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                  <text>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

\

�I ..

Co!J1mentf1ry
The Daily Sentinel

TUMCiay, October 28,1987
Tunclay, October 28, 1897

.

Musical chairs highlight
Controlling Board meeting

·Have a heart
Dear Edtlor,
Nov. 4, eleciiDn day, will soon be here, a day many local officials are
eagerly awaiting.
.
• But not only arc these pohlictans in suspense as 10 the dectstons of the
"btg day", but so are the staff and residents of Ihe county home.
1was placed all he county by the department of human service's JObs 1111it,
and it really doesn't maner one way or the other if the home closes because
of my JOb, I am paid by welfare anyway. So please do nollassume that ts .why
I am writmg this lener.
- .
What does mauer to me is the great injuslicc many people will be inflicting on homeless, disabled, elderly reSidents of the county home. if they vote
: to close the doors. Some people only see the horne as a big expense, but
: these people apparently have not spent very much lime tnSlde talking to the
•res1dents. 1
·
· 1 was brought up to believe people were supposed to help one anolller,
love one another. and have respect for one another. Was I brought up wrong,
· Mctgs County' I am so angry tnsidc as I thmk about the possibility that cer: tatn people in high-ranking places could forget important things like com: man decency, respect and the love for mankind as they were supposed to be
: taught as a child. Some limes domg the nght thing is very hard, but money
IS not the most tmponanllhing m hfe.
I believe havmg compassiOn. honor, decency, and respect is important. To
close the county home is not right, these sweet people do not deserve to be
cast out of a home they need ' and have grown to love. Please have a heart
voters, save the home.
Minla Bogess
Pomeroy

Dedicated carrier appreciated
: Dear Ed11or,
• Our "Senttnel" has been dehvered lo us for many years by Bernice Ann
:"Teeter" Durst.
·
: No rnaller what the weather, our paper has always been on our porch -: never once have we had 10 look under bushes or in the shrubbery for our
paper.
'
We want 10 pubhcly thank Teeter and her assistant for the many years of
~xcellent serv1ce.
Thanks, Teeter, we'll mtss you when we move.
DOn and Barb Mnllea
Middleport

Barry's
World

.Pt&gt;Wr
"1""' tt.DRe. we

'-"'t~EtteSTANP IT,
~MOtte l'r
~oMe s A.rt1". ••
Mit.c1'1N , .. . . .

•

•

major lendBut in recent months, Vefa has
ing institu·
suffered from tile social turmoil that
tionsat hind,
erupted when several smaller linns
he shared his
were exposed as pyramid schemes.
vision with
Since then, the government has
other Albanilumped Vefa in with the worst
ans1 and tens
offenders, and has tried its best to
of thousands
shut down its operations. 111e chaos
ended
up
in Albania has brought Vefa to the
investing in
brink of bankruptcy.
his new com· Moller a. Anderaon
Most fmns were blatant pyramid
pany,
Vefa
schemes that preyed on hapless citiHolcling, atuacted in pan by high ' zens, paying off early investors with
interest rates that would be unheard funds from later investors while creof tn developed countries but not in ating nothing of any real value.
newly emerging economies. , ,
Some of the con artists are now livBy 1996, Vefa had used the ing abroad on tlleir illicit gains. ·
pooled funds to butld 240 individual
When five of the schemes
business entities throughout Albania inevitably collapsed early this year,
and neighboring countries, covering swallowing the life savings of huna diverse array of goods and services dreds of lllousands of citizens, it
-- supermarkets; air, sea and land sparked a violent wave of _protest
transport; factories producing and devastation that is still 'echoing
bricks, bottles food' and construction across Albania. Vefa's businesses
products; tourist resorts; and even a were among those destroyed, though
mining company. The list goes on. they are quickly being rebuilt. The
Vefa employed nearly 12,000 Alba- recently born private economy was
nians, and 60 percent of its business- strangled in its crib, and Albania's
es were reportedly turning a profit. president, Sali Berishi, was swept
At one point, an Italian accounting from power.
fi(ITI valued Vefa's total assets at
Swamping Berishi's Democratic
some $4 bilhon.
Party in elections this summer was
-Fatos
Nano,
whose history
is
anythtng
but comforting. He
was

an

economic
theoreli·
clan at the
Institute of
MarxistLeninist
Studies
and now
heads the
Socialists,
reformed
heirs to the
Commu·
nists. Perhaps more

"All
men, Promise
Keepers
or ·
not, need to
'Sta~d
the
Gap by betng
beuer
husbands, fathers
and fnends.
Ecut
We men need
to let our loved
ones know that we want 1~ be in
EQUAL PARTNERSHIP wllh our
wtves," wrote G.M. of Sugar Land.
Texas.
But more representative was the
leucr I re~civcd from A.W. of Waco.
Texas: "Lei me assure you thalllts
not the atm of the Promtsc Keepers
to subjugate their wives," writes
A.W.. who tHen goes on to explain
why he should be the leader of his
family. "In every endeavor there
must be a leader. else chaos ts the
result. The next ttme 1Oy. for c.ampic, I don't want any doubt in the
crew's mind that the pilot is in con·
trol. The pilot casts no aspersions on
the co-pilot, just as a husband's leadership of the family casts no aspersionson the wife."
L.H. of Kokomo, Ind., expressed
s1milar sentiments: "I do not 'lord it
over' my wife or family. I serve
them. I lead them like (frequently
quoted Promise Keepers speaker)
Tony Evans says, by betng Sens111vc

and gentle, listening to them and
lovi~g them_. l am th~ head ?f the
famtly whtch functions hke a
health~ orgamsm; therefore I am no
more tmponant .tttan the heart or
lungs, etc. I serve my f~moly and
they serve me .. We submu to each
other. Only I strive to.~ the greatest
servant tn the famoly.
Later m the leiter, he g~ts to the
heart of the mauer: "(My wofc and I)
make _lots of decisions together, bill
somcltmcs as_ head I have the final
say. My fam1ly trusts me bccau~e
they know I love them and wtll
never harm them. I take the blame ·
when things go ~~ong, too. That's
pan of lcadershop.
·
The servanllleadcr mndc\ came
up frequently in these leiters. "The
word for leader actually means .scr·
vant." explained happy Promise
Keeper wole B.C. of A~rora, Ill. She
--:en~?" .'o ~ay thai "Tr~~ 'submisSton tsn 1dtfficuh at all.
Personally, I was unmoved by the
scrvanV\eadcr paradox .. However,
there were many Promtse Keeper
wtvcs who, hke B.C., who wrote m
pr.11isc of their husbands, and of the
renewed devotion thear men have
expressed since joining the group.
And mtercstmgly, they were far
more blunt about the gender roles
than their husbands were. M.C. of
Carlsbad, N.M., needed no· fa_ncy
analogtcs to cxplatn the situation:

IND.

Delores M. Aeiker
•54"

~

~
. •I cOlumbusI58' I

Delores M. Aeiker, 74, 1669 Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, died Satunjay,
Oct. 25, 1997, It her residence.
A homemaker, she was born Oct. 8, 1923, in Point Pleasant, W.Va., daugh·
ter of the late John W. and Belibth Huddleston Neville.
She is survived by three sons, John E. Aeiker Sr. of Syracuse, Keith G.
Aeiker Jr. of Chester and Lorraine P. Aeiker of Pomeroy; a daughter, Kei·
tha A. Wbitlatch of Cl\ester; 19 grandchildren; 27 great-grandchildren; a
brattier, David Neville of Phoenix, 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 brotllers and one sister.
Services will be held today, I p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with theRev. Sharon Hausman'officiating. Burial will follow in Meigs Memory Gardens, Pomeroy.

Tylor Jo FeHy
W.VA.

~,~,~~~~~-·
r . - RUt
s.SuMr 2&gt;l:dy =
~

Flunt.

1oe

Pl.

Today's.'f.leather foreca~t
Extended rorecut
, Thursday... Fair. ~ws in the 30s
and highs from tlie lower 50s northeast to tile lower 60s far south.
Friday... Fair. Lows 35 to 45. Highs
in the upper 5Qs to mid 60s..
Saturday... A chance of showers.
Lows in the mid and upper 40s.
Highs in tile upper 50s and lower 60s.

Oblo
Today... Mostly sunny or becoming mostly sunny. Highs in the low·
er to mid 50s.
Tonight. .. Partly cloudy norlll and
mostly clear south. Lows 35 lo 40.
· Wednesday.. .Varia!)le cloudiness
nonh with a chance of mainly mom·
ing showers northeast. Partly 'sunny
south. Highs in the 50s.

Fair conditions expected
over the next few days
•

\

'

f

•
I
"

By The Associated P;.SI
A weak cold front will bring some
clouds to Ohio skies on Wednesday,
but conditions will remain dry and
.cool, forecasters said.
Highs will be 50-55.
Temperatures tonight will drop
into the mid-30s under clear skies.
The extended forecast calls for fair
skies through Friday, the National
Wcalller Service said. Showers are
likely on Saturday.
,The record-high temperature for
·litis date at tile Columbus weather
station was 81 degrees in 1927 while
the record low was 21 in 1976. Sunset tonight will be at 5:34 p.m. and
sunrise Wednesday at 6:57 a.m.
Acrou tbe nation
Rain in southern Florida and
northern Maine were the few uouble
spots early today as clear, dry weather was forecast for most of the
nation.
Mostly mild, seasonal weather
was forecast to take the place of
storms that socked the Plains with
snow over the ~eckcnd and the East
with rain on Monday.
High pressure systems dominated
in the East and the Midwest.

Scattered showers were forecast
for the Dakotas, where a wann front
was forecast to move in, and Mon·
tana, where a cold front was predict·
ed.
Showers also were forecast for
late in tile day in the Pacific Northwest. Windy conditions and some
snow squalls were possible in north·
em Maine, and in lake areas of Penn·
sylvania and western New York.
Hi&amp;h temperatures were expected
to range from the 30s in northern
Maine, the 40s in the Northeast, the
60s in the Southeast through the 80s
in sQuthern Florida.
The Pacific Northwest was
expected to reach into the 50s, while
the West coast and the Desert Southwest was to climb to the 70s and 80s.
Suong winds that swept across the
Tampa, Fla., area· on Monday tore
-Iiies from a gym roof at Clearwater
Hiah School, slightly injuring four
students.111e winds also tore the roof
from Missouri Avenue Baptist
Church.
The high temperature in the lpwer 48 on midday Monday was 91 in
Miami and Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
while the low was 4 in Hill (City,
Kan., and Hastings, Neb.

Meigs EMS.log·s 5 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Clark Memorial Hospital;
5:55 p.m., Mulberry Avenue,
gency Medical Service recorded five
calls for assistance Monday. Units Pomeroy, Velma Dugan, Holzer Medical Center.
responding included:
POMEROY
CENTRAL DISPATCH
lt:09 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabili7:27 a.m., Elmwood Terrace
Apartments, Racine, Opal Cummins, tation Center, Bernice King, Veterans
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Racine Memorial Hospital;
10:15 a.m.. Eagle Ridge Road,
squid assisted;
Ronda!
Kinder, dead on arrival.
9:17 a.m., state Route q4,
Reedsville, Lucille King. Camden-

Mother sues handgun maker
over child's shooting death
The suit against Colt's Manufactunng Co. was filed Monday in Stark
County Common Pleas Court by
Pamela Cugliari of North Canton m
the death of her daughter, Amanda
Marie Druckenbrod No specific
I damages were mentioned.
The girl died after she and a friend
' we._ wounded by a slug from a .357caliber Magnum.

CANToN, (AP) -A' woman has
sued the maker of a handgun that
killed her 13-year-old daughter two
years ago when a friend showed off
the weapon.

Simple·rules _
f or better politics

•

Some water protection money
should be used at the source

IMansflekll54• I•

"Biblically, man IS to be_the head of
th~ h?usehold. The man ts to be submtsSIVe to Chrtst a~d th~ woman lo
her hu~band. By dmng th~s, -:'e teach
our children ~? ,be submtSs1vc .1o us
and the Lord.
. "' ,.
. But not c~cry Promtsc Keeper
wtfe was a sa11sfied custom~r:
One woman wrote that Since her
husband JOtncd Promtsc Kcepers_hc
has become vtolent and taken con·
trol of the fa~ily finances (and sub·
scqucnlly, ~.as dnvcn them $80,000
tnlo dcbl): Smce_ (my husband) has
come tnlo rehgton and Promtse
Keepers he's got a co~plc~cly dtf·
lcrc.~t personallly, and II s not pleasant.
.
.
So now I pose a question to the
women ol Amenca, conservatt.ve
and hberal ahkc. How does Promtsc
Keepers sound to you? Would you
want to be marncd lo a Promtsc
Keeper'' Arc you willi.ng to lei hi~
lead the household tf II means he II
do more chores?
Send
me
c-matl
at
saracumqol.com or wntc to me at
Newspaper Enterprise Associalton,
200 Madison Ave., New York, NY
100\6.
Sar1h Eckel is a syndicated
writer ror Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
'
Send comments to the author in
care of this newspaper or send her
•·mail at saraeumaol.com.

By tan Shoalea
missible to call
a lie, the political figure will have job through e-mail, faxes, phone
Every ttme I see President Clin- anybody from
the words "Big Liar" written on his calls, and post cards? As.a matter of
ton in the so-called "coffee videos," federal proper·
or her forehead in Magic Marker, fact, if everybody just went home,
shaking hands with deep-pocketed ty for any rcawllt!!t they will remain for a week. efficiency would probably rise 100
men, I try to repress a shudder of son, but you
After 12 such judgments, "Big percent. AI least Moira might gel a
revulsiOn, I really do. But the shud- have to pay for
Liar" will be tattooed permanently little work done.
der, unfortunately, just isn't there. the calls your·
on the politician's forehead, and he
(7) Don't discourage bipartisan
I'm repressing nothing.
self. If you're a
or she will be booted out of ..me..
squabbling . As a matter of fact, I
Maybe if Trent Loti hadn 't sand- fedcr~l
(3) From now on, when you're think we should encourage duels to
bagged campaign finance reform I employee, and
elected to public office, you must the death between bickering · sen a·
might feel dtfferently. If political you' re caught
travel on your own steam. This tors. We could get Don King.lo pro·
campaigns cost pennies a day, if air borrowing
a
Shoales
means no limos, no drivers, no Air mole them, wtth the profits partially
lime and air travel were donated frte quarter to make
Force One. You must book·all travel, earmarked to pay off the national
- I&lt;J" candidates by corperations grate· a call, it's a capual offense.
and pay for it yourself.
...
debt.
.
.
ful to support the democratic
Certainly, this will cause our ,
(4) Since most scandals ~rsc
(8) Candtdatcs must ra1sc money
process, if politicians were celibate, elected officials to lug wagons full from so-called "leaks," I reeom- themselves. They arc henceforth for·
mild and selflessly devoted to the of change willl them wherever they mend that all sllffs be eliminated. btddcn to hire spin doctors, lawyers
greater good of this grand republic, I go, but thts is to the good. It might Instead, the federal, judicial and leg· and consultants; no eager college
might be able to gel a good snit slow lllel'l down a little. As a further islative branches would be issu~d students may volunteer for their
going.
1
bonus, the constant Jingle of loose one secretary for the lot, hopefully a campaigns. Each will be issued a tin
The fact is, political campaigns coins might drown out their inane sullen rather lazy woman named .cup, and m~sl take his or her place
are more expensive than the making sound bites.
Moira with paranoid tendencies, 11110111 the homeless 10 panhandle.
of "Jurassic Park." And what do we
(2) From now on, reporters can who refuses to vole. If she hates fi/- Good luck!
voters/consumers get out of it? We only submit their questions in writ· ing, that would be a plus.
. (To recctvc a complimentary Ian
don't get talon-to-talon combat in g. 'l'hey can appear at press confer(5) Stop taping now! What do we Shoales newsletter, call 1-800-989·
between prehtstoric beasts, I'll tell ences if they choose, but they must need all these vtdeo and audio tapes DUCK or write Duck's Breath, 408
you that. Just gavel-to-gayel cover- first tape their mouths shut. If they for anyway? Posterity? Posterity dod Broad St., Nevada City, CA 95959.)
age.
lan Shoales is a syndicated
appear on talk shows, they must perfectly well before our obsessive
Lest you think I'm, like, a total wear bags over thetr heads and have urge to record our every public writer ror Newspaper Enterprise
nattermg nabob of negativism, how- their voices electronically altered.
meeting. I say, if Moira doesn't Association.
ever, I do have some positive sugIn return, political figures must bother to make a memo of it, it's not
(For tnrormatlon on bow to
gestions to bener our political ch· answer all questions in full, and worth recording.
.
communicate electronically with
mate.
UUihfully. A subje.:tive witness, ~a­
(6) Encourage telecommuting. this columnist and others, contact
(I ) Remove all telephones from sen at random from the JUry pool, Does the president really need 10 be · America Online by calling 1·800·
federal property, except pay pho?es. will judge the verity of these stale· in Washingwn? Why doesn'r he 827·6364, ext. 8317.)
Pass a law that from now on it's per- ments. Should a statement be called move back to Little Rock, and do his

WediMICiay; Oct.l9

•
IToledo I57" I

Promise Keepers explain their pledge
By Sara Eckel
When the Promise Keepers met
in Washington recently, the evangelleal Christian men's group attracted
quite a bit of controversy. Though it
was largely praised .. who, after all,
wants to wke ,11mbrage with a stadiurn full of men professing their
devotion to their families? .. some
feminists ..pressed concern about
statements made at earlier Prom 1se
Keeper rallies. Of particular concern
were speeches that urged men' to
take back their role as the head of
the household.
This rhetoric was toned down for
the Washington rally, and P~omiS.
Keepers leaders interviewed on tcleVIsion usually msisted thai they
believed in equal partnerships
between husbands and wives. But do
they'? In an earlier column. 1 asked
Promise Keepers to tell me where
they stood on thts tssue, and 1
recetved a strong response.
Overall, the Promise Keepers
who wrote struck me as nice guys,
who genuinely love and revere their
families. But make no misiake: They
aim to--lead.
Well most of them. Some
Promise' Keepers Oally denied that·it
was the group's intention to have
women submit to their husbands, per
the Biblical injunction, "Wives,
submit yourselves unto your own
husbands, as unto the Lord."

Envlronmentllll.ts:

MICM.

disturbing, Nano was sentenced to
12 years in prison for embezzling
humanitarian aid to Albania during a
brief stint as prime minister in 1991.
He left prison early last spring, and
'was .elected prime minister once
again.
The minister of finance is Arben
Malaj, who is charged with the
daunting task of shutting down the
remaining pyramid schemes and
jump-starting Albania's economy.
His appoinimenl by Nano startled
some observers, who remember
Malaj's own role as a facilitator of
several of the pyramids. Some owners say he was their financial manager; he insists he was merely a
"consultant. •• ·
The World Bank and International Monetary Fund are forced 10 work
through Nano and Malaj to resusci·
late Albania's economy and try to
prevent the spread of more chaos
across tile Balkans. The lending
agencies are trying thc1r best to shut
down the remainder of the illicit
pyramid schemes.
But in throwing out the bath
water, the World Bank and IMF arc
playing into Nano's hand by mstSI·
ing on chucking baby' Vcfa as well.
They refuse to distinguish between
money raised for the sake of raising
money -- and money ratsed to hutld
legitimate businesses.
Well-placed sources tell us that
Nano has good reason to want Vefa
and its owner out of the way. These
sources 'suspect Nano and hts
cohorts are directly involved '" a
range of illegal aciivity in the Balkans, 'including money laundering,
prostitution and drug smuggling.
Some believe Nano would also love
to add the pieces of a dismantled
Vefa Holdings to his portfolio.
Liule -wonder that Vehbi Alimu·
caj sleeps with a revolver under his
pillow and goe&amp; nowhere without a
heavilr armed escort. That is a
shame for freedom's friend.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers ror United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

.'

I'

The Daily Sentinel
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evCr~ 11flcrn00fl, Noltdly thro11w;h

Friday, 111 coun

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Mf-•ber: Th~ l\unci11ted Prt:ss, and the Ohio

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

OHIO Weather
Aceu Weathe,e forcc:ut for daytime conditione and biJb lempentwa

Albanian b~.sinessman is under tl:le gun

By Jack Anclenlon
and
Jan MOlter
,
'£sta6fisfid in 1948
WASHINGTON -- Vehbi Alimucaj looks like he just came from cen111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
tral casting for a role as an Eastern
614-992-2156 • Fu 992·2157
European functionary -- stocky serious, a large heard topped with tousled gray hair.
But Alimucaj is anything but typA Gannett Co. Newspaper
ical. His name is a household word
in Albania, where he represents the
ROBERT L WINGETT
best hope for developing a democraPublisher
tic market economy to overcome the
impoverishment left by a half-century of totalitarian rule under the paraMARGARET
LEHEW
notd Communist dictator, Enver
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Controller
Hoxha. Alimucaj is an unabashed
Genel'll Manager
capitalist who loves his country and
greally admires the United States,
which he considers the world's best
model for economic as well as social
and political freedom.
When Albania, Europe's poorest
country, finally scrapped the Iron
Curtain in 1991, Alirnucaj launched
a determined effort to build a private
enterprise emptre that would make
htm nch and provide jobs to his
countrymen.
By JOHN McCARTHY
"I wanted to help ensure that
Associated Press Writer
.
hi · , Albanians would never return to
COLUMBUS- State agency regulators who anend the twtce-mont Y
. , h
. W'th
· Board say they know 1hat sen. AI an Zal es ki wt 11 communiSm, e exp1atns. 1 no
meetings of the Controlling
tie prepared - and that they had beuer be.
The board, which includes six lawmakers and a prestdenl who represents
the governor, authorizes spendmg outstde the state budget. Each lawmaker
routinely quesuons se veral agency requests, but none as fervently as the
Lorain County Democrat.
.
Thai pomt hit home for Rick \Vymer, asSistant deputy d'.re~tor of the
Department of Mental Retardation and Developmental Dtsabthltes, at last
week's meeung.
The department la..t month asked the board to authorize the purchase of
metal-frame chatrS for a department recreation center. The cost: $!50 aptece.
. Furniture ts kind of a hot-buuon tss~ for Zaleski. He has complamed to
everyone from depanment purchasing gents to umversity presidents about
what they spend on tables, lamps and &lt;l airs.
- " It's almosttrnposstble to find out how furniture ts purchased. I think it's
· a secret agency," Zaleski said.
.
.
.,
..
The board approved the agency's request despue Zaleski s opposmon.
But Zaleski told MRDD to bnng tn one of theirS !50 chairs to board's meet10g last Monday. Wymer complied.
Zaleskt brought in two chairs of his own, mcludmg one he bought at the
"local Office Max for $28.

·Letters to the editor

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page2

Star Bank ..............................48'.4
Wenc:ty'e ...............................20'1.
Worthlngton ................. /...... ,20'!..

_,_._

Stock reporte ere the 10:30
by Ad
e.m. quotee provided
veet
of Galllpolll.

i L===========•

Tylor Jo Fetty, one month, of Letart, died Saturday, Oct. .25, 1997, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital as the result of an automobile accident.
Born Sept. 26, 1997, in Oallipplis, she was tile daughter of Brian A. and
Melissa Faye (Varian) Fetty of Letart, W. Va.
Additional survivors include paternal grandparents, Charles A. and
Shirley A. Fetty of Point Pleasant, W. Va.; maternal grandparents, Gary L.
and Belinda K. Porter of Point Pleasant; paternal great-grandparents, Joel
and Wanda Scott of Poca, W. Va; and paternal great·grandmolller, Edna Fet·
ty of Point Pleasant.
.
A graveside service will be held Wednesday, 3 p.m., at the U~t~n Cemetery with Pastor Jetry Scoll officiahng. Foglesong Funeral Horne IS tn charge
of arrangements.
Friends may call at tile Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home Tuesday, 6 to 9
p.m.

Rondal H. Kinder
Ronda! H. Kinder, 56, Long Bottom, died at his residence on Monday,
Oct. 27, 1997. ·
He was born on June 12, 1941, in Charleston, W.Va., son of the late Olison Cassidy and Berdie Jewel Rice Kinder. He was a laborer in the carpentry
and concrete construction business. He was an Army veteran and served during the Vietnam War. .
He is survived by two daughters, Belli Kinder of Elkview, W.Va., and
Angie Kinder of Oklahoma; three sisters, Sona Davis and Willa Deana Tallman of Sandyville, W.Va., and Adoree Laughling, Titusville, Fla.; a brother, Forrest Kinder of Parkersburg, W.Va. and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at the convenience of the family at a later date
Arrangements are by the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home.

