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YOU KNOW?
C &amp; 0 MOTORS AND LOVE TOYOTA/LEXUS
SERVICE AND PARIS
ARE BOTH
OPEN ON SATURDAYS.
WHY WOULD YOU EVER GO ANY PLACE ELSE?

Pick 3:
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Kicker:
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on Page 4

Vol. 41, NO. 130
C18117, OhiO VII ley Publllhlng Company

10·EXTENDED Cllw-.
.

.

LS PACKAGE, AIR, AWM.
WHEELS &amp; MORE

Clear tonight, low In
lower 30s. Tuesday,
cloudy, high near 60.

TOYOTA

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Ohio Lottery

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.2 Sectlona, 12 Pages, 35 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 20, 1997

A

Gannen Ca. News-r

Engler addresses
Meigs
County
Democrats
..

$13,855

USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS •
ENGLER SPEAKS • David Englar, second from left, met with
Democratic Party Chalnnan Sue Malson, Vice Chairman Henry
Hunter and John lhle, chairman of the Democratic Party Central
Committee prior to the Kennedy Day Dlnnar on Saturday. Hunter
and lhle are the Democratic members of the Meigs County Board
of Elections.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The statewide Democratic ticket
for I 99S is shaping up, according to
a Mahoning County Commissioner
who hopes to he a pan of it. David
Engler of Youngstown, a declared
candidate for Secretary of State, was
the keynote speaker at the Meigs
County Democratic Pany's Kennedy
Day Dinner on Saturday night.
Engler began by paying tribute to
County Chairman Sue .Maison, who
served as master of ceremonies Saturday.
"Let me begin by saluting your
chairman," Engler said. "You may not
know this, but Sue Maison is held in
very high regard at the~tate level , by
the State Chairman and by the members of the State Executive Commit-

tee."
Engler said that the office of Secretary of State offers a unique position to address the issue of campaign
"

finance reform, an issue widely dis- tory of political scandal and corrupcussed on the federal and state levels tion.
Engler was a leader in defeating
and supported by Engler.
"I believe in stronger fmanciai the political leadership with his elecreponing. and the Secretary of State tion to the county commission in
can be the leader in this area," Engler 1992, noting that the county governsaid. "We need to insist on more ment has been completely replaced,
prompt reponing of a candidate's and that no present office holder has
receipts and expenditures. We held political office for more than
shouldn't have to wail unli.l an elec- five years.
He was reelected last year by a
tion is over to find out."
The best ~olution to the problem majority of 80 percent.
U.S. Representative Ted Stnckof campaign finance reform in the
state is two-fold, according to Engler, land, D-Lucasville. used his time at
and would involve voluntary spend- the podium to defend President Bill
ing limits and some degree of public Clinton, who Strickland says may be
''the most honest President to ever
financing of campaigns.
"People are cynical about poli- serve in the White House."
"Why do I say that," Strickland
tics," Engler said. "They think that it's
asked.
"Because the Republican s
all about money. When people don't
have
used,
every tactic to try lo hun
believe that their vote means some·
him and he has remained unharmed ."
thing, we have a problem."
Strickland referred lo Special
Engler discussed the political tumProsecutor
Kenneth Starr, who has
around in Mahoning County, a strong
hecn
con.
d
ucling
the investigation
Democratic county known for a his-

into the Whitewater land scandal.
"Kenneth Starr has used $40 mil lion to inve sti gat e evcrything he can .

I would hate to have a special prosecutor with this much money, not to
mention the power to subpoena witnesses. to try to find even the smallest speck on me," Strickland said,
"and yet they've been unable to find
any wrongdoing. All they have produced is some innuendo and
hearsay."
"We are better off than we .were
when Bill Clinton was elected,"
Strickland said. "The country is in
pretty good ·shape. We 're secure
against outside force s. The economv
is strong and Bill Clinton is looking
at important issues that need to be
addressed."
"In spi1e of all the criticism of the
president , he is enjoying high
approval ratings , and so is the First
Lady. " Strickland said. "I think that
Continued on page 3

URG is given go-ahead
Grand champio·n band
on Meigs County branch
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The University of Rio Grande was
given a green light Saturday by the
university board of trustees to pursue
establishment of a Meigs County
branch. ·
1'1\e board, meeting in Rio
Grande, approved a motion "authorizing the university staff to move
forward with establishing a Meigs
County branch, provided that follow
up meetings with county residents
who indicated an interest in enrolling
in classes produce sufficient enrollment.to enable a branch to be viable:
and funher, provided that a staff c~
secure a site that is convenient to'res·
idents, and that is obtainable on
financial terms favorable to the uni-

"WTHEA,
. . .IIIIICKYAAD
111014 4GO
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AIR, 1110 ENG., LOADED,

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CHARLESTON, W. Va. -A U.S.
District Coun judge has acquitted a
Mason physician on all federal
charges brought against him.
Dr. Danny Westmoreland, 42, of
.Mason was cleared of I0 counts of
unlawfully dispensing controlled substances for no medical purpose by
U.S. District Judge Joseph R. Goodwin Monday morning following clos·
ing arguments, according to a U.S .
Attorney's Office spokesman.
According to Westmoreland's sister, Rosalce Beattie, the judge said
Westmoreland "did what any good
physician would do" on each of the
10 charges.
In February, Westmorel~nd was
indicted' on 37 charges of Medicaid
fraud and illegally prescribing drugs
to create business for his wife's pharmacy. but prosecutors dropped most
of those charges on Tuesday, October
14. The trial began Wednesday. Oct&lt;&gt;-

. ..

bcr 15, in Huntington.
The investigation leading to Westmoreland's indictments in February
1997 was carried out by the U.S .
Drug Enforcement Administration,
the state Medicaid Fraud Unit, the
U.S. Postal Service. and the Ohio
Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. During
the raid, agents seized patient charts,
narcotics records sheets. providers,
papers and a computer.
The doctor's Mason office and
home were raided in June 1995 by
agents with guns drawn. The agents
ordered 15 to 20 patients to stand
against a wall. Agents also pointed
guns at Westmoreland's housekeeper
and nine-year-old pajama-clad son.
In August 1995, Westmoreland
told the Register "I just can't understand how they can come in here with
guns pointed at us, not charge me
with ~nything , not arrest me, and only
want what was in the search warrant.

All they would have had to do was
ask."
Judge Goodwin recently . ruled
evidence collected in the raid on
Westmoreland's office in 1995 can be
used at trial. Citing conduct and other grounds, Westmoreland's lawyers
asked Goodwin to throw out evidence from pat,ient files and other
documents seized by agents.
Westmoreland, who has been
practicing medicine in the Bend Area
for approximately 14 years, has
drown much support from the Mason
County area since the raid, with can-

dlelight vigils being held and many
letters written to the local newspaper.
The doctor is well-known for
contributing to youth efforts, such as
the Mason County Fair livestock sale.
drug resistance program, youth baseball league, as well as being a partner in education with a local elementary school.

Carter feels both parties should share blame
WASHINGTON (AP) - Both
political panics share the blame for.
the fact that Americans who want
something from their government
believe they must buy it with campaign contributions. former President
Caner says.

Study:

I

another. Sojka said he will meet with
people in an effon to establish pilot
programs and also presented the
board of trustees with times that people would like to attend classes at tbe
prQPOsed branch.
· School lllid community
announced ,in early August
a
Meigs County branch of the school
was being proposed. The announcement was followed by a packed
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce community meeting on Sept.
9 in Pomeroy held to gauge community interest in the suggested venture.
Although the venture would not
mark the first time the school has
held off-campus classes, it will be the
first time the school has had a sepa' rate institution identified as a branch.

I,

•if

,

• I

Mason physician acquitted

UTiliTY ·111 ·

5 TAHOES
3 EXPLORERS
2 . SUBURBANS 16 S-1 0 BLAZERS
54 RUNNERS
3 JIMMYS
6 GRAND
2 TRACKERS
CHEROKEES 1 BRONCO
4 CHEROKEES'
1 PASSPORT
.
2 WRANGLERS 1 AMIGO

''

versity."
Dr. Greg Sojka, university
provost, presented the results of a survey designed to gauge community
interest in the branch campus. The
survey indicated that..p!:oplc arc inter- .
fSted in programs such 1ill! micr&lt;&gt;~omputer applications in!lbusiness,
business management and nursing, he
said.
University officials have been
viewing buildings in MeigS' County
suitable for the branch campus. They
are seeking a site that offering a central location with easy accessibility
and plenty of parking: a place with
room for two or more claSsrooms ~nd
office space.
While finding a location is one
thing, getting students to attend is

"I don't think there is any doubt
that in the incumbent administration
and in the Congress decisions are
heavily influenced in many cases by
how large a contribution is made."
the Democratic former chief executive said Sunday on CNN's "Late
Edition With Frank Sesno."

Name-calling between the White
House and Capitol Hill has helped
give Americans "the impression,
which is_not always erroneous, that to
get legislation passed or' ilecisions
made in Washington, you've got to
contribute money in·a so-called 'legal
bribe,'" Carter said.

The Meigs High School
Band was named grand
champion of the Point
Pleasant Battle of the
Bands Saturday. Above1
Bonne Smith, field commander, accepts a first .
place band (Class A) trophy from Lisa Brewer of
McDonald's, a sponsor of
the festival. At left, Smith,
Danielle Peckham and
Melissa Ramsburg, from
left, are pictured with all
the trophies, Including the
grand champion trophy,
that the Maurader band
won. Others included second place percussion,
first .,lace field comman·
der and first place color
guard in its class.

Stress management a key to reducing heart attack risk
"In addition to diet, quttttng worsen the outlook for heart patients, month exercise program and the
By BRENDA c: COLEMAN
third received usual heart care from
smoking
and controlling blood pres- Blumenthal said.
AP Medical Writer
CHICAGO- While dieting right
and giving up smoking are keys in
reducing the risk of hean attacks, a
new study says patients can't ignore
the importance of managing stress.
A stress-management program
helped hean patients reduce their risk
of hean attacks or the need for
surgery by 74 percent, .researchers
reponed in the Oct. 27 JSsue of ~e
American Medical Assocoahon s
Archives of Internal Medicine .

•

sure, you need to think about managing stress" to aven potentially
fatal hean problems, said lames Blu- .
menthal, a professor of medical psychology at Duke University Medical
Center and the lead researcher.
All I07 patients studied showed
impaired blood flow to the heart during mental stress tests or during normal daily activities when they wore
heart mollitors. Such impaired blood
flow, called ischemia. is known to

Among the estimated II million
Americans with heart disease. 50 percent to 60 percent are believed to
develop ischemia under mental stress,
.he said, and 40 percent to 50 percent
during normal daily activities.
All of the patients studied
belonged to one of those categories,
as documented by medical tests, and
were broken into th'ree groups. bne~
group took a four-month stress management program, another a four-

' their personal physicians.
In the next three years, only three
of the 33 people in the stress-management group suffered "cardiac
events," defined as a fatal or nonfatal hean attack or a surgical procedure such as bypass or angioplasty. In
the same period, seven of the 34 peo·
pic in the exercise group and I 2 out
of the 40 patients in usual care suffered such events .

Family feels patrol should have
not chased son in fatal crash
•

BATAVIA (AP) - The family of a teen-ager who died in a car
wreck after leading the State Hi ghway Patrol on a 14-milc chase says
officers shouldn 't have pursued him .
James Ray Poole, 11, of Seaman mAd am&lt;County. died of internal injuries after the 4 a.m. wreck Saturday on U.S. 50 west, Clermont
County Coroner Nico Capurro said.
Relatives said they dtdn 't know the boy wasn't home until police
knocked on their doors to tell them he was dead.
"Our t&gt;iggest question rig ht po w i; wh y." said cousin Stacy
Humphrey, 28. of Seaman.
" Why go into a hogh-speed pursmt on a.straight stretch when you
know there's a horseshoe curve ahead'' " she said.
The patrol's policy requires off1 oers to r.u"uc cars if they fear the ·
driver poses a ri sk to other motori&lt;ts. patrol &lt;pokc,mnn Lt John Born
said.

•

�Co!Jlmentary

Page2 ·

Monday, October 20, 1117
OHIO Wc;-tlhcr
Tuesday, Oct. ll

'Est'a/,[isfJd in 1948

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-21~· Fax 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

Special prosecutor no route
to simple, swift judgment·

Congress rails as c ·linton slices pork
By JIICk Anclenon
and .IMSHMoller
WA INGTON -- Be careful
what you wish for; you just might
ge111.
.
.
That old cliche app!•es to congress10nal Republicans, who s~dde_nly are bestde themselves wnh
gnef and shock hecause Prest~ent
Chnton dared to u~e a weapon that
Congre~s handed htm.
.
PreSident _Ch~ton used the lmetlem veto twtce 1n the _last month to
tn~ about $3~ mtlhon wort\1 of
proJects that netther the admmtstra·
lion nor the Pentagon really wants.
ThiS provoked outrage on Capttol
Htll, much of 11 f~om the very same
people who wer~ ~ly too happy to
change the consmuuonal balan?~ of
power when 11 suned thc11 pohttcal
ends. .
The~r cnes for help_ mtght be
funny, tf the whole sttuauon weren 't
so sad
For nearly two decades, conservauve do-gooders argued that thebes!
way to get nd of wasteful spendmg •
· the pork-barrel prOJects that lawmakers provtde for the folks back
home to ensure re-elecuon-- was to
gtve the prestdentthe power of the

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Spectal prosecutors aren 't supermen. and should
there ulumatcly be one m DemocratiC campatgn fund-ratsing cases. it won't
speed the pace of an mvesttgation Republi cans now call glactal.
They want an mdependem counsel. and Rep. Henry Hyde, chatrman of
the House Jud1c1ary Commmce. smd lhe average Amencan does, too.
They wam answers, m plam language , abou11he Democrats' lamted contnbuuons m the 1996 campatgn. and the roles of Prcstdent Chnton and Vtce
President AI Gore
'
.
Hyde told Auorney General Janet Reno that her Justtce Department
mvcsugauon of alleged fund-ra•s•n g wrongs involvmg her own admmistrauon bnstles wnh conlltcls of 101erest. She satd not
" I can assure you that nobody m the Whtte House has satd boo to me
about anything to do wnh thts mvest•gauon," Reno satd.
That dtd not and wtll not placate her cnucs
The mdependenl coun sel system set up by Congress is intncate, arcane
and not a route to &lt;~mple JUdgments. Or swift ones.
One spectal prosecutor spent more than SIX years on cases involving two
Republican admmtstrauons. Kenneth Starr has been on the Whnewater case
for gmng on four years
Reno has taken m1tial steps under the law for mqumes to determine
whether there's reason for the ne xt step - a request to a federal court panel
to choose an tndependent counsel. The deadline for that decisiOn is Dec 2.
The prehmmary mqUifJes mvolvmg Clmton and Gore are narrow ones,
on the quesuon of whether they vwlated an 1883 law agamst solicitmg campatgn funds m federal butldmgs by telephonmg donors from the Whtte
House. The law was wriuen before there were telephones, and hasn't been
en forced smce
There IS no magtc weapon m all thiS nor IS there, so far at least, a smokmg gun pointmg to illegal acts by Clinton or Gore. No case 1s closed, Reno
said
She hasn't and won 't say much more than that, telling Congress that she By Nat H.,toff
Sen. John McCa10, R·Anz., has
can't go mto the details of a contmumg mvesttgatiOn Without compromtsmg
11 Frustratmg, Hyde satd at a marathon, 7-hour beanng on Wednesday. She not forgtven NBC for bemg the only
agreed, saying it was frustrating to take cnllctsm when she cannot dtsclose televtsion network to refuse to adopt
a "voluntary" rating system he
things that would answer it.
"The average citll.en has a right to ask what's takmg you so long," Reno advocates. Although at an early
sa1d "The answer is simple. We need to do it right Justice IS not served of pomt in the debate McCam satd he
would not support punitive legislaproseculors cui corners. ' '
.
uon
that would affect tile content of
It's ~ccn nearly II months. an&lt;!_ not wtthout mtssteps. Reno ordered a
televiSIOn
programs, he has now told
shakeup of the mvesttgatmg task force on Sept. 16. She told the House comNBC
that
he
will attack the network
mitlee that dectsions on investigative strategy aren't bemg mad~ wnhout the
on a number of fronts if it does not
con~urren ce of FBI Director Louts Frech.
surrender.
As chatrman of the Senate Commer.ce Commiuee, McCain's threats
are not tdle.
In a Sept. 29 leuer to Robert
Wnght, prestdenl of NBC, McCam
presented these warnings: If NBC
does not yield to government pressure (as embodied by the senator).
violent programs will be channeled
to later hours, and the Federal Communications Commission w1ll be
urged to look closely at the licenserenewal application of any television station that does not usc the
new raung system.
NBC, however. wtll not be
moved from its poSition that "there
1s no place for government mvolvement m what people watch on tele•
VISion " NBC voluntanly uses agebased icons on top of entertamment
programs as well as screen advi•
sories (e.g., "Thts program has
scenes of violence"). But 11 will not
yield to government mandates.
And NBC West Coast preSident

line-item
veto. .
nus
singularly
bad idea
was
pushed by
presidents
smce
Ronald
Reagan.
Actually,
Molt.r &amp; Anderson
the
idea
goes back more than a century. But
it's only been in the last two decades
that lawmakers in Washtngton
thought seriously about ceding some
of the11 constituuonal power of the
purse to the ch1ef execuuve.
Nobody was more enamored
with !hts tdea than the fresh-faced,
good-government reformers who
stormed into Washington with the ,
1994 Republican Revoluuon. Having vowed to clean up the government and return home in time for
supper, these reformers couldn 't
wait to tinker wtth the Constttuuon.
There was hardly a problem m the
land -- from abortion to school
prayer to those troublesome flag
burnings -- that couldn't be cured by

meddling with the 200-year-old doc·
ument that has stood the test of time
so well.
Rep. Van Hilleary, R-Tenn , for
example. couldn't have been happier when the line-1tem veto was
passed. He even took It me out to
give a liule cwics lesson to his
hometown paper the next year.
"Big spenders in the old Congress used to auach their wasteful,
taxpayer-funded pet projects to btg
spendmg bills, knowing the president couldn't really veto the whole
bill over such a small provtsion,"
Hilleary explained. " Now, spending
programs must be JUStified or they
can be eliminated by a prestdent."
Could tht&lt; be the same Htlleary
who IS now fighttng like a pit bull to
preserve a $9.9 milhon appropnauon he sponsored to have the A1r
Force improve a wind tunnel a1 a test
facility near Tullahoma, Tenn.?
Wind tunnels are used to test aerodynamiCS, and Htlleary argues that
the Air Force-- whtch didn 't ask for
the improvemenrs -- desperately
needs this hule gift. Without 1t, he
says the Air Force wtll hate to spend
an extra $630,000 a year n tests.
Yes, members of Con ress have

AccuWeathe,. forecast for

over, this rat-

mg system -champtoned by
McCam to protect chtldren .. IS
more confusing than tllummating: L
(coarse language ). D (suggestiVe
d10logue), S (sexual content) and V
(vtolence).
What are the specific wtena for
coarseness. suggcsuvcness. sexual
content and vtolence?
And what are the quahficatwns
for McCain 's ccnsors'l
During hts Jihad, the senator
revealed a confused sense of the
Amencan traditiOn of dtssent when
he satd of NBC 's intransigence:
" How can they calln censorshtp to
add a system that everybody else m
the industry has agreed to?"
The First Amendment exists to
protect a mmomy of one agamst a
maJonty
But as reported in Broadcasting
&amp; Cable magB1\ne, McCain 1s a formtdable wamor for conformuy. At~
September Commerce Comiluttec
hearing on digital TV, he asked FCC

•

:aa:

:r&amp;r,.. • ..

