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Ohio Lottery

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YOU KNOW
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MOTO AND LOVE T ¥ TAl~
ERVIC AND
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WHY WOULD YOU
GOANYPLAC
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Super Lotto 5:
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Sports on Page 4

140109

Partly cloudy tonight.
.Lowe
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sunny, high In upper 501.

eTOVOTA

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W. 41, NO. 131
0111t7, Ohio Vllley

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Pick 3:

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 27,1997

Publllhlng Compeny

A Gannet~ Co. Newlpaper

'Three area residents killed in Saturday wreck

~,855

POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. Three area residents were killed in a
two vehicle accident Saturday
evening on S.R. 2, in Apple Grove,
according Ia a spokesman for the
Point Pleasant Detachment- West
Virginia State Police. Two others
remain in a Huntington hospital.

Coroner I;lr. Bret Morgan exam·
The state ,police spokesman said
Paula A. Fetty Wroten, 28, her
son, Edward 'Eddie' Wroten Jr., 12, Paula A. Wroten, driving a 1993 ined Paula Wroten and Tylor Fetty
and 'I)ilor Jo Fe(ty, three weeks, died Chevrolet Beretta, was traveling · after the accident.
No autopsies were perfonned.
in the 6:56 p.m. accident. Melissa F. north on S.R. 2 and Erik M. Burd, 27,
Surd,
wbo was driving a 1992
of
Huntington
was
traveling
south
Feuy, 27, of Point Pleasant and
Shirley A. Fetty, 54, of Point Pleas- when Surd attempted to tum left into International truck, owned by Arrow
ant remain in Cabell Huntington Apple Grove Man, crossing into Industries of Parkersburg, was cited
Wroten's path.
·
for failure to tum .with reasonable
Hospital.

safety.
.
The Wrotens are survived by husband and father, Edward M. Wroten,
Sr. Paula was a cashier at Paul's
Ei.xon and member of the Loyal
Order of the Moose 731, Point Pleas·
ant. Their funeral service will he
Wednesday, October 29, at I :30 p.m .

at Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home,
Point Pleasant.
Fetty is survived by her parents,
Brian and Missy Fetty of Letart.
Funeral arrangements are under the
direction of Foglesong Fun~ral
Home, Mason.
A state police spokesman said the
accident is still under investigation.

'Crowning jewel' of Pomeroy
revitalization project dedicated

Nft,CHROMI

BUMPERpJ]'ILT..CRUISE

&amp;'MUCH MUAEII

USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS

.

"

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel NIWI Stiff
The "crowning jewel" of
Pomeroy's Downtown Revitalization
Project; the Riverfront Amphitheater,
was dedicated during a brief ceremony on the structure Saturday after·
noon.

ts IUIUM IOAT .

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WITH '""'LER.

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SUPER NICE BOAT ..................IIOW. 77

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'29,317

DEMONSTRAnON - Karen Lambert and Terri Mlckeah of the
Ohio Stltl Highway Patrol visited students at Chester Elementary Scflool with Carol, 1 ap8clelly-tnllned German Shepherd who.
worklln drug enforcement The offlcera' preaenlltlon concluded Drug FI'1Mt Ohio Week actlvHiea tit Cheater. The observance
took
throughout ~he cou~ ~·t - k .

pre

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u~s. industry ·i s lookind'

toward China as lucrative
nuclear power market
"
WASHINGTON (AP) - The power reactors as much as $60 bil-

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u.s. nuclear industry, which has not
sold a power plant in this country in
24 years, is looking to China and a
potential $60 billion bonanza that
could be a path to a long·lerm
revival.
Intense lobbying to open the Chi·
na market for U.S. reaclor builders
may pay off this week when Pres'i·
dent Clinton meets wilh Chinese
President Jiang Zemin at a· White
House summit. The two leaders hope
to sign an agreement to open China's
civilian nuclear market.
Nowhere in the world will the
need for energy in the coming
decades he greater than in China,
.which envisions building hundreds of
power plants- including as many as
I SO nuclear reactors- over the next
40 years to meet .the skyrocketing
electricity needs of its 1.2 billio.n people.
"A great deal of. that business
could come to the United States."
said Robert Newman. head of nuclear
programs at ABB Inc., one of the
country's leading reactor builders. He
estimates the China markcl for new
.

-

at

lion over lhc nex11wo decades.
The U.S. nuclear industry has
been lobbying franlically with the
administration and Congress, arguing
that U.S. companies shoultl be
allowed 10 cpmpelc with France,
C~nada and even Russia for China's
burgeoning reactor market.
·
American and Chinese negotiators
resolved some key concerns last
week, but .Secrclary of State
Madeleine Albright said Sunday that
a final dec'i sion rests with Clinton.
U.S . companies are barred from
selling nuclear technology to China
until the Chinese government gives
assurances il will slop helping other
countries ~ particularly Iran and
Pakistan - in developing their
nuclear programs, and possibly
diverting teChnology to weapons.
Congress a dozen years ago
agreed to allow civiiian·nuclear technology sales to China but required
that the president certify China's
commitment to nonproliferation . It is
this certification thai Jiang is seeking
as pan .of his upcoming visit.
Continued on page 3

Group to probe Reno's
refusal to seek prosecutor
WASHINGTON (AP)- lnlensi·
fying his scrutiny of the Justice
Department in the campaign finance
probe, the Senate Judiciary Commiltee chainnan says an upcoming hearing will focus on why Allomey General Janet Reno is not seeking
appointment of an independent coun·
sel.
'"There are polilical advisers
advising her upon whom she is rely·
ing, I think, to the detriment of our
country," Sen. Orrin Hatch, R·Utah.
said on "Fox News Sunday." "We
are going to have a hearing in the
near future and determine who in the
world is advising her. "
Hatch added that "we have people dawn there" in the Justice Department "who are polilical appointees
who are really guiding her in this
matter."
Responding to criticism from
Republicans earlier this month, Reno
said she will not be stampeded by
"politics or pressure" into applying
for a court-appointed independent
counsel, but is prepared to seek one
if evidence emerges 10 walTant it. She

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•

says her Jusliee Department task
force is working diligently to build a
solid case by traditional bouom-up
investigation .
While Halch zeroed in on the Jus·
tice Department probe. Scns. Fred
Thompson. R-Tenn .. and John Glenn.
D-Ohio. differed on the fund -raising
investigation by their Government
AfTairs Com mince. which ends Dec.
31.
Senate hearings have been "large·
ly an opportunity lost," Glenn, the
commiuee's ranking Democrat, said
on NBC 's '" Meet the Press."
"If we 're just to continue with try·
1
ing to see how much blood we can let
out of bemocrats and how much we
can wound Democrats and not make
it bipartisan, I'm for ending it as
quick as we can end this thing,"
Glenn said . "I think we had the
opportunity 10 make this bipartisan"
and "clean up the whole system."
Separately, Glenn said he will not
object if his colleagues ask President
Clinton to respond to wriuen ques·
tions. Clinton has turned down the
commiuee's invitation to testify.

•
(

About 50 people attended the cer·
emony marked by the introduction of
Donald Kronenberger of Marieua,
Ga., who donated $100,000 toward
construction of the amphitheater in
memory of his parents, the late Donald and Naomi Johnson Kronenberger.
The 163-foot-long amphitheater,
built by Banks Construction of
Pomeroy,, includes seating, a walk·
ing/stage area, chain railing, tiedowns large enough for large river
boats and extends more than 17 feet
out into the tlvet stfpported. . steel
[-beams.
' ·•
'
·
· Kronenberger, an attorne~ _;,ith
the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
who until recently had been referred
to a' an "as-yet unnamed benefactor",
was the son of Donald and Naomi
Johnson Kronenberger who died of
accidental carbon monoxide poison·
ing on June 13. 1992, in Akron . .
The late Mrs. Kronenberger was a
former Pomeroy resident, aucndcd
Trinity Church in Pomeroy. and is
survived locally by her brother.
Theron Johnson of Letart Township.
The late Mr. Kronenberger was a

PLI'Q~IE PRESENTAnON ·The VIllage of
Pomeroy w11 pr111nted 1 plaque Saturday
afternoon by Cliff Eckatrand of the Ohio
Departmlnt of Development llllrking the ded-

retired vice-president and treasurer of
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. of
Akron.
i
A plaque was installed at the
amphitheater Thursday afternoon
Pomeroy Councilmen George Wright
and John Musser bearing the inscrip·
lion "Dedicated to the memory of
Donald and Na9mi Johnson Kronen·

berger."
Kronenberger said he wanted to
support something that would he a
lasting memorial to his parents, and
that the amphitheater project seemed
to be a perfccl mccling between the
town's needs and his wishes.
Although Kronenberger never
resided in Meigs County, he recalled

summertime visits to the area, to his
grandmother's home in Racine and to
the family farm in Letart Falls as a
youth.
"My (Meigs County) roots run
deep on my maternal side," he said.
"I am pleased to honor my parents'
memory in such a lasting way."
&lt;;oolinued on page 3

Heartbreak:

It's 49 years and ·counting for Indian fans
By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
A11oclated Press Writer
CLEVELAND - The city has
polished its comeback image but its
beloved Indians just can't get over the
hump.
When it comes to World Series
frustration, it's 49 years and counting
for the Indians. Thomas Dewey still
looked like a sure hellO heal Prcsi·
dent Harry Truman the last time the
Indians won the Series in 1948.
The Indians made it back to the
Series in 1954, losing to the New
York Giants in four straight games,
but not again until 1995. when they
lost to the Atlanta Braves in six
games.
.
"I didn't cry." admitted Joan Hin·
klc. 34, of suburban Lyndhurst. who
watched the game with hundreds of

other fans at Pclc &amp; Dewey's Planet.
" sports bar outside the center field
wall of Jacobs Field.
"II seems like the city of Cleveland can't get a break. It's a shame
thai a team that hasn't won in 49
years loses to a team that's 5 years old
-that's what hurts the most :•
Cleveland's 3-21oss in II innings
to the upstart Florida Marlins was
greeted by yelps, moans nod profanity at bai.&lt; across town. Then the
refrain began. "Next year," and "Go
Cavs." meaning the city's National.
Basketball Association team. and
finally, "Browns '99," lhc city's
future replacement football team.
About 400 doehard fans showed
up at the airport early this morning to
greet the team on its return home.

The players waved 10 the crowd a&lt;
they deplaned and manager Mike
Hargrove and several team members
went over to the fence and cxchang~
high-fives with fans.
·
The fans were upbeat despite their
•
disappointment.
""Even though they lost lhey did
wonderful," said Carol Brophy of
Akron .
'"Next year they' re going to he
really good," said Leo Sanche/. of
Lorain. " We have faith io these
~uys."

No Cleveland sports learn ha&lt; won

a major title since the 1964 Browns
won the NFL championship. The
Browns skipped town in 1995 for
Baltimore, where they arc now
known as the Ravens and arc still

witbout a Super Bowl berth.
The Indians Game ?loss, the postmidnight end of the game and a
heavy downpour as it ended com·
bined to keep the after-game hoopla
subdued. Most fans who watched the
game away from home took off
immediately after the game. ' a few
honking their horns downtown. Not
many people were around 10 hear.
Clevclarid rx&gt;licc said this morning
there were no maJt&gt;r problems . Exira
police were ready to take up security positions around Jacobs Field if the
Indians won, but the sidewalks leading around the ballpark were empty
after the game.
The city will gel a chance to honor the Indians with a parade and ral·
ly in downtown Cleveland on Tues. day.

1996 killing ieads to Youngstown-area mob
probe
.
" CLEVELAND (AP) - Ernie
The investigation is wide-ranging,
Biondillo drove along his usual route but one of the primary targets is clear:
to work last summer when he came Leoine " Lenny" Slrollo, a Canfield
upon a car with its hood.s:aiscd.
man who authorities say is a member
The block-long, one-way street of the Pittsburgh La Cosa Nostra
with vacant lots and old houses cast family and the boss of organized
of downtown Youngstown is so nar· crime in the Mahoning Valley, The
row that Biondillo could not maneu· Plain Dealer reported Sunday.
ver his Cadillac around the other car.
Strollo. 66, and his Cleveland
Before he could back up, another car lawyer, Orville Stifel, declined to
hOKed him in from behind.
comment On the investigation, The
Two men weaiing ski masks and Plain Dealer reported. Strollo sug·
carrying shotguns rushed toward gested in an interview with the
Biondillo, spraying his car with nine Youngstown Vindicator in January
or 1'0 rounds of deer slugs and pellets. that he is the victim of a vcndeua by
One of the attackers reache$1 into the an overzealous FBI agent.
car and pulled a ring - wi!h the ini·
Strollo could not be reached by
tials " EB" spelled out in small dia· telephone for comment Sunday. He
moods - from Biondillo's finger.
does not have a listed phone numc~r
The June 3, 1996, killing of in the Youngstown area. A message
Biondillo, owner of a vending · seeking Stifel 's comment was left
machine company, is one of the pri- Sunday with an answering service
mary areas of focus ofthe most inten- that took a call placed to his law
sive investigation of organized crime office.
activities in the Youngstown area in
Biondillo's killers stalked him for
at least IS years.
more than a year before he was killed,

r'

·.

Qccording to an affidavit filed last rounding organi1.cd crime in this city
month by FBI Agent Robcn G. Kro- with a lengthy mob history.
Internal Revenue Service and FBI
ner Jr.
So far, two Youngstown men have agcnls searched Strollo's h9mc in
been charged in Biondillo 's death. . January, seizing financial and gam·
George Wilkins. 24, pleaded guilty to bling records, noppy disks, a stun
a federal charge nf commiiting mur- gun and a slot machine, according to
der to further a racketeering enter- search warrant records filed in U.S.
prise. No sentencing date has been District Coun in Akron .
The FBI last year dispatched sevSCI.
Cleveland Blair, 25, was arrested eral agents from its Cleveland office
on a warrant charging him with the to Youngstown to assist i!' the invcs·
same cl'ime last monlh and was in the ligation and has a~ked its headquar·
custody of federal marshals awaiting ttrs in Washington for roore agents,
indictment.
according to Van Harp, the agent in
Wilkins and Blair did the shooting charge of the FBI in northern Ohio.
while two other men drove the cars.
"There's a substantial opportuni·
according to Kroner's affidavit.
ty to have a definite impact on the
Kroner wrote thai the diamond organized crime problem in .
ring with the initials '-'EB " taken Youngstown and the Maboning Valfrom Biondillo's finger moments ley," H3Jll said.
after he was shot was pawned by
At the same time, the FBI is invcsc
Wilkins earlier this year at a jewelry ligating other unrelated fraud and
store in Pittsburgh.
public-corruption matters, includina
In the lasl nine months, there has a review of the financial dealings of
been a Ourry of public aclivity sur- the Mahonin~ Valley Sanitary Dis·
trict.

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Co!_runentary

Monday, October 27,1997

•

land because we've inverted Jeffer- gQI hold of them.
son's triumvirate of values. HappiThere is no more basic question
ness
trumps
freedom,
which
trumps
than who defines good ll!ld evil. The
WASHINGTON - For those .of
life.
you who think America has gone otT
virtue Republicans say the power
Hence, a "right" to choose out- resides in the people, not Uncle
its nut, take heart: You have compaweighs a child's right to life. In Sam.
ny. No less than four key contenders
some
circles, the mere fact of a disfor the Republican presidential nomThat stand could revive the GOP.
ability justifies abortion in infancy Right now, Americans say they like
ination in 2000 an: talking about
and assisted suicide in adulthood.
Republican policies, but not Repubhow to attack 0\11" moral vertigo.
That's just lfie beginning. Law- lil:ans.
Dan Quayle has hit the hustings,
.
makers
once
had
the
decency
to
be
For all their yakking about 10reminding people he was right about
hypocritical when they spurned ~th­ point contracts. seven-year budgets,
Murphy Brown. John Ashcroft has
ical standards, but today's politicos live-year plans and other convoluted
ousured backers be would taJk about
thumb their noses with defiance and gibberish, the Gingrich Brigades
the way his faith informs his poliglee. Democrats and Republicans almost never talk about people's
tics. And John Kasich has wowed
refuse to admi! embarrassment when actual lives. They fumble around
crowds by bemoaning the collapse
chy."
they get caught raiding the till or with arid abstract language ·- school
of common sense.
That's just what we've done. A selling their fealty for cheap. They choice, tax simplification, entitleBut nob9(1y in the Republican
camp so far h\15 done a better job of generation ago. people routinely left claim clear consciences because ment reform -- thinking listeners
speaking systematically , about the their doors unlocked and windows they broke no law.
give a whoop.
open.
They
let
children
roam
the
importance of old-fashipned values
But of course, laws don't define
While Americans don't fully trust
neighborhood with no restrictions morality. They constrict freedom. Bill Clinton, he has the countrythan Steve Forbes.
Forbes' argument, unveiled in the other than to stay within hearing The essence of the Forbes lecture -- music singer's knack for talking
pages of Policy Review magazine, range of a bell or a mother's voice. delivered at .least three limes lasl about aches and hurts and longings.
goes something like this: Capitalism We borrowed cups of sugar from week in Washington -· is that more We see him cry and conclude that
and democracy are necessary but not people up the street and didn't feel it laws mean less virtue, less trUst, less somewhere inside beats an 'effusive,
sufficient conditions for a free soc•- necessary to check with Interpol happiness, less joy. Significantly, he feeling heart -- as opposed to
ety. You can't sustain freedom before hiring a baby sitter.
notes that our most profound libera- Republicans, who the public imagWhile it has become common 10 tion movemenls -- abolitionism, ines, have only a seething hole
unless people trust each other -- and
folks aren't likely to trust each other depict those bygone limes as an age civil rights and the battles ·against where the ticker should reside.
unless they accept an ordered sys- ' of mnocence, they were an epoch of poverty and isolation -- began in
Forbes, Kas1ch, · Quayle and
wisdom when it came to human churches and fell into disrepute only Ashcroft can play Wizard of Oz for
tem of values.
This country's founders recog- relations. Today, suspicion stalks the when an overassertive government their party by raising subjects we
care about deeply•. such as the need
to recreate the atmosphere of safety
and trust.our parents took for granted. A party of limited government
cannot thrive if it doesn't'link liberty and VIrtue. It can't inspire if it
doesn't believe that the people-- not
the lawyers, officeholders and regulators -- have a sovereign duty to
chart the nation's course.
In any event, the Virtue Republi·
cans are on the verge of perfonning
a magnificent public service. They
. seem destined to steer Campaign
2000 away from the dreary decep- ·
tions and slogans of years past, and
toward something far more exciting
and important: an overdue debate
about what matters.

By TONY SNOW
..tan Syrodlc:itlli

'E..ffllb!Md in 1948
111 Court StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2158 • Fu 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
1

PubtlaiMr
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Ohioan fears job cuts for
National Weather Service
'
By. JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
DAYTON - Defenders of the National Weather Service have spotted
stonn clouds on the horizon, but it has nothing to do with the weather. It has
to do with jobs.
A $41 million budget shortage last year forced the agency to freeze hiring, cut travel ana training, and propose 200 layoffs;including staff cuts at
its severe stonns and hurricane centers.
Following an outcry from past presidents of the American Meteorological Society, about $700,000 was reallocated to allow continued around-theclock operations in warning centers outside Washington.
Commerce Secretary William Daley said Thursday he has pledged costeffective management of the agency ana will direct the weather service to
improve services and reduce costs.
He said that while he will recommed that $20 million be added to the
weather service's 1998 budget, he plans to reduce staff levels at the service's
four regional offices.
•
The point-man for the weather service in the budget debate is. Rick
McCoy, director of-the Van Wert (Ohio) County Emergency Management
Agency and president of the National Emergency Management Council for
Americans United to Maintain the Weather Service.
McCoy has begun a campaign via letters to newspapers and Congress to
protect the 1998 weather service budget.
"One of the issues is the (budget) deficit of this ·country," said McCoy.
"~they look at that, everybody says cut, cut, cut.
We have to correct that problem, but not at the risk of jeopardizing public safety."
When the U.S. agricultural forecasting service was eliminated to save $3
millio11ll year, McCoy said, $300 million worth of orange crops in Florida
froze befause of inadequate wammg.
According to McCoy, budget-cutters see the weather service as pan of an
oversized federal government that needs to be trimmed.
· They say private companies could take over weather-service duties,
But McCoy said private companies would be driven by profit and try to
outdo each other.
"It's not going to be a nationwide group with one comiJion goal," he said.
"'The weather service is interconnected.

Letters to the·editor
Global wsrming is hot ~opic
Dear Editor,
Every time it rains it rains a different temperature, but scientists were
unable to devise a thermom~ter to hold in the rain. They divided the temperature on the sidewalk by the amb•enttemperature and came up with the
temperature of the rain.
Finally, after a hundred years of experimenting, includtng sticking their
to11gues out to catch the rain and d1v1ding their body temperature by the temperature of rained-on tongu~s. they diScovered it would been best for
humanity 1f they watched the meltipg icebergs up north instead of sticking .
out their tongues in the rain. Now, Mother Eanh is geuing very, very warm.
Global warming can be compared to putting icc cubes in the sink and running hot water over them. As they melt, the water goes down the drain and
rushes to the sewer or septic tank. If you happen to be at the other end of the
pipe, such as the people of California are, it would be wise to head for Col·
orado or Pomeroy, as soon as possible.
However, with the price of gasohne and bus tickets, it would be better to
stay where they are and begin a massive Ark program, like Noah did. Scientists will tell you how to build a safe boat using ice cubes and sand. It will
be a federal crime to run refrigerators to make ice cubes as it will deplete the
electricity to light up night spots like Las Vegas and New York City. Instead,
they will wait for El Nino to dump snow on the beach to mix sand with the
snow: to build a boat. S plus S"' B.
.
In December, as the ice boats move )Oland, don't expect people around
here to throw you a rope. They'll be too busy washing acid rain off their cars
and getting a nice tan, just in time for Christmas.

Rocer Reeb,
Raclile

Question to commissioners
Dear Editor,
I would like to ask a question to the commissioners.
They are saying .about how mucll they spend on coffee for the county
home in a nine months period. You count it up, il is only 17 cents a cup.
Where can you go in this town and get a cup of coffee for 17 cents a cup.
Nowhere!
1 think the commissioners should look at the money they spend at the
courthouse. They pay for someone to ·cl~an at the courthouse and they play
cards. Yes, the courthouse gets clean because they have welfare workers
there to do it for them. Don't you think that is a luxury for them?
So 1 think they should leave the county home alone. Sharon Johnson is
·
'b"-'
?
domg her JO - uun t you·
-

"

Deadline for publication
of .election letters Oct. 28
The Sunday Times-Sentin~l welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 4 general elect1on. However, in the interest of fairness, no election letters will be
atcepted after IZ noon on Tuesday, Oct. 28.
..
1
Individuals should address 1ssues and not personahlles.
·
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not he used.
Leners must be 300 words and preferably typed. All letters are subject to
editing and and must be signed wi~ name. addre~s and telepbo~e n'l'"ber.
Telephone numbers will not be pubhshed. No uns•gned letters Will be published. Letters should be in good taSte.

Delores M. Aeiker

MICH .

Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness

Patty Laudennllt,
Pomeroy

Meigs EMS logs

Monday, October 27. 11117

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Menagtr

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

OHIO Weather

'Page2

•

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

nized three primal values in the
Declaration of
Independence,
and they ranked
them proper Iy:
Life, liberty and
the pursuit of
happiness.
Writes
Forbes: "Switch
the order of these
three fundamental human rights -putting happiness before liberty, or
libeny before life --and you end up
with moral chaos and social anar-

•I Columbus !58• I

'

W.VA.