Edward F. King .
Edward F. King, 94, Pomeroy, died on Tuesday, October 28, 1997 at the
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center.
. .
He was born on February 16, 1903 in Pomeroy, son of the late Wilham
'• Delbert and Mary .Schreiber King. He was·employed f~r 45 years as a consuuction superintendent for Columbus Southern Electnc Company. He was
a member of the Enterprise Uniled Methodist Church. He was a member
of the Gold Ridge Gun Club, the Masonic Lodge 11363 ?f Middleport ~nd ·
a former member and president of the Salisbury Townshtp School D1sU1ct.
Surviving are his daushter, Enid Em:!ine Bare, Columbus; two sons and
daughters-in-law, Gene Paul and Judy King of Pomeroy and Kenneth R. and
Marcia King of Middleport; 10 grandchildren. 12 great grandchtldren and
several nieces in nephews.Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, Leona Han
King in 1988, a son, Marvin "Fizz" King, and several brothers and Sisters.
Memorial services will be held on Thursday at I p.m. a! t~e Po~eroy
chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with Rev. Ke11h Rader officoatmg. Frtends
may call on Wednesday, Octo'bifl29, 1997 from 7 to 9 p.m. It the fu_ncral
home . •

Historians object...
'

I.

Continued rrom page l
Couns also said that Richards and
Sons is expected to resubmit its permit application.
Other business
ln oltter business, the commissioners increased appropriations
within the budget of the Board of
Elections in ihe amount of
$11,924.93 10 cover a deficit created
· by 'the MRIDD special election in
May. Those funds were recovered
from the MRIDD board through the
collection of indirect costs billed 10
the board for services provided by
county agencies.
The board approved the followmg
adjustments: employees salaries,
$895.28· extra help, $7,378.76; sup·
'
·
plies, $700.37; contract servtccs,
$190.00; advertising and printing,

$2 720.52; other expenses. $40.
'upon the recommendation of
County Engineer Robert EasM, the
commtsstoners accept~d a btd for
various grades of buummous maten. als for the month of October f~om
Asphalt Matcnals, Inc., of Ma~1e1ta.
A list of proposed mmtmum
requirements for real estate transfers
submitted by Eason for the board's
approval was tabled.
Btlls for the week were approv~d
in the amount of $200,294 45, wtth
205 entries.
.
Present were Cornmtsstoner&gt; Fred
Hoffman and Jeff Th?rnlon, Clerk
Glona Kloes a~d Davtd Spencer of
the County Htghway Department.
CommtSstoncr Janel Howard was
absent due 10 a famtly tllness.

State investigating allegations
against Dayton children's home
DAYIDN, Ohio (AP) :- The
state is considering closing part of a
children's home after allegaltons that
a severely disturbed child was kept in
isolation for days and another was
deprived of family mementoes.
State mental health officials confinned Monday tllallhey may revoke
the hcensc and certification of the
intensive treatment unit at St. Joseph
Children's Treatment Center.
1
The 12-bed unit- one of five residential units at St. Joseph's- is the
only lockup ueatmenl program for
children in Montgomery County.
"We were already looking at the
agency closely and repeatedly," said
Sam Hibbs, a spokesman f&lt;1!: the Ohio
Department of Mental Health.
"These statements gave us some spe·
cific areas and dates to look at."
The allegations were made by a.
former St. Joseph's employee last
year.
St. Joseph Executive Director ·
David Emenhiser denied tile allega-

lions.
"We're quick to fire or terminate
people even at the hint of mistreat·
l
mcnl. "hc sm'd .
Emcnhtscr satd St. Joseph made
changes tn the uml in July, firing or
transferring several employees. There
were also changes m the scdusion·
rcstr~inl

procedures
One chtld allegedly was kepi in
seclusion for more than two dayssleeping on the floor in a room with
a only a pillow ansf blankets.
State rcgulallons rcquir~ seclusion-restraint to be limited to two
hours in any seven-day period, or up
to eight hours under certain etrcum·
stances.
Another allegalton tnvolved a
staffer who allegedly tore up a young·
ster's family photos and leuers from
a caseworker.
Emenhiser confirmed thai a child
who had begun harming htmself had
been kepi in a monitored isolation
area for five days before he could be
itted !0 a psychiatric hospital.

XVote For &amp;Re·Eiect

EDDURS'
FOR.

Salfslluey rownslaip Trustee
Pllld fOr by Cllndldale: Ed

TIIANJCfOin

Durat. 31340 Nollie lurnmtt Rd., llddl1port, OH -'S7tO

I

COLUMBUS (AP) -If the fed·
era! money available to protect drinking water is used at the sour«, local
water treaunenl systems could save
money on cleaning up tile water
before it flows mto faucets.
Ohio will receive $43 million
from a fund created by' t996 amendments to the Safe Drinking Water
Act.
Environmental groups say as
much money as possible should be
spent to protect sources of communities' tap water- the rivers, lakes,
wells and reservoirs.
"With a suong source-water protection program, communities can
save a lot of money and citizens can
be a lot safer," said Sandy Buchanan,
direc!Or of Ohio Citizen Aclton.
Systems whose source waters
receive runoff from farms some- ·
times have to issue nitrate warnings.
Nitrates are a component of feniliz·
ers and can contribute to methemo·
globinemia, or blue-baby syndrome,
The Columbus Dispatch reponed
Monday
"If you do source-water proleclton, you ehminale the presence of
these contaminants in the watershed
and the water supply," said Jeff
Skelding, director of Rivers Unlimlled. "If they're not there to begin
wnh, we don't have to wotry about
them bemg in the tap."
The money could buy conservation easements to protect riverside

along rivers or provide financial
incentives to farmers to use fewer
pesticides, environmentalists say.
The Ohio Environmental Protec- :
lion Agency says most of the money :
will go into loans for. improvements :
to local water treatment systems, tile .
newpaper said. However, tile agency '
1s using about S4.3 million to pay for
a stUdy of source water.
The four-year study will identify .
where communities gettlleir drinking :
water, potential threats to the supply:
and what is needed to protect
source, said Mike Baker, manager of ·
the EPA's source-water protection
program.
The U.S. EPA would have allowed
tile slate to set aside an additional 20 ,
percent of the money for other;
source-water protection programs.
But the slate decided to spend the
money to expand or upgrade public
water treatment plants, mainly
because dozens of communities need
help to meet ,urrent drinking watet
demands, Baker said.
Also, many Ohio communities
already have programs to protect
their water at us source, he said.
However, the stale mtght be able
10 use future federal allocations on
source-water programs.
"Historically, we've focused OQ
treaunent and distribution systems,"
Baker said. "We want to have more
confidence in the quality of the water
coming into the plants."

the:

vegetation. restore forest corridors

Meigs announcements
Special services
Special scrvtces wtll be held al the
Red Brush Church of Christ en
Bashan Road Saturday, 7 p.m . and
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. with Denver Hill of Foster, W.Va., speaker.

Bazaar Dec . 6 at the church. Lunch
will be served and baked goods will
be avatlable. Craft tables may be rented by calling Lee Lee at 949-24,4,
Clara Mac Sargent at 949-2604 ·or
Alice Wolfe at 949-2286.

Leadership conrerence
A March of Dimes Leadership
Conference will be held Saturday, I().
noon in the Holzer Medical Center's
French 500 room in Gallipolis. The
conference was organized at the
request of WalkArnerica volunteers,
team captains, commiuee members,
sponsors and walkers wanting more
information about the March of
Dimes and how to beuer prepare for
the Tri-County WalkAmerica. All
are welcome. For more infonnation,
call Tamara Zuspan at (304) 7735528 or Jane Graham al (614) 4461479.

Rutland EMS wieoer roast
The Rutland Emergency Medical
Service squad is holding a wiener
roast and hay ride Friday, 6 p.m. Pe&lt;r
pte who helped in the Corne Home to
Rutland Homecommg are invtted.
Bring covered dosh and hot dog
sticks.
,
'
Syracwe trick or, treat
Trick or treat will be held in Syracuse on Thursday, 6-7 p.m. with tltc
fire whistle to mark the beginniRg
and end of the observance.

AAmeetlo1
Alcoholics J\nonymou• will mact
on Thursday at 7 p.m1• at the Sacred
Heart Church on Mulberry Avenue m
Pomeroy.

DanvDle trick or treat
Trick or treat in Danville will be
held Thursday, 5:30.6:30 p.m.

........ oltbe Llbl'lll')'
.Friends of the Meigs County
Library will meet Monday, 7 p.m . at
the Pomeroy Library.

Christmu Bazaar
The Racine United Methodist
Women will sponsor a Christmas

Today's
livestock
COLUMBUS (AP) .:_ IndianaOhio dtrecl hog prices at selected
buying points Tuesday as provided by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture
Market News:
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50 cents
lo~~.:er, instances 1.00 lower, demand
light to moderate on a moderate
movement.

U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
pomls 43.50.45.00. few 45.50; plants
44.50.46.00. few 44.00.
U.S . 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 41.50·
43.50; 210-230 lbs. 37.50-41.50.
Sows mostly 1.00 lower.
U.S. 1·3 300-400 lbs. 32.0034.00; 400-500 lbs. 33 .00-35 00;
500-600 lbs. 36.00-39 .00.
Boars: 32.00-33.00, few 34.00.
Estimated receipts: 32,000.

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Monday, Oct. 1.7 discharges:
Mrs. Mtchael Thoma.• and son,
Mrs. Charles Bose and daughter.
Mrs. Mark.McBenge, Nial Salser and
Donald Estep .
Monday, Oct. 1.7 birth:
Mr. and Mrs. Charlds Caldwell,
South Bloomfield, son
VeteranS Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSION·
Emma Devore.
MONDAY DISCHARGES
None.

POMEROY
Ntar Pomeroy·Maaon Brtdge
992·2588
VINTON
!lolita County Dloptoy Yard
15S Main St.
388 8603

We Give Mature
Drivers, Ho•e
Owners and
Mobile Ho~n·e
Owners Special
Savings.
Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and less costly losses
than other age groups. So It's
only fair. to charge you less lor
your Insurance. Insure your
home and car with us and save
even more with our special
mui~·PClll~cy discounts.

N~
ER_':

nee SerYicee

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

99N687
Alllo-Oomenl~

LHe Home Car Business

n. ,., ,..,. •

�.

.

Sports

Tuesday, October 28, 1997

The D8ily Sentinel
'

;.

.

By MIKE HARRIS
ROCKINGHAM; N.C. (AP) Bobby Hamilton has worked very
hard nO! to born any bridges at Petly
Enterprises.
Tbat's why he views his victory in
Monday's rain-delayed ACDelco 400
· as mostly a parting gift for team-owner Richard Petty and the crew that has
prepared his STP.Pontiacs for three.
years.

•

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) .- Indianapolis quarterback Jim Harbaugh's
pride was hurting. Now he's feeling
the pain in his wallet and hand.
Upset over remarks by NBC
sportscaster Jim Kelly, Harbaugh
chipped a bone in his right tiand
when he punched the former Buffalo Bills quarterback.
"I consider this something personal between Jim Kelly and I. We
settled things," Harbaugh said Mon·day.
The incident took place Salurday
evening in San Diego, where Kelly
was to broadcast Sunday's game
'between the Colts and Chargers for
BREAKING AWAY- Green Bay running back nlo Freeman (86) In the fourth quarter of Monday
NBC. Kelly, who did not (iiscuss the
Dorsey Levana (25) breaks away from New Eng- night's NFL game In Foxboro, Mess., where the
incident during the broadcas~ did not
land defender Chad Eaton (90) while getting addi- Packers won 28-10. (AP)
return messages left by The Associ·
tional downfield blocking from teammate Antoated Press seeking commenl Monday.
Harbaugh will be placed on the
non-football injured list and will forfeit his salary until he is cleared to
play, the Colts said Monday.
By HOWARD ULMAN
. Drew Bledsoe's 11-yard scoring pass
And lis he did in the Super Bowl,
Direclor of football operations
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) - Brett to Ben Coates and Adam Yinatieri 's when h~ threw touchdown passes of Bill Tobin said the incident was due
Favre made the Super Bowl sequel as 38-yard ·field goal. It was his 22nd 81 and 54 yards and ran for another, to comments Kelly made during a
successful for the Green Bay Packers consecutive successful attempt, the he outplayed Bledsoe.
local Buffalo program which
as the original.
longest current streak in the NFL.
Nowhere was that more evident described Harbaugh as a "baby" who
Throwing on the run and scramFavre then gave the Packers a 14- than in the only two series of the third lacked courage and "overdramabling for first downs, he baffled New I 0 halftime lead with a 32-yard pass quarter.
tized" his injuries.
England's defense with three touch- to Mark Chmura 22 seconds before
Trailing 14-10, the Patriots got the
"It is one of his peers saying
dQwn passes as the Packers won 28- intermission.
ball first and, helped by Bledsoe's 49- something that he took very person10 Monday night, nine months and a
And when the Patriots couldn't yard completion to Terry Glenn, al and Jim wanted to visit with him
day after they beat the Patriots for the score after getting a first down at the moved to a first dqwp at the I. Cur- in a professional manner," Tobin
NFL title 35-21.
Green Bay one-yard line on their first tis Martin was stopped for no gain, said, adding thai Harbaugh wanted to
• Trailing I0-7 late in the first half, series of the second half, Favre led and three passes fell incomplete.
have Kelly apologize for the remarks
F'vre led the Packers on scoring dri- the Packers on a J7, play, 99-yard
On Green Bay's first play of the or e~plain them. "It didn't work that
v~s of 75 yards in the second quar- march ending in his 20-yard scoring next series, Favre threw a nine-yard
way.... The first salvo was fired in
ter, 99 in the third and 85 in the pass to Robert Brooks with .1 S sec- completion to William Hendersonc Buffalo and Jim took it very personfclllrth .
onds left in the third quarter.
Four times on that drive the Packers al. ... He's played through a lot of
: Both teams played down the
Levens, whose status for the game faced a third down and four times injuries. They know that all over
rd!Tlatch angle, focusing instead on had been questionable because of a they came through.
·
America, I don' 1 know why they
correcting recent problems -:- two clavicle injury, finished the scoring
The biggest play came on a third- don't know il in Buffalo."
io6ses in three games for the Patriots with a three-yard run with 2:46 left and-12 at the New England 36. With
It's uncertain how long Hat;baugh
and four win' by fewer than seven ' in the game. He rushed 26 times for his receivers covered, Favre took off would be out, but he'll be missing
p&lt;iints for the Packers.
100 yards.
for a 16-yard gain. On the next olav, about $'140,000 per week until he is
The crowd was subdued most of
Both teams had changed consid- he connected with Brooks for a 21 - cleared to play.
1
the night as tradition prevailed: Super erably since the Super Bowl. The 10 lead.
"This was an attempt to be himBowl winners are now 4-1 in games Patriots have a new coach, Pete CarFavre and Bledsoe were brilliant self that got out of hand," Tobin said.
they've played the following season roll, who hll!j been under pressure to , at times, bumbling at others in the "It's a non-football injury. ... When
against the teams they beat for the show he can be as successful as his first half. Favre threw two scoring a guy is unable to play because of his
title.
predecessor, Bill Parc'ells. And the passes but lost a fuml)le that led .to own actions away from the field, he's
Favre gave the Packers (6·2) a 7- Packers have been hurt by injuries. Coates' touchdown. Bledsoe threw not entitled to his pay."
0 lead with a six-yard pass to Dorsey
But Green Bay still has Favre, one touchdown pass and an interPaul Justin, who started his first
Levens with 3:19left in the first half. who completed 23-of-34 passes for ce1Jtion.
game of the season Sunday ·agai,nst
But the Patriots (5-3) went ahead OQ _239 yards.
San Diego, will start again this week
against Tampa Bay.
Franchise plans memorial for decf1ased owner today
Harbaugh didn't sound like someone who regretted his actioRs on
Monday. •
"I regret that I have a crack in one
of my bones in my hand," Harbaugh
. said.
Harbaugh told ESPNEWS, "I
By PAUL NEWBERRV
die Scott so he could sign quarterback we can say this was something Mr. regret throwing the punch, but I felt
SUWANEE, Ga. (AP) - The flag Jim Miller and receiver Mercury Smith had a direct hand in. That's my I had to do something since my
outside the Atlanta Falcons offices is Hayes.
challenge. I feel like that's going to !Oughncss was being que'!tioned."
flying at half-staff. Inside, coach
The moves came while the team be one of the driving forces for me."
"A part · of me says I under- ·
Dan Reeves detached himself from finalized plans for today's memorial
Reeves decided that the rebuilding stand," coach Lindy Infante said.
the period of mourning long enough service for Falcons owner Rankin job won't include Tolliv.er, who "Another part says I wish it hadn't
to make a couple of business deci· Smith, who died Sunday of heart fail- played in six ofeight games filling in happened. I'm not condoning it, hut
sions.
ure.
for injury plagued Chris Chandler.
at the same time I understand the
After a loss to Carolina dropped
"We're going to get the job done
"Billy Joe has done some good competitive nature of what we do. I
the Falcons to J.7, Reeves announced and make this a fran'chise that every- things," Reeves said. "But that's a understand that all of us have a lot of
Monday he was waiving quarterback body can be happy about," Reeves position we've got to address be.cause pride .... Sometimes you iake things
Billy Joe Tolliver and receiver Fred· said. " Most of all, I want to do it so
(See PLANS on Page S)
[ a Iittle too personal."

Packers defeat Patriots 28-10

1

Atlanta Falcons waive Tolliver;
Scott; Miller, Hayes to be signed

Football
I

~

•

NFL standmgs
'

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
F.:attm1

~
.. ...... 5 \ 0 fl2.5 17fl lflO
... _ . ~ ,l 0 . b2~ 20~ 1;\2

M1amt ............
~w En~lnnd ..

N.Y. h1x............. : ........... S .~ 0 .62~ 201 156
Buffalo ......... :.
. . 4 4 0 .:iOO 151 IKM
lndinnaf'IJlil ................0 ~ 0 .000 I I~ J-,q
· Ct-ntral

Di•~ion

Piusburib ......................... 6 2 0

.1 ~

194 IK7
.....'i J 0 .62.'i 2t11 lbll

Jacbclnwllk . .....

hltitfK11'.: ...........................4 .. 0 . ~ 19-l 1'7~
T~n.:ucc ....................... ..- 4 o . ~ un 161
CINCINNATI..,.. ,.............. I 7 0 . 12" 125 2 1~
Wutem Diwllkan
Dcn.er .... ...........................7 I 0 .R7' 2.\K 1.\ ,
Knnw01y .......................6 2 0 .UO IHI UJ
Selln)e ............................ J J 0 62." 169 117
..4 •
1-10 116

s.. o;,,. ........................

-·-

Dflkll:r.nal .............. .......... .. ]
'

~

om

o .Jn

2JJ 21K

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Z..

IMttn~

Dlwition

WLilll.rEEA

N.Y. Oiunu .........,...............6 3 .0 .067 lie» 1110

I)QIIa•............................. 4
Philndelpl!la ........................ 4
WMhiftJIOn ........................4
ArilOnll ............................. I

4
ol
4
7

0 . ~ 17R 1~1
0 .500 IJ7 I ~9
0 .m 142 1J7
0 . 12.~ 1].\ tKS

Ctnlnllln2 0 . 7~ 196 1~9
2 0 .750 186 161
J 0 . 6:!.~ 106 IJ&lt;I
4 0 .lOO 180 Ill
7 0 .12.1 IJ7 2J2

Om:n Bay .... ,...................... 6
Mln,.IO!o ........................... 6
Tompa BO)' ......................... l
Dotoolt ............,.................. 4
ChitiiJO ............................. 1

Wlllff'ft IMYIIIM

San Fran&amp;:i14.:o .................... 7 I 0 .8, 210

98

C.Ohna ................ ............ .4 4 0 . ~ 128 !J9

St. Loui• .......................... 2 6 0 .l!tO 13J 1117

,.._ O.II!N ..................... 2 7 0 .222 Ill 198
Allam• ............................ I 7 0 .Ill 14l l09

MOIIIhly'• Kora

Or"" a., 21. tkw

Enahw:f t

Chtr.:• o 36. Miami 3.~ &lt;0'11

o

Week 10 diU
s-y,Noo.l

8aJrimore 11 New Yotll Jets. f p m.
Miami II 8utYalo. I p.m.
New i:.~ II M'lantiOUI. I p m.
Oalll~ •
I p.m.
St. J..ouq It Atllllra, I p.m.
S• Diep • CIHCINNATI. I p.m.
T....,. Bay alllldilupolia. I p.m.

c:-onu.

lam

Olvi~ioo

W L I l'lll. 1'I

lam,

Monchay, Nov. 3

.

Division IV

l'lll.

I·Oemwntown Vullt•y Vii!W {26l lJ-0 ............... J72
2·Cic!. Btnet.liclinc 16) 7-0 .... ,................... ] JS
J· Akron Manc~.\1\.T (I) ~-0 ......................... , ... 2~5
4-Bellain: (J)IJ.(] ............................................ 2XI

PinsburKh ut Kan5as Cily. 9 p.m.

Ohio H.S. poll

~· Bell'o'ille

COLU~BUS·Ohio (AP) -

Huw a state panel
nf sporu wnters and bruaJc:as1crs rate~ Ohio hiJh
K tMJoJ [ootball !CO
Unt in tb;o KYenlb of C'ighl Wtck1)' 1997 rcgular· &amp;e:.son polls for The Anoct ith:J
Pn:ss-by OHSA.A divisians, wtth wun-lo~t m.:onl
~nd to4:d pOints (fint-pl,.,·e votes in ~nthtk.,.l :

Iwl

Othrr1 rK~i¥inl ll or 1n0r1 poinll: II · Bt:-'
loit We11 Bran..: h J6. 12-Col. Beechcroft H . 13·
You. Chane:)' 2~. 14-Hubbard 2J. IS (lie}-Cin. Mc Nidtolal. McARTHUR VINTON COUNTY 21.
11·Cin. Pur..:tll Mwinn 19_

Division I

4-~per A•linaton 9·0.................. .... ... .. ..... l .lK
~- onl\inJion Kilbourne IJ-0 ........................... 21 .'
6- Tioy ( 1) 9-0 ................................................... 167

.. ..

2JO

6-NEI.SONVILLE-YORK 9·0 ....................... IM7
7 - W i ~:kliffc

9-0 ................... ... ,...

K· Bucyrus ll-1 ..... ... .. . .. ...

Ita

Division II
.

lll.

I•DdiiU'ICe (~I) 9·0 ...........................................3 ~ 1

2·1Abanoo ll19-1l ..........................................m
l-Aiuon SprinarttldS-1 ....................................2~7
4-C'ol. Wanenon (l) 8· 1...................................24'
J.ZI..,vlll• (2) 8-1 .........................................224
6-BI'Olldvw His. BJeeksvtlle 8-1 ....................... 1MS

1-Cboril&lt;&gt;n 1·2 ............... ........... ..................... 11$
8- Wll'~nw Rlwr Ylew 8-1 .................................. 91

9·AIIian~:e

7-2................................................... !10
ID-Eas! Uvof(I0917-2 ................. ,................. ...... lO
Otllitn rtntwm,11 or mon pol11111 II ·Ct!ll1'11._.. l2·Unionto-MD Like 38. 13-Cin. R?.fer a..
con J I. 14· Bowllna Oreen 2!1. 15· Vermilion 21.
16-Tiffin Columbian 16.

Dlmton Ill

~-·
(23) 9-0 ............................................~
2-Cot. OeSaln (l l 1-l. ......................................m
J.Y;intert&lt;llle lncllioCteek (J) 9-1l .................. 276
4-M&lt;ntor Lake Cotto. {li S. I ............................. 269
5-Avon Latlc 8-1 ............................................ 1110
6-llolle""' 8-1 .................................................. 1:16
7·kllefoot~ .. (l ) 9-1l .................................... .1:14
1-Cuy. Falh Waloh Jeo.it 7-2 ........................... Ill
9-Eolonl-1 .......................................................... 77
IO.JACKSON &amp;-! ............................................... 44

Northu.'il Diwlslon

.......................... 7
2
B~mn .............. :.................7 4 I
... 6 .l .l
Onawa ..
Monnc:d .............................6 .1 2
, C:.mlin;1 ................ .........1 7 .1
Piu ~bur(th

-·-

.. ............... 106

IQ.Manina Ferry K· l .............................. :\9
Olhtra ru:rl•lnJ, U or mon points: 11 Cululiu hbrpn:n:a ~-l. 11- Wellin~ton (I J 2.l IJ.
PIKI!TON 20. 14-WHtElERSBURG 14. 1~-0t·
· la.wn-Oiandtuf 12.

lam

Dlvillon V
•

fb,
I -Murion Pl(,'t\Sunt 11~ ) 9-0 ............ ,............ J7()
2-Amnntlu-Cicun.'fte!k {9~ 9-0 ........... ...............'lX'
J-Hamler Pulrh:k Heru,o (,\ ) 9·0 ......... ............. 2%

4-0rwell Ornnd Yllllcl (I) ~.o ....................... liM

"-Coldwater 7-1 ...................:.:::....................... 111
9-Col. Han ~J'.!·I ................................. ,.......... 'l'l
IO.Sullivnn 8 ·t Ri•et K-1 ................................ ,62
Othtn ncelwl,. IZ or """" pe6nu1 I I-LU.
CASVILLE VALLEY 43. 12-John•lown-Monroe
~J . 1~- Applc: Ct«k Waynednle (I ) 21. 14 (tic)WIIt'ftn Kennedy, Weil•vino 17. 16-Cul. Rtady 13.

lll.