0 1001 "'NEA, ....

• The Incredible shrinking military

·roday in history

continent

Students of
government will
readtly recogmze th1s
as a fairly
tradiuonal
notton For '---decades
Spur
~
now, the taxpayers have been paying farmers not
to grow peanuts and soybeans and so
forth . But the tdea had a limtted
applicauon until the doctor glut
carne along. It 1s my fervent hope
that the sages on the Htll wtll sec
that we can take 11 much further.
Why can 't we pay substdies to
reheve any glut?
Lawyers, for instance. Why can 't
we pay law schools to stop traming
lawyers? Or psychobabble . It's got·
ten so that the mere Sight of a
Mars/Venus boolo gives me a rash,
and I'd gladly pay to forestall publication. Or loudmouths. I, for one,
am up to my ketstcr wnh Rush Lim·

----'

baugh and Denms Rodman and
Roseanne and Howard Stem and Pat
Buchanan and the like. II would be
worth a few mtlhon in substdtcs to
get these rowdy clowns to visit a
remote island for a few years.
What we need, clearly, is a new
entity to investtgate and centfy legitImate gluts -- call 11 the Nat10nal
Glut Board .. and a pool of money
or a trust fund that could be used to
persuade the perpetrators to stop
doing whatever they're doing
In some Instances, lhe returns
would no doubt exceed the costs.
Perhaps you heard about the
$333.000, two-hole outhouse that
the Nattonal Park Service built in
Pennsylvama for htkers in the
Delaware Water Gap Nat10nal
RecreatiOn Area. It has a slate roof,
cedar sidmg, porches and a super·
sturdy, cobblestone foundation that
Will survtve the tremors in earthquake-prone Pennsylvama. A payment to the Park Service of, say.
$250,000 would not only save
money but would mp the fancy public pnvy glut right in the bud
In every case, the national psyche
would be uphfted, and that alone is
worth money Just thmk, for example, how pleasant it would be to
watch the World Sefies if the NGB

PA

IND.

54•

•
W.VA.

Ohtoans who want to learn more
about the two statewtde issues on the
Jack R. Slavin, 61, Syracuse, died Saturday, Oct. 18, 1997, at Veterans Nov 4 ballot may obtain a pamphlet
Memorial Hospital in P9meroy.
called the Ohio Issues Repon by call·
Born Aug. 21. 1936, in Rainelle, W.Va., son of the late Lacy J. Sr. and ing 1-800-753-8683 .
Elizabeth Landrum Slaven, he was retired from Meigs Local High School
The hotline, sponsored by Secrewhere he was .an art teacher for 25 years.
tary of State Bob Taft's office, will be
He graduated from Ohio University with a bachelor of fine arts degree, in operation 24 hours per day through
was a meinber of the Meigs County Cancer Board, retired Ohio Education Oct. 31. A large-pnnt version of the
Association, Nauonal Education Association and.the Riverbend Arts Coun- Ohio Issues Repon is also available
cil Advisory Board
'by calling the hotline.
He was an active member of the Meigs County Democratic Party, an assisThe Ohio Issues Report mcludes
tant golf coach at Meigs High School and was a peacetime Navy veteran.
ballot language for the statewtde
He is survtved by his wife, Rita Hinerman Slavin of Syracuse; two daugh- issues and provides arguments for
ters, Mary Elizabeth Slavin of Jupiter, Fla., and Shannon K. Slavin of Mem- and against each issue. The repon
phis, Tenn.; three brothers and sisters-in-law, Harry M. and Joyce Slaven of also is available through coHege and
Patriot, Marvin L. and Rita Sfavin of Beckley, W.Va., and Maynard D. 1\114 public libraries, high schools, counMarsha Slaven of Grafton, W.Va.; a sister and brother-in-law, Carolyn and ty and local government officials,
Homer Adams of Elkins, W.Va.; sisters-m-law and brothers-in-law, Leah Jean county boards of elections and state
and Bob Ord of Syracuse, Todd J. and Sue Hinerman of Logan and Tene legislators
and Don Bancroft of Hurricane, W.Va.; several nieces and nephews
Issue I, a proposed consututlonal
He was preceded in death by two brothers, Lacy J. Slaven Jr. and Gene
C. Slaven, and by a sister, Edith Rehecca Slaven.
Servtces will be held Wednesday, 3 p.m. at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with AI Hartson officiating. Bunal Will follow in Riverview
Cemetery, Moddleport.
Fnends may call Tuesday, 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home. In lieu
COLUMBUS (AP) - Sheriff's
of flowers, contnbutions may be made to the Meigs County Branch of the
depuues
conducted a search early thts
American Cancer Society, PO BOX 703, Pomeroy OH 45769.
mornmg for tools they beheve three
prisoners used to escape from the
Franklin County jail.
The inmates got loose Saturday
Stella Lucille Persons. 91. Westervilie, died Thursday. Oct 16, 1997, at
and were all captured by early SunSt. Ann's Hospital, Columbus.
day.
A homemaker and missionary, she was born May 30, 1906, at Ward, W.Va.
Sheriff Jtm Karnes said they may
She was a member of the Nazarene Church, formerly the House of Prayer.
have spent three days removmg a 4She is survived by two sons, Denver R. Persons of Pomeroy and Roben mch-wide metal bar on a wmdow 1n
Persons of Gallipolis; a daughter, Myrtle Elizabeth "Betty" McClish of the1r dormitory.
Akron; 17 grandchildren and several great-grandchildren and great-greatKarnes critictzed the Jail's guards
grandchtldren.
because he satd•they should have
She was preceded in death by her husband. Elcherd Persons; two grand- checked that dormitory on every
chtldren, two brothers and a SISter.
shtft
Services will be held Tue~day, 2 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
"If they ' ve been workmg on the
with Herbert Grate officiating. Burial will follow 1n Chester Cemetery.
wmdow for three days. 1t's every·
Friends may call today, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

expected to stretch from Wtsconsm to
Colorado. Cold weather was likely
behind the front, with.scauered, light
rain changing to snow and htghs only
in the 30s and 40s. Wmds gustmg to
40 mph were expected to make it feel
much colder
Snow was also possible along the
eastern slopes of the Rocktes in
Wyoming and Colorado.
Early today, a wmd advtsory was
_addresses.~~ntinued from page 1
tssued for parts of Massachusetts as
a strong storm churned 200 mil~s this 1s a good reflection on the Amer- or Delaware every day to make a
southeast of Nantucket. Gusts of SO
ican people. I am proud of the pres- decent wage "
mph w,ere possible.
ident."
"I guess it's okay to pay a preThe same storm system dumped
Strickland also announced that vailing wage when you're building a
I.S inches of rain on Raleigh and
Congressman Patnck Kennedy of stadium but not to build school build·
Charlotte 10 North Carohna and WalRhode Island would be the guest mgs for our kids."
lops Island 10 Virg10ia into this mornspeaker at a Strickland fundraiser in
Commissioner Jeff Thornton also
ing. In Virginia Beach, Va., an oceanScioto County.
addressed the ~up briefly and comfront vacatton home collapsed after
State Senator Michael Shoemak- mended the Party for its endorsement
heavy nun and a pound10g surf erod- er, D-Boumeville, dtscussed the issue of the proposed half-mtlllevy for the
ed a beach. No one was in the house.
of school fundmg and compared the operation of the county home.
Cool, dry conditions were ·preDemocratic philosophy to the ph1"This is somcthmg that we need 10
dicted by tonight for New England losophy of the Republicans on issues Metgs County, and I hope you'll vote
and the Mtdwest. The Southeast, such as school funding and welfare to support it," Thornton said.
southern Plains and West were
reform.
Chairman Sue Maison recognized
expected to see mostly sunny and
"We are too apologetic as Democ- Democratic Party Chairmen from
mdd condittons.
Shoemaker said. "We need to other counties, including Paul Carter
The high tem~r!!ture in the con- rats,"
remember from whence we came. of Vinton County and Herman 2ierg·
tinental United States on Sunday was There's definitely a difference in aui- er of Monroe County. Also recog95 atl111perial, Calif. The low was 18 tudes. As Democrats, we try to figure nized was Athens County Common
at Gunnison, Colo.
out how to help folks and Repubh- Pleas Judge Alan Goldsberry.
Prior to the program, the assembly
cans want to figure out how to make
people Simply disappear from the honored Norman and Allegra Will of
Rutland for their 60th wedding
welfare rolls."
Shoemaker
also
auacked
recent
an01versary.
Will is a past member of
Units of the Meigs County Emer- ant Valley Hospital,
legislation
which
"
c
uts
the
prevailing
the
board
of
elections
and has served
gency Medical Service recorded 12 MIDDLEPORT
12:27 a.m. Sunday, volunteer fire wage by 30 percent on state-asststed as a Democratic central commtl!eccalls for assistance Saturday and
man for over 35 years
department
to Beech Street, dumpster school building projects.
Sunday. Units responding included:
'This
affects
us,"
Shoemaker
said
The couple was presented wtth a
fire ;
CENTRAL DISPATCH
"I
thmk
about
those
ptckup
trucks
cake
and a gift from the party.
4:04p.m. Sunday, VFD to Village
7:34 a.m. Saturday, slate Route
w1th
Metgs
County
hcense
plates
that
'
Entertainment
was provided by
338, Racme, Bill Amon, Veterans Manor Apartments, grease fire .
I meet on my way to Columbus Roger and Mary Gtlmore.
Memortal Hospital, Racine squad REEDSVILLE
Those
folks are drivmg to Columbus
5:47 p.m. Saturday, state Route
assisted;
8:26 a.m. Saturday, slate Route 124, Marvin Reed, Marietta Memo681, Tuppers Plams, Jean Hawk, rial Hospital.
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Tuppers RUTLAND
The followmg land transfers were
Deed, Donald L and Noell Beth
11.43 a.m. Sunday. Main Street,
Plains and Reedsville squads assistBernice Hoffman, HMC.
recorded recently m the office of Stivers to Rtchard F. and Edna Rused;
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene sell, Middleport parcel;
6:39 p.m. Saturday, June Street,
Ham•lton:
Deed, Leroy Frankhn Bnght to
Syracuse, Jack Slavin, VMH, SyraODNR
probes
Incident
Deed, Grace Martin to Dennis E. Sarah Elizabeth Bright, Syracuse
ciiSe squad assisted;
GUYSVILLE (AP) -An II· and Helen N. Newland. Orange, (ive parcels;
7:44 p.m. Saturday, Texas Road,
Deed, Southern Ohio Coal ComPomeroy. Sharon Maynard, VMH, year-old boy was injured after hJS acres;
brother
acctdentally
shot
him
wtth
an
Deed,
Wayne
0.
and
Minnie
L.
,
pany
to Darrick and Candy McCloud,
Pomeroy squad assisted;
arrow
from
a
crossbow
while
they
9:58 p.m. Saturday, state Route
Pullins to Jerry E. Pullins, 01.-e par- Salem, four acres;
Deed, Frances Adams, et al. to
124, Syracuse, Harold Will, VMH, were hunting, shenff's depuues said. eel;
The Athens County Shenff's
Deed. Mtldred L. Wtlhams to E~erel! T. Calaway, Lebanon parcel,
Syracuse squad assisted;
Deed, Wilham and Stella M Lev8:30 a.m. Sunday, Nye Avenue. Office satd Jonathan Lutz and hts Wtlliam and Janelle D. Harmon,
brother,
Eugene,
13,
were
hunting
Lebanon,
13
acres;
acy
to Belly Levacy Holter, Chester
Pomeroy. Bessie Landaker, Holzer
Saturday
when
the
accident
occurred.
Deed, Ire.ne M. Dtllto Thomas E. parcel; . ·
Medtcal Center;
10 II a.m. Sunday. Lincoln Guysville IS about 20 mtles west of Smtth, Su!!on parcel, I 6 acres,
Deed, Lmdsey and Elizabeth
Deed, Mtldred B. Humphreys to Lyons to Richard A. and Ethel R.
Heights. Pomeroy. Frederick Fems, Parkersburg, W Va.
Jonathan Lutz was hitm the nght James E. and Mchnda K McLam. Lambert, Olive tracts;
VMH;
side
ofhis abdomenand was 1n poor Salisbury, 1.8419 acres,
7:47 p.m. Sunday, O•erbrook
Deed, Teddy E. and Ann C. Spurtoday at Chtldrcn's Hospt·
condition
Nursing Center. Iva Sw1shcr, Pleas. Deed, Charles S. and Frances M. lock to Robert L. Ramsey, Columbta
--·· . . ~- "'"'- -,
lalm Columbus.
Robincue to same, Scipio;
parcels;
I
The investigation has been turned
Deed. Mtchael. Rhonda, Robert E.
Deed, Virgil Havens to Earl C. Jr.
over to the Ohio Depanment of Nat- and Nma J. Sanders to Jonathan and Sue Kauff, Chester.
ural Resources.
(liSPS 21:1-""1
Sanders, Ohve, 11.613 acres.
. Deed. Mtckey R. and Rachel K.
'Deed,
Roben,
Nina.
Rhonda
and
Hul!on to Christopher M. and,
1\!bhllted every, aflcrnoon, Monday lhrou1h
Frldly, Ill Caun St ., Pomeroy, Ohto. by the
Mtchael Sanders to Mtchael and Michelle L. Huuon, Rutland;
Ohio Valley l'tlbhllaiftJ...CompanyiOannclt Co.,
Rhonda Sanders, Olive. 6.591 acres;
Deed, Mtchael Perry to Nancy
Pomeroy, Ohto 4S7t;9. 'Ph 992·2156. Setond
Deed, Roben, Nina, Rhonda and Perry, Columbta, 2 81 acres,
cl.ss po~tagr paid at Pomeroy Ot.lo.
Am Elo Power .......................46'4
Mtchacl Sellers to Robert and Nmn
Deed. Ons L. and PatriCia A
Akzo
......................................
88'4
M,.ber: The ASJOCtated Preu, and tht Ohio
AmrTech
...............................
&amp;&amp;'!.
Sanders,
Olive,
1.580
acres;
Smith
to Brian A. and MISchelle L.
NewSf*pcr 1\UnCtltlon
Aahland 011 ...........................51 ·~
Deed, Mary L. Hudson Hoppe and Beeler, Chester parcel;
POSTMASTER~ ~nd addh!u correr;uons to
ATAT.........................
4~. 1. Henry Hoppe to Shawn Mtchael and
Deed, Thomas J and Suzanne
Tlt Datly Sentinel, Ill Court St , Pomeroy,
Bank Ona.............................s4&gt;.
HeillheJ B Hawley, Be~f_Qrd , three Kibble to Brian A. and Mtschellc L
Ollto4'769
Bob Evan• ............................181J
acres;
Beeler, Chester parcels;
Borg-Wamer .........................57'.1
Deed,
Donald
L.
and
Noell
Beth
Deed, Ltlhe Ann, Jackie Ray and
Chlmplon.............................19'!.·
Charm Shpl ........................... 5'.!.
Stivers to same, Mtddleport, 139 Dtane Robinson to Samuel E. Robm City Holdlng ............................ 41
acrc ,
son, Rutland, .25 acre.
Faclenl Mogul ...................... 44~.
GanntH ..........\ ........... ~o .........5411•
,
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dildy .......... ...... .....
'\~ Cena.
Goodyeer .............................&amp;&amp;'!.
Kmar1 .....................................13'4·
Sublalbcn not duinn, to PlY the nrner may
Linde End ......................... 31'M
rtmit tn •dvance dtrrc:lto The Dilly Sentinel
Course planned
l!:altem Board
Umtted .................................. 23~.
onsttlm:, she or 12 moftlh bulL Crcdll wlli be
The Eastern Local Board of EduAn
Ohio
Hunter
Educatton
Course
Oak
Hill
Flnl
............................
20
aivtn ClfTicr eKh wtek
ova ...~..........,. ..........................37 sponsored by the VFW Post3478 in cation will meet at 6 p.m. tontght in
"• subttripliml by msil pennillrd in areas
One Vallly ...........................37"Coolville will be held on October 25 regular sesston in the htgh school
wk~ bomt carrla Wf\lkt: ts aYatltbh.
Peopl• ................................. 44j.
and 26 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the library
Prem Ftnl...............................22:4
ht!lill11r rtKrYtt thl npt 10 idJ~t ratn dur·
Coolville Volunteer Ftre Department
Rockwell ...............................54'h.
I•J tM llblcflpho• period. Sublc:riplion rate
on Sixth Street. Robert Pulhns and Ducks Unlimited banqutl
" ' " " ' may be implewnled bJ d.nJifiJ tile
RDIShtii .•-............:...............55'cMalt0«1 of tilt wbleripliGft
A Ducks Unhmllcd banquet will
Rick Smith will be the instructors.
Shoney'• ...............................4.,_
be
held Wednesday, 6 p.m . at the
8t1r
Blnk
.............................
48-,.
Information is available by calling
MAILI\JIISCRIPf!ONS
W"'dy'e
................................
22'.4
Royal
Oak Resort near Pomeroy. For
667-3831 or 667-695 I.
·-Melpc-17
Worthlngton .......................... zo~.
13 ""'"-······· .• . . ..•. •. .. ..... ..S27.J(I
information or uckets, call Metgs
26 ·- .. . • . . .. ....
..$53M2
County
Game Protector Keith Wood
Meeting
oet
51Woob........ ...... .. .... .
Sllll..!&lt;l
Stock report• 1r1 the 10:30
-0.-llltlpC.IIJ
at
985-4400.
Tickets are SSO, smgle,
Wmding Trail Garden Club will
a.m. quote• provided by Advell
13 W.kl...... ....... ... .. . . . ..
. $29 2l
'
meet on Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the or $65 , couples.
of GaHlpolla.
;16 W.h .. ....... . ...........: ... ,
$S6 611
•
!2\Yeob................................... . $111!172
home of Addal?u LewiS.

By The A•aoclllted Preaa
Chilly weather will bring the possibilty of snow to northern Ohio, the
National Weather Service said.
Skies will clear tonight and winds
will drop rapidly after sunset. The
combined effects w1ll bring frost !&lt;&gt;
lhe state overnight. Temperatures
will range from the lower 30s north·
east to around 40 in the extreme
south.
A rront bringing much colder air
and the threat of precipitation, perhaps 10 the form of snow in northern
areas, will move across Ohio on
Tuesday. Skies will be partly cloudy
and highs will be 4S to 55.
The record htgh temperature filr
this aate in Columbus is 84, set in
1953. The record low of 24 was set
in 1972.
Sunset today will be at 6·45 p.m.
Sunrise on Tuesday will be at 7·49
a.m.
,
Across the nation
A cold front packing the potential
for snow and the coldest temperatures
of the season pushed across the
northern Plains today. The rest of the
nation was dry and fair, except for
some lingering rains in the midAtlantic states.
By lonight, the co!d front was

Engler

Meigs
EMS
logs
12
caUs
-

Meigs property transfers

Nat Hentoff is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest or the
Bill or Rights.

