. Gl!,l - ')I IM) and to"" on c"a~cs of pos'-t:'&gt;:-ollm ol manjuunu and $100 on
hpohs
c h.or~c' ol diSorderly hy hghmg
(Published with permission)
when he .1ppearcd belnre Mayor
Dewey Horton

Cuban cigars roll into the Uniteci States
By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
The growmg trendmess of ctgars
IS makmg hfc even bus1cr than normal for US Customs offic1als m
SQuth Flonda.
Once concerned mamly w11h
cntchmg Latm Amencan drug deal ers sh1pp1ng thelf tlllcll wares across
the Gulf of Me~1co , Customs officl3ls now have to contend wnh a

Hazel Stanley, 77, of State Route 143, Pomeroy, dted on Tuesday, Octobet 14, 1997 at her home.
Funeral serv1ces will he announced by the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home
in Albany,

&amp;
ss•

I

I

Hazel Stanley

IMansfield 154• I•

Jury is out on the Promise Keepers

nnon~

•

pulled the rug on her two weeks ago
by infonntng her that it had videotapes that captured the o'pening
moments of several dozen White
House coffees •• but domg so the
day after she had given the klatches
her seal of approval
As it turns out, the recordings,
which showed the prestdent
schmoozing folks tn the Oval Office
and the Roosevelt Room, conlradlCI·
ed her assen10n that the prestdent
served up java only in his private
quarters.
Thts pattern makes Reno the
Margaret Dumont of thts adm•mstrauon. a woman beyond enhghten·
ment or embarrassment. Even
though she blew her stack over the
h1dden vtdeus •• which one Whttc
House offictal had catalogued under
the heading of "fund-raw:rs" --no
senous person thtnks n Will lead to
much If Reno were mtent on JUS·
uce, she would have acted long ago
She seems taken by the 1dea that
the law is too convoluted to pennit
prosecuting lawbreakers •· as 1f the
federal code were nn alchemist's
cookbook, comprehensible only to
wnches and dtvines
In th1s instance, however, federal
laws are clear on the key tssucs.
F1rst, she ought to appomt an mdcpendent counsel because she has
trreconctlablc conflicts of mterest
She's bemg asked 10 mvesugate her

. Write Tony Snow, Creators
Syndicate, 5777 West Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Anaeles,
Calif. 90045.

aoono

~

ble avenues of
IIIQUlry,
declanng
them trrelevant or out-ofbounds She
has expressed
little interest.
for instance, in
the peregrinations of such
people as John
Huang, Charles
Yah Lm Trie, Yogesh Gandhi, Anef
Wtriadinata or the Buddh1st ststers
who told a Senate comm111ee last
month that they shredded evidence
that m1ght embarrass Venerable
Gore
One by one, she has cast away the
most colorful and damaging allegaltons against Team Chnton, whit·
thng the legal case down to the narrow and relat1vely Irma! 1ssues of
phone calls that emanated from the
Whtte House
And so the wheels of JUStice
gnnd slowly Under Reno's Law.
obstructiOn of just1cc ISn't a cnme
ll's common sense. Shredding IS
next to Godhncss.
Reno's perfonnancc seems puzzling because the Whttc House conSistently makes her look hkc a doh
On at least a half-dozen occasions, it
has concealed tmponant evtdence
from her at eructal mtcrvals. It

Joseph H. SISson, Pomeroy, died at h1s residence on Monday, Oct. 13,
1997. Arransements are bemg completed by the Pomeroy Chapel of Ftsher Funeral Home and will be announced at a later date
·

The Daily Sentinel
!USPS 21l-96IJ

Puhh~h~d !J'o'\:f)'

,lfh.'rnuun

Mund;~V lhruu~h

frultly Ill Courl St Pnm\:rnv, Oh1u 1'1\' thl
Otuo Vall~v Puhhsluntt ( umr mvl&lt; ,,,n~~~;t1 C••
Pmncroy Uh1n 4~7&amp;•) l'h C)l)lll'ifo S\:.,;om\1
rl.ll$ roslnltt (\IIUJ Ill .,IHIWW~ Oh!H

Mftllbtr• Tile i\ 10.••~•·••~t1 Prl·~~ 11nd lh~ Ohtu

NcW.,1rtr 1\~M'I!:I:tl•nn
~'TMA!I.TER Sl.!nd . ltk.lrc~s ~;om:~1111n~ lo
Tit!: D:ulv S..:nt•n~l Ill (uutl St Punwruv
Oh~«t .. ~1fJ'1

SUBSCRIPTION ltATI!:S
lly C1rrttr or Mntnr anutr

One Week
Ont: Month
Ofk' Ye1r

Sl IIU
SM 111
SI1141111

SINCL£ COPt PRICii
D••ly ............ ......... .. ......................... ,,(t:RII
Sw.,..,1'1beft !Mll ckiiiiRJ tn J'lo1Y ttle nmrr m~~
remit In adnnc.: dtr&lt;CI ICI The Dilly Sentinel
nn •three ~~~or 12 rnnnlh "a"~ C'rledU will he
jiven CMrWr e.:h wed..

1*- J-'tiiCtlpUnn hv m1il prrmtl!cd h1 1rcu
WheN llome C'MI'ICI ltfV~ Is IYIII1bl0

I

•
~---f.

.

PvtoliJ~I ft~I'Vet1 thr rt"IIIIO 1dj1111 riiCI d11r·

'"I lite 111bKnp4 toft period Suhtc11puon ute

chiiAJU 1M)' tit •m~ernt~~ltd by ch•n&amp;inJihet
chlr•ll\m the •vbtcflfl(k'ln

"r

M"ILSVISCIIIPTIONS
I..we Melp COIIIJ

Stocks
Am Ele Power ......................46'l.
Akzo ......................................92'1.
AmrTeeh...............................69,_
Alhland 011 ..........................52'1.
AT.T ..................................... 45'1.
Bank One .............................S7"1..
Bob Evans ............................ t 9'1,
Borg·Wamer .........................60'4
Champion ............................. 19),
Charm Shpl ................ :........... 5'1.
City Holding ..........................40,,
Federal Mogul .......................42\
Gannen ............,......................55

Goodyeer ................................71
Kmart .....................................14'4

Landa !nd ...........................31 "-

Lid .........................................23'4
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 20
OVB ......................................... 37
One Valley ............................311'Ptopltl ...................................45

Prem Flnl ...............................23~4
Rockwell ...............................57~
RD·SMII ....................~ ........... 57\
Shoney'• ...................... ,,........&amp;'!.
St•r Bank ............................,.47\
Wendy'• .............. t ...................23

S27 )U

Worthlngton ......................... 20'-

i'JK2
•
"SIU5-'6
Ibm O.tlldt Melp Cow•l1
I) W..t1
• 129.2.!
2ft W..b
S$6.NI
52 Week•
SW9 72

Stock report• ar• the t0:30
a.m. quotee provided by Adveat
ol Galllpolla.

I J WeeU

2to~2 Wed:a

•

-·-·-

Racme has been set for October 30
from 6 to 7 p m. Those wtshmg to
paructpntc should tum on the If porch
hght. The stren will Signal the bcgmmng and end of the event
Revival planned
Rcvtval scrv1ccs will he held at the
Enterpnse Untted Mcthodtsl Church,
Sunday lhrough Tuesday at 7 p m.
each cven1ng. Thctr Rev. Mel
Frankhn wtll he the guest speaker

Deer-vehicle collisions probed
Four dcer-veh1cle colhstons were
reported over the weekend by
depuues of the Mctgs County Shertffs Depanmcnt
Sham Benton of Racme struck a
deer on East Lctan Road around 2 30
a m Sunday that caused moderate
damage lo h•s 1992 Oldsmobile.
Dennis S Marcmko. Marysville,
was on Success Road ncar Number
Ntne ReedsVIlle. around noon Sunday ;.hen he struck a deer that ran
mto the path ofhts 1992 Dodge Shad·

ow, cau~ing ,moderate damage
Paul E Hoover, Albany was
northbound on County Road I ncar
Salem Center Saturday around 8 30
p m when a deer struck the passenger s1de of hts 1997 Chevrolet S-1 0.
causmg hght damage
Dav1d A Acree, M1ddleport.
struck and k1lled a deer on state
R{)ute 124 ncar Salem Center Sunday
around 10 15 p m causmg moderate
damage 10 hiS 1987 Ntssan Pathlindcr

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - indiana·
Ohw dtrect hog prtccs al selected
buytng pomts Tuesday as provtded by
the US Depanment of Agncuhure
Market News
Barrows and gtlts. 1 00 lower,
demand hghtto moderate on a modcrate run
U.S 1-2. 230-260 lbs country
pomls 44 50-46.00, plants 45 5()..
47 00
U.S. 2-3. 23()..260 lbs 42 50..
45.00. 210-230 lbs. 38 50-42.50.
Sows 1.00 lower
U S 1-3 300-400 lbs. 34.00·
36.00; 400-500 lbs. 36.00-39 00,
5()()..600 lbs. 39.00-41.00, few over
600 lbs 41 ()()..42 00.
Boars 34 00-36 00.

Estimated rccc1pts 34.000
Pnccs from Producers L•vcstock Assoc1a11on:
Hog market trend lor Tuesday
I 00 lower
Summary of Monday's auct10ns at
Htllsboro and Creston
Hogs 2.00 lower
Butcher hogs 46 00-50 10
Cattle· lower to I 00 h1ghcr
Slaughter s1ccrs chmce 62 0066 00, select 58 00-62 00
Slaughter hetfers coohOICC 62 ()()..
65 75, select 58 00-62.,

Farm runoff, .erosion
contributes to water
quality problem~
COLUMBUS (AP)- Water regulators who traditionally have
focused on stoppmg contammants
from mun1c1pal or comrnerc1al p1pes
are turnmg more of then atle ntion to
other areas, mcludtng farms
Dtscharges from eroswn and
runoff - as well as changes from
dredging or movmg nvers - are
among the leading causes of harm to
aquauc hfe, The Columbus DISpatch
reponed Monday
•
Yet federal water legiSiauon generally does not cover those pollutiOn
sources, the newspaper sa1d.
l1m Mnchell, who farms m Umon
County near the B1g Darby Creek,
satd he tries to protect the natwnal
scemc mer He hmu.s plowmg on hts
cornfiel&lt;ls to reduce eroston
The creek has improved, hut only
about half of the farmers m the
creek s watershed use conservation
ullage. he satd
Wes Beery, agnculturnl coordma·
It· lor the Nature Conservancy, saod
sedtments from fannmg cause problems m Ihe Darby ScdtmeniS clog the
stream's rocky botlom. wtpmg ou11hc

livmg and brcedtng places used; by
fish and the 1nsects they feed upen
Also. fenihzers help algae flourISh, whtch robs !he Creek of oxygen
that fosh and aquauc ltfc need to surVIve

Env1ronmentahsts say Ohto has
not done enough 10 protect us nvers
They 'd hkc to sec a pohcy to pr&lt;&gt;!ect
streams
The 1dea resurfaced 1n Apnl. after
contractors used bulldozers to relocate part of the Btg Darby's headwaters The proJeCt sent dtrl and d~ns
down the n ver
"A statewide stream-proteciton
pohcy ,. long overdue," satd :Jeff
Skeldmg, execuuve d1rector of Rtvers
Unhmued, a statcwtde nver-protecuon group The group would hke protective vegctallon along nvers.
Ttre state beheves that such a pol•cy could be challenged, sa1d DoRald
Schrcgardus. d1rector of the Ohto
Envlfonmcnlal ProtectiOn Agency.
"It was fell that our ability to tell
someone they could not do somethmg close to a nver could he challenged.' he sa1d

Bridges topic of ...
Continued from page I
rcpa1r a water leak on F1fth Street He
sa•d 1f the water had been shut off
dunng the rcpmrs that people would
have been wnhoul water and that
muddy water could have entered
back mto the water mmn. ncccssuatmg a b01l order for the area.
The hydrant at the corner of Lmcoln and F1fth streets was allowed 10
run during the repalf penod to rehcve
water pressure on the hne to he
repatred, yet prcvenung mtroducuon
of muddy water mto the water system, he sa1d
In addttlon, m response to merchants placmg thclf wares on stdewalks, he satd a vtllage ordmancc
spectflcally prohtbns persons from
placmg. dcpoSiltng or mamtammg
any merchandise, goods, malcnal or
eqUipment upon any s1dcwal k so as
to obstruct pedestrian tralf•c c~ccp1
for dchvcry or ptckup of Items m
wh1ch ca.&lt;e the Sldew,tlk may not be
obstructed for more than one hour
Chambers also sa1d he would not
anend the next c&lt;1unc11 mccung
because he plans to auend a semmar
on Jail standards and operallon He
also announced ht~ plans to conduct
a two-week timc "nlmlySI,.-1\n vlllag~
workers

~rtmmng In

task analysiS

and lime management
At an earlier m~cung . Chambers
proposed drawmg up JOh descnrtmns
pnorlllzmg &lt;::nt1cal tusks and how
much ume, md1cated as a percentage
of total lime, should he devoted 1&lt;1
each task He presented a sample
dcscnpuon at Monday mght s meelmg and explamcd how they could be
posted so, m the event ol 1llncss or
other emergency. 01hcr workers
would be able 10 lill m lor people not
at work
He also asked pcrm1sslon to mccl
w1th Metgs Counly Department of
Human Resources offic1als conccrnmg the Oh10 Works Ftrsl program m
an cffon to get additiOnal workers lor
the Vl!)"J!C.
lie presented a sample memo
form for vtllagc workers to Iii! out to
encourage wnucn communtcauon
between workers surcrv1sors and
clef.ted ofliCials
'If 11 am't wnucn. 11 d1dn'1 happen," Chambers smd
He also noted several unlicensed
vchtclcs parked on v1llagc streets and
bushes and shrubs obsuucung v1ews
of oncommg traffic that need to be
dealt wnh
Suvcrs encouraged voters m the
v11lagc to approve the upeommg fire
levy wh~eh IS needed to fimsh paymg
off the fire depanmenl s ladder truck,
she sa1d
The truck has been a btg asset to
the arca.1akmg the plaoc oltwo other trucks. she satd
"It was a very good purchase ll
helped the village ach1cvc a lower fire

successful effort to keep the nrc
trucks from drnggmg as they leave
the nrc statiOn
Iannarell1 asked when leal piCkup
would hcgm and asked tl Manley
could arrange to ha~c leave• p1cked
up m fronl of !he hou,e&gt; !hal Will he
featured 1n Sunday~ tour of hastonl·
M1ddlcport homes
Manley sa1d he nollly The Dmly
Sentmcl when leal r•ckup ,, ,chcd
ulcd 10 the v1llagc
Counctl approved the fmanctal
rcporl submntcd by Clerk/treasurer
Bryan Swann wh1ch showed the lollowmg balances ,ll the end ol September general, $63.221 82, street.
$20.477 61, mmt gnlf course.
$1,246.03, law cnforcemcnl. no balance, fire eqUipment. (-$9,188 48),
fire truck, (-$4,029 ~2). COPS FAST.
(-$3,291.36), pool tmprovcmcnt. ($2,521 75), cconom1c development
$7,033 77, puhhc transponauon. (·
$20,270 76), law block grant.
$5.404 12 Issue II. no balance.
rcvolvmg loan, no halance ODNRboal launch. (-$1,467 28), refuse,
$45.410.64, CHIP program, no balance; tree planung. no balance; sewer system, $50,924.59; rccrcauon, ($,,195 21!}, cemetery: (-$4,651 49).
watcrdcposns, $35.059 23, cemctcl)'
endowment, $81.062 77; total all
funds, $484,774 92
In other l:tusmcss, councal
- Pa1d b1lls consiSimg of IlK
cntrlc' 101almg S32,6R 1 II cntnes,
- Approved the mayor's report ol
$3,866 m lines mcludmg S2:4l7 m
old fines,
-· Approved the mmutes ol !he
Sept 22 mccung.
·· Met In CXCCUll VC SCSSIOn to dt~­
personnel matters and alterwards formed an employee gncvancc
~.:uss

commntcc r.:onsH~Img of Hnut:hms.

,...

lannarclll. Gw~a&gt;dowsky and Stovers

.

We Give Mature
Drivers, Hotne
Owners and
Mobile Hotne
Owaers Special
Savings.
Our statistics show lhat malure
dnvers and home owners have
fewer and less cosily losses
!han other age groups So 1t's
only lair to charge you less lor
your msurance Insure your
home and car With us and save
even more wtlh our spectal
mlllti-I:&gt;Oiic~ diSCOunts

msurancc ralmg." she sa ad

Horton commended !he Brent
Manley, strccl supenntendcnl , and
v1llagc workers fnr their work on the
new ramp m I ront ol the lire dcpanmcnt. The ramp was repl.occd m a

HOMECOMING
AND REVIVAL

OOAN

CORNER STONE GOSPEL
CNH Rd., Albany

aurance Servlcea

OCTOBER 111 THRU 18
7 p.m. Nightly

Correction

Homecoming Sunday Momlng
to:ooe.m.
Carry-In Dinner at t :00
Evangetlats
Rev. Harman • Audrey Tranter
Rev. ROMie Tranter
All are Welcome.

The youngster ptctured wtth a
Halloween diSplay on Monday's Datly Sen1mel1s the grandson of Candy
Tillis She was incorrectly tdenhfied
m the photo cap11on The Datly Senttnel apologtzes for the error

•

@-i)

RNER _.:

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992~

4uto-O..nenltuMMIU"'
L~e

Home Car Business

n. 'if, """"" •

�I

..

.SPorts

•

The Daily Sentinel
.

Redskins top Cow~oys 21~1~
to stand on NFC East summ1t

ALCS returns to Baltimore

O's survive rally to beat Indians 4-2
fident about anything. We've got out
work cut out for us going back into
Baltimore. Certainly, we'd rather be
in the posttion we're tn , but they have
a very good ballclub. It's come down
to the last two games."
After an off-day, the best-of·sev·
en series will resume with Cleveland's Charles Nagy facing Mike
Mussina, who struck out an ALCS
record I5 in Game 3 and will again
pitch m the twthght.
For the first time in three games
at Cleveland, the Orioles weren't
undone by the btzane or unexplaioable. There was no steal oti.home on
a botched squeeze play m the 12th
inning or two runners scoring on a
wild p1tch.
Meanwhile, the Indians let dpwn
their rowdy fans by not putting fway
the Orioles.
"It 's kind of disappointing
because the fans have been doing a
great job for us this series," V1zquel
said. "They deserved to see us win."
Leading 2-0, the Orioles added
two cruc1al runs when Enc Davis,
whose comeback from colon cancer
surgery has given the Orioles an emotional lift, connected for a pinchhomer off Paul Assenmacher and Cai
R•pken hit an RBI single.
Compared to two straight nerverackmg weekend games, Game 5
seemed almost a snoozer. The Jaoobs

By TOM WITHERS
CLEVELAND (AP) - Forget
about predicting what might happen
next m this ALCS. whtch has had no
logic or reason so far.
Take Game 5 as the latest example.
_
Balttmore was three outs away
from a nice, tidy shutout that would
send the Onoles home and prolong
their season. Then Cleveland began
working 1ts Jacobs Field magic agam.
Trailmg 4-0, the Indians scored
two· runs and had runners at second
lufd thtrd w1th two oQuts in tbe mnth
wben Omar Vizquel sent a grounder
through the mtddle that had gametying smgle wntten all over n.
Thts time, though, Roberto Alemar made the play as the Orioles survived with a 4-2 vtctory, leavmg the
lndtans wtth a 3-21end in the best-ofseven senes.
" Whatever chance we mtght still
have, we sttll have a chance," sa•d
Orioles starter Scott Kam 1emeckt,
who combined with Jtmmy Key to
blank the Indtans for e1ght mnmgs.
'"Unttl you deep-stx us. we 're gomg
to come out playmg "
As will the Indians, although
Cleveland man"ager Mtke Hargrove
tsn 't sure whllt to expect m Game 6
on Wednesday at Camden Yards.
"The way this senes has been, I
.don't see how anyone can feel con-

· Field crowd of 45,068, whtch
screamed itself hoarse during Cleveland's stunnmg wins on Saturday and
Sunday, was rather subdued until the
ninth, when trailing 4-0, the Indians
finally stirred some more October
drama.
David Justice singled off lUndy
Myers leading off, and Mau Williams
followed with an RBI double. Sandy
Alomar nied out to right and Tony
Fernandez hit another RBI double
that brought the potential tying run to .
the plate.
Marquis Grissom reached on an
infield single - Myers knocked
down a comebacker, but couldn 'I
come up with the ball - and Bip
Robens struck out as Grissom stole
second.
W1th the crowd shaking the ballpark, Myers fmally ended it with an
assist from Alomar. Vizquel hit a
grounder up the middle that the second baseman ran down on the outfield grass and ma~e an off-balance
throw that beat the speedy Vizquel by
a step.
Kamieniecki, who relieved Key in
Game 2, was making his first start
since Sept. 24. The nght-hander gave
Johnson everything he could have
hoped for by limiting the Indians to ,
four hits in five inmngs, with one
walk and four strikeouts.
But he was forced to leave with