Oblo
Today...Cloudy and windy. Patchy
drizzle or flurries this morning. A
chance of rain or snow showers
northwest and central 'this afternoon
with snow sbowen; developing nonheast ohio. Little snow accumulation
except I to 2 inches extreme northeast ohio. Temperatures steady from
the mid 30s to lower 40s.
Tonight ... Snow showers likely
extreme northeast mainly early. Otherwise clearing. Lows in the mid~Os

Search dropped for
i)lane found safe in Ohio

The trouble with role models
a

!)ave respected
since ·his college days -did considerable damage to
Mr. Young's
integnty
("The Young
and the Feckless").
Among
Hentoff
many carefully
detail~d om issions and distortions in the Young
report is the highly embarrassing
fact that Young, in talking to Vietnamcse workers, used Nikc translators. As Stephen Glass notes, Garry
Trudeau -- in his w1dely syndicated
strip, "Doonesbury" -- presented a
Nike ·translator rendering "the
(Asian) workers' pleas of mistreatment into joyous reports of labor
paradise."
Lest th1s growing disrespect for
Nike become a groundswell, a Nike
spokesman visited the New York
neighborhood center where lhe local
sneaker protest among kids began
The public-relations professional
declared, "Nobody has done more
than Nike m terms of leadership.:'
He said this without benefit of translation.
The kids were not impressed. It
might be truly educational for
Andrew Young to visit so~ of these
youth centers. The kids might ask
him why in his report he did not look

BRAGG, W.Va. (AP)- The Civ- of heavy fog, but when he clll\e close
il Air Patrol called off a search Sun- to the interstate he realized he was too
day through dense forest in Raleigh low and started climbing again, 5aid
County for a single-engine plane after state police Sgt. ·J.T. Morrison in
aviation officials confirmed that it Beckley.
- -The _pilot, whose name was not
had landed safely in Ohio.
Witnesses had reported seeing the released, radioed Charleston's Yeager
aircraft go down oft' Interstate 64 at Airport. and air traffic controllers
the Bragg exit Saturday evening, and there helped guide him to Gallipolis,
nearly 100 people searched for the Morrison said.
Thick fog kept planes from taking
plane overnight and Sunday morning.
· The pilot, traveling from Blacks- off or landing at several West Virginia
. burg, Va., to Gallipolis, Ohio, had airports Saturday.
IIJlparently reduced altitude because

letes like Mr. J~rdan ~must be.Part o,f
the dialogue and be made aware of
the conduct' of their sponsors.
Young and Jordan, however, arc
role models for the free marketplace.
Nikc, meanwhile, is issuing further glossy reports about the Asian
factories.
On Oct. 16, the company released
preliminary studies by an MBA student team from Dartmouth's Tuck
School of Business. Michael Jordan
will be glad to know that "Nike contract factory workers can meet basic
needs and, in addition, have income
for discretionary spending or, ;n
some cases, savings."
This Dartmouth study was commissioned by -- surprise! -- Nike.
Meanwhile, the Hong Kong
Christian Industrial Committee and
the Asia Monitor Resource Centei
have released quite another report -this one on Chmese factories producing Nike goods:
"Factories consistently violate
minimum-wage laws; workers who
become pregnant are often fired in
violation of China's labor law granting.workers maternity leave."
Also, "gloves arc not given to all
workers -- seven of whom have lost
their fingers." ·
So much for 1heir hoop dreams.
, Nat Hentoll' Is a 11atlonally
renowtied authority on the ,First
Amendment and the rest ol the
BUI of Rights.

Meigs announcements
Bean dinner slated
The annual Meigs County Republican bean dinner will be held Tuesday, Oct. 28, at the Senior Citizens
Center, Pomeroy, beginning at 6
p.m. Donations will be accepted.

~yracuse

By Dlen Vujovlcll
Hindsight is a wild thing. Look
back at the October 1987 stock market crash, and you'll see just bow
much equity investing via mutual
funds has changed.
Ten years ago, investors thought
that there were plenty of choices to
make in the mutual f d
a
.
un arcn .
Along with the ever-conservative,
ever-popular money market mutual
funds came a host of stock funds
allowing investors to pick and
choose the type of fund they'd like
to invest in. AI that time, most equity money found its way into growth
and income funds, although the fund
category with the largest number of
funds to invest into was the growth
fund category. ·
By the end of September 1987,
total net assets in all types of equity
funds totaled more than $"445 billion .. Those assets were spread
among 1,345 fuqds in 21 investment
categorie~ . according to Lipper Analytical Services. Today, not only
have total assets in equity mutual
funds grown, but investors have
thousands of more funds to pjck
from, along with a mucit wider range
of investment categories to choose
from .

•

Lipper reports that at the end of
the third quaner of 1997, there were
5,433 equity funds -- more than four
times the number there had been fn
1987. And the number of fut¥1 types
had swollen to 37. This year, the category with the most assets and the
largest number of funds has been the
growth fund category. In fact, total
net assets in·the growth fund category alone is roughly $521 billion.
That's $86 bi II ion more •han the
total net assets in all of the I,345
equity funds in 1987.
Look at the number of households investing in equities then and
now, and you'll see a substantial
surge there, too. The percentage of
stocks held directly, through mutual
funds, defined-contribution plans,
and bank personal trusts and estates
was 19.4 percent in 1987, according
to the Investment Company Insti·
lute. At the end of last year, it was
over 31 percent. While that is a big
jump, recent historical figures show
that.equity ownership has been both
higher and lower. In 1968, for example, almost 34 ,percent of households
owned equities. In 1982, 12.8 per·
cent of them did.
While the last decade has been a
booming one for funds, dial back 20-

·-------~-----

some years and you'll see a diff~nt
picture. The ICI reports·that redemptions of mutual funds occurred in
almost every month between 1971
and 1982. Fueling those redemptions was an extended bear market in·
1973-74 when tne Dow Jones IndusIna! Average fell 42 percent.
So, what does all of this history
mean to today"s fund -investors?
"The industry is larger, faster,
more competitive and more important to people today than it was 10
years ago," says A. Michael Lipper,
president of the mutual fund
research firm bearing his name.
"The privatization of retirement,
combined with the changing demographics means that funds play a
bigger role in more families."
Because there are many more
mom-and-pop investors around
today than there were I 0 years ago,
any market correction -- be it a technical one as was the case in October
1987 or a fOndamental one -- moans
more households would feel tts
sting.
Sting or no sting, today's investor
seems little-t~reatened by the
thought of a stock market crash. Part
of the reason for that thinking is
because the crash in '87 lasted such

. ... -- ,

The Daily Sentinel

•

Pwhh*d tvcry lflc:rnoon, Mun1J1y tht'&lt;IUJh
Fmlay, Ill Court St . Pomeroy, Oh1o, tly the

a short tim~,/ within days of tha;
crash, pri&lt;;e,s started to ehmb again,
and long.!(erm fund shareholders
were handsomely rewarded for
hanging in there.
·
Looking ahead, the crystal ball is
blank, as usual. But the~e are
changes in this market's environment worth noting. Leverage is one
of them.
"There is far less leverage in
equities," says Lipper. "Where the
leverage is today is in currencies and
government bonds and mortgages." ·
The importance of leverage, he·
said, is that if markets aren't working in your favor, you could be
forced to sell securities to pay back
debts. And forced sales drive prices .
lower. The good news is, he doesn't '
see leverage as a problem in domes- .
tic equities today.
Sure hope be's right.
Dian Vujovlch Is the author ol
"Strai1ht Talk About Motual
Funda" and "Sinl&amp;ht Talk About
Invnt1n1 for Your Retirement,"
both of wlllch are published by
McGnw Hll. Send queationl to
her In care ol this newap~~per, or
via e-maU at MlsMutualaoL\!om.

•

McCoy 11, Racine, $50, speed; Donald R. Lipscomb, Charleston, W.Va.,
$53, speed; Gerald F. Gay, Independence, Ky.. $S I, speed; Paul D. Conrath, The Plains, $53, speed; Douglas
Hobson, Springfield, $52, speed;
Jason R. Dow. Middlepon, costs
only, speed; Angela A. Richards,
Racine, $50. speed.
.
Fined in court were: Jack Peterson, Syracuse, costs only, speed;
Beverly Wood, Middleport, $52.
speed plus SIS reinstatement fcc for
license suspensiOn.
·

tUSP!Illl-901)
ot.io Valley Pul'tlltbintt c~mrany!Oanneu ('n,
Pomerov. OhiO 4~769, Ph 992-21~6. Second
clau
p;ud al Pnm.:tny, OhiP.

.,OS.••

M. . ber: ~ IU"'ICIIh~d Prc~!i, ouW ltk: U .. iu

New.paprt 1\!!loOC•~• inn

POS'J'MASTER: Send Olddrcn t.'tMI'eCtl11n~

The Dally Senllncl, I II ('outl St , t"nmcJuy,
Oh~t~ 4.'&lt;7fa9
SVISCRIPilON RAT&amp;'
By C1rrltr or Motor Rot~ It

~

Orw \Y«k,.

........ ...

. $:! .1•1

On.: M('fllh.. .................. ......
0~

. ...

. $H 741

Year..... ............... .......... ... . . SJU41•1

SINGLE COI'Y PRin

Dally ................................................... )!i r~nl~

S*"'iben nn~airinJ to PlY th1 'arrier m11y
re111i1 in tdvanc:t diru1 to Tltt Daily Sentinel
on 11hrec. 1i11 or 12 ntnnlh haMs. Credil will~
liven canitr each wHt.
No aub1Cfip410n by ntail pc:rmiued •n arus
· - ~tome earner ttnolcc II available
Pvbli*r teMMS llw riJIII to IC81tlt 111\el dur·
period. s.blcrlpUon rtte
ch•a,c• nta)l be lrnplenteftted by cllanallll lilt
duratiolt of ltle ....._,'Pt'-·

ill liM! sub5cnptioft

MAILSUIISCIUmONS

,_ ......

~

.. '

U .,.... ................................................Jl7.JO
24\ Wto!ol ...............................................S,!l.Hl
l l -...............................................Sit~-'6

--MotpC-1)'

tJ W..b ............................................... Sl9.15
l6 W..b.......................................... Sl&lt;\.1111

l l -............................................. $109.72

.

.... .

...

.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ......................• 7"1.
AkJo ......................................1:127.4.
AmrTec:h·...............................66'1.

Ashland 011 ...........................47'M'

In

•I

I

WDdwood.Garoen Club
· The Wildwood Garden Club will
meet Wednesday, I p.m. at the
Racine Library. Denise Arnold of
Fragrant Fields will be the guest
speaker.

court cases settled

The following cases were resolved
in the Syracuse Court of Mayor
George Connolly for October.
Forfeiting bonds were: David R.
Riggs, Pomeroy, $51, speed; Brian R.
Thacker, Sissonville, W.Va., $57,
speed; Kelly C. Winebrenner, Racine,
$52, speed; Pamela K. Hiles, Grove
City, $50, speed; Val S. Long, Prpe(orville, $54, speed; Mary Diamond,
Cheshire, SSS. speed; Barry W.

·Investing has ·changed
since '87 crash
.
.

Edward Wroten, Jr.

Today's live~ock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct bog prices at selected
buying points Monday as provided
by the U.S. Depanment of Agricullure Market News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to 50
cents lower; demand moderate with
a moderate movement.
U.S. 1-2, 230-21i0 lbs. country ·
points 44.00-45.50, few 43.50, 46;

... . .

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service re.;orded 12
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday. Units responding included:
.CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:08 a.in. Saturday, Baum Addition, Tuppers Plains. Mauretta Miller,
Veterans Memorial Hospital, Tuppers
Plains ,squad assisted;
5:43 a.m. Saturday, Middleport
Police Department, Thomas Stewart,
VMH; ·
II: 16 a.m. Sunday, Owl Hollow
Road, Long Bottoin, William Watson,
VMH;
2:04 p.m. Sunday, Wickham
Road, Pomeroy, Debbi Cundiff,
O'Bleness Memonal Hospital.
MIDDLEPORT
12:01 a.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department assisted Gallipolis VPD,
s_tructure fire at Gallia Hotel, Gal· hpohs;
5:42 p.m. Sunday, Mill Street,

Paula A. Fetty Wroten, 28, of Point Pleasan, W.Va., died Saturday, Octoher 25, 1997, ns a result of an automobile accident in Apple Grove, W. va ..
Born Aprill5, 196',1 in ~oint Pleasant, she was a daughter of Charlie and
Shirley Fetty of Point Pleasant. She was a cashier at Paul's E~xon, Point
Pleasant, and member of the Loyal Order of the, Moose 731, Point Pleasant.
She was preceded in death by a son, Edward "Eddie" Wroten Jr.; two
grandfathers; and a niece, Tylor Jo Fetty.
·
Survivors, in addition to her parents, include her husband, Edward M.
Wroten Sr. of Point Pleasant; maternal grandparents, Joel and Jenny Scou
of Poca. W. Va; paternal grandmother, Edna Fetty of Point Pleasant; brothers and sisters-in-law, Andy and Bev Fetty of Ohio, Brian and Missy Fetty'
to lower 30s.
of Letart, W. Va., and Brent and Cyantha Fetty of Point Pleasant.
Tuesday... Mostly sunny south.
Service will be Wednesday, October 29, at I :30 p.m. in Deal and Brown
Sunshine followed by increasing . Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, with Rev. Even:tt Black officiating. Burial
clouds north. Highs lower to mid 50s. will follow in Union Cemetery, New Haven.
.
Extended forecast
Friends may call at the funeral home Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
Wednesday...A chance qf showers.
Lows 35 to 40 and highs 50 to 55.
Thursday... Fair. Lows in the 30s
and highs in the upper.40s northeast
Edward ·:Eddie" Wroten Jr., 12, of Point Pleasant, W. Va.,died Saturand 50 to 55 elsewhere.
day, October 25, 1997 in an automobile accident in Apple Grove, W. Va.
Friday... Fair. Lows 35 to 40. Highs
Born May 4, 1985 in Point Pleasant, he was a son of Eddie M. Wroten
in the 50s.
Sr. and the late Paula A. (Fetty) Wroten. He was a seventh gra4er at Point
Pleasant Middle School, a member of the Point Pleasant Pirates football
team, the Bomber Jividen Baseball League, when: he n:ceived top honors .
for the most homeruns in 1997.
·
Surviving, in addition to his father, arc maternal grandparents, Charles
and Shirley Fetty of Point Pleasant; paternal grandparents, Dewey and Velplan~ 44.75-46.50.
ma Wroten of Galli(iolis Ferry; several aunts and uncles; and a host of
U.S. 2-3, 230-21i0 lbs. 42.00- friends.
.
44.50; 210-23Q.Ibs. 38.00-42.00.
Service will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, October 29, at Deal and Brown
Sows: steady·to I lower.
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, with Rev. Everett Black" officiating. Burial
U.S. 1-3 300-400 lbs. 33.00- wil) follow at Union Cemetery, New Haven, W. Va.
.
'
35.00; 400-500 lbs. 34.00-36.00; · · Friends mey call at the funeral home Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
500-600 lbs. 36.00-40.00.
Boars: 32.00-33".00, few 34.00.
Estimated receipts: 32,000..

Today's weather forecast

Calif. 90045.

By Nit Henioff
In New York recently, a coalition
of young people from II settlement
houses let it be known that they
would discard their old Nike sneakers at Fifth Avenue shoe store The Sultanate of Swoosh.
As David Gonzalez reported in
the New York Times, "they are part
of a growing movement that has
criticized Nike for failing to pay
workers in (\sian factories a living
wage-- about $3 a day in Indonesia,
for example -- while charging stylesetting urban teen-agers upward of
$100 for the shoes."
As one of the protesters, Dulani
Hiake, explained: "Nike goes to.different countries so people can work
for cheiiJl."
Meanwhile, Andrew Young, a
hero of the civil rights movement
and former ambassador to the United Nations, has completed a report- comm~sioned by Nike -- that does
say there is room for illlprovement
in the working conditions at factories manufacturing N1ke footwear.
But his overall findings are so positive that Nike has celebrated the
result of Andrew Young's Asian
journey in newspaper ads.
When I called a publicity manager for Nike, she said, "Why, who
-could possibly question Andrew ·
Young's integrity?"
In the Sept. 8 and Sept. ·15 issues
Of The New Republic, Stephen
Glass -- a journalist whose work 1

Paula A. Fetty Wroten

~

Write Tony Snow, Creators
Syndicate, 5777 West Century
Blvd., Solte 700, Los Angeles, .

into whether Nike pays its workers
their own country's minimum wage.
Not many youngsters may know
of Andrew Young's previous civil
rights record, but Michael Jordan is
a superhero to kids ,throughout the
nation.
· ·
After 13 years as a very effective
salesman for Nike sneakers, Jordan
has been elevated at the firm. There
is a new Nike sub brand, the Jordan
brand, for which kids will be savmg
their $20 bills. For his new division:
Jordan hils recruited other professional basketball stars who, Nike
says, represent his "'core basketball
values."
In the Sept. 9 USA Today, Jordan
was asked what he thinks ;_as a new
·corporate executive -- of the growing attacks on Nike because of the
working conditions in its Asian factories. Jordan said:
"'I would certainly investigate it,
then deal with what the problems
are.
Right now, they're not doing anything 1mproper or illegal." Could the
White House's Lanny Davis be
moonlighting as a counselor to
Michael Jordan?
Last year, Je~sc Jackson, a colleague of Andrew Young in the Martin Luther King days, spoke during a
Tokyo press conference about the
cthi~al rcsponsibi lities qf being a
role model for America's younJ!.
As reported in the Journal of
Commerce, "Mr. Jackson said ath-

Delores M. Aeiker, 74, 1669 Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, died Saturday,
Oct. 25, 1997, at her n:sidenc:e.
A homemak.er, $he was born Oct. 8, 1923, in Point Pleasan~ W.Va., daughter of the late·John W. and Beulah Huddleston Neville.
She was preceded in death by three sons, John E. Aeiker Sr. of Syracuse,
Keith G. Aeiker Jr. of Chester and Lorraine P. Aeiker of Pomeroy; "daughter, Keitha A. Whitlatch of Chester; 19 grandchildren; 27 great-grandchildren; a brother, David Neville of Pl)oenix, Ariz.; a grandmother, Leona K.
Roach of Pomeroy; several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, KeithAeiker Sr.; a son; infant
daughter; seven brothers and one sister.
Services will be held Tuesday, I p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with the Rev. Sharon Hausman offiCiating. Bwial will fpllow in Meigs Memory Gardens, Pomeroy.
Fncnds may call today, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

12 ·weekend -calls

AT&amp;T ....................................49"i'o
Bank One.............................51 "!..
Bob Evens ............................ 17'1.
Borg-Werner ......................... 5&amp;~
Chemplon ...... :...................... 18~.
Ctwrm Shp1 ...........................5'1.
City Holdlng .......................... 400.
Federal Mogul .................·......44'.i
Gannett ................................53"1.
7

Goodyeer .............................84 1.
Kmert.~ .••.....•......••.•••.•.••••.....12~

Lllnda End ...........................31 ''1.
Umlted ....................,............. 23~
Oek Hill Flnl ............................20

ova .........................................37

OM Valley .............." ...........37'1.
PeopiH ................... ,.............44'J.
Prem Flni ........ -....... ~ .............24'Rockwell ...............................52\
RDISMU .....................:.........51 'Shontly'a ................................,41
Ster Bank ................................50
Wenctv'• ................................ 21~
Worthlngton.......................... 20~

-·-·-•r•

Stock reports
the 10:30
a.m. quot" proYided by Adveat
of Galllpolla.

Anhur Tackett, VMH .
POMEROY
..
I0:51 a.m. Saturday, East Main
Street, William Ea"kins, Holzer Medical Center. Central Dispatch squad
assisted.
'
RUTLAND
5:54 a.m. Saturday, Bailey Run :
Road, Mary Roush, VMH. Central :
Dispatch squad assisted;
•
4:06p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire '
department and squad to state Route
143. motor-v.ehicle accident, Jason
Young, Jenny Young and Christine :
Hedgepath, VMH, Central D;spatch ;
squad and Scipio Township VFD :
assisted;
,
5:33 p.m. Saturday, state Route ,
124, Steven Lane, VMH;
;
8:55 p.m. Sunday, Hill Street, ;
Marcia Dennison, HMC;
5:32p.m. Sunday, Meigs Mine 31,
· Ray Armentrout, HMC.

No one injured in accident
•

•

No injuries were reported following a two-vehicle accident on Third
Street, Syracuse, around 3:10 p.m.,
Friday.
Howard L. Writesel, Racine, was
eastbound on Th1rd Street when
Clifton T. Sisson, Syracuse, pulled
from College Road, striking the left
side of Writesel's 1986 Chrysler,

causmg moderate damage to Writesci's car and Sisson's 1990 Ford ,
truck, according to a Syracuse Police '
Department report.
Sisson was c1ted for failure to
yield. The Syracuse squad of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service respon~ed to the scene with
both parties refusing treatment.

~~iowning jewel/'..c::tinued from page t

Present with Kronenberger Saturday were his wife, Susan; his son,
John; his · sister, Nancy Neill; and
Theron and Mary Lou Johnson of
Letart Falls.
Ohio Lt. Governor Nancy Hollister of • Marietta observed that
Pomeroy "has truly broken in this
amphitheater" with the visit of the
Delta Queen earlier this year.
She recognized the "sweat equity"
of tbose who have worked with the
downtown revitalization project and
who failed to quit after initial grant
attempts failed.
"You make a very powerful statement about who you are," she said.
· "You have a great uniqueness,"
.
.
.
she sai4. ,"When I thmk about
Holzer Medical Center
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Thomas, son, Pomeroy, 1 think about 'Downtown
on the River'."
Friday, OcL 24 diseharaes:
Point Pleasant.
She also recognize(! the gift the
Violet Baird, Darrell Knapp, JohnSanday, O.t. 26 discharaes:
village
received from Knlnenberger.
nie Dyer, Robert Di8Jilllnd, KimberMrs. John Card and daughter; Earl
"You honor your heritage," she
ly Staats, Charles Withee, Mary Ewing, James Hatten, Jo Cardwell,
said
to Mr. Kronenberger.
Owens, Donald Mink, Mrs., David Geneva Haskins, Connie Jolley, Hope
John
Musser, Pomeroy Village
Arbogast and daughter; Debra Roush, Osborne. Mrs. William Gibson and
Council
p.,.ideJit,
rehashed the hisJohn Stobart, and Pamella Ellison.
daughter; Mrs. Neal Watts and son:
tory
of
the
downtown
revitalization
and Frances Grady.
.
Friday, O.:L 24 blrdla:
project which· has seen the involveMr. and Mrs. John Card. daughter, Veterans Memorial
ment
of three mayors: Bruce Reed,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Michael
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Joh11,
Blaettnar
and Vaughan.
Maurita Miller/ Pomeroy, and
Myers, daughter, Gallipolis.
He
said
the
project
began in June,
Frances McKenzie, Racine.
Saturday, O.:L :ZS dischai'JCII:
1991,
with
a
series
of
public
meetings
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Mr. and Mrs. Michael Myers and
and the interviewing of consultants
daughter; Cindy Prater.
None.
the following month. In March, 1992,
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Saturday, O.:L 25 births:
SBA
Consulting of Jackson was
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bosco, None.hired
to
oversee the project.
daughter, Point Pleasant; Mr. and
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
In February, 1993, the first grant
Mrs. Mark McBenge, son, Rutland; Maurita Milk:r and Robert Mahr.
applicatiOn for the project was subCoadnued from page 1
mitted and rejected that April, he sa1d.
It was in early 1993 that Musser
"We will not be selling (reactors) were found by u.s. intelligence 10 he first met Donald Kronenberger who
later that year sent the v1llage a letuntil we feel that we have clear and broken.
"One
has
to
be
very
nervous
about
ter
of commitment for $100,000 on
unequivocal assurances" from the
Chinese on the nuclear proliferation whether we know every!fling that t~ the amphitheater proJect.
With that letter in the grant packissue, Albright said on NBC's "Meet Chinese are actually doing and will
be
doing,"
said
Paul
Leventhal,
preset,
the project was awarded several
the Press."
ident
of
the
private
Nuclear
Control
gnints
including: $357,200 from the
Sixteen 16 senators, many from
Institute.
Ohio
Department
of Development for
states that would significantly 'henefacade
and
business
renovation to be
U.S. officials insist that the presfit economically from sales to China,
urged Clinton last week to issue the sure from the U.S. nuclear industry matched to the tune of $~57,200 by
certification. In a leu~r. they argued - as well as a desire 10 cut into part1e1patmg busmcsses. $70,000
it is in America's best interest to pro- America's huge trade deficit with the . . fr~m an Appala,chwn Rcg1onal Comvide China with the safest civilian Chinese _ is not guiding the dis- ·m•sston gra~t for the grand promenuclear technology and that nuclear cussions on certification, which they nade proJcW:ct, $103,750 frvom Federal
po\l'er would help China deal with say must focus on natwnal security. Land and . , atcr Co~ser at1on .Fund
"Our objective is trying 10 get for a nvers•de amphitheater w1th an
global wanning concerns.
greater
control overtheircoopcration additional $5,000 from ,Big Bend
As much as three-fourths of Ch1with
other
countncs that are devel- Stemwheel Committee for·clectncal
na's electriciiy need - which is
,
expected to double over the next 15 oping nuclear weapons,·· said Sandy upgrades.
Berger.
Clinton's
natwnal
security
Total
grant
funds
amounted
to
to 20 years- likely will come from
.
$530,950 with $362,200 commg
coal plants that, unlike nuclear plants, adviser.
Industry
lobby
ng
for
an
agreefrom.
ot~e~ sources. The total of all
1
emit large amounts of heat-trapping
mcnt.:... and to thwan possible con- fun.?s rcce"•:cd ~as $893,1 ~0
"greenhouse" gases.
gressional
intervention - has been
. ~~erythmg IS ~.,d for, ~usscr
While Congress is unlikely to
intense.
sa1d.
We o.we nothmg and were not
overturn a certification, opposition
Reactor
manufacturers
Westinggoing
to borrow anything." .
remains, especially among some lawmakers who say they simply do not house. General· Electric and ABB . Work started on the pi'OJCCI m July,
trust the Chinese to keep their word. Inc., teamed up w1th construction 1995, a~d "it has been a tremendous
"'China's nuclear proliferation companies such as Stone &amp; Webster proJect, he sa1d.
. Musser made numerous recogn•record is on trial," said Rep. Ben- and Bechtcl 1n the effort .
ABB
's
Newman
has
made
more
lions
and also commended Pomeroy
jamin Gilman, R-N.Y., chairman of
the House International Relations than 20 trips to China and has met Village Council wh~eh "voted·~'!-'' on
Committee. · While not totally with both Jiang and America's top cverythmg I have suggested and
Clerkffrcasurcr Kathy Hysell for
"P£0~d to .Civilian reactor sales to negotiators on the certification issue.
These
compames
and
smaller
subhandhng the money.
China, he wants them to 1iC used as
leverage to get Beijing to stop deal- contractors have peppered Congress
ing with countries like Iran. "We with letters saying business with
should make the most of it," Gilman China could mean 25,000 jobs in 13
states.
said.
Westinghouse chairman Michael
Nuclear proliferation watchdog
Jordan
is a key member of the Presgroups urge caution, noting China's
ident's
E~port Council.
record of past anurances that later

H.O:Spit_al :. news

u. S. l•ndustry..••

X Vote For &amp; Re·Eiect

ED DUll'
FOR

Salisnr, rownsJaip •Trustee
1'BANJCfOin

Paid lor by ..ndlclall: Ed Dutil, 313411- -rnttllcl., "•IIJ!opor:, OH 41780

·

nenberger -ol Marietta, Ga.,
shown here speaking during
Saturday ceremony dedicating .