--

Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprloe
Association.
'

--- - ----- - - •

Information on state
issues is available

Stella Lucille Persons
Colder air, po·ssible
snow, headed for Ohio

detatled study on government regu·
lation of vtolence in the medm.
including licensed med1a. It quotes a
1952 Supreme Court c~se, Burstyn
vs. Wilson: "Partocularly ... where '
expression is sought to be su~Jec.tel!,
to licensing. t~c restrictions cannel
be so vague as to set 'the censor
adnft upon a boundless sea'" ..
whether the censor IS the FCC or the
Umtcd States Congress.
Furthermore, as the Bar Assoc~a­
uon·s Commmcc on Communicatwns and Mcdta Law (the authors of
the New York report) put It " Any
rating scheme adopted may well
constitute state action that burdens .
First Amendment mtcrests " Sen.
McCam is the very cmbodtmcnt of
threats of state acuon.
"It IS anathema to the First
Amendment," said Justtcc Wilham
0. Douglas, "to allow government
any role ol censorship over newspapers. magallncs. books. an, music.
TV, radto or any other aspect of the
press."
Sen. McCam has often satd he
docs not favor the " course of
act10n" he has taken
But he cl31ms NBC has gtven
him no chotec. That sounds like a
variauon on a fa

declared a Sptl Glut and paid base- ..
ball players not to expectorate. I calculated that Cleveland manager
Mtke Hargrove personally worked
up 7.7 gallons during the American
League champiOnships.
!.would like to see a glut declared
on stories about the preSident's gen- · ·
1tals. The Paula Jones case is only m
the diScovery phase and I have
already heard all I want to know
about Mr. Clinton's "diStinguiShmg
charactensttcs, blemtshcs or abnormalities." I say we should pay them
all to shut up
Go back to that congressional pay
ratse Every ume the lawmakers
want one, they have to dtsguise it as
"ethics reform•, or an "inflation
adjustment" and think up ways to
vote for it whtle lookmg like they 're
voting against it How about if the
NGB stmply declared' an oftictal
glut in congresswnal pay raises and
paid the scalawags a subSidy not to
take any? Gtve them, say, $3,000
every year not to take a $4,000 htke.
I thmk you can sec there is some
real potential here.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

amendmen t. would grant JUdges the
power to deny bail m fe lony cases
when the person charged poses a significant threat to others and where the
presumption that the person commit·
ted the offense IS great , even 1f the
case does not carry the potenti al for
the death penalty.
Issue 2, a referendum . asks
Ohioans to vote on Amended Subsutute Senate Btll45, which reforms the
workers' compensation system. It IS
the first time smce 1939that a referendum has been placed before Ohto
voters. A referendum occurs when
enough vahd signatures are collected
to challenge a law that has been
passed by the General Assembly,
Signed by the Governor. and submit:
ted the Secretary of State's office.

•
:
:
.
•
:

!
:

.
:
:
•
:
~

:

Police catch three men who
escape from Columbus jail

It's time to pay down the gluts
extended'
the
glut
subsidy to
hospnals
across the

Jack R. Slavin

IToledo!' 48" I

Senator John McCain: The Enforcer

HentQtf

cOoditions and high

•

And the admintstratiOn wt sely
spared a few stmking porkers slated
for the home turf of Senate Majority
Leader Trent Lon. R-Miss., and
House Speaker Newt Gmgnch, RGa
·
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers ror United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

chairman Reed Hundt, "Would a
station's failure to implement a TV
raung system ... raise a substantial
and matenal questton of fact about
whether tis operations complied
with the public interest?"
And dunng a hearing on the confirmation of three FCC nominees,
McCain asked each whether a stauon's hccnse renewal should be lied
to tis adoption of the new ratmgs
system. Not surpnsingly. all were
wtlhng to consider the posstbtlily.
Robert Corn-Revere, a lawyer
who has worked at the FCC, emphasizes that "so long as the govern- ·
ment brandtshes us hcensmg power
m atd of its programming dcmes, no
'self-regulation' 1s truly voluntary
no matter how many umes that
euphcmtsm 1s mvolvcd "
Sen McCam ·~ not alone m bran·
dishing the new rating system as a
sword of Damocles over NBC. Sen .
Joseph Lieberman. D-Conn., and
Rep Edward Markey, D-Mass ..
have also threatened legislatiOn to
bring NBC to 1ts corporate knees.
Markey promtscs to put pressure on
indtvtdual affiliates of NBC -- they
are the ones that arc hcensed
Presumably. 1f enough of them
get suffictcn!ly scared to put mternal
pressure on the NBC network. the
new ratmg system
And the chtldren of the nallon
wtll be safe.
The Associauon of the Bar of the
Ctty of New York has Jssued a long,

'

MICH.

learned the old Washington lesson
that pork looks a lot different when
it's taken from one's own hide. And
it isn't just the freshmen who are
complaining.
Old hands like Sen. Ted Stevens,
R·Aiaska, the proud chairman of the
Senate Appropriations Commiuee.
lashed out recently, proclaiming that
" we are not eunuchs," and that he
may call for the president's hne·ttem
veto authority to be repealed. He
may have a helpmg hand in the person of Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M.,
the chatrman of the Budget Committee and one of the leading deficithawks in Congress over the past
decade. Domenici can 't for the hfe
of htm understand why Chnton
would dare veto two spendmg pro·
jects in hts home state .
And then thcr~ is the congressional dele gat ton from Utah, whtch
can 't beheve the president disapproved of their plans to have tax payers butld a $12.7 mtlhon Army
mam1cnance factlity The new facil·
ities would have allowed three Army
Reserve umts to move from their
present base, freemg up land there to
be used for university housing,"
whtch coinctd_~ntally could also
serve as the Ol)'mp•c Village during
the 2002 Winter Games. In other
words, the good conservatives from
Utah weren 't above usmg the .
defense budget to help pay for the11
Olympic par1y
Lost 10 all the fire-and-brimstone
rhetonc on Capitol H1llthcsc days IS
JUSt how little money the prestdent
a~tually objected to Only $144 mil han out of a total defense budget or.
$248 bilhon was smgled out for
velo .

Don Ohlmeyer
notes dryly,
"If you read
the
threats
McCain put m
his leuer, how
can
anyone
say this (rating
system) is vul·
untary'/"
More-

Pomeroy • Mldd~, Ohio

•

Monday, October 20, 1887
'

The Daily Sentinel

'\

The Daily Sentinel i

Stocks

u ..........

Meigs announcements

.

I

u ••

-·-·-

•
•

body's problem," he sa1d
"Someone dtdn 't do the11 JOb, it's,
that simple. Not just one person. It .•
looks like several people dtdn 't do
!hell JObs."
The sheriff IS blammg deputies too .
quickly. said Mtke Tanner. preSident
of the Fraternal Order of Pnltcc
Capnol City Lodge No. 9.
"It's typical of the shenfl 's office
to pass the blame to nur members
when there are some collalcral problems," he satd 'To tlat out olamc nur
members for this IS premature "
Ket!h Cabrera, 27 , Rodney
McAfee, 23. and Karccm Jackson.
23. went through the second-lloor
wmdow of the Jail Saturd~y morning

I·

One-car crash injures Pomeroy man
A one-car acctdent on County Road 36 (Sumner) late Saturday left a
Pomeroy man slightly InJUred, the Galha-Metgs Post of the State Htghway Patrol reported.
Adam W. Rtffle. 19. 1739 Chester Road, was not treated at the scene,
'accordtng to the patrol
Troopers said Riffle was southbound, I 9 miles north of State Route
7 in Chester Township at 10:50 p m when the car he drove went off the
right stde of the road and struck a matlbox
The car contmucd on, sinking a ullhty pole and a flower bed. according to the report.
The car was severely damaged. and Rtffle was cited for dnvmg under
the mfluence and fat lure to control.

.

Financial report on relief fund
A report of income and expend•·
lures from the Meigs County MiniStenal Association Rehef Fund has
been released by the Board of
Trustees
Accordtng to the trustees,
Rev. Keith Radar, Rev. Bob Robonson, Rev. Bill Hoback, Rev Fr Wal·
ter Hemz, and Rev. Glen McClung,
the total amount donated following
last spnng's flood totaled $31 ,643.18.
or the total amount.
$24,365 19 was spent on 27 projects
involvmg flood vtcums. One of the
maJor projects w.S ra1smg a house

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admtsstons - Robert
Jeffers, Syracuse; Emma DeVore,
Racme.
Saturday discharges - none . .
Sunday admtssions - Frederica
Faris, Pomeroy.
Sunday dtscharges - none.
Holzer Medieal Center
Discharges Oct. 17- Jacquelin
Watson, Luctllc Parsons, Walter
DaVIS, Frances Grady, Darrell Knapp,
Helen McGraw, Dorothy Taylor,'
Ryan McCarley. Leland Clonch,
Frances Dav1s, Jarred Large .
Birth - Mr and Mrs. Kclvm
Gibson, son, Ray.
Discharges Oct. 18 - Kns Conger, Jack Henson. Apnl Rcitmire.
Mrs Kelvin Gtbson and son. Roger
Rnchte. Dtanc McNutt . Shcllie Han·
nah, Whttncy Dudding.
Discharges Oct. 19 - Betty
Hawk.
(Published with permission)
Noll. . Spoclal MHIIngBOtlrd of Education
Notice le hereby given,
Thot there will be • mHIIng
of the bollrd of Educ.tlon of
Gelllpolle CIIV School
Dlllrtct, Gettle CauJ11Y, OhiO,
on the 22 doy of Oetoblr,
1197, 1t ••vtn o'clock p.m.,
et Admlnlotrotlvt Office
Bulldlngloeoted ot et St.te
SlrHI, Galllpolla, OH 45&amp;31

to conolder till quntlon of

employment
of an
erchlloctulll flrm end other
buolntaa which the board
con1ldtr1 ntCI&amp;IIry to

trllnUCI.

Ellen M. Merple
Trenurer

out or the area wht ch •s frequently
flooded. Other proJeCts mcluded .
replaemg floonng , appliances. cquopmcnl and furniture. asslstmg with the
purchase of carpeting. paying ullliucs. and buymg clcanmg supphe~ .
One church wa"i g1vcn assistance

along wuh a youth center
Contnbuuons came !rom
many sources mcludmg $5.000 I rom
Cathohc Chanties USA, $3 .000 each
from Jhc Farmers Bank and Gannett
Co . Inc /Ohto Valley Pubhshmg Co.;
$2.000 from the Outvtllc Prcshytcnans; $1,400 from Sacred Hearl
Catholic Church. and $500 Irom the
Mtddleport-Pomcroy Rolary Club
The rcmamdcr of the mon·cy for flood rehel came lrom local
churches and busmcsscs and person·
al donations
The balance on the Relief
Fund. as reported by the trustees. 1s
now $7,277.99

***********
*
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On November 4th

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Sports

·

'

'

•. Playing intensely from the start to
finish, the Southern Tornadoes
whirled to a 15-12, 15-7 win over the
Symmes Valley Vikings in the Division rv sectional championship
match Saturday afternoon at Alexander High School.
Southern broke a 3·3 tie when
Cynthia Caldwell scored five straight
t~ give Southern an 8-3 ad vantage ·

--

Eagles defeat South Gallia
to claim D-IV sectional title

.

,-~ EASTERN SECTIONAL CHAMPS - For the
second year In a row, the Eastern Eagles captured the Division IV sectional volleyball cham·
plonshlp by defeating South Gallia Saturday. Pic·
tured are championship team members cele:tJratlng their victory. In front are (L·R) Jessica

Brannon, Leah Sanders, Helllther Mora and
Stephanie Evans. Bahlnd them are Jull Haymln,
Angl Wolfe, Valerie Karr, Angle Taylor, Michelle
Caldwell, Kim Mayle, Jull Bailey and Kristen
Chevalier.

Cleveland ties World Series at 1·1

indians
defeat Marlins 6-1
.
By RONALD BLUM
: MIAMI (AP) - The World Series
Ladn' t even left Florida. and already
~level and had given the Marlins the
big chill.
Sandy Alomar and Chad Ogea
weren't about to let the Marlins run
wild again like they did in the open-

In Saturday night's opener, Moises Alou hit a go-ahead three-run
homer off Ore I Hershiser and Charles
Johnson followed with an upper-deck
shot. Cleveland. in the Series fbr the
second time in three seasons, seemed
shocked.
But the Marlins couldn't do it
ef.
agam.
; " Nobody 's going to sweep. Now
On a 77-degree night. the warmest
ro.-e 're going home to our environ· for a Series game since ·1977 at
!llent." Jim Thome said after Cleve- Dodger Stadium, the crowd of 67,025
land evened the World Series 1-all · was shaking to samba before the
with a 6- 1 victory Sunday night.
game. It was more movement than
• Ogea, finally gelling some support their teal heroes managed on the
[n the postseason, allowed just one bases, and now Florida is in for a cold
Fun and seven hits in 6 2/3 innings. welcome at Jacobs Field, where the
1-larquis Grissom hit a ge&gt;-ahead sin- gametime temperature for Game 3 on
Jle in a three-run fifth, Bip Roberts Tuesday night is expected to be near
edded a two-run single later in the 40.
inning and Alomar hit a two-run
"If we"re sitting around looking at
~omer in the sixth.
each other shivering, we have prob·
: " We just couldn't get that big hit Iems," Leyland said.
tonight." Marlins manager Jim Ley·
Alomar, the star for Cleveland so
land said. "Ogea made some big many times during the season, did it
~itches when he had to."
again. With the score tied at I in the
•

fourth, Moises Alou led off with a
double and Charies Johnson hit a
swinging bunt.
Alomar popped out in front of the
plate, threw to third and -Matt
Williams tagged out Alou.
Gigantic momentum buster.
"A big-time play," Indians man·
ager Mike Hargrove said.
·
Two innings later, Alomar blew
open the game with his drive into the
second deck after a leadoff walk by
David Justice.
And to make it" e&lt;tra special, it
came on his father's 54th birthday.
Sort of a gift to dad.
'Tm not trying to. be cheap and
not buy him a present," Alomar said.
"I got him a watch last week, so he
already got a gift."
Ogea got a present, too. He had
been 0-2 in the postseason, mainly
because the Indian• hadn't scored a
single run in the 19 2/3' innings he
had pitched.
(See SERIES on Page S)

Steelers
down
Ben
gals
26-10
.
8y JOE KAY
Dick LeBeau, the fanner Steelers
CINCINNATI (AP) - Who _defensive coordinator now running
Reeds receivers when you ' ve got the Bengals' unil, stacked the line to
Jerome Bettis?
stop the NFL's top ground attack. It
With three of their top five stopped Bettis for a half but no more.
"Nobody's controlled him yet,"
receivers out and the Cinc~nnati Bengals geared to stop the run , the Pitts- coach Bruce Cos let said. "Once they
ljurgh Steelers stumbled around for a got the lead, we knew the were going
while Sunday before simply doing to give him the baU on every play."
Whatthey do best. They gave the ball
The Bengals lost their sixth
tO Bettis and let him bowl over the straight and fell to 1·6, the same
Bengals.
record that got Dave Shula fired last
· Bettis rushed for 135yards-103 season . Cincinnati is now 8-8 under
of them in the second half - and Coslet, who admitted last week that
K.ordell Stewart threw a pair of some of his players have given up.
t9"chdown passes against CincinThe Bengals came out with more
,.ti's-run-fixateddefcnse for a26-10 emotion than they ' ve shown all sea·,'ictory.
son and went ahead 7-0 on Ki -Jana
: The Steelers (5-2) won their Carter 's 6-yard run in the first quarfdunh straight and moved into a tie ter, only the third rushing touchdown
With Jacksonville for the AFC Ccn- against the Steelers this season .
t!llllead. And they did it even though
From the second quarter on, the
t!'ey were down to three healthy Steelers were in control, often in spite
receivers at the start of the week.
of themselves. Stewart threw a pair
:.' Of course, with Bettis around, of flrst-half.interceptions, nne a poor
rci::eivers don't matter as much.
pass that he forced into double covl " We came out with the mentality eragc in the end zone. and the Stceli't the second half that we were just crs botched an extra-point attempt.
going to run right at them," said Bet· Stewart had live passed batted down
tis, who has rushed for 100 yards in in the first half.
fi~e of his last six games. " We were
"I was humiliated a little hit,"
going to let them do all the stunting Stewart said. "Five of my passes
they wanted. We were gomg to take were knocked down. I said, 'I ' ve got
it:"ght to them."
to find some (throwing) lanes.;,

He moved out of the pocket more
and found the openings. His shovel
pass to George Jones resulted in an
11 -yard touchdown, and Bettis spun
into the end zone to score from a foot
out on founh down. putting the
Steelers ahead 13-7 at halftime.
·Stewart threw an 11-yard touchdown pass to Yancey Thigpen for a
20..7 lead on Pittsburgh's .first possession of the second half. Thigp,cn
led the thin receiving corps with six
catches for 120 yards.
"I knew if our passing game was
going to go, I'd have to be a big part
of it and I approached it in that man·
ncr," Thigpen said. "It's going to be
like that for the next few weeks."
Once Bettis got rolling, the Ben·
gals had little chance. The NFL's
worst run defense gave up 166 yards
- one over its league-tow average
- lost end John Copeland to a sore
thigh and ankle in the first quarter
and lost its emotion play by play.
. "Good things happen when you
have a lot of intensity, but you have·
to do it for 60 minutes," Bengals cornerback Ashley Ambrose said.
The game linally sl;ppcd away
early in the fourth quarter, when Jeff
Blake hit Carl Pickens on a crossing

.
.
Coach Don Jackson's high-flying week."
ranked Waterford for the district
Eastern volleyball team soared to yet . This week's agenda has Eastern, crown Saturday at 3 p.m. at Valley
another championship irr 1997, ranked 16th in the state, meetin~ 19th High School in Lucasville.
claiming the Division IV ~ectional ll . ·"· •
crown Saturday at Alexander High
School with a 15·10, 15·3 win over
•
•
regular season foe South Gallia.
•..-..r
•
Waterford, 20-3 and Eastern 19-3,
•
split in the regular season in two
'
meetings. This was the second consecutive Sectional title for Eastern.
Eastern was somewhat sluggish,
but got the job done Saturday. After
falling 0-1 on a Kari Clark ially for
South Gallia, Eastern came back to
take a 10..1 lead on ten points and
four aces by Jessica Bmnnon. East·
em then fell into a mental lapse and
South Gallia regrouped. The Rebels
stood on the shoulders of Rachel
Waugh who scored eight stmight with
an ace to push the score to I0..9.
Stephanie Evans added four points
with two aces to regain the EHS
· momentum. Then fuli Bailey added
the game point.
·
In the second game, Enstern did.
not play its usually tough game, but
still produced a one-sided final score,
15-3. After stumbling to a 3·3 tie,
·/'
Bailey broke Eastern out of the ice
and into an 11-3 advantage. Bailey
GETS IT ACROSS- An unidentified Eastern front-line player (left)
had two aces in the run, then after one gets the ball across the net to an unldentlfed front·llner _tor South
complete rotation, came back to post Gall Ia during S!lturday's Division IV sectional volleyball tournament
game-point, 15-3.
at Alexander High School. The Eagles won the match lri two games.
Brannon was 16-16 serving over· (Photo by ScoH Wolfe)
all with five aces and three kills,
Caldwell had two kills and four
Shop at home...
dinks, uli Hayman was 17-20 setting,
six sets for kills, with two ditiks;
Valerie Karr had an ace and six kills;
Stephanie Evans had a perfect 7·7
serving night with a 17-18 setting
night and four sets for kills. Bailey
had two aces and three kills, while
Angi Wolfe, Angie Taylor and.Leah
Sanders had good floor games.
Jackson said, "I think we were just
looking ahead, but then again the first
game is always tough in the tournament. We didn't play our taliber of
ball and were very Oat." Jackson
added, "From here on out we have to
be our best. We've got some work to
do for next week."
Call
Jackson also felt that his tean'i
reflected the loss 0 f senior Kim
May-le, who was injured in an auto
accident and may be out the rest of
RU TLA ND, OH IO
the season. Jackson said, "Senior
leadership is very lmpontlnt. It's just
74 2· 251 1
1·800·837·8217
hard to replace experience, but now
we have a week to get ready for next

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World Series••.