I·Oelphot So. Joho's {21) 9-0 . ...................... J71
2·Norwolk Sr. Paul (9) 9-1) ................................ )Jll
J-Dollon (4) 9-il ................................................ l9J
4-lnil&lt;pe- (l) 9.0 ............................. ......w
~-Dola Hardin Nonhcm

9.0 .............................241

6-Beollsvllle {1) 9·0 .............. ........................ 201
7·Dtri•nce Ayen"ille(l)9.0 ..... ,..................... 122 ·
S·Torolto 8-1 .................................................. 117
9-Cledlnllle (I) 9·0 ........................................... 66

IO.Bellnire St. lottn S- 1........................................ 60
01her1 rtcft,lnl 12 ar nt.re pM•It: 1 J.

Collltt'lbima 40. ll-MG~NWwille 1~ .

Hockey
NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allonii&lt;DI-

II lo
12 J(J
!~

.l l

!I

lb

.l l
Jl
10

!I

.lK

.10
1.1 ).1

1'1
ll)

I)
14 Jl
'I .l l

"'

2V
20
&lt;I

20

.l7

II

K !I

•
'

,.

• •
2

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Iwl

Ctntr•l Di•h:i.n

W I. I l'lll. !if liA

Detroit ................................ !,!
St. Louis ....... :.................... '.~
Onllaa ............................... 7
Phoenb.................................Ci

I 2
2 I
4 I

:w

47

21

4~

1~

30

2f'l

J 2· 12 .\4
Toronro .............................. J 6 I 1 22
Chicago .........
. .. .2 10 o 4 Itt

2~

IIJ
1.'\

Bears top Dolphins
36·33 in overtime
to get first 1997 win
By STEVEN WINE
half led to nine Chicago points.
MIAMI (AP) - When the game
"We preuy much gave them the
ended, 33 hours after the scheduled game with the turnovers," Marino
kickoff, the Chicago Bears finally said. "They blitzed and. came after
had something to celebrate.
us, and it worked a lot of the time."
Coach Dave Wannstedt's beleaThe loss left the Dolphins (5-3)
guered Bears earned their first vfcto- · tied with New England and the New
ry of the season Monday, overcom- York Jets for first place in 'the AliC
ing a 15-point deficit in the final5:48 East. The Patriots lost28-1 0 to Green
of regulation to beat the stunned Mia- Bay in the other Monday night game.
mi Dolphins 36-33 in overtime.
Coach Jimmy Johnson blamed
The game was postponed Sunday Miami's defeat on 13 penalties, four
so Game 7 of the World Series could ucks and three turnovers.
·
be played at Pro Player Stadium. For
"We haven't been a highly penalthe Bears (1-7), the victory was izedtcam, w1e haven't turned the ball
worth the wait.
.
over and we have protected the pass" I can't tell you what a relief it er," Johnson said. ''The thi'ngs that
is," said Erik Kramer, who thn&gt;w for have helped us wia up I&lt;? this point
150 yards and two touchdowns in the got us beat tonight."
final7 112 minutes of regulation. Jeff
Late dcfeqsivc breakdowns also
Jaeger clinched the victory by kick- hurt Miami. Kramer completed 32 of
ing his fourth field goal, a 35'yarder, 50 pa.~scs for 343 yards, and ChienWith 5:35 left in overtime.
go achieved its highest point total in
"I never went through anything 71 games dating back to 1993.
like this in my life," Kramer said. "I ·
With six minutes left, the Bears
think the entire team breathed a col- appeared to be beaten - again. But
lective sigh of relief when we hit that they rallied from a 33-18 deficit tn tie•
field goal.''
. the game.
The Bears averted the first 0-8
Kramer hit Buhhy Engram with
start in the 78-year history of the an eight-yard touchdown pass to cup
franchise. They hegan 0-7 in 1969, an 80-yard drive, makigg the score
wonthcncxtgamcandfinishod 1-13. 33-25. Twice Miami failed to mo•e
"If anyone had any questions the ball and had to punt, and Chicaabout our·character, tonight we pro- 1¥' drove 59 yards to score again with
vided some answers," sa!d ~annst(See BEARS on PageS)
edt, who has been under fire from ,.....
· ----------..,
Bears fans and the media.
Barry Minter set up 'the winning
score when he sacked Dan Marino to
force a fumble that Carl Reeves
recovered at the Miami 17-yard r c.
Two fumbles by Marino in the fir.

.The Light
Toac!)

By
Dave

ColonMlo .......... ................. 6
Anaheim ................. ,......... .4
Los A"JCies ......................4
Edmonton .......................... t-4
San Jl* ..............................4
VM~."OU'I'tf' ....................... J

2
4
5
6
7

4
.\
.\
I
0

6 l
CIIIJ•Y ·" ........................... ) K 2

16 oil
II l4

~inlfon ................ J~ f ~ ~ ~

NEW YORK YA.NKI~ E.,_. : E•o:m!ll:d thdr I \I'~
npimi un OF Ch:141 &lt;.:uni11,
TI~ XI\S RANGERS: A~n:&amp;:t.t'tu tcrnl!i wilh OF
Aiel Diaz ttn a minnr·lc :•ttu~· t:ontr:u:t. 1\llnuutii.'Cd
th;u RHP Terry Clark, LHP Oryun [V\..'I'I',I:Crt.l. l'
Henry McrL'I..'ik!~ untl OF Mike Si~nnll! have rdu~c~l
nulriJhl mi1mr·lcn~lll! ~s ~ignn1Cut~ ;md h..-cn lli1Ull·
cd fn.'t: ngl!tk')' . Named Dub lk'mi~:r nUnur- lcnJ~.a:
notrtdtl instru~tnr 1tntl Juy &amp;klint-~ nmatcur !!(nut
TORPNTO BLUE JAY~ · Si)tn'-'\1 RHP &lt;.'hri ~ll~&lt;
pl~r Muwtluy .

Natiooall.taJCUr
NEW YORK METS: Named 1-'f\.'tl WrightiL~sill·
tarll du\.'l.'hlf uf :mlUlt-ur ~ulutin~. Jat:k Buwtn nutinnal M:uutinl! ~: m...~· C:h(.'\:ltr..,. nnd J11c Morlan iln.! il
SL'uUI SUill:rYIMII' It II' Ohan, lntlinna anti Mictaittun .
SAN 1&gt;1 1::00 PAURES: Numcd l&gt;av~ . Sk:warl
llil c hiu~ CliUCh .

SAN llf:ANOSCO GIANTS: Or.:dinctl th1.1 ir
I 1N !'I ~ ~niuu

1.0

Basket bull

2LJ

NlllbfUIIIlwiktthall At~Md•Uon
OOLUEN STI\'Il ~ .WARRIOR.~ : WuiY(.'tl G b·
~~til: Uunnn. (i Dt:ll l&gt;cmp~ . 1: Alttnnlu Uu1g u,nd F

.\1

.liJ

l7

Larry S1cwur1.

Y

2~

1'1

211

,\t'l
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Ftlm."lit.

1'1

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1~

II

C l)allltlll lJcrryhill.

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'-tiRe:: Dlwllion

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I.OS ANGEl.HS L/\kERS: Wa; vctl F Jumcll

ORLANI&gt;O MAGIC: 1\(.~uin.'il 0 Mark Pril:c
l'mm II~~: Gulden Slalc Wnrrinl'lt !ill' G Bmm Shuw
und 1: lluvid Y:tul!,hn .

MtindaJ'•.......,

Montrul•. Ouc:aao 1

S11t1Jotel.N .Y. IIIM!im I
New Jmey ~ . Phlladrtlphi11 0
Dallu at N.Y. Rlln~ . 7:30p.m.

1m Anpln ae F1orida. 1::\0 p.m.
Aftllheirn It TOI'flftlo. 7 : ~ p.m.

• B~ffalo 11 Cokwado, Rp.m.
Pinsbtlfllt '! CaiJ.VY. 9 p:M.

FtMJtball
Natktnal t'u.tt.ll L.-•11"'
All.ANTI\ FAI.CCJNS: Wniwd ()IJ Dilly J n~
tulliYCf 1uu.l WR Fr!!t.IJit.' s.,:nu. Signed f.,10 lim
Milk.., nnU WR Mcn:ury H;tyr5.

CINCINNATI RENOAI.S: Ai!rcct.llu term ~
whh (.'8 Cun:y Snw)'cr nn 11 Of'IC•Yelll' (; tlfllrtM.1 .:a•
len~ inn.
PHILI\DHLPHIA EA.GI.ES: Eatcnt.lcd thll conlnt'.'l of I.Rinm.:s Wi lli ~ 1hmu11h thu 2000 ~al5un .

WedDeoda7'•aames

N.Y. lsludm ar Montflll, 7:~0 r .~t~.
St LoUll at Philadelphia. 7;)0 p.m.
Dallu IU Wuhi"'fOfl, 7:)() p,m.

Ottawa a~ Tampi .Bay. 7:JO p.m.
S..Jote • Detroit. 7:JO r .m.

V•~•Otk:~. BJOp. m.

Phoei'MIIIII Edmonton, 9 p.m.

Tr&lt;HlS&lt;lCIIons
a-ball
A..mc.na....-e
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: lfutciJel.lthelr IWK
oplion QD OF Enr.: Da•ls Acti•aled RHP Ru~: k)'
Coppinaer rrom tht 60-doy disabled lis1 lll1d IMl!Jcd
him to the 6man roster.
I

on it. "

Did that mean Hamilton would
have had to pay Petty $100,000 if he
hadn't won before the end ofthe sea-

son?

TVC CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONS - The
Meigs Marauder boyl' cro11 country teem
recently won the Tri-Valley Conf!ll'ance chimplonlhlp. In front 1re (L·R) Ullses Barrus, Joey
Blazer, Michael Stacy, Mike Williamson, Joseph

McCsll, Derek Johnson al1d Kyla Smlddle.ln ·th~
back row are coach Mike Kennedy, Ryan W.ll,
Steve Behe, Ben Crane, Collin Rouah, James
Stanley and Adam Jason Thomas. Abeent when
picture wu taken was Adam Josepl) Thomas.

'

,•. ''

'

'

.n

Tonlpt's pma

Division VI
Ita

'

Bufr&gt;~lo............................... J

. ...... 1711

7·Tol , St. Frunda K-1 .............. ..................... 1.11
~-Hanmbal RiVtt(l) ·0 .................................. I'll~
11-HMnilton 9-0 ...... ~ ................... .......... ... .'........ 129
Grove q-0 ................................... 1611
9-Cin. St Xa'o'ier 7·2 ........................................... 1W _ 6-Columbu•
7-l,..il)crty ~nk'r K-1 ....................................... 119

IO.EU&lt;Ud 1-1 .............................................611
Olhm nuh... nor more poiMI: II ·Fremont Rou ;\0. 12·Shabr H11: 26. IJ-Newarl )1.
14-You. BIXIfdmln ll

•

N.Y. Rangen ................... ..\ 4 l
Flol'ldtl ......................... ,... l I !
N.Y. Mander~ ... ............ . ...J · ;' 2
Tnmpa Bny .
.. .... 2 K !

'I· PORTSMOUTH 7- 1.................................. AIJ

liL

I·Canton MeKinky IJ'»l 9-0..
.........JIJIJ
l -Cit. St l~natiusK-1 .................................... HO
.~ · Cin . M('i!lkr K-1 ............................................ lM!

Clear For\ lJ) lJ-0 .1 ...

Philadcfphia .................. . ....7 4 I
0
Nc:w Jersey ......................... (!

been dealing with him on a business
level.
"He said, 'You need to win me a
race before you leave.' I said, 'I'm
trying.' He said, 'I'll bet a hundred
thousand dollars that you won't win
another race before the year is up.' I
said, ' Is this a real bet?' He said,
'Yeah, it's a real bet.' We shook hand•

the end of the 393-lap race.
Besides the $89,150 he earned
Petty Enterprises for the win, Hamil·
ton will pocket an extra $100,000 as
the payoff to a bet with Petty.
"We were at dinner one night,"
Hamilton explained. "Actually, we
had just talked about the deBI about
me leaving and everything. You
wouldn't believe bow
this has
been
has

I

Scoreboard
W;\shinglon nf Chi~ngo, 1 p nt.
Dallas ill Sun Franmo.:o. 4 p.m.
Jackstmville m Tenne5~ , 4 p.m
Philndtlphia nt Arizona. 4 p.m.
S!!aUic Ill Oepm-, 4 p.m.
Ottruit ut Gret:n Bar.. Hp.m.
Open date: !'lew Or enns. New York Ginn!~

"Me and Richard have talked
about this, and I think it's real impor·
tant not to burn bridges," said Hamilton, wbo will l!riye m:xt ~on for
Morg1n-MeCiure Racing. "Sometimes things just don't work.''
Everything worked for Hamilton
on Monday as he stayed at or ncar the
front throughout 400-mile event at
North Carolina Motor Speedway,
taking'lhe lead for good 131aps froll)

1·1

CRmCAL TURNOVER:__ Miami quarterback Dan Marino (13) sits
on tha turf altar fumbling the football while baing aacked by Chicago defenalve lineman Barry Minter (92) during the overtime period
of Mo!Kfay nlght'a NFL gama In Miami, where the Bears' 36-33 victory was their first of the seeaon. (AP) .

Hockey

~otloool Hockty Lo1111&lt;
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS: R~(;llll~ctC
Richan.l Pufk IUkl C Moll Cullen from Ondnnatl nf
1ht AHL. kru 0 D1111 T~bil to Cim=inna&amp;l.

CALGARY FLAMES: Recalled C Jim L&gt;owd
1111tJ 0 Ty~ Mon from Saint Jobn oftheAHL.

DAI...O.S STARS: As~itl'lld D Ser.y Ciusev 10
MlclUJI"' of the IHL.
PrrrsBUROH PENGUINS: Re&lt;:olletl 0 Poter
Skudra from Houslon of the IHl Aslianed C
~ l.i!nJ 10 Houlton.
VANCtJUVER CANUCKS: Aui&amp;ned 0 Mark
to SyrkU!IIC of tlw: AHL.

W~on

W&gt;ISHINGTON CAP, TA ': RC&lt;ollod FA ..
drew Bru nelle and F Tndtl Kry
from Ponland
u(lhe AHL
·

"No, that's the great part of it,"
the driver said with a laugh. "It was
one-sided. I couldn't lose on this
deal."
Hamilton 11as said he is leaving
because he 'felt that his team's effort
was gttting less attention since Kyle
Petty, Richard's son, carne back into
the Petty Enterprises fold this year
with bis own PE2 team.
"~ bOUom line was we took on
another team;" he said. "That's going
to be · good · for Petty Enterprises
three years from now. At the time, I
thought ;t was hurting us, and now
it's statiing'..tp show that it's helping.
I probably made the decision a little
too quick, but I felt better about doing
something on my own.
"The main thing ," Hamilton
added, · "is there might be a time
when · ·we W8flt to work together
ag~n. "
·
·"lf .he keeps winning, . he can
come back," Petty joked.
·
. "Back in the summer, we just
agreed to disagree," added .Petty,
NASCAR's all-time winning driver.
"There was no argument or contract
dispute, and we'ye probably been
better since then because the crew has
. · been trying to prove how good the·car
.is, and Bobby has been trying to
prove to those other people how good
·ir driver he is.''
·
Hamilton's .second career victory
· came exactly a year to the day after
·his first win for Pelly at Phoenix. It
also was the first victory for.Pontiac
siriCe then.
. The race; postponed by ·rain on
~uilday, left the tense three-way Winston Cup championship · battle
betwe.en Jeff Gordon, Mark Martin
and bale Jarrett intact with tWO races
remaining.
. Jarrett ~sed Ricky Craven on the
last lap to t.ake second plaC'e for the
fourth straight time at Rockingham,
while Gordon finished fourth and

· Popcorn : Dad's old jokes.

***

Fifty years from now, history
st~denls will be yawning
over the stuff we're worrying
about today.

***

Always be sincere, even
when you don't mean lt.

***

II takes more brains to make

out the Income tax form
than it does to make the
income.

***

What history teaches us Is
that people have never
learned anythl~g from 11.

PLUIIN TO•••
100 LB.

CYLINDER·FOR
ONLY
•28 20 +Tal'

·"'"'••,.•,. ,.,

Rutland Bottle Gas
lt. 124, RIIIM, Oh.

742-2211

Dick Trickle, celebrating his 56th
birthday, barely nipped Martin for
fifth.
That left Gordon with a 125-point
lead ot er Martin and a 145-point
edge b er Jarrell. A pair of 13th-place
finishes would clinch Gordon's second title in three years.
The biggest factor in Monday's
race was tire man.agement on the
abrasive 1.017-mile Rockingham
oval.
·Jarrell was leading when the green
flag came out 22 laps from the end,
following the last of five caution periods. Hamilton, who had led twice up
to that time, was third, trailing Craven
on the restan.
Craven, who led a race-high 139laps, passed Jarrett's Ford for the top
spot on lap 376 and Hamilton wrested second place from Craven the next
time around.
On lap · 378 , Hamilton drove
underneath Craven's Chevrolet on lhe
back straightaway and took the lead
for good. He crossed the finish line
0.941-seconds - 12 car-lengths ahead of Jarrett.
"Bobby and Ricky were a little
better than us on the short runs," the
disappointed Jarrett said. "We .Were
better on the long runs. When that
(last) yellow came out, I knew we
were in trouble. Those guys were bet·
tcr on new tires."
Gordoli came near cti!)aster twice

BOBBY HAIUIILTON
covered during a'.pit stop under caution later in lhe race that the end cap
on his left rear hub had come off.
"I was pretty fortunate ," Gordon
said. "I rubbed 'the wall, but I didn 't
hun the car (in the first incident ).
Then we had the cap that holds the
rear axle just hangin g there. If it hadn't been for that caution, we probably wouldn 't b~ve made it to the end
of the race." ·
Race .tickets were sold out, but
.Monday it appeared that about half of
the 50,000 seats in the ~randstands
were oj;cupied and .the infield crowd
. looked considerably smalle r than
usual.

in the race - once when he slid on
The Parthenon of Greece, built on
the wet tiack and hrus.hed the wall the AcropoliS in Athens, was the chief
moments befo.rc a caution was temple of the goddess Athena and
thrown bticause of a light mist, and was believed to have been complct·
the second time when his crew dis - ed by'438 D.C.

."USA MADE" .IN OHIO
· •COATS
•VESTS
;

' •BIBS
•CHAPS

·coats In: Brown, Orange, Hunter Orange Insets.

.

JOY &amp; PLANTAtiON DOG FEED . .
DOG BOXES With or without Storaie

·For.Beagle &amp; Coon Dogs. Insulated to keep dogsw
. '11rm
COLLARS, LEADS &amp; COUPLERS
. .~·~~D,ealer for Cajun Lights Parts~&amp;~;;;~

ALL-TvC HONOREES- The following Meigs on~(e·~ mimberl· Danlelle Grueeer, James
Marauder cros1 country team memben won all-. Stsnley·snd Adam Jason Thomas and flrst·tesm
TVC honors In·the recent Tri-Valley Conference pick Ashley Thomas.
. \ ..
cross country nMet. From left to right ·are HC-

.

Honor··o ur.Heroes
. On November 11, our nation wiU pause to pay tribute to the
. thousands of men and women who have proudly served their
.e,oun&lt;
t ry during times ofcrises and peace.
·This Veterans Day, the Daily Senti.Ml will publish a very special
tribute honoring area· veterans. you can join in our salute by
·including the veteran 'in. your life, livin~ or deceased, 111ho have
served or is curr;ently.serving in any ~ranch of.the' V.S: Armed

EIG
S-L
,.,_

EIGS ~:

LADY MARAUDER RUNNERS - These run- erly Burdette, Danlelle GrUe,l llr . ancf Ashley
ners made up thla yeer'l Melga Marauder girls , Thomas. Absent when picture was tsken. w11
·.cross country teem. From left to right ..are BevBeatrl~ Morgan.
.
· .. ·.
.
. .
'
.
. . .

.

Marauder harriers claim TVC title

Grate
of
Bottle·
Gas

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Hamilton gets first win of 1997 in ACDelco 400

Pege4
1997

:Harbaugh
• •
InJures
right hand
in fight
with Kelly

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· The Meigs Marauder boys' cross
country team won the Tri-Yalley
Conference championship recently at '
Alexander.
Meigs won the cyent with 48
points to outscore Waterford, ·Belpre.
Miller, Vinton County and Alexander.
Adam Jason Thomas came in

eighth place to lead Meigs. Behind
him were James Stanley (lOth),
Collin Roush (lith), Ryan Well
(16th), Adam Joseph Thomas (17th),
Steve Beha (18th) and Kyle Smiddie
(23rd).
All-conference selections for the
boy's team included James Stanley

· and Adam Jason Thomas. Both
received second-team honors.
In the girls' race, Ashley Thomas
finished second overall ·to capture
first Jteam all·TYC honors. Daniclle
Grueser finished sixth overall to take
home sec.ond-team all· TVC honors,

Fa/cons , plans.. '--'-=(C::;:OO::.:,:ti::,:nU,::Cd~fr,;:;,om::.:P:.:agR::e.;:.4)'-----------we'rejust not setting the job done.'' can do. "
Miller, 26, spent three years in
Tolliver completed 54.8 percent
Pittshurgh and was the starting quar- for 685 yards und five touchdowns,
terback at the beginning of the 1996 . with only one interception, but he
season. He lost the job after only one was hurt by inexplicable errors like
week and was released In training the one thattumcd out to be his last
.camp this year.
play with the Falcons.
The 6-foot-2, 210-pounder signed
In the waning minutes of Sunday
with Jacksonville after Mark Brunell night's 21 -12 loss to Carolina, Tolwent down with a knee injury but liver mishandled a snap on a firstdidn 't play in three games. The . and-goal at lhe I and the Panthers
Jaguars released Miller on Sept. 24 . recovered.
"He was impressive in the workHayes, 24, played in seven games
out with us, so we're going to bring for Nc_,- Orleans last season as a
him in here and give ourselves an rookie, catching fobr passes for 101
opportunity to work with him, " yards. The 5-11 , 195-pounder spent
Reeves said. "I want to see what he the first five games on the inactive

list and was released on Sept. 29.
"He's not a big guy but he 's got
some speed," Reeves said . "That's a
priority for us right now. The thing
that's hurting us is we're not makmg
anything happen after the catch."
Scott, who barely made the Falcons roster in training camp, didn't
catch a pass after making seven
re&lt;:eptlo.ns as a rookie in_ !_996.
Chandler didn 't play agamst the
Panthers after suffering his second
concussion in six weeks, and Reeves
is unsure if he'll be able to return for
Sunday's game against St. Louis . If
not, rookie Tony Graziani will make
his second straight stan.

Bears win ... -(-:::C-on-:'tin-ued""':":'fr-om-·P::-a-ge-:4:-)- - - - - - - - - - - - I:25 left on Kramer's 25-yard pass to
The crowd was announced. as a
a wide-open Chris Penn.
sellout of 73,156, bul with many fans
Engram 's sprawling reception recovering from the Florida Marlins'
near the sideline for the two-point World Series-clinching victory the
conversion tied the score.
night before, there were perhaps
Jaeger improved to 10-for-10 on 20,000 empty seats.
.
In
the
fourth
quarter
the
stadium
field goals this season. He also hit
was only half full. Fans made the
from 39, 23 and 47 yards.
mistake
of thinlr.ing the game was
"It made the last kick easier
knowing I've been kicking so well ," , over, and so did the Dolphins.
"We thought we had it in the
he said, "I had one shot 10 have a
bag,"
receiver O.J. McDuffie said.
good game, and one shot to have a
"We
relaJ(ed.
The Bears are nOt a typbad game.''

ical 0-7 team. I told people that over
and over again, but I don't know if
we all believed it."
Chicago controlled the ball for 22
minutes in the first half, capitalized
on two Marino Tumblos and took an
early 15-7 lead. John Thierry twice
forced Marino to fumble, with the
first turnover leading to a Chicago
touchdown and the second resulting
in a safety.
Marino was sa_cked four times,
doubling his season total .