~:phi~h0e~:;~Y RI~~~~:J

'

$100,000 toward the project as ·
a lasting memorial to his par- . ·
ants, the late Donald and Naomi Johnson Kronenberger.
The late Mrs. Kronenberger
waa a Meigs County native.
Musser also noted that none of the
impro..mcntJ in the dowlllown area
would have been possible without
Kronenberger's donation.
· "Th1s is fact, not speculation," he
saul. "He 1s the true hero of.thts pro-·
ject."
Also making brief comment&lt; were ·
Chff Eckstrand of the Ohio Depart-.
ment of Development, prOJCCI consuitant Mike Stroth and Meigs County Economic Development .director
Ron McDade.
Stroth referred to the amphitheater
as the "crowning jewel" of the downtown rev1talizat10n project while
McDade commended the "pioneers"
of Meigs County who are trying to
open the door for ceonomic development.
"There are a lot of things going for
us," McDade sa1d. "Meigs County is
looking up."
Rev. Roland Wildman of the Trinity Church, Pomeroy, gave the invocation and bencdicuon with Pomeroy
Mayor Frank Vaughan welcoming
those in attendance.
"What a joy to _be in a community where thmgs arc really happening," he said.
"This is a great thing, not just for
Pomeroy but for the whole Ohio Val·
Icy region." he added. "God has
blessed America."
Chamber of Commerce President
Sue Maison sang "America" and
"God Bless America".
•

*******•**'**"
*·
* Elect * ,
A.
***
***·
*:
*
************.
W. VIRGINIA
On November 4th

: JOHN

RANKIN: '

Orange Twp. TrustH
The one who will make a
&lt;lifference on Orang• Twp .
Roads.
P&lt;l"" b)'u Cllndklale 42192 Sl. Rt. 7,*
Tuppern Plains, OniO ~783

COUNTY MAPS

IN .STATE BOOK
A -

-lalalq .U of W..t

Vqiaia'o 66 _.., mopo ia avail~~* •
-...... _ ... _
lSdl
IDch doublo ..
....... ;
, . .... _
_p.
Tbl book caeub• 144 pepa.
Tbo ....... 14.141 ...... of .......... Ill &lt;Wall. Tono, dtl.o aad
Yi11opt .,. I ' M ud looatMI, aad
thonillllllldi oUah
To
W..t VJrprla Couaty W.., booll,
IIIDII SIUS (prioo -....,. cloll••J~
VISA ud Ma-.&lt;:ord a&lt;aptod.
MU. . - , paJablolo

,..,.._lloll.

~c

'!'i:.a

~Siolloii,WIDN4

(ai)Mt:Wt

Olhor-"' 'aHe:.U.I'l.IN.
Jt:Y, Ml, NC, 011, M. SC, TN, Wl

�Sports

The Dally Sentinel

•

·

World Series ends in seven games

·

Peae4

~-2

,
MIAMI (AP) - · This is what
baseball is all about
Coming oh so close and falling oh
so far.
The exuberance of youth fulfilling
dreams.
A curse seemingly dooming one
of baseball's oldest team~ to unending failure.
.
It was one of the great ones Sunday. a seventh game of the World
Series going to extra innings for only
the founh time. And in the end, eight
months after the season's stan, baseball had i~ youngest champion, a
Cuban defector · who relish.ed in
rewards and reunion all at once, and
a team that just couldn't believe what
slipped through its hands.
"I guess every lillie boy imagines
this might happen atone time. It's a
total fantasy for me," Marlins manager Jim Leyland said after Florida's
incredible 3-2. 11-inning victory over
Cleveland.
'
A fantasy for one team was a
nightmare for another.·
Two more outs. That was all
Cleveland needed in the ninth inning
to wrap up its first World Series title
since 1948.
But singles by Moises Alou and
Charles Johnson, and Craig Counsell's sacrifice fly tied the score
against Jose Mesa in the ninth. And
Tony Fernandez's error in the lith set
up a Edgar Renteria's game-winning
hit off Charles Nagy.
In just their fifth season,the Mar·

lins had won it all, the fastest title
ever for any franchise in the majors.
The $89 million they spent on me
agents last winter showed money can
buy success in baseball these days.
"I'm very disappointed that we
lost I can't d~scribe how disappointed," Indians manager Mike Hargrove said on his unhappy 48th
binhday. "I don't really know what
to tell the team, other than they
played hard all year long."
Only once had bpeball's season
been stretched this far, in 1924,
when the Washington Senators beat
the New York Giants in the 12th
inning of Game 7. The tension in
extra innings was immeasurable.
Players knew even.the tiniest mistake
could blow it apart - just look at the
way Cleveland right fielder Manny
Ramirez nearly let Alou's two-out,
two-on fly in the lOth pop out of his
glove.
1 was too nervous to watch,"
Florida first baseman Jeff Conine
said. "I don't think you can find a
better finish than that."
The World Series'had been bashed
for 10 days: The Marlins were a wildcard team than finished nine games
out of first; the Indians, at86-75, had
just the founh-best record in the
American League; neither team could
manage a well-pitched game; television ratings were at an all-time low.
Well, all of that' was true. Yet none
of it mattered Sunday night.
Players and fans spend their entire
lives hoping for night like this. Most
•

'

4

never make it.
"We haven't given up all year,"
Leyland Sdid, "and tonight .wasn't a
night to sive up."
Fernandez had the biggest turnaround of all. His two-run single off
AI Leiter had put Cleveland ahead in
the third. Jim Thome walked, Marquis Grissom singled and Jaret
Wright moved the runners over.
For most of the night, it appeared
Wright would become the first rookie to win Game 7 since Babe Adams
led Pittsburgh over Detroit 8-0 with
a six-hitter in 1909.
He ,.gave up two hiis in 6 1/3
innings. One of them turned out to be
critical - a leadoff homer by Bobby Bonilla in the seventh. Because of
what happened in the ninth, none of
what Wright did mattered.
"My performance is separate,"
Wright said. "It's a team. We go out
there together. Nc.t year. there'll be
a fire to go out there and celebrate
like the Marlins did tonight. All you
can do now is wail."
Hargrove, like he has. through the
postseason, used a bunch of pitchers
to get to the ninth, trying to get to
Mesa with a· lead. Paul Assenmacher, Mike Jackson and Brian Anderson
followed Wright with scoreless relief.
For Cleveland, it all came down to
whether Mesa could hold the lead for
three tina I outs. Finally, the curse 'of
Colavito would end, the one that supposedly began with Rocky's 1960
trade to Milwaukee.
In 1995, Mesa converted 46 of 48
save chances -a record. This year.

he began the season in a counroom
Bonilla singled to center, Gregg
facing rape charges, was acquitted, Zaun popped up i bunt and Counsell
then ~tumbled and wouncl up with hit a grounder to the right side that
only 21 saves in 26 tries.
rolled past Fernandez at second.
He already had wasted two in six
"It was a play I should have
chances this October. This is the one made," Fernandez said. "It wasn't
that will be remembered. As Mitch going to be a.DP. All I wanted to do
Williams found out after a disaster- was get the lead runner. !'gambled. I
ous Series in 1993, when closers fail tried somethin1 I shouldn't have by
in Octo~r. they may never bounce chatging. It was my dCI1ision, my
back.
, fault." ·
Jim Eisenreich was intentionally
Alou, his first batter, singled up
the iniddle. He struck out Bonilla, but walked, Devon White hit a bouncer
Johnson singled to right. Counsell's and Fernandez threw out Bonilla at
fly to· right was deep enough that the plate.
Maybe, perhaps, this would keep
Ramirez had n&lt;l chance.
All of a sudden, Jhe play in the top on going all night, like the games litof the inning when Renteria threw tle kids dream about in so many
,.
·
out Sapdy Alomar at the plate on an parks.
infield grounder was all-important.
Then came Renteria's hit up the
"This has been a crazy year for us middle.
... an adventure year," Alomar said.
Florida exulted!
Cleveland,didn 't get a runner past
Cleveland'/ The most crushing
first in the lOth or lith off Rob Nen loss of all.
or Jay Powell. Florida's two-on threat
"This," the 22-yeur-old Renteria
in the IOth was snuffed when Nagy said, "is the greatest thing in life."
threw a third strike past John CanNot so. Only Livan Hernandez
really could say the night was better
gelosi, then got Alou to fly out.
Both teams and their fans will than any other.
Before the game, he saw his
replay the lith for a long time,

..J

mother for the first time in. 111ore than
two years. He had defected from
Cuba to play in the majors, and he
became the MVP of the NL championship series. Now. with Florida's
victory, the 21-yw-old was MVP of
the World Series, 100, getting twb of
the Marlins' four·wins.
"My mother's here and we're
champions," Hernandez said. "The
victory, I give to her."
Youth had triumphed. A World
Series had been redeemed.
For one glorious night, baseball
seemed back on track.
Notes: All Marlins avoided the
postgame interview room, angering
reponers and baseball offacials. who
blamed Leyland for the team's hostile attitude toward media.....The
teams combined for 76 walks, a
Series record. The previous mark wa.'
68 set by the Yankees and Dodgers in
1947, when Brooklyn pitchers
walked 38.' Marlins pitchers set a
record for walks by one team with 40.
... The 76 runs scored - 42 by
Cleveland - were six short of the
record, set by the Yankees and Pittsburgh in 1960.

Farner Bob Feller said befqre the year-old Marlins- whose fans did·
game.
n't even care enough about baseball
How else can you explain the to fill half of Pro Player Stndium a
long-awaited World Series tropl1y few weeks ago?
.
being whisked away from the door of
"I'm very disappointed that we
the Indians' clubhouse after the Mar- lost. I can't describe how disapIins tied the game in the ninth inning? pointed," Indians manager Mike HarSo many Indians greats never got grove said. "But I am ex!remely
within 10 games of first place, much proud of being close to these people
less the ultimate prize. How could it this year. And I don't "!ant people to
be taken away with ~uch cruelty'/
counl us out next year."
"Just as every other fan, we live
The ninth inning turned into an
vicariously through this team," said adventure with Mesa on ,the mound
Andre Thornton, whose Indians nev- and the Indians leading 2-1.
er finished higher than fifth rrom
Mesa, 1\'~o c0nvened a record 46
1977-87. "There is no· mystical or of 48 save chances in '95, began this
romantic tie because of what I did or season in a counroom facing rape
dido'! do when I played in Cleveland. charges. He was found innocent , but
I don't live in the past, and I don't did not approach the indomitable
reflect on it that way."
form of two.years ago until August.
Oh, that is hard to believe. EspeWith another shaky late-inning
cially now.
performance, Mesa let the Marlins tic
Even though the Indians made a it on Counsell's one-out sacrifice (ly.
rousing return to the Series without
"I feel bad because I let my team
the depaned Alben Belle and Kenny down," Mesa said. "I had the lead in
Lofton and injured pitcher Jack the ninth and I didn't do my job."
McDowell, this loss will be rememThere 'were many tears after
bered as one of the worst of all.
Renteria chased Charles Nagy off the
. Fair or not.
mound with his game-winning single
"It doesn't mauer how happy you in the lith.
·
are to be here today," shonstop
Omar Vir.quel said. "You don't want
to he in the situation we're in."
Indians fans across Ohio and the
country must have felt just like Jim
Thome after Edgar Renteria's gamewinning single to center field. Thome
collapsed on one knee ncar the pitchcr's mound, the weight of a whole
season and decades of wait-till-nextyears pushing him down .
And to have it happen at tbe hands
of the Marlins- the upstan. five-

NFL standings
' . A~ERICAN CONFERENCE
l
Eutern DIYbian
•
~

~

Miami.. ............................... ~
New Sngland ...................... s
N.Y. Jeu ...........................l
Bumoo ................................4
' hWnapolit ........................o

.

..

GETS GAME-WINNING HIT- The Florida Mar·
line' Edgar Renteria (16) ruches out to drive
Charles Nagy's pitch peat him and Into center
field to send Craig Counsell home with the run

that gawlhe Marline a 3-2 victory OV81' the Cleveland Indians In 11 Innings and their first World
Sarin title. (AP)

8 0

Waltm DlwWon
Denm- ...............................7 1 0

1~1

1R8
ll:t IIJ9

.em
. 7~

194
.61S 208
.:\00 194
.!iOO 18)
. ll$ 12~

187
168
175
161
219

.87~

238
KlllltiPCity .................. ,.....6 2 · 0 .7SQ 181
ScDfllc ................................. 5 :t 0 .6l~ 169
S11n0icao ....................... ., ...t 4 0 .~ 140

·Santa Claus is coming to town!

-·-

O.U.Ii!"" ................ ..... :..... J l
'

Applications for toys to.be donated by the Meigs County Bikers
Association will be taken at the Meigs County Health ~epartment
begiilning November 3, 1997. Applications will be taken for two
w~ks. The final day tQ apply for toys is November 14, 1997. No
exceptions. Applicants must apply in peJ;son (ABSOLUTELY NO
PHONE CALLS). Proof of income is required to verify eligibility
(Medical card, pay stub, unemployment, .etc)

1:13
133
117
176

o .m m m

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
lulemiM•Wen .

iwt

ll 1.

N.Y. Giants............... ..' ...... 6
D:~llas................................ 4
Philadelphia ..... ;.................4
Willhington ......................4
Aril,ona ...
.. ..... I

,

r

a

&amp;

4 0 . ~ J37 I $9
4 0 . ~ 142 137
7 0 .ll"i 13) IK~

Central Db Won

146 I:W
IIW ~~~

~:~:n~.~~~~-.::.:::::: . ::::::::::·:r ~ g:fU l!~

;':

Sunday's scoret

CLINIC

•FREE Dtllvtry •FIIEE Stt Up
•FIIEE Aomovot of old unlto
•FIIEE 2nd Yoor Wononty
•FREE monty 11om Frlgldotre on
Golltry rnodtlt • monty back to

·-·

a...;,;,=-._ _ _

_..**

**
**
*

'

Hl!rc are the Top 2~ teBms in the Auociut~ll ·
Pl'fis ~:ollep football poll, wilh first·plxl.' votes m
parcnthi:Jt1, ~ 11 mnl rc~.uds ru of lui Satuttl.l)'. lotal puint~ based on 2~ rotnu fur t1 lint pl&lt;k:e vuh:
through one point for a 2 .~th pin« vote. and lll~l
wtek'slin.'ll ranking:
Lat
Iwo
'
W:ki J'll, lim.
I. Nebrosb()l) ... ,......
.. ....... Hl 1.104
I
l . Penn St. (l."i) .......................... b-0 1 .66~
2
l Flurida St. (fll ..........................7·0 1.629
J
.4:Mkhigan .................................. 7.0 1.~~ ~
~ NnnhC3rolinu(2) ................... 7..0 1..
.
6:Aorida .................................... 6-1 1.400
~
'1. WMhinaton............
.,_ .... 6· 1 1.2HI
K
S Tennessee ......
.. .....5-1 1.2.f5
9: OHIO ST................................. 7-1 1 .2~~
9
10 Washin~tun S1. .................. .....7-0· 1.14.1
10 •
11 : Auhtlrn ... :................................7-1 1.04~
:~
12 . UCLA. .....................................Ct-'2 IJ.I,U
~
I~ . Kru1ti:'!St , ...............................6-l

~M9

1
It!

l.f Gcorgm ..............................6-1
1~: lown .... .....
-~-2
727
IM
16 LSU ............................. ,.......5·2 714
17
11
· · ... ,.....................V"
Ll ~~19
I 1. We11 ·v·lfi-IPIOI
18, Pur,dut: ....................................6--1 • 22
;
19. 0klt~homnSt ...........................6-l -U~ .'
~20 ArizOM Sl............. ., "H'"""""~.} 4;1.4
~-'
21: MidUpn St ............................ ~·2 ~ ~~
22. 'OOLEOO .................... .......... 1.0 2
2l, , y ll'f.lOia
· · · Te~·h ...... · ................ ~~- 1 12-'
IQ
fl-'
24 Southern M1 11......................... •
2.\: Te~IS A&amp;.M ........................... :'·2
~~ . 20
Olhen nnh·l• votta: Colul'lllkl ~- WtJ~o:OO·
•ial48. OrorJia Ttt,:h ~7 . Rkt 42. OHIO J2.
8ri1ham YounJ 2t.. Syrac~llt 23, ~oi~Oidu S1. 17.
Mil~inippi St. 17, Mit1oun 14. VnJima 14. Tcxns
Tech 1 CINCINNATI 6, Air For~e '· MIAMI
iOHIO).:', Alabama 4. 'Ciemttm 3. MARSHA~L . l.
Suuthefn Call. Utah 2. l.olijJian:l Tech I. Mtllll·
Jippi I .

i.,

i

Big Ten standings
Onnn
c....
l! Lf.d.W J.fl:l.
Michi,an......................4 0 1.00 1 0 1.00

Pwdue .S.IIliloolol

Ohio Stille .f9, Northwt:sttn'16

Kent .............. ............... 2 4 J):t

l

6 JJ)
6 .2.W

1

1

3

Akron ........................... I

4 .200

. 600 . ~

2 '~
2 . 1~

6

6
1

1

12~

Wtlkm DlvltiDn ·
Toledo......... ,................ ~ 0 1.00 1 0 1.00
W. Mil:hipn .... ............ 4 1 .667 ~ 3 .62:'
E. Mi~."hia.un ................. 2 .a . 33~ 3 ~ .37:'
o:~.u s1. .........................2 4 .333
J 6 ..n-'
C. Midlipn .. .............. 1 ~ .167 2 1 .222
N. lllinoi.t.. ...................O ~ .CKIO 0 K .CXJO

S.turday's ooores
MAC
Bllll S1. 21. N. lllioois 14
- 1(ent60. Cent. Mldlil'\n )7
• MARSHALL 48. E. Mkhigllll 2~
OHIO 21, Akron 17
Tolrdo 3~ . Bowling Oc-ccn 20

I . 1~7
0 1.00

2 .nR
I

.17~

~

2 .714

l

2 .714

;\
l
0
I

tt

1 .000

.:m

6 .2.'10
7 .12.1

---

Saturday1s a&lt;:tion

'Ibis week'• slate
S.llll'daJ·M~C

Akron 011 Bull St .
Bowling Gn!-cn nl Kt:nt
W. MiL·hig,:m 111 E. Mkbi~an
MARSHALL. 111 C. Mklut;:nn
Mi11mi !li ·ToJcdo
OHIO lll N. Illinois

20

m)O

Stille 14
Columbia 21. Ynk 10
Connteticut .\7. Rhtldl! lsl1111d 21
Comell4~ . Fordham D
Dclawnn: 40. MauuchuseiU Y
F:Urfield 21, Cani~iuM I~
G.:orpet(lwn. 0 C. 2-1, Duqurme 0
Harvanll.f. Princeton 12
Htlfstm .17. BuiTnlo 26
l..ni'~'Y~Ie JM. 1\lWMI'II 0
Lchi,h 46, Oanmuuth 26'
Mati$1 21. Wur;l'k:r 0
1'-kw Hilmp~hiK 2.f. Moine 7
~hc:Jsll!rn 211. Boston U. 7
Penn"· BrowniO
Piusburgh ~~. Rutgcn 4K &lt;2 OT)
Ruben Mmit.fl , MoMlOUih. N.J. 20
Slo!l\.11.2. St. John 's. NY 7
St. Frnnd~. Pa. 41. Oannun26
St . Pekr's 14. lona 12
WtSI V•rP-inia 30. Virttinia Tech 17

S...lh
Alabama 29, Miuisslppi 20
Alabama St 20. Alabama A&amp;.M IJ
APf"'lachian St. 26. Wofford 21
ChaU:\IltlOBll 24. W. Co.rnhna 21
Clcmstm 20, Murylund 9
E. Kenlud,;y 26. Tcnncs~..'e TL~h 7
E. Tennts51.'C S1. -:liH,I-'unnan 2M
Eout Curulinn 32. Mcn~h; 10
Florid:1 St . 47. Viraini~ 21
G1..'0rttin 2.\, Kentu~ky 1_3
o~uttia Southern 49. Curuk'l 7
Hun-rtnn 20. S. Cnrolina St , 14 ({)f)
H1 \ U~hm :lb. Loui~willc- 12
Huwantli.N. CII'(llinaA&amp;T I~
,JackMm St . 2.1. GramblinJ St. 0
l-iberty 4M. Chorkuun Sou.1hem 14 ·
M~l -'1'1. B. Michisul~
Minmi -17. Telll!IC' 1:'
, Middl~ Tenn. ~t SE Miuouri 6
Miss. Va1ky St. 13. Te..., Southtm 10
Mississippi St 3~ . Cent. FkM'id:l2H
Morgan Sr 14. Ddawmw St. 7
NE L.1uisiaml 28. SW luul$1:mi.i 21 (OTl
NW Louis1ano• 49. Atkalllt~ Tech 10
Nidwi!M St. 16. Jacbonville Sl. IJ
Romdolph-Mucon n . D'dYi~lson I~
Richmond 21'», J:una Madi10n 21
S:unrunt 2:'. Troy St. l.f
South Carolina J5. Var*rblh)
Southern Min. 34, Tulant: 1;\
Sou1hem 2~. Akorn S1. Ifl,
Tcnil.:ssee St. '27. Tenn -MIIl'!ln 20
Vil101nova 20, Willi;ml &amp;. Mary 13
W~c Forest .\S, Dub 24
Midwttt
St . 21 . N. lllino1t 1-'
Butler 38, Evansville 35
Cin~:innoti )4, MlllfTii. Ohio ~I 12
O:~yton :W. Vnlpamiso 1.\
E. Illinois 42. Auslin h uy 14
lndiaM St 16, lllinoia St . 1;\ &lt;2 on
IOWD. 62.1ndiaNI 0
Iowa St. 24, Baykll' 11
Kcnt60. Cent. Michi&amp;ttn ~7
Mlchipn 2.1, Michi&amp;M S1. 7
Mot&lt;h&lt;ad St ll. So. Jooeph '•· hoot. 7
Nebraska 35. K~RJU 0
NGh"l! Dame 32. Boston Collear 20
Oltio St. 49, Nonhwc1lem b
Ohio u. 21. Akson 17

on

Toledo 3$, Bowlina Green 20
W. Illinois )7, nl MisiOUri SC. 7
W. Kenruct.., 52. S. Illinois ;\I

l.oke Cath. 54. 0Jancl6
l..uct•villc Valley ~7. rottsmoulh Noire Dmne
0

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Photo of
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WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
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41
24
39
26
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6 26
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Address:

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Ptc"ifk Dl"illon
Color.ldo ............................6
1\nnhcim .... ,...................... 4
Lu~ An8eles .................... 4
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........ .4
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Calg;~ry ............................. I

I AD DEADLINE: Wednesday, Nov. 5th, 5:00pm.
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EASTERN CONFERENCE
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MaUor
Earl Jones
1969-1971

NHL standings

W ash10~1un

. Marauder reserve foot-' '
The Me1gs
ball team will host Wahama in a con- ''
test on Monday evening at Bob .:
Roberts Field in Pomeroy. Kickoff i(
5:55.