BUMPS AMONG TEAMMATES- An unidentified Southern play·
er bumps among teammates Stacy Lyons and Kere King during Sat·
urday's Division IV aectlonal volleyball tournament metch against
Symmes Valley at Alexander High School, where the Tornadoes won
In two games to movti on to district play later this week. (Photo by
Scott Wolfe)

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Cummins and Alhll Davie.

SOUTHERN WINS TITLE- The iouthlm Tor·
nedoes capitalized on a strong finish to "boost
their racord to 14-7 and clelm the Division IV
Southeast Sectional volleyball championship at
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well 's nine, King with six, Lyons
four, Friend three, Sayre three and
Kim Ihle with five .
Sayre was 29-33 setting; Caldwell
was 12- 12 spiking with three kill s,
Lyons had a block and kill ; lhle was
11-12 spiking with six kills and Kati
Cummins and Dena Sayre each had
kill s.
Southern (14-7) advances to the
district tournament at Valley High
School in Lucasville Thursday at
5:30p.m. The Tornadoes will face the
winner of the New Boston-Manchester-Green games.
Symmes Valley bows out of tournament play at 15-6.

ACut

Leo's Cruise &amp; rravef

·tax

.

winning fourteen games. We only had
two full time players coming back to
a young lineup . The team has
responded the last part of the season
by working hard and through great
dedication." Caldwell continued,
"This team canjfllay, but we haven't
forgot last year. We've got this first
game under our be Its now and once
you win the sectional , everything else
is a bonus . You can relax some and
play your style of ball ."
Symmes Valley was led by Chrissy Payne with eight. Sarah Pinker·
man with five, Donna Adkins two,
·Candace Sharp two and Stephanie
Kraft two. Southern was led by Cald-

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points. Kati Cull)mins delivered a kill
to regain the SHS serve, then Cald·
well rallied behind two aces then
added two more for a 7-3 SHS lead.
Friend put Southern up on an lhle
kill, then Kara King added six points
with an ace and a booming lhle kill.
Lyons served an ace for game points:
After the Vikings had a mini-rally
~
erased by a Caldwell kill, the final
(Continued from Page 4)
stood 15-7.
ult goes in stages," he said. uvou
Southern coach Howie Caldwell
go out there and throw good one time said, "One thing we've found ut is
and get no runs, and anotlier time you don't take the first game for granted.
get a lot of runs," he said. "Our team Last year, we had an exceptional club
turned it up tonight."
and got beat the first round. This
Mike Jackson and Jose Mesa year's club deserves a lot of credit for
combined with one-hit relief, extend·
ing the bullpen's scoreless streak to
I 0 2-3 innings.
Marlins stoner Kevin Brown, who
had been 2-0 in the postseason,
allowed all six runs and 10 hits in six
innings.
,
"In defense of Kevin, when
you're a sinkerball pitcher, you live
and die with the ground ball," ley·
land said . "When they hit it at some·
body, it's great. When they find the
holes like the did in that one inning
.. . it can be a long night."
With the score 1-all in the fifth,
Matt Williams hit a leadoff single and
scored on consecutive one-out singles
by Alomar and Grissom. Ogea sacri·
ficed and Bip Robens lined a single
to centerfor a 4-1 lead .
•
Runs make pitching easy. They
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back to win on a game-poi !It serve by
Stacy Lyons.
In the second game, Kim Sayre
scored the first three points after
Owens gave Symmes a 1-0 advantage. Sayre benefited from a Caldwell
kill, but SV erased the Tornado lead
to tie 3-3 on two Sarah Pinkennan

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early in the game. Jenny Friend
added two points and an ace for a I Q..
4 SHS lead. Symmes, behind a trio of
points from Chrissy Payne pulled
back to 0..8. Kim lhle pushed South·
em ahead 14-8, but Tina Owens
added to for a 14-10 tally. Donna
-Adkins added two fora 14-12 score.
Southern called time, then came

C&amp;f} Cfumi!ure

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Southern downs Symmes Valley to win Division IV sectional

Page4

Monday.~ber20,1997

'

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�Monday, October 20,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel.

Philippines brace for visit from powerful typhoon
•
MAND..A. Philippines (AP) -Typhoon Ivan slriiCk the Philippines on
Monday. knoclting down trees and power lines and forcmg offictals to cut
off power to a northern ~hilippine provmce.
·
,Anolher powerful typhoon, meanwhile, headed toward Japan afier ravaging the Northern Mariana Islands. .
Ivan. with sustained winds of lOS miles per hour and gusts of up_t? 125
miles per hour, hit the Philippine archipelago nell!' the town of Apam. m .the
northeastern province of Cagayan, weather offictals wd.
.
Although the typhoon had slightly weakened as II churned over the P!Ktf·
ic Ocean it still was powerful enough to tear tnto butldmgs and farms tn a
vital agri~ultural area that prqduces rice, tobacco and vegetables.
Congressman Rudolfo Albano from Cagayan satd the stortn had uprooted trees, scattered power lines and damaged some homes. Power also was
cut off in parts of the neighboring lsabela provmce.
.
Weather forecasters warned all ocean vessels to av01d the northeastern

coast of the Philippine island of Luzon, where Cagayan is located, and advised
residents of coastal villages in the area to move to higher ground to escape
possible flooding and giant waves.
Early Monday. the storm was moving northwest at 7 miles per hour, weather officials said. Its speed had slowed somewhat because of the effects of
another typhoon, Joan, to the east, they added.
Joan was located about 1,005 miles east of the Philippine island of Luzon
with sustained winds of 120 miles per hour and gusts of up to 145 miles per
hour, forecasters said. It was traveling in a northwesterly direction at I 0 miles
per hour toward southern Japan. they said.
On Sunday. at least two domestic flights and' two international flights
scheduled to arrive in the Philippines from Taiwan and Hong Kong were canceled because of the approaching storms.
Disaster agency officials were put on alen and were preparing relief goods
and heavy transport vehicles . The navy put its rescue vessels on standby,

awaiting distress calls.
Ivan, the country's II th typhoon of the season, could be the strongest to
hit the Philippines this year.
·
Meteorologists said it was not expe~ted to affect metropolitan Manila and
provinces surrounding Mount PinatubO, north of the capital, which erupted
in 1991. Those provinces are often damaged heavily by flows of volcanic
mud during thl: typhoon season.
An average of 20 typhoons batter the Philippines each year, with the
strongest between September and November.
· Forecaster Ludy Alviar said El Nino, an abnormal weather pattern over
the Pacific Ocean,tends to reduce the number of typhoons that hit the Philippines.
Usually, the country experiences as many as 16 major stortns by Octo- ,
ber. five more than the number so far this year, she said.
On Saturday, Joan swept through the Northern Mariana islands.

White House, Congress expect
no progress on pending issues
leadership. "When all you'-ve got is
By SUSAN PAGE
in Congress.
.
and WILLIAM M. WELCH
• Congressional inquiries into 228 seats (out of 435), there's not
USA Today
alleged campaign fund-raising abus- much you can get done in the
WASHINGTON - President es have soured relations between the House," said congressional analyst
Charles Cook.
Clinton and the Republican-led Con· White House and Capitol Hill.
And Republicans have been
gress co-starred in what was called
A key test looms in tbe next few
by infighting over Congress'
slowed
"The Year of the Deal," climaxing weeks. Votepre expected in both the
with this summer's signing of the bal- House of R~presentatives and the own budget, spending on highways
anced-budget and tax-cut bills.
Senate on.fa'st-track trade authority. and abortion.
"Earlier this year, we had an
Get ready for the sequel: "Return which would enable the administraawful
lot of conflict even within our
te Gridlock...
tion to negotiate trade agreements
With Congress back in session with other countries knowing Con- own party," said Rep. Mark Neutoday after the week-long Columbus gress could vote them up or down but mann, R-Wis., a conservative member of the GOP's sophomore class.
Day recess and Chnton back from hts could not amend them.
South America trip. the capital's
Anhe moment, each side is ready "Those things caused huge havoc."
Another factor: A lot of major
divided government seems to be to blame the other for its uncertain
items
are already done.
slipping into to a more familiar pat- prospects.
The
issues that have dominated
tern of bickering. stalemate and ve to.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich
the
national
agenda for nearly a genAfter more than a year of biparti- complains that Clinton hasn't worked
san cooperation on everything from hard enough to line up support among eration - the Cold War, the federal
overhauling welfare to cutti ng taxes. House Democrats, most of whom deficit, resentrnenl over welfare, conthe stage ts set for a. period in which oppose fast-track. White H~use offi- cern about crime - , have been
it may be difficult to enact proposals ctals express exasperation that addressed or at least eased. Some
even when Clinton and Republican Republicans who support free trade analysts say political leaders are now
co ngressional leaders agree, as with seem willing to stand by and watch skirmishing over second-tier matters
the embattled plan to give the presi- Clinton handed a defeat by his own until the next national agenda
emerges.
dent "fast-track" authority to nego- party.
tiate trade deals.
"The president is working as hard!
" I see nothing but confrontation in support of fast-track as I've ever
ahead." said Rep. Joe Scarborough. seen him work on anything. and I
R-Fia., a conservative serving his sec- don't think I can say the same for
and term. "The Holy Grail was the some. Republican leaders," said
balanced budget. ... After that was White House adviser Paul Begala.
achieved, all the things that brought
One reason GOP leaders may be
the leadership and the president gun-shy about fortning any ideologtogether son of vanished."
ical alliances with Clinton is their
Added 'j'homas Mann. director of experience with balancing the federgovernmental st\ldies at the Brook- al budget. After cutting a deal that
ings Institution, a Washington think promises to end the era of deficit
tank: "A shotgun wedding produced spending, a fundamental Republican
this arranged marriage, and when it's tenet, they won not bouquets but
convenient for the partners to coop- brickbats from their most partisan
crate, they will, and when it isn't, supporters.
they won't."
"There are some people that just
The signs of renewed conflict are don' t like our president, and any
everywhere:
cooperation with him is dancing with
• Reform of campaign fund-rais- the devil." said Rep. John Boehner.
ing is stalemated. Supporters threat- R-Ohio. chairman of the House
en to attach the proposal to unrelat- Republican Conference.
ed bills clouding their prospects as_
White House officials say it's
well. •
only • matter of time before public
• On education, Clinton's plan for dismay over gridlock puis pressure
national standards and the GOP's on both sides. just as the approach of
proposal for private school vouchers the 1996 elections helped propel legfor D.C. students are both stalled.
islative action on health insurance.
• Judicial confirtnations are so
"This is a very focused electorate.
b~M:kloggedthatmorethan tO percent and it has be~n since 1992.''. said
of all slots for U.S. district and cir- Rahm Emanuel, a semor Chn(on
Stock 197826
cuit judges are empty. .
aide. :·The other guys will s~arten up
• A ban on a controversial late· and hsten to 11. If they don t, 11 wtll
' tertn abortion procedure, vetoed by be at their own peril."
Clinton for a second time, is expect·
But other factors suggest a proed to provoke a renewed confronta· longed period of confrontation and
tion next year with an attempt in Con- inaction.
.gress to override it.
One complication is the small size
• Clinton's use of the new line- andfragilenatureoftheGOPmajoriitem veto to strike projects from this ties. particularly in the House, where
fall's spending bills has piqued some a few party defectors can stymie the

MHS QUEEN AND HER COURT .- 1997
Meigs High School Homecoming Queen Meli•
sa Ramsburg, center front, posed with her
escort, Mlck Barr, and other candidates, from
left, · Lauren Anderson, Shannon Jenkins,
(Ramsburg), B1111 Bendey and Heidi Legar, pic·

1997, l..ol An,.:lu 1ime~
SyMticatc and Creator•
Syndk11e.

Dear Ann Landers: Will you
please quit printing those boring.
repetitious "how we met" letters
that undoubtedly come from over70, World War II vets? They are
putting your under-70 readers to
sleep.
Why are you .continuing to publish such drivel? Those old war sto. are not. amusmg,
. nor are
' they
nes
informative. They are he-hummers
from hell. Why in the world doesn't
your butt-ltissing staff level with

you? I'm betting you do not have the
guts to print this. --A Florida Read-.
er
Dear Florida: I shared your letter with my "butt-kissing staff," and
this is what they said: Those "old
war stories" may not appeal to
everyone, but you shouldn't ignore
the many readers who love them.
The column has survived for all
these years because I have the pulse
of the people. My readers range
from years of age to 104.
I am well aware that it isn't possible to score a bull's eye with every
reader, every day. If the first few
lines or the first letler are a bore, the
reader can stop reading and go on to
the next one or turn ihe page. My
feelings will not be hurt.

9

Dear Ann Landers: We take
issue with your reply to "Shorter in
Luverne, Minn .. " who asked how to
reply when someone mentioned that
she was "shrinking." You failed
approximately 25 million Americans, 80 percent of them women, by
not using this opportunity to educate
them.
Height loss can be an early symptom of osteoporosis. Unfortunately.
the loss of height associated with
this brittle-bone disease is due to
spinal fractures that can cause
severe pain, defonnity and, finally.
·
disability.
Please. Ann. let your readers
know that osteoporosis is NOT an
inevitable consequence of aging. It
is a bone disease that can be pre-

vented, detected and treated. Every
year. 1.5 million Americans break
bones due to osteoporotic fractures
of the spine, wrist and hip. Your
older readers need to know that this
disease affects both men and
women, and that a quick, painless
procedure called a bone densitometry test is · now available to detect
bone loss Jong before fracture
occurs.

Everyone should consume adequate· calcium in hiS or her diet. This·
includes dairy products like milk ,
yogurt and cheese .. even cheese on
pizza -- as well as broccoli , sardine s,
salmon, almonds, soybeans and

mustard greens. For those who do
not get enough calcium in their
diets, calcium supplements can help.

hope the foundation is swamped
with req uests for free infortnation.
P.S.: I should also let my
readers know that calci um supple·
ments can be purchased at the local
drug&gt;tore. Check with your doctor to
see if they're right for you. The
tabl ets are not expensive and are
very effective. While calcium alone
will nut prevent osteoporosis, I've
been taking supplements for years,
and th ey have served me well. When
the music stans. I'm the first one on
the dance floor.

and for women over 50, medications

may be n~cessary. People should
also do weight-bearing exercises
and avoid tobacco.

As the American population ages.
it is increasingly important thai we
get the word out about this deva;tat ing but preventable disease. For free
information, your readers can contact the National Osteoporosis Foun-

dation, 1150 17th St., N.W., Suite
500. Washington, D.C. 20036-4603,
pr call 1-800-223-9994. (Internet:
www.nof.org} --Jan·Maby, D.O ., and
Gail Rosselot, R.N., Osteoporosis
Program, Mount Sinai Hospital,
N.Y.
Dear Jan Maby and Gail
Rosselot: Thanks for haul ing me up
shan for my inadequate respon~e. I

Send questions to Ann Landers ,
Creators Syndicate. 5777 W. Century Bl vd, Suile 700, Los Angeles,
Calif 90045

has been referred to as "the mother The flag bearers esconed her to the_
of the council."
altar where she accepted her comEsther Smith, councilor, presided mission to be deputy stale councilor
at the meeting. It was noted that Lil- for another year. Mary Jo Barringer
!ian Demosky has had knee surgery, read a poem, "A Sure Way to a
that Shirley Beegle required treatmen! for injuries _she suli.ered in a
fall, and that Goldte Krackomberger
remain~ ill.
A fall festival was held at the
The recent friendship meeting of Rock Springs United Methodist
District 13 as announced. A thank Church for the members and famiyou note was read from the Ada lies of the Middleport Child ConserMorris family. Refreshments were vation League.
served in honor of Erma Cleland.
Games includin~ bean ba~ toss,

responded
with
appreciation.
Kathryn Baum was pianist for the
meeting .
Others attendin g were Marcia
Keller, Ella Osborne, Dolores

penny toss, and bobbing for applies
were included.
Door prizes were won by Kaylee
Kennedy, Casci Arnold, and Robert
Harris . Others attending were
Me~an and
Corky

·
Kitchen. Nancy, Angie, Jason and Helen. ·Jeremy. Joey and Clayton
Tyson Morri s, Patti , John, Jujtin Blackston .
Arvold. Lmda Broderick. Ann ColPizza. pop. chips and cookies
burn. Peggy and Mary Harri s, Emily · were served . Trick or treat bags were
Ash, Donna and Zachary Pullins, given out and secret sister gifts were
Janet Duffy and Breanna Taylor, presented.

WHILE SUPPLIES
LA T

NO RAINCHECKS

Fresh Ground

Festival

Beef

Ice Cream

c.'

4

-~

59

Juice
46 oz.

4

Limit 2 please

Breasts

2 Cheese Pizza
$ 79

89~

* Price includes 55¢
coupon on box

32.5 oz.

Russet

Potatoes'

•

99

Lb

To~ato

Chef Boyardee

US #1

1997
EXPLORER

1/2 gal

Snow Floss

Fresh Split Chicken

·1997
AEROSTAR

1998
WINDSTAR

1997
RANGER

Wolfe. Goldie Frederick. Everell
Grant. Laura Mae Nice. Mary K.
Holter, Doris Grueser, Opal Hollon ,
anJ Opal Eichinger.

cc L h0Ids fam I'I y faII fest'IvaI-----------

10#
Limit 2 please

1997 F150

Happy Day" and Jo Ann Ritchie
read , "Life's Road." Smith gave
S"This is You~ Life" , and on behalf
of the council, Jean Welsh presented
her with a doze red roses. Cleland

tured with their escorts, from left, David Anileraon, Michael Leifheit, (Barr), Josh Leach and
Jon Stewart. Flower girl was Kaltlynn Barr,
daughter of Melinda and Dave Barr, and crown
bearer waa Ryan Van Maire, son of Ann and
Kevin Van Metre.

•

a strike by extending the deadline an
additional week to reach an agreement. it is worth the additional
delay." Dodd said.
President Clinton intervened in
August to block a threatened strike by
the track maintenance workers,
imposing a 60-day cooling-off period and appointing a three-member
board to help resolve the dispute.
. The Presidential Emergency
Board, whose decisions are not binding, recommended that Amtrak give
employees a series of 3. 5 percent
annual salary increases. But it would
not address work-rule disputes, saying they should be submitted to
·
binding arbitration.
The union sa~s it is prepared to
sign a new contract based on the
board's recommendations. Amtrak.
which has a history of losing money,
says it cannot afford any wage
increases.
'"Amtrak is in extreme financial
distress and we are not in any condi·
lion to offer any wage increase. We
are borrowing heavily just to meet
payrolls right now," Black said.
If the railroad went alons with the
board's recommendation, he said, it
would cost Amtrak $25 million iq fiscal 1998 just for BMWE workers,
and $136 million if other unions
demanded equal treatment for their
workers.
The administration is urging Congress to pass Amtrak revitalization
legislation that would pour $2.3 billion into the railroad over the next
five years. But that money would be
set aside only for capital development, not for wages and other operating costs.