Forces.
r--..:.---~-----~--------,
Yout Choice Of Two Styles...
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·C/O The Dally ·sentinel
. P.O. Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45!&amp;g

In Honor Of

Major .
Earl Jones
I
1969-1971

In Honor Of (name and rank)

Army
VietNam

Dates of Active Duly

Love, Your Family

Branch of Service

Ad With Photo- $12.00

Conflict/War

(shown actual size)

Love, (nam.e relationship to veteran)
AD DEADLINE: Wednesday, Nov. 5th, 5:00 pm .
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The Daily Sentinel

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

•
•

r

�•

Tuesday, October 28, 1997

By The Bend

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily ·Se-n tinel
·

Lo.o·king be·hind ·the curtains, book offers
insight to restoration of White ~House

Page&amp;
Tuesday, October 28,1997

Teenager needs to be taught responsibility
Ann
Landers
1 ~7. l..w NIJCb TimtS
Synd1calc ilnd Creators
S~no.hcall:

Dear Ann Landers: I just read
the letter from ''Shrevepon,"' who
got pregnant after her husband had
had a vasectomy. I can empathize
with her because the same thing
happened to me.
Five years after my husband had
a vasectomy, I discovered I was
pregnant. My family doctor said it
was impossible unless I was having
an affair. I ass ured him that was not

the case. 'He did a pregnancy test
that confinned I was indeed pregnant. My husband then had a sperm
test. The results said it was impossible for him to father a child.
When I was five months along.
an ultrasound showed that the baby
had died in utero. I was devastated.
Since I already had three healthy
children and had suffered two previous miscarriages. I decided to have a
tubal ligation and not put any more
pressure on my marriage. My husband insisted the child was not his,
but God and I knew better. We
divorced a few years later.
In 1989, I married a wonderful
man wllo had no children of his own
!Jut J;as happy to take on my three

teenagers. Three months after our
wedding, I found out I was pregnant,
e ven though it seemed impossible.
Unfortunately, I miscarried. My husband and I then gave up all hope of
having a child.
In 1995, a miracle happened. I
gave binh to a healthy. beautiful
daughter. and we are blissfully
happy. She is the joy of her father's
life, and I feel like the luckiest
woman alive . Sign me -- Miracle
Mom in London. Ontario
Dear M.M.: Your letter proves
that doctors can he wrong and miracles do happen. Thanks for a daybrightener.
Dear .Ann Landers: I recently
loaned my late-model car to the 1 ~-

year-old boy next door. He wrecked
the car and now will not pay for ttt.
repairs . He adamantly maintains tbat
he has no money, yet he just bought
a brand-new guitar, and I know guitars do not come cheap.
The deductible on my insurance
policy is $500. ~e bill is going to
he considerably more. I believe the
boy should pay for the damage he
did. His parents are no help at all .
My wife thinks I should get a lawyer
and sue the kid. What do you think?
-- Stuck Out in Dallas
Dear Dllllas: I think' you should
take "the kid" to small claims court.
The e~perience will be good- for
him .
Dear Ann Landers: You printed

several responses to a 1e11er about a
woman who received dirty looks
and disapproving comments when
her son threw a tantrum in the supermarket. One writer speculated that
even though the child looked per- ,
fectly nonnal, he may have had
some psychological problems. Bless
her. My wife and I have walked in
that wciman's shoes.
Our son was diagnosed as autistic
when he was 2 years old. He has had
dozens of tantrums that lasted nearly
two hours. llven with professional
help, we have been unable to find a
satisfactory way of dealing with
those episodrs. To obServers, our
son appears nonnal. The glares and
comments we get from strangers in

By STACEY TIE DOE
The Wilmington Newa Jour-

public places when he has an
episode ar~ cutting. 1lley assume he
is a spoiled brat.
In addition to the sleepless nights
.and exhaustion, the lack of understanding by friends and strangers is
hand to bear. Please ask your readers
not to condemn until they know the.
whole story. --Jacksonville. Aa.
Dear Jack: Your letter certainly
points ou.t the inherent dangers of
passing judgment before wo know
all the facts. Thank you for teaching
my readers a valuable lesson t?&lt;iay.

nal
More than three decades after
Jacqueline Kennedy's · breathless
voice ushered the nation on a televised tour of the redecoration that
transfonned the White House into a
museum, a Delaware woman has coauthored a revealing look at the
redesign 's behind-the-scenes dealings.
" Designing
Camelot:
The
Kennedy White House Restoration"
(Van Nostrand Reinhold. $50)
details the former frrst lady's effons
to transfonn the White House into a
museum of period rooms furnished
with early American antiques.
The book was written by American fine and decorative ans consultant Elaine M. Rice of Wilmington,
Del., and Baltimore Museum of An
curator of decorative arts James A.
Abbott. II takes readers from
Kennedy 's initial redesign. of the
family quaners with the help of a
society decorator to her formation of
the Fine Arts Committee, which
gave historical credence to her trans~
fotmation of the White House's pub-

•

Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.
90045

Hillary Clinton turns 50 - and the celebrations begin
By NANCY BENAC
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Hillary Rodham Cli nton's 50-fest is starting to
catch up with her.
9
By the time she got to Even!
Eight on Day Four of her binhday
celebration. the first lady found herself confessing... I feel like a piece
of history.··
II takes stamina to turn 50 this
way: The first lady has had more

surprise parties, binhrlay serenades,
honorary proclamalions, cakes, candles, and reunions with friends and
family in the past four days than
some people see in a lifetime.
The first lady actually turned 50 on
Sunday. but the parties began on Friday.
The birthday fe stivities were
winding down today with a morning
appearance by Mrs. Clinton on
Oprah Winfrey's syndicated TV

show. Then it was back to business Wisner - Officially proclaimed
as usual for the first lady with an Rodham Comer on Monday:
Chicago chimed in by naming a
appearance before the College
park after the first lady and proBoard to di scuss education policy.
Monday, by contrast, was strictly claiming Monday the time for
"Hillary: A Chicago Celebration." A
for celebratidh.
The first lady and longtime documentary film crew taped the
friends spent the day reliving old . whole thing for a special on cable
times in suburban Park Ridge. visit- TV's A&amp;E channel.
"It was just this constant flood of
ing Mrs. Clinton's old elementary
Mrs. Clinton said in
memories,"
school. church and childhood home
at the tree-lined corner of Elm and summing up the day.

By the time her evening interview before an audience at the
Chicago Historical Society came
along , Mrs. Clinton was showing
signs of fatigue from all the psychoanalysis associated with her birthd~y.
...
"I feel like I'll\ son of in this disembodied eKperience sitting up
here," she said. "I should either be a
hundred years old or talking about
somebody else."

President Clinton, who flew in ·
for a late-night birthday bash at the
Chicago Cultural Center, tweaked
his wife for the long-running festiv ities. He noted that the first lady's
staff began giving her a present a
day starting 50 days out from Sunday's birthday.
"She's still celebrating it as if
she's going .to hold on for dear life,"
he said. "Whatever she wants to do,
I'm for."

Mrs. Clinton goes home to wonderful memories of idyll childhood
By NANCY BENAC
Associated Press Writer
PARK RIDGE, ILL. (AP) Hillary Diane Rodham , the girl
voted most likely to succeed by her
high school classmates, was welcomed home today as a hero returning to re -examine the roots that took
her from Girl Scouts and Goldwater
to Wellesley and the White House.
After cheerleaders, marching
bands and a children's choir greeted
her arrival at O'Hare Airpon. Mrs.
Clinton started the second day of
celebrating her 50th birthday with a
visit to her first alma mater, Eugene
Fields School.
There, Mrs. Clinton sat around a
library table with a dozen former

classmates and teachers to reminisce
about riding her bike to school. coming home for lunch with mom and
ice skating on the flooded tennis
couns.
"I just have lol5 of wondeful
memories." Mrs. Clinton told
youngsters at the elementary school.
She recalled that friends described
her as the perfect student.
Mrs. Clinton confessed to her drivers ed teacher from high school,
Ken'Reese. "There are some who
would argue that you did well with
everyone but me ."
·
Friends described her as a whiz at
collecting Girl Scout merit badges,
But Mrs. Clinton joked. "I'm still
working on my sewing badge."

Mrs. Clinton turned 50 Sunday for an evening bash at the Chicago
and celebrated her landmark binh- Cultural Center, and the first lady
day at a tent pany on the White was appearing Tuesday on Oprah
House South Lawn with family. Winfrey 's show.
The guest list for the day's activincluding daughter Chelsea, who
flew home from college in Califor- ities included Mrs. Clinton's best
nia, and.about 500 friends from all friend from high school, the boy
who walked with her to elementary
stages of her life.
Mrs. Clinton's hometown of Park school and the Methodist youth minRidge was putting up a marker at her ister credited with helping 10 awak"
childhood home. The city of Chica- en her social conscience.
"When people wonder who
go was naming a park after her.
Hillary
.Clinton is, they need to look
Also, a busload of old high school
pals from the Class of 1965 were back at her early life," said Carl
joining her on a bus ride to remi- Anthony, a historian accompanying
nisce at sites in what she remembers the first lady. "She is a product of a
as the "Ozzie and Harriet" suburb of nunuring 1950s idyll, and yet at the
same time she's also a product of the
her youth.
President Clinton was flying in city of Chicago and its tunnoil and

Start now pr~paring. your pets for
winter - it could save their lives
By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Society
One more thing to worry about
with winter on the way! In addition
to anxiously waiting for an overdue
fuel delivery, wondering whether the
car will start on Monday morning.
and managing all the additional ·
details required when making it
through a panieularly cold winter,
there is still more to fret over.
The animals that we humans have
taken on. as companions. security or
hunters. cannot manage the winter
on their own. They have been
domesticated, which means that they
depend on us to look after their
health and ensure their survival.
They need us .
Many people may not know, for
example. that pets that spend a great
deal of time outdoors mily need
more food as the weather grows
.:older. These fur-bearing creatures

work harder to maintain wannth and
so may require additional nutritional
help.
· ·
Water, even when plenty of snow
is around , is essential. Dogs may
play in and roll in the snow and even
bite at it. But snow reduce s body
wannth and does nothing to quench
thirst. Makes sure that the water supply is not frozen by checking it and
replenishing it twice a day:
That blanket thrown in Lady's
doghouse can. because of a leaky,
drafty doghouse. become frozen to
the ground. She can't make a· nest
and her attempts at conserving heat
is wasted. It is necessary to provide
clean fresh bedding ; straw, hay.
shavings, blankets and pillows all
provide extra wannth.
Whether living inside with you or
in the barn, your old tabby may have
the peculiar habit of crawling into
the engine compartment, not to
annoy you but to take advantag~ of
the engine's wannth. So before stan-

ing the car or truck, tap on the hood
or sound the horn to warn him that
you are about to stan the engine.
Remember to tighten container
caps and store them in safe places.
Ethylene glycol, which i~ the main
component of antifreeze. tastes
sweet to hoth cats and ~ogs and it
can and often docs cause kidney
failure if ingested. After walking your dog, wash her

its social change,of the late and mid- armband and march with Wellesley
classmates through ihe streets of
1960s."
A Goldwater Republican in high Boston after King was assassinated.
If her politics no longer fit her
school. Mrs. Clinton became a
hometown,
Mrs. Clinton is nonetheDemocrat during her undergraduate
years at Wellesley College and saw less finding more acceptance among
the turmoil or the Democratic the Republicans of Park Ridge.
National Convention firsthand when where her husband got just 24 pershe came home during the summer cent of the vote in 1992 and was
held to 40 percent in 1996.
of 1968.
"I did pot always sense a pride
She planned an afternoon visit to
Orchestra Hall in downtown Chica- that she was our first lady and she
go, where Jones took 14-year-oid came from here," said Mayor Ron
Hillary to hear Martin Luther Kins Wietecha, a Republican . "Her
Jr. give a speech titled "Sleepins image has definitely improved in the
Through the Revolution"' in April years she's been in Washington.
There's less criticism and more
1962.
In April 1968, by then a Democ- praise. People are very proud that
rat, Mrs. Clinton would don a black she's coming home."

Free faiL

tificate of recognition for the the
1996 reading program.
The society voted to make a
donation to the parish co-op for food
and ceiling repairs. President Park.er
announced the UMW Leadership
Training Program at Richland United Methodist Church. Athens, on
Nov. 6.
. Parker had the prayer calendar
and chose Mary Morris. education
worker in Red Bird Missionary Conference . The society signed a birthday card for her. Pastor Hausman
reported on John Jackson of Gailipolis who is doing missionary
work in Bosnia.
All took part in the World Thank
Offerins program, reading and discussion. Worship. center featured a
Bible, flowers , and pictures of aible

remove salt picked up from icy sidewalks and driveways. Dogs and cats
respire through their paw pads; salt,,
seriously interferes witlr tlii ~
process.
Finally. on very cpld evenings,
bring all your pets in with you.
Dogs, in particular, are pack animals
and will delight in being with you in
your "den." Plus. if the temperature
drops in the house. you'll find that.
an extra cat across your legs can
make all the difference.

Safety poster contest winner
Trust Company following a contest
Tabitha
in which Middleport Elementary
Snyder,
daughter of School students drew pictures on
Norma and · fire and safety.
Snyder's picture will be featured
Jameli Snyat an Oct. 3 I reception for an art
tter,
exhibit in Marietta. At that time, she
Pomeroy,
was recently will also receive a $50 savings bond.
SYNDER
She also won a drawing contest
chosen
to
receive an recently at Vaughan's Supermarket
award by the Peoples Banking &amp; tn Middleport.

Two Pomeroy-area students were
named to the 20th annual edition of
The National Dean's List, 1996-97.
Named were Maria A. Graham and
Julie A. Wandling. Both attend
Hocking Technical College.

******
....•***
*
* Elect · *
** A.
*
*
**
**
*
*
On November 4th

JOHN

RANKIN*

Orange Twp. Truatae
The one who wiU make o
differeru:e on OraiiiJe 'lWp.
Rood..

*
***********
Pd for byu - · "21 112 St. Rt. '7,
T - Plllnt, ONo 4ll783

Mr. and Mrs. Michael DeRosa

BARNETT-DE·ROSA
Robyn Gail Barnett and Michael navy gowns and carried arm bouWilliam DeRosa were united in mar- quets of Virginia roses and delriage at 4:30 p.m . on June 21, 1-997 phinum. Rebecca Woodbury, cousin
at St. Francis Xavier Catholic oftlie groom, of St. Paul , Minn ., was
Church in Parkersburg. W.Va. Father tlie flower girl.
David Huffman officiated the douGary Eastwood, friend of the
groom, of Portland, Ore., was hest
ble ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Ron man. Groomsmen were Andrew
and Carol Barnett of Tuppers Plains. DeRosa, brother of the groom, of
She is the granddaughter of Edward Boulder, Colo.; Steven Barnett,
and Irene Rakowitz of San Antonio, brother of the bride, of Findlay;
Texas, Clarence Barnett of Thppers Brian Russo , friend of the groom, of
Plains, and the late Georgia Barnett. Salem, Mass.; Peter Hayes, fritnd of
The groom is the son of Christo- the groom, of Salem , and bavid
pher DeRosa an Mary Reed of Harding, friend of the groom, of
Rockpon, Mass. He is the grandson Rockport, Mass.
of Dean DeRosa of Andover, Mass ..
Laurie Brooks, friend of the
Lee Livesey and Ruth Clune, both of groom, registered the guests. Toral
South Hamilton. Mass .. and the late Mallory, friend of the bride, distribBill Shultz.
uted programs. Wedding coordinator
Given in marriage by her parents, was DaRa Klein , friend of the bride,
and esconed to the altar by her and photos and videoiape were
father, the bride wore her mother's taken by Mike Barnes and Heather
gown . The gown was made of c,han- Dowler.
tilly lace trimmed with iridescent •
A dinner and dance reception was
sequins and seed pearls, it had a jew- held at the Oils Center. A threeeled sabrina neckline. The bride's tiered rose-decorated cake was
headpiece was a crown decorated served by Adrienne Bin and Weezy
with sequins and pearls. She carried Calderone, friends of the bride.
The bride is a graduate of Eastern
a cascading bouquet of Virginia
roses, stephanosis and Italian ruscus High School and Ohio University.
with a cattalaia orchid in the center. She is employed at WENDIWWMG
Jessica Cannon, friend of the radio in Charlotte, N.C. as a contibride. of Parkersburg, was maid of . nuity director.
honor. Bridesmaids were Jill DouThe groom is a graduate of Rockglass, friend of the bride, of Canton; port High School and the University ·
Sherie Rakowitz , cousin of the of Massachusetts at Amherst. He is
bride, of New Braunfel s, Texas; employed by First Union National
Amisha Shah, friend of the bride. of Bank as a ·team manager in CharColumbus; Amy Walls, friend of the lotte.
bride, of Athens; and Amy Rice,
After a ·honeymoon trip to Ft.
friend of the bride, of Streetsboro. Lauderdale, Fla., and the Bahamas,
The attendants wore floor length the couple is at home in Charlotte.

Community Calendar

or his paws with warm water to

women discussed as witnesses. Conelusions were that all can be witnesscs in many ways.
Caldwell was hostess and served
sandwiches, doughnuts, chips,
candy and cider following a HalJoween theme. Paston Hausman
ask.ed the blessing .
The next meeting will be at the
church on Nov. 18 with combined
Thanksgiving and Christmas programs and a potluck meal.
National dean's list

lic rooms.
It focuses on the often-conflicting

roles of Fine Arts Committee Chairman and Winterthur Museum
founder Henry Francis du Pont, and
the " secret" French designer
Stephane Boudin, whose ideas were
favored by the first lady.
The book grew from the master's
theses written by Rice and Abbott
while each was in different graduate
programs.
Rice, a 29-year-old Indiana

native who earned her master 's · he won," says Rice. "Ever since she
degree from the Early American visited when she was a little girl. she
Culture program of the University o[ had this sense of being let down
Delaware and the Winterthur Muse- becau se it wasn't spectacular."
um, said of writin~ her thesis: " I
Abbon, 33, began writing about
wanted to reach a 20th-century audi- I he redecoration as part of hi s underence and· work with a popular cul- graduate thesis in Ameri can hi story
ture topic , and then I realized I had at Vassar Coll ege . For his graduate
right here in the Winterthur achieves degree at the Fashion Institute of
all of Henry du Pont's correspon- Technology in New York City, he
dence with Jacqueline Kenn edy focused on Boudin 's hidden
about the redec oration of the White involvemen t.
House."
He says he tried to llave his work
Rice pored over Kennedy 's notes puhl\shcd through Winterthur, but
to du Pont. Rice used the letters, he adds, " They felt I had slighted du
along with accounts in books. new s- Po nt. "
papers and magazines, to tell the
Rice focused on duPont's role as
story of how a first lady with limited chaimu n of Kennedy's Fine .Ans
resources _enlisted the help of well- Comnuuce . A common so urc e , John
connected friend s to seek donati ons A . H. Sweeney, curator e me ritus of
of furnishings that fit the hi storic Winterthur and a fnm1 er me mbe r of
periods for which the White House a committee of museum profession·
rooms were designed. And of how al s who ad vised Kennedy 's Fine
her effons were protected by the Art s Commiltcc, put the two scho l·
passage of legislation that ensured ars in touc h with e ac h other amJ the
that acquired furnishings would be idea fbr the book was horn.
forever treated as museum objects
According to the hook, Ke nnedy
and not discarded between admini s- first sought out du Pont . who had
trations.
turned his home, full of ea rly AmcrBefore Kennedy's two years of • ican a n tiqu~s he'd been coll ec ting
work was cut shon by President s ince the 1920s. into a museum, in
Kennedy's assassination, the lirst the hope that he would lend some of
lady succeeded in creating a back- hi s collection to the White House.
drop for ller husband's presidency
Du Pont was unwilling to pan
that fit his evolution from the "New with an y of hi s collection, but he
Frontier's" youthful optimism to his told Kenned y he would offer hi s
role as distinguished world leader. kn owled ge as an adviser.
Her period-room concept has been
Kennedy happily name,d him to
preserved by the administrations the Fine Arts Commi ttee, Rice says,
that followed.
adding that du Pont brougl1t both
"The minute Jacqueline Kennedy prestige and an authorit y on Ameri knew her husband would run for the can hi storical de ~ orat io n and hi s
presidency, she knew the White connections as a longtime collect or
House is what she would work on if of American antiques.

Howe ver, while Kennedy politely
listened to du Pont 's historicall y
focused advice, she more often followed the lead of French designer
Boudin - a man whose name the
committee tri ed to hide frpm the
public.
"Jacqueline Kennedy knew it
was essential that the public accept
her work as something good and
worthwhile and not, her spending a
lot of money on redecorating the
rooms." says Rice. " A French decorator in the president 's home was not
go ing to go over very we ll. "
Sweene y say s Kennedy's preference fo r Boudin's ideas didn' t bother du Pont and he didn 't detect any
animosity betwee n the two decorators.
'He says du Pont un derstood the
politics. "After all . it was·her house .
11 was hi s advice," says Sweeney.
adding . .. He personally regarded it.
as gene ral recognition o f what he

spent hi s iifelime doing."
But, Sweeney says. du Pont did
hring Kenn edy to Wint erlhur. " He
th ought her re al id ea o f e legan ce

was French furniture. bu t he fell
himse lf an apostle for Ame ric an
decorati ve arts and he said he want-

ed to show Mrs. Kennedy thai you
could have a swell house with
Ameri can furniture in it."
The proj ect was a hi gh pnint for

·67-year-old Sweeney .
· "I was JUSt a year younger than

Mrs. Kennedy and we were conl emporarics and mOre or less pee rs, "

says Sweeney. "We felt we were

part of something very important
and exciting, and as I look back on it
now, it did feel like Camelot."

Women's fellowship meeting enjoyed
The Meigs County Churches of · It was ~greed that if Meigs County
Women's Fellowship met churches are asked they would help
recently at Dexter Church of Christ. the Walnut Street Church of Belpre
The prayer song was "Tis so with women's retreat for September,
Sweet to Trust in Jesus", and the 1998.
opening prayer was given by Sherry
The nominating committee presented the 1998 slate of officers as
Shamblin of Bradford Church.
Shamblin also gave devotions on follows : Linda Bates, president;
Paula Pickens, vice-president; Ann
"Priscilla", a woman of the Bible.
Prayer was asked for Amy Perrin, Lambert, secretary; Marie Snyder,
Melanie Daniels and Teresa Deem. treasurer; Janet Bolin , news
A sympathy card was sent to Duane reporter; Eleanor Hoover, cards.
The above officers will be
Stanley on the death of his wife,
Hazel.
installed at the Dec. 4 meeting and
Reports were read and approved. no meeting will he held in Novem-

ber due to the Thanksgiving holiday.
It was noted that the Middle(lOrt
Church's homecoming was Sunday.
Bolin had the program on
"Putting your garden to bed" and
opened with scripture Eccles iastes
3:1.
She said you should rake your
leaves and discussed planting pansies and transplantin g perennial s.
She also discussed feniliz ing lawns,
planting spring bulbs (making sure
you water them good when transplanting) and cl eaning off your
flower beds.

C~rist

(\./CHECK

Clip the tops from peonies and
remove them ; don't leave the m o n

the roots in case they are diseased.
A game was held on the Bible:
"Things In Baskets".
The closing song was "Higher
Ground" and the closing ·prayer was
given by Marie Snyder.
Refres hments were served by the
host church and the next meeting
will he held Dec . 4 at the Middle(lOn
Church of Christ. Dexter Church
will have devotions.

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The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales · or
fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space pennits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.
TUE&amp;DAY
RACINE - Racine Area Community Organization, Tuesday, Star
Mill Park. Potluck dinner at 6:30
p.m.

Alfred United Methodist Women meet
The Alfred United Methodist
Women met Oct. 21 at the church
with njnc members present: Osie
Follrod, Aorence Spencer. Nellie
Parker, Manha Poole, Nina Robinlson. Charlotte VanMeter, Sarah
Caldwell, Thelma Henderson and
Sharon Hausman.
Thirty-six friendship calls were
reponed:
Pastor Hausman opened the business meeting with prayer. All mem bers read the United Methodist
Women's Purpose and the present
officers were reelected. Five-Star
Gi ving was discussed and people
were chosen for gifts in memory,
special missionary recognition and
gi fts 10 mi ssions.
Program resource s chairman
Caldwell reported receiving the ccr-

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Wildwood Garden
Club meeting. Wednesday; I p.m. at
the Racine Library. Denise Arnold

•

OlTON&amp; FO.IIII

FREE!

of Fragrant Fields guest speaker.

THI!! TOPPER

PORlLAND - Lebanon Township Board of Tru stees meeting ·
Wednesday. 7 p.m. at the township
building.

Put )'O~Ir 14HJ1 UP ~!'\\.~ ICM
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CELLULA
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THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Open door
session with State Representative
John Carey Thursday, 2-3 p.m. at
Middleport Village Hall . Carey will
meet with constituents on a one-toone basis.

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JEROD ANDREW CLELAND

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SATURDAY
POMEROY - Holiday craft
show at Pomeroy Elementary
School Saturday. 11 to 5 p.m.
Refreshments will be available.

Jimmy and Stephanie Cleland,
Rutland, announce the binh of their
second child. lerod Andrew, born
Aug. 30 at Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipnlis.
He weighed 7 pounds, 8 112
ounces and was 22 in ches long.
Maternal grandparents arc Dave
and Ginny Barrell, Salem Center.
Paternal grandparents arc Larry and
Bonnie Cleland. Rutland.
Also welcoming Jerod home was
his 6-year-old brother, Joshua.

I

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C:um lort ~utwunt tS ynu

Cleland birth
announced

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$499

1

I

�•

Page 8 e The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Union president Coia
vows to fight allegations
WASHINGTON (AP) - Anhur
Coia vows to tight allegations of corruption and pwported mob ties rather
than resign as president of the Laborers' union.
" I have no doubt in my mind that
... when all the evidence is presented, when the truth is brought forward,
I will be totally, completely and finally vindicated," Coin said Monday in
a leller distributed to union officials.
The pending charges against Coia
will be brought by a union anomey
charged with rooting out corruption
in the 350,000-member union.
Robert Luskin. a former federal
prosecutor. ts expected to allege that
Coia associated with members of
organized crime. allowed mob mcm·
bcrs to run pan of the union and got
favors from companies that received
urli on husincss .