C/O The Daily Sentinel

In Honor Of

Hockey

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Wahama today

VETERAN SALUTE

(shown actual size)

Lu!heran W. 47. Beachwood 16
M(lhawk 26. Fremont St. Jo~~q~h 24
~wark Culh. 41. Johnstown Jil o rthrid~;e 0
001k Hurbor J.J .' Sandusky St. Mill)' · ~ 14
On:JOO Strit~o:h 2~. Ottnwa Hilb 14
Southhtjlon17. Lulher.m E. 0
Tol. Dt1ws~r 42. Tol ~ibhey 20
T,ll. Ccmrui2J. Tnl. WuOOw :trd I 2
Tul. St Franci's .l~. Tul. Scou fl
Wh!.ocling !W.Vu.) Lin~ly 4(1.,Col. Rl!ady 21

I&lt;1111

Meigs football
reserves to play

r-------------------,

·

..,

return

On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the
thousands of men and ~omen who have proudly s'&lt; rved their
country during times of crises and peace.
This Veterans .Dqy, the Daily Sentinel will publish a very special
tribute honoring areb veterans. you can join in our salute by
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Fuirptll1 Harbor J I. Onnhury Laknidc! 2~
Fisher Cuth. J6. Millcnport 6
Fo~lllfia St Wemldin 2~. N. Bullin~«t 7
Oarficld.Ht~. Ttin ily 20. Churdon NO.CL II
Gilmour J2, Richmond Hi s. 27
Hamiltun Badin 34, D11y. MetK!owdnlc 0
Hudson Wellern Rc5l'No! 46, Summit Aca«--

31
29

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In Honor Of

36

Corporal
Bob Johnson
1991-1992
Marines
Desert Stonn

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39

Saturday's scores
AMbcim 4, N.Y. hlnnUc.'rs 2
Florida:'. llmtun 4
Mnmn:al4. Otta.... a2
San Ju.e ol, New ll"fl&lt;)' .1
Toronto .f. Cal&amp;tlt)' .~
Dallas 3. Colorado I
St. Louis~ - WashinJIM 2
Pi1uburgh l . Vancouver 2 (0T)

Love, Your Family

Sunday's scores
l..ol Angdt~ :\. Tamra 8By I

Anahctm :\'; N.Y Ranaen .\ (0T)
Detroit .\ . vn,...'Cowtr I

Cnrulinn 3. Chic"&amp;o 2
Phoenia.. 6. Buffalo I

Tonight'spm&lt;t

_ -_.._

•

His team seemed to accnmplish all•
three.
The defense scored on linebackct. John Grace's 42-yard interception:.

·Honor.Our Heroes

Akron 8uchte141 . Akron Nonh. 7
Akron E. 24. Akron Garfield 21
Bo:U'dnUU121 . Yuung. Mooney I]
Cnntoo McKinley 70,L.ouinillc Alluinas 0
Cin, Elder 3~. U!kewOO!.I S1. Edward 28 (3 OT)
(.'in. Wilhrow 6J. Cin. T:1f1 6
Cit 8o!~di..:ri~49.Cie . VAJSJ 14
Cit'. E.~t Tn:h 76. Clc. Un~'ttln-Wcsf 0
Ck. Glenvilk 46, Cle. Collinwood 1i
Cle Stl~mJtiusiQ , Cin. St. Xnw1er 14
Clc. Univmity 40. Suhllburg (Pu,) Kiski Prep

Cindnnali J.a. Miami Jl (lOT)

Purd~~t 48, 111inoi• ~

•

Ohio U.s; scores

8::~11

Ila

S.tunbly'ucons

b
b

Eaol

o.t Minmi. 9 p.m.

Prio:........................... 0 1.00
0 t .OO
~St .........................)
Wlk.'Oftlm ...... :.............,. I .800
otolo St ......................) t .7!1n
low!1 .............................2 l . ~
Midllp S1. ................2 l ,lOll
- . . . . ............... 1 4 .100
MlnneJOtD ....................O • .000
llli-*1 .. ..............,.........0 • .000
llldiulo ........................0 3 .000

I .1100
I .KOO

Miami .......................... 4
lkrwlinJ Gn!tn ........... J

I

~5. CoiJ.Uie 27
8U~o.-toell Ill. Holy Crou 6
Cent. Coml«tkut St ~, . ln

AP Top 25 college poll

"FREE ZONE"

1

Anny

Gn:cn Bay at New En~llmd, 9 p.m.

. . . . . . ~···•********** .
**

. K1~

0 1.00

Saturday's action

Tonight's games
Chi~ago

~HIIfl\,
m.•••• ••••o•• ~
MARSHALL ............... 4

o.. ...u

J.r.t.W Lr.t.

The win pushed Marshall (6-2, 41 MAC East) into a tic with Miami
for second in the division.
The Herd proved that it can win
when it limits mistakes and
turnovers. They committed only one
turnover against Eastern Michigan.
compared with seven against Miami .
"We had some goals going into
the game," Marshall coach Bob
Pruett said after Saturday's play.
"One was to have no turnovers, after
last week. One was to score on
defense and one was to score on special teams."

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)- It
brought sweet redemption fot.Marshall and a Mid-American Conference record for quarterback Chacl
Pennington.
In hammering Eastern Michigan
48-25 on 'Saturday, the Thundering
Herd more than made up for its
·embarrassing 45-211oss to Miami of
Ohio the week before.
Pennington rebounded from his
lackluster performance at Miami to
pass for 361 yards and three touchdowns to set a conference record for
touchdowns in a single season.

,FtrWnt
8rip.han1 Ynung 31 , Te11DJ Christh:m 10
CS Nonhridge 4~ . Sa~:r-~men..a St. 38 tOT)
Cal Poly·SLU ;\K, N. IoWa 24
E. Washi'ngton 51.1duho St. 7
Frc:a.no St. 46. UNLV 2g
Loo11iana Tech1~ I, Boi.e St. 21
N. AriZOOII27 1 MontaM 24
~v-M. NOI'IhTelusiO
Nl!w Mexico St. 34. Arbllso.. St. 20
PmiMtl St. &lt;M. MontiiiiD Sl. 0
San DieJQ ~. Drt~kc ~0
San"llieau St . 10. Hawllii 3,
Sa'n Joat St 2~ , Air For!.z 22
Soulhem C;•l24. Oregon 22.
Tuls.1 nt C(1lomdo St .. ppd.. a.now
UC Du•is 19. St. M;uy's. C~l. 9
UCLA 3~. CalifOJnia 17
Ulnh 1~ . New Me11ko 10
Utah Sl. 63.1daho 17
Washington 45. Orejon S1. ~7
Wtl.'hint.tnn S1 . ~~. J\rizoiUI J4 (QT)

NCAA Division I scores

80111imore 20, Wdslunt~on 17
New York Ciantsl9. CINCINNAT127
Phil;delflhia 0 . Dnllu 12
Denver ~). Buffalu 20 (QT)
Kan.w City 28. St . Loui11 20 .
San Frnadsco 23. New OrleMI 0
MinneSOia 10. TaiTiflfl Ba)l6
Tennc:n~o.'e 41, AritOI\Ol 14
San Di~go 3S. Indianapolis 19
• Pill~burgh l l Jacllonvillc I~ (Of)
Se;~ttk 4~. 0llk1Mtl ]4
Cnrolirlll21. AtiOIIllll 12
O(lt.on dme: 01:-truil, New Ymk Jeu

SHAVER REP

Etllem Dlwllion
Cont.

19')

Westtrn Di•ilktn
S.n Fm"'i"o .....................? I 0 .m 2t0 911
Curolina........
.. ....... , ...4 4 0 .~ 128 IJ9
St.Louis .......................2 6 0 .2~ I ~3 IK7

FHEE 11\SPECTIC)N

MAC standings

IIIII 1M
168 149

101

, Southwul
Ark.-Pine Bhiff 44. Lana; sf on 0
Auburn 26. Arkansas 21
Coloro&amp;do47, Tc!las 30
Kanw St. 26, Oklahoma 7
Missouri ~I . Ok1nhomn St. 50 t'l Of)
SW Te•fl§ S1. 21. S. Utah 7
Sou1hem Meth. 22. WJ_omillg IJ
~~e~n F.Austin L'. ~cNetse St. 7
Te11as Tech 16, Te:w A&amp;.M 13

SlhUtlay·.,
lllinoi•lll Indiana ·
Penn State • Nonhweatnn
Purdue aaluwa
Minnesota at Michiaun
Ottio SIDle D1 Michiglll'l Stat&amp;!

1'A

:\ 0 .667 186 IKO
4 o . ~ 178 n1

Mi""'""' """"'"""'"""'""6 2 0 ..1~
Gm:n Bay ., ......................... ~ 2 0 .714
Tampa Bay ......................... ~ ) 0 .62S
Detroit ............................... 4 4 0 .!iQO
Cbicago ..............................0 7 0 .(XX)

'

For Beegle &amp; Coon Doge. lnaullltld to keep doge warm.l
COLLARS, LEADS &amp; COUPLERS
Diller for CaJun Ughta Parts 6 ACCMIOrlee.

o-~

C..OraltMPinsbtqh .... .......................6 2 0
J~ville ........................5 J 0
Bllltimnre ....................... .... .4 4 0
Telll'le:SICC ......................... ..4 4 0
ONCINNATI ....... ,............ I 7 0

786 N. 2ND. AVE. MIDDLEPORT OHIO

JOY &amp; PLAIITATIOII DOG FEED
DOt IOIES W1t11 or wi....t Ster•1•

I~

) 0 .62.&lt; 201

4

Wilii..'On!in 22. Minnesom 21

This week'sslate

W I. I lll. lf 1'A
2 0 .714 l.f..1 12-4
2 o .714 19S 104

Ila

.•'
.

FRUTH PHARMACY

Coata In: Brown, Orange, Hunter Orange Insets.

Miehipn 2~. Michizan ~l:~k: 1
Wisconsin 22, Mmnnota 21
Iowa 62, IndiaN~ 0

Football

was snapped. Fitzgerald then scooped
the ball and ell!iily ran it in .
Ohi9 went ahead 14-10 in the 1
third quaner on Hook fin's 13-yard ~
run. But Greg Lomax. who gained 150 yards for the Zips, broke loose on
a 92-yard touchdown run , and Akron
led 17-14 going into the fourth quarter.
Kareem Wilson's two-yard burst
with 12:50 left in the game closed our
the scoring. Akron drove deep 'into
Ohio territory late in the game but
couldn' t score.

Marshall downs EMU 48-25 to tie
·Miami for second place in MAC

Scoreboard

.... ...

deficit to five points.
~
"But I also can't remember the •
last time this team was in first :
place," he added. "I don 'I t think anybody expected we'd be 6-3 at this
point butthere is a still a long way to .
go and we have to keep working."
The Bengals, whose losing streak
is their longest since they started the
1994 season with eight straight losses, made the Giants work a lot harder than expected.·
The Bengals used a team-record
102-yard kickoff return by Eric Bie-.
niemy and a 39-yard touchdown ..
pass from Jeff Blake to David Dunn
six seconds before intermission to •
opena21·1~1ead
.
"I thought we had them," Bengals
safety S!llll Shade said. "But it seems
nothing is going our way. I don 't
know what it is or what we need to
(See BENGALS on Page 6)

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Dennis
The Bobcats ran the bn1161times,
Fitzgerald picked up a blocked punt gaining 291 yards. Steve Hookfin
in the closing seconds of the first half was the main weapon. carrying 25
and went in for Ohio University's times for 122 yards.
first score, and .the Bobcats added
Akron (1-7, 1-4) went up 7-0 in
two rushing touchdowns in the sec- the first quaneron Greg Lomax's 23ond half to beat Akron 21-17 Satur- yard run. Jamie Stidham added a 31day in the Mid-American Confer- yard field goal in the second quaner.
It appeared Ohio would be held
ence.
.
Ohio (7-1, 5-0) remained unde- scoreless in the first half. but with 22
feated in the conference without ever seconds left Tevell Jones broke
.attempting a pass. That's the first through the Akron line and blocked
time that has happened since Baylor Mike Hayes' punt. The Zips had only
only ran the ball against Southern JQ players on the field when the ball
Methodist Oct. 9, 1993.

quarter of Sundly'a NFL game In E•t Rutherford, N.J., where the Glante came from behind to
win 29-27. The pella was ~ncomplata, but Paul
waa Cllled tor pen Interference. (AP)

TRIES FOR RECEPTION - New York Giants
wlda racalver David Pmlml (left) lrlee to C8tch the
footbellln the end zone at Clnelnnatl defenelve
. back THo Paul.defend• an U,. play In the second

•

Tyrone Wheatley and Charles
.Way each scored twice on shon runs,
linebacker Jessie Armstead forced a
key turnover early in the third quar·ter and cornerback Jason Sehorn
intercepted a two-point conversion
-pass with 1:31 to play as the Giants
(6-3) won their fifth straight game.
The streak is the team's longest
since winning seven at the end of the
1994 season. Coupled with losses by
Dallas and Washihgton, New York
now enters its bye week with a I 1/2game lead in the division.
The Giants have made the playoffs once since winning their second
Super Bowl on Jan. 27, 1991.
"I can't remember the last time
we were down 21-10 at the half and
came back to win," said defensive
end Mike Strahan, who had a big
sack on founh down to stop a Bengals' drive after New York cut its

OU Bobcats outlast Akron 21-17

stood two outs away
from ·nearby World Series trophy

MIAMI (AP)- How close? The
World Series trophy was right outside
the clubhouse door.
The trophy was waiting there for
the Cleveland Indians, the one they'd
been chasing for 49 years.
Two outs. Two outs ,could have
lifted 49 years of anguish for this
team and its persecuted fans.
Indians pitcher-turned announcer
Herb Score said it best as he signed
off for the last time in the broadcast
booth Sunday night.
"lt would have been nice to go oul
a world champion, but that was not
to' be," said Score, whose brilliant
career was cut shon when he was hit with a line drive by New York's Gil
McDougald in 1957 - pan of the
Indians' cursed history.
At the end of a wonderful postseason ride that carried such promise,
the Indians managed to suffer their
clirsed franchise 's.mo~t crushing loss
or. all. a 3-2, 11-inoing defeat to the
Florida M'\flins in Game 7 or the
World Series.
Where to stan? Jose Mesa's blown
save?The Indians' failure to sc.orc in
the top of the ninth when they had
first and third and one out'' The
groundball by Craig Counsell that
sQJllehow skidded past second baseman Tony Fernandez in the lith'!
Despite the amazing comebacks
and magical hits strewn together
throughout these playoffs, the Indians
ended up falling and weeping
beneath a dark, cursed cloud once
more.
"I don't believe in that nonsense
whatsoever," Cleveland Hall r•f

By TOM CANAVAN
EAST RUTHF'U'ORD, NJ. (AP)
- Trailing by II points at halftime
against a team riding a six-game losing streak, ther~ was a lot of yelling
in the New York Giants' locker room.
It wasn't Jim Fassel and his coaching staff doing mdst of the ·screaming.
It was the Giants themselves. First
place in the NFC East was slipping
away against the lowly Cincinnati
Ben gals and the players weren't
about to let it go quietly after years
of losing.
"It was an accountability session," safety Percy Ellswonh said.
"We wanted to make sure that w~
had given everything we had. We
wanted everyone to step up and stan
making plays."
A lot of Giants answered the call
.in rallying for Sunday's 29-27 win
over Cincinnati ( 1-7).

to ·~i~ first championship

lndia~s
By KEN BERGER

-'

•

..
By RONALD BLUM

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

N.Y. ·Giants shake 11-po,i nt deficit &amp; beat Bengals 29-27

~day;~obtr27,1897

•'

Marlins beat Indians

t

Monday, ~ober 27, 1997

I Phone: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

1

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The Daily Sentinel ·

P.O. Box 729
111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone (614) 992· 2155

�.
•

•

Monday, October 27, 1997.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Moon leads Seahawks past Raiders

Marchers head ·home with good feelings - for the most part

Tampa I~ Philadelphia ed8ed Dll- shovel pass to Jerome Bettis in over- play, 74-yard drive sustained by a 27Wamm Moon proved thai he's not las 13-12, Baltimore heat Wlshin810R time as PittsburJii moved into firsl yard pass to Kevin Turner and an II·
too old to be a starting quarterback in 20-17, Kansu City tQPPed St Louis pllce in the AFC Central ..
yard comp~rion to Irving Fryar on
28-20,
s.n
Fl'lllcisco
shut
out
New
Denis'
fumble
at
the
Steelen'
16
fourth-and- II at rhe Dallas 43.
lheNFL.
Moon, in his 20th season of pro- Orleans 23-0 llld S1111 Diego topped led to Mark Brunell's three-yard go- ' The Eqlcs (like the Cowboys, 4aheed scoring pass to Pete Mitchell 4) knocked out Troy Ailanttn (mild
fessionii football, passed for 409 lndian~~polis 3.5-19.
The Ban-Dolphins game, oriai- with 8:13 to play, but Pittsbwgh's concussion, strained neck) early in
yards llld five touchdowns to lead the
Seanle Seahawlcs to a 45-34 victory nally scheduled for Sunday afternoon Norm Johnson sent lhe game into the ftnt quaner llld Dlllas' red zone
over the Oaklllld Raiders {3-5) on in Miami, was rescheduled to tonight 'ovcnime with a 19-yard field goal offense, nex1-to-worst in rhe NR.,
to accommodate Game 7 of the with 2:21 remaining.
· mustered only Richie Cunningham's
Sunday.
Rookies Jake Plummer and Tony World Series. Green Bay and New
The visiting team still hasn't won four field goals.
RavtllllO, Reclfklm 17
Graziani, each making his first pro England will also play tonisht in a in six pmes of a fast-developing
start, showed they aren't yet ready to Super Bowl rematch.
ri¥1lry that has· succeeded the
Bam Morris ran 361imes for 176
Detroit and the· New York Jets Browns-Steelers as the AFC Central's yards, both career highs, as Baltimore
lead their teams. ,Grazi.ani completed
just four passes and threw two inter- were idle. ·
biggest. Jacksonville (S-3) has won handed Washington (4-4) its lint
Ollen 41, Cardluab 14
. ceptions before being pulled at hl\lf' all three al home, as have the Steel- defeal at Jack Kent Cooke Stadium.
time of Atlanta's 21-121oss to CarSteve McNair ran for two touch- ers (6-2).
Morris gained 103 yards on 19
downs
ind
threw
for
two
more
as
olina. Plummer threw four intercepauempts wirh a touchdown ir. the fmt
Broacos :23, Bills 20 (OT)
tions in Arizona's 41-14loss to Ten- Tennessee took advantage of PlumJason Elam kicked a 33-yard field half ,11lone as rhe Ravens (4-4) took
mer'~ four interceptions. ·
goal with I :56 left in overtime as the advantage of the second-worst run
nessee.
"Hopefully !his will never happen Broncos overcame a 20-point Buffa· defense in the league entering the
Moon, who completed 28 of 44
passes. including three touchdown . again, •: Plummer said. "It's not what lo (4-4) rally to defeat the Bills, one game.
tosses to Joey Galloway, was so hot I wanted for my first start, but I'm day after Denver battled through a
Chiefs :za, RIUIIS 20
his own coach was afraid to stand too going to go back and look a1 my mis- blizzard back home.
Pete Stoyanovich drilled foilr field
takes and correct them."
close to him on the sidelines.
Terrell Davis ran for 207 yards on goals as KanSas City beat error-prone
"'I didn't want to touch him,"
McNair threw 55- and 20.yard 42 carries and scored one touchdown, St. Louis (2-6) in the first regular-seaDennis Erickson said. "I didn't want · scorint passes to Chris Sanders for and Ehlm added field goals of 23 and 'SOn meeting between the teams since
the Oilers (4-4 ), who have seven 22 yards for the Broncos (7 -I), who the Rams .moved from Anaheim,
to burn myself."
Led by Moon, who will be 41 on interceptions in the past two weeks bounced back from a 28-25 loss to Calif., in 1995.
In front of a friendly road crowd,
Nov. 18, the Scahawks rolled up 554 after having none in the previous six. the Oakland Raiders last week.
Elvis Grbac threw a 21-yard touchyards, their second most in history. All five Oilers touchdowns came
Vlklnp 10, Buts 6
The Seahawks (5-3) won their third after Arizona (1-7) turnovers.
Charles Evans scored on a one- down pass to Lake Dawson and
in ·a row and fifth in their last six
Paatben :u, FalcotlS 12
yard ru·n and Eddie Murray kicked a . completed a pair of 2-point converTshimanga . Biakabutuka rushed 28-yard field goal as Minnesota (6- . sion passes as the Chiefs (6-2) congames.
"Too much is made of the fact that for 104 yards and two touchdnwns as 2) wotf for the fourth lime in five verted three lost fumbles and an interception into 14 points.
I'm 40 years old," he said. "'I can still Carolina (4-4) beat a rookie quarter- games.
49ers 23, Saints 0
read defenses and throw the football. back making his first start for the secMurray's field goal snapped ~
In New Orleans, Steve Young
scoreless tie with just over four minAs long as I'm SUITOUn~ed by good ond week in a row.
One week after stopping New utes left in the third quaner, and threw two touchdown passes and
people, I'll be OK."
Moon had his seventh 400-yard Orleans and Danny WuerfTel, the David Palmer relurned a punt 57 Gary Anderson kicked three field
passing game in his 14th NFL season, Panthers kept Graziani on the run .' yards to set up Evans' touchdown in goals as San Francisco (7-1) won its
seventh, straight game.
·
tying Joe Montana for second place almost constantly and the seventh· the final minute of the period.
New Orleans (2-7). which lost 13The loss was the third srraight for
behind Dan Marino's 13.
round draft pick fflliTl Oregon com"He plays like he's in his 20s," plered just four of 18 passes for 24 the Bucs (5-3); who opened the sea- 0 to Carolina last week. was shut out
admired Oakland quarterback Jeff yards. Graziani was intercepted twice son with five successive victories. • in consecutive !!ames for the first
time in its 31-year history.
Eqles 13, Cowboys 1l
before being lifted at halftime in
George.
,
II also was ·the first time since
Rodney Peete's eight-yard touchIn other games Sunday, Denver favor of Billy Joe Tolliver.
New
Engl~nd in 1992 that any' team
down
pass
to
Chad
Lewis
)With
45
·
Steelen
:23,
Jaauan
17
(OT)
edged Buffalo 23-20 in ovenime,
was
shut
out in.consecutive games.
Kordell Stewan completed 25 of seconds left gave Philadelphia the
Pittsburgh beat Jacksonville 23-17 in
Cllaraen 35, Colts 19
OT, the New York Giants beat 42 passes for 317 yards and two win at home.
· Lewis' touchdown ·ended a I0Gary Brown rushed 28 times
Cincinnati 29-27, Minnesota topped touchdowns, including a 17-yard

'1I
BAM!- Meigs Eastern's Valerie Karr (22) hits the ball acron the
net and above a Beaver Eastern player during Saturday's Division
IV district volleyball title match at Valley High SchOOl, where the
Meigs County sextet lost In three games. Watching Karr'a spike are
teammates Juli Hayman (21) and Kim Mayle (15). (Photo by Scott
Wolfe)

D-IV volleyball tournaments continue

Beaver Eastern
defeats Eagles
in district finals

The Meigs Eastern Eagles fell to ern went up 1-0 in controlling a ISdefeat in the Division IV district vol- 6 win in the opening game. Karr had
ley ball tournament championship six points and two aces, Evans four
game at Valley High School in points and an ace, Caldwell three and
Lucasville Saturday, where the an ace, and Kim Mayle had an ace.
Beaver Eastern Eagles defeated the
At one point Eastern led 13-3.
locals 6-15. 15-10, and 16-14 in three The win was so dominant that most
sets.
fans cashed· in on hotel rooms in LaoPike advances to the Regional caster before Michelle Caldwell
Tournament at Lancaster High served the last two points.
School this Saturday afternoon, ' ' The Eastern-Meigs got a couple
where it will face the New Philadel- questionable calls go against them
phia upper bracket winner. Eastern- and the game faces turned to·stoneMcigs bows out at 20-4, ranking faces as Pike rolled to a 4-2 lead.
tenth in the state in the latest Ohio Eastern came back to tie 4-4, but
High School Volleyball Coaches' Heather Nickell scored nine straight
Asso•iation pel I.
in a string that was interrupted by two
Ironically, Eastern-Pike defeated Eastern-Meigs time outs.
EasterncMeigs in a similar fashion
Nickell never tlinched in lifting
last year in the district tournament at Pike to a 13-4 lead.
South Webster, claiming a 17-1 S win
Eastern fought back hard. Branin a three set diStrict game.
non scored twice on Caldwell spikes
Eastern had earned the right 10 at the net, then after Pike went up 14- ·
play in the championship game after 6, Karr hammered a kill to regain the
a preliminary win over the Waterford serve:, Cald~~ll served up two off
Wildcats. The teams had split earlier_ !lflOther dectstVe Karr ktll off an
· in the season and Eastern claimed the Evans set, then Evans added an ace
rubber game in the series, 13-15, 15- and another point to tighten the score
7, and 15-11.
14-10. The deficit was too much to
Eastern took a 6-0 lead in the overcome and Pike claimed a 15- 10
Waterford game, but lackluster play win on a Kandra Rinehart serve.
by both teams saw the lead slip to 6Caldwell had four points and nn
4. Eastern rolled to a 12-6 advantage. ace, Evans three and an ace, Karr had
hut four points by Katrina Greene one, Brannon two, and Mayle one.
pulled the score to 12-10. Tosha
Eastern-Meigs took a 4-0 lead in
added a kill for a 13-13 tic then the finale off Karr serves, then
Waterfonf came back to claim the , hecame handcuffed when Tabitha
win 15-13.
King notched apcint for Pike. EastEastern did not give up though ern hit into the net on its next serve,
and came back with a vengeance. then Nickell served up five straight to
Behind five Stephanie Evans serves, give her club a 6-4 lead.
including an a•c. Eastern rolled to a
Hayman tied the score at 6-6, but
I0-5lead. Val Karr had a great block Nickell hammered a spike to regain ·
in the drive, then added three points the serve. April Roberts served two
of her own before Waterford called before Eastern-Meigs called time
time. Karr came back with an ace and out. Caldwell aced the next serve for
Eastern went on to win 15-7 as Karr the Meigs Countians. then added
finished out the ga me with five nnothcr to tic ut 8-8.
straight.
Rinehart pushed Eastern-Pike
The championship game of that nhead 11-9 and Eastern called time to
sci was exciting and close. Brannon break the serve. A confident Nickell
and Caldwell had h•g spikes tu lift served up thll'e straight nnd had game
Eastern to a 6-3 lead . WHS came potnt, but Eastern-Meigs recovered .
back to 6-5, then Brannon served up Hayman notched a point, Caltlwell.
two points for a 8-5 EHS lead.
notched a point after a missed serve
Karr nnclCaldwell had key spikes, by both clubs, then Caldwell added
then Caldwell served fourstraight off two aces and another marker lo tic the
an Angtc Wolfe kill that lifted EHS score at 14-14.
·
ahead 12-8. The teams traded single
Mary ·Newsomc served up a I~-14
points for three serves ~nd Brannon lead for Pike, then after a time out,
finished oil th~ Wildcats 15-10.
served an ace off a diving Eagle to
Brannon had six kills, Karr &gt;IX, post the win . . ·
and Caldwell four. Brannon. CaldKarr bad four kills and six blocks,
well, Evans, and Karr each had two Angi Wolfe had four kills, Brannon
aces apiece, and Caldwell had four three nnd Coldwell two. Caldwell had
blocks.
· live aces, Karr three, Evans three,
Juli Hayman was 26-29 setting and Mayle one. Brannon was 23-30
with seven sets for kills and Evans spiking. while Hayman was 25-31
was 30-41 setting with seven sets for setting with seven sets for kills. and
kills. Juli Bailey had"threc dinks and Evans was 40-47 with ftvc sets for
a kill.
kills. Bailey had four dinks and one
In the championship game, East- kill.