By JOSEPH WHITE

elbow stiffness arter the fifth, and
Key came on in relief for the first
time since he won the deciding
Game 6 of the 1992 World Series for
Toronto.
Key pitched three scoreless
innings, with three strikeouts. Baltimore's bullpen finally closed out a
win after going 0-3 with a 3.14 ERA
in the first four games.
"I knew I'd get a stellar performance out of Karnieniecki." Johnson
said, "and I got a bonus with Jimmy
Key."
Baltimore took a 2-0 lead off
Chad Ogea in the second. Chris
Hoiles singled with one out, and after
Mike Bordick struck out, Brady
Anderson's hit to right sent Hailes to
third.
BACK IN nME - The
Bip Roberta (left) gels
Ogea was careful with Alomar,
back to first base ahHd of the throw to Baltimore flrat baseman
walking him to load the bases, and
Rafal Palmelro on a pickoff attempt by j)ltcher Scott' Kamlenleckl
In tha third Inning of Game 5 of the American League Championship
Geronim,o Berroa followed by lining
Serlea Moncllly night In Clevialand, where the Orioles' 4·2 victory
a two-run single. First baseman Jim
sends the bast"()f-seven 1erlea back to Baltimore. (API
Thorne cut off Grissom's throw on
the play and nailed Alomar at third to
end ~inning.
think I would try to hit him," Kam ie- season history have come back from
Kamieniecki pitched inside to niecki said. "It kmd o.f got me ticked 3-1 deficits to win a series. It's been
Manny Ramirez 'twice in the first off, him thinking I was trying to hit done five limes in the World Series
inning before hitting the Cleveland him."
and three limes m league champ•- ~
right field on the upper left arm.
Ogea, who was also the Game I onship series ... The five games have
Ramirez never dropped h1s bat as he joser, allowed SIX hits tn eight been decided by a combmed eight
shouted at Kamieniecki and was innings. The Indians haven't scored runs .... Cleveland had three double
esconed to first base by plate umpire a run for him in 19 113 innings dur- plays to set an ALCS record w1th
Larry McCoy.
ing the playoffs.
nine in the series. ~
"I don't know why he would
Notes: Only eight teams in post-

LANDOVER. Md. (AP) -If the
aging and stale Dallas Cowboys are
ready to surrender the NFC East title
for the first time in six years, the
energetic and innovative Washington
Redsktns are more than ready to take
. it away.
Though outmanned, the Redskins
were not outsmarted as they captta\j.v
ized on the Cowboys' predictabtlit7
and moved into first place in the divtsion with a 21 -16 victory Monday
· hi
mg"l; was important for us to come
out and show not only Dallas, butthe
world, that we are a force to be reckoned with," Redskins guard Joe Patton sat'd .
The force held together even after
Terry Allen and Michael Westbrpok
left with sprained knees in thf first
half adding to an injury list that had
~lre~dy depleted the offensive and
defensive lines. The Redskins (4-2)
made up for it with a solid game plan,
mixing it up on offens~ and defense
to take a 21-3 lead early m the third
quarter.
. .. .
"Dallas is pretty baste, hncbacker Ken Harvey said. "We knew
they were going to try to run the football and establish a ground game. We
just had to put them m a position to
pass the ball."
They did that by stacking the line
with a variety of fortllahons to hold

Fisher says Michigan kept report from him#before ouster~·~·~
•

• By HARRY ATKINS
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Steve Fisher satd he was surpnsed
He said he never dtd anythmg wrong.
Still, 11 d1dn 't seem to e&lt;plam why he
was fired
FISher spoke publicly Monday
for the first t1mc since bemg fired as
.. Michigan's basketball coach. Tom
· Goss, the new athletic director, gave
htm the ax on Fnday.
·What had been btlled as a news
conference, however, seemed mostly an auempt at damage control. Fish· er, speaking in a large hotel room
. t+lled with fnends and supporters,
refused to take quesuons from
:reporters.
· Fisher said he honestly answered

questions from a Kansas law firm ence had been called until late
hired by the university to investigate Wednesday nigh~" Fisher said. "I
alleged NCAA violations. He criti- thought that was strange, that they
cized the universny for not letting were having a press conference withh1m see the results of the study before out me being there."
they were made public Thursday.
Fisher said he also made the misThe mvestigatiOn cited three take of not being more assenive in
NCAA v10lat1ons the university defending himself to school officials.
termed mmor Goss had said he Fisher said his wife urged him to
made the dec1s10n to fire Ftsher after defend himself.
· meeting with him, not after reading
"I said, 'Don't worry, I've done
the report. He satd the basketball pro- nothing that needs defending. When
gram heeded a new direction.
the truth comes out, I'll be fine,"'
Fisher said that he remained silent Fisher said .
after the report was released because
The report called into question
the school asked him not to comment. . Fisher's role in arranging compli"I was asked by our administra- mentary tickets for booster lld Martion when the whole process broke in tin.
March- to allow one voice to speak
Manin, a retired autoworker from
for the university and athletic Detroit, has been at the center of the
department," Fisher said. "I thought investigatiOn into the basketball prothat voice should be mine. But I've gram after published repons satd he
always been.a •
player." 1
. provtded cash and gifts to several
Ftshtt ~angry that he was- Michigan players.
·
·:p&amp;lfi09S
"''t given a chance to review the
Martin has denied the allegations.
. • ::
report before it was made public.
He refused to cooperate with the
: : : Here are the pwnngs for the Div--;. • After the report was commis- investigation.
. ~n II volleyball secttonal tourna- sioned, Fisher said, uniyersity presiFisher said. Martin received com. :;pent, scheduled for Saturday at dent Lee Bollinger promised Fisher plimentary tickets in a w
at con· ·::SOOth Webster High School.
he would get a chance to review it formed to thenable
; : 2 p.m. - Jackson vs. Rock Hill before it was ~_!lased.
rules. He said those rules since have
: : 3 p.m. -Ironton vs. Meigs
"I was told when the report came been lightened. a move he said he
:::- 4 p.m.- No. 2 Waverly vs. Jack- m. I'd be the firstto get a copy of the favors.
':.Olin-Rock Hill winner
report," Fisher said. "Bollinger told
The report noted that Ftsher somep.m. - Vinton County vs. me I'd be able to review and react times wrote the initials of asSIStant
. :::s«?uth Point
t
bef&lt;ii\ it became pubhc record." .
coaches alongstde requests to g•vc
•,• 6 p.m. - Gallia Academy vs.
But the report came '" whtle Martm tickets. Fisher said the initials
: Portsmouth.
Fisher was vacationing in Flonda. were stmply a way of denotmg whtch
. : . :'. 7 p.m. -No: I River Valley vs. Bollinger and Goss held a news con- assistant was requesting the llckets.
. :.Jijnton County-South Point victor
ference Thursday, almost three hours
"I've been called a har, a forger,"
: ·: The district tournament will be before a copy of the report would Fisher said. "This cuts at the chafe
: ]leld on Saturday, Oct. 25 on the Uni- reach Fisher.
·
with me. I'm
those
: :,&amp;!'ity of Rio Grande campus.
"I was not aware a press confer- names.

..-P-11 volleyba II

; SeCtional
.
..·- . .
d '
poste

: :s

Baseball

Ctnt'* Di•isiun

Gr.:cn Buy..
~
M1nnesotn., .
~
T:unpa Boy ............ ........... ,'I
~roil
4
0
1 Ch1cago

: :~inerlcan League
· : f;hampionship Series
• •
•,. •...

BaltiiiiOI'e ••· Cle..land

Monday'sscon
• • • Baltimore 4 Clr~eland 2. Cleveland l~lds
4

.JICI J-2

•

•

San Frnfli:I~CO .
lit·

I

..

Cnrohna

tinue to hve m the land of the liVIng.
I will not apolog•zc for who I am or
what I've done. I am immensely
proud to he Steve Fisher." ·
Bnan Ellerbe, an asstslant hlfcd
by Fisher in the spnng. i~ runmng the
,tcu.m until a new .coach is named.
Goss satd Sunday that Cahformu
coach Ben Braun was a cand1dutc for
the job. Br11.un said he had nol been '
contacted by Michigan. Goss also
named former Mtchtgan star Cawc
Russell, head coach at DiviSIOn Ill
Savannah College of Art and Design,
as a potential candtdate.

By The AIIOCiated Prell
The offense of Eric Lindros and
the defense of Garth Snow made the
dtfference for the Phtladelphia Ayers.
Lindros scored I :49 into overtime
and Snow stopped 43 shots as the
Flyers beat the San Jose Sharks 3-2
Monday night.
Snow was especially sharp in the
second period, when the Sharks barraged htm with a club-record 25
shots.
"They put a lot of shots on me,"
Snow said. "I got caught out of postlion a couple of times, but I got
lucky"
The Flyers won their third stratght
despite gettmg outshot 45-24.
On the winning goal, Lindros
took the puck at center icc, came into
the Sharks' zone on a 2-on-1 wnh
John LeClair and fired a wrist shot
past Kelly Hrudey.
"Eric made a great play." said
LeClair, who scored a goal in the second P!'flod. "The pass wasn't there.
so he did it himself. "
Rnd Brmd' Amour tied the game

Former Marauder qualifies for
Methodist College golf team

: :
• ...

Adaata vs. Florida /'"
Ton'&amp;'•

1 0 '171 160 129

1 (] 00) 101 199

. 2 4 o n~ 104 142
2 .S 0 286 118 lt1 2
I S 0 167 10~ l"i l

New Ork!am

w........,.

:.JQational League
;~bampionship Series

.

.•

Monday's score

W11Sh1ngton 21, OaJI;u: 16

Ohio H.S. football poll
COLUMBUS. Oh1o lAP) - How a slalt pt~ncl
of :sports wncm and bro3tkastcn t:Hes Ohio h1gh
school foollr.lll reams 1n the fifth of e!JIH werkly
1991 lt'JUIII'·IUIOn poll~ for The ANOCI!Rii ~n
by OHSAA diVIIIIOOS With won-loS( r«ord and 10:
rnl pointJ (first-pl;ll.-e 11otes1n puremhc~ea) .

:!11.

Wedntse~ty
• • Florida (Saunders 4-6) at AUarua (Smolrt l!'i·
• I 1·117 p m , If I'MII:naary

• "" ,..

Football

NL standings
. :::: • AMERICAN CONFERENCE
~emDhw.n

l! I. I lla. tt rA
• - Ensland ...................s • o m 176 110

-.

.

Irlm

. t.;... .....

Westtnt (H,.J.._

. ......6 0
. ._.City ..
•
4 2
. . . . . .0.. .. . ...
.. 1 .1
. ""'""""" ..... ....... ...1 '
. I)IIQand ..... ....... . l 4

.: . :..

-·-

0 1000
0 667
0 ,XI()
0 lOO
0 111

190 1!.5
122 110
102
126
107 114
Ul

"'
NATIONAL COI'jFERENCE

•

·~

.Iaiit"" Dhil6on

.

I

l! I. I flo.
667

•
.,..
: N. r Gillnls ..

....
.. l 0
•.... , ... .' 1 0
... ....
... 1 l 0
I!Jiilldelplu•.
. . 2 4 0
~ . ..... .... .......
I 5 0

-

-·
....
-. .
..

!171
lOO
1J l
167

tt

rA

Ill 89
131 IJ]
140 96
Ill IJ7
109 HI

•

. .. J
••• 2
.2
.
l

1 0

2 2

I
1
)
."i

-·-

I
I
I
I

"

6
6

17
14

19
17

."i

II

9
17
IK
12

~

I~

"

1:1

l

14

Irlm
Sl

l.tiUIS .. . ..

Dt.1roat~

l! L I &amp;

..5 I 0

Pho...'1t1x .. :::::•::.::······ ..···· .J
-"
Dallas ....
. 2
Toronto..
... .. .
I
Ol1~a(lu
......... 0

... 270

An.1hc:tm . .
Cul11r•y ..

7

'I

17
21
I$

1 I

~
l

."i 0

0 j' (,

2 I

Patine Di•Won
4 II l
Vart~o'UIIYCr... .. .
.
2 2 I
Ednt~~~'llon .......... .. . . 2 1 I
losAn,clcs .. . . ... . I 2 J
SunJ011e
.
. ..
2 4 0

6

17K

9
12
22

ll&lt;l
H

. 2lO
4-t.lellorl.okCadl. (6)~1
... .. ...2•7
S-WI-.,Ile lodloo C...t (1 ) 7-0 .......... 210
&amp;.s-(1)7.0
........................... .. ll9
!·Belo!tWatBIIhdti&gt;l ....... , ............. 108

ST UWIS I&lt;AMS W:uvcLI P Will Urn:~:

Sll(lll.'tl I' M•kl Hur.m

team. Hts total game, course management skills and particularly his
confidence havo impro&gt;ed ' to the
point that he wtll be competitive at
this level of college golf."
Marauder golf coach John
krawsczyn commented," John Bent·
ley was a winner and a leader for
Meigs High golf and will be an asset
to the Methodist team. He is an outstandmg player aRd a·pel'S&lt;ln."
· ' Bentley~ a· 199~ Meigs g&lt;aduutc, ·
helped lead the Marauder golf team
to a siKth J1]ace•finish in the 1992
D1vision II state tournament. He ts
currently a senior at Methodist College majoring in professional golf
management. John is the son of John
and Joy Bentley of Syracuse.

!i

ll

0 1 2

S ll
4 15
'I
t.
2

l'l

ANAHI:JM MIGH rY IJUCkS 1\ sMJtllcl.l (.'
Ru:hard Purk 1o C.nc•nn,,l, oiiiK: AHL A ~IJ\IutcJ I
Kc~ln 1'u4J rmm lhc mjurcJ b~t

COI.ORAI&gt;O AV/\1.1\NCHI:· A~~~~ net! F

tfl
~J
14

Jn~f M11rh,1 lo H&lt;~."fshcy vii he 1\HL

l&gt;AI.LAS STARS Rc~nllcd I.W P.vnck (.\~te
rrum M1~hll!lln nf the IHL Rc-,u slji.!!Cd D 0 ,1n
K~·nmcr 111 M1~h1~an
OrrAWA SI~NATORS S1gnct1 RW Uamcl

1, &amp;tmon1on 0

Allrcd~s ur1 II• ,, fnur-yc.tr ~;unlr.ICI

'lUlU

Tonlpt'o pmea
Detroit M Toronto, 7:30p.m
PinsburJh a1 N Y Raqen. 8 p.m

Calt•Y Dl Dallas, l •lOp.n\

Wednnday's pmes

C

.-.,9pm

BoaiOftll Lot Altples, IO:lOpm

Plriladelptyia • Auheirn. l&amp;.:lO rm

Hockey
Trans&lt;Jct1ons

N!fL standings

-lc-

,

. EASTERN CONFERENCE

rWashmJfOn

....

..

It L I lla. llf lOA

...&lt;li

'

0

10 l !i -j]

Baaball

'A-"'-

NEW YORK YANKEES: AnftMfteed rhot OF
'

1

Scorr Po.c refuted a nunor· leaa• usiJnmau and

elected 10 become a free naent

1

)

1
·

to Pleasant Mets of
Athena for paying half
the butchering coat n
the Unoualn steer won
by Aaron Wolfe of
Racine and J. T. Cook of
Pomeroy In a raffle
which benefited the
Racine
Emergency ,
Squad.
Thanka also go to the
lndlvld.uala and bual·
ne11a1 who aupported
the fund ralaer.
Bob Graham
GAH Llnoualn

--

Canucks 3, Oilen 0
At Vancouver, Martin Gelinas
scored a goal before injuring h1s left
knee and Kirk McLean made 33
saves for his 20th career shutout.
Gelinas, who led the Canucks with
35 goals last season, scored a shorthanded goal two minutes into the
game. A few minutes later, he
sprained his left knee in a collision
'th Otlers defenseman Dan
WMICG'll'
I IS.
Gelinas 1s expected to miss 2-4
weeks. Brei Hedtcan and Brian Noonan also Scored for Vancouver.
Blues 3 Hurricanes 1
At St. Louis. Terry Yake scored
the go-ahead goal with 3:31 left as
the Blues won thelf fifth straight
game.
Yakc put St. Louis ahead 2-1 when
he poked home a rebound that Hurricanes goahe Trevor K1dd failed to
clear on the power play.
St. Louis goalie Grant Fuhr
stopped 17 shots to move into fifth
place on the career victory list with
357.

·"

Washmgton 39, the scr.:ondary had

team beat C h'ma 2- 1 'oor thc go ld parents and her older brother Garrett, Games, •. ndthmissed a. bronze
l996 by .0 I
medal before a record 76.481 fans m who died in ApT! I of a rare blood dis- seconds '" e event 10
•
,
Athens, Ga.
order, aplastic anemia.
"I alw~ys ,;-"anted the ,hurdles,
The 25-year-~ld
"When he was at the Olympics,hI I'Devers
ha~pen .
•• Hamm said the
h satd.
1
fIt JUSt dtdnhot beheves
country is ready lilr a women's pro saw all the JOY in his eyes just watc ·
m I e ype o person w
soccer league. which is scheduled to ing me compete," Hamm said of her everything happens for a reason. I
brother, who introducejl her to soccer. figure that has to be my. mouva11on .
stan play in the spTing of 1998.
onshtps six years ago h h
f
""'c'rc los•'n• a lot of talented
"When I think my training IS hard. Had I won both of those 10 1992 (100
Now she pomls to I c I rongs o
"'
e
h
d h dl ) 1 •
th t I'd
fans who follow soccer and the playc,rs because they don't have an I thmk of what he had to go throug
dash an ur es , cant say a
advent of a professional women's opportunity to train full time,'' she every day. It keeps things in per- still be in the sport."
the
soccer league as evt'dence o fh ow the s·a1·d. "It's amaztng how stron•e our spective. You can't nddevalue
h
· Desptte
De being 1bothered
ed fi b~ a ~calf
team IS right now. There arc oppor- importance of sport a I c tmpor- tnjury,
vers p ac
trst '" our
and sprinter tunities for elite players. But 1feel we tancc of what it can do for other peo- International Amateur Athletic FedGail Devers were honored as Sports- could he even stronger if there was a pie."
cration (IAAF) Grand Prix events
women of the Year at the Women's league."
Devers overcame ncar-cnpphng during tbe 1996-97 season.
· •s 18h
'
Hamm•sa 10-ycarmcmhcrol'thc Graves' Disease dto win
medalsd
Those mducted
Sports Foundalton
I annuald mh · gold
h 1992
• s intoHthe
II lntemafF
-U.S. national team, whtch won the m the 100-mctcr as 10 t e
an ·tional Women s ports a o ame
nerHamm. a member of the 1996 u.s. Women's Cup tournament th•s 1996 Olympics. Shcjomcd Wyomta at the dinner were Ol~mpic spnnter
gold-medal-winning U.S soccer year and is preparing to host the Tyus, the 1964 and 1968 gold mc~a:- Evelyn Ashfohrd and bDI~mpt~ d ~team, was c hoscn ·m 1hc tcam ca1e- "'omen's
.,.,
.,..
Cuo 1·n 1999.
lSI, as the only woman to su•:cess u - ablcd skimg c amp10n tana o '"orld
gory Devers. who raced to gold
"The Women's World Cup is ly defend the I00-metcr tit1e
en Brosnihan in the contemporary
medals in the 100 meters and 400- going to be unbelievable," she satd.
In Atlanta, she also ran a leg on the category; synchronized swimmmg
meter relay at the Atlanta Games. "The commitment that the comm•t- gold-medal-winning 400-mctcr relay coach Gat I Emery 1n the coaches catwon in the individual category.
tee has made is so exciting. We're
"I want to keep going," the 30- cgory; and Canadian figure skater
"There's dcfinllcly an aud1cncc going to play in the biggest stlldiums year-old Devers said. "The 2000 Barbara Ann Scott-King in the pio(for soccer),.. Hamm said. "Young across the country. Thefre lookiqg to 'Olympics IS definitely '" my plans nccr category.
I
f
1 rol mod
make this the greatest women's sport- nght now. It's a goal of mmc to get
Also honored were Canadtan
I!" s want to sec em a e
c
h
y
d '
three back-to-back golds."
Olympic rower Silken Laumann,
cis...
mg event
in !Story.
ou unless
on I JUSt
She also wants to make ur for two who reectvcd the Wilma Rudolph
A prohf1c scorer known lor her make
a statement
like that
you
·
· 1ory d tvc, .. t&lt;&gt; the turf plan 10 fulfill I'!."
diSappomllng Olympic fimshesm
Courage Award,
and
stgnature
"vic
, II the
h
h
· dDr.h Alpha
B'll'
I H
h 1 d th u s
Harnm dedicated the award to her II 0-mcter hurdles. Devers oc all • Alexander, w o rccetve I e 1 1e
after a goa · amm c pc
c · ·
last hundlc while leading at the 1992 Jean Ktng Contribution Awand.

spo~nh~:n~:r~·Hamm

Grate
of
BoHle

1

Gas
Middle age 1s that time of hie
when you get exhausted just
wrestling with your conscience.

***

The best way to come back
from a casino with a small
fortune is to go there with a b1g
one.

***

if you're 50 now, you've timed
your life all wrong. You were a
chotd when everythl~g was
considered the chtld's fault ,
and a parent when everythtng
was cons•dered the parent's
fault.

Four swimming coaches face charges in steroid probe
' .. - - '

•

If we could see ourselves as
others see us - we'd probably
think they were out of their
minds.

***

.,...., ....

The only people who listen to
both sides of an argument are
the nei hbors.

loHieGas.•• lOO
lb. las Cylinder
$21~30 •••

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

Far All Yow Coold.,
.

'

Rutland Bottle Gas
lt. 124, ...... Ol 742-2211

.