The internal rcvic,.l process was
cstabhshcu under a 1995 consent
d~:crcc

\Vith the Justice Department

that allowed the Laborers' to avoid a
rat.: k~lccnng

suit.
Lusk.in. who declined to comment

-Coia an.1 his father, a former
union olficial with alleged mob ties,
were indicted in I 981 1long with
Raymond L.S. Patriarca. the reputed
head of a New England crime family. in an alleged insurance kickback
scam.
The charges were dismissed, and
Coia insists he never knew Patriarca.
-When he was seeking 10 replace
his father at the Laborers' union, Coia
was steered by another board member into a meeting with an alleged
crime figure who gave Coia his
blessing.
Coia refused to discuss the illcident in an interview last year. but
people familiar with his sworn statements say he testified that the meeting surprised him.
In his leuer, Coia said some of his
associates had advised him to step
down before the charges are filed and
avoid a fight that could lead to his
ouster from the union.

.

'

,

.

Democrats findtng it ·h.a~d to
come up with campaign· funds
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Republican Pany has poured millions
into three closely watched elections
ne~l week while Democratic candidates have been .forced to borrow
money or hold last-minute fund-raisers because their debt-laden party
hasn't come up with the sam~ kind of
cash. ·
Nowhere has the disparity been
more noticeable than in New York's
Staten Island. where the congressional seat vacated by Republican
Susan Molinari is up for grabs.
The Republican National Commiuee injected itself in the race with
a recent $750,000 blitz that funded
30-second ads attacking the Democratic candidate, Eric Vitaliano.
The Democratic Party did not
respond, forcing Vitaliano to dig into

his own campaign coffers to counterattack: He had to settle for lO-seeond spots, and set his campaign back
$280,000.
In addition to the New York race,
the RNC has infllsed large sums of
money into the governors' races in
Virginia and New Jersey - either
giving it to candidates outright or
spending it on independent ads.
National comminees can generally
contribute as much as they want to
candidates· in state and local races
The RNC also has brought pany
headliners, like Dan Quayle, George
Bush and actor Charlton Heston. into
the states to help their candidates
raise more money.
The Democratic National Commiuee, still harboring a $15 million
debt from the last election, has not

Federal regulators may intervene
in Union Pacific woes

of a proposed national settlement
with the tobacco industry will be
· money to pay for programs to prevent
children from smoking.
But while 18-year-old Nickita·
quit, Josh remains hooked.
He was under pressure from his
parents, both of whom smoked, but
couldn 't stop. Smoking cessation
patches and nicotine gum didn't help
and he smokes up to a pack of Newport brand cigareues a day. He started at age 12,
"I guess I didn't really want to
quit," he calmly told the Senate
Labor and Human Resources subcommittee on public health and safety. ''I'm sure I'H want to quit sometime; I'm just not sure when."
Medical experts who testified after
Josh said the Virginia I I th-grader
was typical of most of the 50 million
adult and youth smokers nationwide:

GIUipolll

t~;--....... M••

.... __...._

I"~,..
lllo
lllo IIIII

CELLULAR PHONES
113 W. 2ND ST.
20 Yra. E&gt;&lt;p. • Ina. Owner: Ronnie Jones

·~;:::~lng:•

Arenewal
of an axlatlng tax of 1.7
mUll II I rato not lxceldlng 1.7 milia lor NCh Ontl
dollar of velullllon, which
emounta to aavantctntlt• ($0.17) lor HCh ·ana
hundred dollere of valu•

PubliC Notice
and opellllon 01 c.rteton
School
and
Mala•
lnduatrlu Workahop tor
peraont wltlt mentltl retal'
dllllon and dtvtlopmantltl
diHbllHiaa.
Said tax baing:~ An adellIlona I tax or ·1.e mille at a
flte not uCMdlng1.8 miHe
lor NCh ontt dollar 01 valua·
tlon, which amounta to
tight- (10.18) tor
NCh ona hundred dollart ol
valulllon, lor a continuing
parted of tlma.
The Polla tor aatd Elacllon
will open Ill 8:30 o'clocll
a.m. end ..,..In open until
7:30 o'otoctt p.m. on tha
aatd dey.
By order of t11e llottnl of
Elaotlont, of llelga County;
Ohio.
Han~ L. Huntar, Chalnllln
1111

D~~":'pi.D~~

(10) 7, 14, 21,28 4TC

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE

Handcrafted Wood

llcwlntl _ , llltufdor Oct. 1111,

-10

BRAMII MINING ·

P.ll

tAU

IALE

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1 .4 mllee eaet of Route 32.
614-384 6212
WELLSTON, OHIO

885-4198

Are Having A Rummage, Bake,
And Croll Ball. Thlo WID Bt Held
AI Our Church Hall Btntnd The
Arii-Church 01 Gad On Golil .. d
A.v1nu1, The Houfl Are t A.M.

TUP.Il

LUMP AND STOKER COIL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILAILE

II

·And that meant readirlg to us. Later
they encouraged us to read books.
magazines, and newspapers on our own.

Houra:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00p.m. Monday thtu F{idiY
7:00 am to Noon Seturd

with our children and now enjoy reading
to our grandchildren.
.

Read to your children. Start with
•

story books and when they can read for

BU. Bend Fabrication,
Machine, &amp;. w·e'lding Shop
•;~

i"lewspaper every day. With that kind of
start. they may grow up to make this a
more peaceful world.

·~

'h

"

'itt~

•

·w

The Daily Sentinel
•

In Recognition of National
Diabetes Month and Home
Health Services Month al
PVH Free Screenings,
Door Prizes and
Educational Materials
Tuesday, November 4,
1997 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Wellness &amp; Rehab Center

)

110 Court St.
1112-4119 .

WV1023477

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-291-5800

IUIILY TRRrORS
PARTS

&amp; REPAIR_S

(Free Discount parts list)
Same Day Rep~lr Service

. Buy, Sell &amp; Trade
Rlcharcl'a Lawn &amp; Garden
Gravely Dealer
Spencer, W.Va.
1-800-827-4551

r--------------------,
BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

80

Auction

llld Fill Market
ATTENTION VENDORI:

ln-

Spaco 15.00 Ou- 13.00 Open
Everyday. CriiWfDid's Flea Warkat. Henderson, WV. 304.. 75-

New Homes • Vinyl Siding -New

Garag~s • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

auction

BANKRUPTCY

ROOFING
NEW·REPIIR

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy .contact:
William Safranek,
· Attorney At Law
614-592-5025
Athens, Ohio

Aboolute Top Dollor: All U.S. 81(.;

VII' And Oold Colnt,

lne Anliqu11, Pomaro,, Ohio,
Rutt Moore owner, IU·A822521.

Antlqueo- no 1- 100 ilr1JO or 1&gt;0

smalL A110 estates. appralula.
rtUnilhing, cuslom ordtfl, 114-

11112-41511.
Cltan lilt Uadal Cars Or
Trucka, 1ODO Uodala Or Newer,

Smith Buick PonUac, 1800 Eaotam - . , , Gallpola.

J &amp; D'o Auro Porto. Buying Ill•
~elM.

Wanled: Standing Timber Or

1

Guttera

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110 Help Wanted
AVON I All Arou I Shirley
Spaoro, -67$-14211.
ACTION 'lOUTH CARE. INC, II
~ 1 Child &amp; llinllr Tlt«tplot lor our Pt. Ploooant 1101 or..
fl... Appllcen1 mull be 1 lllittro ...., Sootat worllor, co~
- · l'lyc:hologla1 or R.N. II btt to ba licensed. Salarr
. IH,GOO ID 127,000. AI lout one
~

II/1Wn

SAYRE

HEIRLOOM C()NNECTION

TRUCKING

Heirloom Quality Custom Furniture
* £onaplete Kitchens
* Kltehen Cabinet Relaclng
* Antique Reproductions

Haullng, Excavating
&amp; Trenchln".
•
Llmeatone &amp; G111ve1
Septic Syalema
Trailer &amp; Houu Sites
Ree10t111ble Rem
Joe N. Sayre
,
61 ...,742-2138

Handcrafted Using Meigs Co. Hardwood

50% OFF

Dter Season
742·2076
t0/21197 1 mo. pd.

CHEVALIER'S

HAULING

614-992·0077
OH

Action 'lbuth Caro 217 elh SWHt
Pt. Ploooant. wv 25550 or &lt;II 1181-113-2487. E.O.E. Cloalng
OCL 31 .
Avan II -118 IHr, No Doo• -To'
~-~~C:1~ Fun &amp; Rolox-

......

AVON - U -$1 BIHr. No Ooor To
Door. "Bonum• Fun &amp; Eeorll t--01311.
·
Noodod 3:30-45:30 P.ll.
3 Houro A Dor. llothortr Trpe
P-.od, Roloronooo, 114-441-

in
lhr Clmifinl Stclion'
AWIOUt IC[ t.1 I' tHS

---------1
Ptreonall

Da \tau HaVW: Hard Choat? let
APorchlc Holp, Jufl Cd 1-tlllll-

1111311.

Der•""

Wlntod: 1-2
1(1:
SC0n1c: Hille Nu11intl Cenllr, GilIIMuiclen

w..-. Apptr tn Poraon

llpollo,

er No;on... 1, 1llll7, . , .

_,150.

Cuhlor &amp; Cook, Bring Roourne
To: little John'l t4, 28&gt;13 Sllte
Routl 141. (Cantlnory~ Golipotlo.:
Cas&amp;lng - Mov~ Extr1s. Praduc·
llan TralnHL Film Sludia, 114·

123"?0

CHilD CARE-Working eouplo
oooka onorglll&lt; &amp; "pori• ncod
lady to cart lor MWborr n our
home during lht day. Stnd. In·

....,,.,.,10:

qul•r &amp;
P.O. Bol1 234
3211-10.5, En 8017, IU8/IIIn., I I i - WV 25262. Roloronc:oo
IIUII Bo 11 Yro. San-U, 118· Roquirod.

40

Camput.r Users Nalldad. Wark

Qtu.o.-

••-"•7
1
~=
..... With
Old, Lllllr
Tllinld, Blacil &amp;4Whlto
111.,.
U....Uat. Mark~ Y-Lovablo

Own H11., I20K To ISOK fYr. 1aoo-.1188 X1173.

Coomotologlll Noodod, .Gourontood Wagoo, Pold Vaoollon.
-·' b... F1M CEU Hour, Full I Poll WontIll
to
1
&amp; A ct nate,
N-r - · od Other
Bonoll!o ln&lt;ludod, 1140ulllclo, etH..a-21101.
_
_

(UmeSton•
LoW Relea)

WICKS

Carpet-Upholatery

Lit lit lhing&lt;
arr Worth 11/ol

(J(J5

rnr at u:perltnca In lndiYiduflll
•nd tamilr lharapr. Plaaaa , .
apond by ~tndlng resumea tl;

, llabr•-

145-&amp;II:M.

AH ~t·Upholst~ry
Oeanl•g

CARPO CLEANING

·--

SJt 325,
Langevllle OH
~Now&amp; Wile
Opn Durillg Tile low
&amp;Regtlar

S.lllnfl (&gt;lrll. 304-

Chlppod Wood, 114-381-8118,
Or 11...-.8747.

.--~~~~--.;;;-

OILER'S
DEER SHOP

Proufntl,

Dlomoncl11, Antiquo "-'rr. Gokl
Rtng11, Pr• 1830 U.S. Cuuoncy,
S•ttna. EIC. A&lt;qul~dono ~
- II.T.S. COin Shop, 151 So&lt;ond
- · Golipola, 11 .....3142.
Antiquoe, IDP prl&lt;el pold, - -

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
PalnUng
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

ntiD9'rl_,...

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Adclltlona
•NewGaragH
•Electrlctl &amp; Plumbing
•Aooftng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Alao Concnte .Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
1112-t215
Pomeroy, Ohio

llc:anaed ·

Howard L Wrlte11l

Chapter 13

614·992-4106
Fraa Estimates
Still Takln Orders for Christmas

aarvlce.

f68.,0hlo &amp; Wnt Vloglnlo, 304113-S7850r -713-5047.
90 Wanted to Buy

7/22/lln

' ..

Chapter 7

Rick PMroon Auotion Com-.
full time 1uctlone0f, complete

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

985-4473

448 7287

AblndonN TWo Klnans, Mutt

Domino's Pizza Now Ac:ctptlno

G!Yo.....,II14J+I1- Appllcottona At Golllpolli &amp; PoAda
-lab Pupplee Five " - • Allllll In Pol..,.
-

"*'

Olcl (814)111 lllltl

Domino'• Pi:U:&amp;·Now hiring all

poaitlons, Pt. Plaisant area,
must be 11yrs. old. 3D•·U5·

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

S..Orel
1INy •

bullllall

llleck welnull.

go. 304-e7W818.

614-992-3470

5151.

Eom "'"" money lo1 Chrtounoo.
011-._ ... 114 UIIOG8.
lltcutlvt Director PoaiUon
Awltb't

.~

Tha Gollle County ChamberWI
Co,....,co II In NMd Of An E•

Round: a.r.1 "-te Bra"" Dot
Blue and White FIN Coller,

Opportunities-We Are Expanding
w, are expanding on another ules ctnter and now have

37121 Hoelting Dr.
~ an OK 43131

llalora the all Ia Ia run,
Sundar a Mond•J edition·
1:OOpm Friday.

mo• .

(No Sunday Calls)

rwumeto

Advanoe. Dud line: 1:OOpm the

Umeatone Hllullng
Houee • T111ller Sllea
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy11ema
&amp; Utllltl..
Eallmatn
992-3838

992·5583

IIIWI81 poaltlont open. Must ba hard workl~g. honut, end
care about customer. Benefttllnclude VlcaUon, Holkloyo,
Family lneurence. lila and disability Insurance, ancllucrlllve
&lt;401 K. • Prollt Shar1ng - No Suncley WOlle.
•
1. General Menager- $40K to???
will consider management ~ainu
2. Salespeqon -lull time avg. S23 to $40 •K
3. Used horne repair and sales - M or part tlmt
4. Experillnced Home Service - Heating, Cooling or Sactional
Mtup people "SI.Intng pay range StG-$12 per hr.
"IIIia 101111dlllka you then
piMM apply II or Hnd 1

tl.,

HOWAlD
EICIYlnNG&amp;
IRUCIIIG

614-992-7643

Looking for a

AIIYord lain Mull Be Plld In ·

Soltl4.

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

HOLLON

I VIcinity

3381 Happy Nollow Road
lllddlaport, Ohio 417111
Naw Homn, Addltlona,
Aoollng, Siding,
Pole Bama,
Decka, Painting
Csll Us For A Fr&amp;e Elllmare
814-742-30110
814-742-3324
614-742-3078

•New Homes ·
•Ga(BgBS
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ES.TIMATEES

.'.

themselves. encourage them to read a

1 Quality·Window Systems

Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, lndpstrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday- 8:00 a.m.-4:30p.m.
Saturday-8:00a.m.- 12 noon

250 CDRdor Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A DivisiOn on· NichOla Metal, INc.
Phone: 614; 992-2406
. Fax; 304-n3-5881

DIRECT
PRICES"

·,

comp1~&amp;
Macbl Sh ServJ F b-'-tl
_,.
ne op
ce 8 '""' OD

RADIATOR REPAIR

..

Rosalynn and I carried on this tradition

.

Pomeroy,
Middleport

Hollie h•provelllllfs

''FActORY

IIA1£

tAU

KINGS'

Z5 YEA~S IN BUSINESS

IALE

SaiUrdar Nov. 1, 18D7 TNt Crultcltfl, (Our 3 To 12 YMr Olda)

, _ "X• ,._,

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

111

Fht Cloord1 Of God. 8:00 11 6:00

......
,._111111
..............
,..........

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

11~

Berfield Ave., Itt Brick Btslde ·

34718 St. Rt. 7
Ph.

..... - .

SaL Oct 25111. SaL Nov

Projects

1898 Martin Street

614-992·5479

TRUCKING

about the world outside of Plains. Georgia.

I

Frld~.....,-

"Build Your Dream"

POMEROY, OH.

R~- L.

wanted each of their children to leam

THIS MESSAGE IS BROUGHTTO YOU BYTHIS NEWSPAPER AND
THE NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA•

MY PLACE

Swings, Benches, Tables,
Misc. llei!K

The annualalactlon
Oltha
Board
pi Dlraclore lor
tha ,~=================~
llalge County AgrtcuHurel 1
Soclllly will ba held at the
eacretary't olllca at tha
talrgrounda, Monday, Nov.
3, 11197. The polla will ba
Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
open from 5:00 p.m. to t
•Re-cpres • New Radiator•
p.m. on alactlon day.
Tha election eha.ll be by
Oxy • Accetl Regulator Repair
Ballote muet bl
merkad with an "X"
State Certified Welder
oppoolle tha nama to be
Stick • Tig .• Aluminum Welding
counted. The cooling ot
volat lor director• by
Notice of EIICIIon on Tu
proxleo to not to bo
Levy In Excall of 1M Tan ~~-:'~aldontt of Malgt
1/4/lln
IIIII Umltll(on
'
Coda,l!ectton
County holding mamberRllviMCI ( •
ehlp cartlflcatae lor lll.le11t
3501.11 01. 5705.11!,
15 daye before tha date of
5705 .25
Public Notice
election, may vote.
11
Notlct hereby given that
Mambare of tha eoclet•
Nollca or EIICIIon on Tax
In purauanca ol I
'
Raeotutlon of the Bo.d of muet daclera thalr candld- Levy In Excau or tiM Ten
Commlulonere or the acy lor the office of, OJ rector
IIIII Urntlatlon
County of Melga, Pomeroy,
the eoclety by filing wltlt
RtviMCI Cocla, 'Sicllon
3&amp;0t.11(g), 5705.11,
DUMP TRUCK
Ohio,01pellld
.... thart
11th l[~r~:~~·~cratary
'Dabble
day
Auguet,on1197
424115 Woodt
.Rd.;
5705.25
,
will ba eubmlllld to 1 vole
OH 45723; 1 Notlcala !Mreby given that
SERVICE
ofi!M people oruld IIUbd~
algnad by 10 or In purtuanct or a
Umeatone • G111vel
vltlon at e-Oaneral EIICIIon
me111bara of tha Ratolutlon or tha VIllage
to 11a held In lha County o1 toelety who ar. realdante of Council of lha VIllage ol
0111• Sand
Malge, Ohio, at 1M regular Malge County, II leaet 7 lllddtapo.rt, Ohio, peued
985 4422
plec.e or voting tharaln, on day .. before tha annuel on liM 28th day 01 July,
lha 4th day or .November, alactton ot.dlractorw Ia' !Mid. 11171haN will .....llmlllld
Chester, Ohio
a vote of tiM pioplt 01
1117, the qualllon 01 levy- Only ..,gulerly nomiMiad
1
lng a tax, In excau of lha candtdatat who have mot aald eubdlvlelon at •
ten mill llmltaUon, lor tha tho filing requlrementa will Oenaret Elactlon to ba !Mid
banant Olllelge County lor ba eligible tor olactton ao In tha'YIIlaga of Mlddlepon, · __,!P:!u~b::;llc~N:::01:::1c:::e:__
Ohio, Ill liM raguler plecn
tha purpoaa or malnt• director.
01 voting t!Mraln, on the 4th
Notice of Elactlon on Tax
nenc., c.epltal conatructlon, (1 0114, 21 ,28, 31c
day of Novtmbar, 1117, tiM Levy tn Excau Olt!M Ten
quellllon of levying a tax, In
Mill Umltltlon
IICCIU ott!M tan miH llmltl•
RtvlMCI Coda, SICIIon
lion, for tha benent or
3501.11(11), 5705.18, ·
Middleport Village lor the
5705.25
purpou ol lira protaollon.
Notice II hereby glvan that
S~ld IIX baing:• A ranewet
of •
of an axtettng tax of 2.0
or tiM llottrd of
mille II a rata not nCMdTruiiiHt ol lha
lng 2.0 (two) mille lor - h
of
Olive,
one dolter of valuation,
Ohio, paaMCI on
which ernou~ to twenty
of Mey, 1117
cenll ($0.20) lor aactt ona
.,bmlllld to •
hundred dollere 01 valuepaopta of Hid
lion, lor five (!I) yaare.
at . 1 Gtnarel
The Poll• lor Mid Election
to ba !Mid tn tiM
will Optln II 8:30 o'clock
or Oliva, Ohio, II
a.m. end rameln open until
pta- or voting
7:30 o'clock p.m. on thl
on lha 4th day ol
aald day.
tha qua•
WINTER STORAGE SPACE
By order of tha -rd of
1 tax, In
AVAILABLE
Elacllone, of Malga County, axe•••
mlllllmii.IAt the Meigs County Fairgrounds
Ohlo.
lion, for lha bantltt of ou..
Henry L. Huntltr, Chaln111n Townehtp lor the purpo•
Inside Storage Space $3.00/LF
Rita 0. Smltlt, Dlractor or malntltlnlng end OPifiiOpen Shed Storage $1.50/LF
DIIIed Sept. a. 1117 lng cematortu.
Call 992-6954 or 742-2865
(1 0) 7, t 4, 21, 21 4TC
Seld tax baing:• Arenewal
••
olen axlllllng tax or1 mill Ill
~--------~ 1 rete not exCMdtng 1(onel
OPEN HOUSE
mille tor taeh one dollar of
PVH Physical Therapy
D.. t?l valuetlon, which emounll
Depanment Wellness &amp; Rehab
to ten c.ento (SO. 101 for eech
one hundred dollare of valWednesday, October 29, 1997
ullllon, lor !tva (I) y11re.
11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
TN Politi lor uld Elactlon
.\
will optln Ill 8:30 o'clock .
Door Prizes
e.m. end remeln opt1n until
7:30 ·o'clock p.m. on tha
Free PVH ~peach &amp;
ulddey.
·
By order or t1ta -rd of
Language Screenings
Elactlona, or Malgt County,
Ohio.
CW.IRecle
•••
your
at
Thursday,
L. Huntltr, Chalrmln
home thoppl,. center. Henry
October 30,1997
A"• D. Smltlt, Director
'
Dilled Sapt. e, 1111
Find p-eet,Luye oa pel.l,
3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
~
(10) 7, 14, 21, 21_~TC
pet
accelloriet,
aad
For Children Ages 2 and Up
tervicet.
Children's Clinic
·~
(280 1 Jackson Ave.)
'
Call (304) 675-5250 lor an
.'·
110 HtlpWintiCI
Appointment.
Walk-Ins Welcome

tlon,lor
nve (5)11ld
yeera.
Tha Polltlor
Elaotlon
will open II 6:30 o'.clocll
e.m. end remeln opt~n untH
7:30 o'clock p.m. on liM
utd day.
By order or the Board of
Elactlona, ol llalge County,
Ohio.
Henry L. Hunter, Chairmen
Rita D. Smith, Dlractor
Detld Sept. 8• 11197
(10) 7,14, 21,28 4TC
Public Notice

When I was growing up. my parents

.

llllltllae-:tao,...

tAU

Public Notice
Nolle. ol Election on Tu
Levy In Ex- ol 1M Tan
MIIIIJmltlllon
RtviMCI Code, Section
350U1(11), 5705.11,
5705.215 ·
Nollotlt !Mrtby given that
In purauance or •
Rttolutlon of the VIllage
Council of th\ VIllage or
Raclntt, Ohio, PIIMCI on the
21111 day or ~uty, 1117 thaN
wiH be eubmltled to a vor.
o1 tha peopl&lt;t or uld eubd~
villein 11 a Qaneret Elaotlon
to ba hald In lha Ylllagl of
Raolntt, Ohio, altha reguler
placea or voting tha.-.tn, on
tiM 4th day of November,
11117, the quNIIon 01 levylng a tax. In axc11a of 1M
ten mill limitation, for tha
bantlltt of VIllage of Raotna
lor lha purpoaa of currant

sidcr," Ames said.
"cut your head off and hand it to you
Aggravated menacing is a first- on a platter," and "dispose of you
degree misdemeanor punishable by like !~ash."
six months in Jail and a $1.000 fine.
He was arrested when a woman
If the case is moved to federal court, jotted down a license plate number ·
Jones likely would be chargee) with after a run-in on the road. The plate
sending threats through the mail. was traced to Jones after she called
which carries a sentence of five · Reynoldsburg police about a threatyears in prison.
ening letter.
The State ·Highway Patrol said
Authorities said Jones used BMV
Jones sent motorists anonymous le.t-. computers to identify his targets. He
ters over three years that contained had worked at the bureau for six
such threats as "poke your eyes out," . y~ars

.