Benga/s lose .. jC&lt;&gt;ntinued from Pages)
do. The last few games we have been · guy outside. If I threw it outside, it
tal king about what we need to do to would have been an easy two
win and the guys have been doing it, points."
Blake made a bigger mistake at
but we're not getting it done."
Cincinnati had a chance to force t!'t start of the third quarter. After
overtime when Bla~e s&lt;:ored on a 4- scrambling for a first down, he did
yard run to ·cap a ninc,-play, 62-yard not protect the ball and that allowed
Armstead to knock it loose. Ellsworth
drive in the clostng mtttutes.
Blake tried to tie the game with a returned the ball to ihe Bengals p.
Eight plays and three penalties latfade panern to Pro Bowl receiver
er,
Way scored from a yard out.
Carl Pickens (one catch for 13 yards)
in the corner of the end zone, but
Sehorri W&lt;\S the only one near the ball
when ir c~me down.
"'I rhrew it inside and I should
have thrown ir outside," said Blake,
who hit 17-of-34 passes for 237
yards. "'Tile DB played him inside,
Carl mad~ a good move and beat the

'

-

....

/

By The Attoclllted PrHa

··~·

m;ud• will nnllllllll' In l'lll\'f~'l' in
thnu!'.amb. ol ltJWII" aud in uullion~

,\ssoduh•d l'ns."" Wrih·•·

l'llll.i\lll '. l.l'llli\
,·u"nl lhal
WHman

J!illhru~,t

M : n.~.· h

I i\1'~

at thl' Mlllu111

t'olllllllll,'tl to turllt.•

humt.• Sm11.lay. many :u lu,·cl wuh a
nrwf11mul St.• nst.• ol llti\Yi.'l' ami pa:-.
sinn fnr what II lltt':m.. : to Ill· a hl:u:'-.

wuman.
And, tht'¥ adtlt.·d. thl' spin t of thl'

Yvnnnt.• Ttlll'l y. a \7 yc;n· old -.cc.:n.:tary ln1111 ( 'ltt: . . IL'I. l'a. " We had th~;
Mllll\ 111 Mom M;udt Wc'vc had the
Million Woman M:ud1 . Now it\
rim~.· to put .-..onJt: ht:ad~ ltlrcthct ami
tin po ... uivrc thl~tg:-. ."

I hmdrcd••,:olthou\:uuJ., ot people
p&lt;~..:kcd th~ Bcnjmnin Jt'raukhn l"i.lrk~
W&lt;lY lor the umrch S:.tunlay, :-,landin!!·!&gt;.hl 1Uhk:r tc 1 ~hou ldcr on the nulc1~ •II!!. avenue .
( 'ntw(l ~,;:-.limatc\ ranged widc1y.Org.omit.cr:-. c\tinmtc&lt;.J 2.1 mi Ilion

chilly, ~ray Jay.

~ouru~..,

c..,t imatcd the crowc.J a..,

filled the route from City Hall

between

~(KJ,!MK~

Mu~clirn

noon ,

1lows anti sh mc -Gtppcd spire)'.. is one
of the llCSI CXCL:UICd CX.itlllfliC~ Df

lh•I:J lh.•ta ( 'haf11lT tit
B~..·ta Si)-!111:1 Phi hl'lll its fall ~•utiu~
I'L't'L'Iltly in his torir Marit.'lla :uul
t•t\'l'l'Ph'l'

hlllf't.'d tht.• 1\IUt.'l'it.·:m (..)UL'l'll pa:-.st.·n ~t·r l'tlat. Mt.•tnht.•rs ft.'jlnrll'd ht.·iu~

!!''''allv impr~..·s:-;t.•tl with tht.• inun..·nsL'
rin·•· hoal.
'l'hl• )!I'&amp;IIIJl alsoli.UII"L'd 'l'hL· C~tslk
huil1 in IX)). ' 11'l' ht•us..·. · with ih
,X· ta~,,nal hiWL'I'. 11\'ftlil auk· win -

( iothit· ·H..·viva l - ~tylc ;m.: hilc4.:lurc iu
( )Jtit •- lntcrit 1r an:ltil cl: lural detail~
mdud~ :t ~C:I!! Ioha fircplm.: c lll~utlk
rt uu.l~;!l' papi cr nuudtc mouldin g ....
and lloor-to-cc iling shullcr~ on lhc
t'arfor's hay windows .
The IHIU~c i:-. lurni~hcd witl1 it~.:ms
of historiLa l Sll;!lllfit.:;uu.:c In the an:a

l.cvy ('illtllllittcc mcctin.loj, M111HJay, (,

MONUI\Y

I'OMERI'IY - SoutiK·m Local tl.IH . in the hi gh school t:al'ctcria. All
Sehoul Distri..-1. hoard IHL-ctin!;! . 7 : ~H ' intcn::o; tcd in helping with the
, UjKOIHing levy an: wckornc to
p.m. I .L·Iml Falls l ~ kllll' lltary.
ath.:nd .
POMI'ROY -

Mcips County

Vt.•h.·rans s..·.·vit"l' l'ummissiltU, 7::10
1\11'- Mtlntlay at thl' Vl'tcr~ms ~krvir..:t.'
Offit:c. MulhL·rry 1\vc:. Pllllll'l'llY.·

REEDSVILLE -

Eastern Loocal

well a~ tho~c ly(lic.:al of the Viclfl·
rian era.
' The Hi :-.tori&lt;.: llarmar Village wus
abo visited anc.J lun...:h wu., held at
the l.~tlo. tycttc Hotel. Tho~o,c touring
were Velma l~uc, Ro~c Sb.,on, Jane

not to sell

thtng&gt;."
:
Dor6thy Meredith of Gary, Ind.,_
said ,he was " reall y and truly
&gt;r&gt;rry" ;he made the effort to come ·

parkway.
Othcf\ were turned off by the . so far.

Ci\RPiiNTER -

Revival scr-

vkcs will he lh.: ld at the Mt Union
llaptist Church thmugh l'riday, 7
p.m. nightly. Jesse Tipttin, evangeli st. Special music each cvcnin'g. Joe

RACINE - Racine /\rca C:ommunity

Organizt.~tion,

Tuesday, Star

Mill Park. 1'11tluck dinner at 6:30
p.m.
.
I'OMEROY - Ladic.s Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 12X, Tuesday, 2
p.m. at the hall. Pecan sale and bud~c l

to he

Jiscu s~cd.

614-992-7508

CRISPY STRIPS
MEAL
·

Leo's Cruise &amp; rrave[

.

'learn to Drive Right"
with MGM "Drive Right"

•

9

Now accepting new
students $119.00/SF 470
Form

I

I

Call 992-4233 .
111 W. Second St.
Pomeroy, Oh

Don't forget our convenient
.
Drive-Thru Winduw
.

Family ~estaurant
992-5432

in CR,§cognition.of:Nationa{
(Breast Cancer )twareness :Montfi!

Cfhe CZJJicker

93U$9!J
olop in .and see our
new

Chrislrn~_ ilems
Middleport, Oli

Scfzeaufe ctour Mammogram 'l'oday
ftt
•

·,

Jfo{zer :Meigs Cfinic
88 P.ast 9rtemoria{ CJJrive
(JJomerQy, 06io
992~0060
J[o{zer Cfinic...
:Jfere for rtour J{eaftfi, ·
J{cre for rYour Lifetime!

WARNER
Insurance Agency
113 W. 2nd Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Office: 992-5479
1 -800-7 42-3868

TWIN OAK
PENNZOIL
The best Deals on
Gasoline in the area!

KENS APPLIANCE
We service all maJOt

brands!
Family owned
Ask about our extended
warranty
Jim Young
Owner

992-5335

The Weeks Special!
One Dozen Breaded
Shrimp with Chips and
Hush Puppies
s2. 99 Only at

Specializing in Handmade and
Machinemade Quilts
Fabric, Supplies &amp; Crafts
Machine Quilting
7911 Slate At. 588
(Between Rio Grande &amp; Gallipolis~
Business
614-245-5582

Rutland Bottle
Gas
100 lb Gas Cylinder
Cheapest in The
Tri- Co. Are~

992-5829

742-2211

Buttons &amp;
·Bows

Arthur

Middleport

Treachers
'The Healthy" Alternative

Check out our New
Grilled Menu!
St. Rt. 7

992-5829

!192·5177

Francis
Florist
Our new line
of Bean Pals
·are in stock!
. 992-2644

sinc.e the 1950's

'

Maynard's Quills and Fabrks

JEFF

RE-LOCATION SALE
Eggs 1 Doz. Farm Fresh (local)
Reg. $1.19 SALE $.99
Hrs. M-Sat 8-6
742-2100

MAMMOGRAMS

Mon. thru Sat .

Visit our new location next
to Acquisitions.

Pomeroy

•

Open 9 am - 5 pm

C&amp;{} Cfurnifure
28001 State Route 117
Cheshire, Ohio 45620

&lt;R/duced Clg,tes 'Tlirougli Octo6er

1997
EXPLORER

a great dillcrcncc in the community

from much of the

our community -

'1'1 JES () i\ y

HOLZER MEIGS CLINIC

1997''
RANGER

!eel their power. I think it will make

if nC&gt;t impC&gt;\Sible ,

to

Sayre. l''"tor, invite&gt; the punlic.

Wow }Ivai{a6{e )f. t

1997 F150

" It wa., a grcut moment for all

woml!n at:ro\'&gt; Amcrit:a. It Wl:t'&gt; a
made it difficult,
chance Lu ex pre'&gt;'&gt; thcm '-.c l vc~.o and tn . to hear ~pcakcr\

" For me the cau\c wa\ nor met at

all ,'; \aid Deborah Collin,, 48 , a
drug counselor from New York City.
"My unde"tanding wa' it was supposed to he about reaching out and
finding out about ideas to take back

Walton, i\nn Rupc, Joan Corder,
Jc;in Powell, Ruth i\nn Riflle, ,
Clarice · Krautter and Charlotte
I Jherldd.

BIJYIN

•·'

anJ 1.5 millt&lt;&gt;n fnr

Telephone

228 Main St ·

'

I million . The
\aid it\ police

Jon &amp; Carolyn Jacobs
Owners

~ Crows

,,

1!M~.IXlll and
l'~ulaJelph1a lnqu trer

between

horde &lt;&gt;f entrepreneur\ hawking
everything from button \ and T-,hiru.
to compact dJ&gt;c\ and cardboardframed Polaroid\ of marc he" .

Community Calendar

•

s

olc.J a&lt;.:adcmit..: advio.,cr at Johno., Horkm.., UnJvcr\H)' m Baltimore, \aid
she hearJ "deep rica for healing .
" The rnan.:h i\ Jn.,tilhng a I ~H of
ho'pc In a lot of oy.'Omcn who were
Jo.,mg hope in \Oci&lt;;ty," \he ~aid .
Not all marcher\ c.:amc away with
a glow, however. Many &lt;..:omplainCd
ahout tt pflor ~o unU ~y~o,tcm that

tncluded a keynote speech hy Win·
nie Madikitela-Mandela.

rain guvc

No coupon necessary

MSRP$t,830

Adricnc Bredcnndge , a 33-ycar·

i\..,..,cJui.ilcd Pre-...., an c&lt;.., Limat c ol

way Lo a

wh~,;n

;,i-1

· Onl~

Stock 197828

· Pollee gave no 1Ji fic.:jal crowd

any commun1ty," \aid Gloria\tine Muhammad, 4K, r&gt;l Macon , Ga.

t..:cJunl, hut flolice .,ourcc'&gt; told The

the \Cvc n-hou,r progrum , which

I

'1997
AEROSTAR

-

ul Art in lhc curly after-

• Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy • Cole Slaw
• Biscuit
• .

1998
WINDSTAR

the

lu

- -·- -sorotity visits historic Marietta---

.

1997 ASPIRE

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 27, 1997

Quality
Furpiture Plus
Lane
SUPER SAVINGS MONTH.

BUY t OET t FREEl
.\f.k ::~l...,.:-ul Chri!-lmJs

LJ."JTJ'·I

Tuppers Plains
667-7388
Across from Farmers

TOMACELLI'S
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER

Uve Music, DJs, Video
Games, Billiards and ask
about our party space
• All ages
Non-Alcohol
I.

992-4514

THE OHIO RIVER

BEAR COMPANY
6hop now fl)r
Chrislmas 6avin8s.
Ask about our
Layaway Plan
Middleport, Oh
504 N 2nd Ave
992-4055

CJ!our 9"te!ghborhood
J]ender

Dominos Pizza

Pomeroy. Ohio

2 Lg. Pepperoni Pizza's

Arthur Treachers

Stop in .for lhe Christmas
Layaway Sale. Fine
Jewlery, Guns, TV's,
CO's &amp; Much More

992-5829

992-PAWN

MEGA DEAL

2 Medium Pepperoni Pizza's

The Daily Sentinel
neminds you to support your local
\
businesses!!
tro Promote #Jour Business
9n 'the Small Business Director~
eall Dave Harris or Don Yliffle at 992-2155

''

�Mondly, October a1, 1897 .

The D-aily Sentin,el -~·

By The Bend

Monday, October 27, 1997

•

.....,., - : 1-2 Dip ..., •
Wuk, Applr In Ponon · AI: •

Hard workin_
g· photojournalist tells other side·of. story
Ann
Landers
tim. Ws Anr-;lcl Time~
alld_; Cn:a1&lt;.111

Synd!tlll'

SyllltKau:.

Dear Ann Landen: Since the
tragic death of Princess Diana,
there's been a lot of rage against the
thousands of us who are professional photojournalists. I feel the hurt of
her death as deeply as anyone, but
since that terrible crash. I have been
screamed at. spat on and even had
my camera strap twisted around my
neck.
Every time a photojournalist
meets a new editor, the request is the
same: Show me your previously

published work. This means we
must build trust day by day and
assignment by assignment. Of
course, we all dream of capturing
that heart-stopping, history-making
photo that will propel us to fame and
fortune, but meanwhile, the majority
of us make only a modest living with
our cameras and reporter's notebooks. We do it mostly for the love
of our craft.
The paparazzi may inake thousands of dollars chasing movie stars
and royalty, but the income of a
legitimate photojournalist is modest
at best. We are the ones who. photograph the opening of your new business and the PTA carnival at your
kid's school. We keep our "day
jobs" to help pay the bills.

B.eat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

Finally,! would like to respond to
the rem~ of one of the paparazzi
who really ticked me off. He said the ·
celebrities know what they are getting into and tht;y deserve this treatment. He said the paparazzi are fulfilling a need and "giving the people
what they want.". Well, really?
Nobody goes into public life to die.
I would like to remind that selfappointed spokesperson that there is
also a marketplace for cocaine, child
pornography and even murder-forhire. Does thai juscify making ·
money "fulfilling" any of chese
needs? We professional photographers think not -- Maureen
McCloud. Culver City, Calif.
.Dear Maureen: Your letter in
defense of your craft is sane, solid

Kathy McDaniel, one of the
smging duo, Kathy and Jan, has
been having some health prol)lems
but everything appears to be coming
up roses.
Kathy was playing piano at her
church the other evening when she
began havi ng chest pains which
wouldn't let up. The next day it was
a trip to see a doctor and eventually
she was sent from Pleasant Valley
Hospital to St. Mary 's Hospital in
Huntington, W. Va., where she
underwent heart catherization. The
test revealed some problems but
medication is expected to take care
of them and Kathy was sent home to
recuperate She plans to be back at
her employment in the skilled nursing facility at Veterans Memorial
· Hospit;ll as well as in other locations
in about a week.
Meantime, Kathy extends a big
thanks to all of you for the cards,
flowers and especially your prayers.
She's doing better and her spirits are
high- thanks to you.

Doris Ihle and Scott Lucas extend
thanks to all of you who attended an
open house held Friday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The event was a
farewell gesture co the two-lon_g
time administrative employees who
are retiring and will put in their last
work day on Oct. 31 .
Both of them greet retirement
with mixed emotions, I know. They
were pleased that you turned out to
say goodbye Friday. They were presented gifts from the hospital board
as well as from departments and
individuals not to memion getting a
lot of cards wishing them well.

Several of you have asked about
How are you coming with your. the status of "Lindy".
telephone bill? Better than I, hopeWell. "Lindy" the dog we adoptfully.
ed at the Meigs County Dog Pound
A month ago we were assured · in May, is doing great'. She has
that a weird $4.42 charge would be passed her six month probation peridiscontinued but it remains on che.. od with flying colors. In fact, we
current bill. The current bill brought -coultln'c have designed a better dog
another surprise which I didn' t for our household.
expe\!t.
About one year old, "Lindy"
Included in the charges is a bill turns out to be well trained. minds
from the Pilgrim Telephone Co. in like you wouldn'c believe, and has
Massachusetts for $23.98 for a col- never had an "in house" accident.
lect call we received on Sept . 16 She is anxious to please and
seemingly from Cambridge, Massa- although it sounds a bit off the wall.
chusetts. No amount of..reflecting she seems to be grateful for having
hrought forth information about the been removed froni the pound and
call. So we called Pilgrim. It turns · brought to a good home. And, trust
out that the charge is for a collect me, we do give her a good Mme.
call made to us from &lt;!olumbus.
Perhaps. you'd like to save a·
Ohio from a relative there. Lengch pound dog from death. It's a simple
of the call'' Twenty-two minutes. I process and inexpensive . .However,
knew collect calls were more expcn- do be sure that you are prepared to
sivc than the norm but that 's the first make the commitment to provide the
time we've been hit that hard. I still care and love that any pet should
don 't have the faintest idea on how have. If you are lucky to get yourthe Pilgrim Co. got into the Colum- self a "Lindy" believe me, you will
bus c~ll and we have apparently no keep smiling.

•

Forest Run UMW meet
The recent meeting of Forest Run
United Methodist Women was held
at the home of Wilma Reiber and
opened by Kathleen Scott with ·all
reading the UMW Purpose.
Devotions were read by Scott on
the "Mother of Daniel" and the
Lord's Prayer was spoken in unison.
During the business meeting. it
was decided to retain the group's
officers for the coming year. The
Thanksgiving meeting will be a
potluck dinner at the home of Mary
Nease.
·
Fifteen sick calls were reponed.
Nease had the program, an article
entitled "Responsively Yours" taken
from Response magazine concerning the support of capital punish-

Associated Press Writer
KENNEBUNK, Maine (AP) Like a small herd of buffalo, the five
children charged ioco the office of
schOol nurse Florine LaPointe, fuss.ing and ridgeling, vying to be the
center of auention.
LaPointe, used to this wiggly
bunch, calmly hands out cups of
water and each child gulps down a
pill, tosses the cups and rushes out to
recess.
The students at the Sea Road Elcmentary School don't come to
LaPointe for Band-Aids, aspirin or a
si•* call home to mom. Every day at
noon, chey need their Ricalin.
The scene .is the same in schools
across the country. Ritalin. prescribed to help children wich allen· tion and hyperactivity disorders, has
lumed many nurses into case managers.
Melissa Cash, a nurse at the
Academy at Robinson in Akron,
Ohio, said she han~ out medicine
to only a handful of children when
she started her job seven years ago.
Now she has to make sure almost 35
students receive their prescription
drugs daily, mostly for asthma
inhalers and Ritalin.
At Sea Road, 23 of the 450 students take Ritalin. Others take psychotropic drugs like Prozac and·
Zofoft co control depression or
obsessive compulsive disorders.
"We have a lot of kids on heavy
duty medication," LaPointe said. "I

·cELLULAR PHONES

divorce only to learn years Iacer that
she hadn' t.! also deale with a couple
where the husband thought he was
divorced, but his. wife knew other·
wise.
The moral of the story· is -- get ic
in writing. If in. doubt, pay for the •
time of an expen. It's ·well worth the
money. -- Enrolled Agent in Oregon
Dear Apnt: Thank you for your
excellent advice. i hope my divorced
readers will make sure all cheir
papers are signed and filed, and if
necessary, they shouW seek the
assistance of a professional.

hope it slows down. I don't like the
quick fix."
.
• Although critics have suggested
that Ritalin is · overprescribed for
children, a study lase December
found that doctors use about 2 1/2
limes more Ritalin for hyperactive
and inauencive children than in 1990
- a much .smaller increase than
feared.
· The research, reported in the
December issue of Pediatrics, said
some 1.5 million young people ages
5 chrough 18, or 2.8 percent of the
nacion 's school-age children, take
the drug.
The National Association of
School Nurses, based in Scarborough, Maine, said the number is
more like 3 million.
"This really is a very common
problem in American schools affectins a lot of children," said Doris
Lucken~ill. the association presi·
dent. "Almost every teacher .in the
world has a child in his or her clas.&lt;room with this problem."
Rica]in is so commonly prescribed· to school children that !he
associacion recently sent informatio~ packages ·about the drug to
11,000 members. It includes tips on
how to recognize symptoms and
how to store the drug.
Whotever the numbers. school
nurses say they are ~wamped by the
increase in students' medication,
forced to curtail or reschedule other
programs such as vision and hearing
screening or faculty tlu shots.

J.E"FF WARNER INSURANCE
113 W. 2ND ST.
20 Y~. E&gt;Cp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jone1

The Shame of a Man
By Sherrl L Billings

again
For a call or a letter that never

· The shame of a man who's less
than a mouse
Is one who is satisfied neglecting his
house
·
·
His children long for him and struggle aboul
Yet, his pleasures are filled without a
doubt

arrives

The children, they cry if only tu
hear •
.
.
Just a word from a dad they hold so
dear
That word never comes, there's
never a cali
How does chat man live, his head
held tall

From a dad needed so in in the midst
of their lives
This is his own choice, he has
made ic this way
.
The little ones live with this each
and every day
But, memories arc fading, they soon
will not know
This undeserving father. whom they
have loved so

The shame of this man whp's less
than a mouse
Is that he is satisfied neglecting his
house
. He soon will gtow old and then he
. Birthdays and holidays are still will die
His children can't miss him, I'm sad
just the same·
Presents are nice, yet they wait once to reply

Star Grange hosts Halloween party
winners.
The next meeting will be Nov. I
with a potluck supper at 6:3op.m.