MAKES CONTRIBUTION - Tha Modern trlbuted to the project. Modlm Woodman MCWoodman C.mp 3730 of Tuppers Plain• recent· retary Dllne W~ (right) preMIIted tha chack to
1y contributed $1,551.25" to the Ealtern High Rogar WIIHord (far-lalt), prelldent of the boolt·
School Athl,atic Boolt8r1 Club, railed In part era AIIO pictured are lthlatlc dlractor CIIIY Cof·
through a chicken barbecue. The Modlm Wood- fay· (MCond frolfl left) and Boostwl Club tree·
men Mltehlng Fundi progr1111, which matchell turer Dan Will.
•
local Clmp'l net fund railing profltl, 1110 COO·

-

------Sports briefs-----:.:Coyotes 2, Blackhawks 1
Football
Baseball
At Phoc~tx, Rtck Tocchct scored
OWINGS
MILLS, Md (AP) NEW YORK (AP) - David
the Coyote~ first power-play goal of
the. season 1n a VICtory over wmless Cone. scratched from hts linal post- Bam Morris, jailed last wee~ ;m
season start because of arm problems, Texas, practiced wnh the Balt•m~re
Chtcago.
·
has a small bone spur in his right Ravens and 1s prcpanng to play tbe
Tocchet's.second-penod goal was
shoulder
and wtll have arthroscopic rest of the sca.,on despite the threat of
the Coyo_1es fi,.,;t m 33 power-play
havmg his probation revoked. ,
surgery.
·
opportumues thts season.
Ravens coach Ted March1hcoda
Cone was cK.amined by Dr James
Kenh Tkachuk, who led the NHL
smd
the runnmg buck w1ll hkcly ~1art
Andrews
in
BJrmmgham,
Ala
..
who
wtth 52 goals last seas:nn, got h•.s first
Sunday
against Miam1.
concurred
w1th
tbe
diagnoSis
of
Dr
of the year for Phoemx, and Ntkolat
Morris,
25, tumcd htmself m to
Stuart
Hershon,
the
Yankees
team
Khabibulin. made 34 rdsaves · tot
physician. Cone is also bothered by authorities Friday m Rockwall Counim~rove hts career reco
agatns
tcndmitis and mllammauon m h1s ty, Texas, on an arrest warrant pn&gt;~­
Chtcago to 8-2.
ccutors had sough! in their atteml'tlo
pnching shoulder.
Ethan Moreau hnd the lone goal
revoke hts prohauon on a 1996 drug
Cone,
who
had
an
unrelated
for the Blackhawks, whose 0-5 start
aneurysm in the shoulder repaircd·•n convtctron
is their worst since the 1969-70 seaA hearing scheduled lor Noy .25
1996, finished the regular season 12son.
could
dctertllinc II' Morr1s w1ll be sent
6
with
a
2.82
ERA·
and
222
strikeouts
Bruins 3, Mighty Du&lt;ks 0
to
prison.
m
195
innings.
Jason Allison had a goal and an
assist. and Jim Carey stopped 27
shots as Boston blanked Anaheim.
It was the Mighty Ducks' first •
shutout loss at home since Apnl 7.
1995. a span of91 games.
Ted Donato scored an insurance
goal in the third period before lim
Taylor added an empty-netter tn the
final mtnute.

NEW YORK (AP) -Soccer star
Mia Hamm remembers that four
people greeted the U.S. women •s
national team at Kennedy Airport
after winning the world cham pi-

Dave

.

•
KNOCKED AWAY - Dallas wide receiver Dishman In the second haH of Monday night'!!
Michal Irvin finda Troy Aikman's pass to him NFC East battle In Landover, Mel., where the R~­
knocked away by Wethington cornerback Cris skins won 21-16. (API
recovered at the Dallas 25. Davis lust drive, Green came to the line of Irvin and Anthony M•llcr covered as
lhcn carried six stratghll11ncs. taking scnmmagc and lowered a shoulder Aikman threw mcompletc into tlic
the ball into the end zone frmn fi&gt;ur 1ntn Smllh, lhrowing htm lor :.1 loss end zone.
..
"They brmg that swagger 1n I here,
yards out.
on second down On the nc~t play.
The Redskms kept the Cowboys free salcty Stanley Rtchard blitzed and you've got to go oulthcrc.:•nd ~ry
oiT balance unhl &lt;he end. On Dallas' and forced Aikman to sp1ke the ball. to knock that swagger down. DishOn hourth down , w1th the hall at the man said. "It's all about respect. "

1

By

.,__~.-=·

"

••'··

By MELISSA MURPHY

.r

-.

for Philadelphia with 2·55 remaming
m.the third period when he fought off
a defender and slid a rebound past
Hrudey.
Shawn Burr. obtained by the
Sharks 1n a summer trade with Tampa Bay, scored both goals for San
Jose.
Elsewhere. 11 was Vancouver 3,
Edmonton 0; New York Islanders 2.
Florida 2; St. LouiS 3, Carolina I;
Phoemx 2, Chicago I; and Boston 3,
Anaheim 0.
Islanders 2, Panthers 2
Bryan Berard scored a power-play
goal with 26 seconds rcmaimng m
regulation to give New York a ue at
Florida.
•
Berard, the Ca)derTrophy winner
last season as the NHL's rookie of the
year, scored with Flonda's Robert
Svehla off for tnpping and Islanders
goalie Eric Fichaud on the bench for
an extra attacker.
Panthers goalie John Vanbiesbrouck made 26 saves, including four
in overtime. Fichaud stopped 25
shots, one in the extra session.

***

St Lours l. Uarofina 1
Phoe!Jia 2. OriciiJO I
80110n J, Arwhc1mO
'Pbiladc:lph101 J, San Jote 2 (OTJ

Bul&amp;lo at Carobaa, 1.;JO p.m.
NY Ran&amp;en M Ot._:t. 7::l0p.m
P111tbur1h 111 Montrr.a, 7·:\(1 p m.
TA111f!1 Bay at FJorida. 7.l0 p m
Toronto lJI petR:Ht, 7:)0 p m,
w:;:eon 11 OI!Qao, 1:30 p.m

we"re not careful."
'
Dallas had only two sustained drives -the one for Irvin's touchdown
and an opening drive that took them
to the Washington two before the
Cowboys settled for Richie· Cunningham's 19-yard field goal. "On
first-and-goal, rookie tight end Davtd
LaFleur jumped early and Dallas was
set back to the seven.
That's been typical of the Cowboys' troubles- they have just f':'"r
touchdowns on thelf last 20 mrs
inside their opponents' 20.
"We JUst bog down and d.nn 't
make the plays," coach Barry Swttzcr
said.
"If you've got any answcrs,_c•~mc
help us," he told reporters. "It SJUSt
frustrating."
~
For the rest of the half. Washmgton dominated and the offensive line
failed to open holes for Smith.
After Cunningham's licld goal.
the kedskins went 80 yards m c1ght
plays. 48 of the yards coming on a
pass from Frcrotte to Lcshc Shepherd Then Davis went in from the
two to make it 7-3.
The Redskms made it 14-) six
minutes into the second quarter when
Frerotte found Jenkins at the end nl
another 80-yard drive. this one taking II plays. .
.
And they made tt21-3threc mmutcs mto the second half after Harvey
sacked Aikman and · Rich Owens

Hamm, Devers named top female athletes

Tl)e Light

N1dhtn1I-Hod.ry Llqlk

10
I'
H
21

12

..

National •·uuthlll Leaa:IK'
MIAMI L)OLPHINS W,uYcll WR l·ri!LI U,lr·
ncu 1111tl UR {'l,,yllm Hu lnv: ~

N Y lshuden 2, florida 2 (t~)

~-Ubanon (2) 7-0
. , . . .,.. . . .. ........ 110
6-A.kron SPrinaftetd 6-1 ... .
.
... .. IJ2
7-Col WM~n 6--1 .. . .. ............. . . ..
128
8-('h;.-dc.m~l ..
. .............. .......... ... liS '
9-Untonrown i..Ak6-l , .. .. .. ... . .. ..... .. 9J
IO..WArsaw Ri..r Yin 7..0 ................... ~ ......... ,2
Ott!trt rttth"l•l ller •ere ,..ltlt: II ·
• BrOlldv~twHu. 8rettn1Ue41 ll-AIIaucc2113E. UYefPOOI 20 14-0..-field H11. 17. 1.5-Jta¥\WIIi

.

F&lt;Mitball

12

Monday's sco....

.. ... .... .... : ...... 216

2-Mn.ava (7) 7..0 .. , .• , ... , ...... . ......... 2'16

(.1J,Irk."!i ShaL kldord

Hnck•y
10
$

.I 2 I

VllllCOI.I\Itt

Division VI

Division m

HaJ:th:.. Auot1aUon

PHOENI.IC SUNS W:uvel.l (' W•l~nrunt: ­
h.ull
WASHINGTON WI7.ARIJS W.tm:d J'. ( '

llf 104

10 21

2 II
0

Co/OflkJu

flo.

:\.Col. o.s.Ja (5J6.1.. . . .

Ba..(e;ball
National

Cmtral DMston

I·Zil ntSYI Jlt (21) 7..() ., ..
.. ... ., . )27
2-Cm R~ Boeon (;1) 7-0. .. .. .. ...... ....... 261
3-Tirfin olumbum (2) 1.0 .. .............. ..... 24

z..
lla.
1-A"""W. ( llJ 7-0 .................................2117

Nalton•l IAaur
ATtANTA BRAVES S18m.:d I.HP Joon¥
Kcun1 D11u~ lo :1 mtrMlf-k."'!llh! ~:nnrn-..:1
SAN OIEG(}PADRf..'i: CJ.umed INF &amp;.1 Gm·
YanuJ,, ulfwmv~.'t~ rmm 1~ /\llama Drav~~

. WESTERN CONFERENCE

Division V

Division IJ

4-0er.:u"-'C m1-o .

• ... ....

1-Gennanlown Vallc:y V•cw (22) 7 0 .
12-l
2-Cie Bened1c11ne (7) s-o . . .
. 2tn
:\-AkronMIIIx:hcslt.'f(l)7-0 ,
.~l~)
4-Bellourt'Ol7.0 .
.
216
S.EiynaCarh (1)7-0 , ... . .
11(4
6-BellvllleCkoarFurk (l)70
I,'J
7-NELSONVILLE-YORK 7·0
DO
8-W•ckhfre 7-0
. lfl!'i
9-Bucyrua tt-l
. 6'
10-PORTSMOUilf 6-0
.
. -l I
Othtn ncthinl 11 •r mort' _POlnll! I J.
Caslaha. Margart!\la J4 12-M.~rtm~ t-:c!Ty 29 I \.
Cluolnn F.llls 2&lt;4 14-Gr.IRVJik: L\ I~ (tll.'~Piki.'lnn.
Wel1ngtoo 12

•

•

•

Monln:ni . .
Buffalu
...
P111shurgh .. ..... , ... . . 2
Cnrolrnu ,
. . . ....... I

3- HamlcrPalrn:kHenry(2)7-0 ..
2H
4-Col Hartley OJ 1-0 ...
. . 221
'i-Coldw81rr(2) 6-0... .. .. ..... ,
.... 19K
&amp;.Sullivan Binet R1-we:r (217-0
1.,~
7-0nrnll Gnnd Valle-y 7.0
111
8·Hilnnlb41 River (217-0 , .
119
9-Liberly Cenler 6-l
7~
10-Columbul Grove {217-0. ....
.
. . .J l
Othtn re«hln« 11 er .....-e peNni•: II ·LU·
CAS VILLE YALJ..EY :.0 12-Cnl Jb:::ldy 21 I\•
John11own -Monroe 26 14 {lie)-COAL Gk(}Vf.
DAWSON-BRYANT. Warren Kennedy 19 16Applt C'rMk Wayntdak I:1.

··-

11 9 Ill
177 117
122 l!'i9
IIi 1.11

Ottall/11

10 22 ll
6 11 12
6 14 II
.1 12 II
II 11
I 2 I 1 II

" 2 0
l 2 0
I 0 4
2 2 I
I l 2

Nonllan Dl•illon

Btu1on

lla.

2-AIIlllndii·Cle.utL-m:k 16) 7-0

at.

" 141ami . .... ..... ..
4 2 0 667
· :lll.):kta .......... . 4 ' 0 !'i71
....... ..... .... .. .. J 1 0 jOO
-..,.,n, .
. . o 6 o ooo

Division IV
Irlm

x..
lla.
1-MnnonPicasnnt(l6)7..0 . .......... 116

. ~ ~Flori41:1 &lt;Brown 16-8) Ill Allanta (0haYn'll: 14·
1,0, p.m

.::r;..

Phlladdf'hia . .
,
New Jersey . ... .
NY Ranger1 ...... " ........
Tn~&amp;y .. ......... ,
N Y lslandtrs.
l-lctm/.1

2 0 714 168 149
2 0 714 176 1,5
2 0 714 140 124

Wtlltrn Di•iston
~ I 0 8:\J 152 70
2 4 0 13~ 94 127

S1. Lotals
A!lomta

Futurtgamea

• _ •ClevelaAd (Nagy I!'i · ll) 111 Ba.ltuoorr (Munma
• J!&lt;-8&gt;41lpm
•.~
Tha~nd•:r
: ; Oevcland af &amp;lll~Tt~ft, 8· 1:ii p m 1f ~~e~;~

I

"If you think there was a sinister out as Fisher spoke.
plot on my part to cover up ... you
Fisher said hts b•ggcst regret ts
. need to write a novel. And make it a that he won't be able to work with the
great mystery, because it is absolute- coaches and players he brought to
ly not the truth."
Michigan.
F1sher saic(J.e has told the truth
"I feel sorry for myself because
throughout.
I'm not gomg to have the opportum"I said long time ago, call me a lot ty to work wtth a great group of peoof things, but don't call me dishon- ple," he said.
est. Don't call me someone who
Ftshcr told the players and
doesn't have integrity," he said. "I reporters not to feel sorry lor h•m
know who I am, and I know that's because he is not sorry for anything
absolutely, posillvely not true."
he did.
Fisher seemed confident he will
"Don't feel sorry for us," FISher
land a job elsewhere. Yet he will con- said. "We wtll move on. We will continue to pull for Michigan .
" I'm still going to be a Michigan
man," he said. "Forever I will be a
Mtch•gan fan. I owe a great deal of
who I am to Michigan."
I
Ftsher thanked the Mtchigan basJohn Bentley of Syracuse recent·
ketball players for attendmg while he
ly completed fall qualification rounds
read his statement.
for the MethOdist Ctlllege Golf Team
" ou 're here today not because I
in Fayetteville, N.C.
aske9 ou to be here; you're here
Bentley's scormg average has
today 1 spite of others ... because
placed him fifth in the field of over
you wa ted to be here," he said,
100 prospectiVe intercollegiate
"That akes me feel good. That
golfers. The .ITnish secures a roster
s me feel proud of what you
position on the 1997-98 Methodist
think of me."
Monarch golf team.
The session was almost Iike a pep
Methodtfl College ~~ won the
rally. !:tis friends and supponers
Division III Nattonal ChampiOAshtp.
applauded enthusiasticaii,Y throughseven of the last eight years includthe last four consecuttvc nation-Sports briefs-- aling crowns.
The Monar,hs return
three all-American players and are
FootbaU
ST. LOUIS (AP)- The St. Louts the pre-season picks to r~Jl1'al as
Rams released rookie punter ~II national champions ip 1998.
Methodist golf coach said of BentBnce and replaced him with,veteran
Mike Horan.
ley, "John is a fine young man who
Horan, 38, punted 3 112 seasons came to us with a great golf swing. I
for the
averaging 42.1 yards, am delighted he has shown the perand
played with Denver. sistence and dedtcation to make our

Emmitt Smith to 61 yards on 17 carries -just 34 after he g.ained 2~ on
his first two runs. When 11 came lime
for Troy Aikman to pass, he_ hnd to
contend with cornerbacks Cr1s Dtshman and Darrell Gree~.
"(Defenstve coo~dmator) Nola~
called a great d~.fenstve game plan,
Dishman satd. He told Darrell and
• me th~t we have to bold .~P our men
for thts ®fen,se to work.
' With Allen out, seco.nd-year ru?·
.ning back Stephen Davts stepped '"
and had the biggest game of h1s
career: 94 yards on 22 carries and two
touchdowns. A~other backup, light
end James Jenkms, c~ught a I~:yard
touchdown pass for ht_s first reception
of the. sea.&lt;On
and h1s first scormg
h
catch m I ree years.
.
The Cow~ys (3-3), sun the only
Nf'I: team wtthout a rushtng touchdown, sconed on a 16-yard fumble
return by Dexter Coakley and. a I~
yard pass from Atkman to Mtchae
Irvin. But the rally was too late, and
the five-hme NFC East champtons
are now m thtrd place. behmd the
Redskins and the New York Gtants
(4·3).
"It's going to take us to stay
strong, keep believmg in one ariother, and keep pushing th~ envelore
hard. and ·hopefully we II crack II
open," Smith said. "It'll take some
prayers as well. because. it could •.••tly be a very ugly season for us 1f

Flyers get by Sharks 3-2; Blues also win

~

••
••

The Dally Sentinel • Page .5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pege4

By PAUL GEITNER
BERLIN (AP) - The first .
charges to result from a crtminal .
investigation into steroid use m East
'German sports were brought today
against four fonmer East German
swtmming coaches.
The four were charged with causing bodily harm by administcrmg
anabolic sterotds to 17 teen-age gtrls
fro'nl 1974-1989 "without telling
them or their parents, or answering
honestly when asked" what they
were bemg given, although the
coaches were aware the steroids
could have harmful side effects.
All the young swimmers suffered
from "considerable disturbance of
muscle growth," as well in several
cases, symptoms of pain and bodily
changes such as a deeper votce or
excessiVe body half, according to
Berhn prosecutors.
Two of the coaches charged,
Dieter Lindemann and Volker
Frischke, were hired by the German
national team after umfieation. They
were recently wtthdrawn from trainmg duties in Spain

�0
P~ge 6 • The Deily Sentinel

r

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NLCS to resume tonight

TIJHday, October 14, 1997

•

Marlins to start Brown; Braves. plan to send Smoltz to hill
By BEN WALKER
ATLANTA (AP) - The Florida
Marlins insist Kevin Brown is all set
to start tonight. Then again, they've
had trouble keeping track of thetr atling ace lately.
.
In the latest bit of intrigue dunng
the NL championship series. both
general manager Dave Dombrowski
and manager Jim Leyland sa1d Monday that the pitcher traveled on the
team charter Sunday night.
"Yes, yes, he did." Dombrowski
said.
" He did come in with us last
night," Leyland said. "So unlc~s the
airline had bad lood. I guess he II he
ready tomorrow...

E.eept that it wasn't so.
Brown was not on the Marlins'
plane as they headed to Atlanta,
where they hOld a 3·2 lead over the
Braves heading into Game 6. . .
Instead, he did not leave Flonda
until 9:05 a.m. EDT Monday .on
Delta Hight '1168 from Fort Laud·
erdale. It was an easy trip, aside from
Brown finding someone else sitting
in his assigned seat.
..
"Another night at home 10 my
bed. A little more rest. I feel fine,"
said Brown. scratched twice because
of a viral infection. "I'm throwing
unless lightning strikes me."
But wouldn't the Marlins have
noticed if their No. I starter was

missing going into the most impor·
tant game in franchise history?
"They thought he was on the
plane," Marlins spokesman Ron
Colangelo announced. "They didn't
know he wasn't."
' WHatever, the Marlins said it was
now certain that Brown would start
at Turner Field against Tom Glavine,
the Game 2 winner. A win will put the
Marlins in the World Series, a loss
will force Game 7 on Wednesday
night.
" It's not about me. It's about the
tei\!IL winning," Brown said. "The
fact fhave the chance is just the cir·
cumstance."

Then again,.what seems to be with

Brown in this series is not necessarily so.
Twice the Marlins said be would
start the next day, and both times he
was held back because of illness. Last
Friday, the Marlins said Brown was
in the trainer's noom and would soon
be in the interview area at Pro Player Stadium. It turned out he was
home all day.
•
,There have been times in the past
when teams have not wanted a pitcher's condition to be fully known. In
the 1982 World Series, for example,
the Milwaukee Brewers continued to
insist reliever Rollie Fingers was
available against St. Louis, even
though he wasn't.

' hiulng
Brown, who won the opener, was never ll,now, do you?" Atlanta
scheduled to pitch Games I, 4 an~ 7 coach Clarence Jones said.
in Leyland's original rotation.
''I' m not using it as an excuse, but
"Sure, I was disappointed," said when the guys go home, they want to
Brown, appearing more gaunt than know who's going to be pitching," he
usual. "I was supposed to pitch said. "They like to know who they'll
Game 4 and I was pushed back to be fpcing."
Game 5, and then pushed back ·
If Brown does not pitch, the Mar·
again.".
. .
tins would likely tum to Tony Saun·
Havm~ seen the Marhns ~uggle ders. The rookie was 3-0 against
th~1~ rotat1on on _nearly no nouce- Atlanta in the regular season and got
Flonda coach R1ch Donnelly called a no-decision in Game 3.
Braves manager Bobby Cox four
hours before gametime Sunday to tell
"You just tell yourself it could be
him Livan Hernandez would replace one of those two guys," Braves leadBrown - the Braves weren't sure off man Kenny Lofton said. "We've
who to expect tonight.
faced both of them before."
"Everybody says Brown, but you

·Basebal! owners:seek to have only one team swi~ch Je~gues
By RONALD BLUM ·
NEW YORK (AP)- Remember
the radical realignment plan. in which
15 teams would switch leagues? .
Remember the modified plan '"
which seven teams would switch?
Forget about 'em.
Baseball owners are prepared to
vote Wednesday on a plan in which
only one team will s~itch: probably
Kansas City but poss1bly Milwaukee
or Minnesota.
Owners are faced with a Wednesday deadline to make a decision and
will hold a telephone conference call
to either vote on one-team realignment or push back the deadline until
after the World Series.