MIJ

" WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF

She quit cold turkey and gave birth
to a healthy 8-pound, 9-ounce son; .
she said.
"I owed it to my baby to stop
smoking." Nickita said.
For Brandi Banlc. having relatives, including a mother and grandfather who smoked, was one factor
that helped her decide not to ever
start.
The 14-year-old from Washington,
D.C .. sees smoking's effects firsthand. Also. as an athlete, she needs a
strong and healthy body. And as a
religious person, she said she wants
to obey God's word and treat her
body like a temple.
"I have never personally seen
anyone die from smoking, but each
day I watch my mother smoke herself .
into an early grave," Brandi testified.
"I am too sman to begin a lifestyle
that is self-destructive."

"Encourage your
children to read a ·
newspaper every day.
_They may grow up to
make this amore
peaceful world."

Custom Homes

360° Communications

Man accused of threatening drivers may be tried in federal court
and jurisdictions may lead the U.S.
attorney's office ta take over the case.
Franklin Counly Munici_pal Judge
Marvin S. Romanoff has continued
Jones' case until Nov. 10 at Mcintosh's request.
Jones' attorney. Stephen P. Ames,
said it may simplify matters if the
case is handled in federal court.
"If we tiavc five jurisdictions
claiming an offense ... then dealing
with those charges in one place
might be something ,we .would con-

..•

AV!crllly

aired any independent ads supporting .new about Republi~ans spending
their candidates or doled out as much more than Democrats and defended
cash for candidates as Republicans their strategy of helping raise money
have.
·
for candidates, rather than writing
"They are not rnlcing it in fast them big checks.
enough 10 pay off tlle debt and sup"Our top priority is to make our
port these candidates," said Gary candidates competitive and I have no
Nordlinger, a consultant who has run_ doubt that we will succeed in achievseveral Democratic congressiQnal ing that goal.:' said Democratic
campaigns.
National Committee Chairman Steve
Instead, the DNC is helping can- Grossman. "Republicans are not
didates raise money by having Pres- going to buy the elections. "
·d Cl 'tnton an d h.ts wue.
., H'll
Polt't1·cal partt'es often borrow
1 ent
1 ary,
and Vice President AI Gore swoop money in election times, but insiders
into the states to appear at events.
say the DNC's debts are already so
Privately, strategists for the Demo- high that additional loans are out of
cratic candidates have expressed frus- the question.
tration at the lack of direct financial
Democratic officials also play
assistance from their national party. down the imponance of this year's
Party leaders say there's nothing races, \'fhich some have viewed as
bellwethers for next year's elecuons.

The vast majority want to ·quit but
have lots of trouble doing so.
They asked that some of the .proceeds from any national settlement be
used to provide smokers with easy
access to proven help for kicking the
habit.
,
Such assistance "should . be a
built-in cost of doing business forthe
tobacco industry.'' Tim Nfc,Afee,
director of the Center for Health Promotion at the Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound-Kaiser in Seattie.
.
Nickita said "smoking seemed to
be the thing to do." But two years
after smoking her first ci~arette at age
14. she found a reason to quit.
The Baltimore, Md., resident
learned she was pregnant.
Nickita thinks her mother's smoking caused her own asthma as well as
health problems for an older brother.

Ytfd s.rt

70

~~e~?.~ii~~~~L~~~~E~~~~~; Youngsters testify about tee
. n smoking

he said he was determined to be
remembered as "a man who fought ·
WASHINGTON (AP)- Sixteenfor
what
he
knew
to
be
true;
who
year-old
Josh began smoking with
al!o.
-A draft or the !!OVcrnmcnt's rack· stood for what he knew was right."
one of his father's discarded cigareue
l'tccring ~.·omplainl against the Labor·
"And maybe my good name .. so bulls while Nickita Bradley said she
~r~· show:&lt;i some of the allegations
sullied. so smeared. so stained by lies picked up the habit because she felt
that Luskin had been reviewing:
and rumor, will finally be restored," "left out" while her friends puffed
he continued.
away.
But Brandi Battle and Kelli Jolly
never wanted to smoke. Both play
sports and that makes a difference,
they to)d a Senate hearing on Monday.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The being hun by long service delays.
"Athletes are going to do what's
£ridlock that has stalled the Union
A study commissioned by the
best
for their bodies," said Jolly. 20.
Paciftc Railroad 's 36.000-mile net- Texas Railroad Commission putlossa guard with the University of Tenwork is easim!. railroad executives essin~elulyat$1 billionormore.
Critics blame Union Pacific's nessee 's national champion Lady'
told federal regulators.
"We are absolutely confident that troubles on its merger with Southern Vols basketball team.
Lawmakers were trying to learn
our service will be back to normal · Pacific - a $5.4 billion union
levels by years end and perhaps sev- approved 1'!51 year by the Surface what motivates some youths to stan
smoking while barely in their teens,
eral weeks bef. &gt;re then," Dick David- Transponation Board.
son. chairman of the railroad's parent
Union Pacific has cited a surge in while others are able to resist the peer
company, Dallas-based Union Pacif- chemical and plastics business and pressure to light up.
Congress has said a key element
ic ·Corp., told the Surface Trans- difficulties implementing the merger
as some of the reasons for the logportal JOn Board on Monday. .
Davidson apologized " for the jams in Texas that rippled across its
COLUMBUS (AP) - A former
type of service that we have provid- system.
employee
of ihe state Bureau of
ed 10 our customers over the last 90
The merger was opposed by the
or I00 days." But he appealed for Departments of Justice, Transporta- Motor Vehicles who allegedly sent
more time to straighten out the mess tion and Agriculture, along with oth- threatening letters to people he
and said the railroad's recovery plan er railroads, some shippers and state believed had cut him off while driwas "clearly working.''
officials. all of whom cited concerns ving may be tried in federal coun.
_Union Pacific's gridlock, equip- over reduced service and reduced
Danny L. Jones, 44, of Reynoldsment and manpower shortages have competitiveness.
burg, faces II charges of aggravated
closed some plants along the Gulf
The Transportation Board warned menaCing in Franklin County and
Goast's petrochemical corridor. idled that the government may step in if about 30 similar charges in four othworkers and left bumper harvests to Union Pacific's solutions to its prob- er counties.
fill grain elevators. Lumber and steel lems "weren't far-reaching- and fast
Columbus City Prosecutor Steve
producers in the Northwest also were enough.
Mcintosh said the volume of charges

on the mYcsti~ation. infonned Coia's
anorncy of his decision two weeks

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,October2~1997

with

Found In JohftUft Trailer Pllrk

ecutlvl Dlrec\Or To Manage Ana
St.tpervlat The Dally Operallone
Of The Chi.- Oflco. ~ollftod
Applicant Will Bt Dohlll Orlentod
And Poa.... Supenolsarr, Ot·
ganlzational And Fl-' Planning
Skillo. Mull Be Croati,., Arllouo

-llt4) .......138
Found; Whltl Ce~ 1 Blue 101o And Doclolvo. Appllcent
E!'l, t 'Mow E!'l. VIcini!)': Clork IIUII AIIO S. Sillltod In TNt 0,.
Chopol Rood, .,.,tor, .,._-.. ttttlon Of Ytrkuaa Computer
Sorrwart Pro1ram1 luch Aa
Wt.-a II, ll..,.ook Wor&lt;1, AILoattn Rio Grande: -hit 1
Po-- And Omnl "-ea.
Ftmole Lont Hekod Bleck &amp; APnllonlo,.l
And Po~tive AaiWhill Colt: 1 llalo long Hahod NIII II A IIUII. Submit RHu-

-·

Brown Old

'*'•

ad C.t. I

s.n Or

Found, P!Mao Cell 114-145-1101.
LOST: Small bllckiWitllt Terrier
mla male dag In Flelrock am.

:lfM-871--

111118 I CGDI.III
814-44t-11411
Rd.,

OH

loot llthl coloracl Calloo -~ bo-

hlno vora olflco on

ll~tborrr

Awtnue, brown IIH collar, 114·
7&lt;42-ZIII.

\

To:

Eoporlontld Ptllabo-1od For Eartr Ito• ntne Drawo.
Sond Roaumt To: P.O. ·loo u.
Gallipolll, OH 411:11 .

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~Tu~-M~d~ay~•.~~~o~bw~2~8~,1~89~r----~----------~------~----~P~o~nMW~o~y:•:M~Id~d~I~~~~~O~h~~::~::::::::::::::~T~he~D~a~lly~Se~n~tl:ne~I=·~P~age~1~1 (

Tue~day,~ober28,1997

~YOOP

IUDOE
PHILLIP

)

H01dng &amp; AJC lnalallar wlahHI
metal tll)tfltnct. S.nd resume
tNCmCIII
10: P.O. Box 488 1'1. Plouan~ OHIO VAllEY
PUBLISHING CO.
WI/ 25S50.
rHammonda 11111 you do IMiol·
HoulekHptl Mieded In Racine nou with....,.. you u-, and
NOT 10 MOd . _ throuGh thl
..... ODDklnll.
1111 duieo
ol rumlng a houaahakl roqulred. mall undl you hawo i~M~dgared
Uvtng arrangomenro avollable II thl ollofinO.
nttdtd. PtMM send reftrencn

"""'*"'·

I ruumt lo: P. 0. Box 428,
Raolnt, 01*&gt; 45711 by November
10, 1Q87.

IIEDICAL RECORDS CODER
POSITION AVAILABLE • Compedtiwo S.IIIJ And Exctptlonal

220 Money to LOan

CJJrad.
PINst Send Rell.lme' To Holzer
Clinic; Human Reladana Depart·

mont: 80 Ja&lt;:kaon Pike: Gallpoli'
Ohio 4563!-.1562; Fu To 114·
046-5532; Or Call81 ...48·511111.
E&lt;rJal OpPorlJility Ef11)1oyer.
Ohio Basad Trucking iompany
Looking For OTR Orivetl. Single
On Team Drivers, Mutt Be Over
25 Yaar1 Old Wllh 2 Years Ex·
perience And Good MVR. All
Equipmenl 11 La1a Model Con ~
ventional Trac1ors With Rterer.
Weekly Pay, Health ln1uranc:e

-

1-«&lt;-437-ll714.

PI&gt;Jslciln Roctuilmonr
Phyolctan S.rvlcto Nteded For

Mulli-Cenler Planning Agency.
Contract Position Of Appro•·

lmalaly 3 ·10 Houra Par Wtek.

D1y And Evening Hours Avail·
able For Gyn E1am1 And Birth

Control Strvic:OL STI Ellmt For
Boih Malo And Female. Excellont
Opportunity For Added Income.
lltdlcal Dagree With Training
And Experience In Gynacologr.
Llcen..d To Practice In Ohio.
Sensitive To Woman's I tau ea.
Practice Under Planiled Par·
enthood Federation Of America
Standards And Guldtlln.ea,

'84 14. . 1100 _ , ... boll,
aM ljll)lloncet. taland linlo, COJIIo.
dral ceilings, must move, 11000

Southoaol Dhlo, 381 Richland
Avo., Athena, OH 45701. EOE I
ESP.
Pleaaanr Valley Nursing and Rthabllllldon Ctnttr hao opanlnga
tor eorrllled
ualallnra.
Both
full-dme nurolng
and port·dmt
pooltiona. Mull bt able lo work 12
hour ohifro, holiday a, and woeUnd1. Uu11 be a cerlilied n~o~ralng aaalaronr. Contacl Anglo
Rouall, Aaat Olrao1ol' of Nurolng,
30+175-5231. ANEOE.
Politi Jobo 3 Pooltlono Avail·
ablo, No EaptrilfiCt NHaaaary,
For Information, Call 800·881·
11311,Ea3112.

IALES: lorikJrv lor -aallc per.
ton"' ... raplacomtrll Windriwo
ond doorL EJptrienAin aaiUng
and marlorllng praltrred. Ropty to
Quality Window Sya!lmo, 110
Court S!ltll, Pomeroy, Ohio

14110 AI Eiac:lllo,
2 Badrooma, llajor Appllanoa,
18,000 Nago-. 11~11
Af1or I Aak For JJmlo.

1. . Ford Larlll 4a4 PU. U.400:
1118 Ford Rangar PU, U,885;
1112 Ford Ranger PU, 13.285: .
1H1 GIIC Jimmy Blarar 4 Dr.,
11.400~ 18111 Chavr 1-10 Bltzor
4 Dr.. IUOO: 1888 Chavy 8-10
PU, .1,700; 18811 Nloaan 4X4 EX
Clb PI/, 11,100. BID AulD Bolta,
IMJ, 180 N. 814 4418Be5.

114-3184 •114-812 111:11.

1880 Ford ';!:~· high mllaa,
$2,&amp;DD. :104-1
4 alltr lpm.

-od!

114-388 8t\M

Block,
,..,. IX·

1883, Ctnrury Brawo 14x70, a
lledroomo, 2 Full Balho, Ctnu.l
liir v.lih HM1 ~ Par 011 0n11r.
•11.700, Or Auuma Pxymenl,
Awalloblt lmrntdlo!Oiy, 11f.24i1381
1D87 llodal Sln~owtdao lluar
aa.•--$! 000.
- •··~·
1s111me Buytl'l E·Z Aflancing·2
Of 3 Badrooma Around 1200 Por
11o., BQ0.251-50l0.

port.n&lt;t,
lirA :10411115-35111 oftar 1:00pm, no JoO 10
ornolloriDBiG. W\4021illll
==~~~~~~---1
Livingston•• baatmenl walef·
proofing, oil buomtnl rapalro
dono, tree ta!lmaroa, lilaUma
guarantH. 1Oytl on job eaperl· . ;;;;;:.:.:~:.....:=.;...,.,.-~­
...._ 304-675-2145.
ATTENTION Firat lima Buyoro,
special government bac:ked
morrgaoaa avollablt lor a lmlted
tlmo. Apply by phont 304·75&amp;-

-- .

-=-•

CLtJtom 8ull1 Ooubtawldes Over
250 Available Options, You Pick

~~ real estate advenlslng in
tnls neWspaper is subject to
the Feder• Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it illegal
to advertise ·any preference,

limitation or discriminatiOn
based on race, colOr, religiOn,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any ln1entlon to
make any such preference,
limitation 0t discrlminatton.R
This newspaper·wtU not
knowingly accept
advertisements 1Dr real estate
whlcn is In vtolation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
informo&lt;t that ~ -lings
advertised In lhis Oewspaper
are available on an equal

Tht Aoor Pion, You ConrraiTha
Price. Thousands le11 Than
Othlr Cuarom BuM! Homta. F••·
tory Dlraet, No lllddleman, 304Olacount MOOIIt Home Part• &amp;
Aconoorlta, VInyl Skirting
$28e.gs, Anohon 15.00, Awn·
lnga, Doora, Wlndowa, Plumillna
Buppllta, Wore; H0111r1, Fur-11, llborgiau Sltpa, Call 114·
441-11418 Bennot!'t Suppty, 13111
Safford Sohool Rd, Golllpolla,
Ohio.
Doublawldt Dlaplayo lluar Go.
S...St,OOO, 304-731-340G.
DoubleWide On Land $250 Dopoail Rtquhd, :104-738-728L

Cail1-800-881-11777.
Lllot Mitodon of uatd homtL 2
or :f bedrooma. Staring 11 12885.
310 Homes for Sale
Quick delivery. Call 814·385·
8121 ·
1.1 Ao,. 2 112 Batha,
Brlclr2Rlrocl1,
LOCATORS. Call 304·755·
lltdroomo,
FP, CA.3 LOT
55811
LP Gao, ctrv waror, •• 1&amp;,000 ::;;:·: . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
814-441-11311.
- I t Homo. 2 Garagao, On loL
Po
Land c
Location
18Q4 28x70 Fox Wood Modular
llblt
ontracL
:
Homo on W4 tor~ lot 1n Qatlpolto c,_.cil)l 01*&gt;, ll&lt;l-258-! 704·
Forry. 3 Bodroom, 3 balh, ...,IIIII IIUST SEU. 111 Iota, your gain.
air, we.therldryw, Ill IUtchtn •
3bedroom &amp; 2 bath, doat ra
. . . - , built_. ouralda waxa town. Aak tor Frank 304·755~... ftraplaA.7.1;.;U;.:,1·: .__ _ _ _ _ __

REAL ESTATE

---------.1

-nr

Cal304-eJS.2Da

_

2831 lltadowbrook Dr., 3bod·
rooma, 2batht, 11¥1ng room. dlr&gt;IIJI """"· fomlly room; 2otr ...
raga, - I n - rani. 1,700
aq. fl. :104-175-3821. .

How 1N8 14a70 thrH bedroom,
lndudoa a monthl FREE lol ronL
lnoludaa aklrrlng, doluxa IIepa
ond lt!Up. Only $187.08
month wllh $1075 down. Cal 1·
IDIJ.837-3238. .

r"

Appr-.

=-------

Clir,.

Ono Bodroom llllllr With UdHry
Room, 5 lllnulu From Town
$275 ....... $200 Dopoal~ 2 Rtf.

-

Rtq bad 111•)441111312

Routh Rtnilolla now ...opdng
ranral appllcationa. 304·77311844.

ThrM bedroom mobile homa, no
pota,l11111125¥!
·
Two bedroom lrallar In Raolne,

8~1;;4-1182-44411~;;;;;·;;;jj;';;i;~u;;;

r... btdroan•- on How LJma
Rd., oall14-742-211011_.,.,.
TwO bed:00111 ..._, .,.... .,_
nl air, quiollol oil llil1l&gt;iHy Rd.,
taOO per month pluo doooalt and
..... ,.. 114-tiHOi!o.

440
1MdZbliuwn.,•••ltl..._
ntlhld and u - . MOUrlty
~all required, no pera, 114182-2218.
.
1 Bedroom Ap1lrtmtnt On Flral
Avanua, Glilllpolla, UIIO/IIa.,
Pltrl ~ 81-10'/8..
1 Bldraam Ground Floar. Nur
Cintrna, Eoonomc:aJ Gat Hoor. Dl
W Hook-Up, /iir, . - , + UIIUea, Dtpooll A Loaao Roq. No

~··-28&amp;7.

2 bedroom, turntahtd, gorago
apartment In Clll10n, U50imo.
ptuadtpoaii.:I04-775-5040.
2bdrm. apia., 101a1 altorrlo, ap.
~· tumtlhld, laundry room
lar:IHiltt, 111 tohool In rawn.
Appfk:ationa ovallablt at Vlllogo
Gt- /l.p!L,.. or oaH II4-QIIZ.
3711 . EOH.
Furnlahtd Effldonoy IIMl1i Bllh,
1 1 - , UdlldH l'llld,ID7a n d - . Gaillpollt, 114-4410573, Af1or7 P.ll.

ll~i~~~~~~

Bualntll for ule In M11an,
priced .. Ill. 304-773-1174.

350 Lots &amp;

Clilld Cttt By The Hour D1ir Or
-k, Lovlnt EnvlronmtnL Aga
Approprlalt Aollvl!ita, Etallfn
-Aria, lt4-441-313il

Elftcltnoy ApartmtnL CION To
Walmarr, Conlltuotlon Wotktra
WalcaniiU Ul 2115. · .
fOR RENT: 4 Room Upalolra
Apartmanl • Howly Ramodoltd
Kltc~n, Now Carpet And Pxln~
All UIIIMa .Pxlcl EJCICII C1u Hea~
Large Bldroom, Cto• To DownIIIWn, - - . . Dopoall And Rtf.
oronooa Rtqulrtd, Can 8H AI
1403 Etoltrn Ava.. Galllpolla,

....... .. .
,

F - repair, rtflnlah 111111........... ....... Ohio
Valley Rtflnlahlng 8/iop, Larry

,

ClriOioua llvtng, 1 and 2 b l 1Ptrfmt1111 11 ftloQt llanor and
Rlvtralda
llltlrl•
porL FromE~ ,Inc.lll14182·&amp;014. ..... Hauling Oppor·

PNipa, 114-NU&amp;ll.

........

.

llodorn 1 Bedroom Aparimtn~

Hf rH/\1 S

eu ue ~-.

Nl.. 2br, rolorenota 1
no jiiiL :104-175-1112.

dteQI~

OlD ASH VILLACIE Al'o\RT·
IIEHTS. a_,tlng _....
Pona. Nowly ranovaltd, ·2bed·
raoma. llundrOIIIIt I play
ground an olghL Troth A woror
paid. CtrWII EOH. 304.z.
an111-3pm l4ar&gt;frl-