Ann
Landers

Plans for inspection to be held
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the hall were
made during a recent meeting of
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America.
At that meeting also the charter
will be draped in memory of Ada
Moms, Cora Beegle and Charles
"Red" Carr. Members attending are
asked to wear white. ·
Mrs. Morris, 103, was a member
of Theodore Council, Pomeroy
when she organized Chester Council
in 1934 and through the years

Amtrak customers win
reprieve from job action
WASHINGTON (AP} - After
nearly three years of contract talks,
negotiators for Amtrak and a major
union are giving themselves another
week to reach a deal an~ avoid a
strike that could affect hundreds of
thousands of riders.
Workers were headed for a walkout Wednesday before the two sides
agreed Sunday to a request by Trans·
portation Secretary Rodney Slater to
extend their current cooling-off period for at least seven days beyond that
But the two sides remained well apart
on key wage issues.
Amtrak spokesman Cliff Black
said the weeklong extension also
would give the federally subsidized
passenger railroad more time to
develop contingency plans to keep
commuter trains running in case of a
strike.
It is estimated that a strike by the
2.300-member Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees would
affect 50.000 daily users of Amtrak
as well as some 450,000 people who
ride commuter trains. mainly in the
Northeast, that operate on Amtrak
tr!KkS.
"On behalf of the traveling public, I hope and trust you will use the
additional time to re~Kh a mutually
acceptable settlement," Slater said in
alener Saturday to Amtrak President
Thomas Downs and BMWE PreSident Mac Fleming.
The union's general chairman,
. Jed Dodd. said in a statement Sunday
that "Amtrak has stalled and shown
nocbing but bad faith," in the three
years since the old contract expired,
but that the union had readily agreed
to Slater's request "If we can avoid

I

Charter to be draped in ·memory of members

1997 ASPIRE

A

~~-B_ The.Bend
The Q.!~Y ~~!!!..4l.tl
Old war stories not of interest to this reader

·Tony's Frozen

Pizzas
$

c

Fresh Yellow

RC COLA

Onions

Products

2 Liters

2/$

3#

Limit 4 please

c

Limit 3

United Valley Bell

2% ilk
MSFIP $15,070

MSRP $11,480

Gallon

$ 79

Keebler Zesta

MISTER BEE

Crackers

Potato Chips
$2.79
$ 59

16 oz.
Limit 4 please

'

size

1 lb

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 21 , 1997 ONLY

�..

(

Pomeroy • Middleport, 'bhlo

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, October 20, 1997

Ohio Valley Symphony to perform Saturday
The Ohio Valley Symphony will
perform Dvorak's "Romance in F
Minor" on Saturday. October 2S at8
p.m.
Guests violinist David Langer
will perform the title piece, followed
by Richard Syracuse on piano performing "Rhapsody on a Theme of
Paganini" by Sergei Rachmaninoff.
The symphony is conducted by Ray
Fowler.
. ,
Dvorak is best known for his later '
works such.as Slavanic Dances performed by OVS in November 1994,
and Symphony No. 9 "From the
New World," performed in September 1992. "Romance" for violin and
orchestra was written in 1873 •77
and published in 1879.

The Qhio Valley

Syrophony wi~l
feature David

Langer, left,
and Richard

Syracuse on
October 25.

Rachmaninoff's final work for
piano and orchestra was written in
1934 in just 46 days. It achieved
almost immediate popularity with
critics and the public alike, and
ranks as the most important of his
last compositions.
The Ohio Valley Orchestra will
perform Symphony No. ~ in D,
Minor during the second half of the
October 2S OVS evening.
The symphony performance is
sponsored in pan by McDonald's
Restaurants.
.
Tickets may be purchased at tile
door or at Haskins - Tanner or That
Special Touch. After 4 p.m. call
Sheila Oehler at 446 • 2582 for
reserved seats.

Benefit trail ride planned
A trail ride to benefit Planned
Parenthood of Southeast Ohio has
been planned for QcL 25 at Smoke
Ride Resort in Athen s County.
Theme is "FJ bulous FaH Foli~ge
Choice Event." The ride wtll be fol lowed by a luncheon. The event will begin at 10 a.m.
and end by 2 p.m. Space is limited
and reservations are required.
The cost is $35 a person and al,l
proceeds will benefit Planned Parenthood. To make reservauons. restdents may caH 593-3375 by Thursday.

Honored on seventh birthday
A party honoring Nonnan Wood
on his seventh birthday was held
recently at the home of Norman and
Jean Wood and hosted by Ronnie
Wood, Lee Drake, and Paul
Stephens.
.
Others ·attending were Francis
and Eric Wood, Robyn Hunt, Earl
and Bcrnase Wood, Michael Brumfield, Kenny and Lois Wyant, Janice
DeBoard, Luke and Mae Gilliam,
Joan and Fred Steele, Alice Reeves ,
Roger Coe, Helen and Ed Oberholzer: Elmer Bailey, Virgil and Deloris
Kmg , David, Cindi Elizabeth
Stephen and Michael King, and Jean

Alyson Patterson, Dickie and Bever- Judy Beckett, Huntington, W. Va.
' ly Fetty, Shawn and Alexa Fetty,
Everett, .Sherry and Elizabeth Smith
•:- ...
------- ·-of the Rutland area.
Luther and Mary Smith, Linda
and Heather Boyles, Junior Buskirk, Past Councilon or DofA meet
Roger Dent, Rita Whitney, Megan
Goldie Frederick and Margaret
and Matthew Smith, Middleport; Amberger were hostesses for a
Angie McDonald Pullins, Donnie, recent meeting of the Past CounCarol , Sonny and Summer Folmer. cilors Club of Chester Council 323.
Darrin and Hannah Cremeans, Jeff Daughters of America, held at the
Musser, and Melanie Dudding, hall.
Pomeroy.
Frederick presided at the meting
Marvin Cremeans, Westerville; which opened with the Lord's Prayer
Judy Coomer, Amy Oleseusky, and and pledge to the flag.
Elaine Musser, South Lebanon;
For roll call members told a
Glenna Fetty, favorite Halloween experience of
Richard and
Langsville, and Vada Flowers and lheir youth. Reports wen: given by ,
~

Cremeans reunion held at Center
Descendants of James and Bertha
Cremeans held their annual family
reunion recently at the Rutland
Civic Center.
Attending were Danny, Judy and
Tiffany McDonald, Tommy and
Shirley Simmons, Ted Cremeans.
Danny and Barb Cremeans, Kate
Cremeans, Robert and Shirley
Smith. Phyllis and Darlene Spangler. Iva Creams, Gene and Roberta
Musser, Glennis Mu~ser, Teresa and

----

Three who came back - Social Security Column
·

rehabilitation. Let me tell you the
BY ED PETERSON
inspiring stories of three who came
Social Security Manager, back.
Athena
Several years ago, a young colHaving a disability doesn't nee- lege student. Joseph Wilder, became
. essarily keep you from reaching permanently disabled by a near-fatal
your goals, whatever they might attack of bacterial meningitis: At the
· be-a collegt.. education. a new time, Joe was attending West Georcareer, etc.
Although gia College on a football scholarship
many people think of Social Securi- and was one of the school's star
ty disability benefits as the end of players. He lost all of the fingers on
the road, for many beneficiaries, it his left hand, most on his right hand
becomes a bridge to a better life. and both legs were amputated below
They come back from the abyss of the knees due to complications fol.; dependency caused by their disabili- lowing the meningitis. Joe missed a
· ty to get on with their lives and their year of school but he returned and
dreams with the hefp of Social Secu- expects to graduate in 1998 with a
: rity and Supplemental Security double major in psychology and
Income (SSI) disability lienefits.
· biology.
·
Both programs have special rules
Social Security and SSI disability
that permit disabled beneficiaries benefits helped Joe meet his living
who work to continue to receive expenses and some of his college
• cash benefits and Medicare or Meit- - expenses. Medicare and Medicaid
· icaid until they can work on a regu- benefits also helped tremendously
: Jar basis. The rules also exclude cer- with his medical expenses which
tain work expenses from affecting exceeded $1 million.
· benefits, and helps with training and
After Joe
to his artificial

limbs, his prosthetics group suggest- plant was needed to save his life.
ed that he try shot put/javelin throwFinancial support from the coming. Last year Joe earned a gold munity enabled Larry to have his
medal at a Georgia State University name placed on transplant lists at
exhibition of wheelchair athletes. two area hospitals. Although he
Just missing the qualifications for could no longer work, Larry didn't
the 1996 Paralympic games (the realize he could file for disability
equivalent of the Olympic games for benefits. He thought Social Security
disabled athletes), Joe hopes to com- was only for retirement. Larry was
pete in the year 2000 games. He also near death before a donor was found
plans to go to medical school, and to in No.vember 1995.
work with children who, like him,
After receiving the tran.splant,
are disabled from critical injuries.
Larry contacted Social Security and
With the help of Social Security , began receiving monthly checks that
disability benefits, Larry Wineke is helped with expenses and allowed
back at work teaching science. On Larry to keep his house. The benehis 3Sth birthday, Larry became ill fits will be extended,until he is furwith shortness of breath and flu-like ther along ,in his recovery. Larry.
symptoms. Subsequent medical tests now 44, works full time. His wife
revealed that an infectious virus was and two sons are happy ro have their
slowly destroying his heart.
rather back in good health and able
Medication allowed him to continue to enjoy .life once again .
working as a high school science
A business consultant and motiteacher and football coach until he vational speaker whose clients
suffered a setback requiring surgical include some of the largest compaintervention. When his condition nies in the United States, Joan Founfurther deteriorated, a heart trans- tain is a model of success. Twenty

years ago, that was not the case.
Anxiety-ridden and housebound,
Joan weighed 420 pounds and suffered from addictions to food and
other substances.
After surviving a bout with med·
ical complications due to morbid
obesity, Joan applied for SSI disability benefits. She received medical
care through the Medicaid program
and entered a state vocational rehabilitation program. Four years later,
she regained her health and no
longer needed SSI. Joan entered college and earned a degree from Cali·
fornia State University, becoming a
behavioral counselor. A highly
sought-after SJll'aker and the author
of an inspirational book, "Nothing
Bad Happens, Ever," Joan can hon·
estly state that the SSI program
helped tum her life around.
For more information about
Social Security's work incentives
rules, call 1-800-772-1213 and ask
for the booklet, If You Arc Disabled;
How We Can Help

Renowned
artist to·
.
perform in Athen.s ·

•

'r ' '~

J,' ;'111.

' i }i

• -l

' 1
'

: I

'

PRESENTED PIN - O.rner Griffin of Alfred, a ~ 111d longtime ntlldlnt of lila Alfred community In Melga County, Wilt honored by the Veteran• of Foreign Wtn, Po11 812t, of Maaon, W. Va.
recently. A recaption Will held In hie honor at the ArCidla Nuralng Canter when he now raaldn. Slv·
eral member of the VFW, hit family and friends allttndlng the reception when Griffin waa presented a
· 75-year. pin. Griffin Is lbe only living World War !-veteran In Malgs County. Pictured with Griffin ara
Juanita Lillie, Ladles Auxiliary prealdent; Commander Robart Carulhera; and Grlftln'a naphew, Harold
Hende'raon.

Community Calendar
The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
. and special events. The calendar is
•·not d1signed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.

building.
POMEROY - Revival services,
Enterprise . United
Methodist
Church, through Tuesday, 7 p.m.
each .evening. Rev. Mel Franklin,
guest speaker.
WEDNESDAY

MONDAY
LETART - Letart Township
Trustees, 6 p.m. Monday, at the
offil:i building.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council, Monday 7 p.m. municipal

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m.
home of Mrs. Richard Owen. Phyllis
Hackett to review, "A Letter of
Mary"; a contemporary Sherlock
Holmes novel by Laurie King.

POMEROY - Revival at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 212
West Main $. Pomeroy, to continue
through Wednesday, 7 p.m. each
evening. Speakers, Jimmy Tingler,
Monday; Wayne Caner, Tuesday;
Damon Slone, Wednesday night.
Special music.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - AA meeting, 7
p.m. Thursday at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.

PubliC Notice
Notice ol Eloctton on TIX
Levy In E-• oltha Ten
MiliUmNOTICE It hereby given
thll In pureuenca ot 1
R11olutlon of the Board of
Townehtp Truetooe ol the
Townehlp of Columblt,
Albany, Ohio, petood on the
tot doy ol Augull, 1897
thoro will be eubmmod to 1
vole of tho poopto ol 11ld
IUbdiVIIIOn II I Oonorol
ELECTION to be held In the
Townehlp of Columbia,
Ohio, ot the regullr plocoo
·of voting lhoreln, on the 4th
cloy of November, t K7; tho
quntlon olltvylng 1 tax, In
txc111 of tho ton mill
limitation, lor lht benollt of
Cotumblo townehlp lor tho
purpoea of Mtlntalnlng end
operetlng comotorl11 Seld
tox bolng:2 An oddltlonol
tax of 1/2 mHI II I fill not
exceadlng t/2 mlllo lore
eoch one dollor of
veiUitlon, which 1moun11 to
ftvo oonto {10,011) lor each
one hundred dollore of
veluttlon, lor 5 (ftvo y11ra).
Tho Polll lor eold
Election will open 11 5:30
o'clock A.M. end romotn
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
of Hid cloy.

By order of the Boord of
Eloctlona,
ol Molgo County, Ohio.

MHJOIJIIU

lnzy Newell, secretary, and Thelma
White, treasurer. Thank you cards
were read from the Ada Morris and
Cora Beegle families. Thelma White
thanked the members for remembrances during the death of her
brother, Charles Carr.
Door prizes were won by Opal
Hollon, Erma Cleland, and Mary Jo
Barringer. .
Games were conducted by Opal
Hollon and Shirley Beegle. Others
attending were Mary K. Holter.
Dolores Wolfe, Laura Mac Nice,
Pauline Ridenour, Opal Eichinger,
Marcia Keller, Ella Osborne, and a
guest, Sandy White.

~avidson
bIrt h '
an nou need

Help Wllltld

110

Pwrlonlll

Spon. :IOU'II-1421.

Do """ Hove ..... Cholclt? ltl
A Pevchic Htlp. Jutl Coli 1·1100o
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llult Bl II Yr1. Stn·U, Ill·
ltlltS4.

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Steel Selel, Welcllaa Sappll11, IDihib
. Ill Gal
Radiator Repair &amp; Repllameat
Monday-Friday • 8:00 a.m.· 4:30 p.m.
Saturday- 8:00 a.m. • 12 noon

.

· .Big Bend FabriCation,
· Mach~ne:&amp; Welding Shop
.

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

250 Condor StTeet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
AOlvtslon 01t Nlci!Oia Metal, INc.

992-2406

· Fax:

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We' Have An Openina In Our
Gallipolis Fen~. WV QUiet For
An Accounting AIIIIIIRL Wt

your Otllo State houra wllh Jo·

"Build Your DNam"
1818 Martin Street

a Kurl, lloncltr OcL

· Anne'o Ku1

Joe Wilton

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

LUMP AND STOKER COIL
H.E.I.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY IVAILIILE