"There's been no dec,ision on
either one of those fronts, " acting
commissioner Bud Selig said Monday. ''We're not close to any type of
decision . We're still studying a myr·
iad of options."
Kansas City switching is is the
most likely outcome, one owner and
one management official said Mon·
day. speaking on the condition they
not be identified.
If either Kansas City, Milwaukee
or Minnesota switches to the NL.
Detroit most likely would move from
the AL East to the AL Central, creal·
ing an opening for Tampa Bay in the
AL East.
The NL would either put the new

team in the Central or switch to four
divisions with four teams in each.
Selig originally backed a complete
geographic realignment, in which 15
teams would have switched leagues,
and following an owners meeting last
month said he expected more than
five teams to switch for 1998.
A seve11-team switch in which
Anaheim, C&gt;akland and Seattle Yiould
move to the NL has gotten bogged
down because of opposition by the
San francisco Giants and the players
association.
Management labor negotiator
Randy Levine criticized union head
Donald Fehr on Monday for threatening 10 attempt to block the seven-

team plan.
Owners say they don't need the
union's approval for realignment.
Fehr disputes that and says players
effectively have power to block the
realignment beeause their approval is
needed to extend interleague play
beyond 1998.
~
"The Basic A~ment, which
was carefully worded, makes it a
management prerogative," Levine
said. "We have had strong consulta·
lions with them since day one. We've
taken. their plans and incorpo~ated
them into the discussions. They have
been a part of it, and we told them we
would come and talk )o them when
we had a plan.

"The talk of leveraging inter- In addition, the Giants maintain the
league play, which has been ~ huge NL constitution gives them exclusive
success, I think really troubles fans." NL rights to the jlay area market and
.If realignment results in only one · they can't be forced to accept the
team switching, the biggest loser Oakland Athletics.
would be Texas, which has been try·
In the event of one-team realigning to escape the AL West, claiming ment, owners probably would present
too many of its road games on the it as an interim step, saying they
West Coast have late television starts would consider additional switches
back home.
for 1999 and beyond.
"There is overwhelming support
Also, Schieffer said Texas would
for this. There are probably 24 or 25 force the leagues tQ stay with a bal· .
teams that would vote for realign· anced schedule next season if there's
ment," Rangers president Tom Schi- only one-team realignment. Most
effer said. "The problem is because other teams want an unbalanced
of the veto rule, getting the 24 or 2S schedule in which they play more
to carry the day."
games against teams in their own
No team can be forced to switch division, but the Rangers don't want
leasues or divisions against its will. additional West Coast road games.

Coslet says it's too late to fight indifference in Bengals' camp1,
'

· By JOE KAY
CINCINNAn (AP) -While he
admitted that some of his Cincinnati
Bengals just don't seem to care,
Bruce Coslet emphasized it's too late
to do much about it.
The Bengals have all but elimi·
nated themselves from playoff contention by losing five of their first six .
games. A 30-7 loss Sunday in Ten·
nessee left the Bengals alone in last
place in the AFC Central.
Pan of the problem is a weak
offensive line, part of it is a mistake·

prone defei!Se and part of it involves
attitude. It's clear that something's
tecribly wrong with the team's chemistry.
"We have a large percentage of
our team that is all for the team con·
cept, and I appreciate those guys and
I know who they are," Coslet said ·
Monday. "We have a segment of our
team that probably doesn't care one
way or the other. Then we have
another segment of our•team that is
just worried about individual statistics and that is what's more important

to them than either wins or losses.
"I don't want to get into specifics. ·
I just have a feeling. To say exactly
who or how many, I wouldn't want
to venture that. 1be majority of the
guys are all for the team."
The question is what can be done
about it six games into the season.
Coslet's answer: not much.
"We've made all the changes we
can possibly make," Coslet said.
"We're beyond that point. If we
would have been able to•do that, we
would have already done it."

Salary cap pushed Wilkins
from NBA to seconct Eurotour

In the last few games, Coslet has
played most of his backups, changed
from a 3-4 alignment on defense to a
four-man line and rotated players al
various positions, hoping one of
them would do well enough to win
the job. None of the changes has
made much of a differen•-e.
Cos let said it's not as simple as
getting rid of players who don't care.
"You have to put up with 'em
until you can replace 'em. That's
what Paul Brown used to say,"
Coslct said. "But it's not as easy to
replace them in today 's football,
with the salary cap and the number of
teams and the size of the rosters."
So, they're stuck with them for
now. The question is whether Cos let .
can keep the rest of the team pulling
together or whether the Bengals -

who have not had a winning record
since 1990- will have yet another
implosion.
"This is the point in the sea."'"
where everybody starts drifting
apart," said offensive lineman loe
Walter, who has been through many
Bengal collapses during his 13-year
career. "Everybody is really frus·
!rated and looking for answers, and
nobody has uny.
"I'm not saying we' re fulling
apart. I'm saying· this is the time it
huppens."
·
Quarterback Jeff Blake has tried to.
take a more' vocalleade111hip role in
recent weeks. Running back Ki-Jana
Carter, in only his second season, said
he's going to be more visible this
week.
''I'm sure each·o'f us is looking at

each person to see if they're slacking
and ready to throw in the tow~ I. "
Carter said. ''I'm not ready to throw
it in yet.
"Whatever emotional spark I can
give this team, I'm going to try to do.
I'm sure they don't look at me a.&lt; one
of the key leaders. I'm going to do
what I can. We've got to start some·
thing soon here because this is not u
good feeling."
Walter is surprised ut the lack oi'
urgency among the playe11&lt; so far.
"We've all got to focus u little hit
more and get u little sense of urgency
about us," Walter said. "I think
mayhc this week we'll see it. I think
these guys arc realizing now we've
dug ou11&lt;clves into u big-time hole
and we've got to climb out of it in u
hurry."

Tuesday,October14,1997

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

More are decorating seasonally to give th~tr homes autumn lift
By NICOLE BONDI
The Detroit New•
You'll have to sl:are up more than
just a few cardboard witches and
ghosts taped to the front window
this Halloween.
· l
"We're way beyond paper
cutouts," says Heather Lorincz, gen·
eral manager of English .Gardens in
Eastpoinfe, Mich. With fancy figurines, spooky lights and elaborately
carved pumpkins, Halloween· deco·
rating is taking off.

''Next to Christlnas, it's probably
Decorations have a Halloween
the biggest decorating holiday," theme, but last well beyond Oct. 31.
Lorincz says. "A lot of people are
"People are wanting to decorate
decorating for the fall season. on a seasonal basis to give their
Before they were just decorating for home a lift," says Laura Mahle of
Kmart Corp. "One of the hottest
the week before Halloween."
Now, peopl~ hang . their scary things we've seen is an autumn
wreath that has a Halloween theme
decorations throughout October.
"The real push for Halloween to it." These straw wreaths show a
(decorations) is the first and second scarecrow and a pumpkin, ·and can
week of October," says Dominic easily be left up till Thanksgiving.
The natural, autumn'look is espeRoe of Halloween USA in Royal
'
cially
hot. Pile up com stalks and
Oak, Mich.

Beauty queen
winner from M~.igs
Shannon Jenkins placed sixth in
qj)mpetition at the 1997 Miss Ohio
Teen America Pageant, held recently
at the Columbus Convention Center.
The Meigs High School senior
placed in the top 30 ·semi-finalists
from the field of 164 contestants,
went on to be named to the top 10,
and finished with a sixth place. She
was presented two trophies and a
ribbon for outstanding leadership
and service.
·
In the formal wear competition,
Shamion was escorted by h~r brother, Mike Davis. ·
At Meigs High she is a cheer·
leader, in the flag corps, class secretary, and is planning a career in nursing. She is now preparing for the
1998 Miss Teen Columbus and the
I 998 Miss Ohio Teen USA.

Five ways to make Halloween
frighlful- and tun:
-Lights ($5.99-$11.98). Strings
of lights scare up the Halloween season with dangling skeletons, ghosts
and Frankenstein faces.
-The Monster Mash ($29.98) ..
A figurine has a witch, Frankenstein's monster and 11 mummy that

boogie down to the Monster Mash
when you press a button.
- Carving kits ($2.98-$4.98).

Tools and instructions will help you
carve a wicked jack o' lantern.
- Colrm ($300) and dead body
($75-$115). Whal's Halloween
without someone rising from the
dead?
- Lighted foam pumpkins ($5.99·
$12.99). " If you don't have time to
carve a pumpkin, these you can use
over and over again," says Laura
Mahle of Kmart.
(Sources: English Garde~s. Halloween USA, Kmart Corp.)

State School Board president to
address Ewing SAR on October 23
President of the State ..;;'ard o~ As president of the state hoar~ ,
Education, Jenntfer . L. Sh;ts 11£-~ Sheets has some mteresung observaPomeroy, will be the guest )speaker tions on this interesting issue .
at the Oct. 23 meeting ofth9 Ewings
Due to the importance of the subChapter, Sons of the Ameri'can Rev- ject matter, the Ewings chapter has
olution.
opened the meeting to all interested
The meeting will be held in the persons. Those not wanting to attend
Meigs County Public Library, 216 the dinner should arrive around 8
W. Main St., Pomeroy at 6:30p.m.
p.m. to hear Sheets, who will accept
School funding continues to be a questions at the end of her address.

li~e Extension Service serving in
H1ghland and Me1gs count1 es, and
an instructor at Rio Grande College.
She has bachelqr's and master's
degrees in home economics and
graduated summa cum laude from
the Capital University Law School.
She is a past member of the Meigs
Local School Board and a member
of the Meigs County Historical

major issue in Ohio since March

An attorney in private practice

Society and other community orga-

when the Ohio Supreme Court
declared the present funding of publie schools unconstitutional.

since 1982, Jennifer Sheets has also
been a home economics agent with
the Ohio State University Coopera-

n\zations including the Middtcponl.'hmeroy Rotary Club.

Church women hear about Right to Life program
A Right to Life program was presented by Nonna Torres at a recent
SHANNON JENKINS
meeting of the Meigs County
Churches of Christ Women's Fellowship held at the Bradford Church
of Christ.
·
Torres said that the purpose of the
organization
is to protect unborn
October birthdays were noted.
babi~~
noted
that there is an
It was also reported that Lisle and
800
number
for
people
to call if they
Stout had attended the Racine UMW
'find themselves pregnant, unable or
meeting as guests.
.
The group also presented a gift to unwilling to keep the baby, and
the Athens District of United
Methodist Women in memory of
Nora Houdashelt, a special mission
to cognition, Helen Teaford, and a
The Ohio Mineland Partnership
gift to mission, Emily Nicole Emer- will hold its 1997 annual conference ·
ick.
on Oct. 20 and 21.
The program. "God's Spirit is
The conference will be held at the
Alive in China", was given by Hope Holiday Inn in Zanesville. RegistraMoore with all members taking part. tion on Oct. 20 will begin at 8 a.m.
Moore also closed the meeting with and the banquet will adjourn at 8
a reading from The Upper Room, p.m.
Psalm 15, and with prayer.
Monday's activities will include a
Others attending were Rose Ann tour of The Wilds with lunch, a visit
Jenkins, Beulah Waid, Ruth Crouch, to the Central Ohio Coal Co., and
Freda Wilson and Marie Houdashelt. the conference banquet. The focus
of th~ cr(nference is to build on the
partnerships ill support of continued

$yracuse Asbury UMW
A report on the Festival of Sharing district meeting was given at a
recent session of the Syracuse
Asbury United ,M~thodist Women
held at the church.
Mary Lisle, Hope Moore and
Jean Stout attended the Festival held
at The Plains United Methodist
Churchand took the kits and money
for the blankets.
• The meeting was opened by Pres·
ident Lisle with all members repeat·
ing the United Methodist Women
Purpose in unison. Lisle also had a
reading, "Count your Blessings".
Elma Louks read Psalm I00 for her
devotion.
Jean Stout, secretary, gave lier
report. There were 16 shut-in calls.
J:isle gave the treasurer's report in
the absence of Treasurer Ann
Sauvage. Offering was accepted and

straw bales and scatter a few gourds
for a look that 1am throughout
November.
"It's pretty quick and easy and
ine.pensive," Lorincz says. "I can't
think of anything in the natural
theme that runs over $10."
Try arranging gourds in a straw
or wire bl!Sket. A bag of gourds sells
for under $10 and will ·last up' to
three months . Use natural branches
like bittersweet- which has or~nge '
berries- as accents.

interested in finding adoptive parents. She recommended reading the
book, "Pro Life Answers." In l)er
talk she also discussed euthanasia
and those who assist others in taking
their own lives.
·
Cards were signed for Pat Thoma
and Amy Perrin. Ann Lambert asked
the group to consider taking charge
of the women's retreat for 1998. The
women will take the idea back to
,~eir home churches for discussion

before a decision is made.
Prayer and hymn singing opened
the meeting. Devotions were by
Lynn Runyon of the Bradbury
Church who used "Life Isn't Fair" as
her theme. Paula Pickens and Sherry ·
Shamblin sang "Calvary."
Next meeting will be Oct. 23 at
Dexter. Bradford will have devotions. Chatldine Alkire· had the clos·
ing prayer before refreshments were
served.

.Ohio Mineland Partnership to hold conference

,.J ,,.

(

I

· Abandoned Mineland Reclamalion
Programs in Ohio.
. On Oct. 21 breakfast will be provided followed by a business meet·
ing that will include speeches on the
Appalachian Clean Streams Initiative, Monday Creek and Raccoon
Creek Report, Plannin~ for Mine
Subsidence in Ohio, Remining in
Ohio, Broken Arrow- Mine Seal,
Remining · update and Agency
update. The meeting will ·start at
8:30a.m. and adjourn at 3:30p.m.
Ken Blackwell, the current trea-

By CHRISTOPHER
lion.
Facing former coach Maljkovic, r-----------------~--------------------------------------------~·
P. WINNER
Wilkins and Rivers, who played now with Racing Paris, Wilkins
USA T~
.
briefly with the Los Angeles Lakers played the greyhound game prohihBOLOGNA, Italy - Old Hawks - an4 the Clippers, are the winners.of ited in Greece, where teams usually
never die, they just keep relocating. · lhe losttwo'Euroleague MYP awards. average fewer than 70 points.
"He can eat my dust," Wilkins
. Tell that to Dominique Wilkins. lbey represent a new bn:ed of Euro37. But ~ecp it nice and gentle. pean mercenary - a!e and salary said before the game. The numbers
Above all, don't talk salary cap. "I cap escapees determined IO shoot followed: 30 points, II rebounds. two
hate it;" sighs Wilkins. "It's like a down the NBA's cash-and-carry assists and a blocked shut in u ~3-77
death sentence for veterans:"
youth movement.
win.
For the second time in three years,
"Look at MichaeiJordan. He's 34
"I never said that Wilkins wus not ·
Wilkins- the No. 7 scorer in NBA und he's still the NBA's best player," a gnod player." Maljkovic says. ''I
history- is in Europe,this time with Wilkins says. "Age has not~ing to do said only that a-player who docs not
TeamSystem Bologna in Italy's lop- with it. -Nothing. Great athletes just practice _ no matter who he is !light A-I league.
go out and play. It's drive and deter- does not play."
·
Two years ago, the one-time mination.lt's love of the game."
Wilkins just shakes his head: "In
Atlanta Hawks superstar averaged . Bolog_na has no objection.Wilkins Italy, they treat players as men.
nearly 21 points and led Panathani· ts averagmg ~re than 20 pomts, and Whereas in Greece, it felt a.' though
akos of Athens to the European TcamSystem ts 11·1. wllh four wms • we had 10-year-old kids on the team.
League title. Despite bitter public 1n Euroleague play. The e1ght-month You can't go here, you can't cat this.
feuds with Panathoniakos' discipli- Eurol~uc toufl)~y bunchc,.the con- you can't drink that, which is ridicunarian head coach, · Bozidar uncnt stop clubs m a diVISional play- lous. Two-a-day practices, seven 10
Maljkovic, Wilkins was feted in off system that eventually whmlcs 24 eight months. it's crazy. You wear out
Greece like a national hero.
tcam.s to a final fo~r m Apnl.
your playc11&lt;."
Whereupon the "Human HighL1kc must lt~lum clubs, TeamWilkins won't be worn out. He
light Film" jumped ship to the San System plays a last·hrcakmg ~amc wants another chance. And his IllAntonio Spu11&lt;. Last year. he aver- that fav~&gt;rs quleknc&lt;&gt; .. Pll;"'"~ and year career in Atlanta is siill on his
aged I~.2 points for a team gning penetrauon .. The st~le IS hght years mind. "I played there so long. it was
nowhere once star center Dav1d trom the smothenng zone slu~- hard for me to leave, .. he says .. "I'd
Robinson was injured.
~~wns prc~crred by the more physt· go back, sure, and it's very(!"':iblc
Wilkins expe&lt;.1ed to be hack. Then cal, set: play Greeks, who wor.h1p that it could happen."
·.
cume the cap catch.
Europe s 30-sccond shot clock.
"San Antonio wanted me, but they •
couldn't afford me," Wilkins says.
" It's not really ego {yith me, but what
•
I've done over the years. It's hard for
me to play for the minimum."
The soft-spoken Wilkins talks less B~ HAL BODLEY
umpires unilaterally adopted their
like a converted IWrophile than · a USA Today
own code of conduct just before the
man spumed by a league he loves.
CLEVELAND - Major league playoffs began. Abuse will not be tol"In the NBA, you reach a certain age,
erated. they said.
and it's like you're supposed to he in
So, when the Atlanta Braves openn rocking chair," he says. "Every
ly heaped invective on umpire Eric
year I pretty much had to prove them
Gregg over his strike zone in Sun·
wrong."
·
day's 2-1 Florida victory, it seemed
Wh,en he couldn't make a deal
repen:uosions would be imminent.
with tile Spurs, he took another look
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) _ Toledo
_How. soon would umpire.' union
at Europe.
tailback Dwayne Harris took offen- chtef R1ch1e ~~ll~ps. be demandm~
EnteL, Giorgio Scragnoli, the stve honors while teammate Marcus the Braves hcd1sc1phned and fined.
q
•
eccentr~multimillionaire owner of
Matthews and Miami of Ohio's- · ·surprise! Nuthing-ilappened.
Fortitudo Bologna, which ha.• never DeMarrio Jones shared the defensi'l:e
The only act1on Nat1onal League
Free evening calls. Free weekend calls.
won a championship in its 65-year player of the week awmd in 1 ~ Mid· preSident Len Coleman took was to
history. Seragnoli, 42, who owe~ his American Conference. .
tell Gre!IB to keep h1s mouth shut. .
: free activation. Fr;ee phone. Double minutes. 1
fortune to cigarette-packaging equip- ,
Harris, a S-foot: IO; 191 -pound
l'lulhps was downnght ,tranquil
ment, invited Wilkins to visit him in junior from Columbus, gained 203 when ~ached ~onday at hJS office
his vintage car-filled villa outside yards on 23 carries and IICOred twice ne~ ~tladelph1a.,
. ..
Bologna.
.'
i~ a 41·10 victory over Central
I mnotupset, hesatd. Bobby
Within eight weeks, Wilkins Michigan. His rusbins y.-dqe and C6x and the Braves lost a tough ball·
signed a two-year. $3.9-million dear all-purpose yardaj(e (229 yardt) w= game they thought lhey were gomg
- S1.8 million this season with a career highs. even thouJh he ,.. out to w1n. lf after the game they want$2.1-million option for 1998. He is the fourth quancr. It wu the second ed to ~ent. let t~m ve~t. Thai's what
Europe's highest-paid basketball time this year he 11M been ~elected to ¥~ l!ve Wtlh 1f you re an ump1re.
PoiMtoy 204 West 2nd Street61.4/992-7070 · Gallipolis 1502 Eoslllrn Avenue 614/441.0547
player and makes more than Bologna . receive tbe award.
Thts ts not the ktnd of abuse that I
soccer ·idol Roberto Baggio, who
Matthews a ~-II 190-pound react agatnst. l react to abustve
Athenl 1100 East State Street 614/594-4800 · Jack-. 384 Main Street 614/286-6073 . Also in
starred for Italy in the 1994 World senior li.kerfyomAuon, tt.d 12 behavior ?R the field.".
Weat Vlrtlnla: Charleston, Huntington, Borboursville, .Danville, logan, Parkersburg, Ripley.
Cup. · -•
tackles includina two for neaative
· OreJ8 s p:nerous strike zone may
Scott Depot, Vienna, Welch, Ohio: Chillicothe, Marietta, Portsmouth, South Point, Waverly,
Seragnoli also went after fanner yardtae and broke up two JIUHI. He have helped Florida's Livan Heman·
Kentucky: Ashland
Notre Dame point guard David led a defense thai limited the MAC's dez strike out 15. Six Braves took
•
Rivers, who had paced another No 3 rusher Eric Flowers to 12 called third strikes. Others struck'out
&lt;;:ertoin r•lfrictions apply. All minutes based on local minuhti, rooming ond toll are not included. FrH uie of phone
Athens team, Olympiakos, to last
and . ~ conference's' No. 3 protecting the ou~ide of the plate.
while remaining a Cellular One cuslomer. Oiler limited to quolified.'ote pion•. Oiler ond• soon.
year's European title. Seragnoli team in total offense to 189 yards,
Gregg says h1s str1ke zone has
sisned Riven for two years at S3 mil- 2SO below its ave...,e.
been the same for 2.5 years.