o

Featuring
':!,dro
Don
~~~~~~~:;~:·I ShHra.
A Groom Shop
-PatBath.
Glooming.
375 aorgoa Crook Rd.

~

Furnace
411 I:tO&amp;,

814 148 0211.
30 Paopla Won!ld To LOSE UP AKC Bo
I 1 I 1
TO 30 PoUNOS In Tho Noll 30 ltmalt, ~al':':.::i,.
Dare, All Na11Kal, Dr. Rteom· 3117.
mended, Guaran-~c.u.Traor
At614-441·11112.Ftot~
AKC ~1!111111a1...Dkl, s lomafoi, ' l ' blactwhlto,
Baonlo Babll Hoven Nted Any I buff, l150oa. hod thoro. 304Bttnlt'a Cunanr Of Retired CaM 1137-2733.
614-3iiM18&amp;.
AKC Do barman Pupplao, $1 oo
BHutitul wood-llnl.oh muld- Eaoh, All Colora, 114·441·8868
ahtlf, holdatiiD COo; olto vldta Oor or IIHH-11183 Ahlf 5 pm
tapea or caaaen••· Brand new. Mel an Wul~tndt.
.
uaemblv roquired. Rtllll prlc&lt;~
$300, alklng $150. CaM 114·8DZ. AKC Golden Rttrll¥or pupploa,
6838 - 8 pm.
hit 111 ahara 1 wormed, 4wko
olcL :104-775-!11104:
Black Tonneau Toppar With
Frama Eacollanl Condllon, For AKC Reg Roltwellar pupplao,
Short Wlda Bod Trudl, 114..... IIIII docked, dtelawa rtrROved,
3868.
fomaleo·l150 malta-1100. liar
naga-:104-175-4074Boora By Rtdwtng, C...,_
Rooky, Tony L•-- Guaranrifd AKC Raglatortd Baaaar Hound,
Lowtll Prlclt A I - Ca1o, Gal· Pupploa.
AKC Regla!lrtd
llpoUa
Yorkahlro Pupplu. 111., Shora
BUYCARIFORSIODIII
andWormad.(e 141387' 7105
Salztd And Sold Locally Thla AKC Raoiarortd Oalmadon Pup.
Month. Trucka, 4X4'a, Etc. Baing plao. 5 WHko Did, CoU Anydma,
Llquldotocj In Your Araa - · All 814-4441-11741.
llokto I .llodola Avolloblo. Coli AKC Raol11trld labtldot pupa,
Toll Frat 81J0.122.2730 1 ~
rwo· blaoli malto, all ahara, dtw·
Choolt oul our Gat Unvtnltd diWtd. GOod tamly dog, .I4-N2Hootara (Nolural Of Propane). 2472.
lllrdng tl l114,gl, Wt alao AKC Rtala- ~ puPfll,
hawo Biodt era..•Brand ol Gal malo, 1:f -~old. ~-,and
lna-.nl Flropl.... Pxlnc Pluo I'MI wtth ttlda, U50, 814· 742·
··-·:104-11410.

:.:as-

1-.sf-11121.

Dondru• "Studio" 1110 oarda tor
aalo, ltudlo llao••r Stro•·a
w
..
IX10'a and nagular .... tor
aalo. I havt the lallowlng Btanla
BtliiH lor Mit: Pxtd- f30: Qutk""
•n: HtPIII'· $30: IPDt· t&amp;O:
Sly· UO: Blaokll- 125; Ptanul·
Mil. Coller lnlormlllon, 114-848-.

Black a Tan Coon Hound Pup·
Dial, I llonthL Sholl, Exotlltnl
llloo1lllna,
1100,1137·1186-11873.
Jack Ruaaell Terrier 17 llontha
Old F-lo Whllt Had All Shot~
8payad, 1110, 814-317-7724.

Pure Bred Siberian Huokr Pup.
plea, AlraadJ Bun Wormed 1
Sholl; 1100 Call Allor 5:00 814·
Draaolng tolllo, baby liod, oat 218......
1111, l!lalltr, ewing, play pan .
:104-1~
,
570
Musical

F , _ tor All hardwood.
Instruments
135 luU olza pru lood, attll~ dt- Yahama aa10phane, au. cond
tiki,_ 1150. 304-882-333L
Flr-d Sataoned HardWood,
bollvored Of Plok·Up, 114·218·
~AHf.1 SUPPIIfS
IDS1.

-•-304-ta-2118.

::--:--=~~,---

Furniture 0111oo Equ,_,., Grm
Equl- Lola llloo. ltama In
Large Amountl In Barn. For 1
Price, Chaapl MUll Buy Alll114441-10112.

&amp;

liVESTOCK

1510 Farm Equipment
Hydraulic oll-lowear prlc&lt;~ In
ID'MI. Vtrn ''" ga1 hnr.r~, propana • Equtpmon~
natural .... .on - ·
Sldor'a
:104-175-7421.
llaai., Harrla Ftrguaon wlt:uldhao ~onl tnd, ,good
ahope 11,500. Alita Chat-• B
Wiwldt Irani and, runa good,
•••qoo. :104-175-3124.

••rto cook atove,

Oolo~er

Hew Hoillnd Yatue Bo-

ftlh - · IIIII

f trJAfiCIAI

MARY K COSIIETICS-I'llfl LH, 11,000, HH 411 8' Harblnt
Morr K B-ty ConaulllnL 304- II, 100. NH 482 r Deluxe Hay·
.blna ••,~· HH 130 lproador
175-2148.
1428U M,500. NH 1•1 11M Udtr
Old bolltr radiator haa!lro Willi mau ...100. HH 111 ...,_
2178U 11.400. AI Ford- I
braMIItlnga, I14-0D2-11&amp;4t
harl~fw-ol()o.
l'MnR1wrtT_,_ao=
-,,. lor1..41, s• rloreo.• Ktallra
""""""
appflcltlor• lor 1br. HUD
!!,~
tor oldtrty and handl·
hmoe Ctrillr IL RL 17 Point
EOH SD4-f7S.ae11.
Plalaant' Ripley Rd.-~~­

•rL

450

Fumllhld

Rooms

...-....,..,-Mel.....
...
KHfl(a . . , _

1130

'

• 6 4 3 2

ld - lf . , ,

.. BARNEY
WHAT DID
LUKE'/
WANT

730 Vana &amp; 4-WDs

NOTHIN'
MUCH !I

""·

JEST TH'

3 NT

TWO DOLLER5

•

-~

1814 Jeep Charokee country,
auto, 4-a4, 4dr, new tire• &amp; bat·
!try, all power, hllch. 304-175·
54211.

0

AL.'.f .

DINtR
0

1118 Jeep Cherokee, 11,800 :•
lllleo With A 58,000 Milt Wtr·
rtnly, Can Bt Sttn At 1568' Sr.·
Rl 110. Galllpolla, Ohio, (Tolar a
Toler lnauranoo) Or Call 114·
- 5 For llorolnlorrnotlon.

''

1887 Chryalor Town 1 Counuy;
LXIIIInl Van. Low Mlleol (lUI
448·11330

4 WD S·10 V-8, Lota Of Exllaa1
814-2511-8012.

THE BORN LOSER

~

740

'N.t\)

~

! L...::~:..__~

~Motorcycles ·

1813 Fat Boy, Ex!lo'a ,17,500,
114·245·g071, Loava lltoMp
-alnqulrlat Orly.

1114 Harlty Qavlrlaon 1113 Sport·
Iter, blaclr, uo. cond., $7,200.
:104-115-3824.
1DD2 Pontiac Flrtblrd V-1 305 1_ Honda 300 EX Lot 01 E
anat.... -·
•• ooo .._,_... ·co ...
·- Excanerw Condidon,• Aaklngx~
,...yor, traal
g.__ $5,300. :104-175-lllll.
f3.1110. 614 111 31145.
1H3 Buick Park Avtnuo, garooa
ktp~ low mlloo, alklng SI2,&amp;DD. 1ag7 Woverlnt 350, :0 WD, Pur·
304-175-25113.
ohaaed In Auguor, lluai Selll
·
$5,000, 814·378-2882. Ltava
111113 Camara
I!YII), loadod, lltoaaga
aura, rod, aarra•a, 3•,40omltta, 750 Boats 8r Motors

cnaw

:.••~a~.~~-=:~~~~~=~=::~--~-- I

'FJZS:

South could have g01 home easily
by conlinuing wilh the !ICC and
Tf\.1~~ W~ c.EXTNNLY ""
ano1her
spade. But taking Wesl's first
NOTI-\INC. UK£~ (l(XX;&gt; :'&gt;1f)o.l(..!
discard at face value and not wanti· ·
ng Eas1 on lead, South ran 1he spade
queen . After winning with the king,
West switched to a diamond, East
taking dummy's queen wilh his king.
Now East, Wafik Abdou, returned the
f
heart six.
;~~~~
Declarer was hislory. lf he covered
1&lt;
:.vilh the jack, West would run 1he
suit Bul when Sou1h played 1he
three, Wesl underplayed his carefully preserved two. Another hean from
East le[llhe contracltwo down.
Obviously, declarer mighl, have
played Wes1 for the spade king, bul
· did you notice anolher possibility?
Suppose he had cashed only lhree
club tricks before taking the losing
spade finesse . Now, when adiamond
comes back, declarer can win wilh
dummy's ace and cash lhe club 10. on
which he discards the spade ace! He
~
wins
I0 tricks vra four spades, one .
•
heart. one diamond and four clubs.

1888 Honda 300 tour uu, allah
drlva, good oond., 12.100. 304·
875-3813.

1112 25th Annlvtraary Camero
RS, lliad&lt;,WI .. Rod RS Sb'ltltl. Y.
I, /l.utomatlo, Air, PW, PL, T·
Topa, 15,100, 114·378-2112,
L-..U..•ge.

Pass

IWO).

flON wroo YCIJi:. CJ'Dio.J, lt\\~lU. -r

Ohio Vailar Bank Will Ollar For
Sate A IQIIZ Dodgt Cararan, S. .
rial t2b4Qh2532nr&amp;04324. Public
Auction Wll Be Held At The 01/B
Annll, 1., Third Avo., Gaillpolla,
OH ON 1111117 At 10:00 A.ll.
The Abovo WiU Bt Sold Ta Hightil Blddtr "At ta• Wllhoul Ex·
pruaod Gt l,.pllad ·Warranrr
And May Be Stan By Ceiling
ICtith Jolinaon At 11•·441o1038.
OVB R-v•o The Righi To Ao·
Of Rtlao1 ""' And All lllda,
A1141 Wl!lidrow Proparly From
Salt Pr1or 111 Balo. Ttrmri Of 11a1t:
CAlli OR CEII11FED CIIECI(.

1111 Blj'ck Grand Am LE 2
Doora NADA 15,150; Our Price:
$2,885; 1112 Tempo, GL, 4
Dooro, Loaded, NAOA ...000
Our Prlc&lt;~: $2.485, Cook Morara,
814-4411-D103.

17 Turluiy
gobbler
20 Clam genus
21 Flrot-rate
(2 wde.)
22 Old weapon
23 Tennis player
LAndi
25 Rosin-producing tr""
21 Warplanes
27 Regarding
(2 wds.)
Z8 Vllal Slaliallc
21 Food llah
30 Position
32 Aciran
Turner
34 Comedian
Sparks
38 Pixie
40 Brainy group
42 Luxurious
43 TV horse
(2 wda.)
44 l&gt;reflx lor
plane
45 LAmb or l&gt;oef
46 Overwhelm
47 Path
411 Yea- 50 Shoveled
51 Proopector 'a
find
53 -Quentin

10Ex181....
12 Break
auddenly
13 Caviar

Internet daily bulletin nine from
Albuquerque contained a deal fea- ~ krl-+--1--1--1-~­
turing an . excellenl defensive
unblock. Sde if you can decide how
declarer could have done betler.
Afterward,! suspect North wished
he had settled for four spades, a conCELEBRITY CIPHER
lract he would surely have made.
· · by Luis Campos
Against lhree . no-trump, Wesl,
Celebrity ~~ C'YJ)IOQrams are created lmm ~ahons ,by famous peopla , past and present
Each lener In the Cipher stanD&amp; !or anolher Today's clu9:G equMs Y
Wayne Stuart, led lhe heart seven. (I
don't know why he selecled this card
'R
ICSFSCC
F J Z S
J c
R V
SRYFG
rather than the traditional I 0.) Taking
Easl's ·queen with the king, declarer
OSRHM.'
A"XSHMS .
immedialely cashed his four club
tricks. wesl discarded a discouraging
spade and the heart eight (not the

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

111811 GUC S.ilorl CUoiOm, $4,850
8t4 4.1222

--·-

Pass

C X DC ,

CPJFSC,

CVJZZFSC

UJHM

RVO

CVJZZFSC

B Y S 0 X P J V R H J V A • ' -

X :

M S V Y G. ,

PREVIOUS SC)LUTION: "It's all water under the dam." - Calilornia Angels
manager Lefly Phillips , alter a1augh loss.
.

'~~:t:~' S©lt~~-l££~S"
::::
CLAY I . 'OUAN _,;;__ _ _ __

_,.;;.;;:.::,;;__..=-= 14ht4

O Rearrange

~.

leners ef ti-le

four Krambled words be.

low to fQrm four simple words.

I' II I 1 I I I

1

SUPOD£
2

I

, -· y,\

I

BEAVO

•

' '

~~~= ! ~~--~~

PEANUTS
'(OU LOOKIN6
FOR A PUNCH
IN Tf.IE NOSE,
KID?

f.lfi(.I(IP!

for Sale

'

aa.

By Phillip Alder

-lpm.

1DIID Slmlilnl, Ftilrly Hew Englna,
Au10, Bodr Eaoollonl Condldon,
With SUrwoot Aoklng Plpoll. 114o

0

.where have
.the deals .gone?

1881 Ch1¥rolar 112 ran pickup
4x4, lie, automatic, excellent
condldon, •7500, 814·1M12·7014

CD, UK, Exoollont Condition
11.100,11 j ... 1222

Pass

••
•
•

A,_, to Pnivlouo Puzzle

0

Opening lead: • 7

I OWE HIM!!

1885 ChiVy 110 Blazar, Auto,
Clean, Low llllao, 13,000 080.
(814)44Hl584

1110 Olda Cullall Suprema,

40 Club 41 Speedmeoa.
1 Allao pagu
43 Aunlle 5 Entwlnt
.ce Fomouo
11 Sewing llnet
Hlrltm llie1111
13 HaMa
49 Fund 111111n
,14 Wile iawgl- 52 Roebuck'&amp;
15 Sl"lr.'larl1y
partner
18 Nullify
54 Expurgallon
18 Grafted, In
55 Hair dye
heraldry
56 Senlllly
19 Malkenrer
57
for signa
lbbr.
.
20 Holldloy oufflx
DOWN
22 Roman1,Q02
24 Well·known
1 Fuluro bka.
a Vaal period
Clinic
oltlma
26 AclrHIFarrow
21-ln
3 Whlllah
· lcollap...)
4 Ha21er
31 llallng
5 Bo Dortk'l
number
33/ Small wind
Instrument
6 Hall!
, 35 Tldolwave
7 llallblll te•m•
36 Cozy room
B SeclUded
Vlllly
37 Actrtaa Glirr
139 Moo--tung
91ncaoe
ACROSS

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
Soulb Wesl North East
Pass
1¥
t•
I •
1 NT
Pass
Pass 2 •
Pass 3 e
Pass
2•

U83 Chavy S-10 Blazer 4wd,
V8, 2.1 llltr, &amp;apd, raMt angina
whirarranry, wolf matnralntd,
13.400. 304 1182-28111alltr 1prn

Loldod, llllnclard, LMifitr Satta,

61MME

'!'OUR REO
CRA'f'ON!

WELL. MA'f9E I LIKE
THIS 6REEN ONE ..

€)

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

FORI

II

I WERE I

I

I

I I

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

18DS Ford Tourua,,ta,H!: 1882
Ford FattiYI •ugs; IQIID l'l&gt;ntlo
10 Sunblrd; 1080 Dodge Dynaa•
ly; 11.81&amp;: 1810 Ford Tauruo,
.1,185• 1NI Plymouth Bundonct New au tanks, , 1on truck
1111. iiio Auta s.toa. Hwy. 110 WhHia &amp; radlotaro. D &amp; R AutO.
Ripley, WV. 304·372·3D33 or 1·
N. e!oi-441-IBeL

e. A Cool Cor And Cr..d (M d1t

s-,. .. rt.. OostJ(i&lt;d l«riM.

!TUESDAY

1

. ROBOTMAN

100-278-111211.

1183 Pontiac Gro~d Am SE 2
Doon, AIC, Powal Locka, CD 790
campers &amp;
Playor, New Tlraa And Brokta,
Motor HOITIIS
Amtr. Roclng WhHia, 15,100
MHaa, 1 0 - . Rtduoed Price, 1111 Cltauon 21 Fr. RV Air, Ex·
814 ~ . . . . .
Ollltni Condition. Sl- Sla, 114, ... Clmtro v-e, s Bpaed, Alii ue 3858.
FM Ctaatlta. Farrtlt Green, 1881 Du&amp;chm1n. furnaa, refrlg.
70,000 llltt. . . . . tiiiOr, Ito, loaded, lllUmt loan,
441·1111.
"'
no - . Pl1mtr'1. 304-175-5622.
1IIK Sa"'rn BC2 Aulllmatlo, Air, 1187 Durehman 22 Fr. Tag-ACruiH, AIIIFII. Caaaano, Trunk Lone.· Fully Equipped, Paid
R I aa, 112.000 Cal Af1or 5 P.ll. $15,000, Aaklng It t,&amp;DD, Cd For
CBtrtoua lnqul~•• Onlrll 114· lloro lnlormatlon,l14-371-2571,
-IL
614-3118-11581.
1118 Jaop Chtroklt ·IE,
SERV ICES
a.-., 61U 111 g3&amp;1.

s. ....

A NHd A Cor? No Credit, Bad
Crtdlr Btnkruploy, Wa Can Help
RaEalabllah Credit, lluor llake
$150 -klr Take Homo, Down
Paymanro Ao Low Aa $88, To
Ou,tllly For Thla Bank Financing,
814-441-7.
CARl FOR 11001 Truclra, booro,
&lt;1-Wiiltltra, mo1or homao, turnltu,., e~ecrromca, cornputtrl etc.
br FBI, IRS, DEA .. Avalloblt rour
arn now. Call 1·100·&amp;13·4343
Ell. a.11180 •18110 c.ra For 11001H
Sailld And Sold
, LocaiJ Thla llrin1ll
Trudel. 414'&amp; EIC.
1.-ul-2730, X91101.

Crttll Pro-? Wt Can Help.
Eaoy Bonk Financing For Uoed
Vohlolu, No Turn Downo, Call
Vlo1tlo, 114 1111 21117.

810

. Home .

'

.

BERNICE
EDE OSOL .
B

Lacllr•ftrencea furnfahed. Es~

llbllthod 1D75. Coli (114) 441·
0110 Or 1-800-287-DStll. Rogtra
Walrlrproollng.

Appllanoo Pttll And S&amp;Mco: AI
Nama Branda Ovtr 25 V.ara Ex·
perltnct All Wo1k Ouar1nlttd

~~oh City IIIJIIQ, 114·.41:

CAC Gonaral Homo . llaln·
ttntne•· Pxlnllng, vinyl aiding,
carpentry, doora, Wind- .......
mobllo homo rtpalr and morL For
tH Hdmata otll Cht~ 114fi2·

"'*

840 Electrlcaland
Refrlgantlon •
1888 Nlaaan king cob plclr up,
bad
"""· "'-· bug ahleld, 114Das ,.,

,ASTRO·OilAPH

.

BASEMENT
WATERPRCIOF1HG
Uncondtlontllifedma guarantH

Rogar'a Plumbing Strvloe, Ex·
porlonoad, Frto Eallmaloo, Call
5.114 116 85111l

Livestock

.
L..;:;:;Oo,'-ot-::.......J:.l:;.;oi...;;....,,__-:;,;·- York.

lmpiOVIITIIntl

8323.

CeMt 301 Ml

Collie I Round BalM Of Hay, 10
Cowo. a 1 Bun, Angua I Charolola. 11'-246-0SlO.

¥KJS3

,.,4pn.

~::!ie..BHu-tul

nanza ,,. Financing lor Y
DOOd · ... yihlr'l - • .. monrha.
1100.
114-742HH 472 r Hayblnt

pllloupiDid.~

South

oldt,
GIIC 1H7 •X4.Sitrrl 2551iP.·VoriK Y.8 wllleyer anow
blldo. 123,000. 304-875-5251 al·

.......

4

K 97
• 8 6 53
t

we-.,

1.,.,....,

Maglo Chat

Will ,.lA junlr or

• 7 53

• Q6

1187 F.110 XLT, · Auramatic,
TOpper, Btdilntr &amp; llorol Our
Loaa Ia Your Galnl 114·4411105

Tho Pomarof Thrill Sllop· now
burtng LIVII••n• only, man'a,
_,.,., .... chl-1, alto UUia
glrto · - . . !Oyl, dolla lnd lOCI·
TRANSPORT/\ fiON
Appllancoa:
RHOndldoned dltr ott 111ta, Tuuday through
Friday,
114-1112-3725.
Dryerw, RMGN. Rtlrlgrarora, eo Day lfwaianiHI T"'l' Buill Tully Toltr, Uka Now: N 71
Autoa for Sale
French Cbp llaylag, 114-441. Gage llodtl Railroad 3x7 Ft.
7785.
Hanging Bolld Rudy To Run s· '75 ChtYr Nova, v~a. rune well,
Englnea, 13 Cara, Tranaformtr .. ~~. bHtolat. 114 8H 1107•
EIC. G14-24s.l432.
'88 lluotang GT, I apeed, Hurl!
Warm llornlng Wood Coal SIDVt, ohlfllr, Ftowinaaltr - .... lnlad
wlndow1, aunroaf. new paint. I
$250, 814-388 1!32.
ator rima, _ . , avarytlilng, u·
Wallrllnt Spociol: 3/4 200 PSI -.rccrldlllor•B14-241-ltiiD1.
121.85 Par 100; 1" 200 PSI
t37.0D Pxr 100: All Braaa Com- 1113 Thund11blrd Good Condl·
tion, Runa Well, II ,000 OBO,
pow-. FlalngalnRON EVAHI ENTERPRISES 814-24~
Rt~IQtrt!&lt;W, Slaw, .__, Drr· Jadcaon, ONo, 1-eoo-537..528
1184 JD Ford Good .Condlllon,
VCR. 114-2!51-1231.
Whirlpool Jacuzzi 11111 4-5 peo- IJIQO, 114-2&amp;0-1125.
AIVIRIIDE WIIOLEULE \ ple. redwood pantll. 1pa cover, 1g8s llerourr Grand 111,..1a,
uqd only 25 llmaa, oan be uatd Au~ S02, 'H. Rtmanlloc·
Inside ar DIHIIdt, IIWIWI Ulld lured
Englno Hu Laoa Than
Bunk Bodo Comp. 1225; Soilo 1 lnolde. Serloua lnqulru Onlvl 40,000 llllat, Full Power, Aluml·
Chair $24Q; 4 Cou'*Y Pint T-. 12.750.:104-175-4384.
"""' Whoolo. Sharp Cat, .1,450;
'Bonoh &amp; S Chalra 1235; 1 Po.
1110 ~ Clravan, Au-tic,
CIC!ar BR f'liD; oak Curio Cab. lMIIIIU' Floor llodtl T.V., ta50 UL,
4 C , 25 IIPG, Cllan, Fill1150; Pantry, lltxlc:an Blonkoilo, 090; lllnlaturt Plnohlf AKC able Voh clo, $3,450, 11•·•48·
121L
'
Etc.
Dog, f4DD,
1185 Suberu Turbo, 4 WhHI
Aoult 7 Saulh..C-.aty
550
Building
Drlvo, 4 Do•o, Robullt Entin•
ClpM J.S. Sat I Sun
$3,300, For lloro Info. 114-448·
Suppllas
81..., -.g IIIOhlne Ovtr 50
11173.
Ytara Old •100; Aullrallan Bloclr, btlck, _., plpea, wlndShaphard, Rll!lotored 5 llontha Nntoia, ox:. Cloudt WlniM, 1Ne C1111tr0 'H. 2.1 llu,_ -Pori
Old Coppar/ Whlll (114)381- Rio Grandt, OH Calll14-245· 5 Spaod; ll87 Ford Taurua, 4
110111
;5.:;12:.:,1·:....,_ _ _ _ _ __
D.Oro, 4 Cylinder, Aula, Clao4
-Ctr,l14-2&amp;8-11314.
Woodbui1W, Compllll With Fluo Slool Bulldlnga - · E..-.cl
and-614-441-oeoz. ·
40110x12 Waa Us.&amp;OO llalanoa 18117 Hloaan llulrna IOCid oond.
18,8411, &amp;Ox100a10 Wu •21,200 14.&amp;DD. 304 11115-38211.
1130
Antlqull
Bll111&lt;1 U7,H1, 10x200a11
Waa U2,&amp;DD Balonoa f38,Q72 1· 1880 Ciwory Btrallt, • qllndor, 5
epeed, NC, amlfm c11utte,
Buy or Hll. Rlv111no Antlquaa, BQ0.401-5128.
·
1124 E. Mlln Straa~ on RL 124,
taooo.l14-882·&amp;437 -lpm. .
Pomeroy. Houra: II.T.W.ID:oo 560 Pets for Sale
1811 Ford Tampa, two door, two
Lm. 111 1:00 p.m., Sunday 1:oo 10
8:00 p.m. 814-112·2121, Ruaa 1-Aullllllan Blue HMier Pupptoo, · ownora, full olztd apara, body
good, atrong trlQina~&amp;~ctd 10
lloor. .wnor. •
7-old.(l14)2&amp;8-131&amp;
IIH· 11000, with l.i plopor,
540 MJscella1180US
7 Wnk Old AKC Blaclr A Whlto $1200, 114-841-3088 ma"
aaaa or eel af1or 5:30pm.
Merchandlst
~,,.__

vtllirt,

Will Do ............... llf-4411111, PioMI,.._ II
ga

East

• K 62
¥ A 10 9 8 7 2
• J 8
• 9 7

610

Conoroll &amp; Piaado Sotitio Tankt, AKC Yellow Lib Pupa, 8/iora I
300 Tliru 1,000 Gahona Ron Wormed 114·211·1331 Alter I
Evana Enttrprllea, Jodrton, OH P.M.

2130, X 11D8.

West

•KQJ

~;~~~~~~~·~i~~~~ llnclono,

For Rant lloblt IIOlne, Hloa, s.
cludtd Wooded Lot, Bidwell •
Ponor$250/llo., 814-44Hl720.

t A Q 10 5
• A 1~ 4 2

1881 Chavy 1·10 4wd, 40,000
mllta, exc. oond., 110,000. 304·
115-3010.

.,

~

•QJI084

•A9

"·Ft-.

7311-340Q.

:41::71111.=--------

ANY ODD .1011: E-lor potm.
ing, ahrubo I woeda trimmed,
l&amp;ndiOiplng, old-lk~ed,
0111, 1111. Call 111M
75.7112.

Year round country homao, jolna
Chltl Cornalltll&lt;, 2mllta to -•·
111 neighbor, uaUa lor ATV'a I
walking. Also looking lor a
Iaker (prater man I will), lrat
211edroom tumllhld home Of wll
nagodalt, hu Gildon. •rrlclar
wood haa~ ale, c:~~peUng. 304576-2816.

•..

tll-28·~1

Norlb

1884 XLT Ford Ranger am-fm
- ·304-1185-3011B.
air, lopd, 82,000 mlloa
$8,800.

r.11cRCHMlDIS[

55811.

3 ·4 lladroomo. Opdonal FamiiJ HEW 11DI HOliES 2 • S BEDRoom, .CA" 2 Bollia, In-Ground ROOMS. sns down, •liS/. Pool, N011 Hoapl1al &amp; llaiUpolo. FREE DELIVERY 1 SETUP. 304~7~~~·~·~5~---~-TIXAI ' REFINERY CORP. $73,000, 114-441-4173.
NHC11 Mature P.raan Naw In 4 Btdroom Spilt .._ With 5400 Now 28180 3 or 4 bedroom.
GALUPOLIS ArM. Ragtrdltll Sq. Ft.lnoludlne Full BIMmanl 131,185. Froo dtllvary. 1·800·
Of Training, Wrila B. C. Hapklnt, · Willi 2 Ctt Garaaa. Goa Hea~ 2 111-em.
DopL S-4&amp;831, Box 711, Ft. IIIIH From Gallpolla On Builvlla ::.;,.::.:..;.:.:__ _ _ _ ___
wam, TX lii101-D111 .
Pike, On 1 112 Ar:to Flo! Lo~ Clry Oakwood 281&amp;8 3 bedroom, 2
Schooto, fM.OOO, 111 418 038CI
both, arartlng at 11 ag por mo.
477 LeGrande Blvd.,
CIII1-Him.
modeltd Ranch Homo, 11· · -' 1 Rtpoo • Saw Big $1$1 Cal trodSchoolo, lluar 5141 614·4-11· 11Llno800-251-50l0.
·
2421 CoiAnr'ta
Single Parant PrDQIIIm. Why Rtnt
Approx. 2 Aoroa, SouiWta!lrn Whtn You Can Own. Speolal Fl·
Sdioollllnlr:t On Paved Road, 3 nancing Avoliablt. 304-738-1285.
Warollouaa Gtntral
Lo- Bodroomo, 2 Ba!ht. Lllot Living
011 Athlna Ca. Hoo Full Tlmt Po- Room, WI., F~OPilot, O....hod Toko Dollvory In 8tp1 No Payollloo. Claaa "A" CDL Required: Glltgt, lluar Sat To
mont Until Doc. 1887 800·251 ·
Farlcllt Exp. Rtqulrod. llkfa. 11a1n1. Owner Will Conaldtf Flnanclng, c50;,l0.;,.
A PluL Sand Rtaumaa Only By 114-31NI87.
WANTED lamlly to mova Into
Frlday~Oolllbor 31, 1H7 To Hr.
IIIJ'., - !!!~ Franklin F~miCI, Brick, Ranch Fanm'y Homo, 1.7 3bodroom 2balh moblla homo.
/l.orea Juallllnu!la From Galli· CIII:J04.75s.S&amp;e1.
OH -·"""' 11.1'.1lN.
polla. Gllllpolio City Sohoola, 3
Wuktrid band Hlkl VOCifill
ani baaal1t. Nil have ••perl- Now:
IR, OR,
FR With FP. 2l\4-44f.
Batha, 330 fBnna for Sale
Roof,-~
Vlttrln wltli ponolon -ld 1U Ill
anoa and b e - minded. Roota - .
buy lorm on land oonu.. ~ 110111
.,. 70'1 .... !odly'a
dan Co•:::=· Calll14-887· IUl NOIIII AI LOW AI --~114-1182
M,DOO 1 -e Bdrm., .._ GGw'l. I
MINI
3JI5or 11
Bonk Rapo'a Call 1·100·522·

180 Wanted To Do

18117 Ford F150, ona ownar, A·l

·
1871 Mtrkwood 12110 12,300,
814-3111-f1Be, Ori14-31N747.
11183

ALDER

....... t:l,fiOO. 304-m.l430.