(614) 446-4759

Houra: ,
7:00 a.m. lhru 4:00
Monday lhru Friday

20 Yra. Elcp. • tno. Ownec Rick Joh.-.

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding ·
· .free E11imate1

~

~~~~~~~~;~

WV10234T7

Or
Equal
Required. Bachtfo,.a
Otgloe
A Pluo.

-StndRHu.. To'
Hunn RotDurCH DIPl

AKZONOBEL

CHEtiiCALS,lHC.

P.O. Box 1721
Sll!eRt2

GdlpoHo Forry, WV 25615

"FACTORY
DIRECT
PRICES"
Quality Window SysteJDs
110 Court St.

And /Or Education. The Sue-

-1·.

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Required Previou&amp; Exptfltnct

.coulul Ctndl&lt;lo!e Should Ht,. 5
27, IH7 110.00 PI' Plfton caU Years Experience In The Artll
JoAnne 11'·'41-UH or 11-.. Of Aca·ounllng, Accounts Payollie And Financial Dlllo Entry I
Procealing. Alloclate'l D~rll

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

. EOE 11/f/IW

Ohio
BusjrvWIIh

MY PLACE
H1 mhedWIIOII
Projeds
Swfles,Biadles,

Tallies, Mlsc.lletll
34718 St. Rt. 7
Ph. 985 4188
T_,_
.... ,_
,_...,.,._.
I lllr ..... lt' J

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete ..
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985 4473

KINGS'

(Uma StoniLOW Rilla)

3311 Hippy Hollow Rood'
Mld...port, Ohio 411711
Naw Hom11, Additions,
Roofing, Siding,
Poll Barn1,
Deckl, Pllntlng
CaR Us For A Free Ellllmate
814-742·3011D
814-742-3324
814-742-3078

WICKS

Home l111provements

50% OFF

Bob's

Public Notice
NDTICE TO TAXPAYERS
AppJiance Repair
Rll.,_o: 57111.17
AI Carpet·Upholst•y
·
Service
Ohio Rtvlood Code
Cleattlng
• Relrigll'IIIOIS .
Tho Motgo County Board
of Rovlalon htl comptllld ·
• Ranges e WoshetS
Itt work o1 aqutllutlon. Tho
e
Dryan e Dishwashers
tax rolumolor tax y.~r 1tt7
CARPET CLEANING
hovo bean revllld end tho
Honest Reliable
voluatlone completld lind
Quality Service
Car~·Upholatery
ere open for public In·
(1114) i43 5440
614-992·0077
1pectlon In 1111 ol the
Malgt County Auditor,
All Major Brands
Midclleport, OH
locond 'Floor, Courthoun,
Reasonable Rates
tCI-3-1171 mo.
•ocond Stroot, Porworoy,
Ohio41711.
'
Comptelnto •o•tnal tllo
vetuttiono, 11 11tabllohed
Public Notice
Public Notice
for tax yow 1117, muetbe··
rntdo In eccordencl whh the 3rd d1y of April, 1H7
Chllnnan
Rita D. Smtth
8tctlon 57111.11 o1 the Ohio llltN wttt be Mlbmmtd to •
Rnllld Codo. Thooo VOII Of the people 01 Hid
Df-r
Dlllcl Slpllmbtr 12,1987
OOIIIfll- mult llellltd on eubdlvlelon It a Oenerol
forme which will bt ILICTION to be held In the {tO) e. t3, 20, "£74 te
turntohtd by tho County lownlhlp of Rutltnd, Ohio,
Auditor llld mull ill flied In II lhl regullf pltCII of
Public Notice
the County Audltor'a 0111oo voting lllentn, on the 4th
on or beloN the 311t cloy oft day of Nowmber, 1H7, the
Morch, tiN. All aomplllnta quoatton of levying tlu, In
flltd with the County ' .exca11 ol tho ten mill
Auditor wtl be htlnl by the llmltatton, lor the benolll of
eo1rd of Revltlon In tho Rutllnd Townlihlp lor tho
monner fii'OIIided .... Section purpoea of Maintaining and
•• .
operlllng ctmtltrltl
=tlollhiOhioRovltld
Seld IIX bolng;' An
il-v Ptrktr c.mpboll' 1lddltlon8ltax .o tt.o 'mllle
Melgo County Audttor
11 1 rate not exclldlng
· {tD)tD 12 13 14 11 11 17 2.0 mille for 11eh one dollar
• • • • ' ' ' of VIIUI'tlon. which 1mour'lta
11,20, 21,10tc
to ten conta {$0.10) lorooch
one hundred dollera of
Public Notlca
veltllllon, lor live {S) ,.. ...
Tho POIII lor llld ·
Notice of EIICIIon on TIX
wlll open II li30
Eltctlon
Levy In Ex_. of the Ton
o'clock
A.M.
1nd remeln
Mil LimNOTICE II hlrwby glvon open unlit 7:30 o'clock P.M.
lhll In purtUinCI of I olulddly.
By order ollhl Boord of
RIIOiutlon ol the -rd of
Eltctlono,
Townehlr, TruiiHI of lhe
of Motgl C-tv, Ohio,
T!IWnlh p of Rulllnd,
Honry L Huntar
Ruttend, Ohio, pealld on

CHEVALIER'S

,,

Will~

AVON l All Art.. I Shirley

005

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 mllll ealt of Route 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO ·
8'14-384 8212

HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand, ·
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

SAYRE
TRUCKING

IIIAIILY ftACtORS
PARTS &amp; REPAIRS

TopPI)'&amp;-1

COL-A I I Vr. OfR Ewp. Rlq.

(Free Discount parts list)

Gorman Short Hllred Polfl!lt POrt

Same Day Repair Service

Good - · Good Dog. 114-3711-

Buy, Sell &amp; Trade
Richard's Lawn &amp; Garden
Gravely Dealer
Spencer, W.Va.
1-80(1.827-4551

Black 'Lab, 2 Ve111 Old. N..d

2153.

Olcl

Wurlluor orgon. good ohapt,

with bond! &amp; ......, bookt. 30-4882-21132- 4pm.

lll0-395-10-45
Wookondi/Evenlngl
111»-8113-8792.

Eorn $1,000 WHidy Stufllrv Envelope&amp; At Home. Start Now. No

Exporionce. Free Suppllu. Info.
No ObliGIIion. Sond LSASE To:
ACE. DopL: 1351 Box 5137, Cia·
monel lilt, CA.81785.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching.
Llmel1one &amp; Gravel
Sepllc Syatem1
Trailer &amp; Hou• Sltaa
Reuonabl• Ratu

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages ~ Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
. COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

joe N. Sayre

614-992-7643

614-742·2138

Frolttol
Convon-•1
Home Most Waalwndll

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

AMBER DANIELLE DAVIDSON

.

Peter Schickele, an international- for the film version of the children's
ly known musician. composer, and story, "Where the Wild Things Are:'.
narrator, known for his versatility, He continues to work on his syndiwill perform with the Lark Quartet cated radio program. "Schickclc
on Monday, Oct. 27, 8 p.m. at the Mix" on Public Radio International.
· First United Methodist · Church in
The Lark Quartet is in their third
Athens.
year in residency at Ohio University.
The program is being presented i They will be performing one of
as a pan of the The Ohio University ' Schickele's original pieces. They
Performing Arts Series.
have performed at very prestigious
Schickele studied at the Juilliard venues such as New 'York's Lincoln
School where he later taught.
Center, Kennedy Center in WashingHis compositions include over ton D.C. and the National Gallery .
100 works for symphonies, chamber
Tickets for next week's pcrforensembles, choral groups, movies, . mance are available at the Haning
and T.V He has been commissioned . Hall bux office, Monday through
by the. National Symphony, the Saint .F[iday, noon to 5 p.m. Prices are
Louis Symphony, The Minnesota $10, seniors $7, students $5. To
Opera. The Chamber Music Society charge on Visa or Mastercard, resi·
of Lincoln Center and many others. dents may call (614) 593-1780.
Schickele also created the score

•

MIIIIG

Society Scrapbook
Wood.

The Dally Sentinel • Paga 8

/'

October 20, ~897

Allen and Tracy Davidson of
Langsville announce the birth of
their daughter, Amhcr Danielle, on
Sept. 9 at 5:01 a.m. at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
She weighed 7 pounds, 8 ounces
and was 20 1/2 inches long.
Patcmal grandparents arc Allen
and Diana Davidson of Middleport.
Maternal grandparents arc Earl and
Peggy DeWees of Mason, W.Va.
Great-grandparents are Lois Jean
Province of Middleport, Pauleen
Tillis of Rutland and Leonard
Weimann and Mildred DeWees of
Middleport.

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSIFIEDSI

Public Notice
Public Notice
Henry L Hunter period, commencing wtth
Chelnnan tax year 1187, collection
Aha D. Smith ,..rtlt8.
Dl-r Tho polio will be opon
Dill&lt;! Sopt. 8, 1187 from 8:30 o.m. to 7:30 p.m.
{10) 6, 13, 20, 27 4 tc
on Nlddoto.
BY ORDER OF THE
BOARD OF ELECTIONS OF
Public Notice
COUNTY OF MEIGS,
OHIO
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Ita D. Smith, Dfrwctor
Notlco lo hereby given
thet pureuont to o reoolu- { 0) II, 13, 20,27 4TC
tlon ldopttd by the Boord
of Educetton of thl
Southem Loco! School - _..:P..:u::b:.:;ll:::c..:.N::O:::ti:::C::.e__
Dlllrk:l, County Of Motgo,
PUBUC NOTICE
Ohio, on the 25th dey o1
Tho
County
July, 1187, lllert will be Engineer llllgo
end Mllge County
IUbmmtd to the quoNIItd Auditor will hold public
tloctora ol Nld ochoot dl•
on October 11,
lltct II the election to be meatlnge
1187, 1nd October 23, 1187,
htld on the 4th dey of II
2:00 p.m. In tho Molgl
November, 1187,11 tho "'I" County Court Courtroom,
ullr pi- of voting lhtJrt. Socond Floor, Motge County
In, the qUIItlon of ltvylng o CourlhouH.
rtniWII tax of the
meatlnge lrt held
te!Hnlll _ , . . , . , . . ......
In occordenco with ORC
lotion lor the btnellt of the 31t.203, In order to ldopt
8oulhern Looet lohool dl• lltndordl govemlng the
trlollorthepurpoeeoiPfO- convoyencu of roe I
vldlng funclo lor current PI-"Y In Motgo county.
oporlllng ............ II I
A copy of the propolld
1'1111 of lour (4,0) mille lor llllnclerdl lhall be evellobtl
each- dolllr {11.00) ol lor public ln-'lon during
IIX VIIUIIIon, WhiCh norm11 buelnoll houre 1t
emounto to forty oonta till olftc11 of tho county
{1.40) lor - " -llundNCI eudllor end county
dotllrw {1100.00) of tax vel- tngl .......
""'ion, lor 1 lllrea (3) y11r (tO) 13, 20 21c

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio
Olllee ol Controcto ,
Llpl Copy Number 17-m
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT '
Milling o.to 1011 0107 .
Sooted propoeolo will bf
occoptod !rom 111 pro.
qulllllod blddor1 11 the
Olllco ol Contraeta, Room
118 ol tho Ohto Deportment
·o I
T ranoportatJon,
Cotumbuo, Ohio, until t 0:00
l.m.
Wlldnlldly, November
05, 1187 lor lmprovomonte
In:
Mol•o C.ounty, Ohio lor
•
,
,Improving ooctlon ME0·7·
11·335, St111 Routo 7 In
Chellor Townehlp, r by
roptlrlng two cutvert1 by
hMIIItlng I tunnel 11-.
"The dtte .. , lor
completion of thle work
lhall Ill II HI forth In till
bldcllng ~1."
Plene end Sl*'lftclllone
" 1 on 1111 In the
Dtpertmont of Tran•
portallon,
Jerry Wrey Director of

r;:,n:r,:::
'

'

'

110

Hllp Wllnlld

B.C. S., with over 50 locations in Southeastern Ohio,
currently has 3 part-lime openings In two of our
programs In Gallla and Meigs Counties. The positions
are:
.1) Meigs: 8 am • 8 pm SaVSun;
2) Meigs: 8 pm-8 am. Sat/Sun;
3) Gallla: 11 pm- 8:30am. Thurs; 10:30 pm-8:30
11,111, Fri; 8:30pm· 9 am, Sat;
We are searching !Of compassionate professionals
w~h a team vision and a desire to teach personal and
community skills to Individuals with mental
retardation/developmental disabilities. The work
environment Is Informal and rewarding. The
requirements are: high school dlplomii/GED, valid
Ohio driver's llcenu and three years good driving
experience. B.C.S. offers comprehensive training in
the field of MR/DD. Interested appllcanls need lo
specify posHion of Interest and send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services
P.o. Box 804 JacksOn, OH 45640
All applications must be postmarked by 10/29/97/
Equal Opportunity Employer

. Litllt thing•
art W.rih A/ol

in
iht Cla55i(irtl Stclion!

UmeatDne • Gr~vel
Dirt • Sand
985 4422

Cheater, Ohio

1_ _-__,Eas~ Bank Financing ~
Furnaces
a month

'2SOO

- - -.L--------~~~~==~ Halt Pumpa Installed *3SOO • 111011111

FID
Pick up dl-dld
lppllene11, llaltlrle1,
rMny mllltll.

motor bloekl.

In Memory

114-112-4025. am.a

Fm Ellimat11
(Payments baaed on appnMKI crecfll)

SIOV•s.

oWling To Sot MuU Potion~

Air Condiliontrt,
VCR's. Alto Junil C1t1, &amp;14··256·
1231.
• •

CONTRACT OCCUPATIONIIL

SJandirv Imber or pulp- lor
ciHr cut, contact Greg 11 ,114·
a.l-3~ 15.

RINIBI CDDLIII
lt...,.....tMtll
1391 Sat!ord School Fld.,
OH

Guy A.
Guinther
whopeiHdaway

YOUR MESSAGE

CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

October 20, 111111

Gone but no
forgotten.
Sadly miiHd by the
family

. YOUNG'S
CARPENTER 51RY1CE

Plooot Cllll,ji()0.. .1-e:J34.

Ser&gt;Mo Sou~Mutern OH &amp; WI/

·A-

Addlllon1

•NiwO.IIJM

•EIIICtriCII A Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior • Exterior

Painting

Al80 Cone.,.W Worll
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

812-4215
Pomeroy, Ohio

RADIATOR UPAIB
Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
_Oxy- Accetl Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder
Stick • ng • Aluminum Welding

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

PtmiiCAt. lHERAPtST:

Wonted: Stondlne Timber Or ' West Vlrginil, OhiO ll'lnNI
Chlpplld Wood, 114·311-tiiD, Roqulrod.
Or 114-311-1747.
~

r.l f'l OYME NT
SE f1V IC! S

In Memory of

lHERAPIST

• Wtlt VIrginia, Ohio licenses
Roqulrod.

Ntlld I L1dlo1 To StU Mon t:,oll

eu •4ense

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 20, 1997

Monday, October 20, 1997

Pomeroy • Middle'port, Ohio

•

BalDOI:

·\
The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

______________
....:..
NEA Croaaword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

Small Ho. ., ~lily...._

ed, One large Bedroom. One
Smlll llodroom, Full Baoomon~
Largo Lo~ t300 Monft tet•)3177110V
Two bedroom houae and

boclroom _ . , _ In lldtl port,
:e.:t..
:.;SI0:::2·.:2.;;t"-:::;__ _ _ _ _ _ ,
Two bodrc~om ho~u wllh otove
ond rolrlgoratar, dapo~t roqulrod.
ro lrolda poll, 01ol-ll82-30110. •

Athono Phptcal Thonpy OIIIR
TDp Salaries And Benellta Package• For Our Clinicians. Athena
PhyiiQII Thet'lpy II lOCIItd On

Tho Banks Of The Sconlc Hock·

11111 River In Alhona, Ohio. Athonl

11 A Sail Unlverlity Community
And An Excellent Place To RaJu

ChUdrtn. COmt Join The FatiHI
Growing Rehab THm In Southtutern Ohlol Come Mike Wortey
Toll Free AI 1·888-207-11708 Or
Fax Your Rtaume To 614·51114·
5207. EMAil: upcrehab4J)froQ·

""'""'

·

Ar(lician Recruitment

• All real estate aetllerlislng in
this newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair HOU$ing Act
of 1968 which makes 11 illegal
to ad110rtise ·any preference.

limitation or discrimination
based on race. ector, religion,
se11 famil;al status or national

'

r.1~RCHMWISE

510

Houlthold

. Goods
Appllanctl:
Rtcondllloned
Woahers, Dryers, Ronoat. Rolrtr•toro, iO Da1 GuarantH I
~,., Cl.tr lolartae, 11 •·•••·

Couch and matching choir. blue
wlrrw.uva, «•m. hunw grHn 1
plum. whh oak trim, exc:. cond.,

1at Tlme Buyera ~-Z Finandng 2
Or 3 Bedrooms Around $200 Pet
Mo.. 800-251-50711. .

sdl nH, wUI ucrlllco 1550. SO.e71H213-6pm.

2 Bedroaml, 2 Baths, Garden
Tub, EJcellent Condition, On A

Washer1, drw-ers, retrlgeratora,

GOOD

rangoo. Skagga Apptlo.,...a, 7e
Vlno St'"'· Call 6 t H•8·7388,
t-aoo..flll.34i9.
.

Private Rented Lot, G1een lWp.
(614)~760 Call Allor •

USED APPLIANCES

pm.

ATIENTION Firat Tlmo Buroro,

orioin . or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitatioo or discrimination.·

1pecial government backed
mortgagee avaiillbte for a Wmlltd

Wise. Merct'landiae, 614·440·

1052.

time. Applr by phone :W4-755566e.

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real estate
which iS In violation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
informed lhat all dwelllr)gs

October Now Holland Valuo So·
nanza 1%. Financing fot 38
Grubb's Plano· tuning &amp; repairs. month1. NH .,2 T Haybtne
Probloms? NHCI Tuned? Call the te.ooo. NH •sa ~- Hayblna
plono Dr. 814-448..&amp;:!5
$8.700. NH •~2 ~· Deluxe Htr·
blna U,OOO . NH t30 Spreader
John Deere 12 HP Uowar, Elec. t 42BU ,4,500. NH 145 Sproadar
Start. Eiac. Lll~ 38" Dock, E,.llf. t71BU $4,700. NH 155 Sproadar
lant Condition... 50; Hillsboro 21780 $5,.00. All Ford lraC11&gt;rl &amp;
llolll Flotbod, 8 112 Ft. With 11oy &amp; t&gt;raao t&gt;r m..""nth ol OcGaolllrtiCk And H.D. -Hitch &amp;DDit 1% financlna tlr 36 monlhl.
S•SO: H.D. Ford 8 Ft. Gradtr 3'% for 48, 5% for 60. Keefer&amp;
Blodo, Con Put Crllndora On Service Center St. Rr. 87 Polnl
Ploaaant &amp; Ripley Rd. 304-895·
Sidll, E.C. t-150, 81-Hli-2188.
3874.
King Cool Or Wood With Thermoslllt &amp; Blowor. SIOYt Some Ao Groat Deals On N.., John Deere
Now; &amp; 8 Soctlons Of Triple Wall
UdlltJ Tractoro: JD 770
Plpo. t 75 Gillon Fuel 011 Tank, Compact
24 HP 4 WO $tWIMo.. + Tu: JD
Good Condition. IU-251 -801~. 870 28 HP 4 WD $259/Mo., +
Allor 5 P.M. E""*'u~
Tu; JD i70 33 HP 4 WO $29~/
LapTop 3811 Comf)CliOI. 120 Meg, Mo., + Ta1; JD 1070 3Q HP ._ WD
Windowo 3.1, DOS U wllh Caoo $329/Mo., + Tu.
USC Leave Mo11age (et4)258- JD Skid Steer Loader Financing
t887
AI Low AI 7.5'Mo JO GoiOro alC.
Large Amount Of Furnlrure, And Financing: JD Lawn Tractora No

·~-· ..__._nd 41 Plaadlaflah
42 - Golo 8oc:nt
44 lnlamouo
111-Eaot
A' DflJ.
emperor
12 llfmy
48 •E n 13 ::::..
41 H0119 In lolde
kl
53 Thou
14 ........ ' 1 - 54Typeol
15 Cooldo Hiler
buefllftl .

- - -•w
5 81r1Ubr-

Discount Mobile Home Plrtt I
Acceuoriel, VInyl SklrtinQ
$200.05, Anct'lora $5.00, AwnIngs, Doors. Window1, Plumbing
Supptl&amp;a, Walef Heaters, Furnac·
es, libtrglan Slaps, Call 814·
446-~416

Phyllclan Servlcet Needed For
advertised in this newspaper
Mulli-Centtr Planning Agency.
are available on an equal
Contract Poslllon 01 Approx·
opportunity basis.
lmately 3 · 10 Hours Ptr Week. JJ-1111!1.;,;,_..;_ _ _. .
Day And Evening Hours Avail·
able For Gyn Exams And Birlh
REAL ESTATE
Control Sef\lices. STI Eaamt For
Both Male Anci Female. E•cellent
Oppol!unitt For Added Income. 310
for Sale
U•dical Degree With Training
And Elparience In Gynecology. 1.1 Aero Rivarhont Brick Ranc~ 3
Licensed To Practice In ChiD. Bedroom&amp;, 2 112 Balha, 2 FP. CA.
Sensi tive To Woman'a luues. lP Gas, City Water, 1165,000
Praclice Under Planned Par- 61-'·446·1139.
enthood Federation Of America
Standardl And Guidtllntl, 2 Bedroom ·brick in Mason, 2
OSHA And CLIA Requiremtnla. 1ots.Call304-773-582t.