Birthday boy
James Joshua Daugherty celebrated his first birthday August 21 at
his home. He resides in Mason with
his parents, Jim and Paula Daugherty,
and sister, Danielle.
He is the grandson of Fred and
Juanita Daughterly, Point Pleasant.
and Gordon and Susan Winebrenner,
Syracuse. He is the great· grandson
of Maggie Winebrenner, Syracuse
and Ernestine Zuspan, Mason.

Roush attending WVWC

surer of the State of Ohio, will be the
keynote speaker for the banquet. He
is from the Cincinnati area ·and has
Joshua Roush, son of Donald and •
been in public service for the past 20 Susan Roush of Portland, is attend·
years holding many distinguished ing West Virginia Wesleyan College
positions .
in Buckhannon this fall majoring in
Registration is $75 a person and art.
•
includes meals, breaks and conferRoush is a 1997 graduate of
ence handouts. For additional infor- . Southern High School. Affiliated
mation residents may contact Bob with the United Methodist Church.
First, Buckeye Hills RC&amp;D: 614- the college has an enrollment of
373-7926.
approximately 1,600 students.

I

..

I

•. l

JAMES J. DAUGHERTY

•

::~\--

"Encourage your
children to read a
newspaper every day.
It will make them ·
·s tars in the
most important

Free fall.

..

gameof~ll­

the game of life."
Every day of the year since I was a
child, I've read everything I could for news,

Major league umpires vote
to refuse to tolerate abuse

information and entertainment. So, .if you
want to give your children a great start read
to them from the time they're toddlers.
That's 'what my parents did for me.

MAC honors
two UT players,
Miami's Jones

When your children get older.
encourage them to read books, magazines,
and ce:tainly a newspaper each and every
day. Tell .them john Elway says it will make

-----------------------------,f·

them stars in the most important game of
all -

·'
the game of l1fe.

- John E"'ay. Quartert:&gt;ack

L------------------~------------~

CELW

•

The Daily Sentinel
.It all~ with Il£WS[ep!IS.
THIS MESSAGE IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY THIS NEWSPAPER AND
THE NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION OF AMERIC A•

yards

.'

,,

�.,
The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

"

The Daily Sentin~~

li:rl Holroclt&lt;lnono, &amp;t&lt;·M7-

I..

0... ~ "' Or

60 Lost and Found

:Couples should update-· insurance to insure proper .benefits
. '

'

that my husband was so careless.
I guess tbe moral of the story is
this. Gentlemen: DO you know who
would receive your benefits if you
died today? Are you SURE? --Widowed in America
Dear Widowed: Your letter
should serve as a wake-up call to all
married people in my reading audience. And now a question · to my
readers: Does your spouse have life
insurance? If not, WHY not? Ir so,
do you know where the policy is?
Please clip this column, and talk
about it at the dinner table tonight. It
could be the most \tnponant conversation you have had in a long time.
Dear An~ Landers: Here 's
another Jetter for your Stupid Criminal file: A husband attd wife decided

to rob a service station. ·The wife column, you said that since 1978,
held a gun on the assistant manager Craig Davidson of Phoenix has
in the office, while the husband picked up $5,170 in loose change ·
forced the manager at gunpoint to .while jogging.
the room where the safe was.
I have been running regularly for ·
While alone with the wife, the some 23 years and have also picked
assistant manager told her about thel up some change, but the above fiBwonderful contest they were haying "ure does not compute. It is a very
and suggested that she enter it. She good week when I find a total of $1,
eagerly filled out an entry blank bUt Craig wotild have us believe he
with her name. address and phone has been finding an average of 75
number. As soon as the couple left cents a day, every day for 19 years!
with the loot, the assistant manager' Get real, Ann.
retrieved her entry ·blank and notiThe only way that would make
fied the police. -- Oklahoma City, sense to me is If he is jorging past a
Okla.
lot of ATM machines or through
Dear 0. City: Did she win any- some fancy. Phoenix bedrooms. I'm
thing -- other than a stretch ·in the signing my name. and you can use it
slammer?
if you want to. •- Thomas Coffey in
Dear Ann Landen: In a recent Chantilly, Va.

OU book celebrated town's history
ATHENS-- Athens is celebrating
its 200th binhday by unwrapping a
new book. "Athens, Ohio: The Village Years" is a colorful account of
the town's dcvclopmenl through the
remembrances of early settlers.
•·
"Athens really has had an inter.. ·csting and worthy history that need-ed 10 be recorded." says author
Roben Daniel. Ohio University
emeritus professor of American

hi s~

tory.
Daniel's text. slated for publication Oct. 30 by Ohio University
Press, is based on newspaper
·accouncs, inslitutional archives, ceo-

'

~.

sus records and personal diaries of
early Athenians. It covers the period
from before white settlement to
1920. Daniel is working on a second
volume that will follow Athens from
1920 to 2000.
Ohio Uni versity Press is sponsoring a 'free. public reception to promOle the book at 5 p.m . Tuesday
(today) in Baker Center's 1804
Lounge. Daniel will lecture and also·
he .available to sign copies. The
book sells for $36.95 in hard cover
and $I 7.95 in paperback.
A resident of Athens since I957,
Daniel said he wanted to create a

~ ~oothills Art
The I 6th Annual Foothills will be
_ held in the Lodge at Canter's Cave
" ·4-H Camp. 5 miles nonh west of
Jacks6n, Ohio, on Township Road
;. 223. off Route 35. from Friday,
October 17 to Sunday. October I9.
More than, 145 tri-state anists
have registered works in oils.
·acrylics, mixed media, prints. pastels. drawing. photography, water' .color, and sculpture.
_
Approximately 600 pieces will
. - be on display for judging. A total of

chronology for townsfolk past and
present, not for "scholars in Timbuktu." His lively text. supplemented
with more tban I50 historical photographs, is the result of a decade of
research.
,.
"He includes just the right
amount of detail in his history of the
village of Athens." said Gill
Berchowitz, senior editor a~io
University Press. "He describes ow
outside events affected the pe e of
Athens: a group of Athenians founded a mission in Liberia. the Buckeye
Rovers went to California in search
of gold, and one of the circuses that

visiled Athens paraded I50 'living Pastor Jacob Lindley and the Rev.
wild animals' down Coun Street."
James lrvineQnow · recognized
In I 800, three years before Ohio through the buildings named for
became a state, the Ohio Company's themQhelpcd bring collegiate acadRufus Putnam laid out the village of emia to Ohio University in the early
Athens in a bend of the Hocking · J.800s.
River.
Ohio University Press will mark
Ohio University was born oul of the state's bicentennial in 2003 with
a contract between the Ohio Compa- a 10-book series on the development ·
ny and Congress. The university of Ohio edited by Kent State Uniofficially was founded in 1804, but versily history professor Clarence
it didn't begin opcralion as a sec- Wuaderlin. Some proposeiltitles for
ondary school until I808, according the Ohio Bicentennial Series are:
10 Athens, Ohio: The Village Years. Transportation in Ohio; Women in
By I8 I5, there still were less than I0 Ohio History; Governors of Ohio;
studenls enrolled. Scholars such as and Ohio Technology.
'

•

~ork .

Athens area musicians will take
center stage during the Fes1ival.
Classical harpisl Lucille Jennings
will play Saturday afternoon from 2

to4 p.m.
On Sunday . classical pianist
Richard Syracuse will entertain
from 2 to 4 p.m. The musical entertainment is sponsored by Oak Hill
B.anks.
For those interesting in learning
what a print is or how watercolor
works, there will be a program
called "Experiencing Foothills."
On Saturday from Noon to 2 p.m.
and 5 to 7 p.m. and on Sunday from
noon to 2 p.m., a special area will be

open where folks can Jearn more
about the an they've been seeing.
Hands-on projects will be available free of cost under sponsorship
of National City Bank. •
Festival Chairman . Alice Argo
says visitors can create a watercolor
to take home, make an an print button, or make a mixed media piece.
Admission and parking are free.
Foothills An Festival is sponsored
by. Southern Hills Ans Council and
the OSCO Employees Charily Fund

.....
~rvlee

Coffey: I, too.
doubted his n!Jmbt;rs. so I called his_
home and spoke with Mrs. Davidson. The story sounded I00 percent
legit to me. Incidentally, Craig runs
1hree hours a day and has jojged
120.000 miies since 1978. Aside
from loose change, he has found a
bike helmet, a power drill, a fax
machine and a kitchen sink.
And now, I'd like to hear from
other joggers around :he world .
What ·have YOU found .on your
daily runs?

• Dlylri • DisltwusiMS
. HOIWI Rflllabls
Quality Service
(814) 843 1440
Alt Major Brands
RIIIIIOI18ble Rates

"
·'

Send questions· to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700. Los Angeles,
'

~·

Society
Scrapbook

~

.

~-

•

•

pt!5
Alit

'. 1&amp; . !!o/

•

Sbower to be held
A card shower is planned for
Addie Petrel who will observe her
90th. birthday Friday. She has
resided her entire lifetime in Racine.
Cards may be sent to her at Box I85.
Racine. Ohio 4577 I.

VISITING THAIS · - Jeff •nd
the Rev. Krla Roblnaon,
front lett, who hoatlld • group ot
12 d8leglltw from churchn In
Chl8ngr•l, Th•lland recantty,
Joined their ~·· for • photograph willie •t an outing at the
McKelfty homa In SyrecuM.

•••Mel

*

PUBLIC NOTICE

diYI before tho annual

with

•n

•x"

bo
of
by
bt

permlttH.

Only rntdonta or llotgo
County holding member·
lhlp CortlflCIItl tor II ltllll
15 doya bolore tho dolo of

_, . election, may vote.

llombtrl of ·tho -toty
. mull declare their c.,dld·
acy tor tho olltce of.Dlrtclor
of tho oocloty by fllllljl with
tho Secretary Dobbie
WotiiCHI, 42455 Woocl1 Rd.,
Coolville, OH 45723; I
petition ol9ned by 10 or
more members of the

ooc1o1y who aro ...-.-of
llolga Counly, at lent 7

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER Star
Grange 778. and Star Junor Grange
878, annual Halloween party and
potliuck super on Saturday. Potluck
at 6:30 p.m. fpllowed by costume
judging and games--41 7:30 p.m.
Event to be held at·lhe Salem Cen1er

-

~

8115 4422

Cheater, Ohio
1QI2MII/Irn

•

Public Notice
tor the JIU11ICIM of current
upllllll.

.

'

-~

Arts and Crafts Fair set
The annual arts and crdfts fair
will he held Saturday, Oct. 25. from
9 a.m. tu 3 p.m. at the Wilkesville
Community Center in Wilkesville.
Approximately 25 crafters will be
showing and selling their items.
Some spaces arc still available and
anyone interested may·call 6 I4-6695019. Food will be availahle during
the day.

LUMP AND STOKER COAL
H.E•.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILAIU
Hours:
7:00 a.m. lhru 4:00 p.m. Moncllly thru Frldlly
•

. ... .· '" tht .

CLASSIFIEDSI.

992·9200
Large 16", 3 Item $9.99
Subs, Salads, Lasagna,
Spaghetti, Bread Sticks,
Hot Wings or
Cheese Sticks.

SUNDAY
CARPENTER - Carpenter Batpis! Church, .located on SR 143.
CArpenter, h9mecoming Sunday.
Dinner at noon; afternoon program,
I:30 p.m. with special singers, and
Joe Gwinn of Gallipolis. speaker.

WE DELIVER!!
·I

--··

Custom Homes

Remodeling

M&amp;J

&amp; VIcinity

oon. wv. Evorrdlr 8·8. Cral1o,
antiques, laola, appllancH, turf"
nitu~e. towa. variety. 30•.a75-

Gallipolis, ·ohio 45631

S«l&lt;.

(614) 446-4759

Notlco of Eloallon on Tb
Levy In Ex- of the Ton
IIIII Umllitlon

RevlHCI Coclo, Soctlon
3501.1~:"-1$, .

, ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

CELLULAR PHONES
POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479
BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of financial
obligations and arrange a fair distribution of
assets. Oeblors in bankruptcy may keep
•exempf' property tor their personal use. This
may include a car, a house, clothes, , and
household goods. · · '
_
Fot lntOtmatton Regarding Banlcruptey'COI'IIact:

EatiiRIIee

1192-31138

Second Floor, CourtltouH,
Second Street, Ponteroy,

FID
Ohio 45711_
.
Comptalnlo •tal not tho
Plck up dtacartlocl
voluollona, •• oatobllahod
IPPII8nen, botltrln,
for lox year 1..7, mull be
IRIRJmtlllt&amp;
d
,,~
modo In occor anco w "
motor blocka.
Soclton 5715.11 of tho Ohio
lhvlood Coda. Tho10 814-892-4025 I •m-8
comptatnto muot be Iliad on
forma which will bo
MY PLACE
furnlahod by 1111 County
Audhor oiM1 m•t be filed In
-H•Iuufletl Wood
the County Auclltor'a Olllco
Ptajuts ,
on or bolort lha 3111f day of ·
.....
llwch, 1tM. All complllntl
filed wllh lila County
Swllp, lelues,
Auclllor wtll be hoard by the
Wles, Misc. htiiS
Board of Ravlalon In tho
manner provld1d by ltclton
34718 St. Rt. 7
'711. 11 of lha Ohio RoviHCI
Ph. 985 4198
Nancy Pttrbr Clllljlblll
· Molp County Auditor
CIO) 10, 12,13, 14, 11,18,17,
11, 20, 21,1otc

lllff!IIJIRf. •

114-

Clean Late Uadal Cara Or
Trucks, 19QQ Model• Or Newer,
Smith Buk:k Pontiac, 1DOO Ealt·
Galipob.
J &amp; o·a AulD Porta. Burlnt ul•aoe veNClol. Selling par~o. 304173-50:13.

Non-WarkJng Washer. Orytrl,

S10ve1, Refrlget~~rora, Fr..ztra,
Air Condilionera. Color T. V.'1,
VCA'I. AIIO Junk Carl, 11•·251·

1236.

5

tsGd.l · - - - . . . . . . . . . clear cut, conlacl Greg at ,114-·
1148-3015.
Wanled To Bur UHd Uobilt

115-511115
Wan1ed : · Standing Timber Or
Chipped Wood. 814-3811-8118,

'

EMPLOYr.1EtJT
SERVICES

Help Wanted

AVON f All Areu I Shirley

Avon S8 -St 8 /Hr. No Doer -To Door, Quick Cash, Fun 1 R•x-

1'11, 1-800-31!1&gt;0&lt;611.
AVON - Sl -120 /Hr. No Door To
Door. Qujc:k Cas~l 'Bonuus• 18CI0-2tll-0138.

Free Ell/mates

Awn Repr...nradva Nttdld For
ArOL C&amp;ll Locol 1-800-55t.

Thil

. 41101, Sharon. Ind. Rep.

AVON SEUS ITSELF!

.

BilliG I CODLING
Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WJ
·
1-IJOO.I72·5967
1391 Safford School Ad

614-446-1418

OH

-·18-$-.bonoiatl

Wookplac:o- ilri1- rriondo. Rea~
blo ,_,.I No irwntaryll1-80Q.
742-473&amp; 11""'-l

Computtr U&amp;ert Needed. Work

SAYRE
·TRUCKING

Own HrL. S20K To •sotci/Yr. 1-

8CI0-3411-71•x 1173.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

S.pllc Systems
Trailer &amp; HPuse Sites
Rftsonab/e Rates
Joe N. Sayre

614-742·2138.
·~ .

-7267.

M111 Your Companion 1-DOO·

r)

11~84!&gt;&amp;134.

SophlaUcatad Ea:.cwll\'1 Lady,
"-die, '1Qulhlull50'• Wlm 801ull'
And Br~lna S.eka Profeuional

(Ume StoneLowRatas)

CI&lt;CO For Frioncllhlp ~!On­
To: ClA .a...... Golllpolll OOIIJ Trlbuno, 125 Thlod
A - Galpolio. OH 45G:I1.

WICKS

30 •Amouncements
AnENTION HAIRSTYI.IST Goc

Umestone,
qravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992·3470

i ROIEIT IISSELL

· CONSTIUUION
•New Homes
•G•ragea
•CompleJ'

Remoct~lng

985-4473
7!22mn

Oemonalratora llrlalora Ae~r•­
lfttltalivea FDr A Product Sampling, Part-Time 17 Hol , C.tl ,1·
800-355-4756.

288-1245 Ext. 1251, SUI Per Oomlno'a Pizza Now Accepting

Min. Mu&amp;t Be 11 Ye•ra, Serv·U

Genrlaman SO'a + Hontat, Sin·

HAULING

Coamotologlat Needed, Gaurantead Wagaa, Paid VaCa1kln,

F- CEU Hoor, FuU l Pitt~­
ed Other Bentfil1 Included, e14 -

Personals

005

Hllullng,Exi:avallng
&amp; Trenching

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

I

orde-r~,

~ .. :I04-81S-1Czg_

Heat Pumps Installed S3fl00 8 month

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

I

rt'inllhlng, cullom
8i2-1441.
.

'

·~ Easy Bank Financing ~
Fumaces '2SOO 8 month

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

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

tma\1. Alao •• ta1tl, appralaala,

110

;::::::::;:::::::;,;.L;::::;;:;=:;=~
-

Code.

Antiques- no'l18r11 too largo or lOCI

Mabile lame Furnaces
. and Baal Pumps

CARPENTER SERVICE

Ut1111tona Hauling
HOUM &amp; Trlllar SHaa
Lind Clurlng &amp;
Grldlnst
. Septic Syatema
lc UtllHJ"

Antiques. top prlc:ea paid, River. Ina Antl~ua1, Pomeroy, . Ohio,
Ru.. Uaora owner, &amp;1•·1iU~2·
2528.

01614-381-11747.

Umestone &amp; Gravel

Public Notice

· GaJipoij~ 014-4411-2842.

-

W17/17 1 mo. pd.

YOUNG'S

HOWAII
EXCAVATING &amp;
TIUCIING

EIC. Acqullilio,. JoM1rJ
Coin Shop, 151 Socorwl

Sw •
- II.T.

Athens, Ohi.o

(Paymenls based on approved crodill

V.C. YOUNG 01
892-&amp;215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Yet' And Gold Coina, Proolnta.
Dlotnondo. An¥-,_ Gold
A~,Pr•l830 U.S. Cur&lt;onq,

Homo. Cal 114-&lt;'18-0115 or 304,

(614) 592-5025

EVERY

(FREE ESTIMATES)

Wented to Buy
Aboolule Top Dollot: All u.s. Sit-

Attorney At Law

GUN SHOOT

•Room Addition•
·-Garagoa
•Electrical I Plumbing
•Rootl"ll
•Interior I Exttrlor
Painting
Alao Concreto Wtllll

licensed

90

Attorney William Safranek

5/1..,

Sponsore4hy
Forked Run
Sportsman Cluh

nrwlca.

&amp; Well Vlrglnlo. 304-

om-..

949-2168

FRIDAY,
7 P.M.

CompCIO)',

773-5785 Or 304-113-5441.

Free Estimates

Joe Wll•on
(614 992-4277'

Auc~on

lull lime auctioneer, campleta

ltl6,0hio

20 Yrs. Exp.. Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

113 W. 2ND ST.

How•rd L WrHnel

Rick Poclroon

aucllon

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

"BNIId YoNr DNana"

Public Notice

Sundar &amp; Mo•d•r a,tiUion·
1:80pm Frldo~

Auction
andfleaMnet
C-lord'o FIM l.larlle~ Hanclar·

" WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45719

All Yorcl SOloo !loot Ia Pold In

Advonco. Doocllloo: 1:00poa lho
day before the ad Ia to ru•, '

60

360° Communications

'
I

M't:t

250 Condor Sireel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Dlvi&amp;IOn ort Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992-2406
Fax: 304-n3-5861

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
~:=P Tru~~ ~~:";)
Rllforonca: 5715.17
Ohio RoviHCI Coclo
Rooclovlllo, Ohio, pa1110d
Thll Motg1 county l""rd
tho 2nd day ol .May, 1117 of Rovlolon haa compllled
lhllr41 will lit .•ullmltted to • Ita of oquollutlon. Tho
vola of lhll 11011$ of Mid tn rotume lor tax par 11117
aubdh(laton at • Oonoral · hive boon rovlaod and the
Eloctlon to be hllkl In the
Townahlp of Olivo, Ohio, 11 VIIUIIIOnl compllltd .and
tho r1111ular placn ofYIIIlng oro open for public In·
lhtraln, on lilt 4th day of apoctlon In lht·Offlca of tho
Nowmber, 11197, tho q.,.. llolgo. County Auditor,
u .... oflhll ton mlllllmlltlion, lor tho bonllll of Olive
Townahlp tor llie purpoH
of molnlllnl"ll and opera!·
ISaid
n ·ltx
-·
· · AI'IMWil
iltl"ll:'
olan ..lllltngtaxof1 ·mlllll
1 rile "of ,Pcoocllng 1Conel
mille for tech one dollw of
volualton, which ..,0 unta
to ton conll C$0.10) tor•ch
one hundred dolllrl of valulllon, tor nvo Cll yaara.
Tilt Polll for llkl Elocllon
wiH open ill a:~ o'cloclc
a.m. and .-rn open until
7:30 .o'clock p.m. on tho
..... ....
By orc1or of lht llolrd of
Elocllonl, of lloitl County,
Ohio.
Henry L. Hunlor, ChlllrrMn
Rlbl D. lmlth, Dlroclor
Dlled Sept. I, 1117 ,
C10) 7, 14, 21,21 4TC

cludoo Ki11t1 Size WI""*' 1100.