Public Nollce
11c111c. of Eltcllon an Tlx
l#ly In !x" 11 ota..,.,
Mill Umo"tllllon
NOTICE II !Mrtby given
lh•t In pp,.uonot of a
ll..olutlon of th• Bolrd of
Townllhlp Trullt"' ot th•
Town•hlp ot llulland,
Rutland, Ohio, jllteotd on
lh• 3rd day of April, 1"7

Send quescions to .Ann Landers, Cre- ,
ators Syndicate, 5717 W. Cencury
Blvd, Suite 700, Los Angeles. Calif.
90045

tht,.wlll bl eubmltt..s to 1

voit o1 1M poopta of .Mid

IUbdiVIIIOn II I O•nerll
ELECT10N to be IMtd In 11M
lowMhlp ol Rutland, Olllo,
lit th• r..ullr plla.e of
voting !Mroln, on 1M 4111
doy ol NOVInlber, 1117, 11M
qUN!Ion of levying I tax, In
..ce11 ol the ten mill -=~~n~~ v;~u·:~:· ::~~:
Mmllllllon, lor lilt benoftt of ($0.10) lor nch on•
llutlond Townahlp lor th• hundr•d dollara of
purpooe of Ma.lnlllnlng and Vllultlon. tor live (5} ~a,.,
Tho Poll• tor aald
Sal~ IIX
openlllng
- ·being:•
· · All.
lddtuonaltmc o11.0 mlllo
~~:.~~o,::. :~:r:,:~ ~~
Itt 1 ,.,. not "'c-lng 7:30 o'clock P.M; of .. 1~
2.0 milia lor MCh - dollar
ofVIIuatlon, which .,...,.,,. day. By ...... ol 1M board of
1o ten- I'Q.IO) lor MCh
a.cdona,
on• hundred dollar• ol

::!C::
ber. 1117, 1M

d8y

o1

qu1111111 ollovylng o tex, In
•••••• 0 1 th• 1• n mill
Mmltllton,lor 1M benelll of
Colllmbl• cownlhlp lor IIIII
JlllfiiOM o1 M.. n181nlng ond
opentlng - - • Said
tax IMtlng:2 An ld&lt;IHton•l
tu o1112 miH lit a rato not
••o-lng 112 mill• lor•
••oh on• dollar of
. . . - , - ...-n11 to
live (10.011) lor ••ch
one hundr•d dolloro of
wtuatton,lor 5 (IIW yea,.),
Th• Pollt lor •aid
El.ctlon will o..-n at 8:30
o'clock A.M. and r•maln

lle9..;,;~H=

By onMr of !MikNtrd of

Eltcllono,

of Molp County, Ohio.

Clllllrman
111111 D. Smith

Andy Bodwell, i 1, llkla hla dilly dose of Rill lin from 11lhool
nurae Rorlne LaPolnta It lunch time It the Sea Road Elemtnlllry School In Kennebunk, Milne.
Glendon and LaPoince agree
some kids need Ritalin, but they
worry aboul giving medicine to children who may not need it.
"When kids have issues, the ,
quick fix is a pill. We want them to ·.
learn lifetime skills;'' La!lQinte:llllid. · ~ ·
"We're giving them a message by
medicating · them. They know they
can feel better with drugs."
LaPointe then handed an 11-ycarold boy a cup of water and he swallowed his pill.

Public Notice
Nc111u. of Eltcllon an Tox
~In fExcNI o1a.. Ten
MHI Umllltton
NOTICE II ...roby given
that In purauanc• of a
RHolutlon of the Board of
Comml11tonero ol . th•
county oi.M...., Pom.roy,
Ohio, pa11tc1 on tht 21•t
doy of July, 1"7 ...,. will
be IUIImHtMI 10 I vot• of •

PUBLIC NOTICE
A mMIIng ol 1M S.C.I.P. ·

Local Rovlow CommltiN
an 1'1111..-y,
October 30, 1117 lit 2:30
p.m. In the olllce of lht
llelga County Commlo'

111111 be Mid

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
20 Yra. E&gt;&lt;p. • Int. OWner. Aiel&lt; JoiV1Ion

Free E&amp;limaleo

Complete Machine Shop Senke Fabrleation
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gu

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
Each year, the Gannett Foundation makes contributions to
qualified nonprofit organizations to improve the education,
heallh and .advancement of the people who live in Gannett
communities. We value projects which take a creative
approach to such fundamental issues as education and
neighborhood improvement, economic development, youlh
developmel)t, community problem-solving, assistance to
people who are disadVantaged, environmental conservation
1
and cultural enrichment.

The purpDN of ... ,..,_
lng 1110 ltllcl I !11th ,.,.,.

btr'lor lht• oommltl.._
Fnd Holllnlln, MMIIbtr
S.CJ.P. Dllttrlal18

(10) 21~ COmlyi!IIM

In Memory

In Loving Memory or- •
EDNA F. ROUSH
who pae11d -av one year ago todayOctober 20th
Don't think of Iter .. aone 1111'11)' .
Her JOumeys JUSI begtm,

I\

-111!G.
CoohiO&lt; l Cook, B•lng Rtoumo
To: Lltdt John'o 14, 211.:1 Statt ~
Routa 141. &lt;c.-rl. Oof!lpolil. •
Cold"lf • Movta Exuoo, ProdiH:· : •
lion Traln. .t. Film Studkl, 114· .
523-G920.

IHkl tnargallo &amp; etperl.nced
lady IG c"' far newborn in our •
homo dull"lf lht dar. S.IMI lnqutrr I IIIUrntl 10: P.O. 8or 2S4
I I - WV 252U Roll,....... •
Aoquhd.

WINTER STORAGE
AVAILABLE
Atlht Meigs County Fairgrounds
Inside Storage Space $3.00/t.F
Open Shed Storage $1 .50/t.F

Public Notice
quollil•d bldd•r• at ' tho
Olllc1 of Contnctt, Room
111 of 1M Ohio llefNutiMnt .
0 I
T nnaportdon,
Colurnllul, Ohio, untll10:00
a.m.
.
Widneocl8y
lor ,· Novtmhr
05 , 1117
mprovomontt
In:
Molgo County, Ohio tor
Improving oeccton MI!G-7~8.335, Stilt• Rout• 7 In
Ch••••r Townohlp, by
repairing two c,ulv•rta by
111111111lngatunn•ll1Mr.
·
"Th• dot• .., tor
compl•llon of thlo work
thlll be 11 HI forth In 1M
bidding propout. •
Pl•n• on~ S,._lftcollono
,._
••• on lllo In tho
D•parlm•nt of Trano-.

"""'' '

Wednesday, October 29, 1997
11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Door

Free PVH Speech &amp;
Language Screenings

Thursday,
October 30,1997
3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
'

'

For Children Ages 2 and Up
Children's Clinic
(2801 Jackson Ave.)
Call (304) 675-5250 for an
Appointment.
Walk-Ins Welcome

:104-1'11-15111.

W•o••,

Paid Vacation.
Ful I PM Wonted Otoor Be,..nta Included, 114·

7 Wook Old Block Lob PuPPI, 2
Fomolo C.ll. 2 IQ- 11+245- ~u~e~ne~7·----------~ l
Domlno't Pizza Now Aecepalng
Appllcotlono At: Golllpollo I Po- .
rTloroy. Apjllr ~ f'ltlson.

0525.

PQ.ItES"
Quality Window Systems
wv 10234n

anlliftd

mo CEU How,

Domino's Pizza-Now hiring all

poaitlona, Pl. Pltaaanl uta,

30.&amp;· 17~

SmoR Blldt C.t 3 Yoora Olcl F•

rriull be 18yn. old .
5858.

Othtr Ptll, Housebroke, t14·
44111512, 114-4411-1-

range Ewerythlng: Plactmtnl

eo

lntYrtnce,· And Turck Flaanc-

moto. Spored. Front Pawo Do- DRIVERS
clawecl,ll-10 lbl. Adutll W1111 No Takelhe Ntll lltp, Become

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-291-5600

GRiVILY fRAC,OIS

Lost end Found

An Owner /Operator. Wt Ar'

Wllh A Atputaltlt Fr•lght Ca.,

btocliiWiolta Torrioo lng. NO IIONEY DOWN! BAD
mll malt dog In Flatrock area . CREDIT, No Problem. Ct111
"A" CDL, llln. 1 Yr., OTR. Con
304-e75-58ll0.
1-IQ0.377-3101.
.

LOST: Small

&amp; REPAIRS

70

Yard Sate

Galli potts
&amp; VIcinity

Rlchard'a Lawn &amp; Garden
Gravely DealerSpencer, W.Va.
1-800-827-4551

Earn extta mon&amp;y lor Chriatmaa.
... Avon, call614-948·9000.

Elder IV wonn wanlt .pertOn • .
'""' In homo bt ...... lhon h&amp;lp wilh cooliiO(l,
cort, :
dtalre one with no family, non- .
amok.r &amp; dots not ua alcohol, .

po...,..

reftttnctl ttqulrtd. P.O. Box
1 I 72, Athonl, Oh. 45701 .

-

Equal !loooo1loiiY

~·U/FIIllll

Smoko- And Drug-

RADIATOR REPAIR

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Agricultural .• Industrial • Automotive

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

•Re-corea • New Radiators

Garages • Replacement Windows

Oxy • Accetl Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

TORY'S PORTABLE WELDING

'614-992·7643

992·5583

•

~

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling, ExCIVItlng
&amp; Trenching.
Umeatont 1r G11vet
Septic Syitllml
Trailer a Houaa Slt11
RRIPflllb/1 Rlffl
Joe N. Sayre

614-742·2138 .

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand ·

985 4422

·-

Cheater, Ohio

RACINE GUN

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

CLUB
Gun Shoots
Starts Sunday
Sept. 28 at

949-2168

IOIEIT BISSELL
CONSTRUmON

1:00pm

12 gauge modified
Limited
637 Back Bore
680 Front

IOWAID
. EXCAVATING &amp;
TIUCIJIIG
Umettone Hauling
Houae &amp; Trailer Slt11
Lend Cl11rtng a
Grading
Slpllc Syttema
&amp; Utllltlll
Eatlmat11

992-3838

STATE ROUTE .124
Approl(lmetely 1.4 miles east of Route 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO .
814-384 6212

LUMP AND STOKER COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED ·
DELIVERY IVIIWLE

MY PLACE

KINGS'

Handcrafted Wood
Prolects

HGIMI•pm1111HII
3351 Hoppy Hollow 11Mkldlopcllt, Ohio 4S1el
Homtl, Addltl-,
Rooting, Siding,

Swings, BeiKhes, Tables;
Misc. Items
34718 St. Rt. 7

...... ,_ .... ...,
Ph.ll854198

ltllttn...,. ........

BANKRUPTCY

Dlc:ka, P1lnllng
Us FaA FrH EsttmaNt

114-742-30110
e14-742-3324

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek,
Attorney At Law
614-592·5025
Athens, Ohio
11111'n!W 1 . . . .

HEIRLOOM CONNECTION
Heirloom Quality Custom Fu~niture
* Co•plete Kitchens
* Kitchen Cabinet Refaelng
* Antique Repruduetlons
Hsndcrstrtld Using Meigs Co. Hardwood
614·992-4106
Free Estimates
$till Takln Orders for Christmas
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addltlont
•NewGarag..
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•lnt•rtor I Ext•riO&lt;
Ptlntlng
Alao Concret• Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

OILER'S
DEER SHOP
S.R. 325,
Langavllle OH

Open Now &amp; Will Be
Open Daring The Bow
&amp; Regular

112.Q15

Pomeroy, Ohio

742-2076

50% OFF

(Um1 StoneLow Raila)

AI C.,.t·Upltolstery
Clealling

WICKS

CHEVALIER'S

HAULING

CARPET CLEANING

Umestone,

Carpet-Upholatary

Gravel, Sand,

614·992..0077

OH

EMP LOY f.l ENT
SE RVICES

Dllf Sta101
10/21/87 1 mo. pd.

Top Soli, Flil Dirt

614·992·3470 .

Moldle lame Fllrnaca
and Beat Pumps
- Easy

Bank Fln~nclng -

I FulmiCtl '28"' unoulh
Pumps lnllllled •3800 amottUt
Ftw EttlllllltH

Pick up tlllmdttl
appUanc•a,~,

llllrty mNit &amp;

motor btockl.

Mldcllepor1
&amp; VIcinity
All Yud 8otH llull 8e Paid lo
Advance. D11dtlne: 1:OOpm till

Chapter 13

Chapter 7

(Payments l&gt;IHd on opproveg CIOdlt)

Litlltlhingl

Moving Silo: Slturdar 0&lt;1. 11lh.
Sit 0&lt;1 25th, SIL Nov 11~ 111
Garfield An., In Brick Btlldt Challanolftg And R-nllng C. _
Alii Cl'urdl Of God, 8:00 11 S:liO r•• Available Through Our Wan. •
P.M.
agement Training Program. Wt
Aro SHkl"lf An lntotllg•n~ Co- •
SALE
SALE
SALE
rter -Oriented Ptraon Who It ·
Slturdar Nov. 1, tH7 Tilt Cru, Outgollllf
And Uket To Be Chi~
udora. (Our 3 To 12 Year Oldl)
ltogtd. Ex~;elltnl Training Pro· ·
Art Having A Rummai•· Bakt,
gram, Btlleflla, ·And Adv•nct-.
And Crab Sat.. Tlil Will Be Hold ment
Patentlal. CaU D.,_ Burn~
At Our Church Hall Behind Tho 111614-288~167.
Firat Church Of God On Garfield
Avtnut, The Houra Art I A.U.
Equal Opportunltw
TbeP.M.
~U/FIIllll
SALE
SAL£
SALE
Smoko- And CrugEIMotiillill
Pomeroy,

1111 ad 11 to run,
Monday tdltlon-

Pole llama,

.... MJb"-•

ort Worlh AWl
in
11tt ClmifirJ Stclion'

.

··~------~~------------------~

Howard L Wrtttinl

Gutters
. DO\'Vnapouta
Gutter Cleaning
.
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

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

(No Sunday Calls)

1/4/lln

· Hou,.:
7:00a.m. lhru 4:00 p.in. Monday thru'Fftday
PVH Physical Therapy
I o.,..n,,ent Wellneaa &amp; Rehab Center I

Catmotalogit1 Netdtd. Gaur ..
12 CamtMnatlon delle. &amp; chalrt.

"FAt:TORY ·
~
DmEt:T
110 Court St.
112-4111

u....a Needed. Work ·

OWn Hro., $20K To UOK ftr. 1· •
1100-3411-7188 X 1173.

Buy, Sell &amp; Trade

BRIMBI MINIII

The DilllY
...:..!1
Sentme
. • }

•

1HI Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Same Day Repair Service

250 Condor slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A DlvillOn on·Nichills Metal, INc.
. Phone: 614: 992-2408
· Fax: 304-n3-5881

985-4473

of Education of ,,.
8outh•rn
Localo1 SchOol
.,......, ,._,_,
........ ,
-N~ -·~•
__,.
Ohio, on the 28th d8y ol
July, 1..7, 1Mr1 wlll ' IMt
portallon.
tubmltled to the quollfted
J•rry Wroy Olrtclor ol
''' b: • o r - . , _ dllNOTICE TO IIDOaRI
TnfliPCMtalloll
11101 at the lltotlon 10 be
STATE Of 01110
(10) :10,27 2 tc
,.ld on tho 4th d•y ol
DEMRTMENT Of'
- · 1117,ata.. NtTIIANifiORTATION
ul8r ~ of YOUng lhtroColumllua, Ohio
In, a..:uuUon ollovylng •
Oll1oe or CottbiiOIIl
Senliael
-••- ta aullkll of 11M 1..11111 CollY Plu!ltber 17·772
-Ill ~I RmtUNIT PRICE CONTRACT
.Cia11ifiedt , .
taaan lor 11M blntlll ollhl
Mailing O.C.10110187
Sctllhorn l.ocll SchOol til•
SHI~ propolll• will be
992-2156
trlc!IO&lt; 11M purpooe ol pro- aceoottd I rom all pr•-

3211-1045, Ext 1017, P.IHI Alln.,
tl Yra. S.rv-U. 110·

Mu11

(Free Discount parts list)

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine. &amp; Welding Shop

•NewHomea
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

Proposal's for funding are currently being accepted through
The Dally Sentinel. For more information and an application
for your qualified nonprofit organization, please contact
Charlene Hoeflich at The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, or call 992-2155. Completed applications
must be returned to The Daily Sentinel Tribune no later than
Friday, November 7, 1997.

!hilt ,..,_nt 10 • I'IMiulion lllll!llld by 11M lkNtrd

Perlonall

c-.
...... lr Ill&gt;Holling
SIDw I,
1117, 11'-·:

Do You Hove HIRI Cholcol? Lot
A Porchlc Help. Juat CoW 1-100- CHILD CARE-Working couple : :

"Bafld Yoar Dream"

PARTS

RadiatorRepab'&amp; Replac:eaicnt
Monday-Frlday-8:00a.m.-4:30p.m.
Setwday • 8:00 a.m. • 1.2 noon ·

IIOMN

Ufe holds 10 mill}' facets
this earth II ou1y one.
}ult tltlnk of bet as rating
from tbi! tiOl fOWIIDd the tears
In a place of warmth and comfort
where there ere no clays and years.
'l'blnk !tow she must be wlsblag
that we could know todly
!tow notltlDg but onrllduen
can really piSS away.
And tltlnk of her u 'JMng In the
beu1J or thoee lllte touched· for uotblag loved Is
em- lost· and sbe wu loved 10 mudt.
Sadly misled by Sally and family

GANNITTFOUNDATION

=

005

(614) 446-4759

Dltted 8tptember 12, 1117

(10) I, 13, 20, 27 4 tc

dollan 1$1011.00)
tax Yll1th of (3)
1 1,
: . : : ::.!mo':tng
tax ~or 1"7, collecllan
yNr 1888.
TIM polio will be opar1
from 1:30 a.m. co 7:30 p.m.
onuldtM!e.
.
IYOIIOEII O'THE
·aoAIID OF ELECTIONS 01'
THE COUNTY Of' MEIGI,
OHIO
"~ o· ....,u,,
.. _.... .,,_..,.
~~
.,,..
(10) e, 13, 20,27 4TC
Public Notice

AtHI O lJ I ICt 1.1UI IS

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

Public Notice

Dtnctor

($.40) lor Hell OM llundtld

81

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Henry L Hum.

r~ro:ll~o:w:e:d~b~y~th:e~m~e:e~u~·n~g~at~S~p.~m~.=:=~;;~;;;~:r.;~~~~=-====;==~~:;~~=~

:~-:~=

of

Th• Polla
Clllltrman
E l - will open lit 1:30
RIUI 1), Smtih
o'clock A.M. end r•maln
Dhector
opon unUI 7:30 o'oloc- P.M.
Dltld !lePt. 11187
ol ..lddoy.
(10) I, 13, 20,27 4 tc

Public Notice
vkllng fundi lor curr1n1
ope..Ung UJ*IHI, II a
,..,. o1 ,_ (4.01 milia lor
HCh OM dollar ($1.00) ol
10 vatuollan, which
arnountt to forty cenlll

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

Public Notice
th• pooplo of 111~
aubcllvlalon 11 1 G•naral
ELECTION 10 IMt Mid In 11M
COUnty of Melgl, OhiO, II
!he regulor placet ol voting
therein, on lh• 4th doy of
November, .1817, the
qlltlllon oll.vylng 1 tax, In
••o.. • of th• .t•n mill
llmiUitlon, lor lht benollt of
M•lgt County o•nerol
Health Dl•trlct tor th•
e~!!'!!! of c urrtnt
"S;Id'"; -g~ AN-Il
ofM lldlllng IU of1 mill lit
a rat• not ••eNding 1.0
tone) milia lor .. oh on•

)'Ill,..
lor uld

Public Notice
Public l'lotlce
o1 Election on Tu
OJ*I until 7:30 o'clocii.P.M.
~ ·In Ell- o1 1M T•n
of Nld d•Y·
Mill Umltatlon
By llf'der of lh•E~rd,.ol'
NOTICE 11 honby glvon
...,,.0
that In purluonu of 1
ol M• County, Ohio.
R-tuuon .ollll• Boord o1
HMry L Hunt••
Towllllhlp Tru11 ..o of th•
N•CDIIII. 1rmamfthn .
5
11•w
1iown• hi P o1 Columbia •
, Dt....Cor
~':"7,;:h0~' r.,;=,"';~";
OIIIH Sept. 1,1111
,lhtN will be tubmlltod to 1 11 018, 13, 20,27 41c •
vot11 of 11111 poopt• of utd
oubdlvlolon 11 1 Qanerol
Public Notice
ELECTION to be !Wid In lh•
NO-E OF ELECT10N
1i nohlp of Columbia
,,._II htnby glvon
ow
'
Notla.

You'IPind
.. The Classlfleds

Remodelfng

Campul•

VIIUlllon, lor live (5}

"Work is so intense. I have 10 prioritize constantly. I feel like a triage
nurse," LaPointe said after a boy
came in scarc.hing for his inhaler fdr
asthma and two diabetic studencs
checked their blood sugar.
"The nurses are definicely the
case managers.'' said Maureen
Glendon, a nurse at the Archbishop
Ryan High School in Philadelphia.
"The paperwork is very tedious and
time consuming. but it is also very
rewarding when students do achieve
and do well."

Cuttom Hom"

360" Communications

Poet's Corner

Reiber read scriptures Matthew
22:34-40 and Nease read "Remembering the Basics" which calls people to love God with all their hearts
and thCir neighbors as themselves,
and "Winning by Losing" which
reminded those of when Chris! said
"Whoever would save his life will
Approximately 60 people attend, lose it. .and whoever loses his life my
ed the Star Grange Halloween Party
sake and the gospels will save it."
andpotlucksupperheidatthesalem
The way co have life is to puc
one's glarnourous desires aside and
Winners in the costum~ judging
seek !he Lord's will instead, she stat- CenterFireStation.
·were,
by age group:
ed.
Ages und~r s .. most original,
Nease read "My Shiny Blue
Schwinn Bicycle" and closed the Derrick Eckstine;
· Ages S-10 -- prettiest, Stacy
meeting 'with prayer.
Macomber; usliest, Bryan Gahart;
Refreshments were served by che
·
El' K
· d
t
eyser; wetr est,
hostess to foil' members and one scanest,
Michelle Eggers; most alien, Jim
ment .
guest, Mildred Arnold.
-Eners; mo•t darlins,.llobby Gahart;
most handsome, Shawn Gah art;
Ages J().IS -- prettiest, Rachel
Mace;
mosc alien. Mike Macomber;
DeScendants of James and Bertha
Luthcr and Mary Smith, Linda most lifelike, Eric Montgomery;
Cremeans held their annual family and Heatlier Boyles, Junior Buskirk, mosc beautiful, Chelsea Montreunion recently at the Rutland Roger Dent, Rita Whitney, Megan gomery;
Civic Center.
and Matthcw Smtt· h. M'ddl
t
eport;
Ages IS-20 ·· most oNginal, Lee
Attending were Danny, Judy and Angie McDonald Pullins, Donnie. Bolin. ·
Tiffany McDonald. Tommy and Carol, Sonny and Summer Folmer,
Over 20 -- ugliest, Rick
Shirley s;mmons, Ted Cremeans, Darrin and Hannah Cremeans, Jeff Macomber; scariest, Patty Db:r;
· Dudd ma,
'
Danny and Barb Cremeans, Kate Musser, an d MeIante
. most original, Janis Macom r·,
•
Cremeans. Robert and Shirley Pomeroy.
weirdest, Stella Gibson; most lifeSmith. Phyllis and Darlene SpanMarvin Cremeans, Westerville; like, Linda Montgomery.
Jier. Iva Creams. Gene and Roberta Judy Coomer. Amy 010f1Cusky, ond
Several games were played
Musser. Glennis Musser. Teresa and Elaine Musser, South Lebanon; throughout the evenins includine
Alyson Patterson. Dickie and Bever- Richard and Glenna Felty, pin the nose on the pumpkin, potato
ly Fetty. Shawn and Alexa Fetty. Langsville, and Vada Aowers and in the pot, bubble blowing contest
and several guessing games.
Everett. Sherry.and Elizabeth Smtih Judy Becken, Huntingcon, W. Va.
Prizes wen: awarded co all the
of the Rutland III'Ca.