Under Supervision Of Agency
Medical Director And Chief Oper- 3 Bedrooms, 1 1!2 Baths, Finating Officer. Send Resume And lshed Walk-Out Basement, AtThree Employment Reference• !ached Deck, carport, Ciry
To: Planned partnlhood Of Schools, convenient To Gallipolis
Soulh8ast Ohio, 396 Richland !Hospital. 814·-'46· 4160 After 8
Avo., Athens. OH 45701. EOE I P.ll.

lnterett No Payment Till Marcn
'88 Or 7.h. Financing With 10'At
Down Payment Carmlchael'l
Farm &amp; lawn Galllpo11a, Ohio 1-

o

Available_ 304..58-106~.
Volklwa~on

Rail Buggy, Vory

Sharp, Very Fast Conslslant 1st
Place Winner, Paddle Tlrta, 0.
lono CIYb., Bu• Trans Axle. Too
1118.

maGMC Pick· Up • Now Tran~.
Brakls, TiroL Body &amp; Bocfln Fair
Condition. 250 Engine. Run&amp;

Good, $700, Call 610·••8·4514,
···-·3703.
19811 Cullom 30 udllly bod. 455
wlaJitra 427 wlexera rear W1d, Pit
C!:oo$-1.000 neg. Call 304-875·

:1

... i

'

·L-------------------_;~~-=10~

use Toyota Pick-Up, 2 WD, s
SpeaC, Bod Cover, $2.000 080,
11188 Dodge Dakota V-e, Automatic, AC, Red long Bed With

Lincoln 225 Welder Utilltr Trailer
e·e·,5· Call sam. 814-441-1171

1962 Jeep CJ7laredo, many

callt-800-891-11777.

8)1·

tras. good condition. 614·949·

3087. _ _ _ _ _ __

or 4

bedroom $1,350/down, S2tllllmo.
Calt-600-691-6777.

1989 GMC Safari Cus10m. $-1,950
614-446-4222

1.::=..:..:.:.:...::__;______

Large 1elecrion of used homes. 2
or 3 bodrooma. Slarting at $2895.
delivery. Call 81&lt;4·315·

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

...

E~NI~. vi~AT

I&gt;OGTO(l.

LOT LOCATORS. Call :W•·7555Se6.

RN"a START S11 lmmtdlall
Need Full Or Port Time. Private
Out)' Or FaciliiJ Slaffina. Raqulros
1 ~~~ Uinln'llm Venl Or Hospital
E•porianco. Call For Aj)poln~~~ent
8t..S46-8398

Scrools. $84.000, 6U U6 0300
4 Bedtcom Ranch, LR. DR. Klld&gt;an, 1 112 Batho, Ulllilr Room,
1,6DO Sq. FL 213 Acre, Fenced
Yard, CA. Elect /Goo Hao~ Polri·
°~ 158.500, 81 ol-3n.288tl.
4 Beclroam, 2 ttory hou18 wlfull

THE BORN LOSER

I

~

E
BEn
NEW 19~8 HOII S 2 &amp; 3
~
ROOMS. $995 do111n, StU/mo.
FREE OELIVERY &amp; SETUP. 3114_ _ _ __
1:75;.::5.:58::'5=.._.:_
Now 28x8D 3 ar 4 bedroom.
S3i,995. Froo delivery. t ·800·

~,'(()J\&lt;:.()...0 ~I~

,

Wo!Nt-llt-6
m fW... cwl IT':&gt; f\1&amp;1-\ Tlt-\E. l
~ED flDW m tr.£ W£ ~otto
~ 00

,

· ~

1-lf\Y, If 1. C&gt;Of'.ITWf&gt;..TU\OOT,
~ ll((o.IOW IT, 1&lt;\Y CX.O
T'(l't&gt;l({IT(l(.WIU.. &amp;:Cffa.£Tt:!

(.01,\f'\)'lff_l

·I

1

l

e91-87n.
basemenl, approx 1 acre, 1 112 Oakwood 26x56 3 bedroom, 2
bath, LR, OR, encloted porch,
double garage wlcarport, chain bath, starting a~ SHU~ per mo.

link fonco. locata&lt;! on Chestnut 1;:::...:_1-800.=:.;-Gti:::.H.:Im:.:..:;·:.__ __
Rid~ at Junction ol Rt 2 &amp; Rt Aopos. StMr Big H$$ Call Crtci87.304-8115-38711.
it Une 800-251·5010.
ApproJ. 2 Acres, Soutweatern Take Delivery In Sept No P•ySchool Diau~t On Pavac Road, 3 manr Until Dec. 1997100-251·
Bodr&lt;&gt;oms.With2FBal '.';.~ LarDgo u-~~ 50711.
R

oam,

re,..ce, ela\of,_
Garage, Must Set To Appr8ciall,
Owner W'lll Contlder Financing,

WANTEO; Window tinttr In Pt.

:6::tol-3=1i-:..:1188:::.7·: .______ Call304-755-558t . .

for Eric.

BUY HOMES . AS LOW AS
14,000 1 ·5 Bdrm., l.acal Gov't &amp;

330 FarmS lor Sale ·

Wukend band 18&amp;kl YO,callal
and batailt, must have ••peri-

Bank Repo'1 Call 1· 800-522·

Veteran wilh penaian wauld likl to
buy farm on land contract. 1mall
down paymartt. 6 I4-9112-6838.

........ b o - minded. Rooll
110 70"1 Rode with todlft Chrl•
11on eon_.,. caw et•-687·
3715 or 114 8~U0118

• •••

Sq. Ft. Including Full Baaemenr Includes aklrtlng, deluxe •tepa

WANTED: Cuhier, eJparience
necessary. 304-895-3603.
Pleasant area. 81'-423-6581 Ask ·

SUBST,.4fti(H, YOU
GAIII'T BtAT tiOT
fUI&gt;Gt B~OviNI~S Aftll&gt;'
A Gl-ASS Of Ml£.~!
tO-l.O

7181.

With 2 car Garage, Gal Hoo~ 2 and 11tup. Onl1 St87.08 por
Miles From GaiUpoUa On Buiaville manlh wUh 1107&amp; down. Call 1·
Pike, On 1 tfZ Acrt Flati.J&gt;~ CIIJ :800-83:::.=7:.:·'238
:;::__ _ _ _ __

TU~S REFINERY CORP.
Nuds Maturo Person Now In
QALLIPOLIS Area. Regardleu
01 Trolnlng, Wrilo B. C. Hopkins,
Dept S-45C31, Box 711, Ft.
Worlh, TX 76t0t-D711.

MOOP-A£.Tt~II'IG

EtcNI~

MUST SEll. My lose, )'OUr gain.
3bedroom &amp; 2 bath, clo11 to
town. Aak for Frank 304·755·

Paatal Jobl No EKperience Nee·
0158 ry, Full Banolita. Apfll~ation.
~tion Call Sunday ..friday 1800-~2-5436 En 8060.

Westem Utdical Satvic:ll, JCA·
HO Accredited Wlrh Commendstian.
·

IS YOU~
OPII'IION OF MOOI&gt;·
,.41..Tt,oiG .fUIST AN(~1
w~flll ·IT C.OMfS TO

AS~

1:::::.:;________

New ti98 t4x7D lhroo bod!oom,
• Bedroom Split Level Wllh 5-&lt;llD lncludn 6 months FREE lot ,.,~

ESP.

2730, X· 1'700.

COUNTRY - E
ON • ACRES.
SCOmiWN, OHIO.

RTG NATE

•·

WANTED familr to move Into
3bedroom 2bllth mobile home.

farm In Gallla or
llolga Countr, UO,OOO 10
II Miles From Proclovllle, 3,-400 .,_000- 304-13&amp;-5152.
WlndD• l•etellar n1tdtcl· ••· Sq. Ft. living Area, 2 Story, 3
...,_ roqulnMI. RopiJ to Quill- Bodrooms. 2 t/2 Baths. Finished 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Wanted to buy·

IY Window Sy11ema. 110 Court Baament. Flreptace, Like New, 4
StNot. """'-' OlliD 05169.
Yaara Old S115.ooo. 81•·843·
an.-L.antl
e14-7711-1171
140
Business
2924, er 6t4-843-2m
• Training
For Sale $35,000. Two Bedroom Molga ca.: Darwnio. Nice Ralllna
House, New Windows, New Sid· Tracts: 17 Acrtl t11,00D Or I
Male Dac:tlshund, 3 Dachshund-

milt pupp1o1, et ..8112-57et.

•

180 Wanted To Do
ANY ODO JOBS: E)lllfior paintlng, thrubl &amp; we•ds !rimmed,
landsc:•ping, sidewalks edged,
lawn care, IIIC. Call Bill 304-875-

7112.

Chfkl Coro By The Hour Day Or
- k . Loving Erwlronmon~ Ago
Approprlale Acthrititl, Eaatern
._... Anla, 814-446-3138.

fot . , repairs or home lmptOYemenll. call

B.D.

c ·onstructlon,

et..IMI2·2ll7i.
Fumllure rapalr, refll1iilh and r....

awdan. U. a.auom Drdltl, Ohio

Valley Atfinl1hlng Shop, larrr
PNIIIpa. 814-992-8578.
Gtorgll Poftable Sawmill, don'l
lho rr;11u11 call
31)4.475-1157.

..ul your logo 10

lng, All New Kitchen Will Take

SO Wl-lAT" ARE
'f'OI) READIN6?

Acres 118,000, County Water.

Business
Opportunity

U OWN PAYPHONES U
- 11-SOK Yearly Pan . Greal Sites
Avail. Call Now! 1·800-800-3470
24 Hra.

\liCk Dock. Flroptoco, Osk CabiGallipo~s.

Ph.: 114-448-0035 Ad·

Uonth, AtftrenCfti and Deposit
COII(I!O)..._.,t

...

4

Flro~rd.

230

Professional

Strvlc:es

1 Exerclle

34 Corn product

2~-

,_n

38 s.lnt'Fronclo"

1

Former student

8 Loouned

3 Poet Pound

9 Shining
to C11e au-

4 Nymph

5 Dry, oowlne
8 llabu

3e
ae

Pass
Pass

22 Waxy

·~-­

11 Paris airport
16 Kitchen

in cork

25- Major
(canolollo·

East

I NT

Pass
"Pass

Pass

Pass

••

oppllancu

20 One of the
Judclo

24&lt;:-.

North

lion)

26 Wearine11

28 Topic

30 Ancient
South

--

ArnefiCin
lndlon
31 -and

790

1011111

35 Portonn

oxc&gt;"'!alvely
40 PunctUII
(2 Wda.)

43 tolevlolan
awarde

The ne&lt;t 10 columns will be
interesting for me ·· and hopefully for
you too! As I write them, during the
last week of July, the Summer
Nationals are progressing in Albuquerque. Unfonunately, I cannot go,
but I am downloading the Daily Bulletins from www.acbl.org, the American Contract Bridge League's website.
After the introductory bulletin, my
first Deal of the Day comes from bulletin two. This fascinating layout
occurred during the opening qualifying session of the Life Master Pairs.
Look a1 only the Nonh-South spades.
Needing four spade tricks, you start
by finessing your jack, which wins.
· as it must. You cash the spade ace
and East drops the queen. On the
,lhinl round. do yod finesse dummy's
.nine or go up wilh the king? You have
a guess because a competent East will
drop the queen from Q-IQ..x on the.
second round . He is playing the card
he is known to hold. ·
Yet sometimes circumstances alter
affairs. Aggressive bidding -· four
clubs is an advance cue-bid showing
an excellent hand for heans ··reach. es six hearts; West leads the club
king. You start by cashing the top
hearts, but East still holds the queen.
You finesse the spade jack and cash
lhe ace, droppmg East's queen. Now
what?
If East started with queen-doubleton of spades, you cannel make
the contract. You may finesse dummy 's nine; but East will ruff and
relurn a club. You must assume East
started with Q-10-&lt; of spades. So,
lead a spade lo dummy's king and
continue
with lhe spade nine, dis1
lcarding your club loser while East
wastes his trump trick.

HOW TO DRIVE
A ZAMSONI #

Iris wHh
lrogront

45

raals

46 Indian ·
nur~e

47 Dlol-

48 Peter, - oncl
Mary

50 Sand lizard
51 FruH rind
52 Epacha
55 Slllluto

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis ·Campos .

Celebrity C.ph&amp;l ei\1Mograma .,. tfftlted frOITI qUOI&amp;tiOI'IS ~ ''"""'' people , put And pteSenl
EliCh lidtf .-. lhe ~ atandiiOI' another. Todlr's cW: 2 IQUals P

"SYYC
TOYZ

ZLONELKS

SYYC

RLJ J

ELPOLKS,

ABWTV.'

NVTBF

AL NB

VKC

TQaKSBJ.

'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I can't believe I did all those bad films in a row. 1 went ·
to the well one too many limes.~ - Burt Reynoids.
·

..

.,

,:~~:~;~, S©Rc(l~-Jtr..trs·
ldllool

~y

WOlD
liME

CLAY R. 'OLLAN

0 four

Reorror~ge

•

letters of the
scrambled wards below to form fovr slrnple words

I
I

Nu G 0 R D

I I 1I I
2

. ~~0...:8;....:;..0.,.:O...:L~~

. PI' I I .

r-~----------,~

I
.

.
.

NAMA N
.I

5

1

16 I
.

I~

.

:~

Fashion~ are really slrange.
We wear sports clothes lo work ,
and sweatshirt for-·· ·- -· ·

~_.,:G..:L;...:...l
·I ~T..:I:,....:..N
17 I r---ll
e e

I

A
9

I

1g93 Eagle Vlalon lSI 3.5 Llior

1985 Wllderneu camper, 2t' .
long, air, etc. Excellenl condition,

$8,000. et .. 256-G382.

614·992-667. cr 30H73-5535.

1993 Ford Uuslang Convertible
Air, Automatic, Cruise, All Power,
low Ullea, Excellent Condllloh,
$9,500, 81 """4&amp; 7473.

I malchlng cllalr, blown
wood trim, good cond.

Campers &amp;
Molar Homes

Engine, 74,500 MiJn, Clean Car,

19117' Dulchman 22. Ft. Tag·A·

Long, Fully Equipped, Pold
StS,OOO, Atking $11.!00, Clll For
Mora Information. 814-3111-25711,
6tol-388-9561 .

SERVICES

Twa bedroom lurnilhed apart- Oondrull ·s1Udio• IJI10 cards for
men1 in Uldctiepart, 12001mo. plus 1a11, Studio Matler Strokea
1100 depo1lt, you pay au and 1•10'1 and reguillr llize cards for

olectr\c,. 1110 ~ wator and trllh. sole. I havt tho lolowlng Boonle
et ..SI02-7808 eam-epm.
Babloo for &amp;alo: Pori· taO: Ouak·
•.....,
..,. Furnls.....,
.,..
us: Hopllf-130: St&gt;o•· •so:
,...,
Sir- UO; Biocide- S25; Punut·
Rooms
S&lt;S. Call for lnlllnrtatfon. 11 ......

-

ApPliance Parts And Service: All
NarN Branda Over 25 Vears Ex·
ptrience All Work Guaranteed
FrenFh Cltr Uay1ag, 8.14·441~

CARS FOR .tOOl Trucks,
FAm~

SUPPLIES

&amp; LIVESTOCK

nov.

610 Farm Equipment

1U3, Conrury Bravo !4x10, 3
Lhllf\91rOn't btls•mtnt ••ter· llodrooit)o. 2 Full 1111111. Conlral
p1oonng, all baMment ttpalr• Nt With"..... ~ ""' 011 Ortiy.
done, frH lllimltll, Ufttimt 117,700, Or A11ume Payment,
gu11antM. IOyr..- on job tJI~Hri · .Antlloblo lmmodlallly, eto~-2•511368
..... -.7S-2t.S.

JET

AERATION MOTORS
,Rooalrtd, Now I RoQIIlt In Stade.
·call Ron E1111no, HI00-537-i528.

Bodgar liootJO wagon, goad condtlon,- ..... 11.._.2..7.
Hydr1ullc Dll-loweat price In
town. Verw fltt gu h..ltlfl. PIO·
pane a natural 011. on tale now.

Silof&amp; Equlpmani304-G7!&gt;r.2t .

I

boa!~

4-whnlerl, moror hOmat, furnl·
lure, tfecU'onlca, computers etc.

1&gt;1 FBI. IRS. DEA. Avallablo 1our
art• now. Ca/11 -100·513·43-43

Elll S-11368

t i eo .,g90 cars For stoolll
Solztd Ml Sokl
locally This Uaruh.
Trudl.a, ••4'1. Etc.

t.at0-522-2730, X31101 .

17115.

C&amp;C General Home Malnttnentt• Palnling, ¥1nyl tiding,

COtpenltr. dooro, 111indows, baltla,
mo~IO llorno 10polr and more. For
tr.. eatlmate can Chtt, 814-0028323.

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

Credii Problems? We Can Help. Rtlldenlial or commtrc'-1 wtrlng.
Ea1y 'lank Financing For Used new llfVice or repalrt. Ma~tr lJ.
Vahic !u , No Turn Downs, Call c•naed elecarlclln. Ridenour
Electrical. WV000301, 304·175Vickie, 6U'""'46-281il7.

ed today could weigh heavily on your
mind. Instead of being plagued by
guilt, give your obligatinnnop pri·,
ority.
·
BERNICE
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
BEDEOSOL 21) Today; you could be wise to pass
up a social arrangement where you 'II
have to cater to clients you don't
appreciate. Your absence won '1 be
felt.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) If
entertaining al home today, .don't
make your guests feel as irthey have .
Tuesday. Oct. 21 , 1997
to arbitrate a domestic squabble. It:
LIBRA.(Sepl . 23-0 cl. 23) Do not could throw ice water on the affair. j
bank 1oo heavily upon people who
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19),
have proven th~s fa~ 1o be lukewann . Usually. you are sensitive to the feelallies. These mdiVIduals could be ings of people from all walks of life.'
burrs under your saddle today. Trying This asset might not be operative
today. Get back in character.
10 patch up a broken romance? The
Aslro-Graph Matchmaker can help
PISCES (Feb : 20-March 20)
you understand what 1o do 1o make Today. do not gel mvolved 1n some·
1hc relationship work. Mail S2; 75 to , tht_ng ~here you nsk a lot m order to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, . ~am a I_' tile. Gambles based upon lh!s
PO Box 1758 Murray Hill Station. tdea mtght not be worth the returns.
Ne_;,York. NY 10156.
:
ARIES (March 21-April 19) A
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) family member mig hi resurrect an old
Responsibilities you leave unauend-. , problem today that will cause dis-

ASTRO·ORAPH

'

'·

33 Str-

ctllent condition, power everr-

thlng, 811,500 milts. $7600 OBO,

HEEO A LOAN? AI&gt;Pil Tho Ear 304-713-51711.
War -Br Pllono. Frlondlr Loan, 1988 Clarion 14x70 3br, 1 both,
lleat pump. stove &amp; new refrlg·

West

V-6,

814· 247·3801 aftar 5:00. t.lu1t

good · cond. Asking 111,200.

"'a"''· good cond. st2.soo
Cllfi:JOH75-3000.

Seulh

New gas tanks, 1 lan truck

Pontioc

cau..,

114-311 ie35

. 37 Shaw ~lnly
' 38 Writer o oncl.
31 Seaport In

1111. t· wheels &amp; radlatart. D &amp; R Auto
topt, auiDmatic, gray Interior, o- Ripley, WV. 304 -372-3933 ar ,:
800·273-9329.
19~2

~~r:ft.
for 30oH7s.e&amp;7i.
tldtrly a~d ha:_:nd~I·J~~:_·_:w_•_-e_7~5--3000.:.:__o~r=SO.:_·
- .-EOH
___.__ ~I~i5~-

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

·~2 S&lt;huk Llmill&lt;l Edition, t••711.
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. three bedroom, two batha, total 2 Bedroom Home, ..JI ..&amp;ane
recommend• that you do bull · - · 2.1/l! ton hoot
Height&amp;, Gallipolis, 114·4.._
nen with people ,au know, and tidtng. lhlngle rool, many e1tra1, Z!IO.
NOT tD sond .._through lho. 304-773-5238"' It 4-IID2-345a
mall until JDU haYI l"""tfgatM 1071 Kirkwood 121180 $2,300, 2 llodroom HouN In GllllpOII&amp;,
Deposit /Reforonco. U35111o.•
~
11~11111, Or et•·3e8-tl1•7.
et .......7till.
Local Vondlng ROUII Fot Sale. ti75 12•70 FIHIWOOd 3 Bed·
3 ~oom houso In lolL Alto.
~llull Soil Clll Now,
roomo. t trz lld1o, u-~ COlle~·
u.ooo. 81 ....... 21111.
3 Bedroom. Hau11, located On
PEII80N WANTED To Own. And
211.
Sd&gt;oof Dlolct. t3IO
Oporato Rttoil Candy Shop In
Ptus Daposit, No Pill. 114-2NQAI.LIPOLII Arft. Low lnvolt·
'17&amp;
rnent For Informacion Call Mra.
..,.,.,
aou.- Conclj Compo- tU7 Schultz 14x70. 3br, total
!!· Fwt Worf1. TX 81 7-332-gm. ~Kt(lc, back-up LP g11 hlalet,
new carpet. deck &amp; uttllile dish,

220 Money to Loan

eKI0843
t A 8 7
186

Types, 6tH45-5677

NHI Porter 2 Bodroolna, S350

Twin RIYirl Tower, ,.. acc.epllng
•ppiic:alicn• for 1br. HUO "'blid~

pump.'""'

I

• 7 54 2
South
oAJ 4

Budget Price Transmissions,
Used /Rebuilt, . All Ttpes, Onr
10,000 Transm111lons, Access
Remanufactured Main Shahs For
Standard Transmission
All

410 HoUitl for Rent

dilion.'ll t5Aa•--

neceNity

.

.

~

Com plete the chuckle quoted
by Idling in lhe m1ssing words
you develop from step No . .3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
!ETTERS IN SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER · .

· One mom to another. "It's hard lo raise children properly. since it's their parenls they are COPYING."

RHHALS

nets. Carport. 5 Miles South Of

OOWN

32C-rd

Exempt· Nylon· Grand- Impact- COPYING

•ilr.

21 o

niiiiHikH

27 SUHpotrt
. 2t Dotylan'o place

.

Ac'"-

baths, lull baHmentlgarage,

Whill Frame, 3 8Mroom1, 1 t/2
Baths, Laundry Room, Porch,

24 Actor Brynner

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Help With Eldorl)' Llldy, 614-46- largo building, povod drfv•way. Won10&lt;110 ...,. In liolg&amp;
21143.
~·-3127«304-ers-.575.
=·_preferably lltlga Local.
Dflrlcl. 114-112·5053 a~
Wilt ..ul )unit or trUh - · S351 Tri-Lovel
In ground pool bolplt:kllp laod. 304-175-~
woon Middle achool and .'High llrlpm.
-LIS,OOO. _.75-6515.

FINANCIAL

• Q 10 5
eQ92
• J 5 3

Plains, Besl 5 Acraa Building
Site• On Keebllugn -Follrod Rd.

$14,000 Ea
Golllo Co.: Gollpolls, Noighlror·
hood Rd., 1 0 - s.v-r~
Sl111 St9,ooo. Or 22
lalt Priced at $70,000. call 81'•- Pond NOW 124.000. Frlondll
384-2097 0'614·949-21138.
Ridge t O - $14,01111, &amp;5 Act·
II 17,500 Or 1g Aall 111,000,