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine. &amp; Welding Shop

AgricultUral • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy • Accetl Regulator Repair
State tertlfled Welder
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

57115.25
Nottco Ia hllrolly glYon lhll
In purauance of .I
R..otullon Of the llolnl of

lion Dt' levying 1 lax, 1"

llovlnt Salo: Thuro, Frl, Sal,

Comer Fourli1/GIIPI Sl, 1-e, ln-

RADIATOR REPAIR

3501.11(111. 5705.1e,

Buy, ·sell or Trade

Complete Madllne Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, lndnltrial Gas
Rad18tor ReJ111ir &amp; Replacemellt
Monday-Friday • 8:00a.m.- 4:30 p.m.
Saturday-8:00a.m. ·12 noon ,

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 mllea ealt of Route 32.
WEUSTON, OHIO
114384 6212

IIIII Umllllton
ROYIHCI Coclt, Soctlon

"T8kt your boo18 otr.
I just •crubbed the floor."

. 20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-281-5600

WY lfl23lfT1

Nollcolo hllrtlly glvon thai
In purauaneo ol •
ptacea of votl"lltiloraln, on Rooolutlon of thll Vlllllll•
lhll 4th c1ay of November,
1117, tho quntlon of leVy· Council of the VIllage of
Middleport. Ohio, pallod
l"ll a IIi, In ..of the
ton mill llmllilllon, for lila on 11111 28111 dey of JUly,
11197 thor. will be aubmltted
bonelll of Oliva Townll1lp
to
a ...,.. of the pooplo of
for lila purpo1o of malnltnence, capitol conotrucllon, laid au~dlvlaton II •
and operation of c.rleton o-J Ellolton to be hold
School
and
llolga In the Vllllgo of Mkklleport,
lndultrlol Workahop tor Ohio, lllha rogular piiCM
poraona with m-l rallr- of voting lhllretn, on lhl4th
dlllton and clovelopmonlal dlly of N-mber, 11197, the
qunlton of tevytng 1 tax, In
diMbllHtp, I
.Saki ... bel"ll:' An lddJ.. PCOII of lha ton mlll.llmltatlonll tax of 1.8 milia 11 • llon, . tor tho benollt of
rllt nol oxcoedlng 1.amille Mkltlltport VIllage for tho
lor tiCh one dollar of Ylllua- purpo" of lira protoctlon.
Said 1tx being:• Aronowlll
tlon, which amounta to
tlghlton conll (10.181 tor • of on oxllll"ll tax of 2.0
-one hundred dollara of mllll II I fill not tXCIIOd•
valullloi1, tor 1 conllnul"ll IIIli 2.0 I!WO) mllll for Pch
Ontl dollar Of VIIUIIIOn,
portocl of time.
which • ._.nta to IMnly
The Polla tor llkl Elocllon
will open 11 6:30 o'cloclc conll (10.20) ·tor -h on•
a.m. and ramoln open until hundred dolllra ol vatu•
7:30 o'clock p.m. on_the lion, tor nvo ·C5) ,..,._
Tilt Polll tor Hid Elocllon
ukl day.
wtll
open al &amp;:30 o'ctocll
By onlor of tho llolrd of ·
Elocltona, of Motga County, a.m. and remain open until
7:30 o'clock p.m. on tho
Ohio.
Henry L. Hunter, Chairman llkl day.
Rlla D. Smtih, Dlraclor By orclor ol tho llolrd of
Dilled Sept. a. 11197 Eltcltonl, of llelga COUnty.
Ohio.
C10) 7,14, 21,28 4TC
Henry L. Huntw, Chalnnln
Rill D. Smith, Dlraetor.
Public Notice
Dlled Sepl••• 1117
(10)7,
14,21,21
4TC
Notice of Eloctlon on TIX
t...vy In Excon of IIW Ton

'

GalllpOIIII
&amp;VIcinity

BRAIIBIIIIIIIG

_, Dirt • Sand

_.... 11 1 GeMtlf l!llatkln
to be hllld In lha COUnty of
llolga, Ohio, II the NgUIW

tahon.

THURSDAY
POMEROY
Rock Springs
Beller Health Club, I p.m. Thursday
otthe home of Barbara ·Fry.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umestone • Gravel

Saki ltx baing:' A . . - 1
olocllon of dlroctoro Ia holdbnly rogulorly nominated of an btlll"ll tn Ill 1.7
candldatn who hove mot mllla 11 1 ra1t not ""'nd
tht tlll"ll requlromonto will lng 1.7 mill tor -h one
. ollglblo lor oloctlon 11 dolar of vlllulllon, which
llnOUnll ID HYoniMn
director.
contt C$0.17l tor lOCh one
C10) 14. 21.28, 31e
hundred dollara of Ylllua--------itton, tor 1tvo C5) .,.....
Public Notice
The Potla for Hid Eloclloo
__:.,.=.:::;:...:.;==--1
will open 11 &amp;:30 o'cloCk
Notice of EIICIIon on TIX
a.m.' and 1'011111ln open untll
lAIIy In Ex-. of the Ton
7:30 o'clock p.m. on tho
Mill Umlllllon
111c1 day.
Revloocl Code, SecllOn
By ordlr of tho llolrd of
3101.1~ls705.1t,
Elloltona, of llolga County,
0
NollcelaliorHy glvanlhat
=-ry L. Hunter, Chlllrman
In pu('8111RCI . Of I
• .,118 D. Smith, Dlroclor
Rttolutlon of tho VIllage
'J• 1111ec1 Sept. 8, 1117
councu 01 '.1!18 Vllage of 1 l:Ct:!ut:::J.:.•1:::4::..:21:.:.•:.:21=-4;;;T~c
•
__
Racine, Ohio, peOHCI on the 1·
2111 dey of J~IY. ,..r - 1 _..;·,.!:P:::ub::l::lc:..:N:::o::.:t:::lc:::•-wlll be IUbmltted to I vola 1•
..
of lhll poopte of'lelcl lllillclt- o f Eloctlon on Tu
vloton II 1 o-at Ellolton
IAvy In ex.... ollhll Ten
to be hllkl In the VIHII)e of
·lltn Umllilllon
R1Jclno, Ohio, ill the Ngular
RoviiiOd Code, Socllon
, _ of voting lhanln, on
3501.111111. 5705.19,
the 4th day ol NOvember,
5705.25
1117, the qo Ilion of levyNotlcola hllrtlly glYIIn lhll
Ing I tax, fn OCIII ol the
of 1
lin mill llrn.'ltllon, for the In · pur1111nca
Rooolulloi1
of
the
Boord
of
. benont of OlfYII Townahlp
CornmiMIOntlrl of tho
County or lltlge, Pornlt'oy,
Ohio, puHCI on tho 11th
day of Augull, 1117 will be aullmnted to 1 vola
oltht _ . . of Mid lubell-

AT. 7
PIZZA EXPRESS

UCI.

.

L--·....:,.::;04!97=.;.," '; ; ;·.~...,.
Public Notice

oppoono tho nama to
counttd. Tho caatlna
votoo lor dlrocloll
proxloo lo not to

Community ·calendar
The Community Calendar is pub- p.m. Tuesday
WEDNESDAY ·
lished as a free service to non-profit school.
SYRACUSE - Meigs County · C~R - Chester Volunteer
groups wishing to announce meeting
Chamber of Commerce Luncheon Fire l5epartment work ' detail
and special events. The calendar is
POMEROY - Bedford Town- noon at C81&lt;leton School. Speaker Wednesday, 6 p.m. followed by spenot designed to promote sales or ship Trustees, Tuesday, 7 R.m. at the will be Trish J'.fcCulloush, executive cial meeting at 7 p.m. at the fire stafund raisers of any type. Items are town hall.
director of the Gallia-Meigs Com- tion. All members urged to attend. .
. prin1ed as space permits and cannot
munity Action Agency/JTPA.
•!:&gt;e guaranteed to run a spefilic numPOMEROY - Sunday school
REEDSVJI..:LE - The regular
ber
of
days.
growth
conference
ia
progress
at
MIDDLEPORT
Representamonthly
meeting of the Eastern Ath.
First Southern Baptist Church Mon- tive of the Ohio Tuition Trust Fund letic Boosters will be conducted in
day through Wedneday, 7 p.m. Dr. will be speaking at7 p.m. Tuesday al fhe high school cafeteria WednesRandy Millw~ . New Orleans Bap- the Middleport PTO meeling t6 be day, 7:30p.m. All coac hes and par"'\ TUESDAY
tist Theological Seminary. to con- held at the elementary school. ,
ents of athletes aft urged to attend.

'' 614-~'-oq7t
Mld.ap!f.!; 011

Public: Notice

merked

Annual meedng scheduled
The annual meeting of the Meigs
CQUnly Council on Aging, Inc., will .
be held on Oct. 2 I, at I0:30 a.m. at
the Meigs Multipurpose Center The
with suppon from the Ohio Ans public is invited to attend.
lndi.viduals with paid 1997 memCouncil and the OhiQ Appalachian
berships
will hJ.Ive the opponunity to
Ans Initiative.
The Festival is open Friday from . nominate and/or approve member10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, from 10 ship to the Meigs County Council on
am. to 7 p.m., and Sunday from Aging's Board of Trustees.
noon to 2 p.m. . Food concession, by
the
F1owerShow
Canter's Cave staff. is available.
PI~!)§ for the Meigs County
· For additional infonnation on the
Chrislmas
nower show will be 111ade ·
ans festival, residents may call the
at a mpcting of the Meigs County
Council at 286-6355. ..
Garden Clubs Association meeting
to be held Monday from 7 to 9.p.m.
at the Pomeroy Public Library.
· Hostesses wi II he Shade Valley
Club mcmhers who wi II serve
refreshments prior to the meeting.
Gladys Cumins and Marjorie Fetty
. Twelve delegates from churches of the Middlcpon Amateur Cluh will
in Chiangrai. Thailand visited their distribute and explain the schedule
pan ncr churches in the Presbytery of for the nnwcr sl)ow, the !heme of
Scioto Valley in Ohio for two weeks which will he "Jingle Bell Season.: "
Wildw&lt;KKI Garden Cluh memllcrs
in September.
The partnership between Pr_esby- will have the program hascd on
• tcrian Churches in Ohio and Chian· . ideas frmn the holiday show schedgrai, Thailand has been strengthen- ule.
..
..
.
ing with mutual visits. In summer of . New county ol fiCcrs w•H he
1996. 22 0 Je from Ohio went 10 · mstallcd. Any one Interested 1n the
Chnstmas nowcr show or m learnTh at.1an d. pc P
· more U&lt;ntut
• . gnrucn
.•
1h · ·
0 ncaurymcp
S I da · s temhcr the 1ng
.. h
· · · cdu acllvld
visiting Thais were ¥UCSL' of the lies •n l c county IS InVIte In attcn .
McKclveys in Syracuse visiting Jay
•
McKelvey who was in the gmup
-------------------------going to Thailand Ia.'! year.
The Thais wei): guests of Jeff and HotnKomlna plans announced.
Homecoming at the South Bethel
Rev. Kris Robinson in Middleport
New
Testament Church on Silver
during ihcir visit in Meigs County.
Rw~c
will be held Sunday. Services
Meigs County, with ils irees and
will
he
9 a.m. Sunday s.:hcml; 10:10
hills and corn fields introdu~-ed the
Thais to a landscape different from a.. whrship services. carry·in dinner
their own-country, said the pa,tnr of at nnon. and afternoon ~crviccs at
the Middleport and Syracuse Pres- I:30p.m Music will he hy Russ und
the• Gospel Tones, Rejoice and
hytcrian Churches.
After leaving Meigs County they Joseph. Richie. The public is invited.
were able to visit other tourist areas
. . ·.------·--------in Ohio. ·

---

,

Thllannilll ollctloil Ill 11'11
~- Board of !1"-. !«\'.the,
llolga Cou~ly ~
Society will .• holll ,ollh'
HCretory'o oltlco ol tho
lalrgroundo, Monday. Nov.
3, 1117. Tho poll• will be
open from 5:00 p.m. lo I
p.m. on olocUon doy.
Thll oloctlon ahlll bo by
ballot. Btllota muot be
.,

110 Court Sl.
8112-4111

TRUCKING

C•rpet-Upholttery

Yard Sale

PBit::F..S''
Quality Window Systems

AI Cprpet·Uplloktwy

CHEvaLIER'S
.,.
CARPET CLEANING

4oC07•

.REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

DIBECJT

CLUB

O.•l•g

. SOLID VINYL

"FACIOBY

R, L. HOLLON

...

laat itmoM Codcor Sponlol, w111111n opou, •Po~ehlo", Keno
hlllliclnit¥- long .,.._.

Z5 YEARS IN BUSINESS

50% OFF

~: '::::CI:IIO=::=nt~::~
~

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
R®m Additions ~ Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATE$

RACINE GuN

umHect
7
Cl3 Bt!fok -

(I•

INC •

(No

:oo

~

BISSELL

614-992·7643

Gun Shoots
Starts Sunday
Sept 28at
1
pm
12 ga1,1ge modified

-·Twelve Thais visit Meigs County i.n September
.

·. '

• R~~~~~~t • WasiE

Festival this weekend at Jackson

$1 ,2 10 in cash prizes will be awarded for Best of Show, as welt as First
through Third Places in each of six
categories.
' Cash awards are sponsored by the
CELLULAR ONE and Sands Hill
Coal Co. Some anists will have
bOolhs to showcase more of their

PQb.'e .
Appliall'ee Repair

'

.

Dear ~ Thomas

Calif. 90045

1.11-

\lory~l14-21111o1S11 .

Tue1d1y, October 14, 1197

discovered I was not hi! beneficiary.
When we married, he had been
divorced for two years from a marriage that had lasted Jess than three
years: He worked for the same government agency his entire career and .
had fi lied out paperwork on .his first
wife when he married her. UnfortuDear A1111 Lander's: I have been nately, he never got around to filling
a faithful reader for 35 years. A out new forms when he married me.
while back, I encountered a problem
The irony is that his ex-wife,
I do not recall ever reading about in after two previous failed marriages,
your column, so I'm writing in the married· a wealthy surgeon and is
hope that my experience will help now queen of the tennis courts,
others avoid the same problem.
while I am a secretary struggling to
My husband died two years ago, put our daughters through college.
after a long and painful bout with Did she keep the money he left her
cancer. We had been married 22 "by mistake .. • You bet she did.
years and had two daughters. Imag- Meanwhile, I'm coping, but after
ine my surprise when I attempted to two years, I am still hun and angry
file for h1s insuran10e benefits and

ou-.

tor Trolnocl, EIICOitont larn C....

ohlp. Aoply

your Ohio Stall hourt whh JO·
.,,..., Kut I Kurt, Uonday Ocl
21, 111111 110.00 por ponon coW
JOAMI 81·· U8·Q•Oe Or 114441-0214.

No Hunling or Trupauing on

a.-... lDCIIIC Ridgll Trw Farm.

Applica.ttonl At Galllpolia a Po·

.....,_ AWJinPorton.
Oriwn
~u'Je Tried The

:

Rnt.. '

NOW DAIVE FOR lHE IESlt
YIClORY EXPAESS, INC. •
NEW~Y~CMQE

Expo1ienced lliMiro
SINOLES Eom Up To
38 -112Conll Ror IIIlo
TEAMS Earn Up To
ii -112Conll Ror Milo
WE ALSO OfFER:

'11,500Sing.Qn-

•

• Poid -lloMI I U.
• Plofil hrlng

• "-"

..... Plll(liM1

.

Union lllot, ..._,Co.

NO COlt NO - E l l ? ,

40

..... Ror
Wtito Tlllnlno. Stlrt Cll...;
Beloro1012tit7 And Eam ,
Top Wa(IOL Clan Sl- Are

lnlxp'd DftWII Eom Up To '

o., '

Giveaway

I Klnonl, To A Good Homo, 114317-7080,

twk

llni!Od SO DON'T DELAYI

Old puppiH, motho1 Old
Englllh ShHp doa. lalhor
Shophord, 11t ohotl I wormod.
304-t711-42•.

For l.lortlnlo And An
Applic&amp;llon Cal- Fucu10

Collo &amp; llor&lt;lot Coli• l.lhtOII, 10
l.lonlllo Old, Vory Frioc1diJ, 114-

VIC'IORV EXPRESS, INC.

..,._,CIII2.
-

Puppioo:

5-..

EITI*&gt;Yoo Todorl
1.-.sa ICJJ

1

IIIIo,

Ta Good Homoo, 81•·258-e847,

AIWIPII.
~ittana

to good holM, Uttar
- . 114-14$-52118.

Eorn $1.000 Wooidy SMI,. Et&gt;

volopoo At

Homo. $tart N... ~ •

Exporlonoo. frt10 Supplloa, lniO.
No Obllgotlan. Sond lSASE Jo:
ACE, DopL : 135t Sol 1137, Dlol!'l&gt;nd Bar, CAI1115.

Il

�10 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuaad!!y, October 141 1897 ··

The Dally Sentinel• P•11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•amo•

AU.EYOOP

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER
lllrdWICIIII

8085.

Wjl houl junk or ltalh - · 11351
pickup !old. 304-175-.!1035.

''

'

· H•llh RICOVII)' Sorvicoo. Inc. lo
A JCAHO AcorediiiKI OrganiZI•

~ den Providing Health Care In

FINAN CIAL

• Sou!hoa.,.n Ohio. Tho Following
. Pollillonl,.. Aniloljo:

: COUN9ELOA· FT And PT Pool·
• Dona Availat8 for .M_attel"l ll'o'·
' o1 CounooiOr Wilh .t.&lt;:coc. LPC
· Or Eligible For llc:enat.ut. Prior
E1perllilntt With Chemical Ot·
pendency Or Uental H..lth

T1811m811Prola!Tod

210

Opportunity

$$ OWN PlYPHONEI SS
$150K Yearly Pot'L Grear Sllea

Avail. Call Nowl I·IIOU-800-3470
2• H11.
SPAY PHONE ROUTES
.a Locol H&gt;Tralfic Sl..
12.000 Weekly -.na1 Plolll
1·1100-72'1-17311 En 1011

FT Position
Candiclatt
Will He\le E1cellant Verbal com·
~nunicatlan Skills Both Witll Clienll And Tht P~o~blic: A• W.-11 Aa
Tho Atlili!r To Malnlllln Cleor And

$PAY PHONE ROUTES
.a U1011l H&gt;Traffic: Sl.,o
$2,000 Wotkiy .f'olenjall'n&gt;lll
1-1100·724-1130 En 1011

Organized Documentation. 8A

PNiorrod

•

Business

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommend• that you do bull·
nen with people you know, and
NOT to aend moner through d'le

mall unDI you have lnveatfgated
l'lo oflarifV,

BEHAVIORAL TECHNICIAN· FT
And PT Employment Available .
This Potltion Functions As An
Aide In An Adoleacent Treatm.nt Facill[1. looking Far A MalUre And Sober andividual Experitneed In Behavioral Uaregamenl
With Corrtc:don And lOt Seeurity

EARN I70K THIS YEAR 8 Hro I
Wk -trw Raq 1-80Q.2&amp;2·.UI2 ' 24
,...,
P.son wanted To Own Ancl 0~
.,.11 Retail Candy Shop 1n Galll-poUt Area. Low lrwe.alment F~r

Information Call Ura . Burden I

SldtL Ctnnl Nt, Decll. Roll Not.
114 441111011,8145-446-7717.

14170 oakwood llobllo Ho.., 2
e.droomo. 2 Balho. 1\111 Pump.
O.E. Appllancoo, Llkt Now,
t13.sm Attar e.e1+2M •eo.
1871 Kirkwood 12X80 U.ooo,
11.-..118. Or 814o/IIH747.
1175 12170 Ftoolwood 3 Bod·

,_,.., I 112 Balho, Undeplrftrv,
ss.ooo. 814-441-2111.

1175 lliciWay Doubltwldt 20'151'
3 lltclroomo, 1 Btlh, Good c-.
tlon, Phono:tl'-261· 1~.

·" ~n~ernltdln Anr 01 Thooo Politiono, Pleuo Sand A Resume
With Cover Letltr To nancy Dot·
10 n, Human Rtaourct Manager,
P.O. Bo• 724, Alhono, Ohio
.. 701 . EEO
..,
1Hood Holpl OvanehemiKI, Earn

1187 Schull% 1•110, 3br, 101111
oloc"lc, bade-up LP gao htaltr,
- carptL cltck I lllolllto doh,
good cond. Aoklng I11,20G.
304-773-5171.

Gourmet Candy Company, Fort

Professional
Services

For

~71478-...rmroe

3 Bodroomo, 2 bath houoo In
counry. col lor - . , 11•-37121131.

Olon.. od!Aihlon - · SIIOOimll.
llfuo lig!ll farm-" .. r raduclon
In- Oopoalt -111-2627. ·

mall rtsumt to 2413 Jackson
An., PIPioaont WV 25550.