080. 114-M-4173.

FrH air lrH oklrt, 14170 s·btd·
Under Supervision Of Agency
roam, hosS/dawn, 11 Dllma.
cat11~1-em.
lltdk:al Dlroomr And Chlel Oporadng Officer. Sind Reaume And
Tht.. Employment Reftrtncft 1 Jt-fl!lloiopporliaoau•n•i!yirba_s~•.- - - Frtt air, Ire• skirt. 18x80 3 or 4
bedroom 11.350/down, 12Diimo.
To: Planned parenthood Of ll

. OSHA And CLIA Rt&lt;ulremanll.

.,.,..,_.In

Two bedroom houat and one
twdnan
Uldll1part,
114-1182-2178.

NEED A LDAN? A1K11Y The EIIJ
Way ·Br Phone. F'rltildly Loan, 1815 14x70 Wlndoor, •10,&amp;00,

Fringe Benefit Package • Full-

nma, Flexible Houra. ART. RRA
OR CCS. Ont- E - t IN
ICD·I·CII And CPT-4 Coding,
Good Convmmication fOrganlz•
lion /lnter·Ptraonal Skills Re-

320 Moblll Homn
for Sale

-

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Rtllidan!lal or OOmrntrcill wlrtno,
- urvlct or rapatra. Maollr U:
ttnud tlaclrlclan. Rld4nour
Elto!IICII, WV000301, 304-17S.
IYBe.

Oct. 29, 1997
Do nol be hesilant or fearful of ·
pioneering fresh fields in 1he year
ahead. New possibililic~ could develop for you in ways you 'd leas I
eKpect.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Silua1ions lhat are running smoothly .
shouldn'l be interfered with 1oday.
Unwarranted changes might create
problems where none CKisted pre vi·
ously. Scorpio, lreat yourself to a
birthday gift. Send for your AslroGraph prediclions for the year ahead
by mailing $2 and SASE 10 AstroGraph, c/o Ibis newspaper. P.O. Box
1758, Murray Hill Sta1ion, New

,,

your zodiac. sign.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Today, il is important IO properly acknowledge people who have
helped you recently. Sli~hts will
prompt an .evaporalion of lheir support.
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
All eyes wtll be upon you today, so
conductyoursclfinamanncrthaiwill
aurae I and sustain admirers. Do nol
tarnish your image severly.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. l9)
Even though you .might be bener
informed than your ~ers about certarn sttuattons. don t flaunl your
knowledge in order to appear superior.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Take
nolhing for granled in your business
dealings today, because you mighl be
lulled inlo a·false sense of securi1y
and end up with lhe short straw.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19)
Propositions broughllo you by olh·
ers loday should be studied very carefully, or you mighl agree 10 some1hin g that benefits the promoter bUI
not you.

»M~

i~

order today
and give
and adequale altcntion
· 1o all duties. Anything you neglect
could c;ome back 10 haunt you later.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
. Friends and co-workers might want
to Jlo something today that you 'll
rejecl automatically. oo· not be lhe
lone dissenter disrupting everyone 's ,
plans.
,
· CANCER (June 21-July 22) Do
not buckle under pressure or setbacks
loday. Assume and maintain a positive ani1ude 1hat can turn defeat into
victory.
LEO (July 2 3-~ug. ~2 ) be kind
and compa,ssionale to others today,
but also be careful not to do anyth ing
foolish !hat might cause you 10 have
giver's remorse laler.
~ ·
VIRGO (Aug . ·.23-Sept. 22)
Alliances !hat are based upon mate·
rial concerns could get complicated
today if you become selfish. Do nol
. sci a bad example.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) If you
are assenive enough, !here is no
doubt !hat you can have your way
· 1oday. However, it may nol be worth
tbe price you'll have to pay.

Climax - Tight - Famed - Devour- HAVE LEFT
Memo on dorm wall "Be nice to your parents. After
sending )IOU through college you are all they HIWE
LEFT!"
·

OCTOBER 281

,,

�.

•

YOU KNOW?
,
C &amp; 0 MOTORS
LOVE TOYOTAILEXUS
SERVICE AND PARTS DEPARTMENTS ARE BOTH
-GPEN ON SATURDAYS.
WHY WOULD YOU EVER GO ANY PLACE ELSE?
VE LEX
LOVE T YOTA

Ohio Lottery

Pacers hope to ' - '
Improve under ·
Larry Bird

Pick 3:

345
Pick 4:
5162
Buckeye 5:
10-11-24-28-37

Sports on Page 6

Clear tonight. Low In
mid
30s. Thursday,
sunny, high near 60.

•

NEW 98 510 EXTENDED CAB
LS PACKAGE, AIR, AWM.
513,855
WHEELS &amp; MORE

Vol. 48, NO. 137
e;117, Ohio Vall.,- Publllhlng Compenv

AI
LOW
AI

EIPIISSVII
NEW 97 GEO
4X4
~$1.3;399
~'26,738
USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS

Ill FT., 3.0 UTEA-l.X, MERCRUISER ENGINE
WITH TRAJLER,

'9999

H CIR. UIOI41001414 LT

LEATHER.._!f'ICXYMD """ ElliTKJN, AUTO.,
AIR. 3150 UN., LOADEC,

ONLV 11,000 MILES. SIWIP
WAa

Pt--.--..-

HJ
.•.,,_

....

.

•

ED TRUCKS
.

;BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

"In order to get money from oth- service being provided in an emer·
er sources, we have to be able to meet gency room or somewhere else. Big
certain criteria, and in order to meet difference, and that saves money."
lhat criteria, we have to have levy
Jacobs explained that it is the
money to fulfill the local fund combination of.those dollars which
requirements to qualify for .the allows the Health Department to
grants," said Jacobs.
provide more than 20,000 individual
"It's like a domino cffccl, one services/visits to Meigs Counlian~
thing happens and then it trickles each year.
down all the way."
"The levy means a lono us and it · Many of the programs are geared
means a lot to the county," said to low-income families and offered at
no or low cost, said Jacobs.
Jacobs.
· "The whole county benefits from
But even those who never go to
it, regardless of whether they know it the Health Department offices for
or not. They benefit because we are assistance, benefit indirectly through
reducing the overall costs to the many of the services, like food sercounty by providing services at a vice and sanitary inspections, nuireduced cost as opp&lt;lscd to that same sance investigations. rabies control.

.• southern board OKs
.:.computer funding ~in recent years following tf.lc closing
of Racine ElementarY Scoop! in 199S
The Southern Local Board of as part of a spending reduction plan.
Education, meeting in regular sessio.n
The committee will ha'ic to con·
Monday. night at Letart Falls Ele- Sidt~ available resources, classroom
mentary School, approved School si;~;C and geography in making its recNet Plus funds totaling $94.000.
ommendations. all the while respectThe money will be used to pur- ing students with special ·needs,
chase computers In classrooms Lawrence said at last month's board
grades kindergarten through fourth meeting.
·while n smaller portion of the man·
The committee will consist of
"eycan be used for wiring to connect about 20 people including school
"liTe. computers and enable access to · board members. principals. special
·the. inte111ct. according to dimict educatio~ and special program teachSuperintendent James Lawrence.
ers. teachers representing each buildThe School Net and School Net ing and parents representing each
Plus programs were designed 10 area, and the district's transpottation
enhance Ohio Governor George V. supervi~or.
Voinovich's goal of having one com"We're looking for a smoother
puler for every live students. he said. · way." Lawrence said.
•. However. the program dC&gt;.&gt;s not
The board also met wilh Candace
,consider the cleclrical wiring needed Hecr rcprcs~nting the Meigs County
~o support a large numher of com·
Health Department who presented
pulers in !he classroom. Lawrence information on a wcllncss block
explained. Most of the buildings m gran1 program called Sex Can Wait.
the Southern Local Sch&lt;K&gt;I Dislricl an
ahstincncc·bascd
program
arc older and do not 'have !he clcctri· designed to combat 1ccnagc prcg.cal wiring necessary 10 handle com· nancy.
.rutcrs.
The school hoard decided 10 wail.
The board also discussed . laking no action pcndin!,! a review of
the makeup of the proposed district lhc program's curriculum.
I .planning com mince and sci up a
Ltwrcncc !he currkulum is whol.mcetin!,! for the commincc on Nov. ly ahstincncc·hascd and includes no
10.
discussion nf ''safe sex" since that
· ·. After three years of shifling dass- docs no! suppurt sexual abstinence.
:cs around the district. the committee
The program is currently used in
:-viii consider ways to make class !he Meigs Local School District.
!ocations more pcnnanent.
In olhcr husincos. !he hoard hired
· Cla.,scs. panicularly in the early Michelle Winchrcllncr. Aaron Schctclcmcntary grades, have hccn ju~glcd
Continued on page 3

Sentinel Newt Stiff

NEW

5 TAHOES
3 EXPLORERS .
2 SUBURBANS 16 S-10 BLAZERS '
54 RUNNERS
3 JIMMYS
6 GRAND.
2 TRACKERS
CHEROKEES 1 BRONCO
4 CHEROKEES 1 PASSPORT
2 WRANGLERS 1 AMIGO

P/SEATI. LOADED

=:r.~~~~~. . . . . . - '17,733

~

. In Meigs·County

·:Trick or Treat has been set fo.r
·•Jhursday in most communities
.CHESTER - Chester will hold Irick or lrcat on Thursday from 6
7 p.m. The fire siren will sound to alert 10 the beginning and end.
DANVILLE . Trick or treat has been set for Thursday from 5:30
1o 6:30p.m. in the Oanvillc community.
.
FOREST RUN COMMUNITY· Trick or treat in the Forest Run
area will be held from 6 to 7 p.m . on Thursday.
_. • HARRISONVILLE'JPAGEVILLE - Trick or treat in Harrisonville
and Pagevillc will be sponsored by the Scipio Township Volunteer Fire
Dcpanmeni and will be held from 6 1o 7 p.m. on Friday.
.
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport will conduct tnck or treat on Thurs·
day from 6 to 7 p.m. Those participating should turn on tbeir porch
lights.
POMEROY . Trick or treat will be held on Thursday from 6 to 7
p.m. in Pomeroy.
RACINE - Trick or treat will be held in Racine on Thursday from
6to 7p.m.
REEDSVILLE - The fire siren will signal the beginning of trick or
treat in Reedsville, Thursday from 6 lo 7 p.m.
RUTI..AND - Rutland's trick or treat will be held on Thursday from·
6 to 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE- Syracuse will have trick or treat on Thursday from
6 to 7 p.m. Residents who participale should Iurn on 1he1r porch hghts.
TIJPPERS PLAINS • Trick or treal in Tuppers Plains will begin at
.-: 6 p.m. and end at 7 p.m. on Thursday. The fire siren will signal the
·::·. beginning and end.
~· to

t5 CIR. 4141/4 fOil

SILVERADO. AIJ!Q::..~_R , 350 ENG.,
' P/WI~ P(Uil.;M, AWM. WHEELS,

~~M.trJO~...... .. . . . . ... . *20,440

OPEl
MOI.·FII. 9·9

satt-6

..

I

eral months aflcr lhe Court-ordered March 1998 deadline 1o fix the school
funding system. lawmakers will have 10 ask for an ex!ensiun . "I think !hat
if we're able 10 get something nn the ballot. the mun will look favorable
on thai ," said local Slate Rep. Tom Johnson. R-Ncw Concnrd. the chair of
the Ohio House Finance L:Ommiucc.
The comments of Ray and Johnson followed a meeting of a select Finance
Suhcommitlcc which has held hearings over !he hcsl.mcthoc.l for determining the cost of an adequalc education. YcS!crday. !he commillee heard a pre·
scnlation from !he Coal ilion for Equily and Adequacy of School Funding.
the plaintiff, who successfully sued the s!a!c over ils' school funding sys·
tern.

.

~

By JIM FREEMAN

VII IT.
UTiliTY lOT

ate G.O.P. members supported putting Gov. George Voinovich's $1.2·bil·
Iion·a-ycar penny sales tax hike on the ballot. Statehouse Democrats sat out
the debate instead voting against a process they saw as&lt;1 rush to the ballot.
Most Of those polilical forces are still in place suggesting the same dynamics for the General Assembly's second attempt to fix the stale's school fund ·
ing system ·-declared unconstitutional by the Ohio Supreme Court in March.
Conservatives are slicking to their no-new tax guns. while modcrale G.O.P.
leadership and Democrats seem to be more open to a tax increase . And if
lawmakers do end up voting for a package that hikes 1axcs, it will be subject to voter approval this May.
"In order to have something on the ballot this May. we have to have it
to the ballot board by February," said Ray. Since the primary would fall scv·

tvoters asked to renew
. one-mill health levy Tuesday
; Sentinel Newa Steff
: For every $1 in taxes collected
oJocally, Meigs Countians receive
~ about $3 in services from the Meigs
:; County Health Department. accord~ ing to John Jacobs, administrator.
; Jacobs gave those figures 10
: emphasize the impottance of renew~ ing.the one-mill levy to run for five
: years which will be on the ballot
Tuesday.
He explained that the approxi: mately $180,000 generated by the
: levy give'S the Health Department the
: leverage to get grants lmd other
· funding from state, federal and pri: vate agencies amounting to nearly a
half-million dollars.

95 . . . 101,
SUPER NICE BOAT.................. IIOW

.

· • COLUMBUS-·Itepublica~ legislative le~ders are within a fe~ ':"eeks of
presenting state lawmakers wtth several opuons on how to fix O~to s sch?&lt;JI
funding system, according to powerful Statehouse Fmance Commm~e chatrs.
"What I think we're going to be domg ts developmg some opttons and
. ~hopping those options around to legisla!ors and i~terest groups," said Senrue Finance Chair Sen. Roy Ray, R-Alcron. He declined to outhne what those
- options might be. but said they would be "surfacing within a few weeks."
• When the' full legislature abandoned the school funding debate in early
' August. the Republican-controlled legislature was split. Hardcore House con·
i servatives opposed any school'funding plan with new taxes whtle moder-

AIR, AMJRI CAS$., PWR.
STEERING AND MOREl

WTtER, AUTO., AIR, P/'MNDOWS, PJLOCKS,

A Gannett Co. Newspllpet'

Plan
to fix Ohio's school funding system ·near
.
By AARON MARSHALL
Qennet NIWI Service

MS "IDI414LY

2 Sections, 16 Pagee. 35 cen1a

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 29, 1997

water testing , and other environmental services, he explained.
Jacobs and Nonna Torres, R. N.,
nursing director, also talked about the
tnany other programs which bcncfll
residents including the sJ)cech and
hearing clinic which is funded by the
Board of Hcahh and made possible
by ·levy .funds.
"If we didn'l oiTer speech and
hearing therapy here, our people
would have to travel someplace. like
Athens. lo get !he service, and then
at a cost. while here it's basically free,
although in some instances Medicare
is billed." they said.
Jacobs wen! on to explain that
because Meigs County has an established clinic funded wilh local dol-

Iars. !he agency is ahlc In apply 10 !he rncnt sen-ices. and Torres, who is also
Ohio Children's Trus! Fund for grant working on grants for family plan· ·
monies for additional programs in the ning including abstinence .
speech and hearing clime.
A one mill fevy on which 10 oper·
"So there again we have the domi· ale the Health Depanmtnt was
no effcc1." he said .
passed in 1982 and has hecn renewed
The many o1hcr programs of the every rove years since. Prior to that
dcpattmcnt .. like medic al clinic time Jownships and villages conservices. such as immuni zations. tributed funds 10 carry oul services
children's health services. pregnancy · mandated by the .slalc.
testing and prenatal care. breast, cerJacobs explained thai should !he
vical, and prostate screenings, nutri- levy fail. then 1hc Health Dcpartmenl
tion education, communicable dis- would have lo go hack to the politicase control. and school health pro· cal subdivisions for funding .
grams ·- all require supporting funds
"Our programs make a·diiTcrcncc
from the levy, it was explained.
in !he lives of Meigs Coumians and
The Health Department just !hat's whal coums. We wanl 10 make
recently received a wcllness block that difference ," concluded Torres.
grant which will be used to supple-

Stocks climb
sharply again
this ·morning .
NEW YORK (AP)- Stocks •.rose
sharply again this morning, with the
Dow up more than 100 pdints us Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan soothed Wall Street wilh
assurances tlult the recent market tur·
moil could actually prove bcncticial
to.the U.S. economy. .
The Dow Jones industrial average
was 118.12 points higher at 7.616.44
after the flr.t hour of trading. ·
Wotll Street grew conlillcnt that its
record gain of the day before mighl
hold up when Hon~ Kong invcslors
sent the main index there up nearly
19 pcrccnl overnigh!. The rally
spread In Tokyo stock markcl. which
rose 3.3 percent. and London. where
the main indc• was up 2.1 pcrccm by
midaftcrnoon.
Greenspan. in testimony before
Congress !his morning. said that in a
few years the . markc!'s pullback
could help lhc U.S. economy by
slowing it to a more sustainahlc
pace.
On Tuesday. the Dow soared 337
points in its hi~£CSI one-day gain
ever. erasing more than half the previous day's rcl'nrd dmp of 554 points.
Trading today slowed consider-

ably from Tuesday's blistering pace.
which produced !he lteuvies1 volume
in Wall Street hiswry dcspi!c some
Jcchnology gli1chcs that c.lclayed
many invcst&lt;lr~ · orders.
Overall. more lhan 2.K billion
shares changed hamh Tuesday on big
U.S. exchanges thanks to a crush of
investors eager to make deals

aile~

PAVING FUNDED· The Peoples Banking and
Trust Company office in Rutland has provided
$1 ,000 to assist in funding the paving of a
street next to the bank, as welt as the parking
lot of the Rutland fire department. Branch man-

ager Des Jeffers preaanted the check on Tues·
day to Mayor JoAnn Eads, and Rutland Township Trustaas Charles Barrett, Ch!lrles
Williamson and Joe Bolin. The project was e
joint effort between the village end township.

MeigS Local School Board updated
on computer technology program
By JIM FREEMAN ·
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs Local Board nf Edu·
calion was updmed on lhe dislrie!'s
CO!l)putcr tcchnoiO£Y program when
it met in rc£ular session T~;w~llay
night at the board's central i1fTic c in

Pomeroy.
Technology coordina1nr Todd
Gardner gave a high·!cch pccsema·
tion restating !he goals "r !he pro·
gram whi'h arc:
-- To move computer tec hnology

unO rcsoun.:cs into the ~la!'l:-.mom
focusing up&lt;m student-centered lcam ing;
-- Provide :\(.;Cess to ~.: ompuh.: r
lcchnology for sin If and '!udcn!' !o
improve quality ol work and ~.:duc.l ­

trading was halted ahruplly hy Monday's sclloll. The Nasdaq Stock Market became so bogged down !hal il
was unahlc to calculate its compos~
itc indo. for more lhan 90 minutes
aflcr the close of lrading. The New tion ;
York Siock Exchange had ils lirst bil-- Provic.lc cducat ional orpt~rt uni lion-share day ever.
tic!'l LH !'~tafT ami the ~..:ommuni t y .
IBM's early announcemcnllhat il
Ongmng proJCCI~ indudc an
would .buy back up to $~;5_ billion Appo1lm:hian Regional Sy~tcmic lnt tiati vc prnjccl. School Net and Schc){JI
· Continued on page 3

Net Plus ~tate pn~jccls and training of

tcnchcrs tn implement the technology program.
In additilm. an internet wchsit~: has
hccn constructed for the high ~chool
whiL:h · L:an he accessed hy anyone .
Pl Llns af..&lt;i4&gt; call on ere at in£' om intranct
'i1c a! the high sc hool. An intrancl
~ite differs from an internet site in that
only computers althc school or in the
di~trkt~.:an accl':o.S it.
The ARC projccl a! the high
:-.chonl l:on~ish of 31 networked
L'mnputcrs m I X dao,srnmns. eight
additional networked computers in
!he new eompUicr lab and !We&gt; com·
pule" f&lt;&gt;r' graphics Jcvclopmenl, 34
networked computers in the h!Jsincss
labs and lour nclwor,oll administrative computer... for ;J total
79 new
~.:omputcr ~ and' two network ~crvcrs.
The hirh school curren!ly ha' a
to13l of 102 Penliurn-hased cnmpulcrs and three nclwork server"' and
seven Apple Macmtnsh computers

or

with internet acccs~ in the school
lihrary.
By !he end of the 199R-99 school
year. the district 'hould have 371
Penlium·hascd computers and 131
printers. Gardner said.
h!-.ucs the t.listricL fuccs ut the current tunc arc the costs of unfunded
ponion' of School Nc! and Schm&gt;l
N~:t Plu~ pro!!rams; network hardware. internet connectivity, carts or
other furniture . mouse pac.J~ and other supplies; electrical upgrades to
support the extra computers ant.l
space fnr computers in ~r:u.Jc~
kindcrgnncn lhrough fourth grade .
Board mcmhcr Randy Humphrey'
~:.ud it is imflOflant to :-.tart kids on
c.·. ornpUiers while they arc in the earli er £ri.ldcs.
Gurdncr ."iaid h:achcrs can mcorporatc comput. ~.·r~ Wllh regular learning and rcinfon,.:c da!oo~ lcs~ons with
~:om puler U!\C.
Continued on page 3

911 operator talks husband through baby's delivery
PORTSMOUTH (AP) - Pan- deliver a 6-pound. !·ounce girl.
Jusl hours earlier. Mrs. Runyon
time professional wres!ler Andy Run·
·had
been sent home by doctor&gt; at !he
yon said being body·slammed wasn 't
nearly as scary as helping to deliver Sou1hcrn Ohio Medical Center in
Portsmouth. who lold her she wa,n'l
a baby.
Runyon , 26, was pressed into ser- ready to deliver.
Now. Runyon found himself
vice early Monday when his wife.
Cindy, announced her water had bro- answering questions and taking
ken and there was no time 10 get to instructions from Ms. Wheeler. who
the hospital in Ponsmou1h, two miles alcncd the life squad.
" It's coming out, ma' am." Runysouth of this Scioto County village.
on
told Ms. Wheeler m the 911 call.
"She said we weren't going to
. make it and 1old me to call 911." which was !apc·rccorded .
"If the baby 's head comes out.
Runyon 5aid Tuesday.
With the assistance of Bcrky hold il with your hands and proJect
Wheeler, a·sheriff's dispatcher and · it," Ms. Wheeler replied. "Try to help
emergency medicallechnician , Run· her with her breathing Try to keep
yon helped his 21 -year-old wife her calm ."

"The hahy'' healh here, ma'am.
What do I do' Whal do I do !"
"Calm down ." M' Wheeler
advised. "Hoi~ the hahy'' head in
your hands. and Jell your wile 1o lry
and push."
"The baby 's here. II '' crying,
moving around. II wa' 'o quick ,"
Runyon exclaimed .
" Wrap the baby up good m the
towel. and make sure n·, brcalhmg
OK." Ms. Wheeler said.
"Honey, as long as the baby 's
breathing. you're fine, " she reassured
the excited father, lhen asked him if
il was a boy or a girl.
" You guys d1d a grea1 job. Con·

1

•

gratulations,'' Ms. Wheeler 'aid as
the paramedics arrived.
"When I heard the bahy ery. !hat
was great." Ms. Wheeler lold The
Columbus Dispalch on Tuesday.
"That was an cxciling moment.
We get a lot of calls from people in
labor. They usually make it on lime
or arc false alarms."
Runyon said he couldn't have
done it without Ms. Wheeler's assistance.
"She was just fanta,tic . If I could
sec her right now, I would give her a
big hug ."
Mother and baby were reponed to
he doing line at the Southern Ohio
Medi cal Cemcr.

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