Cremeans reuion held at Center

And cud-chewing cow
Look quite alike, but lhey're differenc somehow.
And whac is the difference?
I s~e it all now.
Ic's the incelligent look
On the face of che cow.
-- Aoyd Camp of Brownfield,
Texas
Dear Floyd: I princed thot little
poem in my column many years ago.
Thanks for reminding me that it was
time to do it again.
, Dear ADn Landen: That "Faux
Wife in Tulsa" Who didn't realize
she wasn't legally marrii:d may have
a lot of company. As a tax consultant, I have amended returns for one
yo~ng man who genuinely believed
his wife had gone through wilh the

At school lunch break - recess and
Ritalin for thousands of children
By VICTORIA BRETT

alternative but to pay the $23.98.
However, I do expect to object to
someone since it doesn 't seem logical that a call from Columbus should
be routed through Massachusetts.
Oh well-easy come, easy go. I
hope you. too, are watching not only
your phone bill but other bills as
well. Seems to me that strange
things are happening.

and sensible. Photojournalism is an
art and should be regarded as such.
Crawling over walls, hiding in bushes and chasing yachts with long-lens
cameras is not "journalism," and it
would help the cause of decency if
publications would not buy such
trash.
So -· as you can see, there is
enough blame to go around. Thank
you for a provocative ietter that gave
me a chance to speak my mind on
this subject.
Dear Ann Landen: When I read
the letter about the woman w.ho
drove everyone in the office crazy
wich ber J!Um-cracking. 1 had the
perfect response. I don 't know who
wrote it, but here it is: Bucolic Bliss
The gum-chewing student

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

•

111'118C001dll
Serving Soulheaslam OH &amp; WI/
1391 Sllilc&lt;d

114 441 t411

School Rd .,

0H

�• I

'

Page 10 o The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Mondlv., October 27, 1997

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

•

... ~ ' ...

AUEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel o Page 11

BIUDGI
PHILLIP

ALDER

-_,$

Polloi Job• s PooiUono Avail· 1.1 Acto-....
ablo, No E1porionco N-OOIY.
Fo• lnfotmaUon, CaiiiOO-NI·
11311, Exl.3t82.
1184 28170 Fo1 Wood Modular
Horne on 314 ~ tot 11 Pdlpo'lt
Ftny. a Btdtoom. s balh• ..,n1
ok, weohttldr)'lt', aM kllchon 01&gt;
~ llllllt..... guard wiliduu:a. flrlptlct.

2Old - 11.,&amp;IIIIa A
Fiiillit
1111,1100080,
1za

----·11111
Up. e1ws 1111

Upton UMCI Cano RL 12·S llltot
wv. Fl ..nolnt
----· 304-45&amp;-loel.

840
100 lb. baiH OltlCIIIIII qualltr

loar, Mar

ICOOOO,

e&amp;lt.

COII114·1111-

Eot oom, f2,71 bulhal " ' _ .

able; orchard gt'llla har, round
•• , _ , •••25 ..

12: 11 I GQ2 Mea, 11.._34-47.
I 11AtJSf'O flll\ TlOt l

~-,.;.;.;·;.;,·30;.;.;.4;;;•;.;;.;;-:..:;;___ _ _ :
1877 GIIC, 1121011, 'U. .,., fll, '

o•.-.

.... &amp; .....
but """'
......lqO.Itof.G07-IQ38.
'

1110 FIIO Plck·l'P I Cr. Fou11

Single Poronl Po .. om. W1oJ Ront
Whtn You Cln, Dwn. Spoclol F~

,.,..... IJ p .... 304-7S7285.

bug-·

tDVI Ford Ranger PU•• 5.8~5:
tDU Ford Rangor PU, I3,2H;

bedroom ipattmanll. fur·

330 ...,.,.. for Slle

SO,a . 301•5 3081

340 Business end
Buildings
Bu alne11 for 1111 In U•eon,

pric:ad .. Hil304-773-5874.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
BRUNER LAND
114-775-1173

lou Ia Your Galnl
8805

WIH do olclotly cono day 01 nlghl,
good rt(ltfiOCII. :W..-175-2347

Mason- Modular hame on 100/
100 lot, tfvH bedroom, IWO lull
baths.
lera• lr/dr combo, klllfr
Will haul junk 01 trull - - 1351
pi:lllop load. 304475-6035.
combo .... ~ fp, Ulllty """"'

.,., 7:al)pm.

210

FINANCIAL

comoo equlppod With atovo. rolrlglloll&gt;f, dolh wooht&lt;. and gat·
bogo dlapollll. connl or, 100 car
gorago and atorago building In·

Business

eluded, privacy lance In blick.
apllt l'llllln fronr. two porchlt.

Opportunity

,.,_llll04.

e

Older home with new lmprov•
monll, 3111, 1 Iloilo, on t boaudlul

1115 Chtv1 a to Blazer, Auto,

2bdrm. apta., total tlac:trlc, appliaMOIIumllhld, _ , room

IU 141

1880 G11C Solari CUatom,

.....,

81-31270&lt;~75-4575.

41 0 Houses tor Rent

loty, all power, hitch. 30H75·j

this newspaper

Is tlltteet to

the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 whiCh makelllllltQal
· to ad'llertj&amp;e "l!lny preference,
Hmltatlon or discrimination
balaed on race. color, re~g lon,
18x lamilialstatua or national
Origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference.
limitatiOn or di scr i m inat ion .~

--

limo. Apply by phona 304-755·

DI\TING
•

rant1, Can Be Seen At t583 St,

SeRV.ICE_
.
-

RL 110, Golllpollo, ·ONo, (Toll/&amp;.

Toler Insurance) Or Call Ot4··

-SFotiiOttlrilxmotlon.

•

'

1H7 Chtyoltt Town &amp; Counttr:
LXIIIInl van. Law lllloal (&amp;14~
440&amp;33)

4 WD 8·10 :.'·1, loll Of Extraof

I14-25UOt2.

,.THF. RORN J.OSER
YOU

~&lt;roW WAA.T\t\1~

ml(l£

,'100 ~ r'U. N£','Eitlt£. 11\E:

...

~

~00~?

Sf&gt;...Y':l 7

ADO

Nice 2br, refllfenc:es &amp; deposit.

-

1'\'(

HOUSE TO THE
"E6C. LIST."

aolt.· .au ..__1.._0 d.
""' ,.. \1$35 full olzo ptu load, opll~ dt·

Firewood lar

&amp; - - 304·882·2556.

OLD . ASH VIlLAGE APART·
MENTS. Now accopUng applico·
11on1. NtwiJ renovated. 2bedLeundromat

I

pley

3 Bedroom HOUII en Country 2
llilu ffam Rio Grando, No .,...

Pado, Starl I3&amp;0JMo. No Pttl,
L - Plua lo&lt;;urlly Dopoalt Ro-

DOWN
1 Cltchlng

Implement
. 34 'Guordlan
aplrlt 2 Bomb ahtrler
3 Bound
35 Sponloh hero
4T-geEl38 Helper
Ninll Turtlll

5 Glrallelllw
In I mal
I Sook (flax)
7 Anclll)tlllllan

namo
8 Noort&lt;
9 Romon 3

10

Frenc~

11~L

17 Mutiny - Bounty

....

19 Spec:e ogcy.
22 Food-ttotage
24 Tooth
25 Roflgloua

28=

East ,
All pass

27 Dlaert plant
28 lladthlngs
29Mooqulto
oenua

31 f•ke to court

.

-+--+--f

33 U.S. aoldlara
36 Got Into the
poker game
37 Castle ditch
39 Make Iizzy
40 Bank
employee
43 Cutin two
45 Non-profit
or g.
47 Hullt411 Waitt
pitcher

We have reached tbe eighth daily
bulletin of the Summer Nationals in
Albuquerque. It contains a de'al from
the fascinating tournaments between
computer programs: Q· Plus Bridge,
-:r+-+--1
r::
written by German !ohannes Leber,
won most of the"early events. but on
-.-+--4-.f 49 Flying prefix
"'
5D Boxing·
the last day lost, 66-44, in a chip-to.--1-+--1
victory abbr.
1!1
chip' 24-board match against Bridge
51 -Tin Tin
...1.-L-..1
(movie dog)
Baron 7, the work of Tom Throop.
52 And lOOn
. Q-Pius. Bridge is clearly capable
(abbr.)
of sophisticated play, as highlighted
53 Ofymptc org.
by this deal.
When lhe GIB program (written
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Matt Ginsburg) sat Easl·West. it
by Luis Campos
~Cipher cryptograms ' !9 created fr om ~II tOft! by famous l)eOt)le , put and l)(~nt
Jed the hean eight, which ran around
, Etch letter lfllt\e Cipl',et Stands lot lholher. Today's dufl: X eQIJIIs M
to declarer's kin¥. Q·Pius attacked '.
T I H ·y D
PNN
'S U ' M
APUYD
diamonds , East wmning with the ace.
ULY
A spade switch is still good enough
H P X.'
JPNSWGDISP
PIFYNM
to defeat the contract. Declarer 'has
only eight tricks {one spade, three
XPIPFYD
NYWUZ
ELSNNSEII, I
hearts, three diamonds and one club),
and When the unsuccessful club·
•
PWUYO
UGTFL
N G MM .
finesse is taken, the defenders can
cash out five tricks: three spades, one
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I don'l care whal you say about me . Just be sure 10
spell my name wrong." - Batbra Streisand.
diamond and one club. However, the
GIB East continued with the heart
jack. South just took lhe club finesse
TIUT DAllY
· and cruised home .
·
,.ULII
Q·Pius did much bener by leading.
_ _ _ _...;_...:; l~lttd ~, CI.AY, I. 'OILAN _:.._...;__ _...:,_
a spade. ·And when the dummy
~earronge leHers of
played low, East made the expert play
four
Krombled words be·
· of the six. Note thai if Ellsl' puts up
low to form four simple wards
the queen ("Third hand high, part" ner." or whatever it is in col)lpuler·
CIXAML
· talk), declarer gets two spade tricks:
his king and dummy 's jack. Along
' w ilh three hearts, three diamonds and
the club ace, that makes the necessary
nine. Now; although Soutli won a
GITTH
cheap irii:k with his spade eight,
when East got in with the diamond
ace, lhe defenders cashed three spade
tricks el\ding with West, who
switched to a club to defeatlhe contract.

I

Modern 1 Bedroom AparlmenL
eu
4"1 03&amp;0.
•

rooma.

•

O

IIIAIM.

nopoll.3044~5t82.

. 30 Groylelt-nd

S© \\cAllA-" r.trs·.::::

Goacloua living. 1 ond 2 bld.-t
SPIItmonllll Vlllltgt llanor and
Rlvtraldo Apottmtnll In Mlddlo·
potL From 1238·$304 . Call 11'4·
VV2-5014. Equal Houalng Oppot-

Tare Townhouse Apanmtnll,
Vtr'l Specious, 2 Bedrooms, 2
FloOr~, CA. t 112 Bolio, Fully Cat-

I

I

PEANUTS
WE OSEP CR41(0NS
JN ~HOOL

TOOA'(..

potlld, Mull Paol l BaiJr Pool,

Socurll)' Dopoalt $32!illlo., 114245-54311.
3 Badrocm, Cloao To Galllpolla,
App/loncoo No lnaldo Ptto, Good

JET
qulrlld, 114-448·3481, ........
AERAllOH MOTORS
0101.
Repalrod. Now &amp; Robli~ ~ Slack.
1\&lt;ln RIVoro T-. now ICCIIPdng Call Ron Ewno, 1-800-537-11528.
appllcoUOno lot lbr. HUO aubald-

441-88110.

lzed apl. lot elderly and handl·
capptd. EOH 3DU75-117V.

3 bedroom. $400/mo. Depoalt.

450

_,,,DOD, 304-738-34011.

lpeelal government backtd
martgagu nailatN tor 1 Umiled

'

11~514.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Cintmax, Showtlme I Dian.,.

..... 304oa7Utl2.

&amp;lnplng rooma with cooking.
Aln t,.u., apace on river. AU
Nice - ~om hGuaaln ~ hook~upa. Call at~er 2:00 p.m.,
meror. new wlndowa. noody ~ 904-773-515t,
Nove- 1, n:o_:ua dtpotll.
no lrtaldo -~~
7244.

-wv.

5oWts in lhr ClrJHif"" Soct;on

IMONDAY
Mualcel lnstrumtnl Catea, Air
ConciiOnl/. 114-441-87011.

RIIFumlhlno
lluon,WV
lkly. Sol~ Trodo .

57~

Uoodl~

Musical
lnltNm8ntl

Yahama 11xophone, eu. c:and
Foumor-.
iloo.550. 301 812 ,....
S04-773-5341.
Alllrlgtfllllr I Stova Set11 Cu.
Fl\m,t SUPPLIES
FL 30 lncll Elocttlc: ·Almond t325,

........ -GO•••

&amp; LIVESfOCK
Rockfotd Foagate Punch 200
SERVICES
Amp. &amp; 3 Woy Box Wllh 15" Sub.
1425, FOI AI OBO 11.......28&amp;11.
610 F1rm Equipment
166 Sourn SC2, Au-... Air,
Home
Ruger Radhawk iif•mag. 1 112"' Hrd11ulla oll·lowoot price In Ctulao, Alllfll Cuaatte, Ttuo\k 810
Improvements
banal t•OO. Rem. f1·87 12ga. town. VtnllrH gao hOIItla, P/0· Rolaao, Stz.ooo Col Mat 5 P.ll.
auto,. high glaao ••so. U86 pone 1 •iurol gu on.I!Uo now. (Serious lnqulrioa Onlyl) et •·
BASEMENT
llonto Carlo S.S. 454
I
4411-ID15.
Sidot'o Equlpmont :10«75-7421.
.
WATERPROOFINQ
exc running condlllon.
Octobll Now Holland value Bo· 87 T-tHrd, Y· l, aunroof, loaded, UncondiUOnallil•llml guorantM.
Call alt« 5pm.
nanzi 1~ Financing for 31 - lhlrl 4,000 mlloa, - · ... Loc:al rtfttencea furnfahlld. Eemontha. NH 472 r Harblno t21,000, d sol lot ,,g,DDO, 114- llbllahod 1875. Call (It
0870 Or 1·100·217-Gite.
1
u .ooo. NH 411 I' Hayblno HZ-&lt;1251.
Wototprooflng
.
U,700. NH 482 &amp;: Oolu1e HIY·
blno SQ,OOO. NH 130 Sprtader A Naed A Car? No Crodll, Bad
142BU 14,500. NH 145 Spnoader Crlldll Bankruptcy, Wt Can Help App/lonce Porto And Sirvlct: AH
t77BU •••700. NH 155 Sflr•dor AtEIIIblil" Crtdll, Mu11 Make Namo Branda OV11 25 Ytaoa Ex2t7BU .5,400. All Fonl -lOra I $150 Walkly Taka Ho'""' Down ~rltnct
All WaJk Guaranteed,
M)' 1 1o11a0 lot tho monlh of ()c. Paymenll Aa Low Ao $VV, To
Fttnch
City
Maytag, 114·441·
Duality
Fo•
Thla
Banll
Financing.
tobll 1% frtiiiCinD lot 38 monlha,
ms.
'
3% tor 48, 5% for JO. Kooftra 81"'"HII07.
St~vlct Center Sl. Rr. 87 Point
C&amp;C
General
Home
Ulln·
STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallon Ploa"""l &amp; Ripley Rd. 304·815· CARS FOR '' 001 Ttucko, boola,
•·whtell/0. motot hGmaa, luml· ten•nc:e- Painting, vln11 aiding,
Upright. ROn Evona Enterprlaoo. 3874.
.
ture, elocuonlca, compulltl et&lt;. carponuy, do011, -~ balhl,
- - Olllo, l.aoo.l37·11528.
br FBI, liS. DEA. Allollllltlo ""'' mobllo homo nopoit and m..o. Fat
.
Wood opl!lll lot ton! 140,... day
T.V. Sel f71: Hlntondo With KAoofot'a Sorvlco Cantor 304-1115- arM now. Coil 1-IOO·IIS·•3•s ~H Oltlmato COil Cht~ et•·U2·
Gamoo. Aaacllmenll, •75, .... ••
1323.
En 8-83111

e

Tl'liS newspaper will not

knowingly accept
ldvartisements tor real estate
wnlch Is m '11ola11on of the
laW. Our ...... lleoeby
~ lha1 all dwellmgo
adVOI!IM&lt;l in '"" nowspaptr
are available on an eQual

opportun&lt;ty basla.
RE.AL ESTATE

110 Honles tor Sale

2111-1125.

-·and-.. .
Tho Pomeror Thiln

Shop- now
ttu,.6ng Ltvl jHnl onlt. men·a,

I I Y - WHOI.EIALE
114-211 •••

llunlo Bado Comp. U25: loll 1
Clwlr WV: 4 c-., Pine Tobit,
Btnch I 8 Chllra U35; 7 Pc.
Codlr BR 17111; Oak Cutlo Cab.
PDIIIIJ, -Icon Blonkoto,

••so:
..._Eto.

Roull7 Soullt. Crown CIW
0pon Q-5, Sot I Sun

Fusion • Swept • Round • Egoist • PURSUING
I've noticed that many people go through life running
from something that is not PURSUING the,m.

Be A(Aol Cot And Clore! 0.. lhr

FurniShed
Rooms

·~· (6!4~14DV.
Wtokly Rolli, Or Monlhlr Rolli,
111 Tlmo lluyero E-Z FJnanQna 2 Nce:lt , .... ......,.,..,.... Conattuctlon Workers Welcome
Ot 3 Bodrooma Around Uoo Por lid. RoflnonCH. Oopoak. No 81..... l·!ilill,81 ..... !-5187.

• All real atate advertising tn

'

1

till JHp ChOIOkH, 18,.8001
lllloa With A 38,000 IIIII Wat·!

.

3 Btdtoam. LMng Room. Don, 2·
Bat111 Gordon Tub. WIW ·Corpot. Klnga Mottl Loweal Rotaa In
11&amp;7 Model Slnglewidll Must Laundry Room. a-urilul. 3:pm- Town. Newly R~~nadolod, HBO,

ATTENTION Firat Tlmt Burtra,

15425.

114-441~

3 Bodroom cloubloWido lot ron! 01
ult, Sandhill Rd. Lot 12Ga127
JWk:ad to HI. 304-773-SV74.

:Jlol-175-41178- - ·

.... 8CJ0.25t~l0.

•

14.~.

tBR.. Duple• LoctiBd on 5th /we. ground on 1igh1. Trash I. water
No Pall I $275. Pluo Utllll)' and ptld. Cenllal hooL EOH. 304-8823711 11om-3pm llon-Fri.
Depo~t (814) -71103
2 Bedroom U75tmo. SZDO de· Smlll ElfkMncr Allltlmlnt UvJno
polit 304-17J5.1574.
. Room. Comblnod. 1&lt;111:1&gt;
on I Bath, Futnll/lod, TlawNtain
lA'II~ 114 ue 3102.
2Hou101.3044~2441 .

Retarencts Plua Oepoall 014·

Go.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST .

-lllo..

••-'D

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

\222

&lt;

1114 Je., Cherak.. cauntry, ~
aula, 414, 4dl, new tirn I bat·'

locllltleo, .. In .....
Appl.,._ tvallablo at. Vlllogt
~ AptL 148 01 coM 11-:z.

Building Sit01 On - o h ·F&lt;oft. Fumlohod 1 Badroom ll2o Faur11
rod Rd., s14,000 EL
- · · Gollpola, S28s.tlo., Ud~
ldoa Paid, 81,.... 1-0573, Ahll 7
GoUla Co.: Galllpolla, Neighbor- P.ll.
hood Rd., tO Acm s-.J ~
Sites StMOO, Or 22 Acrta Will! BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Pond NOW szo.ooo. Ftlondlr BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Ridge 10 Acroo $14,000, 1.5 It/;(· ESTATES, 52 Woatwoad Dtlve
os ,7,500 or tV Acroo ••a.ooo, loom $280 !0 $334. Walk 10 lhQp
County Water. Teena Run. Laal I movloa. Call 814·448·2518.
Equal Hauling Oppotlftly.
OnoltO Aaoa $10,000.
Coil for .ftH llopo • ow... A· Elllcloncj Apartmen~ Cloao To
nonclng IIlli&gt; Tlko t011. Oft Uatld Walrnar~ ConotrucUon Work111
-OnCuhPurcht...l
-•n•let.........a5t5.
Lo11 For Sale: Q Adjoining Lata. FOR RENT: 4 Room Upllolra
Numbllo 1 Thru ~On Volley Or. Apattmtnt • Newtr Romodoll&lt;l
Plantz Subldlvlon. Anoa Ia 1 314 Kltdlen, - C"""t And Pain~
Actu. Ideal For Homtt IAPI!rt- ~ u - Pilei e....,. Gu Hoa~
large llodioom, Cloao To Downment Buklnp. Cl14 4 48 1174.
town.
llapoalt And JW.
Unimproved ecreaa• Uelge erencea Required, Can Set AI
Counly (Pameroy): apJWOK. lhrH 1403 Eaotarn Avt., Gllllpollo.

acre, c:jly W8ltl, hloh l dty, C... ac:te1 located on hill•lde behind
vonlont 10 Rlp/oy. AavonMocd &amp; cream colored concrete block
PL PtHIInt. J511,800. 304-VI4· houao. Euomont br noctlaitr bf
buyer. Asking
ptr acre.
.. OWN PAYPHONEI Sl 2471.
.
Wrltatcoll Paul PortO/, 810 ~,a;.
t150K YNrly Pot'L Great $1111
Avail. Call -lt-800-aoo-3470 Three .,bedroom hou11 in S.yra- cre·at Drive, Stneca, SC 2aen.
cuae. bllem•M. gar~~ae, new (ee4oiiii2-IV7B).
24HrL
_,_lndollromoclelod
IIIQfiCEI
lnaldo. 114·742·1345, 814·62· Wanted to buy- acroago In llolgo
County, p11ferabl1 Uelga Local
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. lli1 us.
School Dial/~~ 814·1182·5053 of·
recommends that you do bull·
non wll!t poople you know, and ThrH bedroom hau11, 2 full
NOT 10 aond monoy throuoll tho Htha, lull baaement/garage,
maH until you have irwatigated large building, paved *fv•way.
RENTALS
tho altaring.

,;

730 VIliS &amp; 4·WDs

ptua dapaiiL 304-77HD411.

North
3 NT

Eartha -

56 Boy ·
20 AnMpOIII grocl 57 Above (pool )
21 Indigo ~.
56 A alngllt time
23 Arizona ..,.rege
only
town .
58 Gonuo of
27Leovenlng
mapleo
ogent
eo In favor of

By Phillip Alder

et•·•••-

Clton, Low llilea, U,OOO OBD.
(114)0&lt;1Hl5M
'

Tuppert Pl1lns, Best 5 Acrea

t.aQ0.311J5.2337, 1571.

'

Pass

18 Abduct

:. Chipping away
at the contract
'

1187 F ~ 150 XLT, Automatic,
TOpper, Bedllner &amp; Morel Our

tloo, Dopoalt &amp; Louo Raq. No
Pita, 81....21157.
2 Blld10am In Galllpolla, 50 112
Gil~ SIIH~ t250111a., Only
-Funiohod,114-388-170&amp;
2 bedroom lurnlahod, oarogo
opartmontln Clifton, 1250/ma.

. West

.

Opening lead: • 2

1084 XLT Fotd Ranger am·lm
Cllltlll, air, Slpd, 52,000 mlloa

llolga Co.: DorMie, Nice Roling 3711.EOH.
Tracra: 17 Acre&amp; ,11,000 Or S
Acre• 118,000, Count1 W•ler. Furnllhld·EIIIdoncr Shtno Bath,
Dyeavile, Cholpol Tllon lot Rani StiQ/Mo., Ullltieo Paid, 807 S...

Will Clean Houan And Offlctl HOUH, Ntw Windows, New Sid·

Sa1ot.

Cob PU, .1,100. B&amp;D Hwy. 180 N, 11•· UIS e M !

--

I MeeD Me A
NIW WATCHDH ll

Dt., U,IIOO; tDU Chevr S·!O
PU, .1,700: 1885 Nluon ••• EX
4

1 Bedroam GtaLind Floor, Near
co-. E--.k:ol Gu . . Dt
W ~ Air, . -.• + UIIJ.

5 Ac111 S7.000 · .1.000 Down Dnd Arronue, GofllpoUa,
St2etllo., Youra In 5 Ytato. N- 0573, Mor7 P.ll"

South
I NT

!IIIII Ford Urllt ••• PU, 15.400:
1111 GUC Jimmy Blazer 4 Or.,
ti,4DO; !HI Chovy S.!D Bluor

--114-QUUIISI.