IIEOI-HOIIE HEALTH AQENCY
Wo.Ato Ptooud 10 AMounco To
Tho Gallipollo Atoo, Tho Growlh
Of Our Agonoy, Wo Ate Looking
For A Dodicattd, Qualillod Per·
oon To Holp Plomoll Tho Ouaii!Y
C.r• We Are Known For
~Tho Ala

FIELD COORDIIIATDR: Daar•

In Marketing Or Prior Medical
Eocparionco

• Ablli!Y To c-linllo our Homo
Caro Sa&lt;vlcoo Willi Till Nttda
01 The Cort Cclrrlllalr'Ay.
• E1: HI II Conmunk:aion I Or·

.. 1
CONTRACT OCCUPATIONAL
'IIIEIIAPIST
o Will Vlrglnil, Ohio Uconooo
1

· -

WAIIII UP: ...._, Ellcld, LP Olo Fur-. Liltlimo ~On lint
If, 'If You Orin'l Col Ut Wo Bcih
Loaol• Froo EoUmalool Add-On
Heal Pumpo Onlr Sllahiy Hiollor.
Coil Uo Today. lli7 lo Tho
Twenty Bovonrh Yoar In Tho
Hoallnil &amp; Cooing Bullnooal114raJ And

E..._,

___

•J
0 Q to 9 4
• A K 10 8 &amp;

YIIDI, llerto, 100,000 mllel,
a-, IIU41-2311 dayo,et4-

Realm Jd ~· u Exoelent
Bloo411no, RoauiiOiily Prlcod, 11184 Chfol. S.IO PU Aulr&gt;; 1111
Doqe Dakola ' ' ' PU; 1111
Cht¥ 1-10 Blazer • Door, 41•:
Sooltd 41) ..........
And tN1 OIIC Jlmrnr '"· • Door:
Kid lloko; II llonlll 01\t AHI· IUO
Chow. S-ID PU Air Cond,
oadod Arabian Col~ 114-•41- $1,700: 1112 Chow. Conv. Van
11711.
tl,200; B&amp;D-AuiO l;loo SL Rr.
100 N.OU ,,. ' " '
640 Hay &amp; 'Cbln
1HI Ford flanlet.lruck, IUIO,
40,000 n\iitl: Wfll/lm caoL, air,
alum. whet~&amp;·
ln..•lor,
DIIO, •. ~ ~-

510

HouNhold
Good•

AppH1""a:

fi11410NIIIIontd
Wuhora, Oryora. Fllr.a, Rofrl·
graloro.- 10.'-ll!f cfua;onltll
French City •OJIIg, 114-441·
'lll6.

STORAGE TANKS 3,~ Gallon
Ullfigh~ Ron Evans E~ooo.
Jadllon,Ohlo.l-800-51~

Sh""·

Tho Pomoroy Thrill
now
buyl~g Ltvl juno only, mtn'a,
- · · and c:Nidrtn'a, olio li11lo
alrlo _ , ~ay~, dolla and tod·
tllor car Mill, Tuotday lhrough
Fridt)l101m-&lt;1pm, t14-f1112-J725.
1\otlq olunolnum t~lflrack
a • Windows. OIZ\
, call
11 . . . .2281.
•

soooo

TR I\NSPOF1TI\ fiOtJ

IT'S eiOT TO

710 Autos for Sale

.

.

STOP READIN' MY
DADBURN ,AN MAIL II

Be FOR .---..
YOU It

IO·ff

~

#CHOw rtfe Pt4oTo l&gt;otsN'T
£.00~ MUGtf Ll~t Me .. - Wt4~1'1 TtffY TOOIC IT, .l

wAS STIL£.

Me

J••r, Charoktt ~•• Red,
21,000 Ill eo, S12,eoo, 014-250·

•

•

__.__,j

A L.IC.~NSt.

• •.
'

THE BORN LOSER
'f~~om.£, I ~VE ~ .,

i

Dlahwaaher, Heal Pump, Take

AM~Zfl&gt;

TtltY weiCe 61VII'IG

Jeep Chlrokee counlry,

Gftlt cond, 88,000
$15.500. 3M·7T.Uil'll.

miles.

Pro~IVC: WOI'r.&gt; FLYI~

11&gt;1 tmfo.\ tATI!&gt;I ~CA ...

1185

1738, 81H6a-1262.

Dl.c:ount Mobile Home Plrtl &amp;

Looko And
814· 378·

RIG N.\TF.

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
11 112ft Cuddy Cabin new proP.
stereo l)'lltm, banar.,, •.3 V·l

lolorc. fniOul board drivo Wlll'llw,
... oond. $5,200. 304-17!&gt;14n.

1811 Bangor 373V 18' 12 ·2•Y
TIOIIIng lolo1or, 150 XP Evlnrudo
Ouibc&gt;ud..$8.100. 814-8112·2770.

oppcrtlrity basis.

Alq~lld.

REAL ESTATE

• 5

18 Norwegl1n
20 Lilt out
22 Act,... JIHion
24- Canol1
25 lhhred

5I F•llva
10 And othlnl
(2 well.)
81 Layer olooll
82 Ballbooll'o

33 Brim
34 COOIIIn9

83 " " 64 - 1'1111

· 21 Arrow polaon
u!Miallo

.

3&amp; Aulhor Fleming
37 Longlloh

Tonnft ICOII

3

(2 wdo.)

Conolructton

10 Feminine

oufllx
•'
11Hovlngpalll
'
19Nol-N
21Dibl~

·8eulll
!NT

Wul
Pan

Norlb
2NT

Easl

3•

Pass

4•

All piSS

'

23 Knola In

cononfl~

25 Chick oounil
26 Concert hlllo
27 Cltr. . lru~
26 Smell tpOia
30 Holplr
•
31 Pnoclplllllan

Pass

Opening lead: • 10

32"-11

31 High--

The U.S. II team in the Bennuda
Bowl will be most peop12S._~te
to win. Nick Nickell, Dick Freeman,
Bob Hamman, Bobby Wolff, Jeff
Meckstroth and Eric Rodwell have
been by far the m()sl successful team
in national competitions·over the last
five years. Also, they are tlte defending Bennuda Bowl champions.
This deal, from the final of the
U.S. 1rials, shows Rodwell al his
card·readins best.
In the other room, after winning
trick one with the bean king. Nickell
(Easl) returned a diamond. To get
home now. Chip Mane! (declarer)
had to win with the ace and guess the
trumps: either continuing wilh lhe ace
and ano1her, or ducking the first
round and cashing the ace next.
Understandably, though, Martel
played his diamond 1hrce. Unerri~­
ly, Freeman (West) won with the king
and swilched to a club. And when in
wilh 1he spade king. Freeman gave
his panncr a club ruff: one down.
In the given auction, Nonh's
response of 1wo no-trump asked for
a five-card major -· though you
probably knew lhal already!
Here, Michael Rosenberg (East)
swi!Chcd 10 his,sinilelon club Bllrick
two. After winning in the dummy,
Rodwell called fort he spade I0: jack,
queen, king. Zia Mahmood (Wesl)
knew he could give his panher a club
ruff. But he realized .that that would·
n'I be enough to defeat the contract.
So, instead, Zia led a second heart.
However, Rodwell ruffed with dummy's spade eight berore playing a
spade to his six! Now ~eclan:r had an
ovenrick ror a pickup or 13 international ma!Chpoints.

baing

vonellng

SOB-

52 VIP'a cor •
63 Slringod •
lntlrumonl

54 -ldlllle

. 57 Fall behind

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

..,

Celeb!'~ CIPher c!YPIOQrams are cwated trlll'l'l quotAiiOM by t• mous people. past and I'J!SS&amp;nl
Eacl'l Hiflet-U\ Ifill Ctphar SlindS 101' another Toda)I'S Clue ·. T ~uiJ/5 B

' J

SJZZXF

VPXW

DNOH
DLX

J

UPLMCF ' B .X

P X N 8 A V XJ Z P E

SNZZXF. ;--::_
I L A XI ,

N G EX I

T L Y X I

OPNKRJLW

CLMJU

HWLOHXF
PJK
LME .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: UThey are ill discoverers lhat thmk there ts no land
when they see not~ing but sea.~ :- Francis Bacon.
·

.
'::~~~~· S@~c{\}A-~t.~SB wou
IAMI
14ito4

letters of
0 foRearrange
vr scrambled words

~.

ClAY I. 'QUAil

rhe ,.~~......-::-......,~:--..,
be· ,.

low to form lour simple words.

AMFROL

I I 1I I I
.I T I 0 L I
. I I P I ....
· CUE J I' j!
I~~~~=~:::-:.,
I I I I" ~ .
1

2

p

·

5

I~

•

A fellow writes ads to make
people think they've longed for
something alllheir life that they
have never heard .o f· · · - - -!

I
I I I e
•

•

•

Complete the ctl vckle quoted

b&gt;t l•lhng In th~ miss.ng words.

L-....1--1-...L-..L.--l.....J vov dewelop fr om step No. 3 below.

PEANUTS

I IIAtE TO TELL
HIM ..'t'OU'D 8ETTE~
TeLL HIM ..

' ...
I CANT
VOO TELL 111M ..

A PRINT NUM8!R!O LrTTUS IN
'1::11'
TH!SE SQUARES

WETI-HNI&lt;
MA'(SE WE TOOK

NO, PLEASE ..'f'OU TELL

HIM ...I DON'T ~&gt;lAVE

ANOT~ER

WRON6
TURN ..

TilE NERVE ..

SCRA~

New gas tanks, ,1 ron 1ruck

Ripley, WV. 30•· 372-3833 or I·
1100-273-11(121.

I TUESDAY

ROBOTMAN

ANSWERS

Amount - Vicar · Foist- Pestle - CUSTOMER
Store manager to shopper. ' I won't cash checks because all too often the check comes back and the CUSTOMER doesn't."

eo A """ eo. w Cloodr 0u1 , .
s..;,. In lllo: Cloulfied Secllon.

WhHII I radlatora. D &amp; R Aula.

Ca,mfll!!l &amp;
Mmor nomes

OCTOBER 14 :1

1813 Jayco 2211. bunk houao,
prico lnciudtt Royal Oak Rooon
llombarohlp. 18,500. 30•· 773·

55t5.

1881 18ft fully aoll-contalnod.

Take over paymen11. No down

-l-.75-5522.

Fam18for
110 Acre Fatm convenlentiJ

For Salt: 1087 Ouu:hm.n POp-U~
Compor, Stupo a, Filmoco Wllh
Tllormoolll~ lnlll~ 10u111da Oao
S... o. Eltc I · Gio Ro~lgtralor, 2
Dining tabl11, Custom Awning,

Jo.

on Sto10 RL 864.
For more lnfarm.don call (114J

caiOd In -

387·7031

•-•CI.

- " " ' ponolon - l l k t ..
buy 111m on tond
omal
-llll'ft'llf. 11+1112-1838.

Wttktnd bind oaoko YOCOiial

lnd MIIIIL must hiYI experl·
onoo and l i t - rnndod, Roolt

350 Lots I Acreage

litn Crlnlon1!orary. Cd 814-117·

100 ocroa, Crab Crolll Rd 1111·
oon Co). Call Samorvillo Rooliy
304-175-30110.,-75-3431.

oro 70'o Rock wllh ll&gt;day'a Clvlo-

llM "'11.....8-3011.

J80 Wlllttd To Do

(~
i! · II
b'
n m.-, f'
.
I
Hi II Station, New York, NY I0 I56.

Lilli New. U•td ~ Tlm11. Pafd

!14,800, Will Sol For 13,500, Coli
114·441·8801 Allor 6 Or Loavo
- g o,

~ Be sure to ·stale your zodiac sign,

~==~~~~~~~==~

SERVICES

"

810

AS'I'IIO•ORAPB
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

:II ..,... Loon llidM All., ......
lll•hcmt.I0150molalllulldln&amp;
12XII IIO!Ige llllldlnt. all 111 O,IXIO.I04-4U ZIIG.

ANY ODO .10111: EJitrlor polmtng. oftrubo I wttdo trlmmod ,
f,lndocoplng, oldtwalko tdgod,
...., cans. .... ca11 •• -ersI
I.AIIo For lilt: 1 Three bechom houM In SrraM 31• Acroo E1ch 2 LOll Rood
7112.
cuM, ba11me•n. garage, new Fronlago, Cno Pr1¥110, Ltto Oq
FUmlawo '"""'· rollnlth Mil roo- wfndoon. dldt lind d rema dll1d 1110, t llllto Ftom llolzor, N,IOO
lllnltlon, aloo ...... Ohio lnoldo, tU-742-1345, 114-882· Cath Onl~ 114-:111·1704·£ tolley Rallnlohlng Shop, Larry 1110.
lngL

a.-.

Npa. 114-112-ee71.

Trl-..- 4111, In ...nd pool, bol_.,.. Por ..blo lltwmll, don'! woon lollddto ochtcl and High
fllul logo ., .,. ml jull col - - . 0 0 0.-75-IIIS.

:IOU75-1110.

-

Halp_E...._...,,.,......_

L l Clunlng Borvlcol: Ll~hl
~- Weeldr,IUllu«&lt;Jr.

y,.-r...,,JhorOuol1, Rollablo,

As fit•
7lk

I'

Clll

La... 114-111,

3:2Dif#ll...._2311.

320 ~Home·
for Slit
- y DIIEAMIIOUir

1.tvo1 lor on llrotdwoy In u - .
Pf#l. 18.100. II tIN
nnrgs lfna ...,.,

Hugo 4111, 2 . . . homo, '"'""'""

2·20 Auto will Born ...
150,000. LollS- 10 - " " ' 4

all new

1ft throuah ftreptace.

olllo ollht arl -urliy orollm.

12.-

Only at

I

For al• 1 acre on Os&amp;Ntrne
Stroot in Pom~~·oy, COl 11..e41-

Homo llolnvlnyl lldlng,
balho,
For

Lo .. 1·10 ........ $11,000. loll

Becfroama, Trl lt¥et
. 1341.114 fill' ....... NI,OOO.
(II•) 31111352

Home

II bur- - g o In loltlgo
Coumy, prolorlllly lltlgo local
SChool Dlo~lc~ 11ol-lll2·5053 •

.llpm.

I

.,
I

I

'

.

45 Command .:
47--My ,
Hull
48 OnoVII ridges
41 ~:"'ld bo '

Typeo, li4-245-5177

.

.

31 Pnoffillor '
ploone
,
41 Aogulllr ·
.,-uno •
43 &amp;.cond .

10,000 Tttnamllllana, Acce11
R~m~t~uiKturtd Mlln Shahs For
Slandar• Trah~mlulan Alf

790

'

3fA- .

owner financing IYiilablt. 304·

755-7181 .

1 --lllea..d
tor Love
2 """~~~'

family
31

-

I Fixed
,
quanUty •

4 Rely
5 Solldhlrll
6 Bom'l
~
7 Pouno
8 Clinic worller

DOWN

31 Anclenllllliln

•

BudGet Prlc• Transm1111ons,
Uood IRobulll, All Typto, Ovor
2 bedroom. lurnlahtd, gorago
IPIII'IIIIIni. $210/mo. pluo " -·
II. 304-773-!040.

Henlllaer

I1

111su.r.h Z212 Shohbah, 221~
open bow, S.l V8, olton, low lvo.
with extra&amp;, vtty sharp, $17,000

New 28180 3 or ~ btdraom.

511 Roman 3

17 Ouobl

K lJ R B E E

760 'Auto Parts &amp;
Acceuorles

Now Bank Ropo'ol Only 3 loft,

• J 9 4

.,_

12 Uwleu crowd 47 ~13 llnoo&lt; Adamo
mlllar8
14 Aw.,. ol
51 Find lhl
12 wdo.)
lno15 Aooa - 55 JICOb'aiWin
IOU
511 Cramo - 16 WotHw native
. c,.,a

19.1100. 3IM;87fl.l!l58'akor •pm. ,

negotlabft. 304 •882·3845 •her
6pm

S3D ,G86. Froo dollvory. 1-100·
111-1777.

-'"'

ill4 Po,..., boll, 2•11., porl·l •
patlt, hl.d trim, like ntw cond.,

ot uud homo. 2
StarUne al113411.
. Coli 1-1011-837·

IICIII'IIM

By Phillip Alder

1810 llldsmoblle Cullaoo, run.o.
........ • - 114 11112 ...11.
- .. - ·
'F
''
!GIS lolorcury Cougu,
Conclllon, 114-441-0631.

rooms, 2 Balha, Garden Tub.

mull Mil, no r-.IDnaiN otfw,..
futod 304-755-7101.

••

448ome

Number two
in name only

1873 Buick RIYitra B. .t Tall
lolod•l AuiOrltollc Tranomloalon,
=:_11 Coupa. 12.000, I14-24J..

liner, tOpper, am· fm casaettt,

Ooubl"'ldo ro-pe . _ lvod In,

P;;wla: • Pqazle

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

BARNEY

'

Acc•••arl11, Vinyl Sklrlino
SZGG.05, Anchoro $5.00, Awnlngo, Doora, W I -. Plumbing
Supplloo. Wtlor Hu10ro, Furto, llbtrolau Sltpo, Call 014·
440.1411 Bonnoll'o Supply, 1381
Salford School Rd. Oolltpollo,
Ohio.

• A K 8 7
087652

1.......,!8!

1895 Chevy ltuck. txt cab, 112
"'"· 414 loodtd, ...... guild, lltd

111 Time Burora E·Z Financing 2
Of 3 Bodroomo Atound S200 Ptr
..... 1100-261·5070.

•

•AQ7&amp;3
• Q6 2
t A 3
• QJ 7

I

1111 Schul~ S bodroomo, 2
balho, conual air, vinyl aiding,
ahlnglod rool, 2 docko, barn

Eaol

Soulb

1114 Rod Joep Ronoor. 41•
113,100, 114·441·1150. Allor 5
WI diWI.

oaoo.

Weal
• K 2
10 9 5 4 3
t K J
• 8 4 3 2

a.-

1884

0.... Pormonll, 11._2.6-03811.

This rtewSp8p8f' wiU not
knowingly II&lt;CtPI
advertisements for real estate
which Is In vioLation ollhe
laW Our 818 hereby
informed that all dwellings
adVertised in this new&amp;_paper
are a~Jallable on an equal

304-112·2220.

1NO Ford F·IIO Suplr cob, 351 ,
8 $/4 btd, ~ •llrlll, IIUto, air,
crulu, IWG-palM, bod Hnor,

auto, 4x4, 4dr, new Urts &amp; bll·
all power, hitch. 304· 875·

Flr•place, S1ove, Rtfrloeraror,

-..a

vea-. ayn. ol&lt;t, aboul
Zyro. Paid UIO will ..... 1300.

• 10 8 5

liDS Dodgo CoroYin ES oport
4 capllln cllllro. 3.3 ilor
V8, aport whttla; luggogo rack,
pw, pd, huntor groon malalllc, .
11,100. :.M-112-31311,

1117 11110 Flotlwaod 3 Bod·

' Al l real estate aavenislng In
this newspaper is sUb)ect to
ll'le Federal Fair HOI.IIing Ac1
of 1968 which makes it lftegal
to.aelvertlse M
any ptefef'enol,
limitation or discriminatiOn
biHII on ,_, COlor. rellQlOrl,
MX famltlal status or naflonal
O(!jjln, or any lnlenttoo to
make iiny sueh preference,
limitation or discrimination."

Lflll4rlor ... l.lhp.

IO·IH7

lliot\814 ••• 0411.

-n.

1883, Ctntur1 8r11ve 1·h70, 3

~304-1~1275.

Clay Roney a1 304-875-8018, or

...,. loll

__

1Mo Ch.., t/2 Ton lllvorado
110, V-1, AJC, PJW, PIS. Powor
llofrlocko,~. Aulo Trano, Trailer
Pllg.'Wido • • - E....lonl Con-

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

,,-~~~or~OI~B~Kl~W¥421~=:3)8~;~
guarantH. 1Dyra on'job 11perl·
ence. 304-175-2145.

r.1E RC IIMJPIS~

S bedroom. t•OOIIIMi. DopooiL

Bedroomo, 2 Full Badia, Conlral
Air Wilh Hot! Pump. Fay 011 Only.
RTS
SO RY
1 k $17,700, Or Aooumo Poymen~
HA
lolA NA
• B 00 '
lltlck &amp; otone work, 30 y•ro OJ· Avolilblo lmlllldloiOiy, 114·246per~t. rtaaonlblt ratn. 304- 11388
116-3611 •nor I:DIIpm. no (Db ., 11114 Sulllll Dokl10 1olx72 Rotdy
To lolovt lniD AI lKOI Parle. ~
2 To 5K Monlhl,
ToiOI Training
&amp;
Supporl
From Homt,
Nor ULM.
baatmtnr water.. lrlgorator, Rongo, Eloculc Holl
Call Now. 2·Min. Mtua~ 1•800..
blltmtnl rtpalrt Pump, 10112 Dock. Coil Allor 5
322.-111111 En 78511.
oodmalto, llloUmo P.M. 114•448·38113 Loavo lito·

ll.you •nl to make money, art
wilting tO work hard, and Uke to
http od'ltrl, we may have 1 job
lor you. Locat resident Excellent
Income postibillties and Homt
,Office trainilg Joe person• atltct·
ad. Musl hava ~ pleaalng per·
tonality and be willing 10 meet
lhl public. No e1perienct nee••
11ry. For more lnformalibn, c:all

ftogo lor Sandplllo Poll Olflco.
Noon-6pm, Fri·Sun. Smolllnd~

42TIIIIW

lorlwo

'

441-e~. 1·100-211-lDII.

814-742-3164.