Older hom• with new Improve· Caunl:y Waler. Tt1n1 Run, laat
menl&amp;, 3br, 1 baltl, on 1 beautiful Onoi10Ac,.. StO,OOO.
acre, o;ltw- water, high a dly, con~enienl kl Ripley, Ra~eniWood &amp;
For FrH llopa + awn. Flo
Pt Pleasant. $58,900. 304·884· Cal
nonclng Info. TIM 1~ Oflllllod
24711.
PriooaOnCIIh-1
Thr!N bldraom houM In Srra· For aaa.. 1 acfl on Oaborne
cuae, be.ltmtnt, garage, new
l'ltrnonw, call 11..window.. dKk and 1M llilh ~IIIII SlrHIIn
3318 or e1.._2llilt.
In~. et4-7•2·13ol5, et4·U2·
1111.
L..ol lot on llrDitlwl!' In 18,!00,
..1182--. Three bedroom h!JUH, 2 full port.
__
w.., 11
.....

51 Actor Mineo
and

23-~1

'-...l-.l-...J-...1..-.L....J

Trade&gt;-In Or Help With Down Par- Dyeavllle, Cheaper Than Lot
men~ 614-3117-0.03, Poglng No: Rent, St.OOO Do111n S12BIIolo ••
t.aro-395-2337. t5711.
Yourt In 5 Year1. Near Tuppert
Home in country with 31 acres,
onlt l years Did, with two bed·
rooms, living room, kitchen bat!\
utility room, tiOI'age building, with
cellar, one car garage. Located
on Beilev RI.Jn Road, Blh house on

SO Killed

By Phillip Alder

1981 F·150 Ford -':C4, Exctllenl
Condition, Asking $2,500, Open
TO 0\hs, 61H.5-11759.

Free air, free tkirt. 1·b?O 3 bedroom, $1 ,055fdown, S10Simo.

•·II·

ppening lead: • K

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

Oli~

21 p....,

·!From the
'Internet

After e P.M.

Bannon"&amp; Supplr. 1:»1

Free air, tree akift, 16J(80 3

[ STILL GOT TH'
OLD•FANCILED KIND !!

tGOTMEA
NEW•FANCILEO
GARBAGE
DISPOSER

814·2US-6172.

HOOYJ Dutr HIIJiork 3 R:&gt;lnl Hld1.
61 ...Ut-t083.

•A9

18 1"11round pool, 59 T- -

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

~

I 9811 Fcrd Rlrlgor. 304-882-3273.

57 Arizona city

18 Fit 10 ana'o UM 56 Nation

5
.9 6 • 2
KQJt03

720 ll"ucks lor Sale

56 P1uo

eAJ76
t K Q 10

8 6 2

•

liner, Chrome Wheels, $3,000,
e14-256·142._

12 -.)

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sension in your household. Take .
immediate steps to quash it quickly.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)~A
.,gossip might tell you something
about a mutual friend today that
•could "fiarm his or her reputation .
1Hold all comments until the facts can
!be verified.
· GEMINI (May 21-June 20) If you
aren't careful today, the folly of a
friend could penalize you in some
manner. Do not let undisciplined people m~ commitments for you .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) In
orderto achieve significant objectives
today, you 'll have to divest yourself
ortimid techniques. Be bold, focused
and persistent.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) You may
not have learned a lesson you should
have from an abrasive past experience. Do not make a similar type of
,mistake today.
.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-S&lt;pt. 22) This
might not be the right day to seek
favors to further your personal ambi·
'lions. Even if they are granted. they
could still have strings attached .

1186.

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Ohio Lottery

Bills outkick
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Monday tilt

Pick 3:
376
Pick 4:

1905·
Buckeye 5:
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Sports on Page 4

Cloudy tonight, low In·
mid 301. Wednesday,
clear, high near 40 .

•

a1
llbl. 48, NO. 131
C1997, Ohio Vlllley Publlahlng Company

2 Sectlona, 12 Pogea, 35 cen11
A Gannet! Co. N o - -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 21 , 1997

Once permits are issued

Portland battle site to· be mined

.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Gravel mining in Penland will
proceed as soon as permits are issued,
according to Paul Rice, general counsel for Richards and Sons, Inc., who

-

.

.
met with the Meigs County Commissioners during their regular meeting on Monday afternoon.
Richards and Sons owns 500 acres
at the site of'the Battle of Buffington
Island, the only Civil War battle

fought in the state. That land will be
subject to gravel mining and loading
as soon as mining and loading permits are issued through the state, Rice
said yesterday.
·
The Penland propeny was pur-

chased by the company in the 1960's
and 1970's.
Richards and Sons now operates a
similar operation in Apple Grove, and
according to Rice, employs 43 people, most of them Meigs County res-

idenb. The company's local payroll is
$1.2 million a year. and the firm pays
appro•imately $50,000 in real estate
and personal property ta•es to the
counly.
The development of the new plant

in Portland will involve a capital
investment of about $6 million, Rice
said. and would add another 20 jobs
to the company's local payroll.
Mining at the site has been conContinued on page 3

Supporters never doubted Mason ~--------Tour--------~
doctor during two-year tribulation

!,

By MINDY KEARNS,
OVP News Staff
POINT PLEASANT- "It was the
best news I could have ever heard,"
said Susie Casto, Pomeroy regarding
the acquittal of Dr. Danny Westmoreland of Mason.
Or. Westmoreland. who was
acquitted of 10 federal charges of
unlawfully dispensing controlled substances for no medical purpose, had
many supponers over the past two
years following a raid on his home
and office in June 1995. Casto was
one of them. .
"Everyone knew he was innocent," Casto said. "Now the federal
government does."
Supponers of Westmoreland's had
no doubt that their doctor was in nocent, but were happy when official
word of that came through.
"We've been patients of Dr. Westmoreland since 1987 and he's done
nothing but good for us. He's been
our doctor and our friend,'' said Casto.
·
~ ·.
"In my ncan. I knew he had aone
no wrong. They put him through so
much, 1'!11 just glad it's over for him."
she concluded.
Casto's husband Ronnie was
among the tri-county residents sitting

in the district courtroom in Huntington when the judge granted the
motion for acquittal.
"I was there when the judge said
it," said Ronnie Casto. "Everyone sitting on his side of the courtroom. the
supponers and his family, were overwhelmed."
"I think he is the best thing that
ever happened in this area. He treats
you no matter if you have insurance
or not, and 'sometimes you don't even
get a bill." he added. "He's just the
best friend anyone could ever have."
Another supponcr, Stella O'Bryan
agreed.
"I think it's great. I had no doubt
he would be found innocent. He's
been super to us and I'm real happy
for him," O'Bryan, of Mason, said.
Both the Castos and O'Bryan,
along with her husband Tom, have
attended vigils over the past two
years for the doctor. They made signs
and posted them along S.R. 62 from
Westmoreland's home through
Mason County so be would see the
suppon on his way io the counhouse.
Nancy · Anderson of Hartford
echoed the Castes' and O'Bryan's
reactions. "There was no doubt in my
mind-he would be acquitted. I just
'

hated what his family had to go
through. I couldn't believe what he
was accused of, knowing how he
treated our family."
Westmoreland closed his office to
be with Anderson and her family
when their son had to have surgery.
He was at the hospital when the family arrived, and stayed through the .
surgery and recovery process, accord·
ing to Anderson.
.
Becky McFarland of Mason said
she. too, knew first hand of the doctor's treatment of patients,
"My son and Chris Westmoreland
(Danny's son) have been friends
since the Westmorelands moved to
Mason County and he has always
been extremely good to my family."
McFarland cited when her son
Trevor was involved in a car accident
this spring in front of Westmoreland
Family Care Center. "He heard the
accident take place and upcin seeing
it was Trevor, took him right into the
office, checking him for injuries. He
could havo just stayed 'in his office
with his own patients and made
Trevor wait for an ambulance.:'
''I'm just glad it's firially over.
They have put 'Doc' and his family
through hell," McFarland concluded.

URG survey results .are
shared with university
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The decision by the University of
Rio Grande Board of Trustees Saturday to pursue launching a Meigs
County branch followed two presentations, one by Dr. Greg Sojka. university provost, and the other by Ron
McDade, Meigs 'County Economic
Development director.
Sojka. who had earlier analyzed
about 1.250 community needs surveys presented at earlier public meeting, shared the results of the that survey with university board members,
The single program generating the
most interest was business manage~
ment with about 300 people indicating interest, followed by microcomputer applic~tions in business and a
bachelor's degree program 10 nursmg
with about 250 and 225 people.
respectively. reporting interest in the
programs.
The largest group of respondents
preferred 'other' progra'!'s including

various medical and allied medical
programs (67). various t.~chnologjcs
(66). education classes (72), various
shorl courses including computer.
fine arts, nosiness', etc. (65), and business related programs (23).
Most people marked more than
one program on the survey. so there
is some overlap. Sojka explained.
The maJority of respondents
seemed to favor traditional. weekday
classes held four or two times a week,
with some preferring evening classes, according to Sojka's prcscntalion.
Only a few respondents indicated a
preference for weekend classes.
The nc•t step is to meet with people to hammer out a successful. program, Sojka e'.plained.
McDade. in a brief. five-to-sixminute presentation, remarked on
the interest shown by Meigs Countians in the proposed branch campus.
McDade presented the university
board of trustees with material that
appeared in The Daily Sentinel sup-

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As part of the America Reads project coor·
din11ed by the Retired Senior Volunteer Program, 71 student• from the county's three local
· school dlatrlct are tltklng tours of the Meigs
County Courthouse In Pom•roy and the· old
courthouse In Cheater. Here, Recorder Emmo-

gene Hamilton shows Salisbury Elementary
School third grade students one of the plat map
books in her oHice. Studen~ at Tuppers Plains
and Salisbury schools are also participating In ·
the program, which puh en RSVP volunteer
Into the classroom each week.

Decision near on government
racial catego-ries for next census

WASHINGTON !AP)- With the
government nearing a decision on
racial categories for the next census,
Harold McDougall wonders how
· he'll be recorded.
McDougall has no doubt who he
ishe's a senior policy consultant
porting the proposed move and
· recalled the interest shown at the pub- at the Washington bureau of the
·. lic meeting held Sept. 9 at the Meigs NAACP
But some states have added "mulCounty Senior Citizens Center in
tiracial"
to their categories, and many
Pomeroy.
people
want
the federal government
He also shared with the board cur- '
rent cffons to find a site for the uni- to do the same. Using state definitions, McDougall would be black in
versity branch . .
McDade called the concept of a
Meigs County hranch campus a
"win/win situation" for the both uniJeffrey Miller of Middleport is the
versity and the people of Meigs
new police chief in Pomeroy. Miller
County.
The board unanimously. approved was hired by Pomeroy Village Couna molion "authorizing the university cil during their regular meeting on
stall' 10 move forward with estab- Monday evening.
Miller's appointment followed an
lishing a Meigs Couiny branch. provided that follow up meetings with execUtive session called to discuss
county residents who ind icatcd an personnel.
Miller will replace Gerald Rought,
interest in enrolling in classes produce sufllcicnt enrollment to enable who retired in August. Jim Wehster of
a branch to he viahle; and furthcr, Pomeroy has served as interim chief
provided that a staff can secure a site since Rought's retirement.
Miller has served as an investigathat is convenient to residents, and
that is obtainable on financial terms tor for the Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney since I994. He i~ also a for·
' favorable to the university."

Georgia. Indiana and Michigan. hut racial and cthni&lt;.: hackgrounds do;,ol
multiracial in California.
· lhink ofthcmsclvc~ as a new racc.&lt;IJUI
''We must take i.·arc not to recre- instead wish to cclchralc all their herate. reinforce or even expand the itages." says McQougall .
C';Lli~c system we arc alltr~ing hard to
That was the rccnmmcndminn of
overcome ... McDougall told a ·con- an intcragcm:y task fun.:~: that sent its
gressional suhcommittcc ·earlier this report to the Offh.:c of M:.magcmcnt
year.
and. Budget in July. The OMB is
Instead he wants to kccr the cur- cKpcctcd to announce a dcci~inn
rent list of races with indivi&lt;Ju~Jis free he fore the end of the month.
to choose all !hal apply - black.
Crucial. McDougall· says. is not
white, Asian. native American or any · JUst how people answer the race qucscomhination.
lion, but how the totals arc the~ tab"Most mLiividuals of diverse

Miller named new Pomeroy police chief
mer deputy sheriff a~d has worked as
a patrolman for the Middleport Police
Dcpanmcnt.
He will start working on the i(Jrce
on November 3. and will he ~worn in
prior to that. according to r.. ayor
Frank Vaughan.
Council lllC( with i.l group ur residents from Anne Stroot (llrcczy
·Heights). who reported prohlcms
with water prcs~ urc It wa~ determined that the prohlcm wa&gt; prohahly
due to faulty line:-.. and it w;1:-. ~1grccd
that the village water dL'partmcnt
should repair the prnhlcin a!\ ~non as

possible.
It was reported that the slip repair
on Legion Terrace has hccn completed. with the retaining wall in
place. Pavmg of the street will be the
next step on the project
One hid has been received l'or the
completion of demolition or a house
on Sycamore Street. and another bid
is c•pectcd. A crew who had agreed
to demolish the house 10 c•changc for
salvageable materials h"' !'ailed to
complete the JOb and hids arc now
heing sought hy finns to complcle the
work.
·

The Jake is ready to rock 'n' roll

OPEl
MOI.·.FII.
SAT.t-6

PREPARE;, FIELD FOR TONIGHT'S GAME ,
Joe Schuf,lett, and Brian Kestranek paint tht
World Sertea logo on the turf at Jacobs Field
In Cleveland Monday In preparation for game 3

of the 1997 World Series tonight. the Flori~
Marllna and Clevaland Indiana are tied at one
win apiece In the best-of-uvan serlea, (AP)

By JOHN AFFLECK
Associated Press Writer
CLEVELAND- After playing in
-·Jat~b':s · field tOnight, thc"'Fiorlda Marlins might want to find a quieter
place to rcla. -like the night deck
of an aircraft carrier.
There will be no cute little fish
dances at the home of the Cleveland
Indians.
The ncx't three games of 1hcWorld
Scrics will be in front of crowds that
are ready to shake. rattle and roll.
"I don't know how our fans can
root any harder for us." Cleveland's
. David Justice said.
•
Justice knows what how tough it
·is to be a visiting player at the Jake
in October.
As an Atlanta Brave. he got in
trouble with his then-hometown fans
during the 1995 World Series when
he said Cleveland's fans were more
supponivc than Atlanta's. The lndians won two of three games from the
Braves here but lost the series.
"Just all the energy coming from
all those people is awesome," Justice
said. "They're walching every pitch,

every play, and they mak~ you want
'" play hetter. ..
And , as the 'eric&gt; rc,umc&gt; aflcr a
S]'llin&gt;f Gamc,- 1- ;Hli.l 2111Miami.
diehard lnd1ans fan' &gt;ay the Cloveland crowd, - if it\ po,&gt;~hlc - arc
rowdier now than thq were two
years ago.
\ "The crowd\ goirlg to he very
well-behaved - and they ' re going to
be nut&gt;. " said Sisler Mary A»umpta. a Roman Catholic nun famous for
baking cookies l&lt;&gt;r 1hc Jndtans. "At
least they hettcr be well -hchaved. II
they're no1. I hey ' II hear il from me."
Good luck. sister.
The crowd will definitely be
standing from the first ritch. h1k1ng
up their socks 10 imitation of their
heroes and yelling themselves hoarse.
The truth is, they"ll do anything to
help the Indians win and end 49 years
of frustratiOn by bringmg a World
Series championship to thiS city.
"I think it' ll be lthe same as the
other playoff games- only worse,"
Carol Elkins said as she waited to get
autographs from the Cleveland players Monday.

While Jacobs Field is always
packed - the 43.368-scat stadium
~ut for all of Cleveland 's n;g_u0 _
lar-season gafncs
Ulc postseason
has brought a new level of frenzy.
Since the final two games of the
divisional scri~s against the New
York Yankees - when Cleveland
came back to win after being four
outs from climinalion - the sonic
power of the Indians fans has given
a sense of inevitability to the outcome
of each game.
"Every time the team has struggled and won, it's taken the fans to a
new level .." Sister Mary Assumpta
said. "I have a feeling the fans are
going to carry the guys through. "
John Adams, the Cleveland fllll
who sits in left field pounding a bas1
drum during rallies, said the racket
has its roots in a town waiting for its
first World Series title since I948.
"There's a long-suffering crowd
here," said Adams, who has been
banging the drum at Cleveland games
for 24 years. "People bere have gone
throuah the down times, so thoy
Continued on page 3
•

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