PhGno Doyo: 114·441·0110, lng, All Now Kitchen WIII·Takt
Evenlnga: I14·UI-0250, Good Toadooln Or Holp With Down Pay·
mont, lt4·317-G003, Paging No:
At.

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South .

11~·1181-

nllhlld and unlumlahod, MCurlly
Tako Doltvery In Sept No Ptor· dopoolf roqulrlld, no poll, 114·
mont Undl Dtc. 1087 800·251· III12-221L
5070.
1 Bedroom Apartment On Firol
WANTED family ID move lniO Avtnuo, Galllpolla, S25Dtila..
3bedroom 2bllh mobile home. ""lltpoait. 114-411-10711.
CaiS04-7!5-Wt.

-Willi
-..
bur 111m on ponelon
land eontract,
ama1

• J 9 4

1421.

Apartments
for Rent
t and 2

• Q J 10 3

~

•:==r=·

(2

•AKQ2

37 Afrlcotn ~

38WIIII
40 !linger Ioiii _
4 Mcllllonol • 41 Thing olvotue
12
.... u Aclnn
~
13 Lueu
44 Btklgo of Btn
1--11
Lule14 Cfrc• Mlmotl 411 Tinnie pro
15 llnnlltlld
G~
-~
50 Grm moochlne
11 lllklnv
54 Bt In dtllt,to
. det]flno on ·
55 ACII'III

'""·&gt;
~~=of

K 6 2

South
• K8

Wltlt OD, Boclr and AI, Runa Good, ltOK, ,1171.'
(114) -7131
:
1011 Nloaon kino cob pick up,:
bod ..... - ·
11...'
1853581
Spood

1117 Dodge Ttuck,

e

• 8 7 3

ACROSS
r -.
1 l'ez. e.g.

(ekln)

• K94
e A"Q 10 5
West
East
eAt042
• Q7 6 3
• 85
• J 10 9 4
• 87 6 5
• A 2

or,

C1113D4-17J5.:1D211.

10-27-91

• 7 6 3

720 Trucks tor Salt ·
'N XLT Fonl Ring•. amtfm coa11111,
I_.;, 52,000 mlloo,•

-wall'

For Sole $35,000, Two Bedroom

North
• J 9 5

Soutl1 of leon.

_.. _,._.

NEA CrOIIWOrd Puzzle

dolo olao
and lllde
todlhrough

::-:::7::··--:-:--:--:--630

Fat anr nopon .. tKtmo ....._
.menla, call B.D. Conatructlon,

Llveltoclc

Coate &amp; Round 8aloa Of Her. 10
Cawa. I 1 IIIII. Anguo I Charo·

114-Dtli!-21711.

'

Rogol'a Plumbing SIIVico, EJ.
J&gt;ffltncod, Froo Eatlmotoo, Call ·
.
AQHA Hen••• For Salt. Show, Crlldll Probl~~na? Wo Can Holp. Met 6. 81 .......1588.
Euy Bank Financing Fa&lt; Ualld
Breeding,
Pleasure,
•2.700
•
Ttoy BuRt Tully Tllar, Ukl Now; N t3.800, ....,711-2832.
Ythlclea, No Turn Downt, Call 840 Electrical end
Gogo llodef Railroad 317 FL
28117.
Refr1g81'1llon
Hanging B01td Rtldl To Run 5 Golll: 1 Bll~ StOO: 5 Nonnr I'll..
Engfnea. 13 Cars, Transformer Young It 50 EliCh; Rabblll 2 F• Taka OV11 Poymtnlo, 167 Gao RooldonUII or commtrclal wlrina.
Ei:. 114-24S.IM32.
. molea 1 Buck. 40 lllxlld Chick- llotra lSI Auto, AC, 11,000 ,.. Mf'Vkt ar ·r.lra. Malilr 0:.
John Doooa Cullvallntr Toaa- 1111" FuN Wotronl)' Plus Exllnd· C!lnltd electrician. Ridenour
Warm Motnlng Wocd Cool Stovo, ana,
lid 34 IIPG, Ph: 814-441·3257, Or
tor,
$1,500,
Ollv11 Baller ..00 ........
Eloctrlcal, WVOOO!If)l, 30...175S250. 1!4-38JI.85n
1307.
1!4-2511-t 125.
•
1781.

prll drot- toys,
dler car IHII,

Tu.'t:.b-3721.
Friday, 1Dan&gt;4pm, 11

1111.114--lO.

v--. ..........

.ASTRQ·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

1\J,esday, Oct. 28, 1997 ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You
··are aptlo feel very protective of people in your charge today. You may go
10 unusual Jeng1hs 10 safeguard their
interests and security. Trying to patch
up a broken romance? The AstraGraph Malchmaker can help you
understand what to do to make the
relationship work. Mall $2.75 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1758, Mu!T8y Hill Station,
New York, NY 101"56.
SAGI1TAR!US (Nov. 23-Dec . .
21 ) Despite your strong emotions
about your belief!&lt; today, you 're nol

likely to be unreasonable if your concepts arc challenged by others. .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·lan. 19)
Someone you know only casually
could become one of your staunchesl
allies soon. The relationship could go
from ground zero to len sLarting
today.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Your leadership skills could be your
long suit today if associates are indc"cisivc. Your instincts might urge you
to lake over lhe situation.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
condilion that has been impeding ·
your progress mighl be allevialed
today. Your progress will be more
rapid once you're free of this restric·
tion .
ARIES {Man:h 21 "Aprill9) Mak~
a concerted effort today to arrange a
social function . Let the guest list
include your most exciting or unusu· ·
al friends.
·
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Today, focus your effOrts and ener·
·gies on things you can do to enhance
your career. Try something. new;

I

,remember, nothing ventured, nothing
gained .
GEMINI (May 2 J-June 20) You
may be challenged on iln issue with
wl!ic~ you'ri: very familiar and about
which you feel strongly. Your know I·
· edge wins oul on all counts today.
• CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Friends who feel they are viclims of
circumstance· should look to you for
inspiration ·today. You will know
how 10 help others help 'themselves.
LEO {July 23-Aug . 22) You
sh()uld be at your best today if
pressed in1o a comer where quick
answers are required . 1l!e tougher lhe
involvement, the bener you're ap110
perform.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You
could be highly motivaled to be lhe
leader among your peers loday. You
might use some clever ploys to avoid
being numbered among the tanks.
LIBRA {Sept. 23"0ct. 23) If you
don't take yourself or what you do
too seriously today, friends and coworkers will copy your behavior
instead. of re s i slin~ it.

.

OCTOBER27I

�Ohio Lottery

Chicago Bears
upset Miami
Dolphins 36-33

Pick 3:
133 .
Pick 4:
5308
Buckeye 5:
24·26-27-32-34

Sports on Page 4

Cletr tonight. Low In
upper 30a. Wedneaday,
partly cloudy, high near
60.

•
Vol. 48, NO. 136
C1H7, Ohio Vlllloy Publlahlng ComP,IIlY

2 Sectlono, i2 P-•· 35 cen11
A Gannott Co. Nawopapar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 28, 1997 ·

Voters to decide permanent MBI th levy

-

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Members of the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardalion/Devel·
opmenlal Disabililies are hoping the
second time proves the charm on
Nov. 4 with a proposed additional,
contin'Uing 1.8 mill levy for Carleton
School and Meigs Industries.
The permanent levy, if approved.
will be used for capital construction
and operation of Carleton School and
Meigs Industries Workshop for per·
sons with mental retardation and
developmental disabilities.
In supporting the levy issue, Car·
leton School/Meigs Industries direc·

have increased by 300 percent. he learning cenlers, a facility cafeteria an additional $12.80 a year while the
said. Adding lhat fulure enrollment' (lO permit full program use of the owner ~fa $80.000 home would pay
increases are anticipated.
· gymnasium) and some kitchen reno· an additional $50 40.
The capital construction project vations. .
The program. which provides eduwould include lwo. phases of con·
Total projecl coSlS including sile cation. habilitation. therapy and guid·
Slruction added to the existing facil· development are projected to be ed workshop services, training, voca·
ity in Syracuse. The firsl phase will $951,000 with $300,000 of the cost tional and work serv1ces to children
add 4.200-sqqare-feet to 1he Adult provided by a capital construclion and adults with developmental dis·
Services Program for habilitation grant through the Ohio Department of abilities, cun-cntly receives D mills
activities and for 1he school age ·Mental Retardation and Develop· in property tax millage. In that lhc
transilion class. It would also allow menial Disabilities, Beha indicated. county government receives only 4.3
for some renovalion of exislinll space
If passed, the levy will generale mills of insode millage. the MRDD
for better utilization of the production approximately $380,000 per year, board would aclually receive m~rc
area of the program.
according to Meigs County Auditor funds from local property taxes t~an
years.
l
The adult program enrollment has
Phase 1wo would add 4,200· Nancy Parker Campbell, ba&lt;ed on~e county general fund. if the meas e is approved .
grown by 40 percent. while Early square-feet 10 ihe school program collection rale of 95 percenr.-:{11
Intervention and Preschool programs with the addilion of two classroom owner of a $20,000 home ~a
The general fund is the fundin g

tor Steve Beha earlier stated the nddi·
tiona! funding will enable the MRDD
Board to "continue lhe qualily services which have already'heen estab·
ljshed and implemenled, increase the
level of services as enrollmenl in lhe
school and aduh programs grow.
allow for the replacement of two bus·
es during the next eight years, and
allow for a capilal conmuclion pro·
jecl lo accommodate the growing
space needs due to an increase in
enroll.?'ent ~ring lhe past five

source adminislercd by the board of
county commissioners to operate all
counhouse office~ - The inside mill·
age was delermined by lhe ~ late years,
ago, Campbell said. and cannot be
changed arbiltarily.
Both the MRDD program and the
counly general fund receive revenue
from sources olher than real eslale tax
millage.
· In 1996, the MRDD board
received a total of $1,465,234.71 in
receipts including $626.770.76 in
local property taxes. The program
spenl $1,462,996.95 in 1996 and car·
ricd over $1 \10,822.()6 into the 1997
budget. according to Campbell.

Historians object to proposed mining
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Opponents of proposed aggregate .
mining at Portland met with the
Meigs County Commissioners on
Monday, to give their side of the con·
tinuing controversy surrounding the
Buffington Island battle site.
Last week, representatives of
Richards and Sons, an aggregate
company which owns 500 acres of
agricultural land near Portland.
announced thai the company will
begin mining gravel at the site once
permils are issued through the Ohio
Depanmenl of Nalural Resources
PRE.OPENING MEETING • Floor supervlsora
a pre-open. and the U.S. Army Corps of Engi·
The Dow
Ing meeting an hour before trading began this
neers for mining and loading, respec·
Jones fndustrlal Average f'll 554.2&amp; Monday, the largeat point
tively.
drop ever. After a slow start this morning, the ma~ket began a
Margaret Parker of the Meigs
rally upw11rd. (AP)
. • 'I!'
· ~'
County Pioneer and 'Hisforilt)l'.i&lt;!ci·
ety, Franco Ruffino of the Ohio His·
loric Preservation Office and David
Gloecker, an active Civil War rcen·
aclOr. mel with the commissioners to
voice. "for the record," lheir opposi·
tion to Richards and Sons' plans 10
mihe at the site.
The Bailie of Buffington Island
between Morgan's Raiders and Union
NEW YORK (AP) - The slock the 22 percenlloss on Oct. 19. 1987, soldiers was the only Civil War bat·
market shrugged off ils hisloric lhc largeSl ever.
The Nasdaq. dominalcd by lech·
plunge and staged a startling rally
today, with the Dow bouncing inlo nology companies that do more bus I·
posilive territory aflcr being down as ness in Asia lhan mosl other Ameri·
much as 178 points in the first hour can industries, also suffered ils worsl By JIM FREEMAN •
one-day point drop ever m 115.83
of trading.
Sentinel News Staff .
On the morning after ils worsl ·poinls, or 7.02 percent.
Middlepon Village employees
Stocks listed on the New York. will soon go to a lwo-week pay peri·
point-dmp in history. lhe Dow Jones
Induslrial Average was up 125.95 Nasdaq and American slock od if Clerkffreasurer Bryan Swann
exchanges losl $600 billion Monday. has his way.
poinls al 7287.13.
.
The markel's mosl widely fol ·
Overnighl, all eyes were on inler·
Swann discussed problems with
lowed gauge fell hclow 7,000 poinls nalional exchanges.
the existing bimonthly syslem, under
before staging its rally on the latesl.
The Hang Seng index of blue chip which the village now pays ils
sign of economic weakness- a drop shares in Hong Kong fell 13.7 per· employees, at Monday night"s meet·
in consumer confidence - Ihat rem- cent, continuing a sharp selloO' lhat ing of Middlepon Village Council.
forced eKpeclalions thai l Federal has unnerved world financial mar·
Swann said going to a lwo-week
Reserve would~ "t mo c
kets. Traders said the selloff was a pay period would allow better scruti·
panicked rcac1ion to IWall Streel"s ny of payroll repons.
soon.
sharp drop.
.
To support his argument, he pro·
Another piece of c cour. ging,___.,::ln::t._okyo, the Nikkei Stock Aver· duced police department pay reports
news came from one of lh arket's age
4.26 percent. In London afler showing where officers were paid
mosl enduring bellwethers.
rna· lwo-and· alf hours of trading. the twice for work during one period by
tiona) Business Machines, W ich Financial , es·Stock fell6 percent. claiming pay for special delails in
announced il would buy $3.5 bill on
All of w 'c h underscored lhe addilion to regular work, or taking
worth of its own Slock. I
s
rtant o Oday's Wall Slreellrad· sick lime ancr calling in sick during
leading lhe rally. rising $3 5116 t
a holiday-- in effect being paid lwice
$94 and accounting for more 1 15
for not working.
points in lhe Dow.
"Then we wonder why we have
The bounce upward was all the
budgel problems," he said.
more dramalic because hefore the
"We cannol check this and gcllhe
New York Slock Exchange opened
payroll out in lime.'" he explained.
this morning, futures and oplions
He also said some officers arc lak·
contracls tied to the Standard &amp;
ing sick leave to accumulate up to 46
Poor's 500 s1ock index had fallen
financial collapse in hours a week although they cannol go
enou~h 10 trigger a brief lrading hall. Hong Kong h igniled fears aboul over 43 hours a week. Police officers
"You "ve got some bargain hunting whelher Southe sl Asia's shaky are allowed up lo 43 hours a Week
righl away, bulthis is not the startof economies will un ermine the glob· because they cann01 lake regular
major rally, " said Ralph Bloch, ch1ef al economy.
lunch breaks. he explained.
markel analyst at Raymond James &amp;
Wilh a majority of major Ameri·
-Police Chief Bruce. .Swift was
Associates of St. Petersburg, Fla. can companies healing Wall Streel queslioned on lhe pay forms and said
"The selling pressure wasn't as great forecasts again with lheir lalesl prof. he will look into it.
it reports and the oullook on domes·
as people lhought. "
"There's obviously mistakes here,"
During a visit to Chicago, Presi· tic inllalion and inlerest ralcs remain·
denl Clinlon declined 10 comment ing favorable, many analysts CO O·
about today's gyralions, excepllo lry eluded after Monday 's lrading thai
1he stock market's downturn should
to reassure investors .
"Our economy is as sli'Ong and prove temporary.
And analysis stressed lhal
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presivibrant today as il has been in a gen·
cralion." Clinton said. "We have to · although plenly of U.S. companies do dent Clinton has invited Chinese
feel confident and continue our ec()o business in Asia. this nation 's finan- President Jiang Zemin for a Pfivate
cial health is only slightly dependent chat tonighl ahead of their formal
nomic stralegy..,
summil. hoping the personal 10uch
The Dow Jones industrial average on lhe fortunes of Soulheast Asia.
The U.S. stock market has been would help narrow the wide gap in
fell 554.26 to 7,161.15 on Monday,
surpassing the 508-point Black Mo~ wonderful lhe pasl few years, said lheir political views.
Jiang, who speaks halting English,
day crash of 1987 as ils biggest point John Shaughnessy, chief inveslmenl
drop ever and prompling U.S. Slock strategist at Advesl Inc. in Hanford. and Clinton, who is Ouenl in the ways
of wooing world leaders, were to
markets to shut down for lhe first Conn.
"So ttiere are huge profits to he meel for about.,an hour with lhe Chi·
time since lhe 1981 assassination
taken and this whole Southeast Asian nese leader in the White House resi·
attempt on President Reagan.
On a percentage basis, lhe 7.18 implosion, with all its vague poten· dence and wi(houl ot/ter officials.
The meeting was •to be ·more
percent drop by lhe Dow was only its tial , frighlened people into taking
sociallhan an auempllO address dis·
12lh largest II didn't come close lo pro fils," he said.

Stock mar_ket ·
stages·big rally

lie fought in Ohio.
Ruffino, whose organization is
contacled for inpul any lime that a
federal permit is involved, said that
19 of lhe 44 "historic sites" which
have been determined on Richards
and Sons' propeny have been pin·
pointed for "Phase Two" investiga·
tion. Those sites revealed prehistoric
Indian "poinls:".
·
At the same time, Ruffino questioned commenls made last week by
Richards and Sons' auorney, Paul
Rice, who said lhatlhe aciaallocation
of the Civil War baltle near Ponland
was unknown, and lhat the propeny
owned by the aggregale company
was probably nol an actual combat
site, but rather.was used as a cross·
ing poinl for retreating Confederates.
. Al:cordi•l to l!.uffino and P~lier,
documenlary evidence p!'eccs the
battle belween Morgan's Raiders and
lhe Union forces directly on the
Richards and Sons propeny, and said
lhat artifacts from the Civil War era
can only be found on the propeny by
the use of metal deleclors, which they
say were not used by Gray and Pape.
lhe consulting firm which conducted
lhe archeological survey for Richards

and Sons.
According

Rice said last week thai Richards and
Parker. the remain s Sons had made no provisions to date
of at least one soldier were' rct:o\'c_rcd for such a provision. Parker and
years , ago on the property, and · Gloeckner also said lhal the compaGloeckner said that the headquarters ny had discussed with them lhe posof Morgan and the Confederate ~amp sibilily of a "land swap" of equal size
arc believed to have hccn located in in exchange for the Buffinglon Island
the area of Sliversville Road.
property.
"The site of this 1prorosed 1 plant
"They told us thai they weren't in
is an inlcgral part of the hal tic sile." the real estate business .. that they
Gloeckner said.
were in the aggregate business ."
Gloeckner suid that histonan s arc Gloeckner said, "bul they said lhey
now planning a series of markers to would be willing to consider a land
commemorate sites relating to Mor- swap."
gan's Raid throughout Ohio. KenAccording to Kimherly Courts,
lucky and Indiana. and Parker added regulatory project manager for the
lhat prcscrvalion of lhc Buffington Corps of Engtncers. Richards and
Island site is now even more impor, Sons filed an application for a loadtant.
ing permil in December, .1996, hut
"ll would he a shame lo come. lo lhat application was withdrawn m
the Meias Count.VJ!ilc and find nolh· Feljr!Jary at the rcquesl of the Corps,
ing but a hole in th!l ground where I~ due to a large number of objections
bauleficld was." Parker said. "The to lhe permit .
gravel will only be available for a
Although the application has not
while, but a historic site would he heen resubmitted. Courts said Monenjoyed for centuries. We lcellhat we day afternoon that the Corps had
need to keep Coghting for that."
received· the archeological survey
Parker "'id lhat pr!'hminury dis· from the consulting rirm or Gray and
cussiom had taken place regarding Pape, which was iJrdcred by Richurds
the possibiiily of selling aside land and Sons.
for preservation purposes. although,
Continued on page 3
lo

Swann .aits Middleport payroll problems

Clinton,

· Swift said. "I'm not hiding any·
thing."
Employees earlier. voled down
lhe lwo-week pay period. Swann
explained. "There's nol going to be a
vole on il now... il's going to happen."
"I pledged lo the taxpayers nollo
wasle lhei&lt; money. I'm not going to
wasle their money.'' he . said.
"Employees have been diclaling to
the village what's going on."
He said he will pullhe fwo-week
. pay period into effect as soon as il
coincides wilh the bimonthly syslcm
so as notlo cause hardships for the
employees.
In addition,. Swann said conlrac·
lOTS gelling perlnits to work in the vii·
lage are nol being given income tax
forms, even· !hough he gave lhe
forms to inspeelor Arnold Johnson lo
hand out.
11 then becomes lhe responsibility of the contractor to file lhc form
with the village's income tax office so
the lax can be taken from the work·
ers' pay.
,
"If we don't know they are in
town , we can't collect (income tax) if
they work in Middleport. He won't
hand the fqrm 10, lhe conlractors."
Swann said.
"It's the age-old problem : employees don't listen lo Iheir superiors."
said Councilman John Neville. "It's
oul of hand. That's the gcncrol ani1ude in lhis village that the mayor and
council need to change."

~iang

Muynr Dewey "Mack" Horton
hailed di"ussion on the 1opic saying
he wanted lo con tmuc the subject in
executive session.
Councilwoman Beth Stivers.
accompanied by her hu&gt;hand . Don,
urged vOlcrs to support the upcoming
one-mill, Cove-year renewal levy h&gt;r
the fire department .
Mr. Slivers said plans call on
going door-to-door delivering hand·
bills in sup(J&lt;'n of the levy. The .
renewal is needed to pay off th~ balancc of the village's ladder truck.
When asked what would happen
should the levy fail. Swann said the
money would have to come from lhe
village's general fund . meaning a cut
in other village services.
A levy failure could also result in
an increase in fire insurance rate&gt;
since the dcpartmenl will may not be
able to modernize, purchase needed
equipment or properly maintain exist·
ing equipment, Mr. Stivers indicated.
. Swann nolcd the levy passed by a
very slim margin lhc last time it was
presented to voters.
"It is critical thai it passes so we
don't have-to cut ot her se,.ices in the
village.'' he said.
Mr. Stiver.; also updaled council
on Federal Communication Commi ssion requirements that the fire
deparlment update its existing lowband rndio syslcm to a high-band systern similar to that used by the police
department by November. 1998. The
cost will be around $12.000 for five

to meet in private tonight

pules aboul human rig~ts, trade and
arms sales. adminiSlralion officials
said Monday. The gregarious Clinton
has used similar one-on-one problemsolving taclics with leaders such as
Russian President Boris Yellsin and
German Chancellor Helmul Kohl , a
favorile dining panner.
" Wilh Kohl, Clinlon can belly up
10 the bar." said Jonathan Pollack, an
Asia expert at Rand Corp., a Santa
Monid, Calif., think tank. B.ut wilh
Jiang and Clinlon, he added. "There's
not a sense that these two leaders arc
confident enough to lower lheir gaard

and speak to each other candtdly."
AI his r.rst meeting with Jiang at
lhe 1993 Asia Pactfic Economic
Conference, Clinton refused to even
smile for photographs. Thi' time. the
administration wants a public display
of closer tics during the first Chinese
stale visit in 12 years. It's also the
firsl summil since the 1989 Tianan·
men Square. massacre of pro-democracy demonsiralors. something the·
administralion says can no longer
solely define the U.S.-China rela·
lionship.
Jiang appears inlenl on showing a

'

•

••

mobile radios. two hand-held radios
and a base station.
The Middleport &gt;lation serves as
a back-up to the main emerge ncy
medical servoccs station in Pomeroy
and served as a hack-up communi·
cations center during lhc bli&gt;.Zard of
1993.
Councilman Steve Houchins
reponed on an "obscene clown" at the
Bob Fife residence ncar his "Little
Waco" monuincnt and remarked that
a village Qrdinancc prohihits obscene
displays.
The clown is shown standing. dts·
playing ils middle finger.
When asked if forcing removal of
the display would he a violaticrn of
Constilutional rights, Neville said
co uncil will apologize to lhc rest of
the vi llage of they have to live with
it.
In other busmc&lt;&gt;. council was
approached by a village resident
who asked she cou ld rebuild a house
on the loundat1o~ of another house
thai was within the Oood plain.
Horton said he chec k on il, bul
noted most likel y she can not huild on
the foundalion due lo the nood plain
ordinance.
Horton also reminded residents
that trick or trem will be held Thursday, 6-7 p.m.
Also present were Village Administrator Bill Browning and Slrect
Superintendent Brent Manley. Absent
were c0uncil memhers Sandy
lannarelli and Eric C~bers.

'

warmer race to America too, a~ ~
visits five cities outside the nalion 's
capital dunng an eighl-day U.S. tour.
Today. the Chinese presidcnl was
gettmg a tasle of early American
democracy when he visited colonial
Williamsburg. Va. City ofr.cials were
giving him a three-cornered hat similar to lhose worn . by President
Thomas Jefferson and Paul Revere,
who warned American revolutionists,
"The Brilish are coming! "
In Washinglon, Ji•ng will face a
sea of criticism of his regime

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