Worth. TX 817·332-9792.
,.:.::::.:.:..;.;.;.:.:_.:;c;;...:,;.c.;...__ _

230

Klngo l,lolol L - Rallo In
2 s. ~ 0011 . . 2 em Home. Sllull- Town, ~ Rema deled. HIO,
td 0.0 20 Acroo 0.0 Soeotdo C l - IIIOWIImo &amp; Dhooay.
Rldgo,ti...-.1R
loVooltly Alllll. Or _.,. ~~~~­
COMhiiiM Wor"-a WtlcoOM
2-3 bedroom houoo w/nlco lo~ f i - I ..... II.W.I.Sie7.
t35D/mo, 30,_,75-3030 or 1104IIHIIInlt rooma •1111 cooklftt.
175-3a1.
Alto· llalltt 11p11co on rl¥11• .All
3 bodroom homo. 1111111 1&gt;1v1 rol- hook-upa. Ca" aftor 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-11151, ..... Wit
•onctt. .......2171.

hOuSI trailer with ctnttal air,
$7,000, con11101: Ca~ A. Hyooll,

1N7 lolobllo Home 14X70, 2IIR.
2BolhL Hul Pump. Ylnjto Siding.
W1glacf Aool. (1141_,.

.,
....,......__273olll&amp;.
Bam SomorvMit'o Alll'/f Camou-

1988 Clayron, 14156, 2 bedroom

1188 All Eltc~lc 3 BR. 14X70. 2
balho, Good Ctnd. 2 Lg PorchtL
Undorpondlng. 110,000. EYL
" HOUSEKEEPER · PT Pooillono , YENDINQ: Lazy lolan'o Drum. 1814) 258· 1884 or (lUI 881·
A~ailablt In Tht Womtn'l Rttl· FIM Hourt • Big $$. Priced ~1. IIZl8
denlial Program. Responsible In·
Fret 8todt. 1·8CJ0.820.CI182.
111112 Ciaylon Norlhriclgo 14170 3
dlvldual Wilh H.S. Diploma Or 220 Money to Loan
.
Bedrooms, 2 Full Ba1h1, lx10
Equivalent. Muat Bt Able To
Dock, Excollorn Condl~on, loluot
Work lndapendonUr And Follow NEED A ~OAH? Apply Tho Eaoy Soli,
Aoklng $17,500, 114·246Olracdono. E1porience Holplul But War -By Phono. Frlondly loan, 5812, Arltr 5:30 P.M., Of LOIYO
'Nor Necelslly.
&amp;14 sea 9835
loltlllgol
~und.

Rockfard Foogato Punch 200
Afl'4l, &amp; 3 Wer 8lllo Wllh.15• &amp;lb.
t425. Fot All 080114-441-21158.

1·4I70 3 Badroom1, 2 Full ~
Tolol Eitel., All Noe Corpo1, Vinyl

=r--::==·""!'"

....._to

40TWM

hou-01'11 .....
(comb.
farm)
•4 Do
Compollllon
_,_

.

Mllctalneoul
Will Coro For Eldorly 114·24&amp;-

ACROSS
1 Endlft81or

Wednesday. Oct IS. 1997
Jn 1he year ahead: your e~pcct~lions will he founded upon realisuc
premises, not ·wishful thinkmg .
Objeclives you believe in will he
achievable when handled in a prag·
matic manner. ·
.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) If you
sense you have the upper hand over
another in a transiiCiiOII today, you're
probably right. butthis doeHot give
you a license to take advantage.
Libra, treat yourself to a binhdayg~fi .
Sehd for your Astro-Oraph predictions for the year ahead by mailina $2
and SASE 10 A.stro-Graph, c/o th1s
newspaper. P.O. Box 1758. Murray

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Keep accumte records of your procedures today. especially if pcrfonning a service for another. A misundcrstanding may surface down 1he
Iinc.
·
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Occasionally, you 'rc no1 prudent
with your resources and this could be
·one of lhosc days. Be careful when
you have the checkbook in your
haod.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Here is a helpful mouo to hang inside
your office today : "What you see
,, here. say here, hear here. s(lys here
when you leave here."
AQUARIUS (Jan . 2Q..Feb. 19) Do
nol knuckle under ioday if you have
to deal with a big '_'lOUih: A mouse
might learn 10 roar hke a hon, but he
or she is still a mouse.
· PISCES (Feb. 2Q..Man:h 20) Be
very cautious loday if you' re
. involved in an arran~ement that
requires your fli\anc1al backmg .
Make sure you know wbat you· ~
doing.
. ARIES (Man:h 21 -April 19) II is

j

~

· ~~
· )~t;;t
_

commendable 10 want to funcuon as
your own person, bu1 it's not very
admirable to gralify self-interests al
the expense of another tc day.
TAURUS (Apnl 211-Ma~ 20)
Future plans should be predicated
upon actual projections, no1 wishful
lhillkiAJ. If you miscal~ Ulte today,
you might have grief tomorrow.
GEMINI (May 21 -Ju te 20) You
might he operating on a different
plane than your associates today.
Serious misunderstandings could
result if differences become too great.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Do
not bun your head against overwhelmins opposition tpday. It could
he foolish to rush in if it's a no-win,
no-value situation.
LEO (July 23•Aug. 22) II may he
difflcuh for you to distinguish
between apprehension and intuit~on
tqday. Do not confuse negauve
thoughls with genuine hunches.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It
you're thinking about buying something rather. n"':nsi~e about which
you know httle, 11 11111ht be wtse to
h~ve your judgment vindicated by an
expen. \
.
'

/

'

�.·

'

'OTORS

•

Ohio Lottery

Marlins
capture
NL crown

Pick 3:
585
Pick 4:
6295
Buckeye 5:
4-5-23·25-26

Sports on Page 4

•

'A:&gt;!. 48, NO. 127

Clear tonight, frost
possible. Thursday, partly
cloudy. High in mid 50s .

•
2 Sections, 1BPaget, 35 ceniS
A O.nnen Ca. New opaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 15, 1997

01897, Ohio Vllley Publllhlng Company

McCull·~rfJ:

Pu community back into CommUnity Action

PATRICIA McCULLOUGH

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Putting the community back into
Community Aclion.
Thai's the goal of Palricia 'Trish"
McCullough, executive director of
the Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency.
McCullough, who has served as
·agency director fQi · lbout three
months after replacing retired director Sid Edwards, spoke aboul the
GMCAA mission with lhe Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce during the ,group's monthly luncheon
Tuesday at Carleton School in Syracuse.
The Community Action Agency is
a private, non-profit corporation
funded in pan by the boards of counly commissioners of Gallia and
Meigs counties. The agency oversees ,
the spending of approximately $2

million annually, much of which
slays in !he lwo counlies, she said.
Community Action Agency's
slarted•out in the 1960s as a grassroots movement, she said.
"We wanted people to stan taking
responsibility for themselves," she
said.
Now the organization hopes to
piay a role in the welfare reform
movement through programs li.ke
Welfare To Work, ~he explained.
In addition, lhe CAA features
utility assistance programs, weatherization, provide transportation for
people who need lo see a doctor on
a regular basis (Cheaper than putting
people in a nursing home, according
to McCullough.) and administered a
flood clean-up program funded under
lhe Job Training Partnership Act
Program.

The agency also has summer
youth programs and helps laid-off
workers with job lrai ni ng as well as
working on housing projects in lhe
Tuppers Plains area and in Gallipolis.
"We support local businesses and
banks ... we believe in keeping the
money here in Meigs and Gallia
counties,'' she said.
·
·
Transportation Commiltee Chairman Steve Story reponed lhe Feder·
al Highway Administration has ruled
the Athens-to-Darwin highway project will have no significanl environmental impact.
He said the finding was significant
in that it marks the firsl lime the
'FHWA has given its approval to !he
project.
"This is a highway thai is going to
be used," he said.
·In addition, the environmental

Engler named speaker
for Kennedy .Day dinner
llnr38
tal:. . . .

AS

.....

lOW
AS

·ILIZEI

DAVID ENGLER
Mahoning Counly Commissioner
David Engler, a candidalc for Secretary of State next year, will be Ihe
keynote speaker at the Meigs County Democratic Party's Kcn.nedy Day
dinner on SaiUrday.
Engler, 37, is a nalive of Akron.
and was raised in AuslinloWn. He is
a graduate of Case Western Reserve
Univcrsily, where he also received hiS
law degree. He has served as Assistant City , Law Dircclor for
YoungSiown, and was lhc youngcSI
person to serve as a Commissioner on
1hc Youngstown Civil Service Commission.
•
He .also served as n city counci~­
man in Youngstown and was clcclcd
County Commissioner in 1992. He
won 1hat oflicc with an KO percent
majorily of 1hc voie.

4
,.

Alr1 AM/fM
I

'

........

As a local officia!, Engler has
emphasized economic development
and anli-crime measures in his work ..
He helped to forge a partnership with
the Youngstown-Warren ~egional
Chamber of Commerce to promote
the Mahoning Valley, and has been a
leader in developing a six-counly
N:ortheasl Ohip regional developmen! group '\'hieh markets Northeast
Ohio's people and products throughout Ihe world.
Married and the father of lhree
children, Engler is a member of 1he
Llliio Democralic Pany's Execulive
Commiltee, lhe Ohio .Jail Advisory
Board, a member of lhe Board of
Trustees of the Counly Commissioners Associalion •of Ohio and lhe
chairman of lhc Mahoning Counly
Solid Waslc Management Dimict.
"David Engler is a greal friend of
Ihe Democratic Pany, and has proven
himscl f as a leader in Mahoning
Counly," Counly Democratic Chairman Sue Maison said: "His efforts in
economic and community development should be of inlerest, not only
lo Democrats, but to all people inlerested in improving our communily."
"I have known David for several
years, and I am very pleased that he
has decided to run for slale-wide
office. I think he will be an impressive candidale," Maison said.
The dinner will be held al lhe
Meigs Coun1y Multipurpose Senior
Cenlcr nl 6 p.m. A social hour will
begin at 5 p.m. Tickcls for lhc even!
arc $10 per person. with children
under 12 admillcd free of charge.
Tickets may he purchased all he door.

Sludy on lhe U.S. 3311-77 Conneclor
RJad from Five Poinls to the William
Ritchie Jr. Bridge al Ra"f'nswood,
W.Va., has been submiltal lo the
FHWA, he said. A hearing will be
held later wilh lhe dale being determined by the level of study lhc
FHWA requeSIS.
Economic Development director
Ron McDade said the engineers
designing the Tuppers Plains lnduslrial Park are about 90 percent com"
pleted with the result thai lhe Community Improvement Corporation
may soon be able lo advenise for
construction bids.·
Judy Williams, tourism committee
chairwoman, reminded members
about upcoming events includiqg lhe
Middlcpon Hislorical Homes tour set
for Sunday from 1-5 p.m. and lhc
dedication of the Pomeroy Amphitheater which will be held Oct. 25 at

-·
H&gt;:~

WASHINGTON (AP) - . Rclail
in Seplcmber for lhe fourth
Consecutive month as ·increases at
fumilure stores and aulo showrooms
helped offset a slump al dcpaf\menl
and clothing slores.
The 0.3 perccnl increase. to a seasonally adjusted $215.5 billion, fol lowed Slrongcr gains in lune, July
and August. the Commerce Departmen! said loday.
Sales had fallen in March. April
and May as unseasonably chilly
wenlher kept shoppers home. Rclailers said unseasonable warmth. on the
other hand, discouraged customers
from buying new full cl01hing lasl
monlh. And the dea1h and funeral of
Princess Diana had some .walching
lelevision ins tend of shopping.
Receipts at department stores and
o1her general merchandisers fell 0.6
percent. while sales dropped 0.7 pefcenl al clothing and accessory shops .
Both were the sharpest declines in
five mon1hs.
The overall perfonnancc in September was a bil monger 1hao many
economisls expe91ed ~nd lhc tcport
upset inllauon-wary fmancml markets. The Dow Jones average of
induslrial stocks slipped 53 poinls to
8,043 in lhe firsl 30 minules of tradsale~ rose

•

AS

lOW
AS

..

·Carleton School/Meigs lndumics
dirct.:lor Steve Beha encouraged

chamber members to support Ihe I .8
mill
Board
of
Mental
Rctardalion/Dcvclopmenl Disabili·tics levy on lhe Nov. 4 ballot. He said
the issue is identical to a measure that
failed in May.

Complaints
against ATV
are common
By JIM FREEMAN

MHS HOMECOMING QUEEN CANDIDATES·
Homecoming queen candldatee at Meigs High
School are from the left, Lauren Anderson, Bll·
II Bentley, Shannon Jenkine, Heidi Leger, and
Meliesa Ramsburg. The queen will be crown In
pre-game ceremonies at the Meigs-Alexander

Pomeroy. A parade will take place on Thursday
night moving through Rutland at 6, Middleport
at 6:45, and Pomeroy at 7:15 p.m. with a bon
fire and rally to take place at 7:45 p.m. There
will be dance at the high school following the
game.

Voinovich promotes school levies

Sentinel News Staff
Slale officials arc conducting their
own' inveSiigalion into a fatal all-terrainuehicle accident -noa ... Letan
Fal!.~y....., ..... -ointto
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby. Meanwhile. Soulsby said hi s
office frequenlly receives complaints
concerning ATV drivers in thai area.
Shaun Paul Harris. 17, Sxracusc,
· died from injuries suslained after the
ATV he was riding apparently lumblcd over a high wall a1 a Richards &amp;
Sons gravel pit in Letart Township,
according to a Meigs County Sheriffs
Department report.
Harris and a passenger. Tim Wickersham, 17, Pomeroy, were both
knocked unconscious in the accident,
according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
When Wickersham regained consciousness, he attempted 10 pul Harris on the ATV before going for help,
Soulsby said. Failing lhis, he then
look the ATV -· which was nol heavily damaged-- and proceeded on his
own for assistance.
Afler summoning help. Wickcr&gt;ham left before ·rescue and law
cnforcemcnl officials arroved. hut
later met with deputies 10 give an
account of the incident.
He said they were panying. oul
there, riding around a~d jumpi"g
ramps and th~n found themselves
"out in space," Soulsby said.
"We could sec later where they
had been jumping Ihe 4-whcclcr," he
said, addong thai alcohol als~ seemed
lobe a factor in the moshap.
Harris, who wa\ a senior at Southern High School. died lalcr thai
evening al St. Mary's Hospilal in
Hunlinglo~ . W Va. Services were
held this morning allhc Racmc United Mclhodist Church .
Soulsby said the Ohio Departmcnl
of Nalural Resources Division of
Mines and Reclamalion is examining
lhc incident and may usc il as an
example to olhcr youngSicrs of whal
can happen when people play around
open pit mines and other similar
areas.

. ·
.
.
. .
qualc education ts sound.
COLUMBUS. (AP)- The slale tngs, Vomov~eh suggeslcd lhal stuAugenblick studied 102 school
districls !hat mel slalc standards for
slands ready to help local school dis- dents .would pcrlonn bcucr. . .
tricts repair or replace their crumbling
Vom~voch also toulcd ho.s faokd proficiency 1es1 scores, attendance.
buildings. But first they must help $1.1 hillton plan lhal would tncrcase graduation and dropout ralcs. The
themselves, Gov. George Voinovich the stale sales tax l&gt;y a penny per dol- total coSI was based on stale spendsaid Tuesday.
lar lO lund changes mandalcd by an ing of$4,269 per student about $600
Voinovich toured soulhem Ohio to Ohoo. Supreme .Court rulong thai more than current spcndong levels.
promolc local levies on the Nov. 4 Ohto s school lundong lormula "
Rep. C.J . Prentiss, said Augen ballot in six districts. A total of 19 dis- unconstotuhonal. .
blick 's numbers were too rigid and
tricts have levies thai must be
Lawm.akcrs ~CJeclcd the plan and did nol take into account &gt;e vcral areas
approved 10 qualify for stale building arc Sludymg thcor ophons at hcarongs thai she said need improvement,
of two spec tal commouccs.
.
such as ali -day kindergarten and
assistance aid.
"The slale school building assis"Hopefully. lhcy woll see thalth~~ lower leachcr-to-pupil ra1i os.'
mg. The price of Ihe benchmark 30''I'm trying 10 figure out how he
ycar Treasury bond fell. pushing tance program is a golden opportu- pr~gra~r w~s a wo~thy one,
nity
thai
they
should
take
advantage
Vomovoch
saod
before
hos
tour
of
lhe
woke
up and became lhc god . ~f
yields up to 6.39 perccnl from 6.35
of,"
Voinovich
said
when
asked
what
dtslrtcts
m
Scioto
and
H1ghlaod
counschool
funding," Ms. Prentiss. Dpcrcenl late Tuesday. ·
lies.
Cleveland. smd aflcr the hearing.
Still, the report didn't contmdict he planned to tell local voters.
·
The
stale
will
spend
about
$550
Meanwhile,
one
oflhe
committees
Bul Rep. Tom Johnson, co-chairanalysts' belief ecorromic growlh is
belwecn
now
and
lhc
beginheard
from
lhc
Denver
school
fund
m·
a
n
of the committee. said Aug~n million
moderaling. The queslion is \Yhclhcr
ning
of
1999,
paying
between
$8
and
ing
consuhanl
who
designed
the
forhlick's
sixth presentation 1o law1hc modcralion is enough 10 persuade
$14
for
every
$1
raised
locally,
mula
!hal
was
at
lhe
ccnler
of
lhc
make"
since
March was prnducltvc.
the Federal Reserve 10 refrain from
governor's plan.
" I think we have a hctler underraising shon-lenn intcrcSI ra1es 10 Voinovich said.
-He
said
!he
program-promised
.John
Augcnblick
lold
the
Joinl
slanding
of the Augcn~lo c k formula.
cool growlh and sguclch any incipihope
for
students
stuck
in
"crappy''
Finance
Subcommittee
thai
his
forIt's
acompli
catcd maltcr.'' -aid John·
Soulshy said his office receives
ent inflation pressures.
numerous cpmplaints from lhc Letan
. "ll's being intcrprcled as among buil_dings. With be tier school build- mula 10 detennine the cosl of an ade- son , R-Ncw Concord .
Falls area concerning people Iresreport. yet il's no1 a strong rcpon.
passing
wilh ATVs on privalc propMany of lhe key categories
cny
or
riding on stale or county
declined, " said cconomisl Bruce
blanket
public
offi
cials
hond
in
the
·
The
board
also
accepled
lhe
resroads .
The Meigs Local Board of EduS1cinberg of Merrill Lynch. · "Seplembcr was on lhe sofl side and whal cation handled mostly personnel mal· ignation of David Deem as ass istant amounl of $414 from the Buckeye
little we know aboul October says lers during its Thesday nighl.f.!eeting boys' varsity basketball coach and Union Insurance Company payable
People riding ATVs arc a common
al the district's central office in approved medical leave of absence to Brogan-\l(arncr Insurance Comthings probably gal a bil sofler."
.pany
of
Pomeroy.
for Debra Shuler.
sight in the Lelart Township area
Re1ail sales represent about a third Pomeroy.
-- Approved lhe creation of text· where, due 10 their rugged conslrucIn other business, the board:
In personnel matters, the board
of the economy's activily and, as
.. Accepted Andrew Philson as a books/instructional matorials ;ubsidy lion and maneuverability. they arc
such, are a key barometer of its hired Jeanie Witherell as a pari-time
tuilion
student at Meigs Middle fund .
heavily utilized by farmers and othkindergarten aide at Salisbury Elemomentum.
-·
Adopted
a
resolulion
of
comSchool
for
lhe
1997-98
school
year.
ers as a primary means of transmentary School for the 1997-98
..
Met
wi1h
Candace
Herr
and
mendation
for
the
Meigs
High
School
ponation.
school
year
effective
Thesday
and
Aulo sales last monlh rose 0.6 percent, the fourth consecutive advane)e hired Lou Hemsley as a substitute bus Kathie V:mMeter conccrmng the "Se. f001ball team. coaching s1aff and
bul no1 nearly as strong as increases driver for the remainder of the school Can Waif' program , an abstinence- administrators for their sportsmanSou Ishy added hi ' &lt;'lloce ha&gt;
in lhe ptevious three months. Fumi- year to be used on an as-needed basis based program aimed a1 reducing ship exhibilcd during lhe Wheeling received numerous comrl amtJ, rrom
teenage pregnancy. Plans call for Central Football Game as reported by 1hc gravel companic&lt; concerntng
ture dealers also reported a 0.6 per- effective immediately.
Pamela Zirkle was hired as a expanding the program to olher the officiating crew. · .
lrespasscr.; oo ATVs.
cent increase in September, the sixth
schools
in
lhe
county.
·· Met in e~ccutivc session to dis·
teacher al Meigs Middle School on a
• month wi1hou1 a decline.
"People shouldn'l he riding on
·; Approved lhe purclml('of a cuss negotiati ons.
, one-year contract.
property like this," he satd

Retail sales are up 0.3 .
percent in Septembf!r

. . . ·.
.· ..

4:30p.m.
· People thai purcha.&lt;ed bricks for
lhe amphitheater are also urged to
attend, she said.
Chamber secretary Bcrncas Brumfield temarked that lhe cruise and
casino night held in conjunclion with
!he recent Big Bend Stern wheel Fcslival raised about $3.100 for the
chamber. The annual dinner/dance
·has been scheduled for March 14,
1998. she said.

Meigs Local Board handles personnel inatters

•

a

'

I

~

t

I
I

I
'I

'4
I

~

I

~·:!!

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="405">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9790">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28876">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28875">
              <text>October 14, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1203">
      <name>sisson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6073">
      <name>stsanley</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
